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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. May 6, 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Area deaths
Karen Johnson
KarenJohnson,41,o!Raclne,dled
unexpectedly Sunday at Holzer
Medical Center.
Funeral arrangements .w111 be
announced later by Foglesong
Funeral Horne, Mason, W.Va.
'

Philip Romano ·

Funeral serVIces for Phlllp Romano, m,ofParlln.N.J. w1ll beheld
Wednesday at 10 a.m. In South
AmbOy, N. J. Romano died unexpectedly Friday at his home In
Parlin.
.
He is survived !Jy his wife, the
former Gloria DemoskY Daltori, two .
sons, six grandchUdren, 12 stepchlldren, ·. and three stepgraildchUdren. ·
Mrs. Romano Is the daughter of
Genevieve Hood Demosky, Mldilleport, and . the late Cllfford
Demoskey.

· ne~a Blrohlleld. Standing 1ar left JsCeUilMcri.y,
advisor, !olli&gt;wed by other new members, Krlstl
Haynes, Jeff Arnold, PhU Kbtg, Marty CUne, Judi
Mees1111d Usa Hoffman.

NEW MEMBERS - Eleven Melgs Wgh students
were tapped National Honor Society members In a
Sunday aftemoon Induction ceremony at the school.
Inducted were, seated left to right,- Erin Anderson,
Jennifer Swartz, Brenda Sinclair, Gina Follrod 1111d

as

Charles Gibbs

marine veteran. Hew"" a member
Illness.
A self employed farmer, he was a of the Parkersburg Ironworkers ·
and the Disabled Ameri·
son of the late AIVII1 and Myrtll . Local
can
Veterans.
Gilkey Rife.
Survivors Include his wtf¢, Joyce
Surviving are his wife, Hazel; two
Lusk
Bartrum: a daughter, Sharon
sons and daughters-In-law, Worley
Lynn
Benschoter, Cygnet, Ohio; .
and Paula Rife and Charles and
five
grandchildren:
two great
Ellen Rife, all of Middleport; four
.grandchildren:
a
brother,
Leroy
grandsons, Kenneth, Stephen, Jo(Bud)
Bartrum
of
Pomeroy;
and a
. seph and Same Rife, all . of
sister,
Vlola
Edwards
of
Middleport; a grandddaughter,
Middleport.
Jandara Rife, Middleport; four
He was pre&lt;:eded ln death by four
step-grandchUdi'en; SherJ Tobin,
California;
and Ttm Kauff, sisters.
Services wUI be2p.m. Wednesday
Middleport, and Mary Tobin , Pome·
ro)i; two great-grandchUdren: six at the Hunter Funeral Home wjth
step-gteatgrandchlldren and a fos- Rev. Paul Taylor offlclatmg.
Burial wtll be In Meigs Memory
ter sister, Mary GOkey, Middleport.
Funeral setVIceS wUI be held at 2 Garden. ·
Friends may call at the funeral
p.m. Tuesday at the Rawlings.
home
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
Coats-Blower Funeral Home wlth
Tuesday.
Charles Hargraves ot!lclatlng. Bur-

m

Carl L Bartrum

Charles Gibbs, 63, of Sewell, N.J.,
died unexpectedly Sunday.
Born In MlnersvUle, he was a son
of Samuel and Blanche Gibbs.
Survivors Include his wlfe, the
former Jean Roller; two sons, Dr.
Charles Gibbs of South Carolina and
Mark Gibbs, at h&lt;\ffie; a daughter,
Mrs. Ed Swain, Sewell; a siSter,
Mrs. VIrginia Oller, Racine; and a
brother, Paul Glbbs of South
Carolina.
He was preceded In death by a
brother Sam.
SeiVIces wUl be held Tuesday at
DePersla Funeral Home, Giassboro, N.J . .
Graveside services wUl be held 11
· a .m. Tuesday at Woodmere Ceme. tery, Huntlllgton, W.Va.

Floyd W. Winn
Floyd W. Wlnn, 59, Columbus,
died Saturday evening at Luthern
Senior Clty ln Columbus, following a
FALL INDUCTEES - Inducted 1aat laD to the
McCoy, !!tanding !ar left, is followed by honor BOCiely
.
Melp Wgh National Honor Society were, seated len to
membersDarrenllayes,RyanMahr, ToddDoczland · lengthy. Ulness.
A truclairtver for Borden's, Mr.
right, Carol Smith, Alison Tromm, Jud)' M..Wery,
Kenda Donohue. Also Inducted last fall but not present
Wlnn was born In Glouster, a son of
M1881 Primmer and Sheila Pullins. Advisor, Cella
for p~ were Chris Kennedy and 11m LeMaster.
the late Clarence and Kate Davis
Wlnn.
He Is survived by ·two brothers,
Ralph Wlnn, Columbus, and Guy
Saturday Discharges--George
PI
1•
Wlnn, Wheelersburg; two sisters,
_an gospe sang:
Lillie Murphy. and Hazel Murphy,
Green, · WU!Iam Morris, Sharon
Jofmsoll, AliTed Dereni,Jerger; Neal
·
· ; a a&lt;isaol_ sing·
·
both . of Tupperii .Plains.: · lour
. There . Will
be
.White.
b
.,...
·nepl)ews; · IUida~: ·
.
Sunday Admlssloris - -Mae '· Saturday at 7' :ll p.m. at the \)nited.
Gravesldesetvfces wm be heldll
Help is stlll needed from parents
Faith Church, Route 7 By-pass,
on actlvllies to be held Sah•rday Ke tc hka • P omeroy.
a.m. Tuesday at Mapl~"ood Ceme·~
S d Dl h
Por:neroy. Old Tlmers Quarter and_
u~
.evening in · conjunction with the
un ay sc arges--JQSephProftery, Glouster, wlth Mr. Kenneth
. the Long Bottom Trio will be
fltt p ri 1 H
.. annua~ Mel&amp;" }{lgh :&gt;c~ool Junior- . ,
.at c a
umphrey, . Mae _feaured singers. ·Other singers are '. Hankinson offlclatbt~.
Senl&lt;ir Prom.·_ · · ,_.
··
' .Ke.I;Shka. · ·'".
: . .· tnvti~. The public Is weleorne.
.
Arr&amp;n~ent~ were made by
. An · Qrgantuiuon ··eil' parents ·or .
·· ·
. ·
. .
·
. .
· . White Funeral HO{Ile, CoolvUie.

Carl L. (Jack) · Bartrum, Ol,
Lasher Rd., Middleport, dlea early
Sunday morning at home.
Born April 19, 1918 In Heights,
W.Va., be was a son of the late
William H. and Laura Goodman
Bartrum.
·
Mr. Bartrum . wa~ a retired
Ironworker and a World War II

...........

Complete line of wgetable &amp;bedding plants, harwing · baskets, '
potted plants - blooming &amp;foliage, shrubbery, rose bushes,
azaleas &amp; Rh()dodendrons.
OPEN PAILY 9 to 5
SUNDAY 1 to 5
PH.992-5776

Put a song in her heart
. on Mother's Day

Ern:erU:_ ncy squa·ds ke·pt-· b'usy - Alva Rife

junlorsandsenlorshasbeenforined
and has held regular meetings to
~
plan a buffet, a pizza party and
Meigs County Emergency Medimovies as a part of pre and post cal Service reports sixteen calls
prom activities. The group still answered over the weekend, eight
needs financial help, food donations, on Saturday and eight on Sunday.
the loan of card tables and volunteer
At 1:38 a.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
workers. Any parent s wishing to went to Union Ave. for Earl Smith
help ln any of these directions Is who was taken to Holzer Medical
asked to contact Mary Young, Center. Rutland at 2:16p.m . went to
992-7314; Barbara Fry, 992-5919, or New Lima Rd . for Walter Haggy to
Susie Soulsby, 992-2377.
.
Veterans Memorial Hospital. SyraDonations of food arl' to be taken cuse at 5:25p.m. took Clifford Smith
to the high school cafeteria after 1 . from Walter St. to Veterans
p.m. Saturday. Also hanging Memorial. At 6: 55 p.m., Syracuse
baskets for Mother's Day are being took Amy Yates who was Injured In
sold for $4 and can be onlered from
a bicycle accident to Veterans
-a ny of the three above or from Cindy Memorial. Middleport at 7:06 p.m.
Soulsby at the school.
was called to the pollee department
for Wayne . Wllllams who was
Meets this ·evening
Racine Chapter 134, Order of treated but not transported. PomeEastern Star, will meet thi s evening roy at 7: 22 p.m. was called to 104
at the Masonic Temple. O!flcers are Peacock for Mae Ketchka to
to report early for a short cleaning Veterans Memorial. And at 8:37
p.m ., tbe Pomeroy unlt transported
session. During the meeting and
e_

r

examlnlng and Instruction commlttees will exemplify thelr work.
Plans will also be made for the
annual lnspectlori to be held
Thrusday evening with Deputy
Grand Matron Sally Gifford as
Inspecting o!!lcer.
·

Weather forecast
Variable cloudiness today, wlth a
chance of showers and thunderstorms, and highs near &amp;l Clearing
tonight, With a low between 45 and
50. Sunny Tuesday, with highs
between 70 and 75.
The probablllty of preclpltatlon Is
ll pe1 ceut today, ~percent tonight
and near zero Tuesday.
Extended forecast
Fair thmugh the period, with
hllfllbetweentltland75Wednesday,
clmbln11nto the 'liiB 'l'hu~ and
l'lllllinl ..,., 75 to 83 Friday.
0\a lllght Jon wiD be between 411·
and 110 early Wednesday and In the
... '111und8J and Friday niOI idnp.

· Winning Lotto number
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Satur·
day's wlnnlng Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Number

90!1.
Ticket sales totaled $1,457,854.50,
With a payof!dueof$417,255.50. Lotto
7,24,13,17,31,22.
Lotto ticket sales totaled

$3,536,445. -

to

Veterans

Come In and let our team
of professional stylists
give your hair a.llft.
You'll love the lookI

- c. . .)

SPECIAL

"'"~..- I

FIOM MAY 7th
THIU MAY llt.h

·&amp;.

CUT &amp; STYLE ·

saso .

. MEN &amp; WOMEN

IMOGENE BELVINS
HAS IOUINED AND IS WBCOMING
OLD AND NEW CUSTOIIEIS
•we Do Perms, Coloring,
•open Tues•• Sat
frostings &amp;
a A.M.. 5 P.M.
Conditioners
Evenings by AIIPt.
"We Use Kenra Products
"Walk-ins Accepted .
"Manicures Available

CHATEAU BEAUTY SALON

214 E. 2ND

·

992-1606

POMEROY

JANICE - DE8 .

- IMOIENE

..

.

··. ;ELSERFELOS .. ; ,'-~ ~ ·
POMEROY

r~Cen;te;r;~;o;llow;·;ln;g;;an;;ex;te;n;d;ed~.~~~~§~~~~§~~~~~~~~C&gt;~I98~5~Ha~J~-~c;"•;•;""-~
OF CONDITION
Consolidating dQDlestlc subsidiaries l!f the

HOME NATIONAL ·. BANK
of Racine In lbe slate o! Ohio, at the close of business on December 31 , 1984 pub·.
lished Ia respoii84! to eall made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12,
Ualled Slates Code, Section 161.
Comptroller, tth District

Charter 9815

--,-

Statement of Resou-rces and L.labllltles

Cash and balances due from depository lnstltutlons:
.
Nonlnterest-bea~lng balances and currency and coin ...................... 1,476,000.00
J
'
rf -•
nterest-bearlng balances ................................................................. 100,000.00
Securities ........ : ... ...................... ... ... ........... ....... ... ............. .. .... , ..... .. . 3,194,000.00
Fecjeral funds sold and securities purchased under agreements
to resellln domestic ol!lces of the bank and of
· Is Edge and Agreemenl subsidiaries and In IBF's .......... .. .... ... ....... 3,303.000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables:
Loans and leases, net unearned Income .......14,776,000.00
L~S: Allowance for loan and lease losses ...... 258,000.00
Uians and leases , net of unearned Income,
allowance, and reserve ..... .. ................................... .. ................. . ... 14,518.000.00
l'remlses and flxed ass!!ts ··= ............................................................. .304.000.00
Other real estate owned ......................................................... , ....... : ..... 51~ 000:00
Other a$sets ... .... ........... .... . :....... ... .. .............. . , .. ... :........ ......... ............. 310,000.00
,---1- Total assets ... . ,............................ . , ... , ........ ... . ... , ....._. .......... , ........... 23,256,000.00

""
E
..
Ill

Iii

1

C

:1

Ill·~-+

--

.

I, Gary P . Norrl~, Cashlet otthe above-named bank do hereby declare that this - - Report of Condition li true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Gary P . Norris
Jan. 30, 1985

.. ,
.,,

... -

.

":!'

. WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Piketon uranium-enrichment plant
at Waverly should not be closed by
.the Iedera! government because It Is
a highly efficient facility that
provides desperately needed jobs to
thousands statewldP, says Ohio's
governor and congressmen from
the state. •
Goy,fl.lchardF.Celeste,Jolnedby
Sens. ·John Glenn and Howard ·
Me~nbaum, both. D-Ohlo, and. an
array of state political and business
leaders, called on Energy Departrn'1lt o!!lclals Monday to retain
•. P!,k.eton operatk)its over.competing
· plants 'IJI Pa.d!IC.ah(-Ky.; and .Oak ·
·Ridge, Tenn. ·
At a luncheon meeting, the
Ohioans said Piketon o!!eted cost
and efficiency advantages that
could not be matched by the
Paducah or Oak Ridge facllltles,
which also are being considered for
shutdown by the goverrunent
They also sald more than 3,&lt;nl
Ohio jobs would be lost by closing
Piketon, Including substantial employrnent at two · major Piketon
suppliers - 450 jobs at Goodyear ·
Aerospace Corp. In Akron and 500
jobs at Garrett Corp. In Sandusky.
The Energy Department say,s It
must clqse one of Its three uranium
enrichment plants because the
market for enriched uranium,
principally used In nuclear power
plants, has become much tighter
due to foreign competition, leaving
the government wlth too much
production capacity.
The department also wants to
phase out the decades-old gaseous

.

sewer line !!'X tension btU, not to exceed $191'1!!0. Karr is
questioning the amount or his stiare, councU members
. report. With the belp of State Rep. Jolynn Boster and
others, Pomeroy ~ · a $62,250 economic
development grant to lund the rest o! the extension.
. Total project costs were ln the m,tm neighborhood.
Only the engineers on tbe project, Engineering
Associates, Wooster, have not been paid lor thelr part ·
ln the sewer Uneextenston. Theflnnhaslndleatedltls
w1lllng to walt for Its money.
John Anderson, council president, also noted that
Bob CampbeU of fiaclne's Hemlock -Pipeline Inc.,
contracter for the sewer line extension, would-like to
tradeoff about seven daY,wf Interest due him from the
village for a late drawdowil or state grant money, for

211 Cento

Sips Ql'dei'ed
Councuman Bruce . Reed reported that Mark
G!Uesple, Piz&gt;.a Hut manager, has ord&lt;.'red slgns for
the restaurant's parking area to regulate traffic flow . '
Once Installed, traffic w111 enter only from Maln St. and
will exlt toward the river.
Councll also discussed Information received from
Clyde D. WUllams, Associates, a Worthington
englnrering firm which specializes In traffic
situations. A representative from the flrm has
Indica ted the company can remedy traffic problems
aild Install a new signal at the Intersection of Nye Ave.
and Ohio 124 on East Maln St. for approximately
$12,(01. According to the mayor, preliminary
estimates from the Ohio Department of Transporta-

tlon state the job would cost them a mlntrnum of
s;ll,tm. Although no firm conunlttrnent hal been
established by the village, the Worihlngtoo finn
already has a copy of an ODOT traffic study of the
location , rompleted twotothreeyears ago.The mayor
said he told engineers a new study would be needed,
since heavy truck traffic has Increased since the
Ravenswood Bridge was constructed. CouncUman
BUI Young has suggested council check Into adding a
thtrd lane at the location. No matter who council
chooses to contract for the project, the job will be bid
according to ooor specifications.
Councll also discussed purchasing the Ches$1e
System rlverlront property from the old depot through
the business section of town. CouncU has asked Mayor
Seyier to make a $10,(01 o!!er for the property which
has ~n for sale since last summer.,
(Continued on page 10)

dllluslonmethodofuranlumenrlchmen!, which Is employed at all three
plants, In favor new ti'Chnologleseither the Advanced Gas Centrtluge
process or Atomic Vapor Laser
Isotope Separation.
The government Is constructing
centrifuge facUlties at Portsmouth,
meaning any decision to go With that
technology _wll) help Piketon's
catJse. Both GOOdyear aild'GarreU ·
have a majorslakeln !be centrifuge
option.
·
··
··
The department says It' w1ll
announcebytheendofMaywblchof
-Us .three ~nts to c)Qse 01:- phase
:dQwn, ll dectsJcrn.Qhlo. Qf!!ctats-8ay ··
holds dire ~uenees for iouth· ·
em Ohio.
"Obviously, I'm deeply con.cerned about the Jobs lnvolve&lt;J,''
Celeste told James Vaughn, acting
assistant energy secretary lor
nuclear energy.
•
State Sen. Cooper Snyder, whose
district Includes Piketon, sald the
·plant was virtually the last major
employer In the area, which already
has a 15 percent unernploymelit
rate.
"Our real problem is that we have
no flexibility," he said. "We lost a
steel plant. We lost shoe factories.
We are down to one Industry In that
area of Ohio and that is the Piketon
plant."
Loslng the Piketon plant, said
Snyder, "would leave us ln a
vacuum that would suck southern
Ohio into who knows where."
· Glenn also argued Plketono!!ered
the government an unparallellel1
level of efficiency,

.
JACKSON - Multiple charges on anotl\er motorcycle.
The motorcyclists were part of a
have been flied against a Jackson
man In the wake of a Sunday club the state highWay patrol said
accident that kUied two motorcy- was based ln the Portsmouth area
returning borne !rom motorcycle
clists In Jackson County.
races
at the Jackson County
Marvin Ogler, ~. has been
Fairgrounds
In Wellston.
charged with two counts of aggraThe
patrol
said Ogler wa8
vated vehicular jiOmlclde, sald
northbound
when
he reportedly ·
County Prosecutor Mark
four
motorcyclists
and
sideswiped
Qchsenbeln.
collided
head-on
wlth
two
of
them.
Ogler has also been charged with
leaving the scent' of an accident, • SeVen other people were ln)ured ln
driving under suspension, failure to the accident and were taken to area
control, left or center and speeding, hospitals for treatment.
Richard Jordan, 35, Franklin
Qchsenbeln added.
Ogler turned himself In to Jackson Furnace, was taken to Grant
County authorities about six hours Hospital In Columbus by Lltefll&amp;ht
, after thea: 15p.m. accident In which and was reported In poor condltlon
Ogler Is alleged to struck a-group of MClliday after bQ le!t leg was
35 motorcyclists on Ohlo 93, just amputated. Charlene , Ash, 26,
1ro1on,
transported to Unlver·
north of the Jackson City llmlts.
slty
Hospital
In Columbus by
Ogler ,Is reportedly betng held ln
Carefll&amp;ht
and
wu listed In falr
)ail. The location has not been
revealed, although an ol!lclal re- condition with mulllple trauma.
Terry Wileman, 2t, Groveport, a
portedly hinted at concerns lor
pasaenger 1n Ogler's vehicle, was
· Ogler's safety.
Injured and reportedly treated and
Killed In tbe accident were Frank ~aBed. Wiseman was also
Cartee, :ll, SclotovUle, driver of one charaed with dl!orderly conduct Ill .
or the motorcycles, and Tonya cormeqtlon wltll thr accident, Och·
Uttle, :ll, Ashland, Ky., a passenger· lil!nbeln said.
.

was

'
..

IW~T~entwasthatKarrwouldpay25percentofthetotal

charges
filed in Jackson
County fata!ities

Common stock ... :.. ... ., ...................... ::....... . .... : ..... ...... ... ... ... ................ 125,000.00
Surplus .., .. ... ................... .: ............................ , ............................ , ....... .125.000.00
Undlv,lded proflts and capttai reserves .. ... .............. ... .. ...................... 1,722,000.00 ·
Total equity capital ..... : .................................................................... 1.972,000.00
Total liabilities, llmlted·llfe preferred stock, and
·
equity capital. ........... :....................... .... ... .......... .............. .... .... .... 23 125610oo.OO
.
'

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this statement of resources and llabUitles. We declare that It has been examined by us, and to the best
or our knowledge and belle! has been prepared In conformance with the lnstructlons and ls true and cOrrect.
'.
\
JOHN T. WOLFE
EARL CROSS - DIRECTORS
CHARLES D. YOST

approximately $3400 ·which was 'not needed to
complete the concrete portion ofthe project. No action
was taken by councU.

outlined.
CouncU's understanding of the cost-sharing arran-

High school
rodeo event
ROPIN' AND RIDIN'- Moos

and whlnneys filled the air Ibis

past weekend as

'

.,

the Ohio Wgh

Schocil Rodeo " - '· held Us llrsl
event of the year at Bob EvFanns In Rio Graade. Cowpolie8
and ~l!lrfs llun around the
region comple&amp;ed four points,
working· for the right to enter
state competition. The two-day
event Included pat and calf
rop~g. boUem left, sleer rldmg
(above) and saddlebronc riding.
The rodeo was one or several
lund-ralsers lor the 1111 Brothers
and Big Sloters of Metp-Gawa-

Mult~iple

Deposits:
In domestic of!lces ...................... ....... :...... .... ... ........... ........ ... . .... .21.049.000.00
Nonlnterest-IM!artng .... .. .... ... ............... , ...... . 4,415,000.00
Interest-bearing ........... .............. ...... ........... 16,634,000.00
Other llabllltles .. ... ::................. -.. ... ..... , ................................................ 235,000.00
Totalll!'bllltles ....................... ......... ...... , .... , ..... .. ............... .............. 21,284;000.00

.,

'

.

Alva Rite, '18,Routel,Mlddleport.,
died Sunday at the Holzer Medical

port
called
to 17
276a.m.,
Ash MiddleSt. for
On was
Sunday
at 12:
Minnie Abbott who was taken flrstto ,
Veterans Memorial and at 1:55a.m.
to Holzer Medical Center. At 6: 10
a .m., the Rutland unit was called to
Lasher Rd. for Carl Bartrum who
was dead on arrtval. Polneroy at ·
1: 36 p.m. transported Bob Stanley-to
Veterans Memorial. Racine at 4: 40
p.m. .went to Letart for Randy
Tucker to Veterans Memorial. At
4:48 p.m., Pomeroy went to Pine
Grove Rd. for Roy Brunty to
Veterans Memorial. Rutland at 7:27
p.m . was called !Q Depot St. for
Betty Taylor who was treated at the
scene. And at 8: 10 p.m., Pomeroy
went to Forest Run Rd. for Brinley
Seth taken to Veterans Memorial.

We Bring Out Your Best!

Veterans Memorial ·
Saturday Admissions--Clarence
Proffitt, Portland; Walter Haggy,
Rutland; Mary Wells, Ewlngton;
Thelma Eblin, Pomeroy.

Thelma Eblin
Memorial.

.

. :•

-l/d....;-l.
·•

1 Section, 10 Poatt

ill Multimedlo Inc. Now-

Piketon plant loss
would devastate
Southeastern ·ohio

A .Jl~sical gre eting card from Hallmark is a keepsake she
r~asure 1ong after Mother's Day. Choose from six
~.y.~!!f) 1 Alud~r;g "You Are the Sunshine of My Life" and
o, nhyl mg for You," and put a song in your
. mo th er s eart on Sunday, May 12 .
WI

,· .. :

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohici, Tuesday. May 7, 1985

, ByNANCYYOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
A cost-sharing agreement between Horace Karr,
buDder of the Pomeroy · Pizza Hut, and Pomeroy
V!Uage Councll has become the center of controversy.
Councll standing flnn on the matter says lt has
upheld Its end of the bargain.
CouncU, discussing the matter briefly at Monday
evening's regular meeting, Is In hopes that Jennifer
Sheets, vUiage solicitor, and Bernard Fultz, attorney
for Karr, can settle the ticklish situation ai; soon as
possible. .
·
According tocouncU, Karr, who has constructed
several P,j.zza Huts, had Intended to build the
restaurant wltl\mlt v!Uage lnputuntU theproblemofan
lnadequ~te sewage disposal sys'em came up. At that
time, Karr approached the village lor help and a
cost-sharing deal to lund a sewer line extension was

Happenings around·Meigs County...

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Vol.35. No.18
Copyright" 1986

Hubbard's Greenhouse
NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SE~SON

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at y enttne
e
Cost-sharing deal object of dispute

II

· fot MeigS p.rom

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More S&amp;Ls sold

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Need parental help

•

NuningHome-Week

Mike

Ial wlll be lnFriends
GravelHUlCemeteryat
Cheshire.
may caU at the
funeral home anytime on Monday
wjth tllefamUy to be present from 2
to4and 7,to9p.m . thlsevenlng. ·

- . music awardl·

~triumph

Mason Counties.

-Meigs students . file suit over .expulsions .
Three Meigs · High School students, along with thelr parents, have
nted.a.suit ln Meigs County Common.
Pleas Cwrt against the Meigs Local
Board of Education and Superintendent Daniel Morrts.
Sean Doidge of Pomeroy, David
Smlth of Langsvllle and Jeffrey
Basham of Coolville. charge that
thelr expulsion from Meigs High
lollowlng a field trtpearller this year
was unconstitutional.
A motlon for a prellmjnary
ln)unctlon from the court restrain·
lng and enjoining the defendants
from puttfne the expulsions Into
effect has ,also been rued.
A lleartni on tbe suit was
scheduled lor this afternoon In
Meigs County Cmul'lon Pleas
Court.
I
The three students were expelled
from the school by Morrts after lt
was determined that each consumed or had ln his possession
all;ohol while ln Canada on a French
Club field tl'lp this sprlna. Intormal
hearklp for each student were held
lUI Friday rnomtng and the

expulsions were e!fe&lt;;tlve as of
yesterday (Monday.)
TIW complaint nted by t.he
plaintiffs alleges that the Informal
hearings last week by tbe board did
not provldethestudentswlt.hfulland
adequate hearings, which allegedly
o,:tolated thelr rights. For this

reason, the ktudents alleged the
procedure was unconstitutional.
'I'he complaint further states that
the Meigs Local polk;y under which
notice of expulsion was given to the
students, was never published as
required by Ohio Revised Code. The
students allege the only regula tlons

Judge orders death sentence
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Alton Coleman has been ordered to die In
tbe electric chalr by a jUdge wbo says the sentence answers a
murdered woman's "cries for Justice."
Coleman, suspected of a half-doZen murders ln a Midwest crime
spree last summer, was sentenced Monday by Hamilton County
Conunon Pleas Court Judge R!chard Niehaus to die Sept. 4 for the
beating death of .Marlene Walters, 44, of suburban Norwood.
"This community cries out for Justice,'' the Judge told Coleman.
"Harry Walters (Marlene's husband) and his family cry out for
justice. And most of all, Marlene Walters cries out for justice."
Coleman, 29, of Waukegan, Ill., showed no emotion when
sentenced and made no statement afterwards.
HamUton County Prosecutor Arthur Ney said "the community
cried out.for )ustlce arid justice has been granted."

posted concerning the use and
consumpllon of alcohol is a policy ·
which only prohibits use and
consumption of alcohol on school
property.
Because the students were In
Canada anti not o.n school property '
at the time of the alleged Incident,
the students feel the board and
Morrts had no jurlsdictlon over
them at thetlmeo!the Incident. Tile
plaintiffs-also feelthatthe use of the
word "Jurisdiction" In the student ·
rules of conduct Is broad and vague
and that It renders the rules
unconstitutional.
The plaintiffs also allege that :
Morris had knowledge or other :
. students cons\lffilng or possessing ;
alcohol during t.he excursion, but
failed to take anydlsclpllnary actlon
against the other students.
In the complaint, arncJftg other
things, the plaintiffs request that •
·• execution of the order.~ of expulst~ :
be stayed pending nnal hearing
the actlon. The are also requestlfQf ·

oo:

thatreasonalble~andlllheJ; ;
rellet he awardl'd.

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Page-2-The Daily Sentinel ~.!.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuetday, May 7, 1985 ~ .;.;t

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-;:::::===::::::::=:::::===========~-=-----~-::---::-:----;::---~~:-:::--.:-· .
The Daily Sentinel
)ine~
J_am_e_sJ_.K_i~lpa_tr_ic_k t: ~

Amtrak: end of the ·

ll1 Court Street

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

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,-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

ASsistant Publl.sher/ Conlroller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

'

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LE'ii'ERS OF OPfNJON ar(l welcome . Ttwy 5hould be less lhan 300 words
long. All letters are subjeCt to editing and musl be' signed with narne, address and
tt&gt;lephone number. No unsigned lt&gt;llers will be publi shed . Letters should be In
good laste. addre!Sslng Issues. not pe-rsonalities.

WASHINGTON -The future of All forms of commerclal_tfahsporAmtrak Is not one of those cosmic tatlon are federally subsidized In
matters, In a class with Star Wars some degree. The president has
and Social Security. on which the said that the taxpayers have to
rate of 'nations and politicians may pungle up a subsidy of$35 for every
depend. Relatively speaking, the Amtrak ticket that is sold, but If the
cost of maintaining passenger rall cost of· maintaining highways,
service Is small potatoes. Even so. · airports ·and air traffic contfoners
tbe debate 'over Amtrak offers a were similarly apportlotled, the
fine example of the problems that per-passenger subsidy for Amtrak
Congress must face In cutting our • would not be out,of llne. ·
federal deficits'.
Further, Amtrak trains serve at
On April 29, an array of lmpres· least 29 communities that have no
slve witnesses appeared befort&gt; a outlets by bus or air. Amtrak trains
Senate committee. All but one of serve 19 million passengers a year,
them, Budget Director David Including 17,500 a day between
Stockman, pleaded Amtrak's Washington and New York. Chaotic ·
cause, Let me try to sum up both conditions would be created In tl)e
sides.
whole Northeast corridor If Amtrak
These are among the arguments Is abandoned.
advanCed by Amtrak's proponents:
Still further, to let Amtrak go Into

bankruptcy would be to toss Its $3
billion in rolling stock onto a serap
heap. Cessation would trigger
enormous costs, running Into !be
bllllons, to cover contracts with the
ran unions. The savings claimed by
the Office of Management and·
Budget would be more than offset
by these llabllltjes. Amtrak's ratio
of revenues to costs Is Improving.
While passenger service never can
tie wholly self-supporting, the mere
existence or passenger cars could
have great value If tbe nation again
had to move great numbers of
troops within the United States.
To these arguments Stockman
respnds: The overarching Isstie has
to do wltb · reducing the federal
deficit as a whole. That need Is so
urgent that only the most necessary

By Keith Wblecup
A'n!ENS - Meigs survived a
gallant Sheridan seventh · lnnlng
rally to 'hang on for a 7-6 sectional
tournament win hert&gt; Monday ad·
vanclng the Marauders Into Wednesday's championship game.
.Meigs, now 13·7 Oil the year, wUI
face tonight's New Lexlngton-Galll·
lJPII$ winner at . the Athens High
School field at 4: ~. Sheridan nearly pulled onl' from
deep out pt the flrt&gt; with a six-run se~n~h and had the tying run on third
base and the winning run on second
base when Dan 'Thomas recorded
the ,gatne's final out with a basesloaded strtkeo4t.
:Leading 7-0 heading Into the bot.tom of the final frame, Meigs'
pitching corps ran Into severe con·
trot problems. After the first two
Sher\dan batters accounted for one
hm wtth a triple and single, the Generals scored five more times
withOut the benefit of a hit.
TIU-ee consecutive walks fol ·
lpwed the Inning-opening hits, then
a hit batsman and another walk
Sandwiched around a fielding error
mac)! 7-5 with the bases loaded and
only one out.
. Meigs' shortstop Dave Hendricks
. s,aved the day with a nlce play on a
sho.rt-hop line drtve to nall the runner• at second for the Inning's se1
-cond out.
·
Dan Thomas, who had started
and pitched live shutout Innings .be·
fore giving way to bullpen help In
the sixth, picked both the w1J! and
the save.
Paul Dalley relieved Thomas In
the sixth arid pitched one scoreless
inning before running into control
problems. Michael Batrum came
on to walk the only two batters he
faced and Nick Bush was called on
after Batrum. Bush recorded the
· tr\hlngs' first two outs before
Thomas came on for the final out.
Meigs started bulldlng its .Jead In
the second with three runs as Scott
Gheen singled, Jay Carpenter hit a
ground-rule double to rtght center

governmental outlays should b&amp; ,I :;
continued. Amtrak is not neces- ,1 ·,
sary. " In a b11~t that must be •.,;1
pared back drastically, It ranlts :·:
near the bottom of tbe program ·~~
priority-scale."
·•-::
.
As for subsidies to other commer-, ·
clal carriers, at least bus and air ,· 1
travelers pay speclai ta)(es; rail , ,. "'
passengers pay none. 1 Amtrak's ·::
agreement with tbe ran unions - . ; :;
an agreement Imposed by Labor: "'
Secretary James Hodgson 13 y,eats,,,,_,.,
ago - provides that If Amtrak goes 1
under, every worker with at least • •
six years' seniority must receive.• j: ~
tuU yap for six years. But this 'e·:~
contingent liability Is not . til&lt;' \,;~
.government's $2 billion liability; It .,:,
Is Amtrak's $2 billion llablllty. In · ·
any event, Amtrak Is not without. :; :•
salable assets. Canada might buy ;; ..
some of the rolling stock; the· .•\ hi
company oWns such valuable prop- : ;,
ertles as Penn Statton ln • Manbat-·., ; .~
tan. New operators might be found . :, ,
for the Northeast corridor.
,~;,y

In our total transportation pic:.''_
ture, Amtrak's role Is minuscule . .'"'?
On a given day, airports In Atlanta· '11 ;·
and ChlcagQ each will board as ~-·:
many passengers as the entire ;· ·
Amtrak system boards. Only 14 of ·· _
Amtrak's 500 stations board, more I"~~
I 1l l
than 500 passengers a day. Average , ·
dally boardlngs number only 39 In ":;
Memphis, 57 In Houston, ffl In ; .. ·
Dallas, 69 In CinCinnati and 39 In ,,,;
Albuquerque. These passengers .,.,;
are carried at exorbitant cost to the 'HJ
·,
taxpayers generally. II such ex· .
penses as Interest and depreciation ·.:I
were properly Included, the per :;·;
ticket subsidy would not be $35; It ,1,;
would be closer to $60. The time has ··,; ,
come, after 12 years of losses and )9 .
bllllo~tln !~vestment, to give up. '.:::

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Jack Anderson &amp; Dale Van Atta :

Misused funds

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Majors

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W Lrd, OB

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Today in history

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Dk'WJ

~ou11ton

1~1

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ll13 ;4."J84
10 1l .4.1'1 4 1S
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fjrlt'lnnall

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that bounced over the fence, and
Donnie Becker singled both home.
Becker scoi-ed on Hendrick's
groundout.
Gheen and Becker played long
ball In the Meigs third as both
cleared the leftlleld fence. Gheen's
shot was a no-doubter In any park,
landing out of sight over trees
beyond the fence. ·
Gheen again started a Meigs
rally In the fifth with a walk and
Carpenter lined out his second
double down the leftfleld line.,
moving Gheen to third. Mike
Chancey then drove both home
with a two-out single up the mid·
die that gave Meigs a seemingly
comfortable 7-0 lead. "
·Thomas walked only one and
fanned six In his five and a third
Innings, allowing but four hits.
Dalley allowed two hils, walked
three and fanned none In one Inning plus, Batrum walked the
two batte'l's he faced, and Bush
picked up one strikeout, walked
two and hit a batter In two-thirds
of an Inning.
Sbertdan:s Craig Love went
the distance, fanning nine and
walking three. The Generals,.
who whipped New Lexington 10-2
In their only meeting this year,
drops to 8-10 on the year.
"It was probably a mistake
taking Dan (Thomas) out, but we
had four pitchers who· have proven .themselves all year and we
thought tpey could handle t~e
job," said Meigs coach Tim
Saunders after the nallbller.
Meigs returns to TVC action this
eveAing when l.t hosts Mlllet: After
Wednesday's sectional champion·
ship, the Marauders go to Wellston
on Friday. The Wdlston make-up
game will be restarted from the
beginning after Wellston bad led 30 last week hefor,e rain forced postponement.

:n~

,f111

. tTu!W'Il 1).21, 1::1\ p.m.
San Dk.,o 10111''C'(!ky ().2 1 mt ~ - Lwl!i
!F'or!IC.'h2·11 . 1::6 p.m.
L.(ll A.n~b ! BrMnan 1·11 at Ctlicato
1Ruthvm fl.lr. 2::1)p.m.
Hw~on !Knc'PPt'r Z.01 u1 Montl'l"ill
t Palmrl' :.! ·'ll. 7::1' p.m .
A!ielllll 1Bft1101ilaft l~lt at f't¥o' YOI'It
tDarllnJi: 1-11. 7::li p.m.
C'lnclnnaU tSOto Ut at Phlladf.•lplja
1Gr&lt;N 2·21 . 7: :1!\ p.m .
" .. . _ . . , .. Giml'M

at Montt't'IL l\ldll

"Atlanta at Nl'Vt' York. ftlp;ht
C'lndnnall' lit PhUJJCkolphhl. niJI:hl

flol!llmorl'

4 .

D:'1 1'UII

who have never answered for their to what It really Is?"
"If you're asking the President to
economic crimes. Some day they
will have to face a higher judge than pardon them for what they !lave
!be President of the United States." written about Bltburg, the answer
I asked; "Do you think It's too , Is no. Their stories are too fresh In
soon for the Reagan administration this administration's mind: Mr.
to bury the hatches with those Reagan still believes jn 'collective
people In the media who have blown gullt' where the journalists of this
the Nazi thing way out of proportion country are concerned."

~lOft

NPol' Ylllk

15 fl.tfi'lL'; 10 .1111 I
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1012 .m -1%
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tCim1CfiK :Wt. 7;:1; p.m.
Ollld!Wid !Sullen 'l&lt;lt II Tora~lo 1Sfiftb

1·.11. 7:.1'1 p.m.

Berry's World

Orfmlt tMorrtl J.lt at Tt-xa~ cNok&lt;tl2-11. -

1':1'1 p.m.

OillllmOI'(I 1Dixon 2.(11 al Kan•u Clry
tS&amp;bc-rQm 1·:.!1, R:':f) p.m. .
Nr""' Y&lt;:d t tWhi!Mm h11 at Mlnnr;t0f1 . ·

!VIola ~·2\,14: .1'1 p.m.
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Oakland 01 Toru110. ftlahl
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23 19 6 :li .:nti
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DaW'!Oft. MU, MarshalL I..A and !\lrawtrn')' ,
NY 6; ~ pla~ titd with~ .
AmMic'arl i..l«W' - Davia. oak 9;
Pm;)coy and 'J'homU. Sfa and RkT. EO 7;
NlX pla~'(ll'fllil'd. wlth&amp;

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t..Smlth. Stl . U: SafJNS!'I, PbU and Dfol~ .

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Prtlla, Cal 13;
Collil'll. O&amp;k l2: MOM"IJY, Tor 8; Sht&gt;ridlln.
KC 7: Qrt1o, Tar fi.
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Natklnal I~ - Mahin'. AU 7.0;
Hawldruc. SD !\-0: Stnltt\ Mtl -1.0: Andujar.
• Stl .. F:dtenM·~· and 'Ttult. 0\1 ;lfld Goodrn.
fl.i""Y H : Solo,~ 6-2.
Ammcan l#~ - Alf:?Widt'r. Tor M:
BoMk'ktr. Bait 4-1: La•ttfl, ~a . Nifokro. '
1'1'\' , PNJ'!o', OA and VIola. Mlnn 4·2. 1
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NK'h trorn ball pta)«&lt;l · .

NaHonal ~ - v~a. I.A 0.1'7:
Brow'nllq(. CW. 1.2§;
NY U7:
K.J'UIIow. ~ 1.!11: I..IIPo&amp;nt, SF l.IB.

r.ooctm.

By MIKE BARNES
UPI Sports Writer
With St. Louts rookie VInce
Colemancreatlngsuchbavoconthe
basepaths these days, theopposltlon
mustbPgladtotaceWtllleMcGeebecause he's so slow.
Ofcourse,McGeerematnsonethe
game·~ swiftest runners, but even
he Is no match for Coleman, who
swiped two more bases Monday
night to Increase his major leagueJeadlngtotal to 19. McGee, however,
remains a dangl'rous threat who
cannot be lgoored:
The St. Louis center fielder went
4-for-4, stole two bases and scored
twiCe Monday night to spark the
CardinalS to a 5-2 victory over the
San Diego Padres. McGeehashltln
sevenofthelastelghtgameswlthsix
stolen bases and six runs scored.
Sf. Louis, which stole five bases In
the game, combined speed and
power In the sixth Inning .against
.ErlcShow,3-2, toscorefo)lrtunsaml
Put away the game. · · · ·
·coterrtanslni!led, stolesecondand.
third and scored on Andy Van

B-2
SIZES AVAILABLE

YOUR COST

16.30
16.30
19.50

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20.50
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21.
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18.30
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. PLUS RECAPPABLE
TRADE
·

P.OMERQJ
·HOME &amp; AUTO
·

606 E•. MAIN

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, ttiJ~209. 4
.. ·.·

· ~ POMEIOY ,

.-:·,.

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y~ ~e,;.: .r;:==========~~=·· =. ==~~~======~=~~=~~~~=;
DEATH AND THE FAMILY

CHICAGO (UP!)- The Chicago
Bears wUI sign former Ohio State
quarterback Mike Tomczak to a
free-agent contract, Tomczak's
agentsays.
.
Peter Johnson said Tomczak
agreed to a tbree-yearcontractover
the weekend.
Tomczak played high school
foOtball at Thornton Fractional
High School In Cahlmet City, a south
Chicago suburb.
·
The Bears' spt;ng roster Includes
three other quarterbacks - Jim
McMahon, Steve Fuller and.Rusty
useh.
Tomczak,whobrokehlsleglnl984
and missed an entire season,
completed 121 of 'JfJ7 passes for 1,662
yards last fall for the Buckeyes. He
was not selected ln the recmt NFL
collegedraft.
·

P' .L BLOWER

· fiJI~~- C(!Dald~PA~il&lt;
.

11 is obvious that uief over the death of a loved one affects
the individual dnply. But whit does this crief and the person's death do to his family as a whole?
The loss of a meMber lea..s the family in transition. The con·
sequences are many: economic (loss of a wace-eamer, for ex·
ample), social (a child may lose a playmate). practical (an
extra room in the house).
also crief shows itself in difftrtnl ways in each of us. and
this 'may cause stress in the family. Amother may snap at her
children: a youn,ster may become Withdrawn at the donner table. Thm reactions are all completely normal .
It is possible that these.extra stresses can cause sicnificant
proble 11s within the f11111y. When thiS os the case, counsehnc
often is advisable. Your cleruman or a mental health profess ina! can assist with this.
Usually thoup the loss of a loved 0111 is a burden shared ~
the family aswtllu by the individual: theairelfamily_members tx&lt;ltrience brines them tocether stroncer as a family than
ever befort.
·
We invite your comment~ and 'questions, which will be an·
swertd in private or pubhcly, throu&amp;h thiS column.

§;_.a~ .ifome
(614) 192-5141
MIDDLlPORT, · OHIO

'..

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01. 42: Ryan, Hou .11. •
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Morril,l)clt lf.; C\Emml, &amp;.l5: Houah. TC'X .
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. RHrdoa, Mtl 7: Smtih. Chi! 6: CID'larla,
Pin 5.: DtPino. 1bl and SuHtT, AU -1.

Amr1'k'M l~ - • HIM't'll, ~ and
RllllCtfi,NY7: CAudiii. Tor. MOOI""t".Calund . , .
Wilddl!U. C'ko 5.

Horse's health factor
in race deter1ninati.o n
On Monday he shipped Spend a
Buck trom Louisville - the site ol
lasi Saturday's Kenlilcky Il!!rhYto Garden State.
.
Aa winner ~the Cherry HW Mile,
Garden State Stakes and tile.
Kentucky Derby, Spend a BuCk Is.
ellglllle lor a $2 mlllloll bonus If be
wins the $600.1ro..Jerlef Derby. .
·crown.
Vlctoriell ln the PreaJmeiS and .
· DtazexpectstodecldebyWednes.June
8 Betrnont Stakel would
day If he will enter Spend a Buck In
complete
thoi'OIIIhlrid racing's .
the May 'r1 J:ersey Derby at Garden
:I'J1ple
crown,
boweYe1'1.and prove
State Park In Cherry HW, N.J. crthe
far niore Nctattve.
May 18 Preaknell.

LOtJISVJi.LE, Ky. (UP!) Spend a Buck's owner DenniS Dl82 ·
Monday said the horse's health will ·
be tiiP main factor In whether the ·
KentuCkY Derby winner trlel for a .
potential $2.6 mllllon payday In the
Jersey Derby or for a chanc:e at .
wlnnll1&amp; the presugloua Triple

r

=

Cards' speed whips P......-a_d_r_e_s--==~===c=.;,=.··=
..

Tomczak will ink
contract with Bears

M 861671.314

National U&gt;MUl' -

.u ......,.....

time.'.' San DJego
manager Dick
It for
Wllllams said. "They're a speedy

Cln 17.
Atnm;:an ~ . - DaYII. oat .and
Rlpl&amp;m. Ball %1: Purkt'n. Mlnn 20; Bradlc~·
al'ld'T'hOmll. Sfa and ft.k\o, fbi 19.

M,• LPtt.GB

Toroolo

~ 93 8 ;II .:rll

..._

National l#a«IK' - MW'Ph.\'. All . ;\2;
Wll~m , PtiU 1B: C.Da\"U, !'IF and Mort'lan4,
C'hJ lfl; BIUD. Mtl, Clark. ~I. and Ela~~· .

~,~_.

.

HARD SWING - Chris Kennedy takes a hard cut durlnJS o.cUon !rom
Monday night's Clas8 AA Sectlnal Tournament acUon al Athens. Meigs
held on lo edge Sheridan, 7-6.

· ro~.~~eag~

11 71 I&lt; 'iT~

Purkll , Mill!
('(qK&gt;r. Mil

._

St. l.wls 111 lm ;\~. nlaht
Pltl~hllrJt:h at sun DlrRo. ~~
fhlea$%0 111 San FI'&amp;IK'l'K'O. n!Jlhl

"""'

~~
-

. . . , .. pes.

~n Frailcl!iCO tGo41 M1 ot "Pinsburab

Anlt'C'k:all

__

ColfoM. !I&lt;L
Pllrtw.·. C'tn
lle"'-111\. Mil
Mortlnd. "'

F'nlD&lt;'O. ("lo.•

(t\I~I!'DTI

Hw:.t~

·
·-'-

.·.c::

~·
l.oM An~J'k'!&gt;
~ Chk'JRO" 110 IMIIIW!I
San fo'rancisro 7, Pln!lbw'Rh ~
St. Loulll !'!.san Dk1IO 2

I

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs ,Eagles bad scored one In the
Marauderettes advanced to se- fourth and two more In the fifth to
cond round action In sectional narrow the Me igs Lead to 4·3.
B11Miop:
tournament play with a 13-3 wtn
000 120 J 3 3
Belpre
over Belpre here Monday, ·giving , Mel ~s
201mxJJI2
Wolf ~ (LPI
the Meigs ' lasses their 17th win In
H a tfl~ ld CWPJ
18 outings this year.
Coach J on Arnott's crew take . l . - - on South Point tonight · at Me igs
at 4 P.M. with thewtnnergaJnlng
the right for Thursday' s sei!:
tiona! championship. By turning
down tbe first round bye, the
number one sPeded Marauder ·
ettes wll play all of their sectional gemes at home. ·
Marta Musser carried the biggest stlckin Meigs' 12-hit attack
with a triple and two singles. Jodi .
Harrison continued red ·hot hit-.
ling ·with three singles while
Tammy Wright and Carol Smith ·
We'd like to 11M 1he opporeach added two singles. Jodi Mil-..
tunity to shoW you what we
ler and Jennl Couch each conmean ... with qua1ty protec, trlbuted a single.
tion and seiVk:e. Cal...-::~
Barb Hatfield hurled the distoday.
tance for Meigs. The Junior
mound ace struck out six, walked
only two, and gave up but three
hits. Belpre's Wolfe also went the
route and fanned four, walked 12,
214 EAST MAIN .
and allowed 12 hits.
POMROY
Meigs broke open a tight 4-3
game with four runs In the fifth
992-6617
and put the Icing on the cake with
. , , . ..... Auto
five more In the sixth. The Lady

club. Coleman Is anoutstandlngkld.
He's exciting, very exciting.
"He gets on, and our pitcher
worries about him, ~nd he steals a
couple bases. It's still 2-1, btit they
get four extra-baSI' hits. Coleman
setlt up."
DannyCox,2·1,wentelghtlnnlngs
for the triumph before needing
ninth-tnnln!t'belp from RickY Hor·
ton and Jeff Lahti, who earned his
second save.
..
By laal•p:
San
Diego
took
a
1-0
leal)
In the
Mel~s .... ....... ...... .. .......... . 032 020 0 7 8 I
Sherlan ......... .................. ooo 000 6 6 6 I
second when catcher Darrell Porter
Thomas (WPI, Dalley (6). Bartrum 17) ,
dropped Coleman's perfect throw
· Bush (7),'11tomaa 1'n .. and Gh~n . Loveo
from left field for an error, allowing
. (LP) and Collins.
carmela Martinez to score. The
Padres tied the game 2-0 In the third
on Kevin McReynolds' homer.
Elsewhere, Los Angeles edged
Chicago 5-4 1n 10 Innings, and San
Francisco defeated Plttsburgh7·.5.
Sihimon' ., Kansllt ('II)•, "'P1
~· von: at Mlnnrlola. nlldl1
Dodgers 5, Cubs t
Seattle at MUwauket', nlp;hl
At Chicago, Candy Maldonado
slngl~ and scored the tie-breaking
Leaders ·
11m to tgnltl' a tWO:~ lOth .Inning
that carried the 'l)()dgers. Maldo-''
..
·
18ai!OO on 3 l {.b.te ~ncrs x no. d
nado s\rigled ott Ray Fontenot, IH.
~t&gt;adliC'$11 has .plaYf'dl . ·
went to third on Ken Landreaux's
lllhrhpt.t.
Mw-phy. All
23 87 22 .n .319 ·
Sly~e'strtpli!.TommyHerrdoubled single and scored when shortstop ·
Stl
:M 88 16 l2 .364
II
, home Van Slyke til,tie the 5&lt;:0!1' 2-2, ShaWOJI Dunston hooted Pedro
~
1.! 99 ~~ l5 - ~
· and McGee' doubled home Herr and, Guerrt&gt;ro's sharp grou_nder. !&lt;en
..::Jb')'t'P.' PI!II .
.
~ J8 ~ -XI .341
. . . ~t. Wallctl . Mtl. ~:-- ,.. _
:M ten :m.1'Ml
scorl'dnn'l'erryPendleton~s·double · Howeli,2:l. wasthewi¥er.tnrellef.
: l'\hPJ. 1'1111 • , .
" •11110 "' ,ni, .

11 1:\ ..ri8 · 2
fl 1!\ .:J'l!\ "

~n F'ranM.'Il'O

Reconciliation ______:..-=--------,-Ar_t_B_uc_hwa_td

Ph.

: 14" tl .Oi ·~-=141 .636-

!'l:rw V01·k
Mon!rtoal
SI.L.w!A
PfUIIMk&gt;lphla .
!'11fKb.iJ",t1

'••'

President to reconcile with the
Amertcan farmers who went bank·
rupt due to bad rrianagennent."
"By reconclllng with the farmers
at this time the President would be
sending the wrong signal to the
agricultural community. The Germans may have made some
mistakes In World Y{ar II, but you
could never accuse them; of looking
for a balloutfrom Washlngton wlten
they C&lt;iuldn't sell their crops."
"I don't Imagine tllat the President would be willing to make a
gesture of reconcUiatton toward the
congressmen who. voted down aid
for the contras fighting in
Nicaragua."
"How can you compare what the
people burled In the Blgburg
cemetery did to left-wing §pltetul
legislators who e&gt;~termlnilted Mr.
Reagan's foreign policy In Central
America?"
"My ·mistake. 'stnce this is
National Reconciliation Week ' I
thought the President might want
to forgive those who voted against
him on Nicaragua, just so he could
get his budget package thro.ugh."
"Nicaragua Is a moral Issue, and
Mr. Reagan wUI never compromise
on a moral Issue lor political gain.
That was the message of Bltburg."
"Is there any posslbUity the
President would want to make
peace with the big spen!)ers In the
Senate who for the past 40 years
have drtyen this country Into debt
with their wlld socialist schemes?"
"It's much too early to offer an
Olive br&amp;'nch to litem. Although
everyone who fought on the German side In World War II Is no
longer alive, there are many big
spenders walking around scot'frt&gt;e

Marauderettes post
13·3 sectional victory _

Scoreboard ...

••
I

dollar tax dodge' permitted by the
"There is no assurance (the) Revenue Service."
1
Maritime Administration, accord- deferred taxes will ever be col'
The tax-deferral system was · (
lng to the IG. In profitable years, lected,'' Ihe IG report states, descrtbed by the IG report as unfair
'
the shipping companies woQ.ld a&lt;ll!lng: "While such :ta.x deferral-. to "taxpayers In general Who must · , :
dump lll9ney Into the /:9hstrucllon ·. avo[danee · ~.neflts make this pro- mal!£' up._for the addlrtonallnterest
:
fund to cut (laWn on ·their t11xes: In gram ·very· popul~r with tbe costs'and the unpatd ·taxes.';
•
:
the lean years, little or no deposits companies Involved, the benefits .. · The IG ·cited as an example of
:
were made because "they could not helng re;elved are far greater tha~ unauthorized ships })u!lt with the
~
resUlt ln a tax savings'."
'
those Intended."
,
fund 55 vessels· costJng $97 million
t
By rtghts, ~Y shotlld have paid - Maritime officials . vehemently ror use In oil Sl'rvlce in Africa,
•
tbe deferred taxe5 tl-they used the ', dlspuje !be IG's contention, Insist:".· MexiCo, .South ~rl!l~ .and tbe , :
m~ fgr 'upqu;illfieii.Ships-: But In
lng ihat the· shlpplrig companies Middle· East by Houstmf Natural•: ! .
ptactlce,' Maritime approved the eventually do pay· back · the tax ·Gas Corp; of Ta&gt;ias: Tidewater Inc . . · : · ·
questionable withdrawals, the IG money. But for various reasons of Louisiana and Nlcor Inc. of
:
found.
changes In tax laws or collapse of illinois. also used the fund Ia bulld
~
More than $173mllllon In withdra- shipping companies- the agency's ships for operations tbat were not
wals was found by the IG to have statement "that 'deferred taxes are qualllled, according to the IG. The
been used to build shlpa not recouped with no loss to the Maritime Administration approved
authorized by the law. "Up to $79.9 government' Is just not correct," all the withdrawals.
million ln government revenue was the IG stated.
"Fund benefits were just not
lost as IJ!Ipald deferred taxes on the
The evolution of the construction Intended to a ld In the acquisition of
withdrawals," according to tbe IG fund Into a tax shelter - with such supply vessels," the ld wrote.
I
report, which was obtained bY our . Maritime's blessing - was made
Footnote: Spokesman for Tide·
associates . CorkY Johnson and clear In one example cited by tbe water Inc. and Houston Natural
Donald Goldberg. And assuming a IG: A company that had never Gas Corp. · had no comment. A
•
10 peroent cost of borrowing to made a deposit to the fund suddenly Nlcor spokesman said his f\rm had
•
•
make up this lost tax revenue, "the dumped In $10.4 million with the adhered to Marttlme Admlnlstra·
U.S. Treasury's annual financing agency's approval. Tills enabled lion regulations. A Maritime spa- - •
•
cost Increased by up to $7.9 the company "to avoid additional kesman did not respond to our
million," the IG pointed out.
taxes assessed by the Internal request for comment.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

May 7, 1985

Meigs advances
·with ·7 -6 victory·

__

Firms exploit
tax breaks

Between 1981 and 1983. the General Electric Co. recorded more than
$6,5 billion In profits- but!lldn't pay a penny In federal Income tax. Indeed,
GE claimed tax refunds totaling $283 m!lllon.
During the same three-year period, the Boeing Co. earned more than
$1.5 billion In profits but Incurred no Income tax liablllly. Instead, Boeing
rt&gt;eelved $267 million worth of net tax benefits from the federal
government.
More than 60 other major corporations enjoyed that same privileged
status. All earnest substantial profits during 1981-83 but paid no federal
Income taxes - and the vast majority of those firms received refunds or .
credits.
The list Includes Dpw Chemical, Tenneco, Eeyerhaeuser, DuPont,
Martin Marjetta, General Dynamics, Union Carbide, RCA, Celanese,
Northrup, Greyhound, Burlington Northern, An]er:lcan Cyanamid: Xerox,
Grumman and Lockheed:· ..-·
Each 'of those firms paid ·less Income tax than tbe average family,
which earns bout $25,000 annually and must rt&gt;mlt approximately $2,500
each. year to the Internal Revenue Service.
'
·
The explanation for much of that Inequity lies in President Reagan's
um package of tax code revisions which relied heavily upon corporate tax
lnCI'ntlves, ostensibly to encourage Investment, growth and capital
formation.
'
One provision authorized ,"sale harbor leasing," which allowed
.corporations not only to reap tax benefils but also to sell them to other
companies. That procedure was so heavily abused that Congress revoked
WASHINGTON- Shipping comit in 1982.
StU! operative, however, are the Accelerated Cost Recovery System panies have avoided millions of
and Investment Tax Credit, which provide unjustifiably generous tax dollars In federal taxes and the
deductions and credits · to offset the c;oSt of bulldjngs, · ma~t\Jnery, Maritime Administration . may
~ulpment and otliei' physlcalllssets. A' bulding with a useful life Of more "' have vJoleted the law to let them do 1
It, accOrding to the Tr~n8portatlon
than .JI years, for example; can e tully depreciated in c;&gt;nly 15 years.,. ·
Corporations are relying upon ACRs and ITC to avoid the payment ·af Department's inspectm~ general.
The vehicle for these unintended
$65 billion In federal taxes this year,and that figure wUl soar to'$122 billion
. oy:)9oo, according to Citizens for Tax JustiCI', a Washington-based Jlllbllc . tax breaks Is the &lt;;apltal COnstrue·
tlon fund Program, created In 1911
Interest group. ,. .
· .
·
• ~. . - ·
·
·. ·:· A.C~ an.d rrc favor larli!!. long~tabllsbed corJl9ratlpns over ~mali, to. 1\elp U.S. -shiP.plng firms falSe .
s~rgtn11 bi!SinE!i&amp;es, which are the i::O~ntty's'teadlng source oi newJabs. · · mQney to expand their merchall\
, In addition, ACRS and rrc have fa~ miserably tc;&gt; perform the task ileets: The cOmpanies could defer
"supPly side" economists claimed they wiiuld do best - encourage Income tax on deposits they made
business Investment In plant and equipment, thus stimulating eoonomic to·the fund, then draw against the
money when they deckled to build
growth.
For the first time since World War II, business Investment In physical more ships.
The program was designed to
assets declined for three consecutive years during tbe 1981-83 pertod encourage the companies to com·
after passage of the Reagan tax bill larded with corporate tax IncentiveS.
A typical example Involves W. R. Grace &amp; Co., the country's leading pete In International trade routes
corporate promoter of federal fiscalrt&gt;SponslbUity. Its board chairman, J. with other countries' merchant
Peter Grace, headed a presidential commission which advocated economy fleets. And the law Is explicit In
In ·government and the firm has sponsored an extensive advertising allowing withdrawals from the fund
only for building ships that will
campaign stressing tbe need to reduce tbe federal deficit.
carry
goods to and from the United
But the company hasn't contributed Its fair share. In 1981·83, W.R.
States.
But the IG found that
Grace &amp; Co. made more than $684 million In profits yet paid no federal
·tncome tax whatever. during the same pertod, It drastically reduced new Marttime had allowed the compan·
les to use the fund for ships that
Investment.
were engaged In unqualified
"The corporate Income taxes constituted 25 percent of all federal
operations.
revenues - but by 1983, that contribution had dropped 'o 6.2 peJ&gt;ent.
The result was a multi-millionDuring the same period. the tax burden Imposed on Individuals Increased
substantially.
The Treasury Dj!partment's hew tax reform package would eliminate ·
some cit the most outrageous corporate loopholes (Including ACRS and
ITCl but even more drastic action Is needed to restore equity In the federal
tax system.
.Since this l.s a period of reconcllla·
tlon and the President Is In . a
forgiving mood, I called one of his
I'M ooRR'f, Mi~~ QUiMBY. ~oFTW~Re De~IGN; close
associates and asked him,
CoM~ufeR PI«XSRaMMii'IG, WoRD PRoCe~§iN6
"Now that President Reagan has
forgiven theGermansforwhatthey
aND COMMUNicaTioN~ exPeRTi~ aRe NO
did In World War II, do you think he
might forgive the American air
LONGeR eNOUGH. We ~OW ReQUiRe a
Q iN
traffic controllers 'who went out on
QUaNTuM MOCHat4iCS FoR ouR ~CReTaRie~. strtke?"
"The President would never go
that far. You have to reptember
what tile air controllers did. When
they walked out on their jobs they
committed an atroCity against
every man, woman and child In the
United States."
"I know It was a despicable thing
to do," I said. "But I thought after
Bltburg, It would be the perfect
time for the President to heal the
\fOUnds here at home."
"The President Is the first person
lo let bygones be bygones, but to my
knowledge he has never forgiven
anyone wbo has gone out on an
unauthorized strike."
,
"Okay. Forget the air controllers.
Do you think In his present mood of
reconciliation Mr. Reagan might
forgive the mother In Chicago who
chiseled on her welfare?"
f'
"How could he forgive herT1
"Maybe tile President could fly to
Chicago and lay a wreath In front ol
the liquor store where he claims she
Today Is Tuesday, May 7, the l27th day of 1985 with 238 to follow.
bought a bottle of vodka 1VIth her
The moon Is approaching its last quarter.
food stamps."
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
''Too many people In this country
The evmlng star Is Mars.
have auffered because of that
'ThoSe born on this date are under the.slgn o!Taurus. They Include poet
welfare mother In Chicago. It's one
RobPrt Browning In 1812; composer Johannes Brahms In 1833;
thing to forgive people you fought
poet-playwrtght Archibald MacLelsh In 1892; Yugoslavian leader Marshal
against durtng a war- it's another
nto 1n 1892; actor Gary Cooper In 1901; Edwin Land, ~tor of the
to turn the other cheek to those who
Polaroid Instant camera, In 191!1 (age 76), and actor Darren McGavin In
cheat on their food stamps."
1922 (age 63).
·
"I guess' there Is no way for the

Tua~liay,

•

.

Dettll"

�Tuesday, May 7, 1985

The Daily Sentjnel

By The Bend

Paga-4

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, meets
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the temple.
Refreshments.

Glaze, Arnold to wed Sattirday

Beat of the bend

Mrs. Belva G laze Is announcing
the engagement and a pproaching
marriage of her daughter, Crystal,
to Pairtck Arnold, son of' Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Arnold of Syracuse. The
brfde.elect is.the daughter of the late
RayGiaze. .
The open-chureh wedding will be
6:30p.m. Saturday at the Pomeroy
Church of Chiist. A reception will
foUow In the chureh social room.

Nursing Home Week
By BOB HOEFuCII

and all of the accompanying
activities. The Meigs auditorium Is
The PanefOY Health Care Center huge ~d derorallng It so exten·
will roll outlts red
slvely IS a difficult job.
carpet of hosplIn addition, Jeanne organizes a
tallty for a week
(lllrent group to stage other actlvtbeglnntng Moth·
ties for the junlOrs and seniors In ·an
er's Day 1n ob5er· attempt to hold a safe prom
vailce of National
observance.
Nursing Home
Incidentally, May Young advises
Week..,
that although the parent support Is
The publiC Is Invited to attend aU present, there are stlll needs. The
of the special events being held group would appreciate food, your
during the week. On Sunday !here time, monetary conttibutions and
wtll he entertainment from 2 to 4 the loan of card tahles fol'Saturday
p.m . and refreshments served. night's event. If you can help In any
Women residents will receive a
way do contact Mrs. Young at
carnation.
992-7314; Barbara Fry at 992-5929,
On Monday, Tuesday and Wed- or Susie Soulsby, 992-2377.
nesday between 2 and 4 aU .three
-days - there will be entertainment
Gina N. Pellegrino and Kerrl A.
with a varied menu of refresh- Beegle, students of Don Salmons at
ments. On Thursday beginning at Southern High School, took first and
noon and running unt114 there will second place honors, respectively,
be an open house lll!d picnic. There for Individual performance In the
wtll be lots of food and Kernnit lOth annual Ohio History Day
Walton, PomefOY businessman.
Dlstnct 11 competition at Ohio
will speak from 1: 30 to 2 p.m. There University in Athens. ·
will be entertainment from 2 to .4
The top winner In each category
p.m . - and there will be a balloon of the contest wtll go to the Ohio
Utt oil and a clown will be on hand. contest In Cleveland on May ll.
Friday will wrap up the observance Dlstrictlllncludes 13 Southeastern
- again with entertainment from 2 Ohio Counties and more than 400
to 4 p.m . and a variety of students and 50 teachers frol)'l 32
refreshments.
schools were on hand for this year's
The center staff will welcome event ·
your visit.
·SWIInel S&amp;atl Wrl&amp;er

Anyone know the whereabouts of
Rosetta (Etta Mae Rosel Collins
Richardson Hill. The Information Is
needed for genealogical researeh
and If you have the Information
please Write 30510 Chieftain Drive,
Logan, Ohio 43138.
·

Neil Proudfoot will perform the
cer emony.
MlssGlazegraduatedfromMelgs
High School and the Holzer School of
Nursing. She Is employed at St.
Joseph's Hospital In ParkersbUrg.
Ainold Is a graduate of Southern
High School and Parkersburg
Community College. He resides in
Belpre and workS for Strock Bald~ ,
Co.

RUTLAND - RullanJl VIllage
Cou ncil meet s Tuesday, 7: ;);)p.m . at
the civic center.
RUTLAND-Amother-daughter
banquet wUI be held at 6 p.m .
Tuesday at the Rutland United'
Me thodist Church. ·Mothers and
daughters of tho? Rutland Charge
are Invited . Thel'e will be a potluck
dinner with beverages, rolls a nd
table servlce.to he furnished.

Meeting held by D of A
New officers were elected and
several contributions made at the
recent meeting of the. Distlct
Deputies and District Past Councilors Club of the Daughters of
America, held rec~ntly at the
University Inn, Athens.
Officers named were Esther
Smith, president; Erma Cleland,
vice president ; Beulah Moyers,
treasurer, and Margaret .:1'\!ttle,
secretary. Contributions of $25each
were made to the Nationa l Horne at
Tiffin, and to the Dlsdtlct Deputy's
project. A jlicnlc to be held at the
Belpre Park was set for Sept. 8 at
1:30 p .m ., and the Christmas
meeting and party at Western
Slzzlln Steak House. Athens. Dec. 7,
1:30p.m .
Betty Roush had the blessing for
the 1.2; 30 dinner which preceded the
meeting. Mrs. Smith read Psalmlll
and the Lord's Prayer was given In
unison. _Reported Ill we!'\' Vera
Householder, Perry Council, who
remains hospitalized. Sym(lllthy
was extended to Mary Moose, Perry
Council, on the death of her brother,
and the hospitalization of her

Brad Allen Morrison

Payne birthday Morrison birth
Jim and Vikl Payne, Bidwell,
entertained recently with a parly In
observance of the first birthday of
their daughter, EmU I. A rainbow
theme was carried out In the
decorations, and a buffet dlnnerwas
served. Whlle the guests enjoyed
cake, ·lee cream and punch, Emily
was served her own special cake
baked by her father.
Gifts and balloons were given to
each of the children. Attendlngwere
Emily's grandmother, Marcella
Chapman, Danny, Linda and Daniel
Young, Joe, Linda and Christophllr
Chapman, Rhonda Haddox and
Scott Polcyn, Middleport; Lillian
Burt, Brent, Clithy, Jason and
Jessica Chapman, Pomeroy; Diane
McQuaid, Matthew McGulr~.
Nancy Patterson, and Libby Casey,
Gallipolis.
The honored guest received · a
birthday card · from her greatgrandmother, Margaret Witt, Mon·
mouth, Ill. Grace Welch send a gift.

Mr. and Mr. Nelson Morrison, the 1
former Vicki Shaefer, Pomeroy, are
announcing the birth of their first
child, 'Brad Allen, April 26 at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital. The Infant
weighed eight pOunds, eight ounces,
and was 22 Inches long.
Maternal grand(lllrents are Mr.
and Mrs. Coy Nitz, Middleport.
Paternal grandparents are Mae
Morrison , and Gene Morrison,
Middleport. Mr. and ' Mrs. Russell
Nltz, Pomeroy, are the mate rhal
great-grandparents and Mrs. DorothyThornton, New Haven, W.Va.,
the paternal great-~:randmoth!~r.

Scouts visit

&amp;outs attend camporee

Community calendar I happenings

Tuesday. May 7, 1986

'

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

- -WEDNESDAY

Citizens Center, Mult.:rry Height~.
PomefOY. All residents with life
threatening Illnesses and their
families are Invited.
. MJDDELPORT ~ The Laurel
Cliff Better Health Club meets 7:;);)
p.m. ThurSday at the home of Mrs.
Beulah Oehler, Middleport .

FRIDAY
ROYALOAK - Belles andBea\15
Western Square Dance Club wtll
sponsor an open dance Friday at the
~yal . Oak Park Recreatlona I
Bulldjng from 8 to 11 a.m. Caller for
the evenlngwUI be Homer Magneto!
Minford ; aU . Western square
dancers are Invited.

SYRACUSE- Syracuse Presby·
terliln Chureh Is having Its annual
mothe r-daughter banquet Wednes·
day, 6 p.m., at the church annex. A
potluck dinner will he servro with
meat furnished by the church.

husband.
Attending were Esther Smith,
Ethel Orr, Belly Roush, Pauline
Rodenour, Cora Beegle, Shirley
Beegle, J ean Frederick, Zelda
Weber, Marcia Keller, Dorothy
RUehle, Erma Cleland, Margaret
TuNie, Thelma White, Mary ~­
Holter, Chester Counci1323; Beulali
Moyers, Golden Gleam, 254, Marietta; and Eileen Clark and Janice
Lawson, Guiding Star Council 12!1,
Syracuse. .

SATURDAY
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. -The Ne-w
Have n Volunteer Ftre Department
Auxlllary wUI hold a !Xlbllc chicken
barbecue Saturday at the fire
station starling at 11 a .m . Besides
chicken, hot dogs, slaw. beans,
beverages and pies will be served.

MIDDLEPORT - Mlddlepori
Amateur Gardeners meet 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the home of Jean
Moore. The Rev . William Middles·
warth will s how slides.

POMEROY - There will be a
gospel sing Saturday evening at 7: 30
p.m. at the United Faith Church,
Route 7 By-(lllss, Pomerqy. Fea·
tured singers will be the Old Tlmen
Quariet and the Long Bottom Trio.
Other singers and the public are
Invited to attend the gospel sing.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
·Sorority, wtll meet Thursday at7:30
p.m . In the Riverboat Room of the
Diamond Savings and Loan · c'o.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lf~HO)
A DI'Vhdon of ~u,IUmedla, Inc.
Published eve~· Y aft~rnoon . Mond~y
· throu~h Fr iday, 111 Cou rt St., Po·
mt&gt;I'OY OhiO, b y the Ohio Vulley Pub·
llsh.\ nf!' Cmtlp8n y/Mu!tlmed la. l"c.,

Ylll'dsale
.
MINERSVll.LE - A yard sale
will he held by the women of the
Minersville United Methodist
Church at the Nathan Roush
residence In Syracuse, Thursday
and Frlday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. A
wide varil'ty of miscellaneous Items
including clothing, furniture, and
dishes wiU be Included in the sale.

TIIURSDAY
· POMEROY - SUSiln Nolan,
Nelsonvllle, president of the Athens
Women 's Aglow Fellowship, wlll be
speaker when the Meigs Wornen~s
Aglow Fellowship meets for a
dinner session at 6:30 p.m . Thursday at the Meigs Inn.

PomE'roy, Ohio 4576~. Ph. 992-215&amp;. Se-·
cond class postage paid a t Pomeroy,
Ohio.
.,

MembPr: Unlted Press lnt{'rnaflonal ,
Inland Dally Pr('ss Association and I he 1
Ohio NewsPaper Association. Nationa l
AdVertlsln,:t Rf"presenta!IV(' , Bran ham
Newspape-r Sa\('s, 73.1 Third Avenue, ··

•

New York . New York 10017.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

Llghtbouse, Hiland Road, through
Sunday, 7:30 each evening. Elder
Fred JohnSOil will be the speaker.
Tom Kelly, (li!Stor, Invites the
public.
Southem a1unm1
RACINE - Plans for RacineSouthern Alumni Assoclatlon·'s annual. banquet and dance are
underway. The themeforthlsyear's
festivities is "Somewhere Over the
Rainbow." Larry Birch of Peublo,
Colo.. a 1953 graduate, wtll speak at
the dinner.
Tickets for the dinner, 6 p.m.
Saturday May 25 at the high school
are $7 a person and may be.
purchased at the Meigs Inn, the
Syracuse Branch of the Racine
Home National Bank, the V~e
Cut ijate or any alumni association
board member: Jants Carnahan,
president; Betiy Wagner, first
vice-president; Dale Hart, second
viCe-president; Tim Thoren, third
vlce-presldelit; Joyce Qulllen.
secretary-treasurer.
Thedancew!U begin at 9:30p.m.
with admissibn$5at the door. Music
will be provided by the band Rose
Alley from Chillicothe. ·
Revival
A revival will be held at the
Hobson Church of Christ In Chris·
tlan Unlo~ beginning Wednesday
and running through May 12 with
services at 7: 30 each evening.
Pastor Date"- Pearson will be
speaker. The public Is Invited.

SPEAKER - Jolm F. White,

Penns Creek, Pa., . will he
i!pioam at revival sen-Ices to he
held Friday through May 19, 7: 30
each evening al the DanvUie
Holiness Church, Stale Route

Mark Edward Rice of R~sville

•nd

D. MICHAEL MULLEN

up

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OFFICE HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
1:00-4:30
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
105 EAST SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY

992-6417

The

Osilg

POMEROY - Revival services
will be held at the Full Gospel

Sentinel

BABY
EDITION

basis. Credit will bt• givf'n carrier each
month.
No subscriptions by mall pPr m!ttf&gt;d In

towns wherf' hom P ca rrier scrvlc(' Is
avallabl{'.

·OFVA 1 UES

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rter ma y remit In advancE' dlrE&gt;ct tQ
The Daily SentlnE'l on a 3, 6or 12 mon th\

Sat.

PIKE·RT.35 WEST

klN;th.M 1t.nord out
tty;rlf tO KON .

Subscr lbtors not d es lrln ~ .to pay the car·

Mon.-Fri. 2-6

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SINGLE OOPV
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Phlo State University for the winter
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must make a 3.5 grade point
average out of four .

5ll

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One WPek ...... ....... ........ ........... $1 .10
One Month .............. .. .......... ....... $4 .80
One Yea r ................. ..... ........ ... $57.20

has been named to the honor roll of

our, Ma.ti Ridenour, and Scott
Starcher.
The troop Is accepting boys
between 11 and lB.

MAKE IT ARULE...
US£ WANT ADS, ,
ARANDY

.
Revival services

POMEROY- Douglas Llttlewtll
be speaker when the Meigs Chapter
of Make Trnday Count meets at 7
p.m. Thursday at the Meigs Senior

POSTMASTER: send addrt&gt;Ss changes
to .Thf' . Dally Sentli'lt&gt;l , 1h Court St.,

Members of Chester Boy Scouts,
Troop 235, atlended the spring
camporee held recently at the 0 .0 .
Mcintyre Park.
The Chester troop came In third
place In competitions. There was
camp fire famlly observance and a
performance by Indian dancers .
Leaders and scouts attending w~re
Gale Osborne, Roger Starcher and
Bill Slm, leaders; Joy Reynolds,
Tom Hunter, Billy Wells, Mike
Hoffman, Danny Lawrence, Howle
Lawrence, Eric Slm, Floyd Riden·

~.4

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snnM s.""'"

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bnith Vi«&lt;M t.c..tiH 4 ...... l.c......... wnM 14".9 5 Veht.'

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v.... ,_ ,..,'"'..,.,.. ,_... f.lrMII.o - · - ·~.... 10 . . . - . . l - t-ot
U ("'"9 .,.,. poodv(" No ~MJr&lt;ha.. - f i - J tO ~let ond , ... -.:1 ...1be lf&lt;-1
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Amando Moehelle Sibley

Mike and Linda Sibley
Rt. 3, Qua il Creek
Gallipolis, Ohio

Oieat for Work or School
animals Inherent In their chemistry to herb grow~ and natural food
ATHENS- Learn what healing
and preparation of sltnple healing dealen. and customers.
powers the 111ltUifll plants of the
plant rerneilies.
The workshops meets 1 to 5 p.m.
earth may ·bold. "Medicinal Plants
Instructors James Cavender, and 6:30 to 9:30 p.m ., Monday.of Ohio," a workshop offel'ed this
professor of Botany, and Arthur Friday, June 17-21.
•summer · at Ohio University,
BUckle, emeritus professor of
The program may be taken for
;AthenS, will provide an opportunity
' to exal')line the medtclnal values of _ Botany, wiU take participants on three hours .of either graduate or
field trips to different plant habitats · under-graduate credit. A non-credit
' wild plants in a sctentlflc
In the heavily forested and rela- "certificate only" option Is also
framework.
tively undisturbed areas of Sou- available.
The week-long worksbop will
theastern Ohio. They will also
For .,egtstratlon and accommocover ldentlfcation of over :;ro wticl
collect
useful
plants
and
discuss
dation
Information, contact the
plants and their habitats, tradipreparation
and
use
of
each.
Wcrkshops
Offices at 1~
tional medicinal
of these
Interested
partiCipants
range
(In
Ohio)
or
(614) 594-11151.'
plants, the study of poisonous plants
from nurses and pre-med students
and their dangers to humans and

'}ses

Evangeline Missionary Society meets ·
Plans for the annual mother· For roll call members gave
Alone Lord" and Mrs. Betty
daughter fellowship dinner to 'be thOughts on spiingtlme. Mrs. Janet
Spencer shared an Easter prayer.
held Thunday at 6:30p.m. at the ' Venoy read "Take Up Your Cross."
The devotions were pen by Mrs.
Pomeroy Church of Christ were Mrs. EUeen Bowers told how Easter
Gertrude Andrews.
finalized at therecentrneetlnlrofthe started and how the date Is
A thank you card was read from
Evangeline Miulonary Group at determined. Mrs. LaDonna Clark
Mrs. Turner. andcarclaweresentto
the home of Mrs. Helen Miller.
gave "Spring Cleaning", Mrs. Eva . several who are Ill. Also read was a
A PRJIII'8Ill wW follow the dinner. Dessauer read a poem, "I Live
letter from Denny and Kim Allen,
the group's mission for 1985.

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CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE

Deadline for photos is Saturday, May 25, 1985 . ·

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PLEASE PRINT
·

.I .s N.arne......................................................................... ..
~~~~~~~;~~~a~:~~~~~~~!~~!~ special !I Parent's N arne .................................................... .............. .. ·

'•- •'t

.. -

•

Check Your Phone Book for the
ADIVISION Of IA)I)'f COfii'OftATION

parents,' aunts and uncles or godparents .to

Brian Justin Gey
Grandparen ts
Carla and Joan langford
Rt. I : Bidwell, Ohio

have their ''baby's"photo appear inThe Senti- 1
ncl's BABY EDITION, Friday, May 31. All ba- I
bles born between 1m and 1985 are eligible to
have their photos published. Just think how 1 Baby

•
••

Save•aoo
~

Here's an opportunity for parents. grand-

,

Trevor Paul Buck
Jon and Tami Buck
Brow nell Ave.
Middleport. Oh.

''

.
It •s easy to have your photo published . II1 Street or R.F.D ........... ,. ......................................
..... ............ .
Just bring or mall to The Sentinel with the In- 1
formation requested In the coupon that ap- I City ........................................................................................... .
pears, together with $5.00 which Includes the B (
) Girl (
) '
Phone ..... .................. ..

cost of processing, publication and postage for
sate return by mall. A black-and-white glossy
photo Insures the best reproduction. However,
color photos, Polaroid photos and snapshots
wUI be accepted. Photos of babies born anywhere wfil be accepted, too. Send In your
baby's photo today. Deadllne for receiving
photos is -Saturday, May 25, 1985.
.

I

.
· .
.
1 oy
1 Date of Birth ..................:..................................................... ..
I
NOTE· Photo of Twins wili be handled as one picture.
I
·
Mall coupon, bally photo and $5.00 to
1
Baby Edition, 11M t)aily Sentinel
P.O. lox 729, Pomeroy,OH. 45769

l
I

·----------------~---------------~
.

�Page-6 The Daily Sentinel
.

Tuesday, May 7, 1985

.1

Alabama, Judds dominate 1985 Country Music Awar~s
BUENA PARK, Ca ll!. (UPI ) The groUp Alabama was na med
entertainer of the year for the fourth
ccnsecutlve time, and collected two
otl\er Hat trophies , and The Judds
mother.&lt;Jalighter singing duo won
twice to highlight the 20th annual
Country Music Awards.
"To All The Girls I've Loved
Before, .. the country-pop hit sung by
WU!Ie ·Nelson ;md Julio Iglesias,
be'at out nominees by both of the
night's big winners for honors as
single of the year.
Alabama bested Nelson, Ricky
Skaggs, Hank W!Uiams Jr. and the
Oak Ridge Boys in winning entertainer of the year honors.

The group, which was nominated
for five Hat awards. also WOII as top
vocal group, for the third year in a
row. and for album of the year , for
the fourth straight year, with " Roll
On.''
"1 still feel like a little kid In a
candy store," Randy Owen, a
member of the quartet, told
report ers after the Monday night
awards. " l!eellike I've got so many
songs left, a nd so do the rest of ihe
guys."
Thc Judds, who joined Nelson and
Skaggs as ttipl~ nominees, won for
top vocal duet and beat out "All The
Girls I've Loved Sefore" and
Alabama 's "When We Make Love"

for song of the year with "Why Not
Me." The song was compose:'! by
Harlan Howard, Sonny Trockmorton and Brent Maber.
"I think country music Is everybody's music," Wynonna Judd, whO
sings with her mother. said bltckstage. "And I think It's nice to be In
Hollywood to play our !f!Uslc."
"Why Not Me" and " When We
Make Love'' were among the losers
to the Nelson-Iglesias standard In
single of the year competition.
W!Uiams, one of thenight'sdouble
nominees, won for video of the year
with "All My Rowdy Frlends Are
Coming Over Tonight ." The award
was presented this year for 11\e first

HO DOWN 'AYMINT
lOWER"MO~TIIl Y ,AYMENT

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box, 326

Tenn.

begins budget ·horse-trading

•.u._,_,.
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goal Is stlll to cut a hOut $52 billion
billion
from . the more tha
deficit, althOugh they seem willing
to make rplnor adjustments on that
score.
"I haven't found anybody who
wants to do less than. $50 billion,"
said Senate Republican Leader
Roher1 Dole of Kansas. "But I'd
rather have 52 votes for $48 billion
than 48 votes for $52 .billion:"
Dole said he wold like to finish
work on the budget this week, but did
not know If that was possible.
Budget director David Stockman,
he said, preferred having the Senate
hold off until after Reagan returns
from Europe this Fridav.
"We're keeping our powder dry,"
added assistant GOP leader Alan
Simpson of Wyoming, noting that no
real action would come until the
rema ining debate time- now about
I4 hours - got down to about five

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Help wanted full and
timt waitreu'a and
maid . Send resume ·to
711. Gellipolia Ferry,
26515 .

part
b.lr·
box
Wv.

SWEEPER and sewing ma ·
chine .repair, parts. and
· auppliee.
Pick up and
delivery, Davia V1cuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Call

Trim off pounds with Go
Beae • Grapefruit E·xtra
Slrength Capsules. Fruth
Pharmacy, Middleport.
•200. reward for relurn of or
information on whereat?outl
of black, len end brown
Bettett Hound. Stolen April
24 from Anne Leamond
r.ealdance, Tanner• ·Run , Ra Mud River Band wlli be at
the River Boat Inn Wtdnee·
day, Thursday, friday, and
S11urdev.

g,oo tut 12:46.

Antique Show &amp;: Sale, Hun ·
tington Galleries, Mother't
Dey weekend• . 30 deelere.
clinic, eppreitals ••r· ,
vice; an,ique auto show .
Admi11lon t2".60. May 11 ,
noon·8; May 1 2. noon-&amp; .

91•••

4

Home AIHmbly Income .
Auembte producu It home .
Part·time. Det.lla. Cell813·
327-0~98 , •••. 169 .

-....-Gaiiiiioiis-·-------

22 Monay to Loan

,....._______ _________ .. ------1- - - - --

&amp;Vicinity

e t. Fraizers Bot ·
liOME OWNERS -IIoflnanco Flea Merk_
to low fixed rale. Ute equity, t.om. wva . on us. 36 open
for eny purpoSe. U:tder every Saturday &amp; Sunday,
Mongaga Co ., 614-692 - 9·6. Open air &amp; covered
apace• for renl, off road
l051 .
partting.

Wanted to buy large round
belea of hay or straw. Call
Good used pianq·old ·ornew .
To be uted in pre-tchool
program . . Donation plea~&amp; .

23

Professional
Servicea

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Brunicardl Music Co .. 614·
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of quallly service. ~ne
Donlato, 614-742 -2951 .
PIANO TUNING AND RE ·

PAIR , Reduced ratetllmited
time only. Ward• a Keyboard.

Porch Sale Thurs ., May 9th.
8 to&amp;. 708 2nd. AVo. I ' pool
tebla w·eQuipment and ping

Rea l Es tate

pong lop. ttere.o stand.
clothing. hou1ehold and
mite . ltemt.

Homes for Sala

Thursday. Friday. 2 mi. frQm

Mu11 . tell 3 bdr . ranch,
Weatbrooke Subd ., FA,
woodburner, carport, deck,
city utllitiet, &amp; aohools,
ieduced to $33 .000 . Call

2629 Mt . Varnon Ave., rain
or thine, 9 :00 t1117. ·

Houee· tor ' eela Eeat · end ,
1918 Eastern 'AYe., 3 bdr .,
has rented apace $200 mo.

12

mobile home on trade . Call

HMC

Rt. 160, Rhuborb.

garden tools, e~ctric motor.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Moy 1. 2 , 3 . Leodlng CrMic

Moy 6 . 7,8. 9:00 om-4:00

pm . ~famUyyardllle. Baby.
women's and men'• ctothea.
old glaaaware and knick·
knacks. kitchen ute"llll,
booka, purees. women••
shoes. tire 6 end 9. lamps, 2
occaulonal chairs. meny
other miac. Reaidenpe of
Renee Store, 381 Grant St .,
Middleport. Rain cencele.

Mon · W•d . 2018¥.1 Rear
Eastern AVe, glassWare, TV, 582 Beech St. in Middle·
haetefl. clolhea. thelvet. port. Mev 8 thru 11 . Beds·
preade, eheeta. ~urtelna .
tlraa, waeher, miac:.9·1
ruga. Clothing, dishes, pic· ,
Garage Sale 2 air condi· lures, coolnivare, electric
lioner, recliner, roll· a-wey, appliancet. furniture. je - ..
r,etrigerator. bed spreads. ___ ,rv
_ •_n_d_Lo_t_•_m_o_,._·, _ _
curJ:aina, booka , blue dithes, near Clay St:hool. Rt. 7.
Thurs .. Fi.. &amp; Sat.

Alklng 145.000. Will take

Situations
Wanted

------Pomiiiov---------

1

304-676-6600 or 8753824.

31

Yard Sale 51 Gerfleld Aw.
Thurodoy &amp; Fridly. Mov I •
lOth .
.

Road . Firat house an right.
Garage Sale May 7th.~ 8th, . Appliances, ciOihing. bookt . .
Tuet. &amp; Wad . Debby Drive Rein or shine.
McGuire Subdivision . Car· .... - . • ..•. . · -. -·- ·- ~ . .. . -lcpe11ter miler box &amp; toola. Garag, Sale: Thursday, Fri·
drafting table completl!, day 2 . 3 . 623Yi RueaeU St.
smell refrigerator. bar stool, Grovel Hill. Middltpor1. bomirror. flowers, clarinet, hind Heiner a Bakery .
1970 Norton motorcy(:le · · ·- ·· ··- ··· · ··· · ······~· -lc need• repair , Wortt:men'1. Moy 2-3. 9:00 -4 :00 pm.
Guy Spencer . Tuppers
614-446 -3918 . .
Plaine. Kerosene healer,
Lorge 3 Fomity Moy 7.8.9. venerator 3000 W. pr..ture.
Boye &amp; maturnity clothing, pump, alorm door, bicycle.
baby bed, ice cream frMrer.
~~~a~~=~e~U~~~~~I!t ~eoua. woven ruga, clothes, etc .

514-446-7144 .
Vord Sola, May 8, 9 , 10.

------ Pt-Pi&amp;ii&amp;iliit" ----

614-446-8 334 or814-446 7398.

Wanted-Live in companiOn
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS for elderly Christian lady.
FURNITURE . Bodo, Iron. Ughl houee work and tome
wood. cupboards, ChairJ. lifting
required. Room and
chests. baskett, . dlehet. board free.
Privete bedroom .
atone jars. anliquea, gold Would prefer
one wilh
and silver, Wrile· M. O . · car. Monthly some
ulary will be
Mlller. .Rt .2, Pomeroy, Ohio considered, plul
ney .
48769 or call 614-992- Reference• required.mo'
Send
7760.
resume to 8oK 3030 in care
of the Gallipolis Dllily Trlb ·
Buying' daily gold, eilver uno.
825 3rd. AVa., Goltlpocoins , ringe, jewelry. sterling lia, Oh
45831 .
ware, old coins, large currency. T9p pric... Ed. Bur· Room and board or sleeping
~ett Barber Shop . 2nd . Ave .
rooms. Men ·only . No
Middlopon, Oh. 614 -992- drinkers.
Call 614· 992·
3476.

3 bdr. ho""e 3 yra. old, 80%
.compleled, rural water, 3
out bids., 'h acre fTonlt on
Rt . 218 &amp; Rock Lick Rd.

Nice·4 bedroom. 11f2: bethl,
garage wllh workbef!ch. gas
hot! tt29 .00 budget! , geo
hot water heater, central air,
'.'1 acre flat"lot . Kyger Cretk

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Ju"k ChevroletTruck 1972·

School•. 146,000. Coli
"814-446 -1990.

Cell 814-256 -6520.

Price reduced lo •48.~00 on
recently renov•ted, 2 elory .
frame houM, R.G.• 3 bdr .. 2
balha. formal dininv. family
roorri, Includes 2nd. pertillly
renovalad houSe 1 acre
properly . Coli 6 I 4-448-

7x2' expando.· tir, skirting,
fireplace. microwave. tte·
reo . sat-up in pari! . 10%
dow,Q, up to 15 yn . Cell

6694.

1977 Rogant, 14X64, 2 bdr .
C.ll614-245-528&amp;. ·

a••

8022 or 614-985 -4418.

..

1979. Wanto to buy . Coli
614-992-7217.

13
Group and Individual Health
lnaur11nce at very low cost .
Also guarentMd Ufe lnau·
ra~te0toage86 . 304·757·

S1:r'J1Ct:~

1,1 Help
Wanted
'
.
1B 'Wanted to Dei ;. ..

'

'ull ,time antl·or pert 11me
- RN potillont open . Flexible
-hours. - experienced Pre·.
f1m,d ..Apply eiSoenio Hills
Nu"rsing Canter Mon.·Fri .. g ··
to 4PM .

required . Applv In

pereofl betwHn 9·4PM to
·Medical Plaza, 203 Jeckaon
Pike, Gtlllpollo .

825 3rd. Avo .. Golllpotlo, Oh
46631 '

Giveaway

Jobt .

016 ,000- $60,000 yr. pou;.

Smell dog -pert Schnauurto
glw away to good home.
Coli oftor 5:00pm 614 -9492794.

Anention PPHS grada1981
to 1171: II you do not hive

an OH· KAN ot your gradue ·
don, call me. Maybe 1 can
hotp, FREE. 304-87&amp;- 1444.

Colt 614-268-6261
5:30PM

after

Wanted 10 mow lawna Qelll·
polis eree . Call 614-441·
4367 after 5 .

Jay Drive owner Mlling 3
bdr .• 2 beth. cozy harth for
winter. pool and AC for

iiii.J!It.ldl

21

· Buaine*' .
, Opportunity

8800.00' por 100. Guoren.t e e d P a y m en t . No

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB LISHING CO. -om..-do
lhat you do butinut wllh
people you know, and NOT

Experienc:e ·No Sales. Detall• send aelf•eddreseed
stemped envelope: Elan

g~ ted

to find out how .

e..·y

Auembly Work!

Villi-718 . 3418 Entorprloo
Rd. Ft. Plarce, Fl . 334B2 .

Coli Mr. Joyner I -800-9824908 .

Saleeman wanttd to repr••·
ent line of Energy Mangament Controls . Excellent
trelnlng •"d mar{letlng program, high Income potentlill
with oppprtunity for ad·
var)cement . DeetenhiP•
available. Cell ' Mr. Ktelna
t -800-912 -4908.
Open territorial wtth new
Avon, catl304 -175-1421 .

Coli th&lt;L Anny f'!lotiOnot
Guard and alk about aut pey

Ono full blooded, Molt
Springer Sponlot. One 1 2' .,d be . .flto, Including edumanth old Mote ,..n Ell&lt; cational a1111t1nci . Call
304-671 -38&amp;0 or 1-800Hound .ond Spitz . 304·6754312.
• 142-3119.

to send l"!"'onev through lhe
mail un.til you heve irivettl·
the offering. .

Yard ••!e. 1st trailer bilhind
Lowman Sale a. Hartford. W. ~
Va . on right aide of atrHt,
Mondey , Tuee~ay ,
Wednesday.
Yard SoloMay8,9 .10. 2121

Mt. Vernon Aw. Rain or
thine. 9 ti11

•.:========;;.~=========

1971 FrHdom good c:ond.

Good .- rental. property aix
. room houte and 2· 3 room

992 -&amp;039.

Have an energy efficienl
home buill on your lot. From
113,900.00 . Call for estlmltll, 304-875· 3981 .

Price reduced, 4 bedrooms.
full ba..mant, a ·mnes from
Point Pl..aent. acre lot,
phone 304·446-1 676 .

log home 3 ecrea. 2 mi. out

Jorrlco Rd . 08~.000 . Coli
304-875 -8622 .

2 'unit apertmant building,

good invettment, price re·
duced , phone 304 ~ 176 ·
7541 evenin9•·

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALtTY M08tLE HOME SALES,
4 Ml• WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
Ill 35 . PHONE 814-446·
7274.

'

Farms for Sale

for Sale to sett'- estate 7
room shingled houae • 55
ecree on Rt. 775, Leete, Oh .
Alto barn, smoke hou.. a
crib. Tobacco baM, 2 dug
wells . Contect Don~~ld My·

'

•••. 614-643 ·246B.

34

Busineas
Building•

Baum8nt shop or i torep
under ' Williamson Meet

Green Mirkoi, ' 304-171•1431 ,
'
.SchOol Plotrict, flood cond.; . 1$01. Jofllroon Blvd. large au,.;aeck, t14,500.
will conli., lrade In of
anything of v~lue 11 down

Ptea .. nt. .

.

payment .• Coli 614-446-

80~8 .
• ...
.- .. 35 Lot•."' Ac&lt;eag&lt;i
; 982" Tow'nhouoe 14x'I'O. - · · ·
'
·· ~
with 7i24" exparfdO •. eJt:c~
• · targe bat h ,
con d .. 2 b ,.r..
deck tldrting, CA. other
axtrat . CaH 614·245·9534
eftor 6 .

3 bdr. all electric. 14x85.
porch , underpinning. in·
town . Call 814·446· 2036.
Big · down payment, short
time employment, or credil
history stopping you from

1

$28,000. 614, &amp;78·2613 .

614-'446 -3547, 9-6, Mon .Stt.

33

frarn:. GeUipolia.

675-6104 or 676-5386.

2 bedrooms, full b~tement,
double car garage, 1 .2.
ecret, Rose Hill. Pomeroy.

1980 Kingoley 70•14 with

3 · bdr; 14xB&amp; &amp; lOt.' '2 mi .

cclllogea . CiLll 81 ~ - 4482143 . . '

NaticJnal Company Seeking
Olttributort 10 handla.exten ~
alve line of re.W.ntlel and Hou... 2&amp; 1crn 304-773Commercial Energy Man , 5225 .
agement Controls. Insured
aavin.gl, contlnuoue training 7 room home with 1 "h Iota.
end marketing Mill and garden apace, Hartford .
inttallatlon . Cuatomer •••· 118,000. 304-882-3374.
lng, computertnd energy
audht, high Income poten · · 2 story, ._ bedroom houM,
tiel. No trenchiM fH. Small vinyl tiding, 11/4 ac,..a. cer·
lnveatment aecund by In· 1)41ting, above ground swim ~
v.ntorv. Cill mr. Wat1011 mlng pool optional.
1-800-962-4908.
t415,000 .00 or make offer.
Thomes Ridge Aoed. Mason
Own a t»eeutiful children's CounLy. 304-895-3672.
shop. Offering the letelt in,
flehlont. Hethh Tex, l1od ,
Lr&lt;l. LM, Chic, Jordoche. 32 Mobile Homes
Butter Brown and many
for Sale
more. Furnlture·ecoeaeorlae ,
and toya1 by · ~rber and · - - - - - - - -Nod-A•Woy. • , 4,900 .00 to
I
117,900.00 includelbotinntn·g l~vontory - trolnlngflxlu,..•grond o.,.ntng promotiono 1nd ro~nd trip olr
fire for LWD. P'-lge Foohlono, 101-329-832'7 .

&amp;Vicinity

,ummer.
Interested
614-446-7554
titeronty
5. cell "

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING

ble . All occupations. Call
806 -887-6000 o•l. R-4682

Yard Sale Moving Sale 8-9th
Addison . 9· 7 Rain·thine.
1976 360 engine. trenamie·
aion, long ahefl. Cell 614·
367·0227 afternoon.

a

814-245-9887.

Bird dOll. 6 yro. old, opoyod . . Service· Technician lo lell
.and ineUII energy manage·
Col 814-367-0172 .
menl control• tor relidenlial
2 Black ftmelt puppies. Call end commercial lnatella·
tioni . 0Hierlhlpt evallable.
614-446-9883. ,
.

7 wk . old female', black, IAI
Golden RetrieVer puppy to

f33 .SOO. Cell 614 -256 8694.

Bowen &amp; Conetruc-tion . Government hom•• from
CompiCtte remodeUng. fire· S1
, fU repair). Aliodeliquenl
place apeci•Uatt. P•inting: tax property. Cell 805-687·
,interior &amp; eKterior. Cement, 6000 · exi. GH -486~ lor
bloc:lc, . b~lc_k work·( ·~IS yr.. infdrm•tion. '· ~. . . .~- ,
expe.rlente, reaeonabhi
· retel . . ~~Bel astii'nltll, .wo~ .. Modern: ·bd'r ~inisf'!~d ~·~· '
guaraniHd. Cell 81~· 388 - meflt, 2 car attached garege',
9670 or 814-388-9808 .
traile r hookup , Gre,n
Schoola . Call 614 -446 Kotali~ Landscaping designing, planning. mowing, trim· 3040.
ming. retail shrubbery . All Deluu ~ bdr. house, pool.
round lewn maintenance. ·good tocollon. $69,500.
Coll81 4 -446-3100 .
farm 50 ecrea. 8 rm. hou•.
$36,000.
Commercial lottWanted 1o' lew'ning mowing Jeckoon Avo.
$48.000. AGallipolis area Sa vinclnlly . One Reel Estate. Call 304·

Babyaitter needed In my
home 4 to 6 deye per week .
Ref . req. Call eftar &amp;PM ,
Governmeot

Yard Sale 9:3 0·6 . 4 Fami·
liet, 'A mi. down Rt. 218.
May 8 .9.10. Hobby horae.
cl&lt;~thea, car rampa. Ayon.
gutllr.

Hannan Trace Schools ,

Southern School DiMrict.
Modified A· Frame on 6
Pump ules, service. Regis· acres
. Immediate occu ·
tared in Ohio. All wotit pancy. See to appreciate.
guarenteed . Call 304 -273· · *30,000. lncludet ouldoor
2811 . Ravenawoocl. W. Va. working tools. 61 4 -843 ·
5384 after 6pm.
Mr. Ed'• Speedy Wash. low
and high pretture cleen!ng 3 bedroom house. 6 acres
end liquid u-:acf blaaling. fenced in, barns. workahop.
Mobile homee, buildings, McCumber Rd.. Rutland.
trucks, heavy equipment. 135.000 . Cell 614-74·2 892-6606 .
swimming pools, P!lftclng 2289.
B"byeitter needed in Crown ar•••· boa11. Edward Oea·
City at my home. Cell terreicher 304·675 ~ 7239 or 3' bedroom houae with gar876-63&amp;7.
.
614 ,266-1769. .
age . New roof, aiding, dou ·
ble paned windows. blown
Ga.rdener 20 hours per Work wanted. painting in· intulation, wood burning
wnk, 83.60 Per hr . Ctll It side or out, odd jabt, e.~tpe ­ stove. new turnece, new
Bollard Library Wed . 9 to 6. riencod , .phone 304-875 - wiring and plumbing , remo·
2 Jenera of recommend• · 8004 .
deled kitchen with oak ct ·
tion~ required.
bineto$18.000. C~ll 614 ·
Are You conaidering Nursing
Home placement tor a loved
one or arethey Currenlly on 1
waiting 1111? You should
consider inquiring with the
Pomeroy Health Care Cen ·
tar. We are only 25 minutes
away and we heve an
outalending health care pro·
gram . P...secall Ulal(614)

To gcod home 'It Terriert-1ti

glvo owoy. Coli 114-98!13979.

•f

•

614-446-3672

Two yellow Pege ttleapeo ·
pit needed t400 week &amp; up.
Only tho•• with aalea up•·
rience · need applv. Jend
resume to Box 800 in care of
the Gallipolis Daily Tribun.a ,

Bleck • white mother· cat &amp;
kitten . Coli 814 ·448-0721 .

Complete Stock ot Weather. ,, \ 11 1
ite Hea.t Pumps. Cenlral Air ~~~Q

&gt;

We pay cash for late model
clean used carJ. ·
Jim Mink Chev.· Oidt Inc.
Bill Gene Johnaon

ASCP

cine . Colt 814-247-4225.

4-17-1 mo. pd.

~1 v1 C C' Pro

line: Moy 22. 1985.

Wanted To Buy

Wanted: A medical Technol·
ogiet for weekdtyl only.

Call David McDonald
698-7219

Goorgeo Crook Rd .
614-446 -0294.

111( 11

d.

9

814-38B-8438.

• 1ft Dexlw, Ohio ·

··

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

dable peraon . Must be avail·
ible for rot1tlng day and
evening shifts. Oenerel d
ecleanlng and ligh~ meinte·
nenc1 duties. b:perlenced
onlr need epply. Pay •3 .'31
per hour far 20 houra·week.
Avoitobte July I . Coli 304876 ·2943 for more infor·
mation , Application deed·

Library Technician (full ·
time): Ma.On County Public
Lost 3 colliaa. 1 mele, 2 Ubrary. Matllre and depenfemales . five Points-Pine dable person: Prevklua liGrova Rd . area . 614-992· b.rery experi&amp;nCe desirable.
Typing required. Du1te1 In5344 or 614-992-2763.
clude acquiailion end citel. ~l ng of library materials
tihder supervision of librar8
Public Sale
ian
, Pay $3 .50 per hour for
IlL Auctjon
40 hour-weak . Aveileble
July · 1. Send letter of
application to Maeon
Auction every Friday night at County ·Public Li brary. At·
the Hartford Community tention: Personnel Sec:tion.
Cenler: Truckload• of new 6th and Vlend Str..ts. Point
marQ:handiae every week . Pouoni, WV 25550 . AppliConaigm8f1tt of new Sa used cation deadline; May 22;
inerchandiH always wei. 1986.
comed. Richard Reynolds.
Auctioneer . Coli 304-n&amp;- Federal, eiate aRd civil jobs
3069.
now available . Call 1 · 819 ·
569· 8304 forinfOrmatlon.
24 hours .

vocalist . willing '-to trevel .
Confirmed bookings. Call

SMALL QROCERY
STORE w/GAS PUMP.

73-79 Ford Tr.
Ftndtrs ...... ...................s..
73-79 ForH Tr . .
Doors ........................~ '13l
10-IS Pord Tr.
•
Doors ......................... $145
71-79 Ford Tr.

Rt. 611 Wut Darwin 'Ohio

lth end Vi.nd StrHta, Point
Ple11ant. Metureand depen-

·1im Wanlifig to ftirita fem~le

Glitits ..................... •31.SO
Hoosh ......................... •us
73-79 Ch"f· Tr.
13-IS Ford long••
Recktr ,_ls ...............
Hoosh.........................
73-79 Chnr. Tr.
13-IS Ford Ro. Cell Coratrs ..................t2Q
Grillts ...........................t75
New and Ustcl Aulo Glo•s-latt Model Parts
1

Cu1todian IPirt·tlmel. Me·
ton County Public librery,

The Daily Sentinei-Pag1

Busine11
Opportunity

' 992 ·6341 '

11 -14-tfc.

-'

Avenue. Bo~ 1213- .-·

21

7824. Georgie Mellon.

FOR SALE

•u

AuthorltiCI John DHrt

•Storm Dooro
•StormWindow1
•NIIeplec- Win-o
• !lOoting
'"Filii EITtMATII"

Reward for Information on
lost femate Border . Collie.
Ten -nd white. Lost in Five
Points vicinil~ . Cell 814·

t 'IIPIIIYil'l:lll

992-5875 Or

GUYSVILLE, OHIO: ne

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Lost l!lnd Found

FOR Aij YOUR
WIRING NEEOS

4-10-1 mo . d.

Gallipolis, 'Ohio ·45631

U. S. Rl. 50 EAST ''5

4-1~ 110.

Call 992-3561

FARM EQUIPMENT
Disc, plows, corn planters, 3 pl . brueh hogs,
grain drill. hey rake, 10ft.
drag harrow. Cub Far·
mall with mower and
plow, hay crimper. tub
.soil8r, potato plow. hay
baler and more.

! • (5141446-7619 or (614) 992-6601

SALES &amp; SERVIQf:

JAMES IEESEE
PH. 992·2772

lostalled
S149S.OO~,':

Expert Service And
Quality Noillt' Brands At

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

417 s'cond

..

Coli 614-446-8224 .. ·

Dexcel Receiver
8' Alum. Dish

St. Rt. 160
North
O.llipolis, Ohio

~.,_

l:

BOGGS ~e

Form EqMIPMint

6

Help Wanted

1-614-863-2902 .

Television Listeninc Devices
'Computerized.. Heeiing Aid selection
c:J · H~arihc- Eval~iions F~r All ~~s .

10.8-tfc

Nn HollaH, lush

676 -5784 aftar 6 :00 .

.can:

I

••

•Waehers •Oiahwaahara
•Ranges
•Refrigerator&amp;
•Dryera: •Freezara
PARTS and SERVICE
4·5·1fc

Kitten110 g·ooct horne, 8 wks
trained. 2 yellow, 2
bltck· Whlte. 1 calico, 30-4 ·

~ld , lltter

Rosidttitial &amp; Commercial

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

U-1-tlc

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE .

Rooting of ott T-•
Worked In homo • 20-ro

M••••

'•W&amp; Rent. For Less"

1-13 -tfc

..

All

446-4522

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio

for everything.

VIIYl I ALI.IIIM

KEN'S
APPLIANCE .
SERVJCE

S&amp;L

We can 'repair and recore radia1ors and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and tod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

asuperma~t

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASAIIT, W. VA.

tcUt OUT FOR FUTURE USEI

' RENT ACAR
CALL .

.

ESTIMATES."
3-22-tfn

....,.,,...._,,_,._

Nlw Homtt-Eit,.i"
....Wiog

J/11/tfn

104~k

Von Schroder ,
Recommended

s..,

SUPEIIOI
SIDING CO.

From

I

by. Leadina Carpet Manu -

CLASSIAED ADS

~
MOTEL

Use

-

IUGI. LOIG

12'x l6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
• 1o 24'x36'
Insulated Doe Hou·ses

Sizes Start

Racine, Oh.

Long Bottom: OH. 45743.
PH. (614) 985-4212

,.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

PH. 949·2101
or 949·2160
No Su~day Calls

POLE BUILDINGS

,35185 Oak Hilt Road

-·

Weather forecast

"Frea Estimates"

Ph. 614-843-5191

PIONEE . ARPET
&amp;UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

REAL ESTATE F()R SALE

-WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

ALL STEEL &amp;

985-3561

pping For
Bargainc?

.. ... ,,..UI,._

New Homes Built

..

ftt!:GKEE

BUSiness
•
•
ervtces

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

mo.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

3-24-tfc

Need matching funds

squads
a'hswer four calls

4/ l / i

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .
Alto TrUtlllltslo•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

_ . ,...,.

*VINYL SIDING
· ·~LUMINUM SIDING
*ILOWN IN
INSULATION

lvonin9L:
614-~85-4212

Rt. 124,Pornoroy Ohio

hours.
"Then there will come a package
that will . be part everybody,"
..,.
11.f-·~
u -.w.w.m..
11-._.,.,_ ,.._._ .,
ll ·l ........ w'..,.tM
Simpson said . " It will he pieces of
IH-t:t . l - 14·fll.t•O-.
11·,· -·-...
,,_
_
(Sen. Lawton) Chiles. pieces of
u, 111111 w..-..o.. .., _ ._,......... 14.10
*'""'"""-......
u,o'"' 11 w...a. ..l'twi*Mr ..__... ......... ..oo
11-,.,....
rv_• c:• ".,...
,,.
.._.
(Sen. Pete) [l(lmenlcl ... pieces of
u, .,,, w--. . ... -.--........... .11.00
n-~··-•
u .w....... , .. o.
eight."
However. putting together a
1
compromise iS a tedious task, with
Real Estate General
some changes appearing to lose as
many votes as they would win.
Aides to Sen. Ernest Holllnlis.
·~wt·
D-S.C., who Is sponsortng a oudget
freeze, examined different variations of that approach, but salt! if ~
·
'Realt:!4freeze were to significantly clit the
Co.
Now
In
deficit It had to Include tax
Increases.
One Hollings aide said the
Real Estate General
senator, who planned to offer hls
plan on Wednesday, would he
~lngfocused onwha tpa rtsofwhich
willing
to make adjustments. But he
blldget plans could he joined to
added,
"We need to Include re.fashion a compromise capable of
venues.
There are a lot of big
winning approvaL
SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bedcorporations making a lot of money
Leaders of hath parties say their
rooms, 2 complete baths, dining
and paying no taxes."
room. living room and large recreaIn addition to tax Increases, key
tion room . Located on 8 acree.
sticking points for any compromise
are the two areas In which the
Large farm pond. Racine area.
-'
ByUPI
supporterstopromoteltspassage,a president's plan. has already been
A spokesperson for the E nvtronspokesman said.
HOUSE WITH GARAGE. small
rejected - defense spending and
social
security.
ehop and shower in basement. Four
Federal officials sa id Ohio had
mental ProtectienAgencysa id Ohio
The Senate voted last week to keep
could lose more than $41 million in several sit.es (hey planned to Include
rooms and bath, 2 porchee, carport,
full social security cost-of-living
te&lt;!eral funds to .clean UP hazardou~ In r.helr own budget , but could not
new fu{nace and central air. Middle·
adjustments, rather thana2percent
Wl!Stes if 10 percent In state unless they were aSsured there
port. Oh.
limit sought by Reagan. It followed
matching money Is not raised.
would he state-matching funds.
that action by voting to allow the
Valdus V. Adamkus, midwest
"Otherwise, we will. give the
CAll 949-2210-Ask for Tim.
Pentagon budget to grow only with
directoroftheEPA,saidln aletter to · money to . other states," said
'Gov. Richard F. Celeste tha t Ohio Margaret McCue. a spokesperson
Inflation . . Reagan Is seeking 3 f------~---'--:--------...JI....--------.1...-------percent real growth.
L • .. . .
•
s" '
• '
could lose federal money to other for the EPA.
The
only
budget
matter
a
pproved
states I! it did not raise $4.6 rniUion
She said that In the Mdwest
.for Supemmcf proj~ts in 1985 and . regl9 n, oniy.Ohlo and WisconSin had . Monday was a non-bln&lt;;llngresolutlol)calllngforleglslatlon !hat would. ~,--....:....__ _ _.._.....,;..-....-1.......;.-.-.-l....~.,...,..o;.-...___.,.....__.,____,,...__..._
1986.
,
.
failecfto 5et-asi.d e adequate match.
.:··
·allow
·government contractors · ro
. ·.under .Superfund. legislation, ~e- log money.
. . ' '•
'
.
' .
pay
overtime
to
workers
beginning
.j
' sti!ned to clean i·tup abandoned
Steve Sedam, head of the 01\(o
WE ARE YOUR SALES
THE QUAUn
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY .
after a 40-hour week Instead of an
haZardous wastes es, states must Env\ronmenta!CouncU, saki Ohio's
AND
SERVICE
eight-hour
day.
Sen.
Donald
NickPIINT
SHOP
pa:; 10 percent of the cost.
budget Included $11 million for Utter
Vn£RINARY
HEADQUARTERS FOR
,, A" fHI,., ...
. •ZENITH
.
.: · • EPA . o!ficlals sa id, Celeste as• : ~ontrol, but ,nqthlrig for matc!Jlng leS, R-Okla., saldthatwo!lldsavethe
CUNIC
m,&gt;vemni~nt .$1 . bllllon over three
PIU~ Office lupfoliol· &amp; · .
-- •SYlVANIA
·• "
. - s~red Utem ·be .was equally C&lt;J(I-_·.. rimds to "dean up haZardous wast~.
_
·IN
MIDDUPOIT
• •
.liSrEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
: '"""two,WIMiia
.
cerned and would Include money for
· · . · · . · .. · .. · .
· . years. ·It was approved SS:5.· · : ..
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR . ·
~~ut ·E. SHOCICE't, J).V.!f.
the Ina tchlng funds in liis budget .
·
There are still about 6(J'ameild·
Wt
liin
A
flil
0Mt
s~~,.....,t, ·.
OPEN EACH .·
ments pending, although It was not
Veterans Memorial
Celeste supports a waste bill
Tllhlelll .
5itoo.
•
s-,.,
clear whether all or most would
presently in the Ohio House of
THURS. EVE. 6-8
I I nF•1111,
•• Dltf
eventually
he
considered
..
Representatives and wlll meet with
ClfLY
Sonic11,
It&lt;.
Admitted--Estill Moore, SyraPT. PLEASANT OFFKE
RIDENOUR
255M
cuse; Esther Dailey, Portland;
UO$ JACKSON AVE.
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
104--•
Charles V. Humphreys, New
~.mergency
SIUU AMIW !lOUIS
CHESTER-985-3307
Haven; Ellen Gibbs. Pomeroy.
Partly
cloudy
toctay,
with
highs
Discharged--William HaliPy,
,..., ..so ,_..........
between 65 and 70. Clear tonight;
Walter King, Irene Russell, Early
WI* I diJ J ,.-..J P."'with a low In the mid 41)s. Sunny
"""""" ! ,..... , , ....
Four calls were answered by local Roush.
J&amp;F
PERSONAUZED POOlS
P.W., I ,_.;,.-1 ,....
Howard L•.Write11l
Wednesday, with highs between 70
uiilts on Monday, the Meigs County
lolw..,
11 0.111-·lh!O o.oo.
VINYL
-LINER
POOL
CONTRACTING
Release activity report
and 75.
Emergency Medical Services
Roofing
Co.
ACRYLIC
WALL
POOL
~Gl
AIIIW.S Alii
DOZER , BACKHOE,
The probability of precipitation Is
reports.
·
NEW-IEPAII
ABOVE
G.ROUND
POOL
!IIIGIIY
IY
APPOIITIIIIT
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
MASON - The Mason Pollee near zero through Wednesd.~y.
Over 400 Choices
At 10:13 a .m ., the Racine Unit
304-675·2441
Guttera - Dow111pouto
SYSTEMS. WATER.
Winds will be from the northwest
"SPAS"
went to Dorcas to treat Debbie Department drove 2,545 miles
Gutteio Cteoned
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES ,
at 10 to 20 mph today and light and
HJDIOTICH CHEMIClU
Bryant, who was not transported; at during the month of April in patrol
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
Pointing
SPRING DEVEWPMENT,
4:34 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit took work, Pollt'e Chief Gregory S. variable tonight.
Storm Door•
491 Gtn. Horti- 'kwr.
HOME FOOTERS,
Extended forecast
&amp; Windows
Ellen Gibbs from Peoples Terrace Roush reports.
Milldl.,rt, Ohia
DUMP
TRUCK
STONE
During-the
month
the
departm
ent
HRS.
10
a.m.
to
5
p.m.
Siding
- Soffit Work
Fair
Thursday
Qlld
Friday,
with
a
to'' Veterans Memorial Hospital;
&amp; DIRT
also
wrote
seven
citations,
wrote
Day
Night
P.ameroy at 5: 34 p.m., went to
"""""" of showers Saturday. Hlgbs
949-2263
JIM CLIFFORD
1-614
1-304
Wright St .. where Gladys Moore Seven warning tickets, Investiga ted wW range from the mid 70s to tlie
or 247-4641
two traffic accidents, received mid 80s each day. Ovendgbt lows
992-2549
773 · 5634
w~s treated but not transport.ed, and
PH. 992-7201
4/29/tfn
S&lt;:&gt;Ven
complains
and
taught
three
wW range from the mld 408 to the
at · 8:41 p.m., Racine took Rena
Chevalier from Elm St., to Holzer drhiing underthelnfluence and drug mld50searlyThursdayandhelnthe
classes at Wahama ijlgh School.
50s Friday and Saturday momlnp.
Medical Center.
WASHINGTON (UPll- Slowed
to.a snail's pace in Its attempt to cut
the deficit , the Senate Is engaging
some speculative horse-trading anO the budget It hopes to produce
may have to walt until President
Reagan returns from Europe.
In a day dominated mostly by
prtvate conferences and a virtually
empty chamber. the Senate gained
little ground In lts2-week-old budget
fl~r battle Monday, approving only
a single minor adjustment to
Reagan's spendi!lg plan, which has
already been dealt several major
defeats.
Behind the scenes , lawma kers
from both parties trted to map out
their strategy for the rest of the
week, with considerable attention

•n.oo

Call

Roger Hysell
Garage

l ·l'wNol..............

GINIUL ftll CONTROl
'"' L!a...t" Witt..t ~614-37,·2243 or
614-379-2712

Also Sold S.poratoly

For faster Service

_.

,~

laby PorakHI,
Cage &amp; SupplioL ,.,, I24.7$
Poir Fancy fin&lt;hol, .
Cage &amp; SupplioL .....
CtKkatiols. hoti&lt; linls

Coli 614-992-6737

•.c.....
•....,.., .........,
.....
,.•·o...._
......._ ........

TIIIIITH

Available
Cago1 &amp; Supplies

Pomeroy, OH. 45769

PHONE
992~2156
Or
DaitiJ SttltiMI
lift

"g''''l s,ultl"

11

Giveaway

White kitten to good home.
304 ·675 -2254 .

...._.-SUPERIOR
lXI ...IATIIG CO•. INC,

THE BIRD CAGE

Wt'd like to introduce you to
Enaac•:A·Car, th1 modern wly
to drive the vehicle of your
choice.

Wtilt
Cln1ilifd
111 Co•ttS1 .. ,... roy.'I*MI •n"

time.

$enat~ .

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

year. Wlnnen of the disc jockey of
the year awards for large, medium
and small markets respectively
were Coyote Calhoun. WAMZ,
Louisville, Ky.; Bllly Parker,
KVOO, Tulsa. Okla., and Dan
Hollander, WDXE, Lawrenceburg,

.

The Daily Sentinel

4

named country nig!ltclub of the

Baron and the Kid."
The show with wlnnen selected
by t~ Acack.my of Country Music's
2 600 members
. In ballots mailed In
March, wastelevlsedonNBCiroma
theater at Knott's Berry Fann.
·
Singer Roy Acutr won the special
Pioneer Trophy, which was presented at ceremonies In Nashville.

.•.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

· Gllley's of Pasadena, Texas was

Bear/ ' '1lle ruver Rat" and '+'~be

George Strait and Reba McEntire
won tophies as top male and female
vocalist.
Named top new vocalists were
Nicolette Larson and Vince Gill.
The movie "Songwriter," starring Willie Nelson and Krls Krlstofferson , won theTexR!tter Award as
the year's bestcountry tum. Other
nominees were "Rhinestone,'' "The ·.

~""~"'""

•

Tueeday. Mev 7 • 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

·
_.
30 .AC:re1, Ht up for mobiJe ,
home, barn, 11 Ewing~on at
Vinton·Gallia Co. line on Rt. '

180. Coil 814 -689-4481 .

16 a crt~, 2 tnl..re. 1 O.xl50 ""
and 8x40. North E••• Mefga

County . Coll614-896-1227 '
afte~

6 :pOpm.

50 .1cree just oft Rt. 82
Soulh ,

304-875-7541

buying a home7 Consider 1 ' evenings.
reclaimed unit. Only e600
1 acre along Rt. 62 SOuth,
down and taka over pay· 304·6 75· 7641 ev~!"inga.
mont . Wo'ro !,!id·Ohio Financial Service t614! 772~
1220 or (6141 773-3926 . Pasture for rent, 40 acret.
fenced paeture, barn, 304·
·call today.
876-7541 evenings .
1978 Bellglode 12'x66'' oil

eleclric, 3 bdr .. AC. under·
pinning , w11her· drver. fur·
nishod. Caii814-446 -32B9
or 614-992-7079 or 814266-8532 .

1Ox&amp;O 1966 New Moon 2
bdr .. $3.460 .. air con~ .• gas
heat • cooking, very good

Large building Iota, Jerry's
Run Road. *3000. Clyde
Bowen Jr.. 304-578-2331

2 level Iota, 7 miles from
town. off Rt.
304-875-

z.

66B9 after 6 PM .

cond. Coll614-446 -0.175 .

12x65 1971 Naw Moon 3
bdr., 1 V, balhl; el8a. r11nge.
very &lt;:Inn. t5.900 . Colt
614-446·0175 .
I 9B2 Cloyton 14d&amp;. fur-

Renta ls
~

"'
~~~----~~~-- ~
41

Houses for Re•n t , •

niahed, underpinning, porch
waeher &amp; dryer, exc. cond.

$12 ,000 . Coli 614- 286 1881 or 614 -251-6280.

7 room houH wilh 2 cer.•
garage, loceted iri Chllhir-. ~...
*2&amp;0 mo . plus dapotit, no'-'!"'
pete . Colt 614-387 -7302 .
:":

19&amp;9 Chemplan treiler

2 bdr home in clly achoote;'!

12•10 with 1976 odd -on

12x24. Good condition. Call
614-992-2589 '
•

1 4x70 Castte on :s,r. acre lot
with 18~t26 addition. Central air. urban root. 2 car
~rport. Price redafcad. Call
614-992-3119 or614 -9923132.
1970 TMC, 3 bedroomo,

fumithed. wathar, dryer.
air. awning, underpinned.
Oltpo. 18960 . Coil 614992-7479.

*236 mo. plue deposit. Caii*Jim tt 614-448·8610 or •

614· 446 ·7881 .
...
'
4 bdr . in counlry ·White oak:·~~
Rd. t200 mo . plus deA.&lt;·
Kyger Creek School din. :~
Coli 614-367·0609.

·•

---~-----:-·

.

1 bedroom house in Minera..~
ville . Beside M ineravllle~ •
Church, by Bulk Plant. Totel _:~
electric . Call 614· 992 .......
6215 .
. .~:2 bedroom turniahed hcu~ ~; .
ee.in Pomeroy. $260 pw;.a':

19B1 14•70 Schultz, ponly

month . Coli 614-992-5113

fumlehed 3 bedrooms with

------~.-----------~ t=

undarpennlng. 304 -675 ·
17&amp;3.
197&amp; Noohuotroltor, 12x60

ft . exc cond. with lome

after

s ~ OOPM .

'•

1 bed country homa. Yard;::
and oerden . NHr Mei~
County fairgrounds. Depoeil"'r
req~ired . Cell after 1 :00pm:"::

8 I 4-992 -2627.

'

..t.... 18, 500.00. 304575-4249.

---------~------~
· ~u
.~.

1978 Holly Port mobile

bedroom homo, B•tchltt, \11[.

home, 14x70 3 bedroom.
cenlrtl air.- fum. wtth appliencea only. Need to HI I,
prloo · nogoLiabto. 304-488 1727 .
'78 Liberty 12•70. 2 bed -

room. new carpet . 911

heat~

For renl or Hll all electric:

v •. 876-1900 .

...

., ......•

•

42 Mobile Home• . ; :0:
for Rant
• -..;

... .

•Furnished,

elr cond., cab'\.:

good cond. 304-578-2119 . no city t'axee, beeutltul rr;.... .,~
lftlr 8 :00 .
. view, Kenauge . Fo..,'aM•:::
btto Homo Port, 11 4-44t[-,..
1969 12d5 Kirkwood 2 1802.
bdr.. new carpeting, air"

cond .,

••c.cond. 304·875-

7277 or 17&amp;-8531 .

·:J:

Trallar for 'r.n1. Cal
4PM. 114-441-4221.

~
•

�..
' · ,41J

Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

LAFF·A·DAY

42 Mobile Homes
· for Rent
2 bdr. fumil hed. all ut ilitea
pd.. except e lect.. cOnve·
nient location, IIICu rity dep Oiit rau qlred. Call614-446-

8558.

J

INTERNAL REVENUE 5f RVIC f

Stud Service. Call61 4 · 446 ·

Gravely tractor with alectric
start and th ree attac hments,
_7_ 5_·_6_9_3_7_. _ _
Briarpetch Kennel s Profea· ._&amp;_o_o_._3_0_4_·11
slonal All -breed grooming. 1
Indoor-outdoor b011rdlng fa · New tobacco s ette rs
cllities. Engli1h Cocker Spa · $575.. 00 . Corn pl a nterl
niel puppies. Call 614-388- $650 . 00 . Cor n sprey1
S460 .00. AC w ith cultivo·
9790 .
ton •1 .250.00. Farmoll C
Dragonwynd Cattery Ken - with c ultivator~ $1,500.00.
nel. CFA Himalayan, Per1ian Ma •J •Y Fergu1on 50
and Siameae kittens. AKC $2.860.00. 304·676 -2328
Chow puppieo. Col.l 614 · or 578-2606 .
446-3844 lifter ~PM .
1 Ya yard Trojan. 4 wheel
Golden Retriever puppie1 , drive loader. good cond.
AKC Reg. on~ Golden Re· 011 , 000 . 00 . . 304 -675 ·
triever female dog Reg. Cell 2377.
61 4· 388·9858 oftor 5PM .
7795 .

2 bdr. m obile home. Call

614 -446·0390 .
12x50 mobile home. located in S yracuse. $ 125. per
month piUs utilitiet. Deposit

requ ired . Coli 6 1 4 · 992 ·
703 4 or 614·992 -5732.

deposit . 304-675 -2464. ·
2-2 bdr . mobile ho·mea, $~ 0

dop. S175 to $1 85 . plus
electric &amp; g iS. 304· 876-

651 2 .

1

.. •·· ...,, "

' ""

'

"

....... ...... ,. ··· ··

"I don't care where you hang
it, Fogarty, but not in here!"

43 Farms for Rent
Pestu•e for rant . Cell 304·
675 · 5104 .
44

44

Apartment
for Rent

54 Misc. Merchandise

----------~.• PECIAL cut slabo 6 PU

Apartment
for Rent

New one bdr. efficiency apt.
Call 614-446·0390.

load• delivered in dump
truck $100, or 21o•d• 11 BO.
You pickup 115. Cell 814·
6_80_4_· _ _ __ _
45 .• Furnished Roomsl _24
_ 6_ ._

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS [Equel
Housing Opportunity)
monthly rent ttlrta at • 169
for 1 bedroom and 120• for
2 bedroom, daposit· • 200,
located near Spring Valley
Plaza and Foodland. pool
and Ca ble TV available,
hours •• possible 10 am to 4
·pm and 7 pm to 9 pm
Monday-Friday, Call 61 4 ·
446 - 2745 or leave
meaaage.
Nicely furnished mobile
home. eff . apt: .. central air
and heat in city, ad~ltl only.
Coli 614-446-0338.

Pool Peopla Special:
For rent Sleeping Rooms Shock liquid $2 .66 goi-PH
and light hou• keeping up •3 .6041b. lngroundpool
rooms. Park Central Hotel, kito, 1&amp;.32 U ,391, 18•31
Call 614·446· 0756 .
t2.196. 20x40 82, 896 in
stook. let us summerire
FUrnished roOm, r8n'ga, re- your pool • 100. Pool paint
frig. S 100, ahtr!t beth, sin- 1 2% off. white. blue ice.
gle. mola. 919 2nd. AVa .. bikini blue. PJ!:iddleport 61 4Galllpolio . Coli 446· 4416 · 992·6724 or Gollipolio 814after 7PM .
446"3051 .
46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot, 1 2'x60' or
smaller. 176 water paid, 4th
llo Neil. Golllpolio. Call 446·
4416 ofter 7PM.

Furnished efficiency 701
4th Ave .. Gollipolio. $180, . COUNTRY MOBILE Home
utH11ieo peld. ohere beth. Perk, Route 33. Nonh of
Pomeroy. large Iota. Call
ad~lts. Call 446· 4416 after
61 4 -992· 7479.
7PM .
UPstairs 3 rooms, furnished,
bath , wuher· dryer, AC .
clean , no pats, ref., dep.
roq .. adults. Call 614-446·
- 151 !;1 .
Upatain unfurnished.3 room
ap, .. carpeted, utilities paid,
no children, no petl. Call
614-446· 1637.
'

Trailer spaces. nice and
quiet, 1 small child accepted. no pets, 304·076·
1076.
.

Spring Special-Patriot utility·
building• on display at two
convenient lOcations. B &amp; S
Produce, Vi•nd St. in Pt.
Pleeun1, and French City
Mobile Home• In Golllpollo.
9x12 1695, also 1Dx16
•996. Delivered and set up
on your lot .
Whirlpool chest type freezer.
17'1&gt; cu.ft., hold• 624 lb,
good cond., 1226. Coli
814-388·8717.
6 cushion couch a. chair.
$160. Hat water halter. old
but good. 30·40 gal . Call
81 4· 246·9372.

Above .ground pool, 1 6x30.
Call614·388·8304 or 814·
388·9981 .
51 Household Go,ods

White' sawing machine, ·
equipped to zig zag, monoGarage apt., turni1hed, 29Yi
gram; overceat. hemming,
Neil Ave., Gallipolis. 1 bdr.,
mending, makes button
$235 , utilities paid. Coli
SWAIN
446-4416 after 7PM .
AUCTION llo FURNITURE hpleo&amp; more. Reg. '279.95
62 Oliva St. ~ Galllpolia. New now •100. Aloo 30% oil
&amp; Ulld 'WOOd· COII.ItOVIS, e . N•ico 1ewlrig machine.
Furni.~;hed .apa.rtme.,.t t
· Adul1s only. Coll ·614·446· pc· wood I,R tuHa 1~99 . 'l'rodo .In ..accepted. ·- ¢•11
9623
or. 61 '4:. 44~ · 1443. , · bunk bedo •199, intron collect 814-386·8026.
.
recllnera eee. new &amp; used
Heevy nmber Equipment:
2 bdr. A:pt .l &amp; houua for bedroqm tuitea. ranges,
rontl125, •1&amp;0.1200 . Coll wrlnp waehera. • ehoee. Tim~ Log llkicldO&lt;. In·
New ' llvlnsJroom aultea tematloMI Log Truck, Tan8711-11104 or 6"5· 63811 .
"198· U98, Iampo, oloo ·d·e m · P•ytoa,ter ~ 4 wheel
' ·3 rooms 8, b•th fur.1iah~d. · buying COI!I &amp; ""00~ IIOV81. dr_lvo . C•ll.304·882·2998.
.
· · utUitie1 'f un)ilhed . '20:0 &lt;;an· 61 4.', ..&amp;·, 3.1 ~~~: ·
Slight Polpt ' Dif!'Oga . New
mo .. · 841 Third Avo. Coli
flaihirig arrow algn. t249 .
l.:AYNi:'S·FURNITURE ·
614·446 -3793 .
Sofa. chiir, rocker, . otto· complete. Frea bulbs. tubetl
River-aide Apts. Middleport. men, 3 tllblea, Iextra hnvyt. Four left. Cell Immediately.
Special ratu for Senior 1685. Sofoo and choln 1 [8001423·01 Ill, onvtime.
Citizens. et30 . Equal HOUI· priced from 1285. to 189~. [Not repoooeosedl.
ing Opportunities. 814 - Tobl01, 1110 ond up to 112&amp;.
Hldo·o-beda.U80. ood up U1ed V30 Ditch Witth and
992· 7721 .
to a560., oofo bedo 1146, uoed TF1000 Davie '
2 bedroom apartments. Reclinero, 1225. to 1376., Trencharo. Coli 614-694·
New- Hflven. WVa. Newly lempo from US. to 1126. 7842 or 614·694·5006.
remodeled . In town. 61•· ~· dinette• from 8109 .. to
435. 7 pc. $189 ond up. ShowcaM. 6 fl ., 10 in. long,
992-7481 .
Wood bible with olx cholro 20 in. wide. Haa l!ght•· and
2 bedroom furnished apt. 1285 to t746. Delk •110 mirror. Nice. •126. Victor
Cetl614·992-6434 or 304· up to .t 226 . Hutcheo, 1550. 516 cash . regilter. CompuBunk bad complato ·with ter typo. 1700 now. 1376.
882-2566.
.
mattreJHI. e276. and up to Hat extra paper and ribbon .
Newly remodeled . 4 room1 8396 . Baby bed1, e110 . Lerge cigarette hck.
and bath apt. Carpeted, MattreSHI or boa aprlnga, t10 .00. Coli 61'4 · 992·
kitchen' furnished . On Eaat full or twin. e&amp;a .. firm . •ea. 2969. Rt. 7. 3 mlleuouth of
Main St. in Pomeroy. Call and 178. Queen Mt1. *226. Mlddl-rt . Nut to Betty'o
614-992· 7314 .
·
dr. cheo11. •48. 6 dr. Carryout.
------~--- l · ~~~~.~·~dU8. Bed lromeo.
One or two bedroom apart· 1
125 .. 10 gun· Gun 1876 Cooe &amp;SOB backhoe
menu in Pomaroy . Fur· cabinets, e3&amp;0 . Gas or with Extond·e·hOOI, 1740
niahed or unfurnithed. Rent electric renge1 •37&amp;. Baby hours.~ lncludel full cab
negotiable. Call '614·992· mattr8aRJ, •2eli e315, bed heater, torque converter, 4
6723 or 614-992·6133 .
fromoo UO. 125, &amp; 130. buckets and 1 trl·lxle trailer.
king fro me s50. Good oolec· Call614·992·6354 or 614·
2 bedroom furnished apt . tlon ' of bedroom 1uita1. 882· 7354 oveningo.
C•ll 6.14-992-15434 or 304- rocker1. metal cabinet a.
882 · 2566 . ·
heodboerdo UB llo up to TV enlenne. tower, end
rotor. t90 .00. 276 gollon oil
$116.
hlnk. •40.00. Coleman util·
··-··............
Furnished apt . for rent. 3
room• and bath. Deposit Ueed Furniture -· &amp; pc. lty trailer. esoo.oo or best
required . Call 814· 992 · dinene. heed boards, elect- offar. Will trodo. 814·898·
ric range. 3 miles out 12271f1or 6:00pm .
5908 . .
Bulaville Ad. Open Bam to
Firewood 120.00 pickup
3 room1 and bath apt . in 5pn1, Mon. thru Sat.
lood. UO.OO delivered . Call
· Pomeroy . Call 614 -992· 614·448-0322 .•
304-176-6782 or 676·
6821 .
.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 2991 :
2 bedroom apt. Bedroom W11hera, dryen, refrlgeraand kitchen furn ished. tots, ranges. Skaggs Ap· · ·cu~~:om draperle•. 1 inch
$200. per month . Cell 614- pllancu, Upper RIYtr Rd. venetian bllndt, verticel
992· 2816 . Allor 5 :00. coli beside Stone Crest Motel. blinda, Romen woven w.ood
ohedeo. lllltolled 11 dlocount
61 4 -441· 7398.
614-992· 5319 .
prieta, frM eatlmat...
1· bedroom apt. Equipped CoUnty Appliance. Inc. Sayre, 304·411B·1 071.
kitchen . PartiaHy furniJhecl. Oood used eppllences end
All electric . e1 76 . per TV 1011. Opon BAM to I PM. Houae flowert for ..le at
month . Coll614·992· 2811i . Mon thru Sot. I 1 4·446· Lucy Wrlghll, Galllpollo
After 6:00. coli 814·982· 1888, 827 3•d. An. Golll· Forry. May 8·31 .
POiio. ·DH .
5319.
In Middleport. 1 bedroom
furnished apt. :• 1 95. per
month, ~tilltiei inclUded.
Coli 614·992 ·7177 after
6 :00pm .
Newly remodeled . large
rooms. *1715. per month.
Coli 814·992·7034 or814·
992· 6732 .
APARTMENTS. mobile
homel, hOUMI. Pt. Pleaunt
ond Golllpollo . 814·441·
8221 .
Laureland Apertmen'te1 New
Haven. now eccep,ing epplfcltiOns f~, 2 bedroom ep•rt:·
ment1. Basic rent •1 83.
Inquire apartment C· 1.
Equol houoing opportunity.
Furnlohed 1 bedroom opart·
mant. utllltloo peid. 304·
876·7112.

AKC Reg . Pe~ingeae · pup·
piea. Will be ready in 2
woeko. Coli 114· 256-9391 .
penial pupa for Ale. lf You're
intere•t:ed. call me at: 614245·9602 .

horse. reg. stock
mere, raady to foil. Belt
offer-trade for good tractor.
Call61•· 379· 2144 .

AKC registered Old Engli1h
Sheep dog . Male. 101h
montho old. Coli 614·992·
8'039 .

1 brown bay mere, 800 lb. Qr
wi11 1ell team . Call61 •-448·
3082.

Himalayan-Siamese kitten•.
$100 eech . Coli 614·9922607.

MUrray Grey Bull, regiltered. pure bred. gentl•.
large frame, 2 year• old,,
proven sire, ready to workl
Coli 614·687-8181 after
8 :00pm or ~eekends ~.

Beautiful AKC . German
·Shepherd puppia.. Ready
Mev 11th. Smell depooi1 will
hold. Phono 304 -675 ·
4663,
.Mothers Dey Special, registered Shetland Sheep Dog
I Mini Collie), sable, obedient
trained, 304·468· 1 056 or
468·1 503.

2 year filly ChestnUt. V..
American V2 QUarter horae.
4 white stockings. Beautiful
and good dispo1ition. Shalt
green br·o ken . 614-9926341 .

Spring Special: 2.4'~t30 ' x8 '
with 16'11.7' garage door &amp;
service door , $3,888
erictcid . Iron Horse Bldgs.
614-332-9746 collact.
- -- - - - -- - CROSS llo SONS
U.S. 35 We1t. Jackson ,
Ohio. 614·286-6451 .
Massey Ferg~son, New
Holland, Bush Hog Sale• &amp;
Service . Over 40 used
tracton to choose from &amp;
complete Una of new &amp;
uaed eq~:-~ipment. Largest
selection in S.E. Ohio .

1980 Pace car Trans Am
9.900 actual mile1, axe.
cond ., al\'¥ays kept in gar·
age . Only Interested caller1;
614-446-8252 aft"' 4PM .

1982 Spirit 4 spd. sunroof,
AM -FM tape, new radials,
low mileage, ca.h price
83,399. John'• Auto Soleo.
Bulevllle Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
[6141446-4782 .
Ferguson 30 1st class 1 -~9~~
2 -C_o_v_ol-io-r-.-3-.-10-0-.-.-.•.
shape. overhauled . Call cond . Cell614-448 ·2.146.
614·388-9909.

1 8

Bush hog, 6 ft.. 3 point ' ·el&lt;trlos.Camaro Berllnena• ._n
1·
axe . cond., white
hitch, good condition . with red interier. Cell 814·
$300 . 1;2 HP air compre1 - 448 8
sor.l60. 4 -6 ft . white pine,
· 7 14.
you dig . $6 . eech . Coli 1--- -- -- - - -61 4·986·4143 after S:OQ 1 9 78 Pontiac Grand lemons
71 ,000 mlleo, now redial
p m . M. f . An yt im
tires, 'deluJle interior,
weekends.
running cond ., no rust.
AC tractor. model C with 2 ' Alpine stereo optional,
$2,700 . Coli 614·388 ·
row cultivator and turning 9744.
plow. 814·992· 5479.
Colt, 4 dr., 4
Pole Building• Constructed .1 983
spd
.,
-FM
tape,
sunroof,
for commercial. garegea,
farm. Jtoraa, etc. Any 1ize, coo~ price $3,899. John'o
free "timetes. Call 304· Auto Sele1, Bulavilla Rd,
Gollipolio. Ohi~ [6141448·
676·3981 .
4782.
1976 HD 6 Fiot Allio doz.,,
ROPS Winch, 1974 9418 77 Monte Cerlo , PS .. AR.
Cat . endloader, ROPS . cruise! tilt wheel, good car.
Good condition. 304·468· $1,1110 . 72 Chev. lmpelo.
rebuilt trana, beat offer. Cell
1642.
614·379·2B48.
New H'oltand 404 hey condi- 1981 Chevette auto~atlc
tioner~ *376 . lnterdationel
corn. chopper an
gr111 ' with air. new tiret 6 p•int,
hood . 304-458·1542 .
• $2 , 500 . Call 814-378·
2682.

.Jl.

e

1884 Ford F1 50 4 op.
overdrive. range A pkg,
em -fm oeJaette , step
bumper, •liding rear gl11a, 1
(300
1"1 13000
~~r~, 304·6;S:Z419 . • .

0181 or 014-446· 3243.
1974 NoveSSioaded.l8150.
1973ChovyPI./IIi10. 1914
Ford .PU U50c Coli 614·
446· 3032.
81 Chevelle Malibu. 76 VW
llobblt. BO Pontiac Phoenix.
Dodrill'• Auto
8:30-6:30.
ColiParta·SeleJ,
114-388·

1977 Chevy Luv tn~ck nino
good. 1860. 304·895-3987
or 896·3472.

~=======.:;:::;:::
73
Vena a. 4 W.

1-1-8-7-8 -J_eo_p_C_J-.1- ..
-w-tl-re_o_llo

I
PS PB 3
d
1 P ··
PInt
·
•
12,460. Coil 814-379·
2836 or 814·378-2182.

19n Dodge winddJII von.
auto,
olr llo oxtl.o..C~II
114-448-4182.
t .

-\o.

'76 Vego, 4 cyl outomoiic,
good , motor and body·.
$860.00. 304·571 - ~866 .

1977 Suzuki Enduro, boot
offer. Coli 814· 266·6251
after 6 :00PM .

73 VW Super Beetle, good
cor-,~ . 72 V'(l Super Beetle,
leu engine. •aoo . .both .
304·4111· 1642.

1878 Horley Dovidoon
aportater' 13,000 mi. Call
814·448 ·1615 or ofter II
814·441 ·1244.

84 Ford F250, autO. trans .
pa, pb, ac, sliding glass,
positive trect:lon trans .
c~er, huvY duty radial
tires. $8,900 . Trade for4a4 .
304-578·2147.

1981 Suzuki 100 dirt bike.
Cell 614·388·8368.
·

1978 Harley David1on Su·
per Glide Custom, lelther
bag1. e• . cond. Call 6141973 Chevy M•libu auto . 446· 8039.
with 4 eKtra tira1 and - - - - - - -- - wheels. Good cond. t600. 1884 IIQpde 260R three
304·937-2334 or 304-578· wheeler. Extroo. Excellent
21551 ;
'"'
cOndition . Low hourt. Cell
114·992·11747.
1979 Duster po, pb, outo, 8
cyl. 1978 Ford Toreno. axe. 1982 Hondo Sllvor Wing
cond . 304· 1176·3753 · or lntorstote GLIOO . 6,000
676-2790.
mllas. AM· FM, CIIHtte,
crolh bers. Aelling t2,200 .
1977 M·ercury Monarch, 814·387·7191 . .
66,000 ",!1101, , V·6, IUIO·
metic, air condition. good '82 Hondo 660 Night Howk,
condition. 304· 671·1828 .
exc con~. ~1 . 400.00 or ball:
offar. 304· 578·2888 . .
1981 Monte Corlo. exc
cond. •&amp;.300 .00. 304·6711· 1884 Shadow 760, gorogo
3378.
kept. 1729 miles. 2 helmet•.
304-675·11917.
1' 880 Oldo Cutleoo
Brougham V-B•. AC, rear '78 Hondo XL350, 2.400
window dofoggar, AM-FM mlleo, •360.00. Phono304·
114pt'eo. exc cond. !ow ml - 175-2178.
luge, mu•t sell. 304·678 ·
24115.
75
Boats and
1977 Chevy Novo. 1974
Motors
for Sale
Chevy Pickup . 304· 876·
61113 ohor 4 :00.
29 ft. Crest pontoon boat
with 81 hor .. power mercury engine. In ••cellent
condition. U,OOO. Aloo
boot troller. 11,100. 7422110 Of 742·2287.
Cobin Cnlloor, Crlla Croft,
38' twin engine, 1967.
W·40' trOller. 19.800. Coli
304·171-1731 affar IPM .
•79, 18ft. alumn, Stercraft
V-hull, 80 hp Mercury motor, 1A c:enapy top. OUJtom
anap on cover, •4.100 .00.
Phone 304·182·2001.

78 .

Auto PertJ
• Acce110r111

Drywall, rel rdential a. com- "·:
merelal. quality hanging S. : ·
·ti.ni•hing. Ceiling d.esigna a. •:
,ep8ir ·. Worttr ' Cit•· Jai'"JIN \ ....
Plonu 614 · 245·6~69 . ' 1, , • •.

ANNIE

Baird'• Home l~ 'prdve­
mentl . Aluminum a. vinyl
tiding. 1torm .doors &amp; win· ·
dows. gutters, roofing. Free
e1tim1101. Cell 1·614·367·
0409 .

lf!IG THE 116P S(!ffflfEC/
!i{},t/f !iOflT OF 111/N()/CIIP.~' illl!il'le!f tilE!

D &amp; R Contractors : Siding,
ropfing, new atructures. remodeling, deckl. patiol.
Free eatlmate1, Gallipolis,
Dh . Call614 -446·7687.
- - - - - - - - :·lc0 · &amp;. M Contractors. VInyl
a nd aluminum si ding ·
replacement winf;tow -. ~
in 1ulating · roof,ng • ·
remodeling and · new
coriatr~ction · gutters . Cell
'304-773-5131 .

t

Gen8's .Deep Stream Carpet
Cleaning , upholstray ,
scotchguard . deodorizeri . _
free e1timatea, highly re : · •
commended . 614 -742 · , '.
2211
.
.

ZOUNDS!
THE MAN
MUST BE .
A WIZARD!

.

1818 313 Chryolor onglne,
311,000. mlleo, good trano.
304, 8711-37113 ""'304·171·
2710.

.'
77

1112. Chevy ~ton 4 - 1
drive. a.z liter
4
epMCf --drive lrenomlo·
~lon. Good oondiUo".
UIOO . tall 814·112 1747.

82

7

;.·

assumed .the
name, Peter Pickle.
when I moved into
your buildinq!

wanted to see what
other world was like!
And I'm so q/ad Idid!

Otherwise we never
would have met...
my dear Lil!

Piumbing .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
'
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 61•· 446-3888 or
814-446-4477

WINNIE
.. . WHAT ARE YOU
S.MNG. TRAGER?

JIM 'S PLUMBING llo HEAT·
lNG. Rt; 1, Bo• 366, Gel II·
polio . Coll614·367-0576 .

)OlJ

83

THINK WRIGHT

ORDERED A
Till~

!lAVlLLE

Excavating

·oood-1 Excavating. baaementl, footers, drivewayS, .
Mptic tilnks. 1andsc.pind .~ ~
Cell on'ytime 61 4 - 44'···:
4537, James L. Deviaon, Jr ,
owner.
'"'-'!"'
'
Dozer Work land clearirig, ~ :
land1ceping, etc. Free eati· · ~
mateo. Call 614·'\46-8038
or 614-992-7119 anytime .
I GOT SOME TERRIBLE BAD NEWS
ABOUT YOUR PROPITTY LINE, LOWEEZY

Dozer and dumptruck aervicea. D.A. Boston El cavet·
ing. 614· 867·6828 or614·
378·8288.
84

® Dr. W ho
IIJ) 3 ·2· 1. Ccintect (CCI
f!) Diff' rent Strokn
[HBO) MOVIE: 'The Sign of
Four'
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Chem piono'
(CCI
.
6 :30 1J CIJ ffi NBC Ne we
CIJ Rifle man
C!l Rovco's World Class
Women
lil Gomer PYle
Cll Cll if21 ABC News (CCI
Q Cl) ® CBS Newo
IIJ
Nightly
Buoineso
Report
IIJJ Body Electric
f!) Ono Dey at e Time
7:00 1J (}) PM Magazine
Cil
Chuck
Connor's
We'atern Theater
(]J Sportscenter ,
(IJ. Sanford end Son
C1J Ente rtainment Tonight
(L) Wheel of Fortun•
Q Cil Wheel of Fortune ·
IIl IIJ) MacNeii/Lohrar
Newahour
® Nowo
II) l!2l New Nome Thet
Tune
fl1 Jefferson•
7:30 8 (}) Tic Toe Dough
CIJ Cisco Kid
@ Sports Focu s- Julius
Irving
([I Major league Baseball:
Atlanta at New York Meta
ill Ill ill Family Feud
m Jeoperdy
® Wheel of Fortune
II)
lf2i . Entertainment
Tonight
f!) WKRP in Cincinnati
8 :00 8 Cil ffi A-Teem [CCI A
nasty
brewe ry
owner
stoops to underhanded·
nes s in order to pu t a local
soda fountain o ut of busines s . (60 min.)
CII Gentle Ben
I]) Major League 8esaball
Film
ill II) lf2l Three's •a Crowd
(CCI Vic ky has e ve ryone
wondering what's wrong
when she starts be having
stran.Jl.ely. (RI
llJ ClJ ® Bon Voyage,
Charlie Brown The Pea nu\'
gang travel s to Fra nce as
exch a nge studen ts . (90
min.)
(]) IIJ) Novo[CCI 'Fro nti ers
of Plastic Surgery.' The
ra pidly advancing techn ol·
ogy of cosmetic s urgery is
e xamined . (RI (60 min.l
f!) MOVIE: 'The .Duchess
·and the Oiitwater Fox•
;IHBOI MOVIE: ' NatiMoi
lampoon•• V•cetion'
. ·IMAiil . MOVIE: 'Pollee
Aoademy' [CCI
8 :30 I]) PKA Full Contact
Karate: . Middleweight
Chaft!pi'ons~ip -Hull Ou•
bee, Canada ..- _. :
' ..
'Cii 8 Cl]i Foui-U~S. Bleeps/
.Blunders -ToniQ ht's in·
house guest is Ricardo
Montalbo n. (CCI
9 :00 8 ClJ ffi Riptide Cod y,
Nick and Boz set out to discover wh o has been du mping lethal waste into the
ocean. [R) [SO min 1
CII 70D Club
® 8 1f21 Who's tho Bossi
[CCI Angelo finds that her
new
boyfriend
would
rath er spend ·t ime watch·
ing s ports' with Tony than
wooing her. (R)
(]) {fj) Frontline [CCI 'Me·
mary of the Camps.' Foo·
ta g e shot by British ·and
American journalists in
April of 1945 docu me nts
th e horror of the discovery
of Nazi death ca mps by Allied forces. (60 min.)
9:30 ® II) ljJ) Hail to tho Chief
~CC) Julia's accountant.
Irving, is blackmailed by
som e peopl e who know of
his previ ous job.
llJ ® ® Amoricen Film
Salute ' o Gene Kelly Sh lr·
ley Mac laine hosts the
13th annUal life ach ieve·
ment award present.a tion .
(90 min.l
·
10:00 II CIJCV Remington Steele
Remington creates a fan .
tny case about a philandering huaba r. d in order to
get laura alone in San
Francisco. (60 min.)
I])
Austtolion
Ruleo
Football
.
.
® Ill l!2l 99 Ways to
Attract the Right Men ICCI
E•pert guests give advice
to s ingle worn en on how tu
discover if a ma n is right
for you. (60 mi n.l

Electrical

IIi Refrigeration

IIJ Statewid~

[j) Newawetch

SE~ING

Mechine repaln,
service. Authorized Singer
Sale• &amp; Service Sharpen ·
Sciuors. Fabiic Shop:
Pomoroy. 814 ·992-2284 . ,·

:;;:=::;;:::=:::;=:;=:
'·
85
General Hauling :·

fll Soap

SNAKE!! ·

James Boys Water Service .
Aloo poolo filled. Coli 614· ,
266 -1141 "' 614 -446 ·
1175 0•·114·448-791 ,1 .

I
DON''f

~INK

He'S EVE!&lt;:
COMING

Ken' I Wat•r Servtce. Well1,
cisterns, pools filled . Phone
814-317·0123 orl14-3877741 rilght o• dey.

ou·nr

Uphol1tery

PEANUTS

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 183 Sec . Avo,, Golllpollo . 814·448 · 71133 or81 4 ·441·
1833.
.

Auto Repair

I{(IU UNZIP TilE $LEEVES,
IT TURNS INTO A VEST...
'

.,' .

1 THINK

I'LL JUST

WEAR TI-lE SLEEV.E5..

[HBO] Maximum Security
An undercove r co p investigates the prison's drug
traffic.
[MA XI MOVIE : 'Brie n'a
Song'
10:30 CII CelebritY Chefs
I]) NBA Baoketbell Ploy·
offs: Teams
To Be
Announced
I]) Mclaughlin Group
(j]) Adul1 Yoors
fl) INN Nowo
IHaOI USA for Africa: Story
of 'We Are the World' Take
a be hind -the-scenes look at
this special recording session.
11 :00 II Cil®CV G IIJ~ e
l!2l Now•
CII Bill Cooby Show
I]) Monty Python
f11 Bonny Hill Show
11:30 lllllffi Tonight Show To·
·
night's guests are Grace
Jones a nd Joh n Ritte r. (60
mln.l
CII lleot of Groucho
I]) SpOrteconter
® WKRP in Cincinnati ·
II Cl) Foil Guy
CIJ Lotorlight Americo
(j) Tul
III IJJl ABC Nawa Nlghtllne
1111 Twilight Zona

by

Honrl Arnold and Bob Loo

onet4mertoeach square, tof9rm
four ordinaty words.

Fr,sr

D CIJ CIH!l lll CIJ ® m
lf2l News
•
CIJ Hot Potato
lil Beverly Hi llbilllel

..

.•

&amp; Heating

A a ¥ FUrniture Manufec- '
turing, St. Rt. 7 . CrOWJI '
P..oono Body lhqp. Looult City. Oh. Coli 814-261· '•
Ad Pt.PI..•nt· Not KIIK&lt; 1470, 0111 fvtl . 114·441•'
FrM Eotlmotao. 814·111· 3 ·438 . Old &amp; new
Uphosterad .
4174.

111-.

. ..

Rotary or cable tool drilling,
Most well• completed 11me
day. Pump sales and ••rvl ·
COl. 304-896-3802.

87

1114 Pord PU f ' 100, PI,
outa. Jto .,gina. Call 81 4 ·
~71-2428.
•

I

.

.

AINGLES 'S . SERVICE, ~ e• · · ·'
periencei:t _Carpe'riter, .A!eci:ri ~
clan,' Mlson ~ palfller, roof·
lng (including hot tar 1
opplicetlonl 304 -675·2088
or 875 · 7368 .

1. .1 Chevy Luv 4 opel.,
AM·F.M . Coeh price tl, 1 19.
John'• Auto 1 ..... lulllvllla
lid. O.llpolle. .

Block, brick, mortor ind
mooonry euppllao. M""ntoin
ltote Block, Rt. ~3. N.,.,
Hollen, W. Vo. · 304-812·
2222.

WATERPROOFING
.~:
lifetime gua·
:
1
rantH', Local reference•
"
furni1hed . Free eatlmatea. . : ·
Collcolle&lt;;t 1· 614·237·
;
0488. doy o• night. Rogoro • •.
Basement
Waterproofing.
~•
.
Uncondition11~

.

1177 Cour~er PU n..,; point
with 4 opil, t1 ,BOO. Call
114-371·2.182.

luftdlng M.itorlolo
.
•
Block, brick, oowar pi,...,
windowa. llnt•l• , etc .
Cloudo Wlnloro, Rio G•onde.
0 . Coli 114-241·1121 .

Marcum Roofing S. SpoutIng . Now il\stalling rubber
rooft. 30 veers experience.· .
specializing in buill up roof .•
Coll614· 388-9857.
•
,___ _ B
_A
_S:-E
: -M
: -::E::-N::T: - - - • ::

RON 'S Televl1ion Service ,
· Houaecallson FiCA. Quazar. ,
F.ord .v_an ,: cuJtomiZad, -:JA T·, GE. Spetialing :, in· .Ztnlth . .:. .
187'7. AT. PS. P8. ·good c•II304-578 · 239B or 814 , ..~:·:·
~ond .,' t3.900. Call ·31!4.
.4 46 · 2454..
.
.
' •.
675-1731 ofter 8PM .
'Fetty Tree Trimming. stumP ,
Jeep Commando V8 re,.ovol . Coil 304-8 .7 6 &lt;""il'"" 11;00:00 . 304-468· ~331 .
,!~

1110· J•p C!larbkll PS,
PI, loolllnt hubo, good
oond. c.. 114·241-1841.

,,

1980 Ford F150. FWD. Four
opoed, lock out hubo, 302
engine, Slarro Bravo, ot"f.
aide. Phone814-949-2-49 .
1978 Ford Club Wagon
Window Von . Blue and
white . 3151 automatic ,
power staerlng and brake1,
cruiai control. AM ~ FM - CB
tape player, dual air. good
body, good lntorior. t3460 .
Coli 614-986:4367 .

1881 Sport Mozde 8 opel.,
AM·FM, ~pere. caoh prlae
12.4... John' • Auto-·
lulavllla R~. Galllpollo.

Plokeno Ulld furnitura . 304171-6483 or 171·1460.

KnaUff Flr-ood Summer
rotlll-big loodo. Moy 1••·
July 3111. Ooell)'l opply to
HEAP. 814· 2Bf· U48.

1978 Lincoln Merit 4, for
111e or trode. Call 61 4·448·

Chevy Luv pickup, with flat
bed, offer. Coli 8142118'8251 liter 8:00PM.

Hlde·•·led. Excollont con·
dltlon . •100 . 114-8431384.

Fumlohed opt. edulto only, 3
roomo ond beth. Coli 304·
8715·2482.

1810 Dodge Romchorg ...
44 whael drive. 2· tone
peint, eutometic, 318 engine, dual exhaust, AM·FM .
Good condition . 814-949·
2830 ,
.

1 983 Camero Z-28. V-8
engine, gray metallic . leu
than 4,000 miloo, •11.000.
Cell 614·4411·8637 oftor
5 :00PM .

Country Oak blblao. aholro.
cupb4;)erda, deekl. ice boJJ.II .
Conkloo, Tupporo Plolno, Rt.
7 1 Hand crafud and
finished.

54 Miec. Merchendl.-

1975 Chevy 1 ton dump
truck. 4 opoed. Coli 114·
982-3194.

Ford
offer. Coli,.
eftar 8 :00PM .

Sel{l · Kenmore. w11h1r,
dryer, heavy duty. Coll81 4 ·
241!'-6288 .

RICK'S NEW ' AND· USED
FURNITURE. Compare our
prlcet. Nve today. Pt-one
304· 713· 6430 ,

77 Plymouth Volere good
cond . Coll614· 379· 2124.

1979 Ford 4x4. Good condition, mu1t '"· 114-892·
6815.

Farm Equipment

Serv1ce~

Trucks

----,.---1 ·,-;:7!j:·T.;;;;;~;(E,;;j;,;:~~

61

..

lmprovemants

For sale:Gray Are bien horse.
,Plymouth Turiomo,
7 -yaar-old. esoo. , spotted
mare pony, 6-year·old.
P.S c, P.B.. AM-FM,
s 100. t block ond white louver•. 6 Jpeedl. Excellent
pony. $100. Want to buy:a- condition .' Coli 114-742 ·
Tomato plantt, 2&amp;.000. All mall western horse saddle. .2979 or 814·742 · 2143.
61 4·992·8804.
in trayl . 50 to a tray. Harry I- - - - - - - - - - 1966 Multong con .. rtlbla.
'HUI. Letart Foils. Ohio. 614·
For 11le at all times springing Candy· apple red. · EKctillant
247-2142.
Holaterie cows end heifers. condition. •e.ooo. Phone
304·576·2610. 875-304- 61 4· 742·21 60 or 614-742·P:Otted ~omato plants. ~ 100
22 6 7
per 1.000 plants or 10 cents _2_2_6_3_·
a JJII!nt. Ponlanc;~. Call even:
'
1 979•
Registered Simmental bulla.
iogo's1 4 · 843·6309 . .
1tareO, air.
Dl!ln·ny, D•"V h ursI · C aII ,e Iter condition.
8 p.m. 304-882 · 3295.
cruiaa. power Jteering and
brake:J. Craig Venoy. Call
59 For Sale or Trade
614-992·8607:
Transporlalion
1974 Pontiac VeRtura. 6
1978 Jeep Cherokee 4 dr ..
cylinder, standard trans; In
'.
auto .• 6 cycl. , PS. PB, neww
good ohepo. Phone 614tires, AM -FM radio, good
949·2681 after 4 :00 pm.
cond. Aol&lt;ing •4,000. or
Autos for $ale
trade for pickup truck or
Ch!IYatte, 4 door, 4
pickup ·of equal valUe.
' .
excellent ~O"ndl ·.
otonda'rd. ohift: Call~;.~;;··""-·3 , 7-00 . 814 .. 992 ·
388,9010. · I
.

..

- - - - - - ··

____ • ,

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

! '~ 111 S"pfilll",
&amp; L1ves1uck

CAPTAIN EASY

~========::;;:=========~ ~8-,....---:H-:-o-m_!l

1616.

~8

1

20 foot Midas Celnpe r
•2 .600 .00 . Go od cond ,
304·675-5309 .

large Quarter Horae. Very
gentle. Good far adult or 1881 blue Mozde RZ· 7 ..c .
c hild. 2 Hereford white face shapo , 27,000 miloo .
bulls. 1. two yean old and·1, 17.600 Can be eeen 11 1ha
nin,e months old . 1 regit· Jumbo in Rio Grande. Coli
tered Hereford cow with 614·.246-9634 or'81 4·241·
5439 .
coif. Coll614· 992 ·7201 .

Fiah Tank and Pet Shop,
2413 Jack1on Avenue ,
Point Pleasant, 304·676·
2063. Fish, birds and more.

6 :00

1~ THAT SCIWIBLEO Wi:&gt;RO IWIE

UniCfamble tneee four Jumbfea,

,5 / 7/85

Wimlebago motor home,
23 ', AC. generator, CB,
1972. like new. 810.500.
Call 304·675-1731 after
II PM .

Autos for Sele

fffl~\iM"t ) ii)lt

r:IJ ~ ~~·

EVENING

Arge1y 26ft. ne w t ires, axe .
cond. Coll61 ~ -446 · 0514.

71

The

Television
Viewing

i,

\

~uarter

I have 2 · 9 Wk. old Cockers-

DICK TRACY

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers ·

Livestock

63

Pomeroy- Middlepon, Ohio

'

'

Veil~ Furniture, Mw •
uHd . Large eectlan of quetlty furniture. 121 I Eutern
Avo., Golllpollo.

u.;furnllhed apartment ~
yard end beNment, d1p01it.
' phone 304 - 871 · 7641
ewnlnt•·

•

tre nche r and used 7014
Da v i s~ w-hoe for ule. 8141194· 7842 or 894-5008 .

puppies:

7, 1985

Auto R e p air

Complete mec ha nical raPIIir, t ranami11ion repair,
engine tune up, end COIJ1·
plat e engine rebuilt. Price
reesoneiHe. Call after 4:3 0
1· 304·176-2884.

U ud R -40 ditc h w itc h

HILL C RES T KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor-ou tdoor fa cilities .
Doberman

77

61 · Farm Equipment

Pets for Sale

AKC

12•60 ~ bdr., $200 mo,,
t20 0 dep. Coli 614 ·388 ·
8304 or 614 · 388·9981 .

2 bedrcwm m obile h ome for
rent . Burd e tte A d dn .
$1 75.0 0 plua utilities end

56

7, 1985

Tuesday,

Ohio

o

f

:o:.~- -

I MAYOF
r)

1

~DINNAL

) []

I PENOLY

rJ

1

.'

tJ
tIJ

WHA'T 'TH e
E$011 $ 'Ti C:A L..
· NU c:&gt;iS'T WA5 A l.l.

WAAP'P'Et:l' Ul" IN.
Now arrange the circled letters to

form

answer, as sug-

the tufprise

gested by tlla above cattoon.

I I I)( I I I IX X)

Mswe!:(

(Answers tomorrow)
Yesterday's

I

Jumbles' AD AGE MOUSV STOLEN CARSON
Answet": What he said when the judge sentenced him
. to be hangod-THAT'S 6AO "NOOSE"

.IIIIDGI

James Jacoby

Show your ace
if there's ~pace

NORm
.K942

1·7·15

.AJH4
•1oe

+u

By James Jacoby

WEST

EAST
May I have the pleasure of intra+3
+Q8
. ducing you to a lull· blown controver·
.KQ
IO"!
.732
sy about cue-bidding an ace when
.AK87 53
•QJ61
partner is making a slam try? First,
+ IOU
+QJ7
let's examine the bidding of today's
SOUTH
deal.
+AJI016 5
Because of a lac k of defensive
strensth, East passed with his 13
high-card pOints. North made a limit
+AK 8 64
raise of three spades in response to
Vuinerabie: Both
his partner's opening one-spade bid .
Deale r: East
South now made a slam try with his
four-club bid. North looked at his
Wesi Nort~ Eoll
Sot!~
eight high-card points and decided to ·
Pass I+
suppress his heart ace. When he bid
Pass 3+
Pass t+
lour spades, South assumed that
Pass 4+
pass Pus
Pass
North did not Have a red ace. He
passed and the good slam was missed .
The question to be resolved is this:
Opening, lead: +K
When · partner makes · a . slani · try, L..-...,..,....,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.J
s~ould you shciw: an ·ace, e.ven t.h!iugh
you · construe your band to be of a.
very minimum nature? The Jacoby
rule is very simple a nd sensible.
Wbep partner expresses slam i~terest; you 'have an obligation to show an · In a different situation, let 's say
, a ce, regardless of your · strength, if where Soutb bids four diamonds .. a
~ u:e:blddirig thaLace does not put you . ·slam tf)i an&lt;! Nii'.'tb .has t~e.,club ace,
higher than the game le ve). lrr today's North would not s how that' clqb
at
deal, North would show the heart ace, ihe five level uniess he has more tban
and the slam would be reached.
a minimum eight high-card paints.

.5•z

ace

t'SHM~t,(
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Cassette
material
5 Muscadine,
e.g.
I 0 Astringe nt
II Academic
officer
13 I ,609.3

39 Cicy of
Manasseh
40 Blunder
41 This (Sp.)
DOWN
I Florida
cit}l

2 Foreign
3 Goofing up
meters
4 Uncle
14 Exagge rate
(Scot.)
Yeeterda7'1 ....wer
15 Fencing
5 Complain
dummy
6 Face with 19 Thomas 29 We ll done!
16 •A Boy
masonry
or Horace 30 Re ntal sign
Named
7 Mature
22 Maize
31 Gawk
•
8 Autumn
ll3 Swamp :II Gennan
17 Turf
frui ts
24 Living
article
18 Spirit
9 Guarantee 25 Mild oath 37 New
won~hiper 12 AB of no w Z7 Heating
Guinea
20 Biblical
16 Hindu god
tank
I.OWII
man
21 Chun:h part
22 Hurl

1:-:-+-+-+--

23 cum laude
25llequesl
recipient
26 - eve n
keel
27 Malt yeast
28 Meat cut
29 Easter
headwear
32 I love (Lat.)
SS Equip
34 Fate
35 Low shoe
S7 "Damn
Yankees"
. temptress
38 Stowing
derric k
DAILY CRYPl'OQUOTES - Here'a bow lo work It:

6-+-+-

·~ .

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands for IIIIOthtr. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostt&lt;lphes, the length and f0111111tion of the words are all
hlnta. Each day the code letleneredifferent.
CRYPTOQUOTE
5· 7
Q CCF
P B XV
VBH

'MXA F
TXY H
ZGHXV

V C YXJ . -

vc

CU VHW
COG

A CO W VG J

WX V K C W

H . R .

RHH

KV

KR

TX G AB

Yetterdef'• CeytoqDOte: NO MAN CAN BE IN
PERFECT ACCORD
SCHOPENHAUER

..

wmt ANY ONE BUT HIMSELF. -

.-.

�7.1986

,

I

.

...

. . . ... . -

. ..........

Chase Manhatten · buying more S&amp;Ls
with assets of $24 billion, wUI buy First National BankofCJnclnnatl Is
American Savings Bank of Upper assisting Charter Oak with lnsu·
Sandusky, Permanent Savings &amp; · ranee from the Federal Savings and
Loan Insurance Corp.
Loan Association or Hammon,
McAlister said he wOUld allow the
Oxford Savings Association of
of Clnclnna tl thrifts to open for
pair
Oxford, and 51\vings One Assocla·
full
service
when they and their
Uon of Dresden. The four thrUts
banks
make the request.
sponsoring
have as;;ets totaling $291 mUUon.
of
the
11 remaining
Another
McAlister said Molitor has been
thrifts, Anchor Savings Association
acquired by Central Trust of
Clncinnatl arid Is In the process of · ofHUisboro, Is In the process of using
a $425,!ID state loan to help qualify
getting Insurance from the Federal
.
for federal Insurance.
Deposit Insurance Corp., while

COLUMBUS (UPI) The
number
of
Ohio
savings
and
loan
Clarence N. Rupp
Karen L Johnson
associ a tlons stJU lacking a way to
Karen Lynn " Prudy" Johnson, 41,
reQpen has dropped below the dozen
Clarence Nicholas Rupp, 72, a Racine, died Sunday in Holzer
mar,k. and wtll go even lower today
former reskll'llt of Middleport and a Medical Center.
as the Chase Manha ttan Bank of
longtime resident or Toledo, died
She was born Jan. 7, 1944, In
New York announces some new
Monday at the Northside Convales· Parkersburg to Charles H. and
acquisitions.
cent Center In Atlanta, Georgia.
Bonnie F . Wolfe 'lbelss. Racine,
Honie Savings of America. Los
A retired ma nager of the Food· Ohio.
Angeles . the second-largest sa vlngs
town food store In Toledo and a U.S.
She was an aide for 13 years with
bank in the country, has signed
· Anny veteran of World War II. the Southern kindergarten aild a
letters
of Intent to purchase four of
Rupp was born March 22, 1913 In member of the Bethany United
the
closed
Ohio thrifts, Robert B.
Attala, Ala., a son of Elmer and Methodist Church, Dorcas, Ohio.
McAlister,
state superintendent of
Maude McComb Rupp. He had been
Surviving along with her parents
savings
and
loan associations,
a member of the Middleport · are her husband Harold David
announced
Monday
..
Masonic Lodge.
Johnson, Racine, Ohio; one son,
In
addition,
Ch.arter
Oak Savings
Survivors Include a daughter and David M. Johnson, Racine; two
ASSOciation
and
Molitor
LOan and
son·ln-law,KrlstenandSteveFrled· sisters, Joy K. Morarlty, Syracuse
Building Co., both Cincinnati, are
man, Atlanta; a brother, Marvin and lbura J . Hupp, Racine; one
Rupp, Fostoria; a sister, Gladys brother, Thomas M. Theiss, Por· · neru· receiving federal Insurance
with help from a pair of Cincinnati
Myers, Toledo; and two grandsons, tland and several nieces and
banks, McAlister said.
Bryon and Evan Friedman, both a t nep~s ..
The latest transactions wltl rehome ln ·Atianta.
Funeral services will be Wednes·
He was preceded In death by his day at1 p.m. at Foglesong Funeral · duce to 11 the number o!Ohio thrifts
stW open only for ilmlted wlthdra·
parents and his wife, Veva Russell Home with the Rev. Paul McGuire
~als
of $1,!ID per month per
officiating.
· Rupp.
customer.
Fifty-seven will be open
Graveside services will be held 3
Burial Will be 1n the Greenwood
tor
full
service.
·
·
p.m. ~ednesday, along with a Cemetery.
said
Home
Savings,
McAIIs!er
veteran s memorial service. at
Friends may call at the funeral
Riverview Cemetery. Rev. George home trotn 2-4 and 7·9 p.m. on
.
. .
Riser will officiate.
Tuesday. .
..

Cost-sharing

The mayor also reported that
another contractor may take over
construction of a new Nelson's Drug
Store. Building materials for the
· project were left on the East Main .
St.' site when Gene Metz Construe·
!Jon, Belpre. began ·expertencjng
financial dlfllcultles. Metz Con·
structlon Is now Involved In lltlga ·
lion over the matter.
As requested by Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman, council voted
to let Middleport administer the
.state funded cab service which has
~ proposed for the two villages.
Administration wtlllnclude writing
the Initial grant, keeping the books
$nd auditing the program.
· In other business, council wjll
l)egtn taking applicatlons for a
supervisor to oversee Pomeroy
summer wor~rs who wiD be
employed through the Ga!Ua-Melgs
Qmmunity Action Agency's Job
Training Program Act. An older
person wDI be needed for the
position. Half of this person's wages
Will be paid through another C.A.A.
program: The vtll!J&amp;e will pay t~
olber half.
.
. . . '
. ·:·. Council discUSsed . a faD trash
pickUp lor the village but made no
decision. A recent trash pickup was
much appreciated by village resl·
dents, a~rdlng to Councilman

Jane Walton, clerk-treasurer,
pointed out that total costs to the
village for the recent week·lorig
trash piCkup was $250,
Walton also said that city lneome
tax moliey to this point Is being used
to ''play catchup." said Mayor
Seyler, "We were bankrupt, but
we'te getting wellJ'Veryday."
At the next regular meeting,
council wtll select an engineer to
outline upgrading of the village's
sewer system as requested by the
Environmental Protection Agency .
Present for Monday's meeting
were Mayor Richard Seyler; Jane
Walton, clerk-treasurer; Council
members Larry Wehrung, John
Anderson, Bruce Reed, Henry
Werry and BUI Young; and Jennifer
Sheets, solicitor.

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRINt S~SON

Cornplellli• of

.,.table &amp;bed-

dirw plants. hal'lirw blsbts,
potted pllnts - bloomi• &amp;foli·
•· shrubbery, rose bushes,
azaleas &amp; Rhododendrons.
OPEN DAILY 9 to 15
SUNDAY 1 to 5
PH.992-5776

.~·~;c.·. TIF, 11~cer1t's~
~

-

.

nice one! Present her With
gilts like these that say
you care! .

•Sportswear
•Knit Tops
•Shorts
•Slacks

The Public Utility t:omriiiSSIOil of
Ohio ' (PUCO) Is holding a public
hearing May 9 to review Columbus
and Southern Coal Electric Company's line of maintenanCe, emergency planning and safety proce·
dures. The healing will be held May
9 at 6: 30 p.m. at the Athens C9unty
Courthouse.
PUCO Chairman Thomas
Chema and Commissioner Ashley
Brown wtll conduct the hearing
with the Athens County Commissioners. The public ls encouraged to
attend and present their concerns.
"It Is Important to Jet the PUCO
know our concerns about q,SOE's
line maintenance, emergency planning and safety procedures," stated
Phyllis Casto , AOPIC board
member.

731.
Ticket sales totaied $2,&lt;Il3,965,
with a payoff due of $1,250,965.

•Sietpw•Dresus
•llouus
•Skirts

a

Bond
•
ISSUe
fails

'

P!CK-4

PENNI OIL
PEPSI

·. ELBERFELDS

.

IPAU
-160l&gt;
.

1293.

$179

PfCK-4 ticket saleS totaled:
$18,298.50, with a payoff due of
$82,421.
PICK-4$1 straight bet pays$4,11;8.
_ PICK-4$1 box l?et paysSrr.i.

First choice
for Mother's Day...

".~(• rdn,rc

.

.. POMEROY

With A Sm ;r,.••

IO&lt;alld In

FOSTORIA

LARGE SELECnON

BRASS -

Genuine Slonee .· Avilllabliln

Diamonds, Rubletl, Emlnlldl
and Slpphi!WI
·~

STEMWARE

SIL.VER

OFF
NOW 20°/0 OFF NOW 20°/o
SET OF 4

DIAMOND

cliJSfm'S

All14K GOLD

GROUP OF

CHAINS

GIFTWARE

Now25°/o OFF

NOW 50°/o OFF

All GOLD FILLED

The P11lt~t Gilt
F11 Motltt1

~

20°/o OFF

~

FREE ENGRAVING
FREE RING SIZING
FREE GIFT WIAP

JEWELRY

4K ·Opal .

200/o Off For Mother'• Day
by
•Bulova
•Cara~elle

•Pulsar

ALL

REDUCED

20°/o

FOR MOM

14K

Add·A·Gold-

Fot Tht Spt~l•l Mothet

4L ·Opal

···t
~@l

ALL

20°/o

Diamond
Earrings
.......~~·
....

OFF

.. ~

~.);

'"

SAVE

20°/o

•Free Gift Wrapping
•Free Engraving

,4N · Smokey.Topaz 40 · Dia. Tiger Eye ·

SAVE

Diamond Pendant

25°/o

2 Sectlona. 16 Pages 26 C•ntt
A Multimedia Inc. NtwapiiPfH

are:
GaiDa County Local Schools, $3.7 million; Cou~ty
general fund, $&amp;17,&lt;XXJ; Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint
Vocatlonal School, $300,00); and, Cheslre Twp.•
$168,!nl.
· Just how much money Is lnvolved·is uncertain and
the Impact Will vary with each county, said Jim
Witzel, administrator of the public utllity tax division
within the state department of 'taxation.
The redistribution stems from a series of sult.i. filed
In 1981, 1982, and 1983 by the Gallia County auditor,
who questioned the method used by the tax
commission to apportion personal property taxes of
the Ohio Power Co. and the Ohio Vallev Electric Co.

. The case went before the board of tax appeals and
eventually reached the Ohio Supreme Court last July,
where a decision favoring the county auditor was
affirmed. But the full Implications of the decision are
only now becoming known to ol~er county auditors.
The six counties will gain .because they contain
power generating facilities owned by the two utilities,
said Witzel. The change does not affect the overall
value of the companies, he said.
"In our original method, we did not apportion all of
the value qf the powr,r plant In the county where It is
. located," Witzel explained. "We sprea~ it over all of
the counties Where It operated."
The method of taxing electric -companies was
changed as a result of the decision. But because the

•

Senrices continue
at Morse Chapel
despite padlock,
•
•
trespassing notice

.....;.,
'
. ,'. .

litigation Involved only those two companies, the
changes affecting the other utilities were made
beginning with the 1984 tax duplica 1es and Will not
require a redistribution, Witzel said.
"What we had to do Is go back Into all of these
counties and take some of that value back out.and put
It Into Gallla and the others," he said.
The money owed by the 59 counties Will be withheld
from future distributions from the state, Witzel said,
but that wtll leave less money fOr each polltlcaL
subdivision, such as schools, townships and others
authorized to levy taxes, until the debt Is paid.
"Picture It as a pie. We, carved It one way, and the
Supreme Court divided It another way, " said Witzel.

~ J,,

•• ·f

A $1,630,!ID bon(! iSsue-tax levy,
which would have provided funds
along with state aid for an extensive
building program, failed &amp;70-579 at a
By BOB HOEFLICH
special election held Tuesday In the
Senllilel Slafl Writer
Eastern Local School District.
AlthOugh
the entran~ Is padAlthough the Issue was for 6.37
and
a
!repassing warning is
locked
mills the Eastern Board of Educa·
p&lt;ll&gt;ted,
services
wtll he held Sunday
lion had Indicated that a five mtll
at
the
Morse
Chapel
Community ·
levy which produces monies for
Church
on
County
Road
35 near
building Improvements In the
Dorcas.
Charles
P
.
Bailey,
chair·
district would be removed so that
man of the chapel's board of
the tax inerease·lf the Issue passed .
·
trustees , said TueSday:
would have bj.&gt;en only 1.87 mills In
rn
fact,
Bailey
ls!;ued
a
public
·
new'taxE'$.
riot!~ to·that euect in re&amp;c!!On to tl\e
. The state had promised $3,823,695
padlock and the trepaJslngnotlceon
to the total building program
the 126 year-old church. It has the
planned by the district. The plan was
same salutation as the !repassing
llJr renovat!on of the present fiigh
CUlSII:D-'DIIIIJI)'oarolddluidlonfuinlyBoad COnfl.lrente or tile MetiJodlst Church. However,
fitiol tnt
Jidated' el
-';' 3Snelll'~-'-r~~lll)dJlllllt!!daplnst ~are beii!J~ aa.cJ wonlllp wiDapparentJy
noll~ ahd reads; .
.
. .
.. sa
. .. o a COR&amp;Q
f')'l&lt;'n·.
:•.--"'·g' by .._, __._ Edwaidll !ll. lhli.' ..,...,. .Ohio COilllnUe 10 lake plll(!e lU; l1ie Church 'despite threats of ·
·. , ''fo WJ!omlt May CO:ncern: .. ,
'.tllty.SChoolandthl!'constructlonofa
_ .,~.
-...-·-·
..
.
.
.
.
p •._._..........
. . "Tliere wlil .be: regular services
new high school.
&gt;
held at the Morse Chapel Commun·
· Here's the precinct vote on the
lty
Church as scheduled, May 12,
Issue:
1985.
Easlem Local Leyy
Yeil No
"Sunday school, lOa.m.; worship
East Bedford (Part) (6
'
service,
lla.m.
voters;
1 0
"Everyone
invited to attend.
North Chester
79 89
"Come
expecting
a blessing from
South Chester
72 104
the
Lord.
We
believe
In worshiping
West Chester
93 83
God through birth, death and
Lebanon (Part.) tersl
4 9
ByNANcr YOACHAM
Quebec, Canada the first week of catied by Fultz to testify about the
resurrection of Jesus Christ."
Long Bottom
32 60
Sentinel staff Writer
April on a French Club field trip. events of the field trip. Both
A !repassing sign posted on the
Ollvedale
96 90
A hearing on a motion for Informal hearings for each student accounts were nearly identical
front
door of the church when
Reedsville
57 78
preliminary lnlunctlon against Dan were held last Friday morning. including the fact that Mrs. Poston.
residents
went to the church the past
Orange
145157
Morris, Meigs Local Superintend- Expulsions were effective as of 3: 15 who was In charge of the trip, was
Sunday,
and
signed by Benjamin
· TOTAU!
579 6l8
ent, and the Meigs Local Board of Monday. Fultz and the students' never told by the non-teaching
Edwards,
superintendent
of the
In the only other election held
Education has been continued until parents . were · present for the chaperones on the excursion that
AI
hens
MethOdist
District,
reads.
In
Tuesday In Meigs County Syracuse · noon Friday by Meigs County Informal hearings held separately. some of the students had been
part
:
Vtllage voters approved a 1.8 mill,
Common Pleas Judge Charles
In opening the hearing Tuesday. drinking.
"To Whom It May Concern:
five year tax levy, · for current
Knight.
Doidge, who had just turned i8
Fultz argued that by expelling the
"The
Morse Chapel United Meth·
expenses 68 to 18.
The motion was Died by Pomei'O)' students before they have ex· prior to the trip, testified that he
odlst Church Is otflclaily closed by
attorneys Bernard Fultz and Jen·
hausted administrative remedies, purchased 1\'hiskey at thelnslstance
action of the West Ohio Conference
nlfer Sheets on behalf ot three Meigs
of several other boys on the trip and
their rights are being denied.
of the United Methodist Church's
students Sean Doidge, David Smith,
·Morris, called by Fultz to testify, th11t each of the boys contributed to
Jeffrey Basham and thetr parents.
said the plalntlfls have not ex· the cost.
The students and . their parents
It was pointed out by FUltz that
hausted their administrative reme·
· have lodged a suit against the dies and may appeal to the board for other students In thegroupoflSwho
defendants Charging that their further hearing. It was Morris' had made thetrlp,are also alleged to
expulsion from Meigs High was
Understanding that no appeal to the have drinking, but no action has
unconstitutional.
been taken against those students.
board has been made.
Joseph Lawless, stopped by
If granted by the judge, the
Morris
said the other cases are
Morris explained that during the
Pomeroy Pollee at 2:44 a.m.
preliminary injunction wiD prevent time or expulsion, the students are under Investigation and the board Is
Tuesday morning on a traffic
the defendants from putting the not permitted to make up work, nor considering taking action.
viola tlon has been taken Into expulsions Into effect until after a
Following readings of key board
take textbooks home, 'nor enter
custody at the Meigs County
final hearing on the matter.
and rules of conduct
policies
school property, Doidge, the only
Sheriffs Department after a check
All parties involved agreed that senior Involved, would not be regarding the use of "conterfelt
on his driver's license number
the students should be allowed to aUowed to graduate unless he has controlled substances," Morris said
revealed he was wanted on charges
return to .classes untH the Friday the necessary number of credits. those · polices and rules· were
In three other Ohio counties.
preliminary Injunction hearing. Fultz pointed out that. without a approved by the board every year.
Lawless; 57, of Sprtngfled, Is They will not be participating·· In diploma, Doidge would not beableto Fultz, who says he searched (he
charged In Monroe County with
extra-curricular activities.
enter the U.S. Naval Nuclear board minutes, charges the policies
defrauding an Innkeeper. Other
The students were expelled from Engineering Program this and FUies were•not approved.
charges against him are pendl~g In
school after It was determined that summer.
This was the critical issue of the
Clark and Franklin Counties, off!·
each had consumed alcohol or had
. Mrs. Virginia Poston, Meigs High hearing.
(Continued on page 6)
alcohol In his possession while In French teacher, and Doidge ·were
(Continued on page 6j

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Question over board policies
arises at expulsion hearing

Couple face
charges in
four counties

Diamond Clusters give
the mood of one big
diamond at an afford·
able price.

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday. May 8. 1985

From United Pn!M
OVP Stall Reporis
CHESHffiE - Fifty-nine Ohio counties that
collected taxes from the Ohio Power Co. and the Ohio
Valley . Electric Co. have to return some of that
money, but eight other counties - Including Gallia
County - will reap a windfall as a result of
reapportionment decls.lon.
.
The eight counties receiving refunds, and the .
amount to he returned, are:
Galli a County, $5.2 million; Jefferson County,
$712,!XXl; Morgan County, $2.5 million; Pike County,
$215,(00; UnlonCounty,$100,(00; WashlngtonCount)l,
$1.41l;l1Uion; and Henry, $900,!XXl.
Gallla's local agencies to reap the greatest benefit

•Fragrancei

Ohio lottery winners
CLEVELAND (UP!-) - Mon·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Nwnber

e
Vot.35. No.17
Copyrighted 1986

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Gallia'·s Gavin tax return totals $5.2 million

Make Mom's day an·especially ·

PUCO schedules
line hearin,.g

·&lt;Continued from page 11

tt.••ad's Grea•IIIM a

Bishop, Cabinet and Dlstrtct Build·
lng and C hurch Locallons
Committee.
"This property Is held legally by
the trustees of the West Ohio
Conference. Persons who trespass
these premises ww be prosecuted to
the fullest extent of the law.
"This property Will be Offered lor
sale about June 1. 1985."
·
.. Acopyofthetrespas81ngorderws
"smt -to Shel1ff . Howard Frank.
~ccotding to a notation atthe liottom
of the order.
Mr, and )l.lrs. Bailey .Indicated
they !\'ere advised that the church
.:was helrig closOO ~~~ $Old ·~ail$e . ,
there ·aTE! only twO ·inemberli.
However, the Baileys report that
there may be only "two members"
on the church book. but that
attendance Is nonnally about15tol8
people each Sunday even though
attendance was low on some
Sundays during the past winter
when weather made the roads
almost an Impossibility to travel. ·
Although residents attending the
church last Sunday morning found
the door padlocked and the notice
posted, services went on as usual.
Screws were removed from the
hasp to gain entrance and were
replaced after the services so the
door remained padlocked. Apparently, the same procedure wUl be
followed next Sunday when services
are again planned at the loca lion.
The Baileys say that the church.
(Continued on page 6)

Timber contract found- valid.in Meigs
Court
.
Meigs County Common Pleas judge feels the Meredith's were
Judge Charles Knight has decided
aware ol the value of the tlmher
that a tlmbertng contract between
because they knew that In 1m. Asa
Bllly Joe Butcher, Albany, and
Hoskins, who then owned the .
RlchardandMaryMeredlth,Pome·
property, received $40,!XXl tor
roy. Is valid.
approximately one-half of the
The judge concluded that conten·
tlmber taken from several acres on
lions by the defendants that "false the·land. The judge also concluded
·and tradulent" representations
that It was the Meredlths who made
·were made to them by Butcher, the . the lnltial'l:ontact with Butcher.
plalntlft, and that they "relied upon
The Meredlths alleged that the
. the representations" because they tlmher contract was tor an "uncon·
"have never dealt In the timber slcouaably" low price. However, the
business" weren't valid.
judge stales that court'B are not
The judge noted the defendants prone to probe Into the amount ot
provided evidence that their lack consideration and that while pay·
of knowledge In the timber business ment to Meredith's from Butcher
hindered them In making deCisions
($4500 on a $52,!nl gross) Is
landOWnerS make dally regarding .substantially io~r.than area stand· .
operations upon their ptopei ty. The
•

oo

•

&gt;.
I.

ard, the defendants chose to receive • field whle storing logs there from
payment by cashier's check for an other operatlons and for cutting
Immediate need rather than specu- seventy trees under eighteen Inches
late on a percentage basis. Butcher In diameter. The court ruled $1!XXl to
be reasonable payment for dam·
lijld otlered the Meredith's forty
percent of the gross lor "saw" ages. Butcher has parttallycornpen·
lumber and fifty percent of the · sated Meredith's In the amount of
$250 leaving $750 to be paid.
"veneer" lumber.
The court further concluded that
The court concluded that each
party made a reasoned decision claims ol Butcher regarding dally
based upon their needs at the tlmeol earnings loss must tall for lack ol
the contract. The contract, entered evidence.
Ftllng of Judge Knight's opinion
Into April 10, 198t, gave Butcher the
terminates
the timbering contract
tlmberrlghtstoaUtreesgreaterthat
181nchesindlameteratthestumpon between Buther and the Meredith's.
the Meredith's 166 acre Bedford ·
Butcher was represented by St~e
Story'of Pomeroy. William LaVelle •
Township fann for the $4500 swn.
According to the judge's opinion, of Athens represented the
Butcher Is to compensate the Meredlths.
Meredith's for the loss of use o'r a

'

NEW SIGN -

1broup

lhe eftoria ollhe Melp County J~

Court, lhe Meigs County Enatneer's Dept., Soutbem School D111r1ct lila
medlanlal and ~he Racine Vllap Street Deparlma!t, INs- .. by.

inch reflectortzed I"'"" and white direcilonal sip to Soi10 IW lfiP
School has been placed at tile inlellleellon of State~ ... ..,.,.
St., Raclae. Supt. Bobby Onl and· lhe cliolrtd's board of ....._...._
extended thanks to aD lho8e who worked on the project. l'lduaed w1111
t.he new sip are I lor, DIIIIRI!De, bus rnecbanlc; Glen Rloeraftlleltreet
.department and BID Hoback, bus meclwdc. AD three worked •
erecting the sgn.

-

~:

···

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