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Thursday. February 21. 1986

Pomeroy-ll!liddleport. Ohio

Page-14 The Daily Sentinel

47 cases processed in Meigs Couniy _Co~rt Wednesday
.
·
Ff\ll1y·sevm cases wrre pro- $22 and costs; Billy Spires, Langs'i ~~ !!&gt;.rough . the Melgs-Gounty - vlllet $Zl ·and costs;---Danny May
.·
. Court of Judge Patrick O'Brien nard, Ravenswood, $23 and costs;
Wednesday.
Franklin B Howard pomeroy $lD
Eight defendants forfeited bonds and cost~; PattY Diefendorf,
andlheyarePhaneutReai,Quebec, Athens,$22andcosts; cnntonPitzer
$50; Teresa Jarvis, TeD City, Ind., Jr .. Long Bottom, $21 aild costs;
$40; John Foster, Marle\1;1, $41; Victor Wigal, · Reedsville, $23 and
Clarence Gray III, Marietta, $44;
costs_
Robert Hickel, Hartford, W.Va., .
Other cases prcx;essed Included:
$40; John C. Burke, Coolville, $44, aU
Edward J. King, Albany, charged
posted on speeding charges; Perry · With falslflcatlon, 10 days In jail and
Smith, Raclne,$45,falluretodlsplay · costs; Wayne Brlcklf!S, Tuppers
valid license plate on ;a traDer, and Plains, assured clear distance. $10
Harry L.
Russell Powers; Middleport, $45, and

·
.
costs, .two years probation, left of
-center, costs only,anddrlvlng whne ·undersuspmslon,SlOOandcostsand
10 days In jail; Cyrus Crlsllp, Long
Bottom, drlvmg while Intoxicated,
$250 and costs, three days In jail,
Ohlollcensesuspended60days; left
of . center: costs . only; Thomas
Scally, Middleport, six months. m ·
jaU, $:Ill and costs, Ohio license ·,
suspended Indefinitely, two .years j
probation; driving whtle under
suspension, $100 and costs and 6(f
days In jail, and resisting aiTest, 60
two years probation and

_

suspension with $100 of. line and suspended, S250 and . costs, six
three days In jan sUS
ded If months
James 'Ibomas.
-- ..__ - · - ~--l!jf r·-rs-;;;-;:;
- .:.:;:;;:;::::=::::.:..:=::_~·;-;;;_;_....;._
res~~ o!:;:tment 11 sc 0
~
atten • .
g a po ce
r,
$l00finand ~ts an: 10 dajy~ lnJa~,$50
of
e an
ays a sen en~

%ce

20

ll a
$7:i nd ~ts- ll d~ys In jail
cense,
a
'
with 25 days suspended If Ohi~
license is obtained within ll days,
Gregory Sheets, HemloCk Grove,
!allure to dlspla~ valid registration,
$l5 and costs, Orland Floyd,
Pomeroy •

.,

. -

Pomeroy, reckless operation, $100

and cos~.

_;;;.....;;:==.-;;;;;;;;;=-----·

ARR.I~ED?

HAS SPRI-

~~~edon::;, k~~fa~ro::~~~

YES IT HAS
AT
MIDDLEPORT DE~ARTMENI' STORE LAYAWAY NOW FOR SPRING
~

fined on speeding charges · and
to yield . costs.
Othercases processed: Laurence suspended; Karen Workrrllln,
Include Jimmie Maynard, Pome- from a private drive; Carolyn
roy, $24 and costs; Frank Roush, · Neutzlmg, Middleport, restitution Lisle, Syracuse, disorderly conduCt, ter ,. bad checks, $20
costs, and assault, six months In jail restitution, one year probation;
· Mason, W.Va., $~ and costs;
and costs, bad checks; James
Al)gela Spaun, Middleport, had
·Ronald Johnson, Sheffield Lake, $20 saunders, Worthington, W.Va., $10 all but twodayssuspended,oneyear
checks,
costs annd restitution, one
probation and costs; . Timothy
and costs; Richard Gorrell, Athens, and costs, following too closely;
year
probation;
David Chase,
'$lD and costs; Robert Stanley,
James Woodyard, Pomeroy, ll Justis, MiddlepOrt, defective ex- · Middleport, bad checks, costs and
haust, SlO and costs; Douglas ·
Huntington, W.Va., $24 and costs;
days In jall 20 days susjlended;
Huston,
Syracuse, driving whUe :restitu\lon, six months probation;
Marlo Rocchi, Bidwell, S2l and $1,000 and costs, Ohio license
sanllra Dlstelhor5t, Racine, falslfi- ·

enttne"

;: :.::

rDift&amp;v_ ..n~u'l' . li~u•
.-.n.,Kt
•:nvnt 1 -

I ,

$1,630,000
·bond issue

under ~attaek-~-· ·•

~

OVER 50 YEARS IN BUSINESS ON
THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

Voters of the Eastern Local

LITTLE DAN'S EXXON

POMEROY

992-9907

LADIES'

UNIFORM
SALE
Dresses1 pantsuits, lab coats, skirts,

Voters of Syracuse Village Will

also go to-thepolls on ivlay7todecide --

~··

'

.

ON TAXES - President Reagan, In a While
Hol!fle East Roo!P news confel't!llce Thursday, called
ior Conlresslo pass tax overhiwl Jeglslalhin this year.
In addltlol!, the pl'eSident said his admln($trallon

·.

woUld be presenting legislation lo Conpoess on Friday
"hopefully geUing the lann economy back In lA&gt; the
farm marketpbice," ( AP Laserpholo ),

.

.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. ~ Buckner, Cohsolloated's vice presiOfficials from six area Ohio and . dent of operations said .. ·
West Virginia municipalities gaThe municipal ofllclals quesil·
thered here Th,ursday to begin oned the rate Increase, taking
formulating a "uniform" -response sharpest alm at the firm's proposal
. to requested rate hike and regula- ' to trim the current senior citizens e
tory proposals sought by the discount from 25 percent to 10
cable-TV firm serv.tclng their percent.
communities.
"I'll guarantee :,:ou there Isn't a

Reg. $9.00 ••••••• Sale S7.19
Reg.S12.00 .~...;Sale.59.59
Rg. Sl8.00 .... ScH S14.39

-

a 1.8 mill, five year, new tax levy.
The levy would provide money for
current expen.sf\S.
As a resu lt of the filings at
Thursday's deadline, It was determined that there will be no May
primary elections this year in either
Pomeroy or Middleport.

Mayors foqni~~:g . response to rate .hike proposal

tops, vests and slacks_
Misses Sizes: 4 to 20 ·
Half sizes: 14~ to 26\7

_ ______________

a
issue at a
·election scheduied May 7.
This was announced by the Meigs
County Board of Elections Thursday at the4 p.m. deadline for filing of
Issues and candidates.
According to the board , the 6.37
mlll tax levy Would be In effect for 23
Jrars and would provide money for
construction of ne"V buildings and
thepurchaseofequipm~ni as well as .
renovation of existing facilities_

WASHINGTON i·A P ) - Prestproducers can gradually get out
dent Reagan, vowing not to "pull the
from Under federal controls and
rug out . from under" . American
subsidies.
.
·
farmers, is sending Congress a
"Many · of the prpblems they
(farmj&gt;rs) face today are the result
controversial farm bm ;lbat is
already under atmpk by critics who
of government's Involvement," .
say -It would devastate family
Reagan said. "Andlthlnkyou'll!lnd
farmers.
·
,
that a great majority or fanners
The blll was being sent to · believe that the answer to their
Congress today.
problems.ls out In the free market"
If enacted, National Farmers
"If government is to help, _then we _
tlnlOit ' spokesman Bob uenman . should help by opening 'up world
says the bill "wnt hasten us very
markets tor them, by holding trade
rapidly down the road to where the
negotiations," Reagan told
agricultural assetsof this country
reporters.
·
·
are controlled by a landed gentry of
Block argues thst American
a few lndlvldualsandcorporatlons." farmers need to be more compeli·
Uve in World markets. But current
. But Reagan, · In a nationally
tPlevlsed news conference Thurs- · government supports artificially
day night, said the proposals for
dictate. rr\inlmum prices and help
:•market -·oriented" federal farm
crowd U.S. crops out of thi&gt;
_ prtce_supports__:: won'LpuU_the rug - International competition. ~
out from under anyone instantly
The administration's bill offers a
· who has geared themselves to these
long,terrri approach to farm policy
that would carry through the year
, government programs."
Agriculture Secretary John Block 200J with "market-oriented" price
says · the bill offers · a .needed supports and a phasing out of direct
overhaul of the basic structure of payments to producers. .
government farm programs so that '

H"'

EAST MAIN ST.

. Voters face

Controversial
far~n bill.now

look F~t Sp'l"l__Pop Specltll $o0t1
·. Pltg lntttnt loH,g

CINCINNATI (API -City public
The union represents 3,500
school teachers and the Board of · teachers in the 52,&lt;XXJ-pupll system.
·The school bOard late Wednesday
Education ended a marathon,
two-day bargaining Session early . offered a 16 percent wage hike, but
today by '. agreeing on a new Mooney held· out for 17 percent,
three-year contract, averting a saying teachers wanted the same
one-day strike the teachers had percentage won by other unton,splannedtaoay:
.. ' • · - · ·• ,. - · • • • ~ · · - · - ·· · ...
•••·•
1
John Rudy, president ofthe school
board, and Tom Mooney, president
of the Cincinnati Federation of
Teachers, emerged from th!' overnight bargaining session shortly
. arter 5 a.m. to tell reporters of the
agreement. Mooney praised ihe
contract . as "a very fair
settlement.".
' Mooney. instructed _: untun
members to report to their classrooms as usual, saying he had
enlisted union persqnnel to alert _
teachers of the tentative contract
agreement.
Asked whether he thought some
teachers still might not report to
work today, Mooney replied, "We
certainly hope not. We hope
everyliody wut show up.
"We have reached an agreement
in principle, which just means we
haven't had a chance to put all the
words down on paper," Mooney
said. "The bargaining team has
suspended any job action."
Mooney and Rudy said- the
contract, still subject to ra tlftcation
by tbe Uilton's members, provides
an 8 percent pay raise the first year,

•

•

WEARING APPAREL a,
*WRANGLER
-*STONEWEAR

PEPSI, RC and COKE •••••:••••• ~.~~;. $179
NEW 3 LITER COKE.~••••••••••••••••• $169 .

Cincy teachers settle ·

-.-·-

.

Mayor Eller Pickens, " Is clog our
police forces and court dockets ... if
they want a law, letlbemgo the state
legis Ia tures and reqoost it."
While Consolidated's proposal
calls for. expanding channel offerIngs to 30, the municipal officials
questioned some proposed changes_
lOOk aim at the

'

In Pomeroy there was a shortage
of candidates -tniilg 'forfour village ~
· council posts wUI open this year.
John Anderson. R, president of
council. did not file for reelection.

Filing were incumbents. William -.
A. Young anp Betty Baronick, both ,
Republicans, and LarryWehrung, a
Democrat. Actually . the primary
elections would have served as a
process lor both Democrats and
Republicans to nominate candi dates to run for council in both
towns. However, With not even four
candidates from any one party filing
in either iown, the primaries will not
be held and those filllig will be
automatically nominated to run in
the fall election.
'

.

In Middleport, six candidates filed
.

'

_..

class sizes to between 28 and
pupils. Both issues were priority
VI ·
demands bytheteachers_ ·
The contract also allows teachers
. to appeal to a professionaf' review
board If a principal changes a grade
the teacher has Issued, Mooney said. _
"The total cost of this agreement
)&gt;: .Mints andedra 1i11 knit IGpf. All
,. ·is such that we will not need a tax
new for- .,ing.
Stripes, p11ftl1 .nd prinh ;,. tan•
levy before the end of/ 'l&gt;l·~ maybe
taps, polo dllirt~. 1lttnlns knits
then,'' Rudy told re)ll)rters.
and rrinltl1' doth.
" ' Misses •zes S. M, l
#'
Ertra sizes 40 to 46
·1; Reg. 17.00 to 121.00

~-

SPRING _
TOPS

J.,

Jii

l .

Athens firm produces
3,300 pounds of cheese

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - The
_Aihens Cheese Bam - in its first
day of opo'ratlon Monday produced 3,ll0 pounds of colby ,
cheese.
President Kenneth Lewis said the
plant produced an average of 11
wunds of chresi' per 100 pounds of ·
mUk, compared with the average of :
10.3.
This 10 percent Increase In .
efllclency "wlllmeana lot later on,"
Lewis said. "For just starling out
we're reaDy pleased-''
Milk to make the cheese is
.obtained !rom eastern and southern
Ohio dally farmers, Lewis said.

Weather forecast
Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low near
40. Friday, cloudy with a chance of
. rain. High near 60 again:Charice of
rain 20 percent tonight and 50
percent Friday.
. · Extended Forecast
Salunlllf through·Monday:
c~~~rmmon~

day, LoWs:J:i.lll. Hlllhs 51H15. Fair on
Sunday and Monday. Lows In the
mld-OOI!IIo mld·:.ls. mg11s mootJy 1n
the~.

·Lottery winner
CLEVELAND

(API The
winning number drawn Wednesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 009.
In the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto"
draWing, the six winning numbers

1

,~

.WASH
CLOTHS

.

-/
,P
•

\

.,-- '

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/

Waffle weave, assorted
colors, large size.

Sale Prlee•

$5

c!,

.'

I

59 To

WRANGLER S9.95

CANNON 69c

~

SWEAT
SHIRTS

~

Men's sizes ~ to 15, boys
size_s 7 to I f. Our popular
Spnngfoot ftualtty. Many
high school olors in·the selection . ·
·

S M, l and XL size. .50%
cotton, 50% acrylic. Cre11
neck, long sleevs, fleece
. lined. Big selection of
solid colors.

s,,S9 White with

Color TfPS ...., l\..19

$J99

2 FOR $100

$1679

TUBE SOCK
SALE

Sale!

Sale!

I

s1.89 Grey with
Color Tops
..... 51.39

Matching Sweat
Pants ......... Sale 17.99

t--r~~r.·-~·-L:~:w~;s·.--w--r~~~~·~·S~A-L-E~--~;;tT·-~-::~~·--~~·--·-,MME~N~'s~··--·----~~,

...

Jimmy Wedge told the r~n·s programming); and, lo offer
assembled officials, "for many of CNN only as a part oft he premium
our senior citizens cableTV isn't a (additional charge) package.
luxury. it' s a necf!Sslty."
"On weekends," said Gallipolis
·
Dlscrepency qilestioned
Commissioner Richard Moore,
A discrepency in rates charged "CNN offers the only real news on
throughout the system was further television."
quf!Siioned during the meeting.
The city and villageofficialswere
While most tnunlcipallties now pay universally critical of theresultsof a
a base-rate of $8.92 a month, the Consolidated-conducted survey that
basic charge for Pomeroy residents Indicated 91 percent of subscribers
is $7.35.
-would pay the additional $193 per
. "sOmewhere down th&lt;' line," , month for basic .cable service "for
Wedge, who chaired the meeting betterplcturequalltyandreliabillty
said, "they are going to have to get and agreaterselectlonofchannels."
The survey registered responses
this thing In line to comply with new
regulaHons !bat require uniformity of 100 subscribers selected at
of priC!1 and serviCe."
random from Mason, Gallia and
The municipal officials said they Meigs counties_ The firm serves an
wanted "no part" of the firm's estimated 9.500 customers in the
request that each city and village local service area.
enad cable service tMft
"In any kind of survey," Wedge
said, "unless you have at least 400
ordinances.
"Allthatwoulddo,"saidSyracuse
(Continued on·page)2l

battle it 'out
November.

for

election ' in

The six lilln'g for the four seats in
Middleport were Incumbent s, Ja ck
Satterfield, D.; Dewey Horton,
Robert Gilmore, both Republicans,
and . Yvonne Scally, a Democrat;
Allen Lee King, an incumbent fill!d
fdr reelection as an independent
candidate and Virgil Phillilps also .
liled as a n independent candidate .
In Pomeroy, TheodoreT.Reed IIJ
filed for election to the Pomeroy
Board of Public Affairs. Inc umbents Dale Smith and Harlan
' Wehrung did not flip with two §\'ats
of the filled.
In Middleport. Willis Al!thony
!Hed lor relection to the board 01
public affairs with only one sea t on
the board to be filled in that town .

.Court continues Taylor case ·
~:::· ·

\ Full slips, half slips and

/~a misoles.

"I', \

.'". . ;;:·.:.:·~~~. .- . .

CASSETTE

'

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( ;i
)&gt;
,_
\ ·.'

VI

rn

I

!.

I'

..
''

'I

Sizes: Small to XXL and 32

. to 50.

·

,; Rag. s$.25 ...... Sale.suo
Rag. S7.00 .•.•.• Sale S5.60
Rag. $9.50 ...... Sala S7.60
Rag. Sl2.00 .... Sole $9.60

Big selection of fashion colors in sizes 29
to 42 waist - plus extra large sizes 44
through ~0._ Save during this sale.

_

pre-recorded cassette tapes. Rock·n-roll, ·
country, religious, sound tracks, bluegrass
andinstrumentals.

s

.

. ..$

.

5.79 Cassettas ......... sae sus
Reg. S7.79 Cassettes ......... Sale sus
.Reg. s$9.79 Cassettes ......... Sale $7.85
. '
Reg. 12.79 Cossettas .... Sale $10.25

. Reg.

Iii'
I

1
19.95. SLACKS
. ....... $15.99 VI
)..

$21.9 5 SLACKS ...... $17.59 Iii
$29 95 SLACKS
$2 3
I
· •
.
.......
•99 .)l.
VI
r-

I~~~~~----·--·-J~~------------~~.~~----~:------~-w--·--·--·~-·--~
.1
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~-

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)&gt;,...

j

"MOUNTAIN MADE"

SAVE 1 /2

ALL PURPOSE

MEN'S AND BOYS WEAR

WORK BELTS

h1

•All Winter Jackets
'
•All Winter Shirts
•Corduroy Jeans
•Men's and Boys' Sweaters

Sizes 32 to 50. Top grade, full grain cowhide leather. Snap
off buckles. Brown and black. 11A inch width. .

"',...~

THROW RUGS

For kitchens · bathrooms · bedrooms
dens· hallways. Colorful patterns.

SS.99 Size 24x90 ... Sale $4,79
S2.99 Size 24x4s'... Sale $2.39

SAVE 1 /2

MEN'S LEATHEI $7.95

$ 50

6-

Black

13/•

Gorrison ltlts...s7.75

inch,••$9,95

~

I

.,,

1·

VI'

;...
~· ~·----~-~~w--·----·--~---~------~------·--·--·--·~~-----~--·-------~----~---~' Fi;'
~
I
~;"~e~i~~~!;-~.:':-~~h•g; o:~ .!,-~~ fREE--PA!!!NG- ~__,...~~~,~~~
$1,oo,anfromwagermgonttsc:tatly 1!:,
OPEN FRIDAY TILL 8
game. Earnings came on sales of
$1 't.l:l, 763, whtle holders of winning
u~kets are entttled ~share $&amp;'i,666.

UNIFORM RESPONSE - Oflldals from six area Ohio and West
VIrginia municlpalittes Thursday began formulating a · unlfonn
resJIOIL'!" to requested raw hike and regulatory proposals sougbt by the
cable-TV finn servicing their communlttes.

talnment last November: The new
owner _immediately raised consumer rates by five percent -which Is
allowed, without municipal approval, under new.federallaw.
The firm then announced plans lor
a $941,025 program of system
Improvements, with expanded and
altered program selections, contingent vpon municipal approval of a $1-93 per month rate Increase;
and, another $1 per month Increase
In 1986.
.
.
While the proposed improvements are tied to the rate hike, the
cable-TV firm did not seek the
Increase In advance. The adjustment, as proposed, wouldtaki&gt;effect
after completion of the work.
"This Increase Is essential if we
are to obtain the financing for the
upgrade from our bank," Hugh

l'l'l

1

·

•

SALE - SALp- SALE ..,.SALE_, SALE._ SALE- ~.1\'u;
•

"

, "·"'"-.SALE -SALE- S~LE- SALE.:. SALE -...SALE-SALE ..( I

_,

The hearing on competency and
extradition for Lindsay Taylor In
Wood County Circuit Court, Par·
kersburg, which had been set for 10
a.m. Friday morning has again
been continued.
Paul Gerard, speclallnvestlgator

October l9&amp;'l shotgun slaying of
tlon With the Jan. Tl break-in at the
Danny Melton In Meigs County.
Gray Michael residence in the
Taylor was arrested Oct. 11, lll83tn
Chester area.
Parkersburg, but extradjtion pro- · Judge Knight set Aprll4 as the datr
ceedlngs have been delayed
for final sentencing.
repeatedly.
&lt;
·
HoskinS has been remanded to the
of
- Shetlff

Attorney
W.
Ill,
late Thursday that the judge who
was to Jiave heard the case was
Involved ·m a trial In Wlrt County,
W.Va., and that a new date for
Taylor's hearing would be set
Taylor, formerly of Rt 1. Forest
Run Rd., Racine, is charged with the

course, att~nd any and all hear·
lngs," Gerard said.
Meanwhile, Thomas Kent Hosklns, Jr., 20, of Chauncey, ThurSday
morning In Meigs County Common
PleasCourtenterecJagulltypleatoa .
charge of breaking and entering.
·
Hoskins was charged -In connec-

. Carl Dean 'Staats, 21, of Washing·
ton Courthouse, also charged in the
break-In at tlie Michael residence,
entered a guilty plea Feb.l2.
Final sentencing for Staats, also
represented by Mullen, was set for
March 26.
•

Meigs classrooms take on new look
Many classrooms and cafet~rias
three at HarrlsonvUie.
school; new chairs for an schools,
of the Meigs Local ,School District · grades one through six .. except
other purchases Include fixtures
ore taking on a "n{'Wiook" -at least
Middleport, have been bought.
for !be junior high rest rooms, new
as far as furnlshlngsareconcemed.
There are 100 new chairs for the tne floor at Sllllsbury; a room
Meigs Local Assistant Superln·
cafeteria at the high school and new divider at Salem Center; handrail
tendent Jim Carpenter has com- chairs fof, the cafeterias at Brad·
for P.omeroy Elementary: custoplied a report on purchases which . bury, salem Center and the junior dian cleaning machines at tbe high
have·been made from a
no
high school, not to mention new school and fencing for the Pomeroy
cost bond Issue approved by voters
chairs -ror -the- band room at the Elementary.
or the district' In November.
junior high. .
Alsotakencareofbythe$.»1,0001s
All schoots gra~ one through
A compresspr for the high school furnaceworkatftutland, Bradbury,
eight of the district are getting new
air conditionmg unit has been Harrisonville and the-Junior high
desks, some 1600 of them; new · ):louldlt; ..J!11!t:k&gt;w shadi!S for~ the ~af!d replacement of t,he roofov~the:­
Bradbury, Harrisonville, Sansbury. .· Brlilloury 8YJ1inliSium;- root ""
chased for Bradbury, Salem Center,
and Pomeroy Elementary Schools;
placement at the Central BuUJdlng,
t11e junior high and six_for the high chalkboardsforgradesonelhrough ·
. (Contln~~r·page 12)

m,ooo

ABOVE AND BEYOND - 011 beMll ol Melp

County's REACT Team, Guy D. llyaell, rllbl,
REACT president, accepted a iropiQ' of thanla! from
11M! Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce for
voloJaej,,.. efforts during lhe ·recent snOw enJel'1li1I!CY

: e= ==tj

~.-:d-=

!er-M!rt=;;. t:~·~ ~...!!!~

durlag 18111 December's Chrt!ilinas parade. Durin&amp;
18l!t ~·~ four-day emaiiGICY, 2113 actual Rllll1

'

._...'111ft - - w e d by

~o·

'een. The troph)';

'l11unldar

mon•lai on the Melgi
· County Coluihouse lllep8 by I'BuJ Geranl, a member
of the Posneroy Area ~her. At left, Chamber
secretary Sherrl Hart displays a HELP fla&amp;. 'l1le8e ·
wM preeented

....... RNID.VDoRAhiA

flonnt R'F.Al'!JI ~'-- .... ···
··~

-~----. -- ·----=------· ·

. -.-.... ---

he' ued by !!&amp;rallded motorllllii aa a slgilal that liEU'

is needed.

•
I

A

�l ..• - _:......

·.

.

~ommentary

,Friday, February 22. 1985•

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Porneroy-Middlepc)rt, Ohio
Friday. February 22. 1985

DEVOTED TO.THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON .o\REA

~~
·~~ . ,..,....._..._....,..,~d·=
RO~ERT L. WING ETJ' .
Publisher

'

PAT W.HITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

. BOB HOEFUCH
Gene.r al Ma!l·ager

A MEMBER of The Assqciat&lt;'&lt;l Press, Inl and Daily Press Associo · ·
: rlon and lhe Amerlc~n Newspaper Publ ishers Association ..
LEITERS OF OPINION are Wf'lrome. Thf'v ~h ou ld br&gt; I Ps~ than .1()(1 word~
ltin~. A ll IC'II'! 'rs'ar!' subjrel to editing and must b(. slgnE'd with· name, address and
!PlE'phonC' nurnbf:&gt;r. No unsifi:ried lt"tlers will be pubiiShE'd . LN!ers shou ld be' in
goOd taste, addrPsstng !SSU('S, not IJ('rsonalulcs,

·
WASHINGTON - The week of
George Washington's . birthday
offers a slngillarly appropriate time
to talk about local sewers - and
about grand opera. (ootbali fran·
chlses and the sale of hot tubs. Old
George was our pre-eminent found·
,lng father. What would he have
thought about current events In .the
capital?
:]'he pn•sidlenlt's

. ·
·
As president of the constitutional
grants over the neXt four years.
Cl!nventlon, Washington heard ar·
Question: How did the building of
gument on questions that trouble us
local sewer lines get to be a federal
to this day:
·
responsibility?
What Is the proper roll' of the
. The budget contains $1611Tilllion .
federal government ln. our society?
to cover grants B!ld administration
What are the llmltaUons, If any, on of the National Endowment for the
the leg!slatlve powers of the Arts.' The grants go to local
Congress? What did the founding · symphonies, opera companies,
fathers mean by authorizing Con· choral groups and troupes of
gress " to provide for the general . players. Question: Does a grant for

to come In 1986: it also prompts a·
backward look at 1787. George
Wasliingion spent the summer of
that year listening to Madison,
Franklin, Hamilton, tile Plnckneys
and others ·debate the terms of a
co!IStitutlon for the young republic.

fisq11 .'86 would authorize$2.4 bllllon
In grants to localities to build local .
sewer systems. The program ·has
been Immensely popular.
Hundreds of mayors and ctty
.counclls are mobUizlng to fight the
president's plan to phase out lbe ·

welfare? The example is hypothetl·
cal; the question Is real.
Through the Small Business
Administration, the taxpayers subsidize 21,00J loans and loan guaran·
tees a .year. Many oft he loans go to
doctors and dentists who could wen

borrow from local banks. Some of
the loans go to such •mall enterprises as ski shops. Insulators and ·
operators of two trucks. One loan
went to a store selling bot · tubs.
Question:·Where·ln the Constitution
does one find authority for Congress
to subsidize the fellow selliJig hot
t\Ibs?

championship~~;

Marauderettes take TVC
.. . By KEITH WISECUP .
Meigs against the Lady~uckey~
llUCkrEL - Meigs scored the - with 1~ points and eight rebounds
-'-llrst elgh1ll01~ or tlleflrsrluitffor-whUl!' j\lillor-~'JOdl " H~n ~arid
a .26-20hillftlmeleadThursdaytben · senior B. J . GOrdon added eight
cruised to Its first Trl· vaney points each. Amy Dlxoo led NYHS
Conference litrJs' cage champion· with 12 points.
· ··
sh)p !:lY a final score of 47-32 over
As the case has been most of the
NelsonvllJe..York.
year, the Marauderettes were bot
. The win, the Marauderettes.' 14th at the foul line as they canned 15 o!
straight. allowed the Meigs ladles to 23 for 65 percent. "Our free throw .
reach the · 20-win plateau, a feat shooting has finally Improved this
rarely accomplished In any season · year. In our last eight games, SIX
by any team. Meigs Is 20- i overaU
times we'ire shot better than ·6(j
and wound up the TVC season 17-1, percent," said Meigs coach Ron
one game ahead of second place Logan about his 17th stale-ranked
Alexander.
Marauderettes.

-- .-The" Daily Sentinel ~ ..,c-.__··-~ ·· ()Jd- question, new~debate-. c--- ~James-J.-Kilpatric~
l1l Court Str~et
Pomeroy, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,. t

'ii

'

..

·A couple of' weeks ago a Senate
sul;&gt;cornrrtlttee held preil·

I!Mf Dye s!art..efll. the kow~lliV~·
age Is six points and the highest ts

n;so lf nas been a ·leanf effilrrlill ..

year.··

Meigs made 16of45from thefteld
fQr 35 percent while taking down 41 r-;:::::::::::::::~::::­
rebounds. committlngl5turnovers,.
and charged with 12 fouls. Jenny
MU!er pliced the Marauderette
rebounding with eight while GOrdon
2101 Jefferson Ave.
had seven and Jenny ~wartz, ·
Point Pleasant, W. Va .
Harrlson, and .Julie Mlller eac)l had
. six. NYHS was elghl of 16 from the
foul line and was guilty of 17 fouls.
The Meigs reserves ended Its
season with a 28-21. loss · to the

PoolsPiw..s
675-1388

SPAS &amp; ·POOLS

round action of the Athens class AA
sectional tournament. Winner Sat·
· urday advances to play tbe New
. Lexington-Alexander wlnnef on
Saturday, March 2.at 3,p.m. Winner
there goes to dl$trlct play.
Sophomore Jenny MOler paced

athletic franchises . One of .the bllls;
spOnsored by the two senators troll)
Missouri, would make It diHicult for
owners of the St. Louis Cardinals of
the National FootbaJILeagul'topull
up stakes and take the team
somewhere else. ·Question: What
business does Congress have ln the

business? i:nl&gt;ugni 'il,u.-i.,.;, .~ .~~...;=·-""•==""~"""
;,_~football
.~~;.~iW..tiinN"Po..hPJI.Pve that the powers delegates to

,~getting~··government~=c

limited powers. Clearly tile national ·
government has the respcinslblllty
to raise am1les; to maintain a navy,
to coin money, to carry the mali, to
provide a system of federal courts,
and to erect " forts, magazines,
arsenals;· dockyards, and other
needful bu1idlngs." But the Consli·
tutlon not oD!y delegates power In
these specific areas; It . also dele·
gates power "to provide for the
general welfare" and ''to regulate
commerce among the several

-·out of agriculture
President ReagB!I'S conservative Ideology anq his commitment to cui
back big government are nowhere more evident than In the farm program
his &amp;dminlstration will propose to Congress,
· Reagan's goal Is to dismantle a half-century of governmeni efforts~
. prop up .farm prices, control production .and assun;-·a decent livelihood for
tpe nation's farmers who, in American mythology; are the backl:lcme and
moral filler of the country.
Although· P..eagan -shares--4hat t-raditional - 3o~iewr- he- be!ieves -""farme~
would be better off without the gover~ent agriculture programs that
have evolved since the Grea I Depression. ·
The president has said the program he envisions ·would be phas&lt;'&lt;l in
gradually to prevent unnecessary shock from withdrawal of government
supports, but administration planners are resigned to watching as many as
200,00J farmers go broke or abandon their land in the nard years ahead.
One official. speaking on condition he would not be named, said some
projections shoW 10 percent of the nation's 2.4 million full·and part·lirrte
farmers will leave the land llefore the decade is out.
, The official stressed that the administration regards ·farm failures as a
· consequence of exiSting ·problerris and pollcies, noi as the likely snakeoul of
· a transition to Reagan's proposed market-based farm economy.
·
But no consideration Is lleing given 1.0 new federal efforts to save failing
farmers.
"There comes a time when you can't do arty more," one White House
afde said this week, "and the time of S2ffi billion deficits is probably it."
· Even the latest revisions In Reagan's. election-eve credit assistance
programs were aimed more at baili!lg out rural banks than the farmers Ia
whom the banks had lent manl-y, one administration oHicial confided.
"The fact is , the cost of any real relief from the debt crisis would be
astronomicaL" said the olfici&lt;il, who also spoke on condition of anonymitY.
According to adn\inistratiQn.analyses, there are 200,00J farmers with a~
debt-to-equity ratio of 40 percent, putting them In the banker's folder of
"patential problems." Of those, about !ll,OOJ have a debt-to-equity ratio of
70 percent or more, meaning they are In imminent danger.
But that problem, as portrayed by a numller of White House off-icials, is
. primarUy a result of land speculation ..,. ·sometimes even referred loa~
grl;'ed, The typical farmer on today's serious list, according tot his portrait ,
is one who bOrrowed all he could to buy farmland· as prices sky!'OCketed
with inflation in the 1910s.
"

food prices. farmers found they couldn't sell the land for enough to pay off
the.debts they had incurred .to buy it.
Although ~0 one pretends the credit . crisis is the only . pl'(lblem i'!
Ap1erlcan agriculture, administration officials have found it a convenient
way to explain the inevita~ilily offarmlailun?s, while promoting Reagan's
hape Of getting government out of agriculture.
.
·
.
.

.

Letters· to editor
Blood donors appreciated .
. On behalf of the Ken Stewart
family we'd like Ia thank all of the
people who so graciously gave their
blood donations at the recent
Bloodmobile.
-We reached half our goal and If
anyone Is Interested, there wlll IJe

states~

Is a loan to the Old·Town Hot Tub
Shoppe a loan for the general
welfare? Is a sports franchise a
part of the . "commerce" . thai
properly should .concern the
Congress?
To be sure, It will be said that the
constitutional questions have long
been settled. John Marshall gave
an expansive reading to . "com·
merce" in the great steamboat case
of 1824.

·. o

Soviet 'torr battle ___~____Ja_ck_A_n_de_rs_on
WASHINGTON - An Intense,
full reciprocity Is a sly attempt by detente, would not be bullied by
of our Moscow embassy's.
llehind·the-screen struggle between
The Intelligence community's · anti-communist hard-liners Ia sab· Congress, the FBI or the CIA.
the Stale Department and the
view of reciprocity accentuates the otage any move toward more
The department also pointed out
intelllgence agencies has wound up
positive: Beefing up the Moscow cordial relations with the Kremlin.
that the SOviet Embassy's excess
in President Reagan's fap. With
On a trip to the Soviet Union in number of people ls misleading;
embassy staff would allow It to send
surprising spunk, the striped-pants · more of Its people into the Soviet 1983, Leahy was appalled at the since it insists that its chauffeurs,
set has stood up Ia the FBI, the CIA
Unio!l with diplomatic protection. It hardships endur&lt;'&lt;l by the Ameri - maintenance personnel and other
and Congress In defense of us· would also eliminate a numller of cans there: the cramped, crum· · menial workers be Soviet citizens. ·
diplomatic turt, and the president
Soviet employees In the · U.S. bllng, 19505-vlntage embassy build· The Stale Department and Conwill have to pick the winner.
Embassy who might be intelligence ing, the squalid living quarters and gress have historically agreed that
The .tempest among the teacups
agents.
the pollee-state restrictions on using Americans Instead of RusconCerns the issue of .:.!reciprocity''
The Stale Department regards travel and other activities. Leahy sians In non·sensltl\'C positions Isn't
or tit -for-tat tretment of Soviet and
figured a demand for
the demands for full
worth the
numllers, the Soviets have 120 more
people stationed at . their U.S.
embassy. than we have In Moscow.
This strikes the FBI as unfair.
Based on the standard rule of
thumb that 40 percent of Soviet
Embassy personnel are spies, it
means that the G-men have48more
agents to keep track of than they
would If the Kremlin's Washington
staff was trimmed back to tbe size

If pursued aggressively, the diplomats fE'ar, the demand may crut;h
the feeble sprout ·or better u:s..
SoViet relatioQs they have detect&lt;'&lt;l
In recent months.
Some State Department oHicials
have confided their darkest suspl·
clons to my associate Lucette
Lagnado. They are prepared · lo
.be1leve that the insist en~ ·on
rocking the boat With demands for ·

may
bless you all. - Jo Ann
the situation Is.
j've called or dropped off write· Newsome, 34432 SR 7. Pomeroy;-·
ups pertaining to school events, . Ohio 45769.
scouting
events,
,· .
. neighborhood
" '.

'foday in

hi~tory

·.

TodaY Is Friday, February 22nd, the 53rd day of 1985. There are 312 days
left In the year.
· Today's Highlight 111 History:
cln February 22nd, 1732, the first president of the United States, George
Wa~hington, was born at his parents' plantation near Fredericksburg,
Virginia. ..
this date:
.
In 1llll. English colonists In America got )heir first taste of popcorn.
. In 171!4. a U.S. cllpper, ithe Empn;-ss of China, left New York Cltyfor the
Far East.
·
·In 1819, Spain ceded Florida to the United States.
In 1865, Tennessee adopted a new constitution abolishing slavery.
In 1879, Frank Winfield Woolworth opened a five-cent store in Utica, New
York. ·
'
· tn 1889,' President Grover Cleveland signed a bill to admit the Dakotas.
Montana and Washington State to the Union.
.
!Jil\124. C~ivin Coolld"P dPlivered the flrg_presldentla:J radio broadcast
from the White House.
1935, It became Ulegal for airplanes to fly over the White. House.

.on

In

Department was a minority of one
- studied Ihe situation and recom·
mended full diplomatic partly with ·
the Soviets. A task force memoran·
dum embodying these recommen.
dllllons has been on Reagan's desk
since November. Secretary of Stale,
George Shultz has urged the
president not to sign II, and so far he hasn't. But the tnremgence agenCies are·convlnced that be wtil.

JridUSt'rial rea)ity_________,..R_ob_er_t_Wa_lt_ers

another Biocidmoblle on March 1 at
Meigs High School from Hi p.m.
and they will be accepting blood
KIHEI, Hawaii (NEA) - The
donations for Ken Stewart again. · notion of the nation attaining
Thanks and God bless all of you. economic nirvana in the 21st
Frank anq Jo Ann Newsome.
century dates back to the late 1960s,
992-3382.
·when sociologist Daniel Ball first
extolled the heneflts of what he
called the "post-Industrial society."
Other sociologists. economists
and futurists enth.uslasllcally em·
news and when I've needed assistbraced and elaborated upon the
ance in different events and I've
ocncept in the 1970s and early 19!lls.
always received ydur help and for
They suggested that the country
this I personally thank you.
.a lready was In the midst of an
Everyone Is eager to criticize and
epochal transition from an
condemn but we don't always take
Industrial-based economy to a
out time to congratulate and thank
service-oriented society.
people wben they've done a good
Workers no longer would be
job and this Is what I'd like to do
assembly lines
confined lo
. now. From-our
and friends

oriented," says Dr. qregory Pal, an
economist Wllh the First Hawaiian
Bank.
At first glance. the state's
employment situation appears to
be very healthy. Throughout the
1981·83 recession, for example,
Hawaii's unemployment rate was
consistently two percentage points
lower than the national average.
But the quality of those jobs has
deteriorated markedly as an In·
creasing proportion are generated
by the burgeoning tourist industry.
.The state Is expect.ed to attract
almost five million tourists this
year- more than 20 times as many
as In
·when Hawaii became ·a

Thanks for a job well-done
I'd like to take my hat oH to the
Sentinel staff and all its carriers for
an excellent job done during the
past two weekly winter storms. You
retx&gt;rted to work and collected your
news and got It printed and then gal
It delivered when everything else
was at a standstill.
I'd also like to thank the entire
and

Wllh the enthusiastic support of
the . FBI and CIA, Leahy and
Huddleston last fall engineered a
non-binding, "sense of the Con·
gress" provision to the' Intelligence
agencies' authorization blli, urging
the State Department to work
toward equal numbers and equal
treatment of U.S. and Soviet
embassy personnel.
But the diplomats, ·worried about

manufacturing jobs In smokestack rior agricultural
the
Industries would be replaced by other two mainstays ' the state's
fulfilling service positions In high· . economy, has grown at a similarly
technology· fields .
phenomenal rate.
There were skeptics, however,
But'the vast majority of the jobs
who dourly noted It was lnconcelva· servicing those visitors are ln the
ble that the nation's entire work category of bellmen and room
force could he employed In the maids at hotels, waitresses and
telecommunications, electronics, busboys lat restaurants, cashiers
genetic engineering and other and stack clerks at retail stores and
high-technology Industries.
tour guides on sightseeing buses. ,
The service-based economy, they
The average earillngs for retaff';
suggested, would produce far more store employees are 63 percent
jobs for those ·wUUng to serve below the statewide average for all
hambUrgers or fried chicken at jobs, whlle hotel positions pay 40
fast-food restaurants than for those percent less than average.
seeking to explore the frontiers of · An estimated two-thirds to three·
biotechnology or computer SCience. fourths of the state's work force
Without any fanfare, Hawaii has today holds ·some form of service
become the flrsl state In tbe country job - a percentage unmatched
tQ undereo the transformation to a anywhere elseln the country. Those
service-based economy - and the employed In the traditional fields of
Initial evidence suggests that the manufacturtna, construction and
skeptics may have been right.
agriculture accounted for 24 per"Since statehood, Hawau has cent ofthe work force when Hawaii
--£xp:2rl~r.~~ -a--...~,.,rtual-~cu~ti..iMng&gt;--'-=-attaint.od-stilteiawd bui only · 11
of Its labor force from one being percent now.
predominantly craft· . and sldll· ·
the result: The average annual
t

wage for all of the slate's employed
workers, after adjustment for
Inflation, has actually declined by
13 percent since 1970. During the
same period, the annual growth
rate of real per ·capita personal
Income averaged two percent
nationally but only one percent In
Hawaii.
In a belated effort to obtain some
benefits from the post-Industrial

society, plans are being made· to
construct two high-technology research parks- one here ~t Kihei on
the west coast of the Island of Maul
and another at MIJilanl Town near
the center of the Island of Oahu.
To date. however. the Hawaiian
experience suggests thallhe highly
promoted advent of the · serviceoriented society Isn't necessarily
what had been promised,

Berry's World

GOES lJP FOR SHOT ~ Jenny M.IUer (42) of Melp attempts a jump
shot as Krlstle Balr oiNelsonvUJe-York tries for a block during action In
·Thursday's TvC championship game won l!y Melp. With the victory,
the Marauderettes capt\lred their flrtlt TVC cage title.

les aump Pirates.·'--·.

ii_·.:.~
,

the first tin\e since 1964, Ohio State
has swept Its four basketball games
with Purdue and Indiana in a single
season.
.
In doing so, the Buckeyes, 16-7
overall and tied for third tn·the Big
Ten at 8-5 with Iowa, silenced their
critics with what Coach Eldon
_ MUJer called Ohio 1State's best
overall performance fhis winter.
"You can knock them down, but
you can't keep them down," Miller
said of his team, panned for losing a

· :~:~~~:~-:~:/~!s!on

to
"I've felt good ailout this club all
By SCOTJ' WOLFE
found the open man underneath, year. My major concern has been
EAST MEIGS :_ Behind Its
while ·swishing several Important our defense. We don't have to worry
biggest scoring. output of the
shots of their own.
about scoring," Miller said.
Meanwhile, Bissell and Leach·
Gene Keady, Purdue's coach,
season; the Eastern High School
man all but owned the boards as Isn't so sure about his squad.
. basketball quintet s0ared to
another impressive SVAC triumph
they single-hanciedly outreboUnded
"Some teams quit at this stage of
over the North Gallla Pirates, 77-ti6.
the Pirates 28-27. At the close ofthe
the year," he said. "Some keep
frame, Eastern had Widened Its
battling. I'm not sure where we are
Four Eagles hit double figures as
freshman Breni Bissell led theway~· ·margin tp ilsM:-.- ~·~ rtghl now. How are we going to react
with 26 markers and 12 rebounds.
Subbing throughout the final
to this?"
Eastern ralsPd Its record to 10-7 · round, Coach Dennis Eichinger's
The defeat knocked the Boiler·
overall, assurance of a winning
Eagles at one point led by 18,1Jefore makers, 17-7 overaJI and 8-6 In the
season, the best Eastern has had In
holding on for the 77·ti6 win.
league, 31·2 games behind Big Ten
· three years. North Gallia dropped
Eastern hit a very wam132 of 64 leader Michigan.
to 5-12 overall.
for 50· percent. and 13 of 21 at the
Sevl'n·foot Brad Sellers, emerg·
Behind Brent Bisseil'sgame-high line. North Gallla canned 30cif73for · lng from Miller's doghouse, led the
26 p()ints. Greg Leachman muscled
a warm 41 percent, whlie notching victcry wllhS.·of·ll floor shooting, 18
In 17 points. freshman standout Jeff
six of seven at the line.
potnls, nine rebounds and five shot
Caldwell tossed In 12, and sopho·
Eastern collected 43 total re·
blocks.
more Eddie Collins added 11. .
bounds led by Leachman's 17 and
Miller said of his two-game
North • Gallia placed three · BISsell's 12. Leachman has had 78
benching of Sellers: "I know orte
members of lis crew In double
rebounds In the last four gamt&gt;s.
thing. Hedldn'tllkelt. It'snotmy job ·
figures as !!'.odd Dee! led the way North Gallla collected 27 with
to keep the players happy. My jobls
with 20 points, Mike Kemper added
Kemper leading the way with
to make them !Jetter."
18, and Paul Lee had 16.
seven: Dee! and Wayne Diddle had
TheOhloStatecoachparticularly
Opportunity knocked all night five each.
long for the Eastern Eagles Thurs·North Gallla had seven steals, 14
day
and II was Brent Bissell turnovers, 16 assists and 10 fouls.
· .JP~ assists .:Jnt

~·

as he and his teammates
engaged In an all-out battle with the
torrid first bali shooting of the
Pirates. When the curtain finally
fell on the first frame Eas(ern led
21·20.
The first period fireworks cooled
somewhat during the second half,
although Eastern still took the
inside groove and NG. swished ·
lengthy jumpers over the . Eagle
zone and through the nets. By the
· close ·of the canto Eastern slowly ·
forced the Pirates to walk the
plank. the score 37-32. despite good
efforts from Kemper, Dee! and Lee.
Eastern enjoyed a great third
quarter as the Eastern guards
Caldwell and Collins continuously

North Gallla cl1\,lmed the reserve
contest with . a 45-40 ·. win. Doyle
Callihan led the winners with 15,
Todd Holstein added 14,'and Shane
Glassburn 10. Bryan Durst and ·
Darrln Drenner each had 12 for
Eastem, Mark Griffin bad eight
and Steve' Horner six.
Eastern host~ Southweste.rn
tonight.

Lebimon results
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) -Tommie's .Ten lunged at the wire to win
the featured ninth race at the
Lebanon Raceway on Thursday
night. paying $5.40, $4 and $2.60.
Ben's Clipper paid $13.40 and $4.20
to place. ldoleyes was the show
horse, paying $2.1ll.
The dally double paid $68.20on the
combination of 8-2. A crowd of 1,515
wagered $170l16.

look F01 Sp1ln1 Pop Sps~l•l' Soon
· Pl•g lntt•nt lottstg H11s

LITTLE DAN'S
EXXON
.
' POMEIOY ·

Eastern ............................. 2116 19 21-'71'
NG ..... ......................... .... :IJ 12 12 22-66

1983 Pont. Grand Prix, U Model

regular-season games ln Ohio
Stadlurr. . Earlier, Bay had an·
nounced Ohio State would play at'
Southern Cailfornla on Sept. 23 and
at home wlth Boston College Sept. 30
'in 1989.
Bay said Ohio State new has only
one open date through the 1990
football season. The Sept. 22 date Is
not fllled In l!ro, he sald.

Small V·8 motor. auto., air, AM· Fill-Cassette. power windows .
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1975 CaclilkK CouDtrDeVille ••• $1695

One owner, looks &amp; runs gooi'l.

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R

'

0-1-1: cOJilnS o-o-o; C.3.idweli ().().(); Runyon
0-0-0. and Shrlvers o-o-o. Totals IZ..ll-77.
NORTH GAUJA (II) - Kemper 11-2-18;
Dccl 9-2-W: Hammons ~; Hawks 1·2-4;
Tlla.ton M-0: Leo ~16: Diddlei.0.2. 'l'*k
:Jl.MI.
Soorebyq-

DEAN POLARIS 78

"Who'd

l

. . .l!

R. BbS&lt;'ll 3.0.6; Collins 5-1·11:

P226175R15 ................................ 1 39.00
P235176R15 ................................ 1 41 .00

REVOLUTION/?" •

1982 Buick Electra 4 Door

White, Dark blue vinyl top. All the class you expect in a classic
car.
•
'"\

16/76R14 ..•.......•.... . ,',.............. _•38.00

Auto. P.S.

j

. .

. ·' I

Caldwel.l J-.6.12; Leachman 7·3-17; W~ber

mLUMBus:ohlo (AP)- Ohio
State will face Oklahoma State for
• the first time In the 19lll collegiate
football opener for both schools In
Columbus on Sept. 16, Ohio State
Athletic Director Rick Bay an·
nounced Tuesday.
The dale with Oklahoma State
completes the 1989 schedule. with
the Buckeyes
six oflhetr 11

Auto., P.B.,P.S., air.

l .. ,..:

EAST MAIN ST. ·

OSU schedules Oklahoma State

1977

··

NEW 3 LifER COKE •••••••••••••,•••••

EASTERN (77)- Barbe-r 2-0-4; B1 Bissell

12·22·26:

1984 Chevrolet Celebrity

4 door, V-6 motOf, auto. trans .. AM·FM radio , cloth interior, .
light green.

.

F-250~•••• 51495

·

Blackwell · Whhew~l

P166/80013 ...... ;............... 1 19.&amp;0
A78x13 ...................... , ....... 1 20.60
B78x13 ....... , ...................... 1 21.&amp;0
C78/14 ...................... :....... 1 21.60
D78/1·4 .................................. N/A
E7B/14 .............................. 1 23.50
F78/14 ...................... , ....... 1 24.60
078/14 ........... , .................. '25.50
H78/14 .............................. 1 27.50
078/16 ......... :.................... 1 27.&amp;0
H78/ 16 .............................. 128.60
L78/16 }.,, •.............................. N/A ,

21.0
22.0
1 23.00
'23.00
1 24.00
1 2&amp;.00
1 26.00
'27.00'
1 29.00
1 29.00
1 30.00
•31.00
1
1

.

�Friday,. Fe;,rua.!Y 22, 1985

Tonight the last regular scheduled games In the SVAC are
slated, an~ as expected, the league -·
race Is going down to the last game
of the season
The league headliner pits peren·
nlal power Southern against
another tough up and-coming ball
clubmHanmlnTtace. TheWlldcats
shared league
and

league the previous seven years
In other game.s Eastern hosts
Southwestern, and North GaUia
visits Kyger Creek
Although Hannan Trace doml
nates Southern In the won loss
column, Southern's tough schedule
has been a factor m Its overall
ledger

•

~

----

.....__

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel Page

5

Meanwhile, Southern hopes to be
reaching a peak for the tournaments with_ a much J mproved
attack In Its latest outings

After Second Place
Eastern could possibly salvage a
second place In the SVAC should
Southern lose Friday, and Eastern
wins Its remaining league games
EHS heat North Gallla Thursday

&amp; SONS SOHIO
Northern
( 5-10) both lose
Saturday, the winner between host
Eastern Michigan (7-8) and West·
ern Michigan (7-8, wllllock up a fifth
spot In the post season playoffs that
determine the le~e·s NCAA
Tournament representative
The Mid-American :rournament
wt11 be
7-91n Toledo's

ously over last season's mark, and
one reason Is that six members of
Its young, but extremely talented
crew are hovering around the
double-digit scortng mark. That's
something you don't see very often
even at the district tournament

level.
Coach Dennis Eichinger's Eagles

Daily
(USPS 1411-900 I
A Division "' Multimedia Inc

own

-

Kingsbury Home Sales

,.f
J/

~h~~ ~=~~~':'

NEW YORK ', .. .&gt;\
Cl.OlHING IIJUSE _~,',.

Published ~;?Very aftE"I noon Monday
through Friday 111 Court St, Y the
Ohio Valley Publis hing Companyt Mul
tlmedia Inc Pomeroy Ohio 45769 h
992 2156 Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy Ohio

KERMIT"S KORNE:R

Pomeroy. Oh1o

Just u the steel in a building needs tempering so
we need to fortify our inner strength In our churches
we leam to know what we are and what we can be
Worship every week-you w1U be the stronger for 1l

• .'f'"~

.

l'rliU'sda!l

Modular Homes

J Cor(nUtlan•

1100 E Marn

THE DAILY
SENTINEL ·

:S£-JJ

,,

CK

SUPERMAR~:,5
~"'

MIDDLEPORT

M•ddleport
P()meroy 0

•·

~- tti1s~unday

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH O~CHR I ST
- JoseptJ B Hoskm s eva nJ":l'llst :Sunday

BlbleStudy9a m Worship lOam Sun
day evening se rvi ce t:i p m Wednesday
I:'Venlng service 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBL \

Racine

Rt 124 Wllltam Hoba ck pa stor Sunday
SchoollO am Sunday f.'Yenm g servtce 7
p m WednesdaY ('venin~.; s~rviCt? 7 P. m
CARPENTER BAPTI S1 Don Cheadl e
Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a m Morning
Worship 10 30a m Pra~Prservice altern
ate Sundays

MIDDLEPORT PENT ECOSTAL, ThircL

Ave Rev~ C!arlr13:uct?r pasTor Cart Nol
tlngham Sunday Sch ool Supt Sunda}
Schoo1 10 a rn With classes for all ages
Evening servlles at 6 p m Wedn esday Bl
bl est ud y at 7 30p m Youth ser\lces Frl

pm
ECCLES !A FELLOWSIIIP 128 Mill St

day at 7 30

TR1NJTY

CHR ISTIAN ASSEMBLY

Coolville Gilbert Spencer pastor Sunday
School 9 3Q a m ;....MQrnlng service 10 30 a
m Sunday evening service 7 00 p m
Mid Wf:'ek pfaye-r service Wednesday 7 p
m
MT

OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH

Lawrence Bush pa!itor Max Folmer Sr
Supt Sunday School and Morning Worship
9 30 a m Sunday eVPnlng sE&gt;rv lce 7 p m
Youth meeting and Bible Study Wcdncs
day 7 p m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH R! 7 on Po
meroy By Pass Rev Robert E Smith Sr
pastor Melvin Drake S S Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m Morning Worship JO 30
Evening Worship 7 30 p m Wednesday
Prayer Service 7 30 p m

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH Railroad
Sunday
II a

10 a m

pastor ' Cornelius Bunch supl
School 9 30 a m Second and
'sur&gt;da''' worship sen Ice at 2 30 p

m

MT MORIAH BAPTIST Fourth and
Main St Middleport Rrv Calvin Minnis
pas tor Mrs Elvm Bumgardner sup1
Sunday School 9 30 a m Worship service
10 45 a m

Middleport Brother Chuck McPherson
pastor Sunday School 10 a m Sunday
eve ning services {II 7 p m and Wednesday
services at 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Earl Shuler
pastor Sunda v Sc hool 9 30 a rn Church
service 7 p m, Youth meeting 6 p m
Tuesday B1ble ST1.,1dv at 7 p m
- FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE 3iJJ45
Hiland Road PomerOy Tom Kell y pas
tor DannY Lambert S S Sup! Sunda v
morning S{'l vice at 10 am Sunda). even
mg sen ICf' 7 ~lip m TuPsday and Thur"
da y Serv1ces a t 7 30 p m
WORD OF FAITH 91 M II Sl
port Rtchard Stpwnrt
sen l;;'";,I.;D;,Ini~·llible
7morning
:Jl Tuesday
!

CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE Re\ Gkndon Slrood, pastor
Sunday SchoolS 30 a m Worship serv1ce
10 30 am , Youth sPn 1cf' Sunday li 1 ~ p
m S'-lnda y evt&gt;nmg servl&lt;:eo 7 00 p m Wed
nesday Prayer MPf'fmg a nd R1blf' Stud)
700p m
NF:ASE SF.TT I EMENTf'HURCH Sun
day afternoon servi('(&gt;S ar 2 J/J Thursc;tav
e"ening servh;es a t 7 30
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Mason W
Va Pastor BtllMU!ph y SlmdavSchoollO
am Su ndoy e\{~ mn~ 7 30 p m Pra:,er
me1:'1lng a nd 8 1ble study WE"dnesday 7 30
p m Everyont&gt; y,eJCQmC'

RUTLAND FREE WiLL BAPTiST

Sa

pm
SOliTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH Si lver Rid j:!;(' Duonc Syden
stricker pastor Sund a y School 9 a m
Church service 10 a m Bible St ud y Wed
nesday at 7 30 p m Junl'thru Septe mber
7 p m OCtober thru M av Sundao., eve ning
FPllowshlp 7 p m June thru september 6
p m October thru May

Sermonette
•
scormg

SVAC
S\'AC SCORING
ALL GAME'!

SVAC GAME'! ONLY

.,.

Player/ School
Todd Adams, s

(As of Feb 19 Games)

PIJiy..-/SdJool

M]ke Krmper NG
TOOd Adams, S

Av

G

347 !16 16
J:l!l 18 2
246 15 9
270 15 0
24&lt;) 1511

&amp;tl'Yr Pelfrw SW

Barnes HT
Mlk&lt;' Bailf'V SW
Chock Vogel I&lt;C
,Ja,\1 ~rick s
Bill Swain HT
Dekf'

2."Xl 14 3

225 13 2
2."Xl 12 7
169 121
192 12 0
186 11 6
111 111
156 96
152 95
148 93
155 86
1J'i 84
151 83
1z; 78
113 7 I
113_ 71

Brl;nt BisSPII E
Kl"l'in Barber E
S!(IIJP Wauli(h KC
C~ Leachman E
Todd [)ff&gt;l NC
J(lff Ca id~A etll E
Eddre Colhm; E
Mil«' Dal st H'l

.S&lt;ar&gt;.Coli&lt;'V SW
PhD Ba llev HT

Wawn&lt;' Diddl e. NG
·Ailthdnv Kitchen KC
• R~cr Bl!iiseli E

Preparation and Celebr..tlon
Smce Ash Wednesday "as designated theopenmgoflhe fast and
the Lenten calendar. Christians have considered Lent a senous
preparation for the 'Feast of feasts ·a way of growmg mt o Easier
Lent Is a "ay of m akmg the truth of Easier part of our ltves a
preparation for salvation
Durmg Lent. we regularly w1thdraw to look mward and ten eel
on the spiritual dimensions of our loves, to m€&lt;:h t ateon the m eanmg of
Lent ' and where that meanmg Intersects ou r faith Otten !his
selfexamonatlon reveals the need to remdcr and clalll\ our
prioritles so thai we may continue to grow spu 1tually
Fasting Is a part of the preparatton for Easter w1t h " htch mam
of us aretam1llar But not many have considered fastin g at !he
deepest level of Its meamng Fasting Is not mere!~ abstm()nce fl om
some act or habit that we will unmedlately resume at !he end oft he
Holy Season, It Is also abstinence from hidden 'little sms 'that" "
unconsciously have allowed to creep mto our II\ es
Early Christians thought that fastmg enrtched theu ptawr ltfe
and acts of glvmg They believed 11 was an espectallv effect tvc wav of
preparing for any sacred art1on Our Lent en fast of 40 days ISan act
of preparauon for redemption. we pu1 our self demal m1o the same
redemptive pattern to which Christ's last belengs ThC'n w e turn to
m faith and hope, emptying our hands of rvC'rvthtng rise so

18
16
18
16
1G
17
18
14
1fo
16
16
16
16
16
18
16
18
16
16
15

Mlkt' l&lt;emper KC
Dekt&gt; Barnes HT
Blll Swain tiT
Chutk Vogrl KC'
Mike BaiiE&gt;V SW
Jl:'ff Caldwell E
Jav Bosllck S
KC'V1n BarbPr E
Tudd 0..1 ;G
Stevf' Pelfrey SW
MikE' Davis HT

St('Veo W01ugh KC
Greg Leachman E
Brent BlsS('!) E
Eddie Collins E

Sean Collt'"l SW
BISsell E

Royce

Anthony Kitchen I&lt;C

Pl\11 BaDe&gt; HT
Wayne Diddle, NG
Kellev Grueser S
Ke\1n
s

Pt.. A&gt; G
IKI ~I 9

149 186 8
14J 15 9 9
125 13 9 9

11JJ 13 5
1111 1~0
101 12 6
97 121
94 118
93 116
87 10 8
97 10 7
113 10 4
81 10 1
59 98
79

74
7"l
69

73

57
58

8
8
8

8
8
8
8
9
8
8

7

Class A tournament
!SECOND GAME)
FEDERAL-HOCKING 1411)- Jill

Dark blue, VB engine, automatiC transmiSSIOn, partially custom1ted
in1enor with 4 Captains chairs I rear bed, rad1al t.res. Locally owned.
Burdette

1 f)- 7 Lisa MUll'r 4 2 tO Jennifer CuckJer
54 14 Lori Sinnett 2 :\.7 Tammv Lockhart
1.0.2 Molly DeLavan fl.22 Kim Chapman
I 24 Totals 14-IIH8

$3,200.1111

KYGER CREEK (21)- Renee Ward 2 2-6
Kelly Roush 1.0.2 Twyllla Connelley 0..3-3
Jill Drummond 3 0-6 Dec Dee Henson 2-1 5
M~sy Kitchen 2-04 Totals tN-28

99 8
93 8

90
86
81
71
64

8
8

9
8
9
9

~--

c

SchOol
30 a m
Worship, 10 45 a m Second and r~ourth
Sundays Fellowship dinner with Sutton
third Thursda~ 6 30 p tn /McGuire)

•'

MINISTRY

.;:AMBURGEY
AVIATION
MASON COUNTY AIRPORT

Lon(lbeel, maroon with matching Interior, 300 cu. tn. SIX cylinder, 4
speed transmission, power steering &amp; brakes, am rad1o, radral tires &amp;
just 30,000 miles

$6,900.1111

10,000 FEET

BUCKEYE .....~ .............. $16 50
Classes Starting lntrodudory Meetin1
Feb. 28th, -7.p.m. • EYetyOne lrril""lld!

FOR FURTH£1 IIIFORMmON PHONE 675-2354

CARNATION......

$15~ 0

UGAR RUN MiLLS
' POIIIIIOY,

STOP IN AND SEE MERRILL, JAY OR
ALAN EVANS
HOURS: Mon. thru Fri. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Worship 10 a m second and fourth Sun
days, UMW flrsl Tuesday, 7 30 \P m
(Grace)
Church School10 a r'n (Grace)

Wednesday at 9 00 a m

MORNING STAR - Worship 9 45 a m •
Church School 10 ~ am Bible Siudy,
Thunday. 7 30 p m tRader I
MORSE CHAPEL- ChUrch S&lt;hool9 30

Church School 10 15 a m Morning Wor
ship 11 15 a m Tuesday 10 00 a m Bible

CHURCH --Sunday WorshiP services
9 00 a m , Church School10 15 a m Bible
I

EAST LETART- Church S&lt;hool9a m

LETART FALLS - Worslllp 9 am.

Director o( Edllll&amp;ilen

HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN

OF THE
:Ii\p;T]~fi"c~!J~Cc:~.
Herbert Grate,

NAZA
pastor
Frank
supt Sunday School 9 30 a
m Wdrshlp service 11 a m and 7 p m
sunday Wednesday 7 p m Prayer meet
~g

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODlST

Tuesday 12 30p m
mens
meeting Wednesda y 7 30
p m Prayer and Praise service
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST. Elder James Miller Bt
ble Stud), Wednesday 7 30 P m . Sunday
School10 l!. m Sunday night service. 7 30

. pm
POMEROY WESLEY AN HOLINESS

RACINE
WESLEY AN - Church
SChool 10 a m Warship, 11 a m UMW

CHURCH Rev Robert Miller pastor Robert E Barton. Director of Christian Edu
cation, Lloyd Wright ' assistant Sunday
School 9 :11 a m , Morning worship 10 30
am Choir practice. Sunday 6 .JJ p m

HarrtsonvUie Road David Ferren pai
tor Clinton Faulk Sunday School Supt
Sunday School 9 3Q a m , morning wor
ship, 11a m Sunday evening service 7 30
p m Prayer Meeting Wednesday , 1 30 P

Sludy. Thursday. 7 30 p m Bible Study
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY

fourth Monday 1 30 p m 1 Men's Prayet'
Breakfast, Wednesday 7 a m (Grace)

Evening worslllp 7 JO p m Wednesday

WorshiP service 9 00 am
Church SChool10 00 a m Tuesday 10 a m
Bible Study Sunday tip m JunlorandSe
nlor High Youth Groups

Morning worship 10 45 a m first and third
Sundays, Fellowship dinner with Carmel,

Prayer and Bible Study. 7 30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Charles Russell Sr minister Rick Ma
comber, supt Sunday School 9 :11 a m
worship service 10 30 a m Bible study,

mSYRACUSE F1RST CHURCH OF GOD
~
non Pentecostal Joy Clark, pastor Wor

Swain, Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m ev·
ery week
~

Tuesday, 7 30 p.m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRISTOFLATTERDAYSAINTS Port
land Racine- Road William Roush, pastor

Study Sunday 7 JO p m Prayer Group

am

MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN -

L

•

TERIAN -

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Pastor
John Evans SunctaY SChool 10 00 a m •

Sunday Mornlfll Worship 11 00 a m 'Chil
dl'ft a Church 11 a m Sunday Evening

Service 7 011 p m Wed. 6 p m Yaungt..a
dleo" AuxUiary '1\ednesday, 7 P m Fam
lly Worohlp
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Near
Lona; Bottun Edsel Hart, pa1tor Sunday
School 9 30 am. Worolllp 10,30 am.
Prayer meeting Thunday, 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH
Comer
Ash
and Plum
Ralph
..,
•
,.
.,n ...., .. - o
\..UOOIII pas1ur

~ ~- •
:)UIIU61,._-~nUUI

/I..V vv .. •u

t

Momtni Wol"lhlp. II 011 a m , Wednesday

and Saturday Evening Services at 7 30 P

m

Worship 11 am (Rader)

SUTTON - Church School. 9 JO a m •

third Thursday, 6 30 p m (McGuire)
KENO CHURCH OF CHR1ST Oliver

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. Rev
'l'om Staten, pastor Sunday School 9 30 a
m , Evening setvlce 7 3o p m Wednesday
prayer meeting 7 30 p m

BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duane Warden minister Bible
clas1 9 30 a m , Morning Worship 10 30 a
m •Evening Worship 6: lJ p m Wednt:a

day Bible Study 6 30 p m
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
nU1'1Df'U

_ ................

m ,

C! .... ,.,,

.............J

C:"'lo""'

"J&gt;ooo

1 .. ,. A AI: ..

..,.. ......... ..... ..-...... . . ,. ... ..

10 30 a m
EvangeliStic Service 7 30 p m Wednes
day Prayer mee11ng 7 30 p m Thursday
Worship

service

....)

Linda

Evan~,

church school director
Church school 9 lJ a m , Morning worslp
10 30 am , Wednesday evenlna prayer
services, 7 :11 p m

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev

Earl

Shuler, pastor Wonhlp service, 9 XI a m

SUnday S&lt;hoollO· 30 am Bible Study and
prayer service Thunday 7 ~ p m

ship service Sunday 10 a m Sunday
School 11 a m Evening worship service
7 00 p m Wednesday prayer meeting 7 00

Dm
MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHR1ST CHURCH. Located In Texas
Comm:unify ofl Ct Rt 82 Rev Robert
Sanders pastor Don Will Jayleader Sun
day School 9 :KI a m Morning Worship
10 45 a m Ewmlng preaching servlce se.
cond and fourth Sunday al 7 30 P m
Christian Endeavor first and third Sun
day, 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer meeting

and Bible Study 7 30 p m

JEHOVAH S WJTNESS

37319 State

CARLETON JNTERDENOMINA
Roule 124 (one mile east of R~tland) Sun
11-ICNA!.-CHURC~T Y.l&amp;;:~.. cy....~d. P~ .. __.. Uar. B;~.c--ln.-;{ .. a~~,; m, '.'/o.·t;~;c-;;..-~r
David Curfman, pastor Sunday School
study 10 30 B m Tuesday Bible study,
9 XI am, Ralph Carl Supt Evenlngwor·
ship 7 1:1 p m Prayer meetlna. Wednes

7 30 p m Thursday, Theocratic School
7 30 p m Sf.rvtce meeting 8 20 p m

The annual feast of the resurrection Is
mosl
of the Christian calendar, ahd through the centun0s "hero\ 0r the
gospel has been heard. the Easter festival IS the crown of the vPar's
worship Whether It takes the form of the Paschal vigil of
fifth century Rome. the nlghtlong service of the orthodox East, thE'
Easter morning eucharist of Anglican congregal!ons or th~ sunnse
services and magnificent cantatas of Protestantism. all show the
common Christian conviction that the celebration of Easter must
dominate the church's worship because the message of Eastern 1s
the foundation of Christianity
The Easter festival Is joyous and triumphant. rich Inns meanmg
and searching In Its demands We grpw Into tt bv meditation
self·dlsclpline, and prayer As we kneel befOI e God let us ponder
these thoughts.
- Is my church life focused Inward and nol outward, mv love
more sell-serving than outreaching?
- Do I confront God's grace In human encounters. heeding
the cry of the hungry, the helpless, the dispossessed , the disoriented?
-Willi remember that the cry, Hosanna, He Is risen' .. Is 1he
triumph of the Easter message? That what the rtsen Jesus once did
He stUI does? That He comes In love to change our dark night into a
sunrise of joy and a new birth•
Having opened our hearts to Christ's presence to accept all that
God's love offers, we will surely rJse released , renewed, and
rejoicing In the splendor of the Easter message. filled with the love
:~.gt th~ ~ur~Hon sl"'.O:¥,.~ to tho ·.-.cr!d!
Ar1icle submitted by Robert E Robln~n HC'ath Unll('(]

--=-

'"'-=

.·
'•

·~

~*"""'"'"'·iH4-

M&lt;'lhod~l thurch

�Friday, Feb~ary 22. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February 22, 1985

Bengals re-sign Collinsworth
CINCINNATI (AP)-TheCinclnnatl Bengals, who briefly lost
All-Pro wide reeelver Cris Colllnsworth to the rival Unlfro Stiiles
Football--League, have· reclaimed
him by signing Collinsworth to a
·mull I·year contract.
The Nallonal Football League
club announeed·j Thursday the
signing of Collfusworth, whose
departure from the Bengals after
!he 1984 season for the USFL's
Tampa Bay Bandits was lamented
by Bengals fans. Collinsworth, 26, a
former University of Florida star,
led Cincinnati in pass catching last.
yearandhasmadelttotl)eProBowi
three times.
·

,,
U

,. .

agreement to sign a Bandits
contract, reportedly a five-year, $3
mUllon agreement.
He has played all of his four
professiOnal years with the Bengals
and made the NFL's Pro Bowl his
first three campaigns.
"I can't tell you how good I feelrelieved Is a better word -I am !hat
It's all over," Collinsworth said.
"After last nlgnt, I was just a little
worried and lhoughtthatl'dhaveto
go back home and start alt over
again."
Collinsworth and his agent, Rl·
chard Benneti, had arrived In
Cincinnati on Wednesday to nego·.
tiate wltb Brown. A bargaining

Beat of the. bend

A question of funds

play in another super BowlfoUow·
lng the 1~ season.

By BOB HOEFLICH

- oVP'stan Writer

My hat'5 off.
well·know
Pomeroy
dent, who is
ing major
problems.
Jane is stlll
smUing and has a
fantastic positive
attitude at.;&gt;ut her proibteins.
even managed to do a bit of'grocery
shopping on Wednesday. Jane Is
making frequent trlps to a Parkers-

~~~-~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
worth told reporter.; would return
pleased as punch that he'll be here

...

•• •

signed contracts with

and

achiPved.

-

That's

what

i~

important. .. ·
Ros&lt;' said he has no-intention of
running "a concentration camp"
and Se&lt;'s little value In strict,
unyielding rules.
"The year (19831 Russ Nixon was
here, the year they were spending
a ll that time on running and
fundamentals. they wouldn't even
leHhem-eome-in-to-the clubhouse
and go to the batlu·oom," Rose said.
"They had Port-O-Lets out on the
field . That's the most ridiculous
thing I ever heard of."
"They're adult s a nd they'r'l'
professionals," Rose said. "Why not
treat them like that?"
The players will have a lot to say
about how they workout. Rose is not
a followerofthe"what'sgoodforone
is good for all" philosophy.
"If Joe Price,
an example,

Rose said. · Mario Soto wants to
runandnot ride bike. fine. If they've
got some other exercise program
they want to do, fine . Just as long as
they do something."
Of course. th&lt;&gt;rewill be time spent
refreshinf( pitchers on defense and
the like, but, overall. the rule will be
flexibility.

Tonight's games
Southern at Hannan Trace ·
Southwestern at Eastern
North 'Gallla al Kyger Creek
Gallipolis at.Jackson
Logan at Athens
Pt. Pleasant at Huntington East
Northwest at Waverly
Wheelersburg at Portsmouth
West
Chesapeake at Coal Grove
Alexander a t Warren Local
Nelsonville· York at Meigs
Vinton County at Wellston
Federal-Hocking at Miller
Waham a at Parkersburg
Catholic
Saturday's ganies:
Meigs at Federal-Hocking
Nelsonville-York at Miller
Belpre at Warren Local
Symmes Valley at Southwestern

"It has to be, I think," Rose said.
"Just like I've said we won't spend
hours and hours on fundamentals
because by the time a guy gets here
to !he majors, he should know all
that. I believe that, but If we aren't
playing'good fundamental baseball,
then we'll go to work on
fundamentals ."
In the beginning, workouts will

ink new pacts
.· CLEVELAND (AP I - Right ·
handed pitcher Rick Behenna and
catcher Jerry Willard have signed ·
one-year contracts with the Cleveland Indians, !he American League
team announeed.
The .Indians now have 34 of 40
players s~ed for the 1985 baseball
season.
W!Uard batted .224 las! season,
with 10 home runs and 37 RBI In 87
games. Behanna was 0.3 with a 13.97
ERA in three games. He was out
-mOst of the' year with a rotator cuff
injury,

slart at 9:45a.m . "Around 10, " Rose
said. They will CO.J]Ciude around 2
p.m., earlier if everything Is
achieved.
"But, If players aren't getting
dressed and getting out on !he field
by then, !hen we'll have a rule-that
they have Ia be dressed by 9: 30.
Rose figures common-sense alone
will push the players to work hard.

.

already have three roster quarterbacks in Ken · Anderson, Turk
Schont&gt;I'i and Norma"h ~..i3c:xJmer· · ·
Esiason.
The Bengals and Collinsworth
refused to dislose details of his
contract. He became available
when the Tampa Bay Bandits
announced eariier this week that
they would not sign Collinsworth
because Lloyds of London refused to
insureCollinsworth'sanklesagalnst
Injury.
Collinsworth had signed a 1983

to Tampa, Fla. But !he Bengals
invited Bennett to a breakfast
meeting,' negotiations were reo·
pened and the announcement was
made at a. hastily·called news
conference Thursday afternoon.
"I have to seil another house. The
realtors Jove rrie,',' Collinsworth

qut.&gt;Sliun

Only a prolessional photographic studio has the ex·
pertenL'e and expertise to
make your wedding mem·
orles all you want them to
be. 'bu can count on us to
devote the Lime and atten·
lion ncet,;sary to express

.-

~;:~bUUi -wnetm:l il"i?"-eX~is.

to spend the rest of his pro career in
Cincinnati.
·
He led the Bengals in receiving
last season with 65 catches for 989
yards and six touchdowns. He has
427 career receptions for3.924 yards
and 20 touchdowns.
·
Collinsworth, who in his 1981
rookie season helped the Bengais to
the American Football Conference
championship, said he would like to

Meantime, ber husband, Russ Is
learning more about the home where things are, how the dish
washer operates and some other
vital operations needeq to keep a
home going,
·
----

changed from Feb. 28 to March 21
- tfie.I6caflon !Sstm the Meigs lnn
- b!Jt !he .Show will be an evening
affair. Now alfthe group has to do is
get into high gear and come up with
a good show- they can do that.
I'm confident everyone is going to
feel more enthused ahout looking at
spring fashions on March 21 than
tbey would have been this month.
The weather has made It a time of
survival and not fa shion.

tu~eth&lt;r.

AI!&gt;!•

Wl"

Wt:ddin~

apparently needed. A dog tag Is the
· cheapest thing I · know of today.
Alter all. just where can you buy a
loyal friend for $2 a year?
Just because the dog poynd Is
hidden away In a locallon which
many of us see only about once a

•.

,_~,-~~~;~~§~JJ1~~~~i,~· t~~~~~~~~~~~ ,~ ·~~~~;~are~;~~~~;~~~~~~~JSisson~
· =;·~Am~an~be~:~-~Cwnln~ ~':~ura~J~en e~ Y~. IJ:sl~e~,~a.n~dAm~~he~r"
~ '··=l·l!.!~~~~~~

and ra·epl
.
Cal l us today, o(.~op b,\'
and sec our samples. Let s
plan this speclaf ·occaston
huvL· .1 c:ompft(l" lint" of
Sration.1rr ;~oJ Supplies.

LEAR.
PtiaTOGRIIPHY
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
(61f) Wl-7f94
Clmt'll \fonda~·

•

Commodore VIC 20 I PET"
Atari 400 and 600*
Magnavox Odyssey•
Mattei Aquarius·
Intellevision·
Coleco Adam·
Columbia"
II 99/4A"

Timex-Sinclair 1000"
Colecovision"
SpectraVideo•
Franklin Ace·
Victor 9000~
Osborne"
Dragon"
Eagle"

-

.,!_he locat_~on mQ_l!_ fr~ntly to
make sure tnat allis going well. As!
say - it's not the problem of the
Hiimane Society - il belongs to all
of us.

Mica Jones, Mlchea Bentz, Theresa Lee, Samml
~ ~~

UMW meeting conducted

"The Family Under Prssure"
Melissa Coleman who was in
was the theme of !he program
Pomeroy this week flying out her
presented by Betty Blackwood,
oew birthday camera not only lost
program leader, at arec&lt;'nt meeting
the lens cap, but lost the camera
of the Forest Run United Methodist
case. She recovered the cap but the· Church held at the home of Kathleen
case Is still miSsing. If you find .It, do . Scott.
give us a.call.
Mrs. Blackwood noted tha 1 the
Drag out the soap bo~. Bunky,
----~
purpose of the program was to
here we go again. . .
.. • _ G_
uy Hysell, _head of the Meigs emphasize the . importance of the
County REACT team which •perAlter having seen some of the
family's role in human devt?lop·
pictures of cannibaltsm which
formed invaluable servicPs
ment, identifying crisis pressure
takes place from time to time atihe
throughout the county during the . and how the UMW can assist in
snow emergency, extends a big
Meigs County Dog Pound located
preventing crisis. She read scrip,
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds, I
thanks to the many, many tieople
ture from Ephesians. The Serenity
think it's high time that something
who helped out.
Prayer was given in unison. She
·
"Evetyone was wond~rful and spoke of the family's experience
is done.
Frankly , it's not just the problem
stood by to help in a ny way they
with love and hate, comfort and
of Ihe Meigs County Humane
could," Hysell comments.
fear, and security and danger .
Society which keeps asking for
----The changing timt? were dis·
bette!'eonditions; but a problem for - - A litHe·ambition-goes-such a-long cussed by the-program leader who
way. You know God prov'ides for
all of us to cope With.
noted the increase in stress in the
The Meigs County Commission·
thP sparrow, but 1 doubt if he will work place, in raistrig children, in
ers' position is that there are no
tl)rowthefoodintoth~nest . Dokeep
food and health care, and education.
funds with which to provide im·
smiling.
She said the church needs to listen
and give support by talking openly
about the problems and needs of a
community. There was a group
discussion-and the pastor-displayed
~~--~---- ---asked
to bring something to
tapes and books concerning family
RUTLAND
Valentine auction.
life.
dance. Saturday, 7 to 9 p.m. for
. Devotions by Evt?lyn Hollon was
Rutland Elementary School stuon "God's Perfect Love." Scripture
dents in school gymnasium
POMEROY - OH KAN Coin
was taken from JoM 4: 7·21, and
sponsored by Rutland PTO.
Club meeting Monday at River' olher scriptures were read on
boat Room of Diamond Savings
embracing ahd hugging. A Lenten
and Loan Co., Pomeroy. Final
prayer was given.
planning ior Ma~h 24 coin show
Hilda ·Yeauger presided at the
POMEROY - The Izaac will take place. A social hour and
meeting · with officers giving re·
Walton Club wUI have its annual trading session precede the 8
ports. February birthdays were
covered-dish supper and auction p.m. meeting. Coin auction .and
at tbt? · .e!resh..rnents.-.aft.e.m.~A-"'!.}OC)!'1£-."'
7

noted and 56 sick and shulin calls
were reported. Contests were held
a nd refreshments served by Mrs.
Scott, Mary K. Roush, and Shirley
Sopher.
·

Admission Price Policy ·
Borgoin Matinees
Sot. &amp;' Sun . . All Seats 52.25

Adm. Every Tuesday , $2,25

Community Builders
conduct meeting
ReedSville- Community BuUders
Club met at the home of Mr . and
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead for its
February meeting. Business meet.
ing was conducted by the vice
president, Mrs. Harllss Frank. The
group· discussed repfacing tbe
historical marker on the Belleville
Locks and Dam park. Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Weber are to lind lnforma·
tlon_ conc.e rning replacing- the.
marker. A thank-you was read
from Denver Weber for the planter ·
he received while a patient ~t the
Camden-Clark Hospital.
. Refreshments were served to
Mrs. Lyle Balderson, Mr.·and Mrs.
Denver Weber, Mr. and Mrs.
Dona!LM)lers, Mr. and Mrs.
Harllss Frank and Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Pi~kens . The next meeting
will be with the Webers.

NOW
SHOWING

HELD .
OYER

FAST
FORWARD

TOM

RATED PG

RATED R

Nlghtly;--7:45 -poni-. ·Sat. &amp; Sun. Mat .. 2 p.m.

BOY
Sat. &amp; Sun., Mat •. 2 : 1

r:---- --------------.----- -r

1·

Mountalnee' Cinema Ripley, W. Va.

1

•1 50 QH

I

I
I
[

.

1

I

Any Adult Admission

Not Valid Tuesday Eve.
Saturday or Sunday Matinee

I

I
I

-------------------------l
hplre• March 14, 1985

MONDAY

Those planning

~lean

Up, America!

I

Throw Your Orphaned ~omputer
Or TV Game On the JUnk Pile .•.
~nd

are

I..&amp;CiOK 'lbo•ghl111

Memories lingET In the twart,
Like dfaw In thE' morning sun:
fkofus!ng to be lost In lii'Tif" ,

Till Sllllfc' s ract' Is run.
But staying within our Inner self,
· And sometimes brinW,ng pain. ·
Yet knowln!! I his. If lt could be.

·We 'd rc-l!ve them all

We'd

a~aln .

kil&lt;w.· again. with Utile ch8ngr:

What once had passtl'd from vlt&gt;w; ·
Accepllnfil wiThout fear or doubt ,
Just !Ike 'twalii sotnE'thlng nev,r.

1111 all our heart would flU again.

We'll Give You $75 to $150 Credit Toward:

As It dJd SO IOD$l: ago:
With th£&gt; very things that WI'I'"E' a part ,
or thE' lifE' we used to know.

men Harrison, PomProy.

He Freed Me
"0\f:' llfl' I was living was worthl&lt;'SS,
Had no futUI'(', no aim, or 110 ~al!
Thr only thinS{ It was doing for mf',
Was thr dt'structlon of m\' soUL

And finally when: I can'l(&gt; "to J'('allzP,
Allth(' m!St&gt;ry, the griE'f. and th~ w(l(':
I said to ~·st&gt;lf. "This has gont&gt; far cnou~h."
This Is not !hP rt~ht way to go.
My sino;, I knew thrr&lt;' \I.'C'rf' many.
My body was-In n«'d or !'('pair;
But I changE'd II that night attht&gt; altar.
Jesus frf'ed mf'. and llf'ft lhPm I her~.
Ht brought mr from darki'K'S.o; to dayllgh1.
My stn blinded eyes! k&gt;t them seE';
I'm glad that now 1'm a C11rlstlan.
And I know what It m&lt;'ans to bE:' tree.

'
64K Color Computer
2

TRS-8Q'!' Model 4

.Radio Shack wants to give your."orphaned" computer.• new home-the junk pile-and give you $75
or $150 credit toward a popular Tandy or Radio
Shack penonal computer.

Start Again with Radio Shack and a
Computer You Can DeJ,end Upon
It's estimated t~ere are already several million
owners of orphaned computers In the U.S. And the
list of orphans Is a long one: Coleco Adam, Atari
400 and 600, Mattei Aquarius, Commodore VIC 20
Eagle,. Franklin Ace, Osborne, Spectra Video, Thxa~
Instruments' TI 99/4A, Timex-Sinclair 1000 ...
and maybe another In tomorrow's newspaper.
· But at Radio Shack, our computers .are always
part of the familif. We think you should be able to
expect years of dependable service and support from
your computer and from your computer company.
So, since I977, we've carefully designed ·and built
~-.,....~- ~ ~--

• •

-

·

\:UIIlpULCT:i~Lni:ll

~row

• -- ·

l

......

· ~

liiSI . . \..Qii1puu:ri

as you need .

•

•

Wlln

•

opilUUS tO

So

Here's Our Offer

Now through February 28, 'bring your orphan
(even an old TV game)-in any condition-to your
nearby Radio Shack Comput~r Center, Radio Shack
store or participating dealer. We'll give you a credit
toward the 64K Color Computer 2 (26-3127) or
TRS-80 Model4 (26-1067, 26-1068 or 26-!069). Or
take your orphan to a Radio Shack Computer Center for credit to use toward our new IBM·
. compatible Tandy I000 (25- I000).
'
(\TV game or an orphan computer without a disk
dme wtll get you a $75 credit to use toward any of
the three cc.mputers. An orphan computer with a
disk drive will get you a $1 SO credit toward a 64K
Color Computer 2 with disk drive (26-3029), a
Model 4 or a Tandy I 000.
That's all there is to it, ami with CitiLine financing ·
available, you couid waiic. out wllh your new Kadlo '
Shack computer today.

For I
I that 1 have' a new hollll',
Yf'S, a mansion high up In tht&gt; sky.
I know what It cost to obtain II.
To ("..od's Son on Calvary's Cross;
Oh! I'm so glad that He heard m(',
And sq ~lad to know I'm not lost.
- By Olen HarriSon, Poml'foy.

Tandy® 1000 Computer

llad.elhaeli

When J~ caD8 Me HorM
WhE"O Jesus l'alls me homP,
From this wartd of. toil and sin.
And 1 stand berore those Pearly Gates.
Aytaltlng to go ln.
I'll look .around and 5ee the ones.
I hdped would make U there.
Waiting to claim the mansion ,

.The Technology Store"

.

A DIVISIOfol OF TANDY CORPORATION

Jesus said that He'd prepare.
I'll take my place and stand In line.

Trade-in credits apply at Radio Shack Computer Centel'land at panicipatinQ Radio
Shack stores and dealerS. Ask our rnanaoers tor in1on'nllion on trldioQ olher
• brands of comput.l rl. Color Computer 2attaches to yw"tlievision (not inciOOed).
Tandy 1000 fT10nff~r .notmcluele&lt;l. One ~·In C~ per COf11j)Uter purchased.
Adam and CotecovisimiTM Cot8co lndustnes. IBM I! a registered lrademarx of
lntemarioflal Business Machines COrp. Atari/TM Atarltnc. EILWITM Eagle Com.
r. ~r_;w1k~n AceiTM F~klin Computer. OsbomaiTM Osborne COmpijter.
t_raVideofTM Spectral/ideO. TI9914NTM Tetca Instruments. Timex-Sinclair/
TtmeK·Sioclalr. Corrrnodore VIC 20 and PETff"M Commodore InternatiOnal
Manel. AQuarius and lnteneviSIOniTM Mattei Corp.Vlctor90001TM V~tor BusinesS

As one of the chOsert few.
Knowing at last the ~lis reached ,
And all He was was truP .
That I 've reached the place where cares are
gone,
...
And WOnif'S are no more.
And f'\'er;1hing Is peace and rest,
And bappl~s galore.
Finally when my nan'J(&gt; Is ca11ed.
And He takes me by the hand.
And says, "Come with Me and see your home,
Jn Heaven's Promised Land."
I'll know by then 'twu worth 11 au.
The pl'lc&lt; He had IO pay.
.
As HP hung on the l1"'SS and bk?d and died,
To open up lt. way.
.lL~-~ !!!'!!!!! '!...wiJ! ~WRY" tiP,
PN&lt;e and joy and bliss.'
I'~ tOOusands of yean to Iff' It all.
And !here'~ not~ng 1. w~nt to. ~s.

~

ProdUcts. Magnavox OdyueyfTM MIIJIIYOJC. ColumbiiiTM Columbia Oata PrOd·
UCII. DraQ&lt;&gt;n/TM Omgon, ltd.

These 'c ards Welcome at Most Locations

Just Say "Charge It"
••

-- f.

currency

Poet's corner

- By

at
Manchester at Wheelersburg
Jackson at Northwest
Ironton at Portsmouth
Wahama at Gilmer County

Behenna, Willard .

the

National Football J.eague
club. Peaoo played for tbe Tampa Bay Bandits of the
United States FoothaiJ League last year. (AP

· · BENGAL'l SIGN 1WO - Wide receiver Crls
Collin~worth (lelt)
quarterback Wayne Peace
. answer questions during a
conference at

TAMPA. Fla. lAP 1 -Cincinnati
Reds Player-Manager Pete Rose Is
looking for results in spring training,
not programs. He's been to23spring
training camps believes he has
learned something.
:·When I was with Philadelphia,
spring training was a honeymoon,"
Rose said. "At Montreal, we had
these big bags that you had to put all
your stuff in and take it out to the
field .~a_u,e it wps , so lar .. .awav.
from the clubhouse WI' didn't come
back in.
"I've been tJu·ough all kinds.
evety kind, and I've learned
something from all of them .
"It' s not how long you a re out
here," Rose said Thursday.
"It's what you get dooe. what's

•

for a number of years into the
future," Mike Brown, !he Bengals'
assistant general manager, told
reporters. "We wanted him badly."
The Bengals also announced the
signing of Bandits castoff quarterback Wayne Peace, 23, a former
teammate or Collinsworth at the

The commissioners' Indicate
they are reluctant to Increase the .
price of dog tags. They have sold for
$2 for years and I can't grasp the
reluctance. Everything else has
increased. and Increased and increased. While a part of · any
lncrt&gt;ase over $2 is required to go
the stat!?, I feel that $21s too cheap

~~:_: : ~tf~~~~:tnf~~~~· ~~~::::

lliit£&gt;Ss: -·- ·

he

- -- -.
proved conditions and sometimes
· !he public- anaTcan't understaffil
people of this makeup either -drop
dogs lnlo the runs at the pound
ereatlng some of the problems.

I

Til want to VIC'Yo' ttl(' spltnctor ot HcavPn,
And walk on S1f('('t ~ or gold.
Knowln~ many mort" could have wl1nesscd
:
·
·the same,
If they bPIIE'\'ed whl:\t ttwy .,,,ere. told.
, - By Olen Hanison. t;&gt;omeroy.
He Touched Me One 'nme
I w as loSt In a world !llled with chaos.
Whero no 00&lt;', C'V('D frl('nds, seemed to care;
Like a man·going down I£} a wall'f'Y grave,
Reached r6r hfolp, when no hl'lp was ti'K're.

And I knt'W If this had to continUE',
My Hft&gt; and my soul "'-'Ould bfo los l:
But .somPWhrrl" I hl"ard of a Jesus.
Who diNS for me on Calvary's Cross.
So I went to my knees far forgivf'ness.
AskEd this man 10 pl&lt;'aS£' set me fr{'(':
And I know by the f(&gt;(&gt;Jing, He hl.&gt;&lt;trd Nery
word,
.
As a changp for the bfost camt' to me .

Yt:'S, Hr touched me that night at the allar,
hf' rE'moved all the sorrow and pain:
And I know from His word, What HP told me,
Some day H~ will tooch me again.

I will m('N Him SOm&lt;' day up In HeavE'n,
Take' His hand and n&gt;rnember His love:

Madeline Painter was weekly
queen and Beulah Collier the
runner- up at the meeting of TOPS
OH 1456 held Tuesday night at the
Rutland Civic Center.
The schedult? for March meetings
was announeed, March 5, beginning
of new. contest, March 12, funny
money auction, Marchl9,electionof
new officers; and Mareh26, lnstalla·
lion . Meetings at'l' held every
Tuesday at 6 p.m. and visitors are
welcome.

Slinderel!a meets
Rhonda Hannahs was 1he top
loser and her mother, Mildred
Hudson, the runner-up at the
Monday night meeting of SUnder·
ella held at the Five Points home of
JoAnn Newsome. director.
At tbe Tuesday night class held in
Mason, Debbie Zuspan lost the most
weight, and Roxann Barton was the
runner-up. Classes are open to new
members.
·

Remf'mber the time I was reaching for help.

And He louchcd me with help from abovl'.
- By Olen Harrison, PomProy.
Betnr A Netrhhor
Oh. If I could but humble myself,
I'd know the n&gt;ason why .

Why Jesus was bom upon this eanh.
And why H{' had 10 dl&lt;".
U I coUld
the love He showed.
I would have taken
upon the cross.
And died for Him
I would look with love upon each one.

That I see in dl.slrt'Ss,
As a chance to help a poor lost soul, .•
With a kind word or caress.
I'd be a ne-Ighbor as Jesus taught. t•
To any along the way,
With a thought In mind, I might need help,
Upon some future day.
The c'bance Is therP, It's always there,
A challenge to each OOf',
To some day. through the love- we show,
We'll meet th&lt;" Father's son .
Wf&gt;'ll shakf&gt; His hand t~nd Sf!(&gt; Hls fa('{',
Wllh tht halo o'er His head.
And know 1t u we~ possible,
We'd have died rar Him Instead .
- By Olen Harrison, l'nrn&lt;!'O)'.

'l'eacliMe
Oh. God abo..e. please touch me,
As I kneel down to pray;
For the many thlngs that come to mind.
PleUP teac~ me what to uy;

I know the things I ask tor,
There are many I W oot need; ,
So glve me just the """'&amp;ef thlnp,
To twep my mind lrom greod.

Let me put my trust In You,
And know You're always near:
And anything I ask You tor,
J know You'D always he-ar.
And thoutlb my neods III'OW .,...ter,
With I tiP naulrur of ~h dAv~

frT\ Rlad that 00e time whri!rl ·J asked,
You taught me how to pray.
- By Olen Harrison. l'orn&lt;!'O)' .

FOR AS

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1f2 .PRICE

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optiOtlll !JI not avlllible on C·lD lf'IClUOt
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P01111ror

~~iii£· ;;2·22;~

!inpr Aflprollll haler

,

�---:-

Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

...

1- -----·--

Ohio

•

Friday, February 22, 1

Big Brothers, Sisters week held .
"bonus" for the both of-them.
OVP StafiWrtler
What dOeS the pair do? "Any. Nationwide, there are mUllOnsof . thing, recreational ac!!vltles !Ike
-~chlidren llvtiig in smgfe-parenf skailiig onust walking or spendlllg:hOmes. Big Brothers and BigSisters time together," she said.
attempttoflllthevoldlnsomesmaU
The commitment to the yoong
waybyprovldlngadu!tvolunteersto person Is for a one-year period, Ms.
spend limP with the young person.
Carter said. AftPrthat, they are not
Locally, Big Brothers and Big obllged to continue, but thl' Big
Sisters operates In a fouroCQWlty Brothers-Big Sisters organization
areaencompasslngGaU!a,Jackson . encourages them to remain
and Ml!lgs Counties tn Ohio and together.
The relationship Is as productive
Mason County In West Virginia.
In showing what the program can . for the·big brother or sister as It Is for
do for young prople, and ir1 . the young person they are matched
·
appreciation for thP adult votun- with, she said.
By LEE ANN WELCH

.

I
I
I
I

a board of directors l"el''re~;entingal.
four counties.
ltJsfunded,notfrom•mm!!;orthti
United Way, but-by private corttributlons and fund raising actlvites,
llke the upcoming ~wi for Kid
Sake, scheduled March 2 at Skyline
Lanes. Thl' bowling wUI bl'gln at
noon and should eoncludP at 6 p.m.
Pledge sheets are available for
anyone wanting to participate by
Plther bowllng or sponsoring a
bowler. To sponsor · or participate
contact 446-0170 In Gall Ia and Mason
counties and 992-55541n Meigs.
The organization has also spon-

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9 ··

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Business Senices

Curti Inflation

11

3 Announcement•

Help Wanted

Pay Cash for ___

CfasiHiecll and··SavellbyImail wi1h
· Wrill!
awn
vaur

ad and on1or

coupon. C""cet your ad by~
, resutts. Mo!ler noT refuncllbte..

1111s

Wilen you get

Nam•--------------------

~~~!~~~~~~~=
-~-~-~As~a!loc~a~I~~~~B~Ig~B~-f:ro~the~rs~~so~red~a~n~a~rt~au~c~ti~on~a~nf;d~pa~rt~ic~l·~
0
-~~~~~~tr':to~ -~fa~ca:;i

REVIEWING PROGRAM - Reviewing inlorma·
tlon on the cancer program at Holzer Medical Center
with Dr. Donna stahl, seated, who surveyed the

-

-

Dr. Lewl• A. · Schmidt, sealed, P . Mark Hannon,
standing left and Charles I. Adkins Jr., chief
executive officer of IIMC.

hospital for th&lt;! American CnUege of Surgeons, are

'

HMC cancer program approvec;i
cancer data system aesiglled to
provide a lifetime followp-up of
cancer patients. This allows the
medicai staff to retrieve data In
analyzing treatment results and the
type of treatments the pa tient has
received.
The tumor registry also makes
available current information on
improvement of patient care to the
facility staff. Special studies of
cancer causeand !rea tment are also
possible through the registry.
The cancer registry is Important ·
lo the physician in prevention, early
diagnosis, p~treatment, evalua-_
lion, staging and rehabliltation of
cancer patients, Adkins said.
"A comprehensive tumor registry provides a patient data base to
help define the role of a hospital

Holzer Medical Center has gained
a three-year approval to its cancer
program from the Commission on
Cancer of the American College of
Surgf!!ns.
. .. •. ·~_
To be approved, a program must
provide an educational, multi·
disciplinary exchange on cancer
patient management, encourage
quality c&lt;int roi and audits and
monitor the success of primary and
sk:condary treatment through longterm foliow -up, according to Cha·
rles L Adkins Jr., chief executive
officer of HMC.
. -:In addition to·the clinic program
· requ ired for approval , the hospital
mUst have a functioning tumor

registry.
The Holzer tumor registry is a

__·
conducts meeting

Amy Jo Northup, five-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
Northup, has bl'en selected as a
cont!'Stant in the 19!1l Ohio National
Little Star Pageant to be held at the
Sinclair Plaza, Columbus, Aug. 10.
The Ohio National Little Star

-Amy Jo Nortlwp

personality, interview and appearance forthe4-7yearold contestants.
Big Bend Food land, Dailey's Country Restaurant , Barrel Head Carry·
0\Jt, Mr. and Mrs: John i'lorthup,
State Farm Insurance, Racine .
Home Natlnal Bank, Peoples Bank,
Point Pleasant, and Farmers Bank
are sponsoring (\mY In the contest.

By the Editors
of Consumer Reports
If you like to ski, you might
consider buying a timeshare unll
for a week or two evPry year at a
winter ski resort . But what can you
do once you've purchased the
timeshare if you'd rather swim
than ski next year?
Consumer Reports' editors. say
that you might try to swap ·your
timeshare unit with someone who
haS a similar unit at say, Walklkl .

'"All

i YiianieU ~ ~
( JFarSate
( !Announcement
· ( lForRent

:: -~!--~~~:

Jl~t . . . ..

Jl M..Wt ......... t• llllt

JJF•IOilllttl ...
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Jllot!ol Acl ....
tUIMf:lltlil .......ll

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4lMitltleM_I........

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111111111101 . . . . .

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u ........

ll-lt . . .. t'IIICI . . . .
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.............

,

,

4JW.,IIIIIallllot

2. _ _ _ __

'-----lt. _ _ _ _ __

•

0

ternatlonal chalks you up as part of
its 94 percent success rate.
When you exchange units, you
normally pay nothing to the family
who owns the unit you wish to use,
and the family who trades lor the
use of your unit pays nothing to you.
But tb!!re are certain rules
llrnitL.g. the swaps. Exchanges
through RCJ genera UY must Ill'
made for time periods of equal or

lesser popularity. For lnstahce, you
can trade two weeks of Decembl'r
In the Florida Keys for two weeks in
January at a Colora do resort. B ut
you can't trade two weeks of

Uhtkl.... ,.., .._.,.,lldl..
U- Mu~ul llllll-lllo

•

.... V.Fultz,P. O.
I'Omonly. DhiiJ 45769, wu

eppoirod Executor of the
- · of ~ E. Flory.
1 :
d, 1ete of 270 Welnut
POitNIOy. Ohio 41789.
E. tlucl!,
Pmtlno
Judge
1
'
lena K. N111.-o.d,
Clottc

s-.

12) 22 13) 1' 8, 31c

First grade - John Card, B. J. Ervtn. Paul
till&lt;, Cral~ Knlghl , Jonna Man..,l, Jyl

Mathe'Ns, Erik Paxton.

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PI.£AS OF
WASHINGTON COUNTY,
PENNSYLVANIA
ORPHANS' COURT
DIVIIION
IN AE:
GWENDOlYN DAWN
POliTER,
I

minor,

No. 83-81-01 eo
TO: TAMMIE L PORTER:
A-hlt--br

. . . . . i . Reno lnCi Dawn
M. A...,, , . - · - . tho

c.-·

- - of.n.n.
of ... minor chid,

f

.,..,;tyoufdtoappeeratthe
heoring, the heoring
will 1J0 on without vou end

.....,...._. Admillliltletrix of
the of Phillt&gt; Fl-.
decnrv'. '-- of Route 3.

illld

••ao

1,011

22t West Second Streot,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 or
phone 992-61147.
Soot_, bido mUll be reby tho Moitlt SWCD.
P.O. So• 432, """-Y· Ohio

Rocine, Moigt
411n1 .

!?==

County,

Ohio

Lena K. Neaelroed
ctorlt

121 8, 15, 22, Jtc

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
INVITATION
TO BID
Tho

LAWYER REFERRAl.
SERVICE
123 WMitington

Choirmen
Meigt SWCD

(21 8, 22. 2tc

Moltlt Salt -

w....

Dltlriollt toltlng

c..
No."01111
:Mat
··Ooeglein,
I. , flllmwoy,

Ohio Aewltod Code, fur tho

Ohio

Withington, PA
11301
(412) 221-1110

one pickup truck with lho

Ad-11111· of ... - · of

....,I I.,

t111t of
412411
·Rp&lt;oW
248,
Long
.........
Ohio.

Gltnn P. Schllo,

2. y, ... 1 -

W. ..-nttothtPI'O'&lt;Wouw
of -

Truat •lild6ng

followinq:
1 . 4 IPIId 1t1nd1rd

rdng

3. I or a Q¥11oldlo eng1no

~--·--

McDonotd, PA 11017
{4121921·1111
(2122. ,.,

Sunday, Feb. 24
1 P.M.

fi, goad IDKiaitwl

For ,.... fnfomiWIItw• con.
tact "" Meivt Salt""' wc..
Dltlriol Ofllco.,

.,

-,.tb•

At Chamber of
Commerce
Building, Howells
Grove Park, Belpre,
Ohio . .

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIIil
ESTATE OF ADA M. NEUTZUNG,DECEASED
c - No. 241111 Docket 12
Poge 415 .
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUC!-'RY
On Febou.v 4, 1111. in ....
Moitlt Coumy l'loboll Co..,,

1111:()11 of tho

t 16 E. IJncaln A.;;;;;

ANTIQUE
AUCTION

Public Notice .

~ ...

SAI£-D.M.C.

41781 -

Ado M.

Nouldna,

Oa~ surpentine high boy,
oak sideboard, dresser
bases, roc~ing chairs. oa~
~itchen cabinet. old toots ,
cherry Sheraton chest, man tel clock (strikes &amp;chimes),
glasswore, picture frames ,
ook dresser, wicker rocker,
cheny loveseat &amp; chair, oak
wardrobe, o&amp;~ commode
lots misc.

ltlllalll1lltl

-lllld.

.._
........
l'lolloleJ.....

Lono K. NtMtt-~

1218. 15, 22. 31c

Fl0...... 29'

Opon 10 AM to 5 PM

Tues., Wtd1., Thun.
fri. and S.l.
Also Opon ly Appt.
Cloud Sun. &amp; Mom.

16141 992-655;o 1

26 heno,calt 6t4 -992·
6696 .•

3/11/tlc

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport,

MEIGS
EXCAVAnNG
COMPANY

JUST CALL!
992-3410

Authorized John DHre,
New Holland. Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer·

8761 :
P:.:f!

Ge:o~en Sh:~pMrd, ~~

614-843-6163.

Free puppiea . 8 wka. old .
Mixed br8ed . Part Irish Set·
ter and part Golden Re triever. Cal1614·992·7701 .
Y-oung -black male cat to give

away. Call 614-986-4288.

Lovable half" grown black
male cat the caring home ,

304-773-9187.

Three loVable part German
Shepherd puppies. All m•le,
very cute, 21h months old .

Will do all types of ex-

cavating, landscapi_ng,
basements,
sys-

POMEROY,O.
992·2259

w
·

;

LITTLE HOME- Has 2 bed·
rooms, bath, lurnace, wood
stove and lP. water. Only
$20,000.

PRICE REDUCED- MID·
OLE PORT- 3bedroom modular, 2 baths, lamily room ,
fireplace on nice lot Bargain
priced. $32,000 00.

50ACRES-lg. 3bedroom
home, leading Creek Water,
bath and lire wood . Asking
$36,000.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Clooll

r

l'llrick H. Blosser.
Auctlonter •
flo. SH·IS ·

rm .

POMEROY - Mnlbelly Ave.
- Aneat 2·3 bedroom home
wrth lots of extras. HI baths,
equipped ~ttchen, ~rge covered patiO. large lot with storage oo~d ine; Just $26.500.00.
REALTORS
HtnJY ~- Cltland, Jr.
992-6191
Dottie Turntr 992·5692
Jean Trumll 949·26&amp;0
Jo Hill 985-4466

A .W

.and

earn

money

imme -

Waitre .. wanted for niiJhJ ·_

6

Lost and Found

JOIN THE ARMY NA '
TtONALGUARD . Good pay.

LOST: Angus Hereford eteer

675-3950 or 1-800-6423619.

614-992-3561 .

.

thllt. Call6t4-992·9917.

Good benefits. Call 304--._

a.

heifer weighing 500· 600
lb . each . Call 614· 367·

7576.

DHiert wanted for satellite ·.
lyatemt, make hundres of
doll•ra on each system. no
experience naceiSary, Hag - '

erty Distributors. Inc. , Rt .

3866.

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection .
Hearin&amp; Evaluations For ·An Ages

We'd like .to introduce you to

EnNe-A·Cir, the modem woy

to drive the vehicle of your
choice. , ·
NO DOWN PAJ.Nr

LOWEI MONTHI YPAYMINT

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

Call 614-992-6737

8-ll tfn

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

Hospital Supplies For Home Use
SALES ·&amp; RENTALS

614-446·7213
Out of Town Customers Call Collect
•O•vgen •Hotpittl Bodt •Wheel Chairs
•8alhroom Aldt •Wotltart •Crutchat &amp; Cane~
Mony Other ttemo
WE tiLl MfDiCAif AND OTIIEI tNSUIANCE
CAHIIIS WHEN EUGIILE

Buying Coins,
Antiques, Glauware, furniture,
Stone Jars, Etc;

949-2801

BOWMAN'S HOME CAB ~ICAL SUI!'I!'l~
l

NO SUNDAY CALlS

63 I'IM St., G•llpolk
2· 11. mo .
'"'
24 Hr. Stnict

Wa Dtlinr

Call6t4 -~ 56 - t982 .

'-ost; All gray, long-haired
cat. In Greenbriar Ettetea.
Would like to do house
Rolling• Hilla eree. .e.u . cle1rling now available f.fl:r ·
304-676-t615 .
Spring House Cleaning . Call

8

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

For Fister Service

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auct~on every Fridty night It
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandiae every week .
Contigmenta of new a. uaed
merchandiae alway• welcomed. Richard Reynold•.
Auctioneer. Call 304· 276·

~a

''~~~

river. Gas F.A. furnace &amp;ali
city util ities.

11-U Chtwy To.
,....,..

SI~SIS

1110

, ...............................•10
73·rt ftr4 Tr.

NEAR TUPPERS PUINS2 BR trailer with 2 added
·rms. and almost orie level
acre. Only $14,000.

, ..... .........-.......-...•59 ·

10·14 f•4 Tr.

~--·.... --.. r
'.t,,o
f~·
~

f-.-.. .-.. -....·-..-4'
-,..';*i'~" . -·-· . - '15
5
"·II -

fonl loittJto
l~ lltw

We pay caah for lite model
cle•n u1ed cart.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oida Inc .
Bill G•ne Johnaon

5rflls.-IJI

Gril•---115

pMttr opp&lt;eclotlcl.

I
I

TROMM EXCAVATING
~
LIMESTONE
HAULED
'

.

llrthclayo. ""nlot.
tllnglng Gomtla. co• lo_t·
loont • Co. 441-4313.

814-245·9622.

21

Business

0 ppo rtu nitv

m~u~~u~~~~~-

. Ohio~;;
d ~lh;e;::o-;;t:te:r;i~n;::g.;;;:;;J~==:
wma -M.D
. go:;;t;e;:

~~~~

h u -.-

Reel estate buaineu . C1ll

Buying doily gold, tilvor
wore. old coint, large cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed . Bur-

Complete

kett Berber Shop, 2nd. Ave .

cre•m equipment. For infor-

614-992-6506 .

rest . end

ice

Middltpon, Oh. 114-992· ""'tion call 304-882·2169
3478.
0&lt; 882·2400.

Slonding Timber-Cot! At
Tromm 01 614·742-2328.

I========
22 Money to Loan

RIICOrdt. Pnofer 50 't ond

eo·a.

Buying collections .

Cott et4-982-7110.
~ 111[1'11', 'l.t'lll

HOME OWNERS-Refinance '
10 low fixed rete. Uae equity ··
for •ny purpoae . Le•der

Mortgage Co., 614-592· .
3051 .
.

I

23

lila one for Get Wei. Anni·

_.yo,

Transportation needed deduct from wagea if
needed . References. Call

1 NOTICE 1
THE OHtO vALLEY PU8 COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Btdt, iron, I.ISHING CO. recommends ·
wood, cupbotrds, chain. that vou do business with
chottt. b.. kato, dithu, people vou know, and NOT .
atone jlra, lntiquea, gold to Mnd money through the

~ 11 I ~ I

rn • .,.,..., • .45.,.au

In Mllga ·co.

ThefomityofWi!loughbyHilt
would till• to thlnll ott 1ho
friondt tnd nolghbort who
donotld Iundt fO&lt; flowtft
and food . Your kindnesa is

............

.MiGKEE
'R.«o't:N-

In Memoriam

and / or ligh t :

housework -you r h o m e .

448·31172

3 Annquncementa

:

.~u.ct·

,2

· Baby1itting

Wanted To Buy

c:oln1, ring1,jewelry, 1t•ling

Oioioi.fltriHO I • . W

•

S11 Murplly, Milton Rousl
Htlln, Vlr&amp;ll and
Bruce TNford

Real Eeteta Oenentl

Car Flllllln
........•.a
19·10 ..,ltoi"""" '
Cit', ...... ..................160
11~14 lKirt·(ynx
1

.....o....-.... - 1"·'

Tr. , _ , .,__.. ,..._.. ,_ 91
12·10 l1o4p To.
-•
F-. ...-....._.....""- 'IU

RUTLAND - One floor, 5
tm. business bldg. Only
$6,500.

Housing
Headquarters

Q;;y''iri:'"""

ftNiwi ......................... ' "
76 · 12 Clt"'110

year old. Mother of 2 . Call..

614' 742-2225 or5t4 -742'
2778 .

Financial

9

~~~~

·

, ......................_.,, ..•70

Will do baby-sitting in by
home for children up to 5 _

3069.

Rt.2,

overlooking the

Will do babysitting In my
home. H1ve plenty of e~tpe ­
rience end good r_eferen ces .

446-7447 for estimate .

USA M. KOCH, M.S.

Pomeroy, OH. 45769

hay, ig. barn , workshop and
4 bedroom home with free
$60 000
gas.
' ·
BUSINESS BLDG. - 5 rental units , over $800 income

big

time. Join Friendlv Horfte
Toy parties, the leader for 30
vra . No . experience neces sary. We have the la rgest
and best line in partv plans,
Big money plus bonuses an~
tr•ve! incentives. Start now .

7 month female pup. half
Brittany half beagle, 304-

Black, brown, and white
Beagle loat in . ~ailey Run
area . An1wen to Bo. Call
Roger Routh at 614-992·

NEW CAl &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
· Box, 326

96 ACRES - About 40 in

$54.900.

A Golden Opportun i t y . .
Make money in .your -spare

304-882-3107.

tems, water

BLACKSTON

216 E. 2nd St.
. Phone
H6141·992·3J25
2 RENTALS -In Middleport
near the schools &amp; stores.
One up, one down .

ranch with hardwood floor1_

Bartender and waitresHs
wanted. E~perience preferred but not necessary.
Send resume to The Daily
Sentinel, P .O. 80.11 129M,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .

. Ohi_o 4.5670L

PRICE REDUCED - MID·
DLEPORT- Colonial wilh all
modern leatures, pool , fire·
place. central air and more.
S40.90o.oo.

NEAR RACINE -:- Mini·
farm- Approx . 10.50 acres
·w,·th 2 bedroom home plus
· d. Th. ·
barn and outbUII mg. IS IS
a buy at $24.750.00.

446-030t .

18 Wanted to Do ·

TWORD
Real Estate
E . M.;,,L,C~.U...II

. .

Housekeeper-child care for .
2 children, ages 10 &amp; 7 .
Live·irl preferred but not
r~q~M r!lfl _ Mu1r.t. be reliabLe
and have own transportation . Ref . requ ired . No '
tmoking or alcohol use. Call ,

diately. Also booking parties . Call Magnolia Nitz a1 .

675-2808 or 675·3186.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL

GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Door~

Large shaggy sheepdog type
dog . Male, vtry playful. gray
&amp; white. · Cell 614-388·

NO SUNDAY CALLS

992-5875 Or
742-3195

U. S. RT. 50 EAST ·

Cat! 446-0390.

kida. good watch dog. Call

Calli

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Two 2 mo. old puppies,
1mall built, male or female .

949-2801

Residential &amp; Commercial

BOGGS

Part Shepherd • Boxer
puppies. Mother's disposi·
tion very friendly, CIIA morn·
ings or after 5, 446-1897.

Collie male dog to give
away . 3 years old. good with

Owner: (arolyn Mt(ay
212011 ....

3024.

"FrH Estimates"

FOR All TOUR
WIRING NEEDS

. .,_

pupp"iil~ iUwka.
old, mi11.ed breed. C1ll 446-

==~~~~~~~~~~~~R~~~U~N~0~~-~3~~~ro~o~m~~~~n~B~u~L~S~~~~;n-~A;~;~~&amp;~~~;;;;::~~~;~;;::~~~=====~~~-~~ ~tver

1985.
4:30 p.m. on

Tho,_lhoiA

bv I -...vy. M the

=

Equal HoiiSift&amp; bp~111ity

-Ita.

YOU SHOUlD.TAKE THIS
TO A LAWYER AT
tF Y.OU DO NOT
HAVE A LAWYER OR CAN·
NOT AFFORD ONE. GO TO
OR TElEPHONE THE OFFICE
SET FORTH BELOW TO FIND
OUT WHERE YOU CAN GET
lEGAL HElP.

'.

Friendiy
Get Along Welt
With Others
Outgoing
Tactful
Good listener
Trustworthy
Willing to Relocate
If you do, and art inter·
11ttd in being a resident
managM of an apart·
mtnl building in Po·
meroy, send your rt·
IUmt to:
P. 0 . lo1 135 .
Mariti ... OH. 45750

Meigs

fur . -

Painting SutJPiito

IU!INISS PHONE

Help Wanted

DO YOU FIT TI!IS
DESCRIPTION??

Public Notice

vonioonFellouory25, 1985at
1:30P.M. Youarewamodtllot

i&amp;pi

11

... Ott.Hy.....,._, ..... ' ' ·011

On

chltd moy be oppoiuted
without
You ,_.- thebeing
right lo be

Creis Stilch and Tolt

317 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

5318.

iLToOMaio

. All Mebt

BIQIIY!! In .Insulation

MILLER
--ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Ac:ct110rtu"
Sixth St., Syr•use, OH.

gra•ter Gallipolis aFel .
Stening salary up to $.4QO
per week . 27-30K first y&amp;ar
potential. Call 30 4-"74• -

Custom Built
.Homes and Siding

Gin SHOP

1218. 15, 22, 3tc

. ,..."_

Public Notice

BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

"Country G~t, and

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

Car pool or ride to Mar1h1tl
·University morninga Mon
.thru Fri. 675· 2808.

PH.

.,. "',..._,

County l'loC.. No. 24182, Dorit
RQIJI8 1, D-128, 8oK B,
Ohio 4&amp;784 wu

-IIY _.. . .

HUDNALL-

•Storm Windows
•Replacement Wlndowa
•New Roofing
EST.MA.'rES '1-

..... t ....

! .. _ .... _ . .........

12 Gaugt

· •Dryers •Fr.zar•

•lnaul•tlon

....,.e•.JO•*"

11-~o

fadory thokt

. 9!5-3561

"THE BERRY BASKET';

now available.

. ·APPLIANCE
SERVICE

PARTS and SERVICE

•Storm

juUm• •lllll l••l••t•lwllr ••.t •·htllllfl '8 ...

Ullll

6:30 P.M.

992·~~-"-"

J.l. - - - - - - 35. - - - - - - ' -

HELP WANTED

"••11-llt
... th'""'..__
U,.IIIIIW... . 1 4 • - - _

&amp;W UlftU'I'
.»AI• ftiUHI

h. ,.,....,

•Wathert •Diahwaahers
•R•nae•
•Refriger•tore

VINYl &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING

U l lwolotd

•• ....., • o ..~~

Mu""'

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE

The Prudential seeks a sales
and service oriented individ- ·
ual "to repretent them in the

EVQY

r

KEN~S

CHESTE R-985·3307

J&amp;L BLOWN.
INSULATION

... ~oot
U7 luiW.

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

RACINE
FilE DEPT.

&amp;

1.!-14-tfc

.t : t,.~~IJ It• II l"'lfi'M t "lll' l •r 1/1t•

PROBATE COURT OF
tnd OwMi M. Reno,,. wile.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
be appolnlad Temporary ESTATE OF PHtWP FISHER,
Guo-. of yow minor child, DECEASED
GWENDOLYN Do\WN POR· C.. No. 24682, Doc:liot 12,
TER. Tho
hotl M1 a Poge 4116
,

lieoolng.

rm ,,lttl•l NINt

32. _ _ _ __
32. _ _ _ _ __

-~E~TQ

IIW••dtollll

- · -ington, Penntyt-

-t:. 16C ~Nvrth·'
Gallipolis, Ohio
7/ll ltfn

(6141 992-7754
·
. 1·22·1 mo.

.,

Woohington County Coort·

~1.

"'------3t. _ _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ _ __

GUN SHOOT

. !CUI OUI FOR FUTURE USII

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE ·

IIS!DENCE

111 Couri St., P011111roy. Ohio 45}G9

II Flfllll-~ ........ 1

be

.,

Public Notice

41111 ......
l111
_
11J 1116-.

-..g that &amp;.lvltOtli B. Reno

.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

PHONE
992-2156
OJ Wrilt OiiHr S.nlintl Clauitifll Dttl.

tom""''

~: :~~·::. ~~!~biH

R~NTAL

27.
-_
-_
-21: __
__ ,

1- - - " c

'"to

11'-'ofatlalt

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF DONALDSON E.
FLORY. QECEASED
C.. No. 241188 Dodurl t2

roll were:

February on Cape Cod for the same Morrarlly. Kendra Norris, Courtney IWusb,
·
Jeremy Smith, Travis Mugrage.
Weeks in Miami.
Third grade&gt; - Beth Oark, Jenny Cleek,
In addliton, you can only !'X· Rachaet Hensle.-, J...m HW, Bnmdl Mallory,
chang!' accommodations•for those Jeremy Northup, RBCbol ~!&lt;&gt;'No, Froddk&gt;
Matson.
ol a similar size or value. You can, If
Founh grack&gt; - Heather Hm. June Hot.
you wish, trade down, exchanging a Nlkld lble, Christi Malclefts, Rus'Y Smith,
Michelle Stobar1.
four-room ·suite·for a two-room ,one.
Filth grade- KoUk&gt;EIVIn, Todd Harrtson,
But you can't trade up.
Andy Hill, Jamey Holt..-, Vetessa Hl'"nett.
Re t • edi
dd David lhle, Trevor !'&lt;!ret, J•MY Vanil!y.
.C
__Qnsumer ~r s· ~ tor~ a ~ Si~hg!:~. -&lt;o:h~~RR'-'~ .1!Lrmr1Ci.rcle.
that a resort affill~ted with RCI or Ja!IOit Circle, Slwmoft Counts, Jenny Damanother maj or exchange organJza. ron, John Hoback, Colin Maidens, Norman
Matson, Jennifer Smith, Jan WIIUams, SheUy
tlon may be of a somewhat hlghpr Wlnebronner, Mayta Yoacham.

16. - - - - - -

U-SAYE
AUTO

Real Estate General

13W•ui4WIJ
U ..... ~niH
11 IMII I Mlleto
7H~ ..
I Acc.,Mtllo
71- A~toPI ..olt
11
f~~~Jitot-ol

"'""............

Public Notice

tho Moigt
Court, CoM

Secondgrade-Gran1Clrcle.Er1c:a0ugan.
Scon Grace, Beth Hysell, KPvtn Jhle, Shannon

1•. - - - - - - 15. - - - - - " -

PARSONS, NEW YORK, N.Y.
PEAR STEVE - Right on!
Thanks for standing up for the other
side.

..... u..

. . On

The third six weeks grading period hooor
ron al th• Racine El•llV'IIIary S&lt;Mol ha.•
been announced. Making a grade or B or
abov• In an 11101r subjects to bo named totbo

13. - - - - - -

grammar, spelling and literature. 1978. Fortunately, there are heart·
What are we to do when a chlld such warming exceptions 111\e this:
as "Art's" daughter persists In
DEAR MEG - For the parent
saying "Wow" and "You know?"
who says his daughter Is inartlcuHit her? Fall her? How would
late and claims today's entire
"Art" feel about that?.
generation of teenagers Is Ignorant
The "Arts" of this worid are
of the English language- Sir as a
letting themSPlves off the respon~hlgh school sophomore,
blllty hook by blaming teachers. entiy ranked No. 2 In my class . .I
They also convince kids that.lf they
have the vocabulary of a college
don't team, It must be the teacher's
junior.
fault Thill's all the excuse a lazy
Maybl' your daughter dcesn 't
t,eenager · needs' - GIMME A speak with excessive eloquence,
BREAK, ASPEN, COLO.
but don't doubt that she knows how.
·' DEAR GIMME - in a society When I was younger, my grades
were terrible . Now I can take
where the average high school
graduate has spent 20,500 hours in college courses, thanks to my
front of the TV set vs. only 16,500 family's encOuragement. ' .
hours in school, according to one
Instead of complaining hhout the
be as!&lt;.ed.-- s!!!!)idi!Y
ta~e. a__

vo;k~,lN~Y~IO~OI9~-;Be:s;u;re;;:ro;a;s;k;f;o;rt~~~~~~~~~n'-~rlng~l"'~~~~~~n~~~N~o!TI~c~E!o!F~~~H

Meigs
honor roll

17. - - - - - - -

KECEIVFl'i PKOCLAIMATION- Rev. AI MacKenzie, a member of
the Boanro!Diredors of Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Meigs, Gallla.
Jackson and Mason Counties, receives the proclalmatlon of Bls
Brolbers and Sisters week In Oiilo from Slate Kep.Jolynn Bosterdurfn«
lhe board meeting Thursday night In Gallipolis.

"W• Rl•t F11 t~~r"

26------

B. _ _ _ __

1o•

WE ARE fOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA .
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
Ill• Nan AFill Tl••
lht TIO.IIIIII
.
11 D11y

CALL
446-4522

2•. _
-75.
__
_
_-

67:_ _
-------_ _ __

'' flomeowners

think, despite the "swapping"
come-ons touted by some time·
share developers. While you might
,.. Ill' able to exchange your timeshare
weeks, it may not always Ill' for the
resort or accommodations you
want.
Orll' way some timeshare oWners
have found to swap units Is through
a timesharing Pxchange network.
The largest of those - Resort
Condominiums International (with
some 334,00l.subscrib.lng timeshare
owners and IW resorts In Its
network! - told the editors that
only about a quarter of its
subscribers want to exchange units
In a given year.
'
'
The organization said It was able
to satisfy only 94 percent of the
requests for exchanges In 1983. But
the edltors point out that doesn't
necessarily mean thai you h&lt;ive a 94
percent chance or getting the
Pxchangeyou want. Here's bow tile_
system works'
To .swap a unit through Resort
Olndomtnlums International, you

73 . ....;__ _ _ __

5. _ _ _ __

10, _ _ _ _ __

RENT A CAR

7!. --22.
__
__-....:;.;__

··-----

41[ ................

Pege

19, - ' - - - - - 20. - - - ' - - - - -

3. _ _ _ __

Public Notice

roster.

!For a special reprint of Consu·
mers Unon's evaluation of ho·
meowners Insurance, send $1 for
pach copy to. CONSUMERS, P.O.
Box 461, Radio City Station, New

................
4J
44-a. . u.....

14 -1 - f l - r l f

11 -W.,tMt.h

..,. ~~~
.,g}:f!:_
...,...........
,
""''
.•.'-*
..........ullt""''
._

houre daily. $800.00 per
month , private pay. V1cancy

StafiOMrJ, Megnttic
_&amp;ns,__h_bbir. Sl!!!!!fll, ~
l1111int11 For1111,
,
Copy Stnkes, Et,,
255 Milt St. Middltport

II. _ _ _ _ __

t . _ _ _ _ __

~

callbl'r than one that Is not The
exchange organizations period! ·
cally Inspect the resorts on their
roster. One that falls bl'low standard runs some risk of bl'lng
suspended from the Pxchange

4

l'lUS: Offi&lt;t

The Daily Sentinel

Swapping timeshares
have to pay an "Initiation" fpe as
well as a fee lor each week
exchangl1! .
At least 60 days bl'fore the date of
the timesharE' w~k you want. to
swap, you must "bank" that week
with the organizatton. You also
have to fill out an "exchange
request form" Indicating at least
four resorts In a specific area that
you might want to visit as well as
four "optlorial" resorts In an
alternative area.

aonal care in a home like
atmoaphere. Certified .ger
ontological nuree on duty 2ol

THE _QUAUTY
PIINT SHOP

,. assassins. After
dis·
Reports were givPn on the tractions, maybl' one minute per
to a good vocabulary and
condlt ions of Billy An~erson and day per child remains to correct correct speech - has dropped
Lynn Shuler and It was noted that a
speech. Yet, If we use our time that alarmingly among those under 21,
mea l is bl'ing taken ineachweekby way, we can't teach incidentals like from 75 percent to 68 percent since
one of the sorority membl'rs to
Shuler.
The social committee announced
a movie and pizza party to Ill' held on
March 5, and a couple's bowling
party to be held later in the month.
Debbie Finlaw had the cultural
program on decorativE' treatment
. I or walls. Refreshment s were ·
served by Kathy Doidge and Dinah
11 l olll"'-"""""'"ui•Uy
·"., tl,.......
,..,o..,,
,,11-ti•*•'"'
...
Gryszka.
1¥ . ........ l.ui,....,lll
U MtMfiD La...
i'Ckololl.to
U l'rot.lolaMI hrwltoo

From
cnnusmer Reports

i

on the
Grande College and
Community College Campus.

Parent~ can xeally _
help_

Dea~¥eg

By Meg Whitcomb
DEAR MEG - I am really
burned at "Articulate," with a
t!!E!nager wbose spepch renders her
unintelligible to anyone over 20.
"Art's" beef: "Shouldn't English
~~-Xi_Gamma.Mu
Je.a~ teach our kids how !9 use
the language properly?"
Meg, why oo· parents make
scapegoats Of teachers? · "Art's"
TheMother'sMarcho!Dimeswill daughter was at home five or six
be held In Middleport and Bradbury years before we ever saw her. The
on the weekend of March 2and 3 by family has power, If they'll just use
membersofXiGa!Jlma MuChapter It That means-directing how much
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
time a child spends reading and
Plans for the Mother's March studying vs. time on the phone,
were made at Tuesday night's watching TV or hanging out.
mpeting held at the borne of Mrs.
How can schools achieve what
AR Knight. Money can Ill' turned
the home can't? English teachers
Jpro.Mauris]'l~ Nel.sanatt!f!'Jl\Omeon _ soo--the!r .students !or..4D.: !!ili!utes.=a=

Meigs girl
chosen to~.~~~
compete

Pageant
1985 in Orlando, Fla. The pagpan\ Is
affiliated with the Miss National
Teenager Pageant which Is in its
14th year and nationally syndicated
for television.
I •. Winner of the pageant in Colum1 bus will receivp a cash award,
· · trophy, crown and banner and a
roimd trip flight for herself and a
parent .to the nationals in Orlando.
Trophies will also bE: awarded to the
winners of best personality, most
poised, best pa'rty· dress, ·and
grooming.
Judging is on the basis of poise,

cancer program by pinpointing the
types of ·cancer for .which highly
specialized care Is recieved," he
said.
Sharon L Miller Is the tumor
registrar arHolzefMeidicai Cenler,
operating from the medical records
of the hospitaL Heading up the
tumor committee Is Dr. Lewis A.
Schmidt, who is the liason between
the hospital and the American
College of Surge&lt;ins. Dr. . Donna
Stahl repreSPnted the American
College of Surgeons and surveyed
the hosptial' s program for approval.
·'Establishing .a CQQJ'~ina.t.ed
cancer program, making It function
over the years and providing the
necessary documentalton renects
the sincere dedication of everyone
involved," Adkins said.

organization.
Big Brothers and BigSisters week
in Ohio has bl'en proclaimed Feb.17
to 24 thanks to the efforts otthe local
organization, accordlng to State
Rep. Jolynn Boster. She attended
the monthly board m~tlng · and
presented the document to Its
~.- .. '--===
There are no "matches" in Meigs
County, Ms. Carter said and ·In
G allla County, there are only seven:
A match Is a pairing of an adult
·· volunteer to a young person. There
are only two other matchPS 'in the
four counties served, she added, one
In Mason and one In Jackson.
.On the othersldeofthe ledger, Ms.
Carter noted there ' are betWeen 25
and 30 children and young peoplE'
wa ltlng for adult volunteers. Mainly
needed are men , she said, In light of
.
the fact \hat the vast majority of
single-parent famll!es are missing
the father.
· In the four-county service area
two of the matchPS are big sisters,
the others are with big brothers. '
All that is required of the adult
volunteer Is three bours of his or her
time weekly to give to the little
brother or sister. Any time they
spend iqgl'lher bl'yohd thatlsallkea

operating for one year, but four
years of planning and fund raising
went into the effort .It Is operated by

11

Help Wanted

Profeuional
Services ...

�•
---~-

The

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

23

LAFF-A-DAY

Professional
Services

51

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. ciMiir. rocker, otto·
man , 3 tabloo,lextro heavy).
Sofas and chair~
priced from t285 . to 8895 .
Tobias. UO aiiil up to- t1 2-6.
Hide-a-bedo,f390 . and up
to t550 .. oofa bedo 8145,
Recliners, 8226. to t376 ..
I.Jimpo from t28 . to $125.
pc. dinettes from 8109 .• to
435. 7 pc . 8189 and up.
Wood t able with six chairs
8286 to t745 . o..k 8110
up to $226 . l!utchoo. 8550 .
Bunk bed complete with
mattresH!I. 1276. a~d up to
t396. Baby bed a, $11 o.
Mattreal88 or bo,; springs,
full or twin. $68 .. firm, $68 .
878. Queen
t195 .

PIANO TUNING AND llE·
PAIR. Roducod roteolimlted
._,,_._._ time.only ..WonCo.KeybQII'II ••
304-676-6600 or &amp;75 ·
3824.

•ees.

Real Estate
31

54

Household Goods

Homes for Sale

T.hree bedrooms, central a ir.
vinyl wall paper. carpet
throughout. well insulated,
new paint, attached garage.
gas outdoor

2 bdr. unfurnis~ad house
with garage &amp; ,..,orkahop.
Call 446-9686.

bdrs., large living room.
dining room &amp; kitchen, 2 f.ull
baths, 3 car garage. 1 .000
sq:ft . workshop animal shed
with 6;4Q or 70 acres.
. Owner financing to suit your
needs Maybe willing to
rent. Call614-388-9710 .

2 bdr house in city, full
basement, carpeted, gas fur·
nace, adults, no pets. Call
446-0958.

3 best remodeled country
home 3 bdrs.. large ·living
room, dining room It kit·
chtm. 2 full baths, 3 car
garage, 1,00 sq.h. work·
ahop animal shed with 5,40
or 70 acres. Owner finencyour needs.
· to rent· ·call

NiCe older home 1n toWn,
Racine. 3 bedrooms, living
room, dining room Kitchen
with appliances. Some other
1urnishings. Weekdays 614·
949-2540 altar 6PM and
weekends anv time.

By owner·Sy~acuse· modern
ranch with living room, rae
room, 3 bedrooms on V2 acre
private lot with B.~e1 0 tongue
and groove building and

unfurnished 4

r.m.

1 bedroom furnished apt. for
rent. Call 614-992-5434 or
304-882-2566.

1 bdr, furnished apt. in
Middleport. Cell 614-992·
6304 altar 6PM call 614·
446-1562 '

One bedroom apartments .
One month free rent to
qualified applicant. Large
modern kitchens. utility
room. free water and trash .
n.')er HQlz•H . Hoso
e217 .00 por month·.
614 - 446-3474 after
4:00PM.
614·992-6434.

electric home. Two bed·
rooms. in country. Full basemont and car-port. $200.00
per month, plus deposit. Cell
614-949-2849 .

Price reduced. four bed rooms. kitchen -family room
with fireplace, finished

3 bdr .• 1 bath,living. dinlng.
kitchen. It utility rm . State
St. $200 mo. Ref. &amp; sec.
dep. req. Call · eve's 4460264.

2 bedroom house m,Mason,
reduced from 837,000 to
525.000. Nice lot and ooparate garage. fully inaulatec:i, ·good starter' home at
this price. 304-882-2169
882-2400.

or

Mobile Homes
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES ~ESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 'MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35. PHONE 614-4467274.

Small unfurnished 4 rm.
houae at 816Va First Ave .•
reer. Call 446-9777.

Very nice 3 bdr home 1lh
bath. city schools, $276 mo.
3 bdr for ule or rent.
redecorated $260 mo. 6
bdr. home on 2nd Ava.,
$325 mo. rant or lease
option 3 bdF. ranch vary nice
home only 2 yrs. old $320.
2-3 bdr. home. nice country
setting, 8300 mo. Security
deposit required. Call Wise·
man Real Estate, 446· 3643.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

erv . Several to
Call614-772- 1
3926 .

Two bedroom apartments in
New Haven. Newly ramo·
deled in town. Call 614·
992-7481 .

APARTMENTS .

Two bedroom apt, 304675·2548 or 676-5783.

Twin Rivers Tower, 200
Second St. Point Pleaaant.
WV. Apartments available
for elderly. Rent Is 30 per
cent of adjusted income. All
utilltlea Included in rent .
Convenient to downtown
and grocary store. Call
304-675-6679 .

.

"

La"reland Apartments. New

li.aven now accepting applications for 2 bedroom apts.
Boslc rent $163.00. en
equal housing opportunity,
304-882-3386.

45

Furnished Rooms

2 bdr mobile home, · •1
mo. water included. fur·
nished, private lot. Call
446 - 7122 or 446-9346
46 Space for Rent
ave.
1972 Buddy 12x60. 2 bdr ..
portly. furnished, 55,400. 1- - - -- - - - - Cell 446-3468 .
Three bodroom moblla
home. Water and g81 paid.
Mobile home lot, 12'x60' or
12x66 Torch 2-3 bedroom One kid accepted. no pats. · smaller, $75 water paid, 4th
&amp; Neil, Gollipolio. Call 446unfurnished, has all screens drunks or dope. John
lY2 miles south of
4416 after 7PM .
&amp; storm. &amp; homemade
Rt. 7 . Call
porches Call 514 -446·
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
7132
Perk. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. · Cell
1971 Oakbrooko 12x50. 2
614-992-7479.
bdr .. good shape. $6.300 .
Rent
Call 614-388-8259 .

12x60 all electric .• 2 bad. room Schultz trailer, large
level lot on At . 7 . Crown
City, 10x22 front porch.
ooking $18.000. 10 min.
from new bridge Huntingto.
Coli 514-256-1444.
1980 Schultz mobile home.

fireplace . completely furnished. priced for quick sale.
304-675- 3030 or 675·
3431.
'72 Mobile Home. 14x70
Fleetwood, 1 y, baths. 304676-3618 .
Farms for Sale

47 Wanted to Rent
JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal Want to rent an Apartment.
Houting Opportunity) has 4 rooms and bath in Pomeone and two bedrooms. rent wy. Cat1514·992-5422.
starting at 8163 for one
bedroom and 8198 por
For Lease
month for two bedroom, 49
with 8200 deposit locatod
near foodland and Spring·
Volley Plaza. pool and TV
For laaae 2 bdr. unfurnished
ont. Coll446-2745 or leave apt .• overlooking city park.
measage.
stove &amp; refrig .. 1190 mo.
Call PJ'a446-1819 or 446·
1 bdr apt.. 2 bdr opt ..
2326 ....
e 1 50-$250. Call 304-675·
7263 876-6104 or 6755386 .
MP.rchililfllsP.

Unfurniahed 2 bdr. in Crown
City. Coll614-266-6620 .

Lots

S.

Acreage

t .14 acre• level land restricted. - w1th unfinlehed
beaament . Electric and w•·
tar. Call 446 -3044 .
5 acres on Bud Chattin
Rood. ono third m~e off Rt.
2, hoi hook-up reedy for
troller. 304-896· 3336 .

36

Real Estate
Wanted

W~ted : mobile home krt.
12X60. private, in or cloeo
to town. Call448-9610 aak
fQr Terri.

.
'

76
S.

i r\~~.le~ ·~~te"t. oM ·st.u\ i wt~ Y~'" OUJMt awa"'
--'-ft•W.
·v·•·~ ho-,
,... ,t:-b e - -

w•·-

y.., a\16

Portablo disl&gt;waoher $176.
pool-holl otylo pool table
$950. Call 448- 1898 aftor
6PM .

tep•l-&gt;d

~t all c.&gt;~t&gt;.

-

Electric stove. d inette sat,
queen size aprings • mat·
trell, chest of drawers,
reclrner, rocking chair. 1970
GMC truck. Coli 448· 3224.

Auto Parts
Accessories

Stock block 3 27 lock pis'
tono &amp; crank. 2 oats of 2.oa
atum, roller rockerarm•. dlatributer driv8 tach~
elect. fuel pump. Soli only I a
• group t660. Call 614·
246-&amp;BOOeve. Daytime call
44B-2107.

•

CAPTAIN EASY

Auto Glass, sliding
beck. glass for pick up with
dark tinted glass and black
Irvin

frame or

I

l 'M AFRAID WE:

, -- - - - - - , I&gt;UT IF YOU COU LD ....----.,

WON'T KNOW MOW

Two
or

I=IG U~E OUT HQ W,
THi )J 'IO L,J MI 6 HT

UNT1l. WE- J&lt;NOW

WHO l

GE-T

~ OME?

CL.Uii?

TO FIGLIRE OUT
WH O ·

Must sell . BellOw 1974
Jeep p-u . 9 N tractor, 926
Homelite . Call 61 4 -992·
6096

79

Motors Homes
S. Campers

..,.

Valley

Furniture, new &amp;
Used. large section of quality tu.rniture 1216 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis.
Tra~ 8 - C8nter ' Furnii ur8
Outlet, Kaneuga, Oh . New
Maytag &amp; Crosley Appliances . Call 446-4466 .

14 cu.tt. cheat type deep
freeze. very reasonable. Call
446-0648.
4 pc . full-size BR suite
0160. 2 yr. old like new. set

of queen size bOx springs
S200. Call
~

Moving. Living rm. suite, 2
Bfi suites. waterbed and
child' s BR suite. Good cond .
Call 614-245-.9464

Side by side retrig . 8160, 2
dr. frost free refrig •.$95. 30
in. electric range white $96·,
30 h'L electric ran$18 almond
like new $150. We also have
gas ranges starting at $65,
we have 9 automatic
washers starting at S66 .
Everything sold with gua·
rantee. Skaggs Appliances
Upper River Rd Gallipolis
Cell446-7398.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood·coal atoves, 6
pc wood LA suite S399,
bunk beds $199. entron
recliners
new
used

a.

Firewood 620.00 pickup
loed. $30 .00 dellliered . Coli
304 -678 -6782 or 675 2991 .

Misc. Merchandise

Knauff Firewood Split- 95%
hardwoods. You pick up or
w&amp; deliver: HEAP vender .
614-21!6-11245.

limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Pick up at Richards &amp; Son .
Call 446-7785.
Firewood cut up slabs . $16
PU load. Larger loads delivered . Call tor prices. 614246-6804.
Will cut and deliVer fire wood. Cell 614·256-1528.
SCM 1201 dry copier.
8660. Call 446-0644 .
House coal for pale . LaMay
Coal Co. Cell 446 -9200 .
Wood &amp; Coal stoJIB with
stainless ateel pipe S250.
Call 446-2044 after Spm.
Kenmore 18.6· Refrigerator
$300. Tobie end 6 ladder
back chairs $75 . Double bed
frame $10. Kodak Carosel
alide projector. with 6 caroa...
ala $60. Call 614· 367 7813.

....:..;__:,.,.--,--,---~41. •. Houses for Rent
ilouoo for r.,t. Call 304·
8711-7213 671-15104 , or
875-5388 .

Furniahed apt. *210. water
paid. 2 bdr. , 1136 2nd. Ave.
Golllpollo. Call 446-4416
after 7PM .

Roy'o USod Furnlture-3670837. Mayug wringer
waaher *100. apt. rafrig .
t86. old refrig. runs good
125. breakfaot • oat 845.
night atond 116, and toblea
$6 ooch. coffee tabla $4.

Nicley furnished amall
houae. mobile home. eff.
apt. adults only. Coli 4460338.

Several gaa h•aters *1 0 II

2 bdr. opt., refrlgerotor &amp;
stove furnished. water •
troah paid. rof. • dep. roq ..
t2211 mo. Coil 4411-0116.

rocker·recllner, bedroom auite. foam mattreaaand foun ·

Fumlohed 2 bdr. progo
apartmont. Adult only, to·
curlty dopoolt. Call after
3PM 446·8279 .
Fum. opt .. 4 roomoa. Hth. 1
or 2 aduho. rot. &amp; MC•
depoolt. Coli 44t-0444.

up.
UHd furnhure. 6 pc. aec tlonol, loveooat, hide-a-bed.
dation. Corbin &amp; Snyde:
Furn. Coli 4411-1171 .

30 Inch electric range,
1100.00. 30 inch eloctlc
double oven like new.
1175.00. 30 Inch gooronga,
165.00. Gonoraloloctrlc oelf
doff- 11211.00. 40 Inch
1111 range. 166.00. G.! .

refrigerator and

free~er,

1100.00. Coli 614·742OPwOIMI Apt.. 1 bdr. quiet 23152.
a. convenient location. no 1 -~--------­
peto. - · dop. Coli 4482011 olttr 2PM •

58
S.

fruit
Vegetables

71

Autos for Sale

new, sleeps 6, AC, furnence,
bath, refrig. .range with

oven.lotsofextras, $3,600 .
Call 446·2297.

Se rvice s

1984 Bronco II. low mlleo,
V-6. new radial tirea, AMCapitol Pools, in-ground
FM. S-trock. CB, PS. 2 tone
special. t r ee installation .
pain!. 1984 Eocort L. low 81
Home
Custom made. only 26
mHes, PS, auto trenl, radial
1
t
.available, brand new lift over
Form Suppllt:s
lireo. 1983 Capri l, black. _ __m
_
p_
ro_v_e_m
~e~n_s_ _
1984 mo~els. We mull keep
aunroof, auto, PS. Michelin 1
our crews working. Your
&amp; Live stock
radials.
AM·FM ca11., low Marcum Roofing 8t Spout· J'
gain oUr loss. Save big.
mHos, 2 dr.. hatchback. Call
Financing and layaway avail·
lng . . Now installing rubbe1~
614-388·8869 anytime or roofs. '30 years experience.&lt;fi
eb,ta. Call 304· 727·8644.
61 Farm Equipment 448·4470lllttr 5.
apecializing in bu1tt up roof;;!
Attic Insulation. Owen'e
Cell614-388·9857.
:
Corning fiberglass installed. Holland tobacco settara. Will 1 962 Olds 88 Collectors
iten),
2
new
tires,
tailpipe,
~'
8 ln . deep. 1.000 sq. ft.
BASEMENT
$300 Estimates . Cell 304- sell below 1983 dealer invo- battery, runs good, body
WAtERPROOFING
""
ice. 61 4 -643·2286.
all orglnal,
675-3962 .
Uncondition~lll lifetime gua:.~ --o
'
ii"iiiU iii I m i+i i .
rantee. Local references ,.
Call 446-4462.
furnished . Free estimates . · ·~
62
Wanted to Buy
55 Building Supplies
Coil collect 1-61 4-237 · .•
1984 T-Bird . PS .. PB .,A.0488, 9 a.m . to 6 p.m . ....
C .. Auto. 88996.00. ExcelRogers Basement
lan1
condition
.
Call
614·
Wanted
tobacco
poundage,
Building Materials
Waterproofing.
Block, brick, sewer pipes. Gallia Co. aree·. Cell 446- 992·5546 botween "' 7:00
and 4:00. Call evenings
.
windows , lintels, etc . 7447.
J &amp; J 's Siding Vinyl &amp;
614-949-2216 .
Clau4e Winters. Rio Grande,
aluminum siding &amp;. roofing .
0 . Cell 614-245-5121 .
free estimates Call 6141974 Plymouth 318 auto·
63
Livestock
367· 7468.
••
Block, brick, monar and
matic. New paint. A· 1 con·
masonry supplies. Mountain
_
dition. $1200 .00. Call614· Michael's Painting and Wal- ·~
S1ato_ l!lo£k. Rt, _33._ '""-'"'-1-.J.l!Bii. Long 380 -' :~;:'-II~9
:9:2~·:_3~1:94:_·:,;::=:;__-'-"-=--­ !papering .- Call-- 61 4 · 742Haven , W. Va. 304· 882- drive diesel tractor $9,196.
2328.
2222
1985 Long 460 dieoeltrac· 1982 Voltswagon Rabbit,
deoiOI,
45-50
MPG,
AC,
5
tor $8, 195. See Larry Exline
RON'S Television Service. ~
. :...
at 93 Auto Sales, 2V2 mi. N. spe3.1 transmission. Good Specializing in Zenith ' and '
56
Pets for Sale
of Jackaon. Oh on Sr. 93. condition . $4395 00. Call Motorola. Quazar, and
814-992-6752 anytime.
Cell 614-286-8622.
house coils. Cell 304 -676 ' 81 Pontiac Phoenix, AC, 2398 or 614-446-2454.
HILLCREST KENNELS Maasev Ferguson 60 tractor cruiM, tilt wheel, AM-FM,
Boarding all breeds. Heated looks new 82,895. Co-op lntermittan wipara, front Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
indoor.-outdoor facilities . 30 tractor with plows 8t whHI drive, axe cond, aak· removal. Call 304-675 AKC Doberman puppies: diaks $995 . Coli 614-286ing &amp;4.400.00. 304-675- 1331 .
Stud Service . Cell61 4-446- 6522.
1849 before 2:00.
RINGLES'S SERVICE . ex·
7795.
3 Hereford cows-all brad. 1
pe~ienced carpenter, electri1
982
Oldl
Firenza.
2
door
Jui:ly Taylor Groomin9 . Cell Hereford bull, 3 Hereford hatch back. pa. pb. ac. tilt cian . mason, painter, roof-.calves. Call 614-256-1906
614-367· 7220 .
wheal. am · fm cassette, ing (including hot tar t...
anytime.
304-675-2088 7,
front wheel drive. new tirea. application!
or 676-7368.
.
••
Briarpatch Kennels Profesprice
negotiable.
304-882•
sional All -breed grooming. Simmantal cattle for sele at 3633.
Rotary or cable tool drilling .:":
lndoor·outdoor boarding fa· all times. Ben Bickert Dou·
cilities. English Cocker Spa· ble 8 Farm . Coil 614-367- 1 980 Renault Locar good MOst wells completed same , 1
niel puppies. Call 614· 388- 7727.
cond .• am·fm radio, bucket day. Pump sales and servi ~
ceo . 304-896-3802 .
9790.
II ~
Pollad Hereford seats, interior exc . cond. see
4 yro. old. Call Designer Kitchen or 304- 8 8t D Home Improvements.
675-3160 before 6.
'
replacement windows ,

LOOK, MR:

ooP..

UP

THERE VVHER E TH'
GLOW IG COMIN'
F~M!

.,

.

anything was qoinq on

What

Io probably be the last to

eats

know! Me, his own' wife!

qarages?
-~,--·r,-_,....

CUSTOMER
IN DALLAS ...
HE'5 FI/R/0(1$/

.. .OH DEA R( I
PROMISED I'D PICK
OI&lt;VIl l E UP AT THE
OFFICE AND r'M
J.ATI!." HE'Ll
YELL 8./00PY

A-fV/lNR:'

;i;;;l;;;;;dP,;ii;.jH;,;;;;;

lamps, also
buying coal wood stoves.
Call614-446-3159.

54

or~~=========:;:==========-~ - -- - - - - 1977 Play-mor 18ft. RV like

i

very tame
$75. Coli

Golden Retriever male. AKC
Registered. Well built &amp;.
beautiful. Available for
brooding Call 446-0301 .
AKC Siberian Husky Pupa. 7
weeks old. Two female. one
black and white and one gray
and white. Cell 304-8823268.

T ay1or.
Wood.
614-643-2286.
Arabian Stallion at stud.
Pure breq and part Arabian
stock for aale . Horae•
boarded. R &amp; J Arab11n1,

Leon. WV Call 304 -458 1062.

64

Hay

S.

Grain

Hay for nla: Orchard grata,
Beautiful AKC reg'ed ~lk· squaret &amp; _round bales. Call
hound . Female. 11 mos. old. 614-245-5622.
had all shots. $76 . Calll - - - - - - - - - 304-676 -21 83 .
Lespedeza hay for aale. Call
614-949-2237.
57

Musical
lnsttuments

Hay for oolo. 81 .60 bolo.
304-882-2442 or 675 ·
6454.

a.

Pianos- Kimbal. Story
Clark, Lo\'Jray . Honeu
values. no ' repossess ion
gimmicka' . Brunicsrdi
Music, Inc .• 61 Court St .,
Gallipolis. Oh 45631 .
Fender Jazz bass guitar.
Fender basaman ten amp,
Bundy lluto. Call 448·0082
after 5·00PM .

59 For Sale or Trade
black and tan
, 1 0 months old

142 acre

35

County A~pliance , Inc .
Good uaad appliances and
TV sots. Open BAM to BPM .
Mon thru Set. 446-1899.
627 3rd. Ave. Gollipblis.
OH.

- - --+

Furntlhtd room. $126. Utili·
tlea, range, ref. Share bath.
Men only. 919 Sec., Gallipo·
lis 446-4416 after 7 p.m.

77 Regent mobile home 2
bdr. 14x64. Call 614-2456288 anytime .

33

dryers, refrigerators. ranges. Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel .
614-446-7398 .

5 rm. unfurn'ed. apt. Call

chain link fence $43.600.
Call 614-992-5866.

32

Larry Wright

~@~
~ '\bo,.,f,.. J\ 11 ; A" ev.l

Peavy T• 16 guitar and CillO
with Puvy backatage amp,
extraa, perfect condhion.
12211 evenin~•· Call 614388-9634 .

Jim
Lanier
876-7397
304-676·
1247.

Remodeled country home· 3

2 bedroom. small modern
house, bath, attached gar·
age. sale or tr41de. large lot,
304-882-3690.

11

!Cool Delivered! good lump
house coal 1 to 7 ton . call

Used Furniture '.. 5 pc.
dinette. head boards. and 2
\ledroom suites. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd.
9em to

basement, Point Pleasant,
304-675-3079. evenings.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

M i sc . Merchandi se

5

For ale, rant of. trade. Nice3
b~r. h.;»ma in Plantz Subdi"t~i·
sian'. '843,000 or $325 ''"'·
call 614-245-5281 .

Page-

Friday, February 22, 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Dal ly Sentinei -

Solar 300 gal bulk tank and
hoy, 614-246-5622.

1-...:...----:------Tr ~nsport alion
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for '80
model end newer uaed cars.
Smith Bulck·Pontloc, 1911
Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis. Call
614-446-2282.
1980

72

Trucks for Sale

1977 Ford F-350 one ton
truck. no ruat with tool box
bed .-Coll 614-286-6622.
1968 Bronco. 4 wh . dr.
Good Shope. 8800 or tnde
for truck. Call 614-3677609 . .

1975 Ford F-250. 'A tpn
360 4 spd .• good tires, many
,new parts with utility bed.
n .200. can 446-4462.
'75 Chovy pickup truck, 'A
ton , 360 auto, good running
cond, $1,500.00. Co11304B82-2936 .
1 979 Ford custom pickup.
F150 stonderd shift, body
a-1 shape $3,000. or best
offer. 304-468·1853.
'76 Oatun pick up, 81
Honda XL 500. both good
cond. 304-676-3656 .

73

Vans

S.

4 W.O .

cheaper. Call everlings, 304·
676-2644
Painting and carpenter
work. dependable and hon·
est. reasonable rates. 304676-8769.

1 979 Datoun 210 hatch·
beck, 4 cyl.. 4spd .. AM-FMCats .. avg. 30 mpg, runa
good. Priced to Mil. Owner
buying pick-up. Call 4463383 .

82

Plumbing
Heating

S.

CARJER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohi o
Phone 614-446 -3888 or,
614-445 -4477
JIM' S PLUMaiNG 8&lt; HEAT·
lNG. Rt . 1. Box 355, Galli·
polis. Call 614-367-0676 .

83

1911&amp; Corvalr Monzo. Call
448· 3044 dayo, 446-4434
eves.
19BO VW Rabbit, outo.
1977 VW Duhof station
auto. Coli 614· 3888 2.

74

James Boys Water Service .
Also paola filled . Coli 814266 - 1141 or 814- 4461175 or 814-446-7911

w:fz"·

1979 Hondo, CB400· T1,
with occeaorl11. 1100. Coli
U8-2044 after 15pm.

197B Dodge Aapon auto
11 .999. 1978 Plymouth
Fury auto 11.488. John'o
Auto 8ale1, Bulavllle Rd,
GoHlpollo, Oh. 446· 4782.

1982 three wiMiolor, ATC
111. G.Dod c_ondltlon .
tt2ti.OO. Coil 1114-74230""

1980 D-150 Doclga 5 opd.
1880 Chevy Luvauto.1978
;o- wn Chevy auto • .1878
Chovy luv 4 tPCI I9PI*
t2, 188. John'o Auto 8aloo
Bul6vllle -!ld. Golllp~lla, Oh:
_44
_8_·4
_7_1_~~·- - - -- \II

1979 Eloctn Glide Clonic
80 cu. ln. low mileage.
ox_!rao. alriJIO ttored
14&amp;00. ·Bnt ~r-:-- 304·
871 12111
"
•
1883 Kawollll KXBO. txO
cond. call 304-882-2428 .

uu.

u rn rn CD o rn ai!J til
Clil News
CIJ Hot Potato

Dr. Who
3 ·2-1 . Contact !CCI
tit Oiff'rent Strokes
6.30 0 (1) CD NBC News
(I) Rifleman
(!) Mazda SportsLook
(I) Gomer Pyle
Cil til ll2l ABC News !CCI
0 []) ~OJ CBS News
(I)
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Business
Report
@ Working Women
fit One Day at a Time
7:00 U (]) PM Magazine
I]J Here Come the Brides
(JJ Sport$Cftnter
C5J
NBA
Basketball :
Detroit at Philadelphia
CIJ Entenainment Tonight

0 []) Wheel of Fortune

General Hauling

K&amp;tn 'a Water Service . Walla,
ciaterns, pools filled . Phone
614-367-0823 or814-367·
7741 night or day

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Gellipolis .
814·446· 7833 or814-4461833.
New &amp; Reupholstered furni·

t~HC .-

R

&amp; ~M

, Fumitu-ra- -

Manufacturing, St. Rt. 7 .
Crown City. Oh . Ooll 6142&amp;6-1470 , call Evo. 448 3438 . '

())

!fO

MacNeil/Lehrer

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USFL '85 Spn ngmg 1nto
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ill I Married Joan
C1J ABC ' Rocks

Wrestling

ID C'i:tl CNN Headline News

CD Taking Advantage

1'J) MOVIE: 'Klute'
1 .15 110J MOVIE 'Dr. Jekyll &amp;
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1 .30 ClJ Dobie Gillis

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(!) Caesar's Tahoe Billiards Classic Coverage of
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(!) Caesar·s Tahoe Bil ·
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·.
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(10) Jeopardy

SATURDAY

(11) Wild

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Foxfite
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(J) Action Sports of the
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Cll til ~~ Benson !CCI Benson, t he Governo r and th e
staff crowd Into their shelter
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81 MOVIE: 'The Great
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lHBOl MOVIE: 'Bill Cosby
'Himaetf''
8:30 Cl) Greet Adventure
(!) Skiing : 1986 World
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Brecklnrldgo. CO
Cil Gl C!t Webster (CCI
W eb ster ac c1denily recycles
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Lou1B Rukeyser analyzes the
' '80s with a weekly review
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• I

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MOVIE: ' Big Broadcast
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Back o~ the Book Second af 4 part s The latest
book s, mov1cs, th eater and
t8l8\IISIOn arA rli Sr.II ~J:.Arl
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1 1 :30 0 I]J CD·Tonight Show
(]) Beat of Groucho
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(I) Night Tracks
(j) WKRP In Cincinnati
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(11) Taxi
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tit Twilight Zone
11 :45 {t-tBO] Hitchhiker: Videodate
12 :00 CIJ Buma &amp; AMen
(]J Top, RMlk Bo•ing from
Atlantic City. NJ
Cll ABC NtWI N!gh!lino
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12:15lHBOi MQVIE : 'The Big
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27 Vegetable

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~ . ~ ~~·
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AXYDLBAAXR
II LONG FELLOW

One letter stands ror another. In this sample A is used
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Cll Love That Bob

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w1ld hfe re fuges are e:-:amlned

2/23/85
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ACROSS
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p •onage w hen he tn es to

t'it~ttr•"'r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

II Scheduled

(]) College Basketball :
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Crockett and Tubbs set o ut
10 ftnd the gang responsible
fo r a fello w detec t•ve's murder (60 mm .)

Newshour
(fOl News
Gl (1}! New Name That
Tune

7:30

1 :00

Street Hawk and Norman
battle a mercenary bunch
out 10 stea l m1ll1ons loot"ed

C1J
®

Good-1 EJCcavating. base ·
ments. footers, driveways.
septic tanks. landscaping .
Call anytime 614-446 4637, James L. Davison, Jr.
owner.

85

1983 Harley Dovld1on, four
glide, fuH dreu. AM·FM
atlfeo caa., new cond .•
4,000 mi . Call after 8PM.
446-211115.

6:00

CD Wheel of Fortune

SEWING Machine repa~rs,
aervice . Authorized Singer
Salas 8a Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric" Shop.
Pomeroy . 614 -992·2284 .

1D (1:tl News

CIJ til l1~ Street Hawk (CCI

Excavating

1983 Ford Ranger f4.996.
Coli 304· 773-6288.
Motorcycles

rn 1oo

(I) Down to Earth

1977 Dodge 4x4, PS, PB,
cruloe. tilt, AM-FM coos. .Oozer work land clearing,
landscaping. etc. free esti·call446-7414 ofler 4.
mates . Call 446-8038 or
1976 ford Conversion van ' 992-7119 anytime.
econoline. autom.tlc, air
conditioning, PS. PB ,
84
Electrical
84,600. Call 446,7413

8 cyl.
pd
new
tlras .,d fendero. Call 304773-6178 after &amp; PM.

o m

9 :oo

l]J The Monroes
@
College Basketball·
,Clemson at North Carolina
(]) World Championship

Cil Benny Hill Show

................. ...... .., .................. _._ . . . _ . • ..cfl ...l ...
and tleldtne 1N111 ........,, M 11M Itt"?
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IMIUdeJOIII'-. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ytl..............pedloOl• •
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AIXX

BNOAYE C GHJ

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HASHUX

CGI

C GH C

BMAYEU . - DIMKDI SHXGYJDCMJ
Ye=!e!'d-~~nn~ · T ADVISE 111EE~TO~VISIT
TifY RELATIONS AND FRIENDS; BU'J: I ADVISE
TIIEE NOT TO I.JVE TOO NEAR TO THEM . - DR.

THO~ FULIJl:R

.'

OIX C

•

..

.

�'

'

Friday, February 22, 1985

801 winning Ohio
lottery Tiumber ·

LOCUST AND PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT·, OHIO

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

CLEVELAND (AP) - The ,
winning number drawn Thursday ·
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally
- -game, "The Number,' 'was801.
1n the ''Pick4 " game, thewlnhlng
number was 4391.

,.

Tu ,.rnd ~
bbut+ lull~ &lt;.Sniplt'll
furor ral ~n~nKrmtllt.
jUu t'llll ur Ytlil

~;

.

POMEROY
flOW£R'
SHOP
~Th~ l''•v ,.,..,.,;,.. ... ........ /.nol'"
Ptl . ttr-ztn • ttHnl

TILIPHONIIIU471

.... NEW STORE HOURS:
'

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS
\ .. +

reader helps, individual book · lntro·
l,ftictions and chapter subheads!

standing, Scott Usle, Eric Lawson, Andy Baer, Travis Nease, Mark
Taylor, Marcy Hill, Chris Wolfe, Michael Beaver, Michael Russell,
Renee Russell, and JeH Allen, with coach BW Baer. Jbn Anderson, not
· pictured, Is the assistant coach of Ute team.

-!'•

,-- ~:-8 A.M~to~10 P.M; -7 DAYS-A WE-EK~

,

"The Book" features many benefits
for the Inexperienced . reader such
as contemporary de·
slgn, easy-to-read
la.y..o.ut .__

SYRACUSE RAIDERS WITH THE SCOREBOARD- Posing with
the new scoreboard wldch will be put into place In the Syracuse
gymnasiuin next week a~e left to right, front, kneeling, BWy DaviS, .
CarltOn Drummer, Chris Ebe~h, and Jamie Anderson, and

t

SALE DATES:
Feb. 28 thru March 2,
' 11185.
.
a..tily~--­

Not ilelpoltaiJie For

rea---deal .

Mildred Braning Rose
Mrs. VemaRoser('C('ivedwordof
the death of her daughter-in-law,

Miljlred Braning Rose, wife of
James L. Rose of Covent ry, Conn.
She is survived by a daughter,
Melinda Kay, and three grandchildren. Atte nding the funeral were
Rose's sister and her husband,
Annabelle and Da na Van Meter,
Belpre, and a · brother, Thomas J .
Rose, Akron.

-

..,

TyjiOIJiljlllitllor
Pictllrill Emn.
..::,____,_,.

..: . =

Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Ewing Funeral
Home where friends may call
Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m . and 7to 9
p.m. Burial wnt be In the Letar1
Falls Cemetery.

George E. Jo;tchim

Geroge E. Joachim, 68. of
Phoenix, Ariz., ·formerly of Meigs
Cpijntv.jlled recent~y after a long
Illness. He had spent the past year in
William R. Thoma
Phoenix after llvlng many years In
Gallon and Columbus.
William R. Thoma,, 61, of Spting
Born m Pomeroy on Sept. 18,1916,
Ave., Pomeroy, died Thursday at
he was the son of the la te George E.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
and Edith Phillips Joachim. He
He was the son of the late Weber
graduated from Pomeroy Hlgh
Thoma and Emma Carman Thoma
School, and martied the former
and was born in Pomeroy on Sept.
Allee Rardin of Athens on Dec. 30,
18, 1923.
.
.
1941, who smvlves. He was a former
. Survl~ors mclude two sons, Wll- - t.eacher-andprinclpalhavingretired
llam Richard Thoma, Jr., and
in 1978 from the Ontario School
Daniel RoyTh?ma,Pomeroy: three
System. After retiring he moved to
daughter s, Dtana Thoma Lyons,
Columbus and wintered in Phoenix.
While living In Galion, he was
Pomeroy; Helen Shain, Letart
Falls, and Carmen Schultz, Tuppers
active 1n the First Lutheran Church
Little League Baseball and th~
Plains. Also surviving a re two
gr~ndchldren , Clayton Shain and
Galion Lions Cub.
He Is Survived by a son, George c.
Mtchelle Schultz, a brother, Glen
Thoma, Chester, and a sister,
of Marlon, a daughter, Sherr!
Mildred Ztegler, Darwin.
Houghton of Columbus four grandBesides his parents, he was
children, and a sister, Grace Holter
preceded In death . by a brother,
of Racine. Hewas precededindeal.h
by a brother and three sisters.
Denver Thoma, hts wife, Ertca
Wteser Thoma, and his stepmother,
Memorial services were held in
Wilhemma Thoma.
Phoenix. Memortal contributions
A carpenter by trade, he was a
may be made to the Trinity
Luther-an Church Building Fund
member of the Carpenters Umon,
Pomeroy Local. He was a veteran of
9424 North Seventh St., Phoenix:
World War U.
8502Jor to the Cancer Society.

A Nissen Scoremaster · score- sors and was able to go over thaI
b()ard ha$ i)fel) P.U.rchased _tor the thr_ough the generosity and support
of merchants lmd 'l:iuslfiesses, as
Syracuse Elementary School.
The Syracuse PI'O recently · well as parents of the ball players
completed a successful campaign aod cheerleaders.
Bill DavisandGregDrummerput
project to raise money for the
scoreboard which will be hung in the together the scoreboard when It
· school gymnasium. The PTO set a arrived, and Joe Foreman and
goal of raising three-fourths of the Ernie Sisson installed the electrical
purchase price through local span- equipment.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

83 MILL ST.

MIDDLEPORT

992-2461

Mayors
(Continued from page 1)
re,--ponses YOi.i·r

· resUlt~

aiT! not ,

~I~iii~~~al!€ ~mt~i«~~~~~

e Salute

;.t.&gt; .....

valid ... with only 100 responses, their
margin of error must be at least 45to
50 percent."
Other officials sa id that, based
upon their own discussions in their
communities, that the responses to
the firm's survey were "selected."
"To get a better sense of what our
peopll' really !eel," Wedge said, "I
proJXlS!' we put !~ether a poll of our
own."
·
The other officials agreed. Those
in attendance are now scheduled to
conduct separate polls in their own
communities. Each vutage a nd city
"ill collect its own data and m eet for
tabula tion and further discussion on
March 21.
Consolidated serves Gallipolis,
Middleport, Pomeroy and Syracuse
in Ohio; Point Pleasant,Henderson,
Mason, New Haven and Hartford in
Mason County, W.Va.; and, Ripley
and and Ravenswood in Jackson
County, W.Va.
Municipal officials from Syracuse, New Haven, Gallipolis, Point
Pleasant, Middleport and Pomeroy
were present at Thursday's
meeting.

Our Caniers
•

ON A -JoB-WELL DONE!!

ITEM
Thorofare -- ..,..
Whole Kernel or
Cream Style

CORN .

FULL

HALF

CASE

CASE

FULL

ITEM

CASE

Thorofare

cane

CASE

ITEM

FULL

MUSHROOM
SOUP

24-10Y.
OZ, Cinl

HALF-

CASE

3 for

B._n-With Bacon

orCre8fllol

24·16 oz.

HALF

CASE

'

r·

$119

,.-4----1 ~

Thorof11'e

CHICKEN
NOODLE OR
VEGETABLE

Thorofare

IUS

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.
.....

~,__,

......,..

.

-.....-. _,,... .

~

•

"

.

Three VinJon area residents ·vehicle.
replacement of a section of roof-at
The three cars sustained light
escaped injury when · their cars
the junior high school, plaster repair
damage in the 5:50p.m. accident ,
collided on Meigs Co. 1 Thursday
at Harrisonville, waterproofing at
troopers sa id.
afternoon, accord ing to the GalliaRutland.
Melgs ·post of the State Highway
1\vo car s sustained light damage
New stage curtains and backwhen the coll!ded Thursday afterPatroL
drops have been placed at the high
Troopers said Kenny S. Thomas,
noon on SR 681, appfximately school and junior high school and
18, of Rt. 1, Vinton, was liOUthbound
~ne-tenth of a mile e~st of . eigs Co.
new drapes for the junior high
on 1, when he stopped for a sign .
cafeteria.
Vehicles driven by Mitchell Blan·
A car driven by Earl , Shepard,
Carpenter reports tha t the
66, of Ashland, Ky., wascrosslng681,
kenship, 24, of Rt . 1, Vinton, and
. drapes, stage cuttains and part of .
Sherry Bla nkenship, ·n, of Rt. 2, . when the · patrol. said a westbound
· the e/(penditure · for chairs came
Vinton, were eastbound. Mitchell
car, driven by Richard Basham, 23,
frOm lhefirstbondissuewhichwasa
Blankenship, according to the
of Rt. 1, Rutland, apparently struck
no
new tax $1 million tax Issue
Sl\epard in theslde. Troopers said-no
patrol. made a left tum, followed by
approved a couple of years ago by
Sherry Blankenship. Sherry Blan - citations were is~ued following the
voters.
3: 15p.m. accident.
kenship's car reportedly struck the
Carpenter a lso point s out that his
left front of Thomas' car a nd the left
'
report does not constitute all of the
rear of Mitchell Blankenship's
Three emergency runs
work or purchases to be carried out
nor does it indicate that all of the
Thre:· calls for assistance were money from the latest issue is
answered Thursday by units of the expended.
.
Robert Lee Wiliams, 19, Tuppers Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service.
Plains, appearing before Judge
At 1:38 a.m., Middleport was
Charles H. Knight , was arraigned
called to 383 Ash St. for Myrtle
Thursday morning m Meigs County
Harrison who was taken to Veterans
Common Pleas Court on a charge of
breaking and entering. The charge 'Memotial. At 5:33 p.m. , Rutland
'Contracts totaling $33,988.2SJ.40
went to Beech Grove W- for Eva awarded by the Ohio Department of
was contained in an indictment
returned by Ihe grand jury Dec .19of McKinney, also taken to Veterans Transportation in Columbus followlast year. Williams, represented by Memorial. And at 6:15p.m., Racine ing the Ja n. 24 bid opening contain
was called to Wells Run for Pearl
Pomeroy attorney, Steven L. Story,
Meigs C:ou rtty project.

Pleads not guilty

One Meigs project
in highway package

was
Kenny Daniel Neal w ith breaking
mt o the concessions booths at the
Meigsliigh football field on Oct28.
Trial for Williams was set for 9
a. m . Aprll4.

PREMIUM
.WEINERS

'-0

$J49_

61b.
box

e lb.

only

only

WHilE
POTATOES

10tb.

101b.

ggc

QlbiOII

81b.

etb.
boa
only

*11••

box

lib.
box
only

• ..-4

~

DURING A TIME WHEN THE SNOW WAS SEVERE AND MOST
OTHER DELIVERY OPERATIONS WERE FORCED TO DELAY
SERVICE, OUR CARRIERS AND MOTOR ROUTE DRIVERS WERE
·DELIVERING THEIR ROUTES.

Thorolare

24·18 oz.
boxaa

SALTINES

WE THANK THEM!
BROTH

'

TO THE FEW SUBSCRIBERS THAT WE WERE LATE iN
DELIVERING THEIR PAPER, WE WOULD LIKE TO APOLOGIZE.

24-141&gt;

oz.cena

11g.~~&amp;~c!!====-c-====c==-!

Route 124 at the following.loca tions:
from State Route338through Its end,
from Route 338 to 5.11 miles north
and from State Rout~ 248to 681.
At approxbnately 8 a.m. ThursThe project includes Route 338
day momtng, Chester Township from .86 miles east of Route 124 to
_Marriage license
Fire Department was recalled to the eight mUes east. The contraf!i was
scene of a stucture fire on Bahr Rd . awarded to The Shelly Co., Inc.,
A marriage license has been
in Chester Township.
Thornville, which submitted a bid of
Issued in Meigs County Probate
A two story frame house, owned $798,426.00. Date for completion of
Court to Martin Leroy Searles, 22,
by Charles and Betty PUgh, was the project is July 31, 1985.
Rutland, a nd Deanna Lee Stek, 16,
completely lost when fire broke out
M lddleport.
In the hom e early Wednesday
afternoon. Firelighters from Chester,
Porneroy and Middleport were ' Tonight, cloudy with a chance of
Meets Monday
on the scene Wednesday but were rain. Low in the rnld-40s. Sarurday, ·
unsuccessful in savlngthedweU!ng. cloudy with a chance of ram. High In
Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet
Other int&gt;mbers of the Pugh the rnld-60s. Chance of rain Is 40
Monday evening, 7 p.m., at the high
family
were living m the home. .
percent tonight and Saturday.
. school. Plans for sectional tournaExtended Forecast
wExact
origin
of
the
fire,
which
• . · ment wW be disCussed.
appears to have started In a clothes
Sunday lhroullh 'fuetlday:
closet has not been established.
Chance of rain Sunday, Fair on
A monetary · loss has not been Monday and 'l'uelday. 1Ugh8 in low
' · ..Veterans Memorial
·.·· .Admissions-- Eva McKinney , determmed.
50s lo low 8011 Sunday ljlld the 408
..__FnfYVI'rnv'~ Fir,:. ~rhno.nt w~c:.
.Monday and Tuesday. Lows In the
-Rutl;md.
~
.
. ·· Discharges--John Motley, Her- alsooo!h;;~~;;Thu~~;;;;~~~~g · 308 Sunday and ~ Monday and
Tuesday.
.
when the lire rekindled,
Hoover, Lou Fraley.

Fire rekindles

Weather forecast

bert

Zane Trail

THANK YOU
AND

CONGRATULATIONS
TO ALL OF OUR CARRIERS AND
MOTOR ROUTE DRIVERS
BECAUSE OF YOU WE CAN
· HONESTLY SAY

All PUJEOII

.,

BRAl\UST

'

'

.

" EDELI~ER"
I

Hunt'l

,

MANWICH

24-111'1
01.081111

89° •21 38 •1()1•

bag

·only

boX

only

=

=

10 lb.

�</text>
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