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Pomeroy-Middlep&lt;)rt. Ohio

Page- 16- The Daily Sentinel

..

Wednesday, Apri110, 1985

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I
BUILDING MATERIALS INC~

fl\tiS
t~S"

..-N..(~ll~

·-

...

G

IUD

SIDING
$4"48

112" THICKNESS 16' LENGTHS

..

~
A PIECE

HOME IMPROVEMENT NEEDS
SPECIAL!.

JOINT
COMPOUND
SGAUON

BAG

T USSES---

.READ-Y MIX

INDOOR-OUTDOOR

TOPPING

-.· 24 FT.--: TRU.SS .••• ~ •••.•~-. $2 7;52
· ·- ·26-. Fr~ .:JRU,S-S.-•• ~.~.•-...-~$2 31s··'

'
$299
·

SQ.-YD•...

28*PRICE
FT. TRUSS
•••••
~ ••·•• S3155
INCLUDES UP TO A
OVERHANG
AND A 4/ 12" PITCH

ALL ORDERS MUST BE PLACED APRIL ·10-16, '85

.

INSULATION

.

2"x4"x92S/a"

112"x4'x8'

$699

1 ROLL + 88.12

GEORGIA PACIFIC ·

15&lt;

FIBERGLASS

SHINGLES

R-11-Kraft-3 112"x23"x70'6"
1

BLACK
BROWN
OR WHITE

$2295

SQUAB .

STUDS

R-11 KRAFT
33/a"x15"x70' 6"

PEl SHUT

•on + 13'5.12 sq_. ft.

.R-19-Kraft-6 112"x 15"x39'2"
1 Roll -+ 48.96 sq. ft.
R-19-Kraft-61f2"x23"x39'2"
1 Roll + 75.07 sq. ft.

FORBES

w·tRE

EACH

CELOTEX

SQ. FT. OR

SQ. FT. OR

SQ. FT. OR

15"~~~~~o.
SPACING

...

Sheriff Frank, union back in court

ROLL

112"x4 'x8'

1,320 FT., 151/2 GAUGE, HIGH. TENSILE,

BARBED

89(

SQ. FT.

SQ~ '$1322
.

Final action on the matter Is
expected to be taken during next
week's regular meeting.
Racine has untll the end of the .
year to use the CDBG funds.
Commissioners plan to accept an
In vita tlon to tour the Mi&gt;lgs County
Museum on Aprll24 to see firsthand
the improvements which have been
made to the Interior of the building.
Funding for the Improvements are
coming from a $5600 yearly alot·
tment of funds provided by the
county for the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society.
(Continued &lt;in pag-P 161

Gorbachev says relations
must ·e merge from 'Ice Age'

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PLYWOOD

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25 Cents

A Multimedia lpc. Newapeper

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - TWo crisis as a way of reaching their Inevitable In this country, that
nationwide banking Is a reallty. lt 's
state-chartered savings and loans objectives."
only
the laws tha t have not caught up
targeted for takeover by Chase
Everson said he believes Inter·
Manhattan Corp. arewelcomlngthe state banking will occur, but that It yet," he said.
Lawrence Cohn, who follows the
New York giant with open anns.
should happen gradually.
But Chase's ultimate goal of
Ryan acknowledged concern banking and thrift Industries for
Deqn Witter Reyno\ds lf\C. In NeW
becoming a conunercial ·banker In among some Ohio bankers.
Ohio prompted another executive to
"While I would never suggest that York, said the significance of
· cautiOn about "wolves appearing In there Is unan!mltyof support,l thlnk Chase's propOsal Is Its broader plan
sheep's cloth!Jlg."
· r ·was encouraged by, some of th.e to acquire and combine thrifts In·
, Cha!je, the nation' s thlrd-largest (newspaper accol!ntsf... at the Ohio Ohlo In h~ of opera tlng them as a
bank holding company, held neyrs conference whE&gt;re bankers were commercial bank.
conferences Wednesday In Colum- quoted ... as saying thL&lt; was
bus, Cincinnati and Cleveland to say
It Intends to acquire two S&amp;Ls In a
SH mnuon deal.
Chase has reached purchase
agreements with the management
.·
and- board, pt -the. M!!fttor- Savil]gs
Bank In Mentor and the Federated
·.
-c
S,av)rigs Bank ln.€lJICinnati. · , · c
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•
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• . Tile deal Is 5\lb"J~tto awrova) tiy .
/ .GOitBACHEV· . - u.s. DELE(}A'l10N -::- members -"' a l! .S..CQiigt eillitollill deJecM~Dn In the ·, fedenil regulatorS~ • . · ·'
·
.Comni\snW.Party leader M!khill s. Gotllilj)he\',left, ·. · ~ W~esday. Olhe!' peilple In P~ are.'lOt · · "This Js Indeed the dawn of anew
meetli with ·HOWJe Speaker np O'!'!elfl, right, and _ldentlfled. (APLaserphcito).
day 1n the thrift and banking
Industry In Ohio," said Charles
Brigham, Federated's president
and chlel executive officer.
Joseph Rusnak, · president of
Mentor Savings, called the acqulsl·
tlon an opportunity for depositors
and shareholders.
"We feel that because we wUI
dent's
national
sec
umy
adviser,
become
part of the Chase organiza"The
time
Is
such
now
tllatpeople
MOOCOW (AP) - The official
In
Santa
Barbara,
Calif.,
where
said
tion,
It
wUJ
aUowustobecomemore
shaping
the
policy
of
the
!WO
news agency Tass quoted Soviet .
the
president
Is
vacationing.
competitive,
not only as a thrift, but
leader Mikhail s. Gorbachev as countri~ should by all means
On
Sunday,
Gorbachev
said
the
In
a
number
of the commercial
'telling a visiting U.S. congressional convprse "with one another. The
Soviet
Union
was
freezing
deploy·
areas.
So
all
In
all,
we feel It wUI be
delegation that relations between world situation Is disquieting, even
ment
of
medium-range
nuclear
just
a
very,
very
fine
marriage."
the two countries must emerge from dan~rous , and a kind of Ice age Is
inlssUes
In
Europe
Jill!
II
November.
Rusnak said.
being observed In relations between
a dangerous "Ice age."
Arthur Ryan, Chase executive
Gorbachev talked for nearly four the O.S.S.R and tl!e United States. TheWhlteHousecaUedtheproposal
a
public
relations
ploy.
·
.
vice president, said the corporation
hours Wednesday with four con· At least this was so untll the most
One of the visiting congressmen, Intends to seek more acquisitions In
gressmen led by Speak!'r of the recent time."
Reagan said Wednesday that he House Republican leader Robert a plan to obtain a llcensetooperatea
House Thomas P. "Tip" O'NeUl.
Gorbachev, 54, who replaced was ready to hold a get-acquainted Michel. said Gorbachev mentioned commercial bank.
"We're not here talking about
Konstantln U. Chernt'nko on March meeting with the Soviet leader but the cool White House response, and
"his characterization was that we simply two acqulsltlon5. We ... want
11, reaffirmed hls interest In a not a summit.
The two .leapers are expected to rejected his proposal out of hand."
summit, the congressmen said
to continue to work with the
Gorbachev received O'NeUi, a governor ... and the Legislature In
meet
at the U.N. General Assembly
afterward. Oneofthempredlctedhe
would be a "very formidable this fall, but a summit would have to Democrat from Massachusetts; terms of getting leglslation·allowlng
adversary" In a meeting with wall and be "the culmination of an Michel of Dllnois; Dan Rosten· us to form a commercial bank, In
extended dialogue whlch has pro- kowskl, D-Ill., and Silvio Conte, whlch case we would then combine
President Reagan.
these two lnstltullons as well as
Tass quoted Gorbachev as telling duced tangible accomplishment." R·Mass.
-Robert C. McFarlane, the presl·
others with a commercial banking
the dt&gt;legatlon:
license," Ryan said.
Word of Chase's plans drew a cool
response from James W. Everson,
lneomlng vl~;e president of the Ohio .
Sheriff Howard Frank and she- James Proffitt and three sheriff's :&lt;m the merits.
Bankers Association.
SeVeral wit'nesses were subporiff's department local lotliA and deputies , at that time, Elizabeth,
Everson, president and chief
enaed by Mendel for thls morning's exeCI!Uveofflcer at €1tlzensSavlngs
Ohio Council 8 of the American Isaac and Donald Mohler.
CrrY MANAGER RESIGNS, CITFl! I!NM CRISIS, - Toledo City
In a prior hearing, Judge John hearing,_ Including some Meigs Bank In Martins Ferry, cautioned
Federation of State, County and
Manager
David Boo!Con told reporterll WedQesday morning he Is
Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO, Bacon entered an order restraining County elected officials.
against moving too quickly.
reslcnlng
because
of pubUclty over city lnve!ltments through the failed
Taking the stand this morning
were back In court Thursday the union from any further action In
"In times of crtsls, we (often) see
ESM Govemmmt Securities lllc. Bostoo, whose resignation Is effective
thematter.However, lheunionftled were William Wickline, Meigs wolves appee.rlng In sheep's 'Cio·
moffilng.
Apr1120, says he wasn't directly lnv())ved In ktvelltlllgthroughtheFiorlda
Purpost'of the court action was to an appea l of the judge's rullng. On County·audltor and Sheriff Frank.
thing, and Icertainly hope this Is not
brokerage, but says the clty'spotentlallo8sof S19.2mUilon becauseo!the
Entered as evidenCe In thecaseon the case," he said. "Obviously, the
determine the merits of a contract March 5, Sandra Mendel, attorney
lnvelltment has hurt his credlbiDty. (AP Laserphoto).
which was entered Into In March representing the union and the behalf of the defense were photocO· New York banks are looking at this
!Continued on pa~e 161
1984 by Frank's predecessor, Sheriff Mohlers, flled a 11\otlonfor a hearing

BROWN &amp; GREEN
6' &amp; 12' LENGTHS

5 GALLON
READY MIX

wanted to meet to diScuss the
unexpected cost overrun for the
vehicle.
·
Pat HUI Ford, Middleport, submitted a bid of $10.495 for a
specialized chassis and Dill's Moun·
talneer Association, Ravenswood ,
submitted a $19,!Fi' bid for a truck
body.
Community Development Block
Grant funds of $ro,(XX) were aUot ed
Racine VIUage, on behalf of the fire
department, for the truck. Racine
has on hand $OOXl whiCh could be
applied to the cost. An additional
$4482 w!U. be needed to cover the ·
expenses.
..

2-Sec1ions, 16 Pages

Chase Manhatten buys S&amp;Ls

GRASS
CARPET

$6 99

$699

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94 LB.

Pomeroy...:..Middleport, Ohio. Thursday. April 11. 1986

· sal system for Tuppers Plains wUI model lor other such systems. · ·
responsible for· suPPlYing suitable
By NAN&lt;JY YOACHAM
be
el(jllalned
In
detail
when
Upon
compleUon
of
the
sewage
facilities
for county court, are
Sentinel Staff Writer ·
from
John
David
Jones
system,
an
EPA
building
mora
tomaking
plans
to move county cou!jl
engineers
we11ther permitting. work could
Associates,
Columbus,
meet
with
rlum
for
Tuppers
Plains
can
be
to
a
location
outside of the
begin as early as Monday on a
residents
In
a
7
p.m.
Monday
public
lifted.
The
moratorium
has
been
In
courthouse.
Conilnlssloners
will
proposed heliport for LHefllght to be
meeting
at
the
Tuppers
Plains
effect
for!lveyears.
thenmovelntothero6msvacatedby
located near Veterans Memorial
The engineers wUi review the county court.
Hospital. According to Meigs Community Building.
Officials are stUI awaiting a project In Its entirety Monday night
O'Brien was told that nothlng
County Commission President
David Koblentz, who spearheaded written opinion from the Ohlo and answer questions concerning .official could be released on the
moveuntU wordlsrecelvedfromthe
the project, a 60 by 60ft. pa"'-'&lt;l pad attorney general regarding the the project.
makeup
of
the
governing
board
for
'
Nothing
new
on
move
owner·of
the proposed wilding.
would be the Ideal size for the
the
Tuppers
Plains
sy$tem_.
The
County
CoUI't
Judge
Patrick
BidS tabled
!acUity. The Meigs County Highway
meeting
will
be
held
regardless
of
O'Brien
was
present
at
WednesThecornmlsslonagalntabledblds
Department wm begin bulldozing
the site as soon as possible. . whether or not the attomey general day 's meeting to see If any decision for a rescue truck for the Racine fire
had been made as to where county · department after . being told by
Inotl)erdevelopmentsatWednes· renders his decision.
The
Tuppers
Plains
project,
the
court
may be moved.
... Frank Cleland, president of Racine
day's weekly rounty · commission
first
of
Its
kind,
could
qecorrie·
a
Commissioners,
who
by
law
are
VUiage Council. that his council
meeting, a proposed sewage dlspo-

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PRE-FABRICATED

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enttne
e
Work planned for hospital ,heli

IT A·LL .•.

Vol.34. No.256
Copyriphted 1986

12" PRIMED LAP

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Sl224
·
. lOLL
$1877

lOLL

99
$1'8

ROLL

INSULATED

SHEETING

New marketitig style planned

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$3
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PERSHEET

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Sen&amp;lnel SWf Writer
A five-hour board of dlrretors meeting on April 1
·has Jed to an agreement between the Mlddleport
Cham~r of Commerce and tile Ohio Technology
Transfer Agency to al(:l Village businesses In
developing new marketing approaches.
Thai announcement catTlE' from Bill Blower,
president, during Tuesday's chamber meeting held at
the LaSalle Restaurant.
,
·
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Blower noted the service Is available at no cost and
Is geared to enwurage mote agresslve promotion of
the vUiage.
Blower explained that an OTTO marketing
specialist BUI Fioretti, of the University of Cincinnati,
has been contacted about the development of
marketing suggestions whlch can be utilized ·by
· village ruslnesses. It Is hoped that some of the
det~tUed planning that would ·precede the actual
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Middleport

ID

t'Xpert and more detailed Information can then be
marketing suggestions cou ld be carried out rree of
made available to that business.·
charge by local university graduate studo:-nts.
state funded network
Improved marketing methods are &lt;'xpected to
OTTO Is a sta IE' funded network of Oltlo colleges and
attract customers to the vUlage. help merchants to
advertise more aggressively and , ultimately, to · universities founded lo serve the needs of business
and Industry In the state.
attract more business to thE' area.
Dwight Leedy, a Middleport chamber member, is
OITO Will make periodic contacts ·with local
O'IIO's
agent In our area, working through Rio
merchants and chamber representatives. Input from·
·
Grande
College
and CommunitY College.
these contacts will then be developed Into
It
Is
also
hoped
by the chamber that a pr&lt;&gt;tecr
recommendations.
st.arted two YfarS agotoimprovethe"street scape" of
This wUI be an ongoing prolect, aceordlng to
Middleport can be r.,vltallzed, Anybody planning any
Blower, and could last for years.
·
type of .future remodeling to downtown Middleport
ln the next couple of months tllrough the Cham be~.
buildings Is being encouraged to review the strert
OTI'O wUl begin offering half hour Informative
scape plans whlch have already been developed.
programs on spec!Qc aspects of business. Experts
Improving the street scape Is a ne&lt;:essary step In
wUI be broUght In to present tIiese programs.
promoting the vUiage.
.
1f an indlvldualliuslness finds par1icular interest In
It
:vas
also
reported
by
mower
that
Middleport
an area, a Jle.rBonal contact can lie made with the
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Mayor Fred Hoffman has lndiC'a tcd·. thP chambo'r
would Ill! allowed to develop a ho&lt;pllallty and
information center In part of thr- old depot , after the
village's purchase or that building and surroundln~
property IS finalized . Dependin~ on when the village
closes the purchase deal, Blowl'r I&lt; In hopes that work
could begin right away with renovatlpn compk&gt;ted by
the Fourth of July.
·
•
First annual run
. Middleport Chamber Is sponsorlnglts first annual5
kilometer (3.2 J111li.'S) run on April '27. The r;~ce Is to
begin at the sear$ parking lot and end a1 the Holzl&gt;r
Clinic parking Jot. A pni-reglstratlon fee to enter the
race will be$5. The enter fee will bl'$6,on thedayo! the·
race. The entry tee Includes a 5-K T- shlrt. Proceros
from this event will ilo to the Middleport BoK!ng Club.
·More Information can be obtalnro by contacting
Roger Stewart at the boxing club.
.
· (Continued on page l6)
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Page--,2-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 11. 1985

announ~e '85 schedule-s

Bengals, Browns

ClNCINNATJ (AP)- TheCincinnati . Bengals will open the. 1985
National Football season at home
against the Seattle Seahawks Sun . ByHALBOCK
day,
&amp;&gt;pt. 8.
AP Sports Wrller
The
Bengals·said lhesch!'dulethls
In the beginning, baseball was conct"ived quite simply and logically, a
year
includes
a visit by Dallas , the
summertime diversion played nine persoru;to a side, In the daytime, on real
grass.
first time the Cowboys will play at
Riwrtront Stadium.
We had two leagues and over the peaks and valleys of a six-month season,
All of the Bengals' home games
theY produced two first piat't'finishers. And when those two winners played
wlll be on Sundays this season. The
In till' sevffi-game World Series, It was the climax of the season, producing
rest of the home schedule Is: San
mruveious drama and excitemeni.
.·
·
Diego, Sept. 22; New York Jets, Oct.
1ben came lights, television, money and greed and now we have a glitzy
6; New York Giants, Oct. 13;
spinoff of the sport, neatly packaged and commercialized, b;lrely
•·
· Piltsburgh St""'lers, Oct. 'l:l; Cleve·
re;(&gt;mbling the original product.
la nd Brown•. Nov. 10; Houston
Most game:; are played at night on a rtificial surtaces. And if some
Oilers, Dec. I; Dallas, Dec. 8.
teleVision network comes up with more money, why we'll just play more
games.
ThE' road schedule Includes a
Monday night game in Pittsburgh
If dobig thilt means cheapening the World Series in the process, well that's
the price of progress.
Sept. 30. Thf' rest of thE' gam es are:
St. Louis Cardinals, Sept. 15;
That is the rea l result of the decision last week to expand the League
Houston, Oct. 20; Buffalo Bills, Nov.
Cbamplonship Series from thebest-{)f·fivegames tot he best-of-seven.lt was
3;
Los Angeles Raiders, Nov . 17;
a brazen, simple sellout to television, which pays premi um prices for prime
.
Cleveland,
Nov. 24. Washington
time events.
Redskins,
Dec.
15; New England
What the merchandisers of the spori chose to Ignore is lhat they are
Patriots, Dec. 22.
changing the basics of the game, tinkering with its continuity. The
best-of-seven games historically has been reserved for the World Series for
more than half a century. Ypu don't just ~ardthat for a few extra million
The Dally Sentinel
bucks.
·
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.
Baseball s prict' for making the World Series a n afterthought was $9
I USPS U.-961l I
A Division of Multimedia. Inc.
mllllon-' big bucks, unless it buys a tradition. Then it becomes a bar~ain.
Tile two LCS, guaranteeing a utomatic playoffs and extra postseason TV
Publi sh('(] ev"ry aft ernoon. Monda y
th r ough Friday, 111 Court Sl., y the
dates each year, were artificially created by expansion in the fin;t place. II
Ohio V~lley Publlshin~ Comp any tMul ·
used to bethatbase ball:sonly playoffs came when twoteamsweretledat the
II media. Jnc .. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. h.
992-2156. Second cl ~ s posta ge. p3id a1
eQd of the season. Now the LCS makes routine what once was unique.
Poml•roy, Ohio.
The expanded playoffs means that the World Series will begin Oct.l9and,
Memtwr : The Associa ted Press, In·
if It goes seven g;~mes, will end Oct. 'l:l. Any postpone111erits - it ~as been
!.a nd Da ily Pr~s Assoclallon a nd the
known to rain or evE&gt;n snow In late October - cou ld pr&lt;lduce the first
Amf"rica n Ne~spaper Publishers As·
sQCi&lt;t!lon , Na tional Advertising Rt&gt;pr e·
NovemberClassic .
.
s~ntall ve, Bra nh am New5pap.?r Sales, ·
Jim Brosnan, a thinking-man's relief pitcher who toiled in the major
73.1 Thli·d Avenue. New York. New
leagues thrre decades ago, once authored a journal detalllng a summer In
Yo rk 10017 .
the l)ullpen and called It "Tile Long Season."
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
Little dld he know.
to The Dally Scnllnel. 111 Court St .. Po·
m('ro_y, Ohio 45769.
Baseball, however,l!lows blithely ahead with no concern for the impact of
Its decisions. It has been that way (or some time, though, so WE' should be
SUBSCRIPTION RATES '
By Carrier or Molor Route
accustomed to it by now.
O n(' Week .............. ......... . ........... $1.10
, There was the conclusion reached a few years ago by some of the deep
Ont• Month .............. ............. ,. .... $4.80
Onf.' Year .............. ................... $57.20
thinkers !hilt the game lacked enough offense.
SINGLE COPY
·So they invented the designated hitter .. NE&gt;ver mind that they had
PRICES··
Daily ................. ... ...... , ... ... .. 2~ Cents
destroyed a major part off he strat!'glcal beauty of the sport -thed!'Cislon of
when, or even if, to pinch hit for the pitcher.
Subscribers not d~sirln g to pay tlle car·
Then they decided the game was too slow and tha t It was dull and boring.
r ler ma y r~ mll In ad va nce dlrec't to
Th r- Dally Sentinel on a 3. 6 or 12 month
Red Smith, the late essayist, once replied to that criticism by saying
bas is. Cn?d il "'Ill l:x&gt; given carrlt&gt;r eadi
sl!nply, "Baseball is dull only to dull minds." · '
·
month .
Smlth's admonition notwithstanding, management felt obliged to supply
No subscrlpllon!l by ma ll permitted In
ilf£'-slzed parrots, cavorting c hickens and all manner of cartoon creatures
t ow n ~ Wh£&gt;r f' ho mP carrier S(&gt;rvlce Is
avail able.
and other gimmickry In the Interest of marketing. They turned·tt)e ballpark
'
.
into a sideshow, a strange way to sell baseball.
Mall Sub~c rtpil'ons
ln!4lde Ohio
l(ls to' baseball 's ccedlt that It overcomes the e ndless fine tuning and
J:l Wee ks ................................. $14.:&gt;6
retains its fascination for the majority of the ptiblic. This despitet heoWTters'
26 \Vecks .• ., ......... .. ................... $:!9.12
52 W(&gt;{'ks .... ............................. . $58.24
apParent detennination to tum this ·steak of a sport into a fastfood
OutMide Ohio
hamburger.
1.1 W(&gt;(&gt;ks ...... ........ ...·........ , .. ...... $15.60
~au get the distinct impression that if these Pf;'Ople werE&gt; In the classica l
26 _We(' k~ ................................... $31.20 ·
52 WPell;s :...
.. ..... .. L ..
$.')9.80
mUsic business, marketing BEethoven, they'd think nothing of packaging an · ·
' . &lt;.
album labele!l ".Luqwig's Greatest Hits." ·
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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

TV, big money
~- changed game

•

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Tile BeDgals hilw two homE&gt;.
exhibition , games - agablsl the
Kansas City Chiefs on SatUrday,
Aug. 10, and the Jets on Saturday,
Aug. 17. They'll play the Lions in

I)Eotrolt on Friday, Aug. 23, and the
Colts in Indianapolis on Friday,
Aug. :ll.
1
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1985 , National Foot~ Lea~&lt;Ue

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BEGINNING TilE cOUNTDOWN -Cincinnati Reds owner Marge
Schott, lop photo, Hipps the swttch Wednesday night Wumlnatlng a sign
on the :!2nd floor of tha-Cinclnnatl Comrnenle Center which wW count
down the number of hits Reds player-manager Pete RAise need!t to break
Ty Cobb's career hit record. Below, the sign as It appeared Wednesday
· night slgnUie; 92 to go. (AP Laserphoto ).
the game after Da ve Kingman. who
homered 35 times in 1984, belted a
twcrrun shot .
'

Sign will keep score
CINCINNATI (API -A Pete Rose hll countdown sign high above
Cincinnati's Fountain Squa,re Plaza wjll keep track of the Cincinnati
Reds' player-manager's assault on the career hit record ofTy Cobb.
" Pf'IE' 92 To Go," theslgn read. Rose had one hit Wednesday In Ihe
4-lloss to tile Montreal Expos.
Cobb's record Is 4,191 hits. Rose has 4,100. HE&gt; needs 92 to break the
record. .
Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott tumed the llghl s on Ihe sign
during a ct"remony Wednesday evE&gt;ning at the Cincinna ti Commerce
Center ln!llding, ownCcl by thE' Llnclay building. The finn recenlly
opened the ~story building downtown. said Lloyd Bernstein, director
of marketing for Llnclay.
_
The sign covers a 75-foot area 'of windows on the 22nd floor. Each
letter L• a paper cutout about 6 feet high. Lights are mounted behind
tpl'windows to make II visible In thE&gt; downtown area.
·
"Everybody, the fans and thE' busln!'SSmE&gt;n, are getting Involved
with this thing," said Mrs. Schott of her new ownership. "This Is the
greatest thing WE' have 111 Cincinnati and E&gt;Ver slncf' OPE&gt;nlng day you
can see the vibes we send out about baseball."

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during the itrst Inning of Wtidnesday's -National
LeaguegameatiUvertrontStadlum.Montre81won4-l
to even the two-game series. (AP Laserphoto ). ·

By BEN WAl.KER
against Toronto.
.
AP Sporis Writer
'ngers 8, IndianS I
ThE' Toronto BluE' Jays Sp{'nt a lot
Lou Whitaker drove In Detroit's
elf limE' recently finding ways to get firstfour runs with a pair of homers
into troul!Ie. This season, they've and Kirk Gibson accounted for the
final three runs with a· monstrous
finally found a way to gE&gt;I out of h.
Bill Caudill, the relief pllch!'r home run.
·
.
. Toronto got Ina tradl.'andslgnedtor
Dan Petry, 18-8 last season,
$9 mlilion· over five yE&gt;ars, pitched scattered four hits over sll&lt; innings
before Aurelio Lopez pitched three
out of jams In the seventh, eighth
· and ninth innings for the victory and
pertectlnnlngs for a savr;&gt;.
Gary Lavell!', acquired In another
Whitaker unloaded a three--run
deal, worked a perfect lOth Wednesblast in I he third Inning off Cleveland
day night to preseJVethe Blue Jays'
starter Vern Ruhle, and then poked
1-0 triumph over the Kansas City
a solo hOmer in the fifth.
Glbson'shomerunbouncedoffthe
Royals.
\
"Caudill gets the win and Lavelle facing at the top .of the right field
gets the saw. What a wayforbothof stands at Tiger Stadium.
them lobreakin,"TorontoMamigE&gt;r
Red Sox 14, Yankees 5
Bobby Cox said with a smile. ·
Tony Annas and Wade Boggs
Last y!'ar, no team in the major
drove In three rurts apiece and Btll
leagues lost as many games In
Buckner belted a two-run homer as
which theywere tledorleadingafter
Boston again routed New York.
sev!'n Innings as did Toronto.
The Red Sox broke the game OP!'n
In other AL games, Detroit
with a seven-run second Inning
hammered ClE&gt;Veland 8-1, Boston
ggainst Ed Whllson, the big-money
crunched New York 14·5, Baltimore
free agent signed by the YankeE:S.
trtrnmed Texas 7·1, Minnesota
Wh!tson lasted only 12-31nnlngs and
gave up nine runs -just three of
downed California 6-3 and Seattle
beat Oakland 54.
them earned- on six hits.
Orioles 7, Rangers I
The game in BQston was the
Fred Lynn, the $6.8-mlllion free
secondQftheseasonforbothteams.
agent signed bv Baltimore, stroked
On Monday, .'he Rea -Sox beat New
his first t\vo hits for theOrioleswhile .York 9-2.
·· Mike · Boddlcker; , the Al.'s only : '
~ 6, Angels~ ,
· 20iliame
Winlll'r
'last'
'seasiin,
went
:.,
.
.
G~ry
Gaettl
was the·hero of • the
•
.•
j
' '.
•
•
· six innlng\l for thE' victory.
.
_night{or vlsllllig Mllmesota .
Tralll.ng 2.1 -ln the eighth tnnll')g, .
.. . 'Boddicker, ~ll in 1~·. gav~ up
sll&lt; hits, Including Lal'IY Pa,'t'l!;h's
Tom ·Brunansky hit a ,!ia'leS·loaded
horn&lt;' run In the sixth. Sammy
single to tie the score and Gaettl
St!'Wart held the visiting Rangers ioHowed wlthanolherslngleoffloser
hltlessoverthelasllhreelnningsfor
Donnie Moore to put the Twins
ahead 3·2.
a save.
The ollly bad news for BaltimorE'
Then. in the ninth, Minnesota
cam!' when Ca I Rlpken Jr. sprained
loaded the bases against.Mooreand
his left ankle during an att!'mpled
Pat Clements before Gaetli belted a
pickoff. The team said Rlpken, wh9· . three-run double off Doug Corbett.
hils played every inning of 444
Mariners 5, A'• 4
straight gall'lE's, may miss the
Mark Langston, the AL's rookie
Orioles' next gam!' Friday night
pitcher of the year in 1984, made a
'
succe5sfull985debutwlththe h!'lpof
T ;.,.
Jim Pl-esley's th'ri'E'·run homer.
Langston. who went 17·10 last
~· year and led the league lnstlikrout s,
- . , Nlle o..~o
pltch!'d 71-Jinnings and gave up six
:~18~
hits. HE' struck out just one, and left

J.AJCa

[ 14

... . . .. "' '

single.

Howe, who was suspended for the
1984 season by Uien-Commlssioner
Bowie Kuhn because of cocaine use
had not pitched In the majorS sin~ ,
September 1983•. In addition to the
su~penslon, he hadund!'rgoneelbow
surgery lastwinter.
Dodgers Manager Tonuny La- ,
sorda summoned Howe In the
bottom of ·the 'ninth Inning after
· Houston hild scored once and hilda
runner.on first with two outs.
On Howe's first pitch, JoSe Cruz
lined out to ceQter field to end the
game .
' 'It's good to be back and get the
first Cine under my beli," Howe said.
"It's like I've neverbeen.gone." ·
There were only two other

.Toronto, Detroit, Boston, Twins post AL Wiris

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By1be At.odete.l ~
National Le;lgtle games Wednes- singles and a triple and stole two
SteVe Howe stmply "S&lt;Ild a li!Ue day, with Montreal beating Cincin- bases for the Expos In piJirJinli the •
prayer and went to war."
natl4-1 and San Diego halting San • Iasson Jay Tibbs.
"I'd be lying If I said I wasn'(
1
· nervous," Howe saki after getting a Franclscol-0.
Expo~! f. RediJ 1
I
save _In his first appearance In the
BW Gullickson overcame a hismajor leagues In more than a year
tory of poor Aprll outings as he
Presented by Mei1s Co.
WednesdaynlghtaslheLosAngeles. pitched seven strong tnnJngs and
Dodgers held ott the Houston Astros
Humane Society and Meifs
also helped himself with an RBI

season at hOmE' against the St. Louis
Cardinals on Sept. 8, and close out
the season on the road against the
New YorkJetsonDec. 22.
,.

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�Th~~April11,

1985

The

'.

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court street "'
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO T{IE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS:MASON AREA

~~

.....

cs:m~ ~ -r.,.,....,.d.o=o
~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'l"r
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslsti\Dt Publisher/ Controller

BOB JIOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edlto,r ·
tlon

Jhund&amp;y,April11, 1985

Reagan's triumph_·--:-______:;w~u;,:.:,:tia=--m:__A_.R_us_he--:r

'

A MEMBER of The Associatt'd Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla ·
a~d the Amerlran Newspaper Publishers Association .

LETTERS OF OPINION art' welcome. Tht&gt;y should btl Jess than 300 words
long. All ltltt"rs are subjt"Ct toedlllna and must be signed wilh name, address and
TE'll1&gt;h0n{' num~r . No unsigned letters will be publlsht'd. l..ttl!ers shoUld b&lt;&gt; In

Reagan whipped_ the necessary
NEW YORK (NEA) - ~ldent dened." Grumpily, Congress
appropriation
for the MX through
Reagan's triumph in the MX battle a~.
.
·Addabbo's
committee
and the
But proceeding with manufac·
· has redu~ his adversaries to
talking to themselves. How In the ture and' deployment required stU! 'Congress.
Last year Congress - preparing
world, they wonder, does he do It? .further congressional assent, and
Here was a missile the congres~ Rep. Joseph Addabbo, the New, to face the voters - again refused .
. slonal doves figures they had York Democrat who . chairs the to scuttle the MX; but 1985 seemed
House Appropriaton5 Committee's llkely to be a different sttiry..Uberal
scotched for goodwhen·some()fMr.
Reagan's close$! . friends In the Defense Subcommittee, had mar- parliamentarians arranged that
Senate, such as Paul · Laxalt of shaled, by mid-summer 1983, ' the MX approprlatlon coming up
Nevada, balked ~t basing lt in the e11ough opposition to block the MX early this year would have to run a
when It was scheduled to come up gauntlet of no Jess than four votes:
Western desert 'way back in 1982.
for a vote In the committee late that two In the Senate and two more in
But Mr. Reagan thereupon apSeptember. But then, on Sept. 1, the House. It seemed almost
pointed the re5pected and biparticame·the shooting down of Korean Inconceivable that the president
san Scowcroft Commission to study
Airlines filght 007. Adroitly tapping could prev all on an four.
the problem and It came up witb a
But· now, miraculously, the .atinto the outr!lge of the American
proposal to base the weapons in
present ICBM silos, suitably "har·. tieople at this vicious act, Mr. mosphere changed: As one MX foe

•

good taste. addrt'sslng Issues. not personalities.

When is .high
too high?
With the Dow Jones Industrial average fllrtlng with l.Dlpolnts since late
January, aipld 19!fi forecasts ranging from 500 points to 1,500, the questlon

arises:
Is tile market fairly priced, underpriced or overpriced? .
The concern may not be as pressing as those other inte~ts of spring baseball, annual meetings, incoine taxes, unseasonal snowf;lHs and the
need to cut government spending. It Is more constant thai! seasonal.
Still, the question Is made more urgent now becauSe Oft he possibility the
market mlgl)t burst upward into undiScovered territory or tan from the
face of the precipice it has been ascending haltingly. since late 1982.
It sufficiently concerned John Wright of Wright Investors' SeJ:VIce that
he went back into the numbers and came to the conclusion - based on
:»year averages - that the DJIA may be underpriced.
Wright's analysiS was made on the basis of ~rice-equity ratios, or the
relationship of market price to book value, artlved at by dividing book
value Into market price.
Recently that ~tlo stood at 1.3- 1250 points divided by a book value of
95!1 at the end of 1984. At that ratio the market conformed to ratios of the
Pll!'t five-year period and the past 10-year period.
However, says Wright, a very dltferent picture emerges when today's
prices are etm1'3red with the :»year aver!lge. By that compm.son the
stdck market's price-equity level Is low, since the :»year average~ 1.93.
:!:'lumbers such as thes'e are useful, but only_as Indicators, since the
$J'kel environment Is ever changing. And some very big changes have
oc:curred over the two decades.
·
;One of the biggest of an has been the lnstitutlonallzatlon of the markets,
or the rise In financial power and trading activity af mutual funds, pension
(unds and other large groupings of. Investment funds.
•
:the strength of .Individual traders meanwhllf! has shriveled oil the New
. Yai'k Stock Exchange, which haDd)eS·most trading in the ll stocks that
~e up the DJJA. On many 'd ays lnstlljltional Investors make up 00 .
14irU'rit of a~lvlty.
.
·• ·
· ·
·
. '
.. :·ManY ot thestl "ii!Stlty.Hons f~ tl)e!r.Jnv~trnents on larger companies,
ti !)lily for the.reason that largl!r companl€5 can absorb the hugeanxillnts
ofmoney that lnstitutto!IS in'vesi. And m~;~hy of ihose companle!&gt; ate In the ·
~.
.. .
For this reason, some analysts think there could be a tendency for the
OJIA to ride a bit high in comparison to two decades ago, when It l!o!asa)llt
r(lOre representative of the random th!nklng of many smaller Investors.
On the other hand, much of today's Investing and trading .by lndlvlduals
!S ·done on the over·the-rounter markets, made up of newer, smaller,
ri!kler, more InnOvative and often more successful companies.
This "entrepreneurial" Investing - whlch Involves much higher
pclce-equlty levels - Is nOt captured In most of the popular averages, and
ei;peclally not so by the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
: Is the market therefore overvalued?
· The quesilon cad be answered only partially. but based on · the
~ulty ratio of the Dow Jones Industrial aver!lge lt Isn't.
· .Jn fact, says Wright, "the market has historically been priced at much
hi8her levels relative to underlying equity than Is the case today."
.

~ :

'

MX racetr~ck

EAST MEIGS - During a great
hlghschoolpltchlngduelatEastern
High School, the visiting Kyger
Creek Bobca\5 broke a 1-1 deadlock In the eighth inning to claim a
2-1 SVAC triumph over the
Eastern Eagles here Wednesday
evening In SVAC diamond action.
Kyger Creek ls 3-0 Inside the
league. while Eastern drops to 2-1
and 4-.-3 overan.
From the onset of .the premier
baseball contest, Kyger Creek's
Larry Edge and EaSiern's Eddle
Collins were razor sharp, hooking up
in a torrid pitching duel. Edge went
thedlstancetoclalmthewln,glvlng
up just two hits, an earned run, just
"one walk, andd sti'lklng out 11.
Colllns. only a sophOmore, was
.Just as effective. Collins allowed
only three. bits, gave up no walks,
and fanned six batters.
During the first threelnnings bOth.
clubs. were tough in the fh!ld, giving.
their hurlers good defensive support. Throughtheflrstthreelnntngs,
bOth hurlers pltc)led to just one
batter past thellmlt,awa lktoRoyce
Bissell off Edge in the flrst .
· In the fourth frame, the celHng
nearly fell In on Eastern as two
error!f led to Kyger' ssolo run. Barry
Matthews hit a squlbber down the
third base line, then after hustling
down the Hnl' trotted to second as the ·
ball deflected out of play for an
·. error. Another errant throw, al·
lowed Anthony Kitchen to reach
safely, thus Matthews came home
with the first run for the defending
SVAC charhps.
In theflfthframe,Chuck Vogel led

complatDed, · Congress had been
persuaded to ·vote for the misSUe
last ·'Year on the ground that the
Russians were refu~lng to negotiate. Now It was being urged to
authOrlz.e productlon · of 21 more
MXs because they were negotlat·
lngl By rtartow margins . In the ·
Senate, and even narrower ones In ·
the House, Mr. Reagan prevailed
on all four votes. Score-another one
tor the Glpper: the.MXs will be built
and deployed.
Watching Mr. Reagan from a
vantage point on the dais just six
feet away, as he addreSsed the
annual Conservative Political AI:·
tlon Conference -In Washington on
March 1, I found myself thlnklng,
''This is the youngest president
we've ever had." The president Is,
of course. famous for looking
younger than his chronological age,
but that wasn't what I had in mind.
What shone and sparkled In his .
remarks that evenJng ·was a
powerful, energetic arid Inherently
youthful quaHty of leadership . ...
there, before him, were 2,(XX) of the .
nallen's ablest and most active
"movement conservatives" -and
there was Ronald Reagan, exhortIng and encouraging them and
pointlng the way to greater achievements. I was reminded of Brandeis'
question, before the Pula Commission, to the chairman ofthe board of
the New Haven Railroad: . "what
was' Mr. J.P. Morgan's relation to
the other members of the board?"
And the famous reply: ''I would say
lt was the relation of a bull to a herd
of cows."
Writing In the March 4 New
Yorker, liberal commentator Eliza·
beth Drew opened her article with a : ·
sentence that deserves thOughtful ~
st.udy: "The large question that ls
preoccupying many people here Is
. hOw lastlng the Reagan phenomenon wiH be."

andJohnEastofNorthCarollna.
In this capacity, Sullivan has
ghosted a series of letters from the
Fearsome Four to thetr Senate
eoneag~~es, President Reagan, DefenseSeoll!taryfasparWelnberget
and· CIA
·. Dlrecto
· r Willi
· am Casey,

tlfl'Ded

sen, .

flopes for summit War against children
______J_ul_inn_B_ond_
brighten, then. fade
then brighten again
.

'&lt;The White House publicity engines are alternately roaring and
lipunerlng about a possible summit meeting between President Reagan
and Soviet chlef Mikhail Gorbachev.
: On the one hand, Reagan and his lieutenants have fueled speculatlen
q!most dally with on-the-record comments and background briefings that
!lt)~csted stpady movement toward a sumrillt. which would be the first
sina' 1979.
· ·
On /he other hand, the White HotJs(' trles to dampen the speculation,
telling repo11ers not to expect anything soon, saying that any meeting has
to be carctully prepared and complaining that the press is creating too
much anticipation.
:. Until Sunday, the . White House was single-handedly managing the
sommlt story. broadcasting not only Reiigan's invitation and but also
· ·JeoaklnJ;r receipt of Gorbacbev's reply.
:aorbachE'V finally broke his silence abou_t a possible· summit in an
lritervlew Sunday with the Communist Party dally. Pravda.
;H£' coupled his acceptance of Reagan's invitation with an announcement
tllat he had ordered a freeze on deployment of medium-range missile
deployffi!'nts in Europe. He sald he hoped the Unlted States would do
lJlu&gt;w!Sl'.
' "fhat pul a chill ·In the administration's sunny statements about a
Slimmlt.
·
·
.
:111e WhltP House quickly labled the missile frwze as a propaganda ploy
and !Mild a trreze on U.S. deployments would lock ln a heavy 5oviet
advantage.
·
Suddenly, prospects for a surrunlt didn't seem so hopeful.
· "It SE'('Il1S to rT1!' less Ukely that he (Gorbachev) would find 11 feasible for
, all early mee)lng," saki White House national security adviser Robel1 C.
McFarlane. ·
; HQWI"Vl'r, he sald the United States remains "open" on the tlming of a
siammlt. "He (Reaganl.lsopen to a met'llngoccurlngat the convenience of
.
tile other sfdl&gt;. The ball Is stW in thPir coul1."
· A dav later, White House chief of staff Donald T, Regan began stressing
that a inE.ting woold requlrl' "a lot of groundwork" and would have to

prodUCt' some results.
:Sl'vei'al weeks a110. the Wlllte House had emphasized that (!eagan had
dlopped his lnslltence on prior assurances of tangible results from a

nfttlng.

.

.; ~n solinded a dltferent theme this week. "We think It would be a big
letdown. not only for Americans but also for the rest oftheworld,ltthetwo
lellders were to meet and accomplish nOthing."
· ..
All d the anmtlon has produced unhappiness among some White House
atdPtl wtto think too much publlctty Is being ~ated.
·

.

'

.,

.

How many four-pound babies
does It take to balance the federal
budget?
That Impolite questlon Is asked
by the Children's Defense Fund, a
ruitlonal charity that works to
provide an effective voice for
children, especially poor, minority,
homeless and neglectEd children.
For the fifth year,. the fund has
put forward a "children's defense
budget," analyzing President Reagan's !!seal 1986 budget and the
amounts it plans to spend on
children's needs.
The conclusions are frightening.
According to the fund, poor Amerl·
can chlldren and their famHles wUl
lose $5.2 bllllon in the next fiscal
year in addition to the $10 bilUon a
year in cutbacks made since 1981.
MUltary spending, on the other
hand, wUl Increase $32 billion In
flscal 1986 over the $178.3 billion In
Increases m&lt;!de during the past five
years.
"If President Re!igan's budget
priorities succeed," Children's r&gt;efense Fund President Marian
Wright Edelman says, "by l.9!Ml,
every American will be spending 19
percent less on poor chHdren and
thetr.fllmllles and 86 pet,.e1t more
on defense.''
'The facts of life for American
children . today are depressing
' enough already.
. American Infants due in greater
numberS •than thOse In 12 other
lndustrtallzed countries.
In 1982, • alrrulst !m,(XX) babies
· were bam to mothers who had late
or no prenatal care. These chHdren
were three times as likely to sutter
low bll1h weights - the greatest
single catue of death and birth·
defects In babies In the first year rl
life.

.

Three hundred thousand fewer
poor children are now covered by
Medicaid than six years ago,
almost 3.3 million children are poor.
and two of every three poor
children have no regular health
Insurance.
Ms. Edelman notes that by flscal
1990; "the military budget will
increase by $344.2 billion or 239
percent. to make . American· child·
ren more secure from external
enemies. But American children
also need defense against the
internal enemies of poverty, infant
mortality, abuse and
hOmelessness."

"Over a five-year period," Ms.
Edleman says, "more American
chlldren die from poverty than the
total number i&gt;f American battle
deaths in the Vietnam War. Yet our
national leadership dreams about a
multi-billion dollar 'Star Wars'
system to make · our defense~
Impenetrable against enemy missiles. Why can't they wage a
smaner. achievable war against
child poverty?"
The Children's Defense Fund's
report Is a remarkable document of
more than 300 pages. It llsts the
Reagan custs In health, education,
child care, legal ~ces and civil
rights, aiKI proposes a powerful
nine-step program for fighting
back.
But Its blgge5t value comes from
Its description of what the Reagan
cuts really mean in hwnan terms. It
translates figures lnto faces and
makes the threatened children
speak from the printed page.
the fund's budget also Includes
the Children's Survival Bill, . a
-blueprint for federal investment
anti Intervention that woulcl restore

some of the montes cut from
children 's programs since 1!111.
The bill outHnes programs to give
young people skills and job opportunities to make them self-sufficient
rather than dependent.
It would expand, rather than
reduce, progr.ams that have
worked - such . as Head Stal1 and a lso lhcludes programs aimed
at dealing wlth teen pregnancy and
school dropouts.

off with a sharp sbtgle, but after a
lengthy discussion at borne plate
cameto. IUein~oryoverthe :
wascaUedoutfi&gt;rtantngtoslldeona
AleXahdet here Wednesday.
·
bang-bang play at the plate.
Winning hurler Dan Titornas
Matthews doubled to lead off the
fanned nine batters in only !our
sixth, but was left stranded on base
inning to chalk up his seccind win.of
as Eastern's defense recovered· to
the year wi.JhOUt a loss. Thomas .
produce several smart defensive
walkedonlyonewhtleglvinguptwo :
plays. .
hils. Nick Bush came with two '
Meanwhile, Edge was nearly
strong innings ; fanning thre&lt;.&gt; . walk· :
perfect, breezing through the East·
ing one, and not allowing a hit . Rick ;
ern llne-up without incident.
· Wise pltc)lt'd the final inning and
Kyger Creek .threatened In the
wa !ked one and allowing one .hit .
seventh as Bill Ward reached on an
Three Alexander pltchers, Wil·
error. but Eastern's defense agatn .
son. Keuter, and Powell combined :
came up with the hlg play to thwart
to fan 10 and walk flve . Wilson was :
thedrlve. ,
:
charged with thf loss.
Scot Gheen led the Meigs 12-hlt .
Sophomore hUrler Eddie Collins
attack with four singles in five trips. ·
helped his cause In the bottom of the
James Acr~ nailed a double and
seventh as he led off wlth a double.
two singles whUe Jay Carpenter had
Royce Bissell hit a long fly baH that
enabled' Collins to advance to third.
two singles while !;COring four runs . .
Other Marauder hitters inCluded :
With two out Brent Bissell tled the
two singles by tlrsl sacker Mike •
score With long double to cen!er.
Chancey, a double by Thomas, and a
Bissell then stole third to put the
single by Jack Welker.
••
wlnntngrunatthlrd,however,Edge
Meigs, now 2-3 overall and 2-1lri
retired theslde; the score H.
the TVC , put the game away in the
In the eighth, the· ftrst two KC
third with five runs when they
batters. were retired before Phil
pounded out six consecutive hits.
Abshire singled. Abshire attempted
Acree opened wlth a doubl~, ~
tostealsecondandcameaHtheway
WURNAMENT CHAMPS - Salisbury captured , Leach, Amy Wainer and Rebecca Bowers. Back row,
Carpenter singled him hOmE', Gheen ·
hOme on a throw that went into
David
Kennedy,
coach;
Kristen
Sti\Diey,
Jennifer
the
recent
Meigs
Elementary
Girls'
Tournament.
It
singled,
Thomas doubled home two ·
center field. In another close play at
Taylor,
Lori
Hayes,
·valerie
Wilson,
and
Tara
runs,
Chancey
singled In another,
finished
tbe
season
witb
an
S.1
record.
Team
memhen
the plate Abshire crossed wlth what
Jlumphreys.
·
and Welker's single added the fifth
were left to right, front row, Misty Butcher, Missy
. proved to be the winning run the
run.
score 2-1.
·
. Acree kept the shutout Intact with
Eastern playsatHannanTraceon
a strong throw from centerfield in
Friday in anSVACmake-up.
thP seventh inning, nailing an
Batteries:' Larry Edge (WP) and
Mike Edge.
He wUl enable us to do a lot more · All'xander runner:at plate. Catcher .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ml· rlmeter players, 6-6 Trimlll Hay·
Eddle · Co!Hns(LP) imd Brent aml strengthened an already for· wood of Chicago Martin Luthern
things, · both .offensively and Gheen applied a diving, one-hand .
tag for the out.
Sissel!.
defensively ."
mldable team with two basketball King High School and 6-41,1 Andy
Rod Roush wUl toe the mound
Boyce was the 1'-'fost Valuable
recruits Wednesday while Young· Ronan ·of Oak Hill Academy In
tonight
when the Marauders host
Player in the Hi-State Conference,
stown State and Akron signed one .Mouth of Wll~n. Va.
Gallipolis
at 4: 30. Meigs will host
averaging 24.9 points and 14.1
f,
player apiece on the opening day of
Despite Miami's returning talent ,
Warren
Local
Friday.
rebounds and connecting on 61
the NCAA spring signing period.
Peirson says there will be room for
percent of his floor shots and 78
They were the only actlveschools his two recruits. Ronan averaged
percent
of hls free throw atJel'npts.
among the state's 12 maJor-college 16.8 points and s.6 reoounils and
He's from Lynchburg, Va .
'0men's bilsketball teams, an Asso- Haywood 16 points and 10 rebounds
last season.
1 ted Pres ssurveyshowed ·
' RACINE-TraUing'1afterfour
Bostlck combint'd wi)h the
ca
tor inside
size
Youngstown
with
Shank, whowent
accounted
for~8.2
""
Ohl St t Ohl0 u l
lty Kent
"They can play inside or out." he
•MM'Mgs,
the Sou'""rn
T·o madoes winner, Kelley Grueser, for seven
a I"""
e, · Bon vers
• ee
uuw•
uor
St
t
T
lin
G
said.
"They're
g
·
ood
athletes
who
points
and
12.1
rebounds
per
game
walks. Harrunon•
a e,
o t.'UU,
w g
r n,
whirled up a storm enroute to Strikeouts and 9
·~
C
i'l
Xa
d Cl 1 d . can run and jump. They're good
last season. "Brad wlll help us fill
"""ling
thetr flrs.t win of the y~r
andSrrtlthsharedpltchlngdutlesfor
ati,
vier an 1 E'Ve an
,.....
~a
Stincln
t
•~--'
shooters. I Uke that style of player."
our vold In the middle. He can help
a 1' 7 NG.
.
•
a e s'6""" no payers . on
here Wednesday ~·en!ng,
~·
..
Wednesd
·
Peirson hinted he might he donr
us lnunediately," said Mike Rlce,
romp over thP North Gailla Pirates. • Southern hosts Federal Hocking
ay.
ed
with
his
1985
slgnlngs,
even
though
who I~ the Penguins to a l!Hl
1
: Southernisnawl-4overanand1·3 tonight and goes to Hannan Trace
Dayton already had comm 11
' he has one more grant avallable.
record and a runner-up flnish last
ooguowhlleNori
. hGallla Monday for an Jmpol1ant SVAC
Its three avallable grants-in-aid to
lnsldethel=
"'
1 u ign
He's st llllooklng at a junior college season in the Ohio Valley
contest.
a s ees.
h 1 Conference.
IA!I&amp;Al! MATtNEES SAT i SU!
drops to ().3.
Ohl0 Sta Ie, however, dld get a n transfer and a couple of high sc oo
~l SEATS Sns
GaUia
rallled
in
the
third
Wliclcats
pound
Wghlanders
. North
AlltlSSltltj EVERY TUESOAY $2.25
offlclal visit from one of Its ·players as prospects.
1nn1ng with four runs as Glassburn
Coach Brett Wilson's Hannan
T
Akron, 12·14 lasl winter, dipped
Lebanon results
_. and came home on a balk. Trace Wlldcats exploded for five
prospects, 6-foot -8 AU·0 hloan ony
Walk""
APRIL 5 tlwu tt
·
di 1
d
~ White from Pataskala Watkins Into the junior college ranks for &amp; 7
LEBANON , Ohio &lt;AP) -Carol
FRIDAY thno TIIURSDAY !
)VIIllamson walked; Hawks walked · runs In the-secon nn ng an · se· · Memorial. The· either player the small forward Marcel Boyce, fi'om
Cocki'eU, a provisionaldrlvE'r,. made
..
'mons
singled
home
a
run.
·
ven
In
the.
four.th
to
defeat
lhe
C
In
p
o'-•
·
Albert
and Ham
1
0 1eau, · 'oua.
·
Buckeyes
•-r·
: &gt;....
...ton .~ingled
home Southwestern
H1ghlan~rs,- 17•3
· . covet
· -' ·· 6-7 Mike ·Crllfin·
· .- ar'
·
·hl
"" fifth trt"p of tl.!n~ year to tile
S·t-·e
1
1
~·
"""'
d
·
fro
'
m
East
~·do
·
n
in
"
the
'
C
hlc•uo
Youn
.
a..to
.wn
State
·
stayed
_
.
wit
n
wt"nn"
· r's c•·rc·Ie. w1·'""
·
·
h!l
· d hit . In
an SVAC contest Wednes ay"
. .-~,.
·
-..
''"
~
,, Major·_..""""uc·
·~
a notiH&gt;r run, w· e an ei'J'Or an
. · '1.
. •
.·.· araa,
' his
. """
"".·-•ts'lo'"'.·
OhlO
. ,...,..
n....O clrc'"S'
"·9 . tloninthefeatu
'
.red runthraceatt.,
..
""
, a"lso'.put ott
" .
..
"' · to
·- ·. stan
~·· .v-'
batsJ'nen let in another, thescore5-1 . even. n~. · ''
.
.. .
, Miami's Redsklns;. 20-ll.over;dl 235-pound,. ~tad.Shank 'of . Lorain Lebanon R&lt;!ceway .. on WE$esd~y
. sOuthern ralllei:t in the fourth on a · ~n the second ' .lnnl!tll.- Hi!nrlal_l. ·and 'an NCAA "Tournament iJi!rtlcl· ·Brookside: . . ·
·. ,
· ·
· .night.
, . · · .. , · · .. ·, _
""Kelley .Grueser '~ruble, a Scott :Trace J.umped on los!,ng pitcher : pant; have ' ali ·or thelr regulars ,
Coach Boll· Hugg[J!s, tl'ying to
ThewlnnerpaldS9.~.$3.00and$3?
Wickline double, a Jim Wolfe walk, RQdrlgulez for flve runs capped by
returning from the team that . rebulld Akron's program, said of Rambling Prldepaid$4.00and$.l40.
finished second In -thP ,Mid· Boyce: "He's a very versatile Eastern Darling finished third,
aOilrlnRoushslnglE&gt;,aRyanOUver hits froi'n Bill Swain, Deke Barnes
player who can play inside or on the
walk Todd Adams single and three and Terry Cline.
, pie by David Ebe
.
rs'bach.
The seven run fourth rr.ame
American Conference race to Ohio
.
paying $3.~.
·
run tr1
University
perimeter. He shoots well from both
The daily doubl&lt;' paid S1ffi.OO on
Hard-hit singles by Freeman, featured hits by Phil Bailey and
Nonerheiess. Jerry · Peirson, the places. He has good size for a small the combination of 5-4. A crowd of
Wickline, J.Wolfe, Adams, and Barnes,awalkandtwoerrors.
R.edsklns' roach, signed two pe· forward, wlth excellent quickness . 1 ,68Swagered$l5l,336.
Ebers bach plated six more runs in
CHne fanned four and walked one
the sixth round.
in galnlng the victory. Andy Halslop
Ebersbach, Adams, Wlckllne, who relieved Rodrlgulez was
and Roush had two hlts to lead SHS; pounded for nine runs and issued
whlle Freeman, Oliver, and Jim· four walks.
.
Wolfe added one. Hammons had two
Bailey led the Wildcat attack with
North Gallla's girls softball team Hensler and Holter added three were Lor! Graham, Leanna Nlbe11
and JUl Drummond. Defensive
singles for NG, while Tim Smith, two hits lnfourtrles.Barneswastwo
boosted thelr record to 3-2 overall each .
Now 3-1in the SVAC, NG returns gems were turned In by stephanie
Wednesday wlth a 20-12 win· over
Brian Hawks, and Thaxton added for two.
k Hill
Pennington, Kelly Roush and Ml·
one each.
Hannan Trace 4·1 p1ays 0 a
to play Saturday in a home game
Southern.
chelle Reese.
tonight and Eastern Friday.
.
Dianne White was the winning against Fairland.
Angle Spencer and ·Rllchle had
In
anotber
loop
contest,
Kyg~&gt;r
pltcher forthe lady Pirates, while G.
Nancepltched for theTornadoettes. Creek exploded for i2 runs ln the three hits apiece for Eastern.
Kyger Creek 2-0plays Southwest·
ln scoring, Michele George was thtrd Inning whlch erased a 2.0
credited wlth three (twodOublesand deficit enroute to a 12-9 victory over ern
ALBANY - The Meigs Marau· single and double. Other hitt ers In
a single). White ha&lt;j fhree (two Eastern Wednesday evening. Rethe Meigs attack included a double
nee Ward was the winning plt~her
derettes erupted for eight sixth
doubles and a triple). and Lisa
by Barb Hatfield plus singles each
while Spencer was chargedwlth the
lnnln~ run~ to score a come-from·
Spence recorded two (two singles).
behind 13-6 win over Alexander here by Jodi Harrison and Carol Smith.
Nance was the leading hitter for loss.
'•
Hatfleld
hurled
!or
Melgs
and
Leading the Lady Bobcat altack
Southern
wlth four hits, ·whlle
Wednesday.
'
chalked up flve strlkeouts whlle
Melgs. now 3-{)overall, had trailed
6·2 going Into the fifth frame but, walking sev~. _Alexander pitching
fanned one while giving up Uwalks.
rallled wlth two ln that bat, !'lght
Coach Jon Arnott's crew returns
mar&lt;' in the sixth, and added an
to
the diamond tonight ln a home
insurance run in the seventh.
gameagalnst
Galllpolls.Frlday, thE&gt;
Tammy Wright and ,Jennl Couch
Marauderettes wDI hbst Warren
paced. the Marinld!'rettes at the
plate as Wright had a triple and
Local.
single and Couch punch~?~~ out a

a

.~

•

Redskins sign two.recruits
•

fjr~~~~~~~~~~,,

°

some committed Ideological hardliners backlnglltrn; It's because his
early warnings on Soviet weapon
development
out yo be dead
accurate.
·
Even Uberal critics concede that ' .
Sullivan ,Is "brllllan
.
t". · and an ·.
Reallzln~hisdaysll)theCIAwere _ remlndlngthemofKrEfnUn~dy.
opponent to ·be ri;&gt;ckoned with·•.
.nurnbered,SuHivanqultanclwentto · A recent campaign, for exampl£',
though they cllilm - with SOI1'te .,
work - tor.
Lloyd:. Benl$en, . trledtogetthePenJ'agonandtfl!;&gt;_crA Just~ -..,..:.that ~ occasloJiaHy ·.
D-Texils. He'Wrotenumei'QUsartl.· toil~;knowledgethattheSov!etsnow · stretches lhe .ta.cq; to make · a··
cles on Soviet duplicity for various have more than 8,500tCBMnudear polemical point.
. ..
publlcatioils. ·
warheads, instead of the 6,500 they
Sullivan's latest weapon Is a hook
When Ronald Reagan became profess to have.
that wUl be pubHshed soon: "Soviet ·
president, Sullivan was given a top
Surprisingly, the Reagan admin· MU!tary Supremacy: The Untold
pbsto at . the Anns Control and lstratlon, while fulmlnatlng the Facts About the New Danger to
Disarmament Agency. His friend, "Evil Empire," was reluctant to America." theco-authorisanother
Richard Perle, became a high reveal information it had on Soviet conservatlve who served .in the
official at the PentaJi!On.
arms-treaty violations. The White trenches of Capitol Hill. Quentin .
Sullivan's "mad dog" pursuit-of HouseflnaHydidsoinasecretreport Crommelln.
Soviet violations guaranteed that his early last year-afterSyrruns (with
We've seen an advance copy, and.
tenure at the dlsannament agency Sullivan at his elbow) had, done given the amount of inteJIJgmce
would j)e brief. Frustrated once some high powered proddlng.
lnformatlon revealed in the hook,
more, he left for the more
Sullivan, the consummate behid· It's surprising that the CIA cleared
synipathetlcenvtronmentofCap!tol the-scenes operator, has become an
ltsrelease.Clearly, thebookwllladd
Hill, becoming a llerJior poUcy irascible and tnnuentlal monkey even more clout to the Ideas and ·
• adviser ·to fOur conservatlve GOP wrench in the machinery of U.S.·
recomm~atloils d the ex-Marine
senators, Steve Symms and James Soviet arms control negotlations.
whose antl·Sovlet warnlllgs were
McCJureofldaho,andJesseHelrns .It's not just because he now has i oncespumedbytheCIA.
bureaucratic hara·ktrl: He dell·
veredhisreportonSovletvtolatlons
to a sympathetic congressional
aide, Richard Perle. This violated
theFtrstCommandmentofbureau·
cratic 'government: 'I'h!&gt;usshalt n&lt;it
go®t of
. ch anneIs. ·
.
.

ALBANY Three' Meigspitchers combined for a ttu"ee-hlt- ,
shutout and the Marauder bats •

•ldcats
rn,
SOut he W •
•
Pos t_. l·eam1.e VlC·t O rleS

Anti-Soviet war_·,...-------J_ac_k_A_n-d_er_so_n_&amp;_D_a_le_Vt_a_n_A_t_t_a
WASHINt;TON-DavldSulllvan
Is a former CIA analyst whose
friends call him "Mad Dog." He's a
pivotal behind-the-scenes power In
the fight over the MX missile and
U.S. -Soviet· arms control
negotlations.
.
The story · or Sulllvah's, nse to
lnfiuencelsaca.sehlstoryoftheway ·
thtng$worklriWaslilligton .. ' . . . ·.
Educated at Haiilard, Sulllv~ ··
serVed In Marine Coi-ps combat
lnteH!gence in Vietnam and E'Ventuany wound up In one of the CIA's
most sensitive Jobs: · analyzing
Soviet strategy and nuclear force
modellttzatlon. .Hesoondlscovered
thattheSovletswerevlolatingSALT
I and other trestles ~lth the United
States.
But when SuHlvan presented his
evidence, he was stonewalled by
agency higher-ups. This was during
the Cart.e r admlnlstratlon, which
didn't want evldence of Soviet
violations of SALT I endangering
President Carter's attempts to
negotiate the SALT II agreement.
· Frustrated, Sullivan committed

Meigs blanks ;1
Spartans,
10.0
.
.

Bobcats capture
2-1 SVACvictory

Page-4-The Daily ~
Pomeroy-Middleport, QhiO

•

For only 25 days ' wol1h - or
seven percent - of the 19116
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Berry's World

NEW ORLEANS (API - A
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allegedly madetheftrstcontact with
Green Wave players involved in a
point -shavlilg %Candal pleaded In no·
cent to charges ·or spol1s gambling
and coeaine dealing.
• Gary Kranz, 21, of New Rochell~,

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'Two other Tulane students, in· a
eluding basketball player Bobby '
Thompson, pleaded gullty to
charges In the gambling case on &amp;
Tuesday.
'

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Page-6-The-Daily Sentinel

. LADIES HIGH HEEL
BEACH COMliER SANDALS

....

- -·~ -

Thursday. April 11, 1985

OXYDOL -

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AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Ben
Crenshaw'sgollgameh.asgonesour
since reaUzlng a U!etlme dreamwinning a Masters Tourname11t.
He knows why. ·
" I had placed so much emphasis
in my own mind about Winning a
tournament like lhlsthat I got In a
mental rut, " said Wednesday.
"There's not a day goes by that! '
·ctor't think about this tournament
(his 19ll4 till~). I've had mental
hangup about it. It's like life was
qrawn out of me.
. '' I still can't tell people how tnuqh'
this tournament meant to ll)i.
t)'lerely returning Is a positive, very
qlce experience for me."
. Crenshaw said he hoped a return
to the scene ofhls greatest trtumph
~ would get him going again.
', Th~ popular Texan had an
· afternoon starting t!me In the field of

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~:;~:f!~yguards ... 'I'm
" ... I don't-like him," Hearns said.
"He's always seemed to be a very
cocky pen;on. He's a fighter who
doesn't like being around thepubilc.
He doesn't Ukesociallzlngwithother
fighters."
Hagler, who Is 60-2-2 with 50
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Vegas.But he vows he will shlne In
this oasis of glitter Monday nJght .
"When I knoek out Thomas
HearQ,S, the world wUI take notice,"
Hagler•sald.

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•STRAWBERRY

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I'll knock out Tommy Hearns."
"You people have Thomas as tall
Hearns, tbeWorldBoxJngCouncll · as this room here," Hagler told
sup!'r welterweight champion, has
reporters. "He's 10 feel tall. lie can
predicted he will scored a tl)lrd- knock buildings do\&lt;jn. You people
round knockout.
·
have built him up sOOigh."
· Hearns Is a slight favorite for the
The fight, which promoter Bob
scheduled 12-round bout outdoors at
Arutn thinks could be the biggest
Caesars Palace. It wUI be shown on
money-match ever, with Hagler and
closed-circuit television and on Hearns easily topping their respeclimited pay-p!'r-vlew, mostly In the. tlve guarantees of $5.6 million and
Los Angeles and San Francisco $5.4 million, has beert theobjectofan
areas.
intense promotional campaign.
"I hop!' they have him 10-1, so
The two fighters made a promo'when I knock his shoe'S off. they'·ll
tiona! tour of 21 U.;;. cities.
know about it," said Hagler. who
"llearn'edonthattripthatidldn't
will bemakinghlsllthdelenseofthe like Thomas," Hagler said. "I did
160-pound class title.
like this attitude. I didn't like his

Majors

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'

gune to some of the game's long demanding 6,001-yard, par 1l Au .
hitters - twcHime champion !)eve gusta' Natlbrulllayout.
Ballesterosof$paln,formerwtnner
Lanny Wadkins won two of the
Fuzzy Zoeller and Australian Greg . year's first three eventS, but hasn 't_
Norman.
done much since. Mark O'Meara
Waison, winless Ibis year, said put together successive victories at
Wectitesday he thought his game ' ,the Crosby ~nd Hawaiian Open, but
was In gOOd shape.
.
. Jv;.too, went lntoaslumpthelasftwo
"Overall, I'm ready to win ," months.
Watson said. "I just need a good
CurtfsStrangewonblssecondtltle
streak. "
three weeks ago, but Calvin Peete Is
Nicklaus says be Is "looser th~n I probably the hottest of the two-time
normally · am" coming Into the wtnners .
Peete, whoeould becornetheflrst
Masters.
"I usually come In and get worked black champldn In Masters history,
up over my golf game and the scored an Impressive victory In the
tournament," said Nicklaus, who Tournament Players Championhas a rerord 17 major professional · ship two weeks. ago and won at
championships, but .none since Phoenix earlier !his year. .
winning the PGA In 19M.
Other players to watch Include
Four two-time winners on this pGA champion Lee Trevino and
season's · Tour also have to be Crl!lg Stadler, who has finished
considered as ·challengers on the second In three events this year.

Scoreboard
8 ,\ ' 'OH• ,\~·~od

,

71 International goUers_~ho ·began
play In the 49th Masters today. ·
HIS recQrd slnceclalmbig th&lt;i title
last April prevented him from
entering this year's tournament as .
one of the favorites.
Since donning the green jacket a
year ago, CrenshawhaSI!PJl!'Bred In
21 events - !li\ishlng In the top 10
only three Urnes and missing the cut
nine times.
"I've put a tot of pressure on
myself," he said. "It just hasn't been .
fun."
Crenshaw said It would only take
sinking a couple of puns to get his
game going, and In a field without a
clearcut favortte, It might be the
boost he needs to repeat.
W!tll Jack Nicklaus, who owns a
record five Masters titles, and Tom
Watson, a two-time Winner. having
So-so seasons, the favorite's role has

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LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) MarvelousMarvlnHaglercanseea
negative side to beating Thomas
Hearns.
"What's going to ha pp!'n after this
fight Is my populariry Is going to
grow so much that my privacy Is
going to be limited."
Hagler can live with it.
When a reporter p!'rslstently
asked him about wtiat he would do If
he lost Monday night In defense of
the undisputed middleweight title,
Hagler said at a news conference
Wednesday:
''Why do you keep talking about
losing?
"I'm a winner. That) where my
head's at. We feel that this guy here
is In for the worst fight of hlsllfe.
"There's no doubt In my mind that

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�The

Sentinel

Calendar/ happenings

Area deaths
Virginia K. Hubbard

Texas .

Besides her -parents she was

precedetl in . death by a brother.
Funeral services ior Virginia
Manring
Seyfried. • arid a sister,
Katherine Hubbard, 61, of South
Annette Gallo.
Fourth , MiddlepOrt, will be held at 1
Friends may call .at the funeral
p.m . Saturday at the Ral\'llt1gs- .
home at anytime. The .family wUI
Coats-Blower F unera.l Home.
·recelvevisltiors from 2 to4and 7 to 9
Mrs. Hubbard, who was a
p.m . Friday. .
registered nurse and worked in the
offices of Dr. R. R Plckens' for 25
years, dledTuesdayafternoonatthe
Wade 0. Mahlman
Pomeroy Health CarE•Center after a
lingering illness.
Funeral ser-Vices for Wade 0 .
The Rev. George Rizer and the
Mahlman. '42, who died Tuesday,
Rev. Alan Blackwood will officiate
wUl be held at 11 a.m. Friday at the
at the funeral serviCes and burial
· RawUngs-Coats- Blower Funeral
wUI be In the Riverview Cemetery.
Home with the Rev. W. H. Perrin
Born ,on . Oct. 13, 1923, Mrs .
officiating. BUrial wUI be In the
Hubbard was the daughter of the
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Ja te Cjl!'istlan Seyfried and Dorothy
Cook Seyfried. She was a member of .
the Middleport First Baptist
Elizabeth Guess
Church.
She Is survived by her husband ,
Funeral services for Elizabeth
Harold Hubbard, Mi&lt;;ldleport, a -Thomas Guess, 87, of Pomeroy, wUI
daughter and son-In-law, Marta and .be held at 3p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Alan Blackwood, and two grand- Fun&lt;;!ral Horne. Burial wlll be In
sons, Nathan and Gabriel Black- · Miles Cemetery. Rutland. Friends
wood . Also surviving are two may call at the funeral holm! today,
brothers, Lawson Seyfried, Pa·
2 to4 and7to9p.in. Thedau~:hterof
nama City, Fla., and Kenneth
Thomas Towseley and Luthella
Seyfr!ed, Columbus; and a sister,
Brlckles Towseley, Mrs. Guess was
Constance Marthes; San Antonio,
born on March 4, 1898. ,

•

•

Village funds total $465,854-

Club Will meet Thursday, 7 p.in.,
ln the basement of the Rutlan(!
Church of Christ.
·
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Mary Shrine
37, Order ofcthe White Shrlne of
Jerusalem, wlll have open Installation Friday at 8 p.m . at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. .
There wlll be potluck refresh- .
ments . Business meet at 4 p.m.
Members of tlhe Order of
Eastern Star and Masonic bl;ldies are Invited to attepd.
SATURDAY
POMEROY - Gospel . slng

TIWII8DAY
POMEROY - The Rock
Springs Grange wlll meet Thursday night at the hall with a
P9tluck dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Baking and sewing contests wUI
be held along with a country
·
auction.
MIDDLEfORT - E._,angellne Chapter 172. Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at 7:30
p.in. Thursday at the Middleport
'
Masonic Temple.
Rl.JTI.AND - Rutland Lion's

.T.'

The Daily Sentinei-Page--:-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, April 11,_1986

will he held at 7:30 p.m .
Saturday at the United Fa.ith - •
Church on the Route 7 bypass
near Pomeroy. Featured singers wllllnclude the Old Time~
Quartet, the Long Bottom Trio
and others. Public invited.
POMEROY - The ' Isaak
Walton Club will have a tree
planting and seeding work session beginning-at 9 a.m. Saturday. All members are ask~ to
attend.

.

Alumn'i
scholarship
available \

invited.
Boan:l to meet
POMEROY - Southern Local
School Board will meet In
regUlar session Wednesday ev- ·
en)lig at 7 p.m . '
AAppllcattons are being accepted
Dance set Saturday
1
for
the Bob Roberts Pomeroy
GALLIPOLIS - The Grande
Scholarship to be awarded
Alumni
Squares W~tern Style Square
graduating
senior at the annual
to
a
Dance Club wlll hold a dance
reunion
on
May
25.
Saturday night a t St. Peters
The
deadUne
for
applylng is May
Episcopal Church, GaUlpotis, 8
I.
Applicants
must
be either a child
toll p.m. Ed Graham wUlbethe
·
or
a
grandchild
of
a graduate of
caller. The dance wUI carry out
Pomeroy
High
School.
A highschool
an Hawaiian theme with ·
grade
transcript,
a
_personal
rememtJers and guests to. receive
SU!f\e.
and
a
wallet
size
picture
are
to
Hawallan leiS at. the door. All
be
mailed
to
the
Pomeroy
Alumni
area western style square
Box m . Pomeroy.
dancers are Invited to attend.

Church of Christ In · Christian
Union," Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor Keitlh Eblin invites the
public to attend. ·

.

MIDDLEPORT- The gospel
group "Saved" will perfonn
Saturday evening at the Ash St.
· Freewill · Baptist Church In
Middleport. The service Is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p .m .
SUNDAY
MITmLEPORT - A sound
track sllde. presentation of a
Holy Land tour by Art Hughes
wU] be shown at the Word of
Faith Churi:h In Middleport at
7:30 p.m. sunday. The public Is

MIDDLEPORT - A hymn
sing with ''Dan Hayman and the
County Hymntlmers" wUl be
held Saturday 7: JJ p.m., at the

Low

L-3rge
FRIENDLIEST EMPLOYEE'!-Vaughn's CIU'IIInal cllliomem
recently voted for their choices of the ten friendliest_employees at the ·
srore. Pictured here extreme left In lront and extreme right In froot are
sroreeo-managers, Don Vaughn and Dennis Hockman. Also pictured In
front are employee .winners, Isabel Phillips, Denise Laughe_ry, Becky

.

wastaken.

Prices

Selection

.

Rhodes, and IJirby Rothgeb. Pictured left w right bt t)le back are
employee wlnael'!l, Beth Schneider, Nancy Beaver, 'l'lna Lee, Wendy
Tillis and Jeannelte Dully. All of the employees received cash P~­
Employee KevinVenoy, also a winner, wasnollh es mtwhentbeplcture

·

Friendliest .e mployee -contest held at Vaughan's

All Middleport Village funds as of
disbursements, $16,889.14; sanifary
A contest to decide the friendliest and Wendy TUUs. These three were worth of groceries; Tim Frailer,
received cash prizes of $559.44,
Village
March 31 totaled$465,854.24,
0
scw$!2er £'$CrDW, no receipts, $10,001,
employees at Vaughan's Cardlnal awarded In cash the equivalent of Middleport, gathered $226.30 worth $226.30 and $lll6.44, respectively.
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck reports.
· · · 6,717.29; fire . house improve- was held In conjunction with a
thearnountofgrocerlesgatheredby . of groceries ln a two minute spree;
Also given away In the shopping
Receipts, disbursements .and the
ment, $57.52. no disbursements.
shopping spree contest for
three shopping spree winners on and Patsy Price ln a oue minute spree contest was a $25 gift
md of I he month qalance, respec$9.010.97; water tank, no receipts, customers.
,
'
Tuesday morning.
spree, gathered groceries valued at
certificate whlch went to Angela
tlvely, in each of the funds making
$40,000, $140,977.58;
wa ter,
Based upon votes from custo$lll6.44. Employees B'ecky Rhodes,
Sellers of Middleport and a $10 gift
up the tot·al include: general, · $10.391.71, $9,664, $26,932.35; sani- mers, the top three employees are ·
Jerry Tlllls, Pomeroy. winner, of a Denise Laughery and Wendy Tillis ceriiflcate which went to George
$29,809.!11, $14,876.61, $45,465.30;
tary sewer: $7,106.81, $6,069.32; Becky Rhodes, Denise Laughery
threemlnutespree,gathered$559.44
Horak of Pomeroy.
·
stl'('('t maintenance, $12,955.10,
swimming pool, no , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 8,707.62, 3;911.17 deficit; federal $37,036.96;
receipts, $26.27, $67.67 deficit;
revi&gt;nue sharlng. no receipts, no
ct:metery. $1,423.19, $1,39~ . 73,
disbun;pmcnt s, $1.13.17; 's treet light ,
$714.27 deficit; water meter trusts,
no receipts, $1444.72, $2,548.39;
$385, $420, $10,963.11; economic
stl'('('tlevy , no receipts, no disburse- development, no receipts, nodisburment s, $27,879.95; fire equipment, sements. $2,000.
.
SOLID PINE
no rec('ipts. $748.38. $3600.72 deficit ;
Receipts for the month totaled
!'ire truck. no rec£&gt;ipts. no disbuse$112,057.24 whlle disburse- m ents
rl'knts. $24,439. 71 deficit ; gent'ra t
"'OUnted to $94,648.R4.
bond rPtirement, no receipts, no

1985

1985

1985

.CROWN -VICTORI·AS

FORD RANGERS

LTD BROUGHAMS

KINCAID

Nine speeders forfeit bonds
Nine people iorfeited 'tines on
speeding_charges in the court of
. Pqmei'oy Mayor · Richard Seyler.
Tuesday night.
.
Forfeiting .fin('; Ol\ the charge ·
were Ferrell Day , l\1iddleport , $45;
·GregQry TQdd'Owen, Matthews;·N.·
. .. c:·$45;Joe) B..Erg&lt;iod, Athens. $48;
David · Huddleston, Raclne, ·$44;
Rocco .Fadro. Athens, $50; Andrew
. Phalin , New Haven, $44; terri
Hawley, Pomeroy, $44; Starnon
Burdette, Leon. W. Va.; 47; Helen
Handley, Pomeroy $44; J9hn Hoiman. Raclne. $45.
Others forfeit lng bonds were
Elizabo'th Swisher. Cheshire. $63 for .

failure to · register her vehlcle;
Donald Elllnger, Logan, $43, . assured ·.ciean dtstanGe;' Jobri Young,
.Pomeroy, disorderly manner, $63,
and assault , $213.
· !Clned were Greg Hi~ks. pomery,
rec~i'!lng stolen property, $163 and
'cQs~;· HarryLeeBarton, dlsorderly

manner , $6.1 and costs: Sherry
Butcher, Pomeroy, public lntoxlcatlon, $1l.'l and costs, and Dale Riffle,
Racine, drlvlng whle intoxicated,
$375andcosts.
Marlene Harrison, Pomeroy,
cited on a s~lng charge entered
an innocent plea and the case has
been transferred to County Court.

Four calls for assistance were
answered on Wednesday by units of
the Meigs County Emergency
MediCal Service.
At 10:12 a .m., Rutland was call ed
to New Lima Road for Joyce Cieland
•to Velerans Memorial Hospital. At
7:49p.m .. Raclncwas called to Ohio
3.18 for Virginia Phalin who was
taken to St. J oseph's Hospital. The
·TupP('rs Plains unit was called to
Reedsville at 11:32 p.m. for Sharon
Barber who was transported to
Holzer Medical Center. And Pomeroy, at 11:58 p.m .. was called to
Township Road 263 for Addle Baker
to St . Joseph' s.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions--Betty Wilson, Pomer6y; Theria Hendrix. Pomeroy.
Discharges--Elmer Sayre, Ell!anorWerry.

••

Graduation planned
· The Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dano:;e Cl11b will hold
graduation for a square dancing
class Monday at 7 p.m. at the Royal
l'lak Park. Recreation auUding.
Those attending are to wear square
dancing a ttire and take a covered
dish and table service.
•

OA~

FINISH

EARLY AMERICAN PLAID

LOVESEAT
SOFA - CHAIR

Reg. 536995

Reg. 51199.95

$19888
Starting At

The senior play of Southern High
School wUI be presented at 8 p.mr
Friday ln the audilor!um. The play
Is made up oflO skits from the Carol
Burnett Show. - ·

$8888

SALE

•

$78888

DINETTE
4 SWIVEL CHAIRS

2 WING CHAIRS
1 RUST • 1 GREEN

Reg. S699.9S

.Reg~ · S2 79~ 6

Will organize club

SALE

$11888

No lotto winner

•

•

MINI PIT

SALE~

$4888

WOOD ROCKERS
Starting--At

.

'•

,.

..

.,

•

'

•
'•
r.

'
".-

New Merchandise

Arri~in_g Every Day.
If You Ha~en't Seen

It Before, It May Be
Here Now.
Come In &amp; See
Tim, Be~, Da1rell,
· Cashy Jr.
· or Skip.

1984 CHEVROLET
C-10
5,000 miles,, ., ton pickup, V-8,
auto. trans .• PS, PB, h;mg wide
bed. gauges, rear step bumper, 'AM/FM radio, stereo
tape, radial tires. Stock #
59391 .
~ lj.. ow
WAS,

$8995.

$7943

NOW

WitS

SOFA -. CHAIR ··

'4995

$4250

Reg. S1699.9S

trans., PS, PB. tong wide bed,
gauges, rear step bumper,
wheel covers. Stock N 5841 t .
WAS

$4695

FLEX STEEL
\

SWIVEL ROCKERS

1

12,196.
5
9.12.
1813 •.

''

.

-~

.

.

'

' '' ton pickup. V·8, stand.
trans .• PS , long wide bed, rear
step bumper, WSW 1ires,
Stock# 50t6t.
WAS

SPECIAL

1995

5

3295

5

• LAREOO PACKAGE
Hard top, 6 cyl., stand . trans .,
PS, PB. AMfFM rad io, black .
Stock# 58941.
NOW

WAS

'5995.

..

5
..

'

5295

.•Heater
•Tinted Gloss ·
•Automat ic.'fr~ns . -~Tilt Wheel.
'. ~

. .

.

.

THE ARITHMETIC:
MONTHLY LEASE

P~YMENT

NON~ "'
$286.00
$6000.00

TOfAL AMOUNT OF PAYMENTS
rOTAL MILEAGE ALLOWED
MILEAGE PENALTY OVER 60,000

,
00 *
, 5
' 0.N Ly $1 2
PER MONTH

NOW

s3495

lf:l ton pickup, V ·8, au1Q .
trans., PS, PB, tong wide t&gt;&lt;;d.
gauges, rear step bumper, tm·
ted glass, AM radio, WSW new
tires, wheel covers, Ar1 con ditiOn . Stock K-5706 t .
WAS
. NOW

5995

1

ON THE
FINANCING
TO QUALIFIED
APPUCANTS AT FORD
MOTOR CREDIT OR .
BANK RATES.

4850

5

*Gallia County Tax Structure

-

Appliesi

Limited Time Offer

15,956•
5708.
51,346.

$13902
.
I
Stock No. 5746

CHRYSLER
LeBARON

4 cyl. , heater ,- auto. trans ., PS,
ps, AM/ FM rad io, stereo
tape, WSW rad ial fir es, bucket
seats. Stock# 50701 .
NOW

WAS

60,000 ·- '3895 .
61 per mile

Stock No. 5936
•

.·

1

.FORD SUGGESTED RETAIL
. FORD FACTORY DISCOUNT
•
TURNPIKE DISCOUNT

48
1
125.00

CASH DOWN PAYMENT
TOTAL AMOUNT DUE AT INCEPTION

.-

-·_· _···2,054· ·D~ISCOUNT

$8,417° $6 '325°
OR YOU CAN LEASE IT FOR LESS!
.

•·Traction LOck
. Rear .Axle

- .,

0

NUMBER OF MONTHS

1977 FORD F-100

•Power Brakes
•AM/ FM Radio
•Power Windows · •WSW Radial Tires
•Power Seat
•Wheel Covers Wire
•~u)(ury Gr~up lnt. •Power Door locks •Remote Mirrors
•Pivoting Vent
•Floor Mots
~Reor Window
.Windows · . ' •Convent ional Spoce [)efogger

0

.

•Cruise Con1rol

•V-8 Engine
•Air Condition
•Vinyl Roof

NOW

WAS

•Power Steering

4 dr ., 2,1,'765 miles , V-8, air
cond., vinyl roqf. heater , ·auto.
trans .. P S, PB. tinted glass,
Tilt wheel, cruise , AM/ FM
rad io, WSW r i'ldial tir es. Stock
158271.
WAS
NOW

S3883
2750 54995
ILE 1981 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE
1nyl roof,
4dr.,V·B,air cond ., vinvlroof •.
5

.
heater , auto. trans .., PS, PB.
body side mouldings, tinted
glass, tilt wheel , cruise,
AMJFM radio , stereo tape.
WSW radial tires, rem ote
mirrors. Stock II 58081.

heater. auto. trans .• P S, PB,
power wind ows. power seat,
power door locks, t infed glass.
tilt wheel. crui sr, _ AM / FM ·
r adio, stereo tape, WSW radial
tires. rear winrlow defogger.

'5695 '
,. 54695 '8995
$7995
.
I-W•A•S------N•O•W~t-W~A~S~~S~to~c~k~K5~56~0~1
.~N~O~W~£;
1984 VOLKSWAGEN

VOLKSWAGEN
RABBIT

·-

1.-, ton pickup, V-:_8, stand.

2 ONL Yl. -

·-

·e4 Cylinder Engine
_·· · •4 Speed T£.a~smis5ion
.. •Vinyl ~nth -Seat. ·.
-.
.:. •4·P18..5 75Rxl4·Tires
: ~·. '
.
..

1980 FORD F-100

1979 FORD
F-100

118888

•4 Door

REFUNDABLE SECURITY DEPOSIT

•• • cyl. , 4 speed, PS, PB. short
wide bed , rear step bumper.
Stock N$9131 .

COUNTRY CASUAL

COMPARE THIS EQUIPMENT

,.

Stock No. 5837

"'-.

Reg. S479.9S
•

.

'

8

Re9ular 5359.95

'

ME,TAL DINETTES

- .

$1"0 I 471
.

q

Fund drive underway
The annual fund drive of the
Orange Township Volunteer Fii'e
Department will be held Saturday
bE'glnnlng at 8: 30 a .m . SelfaddreSsed envelopes will be left at
residences where no one Is home. A
follow-up for the drive will be held on
Saturday, April ro.

; .-.. .

FORD SUGGESTED RETAIL
.FORD FACTORY DISCOUNT
TURNPIKE DISCOUNT

~

-RECLINERS

.

•1725 DISCOUNT .

WOOD TABLE
4 CHAIRS
SALE

Play set for Friday

The Meigs County Swine Club will
hold Us 0rgan!zationai meeting on
'Sunday at 7 p.m. at the. home of
Carolyn Ritchie. Adv.isors are
Ritchie and Liz Upton. Anyone
Interested In joining the club is
CLEVELAND (API - 'l'he next'
·'Ohio Lotto" jackpot will rise to$1.5 Invited to attepd the meetng.
mlllion be!(ause no one picked all six Questions may be directed to
Ritchie, 667-3882, Upton, 378-6311, or
numbers drawn in Wednesday
the Meigs Couniy Extension Office,
night's game, state lottery otficl,als 992-6696.
.
said today.
The winning numbers were 1, 3, 5,
Coaches to meet
26 1 37 and !10. .
Ohio 'Lottery officials said there
.
'
A meeting of aU CQ!lChes and
were 266 tickets sold correctly
others Jnter,ested In the sununer ·
naming five of the six winning
Mlddleyort youth league activities
numbers, and each such ticket pays
are asked to attend a meeting at
$685- There•, were 10,71)1 tickets
Middleport VIllage Hall, Thursday
naming four of the numbers, and
at
_6: 30'p.m.
each such tiCket-Is worth $45. · ·

..

~lntercvoi.Wiper.s

148888

Meets on Friday
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution, wUI meet at 1:30p.m. Friday at
the Meigs Inn.
The program, "1776 D. St.--A
Visual TripCoverlng29 Rooms"will
be presented by Mrs. Clyde Ingels,
the correspondent docent trainee,
and election of officers will be held.
HostesseS will be Mrs. Ingels, Mrs.
Dale Dutton, Mrs. Patll Etch, Mrs.
George Hackett, Jr., and Mrs.
Daniel Thomas. ·

•Tinted Gloss
•4 Door
•Tilt Wheel
•6 Cylinder Engine
•Cruise Control
•Air Condition
•AM/ FM Radio
•Heoter
•WSW Radial Tires
•Automatic
.
•Remote Mirrors
Tronsmissio11
··Rear Window · ·
~ •Po.,._;er Sl~ering
--•Power Disc Brakes ·. pefogg~r ' · '''' .
· •Power Windows · ·., •Luxury Wheel Covers

KING-SIZE BED
NIGHT TABLE
HUTCH
..DRESSER,
'
.
.
. .
· MIR~O~, CHE~.l :
·R_eg:. $'2'265.00
-·
SALE

M_eigs County happenings ....
Emergency squads
answer four calls

COMPARE THIS EQUIPMENT .

BEDROOM
SUITE

2 dr .• 4 cyl., air cond .. heater, 4

speed, AM/ FM radio, stereo
tope, WSW radia l tires, bucket
seats, rear w l ndDN defogger.
·stock 156911 .
NOW
WAS

'7795

2 dr.', 4 cyl. , heCiter , 4 speed,
AM/ FM radio, ra dial tires,
bucl&lt;ct seats. reE~r window
Jetog!w . Stock ' 59041.
WAS
NOW

6695 '4995

5

5

3995

8 a.m.· 8 p.m ..
11\0NDA Y THRU FRIDAY

8

a.m. · 5 p.m.
-SATURDAY

�'

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 11, 1985 .

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Funds .raised by local Canter Society used .mostly in Meigs.
The American Cancer Society cancer patients," she &amp;ald. Besides
wants people to know in Meigs crusade contributions, the society
County how Its funds are used ·also receives support from memorbecause most people thlnk only in Ial g1fts and special events. •
terms of research when the ques· Services to cancer patients retion ts raised, according to s. quired two-fifths of the local budget
Michael, Public Information Chair· In · 1984. This' Included transportaman of the ACS in Meigs County.
tion provided by volunteers who
"In tact, substantial amounts are take patients to and from doctors•
used right here at home to support offices,. clinics, .or hospitals for
local programs for the prevention. treatment; loans of hospital beds
early detection. and treatment of .llnd wheel c hairs; free bandages
cancer, and to provide assistance to and dressings; financial aid for

some drug costs; free cancer
screening programs. ·
Mlchaelsald "Bringing the latest
developments In cancer research;-..
treatment, and diagnosis to medtcal and allied health professionals
through conferepces, publications ,
and other ·methods and informing
peOple about cancer's seven warnlng signals, &lt;&gt;nd safeguards to
protect themselves from cancer;
alerting them to factors In their
background and lifestyle that may

· mean higher rtsk for cancer;
the ACS amounted to one-fifth of the nationally. One-flftll of all '. funds
teaching our children good health local budget total. "These costs are collected In Meigs County are used •.
habits - all 'Of these are part ol kept reasonably low because of the_ for nationwide purposes. The bulk
. Public Education programs that committed work of our volun- of this money goes into research. .
Michael said that copies of the
received about one-fifth of the teers," she saki.
budget during the past year," she
The society's research program, soclety's·latest anrual report can be
second
only In size to that of the obtainE\&lt;1 trom Its ofllce on Mulsaid.
· Fund-raising and administration Federal government 's National . berry Avenue in the old Masonic
costs tor the Meigs Coun{y unit of C.:ncer Institute, Is administered BuUdlRg. The ACS trying to find
ways to prevent cancer and f!ndlng
cures, discovering better detection .
and treatment methods, and restorIng patients to normal lives. When .
'There
58 present for Sunday , oi Keno Road.
the volunteers knock on your door
School' on March 31.
Those calling on Mr. and Mrs.
read all the literature very care·
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Circle ~nd Arthur Johnson and family and
fully to be sure you do not have any
famlly visited wtth Lula Circle on Betty VanMeter were Elsie Circle,
of the "warning signals" and so you ·
Sunday ~n Keno Road.
local. and Sue Hager of Racine,
can f!nd out ways to help safeguard
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Watson of Elva · and Hayman · Bamlts of ypurselffrom cancer, Michael said.
Kent, Ohio spent a we.;okend wtih Pomeroy, Pauline Rose, RD 1.
the arinual crusade will be held
Mr. and Mrs. Edson Roush.
Junior Johnson of Racine spent a
AprU 8 to 19 tn Meigs County.
.
.Mr. and Mrs. Wrtghtseli of Nease recent evening wtth Arthur John·
Hollow Road visited with Mr. and son and fmatly and Betty
11anMeter.
1
Mrs. Douglas Circle on Sunday. .
Rev. Paul McG~lre called In the
Vlsitjng recentfywlth Mrs. EmesFlorence Circle spent a Sunday
tlne. Hayman were 37 of the guests
with Mr. and Mrs. Hayward Bissell community recently.
. here tor a bridal shower honoring
Gwen Barton: The shower was
hostt;ct by Llla Ridenour.
.
A birthday iJarty was given 'a t the Candl, Wendy, and Crystal of
home of Mrs. Jolut Murphy and Medina are spending the week with
Peggy honoring Dickie Downs, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell and
grandson of Mrs. Murphy.
families, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Haggy,
Attending were Iva Johnson, Mrs. Stephanie, Brad and Mr. and Mrs.
John Downs, Adam and Eric, Mrs.
Donald Russell.
Joseph Evans TYson and Jonathan,
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank, Sarah
Complete line of Vegetable &amp;bedMrs. Gregory Davis, Ashley and
Beth, Texas Road, were Sunday
ding plaQts, hanging baskets. ·
Joshua. Favorswereglven and cake visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
potted plants-:. blooming &amp;foliin the Clementine Critter theme was Haning and Ronald, and Mrs.
age,
shrubbery, rose bushes,
served lee cream.
Gladys Tuckermart'
azaleas
·&amp; Rhododendrons.
'fl1e Rev. and Mrs. Robert Purtell
Pic. Rick Little, stationed at Fort
OPEN
DAILY 9 to 5
were recent vi•ltors of Mrs. Iva
Carson, Colo. spent the weekend
SUNDAY
1 5
Johnson.
with his parE'nts. Mr. and Mrs.
PH
.
992
~
5776
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summerfield, Donald Little and Donna.

Flower show set .at Royal Oak

.
.
"Spring Is ln. the Air," a Cower
sl16W by the Chester Garden Club
and . the Shade Valley CQUncll of
Floral Arts, will be staged this
weekend at the Royal Oak Park
recreation building.
1'he show wUI feature arrangements, _horticulture, specbriens and
educational exhibits, -f or both junIors and adults. Entries are to be
. placed before noon Saturday and
remain _in place IUltli 4 p.m. on
Sunday. The public Is invited to View
the soow both days, lto 4 p.m. ·
Ribbons wUI be placed in each
class by an accrejllted Judge of the
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs,
Oral judging Will begin all p.m. Ol}
Saturday. In the adult dlVtslon,
special awards wtU be best o! show,
reserve, and creativity in the
artistic arrangements, and horticulture sweepstakes. In the junior
.division, the special awards wtU be
best of show and green thumb for
horticulture exhibits.
Eight classes In tht&gt; artistic
arrangements division are res·

Is

Carmel area ·happenhigs'
were

Visiting .

.Wolf Pen news
notes.
.

Hubbard's GreenhoUse

..

.ti.1
CONCERT-TheGodsmenQuartetofHuntlngton,
W.Va. wiD he at the Rutland Church of the Nazarme
for a special serviCe of singing Sunday; 6: 30 p.m. The

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

\

public Ls Invited to attend. Uoyd Grinuil Jr., pastor,
Invites the public.

(llfred area community happenings _

'•.-.

•
ByNELLIEPARKER _
• R~vi,·a l services were held April
1:5 at the Alfred Church with an
averag'-' attendance of 27. Speaker
l'l!onday, was th'-' Rev. Steve Nelson
on John 11; Tuesday, the R('v. Roger
. Grace on John 12, Wednesday, the
13-('v. Archer ort Matt. 20. Thursday
was youth night with a film. "The
Qui'Stlon" followed by a discussion.
and on Good F'riday, the Re'v. Mr.
~her Jed the tenebra!' sen·ice.
• The c hoir sang "Kneel a I the
·CJ'oss" a nd there was a responsiv&lt;&gt;
rtading a nd singing of "Near th~
ero&lt;s", scrlpturt', and the extin~l•hing of candles following readiiigs by Thelma Henderson. Nilla
~obinson , the Rev. Mr. Arthur,
Elol'if.' and Russ&lt;'ll Archer, Ger·
trude Robinson. Nellie Parker. and
Evelyn Spencer. ,
. .
. ._
· ·- sunrisl&gt; service was attended by ·
per'sork- flonmce Ann Spence r ..
' liad t hai-ge of the program which
. dppnro withpiayer b)' lay Tay lor.
Marilyn ;Ro\llnsim was planist .. and .Mrs. SjX'ti&lt;'er sang "C~ Ivary·~
Way." Readings . included Lisa
J;!urke, "Christ Liveth-Today". Erin
Brooks recited "A Story to Tell '' ;
i{,trs. Hl'nderson. " If Christ Is" and
~ellie Parker. "Passion Week."
'!'he. choir sa ng "Night Before
East!'r."
·
Mrs. Spence r and
I~ the small chlldr&lt;?n in an-E aster
p~~rade to th&lt;' East!'r bunny and h~ s
rK-st pl'l'pared by EloiS!' Archer.

64

Each child rec&lt;&gt;ived an egg from the
nt&gt;s t. Mrs. Archt&gt;r had prayer.
An Easter brt&gt;akfast was served
lo 50. Kate and Ray Rode haver
furnis h!'!! the ham which was
prepared by Marilyn Robinson.
Doris, Lloyd, and Randy Dillinger
prepa1'ed potatoes and eggs astst_e d
by other members. and Russell
Archer had the blessing.
Easter Sunday school attendance
was 50. church attendance. 21 An
egg hunt was held following Sunday
school. Visitors wert&gt; Mr. and Mrs .
Ben .Jackson. Rl'\Jldsburg, Mr. a nd

Mrs. Eric BrookS. Erin and Jody,
New Marshfield, and Don Coleman.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bartholrnew,
Dayton, and Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Seanam, Barlow. visited Mr. and
Mrs. BU! Robinson and other
relatives in the area last week. Mrs.
Bartholmew died shortly aft~r her
return to Dayton.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Michael,
Stiversville, were supper gliests at
t h~ Poole-Parker home recently.
Overnight guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Fetty, Karen and Sa ndra,
Fairborn.

HOM£

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SATELliTE

to

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BUSINESS ;· Mon.-Fri. 2-6
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(hsidt tht P11t Olflc~,

:

-

; "Travelln' Yesteryear," a pro~amoftiJe Meigs County Council on

Aging's !Wtlred Senior Volunteer
F'rogram, was presepted at the
~l vervlew .E lt&gt;mentary School
recently.
: The school gym as well as the
stage was filled with . displays and
SfVeral demonstrations werE' given
during the d ay. These included
~ndmade musical instruments
played by the owners for entertain·
ment _The students tasted sassafras
tea, .home made butter and kraut.
~nlor citizens were ther~ to
cl'monstrate shoe cobbling, qUilt·
lng. candlewick!ng; chair caning,
and the making of broomstick lace .
display were kitchen tools.
ciJshes and old-time health remedies. Commentaries on Meigs
dlunty history Including one-room
sl:hools were given.

-:On

tonrata
held .
..

: The canta ta, "SonriSl'" was
presented by the .Junior Choir of the
Forrest Run United MethOdist
Church on Easter morning.
·Roles in the cantata wcretakenby
Brian Anderson. guard; Kyle Ord
and Jamie Ord, serva nt s; Rochelle
Jt&gt;nklns and Amber Ohlinger,
&lt;1tlldren; Brian Anderson, Nlcode·
mu s; Kyw Ord, Joseph; Kimberly
Jenkins. Mary Magdalene; Jenny
'(aney, Salome; Renee Russell.
Joanna; Brldg~ Varriey and Rocliene Jenkins. soldiers; Della
etsgh, angel; · and Amanda· Wells,
~ly Wells. Michael Russell and
Jllmie Ord, disciples.
: 1'onya Ing~&gt;Lsand Michael Russeil
-t~ "greeters for the service. The
janlor choir le~ders are Faith
Varney. Jill Pugh, and Rose Ann .
Jenkins·. The Rev. Steve Nelson had ,
tile benE'dlctlon, and breakfa•t was .
Slirved following the service by .
Omega Class. ~ .Llvewtre ·
Class prepared the table
dl!coratlonS.

Alpha

•

'·

TH

5

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'

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. POMEROY, OH.
Your ·Professional
Jewelers

junior Auxiliary attends confe.rence,
awarded trophies, installed as officers
Awards were presented and
Ertca McCJjntock, Pomeroy, was
installed as Eighth District presi·
dent of the Junior American Legion
Auxiliary, at the annua I conference
held Saturday at the Drew WE'bster
Post 39hall.
Mrs. Veda Davis, advisor of the
Pomeroy junkirs, was awarded a
trophy for her narrative of activities
of the group. The unll also received
the Veda Davis attenctan&amp;trophy,
along with first places In history,
Amber Hankla chairman; foreign
relatkiiL•scrapbook, and handwork,
class3. The unit wasatso~lzed
for lis "adOpt a · grandparent"
program.
Mrs. Helen Hampwn, eighth
district president. instal)ed Erl.ca
McClintock as president of the
juniors. The 1985-86 confl'rence wlll

.be held In Middleport. Poppy
royahy attending the conference
were recognized and presented
Susan B. Anthony dollars
Speaker at the conference was
Mrs. Florence Richards who talked .
on Americanism.
Dis Iinguished guests recognized
were Mrs. Hampson, Mrs. Eileen
Howes, Lithopolis Unit 677; Mrs.
Richards, Middleport 263, and Mrs.
Geraldine Parsons, MlddleportJ28,
past Eighth District Presidents:
Mrs. Davis, staterepresentatlvefor
the Athens Mental Health Center;
Mrs. Loretta Tiemeyer, Pomeroy
Unit 39, district lunlor activities
chairman and deputy of Athens ·
Mental Health Center. Other guests
werE' Janice Smllh, Columbus.
Diana Reeves, Athens UniT 21, and

Mrs. VIctor Hannahs.
It was noted that Unit 39 ''has
enrolled five tiny tots, threeofwhom
at1ended the conference. They were
·Ashley Hannahs, Jessica Wright,
and Kayla PuUlns.
Hosting the ronference were'tl!e
Pomeroy and Racine junior units.
Cathy Pullins was the conference
plants!. Anita Smith welcomed the
members and gues!S. and Sherry
Johnson of Racine Unit 602gavethe
response. Tlsha.Jarvls, Unltl28,'and
Laura Black, -Unit 39, gave the
report of the registration commit tee. Jennifer Cross gave the tellers
report for the nomination . and ·
election of the district president ,
'Following the meeting, a reception was held for Laney Hankie,
rE'tlring Eighth District ~resldent.

APRIL 11·13

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Ritchie, Coolville; Linda Smith,
LangsvUie; aM KHa Young,
Reedsville.

fr~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~=:~:~~~;~~~~;:;,

Riverview
PTO meets
The recent PTO meeting at the
Riverview Elementary School was
well attended by parents when
Richard Roberts, superlntE'ndent.
presented facts and Information
concerning th ·proposed school levy
to be voted on in May.
·Following his ta Jk, the group went
on record as supporting the levy and
a donation was made to promote Its
passage.
Mary Newell, president, had
charge of the meeting with committee reports being given. Pat
Shriver's ·room h&lt;!-d . the highest
· percehtage of ·. parents 1-n
anendarice. _
· _
· -'-NeW o~icers to he installed _a t the
"next meeting are .• Sue Reed_,.
prestde)1t; Pat Martin, vtce pr!'Si:·
dE'nt; SueSutUe. secretary; andJlll
Holter, treasurer.
An open house was held at the
conclusion of the meeting. Parents
viewed the children's work In the
classrooms while conferring wtth
the teachers.

Be Sure To -Take It All!
Your doctor preteribes a opecific number of pilla when he_.
writes' 8 preKripdqn•. By :Uiinc ~he endre-(_IU··~~ity't th~
. requ·; r_td fr~uency, yQ~ make sure that rh~ medi~ti~n
prOVidet ill f'?ll bene~u, ju,_t_as !~u~ doclor prea.c:tibed.

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during
previous
all
work
term.
A taken
student
mustthe
have
been
enrolled for a minimum of 12 hours
for consideration and must com·
plete aU courses.
Listed on the dean's list were:

Richard. Ash. Syracuse; Paula
L. DettwUler, Arin
Elizabeth Diddle, Rita F'ields, aU of
Pomeroy; Ann J. Glenn, Karen Sue
Lyons, Okey TribblE', Jr., and
Tammie Starcher, RaCine; Janet
Hoffman, Melissa Thomas, and

Ch~ncey, Albert

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.Nineteen Meigs Countians .were
listed on thE' dean's list forlhewinter
quarter at Rio Grande College and
Community College.
In order to quality for the honor a
student must earn af least a 3.75
gradei&gt;olnt averageona4.0scalefor

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RGC Dean's List names area students

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ltg. 1499.9S

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All MONTHS

trlcted lor !'xhtblts by members of
':Easter Egg Hunt, " a favorlte
the two sponsoring clubs. They are
design. The junior horttculture
'1'hroug)1 au the Frozen Winters" a
classes are for potted plants, a
triangular design Including ever:
daffodil, and a tulip.
·
green tollage, limited to those who
Adult horticulture classes are lor
have never won a blue ribbon;
African violets, one crown blooming
"Spring has Sprung,' ' pop art;
houseplants, whlch may Include "March Winds Doth Blow," featur- · African violets with more thaD one ·
Ing bare branches; "TheWlndlsOut
crown, cacti and succulmt, and
wtth a Leap and a Twirl,'' modem
foliage houSI! plants. Adult specl·
showing motkin and producing
men classes are daffodil, long
sound; "AprU Showers," mbrl·
cupped or trumpet, .. one bloom;
bana; "Woman, Why Weepest
daffodil, short cupped, one bloom·on
Thou" featuring the Easter ma - stem; daf!ixiU,morethanonebloom
dOnna; "He Is Risen ," interpretive; · On'Stem; tulips: flowering branch att
and " In Your Easter Bonnet ," a
Jeastl5inctles-long, andotherspnng
design using a hat.
blooms. All are open for pub)lc
ThE' InvitaTional classes. open .to
exhibit .
the public for exhibits, are "Here
Comes Peter Cottontail," an arranThe educational division, compelgement In a basket using accessoltlve, has classes for corsages, door
ries: "MayMorningsareMerry ." a
decorations, wreathes or other,
breakfast tray not moi-e than 24
while the non-competitive classes
Inches in width; and " I'd Like to
wUI include a display of gardening
Haye a Garden," a ~tUillte.
and flower arrangement books
The junior classes for arrange- owned by club members, and things
ments are "The Robins I hat Sing in
you need to know about horticulture
the Spring," using bird replicas;
by Mace) Barton.

CHINA

-$fotswJds $s~ini1-

14K BRACELEJ
•

placeawardsaslheJumoroontermeeheldSaturdayat
lhe post home. Making up the winning team were.
sealed, Mrs. Veda Davis, junior advlllor, wtth Loretta
Tlem_e yer, the Eighth District junior activities

f,RONTS ARE SOUP BEECH, NOT VENEER.

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chalinJan, and standing, 'Anna WID, chaplain,
displaying the Veda Davis attendance trophy; Laurie
Black, Erica McClintock, new district president;
Laney Hanldey, past district president, and Amber
Hankla, -retary-treasurer, holding the outstanding
unit trophy.

WINNJNQ,TEAM - The juniors of Drew Webster
Post 119. American Legion Auxlllll?', took several first

·.

Mrs~Calaway ~:;:;:;:;;;::;~~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;;;:;:;;;~
I
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The Daily Sentinei-Page-:11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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at tho home of Joanne Calaway_wtlh 11
members and rwo adVIsors anendlnll.
Etectk:Jn ot otflcers was held, memberschose
proJect!.anddueo....-.dr.cus...S. Atthenoxt
meellng, Mandie Harrll will "'"" a demonstrallon oo plnnlnr
a pallem. Ret...,hmonls
W('Jeii&lt;!JVl'd
by Joann Calaway. AI ,,. noel
mot'llng memben wW Sian working on
projocts,anda,.allhandsafetyroport~~lbo
· gtven. - Metllsa Harris,""'"' .-.pol'!"'~ Meigs County Shepherds' Club me1
March
15 at the Melp Qlunty E&gt;&lt;t.,..lon
0111"' wllh IW&lt;&gt; advllors and 11 mem...,.,
~n1. The tollowlnr olfl«&lt;o ...,... alfCied:
p-..ldent, Lort Burtoo: vtce Jli'O'IId&lt;'nl, Will
fook&gt;· Jt'CI"tlt.U:V, Ja~ Rll£"hie; lreaJUm-,
Eric 'n.om.: .,..,., repor~..-. Srott Burke:
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with tourdeck:lfd
actv110rstoand
15members

on S.tunlay, May l, at lhe Racine Home

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Na1161lal Balli&lt;-Ungnd
All&lt;&gt;. a dale
of SepJ.
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Recr25..wu
tton
mn~llted of comput~r and pocket 111me1,

SSC).!S
~

KotDe
Varney,
VlntfYErvin.
oerwdJI'IU1l'
........
_ ,_and
Thellrtdjwt
nexl
meettna will be altho Circle home on April 19

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at which Unw members wtU l'f'pOrt on

projocts. - Carrie Gloo&lt;kner, newa reponer ..

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tigers; tltlrd row, Jared Ridenour, JeH Stethem, and
Jeremy Raymond. wolves; fourth row; WIUJeAdlU118,
.J.R. Rldgeiooay, and Andy Wolfe, hears; tltthnlw,Matt
Michael, Timmy Clem, and VIncent Reiher, wehelos,
and Luke McDanle[, cubmaster.

I~2:!i.~~!~M.J Middleport ·Garden meets

lamp,
Get one

Comport At

PINEWOOD DERBY WINNERS - Flnt. second
third place winners of l'ad&lt; 235 tn the recent
pinewood derby were lront, Usa Stethem, David Van
Jnwagen, and Adam McDaniel, masarts; second row,
Mlchool Smith, Brian Jlllfman, ad doe KanJclutlk,

IUid

OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturday
9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

446-'M:U

Country Boy• 4-H ·Club met - a1 Larry
Ctrete'a homt on Man:h 22 with 18 .men~ a
..t tour advtlon _ ., Ei&lt;ctlon ololltc&lt;n
WU tJeld. I llcatlng porty WU
April!C

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Attor the

Indoor- and vtdoo. Helen llol!!r and Potty Circle
.......llp!On... - Andy Hill, _ ,_

"""'t7·

A program on church arran~- ·by naming flowers suitable for .
ments was given by Nellie Zerkle at
church arrangements. The regional
.
the Monday night meeting of the
meeting to be held AprJll7 at the
Middleport Garden Club held at the
Hocking Motor Lodge at ~Isonville
· and H. a Ill e z.e r kl e.
home of Nellie
was announ ced . A n 1nv 1a 11on was
Miss ZerklE' explained the differ- read to the spring flower show of thE'
enl arrangements to use for the
Chester and Shad(' Valley Clubs at
various seasons and the appropriate · Royal Oak Park, this weekend.
place to Sl't ihem in the church. She
Mrs. Dorothy Morris gave a
•
t oI p In k de monstra tlon on
. thc var lou s kl nds
dlspla)'ed an arrang('men
carnations with greenery. ·
of daffodils and the ways to arrange
Members discussed · the OO!h and preserve them for different
.
anniversary observance to he held arrangemt&gt;nts. Mrs. Nancy HUI
at the Middleport Presbyterian presided at thE' coffee service wtth
ch11rch on May 6, 7:~ p.m.
refreshments belng served from a
For roll call members answered tabledec6rated lntheEastertheme.

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�•

Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Thu~y.April

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs honor rolls annqunced_._,__...........___
ThP Cour1h sb1 ~wks gradlna peor1od OOnor
roll at the BradiNry SCI¥&gt;01 has boon
announced Makh\8 a Kfade c( B or above Ill
aU tlwotrSubjf'cts 1o be named to the roll were:
ruth cradi! - Trtca Baer. Frank Blake,
DocHe Oeiand Sharla Cooper, Ryan Cowan,
~ather Da\l(l'nport. Stacy Duncan. Tarta
Goi'IIICh. Kim Hanning, Darin Logan. Clvls·

Cunningham, Alicia Hllfi:Y Carla Hughes.
Erica PhlUlpo, Palma Wiles, Corey Darst
La Deana GroVf;'f, Israel Gr1rrtm. Travis
Ups(:omb, Heather Knight, Amy Hamson.
'l'en-y Slobart, Amand.a Brlnlc..-, Kr1sdna

w....,...

tina WNVft", Robby Wyatt
Sixth ~ade - Tkfta Deem Erk'a EUas,
Susan HOUchins Jamey Little, StE'Yf! Martin,
Jason Smith. Missy Nelson, Shtlly Pullins,
'Ken VanMatre CaUna wane. Dard WoUtt I

DH Oa.sses - Susan Goo&lt;le, Bobby Nltt,
Rllndy Shulfortl. Daymond Wolf•.
.-/'
,.. tounh olx weeks gradlr\g period honor
roll at thl&gt; L&lt;tart Falls Elementory School has
bet'~\ announced. Making a grade at B or
abo\'E' In allt~ir subj«'ts to be named lo the

run wt'N'

FirSt Ktade -There wUI be no honct roll for
~lrst Al'&gt;de
Second AJ'ad&lt;'- Sabrina Congo, Justin HUI,
Tracy Pickt'ft, Brandy Roush , Shaa;mon

St:aats
Third gradt&gt; - Bart Swanwout
Fourth grade - NlckJ U..,.le Sheri)
Cooper, Oam&gt;ll S.yf'&lt;', Kyle WlckiiN'
ruth grade - Carrie Cloe&lt;kner, Jody
Hayes, Brt&gt;nda Hunt , Dawn Shu.ktr '
Slx1h gradE&gt; - Jason Shain. MattheW
Swartwout
ThE' fourth six WE!f'ks gradlna: periOd honor
roll at tlte Salem Center Elementary School
has belon announced Making a lll'ade ot B or
above In aU thetr subjects to bP ~ to thP
roll """"'
Ftnt gradft - Bryan Colwell , Cyrithla
CottE'flll, Melissa Erlwtne. Jak~ Gannaway,
Anflola Hale. Mlkl')l Jarvis
~grade - Kim Janey, Mandy Jones,
Tabitha Large, Susan Page, Kerry Sexton,
Ml~helle Shuler
Brian Smith, Cf\lstal

fl

V~;ughan.

Third grad&lt;&gt; - MaH Oark, Denbo
Shenefield, Tonya "nn1on
Fourth grade Allison Gannawav,
RandaU Johnston l...orena Oiler. VlrgtnJa
Shul«, Mlct.!lle Young
. F\fth wade- ShaYTW' Aspln Andnoa Hale,
.Matt fl,aynes. TE"reSa Molden Becky Ocker·

man, Darcy Stone
Sixth KTade - H"""ard GI'O\'t'S,
F'E"ylon

Rk~rd

L

Tht fourth six weeks gradlnir: period honor
~ roU at the florn(&gt;roy Eleme-ntary SChool has
. bl'en announcro Making a grade ot 8 or
ai:JDW In all thrlr subjects to br named to thE'

ron W('ff'.

F'lrst wade - TraVis Abbon. Monty
Hunt£'1" ADIM' Brown. Paul Chapman, David

'

Second grade - Joey Bendler, Amy Dust,
Donny Ewing. Denbo Hayos, Ernlly JOIUiso!l. '
Melissa Plorce, Reggie Pratt. Usa Yeauger,
Sarah Arderson, David Cannlchael , Jerod
Cook, .H!ff Darnell, Tara Erwin. David F(&gt;{ty,
Jt"'''ed HUJ, Jasoo Taylor, J uJW Young.
1b1rd gradf&gt; - fu"ton Qeland, JeremY

Grtmm, Stephanie St&gt;e Lee Henderson
Tracy ru.. J P Davis. Brad Anderson,
DanleUe Crovi, Amy Wnght, Jeff Tracy,
Deannalloi&gt;!he
Founh grade - Kevin Lambert, DeOOrah
Alktna, Leann C\lndltf, Stephanie Price
Ru.sseU Tr1p5err Katrtna Thrt'lf'l"' Kelly
DtHd~ Megan Bar1f'ls Jamlf' Blgg:'l. Nathan
Brown. Melissa Maynar&lt;J, Beth RolL'lh, Vlekl
Warner

FUth grade - Melinda OaUey. Jeremy
Dean, Mindy Foulkrod, Stephank&gt; Haggy,
Melissa Neutzllng, Keith Smith, Kimberly
Bur1911, I va n Powell, TftTY Roush, Barbara
Anderson. J~h McElroy. UllaMf&gt; Buc~.
John Harrison, jeremy Heck, Jon•than

Sargont
Sixth grade-- Shat1t' Phillips, Tracy Eblin,
Jennl WerT), Kelly Smith, Ertc Heck, Kim
Ewing
D.H Intermedia te- - Tonva Hudnall. Mary

Morton
L.O - Bruce MC'C'loud

Slawte(,

Feymyer. MisSy Leach, Kr1sten
Krts1en StanJey, Amy Warth

The fourth slx weeks gradtng period honor
roll al the Rutland E-tary SCI¥&gt;01 bas
be(&gt;n annou.JK'l'd Maldng a grade « B or
a~ til au their subJects to be named to theroll wen&gt;

First gr•di! - PhyUis Oark, Jolin Cleland,
Jeremy Coleman, Ryan Dailey, Tara Fitch
patrkk, Travis CUmore, Brent Hanson,
Ma.ri~Mle

Hess, Irremy Honaker, Karan
Kauff, B J Nic-holson, Timmy Priddy, Shawn
Rltl'. Lori Rus.wll Cindy Stewart, Candice
Walk« , Roxane WUUams
s.concJ gr""" - Misty Birchfield, Kevin
&lt;:Oiilns. Bt1daot Davis, PhiUip E&lt;lrnclnd.,
Tara Fowler, Travis Grate, Royden Hawkins,
Lori McGhee. Shml Ramsbu111, Cindy
Roush, Jeremy Imboden, MIC'heUe Ward,
Tonya WUJ , Carrie WUJlams. Beckie Ento«
Third grade - Lor'ri Bumem Bobbl J o
DtcJ.I.see, Arrt1e Elliott, Mellssa Jel'ters, Jason
Mill.,, Bo!&gt;bY llloodlspaugtj
Fourth grade - JE"nnifer Casteen Sheryl

mav bE' the tho~t of loved Of'lf'S,
or partnts. SW('('tht'art or frlf&gt;nd
Bul II makcs no dln&lt;'f'E'fK'e who they are
To you, 11 s trail s t'nd

~'Illt-v

, \'au may havt' !TVC."IIed ma~ miles
To ttl&lt;' noMh, C'SSt, SOUth and Wt'SI:
But that Trail home whPn you w l()I'J('S(lmf:',
Is thfo OI'K' YOU iovf' tl'k' tx&gt;sf

A!S all thelr daUy tasks ttl(&gt;y meet;
And as ttF day wears on to darkness,
Their cyt"le In llfe will bP complete
~ir

time, It 9E'E'ms, was not all wasted,
They made the- most of all that 's free,
But stlll the thought is P.'ef present
Be gracious, God, and Jet me see

Set&gt; the IJI'eak ci neYt' dav's dawning,
Lighting up thl&gt; t'a.S tern sky.
Ready again to stan a ll over
11le things they havt&gt; to give a try
- Bv Ok&gt;n D Harrison

U Jesus hadn 1 found Ill(' and shOwed m(' 1t1t'
way?
Spoke the rtght ~ords and was ln thl' right

So It's dnl\' natural as hl&gt;ansrrtn~ pun'
And tk&gt;sln&gt; l$ to roturn,
'
That as allthll¥t5 In life M"effl frtoe.
SomP xou po~v to learn

plact".
Showed me the power ot His savtng fiUiK'l'
Proved how my We, thcnlgtl to me 5('('1'1:\l'd so
loot,

• Could have UCE' everlasting for He pak1 'I he
rosl ,
Paid wll)l

•

'aut ~oo ha\oto ont' thinK wUhln reach,
Tum your f{'l£'1 and head them back
U U bP IW'ard a mansion hugP.

'Or a link&gt; old rumbk&gt;-dawn shack

.

""arm! h.
You'll knou.• thE&gt; th:~ vou 'VE' tw:-ard so much
Hav(' bem tr100 and all an&gt;: !J"U('

Y&amp;'ll knovo as you top t hat last little risfo
And lllf'~ ~n to talu&gt; o'C'f
Pro\~ tht' onh plac"E&gt; that rould be greatt&gt;r,
Would bf' HC'avC&gt;n'!i &lt;_;okk'n Shol"("
thr plaC'f' that brought you back.
Your hrart uill be&gt; l~hl and fn'(&gt;
You mav nrn•r b£' §OJTV cl whPrt&gt; you IC'fh
But bt&gt; ~of 'A hE-n' yoo will be5('('

- 8\ Olf&gt;n D Hai'T'lson

TeAo.p..wdM-

Mottwor ck'ar ~'OU may tw&gt; R')l'lf'
From all C'8rthly peopW-'s vifo'A•
Rut ln mv hPart )-l)I.J'n&gt; thrr'fo to stay
And I oft~ dream of yoo.
You didn't M ant to JilO I know,
. But Cod .sav.l ~t that da\r;
To ("XChaftjlf" for \o"OU that burcit:&gt;nt&gt;d llff&gt;.
For a tw&gt;Ho:&gt;r pl.aC't' to sta''
Oh I mlu you and ah••a's M'tll
As lthlnk d ,,..., lhnr'fi j:!On(' m~
So11"1t' \1.1'N' J,!OOd and M lnf&gt; v.wro bad
~hA'" \'OU iind I
But J knov. Gad al\lo ays dol&gt;s "'hat's best,
don't undPrstand
H£&gt;' 11 maki&gt; it drar to U.'l I kno\llo .
li.'t' r't'.:K'h that Promi'il'd land

~ Mmr'llmPS \lo'f'

"''hm

vou ma' t:r Ji!!Ont' for tii'N'
But J knl:l\llo \W 311"' at Tl'SI
And M•halt"\'ff Hf' has for yoo up thrrr
So

M ~ In'

-wru br too \"('1"\

~x&gt;st

So I IIIlO rb!ht on thlnk.lnJt
And dn&gt;o.ming drf'ams of \ 'OU
And ~that v.1K"n I waw this mrth
I')J ha\"t' a Ml"nf' tM"P to
• - 8\ Ok'n D Harrtson

F_M&lt;........,

Oh.. to l'f'('a\1 In timr OfK'(' mort',
MM'I"'IfiC'!i like' ~i nd UU'OUjth an ()p("n doOr.
~a.\SC'd on b\ and k:l&amp;t In !ImP.
As up tl'k' ladder ot llfe ""~ l'llmb
Lylnjr dOn'Nnt nov.'. In a sacll:k'N:d taran,
Y£1 a thOU2t'IT jd\•("S thP pu)S(t I qUk'kmlnR

._

start

~ina too \4rll tllost&gt; mPmor1el shared,
Could on!v tx&gt; .,1th onp whc cal'l'd

.

kK'Iwd up Ren'fs. known too ¥.'Pll,
Y'ou cannot mmllon and I wm't It'll;
But When au alonr from pubic v~·.
I'd like to n'C'IIU them all with you

'Jboe(&gt;

']'btn m} hNr1 "-'OUkl bP rol'll(&gt;nt,
My drt'l ma lulllllod 1n&gt;m !loa""" ""''.
My mind at ""' t.&gt;hlnd th.llt door.
'11ll' wind po&gt;M'd t~ but n't'llllod """"

........
- BY 0,., D HarrUol\

&lt;

Ule'• C)'de
11lf tftll'lllut jil:lllten ln nunlr!J sun.
WHit - '"' k!ows from nfllht be!O&lt;P,

_ ___
----..--1)1.
10--.....
a......,._......,.

,._-"**
IJtd
11111
...,..U - -·• door
,_t
· /mil erNIUnlllirrlnl
........
....
pa!in -

·

moybp llo
tlll,)'bP wttb tho ..,...., lllowtqj,
t'l tt)WIW!iif,

--IIIPtlmoiOI-ond&lt;oro

"'*"'

5o ...... al 1ao1 """' ........ Ill 01111,

Oul
uti doy bum:
A tilly lbr oonte
of _ , . ond comlorl,

-

.. .,...., ......... -l'otionl

' ...
fill 11t11tp
,.y
wttlt
'fi.IMY,__dty
'
-

'

'

-t~ s haw

Llvtt with tb:&gt; thought tha t the world and lis
wealth,
Could give them llfe'sluxulies, lncludlng(itOod

h€-alth
But when GOO upabovesays, "Yourtlnl('here
•

'Those riches ar"'" useleois lo gain

H~aven ' s

'"""'

-""'

Makfos me p:lad that I know Him and glad Htt

f3pgins 10 spread 0\ (&gt;I" YOU

You'll

~

I'd probably still be Ilk(&gt; thosE&gt;-wOO dor!'t caf'l&gt;,
Wouldn't ~vtt to anybody, but takP more than

Is 0 1(&gt;1"

: As thE&gt; cOer )OU. ~ and tht&gt; fPE'I.Ing of

&lt;

Yes,, itlfwasl);t for Jl'Sys IU$1 wtwrewduld I
be"

Nof with rrJOf1'l"Y as lll"ou.ki seem,
'But with fE"E''inp you'w gone through:
AJ;. vou know what II means to bli" rar away,
With no Cine' to cheer )1)U but you

fils bklod, so my blind eyes could

""'

woy,

!1111 Ill mind I llopollltll
.........
I

For toda) without Jesus just whl&gt;no would I
lp?

- By Olen D ,Harrison

SIDDI'! ..... CamP To Me
Mv lilt" was wDf' and ml!il'IV,
Mv frk&gt;nds had turnE"d me down
All tht&gt; 01\t'S I thought I had.
Nf'\'ff SC't'mt"d to tx&gt; around
'Ilw' hf&gt;lp thft\1 at\4ays otferE'd.

Wh&lt;&gt;tl IK'&lt;'OOI I coukln 1 lind
BecaUS(' the sin Within thl"tr II~ .~
Had caused thE'm to grow blind

one.

So 1 called upon the- name or
l had nE"\\("f' r1'k'l bE'fOI'('.
And I knew for surt' ft(' heard rnt',
For He was just outsldt ttk&gt; door

l1f'VE"I'

,_.....
.··-...........
·-

accompllshments

Tbatweml~t:htwttbHlm lnHisworld forf.ver

""

It all went well for a shOrt pertod or Umt&gt; and
Hf' was ple ased
'1ll one dav Into the picture sin and ("VII stole.
This ¥.as His plan. the way l1 happened built
made Him a nATY.
To think ma n \40\lld gh E' upE'teomal happiness

.-.

H~ sacriCICfd, by forfC'Itii\R

the- IUe of His OrK'

and onlY Son

- Bv Olen 0 HarriSon
Fallll
m y lord dOes for

'11M-

thin~

,
,

,......

~,

1 .....................1

..,

now a new·found person

'2

ITK'

tht' way

fJl('

Makes me Jove Hlm, but v.'Onder wh(on I kJJeEt1.

down 1o pray
Just when&gt; Yr"OOid I be Without fait h"

tl1('

stn.

IN MEMORY OF
CRESSA M. SHAIN

For J nomemtxar only too w"E"II,
How sin can make you pay:
But thank you, Lord, that's ovPr,
Sine.'{~ J knelt dov.-n that day
- By Olen D Harrison
llodoiiMe

Gonl&gt; aJ'V' the days that wt• ooce laiew

Joo,

Fer sorlalllfe has ~vt'll way now
To the teievlskwl sOOw.
Whal UIOd 10 "" a frlonclly caU,
From Bill and hll family ci lour:
Is oow all"f"'lng ci " HI. IIIII." "Ill. Ja.,.,"
To " 00 you see that fullback srort""'"
We uk'd to walk or drlw for ml~.
Just to~ our trlfnds ard chit;
And U ...nwd u If we- nrwr ran out,
1'\bout
tholf and that
~~ now If you thoukt ew?r c-all.
On lito )'OU lo know:
You can stay 1wllllr. pt up and IH...e.
And
)'OU (10,
From tht W'rl first minute you enter their

,,._.and

thor-··.... -

........

"I'll .... limO """"'" 10 deport:
ll'o "OimP an In lltd lind a cllllr.
My _..m•o""' _ , 10 un."

so
wily .... - - . - . . .
01 .... llmN'ul lite 10&lt;111 ..U:

Wo've dllftiOd lD lhal. ,.. IIINIIItl o oet,
Wllh lfiUII"' ........ coklr, IIIII aD. •

When aU seE'ITX'd so lost Hf&gt; knew just wi1E&gt;re
to begin:

For lhP cleansln~ He dld had to oomf form
~1 t hln

So where would I havf:' bE&gt;t&gt;n withool faith"

I INst Him each day as my life- He takes o'er.
To guk:k' me throu£h safely to Ht&gt;aV(&gt;n s main
BuT

\~.'here

'

would I have been wUOOut faith.,

And as f pass ttlrough I need never fear
For IW told nw one 11TT'Il' Hr "- OUid aMays be
What beft{'f reason that I hold Him so dear,
Rut w~ would I haV(' lx'en ~ ITOOut falt h'1
- By Ok&gt;n D Harrtson

o\ N..,.
Jesls ls 11 namE" to SOmE'.

Hf&gt; led me from the wlkll'mess ,
As I wandertod around In sin,
0
Ht&gt; rt&gt;ITIO\."E"d a cold and stony heart.
And mack&gt; me war m within

-·1

red.,.., ......

" " " ' - they•would ..... - ·
A
IIIey '"""""' IIIey " -·
ICJfttl.

-

'

Ute.

years

have

passed

since we la1t heard you

ar ...... ._.t~ nnd

And IOI1'le day when He coll1l'5 to earth,
To gathe!: His: Chosen few;
tle'U prow His deeth on Calvary's Cross
Was meant for me and you

Hf' did jt all because d. love,
A3 H• dlod that fateful day,
To prove to an the lost on earth.
'I'hroutrh His name ls the only way

"~

HE." pve His life to show me.

What Hfo did was not a gamE",

so no man« whPI'e 1 hear u.
It's more d\an just a name
- By Olen D 11an1son

Bol.om!tl u.
hmiiiOilrm ond Jll!lllle.
,.. nallprlntiiO plain;
'!1lo - . . . . wldle upon lhe crou
'111o111Pllh Ud lite pain.
~

TllerldlculeUdlllrmont,

""" on He hod "' liNr:
For ..,.., and llnlul Uvlll(l,
It's a W'OIIdl!'r He could eatf'
But He dkllt aU t&gt;r you and ""'·
lbal wllh Him""' mlgbl ""·
When our filliP oo Mr1h 1.1 gone,
And Heaven aOOw ~ OOpe to Sft.
So wlwlt our burdenl eet ~ dc:rWn1
~ il One we know wbo wW atways c:..-.,
Thouilh
- · lite COli It .. gild,
JuillutowiJqr Why- prtltl .............
- By Olen D. Harrllan

............................. 1165
73-10 Cho•y lr.
Clwom lu..,... ........... $70
73-10 Cho•y Jr.
Grlllts ........................
73,10 Cho•y. Tr.
IIIII Garts ................... $70
Tr.

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTV, OHIO
Estate of Je111e B Bow·
era. Dece11eed. Cete No
24737, Oockot 12, page
479'
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FtOUCIARY
"On April 8. 1985, tn the

PROBATE COURT OF
MEfGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF HAZEL D. TAYLOR, DECEASED
Cue No. 24721 Dodcot 12
Page 478
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On MllfCh 20, 19B5, In tile
M- County ProboiB Coutt.
Cue No. 24721, ~""Y Tavlor.

Box 96, Rullend. Ohio 4117711
oppoilrled E - afllle
a1 Huot D T..,Jor,
cter· 1. 11W of Box H,

County Probate Court,

Caoe No 24737, Notlie M
Boyer, 1683 Lincoln Heights,
Pomoroy, Ohio 45769. was
lppotnled ~lltcutn• of !he as·
late of J - B Bowen, do·
eealllltd, late of 409 Broadway
StrMt. Middlop&lt;Jfl, Ohio,
46760
Rbbon E. Buck.

••o

-~udge

Lena K. tftn*"d,

(3) 28,(4) 4, 11.311:

:!:

Miac. Merc;h1ndi18

So ndly mi••ed and
verv much loved liy
mom,
dad. Steve.

Terri.

David.

675-1388

*ll&gt;x3IIAICH
SNCIII. *
2 ln·grnnd Pool
Wit~ p...

frH Soler -

lolllollle
1-6 U-992-7 191
Ji• loach
1-304-675·1712

3·18·1 Ill()

BOGGS

U S. AT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Onre,
New Holl1nd, Bush Hoc
Fann Equ1p11tnl

Fer• E••lt•••t
Perta &amp; Servlu

JOHNSON ElECTRIC
Specializing in
All Types Of
Residential
Wiring
And Repair

$HIW Rlfft ,,
"$11/, Clllzu1
PH. 992-3549
·I mo

o•o VAiliY
SliiWll SYSTIMS

A"-ll lfE.CIAL
Dexcel Receiver
8' Alum. Dish
Instilled PI
114CJ5.00 ••-:

hptrt SttviCf And

Quality Na111t 8ruds

At

DISCOUIIT PRICES

Cal 992-3561
4-4·11110. pd

73·14 Ford Tr.

Chromo lompors ........ $70
73·19 forti Tr.
Toil Galos ................... $10
10·14 Ford Tr.

·~Ud·

Rangtf I lronco flndtn
&amp;
Glass-lato Pons

M~GHEE

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

"R_en1~

Uetinge in Meigs Co.

I miles from
Pomtroy-IISon Bride•
SINGLE IZ4.95

3114-675-6271&gt;
•L1ve Enter1amment •Free HBO

•Kitchenettes •Restaurant
A. A.A.
304-675-6271&gt;

DITCHING
SERVICE

GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWER LINES
ELECTRIC LINES
''" Ettllltfll

Bus.; 985-3113
Res.: 985-3837

992-3410

AND

SERVICE

•SYLVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

•GIBSON

REFRIGERATOR

n.e
s•e~e•'"•••••••
D1ty

•• .... ~ F•ll

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER-985·3307

AFFOIDAILI • POITAILI

e
.=. . . . ,. . . .

,_.....,.r........ ..,.
s.., . , ....

Hat . !po.
tiM
...... ift ltd.
lllCIWOOD HOME SPAS

40037

s - ltl.

P-oy. OH.

(6141 985-3105

"$'
"
'
""'*"'·
c.,.

...y &amp; Supplios ..... •24.7S
Pair F-y fiotchts,
&amp; Slflplios •••
Codtotiols, bolk lirds

c.,.

•u.oo

AYIIilalolt
(ogtS ' loopplios
Also SoW Soparattly
Cal billings:

614-985-4212 .

Now "--briMilt
losoiMtting

CAU
U6-4522

"Wt RMt F., lin"

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL
St. lt. 160 Nertl!
Gallipolis,

MIIGS

lnsor.-Work

EXCAYAnNG

""'- Polo lldgs.

COMPANY

&amp;GorogtS

Will do 111 types of
excavating, landacaping, ba11ments. sew·
~e systema. watar
1nd gal Unet1, water
wen driiUng 1111d llrvice, truc:king !limestone &amp;

loofiwl Warlt
""""'- &amp; Vinyl li4ti...
15 Yearo Experience

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7611

11·1-tfc

Call:

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY

THE QUAUn

CLEANERS

PliNY SHOP

35185 01k Hill R01d
lone Bottom, OH. 45743

,, All YHI PtliiiiJ Nuil
PWS: Offlct Supplies &amp;

PH. (614) 985-4212

F-lurt, Wedoli"9

We Un YQ(I Schrldlr
Equipment Rtcommtnded
by ladinc Clflltt llenu·

an4 Gl'lllluttion
5tatlontt'y, lllagnoltc

Sltns. ...... s......
luiiMSs Forms,

flctUIIIS.

'FREE ESTIMATES"

COllY Stnicos, Etc.
255 Mill St. Mltliloporl
104 llloiMrry a••

J.22·tfn

,....,.y

EUGENE LONG

MITCHELL'S
HOME VIDEO
CENTER
102

w"' Mai11 st.

P01111rof, OH.

PH. 992-6911
IUCHIIII &amp; MOYII
BlnW &amp; SALIS

Onr 200

RADIATOR
SEIYICE

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

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

YIIYL &amp; AUI.IIUII

Complete Gutter Worlt
Complete Romo-g
Rooting of el Typea
Worltod In homo a 20yura
"Fr. . Eatlrnatea"

PAT

CAU COWCl:

Ph. 16141 143-5425

GUN SHOOT
UCINE
FilE DEn.

............
EVElY

S&amp;r. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Flldery Cllalte

12 ..... SllttiiU IS Gilly

1 • ·tfc

PIRSONAUDD POOlS

•

....,,.

-

- CoftONII work

..... ptumbl"l anct •lectrlut

llorlltotor l'tlwy.
•••••,•. ow.
HIS 10 1.m. to 5 p.11.

... Goo.

HI·JS49

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addont end remodeUn;
, - Aooflnl tnc1 gutttr work

HYII011C1 C'IIIW&amp;&amp;S

1·614

FORD

YOUNG'S

YIIIYL LIIIU POOL
ACRYLIC WAU POOL
ABOVE OIOUID POOL
0'10(. 400 Cllolcn

ht

HIL~

992-2196
Mldclltport, Ohio

3/1/2 110. pd.

4/ 1/ 1111()
•

RENT ACAR

FILL DIRT

CONSTRUCTION

4·10·1 mo

THE IIRD CAGE
$1fllll"

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

ROUSH

1· 11·1-

I·IO·Ifn

HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

"Free Estimates"

o..n.

PH. 949-2801
or 94CJ·2860
No Sundar Calls

9·13-ttn

,

NIP•

1FIN h11motoo)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

' 1·104

-.,.Ollie

992-621J . . . ., . , 14

71 • 6J4

1
• ...

r

• ··,-·

2-8 k

It

11

14x44 metel ello, v. mlle
below Racine lockt and
Dam, on At. 33, 1bova New
Haven 304·B82-2132

Truck driVers needed. miR-'
imum experience. Cat 613563·9647

Cuement wmdows. phone
304-676·3878

6

311 Norltt Se&lt;ond
Midtloport, O~ia 4s760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
IUSINISS PHONE
16141 992·6550
IISIDIN(I PHON!

(6141 ·92·7754
1122/Uc

TOWN &amp; COUNIRY
VETERINARY

CLINIC

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY. D.V.M

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

Commercial

Call:

992-5_875
742-31

~--

21

Chorlols call lost . All whtte
yearling. last ~aen on
McCumber Hill , Call 614·
742·2468
Fan'lale Walker Coon Dog
lost tn Bradbury area Call
614·992-5D65
lost tn Long Bottom. part
Doberman Pmcher fem1le 1
liver color. wearing chocker
chetn Tag No 0099
$26 00 reward. Cell 614·
667-3586
LOST, Beagle dog, under 1
year old. At 2 v1cinity,
femtly pet, identify by marktngo, 304·676-3973

Yard Sale

...... Giiiiipoiis.. -- -&amp; Vicinity
Garage Sale 'Biggaat and
beot yet' Thuradav &amp; F"day.
April 111b &amp; 12th 9 5PM
Wringer wa~:her , Norttake
Chrna, matching bedspreads
and drapes, kmck knack1,
Home Interior, toola, woodburmng atove. chatr. table
aaw. adult: and children
clothing v. mile peat Shrtne
Club, 4th houae on left,
Bulaytll4 Rd Roy Hoskin&amp;

M1chigan Sole April 11 -1
Clothtng. bedspreads. cur
tetns. knick knacks, paint,
toys, cedar chest 50 Netl
Ave , Galhpolis
Yard Sale acroaa from Blue
Fountain Motel. Aprel 11th
&amp; 12th. Ttme 1 O·OOAM to
5·00PM
'
Vard Safe Fri. 12, Sat 13.
New electrical items-below
wholaaale. unusualawil:ches
(pull ch1m &amp;: wall type),
condurt, wrra, breakers (all
sizes,, fuses (ell types) flureacent ends. bushings, con·
nactora, couplings, power
outlets. fluorescent: bella•r:.
220 V ext cord•. many more
electricalttems. 40' ' electnc
range, 7 heavy wood•n
drnette chairs, bool\caae •

Help Wanted

Wanted Motor Route Driv·
era needed for The Daily
Sentinel Only honest, dependable persons w ith relta ble transportation need
apply Nat a good Income
for Just 3 or 4 hours a day
Apply tn person or call The
Datly Sentinel at 614·992·
2156
Houaekeeper· chtld care.
agel 11 &amp; B Mostly even·
mgs and aome nightl No
amoking Reference• re quired 614-446·0301
E~tpertenced

typllt In Galli·
polis area to help compile
rectpes for cookbook Call
614· 266-1174
Neadad part-time babysit·
ter, Northup- Cen1enary
area. 2 young children
Plaaae call after 1 00. 814446·0621
Baby11tter needed m my
home only, own r:ranaportatton Call614·446· 3046 .
Socall Service po11t1on
Bachelor or associate degree
in soctal l'I'Ork required and
preferably expertence m
long term care Send resume
to Jane D1Uar. Scemc Htlla
Care Center, Rt 2 Box 262 ,
B•dwoll, Oh 45641
Educator To create and
matntaln community education and public speaking
program en private non pof1t
fam1ly planntng agency
Must have knowledge and
experience 10 education in
the areas ot family life,
preventeve heahh. nutretion'
and public policy Must
demonstrate excellence tn
orgentz1t1onal aktll1, com·
mumcation, group dynam·
tes. and an ability to adapt
educatiOnal materials for
program needs Expe~:tence
desired 1n writing newsreleaaes and establishing me·
die contacts throughout an
eight county area. Graphic&amp;
expar1ence helpful. Bache·
lor' s degree requtred Start·
tng salary 811 ,700 00 PoSition i1 based 1n Athens
Must have own tran1porta·
t1on. flexlbtlity of time and
be able to travel locally.
Deadline Apnl 24, 1986.
Send resume to Planned
Parenthood of Southeaat
Ohio, 8 N. Coun St ..
Athena. Ohto 45701 An
E O.E. and E S P.

31

Sizes Start From 12'd6'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up

lARGE ANIMALS AND
SURGERY IT APPOINTMl,Nf
304-675·2441

to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

An nounce menl s

Yard Safe 2 Family Fre 9 · 6
Hou1ehold 1tem1. old Coca
Cole sign, furn • clothing
430 Lariat Dr

Racme, Oh.

Ph. 614·143·5191

3

Piimerov .......

Announcements

· IOG.Ic

JO'S UTTU RED lAIN
On

St. Rt. 124 it Syracwo
Uniquo Silk (nol ploslit)
Grart Arrangtmenfl

$3, Sl. &amp; $12
AIL IIIASS.....S1.00 OFF
FIGURINES.....I 1.00 OFF
PORCElAIN IIRO lfliS
Olhor Nico ko""
IIGSOnoblt PmH

c... T• ,,. T• s.n...
OPEN1 Wtck., ThurL, frt
&amp; Sat.- 10 •• 6
Ctosocl Moct. &amp; Tuft.

G&amp; W
PLASTICS

LONG IOTTOM, OH.
GAS PIPE
WATER PIPE
GAS REGULATORS
OTHER SUPPLIES

BUS.: 985-3813
RES.: 985-3837
,,,.,,

...

(CUT OUT FOI FUTURE USI)

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
915-3561

All M•h•

•Diahw81hlre

•Reng••

•Refrlger•tore

•Drvtre •Fr•••r•
PARTS ond SEIRVI

Roger Hysell
Garage.
If. 124,'-rer Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
. REPAIR
AI•• True•l••l••
PH. 992·5612
or 992-7121
3-2•-ttc

SWEEPER and sew•ng ma·
chine repatr, parts and
auppliea.
Pick up and
delivery, Davia . Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
614·446·0294
Balloons for Get Well, Annt·
versarys, Slnhdeys. panlls.
Stnglng Gorrtllo . Call Bal.
loons&amp; Co 614·446·4313
AerobtCI, Monday thur Fndey 9 to 9 :30 t1 50 each
aession or • 7 00 1 week
Monday, Wednesday. and
Friday 5 16 lo 6 00. 11 50
•ch naa•on. Held at New
Meigs' boxing club, 2nd St
in Mtddlepon Call 614·
992 ·88B6 oller 6.00.
We need junk Too ntce to
throw away? W1ll pick-'up
Call 614 ·992 ·3824 Mon·
day thru Friday 7 to 6.30.
I JNIII not be r81ponstble for
any debts contracted for by
anyone other than my1alf
without my permission Marti Romtne

4

Giveaway

Female pup mixed breed
Call 614-446 ·0962
2 · 7 weak old gray female
kllleno Coli 614 · 446 ·
7100.

Puppleo B weeka old, Cell
614·367·0507.
8 week old puppiea Mi•ed,
bl1ck and white with
touch11 of brown. Will not
got varv big Very odoreble
can 814-378-8422 .
Brittany Spaniel-Border Collie puppiee to give aw1y
Black and whlll, 1 malo ond
3 females. Madulm 11110 dog.
CaH 114-948-2819 .
Bilek, long-haired, neutered
Cit to give IWIY. 2 yeara ~d.
Doclawed CaM 614·7422143.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Garage Sale m F11r View
Hgts Table. saw. wood
rackl, clothmg. Fr1day and
Saturday Call 614·992 ·
1_
1 o_ _ _ _ _ _ __
l ·3_
Yard aale 383 Park St ,
Middleport . Curtains .
drapes, and clothes Pearlle
Jewell, 614 ·9n·6881

8

Pubhc Sale
8r. Auct1on

Auctton every Fnday mght at
the Hartford Communtty
Center Truckloads of new
marchand••• every week
Con11gment1 ot new &amp; used
merch1nd1se always wei·
comed . Richard Reynolds.
Auct1oneei~ Call 304-276·
3069

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
J•m M1nk Chew -Oids Inc
Bill Gene Johnaon
614-446· 3672
Wanted automatic tranamtl·
stan tor 1979 Horizon . Call
614·446 - 1B07

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLOS
FURNITURE. Bod&amp;, Iron,
wood. cupboards chairs.
cheata. baekau . dishes ,
stone j1rs, antique•. gold
and silver Write· M 0 1
Miller, Rt 2. Pomeroy, Ohio
46789 or coli 61 4 -992·
7780.
Buying daily gold, aUv1r
coins, ring~:. jewelry, ~tert1ng
ware, old coins, large currency. Top prlcea. Ed. Burkelt Iorber Shop, 2nd. Avo.
Mlddlopon, Oh. 614-992·
3471.

Troller lot with oil hook-upo
ond 10ma acreoge In country. On l&lt;lnd controct. Call
814-982-8967.

One yHr old German She·
phard to glvo away Spoyod,
good with children Coli
614-742-2328

Electric toy trains. lionel,
Amerlcon Flyer Any ohape
or condition. Col814-982-

Black Terrier, mala, to giv8
oway Call 614-742· 3168
It Horrloonyjllo.
'

"Obod"' uaed truck. phone
304·675·2634.

.

836e.

12

Situation:;
Wanted

Board and room for elderly
Reasonable . Call 614 992·
6022 or 614 -985·4416 .
Room and board for elderty
only Cell614-992-6022 or
614·9B5·4416.

g~rden

Money to Loan

Lovely, colonial home at 121
7th aveln M1ddlepon, Ohio.
Includes aluminum siding,
lltrge closed· tn front porch
w1th wtnd-out wind9W1. 10
rooms. 3 -4 bedrooms, 1 ~
bathl, form•l dinmg room.
utility room , h~rdwood
floon . gas furnace with
circulating hot water, 30 gal
hot water tank Appraised It
$37 , 500 , w11f
for
126,000 Contact R•lph or
Emalene Pratt .. at 227 S
Ftfth Ave , Middleport,
Ohto 614-992-7767.

HOME OWNERS-Refinance
to tow tiMed rate Use equity
for anv purpose leader
Mongago Co.. 614 · 692 ·
3051.

Four bedrooms kitchen tamlly room w1th fireplace,
f1n11hed bas ement , low
l&amp;o·s, Point Pleaant, 304·
675-3079 , evenmga.

23

3 bedroom home, 8 '11 auu
mabie loan , garden spot.
reduced down to $49,000
304·676 ·604 7

22

Professional
Services

P1ano Tuntng and Repair
Brun1cardi Mu11c Co , 614446-0887 Twentieth year
of quality serv1c1 Lane
Oanielo, 614-742· 2951

WINOOW TINTING Resi·
dent1al. Commercial &amp; Auto .
Free estimates Call 614·
446-9346
PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR, Reduced rates limited
time only Ward's Keyboard.
304·675 · 5500 or 615 3B24

Real Est ate
31

Homes for Sale

Three bedrooms. central air,
vtnyl wall paper, carpet
throughout JVBII 1naulated.
new paint. attached garage,
g1s outdoor grill, awnings,
many extrll Call 814-4462583 til 5:00PM , aller
6 OOPM call 614 · 245 5B59
Investment 8 umt apart·
ment complex. built 1974, 4
apartments furniShed, onJy
1% vacancy. res1dent man ager 11 ,440 monthly In·
come Renters pay all utlll1101 Call 614-592 · 11B9
days or 614· 594·2874 af1.,
6

House for Sale 62 L10coln
St. $12,500. needs some
repair Call 614-256 1773
after Spm
House for sale 4 rms &amp;:
bath, trailer hookup vtllage
ot Crown Ctty, $12,900
Call 614 256-6068
6 room house bath basement, 24x24 garage. 1 1f•
acre flat lot, cfose to town
Call 614-446-4217

Waterloo VIllage Ntee 6
room home on 141 1n
W1terloo Garage, Gallta
E.111perlenced pa1nttng
Barns, houses. all types• of water, large tot, go9d price
roots Me1gs area call 614· 1 614·643 2516
992 ·7416 •n Golha calll - - - ' - - - - - - - - 614 367 0298
Flatwood area -Pomeroy 4
bdr , FP, BM ce•ltng, vmyl
In Me1gs County area Will s1ding, 1lum windows 17
InStall new rural mail box acres available Call 614·
with weather treated 4x4 446-2359
polls . f!hone 614·992 · 1- - - -- - - -- House for sale by owner
6348 .
Nice 3 bdr home, full
basement. gas heat, all
carpet. nrca kttchen. att·
1 8 Wanted to Do
ached garage. good locatiOn
fecmg r1ver w•th garden spot
In 900 Block, city Can help
W1ll do lawn mowing &amp; yard ftnance Celt614·446·2573
work . Call Ke1th at 614· Ot 614 446· 1171
256-6251 after &amp;·OOPM
Must sell 3 bdr ranch ,.
Mow lawns. tr~m , rake. have Westbrooke Subd . FR .
own mower In city of woodburner, carport, deck.
Galltpolis, depend1ble ser· c•tv uttlities. &amp; schools,
vice Walter long Caii614- $36.DOO Call 614 446
446 -D098
7144
Bowens Conatruct1on
Complete remodeling, fir·
place apectalista P•inmt
tnterlor S. extereor Cement.
block. breck wor~ . 26 yrs
exper1ence. r,uonable
rates Free estematea, work
guaranteed Call 614 · 388·
9670 Ot 814 · 388·9806
Will mow yards and do odd
j~b1 , farm work Reuqnable
rates Clll614 -448-8541 .
Dependable yard aerv•ce
Yard mowed, WHds, walk·
way1 cleared, hedges
trimmed, etc. Call614-992·
2269
Will do houn cleaning.
304-175·6218

••II

Ntce 4 bdr house by owner.
1 acre lot, 5 mtlet from Pt
Pleasant Call 614 -446·
1675

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 Ml WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35 PHONE 614-4467274
1972 Schultz extra good
cond Call614·256·1922.
1989 Fleetwood trailer,
UODO or best offer. Cell
614-266- 1445.

1978 Bellglodo 12X65, 3
bdr , all electnc, AC &amp;
underpinmng included ex
cond Call 614·446· 32B9

In Pomeroy, 2 story home on
Plaaaant Ridge 2 bed ·
room a, 1 1h baths, hving
room. dining room , kitchen,
basement. 'Large yard plus
acreage . Several out
bu1ldinga S30,0DO C1ll
614·949·2646
Three bedroon"' home level
lot garage. dry b..ement,
bath and half. Call614·992·
3510 an~ 614-992 ·3983
3 bdr home in Village of
Cheeter,Ohio, TPC w1ter,
gas. garden space. gar~ge,
11h, batft., atttc Must: See to
Appreciate 129,600 Glen
Thome C~II614 · 9B5-3571

usine11
Opponunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH! NG CO rocommanda
that you ..do buslneu with
people you know, ond NOT
to •nd money through tiM
mall until you hew lnvel11·
the offering

10 room house with 2 nice
kltchono end 2 both&amp; On
larqt lot F1replace, applianc... built-in d1ahwasher
U1,500. ' For qu•ck oalo
Will conaiHr newer car,
mobll9 homo or travel tr01lor
on trade. Phone 814·7422460

1--------'---

HouH, 2 bdr .• lfove. refrig .•
1715 depoeit,
I, &amp;15 mo , located 1 3 White
Call 446·3870

,.,.ca.

Mlddlepon ar.. houM for
ran,, near achpole and shop·
ping d11tnct tall 304 882 ·
3722.
In New Haven. W Va , 3
bedroom, 2 batha, all elec::tnc Call 814 949·2470
BurdeHe Addn 2 bedroom.
f1mily room, blsement, exc
cond, good neighborhood.
304-4580 or 876·1962

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Furnished. air cond , cable,
no city taxet. beautiful nver·
vtew, Kanauga Falter'• Mo·
b•le Home Pork, 614·4461602.
2 bdr 2 mi from HMC at
Evergreen.. children ec ·
cepted. Coll614-446·3697
or 614-245-5223
In Tupper• Pl11n1 $176 .00

month plua utelit1e1 and
dopooit Coli 614- 61H34B7

In Middlepon. 2 bodroom
Par1Jall';' fumt•hed. Include•
wBiher and dryer. Good
location near park Orie
child Deposit required
992- 7114 or992- 6800
2 bedroom tratler. eduttl
only, daposrt, raquered Call
304·675·2535

44

Apartment
for Rent

1970 Rnz Cref1 12•70 3
bedroom, good conditton
Lot 27 Country Mobile
Home Park

JACKSON ESTATfS
APARTMENTS (Equal
Hou1109 Opportunity)
monthly rent start&amp; 1t *183
for 1 bedroom 1nd $198 for
2 bedroom, dopoo~ *200.
located near Sprtng Valley
Phlza and Foodland pbol
and Cable TV lvallable,
hour&amp; as poasible 101m tu 4
pm and 7 pm to 9 pm
Monday-Friday, Cafl 614446 - 2746 or loove
mea11ge.

Two acres 12x66 mobile
home. County water Hang ·
1ng Rock Rd $15,000 Call
304·882·3764

Redecorated 2 bdr apt , axe.
locatWn Regency Inc Call
304·675· 7283 675-5104
or 676-6386

In Mtneraville. 1974, 14x70
Castle w1th 1B:~t25 addrt1on
built on Two car carport,
central air. all new c•rpet·
tng. n•w counter tops and
new bathroom Lot approx
'I• oe,. Coll614·992· 3119
or 614·992- 3132

1 bdr basement apanmert
Call 614-446·1436 9om·
5pm.

1955 l O•SO Collie mobile
horne 2 bedrooms, fully
-pete(:~. except bathroom
ood cond1t1on S2600
Ca 1".S:742·2856

Bachelor apt~ . 111 cia ...
newly fum11hed. Ref req
t225 par mo . 154 Fwst Ave
Galltpollo Coli 114-4461615 or 614-446- 1243

2 mobtle homes for tele Call
61 4·992·3647

Furmahed 3 rm 1pt, upstairs.
u1:1llttes pd, •195 mo .. 180
deposit 94 Locust Adults
only Call 446 · 1340 or
446-3870

1972 Galuy 1 4X70.
S5600. good cond Cell
614·446·0146
14x70 1982 K~rkwood on
rented downtown lot Pre·
VIOUSiy prtced $17,500 W11f
constder reasonable offer .
Coli 614·446·0208

8:~t45 tratlor
Good condt,
tton Full bath, 1 bedroom.
large hv1ng room Call 614·
992 2221 or 614 · 992·
7202

Mob1le ho mes moved In
aured 20 years expenence
304 576- 2866 or 676 ·
2998
1977 Oakwood mobtle
home, 3 bedroom&amp;. 1 'h
baths, stove, refngerator
washer and dryer, preced for
qu.ck sale. 304 675· 3030
or 675·3431

33

Farms tor Sale

Farm house 8t 6. acres with
tobacco base and mineral
r.ghts In Porter. Oh10 on
Campatgn • Creek Ad
$49 ,000 Call 614 -446·
7247

35 Lots
3 bedroom houae in Ru5t1c
Hills. Fully carpeted, atorage
building, largo lot Cell614 ·
992· 5DB6 alter 4 30 PM

3 bedroom houao, panly
furntahad By owner. In
Brodbury Cell 814-992 ·
3187

21

Hou1e1 for Rant

Romodeled 2 bdr woll t o
wall carpeting, aduttt preferrM Of will consider 1
•mall child, no pet&amp;, 1200
mo ptuo utHhin . 1 32 4th
Avo. Call 814-448· 3204.

~

Person to transport me to
Parktburg 4 days, my car or
yours. 304·675· 1349. 8· 1D
or eventnga

41

3 bdr houae 2 fireplace&amp;.
swimming pool. garage,
exc location. Commenc.l
lot 80•128 Jackson Avo.
Commer.cai tract: 3&amp; acres
Sandhdl Rd Cell 304-676·
5104 or 676 -63B6

PositiOn Available. Operattons Director for County
Board of Mental RetardatiOn
and Developmental DiMbill·
till, Maatera OegrH from
an accredtted university in
Special Educa1:1on, Suslnell
or ralatad field Bachelor's
degr68 with aome graduate
work- will be considered
Eight: years experience 1n
Human Services fteld witfl •
mtnlmum 6 years of adrrunlatrative experience and 5
years financial management
requmed Quallfted applr·
cant&amp; ahould aend reaume by
April 17, 1985 to Me•u•
County Board of MA· DD
P.O Bo• 307, John Street,
Syracuse. Oh10 4677-P

Garage Sale 4 Family 10-13
Clothing &amp;. misc . Across
from Vinton Grade School
7 Famdy Yard Sale at
Centenary Townhouse Frt·
day only 9 to 6.

Homes Jor Sale

3

Opponunity

laOS JACKSON AVE. ·•
SMAll ANIMAl HOURS
Montloy 3 p.m.·5 p.m..
111014oy 6.30 p m.-1 p.m.
W....ntloy 3 p.m.· S p.m .
lhorsdoy S p.rn.-5 p.m
friHy I p m.-2 p.m.
S.tu•Hy 10 o.m.·1 h3G o.m.

ALL-STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

•W•eher~

Lost and Found

Yard Sale 13th, mot:orcycte,
new a. used Items, 9 -?
Weather permtttmg Eno·
Vinton Rd. pff At 664

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
ReStdentoal

Installation ~vailable

AT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT, W VA.

New Homes ~"ilt

, ............................... •90

FOR AU YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

"Free Estimates"

~
MOTEl

- BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

-~ I

Real Estate General

WE ARE YOUR SALES

SALES &amp; SERVICE

a-s .................. •uo

FiliCE &amp; SUPPLY

Business Services
Pt. - - · II¥ 25550

73-n

ACCENT

worlung good for p1rt1.
304·675-1433 after 7:00
PM

7

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•

Clod&lt;

Now

12·10-111'1'

11·14 Ch.. y. lr.
, ............ """"-""' 1110
Ford Tr.
fenders ....................... lSI
73·19 Ford Tr.

PH. 992·6931

Tim, Dreama.
";:~;. Stefani, Christi
Cal. Adem &amp;

Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For faster Strvice

B· lin

were always eo kind.
loving end dear. always

here.

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Ill Licensed Clinical Audiologist
:r

Clolk

Probate Judge

ap-ding good cheer
to thoae fer and ftftllr.
We love you 10 much
.ind wish you were

NO DOWN PAYMENT
LOWII MOWIHL YPA YMfNT

Telev•s•on ltslentng Devices
Computenzed Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For Ail Ages

~

lena K Nesaelroad,
(4) 11 18, 26, 3tc

chotce

3/11/ltn

Rutlord. Ohio 41177t!.
Robort E. Buck.

64

We'd like to Introduce you to
Encace·A·Car, the modern way
to drtYe the vehtcle at your

Boa. 326

AUTO PARIS

laugh, oaw your eweet
face or held you in a
warm embrace
You

1-J.tfc

H&lt;' picked me up whm I was down,
And gavt&gt; me peace ol mind,
He's tHe best frk!nd man has E'\.1:'!' had ,

..--Il -==
••·'-'
..,_

Public Notice

hard to believe three

· D11ler

But HP's mort&gt; than a name to JTI('

He's the one who mmdeod a brokrn hrart

,._,..

Public Notice

So now as days pass I dbn't worry any more,

And II uyanolhould hoppoa lo lalock.

U.JIIlll our t!lllter --.
'llley_,l&lt;l pr&lt;llllbly ll\'ldllflusted ond ~ea ...
'lblnldna Bill's
Uve here lilY """"
But ~ IIIey would have peoltod l,.lde,

Who pa11ed away 3
veers ago Apnl 11 . It's

$7CJOOOO
from

73·10 Cho•y Jr.
Fontlors ........................ •M
73·10 Cho•y lr.
Doors ......................... SI3S
73-10 Chooy. Tr.

---

In Memoriam

ICLE

A

Call 614•99Z -IH

_......

2101 .......... AY. . .

And from bllndres lef rtM.' .st'e

..cia~

*BASEMENTS *SEPTIC SYSTEMS
*FOOTERS *GRADING
•CONCRETE WORK

-..................

~

NEW

BULLDOZER &amp;. BACKHOE WORK

l:hlul/h•fl ,_,,., mtw lltr
fnllfi,.,MJ I..IPplftNfP P.rrft•llf'•

....._..

IN

TROMM EXCAVATIN

Dl~r Stnttntl Clmihd
Ill C.11rt St Po.roy ,.o •s7&amp;t

··,............
. ..................

o

I

POOLS PLUS

each day,
Why He made this jUf'at world and si'Qwt"d

near:

For than's rhe w1y OW"

4-1-2 mo d

PHONE
992-2156
W1itt
Dttt

11·--··
""""-'....
ta.w-•••
,.............

tc.l .............. .......

That throu~~th thE- stl(l('dlng ot Hls blood we
mlghl regain that which was lost.
And JitlorUy His narrM:' by conq!Jl&gt;rltlR death
and a soulthitt rould lJEo won
So now IE'I us the weak b£o E'temally grateful,
For a home In Ht&gt;avt&gt;n, matkt by Him, wtK&gt;rt&gt;
th(&gt; l't'nt Is fr('(' ,
Tak(' another loook al th£&gt; beautv and powE'I'
that still surrounds us
And just to think He dkllt a11 for vou and !Til'

' Til take your cart'S and Vol01'11es,
EaM' thl' burden OO' YOUr hean.
BuJ you, Uke all thE' ottK&gt;rs.
Will have to makE' that sran "
A Chrlstlan, that I'll bE&gt;,
I dk1n t know that kneeling,
Could rnaJtEo that chanat&gt; In mf'

thin~

=

=

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

Th&lt;&gt;Way Js'l'bero
giVE' tOOu~ht to thE- greatness of

and lOSE' hls soul
But still as crt&gt;ator and supplier of all

==

Me~gs

God's handl~ork
w e pass ov~ It l~htiy da\ by day as 1:.-auty
displayed
But from thP small ~! blade' of grass to thfto
l a~ l f["(((&gt; or mountain
E\'ervthlng about us or P\'t'r ho~ IOSC('O(this
great world bv His own twnds He madt&gt;
He shaped l1 from a m ass or \old and
darkflf&gt;Ss.
Created dav and night and all INn~ about us
that we st\11 5('(&gt;
Crtafed man. thl:&gt; wootest of all His

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

143-5410

PH. 742-23.28

:,eems to tJr tn the world today,
And I don t think II Will PVi"'' changw:o
Because T V Is here to stay
SO give up hop(" and join the crowd
And watch T V at Its best
No ust&gt; to ck.&gt;ny you ll" hooked too
Right alOng with ail the I'E'St
- By Olen D Harr1son

We

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Wtndows '
•Replacemar1t Window•
•New Roofing
" FREE ESTIMATES "

Department of Ohio.

Or

!'"§'5LL II

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

143-5155 or

'

The Daily Sentinel

EBERSBACH

drag harrow, Cub Fer·

n.e fourth slx weeks gradlnR period honor

door.

And 1 coklr T.V.

Knapp, Iva Powell, and Kathy
Pullins were In Athens for a party
Tuesday It was hosted by Crooks·

Peterson.
Primary DH - Sbaun Lambert

I lakl my sins: IX'forE" Him.
And sald. · Lord, what can I dO!'
' "Brllcvt' on M(' and I'll SN you frl'fo,
ru make- your life anew

When BIU would visit

the Athens Mental Health Center,

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

AT

mall with mower and
plow. hey crimper, oub
aolter. potato plow, hay
ba.., 1nd more.

ented cigarettes and refreshments
were served. Games were played
and prizes awarded. A jar of Instant
coffee was presented by the

Loretta Tiemeyer, deputy, · Pearl

Carolyn FltC'hpatrick, Derek Miller , Eric

The limE' that Hf' took just to save

J1 had I'T'K" fOOled tor QUit(' a si)E'll.
For 11 takfS no rffort to sln
But I start«! tbinklnJt, after U\'t' lS oo..'t'r.
Ollllo pla('O I WOOid be In

Im

Legion Auxutary representative to

Michael Vance.
f'Uth grade - • James flowerton, PaUl
Shan&gt;. Anlltony Six. Mark Slanll')l, B&lt;&gt;bbY
Vanct", Ronald Vanct.
Slxth Kfadfo- Michelle Matthews Aaron
Sheets

Flfthgrade-AmyHl&gt;rald, TammyMWer,
Miranda Nkholson, Jason ReynQkls, Marjor
Ita Tromm
Slxth gradE&gt; - Angie EIUott, Jason Evans,

.

What kind or ljlt_~ld 1 be llvtng today.

But all you I'T'Itl(lf and whf&gt;re you al'l'.
Can IM."WW" take IlK&gt; pia('(',
Of thclw vou knew and len behind,
Whm yW kmR' tp 6E."P thPlr fat'f'

DIIC, plow1, corn plan·
ter•. 3 pt. brueh hoge,
groin drll, boy roko, 10ft.

roll at the Meigs Junior High School bas been
announced Making a grade t1 B or above In

,

U It l\'un't For Jesua

LN:m to ltV(&gt; man anywhew
~ manv JX\C)I)Ie who are so ruce
E~ somt'. voor troubk's Shart"

FARM EQUIPMENT

'l'h&gt;ma, HoJI)I WUUanu;

The fourth six weeks grading period honor
aU their subjects to be named to the roll were
roll at the Salisbury Elementary Schol has
Seventh grade - John Anderson, Nancy
been announced Making a grade of B or -·...- Baker. Melanie Beegle, Cary Btatzing, Heldl
allow In aU their subjects lo bl' named to the
Caruthers, Klm Chapman, Hank Oeland,
roll Wet?
Eddlt: Crooks, Leah Oantels, Usa Darst,
First grade - Nicole Bentley, Slacy Davis,
KellY Doui!las James Durst. Amy Ewt•.
Jer't"my Hubbard, Cynlhla Klein, Dorothy
Wendy GOkey. Deanna Haggy, Mary Hale,
l~Jfbelt Bert Mash, Mindy Patterson, Jason
Krl.Jy Ha milton Marc Howard, Danny
SlieP.t!. Karyn Thompson , James White
Kennedy, Drlstln King, Marsha King, Karen
Sect'tM grad.P- Jarrod Folmer, Jeremiah
Lambert, Shannon Ne\wsome. Toni Rutter,
Gillette, Christy Grogg KelleyGI'\IfSE'I', Hekll
Dartene See-, Cheryl Stevens, Chris Stewart,
Hutfman, Shllo MOOt"'t', Matthew Morris
Mike Trout
Ertca Robie, A.m3nda WE'Ils. Molly Toban:
Eighth grade - M8tt Baker Christina
Ryan Dodson
Bass. Henry Buchanan, Nl.kk:l Bunch. Mary
Th1rd gradf - Ryan Conck&gt; Jerrod
Butcher, Charlt&gt;l'lf'Cadle,MelodlCarl,lesley
Douglas, Becky Hotfma.n Chris Roettkfr.
Carr, Cbad CMson, stacy Dalton Oiarok&gt;t1f'
Marla White Jason Wltherf'll
Ellion Beth EWint. Shawn Fetty, Tfny
Founh grade - Nat~ Bakty, CaJ'T'ie
Fields, Abby Fry, Tammy Hawk»y, Wesley
Banels, Elizabeth DownJe, 'J'revor Harrison
Howard, Scon Melton. Elise Meier, Cindy
Jason Huffman. John Marttn, Coor1ney
Maynard, Jeff MCElroy. Amy Luckeydoo,
Vlncetlt l.auderm!U, Penni J eHt'f's, Jenny
Mklktff, Mlsll Powell. Mandl Sheets, SheUey
Smith, Steve SWatzel. Y~ne Y oung Misty
Miller, Martha Nelson. Kevin Oller. Todd
Hayman
PowPIJ, Jared Shrets. Ttna Romine, Mind)'
FUth grade - Rebecca Bowers. MlSty
Riggs, Neal Richmond. Mopnlca TUrner
Butcher Conr1if Sauters
Sabrtna Wilson, Allyson WoJfe. MisS}' Woods
Sixth grade Randy Corst, David
Angela White

You can br awav ror many years.

S&amp;L

ville 22 with Mrs. Lenora Adkins,
chairman. Each veteran was Pl't'S·

Mrs. Harr)i Davis, American

•

[ llliJIIIyllli,lll

Givtllwn

Servrc1:s

Party given Athens residents

Fourth grade - Melissa Durham, Shane
Hy,.U, CllrlstOpller N..l. Becky Snowden,

the Daily

PolljMlroy Middleport, Ohio
4

' A new gospel quartet called "The ·and Juanita Spencer of Chester.
VIctory Quartet" has been organ· formerly of tile Gcspei-Tones, and
!zed It lscomposedofEdnaCoeand Diana Pullins, ReedsvUie. InfonnaDennis Coe, Coolvllle, of the Singing tlon on thegroupmaybeobtalned by
Coe Family, and Russell Spencer calling ~92 or 667-3233.

Th1rd grade - Chad O.Sklns, Moron
GNl'Sel', Beth Haning, Stacy Hess, Shawn
Ingels Ronda Raymond, Came Smith,

__
......__Poet's
corner-·
-----._... .... -...

• HOrnE&gt; to somr, a mansMln falr,
While to OlherS just a shack,
Y-{'f no maner how far away you roam,
Then' art' I'TI('fnQrk's that tak~ you back

Thursc:tay, April 11. 1985

Gospel group formed in area

'!1lo founb stx weeks Jll'adiJIII period honor
roU at th! HarrtsonVUJe SchOol has ~n
announced. Making a arade d. 8 or aboVe tn
au their subjecta to be named to the roll 'lt'el'e:
Flrsl Jll'lldi! - Amber Bennett. Cherl
Calhoun, DllUllUI Carman. Marla HaU,
Cbrlslopber Lamborl, Cary Stanley, l'»lrwa
SlegtD, Tabitha S...ar1111J"11. Donald Yost
Second gradi! - ~ Am, BUlle Jo
Buteher, ~ Jo Butchel'. Brandy Grover,
Adam Sw!ets, James Trout, Mt&gt;Ussa Vance.

Jonathan Vance, Timmy Vance

11,1985

8r.

Acreage

2 acre home site on blacktop
county rd , rural water, aome
trees, plenty room tor
garden 1nd fruit treea Call
614·379 2671
Over 1 acre level lot Porter
8x1 2 barn,, septic tank,
or MH ready Cash-contrac1
Caii814· 38B ·9738 ,
17 acres at Bashan'", Oh1o
16500 00 Call 614-667·
6150
1 2x6&amp; mobile home. on 4
acrea of level ground F1ve
minur:e• from Pomeroy' 2 or
3 bedroom e17,900 Coli
614-992· 8091

Hl'lll.ils

Nicety furnished h'tobde
home. 1ff apt: .• centr111 a1r
an.d heat 1n crtJy. ~utts onfy
c;ell 614·446·0338

Furmshed tfftc~ency 701
4th Ava .. Golhpol11. e1 BO,
utlltttll P8td, share bath.
adults. Call 446-4416 after
7PM
Furmehed apt 2 bdr .• 243
Jackson Ptke. Galhpolts
$260. ul:ilittn p11d C1ll
4411-4416 of1or 7PM
Furm•h•d 4 room apt , no
children or pets ple..e .
Located •n 01k Htll Call
after 4PM. 614·682-6010
1 bdr apartment located on
Ev1n1 H11ghts $160 per
month plus deposh and
referencea Call 614-446728B af1er 6 OOPM 614·
446-0104
3 rooms with pr~vate bath.
ref. Requettod •Coli 614446-2215

R 1verttde Apta Mtddleport
Spectal rates for Senior
C1t1tens 1130 Equal HousIng Opportunities 614 992 · 7121
Fu,mshed apt 3 rooms end
bath ' No petJ
Cell
614 - 949- 2253

APARTMENTS . mob"•
homea. hou111 Pt Pleasant
and Galhpohs 614 -446 ·
8221
Furntshed 1H1c1encv apt,
one penon, private. ut1ht18s
tncluded $180 OD month
304 - 675 - 20~3 or 675 ·
66B9

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleepi"11 Room•
and hght house keeping
rooms Park Central Hotel
Coll614·448·0758 .

46 Space for Rent

7 room home with 2 ui
goroge, In Choohlro, e260
mo ., plua dep , adult• only
no peto Call614-367 ·7271
or 614-387·7302.
Four bedroom houM tn
Racine. no pall Coli 81,-.
949-2253

Mobile homo lot, 12'•50' or
smalter. • 75 water paid 4th
&amp; NaH, Oolllpolla. Call 446·
4416 after 7PM .

a

Mobile homo loll, R
'A
Mobilo Homo t'a.tt, lutavJio
Rd .•Golipolio, Oh, Ca11e1~.
446-0527 or 814·448 ·
12~3

�•

.
Page- 14 The

Sentinel
I dllll SUilllill: s
II. liVI:slock

LAFF-A-DAY·

48 Spec::e fqr Rent ,
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork, Route 33 , North of

61

Pomeroy. Lerue \Iota. Cell

&amp;14-992·7479.

Trailer Iota fOr rent, uwer
and water furnished. will
take one amall child, 304ll71i; 1076.

Spring Special: 24'x30'x8'
with 16lx7' ganga door &amp;
aarvlc.e door , $3,888
erected. Iron Horae Bldgs .
614· 332-9746 collect .

Merchandi se
51 Household Goods
SWAIN
,
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
II u~wood -coal stoves, 6
pc wood LR auito S399,
01
lTI\ Ofi
bunk beds $199. ontron
recliners $99, new &amp; used
bedroom suites. ra nges,
,
wringer waohero. &amp; shoos.
1 ~::::========-r~~;;::::;;::::::::::,
New
living room
S199-8599,
tamps,suite
also I·
buying coal • wood atovea. 64 . M '
M
54 Ml' sc . Marchandl'se
Caii814-446-3 1.S9.
ISC .
erchandise

YOU t e.11 h"

Id

't

Want tO be the One tO tell him

the windOWS are Open!

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. c'-ir, rocker. ofto·
man, 3 t•blee. (extra heevy,,
t686. Sofas and chairs
priced from *286. to $895.
Tablea,··t60 and up to $125 .
· Hide-a-beds.8390. and up
to $650 .. solo beda $146.
Recliners, $225. to 1376.,
Lampl from $28. to $125 .
pc. dinettes from $109 .• to
435 . 7 pc. *189 and
Wood table with six ""'"'"
SZ86 to $746 . Desk $110
up to $226. Hutches. $660.
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses. $276 . ondupto
$396 . Baby beds, $110 .
Mattreases or bo• springs,
JuU or t~in, sse .. firm, 868.
.and $78. Queen sets, $226 .
14 dr. chests, $49 . 5 dr.
;chests. S59 . Bed frames,
'$20.and t26 .. 10 gun . Gun
;cabin$1S. e350 . Gas or
1electric rengea •376. Beby
:mattresses, 125 &amp; $36. bed
,lromeo $20, 126, &amp; $30,
•king frame *60. Gool:helec:tion of bedroom suites,
.
k
I
ca b mots.
;roc ers . meta
838
:~~~dboardo
a. up 10

;uaec:t · Furniture

••

5

pc .

•dinette. head boards, and 2
:bedroom suites . 3 mile1 out

;sulaville Ad . Open $am to

Farm Equipment

JD 2 row· planter. tobacco
tetter, 6 pt. chisel plOw. JD
8 h . wheel diac. Now
Holland hay reke, 3 P.l- post.
hole digger. aickle mower, 8
h . drag dioc . Call614·256·
1286.

Rental apece for· tr1vel tr•ilers, c1mpere. fold upa. W•ter, Jewer. ~ectric e1bl~
hook upo. Coli 304· 773·
5661 oher 5 :00 p.m.

"N

Thu~y.April11,

Ohio

Limestonii, Send. Gravel.
Pick up at Richardl a. Son.
Call fj-14-446-7786 .

Red lettered Model 250. 22·
rifle, " last ' made in 1,962,
I$76.00. Auto Winchester
Spring Speciai-Petriotutili1y 1 4 0 0 skeet bar ·
building a on diiplay at two · rell.$150 .00 . Manual tv·
convenient locations, B a. S pewriter. 135 .00 . Call614·
Produce. Viand St. Pt. Plea · 992· 670B from 9 :00 til
san1 . end French City Mobile
2:00.
Homea Gaflipolia. 9 X 12
$896, also 10x16 $996. Rex-Rotary photo copier. 3
Deliveredantttaetuponyour M casual deak copier .. ·A.B.
Di'ck electronic stencH
1 lo1.
maker . Memogreph ma·
Johnoon Upright Furnace, chine. Calf304·676· 3099.
used 1 yr .. 5 rms . of gas
duct, ex. cond .. 10,000 COLOR ENLARGEMENT
BTU . Call614·446·0665.
SPECIALII Now thru April
.1.3. From your COIQr nega ~
GBu irl tfg0n•Y o ur L.o t:bBdrlgh4 mC a r tiva or alide .. 5•7 for 89
0 1
8996 3
0 81
cents; 8x10 for $1 .99.
S13, 96 . See Our Models. HOCKENBERRY PHAR Call1 · 614-886-7311 .
MACY NORTH.
Oalar.le Boat 120 MerCruiser, with trailer, eJic.
cond .. Call614-256· 8413 .
Sears yard tractor 84 Model
44' cut, 16 HP, uaed aboUt
10 hours , new cond ..
$1,660 . Call 614 · 388 ·'
9736 .
·
Front train for ~ 74 Chevy
Blazer &amp; 350 rebuilt Chevy
motor 200 miles .. Call614·
446·0666 .

'5pm. Mon . thru Sat.

·4 Prom .drea•es sizes 5~7.9 .
E~c .. cond. Call 614-245·
9469
altar 3PM:
:GOOD USED APPLIANCES
1Washers. dryers. refrigera'tora, ranges. Skaggs Ap- Gun lor aala 9MM 5 &amp; W
:plian,cea, Upper River Ad. model 39·2 bJack finish
•beside Stone Creat Motel. pearl handle. Coli 614· 266·
1625.
:81 4-44&amp;-739B .
:61 4 -446 -0322

Pole Buildings Constructed
for commercihl. garages.
farm, stores. e1c. Any alze,
free eatimatos. call 304·

CROSS S. SONS
U.S. 36 West , Jack,on.
Ohio. 6H·2B6, 6461.
Masaey Ferguson, New ·
Holland, Buoh Hog Salas a.
• Sei'vice. Over 40 used
tractors to choo•• from 8i
complete line of new &amp;
used equipment. Largeat
selection in S .E. Ohio .
JIVIDEN'S
FARM EQUIPMENT
NEW: long tractors, Vermear round baiers, rakes,
tedders S. mowera. A com·
pleteline accessories,
of bale handling
8t
feeding
wagona . grinder-mixers. rotary
tillers, rotarycuttois, bladeo,
·cultivators, disc. plows. post
driV8ra , woodsplitters,
gales, power washers. to~
be ceo setter, tobacco spray~
ers. corn sprayers. truck
racks, aeedera, nit 8t minera I feeders. bunk feeders,
spike tooth harrows. calf
creeps. headgatos &amp; corral
panels. Wheal Horae lawn 8t
gardentr.ctorswithtendem
axles! And 188 us for a
complete line of partJ 81
service!
USED: 2000 Ford. 3000
Ford, 3600 Ford, 9N Ford,

83

Bently Pig Saill Wed. April
Z4th, 7 :30PM. fayette
County Fair Orounda. WI·
ahlngton CH•. Selling .150
head of Durocs. Hemp·
Duroca croaa bred, Berrowa
&amp; gllto. Roger Bently 613·
684-2398.
Two white face cow.. Due
to hove calveoln July. •600.
each. Coli 114-742-2621
after eight call 61t'·992·
2362.
At atud, cunera, 0-Ton.
DondH. regiitored paint.
15· 1, grade e76.00. regia·
teroH $1 00.00.. 304'882·
2762.
800 lb. to 700 lb. oteor,
304-675·6809.
64

.

uo.oo

Knoulf Firewood Split· 95%
hordwooda. You pick up or
we deliver. HEAP vender.'
814-258 ·8241 .

WANTED·Arto Sporto En·
thuoilloto thot wont to ro·
celvo direct moll opeclola
1111, on exciting new mer-.
chendiM progrem, from TrJ
SPECIAL cut llaba II PU · C,punty Spona, 304·878·
loodl doliv..-..1 In dump 21B8 ot wrlto to Rt. 1. Box
• Point Pleooent, w . Yo.
truck 1100. or 21oodll110.
Ydu picki!P 118. Coli 814· Include nama addreaa e,.d
alp.
2411-&amp;804.

.-

•

CAPTAIN EASV

D &amp; M Contractoro. Vinyl

71

Autos ·for Sale

72 . Trucks for

s8 1e

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

1977ForciCourierp.u.. new
point. 4 apd. 11896. Coli
814-379-2882 .

We now have Northrup t.{ing
seed. For your grats &amp; seed

76 Pontiac Cetallne near
porfoct cond .. $1,200. Call
614-446 · 1604.

'84 A•nger XL, n.e w tlree,
AM ·FM ca11ett. excellent
truck, 9,800 mllea.
$6,600 .00. Phone . 304·
676-328B.

needs. Call 814-245-5193.
Altit!r Form Supply.

Tran sportal 1o n
Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for '80
modal and naw~r used cars:
Smith Buick-l!ontioc. 1911.
Eaatarn Ave., Gallipolis. Cell
61 4-446-2282.
.
19B1 Honda Station
Wagon, auto. trana., 33,000
miles, one owner, ex. cond.
Call 814-245-9296

1-----------

Front end loader fits H or M
International tractor, 420
Case backhoe, good shape.
Coll614· 446-2767.

1982 Datsun 200 SX . Ex·
cellent condition. AM·FM
stero cuaette, air conditioning. Coli 814-69B·6267 ol·
ter 6 :30PM . t8500.
19B2 Chevett8, 26,000
miles. Sell or trade lor cattle.
Call614· 986-3891.
Would like, to dd house
cleaning. Coil 61 4 -992 ·
8359 alter 4 :00 pm .
1979 Grand Prix. black.
AM-FM stereo. cruiai, air,
excellent condition . Call
304-882-2796 .
84 Fiero; . re~. 4 opeed,
AM·FM caasette. 4 year
warrtnty, 20.000 miles .
$8600 . Coil 614-992 ·
7268.

.

===:.l

~==========J~2;;4;;6;·:93=9=8~•:h;or::4:.

They'll Do.It' Eve'ry Tl"me'

EVENING

•

n d al u min u m aiding·
I~~==~~=~=;;::;::-r;:;:::=;;;::::;::;::;;=;=~ replacement
wind owl-

83 Reliant K 2 dr.; S.E..
extras, muot sell . Make
offer." Call 614-446-1504.

71

Morcum Aooflng II. Spout· .
ing. Now inatalling rubber
roOfe. 30 y11r1 ••perience.
apeclollzlng In built up roof.
Call 614·388 -9867 . . ·

4/11/85

J a. J · 1 Home Improvementa, Siding Vi~yl&amp; alumi:
num eidlng, overheng rurter
&amp; roofing. Free estimatea.
Call 814-367-746B.

Hay &amp; Grain

ALFAFA-TIMOTHY HAY 32
acres. standing, averaged
last year 3 .7 tons per acre.
High quality. Coli 4114-448·
6816 or 614-245-6544 af·
ter 6PM.

THURSDAY

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING'
Unconditional lifetime guarantH . Locll reference•
furnlahed . Free aatfmatel.
Coli collect 1 -614·237 ·
0488 . dey or night. Rogera
Baaement Waterproofing .

...

4 formal wedding gowns
aizea 8 to 14, like new. S30
each. Call 614-446-1842
Sears Kenmore dryer like
new 890. guaranteed . Ctlll before 4PM .
614-446-726B .
Camper top for Datsun King
Bedroom suite exc. cond . Cab long bed Or equalent,
new, SZOO . Call 614·
Whirlpool portable dis · like
245
-939B
after 4 .
hwllher. small couch, TV
111ntenni. video tape player. Gasoline powered weed cut·
Call614-446-0103.
tar with saw blade, heavy
'
duty, $60 . Call 814· 245·
Mayrag wringer washer, 9398
oher 4 .
good cond .. $75. Coli 614·
266-6892 .
11 HP lawntractor4 yra .old,
8600 . Call 614-246·939B
30" electric range. good after 4 .
cond.. harvest gold; $60.
Call 614-245-9398 ofler 4.
Stihl AV 32 chain saw, 20in.
bar. spare chain and carrying
Uaed refriger•ror goOd case, t300 . Call 614·245·
working condition S75. Call 9398 alter 4 .
61 4 -246-939B otter 4 .
. auto p•rts et 430
Used refrigerator, teble end Used
Flamingo Dr, Kanauga, OH·
4 chairs. love..et. 8 pc. 2 tenth1 of a mi. N . from Rt.
sectional. mettreas end bo• 36 on Rt. 7 .
springs. Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture. Coli 614-446 · VANGUARD PAINTS ·
1171 .
Quality you can truat .
Ebersbach Hardware,
Country Oak tllblea. chair&amp;. Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 614 ·
cupboards, deeka, ice boxea. 992·2811.
Conkles, Tuppera Plain1. At.
7 . Hand craftad and Slight paint damoge. Now
flniahed .
fl•shing arrow eigne . e249
complete, free lettenl Four
Westinghouae refrigerator left . Call immediately.
and electric stove . set in 11800) 423·0183, anytime.
harve1t hold . Good cqndi· (Not • repoauasion, .
tion. 1300. for the peir.
Charlene Hoeflich , 614- 1400 Winchester aemi·
992 ·6292 .
automatic ahotgun, $200.
Black powder revolver 45
2111 ton central air condi· col, 176. Dewall 740 radial
tloner. Complete with H coil erm saw. uaed little, *300.
1nd tubing. NeW Compre.. er . 1460.00. 814· Call 814 ·992· 3086 .
992·6437 alter &amp;PM.
G.E. Waahor, 1160. G.E.
'
refrigerator tlike ~ufw).
For ule. dining room teble 1250. Both guoronteed lor
ond 4 chaira. Call 814-992· 30 dayo. Stondard bred
' 7&amp;37.
horoe, 1 yeor old . Call
614-992-223B.
Color T.V., 196.00. 4 refrig·
eretora. *7&amp; .00 and up . 1 •1978 Chevrolet School ·
Elocllc range, 196.00. Au· Buo 16 puoenger-V8 engine
tomatlc wuher, 1149.00. 3 auto trans. Can be eeen at
dryero 1 195 .00 eoc.h. ·carleton Sch!)ol. P.0.8o•
18.000 BTU AC, UOO.OO. 307, John Street, SyreCI.!Ie,
Goa r~nga, t86.00. Coli Ohio, 46779 ot houro 9 -10
614-192·2238 .
in morning. or 2 to 3 in
afternoon. From ARril 1 6 to
Plckena ueed furniture . 304- April 19. The Melgo County
875-1483 or 876· 1460.
Boord of Montol R... rdotion
wfll accept written offers up
RICK'S NEW AND. USED to clooe of bualneaa doy
FURNITURE . Uoed otovea Frldoy. Moy 10tll, 1985. The
and refrigerator&amp;. CompaN Boord reoerveo .the rltht to
our pricea, eave today . r~ject any or ell offert.
Phone 304· 773· 6430.
Firewood
pickup
lood: t30.00 dellverod. Coli
54 Mile. MerchandiH 304-8711-6712
or. 6711·
2981 .

Television
Viewing

. Home
Improvements

B1

1941 Chevy truck, ••c
ahepe for . reatoring, price
1600.00. Metal office deak
$100.00. 30.·876-2406.
73

Van,&amp;

4 W . O.

Factory . rail dune b~ggy·
sharp. $700. Cell 614·246 ·
9398 after 4 .

in au Ia tin g ·roo I In g •
remodeling and now
c;onstruction-gutters: Calf
304-773-5131 .
·
Spring spacial: Gene:a deep
ateam Carpet cleaning .
Scotch guard, free estf·
mateo. Call 614-992·8309
or 614 ·742 ·2211 .
J &amp; L Insulation. Vinyl
siding. roofing, replecement
windows, storm windowa,
ttore doora . Call 814·992·
2772.

RON 'S Television Serviee:
Specialliing in Zenith and
M~torola , Quaiar, end
houoo cello. Call 304-676·
2398 or 614-448 , 2464.
Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-676·
1331 .

19B2 Ford Bronco 4x4. no
engine, some body damage,
4 apeed tranemiasion, AM ·
FM 8 track, custome
wheola. t2.975.00. Coli be·
tween 7:30 AM and 9 PM .
304·876·6421 .

RfNGLES'S SERVICE. ex·
perienced carpenter. electrician, m11on, painter. roofing (lnc_luding hot tar
application) 304-671i·208B
or 676· 7388.

74 · Motorcycles

Rotary or cable tool drilling .
Moat walla completed uAte
day. Pump ulaa end aervh
ceo. 304-B96· 3B02.

1974 Honda 760. good
cond., ex.tres included. Call
614-245-5120.
19B1 Honda 760 custom,
2, 700 mi .. peddod sissy bar,
axe. cond. Call 614·367·
0394 .
1980 Suzuki LS 760, 4 cyl ..
4 atroke. under 6,000 mil8a.
adult riden . Never abused,
with ecce..oriea. e1 ,400 or
beat otter. Call 614·446·

'"'' r.

·~

• "'

ANNIE
- KEEP llOit!G,

~Uf!E. WE

.A IN'TNOSOOY
601H' T' OUTAUH
HOOTIE ON HEfl
HOME llfrDUNI7!

ARE! l

HOOTIE,. ~E'RE ~NOW TH15 51'/AMP
' NOT SliFE YET- LIKE TH' Bi'\CK 0'

MY HAND!.

YOUCAN'TCIJI.WT
01'1 THAT ~'l i TH
6HIIOOO-

Starko Tree a. lewn Service.
landsc•ping, seeding, fartil·
izing, thetching. for complete lawn 1arvic.e . Cell ua.
304·676·201 o.
8 8t D Homelmprovemente.
'replacement wh'idowe.
aluininum soffit;· vinyl sid·
lng, continuous gutters, frM
estimates. all work guaran~
tHd. Spring Discount. call
eveningo 304-676-2644.

I'M GLAD T'HEAA
ll1A'T, 'tOUR LORD ·

SH IP.. . BECAUSE I
~s;;;,.::;f'VE A.

~171 .

73 Honda 76.q~c 4, .'cvl ..
fully draoHd. garage kept,
·good cond., conaider ·trade.
1700. Call 446·9216 ."
ltbnda · CB 850 with 2
· ttetmeta, ·&amp; in,erc~m - ~u•t
s~li. Cei·
·8863
. 6\'i-.448
. .
. . .
BZ Honda CB 9oo cu.tom .
Blue, windshield, ahaft
drive, oil cooler, cruise con·
· trol. cuatom back reat .
$1800. Cell 614 -992 ·
7598 .
19B1 Honda XL 600. good
cond, 8BOO.OO. 304·876·

82

• SAGA·CONTINUESI

has · S""econd thoughts after
agr9elng tci work with hi ~

fathe r at the TV station. IAI
(J) Profiles of Nature
(jj) New Tech Times
9 :00 0 CV ill Cheers Diana an·
nounces her decision to
travel to Europe w ith Fra·

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1, Bo• 355, Galli·
polio . Call 814-3&amp;7 -0676.
Excavating

Built On Your lot: Big 4 Cor
Garage $8995. 3 bdr homeo
113.996. SH Our Moctela.
Coli 1·814·B88·7311 .
Oaluie Boat 120 MerCruiaer, with trailer. exc.
cond .. Call 814-256-6413 .
17ft. Creatllner, 1116
inboard-outboard, power
trim pr~p. power trim Uba,
tri·haul. 304·67!1·82B8.
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Acce•.oriu

J

Porting out
oell whole· 72
Chevy Chevelle SS . Call
814-3BB-8!122.

--------

77

Auto Repair

85

79 Motora Home•
&amp; Camper•

1976, 11 .loot allda-ln
compar, lito 8 . loot bed,
•leopo 8, fully oquip·p ed.
Prico •1100. Phone 114912-50811 or 614·892 ·
5984.

Ken' a Water Service. Wells,
claterns, paola fiHect . Phone
614·387·0823 or614· 367·
7741 night or day .

'

·OPEN '{OUR MOUTH,
TATER.AN' RUN OUT
'{OUR TONGUE

NUS$ .. HAND ME
l . MV SPECIAL
lONGUE DEPRESSER
1
FER STUBBORN
j
VOUNG·UNS

!

IT NEVER
FAILS

must arrest an o ld h1g h
school mentor . (60 min .)

([) 1D ~ 20/20 (CCI
0 Cl) ill!l Knot's landing
Karen grows increasinglv
frustrated over the evasive
answers she ge ts from Dr .
Ackerman about Val's ba' bies . 160 min.)
(J) We S ing That They
Shall Speak
ilD Mystery! ICC) ·Adven·

!

.'
r

i"'

r

'

~~32~--_j ! w___~~~
S~AKE!!

General Heuling, dump
truck for hire. you call, we
hlul, 304-675-3190.

Apoche pop-ul' cemper. fur·
naco, relrlglf'otor. ronge.
oink, good cond •
11 ,400.00. Phone ' 304·
B85·3510.

A S. M Furniture Manufacturing, St . Rt. 7, Crown
City. Oh .. Coli ·814·2811 ·
1470, coli Eve. 1114·441 ·
3431 . Old a. now
Uphootarod.

Rick and A .J. investigate the
susp ect ed sabotage of a·n
lndv 500·tvpe race car . (A)

computer whiz kid is
brought into coun for brt~tak ·
1nglnto h iS school:s compu·
tel . lA)
1 0 :00 D Cil (1) Hill Street Blues
Coffey poses as a male
prostitute and finds tha t he

BARNEY

Limeatone, gravel, lind. fill
dirt end coal delivered, 304·
875-4412 .

Upholatery

is found d ead,
0 Cl) ill!l Simon &amp; Simon

160 min.)

Do you need something
moved or hauled ewey?
We'll do itl Cell 614·2866251 oher 6 :00PM.

87

killer whe n an actress friend

(J) (jj) Frontline (CCl ·crisis
in Cemra l America : Revolution in Nicaragua .' Th ~rd of 4
part s. The U.S. involvement
in the Nicaraguan Revolution
is examined. (60 min. ~
9 :30 0 (I) CD Night Court A

Jemtt, Boys W8ler Service.
Aloo poola filled . CoH 814·
268-1141 or 614 · 448 ·
1176 or 814-448·7911 . .

TRISTATE
UPHOLST!RY SHOP
1183 Soc . llvo .. GoHipolla.
814·4411· 7133 or 814·448· ·
1833.

,.

.. .AND NOW THAT WEIGHT
,.r"""" ·,HA5 ElEEN UFrt'P, AND
MINGLED WITH YOUR .
GRIP' 15 A SENSE OF
rA'EEMAr.~ ..

General Hauling ·

'71 Stercroh . pop-up
camper, new e~~nvea. ref~
1111 otove. 28 h oelf con·
tolnod camper. 304·878·

8,03 . .

... THROUGHOUT
YOUR MARRIAGE
10 Ellll YOU

•

.

Peraona Body Shop. Locuot
Rd. Pt .Pieuant. Poll K&amp;K.
Frn Eotlmotoa. 814·9811·
4174.

min.)
(J) Gl @ Eye to Eye ICC)
Tracy and Oscar sea rch for, a

Electrical

SEWING Mochi~o repoira.
aervice. Authorized Singer
Seln &amp; Service · Shorpen
Sciaaora .' Fabiic Shop,
Pomeroy. 814-992·2284. '

()

.t':-"'::.r-..

1

IEAefj r

I

I

\UNCOUj
rJ r

HOW 'THE:

1

COTTON 'TYCOON
FOUNP HI:5WORK.

tJ

I KI
AIIIW!Ifhere: VERY

Now a"ange the circled letters to

fOf'm the. surprll8 answ«, as sust
oested by the above ear1oon.

r I XXX I I I I ]
(Answers tomorrOW)

Yesterday's

I

Jumbles. FAULT BLESS AnACH EVOLVE
Answer. Why you ~ight consult a plastlo surgeonTO SAVE FACE
·

•

BRIDGE

James Jacoby
NORTH

If you need magic,
play for it

4· tl ·8;

+Q'4
·~ Q i 064

t K 74 2
+A 6
WEST

By James.Jacoby

• J iO 9 l

EAST

+K 6 5

North 's jump to three diamonds
• J 8; 2
. 73
inc re ased the value of South's hand .
• QJ 8
• 10
... J 10 4
South cue-bid the heart ace and. after
. Q98532
North's cue-bid of the club ace, went
SOUTH
right to six diamonds . This forthright
+ A 872
a uction resulted in a reasonable
. A9
contract, bu t declarer- had to play as
t A96;3
+ K7
if the backs of the cards were trans·
pare nt to bring it home.
Vul nera ble: East-West
The opening lead of'the spade jack ·
Dealer: South
was covered by dumm y's . queen,
1
North East
West
East's king, and declarer's - ace.
DeClarer could see that there wou'ld I
Pass
Pass
be no problem ii diamonds divided 2·
Pass
Pass
2. If they didn't, how could the slam
Pass
Pass
be made? If hearls were' 3·3 and a
Pass
Pass
Pass
friendly defender never ruffed in,
South could throw his spade losers on
Opening lead: •J
dummy's hea rts . But these defenders
didn 't look that friendly . No, what he
needed was some layout of the oppos·
ing cards that would_'let him jettison
his tosing spades before an opponent
could tromp in . 'fhe magic holding dummy with a low heart and inserted
was the long diamond a.nd fo ur hearts his nine. Next he cashed' his heart ace
.i'n one lippo,~e nt) hand . Hthat holding an.d ·played a club to dummy's· ace. ,
1/x'isted, it· w~s odds-on that t~ose.rour Now poor. East had to follow to theM;· _ ,
hea'rts would include the jac k. And so. Q of hearts as aeclarer shed . two
to work!
s pades. What East did on the fifth
At trick two. South cashed his ace heart was immaterial . Declarer had
or diamonds and · played to dummy's • made his s la m by ..figuring out what
diamond king. As he feared , West he needed to find in his opponents'
showed out. Now South came off hands and then playing for it.

sier.

&amp; Refrigeration
Ed'a Appliance Service .
SWwing ell makes 8&amp; brand•
of refrigeriltora, wash'" '
drven. atov.e• • die hwalh8ra. Coli 814· 367·
7187 or 411'4·448 -4488.

I [)

(]) 700 Club
(!) Top Rank Boxing from
Las
Vegas
Fifth
Anniversary Special Tw o
10 Round lightweight Souls
(Terrence Ali vs. Charlie
Brown}, (Brett Sum111ers vs.
Chris Calv1n). (2 hrs . 30

Good ·1 EXcavating, base·
ments, footers, driveways,
Hptic lanka. landscaping .
Coli anytime 614·446·
4537, Jame1 ~ - Davison, Jr .
owner.

84

Ad11

om

1977 Kawaoki L.T .D. 1000.
304·675·82B4 coli oher 2
PM .
· Dozer Work land clearing,
landscaping. ate. Free eati1981 Yamaha SECA, mates. Call 614·446·8038
f750 .00. £•tro good cond. or 614·992-7119 enytir(le.
304·576-21B6.
.Reeaonable Rat~s . Ditching
for water, ga1, electric;, an·d
75
Boats and
drainage linea. Call 614 ~
446·8608 or 614· 448·
illlotora for Sale
2776 . •
Johnaon Upright Furnace.
uiad 1 yr .• 6 rms. of ges
duct, ex. cond.. 10.000
BTU. Coll614·448·0ll86 .

WV.AH

Ei) .MOVIE: ,'Empire .. Inc..'
'IH.BOI MOVIE: 'ljurricane.'
(MAXl MOVIE; . '·Midnight
Eiprttss'
· ".~ -. ·
(!).flimily .Toes AJe. ·
·8 :30

35~8 .

1981 Virago 750 Yamaha,
exc cond. muat sell, 304576-2119 .

. 6 :00 0 CD CIH D 0 Cl) ® Gl
(j~ News
(]) Hot Potato
(!) Fitness Magazine Tom
and NancY Seaver .
Cil Beverly Hillbillies
CIJ Dr. Who
(lj) 3 ·2· 1 . Contact ICC)
Eil Difl'rent Stro)ces ·
6 :15 !MAXI MOVIE: ' Broadway
Danny Rose ' ICC.)
6:30 0 CV fi) NBC News
CII Rifleman
(!) ESPN ' s Horse Racing
Weekly
{I) Gomer Pyle
CIJ Gl (j} AI;IC Ne~s ICC)
0 (I) @ CBS News
(J)
Nightly
Business
Report
(jj) Body Electric
fj) One Day at a Time
7 :00 0 CD PM Magazine
(])
Chuck
Connor's
Western Theater
fi) SportsCentar
Cil Sanford and Son
(]) Entenainment Tonight
ffi Wheel of Fortune
0 CIJ Wheel of Fortune.
(J) fi]) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
(11 News
•
Gl @ New Name ·That
Tune
fj) Jolfersons
IHBOI Broingames Word
scrambles, number puzzlers
and history and mystery
games are all here to tease
your brain .
7 :30 0 CD Tic Tac Dough
CII Cisco Kid
fi) ESPN's Spoedweek
(I) Major League Baseball:
. Atlanta at Philadelphia
(I) 0 Cl) Family Feud
f1) Jeopardy
. (jQl Wheel of Fortune
Gl @
Entertainment
Tonight
fl) WKRP in Cincinnati
IHBOI Freggle Rock
8 :00 0 CV ill Cosby Show
(]) Circus
(!) Super Bouts olthe 80's
Marvelous Marvin Hagler vs .
Roberto Duran (Las Vegas ,
November, 1983). 160 min.)
(I) Ql @ Wildside A rift be&lt;
tween Brodie and Banniste r
poses several problems for
the Chamber of Commerce .
160' min .)
0 Cl) ill!l Magnum, P.l.
(J) Wild America (CC) 'Hog
Wildl' 'The unusual and
sometimes bizarre lives or
the pecarries 3nd wild hogs
are examined. ~R)
® Forum

. fll EMPIRE INC! THE

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER 'S PlUMiiNG ·AND HEATING ·.
Cor. Fourth and Pine
.
. :. · Galllpollo:.Qhie&gt; ,,'· • .. ·
·Phoile· 014·4411.· 311!18 or
'614-446.-. 477 . '
. .

83

The Daily Sentinei- Page-15

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

11 , 1985

S1:rv11:1:s

Factory made car trailer.
dual wheels. · apore, wench.
new cond. *1900. Johna
Jeager Air Compreaao"r 160
Auto Salea, Bulaville Rd. · 1979 Pontiac Sunbird . Ex·
CFM . 6 cyl . coninotal en·
cellant body . A· 1 engine. 6
Gallipolis 614-446-47B2 .
gino. $2,460.00, phone
cyl. Coli 814 -992-6722 at·
304·46B- 16 10 or 468· BX1 4 Baker flat truck bed
19B3 Chevotte. 26,000 mi .. tor 9 :00 P.M.
1031 .
with steal sides. C.ell 614·
red. with 4 opaod. 82B95.
446...2757.
Cutla11 Suprema. Caii614Call 61 4 -379-26B2.
Cquch, baby bad arid mat·
B43 ·61 27.
tress. Selmer alto sex, 2 9N Ford tractor' 3 spd .. good 76 AMC Hornet stetiontrailer beds (mattress 8t box cond. Call614-446 ·3262.
Wl&gt;gon, 6 cyl .. auto .. good 1978 LTD, 2 door, 40,000
_springa) . 304-B96·3404.
cond .. $BOO. Call614-388· milea, one owner. or · will '
Boker utility tool box bed· , 9367.
, trade for truck or livestock.
Firewood. 825.00 load. fits 1 ton truck. new .8 ft. - - - - - - - - - - Call 304-676-4437 .
304-676·6809.
pull-type bush hog $496.
1981 AMC Spirit DL.•2 dr ..
1\low 160 lb. seeder $195 hatchback. PS. ~B . AM·FM '77 Plymouth Valorie
Washer and dryer. copier Used Massey Ferguson baler stereo , ·air, tilt, 4 apd .• great t600.00. ' 78 Ford Van
machine. den furniture" •nd 8495. Call 814· 2B6-6522 .
gas savor. Priced to nil. Call carpeted . good shape.
stereo. Evening 304· 773·
$2,000 . 00 . 304 · 676 ·
614.246-5040 altar 5PM .
397B . .
5469.
Ford 9N tractor new tune·
up, paint, runs good w 1972 Fiat Sparta - Coupe
heavy duty 4 h . buoh hog. gpod Condi1ion. Call after!, 1 979 Grand Prix, black.
e1,860. Call 814-286 · 814-446-8024.
·auto tranemi•aion, AM-FM
alereo, air, cru1se, er.c con d.
6622 ...
.3 04-882.· 27!16.
.
~ll7B ·chevy Nova ··good
International 340 tractor condition. 'PS. PB. air. Call.
·ps; live power, 3 jii. draw altar 5. 614:446-8024 .
, '73 Muatiing GranCie, 304·
English · Saddle. Pad and t;Jar . ~ bottom · p!ows.
f\76-4880 .
..., ·, ~
IJildle; alao. English 'style · 12,396. ,. Coli 814-286.19B2· AMC Spirit 2 tone. 4
.
;19B2
.
iJierculy'
Zephyr, 4
ridiril ·cqilt Si,:e 1 0 . nev8r 65.2 2 . . . ·. .
•opd., ;1\M·FM tope, ounroot,
worn . 30,4-468-1817.
·
new tirea. $3,999. John's door, 6 ciyl, AC, Auto, ·ps,
3000 Ford diesel tractor. 6 Auto S 01oa. Bulavllle Rd. PB, crui1e, AM ·FM . new
1976 Cameron Mobile ft . buoh hog brand buoh hog,
radial. $4,260 .00. 304·
614-446-4782.
home. 12x64 fl. 2 bedroom. 3 bottom 'plowa. adjustable
273-B161 alter 6 .
all electric, unfurnished, Maaeey Ferguson di'sc,
74 'Chevy window sports
304•676-1777.
U.B96 . . Call 614-286· van. 360. 2 barrel auto, AC, 1976 Chry1ler Cordoba, exc
6622 .
PS. PB. new carpet a. cond, 4 new tires, new
Recliner dishwasher, wOodcaptain seats $1 ~ 100. 70 exhaust syste"m. *1 .600.00
burner, storm door, movie 1980 Masaey Furgerson Duster 340 wedge bucket firm . 304 · 676 - 19B1
camera &amp; projector. 1979 4 tractor, axe cond. Model seet1, floor shift new Tempo evenings.
wheal Jeep. Call 304-675· 265, S7,600.00 . Low radials. battery &amp; dual ex4192 .
houri, 304·46B·1610 or haust, S1,250. Call 61 4· 1984 Cougar XR7. AM-FM
468· 1031 .
cassette, power booater,
446·2459 .
25 in Zenith colored console
loaded, low mileage .• axe
TV, 19 in RCA colored TV.
1978 Grand Prl• SJ. PS. PB, cond, 304· 875 ·9134 .
Phone 304· 676-1226 .
62 Wanted to Buy
pow.;windows &amp; doorlocks,
AC. auto. trana .. tift wheat.
Trucks for Sale
bucket seats, new paint a. 72
55 Building Supplies
Rototillers. prefer Troybilt. tires. new shocks &amp; brakes.
1978 Ranger 4 wh . dr ..
but will buy any make. any Call 61 4-2~8 - 6439 .
black. new tirea, brake1.
aizo. Call 1·614-693·8836.
.
19n Buick Century for saile ehocks, exhaust syuem,
Building Materials
Block. brick. aewer pipes: Wa11t8d to rent pasture in good cond. Call 614-388 · motqr. low mile1ge: Call
windows, llntel1 , ate . Rio Grande area . Call 614- 9331 .
814 ·448·9240 .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande, 446·0962.
PLYMOUTH VOLARE 1977 19B4 Dodge Ram Delu•e
0 . Call614· 246· 6121 .
31B automatic, PS. PB. 4 cab truck. crUise, PS. topper
door. excellent condition, &amp; trailer hitch, 9 ,800 miles.
Cement block, all sizes, 63
Livestock
building material a. Oallipolia
$1 .460 . Call 814. 446- like now. Call 614-379·
6816 or 614-245·6644 al- 2712 altar 6pm.
Block Co .• ' 123Y• Pine St ..
ter &amp;PM .
Gallipolia. Ohio 45631 . Coli
Hoppes Blue Ribbon Pig
614·446· 27B3 .
GMC 2ton, 6 cyl .. Z spd ..
Ssla. April13. 19B5. Satur- MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE 66
with log bunko, good cord ..
day
7PM.
Foyette
County
1967 90% reatored, 8 cyl., 3 •1 ,000. Call 614-3B8·
Block, brick, morter and
maaonry supplies. Mountain Fairground•. Waahington apd ., engine completely 9387.
State Block. Rt. 33. New C.H.. Ohio. Soiling ZOO hood overhauled. looka new,
Hoven. W. Va. 304·B82- of borrows &amp; gilts. 1984 $4 ,200 . Call 614-448 · 19B4 Ford Ranger PU long
Winning&amp; include: Grand 6616 or 614-245 -5644 of·
2222.
wheel beae, 11.000 miles.
Champion Barrow Ohio tor &amp;PM .
cruiH. tilt; air, 15 •Pd., V-6
State Fair, Grand Champion
AM-FM CISIIttl.
Barrow LOuisville Berrow 81 Fireblrd black w ·white engine,
56
·· Pets for Sale
cloth
Interior.
overheed map
Show, Champion York Ohio letter tires. t-top. 81 Dodge
light &amp; clock, hao tunnel
State Fair. Reaerve Cham- Omni 38 ,000 mi.. 4 cyl. cover
shell . Colt
pion crou-breed Ohio State auto, w ~ air , •2.460 firm . 1 812,000and
aoklng
18,700.
HI~LCREST KENNELS
Feir, plua 8 county fair
Call Mr. Vance alter lOAM
Boarding all breede . Heated winners including ra~erva Call 614-2BII·8622.
814·448·7441.
indoor-outdoor facilities . Grand Champion in Gellia
AKC Doberman puppioo: County . Coli 614·336· 1973 Chrysler Newport,
1260, euto. Coli 614-246 : FORD 1983 DUMP TRUCK
Stud Service. Call 814-446· 7394.
9683.
ainglo axle, 292. V-B. 4 opd.,
7795.
electric oxle, oxcellont con·
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call 1 ·3 yr. o•c. blood linea . Gall 1989 vw with newly rebuilt dltion. 12,450. CaR 114·
Slate Run Farme, JaCkson. engine, $600 11 is or $700 448·1818 or 1114·245·
814-387-7220 . .
Oh. 614·2B6·1787 or 614· with point job. Cell 614· 6644 otter 8PM .
288-5396.
Briorpatch
fl.itnnelo
Profeo·.
oionel.
All-breed
grooming
1977 PU, *1 . 700, auto. Call
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa 81 4- 2415 ~9583 .
. . ._
cilllleo. Englilh Cocker Spa·'
niel puppiea. Call 814· 38B·
19BO Toyota SR 6 with lear
9790: ·
lr-----_,...;;.
topper, fully equipped, AC,
*3,600 . Call 614-892 ·
11149 after II.
Dragonwynd Cattery Ken·
nel. CFA Himalayan. Persien
Wall-a -way recliner chair
and Siemeae klttena. AKC
•100. brow~ llinyl3cuahlon
Chow puppiea. Call 61 4 ·
aofa 1100, dryolnk· bar 125.
448·3844 otter 7PM .
Tooheblo TV 13' color 125,
Zenith 19' color t75, Pane9 Pitbull doga. 1 three yeor
IOniC 19; BW 1110. Call
old mole. 1 11omale with 7
814·992 · 8149 after 5.
pupo. Coii614-992. 2BB1 .
-------·lcV-30 Ditch Witch Dltchar.
Some tenk opocl.ola good
1988 Chevy 1-ton dump. 11
thru April 30th. 30 gal tok
fl. Tadum heavydutytroilar.
with hood 189.89. Floh
Coli &amp;14-387·7773.
Tonk. 2413 Jackoon Ave ..
Point Pleooent, 304·875·
1976 FIIOO ford with 42 It
2063.
eeriel bucket and utlllty
body, good cond,
·~0.500.00. Pho~· 304·
57
Mualcel
418·1610 or 4111.- 1031.
histruminta
11184 Ford F 110 pickup,
AC. P8. PB, tilt wheel,
Bundy Trumpet, 1 V. yra. old,
cruloe control. Duol •••
ex. cond. Coli II~ 4·448·
unka. aHdlng reer window.
3044.
Chromo wheolo, VIctor tirH,
running boordo with lghta.
J.B . L. . Doaign . P . A .
chrome bed roilo. bluevolour
ceblneto-empty. 1150. Coil
enterior, 11,000 mllea ,
304-773-1127 ond oak lor
•10,800.00, phone 304·
Reg.
773-5944 .
'
675-3981 ,

1986

KIT 'N'

Llve~tock

125501iv~tr. 446Long, 1SO

MF S. 160 MF with loader,
2 -60 MF, 166 M.F. Vermear
round baiera, · pJowa, haybines. rakes, buahoga, diac.
spike tooth harrow. cultiva·
tors, tobacco aeHer, ft10W·
ingmachine, Bolensmower,
wood burning stove .
We buy used equipment!
Jividen'• Farm Equipment.
614-446-1675.
·

.

\

' tureS Qf Sherlock Holm es :
Th e
Solit ary
Cyclist. ·
Holmes and W atson step 10

when a mysterious man on a

bicyc le follows a client. ·(60
min I
Eil Soap
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Misunder·
stood'
. (!,IAXI Timeslip
10:15 (l) MOVIE: 'Track of the
Cat'
1 0 :30 (]) Cancer Today
Cl) Comstock load
Iii INN News
11
®®

:oo o rn ()) m o m
Cil ii2I NIWI

PEANUTS

• Benny Hill Show
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Angel'
11 :30 0 CV CD Tonight Show .
Host Joan Rivers' ·gue$ts are
John Davidson and C-.thor'" " D•enberg . 160 min I
CII Best of Groucho
(!) SportsCe/lter
Cl) WKRP in Cincinnati
0 Cl) Golf Hillteo
Cl) Capitol Journal
@I Ta•i
(jj) Moneymaker&amp;
Ill
&lt;iZ ABC News
Nightline
!i) T~ll!lh! _?o!'~

~~~··'Htfl

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Restaurant 1· Noted
5 Junctured
crooner
II Redolence 2 Modify
12 Man's name 3 Temporarily
13 Adele of
4 Time period
the late
5 Salcy
show
6 Adversary
14 Heavy
7 Moslem
15 Choose to
rule r, .
YHterda)''l AMwer
16 End
8 Phystclan
17 Yellow
9 Ennoble 23 Japanese %8 Dried fruit
10 Contribute feudal warrior29 European
bugle
18 Or:v
24 Passport
river
18 Difficult
20 Garfield,
1!1 Algerian
end orse·
33 Rig11t on!
e.g.
city
ment
35 Somewhat
21 Pa. city
22 Gennan
25 Dry region 36 Priest's
22 Actress
·Philosopher 26 Bread roll
garb
"
Nelligan
23 Nail
24 Singer·
Jerry
25 Doggone it 1 .
26 Lenient
27 Uncle (dial.)
28 Parish
leader
3Q Swine

b-++-

genus
31 Inlet (Sp.)
32 Tea variety
34 Antarctic

volcano
36 Whit
37 Froglikc
38 Single
39 Nervous
laughter
40 Machine

gun
DAILy CRYPTOQUOrEs - Here's bow to wo.rk it:

•

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands lor another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes; the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code le1t:ers are different.
CRYPTOQUOO'E

4-11

B NMIS WBG BOT SMK TBDZSFRN
BNR KLLG XBNFRT .- AMG SDQQBNT
Yeaterdsy's eryp&amp;oquote : lET US BE mANK,FUL FOR
THE FOOLS; BUT FOR ntEM, 11IE REST OF US
CO~NOOSUCCEED. - MARX TWAIN

0

'

�•

l

.

'

Page- 16- The Daily S~ntinel

1

Infertility linked to IUD usage
BOSTQN (AP)--:- Women who use ity wUJ be caused in aU women who
co? traceptlon and have never had use IUDs," said Dr. Daniel' W.
chtldre~ .should avotd plastic In·
Cramer. one of the researchers. "It
trauterme devices .1! they someday certainly does not mean ·that all
. want to become pregnant, accord· tubal Infertility Is caused by the
mg to a researcher who publ ished a IUD."
study today suggesti ~~ that IUDs
The study by Cramer , a recau!;e infert illty.
.
. searcher a t Brigl)am and Women •
IUDs- coils or loops of plastic or 'Hospital in Boston and another
meta l Inserted in the uterus to study led by Dr. J..;et R. Daling of
prevent . conception - seem to the University of Washington In
double the risk of Infertility In ~attle were published In today's
wome n · Who have never had New England Journal of Medicine.
ch!,ldr7n. a companion study found .
In an accompanying editorial, Dr.
'flus does not mean that lnfertll- Daniel R. Mlsllell Jr. of the

s

University o! Southern California
noted that the iUDisstlllworthwhUe
for women who've already bOrne
children but don't wa nt to have
more. .
The devices, which a re used by
abOut2.2 mWio1!Amer lcanwornen,
are the fourth most common form of
contraceptlonaftetvoluntarysterlllzatlon, the pill aqd condoms. The
si'\JdY suggesteq that IUDs m ay
have caused 8J,!XX) women to
become Infertile.
The Increase 1n risk appears 1o
depend on the kind of IUD llSed·

•

Thursday. April 11, 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohip

Plastic IUPs were more frequently .
linked with Infertility than were
cop;Jer-covered IUDs which are
more coriunonly used 'and see~ to
be relatively Sate.

" If a woman has to select an IUb
who'·s never had a prior pregnancy,
I would certainlY opt for the copper
IUD,'' said Ms. Dal)ng, "and
possl bly I wou.ld look for some oth&lt;;'r
method of contraception If. I was
Interested tn having chlldren at a
la ter period In time."

.,

J.R.~s·

RESTUARANT

(RT. 7, JUST NORTH OF CHESHIRE)

••

Newmarket
(Continued from page 1 1
II ~:olf tournament, jointly sponsored by the Pomeroy ArPa a nd
Middicpo11 Chambers, has been
scheduled for June 6, 1 p.m .. ·al
JayMa r Golf cou rse. The tournamcnl wilt be open to anyone for a $15
!"•which includes green fees, ca rts,
prizC'S and rt'fres hmcnls. The COS I
will be $10 if you own your o\\'11 ca rt .
Bill Childs, Bob Freed, or C'ither
cha m ber should be conlacled to
ent er the 1ournament.
l!:xpress ,nail'delivery
In oihC.r Chan\ber i;Iusiness. Middleport Postmaster J oe S(rublc,
&lt;'X pla in!'(l ~xprf'SS mail deiJJvef'y
which is ava ila biP ihr.ou(lh thP post
· · : ·· · · :-. .
. • ofrwes...
. .. .
· · Elob F'rr«f sjXJke br iefly a bout a .
· beHutifica tion project he and his
wife . .June have undertaken- to put
contaim•rs of fiowPrs along lhe
streets of I hE' village.
Blowf'r pr f'sent ed c hamber
mf'mbers. Bruce Fisher and Cra ig
Ma tthews, wlih mover and sha ker
awa rds for the month of April.

.

Weather forecast
Tonight . part Ia! clearing. Low In
the mld·40s. Friday, partly sunny.
High near 70. The chance of
precipitation is 20 percent tonight
and JO percent Friday.
E&gt;dended Forecast
Satunlay through Monday:
Chance of showers Slitunlay and
Sunday. Fair on Mon,day. MUd with
highs In the mld-11011 lo mld-"'lls
Satunlay and rnostiy in the $Is
Sunday and Monday. Lows mostly
In the 40s Saturday IUid Sunday,
cooUng lo the mid-00.. ·to mid~
Monday.
.

• Sunday preSentation
A sllde presentation with.a- sound
track on a tour of the Holy Land by
Art Hughes will he presented at 7: :.J
p.m : Sunday at the Word of Faith
Church in Middleport . The public Is
Invited.
·

Gospel sing planned
A gospel s ing will be held at 7:30
p.m. Saturday at the United Faith
Church near Pomeroy on the Route ·
7 by pass. Several groups will be
featured and the public Is Invited.
~

New Bobcat recruit

Outstanding women

Story on Page 8

Story oo Page 9 _

.

WEEKDAYS 6:00 A.M. TO 6:00 ·P.M. ·
SATURDAY 8 to 4 1
SUNDAY 10
6

to

SATURDAY ONLY
HOTDOG-50&lt;.

HAMBURGER-75&lt;

. DINE IN OR CARRY OUT

at y

e

.
•

•
•

•

Vot .34,•No .256
Copyrighted 1985

•

•

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday. April 12. 1986

'

FRIDAY, APRIL 12th AND SATURDAY, APRIL 13th
GIRLS

~Wrinjler

KNIT TOPS
SALE

This Year, As Popular As Ever.
Choose natural or khaki pants. skirts/ shorts, knit tops, midriffs. mesh vesta or
blouses.,
GillS SIZES: 7 to I 4

Sale p,leed
$5~ 9

Misses and Extra Size
tank tops, polo knits and
--~, crinkle cloth ·tops.
Misses Sizes S, M, L ,,
, Extra Sizes 40 to 46 1•

..

lag. 17.00 to 123.00

Our
Spring
Clelning
. Sale
Continues

LADIES'

·. SPORTSWEAR
The Safari Look Is Back
j

._ :_ ~ .

TO $1839
OPEN STOCK

•CUSTOM MADE
DRAPE IllS
•WALLPAPER
•KERSCH DRAPERY
HARDWARE .
•EUREKA SWEEPERS
•KROEHLER CHAIRS
•CAPE COD CURTAINS
•READY MADE DRAPERIES
•ENTIRE STOCK OF
SHEERS

·~ ···~lft-

(

JUNIOR
SLACKS
.
.
SALE
Linen, denim, twill, poly-

SAVE ON:

/

v

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

/ gab and baky cords. Solids
and stripes in juniOr sizes
J ·to 20.

Reg. '18.00
SLACKS •• ,; ............:.... $14.39
REG. '22.00
SLACKS ......:............ ;.. S17.59
·REG. '25.00 ' :·
. .
. .SLACKS .......:.............. s1
REG •.527.00 ·. · . ... ··
..
. . '21.59

S7.00 Tops ..................... SS.S9
S9.00. Tops ..................... S7.19
$12.00 Tops ................;. S9.59
S16.00 Tops ................. s12.79
SJ9.00 Tops .......... :.~ .... $15.19

w!tne,~

Fril~.
kclalnjs·th31thecontractwas.
null and'\•old bec;ai!se It was. never ·

ratified by the . Meigs County
Commissioners as required under
-new collective bargaining Jaws
which went Into effect April1, 1984.
In an ear~er hearing, the defense

KODAK
VIDEO
CASSETTE
.

'

TUBE
SOCKS

Kodak Video ca·ssettes are made to
exacting tolerances so you can enjoy. state-of-the-art picture resolution, color, brilliance _and sound
clarity. VHS Format .

REG. S6,59

SALE

SALE!

BOYS'
SHORT.S
8 1

SIZES 3 to. 20
$12.00 ...... Sale S9.59
, ''
$15.00 ... Sale $11.99 ., ...
'22.00 ..... Sale S17.59 ~;· . ..
S29.00 ..... Sale '23.19 ·

Reg.
Reg:
Reg.
Reg.
Reg. '33.00 ..... Sale '26.39

•

$599
SAVE!

MEN'S

Wholesale
prtces up

BOYS' JACKETS
Popular styles and colors in sizes 8
through 20. Just right for wear now
and all summer long.

IOYS' S14.95

JACKETS ........................... NOW lf2;crcr

BOYS S19.9S
JACKETS .......................... NOW s I D.LIU
BOYS '29.95
JACKETS ............................ NOW '24.00

OPEN FRIDAY
'TIL 8 P.M.
SATURDAY 'TIL 5

'1.19

Color Tops ·... Sale

$1.49

JACKETS ..•.................. S26.00

Well .operators now face new rules
By The Associated Press
New rules on brine disposal may
have to be adjusted, but the efforts to
control water pollution will not be
compromised, a state official says.
The neW regulations, which take
effecttoday, were signed into law by
Gov. Richard Celeste In January
after several months of debate
within the Legislature. The rules
Impose tighter controls on disposal
or brine, the saltwaler byproduct of
drilling. '
Renee Houser, director of the
st;~te's Department of Natuml
Resources' DIV(sion of Oil and Ga_s.
said she has received petitions
signed by about G,OOl people .In
soulheastern Ohio. The petitions

H!!~~~!s;i·i·:9r............... '' -15

MEN'S 139.95

JACKETS .................... S31, I 0,
MEN'S S49.95
.
JACKETS .................... S39.00

SfiOIITS............,....,............ '9 .55
511.95

SALE!

MEN'S
LEATHER
., BELTS
Genuine leather, full grain bridle
cowhide. Sizes 32. to 60.'

Reg. S7.95 Black or Brown
I tt•" Widt .......................Salt $6.00
Reg. S9.95 llpck
Jilt" W'd
' sI.QO
t • ...............................

WRANGLER
MEN'S S9.95

argue · the new brCe rules would
make It too expensive to drill for oil
and gas at old. shallow wells.
Sllesald the regulations may have
to be adjusted . to ' oelfer ··handie
regional concerns, but that '!lie
matter of ground and surface water
protectloo " is not negotiable."
The new regulations require that
aU brine haulers register with the
state and file records with the
Natural Resources Division of Oil
• and Gas, showing how much brine is
hauled, where it came from and
where It was taken.
Also, the rules will:
- Increase the drilling permit fee
from ~ to $250 a~ increase

Long eleevee, crew necke, fleac•
lined, 50% crellan acrylic, 50%
cotton knit. Big nleclon of eolid

ments for putting two communca- Walker, who almost was bumped
from the flight Thursday when his
llons satellites Into precise orbits.
Among thousands viewing the drug-making machine sprang a
blazing departure were more than leak.
Only ·once before have seven
100 people from Utah , Sen. Jake
people been · aboard \he same
Gam's home state.
As the shuttle raced Into space, spaceship. That was on another
Gam's bodily functions were monl· shuttle mission last October.
Later today , Ms. Seddon and
tared by flve sensors on h~ head,
four on his stomach and three on his Hofl'man were to deploy a Canadian
chest, part of an effort )0 learn more . communications satellite with a
about how the human body adapts to "For Sale" sign on it. The owner,
. Telesa1 of Canada, has lnvesti!d $78
weightlessness.
The other crew members are million ill !he spacecraft and has put
commander Karol BobkO; mission It on the market. · A second
specialists Margaret Rhea Seddon, communlcatlonssatelllte, tobeused
DavklGrlggsandJeffreyHottrnan: by the De(ense Department, wW be
and payload ' speclalst Charles released Saturday . .

CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP)
- Space shutt Je Discovery thundered Into orbit today, carrying Sen.
Jake Garn among Its sevenmember crew on a much-delayed
n\lsskm that bill$ ted off with just one
· minute to spare.
· The mission, the first of two
~h!lttle fllghis this month; got of! the
ground after five postponements
cau!led by a ~umber of.problems. It
came on the fourth am\lversary ol
the nrst shuttle flight, on April 12,

colora In Sizee S (34·36), M '13840), L (42-44), XL (46).

SJ88
•9.95 Matching
Sweat Pants ....... Sale ~ 7.aa

1981.

POMEIOY

penalties for illegal dumplllg of
brine.
-Give local governments author·
lty to han spreading of brine on
roads.
.....Cut tile .t ime drillerS have to
remove drilling wastes from nlne
months to five months.
.
-Prohibit temporary storage of
brine in pltsatwells!tesbymld-199;.
Recenl estimates have put brine
production at aboutl60,00l barrels a.
day from 52,00! active wells.
·
Jack Cera, D-Beualre,oneofonly
three state representatives who
voted against the brine rules, said
well operators In Belmont, Monroe
and Noble counties could suffer.

Senator aboard latest shuttle.,flight

SWEAT SHIRTS

IUSE OUR FREE
PARKING LOT

LIJ!TOII1I' - 'l1le llpace • • Dllcowery lifted olf tile pad a&amp; the
Kel!lledy Space Center ........, DWNIIfll&amp; 011 tbe, IIWt of a IJv(! day
millllorL (AP I enerpllllto ).
I

'

..

'

90 Me.••.
•len
· . ce
· .t u.d._en·~··.
·e
.
'
...
·1
dem
·
.
.
.
nst·
.
t
.s. e. ·. .·. ,.s. . e.·. c.•a. ·.. -.:. . ·:· ..··...... o..... ·, . r. .-a. •..o.·. n. s....

lsiiciRTS . ~.::.:................... 15.55

MEN'S S32.95

e

WASHINGTON (AP ) - Wholesa le prices rose a moderate 0.2
percent last month, tile steepest
Increase of 1985, tile government
argued that tne contract was signed
said today: Over the last' year,
two days prior to the enactment of
however. prices have been up 0.3 ,
the collective bargaining
percent , the smallest 12-month '
agreement ·
rate In 20yeijr s.
lnfiatlon
The gist of the defense's case Is
.
In
March,
a hOclge-podge ol
that the conunlssloners gave the
Increases
more
than wiped out
contract their approval because
cheaper
prices
for
gasoline and
they appropriated the funds needed ·
food,
which
was
down
overall
to meet the contract obUgation5 and
16.7
.
percent
gain
In
despite
a
that commissioners Manning
vegetable
priCes.
Roush and Richard. Jones actually
The March rise followed a O.l
pa(tlclpated In the negotlatlofil;.
percent gain In FPbruary. Prices
The defense admits that no formal
had held steady In January .
ratification .o f the contract by the
. For the first three months of the
commissioners eyer(ook place.
year , prices were up just 0.3 percent,
Elizabeth Mohler, whUe on the
at an annual rate. Indeed, that rate
stand, testified thill she made the
lleld true !or the lasl year a s a whole
entries· in the sheriff's log on March
and
was the lowest since a O.I
14 and 21, ·1984, which noted that
percent
rate for the 12 months
Meigs County Commissioners Rlin
January 1965.
ending
chard Jones and Mann!itg Roush
0.8
percent gasoline price
The
had visited the sheriff's ofl'lce and
was
the product ofthe LabOr
decline
were present for union negotiations
Department's
seasonal adjustment
on those days. Roush and Jones
to remove predicprocess.
designed
were also alleged .to have been
table, periodic Jnnucences from
present for union negotiations on
prtce activity. Without Ute adjustMarch 7, however, this rould not be
.
ment,
prices at 1he pump actually
substantiated by tile log because
rose
1.7
percent.
negotlatlatlons were not recorded
AnalysiS,
however, expect pump
for tl!at day.
prices
to
begin
falling before long a s
· Gary Wolfe, formerly the special
pressure
builds
from tht&gt; worldwide
Investigator under Proffitt, testified
oU
glut.
·
were
eepeelaiJy
lnlerelied
ill
the
dleliliBb)
eXperithat according to letters of notlflcaHANDS ON -Sclentlftc demoo.trationsarealways
Indeed,
many
analysts
predict
mentslhatwereCOIIducteda&amp;lhelr!ICbool~by
lion, Initial l!llfoit negotiations began
more fun when you can get youa; hands on the
for
allofl985could
be
as low
lnnatlon
Leonard Spatlls, center, outreach pvpun"'JJ"'d•IW .
on March 7 and Jones and Roush
equlpmmt for a IlttJe-peqotlal participation. i\ndrea
as
2
percent.
only
a
slight
deterioralrom the Cenler ol Science and IDdu8lry, C4lumbuswere present, to the best of his
Cleland,left,aslxthgraderatRivervlewElementary,
tion · from the 1.8 percent gain
lqtowledge.
and James ~D"!'lel, right, a Riverview llfthgrader,
recorded ln 1984....
Wolfe further stated that a
· · That performance, combined
tentailve contract was reached orr . . . ·. .·. . .
·g
.
s
.
·.
s
.
.
c
.
'
s
.
,
with ·a minuscule 0.6· Pen.'elli
March 21 which was signed by
·Increase
In 1983; gaxe ·the .United
Roush an.d.Jones ai1d tliatthe Items
·
·
States Its beSt back-lo-hack Inflation
Included In the tentative draft were .
&lt;
.
e
e .
·.
reCord ln t)"Q d(&gt;ca(les. · . '
·
_lnclude()lntl)e.fi!Jal.contriiCt,Wolfe
:.p
·.
.
As
for
·
March,
Ute
.
.kpartmefit
·said after Aprll1;'he benefited from
county .fourth and sixth graders. · offered these , specific~ on price
each of tne Increased bene(lts of tile ··
N!iJety Meigs coimiy elem~ntary
ren wereasked lo.brtng a sack hinch
activity:
Each year thereafter, the pfogram
'contract.
studenis, representing grades 4-6
for tile three hour program.
-Food prices overall fell 0.2
will be geared for fourth graders
MohlertestlfiedthatlnJune1~. fi-omeachsct'iOllnthecounty,were
· CUrt Heady; director of the
the third monthly decline.
percent,
only and the county's fourth grade ·
as required by the commissioners, treated this week to a traveling
Tri-County Career Development
The
drop
came desplle the blgrlse In
(Continued on page 14)
science show courtesy of the Center , Program, NelsonvUie; was respon- teachers wW then· be able to
yegetable
prices. which was almoSt
Incorporate the program Into ttJelr
ofSclenceandlnduslry,Columbus.
slble for bringing the program.
four times the4.6percent ga lnofth~
Forty-five Meigs local students
COS! On Wheels, to Meigs County. curriculum.
preceding month ..
The
Tri-County
Career
Develop,
Arrangements were coordinated
Wednesday enjoyed the "hands on"
Prices were also up, bul at mort&gt;
ment
Program
Is
a
state
funded
through John Costanzo of I he Meigs
science demonstra lions conducted
modest
levels. for eggs and pork
SUPJXlrt system designed 10 provide
by Leonard Sparks, outreach proCounty Board of Education.
while
costs
feU for fruit , down 8.3
gram specialist for COS! On Wheels
Heady and the county board hope resources and services to teachers,
percent,
for
beef and veal, for fish
at Harrisonville School,
to Include mote Meigs County counselors and administrators for
and
for
poultry.
The drop In fruit
' Forty-five students from Eastern
elementary students next year kindergarten through twelfth
erased
the9.1 percenJ
prices
almost
and Southern discovered the fun of
when the COSI enrichment ' pro- grade, and to encourage the
February
gain.
•
Incorporation of career Ideas In tile
science on Thursday wheri they
gram Is brought hack to Ihe area.
-Energy prices overall fell 0.9
' visited · with cOSI at Riverview
The Tri-Courity Career Deveiop- teaching curriculum.
the fourth straight monlhly
percent,
A name change for Tri-County
Eiement;try In ReedsvUie.
ment Program was also responsible
decllne.
Natural
gas prices wereol'l
Ttlrough various methods,lnclud- · ior bringing Sea World and a Career Is In order according 10
2.5 percent but home heating. oil
Jng picking names fiom hats,
program· called "Kelp Beds to Ice Heady since the development
, costs rose 0.6 percent.
program,
which
lnlthllly
covered
teachers cltose. their most scienceBergs" to all the county's fourth and
Heating oil cos1s are now 15.9
oriented students to attendCOS!On
sixth graders on March 27 at Meigs only Athens; Hocking and Perry
·
percent
below their levels of a year
Counties.
was
expanded
this
year
to
Wheels.
High. Sea World's program Is to be
ago
while
gasoline prices are off 9
Each day the participating child- · presented again next ·year to all Include Meigs.

·MEN'S
SHORTS

JACKETS

MEN'S '19.95
JACKETS ................... $15.60

Big Sa~lngsl

Color Tops , ... Sale

'1.89 Grey With

SALE PRICES NO WI.

Boys S4.9S
SHORTS ........................... s3.88 .
BOYS S5.95
SHORTS ...........;............... '4. 78.

SHORTS ........................... S7."18 '
IOYS' S13.9 S
SHORTS ......................... S11.18

'1 .59 White with

..

You'll like this selection of
lightweight ja~kats in regu· ·
lar and extra large sizes.
Pick your favorite Style and
,color and enjoy the savings
now .

.

'

Our popular Springfoot
tubes. Boys sizes 7 to 1 1.
Men's 9 to 16. Big color selection
including school
colors.

i /--~-4...--. ~.;.

Sizes to B In a fine selection of styles and colors.
Select what you need now
arid save.

BOYS' '8.95

Settlement of a dispute between
Meigs County Sheriff Howard
Frank and former deputies Eliza·
beth, Isaac and Donald Mohler. ·
members of Melgs County Sheriff
Department employees· local
108J(A) and Ohio Council 8, Ameri·
can Federation of State, County and
Munlclpa I Employees, AFL-CI 0
should be forthcoming.
A final hearing on the merits of an
injunction ordered by retired Judge
John Bacon on Feb. 12 against the
union W&lt;tS held Wednesday morning
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. Motion for the hearing was
filed on March 5 by Sandra Mendel,
defense . attorney for the Mohlers
and the union.
Final written briefs from the
defense and prosecuting attorneys
are to be filed by May 2 with Judge
Bacon. Bacon will then review the
briefs and Issue a final written
:decision In the matter which will
bring an end to the case unless
appeals are filed.
Accord~g to Meigs County Prose·
cutlng Attorney Rick Crow, further
, court appearances should not be
necessary.
To substantiate the claim of the
defense that a contract entered Into
March 1984 by tllen-sheriff James
Profl'ltt and the employee's loeal .
was stUI a vall~ working coQtract
when Frank assumed his duties as
slle !If 11).,-Ja~tuary 1985, Mendel .
•called ,Several .
. to the .
stand. · , .
.
.
. · •,.
Frank tetinlnated the employment of aU thret' Mohll'rS on Jan. 7. .

..

..,
. 2 Sec1~no. 14 Pag11 2f! Cfnlt
A Multlmodlo Inc . Newopaper

Settlement
forthcoming

Sheriff
IContinuC'd from pa~:e I I
pies of sheriff's dE"partmenl payroll
records since March 1. '1984.
Also entered as evidence were
Ma rch 7, 1984; March 14, 1984 and
Ma rch 21, 1984 entries from the
sheriff's log bOok which showed that
Meigs County Commissioners.Man- ,
ning Roush a nd Richard Jones were
present on those days for union
negotiations with the she riff's
department .
At press time , Commissioner
Richard Jones was about totake lhe
stand .
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Rick Crow Is representing
Sheriff Frank In the action. Crow Is
being assisted by Frank Flinn, from
the Columbus consulting firm of
Clemens-Nelson. Flinn Is a member
of the bar In thes ta tes o! New York
and New Jersey..

Weekly aetnlloi'Wte on Pqe 'I

.

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

"OAIL1 LUNCHEON SPECIALS"

.The Eastet: message

w~

'Storie8 on Pages 3, 6

Work•. ~
. (Continued from page 1)
In other business:
. - Commissioners voted to
appoint F red Hoffman as a cit izen
mem ber of the Meigs County
i?Iannlng Commission and Bill
Blower as alternate.
- The m atter of employee
Insurance renewal was ta bled until
n~ xt week in hopes that an Insura nce
representative from Blue C::toss'
Blue Shield can be present ,
- Accepted an offer from
. humane society member Bill
McKinney, toman the dog poundon
Sunday from 9-10 a .m . and 4-5 p.m .,
thereby relieving Clarence Taylor,
dog warden, of the duties for at least
one day out oft he week.
- Discussed needed improvements at the s ite of the old county
landfill and discussed problems on
three county roads including a
dump site on County Road 12,
Swa dley Iiiii, near Langsville; a s lip
on Cbunty Road 22. Eagle Ridge;
and the proposed CDBG funding for
a slip on Hila nd Road, between '
Union Avenue and . Vete ran s
Memoria l.

Meigs teams

"' \,

The launch carne with just one
minute left beforethemlsslon would
have had to be postponed again. The
launch time was based require-

•

percent.=~=====~

MISSJNG - The Middleport
Pollee Depanment and the
Meigs County Sherill's Depanmmt have ·rewlved 1\ missing
per.lon's report on .\Nile Cleland
MUier, If, a student at the.Melp
Junior Wgh School In Middlepori. lJ!Ie was last seen by her
father at the R. C. Plant In
Middleport 1'uesda,y allernoon
and Willi 10 return to the plant 8t
3: 30 lor II'IIIIIIJIOftatlon home.
Olllctllls say that Mlller was 110011
leUMI Into a car' near the
I .• s.~e Hotel on North ~
Ave., about 3 p.m, Miller was ·
w~ blue jeans and a white
al*t wbeR lastieen. Anyone with
lnfonnll&amp;lon .. asked to call the .
Middleport Polk.'t! at M-310;
the llherlff's odlce, 9ft.3371, or
70.Me8, 70-MI, or "le3184 at
once. MJ11er WM nat _....,
&amp;1111 I at the tlmt of her
,

ppeat'llltee,

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