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                  <text>Page-0-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Po~y-Middleport

January 12, 1986

GallipoHs. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

U.S., Japan end trade talks on positive note
WASHINGTON (UPII - Th~
United States and Japan, ending a
·yearlong sertes of trade talks on a
positive note, proclaimed the nego.tlatlons have o/lened up some
·Japanese markets to American
products and pledged to expand the
process.
In a joint statement issued by
-Secretary of State George Shultz
and Japanese Foreign Minister
Shintaro Abe, both sides agr~
"Important progress" had been
-made In reducing prott'Ctionist
barriers In four sectors of the
Japanese economy. ·

:R e f u g e e s

. NEW YORK tt:PII -Thirty-two
Afghan refugees who nro ·their
homeland after the ·1979 Sovi&lt;'t
intervention- only to land in a U.S.
detention center - a re finally
_beginning to win their long fight fo r
frredom .
All but one of the refugees, sam~
held at the federal detention cen te r
lor up to 18 months for enter ing the
·country Ulegally. were relrased
Friday to a joyful reunion " i th
friends and relatives.
Another refugff&gt; who had been
held with them at the lower
Manhat tan detention facili tY was
released Thu rsda~· under a s.•par
at~ agreement.
The refugees, 29 inen and two
women, were granted t1'1ease bv
immigration officials Thursdav

Most

They a!~ agreed to continue the DepartiTlE'nt. The t'Ml men issued a
process and to seek to expand it to joint statement and held a brief
market sectors beyond the four news conference.
telecommunications, wood pro"I am well aware that the
ducts. mroical equipment and situation is very serious in this
pha rmaceuticals and electronics- country, including the mounting
covered during the year.
pressure lor protectionism in the
"As we move.along, we see plenty Congress," Abe said. But he added
of problems out in front of us and his government had "done our very
lot s of work to do. " Shultz said.
best" to open up markets to U.S.
AbP held a round of meetings with products by removing regulatory
U.S. officials ·Friday, including a and legal barriers.
lOminute cout1esy call on Presi- · The meetings markedtheck&gt;seol
den t Reaga n in The 0Yai Office. He 12 months of talks agreed to by
then mer Shultz ar the State , Reagan and Prtme Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone aimed at removing

win

first

during a meeting with Rep. Gaty
Ackerman. D-NY.. Sen. Daniel
Moynihan . 0 -N. Y.. Sen, AlfonS&lt;'
o ·Amato. R- N.Y.. and attomeys
for the refugees.
··we·,., a il verv exciTed toda v
abouT !llis brmkthro~g h in a case
that has srubborni)· remained
unsolw d for 1'., years:· s.1id
Acketman. ··1 look forward now to
mm·ing ahra d qu ickl)· in good faith
to wcurr petmanent freedom for
1hrsr

co u rc~ geo u s

order;

TRIPOLI. Libya 1UP I t - Amen can oil workers expressed anger
and bitT erness Fr iday ar Prt'siden t
Reagan 's order To lea,·e Lib)•a bur
most said they would &lt;:&lt;amply to
avoid retribution from r ither Rra gan or Col. Moa mmar Khadafv.
" It doesn't make sense to stick iT
out." one America n sa id. ··Rra·
~an · s going to keep going fo r T
hiS
guy tKh adaly l and sooner or later
you won't stand a chance of getting
ou r. They won't let you our.··
The British affiliate of rhr
Houston-based Brown &amp; Root Co..
wh ich is helping ro build a
I.:JIO-mile-long water pipeline in
Lib)·a. said it had decided rosend 1ts

men

and

women.··
The jubtlant t1'fu gees waived
small Amer ican Oags as they left
The detention center. some dressed
in rurbans and scarves traditionallv
worn in Mghanistan . and weNembraced by friend s and relatives
during a n emotional ll'IJnion.

Americans

follow

battle

long

black councilwoman.

V.l'rt'

Tho

lra d ~ r

of tht• House dr lr ga-

tion, Re p. Will iam
said at a departUJY'
enC&lt;' Fr id ay:

Gra~ .

America n workers home. It wlll against Libya in the wake of the
proba bly rcplacr them with Euro- Palestinian tl'rrorist attacks at
pea ns to finish what Khadatv has Rome and Vil'nna airports Dec. 'II
called ··rhe eighTh wonder of the that killed 19 people. including five
world _··
Americans.
·· y"'· we are ordering ail AmeriReagan blamed LibYa for supcans out:· a Bro"n &amp; Root porting the Palestinians who carspokesman sa id.
ried out the attacks as well ror
Most America n oil workers said numerous other f(&gt;rmrist action in
theY had made their decision to recent years around the world.
lra,·p in thr past 24 hours. after Libya denied Involvement in the
IT'ading Reagan 's 2 '~- page order airport attacks.
imposing an t'Conomlc boycoTT and
European allies of the United
gi\·ing the 1.500 Americans in Libya States. whill' I'Xpressing sympathy
unt il Feb. I roger our of the couniry for Reagan 's position, have so far
or risk pnson sentences of up to 10 turned a cold shoulder to his plea for
yPars
support In economically isolating
RPagan imposed the sanctions LibYa .

ACROSS

1 Lacking
7 Chemical
compound

12
17
21
22
23
24
25
26
28
30
32

Dark purplish red
Dance: colloq .
Peril
At that place
Bartlett&amp;, e.g.
First class
Equally
Spoken
Most unusual
Shipping bo•es
South America:
abbr.
33 Btushi"ll
35 Lyric poems
37 Lawgiver
39 Short jacket
40 Excavate
41 Vouandme
43 Biblical character
45 Royal
47 On the outside:

approval for the comments or the
ANC ieadl'r to be printed.
Tambo. who 'Mlrked with jailed
ANC leader Mandeia before leav·
ing South Africa in 1900. made the
remarks Thursday at a news
conference at AN C headquarters in
Lusaka , Zambia. to mark the
group's 74th anniversary .

prefix

48 Surrender
formally
49 Remaining
fragment

52 Mate parent
54 Lurelike
instruments

56 Sword
57 Passageway
59 Ackroyd and
Rather
61 Transmitted
62 Orient
63 Appear

ONLY CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE OFFERS•••

D-Pa ..

llf'WS ro nfPr

··u.s. dollars mu sT not fu rl rhr
fliT's of apar theid. Apart from
government offic ials. I iound ihat
thr majority or thr popula11on does
nor want the t.:nited Srarrs pro' td
ing ThP eco nomic fu rl rnr
apa rt heid_··
G ray sa id th('delega tto n mrt wtth
at least 201 people durin g its
fivp-day m ission to inH-stigatr t ht~

64 Prosecutor : abbr.

7 e 9°/o

66 Mauna 67 Espy
68 "The Mormon
State··
69 Behold!
71 Percent: abbr

APR 48 MO.
ON ALL 2 WHEEL AND 4 WHEEL
DRIVE Dl 00 &amp; 0150 PICKUPS

72 Pointless

74 Seductive woman

76 Asterisk
77 Small seed

AND

78 Yukon Territory:

• PlYMOUTH HORIZONS

abbr .
79 Short-tailed

impact of t.: .S. sanctions impoSi'&lt;l in
Novl'mber.
·· J havr nor S&lt;'l'n anvr hing rhar
made ml' Th ink tha t rhr linlitr&lt;l
sanctions appl it'!l br Prrs idrnr
Reagan should be lilted 1n Th&lt;' near
fulurr :· hr said.

monkeys

8 t Former French
coin
82 The sweetsop
63 Donated

84 Liberate
85 Printer's
measures

87 Deletes
89 Drunkard

73 IngredienT
75 Fish eggs

168 Revolution

169 Swelling
170 Parasite
17 1 Thorough

76 Plains

77 Fathers
79 Lees
8 0 Food fish

90- fee

92 Reward
94 Cut

82 In reserve
83 Person beyond

DOWN

help : colloq

95 Ottawa is its

capital
96 Gigantic
97 Dissotvll&lt;l
99 Foond in living
cells
100 Mimics
101 Word of sorrow
102 Clue
103 Meadow
!05 Most uncanny
t07 Science deg.
109 Delegate: abbr
t 10 Examine closely
tt 1 Color
113 Totals
114 Stitch
1 t5 Einsteinium
symbol
t t6 Ctoek
t t7 Trifle
t 18 Doctrine
120 Tan tatum symbol
12 t Fencing sword
t 22 Ear feature
t 23 Geometry term
124 Condition: suffix
126 "The Sagebrush
State"
128 Pitchers
130 Aircraft shed
!32 Used frugally
134 Primary
!35 Assistant
136 Cerium symbol
t37 Church feature
139 Corn units
141 French article

142 Genetic material
t43 Wet
145 Country on the
Red Sea
147 Ark builder
149 Stator: abbr.
t52 The two of us
!53 Tumult
t56 Settled
!57 Bolster
!59 Type of art
t60 Annoys
162 Deputy
164 Lazy person
166 Book ot plano
studies

84
86
86
89
90

1 Jewish month

2 Foundation

3 Tin symbol
4 The self

Untamed
Gel
Collection
Records
Open space

9 1 Abnormal sound

5 Roman emperor

93 Depicts

6 Barter

95 South Am eric an
reptiles

7 Latin conjunction

8 Shares: abbr .

97 Distance measure

9 Crew
tO Mistake
t t Delta and Pee
Wee
12 Practicing phys.
!3 Recipe: abbr .
14 Swiss river
15 Chatters
16 Bar legally
17 Dance step

98 Lair
102 Living quarters

t04 Fee
106 Groove
107 Documents
108 Perspire
110 Plastic napkins
1 It Stinging teeling

112 Be•ng
1 14 Extras
1 t6 Ripped

18 Artificial language

19 Football term
20 Emaciated
27 Minus
29 Stage directors
3! Hall an em
34 Melodioos
36 Declared
38 Smooth, glossy
cloth
.40 Something owed

11 7 - colada

119 Microe hone:
colloq .
t2t Bad
122 Spartan queen
t 23 Every half year·
abbr

125 Actor Connery
127 D-G link age
128 Insect

42 Former name of

129 Wine

Thailand

establishment

44 Mountain range

130 Lik e blood
131 Weed y plant
!33 Let fall
136 Slice
!36 Engt• sh noveliSt
140 Army ott .: colloq.

ot Russia
46 Alley
48 Monet
49, Grate
50 Upright
51 Cadmium symbol

143 Displaced person
abbr.

53 Son ot Seth
55 Football pos.

144 Stride

56 River in NE
France

146 African river
148 Corn uco pia

58 Whirlpools
60 Capuchin
monkeys
62 Greek letters
65 Entire
68 Southwestern

!50 Tr1 p
151 Church pr oJeCtion
153 Hire .

Indians

69 Resided
70 Musical drama
72 Goddess ot peace

!54 Plunger
156 Follows Nov .
158 Butter square
16! Krypton symbol
163 Sun god
165 Rh odium symbol
167 Roman gods

Gr ay. who is black . is l hr ~ ;::o nsor
of a tough fiConom ic sanctto n~ hill

against South Mrira.ct_n rrspon .~&lt; • t o
rhr legisla tion, PrPS id&lt;•nt RP.tgan
imposed The san1·tions. bur Congress has sa id it would reconsider
passing ha rshr r mf'a .S u!T's of it s
own ir there u:r rr no impro\'Pmr nt s
in South Africa.
Gray s" id the g-roup had nor )·r r

~

at y

•

ent1ne
1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Janaury 13, 1986

26 Cents

A Multimedii. Inc . Newspaper

PIKETON. Ohio tUPl i - The Piketon uranium-enrichment plant's
air-&lt;'vacuation system Sunday was shut do1111 whlle etfort s were continued
ro determine _whaTcaused it to ll'ak 109 (Xlunds of radioactive gas.
According to monitors installro in December. 1985, rhe gas !raked out
over a three- week period, but an Ohio Disaster Services Agency offi cial
said the leak emitted less radlation than a normal chest X-ray
"The figur&lt;' we got is a .25- miUirem inhalation calculation," sa id
disaster sen ices spokeswoman. Tracy Knippenburg . " A chest X-ray
would be 200 times that amount of radiatit&gt;n. "
·
Test result s late Friday and Sa rurday showed uranium hexafluoride, the
same gas that killed one worker and injured 32 at a KNr-McGee plant in
Oklahoma Jan . 4. escaped from an air -evacuation system at the plant in
the south-central part of the state. about 00 miles south of Columbus, Ohio.
00partm(&gt;nt of Energy officials sa id.
' The plant, owned by DOE and operated by the Goodyear Atomic Corp ..
produces fu el rods for nuclear reactors.
Th(&gt; ventila tion system was shu t down . Goodyear Atomic spokesman
Tim Matchett said Sund ay. There appearro to bP no effect oo the workers
and the plant was operating normally. he said.
Filters were installed on the air-evacuation system Dec . 20, 1985. after
the General Accounting Office sa id there had been numerous problems
with leaks at the plant.
F ilters were changed weekly , but because of holiday work schroules at
The plant. and becauSE' some employees were on vacation, they were not
analyzed until Friday.
William Manning, director of the Enriching Operations Divis ion. sa id
or
Dll's
Mountaineer
Associates
for
the
purchase
of
a
new
FMC
Diesel
ENGINE DEDICATED, CHECK PRDENI'ED- Olflelal&amp; from
radiation
monit ors located off The plant grounds a nd filters from the first
fire engine. It was purehased by the passahge r1 a recent fire pro1ectlon
Sutton. Letart, and Lebanon townsltips and the Racine Vlllage CouncU
and third weeks well' analyzed Sa turday.
levy in Letart, Sutton and Lebanon ljl"nshlps. Shown with 1he engine
as.o;emhled Saturday to dedicate Racine's new fire engine. ScoU WoHe
Results from those tests were negative. Matchett said Sunday.
are councilmen Carroll Tealord, Frank Cleland, Bob Beegle; fire ch~r
and Dick Wannsley, representing ooundl and the Racine Vohmteer F1re
Manning said 4&lt; pounds of the gas escaped in one week, and MatchetT
Hank Jolutson; Jetr Walkins, WoHe, Nonis and Wam;ley.
Department, alaong with Gary Nonis of the Racine Home National
and
DOE spokesman Wayne Range said 109 pounds escaped over the
Bank, present a check totaling S9"1,156 to Jeff Watson, a representative
course of I hree weeks.
In the system, wet air is evacuated from "cells" where uranium
hexaliuoride is processed, because it reacts with moisture in the air. No
V i l l a g e , t o w n s h i p o f f i c i a l s d e d i c a t e t r u c k uranium is used in the system, though, Matchett said .
"There is a trap in place in the lines to catch any trace a mounts (of
uranium!
That might com!' through . and there are monitors in addition to
RACINE-Local officials and lon tank to carry additional water
cine Departmenl throu gh specifi· on. the back of the engine, Engine
the
traps,··
Matchett said.
lllE'mbers of the Racine Voiunter to rural fire scenes.
cations set forth by the depart· 23 has a canope cab behind the
"This
new
moni)oril'lg system was pu\ in place to assure emissions
main cab to carry additional fireFire Department assembled at the
Racine Fire Chief Hank Johnson
ml'nt.
contml,"
he
said.
··Since it's indicated a probi(&gt;m, wl''ll go back and look at
Racine Fire Station Saturday ar- said , "With new, updated equipIn addition to upgradin g its fighters . The top mount pump conThe
traps
and
rhe
equipment tha r monitors the traps and try to dl'termine
ternoon. for the delivery of a new ment such as this , we will be able
rur al lire pro tection , the delivery trois are adjacent to the canape.
what
eaused
the
uranium to be introducro into tile system in the first
1985 FMC!Ford Diesel Fire En· to bettl'r serve the areas that .we of the new pumper assures vil- allowing the pump operator to
place."
gine, which was recently pur- protect."
lage and township reside nts of its have an adequate view of the fire
chased at a cost of $97,156 by funds
Frank Cleland, President of Ra- "Class A" fire rating as required scene.
Through Its fund ra ising benegenerated bya one-mill flrppr otec - cine Council, noted it was a clear
by the State of Oh io.
. lion levy lnt he townships Sl'rved expression that Racinl' VUiage
fits,
members of the Racine VoOne special item of note on the
by the fir!' department.
desires to maintain and man , new arrival is its unique polyethy- lunteer Fire Department have
The ne w firl' engine was bough t through its Fire Department, the
lene tank which Is gua ranteed for raised over $5,000 to equip the
by Racine Village. which had en- very best fire equipment possible
truck with needed equipment.
the lire of the truck .
With t he addition of the new
tl'red into fire contracts with Le· In the townships of Lebanon, LeAnother special feature of the
The retired coal miner was
GALLIPOLIS - A 71 -year-old
tart, Sutton, and Lebanon town - tart, and Sutton with whom they
truck is Its 1000 'gallon per minute pumper, Racine firefight ers will
pronounced
dead at the scene b)'
Gailia County woman has been
ships for monies gen!'rated from a havl' fire contracts."
RAM. midship centrifugal single be able to respond with two en·
GaUia
County
Coronl'r Donald R.
charged with murder in connection
one-mill fire protection levy In
Racine's new pumper was built
stage pump. This type pump ts gines; a tanker tru ck, and a fire·
Warehime.
Dr.
Warehime said thls
with The appareut Sunday morning
each of tbe townships.
In Tipton, Indiana bY the FMC Cor· both rugged and dependable in rescue truck to a fire scene, thus
shooting dea th of hl'r 72-year-old morning his office had established
The Class A pumper was espe- (Xlration and purchased through
getting adequate amounts of wa- being able to carry additional wa ·
"no official cause of dea th ,"
cially designed for rural fire-fight · Oil 's Mountaineeer Associates , ter to a fire scene.
ter, a prime concern of rural fir ehusband.
ing and touglt terrain found in Inc. of Ravenswood. The fire enGrace Gi lman. Rt. 4, Oak Hill. pending the result s of an aulopsy.
The cab is a 1985 Ford chassis fighting .
Investigator Langford said this
Racine's first new fire engin e
most township settings, and is gine is a top-of·the -ilnl' Omega mo- with a 175 inch wheel base.In lieu
was lodged in the Gallia County jail
morning the body had been transequipped with a one·thousand gal· del designed es pecially for the Ra· of carrying men to the fire scene
this
morning
awaiting
arraigntContinued on page 61
ment . She is being held on a charge ported to The Franklin County
morgue for a patholog ical

Elderly Gallia woman
faces murder .charge

Coal research
COLUMBUS (UP II - Legisla tion impleml'nting a constitutional
amendment on funding roai research tops the committee agenda
this week in The Ohio Col'nl'rai
Assembly.
Both the House and Senate
appear intenT on passing the plan to
carry out the term s of Sta te Issue I,
adopted by Ohio voters last
Novl'mher.
Thl' Hou se Finance Commit tee
has scheduled a pair of h(&gt;arings for
Tuesday morning and aft ernoon on

hill tops committee

the --measull', which writes the
pmgram for the state to borrow
money lor research and development pro jeers ro encourage the
cll'an )JUming of Oh io's high-sulfu r
coal.
As approved last week by the
House Energy and Environml'nt
Committee. the bill sponsored by
Rep. J. Barnl'y Quilt er, D-Toledo,
limits the bond issue to $50 million
during the current fiscal biffinium.
which ends June ll. 1987:
Simila r legislation wUI be consi-

Barrett

reelected

trustee

president

dered Tuesday aft ernoon by a
Senatl' Finance subcommittee
headed by Sen. Robert W. Ney,
R-Barnesville, the Senate sponsor.
The Hou se Is meeting in solo
sess ion this week, while senators
devot e their time to a varil'ty of
committee meetings.

agendaf:;;:;:r:sc:::e~~~~~:~

Controversial legis l&lt;!fion providin g for motor vehicle (&gt;missions
testing In The Cleveland and
Cincinnati areas may be revived in
the Hou se.
The bill fell nine vot!'5 short of
passing two months ago, bu t House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe J r .. D-New
futon, want s to get tid of IT.

filed against the woman - who was
arrested last night -la ter today.
Ca lled to the scene ar approximately 10 a. m., !he sheriff's
departml'nl reports The body ofJim
Gilman was found inside th!'
fa mily's home on Cora-Crnt erpoinl
Rd., just in side the Ga liia CoUiity
line.

exa mination.

ThE' Ga llia investigator said
Gilman appeared to have died from
a single shot to the chest. A
.38-calibre revoivE"r was conliscated at tlle scene.
Lanford said the incident allegedly foliowed a "domestic
dispute."
The Bu!l'au of Cr iminal Investl · ·
gation. London. 0 .. assisted in the
investigation .

Ram D1 50 Pros pec tor/Royal SE
Charles Banl'tt was re-elected • Williams , 24 years, Bellford Townpr!'sidenr of the Meigs County ship Trustee; Charles Bissell. 24
Association of Township Trustees years, Chester Township Trustee;
and Clerks at the annual meeting Warden Ours. 22 years, Lebanon
held Saturd ay night aT the Meigs and Chester Townsip Trustee;
Multi-Purpose Building. Mulber ry Robert Pickett, 22 yl'ars. Bedford
Township Trustee; Otis Knopp, 22
Height s. Pomeroy .
Otller officers elected were Gaty years, Sutton Township Trustee;
Dill, vice presiden! ; Richard Bal · Francis Warren Wilcox, 20 years,
ley , seererary-rreasurer. and Otis Rutland Township Trustee; and
Ada Bissell, ~ years, Olive TownKnopp , executive orftcer .
Recognition was gtven to those ship Clerk .
. Also recognized was Dorothy
with more than~ years servtce as a
Johnston
ror her assistance at the
trustee or clerk in the county and
Board
ot
Ji:leetions
Office over the
each one was presented a plaque.Jn
the honored group were R. A ,Years.
Past trustees and clerks were
Whittington. 32 years, Columbia
Township Trustee; Nina Robinson, Invited guests at the meeting. They
30 years, Ora nge Townsh ip Clerk, were introdueed along with other
1957-86; Clarence Law rence, 24 guests including Sheriff Howard
years. Lebanon Township Clerk, Frank, Recorder Emogene Congo ..
1956-79; Raymond R. CotterUI. 24 Clerk of Coulj,S Larry. Spencer,
Commissiolll'tt Richard Jones and .
years, Scipio Township Trustee;
Gloria HuMan. 24 years, Columbia Manning Roush. Engineer Philip
Township CJ(&gt;rk, 1962-86; Charles Roberts, and Jimmy Allen .

~a r hrd any cone lU.&lt;iJ Ons a I)')UI
lnlm!iified ff'onom ic rrs trir t ion.&lt;i on

South Africa.
Howevrr. The delegation will
formula te specific rt'Commenda tions as To how the U.S. government
should confront apart heid. South
Africa's systrm of racial seg-regation . a fter t hry retur n ro
Washington.
Police said a 77-yea r-old moderate black councilwoman was
burned todealh Friday under a pil e
ot flaming tires and her home was
firebombed at Queenstown , about
400·mlles south of Johannesburg.
A younger black woman. da ughter of a fanner councilman, died in
a hospital In Queenstown of bum '
after being attacked by black
radiCaL~ for being apolicetntormt •r.
Pollee said in an earlier report a
black man also died of bums in the

e

•

Leak forces
plant closing

SUNDAY PUZZLER

to

gove rnme nt .

Reagan and Nakasone, under the
threat r1 protectionist legislation
from Capitol Hill, agreed in Los
Angeles In January 1985 to a year's
worth ot discussions and to then
assess the progress. The goal of
total elimination of trade barriers
bas rot been achieved, but both
sides cited positive results.
"WI' haven't wrapped up all the
problems," Shultz said. "Thrrl' are
some continuing followup issuf'S.

to ·

bu nwd

dPa lh in renewed blac k ,·iol&lt;'nl&lt;&gt;.
and the exiled leader of the b;tnned
Mri&lt;'an National Congre&gt;S in published remarks urged a stepped-up
··peoplr·s war
agai nst rt»

process.

fight

Libya

tov.n and another young woman
was criti&lt;'a ii)' injured when she was
stoned a nd set afire.
:\ewspaP&lt;'rs na tionwide Frlda v
quot ed a ra U b,. Africa n Na tio,.;i
Congress Pres ident Oliwr Ta mbo
fo r " rap id, r xtmsive ('S('a iation" or
an undPrground ca mpaign against
the gon •rnment. Officials ~:a ,·e rarr

But a grea t drai has been done and
they'll co ntin ue to be worked on."
Abe noted both sides had agreed
last vear to ·· wherever (XlSSibll'
solve. all of the problems in 1~ :·
Abe said ··wr have more or less"
achieved thaT goal. citing a reduction In tariffs on wood products and
an OP&lt;'ning up of the Japanese
telecommunications market to U.S.
products.
Shultz noted U.S. ex(Xlrts to
J apan in the four st'Ctors expanded
by 6.7 percent during the year, well
above the general trend for manufactured goods.

The 31 were seeking asylum as 1)-.;:;.+.::;:
political rerugees, and were freed
on parole untU their reqests for
asylum were determined.
I!-;:;.t.;=+-;:;t..,;+;
Arthur Hl'iton, an anomey with
the Lawyers Commltteefor Human
Rights, which has represented the
refugees In their attempt to win
asylum, said there is a "good
likelihood" tbey will all eventually
gain U.S. citizenship.
The INS will consider requests
for asylum from several of the
refugees who have applied, and
also wUI consider appeais from at
least ~ refugees whose ortginai
requests werl' turned down, said
Helton.
Thr refugees fled their homeland
during lighting between rebels and
the Soviet- backed govffnment that
bPgan in 1979.

Lawmakers urge further sanctions
.JOHAN7\ESBURG. South c\lrira
1UPI I - Six congressmen. on their
way back home Sat urda:o ·. cam£' out
in suppot1 of limit ro c.s sa nctions
aga inst South Mrica and promisro
to su ~es r ways to fight The nalion·s
policy of racial segregation.
In other drvelopmrn ts, rht-r&lt;'
people. including a 70 -v•' ar-old

The statement said an increast' in
Japanese imports in the four areas
" w111 be the important test" of the

Vol.36. No . 187
Copyrighted 1986

The Afghan Community in America. an Afghan relief organization
based in the borough of Queens.
said it would assist those who
needed help, but Habib Mayff, the
head or the group, said all the
refugees had friends and relatives
taking care r1 i.hem .
The INS detained the Afghans
because they entered the country
Uiegally, some using phony passports or bribes . Some refugees
were held at the facility lor as k&gt;ng
as 18 rmnths.
"INS has made a proper and
decent decision," Moynihan said in
a statelllE'nt. "The Afghans can oow
enjoy the feedoms they have sought
while they awalt the resolution of
their cases."

ready

leave

in

all trade barriers to Amertcan
products in the lour areas. The
talks, called Markei·Orlented,
Sector-Selective, are krown by the
acronym Ma&gt;s.
. "Under MO&gt;S. a number of
positive changes have been made in
conditims of market access in
Japan," the joint statement said.
"These should crm te new martel
opportunities t&gt;r Amertcan and
other foreign firms. Further progress should be achieved through
continued discussion in the MOSS
framework ."

Rum D100 P•c kup

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE INC.
Gallipolis

300 3rd
PHON£ 446-0142

'

.

® 1986 Un1led Fea ture Synd 1cate
.)

RECOGNIZED- R. A. mt~~tmgl.on, standing center, who has been a
Columbia ToWIIShlp lru8lee ror 32 years wu pven special recognition at
Saturcla.Y nllftl:s annual meetlnl of die Meigs Coumy ~laUon of
Township Trustees and Qerks. Pldured on either ttlde ~ WJilttlngton
are Charles Barrett, president, and Shirley Jolnlon, secretary-

treasurer. who made lhe presenlallons. others recognized were, lett to
right, seated, Ada Bissell, Dorothy John81on, Warden Ours, Franoes
Wtirrm Wllcox, and Oils Knopp, andstantlng, Gloria Hullon, Raymond
R. Cottertll (Johnson, Whlltmpn, and Bam!U) Robert Pickett, and
Nina Robinson. Charles Wllltams and Oltlrles Blssell were absent.

�Page-2-The Daily Senti1el ·
Pomerov-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, Janaury 13, 1988

Commenta•·y

'86 Super Bowl: Bears vs Patriots
·Bears move to Super Bowl
with 24-0 victory over Rams

,

The Daily

Sentin~l

111 Courl Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~Cb

ts:m~ r'T"'...J._
..... , .......... d

q,v

..=.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR
News Editor

•

A MEMBER of The Associated Pross, Inl and Dally Press Associa tion and tht&gt; Amertcan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are wt&gt;komt' . They sh01.1ld bf lt&gt;Ss than :IXl words
long . All letters arc subject to editing and must be sl.gn t'd with namE' . addrPSs a nd
telephone number . No unsigned ie11Ns w\11 be published . Li'ltt&gt;rs should be In
good taste , addressing Issues. not personallHes.

Take-it-eaSy Congress _____J_am_es_J_.K_ilpa_tric_k
WASHINGTON - The quietest
Yet Wf ought to take a long, slow and took another long nress aver Record.
place In town these days Is the U.S. look at mw the U.S Congress the Fourth of July. Wearied by this
The waste of tlme around this
Capitol. The guards are here, being operates. If a prtvate business ran frenzied pace, they fled Washlngtoo place Is horrendous. Sen. D11vld
helpful to a trickle of tourists. Some on the same take-It-easy schedule, for the whole month of August and Plyor of Arkansas kept notes last
maintenance people are at work A the business would go broke in six didn't come back untU early year. By his rrekonlng, the Sl&gt;nate
September. They took another spent m hours and 15 minutes In
few reporters are doing crossword weeks .
Look back at 1985. Qlngress week at 'Thanksgiving. On a great quorum calls- the equivalent o141
pJZZ]es In the press galleries.
OtheJW!se the place is one great came Into session on Jan. 3. For the cresting wave ol fUlsome oratory, days of work In any other occupa·
yawning vacuum. Congress has next three weeks, members did- they adjourned five days before tion . Senate roD calls are supposed
gone home.
roth!ng but go to parties and hang Christmas.
to be cut off after 15 minutes, but
During the year, our heroes they rarely are. Pryor found that
In a cynical sense, one rught not pictures. The rigors a! Inauguration
to complain aoout the slruatlon. Day lett them exhausted. They did Introduced 6,(0) bills and almost another 47 hours were frittered
UntU Jan. 21, when the next session mth!ng for a week, and then 1,11Xl resolutklns. The good news Is away last year In excess time after
begins, the Uberties of the people recessed to honor Presidents Wa- that only 187 bUls were enacted Into the 15·minute pertods ~ptred.
are secure. That Is the mary )oke.lt shington and Lincoln. It was March law. Tile Senate met on 170 days,
Congress ended the 1985 session
contains a kernel of truth for toose · before they got down to work. Then the House .on only 152. The wtth tm major pieces a! legislation.
they took a vacatkln for Easter. members' • remarks - pus the These were the farm bill and the
who hold by tlte theory oft he fewer
laws, the better. It's mt a bad They took a week off for Memorial extensions ol their remarks- tiDed Gramm·Rudman Dellclt Reduc·
theory.
Day. They slaved away in June, 37,200 pages of the Qlngressional tlon Act. The farm bill has some
good features, but It perpetuates the
worst of the foU!es that affllct our
agricultural policy. Gramm·
Rudman Is a disaster.
What else was accomplished?
Let us see. In Its closing hours,
Congress provided for naming the
John w. Byrnes Post omce BuDding In · Green Bay, Wis., the
Jennings Randolph Lake near'
Keyser, W.Va., the Captain John
Foster Williams Coast Guard BuDdIng In Boston, the Robert N.C. Nix
BuDding In Phlladelphia, and the
James A. Welsh Courthouse in
Tucson.
Q)ngress designated a 'l'nlck and.
Bus Safety Week, a National Fetal
Alcohol Syndrome Awareness
Week, a National Organ and Tissue
Donor Awareness Week, a National
Jaycee Week, an Ethnic Americans
~ Day, a National Agricultural Day,
,-,..,..~
and a Save the U.S.A. Year. A·
"''I
decade might have been better.
''"'"
After approprtate thought and
hard reflection, &lt;Alngress declared
that It opposes chUdhood diseases
and the occupation ol Mghantstan .
It favors the Camp Fire girls and
Uthuanlan independence. A resolu• -.,.,_-.:_· • tton to oppose Man's Inhumanity to
Man on April :M of every year was
postponed for further consideration
In 1986.

CHICAGO (HPJ\ - The Chicago
Bears, whose roots go back more
than a half century to tlte beginnings of tlte NFL, have one more
mission this season:
Win tlte Super Bowl.
The team founded by George
"Papa Bear" Halas 66 years ago
yesterday won their first title since
1963 wilh a typical 1~ performance, ripping the Los Angeles
Rams 240. It was a performance of
which the late Halas, who died in
1983 •. would be proud.
A swarming defense posted the
first back·to-back playoff shu touts
In NFL history, and scrambling
quarterback Jim McMahon rushed
for one TD and threw for another to
start a Windy City celebration of the
Bears' first Super Bowl apperance.
"This team has been on a mission
since it lost to San Francisco (In last
year's NFC title game 23.0), and it 's
not that I'm not enjoying it right
now," said Chicago coach Mike
Dilka, a member of the 1963
championship squad," bUt we've
got more work to do In two weeks In
New Orleans."
Fittingly, VIrginia McCaskey,
Halas' daughter, presented the
Halas Trophy, symbolic ofthe NFC
championship, to her son, Bears
president Michael McCaskey.

McMAHON'S TOUCJIDOWN - Chicago Bears'
quarterback Jim McMahon scnimbles lor a 16 yard
touchdown bt lhe flnlt quarter ol Sunday's NFC game

Ja_c_k_A_nd_e_rs_o_n_&amp;_D_a_le_Va_n_A_r_ta

U.S.·Israell cooperation. But he Is
an Israeli patriot first , and has
never shrunk from using extreme
inethods to achieve his goals,
regardless of legal or diplomatic
niceties. In this case, he was after
technological information thai he
felt was vital to Israel's security.
It's not widely known, but the
diminutive Eltan was the person
responsible for one ol Israeli
Intelligence's most famous coup5:
the tracking, capture and kidnap ping ol Nazi war criminal Adolph
Eichmann In Buenos Aires 25 yearS
ago. The operation was undeniably
Illegal, and caused an rutcry from
the Argentine government .
Eitan's mentor, Issar Hare!,
chief of Israeli Intelligence at the
tlme, told the story oft hi&gt; Eichmann
caprure In a book, "The House on
Garibaldi Street" ta reference to
Eichmann 's house). Hare! identl·
fled the agent ·ln·chargP only by his
code-name, Gabi. but our associate

Lucette Lagnado has learned that
he was, in fact, Ettan.
Gabt/ Eitan was put In charge ol
the Eichmann mission, and he
supervised every detaU, from
setting up the safe house and
tracking Eichmann's every move,
to snatching him on the streets of
suburban Buenos Aires and smug·
gllng him out ol the country to
Israel. Eichmann was hanged alter
a smw trial that revealed him as
the unrepentant technician who
arrangl'd lor the transportation of
mUJtons of European Jews· to the
Nazi death camps.
Another Nazi fugitive on GabVEI· .
tan's list was Dr. Josef MengPie, the
notorious "Angel of Deatlt" who
decided whether Jews at Auschwitz
were gassed Immediately or consigned to the living hell of his quack
genetic experiments.
In fact , while Eichmann was
being interrogated In the Buenos
Aires safe house, one of tbe key bits
of Information thi&gt; Israelis pried out

c1 him was MengPie's address tn.
Argentina. To the Israelis ' chagrin,
however, the address was cold;
MengPie had moved ahout two
months earlier.
After taking Eichmann to Israel, .
Eltan returned toSouthAmertca to ·
continue the search for Mengele.
His team of agents finally located
the doctor In a well·protected
hideout In Paraguay. With charac·
tertstlc coolness, Ettan weighed the
odds ol a successful attack on the
villa and decided they were too
great: There was a substantial
dlance of !allure, and even If the
Israeli commando team could
overpower Mengele's Paraguayan
guards, It would be a bloody
operation. The plan was dropped.
Footnote: Eltan remains skepti·
cal that the mnes unearthed last
year In Brazll were really Men·
gele's. He believes It was an
elabOrate hoax, and assumes that
Mengele is stU! living - In
Paraguay.

&lt;·

Campaigning turns soft ____R_o_be_rt_~_al_te_rs

Berry's World

FECA's stringent restrictions on

campaign finance activities apply
only to ca ndidates and contests for
federal office - the presidency. vice
presidency and seats in the House and
Senate.

, FECA includes elaborate disclosure
requirements , but lour states - Alabama, South Ca rol ina, Wyoming and
Utah - do not require complete dis·
closure before elections, while other
states have loophole·riddled disclo·
sure provisions.
Operating in that al most·anything·
goes environment. the Republican Na·
tiona! Committee was first to take ad·
vantage of the FECA amendments. In
the 1980 presidential campaign, it
raised and spent an estimated $10 mil·
lion in "soft money."
The RNC funneled into IllinOis, a
sta te with an especially weak law .
contributions ol $10,000 to $25,000
from agribusiness firms in California
and similar donations from corporations in Virginia , Maryland, New Jer·
sey and Texas.
The Center for Responsive Politics,
a Washington·based non·parlisan re-

Funds that are subject to the law 's
limitations. prohibitions and disclo·
sure requirements are known as hard
money. Funds ostensibly ea rmarked sea rch organiution, estimates that in
for state and local political campaig ns 1984 the national committees of the
and activities are soft money.
two major political parties collectiveIn theory, that money IS used for ly raised and spent $40 million to $50
such non-federal activities as voter- mtllion in "soft money."
registration drives and Election Da y
Although presidential campaigns
get·OUt·the-vote campaigns. In prac· theoretically are financed with public
tice , those efforts can targeted so pre· funds, most ol that 1984 soft money
cisely that they provide direct assis· was used to suppoM the two paMies'
tance
to
presidential
and presidential candid~tes . Neither party
has ever tully disclosed details ol rts
congressional candidates.
Those "soft money" transactions "soft money " operations in the last
are subject to the ,estrictions of the presidential election.
'"Soft money ' means big money is
states in which they occur - but, in
back
in politics," says the Center for
many states, the laws governing cam·
paign financing are disgracefull y Responsive Politics. "The lat cats of
earlier political eras have a new game
weak and seldom enforced.
FECA limits an individual's cumu- to play, a new way to curry favor with
senators
and
lative contributions to federal cam· presidents,
congressmen."
paigns to $25,000 annually, but 27
Among those promoting the myth
states permit unlimited donations.
Similarly, FECA prohibits direct con- that national parties ca n legitimately
tributions from corporate and union operate non·lederal accounts is Flori·
treasuries, but 18 states allow unre· da lawyer E. William Crotty, who
stricted donations from those sources. made a $50,000 "soft money" contri·

•

I

bution to the Democratic National
Committee 1n 1984 and now heads the
party's National Finance Board of
Directors.
Taking a cue from the national par·
lies. individual politicians are moving
into the booming field . Rep . Vic Fazio,
D·Cahf., has asked the Federal Elec·

tion Commission to rule whether he
can operate a non-federal account.
More than a year ago, Common
Cause petitioned the commission to
fully explore the "soft money" issue
- and late this month the agency will
initiate a long-overdue examina tion of
the scandalous practice.

Berry's ·world

"! know so many people said
what ashame it was that he (Halas)
wasn't here for the whole season,"
Mrs. McCaskey said, "but he was :
here the whole season."
The Bears, 17-1, with Halas'
initials on their jersey sleeves, are
NewOrleans·bound tofacetheAFC
champion New England Patriots, a
club they soundly beat W·7 at
Soldier Field earHer in the season.
The Pats penetrated Chicago territory just once In tltat game.
The expected showdown between
running backs Eric Dickerson of
the Rams and Walter Payton failed
to materialize, as tx&gt;th defenses
successfully stopped the running
game. The overlooked confrontratlon between McMahon and Rams
quanerback Dieter Brock was won
by McMahon hands down , and 1he
·Bears.clalmed their seventh )'jFC
title.
McMahon scrambled for a 16yard TD to cap the Bears' opening
drive with 9:35 remaining in the·
first quater. He also set up Kevin
Butler's 34·yard field goa l later in
the quarter.
McMahon, recently fined by NFL
Commissioner Pet e Rozelle for
wearing a headband bearing an
advenlslng logo, yesterday sported
a hi&gt;adband hand·inscrlbed with

"Rozelle."
McMahon tacked on a 2~-yard
scoring strike to fleet Willie Gault
with 6: 56\eft in the third quarter to
raise tl:£' lead to 17-0.
"They played a lot of zone against
us and the alley was open m tllf&gt; TD
run ," said McMahon, who was
16-of·25 for 164 yards. "I thought the
key play of the who le game was the
pass to Gault that put us up 17- 0. "
McMahon conquered the gusty ll
mph winds, but Brock could handle
neither the dl argrng Bears· defense
nor the weather conditO:lns.
Brock, the maligned 3&lt;1 -year old
"rookie" Rams quarterbac k, ac·
quired from the Canadian Football
Leag~~e , had his seco nd straight
disappointing performance.
'

"We couldn't grt anything going
offen sively" said Brock. who was
10-of-31 for 66 yards, with his longest
completion 15 yards. " I couldn't
throw the baU in the wind . They just
heat us."
Dickerson was limi ted to46 ya rds
in 17 carries after he ru sh&lt;'d for a
pl ayoff record 248 ya rds the week
before against Dall as. Hrs bngest
run was 9 yards.

'

Front-runner,
like it or not U.S. spy Caper ______
Gary Hart says he doesn't want to be regarded as the front - runner for
WASHJNGTON - Among the
the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination. Lots of luck. senator.
espionage cases that siXJOk thi&gt;
The Colorado Democrat would Uke to be thought of as just another
Washington establishment last
member of Congress who has decided not to run for another term, a
year, rone was more surprising
decision he recently an nounced . He won't say he decided to retire from the
than the revelation that Jonathan
Sl&gt;nate In 1986 after 12 years to prepare for the next presidential election,
Jay Pollard, a Navy Intelligence
but he won't say he didn 't either. He did make clear he isn't going to vanish
analyst, had been spying for Israel.
from public IHe.
Mter first denying that Pollard
So It Is assumed he is t\lnning . If he isn't, it would be as big or bigger
had been furnishin g thi&gt;m with
shock than Se-n. Edward Kennedy's declaration tha t he is out of the 1988
secrets, embarrassed Israeli officials admitted the charges and
ptcrure.
Hart is a smart enough politician to know why he will be regarded as the
allowed U.S. Investigators to Interleading candidate for the Democratic nomination.
rogate tt» Israeli Embassy personMost simply stated, it Is bl'cause he made a credible run for the
nel involved.
nomination In 1984. The Almanac ol American PoUtics says with a few
· The mystery man ~hind the
more votes in the Illinois and Georgia presidential primaries, Hart. not
Pollard caper was a swashbuckllng
Walter Mandate. might have had the romlnalio n.
super·spy , RaJ\ Eitan t not to be
He is a proven national vote- getter. which is more tha ri can be said for
confused with former chief ol staff
such other possible contenders as New York Gov . Mario Cuomo, New
of thi&gt; Israeli army, Ralael Eltan) .
Jersev Sl&gt;n. Bill Bradley or Missouri Rep . Richard Gephart, to mention
He has sel\led his country effec only~ few . He has a national organization, which the others don't. He still
tively in the shadowy world of
has debts to pay from 1984. but in the process of raising money to pay them
espionage and coven operations for
off, he ca n keep himself in the public (')'e.
over 35 yea rs.
It also is obvious why Hart doesn 't want to be considered the
Those who know Eltan well
front -runner. let alot'ft&gt; a certain candidat e. The political graveyard is
assured us thai he would never
littered with the oones ol candidat es who ix'came the center a attention so
intentionally harm the United
early in the game that they became everybody' s targPt.
States. or dellherately endanger
Remember George Romney and Ed Muskie? Both got knocked off
almost before there were any other candidates In the field to compare them
with. They got heat from rivals In their own parties, from the political
opposition and from the media and sure enough stumbled . Both probably
got something of a raw dea l. but politics ranks high among the f1Jrsuits in
\He In which there is no guarantee ol fair play.
WASHINGTON (NEA) - First, an
Hart does not have the advantage in this regard enjoyed, if tha t is the
explanation for those who naively beright word, by former Sl&gt;n. Howard Baker of Tennessee. When Baker
lieve that there's only one type of cur·
retired from Congress in 1984, it was assumed that he would be in the 1988 rel')ey. In politics. there are two very
Republican picture.
different varieties - " hard money"
But In his case, he didn't have to worry aoou t premature front-t;unner and " soft mone-y."
That distinction dates back to 1979.
status bl'cause Vice President George Bush has that designation sewed up. ·
when
the Federal Election Campaign
Baker's problem may be tha t he got out of the spotlight so early that he
Act
was
amended to revive declining
won't be able to find his way back.
state and local Republican and Democratic orga nizations by allowing them
to raise and spend unlimited amounts
or money for non·federal "party·
building" or "grass-roots" activities.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Janaury 13. 1986

against Los Angeles. The Bears advanced to their
lint championship game since 1963 wUh a 24-G
victory. UPL

Strong running
game
gives
.
upset victory over Dolphins
MIAMI (UP!) - The New
England Patriots have done enough
in the last month to compensate for
25 years of futility .
The Patriots' 31-14 victory over
the Miami Dolphins Sunday put thi&gt;
fi nal touches on tlte overhaul,
signalling the end of the OrangP
Bowl jinx and New England's
reputation as a team that can't win
the big game.
New England's upset was the
fourth straight game tlte Patrtots
had to win to keep their season
alive, and their first In the OrangP
Bowlin 19 years.
As a reward, theY advance the
Super Bowl XX Jan. 26 at New
Orleans against the Chicago Bears.
"I see something happening here
with this team that's almost
Impossible to comprehend," said
Patriots coach Raymond Berry,
wno the players give credit for the
turnaround.
New England, which lost three ol
tts first five games this season, Is
the third wild card team to advance
to the Super Bowl. The Patrtots had
to beat Cincinnati In the final
regular season game to make the
playoffs, thl'n won three straight on
the road to go to thi&gt; Super Bowl.
"This is a different team from I he
past," Patriots Pro Bowl tackle
Brian Holloway said. "We are a
tough , tough team that has faced a
lot of adversity ... and we have a lot

more adversity to face In two
weeks.

"We did It In tlte Meadowlands
(aga inst the Jets), we did It In the
Coliseum (against the Raiders ) , we
did It here In the Orange Bowl- all
the teams we had lost to. We have
some magic.
"It's going to be a great game
against the Bears, a great game .
between two great, physical foot ball teams."
The Patriots continued their
opportunistic play Sunday. They
forced siX turnovers, turning them
Into 24 points. Craig James rushed
for 100 yards on 22 carries, Tony
Eason completed three short touchdown passes, and . New England
denied Dan Marino the kind of big
plays that helped fiJ I Miami In tlte
conference championship game.
"It seemed like they scored
almost every time we turned tt
over," said Marino, will completed
28.0!-40 passes for 248 yards with
two TDs and two Interceptions.
"They have that type of team.
That's why they're going to the
Super Bowl."
New England ha s forced 16
turnovers In three playa!! games,
which they've turned Into 61 points.
Some call that li)ck; the Patrtots
call It their game plan .
"It's the only way to play
defense," said safety Fred Marton ,
will had an Interception Sunday.

"You've got to play reckless
abandon defense and go after
people. Do that, andgoodthingswUI
happen.
"We go Into every game looking
for five turmvers."
The Dolphins lost an AFC
Championship Game for the first
time In six appearances under
Shipp ( M) attempts to stop Collins. New England
NINE YARD GAIN - Patrlo4s hallback Tony
Coach Don Sllllla. Miami, which
advanced lo Super Bowl XX with a 3(.14 win, ti'Ais
·
Collins
drives
for
nine
yards
agalrull
lhe
Dolphin
overcaml' an 18·polnt deficit last
ending
a long losing streak on the Dolphins home
defense early ID thi&gt; first quarter Sunday at the
week against Cleveland. came up
D
eld.
UPL
Orange Bowl In Miami. Dolphin lnebacker Jackie
empty against New England and
miss going to the Super. Bowl for the
second straight year, and third time
in four years.
Miami had won eight straight
posted a 25·12 win as the Young
games, going back to a loss to the
HEMLOCK - Meigs' twin·sister short.
Ma
rauderet res played most of the
Patriots in Foxboro, Mass.
combo Julie and Jenny M!ller were
Coach Ron Logan'schargPs, who
game
withou t the services of 'ace
"I'm very disappointed In the
nearly as lndent\cal on the hard· have posted a 46·9 record since the
way that we played," Shula said.
wood as they are In statue here MUter sisters and company arrived , scorer Missi Woods due to an
injury. Six Meigs gir ls sco red two
"We worked hard to get Into the
Saturday as they led tbe Marau- on the scene two and half years ago,
derettes to their seventh straight wUI put an 18·game home winning points each including Nikki Whi·
championship game. We came
tlat ch, U&gt;slieCarr. Nancy Blanken·
victory, 59-38 over MUier in girls' streak on the Hne this Thursday
from 54 and turned thi&gt; season
ship
, Dee Hen&lt;k'rson, Rhonda
TVC cage action.
·
around, thi&gt;n played as poorly as we
when they battle NelsonvUie-York
Zirkle,
and Beth Ewing. The Meigs
The MOler girls eac h scored 11 at 5:55 p.m. The Lady Buckeyes
played; nor tackling and giving up
rf'S&lt;'rves
arr 74 cr;erall. Meigs did
the football ...
points while Julie led Meigs with 10 hande~ Meigs Its' only loss ol the
mt atlempt a frff' throw In the
rebounds and Jenny followed with "year earlier with a 39-37 up5et at
The Patriots took a J.O lead on
game.
Tony Franklin's 2'1-yard field goal,
eight. Both Jennl Swartz and Jenn! Buchtel.
MEIGS t~ l - ~·nn1 Mllk'r '-1 11. JuiW Mill(,
after defensive end Garin Verli
Couch added 10 points each for the
In the win over M!ller, Meigs shot
4-3- 11 Jrnru '"' ~Ill · ~· Ul lt'flni r,u:·h l 4 10 .loctl
winners who upped their record to 39 per cent from the field. making 24
recovered Tony Nathan's fumble
Hdrrison 2 14. Tr~ , ·-..~ 1• •~.11'«1 214 ~ .. r kl Mu,&lt;;f'r
T&lt;tmm1 l'. ill.!tll l I I 'nl'll\ ~lol:l..u 1 Ill!. L rs..
on•.the Miami 45 on thi&gt; Dolphins' 10.1 avera \I and 9-11n the TVC. The of 61. The MHS Ladles made 18 &lt;t 28 2·1J..I,
P\JIIin•Mil Tm'\l.l.;~ l l ~U
first play from scrimmage. New
Marauderettes remain deadlocked free throws fo r 64 per cent, had 39
MWD ill'! I - Tm,r l ,r,,, I~ 10. Chri• Slr•ITV'f
1.2 ,., r o nd,l ~~~~ ... \l l+o I U.Jrll F.ll,l /' h' 20-4 RhondH
England went a head for good , 10·7,
with Alexander for the league lead. rebounds, 22 turnovers, and were
2-fH ,\nll.l "(lK'I 'I 1 0 ! r ;rl Tm h I ( I ! ( 1'1£'1'\' ]
oo Eason's 4-yard pass to Tony Meigs nearly advanced into sole called for 18 fouls. Miller made four Tnlh
Doutr.:hll 1~~~ TOT \l.' l'i+:t!.
B• qu.HTPr•
Collins with 10: 10 left In the half.
possession of first place Saturday &lt;t 12 foul shots and committed 19
~'lrl ,l('&lt;
11 U I" H
- 'ill
. as Warren Local's upset bid over fouls.
Mrlk'r
the Lady Spartans feU live points
In the reserve game, Miller

Marauderettes roll over· Miller gals

h~]tll l

·Wahama rips Southwestern, 76-57

' '

"Like George Shultz. I got strong feelings
about lie detector tesrs - know what 1
mean?''

The Wahama White Falcons
upped their record to 5-J with a 76-57
thrashing of the Southwestern
Highlanders Saturday night In the
Wahamagym.
wahama seemingly scored at
wUI In the first half building a 29-7
lead before tbe Highlanders closed
to within J5.20 at the intenn!sslon.
wahama scored seven ot the first
ntne jx&gt;tnts of the second half to
bUDd their advantage back to 20 at
42.22 at the 5: ~mark on a foul shot
by Todd Gress, a pair of inside
baskets by Malt Thompoon and a
15-foot jumper by Riehle Clark.
After a Highlander rally cut the
deficit to 45-32 the White Falcons
put the game away with six
unanswered jXl!ilts and an eventual
55-38 lead entering the final stanza.
waharila substituted freely dur·

lng the final eight minutes of play
oulscortng Southwestern 21·19 lJe.
fore coming away with the 76-57
triumph.
Wahama's offensive attack lea·
tured 11 Individual scorers led by
Jeff Bamltz and Thompson with 12
points apiece and Bill Marshall with
10.
Andy Halslop srored 15 for
Southwestern whUe Jim Jeffers
added 14 and Don Patrick with 13.
From the field Wahama hit 33-71
shots (46.5 perrent) and 1().25 (40
percent) from the tree throw Une.
Southwestern was able to connect
on only 22-67 shots from the Ooor
(32.8 percent) and 13-27 from the
charity stripe (48.2 perrent).
Southwestern outrebounded Wa·
hama J3.29 with Jeffers pulling
down 10. Matt Jewell led tre White

Falcons with seven.
The loss drop5 Southwestern to
2-10.
In the junior varsity matchup
J .T. Uoyd scored 14 points and
Robbie Grtnun added 10 to lead 11
Wahama scorers as the White
Falcons mtched a 57·25 decision
CNer Southwestern.
The win gives Wahama's junior
varsity a 5-1 record while thi&gt;
Htgblandets drop to 1·8.

••l('!llft:

Jim Jl.'rft&gt;n; ~14 .
Wol lum
Danro· Patt1dl • ~1J. Dllw Mtrahon Hl-2.
'h&amp;all D-11-11 .
" 'AIIAMA (11) - .1foff Blrnltt n12. Mall
ThomJ*X! &amp;-O-Il. Rkhlt aark 4-0-8. Tockl GrN 2-3-7.
Mall J..,-.1! .).().i. Mlkl'Wolll't.U. Brad8umll:af1hlf
6-0-8. 8111 Manhl.ll f.2-Kl. 'lh:&amp;' 'J'Uckt'r 2~. Tom
~.,.m I).J.I, Robbk' Grimm 1~2. TC1fAL8
11-11-'11.
80l1111W118ft.ERN (17) -

Andy
H~.

HaiY:Ip 7·1-IS. Bronny

...... .. _....
Southwntrn1

v.·anama

Boyd~ •. lol'll

!I 1!1 lR 19 -57
11 J'l :1) 21 - 7$

- 0&lt;

Meigs' win streak on line Tuesday
Meigs' all·tlme leading retx&gt;under Mike Chancey will be
within striking distance of the
all· time Marauder scoring mark at
NelsonvU\e-York Tuesday when the
undefeated Marauders go after win
number 13.
The 6-5 senior Chancey needs 33
points to better the S!ll career mark
currently held by 1981 Meigs grad
Nick Riggs . Chancey scored 314 as
a sophomore, 3221ast year, and has
212 thus far this season. ·
Marauder guard Rick Wise, also
a three-year starter, Is the number
five all·tlme top MHS scorer,
·having put In 687 markers. Wise,
who scored 170 as a sophomore and
21!8 last year, Is Meigs' top scorer
this year with 229. The 5-9 senior

needs 203 more to better Riggs'
record and Is currently trailing
Riggs, Chancey, Jeff T'yo, a nd Bob
Ashley. He moved ahead of number
six Steve Ohlinger with 39 points In
!its last two games. ·
Meigs defeated N·Y 78-65 ea rlier
in the year, bUt will be facing a
revamped Buckeye five this Tues·
day. NYHS lost a narrow 69-67
decision to Warren Local last week
and defeated VInton County 61·5S
last Friday to raise Its' record to 2·9
averall and 2-8 In the TVC.
Mter a 61-52 upset loss to Mtller
two weeks ago, the Buckeyes of
first year coach Rocky Smathers
underwent a nerve-wrecking week
as all c:i thelr seniors walked out of
practice on Wednesday. AU but one

returned, how~l'cr. later. Dennis
Howe, who paced N·Ywit h 24 points
In the first M~i gsgam e,ls out with a
broken hand. He should be replaced
by G4 Benny Mays.
Other Buckeye starters Include
Chuck Walters and Tom Martin at
guards along with Mike Russell and
C. R Savage at forwards. Meigs
fans remember Walters as the hero
In NYHS' s overt \me win over Meigs
last season at Buchtel with 'a last
second game·winnlng basket.
Meigs starters include Wise and
defensive specialist Brad Robinson
at guards, •tead)' Sh;m111Jaker and
Chancey at forwards, and 6·6 Lee
Powell at cent er. Huey Eason, J . R.
Kitchen, and Donnie Becker wUI
see first action off the bench.

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. Janaurv 13, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eastern rallies in second half for 64-59 SVAC victory
BY SCOTt WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - Trailing by
fjve points at halftime, 33-28, the
Eastern Eagles overcame the
first half deficit with a red -hot
shooting spree from the floor to
defeat the visiting Symmes Valley Vikings, 64-0!1 here Saturday
evening In an SVAC make-up
contest at Eastern High School.
Symmes Valley Is now 4-6
overall and 3-51n loop play, while

Bloomfield had 4of7 steals, while
EASTERN 1111 - Ed Colli ns. Hll:
pace, capitalizing on field goals connected on 17 of 23.
Jimmy Caldwf'll. (}.Q.O: Grt'g Ltachman,
and a goodoutsldeshootlng game
Eastern won the battle of the the Vikings had 11 turnovers an d 4 _ 0 _~ Tone Cha~man. o-o-o: Jetllf,iatdw•ll.
for game-high honors of 25 boards 42 -35 Jed by Eddie Collins' 16 personals.
11-3-25: Bryan Durst 6-2·14: Kevin Barber
Eastern won the reserve con- 2-1-5: Brent Norton. ll-0-0: Michael Malt In
po ints. Junior guard Eddie Col- 15, Leachman's 7, and Barber's
ll-ll-0. TOTAlliiH-11.
!Ins knotted 12, and sophomore 7. Sly Bloomfield grabbed 13 and lest quite handily 58-35 led by
svMMI'li ~ALLEY iltl - Sly BloomBryan Durst 14.
Thompson 9 for SV.
Steve Horner with 13, Tony fleld, &amp;HJ: Gat&gt;e Patterson. 3-M: Shan•
Meadows. 1-H: John Sheppard, 3-9-lS;
John Thompson paced
Eastern had two steals, 11 Hendrix 12, MarkGrlffln10and JohnThompson. S-J-19 , MlkePatt•rson,
Symmes with 19 markers, John turnovers . 17 fouls , and 13 Jeff Johnson 8. Tony Schneider o-oO; st.v• Gates. 0-2-2: Larry Ferris,
Sheppard netted 1~. and Sly assists, led by a good noor game had 10 for Symmes Valley .
ooo. TOfAlllll-17-lt.
Score by ~arten:
Bloomfield 13.
by Ed Collins. Gahe Patterson
Easterntral•elstoNorthGallla Eastern ................... .... \4 14 19 17-61
A somewhat speedy first quar- had 4 of six Valley assists, Tuesday.
Symmes Vaii&lt;Y ...... ..... 18 15 n 15-59
ter pace produced a lot of scoring ,.....:_:_:_ _ _ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

tastern lifts Its record to 4-7 and
3-5.
Eastern enjoyed Its best shootIng night In quite a while as the
Eastern Meigs Countlans drilled
28 of 56 field goal attempts for 50
percent, Including a hot second
half of 14 for 25 for 56 percent.
Symmes Valley canned 21 of 57
for 37 percent.
Sophomore guard Jeff Caldwell led Eastern's hot shooting

action and much aggression on
Eastern's part. although
Symmes Valley climbed Into an
18-14 lead.
Eastern's aggressive style, a
full court press and pressure out
front on the ball. put the hungry
but confident Eagles In early foul
trouble. Throughout the t&gt;ntlre
first half SV took advantage of
excellent foul shooting and _
eleven successful trips to the line
to take a 33-29 lead Into the
lockerroom at the half.
Meanwhile, Eastern who went
to the line just once, took
advantage of a warm night from
the floor to stay within striking
distance. Guard JeffCaldwellled
that attack with a complimentary effort from Ed Collins and
Bryan Durst.
Playing a somewhat conservative, but yet tactful third frame
Eastern quickly made up Its five
point deficit on an Inside goal by
Leachman, and outJ;Ide shot by
Caldwell, Colli ns. and Durst.
EHS took a 47-44 lead Into the
final round aftt&gt;r outscoring SV
19-U.
With the score 55-54 late In the
final round Jeff Ca ldwell hit the
first of a one-and-one and Durst
hit the follow-up jumper on the
rebound for a 58-54 EHS lead . SV
once again pulled close, but a key
bucket by Kevin Barber again
put the Eagles of Coach Dennis
Eichinger ahead by four.
SV resorted to sending EHS to
the line late In the game.
however. Eastern came through
with st&gt;veral key charity tosses to
secure the game.
EHS hit 8 of 14 free t brows for
57 percent. while the VIles

EAGLE FOULED - Eastern's Ed Collins Is fouled from behind by
Synunes Valley's Gabe Patterson during action ln Saturday's SVAC
coMeo!l at Eastern. At left Is the Vlldngs' Jot.. Thompson (-e). Eastern
won 61-59.

R_io Redmen top
Mt. Vernon 76-62
Joe Verhoff scored 31 points
Saturday night as Rio Grande
College defeated \islting Mount
Vernon, 7&amp;-62 in a Mid-Ohio Ohio
onference basketball contest.
In the first game of the evening,
Peg Morbltzer tallied ll points as
1he Redwomen made it a clean
sweep by defeating the Mount
Vernon ladies, 60-57 .
ln the men 's contest, the visitors
were led by Jeff Goodrich with 23
points. The Redmen lead the MOC
with a 2-0 conference record .
Overall, Rio is 15-3.
The Redmen outshot the Cougars
from the field. 55 to 49 percent. The
vi, ltors were. however. a perfect 14
of 14 from the foul line.
Mount Vernon remained closP
during first half play. In second ball
play, Rio outscored tilt&gt; visitors
44-33 to win going away.
Rio Grande will play at Urbana
Tuesday.
The Redwomen won their first
Gr{'ater Ohio Conference tilt , and
improved their mark to 9-2 overall.
The Lady Cougars were unbeatt'll
going into Saturday· s eon test .
Rio buill up a II point first half
lead, but the visitors cut it io six by
halftime. The lead exchanged
hands sLx times befot1' Rio pulled
ahead for keeps.
Amy Fea theringham led thP
losers wit h 15 point s.
Box scot'!':
MtH"'I'tt:K:'Iifl' l lit l - 1 • ''"' "'":1 1 .,.,,n
lionlh 11~2 T" ml l,u~ IH" l d ll,u• hK· ~, ~-!. \
l'lm ~1...-h'-llll 2! ., 1,1\ F11T 'I Ih \ \''• TfiTM.\

!-t-1 1-i"!
KKl 4iR .\..,_DF: Iiiii - ho'f' l \\ ol!, I . 11' 11m
ho •l fl'o .!-1" :O.l il\j' ""''' h 1 1 11 lo o• \, •i h lll 1:· ll

MYLANTA II
LIQUID ANTACID

320Z.
BOTTLE

1

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IDd IDO'It1 •••,. ldVftiCU fll ETS.
Send Yl lhil CDUplft lnd -.:"11 tmd

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Ha.Jllfnl • ~'llfl '- H ~ ol ,r,lflr\o. 1.! \1' 11..1\1 \o ' I!'IUf\.11

ROLD ~
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GOLD riRr SHAMPOO
NORMAL,
PRETZELS - OR OILY

59
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109
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g~m

• Fish Dinner
• Li\'t"f N' Onions Dinner

Or Choose Any
All American Burger Dinner

RACINE - Racine Twin City
Shrine meet Monday, 7:~ p.m .. at
the clubhouse. All members are
urged to attend.

'J'UE'!DAY
CHESHIRE - Cheshire chapter ·
OES meets Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
KYGER - Cheshire Township
trustees meet 'ruesday, 6 p.m.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Elementary PrO meettngwlll be held 7
p.m. Tuesday at the school.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commeree meets
Tuesday noon In the basement of
the Pomeroy Trinity Church on the
corner of Lynn and Second streets.
Lunch wlll be served at a cost of $3
per person. Members are urged to
attend.
POMEROY- The Meigs County
Park Dis!Jict Board of Commissioners wlll meet at 5 p.m. Tuesday
at the offices r1 Attorneys Story and

Story in Pomeroy.

WEDNI!8DAY
PAGEVILLE - Meigs County
Flremans Association meets Wednesday evening, 7:00 p.m., at the
Scipio Township Volunteer Fire
Department.
PAGEVILLE - The Meigs
County Fireman's Association Is
sponsoring a program, "Why Rope
Rescue?," on Wednesday Jan. 15 at
the Scipio Township Volunteer Fire
Department. The program wlll
begin at 7: 30 p.m.

Named to list
James H. Newell , Chester, has
been named to the Columbus
Technical Institute dean's list for
the autumn quarter. A 3.5 grade
point average or higher is required
for listing.

Tobacco without smoking
poses a cancer threat
Chewing tobacco Is sold In a plug,
bar, twist (cutstrips).ca_Ilorpouch,
and it can be dry, moist or flavored.
A wad of tobacco (a "quid" or
"chaw") Is chewed bY placing a
gall ball-sized a~munt between the
cheek and teeth and sucking on lt.
Snuff Is dark air or fire cured
tobacco which bas been powdered
and flavored. · The user places a
small pinch between the lower lip
and gum, where It mixes with
saliva and is absorbed; Inhales a
pinch into the nosbil; or dips a
small moistened brush into the
snu!f and places the brush between
the cheek and gum.
Smol!eless tobaceo which Is
chewing tobacco and snu!f Is rtch in
nitrosamlnes, which Is one of the
most potent carcinogens known,
according to S. · Michael, Public
Information Chairman of ACS In
Meigs County.
It Is estimated that 6 to 12 million
AmeriCans use smokeless tobacco
products which has been directly
linked to oral, pharyngeal and
laryngeal cancer, oral Jeukoplakla
(a pre-cancerous condlllon I. gum
dl.s€ese and tooth loss. The rtsk of
developing cancers a~mng snu!f
users .was four times higher
compared to nonusers . said

....._-----People in the news

TUSSY
DEODORANT

By WUllAM C. TIWl'l'
United Press lntematlonal

•

dOllS FOR ROBOI'S: Actress Ally Sheedy wlll be paired with a
: robot In her next movie, "Short Circuits," and lf she could have a
' robot of her own, she would !Ike It to be a creative one.
; "Because I like good literature and art so much I'd want my robot
· to be a talented artist. " she says In the premiere Issue of GoBots
: magazine. "She'd write great novels, compose beautiful songs and
: create wonderful paintings." Young'llna Yotllers of "Famlly Ties"
•would have more practical tasks for her robot.
· "I'd want a robot to clean my room ," she says. "In fact, rriy robot
:would have to do all my work around the house so I could have more
· ilme for playing."
: REOPEN Ct\SE MACDONALD CASE?: Dr. Thomas Noguclbl,
:the one-time "coroner to the stars" in Los Angeles, has doubts about
·the controversial conviction of former Green Beret Dr. Jeflrey
MacDonald. Noguchi says he Is now reviewing the rnse- In which
MacDonald was convicled d. murdering his pregnant wUe and too

LET US
PRICE
YOUR
NEXT
•
PRESCRIPTION
liMIT

All Dinn•·" lnduc.k Dinnt·r Brrau . Choke of Frit.,. Ricr or Bakrd Puta\10 anu Soup. Salad &amp; Fruil Bar.

Dinner Table .

HARRISONVll..LE - Harrisonville Senior Otlzens wlll hold a free
blood pressure clinic Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon, at the Harrlsonvllle
Sentor Citizens Club. Ferdora
Story, R.N ., will supervise. Everyone welcome.

NOXZEMA
__.MEDICATED
SHAVE
CREAM

Old-Fashioned • All-American • Bacon Burger • Mushroom Swiss

S!~!Y~.

POMEROY - The Board of
Directors of the Big Bend Clvltan
Club will meet at 7:ll p.m. Monday
at the Community Action Agency
Offices In Pomeroy.

229

RODS

2.25STICK,
OZ . ROll-ON
OR
2 OZ.
CREAM OR ANTIPERSPIRANT ROll -ON
2.25 oz

• Italian F~ast Dinn~r
• Chicken Fillet Dinner
• Fish N' Chips Dinner

7 OZ. BOTILE

MONDAY
ALBANY - Southern Hills Arts
Council meets Monday, 7:00 p.m.
Gingerbread Studio, Albany. For
Information call (614 1 384-fl556.

township bulldlng in Kyger.

RACINE - Southern Junior
High Athletic Boosters meet 7: 00
p.m. Monday at !he school.

C

TWIST

lj

• Hau· (J' Pountl Dinner

299

HEMORRHOIDAL
OINTMENT

j=

Extension Agents' Association conference for :10
years service. A certlflcale and gift were presented
IUD bY Ralph Jonlao, OCEAApresldent-elecl, during
ceremonies at the conference.

Community calendar I area happenings

PREPARAnON H

bollull day lq. "011-pook",...

m-u\iloo-·

AGENT HONORED - Jolut C. Rice, rlehl, Melp
County Extmslon Agent, Apicullure and CNRD, was
reoognlzed recently at the Ohio Cooperative

GENERAL ELECTRIC

ASSORTED
SHADES

Somct-...,_ • .,...-.
n. Elodric , . , . Somct (n'S)

hft. la llidDIQ,lt. bwa,.

.....I

6~Gz4 199

L'OREAL
PREFERENCE
HAIR COLOR .

....... ~tlobr­

.

TABLETS

239

CUP AHll MAIL
,_ """ .. - WiN

The Syracuse Presbyterian Anne Redovian, and a Christmas
Chu reb hosted a dinner with the service entitled "Christmas Is" led
Middleport and Harrisonville bY John and Tu nie Redovioan,
Church congregations as guests.
Katie Crow, Peggy Holman , MarAfter the diMer the Syracuse
vin McKelvey, andd the Rev. Ken
church presented a Christmas WUkins.
Eleanor McKelvey was the
program. Recitations were given · accompanist.
Treats were given tothechUdren.
and songs were sung bY the
prtrnary and youth classes. Taking Attending were Jim Teaford. Carpart were Ryan Nease, Luke roll Ann Harper, Ruby Vaughan,
Holman. Trish Holman, Amy Beth Richard W. Vaughan, Faye WalRedovlan, Jay McKelvey, Leigh lace, Dwight Wallace, Roscoe File,
Anne Redovlan, and Michael Betty FHe, Mareella Coleman,
E:ltzabeth Burkett, Eddie Burkett.
McKelvey.
'0 Holy Night" was presented by
Louise Thompson. Lennie and Paul
Paul Haptonstall on the violin and Haptonstall, Helen Sauer, Ethel
Lennie Haptonstall on the plano. and Donald Lowery, Pauline AtMichael McKelvey sang "As Each kins, Stella Atkins. Jim and Martha
Happy Christmas" , and Amy lleth Vennarl, John, Tunle, Amy Beth
Redovlan played "Away in a and Leigh Anne Redovloan, Betsy
Manger"on the palno.
and Sheila HorkY, Genevieve
Esther Harden sang "Now Are Schneider, Jane Teaford. Patty,
the Days Fulfilled.;' There was Donald and Mary Beth Stein, Inez
plano solo, ''O Holy Night" by Leigh

269_;:

SOFT·WHITE
LIGHT lULlS

_.,

RITE AID

DISCOU~T

PHARMACY

208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

with finely chopped mint.
pie packed in syrup
Cut off peel. Cut fruit over the
Orange sections, dloed red apple,
whole seedless grapes or halved bowl so that no juice Is lost. Reroove
Tokay grapes, and canned peaches all white skin around and between
with sweet elder or other fruit juice. sections of tlle oranges and grape- .
Grapefruit sections, orange sec- fruit. Remove all seeds.
Add the pinea pple and Its liquid. :
tions, dloed avocado.
Grapefruit sections with sliced Slice the bananas into the bowl with
the other fruits. Gently stir tostrawberries or frozen cherries.
Grapefruit sections topped with gether. Cover bananas with juice to :
orange or lime sherbet and gar- keep them from turning brown. ·
Cover bowl with plastic wrap and
nished with mint sprigs.
Ambrosia: Alternate layers of refrigerate.
Did You KnowThat .... ln1m, the .
grapefruit and orange sections with
British
Navy ordered all Its ships to · .
coconut. Garnish with mint.
This Sunshine Salad is coloriul carry supplies of lemons and limes
to help prevent scurvey. It wasn't
and nutritious.
untO 1932 that the mysterious
SUNSHINE SAlAD
substance in cit rus fruits that
2 grapefruits
prevented scurvey was found to be
3 large bananas
ascorbic acid or Vitamin C.
6 oranges
1 (20 ounce) can crushed pineap-

Dinner held at Syracuse Presbyterian

NASAL DECONGESTANT

·

Page-6

Cut orange wedges and serve
from fresh oranges. Fresh oranges
are usually less expensive In with pork, chicken, lamb, or turkey .
Dea&gt;rate cold meat with orange
February. Juice oranges are less
expensive than fancy or navel · slices or sections.
BroU a baH grapefruit to serve as
oranges and are fine for eating.
Oranges and grapefruit wlll keep an appetizer or with the main part
for 7-10 days at room temperature of the meal. Large oranges are good
or 2 to 3 weeks II they are this way, too.
Just a llttle fresh orange wlll
refrigerated .
flavor beets, carrots, green beans,
Oranges are great snacking food.
For youngsters, why not cut them In and sweet potatoes, squash, brae·
sections or bite size pieces for easier coli, caullflower, onions, or Brussels sprouts. Use either bite size
eating.
Other suggestions for serving pieces, grated peel or juice to add a
oranges and grapefruit Include the little Interest.
Use sllces or sections of oranges
following Ideas:
or grapefruit with fresh or canned
Add thin slices of orange or
fruit In gelatines or salads for color
grapefruit to broiled fish when
and fresh flavors any time of year.
nearly done. Brush with soft
Suggestions for fruit
margarine. Brown just a little.
romblnatlons:
Serve at once.
Orange and grapefruit sections

SUDAFED

~bf DP\ItK Uillill C:mi"im

Widllllilll*io\ """-yoo

C Is Important In the diet for
bullding strong bones, healthy
gums and repairing wounded or
burned tissues.
The reason we need VItamin C
dally is because It is a water soluble
vitamin. This means that our body
does not store It VItamin C is also
rapidly destroyed In cooking. Cooktog quickly and with as little water
as possible Is recommended for
vegetables such as tomatoes, broccoli and green peppers that contain
a good amount of vitamin C.
Calorie wise a medium orange
bas only 65 kllocalortes and Y.i of a
grapefruit has only 55 calories.
When you shop for good sources
of Vitam(!) C compare sources; for
example, frozen juice concentrate
Is usually " less expensive than
orange juice you squeeze yourseH

.
1

Monday, Janaury 13, 1986

Fruity ideas for the holiday leftovers

LISTERINE
ANnSEPnC

..,..,..• ...., _ _ .....ty""

hn kJp.a.ID 7&amp;.&amp;

By The Bend

2"

120Z.
BOTTLE

OhOor.- C::...,..,\_ .. _

1ft in ciiCr:l

BY CINDY OIJVERI
Coonty EtdeJI8ion t\gent
Horne Economics and 4-H
Many homemakers purchase or
receive fresh fruit baskets or boxes
of fruit over the holiday season.
'IWo of the fruits common at tllls
time of year are oranges and
grapefruits. Both of these fruits are
members of the dtrus family which
Includes tangerines, lemons, and
llmes. Not only are these fresh
fruits tasty, they're nutritious, too!
We need at least four servings a
day from the fruits and vegetable
group. At Ieastooeofthoseservlngs
should be a fruit which is rtch In
Vitamin C.
Fruits such as the citrus fruits are
a rtch source of Vltamln C. Other
good sources are strawberries,
canteloupe, and tomatoes. Vltamtn

• AS PER POSTED SCHEDULE

Now that there are
lower "off-peak"
rates, the heat is
on for Electric
Thermal
Storage.
n. ............. in atra 1IOW

In the spotlight:

COLOR FILM DEVELOPING*

•. _.,_... ., •

oiOIIio.

.

~ ne uaily ~enttnel :.

·'•

small daughters In their North Carolina home- at the request of
MacDonald's attorney.
"I don't know ll he's guUty or not guilty," Noguchi says. "But I
think the evidence, part of ti, may have been misinterpreted."
Noguchi. whose hook "Coroner at Large" came out In November,
handled the deaths of Marilyn Monroe, the Charles Manson vk:ttms,
RDhert Kennedy, Janis Joplin, John Belu.shl but was demoted to an
autopsy physician tn 1982 for using county time for personal JrOjects,
mismanaging his o!flce and sensationalizing the deaths of \W1Iant
Holden and Natalie Wood .
He Is fighting to get the coroner's job back, claiming he was wsted
by a conservative Board of Supervisors that did oot llke him because
he was outspoken and Japanese.
HEAVENLY NAME: Halley's Comet comes around every 76
years or so but Jlalley Comet Reed m can almost always be found
around Pensacola, Fla. Reed, 17, says he never tbougbt aboul
altering his name."! tell them my whole name,"hesald. "I'm proud
of my name. It 's unique."

NOW ACCEPTING REGISTRATION.
FOR SECOND SEMESTER

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

GINGERBREAD HOUSE
PRE-SCHOOL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT.
G.ENERAL ALLERGIST

IN MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO
FOI MOlE IINFO..l'nON PH. 992·7177

Michael.
Since smokeless tobacco contains
nicotine, It Is addictive. A dip of
snulf delivers roughly the same
amount of nicotine as a cigarette,
and ten times the nltrosamtnes.
Smokeless tobacco causes approx. 7 percent of oral cancer
deaths in the country and oral
caneer Is the seventh-leading
cancer death .
For more Information call 992·
7531 or stop at the office on Tuesday
or Thursday afternoon bet ween 1
and 4:~ p.m.

r-::==========:;The Daily Sentinel
!USPS 14!1-BilOI
A. Division of .\ tultlmedla, Inc.
Publlshl:'d t&gt; V€'fV afternoon , Monday

throu gh F'rlda Y. 111 Court St ., Po·
m erov, Ohio, b v th e Ohio Valley Pub·

llsh ln'g Comp3ny MulllmMla, Inc ..
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156. Sf-cond class pos t a~ (' paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Member : Unltl"d Press International,
Inland Daily Press Associat ion and the
Ohio Newspaper Assoc iation National
Advertising Rt&gt;prP!If"n tatillf' . Branham
Newspaper Sa l f'S . 733 Third Avenue.
N~· York . )';f'w York 10017.

POSTMASTER : Send addr&lt;'S s changes
to The Danv Sentinel. 111 Cou rt St ..
Porrl'rO:t'. Oh-Io 45769 .
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

By Carrier or Motor Routt
One \\'eek ................................... Sl.JO
One Month .
One Year . .. .......

........... $4.80
............ $57.20
SINGLE COPV
PRICE

Dati}

... .............. 25 Cents

Subscribers n01 d{'Sir!ng to pay the car·
rter ma y remlt In advanL'(&gt; di rect to
Th~;&gt;

Dailv Sentlnt&gt;l on a 3, 6or 12 month

' basts. Ciedtt wtll bE&gt; gtven rarrlt-r Mch
month .

No

subs c rip tio n~

by mail pt&gt;rmltlrd In

lm,·m; where home carrier Sl'rvlce Is
ava ilabl e .
Mall Subs&lt;:!rlpllon!l

IMide- Ohio

13 Week s .... .......... .
26 Week s ... .
52 Week s ..

... 114 5G
.. 129 12
.......... 158.24

Outside Ohio

1:1 W('ekS
26 WN'kS .. .

52 W('('k s .. .

. . .........
$15.60
.......... ..... 131.20
...... ......... 159.80

531 JACKSON PIKE · AT. J!! WEST
PhOI te 446· 4524

•
Jonathan Charles Larkins

Larkins birth
Mr. and Mr. Delmar Charles
Larkins, Middleport, are announcIng the birth of a son, Jonathan
Charles, born on Nov. 19. He
weighed seven pounds. two ounces
and was 19 Inches long.
Grandparents are Mrs. Wanda
WoH and the late Charles E.
Larkins, and Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Peck. Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Mollahan.

QUESTION: 1neQlected to pal real estate !OK!!! oo my
home for !'No yea~&gt;. Tho year realtzed my house could
be sold lor back taxi!! and Ip01d aII of the taKes tile.Can
1da111 aH thret yea~ · of ~·es as an rtemaed deducoon
on my tax return for tho year'
ANSWER: Yes. For a cash basolaKpayer. taKes ate deductib~ only in lite year rn wh&lt;h they are paid. regard·
less tlwlten they were due. If the amount of real estate
taxes for the thret yem - plus yoUJ other item~ed deductilns - e&lt;ceeds yoor 1ero bracket amount.! .,u be
your benefn to otem~e

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
CALL (614) 992-2104
675·1

Hill, Gertrude Neigler. Beatrtce
Blake, Kadie Crow, Margaret
Cottrill. Diana Nease, John Staats,
and Ryan Nease.

ANOTHER SERVICE OF

H&amp;RBLOC~
THE IN~OI\jiE TAX PEOPLE
618 E. Main St.

PH. 992-3796

OH.

•

�'Page-6-The

Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Monday, Janaury

13, 1986

Shuttle crew begins busy work schedule
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla .
(UPI\- Shuttle Columbia's crew,
finally in spaet&gt; after record dt'lays,
launched one of the world's most
powerful t&lt;&gt;levlslon satellites and
today turned its attention to
gl...ning secrets from fabled Halley's comet.
The shuttle' s seven-mffiltx'r
crew, Including RRp. Bill N&lt;-lson,

Meets Tuesday
Pomeroy Area Chamtx&gt;r of Commerce will meet Tu!'Sday, 12 noon,
at the Trinity Chur&lt;'h in Pomeroy.
Lunch will he $3.

Vl'terans Memorial

. . . .. . . ._

~'"'

,

"'-

t

momtng. The predawn launch went off in clear sides. UPI

T'u"DAY

ttprctAL

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT

Schools closed

Sat urday Admissions-- George
Gri'Cne. Hartford. W.Va.: Lorraine
Aeikel, Pomero1·.
Saturday Discharges--None.
Sund ay Admi ss ion s-- Brian
Ha1es. Rutland: Adam Green,
Racine: Clarenee Norris. Middleport . Matthew Thomas, Pomeroy.
Su nday Discharges--Lorraine
Ariker.

OFF AFTER DEL\YS - Spate shuttle Columbia alter many delays
begins hs ascent off launch pad ~ .\ "ith a crew of seven Sunday

D-Fla .. roared inlo orbit Sunday, 25 astronomy , including observations open c , rgo bay. including three
days late alter stx frustrating of Halley's comet that begin today. designed by high school student s.
blastoff delays, and promptly
The other crewmen are com- will study topics ranging from new
launched the $00 million RCA mander Robert "Hoot " Gibson, ways to store blood to analyzing the
Satoorn television satellite to .-am co-pilot Charles Bolden, Franklin effects of weightless ness on gypsy
the space agency $14.2 mUllen.
Chang-Diaz, the ttrst Hispanic - moths and dog t le ks to find new
"We tx&gt;lleve at this point we're off American astronaut , Steven Haw - ways of interrupting their life
to a very good start, " said Oight ley, George Neison and RCA cycles to control the pests.
director MUt HeDin after the engin&lt;&gt;er Rotx&gt;rt Cenker.
"This is very much a flight that
satellite' s on-board rocket fired
fuixlamental scienee,"
explores
In addition, a bat tery of autosuCCt&gt;ssfu Uy to send the spacecraft matic experiments In the ship's Chang-Diaz said before launch.
toward its proper orbit.
With the commercial side ot the r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;~
$150mUiionfllghtoutoftheway,tlle
NI~~HT
crew S&lt;&gt;tlled down for five days of
II(;~
0
o) ·&amp;;
space science experiments In mate-rials processing, ·medicine and

All schools in Meigs County were
clOS&lt;'d today due to a sprinkling of
snow which fell overnight and a dip
in temperatures which turned
roads icy. Snow was continuing to
fall Monday morning. Thts was the
first day for classes to be dismissed
for an entire day due to weather
conditions.

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY
Served wit!. whipped potatoes, chicken gravy,
cole slaw, hot roll, butler and coffee . Sorry.
no substrtutes extept bewrage with additional price.

FOR JUST

$J.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992-5432

. POMEROY, OH.

Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

SALE PRICES GOOD
THRU JANUARY 19, 1986
OR

WHILE SUPPLIES lAST.

Wl IESOYl Ill IICitT 10 LilT IIAITIIIS

Freda Klaiber
Freda Klaiber. :!8. Rl 2. \'inion.
died SundA)' al Holzer Med ica l
Center. ShP was a formerf'mp lo~·f'f'

of Robbins and M)ws .

Middlr(Xll1 and Phil flcree. Ripley:
onr si5: trr . Jo HelC'n Thomas.
l'hal'irslun: one brot hPr. Jack
K)·ie. :\aoma: 19 grandchildren
"nd IU grea t grandchildren
Fum•ri.ll Si't\:irrs wf'rr .J;:m. l1 at

in

thC' HanlP:o· Funera l Hom&lt;'. Oanvillr

Gallia County tot he laic Dewc1 and
Glenna George Cochran

with tht~ Rt1 \ . Ra.\· Crum officiat ing .

She was born Aug . 8.

She is

SUIYi\'C'&lt;l

~-

1 ~1

onf'

~on.

Jcffre)' Cochran. R1 . 2. \'in ton: onr
daughter. ChristY Baugher. \ 'in
ton: two brot hNs. Charlt•s Corh
.ran, Columbu s. Or tyn Cochran .
Bidwell: and fo ur sisters. Thelma
Mu llins. Gallipolis. Lrora Krus
kamp and Mal,. McCltn!IC, both of
Colubmus. and Ma rgarel :Vlit chrll
of Bidwell.
She was p1&lt;'C&lt;'drd in deat h b' unl'
son and thJ'('f' brothrr s.

Funeral services will llr I p.m.
1\'ednesda; . McCo' -Moorr Fun
rra l Home. \ ·inton.

R£'\

Thf'ron

Durham officiating. Bum! will t.•
in Pinr Gro\'r Crmrtrr:-. F r il'nd~
may ca !l at the funrr&lt;t l hfiffit'

Hu ria l v.:as ar thf'
GardPn:-. !\1adi!M:&gt;n .

Mrmo&lt;,

'ora L. Gilmore

mommg at

Emma Marir Massar Hood, thn&lt; ·
bmlhers. Wil bur. Harold &lt;~nd
~randson.

h:1rk Dup; f
~rYin•s wer r hdtl Sunda.\ .J ftl'r
noon at thf' F.wlng Funf'ral Homr

Margaret A. f:lark
Word has llr&lt;'n rr&lt;"rl\·rd of th&lt; ·
deat h of Margaret Ar1w Clcll k. 7i .
Middiep011 . Ohio. fOJm e1·1, of \· an.
who died .Ja n. 4 at (;rani Hosp!IJI.
Columbus. aflrr an exwndr d
illn ess.
Sur\ ·iving

IN THE
COMMOI\t PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
GEORGE LEMLEY ,
PLAINTIFF
11!0.86 cv 339

Ella and Ew•lyn

arr onr daughtt 'r.

Paula Dolin . Ollawa: fou1 """'·
Jam£-S AcrE'{', Pomf'ro~
( )tJio.
Da\·id a nd Gar~· Acrrf' . both nl

( ;ilmon•.

.\thrns:

( ;Jlmotr. Rutla nd : sr\·en great ~Tdndrhi!drrn. BrandPr. Brian na

ancl .lus1 in

Cilmorr.

Ru1la nd:

~hannon. Ka!'.C'~ - -

Robin and Ba rry
Cilmorf'. Wctlwor th . Wise .: two
Ha;d Good ,,in. Parkrrshui~. II
\ ' a .. and Ora ~OIX'.
Hdil·illt'. W \ 'a .. and a brother.
Mill' 'hrpard. Roekporl . W. \ 'a .
l~·sidt,.., hl'r plJn•nts. shr was
pl't'Ct'df'd in df'ath b~ hrr hu sba nd.

._ !..,TPI""·

In cont rast to thosr priers. ro
d ay's m ar kPt pricf' \.\' JS $97. I:ih
Every tw rnr ~· .\ 'Pars thP :-.re~tr rp
qu lrPs the fir e Sf&gt;n ·icr to ha Yr

.-1

Ple~s

"'" ICI'' will t.• held at I p.m.
at thr E ..., ·ing Full('ra l

Home ,..;r h ~l r :\eal Proudfoot
offl cliltmg 8ut·ial " 'ill br in 13eech
(; ro• r CPnlf'tf'r\ FriC'nd~ ma.v call
;!I 1hP funrra I homr from 2 1 0 ~ t~ nd I

to

~ p . m . Tursda~ .

Lon~

Elso n Daiter dnd cler k
Shirlr' .lohn,on. Racine \'illagr
offiri.ll s included Frank Clela nd,
Flob Beegle. Ca n·o ll Teaford,
Di ck 1\'amsiP\·, Sco1 t Wolfe. and
fin• Drpar1 mr nr Chief Hank
. l o hn~on .

Also in ctttrndancr v.:err mpm brr~ l'f til&lt;' fin"' drpartmrnt . thr Ra rinr Firf'mf&gt;n 's Aux iliary. and

new fir st-line pumprr
Att ending SMu rd~,··s dt •di r c~
tio n were Sulton To1~· n s hip Tr us tee s De lber t Smit~. Oils Kn opp.

members of the public.
Current fire drpanment off! ·
clc~ls arc Hank .Johns on. Chief:

Horacr " B uck " \ 'J nMe t0r and

.John Holman. Assista nt Chief:

ou tgoing truster Denn ie Hill: L&lt;'
tart Trustees Harr1· Hill . Don
Richard Hill .. and Her b Roush:
and Lebanon Trustees Eugene

Doug Rrrs. Captai n: Jack Lyo ns.
C'o-Capt ian : George Cummins.
\\'arne [.,·ons and Scott Wolfe.

PLUS COLD
MEDIC
liE
20

SWAN

ISPIRII

ANTIPERSPIRANT

AEROSOL

99

19

c

3.09 VALUE!

3.35 VAWE!

DEFEII!DAII!T

11!0 . 86 CV 367

SERVICE BY PUB!CATIOI\t
Un;v.sat Fuel end Chomic:al
Cupo~elb•.

whose last known

place of beginning, contain ing 67/ 100 acres more or

leu.
The pr~yer of uid action is
thlt the above deacribed real
ettate be awardiJd ·to the
plaintiff, George Lemley, by
order of the Court ,and for
tuch other relief as may be

just and equitable .

ROBITUSSII Dl
40Z.

2~5!
REGUIM

DISPOSABLE RAZORS
29

YO&amp;OZ. SHIIPOO
I WRA
o"\.1! 139
15

SCHICK

lOllY

2.19 VALUE!

to answer the complaint
within twenty-eight day1 af·
tar the lut publication of
this notice, which witt be
publithed one each week for
six consecutive weeks, the
len pubication will be made
on the 13th day of January

1986. ond the tw•ny-olght
daya tor answer~ will commence on that date .
In Clll of tho f11ilure of lho
dtfenant to 1n1wer or other·

VASELINE

IITEISIVE CARE
tq OZ. LOTION .
o"\.1\ 119
. ElTIA ORY
3.15
REG. OR

wiM reepond II f8quired by

Ohio Rulel of Civil Procedure
judgment wiR be r111darod
againlt i1 tor the relief de ·
monded in tho COf1111alnt.

Larry E. Spencer
~..ottrw:

VAWE!

01 .... ouna

Molgs County
Common Ple11 Cou n

uoz.
o"\.11

311
5.49

DURITIOI
'h OZ. IIASAI.
o"l11 211
SPlAY

3.55

Said real estate being
situated in Township of Sal·

1121 9. 16, 23, 30; (1) 6. 13
etc
Public Notice
tilt THE COMMON
PLEASE COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
RICHARO STEWART, ET AL
PLAINTifFS

vs

UII!IVERSAL FUEL AND
CHEMICAL toRPOR ATION

roadway teaditg from Stiver
Run River lending to SUite

Roote #7

z
i LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
•
~ licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

-

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Secood Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
•
8-J!

011or

tho C&amp;O Roil-

PHONE
992-2156
01 Wntt
Sentinel CIISsthtd Dept
to~o~rl

Public Notice
within twenty-eight da~s after the last publication of
this notice, which will be
publiahad once Nch week

for six consecutive weeks,
the laat publication will be

and egress over the road Jnd
land herein conveyed to
their farm property edjoin·
ing on the nonh .
The prayer of said action is
that the above described real
estate be awarded to the
plaintiffl .- RiChard Stewart
and Betty Stewart . by order
of the court and for such
other relief at miY be just

.JndTheequitobla.
defendant it required

$1.. POfllttOY. 01110 45759

Public Notic'l
1\!DTICE OF A
PRIVATE SALE
Notice is hereby given that
on January 21 , 1986 , and

not on January 20, 1986, at
10 :00 A.M. a private sale
will be held at the offices of

The Central Trust Co. , NA of
Middleport, Ohio to sell for
caah the following collateral
to wit :

t - 1973 Chevrolel C-10

Pickup Serial No .
CCVI 43F4094 t 4
The Central Trust Co .• N A
of Middleport. Ohio reserves
the right to bid et this sale .
11[8, 9. tO . 12. 13. 14 Stc

Ctertc ol Coorts

It 21 23, 30 ;

tt) 6 . 13 . 20, 27 6tc

Public Notice

54 Misc . Merchandise
1\!0TICE OF
APPOINTMENT, OF
FIDUCIARY
Dn Docomber 30. 1985,

in the Meigs County Probate
Court, Cell No. 24999,

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Compklte Gunar Work

Bashan Building

Complete Remodeling

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M•.

Roofing of all Typea

Worked in home aree

20 yaars
"Free Eatimates ..

uu comer,

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
9-30·!1

Ph. 16141 843·

BOGGS

Hon Your Woddill!l,

Annivorsary or S,l&lt;tal
Ckcasion on Video ....Wt
Tape Any SpKtol Occasion.

CHAII.ES BABEY
PH. 742·2050
11-28-3 mo.

B&amp;D MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE
SHADE, 01110

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized Joltn Deere.
New Holland, Bush Ho1
Farm Equip men I
Dealer

far• Equlp111'ant
Parts &amp; Servlea

1· 3·11&lt;

No job too small or too
big. We do Setups and
Underpinning

"lpe&lt;iol Ratts For Senior
Cltium"

PH. (1114) '1'12·33111
or 992-6100
12-20-1 m
Real Estate General

POMEROY, 0.
9?2·2259
NEW USTING- Vacant building 101 - Jl'eal location mEas·
tem School Ois1ricl rear SR 7.
Water and elec. ava~~bie

Pomeroy. Ohio 45 769, was
appointed Executor of the
Illite of Manning D. Webs·

tor, deceeaed, tate of 114

Ohio 46769.
Robert E. Buck,
Probllte Judge

lena K. Neaselroad, Clerk
11 1e, 13. 20. 3lc

LIMESTONE ·,
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

1

EASTERN DISTRICT - A
very nice 3 bedroom ranch
w1th a large lamily room on
app1o1 . 2 acre of ground.
Priced to sell at $45,000.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Approx. 5 acres with a 3 bed·
room mob1le home wrth ad'tl·
on. two tip-outs. dishwasher.
ref.. range, disposal. lront
and bac; porches, 29x27
unl~nished garage,
plus
trailer lot with septic, elec.
and waler. $23.000.00.

lB

received by the Board of
Education of the Southern

Loco! School Dlllrlcl at Ra-

1£11!01

cine, Ohio at tbe tr•turer 's
office until 12:00 noon on

that time opened by the treaturer of nid board 11 pro-

Separate and indltandent

oklo will

be

rocolved whh

respect to the chauls 1nd

to antwer the complaint body typo ond wilt llotethot
the bus when ..nmbhtd and

prior to dellvlll"f ca""'ty whh
olt school dillrict -llico·
tlono, oil oaloty rwgulotlons
and currant Ohio Mlnlmum

Stondordo lor School Bus
Construction of tho D-rlmertt of Hlghwly pursuant

S.Ctlon 4511 .711 of tho
Rovlsod Code ond ott othor
portln..t provioiono of low.
Spocllico11ono.,ond illlruc·

10

tlon1 to bidden 11e on file In
the office of the Tre11urer.
Racine, Ohio .

By Drdlr of tho

Board of Education

Donnr. E. Hill, TrMI.
Southom Locet Schocil
Dlotricl, IOl 171
Roctno, Ohio 45771
(1)1, 13, 20, 27, 4tc

- Addon1 nd

r~dellng

wortc
!Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

RoN.s
Considering a career chango orraturning to ·
your, profession?
CQme to an atmosphere of high quality pa tient Carll with a friendly suppo,rtive nursing
administration.
Positions availabe in many areas
Extensfw personalized orientation
Fluible staffinc: Choose your own
schedule, asllatiout our Available Pqol .
Salary based on education and experience.

&amp;

For more information, cootact Nursin1 Admin·
i'strtion. Mercy Hospitll, Portsmouth, Ohio

614·353·2131, ext. 239.

Equal Opportunily Employer

3·24·tlc

3/11 / tfn

985·3561

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
oGIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATEWTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE
tie Rm ~ Fill Tl111

•Washers •Dishwashers

•• Dllf

!CUT OUT FOR FUIURE US£1

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Shp Tee~elel11

All Maku

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

TV

RIDENOUR
&amp; APPLIANCE

CHE~R--985 · 3307

PARTS ahd SERVICE

4/ 1/lln

4-5-tfc

TOWN &amp; COUN11Y
VnERINARIAN

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

CUNIC
Paul E. Shockty, DVM
PT. PUASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson bt.
SMAll ANIMAL HOUIS
ltaa.-Wotf.-Thur~ 3-! pm
Tu11. 6:30-1: Fri. I ·2 pm
lohrrdoy 10-11 :30 ..
l.AIGI AIIMAl &amp;
ISUIGIIY II APP1.
PH. 304·675·2441

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

11 -14-tfc

.

BEND AREA CAU
Ripley Office
For Hours

304·372·5709 .
10-14-tlc

Announce 111 enl s
3 Announcementa
SWEEPER and II'Wing rnechine

repeir, ptnt, and aupptl•. Pk*

' '

up and delivtry, Davis Vacuum

___

Cleaner, ont half mUe up
George~ Creek Rd . CtK 814·
la::.:..a.;;a,:;a,:,.;;,.;;..:.~j __::_:.::..:...._
US -0294 .

RENT A CAR
CALL
446·4522

"W1 R111 F~t lm"

U-SA~E

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North
Oolllpollt, Ohio

71 11 / tln

12·8·tlc

nNicet. VD tatting ; confiden tiitl: sliding fee ICiile; Planned
PerenthOod of S .E.O., for . .t .

Coli 114-441-0111 or 114 ·
992 ·1912 .
Atcine Gun Shoatspon10red by

Racine Gun Cklb. Ev.rySundey,
bloginning 11 1:00 p.m. Fectory
Choke 12 guage shotgunt.
For overnight relief of cold tor•

and fever

bliatars, uu Lysine
Phumacy in

Tebs . Fruth
MKtdlepon .

Lonerv ticltets go• on tete, Jan.
9, 12:15 . S11sonel Silt Fi1h
now in . A &amp; R Merittt, Hanford,
W. Va . 304-882 -2955 .

McDaniel Custom Butdltring, I

deys

1

week, 30•·882-322• .

Singl• Introductions, write tor

ELUM
REST HOME

IPrniMityo lutt.d IHt H~~m~l
67~

Plum St.
Middltport
•Tender Loving Care
•Senior Citizens

•Disabled
•24 Hour Care
CAll JOi BOWLAND

992-3595

appllation. Pereson• Touch
Introductions. P.O. Boa 8531,
Chtrl ..ton , W. V1 . 26302 .

KOUNTRY
KLUB

4

Golf
Equipment
Now &amp;ips lnstatlotLSl.SO eo.
Oralgo Golf Bath .... $6.!!0 Oar.
•New &amp; Prior Owned Clubs
•Custom Clubs
Youth Clubs
•Sho81 •Trophies
•Repair

Giveaway

"'If

One year o4d femela dog,
Siberian Huaky, helf woW . To 1

country ho me only. Cell 114448 -0310 .
3 fluffy klttent. 7wka old. eating
good . C1U 814 -446 -9635 .

JOHN TEAFORD
Chester,

12130/1 mo.

Smell white doG to giYI eway.

Houtebroken. 114-742 -31 11 .
18 aloe plants to gNe tway.

J&amp;F

AUTOMATIC

CONTRACTING

TRANSMISSION
OVERHAUL

DOZER. BACKHOE,
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER.
GAS 1!o SEWER UNES ,
REClAMAnOI\t, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STOII!E
&amp; DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH.

992·720

R~~~~r:r

We can

Jonuory 31. t98e ond at

11ld Board of Educetion.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

. RENTAL INVESTMENT Racine- 2 bedroom slone
home. large lot. good street

PUBLIC 1\!0T!CE
Sulad propooets will be

tchool bUHS, IC ·
cording to specifications of

YOUNG'S

- Plumbing and electrlcel

$13,000.00.

or 992·71%1

Pregn8f'lcy Te~ting ; Birth control

NEAR CHESTER -Country
livin g in slyle' This 3 bed ·
room home is II excellent
condition. full basement,
olher leatures. on large lot

Henry E. Clelud, Jr.
992-6t91
Jean Trussoll 949-2660
Dottie Tumor 992-5692
Jo Hill 985-4466.

Public Notice

p11f8ng8r

PH. 992·5682

992-3410

- Rooting end gutter wortl
,- Concrete )"'r.

IDEAl TIME TO BUY A
HOME! WE HAVE A 9.8%
FIXED RATE MONEY
AVAILABlE!

Butternut Street, Pomeroy.

vided by t•w lor twa 121 71

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860
No Sunday (ails

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

$9,500.00.

$35,000.00.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Al1o TruaMIIilo•

Anything That Haa To
Do With A Mobite Home

POMEROY - One floor
ranch with J bedrooms,
dec; area, 1 car garage on
approx . 1 acre.

Richard E. JonH, R.D. #2,

low walef moot. ot tho Ohio

Roy and Gail Herrman
have the right for ingre11

!In

GUN SHOOT

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Rt. l24,Pomoroy Ohio

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

E. M~in·~IQir,iu..l

Meigs Count¥ Common
Pleas Court

way tracts and it it under·
etood that tho lend horwincon·
vevod tteo between tho ca.o
Railway's right of way and the
River.

EUGENE LONG

Roger Hysell
Garage

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

10-8-tfc

following described real estate by order of the court.

The object of the com· iabury. County of Meigs and
plaint is to JCquire title tot he State of Ohio.
The a~rface land and river
following described real eatete by order of the Court. · landing formerly known as
Said reo! Htate boitg lit· the Sitver Run Coel Co~any
uoted In tho Townoltip ol Sal· lane ing ond described • bl·
lows: Boonded on tho •II by
i1bury. County of Meigs and
State uf Ohio. Beginning in the low water mark of. the
tho oentOf of tho public road Ohio RiveJ, on the north by
loading from Mlddfoport to land of Roy and GaH He"GaUipolis, Ohto, thenat east mann, on the west by the aut
233 foet to the eall tile of tine ot tho ca.o Railway
MinOIVe Hylllt'o 2 33/ 100 con,~eny's riQht of wav. on
acre lot; thence rorth 61 clog . tho MIU1h by Iondo of F,..k
46 mi'l. eeat 106 feet to the Lynch, being app10xlmotoly
northeelt comer of uid lot; 600 feet alOng the river and
200 fee1 wide and containing
lhenCII well 233 loot 1o the
3 acret more or less. In 100
cemer of the public road and
northwest comer o1 uid lot; acre lot No. 376.
Thit died conveys the .
thence oouth 26 dag . 30
min . west 1 06 teet to the rights of Jon Minitg Co. it tho

The defendant is required

JANUARY SPECIAL
SENTRY PROPANE TORCH
REG. S18.29
SALE $995
TANKS ONLY
SALE $2·1 !
REG ~,3.25

100 PLUS 20

DIAL
4 OZ.

TABLETS

LiC'utenant s

EBERSBACH HARDWARE

Court, Meigs Cwnty,

Ohio. 467e9.

l&lt;n' . Drn\"t'r k.applr.

Village,, township
!Continued from page 1,
was purchased in 1956 at a cost of
$1 9,000, whJie in 1972 its Ia lest engine was purchased at a cos t of
$:!2.000.

fendant. This action his bean
llligned Cooe No. 86 CV 339
and it pandi'lg in the Common

U.ld Ctlmorr. Sr. , in 19:11: four
_..,J~t rr..;_ 1\\'0 hrDf hf'r ~. and a son-in-

Wrdnf'~i:l~

Weather forecast

addreulo, 826 Broodwoy, Fermade on the 27th day of
niti, PI. f6 ·12t . ;. horS&gt;y roti- January.
vs.
1986, and the
fied
!hat
~
hal
_
,
nemod
cloTHE HOCKING DOMESTIC
twenty-eight
days for anlondont ito togal-n onthlod
COAL CDMPAI\!Y
will commence on that
RICHARD STEwART, et al w swer
DEFENDANT
SERVICE BY PUB!CATIOI\t UII!IVEASAL RJEL AII!D date.
In case af the failure of the
The Hocklng Do..-ic Cool CHEMICAL CORPORATION,
defendant to answer or other
Compony, Nol10r1Yil!e. Ohio i1 -doni. This IC1ion ... hitniby notffied !hat~ hlo ._, llligned case No. B6 r:v 367 wise respond as ~ired by
Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure
nom.! dofondont it a log at ac- ond It~ it tho Common judgl118nt
Will be rendered
s
Court.
Meigs
County,
tion ontitled George Lam!oy,
against
it
for the relief deplaintiff vo. The Hocki\g Do- Ohio. Pomeroy. Ohio 46769 . mended in the coff1)1ai1t.
The object ot the commeotic Cool CO"'I""'Y· delarry E. Spencer
plaint is to .:quire titl•to the

Mikr

Cl

Televisioo Ustening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Heanng Evaluations For All Ages

No lotto winners

Public Notice

Public Notice

\\" t"-C. P.1ck GtlmorC'. R(l('(!s\i llf';

Hugt'l

above the ground Is acceptable. On
slopes where constant boom height
cannot be maintained, ilmp hoSes,
with several dragging Inches on th&lt;&gt;
ground , may increase the margin &lt;1.
safety.
Protecting· Water Wells From
Contamination - Mel Palmer,
Extension Agricultural Engin&lt;&gt;er at
The Ohio State University, has
these helpful hints to protect your
well from contamination.
AdrUled well is usually the safest
source of water, provided It is
CLEVELAND, Ohio IUPI )-'- properly located and protected.
Ohio Lottery officials will know Dug wells are much shallower, and
today how many Ohio Lotto players more easily contaminated by sur·
choS&lt;&gt; four and five of the six face water, as are springs.
numbers drawn in Saturday night' s · Surface water that gets into a
game.
well or spring often carries wastes
Lottery offtclals sorted through from livestock. pets, wildlife, or
$3,668,992 worth of tickets Saturday oome sewage systems . Bacteria
nlght, but dld not find any that had and viruses in these wastes can
the six numbers - 10, 16, 22, 36, 37 cause several diseases such as
and 38.
Infectious hepatitis. typhoid fever
That meant they raised the and various intestinal ·ailments.
jackpot for Wednesday's drawing Chemical contamination of wells
to an estimated S3 million.
can also make the water unsafe for
The daily number drawn Satur- home use due to pesticides, slat
brines, gasoline or fuel oil spills,
day night was 139.
and leaking waste dumps.
To protect a weU from contami·
nation It should re located at a site
Today ...snow ending this morn- that has good drainage away from
ing. Snow accumulating less than it, that will not tx&gt; flooded , and that
an inch. Temperatures dropping to ts far enough from contamination
20 to 25 by evening. Northwest sources to avoid srepage of sewage
and chemicals. The well driller
winds 15 to 25 mph.
soould
he competent, using good
Tonight ... variable cloud! ness
materials
and construction mewith a chance of flurries. Low
thods
and,
after
the weU Is drilled, It
around 15.
shoUld
he
properly
protected and
Tuesday ... mostly cloudy with a
The
water
should he
maintained.
chance of flurries. High 30 to 35.
tested
for
purity
whenever
con tam·
Chance of snow ts 20 percent this
afternoon .. 40 percent tonight and !nation Is suspected. Examples
would tx&gt; the sudden occurren&lt;&gt;e of a
Tuesday.
bad odor or cloudiness In the water.
Extended forecast
Water tests and more details on
Wednesday throUgh Friday
the
protection of home water wells
Fair Wednesday and Thursday
are
available from county health
wllh a chance ol rain Friday. A
dPoartmPnt.~
wannlng trend through the period
wtlh highs In lhe 30s Wednesday Divorce granted
and Thursday and In tbe40sFriday.
A divorce has been granted in
Overnight lows from lhe teenS to Meigs County Common Pleas Court
mid 206 early Wednesday, mid 20s to Eddie j&gt;igley , Reedsville, from
to tower 30s Thursday and in the 30s Jacqueline Bigley, Reedsville, on
earty Friday.
grounds of gross neglect or duty .

Ill

pte. both of Pomero,·: a son and

l'onwrm .tO&lt;· Cilmort'. 1\'alwon h.

nozzle bodies, either slipped over
the Indy Itself if spray tips are used,
&lt;r over a hose adapter II orifices are
used. This equipment Is readily
available from spray equipment
dealers and catalogues.
Drop tubes or hoses should be
long enough to prevent splashing
solutions on leaves and causing
tissue damage. On Oat fields ,
discharging material an inch or so

Datil¥

Sur\ 1\-Lilg d i"£' two daughte rs.
!.(mise C.ilmnn.:o and Marjor ir Kap-

The Daily Sentinai-Paga-7

Ohio

Business Services ·

The Daily Sentinel

Church of Christ.

Mehin Hood

his parent s. .John Thomas and

Agrtcullure
POMEROY - Making Your
Dollars Count - Does when and
oow you apply nitrogen to your com
make cents? It certainly does!
Applylng one-hall of your nitrogen
later I after com emerges 1 wUI
provide an Increase in yield. The
nitrogen fertlllzer should be appl1ed
by early June. Applying oo more
than one-hall of the nitrogen when
the corn ts planted and the rest
when the corn lsstartingtoemerge,
can give an increase in yield.
This practice was demonstrated
on the Don Mora Farm. Alan Holter
planted com on May 15 and used :J))
pounds of 13-13-13 through the
planter. Fifty units of nltrogen
(urea) was then broadcast on one
part Immediately after planting.
On a second part the nitrogen was
oot applled until early June. Both
sites were treated the same except
the time the nitrogegn was applied.
100 pounds of (}.().6() was applied to
ooth areas because soll test results
showed a shortage of potash. The
field or area with split nltrogen had
a 176 bushel yield versus 165 bushels
for the field with one application.
If corn Is selling for $2.50 per
bushel and you get 11 more bushels
per acre, the Increase amounts of
SZl .50 per acre. Thts Increase more
than pays jor the time and the
expense of the equl!fment.
This nltrogen can ''be applied
either dry or Uquld. A spinner
spreader can he used if urea Is used
or a sprayer can he used 11 the
nitrogen ts In liquid form.
Most larmers and custom appli·
cators can roodify existing spray·
ers to accomplish dribble applica·
tlons at a reasonable cost. Extra
nozzle bodies should be mounted on
the boom, If necessary , to provide
proper hose spacing. Spray tips or
precision metering orillces can tx&gt;
used to control Dow at each nozzle
body and It Is recommended that
corrosion resistant materials tx&gt;
used to maintain calibration. Ahose
or drop tube Is then attached to the

:\ hOrnf'm,ll.:£'r, Mrs. Gilmorr
'' .t~ OOm in Jdrkso n County, '1/1,.'.
\ 'a . on .\ptil 10. IR9.1. a daughler of
rh t~ lJ tP Jamf's and Matt if' Shepard.
\\ r·s Cilrnon, wa s a m£'mbforof the

( ~ilrnorf'. Pom f'roy: sLx grandchild n~n. Ph \ Ui~ .1nd DrnH•r KappiP,

Mrt1·in 1Peck' Hood. I I I Locu-'1
St .. Pomrro;'. who died Fnda' "'
his home. was pr('('rded in dt'alh b'

BY JOHN C. RICE
Coway Extension Agent

\ 'ctrrans Memorial

dJUJ.!tlll'l in -la w .

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Making your dollars count

Hospit,il .

Pomrro~

13, 1986

CoU:nty Agent's Corner

Mr, . ~ora L. Gilmore. 92. 225
L'nion ,\rr .. Pomrro;·. died Mond ay

Tursda;·. li to 9 p.m.

Henry and a

January Cleanup Sale!!

Monday, Janaury

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

PAT HILL FORD
992·:!196

Middleport, Ohio
. 1-13-tfc

CLARK
COIN SHOP
We Buy and Sell
Gold Silver Colna
Also Class Rings
Scrap Silver &amp; Gold

a.

CIPIN 10·1 WIIIDAYS
10·2 SAIWDAY

Court St.,
Afttr

814-742-2499 .

.

Old utility trlillr to give May.
Fits on okl car .

61• ·992·7714.

Four sm1ll puppietto gNaMWay.

AU AMlRIUN MADl
CARS &amp; TRUCKS

part Bugle, 2 females , 2 mal...
Call614 -949 -2798 .

•TRANSFER CASES•
•TORQUE CONVERTORS•
•USED - REBUILT
TRANSMISSIONS•

5 cats &amp; 2 Ill«'"'· to giveaway.
Cell 614 -988 -3884 .

W1 Olllrtt

·•

Chast·free1er, do" not work.
304-8!2-2191 .

lutolltlltlc

Transntiaicin

Owrtla~

It, I, Patriot, Oh.

614-379-

0

THE QUALITY
PIINT SHOP

,, All

y,, ftltlltf Nlllt

PlUS: Ollico Supp(i11 &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
and Graduatton

Stotltt1.-y, Magnotic
Signs, lubllor Stomps,
Ius in11s f orrm,
C"''Y S.ni&lt;H, II&lt;.
Ill ltill St. ltilltl-s
I04 11-ry A•. rom•oy

992-3345

312/tfn

A

PLUMBING &amp;
HEAnNG

317 North S..orol
Middleporl, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE
we Also Carry
Filhing Suppllea.
IUSINESS !'liON£
16141 ftl-65!0
IIISIDilla fiiONE
16141 ft2-77!4

\/22/ttt

B

Public Sate
&amp; Auction
'

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER

'

SERVICE . Estate. f~rm. tndque,
liquidation "'"- licenHd Ohio

and Wett Virginia . 304-7135785 or JD4 ·n3 · 5430.

9

Wanted To Buy

Wanted t o buy 302 Ford motor.

·Cal l 81,.· 448· 48&amp;4 .
Buying daity gold. sitv.r coins,
rings, jewelry, tt«&lt;lng were, okl
CUrrlncy. lop pric•. Ed. urtlett S.rbtr Shof·

co«.s: la11

2nd. Aw . MkldlfiPOrt, Oh. 81 • ~

982-3471.

·lc- luytng Asw Fur. IMf lftd o.., ~
hklat. Semno-rrepplng ~liN.
WhHt tnd ntte Ht•.
~
Buckle~ . 614 -814 · 471 .
Hours:12-9 p.m .

c..h

for old bookl, '-"'"·
dlari... tnd pamphlets:UOO oi
mor• for ~od copy of lrowne't
Clnclnneti Alrnen.c, 1810, loa
11 4 , Athena, Ohio. t&amp;701 .

61 4· 593-8916.

Wtnted to Buy. Mkfwtlt dump.

bid, 14 ft . long wl!ll folding

rackt . Telephone 304· 171-

ttl1 .

Shope Smllh Mork V low ond
_
..ri ... :104-773·1101.

....

'••

•
•

"•
•'
~'

'
••'
•

••'
•
'
••

•''
•

,.

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
9

Wanted To Buy

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

LAFF-A-DAY

We pey caah for leta model clean

ulld care.

Jim Mink Chev.-Oide Inc .
Bill G.,e Jot'tnaon

Fum11had , AC . ceble. no cit&gt;,'
taxes. betutlful nver view in
Kanaugt . Foster• Mobile Home
Park Call 814- 44&amp; · 160~ .

114-448-3872

WANTED TO BUY uted wood &amp;
coal heat_,e, SWAIN'S FURNI-

TURE, lrd. &amp; Ollt.~e St.
lis . C1ll 814-448 -31 59

2 bdr . fully fumllhed . 1211155,
conv locatk&gt;n , Upper River Rd ..
w1ter Pfkl, HC. dep requtrlld
Cttl 814·440·8518 .

Gallipo-

TOP CASH paid tor '83 modal
1nd newer used Clfl Smtth
Butell-Pontiac, 1911 Eaatem

3 bdr .. trailer. Ackltton , mltro·
politan housing tpprovtd . child·
ren a p11ts welcome
50 mo
Call 1fter &amp;:00 , 814 ·245 -96415

Ave., Gllllpolit. Call 814 -446-

I,

2282.

[ l!lliiOVIIICIIt

Mob1le home for rent 2 bdr ..
Wllhtr a dryer. floyd Clark Ad
off 160 In Bktwall, no c:hiklren Of
pets Furnished, 1175 mo . Cell
81 4-388·8732 .

Ser vices
11

2 bdr tr11lar in Ctty School
d11tnct: county water, LP g1s
,,d wood helt . Ce ll 1514· 319 ·

Help Wanted

FBderal, State and Civil Serv1ce
)Obi

now available in

your a ttl

For hfo . call (6021 837-3401

Dept. 1201

()•&lt;J~~&gt; • ""' ..'"'"' s'"""".. ·~

AVON Sell Avon PlY ChniUNI

FREE . Co11614·446 ·3358.

package world
WI eludes
on the
job
traintr.g,
trevalend
a great
PIV chock Appl;co,tllhovld..
17 · 24 , in good phy•tcel condi·
tion , must pess eecunty beck·
ground inv11tigetions . Must
heve high school d1plome llf
GED . Cell toll free '" Oh10
1 · 800· 282 · 1384 Man ·Ffl .

you?"
1B Wanted to Do

0121

Medical Llboratory tec1'1ntctan
tn person between 9 &amp;

Apply

Mobile home lot. 12'150' or
sm•ller, 171 wetet' pMd, 4th
Nell. O.. lpollt. Call 448 ·4411
attar 8PM .

a

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBliSH·
lNG CO racommendt1hll ~u
do bu1ineu with people you
know , end NOT to send monev
through the mill until you htvt
ln\leshgated the oHenng
t

0109 anv momtng
W1nted reliable lady to l1ve in
with elderly lady Send resume
to 264 F1rst Ava , Gallipolis , On
45631
ReceptiOntst tor local d8ntal
aHice Ellperience prefereblebut
not necesury Please send ra
au me to Do• T5050 '"care of the
Gallipolis Oa•ly Tribune. 825
Jrd Ava . Gall•pohs. Oh 45631
Wanted Two positions ava•leble
et an inte11ned1ate cere htCIIItY
for developmentally d1Ubled
adulu '" Bidwell:
11 Reli&amp;l Hovseman119ftr !hv&amp;· m
weekends . 5 IJ .m Fndev 6 p m
Sunday I
21 l8·hour Comrnumty SeNI~
Worker /weekends 9 a m
5
p m . Sat Sun I
Both positions requ1re 11 h•gh
school degree Md vehd dnver's
lteenae, BIIPBriBnce •n Working
with persons w1th mental retar·
datiOn 11nd developmflntal diS·
abil1t1et ptefBrrOO Send resume
Indicating which po11tion apply ·
1ng tor . to Rob1n Eb., Buckeve
Community SeNICBS, P 0 boll
804 , Ja c kaon , OH 45640
Daadlinefor apphcentl Jan 17.
1986 . Eq ual 0p 1Jo rt u n•l'f
Emp~yer

Oestgn8t' ·Sales Person for 1
local florllt Mu&amp;t have prevtou s
shop experience Sand resu me
to ~u n010 in cere of the
Gelltpol •s OeiiY Tr~buna , 826
J rd Avll . Gllhpohs, Oh 45631
HElP WANTED
Need 10 good people
No experience necessary Must
be a1o1ail11ble for tmmedlltll
employment Wo rking hours
1 PM · 10PM , t1 .200month
Call Monday or Tuesday
10AM · 4PM for pertonal
"'terv•ew. 614 . 446 .74'1
Oak Hill Commun•ty Med 1~ 1
Center . lnc . 11 current ly accept ·
~ng lpphcattant for RN '1 and
LPN 's for both full and per1 t1me
po11t10n1 To apply ple1sa con ·
tact Shen Jol1naon AN Oir11ctor
of Nurslng at 614 ·682 7717
e11 t 276 Monday thru Fridey
trom 8 to 3
Eesy Auemblv Work' 1600 00
per 100 Guartntead payment
No E xpt~tillnCI!I' · N o Sel11t Oeta1lt
aend aelf · eddfeUad stamped
envelope Elan V•ta1 ·5847 3418
Enterpnse Ad Ft P1flrc11. Fl

33'82
Governm11n1 JObs $16 040 ·
159 230 Now hn1ng Ctll 805
687·6000 . e•t R 9805 for
current federal hst

Euv assemb ly work! 1600 par
100 Guarant11ed ~yment No
e•peri11n c11 ·no sales Deta 1l1
s~tnd
salt addreued 111mped
e~weiOpa · Eian \lital .715 341 8
Ent11rprise Rd F1 Pterce. f l

33482
WE NEED YOU R PRIOR MIL

ITARY SERVICE EXPERIENC E
IN THE ARMY NATIONAL
GUAR 0
Monthly paycheck
r11tiremenl bf!f'l8fits educet •one ll
as111tenc:e . tnd other benef•ts
avti lab lt to our part · t•m11
members 304 ·675 · 3950 or
1 ·800· 642 3619
ARE THOSE BILLS FROM THE
CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY S Pll
lNG UP Joi, the Army Nstional
Guerd and you w1llget a monthly
paycheck. a good part t1mo
career. and men y other grt11
benefiu. 304 · 675 · 3950 or 1·

800-&amp;42 ·3619
REPS

NEEDED fo r bu11n11u
accounts Full·time S60.000 to
t80.000 P•rt ·t•mt 112 ,000 10
118.000. No tellin g Rep 9a t
buslneea Set your own hours
Tr•ininy provided 1 · 612 ·938 ·
6870. Mon·Frl 8 AM to 5 PM

CST
Semi drive .. wanted . 2 y11an
over the roM! 111perieou. 1 year
flatbed , 23 yfJirs of ega or older
Current med ic al cerd. Call J l
McCoy. Inc .. 304· 213· 9391
Baby sitter. Aafe~tnctt. ~04

675-2&amp;12 .
Part tlmt . full time repreltnta
tivas needed , educaHonll 11les .
ull 304-882 · 2415
FULLER BRUSH Stlel 6 Ser
vice. 11 m tl to t10 hour For
lntounat•on . c;:all 304 · 176

1090.
Situations
Wanted

vecancv for 1111:1 elderly tn ou r
hemet Trelned and fifteen years
111 peritnct . Call 614 · 99? ·

7314.

vacancy for an elderly ma n or
wom1n 11 prfnte home. 614 -

Beauty Shop for s&amp;Je Owner wtll
fmance Call evamngs 81 4 -698·

5535

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS · R11f1nance to
low fixed rate Use equrty tor tny
P!Jrpose lllder Mortgage Co ,
614 ·592 ·3061
Unlimttad CIPital IVIIIIb le for
111y business pullJOit. Call 814·

256 -1172

23

Professional
Services

l eo ta s Tea Service Reeaonable
f1111ed rttM Cell61 4 · 245 · 9693
Rodney V•llage 11
Income 11111 ten~ice Federal I
State WIIIKe Rua..ll, Brld·
bury. on 614 -992 · 7221
P1eno tuning end rep.tr. tune up
for the holldwvs . apecrtl d1s
count Went ' s Ke,boanl , 30•·
675 &amp;600 or 675· 3824

KESSEl' S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 M1

WEST. GALUPOliS. RT 35
PHONE 114· 4.t6·1274

1411170 FIHtwood 3 bdr .. H7
baths. 1111trt ntee. own~t moved
end mu11 sell. Call 814 ·256 ·
6687 or 61C ·868 · 1687

Mini farm 3 bf!ldrooma. baaa·
ment. bam , bUIId.ngs t226 .
month plus depolit Cal l 814 ·
985 ·4106

44

Apartment
for Rent

1977 121160 Hollty Park. Dood
cond . 2 bdr Call 614 ·2:45·

5120

CltVfOn. 14X66. fully
turn , wastllf. dryer. AC. ~tnder­
plnn•no S. porch he . cond .•
Make an Off., Call 61 4·2581621 or 614 ·261S-6316 .
1982

1980 lib8r1y 1h5,, 2 bed·
room. unfurnished vtn.,t under·
pinntng included Must sell Call
304· 773·5873.

JACKSON ESTATES APART
MENTS (Equal Housing Oppor·
tunity) monthty rent sterts at
t176 for 1 bedroom end 1212
for 2 bedroom, depostt 1200,
located nNr Spring Valley Plua
and Foodland, pool and Cebla T'J
evailabla, office hours u po111·
ble 10 am to4 pmand 7 pm to 9
pm Mondey·fridey. Call 61 4 ·
446 ·2746 or 111\'t message .
Nicely furnished mobile home.
tff tPt . centrtl air and htlt in
City, adults only Call 614 448

33

Farms for Sale

6 acre min• farm on McCumber
Rd for sale 128.500 Ofr.. tfor
1260 per month 81 4 ·992
e373 or 614· 992 · 2143

033S

Redecorated IP1 , 2 bdr . 1150
to •250 Ctll30•·615·5104 or
304 ·675 -5386 or 304 ·675

7898

tyttem , 121124

7ol0 h Second A\Ia 3 bdr I 190
mo . dep . required Call 614·
448 ·4222 between 9 &amp; 5

35 lots &amp; Acreage

Delulll 2 bdr downtown . com·
plete kitchen , 111 carpet. wuher
dryer. alectnc heat &amp; AC Oep
requ ired Call dtys 61 .&amp;· 446·
4383. eve &amp; wtekenda 814·
448 -0139

1

7 acre ftrm . city

wtter. MPtic

bam , H•ckoty
Chap~ Road , Writ11 or ca ll
Wllliem Moffison . P 0 Boa
164 7, Colatnp, Mont 69323 or
1 408· 7C8 ·2497

OOW11town oHica ..,ace. Excel·
lent location on Second Ava .
Close to court houM perfKt for
tttomev'• · CPA 's or other pta ·
feltionala. Btauliful herdwooct
floors a trim . All utilitlw peid.
Call The WlstmM Agency. &amp;1•·

Ma~gs County , 0~'110 ,
At . 7 Gn , county Wltltf, septic
•v•tem U .595 00 30•· &amp;76 ·
4424 D &amp; W Home•

Ont ec:r11.

Rentals

1519
L.ar;e ~ room upstairs 1pt ..
furnished kitchen , noo mo.
plus utilities, 238 ht Ava Ref
&amp; dep . no pets C1ll 61 4 -446·

4928

Homes for Sale

By ownar Must Mll · mowed 3
bdr ranch . one car g1rage.
walk•ng d•st1nca from North
Gallia H1gh School Redu ced to
S29,900 Call 614·388·871 1
4 bedroom houn for nil,
firep lace 3 mt. south of Galltpo·
It,, •32 .600 Ca ll day• 614 ·
44&amp;. 1815 or n•ghts 81 4. ue .
1244

6 room haute 1'1J storv. ''r bath
show11r baament 2 car garage.
31J:i acr111 1n W1lnut Twp on SR
790 Ctll 614 ·446 ·01588
3 bdr story &amp; 1'1 . full basement.
'lj acre Cententry
Cell 614
446 ·30 44
''• m1 out Georges Cr&amp;ek Hd oM
At 7 Ran ch style, uc condl·
lion 3 bdr .ome acre&amp;gl'l Call
614 ·446 4723

- - - - - - - - -lc-

By own11r Remod11led 3 bad ·
roomhouaeonRt 33 NewF A
fu'"1ce . l~tgt lot t2l .OOO
Collect 614 ·423 ·8289

- - - - - - -- - -lc-

By owner Stately. 3 bedroom
house 111 10 E St •n Po marcy 5
wooded acres fam1ly roo m.
dtntng room. F A hut , 2 btths ,
basement gtr191 127,000
Collect 61 4·423 ·6289
Smgle story, 3 bedroom'" town
Close to school Easy to na1t ,
BIQ Buck wood o r coal sto'tfl
w•th masonry c1'11 mne'l
122 .500 Co mpletalv furn 11 had ,
$25 .000 Cell 614 ·949 ·2933
aft &amp;r 4 00
3 bM! room hout~~ 2 .a c r~s . city
water , h11a gal . 10 m1nute1 fr om
K11sar For sale or long term rent ,
304 · 273 ·2848
By ownar 3 bedroo m . newt&gt;.,
dfiCo r o~~tlld A!lld'f to move Into,
forced air furnec11 w ith AC
Ftm•ly room 468 1Q t1 wt1h
woodburn•r. patio w ith deck
and famtl y Jill poo l Chain lint.
fence tnd ou t building l ote ol
e• tru Cion to tchools Call
after 5 00 PM lnd on wtteh•nds
4
304 675 7261

41

Houses for Rent

5 rooma &amp; bllh, newly deeo ·
retllld Inquire 11 91 8 S~nd
Ave .. G1llipolis
4 room• &amp; bath. ni!Wiy daco ·
r~ted
Inquire 11 918 Second
Ave ., G1lhpohs
3 bdr . B'h meles pout Hol1er on
Rt 160 , tJOO mo . 1150 dep ,
no pea Csll 614· 388 9763
Hou te fo r rant. 1350 mo , plus
1150 dap or tor tall . 3 bdr ,
tam•lv room . bath &amp; 11't. located
3'/J m1 out of Gell1polis on Rt
ISB8 C1ll 614 256 8789 or
814· 25&amp;·6205
4 rooms &amp; btlh furnished
locetKI 735 Tnird·ralr 176
dep $125 mo Ctll 446·3870
or 446 1340
Unfurnished houu 3 bdr 29
Ne •l Av11 . GllhpOIII Ctll 446 ·
44 16 ahar 7PM
4 bdr house •n country 1150
mo Ctll 614 886 ·7909 etter

&amp;PM

3 bedrooms III'QI v1rd , c itv
school, 314 lrd St . K1nueg1
C•ll 6U· 446 · 7·73
2 bedroomhou.e U10 mo 176
depo11t '2 Chitlicolhe Ad C•11
614 446 · 1340 or 6U ·44B ·

3870
~

bdr hous~ locat~ beside Rk&gt;
Cre,da College Cell &amp;14·"6 ·
2064 or 614·446 -1323
3 bdr g1raga , City , 911 F.A ..
wood F P , 1275 mo 1100 dtp .
&amp; ref requirfld Call 614 ·U8 ·
1111 or 614· 446 ·4306
3 bdr home , til kitchen ..,plian·
ces. Clllltted . CA. lingle car
ettached gareoe. Sec Oep. •
Ref required tlOO mo located
Sendan Or . G1lliDoli1 C1ll
e 14·11146 o:2s4
Secluded 3 bedroom modem
ftlfmhOUH N11r mm• t250
deposit 1250 p.. month Call

• 14-742-2e77

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Two bedroom, unfurnished '"
Henderson with beument .
118000 month w1th $7600
dePosit. 304 ·615· 11 18

MOBILE HOME S MOVED· tf'l·
sured reasonab le rttes Ctl1
304 ·676 2336

2314 Mt Vernon 2 bedroom.
full buemtnt. gar.;• 1 or 2
children 1260 month Plus
Oepoltt 304·676 2651

1980 L•berty 1•h64 , 2 br
unfurm1tlet1 . vm yl undetpf!lf'lnlng
Included Must Sell 304·773·

5873

1973 Ctmaron trtiler. 1n New
Ha ven . 1!1 alae , j:fart11lly f!Jr ·
nil had, new und11rpenning . must
.sell $!1 .600 00 304 ·882 ·

2688

1978 Norris, 14a70 . 2 bed·
room, total "tc, furn••hed,
pr11t1ne concl, •1 1 .99!1 00
1972 Schult custom, 2 bad·
room, gaa, clean sharp, living
room tip out , t7,2915 .00. 1989
Schult Custom, 2 bedroom, g11 .
furnlh118d , ahtrp, 11.4915 .00
1964 Titan. 10•10. 11,991 .00
1972 Academe., . 1 :i!dO .
$2 . 99&amp; 00 1973 Concors,
1 2~60 , Z bedroom, sharp,
s11 9 95 .00 . Cell 30 4 · 675 ·
~414 D &amp; W Ha mill
Smell 3 bedroom mobile home,
good lhepe. 14... 9&amp; 00 .30•·

67&amp; -3000.

Wo.-n wtlh• llve· in posiUon
with etdtriY f1'll'l or woman
E:xptrfette• end Reftrencu .

12x81 mobile hoi"M with half
acre l.,..d, 2 outbuHdl"fl. waH
and tllpth: syttem. 30•·I57t·

2718.

Close to town 6 rooms and
bath newly dacortted . 2015 8th
St . 1275 . month . Plus Deposit
304 -676· 4300 Of 676·2651

Apt . on Me1n St in Cheshire. 5
room• &amp; btth, camp turn Oep
req , •200 mo Call $14· 245·

5818 .

2 bdr garage tpt , rllldecorated.
c1rpated . stove &amp; r~f rig 917 4th
Ave , 12:25 mo . tl 75 dep Call

&amp;14-44&amp; -48&amp;1

Fum 1pt 920 411'1 Ave. Gtlhpo ·
\Is 1 bclr .. adults t250 , utilitill
paid Cal1446 ·4416 eftar Jpm
Fum . apt . 939 2nd Ave Galli·
pol11 1 bdr . t235 mo . utili tin
ptid Call 446·4416 ahar 7pm
OupiP for rent , 1556 Third Ave ,
Gallipolis 2 bdr , IN"ingroo m.
d ln1ngroom . new kitchen ,
fenced b~ek y.,d , refrit:_ •
range, t280 plue utitities . &amp;
security depo11t Call 814 ·446 ·

0&amp;90

1113 ford Ranger, • cyl .• •
II)Md , topper, niW tlrM. very
good condition. 11,000 mil•,

COUNTRY MOBILE HOIMParlt.
Route 33, Norttl of Pomeroy .
Large lot• Cai1814 · 992-7C79

New 1 ~~nd 2 badi'O&lt;Im tumithed

apts end OOuse in MKtdleport
Ctll 614· 992 5304 or 614
4411 ·1562 .
5 room unfum•shed epartmanl
Call 614 ·992 5434 or 304

882 -25&amp;&amp;

2 btclroomtpt. '" ntce aechon of
Mkfdlepor1 1176 P" month
plus utilities . O~tposit requ lr..t
514·992 ·7177
APARTMENTS . mobile homes.
nou~t~ . Pt Pleesent end Galllpo·
lis . 614· 448 ·8221
Nice 1 end 2 br apartments
dow,town 304 ·675 ·2218 ,

8-6

Two b.clroom epertment for
rant t221S 00 month , Camp
Conley. phone J04 · n3· 6143 :
On• b«f room 1pta in Henderson ,
newtv painted and carpeted,
304· 871· 1972 1fter 5 PM
Mt Vemon Ave Furnithed 1
bedroom apar1rnent . upatttu.
ciNn , wry n•c• Adulu only .
1116 Month Heel and wet11r
paid 304 676· 266 1
3 room and beth . partly fvr .
n11hed , deDos lt requtrecl .
'1 60 00 plustfactric, 304 ·6715 ·

5911

882 - 240~

Sm1ll furnished apartment . no
I.Mitl. adults. referene.s 304

&amp;78 -1315

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 room fum lthld apartment,
ground t~or , priv1te entrance,
utilitl• included , 180 Bowser
St . Hander10n 1:2 50. 304

121110 trail" co.,..,letely fur·
nistted 12&amp;0 mo plus dspo11t 1.
1 0•85 trailer .150 mo on
Bultvllle Ad . Cell 814-441·

&amp;75 -1730.

1 Ok50 mobile home for rent
Call 114·949· 2424

For rtnt Sleeping Rooms and
l~hl hou11 t11111in0 rooms Par~
Central Hotel. Calf 114 ·446·

9204.

3 bedroom, furnished 1 chUd.
no pe1t. 3 mil• above N.W
Heven on At. 33 304-182-

2466

One end two bedroom•. San d
Hill Roed, 30,·111·38,_
Trtlltr In Point PIMMnt arM fOf'
rent. 304-17&amp;-1714.

2 bedroom trlittr. ref*'«'CI .
You pay utiltd•. Aduhs. 304 -

175-2535 . .

46

Furnished Rooms

07!1.

HOUMkttping room, range , fl ·
frlg .• ahara b1th , male pr11fa"ad ,
utilitlee pd. $125. Call 446·
4.&amp;16 after7pm .

46 Space for Rent
MobKt home tots available in
PcMnt Pfaeaant and GIMipOlil,

304·575·3000.

THI'

14.800 304-112·2280.

NE~T

DAY...

I\_.-/

MT. :Z.E i l-,

Vans lit 4 W.O.

73

"till

AW, THOSE

THitJ6? ARE A

THE Y WAKE ME
UP, AT LEA~T 1HEY

DI&gt;IE' A OOZE' N

COULD S HOW Mf

IN TH IS PAF! fOF
THo WOI'.L

SOME RE:SPECT. t·

1876 CJ-10, lont ...,...
b- PU,,,,.d .. Hock. 380. v-1.
auto .. air. PS, Pl!l, .Siding r_.
window. low milhgt. 1171

51 Household Goods

w...._,

CJ -11 Gold.. E111o. V·l, 30jld.,

1p0h
AM-FM iltWIO ,
low mUMge. Cell 814·441·

AUCTION aSWAIN
FURNITURE 52
OI;,eS1.. 0olllpoh. N-auood
wood -coalttovll, I pc wood LR
'";,. 1399. bomk bods t199.

t-;;::;;:::;:=:::;::::;:=:;:;::-r.;;-~~~~~~~~19700.
----------

anlron raellnen 199, rHJW a
used bedroom tuitll, rantn.
wnnger 'W•thert. &amp; .tlo• New
livtngroom au lt.. *199-1589.
lemps , also buvmg coat e. wood
stoves Calfl61 • -c..e-3159

64 Miac. Merchandise

Hou11 coal Lump l stoker Zlnn
Cotl Co. Cllll1•-44t· 1408.
Call*'an'a Uaad Tire Shop. Owr
1.000 tu•. tiru 12. 13, 14. 15,
18, 11 .1. 8 mil• out Rt. 218 .
Caii614·258-S2!11 .

68

&amp;

Fruit
bl
Vegete es

Open dtiiV plentv applu.
orang•. null all fruit1 and
produce. Jacks FNit Mkt, R1.
31, Hend.-IOn, W. Va .

r .ll l'l

Sot .. and ch-'ra prictld from
U86. to n915 Tabl•. 110 ll'ld
up to 1128 . Hkle -a -beds ,l390.
•nd up to 1650 . 10fa beds
1145 , Reclintn . 1226 to
U76 , Limps from 128. to
1125 pc dinettn from 1109 .
to 435 . 7 pc; . 1189 and up . Wood
tlble wim II• ch11r1 128!1 to
1746 Dnk 1110 up to 1226.
Hulchl!ll , 1650 . Bunk bed completll whh mattreuH, 1275.
end up to 1396 Baby bed•.
$1 10 Mattrauea or box
springa, full or twin , 183 ., firm,
S73 . tnd $83. Queen mt,
$226 4 dr c hest1, 1•9 6 dr
cheaU. 159 . Bed tramu .
120 .and 126., 10 gun · G'-11
ca b•nets . t360 Gae or atectric
ranges 1375. Baby mattrttHI,
S35 • t45 , bed frtmM UO,
S25 . &amp; 130. king frame t50 .
Good aelectlon o1 bedroom
S!Jttet, rockers, metal cabinets.
l'ludbotrdl 138 &amp; up to $85.

li
Stlbs· 18 plf' bundle whiM tMy
last. Call S14·2f-5·&amp;80..
Black powder $11 .95 . Thoq~son
c:»nter guns, muula loedlng
IUpplia .,_op, Kotb.. 't Gunt.a
Alf)alr. MIM C,__ Ad 1 mUtotf
At 7 , Hra M· F. !I ·IPM. Set .

1-5. COli !14-441-2315 .

FOr sale fill dirt • hay. Contact
ONCe Davlton. 814· 2&amp;1· 1427 .

NI'W life ttyler otek cabinets by
Home Crut with tertmlc counter top Call814 ·241-9114 .
Firewood aplit &amp; deUvar8d local
t35 . Out of town UO . Call

814-3&amp;7-0201

Sptl1 firewood 140 lo.t deli·
verecl. C1U 614·441 · 1799 arttt

Used Fum1tutt ·· DrtiMr. &amp; bed .
metal oHice desks 3 m•lel out
Bula~o~illa Ad Open 9am to 5pm.
Moo . thru Sit
61 4 ·446 · 0322

8 114-441-N41

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Mtcrowl\ll oven 190, anttque

Wa1hers . dryers, refr~eretors .
rangtt Skaggs ApplitnCII ,
Upper River Ad betide Stone
Crest Motel. 6H ·446 · 7398
County Appliance, Inc Good
usftd appliances and TV sets
Open BAM to &amp;PM . Men thN
Sat 614-44&amp;. 1699 . 827 3rd .
Ava Gallipoli1. OH
Valley Furniture, new &amp; used .
Large section of qutlity f!Jml·
lu re 1216 Eastern Ava ,
Galllpohs.

w..har

&amp; dryer lit 12615
FriQidlirt wuher t96,gu dryer
htrvatt gold 1125. Hoo'i"'r
portable washer &amp; dryer 1915
etch . G.E . tYOCido
195 . electric ren111e *95. electrtc
rtnge Kenmore 30 in. 112&amp;. gu
renge 30 ,1 n. wMe t7!1 . retrigar·
11or white 2 dr 1915. n~frigerator
2 dr coppertont 895. refrlgara·
tor tide bv tide I 160 Skegga
Appliance Upper River Rd. 614·

"""dryer

446 -7398

25 ' ' Ouaur floor modtl TV,
needs minor repair . t20 Call

Firewood torN to. C1ll 814 · 4461437 Of 814·441 ·9286 Of 614·

258-1512.

fire extin. 146, c,.IIIH1 size
electric blanket UO . Call 81 • ·

446·2297.

Firewood for ule 130 00 PU
told. HEAP accepted C. I 61 4 ·

388-9341, Roger Moodo .

9184.

s•
rifle.

Continued· Ammo
tt 2310
E111tem, funher rlduC11on on 10
• 4t0 ahot ......
pinD ..
1mmo reduced additional
11 00 -12 .00. aome rarlt .. ,
Sale continuing thru 1 · 1•·88.
Stop in 6 111 50 pc. dlaplay of
hai'Yy.liaht &amp; eubmachtn•ouns.
Call 614-44&amp; -1822 ev1. • 308 :30 . Open Ill day Sat. &amp; Sun.
RefriglfatOr. side by skle. 3
door. coppertoml, frost frH ••·
cond .. UOO . Call 114-2•&amp;·

Maytag w11har for ula, like
new
Call 614 · 258 ·1428 or
614 268 · 1519'

FiriWood 1 00% perfectly IM·
toned oall Split. daltvered.
tbdcld . Calll1 ..·4ti·0373 .
K~~nmora walh• • drter
1125 WMher IMiedt rep-'•·
drter good cond Cll1114 ·388·

8185.

0380 .

1315 .00 large pick -up

load Htt•P voucher• accepted .
B14 74:2 2481.
2 year okt lapp., electric range
like ntw . 1200 . $1 4 · 98!1 ·4256
anytime.
Mi,ed hardwood al.t)t . 112 , per
bundle. conta ining epprox. Pit
ton, fob Ohio Ptllet Co .. Pome·
roy . Oh 1114 · 992·6461 .
TRS 80 Model4 computer with
OMP 1,0 printer. like new

1960 814 -992-5705 .

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS. hot dip
rabluelng . all typn ot gun1mlth
woric , fett aarvlce. 304 ·611·
4631
Sttrrous about lotinQ wl6ght1
Contact Gloria Grete . At . 2, Bo•

282 . loton. WI/ . 25253. 304·
882 -3152.

65 Building Supplies
BuiklinQ MIMrlllt
Bioc:k, brick, IIW'It p4p•. win ·
dowt. lintels, etc: Claude Win ·
,.,., Rio Grtndt. 0 . Cell 614 -

248-5121 .

Kentucky lump , Ohio Lump.
OhtO Stok•. Yard or diiiYtfv,
cement bk&gt;c:kt and building
mat-'ll. Gtll6polls Block Co ..

Plno 61. . Oolllpollt. Ohio Coli
114-441-2713.

!'::!:•.&amp;kf9t .

1t 4·33 z.e745

Blodl., brldl.. morter and rna·
sonry IUPPII• . Mounteln ltltl
l!ltoc:k. Rt 33. New Heven , W.
v•. 304-882 · 2222

66

Pets for Sale

Picllens Uud Fum ltura. good
quellty u1ed furniture, houre
9 ·00 to t :OO or bv lppolntment.
304·67&amp; -8483 Of 675· 1450.

3&amp; W•t. J•cklon. OhkJ.

CROSS • .SONS

814 -285-6451 .

Mu..,- Ferguton. New Holland.
Buth Hog Selet &amp; Stn'ice. Over
40 Ultd tractors to ctto01e from
00"1)'-te llna of new
u.d
equlpn.nt. Larg•t Mlection in

a

S.E Ohio.

8riltf'Patch

S labt, 17 .00 per bundle 1110
rough lumbar aU 1i:res , cell
Se ars elac1ric renge. aeH clean ·
lng oven w1th Microwave over·
head. 304. n3 .1S718
For lilt · Two P2015 · 71 R·14
mud snow rldlels tnd rwo
regular redials 140 00 pair

304-875·6740 .

Surplus · H11vy duty denim
jaclcats C1rhart. Army clothing,
l 4 or. denim Ptntt 110., D1cron
insolat ed covweUs camouflage,
grMn t21 . Sam Somarvftle' s,
June1totl tndependanot Rold ·
Old At . 21. Eaet RaveniWOOd.
(Fri evenlnQI) · 1 :00· 7:00 p.m.
Stt. Sun . !Kids ctmouft~ge)
Oellverv . 304-8715 -333•
One etaftdard Horiron, hind held
phone marine radio . VHf·FM, 2
mik•. 1 ~wer pack , 1 cete,

304·875·2820.

Htlf Pricel Fishing arrow signa
126911 llg~H e d . non '"ow
t249 . Unlighted 1199 (FrH
lenera l) s" locally (800) .. 23·
0113. anytime (800)8282828. lltt. 804.
Hydnullc wood tplltter .
t&amp;oo.oo. C1ll '"" 1 :30, 304-

571-4211.

Motorcycles

98.

1983 VT 710 Shodow. I
V·4f M11um, 1852 flO Nigh·
th. . k, 1982 CB too custom.

Coll814-387-0482

1113 Honda ltltdow 710.
10,000 mllee, ea. Clond., 12000
firm. Ctl 8,4 ·982·n29

76

Boata and
Motors for Sale

Kennlfa

All·brMd

pupploo.

Englith Cocker Spenltlt. 381·

6:05
6 :30

0

8 ,000 FOfd dine! tractor with 5
bottom plows. 4 row FDrd
oomplanter, U .750. Uke new
10 ft . whHt dtac 1&amp;95 CaN

79 Motors Homes
lit Campers

Plows· Dtar Bom 2· 14 in. 3 pt.
hitch. 3· 1 e '" c... 3 pt. hiteh
.:ijultablt plows. 5 bottom 11
ln . Caa temi ·mount plowe. 2
bottom plows to fit C Farmall
ffiCtOr, 2 bottom dr-a plowa.
Oliv. 4 bottom drill plow .. • "·
Woodt billy mower fitl Cub
FarrMI, Olhtar 18 tnctor lndependtlnt live PrO wldtfronttnd.
OliVII eo triCtOf 2 rtiW tir• Nnt
lilr.e l'tiiW . C.ll61•· 388-9184.

5 Hol•tain baby Miter c11\1et.

Hay lit Grein

Large round blln of hiY' for 1111
ortr.ctatorcattle Call11•·"11012 after &amp;PM.
Atfatfa, orchard grau hiiY · 1st.
2nd , 3rd'. Cutting by the!Mie or
tn.tc:kkJad . Calll14 · 211·1135

YO~

CAN'T EVEI/

liE SVfiE Willi..
WARBUCH9! ~E
HE IS AWA~E OF
OUR PRESENCE'

16 ft Scottte camp•. fijfftace,
refrig .• toilet. Good condition .

round

a

equtre mialtd

4013
Miatld gru• hay fof llle. IU ·

949-2237 .

too ab. rourid bllet. Orchard
gr'issandclover. QUIIityguar•n·
teed . 111~ per bela Volume
nltn . Call81··992 · 3718.
NICE HAY·Lalh• Farm. All
weather .ccaa. On R1.
W•t· llida of Rutl1nd, Oht near
Pomeroy. No phone tt f11m . For
mor. info . call Ftank Goebel •t

n•.

114-4&amp;8-8454 •• 514-4&amp;9·

""·

81

t50. 514·182·21 f5 till f p.m.
814-8tz-11SI o!t. 5 p.m .

Birds, fiah , 1m1tl tnimtll 1nd
thtlr suppUn. Fteh Tank 1r1Ct Pllt
Shop. 2ol13 Jackaon Ave., POint

PlooNOI, 304-175-ZOU .

Want.t, 11Ud wvfca for email
luft colored Cocltw Spenlel,
muat bl , .. iltlfld and luff.

171-f081.

BI\SEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Urtconditm.l lif.. lme gulfan·
t• local referenCM fum.hld
F'" •timet•· CaN coUect
1-114-237-0411....... ""olht.
Aogere Basement
WltMpf'OOflng ,

814-992-2172 .
COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRilUNO

1878 Dodge Matnum tacltlent
condition. 11,500 Ca11 ea.

245-5104.

I 9f6 C...,.ot AT 440 4 opd .
runs gr•t 11 .710. Call 814·

1978 Mustand H Gh'- 302, V· B.
PS . PB. 1uto, n1W ttrll. thocke,
eutllent condition, \2.000

to make it appear the

widowis here
when she

Momen1s in Sports These
sports . lowlights' include
Pres1dent Fords mfamous
tee shot and the Stanford
band 's trombone defense

is not I

OE. &amp;poclollrtg In Zonlth. C.R
304-571-2318 .. 814-4412454.
FettT

ltle. {60 mon)
C!2l College Baskolball:
West Virginia at Penn
Stale
IHaor The Noi.So-Graat

Adevious device desiqned

RON'S Telavlelon Sllvlce
HCMA_. call on RCA , Quaur.

Tree Trlmmtnv. stump
Call304·8715·1331 .

rlmOYII.

•

8:05

RINOLES'S SERVICE . ••P•
ri~

carptntlt', .tectricl1n,
meeon, Plintlf, roofing flnducf.
Ina hot '"' oppllca....,l 304-

StlrU TrM 1M Lawn SeMoe,

londoc:oplng 304·571-2010.

a nine-year f1ght to brmg

WINNIE

h1m to uial {2 hrs.I{R)
(J) Families on lho Faultline
® College Basketball : Vii·
Ianava at Connec1icut
® MOVIE: 'The Right of •
lhe People' ICC)
0 ([)®I Kale &amp; Allie Kale
and Allie unwillingly become invo lved in an argu ·
ment between an aspiring
actor and his family

ph- of building! . 304-178-

® 1Dl Championship Ballroom Dancing Top dancers
from a round the country
compete for honors in

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

JIM'S PLUM SINO. HEATINO .
Rr. 1. Bo• 355, Go1Npo41t. CoR
114-357-0571 .
83

Excavating

1878 Plymouth Valiant SclmP,
V·l, 2door. 311 motor, AC. PS,
red ill tk•. radio. C.ll 614-241·

7111 .

1980 Chevttte. ol dr.. Qood

Ken 's Water SlrVice Wells,
citttms, pooft flltd . Phone

918·3195

1977 Toyota Celice GT , GOOd
eond.'
new perts. 11 1eo.

rnenr

*·

Colll14·843·523f.

1171 Ford Dran.ta. ont ownlf'.

coli 304-175-4014 .

77 Olds Toroneda, CallfomiJ
car. Sherp. •100. 304·17·-

7471 .

1175 Buldt COntu.y, f ,OOO
on '"lint. body ••c .

t1 .eoo.oo 304-BB2·3nl.

9:30

COME ON. TATER·I NEED VOU TO
HELP ME FETCH
SOME WATER

TH' CIRCUS

(i]) Odd Couple
Collage Basketball:
Alabama-Birmingham
at
Soulh Alabama
@) CIJ Odd Couple
0 ® ® Cognoy &amp; Lacey
While lacey IS on matern·
ity leave, Cagney is 85·
signed to a new partner

TENT

10:00 ®

w1th

SNAKE!!

fHEYSAID
\tAH,
BUifHEY
()1[/Nl VVANf

114-3&amp;7-0523 .. 114-387·
7741 nlgtrt or d..,

ANCHOR

I COUL-D SlAY
1F I t.::XCEL.L.ED

MAN FOR fHE
fUGOFWAR

M~

Waugh' a Water Service. Wett1,
daterne. pools. Fett, reli.ble
tlrvlce. Call &amp;14·216·1240 or
614 -211 · 1 130 AtiiOrtlbll
rltll.

/[;.AMI!

iHE JOKE
TOL.D ElY iHE
iR'AMP iURNED
OUI 10 E!E iH IS.

[j

r

II

[j

Now arrange the c:• rcled leltf::! S lo

form lhe su rpr1 se an swer as sug·
gesled by ihe at&gt;o.. e car1aon

Print answer here A
Saturday's

"r I I

r

I I I

(Answe1s ! omono w~
KNIFE ABHOR CO MM ON EMPIRE
Answer Wt1a1 the peace f!J I vegetanan wa s never
abou t to do wrth anyone-PICK A BONE

I Jum bles

Jumble lkJ06I Not 71111181 .. Ul illble lor It 95 llcll plus 55Uilb 81Ch JXIIIIIJIInd
Jumble, do lhil ,..lp.lpltr, P 0 Bcu 4366. Olllndo, FL 12802-431!6
lnclud8 rour ""'"·
zip codllnd mlkl ehtck Pl'flbltt o Ntwsp.aperboOks

handiii'ICiJirom

•OOrn•.

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

87

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY 8HOP
1163

Sec. Ave ..

114·445-7133
1833

01

Gellipolis.

&amp;14-445-

R • M Fumlturt MtnufiiC1uring
St At . "7. Crown Chy , Oh c1 ti
114· 251-1470. call £w. 614·
• • t · 3438 . Old • new
UphotteNd.

a reputation

m mo

MADE THIS
COVNTRV 61\EAT ?''

'' WHAT

DID YOU PU1'
DOWN FOR THAT
QUESTION,
I

'' FAITH COURAGE

AND

!-lARD WORK ".. W ~AT
DID YOU PUT DOWN?

'' PEANUT BUTTER
SANDWICHES "

IIJl Cerson'a Comedy

Clas-

sics

IHBOI 1st &amp; Ton: Tho Ope.
nor
'1 :30 0 (I)
Tho Best of Carson Tonight's guests are
Pela• Fo,ds, Charles Nel·
son Reilly end A. Whilney
Brown. (80 min .) lA). In

em

Stereo.

([) WKRP In Cincinnati
f:ll CIJ '®Tul

EAST

. , 43

• Q10 8 8
• Q10 8 4

' A 96
tJ I0 9 643

.4

+K z
+10 8 6

SOUTH
+A 2

• 52
• Q8
+AK J9 753

Vulnerable. Eas1-West
Dealer: West
West

East

North

I+
2 NT
4•
6•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

Sou tb
2+

3+

Pa~s

5+

Pass

Pass

Openrng lead · • 4
L - -- - - - - - - - -.J

rade of clubs. Since West could not
guard both major queens, he eventual·
ly shed a heart. Now a heart to the
king and a heart ruff made dummy 's
lowly seven of hearts a winner. ThLS
was one lucky hand for our team, but 1
bet you will feel that some ol Ure other
deals this week are even luckier

THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
J In nP&lt;'d of I 'Tal 11allnu"

by

die tm ~
sl.ar
4 That wnman 2 H r lp an~
7 Dormoust•
hand

0

8 Rw.;s1an

30rnanwnta l
wmdow

rtty

I 0 TihN,a n

work

animal

4 W111n1f'
ltw·ponh's

II Sea~m ng
13 Cakulalt·
14 Prompl
16

lovp

5 lh.-;torn

~yps" .t1
tltP altar

pt•ri od
6 Rr htnh
7 Take on
t·argu

17 ChurC'h
man's
n•stdPnl 't'

19 Z1p
20 Ric h fo&lt;'k

'!.7 For ( Sp I

29

n vt•r

IS

Jh~ l ' ll

l r&lt;~ll , u l

{ II .\'

9 Span t~ h
h f'rnlllt'
dwlf'('t
21 T1dv
10 Lau n(' htng 22 All.a(' k

21 Zola no\lt•l
22 TPmfy1ng

:JO r:xpun1:• ·
31 \\&lt;n tp do" 11
32 Sandra :17 Bl'!on •

23 Wn w

24 f'tni Shf'd 39 Stuk \

25 SharP·

salt•sm.m

25 &lt; 'ausli(

'&gt;Lih'&gt;I,HH'I'

holrlrr:-. ·
rUI ·Up

26 Little
Elt•anor

27 Blue ~rass
28 Ex rhrss
· champion

29 Fun•shadow
33 Spanish
'gold"
34 SuFfix

Wi th

("OW

35 Kind
of d r t·r
36 Not on
your hfl''

38 Playing
marbl £'

40 Tcnurr
41Pry

42 TurmN1l'
43 lhe mark

DAILYCRVPTOQUOTES - Here's ho" to work II :
AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another In th1s sampiL- A " used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, elc. S1nglr leiters.
apostrophes, the length and fom1ati on of the words &lt;J re all
hinls. Each day the code letters are dtffcrcn t
CRYPTOQUOTES
1· 13

I RPM

C l'

MCG

VPG

ll CS

zr.

lJ CCGMCGP

Cll SCTV
®I Eyewltnooo Nowa
WHAT

1 11-86

~

em.

1.1]) Thla Old Houn (CC)

WEST

The North American Swtss Teams.
a prestigious bridge event that has
been around only a few years, is held
during Ure last three days of the Fall
North American Championships. It is
more challenging than most other
team events since on the last day all
Ure competing teams play their individual short matches w1th duplicated
deals. Doing s&lt;i'eliminates the inequity
of other Swrss-team competitions, in
which some matches have wilder
deals with more opportunity for exag·
gerated results My team happened to
win this year, so Uris week you are go·
ing to see some of the deals from that
final day.
In today 's deal, South meant his
three-spade bid as a control-showing
cue-bid. When North raised to lour
spades and South corrected to five
clubs, it was obvious that South had
slam interest North gambled to brd
six, feeling that if South had small
hearts, defender West would lead the
ace. U West led a small heart, North
hoped it would be away from the
queen. And that is what happened. On
the opening heart lead, declarer
played dummy's jack and East won
wiUr the ace. Back came the jack of diamonds, covered by the queen, king
and act!. Now declarer began the pa-

as an In -

Nowo

NORTII
• KJ 97
• KJ i l
t A 75
+Q 2

By James Jacoby

(J) Man from U.N.C.L.E
fJJ CIJ Bonny Hill Show

PEANUTS
Upholitery

A lucky guess
pays off

former {60 min .)
1H1 To Bo Announced
@ News
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Tho Blues
Brolhora'
' 10:20 II) MOVIE: 'Tho Luoty Mon'
10:30 fJI CIJ INN Newa
® Comldy with Monlo~h
ond Rend (CC) John Monteith and Suzanna Rend
perform comedy skill and
Improvisational comedy.
illl Newowolch
t
11
® Ill

,,oo

Dump truck service now avalll·
ble, will haul gravel. sand , fill
din. coal. etc . C111 eu.ua.

7447

{90 mon.)
IHBO] MOVIE: 'Happy Birth·
day to Me'
0 Ill ®I Newhart M1chael
goes to extremes to im ·
press his art1stic mother.
while D1ck must keep a
rash p ro m1se to a dogfood
advert1ser.

WE NEED NOW,
TATER. IS A
HIGH WIRE IN

ALL

General Hauling

8f81.

1111 Cad . S.tan DeYIII&amp; Front
whl. drtve. Fully equipped. Ell·
Clhnt condition. 31 ,000 mi111.
114,100 or belt reMOnable
ott.r. 11•·911 -3184 or 114-

BARNEY

Good · 1 hci'Vatlng, b...mlntt.
foote,. , dri¥M¥ay1. Mptlctanb,
landsceplng . Call anytime 114·
446 -4837, Jam• L. Oavfton,
Jr. own•.

Jam II Boyt Wet" Service. Allo
pools filled Cell&amp;1•·251 · 1141
or 114· 441· 1175 or 81•·•4&amp;·

cond .. 11700. 114-9111 -4418.

three different categories.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
445-«n

em Falal Vision ICC)

Part 2 of 2 D•. Jeffrey
McDonald' s m-laws wage

c&gt;ywon . plumbing , oloctri..r.1..

Cor. Fourth end Pine
Glllpolls, Ohio
Phon• 814-441 ·3888 or 114-

{60 min .)
{MAXI MOVIE: 'Top Hot'
® NBA Baskolboll: Denvo•

9:00 0 (I)

ADtlf'Y or cablt tool dritHnQ.
Most welle completed 1emed.,.
Pump ul• tnd lltvloa. 304-

85

m1•

I I

IIMPERRj

a1 Milwaukee

115-2011 .. n&amp;-73&amp;1.

' 79 luldt Lelaber. '74 Rlvere,

cond.. t1000. Con 814-445 ·
0219.

GASOLINE ALLEY

Rav~ns·

Oodrge Asp• • dr ., euto., lir,
vinyl roo1 . will thN.Iow mHegt.
t2.418 . Johns Auto Stl•.
aur ..lllo Rd .. GoMipoNo.

327 tnglrtl, 304-f7f·51f2.

bendl , C,I INttll, • booke. b .

I

ZELZUG

daughter emtgrate from El
Salvador to the US . in the
hopes of fmdmg a bener

:7:-:1---:A:-u-:t-o-s-=ro-r-,;:S-a:--le

1983 Dicit Cutlau lup,.me .•
blue, •
8 cyl .. c:ruiM control.
am -tm atereo, e1 . cond .. l3971.

O'ltn. Lowery GtnMi 44, wfttl

ou•

Pump ul•, llrviOI. R'llltered
In Ohio. All work gUirenteed.

82

Fourmlniatu,. poodtl pups, two
malll. two femalee. 304·•2 ·
3172.
~

C•"

rJ

ff]) Wonderworks: Maricela {CC) A molher and

J .lnd L. lnltattttton. Aoofing,
vtnyt skiing, etorm doors and
wlndowt. F,.. "tlmat11. Cat

1r.lll SJillr lo liOII

114-742 -3 18

Wurlitllr plano , Cherry finlltl ,
good eond . Must tall.

site . (60 min .)
@) (J) Super Model of lhe
World Top models v1e for
the t1tle of 'Super Model of
the World ' in this mlernatl o nal competition (2 hrs)
0 Ill ® Scaroc•ow and
Mrs. King
® MacNeii-Lohro• Newsh-

THAT IT &lt;&gt;

2440 .

304-773-&amp;Uf of11&lt; 4·30

Muaical
Instrument•

PECIDED JUST
T'STAY PUT, IS

Home
Improvements

Bathroom. kitchen remodeling.
ott~mic tile insttllttioft, roofing.

AM·FM rooo, t2,2t9. 1910

Black toy Poodle. FemaMi. Approlt . &amp; lbl H11 been spayW. 1
11:1 y11t1 okt. Qood with chUdren .

M cCorm1ck trace a counCilman' s murder to an 1lle·
gal to•ic waste dum ping

THEN 'YOU'VE

Hay end ltrtw for sale. 30ol-

3681 .

BNutlful AKC loston Terrier
puppi11, 1200 firm . Call I 14-

-"'*'·
11711. Coli 514 -445·
0701 .

JOke VICtimS . (60 mm .)
Father Murphy
:]) Hardcastle And McCormick (CC) Hardcastle and

Cil

•.

ALLEY OOP

895·3802

81 Cut... oLS dloool, PS, PI, II~
· AM-UI ....... pluolt
Interior. good rubber. e•. cond.
Coli f1 4·318-8343 1111&lt; 5PM.

Melt la11 Apl(l 8 werake okl.
R-oistered with .UC. Shott a

Korman and Q.onna M1lls
are this week' s practical

Oround ur com t83 . ton.
142 .50 'h ton. t22 . 14ton. Your
uckl. Aleo strew. 61ol·985·

Ot1g0nwynd Cllttf\' Ktnnel.
CFA Himalayan. ,.,.., .nd
Slam... ktttant . AKC Chow
pupp.._ Call 448 -3144 after
7PM .

44&amp;·7432.

(JJ Please Don't Eat Daisies
® NFL Films
@) CV WKRP in C1ncinnatt
0 Ill @ Jaopardy
® Good Neighbo•s
@ Wheel of Fortuna
C!2l Price Is Right
@
Collage Basketball:
Notre Dame at BYU
IHaO] Fraggle Rock: Wembloy's Wonderful Whoopia
Water {CC)
7 :35 ® Sanford and Son
8:00 0 Cil @ TV's Bloopers
and Practical Jokes Harvey

"210. 114-247-4122.

Cell 304· 273·281 1.
wood. W.Va.

Larv•

AlBAN

(I) NBC Nigh11y News
(I) Green Acres

® College Basketbell Report
® C!2i ABC News
@) (J) One Day al e Time
O ®® CBSNews
® Doctor Who
(ll) Body Electric
@ WKRP in Cincinnati
@ NBC News
!MAXI MOVIE: 'The Thirty
N1ne Steps'
6:35 ® Sale al Home in Slereo
7:00 0 ® PM Magazine
CIJ Courtship of Eddie's
Father
® SportsCente•
(§] Entertainment Tonight
lntel\l!ew w1th
Johnny
Cash
@)
Jelle•sons
0 Ill@ Wheal of Fortune
® Nightly Business Report
[OJ Eyewitness News
11] MacNeil-Lehrer Newshour
(llJ Divorce Court
(HI Barney Miller
7:05 ® Mary Tyler Moore
7:30 0 Cil ® New Newlywed

Liveatock

Coli 114-317-0203

64

1 ·1

Stereo.

Game

ANNIE
'IJfl(}/) V~ 1 Wiii1T!i
NIIPP~HH?

25f-f4t7 .

tom. Coli 114-441-3485.

&amp;14-441-55&amp;0

kt.nu
..
LEIIPIII' lli!l/llll5,

John boat for tale C.U l14-

9790

57

H~ARTBUR~.

Coli 814·2111·11622 .

1912 Spirit. 4 spd., sunroof.

Gu lurnace, LP or Mturel.
Co leman. &amp;0.000 btu , 304675·6277 eftar 6:00PM.

AGID

~~~b~SfiOIJ,

3.000 Ford dietel trector , 4 nMN
tlrtt , 12,9915 flrm . \5 tt. lnttma·
tlon11 bulh hog U95 . 6ft. Ford
heavy duty grader bled• • 1 50.

441-1229 1111&lt; f .
gn&gt;Omlng . Adulro •

French Proventtal dinlnt room
aulte , t abla, si• t:halnand hutch,
Clll 30··882 · 2471

u.s.

Utill1y Bldg. Spl.: 30'•40"•8'.
Etw w· 15'xl sliding doo• a
..,.,. door· 1125&amp; ~.t . ltort

One electric. 1 v-.ollne air
comprenor IS HP 1710 . tach.

304-&amp;75 ·3002.

Farm Equipment

.,.._ of hty. Cell 814·441 ·

Satrt

2•x•o . com·
overtiNCI tnd
13600 . Other
Calf 614·897·

74

61

63

15 · 4a8 atudded ~"'· bultt
whh 2x4 etudl coverlld with 1
inch thidl lumber. This wouk:l
build • 11d0 f"lgl 8ft high
•12 .. chsec:tkln Ctlll14 · 318 ·

rJ

m

LI VCStod

Air tire changer worts gr.at. Call

614·368·11&amp;84.

9191 .

Po!a Bui1d•ng
Dletetv erected
entrance door .
IIZIS IVIii.tJia

H~ADAGHti ,

utility body, 4 IPaed , 4 cyl,
11, 195.00. D • W Homee,

304-&amp;78-4424 .

Suppl11:s

a

1978 Ford Van. S cyt, auto ,

1988 oo. 1976 Ford Courier.

5 ... 288-11622 .

614 -245 -5040

64 MiK. Merchandise

1884 Atmch~tr 4 wttl. drive .
Standlrd, 11.000 mi . lmoked
glau. Priced to •II. 114·149·

3083.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

304- ~76 - 2318 .

2 bedroom 1pt Leon , Hud
approved , Hom .. tud R11tty .
Broker . 304·876·6640 Of 304·

THEI!.I' SHOULD
Be~ MEADOW
7LOPI~ G UP TO

I

MATID

EVENING

® Mazda Sportslook
® 0 @@@ News
@) (J) Diffronl Slrokes
® 3-2-1. ConlaCt {CC)
@1 Eyewitness News
illl Newlon's Apple
@ Jeffersons
([) Down 10 Eorth In

liN Ch.vy PU truck. Y·l, at,
lifO. 304-178-2478.

by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four J umb les,
one letter roeach SQLJare. lo form
four ordmaf)' words

6 :00 0 ® NewsCenlor
Cii 5100,000 Name Thai
Tune

1873 Ford Courilt trudt.' Alit.

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

l9 ~~ ®

~

1/13/86
0

1300. 114·1185·4411.
1170 Chwy P.U t400. 514915 -4473.

Office apace tor ren1 . Excellent
down town tocation, ctoM10 the
courthouM. AeflfCI for -attar·
neva . Calll14· 448 -3144. Winmtn R111 E1t111.

F~rewood

Nice 1·2 bdr tpt '" town Z· 3
bdr . ept 1n town . Referen ces &amp;
deposit requirlld C1ll Wiseman
R11l Estate. 614 · 446· 36'-'

uoo .. trod•""

1177 Ford 150·300, lcyl .. 4op.
114·742·2301.

44f-3f44 .

1fJri}Wf fi5}1j

Television
Viewing

BREAK ING DOWN
INTO HARMLE SS
C.HEMICAL.S, YES-

smell cer. Martin Co-' etow. 2
ton. tiOO . C.U14-211-f670.

Furnithed apt.. 4 room! &amp; blth,

no pet1, adults. Call 6 1'"4 ·446·

Just ev1Uabte 2 ~artmenlt tor
rent Cell 8U ·446· 9244 .

992-7153.

304-e71·2171-

2 bdr trliler. 1 VJ bath , part11lty
tum . aduhs only Call 614· 387 ·
0213

43 Farms for Rent

Real Estate
31

18f6 Fotd PIJ

NEW ANO USED MOBILE

203 Jackson Ptke. Galhpolla.
Babyeitter tor 2'1' vr old wanted
"' ho nw. Ahemoons &amp; evenmgs
weekdays on ly Cal! 614 -367 -

14•70 3 bdr., Wi bath fur·
ntshed. 1250 mo Cell 814 ·446 ·

DICK TRACY

Truck• for Sale

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Ohio

1173 Ford Yo 01n 302, 4 opd ..
noo or blot """· c.n 814·
381-1317-

448 -2602

for Sale

HOMES

4 30 Mon .-Fri . Medtcal Plata.
Ohio

2 bdr 111 elecuie. wood burner.
carpet throughout . AC . dadt
with twning, 2¥1 miltt oo Rt
588 . no c:tuklren, or intidt JMIS
Call 61•· 4"8·'607 or 614 ·

32 Mobile Homes

Would Uke to keep eklefly people
1n my homl!l
Call 614·367·

72

McrcharuJ r~~

3793

!~:=::=~=::::=:-r::;:~:;::;::;=:;:;:====-

9AM -2PM

12

"""'*"'

"I hate a 'Yes' man, don't

bills. lmited time start up fee DECK HANDS immediataopen·
~ngs for deck hands , line
l'endlers, mechtntCI, weld••·
other tradea . Excellent benefits

........ .~,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "''IJ Llri'J Wright

46 Space lor Rent

2659

Monday, Janaury 13. 1986

Monday, .Janaury 13, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

ZEE

" F Q F Y .: -

(-; B P

, XZVP .

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ll CS

U W Z M ll

(i (.

!:Fill'

Z .1

IIF'MI'

f' .I

.I SF.EF'OZ M

Veoterday'o Cryptoquote: A l~AMBLER IS NOTI11N&lt; i
RUT A MAN WHO MAKES HIS LIVING OliT OF IlOPE WIUJAM llOLITHO

0

Ill Remington Steele

Laura and Remington e n·
counter an assortment of
bizarre suspects when they
investigate the murder of

an onist {60 min.) (RI .
Cll AuS1,in City Limits: B.B.

King

[j) Comedy with Monteith
and Rand ICCI John Mon-

teith and Suzanne Rand

perform co medy skits and
im provisational com edy

1H1 ABC

News Nightllne

�..

'

.
Pubbe·speaks out
'.

Monday. Janaury 13, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport Ohio

Jan. 14- IWsonwille· York ........... Away
Jan. 17-Vinton County ............-.H- ·
Jan. 21-Trintltll ........................... HCIIIM

GillS BASIIETBAU
Jan. 1•-IWsonwille· York ............

Hospital

Jan. 4-North Gallia ..................... H01111

GIRLS BASIIETBAU
Jan. 16- 0ak Hiii .......................... H01111
Jan. 21-Gallipolis ..- ....................Away
Jan. 23-North Gallia ................. Away

~

"Your Athletic 1
Shoe.Headquarters"

MULBERRY HTS•.
POMEROY~ OH.
•

EASTERN

PH. 992-2104 ,,:

BOYS BASIIETBAU

VISITING HOURS
Medical &amp;·Surgical
. 2:00 to 4:00
7:.00 to 8:10

Jan. 14-North Gallia ................. Away
Jan. 17 -Hannan Trao ................. HJan. 21-Parkenb•g Catholic .... Hcm

GIRlS BASIIETBAU
Jan. 1•-Hannan Trao ................ Away

'

Jan. 18 -Meigs .............................. Hontt
Jan. 23 - Kyger CrHk ................... H-

,._ ____..,:t:'_

W~

""

'

v

WILL

.~

Mei[!s
BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov . 22 - At Athan s
Nov . 29 - At Miller•
Dec . 3 - NELSONVILLE ·YORK '
Dec . 6 - At Vinton County•
Dec . 10 - At Trimble '
Dec . 13 - BELPRE'
Dec . 17 - At Alexander '
Dec . 20 - WARREN '
Dec . 28 - ATHENS
Jan. 3 - At Wellston'
Jan. 7 - At Federal Hocking•
Jan. 10- MILLER'
Jan . 14 - At Nelsonville -York'
Jan. 17 - VINTON COUNTY'
Jan . 21 - TRIMBLE '
Jan . 2 4 - At Belpre•
Jan . 2B - ALEXANDER'
Jan . 31 - At Warren•
Feb 7 - WELLSTON'
Feb 13 - FEDERAL HOCKING '
·- rvc games

l

DOWNING-CHILDS .
1

MUllEN INSURANCE I
113 SECOND AVE.

POMEROY

'.'!

CALL 992-3381 or
992-2342

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME

POMEROY, OH.

.~.

Dec . 13 - Southwestern •
Dec . 20 - SYMMES VALLEY'
Dec . 21 - FEOERAL HOCKING
Dec . 27 - At Wahema Tournament

~~y,, Deale~

Consolation Game

···:~

On

The Rir11"

Eastern vs . Wirt
Wahama vs . Gilbert
Dec . 28 - At Wahama Tournament

PH. 992 .. 6614

Championship Game
Jan. 3 - At Oak Hill'
Jan. 10 - SOUTHERN '
Jan. 14 - At North Gallia"
Jan . 17 - HANNAN TRACE '
Jan . 21 - PKBG . CATHOLIC'
Jan . 24 - At Kyger Creek ' '
Jan . 31 -- SOUTHWESTERN "
Feb. 4 - At Federnl Hockil\11
Feb . 7 - At Symmes Valley '
Feb . 8 - WAHAMA
Feb . 14 - OAK HILL •
"- SVAC games

308 E. MAIN·
POMEROY, OH.

Southern
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20 - At Trimble Tournament
Waterford vs . Eastern
Southern vs . Trim~e
Nov . 23 - At Trimble Tournament
Consolation game
Championship game
Nov . 25 - At Eastern•
Dec . 2 - KYGER CREEK"
Dec . 5 - At Oak Hilt'
Dec . 9 - NORTH GA ~LIA"
Dec . 12 - HANNAN TRACE'
Dec . 19- At Southwestern'
Jan. 2 - SYMMES VALLEY '
Jan. 9 - EASTERN•
Jan. 11 - GALLIPOLIS
Jan. 13 - At Kyger Creek '
Jan. 16 - OAK HILL'
Jan . 21 - At Gallipolis "
Jan . 23 - At North Gallia

Jan . 30 - At Hannan Trace•
Feb. 3 - At Symmes Valley'
Feb. &amp;- SOUTHWESTERN
' - SVAC games

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20- At Trimble Tournament
Waterford vs. Eastern
Southern vs . Trimble
Nov . 21 - MEIGS
Nov. 23- At Trimble Tournament
Consolation game
Championship game
Nov. 24 - SOUTHERN"
Dec . 2 - At North Gallia'
Dec . 5 - HANNAN TRAC E'
Dec . 9 - At Kyger Creek'
Dec . 12 - SOUTHWESTERN '
Dec . 14 - FEDERAL HOCKING
Dec . 19 - At Symmes Valley'
Jan . 2 - 0AK HILL •
Jan . 9 - At Souther n•
Jan . 13- NORTH GALLIA '
Jan . 16 - At Hannan Trace'
Jan. 1B- At Meigs
Jan. 23 - KYGER CREEK '
~an . 30 - At Southwestern•
Feb . 1- At Federal Hocking
Fab . 3 - At Oak Hill "
Fab . 6 - SYMMES VLALEY '
' - SVAC games

•

at y

enttne
1 Section. 10 Pages

FOR

HOME PEOPLE"'.
MEMBER FDIC

A GIEAT PlACI
FOI IIEAIFASl
WNCH &amp;. DIHIID .,·
Featuring,

+lt.

·* Great Hemburaers
dout Bttf
Crolss,nt *
Pot•ro,s *
• Salad
* ~•I Ice CrtUI *

;7.$YRACUSE OFFICE
. . 992-63.3·3

·, RACINE OffiCE

949-2210

THE\
CENTRll
tRUST ' .

COMPANY
.

.

•

Rmuctlons reviewed
Concerning other reductions for lq86, Mayor
Hoffman said the federal revenue sharing fund wilt be
reduced to approximately $U,OOJthis year. There will
be no funds availa ble lor street resurfacing In 1986.
However. Mayor Hoffman reports thaI over $250,00J
was spent for street resur1acing over the most five
year s and most of the streets and alleys have been
resurtaced In th at time slot.
In the new budget, the fire equipment fund has been
reduced by $6386. The new 10 percent increase in
wa ter rates will increasewaterfund receipts by aoour
$10,00l In 1986 and a 10 percent ra te increase in
sewage ra tes will bring in $7,000 more into thesewagP
fu nd , the mayor pointed out : The increase In the
water rate should provide adequate funding for

normal operations of the department.
In discussing the sewage department, Mayor
Hoffm an reports rhar improvement s at tllE' sewage
lagoons and in the collec tion system are being
mandated by the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency and must be completed by 1988. Engineerin g
cos ts will be incuTTed for those improvements In 1986
and could result in the need for addition'al fuoos, the,
mayor said.
Hegarding the swimmmg pool fund in 1986, Mayor
Hoffman pointed out that last year $5,00J was
transferred fro m the general fund In the pool fuoo.
This vear the am ount will be only $2100. Various ways
of cu.l ling expenses or raismg revenue are definitely
needed in the area of recrea tion. the mayor pointed
out
!Continued on page 6)

~---------------------------------------------------~

Victim's wife still in jail

GALLIPOLIS - A 71-year-old Galla County
Gilman apparently died from a single shot to the
woman remains lodged in the county jail in lleu of chest from a .J8.calibre revolver, which was
$00,00) bond following her arraignment M onday in confiscated at the scene, Langford said.
Galllpolls Municipal Court on a murder charge.
Gilman's lxldy was transported following the
Grace Gilman, of Rt. 4, Oak Hill, was chargro by shooting to the Franklin County morgue for an
the Gallta County Sheriff' s Department in COIUlectlon autopsy to offiCially determine the ca use of deat h.
with the shooting death Sunday morning of her
His body was found inside the couple's home on
72-yeer-old husband, Jim Gilman. Til!' shooting Cora -Centerpoint Road, just inside the Gallia Cou nty
allegedly took place following a domestic dispute, line after the sheriff's department received a call at
according to Chief Invesllgalor Carl Langford.
aoout 10 a.m.
GaiUpolls attorney · Andrew Cox was appointed
The retired coal miner was pronounced dead at the
during the hearing to represent Gilman aft er she. scene by Gallia County Coroner Donald R
claimed to be indigent.
Warehime.
A preliminary hearing was scheduled for 9: ll a.m .
The sher iff's department was assisted in the
Friday In municpal court.
investigation by The Bu!l'au of Criminal Investiga Mrs. Gilman was arrested by the sheriff's tion, of London, Ohio.
department Sunday n ight .

14,000 to 17,000, $2l93; l7,00J to
:10,000, $24.95; :10.001 to 21,00J,
$29.03; 21,00lto Z7,00l, $33.tll; Zl,OOI
to ll,OOl, $J3.4S; ll,OOI to 35,000,
$43.88; 35,00110 40,00), 50.63; 40,001
to 45,00l, $.17.38; 45,001 to 50,000,
$64.13; 50,001 to OO,(XX), $70 .40; 60,001
to 70,00), S&amp;l:IO; 70,001. to 80,000,
$96; 80,001, to !Ml,OOO, $102.&amp;;; !Ml,OOI
to 100,001, $ll4.95; 100,001 upward,
$1.15 per l.OOJ gallons
The charge for installing a new
water tap shall be $150 or the total
cost of Installation whichever is
larger; all rental consumers sha ll
pay a r'eposit of $25; a delayed
Middleport Council meeting Mon·
payment charge of $10 percent of
day
night voted $1200 to the
the fees due wUl be charged lithe
of a county·wtde
establishment
monthly blll Is not paid within the
recreation
program
to be estabtime prescribed by the rules and
lished
by
the
GaiUa·M
eigs Com ·
regulations of the village or
munlty
Ac
tion
Agency.
Syracuse.
The agency wilt be providing
The ordinance becomes effective
some SZl.IXXl for the development of
after April 1. 1986.
Crow m et with council concern· the program which wlll be housed
on Second Ave., Middleport , in the
ing his appointment as solicitor.
building
formerly occupied by the
Also meeting with council wa s
Meigs
Boxing
Club. The agency wUI
Marvin McKelvey, president of the
need
some
$5:ID
in local funds from
Syracuse Baseball Association recommunities
of
the
county and I he
garding organized play on the fields
$1200 represents the amount asked
this spring and summer.
from Middleport by the agency.
Seeks conlribution
Council approved the report of
Council agreed to the reques t
Mayor
Fred Hoffman showing
iilade by M cKelvey. M cKelvey said
receipts
of
$686j,50 In fines and fees
if council Is in a position to donate
for
the
month
of December and
fu nds to the association, toward
authorized
Mayor
Hoffman to
park maintenance and opera tion,it
would be greatly appreciated by the make application for a $9000 stale
grant for securing litter containers.
association.
McKelvey noted thai regardless Mayor Hoffman wa s also autho·
rt1.ed to sign a contract with the
of donations, the association would
Ohio
Ot&gt;ppartment of Development
maintain lhe fields.
for
continuation
of the taxi service
Council. at this tim e. felt it could
during
l!l!6.
Mayor
Hollman sa id
not financially contribute, however.
that
"ridership"
for
lhe new cab
(Continued on page 6)

Donation made to rec project
service started in late 19&amp;; wa s statr.
higher than expected and tha t the
A t the requesl of Councilman
state had provided an additional Jam es Clatworthy. Mayor Hof·
$2700 on the costs.
fman wilt ask the Middleport
Council approved renewal ct fire Postmaster to move outside mail
contrac ts with Cheshire Township. deposit toxes lo another location
$4600 a year plus $75 a call , and near the post office and he will
Cheshire Village, $2BOO a year and request a mail deposit box near Mill
$75 per ca lL
and Third Sts. M ayor Hoffman will
Mayor Hoffman reported that also contact General Telephone Co.
upgrading of the town's lagoon of Ohio to determine if they will
sewage disposal system is being have a loca tion where residents
req uired by the Ohio E nvironmPn· may pay, phone bi lls. Mayor
ral Protection Agency and the Hoffman said tha t he understands
upgrading mu st be completed by tha I the 'Ca ble televis ion company is
July, 1988. \\ilh the plan. which is securing another local loca tion for
prepared. to be submitted to the 1he pay men1of bills . These bills can
slate t his month . Basically, M iddle· no longer be paid at the Fruth
port m usr provided chlorination ar
Pharmacy, offici als Tl'pcrted .
the lagoon sit e a t a cost of $137,500
Council discussed a sidewalk
and must eliminate dry wea ther problem on Pearl St. and there w ill
overflow at an estimated cost of be further discussion with parties
$10,400. In addition, the improve· involvPd. There was no further
ments will bring about an addi· word on annexation pl'OCI'sses and
tiona! $2l,OOO in increase mainte· Cou ncilman Allen King com ·
nance and operating costs, the mended the strt'('f department for
mayor said . CouncitmE'n were it s work in handling the snow
asked 10 study the general plan problems over the Christmas hoU·
which is heiDI( submitted to the day season.

-_• _
..........,.

P!KETON, Ohio tUPli- St,ate
official s sa y they have been assured
that safety checks will be made
moll' often at a uranium plant
where 109 pounds of lea king
radioactive gas went undetected for
I hree weeks.
" It wasn't the amount of leakage
Ihat bot hered us because the level
didn't ~xcl'f'd Environmental Pfo.
tection Agency guidelines, but it
was the fact it went undetected for
three weeks." Tracy Knippenburg
of the Ohio Disaster Services said
Monday.
"Wf' well' given a briefing at the
plan! today 1Monday1 and assured
thai the frequency of checks of
monitoring equipment will in·
C!l'ase," she said .
The 109 pounds of uranium
hexafluoride. the same gas lhal
killed one worker and injured 32 at a
Kerr·McG€'1' plan 1 in Oklahoma
Ja n. 4, leaked from the Piketon

GOodyear urJnium

r~

I

.'

I

J

&amp; SAVJNGS CO.

.

POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-2136

-

'
I

,l

iT
iii
---···--

"YOUR FINANCIAL
CENTER"

· 97 rt;·2N~

'

srliEt

IMDDLIPOIT
992-6661
'. .

IN$MtLATION LOANS
f

'92~3~07t.''
"
.

,...

~-' '&lt;;

&gt;p; '' . ' •.

BLOWER
' 298 SECOND Sl'.
. POMERp~.
0~.
,.
. STOI£ HOURS:

(•·'

en

RAWLINGS
COATS
.. \ 'i'

'•

•

MOtfl"SAT.
~ I A:M.;\o P.M.
SUNDAY ·
JO A:M.~JO P.M.
''

FUNER-AL

I

HOME
IRUC£ R. FISHER
BILL BLOWER

"S6frlee P/111. ...

AftttltiM to Det111'
992 -5141
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

1

NEW l!ll,lll6 FIRE EQUIPMENT - O!llclllls from three Meigs lowns-. Sulloo,

Letart, and

Lebanon aslielllhled wlllt Racine village olllc!Q 111111 Salurdaf for the dedk:allon ol a new 1,080
gallon FonJ.J!IIIC lire engine purduuoed !rom DO's Mounlalneer As!loclalesof Ravenswood, W.Va.
111e new engine was pun:haoed throup funds from the recenlb' approved one-mW fire prukudon

rnrichmenr

plant from Dec. :10 to Jan. 10.
The plant. located in south·
central Ohio aoout 60 miles south of
Columbus, is owned by the U.S.
Depart.ment of Energy and oper ·
a ted by the Goodyf'ar Atomic Corp .
Fuel rods for nuctpa r !l'actors are
produced a1 1he plan I.
Bot h Goodyear and 1he Energy
Department arc invcstlga ring tllE'
teak and why it went undetected for
three weeks.
The ('(Juipmem t hat leaked the
radioactive gas was part of an
auxilia ry air venting system that
was usf'd only during certain types
of ma i menanC&lt;' at the plant. The
faulty ('(Juipment ha s been taken
ou 1of service until an investigation
is completed, but II hasn' t causf'd
any production cutback at the
plant.

•

'

26 Cents

A Mult;med;o Inc. Newopoper

,.~

"HOME BANK

'

Feb. 7 - At Southwestern•
Feb . 14- SYMMES VALLEY'
"- SVAC games

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov . 21 - At Eastern
Nov . 30- MtLLER '
Dec . 5 - AI Nelsonv ill e-York'
Dec . 9 - VtNTON COUNTY'
Dec . 12 - TRIMBLE'
Dec . 16 - ALEXAND ER'
Jan . 4 - At Warren•
Jan . 6 - WELLSTON '
Jan . 9 - FEDERAL HOCKING'
Jan . 11 - At Miller•
Jan . 16 - NELSONVILLE -YORK '
Jan . 18 - EASTERN
Jan . 20 - At Vinton County'
Jan . 23 - At Trimble'
Jan . 27 - BELPRE'
Jan . 30 - At Ate•ander'
Feb . 3 - WARREN'
Fab . 6 - WELLSTON'
Feb . 10- At Federal Hock;ng
·- rvc game s

108 MULBERRY AVE.

o,J

Dec. 28 - At Southeastern
Jan . 3 - At Symmes Valley•
Jan . 4 - At Wahama
Jan . 1 O- At Eastern•
Jan . 14- Kyger Creek '
Jan . 17 - At oak Hill'
Jan . 24 - NORTH GALLIA'
Jan . 25 - At Ravenswood
Ja . 28 - WAHAMA
Jan . 31 - HANNAN TRACE '

•

H e if{.l

PH. 992-2121

.......

(at Chillicothe)

CHEVYI INt',

Easte rn

Ben H. Ewing·Director

___

BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 26 - EASTERN•
Nov. 29 - GALLIPOLIS
Dec . 3 - At Kyger C"'ek•
Dec . 6 - OAK HILL •
Dec . 10 - At North Gallia"
Dec . 13 - At Hannan Trace•
Dec . 20 - SOUTHWESTERN •
Dec . 30 - Peebles

C)\D. .

BOYS BASKETBAll
Nov. 26 - At Southern'
Dec . 3 - NORTH GALLIA'
Dec . 6 - At Hannan Trace•
Doc. 10- Kygor Creek'

Syracuse council Monday night
approved the first reading lo two
ordinancE'S. one tha t wiU increase
water rates. the other the annual
appropriation of funds totaling
$140,045. In a separate ac tion, Fred
as named village
W. Crow
solicitor.
Breakdown of the annual appropriation ordinance is as follows:
genera l fund, $~.oo;; street con·
struction, $16,500; highway, $3.000;
park, $700; revenuesharing,$4,500;
fill', $9 .~;
cuTTen! expense,
$5,600; wa ter, $42,340; pool, $26.000;
guaranty meier. $500; pool repair,
$3,200; ' cem etery, $';00; total,
$140,045.
The ordinance fixing and regula! ·
lng the price that may charged by
lhe village of Syracuse for water
reads: residents w ithin the village
corporation. whose head of the
household Is under the age of 65,
shall pay a Ire of $8.75; residents
loca ted within the village, whose
head of the household Is over the
age of 65, shall pay a fee of $8.
Residents not located within the
\OIIage shall pay a fee of $9.25.
CommerCial users, any lndividu ·
als operating a business lor profit
within the area served by Syracuse
Board of Public Affairs, sha ll pay a
fee of $17.50 per month.
Vacation rates
Consumer vacation rates shall be
one-half of lhe !18.75 rate. Schools
within the area supplied with water
by the Syracuse Board of Pulblc
Affairs shall be meter!'() and be
billed upon the basis of the follo wing
rat e schedule: 0 to l4,00l, $17.50;

rn

~DS .Ea.~ ! ern

'

19&amp;; meaning that the village will have $40,722 less
wilh which to carry out general fund operations of I he
town, the mayor said.
In 1986 expenditures for police serv ices will total
SJ40,450, a reduction of $481B fo r the year. Mayor
Hoffman said approximately $6,000 has been cut !rom
police wages in l!l&amp;l and thl~ reduction will result In a
reduction of hours in the police department beginning
immediately. Cost of supplies and materials have
been reduced by aoout $3500 for 1986.
Mayor Hoffman pointed out that in 19&amp;;, $m,5Zl was
spent for street department operations while in 1986
only $66,6:10 will be available. In 19&amp;'i, $:10,000 were
transferred from the general fuoo into the street
maintenance fund butt his cannot be done this year,
the mayor reported.

Council hikes
water rates
'

WITH US"

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"

,_

Sou l hem

Middleporl Village Council Monday night adopted
Its 19&amp;l appropriarions totaling $1, 166,700 - up only
aoout $66,00) over 19&amp;; despite two large sums which
actually prov ide no help in the operation of the v illage.
The 1985 appropriations totaled $1,100,387.1ncluded
In the l!la) appropriations are $104,000 which is
forthcoming in a grant to assist in the m nsrrucllon of
lhe new Dairy Queen Brazier Restaurant and$144,00J
which wilt borrowed to pay for The new fire truck to be
delivered in early summer .
Commenting on the actual cutback in appropria·
tlons, Mayor Fred Hoffman said the general fund
beginning balance this year Is $14,565, a total ct $ZJ,219
less I han was carried over In 1985. Est imatoo receipts
lor the general lund t his year are $17,5031ess than in

BY KATIE CROW
Sentinel coJTeSpondenl

s~

BOYS SCHEDLL E

I

and

I

1::.!

'

!

TAKE CARE OF 1
All YOUR ·j
I-NSURANCE 1
NEEDS

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MemoriOf';r

Jan. 14-lyger Creek .................. Away
Jan. 17 -Oak HiH ......................... Away

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Veterans ·~

BOYS BASIIETBAU

SeePage7

Middleport council okays 1986 appropnattons

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Property transfers

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SOUTHERN
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pomeroy- MI'd dleport, Ohio, Tuesday. January 14, 1986

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel staff writer

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Middleport, OH; ,

Jan. 20-Vinton County .............. Away

(rJcaiiVIRSij

Vo1.36 , No.188
Copyrighted 1986

716 N. 2nd St.

Jan. 11-Eastem ........................... Hontt

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Open Till 9:00
Ev•ry Nigh~ ' ·
Sunday
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992-~49
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Photo, story on Page 5

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Story oo Page 3

BOYS BASIIETBAU

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Girl scout ·cookies

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Herd .loses

MEIGS

Mon. thru Fri.
7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Sotunlay
7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

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Week's
Games

HOURS:

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. Iaten 011 vflla&amp;e lax, phone services

This
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levy approved In those townshlj,s. Shown lefllo right are Sutton Twp, trustees, Oils Knopp, Horace
VanMeter, Delbert Smith and Dennie HilL oulgoklg trustee; Letart Twp. tru!ilees, Herb &amp;u!h,
Harey Hill and Don Richard Hill; and LebanonTwp.lru!ltees, Elslln Dalley,ShlrleyJohnson, clerk,
and Eugene Long.

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