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Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

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.Discjl~ additional street
lighting for Wn!on Terrace.
- - Approved Councilman
Henry Werry' s suggest!on to Install
bl
a ca e aroupd the vlllag~·s water
tower on Breezy Heights.
son will becdntinulng CDOOefforts.
-:--Approved the maycr'sreport
In other business:
snowing that. the village took ln$33!19
- - Council approved the · during the month of March.
purchaSf' of a time clock for village
A11d discussed publishing a perloworkers.
die report to show where village
--Approved the donatlonof$500 monies are being spent and to help
to the village youth league--money alleviate concern about Pomeroy's
for donation pu~s had already Income tax. It was pointed out by
been appropriatE'dinto thevillage'·s Walt()n that the village books and
recreation funds .
·
vUlage council meet ings at"eopen to
- - Discussed road problems a t tthe public at all times. •
the end of Peacock Ave.; on East
council membersBettyBatonlck
Main St.; and at the i)ottom of and Larry Wehrung were also
Lincoln Hill .
present for the meeting.

Ask to wed

_ A marriage li'8E'nse has been
Issued 1!i Me igs County Probate
Meigs County Emergency MedJ ._ Court to Raymond Lee Patterson,
cal Service reports thatfourcallsfor 22, , and Ellora Rae Faulkner, 21,
assistance were answerect on
both of Pomeroy.
Monday. At 9:40a.m .. Pomeroy was called
Songfest planned
to l:W Mulberry Ave. for Mary
Bonecut1er who was taken to Holzer
Silv!"r Run Baptist Church will
Medical Center . .. At 11:23 a.m.,
have a songfest Saturday night
Pomeroy was called to &lt;;row's
beginning at 7: :JJ p.m. Featured
Restaurant to transport ·Pearl
singers will be "The Inher itors."
Hawthorne to Dr. Conde's office. At
The public Is Invited to attend.
8: 29 p.m.. Pomeroy transported
Virginia Hubbard -from the Pomer.oy Hea lth Care Ce_n ter to Veterans
Veterans Memorial
Me!florial. And at 9: 24p.m., Racine
went' to Bashan Rd . for Afi_cia
Admls,sions:·Horto11· Arnold,
Pickens who was treated a t · the
Pomeroy; • Virginia Hubbard,
scene_btit not transported.
Pomeroy.
•
Discharges--Carl Still, Paula Gil - ,
key. George Molden.

Motorcade
,heads for .
Columbus

Meets· tonight

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SALE

CERTiFICATE , David Burt, left, receives a certificate for
completing a basic short course fur soU and water technJclans held at
Ohfp State University's Agricultural Teclmlcallnstltute, Wcioster, .from
Paul Hoskins, administrator, Division ofSoUandWaterConservatlonfor
theODNR. .
.
.

Burt completes basic course
Da vld Burt of the Meigs SoU and
Water Conse1vatlon Service has
·completed a basic short course for
soil and water conservation techni·
clans held at Ohio State University's
Agricultural Technical Jnstltut_e,
Wooster, March 25-29.
Burt, who is local district technician, received training in soli
conservation history, putpose and
ph!losphy Including relationships
with the various cooperating agencies. He also was given Instruction in
the· soil survey arid Its many uses
including field exercises. utilizing
soli pits, basic hydrology runoff
calculations and watershed evaluations, Ponds, surfaceandsubsurlace ·
drainage, estimation of erosion,
resource conservation systems In- .

I

eluding conservation tUlage and
animal waste management.
The course was sponsor~ by the
Ohio Federation of Soil a_hd Wa ter
·Conserva tlon Districts In cooperation With the USDA Soil Conserv11·
tlon ServiCe, the Division of Soli and
Water Conservation, ODNR, and
the Agricultural Technical Institute. The course is designed to assist '
technicians in doing the best
possible job in their day-to-day
application of engineering and
designing of various sou and water
con!)E'rvation practices.
Anyone wishing information concerning specific soil and water
conservatioi! related needs and
problems should contact the local
district office, Box 432, Pomeroy.

s1· ·29·95

NOW .
ONLY \

All MONTHS
AVAilABLE IN YEllOW
- OR WHITE GOlD

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BILL BLOWER

!?1~ rt«zts~PJ~

fF.,.U'tl, .if~
-11'0111'.
11141 --1141

OHJO.

/

GfM' A~rt

GALLlfOLIS - The GaDla·
. Meigs Rfglonal Airport Authority
.T.ueSday/agteed tp hlre·An'lbui'gey
· Aviation of Politi Pleasant io
· operat~ he Gailla-Me!gs Airport.
Ambu~ wQ)&gt;QPer!lte'..H~ airport
under a~ntract with the authority
and wt ' a penhlt Issued by the
Gallla ounty Coinmlss!on.
Am rgey, which also operates
the
QUiy' .mtpaJ Jn l'Otnt

BULOVA-SEIKO
·:· :PULSA-R·:
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NOW

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20°/o

CARAVELLE WATCHES

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Off

20% TO 50°/o OFF

EACH WATCH HAS A FULL 1 YR. WARRANTY

_ELBERFELDS.
Hanes®SPRING SALE! .

20% Off Sale includes men's Red label T-shirts- Briefs- A-shirts .=_ Boxers
- B,oys .Red label T-Shirts an4 Briefs. Men's Blue label T-Shirts and Briefs plus
mens B1g and Talis and Hanes Pocket T-Shirts.

' .

Piea

• ~ .FootttWs /&gt;VIa·

tlon, hlch puUed out 9f the airport
after, dropping a sillf1 agalo~t the
,, commtsstottlrif~ry.
- · -·
.. Rqbert Mc&lt;:;artey of Rt.2, Vinton,
also1bld with the Authority for the
!!xed base operator's position.
Amburgey wU) provisionally
begin Its operations at the airport
later this week. A contract between
the/parties Is e~Cpected to be signed
ne~t week, authority president Lin
Yo'u-ngsald.
The authority also asked the
eommlsslon for anaddltlonalapproplatlon Ill $8,600 for airport operatlons. The commission had appropIa ted $3,000 In its 1985 budgetfor the
airport.
Younj! told the c0111mlss!On that
after Foothills drop!Jlld out, t~ 1
authority ~pent $1,500 to purchaSE'fuel tan~ts from Foot!Jills and spen)
approxlmately. $1,200 for electricity
and snow removal, leaving the
authority with ~ left In Its
approplatlon for the remainder of

the year.
The authority estimated l!rwould
spend' approx!m;~tely _$2,200 on
electricity operating runway lights
and the beacon, $400 for an outside
telephone, and $500 for llablUty
Insurance. The aulhprity also' requested $5,1ro for maintenance and
repairs to the bulJ(IIilg.
Commission· president Verlln
!.Waill quest!OnEG' tllf I!IIIOUnl request.eq far rnajpt~.
· "My big proble!n;" SWain said; ..
the amount of niortey we're
.P'!tt!ng ln. At~ present _time. we .
• miecj to keep om' budget as iow as ,
possible. We already have.plans to
put a new roof on the building using
In-house labor. We'll takecareofthe
budget and do aU the repairs and
maintenance in-house."
Young said he approved of the
county's plan. Board member Dan
Davies also agreed.
"We'd like to start o!f fresh with
Amburgey," Davies said. "We need
towipethesla!Hlean."
Commissioner J .E. Cremeens
agreed with Young's and Davies'
assessment.
"I'm glad thingS have worked out
.the way they ·have," Cremeens
, added.
,
.
"We're p~ud of the airport," '
·1 Swain concluded, "and as long as
you (authority) keep the dollar
figures In line, we'll back you 100
percent."
·

PARKING
'LOT

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, APRIL 6TH

ELBERF-ELDS IN P·O.MEROY

.-- .

a plan approv~ by the GOP-controlled Senate Budget
Committee.
At _tile same time, sources cautk1iied that that
bargaining pattern might not hold as negotiators turn
to other · ttems . These sources,, who Insisted on
anonymity, 1'£&gt;1l!lrted Increasing l;entiment Inside the
talks to acCept Reagan 's proposal to virtually wipe out
the Sfnall Business Administration and to eliminate
the Amtrak subsidy rather than sharply curial! those
programs, as the Budget Committeepropos!'d.
With the farm Issue at least tentatively resolved,
'negotiators said much of the discussion in the talks
· woulc;l centeraround "hot button"lssues, a phrase they
anributed to Sen. Pete V. Domen!cl, R-N.M .. to refer to
divisive issues such as education. !jefense spending ·
and Social Security.

can SUJlPOrt and not just tacitly approve." But barring
that. he said, "we'll do the best we can to gel a fairly
gQOd con,sensus and then bring it up" on the.floorofthe
Senate.
'
· ThefarrnprOposalwouldcut$8'b!Uionfromfederal
farm price supports over three years, according to a
sou·rce who asked not to be !ndent!fled. Additional
savings would come from crop Insurance programs
and a phase-oot of Farmers Home Administration
direct lending programs.
FHA loan guarantees, a lesscostiywayofpro\rid!ng
goverrunent assistance, would increase as the direct
lending program phased 0\11 by the end of the decade,
the source said.
'Pie proposal, If It remains unchanged, splits the
difference between Reagan's original request for $26
billion in farm program cuts and the $l!·Q!lllon figuTe In

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ANGJ'Y DEPOSITORS - Bob Malherly, left, 1. aboot ...0 Home State Savtnp Bank depositors
and Daisy Bowman; botll of Cbtqlnaall, join ot,Jiet gathered. Re)II'C8elltatlves of the gl-oup met wltb Gov.
·protestenln shouta Tuesday at the '!!tatettoli!e where Celeste. (AP Laserpboto).

November and could face the death
penalty If convicted.
The jury bepn considering the
case Monday evening. They had the
day ott Tuesday because Judge
Thomas Hodson had aconvnltment
out of town
·

't

COLUMBUS, Ohio iAP)- Ohio
financial institutions have i:Jeen
given a last chance io take over the
closed Home State Savings Banli by
coming up with ·a better offer than
one made by an out-&lt;&gt;f-state
company.
A spokesman for a Columbusbased bank said Ohio bankers and
state officials were to meet here this
morning to : discuss ' terms of the
proposed offer. The. spOkesman,
who asked not to· be identified by
name, said the Jl'lflEitlng was
designed to give Ohlo banks a
chance to make their own bids.
Gov. Richard Celeste says that
ba~ring such action by ln-Stl\te
banks, he
Hoose and
Se!lllte approval Thursday of
changes needE'd In state law to
permit sale of the Cincinnati
Institution to the non-Ohio bank.
•Under the proposal, the buyer
would pay a premium to enter the .
Ohio market. -The state would ••
supplement the purchase price with
a financial guaraht.ee to assure that
depositors get all their money.
Celeste said the guarantee, which .
Senate President Paul Glllmor,
R-Port Clinton, said could be a ·
minimum $'10 million" wpuld 'not
come due from t~statliforthreeto
five years.
Celeste said It could be paid tiy the
state from money acquired through
pending lawsuits against Marvin
warner. Home State's owner, and
ESM Government Securities Inc.,
the . Florida firm whose, collapse
triggered Home State's loss.
TheCincinna.tiEnqulrer reported
today that the deal also calls for the

would be .discussed with Ohio's
bank-!x&gt;ldlng companies this mornIng in Columbus.
Chemical Issued a statement
Ttuesday saying · it "had held
discussions" with Celeste's office
but that "there Is no agreement
regarding purchase of Home State
by Chemical."
"There are substantial regulatory, legal and other issues that
would have to be resolved. before
any bastS for acquislflon could be
developed," the statement said.
The ~neral Assembly, which
was to have been in recess starting

wUI seek

buyl'r to wume ihe $00 million
remalnlng \II the Ohio Deposit
Guarantee Fund. ·
The governor would not ldentlf)l
the prospective purchaser, but
published reports In today's C!ncin·
nail Enquirer and The (Cleveland)
. Plain Dealer quoted unidentified
sources as saying CheQllcal Bank of
New York bas made an after lha!

.•

today,lnsteadwillrheetThursdayto
act on legislation Celeste said was
needed to complete Home State's

sa~leste said the out-&lt;&gt;1-~tate'Offer,
for Home State would be held until 3
p.m. today to give Ohio banks a
chance to match or exceed it. "It is the best offer we have, and 11
protects the deposliors100percent,"
Celeste said. "If we get a better
offer,l would prefer II. But we art' at
a point now where we need to move
forward, and I'm prepared to
recommend that offer to the
GeneralAssen\bly."
c
-GUlmor offered no assurances
/!bout the prospect for en&lt;~,crment 01
th'e Democratic governor ' s

P~~ave not_, seea (the bill). 1
have no agreement or commitment
whatsoever that we've made on the
bUI except that obviously, any
legislation , we'D deal with expedl tlously, one way or the other,"
Glllmor said.
Celeste said work was underway
Ttuesday on drafting the measures.
Celeste saki that "tf ·for anyreason" the . legislation was _not
passed or Implemented within the
next · two weeks, he would seek
authority for Home State conserva tor Arlo Smith to begin a limited
withdrawal program for depositors
as soon as possible.
In a~ to the-Home State bill,
Cel~ld he would seek legisla-

DA80N ro SMILE - 0111o
Governor

Rlclttard Celeste

brellb IntO alllllellllhe-en
a reporter's qql'JIItian durtq a
[11'1!11 Cllldi!MKle ~ IIICht
• 1n _
clndnnatl lltiiiCelftn&amp; t11e
cumnt ~~ate or Horne s.ate
S.vmpa.nk. Cetn&amp;e delcrlbed
the deal will wlildl Bll llllllllled
OUI·of Mate 1IIDk 1181 lllreed to
buy Ute doeed Horne Stale
· SampBank. (API mrphoto),
\

Police

stud~ntsandparents marched at St.
VIncent-St. Mary High School to
protest a coach's firing, but no
. arrests were made . .
At one point Tuesd'l)' , Assistant
Prll\cipal Larry Roberso'l report edly pushed two people !nan effort to
keep the pickets from entering the
school.Abrlefshovlngmatchended
when Roberson went Inside.
Dan Boarman. defensive coordi·
nator for the schQoJ's football team
and helld ~ch for the baseball
team ,· has taught history and
eaached M- tl)e school toi'
.
ye&lt;!/"s.
_ .: _- ·
·· ·
... Sist~r Maureen fleld.- -the -school
prinr!pal, notified Boarman on
Monday In writing that h(scontract
as a teacher and coach would not be
reni"W('(i 1his year. ·
"They gave me no reason,"

.
· 0U'
Air

·New_York b-a n·k ·may
rescue Home S.avings·

•
An entry has been IDed, in Meigs Distribution of the monies wiD thei1
. County, Common Pleas :Court re- be made aecord!ng to the wishes of
. _,_ '· gardln~ a 1ransfer of funds In the court.
~lddleport VU1agewlth$16,889.141s
In a suit to recover delinquent
to be transferred from the firehouse • child support flied by the Meigs
construction bond retirement fund County Welfare Dwartment and
to a fire truck fund.
Vonda K. Johnson. Middleport, the
Racine Home National Bank has court has tound Garnes In contempt
filed suit In Meigs County Common and sentenced him to10dayslnjall,
'Pleas Court asking for a $3,132.84 with ll!'lJtence to be suspended. If he
judgment against {:harles D. Curl· , ~ ~paying and continues paying
man, Racine, for nonpayment on a ' toward the delinquency until paid in
full . 1bls arrangement Is
In
promissory note.
- In other court Q'UIIters, a restrain·
accordance with an agreement
·.lng order has been lsswid against
mtered!ntobythepartles!nvolved.
·~UIIam King, Pomeroy, pending
Shelby A. Jarrell, Albany • ha~
the finalization of a divorce action
fUed· an appeal In Meigs County
flledagalnstKlngbycll!tnthJ.King,
Common Pleas Court 11ga!nst the
Middleport.
Southern Ohio Coal Company,
Lancaster, and James L. Mayfield.
In a suit flied by the Ohio Valley . administer of the Bureau of
Publishing Co., Gallipolis, against
Worker's Compensation, Colwn·
Jones Boys, Inc.. Gallipolis. the bus. Jarrell Is appeallr!g an order
court has ordered that moniE!S due
made by the Industrial Commission
the plaintiff from the defendant are of Ohio, dated Feb. 8, 191!5, which
to be attached and i)akl to the Meigs upholds an earlier · decision by
County Clerk ot Courts when the Wocker'a C&lt;mpensatlon denying
monies ~e due In July. 1985.
benefits. :

ATHENS, . Ohio· (AP) - An
Aihells ·County Common Pleas
Court jury was to resume deliberations today In the muttler trial of
Vincent Plckerson.
·
Dlckehon, , of NelsonvUle, Is
chal'ged In the ~hooting death of
Robert Keels of. HaydenvWe last

AKRON, Ohio (AP ) -

were called when mare· than 100

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Parents
protest
firing

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"Is

Athens. 1'ury resumes ,deliberat_ions

USE OUR
FREE

3, 1985

TELL

-Villag~- requests
transfer .o f funds

Pomeroy, _OH.

Four-year-old Karen's mother had died_in an a.c ci·
dent. Her father overcome by arief and shock, sent her
to live with a neighbor ' for a few days, saying she was
"too younc to understand" and would be upset by all
the cryina and visit_o rs.
_:
But Karen became confused, then frightened. No one
would tell her where her mommywas; she was livinc in a
strange house with unfamiliar people: and at nursery
school, her teacher looked at her sadly and started hugling her a lot.
.
Karen eventually learQed, and accepted, that her
mother had died. But those days of fright, the result of .
• ·family and friends trying to "protect" her, need ·never
have happened. Even the youn&amp;est child can under· .
stand, in 1i11plt terms. the concept of death.
As funeral directors, we have experience with helping
children to undtrstand and accept death. Please stop
by if you would like to disc.uss il.

April

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2 Sectiono. 20 Pages 25 ~onta
A Multimedia Inc. NeWspaper

~II operate

(:ROW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT

CAN YOUNG CHILDREN UNDERSTAND DEATH?

..

. - WASHINGTQN (AP) .:. Budget negotiators ror tne
. sizeable cutback In President Reagan's defen~
White House and the Senate Republican leadership are ·
· buUdup.
•
turnlngtothe"hot button"lssuesofeducatlori,defense
· Even so, the apparent resolution of the farm issue
and Social Secl)rity after reaching tentativg
was the first solld \lldleation ,of progress since the
agreement on a packilge· q_f faJ;m prograin cuts
Reagan administration and ·the Seriate GOP
designed to save al)out$14 bU!Ion through 1988.
· leadership began an .Intensive effort' last' week to
"They seem to have worked sometp!ng out'·' on the ·
resolve their differences on a 1986 budget_
·
controversial farm Issue, Sen. John Chafee, R-R.l.,
[' Wlthout-changeslnspending-orataxincreasethat
Reagan has ruled out.:.... deficits are projected at $230
told reporters Tuesday evening. Othersourcescloseto
lbetalksconflrmedthetentatlveagreementandsaldlt
· bllllon.next year.
·
would save sUghtiy less than $3 bUllon from price
Word of progress also came at a crltjcaltlme in the
secret talks, with Senate Republican Leader RQbert
supports, crop Insurance and other farm programs
Dole saying he Intends to bring a deficit reduction plan
next year, and an estlmaied $14 billion through 1~. .
'S everal other sources stressed that the agreement
to the Sena!e floor by AprU 22. even If no agreement Is
was C.onttngent'upon completion of.an oveliill deficit
reached by then with the White House.
_Dole said the goal of the ta!.ks remains to come up
reductlonpackageof$55 billion to$60b!Uion next year
and roughly $:JJO billion over three yellrs, Including a
with a package of spending cuts that "the Whit&lt;~ House
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FREE SIZING

-.

992•5432

'

Po~tfirm

5

Complete line of vegetable &amp;bedding plants, hanging baskets,
potted plants- blooming &amp;folih bbe
age, s ru
ry, rose bushes,
1
&amp; Rh~~ d d
aza eas
uuo en rons.
OPEN DAllY 9 to 5
SUNDAY 1 to 5
PH.992-5776

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enttne

Negotiators slice fa1~n aid program

Balloting underway

Greenhouse
NOW.OPEN FOR .
SPRIN" SE s· ON
U
A

lt'ry on P&amp;«e 00

·P?,.leroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday,

CopyriphteclWI986

REG. SJ6'9,95

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vot.34. No..Z.49

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Farm loans available

at y

Grace officiating. Friends may call
at the Ewing Funeral Home from 2
to 4 a nd 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.

Absent ee voting for -the May
primary elections got underway
Monday a t theMeigsCounryBoard
of Electt'ons.
The board office loca ted in · the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple w!ll be
on a.m. to _4:uv
on p.m ..
open rrom 8:ov
Mondays through Fridays, for
absentee voting.
ThP measures to be voted upon
are the Syracuse tax levy and the tax
levy-bond issudn the Eastern Local'·
&amp; hooWist rict. ·
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Area death

Bertha Spencer

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~onPagelO

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DIAMOND &amp; BIRTHSTONE
14K GOL-D--MOUNTING

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Story, photos on Page 12 .

State farmer· award_

Prof~ssion~l -SfDfBWide Sstingt~

Your
Jewelers

S!!rved with
MaJhed Potatoes,
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Choice of Salad, Roll &amp; Drink

PH.

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APRIL 11-13

POMEROY OH.

.Science Fair.

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Weather forecasJ -

Tonight . mostly clear. Low 30-35.
Wednesday, partly cloudy. High In
the low 60s. The chance .of
precipitation is 10 percent tonight
and Wednesday.
Extended Fo-a..t
'Thursday ihrough Satunlay:
Chance of showers 'Thursday and
Saturday. Fair on Friday. Highs· in
. themld-S&amp;tomld-GO!I'Ibursdayand
bl the 80s Friday; coolhrg to the
upper40s to ml,d·50sSatunluy. Lows
In the , mld-:Di to tow 40s early
, Thursday and Saturday and lll08tly
In the 40s Friday.

NL baseball races

Tt"ee packets and ground cover the Meigs SWCD office, 992-6647, to
plants ordered from the Meigs Soli · ma ke orhet arq~ngef'll£'1ts .
and Water Conservation District
Ladles AuxUlary may be picked up
Friday from~ a.rn. t.o 7 p.m. or on
Applicants sought
Saturday, Sa.m . to lla.m; ·
.
"
The packets and plants a re to be
The Racine Eme.rgenay Squad is
picked up a t the Meigs SW CDOffl~,
now
accepting applications tor new
221 West Second St., second floor of
members.
Applications can be
the Farmers Bank Building in '
picked up at the George CUnimlns.
Pomeroy . .
residence on Third St .. across from '
Those who are unable to l&gt;ick upon
the
squad bu Udlng until Aprtl 8.
the
days should contact

l

Mrs. BerthaSpencer, 100, Route1,
Racine, died Ttuesday morning at
the Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Mrs. Spencer was born Oct. 25,
Meets Saturday
1884atRacine,adaughterofthelate .
MeigsFishandGameAl;Soeiation 'Barnhart and Caroline Bershicke
DAYTON, Ohio (API- For the will have its regular meeting Yost. A housewife, Mrs. Spet)ter
second t !me in two weeks, Irate Saturday with a t,Vork session was a member of the Racine UnitL'CI
Home State Savings Bank deposi- beginning at 2 p.m. ' Mem-bers are Methodist Church and . Racine
tors loaded Into cars and at least one asked 10 bring brush cutting and Grange.
bus, headt;&gt;d for Columbus In hopes carpentry tools.
Surviving are a daughter, Ruth
of convincing state officials to help
Steams, Route 1, Racine; four
grandchildren, Spencer Stearns.
them regain the money that's been
off·\imlts since March 9.
Board to meet
Mansfield; Ethan Stearns, Ginger
·Williams, Euclid, · and Robyn
In Cincinnati, about 90 people left
Ina 19-vehiclecaravanthat included
Southern Local School District
Reitx-r, Racine, and five greata ·40-paSseJJger bus. Mary (lonned - will ln special S&lt;)s§ion, .Wednesday -.• graD~jchl!dp&gt;''!:, She was pll?CE'ded in
black-T-shlrts wrth whit~ leiters that . . evening, 7 p.m,, in the high school ' death by her husband, Roy Sp&lt;'nccr
.-r ead. "Vic tims ofTtrusf:-'-·
_. cafeteria. --.
'· in 196'3. . .
· ' , ·,
· ·
:: .. : _Members oJ Jhe .ciiravan ,werl' . L. · ·
r.tavesWes£'rvlceswti tbehelda t .
givenasendoffbyotherdeposltors
.S
1 p,m . Thursday at the Gilmore ·
who said they coUld not make the
Cemetery with the Rev. Roger
trtp.
(Continued trom page 1)
"Home State represents middle·
class depositors." said Fran Ewing, 10 1015 percent of Kaiser' s salaried
Winning number 302
a Cincinnati-area school employee.-.. staff would be reduced by restruc"They're not gamblers. They're tu ring some jobs and terminating
CLEVELAND AP
oi hers.
( ) The
conservative people. That's the
winning number drawn Monda"
Kaiser agreed to make thr
&gt;
feellngofthesepeople."
r&lt;'ductions in its salaried staff aft er
night In the Ohio Lottery's dai ly
The Cincinnati group planned to U nited Ste&lt;ilworlCe rs Union game, "TheNumber,'l was30'2 .
lnthe" Plck 4"J;lame,t hcw!nning
pick up more protesters near the
Kings Island amusement park. A m embers approved their givr- numberwasOZ73.
w,..., to meet bbacks.
subject to similar sacrifices
Th
Dayton Contingent Plan """
h
,
_ e· 1ottery reported rarnings of
1
In
Columbus
for
'art
11
a.m.
y
t
e
company
s
non-umon
,
saar$639
m
, the
ied workers.
',
.944.50 from wagering on its
The union cuts include a $l.S4-an- dally game. Earnings cameon sa les
march on the Statehouse.
"The situation here has gone on
of $1,278,143.50, whllt' holde rs of
k
'or three w·eeks. We don't feel hnur wage reduction a nd the
. .
.,.~
•
'k u
wmnmg t 1c etsarrentlt~t:ut oshare
they're moving speedily enough,"
balance In benefit cutbac s. nion $fi38, 1!l9. .
said Usa Neldich, an unemployed and company officials also have
In the parlmutuei"Plclo.4" gamr,
cinnati
nurse
who
has
been
agreed
to
work
together.
under
the
$
Cin
rcvist-d contract. In a n effort to sa 1res totaled 191,838.50. Holders of
working 16hoursa day as a leader of
winning tickets are ent ltl&lt;'d to 45
the Home State de_pos.!tors' group.
impmve prQ9uctivity and product percen t . or $87 ,167 . A winning $1
quality.
st raight ticket earns $5,304. A
winning $1 boxed tlckt't earns $221 .

·-ayo

2, ·1985

-"

Chester Council 323 will meet a 8
P,-m . tpnlght (Ttuesday) at the lodge
hall .

f.f ·

April

Tree packe•orders .available on Friday

I

Emergency squad
artswers four calls

'•

Tuesday,

·· (Continued ftom page 1)
_3\Jproached by twO people who have
Indicated to him they ·would be
wllllr!gtoput apartmeiusupstalrs ln
their businesses If the CDBG funds
WOltld be available to them. Ander-

Meigs County happenings.;.

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. . Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Sheets a~~epts.jo,b

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,

I

tion to broaden the powers of the
state superintendent of savings and
loans In an attempt to speed the
rropen!ng forl\tU service of about 40
Institutions where only limited
withdrawals are pennltted now. · .
That plan . would !n~olve 'the
superintendent's use of a $00mllllon
loan fund to bolster the assets ot the
closed Institutions to meet Federal
Home Loan Bank Board requirements and. under state law. allow
them to reopen.

~iglit

=~::::.~~~;~~~~~~~~ ~
0

do things on the up-and-up. This has
me completely befuddled."
Roberson said Sister Field would

~~:~~=~~tn1::::::

chanting Boarman's namt' rushed
outside' the school to join some
parents. A few minutes la.ter, the
students and parents marched
inside to the ·cafeteria and de-

. ·manded to see Sister Field, but she
would not.appear before the crilwd.
AOout 9a.m., aftertheprotesthad
been In progress for more than 00
minutes, pollee wpre called. P arents left the cafeteria calmly before·
pollee arrived and cpnt!nued picket lngoutslde ..
Pollee guarded the doors and
most students re turned to class. No
one was arrested.
About 9:45 a.m .. hundreds of
students resumed the chants a nd
walked out of the .school. Tht'
student.sreturneda short timelatrr.
Since last fall. school administratorsandathleticboostershavt'been·
at odds over a new pol icy that gtves .
theadm!nistrat lon shared cont rol of
money raised by boosters and other
parent~. Th&lt;' athletic· booster club
refusedioabldebythepollcy andln
January was stripped of it sstatusas•
a bona fide school club.
In recent weeks, - bOosters ·and -,
officials at the Catholic DiOC&lt;'S£&gt; of .'
Cleveland have been trying to -~
negotiate a settlement .
·: _
..:

..

-'

$50,000 bond~
set for Taylor ·:·:
.
Due to the serious nature of the ~
chllfges, Meigs County Conunon '
Pleas Judge Charles Knight, acting •
upon a motion before the court, has •,
set l)ond- for Lindsay Taylor at ~
$00,000.
.
.,
Taylor, fonnerly of Forest Run ~
Rd., Racine, faCes aggravated ~
murder charges In cmlneetion with ~
the October 1983 death of Danny ,
Wayne Melton . Taylor. Is also ·,
charged with possession of a ·
!!rearm while under a pending ·
felony indictment _

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e
t
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C
:' omm" n a.ry
,.-----~--"'""'----'--------,
The Da_ily Sentinel
"

j-

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
~lh
.
ts:m~ ~,_-.-,!"T"E'!!d•=

.

~v

ROBE"T L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
, Assistant Publisher /Controlh!r

·r

'

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager
'

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor '
A MeMBER of The Associated' Pre~land Dally Press Assdcla-

tl on and lhf. Ainerlcan Newspaper Publishers Association .

•

LETT ERS OF OPtNIO~ are ·wt:'lcome . T hE'Y should .OO less than 300 words
l onF:. II.IIIC't1 cr s·are subject to edltlnR and must be signed with name. address and
f£'1£1phone number. No unsiRned le11E'rs will bf published. LE'tters should tM&gt; !"
· good I&lt;A.'i l c, addressln~ issues. not pt'rsonBIII _
IeJiii .

Sever relations •t.',....__,·_:______:;___W_i---'-llia:-m_·_F._B_u_ck_ley_J_r.

Dems ··call for change:
easier said than done·

'

theme

Tht&gt; rhetoric of change Is the
of Democrats trying to rally thP
party irom the doldrums of Its recent defeats. But their calls for a new
political courSe may be easter to talk' about than achieve.
, "Our truest tradition is change," Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said In a
speech deslgned.to chart a neW' direction for Ills party ~ and perhaps a new
· Image for himself.
Weeks~arller lt was Sell. Gary Hart of Colorado sayln~that the lesson of
1984' was that "our party and our country must seek a new course."
Kennroy-spoke only days after President -Reagan won another battle In
Congress; this time over tundlng for the MX nuclear rrilsslle, a debate that
·
·
split the Democrats once again. ·
• In the Senate, 10 Democrats sided with Reagan on the MX, and a week
later the preslent got the votes of 61 Democratlc memberS of the House.
When It .c ame down to a hard cholee on a highly visible Issue such as the
MX, many Democrats became acutely conscious of the party's Image as
being "soft" on defense. ·
.
"This is one the Democrats were afraid towln," said Sell:iawton Chiles,
0-Fia., summing up the dilemma felt by many In his party.
. Defense is only one of the a teas In wl)lch congressional Democra~ wUl
face tough choices. At least as difficult may be votes on which they must
ch~ between continuing some popular social programs begun under .
earijer Democratic admlnlstratlons and ending or curtailing them In the ·
name of reducing the budget deficit.
·
·
· It was time, Kennedy said, to underst.and that "those of us who, care
about domestic. progress must do more .with .less." There was Kennedy, ,
symbol for many people of free-spending Uberalism, w;trnlng thai "the
answer is not simply more dollars and more spending" and adding that
"we cannot and should not depend on higher ta~ revenues IIi roll In and
redeem every cosily program."
• ·
,_ ·•
·
But the Massachusetts senator's can for fiscal restraint wasn'tlnstantly
embraced qy all hiS colleagues.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, OOhio, was quick to question whether some
o Democrats were not too eager to turn the party Into "a replica of the
,
Republican Party."
"Everybody's trying to rush to the center." said Ken Melly. political
. il)rector .of the National Eilucatloo Association, the naUoo's largest

OHIO 5o\VIHG5 ,

AND

~

five-hitter alld Fritz Connally homered as 1he BalW"nore... Orioles
blanked the Chicago White Sox 3-0.
BUt Madlock's first home run of
·all-time hit king sooner than he
the spring offFra.nk DlPlno snapped
thinks.
'
a H Ue In the seventh lnrilng as the
Manager Rose started player Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Houston,
Rose ai first base for the first Ume Astros 6-4 and broke a 'live-game •
tills spring Tuesday and went 3-for-3
'
'
loolng streak.
as the Cincinnati Reds d(&gt;feated the
Bob Boone's tie-breaklhgslngle In
Mlnnesot a TWins'7 -6ln an exhibition
the flftlllnnlng helped the CalifOrnia
game.
Angels defeat lh_e Milwaukee Brew" I would lots rather gel those ers 4.-2.
.
J.
seeing-eye hits when they count,"
Garry Maddox singled nome the
!iald Rose, whose spring av_crage Is
tying and lead runs as ,the
.lrn wlth eight hits in 10 at-bats . He P hiladelphia Phlllles. downed the
needs 95· hits during .the regular . Kan8as City Royals 4-2.
season toeraseCobb'smarkof4,191.
Plnclt hitter Marlo Ramirez
The Boston Red Sox and New singled home the winning run In the
York Yankees played to a 1-1 tiP In a
bottom ol the 14th Inning to give the
game tha t was ra ined out after . San Diego Padres a 6-5 victory over
Bostbn took a 2-l lead In thetopofllie
the Chicago Cubs.
sevenI h.
Bob .Brenly' s grand slam home
The Detroit Tigers split their
run off Dave Geisel with one out in
squad. and a pair of ll"mes. Nels?n
the lOth Innlrig gave the Salt
Simmons drove In f¥ runs with a
Francisco Giants a 7-3 victory over
homer, single and :!acrttlce fly to . the seattle Mariners. ·
pace a 20-hlt
a 14-2 rout of
Oakland's lUck j.angford, atthe St. Louis
Sinunons
temptllig a comeback from arm
also homered In a .
game buill
problems, allowed ll'hlts and.seven
wasDetroit'sonly
Ina14-llossto
runs In four Innings as Qeveland
the Toronto
Jays, who got
pounded the A's 11-6. .
home
Willie Aikens.
Harold Reynolds wen I 4-for·5 and
Ranct'
Tony Fernandez_ drove 1n three runs to lead the
and Milch
Seattle Mariners ovPr Arlwna State
Scoll McGr€'1!br. Don Aase and University 12-3.
Tippy
combined on a

defeats
•
nine,
6-1

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Five
hits and rseven
the Wahama White
walks
Falcons to
their second
stra lght. dia.por1d victory Tuesday
night with
bend area team
handing
visiting Southern
Tornadoes 6-1 setback.
Senior
Matt Dawson
paced
locals offensive attack
of doubles to drive In
witli a
three
while Troy .Tucker
con,tril)Ut'ld a double and a single
Hesson laced· a two run
aid the White Falcons

~, ,, , .

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True spy story ___,__·_·_ __:_-;::-_,--~"---. a_ck_A_·n_de_rs-:--on
J
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WASffiNGfON - A true . spy
·. Khomelnl never really trusted
total domination of t))e Iranian
story worthy of .John ·le CaiTe can the Iranian communists, but he commuJiist party.
now be told. It's the tale of a rising used their administrative expertise
Some of Klizlchkin's documents
young KGB agent who defected to · In middle-level government posl- detaUed Sovtet-Tudeh plans 'to
the 'British and brought about the tlons, just as he accepted Soviet
overthrow Khomelnl - by assasslnation, If necessary.
bloody extinction of Iran's commu- KGB advisers to help his own
The British showed a talent for
nlst Tlldeh party a few months Intelligence service.
later.
Despite two promotions while In
manipulative treachery that would
Thecen(falfigurelnthl_sstoryhof , Tehran, Kuzlchkln . grew ,dts.en-· .have made George SmUey blush.
. teacbers.:unl9n. ~.~
.
· .·.:.~
_
.:. .
~· - Intrigue and betrayal was VllKJjpllr
changed -with the Kgp .. In early . - They secretly turned the lnforma. ResiStance remains pattlCularly strong wttliln the party_ to C;tllS 'for .Andreyevtch .Kuztchldn, a 37-year- ' 1982, he contacted ihe British and
lion over to KhomelnL - . ' ·
· .tnslltutlonalchan.g es to help the. Oe!ll&lt;JCrats·_JdcK· the "speclat .Jnterest "
old KGB major operatlJ!g 0)11 ofthe . bec;u:ne a. double agent He ·was : · · Khomelnl put the· purJoltii!!t:KGB .
: tmage bY coitvindng·labor, women, .blacks and other constltuenC&gt;' grou~
SoVJet embassy In Tehran •. F111ent given a radio for tJ:anSJnittl,n g_ tnfortnatlon.to 'deadly use: Late In ..
-to ease up on theif claims of owning a piece of the party , .
In Fari&gt;l, the language of Iran, secret reports to his new bosses.
1982, he began a ruthless crackKuzlchkln had been recruited at 28
In June 1982, things got
hot ior
down on the Tudeh party. In
Into DL!J'ctorate S, the most secret Kuztchkln, and he defected to the
Ja~uary i983, Radio Rel)ral) was
of all the KGB directorates and the . British. We don't know his whereaboasting of widespread executions
one responsible for espionage, bouts from June untU October, but
ofTudeh members- as many as22
sabotage and assassination around In the latter month be was f!natiy
In a single day.
the world.
spirited to London for extensive
In Majr 1983, Khomelnl took a leaf
Assigned to Tehran In 1977, debriefing by British Intelligence.
from Stalin's primer and produced
II was a stunning coup lor the
Tudeh party leaders to conless
Kuztchkln helped In sever! communlst efforts to overthrow the shah. British · ~ the first known defection . publicly that they had been spies for
None su&lt;;ceeded. But when the of a staff officer In Directorate S.
Moscow. 'The party's secretarygeneral, Nureddln Ktanurt, outdid
Ayatollah Kohmelnl's.-lundamen- And like any clever defector,
tallsts seized power early In '1m, Kuzlcbkln had brought along · his
himself, claiming to have spied for
the Soviets since 1945.
Tudeh leaders, with prodding from " passporl" to the West: two trunks
. Kuzlchkin, decalred their unswerv- full ol documents on the Soviets'
On May 4, Khomelnl summoned
lng support for the revolution. .

too

Soviet Ambassador VU K. Boldyrev
and gave him a Ust of 18 embassy
personnel who hJ!d bf ... ;dentlfied
as KGB agents. Tiley were given 48
hours tO leave Iran.
'The Soviets didn't have tO ask
.who was responsible for their
diplomatic embaiTassment and the
Tudeh party's disaster. They knew
It was Kilzlchkln . '· ~
~·:,·
'The KGB . had.. ·clearly been ..
.stunned by · Kt1Ziehldn'&amp; defection: · ..
&lt;~They : ireatect 'Jt ' i.itth absolute
silence - _no claims of kldnapplilg,
no protest to the Brl.tlsh, no dema!!d
to speak with the defector. The
KGB apparently hoped tbatKuzlch·
ldn would keep hls mouth shut If he
were not subjected to pt!bllc
pressure.
But Kuztchkln didn't keep quiet.
And . the result was an Impressive
triumph for the British secret
service: the total destruction of a
Soviet-directed communist party In
a key Middle Eastern country.
Footnote: A British Embassy
spokesman said, "We don't discuss
Intelligence matters of this kind.' ~ .

:Today in history
Today Is Wednesday, Apr113, t1Je93rddayofl~ . ThereareZl2daysleft
In the year.
•
.
.
·Today's highlight In history: •
,
on AprU 3.1882, the notorlousoutlllwJesseJameswas shot todealhln St.
:Joseph, Mo., by Robert Ford. a member of his OW!} gang.
• On this date:
In 1TI6, George Washington ~lved an· honorary doctor of laws degree
from Harvard College.
· .
·
In l!laJ. the Pony Express began service between St. Joseph, Mo., and
Sacramento, Calif. The service would last fol"only a year and a half. giving
way to the transcontinental telegraph.
·.
In Ulffi, Unton forces occupied theConfederatecapltalofRlchmond, Va.,
during Ihe Civil War.
. In· l9.Ji. Bruno Hauptmann was electrocuted In Trenton, N.J .. for the
; kidnap-murder of the Lindbergh Infant.
. ·
' · ·In 1948, President Harry S. Truman signed t~ Marshall Plan; which
; allocated tnore.tban $5 blllloilln akl for 16 European countries.
' : In 1964, the United States and Panama agreed tr resume recently
• severed dlploriultlc relations and seek prompt settlement of the canal
~dlsPl!le.
·
-· Ten years ago: In a nationally broadcast news conference, President
"Gerald R. Ford declai'ed lballosses In South VIetnam shollld not be viewed
. as a sign of U.S. weakness.
: Five years agn: Iran's Revolutionary Council failed to reach agreement
; 00 translerrlng control of the American hostages from the embassy
; mliltants to the guvemm~_l • .
;;.. One year aao: Former VIce President Walter F, Mondale soundly
-"defeated Colorado Senator Gary Hart and the Rev. ·Jesse Jackson In the
· New York Democratic primary. '
•
, ; Today' s blrthdllyS: Marlon Brando Is 61. Actress-singer Doris Day Is 61.
' Actress Mlyoshl Umeklls 56. Senator Lawton ChUes, 0-FIJI,, Is 55. Actress
' Marsha Mason ts43. SlrlgerWayne Newtonls4a.SI!IgerTony0rlandols41.
; Comedian-actor Eddie Mul\)hy Is 24.
• Tllought for !Oday: ''The men the American people adm~ 111011t
·"extravagantly ar~ tl1f most darlni Uars; the ~ lhe')' dell!lt most
·:viOlently are thole who tty to teU them the truth. - H.L. ft!encken, ·
; An.etlcall author and editor (~1!156).
·
·

"Mr. President, my people don't
want me to spend any rnQney on
armaments. We're a peace-loving
nation, and aU we ask Is to be left
alone and comer every automobile
market In the tree world. " .
Yasuhlro, that's just the point.
I can:t let you do .that. Either you Is- '
sue licenses for American Imports
or I'm putting the autb quota back

fOf ,,....~sll:f'l moflt
l\&lt;~tional lo~·il~'Uf'

singled to lead off the - inning.
Following a strikeout and a fly out
Kelly Grueser singled back through
the middle to score Ebersbach and
spoil the White Falcon bid for a
shutou~.

C'IM1:\MTI

IU:Il"\-SI~

Tom P('r

, ,, flt"&lt;,l llJSfm,IJl 10 a o~t~HK'dl f'Ofll t ~&lt;'1
Sl'r\1 Sk..,lt 1 B.1rn.:&gt;&lt;,. tnfi(•IO •t to f~lm.PI

oi.Jhl • i\ml'•lican i\*'clj. nn
MOf\'THf'AJ F:X POS.;_~'I'll Fn'fl Rn~n
lnK. pit.cho·r, If) lndtanupolb of lhl Inter
niltlonal IA'&lt;~J(l.lt• ~ "'nd MJ/1 \'mahlt•, •
n 1t tkoldl'r
.
r"o't'\o\
YOHK
:\1 E'l'S- Tradl'{l .!0!.1
l1qtwn6l . ~hul'l"l~ . .lfld Mdrk 1\ t ~l\.
pncht·r. 10 thf' C.t r.uub- C'Jrdindl!&gt; Jar i\r
~L.•t.ar; ~00t1srop. o~ntl,fohn Young ,
f'&gt;p•orr•&lt;nl lt(';H

'

•I'IHA'I1':S-i)(!r,..tl

utili L..trt .. M•
ftq ·~~· at &lt;.'On!nKI

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pt~('h( •r

ttJ
on

!IT .LOL'Lo.; ('ARD I !'\i\J-~..,.-Piac.-.'(1 Hick

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pl•cm'f", on ,.,.,

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- BM KF:l'BAU.

!'IOill lonaJ ~kl'!tbil!ll A._~iar.lofl
l'llli\,1\;fl PA(.'ERs-Nal'f'llod W;mw

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pn""Sidmt

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t1ln.t.ullarll .

FUO'J'BAI.I,.
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A RI7.0NA 0\..:11.AWs-SlEl1t'd K im An·
&lt;k't"-00. ck&gt;fr&gt;n_~ln' D&lt;arlt In .1 Ulli "H'iU nm

rra('t
M

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AIM 0tJill'ilf1, plac'C'kickt, ~lg,H~ Jlnb
CinJpp. IJUIIH'r
.
1\F:\~ .lER.&lt;.;EY I.F.XEIW$-RI•k•a.'it-d

Karl YU

JUST PRACTICE -The Cincinnati Reds' Pete
Rose rounds first base on the second of three singles
against the Minnesota TwtnsdurlngTIJesday'ssprtn~:

Batting stroke .c hange, work
paying dividends for Esasky
·

TAMPA , Fla. (AP) ~ Nick
Esasky appears to have shaken hls
reputation as "Nick The Butcher,"
by chan~ng his balling stroke this
spring and seems a contender for
Ihe starting third base job.
Since March 22, Esasky has had
eight hits In 25 tries, seven RBI and
three home runs.
..
Esasky has spent m any hou rs
with hlltlng instructor Billy
DeMal'S.
''He's putting the ball In play more
and that's great," said playermanager Pete' Rose. "ll's like I've
told him. the more ·he makes
contact, the more he P\ltS the ball in

HPn~o , olfm~tH • t:w~ r. ·

.

training game In Tampa, Fla. Rose also soored.two
runs In the 7-6 victory as Orst base roach Tommy
Helms watches .the' ball. (AP Laserphoto),

play, the mare hits he is going to get.
"If the guy Is swinging the bat
good like he Is right now. he lsgolng
to play. If the season started
tomorrow, he would be my third
baseman."

nine

Schulze, Tribe'~ third starter

530 JACK~ PIKE - RT.35 W~ST
Ptoone 446· 452'1

BARGAIN KATINEES SAT &amp;SUN
All SEATS $1.15
A1JOISS ION EVERY TUESDAY 12. 25
MARCH 29 thru APRIL 4

FRIDAY th ru THURSDAY !

" ll 's golng lo he hard for him lo
bounce back and hit wllh the
authority Nick has." Rose said .
Rose , cited one· example In
TueSday's game when Esasky hit lo
right field wllh power.
"Whea I see him hit the ball hard
1a· right field ... that's greal," Rose
said. " He Is gainlngconfidenCP, loo .
Arid Iha t comes with it, especially
when you have achieved what he
has. Nick Is S\\inging ,good righl
now. If a guy is swinging good , you'
want.IO keep him going.''
Esasky 1Is far from completely
satisfied with his swing, howsver.
He estimates he .Is only· expeutlng
COI'I'eclly about half the time but
believe he has c leared a· riJajor
hurdle .

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

No trade secret ______..:;___---:--_A_rt_B_uc_h_wa_ld
President Reagan pl,cked up the with the Nippon Telephone
phone and called Japanese Prime Com~ny."
Minister Nakasone In Tokyo.
"You have to rilake a gesture
"Yasuhlro," the president said. even If II means offending your
''What are you doing to me? I ended people, Yasuhlro."
1'If you feel so strongly about It,
'voluntary' U.S. Import quotas oo
Japanese autos and now you're I'll take two Princess phones- one
sending In 2.3 ml)llon cars to for downs)alrs and the other for my
compete with our domestic Indus- bedroom.''
try. Detroit Is screaming bloody
"I don't think Congress woitl(j
murder, and I'in ·on the spot. accept that as a fair exchange for
You've got to give me something In 500,000 automobUes," the president
retUrn." · ' ·
· \ said. "How are you fixed for
phannaceutlcals? Would It hurt IIi
"Of course, Mr. Presldeni. We In buy a slx-~ck of extra-strength
the Inscrutable East believe In lair aspirin? You must have a lot of
trade. What would you Uke?"
headaches In Jap_an."
"In excl1ange for selling an
"We haven't had too many since
unlimited number of JapaiiESI! our balance of trade has been so
cars, you have to buy Amertcan good."
goods !rom us. I have to prove to
"Yasuhiro, you're toying with
Congress that you're serious about me," "the president said angrily.
helping our balance of payments." "The strong dollar plus foreign
"If you Insist," Mr. Nakasone dumping of goods on the American
said. "Put us down for a dozen eggs, . market Is C06tlng the United ~tates
a pound ol butter, two loaves of jobs and threatening my ~mlc
Wonder bread and a 'can of Log plali for recovery. l'm a !reetrllder,
Cabin syrup."
but If you don't make a serious
"You have to·do betterthan thlit, commltmeni to buying our pro- ,
Yasublro. Our trade deftclt to ducts, the trade bamets will go up
Japan Is $37 billion."
and I can't do anything about lt."
"Ah so, Mr. Preskkd!t. I will
"I understand your problem, Mr.
. authorize a special Import lfcense President. But America doesn't
for Cabbage Patch dolls."
produce anything that Japan
"Ho,.w miny?".
needs." ,
"nu-e.i. One for each of my
"What about mUltaryweapons?"
grandchildren."
"You hsve IIi be serious and open We've got the best that money can
up your doors to Amertcan pro- · buy - fighter plani'S, bombers,
ilucta.l can't tell you what pressure tanks.- aircraft carriers, the MX
,
I'm aettlng from the ' National m~Ue."
.
"What
would
we
do
with
an MX
A.saocl,atfol! of ManufactU~," the
mtssUe1"
. president said. ••How about soll1e
· "Yoll could useltasa bargaining
· telecammuntcatlons equipment?
chip when yo~ negotiate a trade
We malce the tlnest In the world."
"lf I buy telecommunications agreement witH the Soviet Union In
Geneva."
c
. equipment from you 1 will lose face

CJAKI.Ar-.IJ A ''-S.&gt;nl 0 M rl\ ~·l n .
ttll-i! i'nJnor• k.&gt;awK' rtlmpiPX

Wayne Krenchlcki is suffering
Wahama completed the scoring In
from a back problem which
the sixth when Jewell led .off with a
developed Monday in batting pracsingle and Billy Marshall tripled
tice. HP may not be ready for nexl
down the right field line.
Monday's season opener.
Once agaiil the White Falcons
Krenchlckl, whom Rose referred
. used four pitchers in the seven in·
to Tu!'sday as "a great defensive
nlng contest with junior righthander
player," has not hll this spring ashe
Matt Thmpson coining away· with
dld last September. In 15 games and
the win. 'Thompson struck out live
4.1 at bats, Krenchlckl has
hils
and walked one in his three inning
and no.RBI. Hls average is .200.
stint before giving way to Troy
hitters were Billy
Tucker who in tum gave way to Billy
· a run producirig triple
Marsball. Rodney Long worked the
Hysell and Matt Jewell
final frame and ·notched the save.
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Right· pitching staff. as was Lhecaseayear a single.
. Jay Bostick, the first · of_ three
Wah,niB opened an early ~lead
Southern. hurlers suffered the loss bander Don Schulze's la test exhlbi- ago .. is Us bullpen. Corrales said. He
altt!i- Bforingtw() runs In the bottom with Kelly Grueser and Jimmy tlon performance has catapulted hopes his starting rota tlon has
half . . .the. se&lt;:ond inning: Paul -Wolfe each tojling_on the mopnjl for · him . Into the top three til · the· Improved enough . to ·keep the
·Hess n got things - started by -the T~does. ',· ·.: .
. .. • Gl!'velanii l·Iidlans' ·' slatting., Indians .closlr uiltlLifie relief eorps
reac g. base vta a base on balls .
Southern hitters "'ere · Brian rotation. _ _'. , ' ·
can be called .. . • _
•
·,folio ed by an err_oi- which allow.ed · · Fr~man and D. ~olfe e11cl\ with a . ·· ··schulze · pitched ··seven· tnrilnllS' _ ·. · Schulzewill bi'thlrtllntherotatiOJt: ·
. Mot Jew~ll to· reach base .. Dawson _: double · while Ebersbach,. Jimmy · Tuesday , giving tip eight .hits and· oohind veierans'eert Blytevcn. who ·
then: elivered a line drive double IIi Wolfe, · Scott Wickline, . Darrin · three runs but walking only one In will pitch Monday's opener In
left /enter to score both runners and
Roush, Jay Bostick, Kelly Gruester the Indians' 11-6 victory over the Detroit. and Vern Ruhle, Corrales
sta~e the White Falcons to a 2-0
and TOdd Adams, aU liad a single Oakland A's.
said.
adwntage.
each.
.
Manager Pal Corrales, w~
· Blyleven is also Ihe probable
Three doubles and a pair of walks
The White Falcons next scheduled · abhors walks, was pleased.
starlerfor Ihe Indians' hom e opener
"What'd you think of Schulze?" April 13 ~gatnsl the New York
in the fourth frame broke the game game was to have been on Friday at
open for WHS as they scored three Parkersburg Catholic but the the manager asked r~etorlcaUy . Yankees, Corrales Indicated.
times to Increase their lead~ IHI. A
Crusaders cancelled out leaving the
"He's coming along. He's going lo
Lefl-hander Neal Heaton is the
free pass to Matt Thompson opened bend area team without a game until pitch in the Detroit series." •
loser In this latest shuffle. He
the lnrltng with Troy Tucker and Wednesday AprU 10 when they host
Schulze pitched Tuesday the way remains In thPstartlngrofalion, but
Paul H\!SSon following l:"ith back to Spencer. However efforts are being CoiTales would like to see aU h~ lie may have to walt awhile for his
back tYjO baggers. After a walk was made to schedule an opponent s tarters pitch 1n 1~. going seven flrsl appearance.
'
strong Innings beforeglvlngway to a
issued fD Matt Jewell, Matt Dawson before that time.
"He's getting the ball up, walking
call!!' ~~)tough withjlis second double Score by Innings:
reliever.
people.'' Corrales said, noting lhal
.
1. .2.. 3.. 4.. 5.. 6.:7-.. R .. H .. E
of the game to make 1t ~. ,
Hea ton has walked 14 batl«?rs [n 22
Soutllem, d~~~ipite out·hittmg the Southern
Corrales remembers too many spring innings . "He's going to sJart.
0 0 0 0 1 0 0 I 9 I
White falcons ~. scored their lone
long ntgh\S last summer when his He's jusl not going to start lrt that
tally o( the game In the fifth _Inning Wahama
starters wQuld give up five runs by flrsl series."
0 2 0 3 0 1 X 6 8 I
when ~bersbach and Jimmy Wolfe
Ruhle earned the No. 2 spol,
the second or third Inning.
"Occasionally, that's going to Corra les said, be&lt;iause he's "been .
happen, but overall we're In good out there slx times lhis spri ng, a,nd
h«?'s got roughed up two times . I'll
fann this year," Corrales said.
The strength of lhe Indians' (ake that the rest of Ihe year."
Right
-bander
Don
Schutzesl
arted
. PHOij:NlX; Ariz. (AP) - Clev('land Indians' center fielder Breit for the Indians and went seven
Buller, ~!ready named by Manager Innings. allowing three runs on eight
Pal carl-ales as the leadoff hitter for hils, sl riklng out four and walking
the tPath's opener nexl Monday In non.e , ReUever Rilmon Romero
Detroit, coUPCted .four hit s In gave up three runs In two Innings.
Meanwhile . .Cl«?veland Indians'
Tllesday's 11-6 exhibition _,victory
shortstop JuUo Fr.anco sat out
over Ihe Oakland A's.
Buller led off lhe game wllh a Tuesday's exhibition game again~t
lhe Oakland A's, bul he was
single and latc'r scored on Mike
expected
to be back In action 1oday,
Hargrove' s single. Butler's bunt
Manager
Pal Corrales said.
·
single In the second rrpved Mike
"Jimmy
!Warfield,
the
Indians'
Fischl in to third bakP, &lt;Jild FlschUn .
trainer ) called It ·runner's knee,"'
scored on Hargrove's double.
Corrales said. "There's nocartUage
Buller's fourth
In the
damage or anything."
seventh, also
to a run.
Franco missed two exhlbltlon
helping load
for Hargames bec~use of the problem.
grove'.s RBJ grcounclopt.

~., .

,,~,

l..t'OIJ.,'\W

By The Associated Pl'e!!S

aver

·-·····..

'

Ml!'&gt;.'r'f-1&gt;C1l '\ 1;'-\"lf':S.....()pllooid .l('ff
li •ffl • Oll('ht'l · ;.Jilrl Andn• 1J&lt;wld. (Jilt
flt·~dl·t . 11:1 1'olrdJ td, tht' l nt t1nat~lf}lll

If Pete Rose keeps hllllrig the way
he has during spring training. he
may pass Ty Cobb as baseball's

Professor Eugene Rt&gt;stow from You can Imagine what happened to
time IIi tlme reminds us of the the good ship Carollpe.
Q. You mean, wi\h people aboard
Caroline Incident.
.
Q. wen. would you remind us of It went down -the tails?
A. 1 mean with people aboard It
'the Caroline Incident?
, A. In 1837; a bunch of aggressive went down the falls.
Q. llut suppose that El Salvador
Yankees In upstate New York
decided to send a few· soldietS and dld not even exist, and therefore we
supplies IIi Canadians Involved In had· no way IIi depend on Ntcara'
an Insurrection against . Canada, guan aggression against El SalvaI.e., Greai Britain. Great Britain · dor to motivate our ald to the
retaUated mCISt ingeniously. It contras. What would we then do?
A. •Secretary of State George
didn't suspend diplomatic relations,
In his speech a fortnight ago
Shultz,
let alone declare war. But It dld
tn
San
Francisco, edged tile &lt;
seize American vesseJ·'caUed 'The
government
In the direction of_
Caroline, which . has been USEd to
argur;nent
that
our aid to the
the
transport the American aggrescontras
Is
In
and
of
Itself a proper
sors. Having seized the vessel, the
British simply Jet It loose a little response ·to the mllltarlzatlon and
way up-river from Niagara Falls. totaUtarlanlzatlon of Nicaragua.
You remember, he said that If the
Soviet Union asserts the right under
by NEA.Inc.
the Brezhnev Doctrlpe to lntervent
In any country to prevent democracy . from taking root; ·so do we .
bave the right to Intervene to help
, democracy.
Q. Would II then make sense to
sever •dlplomatlc relations with
Ntgaragua?
A. aearly this would be a
sensible psychological move. There
Is a paradox In simultaneously
recognl~ng a governrilent, and
giving ald to those who week to ,
destroy tt. It breeds a lot of
schlwphrenla In Congress, for
,,,.r,,n•
,,,,,,., .,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,.,,
Instance.
.
,,,.;,,,.
""""'"' ,,,
'
,,,,,,
"""·~· · ·'
,, ,,. ,. ,
Q.
Does
the
president have
,,,,,.,,,
''''''"'"' ••u,.•.••'
,,.,,
absolute·
autl]orlty
l!l, this field?
,,,
''"'"'''
.
'''''' '"'' . .,,,,,,,,
,,;;,,... iN'''r(~
\WIIiN'"'' ' ,
A.
Absolute
authority
Is exactly
·
,,,, , ,, ,,
ll'l'ri't,..
,,,
..
"'·""''
,,,.,,
..........
-~·
the way to put· It: No .o ne contests
,,,,,,, •..
,,,,,., . . ,,,,,N''
,,
that the chief executive has the
""'"'"' ,,,
.,,,.,,u.
,,,,,,.,..
................ ,,, ,, ,,,,,,. ... ,,,,,
right a) to recognize a government,
....
,.,
.,nr;•"'' ,,,_.,
,,,o''' N,,.,,,,
and b) to sever relations Wlth a
,,.,.#0 ..
,,,.
,,,, ''''"t#'lu
,,,
government. Tomorrow morning,
,,.,,,,,,.
,,,,,,,
,,,..,
,,,,..,
,,,
...
,
President Reagan could sever
,,., "'' ,,,.,~···· .•fl·'''''
,,,.,
,,,,,,.
relations with Nicaragua. He would
,,,,_,.
/'
.,,,, '.
,,,,,,.
have sufficient cause to do so:
1")'_ ...
•iutl'"''
,,,,,.
,.
·~""'''"
naemly, Nlc11ragua's disturbing the.
,,,.,u....
,
peace In the area.

.....

Transactions ·1-.Ji fit-!d4 1', 16

......

.

INSTITUTIONS

The Daily Sentinei !- Page ~3

Ohio

bat
.leads.7-6 victory

~:ne~v~~~~~·9~~io

El Sal~r. ~rty No. 2, fro!lJ ~n
act of aggression by Nicaragua,
party No.3?
vernment of Nicaragua?
A. It has always been recngnlzed
A. Yes.
In
the community of nations ihat
Q. That being the case, bow can
any
nation can lawfully aid any
we, .under International law, give
other
nation IIi defend Itself against
ald and comfort to armed militants
whose stated Intention Is to over- aggression. That was the fXCiuslve
throw the• government we a~ rationale . of our Intervention In
South. Korea. We had no treaty
recognlilng?
A; Our.official raUonale, In giving obligations I'I!Spectlng South ~rea.
aid to the contras, bas been IIi help we simply lntervented under the
the goveriiment of El Salvador. umbrella of the United NaUons as It
That government has been as· happened, to help In a war against
saulted by rebels who are supplied aggression.
Q. But doesn'tlnterventlonofthat
by Nicaragua, Indeed whose head·
nonnaUy lead to a declaration
sort
quarters for a long Period of time
of
war
against the aggressor
were In Managua.
power?··
'
Q. Wbal business is It of the ·
A.
No,
as·
a
matter of fact.
United States, party No. 1, to help

'

Pomeroy-Middleport~

Ros~~s ·hot

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Q. ·we do, do we not, have
dlplomatjc relations wil'\ the go-

DEVOTED Tl) THE INTERESTS OF THE M~IGS-MASON AREA

•

Wednesday. April 3, 1 9'85

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Page:-4The Daiiv Sentinel
.
I

-

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Wednesday. April ·3, 1985

AP Writer seeS fifth place finish for Reds
By ,JOHN NElSON
AP Spom Writer
When a division champlbn stands
pat, the re5ult usually Is predictable.
;There's a
division champion ·
ne~t year.
San Diego General MamigerJack
McKeon understands thls axiom of
baseball. So, if the Padres fall in
1985, It won't 'be because they stood
pat.
After winning the National
League West by 12 games last
season, "Trader Jack" took three
Important steps toward retaililng
the title. He traded lour players,
Including Tim Lollar, to the Chicago
White Sox ~or pitcher LaMarr Hoyt
and two minor leaguers. He also
signed free·agen,ts Tim Stoddard, a
reliever, and utllilyman Jerry ·
Royster.
.
Hcyt won the Cy Young in 1983
with a 24-10 record before falling off
to 13-18 Iast season. Still, McKeon
calls him "the rock.Ihat wUl anchQr
my staff.''
· In 1984, Atlanta and Houston tied ·
for secoild behind the Padres,
followed by Los Angeles, Cincinnati
and San Francisco.
This year, they'll finish .this way:

i\ew

San Diego; Atlanta, Los Angeles,
~ouston,
Cincinnati and San
Francisco.•
SAN DIEGO

'84.
· ATLANT~
The Braws made two major
additions to their roster.- reliever
Bruce Sutter and catcher Rick
Cerone - and changed managers:
Eddie Haas for Joe Torre.
Despite the acquisition of freeagent Sutter, who tied the major
lea~erecordwith45saves, Atlanta
has at least one major problem.
Third baseman BOb Horner proba·
bly won't start the season after
suffering another injury. In addi'tion, outfielder Cia udell Washington
was arrest€~! on a drug charge in
California and could face a
suspension.
Ken Oberkfell, a lifetime .300
hitler, might fill in while Homer
recuperates from a broken wrist,
but he can 'I replace the power. Dale
Murphy will have to carry that load,
along with promising youngst.ers
raid Perry and Brad I&lt;ommlnsk.
Cerone might take the starling
catcher's job from Bruce Benedict.

Hoyt, a right·ha)lder, will replace
free-agent' Ed Whitson in a starting
staff that might also include
rlght-~anders Eric Show a.nd Andy
Hawkins, and left-banders Mark
Thurmond and Dave Draveeky~
Hawkins and Dravecky pitched in
long relief last year, bUt Ihe addition
of Stoddard will tree them to'start .
Manager Dick Williams' short
men are right-hander Rich'GosSjlge
and left-hander Craig Lefferts, who
had 35 saves between them last
year.
Williams' biggest concern is in the
outfield, where bqth Kevin McReynolds and Carmelo Martinez are
coming back from injury. His
healthyoutflelder, Tony GWynn, led
the NL last year with a .3.51 batting
average.
Third. baseman Graig Nettles, at
40, probably can't play evl'l'\"1~.,.....
LOS ANGELES
But Royster Will provide depth al
It
sounds
strange to say it, but the .
that position. Besides McReynolds
Dodgers
made
very few changes
and Nettles, the big RBI men are
·
after
a
79-83
campaig11
in '84. Their
Steve Garvey and Terry Kennedy,
sole acquisition brought AI Oliver

.

Kosar would play for..Browns
.

The learn stood·on a flatbed truck
1ha 1 made a short loop through
Center City and deposited the new
champions in John F. Kennedy
Plaza, where a crowd estimated al
25,(00 cheered their every syllable.
, "I a.m proud of you and the city Is
proudofyou,"saidMayorW. Wilson
Goode, speaking by telephone from
a meeting In Pittsburgh. "I'd like to
commend this outstanding team for
anoutstandingjob."
Coach Rollle Massimino took 'Ihe\

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microphone, sayJrtg, '"They deserve
·
it, they did it.
"I told you when we lefl school on,
Wednesday t.ha1 we were goipg to
have a heck of a party. And they did a
tremendous job and won the
national champiqnship."
Senior center Ed Plrtckney1 who
had 16polnlsand six rebounds in the
tille game and was named the
tournament MVP, ·thanked the
crowd for Its support.
"There wasn't anybody In the
country bul all you people that
believed that we could do II and l,..e
did it and Villanova is No. . !,"Pinckney said, ·
The crowd gave one of its loudest
c!)eers for trainer Jake Nevin, 79,
who is afflicted with Lou Gehrig'.s
disease. He sat in his wheelchair
Wilh the Rupp Arena net around his
neck.
"I'm exhausted, emotionally
drained .'' said senior playmaking
guard Gary McLain as autograph
and picture seekers gathered
. around him. ''I'm going to gel some
sleep a nd then .c atch up on my
schoolwork. I'm bi?htnd a lot
· becauseoflhetournament. butlwlll
gr1i'dua tP on'tlme)' ... ·'
·

-· ....... .

·Cincinnati.may~r _·

declares ~red' ~ay
CINCINNATI (AP)
Mayor .
Charles Luken has proclaimed
Monday, tlie date of the Cincinnati
Reds ·opening game with the
Montreal Expos, as a day for
cititzens to wear .red clothing In
s_upporl of the local team.
The mayor mel on the city's
downtown Fountain Squar'? Plaza
with new Reds owner Marge Schott
on Tuesday make theproclam8:1ion .
In return, Mrs. Schott- already
known for making public appearan ·
ces with her St. Bernard dog,
Sc!)ottzie - presented the mayor
wilh a stuffed toy _replica of

Massimino says all &amp;I seniors in
hls 12 years at Villanova have
graduated on lime, and he expects
Mclain, Pinckney, Dwayne
McClain and reserve ·Brian !jarrington to keep the record intact.
As McLain walked down the
streel,.he posed tor pictures, waved
and smiled at well-wistlers. Afrtend
slipped McLain's travel bag off his
shoulder and carried it lor .him. A
car drove by,
horn blaring. ·
. "You're the best!" a passenger
shouted .
McLain _smilef) and flashed his
lndel&lt; finger in the '"No.1" sign.
"That's right," II(. said.

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payments you can afford. No matter
what you need the money for.

:.~- $649

oz.$1' 99

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you can liave $3,000 today.
We'll even take iour applicati~n
over the p~o11:e. And, psually, give ·you
an answer 10 JUSt 24 hRurs. . '
So call City Loan 1&amp; Savings
about a personal loan y\lu can live
,with. And get the things you want
today.
Without
getting a
AMOUNT
loan you'll r-,::2-:;:;so:::-:-::..:.._-:-=-=::JF--::,::95::.=::34.::.:•
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u,ooo
1125.80'
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1151.88••
City
Loan&amp;
t
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solutions as there are

USDA a""""'

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CHUCK ROAST
_ SUPERIOR
LARD

'•

Ill.

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\

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towns whr•·r tlom{'
avalli.lblr.

SOLVES
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I
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Although Kosar still seems to be
on the team's wlshiist,Davissilidhe
Reeds more experience. He also
questioned the idea of taking a
quarterback because the team
already haS Tom Flick and Terry
Nugent to back up Paul McDonald.
Davis said the Browns are
optimistic -arout the chances of •
getting offensive linemen and wide
receivers.
'
"l reaUy think, and It fils our
needs, wide receiver and offensive
lineman are probably two of the
strongeSt positions in thlli year's
draft," he said.
1be Browns do not have a fourth,
Mh or ninth round pick. because
thole were traded 'to Miami tor
Durie! Harris; Buffalo to complete_.
tlle Tom Cousineau trade, and
Phllacll!lphla tor Carl Hal,rston:
Cincinnati has the 13th and :!lth
pick In the first AA~nd. Pittsburgh,
tlle Browns' other AFC Central
01v1a1on rlval, wW select :alth In the

Falter's Bulk
Meat_Sale

'

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1

CLEVELAND (AP) - The 35th pick I believe we could get a
Cleveland Browns won't suffer this starting offensive lineman,'' Davis
year I! they fail todraftUnlversltyo!. said.
"Conversely, I think if you pick an
Mlam'J;quarterback Bernie Kosar,
offensive
lineman with the seventh
says the personnel director of the
·pick
you
can
also get a ~tartlngwide
National Football League team.
receiver
with
the 35th pick. Those
"It we get Kosar; then we're going
two
positions
are
deep enough, with
to have an outstanding team," Bill ·
other
people
wantlrtgtinebackers
or
Davis said Tuesday at a media
defense
line
or
safeties
or
corners."
IJIIICheon. "lfwedon'tget Kosar and
have the two drafl players I think ~------~~------------------------~
we're going to have, then we're
going to have an outstanding team.''
Kosar, from the YoungstoWn
area, has saidhe'dliketoplayforthe
Browns. However, the Browns have
the seventh pick in this year's draft
· on AprU ~y've been unable
. to work out a dejt to move up the
ladder.
Buffalo, with the first picl&lt;, has
already signed Virginia Tech defensive lineman Bruce Smith. Houston
has the second selection.

•

The Daily,Sentinel-Page-'S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,...

Wearj Wildcats-return home

FLAUNTING IT - VIllanova's Ed Pinckney waves the NCAA
basketball championship . trop!Qr during a victory celebration In
Philadelphia's Jolut F. Kennedy Plaza Tuesday. (AP Laserphoto).

..

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find another starter,
RBI four times · since 19'78, • w~s
over from Philadelphia·,
traded to Sf. Louts, leaving JEtff
Jose Cruz and Jerry Mymphrey
With the personnel they haveprovide what lltUe punch tills team
Leonard to shoulder the burden. The
. like pitchers Fernando Valenzuela
shows, butahealthyThoncotlldhelp • Giants might get some help from
and Orel Hershlser, and sluggerS
here. He had 20 homers, 79 RBI and
David Green, who was partial
Pedro Guerrero and Mike Marshall
payment for Clark, but Green never
- It's hard to,pelieve the Dodgers· batted .2861n 1983.
CINCINNATI
lived
up to hls potential In !our
.
£an'l finis~ atleast .500. .
Buoyed
by
thE&gt;
enthusiasm
of
seasons
with the Cardinals. .
But they still have problems. They
player-manager
Pete
Rose,
the
The
real
bright spot left over1from •,
will be one of the poorest defensive
get
off
to
a
fast'
start'lhls
last
season
was the performance of •
·
Reds
co'tild
teams In the league, and reliever
year,
and
that
could
save
them
from
rookie
Dan
Gladden,
who lilt .i3511n
Steve Howe and starter Alenjandro
the.
cellar.
86
games
with
31
RBI'
and 31 $!olen
Pena have arm problems.
But
the
Reds
really
are
strong
at
bases
while
playing
excellent
center 1
.
HOUSTON
fieid . ·
t
.
· ·.
!
Thf Astros are the sleeper of the Only a few positions: Mario Solo as
thelrNo. 1 si&lt;irter, Da.veC0ncepclon
(The Longshot: Houston, if Thon !
divlsfon. Plagued by pOor starnrthe
••
past two seasons, they have been at. shortstop, DaveParker In right
returns.)
·
unable.to contend. Bob LilUs returns
flelder and, perhaps, even Rose
•
a team thig year that- ll)8de lew
------~~~~~~---,·
;
himself at first base.
The VaUy Sentinel
chang~.
Late in the spring, the Reds still
The key to Hous.ton's success Is were trying to pick a catcher from
(USJ'S IU·HO)
''j ''
Dh•IRion
bf
Multimedia,
lilc.
A
'
the comeback bid by shortstop among four so-so candidates. Cesar
j '
'
'Dickie Thon, sidelined for aU but live Cedeno could help If hE&gt; can maintain
PuDllshf'd C\'('fV afternoon, Monday
;
throu~~ Friday: 111 Co urt St ,,, y the
games of the '84 season with vision · some intensity over the long season,
Ohio Vali&lt;'V Publlshln~ Companyt Mul·
••
•
problems after he was struck in the but much of the Reds' attack will be
tlmcdla, rnc., Pome-roy, Ohio 4~7fi9, h.
992·2156: SC'rond class poslag{' paid at
face with a pitch. His vision may be predicated upon the success of Gary
.Pom('roy, Ohio.
•'
permanently lmpalred.
_ Redus. Redus had just seven
••
,.
M~mbf'r : Th~ Ass(l('latcd Prf'SS,. In·
The Astros have some decent homers imd 22 RBI aUer' a stellar
'
land Dally
·. Assoclaflpn :tnd ftlP
•
piiching in starters Nolan Ryan, Joe rookie season.
AmNI&lt;;an
per Publishers As·
•
.' '
Niekto and Bob Knepper, and
•
1 • 1 Advertisi ng Repr~ ·
SAN FJlANCJSCO
;
Newspapl"r Sales',
. relievers Dave Smith,· Frqnk DiPNew Manager Jim Davenport
~cw York, New
•'
ino, Bill Dawley and Joe Sambito, faces somerathe~,grll)'l prospects In
'
. who conti~ues a two-yearcomeback
his major league managerial debut .
from elbow surgery. Lillis needs to Jack Clark, whohasl,edtheGianlsin

who had a subpar 57-R)3I seas&lt;;m In

V,JLLANOVA, Pa. (AP)- Harold
Jensen, a finance major at vmanova University and a memberofthe
NCAA all-tournamenl team,
walked wearily pown the beer·
stained hallway ot hls dormitory.
It was Tuesday afternoon. 15
hours after VIllanova had won the
NCAA basketball championship
and 28 hours .since Jensen and most
of his teammates had slept.
Since the 66-64 upset over Georgelawn in Lexington, Ky., there had
been all-night parties at the~anf
hotel, an early bus ride to the airport,
a flight home, a bus ride and parade
through downtown Philadelphia
and, finally, another bus ride back 10
the school's Main Lirie campus.
The previous night , thousands
had packed the quadrangle outside
Jensen's dormitory, Sullivan Hall,
dancing and screaming arpund a
bonfire until 5 a.m. Most of the trash
and l&gt;roken glass was cleaned up by
Ihe tlme the team arlived.
"It's great 10 have the season end
this way," said lhe G-loot-4-sophomore who scored 1~ points on
five-for-five shooting. "It 's been a
total team effort the whole way. It
felt so good- to~ able to contribute."
Gasses were not 'field ·Tuesday
and Wednesday nuirked-thebegin·
nlng i)l !;:aster break ai'VIliano\•a.
Jehsen said he was heading for
home, to sleep apd study.
"I definitely have to get back into
thE' book scene again," he said. .
Jensen called theparadeandraliy
in Philadelphla "unbelievable.
There were thousands of people
there ."
'

•

Wednesday. April 3, 1985

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$4 99

:"'~.,

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"I think tile Ideal thing would be to
,et a ereat receiver, or great
I'IIJIIIIn&amp; baCk or ~at quarterback
Ill the - t h pick and thl!n with the

GalllpoUs: 358 Second Ave., 446-1973. Pomeroy: 125 E. Main St.,

71.
.

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• We Reserve The .Right to Limit Quantities • Prlcaa Effective Wed., April 3 thru Saturday, April 6, 1985 • USDA Food S~amps Accepled • Not Responsible For T_y pographical Error• ·

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Pomeioy-Mid~leport, Ohio
..elf'.

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giv~n

ByJOHN~ON

AP Sports Write~
Gary Carter and ·Steve. Rogers
spent ll)Ore thari'10 seasons together
as batterymates on the Montreal
Expos. Naw tha.t they ,w Ulfaceeach
other from opposite sides of,the field,
they ~ agree on one thlng: The
New York .Mets ,have ·an 'excellent
chance of winning the National
League East in 19ffi.
· Carter was traded to the Mets last
December. Rogers Is the Expos'
all~ time leader in vlctorles.
·
In 1984, the Cubs won the division
by 6'f.l games over the Mets, who
were follOWed by St. Louis, Philadel·
phia, Montreal and Pittsburgh.
This season, It wllllook·more like
this: New York, Chicago, Pitts:
burgh, Philadelphia, St. Louis and
Montreal. (The longshot: Phlladel phla, those jackrabbits.)

NEW YORK
.

.,

SEVENTH GRADE - Spirit became second nature lor this year's
Southern Junior lligh seve~~th grade cheerleaders. IRadlng the yells
during the seventh grade football and basketball games were, left to
right, bt front, Mandy BusseD and Amy Harrison; on Door In center,
Abnee WoUe: standing, Angle Manilel, Krls Ash, and JennUer Jolmson:
and on top, AUsa Wlltord.

Carter gives theMetsnotonlythat
extra offense they needed, but he
brings defense and a quality that wlll
he hard to measure. his .ablllty to
handle New York's young pitching
staff.
.
Led by rtght-hander Dwight
Gooden, the 1984 NL Rookie of the
Year, the Mets' starting pitching
may he the only question mark on.a.

W~ne~y. April 3, 198S

3985

nod to win NL

where he would not ewn have ~ a
·olubthat should he solidly favored in
' .500 pitcher had·it not been for a '20-8
the East.
season ln 1978.
Inexperience Is the key. GOOden.
Lee Smith anchors a bulljlen that
Ron Darling and Sid FPrnandez all
Is mediocre.
-are second-year men, albeit with
Pff'l'SBURGH
. stunning potential. The only veterans are Bruce Bereny! and Ed
The Pirates have improved, but
probably not enough t.o win the
Lynch, both sub-.500 t&gt;!tchers. Tile
dMslon this year. ·
, .;
·bullpen is solid with Jesse Oroseo
George Hendrick cameoverfrom
and Doug Sls k.
• CWCAGO
St. Louis to play light field . Dale
Berra went to the New York .
Age and .the law of averages''m.ay
Yankees for Steve Kemp, who wUI
catch up with the CubS this season.
Larry Bowa Is 39, Ron Cey 1537, and
'play left field 1! he's healthy. That,
Gary Matthews will turn 35in July. • . gives. the P!rates pot~ntlal to he a
ROokieShawon Dunston has been · better scoring club than they were jn .
¢ven the starting job at sportstop,
'84, when they were lOth in the NL In
run production.
despite front-office pressure to keep
Bowa there.
The return of BUI Madlock. who ·
Cey, Matthews, Leon DurhafTI,
underwent offseason arm surgery,
Keith Moreland and Jody Davis give
and Jason TI!ompson, who had only
the Cubs the abll!ty to score a lot of
74 RB(and batted .254, could further
runs.the question, as It was a year
Improve the club .. Tony P. ena and
· ago; is how wl11 the Cubs pitching
Johnny Ray should again have good
. staff perform?
seasons.
The Pirates have fine starting
ThPre's no. reason Cy Young
pitching with Jose DeLeon: John
winner Rick Sutcllffe,J6-1 last year
Candefaria, Larry McWilliams and
with the CubS, can't have another
Rick Rhoden. The question Is the
fine seasqn, but he'll probably lose
bullpen. Kent Tekulve, 38~ had only
morethanonegame.Stev!'Tfout,at
13 saves and a 3-9 record last year,
13-7, had the tiest season of hls
although his ERA was 2.66.
career, and Dennis Eckersley was
PIDIADELPIDA
1().8 after aniving from Boston,
Rookie Manager John Felske has

Big .B end wrestlers capture
.first -place tourney honors·
.

'

In Its first outlng for 1~. the Big
!3end Wrestling Club took first place
honors in the Morgan High SchOOl
Tourney Saturday.
The team which consists of all
loca l boys, took 12 wrestlers to the
tourney and brought home ll
awards.
Wrestling in two different weight
classes was Frank Blake, son of
John Blake, former North Gall!a

football coach. He won first place' in
tl)e 78-lll pound weight class to
receive a trophy and then received a
medal for his second place finish in
the 80-90 pound class. Frank was
three for four on the day.
Also taking first place honors was
Heath 'Shoemaker. He defeated his
finai opponent 18 t.o 4 to capture a
.
trophy.
Daymond Wolfe a lso in his first

a big job In front of lilm, meldlngrole
players and getting the maximum
~t of )he s~-dle5t club in the
National League. He can rely on one
thing, however .:... \he play of
35-year-old Mike Schmldt ,- wljO has
one fine season after another.
Phlladelphla'•s speedsters- Juan
Samuel, Voll.Hayes a~~ Jeff Stone
- could make ·up for a -lot .of
weaknesseS,iftheygetO!Ib;lse.Last
, year, they combined for 147 stolen
bases more than the total output of
six dther NL teams. Samuel's
defense' at second base must
improve dramatically. ,
ST. LOUIS
' The Cards' tnay be coming apart
at the seams, although Manager
Whitey Herzog can ~~ a decent .
starting nine on the field·.
In the past two seasons, they have
lost Keith Hernandez, George
'. st
Hendrick '!@ld Sruce Suner:
Louis got Jack Clark from San
Francisco to take Hendrick's spot.,
and that was a positive move. But
there's no way tbey can rwlace
Sutter's 45 saves.
Neil Allen and Ricky Horton wlll
work in short relief, . backing up
starters Joaquin Andujar, Bob
Forsch and John TudOr. Andujar
was the only 20-game winner in the
NL last year. but even Herzog
admits he doesn't have a great staff.
MONTREAL
The Elq)os have undergone a
radical change, perhaps necessary
for the club's !liture, butit's going to
take several years to rebuild. '
Carter is gone, and Mpntreil.l must
replace the entire middle of Its
.defense. Three of the replacements
- catcher Mike Fitzgerald, center
· fielder Herm Winningham and
shortstop Huble Brooks - came
from the Mets, and the Expos got the
other one, second baseman Vance
Law, from the Chicago While Sox .
Both Brooks and Law haverecently
switched from third base, so there
may he some defensive lapses.
Manager Buck Rodgers Is gla&lt;;l to
have outfielder Andre DawSon and
pitcher Steve Rogers healthy. but
pitchers Charlie Lead :and Gary
Lucas have been Injured. Lea
pl'bbably will start the season on the
disabled Ust, but. Lucas, who has
recuiTlng back problems, may he

Trump wants owners
to.help pay Flutie

·The

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
.
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. The Daily Sentinei-Page- 7

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N a m e - - - - - - - -- - 1
1 .

Nam• - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - -

1Address ~~--,-------1

Address - - - - - - - - - - -

Address

Age_&lt;_ _JPhone __________

Age _ _ _....~Phone __- ____

IAae _ ____,Phone _ _ _ _ _ __
I
.I
I
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I

"Name - - - - - - - - - - - -

Name ·------~-----~:.__

_ _ _ _ _~---

PAT HILL FORD
Middleport, OH.

.I
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Ir
I

CONTEST RULES

DOWNING-CHILDS

,MUUEN INSURANCE

1 . Just ~o!or one or more .of ti:Je drawings ~n these pages; filfin the'
blank·· and take yo~,Jr entry to the sponsqrlng store before 5:00 p.m .•
April1 ~th.
. __
. . ·"' ·
.. ·-· ...,._
.

· a3

EIGHTH GRADE - Taking first ~ among 12 groups of·
cheerleaders participating ht this year's Federal Hocking ToumarlWIII
games were Southern Junior lligb's eighth grade cheerleaders. This
same group also took first place la&amp;t year dqrlng the seventh grade
r-~~~~~~--~~----~~~~
tourney. Plclu~ are, left to right ht front, Ouistbia Cooper and Jessica
Evans: top to bottom on right, Monica mu, SheUy ConnoUy .and • ·
RacheUe Davis; and top to bottom on left, Carissa JDU and Tracy
~gle.
.

' I

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Ltt's pause amid this cekhratio"·
And rtntw our lot/( and dtdicatiol! .

outing ever brought borne a fourth
Place medal In the unlimited class
gt)ing 1 for 2.
Tony Miller also wrestled well In
the unlimited class but failed to
place.
" for these four boys to even wtn a
match their first time out was
surprising but to have them place
and receive awards Is fantastic.
''We've only practiced for one
week and we got a lot of place
finishers. I hope the. boys keep
working hard and improving. The
main thing this summerwrestUngis
for Is to have tun and learn.
wrestling. I'm hoping It builds a lot of
.
•
incentive for the jul)lor and senior OK.
•
'Ij'ophy-wlnnlng
higH
levelS,''
sa
id
Coach
Lariy
sign
the
Helsman
NEW YORK !API - United
Grimes.
. - - - - - - - - - - , : - - --.Siates Football League owners wHI quarterback from Boston College
club members are practicing
he confronted at their next meeting for the good of the league.
this week trom 5: 30 to 7: ~ p.m. at
Usher declined to give his own
with another one of those off-thethe Meigs High School cafeteria lor
field squa~ey seem to face so position on the letter.
'
But he said Flutle has helped
those interested.
often - a requ'll!it- tlia t they help
AND
The others to wln medalf'for the
·Donald Truinp and the New Jersey increase attendance despite a
locals Sattitday w~re Pau~ Wolfe,
.Generals l?ay [)oug Flutle's tnultl· hot•and-cold start in which he.rankS
lOth amorig- the 14 st;~rting USFL- .James Snyder, Bri~il Beaver 1,tnd
·
, milllon"\lollar saiary ._ .
USFL Commissioner Harry · quarterbacks. That lias not beep the. · D&lt;tnny DavJs, aU . seeond plqces; :.
SECOND Avi: · ........
ease with- Houston quarterba~k Jim · Tony Shciemakec, Troy Bauer, Ken
Osher. .con!lrmed Ttiesctay that he
:" .POMEROY .~ ,.
had· reeeived from Trutnp · an~· · K~lly, the league's ivlost-V)llu-'blf! McCullough and Pon BljiiCe, thif!l .
Player last season :
places.
·
disbursed to the league's other
. CALL 992-3381
Flutje.
has
pulled
out
two
games
The
next
tournamenttheclubwlll
teams a letter askingth3tthey share
1
992-2342
the burden of F1utie's $8.3-mllllon, • for the 3-3 Generals in the final • traiiel to Is the · Meadowbrook
quarter, but threw four lntercep· ·tournament in Byesville on Aprlll3.
six-year contract. Trump's reason·
lions at Arizona last week and has
ing, Usher; said, was that other
owners had urged him togo all-out to
"'passes.
.completed only 43 percent oi his

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Scoreboard ...

; Buckeye coach experimenting
;
'

•
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - It's
experimenting time lot Earle
Bruce, Ohlo State's football coach.
During the team's spring wor-·
·kouts, Bruce is nying a handful of
players at new positions in a bid to
replace nine departing regulars
from last year's Big TenCon!erence
champions.
'
•
•
•.fi:
' )'tomanBates, t,heNo. Ifull)}l!ckln
1984, has returned to his more
natura l position ~ t tailback, fltllng in
for Helsman Trophy runnerupKelth
Byars.
Mark Pfister, a substitute Unebac)cer last season, Is working at
fullback as Bruce tries to find · a
powerful blocker for Byars, the •
nation's leading rusher, scorer and
all-purpose runner Ia~t fail .

But the most unique transfer
involveS Lany Kolle, who quit the
team twice last season as an Inside
linebacker. Kolle is plaYJng stand·
up middle guard ln the Buckeyes'
spring practices.
· "It's caUed the bubble d¢ense::
the '6-foot-1, 242-pound Kolle said.
' "My position is called the Mike
UnebBcker. I'm very happy. I've got

.

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a spot now and all I've got to do is
'
hold it."
Kolle last left the team just before ·
the Big Ten champs began their
Rose Bowl practices in December.
Bruce and Kolic will only say the
player's depatures were for per·
sonal reasons . .
\ Kolic admits he took some
good-natured ribbing when he
returned for spring workouts.
"TheY. wanti&gt;d to know !low long (
'&lt;"as going to stay this time, " he said
of hls teammates.
Bruce Is tinkering with the
stand-up m iddle guard defense
since he has no bonafide middle
guard candidate for the 19ffi season
that open~ with visiting Pittsburgh
Sept.I4.
In hJs new position, KoUc,stands
up and plays off the ball aobutayard
and a hal! opposite the center. "The
big difference for me now Is I'm
. reading the center's head instead of
. through . the guard and the .nearest
'back," he said oNtls change in spots.
·, The new look gives Ohio Stafe a
mldl!le guard with , a middle
llneba~ker's mobHity.

NHL results

~·he

Nlllklnal Hodl.ty ~~.~
ly 11M' "-»L'I*d Prwt
Wl\l.IS OO~CE
• PIIMdi Dhrkkln
~
.
W LT PtNOFGA
.v·Phllltdt-lphla. 51 2:1 7 100 :1.1t 2.m
JC · Wa~t~on
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11:·f\'Y Tslanm&gt;n. 40 .n
~ !ri 'MJ .YN
II·NY Ra nJ,~m~ 2!i ill 10 ~~ :Mt .t il!
Plttsbu rRh
2.1 48 !l ~l ~i .~
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22 .jG 9 ~1 2"i\ .\ l:)
Adillli!IDh~

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tB 2m ~1
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65 ~~ .m
CAMPIU!'l..L OOI'I'FERENCE

x,[b.ton

1-lor1ford

NorTk DMalon
;I) ill 12
82

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X· ~ J;. n ~P.i :n l2 1:1
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in a Dia,mond 3~. 5 or 7 year cp. ~k
Diamond for details.

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FISH &amp; CHJPS

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·1

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POMEROY, OH.
PH.992-2SS6

Call or villi your local Diamond otllce;
POI!IEROY • 2t6 Weal Main' Street • 992·6655
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�,. ..

···-··· ....

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Page-a-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, April 3, 1985

Wedneldey. April 3, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

ildcat.coach
. l.ExJNGrON,Ky. (AP) -Eddie .

,,

nine 20-wln seasons and trips to the · Sutton said the selecllcm c;ommlt·
Sulton says he " would have crawled NCAA Tournament.
[ '
tee, headed by Kentucky Athletic
aJtthe way to Lexington" for a shot
" They couldn't get Bobby Director CW! Hagan and Pre.sldeni
at ; being University of Kentucky , (Knight) orDe11111SrnlthJ or Denny Otis Singletary, · contacted him
. basketball coach. · So w.hen the (Crum) or John (Thompson), so I Monday. Before Georgetown and
wildcats call~, Sutton jumped.
guess I was next on the list," Sutton VUJanova tipped off for the NCAA
Sutton, whotwow{'fksagotold the joked, referring, ~pectlvely, to the IItle In ~upp Arena Monday night, •
Arkansas Legjslatune he wanted to coaches of Indiana, North Carolina, he said, It was all wrapped upexcept
retire with the Razorbacks, took LoutsvUle and Georgetown.
for Tuesday's vote by the Athletics
chl!rge Tl!esday of Kentucky's
"All my life, I have grown to the Association board.
, Wildcats, ~Inning unanimous . ap· point where !his Is where I belong, •' . ''When Dr. ~lngletary 011lled me,
proval as successor to JOe B. Hall.
he told about 150 reporters, Ken- believe me, I would have crawled all
Sutton, 49, boosted Arkansas from ,tucky administrators and trustees the way to Lexington," said Sutton,
the basement to the top of the and members .. of the Athletics sporting a Wildcat necktie.
Southwest Conference sin~ 1975, Association board. ''This Is where I
"Fortunately, I was already here
cliPping hl~ career wltll a string of want to .be."
for the Final Four . ·. If ypu had
the smile on my face (Monday
nlghl)atthegame,youwouldhave
known : This Is the No.1 coaching job
In America, and that Includes the

• h·levers
• ··
.0.' ve·r· ac
S'prung' one'swell
'
k
. ~I s·Je o. . .e ·
A.. pn•I F
:

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By HAL BOCK
.
Villanova's ga Uant overachievers sprung one swell Aprll Fool's joke on
powerful Georgetown the other night, b~tlt was nothing compared to the
kn€e-siapper college basketball's Rules Committee has pulled on the entire
&lt;I &amp;Wrt.
, .
·
.
· On the day after one of the greatest upsets in the game's history, the
rulesmakersdec!dedtomoveagalnstfutureunderdogswlthleglslatlonthat
will !)'lake Vlllanova-tyPestunners moredltf!cull to achieve .
And the irony Is that!t wasdonew!lh theapprovalof thepopulat!onmost
effected- the college roaches:
Armed with survey ,results supporting the move, the NCAA has put the
clock in th~coliegegame, which isabo~tthe lastthlngthesport needed. Now

KENTUCKY COACH NAMED- Eddie Sulton,
'left, and· his wHe Patsy are aD smile~~ as they are
Introduced to the media by University ol Kentucky

Presi•ent

(ltls

at Kentucky. (AP Luerphoto ).

'

Sale

G,reensboro Open begins Thursilay
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) _:_
The · Grea ter Greensboro Open
offers $400,000 in prizes and the last
chance for some of golf's hiadlng
lights to put the finishing touches on
their M.aste~s preparations.
.
The GGO, wl\lch annually draws
some of the largest and most
enthsiastic
begins Thurs-

Oaks Country Club course with a
144-man field chasing a first pi'\ZE'of

$72,000.
· Among them are Ray Floyd,
Lanny Wadkins, Craig Stadler,
Fuzzy Zoeller, Andy Bean and Ben
Crenshaw.

"Some p!ay£'rs like totake a week

~ugusta, Ga.)," the veteran Floyd
said . ·
"'
"If they feel that's best for them,
flne.Butiliketoplaymywaylntoa
major. Heel it's best for m e to play
the tournament before going to
Augusta - try to stay tournament·
sharp," Floyd said.
Bean Is the defending Greensboro

THURSDAY
FRESH PORK BUTT

Steaks/Roasts ·..~.~;9 9c
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
$
49
Chuck Roast ..••• ~~. - 1

HOMEMADE
Limit Quantities

STORE HOURS .
Mon.-Sat. 8.'A"'· 10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

E-Zcarve HAM
ALL MEAT
ALL BEEF

JUMBO ·
BOLOGNA

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BOliQliET
; An ld&lt;&gt;al· wa;y
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, " HOPPY

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..
.

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14.28
LB. CASE

6.00

12

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LUNCH MEATS

.FLORIST
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11 c

CHIP CHQP
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Grapes .•••••.••.•••. ~.... 99(

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12 lB. CASE

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8.90 t:~
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4.00 l:~
3.60 P£1
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PC.

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Por (UitOIM!
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r- - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
ANNIVER SARY COU PO N I

II

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JELLO GELATIN I
3 OL
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POWELl'S SUI'II
VALUE

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_______ _____ _,
r-------------ANNiVER~ARY

lOX '

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U.T 51'UASl .
POWELl'S SUI'II VALUE

liMIT S P\IASl

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•

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- · --.
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IJELLO PUDDING

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DRUMSTICKS

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Fffrhllll11 19S 7

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BOLOGNA
THICK BOLOGNA
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PICKLE

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POLISH SAUSAGE 10 LB. ·
9 LB.
CHOPPED' HAM AVG.
10 LB.
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1-LB, I'KG.

9 P.M.

: Wnv. Send
' Som(•(me
.
Ou.r
Exd u. .•il'e
' BUNNY
BA SKET

.

Fryer Parts ••••.•• ~·..• 4 3(
.

COOK
SLICED
BACON

NIGHT 'TIL

: D• liKhtful

GET A
HOTDOG
AND A

3.:!xOL

.OPEN FIIDAY

; Et~R I "t'r in a

.. BCJI\IE~ESS ·'. ~~

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CHEESE

.,

.
Brirnming wit h
an (MIInrrment
of lm•ely f'e• h
flowerH and
a k&lt;&gt;ep•ak•a' CU I P, cuddlv,
· Plu•h Bun~y
Ra&amp;&amp;lt. A II
in our own
Berry -Boskel
Cont ainer.

-~

Frankies

banned .printed matter on T-shirts
and made it a rule that the score Is
f!rul! once a referee leaves the floor
after a game.
That had been an lnterpretationof
the rules for years, said F;dward F .
Steitz, secretary-editor of the committee. The committee made It
official after confusion resuited In a
victory being awarded to, taken
away from and then gtven back to
West VIrginia.
All rules changes must be
approved by at least eight of the 12
CQilU'Ililtoo members. Steitz would
say only that the vote on the clock
"was not close." Last year, the shot
clock was rejected by a narrow
margin.
.
.
Steitz said more than 68 percent of
coaches who used the clock this
$f'aSOn wanted the rule.

c

APRIL 4-5-6

.GRADE A·

$END OUR .

CapturP the
., F;~se n ce of
• Sprinfland

•

CUP OF RC
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THU DAY • FR-IDAY •. SATURDAY. 10 A.M. TO 7 P.M.

BUNN.
Y
BASKET
BOUQUET
.,

.

APRIL 4-S-6, 1985
10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY~ OH.

.~

.' "EASTER IS .
.. APRIL 7 ·

SATURDAY

$129
•••••••••••••••

Sa usa

TRUCKLOAD
SALE

We Reserve The Ri&amp;hi'T o

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FRIDAY &amp;

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~CAA
adop~ 45-second clOck
.

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Meat

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Truckload

SUI!IIetary Tuesday. Sutton wW

· replace Joe 8. Hall aa the new head basketbaD coach

"

.

. 298 SECOND ST.
POMER'OY, OH.
PRICES. EFFECTIV.E THRU SAt, A'PRlL 6, 1983

a~~be~~~~~inGseco~~~~wl~~oo f~~~~~~·~-~~~~~~~~y~o~n~th~~~-§~~.~~r~n~F~o~~§t~o~ff~be~~~r~e~the~M~~~t~~~(n~~~t~w~e~ek~ln~~t~m~•~~~r~.~~~~-~;~

:LEXINGTON, Ky : !APJ- Shoot
it' or lose It, thj&gt; NCAA .Men's
B~sketball Rules Committee
decided,
The panel's decision Tuesday
means Monday night' s champ!onsiilp game - won by VIllanova ,
master olthe delay game- w lll be
·the last without the 45-second shot '
c i9cti. The clock- forcing teams to
· shoot or forfeit the ball within 45
seconds of taking possess!Q,n - wfli
stay on the w hole game, all season
t&lt;lpg. '
J
!rwenty-flve conferences - 19 o!
thWl Division I - experimented
wtth the clock this season, but It was
not used In the NCAA Tournament.
J?urlng a wnip-up meeting after
the Final Four In Lexington, the
Rules Committee also · stiffened·
p&amp;nalt!es for Intentional fouls,

. Superi~· r .

1

CrelghtonbeforegolngtoArkansas,
startedoutat Arkansaswlthl7-9and
19-9 seasol!.'!. His 1978 Razorbaeks
.were 32-4, losing .64-59 In the 1978
NCAA semifinals in St. Louis to
Hall's only national champions. The
schools haven't met since: report·
ed!y one of the search committee's
criteria .. It wanted .a coach whose
team was not a Wildcat opponent.
Sutton, AP's national coach ofth~&gt; ·
year in 1978, forged a record of
21J0.75, and hls Razorbacks won or
, sharedflvefeaguetltlesahdf!nlshed
second tour more times. Like at
Kentuckj.-' Arkansas basketball
games have lor years been sold out
at home before the season begaJt.

for other strategtes.
.
The stall Is gone, Taking the air out of the bali to keep a racehorse team ·
from running up and down the court on you is no longer~ coaching option.
Now, you must shoot the bal l, whether you want to or not.
·
· -'Rol!le Massimino, coact;fof victorious VIllanova, thought !be Wildcats
mlgt!t have subdued mighty Georgetown in either of their earlier
co)lfrontatlons this season had It not been lor ihe Big East Conference clock,
which forced his team io take s hots It didn't paf\lcularly want .
!JI Monday night's no-clock tournament game, the option was ali
Villanov~' sand Mass!rnlno's court -smart kids made the most ot II .
'
The Intent of the rule change adojlled Tuesday Is to ellmlnate the farce
game where a team lnoverltsheads!mplyholdsontothebali tokeepila\vay ·
from the other guys. The O!p side of tha t action, however, Is to deplive
tiriderdogs from whatever slim chance they might have to control their own
destiny against powerhouses.
Vllianova was the perfect example. The Wildcats did notfreezt; theb;l.Uori
. Georgetown . They simply controlled the tempo, shootlngwhel) tlieywanted
to, being selective on the shots they attempted. Had they been forced to fire
within theconflnesoftheclock, you can besuretheywould have hadamuch
more difficult time achieving that astounding 78.6 percent accuracy.
With unde~ two minutes remaining In the first hall a nd Georgetown
clt'ng!ng to a on~polnt lead, Villanova's slick point guard, Gary McLain,
motioned to bls tMmmates to spread the court. The Wildcats went for one
last shot, controlled the ball, and made the basket. It was thinking man's
basketball .
With three mlnuii!S lelt in the game and leading by a point, Georgetown
tried the same spread strategy. It backfired with a turnover. Had John
Tllompson gone to the delay too soon?
· ,"I'd have gonew!thnlne mlnutes togo," SaJdiheGeorgetowncoach, "!fit
m~nt-Icouldgetthemou'tottheir z&lt;me." ·. · ';.. ·.
·. .
· . · •
. if was JXJint and counterpoint, like a eheSs:game.'Thatlspartofthebeauty
. of:tJai;kerban : fo!'Cing. t~e ·acrton,wllh aelqc){robs _fh~ game'o f that quality. ·
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Attend
Ou·r

STORt HQURs·
Mon.·Sat: S.AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM .

~~~n,whocoachedflveyearsat

·

)

We Reserve The
Linilt Quantities

I .

seen

AP Sports Writer

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Plan
To

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6, 1915

FOLGER COFFEE

~A~· ;

s,s99

·, Limit, One ~., (lllttmor.
Geoll Only It Pow til' 1
OHer bpirn

a,..ll 6, 1915

JIF PEA'NUT BUnER

2aJARoz.$199
.
Utnlt OM Pet (Uit-r
.... Otoly " , ...... .
Offtr hplm AprM 6, 1915

SHURFINE SUGAR
SLI.$ 1 3 9

lAG

·IJnrit OM Ptr C111tomer ·
Good Owly At hwtll;a .
Offer· bpirH Apiil 6, 1" ' · .

1
t:ntJ!'ON
I .
.
1 Goetl Seturtlay, 4/6115 O"'y
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GERIEI .STI~ED

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.ABY FOOD or JUICE I ~
··~A~z.

11 ( I
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llMtl 5 PUASI
POWILl'S SWII VAL.

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PL.rov~Middleport, Ohio

~

10-lhe Dllily Sentii•ef'

. Wedna11My. April 3, 1986'

Salmonella outbreak
~trik~ 500 people .

Prope.rty transfers .. ~.
.i'aul E;. WQI!e, Leota Mae Wolfe

"

io ' Jeffn!y

Wayne Circle

Lester Shoemaker to Kenneth F .
· Wanda B. Johnston, Eugene C. ·
Molz, ~ Interest,. Parcels ,
Johllston to State of Ohio, 13116
acte, Salem.
'
Salisbury.
.
EUzabeth. H. WUlford, Harry L.
Cltlcorp Savings of Jlltnols fka
Willford, deceased, affidavit,
FirSt . Federal Savings and Loan
PSIJtton.
• . Association of Chicago to Federal
Ernest Ray WUI to Peggy Lynn Savings and Loan Insurani:e Corp.,
Hatrts, Sbedff's deed, Bedford.
LOis 63 and 64, Pomeroy VUiage. ·
llj!nef)clal Ohio Inc. to. Ralph A.
Margaret A. Sayre Lawhon to
Barcus, Part Lot, Middleport Henry N. I.,awbon, Margaret S.
Village.
Lawhon, 10 acres, Letart.
OSby A, ~rtln, Mary A. Martin , Charles Robert Sprague to Anna
.to · Franklln . Martin, · 'Ida . Mae Elizabeth Sprague, Cert. of Trans.,
. · Martin; Lot, Middleport Village. ,
Salem.
'
Cll8rles H. .Murray. Marga rei C. ·
:Gordon Bruce Teaford to David
A. Ferry, Pat:tels.' Salisbury. .
.Murray to Charles H . . Mw'ray,
Grover.C. White, Jr., Elsie Marte' Margaret C. Murray, 1 acre,
White, Woodrow Fortney, Vlndnla Pomeroy.

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Fortney,

.to Samuel E. Curtts, Mary E . , Sr., Sonia · Ruth CliCie, 15 acres,
Curtls,.Parcels, Sutton.
• · Chester.
·.

..•

Athens motor vehicle office robbed '-·
'

ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- TwQmen,
at least one ot them anned with a
handgun. robbed tbe Bureau of
Motor Ve!!!c~ ottl&lt;;e here Monday
night of an undiSckilied amount of
money.
"They told us to be quiet and
. nobodywouldgej)rurt"saldDeputy ·
Registrar MU~ Pmy; who was ·
at the offiCe with her husband

''
:

STATEFARMKEYWINNER-Aaa._.aCtwewell 1-edyeanof
: training and CJppOI'tlmlllee Ill vooaliooal ~. Ancb' RGee, - o f
;. Lawrence RGee, Racine, Wjll ~e the stale F~. Key 011
• · Satu~, Aprl ~- RG8e Is one of the few ~ J!'uture Farmen of
: ~rica who repekoethe honor of the State Fllftlll!l'!ll)egreeeachyear,
' NcR more than two perCent of the pilld memberll aC the Ohio AModatlon
• of the Future Fanners Of America receive tldll delfee IIi a given year;
: .Tills~ will gtvethe Racine FFA, 118-ldsudi honor Ill
; the pa!lt Ie yean. 'Die other reclpk!nt Is Bob Lee, Racine, who received
the awani1D 1.1112. RG8e Is receiving the hlgl! awllldlnblsjunlor year, the
.• elll'llellt lmle at wblcl! the decree Is awarded. Rolle Is preiii1Mt of the
RadDe FFA, a member of tile MelpCountyJ!WorFalr Board andwM
011 tile 8011 jadplg, lejun. Some of his projecls Include cabbage,
IAJmaloe8, ~ BWeet com and market lamb&amp;.

.

Worley at the time.
Mrs. Perry said the robbers
~tered through a bilck door at
about 8: lil p.m., just as she ~nd her
husband were leaving. Theotflce Is
open untll 8 p.m. Monday.

Hubbard's Greriause
IIOW OPEII FOR
SPRI118 SrAS.OII

e

. CHICAGO (.AP) ...., A Salmonella available until Thursday,
;
outbreak belieVed ca~ by con"Jewel omclals have Cooperated' ·
bimtnated mllk has stricken more Wttb us fully and agree tllat we
thanliJOpeople,andlbousandsmore s'houkl warn the public even though •
are expected to rep!lrt they've been laborat(xy tests haven't contlnl'll!d •
bltbysymptornsthatmaymakeyou tllat the mllk Is contaminated," •
"wish you were dead," health Junesald.
:
Jewel spokeswoman Kathleen ;
otfldals said.
A total of 543 cases have been Cox said the company was nol sure •
reported In Iowa and illinois, with that the. mllk w~ contaminated. :
almost:nlconflrmed,IlllnoisPybllc "Our technical staff.ls ... trying to :
Health Department spokesman ~point the problem," she said. ' :
Chet June said Tuesday. For every
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repOrted case, lie said, there were· 1 She said s~ . did not know the ;
prObably 35 to to people who sutter . number or location of the cartons :
some symptOms of the Infection.
but said the mllk Is distributed.In •
"We're expecting the reported Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and ;
Cl!Sf'S to go up," June said, "We Iowa.
.
;.
Jull!! said that salm9nella is •
expecllttoskyrocket probably Into
the lbousands," be said. But he said llfe-threatenlng only tp , "the very :
people with minor symptoms may young, the very oli:l' and the :
never report the Illness.
otherwl!e medically debilitated." :
OfficialS said they believed that 2
BUt hesaldthattheSY!f!plomscan .
percent fat-content mllk sold under · be so severe that "In most healthy :
the Bluebrook brand In Jewel Food
adults, you wish :ro•fwere dead. In :
Stores and Eisner stores Is responsl·
most normally healthy adults, It ,
ble tor the out!lreak. But they said
only l'¥JtS two or thfee days and you :
laboratory· tests might not bE.
feel boiTible."
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R6nl!d HlnninJ. I .Pb .
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Sunday JO:lO a.m, lo 12:30 p.m. and C to 8 p.m

PIESCI!PTIOIS
(nt larn St
,

f rtlftdly S..Vtu

PH. 992·1955
Pomtrow. Oh
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years to ·come.
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graduation. Hf,! noted that Meigs
and video equipment. Morris con·
Local .now requires :aJ units and
ceded that Meigs Local h.a s a long
workS wjth a competitive course or way to go, but did report that on the ·
study. Teachershavebeelllnvolved
3-R tests, students l)re now at
In setting goals and levels for UK!
national norms. He was Introduced
courseofsl)ldy,andtherelsconcem .. by Roberta Wilson and Lucille
about turning over lOCal control of Haggerty. ..
course requirements to a state
Helen Smith Who presided asked
testing committee, Morris said.
each member to read the repm:t on
~;apwblcUII!IMI.AIIel...
.Qai:~~ISteacldlli . Leglslatlve~~C~i!t
tlon 1n the · United States, In muslcindarfblthejunlorhJihand
thelatestlisueotGraduatPWomen.
comparison toother natlonsrranked .offering· reel!lng claue$ In high,
1}le nominating corMIIttee l'l"
low in qualltyi- ·- ·
. -511hdol. Morriscalled fora hard look- po~ that Kathryn Knight wlll
'
At'ttult time recommendations · atteacb~ontheunlversltyll'velas
~eastreasurerandHelenSmlth
· were made .to .'Increase standards.· _welLI\5 better·evaluationofstudents ... as . progr_arp chairman. Margaret ·
and · requli-e new baSics .. Urilversl·
entering · the tellthlng. field . · .J{e
Ella Le\1'1$ dewrated tile ta~Je, and
ties were asked to raise require· . expressed the opinion that.colleges· I..eeLeeconductedthesUentaucllon
ments arid state and local require- and unlversltles are d!&gt;lng a better
with proceeds going td the Educa·
·ments were increased, Morris said.
job of deciding who Is In teacher
tiona I Foundation Fund.
A similar survey taken In 1983, he edu.catlon noting that tests are
A dinner meting wlll beheld April
re rted, showed some Improve- replaced each five years.
•
:Jl at the Meigs Inn, 6: ~p.m., wile~
m:ts had been made.
The supertn!endent talked about
members may take husbands or
· , Morris said that OhiO' 1u1s a fUnding. He said that lottery money
friends.
• ,
Aget-wellgreetlngwasslgnedfor
Commlssicm on' Education and In bas been used for new learning
· 1983 new state minimum standards ~~~?PDrtunltles such as the purchase Fay Sauer, president. wM Is
· were updated and requirements ofcomputers,educatlonalte!evlslon recuperatingfromsurgery.
Increased to 18 units for hltlh school

M

· A riew high-efficiency gas
1""~cvrrv.,..;--.."'l""'l~ So the savings really add
furnace brings warmth and ··
'.
(~ rYe~~~
,;-j up. A new gas furnace is
comfort into you( home. And
"_&lt;~) (:~.., t r ( \? ( (
thJ3 _best v:;ay to ge! through
·savings: the new models cut gas
(:~: ~) \\ ·:\:.? ,J(':h \~;' our :tough w1nters feeling warm,
usage by as much as 30%.
\ " '\/th \ l . :' ;','
cozy, toasty. For more details,
Th~re's m&lt;?re: .a gas furnac~ · \\1
'r'// (j) I J ,• check with your heating dealer.
needs l1ttle ~a1ntenanc~. ?nd w111 · )
It J1:; j
Then go wit,h .the comfort and
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g?s heat. A~d relax .

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.aZ4rene
:. The Middleport Churcn uf the
· Nazarene_wlll host !be Middleport
First Ba'ptlst Church, H~~&amp;tb United
Methodist Church, Middleport; the
Middleport First United Presbyter·
ian Church, and the Pomeroy
.Church of the Nazarene for Good
Friday services.
·
• Eachchurcbwlllpartlclpatewlth ,
special slngtiJg, plaitlsts, and
•preaching. There wUl be a threepart message given by three
· speakers; Rev. Chari!'$ Coyle, Rev,
George Riser and .Rev. ,Robert
Robinson. Rev. Glen McClung wUl •
• read the Easter stocy from the Bible ,
and Rev. Nancy Coyle wllllead the
service..
The public Is lnv~edtotheservlce
• which starts at 7: ll p.m, The
Middleport Church of the Nazarene
·is loCated at 580 Beech St. Anyone
')'lshlng further Information on the
service may call992-5289.

·'I'!!l!Yinciude: MaundyThursday,

In the upper room. Devotional
thoughts will be on tepassoverfeast ,
the garden experience and . the
betrayal, 7: :JJ p.m.
Good Friday, Heath church
congregation wlll worship with
several other congregations at the
Church of the Nazarene, 7:~ to 9
p.m. with Heath Pastor Robert
Robinson speaking 011 various
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ENDS CARPET SHOP
"' MIDDlEPORT

ODDS
RT. 1, MOlSON RD.
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MONEY SAVING COUPON

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OPEN MON.-FRI..

reactions of humanity to Jesus '
Clirlst and Joan Robinson wUI sing
"He Grew the Tree." ·
Easter Sunday, !here wUI be a
sunrise service at 6: ~ a.m. with
breakfast to be - served and the
sermon ' topic. "The Stone was
Rolled Away." Church school
featuring the music of the children
at 9:~ a.m. and Easter celebration
seJ:Viee.lO::Jla.m. with the sermon ·
topic, "SpuntfsoftheStreeiPeople.''

passowr feast, hilly communion, as

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Heath UM
Special worship services for Holy
Week are being announced for
Heath United Methodist Church In
Middleport. ·

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:Holy Week services set by churches

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:r:~sr:;r~~~. Mrs. Weberhad

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Dan Morris, l!\lperlntendent of .
, Meigs Local Schools, talked on
·'!Excellepce 1n Education" at a
:· recent meeting of the Middleport· ·
. Pomeroy Area Branch : of the
.. ArnerlcanAssoclatlonor'UniVerslty
Women, held at the Meigs Inn.
Morrlsreferredtoasurveybythe
Secretary of Education made 25

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CO Ucte recentty

AAUW
topic.
e
clycation
exce
c.

SUJISHER LOHSE

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District 0} . 'raf,ty

ati'ractive areas by cjlrefulplannlng
· and p $ p,lantlng.
Vines on walls, blooming plants in
bare spots .,eresuggestedtocorrect ·
· problem areas. Hedges, she said ,
can provide priva cy and stones or
' steps can change a dra b entryway . .
She also talked about rock gardens
to beautify areas, a nd noted that
patios can .be more a ttractive with
proper shrubs for space.
Mrs. RobsOn won the trav~
prize provld..'&lt;l by Mrs. Colwell and
Mrs. Snowden the bostt'$s gift . ·
Mrs. Wilson closed by reading, " If
spring came but once in a century
Instead or once a year, what wonder
and expectation WOJJld be In a ll
hearts to behold ·the miraculous
change'. "
Easter re freshme nt s we re
served.

CAIPO REMNANTS
PIICEb TO SELL

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a

problem lawn and driveway prob-

terns wllJch can be converted Into

Very large Selection Of
Carpet Drastically Reduced .
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MarVIn Wilson.
presidentS, and the county contact
schedule for the spring fiower sbow
The prQgratn book from the
Mrs. Wilson reviewed an article
chalnnan are asked to attend,
of the Chester and Shade Valley
Nature's Garden Club was passed
from
Garden Path on growing
A letter was read from Mrs.
Clubs at Royal Oak Park. Aprlll3
around. The }Wiland club went to
seeds.
She talked about starting
Ernest Covert reganllng the spring
aJid 14, was ri!ad.
tl)e GallipoliS Developmental Cen·
r'eglonal meeting which will be held
11le three lnvlta.tlonal classes are . ter for a therapy program on March seeds Inside In containers for early
on AIJrll 17 ·at the Hocking Motor "Here Gomes Peter Cottontail,", an 28. Dried matertals and other Items · plants, and then delaying others
Two charter mernbe~ ; Mrs. c.o, Lodge, l':lelsonville. Coffee hour wlll
arrangement In a basket using were .brought to the meeting In .until !bey can 'plant outside In
frames . Some, she said, wlll need
Chapman and Mrs. Everett Colwell,
begin at 9 a.m. with the busliless
acces5orles; "My Mornings are
preparation for the program.
wlll be honored. Plans for the
meeting . at 9::ll!·Judglng of the Merry," abreakfastti'aynotmore
Members answered roll call by soaking to soften coats for earlier
. annlvl!rsary o~ance were dis·
nower show will take place In the . !ban24lncheswlde; and " l'dUketo naming seeds theY enjoy planting, starts. Peat Is a good starter, ~he
' cussed at the club· meeting held
afternoon, Lubcbeon wlll be $6.00 Have Garden," a stW life. Theme Arrangements were displayed by ·noted, and along with proper
fertilizer helps growth. ·
Monday night at the home of Mrs.
wlth ·reservatlons to be made with oftheshowis "Spring is In the Air."
Miss Ruby Dlebl, Mrs. Harvey
Mrs. Roy Snowden gave some
Vernon Weber.
Mrs. James Nlcholsoli before April
A !bank you nole was read from · Erlewilie, Mrs. Eugene Atkins,
horticultural hints for spring, suf h
•, . Announcedatthemeetingwasthe 10. Theafternoonsesslonls$UtwUI Mrs. Everett Colwell for the Mrs; VlrgllAtklns,andMrS. Weber.
as. pruning back overgrowlh of
-· ~onalboardmeetlngtobeheldat
Include a sUde tour of European valentine fruit plate. Mrs. Robert _Mrs. ErnestWardhadadlsplayof
vines, trlrrunin(sbrubs for rounded
the Chester .Methodist Church on
GardensbyProf. JarnesCaldwellof Canaday wrote that she and her seed catalogs.
growth
,' and changing pots and
April 10 with a potluck dinner 11t
Ohio State University..
daughter had attended the Horne
Mrs Virgil Atkins was ci}.hostess
mixing
soU with mulch and peat for
noon . .Regional cha!nnen, club ·
An Invitation to exhibit and a andGardenShow·heldlnCQiumbus. fort)1emeetingandgavedevotlons
better replanting conditions. ,
~11 .
on Lent and a reading, "Spring Is
Mrs. Jack Robson reported on
spot landscaping and solving lands·
RPtter
cap Ing problems from ,. 13
councilor
and
Allen
Levan,
Cleve·
·
The
.
district
deputy
lntroduoed
It
was
announced
tmit
a
plant·sale
The 58th annual r11liY of District
Homes
and
Gardens
and
SoUthern
land,
state
treaslirer.
.
eouncil
deputlt&gt;$
as
they
were
wiD
be
Conducted
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a
t
the
regular
13, Daughters ot America, was held
Living magazines. She talked about
Mrs. Ritchie, statevlcecounclil!l',
escorted to the altar, Mary Gar· AprU meeting at the home of Mrs.
Saturilay a 1 the Senior Citizens
wQPd, Gall~ Council 114; Essa r-===
Center;·Logan, with 140 members gave the Invocation, Ed Tucker,
mayor of Logan, extended a
Varner, Belle Prairie 269, Mildred
and guests attendlrig.
Schultz, Logan :00.
Esther Sinlth, District 13 deputy, welcome to Logan, and Mildred
Betty Roush, Chester 323; and
a memher of Chester Coundl 323. Schultz, Logan, for tl)e host unlt,
Eileen Clark, Guiding Star 124,
presided and was escorted to the gave the rally welcome. Mary
Wines, state councilor, had the
Chester. MrS. Clark's escort, her
altar by the color bearers, Charloltf
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daughter, Mary Donna Simms,
Grant and Doris Grueser, Chester response. .
The rltuallstlc . opening was con·
presented her with a 50 year pin
· Council, where she was Introduced
dueled
by
Mildred
Lowery,
Logan,
fromGuldingStarCouncU.
· : and presented with a corsage.
district councilor. Inltlatloo was
National officers Introduced were held for three candi!JateS and a
Mrs. Smith named Beulah Moy·
Priced
ers, Golden Gleam, Kathryn M!lr-'
• Blanche Moldeney, Toledo, deputy potluck dinner was held at noon.
From
.
Ill· J.d.
' national coundlor, and Charlotte
there were 59 national and state low, Perry Council, aJ1d Mary K.
Wellner, Akron, chairman of the officers, committees and deputieS
]Jolter, Chester, to the nominating
national ways and means commit· received officially wl\h eachrecelv·
committee. Helen Wolf, · Chester,
tee. State board members lntro-. lng a gift from the district. Perry
was pianist. The 1986 rally wlll be
d11ced were Mary Wines, East Council 283 presented the colors , . held at the Carleton School In
Liverpool, state councilor; Beryl Logan had the memoiial service.
Syracuse with Guiding Star as host.
Faust, Marion, 8550Ciatejunlorpast and Guiding Star Council of Syra- Mrs. Wines complimented the
councilor; Joyce Otting, Cincinnati, · cuse, thesllver'shower. lberewere
district on the rally and several
junior past state councilor; and
addendas for Mrs. Wine$, Mrs.
other officers spoke at theclaslngof
the rally.
, Dorothy Ritchie. Chester, vtce state Smith and Mrs. Ritchie.
· Observance of the 50th annlver·
SI!J'Y of the Rutland GardenCiubbas
been set for May 16, at 7:llp.m . with
an open meet1ng to be held a\ the
Rutland United Methodist Church.

UIGI swcno1

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annivers~ry ·set

$3'

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·Rutland· Garden -Club m&lt;!eting conducted, 50th

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OlGA TIC·CARP~T - SALE

.KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

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Ylfednesday, Aprjl3, 1985 .

Page- 11

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shrubbe.y, rose bushes,

•Conservation 'District Is one of the
Present lOcally for t1ie lnteJ:VieW
azaleas &amp; Rhod~ ..
· OPEfl DAILY 9 to 5 ..
'ftra!ist districts In Ohio for a were Tom Theiss, Alan Holter,
SUNDAY I to 5
GoociYearConservatlonAward. 1
David Gloeekner, Rex Shenefield,
PH.tt!-5776
The awards are used to evaluate Robert First and Opal Dyer.
theworkofthedlstrictsandthelocal
'
board met recently for interviewing r-----------.l...J.-----------~
by the Goodyear Comffilttee.
Other flnallst counties are Rich· '
land, Ashland, Seneea, Hardin and
I
Butler. The committee doing the ·
lCCOUIIYIIIG &amp; DATA PIOCESSIIIG
Interviewing was romposed of Jim
Rush, program speciAlist, area 6;
618 EAST MAIN STREET
Roger ijansen, deputy stateconser·
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
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vatlonlst, soU cOnservation service;
Garry Buehl. member of the ·son
OUR SERVICES INCLUDE
conservation coi'I'IItlission, and
-Computerized Acountlng
-Payroil Proc:eaalng
Frank Mills IU representing the
-Payroll Check Writing
-Federal It State Reporta
Ohio Federation of SoU and Water
-Internal Control
-Profit • loaa Statement~
• Conservation Districts. The Inter·
-Tax Plannlnv ·
-Financial Statemanta
view lasted an hour and was made
-Satea Analyaia
-Ceah Management
upota~mlnutepresentatlonbythe
THE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE FOR A
local board of supervisors and :JJ
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS
.
minutes of questioning by the
committee.

.The Daily Sentiniel

By, The . Bend

t,

Choose the right card from our large selection
for an the special people _9fl your list.

Complete liile of 'Jilt table &amp;beddi" plants, hqi~ baskets,
potted plants - :bloomi" &amp;foli-

~~e~~ ~~~~e~~~w!:=~~June.

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�3, 1985

Calend4r

WEDNtiBD.n
f:AGLE fUDGE T

_lllel'llng saturday afWr!KX)rl
Wltb a work Sfi!Skin beglnnlnll a1

.

2 p.m': M,&gt;mbers are asked to
bring bruSh cutting and ca-rpcn·
ll)t tools.
.
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Eagle

Ridge Conummlty Oiurdl wm
baw boly week reYtvaJ beginning Wedild!Liy, C0111:1nu1ng
througb Sunday. Servlt'@S
nlgb!ly at 7: ll p.m. Pliblic
lnvtted.
•

l;'OMEROY-, - Sliver Run
Baptist ~hurch wUI have 'o·
-song(est Saturday night begin·
nJng at 7:.l l ~?,m . Featured
slngerswUI be "'the Inheritors."

11lt!ltSDAY
~OY -

R9CK SPRlNGS - Melg.~
Hlgb FCA wUI have a clean-up
day to.;. the elderly from 9a.f11. to
4 p.m. on saturday: Interested
IndiVIduals sllould contact Mrs.
Janet Williamson or Fenton • · ·
Taylor by. calling Meigs High a t

8}-'lilell Rw1

Holiness Cbwdl will baw a
missionary m:::ellng

'lbUrsday

7::11 .p.in., at die
cbureh. Mr. and Mrs.. NOrman

1'\-'elllng,

Hysell wm pre!imtlbepnwam.

'J'be public Is WeiQ:aillt'-

992-2158.
FRIDAY

Happenirzgs

R£EDSVIU...E- ~-eTown­
shlp Truslees wm nwt 1n
regular sesc!on at 6: ll p.m.
Friday eY8illlg at lbe Rft'ds\illl'

Whire Shrine
POMEROY -

flre station.

SALISBURY 'IWP - Salisbury Township Tn.t5tees will
more' In regular sesskln, Friday
evf!nlng, 7 p.m., at lbe llliine m ·
the IOWDshlp drrk.. Wanda
Eblin,
.
..,..,.. '11oey are • • I g a model cl ol a wlcano
bdl by 8bdls 11 ' . KeiJ Sn*h. Willi the help Gf a
lllde viDepr added 10 liMing 80da. the volcaM was
rtaed to enpc. 'l1le vokaao realy worlu!d- muc:b 10
the cWipt ol the judpoL

Porn~ roy

Elementary
Science Fair
conducted

USAA names
Bobbi Price

Open house set
The Meigs C(!unty Pioneer and
HIStorical Society Is planning a
reception In honor of Charles and
Daisy Blakeslee for their dedication
and service to the society. Blakes·
Jee served as president from 1979 to

1984.

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The open bouse reception will be
held on Sunday, AprU 28, from 2 to 4
p:m. at the Meigs County Mu.se\1111.
The.publlc La Invited.

Bobbi Price ·

H·~e:~.'-!!~lf.~USE
"

Sunrise service.

POMEROY - Holy ~
!Wrvlce!i at the Mt.'Unlon Baptist
(hur:ch, located off Route 143 on
County Road 10, Carpenter HJU
Road, will Include a candlelight
communion service at 7 p.m.
F riday. and a sunriSe service a t
6 a.m. on Easter Sunday.

Attendance at the Fn&gt;e Methodist
Church Feb. 24 was 68.
Mrs.
Jacobs was Ul and
unable to attend services, There
was .a special song, " It's Supper
Tlnie" by Steve ~ daughter, Miss Becky EbUn. &lt;:!._
·

nna

Long Bottom
news notes
By Melody Roberts
A shower honotlng Gwen Barton
and Mark HaU was held recently at
the IKme of Ernestine Hayman.
'nt!rty-sev('!l attended the shoWer.
, Ruby B~er. Janie Fitch, and
~

D!!ems·were. among tho5e'

att.erulllig the' Gary Morrlsey'·con·
·.ciori at the Wheeiing'Jambo~. .
· La~ce Hayinan' hlis ·been tlie
guest or Stanley and Juanita WeUs
past several ~ Oor-ei

tor me

aifd PIIYJHs

I..irldlls are recupeml·

lngfrom Ulness, as Is Paul Baslm·Jt:
Mr. and . Mrs. Harold BaU,
Columbus; Joyce Ball, Cleveland;
and Mr. and Mrs. Dougle Ball.
Mntgomeroy. have been he!'l' to
visit Mrs. Rosa . Ball who Is In Ul
health. Mrs. Dougle BaU and Joyre
Ball remained to assist in her ca!'l'.

meeting held
Several projects were planned
whe n the Meigs Cou nty Grange

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Pll. t91·S776

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. Y"outllGroupmet at the Dyer home. ·
A dance !"as planned (or JuneS at
the Rock Springs G.-ange Hall with
music by Delver Richards of
Jackson · a nd· the IJUbllc ·' Invit ed .
Plans were made 1o constl'\ICI a soft
drink stand for the annual Meigs
County Fair. A work,se5slon was set
for Aprll 21 at the Montgomery
home.
The next meeting was set for May
11 , ip.m . a t rh!'Ashley hom e. ·
·
.

Th8 Daily Sentinei- E'age- 13

Ohio

Auxiliary meeting held .

Theiss -at the recent meet trig of·the . vance for au three chapters tore
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of held AprU 25 at the SportSman In
Beta Sigma Phi SororU¥ ~ld Athens. · Several members also
Indicated plans for attending the
Thursday night at .the Riverboat
Beta Sgrna Phi cqnventiQn .In
Room of the Dl.a mond Savings and
,Cleveland, May 17-19. ·
•
Loan Co.
,
E leanor Thomas and Maidie
· Mora were hqstesses · for the · · The chapter wUJ ha v~.&gt; a second ·
meeting which featured a display of OOJnlry store atthe May 9 meeting .
with members to· take two Items ro.r ·
many of Mrs. 1111'1•s' treasures.
'
· A program ·'on collectibles and ·
P lans were discussed for tfle Beta the sale. The program for the
antiques was !&gt;resented bv Janet Signla Phi Founder's Day obscr- meeting wlll be the "Swingers."

Beta Sigma
Phi meets .

The American Legion AuxUiary.
Eighth Ol,tr.lct. junior canll?rence
wJII be hosted by futclne Unit 002,
a na. Pomeri&gt;y Unit 39, at the Drew ·
Webster Post Home, Saturday.
Fteglslra tlon will begin at noon
and the meeting at J p.m . Laney
Hankla, Eighth District president ,
will have c ha rge of the meeting:
Po~py R~yalty will be honored .

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ROC]{ SPRINGS. , The
Meigs High School C06metology
Department will have Its annual
ha lr-a- thon from 9 a.m. to Sp.ni.
Thursday at the high school.
Residents may call 992-2158 for
an· a ppolntm('!lt orwalk-ln custom ers wUI heaccepteddur!ngthe
deSignated hours.

Sunrise service
POMEROY - Hysell Run
Holiness &lt;:hurch wlll hold a 6 ~
a. m . ~-unrlse communion Sj't·
vice on East~.&gt;r morning. The
.Rev. Leland Haley will he guest
speaker. Pastor Ther6n Durham Invites the public to attend.

.
.
POMEROY " I Walked
Revival slated
Today Where Jesus Walked" Is
the theme of the SunriSe Service
POMEROY - A praise reviat the ZIOn Church of ChriSt a I 7
va 1 wUI be held beginning
a.m. The program features the
Monday and ruMing through
choir and Will be followed by-a~rll 14 at the Mt. OUve
Easter breakfast. The morning
Community Church. Herbert
worship services will Include
Inscoe of Ona, W.Va., wUI be
several musical selections·and a
speaker. Pastor Lawrence Bush
sermon on "The Resurrection."
Invites the public.

Mrs. Emma Fox visited Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Douglas,
GuysvJIIe.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey and
John Stahl called on Mrs. Della
Stahl.
MI-. and Mrs. Vern story. visited
relatives In Columbus recently.
Mr. a~ Mrs. Herman Kasper,
Dayton, visited over the weekend
with Mrs. Kasper's mother, Mrs.
Bertha Parker.

CLELAND
GREENHOUSE
VIne St.,

I~

ON.

NOW OPeN

• EASTER FLOWERS
Mums, lilin, Hatdy A1aleas
Bedding Pienta
Vegetable Pienta •
.
Hanging Balketa ·
Open. 9 'Til Dark Mok-set.
· 1 :00 'Til D•rk Sunday

RUTLAND

DEPARTMENT STORE

_Duncan Hines.

Phone 742 -2100

.--' ~· ca:..ke _:. Mix

Pill Cl ~ l f I l C1!Vl 1HRU SA I . Af' ll !J . I ~JB j
. sUNIIOUIEAIFAsT HAM lOAF .

..

. ;

·

LUNCH MEAT ................ll••••• $1.97 ,'
SEHfiElD
.
SHREDED....Ib. $2.19
BOILED HAM .................ll..... Sl. 9 5
ltOimW(
HAM SALAD ...................11••••• S1.2 9
COOl'S 6·1 ll. AVERAGE

.

·,

'

..

,-. .

1B·oz.

KROGER

WHOLE 14-17-LB. AVG.

. Gf1Jd~_ A
.l· a_r:geDoz.·. Eggs
·

Semi-Boneless ·;,
s·moked · Hams~"
Pound

•

SMOKED CALLA HAMS.........11... 89c

DUNCAN INES FROSTING

16.5-0Z . .. $1.29

Laurel Cliff Better
Health Club meets
A report on hospital equipment
was given by Iva Powell at the
recent fl'l{'{'tlng or the Laurel Club
Better Health Club which she
hosted.
Donna Gilmore had prayer, and
devol Ions were given by Mrs.
Powell from Guideposts. Marge
Fetty had an article entitled "Shake
the Salt Habit," "Cancer, He!'l''s
How You Can Help Me" by Donna
Gllmo!'l', and "A Hillside Garden"
by Eva Robson .
Mrs: Fetty '5e1Ved a salad course
carrying out the St. Patrick's Day ·
theme to those named aDd Genevieve Ward a~d Katie Parker.

14 COUIIY

14 oL ••lllfows

conAGE ·
CIIEESE ............c;w, s1. 39
I..U.

~~~

SPIIAD

DAn
VELVEETA .......!tr. S3.99
1-11. . . . .,., aft's.
.IIAIGAIINE ............. 79&lt;

IliAD

Lrn~c~ ...................

Martha White

,,c

Flour

NEW GIEEN
CABBAGE ........M~..... 39&lt;

5-lb.

I·U. lAG

lED lOME
APPLES ............'Ita s1.29

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE .
MTN . DEW, PEPSI FREE.

FIRST OF. THE SEASON
.

Califo.rnia
Strawberries

Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola
2-Liter

Quart

FROZEN

1·LI. IOOJH OCEAN PERCH

FILLOS ••••• ~~•••••••••••••111.. s·1.97
1-ll. 10 PC. IANQUR DINNER
.
·FRIED CHICKEN ••• ~....\0.X•• S3.79
TOMATQ
JUICE •• ~••~••• ~. 2/69c ,
46 Ot DOU
PINEAPPLE JUICE_......v-:.. S1.39'
16 OZ. MAZOLA ,
CO.N OIL ................
~1·.. S1.19
16 OL GOlDEN ISlE .
·
.
IAITLEJT PEARS ......~:...... 79&lt;1.
FIWKO AMEIIC~ In TonMito &amp; ChHH Sauce .
f
SPAGHmi
••••••••V.il·.CJli.. 2/99&lt; ~
16 OL
CO,FEEMATE ............
t~ .. S2.19
4 Ot INSTANf COfnE
. .
SANIA
••••••••
~...,........t~ .. $3.09
m a. PUFS
.
FACIAL TISSUES
•••m~ta...... 99C
2.5 OZ. AIIMOUR .
·
· . · .
'
DRIED
BEEF
.........
~.~..~~.. S1.09
UO,'J oz......,
.
PINK SALMON ..........w.. ~1.97

*LILIES •AZALEAS *MUMS
•CINERARIA$ *TULII'S
•HYACINTHS ~CALADIUMS

IYUCISI;
,, . OliO

MIDDLEPORT - Final Sig·
· · nup for panlcipatlon In the
Middleport Youth~Wi.llbe
· Satunlay at the Mlddleporl
VUiage Hall. 9: :II a .m to 1 p.m .
Registration II'(' Is 19.

1

Installation or otfirers ror family
and friends at 8 p.m. New rituals
are being printed and anyone
wanting to order one should
notifY the scribe. AU old ritua ls .
are to be destroyed.

Holy Week serviCes

Grange youth

12

!.

OF

LIMIT 1 WITH $10 .00 PURCHASE
25-LB . MARTHA. WHITE FLOUR $H9

Boneless Ham Dinner
5-6-LB. Avg.
All For

·as

•2~.lb.

60

U.S.D.A . GRADE A
10-14-LB . AVG .

!

VIRGINIA BAKED ''

1D'r'4 OZ. (AMI'IEU'S

POnED FLOWERS
· FOR EASTER ·

.

..

regular meeting wlll he held on
AprU 12 at 4 p.m. with open

changed

POMEROY - · A meeting of
J·:vo ngellrie &lt;;:hapter 172. Order
or Easter~ Star. Mlddlepl)rt, has
txO)n postponed from Apr11 4· to
Mrll 1l due to Holy Thursdar.

Laurel Cliff area happenings

room

• United States Achievement
Acado;'flly has announced thar.,.,._,...,_~-­
Prke, Eastern .Junior High School
student, has been namt'd a 1985
United · States National Award
winner In mathematics.
The academy fl't'!lglllzes less than
·10 percent or all Amerlcari high
school students for achievement
making It a prestigious honor: '
Price was nominated . for the
national award by Mrs. Nancy
Larkins. mathematics teacher, on
1he basis of academic performanre,
lnten!!ll and aptitude, leadership
qualities, responsibility. enthusl·
.asm, motlvat ion to learn and
'Jmprove, citizenship, attitude, coopera live spirit, anddependabUity.
Prlee 1$ the daughter or Robert
and· Pamela Prlee.

SATURDAY
MORE MORE MORE, PICI&lt;
UP ITEMS FOR Saturday
.

POMEROY -Meigs Fish and
Game Club will ha\-:e its regular

With L'B entries froln studentS
throughout the schooL Monday's
Pomeroy ~ementary School
Science Fair proved to be a great
success.
Science and health exhibits rangIng {rom atom~ to Dowers to the
human s~letal system to hand·
made wooden xylOphones were
entered ln the fair.·
Any Interested student could
partiCipate with tOO.only stipulation
being that each pro)f'cl shoold
reflect something that had been
siUdle!J durtng 1~. current school
year. Founh grade teacher Bonnie
Fl~her was In charge of the lair, the
fourth of Its kind In recent years at
. .Pomerily . .
'with Winners In ea~li ciass. 'the
·tJrst three winners In each
!N~re gi&lt;/en ~ _
money priZe.- ~ .
khool's overall wJnner receivEd a·
"trophy. Pomeroy PTO, sponsored
OVDAu.WINl'IER-Sixtii&amp;J'IIIIerPAhtckGI'l'"h -OtMr.and ..
the prizes.
Mrs.ErlcGry11Zkaofli3Peacwi&lt;Ave.,Pome•oy,waalheovetallwlnnel'
Science fair winners, first throogh
of the Pomet oy ElernelltarJ School Scle"ce Fair. It took Patnck three
third places respectively, were:
days to develop hll model ol a solar hot water heater. "It waselilly ;• said
Patrick.
.
· ...
Paul Chapman and Shawn Whitte.klnd. Jessica Chapman and Wendl
Collins, Anne Brown and Adam · Leann Cundiff and Nathan:Brown , IGeln, DH class. First and second
Riffle . tlrst grades; William ChU- fourth grades; Keith Smith and
plare wlruiers In the Li&gt; class were
drr-ss·and JeredHUI, Amy Durst and
Jonathan Sargent, Kevin Howard
Chris Swanson and Patrick Jacks.
sarah Anderson. Denise Hayesand and Joe McElroy, John Haggy and
First and second place winners In
·l&lt;l'ilh David Carmichael: second Tammy Klein, fifth grades; Patrick
morning klndergart.e n were Jessica
grades; Ronnie Casto and Joshua Gryszka and Tonya Shelton, Kelly
Elroy and KriSta Sargent. BUiy
1leck, Danlelle Crow and J .P . Smith and Kelly Marcinko, Sean
Crane. Adam Smith and Michael
Dalll~. Trenton Cleland and Lee
Walton and Shane PhllllPs, sixth
IGeln\ve!'l' first, second and third In
'Husk. third grades; Rusty Triplett grades; and Joey Casto and Mary
the afternoon kindergarten class. ·
and .Jamie Blgg,•. ChriS l&lt;nlght , Morton, Robbie Price and Myrile
Patrtck Gryszka, sixth grader.
Dodge and Melissa
Maynard,
Klein, Richard Smith and Kevin
l&lt;elly
was the school's overall wlimer. · ·
.
.

'

Mary Shrine

37, WhJte Shrine or Jerusalem,

M i..Ctiri~

Pomeroy~ Middlaport ,

Wednesday,. April 3, 1985

Frozen
Turkeys
Pound

Maxwell House
~

Coffee
1-lb. Can ·

Potato Salad or Slaw

e2-lb ~· Green Beans

•12 Dinner Rolls · ·

••

PLUS FREE EASTER BUNNY. CAKE
REGULAR·.. . $4 .99

AOWIIU.(D tnM I"OUCl

Play Kroger.

(It" o l lflesn ariveflrs"' rtoJ fnll&lt;ft &lt;tllllr ~lt(i V'&gt; t,. reto•1 ,..,rllllole lnr Hlo &gt;ll111tr ·ll
it;I'()Ut!r S1nte e• ~ltP1 u ~ ·t oee~• noted '" '~" 1111 11 we Oo 1u ro (IUt ot ;~ n
lthtlf1•uld ,,em , - will oHe• vou ~01•• ,.,.,.,w:e ol &gt;1 ( Mn~lbllt !lf'm ... ~,

"""'Q'

..,,,.('1'1

tvt!lll:l le, 11litK:tH'&gt;U lht "-""'•
o• 'II rrh rn-her •
purCI'IIIIfl the f(Nflrt!Htl i1flm)M 101 IH'tVflnrlfMl I)IICI WnM'I
~(klr (nojptll'l wl lfba ICCIOI&amp;fl IMI! 11em DUrth UIIIl
CQf''IRIGHl 19!JS

l~lL

"'A Oirttl ('(I

wrw 1Jn1•!1• ""'' m

3tl

~lVI Ql'lhl' Om&gt;

liM ~ 4.1\rl) f'

t,, p,

1

t.OOO SUN O.t.v MAR('H 11 TI·HlOI 'to"'' S tto tVAO•" R,l'fHi

6, IQ85, iN [, ~l lrl ili.I'IA f'O MI~fiT Ott•r
Wf ArSEA\I E l Hf Al (.l&lt;l

SOLD TO O[AI fR S'

/

'I ll

10 t• M!l QUANT'!Tif!;.

"'Q'Ii~

�'

Page-14-The 'Daily Se~tinel

..

v·

.

Wednesday. f'pril 3, 1985

Pomeroy.:...Middleport, Ohio

•

.Eight and Forty makes plans for dinner
Plans for the annual dinner of the . and a friend wUI be. attending thE,
Meigs County Salon 110, Eight ancj annual dinner. Pearl Knapp wlll
Forty, to be held on May6atTrinlfY confirm all arrangements with the
Church, were completed at Monday church.
Loretta Tiemeyer presided at the
· night's meeting held at the home of
meeting which opened In ritualistic
Iva Powell.
Arrangements fo' favors and ronn. Mrs,. Powell h~d the prayer,
gills for the state · officers were · and Mrs, Knapp served as Ia
made. Marge Fetty will takecareof concierge. Mrs. Richards read the
floral arrangements w-hich will also minutes and also ga~e the treasur.
be used as gifts. Invitations will be
sent to all the state officers, along
wlthmembersofthesalonsofGallla
and . Vinton Counties. Florence
· Richards reported that small plates
and trophies have bel:n received.
. A letter was read !rpm Linda
Edmondson, department chapeau,
noting that she, her Ia secretalre,

er's report . Cards were signed for
Betty V•n Meter who remains Ill at
home, -and for Rhoda !Iackett.
Amemorial service was held with
Mrs. Powell "In charge .and · MJ'S .
Fetty as thecandleligttter. The table
featured a red carnation In a white
vase, white . tapers and an open
Bible. As' the names of deceased
panners were called, a white
carrui(lon was placed In tlie vase.
Taking part were Lula Hampton,
Veda Davis, Kate Welsh, and Mrs.
Knapp, Mrs. Fett}'Wad a poem In
memory of partners. Mary Reapp,

RUTLAND CDtCUS- Coco, a clown from England whowasthe_first
Ronald McDonald clown of the well known food chain, will be aniong th~
artls"' ~lng with the Hetzer lnten:ontlnental ~lrcus at tbe Rutland
Clv_lc Center on AprilS 8:Jid 9 with shows at 4 and 7: 30 p.m. each day. A

Ruth Thornton, Harriet Nelgler,
Myrtle Walker, Macy Roush, Dolly
Hayes and ZueleJia Smith. Mrs.
Powell gave the closing prayer, al!d
Mrs. Richards closed the Bible.
Scholatship and children and
youth fundswerecollectedandMrs .
Richards and Mrs. Hampton won
prizes. Annual report fontts were
distributed and Mrs. Tiemeyer
urged. the members to •get their
reports sent in before May 1.
A !dessert course In the Easter
theme was served by Mrs Powell,
Mrs.
Wels~ and Mrs. Fetty. ·
'
.

love bbth,
but (Cosby 'Show' up,·
'Gift of Life' down
FRED~ERG

•

AP Television Writer
NEW YORI&lt;'(AP) .:.. Two shdws
that earned critical praise wound up
on opposite ends. of last week' s·
ratings list. Audiences flocked to
' 'TiieCosbyShow' 'onN~.IDi:~'i'rs\.

NbTICE OF
APPLICATION OF THE
·OHIO BELL
TELEPHONE ·

An exception to the theory that
news shows wUI not draw as many
viewers as entertainment program-·
' Is the performance or "60
mlng
Mlfiute5."
The program has become a habit
:with vlt:Wers; dominating its protected time period on Sunday, for
which the Federal Communications
Commission requires -neWs, Information or children's prograinmlng. ·
This week, "6Q Minutes" sparked
CBS to a strong performance on
Sunday night, moving the network
Into first place U&gt;rtheweekoiMarch
25-3l.CBS, despite having no Top 5
shows, flnL~hed the week with a 16.5
rating to NBC's 16.2 and ABC'sl5.6.
·The Academy Awards telecast on
ABC finished. seeond for theI week,
but with Its lowest rating ever, Z7.1.
ABC's "Barbara Walters Special,"
featuring an interview with Boy .
George, was third, with ·a .25.2,
followed by NBC's "Famlly Ties''
and ABC's "Dynasty."
With three weeks left In the
prime-time season, CBS has averaged i)_l7.0ratlng, NBC16.3andABC

COMPANYFO~

INCREASES AND
ADJUSTMENTS IN
. ~ RATES, CHARGES
AND RATE

numbers but rejected l!le, -CBS
documeritary, "The Gift of Lite."
"The Cosby Show" fliilshect first
for the etght!l time In nine weelss,
this tlmli, with a ll.l rating, the
· highest for any series epiSode since
CBS' "AfterMASH"'was lnirodu~ed
In Septemberofl983.
It was NBC's best series rating
since a 1978 episode of" Little House
on the Prairie.'' '
At the sarne time, "The Gift. of
Life," about recipients ol organ
transplants, ranked 64th out of 66
shows, with I!" 8.8 rating, according ·
toA.c;:. Nie.Isen Co. figures released .
·"'f-uesctay. That figure-translateS Into .
7.5 mUllan homes, nearly~ million
homes fewer than watched "The
Cosby Show."
"It's difficult," said Mike Eisenberg, CBS' director of audience
' measurement. "People want.to be 1_5.6.
entertained ."
-

.

REGISTER MOW FOR
2'12-3 YEAR-OLD DAY NORSERY
4-and-5 YEAR-OLD KINDERGARTEN

James Eblin, son of Kenneth and
Donna Eblin, Route 14.3, Pomeroy,
wUI ~ competlng.in the Ohio VlCA
skill contests in welding at ColumbuS on May ·4.
·
Eblin won the honor after
· competin-g in tbe regional ~kill
competition at the Eastland Career
Center earlier this month where he
won a silver medal. Eblin is- a.
welding s\l!.llfllt at Meigs High
School. ~

.
'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LOW JUmOII IAIES

·· TINY
TECH
Call 992-3824
Summer Program For Your Child Care Needo

James Eblip

variety of enlertalliment Including animal acts, clowns, aeriallsts, pole
' balancing acts wW be featured by the circus which l,iappearance under
spomorshlp or the Rutland Civic center Organ~ion. Tbe circus
.appearecJ at the center last year also.

.STRU~TURE

..---People in t/Je news-...,
Actor begins serving sentence

Smith birthday is celebrated
Kelly Lynn Smll h, daughter of
Ms. June Smith, VIllage Green
Apartments, Pomeroy, observed
-IIE'.r lOth birthday I'I'Cently with a
party.
Cake, ice cream. and tea were
served.
Attending were Mr. and MtS.
,Charles Smith and. Shannon, and
;Mrs. Rick Smilh, Ricky. Randy and

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actor Chrlstopliet Brown Rob!Mon will
continue tq appear In ABC televlsldn's "General J-lospltal" soap
opera while serving a four-month sentence for income ta'x·evaslon.
Robinson, 46, reported Tuesday to the Vlnewood Rj'-entry
C6mmunlty Treatinent Center In Hollywood, but he will be released
during taping of "General Hospital" to continue playing the role of
Dr. Rick Webber, said Bureau of Prisons supervisor Greg U.ka.
Robinspn pleaded guilty Feb. 4 to two·countsolwillful failure to file
federal income tax returns and was sen~riced by'U.S. District Judge
Edwani!Ral~e to four months In prison and live years' probation.
Rafeljllle later modified the sentence to allow Robinson' to serve his
four ~nths 'It the federalw run community treatJnent center
lnstea · of a penitentiary, salt! Robinson's attorney, George KJng.
Kin said Tuesday that ·he argued for the modification becauSE~,
imp
t could threatefl his client 's ability to pay back the·
nfoney ow
· d would present a hardship to ABC, which would
have"" had to
rite Its "General Hospltai" scripts. ·

Rdbb:y. Shade; Mrs. Michael Smith
and Mlkey, Pomeroy; Mrs. Debbie
Davidson and John Michael, Mid~leport;
Tammy McFarland,
Pomeroy; Tina Smith and Richard
Norman, Pomeroy.
Gifts werepresentedtoKelly, who
also r~elved a gift from Betty
Templeton, Pomeroy.

:M&lt;.Guire
~birtbday
Joshua Tyler McGuire was ho;nored on his first birthday, March .
125, with a party at the Pomeroy .
American Legion Hall, hosted. by
· )ljs mother, Ragena McGuire, and
•aunt, Lynn Arms. .
; A eire.~ .theme was carried our .
:reaturing ·a ca~ussel centerpiece
. ·.··:and .clewns pr.eserjtin'g balloons to
· ·all in a ltendance ."The.C!rcu~ theme
:was also catrled out wlth refresh) nehts and favors of caroussel and
circus train cakes, Ice cream.
punch, and assorted homemade
chocolate.
: Those In attendance, presenting
~fts, and . sending cards ·were:
Joshua T. McGuire
'
grandparents. Betty and Marv!h
McGuire; TeJ1'Y, Tina, Patrick, Elizabeth and Cathy Howard, Kara
and Terry McGuire, Jr., Lynn, Bob and Diana King, Anne· and •Ken
-and Jeannie Arms, Connie, Sonny Richardson, Bill and Shirley
and Stevie Hudson. Cheryl, Clifton, Quickel, Jean and Harry Roush,
'
. Mashell and Rod- Elva and Lewis Hudson, Edith, Joe
:rracee,
Crystal,
ney Morris, Recka and Steve Elder, and Jim Manuel , Sue Tillis, _Patsy
' -Linda Breene, Paul Hayse, Gary Randee, Mary Ann West and Susie
Lee and Roberta Acree, Keri, Goode.

'1.··

. r::;-, '
' U1UJ

•

Our
. 7.97

_,_

Quality Patented Rose Bush

Patented • 1 _rose bush. ready to
plant. Assorted varieties antj c.olors.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Country-pop singer Charlie Daniels
wU i join about 50 top gospel singers to record "Do Something Now," a

Christian music sequel to "We Are the World" by pop singing stars to
benefil Afi·ica famine victims.
The performers will garner tonight at a recording studio to cut "Do
Something Now" after the 16th annual Dove AwarcJs for
achievement In Christian recording aie presented In a live telecast.
on the" CBN Cable Network from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. EST.
The gospel artists scheduled to record the song Include Amy
Grant, Sandi Patti, the Imperials, the. 2nd Chapter of Acts, Doug
Ol&lt;llam, PhU DriscoU, AI Green, Russ Tall and the Galthers.
Proc€eds from the record will go to Compassion International,
··-, which will use the money to help famine victims In Africa.
. The gospel s&lt;ing will be released in about three weeks. There wUI
I' be no album, but a video Wlll be made.
·
"It is a call for action to those of us eager to use our faith to help
' people." said Bob Angelottl. director of publldty and special
. markets for Sparrow Records of Chatsworth, Calif., which will
distribute the song.

2 27

Sal.e
Price
•
50· Lb.· Bag Marl?I• Chips
Decorative marble chips
. 'for
around trees. shrubs. [
"&lt;er wf

Timothy R. Hawthorne

3.47

'

SOle Price

Our
4.27

5·Lb.' Bag Grass Seed

Fora quick cover or abase
lor
permanent towns. Save!
' Nel WI

,' o

1.57

40-Lb.. Orgcmlc Peat
Moisture preaervlng peat
for lawns. gardena, shrubs.

.......

(

•

1
'

·pgg

'

I

25.97 r
Scotts Turf Builder
Clears Out Dandelions.
35.5 ibs.

Rankin birthday · Hawthorne .
, Davlp Lee Rankin recentl,'ILOi):' b. hd
'senied his third birthday with two
1ft
ay
parti£'S"'a t the home ol his parents,
•Mr. and Mrs. John Rankin.
Timothy Ryan Hawthorne. son of
, Attending the parry were his Tlm and Betsy Hawthorne, recently
;brother. Jeff, his sister, Mary Ann, observed his first birthday with a
-• Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Fryar, 11andy party at the home of his paternal
'and Brian, Jack Rankin, Pauline grandparents,Mr.andMrs.Darrrll
:Bunon, Rose Tucker, Shirley Jones. Hawthorne, Chester.
,GraceSneeks, Julia McCoppln.
. Cake, ice cream and punch were
' Senlllng gifts were Mr. and Mrs. served. Others at the party and
\1tober1" Cowdery, Jeremy a nQ ~ding gifts were his rna ternal
Brian, Florence Ruth, Mr. and Mrs. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy F.
·Jack Richardson, Pearl Shutts, Rime and Julie, .Chester, Laura
:Nina Rockhold, Patty OBrien, Iva Hawthorne, Karen Hawthorne,
:Upton, and Judy Jones.
Pam L.Buchanan, Christopher and
,r:;.
h t t
Brandl, Bl')lce and Lena Rime and
Un Se
Heather, Betty Stivers, Janet .1'!g; Weather · permitting, thE' nor,JoeandMaryBeth,Lancaster;.
•Middlep6rt-PomeroyRotaryCiub's 'Marie .and Donna GUIIlan and
:annual Easter egg hunt will take · Jeremy. find Dorothy Hawk.
;place Easter Sunday at l . p.m. at
;Middleporl Park. I.n caseofraln, an
·ofticlal cancellation will be made at
HOilS£ MRFlCNfiNC?
:12 ll()()n over WMPO. If postponed, ·
ClEANUP WITH
;the hunt wUI probably be· resche·
' ' ClASSIFIED ADS
duled for the following Sunday. ·

., .

·LONDON (AP)- Princess Mal!gurct, who had a small amount of
lung tissue removed three months ago, has lost a battle aga i n~! the
cigarette habit, the British Broadtast,lng Corp. said.
· The 54-year-old younger sister of Queen Elizabeth 0 Ut up twice
Tuesday durlng.a Tele\olslon and Radio Industries Club luncheOn at
which she presented awards.
.,
•
,
.
• It was Jbe first tline she-had been sEell smokhlg In public slrice the
operation·. · after . whiCh ·docfors. said :the tl5sl!e removed -:was ,-not
mallghant. _ ·.. · . ..
.
·.. ,
.~-- , .
. · · '" ..
Margaret, who rejjorlE'dly smokecf 40 cigarettes a day before her
Jan. 6 operation , has tried to heed the warnings of her docto~s and
quit, the BBC reported.
"But she hils lost her private battle to give up smoking," the BBC
sal!l.
·
.. Buckingham Palace refused fa comment, sayiqg smoking was a
personal matter.

Christian music benefits famine

~·

- David Rankin

•

Princess Margaret loses the battle

·&amp; .44·

:' Actress 'killed with. kindness'
.

LONOON (AP) ~Dame Peggy A'sh&lt;.oroft, wlnn&amp;r of the Academy
Award ror Best Supporting Actress tor her role In "A Passage To
India," said she never considered herself "subject matter for an·

Qscar.''

'

Miss Ashcroft, 77, who spent Oscar night at home in bed with the
nu, received her statuette Tuesday - eight days alter the awanls ·
ceremony In Los Angeles,
"I never thought I was subject matter lor an Oscar. How
wonderful'to be given it," said Miss Ashcroft. "I've been killed with
kindness."
The actress was handed the gold statuette by Sir Richard
Attenborough, 1983 Oscar-winning director of "Gandhi," at a
luncheon to launch British Film Year at London's Hilton HOtel. .

Our Reg. 129.67

109.67

20", 3-HP IGWn Mo-r
Side discharge, recoil start engine. throttle control on handle.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 15

•

~. Critics

MOMS &amp; DADS.

VICA skills contest
to include local boy

/

Wednesctay. April 3, 1985

5.47"
l"eFfl'""

12·1 S"
A11ortment
Yews. Junipers. or Arborvitaes In
globe, upright, pytamldol. spreaders.

·Christopher Robinson

Dame Peggy Ashcroft

tion, as part of the Company's
notification of its intent to file its
Application .
This Application affects rntes
and charges · for· re s idenc e
exchange access line~ and local
service options for customers of •.
The Ohio Bell -Telephone Corn·
pany and, in addition, affects the
rntes and charges for &lt;lirectory .
assistance , verification and inter·
rupt services, operntor services,
automated callirig card services ,
and wire, cable an"d other materials used for complex service
installations. The Company is.
requesting minimum level pricing for its toll ( long distanc_s:) ·
calls within its Local Access
Tran&amp;port Areas, Custom Call ·
ing services, toll and local oper·
ator services, and wire, cable and
other materials"used for complex
service installations. •

Pursuant to the requirements
of Revised Code Section
4909.19, The Ohio Bell Tele·
phone Company gives notice that
on January ·J8, 1985, it filed an
Application (PU .C.O. Case No.
·84·1435-TP-AIR) with the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio lor
authority to increase and adjust ·
its rates and charges and to
change its regulations and prac ·
tices for telecommunication s
· The affected Ohio Bell Teleservices it provides in Ohio.
phone Company tariffs are:
·
This notice contaips the sub·
Exchange and
· stance and prnyer of the Applica·
(P.U.C.O;
tion. However, any interested
Network
No. I)
party desiring complete detailed
Services Tariff
information with respect to ~II
(P.U .C.O.
Message Toll
' affected rntes , charges , regulaNo. 7)
Service Tariff
tions and practices shou'ld
Any ~rson. firm, co!]Jotation . '
inspect a copy of the Application
or association may.fl.Jhp -rsuant
!\!ld all attached schedules at the
to Re'vised Code Se ·
office .of the Commission, 180
4909.19, objections to the ro·
East Broad Street, Columbus,
PQSed increases and adjustments
Ohio, or at the following Ohio
in rates and charges, and to the
Bell public business offices dur·
p!QP2sed
changes in regulations
ing normal busi(!ess hours : 45
and prnctices and rate structure
Erieview Plaza, CJeveland; 80
W. Bowery Street, Akron; 401
affecting the same. The obi!&lt;£:
tions may allege that such
Cleveland Avenue 1'1 ·W., Canton;
illJplication contains p!QPosals
150 E. Gay Street, Columbus ;
that are unjust and discrimina369 W. £-:irst Street, Dayton; 425
!.QD' or unreasonable. Recom- .
Jefferson Avenue, Toledo ; City
mendations which differ from the
Centre One, Youngstown. In
illJplication may be made by the
addition, proposed tariff sheets
Staff of the Public Utilities Com·
were mailed on December 14 ,
mission or by intervening parties
1984, to the mayors and legisla·
and may be adopted by th e
live authorities of each munici ·
Commission .
pality included in the Applica·
'

RESIDENCE LOCAL EXCHANGE SERVICE

'

..

PERCENTAGE
INCREASE

The increases proposed in monthly residence exchange access line
rntes Jor flat (unlimited), message and measured service are shown
bel
'.
.
. .
~ ~ ·~
·
- _._, Residenq;.
. . Fia~·&lt;U~ii~ited) ...... Messag!l
.. .
· PBX . ,
.'
l -pam 2cpart)"* ·1-party' 2"party * MeasuredTrunk:ll.ne
Present:
14.95
11.90
9.50 · 9.35
6.70
31.80
Proposed: 19.45
15.45
12 .35 . 12. 15
8.70
41.3'5 ·
•Th~ Company is'reqqcsting'that ai12-party service be diminatcd effeclivc May I,
1986. Customer.; with 2-party service can retain the servoce at theor prescnllocauons
until the proposed elimination date.
· The Company's request includes a proposed increase in two local
service options, Option111 Local Area Service and Community Calling.
Monthly rates for Optional Local Area Servjce and Community Calling
would genernlly be increased in proportion to the ·overdll mcrease m
residence basi€ exchange access lines.
·
., .

DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE, VERIFICATION AND INTERRUPT SERVICE, OPERATOR SERVICES
AND AUTOMATED CALLING CARD SERVICES
The rntes and charges affected for directory assistance, verification
and interrupt service , operdtor services and automated calling card
ervice are shown below.
Directory Assistance - Direct Dialed Calls
Present ·
Proposed
Residence Call Allowance
'
• 5/month
0
Business Call Allowance
3/month
0
24/ month
0 .
PBX Trunk Line Allowance
Charge per call
- $ .25
$_ .30
(Current exemptions from these charges provided in Ohio Bell tari,ffs wi ll continue
_ in effect.)
Verification and Interrupt Service
Verification Service
$ 1.20
0
- Charge Per Oc-currence
Interrupt Service (Includes verification)
-Charge Per Occurrence .
0
$1 .60
(There will be no charge for verification if the opcmtor de1ermines thatlhc
telephone line is out of order.)
Local Q~rntor - Coin Services
Customer-Dialed Oper.ttor Assisted Calling
$ .80
$ .45
Card Call (Station - to- Station ~
$1.10
$ .45
Operator Handled Station-to-Station Call _- ·
$3.00
$ .45
Operator Handled Person-to-Person Call
Local O~rntor - Non-Coin Services ·
Operator Handled Station-to-Station Call '
0
$1 . I0
Opemtor Handled Person-to-Person C;lll
0
$3.00
(These charges only apply to local calls which require special opemtor h~ndlin g ·
fqr cqllect, billed to third number. calling card and pcrsoQj;to-pcrson billing.)
Toll (Long Distance) O~rntor Services
Customer-Dialed Operntor Assisted Calling
.
Card Call (Station-to-Station)*
$ .60 · $1.05 $ .80
Operntor Handled Station-to-Station Call $ . 75 · $1 .55
$1..10
Automated Calljng Card Services
Automated 'Calling Card Call , .Toll ' · .
(Long Distance)*
$ .60 · $1.05.
0
Automated Calling Card Call, Local, Coin $ .45
$ ·.45
•(These services are presently jointly provided under C)lstomcr-.Dialcd Calling
Card Station-to-Station s~rvice . )

Should the increase be granred
in full , the average percentage
iricrease in rate for a representa·
tive residential subscriber is 30
~ercent. No basic exchange
increase is proposed for non-resi·
dential subsc ribers . The pro· posed increase for residential
basic exchange services and local
service options increases Ohio
Bell operating revenue by 8.18
percent. All other propo sed
increases amount to 1.79 percent
of operating revenue . These
in c rea ses include direct o ry
assista nce, verification and inter·
rupt services, automated calling
C&lt;trd call s, operator ser.vices and
prices for wire, cable and other
materials used for complex serv·
ice installations for residflntial
and non-resiqential subscribers .

· MINIMUM LEVEL
PRICING
Ohio Bell is proposing that its
minimum level pricing structure
apply to pricing for wire , cable
and other materials used for com·
plex ~ervice installations, ·Local
Access Trnnsport Area toll (long
distance) calls , Custom Calling
services. and toll and local oper·
a services. Rates and charges
con ituting the prices to be
ch\r ed at any given time are
.. ove din pricing lists furni shed
e Public Utilities Commis·
'sion of Ohio by the Company and
may vary from the minimum to a
maximum of 2 times the minimum level. The Company can
adj ust its prices with appropriate
notice to the Commission .

J?..RAYER OF
APPLICATION

The prnyer of the Application
reque sts the Public Utiliti_e s
_commission of Ohio to do the
following :
(a) Find that the present rates
and charges which are "proposed
to ~changed and ther 'egulations
. :_ afld pmctices affecting \hqame ~--. · a·re :unjusi; unteasort;tble·. and
insufficient to y_Jelcth"feasonable
compef)sation 1or t e servrces
rendered ;
(b) Find that the proposed
mtes and charges and regulations
and prnctices are just and l'!:asonable and will provide not more
than a fair and reasonable nne of
returri on the value of Applicant's
property actually used and useful
fort he convenience of the public ;
(c) Approve the filing of the
proposed schedule sheets con·
tained in Schedule E-1 filed herewith and made a part hereof,
modified to·reflect such revisions
thereof as may become effective , .
pursuant to orders of thi s Commi ss io n , during the inter.im
be tween the filing of thi s
· Application and the date upon
which sa id sc hedul e shee ts
become effective;
· (d) Order that said proposed
schedule sheets become effective
immediately upon filing ;
(e) Approve the withdmwal of
the sche,dule sheets which are
proposed to· be changed con·
tained in Schedule E-2 filed herewith and made a part hereof,
modified to reflect such revisions
thereof as may become effective,
pursuant to Orders of this Com·
mission, during th e interim
between the filin g of thi s
Application and the -date upon
which said schedule sheets are
approved for withdrawal ;
(t) Grant such other and further rei ief a!&gt; Applicant is reasonably entitled to in the premises.
The form of thi s noiice has .
been approved by the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio .

TJIE OHIO BELL
.TELEPHONE COMPANY

�•
Page-

The

16-

Daily Sentinel

April

Qhio

' '

.

'"

'

The..Daily · SentineJ

'I

Wedne~.

3, 1

April 3. 988

...

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classifie_d Dept.

PLUMBING-&amp;
HEATING
311 Nerlll SlcOIMI
Mitldlepert, Ohio 45760

)"

SALES &amp; SERVICE
IUSINDS 1'110111

BULLDOZER &amp; BACKHOE WORK

·p'H. 742·2328

1 , card of Thanks(paid in advance )
2-ln Memory
(paid in advance)
3-Announcements
4-Giveaway
5 -Happy Ads
6 -Lostand Found
7 - Yard Sale (paid in advance)
8 - Pubic Sale
&amp; Auction
9 -Wanted to Buy

frnployment
Services

Heal

~state

31 · Homes fiR Sale
32-Mobile Homes for Sale
33- Farms for Sale
34- Business Buildings
35-Lots &amp; Acreage
26- Real Estate Wanted

51-Household,Goods
1?2-CB, TV &amp; Radio Equipment
5 3 - Antiquas
54-Misc. Merchandise
55- Building Supplies
5 &amp;.Pets for Sale
57-Musical Instruments
58- Fruits &amp; Vegetables
· 59- For Sale or Trade

41 - Houses for Rent
42-Mobile Homes for Rent
43-Farmsior Rent ·
44-Apartment for Rent
4 5-Furnished Rooms
4 6-Space f~. Rent
4 7· Wanted to Rant
48- Equipment for Rent
49-For Lease

Fmn Supplies
&amp; L1vestor.k

.

Public' Notice
" .~
· -------

CASH BASIS
COMBINED ANNUAL
FINANCIAL REPORT
FOR THE FISCAL ·
YEAR ENDED•
DECEMBER 31, t984
Village of
s~~.oh~
r-J~etgl County

• ,.

.. ,

•. J certify the following report
,.. .. ,to be correct and true, to the
:· best of my k~owiedge .

Janice Lawson
. . Clerk· l""!surer
·. Box 2,~1

-· ·-

w.

~ytac,use,

Oh1o

.. 45779
61'4-992-7351
: ~

Govemment
•

· '"' Funds

·; Revenue Receipts1

, Property Taxes ..... $ 15 .845
'~ ~lated Lellied Sharud
Tox.... Etc........... 30.354

~· ,lntergovernment
~

Exc. Receipts Over
(Under) Disb. ... . .. 32,648
O~ting Transfet11
- ln ..................... , 3.BOO
Oper81ing TranSfers
- Out . .. .. .......... 4,001 .
Othar Financing
UIHII .................... 24,221
Total Oth..- Fin.
Sources (USES) ... (24,4221
Ex..,.. of Total
Receipts Over
(Under) Total
,
Disbuow. .. .. . ..... 8, t 26
Fund Cash Balance
- J"''! I , 1984 ..... 49,B67
Fund Cash Belance
Dec. 31.1984 ...... 57.983
Res. for Eucumb.,
Dec. 31, 19!14 .. .. .. .... 6B6
Propri-ry
.
.
' Funds 1
Revenue Rocelpta:
Public Notice
Gharges for
servic......... .........49.408
AUOth..Contracts .
30,348
Revenue .. .. .. .... .. .10,678
Fees, Ucenses,
Permits .
. 3;392 Total R""""ue
Reca!pto .......... .... 60,086
lnteres1
Eamjngs .... .. ...... 4.810 O~til)ll Expenses;
Penonal Sarvices ..... 16,976
Fines and
Fringe
Benalits ........... 1.612
Forfeits. .. ... .. .. ..... 4.590
Materials and •
All Other
' Supplies .. .......... .... 26,813
Revenue .. ........ 23,436
Other
Operating
Total Revenue
EICpOnlao .. ...... ......... 1 76
Receipts ............ 112,774
Total Expend.
EKpenditure Disbursements.
Disbuow ........ .... 44,576
Security of
Exc. Raceipta' Over
Persons and
(Un. .l Dlsb, .... , ...,15,510
Property,. ... ' - ~ - .' .
Interest
Ravanqe ........... 623
Le•i ure; T1rl1e'
-·
~
Note and Band
• A:ctivitieJ '' I ' H ",' "~ " ., ~81
Roti_remallt .. ~ .... (9.000)
Tranopona.
lnt_.
Exponoe &amp;
- .
tion ... ,. -~ .. ~ .. , ... .... 10.162
Fioc81 Chorgoo.' .... (3,3421
General Govern· '
~
'
mont ... .. ....... ... 17,926 Other F1nancing
1101
Capital Outlay .. .. .. 33.291
Excen of Total
,·
Note Principal
ReceipUOver
Rotnement ...........·. 2.739
(Under) Disb ........ 3,9B2
Total Expend
,
DiobUr$ ..... , .. ., .. 80,226 Fund Cash Balance,
Jan. 1. 1984 .. . . 8,648
Fund Cash Balance,
Dec. 31, 1984 ....... 12,530

992-2156

.

· ' Grant /

u- .. :... ..............

Public _N otice

lntergovemment

Grant /
•
.
Contracts ............. 30.348
Charges for
• Services .... ..... ... .49,408
Fees. Ucenses,
Permits ................ 3,392
Interest Earnings ....... 4.810
FinBS and
Forf0111 ... .......... .. 4,690
ANOther
Revenue ....... .... .34,113
Total Rewnua
ROC&lt;Iipts .......... 172,860
Security of

Persons and
Property ............... 16,428

Leioura nma
Activhies ..... . ... ..... 681
Transportation .. .. ..... 10.162
c;-at G"""m·
ment ......·............. 17,925
Personal
16.975
Fringe Benal~o.. ........ 1,612
Matarials and·
Suppllot ... .......... 26,813
Capital Outley .. .. .. .. . 23.291
Nota Principe!
Retirement ............ 2.739
Other Operatng
•
ExpenMO ....•............... 176
Total E•penct,
Diolnn.. .... ....... 124,802
Exc. Roceipto Over
(Under) Disb ...... .48.058
0 - Fin. Sourceo (USES(:
lnteraet Revenue ......... . 623
OperatH\g Tronsferw
- In .... ................. 3.800
Opening TronofBnl .
'
- Out ........ : .. """" 4,001

s...-.....

17. _ _ __;_~18. - - - -- 19, _ _ _ _ __.;,._
20. _ _..,..:..._ __

I
I
I

I
I

lntiRioeb,O.remallt .... ........ (9,0001

I
I
23. _ _ _ __
I
I
24. ~~"'"'7'~-'- .I
25.
I'
26. - - - - - - - I
17. - - - - - - - . . . , I
I
21. - - - - - - - I
30. _ _ _ __

29------

31.

-__,....lo.- - -

32. - - - - - - - ' -

33.------

:1-j ,
Jj,

"
'"'7'---_ _ _ _ _.,..

Note and Bond

II F

21. ..--~--22.
_ _...;;.,._ __

I

Meigs CountY
Area Code 614

446-Gallipohs

992-Middlepon
Pomeroy
985 - Chester
343-Portland
247 - Letart Falls
949-Racine
742-Rutland
667 - Coolvlll&amp;

A

(2161 679-2046. The
Reserve will conoider yow
comments and any requBitl
lor 1 pubNc meeting or formal
'-ring on the IIJlPiica~n H
they 1118 - recelvad by the
R81181Ve Bank on or before the
111111 date of the comment

.

.,

!~13HO_,_;J'f413. 10,19, 6tc

od

Valua~on ..

.. ..... 3.1 33.272
Property Tax l.ellioo
Inside 10
Mill ........... ... . ... 10.0
Out~de 10
Mill :.. .. ................... 30.4

Estimated

.

Population .............. 1.000
Federal Censuo
Population ............... ,. 948
(4) 3, 1tc

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE Of EARL W. RIGGS,
DECEASED
c•.., No.. 24689 Docket 12
Pege 468
~
NOTLCE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
19B5. lri the
CouiJIY Probete Court,
lito: 24689. fl.--Marie
R~ 1. ling/lillie,
46741 wu ·~lited
Lengsvlno,

3 Announcements
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF PAUL EDGAR
CASTO, DECEASED
Good
ea.. No. 24663 Docl&lt;et 12 washers ,
Page 472 ·
I tll!ctri'c
NOTICE OF
I ·'
ranges
APPOINTMENT
OPEN 8 TO 6
oF ADUCIARY
•
County Appliance, Inc.
On March 13, 19~"'the
627 Th1nl Awe
Gallipolis
Meigs County Probe Court,
446-1699
Case No. 24663,
yn I ,L---::;:.::.~----1
lucille Casto, 630 • North

Expan•&amp;
ChorgotJ ...... (3,3421
Other Financing
· u - ................. 24.211
Tot . ~Fin.

Sowcos (USES) ... (24,422)
e• ..,.. of T0101
•
ROC&lt;Iiptl Owr
(Under) Toto!
.
Dlsbuow.,...... "''' ..... 12.108
Fund Ceoh Bolonce,
Jan, 1'-1984 .........68,688
Fund c - Bolo"'"'·
Dec. 31, 1'984 .......70,696
Reo. for Encumb ..
Dec. 31, 1984 .......... 933
DePooitoJf
......... ...... ...... .41,15!1
tn......,..111 .. ..•• ....• .. 30,000

Tot.IT,_.,
Bolonat ......... .. ..... .71 '1 56
Le.. Outttand·
ing ... .. ... ... .. ..... 459
Total Balance ...... .. .. 70.696
SUMMARY OF
.
INDEBTEDNESS
OUTSTANDING
· JAN. I, 1884:
oo Bonds .......... : ... ez.ooo
R.v. Antle. Nota• ·-•11 870
TOTAL .t .. ..... .......... ll:a7o

16141

amrn

915·3105

Television Usteniri&amp; Devices
Computerited Hearinc Aid Selection
Hearinc Evaluations For All Aces

en si.tt. T241n SyraMe

ss. $1, &amp; $12

JAMES

.

NEW LISTING - Portland
Area Former church
building. Full basement,
new siding new steel in·
sulated doors, stormwln·
dows. Lots ·of space. Situate don two lots.
PRICE REDUCED F1ve
Points - Newer ~anch \'lith.
appro&lt; I acre of beaubful
yard. Home has 3 bedroom~.
11h baths, equ1pped k1tchen,
iamlly room, 2 car garage, full
basement wood burner set up,
above ground pool, central a1r,
and many othe. mce features.
Now only $46,900 00

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Public water suppltes are

requloed
by State
Aula 3745-B1
·21, Ragulailon.
Ohio Adml· 'ljJ!!!d~!'!!!:~~~[
niotnltive Code. to routinely
monitor the microbiological
quality of the drinking water in
tfHKr distribution system in
order to lnaure that Slife water
being ·~lied to 1he

·

The village of Rutlllnd io
requtred to collect and exam·
ine a minimum of 1 microbio·
log1calsam~o 88Ch month. No
ssmplas were collected and
analyzed for the month of
Fobrua/V. 1985.
The water depan.ment has

taken steps 1o insure that
adequate monitoring will be
perfonned In the future.
Jerry Black
President of
· Council.
Oiclc Fetty,

Mayor of RuUand
14) 1. 2. 3, 3tc
Public Notice

._.e- - '

TEAFORD

lAND CONTRACT - - Wrth a
small down payment this 21
acre farm w~h a 6 room house
can be yours Secluded obut
convement. All IS ienced !or
cattle or whatever Has a bam,
eqUipment shed and a big galdell area $36,500 00

.Real .Est.ate
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-!61 4)·992-3326
NEW LISTING - 20 'cres
more or less. new home
· under construction about
40&lt;28 m Lebanaon Twp
Jusl $16.000

LOT

Ill DDLEPORT

50'&lt;120' level kit w~h all u1JI1·
ties ava1lable. Beaubful view of
river $8,500.00. -,_..

IIIDDLEP(fRT - N Front
- 2' apts on corner lot for
$25,000.
,

IN

LOOKING
FOR
count!Y
acrN&amp;a7 Flalwoods Area Bu1ld tha.l new lwme on appro&lt;. 25 acres wilh a beaullful
stocked pond surrounded by
peaceful woods. Lots of road
frontage. All mmeral nght~
Askini $23,500.00 ,

COUNTR(_- L1ke new 3 BR
ranch w1th lighted pool Carpetmg, full basemen!, only a
. lew years pld.
COUNTRY - Good 7 rm.
one lloor plan , lull basement, !urnace,woodburne1,
dbl garage and ' level acre

WANT A FARII7lhen tlus

lOS
acres of mce laymg land may
be your dream come true.
There is 6,000 square foot well
bwtt barn, free gas and a
· ducmg gas and oil well.
owner took 3,300 bales of hay
lor one culling last year. The
farm house has 10 rooms and
a bath, and
and other outbuildin· ~ ·
wants an

RUTLAND - 2 story ·6 rm
home 2 enclosed ~orches,
l-11 baths on 2 level lots.
S ACRES - Southern
schools Bwld yo~r own
Only $6,500.
COUNTRY - 3 BR, basement. dnlled well, root eel·
Ia! , woodbumer, gas furnace for backup. 2.8 acres
$25,000

$75,000.00.
REALTQRS
Henry f Clsland Jr.

992·6191

Ja~n Trussell 9~9-2660
Dottie Turner 992·5692

Sue Murphy, Milton lou"'
Htlsn, Yirtil oncf
lrucs THlord

Housing
Headquarters

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2160
No Sunday Calls

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.'
Bashan Builtllng

EVERY
SAf. NIGHT
6:3o ·P.M.

((Uf OUT FOR fUfURl USEI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

SERVICE
985-3561

All M1ku

•Weahe,. •Diahwe•hera
. •Rengee
•Refrigerator&amp;

•Dryers •FrMzera
PARTS end SERVICE
· 4-5-lle

_\

•

10'aftt• ..

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can

repair and recore • rad1ators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
We also
repair Gas Tan~s .

. out radiators.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

·~

'

.c&amp;c _,

01

U·SAYE
AUTO
RENTAL
St. lt. 160 North

Fre1 E•tl••'"

Ius.; 985-3813
Res.: 985-3837

Gallipolis, Ohio

3-1

7111/11

mo.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

SUPEIIOISIDING CO.

.

&gt;

Over 30 Vra E,.:perienoe

THE BIRD CAGE

"$'"" Stul•l"

laby ParoltHt,
(age &amp; SUppllos ... - 124.75
Pair fliiCy finches.
Cage &amp; Suppllls ..... •31.00

itr

r--::1N""'TE:-::-R~ES""TE""o·
NEW

VEHICLE

We'd lih to mtroduce you to

Abo Sot4 Separately
(all hlttings:

Enaoa•A·Car, the modern way

to dnve the .vehicle of1 your

choice.

614·915·4212

NO DOWN PAYMENT

Sizn Start From 12'~16'

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLIASANT, W. ,VA.
I milss from
Po11aroy·lason Brid&amp;a
SINGL£ '24.95

UTILI.JY BUILDINGS
6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'

Sizes from

Insulated Doc Houses

304-675.6276

-P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine,

•lm Enlerta~nmeni•Free HBO
•l&lt;.1tchenettes •Restaurant

Oh.

A.U.
304·675-6276 '

Ph. 614·143-5191
I 0-6-tfc

41111 mo

LOWER MOMlHLY PAYMENT

~
MOTEl •

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

(ockatitlt. Exotic lirdo
Awoilaltll
Cagoo &amp; Suppli11

JOHNSON ELECTRIC
Specializing in
All Types ,Of
Residential

BOGGS

And

Repair

9tl61t/ Rt111 F,

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1-IO.t.f.n.

DENNY· CONGO

Farin E,ulp111elilt

WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI

Parte &amp; Service
1-3·Hc

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124.Pomtroy Ohio

Will

do all typet of
excavating, landacap·
ing,
age
and

baaementa. - ·
ayatema,
linea, water

well

and - ·

or 991·7"14

•

~~~~.!fhowv&lt;'!'
r-.1 lnforrne. 1
. ....:J lL-~'::11t:r~•Y~·~O~Wlo~uJ
_,_....
IOMibmltI·· L.;..~~N~o~w~=;;!!~~L!:I•~tl~n!ge~ln:,!!!!!~c:o~

Sitfto. llilllotr Stamps,
lutlnttt fermt.
Copy Serwkos, Etc.
255 IIIH St., 111.._1
1~4 Mullotrry A•.. ll,em«oy

-PIONE£R CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

Haw HonoN--Extonn•• '
ltlll0dlli119

35185

IMur.... Work

PI!. (614) 985-4212

I Ger....
l10fi11t Werk

We Uu Von· Schlader
Equipnttnt Ricommended
by Ludin&amp; Clrpet llnu·
lacturm.

Alu"'
""'"' &amp;Vloyl SWillgt
1 1J Vura Experience
GMG IOUSH ·
PH.

'FREE ESTIMATES"

992-7611

3-22-lln

11·1·11•

IN MIDDLEPORT

.

THURS. EVE. 6-8 (

---

'

PT. PlEASANT OFFKE
3305 IA&lt;ISON Aft.
SIWI.IIIMM 1101115

-

fl1wMitr J ,..... s .......

,..., I IL•·2 ILIL
Sltwtlly )O l.lll.·llrM ....

Or

lAIII A•IAL$"At1D
IUIIGIIY IY APPOIIIT•Nt
·

/.

1- - - - - - - ' - - ' Old·faohiQnod boseboardo.
preferably oak, 8 · 10 ln.
h1gh. Also. a 4 drawer oak
filing cabinet. Call after 6 .
814-949·2093 .

ID•·6tS.J4"

Elflplnvmenl

Truck driVer• needed, 'min-

HOME OWNERS -Refi!lance
to low filled rete Usa equity
for any purpose. Leader
Mongago Co.. 614 -592·
3051 .

· ...... GiiiiiP'oiis··.......

-._vailable including ~;ommia·
slon, bonuaea. &amp; profit aharing. Training &amp; meteriala
provided. First v•ar Incomes

'

Trtrn off pounds wt1h Go
' " ' ' Gtli.Pefr\llt htro
ltreoitth Cajltulee. Fhith
l'horrnaay. Mldcltr"· .

$60.0 down -mobile home
end large lot-your own boat
dock·owner financing . Cell
~14-2&amp;6-1215 .

Government home a from • 1
(U repair,, Alao delinquent
lox property. Call l-B061187·8000 Ext GH-9805for
information.

_.....___..:...__

3 bedroom house, 8 acraa
fenced ln. with bam. chicken
coop. and p4ny ehed
e35.000,. McCumber Rood,
Rutland, ' Ohio COli 814 ·
992-21 43 before 4:30 aak
for Michael or after 6:00 call
614-742-2289.

Own your own jeansporuwear. ladles apparel,
childrena. large size. combination. western etore. ac·
cessoriaa . Jordacbe, Chic.
lee, levi. Euy Street. fzod.
Esprit. Tomboy, Colvin
Klein, Segio Valente. Evan
Picone. liz Claiborne,
Momber1 Ont~. Organically
Grown , HeefthteM , over
1000 others. $7,900 to
$24,900 inventory, train Ing, fixtures. grand oopen·
ing, ·etc. Can open 16 days.
Mr. Loughlin (6121 88B
4228 .

To the fi"der of Jack Rogers

••P•·

Hou1e for Sale: 62 lincoln
St, •12,600, noeds aome
repair . Call 614-268-1773
after 6pmr

Sales reprerentatlve ""dad
in Galli a and Me•a• Counties
to sell end service life,
health. auto and home lnaurenca. For information, caH
Monogor at 30.t-295· 4661
or Wrile P . O . Bo~ 6B9. Per·
keroburg 26102.

:i.2

wollet. pleoH koep money
but return w•net end con- imum experience.. Cal 613563-9647.
ttnto. drop at Murphy'• I------~--­
Storo. or call 304-875- Wanted : Secretary ·
1381.
receptionist. .Skillt .-quired:
baolc bookkeeping okllls.
Found, Cocker Spaniel muat efficient aho'rthand, excel·
deocribe. 304·675·5379 or lent typlot. Wages negotia·
1178·1390 after 5 PM .
ble with oblllty and
rience. Apply at ; M &amp; T
Whlta walker dog, with light Construction, ~t . 1 Boll
brown epota in vit;inity Salt 340, Bidwell.' Oh 466H.
Cr..k. GaiUpolio Ferry, 304- Coli 614· 38!1· 8323:
676 · 32&lt;flt or 814-3792273.
Several immediate po1itiona
open for Cc;;mmi11ion Selea
Rep. In the home-buoineao
7
· Yard Sale
aecurity end water treatment . Multiple Income&amp;

House' with 4' Iota. IJarn.
Upper River Rd. Call 614 258·1988 or &amp;14-4411 ·
7228 .

We are looking for ~omen
wha would like t'o be makmQ
extra money. Make from
820 .00 to 160.00 1n an
evening having a Friendly
Home Party. Also. sign up
and, gat • •400.00 kit of
gifts end toys No money
involved. For more lnforma ·
tion, call Magnolia ·Nitz at
II t 4 -992· 356 1.

AVON earn 40% plus free
producu. Call 81'4 -4463358.

Help Wanted

Muat , aell 3 bdr. rench.
Weotbrooke Subd .• ' FR.
woodbumor corport, 'deck,
citY utllitlt . &amp; ochoolo.
436.00G . C
614·446·
7144 .

Investment Opportunity .
Singles &amp; Multiple houoing.
PurcheH 1 or aH, owner
financing available Call
614-446: 0116.

Fouild female Norwegian
Elk Hound. allvor. Cellll14843-6127. Stlvoroville orea.

Ser vll:l!~

In Eotate-3 bdr. on Rt. 35. ·~
mi. Woot of HMC, e40"o.
Coiiii14:441J-OB03 .

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAU.EY
USHING CO. recommend•
that you_.1 do bu11ne11
people you know, and
to send money thro'logh the
mail until you have inveati·
gated the offerir~g .

11

23

Three bedroom house. Alum
Sid•ng, car port, deck, new
kitchen. remodeled ba ·
throom, NU-Seth wlndowt,
and woodbumer Coli 614 992-2898
Sectional home, like new, all
new appliancea. 3 bed room•. large livin9 room.
family-atyle kitchen, and
dining room, Situated on
large lot which, fronta dn
three strlets. Excellent
neighborhood . Tuppen
Plolna. Ohio . t32.900.QO
1 0 percent down, financing
evaileble to qualified parties.
Call614-992-7034.

Money to Loan

3 bedroom houn in Ruatic
Hillo. Fully carpeted. otorog_e
building, tergolot Call 814992-5086 ofter 4:30PM.
6 roomt,
utility room,
storm window• and doora.
aluminum siding, new roof.
gerago .. Call 614 - 992',
5204 .

·'Professional
Services

Gorage and Bike Sale 6 lo B.
9·1 9 mile West of At . 141 .
New crofts. ctotheo, dropes.
bed1pread, etc.

CouCh, chair. antique dreu ~
lng toblo, BloW 'Tv eoerko
good. sntlqua aldoboard,
atroller, baby 1wlng, c•r
- t . boby btckpeck. white
metll cabinet , clothet,
Much, Much Morelli Thuro
&amp; Fr 8·1. on Rt. 160, behind
lltOCk yord. Come &amp; Soell

······r,-omero;;····.. ···
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Aprll2, 3,and 4. 8:00-? Cer,
goo rongo. mioc. houeehold
ltamo, ttc. 1'I&gt; miiN off Rt.
7 on Beiley Run Rd. Wotch
for ligna.

lmme,diate posaeaaion 2
bedroom home, remodeled,
tob1cco baM. 2 aCres. city
ochoolo, Rt. 584, 123.000
Call614-245-5296.
.

18

Wanted to Do

Beautiful 2 story country
homo, 4 bdr .. LR. beamed
calling, DR, 2 flrepleceo.
.
.
well
intulated, vinyl aiding,
Will do houae cleaning and
babvslttlng in Rio Grande. aluminum wlndow1. Y2 acre
Colt' Minr a't 614-245· lot or 17 acr•a•vadebla. Call
814-,48-2369 .
9663.

Will

do IN!by oitting in my
homo, hove good roft!rencea. Call 814 -992-6921 .
- - - - : : - - - -..:.·:.... tcDopancfoble yerd service.
Waodo. Wolkwoyo cloor8d.
Looveo rokad . Hedgea
trimmed, etc. Call614-992 ·
2269 . Bill Slock. · ·

Cu1tom butchering, 8 day11
weak , phone 304 -882 3224 . • -

i

Stortco T- Lewn Service .
Lendoceping, -lng, tertii·
tzlng,, thatching, fol - com·
pleto lown ..,ice, Coli u...
304-5711·201 0.

...... Pt'Pieaunt'····

Will baby alt In my hpmo
-kdoyo, 'raferancei, 3048711·%807.

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

illi.llll:ldl

~

Boby lumhure, f,..zer, to·
blea, tempo, clothing, "'iiC.;
bealde Gulf Stotlon . GtiMpo·
111 Fsrrv. Tueodey, Wsdntt·
day, Thuradtly.
·

21

MOVING OUT IALE, A'rll
1111·11h. · 1408~ Ohio It,
Pont l'tttsant. ltlllnolds on
rainy dovs:

Cotf" SlloP tor oelo aporot·
lng downtown. I-lion 414
Stcond Ave .. OoUipollo. Coli
814·441·3407.

Buelneu
Opportunity

Mobile Home•
for Sale '

1 2x65 Indy tottl ol&amp;~;tric.
exc cond. Cell &amp;14-4411·
13U·
14x70 Foativol 1 977 mobllo
home . Complete wh:h vinyl
underpinning. tie down
.tnps, blocka 3 bedroomt,
2 full bath1, central air. Lot
be purch..ed or rented .
aftilr live 614-3888166 or 1114·388-8262.
1500 down-mobile ho,...
•nd lerge lot-your own boat
doCk-owner financing . Call
814-256-1216.
14•65 3 bdr. o" olectne,
underpinned. porch, util.
bldg. , rental lot, in town .
Colt 614·446-2036 . Call
anVtime.
12X85 Torch 2· 3 bdr, unf•rr·
ni1heq. H11 all screen• &amp;
atorml &amp; homamadit
porcheo Con · 6t4-446- •
7132 .
Muot sell 1979 14'x60' 2
bdf' . g11 heat. ' underpinning, tee down1, new carpet,
1 both, $7,500. Coll1-8148119-7722 .
1972 Schultz oxtro good
cond . Coll614-266-1922 .
1984 Victorion.' 70x14. Sot
up in tountry Mobile Home
Perk, Darwin . Lot 41 . Asaume mortgage.

1 0•66 two bedroom trailer.
oxc cond. 13.000.00. 304·
675 -6124
1981 Schultz 14x70. oil
electric, 2 bedrot»ms, garden
tub, large porch . wrth •wning, underpenning , 304·
675 -5120 .

1975 Cameron mobile
home. 12x1S4 ft, 2 bedroom
all fflactr1c, unfurnithed: ~
304-675-1777.

Mobile homea mowed."' Inlured 20 years experience .
304-678 -2866 or 57.82998

33

Farms for Sale

Farm houH 8i. 68 acre• with
tobacco ba11 and minerel
rtghts. In Porter, Oh1o on
Campaign Creek Rd
149.000 . Cell 614 -446 -

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

''3i111iii;;;;;;:)!;rs~;.-· J.!!~?iii~~~~:

4 Fomlly April 3·6. 21'&gt; mi .
poot VInton Elementary All
olzai clothing, electric appliance•. ml1c

32

PomeroY. 3 bedroom . 1 1h
PianCJ Tuning and Rep8.r bath , all utilit111. AC, inauSrunicardfMuaic Co., 614- late1t. carport. ,asemei1t. 72~7 .
446·0887. Twentieth year large tot. Call 1114· 992 1 08 acre farm for aale. one
of quality service. Line 2602
mile
eaat of Eno on 564 Call
Daniele, 614-742 -2951 .
1-~~----'--...,..Nothing doWn. Take over 614-367 -0618 .
WINDOW TINT!Alr Reoi· paymantt of $337 , per
clential. CommercialS. Auto. month on aaaumableloan at ~ - - - - - - - - - 34
Business
F,.. eotimatao. Call 614 · 9\7 percent. Included in
446-93411 .
payment are taxe• and insuBuildings
ranee. lots of remodeling. 4
PIANO TUNING AND RE- bedrooma, 1 "h baths. c:enPAIR, Reduced rttea limited
1
in Pomeroy . Call
Hurr1cane . 19 acrea com·
time only. Ward'a Keyboard,
mercial fl•t land on Virginia
304.876· 6500 or 875 ·
Ave. Water.aawer.gas, R.R.
3824.
tiding. large old farm hou•
and born .l260,000. 1 · 11112 3879.
Real E~tate

e30,000-t50,000. Sondra·
oume to: P.A. Murphy, P.O .
Yard Sale Contenarv Town- Box 448, Welloton, Oh
houae Ap&lt;il 3·4·6. Homo 46692 ,
Interior, wedding dreoe, ( ___.;___ _ _ _.....;_
dl8hea, bedapreda, curtains, G o v e r n m e n t J o b t .
mor! itlml '~ch _doy,
•15.000·850.000-yr. poe·
elbl-., "II occupations. HOY(
' Verd Solo &amp; Gilrogo ·Solo: to . find. C•ll ' 1·805·6B7· ·
•. "•
aide .by ollie, · April f,5 ,8 - 6000 E•,t :.
Upper,Rivar. Rd, St: Ri 7, In
f
tront of · Higley! a Sorber Woltrooo needed for evening
Shop. Call 814·448·0002.
shift ond cleaning lady. Beautiful 3 bdr. home buili
Apply at Crowt Steak Houae for you 116,900 &amp; up. See
our models , Call 1-81'43 Family Yard Sole Misc. In peraon.
Thursdoy, Aprl. 4th, 'I&gt; milo
888-7311 .
on G110rgea Cr;eok Road New and u1ed car aalesman
Commisaion and fringe be- lnvaliltment. 8 uf1it apartfrom Rt. 7.
nefit•. S.immona Olds - montcomplex, built 1974,4
Garage Sole Thuro, &amp; fri .. 2 Cad. - CF.ev. Roacoe apartment• furnished , only
mi. from HMC Rt.IIIO. Burdette. 9 to , 4. Phone 1% vace,cy, resident manager, e1 ,440 monthly in·
Garden toola, children• clo- 614-992 -6814 .
thing, mise .
come. fJenters pay all utlliFor general office work. tieo. Call 614-692 - 1189
3 Family Porch Sale Sat'Ur· Muat operate. betiC office dovs or 61 4-6~4- 2874 oftor
day April 8th at 826 Founh machines. Wrjte boJC 7298 6 . .
Avo. From 9:00AM to In care of THe Dolly Sentinel, -~-------111 Court St. ; Pomeroy,
3:00PM.
Ohio 45769.
Porch Sale Wed thru Fri.,
9-6. 2 m1 . Eut of Ponor on JOIN THE ' ARMY NAITO·
654 . Color TV, ping pong NAL GUARD . GOOD PAY.
tobla. diohwuhar, bod, GOOD BENIFITS . EDUCA·
·T IONAL ASSISTANCE. 'Cell
clothing.
. 304·676·3950 or 1-800Gorage Sale Apr. 4,6,8. 642·3519.
Debby Dr .. McGuire Subdi·
vlalon . Viotou &amp; artlfiCal
flowera. lampa. mirror,
dinette aet, bookcaaa. Workman realdence.

~

p.-.

&amp; Commsrcial

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Bodo. Iron.
wood, cupboarda. chairs.
cheatt. baakets, dlahet,
atone jere, antique•. gold
and ·allver, Wrlte-M.D.
Miller, Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio
411769 or coli 111 4-992·
7760 .

Daily Sentinei-Page-17

----:-:----:--31 Home• for Sale

Bueinen
Oppottuflity

Loet famste Norwegian- Elk
Hound. •liver with black
earo . Reword. Colt 614843-5127. Stiwersville area.

'

r.....,
.,,.,..... ,...
WsiR••I, I ,.,...s

WIRING NEEDS

l'DST: AKC Reg. Cocker
Sponitl on Roccon Rd. Colt
614-446-1201.

Goroga Bole: Rustic HHio,
Syroc!Jse 111 Jeanie Connolly
reltklence. Men'e. women'•
3 ~n1_1ouncement1
end chlldren'o clothln11. 311
mm. oemetl Hke new. Aoom
' dlvldilr bar, misc. homo.
SWEEPER ond -lng me- April 3rct 'nd 4th. 10:00·
chino rapalt, pane. ond ~:00.
ouppllea.
PloiJ up ond
dollvsry, Dtvlt Vocuum
Cleoner. one holf mile up
Georgeo Cllllt Rd .
Coli
&amp; Vicinity
814·4411·0284.
'

...., S (lolll.·S ,..,,

FOR All YOUft

Lost and Found

Uoed mobile hoinoo. 10'&amp;.&amp;
12's. 14' wide. Coli 1114·
446-0t76, aik for John .

Buying dliiY gold, oilvor
colna. ring a. jewelry. aterling
ware, old coins, large currency. J op prices. Ed. Bur·
kett Berber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Mlddlfport, Oh. 614·!192·
3476 .
•

011111 111111 I'IIWIII S

PAUL E. SHOCm, D.V.M.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Oak HiU Road
OH. 45743

Lolli Bottom;

,,..,_ l'alo lldgo.

TOWN &amp; COUNIRY
·VmiiNAIY
CUNIC .

3-24-tfc

I

n GrllfUIIIion
Stot'-y, .....tic

(llmea·

10.8-tlc

Al•o Tre•••lulotl
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

Calh l

PWS: Office S..,litt I
furllitvre, Wfllollng

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

FILL DIRT

AUTO &amp; TRUCf
. . REPAIR

992-5875
742-,31

Fll All YHt ,1111111 Nllil

4-1·1 mo. pd.

Authorized John Deere
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farnr Equipment
Dealer

Residsntial

THE QUAUTY
PIINT SHOP

MEIGS
EXCAVADNG
COMPANY

'SIIIot CltJze111
PH. 992-3549

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIQ

6

We pay c11h for late model
clean u·sed clr1.
Jim Mink Chev~ Oids Inc.
BMI Gone Johnoon
·
814-448 ·3672

R·II·O~:

1

Meigs County-Nat
915-4452
Athens Co~~tty-Do119
695-1010

Happy Ad1

&amp; Vicinity

"FroeLE~~ri;•·:

Painti'ng· • Cci r.piritrr
. • Wallpqprillg_
ll~fllli I. IIIII,, .

OPEN EACH

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215

GAS LINES
WATE,R LINES
SEWtR LINES
ELECTRIC LINES

"W• Rt11 F, 1.m"

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Aemodellntt
Roofing of oil Tvpao
. Workod in
20

·RE,.,QDELING.-~

&gt;

1-13·tfc

(Free Eotlmotoo)

Phone 742·3171

CALL
446·4522

VINYL &amp; ALU.NUM

992-3410

- ptumbtng end etectrlcel
WOrk

·•·
Meias

INDIYIOUAL IETIHMENT
ACCOUNT

Wiring

-.ConCmt~ work

ft1z GKrE
~

.DITCHING
SERVICE

EUCiENI LONG

IRA

Pomeroy, OH. 45169
Fo1 Fast11 Smlce
(all 614-992-6737

Factory Cholte
Gauge Shotgun•

CARPENTER
SERVICE

II"

0""1 " • · Thun., Fri.
&amp; lat.-10 Ia 6
&lt;lell4 Moo. &amp; r....
3/Z0/1 1110.

NEW CAR&amp;·
TRUCK LEASIN~
Box. 32.§

YOU

.

RENT A CAR

BLACKSTON

- Addona •nd r•modellng
- Roofing 1nd gutter work

·.Va.wt•

c.., ' Ill T• S.Rw•

IO".S /a

Homes Byilt
"Free Estimates"

12

h1•n•l•

11

New

$6,000 00.

POICEWN . .D IELLS
Olhtr Nfct he ..
Pri,..

Bob lobie
1-614-992·7191
Jim loach

PH.

· BISSELL
SIDING CO •

8-13 tin

$7900 00
free Solar lki'*ot With P..l

"FREE ~e,riu&amp;TI:C&gt;"

· •VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
· *BLOWN IN
INSULATION

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

·

lll lllSS.....$1 .00 OFF

6

o Buy

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Uni ... 111• (net .....lid
Gr1" Arr. . .ftllfttt

Free to good home, 6
lleoutlful pupplea, 'I&gt; Dobe.rbman, YJ S.mova . 304·
175-4216 . .

anted

licensed Clinical Audiologist

...
JO'S. umE RED IARN

M•l• dach1und. Approx. 2
yro. old. Housebroken. Good
with children. Coll81 4·992·
5349.

9~ 13-tln

3·11·1 ....

'
*16x32
IUICH SPICIAl *
In-ground Pool

•New Roofing

PAITS

3-7-1 mo

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

675-1388

•Insulation
•Storm-Doors
•Storm Wlnctows
•Replacement WindoWs

&gt; ........

GAS PIPE
WATER PIPE
GAS REGULATORS
OTHER SUPPLIES

2101 Jellorooo A•oouo
Pt. Ploaoanf,
25550

VINYl &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

73·10 (lll•y lr.
7J·19 rotd Tr.
•
''"'
G!ll.............
sao
• GtHin ...........................•co
7•·10 &lt;lll•r· Tr.
10·14 fer~ Tr.
,
Tall Galtl ................,.. $70
fonclero .........................l90
73-10 (ht¥y. Tr.
Ienger I lr011&lt;a fencloro
Coutlt SU,.rts ..........•65
I Grilh
, Now IHMI IIIH Avto Glau-loto Moolol Parll

LONG IOnOM, OH.

POOLS PLUS
wv

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

ow.,. ---..........~.$70

7S·I4 ford Tr.
·
(IJro"" lu...,o ......... $70

PLASTICS

2/25/ 1 mo

54 Misc. Merchandise

Oh~

NOTICE 0~
APPUCATION FOR
MERGER OF BANKS
Farmera Interim Bank.
Pomeroy. Ohio 457691ntondo
to apply to the Fedarol R-IVe
Boord for permiuion to mo~ge
with The F11m1er11 Bonk and
5avlngo ComPiny of Pomeroy, 211 ' W. SIICOnd Stroot,
l'omtroy. Ohio 46769. The
App!icanta intanda to acquire
control of The F""""'" 81111k
and ' Sovlngo Compeny of
l'omtroy. The Fedenol Reaorva
collllderi a number of foctori
in dac:idlng Whethilr to approve
1hl application, including tho
ieCOrd of pllfOIIliiii'ICO of
ba!U in helping to mett local
credMneedo.
You invited to oubrnlt
com- in writing on dill
oppllc:otlon to the federal
n...., Bonk at C'-land,
Eost Sixth ond Superior '
AIIIIIUO, P. 0 . Box 6387,
C--=, Ohio 44101. The
com
period wltl not ilnd
...,_ Aprtl 19, 11188, end
mov be oomewhllt longer. The
Baird's ,..ocociurao tor Pftl·
CNiing protested applic:otlons
moy be found at 12 CFR
Port 282. Procedureo for pro:
oaulng PfOiwtold applicotion.
tlonemeybeloundot12CFR
~ 282.28. T o - i
r:tlfl'l Ill the

Pt!l*ty, OH.

fiGIIIINIS.....•l.OO Off

lena K. Nesselroad,
Clerk
(3)20, 27. (41 3, 3tc

customer.

SPAS

Ftndtn ...................... '110

71·79 ford Tr.
•
r.nctoro ........................•n
7J-79 ford Tr.
Doers ......................... '1 SO

G&amp;W

Public Notice

Robert E. Buck
P.robate Judge

it

.

.o..r. ... ha.. lo llock.
coons,_ td.

949-2969
or 949·2263 ,

lena K. Neualroad •
Clerk

*

ILA(IWOOD JIOME

NEW-REPAIR
(;utters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
· Painting
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

(31 20. 27, (41 3, 3tc

~"'""'""
of the estote of Eo~
W.
Riggs. deCiitolad, . IIIIo of
Route 1,
45741 .

the

:;:::=======~
W
T

Pon f!lt buli ond (IIOrt beagle.T
One mole end four -female 9
doe•- can 8 _
1 4-992-311611 .
,•

11-14 &lt;he•r• Tr.

a-..........,............... •us .

'l·IO (hewy. Tr.
~......................... '165
73·10 &lt;l••r Tr.

11..., ,,. - l o your own
H.t Sowiolto S,.. St.p- lor to , .

Howard L. Writesel
Roofing Co.

Socood Avon~ Midd~.
Meigs C~l)lli,...:,.O hlo was
appointed ~ecutrix of tt.,
estate of Paul Edgar Caot&lt;f,
deCeased, late of 530 Nonh
Second A_,uo, Middleport.
Ohio
Robert E Buck,
Probate Judge •

U-10 &lt;h"' Tr.
F. .s.........................•6$
73·10 (howr Tr.

E., ,.,....,, r.l•••t'- _,.. ,

675 - Pt. Pleasant
458 - Leon
576 ~ Apple Grove'
773 - Mason ·
882 - New Haven
8 95 -'-- Letart ·
937 - Buffalo

Public Notice

comments
contact Mr.

~-

Mason Co., WV
• Area C,ode 304

Up to 1 6 words , .. One day insertion .. ... ..... $3 .00
Up to 16 words .. , Three day insertion ....... $4.00
Up to 16 Words . : . Six day insertion .'......... $7.00
(Average 4 words per line)

Public Notice

RETI.REDf
' GO Bon do ......... ..3,000
Rev, Antic.
Notes .............. 9,739
TOTAL ........ .... .... ... 1 2, 739
OUTSTANDING
DEC. 31, 1984G 0 Bonds ...... ... 49.000
Rev. Antic .
·
Notea ................. 7,131
TOTAL. .. ........ . .. 66,131
Momorenda Data

Dec. 31, 19B4 ..... .... 247
Totals
Property Taxes ......... 16,845
State lovied Sharud
Toxoo, Etc ........... .30, 354

include discount

Gall ia CountY
Area Coda 614

Glveeway

-"':""-------~---.--------... 1 814·949-29119
or614· 986 l'
39111.

AFFOIDAILE • I'OITAiLE

following telephone exchanges ...

388-Vinton
2 46- Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dist.
643-Arabia Dist.
379 - Walnut

81 -Home Improvements
82-Piumbing &amp; Heating
83-Excavating
84·Eiectrical &amp; Refrigeretion
85-General Heuling
86-M H . Repair
87- Upholstery

Res for Encumb.,

Thesie cash roles

'.

Services

61·Farm Equipment
62-Wanted to Buy
53-Livestock
64-Hay &amp; Grain
66-Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Public Notice

., '

71 -Au,t os for Salq
'12· Trucks for Sale
73-Vans &amp; 4 WD
74-Motorcyclea
.75-Boats &amp; Motors
76-Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
77- Auto Repair
'
78-Camping Equipment

367-C~eshlre

Rental s

1 1 ·Help Wanted
1 2 -Situated Wanted
1 3 -lnsurance
1 4 -BusineS6 Tra1ning
1 5-Schools
16-Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17-Miscelleneous
1 8-Wanted To Do

;

21 - Business Opponunity
2 2· Money to Loan
23- Professio,n al Services

Classified pages cover the

21

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Friday n11Jht at
the Hertford Comlllunlty
Center. Truckloed• of new
mercllandise everv wao.k.
Conligmenta of new 6. -und
merchandl" alwaya welcomed. Richa rd Reynoldo,
AuctfonHr. Call ~04·2753069.
•

7 puppieo, raody to give
awoy In 4 wko. Mother lo
Bnnonv Spaniol. Fother lo
Border Coftlt. Will be •mod.
lila doe with wovy holr.

(6141 "2'·17:14

I ransportation

Merch111Hii se

4

:*BASEMENTS •SEPTIC SYSTEMS
*FOOTERS *GRADINq
•CONCRETE WORK

IUIDBICI PIIONI

Financial

8

Announcement•

TROMM EXCAVATI

16141 H!-6550

Annou nceme~t s

The

•
3

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

·' '

''

Ohio

House for ull or trade fM
form lend. 304-676 -3981 ,
Owner t rantferred. muat
aacrifice, &amp;llC cond. 3 bed·
room. fintshed - baaement.
8Yz per cent easumabl-.loan.
minimal closing coeu.
•9.600.00 down . Phone
304-675· 1652 or 875 1363.
6 room houae. 2 closed in
porc:t'Jea. in Point Pleilaant.
304-676-6468 .

Corile Tok~ A Look II See the
od In Sundoy popar ond
come ... how nice this
houoa Is Inside. l"or . . by
owner. BY•% aaaumable
loan. 3 btdroomo, 2 betho.
ftmlly room. Kltohen with
dllhwll-. r1r1ge, refrlg.
Utility room. Potio, 2 cor
oerogo; eU eltc., heot pump.
olr conditioning. Coli 7738842 or 773· 81127.

By owner 37 acres, 3 fni.
from H M C, on Kemper
Hollow Rd. 110.500 firm.
Call 614-446-7476 .

46 acres and bam 24X31 on

Bladen Mercerville Rd, tome
timber, moatley paature. 6
ft . Bruah Hog 8nd Cattle rack
for long bee! Ford Pickup.
·c;an 614·2!111-11094.
Well C•red for property~ in

Muon. Low upkeep . 304675-6743 .

Beeutiful Atte Lo1 home, 3
acrea. 2 mi from Pt. PleaNnt
on Jericho Rd. 3 bedrooma,
1 bath, lull boooment,
wooden deck, Blh pet . IISU ·
mable toen. •&amp;4.000 304·
676· 7733 .
1--~-,.---.....:-SAVE THOUSANDS BUY
FROM OWNER Bestdeol in
town on thia recently remodeled home. E•tr• large
room_s, carpeted through·
out. lot• ~f atorage room,
plus1f2 b11aement, large front
porch and carport 1ituated
on end lot in quiet neighbor·
hood, priced in upper30'aor
take over poymont of s 227
with' down payment negoti·
able. 304 -675-8686.

4% acre a land on Bud
Chattin Rd. $5,000 304·
876-4464

6 acres of land, public wattr
and electric. 304- 6711' ·
2449.

Re ntals
41

Houses for Rent

House for rent. Cell 304·
676-7263 676 -5 104 o;
676 -6386 .

3 rooma with private beth ~
ref. Requested Call 614446 -2215 .
4 rooms in Gallipolia. $150
S76 dop
9364.

Mobile Home•
for Sale

ti•••

fl••

ace•••

100 acrel" far,tn land. priced
for quick ule."Call614 -38881 39
""

7 acre, brick houoe, 3 bdr,,
lg. LR, lg. kitchen. built In
oven . rohge top, new rafrig ..
cabinet opeca. 1 'I&gt;
1 u~~~~- 'I&gt; bo ..mont. Locoted
Cr..k Diet . 160.000.
1614-367-7238 .
('- - - - - - - - - Selling of Eotato. (1 I 1.t7
ac:ret. one hou.e, 3 barns,
one prage • .56 acret botto1"!~
land, relt In pelture
timber plus tobac:co
1110,000. (21 1
ocreo
paa~~re and woodland
123,000. J3) 28 ocree will
..11 with 147 ocraa or With
1 OOYt at extra coat. All acrea
lilted are mora or
property locatad in Oolllo
County. Walnut Townohip.
Contoct John Owena, 614·
379· 2678," No Sundoy cello
please.

oov.

.;,le

Gollia County~ land for '
on Raccoon Creek. near
State Rt. 7 , 114 m1le
to
Ohio River, approll . ~00
feet of water frontage , creek
can ac:comadate larger pleature boata Owner Meking
privete sale to inveators or
dovelopero. Colll6141 4482974 or 446-0766.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 814-4417274 .
12x60 Sahult 1 Ox22 ft.
poreh, large level lot. Crown
City, price nog.. help fl.
nonce Collll14·2116 · 1444.
1 978 Norrlo two bedroom
total electric on nice lot wl!h
!ergo two dar goroge, CoJI
61 4·256-11460 .
1973 Boron 12x8&amp; 2 bdr ..
central elr, underpinned,
awning, exc. cond. . on
ranted tot In town. Coli
814-446-81177 or814·441·
291l5 ofter 11:00

Call 614-2116 :

2 bdr. unfurniahed hou11
with goroge . Call 614-448 ' 9686
-In lengaville. 6 toom hou•
with beth. Gerden apace .
e200.00 per month pluo '
dtpoait. Reterancea re ~uirod. -Call 614· 9112 · 7286
Small 4 room and tilth
house in Middlopon. C.rpeted, atove and retriger1tor
provided . Att1ched gar•1•
GrNt for 11ngle or workihg
coupte. , s~rv: no pets :or
children. t1 85. month pluo
aecurity deposit. Phohe
614·992-6292 after e :ot
weekend.
Two bedroom homo on Orilo
Street, • 1 50.00 per month
pluil dopooit, ooll ofter 11 :00
PM 304-175-5711 .
,
2 bodroom houoe, 14
Burden•. • ·1111. month plj.o
utllltltl. 304-178-4100, . 9
a.m. to·4:00 p .m.
~

r ••
J'

•

'

"
'

�-

'

.. ..' .

'

I

.

18-The
42 Moblle~.Home•
...,,
for Ment

64

..

.'

~--;..______:_~r:.

2 bdr. mobile home R l R
Mobile Home Pork, Buleville
Rd. GoUpolio, Oh. Coi ~ B,14·
4411 -0527 or 814-448 ·1283.
FurniShed, air cond .• C;b...

no city taMea, beautiful river-

view. Kaneuga . FOet'er'a Mo-

bile Homo Pork. 81 4 -448·
1802.

'--~~~-Sret~o~ ·

c:.••u•"'' ' "'"'""''¥1\f•u'-

I')&lt;

w.,. .... ,~••••w • •"

•••

"We're either . understaffed

or ovetdesked.''

home . ..Include• w•aher-

54

51

Household Good•

In SvrecuM, two bedroom
Baiter, no petl, 1 child.
t176. month . Coil 814992-3945. Bill Knopp.
Tral~r for
furnla~od .

ie.nt. 2 bedrooma,
Cloll

8368.

814-992.

3 bedrooin trailer for rent
t125 . 00 · month end
t100.00 dopoai1 . Call 814·
992-2777. -

THree bedroom trliilerCroe.k Rood, t1 76 .00
month, 304-875-1208 .

Apertmeot
for Rent

Miac. Marchandile

.FO, .u le prom draa.• alz• 15.
plat and 111un1loto, PilCh
with white loco. ·304-67521iB6.

C•mln~

In Middleport, 2 bedroom
partiaUy furnished mobile
dryer. t175.00 per month.
Dopoiit required . 'Good location . Coil 81o4-992-7114
or 81 4-992'-11800.

~

f

.~

•

•,

'

·~

. ...·..
.-· ~

.,

''

81

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br ._.rry Wright
Fa.rm Equipment' .

0'

•

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE
82 Olivo St .. Gollipolla. Now
• Ulld wood-coal ..aves, 6
pc wood LR auite t399.
bunk blda •199, ontron
recliner's 899, new &amp; uud
bedroom euitel, range1,
wrlnge~ weahera, &amp; ahoes.
New livingroom aultei
t1 99-1&amp;99·. lan\pa, alao
buying cool llo wood otovea.
Collll14-4411-3159.- •
· LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chlir, rocker, ottomen; 3 t•blea, (axtr• heavy),
t885, Sofu · end choira
priced irorri t286. to t896.
Tablet, t50 ond up to t1 26.
Hldo·a-beda. U90. and up
to t550 .. oofo blda t145.
Roclinoro, f225: to f375 ..
Lampo from UB. to t1 25.
· . dlnottoa from $109 .. to
"1 pc.· t1 89 end up.
toblo with alx cholra
to 174~. Deak t1 10
'
f226. Hu1Ch81, t650.
bed complete with
mottrellla, f275. ond up to
t395.; Baby beda, t110.
Mattre.... or boJI aprings,
full ortwtn, t58 ., firm, tll8.
ond 178. Quoen aota. t226.
4· dr. cheoto, . .9 . 5 dr.
chot1a. 158. Bod fromea. •
UO.ond t25., 10 gun. G~n
cobinota. 13150. Goo or
oloctrlc rongoo t376. Baby
mottroaooa. t26 llo t35, ,bod
fromoa t20, t25, l UO,
king tromo t50. Good aelec'tlon of bedroom suites,
rockers, metal cabinets,
heldboorda f38 llo up to

Misc. Merchandise

Spring .Spocloi-Potrlot utility
b,u lldings on di1pley at two
convenient locations. B a S
Produce, Vlond St. Pt. Plao aant; arid French City Mobile
Homea Galllpolla. 9 X 12
1595. oloo 10x18 1995.
Dellvlf'ld end Ht up on your
lot.

· block, il!

alzea,

Television ·
Viewing
.

Spring Special : 24'x30'x8 '
with 11'x7' gorogo door l
oervlco door , t3 , 888
.,.ctod. Iron Hor11 Bldga.
814-332-9745 coiiOC1 .

building materlala. Galllpolla
Block Co .. 1 23'12 Pine St ..
Galll~olla. Ohio 45831 . Coil
81'4-"146-2783.

.

Block, bricli,' mortar and
m81onry auppliaa. Mouritain
State , Block, Rt. 33, New
Hoven, W. Vo. 304-882·
2222.
Pets for Sale

56

----''--'-----HILlCREST KENNELS
Boarding all broodi. Heotod
indoor-outdoor f•cllitlaa .
AKC . Doberman pupplea:
S1ud Service. Call8 1 &gt;4· 448·
7795.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
814-387-7220.

Briarpatch Kennels Profet·
81 bed for Ford PU good aional All-breed grooming.
cond .. half horoe, n•w My- lndoor~outi:loor boarding faers aubmersable pump mo· cfli.ties. English COcker Spator. 72-!ord PU gopd drive niol puppioo. Call 8 14-388·
1ruck. Bidwell Mill, 814· .9790.
388-9888.
Dragonwynd Cattery Kan Woodburnlng furnance like nel. CFA Himalayan. Poralon
new. capable of heating and Slamen kittens. AKC
2000 aq.ft. Coil 814 -448- Chow ·puppioo. Call 614·
4113.
.
448-3844 altO. 7PM .

4 pc·. livingroom suite, good
cond., royal blue. loko fur,
noo. Cali&amp;14-441-7821.
Mon .-Wod .. of1er 4:30.

1 male and 1 female Cock·l ·
tiel. large cage. nesting box.

130 Fer""JI with ' cultlva·
toro. oxc. con~ . Coli 614448-783B after 5PM .
CROSS llo SONS
U.S. 36 Welt, Jockaon,
Ohio. 814-288-8451 .
Mealey Ferguson, New ·
Holland. Buoh Hog Salet 1!,
Sorvlca .· Over 40 uoed
tractors to chooae fr:om • ·
complete line of new 8t
u•d equipment. Lllrgelt
aotaction. ln S.E. Ohio. ·
'72 CJ 6 jeop •1 ,600. 72
Inter 24'' hoy truck *2,600.
'77 %' 4 whoiel drive Chow
11 ,600 . (4) 28 ft plpo
.tobacco troltoro fiOO. eoch.
7 ft woodo · Buth Hog
t1 ,400. 7 ft ln1 mower
noo. 79 ft '.4 4 wheel drive
Chev 14.600. Camper top
UOO. 8 hp Troy Bllt •1.000.
Morgen's Woodlawn Farm.
Rt. 35, Plln.y, 'fl. Vo. 304676-1286 or 304- 7382342.
D 19 Allia Cholmara, 2 farm
tralioro, 304-B96-344 1.
1 972 Gravely walk behind
tractor, 2 sp. axle, 30 In
mower, steeing sulky •eoo.
304 · 676-7733 Clr 87561122.

62

Wanted to ' Buy

fBO . Coil 814-388-9783.

Coleco Orginol Cabbage
Po1ch dolla l Promleoo. Coil
before 2PM. 814 · 448·
3387.

81

Home
lmpr,)vemel\ta

•

I

THERE'S A BIG
OIL COMPANY HER&amp;.
MUST BE SOME;
.108!7 THERE,

montt, Siding Vlnylllo oluml·
num tiding, overhang rutter
llo roofing. Free oatlmo1oa.
·Coll81o4•387-7488 .
----,----,-----;-:·leD llo ' M ControC1ora.' Vinyl
end aluminum aiding •
raplaceme~t window• ·
r-------------------~------------------~ln•ulotlng -r ooflng·
remodeling , end new
constructlon~vuttere. C•ll
Vanilla 4 W.O.
71
Autos for Sllle: 73
304•773-8131 .
'
1979
CJ-5,
Goldin
Eogla,
IB Plymouth Fury Ill, 58
Spring apeclol: Gene' 1 dllp
Buick opeclol, 73 Dodge PS. PB. Ioiii( mileage, good tteam· cerpet cleaning.
l'lckup. Call814-448-3969. cond, t4,500. Call 614- ·Scotch guard. fieo uti·
448-9700 ,
motoa: Coil 814-992-11309
1 979 Chovetta, 4 dr ,, outo
or 814-742·221 1 .
trans. , AM~FM , new·. itrea. ·
good engine, •1 .760 . Coli 1984 Dodge Caravan. J l L lnaulotlon. Vinyl
loaded . Call 814 -949 - aiding, roofing. replacement
814-448-4117.
2273.
window•. atorm .wlndowa.
'
atore doora. CoU 814-9921983 Plymouth Colt. 4 opd .. 1978 F100 Ford von cor- 2772.
.
AM-FM tope, aunroof, petad throughout, out. pa,
14.298. John'a Auto Soleo. 3M- Wlndoor engine. 304· RON'S Televlalon 8orvlco .
Bulavtlle Dr. Galllpollo. Coli · 87'5-3978 .
Spociollzlng tn Zenith and
81 4-448-4 782.
Motorole, Ou.a~ar, · llld
1980 Joop Col&amp;. 8 cyl. 4 houil clllo. Coli 304-1781983 Plymouth Relio~t 4 tpeld• • very good cond.
dr.. auto., 51.000 milea. , 304 -876 -2224 or 1175- · 2398 or 1114-448·2414.
1982 Dodge 4~0 auto, 5470.
Fetty Tr11 Trimming, o1Ump
38,000 mlloa, Coil 814·
removal . Coli 304-1175379-2728 . j .
1331.
Mlitorcycles
76 VW Beetle axe . cond.,
RINGLES :$ SERVICE. ••·
.11.200. Call 6·14-448·
periilncad urpenter, etectrl0888.
1980 Hondo CR 260R. vary ciln, mi~n, painter, roof·
83 Plymouth Reliant. 2 dr., good cond. Cell 81 4-4411· lng (in·c luding hot tar
9710,
opplloe11on) 304-875-2088 ,,
:t&amp;dg~de~~~~·-:, .~~~~: 84 Honda Big Red, 8 mo.. lor-875-7388.
--------1604.
ol~ . Coil 814-388-9991. or
Rotary or cable tool drHIIng.
Moat waUl completed ume
1978 Thunderbird. air. riew 614-388-8823.
doy. Pump uleo ond oorvl·
rodlola. Coll814-448-0613.
1981 H.ondo 750 cuotom, cea. 304-895-3802.
'·
2.
700
mi
..
podded
oiaay
bor,
1974 Plymouth Fury 3 with
4 979 400 Chryaler angina, exc. cond . Coli 814-367juot put ln. Coil .8 14-245- 0394.
&amp;844.
'

:QORN LOSER

~~~~ 60ES quo""~""-r":-~--.
'511ll-ll&lt;l flit:&gt;

61-Ek.HED IIAif~., 'IIROlh~
EO.'IN : 100 M.UC11 J:'(EO

. $1-iAroW,

Ul

·m

LI!GT (/111/'ICC.
lf6P! COMe

Ot/T... /lOW!

NO. K
THE
A5P, HE MAY HAVE
5Ef GOME Tlf/1P5
FOFI UG •.

long· viSit . ·

Science (CC) Tonight's
program features tMe FAA 's
atlempts at testing ne w airli ner safety measures and

ALLEYOOP
PREPII.RE 10 MEET '&lt;OUR MAKER,
'I'OU CLODS! YOUR LWI$ HAVE
RUN 'THEIR COURSE!

!

sleep

.

i\LLli}Y
...
.

.•

~

Rente! opoce lor trove! trlil· ·
era. com,.,., fold upo. Wo - 1 - -- - - - - - - - ter. _ . . . oloctric coblo
hook upo. Cell 304· 773· Knauff Flnowood ipllt· 95%
1111 ~ori:OO p.m.
hordwoodo. You pick up or
d&lt;lllwr. HEAP vendor.
Tr1ller Iota for rent, ~., . 1114-258-8245.
ond wetor fumlohed, wttl
lltlo omoll child, 304· Umeatone. Bend. Grovel.
8711-1071 .
Pick up 11 ·Ricl!orda l Son.
Cot1814-o448-778&amp;.

41 Wanted

to !'•nt .

2-3 bdr. houM or lipt, In o•
noor Golllpolla with garoga.
Cotl 114·3117·0324' after
I PM ;
Rottrod couple would tlko to
ront 2 bedroom houM Under
UOO. Wltllln wllktng dll·
tonco of fl'oodland. ;404·
875-4295.

SP~CIAL

cut aloba •I PU
Joodo delivered In dump
trUck t100,or21oedat180.
You- pickup t1'5 . Coil 814·
241-&amp;804.
.

•~

Cilot'!m droperlea. 1 Inch
venetian bllnde , .v ertlcllt
blh•do. Roman woven wood
ohadn. lnatallod ot dlacount
prlceo. Freo1111mo1oa. P. A.
8ay... 304-458· 1078.

..,....,

GOHN.

1974 Chevy Luv, now tlroa, 78
Camping
runo good, t800. Celllftor
EquiPiJ;Uint
8PM,II14·251-8251 .
1 --~---~-1983 4x8 S-10. Coli 114448-1347.

1982 C-10 Chivy o.rto. PS.
PI, AC, tilt whool, AM-FM,
radto, ti.OOO. Coli 111 4·
24,·8870:

Oood 011od A tori, 12 gomea
and wooden Clibinota, 1110.
Phone 304-178-10&lt;13. ·

1.977 Trovll TroY.,, 28 ft.
olr, electric and goa, holt.
Awning.. good Condition,
304-876-4085.

u.ooo.

7~ Motor• Homee
lla Campara

·1973 GMC 2'h 1on, STEL·
UFTm buokot truck, with' 1172 15' t - I l troller. Coli
enoro1or, 14,000. Clol 814-381-988.9 .
14·258·11034 ofllr IIPM.
1972 MidiiOIImper,olr, 19
1811 1'h ton Ford. 14ft. flat ft., oxc. cond. Cell814-448bad 5x2 uonomloolon. 0513 .
1000x20 tlreo. t9&amp;0 . 1178
lntornotlonol 3 14 ton pick- 3llx8 ..oollont condition,
up, a~to, Pl. PB. flat bod, good for 1 penon or C8mpruno good...915. Colll14= lng. 12271. Cell I 14-181985-44114 • .
44114.
•

Loculi poato, 7 ft .,. 304875· 2452:

l

C~bbllge

Patch Kilozu. nice
Eo11er gifta. t40. for one,
171 for both. 304·882·
2334 ;

Pool People Special:
40% off gomoa llo pool
loun.... 31% off 1111 klta,

brulhn. neta. vee hoee. VIC

1813 Ford liang•. .long
bid. 1~.000 m!lao,l. . n-.
304-11711-8111 lfier l :oct.

-do. thero-o. Middleport II 14-982-1724 or Golll-

pollo 814-441-30111 .

.'
.. .

=·. ·

""-"*

~
0..,

G7o8111p.olllo . «;oil 81 4 ·448- 1-;::;:::=:;:::=:;:===
4
2.
1,

'.

'81 TarryTourual2 fttrovel
tralllr. :104-171·2111 Of
1111-3112...

Ken' a W_otor Sorvicl. Walla,
ciatorna, poola filled. Phon•
814-387·0823 or 814' 3877741 night or dly.

i'
.-·'

.·

Nowember. 1979) . (60 niin:l
. Cll Ill . !f21· Dynasty (CC)
.. · Kr.y ~t le accOmpa nies Daniel

Idon't qet
to carry

trtP

(60 m!n .l
(J) (fQI MOVIE: 'Dead
.Men Don 't Wear Plaid '
ClJ Iii) Compleat Gilben
and Sullivan 'Rud(ligore.'
Vincent Price and Keith

anything!

lage. (2 hrs .l

10':00 .(!) PKA
Karate

I XIJ(IJI
(An swers tomorrow)

Yesterday 's

I

Jumbles: AGLOW

r Answer:

DIRTY

FLlMS't'

COUGAR .

What the percussion player enloyed With hiS

dinner- DRUM "ROLLS"

James Jacoby

-

If one is wrong,
the other isn't

NORTH
f-3 ·85
+KJ
98 54
tA 98754
+KJ
WEST
EAST
+A 75 2
• Q 10 4 3
9 6
9KJ
t K Q 10 6 3
tJ
+ Q 10 5
+ A97632
SOUTH
• 9 86
9' AQI09732

.

By James Jacoby
'
L et 's talk · ab&lt;lut a conservative
bridge game . Today's auction actually started with lhree passes . We
might have to wait until t he next century to lind a cast of characters that
would pass on those cards in the first
three positions. But that is what
happened.
.
.
&lt;... North did open in fourth seat And 1
+ 81
previously timid South bid four
Vulnerable:
East-West
hearts. That is not a bad contract He
Dealer:
East
rieed~ .to find some cards right, or
guess th em right.
w... NOrth E.ast
Declarer won the opening lead with
Pass
Pass
Pass
dummy's ace. The favorable location
Pass
Pass
of the K-~. of hearts enabled South to
draw trump in two leads. ·Now what?
It appears that there are some
Opening l ead: tK
guesses to be made in the black suits ..
I · lind this deal interesting ~ause 1...-~----------.....J
there is no way that a wide-awake ./
declarer should go set , no matter,....
what his ,guess is on the high-card
position of the first black suit he
attacks. He. needs to !'lake just two
assumptions: East would have opened now declarer knows tbat the club ace
the bidding with two aces in· addition · is with East; and_he will hope· that
to the heart K-J; and We$! would also East ·does not bave 'the club 9ueen.
have opened with"two aces i'n addition Suppose · IQStead that South · plays a
to the diamond K-Q. • .' .,, .· · .. .
.club·to,dummy's kjngdoslng to' East'!
· Sup,JI&lt;!Sf·_declarer lea~s a spa~e to ·ace: Now he is certain that J;:ast can.' tc·.
· dummy's jack, losing to East's queen . hold the spade ace, and South -will .
Back comes a spade to West 's ace. but play the spades correctly.

·~

Full

·
Cc)ntaci

·

61~:~tM"tJtW'

@ Cancer Today
CIJ &amp;l (12) Arthur Hailey's
Hotel (CC) A woman lea:ns
Jhat bEtauty is only skin deep
aft er s he has had a facelift .
(60 min.)

.·

WINNIE

f.il

by

JOSEPH
5 "The Third
Man -"
a Church
&amp;Grint ·
voices
7 Enjoyed
11 Large fann a Venerable
1Z City near
9 Badly

Leipzig

:oo rn oo m

BAR~EY

drome '

12:30

0 Ill CD

late Night with

David Letterman

(]) love That Bob
(!) Mazda Sportslook
(]) St. · Jude: Please Help

Me live

,.

U (I) MOVIE: 'If Things
Wire Dlfferen1'

Ill (j}) News

·1 :00. (I) I Married Joan

..

"

:' ···... .':::'::."

:

._; ·:t :)g~w

~=-~~~~------••
87 Uphol1tery

1 :30

PEANUTS

TRISTAT.E
UPHOl8TI!IIY IHOP
1 1U ~ : A,.., Oelilpollo. · •
1114-4411,7833or814-448· , .
.1833.
.

ALL MY LIFE l WANTED

TO BE AN ,ONLY C~ILD ...
I AA0 A 600D THINS

.

60!N6 'TIL VOU

R • M Fumltura Monufoc· ·
1uitna: 8t. lit. 7. er-n • •
City, · Oh. can 814-2118- :
1470, caH Eve.·· 814-441· •
34311 . Old •
now •

WilY ARE 'lOll TELLIN6

1 :45

ME ALL. THIS?

CAME ..

(MAXI MOVIE: 'S1Bcy's
Knights'
(]) Dobie Gillis
(!) Fit nell Magazine Tom
and Nancy Seaver.
·
(I) Nowa/Sign Off
IHBOl Cul1ure Club In
Concert One of the most
colorful hitmakers in music
today pertorms at the Ham-

Cil Bochelor Father

·
(!) lntkl!t· tho PGA Tour
Cil MOI11E: 'Stege Fright'
® CBS Newa Nlgtriwatch
S MOVIE : 'T'- C:hargo of
the Ught Brigade'
2 :30 (]) Blontlle

,I
I.

II

a French city
MExternal

1f Transmit

17 Amel".
patriot •
18 Brundage U:Eaclude
19 Contribute n Earthly ·
ze o:t. .
• Ruth's
book
sultanate • Egg drink
Z1 Opera's 33 Literary • Pigeon pea
Rankin
musketeer 0 -haw
2% Exhibit 35
u Furrow

,,
'

1..-t-t-t-ift

15 Concur
II Violinist
Isaac

DOWN
IBiueoore

z Kent's
colleague

3 Price paid
t I (Ger.)

DAD..VCRYPI'OQVOO'ES- Here'1llow 10 work It:
•.

AXYDLBAAXR
liLONGFELLOW

...

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the tWo O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fOI'Illlltlon of the word&lt;; are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYP'I'OQUOl'E

.JMPFFYEU , WT

PMM

UXI'\
T F

QXR'F

EWKBF, WJ '

¥H Y

WRBPMY .~

PQMPW

R T X, R

lll"le: A HORSE: DANQEROUS AT
BOTii ENDS ANO iJNOOMFORTABLE II( THE MID-

YNierdly'e.Cr)pll

DLE. - 1M{ FI.EMING
)

~

.'

• &gt;

'4-3

'

'·

mersmith Odeon in London .

2 :00

.......,_~....__ , , .

..

charge (si.)
15 -whiz!
1&amp; Sea (Fr.)
17 Brass
bullding
zz Portico
25 Come
up with
~ - up
(overact)
21 Make
merry
21 ThJnks
31 Whirl
S2 Channel
· 34 Traitor '
35 Cole of
song
38Ruling

Ill (j}) CNN Headline News
g Wild,· Wild Weot

.

10 Caddoan
Indian

13 Havlilg

ffi Fiohin' Hota
• ffi Cancer Today

..

Umoatone, gravel, aend; fill : •
dirt and cool delivered, 304-' ·
878 -4412 '
,.

THO~AS

ACROSS
1 Brlid

~oap

. (H90l MOVIE: ' Gorky Pari!'
(MAX) Kool &amp; the Gang in
Concert
10:30 li)INN News ·
11
o
o Cil (10) em
. Ul (1jl News
(I) Bill Cosby Show
ffi MOVIE : 'One Million
Years S.C.'
Cll Monty Python
fll Benny Hill Show
IMAX) MOVIE: ' Rollover'
11 :30 0 Ill CD Tonight Show
(I) Best of Groucho
(!) SportsCenter . .
Cil WKRP in Cincinnati
0 (]) Magnum, P.1.
I]) latenight America
(iii) Taxj
·
(t1l lnte~natlonal Edition
Ql
[12)
ABC
News
Nlghtline
f.il Twilight Zone
1 2 ;00 (J) Bums &amp; Allen
(!) Sports Focus - Julius
Erving
, (]) ABC News r.jightline
(1'01 MOVIE: 'Hollywood or
Bust'
Ul (t2l Eye on Hollywood
f.il Gunsmoke
·
12 :1 5lHBDI MOVIE : ' Video-

;

___

rI I. I

Mitchell star in thi s parody
set in a Cornish fishing vil-

Wo'll ·do ltl Coli 1114·286- •·
82&amp;1 lftor 6:00PM..

Uplloat~ .

'

0

Do you n..cl eomathing
· moved or hauled eway?'

_;_

experi -

- ..... - on -his
to New- vork to
mee;t a vola1i!e Sammy Jo.

1:::::::::::::::::Jt::::::::::::::::~
They'll Do It Eve·ry Time
ll&amp;liLEP GE7S A BIG I"QQ.JTICA/. JOB W/1'HOIIT
ANSWE/t/NG A QvliiST/01!1 .. ••
·

deprivation

menls. (SO min .)
f1l MOVIE: 'Pe1er and
Paul' PART I
IHBO)
MOVIE:
'The
Earthling '
(MAX) MOVIE: ' Against All
'Odds' ICC)
11:30 0 Cll ClOl E/R
9:00 0 Ill CD I\IIOVIE: ' A .D.'
(]) Dove Alll(ards
(!) Super Bouts of the 70's·
SUgar Ray l e_onard vs..
Wi,tred Benitez (Las Vegas,

a••

Spoed Ounn wringer type
waohor, good cond. f75. or
boot offor. 304-773-5730.

·

Cll (jj) Discover: Wortd of

GASOLIN~

Answ~rhere.-IT'S

En1ertainmlmt ~

W

Tonight
fll WKRP in Cincinnati
(HBOI Comipg Attractions
B:OO 0 Ill
Highway ·1o ..
Heaven (CCI .jjlnathan and
Mark help out a group of lost
souls whose lives consist
sole)y of gambling and alcohc.l. (R) (60 min .)
·
(I) Flipper
(!) Auto Racing '85: Cart
Phoenix 1 50 from Phoenix. A'Z
Ill MOVIE: 'Wi11chestar
73'
•
Clllll W Fall Guy ICC)
OCil ® Charles in Charge
GrampS arrives 'fo r what
could possibly tl_trn into a

ANNIE

..

.

'

en .

ARriFiGIAL

.MILs, CHEAP ':ID!:?$.

.

7""

..

e,

s.

2 antique wooden w-von
whoelo, oloo 11r corn. t2 .50
per bu. Ca11814-448-2583 .

·----·--

Hole
(5) Beverty Hillbillies
Cll Dr. Who
Gll 3-2· t . Con1ec1 ICC)
Ill Dlff' rent Strokes
6:30 U (]) (I) NBC Newa
(]) Rifleman
(J) l'l!ozda .Sportslook '
(5) Gomer Pyla
Cll ~ ABC Newo (CCI
0 (I) ®I CBS News
Cll Nightly Buojnoss
Report
Gll Body Electric
,
fll One Dey ot a Time
7 :00 II Ill PM -Magazine
(])
Chuck
Connor's
Wea1orn Theater
(!) SporttConter .
Ill Sanford and Son
· (I) Enterteinmen1 Tonight
(I) Wheel of Fortune
0 (I) Wheel of Fortuna
Cll Gll MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@ News
Ul
New Name That .
Tune
fJ) Jefferson•
7 :30 0 Ill Tic Toe Dough
(I) Cioco Kid
(!) lnoide the PGA Tour
Ill AI( In 1he Family ,
(I) 0 ([) Family Feud
.ffi Jeoperdy
00 Wheel of Fortune

CAPTAIN EASY .' ·

,.

COUNTRY , MO.III.'E Homo
Pork. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Larr Iota. CaN
814-992-747 .
' ·.

I ( .·

®l • ·'

rn Fiahin'

J 'a Home lri'lprovl·

iar

en New•

(J)

Cii Hot Potato

. ' 'IASEM.ENT
WATERPROOFING .
Uncondttlontl llf,tlme gul· .
rentM. Local Nflrencea
fumlahld. Frll ot1im-.
Coli collect 1,814-237·
0488. dily or night. Rogera
Baume.nt Waterproofing.

J •

I AML~

/

u Ill (J) (I) 0

8 :00

.

)

Unecrainbfe thlee tour Jumbtel.

one letter tO OICh &amp;Quate. to form
four ordinary WOlds.

EVENING

30&lt;1-~=~~~~~~~~~

a

fil

ftftj~'iM) fj}q
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ·
b)l Honri .Arnold and Bob Llo

4/3/85

Ma,.;uin RO..flng · • Spout·
lng. Now lnalllllng rubber
roofo, 30 yoera axperlenco.
apoclollzlng In buill up roof.
Coll814-388-1867.

19

• .l

WEDNESDAY

i• .

•Ptrt'

The Daily

Pomerov-:-Middleport, ·Ohio

S&gt; IVICI",

Jacko Tropical Fioh llo Pot WANTED: uald oeddloa ond
Shop, Evergreen, OH. Coil tack, 304-882-2782 .
814-446-0198. We have
I!IYeril baby ducka left
'2 .76 or 2 for f6.00. Semi 63
Livestock
fancy 'g uppy' I 11 .10 pr.
7HP Rugg riding lawn trac - ·Many more specie Ia. Hours
tor, good· motor and Jrena· Mon .-Fri. 11 :00-8:00, Sot.
6 yf, old Ragi~tered Sorrel
miaaion, no mower deck, llo Sun . 2:00-B:OO.
gelding 16.3 honda: 2 white
$100. Cobra 85-23 channel
1983 Black C1maro . Excel·
booe radio, t1 00. Morae-40 Alrldole pupplea for ule. atocklnga 8t white bleze. lont • condition. AT, · AC,
'.
channel mobile radio, I 1 50 . 3~ month• old. Perfect for $hown in 4-H llo Quarter Cruise , .Tilt . AM · F.M
Ground plano o~tonno. *35 . Euter. Coll61 4-843· S278 . horoo ohowo. Coll'61o4-28B- Caoaotta .. Coli 614-7428622.
Call 814-448,4838.
3080.
Boby ribbltt and -chlckona,
Guno: model 1 2Winchaoter, 304-875-5043.
Reglatared Quarter horia
Muotong· II, PS.PB.
'
colt: born Moy 9. 1984 1976
modot · .1 0 Rom. Coli 111f·
Redecorated 2 bdr apt. ~ exc.
Dunn
collar
with
white
star.
auto.
trans..
Runa. looks
448-3348.
Coma to us for your Easter 1390. Coli 814-288-8622. good , f850 .00 . 1974
l~cotion. R19ency Inc. Coli
Dodge Voh. ·teoo .oo. Coil
Animal glfto . Rabblu ,
3'04-675-7283 676-6104
1,2x14 metol patio owning, chicks, ducks are in. All
goitod
814-992,5555.
·
'
Saddle
horael,
aloo
675-5386.
exc. for mobile home. Set of special• oh blrda. tanks and
.for
trait.
Ri'dlng
leasons.
French doors • atorm doora .
itama e_nd Saturday, lock. Cell 814-898 ' 3290. 1986 Ford Muateng, 2 door
Furniahed efficiency 607
Coli 1114-4411-9763 or 814- other
April 6th .. Flah Tonk. 2413 Ruth Reeves.
hardtop. 8 c~. . auto. on
2nd . Avo .. Gallipolio. $hero
448-7710.
floor, complo ly roatorod.
Jackaon Avenue, Point Plea'beth. $150 utilitiea peid, a&amp;&amp;.
' 1
oon1, 304-876-2083 .
W1 1 1
H
new chromo. f2BOO .OO .
odul1o. Coli 448-4418 ·after
Rog
Gravely tractor, new cond.
ater~d
k ng · orae, Coll814·992-2081.
7PM .
ltolllon. · 3 years old .
UM41 fUmit\lnl -~ 6 pc. , t1 ,300; yard aproodor f25.
8 600 .00. Call .' 81 4 -992- I.-1-97=-~--Fo-r-dJ._T_D-.-,-oqd~c-o-n-dl·
dinette, heed bC&gt;arda, and 2 Coli 614·448 -3384, :
57
Musical
f~rnll~lid offl!&gt;ioncy --*1 '5 bedroom •Uites. 3 milea ouf
2
81~
· .• ·' .
. . ,. ··· ~
tiori, runs good. e360 .00,
u.tllitoo. pd .• alngloldul1, 920 Bulovtllo Rd. _Open 9om 10 WolghNiench wtth leg llfta.
Instruments
4th Avo.. Golllpollo. · o448· ISP'1'1··Mon. thru Sat.
. Chlckon~,'for lilo. 35 Jirgo Call614-992-8921. -,.
arm pu!la ..ond weight• $80 ~
. . ·_; -·
'
·4418 otter. 7 p.m.
·
814-44~,0322
cell 814-448-1 097 ••
typeloylngho~i•2.·'ooeach. ., 9 ~ 0 :Multoiig .
·tolo.
For' .•• 9pin~t-co·~.oia pl- ~~-z~Wlst~o old : Can ' 8 14 · gQOil. condition: Call 81.4·
'llivoraidl Apta. Middleport. GbOD USED APPLIANCES VANGUARD PA .t NT
ano bargain . Wanted: ra ~
992-5232 oftor 6:00PM.
Special rates for Senior Waahera, dryers, refrlgere- Quality. you can truat. apon1ibla party to take over
Citizena. f 1 30. Equal Houo- 1oro, rongea. Skoggo Ap- Eberabach Herdware. low monthly p'ayments on GoOd riding h"rae, · pan
ing Opportunitlea . 814- plioncu, Upper River Rd. Pomeroy,. Ohio, Coil 814- spinet plano. Can be seen quortor horoe, 8200.00. 1972 Oldo 98, ioaded, runo
good. *295. Coil 814-9B6992-7721 .'
.
..
beaide Stone Creat 'Motel. 992-2811.
locally. Write Credit Man- 304,876-8388.
1972 Hondo double. ovor· . IJiiii'S]~iMj;ii;~~i!i'!4454.
ager: P.O . Box 637, Shalby814-448-7398.
held com, 450 cc, now tlroa; I ·
· 1 end 2 bedroom furnlahed
\Small horae, Sorrel, very
Commercial potted tomato vlllo. IN 46178.
opta. for rent In Middleport. County Appllonco, Inc. planto. •100.00 por 1000
gentle, child ufe, 4 yeats 1974, Z28. · l-82 - I no. 1978
678-2372
578-2281.
400orKowaokl,
Coil 814-992 -5304 be- G9od UMd appliance• end plan1s. Order aerly. Por· Yamaha C.P. 30 electronic old, itJicellent horH for 8 to moko offer, 304-896-3472
or
8915-3987.
tween 4 :00 and 8 :00 TV 1111. Open BAM 1Q8PM. 11ond, Ph!o. Call ewilninga piano metc~ing amp in ~ 14 yr old child, 304-8751974 750 · Honda fully ·
evenings.
dreued. 14,000 m.iloa, 83
~xcavatlng
eluded 1700. Call 814-446- 4604.
Mon thru Sot. 814-448- 814-843-6309.
'73
Monte
Corio,
304-176·
4525 .
1899, 827 3rd. Ave. Galllt800. 304-8711· 7733.
7602.
Newly remodeled ,
polla. OH.
Two 4 gallon humldlflero .
mont. t1 75 .00 plua utlli1111:
Hay lla Grain
Good-1 Excovottng, blao,
Two
Wtlter hutera. 40 Lowrey 2 keyboard organ .
1976 Mercury, 4 door. low Hondo ATC 110 3 whootor, menta, footera, drlvew•ya.
Depooit roqulrod. In Syra- Valley . Furniture. new ,
gallon bottlo and 60 gallon foot pedala. Good condition .
hardly ever uaed, like new,
mileege,
cleen,
good
tir81,
cuoo. coli 814-992-7034. uood. Large toc11on of quol·
ln1truction book. music. and
aeoo.oo. Coli 304-882- oop1ic tonka, londocaping.
814-992-7871 or814-992- lty furniture. 1218 Eutern ;;~~al. Coli 614 .- 98&amp; - bench Included. $400.00 . Good mixe'CI hay for ule. oxc cond, ctll ·304-875- 5022.
Coli anytime II 14-4483486.
'
5732.
4537. Jlmet·L. Dovtoon. Jr.
Coli Ruaoell Spencer at 11.80 per bale . Cell 614Ave .. Golllpotlt.
owner.
814-986-4192.
Realiatlc scanner with
992-3709 evonlnga.
292 Chevy, 8 cyl, engine,
In Middleport, 1 bedroom Trade Center Furniture tala. t75.00. Model
Boats and
rebuilt nev• rUn. Honda trail 75
furniahod opt. Ufllltlea in· Outlot', Konougo, Oh. Now 1 2 gougi ahot g~n with
Dozer Work land cloorlng.
Motors
f~r Sale
90.
304-898-3441.
eluded. •195.00 ph•• dop- Moytag llo Croaley Applion· , ikeet borrotl, t17&amp;.00. Tolondocaplng, 111:. Free eatl·
65
Seed lla Fertilizer ,
ool1. Cell otter 8 :00 pm; coo. Coll814·446.4488.
motu Coli 814-448-8038
bie oew, t&amp;O .OO, Monuol
1966 Chevy 1 ton. cattle
614-9,9~;71 77.
or 814-992-7119 anytime.
typewriter, t35 .00 . All
Far111
SIIJlll ll rs
truck. Sea~~erosistreetfrqm Oeloxlo boot 120 Me·r Uood 30 in . gold olectrlc ltomoln good condition. Cell
We
,
n
ow
have
Northrup
King
Carollno Lumbar. tBOO.OO . Cruiaer. with tr•iler, IJIC . Re•IOflable RatH. Ditching
1 bedroom fonllthed aptJ r8nge, •1&amp;0 . Us~ Kenmore from 9 until two. 814-992lit L;veslock
...d. For your grasa &amp; aeed 304-8083 or 875-2616.
cqnd. Cotl 814·2.5 6 -6413.
Ca11814-992-6434 or 304- wilahor, t125 . Trade Cen- 5708 .
g11, electric, and
neada. Colt 614-245-6193,
882-2586.
IInot. Coil 81 4·
ter. Kenauga, Oh .
Altizer Form Supply .
Wonted good 12-14ft John
or 11 4 · 448 ·
86· 205 F 3.B zoom lena for
1 971 Opel
Boot, alum or flblrgloo. call
APARTMENTS, mobile Gloaa top coff11 table and any Connon ~5mm SLR 61 Farm Equipment
home1, houaea. Pt. PfeiNnt end toblo.lg. velvotloungor, camera. f1 26 .00-offor. Coli
euto. or irado . 304-e•76 · 1 304-895-3579 after 5:00 1-:;:=;:::=:::;;:=:::;J::;::::==
ond Golllpollo. 81 4-448- 2 twin alzo boda. Coil 814-9&gt;49-21193 hm to
7376.
pm.
I·
f r illlSIIIIrl ill l ll ll
JD 2 row planter, tobacco
8221.
814-446-7378.
2om .
'-----~--84
Electrical
aottor, 5 p1. chlzel plow, JD
77 .Chevy MoAbu. high ml- Smell boot. troller for flo1
... Refrigeration
8 . ft. while! dioc, Now
leago 81100 . 304-876- bottom John boot, 304a
Couch llo choir 3 yro: otd. Ctli Firewood 120.00 pickup Hollend hoy roko, 3 ·pl. poat
4230 do'v~ or 875-4853 8112-3543. ·
814-441-8288 oroftor5:30 toad, 130.00 delivered . Calf hole digger, oickla mower, 8 71
A4tos for Sale
evenlnga . ·
304-1175 -6762 or 676 - ft. drag diac. Coii614-26B- - - - - - - - - - 46 Fumished Rooms celt 1114-441&gt;-8127.
Ed't Appliance Service. •
2991 .
1265.
Serving oil mlkao • brondo
Auto Parts
1974 Ch'rvaler 1\iew Yorker 76
Country Ook toblot, cholra,
TOP CASH pold for '80
of refrigeretora, Wllherl •
For rent SIHping Rooms cupboorda, dlako, ico boxaa.
atotion
wagon.
304-876·
·
I!!
Acce
.
.
ories
Polo bom bulldinga built. For John Doero 1010 tractor model and newer u•~ cars.
dryan. ,ltovea a dl• ·
and light hou11 koeplng Conkloa, Tuppera Plolna, Rt . free
148~.
'
oatimoteo coli304·875 - $2,996, Alllo Chalmar a Smith Buick-Pontile. 1911
hwoahero. Coil 814-387rooma. Pori! Central H01ol. 7 . Hand crafted ond
3981.
wide front bally mower
Eeatorn Avo .. Golllpollil. Coli
con 814-448-0788.
1989 Rambler, Amb1111dor Porting out or Hit whole-72 7187 'or 81 4·448-441111.
fllnlahed.
'
.
cultivator 8t plowa~needi 814-448-2282.
with
air , good cond. Chelly Chevolle SS. Call
WANTED-Aroo
Spoita
Enrubber:
oil
for
1895.
BN
Ford
SEWING
Machine
ropolra.
FUff1ilhed room, f100. UtHI· Plckeno uood furniture. 304- thu•illwts thet went to re~ t
1400.00. 9 cu ft froo1er 614-388-8122 .
t
hi h l
1980 Chevy Chevette ono
oervlco. Authorized· Singer
tin. r8ng8. ref. Share bath. 1175-11483 or 875-1450.
t150.00. Phone 304-882ceive direct mail a--cials rae or
g
low range
..with fr~end loader~ runa owner, 4 new tirea, 43,000
Men only. 919 Soc., Galllpo·
2240 botwoon 12 and 9 PM . For oele, porto, 1978 Ply- Soloa llo 8ervico Bhorpen
!tot,
on
oxcl11ng
now
niorgood,
g
rubber
$1
.no.
mllea. t1,995. 1978 MuoSclaaora . Fabric Shop,
lla. 448-&lt;1418 oftor 7 p.m.
RICK'S NEW AND USED ch•ndiaa progrlm. from Tri Fint c
mouth Troll Duller, 4x4. Pomoroy. 814-992-2284 .
e flrat •rve. Mn- tanv Ohie immaculate. Call
1978
Dotoon
210,
otondord
FURNITURE. Uood t10ve1 County Sporto, 304-8711- ""Y Fer
on 15 tractor, llvo
1114-2B6-11122 .
ahlft, oome ruat. 11 .600.00. 304-875-7435 .
and refrlgeratora. Compare 2888 or wrtto·to Rt. 1. Box power,
with front ond
304-418-1853.
our prlcea, ••v• 'oday. 471, Poln1 PIM11n1, W . Vo. loader, 12,995. Coli '8&lt;14·
1879 Corvet1e. exoilllont
85 General Hauling
46 Space for Rent
Phone 304 -773-6430 .
Include nome oddreaa and 286-8622.
77 Auto Repair
condition, 304·875-5455 .
I
zp.
72 Trucks for Sale
'
Boys W.ter Service.
Nlghtcrowlero, ll~o· min - 1________
...__ Peroona Body Shop. Loouit
Mobile hoine lot, 12' x50' or
poolo
filled. Coli 114amoller. t75 _,., peld. 4th 1-::-:::-- - : - - : : - - - - nowa. meol wormo. Tri
1981 Chevy Luv, 4 apd., Rd. Pt.PINaent. p 111 K•K.
·1141
or 1114-448• Noll. Golllpolla. Call 448- 53
CotJnty Sport. 304-875AM -FM 13,199. John ' a. Freo Eatlmotoo. 814-881·
1175 Of 1114-448-7911 .
2988 .
Auto Soloo. 8ulovlllo Dr, 4174 .
·
44181ftor 7PM.
JACKSON ESTAT'Es
APARTMENTS l Equal
~ouoing Opponunl1y)
monthly rent otorta a1 I 1 63
f&lt;lr 1 ""droom ond 1198 for
2. be~room. dopoolt t200,
located noor Swing Volley
Pfeu end Foodlend, pool
ond Coble TV ovailoblo,
hour..•• ppnible1 0 •m to 4
pm ond 7 ·pm 1q ·9 pm
~ondoy-Frldoy. Coil 8144,48-2745 or litovo
mesaege.

t

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3. 1986

8 fooi pool table. eJc cond,
.Ferguaon tractor: 4 apd.', 4
3~4- 8~2- 2'347/
new tires. new blttery. n·ew
2 hp Roto T\llor, t100.oo. tune-up, new p11lnt . New
304-875-151118.
lift. buah h011: never uald.
12.350 . Moaaoy Forguoon
1115 dletel troc1or. llvo
55 Building Supplies power, ' PS, . high llo low
rongo: heavy duty Moany
Ferguaon buah ·hog 11o 3
bOttom ptowa; 10 ft. wheel
Building Mo1orlala
Block. brick, - e r pipoa. dloc oil for t l,485. 3000
wlndowa, llntele. etc . Ford dleool-nool clean now
Claude Wlntora, Rio Orondo, rubber, SAVE. Coli 8142·8·81522.
.
0 , Coll614· 246-6121 .

Nice 2 bdr. Skyline turn,. ·
water paid, !ocoted on Rt'. 7.
Coil 814-245-581 a.

3 bdf. trailer, fYJ bathe, in
Everg,.een on Co. Rd. 48 .
ciiila14-245-917o .

I '

('

2 bdi ., all · electric.
814-4411-3371 .

2 bdr. mobile home at
Evergreen. Coil 814-4467032.

.'

Ohio ·

2 ..jldr. mobile home.. Call
814·446·0380.

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2o-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, April 3; 1985

Area deaths
survl\rors Include ~ brother, JtJanLuts: grandparents, Elmer and •·
'
James H. Rathburn, 61, Colum- MJ!rtle Tufts of Middleport, . and
Oscar and Delsy Saavedra, Guabus, formerly \){Meigs County, died
Monday night at Qoctor' s Hospital temala City; an uncle and aunt,
North In Columbus folloiving'a long Lane and . Donna ·Daniels: ·· and
cousins, Erek and Leah Daniels, all
Illness.
'·
(
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He was bornMay2, 19ZIIn Dexter, · ofRutland.
Burlal services toolC place at the
a son or the late Jonas and Olive
.aetliel Rathburn. He was a rettred Tufts-Holt Cemetery In Greenup
;welder for the Ben-Tom Corp., and County, Ky.
•waS-a veteran of World War II. ·
· Sl!iVIvlng are his wife, Phyllls Bessie A. Parsons.
Wise Ra thbum: a brother, Cecil 'E.
· Bessie A. Parsons, 66, 28471
Ratl\bUm, Columbus; a sister,
1
'Amelia Faust, Athens, and several BashanRoad,Raclne,dledTuesday
Jlleees, nephEws and cquslns.
at the Holzer Medical Center.
A housewife, Mrs. Parsons was
: Besides his parents, he was
.preceded In death by three brothers borri July 4, 1918 at Apple Grove, a
:and two sisters. ·
d&lt;lughter of the late Wilson and Ora
. ;: Services wUI be held at 10 a .m . DurstSlaughter.
Thursday at the Woodyard East
Sun(lvlng are her husband, Dorsa
Ptapel, 2:nl E. Uv'Jngston Ave., Parsons; two foster daughters,
£olumbus, with' the Rev. MlchaE'I Norma MorriS, Bowling Green, and
punt offlclatbig. Grave51!1eservlces Frankie Foster, Delaware; five
·will beheldat2p.m. Thursday at the stepchildren, Ruby Hupp, Lake
M]Jes Cemetery In Rutland with 'the · Milton: George Parsons and Roger
'Rev. David Hunt ln .charge. Friend Parsons, both .of Ashland, Ohio;
inay call at the chapel trom2to4and Joyce White, Racine, and Jean
Tto9p.m. Wednesday.
Wells, Columbus: several nieces
and nephews, and four sisters,
~ason Kent
Bernlce Roush and Mary Roush,
•
both of Racine; Georgie Durst,
: ~eral services for Jason Kent Niles, and Frances Parsons,
prtlz, 6, who died Friday at . Nagely.
· · .fhlldren's IJospital In Columbus,
Mrs. Parsons was a member or
held Monday In Grove City.
the Apple Grove United MethodiSt
• A student at Berwick Elementary Church and a membeqoftheUnlted
DIN~!SAVR TO VISIT AREA STUDENI'S- With the help of her
School In Columbus, Jason suffered MetllodlstWomen'sorg;mlzatlon.
preh181odc frlendj Daphne, A. M. Ul\dfMiy presents "GasWorks:
:tatallnjurles when hewasrunc;town
Services~ be held at 2::llp.. m . .
Pipeline to the Future" to area students. The traveling energy
PY an an alleged llrunk driver. He ·, Thursday at 'the Ewing Funeral · educa&amp;lon program Ia sponsored by&gt;Columhla Gas of Ohio• .
1ras born Jljiy 25.1978.
Home with the Rev. Roger Grace
~ Jjlson allen~ the Kingdom Hall
ofllclatlng. Burial wUI be In Letart
at Grove City with Ills parents, Juan Falls Cemetery. Frlendsmaycallat
and Sue Tutts-clrtlz.
,
the fUneral home from 5 to 9 thls
In addition to his parents, evening.

James H. Rathbilrn

DniZ

:-ere

Natural gas program
slated at Meigs
High~
.

:Meigs County happenings

.

Marriages_ended ,

Velerans Memorial'

.
Mary Meredith, Pomeroy, has
··Admissions--Raymond Little,
~n granted a divorce In Meigs
Middleport; Karen Brown, WllkesQ:lunty Common Pleas Court from
vUle; John Hoffman, Mason: Curtis.
J{1ames L. Meredith, Pomeroy, on
Roush, Po~roy .
~rounds of gross neglect of duty. The
Dlscharges--Ople Cobb, Alva
plaintiff's malden name of HardWill, Norma Goodwin.
barger has been restored.
' .
•. Sharen Herald, Cheshire, h~s
l;Jeen granted a divorce from Frand
f.lerald, Middleport, on grounds of ·Marriage license
gross neglect of duty. ·
Mary Ann Jeffers, Pomeroy, and 1. A marriage license has been
Joseph LefO¥ Jeffers, Middleport.
Issued In Meigs County Probate
bave been granted a dissolution of ··Court to Rex Allen Darst, 29, and
tnarrligelnMelgsCowityCommon . Brenda Kay MI!ITaY. 28, ·both of
Pleas Court.
.
.
· }&gt;omeroy.
..
Silndra Kay Scott·irndSteveil Ray• ·-- •
• "·
1
ScOtt, ~h of Pomerpy;· and Renia ,
.
Chatm: Mohler of' Pomeroy· ;ihd .
Thorn~!$ Mohler . of Pa~t . h11ve -- ,: ·_
· . ·. ·
·. ·
MelacCo·unty Com
Th
'· h
.
pe·titioned the
· .., ""
· e state lghway ·patro
.. 1 cited
man Pleas Court
for dissolutions Of
·
Rex
Thornton,
21,
Rt.
2,
Racine,
for
their marriages · ·
failure
to
yield
In
a
tw&lt;&gt;-_
vel;tlcle
,
accident Tuesday on Letart Town~riday meetings sel
ship Road 96. ·
Troopers said Thornton report.• ·Meigs County Foxchasers Associ- edly puUedfromapr!Vatedrlveway
ation will meet Friday evening, 7 at 11: 20 a.m. jnto the path of a
p.m., at the Elagle Ridge cabin.
southbound vehicle driven by
James E. Pierce, 73, Rt. 2, Racine,
Meigs County Coonhunters will and struck Pierce's vehicle ln the
· met·at the Snowball HUI clubhouse, right s~. ·
'Friday evening, 7 p.m. Refresh- . Th'!ref&gt;ere no Injuries and both
ments wm be served.
. .
vehiclesweresllghtlydamaged.

"Gas . Wor~&lt;S: Pipeline to the flcatlon domes demonstrating syn- Future", a fast paced presentation thetic fUel production, ~ cryogenics
describing cuiTI!Ill :energy Issues, demonstration explaining the IIQulflcation of natural gas and a giant
will be . presented at ~::II a.m.
Monday ·at Meigs High School, dinosaur Ulustrates the 'original of
Principal J. E. Miller announres.
fossil fuels. Students wUI participate
Produced by Qak Ridge AssoIn most of the demonstrations.
ciated Unlversltles, "Gas Works"
A. M. Lindsey will he the
answers questions about where teacher-demonstrator for the proenergy comes from, how It Is used, gram which ·1s sponsored by
and why It Is becoming scarce and · Columbia Gas Qlstrlbutlon Com. expensive.
panies. Lindsey Is a graduate of
_ Focusing on an array of·colorful Tennessee Technical University
and has received additional training
graptilc and electronic teaching
on the complexities ot energy from
deviCes, the program features a
. propane-powi!J'ed motor bike, gas!- Oak Ridge Associated Universities.

OSP issues citation .

Em
_ r!iency
' . squQds ansiver se~en calls . '
o
e_

Severi.c;ills -for ~~lstanee were .. Ohio ·3.1l residence- to St. Joseph
answered Tuesday by uitlts or the
Me.nionill HospitaL At 9:04 p.m .•
-~~~County :Ell')ergen?"M~~c,~l .Racine transporled .T\"avts ChUiJers
- from· the Cleland A&amp;)artinents· to
AI 2: 06 a.ni:: Mlddlepo
' rt
Veterans fl1emorlai : Alid at 9:22
called to the su.perAmerlca service'
p.m.. Pomeroy trasported Curtis
station for Dennls Hart who refU•'-'
Roush
from 324 Meclianlc St. to
"""
treatment. At '11: 12 a.m., MiddleVE'terans Mem11rlaL
port responded to a call from Dr.
Dayo's otrlce and transported Ray
Winning number 503
Little tram teh office to Veterans
Memorial. The Syracuse fire dec;LEVE;LAND (AP) - The
partment was called to the Ruth
wlnotng number drawn Tuesday
CannerresidenceonThiNlSt.at3:00
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
p.m. but the can was false alarm.
game,
'1'he Number," was 500.
The Pomeroy unit wen· t t o Kroger•s
• Inthe"Pick4"game, thewlnnlng
at 3:43 p.m. for Vannie Roush who
number was 1189.
was transported to Veterans MemThe lottery reporl.e d earnings of
· trans-·
or11
a . A t 6: 21 p.m.,' ~cine
$844,~.50 from wagering on lt.s
ported VIrginia Phalln from her
dally game. Ea'rningscameonsales
of $1,228,507Jxl, while holders of
winning tickets are entitied to share
$383,518.
Over that span of time, thanks to
many volunteers, Improvements
have also taken place regarding
facUlties, Including rennovatlon of
an existing ball diamond, developmentof(Wonewbliseballdlamonds,
development ·of a softball diamond,
and the building of two new dugouts
at the hlgh school.
Uniforms and equipment have
also been purchased over the years
t~~tlons and the efforts of
volunt
:

New officers were elected Monday night to the Racine Summer
Youth League. Now administering
the program will be Glenn Tucker,
president; Wilson Wolfe, vice' presldflll; and Mickey Hoback.
secretary-treasurer.

.

- Sign up day for youth league

teams, which Includes baseball,
girl's softbaU and tee ~?aU, will be
Satunlay, AprU13, from9-lla.m .. at
Southern kindergarten. Teams are

available for most el~entary
school through high school age
children. i(lndgergarteh students,
or school children who wUl not be
eight before Aug. 1 are eligible for

~ball.
Leaving summer league offices
after 15 years of service are.BUI and
Mary Porter of Racine. In their
fifteen yeaJ:S, tile Porters have seen
the program grow to Include nine
different teams with an a_verage of
. 120chllflren part!Cipa!lng.

,

=-Farm loan progra~ ·
si~ed, by governor
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) Wlthlit days, money-shprt Ohio
farmers may be able to qualify for
reduced-intereSt loans under a new
prOgram making $lOOmUllon In Idle
state funds available for that
purpose.
The Uglslature completed passage and Gov. Rich am ·Celeste
· .signed Into law Tuesday an Immediately effective law that apows
' farmers who can establlsb credit to
borrow up to $100,&lt;XXJ. '
Rep. Ross l.)oggs Jr., D-Andover,
and other sponsors said lnterest€(j
farmers should make Inquiries at
their local banks or wlih Production
Credit Associations which.also ate
authorized to make ihe loans. . .
&amp;ggs said some ban.k officials In hlsdlctrict have said they are willing
to ~ahead now with the paperwork
on Individual loans, although the
official forms may not be received
from the state for a couple of days.
Both. houses of the , Legisiature
gave overwhelming approval to a
joint Cl)nference committee measure establishing the · program.
However, some members warned
against any notions that It wUl solve
farmers' problems.
Boggs stressed that the program
will help only a limited number of
Ohlb's 90,&lt;XXJ farmers. because the
loans are restricted and proceeds
may not be used to pay off existing
debts or mortgages.
·Each · borrower wiD ·have to
establish credit with local banks that
agree to participate In the. bill's
expansion of a stateproil-ram which
already subsidizes loans to sqtaU
businesses to create jobs.
·"-This Is not a cure-aU, but It
certainly will be a major help to

Easte~ Meigs-win

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It would appear that Melg!ii County Court will ~
moved to a location outside trn!·courthouse sometime
In the near future. However, Meigs County Court
Judge Patrick O'Brien was not aware that an ,outside
move was being planned.
·
· The move 'was discussed foliow'lng Wednesday's
meeting of the Meigs County Cominlsslo!lE'rs.
·Commissioners, In need of additional meeting
space, had approached O'Brien earlier In the year
about moving his facilities either to another locatlori
within the courthouse or to an outside location.
• A decision, thought to be final at the time, was made
·to ·move the county courtrOOm to .the present jury

-

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&lt;

ALSO: . '·
•Canariiti
•Hematera ·

•Parakeets
•Finchea
•Feed a. Feedera

•
399 W. Main

.

,
Ph. 992-2184
The Store )Vith "All Kinds of Stuff" - For Pets, St1bles,
·
Lar&amp;e &amp; Small Animals. llwns 1nd Glrdtns '

'

/

ACTS!

*JfJf
Jf
*·
Jf
,.:
**
**
**

\.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
· · "The Way America Send• Love" ·

1.. htt'""" Awl.
,_.,, 011.

We Aut,!. M.jer Cl'lllt ( r i
&amp; Win flawan hllfW..,•·

•
•;'

•

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··

Jf· Jf-

!'H. 99MOJ9
er 992·5721

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' Thrtlls, Chilli, ~....
Exctt.ment 'tn the lleliei Tl*lllon

RutLAND CIVIC CINTEI

·'

Mo•diJ, April I, .1 915

.

4100 , ... &amp; 7:30 , ...
Tunday, April 9, 1915
4:00.'·~ &amp; 7:30 , ...

..
''

CATHY ROGIIII
Vlvaclo~a Slllflng RINGIIISTRESS

'

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"You're talking state tax dollars anyway you slice It
... that's really what you'retalklngabout. Y.ourpocket
and mine, arid everybody ~lse's," Pfeifer said.
Pfeifer said attempts were helng made to draft
language that wouljl make use of the tax funds
constitutlonlll.
_
"I think that's the reality ofwhereyou are. They're
working within that framework," Pfeifer said.
Celeste said the precise · amolfnt of the state
guarantee has not been determined.
"The numbers are dependent on continuing
conversations with folks from Chemical," he, said.
Celeste. declined to say which purchase o'tfer he
·
thought was better.
"The queStion Is what can we have that minimizes
the exposure of stale revenues of any kind ... and
provides us the greatest certainty that It wUI

.·.Jobless rate 'highes.t ;
-in · Harriso~ wunty

•
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•
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'

· aides of Gov. Richard Celesle at the Statehouse. The
bankers were briefed about an olfe~ from an

out-of-state ' lnstltudon for the closed Home State
Savings Bank. ( AP Laserphoto ).

..

accomplish our other goals Including, for example,
federal Insurance upon opening, which is a, cti.tical
ingredient," he said.
The closed-door .mi'E'ting ended without a firm
decision on which offer to accept or on key detailS of
the legislation needed for the sale. But participants
said they had agreed on some possible legislative
approaches.
Their proposals were to be .reviE&gt;Wed when the
group reconvened later this morning , prior to
scheduled mretlngs with party caucuses in the House
and Senate.
The General Assembly·, which had ex peeled _to be in
recess today, was to reconvene to consider the Home
State buyout bill and two other ll;leasures stemming
from the state 's savings and loan crisis.

]nmat~ sues sheriff

for escape injuries
POINT PLEASANT- An inmate

at the Mason County Jail Is seeking

AKRON, Ohio '(AP) - . The "He'soneoftheflnest teachers In ihe
athletiC director and students at-. a-.. school ... one of the best coaches
we've had at St. VIncent-St. Mary."
Ca thoilc high school are calling for
ThE' students circulated petitions
the principal's resignation IIi the
wake of a popular teacher-coach's · asking for Boarman's rehiring and a
meeting wlt.h ·diocesan offlcals.
dismissal.
John Clstpne, athletic dlfflCtor Angry parents and students on
and head football coach at St. Tuesday protested at the school.
Vlncent4&amp;t. Mar)' High School, said
Clstone, who has led the school's
be wUI quit unless principal Slsier
football
team to three state cham·
Maureen Field Is replaced.
plonshlp
In tils 28-Year career, said
Clstone said Wednesday that
Sister Field has "lost ihe respecl'of Boarman's flrlngwasa "tranparent
the · students and faculty and atlempt" to retaliate against the
parents. Ar!d so she has lost the school's athletic booster club, which
ha~ been Involved ln. a dispute with
ablllty to lead the school."
Slsto:r Field has declined com• the 91Qcese.
'
ment about the controVersy. ·
Diocesan olflclals deny a Unk
The fli'lng of teacher-coach pan between 13oarman's dismissal and
Boarman on Monday also prompted the dlspull!, saying the firing wa-s
a lirouP _or 236 students to c~ for based on his pertonnans:e: BoarSister Field's resignation bt a letter . man, 32, has been a history teacher
to Bishop Anthony Pilla of the and coach at the school · for eight
Catholic Diocese of Cleveland,
years.
which operates the school.
An after-iehoo1 rally Wednesday - lnJanuary,thedlocesebarredthe
~t aunlonhallwasattended,byabout
booster club from giving money to
\ 250 students.
·
ihe 9;ll.pupll school after the clul:! .
i "W:e want Dan Boarman back at • refUsed to let the diOcese share
St. V," said senior Fred Do~van . control of Its moriey.
'

$3 million for Injuries he claims he

.

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Jt bUDENT·CHILD 13.00
Jf- ADULT·II.OO

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that easy accessibility to the J!'il and s.heiifl's office
· were essential. The commissioners did not feel it wise
to release the address of the location at this time.
According- to ~mmlssioner Rich Jones , commissioners' office must remain Inside the courthouse.
Commissioners are responsible for providing space
for county cour1, however, no stipulation · exists
regarding that location.
"We will be moving on this plan as expeditiously as
possible," stated Jones.
O'Brien said, "You'd think I would have been
consulted in finding a location.''

·'

Upset stu~ents
want principal out

--'

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Knight said be had re-examined the requirements of
the court for facilities In the courthouse for ]l&amp; _and
given the serious nature of the crimes that are
· expected to be tried this year, tile court could not
divide Its facUlties: "Therefore.i: tile judge said, "1
cannot agree to house the county court facility In the
room required for jury service and jury deliberations .
in these serious U1als. Other facUlties will have to be
provided," he continued.
Commissioners say they have located a possible
outside location for county court wltllln walking
distance of the Meigs County Jail. O'Brien had felt
.
'

"There was an (Ohio r offer forwarded to. the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov. Rl~hard Celeste,
superintendent
(of savings ,and loans). The terms
legislators and attorneys are exploring the possibility
seem.
to
be
different
In both nature and amount so that
of using general tax ,money ~or tile state guarantee
-It's
difficult
to
determine.
really, 'w hether they are
_ rieeded If the closed Home State Savings Bank Is toile' ....
•
competitive.
That's
something
that we a~ also
sold.
,
•.
pursuing,"
C
eleste
said.
Celeste confirmed the tax revenue option was being
Previously announced terms called for an
considered as he emerged from. a marathon,
out-of-state
buyer to pay a premium for entering the
• closed-door session at the StatehOuse early Thursday.
Ohio
market
. and for the state to supplement the
"That's one possibility," Celeste said.
purchase price with a guarantee, possibly of $S5
"We're looking at every possibility to accomplish
million, to assure that all depositors could get their
' the Ingredients of a $ale. On one side of· the sale Is a
money.
.
substantial commitment on the part of the state. On
Sen. Paul Pfeifer. R-Bucyrus, one of the legislators
the othti-r side of the sa1e Is a substantial commitment
· who sat In on the session, said-use of general tax
on the pari of the buyer," he said.
money was being considered because there was not
Oflers to buy the Cincinnati-based thrift have been
enough
non,Jax -revenue - money from I!Je state's
received from the Chemical Bani! pf New York, and
liquor
monopoly,
for example- t~ meet the need. ·
from an unidentified Ohio comoanv.

,-----------...!...------------------...,._____:

\

room, thus keeping county court In the courthouse.
Commissioners were then planning to move Into the
vacated courtroom. Although O'Brien was not
please() with this decision, he agrtjtd' to nptke the
move. The jury room, which actually ,co;lmeS under
the jurisdiction of the common pleas judge; was to
· have been reTllOjleled to accomodateO'Brlen's needs.
lnltially, Knight had agreed to this arrangement.
The decision to move county court outside the
courthouse was made late last wrek after the
commissioners received a memo from Common
Pleas Ju9ge Charles Knight. In thl;lt communlcatlon,

.

25 Centa

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

State·tax money may-brick Home State deal

·-

"

,•
Easter is Sunday,
April 7. Call or·
visit us today.

2 Sections. 16 Pages

•

By NANCY VOACHAM
insurance would cost employees raised through volunteer efforts .
",
SentlneiS&amp;affWrlter
about $71 a month for single
The bids were tabled pending
The Meigs County Board of coverage; $190 for a family plan.
notification from Racine VIllage
Commissioners Is again discussing
No action was taken by the Councllt(ither acceptorrejectthe
employee Insurance, this time to commissioners al yesterday's off~rs.
decide whether to accept a rate meeting, however, the usual custom
Aliso under consideration by the
credit from Blue Cross-Blue Shield In the past has ·been to accept the commissioners Is a· proposal to
In order to suppress a raise In rates rate credit.
accept the services of Compensator next year.
In other matters, bids fora rescue tlon Management, Inc., Logan.
Commissioners could waive a
ttuckforRaclneVIIIage,onbehalf()f · Dick Ku'rth, a representative. of
rate credit and accept a premium
the fire department, were opened the firm, present at yesterday's
· refUnd, but lftheychoosethlsoptlon,
yesterday afternoon.
meeting, explained the function of ·
next year's employee Insurance ·
Submitting a bid for a specialized the firm . Kurth noted the main
rates wUI raise considerably.
chassis was Pat Hill Ford, Middle- function Is "cost contalrunent and
The present Insurance poUcy
port, at $10,495. Thevehtdels to be reimbursement" regarding workexpires May 1. Insurance rates vary
delivered within four to sl.x months. man's compensation claims.
Dill's Mountaineer A,ssoclatlon,
The proposed C\)St for retaining
according to' the num~r··of claims
.flledduringthetermofa policy.
. Ravenswood, submitted a $19,W/ the firm Is to be $900 a year,
Blue Cross-Blue Shield has also
bid for a rescue truck body without however, the commissioners lndloffered an option to InClude more
thechass'tsc
'
catedtheywerenotreallylniavorof .
coverage.
·· . · .·
- · ·
Although speclfica lions went .out . contracting for the services.
The employees covered unc!er the ,.--: all aver thesta'ie;iJ:lesewere thebnly
. SQIIIIUl'\!ey teviewed
.
· present P&lt;illcy ~ctually ~¥for t~li- ,_· .b-!~ s r e c I' I v ~ d by t h'e~
'· · fllon Gilmore, head of the·,
·own Insurance at an approxlmaJe
commissioners. ·. · __
·
·' coun ts soil .SUIVey · being done · .
·rpte ol $62 a morith for a sln!fle .~ ' . · ; . . Fu!idii awarded ' .
fh gh the · ;&gt;aU ·cori~rvallon
coverage and $167 a month for
Community Dev«;&gt;lopment Block Service, discussed an upcOming ·.
family coverage. With a rate credit
Grant funds totaling $20,1XXJ were review of the project.
·
and without an lnc~ase In benefits,
awarded thevUiage by thecommlsGilmore suggested commisslonllE'Xt year's rate would be about $67 a
sloners for the truck purchase. ·
ers meet with SCS representatives
BANKER MEETING - Ralph Bolen, executive
month for single and $177 for a
Racine has on hand $600Jfor the whent.heycometoMelgsCountyfor
vice president of the Ohio Bankers Association,
1
· • family.
.
tn&lt;ck purchase. 'The additional the review process. At that time,
answers queslions from reporters following a'
mid-day meeting between 28 Ohio bankers and lop
funds wUI · be either borrowed or
(Continued on page 8)
Wlthout .a rate credit, next year's

-- : WILL ARRIVE ON
'· APRiL
- . 2, 1985 .

I

en tine
.
surprises O'Brien

Employee insurance
.
commissioners' topic

to mJci..40ri Salurtla..v.and Suaday.

MODERN SUPPLY
·
Pomery, Ohio

a1y

Outside ·cou-r thouse move

tJie 3!Jslo low 401Frldayandlllid-OOI

a

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 4, 1985

Copyrighted 1986

High ffi-65. The chance of preclplta. tlon Is 20 percent tonight and
.' ..._
Thursday.
E,xtended Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
Chance .of nlln Frtda.V and
· scattered showers Satl!nla.,v. Fair ·
on Suaday. Hlp. from the~
north to the rniiHIIIliOUth. Lows Ill

.l

e..

Vo1 .34, No.250

Tonlght, partly cloudy. LOw near

.

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•

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·

llei!l'aPU

40. .Thursday, variable cloudinesS. ,

LOTS ':(:.
· • •SOLD.
-oF&amp;INONlY

' .

Easter _.senrices

U7eatherforecast

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11Cait111P~3

SQJTie farmers ," said Sen, M: Ben
Gaeth, R-Deflance, the Senate
I sponsor. · •
The Diipartment Qf Agriculture ·
has said thatperhaps20,&lt;XXlfarmers ·
may be eligible for the loanS, but
·Sen. Donald E. "Buz" Lukens, ·
- R-Middletown, said he thinks as few
as 1,&lt;XXJ wUI seek them .' He· said
-farmers neeo;l more ttme to pay off .
existing debt, adding, "they don't
• !'
·need more credit•
·
..•
Lukens voted (or the bill·, · however, saying, "It will help some.''
Sen. Eugene BranstoOi, DUllea, ·
whet voted against the compromise,
said the Seriate prevailed In the
conference committee and that the
effect was to make the state money
'available to big farmers.
"For every farmer who gets a
$100,&lt;XXlloan, that's two$50,1mloanS
that coulcl. have- been made availa· ·
ble to the 'smaller farmers," said
Braristrool, who favored a $50,&lt;XXJ
maximum.
· The blll provides for the state
treasurer to allocate the state
money for deposits In the participatIng banks.
·

GIFT SUGGESTIONS
*RABBITS
*DUCKS
.*' 'CHICKS"

was ·

'T ucker ~eads summer league group
·

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111)

occurred due to the "gross negligence or the defendants.''
While not making reference to jail
escape in the suit , Grubbs m&lt;'nlloned that fellow inmates Ronald
Myers and Michael B. Fielder wcrr
present when he alleged!)' sustained
the Injuries. Grubbs and M.vcrs
have been charged In connect ion
with thE' jairescape. Fielder did ~ot

suffered on Aug. 12, l!*l-1, the same
day he and anOther prisoner
reporteftly escaped from the jail.
The judgment Is sought by
Michael Wayne Grubbs, Charles·
ton, W.Va. , In a suit fUed in U.S.
District Court in Parke,rsbufll ,
escape.
W.Va.
·
Grubbs alleges negligence on the
Grubbs names as defendants In
part of the.sheriff for failing to hlrt&gt; .
the suit Sheriff Robert E. Fruth;
Leonard Shobe, chief corrections and train sufficient personnel to
. officer at the jail; Chief DeputY · properly maintain security and
George Plants; David Jarvis, a safety of the Inmates at the jail;
dlsi}atcher: Mason County Com- Shobe for falling to make sure that at
missioners Paul E.
Watkins and &gt;· least one trained corrections officer
•
Michael E. Whalen; and former was on duty to .e nsure the security
and safety or the inmates; Plants.
County Cornmtssioner Charles E.
for
sending Jarvis. who had no
Fowler.
·
training
·as either a correction~ •
drubbs, who filed the suit In his
officer
or
a deputy sheriff, to
own behalf, claims that last-Aug: 12
he suffered lnjunes·to his back, as transport prisoners from one an' a-of .
well as Internal injuries ' The nature tile jail to another; and Jarvis, for
of which have not been determined accepting the responsibilitY for •·an
because the plaintiff (Grubbs) has · assignment which was not part of
been unable to get t.he proper his job and tor wlllch he kllew he had
medical test todi&gt;termlnethenature no training ... "
· Grubbs claims the threecommlsof these Injuries."
(Continued on page 16)
He further claims that the Injuries
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