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                  <text>Page-12-11)8 'Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 13, 1986

Commission post taken from
Chrysler Corp. chainnan
WASHINGTON (UP!) Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lee
Iacocca, fired as head of a
commission set up to renovate the
Statue of Liberty, says Interior
Secretary Donald Hodel used "off
the walt" reasoning to remove hlm
from the post.
Hodel fired lacocca Wednesday,
saying the auto executive should
not run both the commission and-a
companion fund·rafstng foundation. Hodel said he acted to avoid
any possible ronfltct of interest in
havlng Iarocca head both bodk&gt;s.
But Iarocca challenged Hodel's
action In a statement Issued
Wednesday night.
· "The secretary's statement was
off the wall and In clear rontradic·
tion of the !acts," Iarocca said. "I
resent any lnfen&gt;nce on his part of
conflict of interest. The truth is that
the secretary is in conflict with his
own charter. This is a grab for four
years' worth of 'COntributions by the
American people."
Iarocca planned to elaborate on
his charges during a news ronference scheduled this afternoon in
Detroit.
In announcing his action, Hodel
IACOCCA FIRED - Lee lacooca, chalnnan 11the
Chrysler Corp. has been fired as head of a
oornmlsslon set up to renovate the Statue of Uberty
aca~rdlng to Interior Secretary Donald Hodel who
WJed ''oft lhe waD" reasoning to fire him. The Statute

will celebrate Its lotlh kbirlhday on Juey 4th. lacocc a
was fired be&lt;:ause he In on both the commlssln and
companion lund-raising foundation In renovate tbe
statute. UPI.

Happenings around Meigs County••.
Emergency squads Veterans Memorial
Middleport police
answer three calls
Admttted--Don Roach, Middle- make 27 arrests
Three calls were answered by
local units Wedl\€Sday, the Meigs

Coonty Emergency Medical Servl·
ces reports. At 2:52a.m.. Pomeroy
took Julian Ice from E. Main St .. to
Veterans' Memolial Hospital; Ru ·
tland at 6:52 p.m. took Warnick
Allen, Jr., from Meigs Mine 2 to
Holzer Medical Center and at ll: 41
p.m., Middlepor1 took Ricky
McClellan from Cole St. to Veterans
Memorial.

port; George Brothers. Pomeroy;
Wilbur Hanning, Middleport; Hazel
The Middleport Police Depart·
Weston, Racine: Elizabeth Bartoe, ment made 'li arrests during the
Long Bottom.
month of January. Ch ief of Police
Discharged--Mary Casto. Virg\1 Sid Little rY'ports .
Jacks.
During the month eight accidents
wen&gt; inl'estiga ted and all vehicles
Closed Monday
werc driven a total of 5,413 miles.
Merchant policr rollrctions totaled
The Ohio State Liquor Store. $52 and parking met er co llect ions.
Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. wlll be $875. ThPre were .110 parking tickets
closed all day Monday in obser- wiittPn.
vance of Presidents' Day.

Schools reopen

648 board (Continued from page 11

All schools of Meigs County
opened today for classes after
having been closrd for the past
three days due to a snow and Icy
road conditions. All schools are
over the five days which are
permitted without makeup time for
calamity time. Temperatures are
expected to moderate In the next
few days.

tern. "There was no other way ...
said.
Hopkins pointed ru t thai by law,
emergency ser\iees such as the
crisis line cou ld not be cut. Those
types of serviees remair in full
operation. The residential center
also rontinues to operate.
Jones asked if mental health
sponsored programs at the Meigs
Senior Citiz&lt;'lls Center rould be
continued without a IPI'y.
"I would say they should be
continued because they help meet
the ron!'l'rns of the elderly," said
Hopkins. and programs for the
rtderly "should increase based on
current needs." She ca lled the
needs fl. the ei&lt;Frly an area of "high
need which is underfunded" in the
ment al health system.
She rommm&lt;Fd the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Program as
"excellent" and explained that the

Meets Friday
Mary Shrine. White Shrine of
Jerusalem. will meet at 8 p.m.
Friday at the temple in Pomeroy.

Saturday danre set
A va iPDtin&lt;' dance will be held
from 7 to 10 p.m. Saturday at th&lt;'
Harrisonville Elementary Sc hool
under the sponsorship of lhl'
HarrisonYille PTO. Admission i' :JJ
cents for childn·n and $1 for adult s.

she

Community
tContlnued from page .J )
present roveragr with Imperial
Casualty and ln&lt;Fmnity Co. is
canceled without option.
The Meigs County Sheriff's [lp.
partment's liablity insurance has
already been dropped by the sa me
company.
At this time. the commissioners
an&gt; still searching for insurance
roverage.
Meigs County Engineer Phil
Roberts repm1ed to thP commission that he hopes to have plans
finished by the end of Ma rch. "if not
soonrr." lor the access road fi·om
Rt. 3J to Calll"r's Nursery.
He also reported that hr is
consi&lt;Fring the purchase of anothN
snowplow lor the rounty highwa)·
department at a cost of $ll00.
Roberts read to Ihe commission a
letter trom Attorney Frank II'.
Porter commending him (Roberts 1
and the highway department for
imnprovements on Cou nty Rd . 35 at
the Intersection of Township Rd .
129. The county eliminated a
dan~rous curve at that site.
Tuppers Plains resident Mary
Jane Talbott was at the meeting
brk&gt;fty to ask the board about th&lt;'
upcoming public meeting on the
Tupp&lt;'rs Plains sewage disposal
project 1 Commissioner Richard
Jorrs lold Talbott he expects the
meeting to be held within the next
three weeks. The rounty wlll be
contacted by the Ohio Environmen·
tal Protection Agency when they
tEPA I are ready for the meeting he
said .
In other business, the board
approved a request from Loraine
Newsome of Serenity House, Gampolls, lor the second half collections
from 19!5 Meigs County marriage
liCense fees which help fund
Serenity House.
The board also appointed John
Rice, county extension agent. as a
replacement on the Private Indus·
tr:1i Cooncll for Eleanor Thomas.
SEIIklrcltlzensdlrector, who left the
posltkln.
·

elderly population in l"&gt;g&lt;&gt; r countiPs is not always servOO' as well as
in smaller counties.
"We tmental health! have to
prepare and look to the future."
Hopkins ronten&lt;Fd. because "federal dollars will be gone."
Hopkins said the mmtal health
board will have to make some
"tough decisions" on using what
monies they presently' have to
m ainta in thos(' seJ\Iices they presC'ntly have.
.

Two men wen&gt; cited by the
Gallla·Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol Wednesday morning following a three-vehicle rolll·
sion on Meigs County 5.
Troopers said a truck driven by
Raymond L Patterson, 23. of
College Avenue, Rutland, had
stq~ped in the roadway, about
one-half mile west of Ohio 7, and

Divorce granted
Wanda Sue Laudermilt. Racine,
has been granted a divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Cour1 from
Thomas Wayne Laudermilt .
Springfield, on grounds of gross
neglect of duty.
Edw in Keith Cleland and Connie
Darlene Cleland, both of Middle·
port, have asked the cour1 for a'
dissolution of their marriage.

CLEVELAN D (UP!) - Two
Ohio Lotto players can claim equal
shares of a $12 million prize after
plcklng all six numbers in Wednes·
day night's drawing.
The names of the players wlll be
announced after their tickets are
redeemed at a regional lottery
office. The wlnntng numbers wen&gt;
7, 10, ~. Z7, 30 and 36.
Each of the players will receive
$600,8:&gt;2 In ~ annual payments of
$:ll,l40.10, minus taxes.

.

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give your spec ial
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forever from our Miniature

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gold overlay fro m
Krementz.

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en tine
1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 14, 1986

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

other snowstonn hits Meigs area
By local ol UP1 reports
Meigs County schools which had been closed
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday due to weather
conditions rut operated on Thursday were closed
again Friday as another snow storm hit Friday
morning. Highway and street department workers
once more began fighting the fast· falling snow Friday
morning. Roads were slippery and dangsrous as the
new snow fell. According to predictions, temperatures were expected to beginning rlslng today and
rain was predicted for the weskend. The Gallia-Melgs
Highway Patrol reported all major and secondary
roads were becoming snow-covered and slippery.
The snow storm which had been racing toward Ohio
overnight, entered the state during the early mornlng
hours brlngtng tbe most amount of snow yet this
wlnter to southwestern portions of Ohio and slippery

'

212 E. IMln, Pomtroy

INCLUDES

Mr s. Theresa Fisher. 00. Miners'ille. who died Tuesday at \'eterans
Memorial Hospital. was preceded
in death by her parcnrs. Grorgeand
Lena Mitch Phillips: his husband,
Pau l; a brother. Nmman PhUIIps,
and three sisters. Alma Phillips,
Anna Jones and Myr11&lt;' Watson.

Vot.36, No.211
Copyrighted 1988

•

driving ronditions elsewhere.
A travelers advisory was in effect for the southern
half of Ohio this morning today where 4 to 6 inches of
snow was expected.
"The roads are just slick and slippery," said State
Highway Patrol Sgt . H.E. Nease In ColumtxJs. He
said there had been no serious weather related
accidents reported.
In Cincinnati , local pollee attlibuted about 100
fender- benders and cars ln ditches tn the weather.
Minor Injuries were reported In a seven car accident
around 7 a. m. on a roadway connecting I-71 and I· 75.
Dolores Egleseder. employee of the Cincinnati
Chamber of Commerce. wbo carne trom suoorb of
Western Hills to downtown by bus joked about her
ride to work.
"It only took like two hours," she said laughingly.
"Normally it takes about 35-40 minutes. It was a zoo. I

didn't see any accidents, just a lot or people slipping
and sliding and going awfully slow."
A patrol dispatcher in Falrfteld said be was
surprised that the post had no accidents. just report s
of cars off the road.
"I guess we made believers out of them that you
have to drive cautiously in this stuff," he said.
The snow was ahead of a cold front that was over
western Illinois this morning. The National Wheather
Service said snow was expected to continue across
Ohio today then taper off to flurries tonight after the
cold front moves through.
Early morning temperatures were near the 20
degree mark and winds were southerly at 10 to 15
mph.
Across the nation, winter storm watches exten&lt;Fd
from California's Sierra Nevada northward into
Washington for today and Saturday. Up to 4 teet of
snow was expected to accumulate above 7IXll feet in

0
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ELLIOTT'S

"Jobs must rontinue tG be the
first prior1ty an~ major thrust of
state government," Celeste wrote,
calling lor Implementation of a
clean coal development program
mandated by the passage of Issue 1
in November. He also asked
lawmakers to reach a consensus on
the workers' compensation issue.
"I know you share my concerns
about workers' compensation,"
Celeste said. Because txJstness and
labor could not agree. "It is now
Incumbent upon the General Assembly to try to shape legislation
that wlll restore the historic
consensus which served both In·

jured workers and Ohio's bust·
nesses ln a responsible fashion.
"The current atmospbrre of
uncertainty is detrimental to a
program that lor years has been the
source of pride for all Ohioans,' · the
letter said.
The other priorities Include:
-Regulatory changes involving
savings and loan Institutions.
-Updating care to the mentally
retarded and developmentally
disabled
-Expansion of the Ethics Commission's julilsdiction and In·
creased protection of people who
file complaints.

-Passage of a bill that allows
voter·approved taxes to raise a
portion or the funds needed to bilild
sports stadiums and convention
centers.
-Support of a bill to protect
utility consumers when a utUity
reorganizes, merges or eombtnes
under a holding company.
-Passage of legislation to protect the public against prescription
drug abuse, extremely hazardous
PCBs and solid waste pollution.
Some of the measures described
by Celeste are belng considered ln
the legislature, others will be
introduced by the governor.

Photos show shuttle in trouble at liftoff

10 FT. MESH
DISH

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e

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -Gov.
Richard F . Celeste says he will
Introduce a "prudent and practical
capital Improvements bill" and
offer a package to "strengthen and
line tune" Ohio's drunken driving
laws.
In a letter to legislators Thursday, Celeste also listed 11 other
prlorlt~ for 198i.
The governor's letter did not
detail his OWl proposal. and It did
not acknowledge a bill Including
stricter penalties against drunken
drivers that was recommended for
passage by a Senate committee
Wednesday.

.

IN .FEBRUARY

WITH 75

·#~

the Sierra Nevada. the NWS said.
As much as 10 Inches of snow was expected in the
Hockies of Colorado, where it was reared winds
gusting to 69 mph !n Walen burg would cause white
outs.
Dezens of families were forced to evacuate their
homes Thursday ln the mountains of Ventura County.
Calif., because the heavy rain and unstable soil
threatened to destroy homes with mud slides .
Officials said about half the 00 residents of the
Matilija Canyon, 50 miles north or Los Angeles, had
evacuated their homes. Before leaving. many
buttressed their homes with planks and reinforced
them with walls of sandbags.
Rock slides in Ventura County Thursday closed ll
miles of Highway 33, which twlsts through the rugged
Los Padres National Forest. Nearby Matillja Road
was also shu t down.

Jobs Governor's top priority

'~
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Village funds total $360,859
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck reports.
Hecelpts, di sbursements. respectively , and the ba lance of each fund
at the end of the mon).h included:
general , $13,040.90. $13,470.16.
$14,214.71: street maintenance.
$4,013.23, $6.973.03. $1.216.38; fed·
eral revenue sharlng. $4,362:
$1,070.43, $4,235.59: street light, no
receipts. $1.577.04. $2.36.125; street
levy. no receipts. no dlstxJrsements,
$2,343.56.
Also fire equipment , $3,625;
$3,!*12.52; $1,002.77; fire truck ,
$1'.00), no disbursements, $7,466.91;
public transportation, $ll,027.ro.
$7,743.93; S7.0..li.OO deficit: sanitary

was backing Into a private drive.
Pickups operated by RDbert V.
Vallandinghani, 33, and William R.
Hall, ll, both of Minford, were
westbound. Hall n&gt;portedly stopped
for Patterson's vehicle while Vallandlngliam allegedly could not
stct~ 1n time and struck Hall's
vehicle from behind.
No lnjur1!$ were reported in tbe
9: 10 a.m. accident which troopers
said caused moderate damage to
Vallandingham's vehicle, light
damage to Hall's and no damage to
Patterson's. The patrol charged
Vallandingham wtth failure to stq~
in an assured clear distance and
Patterson with Improper backlng.

ELLIOTT'S
GOES WHOLESALE

Passing a i&lt;''Ywil l be an "uphUI
bail ie" Hopkins admitted. "but we
ha,·e to try."

sewer escrow, no J"E('Pipts. no
distxJrsemenls, $116,717.29: fire
house Improvement fund, $5.11), no
disbursements. $24,491.16: water
tank, no receipts. no dtstxJrsement s, $1.30,977,58; water, $9,626.Z7,
$7.187.87 , $18,29 1.32; sa nitary
se wer . $7 ,179 .85, $3, 739 .80,
S27,26.i.8J; swimming pool, no
receipt s. $21.34, $1,631.ro; cemetery, $1,331.59, $1,324.10, $003.00;
water meter trusts, s:BJ, $.ll0.22,
Sll.476.35; economic development,
99.00J, $100,322.51, $9,310.86; contingency, no receipts, $102.10, $6,013.03
&lt;k&gt;Oclt.
Receipts for the month totaled
$158,592.63 while disbursements
arrounted to $147,815.74.

"We owe that much to the
schoolchildren, other Individuals
and corporations wbo have contributed their time and money to
helplng restore the Statue of
Liberty."

Monday.

Wfflk .

~·

act iv it if's .

!Is In mid :10s early Sunday and

She said it will perhaps have to
consider less medtcal or counseling
serv ices. or perhaps buying servi·
('('S at lesser ratrs.
G-J ·M Mental Health Board will
be filin g it s le'y proposal next

tainted Tyl~nql

of gover nment

-~,..----

Today ...partly cloudy . H igh~ to
25. West winds 10 mph or less.
Tonlght...clear early with increasing cloudiness late tonight.
Low near 15. Southwest winds
around 10 mph.
Frlday... snow and warmer. High
near 35.
Chance of precipitation 10 percent today .. 20 percent tonight .. and
00 percent Friday.
Extended forecast
Saturday lllr9ugh Monday
Fair Saturday. A chance d rain
or snow Sunday and llilnday. lllghs
In tbe upper »; and :lls Saturday
wannlng to the 40s to lower 50s
Sunday and Monday. IJIM 10 tD 00
early Saturday wannlng to the mid

Westerville. and Noami Pickens.
Athens; an uncle. Hobart WhiteMargaret Pickens Brmm. &amp;l . side. Parkersburg, and seven
died Wednesday at her home in granochildren. Mathew. Devln and
Reedsville.
Mara Thomas. al l of Springfield,
Mrs. Brown ..was bam in Hreds- and Christopher . Jason, Brad and
''il le. a daughter of the late Frank Melissa Cowdery . all of Chillicothe.
and Frankie Whiteside Pickens .
Services will be held at I p.m.
She was a member of til&lt;' Lo~ Saturday a1 thl' Long Bot tom
Bonom Chrislian Chu f'('h serl'ing Ch ristian Church with Mr. David
as a deacon and treasurer: a
Prentice and Mr. Vernon Elderidge
\'oluntl'er at the Meigs \ounty officiating. Burial will be In the
Senior Citizens Center and trPas- Reedsville Cemet ery. Friends may
urcr of the Long Boltom Senior call at the White Funrr·aJ Home ln
Citizrns: a member of the Meigs CooJ,·ille from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
County Council on Aging; a Friday. In lieu of flowers. friends
member or the Rerosville Com rna,· make donations to the Long
munity Builders Club and the Bot.rom Chri~tian Chuf'('h. ·
Riverview Garden Club. She was a
1-H club advisor for 20 years.
Theresa Fisher

All Mlddlepor1 funds totaled

integrity

Weather forecast

Margaret P. Brown

m .859.48 as of .Jan. 31. Middleport

til&lt;'

Two citations issued following collision

Two lotto winners

Area deaths

Survh·ing are her husband. WaJ .
ter Brown ; a son and daughter·in·
law, David and Peggy Brol'.n ,
ColumtxJs; two daughters and
sons-in -taw. Melan ie and Bill Tho·
mas. Sprlnglield ; Linda and StPI'e
Cowdery, Chillirothe; a brother.
Charles Pickens, Williamsto""· W.
Va .: two sisters. Wanda Meredith.

pratsed laPO!'Ca's work and said
then&gt; was "absolutely" no evidence
or suspicion of any wrongdoing.
"This Is a matter a [llblic trust,"
Hodel added. "Those of uo;; who are
heads of federal departments or
agencies luve the reponsiblllty to
malntatn the public's confidence ln

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS

446-8051

'

- CAPE; - C'ANAVERA!:; Pia.
(UP!) - New NASA photographs
show a cloud of black smoke
spurting around a shunle rocket
booster lf'Ss than a second after
Challenger's blastoff, Indicating the
crew of st'Ven was doomed trom the
momen\ of llttoff.
A presidential commission inves·
ligating the disaster at the Kennedy
Space Center reviewed unreleased
!Ibn and data Thursday and
planned to tour key shuttleport
facflltles today, including Chal·
Ienger's launch pad.
Following a selies of meetings
Thursday, NASA released photographs that clearly show an
abnormal spurt of sooty black
smoke emerging between the right·
side solid rocket booster and the

shuttle's external fuel tank about
one fourth of the way up the 14·
story rocket.
·The oligtn of the smoke cannot be
seen but It is thickest well above the
joint connecting the booster's lower
two fuel segments that has been the
subject of Intense scrutiny beeause
of NASA documents that show a
history of problems with crucia l
joint seals.
The firsl or the six photographs
was taken .676 seronds after solid
rocket ignition, which commits the
shuttle to blastoff. While the picture
is not clear. the NASA caption said
"dark smoke begins to appear" In
the area between the booster and
the rue! tank.
The third picture in the series was

Mutant virus causing
major flu epidemic
ATLANTA tUPI) - Federal
health officials say a mutant
tnOuenza virus is spreading rapidly
across the nation and may be
responsible for causing much of the
Ou epidemic that has now spread to
45 states.
The national Centers for Disease
Control said Thursday the Type B
flu has underone a rapid mutation
or "antigeniC drift " since early
January, Increasing the susceptibility of the public to Infection.
CDC flu expert Dr. Karl Kappus
said the mutation "has been fnore
rapid than you usually see in Type

who have wilt an immunity to Type
B flu by havlng an active case in the
past may be susceptible to Infection
by the changed virus.
The change tn the Type B nu
virus could pose another !l'Oblem getting til&lt;' correct formulation for
next winter's vaccine.

taken 1.81 seconds after launch ~d agency spokesman Hugh Harlils
by that polnt. the cloud of smoke Is Indicated the shuttle and Its liquidclearly visible. ex tending about 15 fueled rockets operated properly.
"The task force has not ruled out
feet up from the area a the highly
any
elements of the space shuttle
publicized joint.
The last two pictures in the series, system in their investigation of the
taken at 3.34 seronds and 3.37 accident," he said. "But very
seconds alter launch do not show preliminary data evaluation of the
any signs of smoke or any other orbiter and Its three main engines
show normal operation.
apparent problem.
"Special emphusis Is being
The pictures could indicate the
results of a possible defect .in the placed oo ootid rocket boosters. the
booster's steel casing or trouble external tank and launch pad
with a factory seam ln the case that facilities."
When the shuttle boosters are
a IIowed hot fiame and gas from
burning propellant to escape. They ignited. the internal ll'essure jumps
to about 1,00J pounds per square
also rould Indicate a problem with
the propellant or a blowout of the · inch ln six-tenths of a second,
forcing the steel cases of the fuel
seaL NASA would not say.
Previously released footage of segments to oolge oot sllghtly
the launch shows a plume of name around the stiffer joints that hold
them together.
spewing from the lower side of the
Attention has focused oo the t\\11
right-side booster moments before
the shultle's fuel lank exploded 73 rubber 0-ring seals In those joints
beeause the Ioree fl. ignition tends
seconds after blastoff, killing the
to pull the jolnts apart slightly.
ship's seven-member crew.
Investigators may not be able to tnter1er1ng with the operation of the
secondaryO-rings under some ·
pin down the cause or the disaster
conditions.
until the wreckage of the booster,
Another concern for the commisthought to be restlng 1,100 feet
sion Is the weather on launch day: It
below the ocean surface about 40
was 38 &lt;Fgrees when Challenger
miles offshore, is salvaged lor
blasted off. The previous record low ·
detailed inspection.
was 51 degrees and SOII)I' experts
NASA refuses to comment on
have suggested the cold rould have
what agency Investigators suspect
caused problems.
caused the disaster, although

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SHOVELING - Teresa Tyson Drununer, a secretary at lhe Crow
law offices In Pomeroy, abandoned her typewriter- only lml(IOI'&amp;I'IJ)I
- Friday momlng In favor of a shovel to remove snow which was
accwnlallng quickly In lhe latest snow which started Friday morning.

$1,300,000 judgment
filed in Meigs court
A $l,:JXJ.!XXJ judgment suit has
been filed in Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Court an the question of
liabllty raised by the plaintiff, Mary
Jane Talbott, Tuppers Plains, in an
action against Woodland Accident
and Life Insurance Co.. Lincoln.
Neb., and Charles Hughes Sr ..
Marietta, as the company's agent.
The defendants have asked lor a

B.''

"It's hard to know if this is
responsible for all the Type B
Influenza out there," he said, "but
It's certainly Interesting
speculation."
Flu has spread to 45 states, the
CDC said, with 21 reporting wtdes· ·
pread outbreaks, 14 regional out·
breaks and 10 states wtth Isolated

cases.

"You'd have to go back to
January of 1981 to come up with as
many states reporting outbn&gt;aks,"
Kappus said.
The CDC reported 792 deaths
caused by flu and pneumonia In 121
major U.S. clUes for the week
ending Feb. S. compared to 833 the
previous week.
The CDC said the Type B flu,
which strikes children and young
adults more often than older age
groups, was responsible for 75
percent r1 the fiu cases and the
A-H3N2 strain accounted for most

of !hi~ !Fr cases.
Flu mutations are not uncom-

mon, rut Kapus said the changes
can cause current nu vaccines to be
less el!ectlve. And he said people

CMi'J!S SCOREBOARD -

Reprermta&amp;lvetl from lhe Fanner's
Bank In Pomeroy 'lbursday dedlcaled a modern, COIII(IW!ril.edNevoo
Fairplay blllllu!lball 800reboard at Eutem Hlah Sd1ooL The
sooreboanl Wll8 purchased by lhe bank for Ill.'lOO. II not oaly poellllhe
...,,.., but also displays lhe player and mmtber of fouls. VolleybaD

matd1el 1118¥ aile be bswpo"'ted ..., ll 8howa wlh the new
800reboard are, left li1l ..... ~CIIIancUIII, ; I IIIII ¥ie&amp;pl'etlldent 11
Farmer'aa.k; Paul Kloel, vlce-[1 I'm t; Dennlrl Eichinger, head
vanlly bMittetlrell coach at Eutem and BID Bucldey, principal at
Eutem.

summary judgment dlsmissing
them as part ies In the case.
The action and subsequent re
qu est fo r summary stems from an
alledged fraud on the part of the
defendants regarding insurance
coverage on the late Terry D.
Talbott.
The defendants say that although
Talbott had requested coverage
and had issued thl'm checks lor two
premiums. the policy was not in
effl&gt;ct becauSl' Ta lbott had not
provided them wi th a compll'l e
medical histor,· as was requirrd .
The defendant' say the mone)· wa s
held In a special account pendin g
completion of the medical in/orma
tion. The mone)· would have bern
returned ~ Talbott had lx'•n
refused a polir) based upon final
!'('View or his application and
medical histor')·.
The plaintllf is claiming thr
Insurance eompany is t rytng to
&lt;Firaud her of her deceased
husband 's benefits and that thr
policy record was destroyed.
The &lt;Ffendant claims there tl&lt;'l'er
was a policy. ju st an application for
the policy and it was the application
which was destroyed when the
medical Information was not completed on schedule. The plalntlffs
say the application was destroyed:
prior to Talbott' s death.
·
The plaintiff claims that Talbott
believed himself to be Insured and
that his payment of the premiums is
proof of that belief.
The plaintiff has requested
Sl!O,OOJ in compens.tory (llabllty) ·
damages and $J,[O),OOJ ln punitive ·
damages from the defendants.
The matter is scheduled for jury
trial tn early Ma rch.
Judge Charles Knight wtll Issue a
wlitten decision on the motions tor
summary judgments by Tuesday:

�'•
•

.

.

~; ~~~~

Commentary
_

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Olllo
DEVOTED TO mE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~
~v

I"'T"\...o.L-""T"II"'T"&gt;!!!!!d,.=o

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manaser

:AMistllllt Publlsher/ ControUer
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A .MEMBER of The Unill'd Press lntematkma l, Inland Dally Prt&gt;SS Assocla ·
tlon and the American NeWspapff' PubJI.s!M&gt;rs Association .
LE1TERS OF OPINION are wel~me . ,They should be lf'S.s than :m words
long. AU letters aresubj(!('t to OOitlng and must bfs!gned with name, address a nd
lt&gt;lephone number . No W1Slgned leiters will be published. Lenfrs should be In
good taste, addressing IssuE'S, not persooalltles.

WASHINGTON - Three federal
judges last week performro a
notablt&gt; public servlce. They real·
firmed and buttressro one of the
oldest principles d our ~vern ·
ment. In doing so, they effectively
disarmed the worst feature of the
legislative disaster known as the
Gramrn·Rudman·Hollings Act. It's
not etten that I cit hooray for
federal judges, but this time hooray!
The obja:ts of my rah·rah·rah
are Circuit Court Judge Antonin
Scalia of the District of Columbia
Court of Appeals, and District
Judges Oliver Gasch and Norma
Holloway Johnson. They took a

Backstairs at the
Reagan White House
Two of the Reagan children have become wnters.
. The President and Mrs. Reagan's son, Ron. is now working for Playboy
magazine, and their daughter, Pant DaviS, has written a novel titled
''Home Front" that has all the overtol'IE'S of being autobiographical.
It's about a young girl's family ... whosefather happens to be president of
the United States," said Elaine Clispen, Mrs. Reagan's press seci'E'tary.
Crispen said the book is a novel and quotes Patti as saying she wW "let
the readers ju~ for themselves."
Patti, who wrotP the book with co-author Maureen Strang&lt;&gt;, has probably
!;pent less time at the White House than any other offspring of a recent
president.
·
When she viSits her parents, usually for ooe night, it is without fanfare.
She chose to be marlied in her natlvp Ca!lfornia rather than in the White
House, wherE' It would have been almost a state affair.
. She has shunned polities and the llfe her parents !Pad. She is even more
Independent from family tles than Ron, who sees his parents morE' .tten.
. Mrs. Reagan IS looking for a new chief of staff with the departure of Lee
Verstandig after a month on the job. She has had two previous chiefs of
staff, Peter McCoy and James Rosebush.
V...rstandlg plans to remain on the job until hiS successor IS named.
Afterward, he will join former White Hoose deputy chief of staff Michael
Deaver, who Is now a high-powered public relati:Jns executive in
l'Jashington.
• The job of chief of staff in the East Wing is primarily Oil&lt;' of being a
Coordinator of all the first lady's activities. The chief d staff travels with
Mrs. Reagan wherever she goes and Is in charg&lt;&gt; ri other mem~"\u the

Staff.

.

\

. Presidents often sby away from -;;t~dlngweddings, even ri thechlldren
&amp;f close friends. They do not want totakethespotllght away from thebridP.
: When President Reagan sent his regrets to USIA Dlra:tor and Mrs.
{:harles Wick, his longtime friends, that he was unable toattendthe!r!lln's
wedding, he was merely following the example of many of his
predeces!r!rs
Presidents believe their presence Is a disruptivP element , since they
come with a convoy of Secret Service agents and fl'll0r1ers.
Most of them decide to stay home so that It can be strictly the trlde'sday .
But in terms of history, a bride would probably he happy to say her
wedding wa~ attended by the president of the United States.

.

• Despite the tragic t'!ld oft he space shuttle Otallenger, you will not find a
inore enthusiastic devotee of the space program than the president.
Reagan told a gathering of high school students that he ooes not believe
the tragedy "in any way should affect the policy" of sending civilians into
space with astronauts. He spoke &lt;1 space as the "last frontier" and said it
~ould not be left to individuals, scientists or carrer people who are up
!here just for space exploration.

.

: The Reagans' spaniel, Rex. has special privilegPS other White House
dogs have not had. He slreps in a basket with a large pillow in the
presidential bedroom.
Other presidential pets hav&lt;' been relegatro to downstairs baSf.'mpnt
quarters, the flower shop and what was once known as the doghouse.

Berry's World

decisions rurselves. We wW let
unelected bureacrats and computers do the job for us. " U the
trtggeling mechanism had survived constitutional challenge, the
Indispensable agencies of ~vern­
ment, such as the Internal Revenue
Service, would have been cut by the
same percentage applied to the
dispensable agencies, such as the
National Endowment for
Democracy.
The mechanism dld not survive.
The three judges held unanlmouo.ly
that In this respect the act violates
the oonstltutlonal plinclple of seria-_
ratlon &lt;1 powers. The GAO IS·:
headed by a comptroller general:
who Is nominated by the presldenr
but cannot be removed by the· ·
president. One confirmed, a comp- '
troller general is subject to dlsJnls.
sal only by Congress. He IS thus a·
part of the leglslatlve branch.
Under Gramm-Rudman-Hollings,
the GAO would be performing
executive !unctions. This the Constltutlon forbids.
What happens now? The court
told Congress, In Effect, that It must
face the dismal music itself. U thl!
act's $144 billion target IS to be met .
for 1987, Congress must pass the ·
necessary legislation to achieve the
r·
~al and the president must sign it.
0.1
I
•
This
Is the very duty that Congress
.
!rlught so desperately to run away
from.
It ls universally assumed that an
@
appeal will be taken from the
thrff'-judge court to the U.S.
ldP ,PI
Supreme Court. It IS widely as·
lll!lltu;~ ~"""' ,. .., "' surned that the high court will
- - -~''W · IPJ
" •' affirm last week's oplnkln. In June
1983, in what IS known as the
Otadha case, seven of the nine
~ justices agreed that Congress could .
not unilaterally veto an act of the
executive branch. The case had to
do with an alien. The Justice
Department had ruled that Chadha
could remain In the United States.

..

.

"Every t1me the TV sweeps roll around, I wish
I had TWO or THREE VCRs."

Today in history
Today is Friday, Feb. 14, the ~11h day of 1986 with 320 to follow.
This Is Valentine's Day.
The moon is moving toward it s fi rst quarter.
The morning stars are Mars and Sa tum.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and .rupiler.
Those born on this date are under lhP sign of Aquarius. They include
Engllsh economist Thomas Mall hu s In 1766, suffrage leader Anna Howard
Sh~w in 1874, comedian Jack Benny in :IS!», Teamsters Union President
Jil!'my Hoffa In 19JJ, telf.'Vision broadcaster Hugh Downs in 1921 (ageffi).
sports commentator Mel Allen In 19JJ tage 73), and actress·S!ngl'r
FIO~ce Henderson in 1934 1age 521.

Letter to editor
Wants alcohol beverages outlawed

,

could ever cause. Yet they still sell
It and llcense It to be sold for therevenue that It brings to the state.
When the officials outlaw the
sale of all alcohol and cancel all the
licenses of those that sell It, then I
will buckle up with·the rest.
A. Eblen,
Pomeroy

I

,.,-,

~

KEEPS WILDCAT AWAY - Kentudly's Wlnalon Bennett (25) Is
kept away frool the goal by Alabama's Denick McKey (left, rear) and
Jim Fanner during action In Thuniday night's game at Tuscalossa,
Ala. UPI.

SVAC

Mis!rluli gave Btg Eight rival
Oklahoma a big dose of Its own
medicine.
The 10th·ranked Sooners, whose
run-and·gun style has made them
one of the highest scoling teams in
the nation, met their match in
Columbia, Mo., Thursday night .in a
101-881oss to Missouli.
The Tigers, whohaddroppedfour
straight games, learned from a
11XJ.ti6 loss tn Kansas Tuesday and
went right at Oklahoma. They
~ed an J8..1Iead and the Sonners
never recovered.
"It opened up our confidence,
which ~Was a big key," Tigers
forward Dan Bingenheimer said rt
the early outburst. "We couldn't do
nothing wrong in the beginning. I
feel like we learned our lesson at
Kansas."
Mis!rluli coach Norm Stewali
said the Kansas game had a lasting
Impression on him and played a big
factor In the strategy for
Oklahoma.
"We played pretty good in the last
10 minutes against Kansas and we
saw that we could come back,"
Stewart said. "That helped us. I'm
in favor of offense. We decided to
come out shooting."
Derlick Otievous and Jeff Strong
each scored 29 points to lead the
Tigers in a game that had 62 fouls
called.
/
Ot!evous had 27 points In the
second half to help the Tigers, who
had lost six of their last seven,
improve to 18-11 overall and 5-5 In
the Big Eigh\. Tile Sooners fell to

22-3 and 7-3.
Anthooy Bowie, who made Oklahoma's first field goal at the 5: rn
mark after the Sonners missed
their previous 7 shots, scored 29
points.
In other games Involving top- 20
teams, Mary land beat No. 18 North
Carolina State 67-66, No. 8Kentucky
roged No. 17 Alabama 73-71, No. 9
Michigan rouled Minnesota 92·56,
No. 12 Bradley topped Indiana State
54·52 and No. 19 LouisVIUe beat
Cincinnati 74-58.
At Ralf 1gh, N.C. , Len Bias scored
21 points, including the winning free
tbrows with 1:26 left, to ilft
Mary land. The Terrapins lm·
proved to 13-10 overall and 3-61n the
AtlantiC Coast Conference. The
Wolfpack, led by Chris Washburn 's
24 points, fell to 17·7 and 6-4.
At Tuscaloosa, Ala., Roger
Harden hit a 25-foot jump shot with
six seconds left to carry Kentucky,
21-3 overall and 12-1 in the
Southeastern Conference. Alabama, 17·5 and 10-3, got 22 points
trom Buck Johnson before be fouled
rut with 3:45 remaining.
At Ann Arhor, Mich., Roy
Tarpley scored 21 points, including

9 of Michigan's llrst 11, to carry the
Wolverines. Minnesota, playing
under Its third coach this season,
were guided by assistant Phil
Saunders. Jimmy Williams, the
interim coach after the resignation
cr Jim Dutcher, missed the game
because of a familY death.
At Terre Ha~te. Ind., Jim Les
scored 16 points to lead Bradley,
25-1 pverall and 12.0 In the Missouri·
Valley Conference. Bryan Keger·
rels missed a :11). footer with flve
seconds left and freshman Darrlon
Applewhite's ~footer at the buzzer
bounced off the rim, allowing
Bradley t&gt; escape.
At Cincinnati, Billy Thompson
soored 23 points and grabbed 9
rebounds to power Louisville, 17·7
overall and 6-2 in the Metro
Conference. Milt Wagner added 14
points to help the Cardinals, who
had lost three straight to the
Bearcats, 9-12 and ~5.
Elsewhere, It was: llllnois 75,
Northwestern 52; Michigan State
83, Iowa 73; Purdue !II, WISconsin
78; Arizona 85, UCLA 60; Arizona
State 75, Southern Cal 01; and Old
Dominion 61, Virginia Commonwealth 56.

TO A

BETTER DEAL

BorN Ohio ID&amp;fl SdlooiBwlllrtball
By Unlled Press lnlt'rmUonaJ
Ttall'!lday'~; R&amp;iub
Bl)·an 7'i Sw;mlon !'&gt;!!
Cad.IL 16. 13urkeyr r.; ;19
Day Pa !1f'rson 72. Oiiy While• S7
[tl y MradoWdak&gt; 70. Da.~· Ek&gt;lmonl hi
Sl a11100 151 , Jp f!('!'son L;nKJn 3-l
Sfl'Utl!n v illt• n. Bn:n kt' 1 W\' '" 'lO
Sti.'IJbrnvUIP Cf'nl 60. Toroflto 31

B11·an 75. Swanton l!l
Fl'd Horkt~~J: ti.'i. Ml'tsr.; r.astr&gt;rn !l3
TrimbiP Sl , Wrl ls ton \II

GOSPEL SING
Reflections Trlo, George Hoochar, The Christian Brethern

Cburch and all those woo took part at the Bend Area Goopel
SJng on February 8 Jn Mason slncerely regret that over 100
people had to turn away because of the overwhelming
crowd. We truly thank God for the Interest and appreciate
your every effort for coming.
The church did a great job handling the crowd of nearly :m.

SPECIAL

Scoring

Prep scores

BEND AREA

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS
HAS THE KEYS

CJNCINNATIIUPI) -The ReM
Thursday announced catcher Dave ·.
Van Gorder won his arbitration :
case and will receive $150,tXXl for the ·
upcoming season. The club was :
ol!erlng half of that.
With the signing of Van Gorder,
who last season hatted .238 with 2
home runs and 2l runs batted In, all
players on the Reds' 40-man roster
are under contract.
Also, Tom Browning has been
named the team's outstanding
pitcher for 1985 by the Cincinnati
chapter of the Baseball Writers
Association of America. Browning
was ~9 last season, the major
leagues' first rookie 20-game
winner since 1954.

We are trusting God for the next slng on Aprtl12 to be even
rrore successful. It will be held at the Wahama High School
Gymnasium In Mason.

1986 E-150 FORD CUSTOM VAN

Make plans now to attend as there will be room for everyone.

YOU ARE INVITED TO THE

GRAND OPENING

Mussavi family _____J_a_ck_A_nde_rs_on_&amp;__Jo_se_ph_s_v_ea_r
WASHINGTON - The Mussavl clan makes the mos t bloodthirsty Mafia family of fact or
fic tion look llke a Cub Scout
pack. The Mussavls , cloaking
their homicidal anti-AmericanIsm ln the black robes of Shiite
Moslem fundamentalism, have
been responslbl&lt;' for the murder
sol 264 Americans in the Middle
East.
As we've already reported, the
MussavlS have more in common
with the Corleones of " The God·
father" than with the dedicated
diSciples of the Prophet Mohammed. The Mussavis are seek·
lng power and money, and they
use the Ayatnllah Khomelnl's Is·
Iamie revolutlon as a convenient
cover for building a famUy empirP
In Lebanon's Bekaa Valley.
Who are these people who have
transformed shrill antl·Amerl·
can rhetoric Into bloody bomb·
lngs, airplane hljacklngs and
kldnapplngs over the past three
years• Here 's a rundown on the
most powerful Mussavis, gath·
ered from Intelligence sources

we trust:
- Mohammed Mussavl, the family patriarch. A clergyman who
went to school many years ago with
Khomelnlln the Iranian holy city of
Qom. He joined Khomeinl for a
while in his Pans exne, which
ended when the shah was overthrown early In 1979 and Khomeinl
returned to Tehran to seW! power
in the name of the lsamlc revolution .
- Mohammed Mohsen Mussavl, the patriarch 's first son tJJ
rise to prominence, came to public attention as Iran's charge
d 'affaires In Lebanon , as appointment undoubtedly greased
by the fact that the Iranian prime
minister IS another family member, Mlr Hussein Mussavl.
- Hussein Mussavl , another son
of Mohammed Mussavl. A one·
time school teacher, he broke with
the mainstream Shiite movement
In Lebanon, Amal, about the time
that his brother was lddnapped.
Hussein reportedly was unhappy
with Amal's unwillingness to be-

tobacco companies are taxpayers. Through cigarette taxes
ftghting back against the steady they support schools, sewers and
drumbea t of anti -cigarette the hospitals they check Into when
propaganda .
they get sick from smoking.
According to The wan Street
Smoking contributes to the naJournal , Philip Morris has tion's economy. Cigarette addicts
launched a vigorous campaign to will spend their last ooilar for a
prevent discrimination against pack of smokes rather than throw It
smokers . The tobacco company away on bread or milk.
says anti-smoking zeai:Jts are
One of the most telling health
harassing smokers and violating arguments in favor of smoking Is
their civil lights.
that more women are doing It now
A Philip Moms spokesman also than ever before. They wouldn't 11 It
maintains that when It comes to weren't safe, becausp women
reporting the smoking story, the smokers are not dumb.
media are grossly unfair to the
The more anxi:Jus people al'l!
tobacco interests and support the about lighting up, the more they are
"flinge element In the country bullied by nonsmokers who will not
today bent on modifying Ameri- tolerate smokers In the same room .
cans' behavior to conform to their These nonsmoking zealots justlly
own interpretation of Utopia."
their rudeness by claiming they
I wiSh the spokesman had sa id become dizzy from the fumes. This
"some of the media" because 1 IS a joke. It Is a known medical fact
believe that anybody in this country that tobacco smoke cannot do any
who wants to smoke should be more physical harm to a non ·
allowed to do so. I refuse to be smoker than a glass d warm water
lumped with zea!ots'or members of from the East River.
the fringe element. While I am a
The biggest fear of the tobacco
lxlrn·again ex-cigar smoker, I companies is that~ the nonsmoker
would never take sides between IS permitted · to persecute the
those courageous people who have smoker today, he will persecute
given up smoking and the weak. diesel trucks tomorrow and Con!r!l·
miserable wretches who a!'l' stlll !dated EdiSon smokestacks next
addicted to this ftltby habit.
wrek. So the pv-smoker Is fighting
The newspaperman's job Is to be not just for his own lights, but the
fair and lmpalilal on any political rights of everything that smokes In
Issue, whether It IS tobacco or America.
Colonel Kadafl.
Now let's be fair to the other side.
So I will first deal with the The nonsmokers are made up of
arguments In favor ct smoking. wimps who sit around au day
Moot people who smoke are waiting for a smoker to pull out a
walking time bombs waiting to go cigarette. They are intolerant,
oft, and the cigarette Is the only
sel!lsh people. When asked why
thing to keep them from self- they obja:t to someone enjoying a
destructing. The country does not fl!w pulls from the lllter tip, au the
have enough menta! Institutions tn
nonsmoker can come up with Is a
take care d all the neurotic people weak, " I haves llllthma," which Is ·
who would have to be committed 11 no reason at au.
they weren't permitted to smoke.
Besides the wimps, a large
Smokers are among rur biggest number &lt;1 nonsmokers are reThe

•

By .JOE DJ..UZZI
UPI Spotts Writer

apply a numerical reductiOn factor
to an affected programs. Thirty
l:llllon dollars would have to come
out. Half would come from defense
appropriations, half from non·
defense. OMB and CBO then would
transmit their calculatlons to the
General Accounting Ofllce (GAO),
which would review the figures and
transmit them to the president. The
president then would have no
choice. He would have to order the
$.ll billion in cuts whether he liked
them or not.
The act constituted· a congres·
slonal confesskln d Irresponslblllty.
It said to the whole world, "We are
incapable d making hard political

come more militant.
As a first gesture of indepen·
dence, Hussein assisted ln the
kidnapping of David Dodge, act·
lng president of the American
University of Beirut. Dodge was
lucky: He was released after
having been taken secretly to
Iran .
By late 1982, Hussein had gathered a bunch of fanatical follow·
ers ready to do his bidding. His
headquarters was the ancient
city of Baalbek In the Bekaa Val ·
ley, near the Syrian border. He
named his splinter Islam! Amal.
Our lntell!gence sources ate
convinced that Islamic Amal
was responsible for the 1983 sui ·
clde bombings of the U.S. Em·
bassy ln Beirut and the Marine
barracks at the city's airport. A
total of 258 Americans died In the
two blasts. One of Hussein's cou·
sins, Abu Haydar Mussavl, reportedly obtained the pickup
truck used In the Marine bar·
racks bombing.
Although he disclaimed res ·

Where there's Smoke

It might srem good that our
state o!flclals are so concerned
abOut us dtlens that thPy would
~ a law I'EQUiring f.'Veryone to
usa seat belts lor our own protec·
ttofl'lbey know very well the use of
alcqhollc beveraies has caused
more deaths, and that to the Innocent, than the lack of seat belts

\

Friday, Febru.-y 14, 1986

long, cool, !il-page k&gt;ok at this
misbegotten act .and found Its key
provision unconstitutional.
By this time, almost every person
interested In ru~ natlonal ~vern·
ment knows !ll!llethlng about the
Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act. For
the record: The act, passed In
December, provided a crude mechanism for compelling annual reduc·
tlons In the federal deficit. For
fiscal 1987 'the dellclt could not
exCPed $144 bllllon.lf It appeared to
the O!flce of Management and
Budget (OMBi and the eongres.
slonal Budget O!flce (COO) thattbe
dellclt might be, let us say, $174
billion, the two agencies would

Van Gorder wins
arbitration case

Missouri defeats Oldahoma

End of a disaster _______Ja_m_es_J.-,-K_ilpa_tr_ic~_

The Daily Sentinel

'

Ohio

OK .

Backstreet Video

ponslblllty for the Marine bomb·
lng, Hussein dld say: "I salute
this good act." He was peripher-

(•XT TO 1'111 fAIIIC SHOP!

ally Involved In the bombings
that rocked American, French
and Kuwaiti facilities in Kuwait
in December 1983.
-Sheik Abbas Mussavl. This
third Mussavl brother emerged
In early 1984 as one of three lead ·
ers of Hezbollah (Party of God)
which wa being transformed Into
a terrorist group. By no colncl·
dence Hezbollah came to terrorist prominence about 'the time
that 17 suspects In the Kuwaiti
bombings were arrested an d
convicted. Two of the 17 were
Mussavl famtly members.
The sheik's Hezbollah terrorist
group was Involved In the 1984
bombing of the U.S. Embassy annex In Beirut and the h!jacklngs
of a Kuwaiti airliner In late 1984
and a 1WA plane In June 1985.
Release of the 17 terrorists held
by Kuwait - and particularly
the two Mussavl clansmen was a key demand of the hljaders In both Incidents.

1ECNIIA 19"

COLOR
TELEVISION

ECNIICA

'vel'S

weed and now want everyone else
to do the same. These people are
unbearable because they not only
ask smokers tn put rut their
cigarettes but spend a half-hour
telling them why they are no good.
So there you have It, the two
q&gt;posing sides, each with their own
truth: one composed of smoke

:l'vO.:.'::~:·:m

•Remote Control

$

Lobor Wornntv

95

299

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�Page 4 The Deily Sa1ti1el

Eaglettes post
league victory

KC, North Gallia
advance in girls'
sectional toomey
Kyger Creek and North Gallia
posted first round wins in the 1986
girls Class A Sectional basketball
tournament Thursday night in the
Gallipolis gym.
In the opening game, Kyger
Creek and Eastern battled on even
terms for nearly three periods
before the Lady Bollea ts l1l lled
away to a 5342 victory.
The score was tied 8-8 and 21-21
after two periods. KCHS led 36-29
going into the final stanza . The
Gallians outscored tlle secondseeded Meigs Countjans 17-13 in the
final eight minutes.
Renee Ward paced Kyger Creek
witll 16 points. Jill Drummond
added 14. Tina Vogel added sL~Margaret Homer led the Eagle
ladles with 13 points. Amy Young
allded nine and Lesa Rucker eight.
: Kyger Crrek will take part In a
~b. 19 semifinal game, with the
winner of that contest advancing to
t4e Class A District at Waverly.
In Thursday's nightcap, North
Gallia humbled Soutllem, 50-29.
After an 8-8 fi rst period tie, the
Lady Pirates grabbed a 22-14
halftime advantage. NGHS led
:Ji-22 going into the .tina! period. The
ry.rates outscored the Lady Toma·

does 16-7 in the final quarter.
Michele George paced the
winners with 25 points. Jay!ll'
Campbell added nine. Lort Adams
netted eight for the Tornadoes.
Alana Butler and Crystal Hlll added
six apiece.
North Gallia will take part In a
Feb. 19 semifinal game, with the
winner advancing to the Oass A
District at Waverly.
Monday's makeup tournament
games pit Federal-Hocking against
Southwestern at 7, and Hannan
Trace against Symmes Valley at 9
a.m.

Thursday's box scores.
i fliW GiUTJP )
Kl'GKK C11.D:K j$31 - 1-k&gt;nson. 11)2, Ward.
~ l l6; \'ort&gt;l. :nn; Kltrtlt'fl ,._210. Drurrmurrl.
~&gt;-! 12; flroA•n, 1.0.2. Cmoll, G-J-3. Lgglelon, 0-0-1);
GrllilMl MO TOT..U.S tl·ll-$3.
E.o\S'I'OtN !U l - Sai!J!&gt;', :n r. Rltrftk&gt;, UH:
Horner, ~ 1:1: Youlli:..H ·9: Ruckt"t J.ZS; WtR'8].
1 1 .1. M a11 kin ~ c~·dl.•t'\ . ().4).(1 '['(y('W 1~u..u.
&amp;we by q81"ten:
KH!t'r ('n ,i;.
~ 13 ~~ li -\.1

Easr,•rn .

fll.l~

l 3 - t:!

!SitcoNI G•nll'l
N0R11t G..U.LlA i ~) - C'.ro~ 1:! I~. Bla{'k
bum, HJ.2: Lf&gt;mutl't', J.0.6 &lt;.'ampbf'll. 2·:'1-9. Rutan.
2·04. Rar utr. (}.3(): l:brDPn. 2-1).4, AI'kill'. [}{).&amp;,

Marcum 0-M: Pkkms,

EAST MEIGS - Paced by out·
standing efforts by Amy Young,
Bev Wigal and Margaret Horner,
the Eastern Eaglettes' girls' bas·
ketball team ended regular season
play with a 59-31 SVAC triumph
over Symmes Valley.
Eastern ended up second ln the
SVAC behind champion Oak Hill
with a 12-8 overall record and 11-3
league record. Eastern continued
play last night In the sectional
tournament at Gallipolis. Oak Hill
as a result of having a high perren·
tage of girls wUI go to the class
"AA" Sectional.
Eastern zoomed quickly to an
18-8 first period lead behind solid
performances by Young, Wigal
and Horner. A slower paced second frame netted a 2'1 ·13 halftime
score.
Playing on even terms In the
third round , both teams scored
twelve points each for a 39-25 score
before EHS erupted for a devastat·
lng final round, the final score 59·
33.
Senior Amy Young again led
the scoring parade with 22 points,
followed by a season high 16 points
from junior Bev Wigal. Horner
had 10, Savoy 6 and Rucker 5.

(H)-0_ TOT.\IS 'll-6~

SOtn11FllN (!II - Butler ~: Rl'IIH. 21 -$:
Hill. l+li; SllliUt 2-0-&lt;6. Thriss. 0-0; (); SirTIJl'IOI\. !HH):
AdlllTI~ . ~US.: Arruld. o.M: F'r) ~ r.ruSA" MoO:
Bostick, B-(1.0. 'IUI'ALSJ.t-J-11.
Sc:cn by quutrn.;
t.:llMh Gall Ia .. ..
M U \2 16 - ~
East('l'n ........ ..
. 8 6 II 7 -~

By Scoll Wolfe
STEWART- Outscoring visitIng Eastern 18-4 In the t hlrd
frame, host Federal Hocking
broke open a close game while
rolling to a 65·53 non-league
triumph over the Eagles here
Thursday evening in a make-up
boys' basketball contest.
Federal's Keith Barnhart and
Eastern's Eddie Collins shared top
scoring honors with 22 points each,
utilizing a balanced inside-rut at·
tack and swisher perimeter jump-

Jay Ethridge and Teri'y Tack·
ach unveiled dual14 point efforts
to go with Barnhart's 22.
Federal Hocking of the TVC
jumped out to a quick 13-6 lead In
the first period, but the youthful
Eagles fought back to take a 22-21
lead at the half after Eastern once
trailed y 10 points. Collins got hot
from the field, then coMected on
both ends of a bonus to give EHS
Its Initial lead .
Federal Hocking deflated Eas·
tern 's hopes early in the third
round , when the hosts rallied for 7
unanswered points in tlJe first two
minutes, then went on to outscore
EHS 18·4.
HORNER GRAilS LOOSE BALL - Eastem'sMargaret Homer (!12)
picks up loose ball In Tbuftld!r,y's Class Alounuunatlgame at Gallipolis
agaiDst Kyger Creek. Homer had 18 points for Eastern, now 13-9. 'lbe
second seeded Eagle ladles were OU!iled, 5342. KCHS defendel'!l are
Renee Ward (32) and Missy Kitchen (90).

The Victory Circle
centers around one young m an -

that being the outstanding multi ·
sport athlete Mike Chancey. who
Wednesday made the entire country proud when he signed a letter
of Intent to play footba ll for the
Ohio State Buckeyes.
Chancey, woo excelled as a
player at Oass "AA" Meigs,
caught the atten tion of several major unlverslttes. but chose Ohio
State to ful fill a lifelong dream.
Chancey was one of 26 Buckeyes
expected to sign on In tllls year's
recruiting class.
Owni ng virtually all of Meigs
High's passing records. Chancey
threw for ll04 career yards, com pleting !68 of 304 passes for 55 per cent a nd 29 touchdowns . A starter
for three seaso ns. the Meigs quarterback had his best season In
1985, leading Meigs to a 9·1 record
and 24 ·5·1 record in three years.
Signing at a university the ca lIber of Ohio Sta te Is quite an accomplishment . May these accom·
pllshments be the Inspiration to
many young athletes in the area.
rein forcing the Idea that it ra n he
done with dedication and much
hard work .
Mi ke Is the son of Charles and
Mary Chancey of Syracuse. Con gra tu lations, Mike'
In my last column I mentio ned
the success of our area boys
teams , not meaning to over look

Eastern was as frlgld as the
weather ou tslde, hitting just two
field goals the entire eight min·

I

the Impressive record that Meigs'
gals have complled over the past
few seasons. Coach Ron Logan' s
Meigs girls are currently enjoying
a fi ne season In tlJe TVC, having
been ranked all season long In both
state polls.
Currently, Meigs Is 14th in the AP
poll . at one point reaching 13th In
the UP! ratings.
Coac h Ron Logan attributes hi s
team's success to Its tremendous
team effort and unse lfish lndl ·
vidual play.
During the last three seasons
the Marauderettes have pos ted
16-6. 20·2. and 15-2 records tnclud·
ing TVC cha mpionships along the
way. One gir l. Jodi Harrison. a se·
nlor play maker at Meigs has been
a pa rt of It a ll. as the MHS gi rls
have posted a mos t lmpresslve5110 record over the past three
years .

Faced wi th a couple tough road
games this week, the Marauder·
ettes are lookin g ahead to nex t
week's sec tional tournament play.
Congratulations . Ma rauderettes.
on your fine season and good luck
In the tournament!
Out Eastern way, Coach Pam
Dou thitt's gals have produced
another fi ne record . Eastern has always had a strong girls' program,
starting with Coach Sue Thomspon
Arnold. then continuing with Coach
Douthitt last season. Eastern Is 13-8
overall an d 11-3 In tlle SVAC. a second place fin ish behlng Class
"AA' ' ch ampion Oak Hill.

come Hear.

CHESTER
RACINE
COOLVILLE
PORTLAND

10:00
12:30

&gt;
&gt;

100

&gt;

WATERFORD
PORTLAND

.

5rl'f 6:00

3:00'
130

5:30'

11:15
2:15

SYRACUSE
ALBANY
BEVERLY
TUPPERS PLAINS
COOlVIllE
RAVENSWOOD

1:45
4:15

6TH

&gt;

1,' 1' \ r • 1,•:

7:15

4:45)

r

6:45)

GRADE SCHOOL TOURNAMENT- 'lbe Eastern
Alhletic booslen are sponsoring a !lfth 111d sixth
grade basketbaD toul'IUIIIIelll Saturday ud SwJda.v,,
Young controlled the boards with
14 rebounds and Horner had 10.
Donna Wilson led Symmes Val·
ley with 18 points, Teresa Owens

Feb. 15 ud 18 at Eastern IDgh Sehool. Slartmg lime
on Saturday l&lt;IIO a.m. Sunday's action begllls at U: 15
a.m. Sixteen teams are entered bt lhe toumamenl. · ·

had 8, Ruby Bryant, Becky Fuller,
Deon Mays mntrlbuted with two
each, while Sheila White added
one.

utes. Meanwhlle, Federal Hocking
could not ,mlss. When the EHS de·
tense collapsed on post man
Tackach Inside, Barnhart would
drill the al-footer.
Despite the dismal third round,
Eastern played well and made a
legitimate comeback to within
ten points before finally running
out of steam on a 65-53 defeat.
Coach Dennis Eichinger said,
"We played well and had good ef·
forts from several players. We
just go beat by a better team to·
night ."
Eastern is still without tlle ser·
vices of Greg Leachman, Its leadIng scorer.
EHS hit 24 of 51 and 5 of 6 at the
line, while Coach Tim Simpson's
crew hit a sizzling 28 of 53 and 10 of
16 at the line. The Eagles grabbed
31 rebounds, led by Collins with ll
and Durst with 9. Ethridge had 8 of
FH's 26.
EHS had ll turnovers , 8 assists
and 15 personal fouls. FH had 10
turnovers , ten assists, and 12 per·
sonals.
Federal Hocking won there·
sE!'ve contest 55-25.
Eastern Is 10-9 overall and 8-1i In·
side the SVAC, while Federal
Hockbl'g Is J0..9 overall.
Eastern hosts Oak Hill In an
SVAC tilt tonight and Federal
Hockin!! goes to Meigs. ,

TO A

have been Southeru's main work·
oorses, altoough the remaining
Whirlwinds have spawned their
own storms In JX'O(lucing a success·
lui season.
Adams doubles as one of the
area's top scorers and the SHS
playmaker, as his basketballlntelll·
gence operates a smooth offensive
game. Bostick, another top area
scorer, also serves as a·· top
rebounder avE!'aging nearly ten
caroms per game.

BETTER DEAL

Keith

II-G.

JACKSON PME • RT 3!1 WEST

Phano 446· 4524

A TRUCK YOU
CAN LIVE WITH
•2 WHEEL DRIVE
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992-2174
!-=--==-~~.:..==:_ _::_j~~~~~~~~~~~~

_

Audlologllt, C~C·A

ATHENS

603 W. Union
592·2863

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

POMEROY - The thi rd and fin al
genealogical worksoop sponsored
by the Meigs Count y Historical
Society wll be held Saturday at
12:30 p.m. at the Museum. The
class will be taught by Ketth
Ashley, who will be giving instruc·
lion on preparing applications for

SYRACUSE - Volunteer Fire
Department monthly dana' at
Syracuse Grade School, Saturday, 8
to 11 p.m.; adm ission $2 a person
wtth proceeds going to the rescue
air bags fund .
RAVENSWOOD - Va lentine
banquet of First Southern Baptist
Church of Metgs County Sa turday
evening at Ma Perry ; s Bouty'
Table, Ravenswood; anyone plan·
ning to artend but has not signed up
notify Ketth Ashley Immed iately.
SUNDAY
PAGEV ILLE -G un sooat Sun·
day at I p.m. in Pagev ille sponsored
by Sctpto Volunteer Fire Department. Unlimited gu ns . 12-16-:!l.
Food will be served .

CORRECTION
WEDNESDAY AD SHOULD READ

Sl 72

Ohio Valley

F00d5

Save

sao 219!~99.95

Save
200

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Mini AM/FM Cassette

Save
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QAV funds

announced
Disabled American Veterans of

vow 00111 wtltliiiMIIy mowtn• at lOP lilted
· tor "~· ..lllfll qualltr: nutrttlout cllunl!a
Gllltalnlng a..-, fl~ P104t1n OOflttnt.to

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1111P iM ,our~ herd 11tartng
..... ...,. ..... llld .... 111111111

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@naUon ~pany
~-

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Jane Ann Kan. M.A.

Harrisonville
happenings

500 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY

MILLING DIVIIIOitl

Sua.-Thun., 7:00
Fri. "Sat., 7:00, 9:00
Sat. A Sun. Mat., Z:OO
Sat. MldaJallt, IZ:eo

SATURDAY
HARRISONVU.LE - Annual
inspection, Harrtsonvllle Lodge411 ,
F&amp;AM, Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at
temple with work In the Master

POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Dance Club will
sponsor an cpen dance Satu rday at
the Royal Oak Park recreation
building, 8 to 11 p.m. Ca ller will be
Bill Darby of Beaver, W.Va. All
western square dancers Invited to
attend.
W~tern ~uare

assistance.

n

OFFEI ENDS 2/21/16

Setting the to!Tid tempo with
brtlllant defense are Sean and
Kelley Grueser. Both exhlblt out·
standing defensive traits as well as
fine floor players.
Youngsters Matt Harris, David
Amburgey, and Ken Turley have
been Tornado mainstays through·
out the season, each taking his turn
in a starting role.
Rich Gilbride, a part tlme starter
and key asset to the SHS squad, ls
called upon to strengthen the
rebounding mrp; and stiffen a
tough SHS defense. Tonight's game
starts at 6:30.

Storts Friday, February l•
r--- - -- ---·
I
..~,
11.. ' ' n•',.
tht ,,r~' tt.~l
i ~~ ~~, ,~

POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, meeting,
Friday, 1:30 p.m. at Heath United
Methodist Church with Mrs. Roger
Luckeydoo, Mrs. WllsonCarpenter,
Mrs. Nan Moore and Mrs. Roscoe
Wise as hostesses.

RACINE - Public Valentine
Dance at Racine American Legion
Post 002Home Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1
a.m . wilh music by the Circle D
Wranglrrs; women attending are to
take a covered dish. Admission is,
a single and SJO a couple.

DAR, SAR, FFO, and other
hereditary organizations . He will be
giving the necessary proofs and
where to find them and offering

Lowest Price Ever on Our
Best Compact Disc Player

TON

Adm lnion Price Polley
6orqpln Matln. .s
Sot . I Sun .. All S.Ot 1 $2,
Adm. Every Tuooday . $2.25

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WILKESVILLE - A smorgasbord will be held at the Wilkesville
Pythlan hall Friday with serving
from 5 to 8 p.m. The public is
invited. Charge for the dinner will
he $4 for adults and $1. ~ for
children.

Masons Degree.

THE
GRAVElY
SYSTEM

~

Ctnem£\'1)

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Education will meet in
rescheduled session at 10 a.m.
Fr!dday at Its offices onE. Main S!.,
Pomeroy .

a

Barnhart 10.2-22; Stacey Tall" 2-2·6: Phil
GIUan 3·2-ll: Jay Ethridge 6-2-II : Terry
Tackach 6-2-14 ; Scott Way 1·(). 2. Tote ?B·

e1f2

Your Social Security oU!ce cannot
suggest one policy over another but
we do have a pamphlet that can
help you make a better Informed
decision on whether a policy Is
necessary and what to look for in
ol)e.
Being ·an informed consumer Is
as Important for medical care
dollars as any other 11Jrchase, and
extremely Important for those
called upon to make that purchase
decision for others.
If you get Social Security benefits
or are someone who helps another
person with his or her affairs and
you have questions about any
particular coverage or benefit, be
sure to contact your Social Security
office. You can get the necessary
and accurate information about
your specific concern. We're the
right place to go. Give us a call at
992-6622 Monday through Friday
from 8:45-4: JJ.

CHOCOLATE (HIPrt2

CotdweU 2-lH: Ed Collins 10-2-22: Tone

~ 31

have Medicare coverage, you most
likely know someone who does.
That person might be a neighbor, a
relative, or a parmt.. .. and could
come to you for advice or
assistance.
Agood many of us from the BabY
Boomer generation now lind our·
selves helping our parents with
their retirement matters .and, for
&amp;~me, this Is the first active
exposure to Social Security and
awareness of the need for good
planning to supplement loose Social
Securtty benefits. It's also a time to
evaluate medical and hospital
Insurances to see oow they relate to
Medicare.
People of retirement age face a
barrage of advertising for Medl·
care supplements, often called
"Medlgap" policies. Some ads
paint some pretty frightening pictures of non-covered costs and au,
of course, claim to be the best value.

Community calendar I area happenings

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

Chapman 1-2-4; Kevin Barber 3-0-6: Bryan
Durst H-9 TGialo lt-f.SS.

FEDERAL HOCKING (il) -

By WU RORVAm
Fie.. Rep-lallve
When you see the words "Medl·
care" or "Social Securtty" headlin·
lng an article, how do you react?
People d retirement age or older
generally pay rmre attention than
those you•r folks In the work·
force. That srems logical, but
s!Jou)d ~ Security Issues only
be the co~m d older Americans?
Definitely not. The Social Secur·
Ity taxes paid on earnings lund
current benetlclaries' checks whlle
at the same time also provide
Income replacement protection for
retirement, dlllablllty, and death for
yoonger lnmme earners. So all age
groups have a stake In knowing
something about Social Security
because all groups are directly
affected by the p-ogram.
Another significant reason for Mt
Ignoring these Informative mes·
sages Is that although you may not
receive Social Security checks or

Not just for the elderly

The Daily Sentinei-Page-6

Mrs. Wllson Carpenter reviewed,
Mrs. Carpenter told of her unwillmg to wai t for reinforce''Life in Custer's Cavalry", a great-uncle's growing disenchant· mcnts dividcd his cavalry intothr!'E'
GRAVELY TRACTOR
oollectlon of letters and diaries of rnent with General Custer as he groups and history tells the rest of
SALES &amp; SERVICE
l\lbert Barnltz and his wife edited became unpleasant and cruel to his the story .
204 Condor St.
AMBROSIA SEMI· SWEET
fer~R~bllcatlonbyRobertM. Utley. troops and obnoxious with his
Seriously wounded Barnitz was
Pomery. OH,
0l.
al last week's meeting d the cilicers, creating havoc and des· taken in a mule drawn ambulance
Phone 992-2976
.,. 00 0
~lddleport Literary Club held at tructlon to the homes and lives of to a hospit al a hundred miles away.
FAU I. WIN1EI HOUIS
COMPARE TO HERSHEY'S SEMI-SWEET CHOCOLATE CHI~S
the Middleport Presbyterian the Indians . Barnltz' final battle His army career ended in 1868. He
Closed Mondar
AT 12.09 FOR 12 OZ.
was at Washita, Okla. where Custer wrote of his experiences for
lues.-Frl. 9 to 5,. Sat. 9 to 1
&lt;lturch.
: Albert Barn!tz was the great ordered 51 of the Indian lodges In a Clevland newspapers. Barnitz died
uncle of Mrs. Carpenter and she single encampment destroyed .
in 1912 .
&lt;lsplayed a picture of him, along
He was unawa re that the valley
Mrs. Dwight Wallacr pres ided at
524 EAST MAIN
CJCJ2 -6CJ 10
with ooes d Is grave and the and surrounding hills were full of the meeting Greetings were read
POMEROY
We Accept
cemetery where he Is buried.
Indian warriors under the com· from Mrs. George HackelI woo Is
Food Stamps
Mrs. Carpenter Mted that her ...~m~an~d~o~f~Ch~le:f~B~l~~k~K~e~t~tl~e.~C~u~st~
er~~v~ac~a~ti~oru~·~ng~in~F~lo~n~·d~a~.--------L:::::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::~~~~~~~::::::::::~::~
ancestor was born in 18l5 in
Pennyslvanla, the son r1 a phslclan,
~ho later rmved his famlly to Ohio.
Albert Barnltz attenred a Cleve~
CHARGEIT
land law school, there met his
~ (MOST STORES)
flllure wife, Jennie Platt, and then
voluntEered as a sergeant when the
Clvll War started. He later served
under General Sheridan and GenePal Grant 'and was wounded
several times. ·After the Clvll War, he joined the
regular army and went to Fori
RUey, Kansas where he served
uniler General Custer In the
seventll Cavalry Division at Fort
ruiey which was bull In 1866 at a
co6t of a million dollars and housed
10,00) men.
In her review, Mrs. Carpenter
tolil of the luxury andsporting life of
the dficers and their wives, and of
tm harried life led by the non·
cofnmissloned officers. After four
mqnths she returned -to Cleveland
CD-1200 by Real tstic
as -the treaty with the Indians had
been vk&gt;Iated and mllltai'Y. manuver's had begUn.
In his letters, Albert Barnltz tells
of the Indian lo~es made of bu!falo
1~ ... I
hides tanned to a smooth texture
n
and W foot poles polished to a shiny
finish . He further tells d Chief
Sitting Bull woo attended a peace
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Mr. and Mrs. Don Gibson and
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Gay Lynn and Mrs. Margaret
O!;&gt;uglas visited recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Welker and Mrs. Clara
Hirll, Waldo.
:Mrs. VIrginia Gibson spent the
W('j!kend with Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Clarinette®-67 by Realistic
By Realislic
G(bsort and family, Columbus.
·Mrs. Frances Alkire visited Ray
AI\lire and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Gibson, Columbus, recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Donahue
spent the weekend here visiting Mr.
arui Mrs. John Lambert and Mr.
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and Mrs. Raymond Donahue.
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SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS

Scort bJ 91arters:
Eul&lt;nr
I II 4 !'l- 53
Federal HD&lt;I&lt;IDI
IS 8 18 16-IIS
EASTERN t 53) - JeH Caldwell l-O-ll: Jim

SocSec:

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Middleport Literary Club meets

HAS THE KEYS

SVAC champs face
SV Vikings tonight

RACINE - Weather-penntttlng
tonight the reigning SVAC cham·
pion Southern Tornadoes of Coach
Howie Caldwell , 1&amp;-3 overall and
13.0 Inside the SVAC, wlll meet
league foe Symmes Valley In the
final league encounter for both
squads. The oost Tornadoes will
make their !Ina! oome appearance
In Charles W. Hayman gymnasium
this season, losing only one bout
(last week to Gallla Academy) on
their own hardwood.
The llrst year for Coach Howie
Caldwell has been a good one as the
Tornadoes upoold a creditable 7th
place AP ranking and tenth place
UPI ranking. Considered as one d
Ohio's ten best teams, the Torna·
does hope to use tonight's tllt as a
final tune-up for Tuesday's sectional tournament at Meigs.
Altoough Southern has stumbled
in Its last couple d bouts, the SHS
quintet wlll be much more relaxed
now that several consecutive "big"
games are now history and the
SVAC championship has been
secured .
Todd Adams and Jay Bostick

Your

·~

SYRACUSE
TUPPERS PLAINS
RAVENSWOOD
BEVERLY

friday. Feblu81Y 14, 1986

EASTERN TOURNEY

Lancers dump Eagles, 65-53

ers.

By Scott Wolle
Probably the biggest sports
story In Meigs Cou ntv these days

Friday, February 14, 198B

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Sun.·Thun., 7:10
Fri. &amp; Sal., 7:10, 9:30
Sat. &amp; Sua. Mat., Z:10
Sat. Mi4111Jpl, 12:10

SUGAR RUN .
... X

I

FLOUR
MILLS...........
Pf:l,
....

'"~2111

Ott,

Meigs County in 19Efi received more
than $2Y.i million in total benefits,
according to Kenneth Cundiff,
adjutant treasurer of the Meigs
Chapter 53, Disabled American
Veterans, Pomeroy.
dundtff stressed the Importance
of ·the benefits to the overall
economy of the county and the role
of the Disabled American Veterans
as an organization dedicated to
obtaining and protecting the rights
and benefits of veterans of all wars.
The DAV was founded by Judge
RobertS. Marx of Cincinnati in 19l!J
and the national headquarters
remain In that city .
Cundiff talked aboutthe Veterans
Administration and Its seiVIce to
veterans noting that In 1985. the VA
spent $226.5 million for medical
research. rehabllltaton research
and development, and other health
services research and
develo(ment.
The VA, he says, operates and
maintains 109 national cemeteries,
provides clinical training for nearly .
101,00) students In all health care
disciplines during the year, and
treated more than 1.4 mllllon
patients In 172 VA medical ce!tters
and niiiiii!I'QISIIOII·VA tacWtles.
I'

C)

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�Page-6-The Daily &amp;.ltinel

Friday, February

Pc!meroy-Middlep(,n, Ohio

14,

1~86
t'

'

Friday, February 14, 1986

Another .teacher gets chance
to travel on space shuttle

This Message and Church Directory Spons~red By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

EWS &amp;SONS SOHIO
~
·
-;-

Automotive
Senice

Rutlind, Ohto 4S77S

J, Wm . " Bill" Brown , Owne r
Phone U14) 747 H77

,,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
of Columbu!!o , 0 .

804 W. Mam
ft'J ·llll Pomeroy

RACINE PLANING MILL
Work ·
Cabinet Making

992-3978

l•.lf.. ll&gt;'e :,~

~r;:::.:::d

kl$111
Rt&gt;v. W. H. l'l&gt;nin.
. SuOOay School Supt.

ast:Cf';

~urc h
; WOC'Ship &amp;&gt;tviE" lO:lJ
. .m. crotr n.&gt;ht'arsal, Tuesday. 7• ,'1) p.m
nder dtrectlon or Lois Burt.

POMEROY O!URCH OF TilE NA2A

;ENE. Canl'r Unloo and MuJbPIT)'. Rt&gt;v
'OOmas Glen Mc('lung, j:BS1or. Ncnnan Pn&gt;s·
";/. S. S. ~pt ., Surday Schoc!l, 9:]) am ;
lOI'1\ing wa"Shlp lO: ,J) a.m.: evenlnfi! sm 1ct&gt;6
.m.; mJd-\1.-'Eek: service. Wedrlc5day. 7 p.m.

mACE EPISCOPAL CHURl"H . l!6 E
Jain St., Poneuy. Sunday savkes: Hoh
prrrnurOOn on th:&gt; first SuOOa}· of each nvnth.
nd. combinfd Vt'lth morning ~ayer on t~
- Uidd SUndAy. Morning IJI"ayer andserrmn or1
U othl?r SUndays ct t t'l&gt; m:~nth. Churrh School
rKI Nunery care Pf0\1dfd Cotfetl hour In t~

~ )rlshHalllmm'dlatfly foUoNingtt.&gt;servkv.

. POMEROY CHURCH OF CHR81". 112 W

• Jain St .. NE'U Proudfoot , plS!&lt;J". Blbl.f" School
·ll am.; M&lt;rfll.ng W&lt;rShip. J): J) a.m.: Youth
• _ ~.6:00p. m .: Evening worship , 7:00 p
L Wednesday ~ht prayer rl1('1('{1ng and Bible

•\udy.~00 p.m.

t THE SALVATION ARMY . 1J5 &amp; tternut

• 1\i:o .• Pomeroy. Mrs. D:ra Wining In chargp
· imday Mlincss mN"fing, 10 a.m.; SUnda\
• thooi. lfr.Jl a.m. !'l!nday School. YPSM
~ 'Jolse Adams. lt&gt;adl&gt;r. i: ll p.m. Salva non
JSeting. varlous SpE'akE'f"S a nd music SJX'l'ial&lt;;.
.• 'hursday, 11: D a.m. to 2 p.m. Ladlf&gt;s HOlT'('
e~. mrmlx&gt;rs In charJa'. all \.\-'O~n
· N11Ed: 6: ~ p.m. Thursday, C~ Cadrt
l.a&amp;Ss tYoung Poople-Bitwl. 7· .:J) p.m. Blblr
tudy and Prayt'l" nll'eting, ~ to t tF public

POMEROY WES'I'SIDE CHURCH OF

· HRISI', :m.li Chlktrt&gt;n's HomP Road 1fountv
nad 7ti) . !BZ.5Z'fi. Vocal musk'. Sunda~· woi.
tt1? lO a.m. : Bible &amp;ucy 11 a.m.: wcntilp. 6 p.
~~~-y . 8blP Study, 7 p.m.

BIBlE CHRLITIA.~
tn..rRrn. Alvtrl CUrtis. pastoc; Linda Swan,
~pt . Sunday SC'In&gt;l 9: ll a.m.; ~C"hing ser ·
· ~ . first and third &amp;lnday fol.lcM•ing ~nday
• cttool. Youth meetln~ . 7: :ll p.m. E"\'ery Sun·
~ ay.
• GRAHAM CNlTED MITHODI ST .
· &gt;reach in~ 9:30a .m . 1\rst and S('('Ond . Sun
"lays of t&gt;ach month ; thrd and fourth Sun .
· jay eachmonth worship st&gt;n·lct&gt;S at j 30 p.
n.; Wldnl'Sday evenlngs at 7:.10 p.m .
"rayer and Biblr Srudy.
SEVENTH·DA Y ADVENTIST. Mulb·
•rry Ht&gt;ig hts Road, Pomeroy Lc&gt;roy
Jruch. Pastor: Sabbath School Superln·
: endenf. Rhonda Markin . Sa bbath ~ h ool
"~ ~lns at 2 p m. on Satu rda y with worshtp
-~HYle r following at 3: 15. E\'f'ry onr wei ·
mmE' .
• Rl!I"LA NO FIRST BAPTIST CHCRCfl
- Sister Harr \Ptt \\'arnt&gt;r. Supt. Sunda\
jkhool9::11 a.m.: Mornl n,i:! Worshtp 10 .&amp;o;
&gt;OLD

O!XTER

ll.m .

; POMEROY FIRST BAP'TIST . Lvsion
Hall('y, min ister. \\'illlam SnouHrr . Sun
'day School Supt. Sunday SC"hoo\, ~ ~n &lt;l.m
': Morn lnjl Worship 10: .10 a.m
FIRST SOUTHERj\: 8,\PTIST . Po·
mrroy PlkP. Lama r O'Bf!•ant . pa"tor:
·Jark NE'E'ds, Sunda y School Olrf'Ctor Sun
da y School, 9· 30 a.m : MornlnJi! \\'o r ~ h l p ,
10: 30: evenlng,.,·orshlp . 7·00p m TuPSd..t\
Visitation. 1 p.m. WE.'dnesday. Prayf'r Sf&gt;r.
vlcf'.7:30p.m.: Mission FriPnds, i :.Wp.m
: Girls In A&lt;'!!on . i :.ll p m .
FAITH TABER NACLE CHURCH. Bal
ley Run Road , Rev Emmf' ll Ra ,.,·son , p a ~
tor. Handley Dunn . sup! Sunday School
IOa .m .; Sundayev{'nln,l:! st'rv tre 7·.10p m
: Blblf' ttarhing , ~ 30 p.m. Thu~ s d a \
SYRACUSE MI SSIO:'\ . CHPrn· !"1 , S\
raCUSE'. St&gt;rvtrf'S . lOa m . Sunda ~ . Ew nin~
~rvlrP!i Sunday and Wffinf'-.da,\ d t 7 00 p
.m
MIDDLEPORT CH URCH OF CHRI ST
IN CHRISTIAN U:'flON , Rf'v . Krlth Eblln .
pastor. Sunda y School ~ : 30 a.m.. Wadf'
' Ha_y man, supt .; Morning Worship . tO : .lil a
m.: Sunda y P\' ~ln~ sen·kf' i 30 ~ m..
Wednf"Sday PrayPr Met&gt;ting . 7:,10 p m
m . MOR IAH CHL' RC'H OF r;ou
Racln P. Rev. JamE"s SanE"rflf'ld. pa.c;tur
FreE'man Willia ms. Sup1. Sunda y School
9: 45 a.m.: Sunda y and WE'd m&gt;sda\ f'\ Pn
1ng st&gt;rvlcf'S . 7 p.m
·
MIDDLEPORT FIRST RAPTIST
Cornt&gt;r Sixth and PalmPr . Earl F.drn Pas
tor. Ra y fl('lds. S.S !'upl. ; Dan Rl,e-,e: ~
Asst. Supt. Sunday Srhool. 9· 15 J m .
-Morning Worship. 10. 15 a.m , Sund;n
f:wn lnlj: serv ire. 7 p.m Vou1h m&lt;'l•ll n,~~; .
7:30p.m. Wt'dnf'sday : f'\'A'I inJ&lt;"Sf'rvic'f' j p
Jn.; Choir prartlrr 8 p.m.
... MIDDLEPORT CHL' IKH Of l 'HHI ST.
~th and Main , Bnh Mt&gt;llon. mlll l.. rPr 1
\i
Hartson, :tS!!.OC' . mint!!.I Pr: \1 iki ' C. l' r l.u ·h
' Sunday School Su perlntf' ndt•nt B1tllt•
):-hoot 9:30 a.m.: Morntn1o1 Wo r ~ ht p Ill Jn
.a .m. Evt• n ln~ \'\.'orship 7· 00 p.m 1\t&gt;&lt;inP..
'day. 7: ()(] p.m PLI)-'1'1 rm't•li ng
MIDDL EPORT CHURCH fl F T HE \ ,\
_V RENE , (o.pasto r!' Rr ,·. Char Irs f\1)- lr'
and Rev. ~an c y ( O\'l(' Bill Wh l!f'. Sun rl.J\
&amp;hoof Supt. Su n da ~· School 9 .lo . 1 m
Morn i n ,;Wor~hlp \ 0 10d.m . F.\ . ln JZ f' li ~ti (
fn(l{'tin~ 7:00 p.rn \\'f'd nPsd .n . 7 rill p m
·Prayt:•r mH't l n j~j: .
: UNITED&amp;::~1~~~~2~,:~ INISTR I
Rf'v. Ken Wilkinson
p

•

HARRISONV tLL E PRE S B \'TEHL \ ~

:C HURCH - Sund ay · Worshi p SPr\·k p-.
»:00 a.m .; Chu rr h School 10: 15 a.m.. Aiblr•
litiKiy Sunda.v 7:.}) p.m.: Prayl'r (; rou p
Wf'dnPSda y at 9:00a .m.
- MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERI A.' tl'lurch sc hool 10: l i a.m. Morn in ~-: Wr1 r
ship 11 : 15 a.m . Tuf'sda.\·. 10:00 n.m. Rlblr'
Study: Thu rsda y. 7:.10 p.m Bl bk Study
, SYRACUS E FIRST UNITED Pllf:SBY
TERIAN - Worship St:'rvlce 10:15 a.m.
thurch SchQOilO:OO a.m. Tu{'sda y, lOa .m
Btbll' Study; Sunday, 6 p.m. Junior and St •.
nior High Youth Groups.
· RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD. Pastor.
~oh n Evans. Sunday School 10: 00 a.m.:
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Chll
dren's Chu rch 11 a.m. Sunday Ev!:'n lnf;t
St'rvic£1 7:00p.m. Wt:&gt;d ., 6 p.m. Young La·
diPS' Auxillar.v. Wednesda y, 7 p.m. Fam IlY Wor11hlp.
• ' HAZEL COMMU NITY CHURCH. Noor
long Bottom. Edsel Hart . pastor. Sunday
SChool 9:30a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Prayllr meeting Thursday, 7! 30 p.m.
• MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAP'TIST
t HURCH. Corner As h and Plum . R31Ph
Cundlff, pastor. Sunday SchoollO: 00 a.!'l.;
Morning Worshlp, ll :OOa .m.; Wednesi:lay
and Sat\Jrday Evening ServlrE'!i al 7:30 p.
ln.

Pomeroy

991 · 19!!

Brown's Fire &amp;
"Equl'pment S•l••
and
Servtce

Nationwide Ins . Co .

Bl

Prescrtpttons

Locust I Beech Street
"2·,21 MiOOieport

Syracuse

~~~~!

r gT'\

Completo

Mill

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

True Love Is Not
Confined To A Valentine

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 £. Main
992 -5 130

"'
ft~\ \
\

I

~l

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

216 S. Second
Pomeroy

CLRSSIFIED RDS
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

992·3325

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN

Pomeroy

hen love's the thing they Write about

BEN
jlFRAN KLIN'
Middleport. Ohio

I~K&amp;C~=ERS

As something

we can't dO without,

·

This leaves its meaning much in doubt
'ne.
And harder to defl
It's not a printed sentiment
Upon a card that will

be

sent;

Unless the words are truly meant,
Instead of just a "line".

WASHINGTON (UP!)- NASA
says it will · give backup space
leacher Barbara Morgan a chance
Io join a shuttle crew when the
flights resume, a nd educators
praised the decision, saying the
project must continue in the spirit d
O!rlsta McAuliffe.
" We must kindle and rekindle the
splrlt of Inquiry that O!rista
brought alive," said Mary Futrell,
president of the National Education
Association. "We must preserve
her 'legacy the legacy of
insplratton.
· " II, together, we honor oor
'pledges, then w e will he able to say
that on Jan. 28, 1986, t~agedy and
triumph were fused . We will truly
he able to say that although Christa
McAuliffe never reached her destl·

REA~TY

lH
mno•

GroceriesGeneral ltm~andise
Racine 949-2550

IN CHRIST CHURCH, Localed In Texas

Joh n F . FuiU , Mqr .
Ph . 991· 1101

0

TEAFORD

MiddleportPomeroy, 'tlh.

RALL'S

l

Read the Best Seier
Read the

CommunJty crt Ct. Rt. 82. Rev . Robt&gt;rt
Sanders, plstor. Jerr Holter, la y leader;
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
SChool 9; XI a.m.; morning worship and
chUdre!!'s church, 10::.1 a.m.; evmlng
preaching service on the second and
fourth Sundays at 7:30p.m .; Christian En·
deavor on the first and third Sundays at
7: :1) p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting and
Blblo Sludy, 7: JO p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY .
Localed on 0 . J . White R..d ot Highway
160. Pal Henson, pastor. Sunday Schoo!IO
a .m. ClasSH for all ages. Junior Chu rch 1l
a.m.: Morning worship 11 a.m. Adull
Choir pracllce 6 p.m. Sunday. Young Peo·
~le' s, Children's Church and Adult Bible
tudy, Wedn .. day at 7:30p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Gran I
Middleport. Attlllaied with Southern
Convention . David Bryan. Sr., Mi·
1

l:~gs~l'f'~:~~ri:~.•;~hv:ln ~ !~';';~1~7°~~~

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

rourth Sundays worship serv ice at 2:30 p.

m.

MT. MORIAH BAPI'IST , Fou rth and
Main St., Middleport. Rev . Gilbert Craig.
Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunday SChool Supt. Sunday School9:30 a.
m.; Worship SeiVIce, 10: ~ ~a . m .
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B. H011klns, evangell!t. SW1day
BlbleStudy9a.m.: Worshlp,lOa.m. : Sunday evening service 6 p.m.: Wednesda y
evenlna service. 1 p.m. ..
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
Rt. 124. William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
School tO a.m.; Sunday even Ina sf!I'VI~ 7
p.m. Wednes4a y evening Sf'I'V I~ 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Doll Cheadle,
Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Momlng
Worship 10:30 a.m. Prayer service, altern ate Sunday!.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL , Third
Avt&gt;. Rev. Clark Baker, paslor. Carl Not·
tlngham, St.tnday School Supt Sunda y
School 10 a.m. with rlasses for all ages.
Evenlng serv ices at 6 p.m. Wednesday BlbiP stud y at 7:30 p.m. Y oulh services Friday at 7:30p. m.
ECCLESIA FELLO~IDP , 128 Mill Sl. ,
Middleport . Brolher OIUck McPherson .
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m : Sunday
evening services at 7 p.m. and Wed nesclly
serv iCE's at 7 p.m.

nation, her mission was
accomplished."
Acting National Aeronautics and
Space Administration chief Wll·
Ham Graham announced the agency's decision Thursday . But he said .
the date of the next teacher flight
depends ·on the outcome of tlv'
Investigation Into the explosion that
killed the Concon:l, N.H., teacher
and her six crewmates aboard the
shuttle Challenger.
Morgan, of McCall, Idaho, under·
went the same training as McAullfle and was at Cape Canaveral
when her colleague was killed 73 ·
seconds after takeoff.
Morgan did not attend the news
Conference at which Graham and
tWo space teacher finalists _appeared, but she said Wednesday in

Boise that she stDI wants tn Oy In
space.
Graham sald he met with
Morgan earlier and she told him
that her acceptance of a seat
aboard a shuttle would depend on
her ctrcumstana!S when NASA
decides it Is ready to ny slruttles
again.
" We're going to offer her the
opportun ity, " Graham said. ·
"We're not asking her to make a
specific commitment today to a
time frame tha t has not been
established."
The eight other finalists agreed
thaI Morgan should get the first
chance to fly, Graham said.
Officials have not decided whetrer
another backup would be selected.

Happenings around Meigs County.••

ovonlng Blblo study and
212 E. Main Street
7 p.m.
Your House of Worship will convey
CHURCH OF CHRIST. s1.
992 -3785. Pomeroy
12t and Co. Rd. 5. Mark Seevei-s, mlnls·
That love is what we do and say
Sunday School Sup! . Harry Hon·
; Sunday School9: 30 a. m.; Morning
MEIGS
That helps to brighten someone's day,
IO: 30 a. m.; Evonlng worship 1 p.
•
wors hip 7 p.m.
1
AS part 0 f lieS
f deSign;
COO PERATIVE PARISH
l-;~;ner
LUTHERAN CHURCH.
UNITED Mf:I'HODIST CHURCH
I~
Sycamore and ~nd Sts., PoANTIQUITY BAPTlST. Kenneth Smith,
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
And SO, it should be evident
meroy. The Rov. William Mldd/eswarlh . pastor. Sunday School 9:30a .m.; church
lce 7:30p.m.; you th ft&gt;llowship 6:30 p.
1::~: ~ ~~
Your finest hour can be spent
~\c.slt":·~.schoor 9:&lt;5 a.m .; Chureh SPrv
m.: Bible stud y, Thursda y, 7::10 p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTIDUS E. 33045
R.,. S.ldoo John...,
0
k' d d ed I
SACRED HEART CHURCH, Msgr .
ALFRED - Chocch School 9, 30 a.m.:
n some In
e , 0 represent
Anthotly Glannamore. Ph . 992.5898 . Satur·
Hlland Road, PomProy . Tom KPil y, pas·
The nicest Valentine.
day Evonlng Mass 1 :30 p.m.; Sunday tor. Danny Lamber t, S. S, Supt. Sunday
Worship. II a.m. UMYF6 :llpm ; UMW
Third Tursda ~· . 7:30 p.m. Communion ,
Mast, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Confessions (Jle
morning service at 10 a.m.; Sunda y evenIng servIce 7: 30 p.m. Tuesday and Thu rs·
first Sundal''. (ArCh('r l
-Gloria Nowak
tultlf hour before each Mass. ceo classes,
II a.m. Sunday.
da y Sero'lces at 7: l} p.m. ·
o _CHESTER - Worship 9 a m .; Churth
·
."\1,_-hool l 0 a.m.; Bible Study, Th ursday, ip.
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St. ,
WORD OF FAITH. 93 Mill S&lt;.. Mldd iP·
m.: L' MW . fi rst Thursday , I p.m., Com· ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . I M i d d l e p o r t. James E . Keesee, pastor .
munlon. first Sunday IArcher \
Sunday morning worship lO a.m.; EV@ft·
port. Sunday moml ng sen' lee 10:15 a. m ..
Sunday evening 7: ~ - Thursday mom in~
JOPPA - Wor"hrP 9:30a .m .: Church
tng RrVlct&gt; 7 p.m .; Wednesday evenin g
S&lt;·hool10:30 a.m. Bible Srudy WednE"Sda y.
worship 7 p.m. Visitation, Thu rsday 6: J)
BlbiP study 10 a.m. WE.'dnPSda y evrnln g
j :!,()p.m. 1Johnsor11
p.m.
7:30 p.m.
LONG R011"0M- Chon:h School 9:30
MORSE CHAP£1. CHURCH _ Gary
NEW HAVEN CHU RCH OF TilE NA
a.m : Worship 7 p m : Bible Stud~. Wf'dHolter, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a .m.:
ZAREN E. Rt'v . Glendon Stroud, pastor.
n('Sday. 7 30 p.m.: L' MYF. Wednf'Sda v.
wonhlpseiVI""" u am · ll'l
11
Sunday School9:l} a.m.: Worship service,
6: 00 p.m.: Communion First SundaY.
"""'
· ··
yer me-e ng,
10:30 a.m.: Vouth service Sunda y 6: 15 p.
a.
•
~vangeUstlc
Service
7:30
p.m.
Wednes·
CARLETON
INTEROENOMINATION·
7:30p.m.
Thursday.
1A
m. Sunday t'Ven lnlj: serv icf' 7:00p.m. Wed ·
" '" " " 'IL LE
LIVING
WORD
CHESTER
CHURCH
Chu ....... ~- .. ool9·30a
day: Prayer mf.'E"t lng '1 :30 p.m. Thunday. AL CHURCH. Kln~bury Road. Rov. OaREEDS\
nt&gt;Sday Prayer Meetln~ and BiblE' Study
,
hi
0 .
II
oo'
"
'
"
-30\: ll
n-.
:
.
.
ZION
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST,
PomernvDY
OF
GODGObert
Spencer,
pastor.
Sunm.: 11 ors p .wrv C'f'
a .m. 1~ter~ .
H rrt
Ill Rd
-J
vld CUrfman, pa5tor. Sunday School9::ll
dav School 9: 30 a.m. ·. Morning service
7:00p.m.
TUPPERS PLAISS ST. PAUL a sonv e · Robert Purtell, minis· a.m .; R&amp;lpb Carl, Supt. Evening worship
J
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun ·
Church School ~ a.m.: Worship 10 a.m :
te-r ; StPve Stanlt'Y, S. S. Supt.: Bill MeEt· 7: 00 p.m. Praye-r meet1Di. Wednesday
!O:OOa.m.; Sunday evening se-rviCE" 7:00p.
day afternoon servlet&gt;S at 2: 30. Thursda y
roy,
Asst.
Supt.
;
SundaySchool9:30a.m.:
7
00
m.;
Mid-week
prayl'1'
senrlee
Wt'dnesday
BIb IE'.Srudy, TuPSda y, 7:30p.m .; UMW,
W ' I
O
: p.m.
7
even lna s~kf:"S at 7:ll.
orsnp servlce 1 :30a.m.; EvenlngworLONG BOTTOM CHRISTl
p.m.
Thl ' d T 0 "' d' Y· 7: 30 p.m.; Communlon
'l
s
d
7
d
AN,
Jocly
MT.
OUVE
COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
f Irs
' 1 .s un d ay (Arc her t.
Snsr
p un
ay p.m. an WednesdatH7~.m .
Ho11 an,
d p.u 1or: wa II ace Damew ood ,
JOIINL'~HERANCHUR
, pastor.Ma•Fol-r. Sr.
FIRST BAPTIST CHUKCH. Mason . W.
1
•
fE,NTRAL CLUSTER
·
u
lne
SUnday School SUpt. Worship ~rvlt't', 9a.
sLawrenct"Bush
s •- Sc
•
"Va . Pastor, Bill Mui'J)hy. SundaySctloollO
Rn .•l ame~ E. Corhltt
Grovf'. ChThe Rhev. William Mlddleswarth,
m.; Bible SchoollO a.m.
upt. ungy dhool and Mornln i worshlp
9: l) a.m.; un ay t"Ven 1ng 5erv 1ce, 7 p.m.;
a.m.; Sunday eveninR 7::.) p.m. Praye-r
Re'\' , Sleven Nelson
pastor. urt service 9:30a.m.: Sunday ·
mt&gt;etlng and BiblE-study Wedne-sday, 7:XI
RP\'. Melvin Franklin
School10:30 a.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHUROI.
Youth rneetlftg and Bible- Study, Wednes·
p.m. Everyooe wPlcome . .,
BRADBURY CHURCH or OIRlST.
Sunday School at 9:30a.m.; Momtna WOT·
day, H .m.
Rt&gt;\' . (1 emen If' s. Zun Ira, J r.
J 011n
• Wr!gil t. pastor. Sunday School9: 30 a.
-•1
"
UN EO FAITH CHURCH , Rl . 7 on P•vRl!I"LAND FREE WILL BAPTIST. Sa •- kin
:w1 pat 10: :II a.m.; Sundaye-venk'tg5ervice
R,.,. · .•..n drew Ru'"'n
~
Hay nf'S , S. S. Supt. Mornlna
1 7:.JU
~ p.m. Th ursda yservkesat7:3l)n
meroy "'··Pass.
R-·.
lem St. Re-v, Paul Taylor. pastor. Sunday
hiI 11
m.: 1"""'rry
a
u7
-=• Ro~l
~· E. Smll'n , Sr .
\' ·SBL' R\' l s.y ra rust~l- '"
n ors P
a.m.
hll030
•
r
, tuo•tor. MelvlnOr-•e.S, S. Supi .Sun'·v
SchoollOa.m.; Sunday even ina 7:00p.m.;
. Church School 9 : ~5 a.m : ChargP Bib\('
wors P : a.m.
m.
~ 9~
ua.,
Wednf'Sday f"Vf'11ing prayt&gt;r m ~ tlng 7:00
Stud y. W('dnl'!lda_
y, 7:,l0 p.m:; UMW. first
RACINE CHURQ{ OF THE NAZAFREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
I : a.m.: MomlnJ Wonhlp 10:30:
p.m.
,.
RENE.
Rev.
Lloyd
D.
Grimm,
Jr.,
pastor.
Knob,
!ocatrd
oo
Coonty
Road
31.
Rfv
.
Evening
Wonhlp
7:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
Tuesday, 7..JO p.m.; -.hoir RPh e-arsal.
0 B
•- n,.
GJuesencamp, pastor. Rev.
Prayer~rv
•- Ice, 730
SOUTH BETHEL NEW T~TAMENT
Wl"'dnMda ~· 6:)) p.m.; UMW. fourth Sun·
ra ass. c•ua Irman oI tnt·ouardofChris·
.-wrence
: p.m.
CHURCH, Stiver Ridge-. Duane Sydf'n·
Uan Lire. SundaloSchool9::11 a.m.; Mom·
Roger Willford, aut . pulor. Preaching
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad
I l
day. 6: 30 p.m.{ Ne-son
Ingwors hIll 10 : a.m.: evangellstlr-ser·
1
St ., Ma son. Snd
stricker, pastor. Sunday School 9 a.m.:
ENTERPRLSE _ Worship 9 am;
servcesSunda
y7:30 p.m. Praye-r mertlng
u. ay s~ooiiO
'-"~'
a.m.; Morn·
Chu rch Srhool lOa.m.: Blble Studv. Turs·
viC'!! 7:00p.m. Wedne-sday serv iCE', 7 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Gary GrUflth,
lng worship 11 a.m.: Evening servlef 6 p. Churdl service 10 a.m. Bible Study Wed da~' · i · :10 p m.: UMW . Fi rst \&gt;tond3y. 7:.ll
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
Ieeder. Youlh grwps Sunday evaalng at
m. Prayer meellng and Bible Study Wed · nesday at 7: .l1 ~.m . Junt&gt; thru September,
7 p.m. October thru Ma)'. Sunday evening
p.m . l'M\'F Sunda ~' · 6 p.m Choir Re-·
tl'r . Woody Call , pastor. Sen.•ices Sunday
6:.1) p.m. with Roger and Violet Willford .
nesday, 7 ~.m.
Fellowship 7 p.m. June thru Sep!Pmber , 6
hf'ar~al . 6:30p.m WPdnf'sda~· (Franklin \
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. WMne-sday, 7 p.m.
leeders. Communion serv ice ttrst Sunday
FORES RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
FLATWOODS_ Churrh School. 1o a.m.
RAC INE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
each month.
Borden, pa5tor. Corne-lius Bunch, supt . p.m. Octobt&gt;r thru May.
Worship, 11 tl .m.; Bible Study. Thu rJ·
Dfaver. Paslor. Mike Swiger, Sunda y
WIUTE 'S CHAPn.
WESLEYAN
Sunday School 9: ~ a.m.; Sf.'rond and
da \ . 7 p m.. L' MYF , sunday. 6 p.m
SChool Supt. : Sunda y School 9:30a .m.;
CHURCH-Coolvllle- RD. Rev. PhlllipRI · ,...._;.._ _ _ _ _...;,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
Morning worship 10:40 a.m.; Sunda )
denour, pastor. Sunday School 9:30 • .m.;
1 f'rank lin1
F'ORF.ST RUN _ Worship 9 a.m.,
even in jil: worship 7:XI p.m.: Wl'dnf"Sday
worship st&gt;rvtce lD:.l) • .m.; Btbll' study
Church School Hl A.M. Ct1oir practicE'.
evPning Biblp study 7:30 p.m.
and worship service, '!'."tdnE'I!IIday, 7 p.m.
Tu&lt;'Sda~' . 6::10 p.m . UMW . first Tuf'sday.
BURLINGHAM ffiMMUNITY CHURCH,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.
i -:W p.m. 1Nrl~ on 1 •
Burlingham. Ray LaudermUt, pastor. RoMark Jones, pastor. Bill Nlcholscn,Sun·
HEAT H 1MlddlPport 1 _ Churr h School.
bt'rt COlan, assiStant pastor. Sunday School
day School Supt . Sunday Schoo19:)) a.m.;
q 3fl d m.. \1 ornln~ Worship 10 : 30 a.m.:
10 a.m.: wor..hlp 7 p.m.; Wednesday. 6 p.m
MornlngWorshlpandCommunlon lO:Xl a.
Youth Group. -1 p m : Wednesday. Church
youth ffil'!E'tlng; Wf"d., 7p.m. church serv1m.
m.
Choir r('hf'ars.1 1. j p.m.: Thu rsdav .
PINEGRO\'EHOLINESSCHURCH.'h
RUTLANDBIBLEMETOODIST. Am05
PrJ\ N Scrvlrt' . ld O p m.: BlbiP S tud~·.' 7 mile off Rt. 325. Rev Be-n J Wa tts, pastor.
Tillis, putor. Sonny HudsCII , supt. Sunday
p.m. 1Zuni Jl a •
L('(' RusSt&gt;ll. S.S. Supt. Sunday School9: 30
School 9:30a.m.; Mom inK wonhtp, 10:30
MI~ER S \' l LL E _ Worship Sf&gt;n•frE" 10
a.m.; Morning Worship 10 :30 a.m.; Sun·
a.m.; Sunday evenlfta se-rvlce 7:00p.m.
a.m .. Church School. tt a.m ; UMW, third
da}' ttvenlng S(&gt;rvk(' 7:30p.m.; We&lt;lnPS ·
Wednesda y kTV\ce 7 p.m. WMPO pro"TAKE 'DIE SAFE WAY"
Wrd n e~d a~· . 1 p m . Cholr practkt&gt;. Mon .
day st-rvlce, 7· ]} p.m .
i'f'Bm 9 a.m. each SUnday.
A mao wm llved In a ~muntalnous region wanted to hire a
da y. ; JOp.m 1 ~ol son l
SILVER RUN BAPTIST. Bill Lillie,
RUTLAND CHURO! OF THE NAZA ·
coactunao. He llved where the road ran around a very high and
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship s.rn·lrr ~
pastor. Steve Llttlt-. S. S. Supl. Sunday
REN E. Rev. Lowell Ford, pas1or. Sunday
&lt;I m .: Chu rl'h School 11 a .m .: UMW Sr·
SchoollOa.m.: Morning worslp , 11 a.m ;
School 9:30a.m.; Worstlipservlce10:30 a.
sharp cllt!. A number of appllcants were lote.vlewed for the Job.
ro nd 1'uPsd &lt;~ .\ . j '\0 p m . L: MYF la st Sunday Pventng worship 7: :KJ p.m. Prayer . m .; Young Pf'Ople'5 service 6 p.m.
The first applicant was asked, "Tell me, can you handle spirited
T u&lt;'s da~ . 7: .lO p m 1Rubf'nking 1
ffi('(&gt;tlnfil' and Blblu tu dyThursday, 7:30 p.
Evangl'llstlc serv~ 6::U p.m. Wednesda y
unruly horses?"
'
POMrR OY - Church School 9 15 am .
m.: You th mf'E"tlng WednPSda y at 7 p.m.
service 7 p.m.
W n r ~ h tp Hl 10 d.m ; ChOir rrhear~a l
REJ OICTNG LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
MASON CHURCH OF CHRlST. Miller
Tile man answered, "Yes."
Wt'Cl n l?~dJ\ , i ·.lO p.m : t.: MW . SP&lt;'O nd
-383 N. 2nd Ave .. Midd leport. Suf)day
St..Mason,W. Va . EugeneL.. Conger, ml·
"Can )IOU drive a slx·mrse team? "
&amp;hool lO a.m. Sunday tvening 7:00p.m.;
nlsler. Sunday Bible Study lO a.m.; WorTuf'S.da \ 7 .'lflp m . L'~WF'S und ay . t.p .m .
"Yes, I can do that."
1Cor biTt I
Mtd.we-ek S(lorvlce, Wed .. 7 p.m.
ship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wedne-sday Bible
ROCI\ SPRINC.S- Church School. 9 1~
LANGSVILLE CHRfSnAN CHURCH.
Study, V(•C'al music. 7 p.m.
"How near can you drive to the edge ci. the cll1f without ~tng
am .. Worship 10 a.m.: Bible Study. wro . Robert E. Musser. pastor. Sunday School
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GO D. Dud·
over?"
fi"'
n!'sday . 7·.tO p.m , l ' MYF 1&amp;-nlors 1. ~un ·
9::10 a.m.: Paul Mu sstr , supt .; Morning
ding La np, Mason, W.Va. J . N. Thacker,
d&lt;~~ . 'l p m : (Jun iors I P\E"!'\' oth&lt;'r Sun ·
worship 10:30 a.m.: Sunday f'Vf'n lng st&gt;r·
pastor. Evening ser\' lre 7:30 p.m.; Wo"Oh I have a steady hand and ll\Y eye Is pretty true: I call get with
da ~ . hpm 1fr.tnklln l
VICE', 7 p.m.: mld ·Wft'kSE'rv iC't'. WE.'dnes·
men 's Mlni5try . Thursday, 9:30a.m.;
In
a loot of !t and mt go OVl'!'."
Rl'TLA\'D- Church Sc'hool, 9 ~~ a.m :
day, 7 p.m.
Wednesda y Prayer and Blblt&gt; Study, 7:1S
"You step outside."
Worship. 10· :w a m : L'MW 1 r. v..,ninRC'lr·
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
p.m.
rlf' l seC'ond W&lt;'dnf'Sda.\ . 7 .10 p.m . UMW
ZARENE . Rev. Gltonn McMillan . pastor.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
Amther applicant came In and the man asked him the sam e
1,\ltf'r noon C'l rr lr 1 ~f"&lt;: ond Thurwlay . 1 p
Mary Jan I~ Lavendfr. Sunday School
CHRISTIAN UNION . The Rev. William
questions.
This applicant sald, "I am an expert at handling horses· 1
m 1Rubf'nklnjil t
Supt. Sunda y Srhool 9: :rJ a.m.: Morning
Ci.mpbell . put or. Sunday School 9: 30 a.
can drive right along the edge and mt go over ."
'
SALEl\1 CE;\TER - Ctturrh S&lt;'hoot 10 a.
worship 10: 30 a.m.: Evan~l'llstlc serv!('f',
m.: James Hugh", supl . Even ing service
m . Worship 9· 4) ••. m 1Rubenk lnl(' 1
6 p.m.; PrayE'r and Praise Wednt&gt;sda~· · 7p.
7: ~p. m. Wednsd£1 y evenIn~ prayer merel·
"Step outside."
S~O W\'lL LF. - Worship. 8: 311 .:1m .
m.: Youth mf.'E' IIng, 7 p.m.
lnR 7: )) p.m. Youth prayer servke each
A 1lllrd aP,pllcant came in and was asked the sam e questions. His
Church Srhool W a.m. t Rubenklnlo! 1
EDEN UNITED BRE.i HR EN IN
Tuesday.
CHRIST. EldPn R. Blake, pa stor. Sunday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
reply was, If you want a man to drive on the edge of the road you
SO l 'TIIERN flt'STE R
School 10 a.m.; Gary RN'd . La y leader.
• Letart,
W. Va .. Rt. 1. James Lewis, pastor.
Woroon't want me. I keep as lar away !rom the edge as I can ." '
MomIng S&lt;'rmon , II a.m.: Sun day night
R""· Ro"f'r Graci'
ship serv ices 9:30a.m.: Sunda y School U
.. You're hired!"
~\' . I' au! Yl rGuirf'
services : Ctlrlsttan Endeavor 7:30 p.m..
a.m.; EvenlnR worship 7:30p.m. Tuesday
Re\'. Krlth Rader
Son10: serv ln 8 p.m. Preaching 8:lJ p.m
cott~e pra yer mE'f'tlnR and Bible Study
People often Hve dangerously by claiming to be Christians yet
,\PP LF. GRO\'F: - CHurch School 9: (X~ Mid ·\IOff'k prayf"r mE'f.' tlng, Wt'dnesday, 7
9:30 a.m.; Worship serviCE', Wednesday
llvlng
as close to sin as they can witoout falling In headfirst '
am Wor-. hip, 10 CXJ a.m. tfl rst and lhlrd
P m.
7:ll p.m.
Let's take the positive approach of seeing how close to the ~rd we
Sundo.~ ~ " L'.\ 1\\' ~c ond Tuesda:o. 7: 30 p
OUR SAV IOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
m
P r &lt;~ .\.TI mf'f'll n,R: . Wt:'dnPsd ay ,i p.m
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN,
Walnut and Hen ry Sts., Ravenswood , W.
can walk. Your time spent In prayer and medllatlon and Bible
tGt·arf'l .
Roger Watson , pastor. Crenson Pratt ,
Va . The Rev. George C. Weirick, pastor .
reading and study and fellowship with others will help to provide the
BETH ,\ .\ Y - Worship, 9 a.m.: Church
Sunday School Supt. Morning worship 9:30
Sunday SChool 9: XI a.m.; Su nday worship
motivation you seek for this close walk with O!risl!
Sc hon!. 10 a m . Blbl{' Stud y, W('(]nPSday,
a.m.: Sunday School 10:30 a.m.; Evening
11 a.m.
10 rt m . Oorras Women 's Ff'l lowship.
service. 7::llp.m.
CALVARYBIBLECHUR(]{ , Jocatedon
Not how close to the edge .... but lllw close to O!rlsl .... that's our
Wf'dnt·,da\. It "m . 1Mc(;uirt&gt;t .
Mr. UNlON BAPTIST, Donald Stlue.
Pomeroy Pike, County Road z ~r Flat·
goal! - PIIIIDr Glen McC.III(.
C-\ R ~IF.L- C'hurch School 9:30a.m..
pastor: Joe Say!'f, Sunday School Supt .
woods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor, Ser.- lcet
Worshtp. 10 . ~5 a m. St&gt;rond and Fourth
Su nday School 9: n a.m.; Evening wor·
on Sunday at 10: Xt a.m. and 7:30 p.m. with
S unda~ ~- Frllov.·shlp dinner with Sutton
ship 6:30 p.m.: Pra)·er MeetinR. 6:30 p.m. Sunday School 9:30a.m. Blblt&gt; Study, Wed
thi rd Thu r f.da\ . n: .lO p.m. 1McGuire 1.
Wednesday.
nesday. 7: l1 p.m.
EA' T LETART- Chucch S&lt;hool9a.m.:
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
FAITH FELLOMiiDP CRUSADE FOR
Wors hi p 1fl J m ~('('(l nd and fourth Sun·
CHRIST. Davt' PrmtiCt&gt;, mlnisttr. Oery l
CHRIST, St. Rt. l38, Antiquity. Re-v .
da .n : liM W rl rst Tut:&gt;sda}'. 7 .11 p m
WPils, Supt . Chui'C'h School 9 a.m.; Wor·
Franklin Dickens, pastor. Sunday mom ·
1Grarf' L
ship Service-, 9:45p.m.
lng 10 a.m.; Sunday even ing 7:30p.m.
LETART F'ALLS - Worship 9 a.m.:
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NA.ZA Thunday evenlne7:J) p.m.
RENE. Rev. Herbe-rt Gratl!l', pastor.
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAP ·
Churrh Srhool lO a.m. 1Gract' t.
MORNING STAR- \\'orshlp. 9:45 a.m.;
Frank Rlrtle, supt . Sunday Sctlool 9: .l) a.
TJST CHURCH . Pastor Robet·l Byer! .
m.; Worship service, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
SundaySchoollOa.m,; Worshlp servlcetl
Church School. 10 :10 a .m .: Bible- STud y.
Thu rsday. 7:30 p.m. 1Radt•r l.
Sunday. WE'dnrsda y, 7 p.m. Prayer meeta.m.; Sunda y evenlniiiE"I"VIce,7: 30 p.m.;
RACINE WESLF.Y AN - Chu rch School
lng.
Wl!l'dnesda &gt;- even ing service- 7: 3() p.m.
lOa.m., Worship II &lt;~ . m . : UMW tourttl Mon.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE ME1'HOOIST
INDEPENDENT OOUNESS CHUROI
da ~· at i .l } p m.. M1•n '.!i PrayPr Brt'aldast ,
CHURCH . Rev. Robert Miller. put or. RoInc., Ptarl St., Mldd~ort . Rev. O'Dt&gt;ll
Wf'dn PSda~ . 7" m 1GraL'('I.
berl E Barton, Dtrector otCbrlsllan Edu ·
Manley, pulor. Sunday School 9: Jl a.m.;
SL'TTON -Church School. 9:30a.m.:
·ration: Stlt've Eblin , aulstant . SUnday
Momlne wonhlp 10:30 a.m.; Evening
Mornln ~ Worship 10: ~ 5 a.m. first and third
School 9 : ~ a.m.: Morning worship 10:30
worship 7:.rl p.m. Tuesday, 12:30 p.m. woSundavs: fe-llowship dlnnl'r with Carme-l
a,m.: Choir practice, Sunday 6:30p. m.,
mea'5 Pnyer meeting. Wt'dnesday, 7; Jl
thi rd Thursda y. 6:30 p.m. t McGuJr e~,
Ev~lng worship 7:Xt p.m. Wedne5day
p.m. Prayer and Pratseservl~ .
.•
Prayor and B/blo Study, 7;30 p.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST AP&lt;E·
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST.
TOLIC - VanZandt and Ward RAI. Ekl.,.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Vemon
Charle-s Russell Sr ., minister . Rick Ma·
James Miller, pastor. Sunday School,
E ld rldgl'. minister; Oliver Swain, Sunday
comber, sup!. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.;
10:30 a.m.; Worship Service, Sunday, 7:30
School Supt Preaching 9:JO a.m. each
Worship service 10: Jl a.m. Bible study,
p.m.: Bible Study, Wfdnetdty, 7:Jl p.m.
Sunday.
'
POMEROY WDlLEY AN HOUNESS,
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. RPV . 1\lesday, 7:30 p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
Harrtsonvlllo Road. David F.,.re/1, palTom Staten. pas tor. Sunday Schooi9:JO a.
tor; Olnton Faulk, Sunday Scllool Supt .;
m ; Eveni ng serv ice 7:30p.m. Wed nesday CHRIST OF LA'ITER DAY SAINTS. Pori·
prayer meeting 7:30 p,m,
land-Racine Road. Wllll•m Roush, paslor.
SuDday School t : J&gt; a.m.; momlna wvr·
Linda Evans, church school director.
ship, 11 a.m.; Sunday.vcmlnes«vlce7: J)
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
p.m. Prayer Mtetlng, Wf!dneedly, 7:.11 p.
CHRIST, Duane Warden, minl51er. Bible Churcl'l school9:30 a.m.; Morning worslp
m.
riass 9:30a.m.: Morning Worship 10 ::11 a. 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening prayer
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
m,: Evl'nlng Worship 6:Xt p.m. Wednel - oervlces, 7: Jl p.m.
day Bible Study 6:30 p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rov. Earl
non-Pentecostal. Wor1hlp 10rvlce ~nday
Shuler, putor. Wonhip service, 9:30 a.m.
)0 a.m.: Sunda)' Sctloolll a.m. Eventna
NEW STIVERSVILLE CO MMUNITY
wor! hlp sl!l'f'Y&amp;c. 7:00 p.m. Wednetdlly
CHURCH. Sunday School serv ice, 9:45 a, Sunday SchoollO:JO a.m. Bible Study and
m.: ' Worship ~Prv i ~ 10: ~ a.m.;
prayer ...-vice Thura&lt;~:"Y · 7:30 p.p1.
prayer meetln&amp; 7:00p.m.
-1

Events cancelled
Tonighl's baske!ball game between Federal Hocking and Meigs
has been canceled. The game wlll
be held ,Satun:lay night at Meigs
High.

The Eastern-Oak Hill basketball
game scheduled for this evening
has been cancelled with no makeup
date scheduled .
A sweetheart dance planned for
after the game has also been
postponed.
Earlll'!', the postponed date was set for tomorrow
night, Saturday. However, it wlll
not be he ld Satun:lay night and a
new date will be scheduled.
Todats Tri.Yalley Wrestling
Tourney has been postponed until
Saturday . Weigh-in will be from
9: 30 a.m. to 10: 30 a. m . with
.matches to begin at 11. The tourney
is being held a r Trimble Hlgh
:School.

SERMONETTE

•

''

Business Services

J

. ·1·

UTTLE'S
IEFRIGERAnON
APPUANCI SRVKE
USED APPUANCES
lillie .,.......,
Cheshir~ Ohio
PH. 614·3

RIDENOUR

TV &amp; APPliANCE

Insulated Dog Houses

GUN SHOOT

Board lo meel

RACINE

Ph.

EVElY

The rescheduled session of the
Meigs County Board of Ed ucation
will be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow
(Saturday) at its offices on E. Main
St .. Pomeroy.

Open house planned

Admltted-·Rlcky McClellan. Mid·
dleport; Floyd Barnhouse. Hem·
lock Grove.
Dischan:ed-·Olfford Icenhower,
Allred Ly ons, Sr., J ack Landers,
Ricky McClellan.

Open hou se will be held at the new
Veterans Memorial H ospital
SkUied Nursing·lntennedlate Care
Facility on Suooay from 2 to 4 p.m .
Visitors are being asked to use tlv'
patio entrance which opens into the
dining room and activities centl'!'.
WalterS. Lucas, hospital admlnlstdrator, wDI speak brletly at 2:30
p.m . and tours of tre facillty will
fotlow .

Dance cancelled
Due to inclement weathl'!' there
will not be any square dancing at
the Long Bottom Community Cen·
ter tonight. (Friday).

Slighl fll'e damage

Cancel dance

The Pomeroy Fire Department
was called to the Robert Robie
residents on Rose Hill at 10:30 a .m .
Thursday for a chimney fire .
Damages were sllght .

The Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority. valentine
dance scheduled for tonight has
been cancelled due to !he snow.

PHONE
992-2156
0111ittOittl7 Snl1ntl CtmiiMtd Dtpt.
Il l Co111t St .. Poi!Mro,. Otlkl U7&amp;!1

TV,

DIJSTR IAI. IAN 0
INVITATION TO BID
IN

Sealed bids •e ~eby irtYied lit !lie I'm ol J. Bern•d Cook b' the
ll'ICilastOIIlflllRllmali!lyone llu-lwM!y he (1251 act!l Jmtetr
less. tleet~ wilh the buidin115 tlterm. The at:rlll! oll!red br sale is
known os lhe Bom•d Cook hrm loated ~ Hartllr~ Woql!ll!J Distrd,
MISOO County, Will. V•W!~. bul ltJes rill ~elude Ihe resilence ntrlhe
land slullle - I he toilroatl and Rtllte 33. Sed IIWld is Ia tar moille
land wlh rail"oad frontiiie and rive&lt; frontlgo.
The buildil115 Iot:ale&lt;t on Ills land andolfaed b' sale ..edescribed 11
klllows:
I - lwo bedroom lildllype lar ntouse dh btsem!flt lorced li&lt;
fllel ~~ and alltJDd wdl.

and Refrigerator
Repairs
OPEN 8TO

6

COUNTY
APPLIANCE,
INC •

M~re for

Your Pet food, When
MGM form City, lr&lt;,
Pome'&lt;lj 0"10
fi4 992 1181
Is lower Pmed w1th
A Belter Produ&lt;i.

50# Dog Nuggets
Only 19 50
251i Cat Food
Only 17.52
All K1nrls

ol Pel

Sup~! !£IS

We al&lt;o have Con01y &amp;
·~uiAea P1g feed

MGM
Form City, 111(.

I - hay and

~eestllll

slfd wih approcimately 70 ~eeoall &amp;'ld

mage .,., sulllcorrt to me iltlUOO ~000 bales d hoy, concrete feed
lit wlh mar&lt;Jlt load~g ramp. and lenced &lt;tv 11
I - 16 • 00 concrete sill
I - ll'l~ing pMilr llfll"OIIy !1!1 up tot 4 coos '"' side.

I - sm!ll ~*lei~ (4

~~~

Real Estete General

equiJment sited.

I - wood t)Jncrib.
Interested plltios may i"cture o1 !he ollices d Sit,. &amp;!lt!it.l.C.•61D

""'in Street Point~. Wesl VirP.i&amp; toobllin ~brnwtion -dini

lhe desal&gt;lion cj I"' real eslat• lnspectiln rJ '"' suqoct lind lid
buldit115 moy bo ¥Ianged tinilg r~WJI• busr&gt;ess llllln by Clilina weo
c:ot1e fll41 m91SJ.
AI bils tr~~st be seoletl and sulrnitlo:llo the ol!ice of SltiW &amp; Sl!il,
LC.. trJ or bofote the 1t11 t1r; d ""'rch. 1986. 1t 3:00 o'clodl p.m. II
•~ell tine slid bids willl Ofl8ltd lor mpec1iln &amp;'ld reviow. Thestltn
reserve the rieltt to reject any and ., bills.
In I"' MRI tllalan' _.,t lliflllitl is occepled, I deed b lhe
sulject reo! t!l.lle wl II tS.dertd lit lhe sllen oihll 1 ,_,..,
period olllrte !rom lhe Ofl810lf of ll!!!e lids.

REAL ESTATE·
FOR SALE
SPLIT lEVEL HOUSE with
3 bedrooms, 2 CO~rfltte
b1ths . din in&amp; room, hvinl
room and larte recrntion
room. located on 8ecres.
farm pand. R~t:ine
arn .

wae

2 STORY HOUSE in Racine
nnr Elementary School.
OLDER HOUSE with 3 bed·
rooms on corner lot ins,.
racuse.

HONE NA110NAL

BANK

949-2210

01111

"We Rent Fo1L111"

U-SA~E

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt.

519.95
left at Meigs Mamo1y
Gardens . J mite ot1 Rt. 7 on
the right
471 59 Eagle Ridge Rd.
1·17- tln

Tu~ n

160
Gallipolis.

~orth
hlo •

7 ; 11 / ~n

YOUNG'S

PRINT SHOP

CARPENTER

F11 All Yw p,i,li•lll"dJ

SERVICE
- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing 11nd guttar work
- Con crate work
- Piumbmg and el11ctrical

PLUS: Oflict Supplies &amp;

f':'rniture, Wedding
and Graduation
Station«y, Magnetic
Sign~, Rubber Stomps,
~ Bus i ness Forms,
Copy Servius, Etc.
25S Mill St., Middlepoot
104 Mulberry A-v., Pom!I'Df

w ork

(Free Estimates)

V. C.

Ill

YOUNG
992-6215 or 992 - 7314~

Pomeroy, Ohio

992 · 3345
3/ 2/lln

:-

12·8·11c

Public Nollce
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
Esttte ol DDRIS IRENE
MILLER , deceued, Ceao
NO. 25,033 .
On Februeoy 11, 1988, in
the Meigs County Probllto
Court , Cooe No. 211,033.
Roilold l . Miller. R.R . '· Mid·
dlepart. Ohio 46780. wos
oppolnled Executor of the
•tate of Doris Irene Miller,
dlcoued, lete of P. 0 . Box
431, Rtclne, Meigs County.
Ohio, 45771 .
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Melgo Counl"/. Ohio
lone K. Netselrood. Clerk
12114, 21 , 2B. 3tc
Real Estate Geneeral

ACRES

130
Hugt Dutch style bam,
uctlltnl lake sHit and
farmland pasture and
woods. Asking $400 per
acrt. fDf' quick salt. Adjaunt Pomeroy.

2 BUilDING LOTS
I ACRE PlUS
6 ACRES-'6,000

1S

acre1 wooded land,
huge polars; excellent
limber, mnic. Wright
St. Pomeroy.

MONTGONERY
REALTY
614·385·7419
Coiled Calls Accepted

Now Patng 25C lb.
For lattened
aluminum cans.
Must bt completely fl at
All other tlpes of aluminum
pure and doily.
Open 8 a.m. tit 5 p.m .

Complete Building
and

446·1699
2· 13·1 mo.

Contracting Service
(Free Estimates)

PEAT'S SHARPEN UP
HAND 8o CIA. SAWS
CARBIDE TIPS
SCISSORS- MOWER
BLADES
SMAU JOIS
PlUMBING • PAN!UNG
CEiliNG TR!
UTiliTY IUIDINGS IUILT
011 !IT!
lAIU (PHil CAINAHAN

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.
long lollom, Ohio

PH.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

S$171 Oolo Mil ld.

915-4112 or 915·3301
1·31·16·1 mo.

.

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

BOGGS
&amp;

SALES
SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere.
New Holland. Bus~ Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

hr111 E••IP•••t
Part• &amp; Service

Roger Hysell
Garage

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

(CUT OUT FOR rUTURE USIJ

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

949-2649
1-23-1 mo.

.

loot lott..,, 011. 4S 7U

·

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built - .
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls .

weekdays

8 to 12 Salurday
Located 1 1/• Milts
East of P.agetawn
Ph. 992- 34116
1-3[.86-1mo.

3/ 11/tf.

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

627 Third Avt., Gatlipoli1

10·8·tfc

CONTRACTING
DOZER. BACKHOE .
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS , WATER ,
GAS 8o SEWER LINES ,
RECLAMATION. PpNOS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
OU MP TRUCK STONE
8o DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

Bl.ue Streak Tax Servicoe
W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER :

-

FEDERAL-STATE
INCOME

TAX

107 Sycamore

RETURNS
St., Pomeroy, Oh.

PHONE 992-7075
HOURS: 9 :00 A .M.- 5 :00P .M. Mon . thru Sat .
Evenings &amp; Sunday By Appoinlment
1· 15 -ttn .

I

EUGENE LONG

PUT YOUR SNAPPER REAR
TINI TILLER ON HOLD
NOW THRU MAY 1
AS lOW AS $) 00 DOWN

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complell Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Type s

GRAVELY
TRACTOR

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Worked in home area

20 yeers

204 Condor Sl., Pomeroy

"Free Estimates"

992-2975
2-14· 1 mo .

CALl COLLEU:
Ph.

1614) 143·5425
1· 12·2 mo.

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and recore radia1ors and
heater cores . We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

"zi
~

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Licensed Clinical Audiologist

:t

-z

PAT Hilt FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1·1 3 -tfc

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
,
8· 13 li n

985-3561

All fllltkte

•Washefl •Oishweshlu

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

MILLER
ELECT~IC

PARTS end SERVICE

SERVICE

ANGIE'S PIZZA

FOR AlL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

4·5·/k

IIO Yo Weot Main Street, Pomeroy Ohio.
Phone 614-992-6778
Your Com pl•l• Au to Sody Ae pcur , , ,,.,
lody Fill• n . Sondpope,.. , ~ot r 1hong Co""po 1.md1 Po1nt1
Ur1thon• HOI"dnen. {5old Unde1 Whotesol• To A.lll
OundH New Rej:jloc..-n~t Pons f.or Trvdn And Cars

Call:

349 No. 21111 ''"·
Mldclleport, Oh.

992-5875 Or

992-3559

742-3195

FREE DELIVERY

11 ·14 -tlc

q

w:a Jlij(iSoliiol~oct~ionig~u~~r~f~~d~l!
..

liP?

IN

SYRACUSE. POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
BRADBURY
MASON, W. VA.
Open Man.·Thun. 4 · 11
Fri. &amp; Set. 4 - 12
l-15-l ""·

54,000 CASH
SPRING STREET

•VJNYl SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

RECYCLING

CIRCLE

Alto Trm•lt~IOI

I - 54' • 126" 1 12'5'. Mo!tDn rr&lt;!l~ Mdwt' lllrtlimtxlo~
.,., wih conaolelloor and 1111!1 forced r&lt; hell tlnelZ ibtbleslldini

illor5 - one ~ workshop. IWO ID ~u~rrenl sturage •eo. Pmiructed
' ~ 1911 1)

Fishing Suppliss
Pay Your Cable &amp;
Bills Here
IU!IHISS P!ION!
16141 992-6550
R!!IOENC! PHON!
16141 992-7754

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Why Pay

&amp; SERVICE

SALES

Washer, Dryer

Rt. 124,Pomeray Ohio

AGRICULTURAL OR

PLUMBING &amp; HfAnNG
New LCKation:
168 North Second
Midclltporl, Ohio 45760

6:30P.M.

1·3·11&lt;

Misc. Merchandise

l•llod~tiiiV

PUSH MOWER TUNEUP
!Pans Included)
Oil Change. Sharpen Blades

SCIPIO ENERGY

SAT. NIGHT

We C1rry

Velerans Memorial

64

614·843·5191
1·20·11&lt;

9-30·11

Major and Mrs. Lev i Olmstead.
retired. of Marietta. will be guest
speakers al the Salvation Army in
Pomeroy at 7 Sunday evening.
They served in a number of states
before retirement and once were In
charge of the Pomeroy and Athens
units. A da ughter, Kathy, will
accompany them on their Pomeroy
visi t. The public Is invited.

79 N. Congress St .. Athen1,
Ohio 45701 , wes oppointed
Adminl.trator of the 111111
of, llrry A. Plan. ctecnoecl.
loll of Route 3. Box 44A, Albany. Melgo Catinty. Ohio.
Robart E. Buck.
Probate ~udgo
Meiljt County, Ohio
lena K. Nouelroed , Clerk
12114, 21, 28, 3tc

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
lacint; Oh.

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

Two calls were answered by local
units on Thursday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Servi·
ces reports.
At 1:36 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
took Patricia Klein from Welsh·
town to Veterans Memorial Hospi ·
tal and at 11:26 p. m . Syracuse took
Angela Rowe from Second St. to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
Esteto of LARRY A.
PLATT, dlceated. Cote No .
26.048 .
· On Februeoy 10, 1988, in
floe Meiljs County Probate
Court , Coso No . 26,048,
~utsell Shieldo. c/ o Oeny
~ . Hunter, Attorney·at-Law,

UTiliTY BUilDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6'
u~ to 24'x36'

11-28-3 mo.

CALL
446-4522

949·1969

THE QUALITY

POLE BUilDINGS
Sim Start From 12xl6'

PH. 742-2050

The Me igs County Genealogical
Society will meet at 2 p.m . Su ooay
at the Me igs Museum for a
workshop and program.

Speakers chosen

Public Notice

&amp;

ALL STEEL

""" Your Woddi"',
Anni.,.nary or Sp~e~al
Occa1ion on VidH ....Wt
Tape Any Spt&lt;ial Occasion.
CHAlLIS lAlLEY ·

RENT A CAR

EAGLE RIDGE

SMAU ENGINE CENftR
Parts • Service

Bashan Building

Emergenfy squads
answer lwo calls

Public Notice

CHESTfR-985 . 3307
4/ 1/ tfn

7·0f1,,"'

Meets Sunday

issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Lowell Plotner II, 25, and
Lois Marie Bailey, 25, both of
Racine; Charles Ross Mash lll, 34,
and Susan Jane Pullins, 36, both of
Pomeroy: Scott Douglas Kimes, 21 ,
Racine, and Lori Lyon Stewart, 19,
Syracuse; Teny Ray Gardner, 24,
and Lorraine Kay D avis, 26, both of
Pomeroy; John Wllltam Hess Sr. ,
41, and Rebecca Angels, Hess, 21,
both of Switzer, W.Va.

The Daily Sentinel

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENIIH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
*GilSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTI SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Hen ft Fall Th11e
Shp Tuh1lcl ..
"D•ty

CLARK COIN SHOP
We Buy •nd Sell Gold •
Sltver Coin• . Alao Cla11
Ringl, Scr_, SIIYir. Gold
OI'IN I O.l WIIXDA Yl
10-2 !AIUitAT
Court 51., Ponttr,oy
All« 7:00-36Ti0626

FIRE DEPT.

Meigs man cited
M arriflge licenses
following accident Marriage licenses have been
A Meigs County man was cited by
city police Thursday afternoon
following a two-vehicle accident at
the lntl'!'section of Eastern Avenue
a nd Birch Lane.
Roonda Ranoolph, 17, of 101
Rlv ~r St.. Kanauga, was north·
bound on Eastern and had stopped
to make a left tum ooto Birch, when
of!lcers sald a pick-up driven by
Virgil L. Wlnoon, :A!, of 32971 Texas
Rd. , Pomeroy, allegedly could not
st~ in time and struck Randolph
from behind.
No injuries were reported In the
3: 30 p.m. collision, which officers
said caused moderate damage to
both vehicles. Windon w as c harged
by pollee with failure to stop in an
assured clear dlstan re.

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 7

WANT ADS bring

Vacation Money

TOWN I

COUJIIIY

YEIEIINAIIAN
CLINIC
. Paul E. Shackty, DVM

n. PlEASANT OFFICE
305 JackMft bt.
SIIAill-&amp;1 NODS
Mool ••w..r.• fhun. 3·S pm
Tues. 6:30·t : Fri. I· 2 pm
Salurclllf 10· II :30 am
liiGE All•ll &amp;

SUIGEIY IY IPPJ.

PH.

304-67 5-2441

lEND AIEA CALL

llpl•y OHict

For Hours
304-372-5709
10·i4·tlc

0

!NT E~ THE~M

INTERTHERM

8o COLEMAN

BENNnT'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

* * #1 * *

By offerin g a complete line of mobile home
heating and cooling products for the tri·
county area
"FURNACES
'HEAT PUMPS
'AIR CONDITIONERS
'COMPLETE LINE OF REPLACEMENT PARTS
'FACTORY AUTHORIZED &amp; TRAINED
SERVICE C~NTER
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . EMERGENCY SERVICE
CAll 16141 446-9416

..

�2

42

LAFF-A-DAY

A!IIlii 1111 ce 111 1~ 11 ts

46

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. fully furnlthtd. t 2~~:el,
conv loc.tlon, Upper Alwr Ad ..
weter paid. IIC- dep . requited.

In Memoriam

con 114·448·8588 .. 814·
448· 2430 .

In · loving memory of Glfl•
E..._.. SMIIv mlu• by witt.

bdr

stepcftildr•

mobile home, unfur·
nlthlld. locetld In mobile ,_,,.,,

3

2 bdr , nicety fum., u . .cond .•
ref . a dip . requ tred . Cell 6 14-

Muguet,

2

children tnd

par~ .

Announcements

up -.,d delivery, Dl\!11 VtcUum

0221 ... 814·317·7242 .

Cletner. one h1lf mile up
GtortN Crttk Rd. C•ll 114-

2 bdr. lereepriv.telot. 1110 mo.

U8•02U

pkoo clap. Colll14·4411-2236 0&lt;
&amp;14· 441·2881 .

PregntncyTnting; Birth control
aervlott. VD tilting: contldentltl; sliding he ICIII; Pl1nned
P.r.w~thood of S .E.O .. for eppt.
Cali 614-448-0168 or 114-

c.n 814 -UI-07151.

AocinoGunCkob. EvarvSundov.

For ,..nt. 2 bdr. mobile home

....
"It'S a fiOte ffOffi hiS teacher

3 b~room, near BIQ Wh•l.
ewage. wood-bumer. IJtpando,
g.-d., and fruit a-.... Deposit
1nd rlferencee. Cell 814·949·

3031.

:1 Hdrooms. 1165
~k;~~ ::.~~~:;~::. 'to.., -good grief! She can't spell InperSyrecult.
month phis utl!itl• end
INH. No pete. PhoneiS14-892Ouell. incubators, brlldinvpent
ei"therl."
3948.
•II kinds, 11orlng pen1, ftld ·
ars, wat•art,
hot will
peds
All 1-----------T;;:;:::;:;:::::::;:::;::;:::1
equipment
1nd birdt
be sold
1
2
w•ehll' end dryar
of

L• Bonte's Quell Farm. Long
Bottom. Call 8H·985· 4345 .

31

lndrvicluel guitar let10n1. Stgn
up now 11 Brunlctrdi Mus1c, c1ll

C01y old..- home. IJine Str"t.
Racine, Otuo. Nt~W oek kitchen
with epplienc• . .,.ntry, 3 bed·
roo me, dining room,lwing room.
Priced 1315.000 00 Ptlone814·
949· 2&amp;40 weekdays 1fter 8:00
p m ; w. .kendl enytlme

814·448
0687 or inltructor Jeff Wem•·

tsy. eu-44e-aon

Lonlsy, NHd 1 dete? CtM
Dtte1ime 1 -800 -972 -717&amp;

Gui1arltt needed for Sa·
rlous Top 40, Rock Band
Contact Medelllon 514-992 ·
6590 Of 61. · 175 - 2412
8111

ASAP
100tt1 Annlver11ry. Avon. to sell

call304· 81'5·1428

Cut biQ tree fer your fir8W'ood

Calt814 -446 -7475

&amp;75·39150"' 1·800·1142·3819

3 pup1-p1r1 Shepherd end ptrt
Mtlt,.,ute Phone 6 1 4 -742 -

The Army N1tk)n1l Guard nuda
lr'ld!Yidualt with prior mlln:er"¥
IJtpM'lllnC» Many benefits avail·
lble. Whll"e 1111 c.rr you gat 1
pert·trrne job with 10 meny full
time btnlfittl304·875-3950 or

Giveaway

2388
6 pupp1111. mother registered
Cocker Spaniel 304-882 -2061

1·800·M2·3819
Losta-nd""'""F,.oun_d_

6

FOUND Blue gray kitt811 with
wh ite PIWI- Found Upper Se·

cond Ave Cell 61• -u&amp; -130"
LOST NM'Ii whitt lrel~nd Regis ·
tered rebb1t. Lost et 26 Vtnton
St. Atwttd Ct1ild' s p111 C1ll
BU-... 8 -8263
LOST, l1rg1 black end brown
dOi . Air.ctele 1nswers Gonzo.

P1r1 -11rne IICrlllry , 3 l'ln • dey,
five day a wHk , good typinlJ
..ulls 1nd 1bllitv to meet publiCI
must Send reau~ toP 0 80.11
415, Pornt Pl.. unt. W V1

12

Situations
Wanted

VICW'Icy for ekterty men or
womtn'" priveta home.24 hrs 1
de't Cell 81•·992 -7553
H1~o~t

304·875-2320

15

9

Schools
Instruction

Wanted To Buy

We pey c11h for lete model clun
used cera
J1m Mmk Chl'l -Oids Inc
Bill Gene Johruon

614·448 · 3672
WANTED TO BUV uud wood &amp;
coel hteters SWAIN 'S FUANI
T\JAE . 3rd &amp; Olive St Gellipo lis Cell 014-448-3159 .
TOP CASH peid tor 'B 3 model
1nd n.wer used cera Smith
Buick-Pont l•c 1911 Eestem
Ave , Gelhpolis Call 614 4462282
Buying deity gold ••lver coins,
rings. jewelry. 1t.,.1ng were. old
COfnl, .. rge curr..,cy Top pn·
c... Ed. Burhl" Berber Shop,
2nd. A~o~e MKtdlepor1. Oh 61!1 -

Truck Driver Sct1ool Job plac•
ment 11ait1ence DOT Certlflce
hem , El.gible Institution fed•al
lid, guertnteed student loans.
Home study· rnident tretntng
Stert mmedl1tetv. Uni1ed Truck
Mnt..-. Minetal Wellt. W V1.
304·489 -2027 honw offic•.
Clearwater, Fl.

18

Wanted to Do

Will b1by li t '" home in town
Cell 6, 4 ·446· 7•Bo en'(ttme
Office and houH ciNnlftQ, Point
Pl11tant end Gellipolit, resone·
1:!111 rat.. Atk tor Lorrane,

304·895-3972

992 · 347&amp;

Ftn anm l
Ellip loyment

21

Business
Opportunity

Servtces
11

Help Wanted

Government Job 116.0•0 ·
159,230 yr Now hrring C111
805-687 -8000 Ext R--4662 for
current tederellist
Front duk clerlt·eudrtor full
time Hours must be flexible,
eceounting beckground. bus•·
neu meehin• rt(lulrecl Mutt
eppty 1rt pei"'In no phon11 cells.
Holiday Inn . Olllipolis, Oh
NHd .. las penon at M•ke 's

Auto Stl• ApplY after 4·00
wll'kdeys, elldeySeturdey E!CP
~nterv Cell e14 -44e -2900
Full time R N position IVIrlsble
Plelle COIHICt Pine Crest Caul
Center, 655 J1ckton Pike, G1 lh
polls, Oh. No phone calls
Bebvamer tor 6 month old '"
hOme. light house keepinv 4 to
8 hrs per diY inc weettendt
Pleue und IllUme, 3 referencat to 281 State St , G111ipotif .
oh 45e31
E11y Auembfv Work I &amp;600 00
per 100 Guerenteed Peyment
No E~qJerltnce - No Sahli. Detarls
send IIH· .:ldr••.-1 ttemped
envelop1: Elen Vittl -6847 3418
Enttrprlla Rd . Ft Pterce Fl

33482
EIIV A"emllty Work I UOO 00
p• 100 Guaranteed Peyment
No Experlenos-No Sel• Oeterls
Sind teH· Iddrased tttmped
envelope: El1n Vitel -71!5 3418
Ent,rprita Rd Ft Pierce. Fl

33482 .
S ecr etery · Bo o kk1eper ·
lmmadltte opening Elpe ·
rl.,.ced or College tramld. Mutt
bt flit typltt. know lhortt1and.
bookkeeping Send full reeume
end If you erelnter11ted in tun or
plrt·tima work . Also how lOon
llllilabll. To Appl1cant 80.11426
Pom~~roy , Ot1 46769,
WANTED . P.aplepower, wa1re
looking for people whO went to
turn. grow end .,.;pend wltt1 us
P.aple who Q.,.ulnely llk1 PliO·
pia; whO find udtftctkln In
helping othltr'e, In going out of
their WIY llO M oi llf'ViCI We
n..cl people with an aye tor
datliU, aw1111otucceed Wenlld
peOple to meke things VO
arMott1ty. People wlttl kle•
People with 111 kind• of potenllel People pow..-. We ere now
ec:cepUng eppUcationl end r•
~mil et our office. R Craig
Meth.wt end Larry 0 . Kennedy
ODS, 20! N Second Ave..
Ml.-fdleport. Ohio .
W1nted Body Man E worlenced
auto repa1r and peinting
Rtftrtn et requ ired Call be·
tw- 8 30 lfld 5:00. 814·912·

in

7013 .
YIM111 of Syrec:uHII Knptfng
.,ucatlona tJJ th• poeltlon of
pool rTW'IIII• et London Pool
RIIUmttlreto be eubmttttd by
Fetll. 22 to Clerii·TruturtrJiniee UW10n.

Homes for Sale

bedroom~.

'*'

11715.
mon1t1 ~us utiliti•.
Oepotlt requir«t . No pets. Call

114·892·2448.

Join the Army N.tlontl Gutrd
tor e pert·tlme pb, monthly
peycheclc. .:lucatlonal ualst·
tnce, lite rna.rrence, mtrem~nt .
end meny oth..- ben.tit.. 30"·

4

72

• NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLE\' PUBLISH ING CO . recommends th1t vou
do butm•• Mth people -you
know, 1nd NOT 10 511'1d montv
throuvt"t the m1il until you hi'VI
ir w•tiget.:l the oflering.
Own your Jeen -Sport1w1 .. le diel . Ct111dr.-.s, L1rg1 Slu . or
Combinetion Store 100 '• of
N11'1 Brenda t13 .300 lnclud11
~nvemtory , tixturll, trelning 1nd
more C1ll tode&gt;t! Mr. Tete
704-214-69e6
MAKE MORE MONEV I Etrn
wHkty commisPons whh our
protitlblt ~ ne of ldvtrtising
calclendars. pens. cap1, 1nd
fackeu Helpful .. 1.. ideas. a
toll -fret m•-.a• centtt and
other vrut ... ling tools All
whrle be.ng vou r own bo ... No
tnvntment No oollectklns full
cw part l•mt Out ntt1 .,..,,
Wm• Ke~o~rn Ptllll, Newton Mtg
Coi'J1)eny. Dep t D 1027. New ·
ton, IOWI 5020 8

22

Money to loan

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"$ QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 M1
WEST GALLIPOLIS. AT 35
PHONE 114·441·7274
19715

ln'country 1t Torch, Ohio t200 .
Plf' month piUI utllttl• Unfurnlthtd Shuetld on 2 ecre• of
lend. C1H 513-887-2083 efter
5 30 pm.

FOR SAL£ OR RENT 304·875·4874.

Mobile ~m.. 2 bedrooms, one
Ill electric end oneu•. 1140.00
monttl pfus utilltl•. 30•·175-

4088

44

14xeo. part
tum ., goodcond CallaftMe 00,

304·875·3959

Mobllt home lot 14x70 or
emell• t71 .00 watet, uwer
and trtsh pa.kl. Ohio 304·871·

1914S· 1Diongbed,V· 8tnglne,
4 spd. trtnl., PS, PB Cell

1982 Clayton, 14X815. tully
tum ., Wither, dryer, AC. under·
pinning &amp; porch Exc cond.,
Meke 1n Offer. Cell 814-26e1821 or 8U-2156· 8315
1211180 New Moon, w1th 1 J,t
ecr.. perti1lly fum very good
cond., jut1 off Rt 218. Cell
614 -215-5009
1976 1••70 FIMtwood New
CtrPet. woodbumltr' , lots of
ex1r11 Super n1ce $9,900 C•ll
8U -2!ie -&amp;587 or G14·8eB

1887
1973 mob•le home, 12xeo. 2
bdr . fully carpeted. W &amp; 0 , AC
porch. underpinntd , e•A'' 1neula·
tton . to"l eiKtric f •cellent
condition . M1y lee'it on lot,
ultrng 18,200 Celt e1• -2.a6.
9•59 or 304-675 -3084 or 61"·

448·9808
1971 121166 SchuiU 2 bdr ,
15,900 1983 101150 New
Moon 2 bdr . 12.900. Bolh in
good cond. Call e1 4-44e·0175
1972 14•t70, 3 bdr , pert turn .,
good cond Call 8U·4•6·7546
envtrme
, 980 Lrbarty 14x64. 2 bad
room. unturn11hed. vrnyl undtr·
pinning includ!ld Must 1111. Call
J04· n l -5873 .
19715 Cam.on Mobile Home.
12•80 ft For further Info. cell

114·992 ·U24 .
1998" Shultz Trerl• 14x70. 3
bedrooms, 2 full beth• Excellent
condition 118 .000 Located In
A•c•nt Cell 1 -304-925 ·3293

2 lots wrth trailer and 3 1dd -on
rooms lmmed i1te potlllltOn
Ptlone 114 -992 ·8913 days,
814 ·9•9-2538 nigt1ts
K•rkwood Mobile Home wtth 1
ecre ground. 2 b.clrooms, 1111
hilt On Belley Run Rd Call
6U-992-3623.

MENTS (Equel Housmv Oppor·
tunltvl monthly rent 11:1rte at
1178 tor 1 bedroom 1nd 1212
for 2 ~room , d1po11t UOO.
k)e~~tld n• Spring Vall"¥' Plue
1nd Foodl1nd. pool end Ceble TV
1'1111~11, offiCI hoUf'l II poHtble10.., to • pm and 7 pmto9
pm Monday-Friday, Clll 81•·
••e-27"5 or INve m•••u•
2
Nicety tumishtd mobile ho'T'e,
etf ept .. cantrel 1lr end heet in
clry, adultt ontv C•ll 51•·44e -

814·441·111128 .
t911 Chi'V'f' Lovt 4a-t. 4 IPd..
AM·FM 0111., CUI10m paint,
, _ "'-· U ,OOO miln. 11klng

13,200. Coll14·245 ·5825 .

7401/t Second AVe 3bclr . 1190
mo . dep required C1ll 114·
··8 -4222 blltween 9 a 6
Dupl111 for rent 556 Third Avw
G11Upolit. 2 bdr . llvingroom.
d1ningroom , new kitchen .
fenced b1ck ytrd. rafrlv. &amp;
rtnge, UU plus u1ilitl•. &amp;
Mcurity deposil Cell 614 -•4e-

0&amp;90.
Furn11hld tp1.. 1 bdr., 29 11"J Neil
Ave , Oallrpolil 123&amp;, utilhl•
p11d Cell4o\8·4•18 1ttar 7pm
effic•ency 1150 uttllti•
Pfild. Shari b1th, 807 2nd Aw .,
GeHtpoll• Single Call •46·
441e after 7pm.
furn

Newly remodtlld 5 room upsteir• apt . 238 First , Ave
Kitchen furnished , no pets.
U25 mo . plue utllitiet, ref•anCH &amp; deposit. Celt 114 ·448·

4921 .
Furn 1pt. 919 2nd. Ave. Galli·
poll• shtre bath. linul• mele,
1175 mo , utilltl .. peid C1ll
••e-« 18 •ft• 7pm
Two bedroom 1penment down1own. 1210 without utilltiH.
1330 wtlh utihtitl. Oeposh
required Cell eU-U&amp; -2129
8AM· 5PM .

514·U8·7025

304 571·233&amp;

Eft ept., all utilltl• paki, turn ,
next to Rio Grinde College C1U
11•·•48-97e2 or 81 • ·••e -

lots &amp; Acreage

Cemp site Addison. Ohro, with
river front, a.p1rc svttem. alact·
ric. U .OOO.OO. Ahtt 15·00 cell

304·895· 3838

2 bdr , new c•rpetlng, naarPtzze
Hut. IVIillble M~rch 1It Clll

1323
Furnished afliclency, 7'h Neil
Ave . G111ipolls Single. t150
mo , utiliti• peid Cell "48·
4418 efttt 7pm.
Furnished 1pt 2 bdr , 1250mo.,
utiUtlea ptld, 701 41h Ave ,
Gallipolla. C1il 440·•418 1f11f
7pm.
2 bdr. 1 bath , 1200 sq. ft above
Dnftwood Florist Ref . req C•ll

Renlal s

Unlimited ceQitel 1velllbla tor
1ny DullnNI purpote. Csllll-4256-1772

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR .
red1scovervour pitno 's b111u~itul
tone, cell tod1y, Ward 's Key
bolld 304· 175· 151500 Of 075 ·
3824 .
TONV 'S GUN REPAIR , full time
gunsmith Hot rebilling. hourt , I
till dark 30·· 171-4131

Real Estate

31

Homes for Sale

4 tM!droom houN for sell.
flrtpllce, 3 mi. touth of Oel!ipo·
lis, 132,500. Call deys e14.
44e 1815 or ni;htt 114-446·

u••

Government Homet from 11 . (U
repelr}. Also deliquent 1111 proplrty Call 805-e87 -IOOO bt.
GH·4562 for Information
For ••le or treda 3 bdr houM
wltt1 1 5 a c r t~ on Rt . 7 ne.11 t to
Cloy Sc hool 4 vrs old. Pr lctdto
1111. C111 614 -266-e&amp;eo or

814·441·1811 .

1 roomt, btth, utUity, g•eoe.
&lt;*1tfll hett Oood condition

c'" t14·H2·5204 .
2 lo11 end hoUM in Ponfend.
CkJee to achool. Call 814-148-

2397.

The Village Orten Apertmtnts
lrl ICC.Ptlng appHC:etionl fOf
occupence. Tha apartments 1ra
Nice duplea houll, 5 rooms • two bedrooms For mora lnfor·
bath. cla.n, completely fum . mellon . c1ll SU-912 -817• ...-.
1200 mo M•n St. Ct1•t1ire enlnge EQuel Houe i ng
Coli 814 245·5118 .
Opportunity
2

bedroom Mlddlepon apt .

recently remodeled I 1 8&amp;

P•

month plus utlltti•.Call deyt
Nur BuCki'Ve HtNI 2 bdr., FA. e14-192·2381 evtninvs eu.
woodburner, 1225 &amp; dap , no t82·2509.
pets Call 614· 2•5-5097 or
e14 · 2•15 -8319 or &amp;1•· ••e - 4 ltd room hou11 outtkfe Pom•
9475
roy .Juet rtmodtltd 12115 p•
month ptus utlthiM. Cell ften·
• bdr hou• in Plentz Subdivl· lngtl14·t&amp;2· 8723.
tion , city schools. C1ll e14 -4!18 027&amp;
APARTMENTS , mobile hom•.
houe• Pt. Pt. .an1 1nd OelllpoHouN • room• a. batl'l. located llo. t1 4·441·1221 .
735 rear 3rd. Ave .. fut-nlstltd.
11215.00 rno ., 178 .00 ct.,. Cel Nice 1 end 2 br apartmente
Ul-3870 0&lt; 448·1340.
downtown 3M-e71 -2211 ,
Modltr"ft 3 bdr home, nice
kitchen . range. r.tr~gerelor , dit·
.,.... ., • . gts heat cantrelalr, 11t
b... ment. 11 OJ Ohio Ave. For
rent whh opt ion to buv. C1n
flnencer 1350.00 mo No Pats.
Cell e14 -44e-2573.
In Raclnt, duplea 2 MdrOGm,
compll'llty furniehed All utili·
tiea pekt. t3&amp;0 . pet month plue
deposit Call 11"·141-2801 .
Mkldtepon, p•nlcllty furnlll'lld
houaa. t:IHn reuonabla rant
Mlddleport, Ohio, It lntereated
call 30•·882·3722
2305 Mt Vernon .t.v• . , natlable
March 111. 1231 .00 month rent

pluo 1 monlh
2173.

dopo&lt;~.

304·171·

1·1
Leureland llptl. ltow lr refrfget·
1tor fum , 2 bldroomt, Clfpetld,
til .. ec:. •pta, for more lnforme·

tlon 304·182·3711

46

Furnlehed Roome

For rent SIMPiftG Rooms lnd
light ~UN k.-plng rooms. Perk
Central Hotel. Cell 01•·••e·

0788.

46

Space for Rent

Mobile ho~n~ lot, 1 2 ' d0' or
'"""·· 171 \(tl11r paid, 4th •

Nell. Golllpollo. Coli 448·4411

oftor SPM.

2 bedroomt , llvln; room .
klt~fln . TV rootn, conv.nltnt
loc;atk)n, fenced beckyerd, 304-

COUNTRY MOilLE Homal'wlo.

575·4255 oftor 1:00

L"'gatou. Coli 814·9&amp;2·7478.

~Iii.

Sofu 1nd ch-'ts priced from
1285. to 11915 Tab ... tiD lnd

Route 33, Nonh of Pom.oy.

Vans&amp;.

4 W.O.

19780odgepowerwegon, 41t4.
good working cond., 11,500.

Coli 814·251· 1427

' l-&gt;)'

. ' '},.r

11BI Cuatomlzed Dodge Mini

end
to 1110..
10f1 beds.
up to up
1125
Hld•e·brlds,e390
IH5. Atcllnen, 1221 to
1375 ., Lampe tram 121. to
o128 . pc dlnlft• &amp;om •108 ..
to43G . 7pc. 1119endup . Wood
table with six chtln UIS tv
0745 . Oak •110 up 10 1225.
Hutch•. 1550 . lunlt bid com·
plate with maHr...... 1275.
•nd up to 1391. Blby bedl,
t110 Mettrenu or bo•
sprtngl, full Of twin, 113 ., firm,
173. end Sl3 Outen •••·
1225 4 dr . ch•tt. 149. I dr.
chuu. 119 Bed tnmee.
120.1nd 125 . 10 gun • 0"'
c•bintts, 1350 . Gil or IIIC'Iric
reng11 •37&amp; Baby m•"r. . . ..
135 a. 145. bed frlmet 120,
126, &amp; UO , kinv freme 150 .
Good Hltctlon of bedroom
IUIIII. rockers, metal clbln.ts.
headbolfdl UB I up to tiS .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waehers drven. refrlgll'alon.
rtngea . Skagge Appilences.
Upper River Rd . belld1 Stone

C.101 Motel 11'\·"1&amp;17398 .

"" "'

County" rp~lienc., Inc. Good
used applienc.e tnd TV Nt•
Open 8AM to &amp;PM . Mon thru

64

64

Misc. Merchendlee

•· G •

ay,.

ram

AM·FM ..,... c'"'"· wh •lma.

Cherry bookcue (beautiful)
t350 01k go•-'P bend'! UOO,
grrft 3 spd. bik•(n.wl ISO Cell
6U·446·2410 efter 3PM.

304·875·1112.

Alf1H1 Hl'f. equare bel• S•
cond, third, 1nd fourth cutting
Top qualtty hey, n....er bHn wet
Atso. 1.,. round baltl o1 ftrlt
cutting Alfetfe end Orcherd
Oren Cell 814·98&amp;· 3341
Royal 01111 Farme.

Building Suppliee

Building Materltll
Blodl. brick.
IMP•· win·
dowl. lint.... etc. Cltude Win ·
ten. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 114·
248·1121 .

eew•

54

C•ll•h111 '1 Uslld Tire Shop. Ovll"
1,000trrtl, lil:ll12 , 13,14 , 15 ,
16, 16 5 8 mil• out At. 211
c.u eu-258-1251 .
Black powder 15 96, T · C
Htwken 1209 98 , ~ "VV• of
btl1 buckloo •5 .95 e. H.&amp;tl.
Koebel's Guns &amp; R~alr . Mite
C•eol&lt; Ad Hn . M·f . 5·8 PM.
S11 1-5 . can 614-44e-2J1t .

Miaed hey •roe IIIUifl biiM,

814·241·&amp;825

7439 .

76

1ransuort .J tJon

Block. brick. morttr .nd m..
sonry auppiMI. Mounteln Stett
Btodl, At 33, New Haven. W

71

Vo. 304·812·2222.

&amp;

Autos for Sele

1981 FOtd Futuf'l • door, n.w
tir11 . ss.ooo mu... full tQuip·
ment. V«Y nle~~ . Call 11.a·2•5·

American Pit Bull puppiu. 3 mo .
old. Coli 114·388 ·HI1 ,

7310.
Male black Chow. AKC N;ll·
t..-ed. 2 .,.., old. Ca11814·H2-

2017.
2 male AKC SUv.r Poodle Pup1,
hid aH shOtt. rNitt good houM
..... - ·· 2· 3172.
Velentine Speciel Perakaett
f11.81, COlli •t.llt. Flolt buy
one get MCOnd heH price Flah
Tank end Pt1 Shop, 2411
Jackeon Ave.. Point PIHNnt.

WYo. 304·&amp;75·2083.

Halt Price! Fl1d1ing enow Iiana
t289. Ughted . non·lrrowl2tt.
NonUgt1tld *219. Fr11 llttlfll
Vary t.w left. S11 ku:atly.

1(800!423·01 n . lnyllma.

Jeep CJI. V8 motor, h•d top
md mini top . 11!00 1171
Tovo11 pidl-up . 1250. 300
Peevey Ampllfltt 1nd 2 spuk-

FNit

a. Vegetable•

3582
Ber;ain•l Oak deek, 150. K.,.
mor• wether. 11&amp;. Electric
chord or gen. I 1I More mite.
items. Cell 114·1111·4384

TONY"S GUN REPAIRS. holdlp
rtblutlng, tlltypet of gur~erNd.
work, t11t tervlct, 30" ·171·

4831.
~

00 Annl'ierH!'¥ Avon to Mil.

304·178·142&amp; .
HALF PRICE I Ftathlng ln'OW
signs 12191 Lighted, nctn•tn'OW
121111 NonliQhtld 121tt Fr11
lltt1t11l V..-y t.wleft. IMiowlty

1(8001423·0113. On'(11mo.

lelllw· Sewfllar· manuel ebre·
""' boltoond" · Mocltl 1010.
B.a..w ckcuiM IIW lftd tool
trlnder ltllrp·aM . Auto MW
filar -model 317 ·Foley . All

Trucklo.t No 1 Rome hauty
11.00 bu.; PolttOII 50 lb
13 00 Complete line fruht end
product. J~1 Fruit M1rbt.
Routt 35, Henderson.

I .11111

Supp l ll' \

(; L ! VI ~~:I J t: k

61

Farm
_, Equipment

S.E. Ohio.
Mld-Win1tl Cl11nnct Sele.
U~ trecton MF 111 dll ., MF
135 1111· dol.• MF 35 dol .,

Farv. 30. F.. c~- 1000. 5000.
4000, 3000 dol., Ford 2000101.
FO&lt;d 2810 dol. • PI· Dl Fonl
810 W·l PrO.. Ford IN ·tl'4.
Joltn Dooro 2020· 2030· 1820
del. Ov• 71 UHd triCiol w·pa.
.Hm'l Ferm Equlpmen1 Cent.,,

R1 31 W•1. Galllpoll~ Oh. Coli
114·441·1777.

YIU9tf farm Supply, Souttlltde,
W. Va. Co,.., .... 16ne of ftrm

.,pplll. N-

buv1n11 lhollod

oom. Call far lrltorfMtion 304·

175·20"'111,

FO&lt; Sola plgo. 304-17S ·3308 .

63

Uvestock

Grein fed ,.._., boot. Wll
dtliY... to but:dttr 11t011. Col
814·387·0112 .
Reg . Ouerttr hot-M lwoedm..-e
1800. Crop·OUI Q.H. yoo"lnl

colt o4SO CaM 114·448·0113.
3 lOW hoOI cllt1o hive pip In l

w -. 1221 uch. 304·175·
1412.

64

Hay

a. Grein

For Nle hey nevtr wet rtd dover
• CH"ahn lrltl mixed . Cell

•21 .00 mon11tly. FOf lnformo·
don call your loc* lohool
SatVIco ft-1oti¥o, Mor·

~- Pl.-... 304-171·3778.
toll oollocl.

Skutt Eloclric kiln. Modol LT·3k.
240 voMo 28.7 ...,,. Col
304·773·1303.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1178 Conoord I cyt .. 1uto. good
condltk»n, low miiNQa. Call

814· 448· 1122 ., 1,4·441·
7172.

Uncondltiontlllfetlme guar•ntH. Local reftrencet furnished
Ff• •timet•. C1ll collect
1· 114·237-o•aa. diV or night.
Rog1r1 Baaemant
Waterproofing.

1184 Toyote ven. 21.000 mi.

1flol...,. Coli 814·448·081&amp; .

Colll14·441·9740 oft"' 7PM

RON ' S Television Service .
HouM cells' on RCA , Quaalf.
GE . Sptcitlina In Zenith. Cell
304 -578-2398 or &amp;1•·•48·

1110 CougW XR7. gootl ccnd .

441·2422 oltor 1:30.
1177 Pontiac Grend Prix. fOOd
oorld., NnatiktniiN. Cellettera.

2454.

114·441·1522 .

Fetty Tree Trimming. etump
removal. Cell 304·87!5-1331

U78 Toyote Cetlca A-1 cond ..
AM ·FM eterto. AC. muet 1111.

AINGLES' S SERVICE . upt·

1978 Ptymouttl Horizon TC· l .
11.000. Call 814·448·8314

1• Dodge Def1 4 MW 1irM, runt
good. bOdy In felr shape. Call

814·318·8472
1110 Pontlec Phoenlll front

whHI drlvo, 4 oyl., varv (IOOCI
lhepe, low mi._, reuonebla

Coli 814 ·441·1710.
1111 4 door Chevette. -t SDd..

AM·FM radio, U .OOO. good
ODftdklon . Col1114·441·3830.
1183 Plymouth ReUtnt 4 door.
auto , elf, CN .... PS, Pl. AM·
FM, price 13,11600. John ' e Auto
Sale, Bullville Ad • Olllipoll•.
1170 Ford OranldL new Plint,
good worlr. cer. Call 81"·"'·

1024

Cen you buy Jeeps, cen. or
4x4't tlil:tcl in dNI rlidl for
&amp;nd• 1100.007 C.M tor tecta
10doyl !1151 218 ·1701 Ea1.
181.
1812 CemtrO wlttl MW 4 cyt
engine, tt•d ., 4tpd . tnrne . Alao
11"11 PontiH OP , new ptint.
brek•. tlr• • ••heust. CaH

814·1182·8010 or - 11 1512
-111., Middleport.
1182 Chwy Cl1a11on. AT. AC.
AM·FM redlo, ,.. dafogg•. 4
cyl. 41 ,000 actual m1111. Cell

114·882· 3703 o• 814·992·
3711 .
1872 FordMusteng. 351 Cltve·
lond _,llnL 1200.00. 304·

rltnc.cl cerplr'lt.,, el.ctdc:i1n,
meson, painter. roofing t•nctud·
ing t1o1 tar 1pplicetlon) 30•·

875·2018 o• 875·7388
Starlet Tr• and ltwn Service
lendKtplng. 304 -576 2010

' 14 Chev Cn1llar 1t1tlon·
wlgOI'I .
cond, AC. reclining
,.,,,, u,ne .oo. Poulbla
tred .. mull ..11 304·937· 2110.

••c

1971 Chew Cepric ClaNiC. AC.
Pl. PI, runs good, cell efttr

5 ·00. 304·175· 3124.
1972 Oldtmoblle Cutt•• Su·
pteme. 11800. Call Htwun

t :OO Mtd 1 :00. 304·171·1113.
1913 Volttowog.,

Robb~

GTI.

.. IQodod.
112· 2811.

72

•uoo. 304-

Truckl for Sale

891·3802
Roofing, ell klndl Installed or
repeired Insured, fr1e esti·
mat... Phonl 304-523·3i17 or

304·512·5200.

82

Cor. Fourtt1 end Pine
Qellipollt, Ohio
Phone 1,4·448 -3888 or e14·

441· 4477
Cllrk Plumbing and Ht111ing, 18
years uperiencer. unltop drtins .
New· remodellng-rap•lr work .
l'tlone 304-882 ·201 2

Excavating

Good-1 Excft'atlng. b11tment1.
footlf'l, driVNIIYI. nptic tanks,
lendscaplng. Call 1nvtlme 1514 448·4!537, Jam11 L. Oevlaon,
Jr . owner

Round biiiCI hay, toldldonyour

1rv01&lt;. •12 00 per bolo. Coli

814·441·11711 or 114·441 ·
2174.
110 ,.,.. . . . . ""'· _ _ ,
•1 .00 par - · Col 114·441·
4013.

72 KtrMOrth 311 m . 73 TreM
mobile flat. W.l .• olld"l ......

LMto round ,.,.

78 ChlvYPU3101U10 .• ~1. P8,
Nftl g,..t. qmp• thtll. Cel
114· 241·11040.

of hoy. no.

Con dallvar. Call 114·812·
7401 .

c'" 114·44 .. 7444.

. h

with

Michael

(]]) MecN•t~uhrer Nowth·
our
Ill (IZ Dlvorc41 Cout1
(HI Barney Mlllor
7:05 (I) Mary_Tyler Moore
7:30 D Cil (I) New Newlywed

Clemo
(]) AWA W,..lllng
liD Cl) WKRP In Clnclnneli
• (JJ IDI JIIOperdy
CIJ. Agony
® WhHI of Fot1une
01 @ Price II Right
® Bob Newhart
7:31 (I) &amp;onlord end Son
8:00 D Cil iDI Dlsney'a DlVI
Yalontlne'o Dey Speclol
Clastic Disney cartoons
are preeented to salute the
romantic spirit of Valen·

A-1 Refrigaretion &amp; Appl iance
Repair , w11her I dryer Call

e

114·44&amp;·8840.

611

(!) MOVIE: "Tho Howl·

lf1J1'

85

Cl (JJ 1m Twilight Zono

General Hauling

Cl) MacNeil-Lehrer Newsh-

our

llJl Waahlnaton WHk In

Jtmfl Boys Weter Sennce Also
poole f•lled . C.tl 814-266-1141
or 01•·441 1176 or &amp;14 -44e

Rovlaw (CCI Paul Ouko is
joined by top Washington
journelittl 8nalyzlng the
week't news.

7911
Ktn' l Weter Servrca
cisterna. poole tilled

Wells,
Phone

114· 367 ·0123 o• 614·367·

..tBI( MOVIE: 'Tho lleaatme•

7741 niQht or dey

8:01 ([) MOVIE: "Tho Loot Train
fn&gt;m Oun Hill'

Weugh 't W•t• Service. Welts ,
clstemt, pools. Fut. rehlblt
service C11i 114-258· 12"0 or
61-l·215e· 1130 R1110n1

1 :30

Richerd ' s Oerb1ga H1ulin g
1•.10 1 month &amp; other heuhng
C1ll •nvtime day or nl9ht Call

7397

87

Upholstery

"'"bed

1178.

A n Eng (11 men
roa
(CC) Actress Corel Bro wne
portrays herself in a dra·
mat•zation of her actua l en·
counter with no1onous defactor Guy Burgess. (60

Webs1er falls for a new girl
in tchool, but blows his
chance to invite her t o the
Valentine·• Day party.

1973 Chi'IV FletCeide PU. wtth

-1173 11ft
ron up door,
auto. 414 •tint. Caiii14·11MI·

EVENINQ

Electrical
&amp;. Refrigeration

84

Coel. lim111one, grevel, etc
D11ivered 1 ton end up Jim
Unitt'. 304-875 -1247 or 675 -

1001 bo• l10ppar. Cal1114·445·
1711 0&lt; 114· 241·1111 ofl ..
8PM.

~ S~!"':'d;trformancel:

11na·o Day. !80 mln .l
I]) Doria
Doy'o S.a1
Frlando
(I)
@ Woboler (CCI

Ford~. tow miiHgl Hila
- · 14,!100. Call 114·441·
47H

Supply, 114·248·1113.

2/1 4/88

611 (!) Jefferoona
Cl (I) (Ill WhMI of Fortune
Cil Nlgh11y Bualnou Repot1
® Eyowltneu Newt

CAATER"S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

83

Jonnolo soo o psychi01riS1.
(60 mm.)

7:00 I)()) PM Megezlno
C3J AI(IO Smith ond JonOI
(]) SpoiUCon,.r
(I) En,.t111nmon1 Tonight

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

114·3&amp;7·0121

fHd••

FRIDAY

Interview
Landon.

251·1221
1112

Evening Television Listings ______;__.....,~~-~----------------=:-:==-:::-:-:-::-:--.---;:;=:;:;---~~~~
f
hottest f1lms
;-;..

Rotery or clble tool drilhng
Moll welleeomplettd 11medey
Pump 11111 1nd lti'VIeot. 30•

773·1173.
1111 Dodga Potwo. 73,000
mt!Oo. good cond. 304·891·
3172

.·

Blodl. end concrete work elso
pllndng and carpentry,gerag•.
buam1nt1. atdewelke. patios,
retlifting WIMI. 30 yr. PP•
ri.,ce. F,.. ..dmatet. Wa' reon

c.._
hoy w11 ..114·441
oo~. too ·1012.
· -·
Cotll -IPM,

Mo1omllv and blbv clo1111ng.

t 1 50.00 nvW.gs WartdbOOit Erl·
cyclopedia, 110.00 Hpoelt •

Home
Improvements

1810 Detaun PU good cond ..
87,000 ICt. ' mi• . Ctll 814·

Round bl'-e
17!. Wtlh:e
uh bloc*• 12,• . Attlz11 Ftrm

THIS 19 OUR ANNUAL SALE.

81

304·411·11 7

0900.00, caft 304·171·1123.

571· 2481.

caeHttt. Elcctllent condition
High miiHge Call 81-t -441·
80"10.

lilvll', aac. cond .. ntw dr• •

Lllrvt rauncl hoy In ,_,
-lood. Cal1114·441·1171.

cabinete, houMhotd lteml. 304-

Air. maroon intid•out. AM·FM

Phyllis want us to share

h~,__ il'

81 4·245·81151
19B1 Delta 88 Rovatt B':lh·
men 2 dr., AT, PI, P door
1

Watt won dinner for four
at Diceys Gr iII' 11e and

Happ4 birthday
cmd thanks !

Nina, set anot her
plate!

Serv ice s

1878 Ford Future 2 door.
09.000 miMI, AM·FM tape, lir,
auto Cell 114-2-l5· 1S131 Of

evenlnge.

"'· •850 Ca11114· 742·2181 .
Firewood for sale. Split ..-.d
delivered. 135 . Call e14·885·

___

Coli 114·311·8417

MuHy Feroueon. New Hoflend,
Bush Hog Sal•. Service. Over
40 uatd triCtorl to dloOH from
• con.,t.te line of new • ulld
~e~uipment. largttt Mlectlon In

814·&amp;89·3551

5131 .. 114·248·11815

I:.~...::.:-=~~...::.::..:_

7PM .

58

FEEL OF

Four 15 indl old style Rally
whlllll 1100.00 Two 260 ei11
eve I• ChiVY engine I 100 .00.

1977 Albblt1. Coli &amp;14· 388 ·
1421 0&lt; oftor 5·30 &amp;14·388·
1823

Brierpatctl Kenn• All· brNd
grooming. Englllh Codl11 Spa·
n6tta. 311·97to.

Orogonwynd Clftarv Kannol.

'1')4'

MY OL' WARCLUB .

Auto Parte
Accessories

304·895·3838 .

Pets for Sale

CFA Himal.-,en, Pllflitn tnd
&amp;lemtH kitttna. AKC Chow
puppl" Cell 441· 31" efter

GOT

&amp;78·3817.

collect.

66

THIS HASN' T

I'P.CE, WE SHOULD BE P-BLE
TtO'VER A LOTTA. GROUND
BY NtGHTFALL!

Ferm Hay 1,000 bal... 304·

2 model12 Wind-leiter. 1 modtl
10 Remington , 1 Frerrchlt 32 in.
tul , 1 modal 37 R.L. Wlnchnt•
JO ln. tul. Cell e14 -441 ·33.al .

Firewood t35 , turing p'ow.
comb ine &amp; mowing mach6ne.

IF VIE CAN KEEP UP THIS

U11111v lldg. Spl.: 30"140"11".

CROSS a SONS
U.S . 31 WMt, Jacltoon. Ohio .
114· 211·MS1 . .

tticks, and acceesoriea. ••c
cond C1ll e14·387-1800.

ALLEYOOP

1981 Honde CR 80, 1260 C1ll

Good mixed h.., 11 2&amp; bele.

Color TV 25 lnctl Ztnittl, good
pictu,.. Call 61•· 2•5 -15131 or
61•·245 ·95615

1 ft pool teble, 11111 top , QUe

Motorcycles

5133.
,, !10 304·81'8 ·5579

flft W • 11'x8' slkting door •
""'· door· 11211 trecMd Iron
HDtM ftldgo . 114· 332·9745

Misc . Merctoandiae

Houte coel Lump I. stoker Zlnn
Coal Co Cal! 614-448 ,408 .

74

304·111·21 01. '

Pleno bHU11ful Acrotorlk:, In
fintcond t900 . CaU e1-t-ll7·

Anttque kitdltn CUPbolfd, with
flowr bin. neturel wood finhrh.
1.11c cond . 1300. 44e -•51• .

1979 Ford Bronco. 4 wheet 4
IP· pb, ps, 351 M, good cond
14800 304·882· 3201 .

1985 4 WtiHier Kewenki motorcycle 300 •1500. 1985 3
Whllllf' Honde Moped In 111.
conditkm 1300 Cell 61•·367-

1218

Antiques

304·882·3237 ol1or 5:00PM .

Plno Sl.. Golllpolla. Ohio Col
114·441·2783.

AKC lotton Tlf'rier mtle, 8
wooko old Col1114·448·7432 .

53

I&gt;W5ELF TH//'1~!

1171 Scout, 4x4, AC , PS, P8,
cn.~6st , good cond, 11,950 00

Hey for 1111. Ctll e14·992 ·

Ktntuc"'- LUft"CJ , Ot16o Lu.,.,
Ohio Stok•. Yard or delivery.
clfMI'It btocb and buMdlnt
m1t.-ial. G..lpoKI llodt Co ..

Genuine l'lardrock meple dining
room euite, 38 in hutch, table &amp;
ch1irs. lllte new . 1•00 00. 251Ray' s Used Fumtture, Addilon.
Ca11&amp;1•·387·01l7 New Bunb
1160, used bunk bide 1100,
l1rge coal • wood h.,l• 1185.
cheel 130 . 2 •mall Qtl hletere
11 8 ••· end t.tJI• sa aa .. high
chlf 110. 4 bar llool 110 11 ..
roll e wey blld UO. bedroom
IUitl t1SO. tntng cabinet 140,
refrigerator 1100

HAN!

STOP T' EAT!

Large round bllee of good mb.tcl

hoy UO. par bolo or •150. tor
all. CIIII14-992·BOI3 or 814·
742·2821 .

Sl1. &amp;14·448·1899. 827 3nl.
Ave. G111ipolis. OH .

• CHOf'I'E fl' -

111u. I'llf oor,

19B2 Dodgecuetomven, 1utor,

rm

YER STOMACH'S Rlhi18(.1N'
50 LO U~ I CAN'T HEAR

Prlct 13,498 . John's Auto Sale,
Ruleville Ad . Oalllpolit

UHd I'""P"'· lawn moWifl,
school ctllir1, mlec. Fbi It Shop.

66

H

.ONE OF THE: CARS
I CALLEU IN JU~
AAAIVEO. IMIJAME

•. \'iE"Q ~E T

11f SMALLEST

~·50fiAV, IT'~

condition.
Call 81• ·"1·8342
~;~:=~~~=~~l~;~~~;;~~·-;"~'"~'~~~, Ram
van. miiMOeiOW,
IItCelfen1
-

Pole Build ings by Ou1li1W"
Builders. Fr" tltlmetM. Cell

Houses for Rent

2 bdr unfumteh..t houaa with
garage Cell l14-441 -988e.

1-1 ~

LAYNE "S FURNITURE

2 bedroom1ptln Pomeroy tb&lt;we
Kroge,., newty remodeled. Cell
81.&amp; ·992-8215 Of e1•· 992 ·

882 ·2518.

41

73

Call 614·UI·4530

2 bedroom tumltt1ed apt. for
rent In Mktdtepon C•ll 1 -30•·

614·592· 3051 .

11 ,200.00 or trld1 for 3 or 4
wheeler. 30•· 882· 2438

114· 388 ·9750

7314
HOME OWNERS -Rafm1111 ca to
low tl.llecl rate UH liQUify fOI •Iny
purpou Leader Mortljlll;te Co ,

1880 ChOYY Silverado 4•4
lootlod, altort bod, 05.800.00 .
1951 ChtvV 2 door sed en,

vwood·co.letov•. epcwood LA
aulte 1398. bunk bldl 1181.
entron reclinlf'l 188. ntw •
used bedroom auitel, rengll.
Wlingtr Wllhl,.. , • lhoea . New
livlngroom sultM 1188· el81.
ltmps, 1110 buying coli • wood
ltov... Call 814·441· 3119 .

Mollot11n Fum . &amp; Appl. Sal11
Gibson &amp; Mevtev. St Rt. 1 N .
Gallipolis Ctll 81•·"1·7•-M .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED tn•ured, reuonable retet. C1ll

35

2311

SWAIN
AUCTION a FURNITURE 12
Oliva St.. GolllpoNo. Now a -

Aadecouted ept , 2 bdr 1160
to 1250. Clll304 -676 5104 or
30•· 875-5381 or 304-87&amp;-

Furn 3 rooms e. bath. uptttirt.
clatn. no pl'tl, adults, ref &amp; dep
rtQ . Call BU-448· 1519

1982 1h•a 2 bedroom Com·
modore turn ithtd. 1uume loan,
t152 09 month Mov;nv. must
tell. 304· 875·8782

1880 FOfd F250, I cylinder. ..
IPeed. AM·FM, cu..Ue. cruiaa,
dual tankl. tappet'. Exctlltnt
conditlon . .. 100 . 61•·192-

Houeehold Goods

0338

1982 . 1•x!52, 2 bedroom. vinyl
underplnn•nQ , I!II downs, 1e1110
porch tnd electric entrence
11rvlce Excellent conditiOn. C1ll
814-992 -2772 .

Pr.owned mobile hom• like
new . l1~tr Nlectlon See them
1t K.K Mobile Homet Inc 341 1
Jacltson Ave P1. PI ICfOU from
Jr Hi1Jh 30-t-175-3000

61

V•lley Furniture. new &amp; ut~ .
Llrge HCtion of QUIIItv fum i·
tun 121 II Eutarn Ave ,
01lllpolis

789a .

,r

3000 . . •

814·448·0322

JACKSON ESTATES APART·

PLAC iNG M V FINANCIAL
THE HANDS OF UPPWARO

Trucks for Sale

b"* of K a K. 304·178·1071.

Used Fumitura · · Oreuer, &amp; btd ,
mttel office d•lta. 3 mll11 out
Bulevrllt Rd Open Sam to !pm,
Mon . thru Sat.

Apartment
for Rent

R~wood

814·44&amp;·4151

2

bedroom trailer. furnished.
wuher 1nd dfyer, 1ir condition.

11 1'M

72 Ford F-100, 302 . 3 apd .,
camp• top . best offer Cell

Trtiltr spaa... tMIU ohlklnn
eccepted, At. 1. Locuat RoM.

Call 814.448·0722

12xll Windsor, furnlthld, naw
c.-pet, q11 heat. CA. Roush
L1n1, Ch•hlt'e. Call 114·367-

rtptlr. perta. end auppll• Pick

Recine Gun Shoot tpon.ored by

'N' CARLYLI ®br urry Wright

KIT

Space for Rent

448·4119 .

SWEEPER tnd IIIWII'ISI machine

992·5912

Friday, February 14, 1986 •·

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

TRISTATE

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11e3 Sac Ave . GaHlpolls
114· 44e -7833 or 61•·4•6 ·

1133.

A ~ M Furniture Menufecturing,
St. Rt. 7, Crown City, Ot1 Cell
e14-2!e-U70, call Eve 814441 · 3438 . Otd &amp;. new
Uphotterld

il) Fll,.,er
•
{]J Top Rank Boxing from
Atlonllo City, NJ
([) Ill riZ Mr. Belvod•re
ICCI When Wooley is
moved to en advanced
cla11 at school, he meets a
girl who uks h im to the
Valen1ine 'e dance.
llJl Wall SirMI WHk Louis
Rukey1er analyz11 the
' 80' a with 1 weekly revrew
of economic 8nd invest·1
ment menert.
'
8:00 D Cil tBI Knight AI dar M ,.
chael end KITT fa ce a su·
perpowered jeep when
they Infiltrate 8 forest re~
urve hideout for illegal
drugs . (60 min.! In Stereo.
I]) 700 Club
· (I) Stor llean~h
D (JJ ® D•lloa (CC) Matt
meets with Pam' s Col·
omblln kldnepporo while
Cla'tton and Mi11 Effie urge

Ab

d

min.) (AI .

01 (IZ Dilfrent Slrokos

(CC)
9 :30 I]) Well Stree1 WHk Louis

aboul his ldonlity.
10:00 I) Cil Doya of Our Llvoaln
Stereo .

CD

CBN Nowa Tonighl
Cll lll@Th• Fell Guy (CCI

Infinity'

public f1gure rs lu lled , Hun.

Jeffrey Lyons and Michael

ter suspects hom1c1de e ve n
though all c lu es p o mt 10
po lrt 1c al a ssa s sin at• o n

{1) National Geographic
Special: Creature• of 1he
Mangrove (CC) The trdat
forest of Siarau 15 home to
an amazing array of crea ·
tures . (60 m1n.) In Stereo.
[I) Austin City Limits:
Tanya
Tucker/ Sawyer
Brown In Sweo.
llJ Co1101)o Buko1ba11: 1111·

lnlorview with Michael
Landon .
fl) (l) MOVIE: 'Race With

the Devil'

tD

MOVIE: 'The House of

Fear'
ID (IZ MOYIE: "Mork of tho
Devlr
12:20 (]) Night Tracks In Stereo.
12:30 0 Cil (Ill Friday Night Vi·
deoe In Stereo
Cosby Show
(I) ABC News Nlghtline
CD) MOVIE: ' Let'1 Do It

CD Bill
Again"

1 :00

CD Doble Gillis
C!l World Cup Skiing
()) Puttln' on 1he Hlte

® MOVIE: "Tho Chlnne
Web"
1 :30 (I) Fether Knows Best
([) Nowa
2:00 I) Cil NewaCen1er

Colt and Pat Boone team
up 1o find a fug itive in dustrtal spy. {60 mm)

(]) 700 Club
(J) Mezda Sportalook
(I) Dick Clerk's Nl1etlme

611 (!) Odd Couple
ill (I)(JD Falcon Crest (CC)

fi) Cl) MOYIE : 'The Sevon
Minutes'

SATURDAy

Angola anemp11 10 sovo

Lance and Peter from their
imprisonment, Jorden worries about her memory
lapses , and Chase devises
8 scheme to even the score

ll]) MOYIE:' Dr. Who: Arco

tard of Oz" (CCI

=

Ill (IZ Ho'a 1ho Mayor (CCI
Cerl risks losing an unex·
pected friendship wt1h a
woman when he lies to her

0 (I) ® MOYIE: "Tho Wi·

~ 2 00 ~ ~~~~~~i~~~~~~onigh1

Rukeyser analyzes
the
' 80' s with a weekly rev1ew '
of economic end invest·
ment matters

2(1 ~/86
EVENING

w11h Angela. (60 m1n .1
Cil Brown Sugor (CC) Tho

7 =00 0 Cil Too Cloao tor Com·
11Cempbolll

period 1940· 1959 11 ell:·
amtned via film footage
and interviews w ith Lena
Horne , Eartha Kin, Sarah
Vaughan and others {60
min I
(fi) Newswatch
\B) Nowo
IRI
\llll M i8ml Vice Cro cken
and Tubbs track a Grand

1
~ 1 Sgte at Kentucky
1111
([) . ([) {])) Hee Haw

1;
(]] College Beake bell: M il ·
fl) (!) Smell Wonder
CIJ Wild America
CiJ Wheel of ,-ortune
llJl Newton'l Apple (CC)

i~!x b~~cy•:;~ ~t'~r~rpr~~~i~

JJllJWID1Lll

tute 11 thrown from hrs
speeding car . {60 min) In
S1ereo.

m (}})SOlid
Gold
8

the bends.

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
ooelelt81'IOeactllqU8r8,toform
lour ordinary word!!.

(I)) It'a

7 :30 D Cil tnoldo Look
~ Guno of Will Sonnott ·
"-'
611 ClJ It'a 0 Living
Cil P•oflloo of Nelure

••
a_on State 11 Weahlngton
CV Cl (I) Cit (]11 &lt;Ill Newt
fit CD Benny Hill Show

pre~o~iew

~fAfll,,,/
by

citt In Stereo.
(I) MOVIE: 'Oekote lnct.
dent'
(I) 01 (IZ The Aodd Fo••
Show (CCI The banker who
own s the loan on Al's d iner
s ues AI fo r a fortune after
he chokes on one of his

Tho Tonight

::::olo(l)

MOVIE :

.,
Matte. . Felcon'

11 Theater box his tory
12 "Hud" s t.ar 4 Surnmi£'r
15 Blvd
(Fr )
16 Exclude
5 "Tomo rrow'" Yesterday's Answer
17 Hebrew
in Tamp1 ro
judge
18 Man&lt;h

The moo1 bolovod
movie of oil tlmel

6 Vig1la n1
7 Coarse

22 Pub o rdN
8 Way har k 23 ~ Pea so u p ~
24 Exrwns1vt•
13 Texa.,
2 5 Ar~ f'n tlnt'
h a ttlt'
ammal
siiR

19 I (Ill
dYt' ell e r

20 Gram
21 Ire n e

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cas ·...~

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30 Aspt' rl
32 W ;_Lo;; h m~

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33 :--;hrnw
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38 ·sunhonn(',l ,

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14 Saltpeter

of ,.,ng
23 f11vc
off v ap o r

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16 Au natur£'1 28 Yn ungs iN 39 T.tl n,\ UVf' ••'

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24 F'ash1 on
26 DMve
27 Red -

28

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orde r
29 Watch

30 Le((Ume
31 Monk"s
ti tle
34 S tra~
35 Ex rh 1ck
36 Wirt'

nwa.sun•
371 tahan

film

TltA:T SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
•
by Henri Arnold a nd Bo b Lee
It's supposed to
be a wall

d assn
39 Suil 's hatll'
40 Eng nver

41

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(Answers tomorrow)

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2 · 14
P

Jum~ CROON RABBI BEATEN JAGGED

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IA

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One letter stands for another In thiS sample'' IS used&lt; ''
for the three L"s. X for the two O "s. etc S1nglr l elterl; ~ ;~
apost r ophes, the length and forma ti on of the words ore .a ll ,
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
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form the surprise answer, as s ug~~JL-:h:::J:;~;::J~:;:"?"'o~o~s:led: by the above cartoon

Vaeterday's

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THOMAS JOSEPH

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5 Shuppmg
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placl'
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in Eng

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Nell becomes convtnced
1het the employer II a ra-

Show Tonight's guesu are
Jamtl Stewart and Sheila

today s

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both Nell and Addy' s job

Eyewltntal Newa
(]]) The Sheke.,e•r• Hour
Hoslod by Welle• Matt h ou:
A
Mld1ummer Night" I
D.-.am The Fa iry king frees
his wife from the ape II Puc k
has cen (60 min .)
G]l WKRP In Cincinnati

E. (80 min.) In Sloreo.
(I) WKRP In Clnclnnoll
611 (!) il) Tul
Cl (I) MOVIE: 'The Umbre~
lsa of Ch-rg'
Cil Auotln Cllv Llmlll

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cr eator~

applications are rejected.

mt

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9:30

nola versus Wisconsin
@ The A·Teom Facoman
inadvertently hires the
band Culture Club to pet·
fo rm at a rowdy cowboy
bar {60 mm.) In Stereo
8 :05 CiJ Canlonnlal Pat1 5 Colo·
nel Sktmmerhorn 's cru·
sa de to wtpe out the Indian
race brings death to the
plains (2 hrsl
8 :30 0 (}) Feels of Lifo (CCI In
Stereo
(I) 01 (IZ Bonoon (CCI Port
2 of 2 Benson ond George
Kennedy find themtelves
trapped m the Governors
mans 1on dunng a snows·
torm. as they anempt to
solve a .murder.
9 :00 0 ~(Ill Tho Golden Girls
Blanche is courted by .11
wealthy
bachelor
In
Stereo.
(]) College Beaketbt~ll : Alabema va. Auburn
([) II) (IZ Fonono Dono
(CCI (Promlorol Af1er ho is
unwittingly linked with cor·
ruption . p o ll ee detective
Fortune Dane turns 1n h1s
badge, moves to the West
Coast and serves as troUb·
h
leshooter for a toug
woman meyor. (80 min )
Cil Tripods

Host Ira Flatow ex8mmes
the apeech capabilitres of
chimpam:ees
an d . t he
causes of peJSpiration and

"'
t0:05 ...., NBA Baokotboll: Boo1on
at Ponlond
10:30 CD To Bo Announcod
fJI IJ) INN Nowa

IO:OO O ~ @ Hunter When a .: ;:..

ID (IZ ABC Nows N1ghllino

(D) Trapper John, M .D.

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BECAUS E SOONER OR LATEll ~O~H:THINC; IS I:OIN..., ,;., ·
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More tainted
Tylenol found

\ Area death

YONKERS. N.Y. (UPI) -Con·
sumers nationwide were warned
against using 'I)'Jenol as tnvestlga·
tors searched for a link between the
cyanide-laced capsules that killed a
woman and a s«''Old bottle ~
Extra· Strength 'IYlenol tainted
with the polsOn.
Five capsules containing cyanide
were found Thursday In a triplesealed Tylenol bottle that came
trorn a Bronxville. N.Y., Wool·,
worth's store less than a mile away
from the A&amp;P supermarket where
the tainted Extra-Strength Tylenol
that kllled Diane Eisroth, :1.'1, oo
Saturday had been purchased.

Friday, Februrt 14, 198f

Pomeloy-Midcli~PC~ft Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday's discoVery pmnpted
the Food and Drug Admlnstratlon
to Issue a nationwide warning
against the use of 'I)'leml capsules.
Gov. Markl Cuomo banned the sale
of the capsules In New York, and
caJlfornla, llllnol.s, Massachusetts
and Indiana followed suit.
FDA commissioner Frank
Young said a bottle of Regular·
Strength 'I)'Ienol containing "a
very, very small trace of something
that reacted like cyanide" was also
found Thursday. But FDA spole·
woman Kay Hamric said later,
•'There was absolutely no evldellce
what!Oei'Er the substance was the

deadly polsOn."

findings because. "Weoon't wantt:o

today.

Prellmlnary analysis sllowl'd the

Dve tainted Extra-Strength cap.
sules CODtalned rougi1Jy equll cD~es
of cyanide and potau1um cyanide,
a lethal dole, acrordlng to Young.
The wtslde SE8ls on the bottle were
not broken and the aluminum ilU
over the top of the COiltalner was
Intact, he said.
.
"We're hoplngfllrther testil&amp;wW
give us a clue If there Ia a Unk
between the sewnd bottle and the
Yonken dellth," said Paul Hlle,
FDA asslstailt comrnlsaloner for
regulatory affairs.
The test results were expected

I

Elsroth. ol Peekskill, N.Y., died
·after taking two capsules given kl
her by llerboyll'lend, will said they
came from a sealed bottle. It was
determined the capsules contained
«l percent sodium cyanide and 9l
percent pollisslum cyanide.
Her death, the nrst Tylenol
poisoning since seven peopll' were
killed In the ChiCago area In 1982,
pnmpted the FDA to test 9l,!Dl
capsules !rom some 1,000 bottles
from st&lt;reS In the Westchester
County area.
Young said consumers sll&gt;uld
stq~ using Tylenol capsules despite
the local nature r1 the latest

take any chances.". Johnson· ,II
Johnson Co., maker of the popular
painkiller. joined In the warrunc::
After thl' 1982 deaths, Johnsort&amp;
Johnson. which is based In N~
Brunswick. N.J., pulled EX!ra·
Strength Ty !enol capsules fn#n
stores nationwide and began··~
testing program that eKllnUjled
more than 1 l)'lUllon bottles.
•
The contaminated blttle discovered Thursday came from lot
AHA-000 with an ex!Uatlon date t:l
March 1987 and had been rnanufac·
tured tn Puerto Rlco, Westchester
Cwnty.Pollee spol&lt;es...oman Maiy
Russell said.

Vocational ·
education
-Page B-1

-Page B-8

tmts
Vol. 21 No. 1
Copyrighlod 1986

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

EdiiAlrlals .................. .. .. ... A·2
Fann ...... .... ... ...... .. ... ..... .. D-1
Sports .... .. ............. .. .. ..... C.l-8

entitte
9 Sectiona. 64 Pege1 50 "'enta

Middleport-Pomeroy;_Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, February 16, 1986

The Coolville Exchange presently has toll-free
calling to the Chester, Uttle Hocking, Reedsville and
GuysvUie Exchanges.
PUCO notl'd In lts report that testimony at the
public meeting "reflected the calling needs of the
Tuppers Plains community aiolll' as opposed to the
entire CoolvUle Exchange."
In conclusion the report stated, "It appears the
major reason for those at the hearing wishing to call
Pomeroy Is to reach county government of!lces. The
PUCO "cannot Ignore that the majority r1 the
Coolville Exchange does not lle In Meigs County ."
Also, according to the report, the low calling
statistics fall short of those required for extended
service.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Tlme&amp;-Senllnel Staff
TUPPERS PLAINS - A proposal for extended
area telephonf' service between the Coolville
Exchange of Western Reserve Teiepll&gt;ne Co. and the
Pomeroy Exchange of General Teleptone Co. ofOhlo
has been denied by thl' state public . utilities
commission. ·
A report of the denial has been refeased by the
Public UtUltles Commission of Ohio (PUCO) .
A petition for toll-free service, spearheaded by
Mary Jane Talbott of Tuppers Plains, was ftled with
PUCOJune 17,19&amp;';. A publlc hearing was held Oct. 24
in Tuppers Plains.
At the hearing, Tl public witnesses testified In favor
of the proposed service. One witness was opposed.

Messages
Your VII molt .Kill

Heppy Valentine's Dty, I
love you .

LDYI,

I

hew m.,.y more
ye.,a together.
wt1

loY e.
Aey

Pete,
Happy v ...,tlne't Dey, I
love you very much .
Bunt
Gr~rNI.tey ,

To Sew...
All I ever dftemed of Clmt
truawhen 1fouNt you . IIDvtyou

Cheltlf,
I love you,

.
....
.

To len.

Lon
Tracy • Wendl

D'"'l·hhough the Murt it .Ill
unlftawn, atw1y1 riiiMmbef I
kw•.,.,..
end wou'n. the .,..a.t.
I .m youn.
Allth1

Willie.

llovt Yout
Rllph

.....

!l'll.

tl)

I Lovt U!

111 of

Forever.
Joyce

Molodle. Jeri lue, a...ty, Lori
end Ancty .. end temlllee. I
lovt Melt of you dHfty.

Pooct.le,

llovt You .

lcYe.

Momlo.,,...

Lovo

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

Mooc:ftlt

--·
n......

Heppy VIMntlnt' t Dey 10 my

LOlli,

F!!!Dm yow wffe.
DtM'IIII la.dl

torwtrd to our future pllf'lt. I
lo111e you tlwtY'.
Ttmmy

Bob.
You lrt the ont who tall•
my kiiYe end hkl• h ne•t to your

.....,

hMrt fortver 111d 1 day.

Lovo.

Steve,
HIPPY Vll.,tlnt' t

11'1

Love ye ,

T""
Oetr F1tt1.
You will alwiVI bt my
Ytllntlne.
L....
Tubbs

ledoy

Mom• Old z..
on to that h.mt

Mom . . d Dtd Ohlinglf.
Love Vt both. Htppy Vllentint' l Drt.
love

edoy

Steve,

You 'rt tht belt lhlnQ thtt
t'IIPPentd to mtl I tovt
you!

Shell

., .. tvltf

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS

Tetri

Mom• Did.
llovtyoul

Wilb,
I lo'ltl you! Htppy Ytlen -

ledoy
George,

e.

HAS THE KEYS

Heppy Vtl..,tlnt't Dey No.

tlnt' l Dey.
Bub

a.

Dtlt.
1 lo1111 you very mucfl .

loYI ya,

Jody

TO A

T.A .

BETTER DEAL

-

Tim• merch• on . the ole
bon• grow wt.-y , ttch dly thtt
wt' rt aotrt I k)ve you mort
Prltly LM!y

D-Spud,
TotM guy In myltfewho htt
m8dt ... of my *-ml COIN
tNt. Happy Vallnttn"t •t Oty.
LOYt you atweya.
Oon.et•
jult one wwv to .., tt
Lll'ry. Your v.,. tped.t tnd I'll
tfweya kMI you.

s-

Mlkt.
Htppy Ytlentint'l Oty. Wt
love you
Robin &amp; Jtult

Terry P.
I'm lucky to hlvayou it my
lift. I ctnnot watt to bt your
wtfe. Htppy Va*'tint'• Dey!

love.

Lll O·tq.
It my Veltntlnet

Mr. 0 -tey

Kim • scon.
BMt of luck. heppln . .. llld
love to,..,..
lovt.
KriN

a.

A Multimedil Inc . Nowopoper

H•PPY VMtntint't Dty to Daddy

Love,
Decl

• Mommy.
Ntncy What..,

HIPPY Vlltntlnt' t Dey to N•u:t

w•••..,.

Dtddy A Mommy

Mty *Yet'yclly ol your IHt bt

tove.

Love

Krilto

•REGAL

Thtnk God for enoth• Vtlen·
tlnt't Day with C"Miont.
Love.
Netflen

•2 DR. SO!t'ERSET

•CENTURY
WITH 4 CYl.

To My OrMdd ..... ter Mle1y,
You trt my IPtelel Vettntlnt. Heppy V,._.tlnt' t o..,. I
love you.

•4 DOOR SKYLARK

Mem1

OFFEI ENDS 2/22/16

H~ye

To Chuck.
I love you fll._ .

From lltencla

ONLY 6 DAYS LEn

Sti'Vt. JOihUI,
Heppy Velentint' a D•y to
my hulbtnd lind bttutifulson . I
lovtyou.

.....

U.ny.
I mils you
Vtttrnint't Dty.
love .

t~t.

Cintlv
Mu,
Pat II just lovt betng in lovt
whhyt .

MluO·tlly,
H.,.y Vtlentint'l Dav. Yul
NoiY11I

lovtyt,
Mr. O·tay
To IIN'en,
"The touch of the hind. 1ht
" " all ~glow. ltnd CIOUrllt to
hopt, witt. low It wtH grow.

,.......

Tim.
ThenU fo r the p111yetr ..,d
1 htH. I lov. ~ou and Happy

Yallntint'l Dtv.
l ove.

Deno

Ayen.
You will ttwey• have

To lh.wna Manley ,
Hlppf Flm Vtltntlne'sO•y .
Love.
Mommy tnd Caddy
To ftod Menley.
I low you . Happy Valen-

o..,.

Kiatu .
Angie Manley

Wruldn 't you

really rather have a ~ck ?

Happy Valentine's Day!

600 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY

992-2174

.,
.

'

t

ll)tcitl IJitctln my tltart .
love ya ,
Ptult

tin•'•

Smith-Nelson
Motors

Happy

Mom• Dad.
IMttd wfttl

the 20 million kilowatt level mey
once during l!llli, when II reached
20.2 million kilowatts just before
Christmas.
Cold weather across the ea
central area of the nation was
believl'd the JJ"imary factor lbr the
electric usage·record. While sales to
retail customers were high , deliverIes to nelghblrlngutllltles-ln need
of additional en~&gt;rgy because of the
low temperatui'€S - totaled 6.8
million kilowatts. That Is believed
to be the highest peak llr external
sales in the system's 79-year
history, AEP oCflclals said.
With the record demand, for
energy came a record use of wal in
A,EP power plants. On Wednesday.
AEP's 18 coal-fired generating
stations burned 171,6'72 tons of coal.
ornclals said that new mark was
set desplte the fact that both ci. the
system's nucll'ar gPneratlng units
were In operation. Average dally
coal usage during 1985 was only
105,071 tons.
· The AEP's coal consumption on
Wednesday was the equivalent of
more than 17 trains of 100 coal cars
each.

PUCO recommends that Tuppers Plains subscribers request "optional oft-peak toll service" from
Western Reserve. This service would allow subscribers in that area aloll!' to call exchanges within a 22
mile radius during off-peak hours at a reduced rate.
Western Reserve expressed willingness at the
public hearing to provide this type of Sff'lice if
specific requisites are met, including a petitiln.
Talbott indicated the PUCO declskm will be
appealed.
Several reasons for the proposed extrnded area
service were touchl'd on by witnesses at the hearing.
However, according to the report, there was Utile
testimony concerning population movement within
the Tuppers Plains area and it was pointedoutthat an
Envortnomental Protection Agency restriction on

building now exists in that community due to sewer
problems.
It was atso noted that schools within the Eastern
Local District in that portion of Meigs County can be
r!'ached on a toll-free basis b'j Tuppers Plains
residents.
Without local law enforcemenl , it was reported,
Tuppers Plains res idents must rely on the JX')tection
of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department. However,
the sheriff's office has a toll-free line.
At the time ci. the hearing, Sheriff Howard Frank
estimated that 70 percent of his time Is spent In the
Tuppers Plains area and the extended area servic~
would aid his work.
(Continued on page A-31

Power outage handling better
in 1986 stonns, report says
GALLIPOLIS - Three area
electric companies handled power
outages !rom a Jan. 19 snowstorm
better than power outages resulting
from February 1985 storms, according to the findings~ an Inquiry
conducted by the Public Utilities
Commission or Ohio !PUCO) .
The review focused on anaylzlng
repair efforts by the Ohio Power
Company, Columws and SoUthern
. Ohio Electric Company and South
Central Power Company as well as
the utillty companies' communications with the public during the
outages.
"Response time was improved .

counties, the PUCO said. Crews
from Chllllcothe and Columbus
were brought In to assist Athens
crews already working on the
problems.
By 10:30 a.m. on Tuesday, J an.
21, ali IN t 150 customers had their
service restored.
In' an effort to improve communications with customers during
wtages, c&amp;&amp;&gt;E assigned an adml·
nlstratlve assistant to full·tlme
communications with . tete&gt; !!'lOu,
radio and newspapers. During the
storm. the llason kept In contact
with media from Columoos to
(Cootlnued on page i\3)

this year," PUCO Chairman Thomas Chemahsaid. "In addition,

vital communications with media
and local oCflclals during the outage
period was much better than last
.winter."

WhileChema said there is always
room for improvement, " It is clear
that the hearing In Athens last May
and the Emergency i&gt;reparecl11ess
Semlnar that the PUCO sponsored
last fall enabled the companJes 10
respond more effectively" to the
recent storm.
During thl' storm, more than
9,400 Columbus &amp; Southern customers were without service in five

Pfeifer: Rhodes can
be beaten in primary
"\

REPAIRS OUfAGE - Columbus 6 Soulllem Oblo Electric
employ- repair a power outa,e resullnl from an accldenl on Ph!
StreeliD G•lllpnllo early Saturday IDlmiDI; Clly pollee said Mark V.
W
17, GIRt%, GaiJipollo, w• eaalbouod onl'lne and reportedly
locked hi!! bnkea as he came over lbe railroad tracks, swerved ta the
left to avoid a parlled car, wmt off the Jell !Ide Gllheroad and struck a
uilllly pole, knocldng out power bl the area.

of the month.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) They said the survey was of
Republican gubernatorial hopeful
Republicans
"likely to vote" In the
Paul E. Pfeifer concedes that
primary
election.
former Gov. Jam~$ A. Rhodes has
Pfeifer said he Is running second,
a "significant" lead, but says
wt
refUsed to provide figures to
Rer ubllcans are looking for an
back
up that clalm. Senate Presialtt,rnative. .
The Bucyrus state senator Fri- dent Paul E . Gllimor, R-Port
day released certain portions dt a Clinton. has cited a poll showing he
poll which hesaldshowthatRhodes is second to Rhodes. aloo refusing to
can be beaten In the May Republi- furnish the exact breakdown.
Nell Newhouse, senior assistant
can primary, and that he Is the
executivf'
ot Declshn Making
second most-preferred candidate.
At a press conference, both Information, McLean, Va .. said the
Pfeifer and a representative of his poll sll&gt;wed Pfeifer with the
polling firm repeatedly declined to second-highest name recognltion to
furnish reporters with detailed Rhodes. Again, he refused to
results from the telepholll' poll ci. provide specific !lgul'€5.
Newhouse sa id Pfe ~er has a 10-1
400 randomly·selected Ohlo Repub(Continued on paae A3)
licans, conductl'd at the beginning

GOP Candhlete
Paul E. Pfeifer

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COLUMBUS \UPI ) -American
Electric Power .System customers
set an all-t imeelectric usage record
on Wednesday, officials announced.
Between 10 a.m. and 11 a.m., the
AEP's eight operating companies
were called upon to deliver
21,006,1lMl kilowatts to their more
than 2.5 mUUon customers, lnelud·
ing retaU and wll&gt;lesale custcrners
and nelg~borlng systems. The
previOUs peak of 20,762,tm klkr
watts was set on Jan. 1.2, 1981.
Olflclals say demand exceeded

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CLE VEL.AJ\ D ii.: Pl i - Thursday's wi nning Ohio Lott ery
numbers: Dally Number

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,.....---.......
Electric usage

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Kolly.

The Bunt fl'"•l.

A travelers advisOry In effect
today.
Today ... perlods of snow. Accum·
ulations 2 to 41nches. High Zi to ll.
Winds southwest 15 to Zi mph.
Tonight... partly cloudy with a
chance of flurries. Low 10 to 15.
Winds northwest 10 to :!l mph.
Saturday ... mostly sunny. High In
the lower 30s.
Extended forecast
SundaylhroogltTueoday
A ctwnce ol rain or snow Sunday
and Monclay .. fair Tuesday. lll&amp;hs
in the tis and low ~ Sunday and
Monday and In die mid :llo lo mid
-Ills 1\Jesday. Lows 15 lo 20 Sunday
and In the mid 20s to mid 3&amp;
Monday and TUesday .

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Ohio weather:
rain forecast
-Page A-3-

Along the Rl&gt;er .. ..... ........ B-1-8

PUCO denies extended phone service request

Weather forecast

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1--------------------~ ~
D·I
Dealhs .... .... ................ ..... A-1

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Jessie Virginia Houchins, 83, 393
Park St., Middleport, died Thursday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs. Houchins was born at
Union, W. Va .. a daughter of the
late Hugh and Mary Shaffer Bostic.
She was a member of the Vinton
Methodist Church, Vinton GrangP
and was active with the Meigs
County Senior Citizens group. She
attended Heath United Methodlst
Church In Middleport
Surviving are t...o daughters and
sons-In-law, BHlif' Jo and John
Krawsczyn , Middleport. and
Wlbna and Calvin Hill, Jr ., St.
Albans. VI' . Va.; a son and
daughter-In-law, Stephen and Vicki
Hoochlns. Middleport: a brothl'r.
Marshall Bostic, Akron; a slstf'r.
Nathlal Bostic. Lewlswrg. W. Va ..
11 gra ndc hildr en. 11 greatgrandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In deat h by her husband.
William Charles Houchins in 1963.
t...o grandchildren. five sisters and
a brother.
Services will he held at 1 p.m.
Sunday at Heath United Methodist
Church with Rev. C. S. Zuniga
officiating. Burial will be In Vinton
Memorial Cemetery . Friends may
call at the Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and 6 to 9
p.m. Saturday.

7.9

James J, Kilpatrick praises Reagan's proposed
1987 budget- Page A-2
Bob Hoeflich dicusses drawbacks of ice and snow

Je!!llie V. Houchins

B-7

Firefighters mark 35th year

Mental retardation bill may move this week
$19 mllllon price tag, Is sponsored by Sen. David L.
Hobson, the committee chairman.
It establishes a "bill of rights" for mentally
retarded and developmentally disabled Ohioans, sets
up a toll-free hotllne !or reporting concerns, and
Installs an ombudsman in the Ohio Legal Rights
Service to receive, Investigate and mediate
complaints.
The measure also upgrades staffing and empklyee
screening .within the department, requires case
management services at the local level, requires
detailed financial disclosure by group home
operators, and permits the state to take over a
residential facUlty under certain circumstances.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - State lawmakers are
planning to act quickly on legislation making major
Improvements within the Ohio Department r1 Mental
Retardation and Developmental Dlsabllltles.
The Senate Health, Human Services and Aging
Committee may vote Wednesday afternoon on the
proposal, Introduced earlier this month In reaction to
instances of awse and financial lrregularitl~
uncovered last year in connection with the
department's program to send patients to group
homes.
The House reconvenes Tuesday at 11 a.m. The
Senate Is nol In session this week.
The bill for mentally retarded people, carrying a

The House Education Committee wil l meet
Tuesday evening to take up Senate- passed legislation
requiring that certain procedures be followed when
corporal punishment (spanking) Is used.
Under the legislation, sponsored by Sen. Oliver
Ocasek, D· Northfield, corporal punishment could be
used unless the local board ci. education adopts a rule
to thl' contrary.
Details of lhe punishment would have to be reported
to thl' superintendent within 72 hours, and school
boards would have to adopt policies for notifying
parents or guardians.
The state would collect annual reports from thl'
school districts on the frequency of use and the

reasons for corporal punishment.
The Senate Judiciary Committee plans a Wednooday morning meeting, possibly to vote on Hou~
passed legislation permitting closed preliminary
hearings on certain "'' offenses Involving a child.
At that meeting, the commit!('(' wlll continue to
study legislation permitting court - ordered wiretapping under certain circumstances to combat
organized crime, and the "merit" sel«:tion \)IIOh:Io
Supreme Court and appellat(' judges.
Under merit selection, judges are appointed to a
fixed term from a list of qualified candidat{'S
submlttl'd by a special panel. They must submit to !he
ballot if Ihey want an

Company calls Tyleno~ poisoning 'act of terrorism'
son called the tampering "an act r1 day night that he :-vrote the letter,
terrorism" and offered a SlOO,tm claiming responslbUlty for the
reward leading to arrest and death of Diane Elsroth; 23, oo
conviction of the poisoner.
Saturday. He was not charged In
The company 's stock was the the Tylenol case.
most actively traded Issue on the
Authorities said the letter, In
New York Stock Exchange Frklay, which t1te man threatened to polson
dropping a substantial $3.75ashare more Tylenol along with orange
co•wnen. However, oftlclals to S48 at the close. The stock lost ju~-!"8S received In the mall by
pollee In nearb')' Bronxville, where
noted there have been no reports t:l $5.50 per share on thl' week.
any tainted Tylenol capsules lound . Assist ant u.s. Attorney Jim two bottles containing talntecl
DeVita said a copy of the hand- Extra· Strength 'I)'lenol have
In Ohio.
written extortion letter was found tuml'd up. Capsules trorn one blttle
YONK ERS. N.Y. (UPl) - Pulice Thursday b'j Secret Service agents killed Elsroth.
"Why they would send It to the
said Friday they arrested a man In a New Rochelle home when they
who admitted writing a ~ miiUon arrested Dewitt Gilmore, 55, his son Bronxville pollee beats me," sald
extortion letter claiming he laced DeWitt Jr., 21, and Daffodil Gra- Westchester County Dlstrtct Attor·
Tylenol with cyanide that killed a ham, 18, the younger DeWitt's ney Carl Vergarl. '1t wasde9crlbed
woman and led to 14 states banning girlfriend, on an unrelated credit to me as almost amateurish."
In the letter, the author said he
the painkiller, w t otflclals dis- card fraud case.
DeVIta said the younger DeWitt , was "the number two 'I)'lenol
Counted the letter as a fraud .
Tylenoi,maker John&amp;ln &amp; John· admitted at an arraignment Thurs- killer" and If S2mWk&gt;n was oot paid
COLUMBUS(UPI)-1besaleof

all Tylenol ciiPII'Jes within the slll&amp;e
ol Ohio
banned Sattmlay by the
Ohio l)epal1lneDI ol Aplcullure.
l)epal1lneDI officials noted they
are empowered to lllop the sale of a
ctrus product If II Is determiDed
there Is a potential threal ta

w•

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"In 72 hours" there would be more
tampering of Tylenol and "orange
juice," saki Bronxvtlle Pollee Chief
Carl Stetrunuller.
Steinmuller said he understood
that authorities believed "at this
time" there was no connection
between the letter and the 'I)'Ienol
tampering.
The Food and Drug Admlnstra- .
lion said earner Friday that tests
ThursdaY showed cyanide In capsules that killed Elaroth was from
thesamesourceas polson found In a
second bottle of Extra.Strength
.
'I)'Ienol.
The second bottle of polsonl'd
capsules was found In a Woolworth's tn Bronxville, leas than a
mile from the A&amp;P supermarket
where the talntl'd Extta.Stralgth
Tylenol that kllled Etsroth had been

.

J

]NI'Chased.

FDA Comm issioner F rank
Young said the agency still felt thl'
poisOning was a "localized matter."
Thursday's discovery led to a
nationwide alert . and 14 states and
the District ot Columbia officially
banned the capsules by Friday.
Another 15 states advised consumers not to take the drug and asked
store owners to remove the capsules from shelves. The FDA also
urged consumers not to use the
capsules.
Another 21 states took no action.
There was an ootrlght ban on
sales In ef!ect In Wtsoonstn, Califor·
nla, Florida, Idaho, Mls90Url, Massachusettes, Montana, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York,
Rhode Island, Illinois, Indlana,
(Continued on page

E. Burlle, chief executive ollcer
ol Jom- and Jo.._, oOen a •
reward for tile APJII'e" •.
. . . . n of the periDil no ...
poilllled Tylenol C'f W wilt
cyii!We.

noe.•

A3t

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Commentary and. perspective

February 16, 1986

r----Weather: ........______, .Power outage.·•• __

The Sunday Times-Sentinel _·

(c_on_ttn_u_ed_tro_m..:.pa-=g..:.e._Al_ l_

February 16, 1986

Page-A·2

'litn:eJ ,.. itntina

~~
q,v
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-~2

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
ROBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association

'
'
LETTERS OF OPINION are wPicorrtf' Th~ should bE&gt; less than XlO words

long. All letters a re subject toed !tlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone 'number. No unsigned lt&gt;ltt'rs wil l be publlshl'd . Letlers should be In
.. good taste. addressing Iss ues, nol personalltlf'S.

llush tries to whip up
GOP spirit in Ohio
-:Vice President George Bush trted to pep up capital city Republicans last
wl'ek by persuading them that the popularity of Ronald Reagan will carry
o;il'r to this year's statewide contests and legislative races.
;'The Reagan popularity can and will benefit prople running on the ticket
a':alllevels In 198&gt;." Bush told a $100-a-(:iate luncheon sponsored by Ohio
House Repubhcans.
_
• :11Je Republicans have control rJ. the state Senate and are unlikely to klse
it.· .and they have a chance of defeating Democratic Gov. Richard F.
Celeste.
· ,:rut despite the rosy words of the vice president, the GOP has little hope
It-OVerturn big the 59- 40 edge enjoyed l7y the DetTlO&lt;'rats In the state House
ot:Representatlves.
!UJd U.S. Rep. Thomas N. Kindness. R-Ohio. is an extreme long-shot
against Sen. John Glenn. D-Ohio.
Even Bush was not wildly optimistic about the latter race. "I want to
single out Tom Kindness and say, we need all the support we can get for
~-" he said. "We need to pick up that SEal ~ at all possible.
;•we better elect a strong Republican govennr in Ohio again. and get this
slate back on Its feet ," said Bu.Sh.
·!rile vice president carefully avoided playing any favorites in the
~ublican gubernatorial primacy, even though he is a longtime
acquaintance of former Gov. James A. Rho&lt;Es.
. ~ush recognized all three candidates for the GOP oominati&gt;n without
m~tionlng that they are competing against each other. He visited Rhodes'
table, but that may have been only because Rhodes was seated with two
otber stellar seniors - Woody ·Hayes and Columbus developer John
G~lbreath.

State Rep. JoAnn Davidson. R-Reyooldsburg. who ls in charge rJ. the
Ollio House campaigns, said the Bush event raised $60,(0) to $75,0Xl- a
small amount in comparison to the $500,0Xl the House Democrats have at
their disposal.
"It's a challenge, I don 't think there's any question about that," said
Davidson. "But we think we've ~t the expertise and we've got a message
to get oul."
That message. said Davidson, Is that taxes were raised too high by tlle
Cl(leste administration and the Hou se Democratic majority.
!'I think the tax issue is still a very e!fective issue.'' she said.
In addition, said Davidson, the Republicans plan to make a campaign
is'!'Je out of Ohio's failure to fully participate in the national ecooomic
recovery.
"Why aren't we doing any better than we are?" she asked. The answer.
Republicans feel , is In the way the business community regards Ohio's
workers' compensation system and its corporate tax structure.

WASHINGTON - President
Reagan sent his 1987 bu~et to
Capitol H111 oo the morning rt Feb.
5. Several of the merry rmrtlclans
of the Democratic Party at once
pronounced It "dead before arrtvai."They are wrong. This budget
ls very much alive. With some
relatively minor adjustments, It is
, quite likely to he adopted before the
~I year begins In October.
The prospect naturally alarms
governors and maylrS: 1beir
federal aid would he cut by about 10
peroent, from $1(Ml.8 billlon In 1986 to
$99 bUIIon In 1987. The prospect
distresses college students: Many
of them would find It toui:her to get
guaranteed student loans. Subs tanttai cuts woullf be made in both
N~

"I didn't think Gramm-Rudman-Hollings would affect me, but that was
before I began explaining it to people who didn't think It would affect
them."

:
•
:

State zone forecasts

~vernment's

oU production facllltles at Teapot Dome. The government has oo busbtess In the oil,
business.
When the budget figures m social
services became known, a teoible
oowi arose that the president was
grinding the faces fl. the poor. Bosh.
No cuts are proposed In benefit
level for veterans' pensions, food
stamps, Supplemental Securtty ln-.
rome, or Aid to Famllies with
Dependent Children. Medicaid
grants to the state would be cut by
$1 billion, but nothing prevents the
state from replacing the federal
money with their own money. The federal government stUI would be
providing nearly $26 biWon tofinance Medicaid for 23.6 rntlllon
poor Amertcans.
1be president has proposed
spending roughly $282 billion on
natbnal defense. Most of the ·
howling is directed toward that
apparently fat target. The theme Is,
"Don't cut us, cut defense." We will·
be hearing that refrain for the next
eight months. The defense ligures·
wght to be kept ln ,perspectlve. In
constant dollars, unaffected by
Inflation, the defense budget would
~ up by less than S6 biUion over
1986, only $10 bllllon over 19115.
These are oot excessive Increases.
Yes, Congress wtll make changes
- plenty cl. changes - In the
president's budget. But If the target
rJ. a $144 billion deficit Is to bepreserved - the target established
by Olngress last December- most
o! the president's recommendations will have to be accepted. 1be
relative percentages· within the
budget will rot be greatly altered. I
oon't expect Congress to sell rl.!the
Bonneville Power Authority that's asking a bit much- but walt
and see: This "dead on arrtval"
budget, In Its key provisions, will be
kicking up Its heels when the
autumn leaves begin to tali.

~

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Inefficiency.
We oot ooly can afford to seek out
man's future, but we can enrich the
present by oolng so. Discoveries
have always been the best anllilotes
to poverty, squalor and disease.
The voyage of Columbus - for
~ars tuined down as impractical,
first 17y the King of Portugal, then
by a Spanish commission - made
possible the most successful antipoverty program In history: the
great migration cl.,destltutepeoples
ID the new world.
Even as the space program
prepares to qJen up future worlds,
It also advances science and
technology that enriches our everyday llle In the here and oow. The
appllca!loru; on earth of the discoveries that have come from thE'
space program - ranging from
computers ·to miniaturizations
from weather forecastbtg to health
benefits - have created many
times more wealth than the program has cost.
Some analystS are predicting
that space exploitation will be for
the 21st century what aviation,
electronics and computers were for
the 20th. 1be corporations of the
ftlture are already laying plans for
the first waves d Industry-In-space.
The ljg leap forward wtll come with
actual manufacturtng or processIng of matertals as diverse as

this. maybe It would serve notice io
the Consumer Complaint Office.
that we need help. The telephone
call only takes a minute and the
form Is filled out is less than five
minutes.
The telephone number Is: 1-!ro282-ai15.
The address: Attorney General's
Office. ll East Broad Street-()66,
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Gabriele Sa liter
Rt. 4. Ga llipolis

Today in history
Today Is Sunday, Feb. 16. the 47th day of 1986 with 318 to follow.
The moon is In its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mars and Sa tum
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on tllls date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
hJstprtan Henry Brooks Adams in l&amp;'JB, actress Katharine Cornell In~­
orchestra leader Wayne King In 1901, ventrtloquisl Edgar Bergen In 1903
singer Patti Andrews of the Andrews Sisters In 19aJ (age 66). actors Sonn;
BotJo In 1940 (age 46) and LeVar Burton In 1957 (age 29) , and tennis ptaye~
John McEnroe In 1900 (age 27 ).
On this date In history:
IJ11923. the treasure-filled tomb d Tutankhamen - "King Tut"- was
ope11ed l7y archaeologists In Egypt's VaUey o! the Kings.
11) 195B, Fidel Castro was sworn In as Cuba's premier.
In 19ffi, China seized thrl'e yachts near Hong Kong, and took 15 prople
captive Including four Amertcans.
In l!«.l, Sen. Harrison WU!lams of New Jersey was sentenred to three
years In prison and fined $50,(00 after he was convicted d bribery and
conspiracy In the Abscam Investigation.
A thought for the day: Hlstortan Henry Brooks Adams said, ·"Accident
acrounts for much In companionship and marrjage."·

Now, as it happens, Bush was absolutely right in malting tllat acc:usalion.
and thorougly within bounds in criticir.ing Cuomo lor II. The New York
governor is the shrewdest practitioner
of groin-and-eyeball politics currently
on display in either party, and he seldom opens his mouth without making
some invidious comparison - usually
of his own limitless compassion for
the weak, tlle poor, and the numerous,
as contrasted with Ronald Reagan's
alleged favoritism toward the powerful , the wealtlly, and the few.
Recently, gearing up for a run lor
the presidency in 1988, Cuomo suggested that he might be forced to
make the race simply to disprove the
(allegedly widespread) theory tllat no
Italian-American can be elected to
that olfi£L_Bush rightly denounced
this fo r 4ihat, of coorse, it really was:
a cheap attempt to sensitize ItalianAmerica~ (and by extension, other
ethnic minorities) to their supposedly
inferior statWJ in our natlonalllfe - a
statWJ they could implicitly improve
by installing Marto in the While

We mt·it e you t o share u:tl h IIJ the excti111R wo rld of f rag rance
wit h Co~tntrp ide Herbs. Coun1ryside '1 int eg rity is de motH/rated in their h1p, redienlf - nature'_r pure II afJd best,
their pro cesrinx - tru e a{! ill f.! and curmg. their pricing u·hich
offe rs yott th e hiRhe.rt po1Sible qt~a lit)' at the lowest price.&lt; .
Cormtr)'side Herbs are at·ailable in the following f orms:
The potpourri crm si.rt r of
exquisite petals a11d buds.
rich 1pices and herb.r. nurtured from I be grormd up.
then shade dri ed. •K ed a11d
cured to a f ral'.rance of lin para/Led perfection.
SimmerinK purp oum is a
unique ble11d containin!(
t wo u:bo!e cinn,anOJ1 stic~s .
whole spiCes. berbs, f/ou ·ers, fm its a1td citr:u peels
fo rmul~led to Jtm mer gt.m l·
ly many pol or kellle of wa·
ter. &amp;th the potp ourri atul
ummeriup potpourri are
a 1 ~ilable i11 10 excl:niL·e
scents attractit ·ely packaged in Yi cup bai', J.
Cormtry.ride'r Herbs dedicatio11 to pri nciple from planting
time. until han·est. throuf',h puckaRill f', hu .r made Cou ntry·
side'J name spwnom ouJ u.'ith quality, heaul)' a11d fragrance
t hrolll'.hout :he world.

CHERRY BLOSSO•:

Wilmington, lancaster and 1 'lore

5305
MAY 12·15
TULIP FESTIVAL

$230
JUNE 11-JULY 7
PACIFIC NOifHWE ST

SJ585
All TRIPS CAN BE PICK EO UP
AT GALLIPOLIS BUS STATtON

G&amp;L TOURS

Phone 304-744-5981
After S P.M. 774-2152

-

The Alcove j ·_,

314 Second A venue
Gallipolis
Op en M-S J() ·UC- A:OO; Sunday 10:30-4:00

.

IZJh .... ot+-+t+••··~ fSl
..•.
·-

number!!: 539, 7412
CLEVELAND !UP!)- Friday's
winning Ohio Lollery numbers:
Dally Number: Sll.
Ticket sales totaled $1,215,93l.!Al.
with a payoff due of $542,941.
PICK-4: 7412.
PJCK-4 ticket sales totaled
$182,209, with a payoff due of
$82,114.
PICK-4 Sl stra ight bet pays
$3,&amp;18. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays $152.

or

When You Can Have

Sln~e all

IRA accounts provide tax savings, tne difference among
IRA scan be tne difference between being a "saver" or being an
"Investor." Tnat difference Is performance.

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

.

~

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unless your current IRA offers you tne following ()eneflts you
'
may nave to be content with just being a "saver":

• HIGHIR RITURNS
• FLIXIIIUn TO FINI·TUNI AS NEIDS CHANCE
• AIILITY TO DIVIRSIFY ~
• PROFISSIONAL I~VISTMINT ADVICI
If your current IRA doesn't provide these benefits, let rne onto
company take tne time to Offer you prOfessional Investment
guidance. By consolidating your current IRA accounts lhto a
single, convenient plan you can develop a well-balanced Invest·
ment portfolio and become more tnan just an IRA "saver".

APR*

For more Information simply call your nearest Ohio company
office or complete the coupon below.

House.

Of course, no one knows better than
I that a political columnist is entitled
to play favorites, and It may simply be
that Bush isn't one of Will's. II so, the
Republic , and probably even Bush,
will survive. But Ills at least equally
possible tbat Will has merely looked at
the long line of months stretching between now and the Republican national convention of UBI and - noting
Bush's impressive lead for the nomination - been seized by the appalling
thought that there just isn't enough going on in that corner of the pasture to
sWJtain the requisite numheJ of col-

At The Alcove

Lottery winning

ARE YOU
AN IRA ''SAVER"
OR ·-·
AN IRA
.. INVESTOR.. ?

umns on the subject. Hence a little in- attacks on him will fade as systematiterim denunciation, to keep the pot cally ~s his attacks on Ronald Reagan :
faded m the late 1970s. In which case '
boiling.
Bush too may enjoy the experience a~ i
If so, and if Bush nevertheless con- Reagan did , of being the guest of ho~or i
tinues to move confidently forward t()- at a glittering Will party for the presi- 11
Wlrd nomination and election, Will's dent-elect.

Doonesbury

!Continued from page All
favorable to unfavorable ratio
among voters who have heard his
name. Rhodes had a 3-1 favorable
perception and Gillmor 6-1, he said .
The pollster said m question was
asked to determine If the respondents actually know who Pfeiler Is.
Newoouse also said thE' poll
showed 47 percent of the Republicans want an alternative to Rhodes,
while 49 percent said they would
probably vote for him again.
"This demonstrates very clearly
that voters are looking for an
alternative," said Newhouse.
"I think there Is a serious. serious
question about the electability of
Jim Rhodes," said Pfeifer, adding
he plans to exploit that concern
durtng the upcoming campaign.

By United Press lnternallonal
Foul weather stretched across the nation Saturday from
California - where torrential rains threatened to wash away
mountainside homes -ID the Eastwhell'soowsllckened roads !rom
New York City southward to the Appalachians.
Canyon dwellers In Southern California heaved sandbags and
herded horses to safety In a race against a Paclftc storm thaI
dumped more rain on already saturated hills and canyons strtpped of
vegetation by summer brush fires.
The New York City area was not spared, receiving a light dusting
of snow for the third time In a week. Up to 4 Inches of snow were
forecast lor Saturday, NWS spokesman Edward Yandrlch said.
In Washington, a nighttime snowfall blanketed the capital with
white flakes.
Up to 10 Inches of rain could fall over the coastal rmuntains of
Northern California with up to 5 inches of raln forecast for the
southern mountains, the National Weather Service said.
"It's a huge system we're talking about, Involving hundreds of
mDes from Oregon Ia Southern California, and even Mexico should
get a taste or it," said Blll Hoffer, a spo~sman with the National
Weather Service. "We're looking for rain probably Into Monday
morning."
Flooding was reported In Tehama, Los Angeles and Ventura
counties In California. Rain was falling at the rate of an Inch per hour
early Saturday In the Wheeler area In Ventura Crunty, wheN' two
people were swept away by higb waters In the South San Antonio
Creek, the National Weather Service said.
In the scenic Ventura County community of Ojai, 65 miles north of
Los Angeles , residents who had not previously evacuated worked
feverishly Friday night to reinforce their mountain oomes
threatened by mudslldes.
Dozens of families were forced to evacuate their homes Thursday
In Ventura County because of the threat of mudslides.

•

...Introducing Countryside Herbs ·-'-_.

and the

Pfeifer••.

when the facility is closed, toll calls
to Athen s are necessary to contact
stMf.
There are no dentists, hospitals.
optometrtsts or other medical
specialis ts, nor veteranarlans ,
within the Coolville local calling
area .
The one person testifying In
opposition to the extended service
did so because she relies not on
Pomeroy !or goods and services,
but on Athens and Parkersburg
which are also long distance.
A W!'Siern Reserve representative testified it would cost that
company an investment of s.l\2,928
and annual expenses of $ll6,32&lt;1.
General Telehpone estimated
their costs to provide extended
ser.ice wou id be an investment of
$12.207 and $403 annuallv.

&amp;ZJ~················~·~,

GROUP TOURS

The nation's weather

•

services.
The Coolvllle Exchange offers a
ctlnic employing tWO physicians,
oowever, witnesses complained
that clinic hours are limited and

C:v: -~"'lbi a.

High temperatull' Friday: 'll.
Low temperature Friday: 17.
Record high : 62 In 1918.
Record low: -11 In 19!6.
Total precipitation Friday: .00.
Record high tonight : 67 In 1954.
Record low tonight: -4 in 19€&gt;1.

'

Tuppers Plains has its own fire
department but cannot call Pomeroy, whf're the Emergency Medical
Service system is headquartered,
without Incurring a toll .
The Reedsvtlle Fire Department
must also pay a toll to call
Pomeroy. Mrs. Talbott Indicated
she will seek support for ex tended
service !rom Reedsville on the ~xt
go-round
Meigs Officials say residents of
the Tuppers Plains area would use
county serv ices moll' If extended
service were granted.
A number of witnesses testified
they rely on 1'\lmeroy for medical

Dlstrtcl of · In 1982. James Lewis, 39, Is serving
a 10-yea r prtson sentence for trying
The !' states that advised to extort $1 million at that time.
consumers to follow FDA warnings Lewis, once a prtme suspect , was
were Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado. never charged In the killings. On
Connecticut, Delaware. Georgia, Oct. '1:1, 19&amp;3, he was convicted of
Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska, New atterrpled extortion.
Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon,
Johnson &amp; Johnson said It
South Dakota, Texas and Utah.
received no Jetter connected to the
Vergari said the discovery of the current case and said it joined In the
second bottle increased "the focus" call for caution In using Tylenol.
of a theory that the Tylenol was
Officials of the company urged ail
poisllned at the point of manufac- romsumers In Westchester County
ture. H e cited lndustrtal sa bot age to send In all bottles of the
and a disgruntled plant employees paln-klller for testing.
as theortes.
The extoMion letter recaUed a
wrttten threat following the seven
cyanide-Tylenol deaths in Ch icago
MAR. 31-APR. 5
vermont

Ohio weather table

drugs, alloys and crystals, tor I
which gravity-free conditions provide the Ideal environment. Early
estimates put a PlO billion gross m
the commercial SP,aCe Industry by
the tum of the century.
•
A pall of pessimism, neverthe- •I
less, !:ill hovers over the miles. No
less than The New York Times has •I
suggested timidly that man should
keep his !eel on the eanh and let
robots ex(:iore the great beyond.
The ftrst robots mlght begin by
wrttlngedltorlals for The New York
Times. We doubt that the results
would have been the same If the
unmanned Flying Dutchman had
sailed to America In place of the
Nina, Pbtta and Santa Maria. And
somehOw It wouldn't have been the
same of Charles Lindbergh had
sent a drone to Parts bt 1927.
Again and again, NASA has
demonstrated that astronauts can
make repairs and adjustments In
space that aN' beyond the capabllity of the most marvelous madllnes. Faraway planets simply
cannot he explored efficiently by . ,
robots. It takes lJ minutes, for . • •
example, for a command from ·earth to reach Mars. At this rate,lt
would take an eternity for robots to : •,
move around Mars, without bump- .;.,
lng Into boulders and falling Into ~
craters.
~

administrative assistant was assigned to the communications
e!tlrt and updated to media
approximately loUr limes daily
untO all seNice was restored.
Over 22,0Xl South Central Power
customers on 221 power lines were
witmut power at some time as a
result of the storm. Mud sUdes in
Hocking County swept away whole
sections of power Dnes, where',OXl
customers were without service. ln
addition to Hocking County. the
rural cooperative serves customers
in VInton, Perry, Fairfield, Plckaway and Ross counties.
The cooperative called in outside
crews to perform eventually total
over 540 hours of work removing
and trimmlng over ll,ml trees
while repairtng the downed Jines.
Service to more than J.'I,OXl
customers was restored within six
hours and ali service was restored
by Jan. 24.
Representatives of the rural
co-op, which Is not regulated by the
PUCO contacted the media In
Lancaster, Chillicothe, Logan, Circleville and Columbus on a nearly
oourly basis concerning the outages. State and local fl.!lclais were
also kepi apprised of (X'ogress and
the PUCO received three updates
daily.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page A-3

PUc0 denies••• __;_IC.:.:o.:.:n.:.:tin.:u..: :;ed: .;!ro: . : : m:.pag~e.:.:A~
:.!: -1:_)_,

1r)'Jell()l, •. ____________~iC~on~t~ln~ued~fro~m~p~a~ge~~~l--

Lake Erie

Tory tantrum __________:_:_W-=il=lia:.:..:m~A::...:.R~w=h~er
George Will may not be to everyone's taste - certainly not to every
conservative's - but at least until
now we could count on him for a certain magisterial quality of style. Will
tlaims to be a Tory of the old school
and his prose follows the party line:
pleasantly o~ate, as stuffed with apposite quotations as a plum pudding
with currants. and having the general
a~r of a peri wigged courtier inhaling a
pinch of snuff.
What are we to think , then, of Will's
recent hy-sterical bla$1 at George
BWJh? Under the caption "George
Bush: The Sound of a Lapdog" (itself a
rather risky me!Jiphor for Kay Graham's favorite "conservative"), Will
savagely denounced thW'viCi! president
for varloWJ supposed blunders in the
course of a speech to the annual dinner
of the New York State Conservative
Party.
Referring to Blish's speech as "his
New York debacle," and a little further on as "Bush's New York shambles," Will attacked the talk as "rot "
as "gibberish," and, In the case of o~e
especially offensive sentence, as
"smarmy." Nor Is reform at all likely:
"Concerning BWJh, optimists say:
Well, er, perhaps in New York he got
the demagoguery out of his system
Realists say: That was not a momen:
tary dereliction of taste; that was part
of a pattern."
And what, precisely, is this "pattern" of "rot" that so outraged the
Last Tory? Well, it seems that BWJh
criticized New York's liberal Dem()cratic governor, Marlo Cuomo surely not an Illogical target, when addresslnc the New York State Conservative Party. And he "began," Will
char1ed, "by accusing Cuomo of
'divisiveness."'

Ohio Power dispatched 57 truck
rrews and 24 tree-trimming crews
:o the affected area !rom the
company's divisions In Canton,
Tiffin, Newark, Steubenville and
Lancaster. Additionally, five Independent contract crews were used
In addition to crews from Columbus
&amp; Southern as well as crews !rom
the Crooksville and McConnelsville
area.
Within 24 hours, service was
restored to aboul75 percent of the
affected customers and ~ percent
within ~ hours.
As soon as the serious of the the
storm became evident, Ohio Power
began contacting local radio stations and customers on the utility' s
critical list to broadcast the possibil ity of electrical outages. An

Winds were forecast to be from the south to southeast at aJ to ~
knots Sunday. Chance of snow, sleet and rain Sunday. The lake Is
mostly Ice covered.

•

Not only the unschooled but the
educated resist change; many
Intellectuals are fearlul of the
future. They write anti-science
rovels and produce movies about
computers that get out of control
and fall-safe devices that fall .
The most crucial level rJ. perception Is thai of the news media. If the
press focuses on the crliicism, If
editors !aU to keep It In perspective,
If reporters jump In for lack of
something else to wrlte,lfteii'Vlsion
interviewers seek rut dissent just to
stir things up and sharpen the
Issues, then the space program
could be damaged and Amertca
could lose Its edge.
Let us, therefore, answer the
crttlcs before .the ;&gt;obllc starts to
lake them too seriously :
Their loudest complaint Is that
the money It costs to stage space
spectaculars can be better spent
here on earth, that we can't alford
to chase moonbeams while we have
unmet needs down below.
This Is an argument that rests oo
bad arithmetic and bllnkered vi·
slon. The NASA budget for extendIng man's reach Into Infinity and
expanding his knowledge ten thousand !old aroounts to ooe-half
!l"rcent of our Gross National
Product. The federal government
throws away five times more
money on was,e, fraud and

21.

Northweot, West Central
Mostly cloudy Saturday night with lows between 15 and ll.
Cloudy Sunday with a chance of rain cr sleet and highs bt the upper
lls.
The probbablllty of precipitation was ll percent Saturday night
and 40 percent Sunday.
Winds were forecast ID he !rom the southwest at 10 to W mph
Saturday night.
Northeast Inland, CentraiiDglllands
Mostly cloudy Saturday night with a low near aJ.
Cloudy Sunday with a chance of rain cr sleet and highs In the upper
lls.
The probability of preclpltatln was ll percent Saturday night and
40 percent Sunday.
Winds were forecast to be from the oouthwest at 10 to W mph
Saturday night.
Miami valley' Central. East Central
Partly cloudy Saturda~ night. Highs wel'e forecast to be In the
upper aJs and lows Saturday night near ll.
·
Cloudy Sunday with a chance rJ. rain and a highs in the mld 40s.
The probablllty of precipitation was ll percent Saturday night and
40 percent Sunday.
Winds were forecast to be !rom the oouthwest at 10 to ll mph
Saturday night.
Southwest, South Central
Cl()udy Sunday with a chance rJ. rain and highs between !AI and 55.
The probabillty of precipitation was ll percent Saturday night and
-40 percent Sunday.
Winds were forecast to be from the southwest at 10 to ll mph
Saturday night.

1

Spirit of history_~___J:_a_ck_A_n_de_:_rs_o_n. :. :&amp;_D_a.: .:_le_~. :.:. an.:. .A. .:.:t. :.=.ta •••

WASHINGTON - When frozen
feet threatened to keep Adm.
Roher! Peary from reaching the
Nonh Pole, he wrote on the wall of
his makeshift shelte!': "lshaUflnd a
way or make one."
This is the splrtt of those woo
make history; It is the spirit
certainly of the astronauts who are
explortng space. They won't be
deterred by thE' "shouldn't-bedones" and "can't-be-dones." Polls
show that most Amertcans shaN'
their 'determination: they smse
mankind Is venturing Into a new era
of discovery. and they want to be
part of it. For them. the slllttle
tragedy has merely made them
more dedicated, and space exploration has taken oo the dimensions of
a
national cause.
gas that costs us .98¢ for .84&lt;. No
Of
course, the space progra m has
way.
its
claque
of critics. Some would
So stop pointing fingers at· the
like
to
hall
the surge In to space;
service stations. We resent being
there
are
even
those who wish they
accused of "lipping off" our
could
stop
the
advance Into the
neighbors and growing wealthy by
high-tech
age.
They
are bewtldered
slicking exorbant profits In rur
by
Its
complex
it
les;
they
don't want
pockets .
their
Uves
disturhed
by new
The situatio n Is frustrating fo r us
discoveries.
They
prefer
to
believe
too, you know. During rur oJl years
what
they
find
convenient
to
in this business we have met and
believe,
because
II
takes
an
uncomendured many frustrating situations with the help and understand- fortable adjustment to believe
ing of the good people in Gallia something new. Others fear the
County. I'm sure we can weather technoioglcal revolution wtll deprive them of their Uvellhoods and
this one too.
destroy
society as they know II.
Mrs. Earl Winters
Winters Sohio SeN\ce
Gallipolis

Consumer complaint
In reference to recent articles
about high gas prices in Gaiila
Co\lnly. I wou ld like to Inform the
ctttzens of Gallipolis, that If prople
want to fil e a complaint they can do
so.
I recently found out that! here Is a
toll free telephone number to the
Attorney's General 's Office. I
called there and tof course ) was
sent a consumer complaint form .
which I ftlled out and sent back.
li all concerned citizens would do

national In scope. Other political
responslbllltles should remain with
the states and the localities.
Another sound principle is that
people should pay for henefits that
at!ect them lndlvl\lually. A third
sound principle Is that the federal
government should leave to the
prtvate sector those functions that
may e!tlclentiy be handled there.
Applying those principles, the
president remmmends an end to
grants-In-aid for local sewer and
water systems. Clearly these are
rot "national responsibilities."
They are local responslbllltles. He
proposes that prople who visit
national narks pay higher fees for
their recreation. What's wrong with
that? He asks Congress to sell the

ET~~tU6 F&lt;l!IT~~-"'RBS----

The other side of the pump
up and be counted , so I'm standing
up~ on the other side of t he pump,
definitely the minority.
Judging from all the nasty
remarks directed at the service
sta!bns, you would think that we
are mean enough to take candy
away !rom a child .
!.peal stations oo oot set the gas
prices. Neither does the legislature
- ilor should it. Several lin;JI$ we
ha~e addressed the company as to
why our gas costs so much more
here and the mly answer we have
received Is that we are ootln a high
competitive area .
~rhaps we should hire Mr.
Moore as our business consultant
and he could tell us how we can sell

REA

'

l

]ames ]. Kilpatrick.

~ULI'IIE 2-A

Letters to the editor
Mr. Moore says Its time to stand

rural and urban housing. Famllles
with Incomes above $'!),(XX) would
have to pay for their children's hot
school lu~hes . The (resident
wants to abolish the Small Business
Administration ID raise Interest
rates lor
electrtc cooperatlves, to get rtd of Amtrak, and to
sell off large dlunks rJ. government
property. There's some shod&lt; here
for almost everyme.
But on examinatbn, the presldent's budget makes good sense. It
Is tlrmly grounded bt political
principles that most Americans
regard as sound principles. One
such principle is that the national
government should assume only
those responslbllltles that truly are

MONDAY Til ROUGH WEDNESDAY:
Chance of rain Monday and rain or snow Tuesday with fair
weather Wednesday. Highs werelorecast to be in the OOsMonday In
the40s and low 00s Tuesday and In the upper llsand40s Wednesd~Y ­
Lows were forecast to be In the upper aJs and lls.

'I

It's a good budget

A Division Of

Charleston, W.Va., on almost an
hourly basis !rom 4 a.m. to
midnight durtng the outage period.
State and local officials also
received regular updates and the
PUCO received three updates on
the situation dally.
About 19, 8JO Ohio Power Company customers within the Newark ,
7.anesvllle and Portsmouth operatIng divisions were without electrical SI'I"Vice as a! the evenng fl. Jan .

Extended Ohio Forecast
•

imtb~

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant. W. Va.

•

1.--~---------------Please send me more Information on llecomlnO an IRA Investor.

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fecllhru 3-31 -86 . The tnnual poroont8gtrllt mov
very blted on our base lending rete in effect on the
111 dly of buaineu of lht montha October, JanUiry, April , end July . AppNatlons for credit are
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