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                  <text>Wednesday, May 9 , 1984

Soviet athletes pull out of 1984 summer Olympic games
gov0rnment to forget it . There will
be no gold No silver. No bronze .
Nothing Not this year. Not in Los
Angeles. Not in the United Sta tes.
And in GainPsvillP. Fla ., Tracy
l '-l u!ki ns knows Pxacrly how that
swimmer feels. Four years ago, she
wmt through t he same thing.
" I can sympat hize with tha t
swimmN ... Caulkins sa id . "I know

By HALBOCK
i\P Sports Writer
Som ewhe rP in I he S&lt;wict Union . a

SWlrrunPr s its tod a~· . " 'ondf'ri ng
about h&lt;' r hour..., upo n ho w·s of
practicf' . lhf' la tP mPab a nd misSC"d
m0a ls . thf' ln\'f•st mpnt of timf' and
effort applic•d

in the pursuit of

Olvmpic gold.
She h c~s l:x'!·n

llllrl

hv

hpr·

what she feels, because I knowhow 1
fell ."
In 19ro. the Uni ted Sta tes,
protesting the Soviet Union's mil ·
itary incursion in Afghanistan ,
passed on the Most.uw Games. The
Soviets did not get a ngry . They gut
even. And so, on Tuesday, just as the
Olympic Iorch began its much ·
hera lded journey across Ame rica ,

with innpeccable tinning, Moscow
informed the world that It would
pass on the Los Angeles Games.
Take that. Uncle Sam .
But really, Caulkins wonders If
the Soviets realize tha t ones who feel
the greatest impact of this decision
a re tlw a thietes, innocent victinns of
a politica l ploy. Her own history
proves tha t.

" Four years ago, I felt helpless,
robbed of an opportunity to perform
for something I had trained very
long and very hard to get," she said .
" I was angry and disappointed and
confused .
" For a eouple of months after
that , I Jacked motivatio n. There
wasn't much to ainn for. I really
don't think I regained tha t moliva·

tlon completely until one year ago I
swam well until then, but not a s well
as I would have liked.
"Som e body there is going ! hrough
the sam e thing right now. I fed sorry
for tha t person. I know how it feels."
Today , Caulkins says, 1he wounds
are heal'ed . With th&lt;' Olym pics
approaching , she has f'C'ga ined her
zest for competing.

Meigs gals win TVC

Induction ceremony

See track story oo Page 3

Eastern honor society photo Page 9

Reds defeat Expos

OU computer camp

Story on Page 4

Story on Page 16

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 10, 1984

48
PLUS
DEPOSIT

25 Centt

A Muhim&lt;tdia Inc. New • paper

House okays $350 million for Piketon Plant
WASHINGTON tAP) -The House Energy and
Commerce Committee was expected to clear a blll
today that includes fiscal 1985 funding for the Gas
Centrifuge Enrichment Plant near Piketon, Ohio.
On Wednesday, the House Interior and Insular
Affairs Committee a pproved $350 million for the
project a s pan of a bill authorizing appropriations for
the Depanment of Energy's c ivilian energy
programs .
The ene rgy and commerce panel considered a
sinnllar measure Wednesday but took no final action
on it .
The centrifuge plant Is being built adjacent to the
Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant near Piketon,

about ~ miles north of Portsmouth . Both plants are
designed to enrich uranium , which then is sold as fuel
to nuclear power plants.
Under the blll a pproved by fhe int erior committee,
GCEP would receive $.310 million for construction of
two process buildings and purchase of centrifuge
machines to fill half of one building. A total of $40
mlllion was a pproved for operating expenses.
"Once again we have been successful in our effort s
to assure that work at GCEP proceeds on sch!'dulc,
protecting jobs In southern Ohio. " said Rep . Bob
McEwen, R-Ohio, whose congressional dislrict
includes GCEP. "I am grateful that the members of

the committee unde rstood what is a 1 stake for our
nation's enriched fu els program a nd a pproved fu ll
funding authorization."
The administration has requested $350 mlilion for
the GCEP project , down from $578 million in fisca l
1984.
F alling df&gt;mand for uraniu m enrictunent has

resulted in a s lowdown of the project , a nd the en&lt;'rgy
department is scheduled to decide by next spring
whether to pursue development of cent rifu ge or laser
technology.
The multibillion-dollar centrifu ge plant was
scheduled for initial operation in the la te 19ros. with

the cntif'C' venture to be complet!'d bY 1994. Gas
centrifuge technology requires oni)l a fraction of the
e lectric power of the gaseous diffusion method.
The eomplex was to in clude eight process buildings
housing tens of thousands of centrifuge machi nes,
putting about 93 acres under roof. About 2,900 workers
were to be employed a I the plant once it became full y
operational
The energy departm ent' s budget falls under
jurisdiction of tht·ee House eorrunit tees , a nd th&lt;' bills
repo11ed out by 1he panels likely would be
consolida ted into one measure before mov ing to the
House floo r.

Highway
•
spraying
cancelled

A numbProfredamationprojecl s
in Meigs and Gallia coun ties will be
oullinl'd to area residents at a public
hearing slated to be held in Athe ns
next wPek.
The reclamat ion division of the
Ohio Department of Natura l Re·
sources will review proposed projects that will be submi tted to the
U.S. Department of Interior for
funding .
The hearing"oll be held May 17 at
the Athens County Cooperative
E xtension Office.
Rep . Jolv nn BasiN, D·Gall ipolis,
whose district includes Gal li a a nd
Meigs , urged loca l part icipa tion in
the hearing, on&lt;' of four scheduled to
be conducted around the state .
"Reclamation Is a crucia l state
project In our area ," the legislator
said, "and in order to estaiJiish
pliorlties amongproposcdreclam a ·
tion sites, we need Cit izen input "
Boster also urged residents to
contact her with comm ents a nd
suggestions on ODNR 's proposals.
The proposals, part of the depa rt ·
ment's third a nnual work plan , will
be sent to Washington in June .

Spra)'ing of a chemica l to redu ce
wN'd and brush growth on sta te
rout es in Gall ia and Meigs counties
has been canc'Plled by the Oh1o
Depa rtment uf Transporta tion.
The chemica l has been identifil'd
as

final des igns or reclamation of
m in!'d la nds abandoned ptior to
Augu st 1977 .
In GaiUa County, projects s lat ed
by ODNR include Little Kyger In in
Cheshire Township; a landslide on
properly owned by Alden and Le&lt;&gt;
Wedemeyer in Green Township ;
a nd White Oak I and II, two strip
mines in Cheshire Township.
Proposed projects in Me igs
County include mine drainage on
the Brickles property in Pomeroy;
the Buck mine shaft in Pomeroy;
m ine dra inage on Pomeroy' s CondorStreet; mine drainageonthe Dill
prop&lt;:&gt;rtv in Pomeroy; mine drain·
a ge on F a ir lane Driw in Middle·
port; and mine drainage in Miners·
vi llP known as the Jett seep.
Also on ODNR's list for Meigs are
mine drainage and openings on the
Morris property, Sali sbury Town·
ship; a s trip mine in the Pageville 11
proj ect; a strip mine In Rutland
Township; mine drainage on the
Sheets prooperty in Pomero~·; and a
la ndslide on the Tannehill property
in Pomeroy.

WASHINGTON tAPI-Thefi rst
follow ·up meeting after the forma l
opening of contract talks between
the United Mine Workers union a nd
the soft coal industry dealt almost
exclusively with "procedural m a t·
ter s," a spokesman says.
The bargaining session took place
in a Washington hotel and evidently
involved no significant substantive
discussion s of the lssuPS th at wlll
dominate negotiations as they get
closer to the Sept . 30expi ration da te
for the current contract.
"The meeting was mostly to
discuss procedural matters" on how
bargaining will be done, said one
individual close to the talks, who
asked not to be identified publicly .
The first session. prinnarily ceremonial, was held April 24. On
Wednesday. the two sides me t for a
couple of hours, then recessed the

BanvPI-270.

w h il'h

an

are;;~

a d \'Oeac~·

group said conta ins a
'' potentiaU\ dangerous· · c hemical
known as 2A·D.
Ma rty Zinn . a spJkf'sper son for
Appalachian Ohio Public t n1erest
Ca mpaign . called ODOT s decision
a " big victory ·· for southeast Ohio

Th e proposed projects incl ude

r 0sidl?n t s.
Z in n said t ha t in resp:m se topublir

pressu rr from Athen s

Count ~:

resi·

dent s . OOOT chose two weeks agu
not to spray thrrP . A k e~' factor in
that dE'C'i." ion. acrorrlin g to OOOT

spokPSperson Mary
IC'tri .

JtFI'ffiED - These two retirees of Veterans
Hospital were presented jewelry hoxes hy
Scott Lucas , right, administmtor at awards day
~lemorial

Wednesday. From the left are Marabel Fn'Cker, 211
years service, and Beulah Maxey, 21 years and !It'•·en
month• of service .

was

L ) nne

A thPn s·

Cappel·

no-spr ay.·i ng

policies.
OOOT had awarded th&lt;' contract
for spraying in this a rea to
Chemitrol ChPmical Co .. Gibson ·
burg . The firm wa s scheduled to
sta rt work this W&lt;'&lt;'k in Ga ll ia and
Meigs counties. but sa id that no
spraying would b&lt;.' done sou lh of U.S .
J5 in Galli a .
Spra ving would nut b&lt;• done on
pm perly with sign s pus lt'!l "no
spra)·ing ," ODOT sa id last week .
" When lX'OPlf' in other r ountiPS

sa w the possibility to stop the
spra~·in g ,

they began to orgi:iil ize,"

Zinn sa id , not ing tha t public
oppos ition to use of 2,4-D in Vin ton
a nd Meigs count ies hc•lped in
ODOT' s deci sion nol to us&lt;.' the

Follow-up coal talks
deal with procedures

20 oz .

Del Monte

32-oz.

en tine

Gallia-Meigs
reclamation
•
proJects up
for hearings

U .S OA iNSPECTED
f ,. orythlnt;~

at y

e
Vol.l3 , No .20
Copyrighted 1984

loch ol the•• ad ... er'tlted ltoml It requ ited to be roodllr available tor tala
In oo ch Kro:•• St o re . ouopt 01 tp-.c:ll lc ally noted In thlt ad . If wo do run
o ~o~t of on a YOrtlted ltom wo wilt oHo r you your choke ol o comporoltla
I tom wtloPI a ... ollablo . r ofl.-:tlll&amp; tho IDIYIO tOYinllt o r o rolnchodc which
will antltlo you to purc: hato tho od,.ortltod Item of tho od,..ortlt.d prlco
within
doyt Only
YOI'Idor &lt;oupon ...,111 bo occoptod
Itom
p ur t l'lotod .

•

c hf' mi cal.

Washing1 on County has b&lt;'t.&gt;n
from th~ departmen t' s
cancellation becau Sf' it conduc ts its
~xc l uded

talks tentatively until next Wednesday, according to tha t source.

own spraying progra m , sa id StC'V€'

Fought ofOOOT srommunicatio ns
offi ec

The UMWA . with roughly 100,00J

working members, has more than
50,00J members on layoff, many of
them in West Virginia. But union
President Richard Trumka said at
the outset of the talks in April that the
union would take " no backwa rd
steps" in the talks with the
Bitwninous Coal Operators Associ·
a 1ion. the indus liy bargaining group
Jed by Bobby R Brown, chief
executive officer of Consolida tion
Coal Co. of Pittsburgh.
Brown indicated at the sam&lt;' Iinne
tha i a major management goal in
this year's talks wa s to achieve a
contract settlement that would
innprove the a bill ty of unionized coa I
companies to cope wit h non-union
competitors.

Can('('Jia t ion ol t hP rontract
spraying of 13a m ·ri dOC's not mpan

....'

al l spra\ing m OOOT DtStrir t lll will
stop, Zinn sa1d . The di st ric t has its
own in·houS£' Opt"'ra lion for s.pra\·ing
Am iz ln:- undPr guardr ai ls. 1.1.-" hi ch it
has done in sf'\·er a l countif's
alrc-ad,\·.
An in\'£&gt;stigatinn cond uct('(] b~

.h- : '
t)

~

S)

t\O PIC s howf'd that A mi; inr
"\'C'I")' low ·· t o~irit y-. Zinn saici

ha~

"W&lt;' don not think proplr need to
SERVICE AWARDS- Gold St'rvl,_, pim for five,
10 and 15 years service a1 Veterans Memorial
Hospital were presented Wednesday hy Scott IAica.•,
hospital admlni.trator, when award• day was
observed a1 the hospital as a part of National Hospital
\\leek. Receiving the award• WPN' front from left,

SaDy Savage, 15 years; Lorraine Venoy, Doroth.v
Reeves, Pam Henderson , all 10 years; hack, Bonnie
Smith, ,Julia Qualls, and Brenda Cunningham, all five
years. Another five year employee , ChartesSprou""
was not present.

tlE' C'Onf'f' rnPd a bout thi s herbir idr. ··
Zinn ad\'isrd. ··Howrvrr. rr s idf'nt s
on sta ff' highwa_
, .._ rna,\' still ~ra nt to
post s igns twa r thr ir hom~ and

liPids. "

Jackson believes absence heightens US-Soviet tensions
WASHINGTON IAPJ-The Rev.
Jesse Jackson went to fhe Soviet
Embassy today to tell Ambassador
Anatoly Dobrynin that the absence
of Soviet athletes from the 1984
Olympics "takes away the glory of
the Olympics and heightens tensions between our two countries."
" Our young men and women In
their fOITIUltlve years ought to learn
to participate In athletic games and
not In war games, " 'the Dem!lcratlc
presidential candidate told reporters outsltle the embassy.
He said t,11e presence of the Soviet

thletes "would be a major step

~oward peaceful relations" between

the two countries.
J cksonsaldhehadnotdiscussed
the ':neeungwith the White House .
White House sp9kesman Larry
Speakes said , "We'll belnterestedto
see the outcome of his visit with the
Soviets."
The Soviet Union announced
Tuesday It would boycott the games
In Los Angeles. Bulgaria and East
Germany, two Warsaw Pact coun·
tries, have joined the boycott
Jackson's interventiOn In the

Olvmpics disputeis hissecond foray
Into diplomatic matters since announclng his candidacy for thr
De mo c rati c pr esi denti a l
nomination.
The black clvU rights leader wen t
to Syri a late last year to negot iatP
the release of a U.S. ailm an
captured ln Lebanon . He came back
to the United Stateswiththe airma n,
Lt. Robert 0 . Goodman Jr., a t his
side.
Jackson also has said he plans to
\1sit Nicaragua to meet with the
Contadora nations, a group of four

countries trying to bring peace to
Central Amen ca. He has not set a
date for tha t trip.
,
At the Soviet I::mbassy. J ackson
said he would ask congressiona l
leade rs , as we ll as the Soviets. "to
take the in it iative to break this
deadlock."
"If there is anything that the
combination of the pres ident, congresslonal leader s and c itizens can
do to appea l to the Olympic
committee to get this contest back
on track, we ought to do tha t,"
J ac kso n said.

He said he intended to ask

~mbassador .~brynin for the

fa~tual basis behind the Sov 1et
df'Cts tontoboycott thc games.
" And we shall appeal to a broa d
base of leadership to take som e
initiative to try to break this cycle ."
.Jackson sa id .
He sa id he ha d no Indication
before the meeting that the Sovie ts
h d a ny intention of reversing their
decision to sta)· away from the
games .

ME&gt;anwhlle, Gary Hart, his cam ·
palgn re ju ve na ted in Ohio a nd

Indian a. is campa ign ing towa rdthe
next round of prima ries and eyeing
unpledged delrga trs. bu t Wa lter F
Mondale'scampplans to havr thc
Democratic pwsidenlia l nomina ·
tionlockedupbcforotheconvention .
~Ionda le rPma ined In Washlng1on
tod ay. but will be heading to
Nebr aska . which holds Its prim ary
Tuesday, and California. the big
prize with a June 5 primary
Hart was already in Nebra•ka
aft er spending the night at the
governor 's mansion in Lincoln as a
guest of his supporter Gov . Bob
Kerf'C'y .

�Thundciy, May 10, 1984

Commenta•'Y
The Daily Sentinel
111 Cou11 Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVIJI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGs-MASON !UtEA

~~

I'"T1.--''-""T""'

~v

,.,...,o::=f, =

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhllsher

P i\T WHITEHK-\D
A!i!.slstant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

Di\LE ROTHGEB, JR .
News Editor
A 1\1 EM Ht:n of The Asso&lt;'lated Press, Inland llally Pre!iis Associa-

tion and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They shou ld he less than 300 words
long . Allll'tlt&gt;rs are subjeel to edltln(( and mu"t be slgned with name, address and
ll'lephonP number. No unslgnf.'d lt&gt;tters wUI bt&gt; publbihed. Letter11 should be In
good ta.~h·. addrt&gt;1t~ng L'll"ue!il, not J&gt;f'"'OIHt.lltles.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pamenly Middleport, Ohio
Thunday, ffay 10, 1984

(;oo&lt;f

lle\VS __________________________Ja_m_e_s_J_._K_i~~a_t_r~_k

I don't mean to go overboard.
Some of us who have followed the
melancholy course of public education over the past 40 years are- so
hungry for good news tha t we may
gf't swppt away. Tennessee's pro gram looJis good - it looks very
good - but !Is success will depPnd

: \\'hen enough requests arc ~ant ed to bring the agencies to the minimum
number of workers needed to maintain norma l opPralions, no m ore will be
considered.
In the granting of such requests, Sykes said supPrvisors are allowed to
uS€' lhf'ir own discrelion with rPgard to indiv idual employees.
The dirrctor said hP does not believe there w ill be sick calls in
disproponionate numbf.'rs on the 28th and 29th . Other holidays, suc h as
Christmas and the 4th of July, fall on various days of I he week "and I his has
nev&lt;.' r bet?n a problem," hC' sa id.

reachers give views
on quality education
School teachers in Ohio shou ld ea rn at least $20,(0) a year and have the
opportunity to increase their annua l sa laries to $40,(0) a year, according to
a;rE"port of I he Ohio Education Associat ion .
· At the same limt'. the OF.A says the stat e should have tougher standards
for admissions to colleges of teacher educaTion. and that good studen ts
should bP channeled into the field with more scholarships and grants.
They are among do7.Pns of r('('()mmcnda tions in an OEA rcpot1 on
excellence in education. adop!Pd by the mol'!' than 1.300 delegates who
a trended the OF. A ·s Representative Assembly In Columbus last weekend.
Don Wilson. president of the llO,OOJ·member organization, said therep&lt;Jrl
Rrew oo 1of a series of t:l meetings around 1h&lt;' state in February and March .
"While sam&lt;' 22 national report s on edurat ion reform have been issued in
the last year. this is the first document prC'pared by Ohio teac hers," he
said .
the repor1 dmls gmerau,, with more efficient management of schools,
~uality of curriculum. bet trr u.'*' of instruction. career development and
others.
.On the issue of sa laries. OEI\ says almost every recent study on
rf!ucat iona l cxcellcnct' has acknowiPdged their inadequacy. Th&lt;&gt; repur1
says unless sa !aries are up~adcd '' the general public will continue to view
teaching as neither financiall y rewarding nor prof&lt;&gt;ssionally satisfying."
Cu!T(' nl ly, the minimum salary for an Oh.io teacher with a bachelor's
clegrE'f' is $1:2,100 a year although llw average statewide is $1.1,319. Tht&gt;
average for all l&lt;&gt;achers statewide is $21,4.15.
;The OEA takes a dim v iew of merit pay plans for teachers and says that
unless carefully admin istered, they can cause divisiveness among slaff
and misunderstanding among parents and teacher s.
Without lmg-lhening 1hP school day or school year, the report says more
etficiPnl use should be m ade of teachers' time . They should be relieved of
"aamlnistrative minutia" tha t comes with such things as playground and
IUflCh duly and the filling out of forms. "Activities which detract from
va lu able class time should be redu ced or Pliminated," the report says.
:The OEA says standards for admission to teachPr colleges should be
raised and based on such things as faculty recommmdal ions, gradepolnl
average, and pPrsonal interviews, among other things.
Would -be teacl1ers should have to "demonstrate competency in the oral
ana wlillen use of the English language. human relation.' skills and the
abOi ty to work with students," the report says.
'1\'hile the report does not call for teacher competency tests, il does
sug!lest creat ion of an Educational Professional Standards Board made up
of. a majority of tPachers to approve preparation programs and certify
tffichers.

•

Today In history
Today Is Thursday, May 10, the !Jist day of198&lt;l. There are 23'i days left
In · !he year.
Today's highlight In history :
On May 10, 18el, a gold spike was driven at Ogden, Utah, marking
completion of lhe first transcontinental railroad .
On this date:
In 1497, the liaUan navigator Amerigo Vespucct sailed on his first voyage
to the New World.
In 1818. the American patriot Paul Revere dled in Boston.
in 1865, Union forces cap tured Confederate President Jetrerson Davis In
IrWinville, Ga.
lit 1003, the first Mother's Day was celebrated, In Phlladelphia; and In
191f. the first national Mother's Day was celebrated.
In 1924, .J. Edgar Hoover was named director of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation .
In 1940, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain resigned, and
Winston Churchill fanned a government.
And In 1941, a top Nazi oftlctal, Rudolf Hess, landed by parachute In
Scotland In a private effort to make peace during World War II.

~,.

,

IT WAf&gt; VERY lr.'SENS'Iii'IE OF THE
8RITISI-\ TO B~EAK OFF ~lf't..OIVIATIC:
REI.A"TION5 WITH US LIBYAN~ ....

- ......

~

..

•

··~.....
~

d

Officials sa~' thf'~' are a warP that somP state workers may seek to parla~·

accumu la tecl sick leave must apply to their superiors two weeks in
advance- in this in.stancC' Oy May 16.

gratifying ways to last y&lt;'ar's report
of the N a tiona! Commission on
Excellence In Education, but Ten·
nessee's Is the most truly comprehensive program to be enacted thus
far. It Is a product of Gov. Lamar
Alexander's leadership, coupled
with a high degree of legislative
courage and some powerful lobby·
ing by the TEA. The final package
is not what Alexander originally
sought, but nellher is II the
comfortable combination of pay
rai ses and permanent protection
that would have pleased the TEA.
These ar&lt;' th&lt;' key elements:
Starting in the teachers' colleges.
the academic program !hal leads to
teacher certification will be beefed '

largely upon some complex and
untried procedw·es for evaluati ng
l&lt;'ach&lt;'r perlormanc...
Other factors of unc..rtaln effect
~&lt;111 play a part. The Tennessee
Education Association (TEA lis not
exactly burbling with enthusiasm
at the n&lt;'W program. A newly
consllluted Stale Board of Education will have to provide fresh
l&lt;'adershlp. The legislature has
imposed additional taxes to pay for
the venture. and both legislators
and taxpayers understandably will
e x p e c 1 d e m ,o n s 1 r a b I e
improvement.
For the moment, let m e put
to one slde.
doubts and reservatltias
..
Many other states have reacted in

FATE HM VEALI 'C'OU A
CRUEL BLOW, KI-\A~AFY

State employees
could parlay holiday
•
•
•
toto mtn-vacatton
this year's Memorial Day hol iday into a five-day vaca tion.
But they are prepared to deal with such efforts, they add.
The stale will observe the holiday on May 30, a Wednesday, w hile federal
government and most private business employees will stay home May 28.
Under the federal law , from which the states can exempt themselves, as
Ohio has donl', Memorial Dav always !aU on Monday to provide a
1hrpe-day wePkt&gt;nd.
Concerns have come up recently that with the stale holiday coming at
midweek, there may be an disproportionate number of sick leaves and
vacation reques ts on Monday and Tui'Sday .
Admin is! rat ive Services Director William Sykes, however , said there is
a limit to the number of workers who can be ex cused and that his personnel
division intends to adhere strictly to it.
" I have told the supervisors who must approve time off that they cannot
fall below the number of employN's they need to maintain norma l
operations... Sykes said .
The director said he could nor f'~ timatC' how many of the state's n1url'
than 50.COO employees may use the unusual situation to try to gel a spling
vaca tion. "But I would guess that !her&lt;' "ill be a fair number," he said.
Sykes pointed out that employecs requesting vacation or use of

Marauderettes, Belpre capture TVC track championships
M ROCdK SPRINGS - 'The Meigs
arau erettes won the TVC track
championship In girls' competition
and th Bel
bo
e
pre
ys won Its ninth
consecutive TVC crown tn the
conf
•
meet her e
Wed ere nee s

BUT YOU'I.l. FEEL 6E'N EIZ. IF 'C'OU TRY
TO GET BACK IN YOU~ I"'~AL \&gt;AlLY
ROUTINE-1.\FEMU~TGO ON ...

.

. .........

....

~

COME

ON-LE~

HANG

SOME MORE ~TUPENTS

=

-c::· .

-

-A
E,.-"11&gt;.

Rlt'!r

llo~ennakers'
WASHINGTON- Sunday will be
Molht•r's Day. And again. the
nation will pay lip service to
motherhood . But it no longer honor s
its mot hers.
Most working mothers cannot
find adequate da y care for thei r
children. Most divorced and wi ·
dowed mothers can't collect the full
chi ld support that the courts have
ordered. Mothers who want to slay
home with their chlldren arp
trra tf'd as social inferiors.
The&gt; govern ment offers tax lncenti vrs and pension benefits to
mothers who leave their children
during lhP day and find jobs away
from home. Mothers who try to
earn a livi ng at home. where they
can k('("p an &lt;'Vf' on their children,
ma y PVfln run afoul o f ttw labor
laws.
Thr mPdia is thr wors t offender .
I t glorifies srx hut denigrates
mothrrhood. Carf'f'r womPn are
portrayf&gt;d as glamorous. homf'makers LIS frumpy.
"We hJVf' fostrrf'd a generation
of voung people who have heard
nothing but put -downs about child·
rra ring," complains Linda Burton

WO~N-~ULME

up wfth stronger courses tn a
teacher's subject. There will be
more emphasis on coment and less
emphasis on method.
Upon graduation, a prospective
teacher wtll have to pass tbe
California AchlevemPnt Test tor Its
equivalent), and then survive a
onP·year probationary period. For
the next three yPars the beginning
teacher will have the status of
"apprentice teacher. " If all gO&lt;
well, the teac her acq uir~ tenur•
after his or hr r fourth year.
Substantial pay ra ises will providP
incentives all along the line. For
prospective teachers of math and
science, 100 scholarships a year will
be made ava ilable.
For experienced teach&lt;&gt;r-s th.e
Tennessee program offers a fivestep "career ladder." No teacher Is
compPIIed to get on the ladder, but
bonuses of $1,00J to$7 ,000 a year are
expected to prove great allraclions.
To move up I he ladder a teacher
must go through a recurring
procPss uf evaluation. In this
process tlw te&gt;achpr's perlorma nce
will be judged bv other teache1-s, by
principals, and in some part by
studf'nts . Evaluators witt sit in a
tf'achrr's classroom to observe the
teachrr in ac ti on. Not only classroom tcarlu:-rs, but also principals,
supt?rintendents, librarians a nd
others wi ll f ace simila r tt:-sts and
will ha\'f' similar opportunities.
Thf' Tennessee prog-ram addf('5'PS t he problem of disruptive
student s, it will bP a little easier
horra flrr to move the lroublemak·
er!\ to altprnat i vP schools. The
program providPs $9 million in n ew
monry for compu t('rs. $35 million
for math and scienCf' f(l('hPrs in the
high SC ilools. $4.6 mi llion in instructional supplies and $6_ ."'1 millio n
toward I tl e C'mplo~·mf'nt of lrachPr
aides.

rights _____________k_c_k_AI_ld_er_~u~n

of Springfield, Va. "They have il&lt;&gt;&lt;'n
encouraged to 'do something more
important' with their lives. They
are considered lntelleetua ll y lnfe·
rior and out of pace with the limes."
Mrs. Burton gave up an office job
to raise her two small children. She
knew that many Intelligent. gifted
women prefe r child-rearing to any
other career. tha t they find home·
making more challenging than
office routine, and that they can
earn a living and broaden their
talent s at home.
So Linda Burton joined some
other VIrginia women in forming a
non-profit group to set the rec ord
straight. They call themselves
Mothers at Home. "We should be
shouting from the housetops, saying 'I stay at home with m y kids!'"
she dec lares. She thinks it's best for
them and for herself.
The gr oup doPsn't criticize
womc&gt;n who choose a career; it
merely upholds the right of al l
women to decide what thC'y want to
do w\lh their lives. "But as II now
stands," says Mrs. Burt on, "many
women are under P&lt;:'Onomic and
.w c lal pressure to work ."

The group provides mora l sup·
port for mothers who want to stay
home and raise their children.
These women are tired of I he media
telling them thai rearing children is
beneath the national dignity and
that smart w omen don·t stay home.
So last Ja nuary, more than 50
volunt eers combinf'd thei r skills to
publish a provocative little newsiPt ter they ca ll Welcome Home. No
one1spaid; lt 'salaboroflove. They
charge $12 a year to cover printing
and m ailing costs.
Overnight, they allractf'd na tional attention. they never got
arou nd to issuin g their first press
release: the pres came to them .
They neve r bothered to solicit
subscript ions: yet the subsc riptions
bf.&gt;ga n pouring in. Phil Donahue
askPd them to appear on his
television show. ABC and CBS
News filmed them in action.
Congress even solicited their
wives on day·ca n.' centers. Linda
Burton ll slenPd to witness after
wi 1ness call for more centers,
better care and bigger federal
subsidies. Politely disagreeing, she
urgPd economic and social im:·rn·

tives to bring working mothers
home "who would ra ther not have
thr ir children in da~' cJrPi n tht&gt;first
place ...
"Mothers w ho do rPq uire a day
ca rr for their ehildrf'n dearly must
h av(' access to the best car('
available." she said. "Hut they are
not going to get it from an
overburdf'ned child-care systPm .
Seldom do"more' and 'quality' go
hand in hand , ancl in the cas£&gt; of an
Issue so dePpl y human as child
ca re. this is particularly so We
ca nnot legislate' or Pxrrcise quality
control over the&gt; rapacity of one
huma n being to lovr and ca r r for
a not hf'r."
Later that evening. the CBS
Evening News showpd PXf'f'rpts
from the heari ngs. Mrs. Burton's
tPstimon y wa s dismissf'd cava ·
ll erly by CBS as "proposi ng that the
problem be solv•~l b)' a return tolhP
ways of y(-"S tC'I}'Par." In other
words, ch ild-r t•ari ng isn' t chic:
home m aking is old-fashioned;
mother s at humP arr a throwback
to less enllghlcnf'd limes .
Obviously tht-&gt;rf'·~ a nf'C'd for the
nrwslf't tf'r.

ments must provide for this
shor tfall or suffer deterioration of
their sc hool systems. What this
country does not want or need is
backw ard steps In education. There
Is so much more the children of
today must lea rn 10 compPie in the
world of tomorrow. What every
pan•n l wants is the best education
possible for their children and most
Americans of normal means depend on public educa lio n for their
children's education. To give them
less time than the best is not
fulfilling our obligation lo future
generations. What was good enough
70, 50, ~ or even 10 years ago is not
good enough today. What is good
enough today will not be adequate
10 or 20 years In the future.
Education must keep up with the
times!
In 1983 another one of the plentiful
presidential commissions w as ap·
pointed by President Reagan to
study education In America. Its
report safd "the nation had commit·
ted an ac t of unthinking unilateral
educational disarmament ." The
report, '"A Nallon at Risk," caused
some good by turning the nallon 's
attention to education. Also the
president came out wflh a statement advocating merit pay for
teachl'rs, a plan that failed to get
widespread endorsement by our
educators. While both gained wide
publicity, neither was of lasting
Importance because the administration didn't put Its money where
Its mouth w as. That has been the
trouble with most ofthe admlnlstra·
lion 's brain storms designed more
to gain publicity and political
support than to achieve any
concrete ends.
State governments are now

shouldcling 49 pPrcent of the cos t of
educating their children co,.,., pared
to 43· percent 10 years ago. The
balance Is made up by loc al
laxation . According to the NEA
report , educating a pupil for a year
com es to a fi((Ure never dreamed of
in the days of the Little Red
Schoolhouse. New York spends the
most, $4,845 per pupil and Mississippi the least, $1.962. Ohio spends
$3,090 and West Virginia, $2,587.
That's w hat II lakes today to give
your child the ability to compete in
the world tomorrow . What it will

~

Trimble .. .............................. .............. .48

with Mlssie Howard, Erin Ander·
son and Rhonda Haddox.

Muter ...

Belpre's Ernie Willlams was an
upset winner in the Most Valuable
Award over second place Franz
Coleman of W ll t
Willi
h
e son.
ams ad
34 points wilh firsts in the 100 and
300 hurdles with a second In the IOO
and a third In the long jump.
Coleman won the 2(X) 400 and 100

In the 1600 while Chad Williams also
wsa third in thP 400 for the

an earned two more points as a
relay member of his team's win tn
the 400 relay for 32 points.
Nelsonville-York's Amy Dixon
was the girls ' Most Valuabie Award
j
W nner with 34 points. She won the
100 and 300 hurdles, was second in
the high jump, and third In the ion a
,.,
jump. VickJ Colmer of Warren
Local was second with 30 points
Th
.
.
.
e MetgsgJrls were led by Ann
Trainer who broke both her own
Meigs H. h Sch
d
.
tg · 00 1 rff'or s With

Marauders' two highest Individual
places. The Meigs relay teams of
Ed Kitchen . Brad Robinson. Mark
Hammonds, and Darrtn Cremeans
in the 400 and Mike Willford, Jon
Perrin, Chad Williams. and Greg
Sinclair in thP 1600 were both third
also.

d

'

&amp;~·Results

Polnbi

Team
&amp;•lpn ·
Wrllsron

W &lt;~ rTNl Local ..

. Jl(l
.. . f~'l

Nf'lsonvillr-· York .
FedNal Hockln~ ..

62
.. tiO

..~

Atexandor ...... .....

. .&lt;J

31

Meljoi ····· .. ... ..... ........

VInton County ...................... ... ... .... .. 9

... 6
Potn&amp;H

Meigs ..... ..

..... ... ...... ... ...... ..... .. 99

WarrmLoca l.

92

~~af~~Yk~~

Wellston . ..
VLnt on Counrv ..
AIPxandff . ·

Mlll('f" .
Trimble

I t:

tonned y IMI ; Uston IBl; RosmusS(&gt;fl

·· ·· ···

··:~~
.40

:w

. ... .. ......... . .
.. . .. ... JS.S

.. 6
.. o

!VC I. 1FH1.

400RVN -CoiPman ! W t~2.9: H&lt;'nry ! Wl :
Wll llams 1M1: Sl nnf&gt;n IFHJ: GI"('E&gt;n 1A 1:

D~s ~TJRDLF:S-

WitHams 1B1 40S L.:.·

IWLI : Terl'f'll INYl : Guthrie 1A 1: j f'nks
lMh: Boothr tVCl .
x.IJX) RUN - Marks !WLI 2:0'.!.9: Cohf'n
1FH1: Row\~' 1\\'L l: UstoniBl;ObE&gt;rhauSC'r

tT&gt;:

Dodderlll

,vc,

lndlvlduatllesutb
(Do~)

:roI; DASH
- Cotemao 1W1 215. toomao
INY
Henrv IWl: Green lA I' Terr&lt;'lli"JYI

HJGH .JUMP- Sl•o•r !FH&gt; 6T': Dupler
1T1: Bollt&gt;nder 1VC1: Butc!Fr tFHl: Fads

""slxrh &lt;tatS. Slartl
.
.
UXl RUN- Walters IWLl 10: 19.8; Sh!fkl
ITI; Campt..•lt I AI; SaVf'r ITI : Kf'nllf'dy
tMI ; Cllnf' IAI
1600 RELAY - 1FH1 3: ~5 : 1WL1. 1M1 .
1
0 - · · · " ·•
tBI. tMII.Indl
Wvll.duaJ G'~·s'
u~: ~ou..,
HIGH JUMP- Boring I V(' I 5· r ·: Dixon
M•NIYII~r·
rWMI&gt;t.llaN~B•M'· ' Casslf'r r F"Hr . J Pn .
•
n"'"'LONG JUMP - Williams rB I IS'9 '·:
Haddo11 1M1 : Dixon rNY ~ . SIIIPr rMII;
Co,tmSer
H~LPoUT
; Ka~rE&gt;~h,,,','r'L,•A· ' .o.- lt.5· ·.

1M1; ta rr 1R1

LONG .JUMP- Singer 1Fl11 20H: Holdt'r
1Bc

Remember Mom
With Flowers From
Hubbard's Greenhouse

1R1: Goodso• tW&gt; .
&lt;00 RELAY- 1B1 4G.5. tW&gt;. tM&gt; . 1NY• .

Gb1o'-.....

Team

lBO: IMma" INYo : Mcf'adde" oVCo:
Campbell tTl: no sixth lfatsr s&gt;an 1
A1600lUN - Marks IWLI • .ll!.t: Campbell

Williams 1B1: Campbell 1T1:

KlnJ:!

IMio:
Sayw &lt;TI.
SHOTPlJT-.Jon(&gt;S

rN YI~' : Elllorr 1A1 :
Ell is rBr ; Lack.t'\' rTl, Kl•nnard i T \ Cox

rFII L

DISCUS- .Jo!l(&gt;S rNY1 141' 4"; Ellis 18 1.
Cox 1FH1: Elllon rA 1: Kovat&lt;'h 1A1; Maim•
1VC1.
li·POLE VAULT - HoldPr I B• n · 1" .
Ru rrh 1R1: Jnnman rNY r. l. r~"Pn rA l.
Stanley 1T1 : Korn tM r.
· ·.'t.!t.MJRELAY- Ll8:12.4: 1W 1; ITr : rB~:
1M1 : !AI. .
•. JJO HURDLES _ Williams 181 I S. \ :
Tf'rrf'll I NY I : Carr 181: Sayre 1T1 : Spearrv
IWI. Tomlin I WI.
·
)o( -\1111 uASH- Colf'mi:l n 1Wl \Li : Wl ((ioms

\_II

L't-'

Flats of Flowers or Vegetables
Mil or Malch. Your choice .... ... . 18.00 flat
Hancing Baskets . flowering or foliage ... ... .......... ... 15.75- 18.95
Hardy Azaleas. full bloom ................. .................. '4.00- 110.00
Hardy 4" Mums..................... .. .......
. ... ..... ... .. .. ...... .... 11.00
6" Holiday Mums .................................................................. 1 3.75
Porch Boxes ......................................... ....... ...... .. ................. 19.98
Also Foliage Plants. Shrubbery, Fruit Trees. Caladiums. 4" Geraniums.
Rubber Trees, &amp; Vine Riped Tomatoes ........ ................... 3 lb./ 11.50

large

OPEN MON .- FRI. 9:00 TO 8 :00
SUNDAY &amp; MOTHER'S DAY 1 :00 tr:&gt; 5 :00

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
PH. 992 -577 6

Syracuse. OH .

· "~

Lan l horn tNY 1: Watkins 181 : Wood rFH 1.
Southwor1h 1l\H: Joii&lt;'Y 1A1.
DISCUS - Lanthom I NY \ 9'1' ,~ .. : llf'xtrr
181: Monk 1f'Y1 , Watkin s 181 : Lar kr\
rF'H I: Jolltoy IA l : Watkins 1B1
Jo;..1~ RELAY- 1WL1 \0: ~1.2 : 1M1. 1W1.

(Continued on page 4)

Eagles advance to Class A channpionship
round with 17-13 victory over Pirates
By SCO'IT WOLFE
GALLI POLIS - During a damp,
blustery Sectional Tournament
semi- final game at GaUl a Academy
Memorial Field Wednesdav even ing, the Eastern Eagles. tr~lling at
one point 11 ·2, battled the young
North Gallia Pirates for six innings
before scoring a dramatic 17-13
com eback victory on four r uns In
I he boltom half of the sixth frame
Earlier, Eastern's pitchers had
difficulty finding t he pla te, but
f reshman reliever Eddie Collins
cam&lt;&gt; on in the fifth inning to pitch
three scoreless in nings to piek up
his first ever var sity win .
The Eagles. winning sevC'n of
their last eight games, now move on
to the sectional championship
gam e tonight (Thursday) against
Kyger Creek beginning al4 : 30 p.m.
E:astern now owns a 9-7 rE"C'or d
going into I he contPsl .
Tn the first innin g, a stPady drizz)(&gt;

compounded the prohl em of an
already soggy mound. causing
most pitches to be held in the strlkP
zone. resu lting in a big first round
for the youthful Pirates. They
scorPd ei ght runs in that round on
five singles, two walks and a big
double by Steve Glassburn, the
score 8-0.
An over·anxi ous Eastrrn crf'w
rallied for two run s on two walks
and a double by Tom Everett.
In the first inning Jimmy Weber
came on in relief of stancr Mike
Collins, holding the Pirates scoreless in the second fram e. however.
Scan Thaxton shu t out Eastern also
the nex t two at-bats .
North Gallia, whom Eastern
dPfeatf'd handily twicl' dw·ing the
re&gt;gular season, contin ued its drivP
to vietmy· with spvpn freshmen in
the starl ing linP·u~ In th e third
fra rnP thr('{' walks and an e&gt;rror let
in two more runs as acf' Jimmy

Newell came on to put out the fire,
the scorP now 10.2. North Galli a
added a single run in the fourth
framP .
In the bottom of the fourth frame,
Eastern got bac-k in the contest as it
ralliPd for nine runs aided by lhref'
walks, a hll batter , a Tim Probert
sin giP, a Royce Bissell double, a
Jim Newell single, a Mike Collins
double. and a Tony Guthrie double.
the score now ll·ll .
Two leadoff walks and a double
by Welch plated two Pirate runs in
the fifth inning prompting a
pitching c han ge that brought Eddie
Collins to the mound. where he then
took cont rol for three shut-out
in nings.
Meanwhile. Eastern tied thr
scarp at 13-13 on walks to Rnycf'
Bissell and Mike Colli ns. an
sing tf' by Tim Probf'rt, and a steal
by Collin s, who beat the throw to the
plate for a successful theft.

RBI

Eaglettes post opening round victory
EAST MEIGS In opening
round play of the sectional tourna·
men! Eastern's Eagtettes of Coach
Pam Douthitt ripped the Miller
Falcons 36-8, breaking away from a
very close 8-6 score in the srcond
inning.
A ccording to Coach Douthitt,
"It's the bPs! we've hit all year! We
hit the ball in the hole and ran the
bases very well."
Lori Ritch!!' was thC' w innin g
pitchPr. going thedistanCP to record

Lifestyle
FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

six strikeouts, post 10 walks , and
allow just th ree hils. Eastern
literally pounded the ball for 29 hils,
had seven walks, and j ust two
strikeouts . Cook suffered the loss in
goin g the distance.
Lf'f' Ann Gaul led Eastern's hit
parade with Lesa Rucker, who had
four sin gles apiPCP in a perfect night
at the plate. Krisli Gaddis had two
doubles. a singl e, and a triple, Kim
Dent three sin gles, Angie Spencer
and Tanya Savoy three s in ~lrs

each. Beth Bcrkhimcr two singl es.
Dawns G ru eser a single and double.
and singiPs by Lori Ritchie. Amy
Young, Angie Young and Lori
Hudson.
Miller hittt1 rs wPre BaunP. Bray,
and Hoskinson with singles each.
Eastern is now 7-7 overall and 4·4 on
the SVAC. With I he win the Eagles
adva nce&gt; to the next round of
tourna ment play at Trimble, whprp
lhev will face the Tomkillens .

Your Authorized Simmons®Dealer
FEATURING

SIMMONS FLOTATION SYSTEMS

The winning runs came on a loop
sin gle by Jeff Bissell, a Larry
Cowdery si ngiP, a Bissell wa lk .
Collins walk, Tom F.verell w alks
and two-run singles by Troy
GuthriP, the scarP now 17-1.1.
Collins buckled down to hold on
for the victory Y.ilh a fine relief
performance. Collins fanned four
and did now allow a single hit. while
walking just one in three complete
i nnings of reli ef. while also m arking
his first career varsity win . Overall
Eastern pitching walked 11 batters,
fanned eight, and gave up nine hits.
North Gall ia pitching, which
consisted of Glassburn, T haxton.
Hol stein, and Welch, gaVP up 11
hils, H walks and fanned five .
L&lt;&gt;ading the Eagles of Coac h
Scolt Wolfe wer e Guthrie with a
double and single, Jeff Bissell two
singles and two walks. Newell a
double and single, Probert two
singles, Larry Cowdery a sin glf'
and three walks, Royce B issell a
double. E:verell a double and Mikr
Collins a double.
Leading North Galll a was Thax·
ton with three singles , Glassburn
with a double and single, Moore a
singl&lt;'. Welch a double, and D.
Ca llihan a single.

;\ gdt of Russell Stover Ca ndu•s will finn~ a smde to Mothers, Crandmothen;
nnd Aun/s on May 13. Choose frorn lfiWfll)' candies madr of fresh, who/e .
.some ingredients 5e/ected with the t~reatrst carl' "Only I he {uw5t" (or her
on this sprcwl dlly .
'f)

~ -------------------I Li~
Sttwed:cwiiM
~'
SWISHER
LIJHSE
I

I
I

Pharmacy
I
Cn•' "''"'"" " ~n I

,.,.,.. ,, ~M&lt;t:u'"''"il" 11 Pn
ll f ft Oh)

"" " ' h~

"

I

Ph

syn&amp;:; ~·;·Jo \,~· 1;~ ·a;;,:·~~ "• ~..

I

,.,. " ! 1'1&gt;

P ll€\f"lliJ'TlOOO

o,...n N oQnh

' '' ' •

I
I

·--------- -- -- - -- ----

YOUR fAR DESERVES
TilE BEST fARE!
Care Headquarters!

JUST ADD WATER

Federal aid cuts________________L_ou;_&gt;el_lW_r~"ng=-:_e_tl
Spending for Pducatlon has not
krpl pace wit h lhP ~owlh of high
trchnology in this computerized,
ei&lt;'Ctronlc age. Th"l was the gist of
a report by the National Education
Association l as t week which
charged that the federal govern·
mrnt had not fin anced its fair share
for public and secondary education.
Government spending for Pduca·
lion has stead il ~ declined undpr the
RPagan admi nistration . In the
school vear of 1979-IU the federa l
contribution v.'as 9.2 percent, this
school year it is 6.4 percent. Is this
any way to preparE' our c hildren for
thf' future ?
.Just as it wasnf'Cessaryforevery
child to be able to read. wrlleanddo
sums a t the turn of the century,
today II is nPCessary that they grow
up with some electronic knowledge.
Expensive equipment must tie
added to the blackboard In the
classroom . With the need for this
added equipment ca me the need tor
more Informed teachers to show the
pupils how to use II. Naturally.
school cos ts Increased. Ronald
R&lt;&gt;agan cam e Into the While House
in 1981 as an avowed foe to
Pducatlon . He had campa igned In
1980 wflh the promise to eliminate
the Department of Education. What
was good enough for him 70 years
ago was good enough for the
children today. He was wrong then
and he has been wrong ever since
when he has allowed federal aid for
education to shrink as the need
stea dily grew.
According to the NEA report,
government aid to education for the
school year dipped In 198().81 to 8.7
percent; In 1981·82, 7.4 percent;
1982-&amp;1. 6.8 percent; 1983-84, 6.4
percent. State and local govern·

wins In both the 600 and 3200 runs.
Trainer was also a member of the
second-place 3200 relay squad along

The other two Marauderette
ftrstsweretallled bythe8Xland400
relay teams. On the 9l) team were
Tammy Cremeans, Unda Stewart,
Haddox, and Channele Turner and
on the 400 team were Cremeans,
Stewart, Turner and Jenny Miller.
Meigs' Mike Kennedy was third

nesday.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -In recent
years most of the news about our
public schools has been bad news news of teacher strikes, student
vandalism. declining lest scores,
and so on. Here In Tennessee. as a
refres hing change, some good news
is being wrillen. The Volunteer
Stale's "Comprehensive Education
Reform" Act" is on the books and
it s implementation has begun.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

'

Brakes

cos t in thf' futurr is an~.ro np 's guess
but common spns(' says it will not
df'Crf'ase.
The Reagan admin istration is no
fairer to child ren than it has been to
many oth er segments of lhP
population. They have cut school
lunch programs and made thP
m eals more expensi ve and less
nutritious. In their zea l to provide
morE&gt; monf':V for weapons thPy are
weakening the generatio n thatt hcv
claim they are trying to protrcl. ·
Can wf' st and such solicitude four
more yean;?

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( 'AUGHT AT HOME -

New York Mets' Hubie
Brooks is caught at home plate o'n a throw from
Atlanta Braves' Dale Mw-phy and Is called out by
plate umpirto .Joe W&lt;•sl. The Met.s protested the call

I 'ITC HI "'iC ' I d n · o~ ron-.' l';wdtll . I l:rk
Lllrd . '&gt;0. IIU:l 2 -10&gt;. l.t•,t! Tut"n·"· I 0

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S' nl ii\EOl "~ flh!f'\·m . ( 'lel•·l.md. 1.'1
Moms. l.lr'l roi t. :~ : Smith.'i&lt;lfl . .\1 uulf'".u1.1 .
l&lt; : 1\:ll.'kro. r'\'f'\l York. ·r; , &lt;.;ril'll. Tnr" nr "
·r;. Will . Ca lllo r ni a . .17
'&gt;J\VES : Qui~nlx•rT\ Ka n.~a~ l't''
I ,wr:ltll . t lak!;•nd h . I l,fl't . .. ,\ !mnr..,,!.l
l~•miJ . Tnr11nt&lt;l . '•: S1;1nl&lt;'\ ~~~-.u rn . \

Stanley Cup finals to
be a battle of styles
·- · UNIONDi\LE, NY 1AP1 - 111&lt;'
. 'Sian ley Cup final s will lx' a battle of
styles the all ·oul att acking
manner of t he Edmont on Oilers
against the tight -c hf'&lt;'rking. more
: ca ulious mod(' of lhf' New York
: Islanders.
If the Oilers ran get thf'ir
· record·St:'l ling offrnsf' untracked
against the tpam t hal swept them in
last wa( s Nal ional Hockl'y League
championship round. then Edmon: ton will bP Iough to stop . But lf the
: JslandPrs mnlinur to foil the
: high · fly ing: OiiC'rs as thp~· ·vf'do nc in
rolling up 10 straight v ictori f's ovf'r
Edmont on. then New York should
skat p off wi t h il s fiHh ronst'Cutivc
tit le - tying the record S&lt;'l b;· by the
!956-00 Mont rml Ca nodims
: - " We 'll bolh try to play our sty les
and St"E' which onr comes 1hrough, ''
.aid l slandrrs left wing Clark
Gilli~. who ha s P ra~ rh r bitt('r

'

mf'mory· of a l'2·goa 1 sp;.:t.o.;on \ \.'ilh a

fine

plavoff p&lt;'rformoncr- thai
includ E'~ Sf'\'f'n goa ls. "Thf'~' likC' to
frpt•wll('PI it Jnd pia \' shoot ou t
hockr ; . W('\iketot ightcn it up, gri nd
h our.. Both stvl••s hal l ' workE'd bur
ours sf'C'm s to wor k !)( 'ti er again st
1heirs
Beginnmg 1on1ght. tho"' sty lr-s
clash hf'ad on in thC' bC'~ t -o f·Sf'\'('n
final sPries.
. . " \\-'hC'n you· ve bc(&gt;n so unsuccf'SS·
tul for a long lime aga inst onl' t!'am.
you think about changing things,"
sa id Wavne Grr-tzky. the NHL 's
sco ring king . ·w e' ll have to do
things we havm ' t done befol'(' to
t]lrow them off.··

But Gretz!&lt;)·. w ho was hel d to only
four assists by the Islanders la st
spring, knows the Oilers must live
and die by their offense. And the
Islander s recognize they' ll neE'(]
their defense to lx' at il s sharpest
against lhe Oilers. who scorE'd a
11mrd 446 goals this S&lt;'ason
"They've been better as a tea m
overall df'fPnsivPiy ," said lslandC'rs
r oach AI Arbour. "but thev still
want to come at \'OU all thf' timC'.

Marauderettes ....
tContin uPd on P age :ll
11-'1\ r.

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Willi :·lm.., 1!1 1 1 :1·~

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1H1 . (i, lnl 1\\l .t
Jill HI 'RI&gt;I.FS - l)t :&lt;:l lll r'\'Y• "111•. l-:\',111."

MONTREAL u\P i
Da\·e
Parkf'r' s first homf' r un of thC'
st•ason malll' a winner of fhl)
Cinci nnati Reds \\.'ednf'Sda~· night.
rvrn if il failed 10 determinP a
winnPr of the pool organized by
membf&gt;rs of thf' tra m .
Parkf"r bC'Ilf'd a IWO·OUI. 1\\.'0-run
homer in the eighth whJch brough t
th&lt;' R&lt;'ds back from a onp-run deficit
and pro]X'lled them to a 64 triu mph
over thf' Mont rea l Expos.
While the\' awaited f'arkrr' s first
regular· season homf'r - hf' hit one
in hL.;; first spring ·! raining at -bat. the
Red' tried to prC'dict when il would
occur . Da nn B ilardrllo. the ca tcher.
sa id S&lt;&gt;pt . ~1- in other words. never
- whil e Tony Perez sa id spring
training in lq?,'i
.. Yea h. I knew I he\' had the pool ...
said Pa rkPr. "11 wa s all in fun, a nd
then som e rppor1f'r in ( 'incinnati put
il in lh&lt;' pap&lt;•r ..
Bill Gullickso n. 0-:\. nursrd a 4-:1

DAYJ'ON . Ohio 1Af'&lt; - Don
Donohcr. an assislanl Ol;mpit·
baskclba\1 roach. isn· t worried that
Ihe Olympic hoycn11 hy I he Smi ets
will affN.'t compc'lition in that sp::.rt .
" I rf'a lJ~· cton·t S('(' th at it atfE'Ctsus
that much as tar as baskr tbaJ I
goPs," lhP Unin'rsit v of IJa\'fOn
coa l'h s;.~i d . "I t dOC'S n 't changf' our
\ask w hatso&lt;.'ver . li' s going \u ix' ''
powcriul roumamrnt. with the
Ru sc.;in ns or w ithout 1hr Russians.··
"Y ugosla,·ia won the 19?11 Oly m pics and I don' t l hmk thP). fdt any
lf'ss lhC' champions ju ~1 lx'&lt;.·auS&lt;' WP
''-'f'JT'n' t thrrT·." sJid DonohPr. who
coach&lt;'Ci the Flyer s luI he quancrfl

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STORE HOURS
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WORCESTER, Mass. tAP! ''I'll have jitters, butterflies, like

CINCINNATI !API Dick
Forbes. a Cincinnati spans wrtter
since 1941, has retirE'd after43years
with The Cincinnati Enquirer.

The Daily Sentinel
(l iSPS 145·900)
.\Division of Multimed ia, Inc.
Pu blls h rd f'vrn· af H' rn oon, Monday
t h rou~o:h Frida .\· , ·Ill Court StrN't, b y t he
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011 io 45769

SUBSCRIPTION RI\TES
R}' l' ~trrlt&gt;r ur Motor R()ute
Onr \\'r rk .
OnP Month .
Onf'

career relief appearance and first
since 1976. Seaver then gave up
three hits - two of them homers to
Roy Howell and Robin Yount - in 8
1-3 Innings of the nightcap aft er
refiring the first 14 batters.
In other AL action, the Del rolt
Tigers downed the Kansas City
Royals 3-1, the Minnesota Twins
beat the California Angels 5-2, the
Baltimore Orioles took two from the
Toront o Blue Jays 7-4 and 7-3, the
Seattle Mariners defeated the
OaklandAthletics 4-1, the New York
Yankees poundE'd the Cleveland
Indians ll4 and the Boston Red Sox
blankE'd the Texas Rangers 2-0.
The previous longest game in
elapsed timewas7bours, 23minutes
when the San Francisco Giants
defeatE'd the New York MetsB-6 in 2:!
innings on May 31, 196l. The old AL
time record was June24.1962, when
th e New York Yankees outlastE'd
Detroit 9-7 in a 22-inning game that
lastE'd exac tly seven hours.

The former AL record for m ost
innings was 24, orlg!nally set ln the
Philadelphia Athletics' 4-1 vlctory
over Boston ln 1!0i and equaJE'd in
1945 when Philadelphia and Detroit
played a 1-1 tie.
The longest major-league game
was 26 innings on May I , 19:xl, when
the Brooklyn Dodgers and Boston
Braves played a 1-1 tie. The only
other 25-lnning cont es t was the St.
Lou is Cardinals' 4-3 vlctory over
Seaver's Mets In 1974. Seaver also
was a member of the Mets when
they lost to Houston 1-0 in 24 innlngs
in 1~
"I'm mol'(' than happy toputthem
(the wins) on m y side ofthe!E'dger,"
Seaver said. "But the imponant
thing is this team earned two
vic tories. It's a great lift beeause
thl'Se guys a!'(' exhausted . The
records and all the other nwnbers
arc nice for the media and I he fans
because that's \he mystique that
makes baseba ll what it is. But we

were ju st concerned about
winning."
But Inning after Inning It seemed
no one would ever win. Both teams
sc::ored two runs in the ninth inning
Tuesday night. When play resumed ,
Ben Ogilvie's three-run homer In the
21st gave Milwaukee a 6-3 lead but
the White Sox tied lnthebottomha lf.
They blew a chance to win it In the
23rd when Dave Stegman IE'd off
with a single. One out later, on a
hit-and-run play, Tom Paciorek
singled. But as Stegma n roundE'd
third he was physically stopped by
coach Jim Leyland and was ruled
out for coach's interference.
Scott Fletcher's two-run single
broke a 3-3 tie in the seventh inning of
the night cap.
Milwaukee Manager Rf'ne Lach ·
mann held a brief team meeting
following the sweep." Allltold them
was that these we\E' tough ones to
Jose, but the world 's not going to end
by any means," he said. "We 're not
going to hang our heads. !Jut l'w

BAGS TURKEY Mike
O'Brien, a lonner resident of
Meigs County who resides on Rt.
t, Ga!Upolls tBulaville Rd.),
GalUpoUs, bagged this 21-pound
bird In Raccoon Twp.

before my fi rst pro fight," says
Sugar Ray Leonard, who comes
back to boxing Friday night.
"This fight is comparablew ithmy
first pro fight,' ' Leonard said
Wednesday.
But the questions surrounding his
first fight and this fight arediffprenl.
The question about Leonard when
he scored a six-round decision over
Luis Vega on Feb . .5, 1977. in
Baltimorewasrould hebeasgreat a
fighter as a pro as he had been as an
amateur.
But when Leonard tights K ev in
Howard Friday nigh t at the Centtum, the question in the minds of
some people will remain: why is he
fighting at all?
The schE'dulE'd 10-round fight
comes two years and two days after
Leonard has re tinal surgery on the
left eye, which caused him to r etire
as undispuiE'd wel\etwe1ght cham pion Nov. 9, 1982.
I! comes 88 days after a freezing
procedure wa s peiio&lt;mE'd Ia streng then the r etina in Lrunard's right
eye. That forr-f'd postponement of
this fight, w hich was S&lt;'hC'duled for
Feb. 25 here.
"Dr. Ryan and I are in agreement
that Mr. Leonard should be permitIE'd to resume his boxing career,''
sa id Dr. Ronald Michels. w ho
periorrned the retinal surgery. Dr.
Edward Ryan periorm&lt;'d the free-L ing technique.

Besides mE'dical clearance, Leonard also has thesuppon of his wlfe,
Juanita, who wantE'd him to retire.
Of his comeback following the eye
problems. Leonard said his wife

'\vas more concerned as to whet her
I was into the sport, whether I still
had drive. "
",Just my own special Jove for the
sport , m y own special feelings, " is
what m ottvated him to fight again ,
said Leonard, who will be28May 17.
"I was bored, I really was," said
lhe fonner champion, whoservesas
boxing commentator for HBO,
which is televising the !fight , and for

had a lot of happier days ln my life.

Its sixth straight game and moved

you can bet on that."

btto first place bt the AL West,
one-halfgameaheadofOakiandand
California. With the score tied 1-1111
the sixth, Gaettl doubled off Geoff
Zahn and scored on Ron Washington's single. After Reggie Jackson's
homer tied the score in the bot tom of
the sixth, the Twins scored three
runs in the seventh. Tim Teufel
singled, went to third on a single by
Tom Brunansky and contlnuf'!l
home on center fielder Fred Lynn's
throwing error. Brunansky scored
on Gaetti's single and Mike Han · s
grounder produced the third run.

11gers 3, Royals I
Alan Trammell collected three

hits as Detroit stretched Its road
record to 14-&lt;l. In winning their sixth
game In a row and handing the
lading Royals their seventh straight
defeat, the T!gersmovE'dwfthin two
of the AL record for consecutive
road victories established by the
1912 Washington Senators. The
major-league mark Is 17 by the 1916
New York G iants. The Tigers' 254
record equals tbe 1955 Brooklyn
Dodgers for the best start after 29

games.
Darrell Evans doubled to start the
Detroit second inning and scorE'd on
a double by Rusty Kuntz, who went
to third on a throwing error by loser
Danny Jackson on Tom Brookens'
grounder and scored on Lou
Whitaker's grounder .Trammell,
who leads the league with a .381
batting average, si ngled in tbefifth,
went to second on a wild pitch and
scored on Marty Cast lila's single .
Twins 5, Angels 2
Gary Gael t i doubled to trigger one
uprising and contributed an RBI
single to another as Minnesota won

Leonard-Howard bout scheduled Friday

Sports write;· retires

CBS.
"At the times when I was saying,
'I I eel grea t , I'm happy,' I was
psyching myself. But you can't fool
yourself. "
Leonard, who made between $35
million and $lO million before
retiring, is getting $3 milUon for his
com eback fight, but he said: ''I'm
doing somelhing from the heat1. not
for financial reasons.··
Leonard and Howard will wear
thumbl ess gloves, and anyone who
wants to fight Leonard must do the
same.

BERRY BASKET
GIFT SHOP
Sixth St .. Syracuse. Oh.

Mother' s Day Gifts
Flower Arrangements
Handmade Needlecrafts
Baskets and More
HOURS: Mon .-Wed.-Fri .
10 a .m .-5 p.m .
Saturday 10 -3
Also by Appointment

614-992-5082 •

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WE'RE CELEBRATING

SENIOR CITIZENS DAY
MAY 15

FREE PORTRAIT
FOR ONE DAY ONLY, TUESDAY, MAY 15, SENIOR
CITIZENS MAY HAVE THEIR PORTRAIT TAKEN AND
RECEIVE l-4X5 PORTRAIT IN A GIFT FOLDER AT
NO CHARGE. COUPLES OR INDIVIDUALS ONLY.
THE PORTRAIT MAY NOT BE TAKEN OF ANYONE
OTHER THAN SENIOR CITIZENS.
APPOINTMENTS ARE NECESSARY!

Spring is here,
Everything is blooming
Come on out and get Mom
Something for that Special Day!

EARLY BIRD SPECIALS!!

CALL NOW 446-7494

Potted Plants
Vegetable Plants
Bedding Plants
Cactus &amp; Succulents
Mother's Day Arrangements
Hanging Baskets-Flowering - Foliage
Retail 8t Wholesale on Baskets 8t Vegetables

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••
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••

Milwaukee Brewers aren't in midseason form yet, they probably
never will be.
After playing 34 !Mings in two
days - including an American
League-record 25-inning marathon
that lasted 8 hours and 6 minutes,
making it the longest major-league
game ever lime-wise- both teams
might be ready for the AU-Star
break.The game was sus]X'ndect by
an AL curfew after 17 innings
Tuesday night tied 3-3.
"If you'!'(' going to play them that
long, you might as well win them "
said Chicago's Tom Seaver, the
wiMing pitcher In both games as the
White Sox caplu red the record game
7-6 on Harold Ba ines' hom~r and
then took the regu larly schedulE'(]
ga me 54.
Seaver hur\E'd lhe topof the25thas
Chicago's eighth pitcher and al lowed one hit. II was his seventh

1--------------...!.----------~'--­

•

•
•••
•••
••
••
•••
•••
••

AP Sports Writer
If the Chicago White Sox and

I'RICE."'i

Come See Our

••

In sectional softball toumament
play, Southern advanced with a 29-5
shellacking of Hannan Trace In
action earlier this week .
Laren Wolfe was the winning
pitcher for the Tornadoettes. Hitters were Karen H emsley with four
base knocks. Debbie Michael had
thrce hits. Becky Michael , Jenny
Bmtlcy. Alana Lyons. and Rachel
Reiber all had two hits. Leading
hitters for the Lady Wildcats were
.J. Barnes with four hits and S.
Dil lon with three safeties.

21:16 Sffond class po~lagf' paid

The DaHy Sentinei-Po91 5

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to APPLIANCES, LADIES CLOTHING.
SUMMER ITEMS

~:E

lt a lv was first, Spa in was second
and. Russia w as third . So there are
a! her countries than just }{ussia "
Danaher said he wasn't tha t
surprised when the Soviets an nounrl'd they wouldn't panicipatc.
" I just all along felt the fact that we
stayE'd away from their Games in
1900 would tend to make them stay
away hum ours. Thai's just human
naturE', " hP sa id.

FREE LOVESEAT

I)U!ko 1fi r

LARGE DISCOUNTS
. THROUGHOUT THE STORE

25

nals of I he NCAA tournament .
" ll alv' s going to be there . Spa in's
going to be there. TherP ar.- enough
tPam s to havf' a w hale of a
tour nament. I saw the E uro]X'an
ch ampionships laS! summer and

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4

)((IJ1 U"\- W llli\·r·r:2 .'1:-&lt; l i. lJI'-hon~l .''." ' 1
Fn 1WI .&gt; ,\m1f'T"&gt;nn 1:\-T 1. ( 'hildt· r·,. , \\' 1.

HHI Hl-:l .rn · -

One out later, Miguel Dilone. a
swilch-hitt er batting right -handed
for lhe first time this season ,
cunnect&lt;'d on a 1-1 pitch for his first
homer. and the sixth of his
sevcn-vear car('('r.
l.ulllckson. on the disabled list
with a gro1n injury since Aprill9, fell
behind 3-0 in the first aft er Milner
and Ron Oester openE'd the gam~
with singles and Walker slammE'd
hJs fifth homer.
The Expos, who st r andE'd eight
runners in the first four innings,
closed the gap Ia 3-2 in the third .
Bryan Litt \c drew a Jeadoffwalk and
Tim RainesmovE'd him to third with
a single. Afl&lt;'r Raines stole SN'Ond,
Andre Dawson doubled in both
runners.

CUSTOM SCREEN
PRINTING

Donoher isn.,t worried

MOTHER'S DAY
GIFT IDEAS!
..

lead and had al\owE'd only one hit
since the first inning beforf' Duane
Walker strokE'd a two-out single in
the eighth . Parker, swingi ng might ·
ilv. missed the firs\ pitch before
\~ unching the nex t one beyond the
righl· fi e\d fence.
·· 1 admit I went up to the plat e
trv ing to hit a home run." said
Parker. " This isone ofthefew limes
you go up there trying and it
hapjX'nS."
The Reds added a run tn the ninth
on a smgle by Cesar Ced&lt;'no and a
single by EddteM ilnerand throwing
error by third baseman Tim
Wallach.
Tom Hwne . 2·.1, the fourth RE'ds
pitcher. worked two innings for the
v ictory, while John Franco pitchE'd
thf' ninth for his second saV&lt;'.
The Expos trailed 3-2 In the sixth
when Argems Salazar doubl&lt;'d off
Bill Scherrer, who had relievE'(]
BnJCP Beren~:i to start the inning

Middleport. Ohio

1\\' 1 Willi;rn~ r Rr , . la~n 1FII •. Huhll• 1H r .
lui Millt•J 1M &gt;

,'UI'IIl ' : \ - Col mn· r WI.t '.!'77

resulting in two television cameramen being ejected
from the game after they showed a replay In the Mets'
dugout. No television replays are aUowed In the
dugout during a game according to major league
baseball rules. ( AP Laserpholo).

Parker's blast sinks Expos

1: '· ~tl:lwn

Dll•rrnir . 1; U•mon. r lNrol! . '1: \1lN'I:l\
Torunln \. Owm ..Cit•.otll•· .1 S hf'l b\ . Ha l
timl n ·. 1: Shr'ridan . Kan~as Cit\ :1
H••MF. kl':'\S· !&lt;:im.,'lll;a/1 . ( lakl.llltl. II .
ftip km . Balrirrr~n •. 1n. I la•.h . ..,..,,tt l•·. '' ·
,\nna.~.
11u•;!m, 7: Ktll!&lt;-. n,w,tc" :
IJ'tnon, ] )('lm lt. &lt;: l'po.haw , T or .,nt''·&lt;.,"fl 11.1-::-. fu\.\;;f:S I ;:m·i.•. Turomo. I ~
I~ T ilM . ml 1·1,'\ d ,oml. \.1. lllllh•1
(1''' ' '
l.,nd . 1:1. l'•·trr-.. C llilonu.a. 1:!. llmcl· ·•

' lUI,

l'hrl,tdr· lphl .l •h:&lt;&gt;r-.rn. 1n :C l • rt 1/iJu'l••n

1£·\(;, •:

l lATll t\'1; ,(jt :11 h.l'' ' T r ,unnwll l)o •
lrnll . 101-1. lil•ll . Tr ~' •nto &gt; . .• &gt;! . C dt"t:lf·l
l~ · lrurl.
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K&lt;f1. ll.allrrnnn · .l-1:
HI ·:-.,-s R ap knr H.tl tHnnn• ~"l Tram
rndl I A·!!nll . ~- \\ hrt&lt;lk&lt;·r . Or-r rot!. 'j. ,
l " p-.h,r~&gt;. ·1om nlo. :.!.!. ~ ••n· Hrt:J ll'ilh '.!1
I{BI
K~ji;TTlafl. O;r k lanrl ..11. \1urTn.\
ll.•ll i mnn·. B. IJ•nJOtl. lJo.•lmll. :!l-1. Da1 i!.
'io.·&lt;J I11f' li . IK&lt;'inr'\"S, CaU f()rnW. ~4
HJ'IX 1;a rri::a. Toronl u. -11: T r ,l mml'll
[)j•rrou . .t.,. Ripkm. R.:J it irT'IOIT' ..u F'W•II
Tor ont o. '1!1: ~ - [),..lmit. '19: l'o ·r
ronl r . Sr&lt;J illf', .11.
OOUBI .E:'i Boom• C'a llforma . 10: 1\t&gt;ll
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1.,,.,.,,

I-I W~ ! Ofl : . i'h!l .!l~ ' lp tu.• I

S;,n F •• tnd,--o ,,1

.un:tm ,\ ."'i

1984

By IIER8CHEL NISSENSON

Southern dumps
Wildkittens, 29-5

~n'f

In; A nj..'l'IP!i;, ll
P ll\ 'ln NC 1~

1

St•atlk, 111

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MonHl'al.

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1 ·h u · ~· · ~ Mtiii,HJk( •• h !:1
lnmpl••tiOfi ••I 'U'p! 'lllli'l J.!, l nl&lt;

Tf'llol~

"'

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S;m Ol&lt;'ll'J. ll: S.u. l.()!; Ang.:&gt;ll'S. 22:
Sct!mldt . Phll&lt;tdf&gt;lphla . 'll: WIJG!IIIS, San
U iPj:lO . '/J
RBI · Canl'r. Moon'l'aJ , :0, Mar.&gt;nall.
l.o&gt; Ali)(t'lrs. ~- Schmid!. Philadt&gt;lphlil.
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t··ark(&gt;t' C incinnati, Jl, l {alnt~. M ont n•al.

ui,

Chicago White Sox win record 25-inning marathon, 7-6

The Baron's men's shop softball
team of Athens will hold a men's
and a women's slow-pitch softball
tournament on May 19 and 20 at the
West State street fields in Athens.
Entry fees for the A .S.A. sanctioned
tournaments will be $75. (Balls w111
be providE'd 1. Team trophies w111 be
awardE'd to the top four teams In··
each tournament. with j ackets
going to the first place teams and
! -shirts to the runners-up.
Trophies will also be awardE'd for
most home runs and most hits. For
fur\her Information contact Gene
Wise at 614-992-6224, Rick Ash at
992-5960 or Jerry Davenport 992732.1 ! Awards depend upon a
suffici ent number of teams entered ) Entry deadline Is May 16.

Clark, San Frllllttsco, .:till: MalOOI\ado.
La
Arllo!l'it"'i .YJ2: Wa.shlnglon. Ar lama .

~

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BAlTU'fG tOO a t b.at.s1. c . . ·ynn. San
01£'1':0. :tn ; Francona.. Mootreal. .J/5:

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~ ·. ,nlo · ~ -

Softball
tournament
announced

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�Page

6

The Daily Sentinel

Dodgers lose,
Padres in first
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AI' Sports Writer
It 's IJeen a home run famine for
Dave Parker this season, bu 1 h(•
finally feasted on a pitch from Bill
Gullickson.
"It's one of the few times in
baseball where you go to the plate
trying to hit a home run and it
happens," said Parker, whose first
blast of the season led th&lt;&gt;Cinclnnat i
Reds to a &amp;-4 victory· over th&lt;?
Montr&lt;&gt;al Expos Wednesday night
The two- run shot with two outs in
the eighth inning was Parker 's first
homC'r in a Rrds· uniform since he
hit onP on th&lt;' first d ay of spnng
training . In fact . Parker's tl'am·
mat('s had organizro a " home run
pool " to gtl&lt;'SS whm h&lt;&gt;would hit his
first 1his season .
" YPah , I knew th&lt;'Y had the pool."
said Parker. " It was all in fun. and
then som.- reponer in Cincinna ti put
it in the paper. I admit I wpnt up to
the plate trying to hit a hum(• tun . It
was that kind of situation - wl'rr
losing by one run with a man at first
base and two out."
E lsew here in the National
League, it was New York 3, Atlanta
1: Houston 7, Philadelphia I , San
Diego .1. St. Louis 2 and Chicago 7.
Los Angeles 0 Rain washed oul the
Pittsburgh-San Franc isco gam 0.
Gullickson, ().3, had yieldro onlY
onP hit since the first inning bt:'forr

Duane Walker singled with two out s
in the eighth . Parker then launchro
a towering ny beyond the right -field
fence in Olympic Stadium to gl\'c I hi'

Thunday, 1/Gy 10, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Rros a 54 lead .
The Reds added a run in the ninth
on a single by Cesar Cedeno and a
single by Eddie Milner and throwing
error by third baseman Tim
Wallach.
Tom Hume , 2-3. the fourth Reds
pitc he r, worked two innings for the
victory, while John Franco pitched
the ninth for his second save as the
hoi Rros won for the lOth Iinne in 11
games.
'' I don ' t car&lt;' how many home
runs he hit s, as long as hf" keeps

getting those lUlls, .. said Cincinnati
catcher Dann BilardeUo, mindful
that Parker leads the team wit h 20.
"That's why we got him over herehe conftibutes so much w ith his bat

a nd his lmd&lt;&gt;rship "
Mets 3, Braves t
In New York, Keith H&lt;&gt;rnandez
singled home the tie-breaking run in
thf•third inningandRonDarlingand
relievers combined On a
Sl'Vm -hitter a s the Met s ix'at
Atlanta to snap a three-gamP los ing
streak .
IWO

Thunday, May 10, 1984

Celtics flex muscles in 121-99 victory
By DAVE O'HARA
AI' SportsWriter
BOSTON iAPi-Thepoundingo!
bodies is accepted. Wayward el bows are a way of ll!e. Even a
bare-knuckle fight is excused .
The Boston Cellics and the New
York Knicks considerthelr National
BasketballAssoclationplayofflegal
aggression .
The Celtlcs flexed th&lt;'ir speed and
muscles early , withstood a New
York counterattack and went on to a
121-99 victory Wednesday night.
That moved the Celtics to within
one victory of laking the best -of·
seven series and advancing to the
Eastern Conference final against

New York and we're going to have to
jump on them early," Boston
forwand Cedric Maxwell said.
"We've got to tcy to take them out
early."
"All this means Is that the Celtlcs
held their home court advantage,"
said New York superstar Bemand
King. " Whenwearementallytough
and physically aggressive, we can
beat them. No one In this room Is
down. We'll see you back here
Sunday."
Tonight's playoff games have
Milwaukee at New Jersey and Utah
at Phoenix. The Suns and Bucks,
leading 3-2, can c linch their series
and advance totheconferenceflnals

Milwaukee or New Jersey.
However, with three victories on
their home court and two losses in
New York, the Celt ics aren 't
c laiming any series triumph over
the Knicks yet. They do have two
shot s, in New York Friday nig ht
a nd. if necessary, bark here Sunday
afternoon.
"The Knicks have played great in

with victories.
The Suns-Jazz winner will meet
Los Angeles, which completed a 4-1
second-roundvic toryoverDallason
Tuesday night .
Aller winning the first two games
at home, the Celtics were embar·
rassed In losing the next two in New
York. The Knicks took the c ue at
home from the Celtlcs: break on top

and hold on Ihe rest ot the way·
The Celtlcs did just that again In
the pivotal fifth game. Larry Bind
scored 10 of Boston 's first 14 points
and then Kevin McHale came In to
add his fabulous punch.
With Bird scoring 12 points and
McHale 7, theCeltlcs ra('ed toa32-20
first-period lead. They padded the
advantage to 6645 at halttlme,
McHale going to the dressing
roornm with 19 points and Bind with
14.
Boston stretched Its lead to as
much as 27 points, 74-47, early In the
second half, but New York literally
fought back. Boston's Danny Alnge
and New York's Darrell Walker

Tommy Sayre
Tommy Sayre, 50, 58 Lantana
Drive, BeBacy, F1a., fanner resident of the Harrisonville area, was
ldlled In an automobile accident at
Sanford, F1a ., Monday.
Born In Kanawha County, W. Va,
he was the son of Martha H. Sayre ,
DeBacy, F1a., and the late Carl
Sayre. He was an anny veteran of
the Korean War, and fanner owner
and opera lor of the Sohio Service
Station at HarrtsonvWe. An Iron
worker by trade, he was a member
of the Iron Workers Union in
Orlando, Fla., Local Wl, and was
afflllated with Sanford Masonic
Lodge.
Besides his mother, he is survived
by his wife, Halcie Clark Sayre, a
brother, Joe Sayre, Rutland, and a
sister, Kitty Can terberry, Rocka .
way, Mo.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at the Hughes
Funeral Home in Athens with the
Rev. Everett C. Isaacs officiating.
Burial wlll be at Wells Cemetery,
Downington. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 10 a.m.
Frldayuntil the llmeof theservices.

r~w;ere~e;j;ec;ted;;;fo:r~!l~g~ht~ing;:w~i~th~50~~pe:;r~lod~w~it~h~!!v~e~f:ou:!s:.==:::.

r;;::;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-i

WVE

Da rling , 3-2, pitched six innings
and a llowed five hit s, struck out four
and wa lked four floug Sisk and
.Jess&lt;&gt; Orosco combined to pitch
two hit balllhP rest of the wa)·. with
Orosco picking up his sixth save.
Atlant a's Rick Mohler. 01. in his
firs t stan of the S('ason aft&lt;'r nine
relief appearances, la sted o 1-3
innings . and allowed eight of the
Mct s' 10 hits. He struck out one and
walked threP.

James N. Neutzling

TIMEX

WATCHES

F uneral services for James
Norman Neutzling, 43, Middlepol1,
who was killed in a construction
accident Tuesday in Aiken, South
Carolina will be held Sa turd ay a t 2
p.m . at the Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home with the Rev. Wanda
Johnson officiating. Bulial will be in
Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call a t the fune r a l
home Friday from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Mr. Neutzling was born in

Receive this as a
Free Gifl with Any
Krementz Purchase.

CARPET FOR LESS
DIRECT MILL BUYING AND LOW OVERHEAD
COMBINE TO GIVE LOW PRICES . WE ALSO
HAVE EXPERT INSTALLATION AND ONE OF
THE LARGEST SELECTIONS OF CARPET IN
THE AREA . CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTI MATES , IT COULD SAVE YOU HUNDREDS OF
DOLLARS .

ODDS &amp; ENDS
CARPET SHOP

Page-7-

Village mayors end several court cases

Area death

third
rkxl
sroJnds lett in the ton:troni
which ended with 8os
88-76·
t the deficit toSS-ffi
The Knlcks cu
1
00 but
early In the fourth peri ·
ranou
of gas. Several CeltlCS were hln~oul
trouble, but they had too muc
wn
the stretch.
. 26
ints
Bind wound up With
po
•
along with 10 rebounds and nine
assists, while McHale finished with
22 points and eight rebounds.
,
That more Ihan offset Kings
production. The New York ace, held
to nine points in the first half, had 14
in the lhind period and ~ for the
game. He sat down late m the fourth

The Daily Sentinel

!lomerDy Middleport, Ohio

Middleport on January 28, 1941 to
Thea Nonnan Neuzllng who dled In
1967 and VIrginia Cia!worthy Buch·
anan of Middleport.
He was a construction worker,
fanner member of the Ohio
National Guand, member o!
Carpenters Local 650, former
member of Pomeroy VIllage Coun·
ell and Pomeroy Fire Department
and Emergency Squad.
In addition to his father, he was
preceded in death by his grandpare nt s, James and Margaret
Clatworthy.
Survivors Include his wife, Janice
Neutzllng; one daughter, Patricia
Lynn Neutzling, Middleport; his
mother. Virginia Clatworthy Bucha nan, Middleport ; step-father ,
James B uchanan, Middleport; one
brother, William Neutzllng, Chesler: one sister, Sue Ann Johnson,
Mason; two step-sisters, Nancy
Tatocsi, Springfield: Lynn Kltchen ,
Mason; severa l aunts, uncles ,
nteces and nephews.

a

Speakers chosen for
Tuppers Plains group
Tuppers Plains E le m entary
Boosters will meet Monday, May14,
at 7: :&gt;n p.m . at the schooL
Guest speakers will be Cindy
Pitzer, reading teacher and Wendy
Haller, math teacher. They wlll
explain the booklets made for youth
for the summe~ .
Baby sitting will be provided and
refreshments will be served.
New officers of the associat ion are
JoAnn Calloway, president , JoAnn
Francis, vice presldenl, Marsha
Guess, secretary, a nd Nancy
Roush, treasurer.

Ricky Abies, POmeroy, was fined
$213 on a charge of petty theft
resulting !rom a break-In at the
Meigs Inn overnight MoOOlly when
he appeared In the rourto!Porneroy
Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday
night.
Also fined in the court was Mark
Hawk, Belpre, $138 and costs on a
charge of delinquent parking

tickets.
Forfeiting bonds on speeding
charges were Kathleen Allen,
Newark, $29; Steven Taylor, Pomeroy, $45; Okey Laudermllt, Racine,
$45; Rhonda Phelps, Pomeroy, $1i0;
Donald Lambert, Galax, Va ., $45,
and Charbtte Clutcheon, Marietta,
$46. Jesse WW, Route 2, Pomeroy ,
forfeited a $163 bond on a charge of

reckless operation.

Eight persons were fined and
elgbt others forfeited bonds In the
court of Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday nlgbt.
Fined $425 and costs and sentenced to three days In jail on a
charge ot driving while Intoxicated
was Steven C. Taylor, Pomeroy .
TonyJackson,Langsvllle,wasfined
$100 and costs on a petty theft
charge, whill' Dewayne Qualls was
fined $25 and costs on two counts,
in. Legar commented that Lauder· disorderly manner and defrauding

Fire damages placed at $2,500
Charles Legar, Pomeroy Fire
Chief, reported that losses to the
Bllly Joe Mitchum property, WyUis
Hill, Pomeroy, totaled $2,500.
Legar stated that Mitchum had
just recenlly moved from the
property and Eddie Laudemillt
rented the propertyandwasmaking
repairs to the home before moving

r-;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;======:;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;1'

milt built a lire In the grate which
caused the two and oll!'-half story I
hometocatchonfireandbumdown.
Pomeroy Firemen had to go by
the way of Pleasant Ridge to get to
the property. The house burned to
the ground before the !Ire depart·
ment with one pumper truck
arrived.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND tAP ) The
winning number drawn Wednesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's daily
game. "The Number," was !O:l.
In the " Pick 4" game, played
Monday through Friday, the win·
ning number was 7712.

an Innkeeper.
•
Also fined were Valerie Proffitt:
Middleport, $25 and costs on a
dlsonderly manner charge; Gregory Tyree, Middleport , $50 and
costs, reckless opera tion, and $10
and costs. no operator 's license:
Franklin Robinson, Pomeroy, $1b
and costs speeding; Vincent Stone,
Middleport, $17 and costs, speeding
Ricky McClellan , Middleport, was
senten('ed to five days in jail on an
assault charge and another five
days in jail on a c harge of
destruction of property .

SENIOR CITIZENS
YOUR DAY IS TUESDAY, MAY 15
CALL BEFORE SATURDAY
5 P.M. TO SEE HOW YOU CAN GET

FREE PORTRAITS

Meets Wednesday
The Meigs County Fire Associa·
lion will meet Wednesday, May 16,
at 7: ~p. m. at the Salem Township
Fire Station at Salem Center.

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
446-7494

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
I

3~!1!~~~-!v

x~

Middleport

N. 2n d Ave.
Ph. 992-6669

BOB'S MARKET AND GREENHOUSES
11

1N THE BEND AREA"

Business Route 7, Middleport, Ohio

Stock No.

992-6173

4830

Hours: 10 A.M. to 5 P.M.

MOTHER'S DAY MAY 13TH

Free
•
Family Portrait
For Mom
From Ponderosa
on Mother's Day.

FLOWERS AND PLANTS TELL MOM YOU CARE ABOUT
HER. FOR ALL THE THINGS SHE IS TO YOU, FOR ALL
THE THINGS SHE'S DONE, GIVE HER A SPECIAL PLANT
OR BOUQUET.

~~H~A~N~G~IN~G~B~A-S~K-E_T_S__
NEW GUINEA HYBRID IMPATIENS,
BOSTON FERNS, BEGONIAS, IVY
GERANIUMS AND MANY OTHERS.
PORCH BOXES AND COMBINATION POTS
A MINI GARDEN OF SUMMER FLOWERS
FOR PORCH OR PATIO.

FOR THE LADY OF THE HOME
HUGE SELECTION OF BEDDING
FLOWERS AND PLANTS INCLUDING
THE SHADE LOVERS, BEGONIAS AND
IMPATIENS
POTTING SOIL &amp; PINE

B~RK

SPECIALS

SALE THRU SUNDAY MAY IJONLY

EE8

JOcolor

Get a certificate for a ~~~dero:G

,,milll poMrtr;,";':,::O';aphll studios.
5
.,,.dOlan
$30.00 vGlue.
ill receive a certificat~.
Mother 's Day. ev~r~ mom w n Mills Studio. Addr·

~:~~~~~
~~\::~~~'!!i~!~~:~~
~~~~~r:n7i~~e:o
prices. However. y
free photo per {amr y.

one setting pe~ phZ\~~o;~h other Olan Mills, ortd~d
be used in cort)Un
otions Frame not me u ·
derosa discounts or,.prom h Ju~r 16, 1984.
cwrtlfl~le ,.lid t roug

UPPER RIVER ROAD
(Across from the Airport

REG.
40 lb . Potting..... .. ................. ~3.5 0
40 lb . Top Soil... ..... ........ ..... . ~3.25
40 lb . Organic Peat ...............5 3.25
40 lb . Planting Mix .............. ~3.5 0
40 lb. Cow or Sheep Manure 5 3.50
3 cu. ft . Pine Nuggets ............s3. 79
3 cu.ft. Mini Nuggets............ s3.49
H~rdwood Mulch ................. s3.39
Pme Mulch ........................ . s3. 59

SALE
'2.98
'2.98
'2.98
'2.98
'2.98
'2.98
'2.98
~2.98

'2.98

sPECIAL BoNus - MIX oR MATcH
ANYOFABOVE - SAVEANOTHER 25cPERBAG

• VEGETABLE PLANTS • FRUIT TREES
• BULK GARDEN SEEDS
Can Be Purchased With Food Stamps

WORD OF FAITH CHURCH
93 Mill Street
Middleport. Ohio 45760

* fl1 t' nmallllY r• rl t' •In• • rol Pu b!.,- I fl t' 'll , ._, u he b.-rame God 1 P·r~ O'l Ga nq

POTTED PLA
•Mums •Geraniums •Impatiens
Daisies •Hardy Azaleas
•Caladiums And Others

SELECTION OF

WOMEN'S SHOES....

I: 1~ Ponderosa. Inc

5° 0
PRICE

l

SELECTION OF WOMEN'S

CANVAS ................... V2 PRICE

TOMATO PLANT SALE
(THIS SELECTION ONLY)

GROUP OF MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

• BETTER BOY • BIG BOY • SUPERSONIC
6 Large Plants/Pack Reg. $1.50 Sale 98'

NIKE, CONVEPSE, JOX

30°/o
Off
--·- -u - --

Sale Good While Supplies Last

BULK GARDEN SEEDS

The Bob &amp; CoreNI Bamltz F•mlly and employ- would like to wllh rou • Heppy Dlly •nd upr"' their
feelings !hat veget•bl" can nourl1h your llody,llut flowers can nourllll fiNIIOUII

EVIItr DAY· IS OPIN HOUSE AT 101 'S MARKET

VB, auto lrans. ps,

•'

.
•
•

.'•'

~ -----

.--.. --.- -

--

_.

----

c~=n

\: ~htrita:gt houst i;
I

I SHoE PLACE)
1

I

••

NOW

5495

JOXAND
$500
KID POWER ....... .

OPEN UNTIL 7 P.M. FRIDAY

1979 JEEP JlO

Stock No. 48111
4 wh drive, 4 cyl eng , S sp, ps.

112 ton pickup. 6 cyl. stand . trans,

48231

pb, long wide bed, heavy duty
shocks, heavy duty springs, rear
step ~umper, tint. glass. am
radio, green 1!. white .
1

BOYS SIZE 3 TO 6

Off Regular Price As Marked

VERY GOOD SELECTION .Ol BEANS, CORN, PEAS,
SMALL SEEDS AND MORE!

Stock No.

:v. ton pickup,

'4995

gauges, fact. air, am--fm stereo,

rwl, bucket seats.
WAS

'6495

NOW

'5995

4895

1

Stock No.

Stock No.

47111

ps, pb, tong wide bed. rear step
bumper, am radio.
WAS
NOW

'2495

'2995

Stock No. JT7701
'I' ton pickup, 6 cyl, auto trans,
ps. pb. long wide bed, gauges,
rear step bumper, fa ct air, tlnl.
glass, am , wsw .
WAS
1

5995

Stock No.

seats.
WAS

45971

ps, long wide bed. gauges, am

radio.

'3995

NOW

'5995

'4995

1980 FORD FlOO

V'l ton pickup, V8, stand . trans,

WAS

48171

VB , auto. trans, ps, pb , tint. glass ,
am -fm , rwl. wheel covers , bucket

f979 FORD F100

1
RAM CHARGER
Stock No. 47581
4 wheel drive, VB eng, auto trans •
ps, pb, am-fm, wheel covers.
bucket seats.
WAS
NOW

1979 FORD BRONCO

1980 DATSUN

1979 FORD TRUCK

WAS

••

pQNDEt\OSA

$

WOMEN'S SANDALS .... 1/2

"VAUGHAN$ INSTANT GLAMOUR"
POTTED ROSES

'loo

45

SELECTION OF

WEEK-END SPECIAL
ONLY!

$7620°0

COMPARABLE DEALS ON ALL NEW FORD TRUCKS
DURING "WHEELIN DEALIN DAYS!"
OVER
IN STOCK!
GOOD SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM!

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

14 VARIETIES OF TOMATO PLANTS
FEATURING SUPERSONIC, BETTER BOY,
BIG BOY HYBRIDS, SWEET PEPPERS,
HOT PEPPERS, CABBAGE, HEAD LETTUCE
CAULIFLOWER, BROCCOLI, CELERY,
EGG PLANT, CUCUMBERS
AND OTHERS.
'

NOW

mirrors, rust proofing.

SIDEWALK
SALE/'

FOR THE HOME GARDNER

1984 FORD RANGER

114 wheel base, 4 cyl. engine, 5 speed trans.,
power steering, long wide bed, rear step bumper,

NOW

'3595

Stock No. 40542
1J1 ton pickup. 6 cyl. .

~ tand .

trans,

ps, pb . long wide bed , gauges,
rear step bumper , am . blue .

WAS

'4995

NOW

'4595

�Thu.-y, May 10, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

VMH plays key role in Multiphasic
Health Screening Clinic set in June
'

Veterans Memorial Hospital, Its
nursing staff and laboratory technicllins, will play a key role In Meigs
County's Multiphasic Health
Screening Clinic to be held at the
Meigs Multipurpose Building, June
4-8.
Using volunteer health professionals, the clinic will screen a
ma.JQmwn of500Melgs Countlans. It
Is being coordinated by Eleanor
Thomas. director of the Senior
Cltziens Center program, Debbie
Hauber, R. N. and Noreen On·
drusko. P . A.
Many hospital employes, includ·
ing registered and practical nurses
and nurses aides and laboratory
technicians, will work on a volunteer
basis on their off-duty hours In the
screening program. Assisting 1.1.1th
some of the paper work and as
guldPS will be the Candystripers of
Veterans.
The hospital will coopera te by

'

providing the laboratory facilities

PlANNING SESSION - Scott Lucas, admlnl..trator of Veterans Memorial Hospital, and his volunteer
chalnnen fortheMeigsMultlphasicHealthScreening
Clinic, Teresa CoDIM, R. N., dlrecror of nurses. and
scrvic&lt;• chainnan for the Cancer Society. seated:

KanJn Clark, standing left, laboratory technician, and
Rhonda Dalley, R.N., hospital lnservice director,
review plans for the hospital's role In the health
program for Meigs Countlans, June 4-8.

Happenings around Meigs County..
Publil' dinner set

Mei= boosters call meeting for Goodnite

Then' wiU be a public dinner
Friday from 4 p.m . to 6 p.m. at the
Senior Cit izcns Center, Pomeroy.
Menu includes spag hetti or
chickm and hompmade noodlPS,
roll , salad and beverage for $2.
There will bean extra charge for pie.

The Meigs Local School District
Band Boosters have called a pubUc ,..
support meeting for Marilyn Good ·
nile, band director, at the Rock
Springs &lt;;;range Hall, Monday at 8
p.m. Organizational and urtion
reprPSentaJives as well as lndividu·
a is arP asked to be present for the
session at which time plans will b&lt;'
made to send a delegation to the
Meigs Local School District Board
of Education meeting on Tuesday
evening. The board fired Ms.
Goodnight with a 3-2 vote at its last
r0gu \ar meeting and protests have

.,~

cake and ice cream.

Following the dinner round and
square dancing will be held from 7
p.m . to 10 p.m . with music by the
StringdustC'rs. The dinnPr
dancf• a1v open to thE' publir .

and

Basehall association
sta~es parade, sale
A pamcle will hP held in Syracuse.
Sa turdav sponsored by the
Syracuse -Minersville Ba se ball
Association

The pa rad&lt;' will be made up of
members of the various baseball
teams. Those pat1icipating may
dc~·orate the VPhicle they rid&lt;' if thPy
1.1.ish.
The pam de w ill lim• up al Larry' s
on Dusky Sttwl all p.m . and travel
up rivPr to lhP park. Following the
parade a yard sa lPwill be held a t the
concession stand at thepark.lncase
of r ain . the y ard sale• will not beheld
Childn'n wistting to participate in
the paradP a n• asked toca119\l'l-581X.

Saturday danl't' set

for blood work and other body
function tests as well as the needed
suppl!PS on an "at cost" basis.
The blood work will Include tests
In 25 different areas to detect such
problems as kidney and liver
disfunction , cholPSterol levels, anemia, and potential diabetes and
heart problems. Urinalysis will be
done on each patient as well as
hemoccult slides provided by the
Meigs County unit of the American
Cancer Society.
It was explained by Mrs. Thomas
that the slide Is a technique for
detecting colo-rectal cancer and wUI
be taken home by the clinic
participants, and then returned to
the clinic lor reading.
Pap tests and breast examina tions will not be offered through the
screening program although per·
sonnel of the Cancer Society wtll be
on hand to make appointments for
these at the clinics ofiPre&lt;'l regularly

Partly cloudy tonight. Low 50-55.
SouthwPSterly winds 10-W mph .
Friday, mostly sunny. High 75-ffi.
Chance of rain W percent tonight
and 10 percent Friday.

Satu.!~~g~~n:.:y:
Chan~'t!ofshowerslatcSaturday.
Showers and thunderstonns Sunday.FairandcoolerMonday.High.s

Emergency room personnel wUI
be on standby during the week for
any health situation of an emergency nature arJslng during the
clinic program.
Other professional personnel volunteering services in the program
will include dentists, dental hygenlsts, podiatrists, and optometriSts,
and e merg e ncy medical
technicians.
All examinations will be handled
by appointment through the Senior
Citizens Center, ~2 -2161. Meigs
Countians of any age may participate and lor those with a monthly
income under $447 for one person or
$590 for a couple, there will be no
charge. For those with a n income
above those figures, there will be a
charge ol$17.
Emphasis of the screening clinic
is early detection aimed at controling and correcting chronic dlseasPS.

CORBECliON
Wednesday's Ad Should Have Read:

ANY 2 LITER POP ....... ,............... , 69¢
ONE WITH PURCHASE OF
ANY 2 PACKS OF CHEESE

C K SUPERMARKET
•

•

By The Bend

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

~co~n:t:in~ued~s~in~c~eth~a~t~tlm~e·~---~65-~75~-~Lo~w:s~4~i&gt;-:55~.----~-r~::::::::::::::::~~::~~~::~~~~~~~

-Page 9

Rutland garden club conducts recent meeting~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~----iiiiiii!j!iiiiiiiiiiiiii---.
ca~~tri=ns !e:"e~~u!ei
arrangements were completed to
fill the park planters with flowers
and make plantings at MUes
O!meterywhentheRutlandGarden
Club met Monday at the home of
Mrs. Marvin Wllson.
The club will send monetary gifts
to Wahkeena, VIctor Rles F'und, the
Horticulture ScholarOhio
hi State
d
s p, an the Public Beautlflcatlon
Project fund .
Mrs . Harvey
Erlewlne reported that the ctvlc
commJtteewillhandletheplantlngs
for the club. At the request of the
Rutland
Alumni Association, the
1b
c u agreed to purchase 28 geraniurns to be used on the banquet
tables.
During the month, arrangements
were made for other groups by Mrs.
James Nicholson, Mrs. Roy
Snowden, Mrs. Margaret Ella
Lewis, Mrs. Han;ey Erlewlne, Mrs.
Carl Denison, Mrs. Eva Robson,
Mrs ErnPSt Ward, Mrs. Virgil
Atkins, and Miss Diehl.
A tour oft he Will garden planned
forearllerthisrnonthwascancelled

Happenings
Car wash and
bake sale set
POMEROY - The Southern
Band Boosters will sponsor two
car washPS and one bake sa le
Saturday, May 12. One car wash
will be held at Eb&lt;'r's Gull in
Racine and the other at

Funds distributed

Special sessron

Meigs Junior High School all
spon s banquet will b&lt;' held this
~vening at6: ~p.m . in thecafeiPrla
at the high schoolforteammembers
and their families Persons to bring
two dishes. salad. vegetable or
dessert

Sta te Auditor Thomas E. Fergu·
son reported the May distribution of
$41.536.~.37 in local gowrnment
fund money to all counties and to462
cilles and villages levying local
Income taxes. Meigs County's share
of the Iota! was $58,439.79.

POMEROY - Easlern Local
Board of Education w ill meet in
special session Tuesday, May 15,
at 6 p.m. in regard to building
programs. school calendar and
senior graduates.

Wyllfs HID where an unoccupied
aged home burned; Middleport at
7: 33 p.m . took Diana Clay, Cookgap
HID to Veterans Memorial and
Pomeroy at 10; 18 p.m. took Judy
Gloeckner from Meigs Inn to
Veterans Memorial.
At 12: 51 p.m. Tuesday, Racine
took Clyde Tucker to Veterans
Memorial and Tuppers Plains at
2: 33 a.m. took WWie Grueser,
Tuppers Plains to Holzer Medical .
Center.

9 AM
·

••••

10 A •M •

• -

v

~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~

REMEMBER

MOTHER'S
DAY

POMEROY - The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter bf Beta
Sigma Phi Sororlly will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m . at the
Riverboat Room. Diamonds
Savings and Loan . New officprs
will be install!'d.

Plan !Spring hanquet

Nine calls were answered by local
units Tuesday and Wednesday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reports.
Mlddleport at 6: 17 a.m. Wednes·
day took Lucllle Casto to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and at 6:08a.m .
took Harry Stover to Veterans
Memorial. Racine at 12: 51 a.m. took
Clyde Tucker to Veterans Memor.
tal. Pomeroy at 3 p.m. took Mark
Campbell from Meigs High School
to Veterans Memorial and at 3:49
p.m . responded to a fire call on

A Voyage Through
Beatles' Magic
Every Monday

SUNDAY, MAY 13th

DUSTERS

$}J99
Reg. $18.00

RINGS
$]99
-

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Brownie Troop 1254 will
be having bridging ceremoniPS
Friday at 7 p.m . at the Middleport Masortic Temple.

Evenl cancelled

"'
Emergency
squads kept busy

,. ...

FRIDAY

Tuesday Admissions--Lawrence
Diddle. Syracuse; Allie Gonzalez.
Lowell , Mass. : Thelma Grueser.
Pomeroy .
Tuesday Discharges--Elmer
Pickens. Robert Ball. Glada Davis,
Nancy Watson. Russell Barton,
Gwinnie White. Edna McKinney,
Bertha Zamorano.
Wednesday Admissions .. JamPS
Bychanan, Middleport; Clyde
Tucker. Racine; Hilda Frederick.
Racine.
Wednesday Dlscharges .. Lovey
Watson. Homer Bradshaw, Edgar
Kidwell, James Buchanan.

Pomeroy. for assured clear distance in a collision with an Eastern
Local School District bus on Ohio 7
earlier Wednesday.
Moon was reportedly northbound
at 3 p.m. when he was unable to stop
In time and struck thP IJ.Js, driven by
Flossie M. Dill, 50, Rt. 1, Long
Bottom. Dill had stopped the bus at
the Intersection with ChPSter Township Road 425 to discharge students .
Moon's vehicle was slightly
damaged In the accident, the patrol
sald .

Ringo's y elloUI Submarine

THURSDAY

S(?n.'C'&lt;J

A Rutland woman was treated
and relPased from Veterans MPm·
ortal Hospital following a twO·
vehicle accident Wednesday.
Diane L. Clay, 'll. was westbound
on Ohio 124 at 7:20 p.m . when an
unknown westbound vehicle struck
her car In therearandfledthescene.
The accident caused sligh t dam·
age, said theGallla-Melgspost of the
state highway patrol.
Clay was taken to Veterans by the
MetgsEMS.
The patrol cited Lyle V. Moon. 21,

ErnPSt Covert, regional director,
concerningspringregionalmeetlng
on May 17 at the Arts Center in
Mar!Ptta . Morning session will
begin at 9: ~with clinics at 11 a.m.
and the afternoon session at 1:15
p.m. Lunch will be at noon at
Gllmans Student Center. Cost Is
$6.50 lor the day, $4for theaftenroon.
Reservations are to be made with
Mr s. w. p . .Sa·"
..ers, Bel pre, belore
Saturday. Memb&lt;'rs were asked to
take items for the sale tables .
Members named their favorite
tre&lt;&gt;forrollcall. The traveling prize
went to Mrs. Erlewlne and the
ho stess 'It to Mrs. '~IS
-· · . M rs.
Wllson introduced Mrs. Snowden·
who gave a review on planting and
caring for tre&lt;&gt;s and shrubs from
Burpee's Nursery Guide. Mrs.
Turner conducted an Arbor Day
quiz on trees, and Mrs. Robson
displayed insecticides furnished by
MGM Farm City Inc .. Pomeroy. A
daffodil arrangement centered the
refrPShment table. A reading,
"Daily Prayers Dissolve Your
Cares" by Mrs. Nicholson, c losed
the meeting .

BRADFORD Bradford
Church of Chris\ will have a
m other -daughter banquet at the
church Friday, 6 p.m. Ruth
Seevers will speak on "Purity"
and there will be skit and
inspira ti on a ! readings . All
women are invited to attend.

Veterans Memorial

Rutland woman hurt
in two-vehicle wreck

Trinity Church. Mrs . Joe Bolin
reported on the county fair flower
shows and assigned Rutland Club to
have charge of educational and
special displays.
Mrs . Robson, Mrs. Ernest Ward,
Mrs. Diehl, Mrs. Eugene Atkins,
Miss Diehl, Mrs. Snowden and Mrs.
Denison enjoyed the open meeting
of Shade Valley Club where Mrs.
Madhu Maholtra, a native of India.
was speaker.
A report on the regional board
meeting was given by Mrs. Virgil
Atkins, who noted that the next
meetlngwtll be0ct.15precedingthe
fallre""'nalmeetingon0ct.l7
at the
.,.~
Hermann Fine Arts Center, Marletta. New handbooks are now
available at $3.50, she said.
Mrs. Margaret Ella I..ewis, Mrs.
Robson and Mrs. Ward participated
in the Open Gate Garden Club's
flower show at Rio Grande, April
28-29 and won 13 ribbons. An
Invitation was read from the DainPS
Arboretum lor Ohio Garden Club
members to attend the Ohio Regal
Bonsai Show, June 9-lOal N!"wark .
A letter was read from Mrs .

Calendar

ThP me&lt;&gt;llng of lhP Rut land Row
Hunters scheduled for Saturday has
been cancell!'d . HowcvPr,therewUI
be a bow shoot Tuesday, May 15,
sponsored by Rutland Bow Hunters.
A meeting will be held following the
shoot .

Salurdav b&lt;-ginmng at 8::10 p.m.
Dances will inc lude c logg-~ng, coun·
try rock. square and rock. Music by
Circle D . Wrangles . Rl'&lt;ICarrwill be
the r ailer . RefrPshmenls will tX'

due to weather damage. Mrs.
Denison, Mrs. Erlewlne, and Mrs.
Canaday, nominating corrunlttee
members, will report on new
officers at the May 22 meeting to be
held at the home of Mrs. Albert
Woodard with a lawn tour at 7 p.m.
and a plant exchange during the
evening .
Mrs. Nicholson, prPSident, condueled the meeting with Mrs .
Wilson giving devotions from the
65th Psalm, a poem and prayer. 11
was noted that Mrs . Eugene Atkins
Is Ill, and that Mrs . Paul Wlnn Is
recuperating from illnPSs.
Mrs . Roy Snowden reported that9
members had attended the county
garden club meeting April 23 at
Trinity Church. Miss Diehl had
devotions, and plans for permanent
landscaping at the Carleton School
were made with each garden club
member to contribute $1 to the
project. The Rutland Club was
assigned the month of February to
provideGreenThurnbNotPSforThe
Daily Sentinel.
The Rutland Club will host the
nex t county meeting on Oct. 15 at

POMEROY- Southern Band
Boosers will mePI Thursday at
7:30p.m. in the band room.

There will bc a va riety dance at
thr fulcinf&gt; AmC'rican Lt'gion Hall

Thursday, May 10, 1984

to the public.

r,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;~~;:~~~~~:.;

Weather forecast

The Daily Sentinel

Automatic Transmission acros..loi

from Save More on West Main
St!'€'E't in Pomeroy. The bake
sale will be held at Racine
National Rank . Th&lt;' car washes
will begin at9a .m . and bakes a le
at 8 a.m.

6 PIECE COLONIAL

4 PIECE OAK

LIVING 1ROOM SUITE

BEDROOM SUITE

$488

$699

SOFA LOVESEA T
CHAIR

$399 95
1 PC. SOLID PINE

DINING ROOM SUITE

$588
HEATER VIBRATOR

EX

HOURS

Monday-Friday 10 to 8
Saturday 10 to 5

SUNDAY 1 to 6

FLEXSTEEL

SLEEPERS

OCCASIONAL

CHAIRS

$79
OAK DINETTE

RECLINER

EXTENSION TABLE, 4 CHAIRS

$188

$238

----- _.. .

BLOUSES
"Selective Group"

CHO&gt;EN FOR HONOR SOCIEI'Y - Usa Ashley,
a jwtlor, was tapped for the 1\lelgs iligh School
Chapter of the National Honor Society In ceremonies
held Sunday alremoon at the high school. The
daughler of Mr. Md Mrs. Mike Smith, Middleport,
and Mr. and Mrs. David A..~hley, Belpre, Ms. Ashley,

center, Is pictured with Mrs. Jeanne Taylor, society
advisor, and Chris Burdette, this year's Meigs
Chapter president. .o\lso scheduled for tapping but
tmable to be present due to illness was Alison Tromm,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alhert C. Trorrun, Rutland .

Community Build~rs make plans to plant
Plans lor planting fl owers around
the marker at the Belleville Locks
and Dam Park were made when the
Community Builders Club mel
recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Roy Hannum.
1\llrs. Grace Web&lt;'r reported on

Banguet set
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Presbyteran Church will
hold its annual mother-daughter
banquet on Wednesday at 6: lJ
p.m. at the church fellowship
hall. The meat and dessert wlll be
provided. Those attending are
asked to take a cooked vegetable
or a salad dish. All women and
friends of the church are Invited
to attend.

Syracuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-5776
NOW OPEN

FOR SPRING SEASON

Complete line of vecetable &amp;

Reg. '20.00 .

•

tnza

"FREE
GlFT
"RAPPING'

Osborne. Mr. and Mrs. Har liss
Frank. Mr. and Mrs . Llovrl Balderson. Next mi'Piing will be with Mr.
and Mrs . Frank.

Lav -A-Way

to 6:00
Friday 9:30 to 8:00
Saturday 9:00 to 6:00

Mon. ·Thurs. 9 30

STORE
HOURS:

GIFT
MAY

ALL

LADIES' NECKLACES
NOW 20o/oOFF
14K, GOLD FILLED.
STERLING

THANKS TO OUR MANY
CUSTOMERS, OUR MOVE AND
GRAND OPENING WAS A
TREMENDOUS SUCCESS!!

FREE-FREE-FREE

FRESH ROSE
WITH EVERY
PURCHASE OF
OR MORE

S25° 0

&amp;RUBY

BOYS' 100% COTTON

WAS $169.95

$36995

NON-WASHED LEE JEANS
$799 - $1299

SAVE

T

GREAT FOR MOM
NOW

BASIC DENIM JEANS
$1699
In The Middleport Masonic Temple

ALL 18K GOLD. STERLING
GOLD FILLED

ALL

SAVE •40.00

ALL MOUNTS AVAILABLE YELLOW OR WHITE
FREE SIZING

...., '429.95

S7995

LADIES' LEE &amp; CHIC

Open Deily 9 to 8 ·
Sun. 1 to S

PIERCED EARRINGS
NOW 200/QOFF

$129 95

NOW

ONLY

DIAMOND

DAN'S DEPARTMENT STORE

ALL

. -..... 14 K GOLD MOUNTING

MANY ITEMS ARE SPECIALLY PRICED

flowerin1 plants, shrubbery, fruit
trees, Azaleas, Rhododendron,
House Plants • 4" to 10".
Foliap &amp; Bloominc Baskets

13th

DIAMOND AND BIRTHSTONE

MEN'S ......................... $12 99
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

$}499

Use Our Convenient

funds colleeted for the community
flower fund. Roy Hannum presided
at the meeting. Refreshment were
scrv!'d to Mr. a nd Mr . Denwr
Weix'r. Mr . and Mrs . Warren
Pickens. Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Myers. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald

Trustees to meet
COLUMBIA 1WP - The
board of trustees of Columbia
Township will meet in special
session Saturday, May 12, a t 8
a.m. at the fire slat ion.

Reg. '20.00
To '40 00

GIFT-

DIAMOND
NECKLACES

25°/o
OFF

BUlOVA WATCHES
FOR LADIES

NOW

20%

OFF
..

j '

~-

SOLITAIRES
ALL

7 DIAMOND CLUSTERS
YEllOW 01 WHm 80lD

FlEE DIAIOIID FLOATIIIG
HEART WITH PURCHASE

,,

Pomeroy,

•

20o/o

OFF

DOZENS OF STYLES
IN YELLOW AND WHITE

�10--- The Daily Sentinel

Page

Thursday, Nay 10, 1-n4

Pante~ot-Middleport, Ohio

Mlddleport American Legion hall.

take

~
FLORIST

place In June at Ashland

College. Also present was Mrs.
Helen Hampson, the Eighth District

The tea was hosted by the
Aux!Uary of Feeney-Bennett Post
128. Louise Stewart, Racine, and
Lorraine Snyder, Lancaster, gave
instruction on Girls State which wtU

American
president.

Legion

PH. 992-2644

Auxiliary

352 E. Mllln. Pomeroy

O'DELL LUMBE

Gary Lee Cooper

Sara Jean Craig

Art show
•'

Craig birthday

wtnners
announced

I:Q,hCade.C·

First place winners of thP Meigs
County Head Start program art
·. show. sponsored by the Meigs Head
: Start staff and the Meigs Head Start
•: Parent Commit!£'\' were James
:. Riffle, Henry Travis Thomas and
•: Gary Lee Cooper.
: James was the winner in the age
• three group, Henry the winner in the
age four group and Gary in the age
five group.
James is the son of James and
. Vicky Riffle, Racine, Henry the son
· of Carl and Maxine Thomas, Long
·: Bottom and Gary the son of Gary
: and Marilyn Cooper, Portland.
: · Head Start classes are held In the

auxiliary room at H.acine Fire
· Station and will serve 102 children

1

'

. this fall.
: Applications for enrollment next
:- tall are presently being accepted
:and persons may ca ll the Woodland

GARDEN TRACTOR
. _ _, __ _ Fully

en::lo~d

eng1nt' for CJ-IIt't

o~r atiQn _Sohd 5tate ICJlltiOn

:::-

...;;:::----

for eaSier, sure stam
every mne Full length
steel frame, heavy-duty
~am

and p1vot1ng
fronr: axle Eleanc, troll(
posJt:K&gt;ned PTO clutch

e-asy use ol attact"lme'nu.

MODEL 582
Geat Dnve 16 H P -

' Speed TransmiSSion

$3599

Center office, located in the Senior
Ci t izens Building, Pomeroy, at
992-2192. Janet Koblentz is coordinator for Meigs County.
Art work done by the children is on
display in the lobby at Woodland
Center.
Judges oft he contest were Erman
Yoho. Gladys Brothers and Betty
Weyersmiller. Each youngster that
participated received a certHicate .

8HP

MODEI.580

$999

4 Speed Tran&lt;miSsiOn

$2999

$1799

30" 0Kk incl u d~d

95 MODEL 404 Rear Tine

Gear Dr~ve 16 H.P -

Here 's a tractor wrth unequaled

Tiller-S H.P.

power, operat•ng ea&lt;e and pric·
ed right

BRIGGS &amp; STRAi'j()r.f ENGINE

Sara Jean Craig , daughter of
Steven and Fae Craig. celebrated
her fourth birthday at her home on
Pleasant Ridge.
The Cabbage Patch and Care
Bear themes were carried out. Her
Care Bear cake was baked by h&lt;'r
aunt, Doruna Shato, and served with
ice cream and koolaid. Attending
were Mrs. Martha Searls, D .
Hartinger, Middlepoi1; Jean Craig,
Tuppers Plains, Car olyn Searls.
Columbus; Mrs. Shato, Kristin and
Molly, Gallipois; Amy and Matt
Grube. Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Donley Reibel and Emma Ogdin,
Pomeroy .
Sending gifts wer&lt;' Mrs. Edna
Reibel, Pomeroy; Althea Strong,
Wilkesville, and Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Rothwell, Glouster.

MeD"niel.

Kell~·

T homp-

NamPd to a welcoming commit ·

:: division winm'rs reeugn izPd at thf'
~ rPCPnt Area Recognition Day of
TOPS 1take off pounds sensiblv1.

Brendct

Holll•r

A rPport on theARDwasgivran bv

Mary F'olmPr and Linnie 8f'll
Aleshirr at Tuesday night's mN't . ing of Chapter 570 held at the World
:ot Faith Church in Middleport. Mrs .
:Thompson ac hiPvf'd hpr wright

Mary

Polmpr end

Five generations
gather recently
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lee , Linda and
Gerri. Elyria, and Mr. and Mrs. Roy
'Howell. Dorunie, Sherrie. Eddie and
C had. and a friend, Karen, Comfort.
W .Va .; Mrs. Patty Einans and son,
William. spent the past weekt&gt;nd
here wit h Mr. and Mrs. Edward
T empleton . They also visited Mrs.
Margar&lt;'t Johnson and Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll Johnson. Middleport. and
:Mrs. Nellie Price. Pomeroy. There

369

.--------------l
Long-Handle
Round Point Shonl

1-HP motor sweeps leaves . litte1. clippings
lor fester, easier outdoor cleanup . Adjustable
lou•ers control airflow.
PO 150
Vac- N-Sac~ Anachrtlaot. 6000 ..... 27 .99

Features depth bar to control
tilling depth. prevent sliding on
slopes. With adjustable 10·in .
wheels, 16 bolo tines.
5CA

long handle pro•ides good lev·
erage . Built to last.
139550

5,31 JACKSON PIKE ·RT. 35 WEST

Phone 446-4524

239

FOR 1liE BffAJ\

Black &amp; Becket!

99

3899

1&amp;-In. Delaxe Hadga Trimmer

UoJble e dge~ ree~pro ta l b l aoesprovrd ~ 3 ClOOornm~ ~ lur~~:! ~ mri"lule
m ~rl' 111!frt•rrn' W11h 3 posot o~ swrt ch M~Da•ound handle 81?4

Oilers 8 double-end slesher
blades. adjustablolilling width .
With easy-spin recoil starter,
depth control bar.
31 C

649
Lawn Rake
With 24 tines of tempered spring
steel. 54-in . handle . 279218

and enth!a l hn,~; ·

999

·····-· ,. '"'"'

Sponsors rar wash

95

11 HORSE POWER
5 SPEED

FLOATING DECK

The Southern Band Boosters will
sponsor two car washf:"'S and one

. 1499

2888

JO-In. 4-Cu. Ft

51MJl.

l'f&amp; l 599

Hedge Shears Lawn/&amp;lnlen Clrt
Serrated top blade comes with
pruning notch for cutting large
bushes. Ash handles. 208599

Tilts flush to ground lor easy
emptying or filling. 15-in. deep
stu! tray. Staal handle . 4LC

&amp;lnen Hoe
With welded shank lor strength.
52-in. ash handle.
138743

SUPREME 21 "' self-propelled,
SUPREME 19 .. push,
• Up to 30'o more u sil ble power
• Tot~ch ·N - Go con trol t"~andlc

NYLON &amp; KNIT GOWNS

• Ouret under - the . dec~ muHier
• Fmgertrp startrng
• Patented Lawn -Boy safety
f eatures
• Bu;, s.rde catcher· prvots to

In Waltz and Full Length
Sizes: Small to XXXL

a llow both· srdes tr·rmmrng

WHITE TEDDY WITH
COORDINATING SHORT COATS

Stephanie Nicole Bell

SLIPS, PANTIES, HOSE, DUSTERS
and BRAS

OnP thous&lt;l!1d. onP hurrdn'll and IPn nH'n
Mountain mPn. on£' and all.
Knowin.E: thf'_,.'d lx"f"n t&gt;~•tra~'rd b~· !....ord
Dunmorf'
R ~ttl i t"'d

to thf' batt it• call .

.
"OVER 48 YEARS IN THE SAME PLACE

FREE PARKING ON THE MUNICIPAL PARKING LOT

Several contributions wpre madr
by Star Grange at a recpnt m eeting
held at the hall.
The group voted tomakP cont ribu tions to Care, the National Grange
Deaf Fund, Friendly Hills Camp
Fund, Church World Service. State
Deaf Fund, and Jaws of Life.
The Women 's Activities chairman announced that the state
sewing contest, the national needlework contest, and the national
stuffed toy contest wUI he judged at
the June meeting. ThPre will be a
wedding shower for Ka I hy Pooler
and Bill Dyt&gt;r on Saturday, May 19,
at 7: 30at the Grange hall. The public
Is cordially Invited to attnd. A
wedding shower wUI he held Ia ter for

• Unto 30". r11ure tJ';i!hlf' puwer
• Soloel -statf! rgnrtron
• Ouret under the dec~ mrJ!IIer
• Lrghtweryr1l

Thr~ ·

fP.AturP "i
• Brg srde catcher prv ots t.o
rilk.Jw both -srdes trrmmrng

12488

As t h.. l r li vPs &lt;rnd limb!; fo r F:ngtand

.zo.:::

thO'~

446-7826
HOURS: 8:00AM. TO 4:30P.M. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY

REG.
$420

19" COLOR

Th f'~·

fought and diNt. thf'S&lt;' mountain mf'n
lh&lt;' b:.mk.s Whf'rt' Two Ri Vf'l"&lt;; m('('l.
\'owing to fight to lhP n•r\ lasr mun
Fk•fon• 11Jp~· would n•trt'at

on

TELEVISION

Whf'n tht · gun-; wi'l"f' ~i iPnt and t hl"' ~mo k f' had
r lt•arro
On thf' Ohio Rlwr ~horf'.
Twas the tenTh of Ortobfor . in lt1f' Vf'&lt;r r of our
Locd

In ..,.,\"C'ntwn .

SUPER
SPECIAL

DISH
WASHERS

$299

REG.

$J50

A GOOD
VALUE

REG.

'400

ncn

GIBSON

VIDEO DISC

14 CU. FT.

PLAYER
NEVER GO TO A MOVIE AGAIN!

('olnnf' l Lf'wis a nd his r.wn won lhr' mnnicr

Aur to tht' ir st r llr . ("amf' no im mNiialf'
soluTion .

For as hi~tory has prow&gt;d, it was Ill£'\"('!"\" first
ball ll'
Of thf' AITlf'rk ;m R,-.1-ol uti on
- Il~· Ralph II. (ilbhs . Accf'ptNl h v lhC'
("pnft&gt;nnlal Commis sion of Wrst Virginia and
ThC' Historical Sr:&lt;'I&lt;'IY on Am('r!can HistorY.
In T»trnll . Michigan.·
·

Carla Rife and Martin Davis.
The youth chairman announced
that there will be a short county
youth meetingMay19 at ?p. m . at the
Star Grange hall.

r--------------1

$299
STAND
NICE SIZE
AND PORTABLE

Woodland Centers

e

$199
19"
COLOR
PORTABLE

$474

Pomeroy

992·2192

OVER 200 AIR CONDITIONERS
IN STOCK-ALL PRE-SEASON SALE PRICED

A1~1leW WORlD Of C~Ol

!!!

ROOM
AIR CONDITIONERS

$1295

HURRY, ONLY J 0 DAYS lEFT

ODDS &amp; ENDS SHOP

MIDDLEPORT

REFRIGERATOR

$494

TELEVISION

Professional Counseling .
and
Family Services

AVAILABLE

992-6173

$339

~·~ ·~ · nt \·- four .

FINANCING
AND
SERVICING

2400 EASTERN AVENUE
!ilollqOJ

$349

mul'*

O'DELL .7i«iY«At LUMBER
o.o....._rc

HEAVY DUTY
FAMILY SIZE

gavr

Only

cable

C(lf .... ~c-1

WASHER

TEN FOOT DISH
KJ M RECEIVER
A ~PLICA LNA

21-IIICII, 3-IIP ....

~~ ~~~UJ~

'

could hear "'("hlfof Cornsta lk' s" fa mous

wll.
·Ji- strong , Be&gt; sTrong··: tn hi s Indian bn.tvf'S

SUPER, SUPER
SALE

• P&lt;'lte ,ltl:'d L&lt;:~wfl - 8uy ~ &lt;~ f ety

FetMurts 11 stmng, one-p..ct rioid ltNI cite~ wi!h rur uncltr ·deck
bllltte rut\ltd m~r~11 cnutt cttfltctlll. kink 1nd tUIHtt•stlnt contror

UNDER THE SAME MANAGEMENT"

,I

-~·

Thr alta&lt;k bf"-gan anrl amid shnt and o;; hrll

W/ 0 lAG

STOP IN ANO REGISTER FOR
FREE GIFT CERTIFICATE
TO BE GIVEN AWAY FRIDAY- 5-8 p.m.

'

tl(• did dPI;n·

Star grange has meeting

28495

We Also Hove

arm~ ·

--

~ne .

lk wanlf'rl C'nlonrl I.Pwi~ ddf'at rd
it S " tool.
T o k('('p tht' Co lo nic'S &lt;~lwav.,
L' ndPr Engl is h rult&gt; .

Mr. and Mrs. Shawn Bell. the
former Rhonda Jeffers. Pomeroy,
are announcing the birth of their
first child. a daughter, Stephanie
Nicole, April 3 at O'Bienness
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
The infant wighed eight pounds,
lour ounces and was 291nches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Jeffers, Pomeroy. and
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Bell, Racine. Maternal
great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Dores Arnold, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jefft&gt;rs,
Syracuse.
Paternal great grandmother Is Helen Phillips,
Coolville.

3-HP ChainDrive Tiller

tfi1

·bake sal&lt;• Saturday, Ma y 12.
One ca r wash will be hPld at
Eber's Gulf in Rllcine and til&lt;' othcr
at Automatic Transmission across
from Save More on Wt&gt;st Main
Street in Pomeroy . The bakl' sale
will be held at Rllcine National
Bank . The car washes will begin at 9
·a.m . and bake sa le at 8a.m.

WITH PURCHASE

So to us(' him

Bell birth

BARGAIN MATINEES SAr&amp; SUN
All SEATS $2.00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2 00

."

Wtlil!' his

GET 12" B&amp;W TV FOR
SJ8.00 WITH PURCHASE
OF A MAJOR APPLIANCE,
TV OR 40 SQ. YARDS OF
CARPET.

.

But Journrvf'd a clif!l•rPnl wa~ ,
Ht• wpnr to &lt;&gt;C'nd 'C"hirf Comslalk " rnlu txrtllr

5-HP ChainDrive Tiller

3 DAYS ONLY

1lle First Promist&gt;

Hr a lscr led an Armv

99

And He Says
"Roll 'EM"

FOR

(Fought at what Is now known ""'" Point
Plmt.."&gt;lml, \\'eNI Vlr~nis, o,~ t. 10, ITI-1)
At thf&gt; muuth of th{&gt; Kanawha Rlv('r
Wher(' It Pnters the O·hl ·o,
Thf"rf''s a two-strwv old ~Cabin
Fillf'd wll h T"£'llcs. from a war long af?o

\\'hf'n' a baltlr woulcl MX.ln bf'gin.

Electric
Power Blower

losPr of the week with Mary Folmer
t:ts runnPr-up .. Tudy Holtf'r was the
April queen having lost the most
weight during the month .

~were five genera lions a tthf' homf'Of

·Mrs. Johnson. They also visited with
Edward and Frieda Howell. Gen~ra l Hartinger Parkway. before
returning to their home'S.
Other we&lt;&gt;kcnd visitors of Mrs.
Price, Village Green Apartments,
·Pomeroy, were Louis Smith. and
:Mr and Mrs. Delbert LPgg,
·Columbu s

TELEVISION

ONLY

Lord Dunmorf'. the (lovf'rnor of Virglnl o
Sl&gt;n t Andrrw !..('wis &lt;J nd his m r n.
To thr mouth of thf' Kanawha Ri ,·rr

Linnie Bell

OF YIJ\fl UFE I

GET A 12" BLACK &amp; WHITE

or

Aleshire. C'alis ta King was the top

goa l and "'·as wf'lcomf'CI into l&lt;OPS
( kE'f'p off pounds sensibl_
v . 1 A new
ron tPsl was df'Scribf&gt;d b.v Virgi nia
Sm ith and "car&lt;' pals" wrrr

THE BOSS IS
BACK SALE!

Poet's
Corner

And of mPn . that '., lung sinl'f'

tee wen: Pegi Vini ng, Pearl Knapp,

and

Slides of the National Rocky
Mountain Park in Colorado were
shown by Mrs. Margaret Brown at
the recent meeting of the Riverview
Garden Oub ht&gt;ld at the home of
Mrs. Janet Connolly. Mrs. Debbie
Gilmore and Mrs. Janice Young
were co-hostesses for the m£'\'ting.
For roll call members named a
plant which helps control Insects.
Mrs. Delores Frank conducted the
devotions with spring as her topic.
Mrs. Grace Weber presided at the
business meet lng during which tinne
a flower bed on the lawn at Eastern
High School was discussed.
Refreshments were served by the
hostesses to those named and Mrs.
Ella Osborne. Mrs. Pauline Myer,
Mrs. Mary A lice Bise, Mrs. Margaret Cauthorn, Mrs. Cathy
Spencer,
Mrs. Mary Grace
Cowdery, Mrs. Marlene Putman,
and Mrs. Ruth Ann Balderson. The
door prize went to Mrs. Putman .
Next meeting will be May 31 at the
home of Mrs. Frank.

Ir s surround C'd b~ · monuments of tx&gt;autv
With a slorv i nscribE'd th('reon.
·
a bart If' on('f' fougtlt in that arPa

selected

wf' rr

:son,

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Ff'w Pf'Oplf' know of its exislenCf'
Or w h:-' It earn£' to bP.
Yf'f it &lt;;; la nrls in all its splC'ndor
Wllhin a P;;rk. rallffi Th -Endie-Wf'l

·TOPS group has meeting
.
Kath~-

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Riverview
Garden Club
meeting held

Your "Extr• Touch ..
Florill1 Since 1957

Girls State honorees introduction given
Delegates and alternates to
Buckeye Girls State, along with 38
representatives of sponsoring organizations. parents and American
Legion Auxlllary members attended an orientation tea at the

Thursday, tlw:ty 10, 1984

At specially reduced prices.

25"
COLOR
PORTABLE

$594
WE RENT
VIDEO DISC
AND TAPES
WE ALSO RENT THE
VIDEO PLAYERS

�Page- 12-The Daily

Sentinel

death chamber, calmly awaiting word from the
Supreme Court.
Bradford satd Adams met with friends, relatives.
attorneys and the Rev. Wayne Griffin, a Presbyterian

STARKE. Fla . !API - James Adams died in
Florida 's electric chair today for the beating death of
a m1llionalrt&gt; rancher more than a decade ago.
becoming the fifth convict executed in the sta te since
the death pmalty was restored and the 19th
nationwide.
Adam s. 47 died shortly after 7 a.m at the F lorida
State Prison, where four other men have been put to
death sinCf' May 1979
He was conv icted oft he murder of Edgar Brown of
Fort Pierce, a rancher and former St. Luc1e County
sheriff's deputy who was beaten to death during a
Nov 12. 1973, robbery at his home
"I don' t care what the; do to hun, " said AI Brown,
the VICtim's son 'I ha ve ml.Xed feelings about thP
whole t hmg "
Adams was the first blac k t&gt;lectrocuted m Flonda m
10 ~ca1 s Three ot her bl ack mt&gt;n have been executed

1976.
The U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way lor
Adams' execution Wednesday night. voting 54 In
favor of tile state's emergency request to lift a stFy of
executiOn which a lower federa l panel granted a day

earUer

mlnlster from Galnesvtlle.
When a defense lawyer, one of several late-night
visitors, told Adams that his reprteve had ended, " He
was nervous and he shook sllghtly," Bradford said

FlOWERING &amp; FOliAGE

S&amp;w TV

HANGING BASKETS ..... S5
$9
POTTED AZALEAS ................. S6

Scout Camp Rd.
Chester. Ohio
Ph. 985-4269
II No Answer, Coll985·4312
We SO&lt;Vice All
Makes &amp;. Models
Anltnno tnstollotion
House Calls ond Shop

95
99

s:

PAT HILL
FORD
_

s2.59

MillER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

BASS MOUNTED

$50

°

TANNED DEER HIDES

s2 5 Flowering
50 Plants

Sut lob le lot

G lovt&gt; ~

f l&lt;

&amp; Commercial

TAXIDERMY SHOP

West Main St.

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

New l1ma Rd, Rulland Oh
PH. 742-2225

Regulabon number 84-002

RESOLUTION
J1. RESOLUTION PROHIBIT·
lNG LONGWALL MINING
BENEATH THE WORKS OF
THE LEADING CREEK CONVERVANCY DISTRICT ,
AMENDING PRIOR RESOLUTIONS, AND PROVIDING
FOR ENFORCEMENT
\1\!Hf R [I\ ~

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RESOLUTION
A RESOLUTION IMPLE ·
Page 418
MENTING A PERMIT SYSNOTICE OF
TEM FOR DAMS OR RESER ·
APPOINTMENT
VOIRS
TO
BE
OF FIDUCIARY
CONSTRUCTED UPON ANY
()'l
M ' " I 1 if-q
II
tht- STREAM OR WATER ·
M· q" ( l' r' '' t' p,, h. ,, , fn ,P t COURSE OF THE LEADING
(,'I&lt;; P N ~
J 4.1 1 q Thc•rn l '&gt; E CREEK CONSERVANCY
lL"'-'_ _ _:___::JJ ArHif'•'&gt;rn Rull tnd l) H 1 ',77S
DISTRICT

il ! th HI ()

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Public Notice

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'•II PO ly

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B&amp;G BAR

(.'/" ·'·•ifil'fl/lllf.f''·' •·m•••r th1•
folio u•i II{.[ t ••It•ph 1&gt;111' l'.fl'h 1111{.[1'.' ••.
G&lt;1lhol Co Area Code

614

BAND fRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY NIGHT
MIDNGHT BANDITS
1 00

614

Mason Co , W va
A r ca code 304
67 5- Pf Pleasant
458 - L con
576 - Apple Grove
77 3- Mason
887- New Hav en
89 5- Lctart
9]7 - Bu lf.JI O

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

1

Me1g5 Co Area Code
99 2-Mrddleporr
Pomeroy
985 - Chesrer
343- Portland
247 - Letart Follis
949 - R.1Ctne
747 - RutloJnd
667 - Coolvtll e

446- Galhpolrs
167- Cheshtre
J88- Vmton
245 - Rro Grande
2S6 - Guvan Drst
64 3- Arabra Drst

(Formerly Headquarters)

8:30-12:30

8
9
10

lt3. - - - - - -

114. - - - - - -

r

l iON

')

Vv•l()l'\.&lt; 1 I

111 0

•

10 I 19

tAl

,.

1111

~

•

I • ,H I II

v )

!\

YOlk, NY 10113 Pnnt Name,
Address, Ztp, Pattern Number
Over 170 ~aned destgn s 3 free
patle&lt;ns Send 12 00
ALL CRAFT BOOKS •. $2.50 each
All Books and Catalog-add 504
each tor postage and handling
llS.Dolls l Clothes On Parade
ll4-14 qtlick Mach1ne Quilts
ll3-Fashron Home Qutlt&lt;ni
132-Qutlt Onjtnals
130-Sweaterfashtons·Sizes 38·56
t28-Envelope Patchwork Qurlts
l27·Afgltans 'n' Doilies
126-Tlurfty Crotty Flowe!S
125-Pelll Qurl\s
124-Easy Gifts 'n' Ornaments
123-Strtch 'n' Patch lltults
IZ2·Stulf 'n' Puff Quilts
I Zo.trochet Yoar Wardrobe
I 19-Easy Art of Rower Crochet
116-Nifty Fifty Quilts
115-Easy Art of ~ipp\e Crochet
IIHamplete G1ft Boolt
109-Sew+Knll (Bosic t1ssue &lt;nell
105·1nst.Jn1 CriiChet
101-Quilt Boolt Callection I

,,

11

L " '' ~

I • t wh , -.. r11

Jr,

ll11d

"1
lc

11\d VIlli I f1P ,I Jh l '

t

" rl rJ tfl • t1u1 otl , t thP w

" l f' l \1
) lit

I 1'\1 1' I 1(:

i

-

BACKHOES
DUMP TRUCKS
tO-BOYS
TRENCHER
WATER
SEWER
GAS LINES
SEPTIC SYSHMS
lARGE o• SMAll JOBS
PH . 992-2478

FOR FUTURE USE"

498 General Hartmger Pkwy
Middleport, OH

PH. 992-2549

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Mon .-Sat. 10 to 6
General

' il

71

lfl

~

w

~ rw,f'

11

Autos for Sale

SPECIAL BUY!
1981 - BONNEVILLE

Construction

•Refngerators
•Dryers •Freezers

Roofing A Specialty

PARTS and SERVICE

Wolfe
Investigations.
Inc.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

614-992-7626
PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF All TYPES

Roger Hysell
Rt.

GARAGE
124

Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682

·ouMP TRUCK SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addona and remodehng
- Rool1ng and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbmg 11nd Alectnclll
work

(Free Est1mate1)

Plus,

sunroof

and

new t1res. Warranty
good thru

9/86.

Call

124 Itt

Pomeroy, Ohio

All Types of Alumrnum
Clean Sheet &amp; Cast
41( lb
Weeks of April 9 -21
Alumrnum Aulo Trans
'8 00 Each
Irony Aluminum
Priced On ln5peelion
Louted 1 Y. M11e lut ol
Paeetown orr Twp 142

Call 992-3461&gt;
Scipio Energy
Recycling Division

4/ 11 / mo

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodelrng
Rooftng of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years
"Free Estrmates"

EUGENE lONG
Ph .

(614) 843-5425
3-8·2 mo.

pd .

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

CARROLL'S
LAWN SERVICE
*MOWING
•TRIMMING
•CEMETERY

992-3348

MAINTENANCE
Reasonable Rates

Real Estate General

CALL
992-5949

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER-985-3307

FOR SALE

5353 eJI:t 324.
LOST Smell female puppy
gold color, 12 weeks old
lost 500 block of 3rd Ave
Gallipolis
Reward Call

742-2328

992·7201

446.8017
LOST White German She·
pherd, neck shaved. w1ll not
btte Answer to Cuke Roger
Johnson. call 446 1824

4 'J I mel

Found Female Doberman
black 8r tan, 1n Tuppers
Plain• area Call 614 -667·

THE NEW

8o Alummum

PLASTICS &amp;
SUPPlY

SARAH COVENTRY
JEWELRY

GAS - WATER
SEWAGE PIPE
REGULATORS 8o
FITTINGS
VOLUME DRIPS

Call for free siding es·
timates, 949-2801 or

949-2860
No Sunday Calls

Warehouse

3 I!

J

I ~~

3484
lost-a Firestone all -Terrarn
1 0 - 100 trre on a rally nm

Is Expanding
In This Area

'"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

rtr

Coil collect 814·9B5·3604

- 10 F11h1on Show Dtrec
tors Needed
- No Experrence Neceuery
- No Money N•eded
- E..cellent Pay Plens
Earn en 1800 Jewelry Kit
- W1n Tnps end Pn2e1

LOST 2 Br~ttan1es, female 6
vrs. orange collar Male 1
yr , leather collar w1th name
tag last seen Ambrose area,
May 5th Please call 304 6 75 -3340 Reward

Call 992-2063
Belween 9-00 A M -1 00 P M
5· 9· 1 mo

8

When you 're on your way reach
for th1s wave--of·color Jacket
All one precel It' s eas~ to uo-

chet thiS "goo&lt;l.feehnes" Jacket
from the neck down &lt;nclud&lt;ng
~le~es

Use acf)hc worsted tn

lwo col01s Note s.owtooth hem
Pa«ern 759Z S11es 10.16 &lt;ncl
$2.75 for each pa«ern Add
501 each pattern lor postage
and handl&lt;ng . Send to :

29.------

30.

Nict Brarrb Cllfts
Rlldtr Mail

31.

The Daily Sentinel

32.
33. _ _ _ __

... 163, Old C1rt1sa Slit., New
Real Estate General
II. L."Bud" McGHEE
Broktr·Auction Service
Cheryl Lemley,
lltJIS County Associate

1
I
J

I

~--------,---------~----

Phone
Now Acceptin

742-3171

II

interested contict
The Home National Bank
in Racine, 949·2210.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U S. RT 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts

&amp; Service
13

.r,

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

All Types Roofi~ &amp; S1dinc
Gutters, Downspouta

Painting. Coating
NEW-REPAIR
FREE ESTIMATES

DOZER

Residence
985-3837
51711 mo

Dr. Carol Osborne
Veterinarian
Is At The
Meigs Humane Society

THRIFT SHOP
Middleport
From

WRITESEL

d

3 to 8 p.m .

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Auct1on every Tuesday
mght , Pt Pleasant, WVa
Auct lonnie Neal Youth
Centet Bldg . Camden St

ROOFING CO.

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate. Farm. An tique &amp; liqutdat1on sales
Ucensed S. bonded tn Ohio &amp;

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
8o Painted
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racme. Oh
Ph 614-843-5191

wva 304 -773 · 57B5 or
304-773-91B5
Auct1on every Fn nrght at
the Hartford Communrty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandise every week
Conaigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Rtchard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304 276

949-2263

3 2 tfn

10 6 If(

For Treatment Of
Animals
5/8/ 1 mo.

3069 .

BACKHOE
WORK
AL TROMM
742-2328
We Have the
Lowest Rates

New Homes- Extens&lt;ve
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custqm Pole Bldgs
&amp; Garages
Roofing Work
Alum&lt;num &amp; Vrnyl S1dtngs
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992 -7583
or 992 - 2282

&amp;

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows

ALUMINUM SIDING

•Gutter &amp; Downspouts
•Roofing

•Replacement Windows •Sidewalks. Pat1os

•Custom Built Garages

All Work Guaranteed

CALL TOM HOSKINS
614-742-2834
t l lt t l rno

9
3

RAIN UNES
County Certified
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLE~

FlEE ESTIMATES

367-7560-367-76?
CH£SHIR£, OHIO

3 1

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE PH. 992-2772

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH. 992-7013
New Chevy Truck.- ..
FENDER ............ 176.95
DOORS ........ .... '149.95
HOODS ...... ..... 1174.95
BUMPERS ,,, .. '69.95
GRILL .............. . 142 .50
R. SUPPORT ...... 184 .95
TAIL GATE ........ 185 .00
FORD FENDER ,, '69.95
BUMPIR ............ 169.95
Alao Soma Car
Fond art A vallablo
1-lllfll

SWEEPER and sewing machme repair . p•rts. end
suppliu
Pick up and
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
George• Creek Rd
Call

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean uaed cars
Jim Mink Chev.-Oida Inc
Bill Gene Johnson

448-3672
Wanted to buy uaed coal &amp;:
wood heatera. Swain Furni -

turo. 446 -3169. 3rd
Ohve St , Golhpolll, Oh

Young boy will do gra11
cuning In the Svr•cuae.
Mlneraville. Pomeroy area .
Call after 4 :00p .m aak for
Lawn mowing and tnmmino
done at fa1r prices. 304 -

875-8347 or 304-875 7243
FbAt ~ Shop

moved to 86
Burdette Add , Pt Ph . Re·
pair vacuum •weepers end
lawn mowera . Sell sweeper
parts. belt1 and bags. 304-

875-8512.
Pfow g•rdens Potnt Plea sant, Kanauga area . Phone

21

playera, Sudden Impact

DC Cab. Colt 448-171 B

Retail Outlet must employ 3
conscientious, trustworthy,
inside reta1l aalea clerksImmediately Retail expe rience desired, but not ne cessary . Must be able to
work with minimum super
vision and be able to meet
public. must be prof1c1ent m
ba111c mathmattca. Oppor·
tumty for advancement for
nght persons Please reply m
own handwriting, references required to box BOO rn
care o, the Galhpoli&amp; Daily
Tribune, 826 3rd. Ave ,
Jobs

Singing Gorrlllo. Call Botloons a. Co. "48·43 13.
Clel•nd GrHnhouH, flow·
era. flatt or pote; hanging
ba•~!lo:

Y&lt;~gotoble

tomato

pi•nta; Oeraldint

plonto;

Clelond, Vine ond Moln St.

top price. Coli 448-4746
aher &amp;PM

Buying doily gold,

lltvor

colna, ringe. jewelry. tterling
were, old colna. t.rge currency. Top pricu. Ed Bur·
kett B•rber Shop, 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Oh. 6"·992·

3U8

Market

Bottom Flee
Every weekend

U.S. 36 Frazlero Bottom,
WVa. 26082. Don Froztor·
Operotor. 304-758-2779
Gallipolis Fie• M•rket Unlimited Dealer Space Out door. all this week end only
e&amp;.OO. Start •nvtime after
8PM Fri night •~lilting A
avernighting allowed located at Rts 180 &amp;. Rt. 36
Former Thaler Ford Prop-

R·

Softball off1c1Bis are needed
for the Park Diatnct's
Women's Softball league
Those interested ahould
contact the Park District
offtce at 446-4612, ext 66
Auto body repairman , with 6
yrs experience Contact Bill
Wel11h at S1mmona Olds,
Cad , &amp; Chev , Pomeroy
General dent1st now hirrng
people onented. enthust satrc . career minded assist ants Please Slftnd compl8ted
resume with references to
P 0 Box 729 A. Pomeroy.
Oh 45769, co the Daily
Sentinel
Mature individual to repres ·
ant established life 8t health
Insurance Co excellent po
tential for Increased earmng
&amp; advancement We are an
equal opportunrty employer
For more mformat1on.
please call People's Life
Insurance Co 614-687·
0065 between 8 30 a m &amp;
4 30 p .m weekdays

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS GRADUATES If you are
wondering how you can get
a job without work expe rtence. the West V1rgm1a
Army National Guard mtght
be the answer for you Earn
good money whllelearmng a
skill Full time pay while you
train. part time pay once you
come back home call 304-

675-3950 o• 1·800-642 ·
3819 .

00

LISHING CO . recommends
that you do busineas with
people vou know. and NOT
to send money through the
mall until you have mveati gated the offering .

8 femily Yard Sale Fr1
Sat Thei11 M•rket on St
At. 160, 1nside

1------ - - - -

Yard Sale 41 '12 lincoln St ,
Gallipolis, behtnd Rocchi's
Restaurant lots of everything Thur • Fn , &amp; Sat

Beer. W1ne. Carry~ Out Over 1-- - - - - - - - 6 d1gtt f1gure 1n grosa annual
mcome Beer sales 6 d1grt Carport Sale fri. · Set . 9 -5 ,
f1gurfl annually Lottery ter- name brand. boys, gtrls &amp;
baby clothes. women
minal Contact Guido J
Girolamt, 605 W Main St , clothes , much morel
Btdweii · Rodney- Kerr HarPomeroy
nsburg cross roads Nora
Hager

22 Money to loan

Yard Sale 132 State St.,

May 1 1 &amp; 12th. Mostly
FIXED 1-c-to_th_•_n_g_._R_ai_n_c_a_n_ce_t_•__

HOME LOANS
RATES Below market r•tes.
Fixed conventional FHA VA leader Mortgage,
Athens. collect 614 -692 -

3051
23

Professional
Services

PIAN 0 regular
TUN lNGtunmgs
Lowerprrced
diScounts to Sen~orCtttzeno.

Churches &amp; Schools Ward's
Keyboard. 304-676 -3824
Ptano Tuning and Repe1r
Brunicardr Mus1c Co • 446 ·
0887 Skill and integrity our
trademark
lane D•mels,

May 11 S. 12 719 P&lt;ne St ,
Rio Granda 4 Family Baby
children 8t adult clothmg and
other Items Ra1n cancels

4 Fam1ly Garage Sale Fn &amp;
Sat 11 &amp; 12 lmcoln Pike.
off Rt 141 to Northup cross
brrdge

to sell . $6500 Colt 6 t 4·
669 -3761

614 742 2951
THOMPSON BOOKKEEP
lNG Monthly and Quarterly
accounts welcome 428 Second Ave Call 446 · 1136

Setthng estate Mid 20's, 5
rooms. bath , basement ,
good shape , convement
Middleport locatiOn
Call

216 ·B35 ·3952

Unwanted Factal or body
ha1r? Permanent, painless
removal by European Electrontc Oep1lator Mary is
certified m this new compu tenzed digital system . Call

FOR RENT WITH OPTION

today 814·992·6720 Top

month. 304-576-2711

of the Statrs. full service
salon
Professional Electroly11s
Clime Probe Type ElectrolyAMA, FDA &amp; FCC
sis
approved Doctor referrals

304-675 · 5568
Real Eslale

31

Homes for Sale

All brick 3 bdr , 2 baths,
garage, completely fur·
nrshed, n1ce lawn, Crown

TO BUYIII14 ft wide three
bedroom, bath and half.
mobile home srtt1ng on mce
lot, ready to move mto
$226 00 down 8225 00 per

8 yr

old three bedroom
ranch, 6 mtles from Holzer,

139,500 00
7746 .

304 675

Owner transferred. must
sell. uc cond S66,000 ·
S11 .000 down Assume
8"11 pet loan 304 -675 ·

1629
By owner, 2910 Meadowbrook Dr , 1 floor plan, 3
bedrooms. family room wtth
fireplace. utility room , re
fugerator, butlt tn range ,
fully carpeted. fenced back

yard . Phone 304-675·5856

kla, 782 2521 EOE .

Cutest Home. Our loll, But
Your Gain II Your best bet for
Savings t1 Call 6t4 · 992 -

8941
By owner lovely 2 bdr .
home on waterfront, boat
ramp &amp;. dock, closato town.
puced $34,900 Will help
fmance . Call 614 - 256 -

1218
For sale by owner. 3 bdr ,
central a1r, forced a1r fur nance. buck stove. 1nground
18x36 swrmmmg pool.
close to ctty schools

$30,000 Call 448-3204

140B
12

Situations
Wanted

887·3402
Hamea Boarding Home in
Pomeroy h.. vacancy for
etderly patienu only. Reaso -

nable prices. Call 614 ·992·
8022
18 Wanted to Do

Roofing and gutter work.
metal work, houMpalnting,
carpenter work . Exc. ref .
Fru eatim•tea. Cell 446-

3171 .

Oarogoa, potloo, lldowalks,
b•temente,

block work

R1010noblo prlctd. 35 yra.
experience. fi'M eatlmatea

Call 448·3384.

8 FomllyYord Sole Moy 11

a.

12. 39 Neil Ave , ne•r
Sycamore Clinic . Gina ~
w•re. school deW, Avon .
childrens, womena end
mena clothing
Jewelry,
bikea, microw•v•. van se1t1
&amp; bucket ae•ta, sewing
machine, hair dryera and
much more. Rain or 1h1ne

Middleport
Vicinity

&amp;

6 rooms , basement, double
garage. 1 S. one·thtrd acre
lot. Rose Hill, Pomeroy

132,900 Call 1-814·87B·
2513
Owner transferred. must aell
beaut1tul 3 bedrm brick
home F1raplace. deck.
woods, pnv•cy . aunahtne

$63.900
5420

Carport Sal a Fr~d•y &amp;. S•tur·
day. 3 families Aaaorted
Items from toys to clothing
675 Front St . Middleport
Y•rd S•le at Brenda Hysella',
1 .3 miles on 143 off At 7 on
S•turd•y, May 12th 26 in
g1rl's bicycle, rocking ch1ir,
children ' s clothing .
Garage Sale. london lane,
Syracuae, Ohio Mev 10, 11 ,
&amp; 12 . 9 30 to 4 00 Children
&amp;. adult clothrng

-·---· P-fPieasan·c -· ·

Garage Sale, Baum Addt ·
lion. May 11 &amp; 12 from 9·3
Baby items &amp; much more

&amp;

Vicinity

Yard Sale Galhpohs Ferry,

Call 814 -992 ·

10 room home m Ruti and on
47x140 lot on N M•in St
8th house from S•lem west
side of street Need a con aid·
arable work but can be
bought well below property

votue Cart 218 -394-8741

8 yra old, 3 bedrm. 2 hetha.
family room w1th wood burner. Single car garage. on
8 fl•t •crvs with atocked
pond. City water in Racine.

Call 814-949 -2641 .
6 room house. 2 bedroom.
full bliument, 2 fireplacea.
garage &amp; carport New roof,
carpet.
furnace . Remodeled kitchen • bathroom.

a

Clooo to schoolo, hospital, &amp;
stores Coli collect 814287· 8658 or288·7979.

Yard Sale. College Rd. Syracuae May 1Oth &amp; 11th. 9 till
4 Children, adult clothing
Odds S.. end1. mite. pfu1.
Yard sale at Henry Hartman
res in Cheater, Mev 11 , 9 to
6 . Child rena clothrng, me
ten,ity, untforma. ult &amp;
pep~er sets, truck topper,
motorcycle etc . 614 -986 -

and Thurs

Yord

Sale,

CHEAPII

CHEAP!! George St • Mason. W Va Fri 6 00-8:00,
Sat 9 00-6 00 Cancelle'd tf
rain

YARD SALE , Mav 11 and
12, 9·00 till 5 00 3002
Parrtsh Ave

Pomt Pleaaent.

3839 .

W Va

Yard Sale, May 11 &amp; 12
from 9 to 5 . Nathan Roush
Rt 124. Syracute Clannet,
tape recorder, clothing for
everyone, motorcycle, re ·
fr1gerator. ghaawere ,
hous8hold articles. ect

Yard Sale -Sat 12th. 104
Pleasant St 9 - 7, houseHold
1tems. antiques. clothing
and baby 1tems

4 Family 676 Front St
Middleport Household
ttema. crafta. women1 .
mens clothing . 9AM -4PM .
Fnday &amp;: Saturday.
Yard Sale -May 12th. Gladys
Deem restdence on Old
Portland Ad, Movmg,
clothes. furniture, mise
Ra1n or Shrne

Yard Sale- On Plymale Road.
Gallipolis Ferry, Fri and
Sat ., May 11 - 12 Cancelled
1f rain11
Yard Sale , 290t Brook
Drive. behmd Village P1zza
Books . furmturo . d1shes.
mrsc Fri. and Sat.
Yard Sale . Fn Sat . Sun
608 4th St . New Haven
Girls and womens dothmg
Cancelled rf rein

for Sale
House &amp; lot m Dexter 4
large rooms. metal roof.
cement porch , hand dug
well. near mine no 1 Pnced

Story and half. 3 bedrooms.
new srding, new remodeled
living room with ftreplace

Lady to live rn wtth eldertv
lady must havo good re commendations 304 -675 -

Priced cheap. Fri 9 -5.

1- ---__:,__.:.._:__

w.

r~=========~-:::::::::::::::::::::-+==========
31 Homes for Sale
32 Mobile Homes
35 lots &amp; Acreage

Buy1ng your first home can
be a terrtfymg and JOYOUS
experience Let N l Stevens
&amp; Associates help you by
arrangtng your financing
We w1ll be happy to fully
explain the options open to
you and let you decide wh1ch
one meets your needs Todays mterest rates stan at
10.50% wtth a downpayment of only 5% . Call Jeri
Alhe today 614-379+27B9

travel . 304 6 76· 3860

2 Family G•rage Sale Porterbrook Subdiviaion. Fol ·
low aigna
larger aizes

dey Moy 12 ot 114 Mopte

360 Dobby

Baby, children. men
women clothes, shoes.

Green Acres Regional Center House at Point Pleasant
Home Ufe Instructor: 12
m1dmght - 9 a m minimum
qualifications. 72 semester
h " urs of college cred1ts or
two years of fulltime pard
e•perience as a house par·
ent Hygiene A1de mimmum
qualifications. high school
graduate or equivalent and a
record of auccessful prevtous experiene with mental
retarded Contact Dav1d Ea-

Help Wanted11 Good Chris nan male musicians and
smgers for Gospel Group
" Saved " Must be willtng 10

Street , Maaon ,
Va .
Wa1her+dryer , clothe•. bike
frame1. booka, p•nerns. ceramic planten . &amp;. miac.
1tema. R•rn or ahine .

Fr1day, May 11

or 876-2062

24B6

medicine c1blnet. Atari,
spreada, mlec.

·-· ·-· P-omero;,;-----· ··-

C&lt;ty. Call 614 256·6244 .

Teachers and coaches
summer employment.
8900 00 per month guarant,ed income World Book
and Chtld Craft 304-882·

Carpon Sale ''artlng Satur·

W Va below Stauffer Wed

Now htrtng Your area Call

2&amp;8-1251 after 5:30.
Wented to buy or •••••
tobacco poundage. Will PlY

Fra&lt;~iers

Yord Solo Moy 1 1, 9 unllt13
mi below Eureka . Clothel,

I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB-

lawn Mowing A Trlmmmg.
Reliable and depend•ble.
Aeaaonable ratea . Call814·

a.

Balloon• for Get Well. Anni·
veraarya, Blrthd•v•. partHia

Business
Opportunity

or write Bo• 723. Pomeroy,
OhiO

CEDo fdlocl . Ront mov101 &amp;

Vicinity

Financial

Help Wanted

1-805-887 ·6000. e•t
9000

&amp;

G•rv 814-992-2086.

Services

11

··----Gaiiipoiii-··.. -·-·

erty, 446-7037.

a.

Paul's Home Video loc•ted
406 2nd. Ave , in Partl
Central Hotel VH S, Betas,

Racine.

General Hauling. For 11le

Umootono, 1111 dirt, ond top
ooll Colt Colt 814-2861427.

Employmen t

W11l care for tha elderty 1n my
home lots of references
Men or women Call 614·

Announcements

81 4-,48-0294

J&amp;L INSULATION
VINYL

•BACK HOE •DOZER
•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER . GAS. SEWER

BIG SALE. Mt . Alto Auct1on
Barn. Sat. May 12th B1g
load different merch•ndise
Emma Bell , lie. No 429 -84

Announce me nl s

•TRENCHING

weavea

814-367-7101

NEW-REPAIR

Srzes Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

Every Tuesday

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

AND

Public Sale
8o Auction

985-3813

(I) HOUSE IN CHESTER.
Three acres wtth a nicely
constructed comete block
home 26x30, 3 bedrooms,
one bath, 12d5 livmg
room and 24x24 family
room. Parttally carpeted,
fuel oil furnace w~h facili·
Ires
for woodbumer.
12x 15 block stOIJie building. 20x30 block garage.
Right off Rt. 248, country
setttng. 'It mrle east of
Chester. Ohio.
(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE ·
Down·
stairs equipped with
kitchen, living room,
dining room and den;
upstairs has two bed·
rooms and one bath: ·
house also has baSt·
ment. Lot size approx.
48'x308'. Needs wort.

lost and Found

814-245 ·9691 or814 · 245 ·

CLIFFORD

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

G&amp;W

AKC regtatered toy 11lver
female Poodle, 1 yr old
spayed . owners moving

LOST dogs, black male
Cocker Span1el limps, male
part Beagle Reward Call

AL TROMM

SIDING

WANTED

Rabbit 304-675 -7677

6

992·6215 or 992·7314

We Have A Full T1me
Shop Technician
on Duty

Tom Anderson

JIM
PH

who

304·675·2571

LIMESTONE
HAULED

·cONCRETE WORK
·cuSTOM BUll THOMES
'W4 TEA. Gf&lt;S &amp;
OIL UNES

Somebody

rugs. Colt 614-992 -3704

Government

Half Basset Hound pupp1es

V. C. YOUNG Ill

or 992-7121

''

YOUNG'S

•Qtl FIELD SERVICES

Bo• 1BB SardiS. Dh 43946.
Phone 614·483· 1605

2714

Three puppies. Okay Hur
low. Rt 2. next to South folk. Pomt Pleasant, WV

J&amp;F
•RECLAMATION WORK

First floor only. Write giving
directiona. Witten Piano•

Gallipolis, Oh 45831

304·675·1 16B

CONTRACTING

Wonted old plonoa. Paying
$20.00 and $40.00 ooch.

Queen size maness and box
springs Phone 304 -675
long ha1red cat. to good
home, female. liHer tra1ned
1 'hyr • declawed must be
kept ms1de. 304~895-3353

"Free Estimates"
Installation Available
4/2 711 mo

9 I mo

•DOZER - BACKHOE

White on White
low mileage. Power

•On Couru lnstruct10r1

46789 or call 614 -992-

$16,559 - $50,563 - year

All Ma~es
•Washers •D•shwashers
•Ranges

1 J[t

1 Ci t • I

trtps

~

m

II

•All Atn
S..turday playu11

CHESTER. OHIO

985-3561

Open:

•Bq:tMIAI now

•Awards
INSTRUCTORS John Teafofd
Dave "Big Htt' Burt

4 ~ I m~

ho

th 'l

1

Poo&amp;!lm

. . ,{-1 ·
"V&lt;.C..

446·4477

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
220 E. Main, Pomeroy
PH. 992-6931

throuth season

"CUT OUT

448.3313

Free kittens, some all blacl(,
some part Siamese Call

ACCENT

GOlf LESSONS SPECIAl
ADULT 6 for 140
STUDENTS 6 for 130
,
1 •Supermtd Golf

FURNITURE
Bedt, iron ,
wood. cupboards. ch•ira,
chesu, b•akets. diehes .
atone jars. antiques. gold
end silver . Wrlte · M D.
Miller, Rt.2. Pomeroy. Ohio

446·7741 alto• 5.30 .

Black &amp; brown mele
Schnauzer Call 446-2687

PH . 992-7582
U

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

•eq Coll446 -1023 or 1 414

448·6237

Appointment

mo

1- 304-8B2 ·

Tame nice to ghreaway Call

Small Beagle -type dog. hkes
children. named Chtco . Call

500 lincoln Hrll , Pomeroy
Open by chance or

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

4 )01mo

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
DOZERS

!111

nt tl•n Q1c;l "r 1
J.1

'r

N 11f' l

51211

We Use Von Schrader
Equ1pment Recommended
by Leadmg Carpet llanu lacturers
'FREE ESTIMATES"

t il ( I IJ I 111\ 1111 P&gt;'ffTll&lt;;" d

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18

111 court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 457"

II ' n I

nll II

WATERMELON
PATCH

PH. (614) 985·4212

Call 614-992-6737

nt

w. r iPrrnursf'

lht

In Ma so n Cou nty

35. _ _ _ _ __

II

''

' r1

, • 111' '

,

17

Mail This coupon wllh Remittance
The Dally Sentinel

1"

1 111

I "1 !

YOUR NEXT CRAFT II '" OUI NEW
19 84 NEEDLECRA FT CATALC G

,115.----... ------ 34.------

1
I
I

·. t• r

35185 Oak Hill Road
Long Bottom. OH. 45743

nt \ liJ S I ~"' 11 o o n

• J&lt;: r&gt;r1 f 11 1 rf ,~ t rn &lt;- .t l

c.,F

992·2156

Waves-of-Color

W'r &lt;&gt;n n

sh.1l l f' l r&gt; ( 1
''· thr n 111r d1 rr n l(lfl Hf•J n l ! hi?
L&gt;',ll1r nq
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fJ &lt;., I I ( ! t n v d l r • ()r lf' 'J f'IV OII

!&gt; I•

28.------

11.
12. -----_ _ _ _ __

No

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19,

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G10 1 oq
SF C I IC ' ,

ht

675-1333

20
21
21
13
24
25
26
27.

6

I HIC I PURSUANt TO OHIO
Rf VISf D CO DE SECTION

II ,

These cash rates
mclude d1s.count

•5

1Hir1 Ff OHF 8 F 11
I ~ I SOl \/I r1 Ill I H~ HC AHU O F
n !Rf C I ORS 0 1 I HI I I 6.fJING
( HI f K lO NS[ RVANCY DI S
~-.J OV\'

1 jIl l I '

446-2342

l•lur I o r 'Ol•d

11y

Available
Anytime

1

of tll P

J,n I I I l! r\ l) llhf IJI ,j'l') f 01 ". I I( h

54 Misc. Merchandise

1
3

ol

For Faster Semce

THE

board . colt
2711

446-4472

Cross-St1tch Supplies.

"FREE ESTIMATES"

MillY Iron btds. • 1 60 end
up for certain Meiga Co.
.cone jar1. Old time cup -

Widow would like a m1ddle
aged widow for companion
live·in. be able to drive my
car if needed Free rent, ref

Free kitten plus one female
cat to good home Call

vard sa\e&amp;

Caah peld for fancy Iron or

Giveaway

Reg female Pointer 3 yr
old. Must be hunted Call
between . 7 &amp;r 9PM Call

COUNTED CROSS STITCH
DMC FLOSS
BOOKS
CUSTOM-MADE FRAMES
RegiSter lor May Basket lull of

PH. 446-8038
or 992-7119

r

Bo 1Hi d
l 1y O h oo

11 1 (&gt; lfl10 tlh• S fl/JPIS

i) o&lt;;t l 1 1

1'\ \

In M e tg s Count y

In G.JIIIcl County

wr1re vour own ad and oroer bv matt w•ttl ttus
coupon Cancel your ad bV phone when you get
resulTS Monev not refundable

I

5171\ mo pd

No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 3Z6
Pomeroy. OH 4S769

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

IJ 1

1' •• Do ,11" l\1\. &lt;lh ' &gt;11 1 l rl " 1 •, u tl1no1

TO PLA CE AN AD CA LL

,----------------------~

)Wanted
! F or Sale
) Announcement
)For Rent

th"

t 1

t:, 10 Pll Jh•Uil or lf'(JIII ;:uethP.

rl rs c h

1'

COVER

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

BUS. : 98S-3813
RES.: 985-3837

d &lt;; 1rrr' l ldf hP

pr n oowr •r P r j

f 1o1II 1Pr

IA I

'&gt; , 1 I" 1
r• l
I If

tm•"

;J l hP

cho1ce

GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE Ll NES
FREE ESTIMATES

V\,t1Pr

.t~~h r t ~

Engage-A-Car the modern way
to dn~Je the vehicle of your

SERVICE

A vr~ f&gt;d Code S o•r lorHl 6 10 1 1 ~

I&lt;I ' ' 1

1.,1 ••11 [1.1 5', • 1' a. p o

rn

n l ,l l iY I

WH ERF AS

, , r 'IIO Td

r

of

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd ltke to mtroduce you to

THE
DITCHING

iJ) 10 [lrf! SC i rb P

" " ''" l n r &lt;;P V\'f'r ru 11 PtS
dr &lt;; (H '; li nl was to • ,1111

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D ori' C !O fS ot ]hi' LP.Jd mq (l('f'k
Con!&gt; f' rv.Jncy 0 1'itrrct o l the
Oh1 0 Re vr SP d Corl e Sec t 10n

L l iti S&lt;'&lt;;

Il l 111 I 11 !I ll

~&gt; d ' h til 8 •
l r II•
l r1 11 df

WHERFAS

lh "

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f'""' &gt; I
' ti l h• di' l ' II d t l

\ II •

o ' T1 11 • ' ' '
11 111 •
I

SOMEONE TO
TEAR DOWN
2 STORY HOUSE
FOR MATERIAl
Call Cleland Realty
992-2259 or
992-5692

OH

C

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7. •

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WANTED

I

0

Oh
H&lt;•&gt;. • , +'11 ( I , I, S··· 1"111S
bl () ' 1Y !Rt I" &lt;t o10 1 •N fll
l 'll l on ,)f1(J ojr!)ll

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Regulation number 84-003

Case no 24,419 Docket 12

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DOZER
WORK

Business Services

Public Not1ce

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF JESSAMINE
LYONS. DECEASED

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LAFF -A -DAY

Public Notice

18 Wantsd to Do

AVON Sell the boot Sell
AVON Call 446·335B.

Pomeroy

13

304-875-3292.

Cherokee Bingo, May 19· 20
wrll pick up, by Greyhound.
Pomeroy, Point Pleeaant.
Charleston. Beckley
For
informeiton call lucas Tours
and Travel. 304 -346 -7542

4

OPEN DAILY 10 A.M . 'TO 6 PM.

Pubhc Notoce

May 31 · color reprints from
your negatives 12 for
81 89 May use different
negative for each print If
desired Hockenberry Phar·
macy North 304 -676 -

Residential

Reasonably Pnced

MAIN STREET MARKET

McDonlot Cuatom Butcher·
tng, during oummerwortdng
firet week a•ch month,

2113

for all your wiring
needs; furnaces repan
service and mstallation .

Thru Month of May

port No•t to Stonewood
Apto

PHOTO SPECIALI Now thru

1 13 tfc

ANY SIZE

Powell St., lower Middle -

Sopt 304-B82-3224.

Middleport, Ohio

FISHERMEN

Ftoworo for Momorlot Dey.
Nice oolectlon. Cliff' a ploco,

Wentsd To Buy

otartingbackfull~moflrotof 7780

992 2196

.,

LARGE SELECTION OF VETABLE . PLANTS

Potted
Mums

out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

Servtct Available
• Servtce that Towers Above
The Re s!

FOR

The Daily Sentinel

9

Announcementl

bauoto. county Rd. 100.
Recine, Ohio.

SERVICE
We can repair and re·
Core radl'ators and
heater cores . We can
also acid boil and rod

APPLIANCE
~ERVIC E

Saturday Only

ROSE BUSHES

RADIATOR

AND

4635

95 to

3

bedding
Stob•rt
Greenplentl.
Houeeveget•·
hill for
;==:;;;~~;;:==~r.:=========~ ule
blo plonto, a. 10 Inch

HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY!

CHECK THE

Tuesday afternoon, Adams told rcponers at a
prison news conterenc&lt;:&gt; t hat he was Innocent and had
been "railroaded."
But the Tennessee naiJW'. who studied m prison so
he could read the Bible. said he had bPcome a
confirmed Christian and had !orgJVen his prosecu
tors. Ht&gt; sa id he "wouldn't hes1tarr to w alk hke a
man" \o tht&gt; electric chair , convrnced hf' would soon
be "with the Lord "
Prison spokesman Vernon Bradford sa1d that
Adams spent Wectnescta:. In a cell 50 feet from th&lt;'

Ohio

Business Services

Long wait ends: Adams dies in Florida's electric chair
in other states since the death penalty was restored In

10, 1984

Thursday, fo&amp;Jy 1 0, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

$15,000 304·675 -5B64
3 bedroom house on Moss·
man Ave, Bellmeade Cen tral air. carpeted e•cept
kitchen and bath
More
information 304 675 -3168
after 6PM.
House on doubl&amp;.lot . storage
bldg . near school in New
Haven. $13,000 00 304~

773-55B6
Price reduced, 3 bedroom
home, 1 acre of land, Rt 62
Charleston Road 304 -675-

4BB7, 614 ·446 -1875
3 yrs old. 3 bedroom . 1 h
baths, ftreplece, rural water.
8 mrles out of town on At 2,
One thrrd acre lot 8 h
IIISaumable loan Very low
down payment Peyment11
under $400 00 Call 304-

876 -5848 bolo•• 5 30 ,
304 ·675-4358 after 5 30
2 bedrooms with garage. 3
Iota tn Maaon. W Va . 304-

8B2-3288
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TAl STATE MOBILE
HOMES USED - CARS,
TRUCKS GALLIPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRICES CALL
81 4-446· 7572 .
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36 . PHONE 614 -4'8 7274
1981 14x52 mobile homl!llln
exc cond Can be seen at
Johnaon's Mobile Park on
Eastern Ave .. lot 29

Holley Pork 1973, 14x80, 2
bdr , Quail Creek Mobile
Home Park, ex cond . French
City Brokerage Serv1ce1 .

448-9340
Cioyton 19B312•60 2 bdr .•
like new. on lot •t Ou•il

Crook Mobllo Home Porio.
French City Brokorogo Sor·
vices, 441-9340.

1965 12•60 mobtle home.
unfurntshed $3,900 can

446 -1340
72 W1ndsor 12•70. lR
expando. 2 bdr .. ut room .
new carpet. cent a1r ,
drapes. partly furmshed, unp.nnmg. awning, new star ~
age building Cell 814-3677166. Roush lane,
Cheshire

4 acres off Kerr-Hamaburg
Rd on Viney Road. &amp;8.000 .

Call 304 ·895 3398 alto•
7PM
4 acres off Kerr Hamsburg
Road on Vtney Road,
$8.000 00
304 - 896
3398

1- - - - - - - - - Renlals

Houses for Rent
1972 K1rkwood unfur · 41
nished. underpinning. very - - -- - - - - - good condition. Call 446 Condomrnum Myrtle Beach .
7893
2 bdr , 2 bath completely
1972 1 2x60 mobile home . furn11hed ocean vtew, 3
pools 24 hr security. tennia
$2,900 814-742 -2261
court &amp; ma1d serv1ce Call
Closing Out Trailer Rental alto• 4 30, 446 ·3428
Busmess Had 22 ONlY 6
LEFT
Stzes 10x50 &amp;. 2 bdr hou ..e 1 m1 out of
588 Celt
12Jt;52 . 2 bedroom fur· town on At
mshed A comfortable home 446 ·2196
for a Low Price Brown's
Trailer Park. Minert'IIUie , Clean 5 room house rn
Eureka , full s1ze basement.
Oh&lt;o Call 614-992 ·3324.
garden ava1lable Call 614 1976 Kirkwnod, 14x70, 3 256 6547
bedroom•. _ full batha, total
electric, t9000. Call 614 - 4 room house 2 bdr , ktt chen, hvingroom 1hower
992 -7725 or 992-3396
Call 446 -4780 Must have
Trailer wtth added room. references
large llvrng room with wood 1 ------~--­
burner. a buddtng &amp; garage, 2 bdr unfurn . $200 mo,
large garden space. also fruit 1ncludes water &amp; S160
trees &amp; fenced yard. Ideal for deposit Call 446 3949 .
starter home or eldely cou~
Must selll &amp;2 000 down take
pte Colt 614·992 -6712
over S315 per mo payment
Double wide trailer. 2Bx60 taxes &amp; rnsurance 1nc Plants
wtth 8~50 addition and Sub
3 bdr
ranch full
carport. centralatr; on 80 by basemen1 , carport, WB, city
120 foot 101 in Racine. Call schools Call 446 -8002
614-949 2505 .
1974 Kirkwood. 12x60. to tal alec . 2 bedroom mea
carpet. partly fum11hed . underpmmng
MUST SELL

Small 1 bedroom home for
rent . Total electric. located
1n Minersvtlle near Bulk

Plant 992 ·6215

304-675·732B

Apartment tn M1ddteport,
houae 1n Pomeroy Call

12x65 H T
stripped
2
w1ndow
eir -

814·992 ·7511

cond &amp;4,500 .00. 9:00 to
4 00 Phone 304 -876 -2978
alter 4:00 304·676-2562

Poasible 3 bedroom house.
basement, garage. unturmshed on large lo1 Rt 2 N 4
mile11 from Point Plea .. nt.
6226 month plus ut1littes .

Used 60x1 0 mobtle home,

$B95 00 304-875-4424

S50 00 depos!l 304-675 3248 after 7 00

33

4 bedroom house. 2200
Wuhtngton Ave . 8226
month. deposit req01red

Farms for Sale

16 acre farm. modern
houae. free gea and water
Out bu1ld1ngs Tribble Road ,
Mason County I 32.600.
Call after 6 00 304~686 -

After 5PM , 514 ·256 ·6572

3930

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

60 •ere farm , 4 bedroom
home, 6 milea N . Point
Peannt, 1 mile off At 2

2 bdr tra1ler fully furntshed .
good locatron . sec dep req

304 -876 -6B09.

Cell 446 B55B

35 lots &amp; Acreage

Upper Riuer Rd water Ar
sewage furm1hed . ref &amp;r

dep Call 446 -050B o' 446
1809
Rio Grande, SA acre lot, all
utilities. drivewey A patiO
ldeel for houae or trailer

$9,000 Coli 441-8038
1.8 1Cr81, IJtC . bldg . or M .H .

lito

with

360

ft . rotd

frontage. located on old 180
near Porter. all uttlitiea

noorby. t3, 750 Call B143BB-BB01

1----------

Approx &amp;'h acrea levell•nd
with front•a• on 2 ro1d1 ,
exc for building or mini
farm All utlfltte1 ne•r by oft
old Rt. 160 near Poner.

$9,000
BB01

Call

814 3B8-

1- - - - - - - - -

2 bdr tra1ter , near Tycoo n
Lako. S185 mo dep re qu.red Call 614-388 -8711
1978 14x 70 3 bdr mobile
home Call after SPM , 614 -

388 · B469 or 614 · 388 ·
B692
Mob1le home for ren1 tn
A•cine
Call 614 367

714B
2 bedroom mobile home 'on

Rt

2, Pt

Pit , 5200 'o o

monthly. 304 -675 -4424

43 Farms for Rent

13 acre• of land in lebanon

Township. Colt 614-9492606 .
Acreogo lor Nle. 304·175·
7541 ovenlngo .

For rent 100 acrea good
paature, 1lso, 60 acrea c9Jn
ground for rent Call 614 -

986 ·3B09.

�l'age--14
44

The Daily Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

Apartment
for Rent

56

has

one and two bedrooms, rent
at.rting at $157 fo r one
bedroom and $193 per
month for rwo bedroo m ,
with $200 deposit located
near Foodland and Sprin g
Valley Plaza , pool and TV

Rabbits . Checkers and
Outch. 83 . 00 - $~ . 00 each. 2
Pens and large pens $66 .00
for all.

ant. Call 446 -2746 or leave
message .

Buy one fish regular price
get second of same half
price. Hamsters 99 cents .
10 gal . tank S8 .88 . Fish
Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave ..
Point Pleasant. 304 -675·
2063

Small efficien cy apart ., ce n tral air &amp; heat , 1 professional
t ype gentleman o nly. 446 0338 .
Garage apt.. furn ished 3
rooms &amp; bath . Washer &amp;
dryer . Clean . no pets . adult s
only . Oep . &amp; ref . req . C all

57

446 -1519 .
3 bdr

unfurn

S250 plus
446 -3786

Musical
Instruments

--nt-t-Li

uaEH AHN

gara ge a pt .

depos1t

UGllRIAIAH ,

Call

1.5C'I~otl
~.

~LINT ,A'ICH

Furnished apt , 2 b d r , ne ar
HMC . $235 Util ities pd ..
Adults Call 446 -4416 after
7PM
Furnished Mobile H o m e,
centra l air, mile belo w city
overlookmg the nver . On e or
tw o adults only . 446 -0338 .

Garage apt . furn ished 3
roo m s, bath , washer -dryer
and upstairs furnished , 4
rooms , bath , both AC , clean ,
no pets , adults onl\1 , dep . &amp;.
ref req . Call 446- 151 9
1 bdr . unfurnished utilities
paid , no children . no pets, 6
mos. lease required , $50
dep .. S190 mo . Call 446 3667 after 5 .
Nice new private down stairs, apt . qu1et near HMC .
1 adult only No pets. ref .
req . Drapes, stove, refng .
FurniShed . $200 . mo . Call
614-446 -4782
2 bdr. apts .. newly dec .
utilit1es partly pa1d . $145
mo . Call675 -5104 or 675 5386 .
1 bedroom Apt S196 m o
i ncluding utilities . Equa l
Housing Opportunit\1 . Co n tact Village Manor Apts .
614 -992 -7787.
Riverstde Apts Middleport
Special rates for Senior
Citizens S130 Equal Hou sing Opportunities 614 992 -7721
1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnish ed
apartments for re nt Call
992 -5434, 992 -5914 , 0 '
304-882 -2566 .
APARTMENTS ; mob i le
homes, houses . Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614 -446 8221.

TWIN RIVERS TOWER
Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled w1th an
income of less than
Iii 12,300. Renting for 30
percent of adjusted in come .
Phone 304 -675 -6679
3 room apt . and bath . Ntce
location . reference and dep osit required . 304 -675 1090.

45

Pets for Sale

Stud service: CF A Fl•m•
Point Him•l•y•n C•t-Sire Is
Dregonwynd' s Royal M•i ·
lei Blue of Taingling . t1 00.
ltud fee . No checks . Call
814-992-2607.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity)

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleepmg Roo m s
and light house keepmg
rooms . Park Central Hotel
Coli 614 -446-0756
Sleeping room $115 .
tu!la paid . Share bath .
o nly Range &amp; refr•g
2nd Ave , Gallipolis
446 -4416 after 7 PM

utlll ·
male
919
Call

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBil E Ho me
Park , Route 33. North of
Pomer oy large lots Ca ll
614 -992-7479

4 7 Wanted to Rent
Would like t o rent furn
m obile home in rural areft
Have outdoor dog . f o r 2
adults , price ranging S1 50 $175 mo . Call 614 -256 1271
Wanted to rent furn1sh ed
mobile home or house with
at least 2 bedrooms Rent
t250 to S300 . per mo nth
by June 111 Contact , B . H
ferguson . P.O Box 344 ,
Aberdeen , Ohio 45101

Merchandise
61 Household Goods
Will trade old china cup board for elec . range or
couch and chair. good con d .
304-676-6808
New Stearns and Foster .
queen mattress and bOK
springs. firm , S400 . 00
304-676 -2719 .
Zenith 23 " color 880.00 .
Two 19" portable bl&amp;ck &amp;nd
white 835 00 ea ch . 304675 -2815
U1ed carpet, green , 11x 1 3
$26 .00, 1 2x22 $25 00 .
Buill· in gas oven fits 22in .
wide x 28in . high opening
t60 .00. Antique apar1ment
gao IIOVO $10 .00 . Call304 676-3275
One aluper sofa. light beige
twood, S260 .00. 304-675 3756.
Surplua 11ock, new and used
1ppU1Ate8. furniture . 304·
875-4424.

.

51 Household Goods

54 Misc . Merchandise

TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third
Ave. Gallipolis, 614-446 1699 Spin washers, gas &amp;.
electri c dryers . auto
washers , gas 81 electric
ranges , refrigerators , TV
sets.

Plastic cisterns state 8p proved , plastic uptic tanks ,
plastic culvert. metal cul verts, RON EVANS ENTER PRISES. Jackson. Oh 614 286-5930

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers . refrigera tors, ranges . Skaggs Ap pliances , Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel.
614 -446-7398 .
Country Oak Furniture. ta bles. chairs . cupboards, dr'\1
sinks , p1e safes. lots of misc .
Conkles . At . 7 , Tuppers
Plams, Ohio .
New swivel rocker . antique
chair , library table, large
picture, other small 1tems.
Payments acceptiable 304 675 -3638
Gas coo k stov e. good cond .
304-675 - 1198

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sof8 . chair. rocker , otto man . 3 table s. !extra heavy
by Frontier) . 9685 Sofa .
chalf 11nd loveseat, $275 .
Sofas and chairs priced from
$285 to SB96 Tables . $45
and up to $125 Hide ·&amp;·
beds. $440
and up to
S525 . Recliners. $175 to
S375 , lamps from S28 to
975 .5 pc . dinettes from
S99, to 435 . 7 pc . $189
and up . Wood table with six
chairs $425 to S745 Desk
9110 up t o S225 . Hutches,
9550 . and up . maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, 5250 . and
up to $395 . Baby beds.
$110 . Mattresses or box
spnngs, full or twin , $58.,
firm , 968 . and S78 Queen
sets , $195 . 4 dr . chests .
$42 . 5 dr . chests . $54. Bed
frames , $20 .and S25 ., 10
gun
Gun cabinets, 9350 .
Gas or electric ranges $375 .
Baby mattresses, $26 &amp;.
$35 . bed frames $20, $26.
&amp; &amp;30 . king frame $60 .
Good selection of bedroom
suites . cedar chests .
rockers . metal cab1nets.
sw1vel rockers .
Used Furniture -- Refngera tors. chBirs . dryers, and
TV 's . 3 miles out 8ulaville
Ad Open 9am to 6pm . Man
thru Fri . 9am to 5pm , Sat
614 -446 -0322

SWAIN
AU CTION B. FURNITURE
62 Olive St. . Gallipolis . New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stoves,
6 piece wood living room
suite with 6 inch flat erma
9399 . bunk beds complete
w1th bunkies 8199, 2 piece
antr o n livingroom suitea
9199 . antron recliners 899,
other recliners sea. maple
dinette sets $179 , bow
springs &amp; mattreu twin or
ful l $100 set regular-firm
$120. maple dinette chairs
&amp;36 , wash stands $34.
maple rockers S59 . 7 piece
chrome dinette set $149 . 5
piece dinette set S99. used
bedroom suites, refrigera ·
tor s. ranges . cheat. dressers.
wnnger washers. TV ' s. dryera. &amp; shoes . Call614 -446 3159 .

53

Thursday, McJy 10, 1984

Ohio

Antiques

Anuque china closet &amp; A . S .
Prus!!l ia d1sh . Call 614-949 2801 .

54 Misc . Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Del•vered . 1 2 '" -22' " stocked
m yard
HEAP vender ,
prompt delivery . 614 -256 ·
6245
l1mestone . Sand . Gravel.
Delivered 1n Mason. Meigs.
Galli a or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446 -7786 .
Firewood cut up slabs S1 5
pickup load . Call 614 -245 5804
Doter Work Free Estimates
446 -8038
, 983 utility trailer bed size
54•44 in Barnette. Wildcat
cross bow . Delco AM -FM
stereo radio Ca11446 -3637
after 6PM .
30 gal . aquarium complete
with light , fish , gravel,
pump . Will trade or sale . Call
446 -8114 .
K1ng sized bed and hide-abod couch . 446 -2177 .
Truck camper top . Call446 3978.
Go-can 6 HP Bts engine, 2
boys BM)( bikes , dual hand
brakes, XL 250 Honda. Call
614-266- 1778 avo .

Coffee table stere o, stereo,
dinette table Ca11614 · 256 6417 .
1 loveseat $50, 1 couch
$66, Victor adding machine
S 35 . elec tric bake oven S 1 5 .
Call 446 -3204 .
Bed &amp; stereo . Call 446 1184.
Wedd ing sets 1 OK &amp; 14K
gold $49 .96 &amp; up . Wedding
bands S30 &amp; up New &amp;
preowned . Frank's Pawn
Shop, 430 2nd . Avo .. Galli polis, Oh, 446 -0840 .
Extra firm double size mot tress box springs &amp; bed
frame $50 Call 446 -9476
after 5
Shrubs pruned . lewn re seeded . retaining walls ,
sidewalks . patios, till dirt,
topsoil. bark mulch 8. sawdust . Contact Bruce Davi Sion . Call 614 -256 -1427

For Sale Piano . Call 614256-8417 .
Electric organ Kimbel swin ger 200, 2 keyboards, $760.
Ca11614-256- 1512 .

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61

Farm Equipment

Troy -Bilt tillers . Check our
special price before you buy
any tillers. Swisher Implement Co. St . Rt.7 N, Galli ·
polis.OH . Call 614 -446 0475 .
Tractor, model B with culti ·
vators . Call 614 -256-6417 .
Farman M 2 row mounted
corn picker. 81,500 . 1 row
pull type corn picker. Co-op.
$300 . 2 row pull typo JD
corn planter, S300 . 3 pt.
pickup disk. $250 . 3 pt .
grading blade. e160. Ma nure loader. 6150 . New Idea
hay rake . S100. Hay baler
66, $150 . Call 614 -256 1427
6 HP True Value rototiller
Used last summer, e11:c .
shape
S150
firm . Call
446 -9456 .
9N Ford tractor with 12 in
plows. good shape, $1,500 .
or S250 for plus . Call
614 -379-2115

Electric garage door opener
with remote control ~2).
$50. Co11614-949-2801

XT190 Alice Chalmers hum
tractor $7500. Will take
trade 304 -675 -7421 .

long prom dress . worn
once 304 -675 - 1386.

1956 John Deere tractor
with Bit . blade &amp;2.000 .00 .
Edward lhlo 304 - 882 2870 .

Baby crib. mattress, bumper
pads . good conditon .
Wooden toy slide and spring
horse 304 -675 - 1038.
Firewood for sale, $20 .00
pick -up load, $30 .00 deli vered Call before 1 1 :00
"""' s ,oo . 304 -675 -2991 .
Singer Zig -Zag sewing ma chine, case and cabinet ,
$60 .00 ., four 1 4in . radial
tires 530 00 . 304 - 676 3909 .
Emerson Quiet cool air cond ., ,0,000 btu . 4 yrs .
old . unit still underworrenty .
RCA color console TV. o ld
but works. SI'(Vania console
blk . and wh1te . good con d ..
portable submerible pump
Used One Time. Phone
304 -675·6443 .

Troy Buil1 Poney tiller, 168
Mayo Drive, New Haven .
304-882-2200.
M .F. 10 ton silage wagon,
used 3 seasons, $3,600.00 .
One row M . F. field chopper.
$3 , 500 . 00 . 304 - 468 1610.
Wood chuck. model STWC
12 Brush Chipper. exc .
cond . $4,650 .00 . Allice
Chalmers model DO road
grader. all hydrlllulic. 6 cyl. ,
diesel engine . $8,500.00
304 -458- 1610.
4ft. Bush Hog, drag type,
&amp;325 00 304-675 -6930 .

62 Wanted to Buy

55 Building Supplies
New galvaniled corrugated
culvert $2 35 ft . up All
sizes . Fittings . P1pe, beams.
structural steel -new. used .
Big discounts. Delivered!
Anywhere! Nowl Est1mates
free . 304 -926 -0984
Just re ceived two loads of
metal buildings -sizes from
B'K1 0' to 1 O'x16 ' . Shop
early while selection is good .
Gallipolis Block Co .. 123 V2
Pine St ., Gallipolis, Oh. Call
446 -2783 .
lUMBER -Rough cut, oak ,
poplar, 2K4 , 2x6 . 2x8, 1 ~~e4.
1 xe . 1x8, length available , 8
h . through 16 ft. Hogg &amp;
Zuopan, 304 -773 -6654 .

Wanted to buy old junk uw
mill for parts. Phone 304 675 -4581 .

63

livestock

Reg . Quarter horse filly born
5 - 15 -82 . laquana D . Han cock, sire Handy Wifk , dam
Housa Hancock . Reg Stal ·
lion born 1-23-83, Eye
Wanna Fly , sire Ruff Tuff
Revenue, dam Top Liverty
Bell Co li 614-286-6522 .
Exline Saddle Shop Spring
Sale on all show items, show
sad dle. breast strap and
head sta ll with silver, $489
value on sale 9259 . Call
614 -286 -6522 .

50 sheets of T1 -11 wood
aiding . Call 614 -949 -2437 .

Registered Morgan Stallion
Co11614-379-2585 .

Now open 1or business ,
Mountain State Block , Rt
33 , New Haven . Complete
masonry supplies. 4" , 8 " ,
12 " block . Delivery service .
Phone dav 304 -882 -2222 .
eveni ng 882 -3239 .

Riding horses . Call after
5PM, 614-388 - 8469 or
614-388 -8592 .

56

1 4 Registered Bleck Angus
heifers
Call 614 - 632 5763 .

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor - outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies .
Stud Servtce . Call614 -446 7796 .

Registered Ouaner Horses
Come &amp;. see . Will accept
reasonable offer. Call 614 446 -7711 .

Double registered TW 8
racking stud colt. 2 yrs old.
well broke , Sorrel, 61
inches . $1200 . Call 614 992 -6102 .

64

Hey &amp; Grain

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

.-~--,.,;~-&gt;.~ ~

Alfollo -11mothy hay, otond·
lng or baled. No clovercloon . Coli 448-3468 . 9 to
6, 614- 246-6644alter6PM
a. WMkenda.
·

i:

Transvon atwn
71

~

Autos for Sale

76

Starcraft bunk house
camper, 26'h ft . long. aleepl
7 A - 1 cond .. t6,000. Coli
Bl4 -388-8274 or614 -3889963 .

1981 Coleman fold up
camper. Colonial model.
o•c . cond., 304-773-6338 .

81

71

Autos for Sale

1976 Olds Cutlass 360.
V-8 . PS. PB, AC , auto trans,
AM· FM radio. good cond.
Avg . 21 MPG. 81 ,800 .
Weekdays after 4PM. 446·
6656 .

'81 Celica Toyot•. lift back.
304-675-5t49 after 6 :00 .

1972 Olds Cutlass 4 Or. Call
after 5 P.M . 446-4850 .
1948 Ford Coupe Deluxe ex .
cond , new engine. Must
soli. Call614-245 -5190 .
1966 MG Midget converti ble, priced reasonable, good
cond . Call after 6, 614 -379 2243 or 614 -379-2712.
1977 Dodge Charger Spe cia l Edition. extra clean. exc .
cond.. black with t-top,
loaded. S2.000. Cell 614 245 -5818 .
From South Georgia 1976
Olds Delta . axe . cond .. PS.
PB . AC . new exhaust,
brakes, $1,295 . Call 446·
8238 .
1973 Firbird runs good,
87.000 mil. , $300. Call
446 -3091 .
1968 El Camino 307 en ·
gine, 3 spd. tran11mission,
great cond., 61,000 act.
miles, $1,995 . Call 614388 -9905 work, 614 -3677524 home .
1977 Camara loaded good
cond , $1 .750 . 1978 Yolkswagon Rabbit good cond .•
$1 ,650 Call446 -4230 .
1979 Monte Carlo $3,000
or best offer. Call 4464382 .
1980 Buick Regal Umited.
PS, PB. CC. tilt wheel, good
tire . rear wind . def.. good
cond . Call 446-4205 .
80 Chevy Mazda hatchblllck.
clean. 4 cyl., auto, good gas.
S2,500 77 Oldo Omega
Brougham. run good, 8960 .
Cell 614 -245 -5405
1979 Chevy Caprice Clas·
sic , 2 dr, ec, ps, V-8 angine.
body good condi1ion, axe .
performance . Will consider
all off oro . Cell 61 4 -9927412 after 6 p .m .
1956 Ford Victoria. good
con .. S1 200 . Coll614 -992 6102 .
80 Chevette. 4 door hatch back. 4 epeed. 80 Honda
Accord , 2 door hatchback.
clean care. 304-675-6286.
1965 Dodge Dart. excellent
condition . No ruu. 6 cy·
Iinder, automatic. radials .
M uat see to appreciate.
s9oo. cau 992-6190.
Z-28 Camara . 4spd.,am-fm
stero, 35.000 miles, exc .
con. 86200 or 8.0 . Call
614 -843-6213 .
1982 Chevette, 4 spd .,
48 .000 miles, $3500 or will
take older car 11 trade . Call
614 -985 -4174 .

1973 V.W. model 412 nation wegon, auto., PS, PB,
new brakes. b•nery, mechanically great, $350.00.
304-882-2418 .
1964 Chevrolet Nova. 4
door. auto .• 6 cyl., body fair.
$460.00. Phone 304 -6762847 .

1976 Buick Skylark. V-6
auto. 304-676-2714 or
675-1577.

73

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

1973 Dodge Concession
van he1 sink, refrigerator.
pop machine&amp;. breaker boK .
Call 446 -9475 or 614 -2466097.
1980 CJ· 5 Renegade pack age, hiah back bucket seata .
full carpeting. axe . cond ..
84,600 . Call 614-446 9506

1978 Ford F150, 4•4 . 4
speed. lock out hubs, VB,
92,600.00 . 304 - 882 2012.
198, Ford F260, 4x4, super
cab, 6 cyl. , 4 speed ,
$2,460 . 00 . 304 - 676 6421 .

74

Motorcycles

1

1979 Mercury Cougar XA·
7. PS. PB. Air cond., AM -FM
stereo tepe, low mileage.
axe . cond . 54 . 150 or beat
offor. 304 -676-6686 .
1969 Pontiac E111ecutive.
runs good. look IJ. good,
$400.00 . 304-676-4828
1972 Ford Muat•ng, new
tires. runs good, body fair.
$900.00 . 304-676-4828
1 977 Old1mobile Omega.
auto .. PS, PB, V -6 engine,
7.400 milos. S 1 ,950.00.
304 -676-1431 .
'79 Mercury Capri, ST6 200
motor, AC , AM-FM casaet1,
redial tires, exc . cond . 304 675 -1145 .

1982 Z2B, loaded with
everything , black ,
810,000 .00 firm . 304 -8752189 .

72

Trucks for Sale

1978 Chevy luv PU , 4 spd,
radio, S1,995. Johns Auto
Sales, Bulaville Ad . Gallipolis. 446-4782, open til dark.
1978 Chevy van auto. 6cyl.,
AM - FM tape. carpeted. co vered spare tire on raar.
ladder. 83.496. Johns Auto
Sales. Bulaville Rd . Gallipolis. 446 -4782 . open til dark.
1960 International 4x4 lJ.
ton . flatbed or wrecker with
40.000 lb . wonch . S1 ,996 .
Call614-367-7624 o' 614388-9905 .
1969 Mack new rebuilt
eng ., 38,000 rears, 4.17
fifth wheel, wet line ,
&amp;7,500 Coli 614 -367 731 7, Mon. -Fri.
73 ford pickup euto. trans,
$1,000 . Call 446-8328 or
614-388 -9809 .

1967 half ton Chevy PU
running cond . Call 614·
266 - 8691 or 614 -256 1196.
1975 Ford 1 ton. 360
engine. 10 ft . bed . 4 1pd.
$800. Coll614-992-3194 .
1963 International Pickup,
heavy duty cab. 6 cyl . 4
apd., Call 614 -992 -7492
after 6 p.m. or 992-3716.

1976 Ford truck, FtOOCiub
Cab, good tires, $900. Call
614-992-2784 .
1980 Chevy hton, ps, tb,
auto, air, am -fm cassette .
$6600 . Coli 614 -992 7364.
1

'75 Chevy truck, J.t4 ton
pickup . &amp;1200. Call 814992-8102.
1973 Dodge club cab truck.
66,600 actual miles. 304676-2474 after 6 :00.

1976 F-100 Ford pickup,
standard shift, t 1.800.
304-676-2387 .

1980 Harley Da~tidson wide
glide. Can be seen at Betz
Honda .

1980 Honda XR80 . Cell
at1or 5, 446-2451 .

HOW

KITTIN '

AF EW
CiOLF
BALLS.
POP~

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennels AKC Chow puppies . CFA Himalayan. Per sian and Si•mese kittens.
Call 614-446-3844 after 6 .

1980 KDX 400 273 miles,
$795. Call 4468221 .
1979 Honda CB 650. wind shield, roll bar. cruise con trol. mag wheel. truck . low
miles. Call 446 -4205 .
1981 Kawasaki 80 KDX dirt
bike. &amp;300. Call 614 -6673941 .
1 978 Kawaseki KZ 200, low
mileage . Call 6,4 - 992 3256

1980 Kawasoki KZ1 300, 6
cycle engine shaft drive.
Many extras, very good
con., Call 614- 992 -7110
after 5 p.m .
1981 KDX 17&amp;, low mi.
luge. exc . con ., $550.
Bruce Johnson, Portland,
Ohio . Call 614-843 -6205 .
Motorcycle paru. auper
Glide front end complete
wheel, tire, good ru bber, dial
brake, master cylinder, buck
horn with stock grips . throt·
tie cable. new head light all
$326, 00 . 304 -882- 2688
after 6PM .

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1982 Lowe lina. Lake Jon.
trailer. 20 HP and 6 HP
motors. 231b. thru1t trolling
motor, oars. swivel seats ,
live well , 6 gal . &amp; 3 gal . gas
tanks . Call 446 · 3637 after
6PM .
Cris Craf1 36 ft . cabin
cruiser with trai l er,
&amp;1 1.600 . Call 614-2456032 or 304-676 -1731 .

AKC Regi1tered mnle Brit tany Spaniel pup. $90. Call
446-4803 .

ling motor, sccessorlea,
S360. Cell 446-7383.
76 Chevy luv new frontend
part•. tune up, good cond .,
8600 firm . Coli 614 -379 2116.
Correct Craft &amp; Ski Su preme, family ski boata .
'New 8. uted. Parkersburg ,
WV 304- 422-8433 or 304 422-2367.
Trailer on large wooded lot
BOAT RAMP and dock
space . Cell 6-8 evenings
304-675- 6448. Torms .

Parts for 1970 T oyato Cor ona cheap. 304 - 676 -4828 .

AKC Registered German
Shepherd puppies. Ca11446 3430 .

73

Baby P•rekeets, 1 Cockatail .
Call 446 -3732 .

t 878 JHP CJ-tl, 8 oyt .. 3
apd.. loodad with oatroo.
U .OOO. Coll448 -0811.

&gt;·10

Vans &amp; 4 W.b .

'11JU'R£ WHHA
LOll?: ll\I&gt;S
Cf&lt;€-AM
FvFF 1

t1 &amp; S Home Improvements
vinyl siding , roofing. room
addition, storm windows,

s1ono. Call 614- 367-0409
or 614 -367 -7244.
H &amp;. S Home Improvements
vtnyl siding, roofing. room
addition, storm windows,
stone. Call 6t4- 367-0409
or 614 -367-7244.

9,00

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN .
scotchguard-water extrac tion, deodorizers. FA E E estimates . Reasonable rates .
Gene Smith , 992-6309 .

.. Tlf' 5/ffiflitS lfEIJ{)/1'/' AWilY
FIION ~E !YOI&lt;/. 1... fiN' CiOIN'
FL~T OUT TOO.l.

'·

-----

. M.4 Y!3E !fE SIJW SOtt!ET!IIN'
TlfliT L aJ!fEt? m5TIE8
T'/11~ T!t.4!Y ~E, O!i...
.(

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES &amp; SERVICE, Open
dally 9 to 8 :30, Sat . 9 to 4
Sun. 1 to 4. U.S . Rt. so:
Coolville, Oh 814 - 867 3388.
13 ft. treller c•mper, good
cond . He1 ltO\It. ~nk, furnonce, Ice bo• . AC-DC,
turbo oven. sleepa four. Call
448· 4138.

·'

-.

Magnum P.l.
Mag num an d TC put the1r
lives o n the l1n e to prot ec t
an old Navy buddy w ho b elieves that t hey are mark ed
for death by an en ernv da tmg b ack to !he V 1etnam

w"

Woman
[I) Sneak Previews In th •s
spe c 1al program. Neal Gab le r a nd J effrey Lyons tak e
a lo ok at th e mov•e s of t he
Bea t les . mc ludm g A Har d
Day"s N 1ght. "Hel p" and
"l et It Be ·

... I OFFICII&gt;.LLY APPOINT ALLEY
THE GOVERNOR OF UPPER '(()RCH!

Water wells commercial and
domestic. teat hrnes. pump
sales and service 304· 8953802 .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 6 t 4-446-3888 or
614-446-4477

fi) MAGNUM FORCE-Clin t
*Eastwood Gets Toughl

W VAH

I
f1)
G ~ &lt;&amp;.o.A..'i_
S - 10

·• •• . NI '

GASOLINE ALLEY

l have decided to

Mr Pert' I'm sorry
we're late with Hie

Let$ say, Mrs.Skinner,
you have cauQht me in
one of m~ rare qenerotE
moods!

qive you a ten-day
extension on your
rent payment!

rent.

but..

9:00

Excavating

Good - 1 E~ecavat1ng. bua ments, tooters, driveways,
septic tanka. landscaping .
Call anytime 614 -446 4537 . James L Davison, Jr.
owner .

WINNIE
TERRORISTS HIRED TO
DO THE JOB WOULD HME
COLL ECTED THE RAN50M
TKEN P!SPoSEP OF YOU .

J.A.R .Construction Co .Ru llond, Oh,614-742 -2903 ,
Basements, Footers , Con crete work, Backhoe's ,
Dozer &amp; Ditcher, Dump
trucks. &amp; water· gas-aawer electricallinea .

I WA5 OF NO"'

TO FRED
CUNN INGHAM
AS LONG AS I
WA5 ALIVE , EH?

Dotson's Tree Service. In ·
•urad · Free Estimate. 304 576 -2897 .
Starks Tree Trimming &amp;
Rer:noval. lawn mowing and
maintenance. landscaping ,
10 Pet . off all estimates
304 -576- 2010 .

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Pasquale Elactr1c Co all
phases of electric work all
work guaranteed
A~rial
truck rental. 614 -446 ·
4066 .

BARNEY

MV 01: TEA KETTLE'S FIX.tN'
TO WHISTLE A CHUNE

NOW

87

t

•

I

lotEV, STUPID! COME

IN OUT OF ll(E RAIN!!

JUST WHEN I
WAS GOIN G GOOD..

'Magn u m

"~
"

~-~Iff

,;II (~ 4f.

~ ZELZI F ----b~....,.,..--,

[I)

(J

I

WHAT T HE GUY
W l-'0 "TH OUGHT HE

WA 6 A WIT WAS.

\GLARBE+-r--1

[] Kj .
Answer:

ONLY

Now arrange the ClrcleCl rener s t··
term the surpt~se ans wer. as sug gesleCl by the above canoon

r I XI Jr I X1 X]
(Answers tomorr ow)

Jumbles NOISY GNOME SUBWAY KETI LE
Yesterdays I1
1 Answer Even more fun than hav1 ng a vaca ti on •S
hav 1ng thts - TH E BOSS TAKE ONE
Jua l oil IKe Pf1!55. J umble Book Nos 26 11 nd 'l7 Hre awe1lable !Of $2 25 each plu s SX. each
posUigE! ano handli ng !rom Jumble. Cio !hi s ne...,. ~ papcu Bo• 30. Norwood. N J 0 7646
In c ludE! your name. add 1ess. z1p c ode a11d make c heck peva ble to N e w spape1 book~

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

20-20 hindsight
NORTH

:&gt;-10-84

+7 I 2
WEST

EAST
+K Q98 5

"Q 6 4
• 9 7 '2
+I OA4 2

'I'J I06
t AQ .I

So ut h

• 10 4

Both . 1'u rth

Dealer Eas t

Pass

:1:' :ID m ~ ®

m !12'

~ MOVIE~ 'local Hero'
:]] Another Lifo
(__' (1 SportsCenter
(1_~ News/ Sports/Weat her
[f. Tony Brown's Journal
@) Benny Hill Show
11 :15 ~ Mazda Sports look
11 :30 0 ~ (J) Tonight Show
Tl Best of Groucho
C5J Catlins
([) WKRP in Cincmnat1
llJ :]) NBA Basketball
Playoffs Should th1 s g ame
no t be necessa r\1 , then regul ar progr ammm g will a ir
at thi s t1 me
® All In tho Family
&lt;ni Nightl ino
Twitight Zone
11 ,45
MOVIE' 'Tho Sex
Machine'
(!) Top Rank Box1ng from
Brockton, MA
12'00 ~ Burns &amp; Allan

dumm y 's

heart This ended all pl ay

on S('Or e

Pass

pla y ed

se ven . East wa s tn with the
jack and could do nothing
better than cash hts f our
spad es and then switc h to a

+ AQ91 .1

North

dtamonds So at trick tw o he

led his three of clubs. Wesl

+.16

West

Wes t opened his jac k of
spades. South won with the
ace. He didn 't want a s hJft to
cov ered with the four and

SOUTH
+ A 10 6
'I'AK 3

Vu lnerable

-

not take pl ace fhis time.

• J3

South 60

South had 17 poin ts f o r hts
no-trump overcall , bu t they
are not enovgh agamst per fect.. defense However . per fec t defense is not common

in rubber bndge and it dt d

'1'9 712
t K8 63
+K 7

Eas1
1•
Pa s.,

So ulh
1 NT

smce South was gotng to get
four club tn c ks, two hearts.
and the spade alr ead y 1n his
possess1on.
East pointed out t hat 1f

Wes t had played the e1ght of
c lubs. South would nol ma ke
his contrac t West w ould gel

the lead wtth the I 0 of clubs

+J

Opent ng lead

a nd could lead a di am ond
for t he S£&gt;ttmg tr tck . West
asked . " Would you have
dropped your Jack of c lubs
under dummv 's king 1f m y
eight had fo-rce d South tO

Today's hand IS unusual
because il shows a play at
no· trump to wm a rubber

J..

Fac1ory Ag g•e ask s Sk1p to pose as
her new love w hen an old
flam e com es to town
10·00 D I
L H11l Street Bl ues
The b1gge st g ang w a r 1n S I K
ye a rs t hreat ens to expl o d e
on the Hill wh1l e Re nk o
mak es h 1S fma l w eddm g
plan s (60 mtn)
~~ Culture Club ir~ Concert
Thts
Grammy
Aw a rd wm n •ng group pe rf or ms at
t he H amm ersmith Od eo n
tn l o ndo n
(£) MOVIE : 'Jin xed'
:ID &amp;l ~ 20 / 20
0 CID ® S1mon &amp; Simo n
A J . a nd R1c k ar e dr a w n
•n to th e w orld ol tll us• o n
w hen a ma ster co nJure r 1S
c ha rg ed w1th th e sleymg of
a fe ll o w mag •c • t~n ~R) (60
mm )
~ MOVIE : ' Anne Karen ina '
di Newswatch
fi) INN News
r0 :30 (I'1 My linle Margie
(IT) Bits and Bytes
flllove American Style
10:45 ([J TBS Event~ News
News

Q

ANP W~O REALLY CARES ? i
NOBOD'r'! NOTI-IING 15 ~
MORE SAD .. NOTI-lll-46
K
15 MORE PATI-IETIC"
NOTHING 15 ...

~~ ~·

A n&gt;

1J 2 IJ Duck

I

~- 10

"l

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

Family Ties
Elyse' s de c1 s1 on to take a
full ·t tme JOb at an ar ch•t ec tural o ff1c e ha s th e wh o le
famtl \1 m tur mo il
•I Top Rank Boxing from
Brock ton. MA
f1 New Tech Times
i) ~- CL: Cheers Conclu SIOn Sa m and 01 ane i:lle
pu she d to the break tnq
pom t whe n she prese nts a
po rtra•t to Sam b.,- a art• st
wh o urged her to l eave "th e
source of h er sufl er1ng
3 700 Club
,:§: Ill (!] • Celebrttles ;
Where Are They Now? (60
m1n .)
JI Mystery! "Sh ad es of
Dark ness ·
A
w ealthy
Amen can co upl e co mes to
Englan d to buy an o ld
ho use th aL unk now ingl y to
th em . 1S h aunted (60 m 1n )
[C los ed Ca ptt o ned ]

:ao o

PEANUTS

NOTI-IIN6 15 MORE SAD
nlAN A DOG SITTING
IN THE RAIN ... NOTI-IING
15 MORE PATHETIC...

9,30

0

11

'--':::,L--1 1

-'""''--'""=~---'

U pholatary

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY &amp;HOP
1 1 83 Sac. Ave ., Oolllpolia
814-446-7833 or814 . 448 ·
1833 .
•

THAR SHE
BLOWS

='---"-- r
~~ ''J_/

.

JIMS WATER SERVICE
Call Jim Lanier. 304-676 ~
7397.

on
uo
0

General Hauling

James Boys Water Service.
Also pools filled . Call 614256-1141 or 614 -446 1 t 76 or 614 -446-7911 .

'j

ANY SECONT

SE~ING Machine repairs,
serv 1ce. Authorized Singer
Sal_
es &amp; Service Sharpen
Sctuora Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy 614 -992-2284 .

85

MOV I E·

Force'
8:30

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT ING. Rt. 1, Bo• 356, Galli polis . Call 614- 367-0576 .

83

(AI (2 hrs 1

([:1Tycoon: The Story of a

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER. Water removal,
furniture cleaning, free eltimates . 304-676-2295.

82

'""

,._,_,_, - - -

mm)
0 (8) @

RINGLE'S SERVICE .. parienced roofing, including
hot tar application. carpen ter, electrician. mason. Call
304 - 676-2088 or 675 4560

Absten Home Improvement
Specialists. framing, roofing, siding, concrete. remo·
deling, painting, etc . free
estimate. 304· 458 -1566 .

/ I

m

7,30

12 ft . Sean fiberglas• boat

&amp; trailer, awlval seats, trol ·

'69 Chovv ohort W8PU,
must see to appreciate,
uking a 1, 700 .00 . 304 675-2663 .

1979 Chav . Chevon no
truck, topper, heavy half
ton , PS, P8, Auto, good
cond., no ruot. e3.900.00.
304-876-2836.

BORN LOSER

PAINTING- interior and exterior, plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yrs.
oxp . Call 614-388-9652 .

1983 Honda 460 like new,
800 miles . tl•e extras,
S 1,900. Call 446-7318 .
1974 Honda CB350, re built, S176 . Call 614 -379 2574 .

1
(]:

Marcum Roofing 8. Spouting . Now installing rubber
roofs. 30 years &amp;Kperience.
specializing in built up roof .
Ca11614 -388-9867 .

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal .· Call 304- 675 1331 .

76

sw\

STUCCO and PLASTERING
- Commercial and resldan·
tial , free estimates. Call
614-266-1182 .

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Ouazar, and
house calls. Call 304-676 2398 or 614-446-2454 .

1 980 Chevy truck . 6 cyl.,
PS , PB . 38,000 mileo,
&amp;6,400.00. Phone 614446-1387 or 448 -8064.

1971 Chevy truck
stap-side, 78 , 000 miles.
304-675 -8628.

AKC Reg . Poodle puppies .
Call 446-0857 .

Home
Improvements

For sale 1980 Suwki P E
400, dirt bike, 600 miles on
it. Will sell reasonable price .
379-2834 .

12ft. alumn jon boat with
trailer and 3hp. motor
$476.00. 304-876 - 606t .

ABOUT

5,30

ONE OF THIO~E THI':EE!
If&gt; A COMMON THIEF~

7,00

1962 Imperial Crown
Chrysler, 4 dr, hardtop, a.c.
p .a, p .b. power windows 8.
seats. antenna. cruise con.
33,700 mlloo. $2600. Coli
614-693-8623 .

1973 VW Super Beetle,
good shape. 256-1421.

MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
li] 3-2-1, Con1ao1
@) Star Trek
IJ C2J CIJ NBC News
(lJ MOVIE: 'Wild Horse
Hank'
CD Rifleman
@ Numero Uno
([J Carol Burnett
@ IIJ!l}) ABC News
llJ (I) ®I CBS News
lilJ High Feather
1J (lJ PM Mog01ono
CLl Here Come the Brides
C!J SportsCenter
Sanford and Son
OC Enterteinment Tonight
(L B.J .!Lobo Show
mJ (I} Wheel of Fortune
ri:
Nightly
Business
Report
@News
CD":
MacNeil / Lehrer
Newshour
(!)
G])
Entertainment
Tontght
Jeffersonr
IJ &lt;1:: Tic Tac Dough
LV Maxtrax # 3
@ ESPN' s Speodwoek
® Bob Newhart Show
@ llJ CID Family Feud
® Dr. Who
® Wheel of Fortul)e
lEI '121People's Court
fB) One Day at a Time
IJ (I) (L Gimmo a Break
The Chief 1sn "t plea se d
when he learn s tha t Ka t 1e
i ~ datmg a ·coll ege man ·
W MOVIE 'Split Image'
CIJ MOVIE : 'The Promise'
II• Circus
1-:!l NFL' s Greatest Moments NFL 's Great es t M o ments presen t s h1ghl •ghts
of th e , 966 Worl d C ham ·
p 1o n Gr een Bay Pa cker s
~ MOV IE : 'Major Dundee'
[_§) (E) \1%1 TV's Funn 1est
Game Show Moments (6 0

:?

[J

--·-

&lt; .. . · -

(I1

Services

1978 Chevy Monza II plus II
hatchback . V-6. AM -FM PS.
PB. exc. cond ., great gal
mileage, $1,696. Call 614367- 7524 or 614-388 9906 .

1976 Monte Carlo, new
tires, chrome rims, body
good, inside excellent, AM FM 8 track, 66,000 mi.,
$700. Call 446-8t14 .

WHO WOUl-D
!OVER THI&gt;Jk-

I KJ

CL Mazda SportsLook
C5J Andy Griffith
CIJ News/ Sports/Weather

"" [OCL!I\l

b) H ~1m ArnotaandBnb l ee

THACC

o CIJ (I) m (I) ® lll ii2l
News
rn New Treasure Hunt

ANY CO NFUSION .

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these tour Jumbles ,
one lener to each square. to form
four ord1nary words .

EVENING

e:oo

m'if

~ ~ ~~ 1.

THURSDAY
5/10/84

WE APOL061ZE FOR

~ la~R

'fl'fl\l~

Television
Viewing

THE PAW PAW PATC11
DOLL DEPICTED IN
THIS SERIES IS NOT
A CAIJI!AGE PATCH
KID,T" NOR DO WE
INTEND TO IMPLY
FLAWS IN CAI!BAGE
PATCH KIDS .' "

1979 Wilderness travel
trailer 23ft . extre nice. Call
446 -1168.

1981 Chovotto, AC, 4apd.,
4 dr., $3,400, oloo 1971
Seoul &amp; 1 976 Honda 760 .
Call614 -266 -1251 .

1967 Mustang Convertible
restored to orginal, metallic
blue -black top, 8 cyl., 3 spd ..
new tires, 93,850 . Call
446-3466 9 to 6, 614-2465544

DICI&lt; TRACY

1973 Camper good cond.
304-576-2886 .

1978 Futura, 6 cyl., good
cond., 59 ,000 mi . Clean car .
air cond ., PS . Call 4463837 altar 5PM .

1982 2 dr. Chevy Chovono,
4 opd .. AM - FM tape ,
$3,496 . 1981 2 dr . Chevy
Cheveue auto . sunroof.
$3,196 , Johns Auto Sales.
Bulaville Ad. Gallipolis. 4464 782. open til dark .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

The Daily Sentinei- Poge-- 1_5

P'omeroy--Middleport. Ohio

1977 18ft . contained
camper . air, bath, sleeps 6.
see to appreciate . 304 -876 6912.

TOP CASH paid lor leta
model used cars.
Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 East·
ern Ave., Gallipolis . Call
614-446- 2282 .

Judy Taylor Grooming Call
614-367-7220 .
Briarpatcl'l Kennels Profes·
sional All -braed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cilities. English Cocker Spanisi puppias. C•ll614 - 388 9790

by Larry Wright

Thunday, McJy 10, 1984

(North-South
score of 60 1

has

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pla y it" "
" Of course." repli ed E ast.
N everth eless, we w o nder

if East was really up to th at
play .
( NEW S P~PE R

E!\ITERPRl SE ASSN )

~aM'~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

DOWN

I Up tlilnow

II Rose

I Caesa r , e g
2 - 0y l
J Ca rpente r's
need
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extract
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sufft x
5 Bur gu nd)

6 -productwn
10 Strai ghten

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14 Lasso

6 Wed

15 Bird

7 Anagram

1com b. fo nn 1

16 Strife
18 Sl ower (mus
19 Fate
21 Makr la ce
, 22 Sugges tion
23 Arab bread
24 Pwkler
26 Cambric
27 Bud ~et
1tem
%8 Troll
!9 F ell ow

fo r tea

8 Beginru ng
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9 Ove ti11l
12 Sourer
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11 T1 ny
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20 Shade
23 rm eappl t'

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24 Ac tress
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�Page

.

'
ll&gt;--The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, f&gt;hly 10, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Computer camp planned at Ohio University
ATHENS- Ohio University wlll
offer thrf'f' residential one-week
computer ca mps In July for young
people aged 10 through 16.
Instruction will be offered &lt;}t
bPglnning, Intermediate a nd a d ·
vanced levels of eomputlng experience. and enrollment will bP kept
to about 00 per session
The thrw identical sessions ane

scheduled for July 8-13. July 15-20
and July ?2.-27.
The Instructors for the camp will
bP OhJo University or public school
faculty , and there be one Instructor
or lab assistant for each fi ve
students.

Material will be geared to the
cam-p&lt;'rs' expPrience levels and
their

individual

interests,

with

&lt;XiAC regional
meeting planned
"From thcSimpleto theSublimP''
will be thc t itle of the afternoon
program for the Region 11, Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs, meet ·
ing to be held at MariPttaon May 17.
Mrs. Vance Hendricks. Orient. an
accredited judge of the OAGC, will
p~sent arrangernents that can be
madP for use in the home. Some will
bl' sirnple, using only a rr w flowers
arranged in a minimumoftime. The
arangemf'nt s made by Mrs. Hen-

dricks wilt then
sophistica tru .

become morP

Thrw c linics wiU bP offc•red
during thP mor ning session to
update mf'mtM?rs on the new and

rc,·iSl'd 111les of the publicit y book,

lntennedlate and advanced students choosing an area of lntert'stscience, business or communications -In which they learn to apply
computer programming and software packages.
The campus wUI offer a maxi mum of hands-on experience for
Individual and group projects, with
at least one microcomputer for
every two campers . The micros wtll
alsn IJP available for use during

therapy and program book contests.
Hazel Gray. state slide chairman,
will be present to show slides that
needed con.-ctions in order to be
winners. and how to improve the
quality of slides of Dowers . shrubs.
and trees.
.Janet Bolin, second vice president
of thP OAGC. will conduct the
program and therapy c linic. and
Mary Lou Capps, winner of the
outstanding garden club member
award in 1~. and a past Region 11
dirctor will conduct the publicity
book clinic.
The mwling will be held at the
Hermann Fine Ar1 s Cent!'r, Ma rietta College. May 17. with the
coffw hour to begin at9 a .m.

It seemed
just like yesterday

campers' free time.
The cost of each session Is $315, If
paid In full by June 8: and $350
thereafter.
Further Information 1s available
by wrtttng OhJo University Computer Camp, Continuing Education.
Me mori al Auditorium. Athens,
Ohio 45701. Ohlo residents may call
the toll free number 1-!01-621-5215:
out-of-state callers may call collect
1-614-594-6876.

MOTHER'S DAY ,..
WEEKEND
SPECIAL
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY

and now graduation tim e IS here The It me of
commencement Start their new beginntng wrth
congratulatrons and warm wrshes of future
good fortune
Stop m soon and see our large select ton of
appropnate elementary, prep , and co llege
graduatron cards by Gtbson .

WOMEN'S

DRESS SHOES &amp; SANDALS

20%

OFF

MARGUERITE SHOES

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
MIDDLEPORT

MILL ST.

You' ll get straight A's

wtt~i/JS(Jlb

" The Middle Shoe Stare In The Middle Black"

Pastore 2-hits Expos

$8,000 scholarship

NL I'OJIIlllup on Page 3

Story , photo on Page 8

KC., diamond champs

Meigs band....

Story on Page 4

Photo on Page 8

•

at y

e
Vol.33, No.2 I

Copyrighlod

enttne

19&amp;4

Restriction
won't affect
work at plant

Police
layoffs
scheduled
Sunday

WASHINGTON I API -U.S. Rep. Bob McEwen says a bill passed by a
House committee putting a cap on the number of centrifuges for the Gas
Centrifuge Enrichment Plant near Portsmouth won 't affect work at the
facility .
"The language accepted by the committee will not in any way delay work
at the plant in Portsmouth," said the Ohio Republican, whosecongressional
district includes GCEP. "It will place into law what the Department of
Energy has established as it s goals for this year ...
The House Energy and Commerce Committee on Thursday approved
SlJO million forthPproject as part of a bill authorizing appropriations for t11e
energy department's civilian energy programs in fiscall985 .
The Cf'ntrifuge plant is being built adjacE'nt to the Portsmouth Gaseous
Diffusion Plant near Piketon . Both plants are designed to enrich uranium .
which then is sold as fu el to nuclear power plants.
Falling demand for uranium e nrichment has resulted in a slowdown of the
GCEP project. howpver. and the enPrgy depar1ment is scheduled to decide
by next spring whether to pursue development of the cen trifuges or a new
laser technology.
An amendment offered to the committw bv Rep. Richard Ot tinger .
0 -N. Y.. would prohibit thepurchaseofanynev,.centrifugesforGCEP. olher
than thP 3,150 currently on order . But congr&lt;&gt;ssronal aides sa id the ene rgy
department has no intention of installing more than tha t for the fiscal year

Eimer Dunaway said the FOP
also will seek a charter amendment
that would keep pollee staffing at the
current level of 946 officers. A
similar proposal was rejeeted by
Cleveland voters Tuesday.
City Council voted to proceed with
the layoffs after voters this week
rejected a 0.3 percent Increase in the
city's 2 percent Income tax.
Dunaway was unsuccessful in his
attempts 10 persuade City Manager
Sylvester Murray, Mayor Arnold
Bortz and several council members
to stop the layoffs.
On the same day that those 42
officers will be laid off, the city will
begin its observance of National
Pollee Memorial Week, In honor of
officers who have lost their lives in
the line of duty.
Thursday morning. Murray rejected Dunaway's proposal to have
the pollee division's 901 remaining
ottlcers defer their last two-week
paychecks for 1984 until January
1985. That would reduce the city's
1984 expenses by $1.2 million,
enough to keep the 42 officers on the
payroll through 1984.
Murray said that only would delay
the !!seal problems. Instead, he told
Dunaway the layoffs still could be
avoided If the pollee were willing to
give back certain benefits.
Dunaway rejected the idea of

more concessions.
U.S. District Judge Carl B. Rubin
has ruled that the city must
maintain the same percentage of
blacks and females on the pollee
force when making layoffs .
Hardin has appealed to the 6th
U.S. Circuit Couri of Appeals.

anyway.

DRILL -Staff members of Veteran• Memorial
Hospital check out a "patient," one of 10 Meigs
Countlans brought to the hospital during the hour long
disaster drill .taged Thursday aftemoon as a part of
the annual trl-county driiJ. Meigs Countlans

participating were Involved In a collapse of bleachers
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. AU emergency
units of the county partlcipat~'ll in the annual m ock

The centrifuges are made by Goodyear Aerospace Corp., Akron : Garrt:'ll
Corp .. Sandusky; and Boeing.
Ottinger's amendment also would requlf{' the energy department to
submit to Congress by Oct. I some economic criteria for evaluating the new
technologies.
The amendment. which was approved. a lso mandates that no final
decision be made on further const111ction of enrichment capacit)· until bO
davs after the criteria are established

event.

April wholesale prices remain steady
WASHINGTON !API - WholesalE' prices held flat in April, ending
four mon1 hs of increases. thP
government said tooay. The sharpest food price decline sinCI' .June
offset the only gasoline price gam in
nine months.

Tooay·s report s howed that . for
the first four months of 19&amp;1.
inflation at the wholesale level is
running at an annual rate of 4.4
percent, in line with analysts'

predictions that, forthefullyear. the
rate will be 4.5 percent to5 percent.
The 2.9 percent boost In gasoline
prices had been expected by
industry analysts who point to
increased consumption but diminished refinPry capacity.
Not since thl' summer has the
Labor Department's Producer
Price lndcx for finished goods
rf'Cord.ed an incrC'asP in gasoline

prircs.

Murder indictments returned
POINT PLEASANT - Sixteen
lndividua ls were named in indict ment s handed down Thursday
afternoon by the Mason County
grand jury, Including two who were
Indicted for munler, according to
Mason County Prosecuting Attorney Damon B. Morgan Jr.
Mlchael Brent Fielder. 32. Point

l Sections, 14 Pages 25 Cenh
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 11, 1984

CINCINNATI !API -The president of the Clnclnnatl Fraternal
Order of Pollee says his organization will file suit against the city If it
lays off 42 officers Sunday.

POMEROY, OH.

•

Pleasant. was indicted for murder
in conneetion with the shooting
death of terry-ll&gt;e Smith, 21. Point
Pleasani. tha t occurred April 9 at
the Anchor Club on Main Street .
Also indicted for murdl"r was
Sarah May Keyes. 27, Letart . Keyes
was indicted in connrction with the

•

March 28deathof he r 1'/,-month old
Infant. Jerome Scott Keyes.
Morgan said a Mason man wa s
also indicted in conneetion with an
unlawful wounding incident that
occurred Feb. 21. Charles Edward
Meadows. 33, Mason, was named in
the indictment .

Offsetting that . however. was the
good news on food prices.
Wholesale vegetable costs plummeted a sharp 26.1 percent . Fresh
fruit pnces tumbled R.2 percent
while beef and veal prices were off
2.8 percent.
Fish pric&lt;'s fe ll 3.4 percent after
soaring 30.2 percent in Mareh a s
fishing off the Northeast coast was
slowed sharply by bad weather.
In a separate report. the Com ·
merc&lt;' Department sa id retail sal&lt;'s
rebounded sharply in April. rising
2.9 percent to wipe out a March
decline that had been onE' of ttw
biggest in r('('ent .vears.
As for wholesale prices. natura I
gas costs recorded their stE'Cpest
increase. 1.7 percent , since March
1983. But fuel oil prices, reflect ing
the end of thewinter heating season.
plunged 9.2 percent .
The energy price increases lag a
month behJnd the other wholesale

price calculations as energy companies make their reports too late

Egg prices shot up 18.6 percent.
neversing thP 18.0 peiwttttttt harply

curnmt

in the :vear 's first quartf'r as a rpsult

tabulation .
Wholesale prices overall had
risen 0.5 percent in March. 0.4
percent in February and0.6 percent
in January Prices rose a tiny 0.6
percent in 19&amp;1, their best showing in
two decades. after advancing 3.7
percent in 1~ .
The wholesale price index mea sures month-to-month changes in
the prices paid to producers for food.
energy prooucts and oth&lt;•r items.
Thf' prices American consumers
actually pay - usually lo ,..,railers
- arc measur&lt;'!l by the Consumer
Prier Index. The producer price
measure often gives a good idea
whrrc those consumer prices are
heading.
Deta iling last month' s price
act ivity. the Labor Dl&gt;partment
said:

of harsh winter weather in much of
the nation . Food prices had risen0.8
percent in March .
-Alcoholic beverage coadvanced 1.1 percent after a small
March decline
-New car prices fell 03 percent
alter substantial gains in rhe
preceding two months. Light truck
prices tumbled 1.1 percent
-Capital equipmPnl cost s we re
up 0..1 percent . matching the March
gain. Those prici'S reflect what
industry pays to mooernizc a nd
expand operations.
All the changes arc adJusted for

for

inclusion

in

the

normal Sf'a&lt;;ona l variation._c;

In aU. the Producer Price Index
for finished goods s tood at 29H in
Aprll. meaning that goods costing
$10 in 1967 would havrcost $29.H last
month.

•

DWicaseson rise In area

,l\1other's Day Sale

JUNIOR

PANTS
Poly/cotton blends. linen looks, stripes,
solid and denims.
Junior Sizes 3 to 20

REG. Sl8.00 ... SALE s14.39
REG. S2l.OO ... SALE 516.79
REG. S26.00 ... SALE S20.79

Playtex- Cross 'tx.Jr Heart·

Summer Sale

20°/oOFE
Selected Popular Styles

Including all Super Look" panty styles

Mother's Day Salt•

Drunk driving has been on the rise
In the state highway patrol's
Gallia-Melgs post coverage area.
according to statist lcs released by
Lt. Dan Henderson. post
commander.
OWl arrests for the first four
months of this year are up9percent
over the same perloo In 19133 for this
area, with162peoplearrested for the
offense, Henderson said.
The average blood alcohol test
was .16 for those arrested, which Is
"considerably over" the .10 level
established by Ohio law for a driver
to be considered under the Influence.

Fatal accidents are duwn 50
percent. with one person killed in
each county during thP first four
months of the year, compared ta.
four during the first fou r months of
1983. But one of the two fa tals so far
this year has involved a drinking
driver. Henderson noted.
The total number of accidPnts in
Gallia and Meigs counties are up Ji
percent, with459accidents recorded
so far in 1984. or those. 99 people
have been In jured, and none oft hose
hurt or killed so far were wearing
seat belts at the time of th&lt;" crash.
"In the next 10 yea rs of normal

driving, it is almost cer1ain that a
person will be involved in an injury
or a fatal accident," the commander
said. "A properly fastened safety
belt can improve a person's chance
of survival 600 percent if he or she
were involved in a traffic crash."
Henderson said troopers will
continue working "aggressively" in
removing drunk drivers from the
roads.
.. Our goal has been no more
deaths on our highways for the
remainder of the year," Henderson
said.

Concessions may help small coal companies
CHARLESIDN, W.Va. (API The United Mine Workers union will
have to make contract concessions
If ft ts to benefit from the growth of
small coal companies, an industry
official says.
William Clay, president of the
Abingdon, Va.-based Small Coal
Operators Association, sald small
producers will become more lmpor·
taut In mining as the larger
companies turn more to processing
and marketing.
But he warned that If the union
doesn't make benefit concessions to

the small companies. the growth
will occur among small. non-union
producers.
"They're going to ha ve to make
some accommooatlon. the economies being what they are." he said .
"The trend will happen one way or
another. In the past the union has
tried to thwart the small operator."
Specifically, Oay sald small
companies need relief on pensions,
medical benefits and Idle time when miners are paid but don't
work.
"The pension program has been a

thorn in their side," Clay said. " It 's
underfunded, and these boys are
expected to ball out an unfunded
liability that's been there for years.
The medical benefits are poorly
designed and very expensive.
"The miner receives a high
wage," he said. "No one is
complaining about that. But It's bad
when you pay for timet hat no ('Qal is
produced."
Although they have been hard-hit
by the two-year coal slump. small
coal companies have an assun'd
(Continued on page 14 I

READY FOR PARADE - Ready l&lt;l roll In
Saturday's parade to he held In Syracuse Saturday
beginning al I p.m. are, 1-r, Carlton Drummer, BIUy
Davis and Aaron Dnmuner. The parade IS helng
sponsored by the Syracuse-Minersville Baseball

Asllocla&amp;lon. The parade will fonn at Larry"s on
DuMry Street al I p.m. and travel up river to the
Symcuse Ballfield. Prizes will be awanled. Following
lhe parade a yard sale wU1 be held al the C&lt;Jncession
stand. In case of rain the yard sale wiD not be held.

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