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Page 10-the Daily Sentinel

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Monday, Matc;h 25, 19U

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Libraries .get

$200 check
. TbeLadlesAuxiJiaryoiAerie2171 .
in Pomeroy Friday presented am&gt;
gUt to the Meigs County Libraries as
This Is the Uth year o1 the grant
program, national in SCQPe. Llbrar·
les receiving-these grants are asked
to purchase large print bQOks for the
and visually

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ary

grants from the Order's Memorial
Foundation In appreciation of their
support of the senior cltlzenorlented
Golden Eagle Fund which the
foundation administers. Eagles
raise money for this project which
makes available grants tp organlza-

.... -"- vau~.11lo...2_43 - ---~­

- g.,,,..,

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7985

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ent1ne·

wan
-,;;m

$2,865.~.

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Area deaths

Each ticket, which Usted all six
numbers drawn Saturday night In
the lotto game, wlll pay $23,87'5.40
-annually for :a&gt;
said Ohio

Our Good
QualifY

berg.
amount Is subject to
federal taxes of :a&gt; percent.
The winning numbers were 3, 8,
11, 22, 35 and 37.

&lt;

grandchildren.
.
Besides his lather, he was
preceded in death by his wife, Ruth,
and a brother, Earl.
Mr. Sansbury was a member of
Feeney-Bennett Post l28Amerlcan
LegionandtheVeteransofForelgn
W;us. .
·- _
.
, Friends maycaU alfdayTuesctay~
at the Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral Home In Middleport with the
family to be present from 7 to9p.m.
Muttary grav~l{le r,Ues \_'lUI t)e tleld
at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Gravel
HUI Cemetery In Cheshire with the
chapla~ of Fe&lt;;&gt;"!!Y· Bennett -Post
offlclatmg.
.

•

99 Gallon

Economic white interior finish · ·
• Soap &amp; water clean-up. List price $8.99

•

had four or five of the 'wtnning
numbers and the winning
payments
' The taiest semiweekly game
reported sales of $4,340,891.
The estimated jackpQt for Wed- ·
nesday'sgamels$1mlllion. ·
_ ___
.. ___ _ .. . . . , __

· save on our best

~ml~1~:1:I~:, ~~~~~!~~ ~~~e~ 3!! =~

-weaffier forecasf .·Tonight, clear. Low near :n
1\Iesday, sunny and warmer. High
15
1
f,G..ffi,..,_.ctct&amp;fulghiL-rt 'Utd11Tu
·€Cesda
·aplt&amp;tiou
near ze~;orecut Y:
Wednesday through Friday:
Cluutce ol showers Wednesday.

department.
'Ibe rnodltled contract allows for a 60 cent an hour wage lricrease for the
next year. and another 60 cent' an hour raise for the second year of the
contraCt. 'Ibe original union contract proposal for the highway department ·
called for a 60 cents an hour Increase each year over a three-yl'ar contract
period.
.
At last Wednesday's regular commissioner's meeting,_the connmlssion·
ers voted 2,1 not to ratify the original proposal. Unanimous ratlflcatlohOfthe
contract by the conimlssioners Is mandated under collective bargaining '
·
laws.
At that time, commissioners David Koblentz and Manning Roush, who
Voted "no" against commissioner Rich Jones' to.le vote ot;'yes,l' said the
"excessive wage Increase" led them to cast ·negative votes. However, It
would appear that by voting yes on the two-year union contract, the.
commissioners havE' merely delayed the lnevltabllllty rt a third year raise.
'Ibe highway department employees are still·gelling the amount of hourly
Increase they wanted, just over a shorter period oUime, ·
'1)le m~ contract .also carries minor changes In clauses dealing with .
dlsctpllne procedures and maintenance of unlori memli!rshlp.
Stated Barry, Bolin, staff representattvefor the Aml'rlean Federation o1
Suite, COUJity and Municipal employees, "A1tl'r renegotiating )hi' contract
that w.S In . debate between ISsues which were a concern to 11\E'
commlss!Qners, the lTll'lllbershlp of the local ratified by a vMe ol28-2 to
-. · ItA~ OON!Ulre ..,.. .;.\ lelp .Coruilj(. Coumtl '~- vl!l.ell .. ilonlrad. Jmoob&lt;edckl·y·~~ ~ -~~l!!!~J!ft. to .liJ!It
.
accept cliangescln-the contract. The c~anges.makethet.Jtree,yearcolitract a
lllliUIIn'louly tn an emerK'lfiCY M~ allemooli ffieetlng to rattly ·a ' . around the table, Cornrnl8liloner RlchJoaes; Dave Spencer, wldi~tAI"'U' '"'""
two-year contract. Money remalried the same In _each year. Other cjlanges
two-year union contract lor the Melp Coullty Highway Uepartment,
camera, with the hlpway department; and Conunlllllloner Manlilc
·were just minot ones which were overlooked by the county engineer and
!hereby av.!rttng a pOtentlonal highway department strike. 'llle
Roush and David Koblentz. Standing Is Phil Roberts, Melp County
myself. Tile changes_are unusual because the union usually will settle for a
commls81oners had last week voted ".not" IAl ratify a three-year union
engineer;
shorter contract and l081lagement US\Jally wants a longer onE&gt;."

Wall or Ceiling Paint

·--·- Ai'tna M~Mohle~~- ,_'"-·-" Nett"'~ ana ~nine='sTeil"-grear-d 1~;;;;~~=~rn:Y:~
Funeral ~tees for Anna M.
Mohler, 82, who died Saturday at
Holzer Medical Center, will be held
:at 2 p.m. TueSday at the Christian
: Union Church at Hobson.
· A homemaker, Mrs. Mohler was
......= .---bom....Oct -- 30,...l902,..J n .Kanawha:...
County, W. Va., a daughter of the
late Wllllam M. and Mary Ellis
Reeves. Besides her parents, she
was preceded In death by her
husb~"1d, hfaac-!-llcl'-Jm- !n 1953,· a
son, Dale Mohler, nine brothers, a
sister and four infants.
She was a lifetime membef of the
Christian Unlqn Church at Hobson

• Economical washable white finish
• Easy soap &amp; water clean-up
• List price $12.99
.

LatexorFlat
Wall
Ceiling~
Decoration

199
gallon

PRICES .GOOD JHRU MARCH 30TH

-- --~~~1';!~~-~~~Po~~~:·-- .!!ay~2-~~_w_.:.I~!!t!!'.t ··---r~£'ac~~&amp;~T:! .

.. ·- -

~~~~~ ~,=~.!!.,~

[,.!!!!!!,!!!!J!.-!!111'!' ...

SU.P~.LY~~-~-. . .:.

.CONVENIENT OFF ,
SECOIND
!A'glqn,_ In Mlddloyort . .
Raymond W. (Buck) Larkins, 54,
60S Wednesila,y and 1n the .50s
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THMTREET
PARKING
and the auxlllary of the Disabled Tuppers Plains, died Sunday evenniursday wid Friday. Low&amp; In the ·
American Veterans.
lng at the Camden-Clark Memo~!
mtd-308 to low 408.
Surviving are two daughters, Hospital in Parkersburg following a r-----,.-------1":-.:::------'-----::----------~...:...-----------.:_-'--'-­
Mrs. Carl (Wand a) Findling, Reeds- brlef1llness.
vllle, and Mrs. Earl (Patricia) . Mr. Larkins was bOrn at Long
Mossman, Middleport; four sans; Bottom,asonofthelateFredE.and
Wntard Mohler, Piney Flats, Tenn.; Ruth Larkins. He was owner of the
John Mohler and James Mohler, Tuppers PlalnsAtitoSalesandwasa
both of Route 1, Middleport, retired master sergeant of the U.S.
Kenneth Mohler, Middleport; four Army having served In the Korean
daughters-In-law, Marie Mohler, Conflict and the Vietnam War. He
Piney Flats, Tenn.; Wanda Mohler was awarded the PurplE' Heart.
and Linda Mohler, Middleport, and
He had served as manager of the
Della Mohler, Shade, 12 grandchild· officers' club at Aberdeen, Md., for
ren and four great-grandchildren.
two years after compll'tlng 27 years
Officiating at 1\Iesday's services of active military duty. He was a
will be the Rev. Amos Tillis. Burial member of the American Legion, a
will be In Gravel Hut Cemetery at life member of the Veterans of
~erlcan

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By BOB HOEFLICH
i
Sentlllel stall Writer
Middleport Village Council mreting In regular
session Monday night took Initial steps to Increase
water and sewer tap fees In the town.
·
'The action was taken upon the recommE'IKI!itlon of
the Middleport Board of'Publlc Affairs. ,
1be ordinance provides lor an lncre8SI' of $100 In
sev!'ral of the water tap and sewer tap fees. A three
quarWr Inch wa tl'r meter tap will C!&gt;St $225, now $125;

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ji~~~~~~~~1=:~~cf~'~c~ta~p~~~~~~r~~
Roy S. Sansbury
Roy Sidney Sansbury, 65, Middleport, died Sunday aft.ernoon at the
Vl'terans Hospital in Chillicothe.
Mr. Sansbury was born Oct. 27,
1919, a son of JessiE' Denny
Sansbury, local area resident who
survives, and the late Charles
Sansbury.
Mr. Sansbury was a crane
operator for the New York Central
Railroad.
1
Surviving iJt addition to his
mother are a stepson and his wife,
Dr. Kl'lth and Barbara Riggs,
Pomeroy; a stepdaughter and her
husband, Lorraine and .Jack Nl'ff,
Ravenswood, W. Va.; stepgrandchildren, Andrea and Nick
Riggs, Pomeroy; Duane Johnson,
Mason, W. Va.; Kim · A. Jones,
Darwin, and Larry, Roy and Kelly

County Fish and Game Assn., a of
the Fraternal Order of Eagles at
Aberdeen, Md., and was a member
of Ralph's Gun Club, LongBottom.
SunQ.vlng are his wife, Nancy
Arnold Larkins; a son, Eric Ray
Larkins, at home; two daughters,
Catherine Kay Yoli, Columbus, and
CharlenE' Yonker Samsel, New
Haven, W.Va.; a brother, Howard
L. i:oarklns.- Portland; . two sisters,
Vera Weber, Tuppers Plains, and
Donna Bogard, Long Bottom; two
grandchildren, Neil and Courtney
and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents he was
precedecllndeathbyason,Denills,a
sister and a brother.
Services wUI be held at 11 a.m.
Thursday at the White-Ethridge
Funeral Home, 125 Lee St., Belpre
and burial will be in Meigs Memory
Gardens. Military rites wUI be
conduct.ed. Friends may call at the
tuneral home from 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday and from 3 to 9 p.m. on
Wednesday.

Emergency ~quads kept·busy
· Eleven calls were answered by €enter.
units of thEi Meigs County Emer- · Sunday calls Included 8: 57 a.m.,
gency Medical Services over the Tuppers Plains to ReedsvUie for
. weekend.,
Carl Buckley, to St.Joseph Hospital
a.m., Syracuse to College Road for
Walter Harris, to Veterans MemorIal Hospital; 4:21a.m., Middleport,
to Super-America for Dina Hart, to
Veterans Memorial; 3: 50 p.m., the
Columbia Township Fire Department extinguished a brush fire on
Route 689; Rutland at 5:33p.m., to
Main St. for Evelyn Rife, to
Veterans Memorial, and at 10:56
p.m., Pomeroy to 109 New St. lor
Teresa Garnes to Holzer Medical

port to village hall for Charles
Canter, treated but not transported;
10: 47 a.m., Middleport toStorys Run
Road for !=ecil Hall, to Holzer
Medical Center; Pomeroy at 11: 47
a.m., toE.MalnSt.,forJohnConley,
to Veterans Meniorlal; Rutland at
6:22p.m. to Zion RoadforCariStUI
to Vl't.erans Ml'lllorlal, and Pomeroy at 9:45p.m. to the Pizza Hut for
Stephanie Stanley, to Veterans
MemoriaL

the present $700 char~..and .six Inch taps remain at
the present rate of $9:Xl. A four Inch sew'er tap
connection will cost $225, now $125; a six !nc}j
connection, $500, now $400, and an eight inch
co~ttOn wUI remain at the present charge of $600.

BASKETBALL TEAMS

ON A FINE-SEASON.

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - The Local,' Crawford County, $100,100;
state Controlling Board has ap- and Vari Buren Local, Hancock
proved loans to nine local school County, ~.!IXJ.
.
boards which have haci. deficits
Under the state's sc!lool loan
certllled by state Autlltor Thomas progr;un, districts may borrow
'Ferguson.
against their tuture slate subsidies
The loans on Monday were the tohelpdealwithcash-fiowproblems
first In several months, and they which occur during periods bf low
took by surprise at least one local revenue c;ollectlons.
controlling board ml'lllberwhosald
However, Senate Finance Chairhe thought lOcal schciot-tundlng man Stanley J, Aronoff, Rproblerns basically had been solved Cincinnati, said the latest wave of
as a res)!lt of the 1983 increase In the requests - the first In ~ral
state Income tax.
months- prompted him toquestlon
The largest loan, $1.57 mUllan, whether thE' state school formula Is
went loCanton Local School District doing an adequate job.
lnStarkCountyafteradeflclt In that,.
"I think this Is lrpnlc only a few
amount was certified by Ferguson.
months after the state Income tax
He certified and the board was Increased and wpwere told that
approVed these ot.her loans:
·
· these districts no longer would have
Manchester (..ocal, Summit tocometotheloanfund," ·hesald.
Cbunty;""$.1M;m1;Jiimes Gartli!la
·Aronoff- Siild--that - when- hlsLocal, Portage County, $491,200;
CQI'IImlttee ~a r~lew of Gov.
Buckey!' Valley Local, Delaware Rldlard &lt;;elestl' s two-year budget
County, $339,!XXJ; Jonathan Alder pqJOSal, nowpendlnglntheHouse,
"we will take a look at the formula,
Local, Madison County, $338,700;
Bath Local, Allen County, $238,001;
not only the amount the Legislature
Farmington Local, Trumbull
puts In It butalsothewaythemoney
County, $141,m, Colonel Crawford
Is distributed."

Tri-Valley Conference Champions

MEIG.S GIRLS·
Tri-Valley Conference Champions

EASTERN BOYS
Class A Sedioncil Champions

p

EASTERN GIRLS
Southern Valley Athletic .Cold.• Champ.ions

.

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Southern Valley Athletic Conf. Champion$

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1 1985 permanent appropriations ordinance addlilg ·
development
block grant, which, If allowed, could go
Acqul8ltloa pending
$70,!XXJ
to
the
HUD
appropriations,
changing
the
to
a
maximum
of $6XJ,!XXJ for l9lfi and $400,!XXJ for
At last night's mretlng, there were also Indications
origlnalflgurefrom$91,500to$161,500.Athlrdreadlng
1~.
The
money
would be used for· musing
the village may be acquiring the old Chesapeake and ·
and
approval
was
also
given
to
an
ordinance
rehabilitation
and
other
projects such as streets,
Ohio Railroad Depot on -Front St. ; along with three
pi'(JCedures
to
be
followed
In
handling
water
and
sewage
related
to the rehabllilation.
providing
lots owned by the railroad company. Mayor Fred
burned out buUdlngs resulting from fires In
Deadline for IUing the application Is March 29.
Hoffman reported 'l'allroad officials have Indicated
A meeting o1 representatives from area communiaccordance with the Ohio ReviSed Code.
they will sell the depot and three lots to the town for
ties to review the television cable service with
. A joint meeting was set wi\ll Pomeroy VIUage
$40,00&gt;. Into tJie sale agpeement, a $6400 mowing but
CouncU for Apr1111n Pomeroy when the two groups
representatives of Consolidated Communications,
which the vUiagl' held agalJist the railroad company
will hear aspecJ$ oj_a program to es_tabllsh taxi ___ lnc.,whlchservesthetownswasannouncedfor7p.m .
_ wlll be absorbed. The village]!;Is lleen In the process .
In
~~~~~~~
haveconducted
as
· sul"ieys
recently by Bill Snouffer, Pomeroy, who plans to start
meeting.
act to purchase the buDding and lots for the proposed
the
service.
A
representativE'
from
the
department
of
Council disCussed a crackdown on dogs running
$40,!XXJ figure. A contract for the purchase Is expected
transportation
wUI
be
present
for
the
joint
session.
loose
In !he community this spring and the installation
to be received before the nl'xt meeting.
Hoffrhan
was
authorized
by
council
to
of
strret
lights at the new housing area on Hartinger
Mayor
Final reading &amp;Jven
proceed with an application for a community
Parkway.
Council llave a final readlnJS and approval to the

Controlling ~oard
oks school loans

MEIGS BOYS

RN-Io-Y-

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Council takes firSt step for tap -fee- mcrease

TO· THE
FOLLOWING AREA

lie In stateatthechurch for one hour
preceding thl' service.

25 Cento

lrtteriO! L.afeX

O..EVELAND tAP)- Holders of
six winning tickets wDI share the
latest "Ohio Lotto" jackpot of
GIFr PRD'IEN'mD - Debt Hensley, left, president of the lAdles
AuxtJiary, Aerie 217l, .Frlday afterlioon presented a $200 gift to Ruth
Powers, Ubrarian, lor the Meigs County Ubrarle5.

·--""'·- 1 Section, 10 P -

Pomeroy.... Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday; March 26. 1986

the aged.

Six share jackpot

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o:c~-"·"''"'==A;~-""''"rl-~~)·.~,~..e

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.,,.

Conservator sues
Home .State brass

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ONCJNNATI (AP) - A $432
z:nllllon lawsuit flied against 12
Home State Savings Bank oflldals
shows that Ohio -Is serious abOut
seeking compensation for customers of the savings and loan !Mt
closed March 9, stall' officials say.
"Thls is not a cute little lawsuit
that atlacks some corJioratlon
where there Is no money," Robert
McAlister, superlntl'ndent of the
state Division of Savings and Loans,
S.Jd Monday. "This Is the hardest
and strongest possible legal attack

lngHomeSiateconservatorArloM.
Smith, Home State and Home State
of Dayton fUed the suit Monday In
Hamilton County Corrunon Pleas
Cour1,
·
Smith has been managing Home
State since Its closure and overseetng efforts to sell lt. Depositors in the
33-olflce, Cincinnati-based bank
with $1.4 billion In assets have been
cut off from their money.
"From the ~nnlng, I have told
the conservator to pull no punches

and pursue every legal av!'llue of
redress to protect the depositors of

that cab be mounted against those
Individuals woo It has been all!'ged Home Stall'," Gov. Richard Celeste
areresponslbleforthls." ·
saldMonday.
Defendants Include Marvin
'The lawsuit alleges that Warner
Warner, U.S. ambassador to Swlt- and former Home State officers
zerlanddurlngtheadmlnlstrattonof . Ignored warnings that the thrift was
President Jimmy Carter. 'llle__!(_~~ ~atedly ~rrowlng,
':""';'+-1- -clncinnatl ous!Jiessman stepped through reverse repurchase agreedowntwoweeksagoaschalrmanof ments from · ESM Gov
i
the ~hlo BuDding Authority as the Securities Inc. of Fort ~..a:X."'::'~
state s savings and loan crisis Fla. ESM was closed by federal
snowballed.
court order March 4 after auditorS
State-l'!'tainedlawyers represent· discovered a $.UimUIIon deficit.

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Tuudly, MM:h

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Commentary.

l

James ]. Kilpatrick '
.
N
Fund the MX? • 0----~--~------4

el
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
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WASHINGTON - The House of
Representatives will be voting thls
week on whether production of the
• nuclear mls·
MX Intercontinental
stle should be continued. Last
Tuesday the Senat'? said yes. The
House should say no.
reasons alone, In my view,
add up to a compelling case against
continued Investment in the MX.
The first has to do .wtth retaliatory
capacity, · the :;econd wtth •. the
problems pt the MX itself. the third
with alternatives. to pouring more
money into nuclear arms. A fourth
argument, more persuasive than
all the rest, Is that the llkellhoodof a
nuclear war has become so 'remot~
that Its posslbUUy no longer ·sbould
dominate defense planning.
The threshold question that has to
be met In any discussion of new
strategic weapons may be sjmply
put: Does the l}nlted. States now
possess a sufficient retallatory .

Three

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PA.T WJU'I"EHEAD
Assistant Publhher/Conlroller

.

BOB HOEFLICH •
General Manager
•

A MEMBJ;:R of Th{'· AssoclatN Press, Inland Dally Press Associa tion and the A!fierlcan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION arE&gt; wt&gt;lcome. Tht'y should b£' Jess than 30fl words
long. All letters are subjPctl o f'dl11n~ and mu st bE&gt; s igned with namE', address and
tCIPph onf' numbPr . No unsigned )(tflt&gt;rs will be published. Lettl?'rs should be In
good tast(', addr('ss!n~ lssuf"S, not I)E'rsona lill£'5 .

f~==~Jl~j!gi!ILI:eluclant to

criticize South
Africans, Israelis

capacity to deter tbe Soviet Union
from launching an attack? If the
answer Is no: then perhaps a case
could .reluctantly be made !or
continuing the hemorrhage of
public funds lri this area . I! the
answer Is yes, as many informed
observers believe, then the MX
cannot be justified.
The truth Is that the United States
now possesses a nuclear arsenal
sufficient to destmy the Soviet
Union altogether - Its clUes, Its
reflnertes, Its transportation system, its power generating plants, Its
military bases. Our Minuteman
mlsstles may be vulnerable and our
.bombers may be aging, but given
the will to retaliate - and few
would doubt that Ronald Reagl!ll
possesses that will - the United
States still retains the capablllty of
wreaking. awesom'? ..destruction
upon an enemy. · At some point,
enough Is enough. W~ have reached

that point.
What ts to be done with the 21 MX
mlsslles voted by the Senate? The
answer appears to be that we wUI
"superharden" theexlst.lngMinutemen silos and house the new
supermtsslles there. But expert
opinion Is sorely divided on the .
feasibility of this app~oach. Unlike
a submarine or ~ bomber, a silo
stays put; Its location can pe

um.

pantsandthelrparentsw~treated

the MX Is essentlaltosurvlval, then .
the MX has to be produced. It
becomes non-negotiable. Talk o( a
"chip" dissipates the sertousness of
our supposed detennlnatlon.
No one knows- no one can know

to a flnemealpreparedbyCtrcle'sof
Gallipolis. A welcome was given by
board member and booster pres!·
dent SusteGrueser.
First on ttl(, agenda was the

testimony est imates the prtce of
each rnlssUe at $74 million; the
superhardenlng could range trom
$100 million to $1!0 million per silo.
Wf! are talking of , squandering
billions and billions of dollarS In tax
funds, merely to achieve some
ternporary enhancement ot a .des·
tructlve capacity that Is 11l()re than
sufficient already.
.
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the Southern
for
hard work and splrtt
throughout the season.
Freshman Coach Btu Hensler .
presented awards to his freshmen
club, speaking -highly of the fUture
Tornadoes. With only six players on
theteam,theSHSfreshmenfinlshed'
a respectab1e season.
'Reserve Coach Howle Caldwell

Southeastern and

these games was the '"turning- things to say about these players .
point " of the season.
TheydldnotputasrnanyballsonUle
Of eight losses, six were by lour banners as some teams, but I think
points or less. Southern dropped justasmuchoftheJ1'1asotherteams.
those 8 games by a total of Just 45 'I)Iey hav~.done just asmu~h for the
puhl\5. -··- _. =
. "'- -=-~ -1:!!'-W'!-"!'b --=···•· ~..== •.---"''""'"='";1--'Eiii!i~
Caldwell cited this season as "one
Seniors Darin Roush, ·Kevin
of tlie most enJoyable seasons" l)e Tealord, and Steve Tealord were
·has had because this Is the most . bonored as senior members of the
development he has seen in a squad club along with. manager Alan
during a season.
. .
Crtsp.
Next veteran Varsity Coach Carl
Special recognition and awards

I

~,._t.e-a.--:::.t=Wl"..!c!:' !!...~ -!he.};Pa~J!.... o'
~ •.!=!''iiJ!I"C!.-r:&gt;
- .r- -· ~
=• -- ~
.. A _t. ••.
hA
with a 12-8 overall record.
a learntng experience. We faced a

=:~~:~i~:::~~~=

whatever It may be worth, Is that no
nucl~ar war will ever we waged.
·This· conviction rests upon. the
Observation tilat Soviei~ teaders,
whatever thelt flaws, are not
raving lunatics. They love their
homeland as we love ours, and In a
showdown
d e~;truct
· 1pn. they
Th. e.. Will
tlme not
.t!! $trisk
1/R_thlits&amp; ·. ·
nuclear arms race Is now. The ·
·. House should .say so .this week.

Maritime Administration to allow to a seagoing Incineration program Indicated that ocean Incineration
full -scale ocean waste burning. An worked out between the two agen- regulations were needed, and deS·
E;PA spokesman dented this , and cies.
plte EPA commitment, the agency
Maritime 'hasn't tried to take any
Why was Martttme so worked up has failed to develop even an
credit for the EPA decision. But the about EPA's delaying tactics?
persistent crttlcal bombardment
One answer could be concern
start
over the years Is obvious ln the over a financial gamble the agency from scratch ·acroused particular
Internal memos and reports.
took In 1982, when It guar-dnteed a
"To be perfectly candid, this $55 million construction loan for AT Ire at Maritime. "The ·proposed
EPA strategy outlines in ,effect a
situation at EPA regarding tnclnerSea Inc., one of the companies in· multimillion-dollar research effort
atlon at sea has reached egregious
terested In burning wastes at sea.
proportions," one expert wrote The company Is buDding two lncl· that will take hundreds of scientists
recently after reviewing EPA's · nerator ships, and MarttJme could
draft regulations.
or the sufficient
more thananswers
anothercan be gati!Jened
stuck with at
"The subject draft regulatory
document ... unfortunately does not
.
represent a coherent and equitable
Marttlme officials are sensitive to
EPA ... strategy Is unworkable and
regulatory scheme," complained . suggestions th;lt they're merely
cannot be Implemented."
another memo wrtter, who claimed
worried about their loan guarantee.
Stl.ll another Mart time official
that Maritime's view that EPA had
In fact, when an official or the
EPA of lgortng ocean
accused
been dragging Its feet was shared
Transportation Department - of
Incineration
tests, wrtting, "It Is
by EPA's own scientists.
which Maritime Is a part EPA
apparently does not
noted
that
Maritime officials have pointed
Insinuated just such a possibility. a
believe
their
own
data/ '
out that International guldeltnes for
Maritime olflclal retorted In a
One Maritime scientist com. .
..
ocean waste destruetlon have been sizzling memo: "It is most unfortu- . , plained that EPA's policy of
on the books for years, and that Eu · nate that someone with your super-caution could be dlscouragropean coun.trtes have been burn- position and respol)SibUitles Is so lng enterprtslng companies from
Ing wastes at sea for almost 10 Inadequately Informed."
·d e veloping advanced ·disposal
A Maritime report complained:
years. Maritime also accused EPA
techniques.
of reneging on a 1981 commitment "Almost eight years since EPA

ln~~~·~a:~~~~':eo::s·;~

out slowly, losing several games
early In the season.
By tbemlddleoftbeseasonlcou!Jl
see Improvement almost every
practice", said the veteran mentor
as c'"' continued to ,speak of tw.o
comeback efforts against Ross·

never try to eat you again."
"Sorry, built's too late," and with
that Red Riding Hood cut open the·
wolf's stomacb and out popped her
grand(llother, who had a grin on her
face .
The grandmother
said, "It
'•

worked. I knewwecouldgetcontrol
once he got fat and cocky."
RedRldlngHoodsaid, "Wberedo
you get that ·we' stul'r, Grandma?
I'm spinning you off to Standard 011
of New Jersey."

Berry's.World
,,

rnn:Ru- ADERS • Mlndv Hm. """"

v., MMr&lt;.JIII ,.•..,.r,... "'""··"dA".;'

"
- ....__
NATURAL LIGHTING - Steve Wlligls, fonnerly
effectively banning night games at Wrigley Field.
of Chicago and now a resident of San Dlep, looks · -Wingls said he had come out lathe ballpark, ho!ne of
skyward Monday In reocllon to a circuli judge's
the Chicago Cubs, to get tickets for a scheduled
f
~-•.....
.......,
Jaws
Padres-Cubs
series (AP La!lerpholo)
upboldln~ the constttutlonallly o . . - _.., _..,
·
·
·
:

·

.an
'
other
battle
for
.
~l'ii\Gf4;~·,Al~~~lsp,D~!~=~""~"'·~
s=-~.os.e ~ · - ~ --'"'"""'"~~. . -~...._ . ,. ,. ,. , . ,." "-,. -t".,~r..,-,.-= ~· ~~:=..""""'..,..-=~-••"-••=
w • I F• Jd
~y£1~0~:::
night games at . rig.ey Ie

.....lrn'iCc&gt;"'"'Woilr,..na)'rtm.!lflll~h m

'

EHC'~ 11 . 10

--&amp;ans
out
aof
~Pi;l£-l • ·
· ... • ~., .,.,..

By SCOITWOLFE
ALBANY_ Behind nine costly
errors, including five major rntstakes in the six innifl·g, tile East&amp;~
Eagles dropped an 11-10 non-league battle to the Alexander
Spartans here Monday evening In

~~ ·

4

Brooks popped out.
' Wilson sbtgled, then scored on a
stowrollerbtfrontoftheplateasJoe
YV••!dgerd react.ed Oii "'t he e,rvr.
Junior Royce Bissell came on in
relief as Chapman squared around
to bunt on the squeeze.Bissell

Alba
mound, then threw
ny . 10-,5 gotngJnt!l
·
bo~asthe"·"-umplrecalled"no
TraUtng
!be slxt·h·· backed
.. ~ off the
""""
· tr~me Alexander took advrustageor
pitch' ;: "iioweve"f:"lhe tHrow horiie
five Eastern errors and singles by was fouled o!!. After a discussion
.B 1 Wllso With som6 time later a balk was called
ley
Tom F ar and ran
n.
~
one
Roger Powell
on . and
wastoawarded
home
whatout,seemed
to be reached
a routine
with Woodgerd
what proved
be the winning
groonder to second Jim Allman run.
walked, Dave Law~n reached on
Eastern had taken a 3-0 lead in
error Tom Farley singled and
the first frame on a double by Jim
and
ced'
an error before Weber, a walk to Ro
. yce Bissell, a
on
· _
a van

E 1·
I •
ag· ettes c a••n
ea8,.y 26-4 VI··ctory
- .' ,·.

. .

.

ALBANY _ The Eastern Ea·

1

Tanya

a 26-4 trtumph over

note,

.•

action .
SentorhurlerKrtstiGaddtsh~~rled
the win in going the distance,
allowing four runs, thirteen walks,
andflvestrlkeouts.
·
K. Beatty suffered the loss for
Alexander, allowing eleven walks
and two strike outs. Beatty gave up
16 hltsalongtheway. _ ·
After a scoreless first inning
Eastern loading Its offensive can·
nons as 11 exploded four 13 runs. In
that frame Amy Young singled
twice, Arlene Ritchie singled and
doubled , Lee Ann Gaul singled,

Savoy

singled.

....

•

CHICAGO (AP) _The Chicago
Cubs have been thrown out In th~lr
Clrst at-bat for light s at Wrtgley
Field, but hold on baseball fans, the
ca ills betngappealed.
AttorneysforTrlbuneCo.,owners
of the National League team, hjlve
fllednotlcethattheywutappeata
judge's rull,!1g MoruJ..aX th_f!l.'JPhel_!:l_ .

"""'"""""G""""·

]

~

_

u.

,.,.,......,..,..,,., c"~'"""""·John ""

percent ~U the time; In practice and &lt;:nbrld&lt;·.Jrun""'"'"'·J&lt;'IfHoi"·""'M 1111"
"
ron.K1•nny Brown.Kenny }urlt~·. l-'t• H'
throughout the summer.
. Roo•h.Sh"'""' rumo.;mdDavldAmoo•••&gt;·
Wolfe emphasized his hopes that
Vuc&gt;Uv "''""""II . ()'"'" . , .... h.K&lt;''1"
T{'u lo.rd: Sfi"'V Tra!ord.Todd Atlam!&lt;o,J&lt;':ot
ill
the team would carry a pos ve
"'"""G"""·•·.M,.·•
attltudelntonextseasonandthatthe ·'•~•II.Sro11Wid&lt;I""'·"'"""''G 11 "''"'· ""d
M•"""i-1'
·,
players to towork thl s summer ·
''""·Joc.""'"'m''"''"•J•y"N'

d~!a~de~be~l~o~re~;;;~~=-·jg~le;t~tes~~~ithe~se§aso~n on~a~hl~gh~~Spence~~~r

Ar_tR_
· u_ch_wa_ld

-----._ - - - - -

rebounding award; Darin Roush
claimed the Best Defensive Award . .
and Kevin Teaford took the Most
Improved award; The Jonathan
Rees 110 percent award was
pfi!sented to Kelley Grueser.
Awards areas follows:

:~E~a:~;~~;:;: t~~=~:;:E~

could have acquired 840 M-1 attack
h
helicopters, 1o0 F -16 fighter
bombers and 48F-15flghterjets. All
of these have been requested by the
Pentagon for the coming fiscal
year. Surely It makes more sense to
prepare for wars that ll!&lt;ely wiD be
fought than to ·· prepare for an
Improbable cataclysmic conflict.

~ ~~ -~-;;,-se;~~-~~vtct~~~-;;-·= ...

:'

team. Wolfe talked of
tea.m
chemlstryandofSoutbern'sseason.
He explained that much credit had
to be given to other teams and other
coaches this season for wantlng to
win as much as the TornadoeS.
Wolfe talked of Southern's "inex·
pertence" alld "youth", then commented on members of the 1985
'chamoionshlp team. '"In many

f~.n~.ht...!t_·~t h!:~~~n

~-&lt;n .,...""F'&lt;c~= ""'n&amp;i Mto·i:-vu~:r;u~u·du.r~~=....,~~
lion. If the $13 billion that has been

merger rumors on the street," the
wolf replied.
"Oh, Grandmother, what big
eyes you have."·
"The better to read everyone's
latest financial report."
"What big hands you've got." ·
. "The better to grab all your
assets with, my dear. "
"Grandmother, what big teeth
you have."
"The better to eat you with!" And
with that the wolf sprang out of his .
chair and made a lunge for Red
Riding Hood, who easUy sidestepped him and knocked him to the
floor .
"What are you doing?" the
stunned wolf asked.
Red Riding Hood sat on the wolf's
stomach and said, ''I'm taking you

In talking about his threE; seniors, ·

Ravenswood.

~~e:;:s~:c~:=.:~ ~:!'!en~"fo~ -::s-=~es. E.~:-t~:;·~~:~;E1~---c
· ••1, -~~~

;r::~~~=~b;~:~~~~r;:B~ rec~iy ~~~~~edae::tu:a~.::: .

Little Red lnc. ____·_____

Today in history·

Southern High basla!lball teams
and Its Cheerleaders, a large
banquet and awards ceremony was
beldMondayeventnglnCbarlesW.
Hayman gymnasium in Racine.
·-- FCJlli&gt;wlngtbein-rucatlo;;rPllf'l!:rl~"

a bargaining chip ceases to be
much of a bargatnlng chip when
this argument Is so publicly
~~~::·w~r ':t:;:,n ~::"US:

EPA-Maritime battle._-,---,----___
Jack_·· ~An_de~rso_n

.

BY IINYI'I'WOLFE

-- ifAC!N'E~~oftJtel~ · sout'fierii•s"e!!ort"ro- ~-~waite sa1a, :1 11 ve oruy ·p&amp;!nive=·-';..;;--.,.; ...,;;;;;o_'i l

mUI~m~e~t~er~.LJ;:r;~w~~ha~t~t~h~e~M~X~ml~ssEI~e:,s~y~stem~~;:::~:: : : : J~p~r~e~se~n~t~at~lo~n~~o~f~~~~~~~W~oU~e~a~w~81~ded~·~me~m!be~JS~of~Ul~l~s~we~n~t~to~J~u§nio~r~11~0d~d~AFd~a~ms~forFoul
~~~ffici.:rii:~~iiiilii5J ~a~;;@~3:!:.!};:z-ilri'&gt;:=;:;:~p ~~~ ill~§!!J~=~

targeted the
to folly
the last
Befdre
of the
!
compounded by the folly
deployment, s urely renewed
thought should be given to some
form the mobility.
·
The argument that carried the
Senate, convincingly put forth by
Mr. Reagan, was thai to abandon
the MX. would cut the legs from
under the negotiating · table in
Geneva. A " l)o" vote would send the

•

President Reagan apparently Is more reluctant to crtticlze violence at
the hands of South African pollee and Israeli tl'O(lps than brutality and
l)uman lights violations by Communist gOvernments.
.
At least, that was the Impression during his news conference Thursday
night.
.
.
Asked about the killing ofl7 South African blacks by the pollee when they
lired on an anti-apartheid demonstration, Reagan said he saw no need to
put mor~? pressure on the white govenunent of that country to change Its
ways. He declined to condemn the government and instead suggested that
blame partly lay with "an element In South Africa that do not want a
. ~ peaceful~~~~t,aLthls :- who want 1! v!Qim!!-sett!ement,'~. . . · ·
The president was equally reluctant to place blame on Israeli troops who
fired on a CBS camera crew @ South Lebanon, killing two ·men and
crtttliUy wounping a third. He said the Israelis were returning hostUe ftre
from people In civilian garb.
.
. more sympathetically to the actions of allies and ~
Presldent.s tend to
·
. ·
campaign ·agalns\
.ttmmy Carter In 1981, Reagan condemned the lncumlient's hum8.Jl.lights
policy for singling out VIolations by iuitf-Communlst cpuntrles while
Ignoring those' ef the Soviet Union and Its allies.
What Reagan demonstrated in his comments Thursday night was a
~eluctancE' to condemn brutality by governments he sees as
anil.Comrnunlst with the same vigor he castigates such actions by
G:oinmunlst governments.
WASHINGTON -Along bureau·
: Caution may have been understandable In responsing to the Incident In
cratlc braimlgan between two
Lebanon, which took place du'ring combat although CBS called It "an
federal agencies has finally ended
- and the public could 'be the
unprovoked and deliberate at1ack by Israeli forces."
"I'd like to know all the details of thls," Reagan said when asked about
winner.
..
Ole Incident in which the three men , an Lebanese, were sbot.
~
After years of exasperated prod·
· "I'm quite sure In combat of that kind this was not a deliberate killing,"
ding by the Marttlme Admlnlstralie added.
tlon, the Environmental Protection
: The. detaUs of the incident In South Afrtca were clearer. About 3.,(XX)
Agency has flnaUy decided to begin
granting licenses this fall to speblacks were demonstrating to mark the 25th anniversary ol theSharpevllle
shooting In which 69 blacks were kllled."f'ollceflred upon the marchers and
clally designed lnclneriltor ships
17 were killed.
.
that wUI burn hazardous industrial
· South African authorttles claimed the marchers were confrontirl by
wastes at sea. This could mean the
P.OIIce and refused to disperse and threw rocks at the officers. .Other
eventual shrtnklng of the moun·Witnesses said-the shOOting was unprovoked by the marche~ . ~ __ talns of tqxlc chemicals that are
---7'TbE!-presl!lertra1~Ceptro !IIPSOO!IIAfrlcan government version, although
strewn around the cduntry, contam·
!!artier in the day Secretary of State George Shultz said "violence as ·a
lnatlng the soli and poisoning our
tactic to break demonstrations Is a deplorable tactic and I am not prepared
drinking water .
tit any way to try to defend lt. "
·
Initial EPA test• suggest that
Reagan said it w.J "significant" that "some of those enforcing the law
these cancer-causing waste sludges
ljnd using the guns were also black - black policemen."
can be successfully burned at
. "I think to put it that way- that they were simply klUed and that the · extremely high temperatures In the
.ilotence was corning totally irom the taw and order side ignores the fact
floating Incinerators. Some agency
that there was rioting going on In bel)alf of others there," he respopded.
officials are stiU concerned , how· ·
· When asked If tlie.unarined crowd posed that much of a threat, Reagan
ever, that spUis and residue could
saki there has been Increasing violence In South Afrtca, which he blamed
be harmful tO' the ocean life.
orr an element opposed to a peacefuisettlement and added, "!think all of us
Internal documents obtained by
find the system there repugnant, but we're going to keep on trying to
my associates Corky Johnson and
contribute to a peaceful solution if we can."
.
.
Donald Goldberg chronlcle several
: To the inevitable . questJln about Nicaragua, the president had .. years of pressure on EPA by the
predictably tough language with no reference to a peaceful solution:
• "The Unfted States Is tJying to help people who had a communist tyranny
lftl~ on them by force, deception and fraud andeltherwerontinue with
that tradition, which has ·atways been ours, or we give that up entirely, and ·
1 don't think we sbould give that up."
Once upon a time there was a
sweet thing called Red Riding
Hood, who owned Little Red Riding
Hood Inc., a small company that
made cl)lldren's dresses. One day
she was walking down Wall Street
when she met a great big wolf
(Amalgamated Wolf).
"Where are you going, · Red
Today Is Tuesday, March 26, the 85th day of1985. There are 2lll days left
Riding
Hood?" the wolf asked.
In the year.
"To
Grandmother
Pizza 's office
· Today's highlight In history:
with·
this
new
Issue
of
stock which I
On March 26, 1953, Dr. Jonas Salk announced a new vaccine to tnununtze
hope
wUI
make
lier
well&lt;'
'
people against polio.
The
wolf
thought
to
himself,
On this date:
"What
a
tasty
morsel.
I
could
eat
In mM, the Louisiana Pur-chase was divided into the Terrttory of Orleans
Grandmother·
·Pizza
lor
break- and the-Distlict.of-Loulslana.
·fast and Red Riding Hood Inc. for
In 1827, composer Ludwig Van Beethoven died in Vienna.
lunch."
In 1875, poet Robert Frost was born in San Francisco.
The wolf then said, "Where are
the Eastman Dry Plate and Film Company of Rochester, N.Y ..
In
your Grandmother's offices? "
manufactured the first commercial motion picture 111m.
"And Red Riding Hood replied,
In 189'2. poet Walt Whitman died In Camden. N.J.
"In
the World Trade Center
In l9U, playwright Tennessee WUilams was born in Columbus, ML'5.
buDding."
In 1918, Marshal Ferdinand Foch or France was named commander ot
The wolf then said, "Would you
the Allied artnles In World War I.
like
to ha'&lt;e a hot pretzel from the
In 1937 a 6-loot;taU concrete statue of the cartoon character "Popeye".
stand
over there?"
was unv~lled during \he Second Alll!uat Spinach Festival lit Crystal City.
"Why
not? They are not expect·
Texas.
·
lng
me
at Grandmother's board
ll!l958. tile U.S. Anny launched Amertca's third successful satellite,
meeting
for
a half-hour."
Explorer Three.
·
Whilst
Red
Riding Hood was
In l!Mfi, President Lyndon B. Johnson announced arrests had been made
!!atlng her pretzel and drtnking her
1n Connection with the murder jn Alabama ol civil ligh!s worker Viola
soda the wolf sped off to the World
Lliazo.
Trade Center. He dashed into.
ln 1971, East Pakistan proclaimed Its Independence, taking the name
Grandmother Pizza's office and ate
B4ngladesh. .
.
poor Grandmother up."
;Iii 1979, the Camp David peace (reaty betwee11 Israel and Egypt was
~en he pulled the curtains and
signed In cerernon•es In Washington.
satin
her leather chair.
· Ten years ago: Congress approved a tax-cut bill totallng $22.8 billion,
Red
Riding Hood was ushered In
Five years ago: A State Department spokesman said the heightening
by
the
secretary.
hostage crisis In Iran \vt)uld not prompt the Unlted States to take military
"Good
morning, Grandmother."
. action.
'
did not reply.
The
wolf
One year ago: The four men who were convicted In the barroom rape
"Oh, Grandmother, what big
~rrw liH'lll!-ruver; M"assachusetts, received pnsoo sentences of up to 1.2
ears
you have."
years.
"The better to hear all the

•
•

.

~

-

.

The Daily Sentinei-Pagei 3

Pom8roy-Middlepo11, Ohio

Annual winter fete
held for SHS athletes

. Pege-2'-The Daily Sentinel
. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday,
. . ..March
. 28,. 1986
..
.
.

2e. 188&amp;

Angle

singled, and
Lesa Rucker
singled,
Krlstlsingled.
Gaddis

Eastern plated three more runs In
the fourth, twontheflfth,andseven
in the sixth.
Amy Young ted Eastern with a
perfect four for four night and two
walks, whUe Lea Ann Gaul added
three singles, Tony a Savoy two
singles. AMy Connolly two singles,
Arlene Ritchie two singles, Lesa
Rucker a single, Gaddis a single,
and Spencer a single.
Leading Alexander wasP. Peterson with a single, L. Kisor a single
and T. Rice a single
Eastemlsnow1-0ontheseason.

, ., .

. _II!-

.

""~!'~=d"e~!=~~~~~~~~;~~
..u·~···

· •......... -.---- ------

u --

- -

thesamefashionduringthe second .
Sophomore Eddie Collins was
phaltdchinttlgeababecakuintifilg~ ';;:.:';~~~~~~~~
11
allowed)usttwoearnedrun•inhis5
aiilf tw.,;.:=:thlfas lnnmgs i&gt;f wortc'~
In the fifth round , Eastern trailed
5-3, but plated 7 runs on singles by
BrentBisseli,JeffBissell,andEddle
CoIllns. I n between Bryan ' Durst ,
Tracy Taylor, and D .. J. Randolhh
· each walked. n.:o errors In t e
latterpartoflhelnrungsetupanRBI
singlebyRoyceBlssellgivtngEHSa
10-5 lead.
Collins was charged with the loss, ·
whUe Brtan Wilson claimed the win
In relief. Starter Robbie Powell went
four and 2-3 Innings, Ianning 4 and
walking seven.Wilson just walked
one.
Collins fanned four and walked
one.
Eastern collected nine hits led by
DJ Randolph with two singles,

Alexander had six hits led by
Farley with two, Wilson one,
Lawson one. and two triples by
Powell.
Eastern Is 1-1 , while Alexander
climbs to 3-1 overalL
Eastern travels .to Federal Hock·
lng tonight, then hosts the Lancers .

where the game has been played
exclusively In the sunshine since
1916.
Tfle notice, filed wlth the Dlinels
Appellat e Coun, came two hiurs
alter Cook County Circuit Judge
Richard Curry said those laws don't ·
violate
rlght,s the team's
·

on;~~==~- Cll!:l),::.~

added.
.
.
.
The ruling,. which came ~n

~po~ toa sultfU"":by~~e~~~~

- Ul:'Cefi1uer~, w·as appaau""'.., YJ '- ..'J
leaders and r!'Sidents around the
park.
.
"This ruling Is further evutence

they couldn't get lights. he said, "We
consider this very, very sertous·
buslnPSs."
Curry's rullntlnt.efSj)erseawdrdS
from "Take Me Out To The"
Ballgame" and ended with, " Yes, ·
you're out. 0-U-T. The Cubs are out .

cu..;;.·~-;;;ges;;;du;"Q;b;; ~;;;;r~

were more concerned about making Washington said.
h 1 h b b 11 th they ·
"It means peace and tranquility,''
moneyw1t ng
t ase a
an

rw;;er;e;a;bo;;ut;t;h~e;po~t;e~nt~la~l~d~ls~ru~p~t~lo~n.;saiiidiliA~I~d~~rmiiaiinli!Bei!rn!ia~rdiHiainseii·ii,nii.i1
BROUGHTON'S
GALLON

t/1

GAlLON

$149

3 LBS.f$1

"You can't take me over," the
•

••

.

it. II

"They haven't stopped anyone
!rom swallowing anybody else up

(0 ''~~~~ n 1 1'1[ _. lnt

(.~~P-51""-.;::..

.

yet," Red Rldi!Ji Hood retorted.
"W/1 ~uA&lt;v"" •'~s·v• •e&gt;I.IARC' S"m••~+&gt;lna 1
"W It" iiiewoiFs'ild.''WfiyCiiiT"'~~~~- ~·- ~"-~""'"" 4~-m ·"' ~ ~llJ!'J ,
ak, thl sau.e
..., ndl.y lakeover ?..
me? Why can't you just TELL me something?"
wemae

We'd like to have the oppor·
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today.

CREAM SODA ••••,ufi.'AQ'-•·S1 29 ·,.o.
RC COLA •••••••••••\Ufi.'AU•• $1 49

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

. .. .,..

992-6687
•

P.D.

..... Auto

c ....... .

Wedn~ay.

Walker not content
with parttime stat~s
problem with that. I'm just going to

TAMPA. Fla. (AP) - Duane
Walker Is not content with his role as
a part time outfielder but he says
he's not going to complain because
baseball has been good to him.
He's willing to walt his tum,
hoping Player Manager Pete Rose
will give him the nod eventuaUy. ·
"I think Pete has made up hls
mind who the starting outfielders
aregoingtobe,"Walkersakl. "He's
been lair about It, too.

be ready and when my chance

:n:
ge:

"You can't very well take Dave
Parker out of there. Eric Davis has
great potential, and Ce!iar Cedeno
deserves
be Ill left. I have no

don't work
they will somewhere
elseorevenmaybeoutofbaseball.J
don't let It dominate my life."

es a~nd l'mgoingto be ready
In the~ and prove that! can
~e Job done that 1 can be an
asset to this tea~."
.
Walker whose name was mentl·
oned in tr;;de talk with the New York
Yankees last week, Isn't wonied
abOut hls situation with the Reds.
'"I'm not one wbo puts a whole lot
of
011 baseball. I make a
just

for me here.

o~er."

wolf crted. '"I'm five times bigger
than you are."
"Size means nothing," Red Rid·
lng Hood said. "The only thlng that
counts Is how much money I can
raise to get control."
··
· "Where multi Y&lt;?U find enough
dough to buy a great big wolf?"
"I'll make a leveraged buyout.
I'll cut o!! your head and sell It to a
museum, your coat to a furrier and
your teeth 'to a key chain mmpa,ny.
It's all here In the prospectus."
"The SEC wUI never let you .do

~~-

constitutlonal '..;c.t~h:;at~~;~:~f~;~~~~l~~~~~~~~to~~~~~~-:::::::::::.::3~·•

2°/o
MILK
BROUGHT-ON'S
ICE CREAM
BANANAS

WE ARE TAKING APPLICATIONS AND
GIVING INFORMATION ABOUT HOUSING
FOR THE ELDERLY (age 62 or older),
HANDICAPPED .OR DISABfED IN THE
MAPLES LOCATED IN POMEROY, OH.
AREPRESENTATIVE WILL IE AVAILABLE AT
THE SENIOR cmZENS CENTER FROM 9:30
A.M. TO 7 P.M. THURSDAY, MARCH 28

SlVERHEELS DEVELOPMENT
E UAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

Give me a golden parachute and I'll

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.POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO.
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· ··

to the 55.000 resldents .oMh\!"·Noi"th ~" ~vhos:i!'lilaiml1clifdes-p;!l'l·lnliieaft"li'~··"-~··~~r
1..
nJ
Side communltv.
around Wrtgley Field, h•e 0 Y
. "The game of baseball may be
major league ballpark wttbout
iJod
'
b
i
ess
but
the
bUS(
.
every Y s us n · .
·
lights.
ness of baseball Is greed," Curry
But General Mallager Dallas ·
said In his 64-page ruling,
·
' !lBid In Mesa, Ariz., wherethe
Green
"The Cubs and the commissioner
Cubs are tn spring training, that he
olbaseballhavelosttheirgraspot
was"very ,verydlsappolnted"wlth
•.!:e.allty _:&gt;nd pers_I?"C.tlve
r;u_llng. .
_.
:

~- . ~- :~~;~:n~~;~:tyba:;~;~~r~;I '-:~~·~';';~!'~~~ii~~'7=;,;::~; " ru~~~~!;:~~~~:~~~~;~ ·

Greg Leachman double, and Kevin
Barber single.
v ••

"

HONI992·2094

"'
POMEIOY

�.,
Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

'

NCAA preview

~ Tigers

B.y The Bend

prepare for _Villanova

· -MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -Relying bn an old POlitical adage,
Memphis State basketball coach
Dana Kirk says there's house fixlr~g
something that's not broke.
Kirk started getting hls Tigers In
shape Monday for the semlflnals of
the NCAA Tournament, and he said
he planned to work on the plays his
squad lllready knows. "WP'll reviPW and go with thP
tblngs wp've been doing to givP us
our 31 wins," he said.
"There'll bP somp' adjustments
madP as towhat we' redoing, rnaybe
a rouple of lnbounds plays against
pressu1re defense and thls type of
'l'e worked on all year. there won't
. bP that much of a change.
. "When you start getting in a
tournament likethls, you don't want
to make any wholesale changes at ·
alL We'll do the things that haye
been good to us,'.' he said.
·
Kirk's Tigers, ranked fifth during
tJ!e regular season, face unranked
Villanova in the semifinal opener 0n

Tua1day, March 26, 1986
Pege- 6

Saturday.
game, and when he has that good
No. 1 Georgetown playg No. 3 St. game lfeelsony !ortheotherteam.
John's in the second game in Ilmow-~can~.~Lexing1on, Ky.. with the winner
aeorgefawn Is rated the team to
facing the victor of the Memphis , _ Ileal lor the championship, but Kirk ·
saki he's not woiTied about GeorgeState-Villanova contest.
Keith Lee, a 6-10 senior foJWard town Just yet.
who holds Memphis State's all-tlme
"I want to play VIUanova, " he
scoring and reboundlng records, · said.
Askew, however, said he would
has been In foul troubleformuchot
the tournament, spending a total o! like to lace Georgetown In theftnals.
61 minutes on the bench In the past
"That's the one l'mreally1ooklng
four games.
forward to," hesald. "Yollcan'thold
· But Klrksaldhecan'twonyabout anything agalnstVU!anova because
that.
they're a good ball club. I! they
"I won't anticipate anybody weren't; !hey wouldn't bP in the
getting. into foul trouble. That's not Final Four.
we'll go wlth the situation that's In
hand," he said .
·
And VIncent AskPW. a 6-5 freshman guard who starts for Memphis
State, said theotherTigersjust have
to play hafderwhen Lee goes to the
bPnch.
"It seems like when Keith goes
· out, it inspires the restoltheteam,"
Askew said. "Keit h Is due for a good

The Daily Sentinel

In the spotlight
By CINDY 8. OUVERI
c.nty ltrt 1aa AleM
Hame~4-H

There's a saying "You are what
you eat!" The food that you
consuml' during the course of a day
has a lot to do wlth hdw you look,
!eel, and react to others.
A good breakfast Is an Important
part of a weU·balanced dlet.
Skipping breakfast means that
your
has to function lor 12-16

morning coffee break Is not an
ettlctent substitute for an adequate
breakfast.
Watching calories? Eating a

nutrtttou~
wft!

action o!-Monday's Cactus League game
i\riz. (A.P Laserphoto).

DOUJ!LED UP -Cleveland second.,_,.,.. Ton,y
BenezenlsJoveslhebaiiMCistepeoosecondtodouble
up Chlcag!lCubi8oott'l11om(18011 (21) In elglilh IDnlng

at Mesa.

'

-

Vet~ran

almost In hall.
: Studies have shown that skipping
breakfast can cause a low blood
sugar level whlch may result .In
midmorning 1atlgue and hunger.
Without breakfast, people can
become less efficient In the late
morning hours, mental reactions
are slowed, and muscular fatigue
Increases. · The typical ·mid-

hurlers rounding into shape

preparing the main dish. AOOtber
Idea Is to make extras of foods llke
French toast or pancilces during'
the weekenda, freem them In

moderate heat. Cool.
Lay slices on greased baking
sheet; freeze. Wilen frozen , stack
sHces wtth ron between; wrap for·

proteins, vitamins and
fuel for body energy and taste good:
The pattern lor a nutritionally
adequate breakfast Is as follows:
fruit or fi·utt Juice (preferably one
high In vitamin C), cereal and milk
or Protein- rich food, bread and
butter or margarine, milk or milk
beverage and other beverage If
deslrect.

toast or bread. See It the appetite
doesn't soon ask for larger servings
every day.
.
Meals for a day should be planned
as a unit a:nd riot as Individual
meals disregarding what has been

For frozen French toast try thls . thoroughly. Makes eight slloes.
. easy recipe:·
Pancakes can -bP prepared and
4 eggs, beaten
frozen In a simllar manner. You
. 2 tsp, sugar
will find It easlerto reheat pancakes
\7 tsp. salt
In the regular oven or microwave.
~ tsp. nutmeg
For a special pa~1 cake1tre&gt;1 t,

day, plan to attend. Tickets wW bP
available at the door.
'
Did you know that Focid Labels
list ingredlents In the order of
quantity contained In the food? I!'
you're looking for breakfast cereals

for a Pancake Day. It will be held
from 7 -a.m.-6 p.m . at the Pomeroy
Elementary School. The menu
consists of sausage, beverage and
aU the pancakes you can eat! Cost 1s
$3 for adults and $2 ,or children
underl2.Anotherspeclalfeature o!
the day Is a crafts bazaar featuring
handmade baskets, Easter candy,

surprise you.
All educational programs and
activities conducted by the Ohio
Cooperative Elctenslon Service are
available to all POtential clientele on
a non-dlscrlmlnatory basis wltbout
regard to race, color, nailonal
origin, sex. handicap or religious
atnllatlon. ·

~,:!!~~~~~ d~MJ~~~~~~~~~~:;~i!~~~~
Breakfasts need not be monotoday-old break (very dry)
nous If they re pla nned ahead of
Butter or margarine
time. There's no rule about what
Combine eggs, sugar. seasoncan be served at breakfast. It you
lngs, vanUiaandmllklnlargebowl;
don't have time to prepare breakbeat well. Dtp each bread sllcl' so It '
fasts each morning, why not . will absorb as much egg mixture as
w-ganize some things the night
POSSible.
before, get the table set, and save
Brown bfl!ad on ·both sides In
precious time In the morntn111 lor · butter or margarine In skillet over

e~~~~pUibe&amp;t.s~ure.
~to~c~hec
ruk~the
~~:J~a~be~U
~orDJ!Je~:fZml:Ji~

Scholarship awarded ;

_,t"~,·--;i~j~'rJ1U;iLta:nrsr1~~~~itJ;t~ll1fie:r·-.:Jr(iti,u~1~ilnr"'f-~w1~~~~~~~~bey;;~ond~;~~~~r:-=~:?t:~"::A-=.~. :;~~'P~~h~ ·~=~--=~Beat£J.f--th.ehen!L=""""-=~
Gold drPW a meager ·17,890, which came despite a
money-back guarantee that officials thought might
attractw·"cro-.v~vf43;tm to 50,&lt;0&gt;.
- The Denver Gold, putting together three scoring
Gold owner Doug Speddlng Insisted there was no
drives that totaled only 49 yards thanks to San Antonio cause fcir alarm.
"I'm a patient man,'' Speddlng said. "We Just have
turnovers, defeated theGunslingers16-2Mondaynight
in a United States Football League game.
to give this team tlrile, and work a little harder on
The victory_ raised the Gold's recOrd to 3-2 and kept promotions."
•
Denver within striking distance Houston, which leads
But the downward trend Is unmistakable. In 1983, the
theWesternConferencewltha5-0record.
Gold averaged an Impressive 41,735 In home
But a far more significant event may have occurred attendance, slipping slightly to 33,9521ast season.
USFL commissioner Hany Usher, In Denver to
hereMondaynight. Denverfansmayhavesouredon
the USFL. which could ..pltimately threaten the attend the game, said earlier Monday that "one of~
existence of the three-yeardd franchise. , ·
things that concerns us Is the decline In attendance In
Despite perfect weather, only 13,901 fans turned out Denver.! believe people wlll come It the quality of the
for the game- a record low lor the Gold. Two weeks product merits it. I believe It does, In Denver and
--;~·.an, fn fm'lr {fr\ly-oftfef llbme game·oi iiJe·seaso)\;'ihe :·~tnrougnbut tile league:''' c,,
·····-~ ··-~ ..
DENVER tAP)- The bottom line, as CQach Mouse
Davls and several
noted , was that they won,

J d•

T

NIT

.

halfway mark, some veteran
pitchers appear to be rounding Into
mldseason !orm.
.Jiou~.on- Oreballer Nolarl Ryan
allowed' only one hit and struck out ·
seven In six scoreless Innings
Monday-andtheAstrosheldonfora
G-5 exhibition victory over ' the
Boston Red Sox. Ryan walked lour
and thrPW a wUdpltch, all In the first
three Innings, In his most lmpresslveouttngo! the spring.
Jeny Mumphrey led -Houston's
14-hlt\lttackwlthhlsftrstpreseason
' homer,'connecttngof!Bostonrellef
ace Bob Stanley.
Burris pitched ihree-hlt baD
! ~Jm,s!J&lt;-L~n!n.gs and &amp;::OglM~·wer.t
4-for-5, Including a triple and two
RBI, ·as the Milwaukee Brewers
defeated the San Francisco Giants
4-0.Glants' starter Mike Krukow ·

... ~-- fl._Jll.IJ.l\:~"'~~1!11~~~~ --·-~~-,9.J!Rru!~-)~~-= ~":~Jhh?s~~~:n'g
NEW YORK lA!') -::Talka bouta"!aygames---,-that . defeat bY No. 3 St. John's. earlier thls season at the
.certainly Is what the semiftnai matchup between
Garden.
·
.Indiana and Tennessee at the National Invitation
Hazzard. a native of PhHadelphia, played many
Tournament wlll be.
- games In the Garden In a 10-year N!!tlonal Basketball
· "I think the team we're going tobringlnherehasone
Association career.
kid who has been here (toNewYorkl ,andthat'sthe kid
He never mad!' the famed arena In three years as a
from Colombia (Magnus Pelk0wski, . a South
player at UCLA, Including the 1963-64 season when the
- - Amertean)-~Indiarta'- Coach Bobby Krtlght said
Bruins werit -30-0 and won the NCAA championship.
Monday at a nPWsconference to hype the semifinals of
. Hazzard's Bruins are the hottest . team of the
.the 48-year-old college basketball tournament.
surviving lour In the NIT.
The other semifinal on Wednesday wlll match
"Our only loss In the last 11 games was to usc; '
't.JCLA,19-12. against Louisville. 19-16. and will follow
(Southern California) In four overtmes," said
the game between Indlana,l&amp;-13, against Tennessee,
Hazzard. "We just kept working on fundamentals of
21-14, which Is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m., EST.
basketball. We didn't change our system at all."
"I doubt It I have any players who have been north of
The only head coach absent Monday was Denny
the Mason-Dixon line," said .Don· DeVoe, the
Crum or LoutsvU)e, which Is tnttsl2thNIT, third since
:rennessee coach, who once was an assistant to Knight
Crum joined the Cardinals for the 1971-72 season.
. _ptArmy.
LoulsvUie won the title In 1951l.
Knight and DeVoe are not strangers toNewYorkor
Representing Louisville at the news conference was
assistant coach.BobbY Dotson, and he remembered an
tournament four times.
• "1 may bP one of only a couple of guys who ever
;turned down an NCAA bid to play In the NIT," he said of
-his declston In 19GI while coaching at West Point.
: "We got beat by Notre Dame In the first game."
: DeVoe will be the tournament lor the first time at
Tennessee, but he won the 1973NITwlth VIrginia Tech.
: For Walt Hazzard. the Orst-yearcoach at UCLA, the
;Jrlp to NPW York wlll be a chance to redeem an 88-69

•

~{night

By BARRY WILNER

"

• About blaming It on a case of
lJUrnout. however, Knight said
:Monday that It Just,lsn't so.
• "People that have said that have
•
;satd it without really talldngtomeor
,when talking to me, haven't
:believed what I've said," Knight
)laid at a nPWs conference at
:Madison SQuare Garden where his
~ooslers wlll play Wednesday night
'In the seml!tnals of !he National
invitation Tournament.
·: "I left Los Angeles the day after
lf!e final game (or the Olympics)
lmd I went up Into Montana and
,ipent abOUt three weeks fishing and
~xhli- And I went back home and
4Id a little work at home with
Jllt!Crulting and so forth , and then
iknt back out to Montana for
lfnother three weeks on a hunting
and fishing trtp. I did absolutely
nothing but that."
• Not too
And Knight didn't

Ruble Brooks singled home the ninth to lead the Minnesota Twins
tying run and Terry Francona ov..er the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-1.
DoUg Frobel's three-run homer
followed with a sacrifice fly In the
sixth lnl)lng as the Montreal EXPOS helped power Plltsburgh to a 10J

Bilardello paces Reds victory
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Catcher
Dann Bllardello had one hn In
Clnctnnatl's big fifth Inning and
thrPW out stealthy Vince Coleman
whlle trying to bolster his bid for the
Reds' starting catcher Job. ·
the Reds' runs Monday all were
scored In thefl!thoffBobForschbut
held up for a :&gt;-4 victory over St.
Louis.
The Cardinals clipped Cincinnati
Joe Price,
Tibbs and

Gellego had a run-scoring single In
the eighth Inning.
Matt Young limited Callfornta to
three hits and an unearned run In six
Innings and Bany Bonnell drove In
both Seattle 'tuns as the Mariners
downed theAngets2-1.

Association.

The Dally Senllnei

"I always felt I was a good
thrower, and that Is one part of my
game I have conftdence t'ri."

(USPS 145-. . )

~ Dl\llslon of Multlmed~. lac. ·

Published every af ternoon , Mon!Jay

throl.lgh F riday, 111 Court St., y the
Ohlo Valley Publishing Comp'any / Mul -

But Pete Rose. Cincinnati's
player-manager, declined to say
whether the outing Improved BUardello's chances for winning the
catching job.

beat us by 10 points (75-&amp;'i Feb. 24 at
Louisville), but I think Walt was aw!ully nice to us,"
Dotson said.
Louisville reached the semifinals bY bPatlng
TPnnessee-Chattanooga 71-66 Sunday, UCLA beat
Fresno State 53-43 Saturday.
In the other quarterfinal games, Tennessee defeated
Vlrglnla 61-54 Saturday, and Indiana outlasted
Marquette 94-821n two overtlmes Sundily.

"I did not feel I was real sharp as pick the catching sltua lion until the
far as having good stuff," Price said.
end of spring training," said Rose.
Rose played In a morning "B"
"There were a couple of people I
struck out and I was happy about · gameearter In the day.
that. Brian Harper beats me like a
stepchlld and I finally got him out. I
threw some goqd location pitches,"
said Price.
- Coleman stole 145 bases In 1983 at
Macon. a professtQnal baseball
NEW YORK' tAP) - Kareem
record, and 101 last year at Ahdul-Jabbar, who shot 76 percent
Loulsvllle, both St. Louis farm from the field and averaged :IS.7
teams.
POints per game last week as the Los
"I got- h1m two out of three times Angeles Lakers won all three
last year,'' Bllardello said of his games, was named the National
to two NCAA crowns and an NIT
tenure with Wichita In the American Basketball Association Player of the
championship.
Week for the period ending March
·~----------:----------------., 24
, . . •In winning Player of the Week
honors, Ahdui-Jabbar beat .out Otis
Chopmla- ................ .................... 88
Thorpe of Kansas Ctty, wh0
·Ridl • . . - ci
averaged 19.0 POints and 15.7

tlmrdla. Inc .. Pome roy. Ohio 45769, h .
992-2156. Second c la ss posta~e paid at
P o mero~·.

after th_a t, either.
"Then, as practice started, I was
probably less Involved with actual
practice," he continued. "I kind of
let the assistant coaches take It and
relaxed, and when we'd get Into
5-on-5, I'd get Involved."
'

No one has accused Knight of
being especially aloof or detached
thls year. though. Instl'ad, people
have wondered H he has been too
intense - witness his throwing a
chair onto the court during a game
last month wlth Purdue, which
earned h1m a one-game suspension.
Knight clatms IJ!Is season hasn't
been rougher or easter than any
other In hls:al-yearcoacljtngcareer.

Local 00
- wlm•. g ·

SII,..._.,.IMM
-.....GMarobS,-

Teom

....
.......................... ,. , 118
Dan's ........... ..... ............................ ..... 102

Brenda· &amp; .Boutiques

Simmons Old!i, Cadillac

and Ctlil"\i .............................. ......... .... 82
Francis Florist ........ --- ............... .. ....... ,.. 81
Pools Plus ............ .. ...... .. ...................... 73
Tile Fabric., Sliop ................................... 72
High individual game - Shirley Simrmns
2'11; Dorta Grueser :nt: Fran Matthews 202.
High lndlvldual three-gal11l'S - June
Lambert ~i Shirley stmmons !'J6i; Barbara
Whittington 536.

·=.~. :::--~ f'~'2i~

18~
Goi..-J-G....,

POSTMAST E R: Sf:&gt;nd ~ddress changt'S
to The -Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St ~ . PomC'roy , Ohio 45769.

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;~~::~: ••••• •••:•••:•••• ::: ••••::: ~:~

Holr AJ:1o .....

a..--JJa.

Pmn4'rr"' Rtw!lin« l..om,

,..,.Ill'

FArl.v J(','flrw»fltry Mix•'fl
Mon-11 6.

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BoP- a.b ..... " .......................... ......... . '

.............................
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~-- - - Too)-'o ~I!Jt.
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...... - TooT• ConJ-o.il 'IlL

1980 MERCURY
MONARCH
.,

WE PURCHASE 1ST • 2ND MORTGAGES
AND LAND CONTRACTS

Are you collecting p1yment1 on· 1 re1l fttate mortgage,
but would' prater to have 1 lump sum?
Let us show you how to convert all or p1rt of your
mortglge into Cllh. For dlltails, call today.

II

Southern
lsoneof'
72 students to bP awarded a 19115
.iilunml scholarship. at Musklngum
College. She plans to major In
. ·&amp;COOunH."'lg.
.
The scholarships were awarded
on the basis of a cornpetlttvp:
on-campus examination and Inter-:
VIPW. Second school records and '
ACT or SAT results were also
considered.

/,1,

By BOB.HOEFLICH
OVP stall Writer

In
scholarships should request appllcations bY May 15, this year, from
the Educational Communications
Scholarship Foundatlori, 721 N.
McKinley Road, Lake Forest. Dl.,

Right to Read
Week observed

~=-----=&lt;

=t~~~:;:::F£.;:

Stiversville community happenings

.•

-

4 door, maroon metallic exterior with matching vinyl Interior .
6 cylinder engine, automatic transmission . power steering
and brakes. air condition , AM-FM stereo. rear 'defogger ,
radial tirei and just 57,000 miles!
I
REAL CLEAN LOCALLY OWNED TRADE -IN I

.

---·_______., ---

"""~,.

_

RSVP.organizational
·luncheon .held recently

Party given fot; veterans

financial resources,
an arulual evaluation o! the RSVP
program, participate In RSVP
volunteer recognition events, assist
In the development andflnalrevlew
of grant renewal appUcatlons and

Wolfe,
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
RSVP staf! present were Susan
OUver, Director; Jeanne araun
and Allee ~ol!e, Volunteer
Coordinators.

provide Ideas aDd/or contacts for
The next meeting wW bP on June
developrni!nt rl. · new volunteer. 19 at the Multipurpose Sellloi'
stations and prpsp!l_Ctlve ___ Center tn'Porrieroy.volunteers.

an~,:u-~~~h

.

-tines each with $2 were given to the
veterans from the Department of
· Ohio Auxiliary.
Each veteran was also given a jar
of Instant coffee and -cigarettes to
take to their rooms. Games were

Going to Athens to assist with the
party we.·e Pearl Knapp, Kate
Welsh, Iva Powell, Kathy Pulitns,
and Veda Davis, hospital
representative.

r~~;::~~~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;~;~;;:;;;;!;;;l
HOM!£ SA
SIU'IIIBIBD TV SPECIALISTS
•

RESIDENCE?.WE CAN HELP •••
HIRILOCit

&amp;\TIWTE
811'1'1118

THE INCOME TAX PEOI'U!

This Ad For A Sl 00
Savings
On A Complete System..

618 East Main Street
POIMroy, Ohio
Open 9 AM-6 _PM Wllkllays, 9-5

CM&amp;tti·Mit
II Nllllllllly

.

Ull1e ·

"=!s...~~
,.

IUSINISS; . ~:'"· 2-•

Sat.-~one

992-3795

APPOINTMENTS AVAILAILE

1614) 378-6151 QUAUIY SYSTEMS

IUICH J1, 1915
~

--.- · ~-..,1 _.....,.¥__.~,

~

Off1r Good Until
- March .31, 1915
1312 Eamro Avenue (David Adams) ......... 446-4113

~

Cancer Day ·conducted in stores

~-octh~e~!o~rm~~ul:a~tl~o~n~o~f=loc~ai~~~-PiBetty~ar~ke~r.~PI~'I!!I~t~d~ent,

.

..
...,_,III,Ray-

A SS"S• +ance sought

Friends and neighbors of the
Dennis ; Lee Rlchards famj(y
are asking help
for the famlly.
ti0045.
Lee Is In lntenFifty award winners wlll be
'
stve care at the
selected on the basts of academic
Charleston Genperformance, Involvement In exera! Hospital In
tracuJTicular activities and ·need
Charleston, W.Va., alter being lor !lnanclal ald. For an application
·•
seriously Injured In an highway send a note giving yokur name, accident In the Ripley, W.Va., 31'1'a. address, city, state, zip code, an
· AccoriUng to reports a tire biew · appr-oxilnate M' ade point averng~-'-'
:"' NUTfit'l'OU-sacti.viUes werecan·ted·
out on the Richards vehlciP and
and year of graduation to til!'
out at the Riverview School to
threw It Into the path of a semi. Lee foundation.
promote reading during Ohio's
suffered fractures o! both 1~. a
Getting to college Is dlfflcu\t
Rlght to Read Week.
•
broken arms and multiple Internal
sometimes especially from a flnan The school motto, "RI'~Ing Jogs
lnJurles. Hels at the presl!llt tlnJe _!n .s!al §.'!!n,!lpq,l,!tt~J.'.!.!!,I P.as.:s••:::;~:c~'"'·~
Your Mind"
was.-.,..·used to motivater
..,.,...
,.. -_,..
stable condition.
· any leads that I encounter.
·
.the students to Increase the quanlty ·
·' Mr. and Mrs. Richards have ftve wejl give them all a whirl-- not.hlng
of reading. Classroom displays
children . .They are hard-working
to lose.
were prepared ' by students and a
deserving people but have m
total of 465 famutes of students
And- the Rutland Youth League
Income, neighbors rePOrted. They
contracted with the school to
Is getting It going.
took up ti coll~tlon last week and
,
CANCER DAY -On behaH of the Melp Cowtiy _ for SU411.72. Brent Easlmlm, F........... ~
support the program In their homes.
An organizational meeting for the
Unit of the American Cancer Society, Big Bend
a..W•• from the main ofllce In G•IUpnHA, extleme
took It to Mrs. Richards who 1s
A silent reading period as well as
staying In Charleston during the league wlll be held at 7 p.m.
Foodland recently paa;lclpaled In Cancer Day rtpt, and Ill&amp;' Bend einployee Lori llurdeCte, who
teachers reading orally to the
critical penoo:----Tiil!" children- are Wednesday- aHhe- Rutland Ci¥1G--------- glvlngflve percent-of-lis total-sales far.-Marehl3to &amp;IJe_ belped.organtze the ev4P, were all!o oo ~ ~~-~
-~lldren added daily ·to the acttvi·
with grand($'ents out of the county Center. All coaches, parents and all
Meigs' cancer unit. Ed Atkln8, Big Bend Foodland
presentation. BunleUe Is holding a plaqUe o!
ties. A book fatr was held In the
others Interested In the league's
temPOrarily!
manager, center left, prew..ted Ralph Werry,
appreclldlon which wu presented to lhe store by
gymnasium and a ~lflcat&lt;" !rom
A bank account has been estabtuture should attend. I always
president o!lhe Meigs' unit, centerrt(lltl, with ac~
Werry.
the State ~artment of Education
lished ta at&amp; the !arnlly and It you
ls now on display at the school.
would llke to help, you can send
your check to Diamond Savings and
Loan, P .O. Box 701, Pomeroy, Ohio
In a sense I hate to mention ItIn the fight against cancer, Big Citizen's Center.
onstrated his unlcycllng abHitles.
45769. Checks should be made out to
but what the heck? We've learned
Bend Foodland, and several other
Volunteers were kept busy selllng
Other s.tore emplOYees volunthe Lee Richards Accident Fwid.
to talk about the good and the bad, loca l businesses, part.lclpated 1n hot dogs; balloons with free teered their time blowing up the
haven't we?
"Cancer Day" activities on March
s Inside; and tickets for a
balloons and preparing the store lor
· It Is getting time for graduation,
;.]:u~-~the~C~~an~":cer
activities.
C'""-..c=.~-·~"-=.K-t«ba.i··:,~pa'. --... - ~.,....,. ,__'=""""= -==-=:=~. ~ fO! !)P..!:.sQ!l..l:r-~~ cttn~•.,J})eJ.r_, fro"!
The Adolph Coors Co. has !amllles and friends is to bP held County Unit
Staats was the winner o! a
Between 3 and 9 p.m.. "'Qle
announced that It has established f! !rom AprU 8 through May 20. 7 to 9 Society.
$500,())) seholarshlp fund lor the p.m. each Monday ilt the St. Joseph
Helping out during the Cancer Roadrunners" band was also on 10-s~ bicycle dona ted for the
event by Pepsi-Cola.
hand to provide entertainment.
Hospital In Parkersburg.
· children and dependents o! Ameri·
Day activities at Foodland were
Ed Atkins, Big Bend Foodland
In addition to the other activities,
can veterans and of servicemen
The series will be an educational Erma Smith and Delores Frank
and women kUied In the ttneo!duly.
and sharing program dealing with. from the local cancer society unit; ' the -Meigs County Emergency manager, credits local community
missing In action or taken prisoners
various aspects of cancer. There Is cheerleaders !rom Southern, East- Medical Service gave free blood support for the success o! tbe Canpressure checks; the cancer society ·cer Day event and says the store
or war .
no charge but attendance Is limited. ern and Meigs High Schools; and
wW bP making Cancer Day an
distributed
free educational mateComplete details, Including I! ·you'd be Interested you can members of the Retired Senior
annual event.
rials
at
a
booth;
and
just
for
fun,
where to apply and eligiblllty · register through the h&lt;&gt;Spltal's Volunteer Program, through Susan
•
store
emplOYee
Mark
Abbot!
demrequlrements, wUI be avaUable
social services department. phone Oliver at the Meigs County Senior
·trom Adolph Coors Co. and Ohio 424-4384. The area code Is 304.
distributors this month. The nearSomettmes It's an advantage to
' est distributor ls Kerr Distributing
be broke. At least you don't have to
Co., Inc., m West Union St.,
By Freda Carpenter
Gary Wells, Cleveland, spent -a Poml'roy, and Mr. and trus- Joe
worry about having your money
Athens.
Mrs. DarlenP Cooper spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Monty Camp and daughters, Racine,
wlth Home State Savings and Loan.
Junior and senior class ~lgh
weekend with h.e r daughter and Proffitt and Mrs. Fannie Durst.
called on Mr. and Mrs. Charles ·
Do
keep smiling.
school students who are Interested
son-In-law. Mr . . and Mrs. Gene ·. M'rS. Clyde Close, . Waterford. ·· ·congo recently. ·
'
Corns, Huntington, W.Va .
Mrs. Rita Garrett, Columbus, and
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Pape, Kristen
Mrs. Anne Dalley and Mrs., Jan Pvt. Roy Cl~se. Ft. Campbell, Ky.. and Cheryl, Syracuse, visited on
Jeffers attended the Kenny Rogers- visited with Mrs. Audrey Brewer Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Dolly Pa rton concert at Charleston a.nd David recently.
Allen and Carl Autherson.
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. David Wolle and
Thomas Hunt has returned to his
Mrs. Zetta Boyd and Mrs . Reva employment on the Ohio River son shopped In Pomeroy recently.
Taylor and Jeremy. Parkersburg, alter the winter lay-off.
Mrs. Fannie Durst, local. and
Representatives o! the Meigs
Those .attending Include John
visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Durst
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Congo and Mrs. Nita Wells, Long Bottom.
County J¥&gt;tlred Senior Volunteer Constanzo, Meigs County Elemenrecently.
_daughters, Belpre, Denny Congo, visited In Columbus qn Wednesday
:f"rogram ) (RSVP), volunteer sta- tary Supervisor; Robert Byer,
.lions an~ the communlry held an Administration of the Emergency
called on Mrs.
·organizational luncheon meeting of Medical Service; Florence Smith.
Maxine Durst on Tuesday.
the RSVP Advisory Council on
Norman Fisher. Florence Richards
The American Legion Auxlllary played with prizes going to the
,wednesday, March 20.
.and Willie [!avis, · RSVP volunof Drew Webster Post 39. Pomeroy.
winners and each one a ttendlng
• · The board wlll provide suPPOrt In . teet's; June Kloes, R.N.; Margaret
host~ a party of 18 veterans at the
received a pair of socks.
Athes Mental Health Center Thurs-.
Refreshments of were served .
.
Coun!Y
In

riwieeik~···~~~!f~·~·~~~~~~~~~~~~
"*" ...

IHL't! player-of week .
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Toledo
Goaldlggers' center Dave Gans was
selected Monday as · the International Hockey League's Player ot
' the Week.
In four 'games last week, he had
eight goals and three assists lor 11
points. Included In that total were
three-goal and a !our-goal games,
both against Muskegon, two powerplay goals, a game-wlnntnggoaland
a shorthanded goal.
Gans Is fourth on the IHL scoring
list wlth 42 goals and47 asslstsfor8!1'

No subscriptions by. mall permitted In
town s where homC' carrier sprvlct" Is
avallablt.•.
·

_ _ _411;.........,_ttl!;
-

--,... __
G....,--.. . .. . . . . . ... . . . . ..HIHI
.,...._

reboundslnhelplngt.heKtngstoa3-0

·

~
~
Folmer NO;
........
Neolm;
, -_
_ytt&amp;
Toom
- P11onnocJ
.Joyee
....pmo ,_.,.,.
111. North Ill;

team gam. - FranctJ Florist 828;
·'·'-' .c'·. .c.. Fabric SIJ:&gt;p- '1FrallCil
9.1.
F'lol1!t

~-Owlo
or less worn - no season has bee1J
Mardlli,more dttncult or less difficult," he
Pt1.
s;o.ys. "It was a routine season In T-m ,
terms otthedraln on me, I think."
l'tuumooJ .......... ;......................
It wasn't even the most frustrat- ' .......... .....-vo~o ............................ uJ
Ne&amp;wd v... .. '....................................
lng lor the man who has led Indiana WluoloJ'o VIM- P-...................... 11

'

Ohio.

Member : The Associated Press, 1nla nd Dall y Pr·ess Association and t he
American Newspaper Publishers Ass.o cia tiQn, Na tional Advertising Repren nn-;BJ-&amp;"'liiiii'fl'pi{~ Pf-r Sales.
733 Third AvPnue, New York, New
York 10017.

Player of week

~-

•J

h)s ~=o~=h~~e::~~~n":;~ . ~;v~~t ~~~e~~r:;~~ ~:

isn't suffering from bumo~t

•
APSporisWrlter
; I! Bob Knight ls suffering from
l)lrnout, the Indiana University
Cllach says he doesn't know about it.
,: Knight has been on a virtual
lion-stop coaching merry-go-round
tpr the past two years, going !rom
leading the 1983-84 Hoosiers Into the
NCAA Tournament to guiding the
Qnlted States Olympic basketball
tl!am to a runaway gold medal and
• to this season's Hoosiers.
back
: But Knight's team has bPen a
tllaJor disapPOintment this year,
going just 15-13, and his behavior on
the sidelines has been, at limes, even
more volatile and unpredictable
than ever before. Given Knight's
. :previous histrionics and temper

.

allowedonlytwohllsln!lvetnnings, gamelostngstreak.
Including a second-Inning home run
Dave Rozema pitched nve scoreto Herm Winningham. Bill Gullick- less Innings and Ned Yost had threeson allowed three runs and seven hits and drove In both runs off Scott
hits 1n six Innings, the longest outing McGregor as the Texas Rangers
by a Montreal pltchet this spring.
nipped the Baltimore Orioles 2-1.
Luis Aguayo capped a three-run
UOYd Moseby, WUIIeAikensand
eighth Inning with a gamp-wlnning Ron Shepherd hit solo home runs as
single as the Philadelphia Ph IIIII's the Toronto Blue Jays defeated the
defeated the Detroit Tigers 5-4.
Chicago White Sox 5-.1 and boosted
Otis Nixon singled home the their exhibition record to 13-3.
winning runwlthhisfourthhlt in the
A split squad of White Sox lost to
top of. the 13th - Inning and the the New York Mets 6-1 as leftCleveland Indians edged the Chl- bander Blll Latham, who Is given
cagoCubs4-3.
only an outside chance at making
The Cincinnati Reds scored five the majors' thls season, pitched live
runs on six hits, Including a double scoreless Innings.
by C....ar Cederto. off Bob F6rsch in ·., --··oave·Dravecl\y, L-uls·DeLeonand .........
thethlrdinnlnganddefeatedtheSt. · Rich Gossage limited Oakl.and to
Louis Cardinals :H.
five hits as the San Diego Padres
Greg Gagne doubled home what
blanked the A's 2-0 In the first gam&lt;"
proved to be the declsivP run In the of a day-night double-header. The

quilts, woven rugs, stained glass,
ceramics, woodburning Items,
dolls, crocheted articles, baked
goods and homemade noodles! I!

doesn't"~~f-"-·"~~;;;'ii~ci~;~-;;;';~aJ~~~~~··-l~Jil~1(f~!~!f~;r;~~de~!J~os~~t!:an~_
~dl=~; 1'e1~~1~~~;~i!rozen~~~~~~~~loo~kin~~g~fo~r:;;;~;~~a~nd~=-":"'~~
tw6 or

breakfast
you
~galnwelght
~ ..
Skipping breakfast mean you wlll
lose weight provided the day's total
calories remains constant.
A good breakfast should pi'ovlde
about one-fourth o! the day's
calories, protein, vitamins and
test of a

and
bebeatandaUthat.
that.
They've lost two games. That
proves they can be beat, and I
believe we can bPat them," he said.
And the treshman said Memphis
State Isn't lntlmldated bY Georgetown's reputation.
"They might bP. lnllmldated bY
11
US, he saJd.

Sound like a lot? For the person
who hasn't been eating breakfast It
might! To get you In a breakfasteating habit, start wlth a · smaU

'SONY Dtaltr

, . ,. ,_~... --===.=~..~--=-=n·~=. _,=._~:'. . .~
~=---=-~====~~-:':'=~~-=--:-~~:.:;:
_ _:.. •:.~=~~-:~==~~-~==~-~""'0-~

•

'

�------. .....___

-

,_

'

,

•

Page-6..:..The Daily Sentinel

Calendar -~
TUESDAY

RACINE - Southern Junior
High Athletic Banquet wilt he
b!'ld Tuesday beginning at 6: lJ
p.m., at the high school.

March 26, 1985
at tb!' homeo!CharleneHoetllch,
sponsor. The ritual of jewels tea
wilt he held. Members are to
meet behind the Pomeroy fire-house at 7: 15.

WEDNESDAY

HARRISONVILLE - Past
Matrons of Harrisonville Eastem Star will meet Tuesday
evening, 7:30p.m., at the home
· of Betty Bishop.

LONG OOITOM - Loog
Bottom Community Asaociaiton
wilt meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednes·
day evening at the Long Bottom
Community Building.

HARRISONviLLE--The Harrisonville Senior Citizens Coub
will have a potluck slipper at 6
p.m. Tuesday at the town halt.
Janual)•. February and March
birthdays wilt he observed With
the regUlar monthly meeting to
follow . All members are asked
to attend and visitors are

MASON, W.Va.- Chapterl57
of the Order of the Eastern Star,
Mason, will meet tn regular
sessiolJ on Wednesday evening,
.7: 30 p.m .. in the chapter room,
Mason.lnttiattim wllt be hetd and
all past matrons imdpasfpatrons
in attendance will he ·honored.
and social hour wilt

RACINE - The Southern
Local ·School Dist Iiet Board of
Education will meet at 7 p .m.
Tuesday in the high school
cafeteria.
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SororIty, will meet Tut•sday, 7:30p.m.

1HURSDAY
BRADBURY Bradbury·
PTO will meet Thursday elrening, 7:30p.m., at the school.
POMEORY Twin City
Shrinettes will meet a t7:_30 p.m.
Thursday evening at Pleaser's
Restaurant.

-

Pubflo Notlot

1HURSDAY

•

Public Notice

....... _ n . . _ ..
- f o r .......

...

POMEROY-Precl-ptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, wUI meet at 7:.11 p.m.,
Thursday at the Riverboat
Room, Diamond Savings and
Loan.

~~~

March 26. 1985

Cioot·T-

Business Senices

Vllogo "'
Rudlndlnc.

(3!1Z. 19, 21, 3..

Public Notice
1:

Happenings
- FllEECLOI'IDNGDAY
POMROY - Free clothing
day wUI he held at The SalvaUon
Thursday from 10 a .m. till 12
noon. All area residents in need of
clothlog are welcome.
EASTER BAZAAR

MIDDLEPORT - An Easter
bazaar,

.

.

POOLS PLIS

SEIYICE

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
ater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

. .,, . ..,..,....,...

675-13.1 1
* UICI SPICIAL *
$7900M

........

frN s.a.

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

ond truo, to tho

..........

t -13-tlc

beat of my kno•n411ip.

...... Wltll ....

'

JIM leach
1-304-675-1712

Rtsldentill &amp; CoiiiiiiiiCill

OWNEA : &amp;oroh Flohor

11·14-tfc

Cl.t!·T-

T~

&amp;_CCNIMIRY
VETEIINART

Pornoooy, Ohio, upon roquat.
Edith A. LMch, Cl.t!
~92-7820

13! 26. 1tc

CLINIC
IN MIODLEPORT

PAUL E. SHOCKEY. D.V.M.

JO'S

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8

Ml••t•port, Ohio 45760

PT. PlEASANT OFFICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

nos JAU!OH Avt.

317 North Second

~r-

SMAll oiNIMAl HOUIS ..
i11oMcoy 3 p.m.· I fL'"'·

,...., uo , ...... fL"'WodnosNy 3 p.m.-! p.m.
· 'ltoon4oy I fL"' ·l p.m.
fri~ 1 p.lll.-2 p.m.
S.t....y 10 LIIL·I h!O o.oo.

LAI6E AIIMAI.S AND
!UIGEIY IY AI'POINTIIINT

304-675-2441
12-3-t!n

(CUT OUT FOR FUTUIIE USEI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Mekt•

Group·2

IUIINBI16UI 991·6550

IIIIDINCE~~!116UI 99.1:!!!1~

.,.... lllr tnot plostkl
GrttYI Arrangemtnll

$3, $1, 1 ' $12
AU IIASS..-S 1.00 OFF
FIGUIINES.: •• •t.OO Off
POICEUIN . . lEU!

..
c.-.•...,....,k
,, , ,, Ulfft
, w.... ,,....
Othot Nko lltiM

'

___

OPENr

Thun., Fri.

&amp; lat.-10 to 6

J/2011 ....

DITCHING,
SERVICE

GAS LINES
WATER LINES .
SEWER LINES
ELECTRIC LINES

F"' E•ll•tlll

Bus.; 985-3813
Res.: 985-3137 ·
1·11·1 ....

•R~r.!ge!"~to~ - .
•Dryers •FrMzert
PARTS end SeRVICE
4·5·HC

conducts
•
-- .recent meettng.

_,Burns to observe.anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Paut D. Burns, 109
Locust St. Pomeroy, are observing
their 50th wedding anniversary
IOOay.
celebration of the occasion was
at their home Sunday with a

---ri~iriii~~rffiilif.eifieiiiia~n=:..::-- Mr. and Mrs. Bumsweremarrle&lt;l
at.Greenup, Ky. by the Rev. J.N.
Harold. They are the parents of 15
clllldren. Cherie Rupe, Phoen'tx,
Artz.; Gary · of WUmington, N.C.;

C&amp;C
REMODELING

AFFORDAIII • POITAIII

lii.U ' ,.,,,,

hitr compltfl r....,.... -r·
llmt. ,,. •""" 1ft your own

Painting ~ Carpentry
Wallpaprillg
Over 30 VU. ExiN!Irie"ce

Meigs County-Nat
915-4452
Athtnl County-Doug
695-1010

~

Hoi ..... lpo. !lop by lo ••
tht ............ ,.. ttodc.

IIAtKWOOD HOME SPAS
40017 s - u
Po-oy, OH.

161" 915-3105

3-7·1 mo.

-" r - - - - - - - ,

~
MOTil

8ourcoo ...... ..... 29.366.35
Tolat Qther Fin. .
SOurcoo
43.154.82
ExcotooiTotal
Rocolpli 0....
lUnder) TDIBI
Ollb . .... .... .. ..... 69.160.31
Fund Cull 8olonco.
Jon. t, 1984 .. 683,963.99
Fund Cooh Bot..-,
- oec.-31 . 19114 743;114.30 (3) 26;-1tc --

cu-1 ..

Pioplel&amp;ry
fundi

Rl. U NORTH

POINT PWSANT, W. VA.
8 11ilos from
Po110roy-luon Brld&amp;o
SINGlE IJUS
304-675-6276

-~·-·-- · ~- · - --

Howord L Writ111l

Roofing Co.
NEW-REPAIR
Gutttrl
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
Painting
Storm Doora
&amp; Windows

949-2969
or 949-2263

GUN SHOOT
UCINE

FilE DEPT.
loshani.Utlng

. EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
factctrr Chah
12 Gaup

304-67!-6276

J.J 0-t.l. n,

.

Service~ ......... 218,496.27
1.
An Other .
RIMinuo .... .. ...... 9,711.70
TotaiRownuo
Rocolpts .... .. ... 228,207.97
Penonol
........... 99,123.26
... 33.083.34

MRCHELL'S

••as

HOME VIDEO

EX CAVAn
COMPAN

CENTER

Will do all ty e of
excamng, landecap·

102 Witt Mlln St.

lng, basem-. - ·
age aystama, wMer
and 911t1 lillft, wMer
well drilling and - ·

PH. 992-,911

vice.. trucking (limea-

tone

a. dint.

P-op, OH.

'MACIIIIE &amp; MOVIE
lllnALS &amp; SAUS
O•or 200 Mowioso A•-llo

G&amp;W
PLASTICS

LONG BOTTOM, OH.
GAS PIPE
WATER PIPE
GAS · REGULATORS
OTHER SUPPLIES

BUS.: 915-3113
RES.: 985-3837
3·11-1 ""·

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

delegates wereJennlfer Dye, Peggy
Tobias was named Little Miss
ad Tlsha Jarvis.
Poppy for the unit.
Special persons to be remem Tray favors will be made for the
bered by the unit during the year
Velerans Memorial Hospital and
Arcadia NursingHomeeachmonth.
were "adopted" durtngthemeetlng.
They are Sam Ralrden, grand·
A rummage and bake sale was set
father, and Alice Marcum, grand·
for the weekend of May 16 and
mother, both patients at ArCadia
several other fund raising projects
Nursing Home; MUdred Fowler, were discussed. Donations for the
charter member; Kathleen Man- - sale · are needed and for pickup
. ley, Gold Slarmother; andJennlfer residents may call Mrs. Jarvis at
Geary, special child.
992·5418. It was decided that each
Plans were made to participate tn member wlll contribute a quarter
the District 8 juntorcooference to be lor refreshments. Pizza was served
hetd al Racine on AprU 6. Named as following the meeting.

54 Misc. Marchandi•e

Authorized Johp Deere,
New Hollond, Bush Hoa
F1mr Equipment
Ouler

MIDDLEPORT
FIRESTONE
STORE _

Stllllf 0•1 Wtlllo Wtll

30-50-70°/o
· All Appliances • TY
Sporting Goods
Tires • Misc. Hdwe.
Car Stereos • Fixtures

4 ·

.(3!12;
. 19, 26,. 3tc

Meli.r.ra Kay Clark

Put:illc Notice
PUBUCNOnCE
The Vilogo of Rullond hlo
1ho lokullkrv.._upfor ...:
A 19111 FNihouf flomi.TIUOII
T... lloolol No. GW-11,
modol No. FUOSM lftd o

r-. ...,_.,

1914 -

..... No. 111104011, 7400.

---boo.~tto

llullond Vlllole Ina.. lox 420,
llullond, Olilo 41771. . . .
do!a-wllbo..,coploldlo 12
2. 11• .
wt'c'll rney Ill_,~ flam
"' tho Rutllnd CMc
llullond Wtgo Cclwd ...
- 1ho
to .... "'!t.

-·April

rill!!

n..
c-.

Balance
Jon. 1, 1984 .. 148,398.00
T - Pitll ......., ...... 190.00
Food 8orvioo ......... 2_187.00

Pert Collie a. German Shephard dog to good homa.
Call814·266·1393.

1 cet. 2 doge. all m1le. all
ohoto. Colt 614-441·2129
aher 4PM.
hurw ~r•wn diiG,~ yv.haul awey . Cell after

6:00PM. 114-2116'1436.
Female Springer Speniel approx. 3 yr1. ald. gantle. Cell
614·446-4123 .

New

Homt~-btansin

RIIIIOdoll..
tMUfMO

IRA

CutiOIII Polo lldp.

&amp;Gar...,
loofl,. Work
AklmiNrm I Vinyl Sittings
t 6 Yeara Experience

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7611

11-1-lfc

AIISiai
..,.,............

DAVIS-QUICKEL
AGENCY, INC.

114 COUIT ST. POIIIIOY
Acrtu from (eurtltouN

992-667l

Germ1n Shepherd.
gentle. frlandty. good
dOll. 304·676-1222.

,..---,==·
INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

We'd likt to introdoct wou to
Enlllt·A·Cou. the modem ..Y
to drive the vehicle of rour
·cholcs.
NO DOWN PAYMINT

LOWIIIIOI!TIIlT PAYIUIIT

BLA(KSTON
NEW CAR I
TIUCI LEASING

Box, 326 •
Pomeroy. OH. 45769
For Footer StNict

Call 614-992-673

Part St. Bernard end pert
Oormon Shepherd dog with
dog hou10. 304·1176·2218 .
Ono yur old Shepherd dog.
304· 896·38815.

6

WJie"• Evene--Found your
old book 'Smoky.' Valueble
paper therein. Contac1 me.

Staoto, 607· 7.49·2638.

Rt. 110, S. ol5541n Portlll'.
Sit., M1r. 30.1915stlrtlna

··----r,.iim&amp;rov ........ .
Middleport
. &amp; Vicinity

HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZUIIH
•SYLVANIA
.SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

Wt H••• AFill Thit
sh~ T.. ~elsl••
e• Dltf

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE

CHESTER-985-3307

MOvlng 10lo: 3111 Condor

St .. Pomeroy. Sofe bed. 111
renga, bedroom auit,

8

.

... ,•

··o.a..
...1•
VIW-

I. L. "Bud" lcGHH
Brobr·Auctlon Strvie

l"l 8

Meias County A11ocl1te

M,.GKE£
~a'•*

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addona and
-llooliflg
_rtrnoftlklt
_ _..

fhiii'JI Lemley

- Now A-pttni UMinga In Melgl Co.

_...
-

- ~wollt

-Pl...................,

Phone 742-3171

IF,.. Eltfm.otoo)

..

.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-·215 ' .. -ttf-731,

'-IIJ• Ohl•

12·8-Hc

9

"Free EMimatea"

Situations
Wanted

Will dq housecleaning in
Chutot. Longbottom.
Tupperl Plaine area . Cell
614-986-4392 .

Need temporery office h81p
typing, 1horthand.
Word proceuing, filing, tel•·
phoning 1 Cell Beth at I 14·
448-3412.
~::_:_:..:..:._ _ _ _ lcDependlble v•rd llfVice .
WHde. Welkweyl c6ered .
leave• reked . · Hedge a
trimmed, etc. Call 114-992·
2219. Bill Stock. '
Will plow prden1, lerge or
smell, Poirit Pleeunt. : K8·
nougo. Ohio orao. 814-4414088 or 304-875· 7228 olter 5:00PM .

deys, anytime weekende. ae
Burdotto. Pt. Pl. 175·8612.
Stop ln.
Custom butchering, 8 dlys a
week. phona 30"·882·
3224.

1984 Schullz 3 bedroomi,
kitchen with refrivefatDf.
.......-.-nd dl-olhoi, - ·
trot oit, vinyl undorponnlng.
roof, porch with 1undeck,
304-176-6376.
1973 Mobile homo, 2 bed total ~ alectric.
U.700 .00. Phono 304·
895-38815.

rooms,

n·l::;:;:=:;==;:::::;:=

HouM: for .... Rench style
1 will cere for elderly in my wlih full complatad Hn·
homo. &lt;;oil 61_4-992-6022. !- mont, 1.110x300. tol, 20x40
lnground pool fenettd, city
school. reetaneble. 10 ft .
18 Wanted to Do
Satellita Dish . Cell 114·
441 -3199.
\

sw*eper~. etc. after 15 waak-

Wanted To 8uy

Government Homes dlroim
1
,, (U-repairl
. Also •Call
quent
te• property.
805-187-1000 oxt . GH ·
10189 for information.

1973 Kirkwood MobQa'
Home. 1 2x60 . 2 bedroot'Ml
n'ew clrpet. Good condttiofL
Coil 614-948-2813.
•eooo. or best offer.

3 bdr houM, FR. kitchen,
LR. 1 Vz btlth, AC. on 3 .6
ecres ·ovartooklng Ohio
River, alking in 40'a. C1ll
614-446·2151 otter 4pm.

Older oix room hou10 (whh
two bedroom•! for 1111 Of
rent. Double carvarage. full
buement . On approaimetely 1 .9 •ere lot. RoM
Hilf, Pomoroy. t29,500.
Coli 114-171·2513 .
Modern 3 bedroom houM in
the villaga of Che•te:r. Ohio.
Contact G..,. .. Tho~• at
114·986-3671 .
In SyracuM, ·9 room hou11.
2 bathrooms, woodbumer,
alum. siding, 2 car cerport
with worloohop . Coli 814·
992-72811 .

Three bedroom home. re.l
nice. on route1241n Minersville, priced low. Call 114992-3324 .

fiiiJIICtaJ

Farms for Sale-

F•rm houu &amp; 18 acrM wtth
tobecco btiM end mlnerM
riihts. In Porter, Ohio on
Cemplign Creek Rd .
•41,000. Colt 114-441·
7247 .

34

Buainesa
Buildings

For ule-ln Recin• Ohio~ on
St. f!t. 124. Now tool.
lnsultlted and paneled. c.n
614 -9JI9-2719 .
FOR SALE OR LEASE,
comrnerdel property end

now building, 70'x100'With
2 Kres, 200' road frontage.
no zoning required, 2 miln
north of Point Plae•nt, W.
Vo . on Rt. 12. Phone 304675-1578 w-d•¥•· 304'·
8715-7891 evening• ind

wMkenda.

35 Lots 8o Acreage
B•Mrnenl

a. 3 mobile homa

lots for ula. ownar will

linonco . Coli 114·441·
Addioon Ohio frontage .

·ons.

------.crJta,

For aale bv ownar 37
3 mi. lrom HMC, on Ko.._
Hollow Rd. 112,000 . C•H
814-446·7471 .
•

8uaine11
Opportunity

PH. 949-2801
No

Sunday (oils

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Sizes St1rt From 12'11&amp;'

UTILITY BUI LQI NGS
Sizes f111m &amp;'x6' Up
to 24'x36' •

Insulated Do1 Ho1ses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rlclne, 011.

Ph. 614-143·5191

Television Listenina Devices
Computerized Hearin1 Aid Selection
Hearina EValuations For All Aps

USA II. KOCH, M.S.
Llcenstd Clinical AudloiOiiSI

3 rooms with prtveta bettl,
ref. Roquootod. Colt 814·

441-2216 .

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Am1111, Box 1213
Glllipolis, Ohio 45631

· Smell unfum , 4 rm . houM: M

•"

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

or
843·5424

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOl L-FIU DIRT

10.1-tfc

Shop for 1111 nt8b·
lllhod bull-•. Coli 814·
441·3703 .

. . .uty

10·6-tfc

3/1/2 .... pd.

YOUNG'S

12

21

New llonMs luilt

8 room houM, beth, ba~·
·ment. .. 24,.24 prage. ··-1 1A
acre tilt lot. cl011 to town .
Coli 614-446-4217.

Real Cute Nmodalad Mid·
dleport home. Raal bargain
pricolll Coli 114·992·1941 .

Someone to live in With
lady in Dunbar. W.
Va. Phone 304·676·1374.

mowers. cheln saws .

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

Green T ownehip new 2 etorv
4 or 5 bdr. forme I din in·
groom. utility room, 1 Yz
bath, gerege. concrete drivll,
· n'lce lot. 41'2 mi . from ·
Goltipolio on Rt. 141 . Will
consider mobil• home ••
trede-in. Bargeln priced.
tS2.600. Coli 441 ·8038.

...,,V

Fix-It-Shop · We repair, lewn

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Ph. 16141 143·5425

Gtorp Woorllllld. ·

met ~

and aprings. misc.
ltama. Friday. March 29.
I 0:00 o.m .-8 :00 p.m.
trill

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

CAll cowa,

1t 2:00 p.111. AlciOlnMr,

Yard Sale

St. 11 i1, except tool•. Until
April 14. e 38.6oa· Gtpo .

.Houee for jn Jeckeon
County, Ohio. fi miles above
ThUrrnen off Rt. 35 on Co .
Rd . 41, Bloomfiold Twp. 2
bdr., ·beeemant. attic,
garden space. lerga back
yerd ; good communll-,t,
ecrott-- from -B~oomfi•~d
ochool. Coli 614-251-1261
oftor &amp;PM .

with

comod. Richard Roynoldo.
Auctfon-. Coli 304-276·
3089.

Complete Remodeling
RoOflnti of . . Typoo ·
Wootcod In holM ,,_
20-•
"F- Eo1tmeteo"

2nd Annuel Auction sponsored bj Golli1 Christian
School ot Thells' M1rltt.

Loet and Found

II. I24,P0moroy Ol!io

SUPiRIOR
SIDING CO.
v•n
&amp; A&amp;UIIIIIIl
Complete Oom.r Wootc

o ·pen territories with tha
new AvOn~ -t!all 3Q4-61!·

Someone to NY night,• with
on oldortv lody. 30_4-576·
3674.

AND SERVICE

10.50fo

WO&lt;~

HIGH SCHOOL JUNIOR SENIORS. Tho Army Na tJonal ·ouerd ~an g!n you
nluebte work e•periance.
Gooll Pey, ·good benlfi11.
plue learn • lkill . Call 304176-3960 or 1·800-6423619.

3·22-tln

WE ARt'YOUR SALES

INDIVIDUAL IEnREMENT
ACCOUNT

3358.

Will cere for ill or elderly In
your home. by hour or day.
experk'"cad in medicM care.
304· 676·6137.

'FREE ESTIMATES"

·1 981 Victorlln 14x70,
Quail CrHk. pricad raduoad~
n.o.oo . Colt 114 -2411·
9291 or nil collect &amp;oea
432 -4403.
•

1 bdr. hOUHit64Mii1Creek

AVON earn 40% plut fru
producta . Call 814· 441 ·

Equipment Recommended
by Leldin&amp; Carpet M1nu·
focturers.

7

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

prafarred. Sand r11ume
cover lettar atating
BeautHul 3 bdr. home built
whk:h potit6on •pptying for
for you t18,900 • up. Su
to: Robin Eby, 8uckeye
our ·modoto. Call 1·114·
Community Servk:e. P.O.'
881· 7 3 11 .
Boa 104, Jeckson, Oh
41140. Dudlina for eppli· . lnveatment. 8 unit apartment complex, buift1974. 4
cants: 4· 1 ·815. Equel Opporapenmenta .furnlahed, only
tunitf Employer.
1% Yllcancy, rnident manager, t1 ,440 monthly inFloral deeigner, e~tperlenc;:e
come . Renters pay all utilineceeury. Send retumt to
lioo. Coli 814-692-1189
boK 700. in cere of the
days or 614-594-2874 after
Gollipollo Dollrlribuno, 826
6.
3rd. Ave.. Gelllpolis, Oh
45631 .
and

1429 .

*VINTL 'SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*ILOWN IN
INSULAnON

Roger Hysell
Garage

IIGEJIILOIIG

Public Sale
a. Auction .

8

Giveaway

Auction .wry Friday night at
the Hanford Community
Center. Truckloeda of new
rnerchlndiM every week.
Conalgmanta of new • uaed
mtrchandiH IIWIYI Wll·

PH. 992·5612
or 992-7121

FRED W. CROW,
CROW&amp;CROW
Attomop ot t..w,
P. 0 . Box486
Pornoooy, Ohio 45789
11141892-1132

and Mrs. John Clark, Marietta, are announcing lhe birth
ofthelrflrstchlld, Melissa Kay, born
on Feb.l9at the Marietta Memorial
Hospital, Marietta. 'llte Infant
~lghed seven pounds, lour ounces
:1$1 was 18 inches long.
-Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Clark, Middleport, and Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Brockmelre,.

I·J·Ifo

AI•• Tre•••l~tlo•

e....-..

... .Mr.

F1r111 E~IIP•••t
Plttt &amp; Servin

fece . Profe18lonel work 11
decent pricee. Frw elti·
metee. Cell Doc 304·876·
27f3.

SAVE

Fernwood Garden topic
plants hazardous to you

;ctark birth

U. S. liT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Sign P*nting on env aur·

PH. (614) 985··4212

Cal: 742-2407

Junior Auxiliary holds recent meeting

SINCJLES CLUB for We..
Virglnianall Dateila •2 .00.
Hillbilly H.. rta Club. Box
81, t..ivuy. W. Vo. 28176.

Wt Use Von Schr1der

2/2511 mo.

•live Entertainment of ree HBO
•Kitchenettes •Restaurant
U.A.
.

Public Notica

PION.EER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS
35185 Oik Hill Ro1d
Lone Boitoni. OH,.mu·

J-11-IIM.

Officers were elected at the
nrorgantzational meeting of the
'JUnior Auxiliary of Feeney-Benn~tt ·
'l?,ilst 128, American Legion.
. ·Elected were Tlsha Jarvis, presic)ent; Mildred Parsons, first vice
J.jrestclent; Jennifer Dye, secretary·
·treasurer; Amy Might , chaplain;
Jennifer Garey, sergeant at arms;
l"eggy Garvls, historian.
Gerry Parsons Installed lhe new
officers. Advisors are Diane Jarvis
,~ Jeannie Lipscomb. Trisha

A11111111111.1:111 I' 11 I:.

IIT11E RED-wit

•Ran...

Opetating RevenUM:
c~~orveo fat

992·5175 Or
742-3195

011 St. II. 124 In S,...

•Waahers •Diahwalhert

tYr. and Mr.r.

Call:

3

237R_S,_

held Thursday and Friday !rom
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. dally tn the
basement of the Middleport
Masonic · Temple: Craft Items,
baked goods and Easter basket
!(ems will be sold. Lunch each
day wut he served from 11 a .m . to
2p.m. with soup, sandwiches and
beverages avaUable.

A Bible study on the prophet,
Micah, from the fourth chapter of
Concern was given by Mrs. Harley
Brown at the recent meeting of
· Group 2 of the Middleport Presbyterian Church held at the home of
,
' ·
Mrs. Dwlght Wallace.
=..,.~-=~ ;~: JackSiirden was ro:hosleSs
Patti D. Burns
for the meeting with Mrs. Brown
presldtng at the meeting In the ;.
absence of Mrs. David Cummings,
chairman. Mrs. Wallace had the
opening prayer followed by roll call
Carla McKinney, Middleport; Rt·
and the Collecting of dues by the
chard of Phoenix , Artz.; Sandi Van
treasurer, Mrs. Myron Miller. It
Ma tre, Point Pleasant, W.Va.;
was decided to dispense wlth the
Larry, Ada, Mich.; Jerry, Kodiak,
mother-daughterbanquetthlsyear.
Ark.; Paula Myers, Langsville;
The least coin offering was.
Mike. Cheshire; Ed, Roy, Utah;
conducted by Mrs. Sorden. Mrs.
- Dougla:s;-Pomeroy;- Jan-Roush;-- Wtlllam--Morrts- - was -devotional
· New Haven; Beth Birchfield, Ruleader and read an article, "His
lland; Susan Trent, Racone. A son,
Arrest," and then concluded with an
Roger, c:lled in Infancy. Mr. and Mrs.
Eogllsh prayer.
·
Burnshave37grandchlldren,and10
The hostesses served a dessert
great-grandc~dren.
course.

W111" NEEDS

OPEN• Tues.·WIII.·Fri.
Sot. I Sun. 10 to 5
Mondays 10 to a
Closlll ThurWy

T1H111eft, tttt• Twp. 79, l1t
dri ..woy Oft rltht.
/tln
1115

3-18-1 mo.

for S1le

FOR AU TOUI

, Em! of lt. 7
lp Moip Hitlh School

1·614·9t~M 191

32 Mobile Home•

22 Morey to Loan

MILLEI
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

THE COUNIIY LOFT
(;1FT SHOP

1111 Joffor_A_
Pf, ...._., WV !JISt

PAT HILL FORD

~County

_.,.lho -·"""' '-'

to tbo -

UDIAIOI

•

The Dllily Sentinei-Paga 7 :

Ohio

1ROMM EXCAVA
BULLDOZER &amp; BACKHOE WORK
*BASEMENTS *SEPTIC SYSTEMS
*FOOTERS *GRADING
*CONCRETE WORK

PH. 742·23.2 8 12_1o.111

Cherrington Sorop M...lo.
Unp. lron·t2.00 - · ehort
lron-•2.10 awt, Motor
Cooi·II.IO OW1, No. 2
Coppor-e.38 lb.. Alum.·
e.211 lb., llodl8tan· f .ZI Ito.
Col,. bofore you eelt.ll141
02·7171.

House tor ule or t,.de for
form fond. 304-17&amp;-3111 .

811 Roor Firot Avo. Ooll
114-44&amp;-1779 .
Two bedroom unfumtehed
hou10. 107~ - n d Sl,

Ho-. WYo. e111 .00
month, •100.00 dapa.tt.

304-·2-2801 .

�•

The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A·DAY

41 . Houses for Rent

64 Miac . Merch•ndise

tow Hewn. 2 Mdroom.

rnomh,

depotit

- -.._ __ --

'

56 -Building

t;p_,- _z:,.,_

KIT 'N' CARLYU

Urll Wright

Television
Viewing

79 Moton Homes
&amp; Campen

trector
8

once, *30.00. 304·175·
3082.

ezso.oo. AI- view, phone
304-882-31141.
.

304·1711-2811 .

Farm Equipment

Prom dre11, size 7, Worn

panly turnlebed kitchen,

3-ooma,
retod,-

61

Tuu::tay. March 28. 1986

March 26. 1985

Polnerov-llliiddleport. Ohio

28

II. prowler camplnf
troller. Qooandelectric,_t.
Tub and ahower. air condi-

~· 24 ft.

,.,... oodlnory """"'"'

EVENING

rtqulrH.

Building Material•
Block, brick. aewer pipet.
windowt. lintels ; etc .
Claude Wintert. Aio Grande,
0 . Coll614·246-612.1.

~ TIIAT '0"'11 . , _ . , ~ ~ ~~· by Wonr!Amoldond lob~
Unocr-1'-lourJont '-"• to MCh square. 10 ronn

3/28/85

tion. $2800.00. Coli 114742-2811 . .

Supplies

YJl}ftN'f fi)~

" 8:00

..w

awning. ua.cl vtry little.
excellent , alaapa 7. ·
n.ooo .oo . 304·812 ·
2986.

·1

1 ~..! CD ew 111 •
(J) Hot Potato

.•

.I EWTTE I ..·
I Cl ()

(I) Qr. Who ·
(lj) ~2-1, c - (CC)

Dlff'nont 8trokM
IMAXI MOVIII: "'They Got

..

MICo~

1 NEVER SHOU"P'V~

Furniahed, no city' tuea.

weter • HWige furoiahed,
betu.tiful riverview. Ka·
nel!gl . Fotter'a Mobile
Home Pork, 814 -446-1602.

•

"Tastes

•

women ·

THIY' P MAKE IT A
IUCiiEATIOirrJ AIZ:EA.

I

doesn't it?"

16 hourMpOwer Workhorae

HIUCREST
KENNELS
8oerding
all breeda.
Heated
facilitiet .
AKC Doberman puppioo:
StudService. Call614-4467796.

indoor~ outdoor

--~-------

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

814-367-7220.

garden
tractor.
Madeinch
by
Wheelhone
. 48

mower. Manuel shift .
e2ooo .oo. Cell 614-9926241 .

t-=;;;:==;==:;::::;=::-r;=;=;::;::;;=;:::1
71

. Auto8 for Sale

72

Trucks for Sale

Set of 121nch plowo. 3 point
hitch . De .e rbour·n -e ·.
$126.00. Cell 814-986 ·
3546.

e

I ro.l'T KNOW...
~ OCI,I'T 400
11\~
'

&amp;. J'~ Home Improve·
menta. Siding VInylS. aluminum aiding, ov.rhrng rutter
• roofing. FrH ettlmat...
Coll614-387-7488.

J

fully

'

security depotlt. No pets or

children . Cell 1614) 986 ·
4227 .

.

you ever saw

chair.
man, 3 tablet, lextra
8886. Sofaa and
I
priced from 8286. to 1896.
Tobleo, f&amp;Oond up to •121 .
Hide-a-bedt.*390. and up
jiACKSON ESTATES
to •&amp;eo ...... bed• •145,
APARTMENtS (Equal, Recllnero, 8226. to t376 ..
Houolng 0pportunlty1
lompo from $28 . to •126.
)nonthly rent sterts at $183
pc. dinette• from •109 .• to
lor 1 bedroom end •198 for
436. 7 pc. $189 and up.
: :..o:=:wm, . ~epc:!! !200, Wood iibiB -with 1ht chalri
located ne., Spring · Volley
f2811 to •746. Dolk •no
pta11 tnd Foodlend, pool "up to $226. Hutchtt, t&amp;&amp;O .
and Cable TV available.
Bunk bed complete with
hours 11 poatible 10 am to 4
mattrenea. 8276. and up to
bmlnd7pmto9pm
a396 . Baby bedo. $110.
Mondoy-Fridov. Call 614· . Mattri1te1 or box tp1ing1.
. 446 .- 2746 or leave
full or twin •.asa., firm, •ea.
ine11ege.
;
and t78. Ounn 1111. •22&amp; .
4 dr. cheatl, t49. 5 dr.
e5g, ·Bod ·fro-o,
' f'edecorat.- 2 bdr apt., exc:. ca.eata,
.,
.. _
location. Regancr Inc. Call
S20.ond •26., 10 gun. Gun
304-87.5· 7283 876-6104 cabinet•. $3150. Gat or
or 67&amp;-6386.
electric ranget *376. Baby
mattr..Ha, t2&amp; 6 e3&amp;. bed
Partilllly fumiehed ·2 bdr.
f~ameo $20, 826. • $30,
garlge apartment. Aduha k•na frame $60 . Good ooloc only, aacurity· depoait . Call
tion of bedroom aulte1,
attar 3PM 814-446-9279.
rock_en , m_Jttal cablneu,
headboards $38 6 up to
Furniahed 2 rooma &amp;: bath.
866.
downatain, clean, adul•
~-.,ly, no petl. Raf. required .
Und Furniture .. 6 pc .
Call814-441·1519
.
dinette. head boardt, and 2
'
bedroom auitet. 3 m'ilea out
Furnlahed efficiency 807
Bulovlllo Rd. Open 9am to
Ind. Ave., Gallipolia. Share
&amp;pm, Mon. thru Set.
bath, •160 utilitiea peid,
614-448·0322
odulto. CoR 614-448-4416
otter 7PM .

"""""'!.

.

we qor
SOME

Juat arrived. Trailer load of
barb wire •20 roll. ·J im'o
Ferm Equipment Center, Rt .
36 Wool. Golllpolio, Oh Call
614·448·9777 or 61 4-448·
2484.

NEW

1 bar ut 3 ttoola. 1 bar tet
with 2 ttoolt. 1 drnaer. Call
614-448-0844 or 614·446·
46'37.
. -"-"-

Male Peek·a-poo puppies. 8
weeks old. Call 614 -992·
6013.

Mixed firewood t20 a
pickup load. you .haul it. Call
814-448-41199 . .

57

Pre-tprlng close out o~ all
ltMI buildingt, direct fee ·
tory to you dlacounta, imme·
d1ate delivery. Cell collect
1-617-692-3821.

-:--:-~~~---­

1 ladiet bike.' 1 boyt bike, 1
girl bike, 1 Hoover 1weeper.
1 humdlfier . Call 614-446·
0826
·
For Sale: Waterbed *1 00 .
Ceii614L44~·.8273 !!.!.l!14·
261·8034.
1h bed. very Good cond.,
t36. ·2 rabbit oeoe• e&amp; .OO

each. Call814-448-1473. 9
to 6.
RCA dlte player, 9 mo. old.,
exc. cond., orginally 8200,

alking t100. Coll814-448·
4737,

Musical
lnstruma,nts

For····detoilo · ·cell ·-614-446-7921 .
100 h . 12 channel Sna.ke by
Conquett, tource with reel.
Use~ 3 moa .• $300. 2 Peavy
speaker columna 8200 . Call

Boar hogs for tale, purebred
Red Polled bull. Cell 814379 -2146 or 614-379·
2868 .

For tala, Alvarez Vari flattop ·
guitar len than 2 year1 old.
Ltk• new. •300.00, call
614-142-2996.

gelding 15.3 handa: 2 white

614-446-4526 .

Sho-Bud Pro·1 pedal ateel

guitar *700. Fender 'Sand,
maater reverb amp-2-12 "
speaker t:abinet $260 , 304 ·
773-6693."

6 yr. old Regiatered Sorrel

atockinga

a.

white bleze.

Shown in 4-H &amp; Quaner
horse ahoWs. Cal1614-288 -

6622 .

Regittered Ou1rter horae
colt: born Mov 9, 1984
Dunn collar with'whiteatar,
$390. Call614-288-6622.
Saddle honea, elao gaited

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

tor trail. Aiding leaaona.
Tack . Cell 614-898-3290.
Ruth Reeves.

•4

cyL, auto. good

L.-----------..-1

""''PI·

well , Pioneer atereo. belt
offer. Cell 304·676-1690.
83 Cheveno $3,200. Coli
614· 379-2682.
.
1979 Volktwagon Rabbit
fuel injaclld, good cond ..
AM-FM otoroo,. AC: Coli
614-266-1423.
1982 Plymouth Touritmo 4
cyl., 4 opd., 34,000 milft.
Call 814-379·2728.
1982 Camero autometic
305 angina. AC. cruiu
Cdntrol. AM·FM 8 track,
sl.ooo. con 614· 4487358.

74

Motorcycle•

2 Hondo Big Rodo 1983 a.
1984. SH 11 Botz Hondo.

ing Opportunities . 614992·7721 .
Two bedroom apartmentl in
New Haven. Newty remodelod In town. Call 614·
992-7481.
Fumithed 2 bedroom apanmentl in Middleport. All
utllltiOI paid. Coll614-992~084 .

Two bedroom apartment .
frn heat. Call 814-9927481 .
1 and 2 bedroom furnlahed

aptl. for rent in Middleport.
Coli 614 -992 -1304 between 4 ;00 and 8 :00
eveninga.
APARTMENTS , mobile
hom... houHt. Pt . Ple..ant
end Gellipollo. 814-4468221.
Furnlahed one bedroom apt

In Point PINunt. Very clean
end nlco. Phone 304-876·
1388.

Furniahed uj)ataln apart·
ment, 1 bedroom. helt and
water paid. adulta, 304-

676· 2661 .

Valley Furniture. new &amp;
uaad. Large taction of quality fu~l1iture. 1216 E11tern
Ave., Gallipolis.
Trade Centtr Furniture
Outlet, K•neuga, Oh . New
Maytag a. Croolay Appliancoo . Cell614·446-4488.

Men only. 919 Soc .. GolllpoNo. 814-441 -4411 otter 7
. p.m . .
48 SpliCe for Rent

Mobile hoiMiot, 12'd0' or
omallor. •71 woter pold. 4th
• Nell, Qolllpolio. Coli 614·
441· 4411 otter 7PM.

Seara hot water tank, 30
go1 .. 8100. 4 yro. old . Elect·
ric Sean typewriter.
$200.00 . Maintenance on
both. in good condition . Call
614-992-3379.

Special thit week. 30 in.
elect. range cOppertone Pre·tprlng Cion-out on all
$76. eve level electric range
b lldl
·
white *9&amp;, gat rani'\A 38 in, atee1 1:.1 ngs. Direct fac ·
v~
torv to you dlscOunta. lmmewhite •t&amp;, Whirlpool auto diate delivery .. Call collect
waaher •76, Kenmore auto 1 _617 •692 _3821 .
waaher •7&amp;, Kenmore. dryer 1 · -:-:=-:------~­
*1 .26, Whirlpool auto
Wllher like new *160. aide 1974 .Chevy pick -up. 4 n·ew
tirea, 360, standart thih.
by side refrigerator freezer e7&amp;0 .00 . 1983 Monte
whlte.196.goadryor$125 . Corio, 305. 37,000 miloo .
Skaggs Appliencea Upper 1 86 pound weight set,
River Rd. 614-446-7398.
e&amp;Q.OO. 600 pound capac·
ity
weight bench, •76,00.
Queen tile box tpringt &amp; EKcerclte bicycle. teo.oo.
rhattren like new, •1 00. Coli 814-7,42-2744.
Coll814-2&amp;8-1393.
Floural. Blrly American
Kelvinetor Free1er, upright. couch, •100.00. Drapea
No frost. •160.00. Coli and hooks, 144x80,
614-986-4392.
816.00. No Sunday calls.
614-992· 2469.
Kroehler couch·3 revertible
T. cuahiont. grHn nylon Firewood *20.00 pickup
clettic design. EKcellant lood, 830.00 delivered. Cell
condition. UOO.OO. Coli 304-676-6782 or 1176·
614-986-3646.
2991 .

59 For Sale or Trade

Fill Eoltor 8olkoto

with

~:~e::":!ttP:!~h ~:d ~:~~P~
52 CB.TV. Redio
Equipment
25 Inch Zenith conaole,
color. U80.00. Clll .l14·
982 ·3117 oftori:30PM.

64 Miec. Merchandise
Knouff Arawood Split· 91"
hlrdwooda. You pick up or
we d - . HEAP vendor.
114-ZII-1241.

·'

Want to rent corn It hay
fields . Gallipolis &amp; Cheahire
area. Call 614 -367-0181
aher dark.
'
Hay for aola, $1 .76 Bolo.
Call 814·258 -6740 lifter
4

1961 Ford wrecker 81,600.
Call 614-268-1393.
F.1r111

&amp;
81

Supp li es

l1vestnck

Farm Equipment

JD 2 row planter, tobacco
aenar, 6 pt. ·chizel plow. JD
8 ft. wheel ditc, New
Holland hay rake. 3 pt. post

hole digger. oickle mower, 8
ft . dreg dioc. Call 814-266·
1266.
Spring Special: 2!1' x30'x8'
wlth 18'K7' garage door It
aervice door, 83,888
erected. Iron Horte Bldga.

814-332-9746 collect.

64 Farman Cub with equipment. •1. 7!)0 delivered.
Call814·379-2182.

2 tractor• 446 Long S. Ford.
12.600 'each . 1 milk cow.
~:i.:iifi:.RJi:jUJj;_jLColl 814-246-9640 after

For rent Sleeping Roomt
and light houM keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Coli 814-446-0751 .
Fwnl•~d room. e100. Utilitilt. range. ref. Shere bath ~

VANGUARD PAINTS·
Quality you can trual .
Ebertbach Hardware.
Pomeroy, Ohio_. Call 614·
992-2811 .

pm .

1983 , Oldo Cutlaoo Su preme. V·B, 22 MPG, air,
tilt. AM-FM cou .. low milo,
below book. Call 814·448·
0362.

1-:-......
::-:-------1877 · Cutl111 Supremo
Brougham, aharp and
loaded. Coll814-843-6127.

For Ale Suzuki motor cycle.
Coli 614-266-6261 otter
~~,.

.

1974 !lorlay Davldoon:1080
Sportoor price $2,200, Cell
814-446-2077.

JIM'S PLUMBING. HEATING. At. 1, Box 366, Golli·
polio. Coli 614 -317-067,1 .

83

WINNIE

Excavating

f~~=~==~~=~~~~~~~~~~~t~~~:~~~~:
They'll Do It Every Time

BARNEY

!~ ~'X'::.~~ :1 ::_ 0~

1976 Pinto ltltlon wagon,
good worlc cor. 8100.00.
304-882-2934 .
'73 MDnto Corlo, 304·176·
7102.

1 I ft. alumlnmum Mmi-V
with 31 HP motor • tnoler.
11.000. Coli 114·379·
2182.
11 ft. wood rowing johnbD.Ot. Modo by Woovar. Coli
1·114-899-7171.
:
17 lt. Crutllner, 1111
lnboerd -outboard. power
trim prop, po- trlm tabo,
trl-haul. 304·171·1281.

7e
72

Trucka for 8111

1978 fOfd · - Cab f.
110. 4-WD, a1110., AC,
crulae. " ........... AM-I'M.
Col I 1 4-441·4422.
1N1 Ford f-100 ..., ••••
II!Oo1'1d PU, I GYI .. 4 apd.,
...... lherp. 14,n8. Joltn'o
Auto loleo, lulavlla lid.
Cell 114-446-4712.

Malcolm ond
Jenny are having trouble
trying to keep o man from
harassing his ox-wife end
her new husband. (60 min .)
Cil illl Frontllflo (CC) ·A
Class Divided .' An Iowa
teacher divided her clan
into two sections, superior
and inferior. in order to
teach her children what it
was like for blacks in -the
1980's. (60 min.)
9:30 IHBOI Coming Attroclions
10:00 D (}) m Remington Steole
. Laura
ond
Remington
travel to Cannes with her
olumni club and find them·
seives chased by some
deadly jewel 1hieves . .!RI
(!!0 min .)
·
(]) World Cup Skiing:
Iorn from
Mon'o Glont
Panoromo. Canada
(]) MOVIE: 'Short Walk to
Daylight'
•
(j) Moonllgh1inl
Cil Sta..wlde
(fi) Newawotch
GISalp
IHBOI Hitchhiker
!MAXI MOVIE: 'The Dro&amp;ICC)
10:30 (]) Celebrity Cholo
(J) Molaughll" Group

WHAT DID

SHE SAY?

"AAAH"

•

illl
a-• DeolGIINNN_.

(Heal Corlln on Compua
Toke o look at life Carlin·
!JYie.
··

Ganaral Ha111ing

Auto P1rt1
&amp; Accaesorle•

8 • M TillES. Tire -11.
C""\4"1' Wheelo ' Cal for
prlcu 304-eh-uu.
llneo1871.
,.

77

Auto Repair

Jamea B:ov'a Water Service ,
Aloo poolo filled. Coil 814·
216· 1141 or 114· 446 1171 or81!t-441·7911 . '

SNAKE!!

Ken'• Water'&amp;ervtct. Walla~
citternt, poola tilled. Phone;
614-367-0123 or614·3&amp;7J
7741 nlghtordoy.
I
Do you need aomethlr'ig
moved Or heuled awav7'

We'U "do Ill Coli 814 · 211 ~
620 .1 otter O:OOPM .
•

._ ·

Llmlltono. grovel. und, rut
dirt end _ . dollv.rod, 304·
171·4412.
l
87

Upholatary

•

TAIITATE
UPHOLITIIIY SHDP 1
1113 lac. A.... QoHipelio ·
114-441-7833 Of114-448:'
1833.
•

(i2) New•
(]) Bill Coaby ShCil Dod'a Army
@Lea 8uocogllo.
Gl Benny Hill Show
11:30 UC1:lCI&gt;Tonlght Sh- To·
night'• guests -r• Jame•
Stewort end muolclon
NadJa
• Sonnonborlt
Salenoo . (80 min .)
·
(I) .... al (hug'"'
CIJ lp ltiC.nter
[I) WICIIP In Cinolnnotl
• ()) Fall Guy
()) LlloNIItht Amarloo
Ill Told
'
• crJI A I C - Nlghtllne
Twilight Zone
(HIOI MOVIE: 'The Ho1el
Harnpehlre'

penlnsula

I Actress
Virlinla

41 Smooth
DOWN
1 Not-

It Daisy"'"'

Z Male

15 Bomber
ltl"ftm
.,.__,..
11 Torched
11 Runner

S No doubt
aboutitl'
4 Eye
c - .. _.
5 .,.,,..,
I Hold out
7 Adherent
(suff.)
8 Probably

12:00 ~Burna
Allen
.._..al•artlleok

MOYIII: ,.,_.,, Ina.'
AIC - . NlghtHne
1!1 MOVII: 'ProrniM Her

· l!;on.w~ud
A - .c - r

IMAXl MOVlll 'Halloween'
(I) CiliAta Night with
· Qevlcl LMNt,_ 'fonigh.-o
gueat 11 Lorry Miller. (80
min .)
(]) Low TNt lob

12:10 •

trick

.. U Rebuff
"'"·

nowen

relative

SebasUu
18 Coaaack
laader
Z0 Climb .
lna·w•y
%1 He's no

t Dlegal
drug

II Jewish

friend
zz Ratlan
ZS Punch

uc:ellc

Yesterday'sAns11el'
.. "La ..
11 "Behold ..
-:the
Z? Scottish
of God .. fabric

·"

za George

II Signified
Ruth
20 Seatch
!1 K too

Z4 Neronlan
n~
garb
Dmel"""'ody
Z5 Sacred
.
Egyptian II Old note
beetle
S7 Flat (mus.)

Z4 Freight

welgbt
Z5 Woven
Z7
pity

cause

.

zt Sling
31

Came

10 tenns
IZ High
(mUI. I
13 Allar constellaticJn
..
Indian
..,
1$ De Nlro
S7 Nuraary

uu.

b+-+--

word

liVer$
.. ~.. ._.., ...,
seaport

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Hert'sllow to work It:
AXYDL·B AAXR
'-LONGF"'LLOW

•

"'

One letter sllnda for another. In this sample /t. is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter'$,
aposttophea,lhe length and formation of the words are all
hints. E.ch day the code letlers are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

e

PEANUTS

consooant

5 Ught-h8arted

-11 Stravinsky
U Outbreaks

1)).

11:00W&lt;Il&lt;ll &lt;1J .IDWI'•• ..~ i

1

Smith and· We11o~ revolver

..
GLORY BE!!

fOr

B6

1

•Ia

.,,,

Arrow Plymouth '79, AM FM ,.dlo tepe deck, aun
root. 1806 J,._n llvd.,
Point Ple-nt. 304·1762835
.

·-).

iii~iiioc'Clrucl•~ and

.
· Qolllpotio. Ohio
Pbona 814-446·3888 'I'
8n''"'fl'"77

...

Buah·Hog rotary orlu
mo-r, Modtl TM-6. 6 ft
cut.. 3 point hitch. rear
mount, IKC cond, 304·468·
1727.

Blight pol"' demo. .. Flaohlng orraw lltn•· New otherwill. U41 complete, lour
loft, borvoln. CeH hnmodlotely. 1-800-423·0113,
anyllme. (Faatary repa

's·.~~ ~~il~~'&gt;c;r.~i~tsrit;,~~~~~~~~in~to~n~effontohel~in- 0 • ~~~,!Z~~~~~~~~~~~~:;.;;:J.I~~

83 Hondo 760 Shodow only
1978 Ford Granada. PS,PB,
2,200 mll11. 2 holmeto. exc. Good-1 EKCIVBtlng, bile•
bushel. Lorga round beloo of AC.. 83 •800 mlleo end In
ment1. footera. driveweyr.'
cond. Coll614-446-3738.
good hay, 810 ·00 1 bale. 3ood condition. Call 814·
Mptlc taflkl, lendacaping.
Shade river farms. Cell
614-986·3665 or 614·986·
49-2490.
1982 Hondo 760 Cuotom, Coli anytime 114 -441 2.000 octuol · mlloo. mlm. 4637. Jamet L. Davitqn, Jr.
386 B.
.
1978 Ford F100 pickup. PS, · cond.,
' ..
nevw slny bar • ..owner.
luggogo rock, $2150. Coli
Hay for ule. Square bales. outo. 82200.00 Coli 114992-7453.
Dozer Work land· Cl•arint•
814·388·9809.
Call614-992-6633.
landiCaplng, etc. Free nt:J..
1977 XR-7 Morcury Cogar.
1983 Hondo Moped. Good motel. Coli 1114-448-8038:
E"cellent condition. Call
condition. Coli 614-247- or ~14·912·7119 onytlme. ·
Transpurlalillll
614-949-2239.
3712.
Reaaonable Ratea. Oitchln~
1978 Dodge Aopen, IUIO,
for water. gee, electric, anj:l
1\'o.
n
M.t
lt~b.,n
upren
318 VI,' locke goad . .,00.
drolnogo llnoo. Call 614·1
71
Autos for Sale
mopod;,i~colltrn
·
------~--- 1977 Plymouth -·Arrow. 4
Call 1~4-912-3112 - k· 446·8608 or 114·448•
opood. 4 cyt. fluno good. Goo
doyo otter 4 :30 pm end 2771 .
11vor. $860. Coli 014· 892•
weekenda 1nyt1me.
TOP CASH paid for '80 7403.
$320 .00.
model and newer u11d cart. 1-:-:=::-:-:--~-~~­
84
Elec1r'icitl' ~ .
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911 1977 Monte Carlo, 360,
&amp;
Refrigeration
1980
LTD
KIWIIIkl
760.
Eattern Ave .. GallipoHt. Call automatic, PI.P8.Air. 1873
2.000 ootual mHoo. Uko
614-446·2282.
Chivy% ton pick-up, 360,4
new. Very Jharp. •1&amp;00 .00.
lpood, runo good. body
Cal 114-949-2410 or 114- SEWING Machine rep1ir1j
247· 3801.
1982 Ford Eacort 39.000 rough. Call 814-190-1286.
HrVIce. Authorlled Singer
miles, 36 MPG, blue with
Solei a. Service Shorpon
1978
Mollbu
Clooalc.
Runo
blue interior. 2 dr.. hatch- good. ·uoo.oo. Coli 814- ·
Scluon. Fabric Shop,
76
Boats and
bock, VGC, $3,400. Coli 992 -2671.
Pomeroy. 814·892·2284. i
614-3118·8710 .
Motor•
Sale

304-17.1 -2913.

Polo born buHdlnfto built, FOf
' - -lmotoo col304-1713981.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

1 •000 bushel corn, 82 · 50 1

lure. 304·876·5"4 00.

Model 211, 46 collbor, 8!h In
berrall. holator end pruento·
tion ceae InclUded.
•300.00. Grey mDtorcyclo
helmet t20.00. 304·8711·
4414.

"82

1983 Hondo 710 Shodow.
or 614·

Furnlahed •Hiciency 8185
utiUtea pd .. alngleadult. 920
4th Ave .. (]alllpolil. 814·
446-4416 after 7 p.m.
Freezer beef. Sat of turning
12 in. p40WI . 13 COWl. 1
Hereford Bull, aome with
calvea . 304-676-4182 .

.J

w..

Ludwig drum set, complete.

1 famHy 3 bdr .. unfurni1hed
garege apt., 1 mo. dep. &amp;
ref. roqulrod . Co11814-4483788.

Riv•raide Aptl. Middleport .
Speciel rate• for Senior
Citizen•. e130 . Equal Hour-

_ ......

The falsest card

Jwo bedroom trailer, no .
peto, one child. $176.00
month. Cell614·992-3946
.
.
Apartment
for Rent

-

•onel)eyetonme
7:00 • (J) PM M""'zlne
.
Anawerlle~e: [
CD H.,. Come the Brldaa
(J) SportoCari1w
~.Answers too••onow)
CIJ Little Hou• on ·the
.Yesterday's. Jumbles: MELLO WHINE VELVET GRISLY
Prairie
Answer: What he did after pullif'g a lead alug In the
(J) En-lnment Tonight
scale-STOLE A WEIGH
·
[!) WhMI oi .Fortune
CJ (J) Wheel of Fortune
(I) illl MecNeiVLehrer
Newahour
· ill Newo
Gl (i2) New ' Nome Th.e t
Tune
• Jafferoono
IHBOI Cultu,. Club In
· Concert One of the ·most
""""'!
.~.~.,-==·-=""'=,5'·=
- ""'""""'-·'=-~-='-' ~~· -""" -·~~
colorfUl hitmakert in music
today performs at the Hammersmith Odeon in · LonJames Jacoby
don .
7:30 ·a(}) Tlo Tac Dough
(J) Numero Uno: SwimNORTH
3·25-lfl
ming Murray Roae from
. .AQ
AustraliS.
.JI!42
"(() D (J) Family Feud
+I!!
CD Jaopordy .
10 5
® WhMI of Fortune
· By Jlllllft Jacoby
Ill (i2) Entortolnmem
WEST
EAST
. Richard Frey, long-time editor of
Tonight
•as
•tono
tbe American Contract . Bridce
Ill WKRP In Clnclnnetl
•AK
•us
League Bulletin (19~8·1~70), iJ a
8:00 D(J)CI&gt; A·TMm (CCI Tho
tQt64
+105
great COIJtributor to bridce literature.
A-Taam ·infiltratel an auto
+Qa&amp;2
+An
Modem payen may not taow that he
factory 'in order to catch a
SOUTH
wu alao a great championship payer
gang of auto parts thievea.
.KJ2
in . the early days of tournament
{A) (80 min .)
.Q 10 g
brld&amp;e. Here is a deceptive play be
CD Gentle Ben
tAKJ 2
(]) NCAA Divlalon I
made 50 years aco that has withstood
+K43
Womei\'i Swltnmlncr and· - ·
teat of ·time. ·- -· ·--..-·- '""
Diving
Chomplonahlpo
~-Vulnerable: Neither '"" ·
In 1115 North would Introduce the
from Tuocolaau AL
Dealer: South
heart suit into the bidding after
(() MOVIE: 'Tho Savage'
South's opening one no-trump bid . Not
t
Nortlo Eoot
Sol..
CIJ 11/!Y. Llltle Pony, Part 2
,
then
.
No-trump was raised, and Frey
I NT
CJ CJJ ill MOYIE: 'Anno
happily accepted with 17 high-cat'd
Pass
2NT
Pass 3NT
Karen ina'
points and a 10 as a kicker,
Pass
P'ass Pau
Cil illl Nova (CC) 'The Case
Declarer won the diamond lead
of the Bermuda Triangle.'
with bll jack and played the bear!
The mystery of the triangle
Opening lead:
queen . .West won and switched to the
.
that has claimed thousands of people · and
club deuce. When East played the ace,
hundreds of ships and
Frey bad his chalice to make the
planet tinea 1946 is ·~·
brld&amp;e columns of the future. 1M
~red . IRJ(80 min.)
played the club kine, If you . place
Ill (i2) Three's • Crowd
younelf In the Eut position, 'you can
(CC) Jack aeeks profe•·
hardly be blamed for feeHng lbat would be oet in three no-trump.
sion'al ·help when he hasr
lncldent.al!y, the play lhould not
declarer
also bad tbe club queen for
trouble sustaining his romhave
worked. Without an honor In
tbiJ
play.
Accordinlly
East
played
ance with Vicky. (A)
clubs,
West should have led a high
back
a
diamcod,
and
declarer
bad
Ill MOVIE: 'Lifootyiel of
time to set up the heart suit and nine club aucb as lbe eight or sir. No d&lt;&gt;ullt
the Rich and Flmoua'
tricks. If Soutb does not make the Eut felt it wu more likely that bll
IHBOI MOVIE: 'RICkleu'
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Stacy'o
deceptive pay of tbe club. king, Ea.sl partner bad erred than ·lhat Richard
·
Knlll!lts'
wool4 cot~linue clubs, and declarer Frey bad wuted blo club kiJiC.
8:30 &lt;IJIIJ rD Who'a thl 8ootl
.ICC) Angola is shocked
when she finds out that
Mona has been Seeing a
'i,!lUOJI..Ir man, (A)
D LtJ CD Riptide Cody,
Nick and Boz .rejoin the

I

gltaMd·in porch •175.00
per mont" plua utilitiet and

!14

.

5111.1. 5E iHI5.

I I I I I XI I) ·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditlonelltfetlme gua·
rant... loclll reference•
furnished . FrH e1timate1.
Coli coloct 1 -614-2370488, 9 o.m. to 5 p.m.
Roger• Seaement
Waterproofing.-

with 1Ox26 ft.

.

A L.OT CAl-l

e

(lj) llocly !leotriC -

Pets for Sale

!5-0ME I"£9PI.E

WHOARE~TH

(I) GorY* Pyle
(J)
crJI ABC Newo )CCI
(J) liD CU Newt~
(I)
Nightly
lual-•

IT'D

Report

a little like spinach,

tANSOOLt

(J)fllflern8n
(J) Revoo'a Wor1d CIA•

TO THJ CIT'&gt;( 1 "THOO~HT

Block. brick, monar and
miltonry tuppliea. Mountain
State Block. At. 33, New
He"""· w. Ve , 304-882·
2222 .

12x8o 2 bdr. rumiahod
troller.
g11 t100
• wotor
pd .. r1..----------r---------~
*250 mo.,
depoJit.
Cell 614-448-6683 .
54 Misc. MerchAndise
2 bdr. Skyline eompletl.ly
,..
. furnithl!td . water paid. Jocation on R.t. 7, below bOwling
Pool People Special:
alley. Coll814-245-6818.
51 Household Goods Above ground pools-thru
4 · 1 6·86 · Free auto
2 bdr. mobile home. Call
cleaner and u11der llolht&gt;•ol'"'
114-448·0390.
'269.96_
bedroom

8:30 • (J) (I) NIC Newo

DONAT&amp;D THAT "ANP

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42 Mobile Homes
• •• , •• for-Rent

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3-211

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IIIITSQOYUJ,

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BUatLING A SEAT BELT

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Pl~ag••
. -1 o-The Daily SaJiililiill

Tua1dey, M . 28, 188&amp;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

sa a.

&lt;

Area deaths
Harry L Murrey

'Maihew.

t

••

...

--,. ,

=

dead on arrival Sunday at Pleasant
Garton MUJTey; thrl'l' sons, Eddie,
Valley Hospital.
Born Dec. 15, 1915, In Strange
Columbus; Robert of VIncent, and
William, Terre Haute, Ind.; a
Creek, shelslbedaughterofFrroC.
daughter, Betty Vlheyard, Little Brown, Ravenswood, and the late
Hocking; a siSter, Blance Vieth of Ida Mullins Brown.
Davenport, Ia., and 16 grandchildShewasalsoprecedrolndeathby
.renand10great-grandchildren.
her husband, William Harley
Besides his parents, he was Starcher.
preceded In death by a stepmother
She was a member of the
ljJI(I two half siSters. ·
Cbr!Stl&lt;in Bret~n Church; Mason
Services will be held at 2 p.m. andtheSenlorCltlzensofPomeroy. ·
Wedn~av at the Whlte Funeral . ~-.•- •· ·•~- -~ k . .. dait~;~~~:-·~=·~:.."~~=~

failure to yield the rlgh~otway.

Morulay accident
leaves one injured
A Pomeroy woman was Injured In
a 'two-vehicle accident on Ohio 71n
Sallsb.ucy Township Monday, according to the state highway patrol.
· Shirley M. Yates, 23, was treated
· and releasee from Veterans Mem-

~ ~ifor:ne~ iit=cooMife~ wllht'fie"ReV:"- ~;;" .f.:d"(illiiri;.us.&gt;

. .

Walter Carney and the Rev. Roy
Deeter officiating. Burial will be In
Stewart Cemetery at Hocklngponi
·-"' " Et\ends . ffili.YS~!. at _tl),e~ tune...:a
homeanyt~~peafter2p.m . today.

Ceeil B. Rockhold

Mason and Mrs. Don ·(Margie L.)
Scheuermann, Oklahoma City,
Okla.; two sons, Jerry W. Starcher.
MasonandJamesH.andd.:ughtel'-in-law, Jeanie Starcher,· Long
Bottom; four stepdaughters, Gen' eva Caltrider, Pebble and Rosetta

:m

.11., ~ ""-- - --~~

THE .WINNERS _F. Murra:y Abraham re~~slils

-- heWliinllie~smulilerol"·n.:·FieldMondayafierthey~·
""""'

57th.,annual Academy Award presentatloq5 at the
=.,~;~dler ·Pavllioa tn-i:.o;; · AnseJm. (-AP

received Osc!ars'for llesl Actor and Actress during the

.,

..

'Am
d
'
t
0
•
~%~~:~;so:;rB";is~~:,nd~b:r~
a eus .o p scar WIDDer
,

-

·

Dixon, Ravenswood, Merl Coen,
G ·L ES AP)
"A
Burnwick, Ohio, Mabel Butcher,
L~ AN E . ( .-f I ml aTitusville, Fla . and Lerli7'Z;:..:..:-·.T(!eus, ~.~ -soarlng. drJlmao . r _v_ar:
Covington va.; four brothers, Ira and -a celeDretlon of Mozart s
Brown G;and Prairie Texas Free musical genius, waltzed off with
Brown: Sum;.ersvUle, Charles eight Oscars, five more than Its
Brown, Lodi, Ohio, Bobby Brown, closest competitor, t~ true ~He

and Soml' cuts, said a hoSpital
spoliesperson. Yates was taken 1o
the hospital by the Middleport
Emergency Squad.
- ' The ' patrol· -saki··· YateS · was "~·
southbound at 12:45 p.m. when she
slowro down to get onto tbe
eastbound berm. Another southbound vehicle, driven by Delbert W.
Lawson, 47, Rt. 1, Racine, struck
Yates' vehicle In the left rear and
torero her vehicle to spin o!f the left
side of the road, causing severe
• i:iarrtal!i"tiHxltll vehicies. · "· ·•~1111' patrol cltro Lawson for
assured clear distance.

bUll
- "II
ldbeallelfi
lndl "
t ldon v1ewidelrds .. t knwou h t t sa ' to
a,
was absent, having
. o _ you ,. ___ n _._ owl': a o ,_¥ remalnrolnEnglandforthefuneral
beCause rve DeE'!! w?.rKJ!lg on bus " oflli!r'ft'iena ;SitfvliciraelRe~lgrav-e:
speech for 25 years, but he said Hl'r award was accepted by Angl'la
none of those speeches fit tbe time Lansbury.
limit.
The 77-year-old Ms. Ashcroft,
Framt:town; sev&amp;"i grandchildren CambQdla,n war story The K~)~ng
f«ently seen in TV's "Jewel In The
fo~st
andseveralstep-grandchlldren .
Fields."
Abraham: 45, who portrayro Crown," once said, . "I've never
Funeral service wlll be Thu~ay
sally Field ciaimro her second
Mozart's jealous rival, Sallert, really wantro to be a film star. It
Torltght, clear. LOw In themld-406,
at 10 a.m. at the Christian Brethren Oscar for best act.':ess as the
expressro regret that he could not seems toleadonlytotaxproblems." . Wednesday, Increasing cloudiness,
Church, Mason with the Rev. Ralph coura~us farmer In Places In the
share the Oscar with co-star and
The only best-picture nomlnl'l' to breezy and warmer -with 8 sllglit
Workman.officlatlng. I;iurlal wlll be . Heart" ata streamljned Acadl'my
fellow nominee Tom Hulce. who end the night without ?nY ().;cars chance of afternoon shoWers. HI
. ....
Strange
Awards
ceremony
Monday
night
played.
the
eighteenth-century·
Auswas
"A
Soldier's
Story."
,...
-e r Cemeten•
•J
70-75. Thechanceolraln!Snearzero
at Walk
Creek
'
televised to most &lt;lf the World,
Irian composer.
The widely prroictro "Amadeus" tonlght and :I) percent Wediii'Sday.
Catitng hoursareWronesday, Gto . in~~udlng China for th~:irst time.
"There's only one thing that is swl'l'p began early In the show with
Extmlled Forecast .
p.m.
the
Foglesong
Funeral
The
KHIIng
Fields\
took
home
missing
for
me
tonlght
and
that
Is
to
awards
tor
makeup,
sound,
art
'lbursday
lhrougtl Saturday:
9
Home.
three Oscars. with th~ victory. of
have Tom Hulce standing by my direction, costume desigtf and
Chance of showen each day.
Halng s. Ngor, a Cambodian
side, " he said.
screenplay adapt€(! by Peter
relugee,marklnganetnQtlonalhlgh
Miss Field, 37, claiming her Shafferfromhlsownplay.
. ::W
. t~:S.tbe..!:~~=:
point In the presentatio"".
second Oscar for best actress as the
Milos Forman, the director who
···Ngor, who endurro torture In his
courageousfarmwomanof"Places guldro the Czech-made Orion t.he 308 Saturday. Hlgtla In the
homeland which ml~rro the
In 1111' Heart," acceptro her award picture, hallro the collaboration of mld-iiOs to mJd..als Friday and
agonies of. his movie role as an
through tears:
artists In Czeehoslovakla, saying, - Satunlay.
assistant to a newspaper ~porter,
"Th!Smeanssomuchmoretome "This kind of 'recogrutlon tsencou•
,
etg CO
held his Oscar aloft in dt:lare(!,
this time," she said. "lthinkthefirst raging for more than box-office 'Wmmng lottery number
"This is unbelievable. But .so Is my_ time I hardly fell It because it was so reasons."
~CLEVELAND (AP) The
· Eight calls for assistance were entire life."
RI'W."
Forman,• 5~. who won the best
winning
nuniber
drawn
Monday
answerroonMondaybyunltsofthe
The 57th awards went down In
She won In 1919, portraying directo~Oscarln1976for"OneFlew
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
Meigs County Emergency Medical
history as one of the short.e st ever:
another strong-willro woman In Over the Cuckoo's Nest," left his
game,
Number," was5.11.
Service.
three hours, five minutes - 40 "Norma Rae. "
native Czechoslovakia 16years ago.
In
the
"Plck4"
At 10:'22 a.m., Tuppers Plains took
minutes less than last year's
The gowned, bejewelro and "Amadeus" was his first film there number )Vas 4922.game,\the winning
........
Jack Rood from 'nippers Plains to
marathon telecast. · Recipients,
tuxroo-clad crowd at the Los since be became aU .S. citizen.
The lottery reported earnings 'of
St. Joseph Memorial Hospital In
houndro by rro warning lights and Angeles Music · Center gave a
The award for best foreignits
"'F\r.L{\er:)uu:ll-.~;:~H-~e--rp~o•?f~~~~1~..;_m:r~ats tl1atme i:Ji't:he.•striiW®IU'l:Ui...,.""'S'rtu'Kili1g"VV1iU'oii.==to-v~~~~r: · ~~:~~·-:;~~~;~:i;,:;e;:~;;;;~;~~;.!~""~~~~~~rj~

A8$UPPLY CO.

Dan C. Morris, superintendent of
the MelgsLocaJ.SchoolDistrlct, will
speak on roucatton at a meeting of
the Middleport-Pomeroy Area
Branch oftheAmerlcanAssociatlon
of University Women to be held at
j: :J)p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
A silent auctiOn wlll be held and
members may Invite guests to the

--~,"'- -~- ~w~~~-~"''""'-

c-=

4

;.~~h~~da;~~~~ -. ~~:-~-:;:-::;&lt;;;~:~~;7~~~~~~- :::~~-t~ne~,~·~;~-;:: " ~~:~!.;~c~:';;:::byvb~~

Thl' Southern Local School DIS'
trict BoardofEducatlonwlllml'l'tat
.7 p.m. Tui'Sday In the high school
cafeteria.
' Mrs. Thelma DIU was he hostess
at her home for members of Past
Matrons of PoJ'ile!'OY Chapter,
Order of Eastml Star, at 7: :ll p.m .
Thi'Sday.
·

Appeals djleision
Jl'ffrey G. Smith of Chauncey. has
!lied a petition In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court appealing a
decilliOn by tbe Industrial commisslonforworker'scompensattonlna
suit tlled by Smith against Southern
Ohio Coal Co., Lancaster, and
Raymond Conner, Bureau of
Work.er'sCompensationadmlnstra-

evening at 7: :Jlp.m.
has been cancellro. However, a
~tar mretlng of tbe local
commandary will be held on
Wedni'Sday evening.

Budget on agenda
A discussiOn on 1985 appropria-

tions will be the highlight of a special

meeting ot Chester Township Trustees to be held at 7: :ll p.m.
Wedni'Sday.

To end marriages
Divorce acllons have been t11ro In

Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Ray Gfllyllln Bareswllt, Middleport, against Anna MarJe BaresW!lt
pf Harker Heights, Tx., chatglng
gross neglect of duty; Donna Marte
WoodagabtstEariL. Wood, both of
Pomeroy,charglnggrossneglectof
duty and extreme cruelty: and

'

cruelty.

c~s- n';l~:.~~~~~~~&amp;i~ii-~~~~~4

compared with $61&gt;9 billion for the
same five months In flscal198i. The
Interest In February alonewas$12.9
billion. ·

The U.S. budget deficit IS runnlng
11.7 percent ahead of last year's
pace thanks to a $!1.8 billion
shortfall In February, the Treasury
The Federal Reserve's policyDepartment says.
'
setting
Froeral Open Market ComThe Federal Reserve Board's
mittl'l' is faced with a dHficult
policy-making arm, meanwhile, Is
balancing act as it considers
scbrouled to meet today to plot
monetary sti'am and what effect
credit strategy for the weeks ahead .
that strategy will have on Interest
Many analysts .are betting the
"
.
rates.
committee wUi vote to maintain Its
current monetary stance.
Among the factors the committee
And the majorU .S. auto manufacturers said their combinro mid- wUI weigh Is the recent volatlllty of
the dollar In foreign exchange
March sales rose 5 percent from a
markets, the savings and loan crisiS
year earlier, bolStered by cut-rat!'
In
Ohio .and tbe the Commerce
fln'lJiclng and other Incentives
Department's
report last week of
offered by someoftbecompanles.
·
slower-than-expectro
economic
The February SJX!rlln the budget
growth
In
the
current
quarter.
deficit comparee with a $6.4 bllllon

.

first five months the
which began Oct. 1, the deficit
swelled to $99.6 billion from $89.2
billion for the same period In 1984,
the Treasury Department said.
The Reagan administration Is
prrolctlng that the deficit for the
entire yPar wlll hit $222.2 bllllort,
eclipsing the previous record of
$195.4 billion set In flscal1983.
One of the fastest growing
spending categories continues to be
Interest paymenls on the debt. The ·
goveJ'llir1ent has paid $74.8 bllllon In
Interest the past five months,

,._

.

"'.,.,.. ,_

.

,.· I

PRESSURE TREATED
SPLIT RAIL FENCE

We ·carry a complete
selection of lumber for

~-·~ air

of ·youf tiuiJarng -. ·needs.

STOCKAGE fENCE .

. Many economists, citing the last
two factors, sald 'the FOMC probably will vote to hold a steady
monetary. course so as to avoid
sending Interest rates up sharply.

·$179
locatod In

~a&lt;ino,

I
•'
I'

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L i!

I

I

J4

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II

6'xi' SECTIONS
NORTHERN WHITE CEDAR .

$2295
~~ ·c~ :.::!~~~!1::~~:~--~-.~T"·-,"-~-,~-----,=·-.~~&lt;--.--~~-------(\

..

. ..

PRESSURE REATED
. LUMB~R
PRE-SEASON SPECIAL

hnce:E -•
geing to
pw

......,,.., that dkts or
builll?1 lltw is ... tiirlt to

42"x96" PANELS
HARDWOOD &amp; POPLAR

OFFICE HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
.
1:00-4:30
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY

Limdscape Timbirs

c...... aliMulifllllandlc•· Ute them fullltilgtll (1'1

toll.

· l,rlot PIII...Atttlllllll to Oltlll

~~ -#'""~
&lt;tL~~ -~·~~JAMES SIMPSON ~~" ··--~-"
·~ =-=~.,.,""'.~""'
utl:~~=-~~~/0
BILL BLOWER
•

-

L--:--------------------_...________..J

..-Milt waliwap-:ut;' tii1rii'

I

ordtr. A

1/3 olopasil will i?Pid pur
, aftd WI wlA DEU¥11 FifE to yoolr i• sit. anytirlit llofore Aflril
30.

QUALITY

FT. 16FT.

2x4
2x6

2.04
3.14

2.63
3.82

2x8
10

4.07
. 6.37

5.86

2xl2
4x4

105 EAST SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY
•

SOUTHERN PINE

--~-----.-~---::~2l ~ •&amp;----·. --.,.---.--.

fL

AnORNEY-AT-LAW

992·6417

6'x8' SECnONS

5/16i6" BOARDS
TREATED

-...._--.

D. MICHAEL MULLEN

"!II

,

II

'

10' RAIL. .........$4 19
49
LINE POST •••••
END POST ........ .$519

.

US I

,.a;

I.

ON.

li'sso tiiY to avoid pltnnina• t•neral in tdvtnce. Soofttn, PIG"'
pte tond to iport thuubjoct. instoad Imina to the 1111 minute
thostimp0rtant constdtroilons which con bt rn~dt 'corofully bttor~ thoy lrt nHdtd.
C.rtoin tP'OUll of people, ospoclolly, sho&lt;lld consider pro-ptonninaond pro-lloonci1111unmt For tu11pio, - i t thrinl on 1
fixlli in&lt;OIIt WOII!d bt Wilt to pt1n II 14VInctlor fUllfil erronp-S, so thty In bt ouurlli thlt till tOil of such Mrvicos
con bt 1111ty IIIII. (Pn-plonnina. .......,, nttd oat cost lftythina. You !lilY sillply rttord with us your llnll wlshHin tho mittor.)
bilrtd "opio should think obout ptonnina orronaomtnts 10
such docoslons -·t tllvtio bt ,.., 11 the timt of nlld. inodditiDft, -11 who "' cortnalor
poronts would bt wist to
111111 1-11 llflftll-• in odvonco.
.
Finotty, If you 111'111 or 110ft Y""' houllllold frtqUiotiy, propiMinlna /ltiJ ""MMth cootusion 111111 time of. notcl. Pi1110111
lrl-•lso llftllhlllllity fro• makina•I!Y lona-dlstonce
ttllllllonl colts to mlllt lrrlnJIMIIts ot 1.dilllcuH ti.,.lorthlll.
Aslunni director•. wt con provldllll tho lnlor111tlon • - ·
ury tor yet~ to pro-plln funeral semen. PliiH stop by or a!H

.fl}J_~..J..;.;.,_

:7l--..7!J

DOG EARED .SHA.DOW· BOX FENC~

n

"S(•rl'inl( With A Smilr•"

-Y

1

•

PENNI OIL

WHO SHOULD PRE-PLAN FOR A FUNERA~?

Atik to wed

Harden, 22, Middleport.

~·

SUN FUN

I PACK -16 OZ.

--".,.,-19'191nddentattbemlnes.
~vrr~~~friet"~~
·~~~hh. ~cti::i· - Pomeroy,
~~Jl~~:~~ri.
Smlthhas gross neglect of duty and extreme
. and Veronica Paige
asked for a trial by Jury.

Grant. .
•
With typical modesty,, Stewart, 76,
thankro his colleagues and movie
audiences, saying: "You've given
mea wonderful life. God bless you."
Best supporting actress winner
Dame Peggy Ashcroft, the charlsmatlcEngllshv!Sltorof"APassage

2

match.
A RI'W generation of superstars nlng tiCkets 11re entitled to share
was representee, with Oscar $423,094.50.
winners In the music categories. rr:=:;:=====;;:.;=~
Prince clalrnro an Oscar for best
score, "Purple· Rain," aqd SteviE'
Wonder for best song, "I Just Callro
To Say I Love You" from "The
WomanlnRro." •

s,,,.,
.
PEPSI
U.S. deficit running ahead of }.984 ·

Marriage licenses have been
Issued ill Meigs County Probate .
Court to Alan Thomas Lowery, 28,
Pomeroy, and Deborah Ann
Pickens, 24, Racine; VIrgil Alvin,
MUter, Jr .. 20, and Sherry Ann

·"""" ,,. -"

Weather

"ne

By 'Ole Associated Press

'

77 ......... - .

•

Emergency squads
•h
lls
answer
t

lance speeches short.
"'A Passage to India" and " Places
1n the Heart" each won two Oscars.
The aU-time top Oscar winner was
"Ben-Hur'' with llln 1959.
Best actor of the year, F. Murray
Abraham of "Amadeus," told the
TV audience of an estlmatro one ·

--

7 a.m.-5
Sat.:
7 a,IJI_,_;-j:OO_,._.....

Middleport, Ohio

at

Shirley Yates was taken from · the .
The seH·help and support group sceneto VeteransMemoMal. Pome·
tor tbe tennlnally Ul and their roy was caiiro to Monkey Run at
·iarnllles will meet at 6: :~)Thursday 1: I3 p.m. and Bertha Conde was
evening at the Bethany Chapel In taken to Veterans Memorial. Rutland was callro to Hysell Run Rd. at
Dorcas.
3;32p.m. forJustlnJefferswhowas
taken to Veterans Memorial. At 6
Sale still going
p.m., the Syracuse unit was called to
Minersville for Harold Davis who
The Easter War Cry of the
was taken to Holzer Mrolcat.Center.
Salvation Anny Is on sale this week
At 6:40 p.m., Rutland went to
In Middleport, house to house. and
Harrisonville
lor Earl Arix to
will be on sale In Pomeroy next
es.s
Memorial
Hospital in
·
O'Blenn
_
week. Anyone mlssro may call
Athens. And at 7:10 p.m., Middle992-5472 or 992-74!ll.
port went to 209 South Fourth Ave.
for Alfred. Duff to Veterans
Incorrect number
Memorial.
·· The phone number for adoption of
a Siamese cat which the Meigs Veterans Memorial
·County ·H umane Sbclely was Incorrectly published In Monday's Dally · · Admissions--Wilma Anderson,
Sentinel. The correct numperwhlch Racine; Ethel Nicholson, Rutland;
residents lnterestro In the animal Phyllis Baker, Racine; Clarence
Hayman, Racine; Bertha Conde,
may call is 9!J2.jj5(]5,
Pomeroy; Ray Sherrill, Graysville,
'reM.;
Altrro Duff, Middleport.
Meetll Thursday
Discharges--None.
The Rutland Lions Club will meet
Visitation cancelled
at 7 p.m. Thursday In thl' basement
A plannro visit by Sir Knight
of the Rutland Church o~ Christ
William
Ammer, right eminent
Visitors arewPICOml'.
commander of the Grand Corn-

... • .,

· -555 Park-St; -

County happenings...

Supt. Morris to speak

'·".

orlai~nospltai'-ttJi"" 'iTfu~t:pte--Gi"u~ · ~'- --

Anderson, and Janella Carroll;

Cecil B. Rockhold, 85, Hocking·
port, diro Monday evening at St.
Joseph Hospital In Parkersburg, W.
Va., following an extendro Illness.
Hewasbornat Exchange, W.Va.,
a son of the late Free and Gay
Rockhold.
He was a member of the
Hockingpurt United ?"1e;hodtst
Church; the Coolville Masonlc ..
Lodge
and was retired fron?lhe
Ohio River Sand and Gravel Co. at
·Parkersburg. .
" Surviving are hiS' wHe, Nina .
Randolph Rockhold; three daugh·
(l!rs; Janet DepOy, Guysville, and
Joyce Alexander and Jarilce L.
Rockhold, both of Baltimore,
· Md,; two grandsons. Mark · and

M~i~

.._
-

f" •

A Meigs County inan was cited by
the Gallla·Melgs post ot the "State
Hl8hWaY Patrol Sunday following a
two.car accldm! pn S!t 143.Ellis C)onch, 41, of Pomeroy, was
southbound on 143. approximately •
three-tenths of a mile aouth ot
Salllbury Twp. JJ, when a car
driven by John ThOmas, 27, also ot
pOmeroy, apparently backed from
a driveway and struck Cloncb'scar
In the ·right side. A passeltll!!' In
Clonch's car, 37-year-old Ann
Clonch, of Pomeroy,. claimed btjucy, but was not treated, troopers
said.
· .
Both ·cars sustained moderate
In the 11: 25 a.m. lncldellt.

'

Besldl's his parents, he was
. ,. ~~"'-·· - fWTY · t:esfer~wi iYurJ "'"'Ltftie~ ·y~ !.-: !k~t.~ ,a ~~uree!! . .. --=
Hocking, died Monday ~t the
In 1919. .
Camden-Clark Hospital in ParkersServices will be held at 2 p.m.
burg following a brief illness
Thursday at the White Funeral
He was born 1n Jackson County,
Home bt Coolville with Rev . Eric
w. va., a son o!tbe late Eddie Ross ~tarr officiating. Burlai wut be In
·
Murrey. He
Stewart .cemetery at Hockingport.
had rettrro from the Kenne Corp.,
Friends may call at . the White
Funera1Homeafter3p.m. WedllesVienna, w. va., where he was
day. Masonlcrlteswlllbeheldatthe
employro for 21 years. He was a
formerfarmerlnAthenscounty.He
funeral home at 7 Wednesday
belonged to Local1200, United Steel
evening.
WorkersofAmerlca,AFL-CI'O,and
Irene B. Starcher
attended the Decatur

.

Mei@S dri~ cited
.following ·i ecident

Deckinl

&amp;:48
4.24 . 6.03

3.31
4.99

4.75
6.71

12.40
6.96

11.~4

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