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OUR GENERIC DRUGS
Can Save You Money

Public ripoffs??

Boston Marathon

See letter on Page 2

Photos, srory on Page 4

Meigs, Eastern lose

Leukemia advances

See siAJries on Page 3

See Cancer answerline on Page 8

EASTER CANDY
IIIIIATURE
IARSHIALLOW EGGS

12 IICH
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r t'

t' I

l.&gt;~J
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REDWOOD
CHAIR

.99e

1001.

\loUJ , No . 1
Copyrighted 1984

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LEAF
PEACOCK EGGS

Utility companies across the sta te began pulling the
plug on non-paying custom ers Monday, oneday after a
virtual moratorium on shutoffs ended
Last week . the state's Officeo! Conswners' Counsel
estimated utilities would pull the plug on as many as
177,1XXJ Ohioans.
John !Vi. "Jake" K oebel, office manager for
Columbia Gas of Ohio. reported l hal it was "relatively
quiet" Monday, with no shutoffs olanned.

" In unit s that arP working. we'rp studying il
unit -by-unit." Koebel sa id . "\JnJortunal&lt;'ly, f don't Sl'&lt;'
a rush of payment s."
Koebel reponed that delinquent customers have
been informed of the shutoff date through notices and
by Columbia Gas personnel, and added that shutoffs
were "the last thing" the utility wanted to do.
As of this morning, Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Elcctlic Co. has had no shutoffs. although Lonnie
Leonard. area office manager. said that isn't an
indication t hNe won't be shutoffs.
" What we're doing, and apparen tly through the
mail, we've had a hea''Y flow of peop le making
arrangement s." Leonard sa id . " They don't want lobe
cut off , and we don't want that to ha ppen
"We can di sconnect. and we have the right to do so,"

Leonard continued. " I can't saywewon'ltoday, but we

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel stall
Pomeroy Council Monday
night approved the hiring of an
auditor from the State Auditor's
oftl('(' to assist with the village's
financial problems.
The resolution requests that
the State Auditor's office make
available certain data concern ing financial planning for the
village.
It further asked tha t a state
auditor be mgaged at the rate of
$15 an hour not to exceed 40 hours
to provide council with projected
financial data as requested by
the v illage clerk, mayor or
council president.
Councilman John Anderson
said the hiring would give council
a handle on what it should do to
best meet the financial obliga tions of the village since there is
such a tight money situation.
Council. after talking with
John Koebel, entered into an
executive session to discuss the
financial situation.
During the session with Koebel
of Columbia Gas, Koebel said it
was brought to his attention
following the recent !ire in
Middleport. th at the gas company's emergency number wa s
not Usted In the white pages of the
phone book. However. the correct nwnber is Us ted in the yellow
pages. Due to the fact the number
was not in the white pages there
was some difficulty in locating
the ga• company at the time of
the fire, Koebel noted.
Koebel presented the mayor
with severa l booklets called
"Public Safety, Natural Gas"
which lists phone numbers of the
gas company where they may
reached on holidays, after hou rs
and in case of emergency.
Koebel also told council that
the gas company Is abandoning
service to property on Welsh
Town H ill that has not used their
service for several years.
He also said the company

First Alert

READY-UTE JR~

7 01.

I

.·.:...-------

-

Model RL50

And

NANCARROW'S PHARMACY

The Eastern Board of Eduaction
Monday night ren ewed mnlracts
for certified and non-certified em ployes, accepted resignations and
agreed to establish a second
kindergarten class at Chester
Elementary.
The board acceptE'Ci resignations
from the foll owing, Archie ROSP as
head football coach, Dennis Eic hin·
ger as junior high footba II coach and
sophomore class advisor, Ralph
Wigal as sevenlh and eighth grade
girls basketball coach, Susan Arnold as , varsity girls basketball
coach, Maida Long, junior high
cheerleader advisor. and Lynette
Van Reeth as senior high cheerleader ad,1sor.
Employes hired
Certified employes hired were
James Hut!, NormanBahr, Carolyn
Tripp, Seott Wolfe, George Gagal,
Rececca Eichinger, Wendy Halar,
Anna Rice, Michael Will, K ay
Balderson, Linda Brock, Barbara
Russell, Lynette V anReeth, Brian
Windon, Maida Long, Lois Whitehead, James Wilhelm . Richard

ruled that no Oh io uWity could disconnf'&lt;'l residential
gas or electric service without obtaining PUCO
approval in each case_ Cincinnati Gas &amp; E lectric Co.
spokesman Bruce Stoeckl in said the ban amounted to

may , if we can't work it out wHh someone. We have a

va riety of plans available for pa;ment."
Leonard noted that the most difficult problem facing
C&amp;SOE are customers that arc in arrears that haw left
the area, leaving the company to absorb the cost ol
used electricity.
Leonard concurred with Ron Ash. manager of the
Ohio Power Co_ office in Pomeroy. that through the rwo

"a de facto moratorium."
Although utilities wet-.. petmitted to begin shutoff"
1\lionday, most said they would {.:ive customers a final
chanc-.. to arra nge a payment plan before actually
disconnet'l ing serv iCf&gt;.
One payment opt ion allows qualified low-income
customers to pay 15 p&lt;'rcent of their income or their
curren t bill, whichever is grPater , in order to keep
service restored . Ten percent would go to a primary
utility. and 5 percent to a secondary source.
1Continued on pagr 61

companies' various pa,yment plans. there werr
delinquencies. but not all came due at the same time.
"We've been on top of the situation," As h said. " We
only had two customers off. and both paid here in the
office. We didn't have anything yesterday."
Tite Public Utili! ies Commissio n of Ohio in Ja nuary

Southern board
hires personnel
~ umProu s

contracts v.:('rC' issuc&gt;d

" -hen 1l1e Sout hern Local Sehool
Dis trict Boc.!!'d of Education m PI in
regular st1 ssion !\&gt;~ondJy night.
Contracts gwm to certified p&lt;'r
son nrl includr: onr .\'f'ar. Kimbf&gt;rl.\
GnJ('S('r. \rVilliam H enslrr. Chcn: l
King: two 'vrars. Cath! ' Blaellna.r.
Jpnnifer Hill. Charise Kntghl, John
fuoeth; lhr"" year&lt; , Lee l..ft'; five
~' Pars. Da i!'.\ ' F'ranz. JoyC'C' RitchiE',
.)3niC'E' [)co(&gt;rn; cont lnuing, Christy
CaldwE&gt;ll, James Lawren&lt;'e . Debora

Roush.
Supplcmmtal contracts
Supplemental contracts went to
Barbara Bailey. Echo supervisor;
Donald Salmons. senior play; .Joyce
Thoren ,

lunchroom

SUpC't\.risor:

now through ('()Qrdinator; hand i cap ped coo rdinator . Sandra
Boot he. title IX compliance uffic'&lt;'r:

Ja mrs Lawr'C'nC'C'. drivrrs' (-'{)ucafion : LN' Ll?f'. vari f'ty show : Carla

STUDY FINANCL\L PROBLEMS - Ponwroy's
muncil Monday night took action to employ an
auditor from tht• Stalf• Auditor's Offict• to assist till'
villagt&gt; with its financial prohlf•ms. Participating- in
would r epair any holes in the hill
that the gas company makes. He
also said the paving they would
do would be satis factory.
Koebel reported that as of
yes terday, Ute gas companv
could if necessary discontinue
gas Sl'rvicr to customers who
have not paid their bills.
Koebel said the company has
madt&gt; every effort to contact
cus tomers and advise them
where they might seek help in
paying their delinquent bills. The
company is offer ing a payment
plan wit hout having r:as
disconnected.
He asked that council arlviSl'
customers of the Sf'rvice the
company is offering.
Anderson explained the two
projects · that are presently
undetway in the village.
He said thewaterUneimprove-

h't night's discussion were left to ri~&lt;ht, .John
!\ndt•rson, Larry Wehrung, Bill Snouffer, Mayor Dick
Srylt•r, Hetty Bamnick, Henry Werry and Bruer
Ik•t•d. Ahsent Bill YOtmg.

men! at NyP Ave .. is nearly
completed and the sewe r pruject
is underu:a y on ChPsler St reP!.
Anderson also r eported tha t
hids for the third phase of the
watprline extension wi ll b&lt;'
opened April 26 w ith work
beginning shortly aft er the bid
opening.
ThP Pxten sion includes insl&lt;ll·
lation of a 12 inch pipe downMa in
Street to Sprin g !we. and up
Condor Strt'&lt;'t.
WaiRr rate explained
Council was asked aiJOut the
watPr rate increase that was
proposed bv the Iloard of Public
Affairs.
Anderson explained thai coun ell had tabled the request and it is
now up to the Board of Public
Affairs. The Board of Public of
Affairs ma;· increase the ra tes
without the aid of council

Anrlerson stated
The chief of police report
showed that within the past 13
weeks $3,274 was collected from
parking m eters and fine-;.
The departmf'nt made 24
arrest s. drove the cruiser 1,555
miles, and purchased 242 gallon
of gas at a cost of$29&lt;1.25.
Mayor Richard Sey ler reported that the vtllage would not
be able to maintain Beech Grove
Cemetery. As of last night
donations to m a intain the ceme
tery totaled $1.195 which is not
enough to ma in tain
the
clometery.
Attending were Ma yor Seyler,
Betty Baronick, Ralph Werry,
Bru('(' Ref'Ci. Anderson. and
Larry Wehrung, co unc i l
members and Bill Snouffer.
clerk -treasuwr_

Eastern board accepts resignations~ hires staff
SO Sheets 100 Pages

1 Sec:t ion. 12 Paget
'25 Cenh
/4. Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

17, 1984

Pomeroy council seeks help

Milk Choco lat e
6 Pock

l!llibilliii
9 01. Bag

Pomeroy - Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April

By Associated Press
&amp; OVP reports
Thousands of Ohio residents, including customers of
gas and electric utilities in the Gallia-Meigs area, have
been flooding utility company lobbies, trying to work
out payment schedules that will allow Utem to keep

C~OCOLATE

10 01.

en tine

Late payments stop utility cutoffs

24 ·Wide by
34 -1 / 4" High

Beoutdul gold and ivory co lors Po~~erfu l
(o o lin g breeze. A sum mer necessity. Ul
l 1·,tecl Pian o keyboard .

at y

e

GEIIUIIIE

2-1 / 4 Oz. Solid
Milk Chocolate

•

Chambers. Kathiffn Cook. Marty
Bawn, Gary Reed, Patricia Chap man, Mary Jo Buckle;·. Cynthia
Pitzer, Frances Thomas, William
Blaine. Debbie Prall and Mar:•
Price.
Non-cert i!il'!l employes hired
were Ruth Masters. F lossie Dil l and
Nint a Jean Ritchie. bu s dri vers, and

Barb

Youn g,

serrrtary

at

Rivel\li€'\"-'.

Supplemental contracts werr
awarded to Dennis Eichinger.
athletic director. .James Huff.
federal programs coordinator , Tom
Kelly and Jim Huff. sen ior class
advisors, Don Eichinger and Barbara Russell . junior class advisors,
&amp;ott Wolfe, head baseball coach,
Pam Douthitt, girls head softball
coach, Sue Arnold, national honor
society, Carolyn Tripp, english
department chairman. and Nancy
Larkins, m ath department chairman, Barbara Russell, flay and
majorette director. George Gaga!,
freshman class advisor. Tom Kelly,
audio visual director. Carolyn
Tripp, play and nPwspaperadvisor .

.]()('Baile)', student council advisor,
:Vi &lt;-.~xinc WhitC'hPad, f'lrmtary choi r
dirpctor. L)'nl•lll' VanReeth. smior
high c hoir. Srott WolfE'. ;·carbook
mJvisor. Df'nnis t.:ichingpr, head
track roac h.an&lt;i Pam Douthitt. gir ls
voll&lt;'y b&lt;&gt; ll roac h.
Micharl Douglas, Don Etchinger
and Grorgr Gagai w('rC' hired as
assistant footba ll roaches and Pam
Douthitt, Scott Wolfe, Crorgp Ga ga i. and Don Eichinger. ass istant
basketball coochPs.
Dennis Eichinger was named
head basketball roac h_
Jim Wilhel m was recommended
as senior high marching band
director but was not hired by the
board .
Not-renewed
SuppiPmmlal contracts that wcrc
not renewed wPrP those of Wendy
Halar, Michael Will and Grace
Weber as head teachers sine£' it is
necessary to have elementary
principals, Mary Rose as lunchroom supervisor, Don Eichinger as
freshman baskelball roach. and
Arch Rose as transporta tion

dirf'('Tor.

,

Mar): PriC'£' \vas hirf'd a s spP(' ial
rducation supPrv isor .

Chester kindergarten
The board voted to establish
additional kindergarten classes to
bP located at Chester Elementary .

Shu lrr.

DPPS

('()()rdinator

and

c hapter two coordina tor: GrarP
Griffin. chapter 1 secretary: Denni£'

Hill, chapter I tt'l'asurer and Df'PS
trPasul"('r, l'a thv Blaettnar. chapter 1 coordi nator; Hilton Wolfe. Jr.,
hPad gir ls basketball coach; Kim
berlv Grucscr, reser-ve girls basket ball coac h; Howard Caldwell. Jr.,
rcscr\'e boys basketball coach;
.John Dudding. 'head {.:iris soft ball
coa ch: Suzan ne Walk. head and
rC'scrvc \ 'Oll('yhall coach: Larl)·
Wolfe, Jr. junior high gtrls basket
OOUcoach; .James LawrE'nCC',junior
high bovs hasketbatl coach; Ml chaf'l Winrbrc nner. junior high boys

baskPtbal l coach; Howard Cald well. Jr .. and Carl Wolfe. ft-pstunen
basketball coachtos: Ca rl Wolfe.
athletic dir&lt;'Ctor and transpor wt ion
supt'r;lsor; 1\oiichPIIa Hoback. high
school chf'f'r lf'ader advisor.
No n-ccrtihf'd

personnel

given

ro nt racts arr: two .\:f'ars . EveJ;.·n
ForPman . ltXJ c her a id£&gt;; \~'i lliam
Hobac·k. mPCilanic; Bobb1- .)()('
Dudding. bus driver; contmuing,
PamC'Ia Boso. assistant to ln:•as·
ur f'r;
.Jo s rp h Forrman.
maint r nanrr .

('la.,;;;ifif&gt;d rwrsonnel
!\'amN.I substitutP bu s dri\ ·C'r s lor
1hC' next school )'PanA·erp Chor iP:-o T.
Chapman. ~l iJJiam Downif'. J r" .,

!\olilford Frederi ck . .James O'Bnm.
Debra Rizt&gt;r. Aaron Sa1Tc. Hilton
Wolk . .Jr., and board memix'r . Don
Smith. nli pay . 1\am ed subst itutP
cooks wm• J unP Ashlr;·. Ann Boso.
VioiPI Bush. r.0ralrlinr Cleland .
Sharlcr Evans. Dorothy Johnson,
Joyce Manuel. Lois Mugrage.
Wanda Teafonl, Florenc-e Thornton. Theresa \'an 1\iicter. Pamela
Ritfll'. Ra'1nond Cook. 1\iiary Fin
]{'y.

Ju.H'f' !Vianud. Lois Mugrag('.

1\oiJI)' Smith and Paml e RitflP were
na med subst it ute cus todi ans
:'Jamed to the subst it utr tear her Jist
were Barbara Lav.:rence, Helen
Maag. Juli~ BvPr. Fra nces Foster ,
John (;r~g Ba iley, Debora Harris .
Vinas
Rolx&gt;rta MaidPns.
Brenda McGuirP, E lc•anor McKel
v~y . Janninp PPtrcl. Nathan RDbinellr. RoSl' Ann Jenkins anrl

m.

Valeri£' HanstinP.

Thr board accrptm thr resigna llon of Hilt on Wolfe . .lr . as head
baseball coac h at the cloS&lt;' of the
c urrent season and agT('E'd to
adver1 ise for two new 71 passenger
buses aft Pr thE&gt; rirst of the yPar .
LRavf' wa~ approvf&gt;d for f\.'irs.
Shirle,\ · Sa~'J'f' and 72 seniors were

approved for gt·aduation next
month. It was ar:ree&lt;J to add an art
tcachPr. a rpading communica tions
IC'aC' hPr, a srir ncY' tr achrr and a
reserve footb&lt;tll rooch to the st11 ff
next ~'rar . It was announrfld that a

planer no longer needed b\ ' the
industrial at1s depa rtment will 1x&gt;
sold and bids wil l be rPCf'ivt-d at the
offi('{' of thr trrasurer no lat Pr than
!Via~' 4. The pla nPr can bP vi('\Vf'd at
the high sehoul.
Supt. Bobb;· Ord was au thonzed
to pr[)('!'('(] with a polir;· manuel and
Tr£'asurrr Ol•nnic H ill ~·as authori7M to SI'X'urr an advancr draw
from th£'munt~· auditor .
At tending thr SC'S!'ion \\.'f'n • SupL

Ord. li·ca sut1'r Hill. ami board

mf'mbers.

Drnn.v

E\·ans.

SU&lt;'

G ru=r. Don Smtl h. David Hill an n
.Joseph ThorPn .

Cheese giveaway set
in Gallia-Meigs area
Surplus ch"'-'se w ill be distributed
Action

ThC'rP wrrt• 67 youngsters rE&gt;gis-

b~ · Gallia-l'viPigs Communit~ ·

tered for kinderga11rn this faiL
There will be classes aI Tuppers
Plains and Chester.
ThP board will mcet in specia l
session on May i . to dC't('rmin e
whether it wiU have full or halt day
klndergarten classes_
In other matters. the board
passed a resolution to hire an
architect for the bu ilding program,
applied to the sta te for ffi-20 funding
for the program and passed a
resolution to participate in all state
and federal progran s next yf'ar
which Include. Chapter 1, 11, DPPF
and Title 6-B .
The board voted not to renew thE'
following contracts because II does
not know what funds will be
available. ThpY were library aides.
!Continued on page 6)

Agenr~·

in both cou nties. start ing at

10 a.m. Thursday .
ninP tons of
will be distribute'(] p&lt;'r
count y. CAA sa id .
'
In Gallia County . c h('('Sf' will be
distributed at r.uyan Township
Volunteer F ire Departmen t at
Mercerville; Calha Counly Junior
Fairgrounds; and Mount Carmel
Baptist Church al Bidwell.
Meigs County loca I ions are the
American Legion hall at Racine:
Meigs County Fairgrounds; and the
fire station at Tuppers Plains .
Households must be wllhin the
following guidelines to receivE'
cheese:
One, $540 monthly income. $6,474
ann ual income: two. $1}8 monthly,
$8,736 annual; three, $917 m onthly,
Approximately

dtc~ose

$10.99Rannual: four. $1.10:\mon thl y.
fi\ ·l'. $1 .294 mont hlv,
$15,522 annual; sL~. $1.4R2 monthly
$17.784 annual :
seven, $1,67]
mont hi)'. $20. tl4h annual ; Pight .
$1.&amp;'i9 monthly . S..'2 ..1ffi annual.

$13.260 annual,

Family m£'mbers with mon: than

eigh t mpmb&lt;'rs may add $1R!I
monthlv. or $1.262 annually for Pach
additional family m••mber
Documents that will be accepted
an:&gt; food stamp cards, SSI award
l~ttN . genera l rPiief card. IRS lax
information jW ·2 form, etc. ), current unemplo;·mpnt book, welfare
ID cards, g&lt;'neral welfare card
w elfaw medical card and foste~
grandparrnt ('('rtification card _
Persons on social security without
proof may sign their names,
wrifylng income Cheese may be
picked up by others for senior
c llizens only

�Tuesday, April 17, 1984

Comment
The Daily Sentinel
I ll C.ou rt Street
Pome roy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERE&lt;;T OF THE MEIG8-,1ASON AREA

ROB E RT L. WI NGETT
Publisher
B OB HOEFLICH
(;eneral Manage r

PAT WHIT E HEAD
Asslsl a nt Puhlis tw r t ('o nt ro ll t&gt; r

D A L E HOTIIGE B, JH.
Stows E dlt ol'

A.l\I EMBER of T he Associatt·d Pn·ss. lnl und Dail)' Press 1\ssof'iati on a nd th t' f\ m l' r ican St-ws pa pe r Pu hlis lu•r A.ssodation .
LETTERS OF OPINION IUP wto h'o nu_od . T hi'.V s hould hl' less t ha n JO() words
Jon ~e. i\JII etll•r!o a r e suhj l'd t o (•dilin g a nd must tw !O i Kntod w ith na rn t', a ddr ~s a nd
tdt•phun t' rmmhN . No umdg n t'd lt·H t•rs " ·Ill lw p u h ll~ h e d . Lt•tte r !&lt;i s hou ld bt&gt; in
JtOUd l a ..;h•, udd r l'sslng h s u es, not pt" r so n ll lltl es.

Page--2- The Daily Sentinel
Pamen~y-Middleport, Ohio
T~y,

Untouchable editors _____J_am_e_sJ_._Kt.·lp_
. .:;_ at_ric_k
WASHI NGTON - The University of Minnesota recenlly se111ed a
long and drawn-out lawsuit br ought
by the school 's student newspaper .
T he decision was under standable,
but i1 was regret table all the same.
If the university had kepi fighting,
the U.S. Suprem e Court might have
had an opportunit y to review a
question it has n P\'1?1' ~·e t tack lrd
directly : Wha t are the rights of a
s tu de n t ed it or at a pub lic

llshed m ateria l that is obscene.
libelous or in grossly bad taste; the
university undertakes to punish the
editor In some fas hion: the editor
sues for an injunc tion to stop the
punishment ; and the ed itor wins

every lime. The legal theory ,
drawn from the 14th Amendment,
is that the stale cannot abridge the
editor's right to f reedom of the
press.

instiTu tion?

The theory st rikes me as hogwas h, but until the Suprem e Cout1

The issue bobs up as perenniali)'
as 1he daffodils of spring . In the

st ri kes it dow n. studen t edit or s w ill
remain free and irres ponsible, the

usual

~eq uence

ullra -liberal

uf

evpnts,

an

student edito r pul&gt;-

only unt ouchable editors in the
land.

r

Minnesota's con troversy was in

the class ic trad ition. AI the end of
the 1978-79 school year, T he Minnesota Dally produced what m ay
doubtfu ll v be descr ibed as a
" humor' : edition . The 8th U.S.
District Court last October swnm arized the cont ents In this
fashion : The paper sallr lzed Jesus
Christ. the Ca thollc Church. evangelica l religion, public figures and
ethnic groups. The edition conta ined scatological language. It had
ma ny "expllcll and implicit r efere nces to sex ual ac ts. "
The edition produced a reac tion
th ai at firs t m ust have delighted the

- - --

-- --

-,

-~

I

'SJI

New Reagan doctrine
won't sell in Congress

~I

I

Lyndon B . Johnson saw himself as a lx'sicgcd prt'sident . misunder stood
~ and maligned. On Lincoln's Bit1 hday in 1968. at Uw Lincoln Memorial.
· Johnson compar ed his ordeal in Vietnam wit h Lincoln's in the Civil Wa r .
But even in his bleakest days in coping with dissent. r iot and r~b&lt;&gt;lliun .
L BJ didn' t go as far as Ronald Reagan did in his suggestions thai Congress
has a duty to hush up and go along onet' a president has sent troops into a
dangerous place.
Reagan sa id at his news confermce on April4 thai members of Congress
" must U!ke a r esponsibility" for a loss of American credibility suffer ed
· when Marines wer e withdrawn from Lebanon and their peaC&lt;'keeping

-president , lPtters to him and c losed forums .
Tht: next day . White House spokPsman Larry Speakes, identified the
"senior administrat ion official" at a public bri efing. He was rtot&gt;e t1
M cFarlane. Reagan's top adviser on foreign polic.v mailer s.
And thP follow ing day, Reagan made a speec h at the Georgetown Center
.for Strai P):[ic and Int ernational Studies. He said "waverin g" and " second
)luessing" by m embers of Co nh~·ess prolonged the violence in Lebanon and
t"ncouragC's M arxist s in Central AmPrica.
The new Reaga n doct rine- tha t Conf[rpss has no role in foreign poli cy
aller the t roo ps set sail -won' t sell in Congrpss.
Second guessing is second nal un: on Capi tol H ill .
Congress· answer cam e quickly in I he form of an second gush of S('('()nd
thi s limP on the secr c&gt; t mining of N i cara~ruan harbors. By
'' bipart isan and ovrrwhelm ing votE'S. it v.·as condemnL&gt;d .
·
guC'Ssing -

Letters to editor
Proud nwther

The 8th Circ uit . follov.i ng a dozen
prPCCdC'nt s in thr low er felleral
courts . h('td that a publi c university

may not consti tu tt onall y take adver se action against a student
new spaper . sucti as red uci ng the
paper's fun ding, because it di sapproves of the paper' s co nt ent. The
court was sa tisfied lhallhe refund

West's long-term security nl'Cds.
But th at's only the tip of the
iceber g. The suspected cases of
hi gh-t ec h theft run int o the
hundreds . The very uncertai nt y

Yet Japanese officials are unwil -

over the number s is a sourcp of
contin uing frustration for U.S.

ling to slop the m assive leakage of
technology - or Pven admit it's
goin g on . Wh en confrontf'd pri vately with the Pvidence, they

profess skepticism that their trad in g benefit s lhP Soviets militarily
since. they say. II involves only
com mer cial products.
I ntelligence sources laid out the
problem of Japan's wea k export
coni rots to my assocla l&lt;'S Michael
Einstein in Was hingt on and Dale
Va n Alia in T okyo.
T he sources sa id there have been
abou t three dozen documented
cases of high·lech diver sion by lhL•
Sovi pls throug h Japan si nce 19ffi.
T he CIA is disturbed thai m ore than
half of t hesC' diversions were

thf'

at Meig s Hi g h and again we had
sPvPra I w inner s.

Thoug h tt's not a schoo l event.

Th&lt;' wi ll go to Co lum bus M ay 21 for th e State GoldC'n Gloves,
whic h m~· so n won in l~Rl T hey
ha\'(' gond Chr is ti a n coJc hr s a nd
t hp~· a rf' boy s to be prou d of.
No r a N il z
M idd iPporl . Oh io

T her e are l aws o f all sor fs pr o·
tec lln g peo pl e from being r ipped
Off , but One of l hP biggPS I r ip-offs
th ere is. is used ca r s~ Why isn' t
there a l aw protecti ng th e gc ·
nera l public fro m be i ng ripped
off by used car dealer s?
You go buv a ca r , pay cas h for

i t , thi nki ng it's a good car, then

one

w ee k l ater, it fall s to pieces
and you ca n ' t drive it . T he na ·

l ura! thin g eve r yo ne would do
1unless you happen to be a
m echanic a nd ca n replace a n en f[inei lsgo to t hecardealer t osee
if he will make II r ig ht.
The first trip, he has to go to a
f uner al- can 't talk lo you . these·
cond trip y ou ex pl ain a ll the l h·
tngs that are wrong with the ca r ,
he laughs In yo ur face. only und er
pressure . drives your car up the
road . com es back . and diagnose s
two burnt va l ves as OVE R
INFLATE D TIR ES~ ! Then has lu
close at noon, and shut s and lock s

thP door in your face.
The next ti m e y ou h r&lt;:~r, hP has
ma de an appoin t ment to ta k P
;;our car to th e garage to sef'
w ha t 's wro n g (Pven thoug h he
kn ows it ' s j ust ovPr in fla ted

ti r es! a nd at the garage the,· put
on f ront brakes a nd rep lace a

spar l plu g, a nd put S.T.P . i n th!'
engin e .

Well, as the old cry is. I ca ll
him. he gel s ma d. and dem and s I
leave my cara t t he ga rage unt il I
pay for re pa irs. $68.00 , th at he
or dered . then hangs up .
I lls ve r y hard to be kind to people like I hi s. beca use he sure was
gl ad to gel his hand s on the cas h
for th e car. and l think t h er e
should be a law against this kind
or thin g . M ay be someday th er e
will be, unt il then J ca n only say .
If he ca n l ive w ith chea ting and
lyi ng to gel a fas t buck , I sure c an
live w it ho ut it, because I kno w I
did n't c heat hi m .
M s. Ba r bara St ahl
Mi ddleport, Ohio 45760

Today in history
Today Is Tuesday. i\prll 17. the I~th day of I984. There are 258 days left in
tht: year .
1
Today's hJghJ ighl in history:
On AprU 17. 1961. aboutl.500 Cuban ex Ues. trained and eq uipped by the
CIA. invaded Cuba a 1 the Bay of Pigs but were overt'Ome by til&lt;' forces of
F idel Castro.

Calllpr&gt;li!ooo

f i na l run of fh C' i nni ng .

fa nn ed " ix a nd wa l krd

,

intell igence agenciPs.

By legal and illega l method s, the
So' iets have bought Japanese
manufac turi ng

used il

equipment

and

to build up their own

micr oelectronics i ndustry fo r mil-

it ary purposes. The Soviet objective
is to improve both the tec hnology
and pr oductivity of industries that
have histor ically lagged behind the
WPsl 's: m icr oelectronics. m achinP
tools. automati on and S(X'C'ialty
s I f'f'l.

Technology acqui red from the
J apa nese has mhanced the Soviets'
ground- basf'd w ea pons system s
and soli d-state circuitry for missil es and aircraft . according to

Int elligence sourcPs. The Soviets
have obtained a satellite naviga tion
system through .J apan eSP trading

firms.
ThP Russ ians also used illega l

m en t -for companirs considcli ng
tr ade wilh thP S&lt;l\'irt s.

means, such as industrial espion-

age and oulri~hl thefl , l oevade U.S.

M ull iple transshi pm ent rship·
m Pnts to fou r. fivr or m orC'

and ot her Western export controls
on prcxlucts reaching Ja pan. In

d es 1in ations 1 a nd creati on of
d umm y corporations ar e two m e-

fact, there's a lar ge K GB Ioree

thods

working out of Soviet diploma tic
r esidences in Japan w hose solf'
mission is high-tech d iver sion .
Japan 's nationa l police an d
pu b li c -secu r i t y in ves ti g ati vC'
agency have the primary r esponsi ·
bility of cou nter ing the high-tech
theft . and they have impressive

profit -hungr y Ja panese busi nessm f'n to gPt arou nd ,~.:ha t f'ver
r0s tr ictions thC'r 0 an~ .
Som0times thf• il l icit tra de is a
sm all -scalf' r nt ('rprist:. as when
.Japa nosr fis hermen win thr privilrgc of fi sh ing oft islands c laimed
t) .\ ' thp Sov ir ts b~· m('('tin g KGB
agf'nts at ~ f'a J nd slippin g them
C' \·crything from digital ' "''atches to
microchi ps and inform ation on U.S.
ami .J&lt;t panPs0 mili tary bases.
F ootnotf': In an attPmpt to stop
thr high-tf'f' h d rain. Congress is
rf'\\T iting thr F.xport Ad ministra-

fi le&lt;; on K GB agent s and thei r
operarions.
Bur fhf' pnlicc' authoriti es haw•
not been permitt ed to takP ac tion
against the KGB's hig h-IPCh lar ·
('('fly, thanks to burea ucra t ic nirf'·

tics.

Japa n&lt;'S&lt;'

law

puts such

ma tl cr s outsidf' 1hf' jurisdiction of

the police and gives it to the
minist ri es of foreign affairs and
intern ational tra de. Th e best the
lawmen ca n do Is provide "a d minis
trative gu ida nce" - bu t no enforce

used

by

l h&lt;'

o nl ~·

onf'

Thr- t hree M ar auder hit s wf're

batt er while hilling
man .

Collec t i ng hils for Gallipolis
w ('r£' E astma n 's double an d sin-

g les by Bost ic, Splele, Wolfe.
Slone. and Shepler.
M eigs droppM to 5·4 on the
yC'ar. The :.L raJ.ders travel to
Vi n ton Count y tl-'s f've ni ng for a
T r i-Va lle:v Conte1 L'nce game . Th e
V i k in gs are th e l eaders in the
W estern D iv isi on w hii P M eigs a 1
B:\

lnn i n ~ts:

010

\ 1Pi J.!:....

fl\XI

Sph' H '

&lt;'d~se ll

J nd

1W )'1

- !i

ti 0
·1 ·2

, [_P I

.1 nd

004

ooo o-n

C hN' n.

•

KC stops Eastern, 8-5 tn SVAC game
r ound with a walk, E dge singled,
and Du ane Abshire doubled
hom e the fourth run of th e ga m e.
K C sco r ed two more limes i n the
thi r d f r am e on singles b y StevP
Waugh and Brian Wam sley, and

By SCOTT WOLFE
EAST M E I GS - A combined
P!fort f rom the Ky ger Creek offense and a li ve- hit pitc hing perfor m ance from junior fi reball er

Larry E dge gave 1he Kyger
Creek Bobc ats an 8-3 SVAC
t rlumph over the E ast ern Eagl&lt;:s
her e Monday evening. T he vic tory boost s K yge r 's record t o 3-1
in t he SVAC and 4-5 over all .
while Eas tern dr ops to 1-3 in the
league and 1-5 overa ll .
Kyger Cr eek got of ! to a quick

a n error .

Eastern produced a sm all r ally
in I he fourt h fram e. when Troy Guthr ie reac hed on an err or, B issell
r eached on a fielder 's choice. Tom

Everet t sm acked a long dou ble,
J imm y Weber lau nched a double
to lh~ same location. and J eff Bissell singled as each EH S hit ter
picked up an RBI.
Despite that inning E dge

sta rt . scorin g t hree r uns in tge

opening r ound off East ern star ter Royce Bissell . Gar y Pennington reached fir st on a n error ,
A nthony K it chen l in ed a single,
Bill W ard singled . A r un c ame

w ith a strong effort to th e fi ntsh.
K C pl ated sin gle runs In the six th
and sev enth fram es to round out
th e scoring.
K y ger Creek hitt er s wer e
Duane Abshire with a double a nd

r or . th en a disput ed c all at fi rs t
kepi KC ali ve. Bisse ll . des pit e hi s
aggr ess ive st y le, wa s t ouched
for three unea rned runs.

led off

tire SE'ven innings to record the

w in all ow i ng ju st fi v e hil s. only
t wo walks , and r ecord i ng eight
strikeo u ts . Bi ssell w ent f ou r in nings, gave up six hit s, on e

sec,ond

Majors

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IKXI :wu 11 -:1 .') ~,
Ba llf'ri rs Larrv Edg&lt;' 1WP Jnd Mvf'l' &lt;;
R. BlssPl l r L P 1. Cu lli n s 4th . &lt;1 11d CowdPn

h' vgC'r Creek

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F'.•A.•;;T (}[Vf;IO\
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Sl. Lou is

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Ol!f AT FIR.';T - G allipolis infielder Keith Fellure (21 ) is thrown oul
at first during action in Monday's non-conference loss to the Blue Devils
at Rock Springs. Blue Devil righthander Gordon Splete fired a fHI
victory . Reconllng the putout '' Meigs first sacker , Nkk Bush.

Bruce TV show
returns this fall
COLUMBUS. Ohio (APt- " The
Earle Bruce Show" will lx' returning to television this football season
w ith the sa me station despite
report s thai Ohio State' s coach did
some compa al ive shopping.
Bruer ha: signed anot her oneyear agree m c•nt with WTVN -TV .
which picked uprights to the weekly
show last yea r after WENS-T V
dropped it.
Paul Dinov itz, general manager

at WTVN ·T V, said that if Bruce
talked v.i l h other stat ions. he
probably was examining aUopt ions
as would any good bu sinessm an .
ll 's estim ated that [lruce could
earn nearly $50.00l a year f rom the
li ve program and it s advcrti.o;; i.n g,
a lthough no figures werp rPieasPd .

fio.; ron. 'n 1

t he lasr r f'gu lar-Sf'ason show. 1\o\'.
17.

Pr0-gamP and posl ·game programs w ill lx' aired if Ohio Sw te
rl'Cci ves a bow l bid .

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" NOW WITH ROAD HAZARD WARRANTY"

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!VIAV U]~S - Sq.: rw d

.Jim T;11JO r. w1dr •
m 1'i n'r~ PI.H111
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dd'm ~ i\o · r.wklo·. on t hi:• inrurf'd r,...,,r,, .
Ff'IT:lnTi

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HAPPY
BIRTHDAY
GRANDMA
BARTON
Love,
Tyson &amp; Tyler

K.am:as Cl!y

(llkago
Ctl iforni~

ceremonies.

tion Ac t. Th0 Oeba le has pitted
Rep. Don Banker. D-Was h., who
tx- licvrs .J a pan and ot her coun tries
arc adeq uately cont r olling hi ghIPCh rxport s. agr:l insf R ep. T oby
Roth. R Wi s.. w ho questions J a-

pan' s record.

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0902 28
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0902 41
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9Q2-6687

Transaclions
C amhlt ·.

P hi )a(j{&gt;lphi.t ..11 Pilt'&gt; bui'J.!h
.\i l.;ur r ;~ .11 Cmn11n;t1t
!Vlontwal &lt;II :\1...- YtJI'k
Sl I .outs a t Clticac o
San Dl ~ ar San f-' ratl('l&gt;.m
Lr r- Aliji;t" lf"' ill H(JU .q on . I JI I
o\..m KJ C\N LEA.G~'E
f:A."iT l&gt;n'l"'ION

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The first show will air Sept. Rand

I I, , n ,

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OnJ~· ~ &lt;
UTW

OSBORNE HONORED- Veteran-Gallipolis ba.o;ketball coach Jim
Osborne was honored Monday evening by Gallipolis fans. The GAHS
mentor received several gilts during a SUillli.se program at Oscar's.
Among those attending were Carl Wolfe (center) Southern coach,
Charlie M cAfee, retired Athens coach and Larry Hunter, Wlltenberg
coach along with Rick VanMatre, Greenfield coach who began his
career at Gallipoli•. On left is Coach Osborne, who has completed 15
years service at Gi\IIS. On right is BW Gray, who served as master of

Weather permllting E astern
pl ays Waham a toni ght and South·
wes tern Wed nesd ay.
The Eagles to go Waterford
T hursday, and Sou ther n F ri day

T&lt;'ll aS

C'hi('agO

K GB and

earned ru n o nd five un(_'arnl'd.
ju st two wa l ks a nd one strikeou t.
Co l lins ca m e on i n r elief to do a
fi nr job g i v ing u p four hi ts, tw o
ear ned r uns, o nl y o ne wa l k , and
two str ikeout s.

Scoreboard ...

bu ckl ed dow n to ex tingui sh a ny
fu r th f' r sro rin g a s he cont inued

home as a r esult of a t hrowing er -

Chuck

Ward two singles. Matt ht&gt;ws a
single. W aug h a sing le. Vogel a
sing l e, a nd Edge a sin gle
For East ern E ve ret t and Weber
eac h doubled, Cowdery singled.
Jeff Bissell singled, and Jim Ne·
well lined a sin glt&gt;.
Desp it e gusty winds an I very
eoo l w eat her. Edge went t he en ·

t'fl\'1 (I l ,

h ardl y evC'r a n yth in g
pape r . Wh y ??

I am writing this out of concf'r n
for publ ic r ip -o ff s.

and hu r i Pd bett er th an the score
woul d ind i ca te. The M ei gs righty

Profits vs. security_ _ ______J_ac_k_A_nd_e_
· rs_o n

whic h, U.S. officials charge, puts
short -tem1 profits ahead of the

Public ripoffs???

4-0 heads the Eastern loop.

lielder's choi ce pl ated the thir d
r un. Shepler singl ed to notc h the

rPSIXmsiblr jou rrwlism . W hat it did,
said thC' court. \\·as to have a
··c hillin g rff0ct" on thf' ,voung
od it ors a t fllf' D~t il v.

join ed box in g this yea r and th at
was h is f irs t fi g ht. Marc h 24 was

tram s a nd wrest l i ng .
Ma rch 17 was ltlP C ol dC' n
G lovPs rv cnt in J ack son v iJI C',
O hio and w e had sC'veral w inne r s
t hat nigh t inc lu d in g m ,v son- in -

for Coach T im Sa und ers' c rew

T r&lt;'y Cassell pit c hed the rou te

I

one bats ·

dri ve i n the second run . A ft er a

w ild pit c h . and scorPd on Eas t ma n 's sacri fi cr fly to left.

Se nti nel- Page-~

.'

f
(

Bostic scored t he fir st D ev il
run In t he seco nd after he
sin gled. took second on a n over ·
t hrow. reached thir d on a wi ld
pitc h, and scored on Sl one's
grou nd ou t. F ellu re scored in t he
last In nin g a tier he was hll by a
pit ch. went to second on a field
er's choi ce, wpn t to t hird o n Cl

conceded as m uch. His
thought wa~ tha t t he thrra tf'ned
loss of incomr would prom ote

WASHINGTON - The K GB has
found Ja pan C:l rich source of
Wesl&lt;•rn high-tech nology produc ts
that can De turned to military
adva ntage by the Kremlin.

•
WID

singles by Jay Car penter and
C hri s Burdelte while Dan Thom as looped a do uble. Thomas
&lt;:vcnt ually reached thi rd base.
t he only Meigs r unn er advancing
that far.
Ga lli polis brok e open a 1-0
game with fo ur r uns in t he six th
as Steve Wolfe led off with a bunt
singl e and Eas tman doub led him
home. Bre tt Bos t ic walked with
on&lt;' out and T odd Sl one singled t o

('(feel

commercial transac tions approved
by the Japanese government -

hard tf not hardN as th e ball

By K E ITII WI SE CU P
ROCK SPRI NGS- Gallipolis'
Gordie Splete fire d a three-hi tt er
as the B lue Devils shutout Mei gs
6· 0 Monday in a non-l eagu e game
i n chi lly , dreary wea th er.
Sptete, w ho defeated the M arauders l ast year i n the sectional
tournament opener 5-4, had Meigs
off-s tride with a vari ety of break ·
ing balls to compliment his hea ter .
T he Devils' ri ghty had pin-poin t
control. Ht: did nut walk a ba ll er
and three very lew pitc hes that
weren't over the plate. Splete
fan ned n inC' .

The Daily

Ohio

GAHS' Splete fires three-hit, 6-0

sys tem was intended as a punitive
m easure, and P rC'sident M agrath in

law, Ne lson M orr i so n. w ho j ust

th ose boys work and t r ai n j ust as

Why indr'('(J? The univer sity's
Board of Regent s thought it over
and concl uded that the objecting
st udents had a point. The board
then proposed a system by whic h
st udents, if they wis hed. could
ohtai n a r efund of the $2.56 fee that
went to the student paper. The
edit ors then sued the university's
preside nt. C. Pete r M agrath. Last
October. the 8th Circuit restored the
non-refundable fet•, and last February the board decided lu throw i n
the sponge. T he univers it y will pay
$182.00l in l egal fpes and will
contri bute $5 .00l toward a progr am

freedom of I he press .

I' m sun• thr&gt;rr a r e a lot of pf'O ·
pl c wh o kn ow w h a t a grf'at box ·
i Ug club w e ha\'P. yPt thf&gt;rr·s
in

sophomoric editors. The regents
found the iss ue " flagra ntly offensive ." Stale legislators and prominent alumni denounced the Dally
out of hand. Senslllve and unsophisticated students deeply resented the
mockery of their reli gious t&gt;ellef s.
Some of the offended students
ra ised a poi nt ed question: Why
shou ld th&lt;:y be compelled. through
st udent fees. to support a publication they found sacrtlegiuus?

tho 1 will br ing scholars and jour nalists to the ca mpus to discuss

m ission ended.

He said congressional dissent stimulated the ter rorists who attack ed
M arines sleeping in their hea dquart ers on Sunday morning, Oct. 23, killing
m on&gt; than 240 U.S. serv icem en.
Most of the congressional dissen t tha t Reagan complained of occurred
.after. not befoi'P. the terrorist attack Before then, Congress gave Reagan
:almost a free ha nd in Lebanon, just as 11 has given him most of what he
wantM in milit ary spending and in culling taxes.
Reagan's complaint was no off-hand comment, latd dowr under the
prf'ssurc of coming up w ith a quirk answPr ro a tough question on
te levision. Ra ther. it r eprpsen ts an administra tion policy.
On March 1. Secretary of Stall' CNJrge P Shultz told a Senate
sulx'ommitt('(' that congressional debate on the US. presence in Lebanon
" just tolaUy took the ru g out from under U.S. in tcr!'sl s... He said the debate
led Syria to doubt American resolve.
And the day after Rmgan's mws conlerenct:. an official who under the
ground rules could only be iden tified as "a senior administra tion offic ial"
briefed I'Ppot1er s. He sa id a pr esident has a r esponsibility to consull
Congress befor!' he jeopard izes Ameri can lives in a foreign m aneuwr but
congressiona l crit icism m ust be muted once American rurcPS are
deployed.
~ He said criticism shou ld be restricted to priva tC' meetings with the

April 17, 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport,

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Mining the Chesapeake._ __ _A_rt _Bu_ch_wa_Ld
I was out sa iling on the Chesa -

peake Bay l ast weekend when I saw

a fellow throwi ng a lar ge round
pl astic ball over the side of hi s boat
''Hey, w ha t are you doing?'' I
askf'd .
" Mining for oys ters,'· he saicl .
" Why mines?" I asked.
" I 1's easie r to find them if you ca n
m ake a big explosion," he replied.
"Arc you !rom the CIA?"
"Let's just say I'm an oysterm an.
and let It go al tha !. "
"Are you an overt oysterman or a
cover t oysterma n?"

''I'm a covert oysterm an," he
sa id. "You don't think I'd lx'
throwing mines over the si de if I
wa s oven ."

"Are those things explosive?" I

we assembled. They will explode as
soon as they hear a sound."
"Oys t er s don ' t m ake any
sou nd ~" I yellt'Cl.
T he skipper sa id, "Jose, Pedro,
go below decks. " Then he turned to
m e and said. "Th ai is how m uch
yo u k now about fi shing . E v ery limP
an oyster opens it s m outh it emi ts a
noise, and then we've got him."
"Do you know w hat I thi nk? l
don't believe you'n&gt; looking for
oysters at all. I believe you 're
t est i ng m i n es fo r u se i n
Nicaragua."
"You m ust b!' crazy. Why would
an oy sterm an w ant to mine
Nica ragua?"
" Why would he '":a nt to mine the
Chesapea ke? "

" I told you. it's the eas iest way to
dredge. Jose and Pedro have large
families to support. ..
"What you're doing is ill egal and
I'm going to repor t you to the

f' ithr r. If you ·rf' a loya! Am erican
wh o bf&gt;li0ves in your country you 'll
for gPt you evC'r saw me dropping

authorities. "
" T hf' authorili£'s
\\.:e' re doing. "

w hat

"Senor , .Jose want s to know if w e
ca n co me topsi de to sw what

" What authorit ies'?"
"Suppose l told yo u the pr esident
oi l he United Stal es knows?"
"Then I would say you wer e

happm s when a boa t hils one of our
tortillas."
T he skipp!'r got red in the face. " I
told everyone to stay below dec ks
until we loca ted an oyst er !x'd."
Pedro grinnN:I . "Exc use me,

know

L'razy, or hC' w as crazy."

"You better gel going or I'll dump
one of these mines on y our boa t. "

" If you do I'll go to cou rt and sue
you.
" We don' t rE'Cogn izc thP courts,
and don' t wr i te to your S€'nator s,
because we don' t recognize t hem

mines of! the side of the boat."
Pedr o ca me back on deck .

boss. I forgot wherC' we '"·er0 ."
" Th(' captain sa id to me, ' 'I' ve got

lu pu ll up anchor . Now get the hell
out of here. II J clon't br ing back anv
oysters toni ght the companv w ii l
kill me. "

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wa nted to know .
" I hope so. H ow else are wP going

to shake up the oysters? "
" But good heavens, man." I
cried, " some sailor could hit one
wi th his boat and be sunk."
" Well, we have to practice
som ewher e, " he said. " Would you
want us to drag l or oysters with
duds?"
"No. But suppose you dam aged a
foreign ship? T here would be hell to
pay."
" We've Informed all shipping
nations we'n&gt; mining lor oysters In
the Chesapeake and they sail at
their own risk."
"But why the Chesapeake?"
"We might want to go alter
bigger shellfish oH the coast of
Central Amertca, and we have to
m ake sure our mines work ."
While we were talldng, two Latin
Amertcans came on deck with
pl astic packages, and one said,
"Senor. her e are five more IortUias

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�•
Page

4

The Daily Sentinel

Tue&amp;day, April 17, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tue&amp;day, April 17, 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel- Pag•

5

Smith, Moller Boston Marathon winners
BOSTON tAPt Rainy-day
rurmer Grolf Smith. the w inner of
the 88th Boston Mara thon, tluives
on wet. wind~ days in the fall and
sprmg. But w hat about steamy Los
Angeles in the thick of Its O" •mpir
summer?
No problem. says the con fident
E ng lishman who splashed t hrough
puddles and crushed the m m pet i·
t1on Monday to captu['(' the Boston
!1-:arathun by four minutes. l o
s« ·onds. one of the widest m argins
in the C\'ent' s hi stO!)'.
" 1 think l 'mallright." hesmd. "!
in lend 10 rome bark and tra in under
1host' 1warmcn conditions ...
l.ast Oct . 2.3, another cool and
rainv dav. Smith led for muc h o!the
,, ow York Ci tv Ma r athon only to be
passed b\' Rod DLxon 385 ~' ard s
tJOfore the end. Smll h finished
seconcl in rn:o hours, nine m i nut es.
Pight seronds. Uw fastE'st debut
marathon in h1st01::
! l is time of 2:10:.1--1 ~· i ond a\· in his

found m ySPif just moving In front .
From that point on I thought the race
was probably mine. "
Sisel Grottenburgot Norway, also
hoping to make hE'r 'country 's
Olympic squad, came In third In
2:36: 13.
While fo!'('igner s hoped the Boston
:Yiara thon would Improve their
O l~mpic prospects. Americans,
bus) p['('paling for next m onth's
OJ~·mpic trials. stayed away in
dm\'PS. The wom en's trials are May
12 in OI)•mpia. Wash .. and the men's
ttials art&gt; M ay 26 1n Buffalo. N.Y .
· 1 had exactly the same thought
bPforP New York as I did here."
Sm ith said. " I wasvE&gt;r,•nervous. M y

S€COnd marathon was only the 79th
ProvidE'nce CollpgP studE'nt had
fastest in history and the slowE&gt;st
said. " I'm an experiE&gt;nced track
winning time here since 1981 Bur hE'
runn~r. 1 think Los A ngpiPS Y.illbe a
was fUMing into an often stiff
tactical race I ·m a 3:55 miler and
headwind.
I'm capableof sprintlng at the end. I
Smith a lso was trying to over· . do n't""" an~· bod~ · in the pack going
com e the r esistan('(' of the British
out a t world J'(l('()l'd P,.1('(' in R5
Amateur Athletic Board, which is
dE'grt""' ·
scheduled to choose on M av l o its
Smith h.id prwllct(xJ he wou ld
counliy's thrE'e ma rat ho~t&gt;rs to
bE?al thP t't:'lati\'f'J~ · wra.k: field on:r
com pete in the r ace A ug. 12, the l ast
the ~'b·mtlr ..~"&gt; .vard cour'S&lt;:' he!\' .
day of the Summer Olympics m Los
After he did it bv taking the lead
Angeles.
from Ar»ga Abr aha of E thiopia
Boa rd m em bers we IT' upset that
Smith chose to run here instE'ad of in
rhe London M arathon on h~la y 13.
" It shou ld imprpss thE'm . I know it
impiT'Ssed mE','· the heavily fal'orPd
Sm ith said of his performance. " If
the wind had beE'n in m v fa, ·or, I
think I co uld h avE' run two o r thrff'
m inutE's faster .'' possiblv challeng·
ing Alberto Salaza r 's world best
trmcof2 :08:13.
BPfoiT' the race. the 30-ypar-old

tx&gt; tw(l('n thr fi fth and six th mile and
nrn"r losi_nJz il. hf' was askf'rl wl1o
will be the h.ardf'st nmner to l'Jf'Ht in
theOJ~·m pic

marat hon.
"!Vit:.·· hPsaici wit hout hN itation.
U tt iP-known Gerr_,. \ 'anasSf' of
New Milford. Conn . fini shPd a

stomach was turning over . I was

confidf'nt . The only difference Is In

distant second in 2: H: -1.9. out of a

1'\l)W York rherP was a tailwind .

tota l of a OOut 6, FOJ r ntrnnt s. It was
not known how man~· actua iJ~· ra n in

Hrrc th er'i' was a bit of a headwind .
··It's hnrd 10 compa ff' two r a('('S, ''
hE' added ""&lt;ew Yor k had a much
stronger field _··
Dom ingo Tibaduiza of Colombia
finished thntl Mond a~ · 1n 2: 15:40.
Juan G . ZPtina of D alla s. in 2: 15: 41,
and Keld Johansen of Denmark. in
.....
2: l b: 36, rounded out the top five.
Smith said " it was a bit frig hten
ing" when he covered the first m ile
WINS BOSTON - Geoff Smith of Brllaln reacts as he comes
in a speed)' ~ :37. " I had to control
up on the finish ribbon to win the Boston Marathon Monday with a
m \·self and slow m yself down."
time of 2: 10: 34. Smith attends Providence College. ( i\P Laser·
He had no nPcd to spt&gt;f'd up,
photo)
cons1dt&gt;ring the lark or sE'riou s 1 - - - - -- - - - - -1 1- - - - - - - - - - - challengE&gt;r s.
" ! d idn 't push thE' pacE'," Smith
The Duil y Sentinel
said . " I wa nted to be w ith somE'body
until 15 miles but I was piT'pared to
(l "SI•S 1-15-!ltitll
1\ Divis ion of :\ tullim€'dla , In&lt;' .
ru n alone.
"I was her etodo a job. Thatwasto
Pu hlhlwd f'W' n &lt;J ilf'r noo n. M o nd&lt;Jv
lh ro uF! h F r id a v . ·111 Cnu rl Sl rrf' t. hv 1hP
nm a fa st time and win whE'ther I
Ohio Vallf':O " Publi shin g Co m pany Mul
had com petition or not ," hE' added .
Tim C'd i~ . In c., P om f'rm ·, Ohi o -15769 , 992
" It showed I'm a com petent runner
:.! l ~1t i . Sl&gt;t· ontl d a,:s posl :.tgf' pa id at Po·
m f'm v. Ohw
and can dornina t (' a r ac(l'."

the nasty wf"a ther.

The v.inning m a rgi n in th('
women's com{X'tition was p\·en
greater and enhanced v.:innrr
Lorraine Moller 's c hance to makf'
l'iew Zealand '&gt; Oly m pic team
ShE' fimshed in a personal best

['(&gt;COrd or 1:22: 42 set herP last vpar
by Joan llE'noit . Midde H amrin ot
Swedpn , also fi ghting for an

'•••v ''"'.....,...,..,..

Olympic 't::€rt h, was Sf'Cond Nwnd a~·

in 2:33: 51.
Allison Roe. tht&gt; 1981 Boston
1\li ar athon winne r , sepmed wC'Il on

her way to joining that group. She
had a two-minu te lea d on :Yioller ,
th en in second place, 15 m ilE's into

the rarP.

:..C.

~

I

~.'

~.

But Moller surg ed ahead near the
19·mile mark. and Roe dropped out
after 25 miles due to a hamstri ng
pmblem.
Moiler ex]X'Cted Ro&lt;&gt; to sta rt fast
ard said, "I thought she was goin g to
go out and steal it.
"Aftpr I passed he r It hough I sh&lt;,.il
probably rPspond a net nrn with mP
for a while, " add ed M aUer. who
al ready has quali fied to repr esent
New ZPalard In the 3.00J. and
1.500-meter Olympic ra ces. " But I

~.._ -~-

\·- . i

~:"L

Game rained out

2~ :

M Pm b&lt;'r : T he Associ at rd Prf'!'is . In ·
Dalh • Prf&gt;Ss 1\ss()(' ia to n and lhf'
Amt&gt; ri ea n· N(•w spa p&lt;&gt;r Publl sht' rs A s·
SOC' i.at lon . Nat ional ;\d vNTi sln g Rf' p r f'·
~f' nlall vr. Dr an ham l"oi f' w spap('r S&lt;~lf' s.
1:\."t Third A v f'nU f' , NN· Yo r k. N f' W
Yor k 100J j
J ~n d

GA LLI POLIS - Th e Meig s·
Gol l1 po li s girl s va r sit v softball
ga me sc heduiE&gt;d f or l as t night
tJ r rf' was r a ined ou t in the th i rd
i nnin g w ith M eigs lea ding 7·'2.

T he M ar aud er ett es. now 5· 0 o n
t hf&gt; .vra r . t rav f'l t o Vint on C ount y
thi s f'\'E' ni ng .

\\O~I E VS \\1:-i:\ER - Lorraine \!oiler of '1/t•w Zealand
t· r o!oost' ~ til(' fini!'lh lin l' to win tht' "' omt·n·~ t·ompt&gt;tition Monday In

the Bo.,.lon .\ larathon . Molkr's timP wao; ~:

POSTMA ST F: R
Oh lll 1 ~1 / ll~

\\.it h Da\'t ·I&lt; ingm ;1n. it 'sf' if hC'r hit
(JI"

r1l i.e.·-,

h11! ing. slu_
l!i-!t •d homr runs h i ~ fi r st
t hn'\ ' !inw:--. u~ Jgai nq thr ~·n t t l f'
.\ L rri nrr.&lt;-.. dri\'ln.i! in Pight ru ns. T hf'
ont&gt; · m~tn powrr ~ hov.· Jl thf' 1-\ ing·
domf' pro,·iU! 'd thP ,\ ';-.; wi th a ~ H l

u.-' ith two men on base.
·· 1 \.ras pure ly on•r -anx iou s th P
!Jst two tim! •s .'' K inh'lTlan sa ld .

· It rl(x•sn' t !ak!· ,·c-r:-: mur h to g (•! it
out of thi ~ p.:.Jrk." said K ingm;-tn " I
dnrl"t think I \\'Oulrl w ant to hf' a

pllchr-r tHld p itch hf'tT' ·

" I cr:~n on! \ " r1Jn about hcllf-S P£---'f'd ."
hP s;l id "\\.'nPn I camf' out ear ly f or
batt ing pr;w ti&lt;'f', I didn' t kn ow 1f 1
r~nu ld

p lay . I I ju st pia in hurt s. Jt' s fu n
to sta r! our ttli" wa_\· I I rnak(•s it
t'&lt;t\ iP r to o;;;ust ;ttn ."
In or her Amf'r ican I .Pague act ion,
rht• C'h:'\'f'l an d I ndi an s nipped th f'
lklltim ort' Oriolf's 4-.'l and thf'
\-i innesot a ·!\vim· routed theCa lifor r.i.l Angds 9 - ~. Rai n washed o ut a
dou blph(•J d N J-x&gt;t\vf'('n Detroi t and
l~osto n and th(· Chicago· New Y urk
L:a m( ~ a lso was ra ined ou t.
In ltlf' nnh· Na tiona l L&lt;.•a gu C~
~'(Hill 's!. 1h1• 1.o;-.; A ngP IPs D odgPrs
1rirnrm_'{i t ~u · Houston As ! r os 5-4.
Kin~nan

bPltPd a grand sl am in
thl' first inning aft rr sing les by Joe
!\iorgan. !la w•y Lopes and Carney
l.a nsfunJ. Lansford wa lked tJOfore
K1ngrnan in both l hP third and fifth
innings. and hot h times K ingman
fo llowed v.ot h a two- run hom er. The
fir" two. ofl starter M att Young. 2· 1.

Including the tiC'·brcakrr on an
tn tield sing le in the S&lt;'vrnth inning,
to lead CIC'vcland over BaltimorP.
With runner s at fi rst anrt third and
rv.·o ou t, Thornton grf'f'trd rC'I iever
De nnis IViartinez wit h a single,
scoring Tony &amp;maza rd from third .
Mike Flanagan , 0·2. took th e loss,
giving up four runs. lh!'ff of t hem
('a m rcl. on nine hits in 62-3 innings.
BE'r1 Bly leven. 2·1. wa s the

E rnie

'""I ~oco

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STUDENT-CHILD $3.00 ADUL T-$5.00

t-- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

PICTURES
WITH
THE
EASTER

Ca t Ripken 's hom e run . his four1h
of the VE'ar, had tif'd the gamP 3-3 in
the Baltimore sLx th befo rE&gt; Thorn·
ton's tie-breaking hit.
Twins 9, Angel• 2
Kent Hrbek's grand slam homer
rapped an eight ·run sixUt inning,
leading MinnPsot a over California
tJOhind M ike Smithson's six·hitter.

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I

I

lbanks and take your entry to the sponsoring store before 5:00 p .m .,
April 20th.

~~~

12

:n

$ 1 ~ j}j.)

. .$.'1 1

'I ~ WP!'k .~

I

Color this basket pretty and bnght ,
With red and green . . . blue and whttel

3. Children may enter as many pictures as they like but can only win one

~~~· ~~

prtze.

t
I
I

t
t

'This Easter egg so brg and bnght
I
~Was brought by bunn~e s 1n the mghi~

4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Introducing our

t
t

2. Entries will be judged in two different age categories: ages 4-8 and 912 .

. ~11

$~ 1 1 . HI)

I

5. Decisions of the judge will be final.

Ponderosa
All
you-can-eat
Breakfast

Name __________________________

FIRST PRIZE .................. $15.00
SECOND PRIZE ............. $10.00

Address
Age ______.Phone _________

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

Buffet.

Bring your own
camera or we will
take it for you.
ONLY 11.50 EACH

GALLIPOLIS STORE
THURS. &amp; FRI.
6:30 to 8:30

MIDDLEPORT STORE
TUES. &amp; WED.
6:30 to 8:30

$'1!!~

Who could 'lt ontylfil
ask for more. con biscuitS.

'The more you CO~&lt;nt , the more you sa ,
'fhm 's plenty of eggs for yo~&lt; and mel

A symbol of peace , this Easter dove,
Remmds us of our everlasttng love .

'fwo little chicks so cute and furry . .
Better color them before rhey scurry!

Name ------------------------Address - - -- - - - - - - - -

Name ------------------------Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

Name ------------------------Address _________ _ __

Name ------------------------Address ___ _ __________

Age

Age

Age

Age _____.Phone _________

'fhcsc lihcs make a lovel y bouguct .
'To show the world it 's E.IS tcr Dul'

Fn

StiUIOgC .

What a breakfast. TShcra"!b~::~9frt~ fruit bar. $3
0n u •e~k;;d.&lt;
d more
ere 5
for}ust ·· ·
cheese an
ffr t includes el 'erl mort
hilr kids undn
the bkr:aktlas t,!~ $~ .99 for kids 10 a~d un~f;il:at Pondero.&lt;a
brta ,as ts r. )'ou get so much ,or so
5 lW&lt;JYS eat ,ru.
k
a w t servod Ttti11AM 7 De~• • wee

39

Meigs Inn, Pomeroy, Ohio

We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Batteries and Suppies For All Makes For Sale.

I

I
I
I
~· I
., I
I
&gt;I

BUNNY

Mr. H. William Mattingly
BELTONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
Any one wh o has trouble hearing is welcome to have a heanng test
ustn g modern electrontc equtpment to determ ine 1f h1s loss is one
whtc h ma y be helped Some of the causes of hearing loss will be explatn ed and dtagram s of how the ear works wi ll be shown.

s~~

$:.! ~1

f-.,.,'

Sh ow&lt;.. o t 4 00 &amp; 7 3 0

first rar(&gt;('r sa ve.

THURSDAY
APRil 19, 1984
9:00A.M. Till
NOON

'1~ W Pf'li\

TUESDAY , APR . 17

FREE HEARl NG
TESTS SET

$H

Thr~ll ~ O ulls La.Jghter and
Ex c, wmen l ,n me Helle• Tra ci•I•On

pitrhrd tw o scor('IPss mnings for hi s

t
:

Middleport, OH.

1 . Just color one or more of the drawings on these pages. fill in the

1.1 \\" ('f' k ~
".!ti \\"f'f'k ...

*******************

Ca m acho

VILLAGE PHARMACY
t

-o;~:_::::::::::========::::::::o:~s;.""f------------------------..J---------------r~
.
- - - - - - - - .l - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I

Hhlo

~ ~ ; \\" rf' k ~

C. p o n \OI 4'fi

Pomeroy, OH .

t
t

Out..,idt• Ohio

CATHY ROGERS
Vivacious Singing
RINGMISTRESS

FRANCIS FlORIST

Pomeroy, OH.

I

ho mf' L lrri f'r .. l' r \"l c p i ..

L1 Wt •d i"

!hun

THE FARMERS BANK

t
t

t

Suhsnihf·r" no1 d r~i r i n g 10 P&lt;H t hf' c a r
rtf'l mc~1 · l"f' rll it in .Jih·;ln&lt;-'f' d irt'ct 10
T h1 • D.:1ih Sf' nli nf'l on .1. li u r \ ~ m onlh
I );J~I~ &lt;" ll 'd il w ill br gi\·f' n rtl rrif' r pa e h

ln~id, •

\.\rl nn&lt;'r. surrend&lt;'ri.ng 1hree runs on
inn ings.

Middleport, OH.

M;\ I I S l 'RSC HI PT I O~S

dght hit s w hilE' striking out seven in
sev&lt;'n

PAT HILL FORD

I

$·UIO
211

;1\' ;1\ i: lhl l'

while Ak in Dans slugged a solo
hom&lt;·r for Smttle. Oakland r ight
handPr 1\o; ik&lt;' Warren 1 2. worked the
fir st li 2.:1 innings and pieked up the

AndrPThornton drbvr in tvm run~.

mus.ck .

Age _ _ _...~Phone _ _ _ _ __ _

$~1

t1W&gt;n .. w lw n ·

hut ! wasn ' t goi ng to walk .' "
l'vlorgan a lso homt'J"('(1 fur thl' A' s.

Indians ·1, Orioles :1

Age _ _ _.JPhone _ _ _ _ _ __

Sl'BSCRIPTIO" R1\T ES

!\"o o., u iJ~ n!plion .. b.v m.tH jX' r mi11Pd in

" Thc•y didn ' t g ivp mp any pi tc hes,

1\.ingman had misSf'd th£' past
1ht 'f'(~ gamt'S hf'causf' of a sorp Jpg

Age _ _ __rPhone _ _ _ _ _ __

I

:RlDAY thru THURSDAY:

m(1 nHt

On his nPx t a t-ba t. in the scv f'nth
in njng, Kingman struc k out on three
hrPakin g hal ls from Vande &amp; r g.ln
the ninth, he popped out to the infield

Address ____ _ _ __ __ _ :

LAPRIL 13 thru 19 J

1

pitch off rPii&lt;'\W E d Va nde BE'rg.

Oakland s luggrr. known a s
rnud1 fur ~~ rikl'(JUts JS long -boJ I

·nu~

Address

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

PRICES

ITII~:-. .

..\nd :\uJ nd ;r\ night, hf' couldn' t

Phone ________

Name __________ _ _ It

SI,'GlE COI"l"

ca m i'on 0-2 pit c hes a nd ti1C t hird on a
J. ]

Age

Name

Hy farrlpr or Vlulor Routt•
Un r W•·r k
$1 10

****
ACT S

Address

Name

.

Otw Y!'ar

2k . { t\l:.l.. asrrphoto)

Name _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _

SP nd &lt;Hl(Jr ·f'~'- In T hP

Ont' :Y1 n nth

Kingman powers
A's 9-6 victory
Pres..~

'Thts brg Easter egg looks so Jwnny .
When wsed to hide our !tttle bunny I

Daily Sf'nli nd . 111 Court S1. Po mf'ro\".

FABULOUS

R.v 1\,~· iatt&gt;d

Wtth' prayer and gladness we recilll ,
Hts resurrection , His message to all .

.........

of 2: ~&gt;9: 28. nearly se\·en
minutps slower than th e world
lll11f'

-~ ,,_!

His fatth and louc showed us the way
'fo peace and harmony on Easter Day.

Ltt's pawse amid thts celebratwn,
And renew our laue and dedtcatwn .

1

PHARMACY
786 North 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh.

I

Jet. Rt. 160 &amp; 35
Gallipolis, Oh.

sre•"'•s

Upper River Rd.
(Across from the Airport)
Gallipolis, Oh.

__fhone

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742-2211

Rutland, OH.

Phone

KINGSBURY HOMES
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Phone _ _ _ _ _ __

heritage house of shoes
Loc ker 219

HOME NATIONAL RBANK
.

0

L_~:_·_2'~~=~~~:_F:~:-.::•.:a:~~: __________ !~~e~~:..~.:.--------...l--------Mid~I!"~~·-OH_:_ _______ L _________________:::_~-

�Page

6

The Doily Sentinel

Plf'eiDirnnee~IOIOYf-lM~Uicdlddleport,

T~y,

atio

April 17, 1984

Police offer reward
in mass murder case
NEW YORK (!\Pi- Police have
o!fered a $10 ,Oll reward and opened
a specia I phone lin&lt;' to help find
whoever pumped buliPts through
the heads of two women and eight
chlldren, a massacr&lt;' authorities
lx&gt;lieve may have stemmed from
"bad blood " in drug dealings.
The slayings may have been
drug-related because milk sugar
used to cut heroin and foU often used
10 wrap narcotics were found in thP
blood-spattered apartment in a
working-c lass Brooklyn neighbor·
hood, pulic&lt;&gt; said Monday.
The women, ages 20 and 24, and
lhechlldren, ages3 to 14, were found
Sunday in front of a blaring TV set
likr figures ''in a wax museum"
afler what aulhori1ies called the
worst mass killing in the city's
histo!'}·.
Most of thC' v1rtims v.:rrr found

Sitting upright in chairs. A slain
pn&gt;gnant woman sttll held a spoon
and pudding can in her hand as
though feed ing a baby. and a crying
infant the only survivor rrav•.: !ed among the bodies
Ln lhP Colombian drug world.

murdering children is a revenge
taetlc that has been used as a
l'{'prisal against adults, said Patrick
Murphy, first deputy pollee commissioner. Although the victims
were Puerto Rican, the revenge
motive was being investigated, he
said.
" We' re looking Into the possibility
i1 could be a reprisal because of
some bad blood," Murphy said at a
news conference. "We'n&gt; specula!·
ing because of the fact that there
wer&lt;' young children involved and
thpy wen&gt; murdered in the fashlon

Eastern
1Continued from page II
M argar&lt;&gt;t Cauthorn and Judy Wolfe
and special education aide. Sally
Ca ldwell.
The board voted to repair and
n&gt;place bleachers on thf' football
field. purchased a co!fff machlnf'
for the high school. and renewed the
contract for drivers education with
High school Drivers Training, Inc.,
and set asidP $250 for the awards
asSf'mbly.

By The Bend

related to the cancer of the
pancreas, which spn&gt;ad to his

Rome a nd accepted the Cerman
surrenclf'f th"l ended World War II

Clark became the liberator of
Rome in 1944, commanding the 5th
Army as it chased German forces
out of I taly. He was later supreme
m mmander of the United Nations
forces In the Far East and the signer
of the Korean War armistice In 1953.
On March 19, 1954, Clark was
inaugurated president of The Cit adel. He served in thalcapacltyuntll
1965 but never relinquished his close
11es to the sc hool.
In recent years, Clark made
provisions for a $500,00J trust fund
with all assets becommg the

in Italy . ci ted tnrlay . Hrwas 8i.
Clark, a fou r-star general whose
high!'' ciPcorat&lt;'d military career
spannf'&lt;l thm• wars. entered !.he
!Vicdtcal U niver siry of South Carolina fort PstsMarch 20. but by Sunday
wa s listed in critical anLI drt eriorat ing rond it ion . He diPd slto rtlv aftr•r I
a.m. today
Clark had hl': tr·tt mublt•:ulCI US('(ia
paC('makt.'r, but hospital s!X)kes-

rnan

Charlt·~ Gudailis said in

a

s!a rernPnt that Clark' s dea th "wa s

liver."

The annual inspection or Harrt sonvlle Chapter 255, Order or the
Eastern Star, was held recently with
Genevieve Kincaid, deputy grand
matron, at the Inspection office.

Rotary Easter
egg hunt set

Other disdnguished guests were
grand representatives, Lena Smith,
Arkansas; Helen Faires. Nevada
ard Margarel Ehmar, Illinois.
Attendln!( were members of chap·
tl'rs !rom Albany, Aureliu s, Wilkes·
ville, Evangeline, Athens, Racine,
McConnelsville, Pomeroy, Ma·
rietta, Thea, New Marshfield,
Vinton, Reinersv!Ue, Guysville, Bel·

Blgg~&gt;r and bettl'r than ever is the
word on the annual Middleport·
Pomeroy Rotary Club Easter egg
hunt to be held at 1 p.m . Sunday at
General Hartinger Park in
Middleport.
Chairman Hank Cleland repons
that 1.231 cash and merchandise
prizes "'1li be distrtbu ted In the prize
eggs to be hidden on the park
grounds for three age groups. The
age groups will Include one year
through kindergarten, first, second
and thlrd graders, and fourth, fifth
and sixth graders. A costumed
Easter bunny will be on hand to add
to the activities. A gold egg will be
worth $25; a silver egg, $10 and a
bronze egg, $5.

L a t e p a y m e n t._,_co_nti_nu_ed_rro_m_pa_ge_Jr_ _ _ _ _ _ __

current blll pius one·slxth of the
amount in arrears, ur one- third of
thr past ·dUL' ;m w unt plu s the
curTl'n l bill !oJvoid s hut otts
AIJuut ti.10 JX"P'" walked into
hl'adq ua r tPrs of t hf' Clf'veland

E lt'l'lric

lllurn i nL~tin g

Co . on

Mnn ·

day, with WI stgning up for lh&lt;' 15
j)('rc&lt;'nt plan .
"111E' major i t~ · u t thP rrs. t made
arrangPmC'nt s to gE'I nn another
extend0d pJynwn l plan or mad&lt;'
paymPnh nn lllPir bJI I'-'." CE I
spokf'sm.an f{wk Dl ·C iunt " aid
Mond&lt;l_
, . "Thl" morn i n ~=: 1ilf'!"f ' wrn'
onlf •l""i to (1\-..,cnn m"f 'l .1ppm.'&lt; lm&lt;.t1f'l .\ "
~MI . bu 1:1'•-:0 wr·rl ' in 1.1 1"1 d 1:-.c:·nnnrc tf'&lt;J

today.
IX'('n
asking thrm.
· Plcasf'. Pittl('r comr in or phonC'.'"
lkChanf ... aid "'Right now, we arf'
lookmg at llf'tWf'f'n $4 million to$:&gt;
mi llion in ou 1st and in}! unpo id IJi \ls ."

while Easl Ohio Gas Co. estinnated
that lO,OOJ might lose service.
East Ohio processed about 200
cus tomer cases in the mor ning
alone, lhe usual number for an
r n1in&gt; day.
East Ohlo spokesman John Tidy·
man said collectors in a 2tkounty
scrvicC' arPa were visiting delin·

Boosters to meet
A m('('tin~ of the MPigs Vocal
Mu sic 13oostcrs sc heduled for 7: :!0
p.m . tonigh t at Nieigs High School
has lx&gt;cn changed to6p.m. tonight at
thp ~&lt;'l~s Junior High School.

Mc-'f'ts W edrwsdav

'" V\··f' ·vf'

: ~1.010
cu stornPr ~ I'OU!d b1 · di ~ connc'C.' tt-'&lt;1.

CEI said I;JSt

"""'k thai

The Middleport Literary Clu b will
me\'1 Wednesday evening at 7 :lO
p.m at lhP homt' u[ Mrs. Harold
S&lt;JuPr. Rut lond. Book r&lt;'ViPWS will
bt• givpn b~' Mrs . SJul'r and Mrs .
Car I Horkv .

quent customers to get either partial
payments, arrange a payment plan
or disconnE"Ct service.
Dave Osterland, spokesman for
Ohio Edison in Akron, said a bout
14,00J customers had signed up for
the 15 percent plar .

Good Friday service
Good Frtday services will bc held
al the Syracuse PresbytPrian
Church a17: 30p. m. Communion will
be served.

Trurk kills deer
A pickup truck sustai n&lt;&gt;d m odPr
a te damage ln an 8 p .m. accident in
Scipto Township r&lt;'ports the Ga llia
Nieigs Post of the Ohio Highwav
Patrol
·
According to lhf' palmi, a pickup
truck driven by Franklin Howard,
lR, Pomero~'. \vhowas heading wPst
on Oh10 f;IJJ struck and killed a deer .
How a rei was uninjurPd.

BACK IN OHIO- U.S. Sen. ,John Glenn es-

corts his mother-in-law, Margaret Castor, into
the meeting hall of a Columbus retirement com munity where he urged their support lor pending

pla nnt'li to d rink t.·hampagnP with

cvprybully dl Tht· Wall Strf'f'l
Journal as jou111alists toasted their
1984 Pulit z&lt;'r PrizPS.

Four nC'\\I·spapPrs won two apioce
of the awards announced Monday :
Thr Los AngclPs Times. pubUc

..,prvice a n(l f'Cl llorial ca11ooning:
Tht' Boston ~ ;111ht ' . special locnl
rC&gt;portin g and s ~t nt.'W S photo·
g-ra phy: Thr ~ew York Timf'S,
national reportin g an d criticism ;
ond The \\'all St!l'f't .Jou rnal.
lntt'rn a t io nal r p pnr1 1n g and
~·o mment ; tr.v

OthPr award s w~ ·nt to :\'f'\\/Sd:1 y,
J,ong Island. :-.I .Y .. general local

r&lt;'porting; The Oenvr r Post, lea tun&gt;
photography: The Seatllc Times.
feature wrtting; and the weekly
r;rorgia Gaz.f'tte of Savannah.
f'(litoria l writing .
,\ t ThP Los 1\ngeiPs Times.
~a n agtng ~~ditor George Cotilar
expn&gt;sSPd particular pride that the
wlnnlng serll's on Southern
California· s growing Hispanic popu ·
lation - had been conceived and
carried out by n&gt;purters, editorsand
photographers or Hispa nic descpnl.
Thr ncwspappr 's Pau l Conrad won
his third Puiltwr for cartooning.
Grossfeld, who spent 311 weeks in
Lebanon photographing lhe effects
of !he bloody clvU war, and Anthony
Suau of The Denver Post, whose
winning photograp~wed starving people in EthioPia, were pensive
aunidst the rpvrlry

'"We drink champagne and celebrate today. but I can "I forget that
there·s a lot of prople over there,
children and civilians, that are
living," said Grossfeld . He added
that the news had hampered
carry ing out his assignment for the
day: "'I'm lrylng to print Boston
marathon pictures and I can'l make
a good print to save my ille."
Suau said his award "couldn't
ha "" happened to a bet tl'r set or
pictures ... The lmportant thin!\ Is
t ha I I hose pictun&gt;s be seen."
Two journalists who later turned
to fi ction, William Kennedy and
Theodor SeussGeisel, were honored
tn the Letters and Drama category
- Kmnedy for his novel "Iron ·
w&lt;'i'd," " and the ll().year-old "Dr .
Seuss" in a special citation for
conlributing to "the education and
enjoyment" of children and parents
with his whimsical books.
Playwright Davtd Mamet, calling
hJs prize "an extraordinary endorsement,"' won the drama award lor
·'Gl engarry Glen Ross ."
·· 1 have oo thoughts . I'm unable to
think." said Kennedy, a 56-year-old
former reporter from Averill Park,
N .Y . He said "Ironweed," theslory
of an ex-baseball player who
commits murder ard returns to his
hometown '1:2 years later, was
rejected 13 times before being
published last year.
"'It wasn'tan easy book towtiteor
an easy one to read," he said, but
"America is treating me royaliy."
The book also won the 1983 National
Book Critics Clrcle prize tor fiction .
Geisel spent many years as a
nPwspap&lt;&gt;r ca rtoonist before begin-

nlng to write and illustrate his "Dr.
Seuss" books.
Boston Globe Editor Thomas
Winship, whose newspaper·s win ning series on racism was lauded for
including some self-criticism, sa id
his staff had "opened a bottle of
champagne . ard hope ard pray
that the paper gets out tomorrow ."
The writers who gave The New
York Times Its third straight
two·prtze year expn&gt;ssed satisfaction both for themselves and for lhc
fields they cover. Architecture critic
Paul Goldberger noted that h1s field
was "a relatively new one, " a nd
aerospace writer John Noble Wilford said It was "particularly great
for science wrttlng to have this kind
of recognition ."
At The WaU Street Journal, !Vis.
House, who five weeks ago became
foreign editor, saldshewould "drtnk
champagne with everybody on the
paper." She was cited tor her
"extraordinary" series of Inter·
vtews with Jordan's King Hussein .
"Nonnaliy one wins Pulltzers for
war coverage, not peace coverage
that didn't work," she said.
The Journal's Vermont Royster.
winning his second Pulitzer at age
70, said he "felt sorry tor people like
golfers or journalists who have their
blg moments when they're young."
There was champagne In the
newsroom at Newsday, the Long
Island, N.Y., dally, which won for
what the Pulitzer board called its
"enterprising and comprehensive"

coverage or the Baby Jane Doe case
and Its social and political
lmplications.
Editorial writer Albert Scardino

legislation. Glenn returned to Ohio to shore up his
home stale political base alter dropping out of the
race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
( AP Laserpholo)
'

RIVERVIEW These are the Riverview
Elementary School Meigs SoU and Water District
poster conlesl winners. Shown an&gt; the first place

poswr of Wesley Holter, not present; second row from
left, Andrea Rockhold, second pl:we and Patrtck
Gibbs, third . With them is Grare Weber, school
principals.
•-" .~· .· ,_JI ~ ·:I ) t

;:;;..

,il

~-'

Meigs County happenings
Wednesday eourt out

Sunrise service set

The Third ll'ednesdoy Homemak ·
ersCiubwill mr'f'l Wednesday, April
IR, al 10 a.m at the S.vracuse
Municipal Building.

No cour1 casC's will be hea rd in
Meigs County Court on Wednesday,
AprU 25.

Easter Sunrise service wUI be
held at 6 a.m. at the Pomeroy
Wesleyar Holiness Church, SR 143,
Pomeroy.

Vc·teran~ Memorial
Admilted --Leona HcnsiPy, Long
Boltom;
Roger Moore, .11
Haydenville.
Discharged --Char!"" [)e(&gt;rn . Jr

The placf'ment office at Rio
Grande Coll&lt;&gt;ge and Communit y
CoiiPgf' is Sl""'f'ki.ng businesSC's whicll

would lx' interest('{] in C'mploying
students on a pat1 or fuil -timC' basis
this summn1f'r. Those intf'restcd
are asked to contact Pf'g Thoma s,

placcm4?nt dire-ctor. at thC' collf'gc,
phone 614 -245-:&gt;35.1.

Bike·a·thon date set
The Cyst ic Fibrosis Foundation
will sponsor a bikP.a-thon May 12. in
Racine.
The C'Vcnt wil l stan at th&lt;' fire
station at lO a .m wi th rPhri strat ion ;lt
9:30 a .m . Pl'rsons wishing to

participatl' may pick up their
registration s lip at any school in
Southern Local Dis trict. For add ito·
na l inf01mation ca11949-2:l'/8.
Riders will be supervised and
prizes will be awarded. The first
prize isa$50bond donated bv R ac ine
National Bank .

of the Georgia Gazcltc said the
av.·ai"d "means an avvful lor for .1
weekly n&lt;&gt;wspap&lt;.'r."
At TI1e Sea ttle Tlmes. aerospace
reporter Peter Mark RinearSDn
thanked his newspaper for giv ing
him Sl.&gt;l months lo work on hi s

Holy services ~et
Grace Episcopal Church, E.!Viain
St , Pomeroy, continues Holy Week
services wilh :vlaundy Thursday
I Commardment Thursd ay 1 servi·
ces to be held at7: 30 p.m. Thursday .
(;ood Friday services will begin at
7:30

p.m. and two sen.:ices are

scheduled for Sa turda y - a Hol y
Sa iurda)· service at 7:30p.m. ard ar
Easter vigil service at 1I p .m .
F:aster sunrise serv icewilllx&gt;gin at 7
a.m. and Easter Sunday holy
eucharist at 10 :30a.m.

Acid rain program
scheduled Wednesday
Economic and environment al
problems n&gt;volving around the acid
rain issue will be examined in ''Ohio
Coa l and Acid Rain ," part of
WOUB-TV' s "Forum ·· se ries, to be
hroadcast at 8 p.m . \\'('(lnC'sday on
r·ablentPr1ainmC'n t Channf•ll l.
Thf'progTam \..viii look at acid rain
from &lt;1 sc i(.~nt i.t"ic poin t of viC'v.:, and
exam ine acid r ain origination, costs

of environmen tal damage, cleanup
costs, and effect s the acid rain issue
'"''ill have on the Ohio coal industry .

l.uest panelists include C Luther
Ht'Ckm::J.n. executivf'director. Coa lirion for Environmental Energy
Ba lance: Neal Tnstenson, Ohio
Mining and R('('lamation Associa ·
tion ; Tom Gibbons, United Mine
Workers; Steve Sedam, OhioEnvir·
on m cnlal CounciL Lois Whea ley.
llhio League of Women Voters ; and
D r. William Baasel, c hemical
engineering department, Ohio

University.

Fire auxiliary

A candlelighl memorial scr·
\iC(' for Mrs. Grace Weese was he ld
at the April m&lt;'f'ting of thf' Asbury
Uniled Methodist Church at the
hom£&gt; of Mrs. lrPne Parker .
Miss Marcia Karr conducted the
service- noting !hat Mrs. Weese was
a longtime member serving in
many offices for thP group.
It wa s voted to sponsor a Brownir
troop for the next year at the
suggestion of April Harmon. Easte r
breakfast was discussed with thP
sunrise service being announced
for 6 a. m. and the breakfast at 7
a.m. for the ch urch cborge at lhe
Asbury Church
Margaret Eichinger hod the

An Plection day dinner to raisl.'
fund s for the " j aws of life" was
planned at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Auxiliary of the
Racine Fire Department.
It was decided that members will
solicit Racine, Letart and Portland
for the dinner. Donationsareneeded
and residents are asked to con tact
either 949-2946 or949-2619to contrib·
utc. Members contributed at the
meeting to the fund for a new
coffeepot for the firf'men. A vote of
thanks was extended to the
members who havp assisted with
emergencies and mad(' coff('(' and
sa ndwiches for I he firemen .
Welcomed into the group were
Wanda Lyons and Becky Hall. The
door prize was won by Ruth Shane.
Refreshment s were setved by
Tlwlrna Wa lton and Chlck Oiler .

Df'votions were by :vl.rs. Karr wh o
used Psalm ~2 and a reading from
"Se1 mons" by' E. Stanley Jones
Officf'rs' rrports wriT' given and an
Easter offeri ng "-'as takf'n . Thr
birl hdays of Mrs. Harmon and Ann
Sa uv age were observf'd .
Refreshments were SPrvrd b~·

Mrs. P ark er and M rs.
Houda shel t. co hostess.

The F'irst Southern Bapllst
Chu11'h will hold ils sunrl&lt;;e service
Sunday at 5; 30 a.m . at the roadside
park on Raul&lt;' .11, betw("'n Pomeroy
and Athens. Traveling nOt1h lhe
park is on lh&lt;' ri!(hl of the highway.
Other servic&lt;'s will be held at the
church Sunday with Sunday school
a t~: 30a .m . and morning worship at
IU: 30 a.m. at whtch llmc children
will prcsml an I:: aster program.

R.&lt;.~c inP.

Wolff' rrcrnt ly underwent open
hPar t s urgC'ry at University
Hospilal.
The bloodmobile will be at the
S..•nior Cit izcns Cenler Wednesday
from I p.m.too:30p.m.

EmergPncy runs
Two calls were answered by local
unit s Monday. lhe Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reporls. At 5;
a.m .. I he Tuppers
Pla ins Unit look Leonard Hensley,
Long Bottom. to Veteran s Memorial
Hosp ital. and at 7:07 p.m ., the
Racine Unil took Tim Evans from
Third Si . to Holzer Medical Center.

qz

.,,~!·

, IH •
~-

An Ea ster program was prPS·
ented bv Mrs. Daylen&lt;' Bahr
assisted by Mrs. Marilyn SpE"nrer at
lhe April meeting of the Ches ter
United Melhodisl Chu rch
:Virs. Kathryn Mora pre&lt;;ided at
the session, at which &amp;I sick and
shut ·in call s were noted .

TIJPPER.'i PI.AlNS - Tuppers Plains School
winners of thP Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
Oio;trict poster contest are: front from left, Sanders.

;cienre teacher: ,Jenny Roush, second: TinaComolly,
Brst: Angie Hysell. third. and Wendy Halar, principal.

th e sun rL~ SPrvi('(' nt 6: 30 a .m . with

•

Horae£' Karr rat! IE' sa le on J unC&gt; 2.

Alfred area
happenings

Awards have been presented to
Eastern Local School students who
have been judged winners or the
arnual fourth grade poster contest
of the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservat ion District
Theme of the poster contest this
year was "Ptants,AnimasandMan,
Sharing the Earth, an Ecology
Story."
First place winners received a
blue ribbon and $3; second place
winners, red ribbons and $2 and
third ptace,Slandawhiteribbon. All
conlesta nt s received a pencil from
thedistricl.
11!fany Gardner. Chesl er E le·
mentary School was co-champion
from the Eastern Local Dislrict .

The annual banquet and dance of
the Harrisonvtlle-Sclpio Alumni
Association has been set for May 26
at 7 p.m. at the HarrtsonvUleSchool.
Plans were made during a recent
meeting of the offlcers. The dance
will begin at 9 p.m . with music to be
provided by "True Country" of
Gloustl'r. Classes to be honored will
be 1924, 19~,1944, 1954,and1959wtth
special recogntlon for the 50th
anniversary class, 1934, and the 25th
anniversary class, 1959. The prtce
was set for $7 for adults, an $3.50 for
children.
Reservations are to b sent to Joy
Clark. Middleport, 45700, or may be
telephoned to Mrs. Clark, 992-3690or
Harold Graham, 742-lll'l.

It was disclosed thf' UMW is
sponsoring a churchwide project to
buy sea t pads for the sanctuaf)·
pews. Donations ma y be mad£' to
M rs . Helen Wolf or Mrs. Kathryn
Windon. Plans were established for
Mrs. Wolf and !Virs. Ruth Korrtolx&gt;
program leaders.
The UIVM' will serve a primal~'
cleclion day dinner on May 8 in the
social room of the church. M rs.
Bailey and Mrs. Windon will tX'
chairv;omPn for the dinner. It was
also decided to serve food at the

Poster
wtnners
announced

Alumni Banquet
planned for
Harrisonville

WINS FEATURE PULITIZER -Anthony Suau won the feature photovaphy 1984 Pulitzer Prize wttb this photo of a grieving
widow In a Denver Cemetery on Memorial Day In 1983. He also
won lor photos of starving Ethiopians. The announcement was
made In New York Monday. (AP Laserphoto)

Nora

Chester UMW

Blood donors sought
Persons atlcn ding the Bloodmo·
bile on Wednesday are asked to
dona l e in the nanwofVictorWolfe .

"Christian

Tes ts ." She usf'd scripture from
Matthew 7 and a reading, ' "G ivt"of
Your Best to the Mast£'r" a ssisted
by Mary LislC'. Irene Parker, Helrn
Teaford and Opal Kloes
Mary Cundiff opened 1he meeti ng
bv readtng a poem, "If Chri st Hod. "

Easter SunriSe serv ices at the
Fa ith Baplist Church will be held a!
Mason Park a16 a m.ln case of rain
services will be held at the church.
Bn&gt;akfast will be served following
the scrv ices.

"'-&gt;inning feature. a report on the new

Boeing 75i j('lliner.
The 1984 prizes, most of which
carry $1,00J cash awards, wen'
announced by Columbia Univ&lt;:&gt;rslty,
which administers thP compel it ion
under the will of the !alP publi shl'r
Joseph Pulitzer.
In the Arts and Letters categories.
l&gt;iography winner Louis R. Harlan
said the award for his work "BookN T. Washington : TIH• Wi
mrd ofTuskCh'f'&lt;', 1901 -191.1 "- was
especially pleasing because biography tends "'to be neglecled in lhr•
computerized age.·'
The other Arts and Letters
winners were :
- Mary Oliver's "American
Primitive," a collection of 50 poems,
for poelry.
- For general nonfiction, Paul
Starr's "'The Social Transformation
of American Medicine, " which
investigates the medical profes·
sion' s power and refonns ard crises
In America's hmlth-ca rP sysl em .
-Bernard Rands' "Canli del
Sole." for tenor and orchestra , for
music. Rands Is a professor of
composition at the University of
California at San Otego.
The Pulitzer boaJ;d said tt
switched two entries, Rlnearson's
story and Grossteld's photographs,
to categories other than those in
which they were entered .

Asbury church

pr og r am entitlPd

Homemakers to mL&gt;et

Journalists toast 1984 Pulitzer Awards
NEW YORK t,\Pt - Pl10to·
gra phPr Stan Grossfeld of The
Boston Glut.M• was so excited he
couldn't "makP a good print to sav&lt;'
rny liff'. " and f\ar"n r·: lliott Hou se·

pn&gt;, Amesvlile, CheshJl'(' and Webb.
Past matrons and patrons of the
Harrtsonvllle chapwr Introduced
wen&gt; Pauline Atldns, Donna Nelson,
Grade Wilson, Bernice Hoffman,
Sharon Jewell, Joan Kaldor, Ruth
Erlewine, Lois Thompson, Betty
Biship, Pearle Canaday, Janice
DeBoard, Allegra Will, DougBishp,
Chester King, Charles King, Larry
Well, Norman Will, Dana Hoffman
and Dallas DeBord.
Honored masons presented were
Jim Buchanan , Bob Kuhn, Clayton
Smith, Cecil Staneart. Jesse
Brinker and Robert Reed. Also

recognized were Wylde Whitley,
district representative; June Scott,
Linda Davis, and Betty Bishop,
dlstrtct o!flcers; Mary Wooley and
Mildred Donahue, grand pages;
Lewis Schoenlan, grand aide; Betty
Schenkel, ESTARL n&gt;pl'{'sentative,
and former grand appointments
and past matrons and past patrons
of other chapters.
The sunshine fund was gtven to the
OES Endowment Fund. Jane Wise
was soloist for the m eeting. Dallas
and Janice DeBord were pro tern
candidates for Inspection attended
by 30 members and 80 visitors.

Meigs groups gather in meetings

Employers' sought
Customers J(so ran pay fllC'ir

7

Harrisonville OES installation conducted

they were."
Enrlqll(' BAmudez, 34, who was
father of two of the slalnchlidl'{'fl and
who discovered the bodies at his
apartment, was being intl'rviewed

property or the school at hls death.
"It is a little oasis of honor, duty
and enlightened dlsclpllne," Clark
said of the school. "I see so much
Americanism here.''
II was his wish to be buried at The
Citadel with a stmple epitaph saying
only that hew as a generaloftheU.S.
Army and president of the military
school.
Clark is survived by h1s wife of 17
years. the former Mary Mildred
Applegate; a son, retired Army
Maj. William Doran Clark of
Washington; and four grandchildr en. His first wife, the former
Maurine Doran, died in 1966; their
daughter, Patricia Ann Oostlng,
died In 1962.

Tuesday, April 17, 1984
Page

Gen. Clark dead at age 87
CHARLESTOr&gt;:. S.C !API Retired Cen. Mark W Clark , who
led the U .S. ;,t hMm:• on 11 s long fight
from Alricet to the liberation or

The Daily Sentinel

m embers lo meet at thP United
Methodist Church in Chester at6 : lo
p.m. Mf'mtX'rs arc to take a
"'ildflower or tree guide book with
them . ·

Happy Harvesters

Chester Garden

An Easter breakfast was an ·
nounced for April 22 at the Trinity
Church when the Happy Harvesters
Class met Wednesday at thechurch .
Also announced was May F eUow·
ship Day to be held by Church
Women United al Trinity on May 4,
10:30 a.m., and a rummage sa te to
be held on May .1·3 at the church
basement .
Miss Erma Smith pn&gt;sided al the
me('ting with Mrs. Genevieve
M einhart giving devotions on
Easter. Mildred Arnold was wel comed as a new member in both the
Happy Harvesters Class and the
Bu sy Bees. Th&lt;' class gavp a vote of
thanks to Ralph WPrry· for hi s
assistancC' wit h cla ss projff'ts .

New offtcNs were elected at the
Wednesda~ mght meeting of the
Chester Garden Club hPid at the
home or Ruth Erwin.
Elected were Pat HoltPr, presi ·
dPnt; .Jennie Me~chir, first \'ICE'
ptl•sident; El eanor Knight, second
\OCc president; Ruth Ernin, sect&lt;'·
tary; Maurita Miller, assistant
secretary; Dorothy Karr, ln&gt;as·
UllO'r; Twila Buckley, assistant

Caryl Cook, Georgia Watson . E llen
Wil son. ll'ilmo Terrell and Edna
Reibel.
Get -well cards will again tx• sold
by the class. For the&gt; :Via~· mff•ting.
Eva Df&gt;ssaurr will havp thP pro·
gram and Mrs l\lteinhar1 will be
hostf'SS. Cake , ice cream and Nffff'
were se~'C'd by· Mrs. E:!a Smith,
hosl css

Conv alescent card!-&gt; w('re signed

tor

trrasun:r.
The Arbor Day planting at the

Hearthstone clan

Carleton School was noted by
Nia urita Miller and Eleanor Knight .
Severa l namPS were proposed for

Arrangement s to pu rchasP flow .
f'rs for the church altar on £aster
were made durmg a mffttn g oft he
Hearthstone Class of thP M tddlPporl
First Baptist Chu rch held at the
home of Mr. and :Virs. Ton)' Fow ler
Bes ides the mum to bP purrhased
bv the class . scvNa l memlx&gt;rs
indicaled that they will provide
EastN flowers for thP church.
The "come as you arp" meeting
opened with a welcomp from Edna
Wilson and dl:'votions on the Easter
lhC'rne b,· Mary Hughes. Don Wilson
r&lt;'ported lhat LuJa Murrav- is in a
health care center at Ravenswood .
She will be J()j In Julv.
Round· robin get·well cards were
signed for John ard Alwilda WPrnf'r
and Willis and Katie Anthony.
For the program Harold Chase
displayed an antique ard Fowler
showed his va lentine collect ion .
There was a gan1f' on hy mns
prepared by Sarah Fow lf'r wit h
Mrs. Harold Chase as the wmner.
Chase won the door pri7P , a potled
plan I . Finger foods were servf'&lt;l by
the Fowlers from a table derorated
in the Easter theme.

mcmlx'rship . and announct'{j wen•
the count y meeling lo lx&gt; held April

23 at Trinily Church. thP wildflower
walk to be held April IS in Jackson
County. Lake Kathryn, and th('
regi onal mwling lobe held May J7
at Marielta.
'"God' s Tm's" was lhe t hem(' of
thP prugram w ith memlx&gt;rs com·
ment ing on I he s (JOt oft heir fa vorite
IIW for roil call. Ada Holl er had a

conserva tion progra m on choosing

shade lrPf's and gave lips on how to
plant them . There was a story on
pl ant tng trees by Twlla Buckley.
On exhlbit at the meeling were
specimens of spring flowers. Ruth
Eru.·in and Clarice Krauner had
an·argement s entitled ··sprin~
Beauty ·· Sunshine project for the
month will be a n&gt;membrance for
&amp;u l Ridenour. Df'votons b)' Mrs.
F:rwin WPN' on the Easier !heme.
and refreshments were served by
Mrs. F:rwin and Mrs. Knigh t.
Next meeting will be a wildflower
htke on the Ridenour fann with

Sunday School attendance Apri l t
was 46; c hurch attendancP, 17. On
April 8 Sunday School attendance
was 37; church attendanc(•, 24.
Debbie Ross, Parkersburg, w.1sa
church visitor.
Mr . and Mrs. Richard S\..l-' artz.
RavPnna. visited Mr. a nd Mrs .

CHESTER- These are the Chester Elementary School winnersoltltc
Meigs SoU and Water Co~'iervation Dlo;trict post&lt;" contesl. Front from
left, Tiffany Gardner, first and count)' co-champion: T .F. Buckley,
second; Rodney Newsome, third. Back is Kay Holter of the Lad!.,;
Auxiliary of the conservation district.

lAurel Cliff happenings
Attendance at the Frff Methodi st
Churc h Sunday, April 1, was 91 .
Choir members present werP 12.
Pastor Miller delivered the sermon.
Attendance at the local church
April 8 ws 101. Choir members
present were 12 .
Roy Howell. who was very 111 , Is
much improved.
Recently then&gt; were 13 visitors at
the morning service at the loc.'al
church. Everyone is welcome.
Mrs. E lizabeth Reynolds, a mis·
sionary, gave a talk and had a
display of many things which
everyone enjoyed .

Mrs. Tl na J acobs is improving
from her rC'Cent il!nl.'Ss but not able
to attend rhurch serv1ces .
Easter morning sunrisC' Sf'l\!ic e
al the church will be 6 a.m. The

choir will pr,;ent a program in th~
evening.

Seniors honored
Senior cilizens were honored at
the Sunday worship service of the
Rutland Church of God .
Prizes went to Shirley Appleby,
Meriel Young and Geneva Shumate, the later two tying for the mosl
years of senice to God.

Hobart Swarlz March :!1 . •
Mr and Mrs. Harold Fetty.
Langsville. werP supper guf'sts of
Mr. and Mrs. JOf' Poole and Will
April l.
Members of Ihe AI frf'd \JMW
held Sf'rvicf's at Arcadia Nu r sing
Center. Apnl 10. The,, were joined
l&gt;y Marjory Malone. Coolvi ll r:
Thelma Hayes . Chester; a nd Fern
Cheesbrew. Vinton. Thelma Hend·
orson led the program with Martha
El liott giving lhe opening prayer.
Mrs . HcnderSD n read scripture
from LUkP 24. Group singing wilh
Ni na Robinson at the organ and
sharing of Easter memories ,J.
lowed. Genrude Robinson sang
·Tm Adopted ." Mrs. Henderson
closed the program with prayer.
Oiher \JMW members attendi ng
were

Genevieve Guthrie,

Clara

Follrod, and Nellie Parker. they
also visiled patients not able to
attend th e services, H &lt;;~Zel Parish,
Helen Woode and Avery Sheets.
Keith Weber and family attended
funeral services for hl s grand·
father, Fred Larkins, April 10.
Mrs. Wilber Parker attended a
dinner In hono r of her twin nieces,
Louise Michael and Lenora Lelf·
belt, April 1.2. Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Michael hosted the meal. Others
attending were Samuel Michael,
Dorothy and Michael Lelfueit.

MISS CINDERELLA TOT- Stacy Shuler, nve-ye&amp;I'Oid daugtaer of
Mr. and Mrs. John Shuler, WeotervWe, and granddaugher of Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Van Meter, Pomeroy, was crowned "Miss CinderellaTot"
in the Newark district competition pageant. The youngster competed bt
lhe three to six year old oomest to wtn the tttle as the overall winner and
was presented a trophy and nowers. She will compete in state finals at
Ohio University, J wte 22-25.

t

f"

:t

�17, 1984

Tuesday, April

Ohio

Tuesday, April

17, 1984

Leukemia victims benefit from new advances
Thanks to advances in chemotherapy, leukemia patients arr
living years Instead of months
Y ears t hey' ll spend going to college.
starting careers. and even raising
familJ,:s. For many , hope of a
normal lift:&gt; span will become a
reali ty. according to S Michael .
public informallon chairman of the
American Cancer Soc1rty m M eigs
Count y
Leukemia . a cancer of the
blood -fo1 ming ti ssues, strikes both
sexes and ail ages Caus&lt;'S of most
ca ses arr unknown T hf'rf' IS sume

evidence of inherited susceptibility .
alt hough not for direct trans mission
from parent to child .
Individuals with Down' s syn
drome and certain other heredital)'
abnormalities have higher than
normal Incidence of leukemia. Tt
has also been linked to excess ive
exposure to radiation and certa in
chemica ls such as benzene.
An esllmated 24,001 new cases
ar e expected in 1984. Although It Is
often thought of as primartly a
childhood disease. leukemia stnkes
m any m orP adults, 21,500cases per
year compared w1th 2,500 in
children.
A cute leukemia m chl ldren ap-

·
d
Chazrrnan rtame
FIVE GENERATIONS- .Jeremy CoiUIOIIy's birth on Jan. 14 made a
Hfth generation for the Lola Griffin family ..Jeremy i• held hy his father,
Michael ConnoUy, seated next w his grandmother, Marjorie Connolly.
Standing left is his greai·grandmothcr. Beulah Schultz, and hi~
great·greal·gt"dlldmother, Lola Griffin, "ho will ohserw her SUh
birthday anniversary this year .• Jeremy's mother is the fom&gt;er Sheila
Harri,,

Mrs. Joy Hysell and Mrs. Lmda
Ryan wtll serve as chairmen ,
respectively, for b1ke--a thons in
Rutland and RacmP this sprmg for
the benefit of St Jude Children's
Hospital. The mstitution. founded bv
entet1 amer. Dannv Kav, combats
catasiiOphic disPases w hich afflic t
ehildl'!'n.

Pomeory man taken in society
of Crc•w Road .

el igible for members hip , proof of

Pomeroy·. has rC'CeJVf'd notification
of accPpta ncr mto two major lmral
orgamzat10ns ThP fn·st 1" thP Sons
of Uruon Veterans of thrCJn l Wars

srrY icr of an a ncestor must txgl\'Pn as \-~if' II as pt oaf of descen ·

Ke1th

Ashle)

,suvcw,

d.mcv from that ancPstor
A.c; h.lry's r llgiblr ancC' stor is h1s
grra t-greA! -g r andfathf'r

This soc trty "as foundPd m 18Rl
as an aux Jii af\ of t hC' Grand Ann\
of I he Republic 1C A. R 1. wh1ch
wa s an organtzatlon of Cmon
veterans ot lhC' C'Ivtl War
The purpose of the SUVCW is to
J.X'f!X'Iuate the mPmory of thf'
Unton soldif'rs and to educate the
public about the C1vli War. T o be

Calendar
TIJESDAY
'
MWIJU::PORT - Group II of
l ht• IV1iddleport Presbv tenan
Church will mpc t Tuesd ay at
7· :«1 p m at thP hom&lt;• of Mrs
M an ha And•~ r so n
Co hostess will tx• Mrs E liza
bf't h 8urkr t t and tvirs .Jean
Moore will ha\'C' dev otions

WEDNE')DAY
M illDLEPORT Rev ival
SCI"VIC&lt;" will begin Wednesda y
at the United P~ntt&gt;eostal
Churrh in Middleport
Speake! will tx• ih&lt;• Rev. IV1ikr
B larkensh.ip from PPnnsvlva nta Serv ices will be bf'gtn at 7 Jtl
p m Thf' public IS m v ti ("CJ
RACINJ::
T he Racme
Churr h of the Naza rcone. TvrP&lt;'
BuuiPva•d . FWci ne. \\Oil ·hold
rev!' a I services th10u gh April 'l2

Wlil1a m

Ashley, who sPrved 1n Co I. 36th
Rog1ment of the Oh1o Volun tc&lt;'r
Infa ntry a s a COfJJ01 a l.
As hley ha s recc1ved life membership m the SUVCW with his
mrmbers h1p bf&gt;mg a t-large smcr
no loca l c hapt e r rx1st s
ThP second orgamza tion Ashley
has been accf'ptf'd into is the Sons
at 7 JO p.m with the Sunday
scrvtcc at 10· :M1 a m
Rov McKmney. evangelist,
Orlando. Fla .. w1ll be the
speakl••
Pastor T homas H
Coll1er mvlll'S U1e public

TH URSDAY
!ViillDLEPORT
Meigs
Count; Humane Soc irty w1ll
rn('('t Thursda \. 7: 30 p m , at the
LaSalle in Middleport.
POMF.ROY
The Rock
Spr mgs Oetter Hea lth Club Will
m eet Thursda y at 1. 15 p.m. a1
the hom e of Louise Folmer .
The program w11l be by Mrs.
Franets Goegll:'Jn, and the con
IPs! by Helen Blackston
POMEROY

-

Holy we&lt;&gt;k
sC'rv1ces a t Tnmtv Co ngrega ·
tlonal Church will begin wnh
f\.iaundy Thursday commuruon
at 7· 30 p m
E aster Sunday sunn sf'service

Births, birthdays

and Daughl ers of Pilgrim s, whirh
wsa orgamzed m 1900 for the
purpose of hononng the memory of
Pilgrim a ncestors and those who
helped m establishmg the Ameri
can colonies before 1700. Membf'r
ship ts by invitation only
F.lig~blllly for hiS m embership
was based upon his e1ghth great
grandfather . Capt William Curti s
of Stratford . Connecticut, who
served in the local mllilla and
deputy and commissioner of the
town of Stratford. Conn

The Daily Sentinel

AcCOt rn t Ol Hr- len Gu llr• y F ;. ('l u

Case No 24407. Docket M .
Page 372

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
1

Orr Apr ,

I

1 qq I

Three-day revival
ROCK SPRINGS Rock
Spn ngs U n1ted Method iS t
Church will have revJv al seJ\..'1
ces. Wednesday through Friday
with the Rev. James Corbitt and
the Rev. Richard Rothmick. The
Heaven Bound Four will sing
Fnday night and the public IS

M ~ N f'il l

lJ P \ f' I O:.r'rl

CA SF NO 2 &lt;1 156 F ,.~,1 1 1n J
D• s t••h• •T•vP At ' rJt ro•r o l &gt;N r1r1u
M ,Hrf.' H .l •Hll11 M l K 11l'1f'V ~x i"
r ut r•" o t th r E•,til! I' r'l Ott oI
(Jil l ' S O li Mr K onl ,f'\ fJf&gt;r f&gt; l ',F- ~

( Ac, l NO

l 0 1l f 11ll l

/·~

Hl l

,., ttl&lt;'

RI UV\1111 11&lt; 1

I

&lt;I'

.. t

Il l i ll

Fc,tl l" n l P,,n d 1 I fl •rr,..., l onr t

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IN THE
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COMMON PLEAS COURT
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PROBATE DIVISION
DPL •' I I d
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Un l•
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IN THE MATIER OF SETTLE- 11"'1' " I
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MENT OF ACCOUNTS. PRO tr, • 11, I' 1\ 1 l h •,, f ,, , ,• 1 ('&gt;,i l l
BATE COURT. MEIGS ()'1 1~ 11' 1 · ,, , ' 1\ ,, f M ·~ l' H-l l
COUNTY. OHIO
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Public Notice

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RruiT and Christv lllacksto n.
Rock Sprmgs Road Pomeroy
f&gt;ntertamf'd r('{'rntlv \.\11th a part\.
honormg thf'tr dau ghl rr. i\ml:x&gt;r
N ichole, on her Sffond bn1hday
A Carl' &amp;&gt;at thf'me v.as C' arru'll
out With a "birthday bear" rake. icr•
c!'&lt;'am and punch being servPd
A ttending wcrC' Mr and Mrs
Harold Blackston and Mr and Mrs.
.James Evans, gr&lt;.m dparent s. Mr.
and Mrs. William GrueSPI , Mrs
Dorothy Evans. and Francis
Shaeffer, great-grandparent s, and
Mr. and Mrs Jack Kane. Heather
and Emily, Mr. and Mrs Dennis
Wolfe, Mrs. Brenda Blackston and
Jay Evans.
Othrs presnting gifts were Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Wears. Mr and
Mrs. Douglas Eblin , Doug, M a ndy,
and Dale. Mrs. Reta Eblin, Dixie,
Kim, Tammi and Tracy, Corey and
Del'!'k Yoker, Tamra and Mindy
O'Dell and Susanna Wise.

h~&lt;lll '

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PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF DEAN WOOTEN.
DECEASED
Case No 24403 Docket 12
Page 412

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIOUCIARY
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1 ' 18 )

Gilkey birth
Mr. and Mrs Rod Gi lkey (Debbie
Crowl. Lancaster, are announelng

Kennedy birth

I'

Mr and Mrs David C Kennedy,
Pomeroy. are anouncmg the birth of
th c~r first child, a daughter,Jennlfer
Ann. born March 5 at the Holzer
Medical Center The infant weighed
eight pounds. four ounces and was21
inches long.
M aternal grandparents are Mr
end Mrs. Charles Neece Jr.,
Pomeroy, and the paternal grandparent are Mr. and Mrs. Ed
K ennedy, Pomeroy
Maternal
great-grandparents a !'!' Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Neece. Middleport,
Mrs. Minnie Sargent and the late
Christopher Sargenl. Kisher. W.Va.
Paternal grcat -grandpal'&lt;'nts are
Mr and Mrs. William Kennedy,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs Charles
Strd uss. Pomeroy .

54 M1sc. Merchandise

17
18
19,
10
21
22 .
23. - - - - - 24.

7. _ _ _ _ __
8. _ _ _ _ __

25.
26
27.

9.

G&lt;XX.i Friday service

10

POMEROY - A Good Friday
service will be held at Sacred
Heart Church In Pomeroy,
Friday, noon to 1· 30 p m . The
public is invited to attend.
Sponsored by the Meigs
County Ministerial Association,
12 ministers wiD take part,
representing AmeriCan Baptist,
Catholic, Episcopal, Lutheran,
Methodist . Nazarene and Presbyterian churches.

12.
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2'1. = =
30.
3\.
32.

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Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally sentinel
111 Court St.

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

~--------~--T~--------·

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CONTRACTING
"DOZER - BACKHOE
"REClAMATION WORK
"OIL FIElD SERVICES
"DUMP TAUCI&lt; SERVICE
'CONCRETE WORK
'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
'WATER GAS &amp;
OILUNES

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Business
Services

JIM CLIFFORD
PH 992- 720L5 -tt

cho1ce

Remodelmg
Insurance Work
Custom Pole Bldgs
_ &amp; Gar~ges
Roofmg Work
Alummum &amp; V1nyl S1dmgs

15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282
11 -1-tfc

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

PH .

RT. 50 EAST

949-~046

Wolfe
Investigations,
1. ... .....
~

FENDER
'76 95
DOORS.. ....... '149.95
HOODS .......... '174 95
BUMPERS
'69 95
GRILl .... . ........ '42.50
R. SUPPORT ..... '84.95
TAll GATE
. '85 DO
FORD FENDER .... '69 95
BUMPER . . .. .. '69 95

1

614-992-7626
PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF All TYPES

3; 23

3 18-ttn

463~3 Scout Camp Rd

Chester. Oh1o
Ph . 985-4269
If No Answer Call 985-4381

Sales and

Service

NOW OPEN
Charleston Rd.
Just Past Krodell Patk

Special April Only

Farm Equipment

14x28 .$6.200 msta lled

&amp;

Service
I 3 ri c

w
_cl\p
'

Readmg 15 W1th
Th1s Ad
1?? 1

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

12x24 .. $5.500 tnsta lled

Office: 675-1388
4-4-1 mo. pd.

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked 1n home area

20 years
·Free Est1males'

EUGENE LONG
Ph.

(614) 843-5425
3-8· 2 mo.

ml

-

Addons end remodelrng
Roofing and gutter work
Concrete work
Piumbmg and electr1cet
work
(Frae Estimates!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

Also Some Cor
Fenders Available

Pomeroy, Ohio

12 8 II

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wtnng
needs; furnaces repair
serY!ce and installation
Residential

&amp; Commerctal
Call
Or

742-3195
992-5875

LIMESTONE
HAULED
AL TROMM

742-2328
4/ 9/ 1 mo

Servtce Avatlable

Se1v1t P that

l o'll e r ~
Re ~ t

Abov e

4 I

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JEWELL'S
PLUMBING
and

HEATING
Big or Small

MINERSVILLE. OHIO
Experienced

3·26- 1 mo

.L

M l "Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction Service
Cheryl Lemley .
Meigs County Associate
Phone 742-3171

Now Accepting Listings in Meigs Co .

We would hke to express our
thanks 10 each &amp; everyone
who helped m any way
durtng the 1llness S. death of
our Mother, Lydut Hysall
Spectal thanks to Or John
Ridgway, Ve1erans Memor
tal Hospital. nurses &amp; staff .
Pomeroy Health CAre Cen ter , Ewing Funeral Home.
Rev David Mann, &amp; those
who sent flowers &amp; foods
Ethel , Etleen , Beulah, Helen ,
&amp; Margaret

2

In Memoriam

'In Memory of EHie Manuel' .
Mother 1t was 18 years ago
that God took you awBy
Your memor~es are w;th us
still, as your earthly work
was o'er, God closed your
eyes in eternal Rest to be
With htm tor ever more
Sadly mtssed by your Sons,
Daughters , Relat•ves , &amp;.
loved ones

3

Announcements

Big Yard Sale 447 Jerry St,
Pleasant Valley Estates
Wed 18 &amp; Thurs . 19,9 00
til ? Men 's womens &amp;
ch1ldrens clothrng, curtains.
kmc k knacks, etc

Yard Sale Thursday, April
19th 9 .30 to 3 .30 2 mr
south of 5 Potnts, Vtnegar
St Ad f ollow s1gns Baby
items &amp; other m1sc

6

Lost and Found

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

GUN SHOOT

35185 Oak H11l Road
long Bollom . OH . 45743
PH.
llle Use Von Schrader
Eqmpment Recommended
by Leadmg Carpet Manu -

Boshan Building

(614) 985·4212

facturers

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns

'FREE ESTIMATES"
J 28 I mo

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION
498 General Hartmger Pkwy.
Middleport. OH .

PH. 992-2549
Open:
Mon.·Sat.

10 to 6

General
Construction
Roofing A Specialty
4-6- I mo .

Only

SWEEPER and sewmg ma chme repatr. parts, and
supplies
Ptck up and
dehverv . Oav1s Vacuum
Cleaner. one half m1le up
Georges Creek Ad
Call

614 -446 -0294
Cake &amp; Candy Shop - 1/ • mrle
East of HarrrsonvtUe on St&amp;
Rt . 143 Full lme of Wrlton
cake supplies
Waddtng
supplies, wedding cakes, &amp;
spec1al order cakes allavatla b lo at very reasonable pnces
We alao have candy caps by
Ne~tle &amp; candy mel ts by
Wilton plu1 a fulll1ne of other
candy supplias . Hours of
operation Tuesday through
Saturday. 9 a.m - 5 p m
Sunday &amp; Monday p lease
call before commg
Call

614-742 -3033

GARAGE
Rt 124.Pomeroy OhrG

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-2 4-tfc

SIDING

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

BISSELL

498 Gen . Hartmger Pkwy.
Middleport . OH.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING CO.
"'Beautiful. Custom
Bt,~ilt Garages"
Call for free siding es·
llmates; 949·2801 or

949·28o0

No Sunday Calls

3- !1 tfc

PH. 992-2549

OPEN:
MON.-SAT. 10 to 6

COMPLETE
POOL SERVICE
4-6- 1 mo .

Auctton every T ues day
night. Pt Pleasant. WVa
Auct lonme Neal Youth
Center Bldg . Camden 51

6t4-367 -7t0t
R1ck Pearson Auctioneer
Serv1ce Estate. Farm . An t•que &amp; liqUidatiOn sales
Licensed &amp; bonded in Oh10 S.
WVa 304 -773 - 57B5 or

304 773-9185
Auctron avery Fn night at
the Hartford Commumty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandise every week
Cons1gments of new and
used merchand1se always
welcome Ar c hard Reynolds
Auct•oneer
304 · 275

4

Giveaway

9

614 -367-7743

Register female Beagle
without papers Mov1ng out
of state Call 614 - 256 -

1690

Bag of Yard Sale Goods .

Metal Honda crates. p1ckup
a1 Betz Honda on St Rt 7
5 Doberman - Beagle pup
ptes. 7 wks old Call 614 992 -7468 between 10 am
&amp; 9 p m.

Common Golden baby
hamsters. call after 6 00,

304-896-3603 .
8nndle colored,playful kitty

304-675-1372 .
German Sheperd puppres,
can be seen at " y ··. Pt.
Pleasant, 1st. tnuler to left
ask for: Judy Stover
20 metal stack chair•. seats

of some . 304-676- t460.
after

304 -6 76-6 I 96 .

6 00,

Vicinity

Help Wanted

25th
Oil &amp; Gas If you have 011 &amp;
gas exper~ence . our grow.ng
corp IS look for rep s and
area supervrsors Full tram
mg Sales or publtc relattons
expertence helpful buy not
necessary Openings rn most
eastern coun11es Ex ce llent
opportunity and money Call
614 265 7300 anyttme
AVON For customer serv1ce
Call 446 · 2,56 or 446 -

3358

304 -675 -3950
642 3619

Of

1 -800

HELP WANTED . W elcome
Wagon trammg class start
tng soon Call about our
Aprtl tramtng class Greet
people and represent local
busrnesses tn Potnt Pleasant
and Galltpohs Area We trarn
for flexab le hours Ful l ttme
or part ttme Sale and publr c
retatrons posrt1on
Car a
must Call ltnda Lambert.
304 · 744 -4641 Apr1l 1~"'th
9 00 - 5 00, Apnl 17th 9 00
rttl noon Equal opportu tty

_e_m_p_lo_v_•_•_ _ _ _ _ __

1

OPPORTUNITY PLUS

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

1090

WANTED person to stay
w1th elderly woman ;n Poca

Call 304 -675 -2t 12

3476
Cash patd for fancy lton or
heavy rron beds $ 160 and
up for certam Metgs Co
stone Jars
Old t1me c up board
ca ll 1 304 882 ·

FURNITURE
Beds , iron ,
wood
cupboards. chatrs.
c hests . baskets . d1 shes.
stone J8U anttques gold
and s1lver
Write - M D
M1Uer, Fit 2 , Pomeroy Oh•o

45769 o• cell
7760

614 992

Fill dirt for yard

Call 614 ·

992 -202 I

Employmenl
Services

Earn S50 00 S75 00 on a
Tues
or Thurs
Wrll be
rntervrew1ng o n Aprrl 19th
1 00 PM . Fort Rand o lp h
Terrace
Ask f o r M a ry
Ftsher

12

SituatiOns
Wanted

Softball play er new m artJa
lnf1elder wrll play any where Lookmg for scrrous.
dedtcated team Please ca ll

Wtll care for the elderly m my
home Lot s of refer ences
Men or w o m en Ca ll 614

Own your o wn Jean Sportswear, Ladies AppareL
Comb~natron , Accessories,
Large Size store. Nat1onal
brands Jordache. Chic Lee.
Levi . Vanderbilt , hod ,
Gunne Su. Espir~t , Britta nle, Calvm Klern , Sergro
Valente, Evan Picone, Clai
borne. Members Only Bill
Blass , Organically Grown,
Healthtes , 300 others

87.900 to $24,900. mven tory. airfare, trainmg. filt tures, grand opening. act
Call Mr Keenan 305 -678 -

3839

23

MOBIL E

HOMES USED - CA RS ,
TRUCKS
GALLIPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRICES CALL
614 -446 -7572
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL ' S OUAL ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 Ml WEST , GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35 PHONE 614 446 7274

446 -B038

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

14x70 Krrkwood two bed room mobtle home Central
A H , carpet , appliances, un derprnntng
S9 .000
Call
614 -256 -6035 or after 6PM

Professional
Elcona mobile home , 12x70
wrth expando . excellent
condttron Cal1446 - 7751 or

Services
PIANO TUNING lower
prr ce d regular 1u n lngs drscou nts t o Senror C1t1zen s.
Churches &amp; Sc hools W ard's
Keyboard 30 4 -675 - 3824
P1ano Tumng an d Fleparr
Brunrcardt Mu src Co 446
0687 Skill and mtegnty our
trademark
Lane Damels .

614 -742 -2951
B &amp; M Pa1n tmg Res , lnd .
Comm Fre e estrmat es Call
614 256 1492 o r 446
1104

THOMPSON BOOKKEEP ING Monthly and Quanerlv
accounts wel c ome 428 Se
co nd Ave Ca ll 446 1 1 36
Unwanted Fa c 1al or bo d y
ha•r7 Permanent, pa•nle ss
removal by European Elec
tronr c Doptl ator
Marv 1s
cer11f1ed 1n th1s new co mpu tenled d1gttBI system Ca ll
toda.., , 614 -992 - 6720 Top
of the Statrs , full se rv• ce
salon
Thorobred Collre t o r stud
serv1ce Call 992 - 3014

Real Estale
31

Homes for Sale

E11
lac
4 bdr
house
Corner of Wa shrngt on Ave
and Jerrrc o A d S39 500
Rt 2 3 bdr country hv1ng
$28,000 lrst w1th us. we
have other
A - One Real
Estate Carol Yeager Br o ker
Howard L Yeager Ill sales
man Call 304 - 675 5104 or

992 -6941
Budd o n your lot a new home
you afford Over 1100 SQ
fl
6 rooms &amp; bath car
peted ready t o mov e mto
$26,500 also garages &amp;
basement
Call Patnol
Home Butlder s 446 -8038
W•ll constde r mob1l e home
as trade ·•n
Must sell $2 ,000 down take
ove r S315 per m o pay
m en t Taxe s &amp; msuran ce
rn c luded
Loc ated Plantz
Suhd1vrston 3 bdr ran c h
full b ase ment . ca rport
woodburner , c•ty schools

Cell 446 8002
Fo r sAle by owner 3 bdr
ce ntral au , for ce d Air fur
nance bu ck stove. 1ngroun ,..
18x36 sw•mmrng poo
close to crty schools Prr ced
reduced to 5 38 .500 Ca ll

446 3204
Large 3 bdr h ouse for sale or
rent In Plant z Subdrv1510n
No c h1ldren. no pets Ca ll
614 -245 -5281 eve ' s

Harper's Adult Care Home
has a va cancy f o r anorher
restdent . eltlerly per son Ca ll

Nt ce house rn Pomer o y 3
badrm ful ly carpeted. base m ent , ftrepla ce . large front
p o rc h S39 .500 Cal l 614 -

992 7583

18 Wanted to Do

General Haulrng and Trash
reinoval Serv1ce
R eltable
and dependable Call 446 ·
3159 between 9 and 5
Keith's Lawn Mowtng &amp;
Trrmmtng Servrce . Reliable
and dependable Reasona ble rates Call 446 - 3159 or

256 -6251
Roofrng and gutter work .
metal work . hou separnttng
carpenter w ork Exc ref
Free es11mates Call 446 -

6 rooms . basemen t . doublle
garage 1 S. one tht rd acre
lot , Rose H1ll , Pom eroy

S32.900 Coil 1 -614 -678 2513
8aum Add1t1on . 3 bedr oo m .
br•ck, 1'/:~ bath s. full base ment , family room, ca rport .
patto &amp; adjotntng % acre tot ,
8V8IIable
$57.000
614

9B5-4201
2 story hou!le , corner lot
Middleport, 1 'h baths . ca r peted . storm doors &amp; wrn
dows. gas hot water heat &amp;
full basement
Call 614 -

992 -3140
Completely remodel ed 2 -3
bed room house wrth v1nyl
srding, fully carpeted. for ced
arr gas furna ce, large out
bulldmg , 10 exc neighbor -

3171

hood Ca ll 614 992 6161

Wrll do' general house &amp;
office cleanmg Call 614 -

$19 ,500 1 V.storyhouse.2
barns. corn crib &amp;. cellar . A

992 -69t 9
Wtll d o custom yard and
garden 1illtng with Troy - Bilt

tiller

Call 304 -675 -1259

en'(1tme

Used 2 bedroom mobile
homes. furnished
1 Ox 50
and 1 2x52 s1zes
Your
c hance to own a comfort&amp; ·
ble home Bro wns tra•ler
Court Mrner sv1 lle. Oh 614 -

992 3324
Reduced mov.ng and mu!lt
sel l 1973 12x65 mobile
h ome
Good c ond ttron ,
washer &amp; dryer
S6500

614 -742 2274
14 x 70 Mob1l e home 1978
bclths

3 bed room s 1 112
S9000 992 -3316

81155 2 be droo m house
trarl er S2700 Call 614

952 -6846

1976 Trr S1a r m o btle home
12 'x 60 ' all electnc 8 1114 '
su n deck . 10 ~~:20' detacha bl e ro o m w1th wood stove

30 4 895 391 1
1965 NP.w Moon . 1 2x65 2
bedroom
exc
cond ,

S5 000 00 304 -675 t 822
after 5 00

142 ac re farm neon Rto
Grande , good house and
barn
Call 6 14 245 5281
eve's

992 -5420

Will bBby s1t .n my home

Tratler for sale 1 Ox35 Call
6 14 · 388 ' 9686 anyt1m e

Home n Mrddleport , Aprrl
shower of sav tn gs Tho u
sands of dollars Call 6 14

773 -5BB2

304 -675 3292

1965 12x60 mob1le home
unfurnrshed , S3 900 Call
446 - I 340

33

Owner transfered -mus t sell
beautrful 3 bdrm br1ck
h o me
Frrcplace . deck .
woods
prrvacy sunshme
pnva cy 563 .900 Call 614

Plow and drsk gardens Pomt
Pleasant and Kanauga area

1972 mobrle home, 2 bdr ,
good con d Call 446 -7171
or 446 8288 after 5

304 -675 53B6

Mercer 's Rrverv1ew Per sonal Care Home ha s vacan
ctes f o r eld erly p ersons
Betty Mercer owner 30 4

304 -675-1293

614 -256- 6569

M ob il e hom e for sale ,
12•60 1973 Came ron . 2
bed roo m Phone 30 4 675 6464 a1ter 5pm

667 -3402

Help Wanted

Tennrs Instructor needed tor
youth and adult classes on
Tuesday and Thursday
m o rnings and evening for
June and July . Qualified
applicants contact The Galli polts Paries and Aecraatton
Dept 518 Sec Ave before
May 1 1 Equal Opportunrty
Employer

FIXED

446-9519

304 -576-2381
11

TRI - STATE

446 -825t
Dental Ass•stant needed
Full ttme , m Galhpolts area
Must be w1lhng to l earn
Flesumes requtred Sond to
Box 200 1n care of the
Galhpol1s Da•lyTubune 825
Third Ave , Gall•pol•s Oh
45631 . No later than J .pr J!

Wanted to buy Junk cars,
top prrces paid Call 614 388 9615

Buymg dat ly gold, Sliver
corns. rtngs, Jewelry. sterling
ware. old coms. large Cl · -rency Top prr ces Ed Bur
kett Barber Shop 2 nd Ave
M1ddlepon . Oh 614 - 992 ·

22 Money to Loan

3051

Rawle•gh Dealers w r lted
Full or part trme 30~ 6 75 ·

7231

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

In Fl1o Grande 1982 mob1le
home 14 ft 2 bdr , good
cond Set up on approx 1
S17 .000 Call
acre land

11

614 38B -

Wanted to buy New used &amp;
antrque furn1ture W1ll buy 1
piece or complete house holds Als o complete Auctl oneertng se rvrc e Ca ll
Rodney Howery 614 -698 -

Beer. Wme . Carry -Out Over
6 d1git frgure 1n gross annual
mc ome Beer sales. 5 d1g1t
f•gura annually Lottary Tar minat
Contact Gurdo J
Gnolamr. 605 W M am S1
Pomeroy

RATES Bel ow market rates
flxed conventronal FHA VA leadtH Mort gage
Athens, co ll ec t 614 592 ·

Wanted to buy square dane
mg c loth es Size 10 any
type Call 446 ·4537
Wsnted to buy stsndrng
timber
Call after 6 or
anyume weekend s, 614

ladtes 18 or o ver. are you
lookmg for a JOb 7 Here 's a
great opportunity to earn
REAl MONEY now How 7
Call me today for 8 febulous
offer you c on't res1st CBII
614 -843 -51 80 before 1 2
noon or at1er 4 p m

HOM E LOANS

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters Swatn Furm ture. 446 - 3159 . 3rd
&amp;
Olive St Gallrpol1s. Oh

38B 9906 o•

Homes for Sele

! NOTICE !
30
4_-5_7_6_-_2_7_t_ t _
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB · l-m_o_n_t_h_
__
LISHING CO recommends Ftve room house With base that you do business wtth ment and attached garage
people you know , and NOT on two acres 4 miles from
10 send money through the Pomt Pleasant on R1 2 N
matl unttl you have tnvestl
304 -675 ·3248
gated the otterrng

B1g f1ve famtly yard sa le ,
Wednesday Thursday, 144
S Park D1 . ltttle b tt of
eve rythr ng, chrldrens
clo1htng

446 -3672

38B-8564
3BB -B449

&amp;

We psy cash for late model
clean u~ed cars
Jrm Mtnk Chev - Oids Inc
Btll Gene Johnson

Pupptes Part Collte &amp; German Shepherd Call 614 -

Clll

-F&gt;t Pieasant

Wanted To 8uy

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

3 muted breed pupptes Call

Puppies .

Frtday April 20th &amp; Sat
April 21st Used &amp; new
clothtng, toys, odds &amp; ends.
collectable 1te m s . Geo ' s
Gun &amp; Carry OuL 3 mtles
south of Mtddleport o n Rt
7 9 a m t1ll 7

Htgh School J u n1or s.
Senrors - -Be a member of
OUR West Vrrgtnta Army
3069
Natronal Guord Buddy Pla
toont!l We currently have
Mt Alto Auctton Every va ca ncies for 1nd1v1duals
Saturday 6 p m Consign - who want to attend basic
ments accepted 1 00 ttl! sale tratning w1th others from
t1me Emma Bell auctroneer West Vtrgrnra Trarmng wrll
4288177 LIC 429 84
begrn at Fort Dtx . NJ. on
June 1 11h and you wtll be
Mt Alto Auctron Barn unttl back for the fall school term
further notice, sale will be Thts IS the perfect summer
the f~rst and se..:ond Satur - JOb Jom now and begtn
day. 6 pm only Emma Bell earning money for monthly
Aucttoneer l1c No 429
meetrngs . earn full time pay
84 304 -428 -8177
durrng summer trarnrng . and
then earn part t•me pay upon
return from trainmg Call

2711

2 yellow . 6 months. male
cats, 304- 882 -2 533

Roger Hysell

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Vicinity

April 17 &amp; 18 Infant c lo thmg , boys c lothing siJ:e
10 -12, large size women&amp;.
men 's clothrng . TV. 30 in .
elect range , excellent con dition. &amp;. trres . etc
276
Sycamore St. Middleport

·- · P-ciriiiiri:iv - --

9617

614 256 6505

Reasonable
WORK GUARANTEED

992-6030

Card of Thanks

1 male % Border Collte
puppy, 8 wk . old
Call

pd .

We Sorvtce All
Makes &amp; Models
Antenna lnstallatton
House Calls and Shop

Announcements

MIODLEPOilT. OHIO

New Chevy Truck .. .

Authomed John Deere.
New Holland. Bush Hog
farm Equipment
Dealer

Znd flo01 Ofl 9 Ciill S93 5485
10 a m 6 p m - Aller 6 JO p m
can be leached at 16 Pla111s
Rd Rt 68l - 6JO II pm

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Yard Sale Thurs . &amp; Fri
Across from Vrnton Baptist
Church

8

992 - 2196
Middleport, Ohio
1 - 13-tfc

3 2J 1! 11

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH. 992-7013

POOLS-PLUS

ATHEN S

AND

Real Estate General

~ah~

New Homes-Extens1ve

Wt ll rud you r enlne lrlt w1ltrout
ast.ng any Queslrons gtves adv1 ce
on all all a1rs of ltfe such as lov e
and busrness s•ckness and health
151 7 S Court ! 11ul to Courthouse)

S&amp;W TV

Ap• t6 -17-18

3741

RADIATOR
SERVICE

PAT HILL FORD

Racme. Oh
Ph 614-843 -5191
10-6-ttc

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

MARCO
PALM &amp;
PSYCHE READING

Call 614-992-6737

M~GKEE

I mo pd

We can repair and re·
core
rad 1ators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
r-epair Gas Tanks.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

CALL
992-5949

MISS THERESA

For Faster Senr1ce

~ud'

J.n

CHIMNEY SWEEP

3 ' 231 1 1110

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

Parts

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box 326
Pomeroy. OH. 4~769

If tnterested contact
The Home National Bank
tn Racine, 949· 2210.

Systems
LARGE o• SMAll JOBS
PH 992· 2478
-Sept1c

CHIMNEY KING

CHESTER-985-3307

•CEMETERY
MAl NTENANCE

GUYSVILLE. OHIO

to dnve the veh 1cle of your

Jobs -

- Gas Ltnes

on Duty

UTILITY BUILDINGS

U. S.

Engage A-Car . the modern way

The

- Sewer

Techmcian

•TRIMMING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wed lrke to rntroduce you to

II) HOUSE IN CHESTER ·
Three acres w1th a mcely
constructed conrete block
home 26x30. 3 bedrooms.
one bath. 12xl5 l!vmg
room and 24x24 family
room. Partially carpeted.
fuel 011 furnace w1th facilities
fo1
woodbume1.
12xl5 block storage buildmg. 20d0 block garage.
Right off Rt 248, country
settmg, 'h mtle east of
Chester. Ohio.
12) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE:
Down stails equipped with
kitchen. livtng room.
d1ntng room and den ;
upstairs has two bed ·
rooms and one bath.
house also has basement. Lot size approx .
48'x308'. Needs work.

trrps

We Have A Full Time

Shop

Middleport

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

- lrenche1
- Water

•On Cour se lr~ sffu cho n
•Awards

S1zes Start From 12'xi6'

BOGGS

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Real Estate General

IIIE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYlVANIA
•SP££0 QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
AND OTHER M.\JOR BRANDS

,,

I

Large 3 Fam1ly Vard Sale,
Fatn11ew Subv . 534 Hilda
Dnve Brg vanety 8 -Dark

- Dozers

9

TO BUYUI 14 ft wrde three
bedroom , ba t h and half,
mob•le home srtttng on mce
lot , ready t o move into
S225 00 down S226 00 per

Business
Opportunity

······ P-ci-miiri:iv ·····
&amp;

-lo-Boy

I

11 11 1,

V,il

' •·

[1 .

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

INSTRUCTORS John Teaford
Dave " B•g H1t' ' Burt
CHESTER OHIO
4-9 1 mo

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

1 l l'

&lt;

i ll I \'

I I,

I

.r&lt;&gt;l

~a~:~i~lii:y

-Bad! hoes
-Dump Trucks

P , .

tfl •· I

Jl

I

1 '' •

', ( •

lo ' l 1 '

I• •
I' 1t 1 ~

Addreui----------------~

6

c,

I

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Louted 1\', M1le ut of
Pagetown on Twp 142

, 1 •Supervised Goll
1
Program
' •Besmn~ng now
th10ugh season
)
•All Ages
•
Saturday playmg

1h ,

.! i

•l~t df&lt; · tl

II • • 1.11 •

/ / I (' ~

)Wanted

J&amp;F

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P I&lt;

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M •If ' ' ' " • ' • 1

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Name--------------------

•5

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\

coupon . Cancel your ad br phone when you get
resu lts. Money no1 refundable.

I

1•.

I

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h•

Wnte yOur own ad and Of'DE'f' by mail with ftlis

2
3

' o I '

r~ 1

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l,o•ll • '

Savell!

t. _ _ _ _ __

I

PI

M..,.. Da\'id Kennedy and
.Jennifer 1\nn K ennedy

REVIVAL - Revival services
are undenvay at the Rutland
Chun:h of the Nazarene and will
continue through AprU 22, 7 p.m.
each evening, and 10:30 a.m. on
Sunday. 1be Rev. Richard
,Jaymesof Mt. VemonwiU be the
ev angellst. The public is Invited
I&lt;&gt; aUend hy the Rev. Uoyd 1&gt;.
Grimm Jr .. pa_'ilor.

A

r

l

JFor Sale
I Announcement
J For Rent

~. ~

'd • •

I r l rl

I__., ------------------=-----,.,. ,.-...,
II Curb Inflation II
1
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and

the b1rth ut "daughter . Lindy Ann on
1\prU 4. a t Lancaster F airfield
Hospital
Thr infant we1 ghed e1ght pounds
and 14 ou nccs
Maternal grandparent s arP Mr
and Mrs Tom Crow. Pomeroy
Paternal grandparents a re Mr and
Mrs Howa rd Gilkey. Columbus
The couple are also the pa rent s of
a daughter . .Tody, age five

ll •

I

I •\

FOR SALE

Blackston
birthday

If

lr

' T

•Drvers•Freeze.s
PARTS and SERVICE
4 5-tfc

Call 992-3466
Scipio Energy
Recycling Division
4!1 i l l mo

• W as h ers • D ishwashers
•Ranges
•Retr~geretors

V'.L_

- - · - ···- ·· -··- · ----

Lost 2 key s on a r1ng, Point
Pleasant area. 304 6 75 -

Reasonable Rates

Public Notice
"•

985·3561
All MaKes

Aluminum Auto Trans
sa.oo Each
Irony Alumtnum
Pnced On lns~ection

SERVICE

'

II

:~~e~lo&amp; Cast

31

Page

FOR RENT WITH OPTION
21

Wee~s of Apr~ I 9 · 2I

APPLIANCE

GOLF LfSSONS SPfOAL
ADULT 6 for 140
STUDENTS 6 for 130

We Have the
lowest Rates

CARROLL'S
LAWN SERVICE

'.
,, · '

,

Clean

? 10

,• &gt;t

/y1 I ,

I .

• (

USE"

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

949-2263

•MOWING

r t I •~&lt;'\ • 1 I • r i&lt;'•

1

r·

•

l 'i

All Types of Aluminum

,, ' ., ,I, d .1r n"
~
H. 1 ~ , . Sr

11,.1 '"

Phone-------------------Amber :"'i&lt;'hole Bla&lt;·k.ston

,

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1&lt;&gt;1•

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P I~ .. I fill

1

P'

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I ' I 'I

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE
WORK
AL TROMM
742-2328

lh o• lrd • '"-'''' ) o) Pill

B rj '"'I I

'r

• II

1 r fl • •

", . llv '-Pdll' d

.. . un•

I 1J'u 'llo

&lt; I t\

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I

1•" 11 11
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N '-J th A\ • II •' Pill\ II • f\• /
1111 I ld• d &lt;1\ ·h, • ,11 1 ,, · ' I• I
0/)t

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df • ' ,.

f •H

A&lt;

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p.,,t&gt; " ' ' !)..... '
M• • 1 I 1 l r"IY ( )'l

thanks to the Me~gs Emer·
gency Medical Se!V!Ce. staff
at Holzer Med1cal Center. the
Ewmg Funeral Home staff
the Rev. Marlr McClung, and
to all our fnends and neighbors who sent flowers. lood
or cards or helped many way
dunng the Illness and death
of our dear w1fe and mother
Gladys M Wmes Your k1nd·
ness will never be forgotten
The Clyde Wmes Family

"

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,,j " l • ' q til 1\ l M !" ,

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I{(
1 ' l ; 11 1 1
"1 111" '
&lt;1 ! 111 &gt;

CARD OF THANKS
We wtsh to express our

POMEROY- Easter Sunn SP
Services will be held at the
Pomeroy Wes levan Holiness
Church. State Route 143. Pomer oy, beginning at 6 a.m. The
public is mvited to attf'nd

tl ll l
I I\ •

Ju dq P

1' 1 11 h l l ~'

l .q 1ll 1

Rr tH 11 r

Sunrise Service

1&gt;,

r&gt; t h Av o 1111 r

t

•'lor 1 Tl"

1

'I II

l ' l•• 1-J, ,,n 1t r•

M ·•' l"(,,,,qy

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24342 and
24343
NOTICE

\j ( 1]&lt;1 '

" " ""

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
&amp; Painted
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

0 '"' • 0 4~ 7 2h

NOS

11 w

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH . 992 - 2772

St

Kt.f! 7

1\Y I · ''" K N r•r;• o~' lr Q ,lol

r~ ... ,_.

FREE ESTIMAIES

!I.J&gt;, v tn-' , nt 111 fl.l hr r1 S OH
I '· I(' 1 ./\I ' il )fl () 11lH1 Ad nll·
,,. t•.t1• • 1! th· · • ',J,II 0 o t D ea n
\fl.' 111 11 II
d r•1 r• , l0:. 1' 11 lrt le Ql

Deceased

CASE

•Storm Window s
•Replacement Wmdows
•New Roofmg

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.

FKUETUN~ES

FOR

RAIN LINES
County
Cerhf1ed
SEPTIC
TANKS
INSTAllED

NEW-REPAIR

]')

ELIZABETH"

11

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1\.., j• TI!'' \I

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Deceased.

and
MARY
ROUSH .

II

n "'' ·h••t•\ ' A,,'" •·r

( , 1• , .

" CUT OUT

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insula lOon
•Swm Doo ,.

CHESHIRE. OHIO
3-1 · t

(n •. ntv Pr n ft,l l(' Co u r t
N
) .14 0 1 M •n n •C

M PII I '&gt;

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

•BACK HOE •DOZER
•ENOLOAOER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER. GAS. SEWER

367-7560-367·767

Public Notice

IN THE
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATIER OF THE
ESTATES OF
DOW BEN ROUSH .

th•

Ml' " l '

mvtted

Recent VISitors of John A. Dean
home after thrPC v..·eek' sofhosp1ta !1
zation. and Mrs Dean have been
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth Markins,
"lrs Alma Wood, Racine. !vir. and
Mrs Robert Re1d, Rodney and
DaviS, Mr an~ Mrs WalterTer f'f'll ,
Pata skla. Mrs. V1rgmla Sm1th ami
.Joshua. McArthur. Mr and Mrs
Harold Well and sons. &amp;linda Fif~.
B!dwril. !Vilmm1e Harp~.•r. San
Antoma . Texas; Mr and Mrs. Bill
Spa un, Shannon and Juua Pome
1oy , Mr. and Mrs. Paul Paynter.
Albany. M 1. and Mrs. Garold
Gilkey and R1ck. Athens. John
Walter. Jeremy . James and Sarah
Dean. Mrs Tma Justus and son.
Mrs. Harold Well, Bidwell

tr 1x o t tn r• Estlll f' ol (l d t~' n r'

D •&lt;&gt; t• •h • 1l•\ •' A •' trt l• ' l r1 t [),r , l

( IP•l

Happenings

•T-RENCHING

PHONE 992-2156

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF ASA ASH ·
WORTH HOSKINS ,
DECEASED

H,

Will be at 6· 30 a m to be followed
by a bl'!'aklast The Trinity and
Pomeroy United !Victhodlsl con
r.'regat!ons Will jom.

ES
EXCAVATING

Ill Covrt $1 Po111eroy Dlno 45769

Public Notice

Financial

;;~;;~~~;rr::::::::::~~::::::::::~r,=::~W~A~N;TE~D~~ ~~~~~r

Or W11lr D••lly Sentmel Clnsrt••d Dept

Public Notice

The Daily Sentinel

Business Services

through blood test.s and a biopsy of
bone marr ow. Chemotherapy Is by
far the most effective fnitlal m ethod
of t reating leukemia patients .
Today. researchers a!'!' testing
new drug combination. finding
ways to control symptoms like
mfec tion , uncovering information
t hat helps distinguish one kind of
leukem ia from another, which Is
one of the keys to effective
t reatment. Research continues so a
leukemia patient can have a
brighter future.
To keep these research projects
goin g, the American Cancer So
c1ety last year invested close to $12
million in grants .

pears suddenly, with symptoms
similar to those of a cold. and
progresses rapidl y
L y mph nodes, spleen and liver
become enlarged with white blood
cells that accumulate 1n these
organs. Early signs may include
fa tigue. paleness. weight loss.
repeated infection. easy bruising.
nosebleeds or other hemorrhages.
pain , swelling of gums and various
skin disorders . Chronic leukemia
progresses slowly and w it hout
warning s1gns. Symptoms. similar
to those of acute leukemia , ma y not
appear for years.
When a physician does suspect
leukemict. a diagnosi s can be made

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

AND

21

ACRESI

Busrness
Buildings

Large two un•t . apartment
bu1ld.ng good rnvestment
Pr1 c e reduced
304 675

754 1
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 ac r es on R1o Grande
Centerpo.nt Fl d Near Cen terpotnt
Partly wooded .
cou nty water &amp; u trltt1es near
by
Sout hwestern School
D•st,.ct . S2 000 Call 614 -

245 -5405
N orthup , f1rst s treet on the
rrght after cro ss tng Ra ccoo n
brrdgA Approx 1 30 ' fron t age. $5 500
Call 446 -

3485
28 acres mostly wooded .
several walnut trees to ·
bacco allotm ent . all m1neral
nghts borders Ch1ef Corn sto ck , hunters paradrse. to
cate d ott Mtll stone Road
Prrc ed 511 ,500 00 Phone

614 -367 -7271

Renlals
41

Houses for Rent

5 rm ho use 44 Olrve St
GallipoliS lnqurre at 918
2nd Ave Gall•pol1s, Oh 10
3 bdr ranch wnh garage . on
lan dscaped lot 'h mmutes
from Galhpohs rn Green
A cres Subdtv1s10n
Dep,
lea se &amp; ref req S250 mo
Call 446 -0505 after 7 week days or anyt1me weekends
Or stop by 387 LeGrande
Blvd
3 bdr house m co untry near
Rro Grande , S235 mo plus
sec urrty depos•t . no pets .
Call 614 - 245 -5439
3 Bedroom House. nver ·
vtew . no pet s 446 -2404.
2 bedroom furmshed , $200
mo S. deposit, also, 1
bedroom &amp;
beth cabin
$11 0 mo &amp; depos 1t Cool :
vtlle . Ohto Call 614-6&amp;7 -

30BO

Good

lout1on on Rt . 124 west of
Langsville, house needs
some work . Must sell Call
Glorra Grabo in Col . at

1-614 -868 5041

34

Farms for Sale

3 Bedroom , family room,
basement near schoola and
hospital. Deposit end refer ence required
304· 676 ·

433B

�10---The

Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

plus 8 100 dep &amp; ref 's. Cal l

614 -643-291 6 0,6 14-6432644

Now open for business.
Mountain State Btock, R1 .
33 , New Haven . Complete 63
masonrv supplies, 4" , 8 ",
12" bl o~ k . Delivery service . 49 "

2 bdr . trailer fully furn ished .
good location . sec dep req .

Call 446 -8558
1 2~~:6 0

Trai ler . 2 bedrms . 1 1h
bat hs located on private Y2

614-266-1528.

1982 Coachman 23% h ..
ACm eJCC. cond .. sleeps 6 .

Call 614 -388-9043 .

Pets for Sale

Batt Little Club Lamb Sele In
Ohio. Thursday, April 19,
1984 . 7 : 30PM . Fayette
County Fairground. Wa·
shington, C .H .. Ohio . 126to

fl~1 - 3239 .

56

Trailer f or rent m Middleport. house for rent in
Pomeroy
Ca ll 614 -992 -

HillCREST KENNELS

2 bed room mo bile home.

Stud Service . Call614 -4467796.

ne w ca rpet . furnished . utili ·

t1es paid , no pets. 1 kid
accepted . Cal l 614 -367 061 1

Judy Taylor Grooming Call

614-367-7220.
Briarpatch Kennels Professional Alt-breed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cilities. English Cocker Spa niel puppies. Call 614 -388 -

44

Apartment
for Rent

JAC KSON

E STATES

APA RTMENTS (Eq ual
Housm g

une

O pport unity)

has

two bedrooms. rent
!.tar tm g at S 15 7 for one
i!Od

bedroom

mon th

and

S19 3

per

fo r two be dro o m .

w1th S200 de posit loc ated

near Foodland and Spring
Va ll ey Plaza, pool and TV
nnt Call 446 -2745 o r leave
message .

Smatl et11cten cy apart ., cen tral at r &amp; heat 1 professional
type gentleman only . 446 ·

0338
2 bd r apt s . nt ce . 1 bdr . apt
u1 d1tes part paid A-One
Rea l Es ti! te, Ca ro l Yeager
Bro Ker Howard L. Yeager Ill
ltales man . Ca ll 30 4 -675 5 104 or 304 -675 -5386 .
513' 1
apt .
water
tween

Th 1rd
s 135
Ca ll
9 and

Ave .. 3 roo m
mo includes
446 4222 be -

5

G~:~ r age apt
tum•shed 3
roo m s &amp; bath . Wash er &amp;
drye r Clean . no pet s. adults
only Dep &amp; ref req . Call
446 151 9

3 bd r unfurn ga rag e apt .,
S250 plus deposit
Call

446 3786 .
Furnished ettic\ency, 607
2nd
Ga llip olis S1 45
Share bath . sing le Call
446 -441 6 af ter 7PM .
Furn 1sho d apt . 2 bd r .
s 1 85 1 136 1h 2nd .. Galli po l•s WAter paid Call 446 441 6 aft er 7 PM
1 be droom Apt. S196 . m o .
•nclu d• ng utilitieS Equ al
Hou smg Opport unit y Co n tac t Village Manor Apt s

614 992 7787

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gallipolis . New
&amp; used wood 8. coa l stoves,
6 piece wood living room
sui1e with 6 inch flat arms
S399 , bunk beds complete
with bunkies $199 , 2 piece
antron livingroom suites
S199. ant ron recliners $99 ,
other recliners $80, maple
dinette sets $179. box
springs &amp; manreas twin or
full $1 00 set regutar-firm
S 120, maple dinette chairs
S35. wash stands $34 ,
maple rockers S59 . 7 piece
chrome dinetta set $149. 5
piece dinet1e set :999. used
bedroom suites. refrigera tors, ranges, che!lt, dressers.
wringer weshers . TV's, dry ers, &amp; shoes . Call 614 -446 -

3159 .
lAYNe·s FURNITURE
Sofa . chair, rocker . otto man , 3 tables, (extra heavy
by Frontier) . $685 . Sofa.
chair and loveseat, $275.
So1as and chairs priced from
S285 . to $895 . Tables. $45
.and up to $125 . Hide-abeds . $440
and up to
$525 .. Recliners, $175 . to
S375 .. lamps f rom S28 . to
575 .5 pc . dinettes hom

$99 .. to 435 . 7 pc

1 bedroom apt fu rn 1s hed .
pau1 . no p ~ t s 3 Y1
m df!s south o f M rddleport .
At 7 John ShP.e t s Ce ll
6 14 36 7 -0611

.Jl illfle s

1 &amp; 2 bedr oo m furnr shed
&lt;~ pts Call 6 14 -992 -5434 or
9 92 59 14 or 304 -882 -

$189

and up . Wood table with six
chairs 5425 to S746 . Desk
SllO up 10 S226 . Hutches.
S550 . and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250 . and
up to $395 . Baby beds.
S11 0 . Mattresses or box
springs, tull or twin . $58 ..
fi rm . S68 and S78 . Queen
sets. S195 . 4 dr . chests,
$42 5 dr . chests, $54 . Bed
frames, S20 .and S25 .. 10
gun · Gun cabinets, $350 .
Gas or electric ranges S375 .
Ba by mattresses , S25 &amp;
535 . bed frames &amp;20, S25 ,
&amp; 930. Icing frame S50 .
Good selection of bedroo m
su1 tes . ce dar c he s ts .
rockers , m e tal cab inets ,
sw1vel rocker s.
Use d Furniture · · Ranges.
cha trs . dryers. and TV 's. 3
m iles out Bulaville Rd . Open
9am to 6pm , Man thru Fri .,
9am to 5pm . Sat _
TV &amp; Applian ces, 627 Third
Ave .. Gallipoli s. 614 -446 1699 Spin wash ers, gas &amp;
e l ec tri c dry e r s . auto
washers. gas &amp; electric
ra nge s, refrigerators . TV
se t s .

GOOD US EO APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrigera tors . rrwges Skaggs Ap pliances. Upper Rivur Rd .
beside Stone C re st Motel.

614 -446 -7398

2566
AP ARTMENTS . m o bil e
ho mes. houses P1 Pleasa nt
and Galhpo lt s 6 14 -446 ·

8?21
TWIN RIVERS TOWER
Apn nmer1 t s nuw avai lable to
eld erly &amp; dr sabi Bd w 1th an
rncome of less t h a n
S 12 300 Ren tm g tor 30
pe rce nt of ad ju sted 1ncome .
Phone 304 675 6679

45

Furnis h ed R oo ms

For ren 1 Sleep tn g Rooms
and l1g ht ho use k eep 1ng
rooms Pe~rk Centra l Hotel
Cal l 61 4 -446 -0756
Slee prn q room 9 11 5 . utril tles pcud Share bath , male
o nl y Ra nge &amp; refrig . 9 19
2nd Ave . Ga llipoli s Call
44 6 -44 16 after 7 PM

46 S pace for Ren1
Tr a1l cr space fo r rent . 1 m1l e
fr om Hosp 1tal . S65 mo ,
wat f!r and trash paid Call
446 -1 35 4 aft er 5 PM
COU NTRY MOBI LE Home
Park, Route 33 . North of
Pomeroy Large l.ot !l Call

6 14 -992 7479
One trai ler lot . sewer and
wa ter f urnished , one smell
child acce pted 304 -676 -

1076 .
4 7 Want e d to Rent

Ba rga 1ns Trade Ce nter .
Furn . &amp; appl. outlot . Ka ·
nauga, Ohio
Rebuilt wa shers. dryers &amp;
r e fr~gerators . 30 day s war ranty . Nice . Hupp's Applian ces &amp; Glassware Corner Rt .
141 &amp; Rt 7 . 446 -803 3.
3 used c arpe ts, exc . cond .
(yellow, red. purpl e). Call
446 -3426 after 4 JOPM .
Country Oak Furniture . ta ·
bles, chairs. c upbo ards . dry
sink s, pie safe5. lots of misc .
Conkl es . At
7 . Tuppers
Pl atns . Ohi o
Couch . 2 chair s. ottoman for
sale
In good condition .

992 -3429
Sealy posturepedic double
b~:~d mattress , box springs. &amp;
lrama . Exc . c on . Call 614 -

992 -2450 .
15 cubic fool chest type
fr ee zer
Coli 614 - 742 2 416
2 new complete twin bed s.
headboards, box springs,
mattress &amp; frame $175

eac h Call 614 -378 -6433 .
Three new glass top living
room tables. $60 .00 each .

Call 304-675-2810
4 ' 30 .

after

Used furniture : co uch .
rocker . foot stool. $60 .00 . 3
pc . white bedroom suite,
8125 .00 . Stereo stand
810 .00 . Bar S20 00 . Call

304 -675 -5019
46 yr _old hanging light with

5 lites 304-676 -2836 .

Ho use three bedrooms . New
Haven , Muon are8 . Celt

after 5PM. 304 -882 -2098

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

1- - - - -- - - - - 52

Antique cherry love seat,
pattern back. matching
chair, $176 . Also oak ice
box . All good condition . Call
614 -992 -3079 .
·

CB.TV , Radio
Equipment

Pocket size Panasonic b&amp;w
TV · Radio combination .
Weight l11t11 than 2 lbs. Call

176 00, 19'" Zenith block
and white portable $36.00.

304 -675·28 16

Sanyo Stereo, receiver, turn
table, 2 speakers, an in wood

ond glass cabinet. 1250.
304-675-2183.

_6_1_4 _
-4_2_6_-6
_72_5_._ _ __

roows

gilts. 513 -584·

&amp;

2398 .

1977 Granada. 4 apd .. 6 cyt .

1967 International Scout. 4

2 Dr .. 82.000 mi . 11200
firm. 446-7629 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

256 -1427 .
Dairy goats Alpines and
Lamanchas . buck and doe
kids and milkers . Call 304 -

cu1ol Call 614 -245-9502 .

675 -6430 .

Baby rabbits $3 .00 each
2 white miniture male poo dles, 8 mo. old. Also puppies
ready to go by May 1. Call

One pair Perch on · mares 4
yrs otd . weighs 1.600 lbs,
broke . One 6 yr. old Belguim
mare 1.600 lbs , broke to
work . Also, for stud service
Big Blond Belguim. Ca ll

5804 .

446 -0867 .

304-675 -1487.

All kinds of furnance pipes

Dachshund puppies. 12
wks . old . $25 each . Call

Team of work horses. 6 and
7 yrs. otd . mare and gelding,
approx. 1,400 lbs. each.
Broken singte or double.

Call 614 -379 -2216 .

Firewood cut up slabs $15
pickup load . Call 614 -245 -

614·992 -2302 .

1 0 " Pollen chain saw $75 .

Call 614 -256 -1528 .
Seigler oil stove. Maytag
wringer washer. Call 446 -

Baby rabbits . 80 to choose
from. Assorted breeds, co lors. &amp; sizes . $3 .50 each.

304-576 -2147 .

Call614-843 -5276.

64

Hay

&amp;

Build on your lot a new home
you afford . Over 1 100 sq .
ft . 6 rooms &amp; bath. ca r peted. ready to move into .
$26.500 also garages &amp;
basement . Call Patriot
Home Builders 446 ~ 8038 .
Will consider mobile home
as trade -in
1

si~~:

4134 .
Registered Torti e Point Hi malayan female . 4 yrs . old.
spayed and declawed . 304 -

675 -7110.

pack JA Ewing beer

16x6 wood storage build ing . Call 446 -7751 or 614 -

57

256 -6569

Call 446 -0429 .

For sale Spinet-console pi ano bargain . Wated : Re sponsible party to take over
low monthly payments on
!lpinet piano. Can be seen
locally . Write Credit Man ager: P.O. Box 537 Shelbyville. IN 46176 .

1 real ni ce beby car seat

S25 . Call 446 · 1526 .
Lo cust post . straight and
soli d Pri ce d reasonable .
Call 446 -7993 anytime .
Sell Steel Buildings . 'Steel
building dealership' Small to
big profit potential big
demand -starter leads fur nished . Some areos taken .
Call to qualify . 303 -759 -

58

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables
Harris Farms &amp; Green
Houses. Rt . 124, Portland .
Oh . Now open 1 0 ·-dusk .

3200 .
Copperfield Washer . old
dolls 446 - 2088 . after 6
p .m . Seen Tues .· Fri at 728
First Ave

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Limestone , fill dirt, and top
soil. Call 614 -256 - 1427

61

AM -FM stereo record player
combination. 4 ' long like
new S50 Nice 7 drawer
desk S80 . Large gas sp.aco
heoter with wa ll thermostat

0475 .

69 Starc raft f old down
cam per wi t h refrigerator ;
wa lking exerciser , exerciser

Due to death must sell 2
Quonset style st981 build ings . Brand new never
erected One is 40~~:66 Call
Wayne at 419 -659 -2494

bike. Call 992 -6935
Utility

trailer

S350 .

Call

614 992 ·6846 .
Firewood f o r sale . S20 .00
pickup SJO .OO delivered
304 - 675 - 2991 before
11 :00 AM or after 6 :00PM .

Super C Farmall fast hitch ,
small case trector . 3 poin t
hitch , Ford 2 row cultiva tors. tri axel machi nery
trailer, all in exc . con . Call

$3, 500 organ LO'IN'ery one
veer old $1200 , Grand father clock $900 one year
old S450 ., 25" floor model
color TV S-699 .00 - $400 .; 1
co mplete Hi Fi system 150W
with 15 "
JBl speaker s
$900 . S450 . all less than
two years old . Call at 167
lynn Drive in New Haven ,
WV Charles V _Humphreys

614-949 -2013 .
A .C . four row no-till air
planter with monoline. Tim
Rock Farm. 304 -675 -4308

62 Wanted to Buy

' 68 Camero RS, new tires,
327 engine 4 spd. 1$1100.

Call 614 -949-2773 , Wollio.
1978 Trans Am, automatic,
looks good , extras. $4500

71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars .
Smith
Buick -Pontiac , 1911 Eutern Ave.. Gallipoli~;_ Call

614 · 446 -2282 .

Call 614-388 -9003
5PM

alto'

1982 Chevene AM ~ FM. AC.
sports stripes . sports mirrors , sport wh ee ls. $4.600 .

Call446 -3101 .
1982 Am erican Motors
AMC Spirit, 6 cyl. , auto ., air.

AM -FM . $4 .195 . 19812d&lt;.
Chevy

S3. 195

Chevette,

auto ,

1979 Buick Sky-

hawk, 6 cyl. , auto ., air,
AM - FM tape, $2,495
John 's Auto Sales. 446 4782 . 8uleville Ad , Gallipo lis. Oh . Open til dark .
1981 Dodge Diplomat . 2
dr .. auto . 6 cyl .. nice. Call

614-379 -2726 .
1979 Camero, exc . cond.,
low mileage, AC . power
windows , tilt, AM -FM . Must
see to appreciate . Call 446 -

4053 .
1977 M ercury Monarch PS ,
PB. AC , 302 V -8 . auto .
tran s. good gas mileage ,
exc . cond ., $1 .895 . Call

614 -388 -9905
9644 .

Want to lease tobacco base
Make en offer! Call 446 2364 .

0'

446 -

Cared for like a babyt 1980
Monza. 4 cyl ., 4 spd.,
43.900 miles , never
wrecked , never painted ,
gold with white pinstripe.
saddel interior. PS , PB.
AM - FM 8 track . rust
proofed. sport minors &amp;
wheels . W e upkept , many
new parts. Mint condition.

C all

1979 Chrysler Cordoba,
very good condition, fully
equipped, good gas mileage,

&amp;3,600. 00 .
896 -3812.

Phone

1976 Ford Granada $400 .
or will trade for truck of
equal value . 304 · 675 -

5079 .
1965

Thunderbird.

two

1976 Olds 442, exc . cond .•

614 -388 ·

Call betwen 3 :00 and 7 :00

0 . Call614 -245-6121 .

1981

Suzuki 860l full

1979 HondaC8X6cylinder,
silver ~ black,
mint cond.,
new tires, fairing . Calf 446·
1974 Yamaha 260MX ex cellent condition with ex traa . 1974 Honda XR 75 .

_c_a_ll_4_4_6_
-9_5_9_o_._ _ _ __
1979 CM 400T good cond.,
$600 or best offer . Call

446-4580 .
1980 Harley Sportster motor cycle 6000 miles, 1

1980 Kawaski 1300 Shall
drive, 13,050 miles . Very
good condition . Call 614 992 -7110after 5 p .m .
750 Honda motorcycle. Call

1973 Plymou1h Fury. 360.

' 81 Suzuki 850, full dress,
shaft drive. exc
cond.,

green vinyl top, 4 door, fair
condition. 304 -882 -2669 .
Chevy

Malibu,

$760 .00, 304-675 -1948 .
1976 Corvette loaded .
58200. negotiable , 304 895 -3967 after 5 p .m .

&amp;2.400 . 00.
2480 .

304 - 882 -

1979 Harley Davidson .
Electra -Glide classic . many
e•tras. low mileage, garage
stored. $5,000 . or best

oHor . 304-675 -1269.

scotchguard ~ wat e r e~~:tra c·

1980 Yamaha 650 special,
good condition, 41 . 000
miles. $1,300 00 , 304 -

1974 Ford Maverick , 6 cy\.,
auto, AC. good body ,

75

576-2846

ITSPE'LL?

Gone Smith, 992 -6309 .

304 - 675 - 2088
4560 .
GET

7:45
B:OO

or

675 -

your

car p e1

. JUST CHEC~I N6 TO
.! C'N IIE/18
MAKE SU~E THE FlAOIO
YOII LllfE
15 WOf\KINq ALL FliQNT:.. '!01111£ Ri6ffT

GOSH, NO!! I'VE c10T
A81 TE! A WffOPPER!,I

Opening
Game

ffERE ftf Tff'
804 T l'lfT!f 1116

"011.

Blunders
(])@)American Parade
Charles Kuralt anchors th1 s
program whi ch featu res
views of the people of thts
country . the pers onal impact
of imponant news sto rie s
an d proftles of fa mous
Amencan s (60 m tn .)
Cl) (ffi Nova 'A Magic Way
of Go1ng : The Story of Tho·
roughbre ds . · Tontght' s pro gram examines the billion dollar horse racing industry

0

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER ·s PlUMBIN G
AND HEATING

ALLEY OOP

ING At. 1, 8o~~: 355 , Galli polis . Call 614 -367 -0576
SHULAW'S Plumbing end
Heating. Rt. 2 Neal Ro ad.
Point Plea sant, W . Va . 304 675 -5420 . licensed and
Insured .

83

Excavating

Good · 1 Excavating . base ments. footers . driv eway s.
septic tanks. land sca pin g .
Call anytime 614 - 446 4537 , Jame s l. D avi so n. Jr
owner
J .A .R . Constru ct io n Co .
Warer Lines . Foot e r s.
Drains . All kinds of Ditching
Rutland , Oh
614 - 742 ·

$960 .00 . 304 -676 -6730 .
Trucks for Sale

New truck fenders &amp; doors .
Chevy fenders $84 .95 .
Chevy doors $175 . Ford
fenders $75 . Ca11614 -256 -

1260.
1980 yellow Chevy Luv 4
spd ., AM - FM tape, real
clean , $2 ,995 . 1980 blue
Chevy luv 4 spd .• AM -FM
tape , camper top. real nice.
&amp;3,196 . John's Auto Sa tes.
446 -4782 . Bulaville Rd.
Gatlipolis, Oh . Open til dark.
1979 Ford F- 150. lariat,
PS, PB. AC, AM -FM radio ,
good cond.. 83.496 . Call

9729 after 5 .

614-388-9905 o•614 -367 7624 .

1971 Buick Sky lark auto
trans ., tooks &amp; runs good
$ 300 _ Call 614 . 256 _6278 _

1983 Ford Ranger, 4 spd ., 4
cyl ., 2 tone, brown &amp; tan.

896 -3696 .

W .O.

v•n. luto. AM · FM t•pe,
carpeted. aport rims. co·
vered spare tire, re•r ladder,

f3,119&amp;. John'o Auto Selao,
448-4782, Bulovllle Rd,
Galli polio. Dh. Open dl dor11.

All older people
lihe ourselves!

Fortunately
Bubba if d
LJOunqerdoq'

Stark s Tree Trimming &amp;
Removal . Lawn mowing end
maintenance, land scap1 ng .
10 Pet . off all estima tes .

&amp;

Electrical
Refrigeration

Chris Craft 36
cruiser with

16 ft . fishing boat. 20 HP
motor. trailer. trolling motor . swivel seats . $1 .995 .

Call 446-3637 .
Correct Craft &amp; Ski Supreme, tamity ski boats .
New &amp; used, Parkersburg ,

WV 304-422-8433 or 304 422 -2367.
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

7 2 Dodge can be fiJted or
used for parts. $150 . Call

614 -367-0414 .

304 -675-6462 .
Auto Repair

Over 20 used motorcycles
including several large tate
model Hondas and 1 Harley
Davidson 1980-80 ci. Calt

448 -2240 ,

Batz

Camping
Equipment

Camper -topper wilh all ex tras for pick up truck , $ 600 .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

.

. .'

.

(!) Nfl's Greatest Mo·
ments NFl' s Greatest M oments pr esents '1982 Year
in Review _·
(]) TBS Evening News

D . DAY REFRIGERATION
SALES · Professio nal ser vi ce f or appliances, hea t ing ,
cooling and electric . Sell and
install Amana, Gibson. Kit chen Aid . Residential, Com merciel , Indu strial. 304 ·
675 - 4819
o r

0 Cll ® Fine Romonca
BAHNEY

LOOKV, PAW!!

614 -388 ·8274 .
SALES · Profes sional stH ·
vice for appliances, heattng ,
cooling and electric . Sell and
install Amana , Gibson . Kit chen Aid . Residential , Com mercia l , Industrial. 304 -

675 - 481
614 -388 -8274 .
85

9

TH' PURTIEST
I EVER LAID
EVES ON-

11

IT GOT FOUR 5TAR5

(])Greet Pleasure Hunt Ill
This documentary focuses
on extra\lagant ·pJ9-8 sures

General Hauling

Cil Boat of Groucho
CIJ Catllna
CIJ Bonny Hill Show
0 CIJ Magnum P.l .

Need something haul ed
away or something moved 1
We ' ll do it_ Call 446 -3159
between 9 and 5 .
James Boys Water Servico .

Ca11614 -256 -1141 o'614 446 - 1175 0' 614 -446 7911 .
JIMS

WATER

SERVICE.

7397 .

Uph ~ lstery

304-895-3664 .
1977 Compor solf con tained. 111ume loan . Phone

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

_____

1 163 Sec. Ave .• -Gallipoli s.

614-446 -7833 or 614 -446 1833 .
,_

,oo

Two devotedly single peopte are tntroduced to each
othef and a reluctant rom·
ance follows . {R)
0 (}) (I) 0 (I) ®I Ill ClZ
News

I]) Ano1her Ufo
CJl SportoCeme•
(1) News/Sports/Weather
CIJ Firing Uno
(il) Newswatch
f1) Benny Hill Show
11 :15 C!l Mazda Sportslook
11 ,30 II Cll (1) Tonight Show

0'

Camper trailer, ' 76 Starcraft, 17 ft ., ulf contained.

304-1176-8912.

~. . ·:-..~·-

SEWING Machine repai r s.
service . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Scr'llice Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric S hop .
Pom eroy . 614 -992 -228 4

Hondo

Sales .

7B

·. ,rs

4066 .

D . DAY REFRIGERATION

tzisu motor to fit 1978
Chevy luv truck . Phone

77

Pasquale Ele ctr ic Co . all
phases of electric w o rk , all
wo r k guaranteed . A erial
1ru c k r e n ta l 614 - 44 6 -

87
1978 C-20 Chevy Sport

That's three
this month!

Dotson's Tree Service . In
sured Free Estimate . 304 -

84

Call 614-992 -6846 .

&amp; 4

Another house brohen
1nto ·I n our neiqhborhood, Walt 1

2903 .

Call Jim Lanier. 304 -675 -

Vans

G ASOLINE ALLEY

t1oned]
f1) MOVIE ' 'The Country
Girl'
8 :30 (I) Ill Cl2l a.k.a. Pablo
9 ,00 OC2J CIJ MOVIE: •Jesus of
Nazareth' Part 3
Cil 700 Club
I])
Ill (j2J Throe's
Company Janet fret s when
she mtsfaken ly concludes
that the se11 therapist Jack IS
dating is actually a ca ll g1rl.
{AI (Closed Cap1ionedl
0 (]) •]] American film
Institute Salute of Lillian
Gish Douglas Fairbanks Jr
lead s the annual presenta·
tion of the AFl 's distill·
g uished life Achteveme nt
Award wh1ch goes to lillian
Gish for her endunng co ntnbuttons to the world of fttm
(90 mm I
(])®American Playhouse
'Heartland · Rip Torn and
Conchata Ferrell star in th1 s
story abou t a ran cher and a
widow who wants ro homestead her own place . (2 hrs .l
[Closed Captioned)
9 :30 I]) (!) ~ Shaping Up
Buddy gets nervous when a
casual aqua1ntance dieS of a
hean attack and Shannon IS
upse t whe n Melissa loses
her good luck earrings .
10,00 (2) MOVIE : ' Touched·
CD Assaulted Nuts
I]) Ill ClZ Hart to Hart Jonathan teams with Mantna Na·
vratilov a tn a tenn1s match
a1med at exposing a decett ·
fu l tenn1s pro and a man
who ·s black m ailing him (R)
(60 m1n .) [Closed Capt1onedj
f1) Stroh ' s Fight of the
Month : Marlin Stariing vs .
Lupe Aquino
1 0 30 (}) MOVIE ' 'The World
According to Garp'
Cil My Little Ma•gie

®

All In the Family
Ill ClZ Nightline
Ill Twilight Zone
11 :45 C!1 USFL Football ' Tampe
Bay at Now Orleans or

PEANUTS

YOU'VE MOVED? WELL,
~OW WILL l I=IND MV WAY
TO '{OUR NEW NEST?

NO, MAKE
SIMPLER

IT

CJ

0

YOU DON'T HAVE
TO PUT IN ALL TilE
TINENTS ..

Houston at Oakland

t 2 ,00 Cil Bums &amp; Allen
(I) Catllna
(I) Nlghtline
(J) Dave Allen at La'{le
® MOVIE: 'The SevenUps'
II ClZ Eye on Hollywood
• Gunamoke
12:30 II (}) (1) Lete Night whh
David Letterman
(}) MOVIE: 'Some Kind of•

Hero'
(]) Joel&lt; Benny Show
CiJ MOVIE : 'Birds of Prey'

Now arrange the circled leners to
lorm the surprise answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles MIDGE GUMBO BUUER NORMAL
Answer Whar tne coacn did ever~ t1me a player

Yeswday s

lumbled~MU MBL ED

Jumble Book No 2~ . cofll lllnil1g 11 0 _puules.. 13 arall•bhr for S1 95 piu!i 55c: pos1age
and handhng f rom Jumble. do lhrt rtllwsp•per . Boll 34. NOfWood, N.J. 076-48
Inc lude your nl!me . address. zip coae and ma~e c hec~ pe yabieto Newspapertx&gt;oke

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Taking a double finesse
West opens the diamond
queen, wh lch you . as decla r er, have to win . A quick

NORTH

4-17-84

+A6
9K 5

• 7632
+AQ IUti5

WEST

EAST

+J 2

+QI 0984

910 ti 7 3
• Q J 10 9

9QH
• 854
+J 7

+K 9 6

and you

must

win

again .

Now it is up to you to take
a second finesse . It works
you

make

four

no-

trump. a total of I 0 tric ks

SOUTH

Now Watson goes into a
long explanation of why the
pla y of the 10 wa s correct.
First he shows that against
all 3-2 splits. you win all the
cl ub tricks If West holds K-

• A64 2

tAK
+ 432

Vulnerabl" Both
Dealer : North

Pass
Pass

develop the club suit. so you

and

+ K 7 53

West

study shows that you musl
lead a club and take the double finesse of the I 0. whic h
loses to the jack
A diamond comes bac k

North
I+

East

2+

Pass

Pass

Pass

South
19
3 NT

Pass

lA) {60 m•n 1 (Closed Cap·

.. J40 WEVE"R, l'LL
TELL ..OU WHA.T
I'LL 00 ... I'LL
13E f IT ALL ON
TH' FINAL

JIM ' S PlUMBING &amp; HEAT -

Playoff

(I) Ill ClZ Foul-ups/Bleeps/

YI11El'

614 -446 · 4477

Round

WHAT A 15EAUTY
CONIE5T JUDGE
HA510KNOW
HOW TO DO.

I I JON r I I I XXJ

(1) A Team The A
Team tries to clean up a

(}) MOVIE : 'The Betsy'
Cil Veshua
C!J N8A Basketball: 1984

304 -576 2010 .

ft . cabin
trailer,
S12,000 . Call 614 -2455032 or 304 -675-1731 .

0 (})

tJ
II

rI

Answer:

Murder'

SHIP

Cor. Fourth and Pi ne
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phon e 614 -446 -3888 or

rx

(}) MOVIE : .Dial M For

STEAMER . Water removal,
furniture cleaning , free esti mate s. 304 -675 -2295 .

82

~EVILAB I
J I I

New Mexico c1t y where the
lawman is the kingpin in an
underwortd operation (60
min.)

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN

- - - -- - 4

1973 Olds, 1 owner, exc.
cond . inside and out .

Ill! Entertainment
Tonight
fl) One Day at a Time
CJ) NBA Tonight

Fetty Tree Trimmin g, stu mp
rem ova l. Calt 304 - 675 -

rienced roofing. including
hot tar application , carpen ter, electricia n. m ason . Ca lt

I I K J

G

RON ' S Television Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
M o torola . Quazar , and
house calls . Calt 304 -576 2398 or 614 · 446 -2454 .

(

t·····-"""'
J ""···-r ...... J
.._,_

CJ) SportsCente•
(I) Major League Baseball:
Atlanta at Cincinnati
(I) 0 (I) Family Feud
® Wheel of Fortune

Boats and
Motors for Sale

$700 .00. 304 -882-2012 .

Ill ClZ People' s Court
IIJ Jeffersons
U (})Tic Tac Dough

7 ,30

576 -2897

' 81 Celica Toyota GT. lift
back. AC. tilt wheel, tinted
gtass . AM - FM Stero ,
36 .6 00 miles 304 -675 5149 after 5PM .

72

'•

'LAT, " I'IHAT tOES

tion , deodorizers . FREE esti mates . Reesonable rates .

dressed S2 ,000 Call 614 ·
266-1141 after 6PM _

PM. 304-675-5730 .

73

Building materiels
block. brick. sewer pipes,
windows . llntela. etc .
Claude Wintera. Rio Grande ,

Call 446-8648

614 -992-6846.

-

IT~T'5Pl'LL

owner, &amp;2800 . 992 -3316 .

1948 Jeeps. Phone 304·
675 -1242.

1971

BORN LOSER

Motorcycles

dirt bike

®News

after 6PM .

304 - 1

1-

55 Building Supplies

304 -

175 cc Kawasaki trail &amp; road
bike. 100 cc Yamaha road &amp;

ask for Jim lively .

68 ,000 miles, $2,300.00 .

1981 Corvette, like new
inside &amp; out, 10,000 miles .

(I) Entertainment Tonight
CZl B.J. /Lobo Show
0 (I) Wheel of Fortune
(I)
liD MacNeil/lohre'
Newshour

GENE ' S DEEP STEAM
CARPET ClEAN .

1979 Subaru station
wagon, 4 wheel drive , exc .

74

1969 Camero 360, 4speed.

Transportation

CE' LEBRATIOIJ.

axp. Call 614-388 -9652 .

RINGle·!; SERVICE expe-

1--- - - - - - -

Call 614-992-6846.

PAINTING - interior and OK ·
terior, plumbing , roofing ,
some remodeling . 20 yr s

1331

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

Fertilizer

Garden seeds. plants, Ken nebec seed potatoes $8 .50 .
Fertilizer. field seeds . Boso
Agri -Certer. 446-2463 .

~:!o."-.WITHOVT LJ9.

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting . Now installing rubber
roofs . 30 years experience.
spe cializing in built up roof

Call 614-992-6846 .

cond., $2,900 .00
896-3681 .

or b.o. Call 614 -992-5620

hoop. si1e 7 , $80 .00 . Phone 1 ==========::.J.::::::.::.::.::::::.::.::::::::::::.~ long bed , step bamper . Road
304 -675 -4208
lights , matching topper. For
sale or trade. 86896 . Catt
Bridesmaid or prom dresses .
614-986 · 4367.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE ''
wllh Major Hoople ®
Size 9 - 10 and 12 . Call
304 -675 -5460 or 304 -468 6CiENTI~T5 ARE DI VIDED, MAJO~!
1978 Ford XLT pickup , auto,
1722.
~ME FEAR itlAT CONSTANT
runs good , t2 . 400 . 00 .
13,._0 EXI'-MPl~ WILL L006E N
Phone 304-895 -3664 .
3 pc . Navy blue suite. like
M,.._RRII'\GE TIE!&gt;! 0THE.R5
new, young mens size '20 .
FEeL IT~ Tt-\ERAPE.llTIC TO
1977 Chevy Scottdale
304·675 -1869.
5~E. T.-\AT OTHER GREEP5
pickup , 6 cyt . std . shift,
spoke wheels, $1 ,600 .00,
P..RE ENE I&lt; WORSE OFF'
Spray painting equipment.
good condi1on . 304 -676 compressor, 2 gel. pot. 60
2196 .
ft . material line, Binks Gun .
Also. 20 c u ft upright
"76 Ford F150, vory good
freezer . leland M . Johnson.
cond ., good truck to pull
304-676 -1128.
trailer, 390 engine. 304·
Night crawlers 90 cents doz .
lester and Charlie Leonard.
1213 Main St . Point
Pteuant .

Oddysey mud climber $800.

1975 Olds Cuttaas 442 . Call

$3.750 .

Baby blue prom dreu with

614 -388-9043 .

614·949-2833.

Farm Equipment

Troy -Silt tiUers Check our
special price before you buy
any tillers . Swisher Implem ent Co St Rt .7 N , Galli polis, OH . Call 614 -446 -

$60 . Call 446-9283.

loaded with eJttras,

1974 Chevy 10 Van V -8 1o·
bad. &amp;450 . Call 446 -9283.

1983 AMC Spirit, exc.
cond .. 6 cyl. , 4 spd . Call

Call 614 -992 -6919 .

Musical

Peavey standard series 260.
300 watt head . with Peavey
ca binet, with six 1 0" speak ers , S400 . Ca\1446 -8655.

R1ding mower. 7HP, 2 air
conditioners, 2 rugs 6x9 .

spd.,

$3,000 . Call446-0515 .

Hay $1 60 per bale . Phone

&amp;

eJttras.

1979 Joap CJ-6, 6 cyl, 3

614 -388-9043 .

5815 after BPM .

65 Seed

loaded with

$3.000 . Coil 446-0615 .

1975 Pontiac Ventura good
con d .. clean, runs good . Call

Must selH 1979 Plymonth
Horizon TC3 . Sharp . PS , PB.
auto .. factory atuminin
wheels. am -fm cassette .

614-246 -5064 0&lt; 614 -245-

Instruments

Flat bed with side kits .
chains. binders . &amp; tarp . Call
446 -3281 after 5PM .

offer. Call614-379-2314.

1979 Jeep CJ -5 , 6 cyl. 3

S1.100 .00. 304-675 -1600 I -0-64_8_•_h_•r_6_P_M
_.- - -

Easter bo.1nies, all sizes and
colors . $4.00 or 2 for S7. 00 .
One mile out West Point
Road. Hartford .

&amp;376 . Call 614 -245 -9504 .

1pd..

' 79 Z-28 Camero, $4300 .

576-2700

For sale Majestic fireplace .
complete with all pipes and
chimney . Used very little .

74 Cadillac excellent condi ~
tion, $1,000.00 or best

304-882 -2422 .

Registered Black German
Shepherd, female dog, 1 0
months old . $150 .00. 304 -

$500 . Call 446 3235 .

WD . Call 614-446-0319.

4 d&lt;.. 81.800. Coil 446 8158 .

$500 . 992 -3316 .

Northup King corn , elfalfa &amp;
grass seed , other farm
seeds . Cell Vaughn Taylor,

W.O .

78 Seoul $2,500, 77 Scout
&amp;2.250 . or make offer . Both
V-8. au1o. Call 614 -379·
2676.

1975 Vega. good work car,

Grain

Home
Improvements

(]) New Treasure Hunt
(I) Andy Griffith
CZl News/Sports/Weotho•
(I) D•. Who
(fil 3 -2 -1. Contact
1!11 Sta• Trek
5,30 U (l) CZl NBC News
(I) Rifleman
CJl Mazda Sportslook
(I) Carol Bu'"ett
CIJ 0 ClZ ABC News
0 CIJ ® CBS New•
Cll Business Report
(fil Bita ond Bytes
7 :00 U (l) PM Magazine
Cil Here Como the Brides
CJ) This Week in the NBA
(]) Sanford and Son

Call 614 -388 -9857 .

after 5 p .m .

3059 .
Harlequin Easter Bunnies,
83.00 no papers , S5 .00
with papers . Call 614 -985 -

73

1977 Dodge Aspen slant 6 ,

6457 .

limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446 -7785 .

4

379 -2657 .

l- - - - - - - - - - -

Autos for Sale

Vans &amp;

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennels. AKC Chow puppies , CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kittens.

For sate full blooded Red Poll
bull, 5 yr. old, very gentle .

I SEE T HE
FE5TIY ITIE:S
HAVE !&gt;TARTED

TO PUT OIV CLOT~E5- ,
WA5•t THE' O~LY ONE!&gt;
WE HA D WE'RE- THC'!&gt;E'
O UTFI T~ THE MAYOR.
5AVe; l)!7 FOR T HI&lt;

614 -266 -1182 .

71

American Cocker pup 1 0
weeks old . Buff female ,

CAPTAIN EASY

Commercial and resi de n tiaL ' hoe estimates . Call

~-----------,.-----------1

CIZ

Stranger'

STUCCO and PLASTERING

REg . Polled Hereford bull
approx _ 1 300 lbs . Call 614·

Case 310 front endloader
dozer. $4 ,000 . Call 614 -

6245 .

L~

u rn rn llt rn (j) a

Newa
(l) MOVIE: 'The Mirror
Crack' d'
(l) MOVIE' ' I See a Dark

_ _.

9790 .

White Eastet bunnies, Pedi gree Rex . also red . weaning
this week . Call 614·245 -

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 12" -22 " stocked
in yard . HEAP vender.
prompt delivery . 614 ~ 256 -

L

24. 7 : 30PM , Fayette
County Fairgrounds. Wa·
shington C .H. Setting 160
head Ouro cs. Hamp-duroc
ath e th e Crossbridge, bar·

l-::-:--,--------,-

614-992-2080.
23 " RCA color TV conaol

1

I Bentley pig Sale Tues., April

Call614-379 -2 146. ·

54 Misc. Merchandise

6: oo

r

Unscrambfe these four Jumb'es,
one fenar to each square. to form
lour ordinary words.

EVENING

YOU WAIJT E 17
81

ftfl~~ fij)'i} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHenriAtnoldandBoblee

4L11L84

150 head . Hampohiroa-

Call 614 -446 -3844 alter 6.

Ca11614-256 -1528

6 14 -446 -0322
R•vers1dA Apts M tdd leport
SpACh·l l rates for Santor
C• t• ze ns s 13 0 Equa l Hous •ng Oppo rt un itie s 614 992 772 1

Services

8oarding all breeds . Heated Suffolks-Crossbreds. From
indoor -outdoor facilities . , Schlichter, Spracklen. Hak ·
·
AKC D o be rman pupp1es:
1 ola &amp; Cornett flocks . Call

3590

?

The Daily

Television
Viewing

4138 .

Call

mare .

v 304-882-2222 ,

Phone d'
avenh

acr e lot in Addison . &amp;220 a
mon th plus utilities . Call
614-992 -6843 after 5 p .m .

WHP&lt;T••• WHAT ARE

1 3 ft . self contained Leisure
Products camping trailer .
Hat everything . Call 446 -

Livestock
spotted

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES &amp; SERVIC! , U.S.
Rl . 50, Coolville, Oh 614·
667-3386 .

Farm. R1 . 35 . 304-6762276 0' 304 -736-2342 .

Zuspan, 304-773-6564 .

Ohio

YOU GOING "TO PO

Want to lease tobacco allot ·
menta , Mason, Cabell, Putnam County. Call Andy
Sigler . Morgan 's Woodlawn

LUMBER ~ Rough cut, oak,
poplar, 2x4, 2~~:8, 2x8 , 1x4,
1 JC6. 1~~:8 . 1ength available. 8
h . through 16 ft . Hogg &amp;

located 1 mi . so uth o f
Eureka 1 2•60. $160 m o ..

by Lorry Wrlghl

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

62 Wanted to Buy

55 Building Supplies

17 1984

117, 1984

Ohio

Ope ning lead: + Q

J -x. You must lose one trick
if you play the queen lirst
Then he pomts out that if th~
are divided . both
work equall y well
H ow ever . if East holds bolh
missing honors. you can't
avoid two club losers
As for 4-1 splits, Watson

honors

plays

points out that you ca n make
By Oswald Jacoby
aod James Jacoby
When Louis Watson shows

a simple hand , he frequentl y
adds some advanced reason -

ing. Thus, in today's hand .
North opens one club and
South eventually becom es
declarer in three

no-trump.

a ll th e tnck.s against a singleton jac\r. if you p\a y the
queen. but that the play of
the I 0 gives you fo ur tncks
agai nst a singleton king or
nine .

He d &gt;S n't go into the 5-0
break . • r he had . he woul d
have sa id that the pla y of lhe
10 w as far superior
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

1

~M~
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

41 Gaze

I Enclosure

DOWN

5 Idle talk
9 caution
10 Metalwork
machine
12 Italian
commune
13 Direc tion
on ship
15 Brown kiwi
16 Except
11 Vineyard
(Fr.)
18 Group
ofwords

1 Sultry
songstress
2 Famed
fabulist

3 Grasp the
advantage
( 4 wds I
4 Dutch
conunune
16 Starting
5 Part of a
point
sentence
6 Abruptness
19 Evaluate
7 Barrister
22 Patois
{abbr.)
23 Angler's
2U " If I - a
8 Probably
basket
hammer .. "
{3 wds .l
24 Fall
21 Facility
II Task
color
22 Chaplin
14 Painter's
25 Semitic
deity
prop
subjects
23 Jalopy
25 Brass and
Dixieland
26 Ill-mannered ~-1---l-+-27 Judge's
bench

27 Uquor
29 Backbone
30 European

nver
34 Olfactory
perception
36 Germa n
article
37 Drink
up

28 Written
letter
29 Moon
feature

31 "C'- Si
Bon' '
32 Holbrook
33 Japanese
dry

measure
35 Guide ; usher
37 Placed
38 Tendency

b+--+--

39 Italian
river
40 card player's
''three''
-11

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
II

1\XVDI. RAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands fo r another . In this sample A ia
used for the three L's, X f or the two O' s. l'lC. Si ngle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordB are all
hiots. Each day the rode letters are different.

CRVPTOQUOTES
AT

RlK

ZIXJR,

WEX
RIK

WlKXG

HI X ' G

R I K D

YECJ

E

NAUUAIX HIUUEDL . - Q . BEKU FJGGR
Yeslerday's Cryploquote : JUDGING FROM THE MAIN PORTIONS OF THE IDSTORY OF THE WORLD, SO FAR,

JUSTICE 1S ALWAYS IN JEOPARDY.- WALT WHITMAN

�Page

12-lhe Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Temporary order
granted in strike

Area deaths
Moun! VPmon Ring
Mou nt \'r m on Bing, 63. 344,5
Baile')' Run Road. Pomcr O)'. died
Monda)· in \ 'etr ran s Memorial
Hospital.
13om Si&gt;pr 13. 19'20, in MPiRS
County. son of Flon'nc&lt;' F:ppiP B ing
Baf'r. who ~un · i\'1 •s at lVi iners\·illf',

and the late Mount i\dam 13ing, hl'

was ('mplo~'l'&lt;l

JS a cmshprupt •ro tor

for F'uol(' :Viim·r~!l Co. for ~ 1 \T'Jrs.
,.\ \\'ori el YVar II ..\nn:. , .t:tL•ra n , llr•
W&lt;:t~ affiliJtf'tl \\'ilh Zion Churc h of
Chri&gt;l

Also surYi\"i.ng

;.~rf'

h.i." wife.

Bc-rtho F: Hoffman Bing: a son.
\'C'r nun of (;aJiipo lis. thr('(' d aug h!(&gt;r&gt;;. Ja niCt' £3ing Hudson ol Chf'·

shirf' . and f(a_\· B ing McFlro_\· and
Sharon Bmg Sa _
\ TP. OOth of PomP-

ro_\·: a hrothrr. (;u,· ofMiddkport: a
s i ~tr r. :Vitlrtha Ash of l\ltinr•rsv illc:
closdriends. Fr·,'d PNt') and Pea r·!
Hoffman . dll of f\iiddlrpol1. and 15

a m ember of Grace Baptist Chu rch
and the Anne Bai!Py Hom&lt;'makers
Club. and treasurer of Roosevelt
E lementary PTO in Point Pleasant .
Also su rv iving are her husband .
Stephen B. Johnson: three daughters. Val!'rie.Amy and Brooke, all at
home: a son. Stephen B .. at home: a
brother. Pau l of Point Pleasant : two
sisters. D'niee Queen of Point
Pleasant. and Dawn Barker of
Ca lli polis: a maternal grandmothf'r. El&lt;'rt ha Mav Christian of
Iront on: and sevpra l ni('('f'S and
nqJhPWS.

Fun('ra I SC' IYiC'Ps \\·ill bf' held a t 1
p.m . T hursda)' in Crace Llaptist
Chu rch . wit h th&lt;&gt; Hev_ Kennet h
Coleman officia ting_ I3urial wi ll bf&gt;
in Broad Run Cemetcr;.'. F riPnd s
rna~·

~that

FCaa
\AUII
will get all you bunnies hopping
SUPERIOR SEMI-BONELESS

HAMS

pnor to thr srrv iCf' at thf' church.

...

..

HAMs~~~E~ ..

.·

BONELESS HAM ................... $1.89 LB.

T he

"'inning number drawn Monday

I.RP

Dorolhv
night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
H(' was alsu pnx't'(Jp(j in d(•Jth IJ~·
game, "'The Nwnber. " was 245.
two brothP r s .
Domthv Bills Lee, 79 , Cross
In the "Pick 4" game, played
Funl'ral ~PtYin_'s v.-ill h(• hl'ld at 1
W
\'a
..
fomner
ty
of
HuntingMonday
through Friday, the win·
Lane&gt;.
p.m . V\.'t'Cin0.'d&lt;t _\ in f-:\\·ing Funf'ral
W
.\
'a
.•
died
at
1:20
p.m.
nmgnumberwas69Jl_
ton.
HOm(•. Pumcrm·, ldth thP Rev .
rvi ondaY all he home of a son . Dallas
The lottery reported earnings of
Hobl.'rl Punf'll officiating. Burial
!:lilts
of
Cross
Lanes
.
$_'i64,991.50
from wagering on its
v.:JII tx• in \ltdgs lVwmot~· Card&lt;'ns.
Born
April1
0.
19Cf.i.
m
Henderson.
daily
game_
Earnings carneon sales
Fri(' nds ma\· C' ;JJI ,tt thf' funeral
II'
Va
..
she
was
lh&lt;'
daught!'r
of
the
of
$1,198,0&amp;'\,
while holders of
homf' I rom : ~ - ·) and 7-q p .m . toda .\·.
late John and iViinnie Austin Spears . winning tiekets were entitled to
In lif'u nt flowt•l''\. co ntr ibu tion ~
FunPral arra ngements will be share $633,073.50.
m .:J .\ bt· mad1· to tht• .\mrrican
un nounrc'd later b.\' Crow-HusS&lt;&gt;II r - - - - - - - - - - - - - l'll nc ·r·r S.:·'K ·ir-t~
Fun0ra l Home. Point Plmsant .

KAHN'S (HICKORY GROVE)

BONELESS HAM ................... $1.99 LB.
Kahn'sHILLSHIRE SMOKED SAUSAGE ..... $1.99LB.
Kahn'sHILLSHIRE POLSKA-KIELBASA ....... $1.99 LB.
Kahn's AMERICAN BEAUTY BACON ........ $1 .99 LB.

Prices In Effect
April 17th thru April 29th

ARMACY

RC COLA
DIET

Hulwrt A. Smilh

Diann John&gt;&lt;on

$1 59 LB.

HAM SICES ....... $}.99LB.

Ohio louery winner
I AP 1 -

49LB.

SUPERIOR-SEMI-BONELESS

SUPERIORGENHR GUT
CLEVELAND

$1

WHOLE

ca ll at Foglesong Fu nera l

Home. Mason. W _Va .. from 2-4 and
7.q p .m Wednesday and one hour

g-r~ln d c hil drPn.

•

JACKSON, Ohio tAP) - Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. has been
granted a temporary restraining
order limiting picketing at Its plant
here, where members of United
Rubber Workers Union Local 820
went on st rike last weekend.
The employees struck Saturday
afternoon after turning down a
tentative agreement with the com pany in the m orning.
The l'f'Straining order limit s
pickpt ing at the plant to three people
at least 2o fE'&lt;'t from the plant's
property. It a !so forbids union
members from congregat ing any
closer than 300 ff'&lt;'t from the plant
and prohibit s the union from
blocking any entra nces to the plant.
No nPw talks arP sehl'du led. The
plant &lt;'mploys about :iOO prople.

16

Diann .Juhnsun ..1\ Rt. ~. Puinl
J\li ondJ \' in St. VIa 1\-' ·s
Hospital. Huntington. W.Va.
Born !\lia rch '27, 1949, in HuntingP!r-a~ e~ nt, di('d

RITE-UPPE~

oz.

8 PACK

10

$149

Inn. W Lt . d;t ug ht f'rofCaten B. and
l.t ·I ha \&gt;i. ( 'hrist ian (~uw n , wbo bot h
su n:iw' in l 'nin t P!C'asant. shf' was a

tonnr'r v.-aitrr"" at Tin.\ ·, Dri\'f•-l n.

GRADE •• A"

SMALL EGGS ••••

WII.\:1":\CTOr\ ,,\J' , - IV10r·0
one IX't·~...on was inn •ln'd in thf'
:vl:tr&lt;'h :.!X '-b_,·ings oil tm ., , nwm lx•rs
uf tht · Ifimald n: mt'~ !Jrnily,
! h ~.ln

~!l' ('Onli ng

to C l i nltHI ( 't•unt\· ~il&lt;' riff

'?~~~·~"""~:-,

,

'

P:1tr ick H a l(·\-.
Half' \ ~&lt;Ji Ll !\rtoncl:l\ the~ t ( ' \ -tdf' ll&lt;'f'
found at thf' &lt;.;('f'nP ind i('atPd at least
,,~ - n ; r . . s. Ji bn ts \\ r-rf" insidt• I h&lt;' housr
on I. it tTirk Hoar! in J.j'f'&lt;;; en 'f'k H'hPn
Donald ~t ncl f\.;tn•n Diln('c.. txJth .1~L
;tnrl thdt · l:)-\ -l'ar -olcl c..on Hodn r~ ·
\\'( ' 1'( ' kiliNI.
Tht • sh1 •ntt ~&lt;lid on1 · Ill rh c JX'(Jpl r
in thr· !lOU'-;{' " md\ ' nor h;t\'&lt;' tX'f'n J
tu!l p;n·ttl ·tp:mr" in tllf' i!S"&lt; tult s anU
rna\ 11;,~, -~. t&gt;t'1·n in\'fJJ\ ·J·d ~t h;ti n st hi~
Wi l l.
·J·\ H th.tt n·;•.... on. ·

-t''r~·\-_

LUCKY LEAF
[

.

'~' '· ' '. r

ks

!L tlt •\ .t!'-'' . lnn• tunn..;! .\itHl&lt;Lt\
rh.ll . 1 1'1 '\\,trcl lund h; t" ht'f'll
'''-!.thlr.... ht,J l•t pn1\ td£· ca'h lor
. tn\rtnt· pt·nt.tding inhtJmatittn rh.tt
\( •; 1d" tr 1 1ht · a n ·r-.;t and 0 1m·w t Jon tJf

~,
.4\lc·
..«..~

,~..,&lt;.,atLJnl~

·~II

.,

,,;
• 1

Changf-'s made in

''!!-.

•,1

,

')',

• ,.

Pf: l

Bo.._

No l. irrHt

·\1 ~}P]rS

wheal program

.&lt;..f'tYati(ln Sf'tYir·•·.
c-hangf'.., in 1111 · l ~ lK--1

WALNUTS;~B~B~~ ..

200 Count

NOTEBOOK ... 1/2 PRICE

Trimmed to

Restao rant
Spec1tications

CHIPS

HURRY!
DONI

~~Goz

MISS
IT!

8rnc;otn Wan1f'r Jnsura nC'(' w ill
cl OSf ' .11 tl l )( ltl • 1n Ft· ir i;J~. April'..~. in
ob"')IYdnt r· nt ( ,ood Frida\

50 LB.

CABBAGE Fertilizer
ONION PLANTS 50LB.BAG
SETS $1 29DOZEN $ 99

5

$1~.~~

COUPON SAVIN6S
Double the value of manufacturers' cents off coupons
up to 49' in face value.

Laurf'l ('li If HPalt h Club will mC&lt;'t
T hursdav at 1: :ltt p.m. at the home of
Bertha Parker.

SAVE DOUBLE $$
· AT C.K. SUPERMARKET

EFFECTIVE SUN., APRIL 22ND

•R~d~em your manufacturers money-saving coupons at C.K.'s andre -

ceive double the value when you putchase the specrfied item . One coupon per item . No expired coupons accepted Double redemption offer
does not apply to "free Merchandise", coupons or coupons over 49' rn
lace value. No cash refunds when Double Coupons value exceeds price
of item. Cigarettes and certain other •tems are excluded by law. Tornsure product to all our customers. we are limiting our "Double Coupon"
offer to one jar of Instant Coffee and one can of Ground Coif•• ""'
shopping. Double Coupon offer good Sunday, April 22nd. 1984.

Wt'alht•r fore(' as!
Rain ltkplv tonight and Wednes day_ Low tonight npar .15. High
Wednesday 40-45. Winds northerly
10-15 mph tonight. Chance of
precipi tation 70 pPrcrnt tonig ht and
Wednesday
Exwnded Foreca.•t

Thursday through Satunlay:
Chance of a little rain or soow
Thursday. Fair Friday and Satu"'
day. Lows In the :lis Thursday and
Friday and mostly 40s Satunlay.
Hlghs In the 50s Thursday, 50s to low
60s Friday and 60s Satunlay.

$9.50 2Bulbs/69¢

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUNDAY , APRIL

AU THORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT
G REGG &amp; PATTY GIBB S
N

7ND AVE

MIDDLEPOR1

PH :Ohio ) 992-2178
(W Va .) 773-9577
f" Ot l~ r)

'l rJn
'l _lQ

l11~''&gt;
! 11 '1

Wrrj I,
0(1

!o u•1 \ JO to II 00

Supptementto Point Ptusant Ratister - Glllllpolls O..iiy Tribune- Pomeroy Sentinel- The Putnam Post

OR WHITE

ICE
CREAM

Mt-.·ls Thur.ooday

60 &amp; 70 WAn

YELLOW, RED,

VALlEY BELL

G!eat Buys on
Sea Food, ,
Steaks And ('
Other Specialties

Frida\· noon c-losin~

89¢

SEED POT A TOES
KENNEBEC-PONTIAC

79¢
LIGHT
BULBS

PRODUCE SPECIALS

POTATO

announced
~. ~·hPal program

c1nd rc•OJY'tll'(! &lt;.; ign -up. Tl1f' nc-'v.:
sij:.'JH tp •nil run fmm . \pril lb thru
:Vla\' -l Thl' nPv·: prnYJ&lt;.;Jons arr a 10
pt·t ·r·f'nl '.A'hf'.tl p;tirl :-f'T-asidf' al a
rMr nf $2 .10 pt•r hushPI of ASCS
.v ir ld, a n '(j U(' rrn n •J f r hc· ra rgPt rrtcf'
from $4 .·1:1 1(l.'f;.-t .• {X, and prm·i!' ions for
ha.vi ng r1IH I ~ra1 ing t.-\' hf'll l for
acn·ag(' consPt'\'JIHm uSC'
For furthf'r mformJ tion prcx::lurf' t'S \\ i th whPLll ha !--.r~ &lt;Jrf' Pnrouragrd ro t'tlfllarr lhr' .\S&lt;'S nffi('(' on
th£· S('('Oild llfW II' qf ltlt· I·'.Jfffii 'f&lt;.;
Rank Hu1ldin ~.; llt 'l'l' .

GALLON

LAY 'S

hcl!'

2% MILK

SLICED
CRUSHED
CHUNK

ENGLISH

I'OM I&lt;Ht JY - [)a"id Fox. c·xrcu ti\t ' din"'t·tor n l tht ' :Vh--.ig" Cou ntY
Agricultut·;l ] c.;LJht\i.t,~rt on anrl Con

Pineapple
20 OZ. CAN

r d tCIOU~

,_.1 ted

VAllEY BEll

CAN

H

~I:.J 70n

DEl MONTE

CHERRY
PIE
Fllll NG

c

1-Ltlf'.\' s: li rt.

.. , ht• orH• "U~ I--JI ·ct ·~ 1''" n I tf•• rnicht tx'
Ill d. l fl L:f' r ' tlH 't' ht ' j._ I h t 'I Hlh \\ II II!' '~
Tnlht · lli UI'f h •t ·

th, • l .t -t·.., I · n~· k

¢

DOZEN

OH

•

SUPER
MARKET

WE WILL

BE CLOSED
EASTER
SUNDAY

OPEN DAILY &amp; SUNDAY-9:00A.M. TO 9:00P.M.

SECOND &amp; MILL ST.

MIDDLEPORT, Oh.

. We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities.

'..ll q 10 ltl } (I f'

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS &amp; "WIC" COUPONS
R

RAPH

2501 Jockson Ave.

J~ Jackson Pike
Gallipolis , Ohio

Point Pleasant, W.Va.
786 N. Second Street
101 Slllh Ave.

Middleport, Ohio

Huntington. W.Va.
1125 Main Street
Milton, W.Va .

120 W . Second Street
Wetfston, Ohio

\\~•

I! I'S t•n r ' l11 f' lti11ht Tu l _lmif Qnilllli ti .. ~

Xot

ltl'~pun s lhi P

Ft.r l'rinlh1P, Frrtors

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