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......... .
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I

I

• Pasle-D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

·.·.,...-Business

Briefs:~;­

SAFE

College holds graduation cereriiOny
GALLIPOLIS - Four students from the Galli~ branch of
Southeastem Buslness College participated In the fj!Cerlt I!ki winter
quarter graduation and awards ceremony iiefaat Jackson.
The students were Orenda Cook, Barbara Davis, Edna Ledsome
and Debra Leedy.
Degtees, diplomas and awards werepresen,t€d by 'U'oBiackburn,
Southeastern's chairman, and · Sam Bla~kbltm, the college
president, along with the Institution's five branch directors.
A new award for outstanding student of the quarter was presented
to students chosen from the five branches. Selected from the
Gallipolis branch was· Ron White, Rt. 1, Cheshire.
John IJwln, president of the Southeastern Ohio Aut.omo6l~ Club,
was guest speaker at the ceremony and stressed the need for
working together, to promote the region's eronomic growth.
Gallipolis branch stud~nts named to the direCtor's honor list for
winter quarter 1985 were Sherr! Angell, Wanda Ashley, Geraldine
Bose, Melody Cantrlll, Peggy Cook, Nina Craddock, Anita Dean,
Betty Durst, Mary Greene, Klmelea IDII, Shari Jarrell, Debra
Johnson, Fred Jones, La verna Kauff, Scott King, Kathryn Klzzee,
Jlll R. Lewis, Cheryl Mayes, Barbara Miller, Barbara Montgomery,
Kathy Montgomery, Harry Roush, Charlotte Schwartz, Paul
~twt,ens~J;&gt;ale Thoene, Terri Thoma, Brenda Thompson, Ro.bert
T!tompson, Ronald White.

Top accounting students hired

'

RIO GRANDE - Two accounting graduates at Rio Grande
CoUege and Community CoUege have accepted jobs at Ashland Oil
Co.
·
·
,
Charlie Cecil of Hamden and Robert Frisby of WeUston will join .
the finn In June.
·
Cecil Is recipient of the Wall Street Journal award as top business
stUdent at RGC.CC, while Frisby was selected the outstanding
accounting graduate for 1985 by the faculty of Emerson E. Evans
School of Busln'ess Management.
·
.

f

Best sales increase
RICHMOND, Va. - Best Products sales for a five-week period
ending April 6.1ncreased 5.5 percent to $168.8 million from sales of
$100 mUllan fl&gt;r March 1~.
Sales for the nine weeks of the flrst quarter were $295.5 million, an
Increase of 7.3 percent above sales of $275.4 million reported last
year.

Florist

init~tes
.

I

promotion

GALLIPOLIS - A "Swing lnto Spring" promotion has ·been
Initiated by Dudley's Florists.
Complete details are available at the Dudley's stores In
Charleston, Parkersburg, SlsteiVIlle, Ravenswood and Spencer In
West Virginia and at Marietta and GaUipolls In Ohio.

Chessie System signs
"Contract.for shippin.g
';o f coal ·to .power units
•
, CLEVELAND·- Chessle System England Power's generating fac)ll·
" ;..RaiJroads&gt; a unit Ot-~X Corp., was ties, according to A. R Carpenif;!r,
·. t lgned ~-' trahsportatipn .contra~! :. Che~sie's .sehlor vtce·l'•esldent-cqa[- ·
.wlth NI!W England Eleetrlc System lind coordination.- ··
"coverihg movements of coal from
"The Chessle System railroads
"West VIrginia io power plants In are pleased to be working closely
:Massachusetts Via private and wlth New England Electric and the
:rellroad-owned piers at Baltimore state of West Virginia to create new
. and Newport News, Va.
markets for coal mined In central
- The coal from Chessle-served and n.orthern West Virginia," he
origins will move In unit trairi lots to said.
1he ports, where It will be IQaded
Chessie's new unlt train policy,
aboard vessels forwaterdellveryto under which many West Virginia
.NEP's Brayton Point and Salem producers are expanding their
Harbor generating stations.
operations to permit loading of
The three units at Salem Harbor entire trainloads in 24 hours, was an
burns 750,1»1 tons of coal per year Important factor in the contract.
"These more efficient operations
'and the three Brayton Point units
consume up to :l,«XXX,OOJ tons per allow Chessle to reduce operating
year.
· costs and pass the saVIngs on to the
1
It Is anticlpated that this new customer. We anticipate tnat both
contract wtu make coal originating Chessle System and the West
on the Chessle System In northern V\rginla producers It serves will
West VIrginia more competitive continue to benefit from efforts
Wtth coal moving from Pennsylva- such as this to make West ·virginia
nla and Vlrginla origins to East coal more competitive," Carpenter
Coast ports for delivery to New ,added.

capt~res

1st place
·in Ohio
RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande Colleges Student Ambassadors for Free Enierpr!Je team won
first place at the state SAFE
competition held on April 14 I!Dd l!i
at Mount VemonNazareneCollege,
Mount Vernbn,.Ohlo.
The SAFE team will participate
In national competition at St. Louis,
Mo. 01} April Zl.JO.
SAFE Is a statewide. group of
college and university students
which was formed to promote
economic understanding by going
Into the communities and atte_mpt·
lng to qteate a awareness of
ecoriomlcs. It Is. OhiO's chapter of
the nationwide group called Stu·
~ents In Free Enterprises.
"This year's

-.a pr ¥aMI.''
Each illcbor lhllbe Mqultod
to lllo wllh ~ bid a C*MIIed
choclcot_.achoclcforlll
oquol "'fMI per 01111
at~ bid. but In no-.t . - .
tho!n flllh 1Mo Ml clolaoa. Of I
bond for .... per""" at ~bid.
p.y- to tho Dnc:w.
. _ . , _ epply. on the
formo. for qua~~~~cac~oo,
at .... davl P1ior "' .the
FRG-OOORI2221
lit for
blda In
Sealed pr ) , . w4l be accordance with Ctwpttr
rwoa•..t at 11io o111ce of 11io 1111211 ONo R....... Codo.
.Diroclor af llio 0No ~·
Plana ; I 1~11 1101
at T•wMjJOitatlot~ eo. , on fie In tho ~-•• of
tumbul. 0111o. unttt 1o:oo T......,.tatlcwl - tho """"
A.M., Ohio SlJindn. 'llme. of the Dlatrlct Deputy
T....._,, MIY 14. 1 9811. for DINCtOI'. '
;..,..._.,_,.in:
.·
The Director - • the :
Attwno, Ootllo, , Hocklna. right to iljoct any- o1 lidL
Melga.
Noble; llln·
WARREN J. SMITH
"'"· Morgen- We~
DIRECTOR
·Cou-. ONo. on Vllriaua April 21, 28
rout• -tiolll, by fur·
niohing •rol tn-.g p... ement nwklr rnaterilll.
NOTicE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE Of OHIO
OEP"-RTMENT OF
1RAN8PORTATION
Columbua. Ohio
April 12, 1 Contawt . . Ugol
C....., No. 81-444
, UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
SRO..OOORI230)

a'o.
,

.

tho

-·'II

"'"""*

...__,Widthv-.
P!ojoct
0.00 IMt
~ ·-

Of

0.00 mile.

. .

or Vllrioua mlltl.
,
The Ohio~ of
TI8Nj)CM tation hMbY notlflta
•• btdderw lhot It wilt 8fllrmo.
_ , lnouN 1hlt in env

ontenl!d Into punuont

-•..m.

to thlald\ ..
minority
~ .. _ .. , •
wll -

pu~

opportunity
...
of the Rio ·
Mlbmlt
bfull
tda
l n - to thil
Grande SAFE team was to pro· lnllltlltion and wilt ·not be
dlacrimlnatlld ogal- on tho
mote the movement of tree enter· grounct.
of race. color. or
prtse through the education of national origin In COI'ooidonltioll
others by creating an awarenes's for sn IWerd.
"Minimum ntoo for
and desire to perpetuate the
education of the American · tree thil
pocjlct
........
tormined . . req..o-ed by
lOw
enterprise system," said advisor . end ,,. - forth In tho bid
Pf'OPONI.''
Beverly WUklns.
"Tho- ':'1 for complolion
Students presented both group at thilwork- be -forth In
and lndlvtdual projects designed to

ec;onomiccompeprlnct· ·
· communicate
ples of savings,the
investment,
titian, decision-making, opportun·
tty costs. prices. consumerts...,.
production, profit, productivity,
etficlency In r.esources, entrepreneurs, government Intervention,
supply and demand, and capital·
Ism, to public and private schools
throughout Ohio, West VIrginia and
Kentucky.
The SAFE team's biggest ac·
compllshment was Gov. Richard F.
Celeste's proclamation of Free
Enterprise Week In Ohio for June
16-22.
Communlcatlons Consultant
Juanita Dailey said, "Our students
work~ hard to deliver their writte11
and oral presentations, but lt was
worth it."
"
Only In Its second year of
partlcipatlon in the SAFE pro·
gram, the 20 students ·with the
guidance o_ft!telr advisor, cOmmunIcations conSt\ltant and ad~ty
boards, reached · oyer. one million
PeoPle.
·· Student speakers for SAFE were
Val McElroy,; Ted Com~. Ron
:FUmier apd.De!lfly:Compton. Other.
SAFE members were. Rick Flit%;
Craig Colopy, Randy Kessinger,
Adam McNichols, Ed Moore, Greg
Verhoff, Klla Young, Tanya Adldns
. and .Amy Heaberlin.

Public Notice

'-:. _ _..:..__ __

.

Work Lengdi - Vllrioul IMt

COilhCI

Public Notice

Public Notice

Melga. Monroe. Morvin. ~·
... ,.,.,. lllnllln lrol w...
. .;gtUII, Cowl1lll, Ohio, on

1111211 Ohio R-.cl Codo.
Plana oftd ..... llcatlciua _,..
on 111o Iii tho t!tP-' Gil
T,....,...tatiol•- tho ollloi!

Public Notice

Public Notice

- - - ........... .atiooll, by

:;:t-t:ot-~.~
~....,._
...:...;.;;.;J:'-ii.IMVIIdth - ·
LMigth - o.oo .... o.oo ....

-

....-~-..- ........
lliddlnll on thil !'nljoct Ia

rMirlctlcf to . Dhnct•r-•d
......... Eii..iilow IDSE'al
certllod ' 11 D E't In - ·
-whh48CfR-Z3by
ODOT and qualflld to bid wllh
ODOT Choptiar Sll:lll of
tho O.ft.C.
The Ohk&gt; Doprito-•1 "'
lrar-llli&lt;M lllrlby notllill
.. It wtlllfllnna.
......., ....... In ....;

........
•nllnod 11 NqUirad by loiw

- ... ... lor!l! In tho
p;oPoul ...

%1"~~:;-

bid

-

VOI.35, No.6

-·Court.

wllHI..Soloaubjctto_.. ,
of tho
Kett.,rlne Eblin.
Adminlotralrix of •
\he Eatate of

lien Eblin,·

GALLIPOLIS - Two people were killed Saturday
night In separate Incidents In Gallla County·and Mason
County, W.Va . .
The"state highway patrol said Laura A. Sands, 78, Rt.
2, &lt;;:rown City, died when she was struck by a
hit·and·run driver and was run over by a vehicle
travelling in the opposite direction.
Floyd Alford Hayes, 13, Rt. 3, Leon, reportedly
drowned after he fell Into a creek.
'I't!e patrol ls continuing Its search today for the
driver of the veh~le which struck Sands, a
spokesperson for the Gallla·Meigs post said this
morning.
·
Troopers Sllld the accident occurred on County Road
8 (Hamilton Road), two and nine-tenthS miles east o!

' '

~-SoloaiAAol

·--In:

•

·

,.

Governor
.
testifies:
Piketon

·

1983 FORD
MUSTANG
GL
.
·

White exterior with chocplate vinyl bucket seats. ' Air, sun~ roof, AM-FM stereo. 4 spd. New premium tires. 38,486. ac· New Chevrolet trade.
tual miles.
.

.

"Nobody Deals Better''
.·

' · ......_,

,,~

~,

Ch:~rolet-Ol-dsmobilfl ~ ln,.c;.
1616 EASTERN AYE. ~ALUPCJLIS

. :. - ' ..

Tonta
. .' does Ieave d ead beh.·m
• ·d. ·

446,.3672

OUR
BIGGEST
DRAPERY SALE

Governor, laWJDakers
ponder S&amp;L solutions
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -Law,
makers will he considering a palr of
alternatives this week for rescuing
some of the smaller savihgs and
loans which cannot quality for
federal insurance.
Onenewproposallawmakerswill
look at could bring major Insurance
companies Into the deposltorS'
Insurance business. Another In·
volves a possible a rrangement
under which .Chase M;mhattan
Corp. of New York would acqulre
some of lhesmallS&amp;Ls lnapackage
deal.
Rep. Terry Tranter • . D·
Cincinnati. Is sponsoring a bill tha t
would permit ·major insurance
cQ!'!ipantes· such as Natlonwid~ tnl
Columbus and .Western &amp; Southernf
Life In "Cincinnat i to Insure the
deposits of thrifts that can't qualify
· for federal insurance:
· . Under Tranter!s bill, sched)lled
'for &lt;~ ·he~rlng Wrohesday _ln ttie''
· House FinanCial Jnstituticms Com·
mlttee, the S&amp;Ls would obtain the
private Insurance and then deliver
to each depOsitor a policy "they can
place right beside th£&gt;1r automobile,
home or other Insurance policy."
The proposal woUld let lnsurance
companies take dolla~·!or-dolla r
credits on their state taxes for any
losses they Incurred by Insuring the
thrllts. Opt-of-state companies also
could insureOhios&amp;Ls.
The state has mandaled federal
lnsurance as a condition for
reopening for full service, and about
• 20 of thfs' 69. privately insured thrifts .
· which ere shut down at th£&gt; height
. ofOhlo s S&amp;L crisis on March 15 ~tlll

don't have it.
The 20 thrlfts are open for llinlted
service undertermsofthe new state
law. To quallfy for the fede ra l
lnsurance. a thrift must have assets
that excCed liabilities by 5 percent
and agree to be open at least 'five
days a week. The law also permits
them to reopen for full service lf-lhey
m erge with or are taken over by
another savings and loan that has
federallnsurance.
Gov. Richard Celeste said last
week that hewouldpush tocomplete
thesaleof HomeStateSavingsBank
of Clnclrinati to Chemical Bank of
New York. which would require
legislation.
.'
The governor wants lo use $87 .
mlltlon remaining ·- In the Ohio ..
Deposit Guarani ~ Fund and up to ·
$129 million in state funds to make
sure HomeStatedepositorsarc !ully
re!mbur,sed . .
Clieinical 6ank wo~ld ·pay $21
millionfor thetlght weiiter!heOhio ·
financlai market" and prOvide an
additional $36 million for capltallza·
tlon, under a tentative contract
Celeste has described .
The governor's office also Is
cons idering furt her legislation
under which Chase Manhattan,
which already has acquired thrifts
in Mentor and Cincinnati, could
obtain more.
That arrangement could be
included in the Home State legisla ·
lion. However, Celeste envisions a
pla n under which ChaSe would have
to acq.ulre enough o! the s&amp;Ls for a
total asset package equal to the
assets of Home State.

Nation's prisons full

SAVE

13 die on Ohio roads

.

ON QUALITY DECORAMA
DRAPES and BEDSPREADS
HURRY
IN
AND

SAVEl .·

In association
POMEROY- RocklngG Ranch,
Pomeroy, has been elected to · .
membershlp In the . American
Angus A!!SOCiatlon, reports Dick
Spader, executive vice president ol
the national organization, with ·
headquarters In St. Joseph, Mo.

...

pronounced dead at 11: :ll p.m ., deputies reported.
Meanwhile, a Portland woman escaped injury in a
one-car accident Saturday on Ohio l24, according to
the state htgnway patrol.
Troopers said 2!&gt;-year-old Brenda Johnson was
westbound, one mile east of0 hto3.'l8, at8: 15a.m. when
her vehicle dropped off Ihe right side of the road. lost
control, came back onto the road and struck an
embankment.
Her vehicle was moderately damaged.
E leven people were Injured, some requiring
hospitalization, in a three-vehicle accident Saturday
on SR 7. near the Crown City Mining Tipple. Most ofthe
lnju red were·transported to Hunting1on area hOspitals.

GERMANTOWN, Md. lAP) Ohio Gov. Rlchard' Celeste said
· today that the social and economic
costs of closing the uranium
enrichment plant at Piketon, Ohio.
would be "devastating andqnac&lt;'ep·
table" to the state.
·
•'
in Wrltten teStimony, delivered to
a publlc meeting ·of the U.S.
' Department of Energy, Celeste said
"the !!losing o! the Piketon facility, ;.
, at whatever leve\.-wm wreak bilvoc. ,_. . OLD nom RAZEo-.me ~ POII)ero)"!l..o)dest neXt door to Crow' sF~ Re.caurant, the lot wiU be
_·. ulx!n thlsP!).rt:Of()hlo._!lf!d its.advei'Se·
laomeii, which was laattheri!81denceqltbelall!Dr:and- ·; u!ll!d'for addlt~·paridngfor the~l
tn\]:lacts wm ·~ felt acros!Hhe '- ~.TotnCrow,W.~St.,tsbe!JtgrUA!d.Loo.ited
.'
·· · &lt;
- · ·
,
1
state.':
·
·
Faced with a glut of enriched
uranlumontheworldmarket.DOE
Is currently evaluating theeconom·
ics of centrifuge and laser uranium
'
His daughter was treated !or cuts and bruises. The
enrichment technologies to decide
By SOOTT WILLIAMS
·twister
demolished the bouse where Roach's wife had
which one to purse In the future. The
AMoclated Preis Writer
taken
shelter
In a hallway, but Mrs. Roach was
declson~ which will effect the Gas
, A lumbering, slow·movlng storm already responsl·
uninjured,
authorities
said.
Centrifuge Enrichment Plant al
ble for millions o! dollars In damage crept across the
At
the
National
Severe
Storms Forecast Center In
Piketon. Is expected next month.
Midwest today after unleashing at least 35 tornadoes,
Kansas
City,
Mo.,
spokesman
Scott Tansey said today
About 1,&lt;XXladvancedcentrifuges,
Including one In Texas that killed three elderly people
the
lingering
weather
system
that generated the
w)llch enrich uranium by separa t·
when their house "just exploded."
tornadoes
meant
a
continued
chance of severe
!ng the material a spinning process,
weather
for
a
region
from
northern
Texas to southern
have been ln~talled at the plant.
In the East, meanwhile, thecalendarsklppedsprlng
Oklahoma and Kansas, and from Minnesota to the
.DOE has also conducted soclo·
and went right to summer, ~ndil)g the mercury to
Dakotas.
economic studies on the Impact of
record highS for the date In at least 48 cltles. In
closing one of II s three gaseous
Mlchlgan, raln runoff combined wlth snowmelt
In the northern states, Minnesota officials sald at
dltfuslon plan\. one of which Is at
flooded at least 16 roads In one county.
least
six tornadoes struck Sunday, downlng· power
Piketon.
An elderly ·Texas couple and their 64-year-old son ' lines and damaging barns. One' twister chopped a
Celeste noted that the federal .• were killed Sunday when a twister smashed their·
mile-long swath several hundred feet wide throUgh
government will have Invested $3
bouse In Elbert, south of Wichita Falls, said Sgt. Joe
Willmar,
a city of about 17,1»1 people, but no Injuries
bllllon In GCEP by the end of !!seal
WASHINGTON lAP ) -Crimes to the same period In 1983,
Hall, a Young County deputy sheriff.
were
reported.
1985 and that skilled workers have
reported to pollee rose by 2 percen1 represented I he first increase since
"This ls the worst I've ever seen," Hall said Sunday
.
been hired and trained for the
In the fourth quarter of last year 1981.
night. "I think this one here just exploded. It just
The Bureau of Justice Statistics.
centrifuge process.
following
three
consecutive
quar·
Atornado near Tracy threw a car Into a ditch but the
whipped the whole place apart. It wasn't recognizable
· "At a tlinewhengovemment at all
ters of decline, while federal an!l m eanwhile, said sta tes "have not
passengers escaped unhurt, state pollee said:
asahouse."
·
~
levels Is being challenged to tighten
state
prisOn populations were at kept pace with the escalating
TornadQ!'S were alSo reported near Grand Isle and
HalL said the bodies of Arch Curtis, Ill, and his wife,
Its . belt ··and rely on existing
iecord
levels. the Justice Depart· demand for additional prison
Wolbach, In Nebraska. A twister also touched down In
Beulah, 85, were found In a field lm tom yards from
space." lt sa id sta te prisons were
resources wherever pOssible, It
men! says.
the house. The body of their son, Malcolm Curtis, was
Rock Rapids, Iowa, the weather service said.
operating atllO percent of capacity
· wouid he the height of hypocrisy to · found near the house.
Overall,.
however,
the
FBI's
In Michigan, Marquette County Sherlff's Lt. Mike
walk away from such a massive and
Unlfol'll) Crime Reports, based on a l the Pnd of 1984 .. requiring some
Zorza said flooding over already saturated ground was
About six miles away, a second tornado struck while
lOilg·standlng Investment ," Celeste
calculations of crimes reported to 11,51)) prlsonPrs to be housed in local
George H. Roach, 43, and his 15-year·old &lt;)aughter
the worst In .;ecent memory .
,
pollee In nearly 13,00l jurisdictions, jails.
said.
''the sponge Is full, so to speak," he said.
Robin trted to reach home In a pickup truck. Roach,
While
overall
crtmc reported Ia
· "If a newer .technology Is to be
showS overall cl'in\e was down 3
Sevtoral families ~adviSed tn leave their homes
hospltall2ed with ~tsandbrolu!rt bones.saldthestorm ·
police
fell
by
3
percent. forcible
selected for further production,
percent In 1981, compared to the
'becaUJe of basetnfllt tloodlng that could ca111e
threw hlm 100 feet from the tnlck and thrn Jobbed It
rapes
and
aggravated
assaults rose
Install it at Piketon."
year before.
about :.xlfeet.
'
·
electrical problems•.Zorza said.
by
6
percent
a
nd
4 percent
Celeste sald subcontracts for
But the 2 percent rise in the final
respectively,
the
steepesl
growth
constructing GCEP have resulted in
three monthS of last year' compared
rates slnce the start oCt he decade.
more than $3.llmUilon of business In
22 Ohio counties.
The governor sald that If DOE
decldes to close or slnlgicantly
a car that ran off a city street and
By The AIJ8oclated Preis
reduce the Piketon facilities, the
'
At least 13 people were killed In struck a pole.
agency should:
UPPER
SANDUSKYKeith
A.
traffic
accidents
arourid
Ohio
this
-Issue a clear timetable for any
Rhoden,
24,
of
Nevada,
Ohlo,
In
a
weekend,
the
Hfghway
Patrol
said
phase-out and a specific statement
car-motorcYcle
accldel\t
on
an
today.
of job loss;
The patrol_counts traffic fatalities Uppl!l' Sandusky stlftt.
· -Give a mlnlumun of one year's
GAU.IPOUS - Lori A. ' Sands,
from
6 p.m. Friday to midnight
notice to workers and the
78
of Crown pty, a pedestrian
Sunday.
communities; .
1
sttuck.on
a Gallla County road.
The dead:
. -Submit a detaUed envlronmen·
LEBANONB.yanA. Couch, 20,
'
FRD&gt;AYNIGHI'
.tal Impact statement about any
of
Lebanon,
In
a two-vehicle
HILUiBORO - George D. J'or·
remaining radloacttlve wastes and
accident
on
a
Warren
County road.
dan Jr., Zl, of Green!leld, who lost
a plan fQr their disposal;
GIRARDDavid
R.
Merrill, 51i,
• -Provide sufflclent funds (or control of his mOtorcycle and ran off
of
Campbell,
In
a
twt&gt;car
accident
worker retraining and assistance U.S. Route 50, striking a guardrail.
· HILUiQORO - Michael D. on a city street In Girard.
1,1rograms•
SVNDAY
Lovett, 17, of Hillsboro, w~ car
MANSFIELD- Lawrence E.
ran off a Highland County road and
WorthlnCton. Zl, ot Manslleld, In
struck a pole.
one-car accident on a Richland
SATURDAY
CLEVELAND (AP) -Holders of
five winning tickets wiU share an
CLEVELAND - Lisa ~u· County road. ·
ASIITABULA Jamie L.
uOhlo Lotto" jackpot worth mycky.z, 18, ot Cleveland, a pedes·
STORM DAMAGE - Re81denta near Lake 40 more, two of them severely, offtclals said. 'l1le
Barnes,
~.of
Dorset,
whowasstruck
$1,450,llll, state lottery officials say. trtan struck by a vehicle while
wu.on. Minn. IUJ'\Iey the dam~~ge to a fann Sunday Nadonal Weather Sel'\llcc In Minneapolis said the
Each ticket listed all six numbers crossing a city street.
· by a car on a county road In
daJna8e could have l)een caused by a tomado or
after
~ wlndl swept tllroup tile area Sa&amp;urday
from the drawing Sa tul'day- 6, 10,_
CINCINNATI - Charles Camp(Continued on page 10)
strong wlnd!i. ( AP Laserpboto ).
IIIJhl.
The
wiiHIII
de/!IO'oyed
four
fanns
and
darnaied
14,'18, 23 and Zl.
beU, 28,ofCinclnnatl, a passenger In
'

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26 Cents

.0, Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

the year. In a related matter, county resldenl Willlam
Ward, 63, Thurman, was killed Friday In a crash
between his van and a CQal truck on U.S. 351nJackson .
County near theGaUia line.
Mason County sheriffs deputies _said, t.helr
department Was notified at 9::.! p.m. thai Hayes had
fallen Into eight feet of water In 13 Mlle Creek whlle
fishing with his mother. Opal Hayes.
She tried to save her son from falllnglntothewa ter.
deputles said, but was unable to hol9 onto -hlm. A
search was Initiated by local volunteers and a nelghbor
later found the boy:s body and pulled him from the
creek.
The youth 'was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital by
the Mount Flower Rescue Squad, where he was

-would
be ·
.
devastating

::::::::!::~ ~

Reservations may be. placed by
calling 1-IO).:;Bz.7201, extension 36t,
or 26-5353. .

Olilo 218, at 8: 15 p.m. Troopers said Sands was
standing In the road talking to the driver of another car. .
'fhatdrlversawavehlcledrlvenbyJohnG.Johnson,
18, Rt. 2, Crown City, approaching westbound, and
drove off. An unknown vehlclf then came eastbound;
struck Sands and knocked her Into the path of
.Johnson's auto.
Jobllson was unable to avoid striking Sands, and his
vehicle came to rest 'on top of her, the patrol sal d.
The-unknown vehlcle continued on, troopers said.
BIUy Sands, an eyewitness to the accident ,Informed
Gallla, County sheriffs deputies that the unknown
vehicle, a pickup truck, had attempted to force him off
Bladen·Mercerville Road earlier that night.
The accident was Gallla County's second fatality of

clos~g

.

1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio. Monday. April 22. 1985

Copyrighted , 985

0/o.

RGbelt L. Huffman

e: at. Y enttne
Driver sought m·Gallia's 2nd fatality

,..

ecree anc.t ·waa app;r '1., for
*10.000.00 ' cannot be
lOki tor 1e11 then h epp;af11d

"Tho datlt ..t"" cornpledon
of IIIIa -lhllbellll forth in
Copy No. 811·443
tho bidding propoool ..
' UNIT PRICE
l1lch _
.... IIi Nctulllld
CONTRACT
ti&gt;
fie
with
~
bid o cwdllod
. tRG-OOORI48)
... ---lohlckf......
FRQ.OOOR(221 I
SRO·OOORIZ21
"""" ... llw per coni
SMIId prql Ollh wll t. at hll bid. but In no - . t more
....,
ftfthtfIll dolan. oro
roc I illecl II tho offici at llio
~at tho ONo ~· - · - per~of~ bid,
, _ of TNr-iatkWI, Co- - - .. tho Dnctor.
Blddwl IQIIIy,, on llio
lumbua. Ohio. . until 10:00
farml. for quallllcadon
A.M., Ohio S-nl llme, ... dllyo Plior .. the
tu..u.y, May 14. 1111111. for . at 1111 for _ . ..... blda In
Athena, Gomo. Hoclilng, accordance with Chapter

•

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llil .'"-·

(4)19. 21. 22. 31ic

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P'orn.ov. Ohio. Tho PI-"!
_ .... of opproxim.tely 23 '

for ·

-

Maaobeallilpdi.We md way on Pap I

Blce'Jooh- OD PaplO

of Fllld VW, Crow. A-..ey.

Mlionlll origin lncon~INtion
tor .. .

Valley artist ·series

DIRECTOR

tion at Union Aw. State
Rt. 7, on Wildt--,; Apr124,
19811. 1111 o.m; litho office

JNftt. rnlnorhy
......,_ lnlillpolow wit be
arh:wdld ful opportUNty to
IUbmlt blda in - - .....
trwltatlon arol will be
dilcriminllld ~ on 1M

"Minimum thil PIVloct .._

Aprtl21,28

To-lp. -

_,...,_Into-'

'

•
WUl8

Extension notes

LEGAL NOTICE
I wtlt ollw lor aole 1M hn
Ebtlri property. Satlabury '

to 1hll echal'

seven
.............

••

of tho Dtotrlct Deputy
Dnctor.
Tht Oirec:lor [lllf'* . .
right to lljoct - and .. blda..
WARREN J. SMITH

Public Notice

groundl at ..... color, ...

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
lRANSPORTATION

\

~p;;;;;;;;;.;;;;~--------~~iii-------;;;;liiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij·. ·

prganizational effectiveness
·s eminar Friday at RGC-CC
;,. RIO GRANDE - A seminar for
· non·proftt organizations designed to
~enghten organizational etfectlve.iiess has been ·set for Frtday from 9
a:m. untU3p.m.lnJamesA.Rbodes
'Student-Community Center at RJo
Crande College and Conununity
·College. ·
: . Robert L. Huffman of Jackson,
.TeM., personnel director for the
'food division of Procter &amp; Gamble,
~Ill prese~t the seminar, which wUl
eover ·such tq&gt;lcs as long·rangl''
JXaMing, board management,
problem· solving, effective teamln~
~ linprovlng member, employee
~ board commitment.
Huttman, who has had experience
with organtzatlonal consulting, has
'~~,!en president ol the West Tennes·
,ee United Way, Jackson Boys Club
lllld Jackson Symphony.
• He Is past chairman of tlwi
j.ck&amp;On Housing Authority and has
ken active In the Salvation Army.
1fe has held chatrmanshlps with the
~Arts Commission, South·
fl1l Arts Federatio; and the
~ and policy ccmmlttee of
ille NaUonal ANemblyofSta!e Arts
;\a ncJe8.1n 1980 heWU the guest of
1lie West German aovemment to
~their arll supports system.
' Jteillltr8tloll tor the seminar Is
JDcludln( lunch. The seminar Is
~liP' 11~ by RGC·CC and
~ HJ1111 Arts CCN~JCU, with
~from the Ohlo Arts Council.

April21~ 198~

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

.

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\

*Hundreds of colors and patterns
*Buy any width, any lentth,
any fullness
*4-inch double headings and
, bottom hems
*H.and set permanent plea.ts
*Lmed or unlined

GIVE
YOUR HOME
A NEW
.
LOOK

Five share jackpot

.,

FREE
PARKING

EL.B·ERFELDS
POMIIOY

.,

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f~t!~·
...., "
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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

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fS'm~ ~.__-.,.....r"""T"'1!!:ad•~

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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associa ted Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
1
tlon and the American Ne ';Vspa per Publis hers Association .
LEITE RS OF OPINroN are welcome. Th~y should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to l,.'dltlng and must be signed with name, addr~s &lt;tnd
t~;olephone number . No unsigned 1&lt;:-tter s w!ll be published. L etters should be in
good tilste, addr('s sl ng IsSues. not per so nallt l ~s .

On~

Pege-2-The Daily Seatinel· •
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
. .Monday. April 22. 1986

anniversaries.:...·_ __.___

The hassle over the Itinerary of
Mr. Reagan when he journeys to
Europe Invites reflection on ann!·
versarles and what they .reveal. .
Ten years' after V·E Day, we had
just finished telling the Soviet
Union, our wartline ally, that we
didn't give a damn what they
thought, about It, we were going to
concl~de a peace treaty with West
&lt;Oermany (our wartime en~my).
which we proceeded to do. We had
been Intimate friends of Adenauer,
the leader of West Germany, from
·virtually the beginning~ We wrote
some stlff Ia ws - no Germans
would be allowed to publish and
circulate Nhl propaganda. We

hanged a few criminals (and were a
_little unhappy about doing so, since
there were jurists whO said we were
violating our own constitutional
guarantees agajnst ex post facto ·
justice).
At the other end of the world we'
also did a spot of hanging, but then .
propped up the same emperor
under whose divine benediction the
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor
and launched their ravenous war.
against Manchuria, China, the
Philippines and SoutheflsL~sla. But
a few years of Douglas MacArthur '
and we were the fastest of friends,
and five years· after V·J Day we
were sending American troops to

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Moocley, Aprtl22, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Petrodollar
•
connection
As the United States recovers from the recession, oil consumption
Increases, and so do oil Irnpons. They rose 7. 7 percent last year. the first
jump in five years.
·
.
Ollis still plentitul. According to Edward Murphy, director of statistics
from the American Petroleum Institute, there are at least 10 million
barrels a day In excess capacity on world markets. Despite t!)e glut,
however, and as U.S. lnlports Increase, Saudi Arabia remains a major
Influence on oil prices.
More than a decade ago, the Nixon administration paid close attention to
what the Saudis had to say abOut world events, particularly the
Arab-Israeli conflict. At the same time, the United States tried to persuade
the Saudis to use their lnfiuence In the Arab world to promote a settlement.
That process continues today. The Reagan administration, like Its
predecessors, Is ~oping the Saudis wlll ·promote negotiations between
Israel and a mixed Jordanian-Palestinian delegation. The SaudiS, In tum,
hope to ·Influence 1:J .S. policy.
How the Saudis try to exert their lnOuence Is not very easy to trace. The
rulers of the desert kingdom operate quietly, even within Arab counc!Th.
How they operate In the llnlted Staiesremalnsmostly a mystery. Unlike
•
Israel, for ·instance, whose supporters are bOth persistent and vocal, the
Saudis are usually low-key.
According to a new boo]l, "The American House of Saud: The Secret
Petrodollar Connection," .the Sau~is have quietly translated their
Jnun~se oil wealth- $661 billion in oil earnings from 1973 to 1984- into
WASHINGTON - Ahout 1hree administration.:
tnunense polltlcal ·power.
weeks ago, a federal agency
The FCJC was created In 1938 as
actually experienced the night·. an attempt to spread the risk of an
The author, Steven Emerson, a former Investigator for the Senate
mare that Social Security benefl· Inherently. risky business. And
Forelgo Relations Conunittee, claims the Saudis, often through friendly oil
companies and other firms eager 'for contract$, "spread the Arab
ciarlesoftenworryabout: Iiranout through~ years of dust, droughts
· . message'' with _political donations; Mideast institutes and . university
of money to pay the people lt.owed. and deluges, It worked. It was not
, programs. .
.
.
, There wa~- pracucaUy no money only ' self-supporting, but · for ' 00
Emet'Siin says, for Instance, the four major American oil comPanies that .. lett. In the till to p_ay Insurance J;X!i;twar ,years It took In more In
make up AriUnco have conducted a secret multlnlllllon-dollar political · claims flied by farmers for. crop premiums .thi!n ll ·had to pay out In ·
campaign designed to sway public opinion against' Israel.
losses - though the farmers !lad claims.
AWACS radar
paid premiums for the protection.
The cheery picture darkened
.
'.During Jl].e congr.,.ssional fight over the purchase of
~_. .., planes. :Emerson says, the SaudJ&amp;.lleld up an· co.ntract negotlalio!IS will)
· According to our sources, the abruptly in 1980, When the FCIC
Amf~icim companies . .-The . su$penslon, he · says, elicited- the "most
Federal Crop Insuran&lt;;e ' Cf&gt;rp.
paid out $199 mllilon 1l)Qre· than it
exterisive·buslness lobbying on _a ny'lorelgn (JQlley .tssu since World War- - simply stopped processl!lg tie· . IO!lk lri. In the [last five years, tihas
IL..
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m:ands fllr payment. To cover l~s · · gone·$861 iriUIIon hitq 'the Ted. :
During Senate hearings, a few senatorsCrlticalofthedealquestloned the · flnancl'\1 embarrassment, the
Various stopgaps have kept It
lobbying campaign. Much more attention, however, was paid to efforts by
FCJC seCretly resol1ed to a bit of afloat - but as precariously as a
Peter-Paul robbery, transferring henhouse In a Oood. First It
Israel's suppor1ers to block the weapons sale. It went t.hrough. ·
According to Emerson, the pro-Saudi lobbyists, ranging from oU,
$50 million of administrative and
bo~rowed $250 million from a sister
operating funds to the bankrupt
agency in the Agriculture Depart·
aluminum and farm machinery companies to rtce growers and farm
cooperatives, may have made the difference. ,
claims section. It has since asked
ment. the Commodity Credit Corp.
In the months ahead, thP Reagan administration wlll renew its effort to
Congress for permission to take yet That loan was swallowed with
another stopgap measure to cover barely a burp to note Its passing.
promote Arab-Israeli negotiations and Palestinlan'rights. It probably also
the first one.
Commodity Credit has written It off.
will propose more Saudi purchases of advanced weapons.
Once again, the United States will be specially sensitive to the oll-rlch
But It's becoming obvious that as a bad debt.
,
kingdom. And how the Saudis get their views across ID Americans again
FCIC needs an overhaul, which will
Then the FCIC went to the ·
' require some hard decisions by Treasury Department. With con·
will be a matter of great Interest.
b-oth Congress and th 'e

_w_uL_ia_m_F_.n..,....uc_k_Ley_J_r:

defend, to thelt death, the South Japanese who professed veneration
Koreans and the Japanese against for Tojo. And so we bi!came friends
· communis! aggression trom North with people we struggled !lo hard to
kill, In a war that brought death to .
·
Korea.
55
million people,
·
How much easter It Is to reconclle
But
10
years
after
the
Vietnam
one's self with countries one has
War,
we
do
not
recognize
the
defealed, than with countries that
govenunent
of
VIetnam.
~d
our
have defeated us. True. the Germans and the Japanese, !]Iough own government has not changed:
defeated. came around quickly, but They are stU! Republicans, and ·
that was because, In order to Democrats runs Congress, · not :
reconcUe themselves with their communists or Maoists.
Noone, on the lOth anniversary~ :
own defeat, it was necessary that
they should publicly abominate . the fall of Sosuth Vietnam, ~ :
their older leaders. So that It was all · suggestlngthat·wehaveanythlngln' :
but Impossible, a year or two after rommon with the people who'·
the war's end, to find a German who conquered South VIetnam, LaOS" '
.professed vener;~tlon for Hitler, or a and Cambodia- and, IncidentallY,·:
the United States. Nor were we ·
wrong In predicting what would.:
happen It the North VIetnamese :
took over the SoUth. Peter Berger,
the sociologist and phllosopher,)las •
said re§onantly that anyone whO: :
can't tell the difference between
authoritarianism and totalitarian·
lsnl eould not tell the difference
between Saigon and Ho Chi Minh
City.
But the Introspection to which we
have been given, on this 10th
anitlversary of our defeat In
Southeast Alta, devotes. very little
time - have you noticed - to the
awful betrayal .of1975~We no longer
stood to lose American soldiers In · •
1975. They were long since gone. ..
But Congress stood there. Pi-esi· '
dent Ford begged'It to act. Congress
.
all but latigbed at the call to redeem
the pledges we had so solenmly . • ~
made to the South VIetnamese after •
- as well as before - the Treaty of •
Parts. The general tit of ·lconoc·
lasm, brought on by the unpopular
war and. exacertrted by ·the
apparent moral Insouciance of '
Richard Nixon In the matter of' ·
Watergate coarsened our senslbUJ.'
ties.
1

C~op

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Insurance running
dry
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Jack Andersop . :'
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The Deily Sentinel-Peg• 3

Reds winning s
7;
despite low offensiv~ .o utput ·

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gresslonaJ' perm15slon, It may sell
were 'very high and probabtyv ,
up to $500 million In so-called
unrealistic" when .It passed a
"stock" .In Itself to the Treasury,
sweeping law ln,.l98l that required
supposedly to buUd a reserve
the FCJC to · insure . many more
against the lean years.
~rops for a higher portion of the· ·
But the money from the· stock
value ('15 percent), and to make its ' :
sales diSappeared rapidly- in br,&gt;th
prenituins ''actuarlally sound.''. , , ' :
f'!t and lean ye~rs. Now the FCIC
Tlie FCIC du,tlfully expan~ its·&gt; · .
has only $50 rriUllon oOts worthless . · coverage, but ·It ,n ever. raised lis · I
stock left to paddle-to an understan·
premiums to make them actuar·
dably reluctant ' Treasury. · It · Is
Ially sound. The result was i '
' tryfug·to extract this last residue tp
pre.;Jictable.
, ·,
~eplace the money It transferred
Slifague cl~lms that FCfC ••never • · •
·from Its administrative budget. . · :technically · stop~ proce5slitg r _
HOW did . IM FCIC get In sucll
claims ' ' 'But ·another agency, offl. .·.'
pathetic straits? MeiTitt Sprague, a
clal acknowledged that "we were ... :
plain-spoken Illinois farmer who Is
very selective on our payments"•
the agency's .third manager since
untU the $50 mllllon transfusion,.
hard times struck, put It simply:
which he said keeps the agency . ,
"The truth Is we've experienced
alive today.
losses \hat have exceeded our
Sprague retains the tanner's.
premium Income for five cOnsecuInborn optimism, lnslsthig that "the
tive years, and that has resulted In
obligations will be coVered'" and
an unintended Federal subsidy to
expressing confidence that "Con·
the program."
gress will recognize Its
Diplomatically, Sprague told us
responsibility. •·
that "the expectation of Congress
.\
Sources in Congress : an~ the .
admlnlstratlo!J aren't so sure.

,

' THE' ONE AND ' ONLY - Clqclnnpll Reds' .
bWnmner Ertc Da~ (M) lllldt!s Into home plate
Sl!fely, behind San Franclsoo Glliala' c;atcher Bob
Branly (U)1 and In (ronhiReds'bli&amp;erGaryRed\18,
to limre the only nui of the game during the third

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
Tile San Francisco Giants a re
losing these days because they
' aren't scoring many runs . The
Cincinnati Reds aren't ~ring
many, either- buf that hasn't kept
them from winning.
' 1We'll takeeveryonewecanget,"
Clnclnnatl player-manager Pete
Rose said after !sunday's 1,0victory
over San Frantlsco extended the
Reds' winning streak to seven
games . "Score one run and WJn,
scoretworunsandwln,or'fOrenlne
runs and win -whatever It takes."
The Reds haven't exactly been
killlng teams In their streak scoring but two or less runs In three
of the last seven games. The Giants,
meanwhile. suffered their sixth
straight loss, dropping four one-run
games In their last five,
"I've never been on a ballclub that
went this many tiDies without
scoring nothing," said Giants Manager Jim Davenport.
The Reds scored the only run they
needed when Eric Davis tripled off
Allee Hammaker, 0-2, with two outs
In the third and came home on a
catcher's Interference call ali he
tried to steal home.
.
I
Tom Browning, 2·0, scatteredYlve
ltinlng of . their Nalional League game SulldaY
aftemoon In Clnclnllatl. Davis was awarded home . hits ov"' (he first eight Innings as the
Reds matched their longest Winning
plate on a balk by Gltlll&amp;li' pUeher Allee Hammaker,
streak
of 1984, keeping them In first
lind Redwl given lint bMe on Catcher's Interference
place
In
the NL West, 1~ games
on BrenJy. 'lbe Reds beJit the GtaiJts 1-3: (AP
aheadofSanDiegoandLosAngeles.
I ;, p ?11thoto).

In other Natlon.ill Leaglle games,
Knepper, l.O, allowed no runs and
Chicago blanked Montreal 4-0;
onlyonehltovertheflrsttlvelnnlngs
Phl~delphla trimmed New York
1n gaining his first decision of the
1o:6; Houston stopped Atlanta 4-2; season In his third start. He struck
St. Louis turned back Pittsburgh out three and walked one.
6-0; and Los Angeles defealed San
Cardinali II, l'lrUel8
Diego 2.0.
Terry Pendleton hit his first
Cull8 t. ~pos 0
career grand-slam home run and
Riehle Hebner stroked three B!lb Forsch and two other pitchers
singles and drove 1n three runs and combined on a six-hitter to lead ·st.
Dennis Eckersley fired a five-hitter Louis over Pittsburgh.
for his second consecutive shutout
The Cardinals were leading Ul In
as Chlca8o ended Montreal's tour· itheseventhwhenPendletondrovea
gamewlnntngstreak.
. IR.od Scurry pitch Into the left·~ld
Eckersley, 2-1, who tossed a lbleachersat~sch~lum.Lonnle
W-Inning, tlve-hltter 1n beating Smith bunted his way on and
Philadelphia 1.0 In his previous Tommy Herr and Andy VanSlyke
start, didn 'tallowaMontrealrunner walked to load the bases before
past second base. He walked only . Pendleton's blast.
one batter and struck out three 1n
Forsch, 2.0, left the game after six
recording his nlnth victory 1n 12 Innings because of a cut on the
decisions since July l5oflast season. middle finger of his pitching hand.
Phlllle!8 10, Melli 6
Andy Hassler aJ)d Bill Campbell
Ozzle VlrgU singled In thewlnnlng pitched the final threelnnlngsforthe
run as Philadelphia snapped a ~tie Cardl.nals.
with (our I;llliS In the seventh Inning : - - - - - - - - - - - tode(eatNew York .
Reliever Kevin Gross, 1·2, al·
lowed only three hits and one run In 4
2·3 Innings, striking out five and
walking only ·one. Kent TekuiYe,
acquired In a trade with Pittsburgh
031 J.ICKSON Plltf·RT. 30 WEST
Saturday, worked two scoreless
Pftone 448· 4524·
Innings In relief.
B~IIGAIN ~liNEES SAT I SU'
Astro8 4, Braves2
All SEATS $2 .ZS
Bob Knepper gave up only four.
hits In six Innings and Jose Cruz got
three hits to lead Houston· over
error-plagued Atlanta.

Tw~s break nine game _losing streak; ln~ians win
Seattle2.
Toronto.
WhlteSC)x7,ReciSox2
. By BOB GREENE
Royalll3, 11aen2
lndlans3, YankeesO •
A two-rim double by Carlton Fisk
,
AP Sports Writer
A bases-lOOded single by Darryl
Tony Bernazard homered for the keyed a seven-run, seventh-Inning
When YO\I haven't won In a long
Motley In the 13th lnnlng drove In · seconllstralghtdayandVemeRuhl, raUyandcarrledTimLollarandthe
time, It's
to' forget the little
Willie Wilson with the winning run· Dave Von Ohlen and Tom Waddell Chicago White Sox over Bostpn.
things -like "high fives."
blanked New York on seven hits to
Loser Roger Clemens, 1·2, had a
"Kent 'Hrbek ~td he'd torgoueu ·-as Kansas City edged Detroit. ,
The winner was Dan Qulsen- glveCievelandthevlctory.
tWo-hit shutout working when the
howtodoa 'hl&amp;hflve,'" pJtcher Johii
berry, l-2, the tourth of five Kansas
Ruhl started tor the Indians and White Sox struck ·In the seventh.
Butcher rioted after burllng Minne·Lollar, 1-l, allowed three hits In
sota !&lt;ia ~-;Ov_lctoryove~theOakland 'Cltypitchers.QulsenberryloQkover . pitched four innings, givtngupfour
A's: "'Ihi!re was a lot of missing · at~ start of the lOth and worked 2 hits, before departing because of a the seven Innings he worked, btitone
stlff right shoulder. Von Olhen, 2-l, was Tony Armas ' fourth homer of
going on ~t there," Butcher said of 2-Jinnlngs, allowing one hit.
. The Royals' Steve Balboni ex· took over to begin the fifth, whlle the season In the fourth Inning.
the hand-slapping scene after the
!ended his hitting streak to six Waddell came on In the ninth to
· Twins snapped a nine-game losing
Rangers 5; Brewers 2
Don Slaugh! belted a home run
. games with a solo homer off Detroit record his lhlrd.save ofthe season.
streSk on Sunday: •
ClevelandshortstopJulloFranco, and singled twice to back the
BUtcher dldn 'I miss muj:h while st~rt Mllt Wilcox, whO was making
whO mlsseQ Saturday's game, combined eight-hit pitching or Mike
he was !lttlngl)n the bench awaiting . his first starl of the season.
Orlolell3, Blue Jay~~ ·2
returned to !he siartlng line\lp and
Mason ano Dave Stewart as Texas
. his turn to pitch.
.
illitcher evened his.record at H
Gary Roenlclte's towering, two- · went Mor4 to continue. to lead·lhe ci&gt;mpleted a tbfee-game sw!;'ep of
bystdldngouttwoand.wall!lngnotW··· run hOmer lifted Baltimore oVer . major lea~es wlih a .486!1~erage. · MUwauk~.
.
allowing Oakland just three Toronto and gave pitcher Dennis
hits.
Martinez his . first victory
of the r--'--"'-:.......--~·'--'-----;-----........
Butcher's victory all!o stopped a
season.
.
.1.··
sl,x-gameQa)llan!l wtnnlngstrea!t. • The loss snapped roronto's four.rti aliter Amei'lc!m U.ague games·. game winning strea)(. . .
.
Sunday, It was Kansas City . 3,' · It was Roenicke's '~nd homer
' ..
Detroit 2 In l3lnnlngs; Baltimore 3, of 'the season - and his second off .
Toronto2; Cleveland 3, New YorkO;
Toronto starter J lmmy Key, now
Chicago 7, Be$ton 2; Texas 5, 0-2.
Milwaukee 2; and California 9,
Damaso Garcia hOmered for

easy

while·

Slaugh! slammed his first hOrner
of the year In the fourth and CUff
Johnson hit a solo shOt. his third, In
the sixth.
Mason, 2-1. scattered three hits
through seven Innings, giving up two
·runs In the eighth .

'
Angels 9, Mariners 2
Juan Benlquez, Brian Downing
and poug DeCinces drove In two
runs each to lead Calltornla over
Seattle.
.
Geoff Zahn, 2.0, pitched four·hlt
ball through seven Innings and
benefited from the Angels' six-run
exploSion In the first two InningS.
Doug Corl1ett worked: the last two
Innings for the Angels.

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

~

,Ohio
Sportlight

Wind Indicator

I

OKaY iF

I &amp;Mot&lt;e?

A~

LONG a~ YoU

DoN'T VioLare

MY aiR ~Pace.

Today in history
Today Is Monday, April 22, the 112th day of1985. There ate 253 days left In
tbe' year.
Today's highlight In history:
On Apr1122, 1864, Congress authOriZed the use of the phrase "In God We
Trust" on U.S. coins.
On this date:
In 1009, Henry VIII ascended to the throne of England following the death
of his father, Henry VII.
In 1870, Russian revolutionary Vladimir I. Lenin was born. I
In 1898. the first shot of the Spanish-American War rang out When the
uss NashvUie captured a Spanish merchant ship off Key West, Fla.
1n 19:15, the German army used polson gas for the first time In World War

l-

In 195&lt;1, the televised Senate Army-McCarthy hearings began.
In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson opened the New York World's Fair

at Flushing Meadow-Corona Park.
Ten years ago: Following the resignation of South Vietnamese president
NJI!yen van Thleu the day before, VIetnamese Communists said the Ford
lldmlnlstratlon's "only way out" ,would be to stop all Involvement In South
VIetnam.

i

~

.,,.,.

·Insensitive
WASHINGTON (NEA) -"Our
most sacred task," President Rea·
gan somberly proclaimed two
years ago, "Is to assure that the
memory of this greatest of human
tragedies, the Holocaust, never
fades - and that Its lessons are not
forgotten."
Notwithstanding tljat eloquent
rhetoric, the president today appears quite willing to forget the
systematic slaughter of more than
six million European Jews by
Germany's Nazis during World
War II.
In an appalling display of tnsensi·
tlvity, Reagan's Itinerary for his
forthcoming visit to Europe has
been constructed to allow him to
pay tribute to the defenders of the
Third Reich while ignoring the
victims of that reign of terror.
Coinciding with the eruption of a
controversy over the president's
activities on that trip, the World
Jewish Congress has raised dis·
· turblng questions about the attitude
toward the Holocaust embraced by
J?l!~, l,aa&lt;:hanan, . a
In·
stalled senior member of Reagan's
White House staff.
Dw:Jng an appearance three
years ago on a public affairs
program broadcast by a Washing·
ton television station, Buchiman
belittled the historical slgnltlcance
of the Holocaust.
At the same time, he called for
the abbjutlon of the Office of Special
{nvestlgatlons, the Justice Depart·
ment unit mandated to Identify,
locate, prosecute and deport Nazi
wa~ criminals living In this country.
Citing rrtassacres In the Soviet
Union, the People's Republic of
China, Poland and Cambodia,
Buchanan Insisted that ." there 'Is no
singularity'' ID tlle Holocaust.
"Why keep a special office to
Investigate Nazi war criminals.? "

newlY

forgetfulness~___R_o_be_rt_W&lt;_a_Lte_r~.

he asked. "Why not abOlish (the)
office?"
In subsequent newspaper columns, Buchanan was sharply
critical of the OS! for accepting
evidence supplied by the Soviet
Union to advance the prosecution r:l
former. Nazis.
Perhaps the only significant
distinction between the positions on
, Nazi war crlnllnals embraced by
Reagan and by Buchanan Is that
the president thinks they're all dead
while his aide knows that many are
alive, albeit quite old.
"We're. going after people who
.. are about 70 years old now ... and
· we&gt;re prosecuting them, throwing
them out ofthecountry," Buchanan
said during the television program.
At his March news conference,
Reagan Incorrectly lnslsled that
"the Gerinan people have very few
alive that remember evell the war
and certainly more ol them wpo
were adults and participating In
any way."
The president was attempting to
justify his decision not to visit
Dachau, one of the most notorious
German concentration cam115,
Claiming that he did not want tO be
Involved In "reawakening the
memories ... and the passions of the

'slve and sadistic case of genocide in
modern history.
As Buchanan Is quick to note,
there have been other Instances ol
government-sponsored mass
murder, but ·none can match the
unspeakable torture of the Holo·
caust victims while they were alive,
the depraved mutlllatlon of their
bodies after they were dead and the
vast scope of the entire operation.
Reagan says he wants to emphas- lze reconciliation while commemo-

rating World War II In Europe, but ·:
the American Legion apparently: •
understands the delicate nature of' ·
that mission better than does the . · &gt;
president
,
"HonoriQg the German war dead . :
while Ignoring the thousands or·
Allied war dead who fought there • · .
and the millions of European Jews · ·
who were victims of the Third
Reich has nothing to do with
reconclllatlon."

That decision was defensible .until It was disclosed that Reagan
would visit a German mallltary
!!t!met~ and lay a wreath In
memory ,ot that country's soldiers
who fought troops from the United ~
States and other Allied nations
during .World War II.
What neither Reagan nor 13ucha·
nan 'apparently understands Is that
the Third Reich's calculaled cam·
palgn to eliminate an entlri!-race of
people constitutes the most. !DDS·

Clouds

The O'Toole· clan

CINCINNATI CAP) - Former Cincinnati Reds pitcher J 1m O'Toole has
come up with a different version of baseball's triple play. Three.of his sons
pitch for McNicbolas High School's baseball team, and he serves as
pitching coach.
·
i
' •
. !'I could not be prouder than to have all three sons on the same team,"
says o:Toole, a left ·hander who pitched tor the Reds from 1958 to 1966.
''They've never been on thes~ team before. Thlsyearblowsmymlnd."
Billy, Frank and Jetry; three of ()'Toole's five sons, pitch for the
McNicholas Rockets. Frank Is the only left·hander of the trio.
"All three can play," McNicholas Coach Steve'Jostw.orthsald. "Tiiey are
· my three main starters. They are totally opposite from their father. They
' .
are the quietest kids you'd ever want to meet. Jim ls .outspolten. But he s
always positive.;· .
Tile three sons are In the middle' of the O'Toole clan. He also has six
daughters.
Billy,l8; Is a senior and transferred trom St. Xavier High two years ago.
Frank, junlor_and the Rockets' ace last year, Is 16.. Jerry, 15, Is the only
sophomore on the McNicholas varsity squad, and he, too, transferred fror:n
St. Xavier.
·
\
"Billy lives and dies baseball," Jostworth said. "Frank was our best
pitcher last year., And Jerry's along the same llnell as Bllly. ,He's a good
hitter and he'll lie playing the ouUleld down the toad."
Jim O'Toole w/JI&gt; one of the Reds' top pitchers In the 1960s. From 1961 to
lOOC, he had a record of69-43, Including a 19-9mark In 1961 and 17·71n 1964. ·
He last pitched In the major leag)les with the Chicago White Sox In 1967,
. when Bllly '\'as barely a year old. ·
·
·
.
The players the younger O'Tooles face never saw the senior O'Toole
pitch' (or the Reds. But that doesn't diminish the significance of the family
narne. ·
"People know your dad played tor the Reds," Billy said. "They get up
and try to beat you. They give a llttle more effort because there's basebaU
blood In you.'' ·
.
'
I.ast year. O'Toole would go to a St. xavier game to watch Jerry, then
teavetowaich FrahkandBilly. Sometimes, hewouldwatchonegame, and
his wife, Betty, would go to the other. That's what makes this year so
convenient tor both. parents, though Betty worried aloud, ''Why did they all
have to be pitchers?"
'"They all have. nice, smoothdellverles," O'Toolestld:'"lbeylatow.t
dley're doing at this age. I don't put any pl'eiiW'e on them.Jf dley didn't
'
•
•·
pitch, It WOU\dft't be the end Of the' world.·
"I think tllf'Y all have an excellent chance to inake It to the big leagues," ,
the senior O'Toole said.
·
,
.
Jbn O'TO(lle attended the University o!Wlsconaln before signing with the
Reds. Billy, 3-0by lastweekw;lthal.lOERAanda .427 batting average, Is
being pUrsued I!Y three maJor colleges - Indiana, Florida Southem and

..

WOOllY Worms

Barometer

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aerry's. World

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"Hmml The latest Issue of Amerlcsn MilitaryIndustrial Secrets. Would you like a psper
bag?"

cround Hog

a

time."

·

By George Strod,e ·

. '.

.'
·' ·..
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-~~;;"~works In public relations tor ~-Fetrts Industries, a

wAite I'I!I'IIO\Ial company. "Once a pitcher 1.0111!1 lila faal baD, be has to go to
garbage," be quipped.
· '
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-·vou dOn't··need to be a weather

expert to ~diet your electric
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Every month you get an electric bill. Ar"td
~rv month It's different Because your etec·
trtc usage var:tes withlne cnangtno seasons.
USUIIIV, It's up In the winter, dOwn In
sprtng, up ag~ln In air conditioning season,
ll'ld down 11111n In fill.
•
So hoW Clf1 you puttooether an Intelligent
hOCIII.'IOid
you Clln't Pr:tCSJct What
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SWitcl'l to our EQt,.tll Payment Plan.
, With the IQUII Payment Plan, we·u bill
you·a find amount eaCh month based on

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your average yeartv electl1c usage.
Your account Will be revleweCS every siX
montns to see tnatvour bUdget payment ts
still as dose as I)OIIII)Ie to vour 1verage use.
And, It tht! tnd or the twelrt1\ month. vou'll
receive a settle-up bill or a Credit.
want to smOOth out the ups and Clowns In
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�I

Page- 4 - The Daily Sentinel

Monday. Aprit

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1986

Health Department

OO,ge highly- tc;mted Dublin

... ,.

DELIVERS PITCH - Righthander Dan Thomas received both the
win and save in a6-5vlctory overhlghly-tootedDubUnSundayinagame
played at Franklin County Stadium in Colwnbus. Thomas went the first
lour Inning then carne back to retire the linal two DubUn hitters in the
seventh Inning. Dave Harrts photo.

, By KEITH WISECUP
COLUMBUS- Dan Thomas and
Rod R(lush llrillted highly-touted
Dublin to only five hits as Meigs
·, gave the Franklln Countlans il
· douse of good ole' fashioned country
hardball In winning a 6-5 verdict In
Franklln County Stadium Sunday.
The win was the streaking
Marauders' fifth In a row, raising
Its record to 9-5 whlle Dublin lost for
only the second' time this year
against U Wins, Dublin, a class
AAA . school, .h ad loSt oiJly fo
Wjietstone before Meigs came to
town Sunday.
Thomas went the first four
lnnlligs, lea~ with Meigs on top
2-{). Rod Roush pitched two and a
third lnnii!P before giVing way to
Thomas once again, who retired the
final two batters with the tying run
on third base and only one out:
Dublin traUed 6-4 heading for Its
last at bat and promptly rallied with
a pair of one out walks. Thomas'
return to the hlU resulted In a single
that drove In one run, making lt.6-5
and runners on first and third.
Thomas fanned a Dublin batter for
the second out and InduCed the final
out on a shotstril!g catch bY
centet1lelder James·Acree of a line
drive.
··
The first out of DubUn's seventh
carrie about when Meigs' hardhitting catcher srot Gheen showed
his defensive prowesS as he hustled
down the first base line on a
grounder to short, retrieved the

strikeouts.
·
Other tbiln Gheen's tliree hits, the
Meigs' hitting parade had Acree
with two trtples, Kennedy and
Carpenter with two singles each
and Chancey, Bush and Roush each
singled once: Thomas walked all
threettmesashkwasupandJackle
Welker added a pair of walks.
"It was a real good experience for
the klds. 'They really had a lot oftun
alldlt was rna~ doubly good when
we won," said Meigs' coach
Saunders, w ho himseIf halls 1rom
,
the Columbus area.
Ex-Meigs sandlotter Trey Cas·
sell, who moved to Pickerington
ball
with his p&lt;\l'E'nts and plays base
there, sat In the dugout with his old
teammates.AgoodMelgsfollowing
supported the Marauders to the
home of the class , AAA. minor
league Columbus Clappers.
On Friday, the Marauders made
· their TVC record 6-1 with a :H win
over Belpre behind the twO:hlt
.pitching of Nick Bush. .
After giving up three runs helped
.
by th('l:e walks In the firs! Inning,
.Bush settled . down to stymie the

overthrow on one bounce off the
firSt base sl~ wall, and threw the
runner out going to second. It was a
sensational play, according to
M~ roach Tim Saunders.
The Marauders, who drlUed out
12 hits during the game, ~~rabbed a
2~ lead In the third "ihen Chris
Kennedy led off with a single and
'scored oii Acree's triple; then
Gheen doubled In Acree.
The "tired-up" Marauders made
It 5-{)ln theMh when JayCa1'pellter
hit a one out single, Gheen walked,
Rodd Harrison was safe on a ·
fielder's chc&gt;ice to load the bases.
Mike Chancey singled in the first
run making It 3-0, and Nick Bush
lined the baU over third base to
drive In two more runs.
The eventual winning two ·
crossed the plate in the Meigs' sixth
when the fleet-footed Acree singled,
stole second, and rode home on
Gheen's third straight hit. a single.
Gheen was three of three, Including
a walk, two singles, and a double.
Dublin's all-state candidate Kent
Me~ker banged out a single and
double plus a walk In three.at·bals. ·
Mercker Is 5-{) on the. mound this ·
year and was being saved for
league action later this week.
Thomas received credit for both
the win and save In his two'sejJarate
appearanCes whUe Dublin's John
Finley suffered the loss. Finley had
relief help trom John Koter In the
sltth. DubHn pitching fanned nine
willie Meigs hurling had four .

to Warren Local Tuesday, return
home against Trimble Wednesil;\Y.
and go to Southern Thursday.
Friday'• Game
'
Motgs ......... .....................
IXIJ IXll :1-~ 6 I
Belpre ..... :...... ................. :m IXll 1-1 2 2
Bush tWPI and Glleon. Poole tll'l.
111

·=.

~;.....

00!: H

1

Meigs .............................
~
. Dublin ............. ... , .......... ~ .. )
Thomas (WP), Roush (5) , • oom.. ,7), and
Gh.,.n. Finley iLP!. Koter 161, and Evans.
· ·

By Norma A. TOI'I'el, RN
Supervteor of NunlnJr:
, Meigs H~ Depw1ttnent
AprU Is Cancer Awareness Month
and I want to share the following
.
Information with you.
Smoking during pregnancy
causes growth retardation ·and
Increases risk' of neonatal death by
50 percent and also lbterteres Wtth
the baby's vitamin metabolism.
Colo-rectal cancer affects 100,0ll
Americans every year. It's the
second biggest cancer ldUer In the
over 50 age group. Colon or large
· bowel Is the lower sbl feet oi the
Intestines; the rectum Is the last
' five to six Inches in ·the end of the
· colon leading to the outside of the ·
body. If detected and tre~ted early.
·three out four cases can he cured.
Gond ways for women to stay
healthy Include not• smoking, hav·
.. lng regular cancer check-ups and·
doing monthly slo!f-breast exams:
The American Cancer Society
reports that one out of every 11
w:omenwUI get breast cancer In her
lifetime especially. thdAe ovet 35

or

, persistent '&amp;!tack at the plate,
3·0.
NEWPORT - Playing on the scored as did two runs on errors.
Defensive!¥. Eastern played rel- Eastern managed only a 13-2rinale.
While Davis was holding tl]e
excellent facilities at Frontier High
Cameron crew scoreless, Eastern
School, the visiting Eastern Eagles atively well, committing only three leaving 12 men stranded on base.
Junior Royce Bissell came back
erupted for six runs In the third
dropped a 131.! en.counter to host errors in the course of the event.
After
striking
out
the
first
two
swing
with
two
solid
round on four walks, an error. and
into
ruu
: • Frontier. then rebounded In a big
batters.
freshman
hurler
Brent
doubles. Sophomore Eddie Collins
singles by Bryan DFurst, Ran;. • way in the nightcap to soundly
Bissell continued to throw smoke,
and Jeff Bissell each singled twice,
dolph, and Barber, the score' now
defeat Cameron, W.Va .• 16-2.
9-0. ·
.
Eastern Is now 7·6 overall a nd ~ - 2 but his pltchesnarrowly missed the Brent Bissell doubled, and Kevin
Inside the SVAC. Frontier. which . strlk&lt;' zone as four batters walked In Barber~ Bryan , Durst and Jim
Eastern plated five more 1n the
Weber·each singled.
fifth and two In the sixth to Increase
also defeated Cameron, evened its succession for a H Frontier lead.
It was a 1-0 game untU the hottom
Morris, Martin and Mendenhall
Its total to 16.. Cameron plated single
record at 6-6.
runs In the fourth arid slx!)i rounds.
•In the first game with Frontier, of the . third frame, when a walk, each singled twice for Frontier,
however. the biggest defensive ptay
Eastern actually outhit the winners three hits, and an error brought while Hartshorn slng!ed aitd I,amp
·JIM!, but had difficulty crossing the home three runs, and Mark Lainp hit a three-run homer.
of the day came In the third round,
Freshman Brent JJissell got his
when Cameron placed twq runners
plate In the 13-2 defeat. Eastern pounded an opposite field home run
on base. A popp!aytoKevln Barber
pitching had a harcUime hitting the over the right field fence for a 7-{) first starting nod of the seasqn for
\
...
Eastern, going two and two-thirds
at second resulted In a Barber-tostrike zone as its hurlers issued 11 lead.
Despite
a
detetmlned
effort
and
Innings.
BlsseU
walked
five,
fanned
Royce Blssell-10-Bryan Durst. 4-3-5.
walks. Seven of those walk victims
two, and allowed seven runs', four of
triple play to save the Inning.
which were earned.•
Enroute to his first varsity wip
eiiJ'~
Eddie CoHtns went one.:thlrd -Davis struck out eight, Including ·
~·
Inning of flawless · relief, while ,.. striking out thli side ·In· the fifth

~nr:s.B~llel:~~=ll':~~~::: ~ri:~,~~~~J~~: ·':~·-·

weal bowling

j

Eaglettes sp1•It 2 Wit
• h' Lady ·cougars
'f'Q.l;

a

r-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiii

'

CALL (614) 992.-2104

~

tiQIIS on prayer were given by Farle
Cole, and membe\'5 answered to roll
call with an Easter remembrance.
Donations weremadetotheChurch
of Christ radio ministry and to the
Brian Harden fund.
Named .on the prayer Ust were
Kim Boyer, Freda Welling, Lor·
ralne Lewis; Mildred Hawley, J.J•
Cremeans, Reina '-'lnd, Tammi
Nelso~, and Brian Harden. It_was
annouilced that the Meigs County
Women's Fellowship wlll meet at
theMiddleportChurchonApri!25at
7: lJ p.m. and the S!!Jllor choir of the
church wiil present the program;
Attending besides ihose named
were C!yda Allensworth, Coleen
Van Meter, Dorothy Baker, Delete
Forth, Rutlr Underwood. Grace
Hawley,• Regina Swift, Phyllis
GUkey, Marlyn Wilcox, Lula Mae
Qulvey, Francis Roush, Nettle
Boyer, and Vlrglnla:Underwood .

.

.

D.J.'s TRADING POST

Robert Hill, Columbus. Paternal·
grandparents are Mr.. and Mrs . .
Loren Grimes, MarysvU!e.
Maternal great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles' Hill, and Mrs. Helyn
Hill, all of Columbus, and Mr. and
Mrs. Glen England, Hollywood, Fla.

~ ;·lc~n:e~H:U;l,;P~om~pan;;o~Be~a;ch:,~F~I;a·~·a;n~·d----------~·~------------,

"

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Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Grlmes, l2
D RaUroad Street, Middleport,
.announce the birth of their first
child, LucasEngland, born April Sat
Marletlli' Memorial Hospital. He
, weighed eight pounds, four ounces
; and was~ inches long.
1
Maternal grandparents are Mar·

.•.•,.
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IIOth Cad.eC®

HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT ·
GENERAL AlLERGIST

luncheon meats (read your labels to
see If nitrite are found ),
Requce use of alcoh61.
Do you know cancer's
warning signs?
Change In bowel or bladder
habits. A sore that does not heal.
Unusual bleecttng or discharge .
Thickness or lump In breast or
. elsewhere.
··
lndlges!lon or difficulty In
swallowing.
• Obvious change In wart or.JllOie.
Nagging cough or hoorseness.
If you have a warning sign, see
your doctor. And, It you are out in •
the suinmer sun, be careful and
wear a sunscreen lotion. This. helps
protect you against various forms
of skin cancer.
Five million Americans are alive
todaywhohaveahistoryofcancer.
Eighty percent !Ire eligible for the
·• work force. Nine hundred thousand
are found each year In USA. Fifty
percent of all cancer victims are
being cured now.

ADOPTION - This one yeat old female border type collie Is being
offered for adoption by the Meigs County Hwnane Society. She t.s·good •
with children and wlll make a good family JIBI.Interested residents may
ca11992-m05 or 992-5427 to discuss the society's adoption policies.

the cost or Individual tickets for the
six events;-The same reserved seat
for each performance; j!o waiting
in line at the thealredoor; and ease
of renewal for the following season .
The Valley ~rtlstsSerles Is a Joint
sponsorship venture of the Trt·
County Cofllmunity Coqcert ASSOCI·
atlon aQd t)le. Riq"Grancte CPllege
Family A:rtlsts·Series. . &lt;;. · · . ·· · Por further ticket Infotmatlon,IJ)
.addition. 1&lt;1 the Velley Artists Series
representative call Rio Grande
College Fine and Performing Arts ·
Center at (614) 245-5353, extension
364.
·

j Grimes birth being 4nnounceci

America's Newest Lawn Tracto''r'

Come See ... Come $ave!·

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
MEMO~IAL

•

: • The Valley Artists Series Mem·
orders prior to April18, before the
and $15 for high school students a nd
hershlp Committee wUI ronduct Its
general dlive hegins. The 1985-86
chUdren . .General reserved seating
annual ticket sale di1ve tor the
season brochure. which Includes . subscriptions are $20 for adults and
· '1985-86 Season frOm April 22·AJ&gt;ri! .descriptions of . upcoming · per· · $12 for lllgh school students and
29. All six events will be held In the fortne.r s and tleket order forms, w.~l . · chldren. Tickets wlilch are:not ·sold ·
be dlstlibUted to current members
as subscriptions will be availabJe .at
. 'Rio Grande College Fine and
the box ..office ·prior _to each
Performing Arts Center.
in early AprU. ·
. . ·Selections for ~xt season were T)Je community drive will be , performance. ~nior cltlzeris .•wijl
•. CQmpl~ted In Feb~ai'Y oy ' repre- . ' AprU.22-April ~. se.a,!iOn·bi:Qchures ' receive. a 10 point d!scouilt wi~h ~~':.
~taltve$ frol'IJ.thecoinmunlty:and : wUi be mailed thJ'olighout the a~a ;· GOlderi·Bu,ckeye Car(!. .
,~ . . .
· from the, rollege. The six peHor.· · prior.ta the start of the drive: Valley . Season. subscribers are ·g \laran- ·
mances which have been scheduled
Artists Seri!'S representatives will
teed up to a 40 percent savings over
for l!ei-86 are: The Rondollers. a
be throughout ihe four..cOuitty' area
· ·
·
'
male vocal tr:lo; Seona McDowell, . to sell . subscriptions and answer
1
an Australian folk singer; "They're
questions.
Playing Our Song," a Broadway
For further Information contact a
musical; "Hansel and Gretel,"
performed by the Cincinnati ap.
representatlv~ ;
Dottle Cook
era; the Ohio State University Jazz
(384)5232) In Wellston; Lee Lee
Ensemble; ·and the Apple HUI
(949·2454! In Meigs County and
Chamber Players. Performances Anita Tope (440-2457) In Qallla
are scheduled from Sept. 29,
County. VInton County residents
and Jackson County residents
through April 6, 1986.
Current su~rlptlon holders will outside the Wellston area may call
be gfven first opportunity to renew .the college's. toll-free numbEor.
·their series subscriptions and retain
Season subscriptions In preferred
'the same sears by placing their reServed seating are $25 for adults

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~~t=e:p:wi~,

VETERANS

t

ance and positive example or
another woman whO has already
experienced the surgical procedure
Qf mastectomy.
Of every five deaths of blacks In .
the U.S. In 1983, one was from
cancer. Cancer of the breast, large
bowel , bladder, lung, stomach,
cervix. prostate. mouth and esophagus are on the rtse In the black
community.
American Cancer Sqclety has.set
some nutritional guidelines by
which to achieve gpals to reduce the
lnci(lence of cahcer.
. People who are 40 pePcent over.
normal body weight are 50 percent
more at risk of getting cancer.
Increase fiber- trim off flits, not
frying foods, limit red meat,)i,
Increase poultry and fish.
Increase VItamins A and C. SOrt)e
foods these are found .ln Include:
melons, and yellow and orange
fruits and vegetables. •
Increase cruclferous. veggles
such as broecoll, cauliflower.
Reduce . salt cured ana nitrite

Philathea meeting held

Red Devils stop Tornadoes

;~~~=:e~:~ s~~.:.

'

::Artists Series .membership dri~e begh1niJ!g· .

.
sbl and struck out one, giving up
earned run.
PORTSMOUTH - The Meig&gt; s~ffering . .Its first regular season five ru,ns. threl). o! which were
Starter Gerald Cray was tagged • ' BIG CUT- M:elp catcher !jcxJt Gheen takes a he~IQ' swing during .
Marauderettes suffered their first. '. loss in 'so~e 29 gam•s lncludlngJ9. .~eamec;I, : 'Jim We~r weht one in!llnlt. " With. the loss, w'h!Je· JertY Trow- - Suncll!,y'sgameaplplitDubJ!natFr~CouptyStad!Um)tColuin~. :_
. ·Joss ·of thP. ¥ear • he re S'aturday. '·straight Iailt'year.·' · ..... '
. toglveu'p(!nehit;onerun,tiowalks;
bridge came oil ln. relief, · They
Gheenhadlhl'elfhltSplusadefeniilvegemtitlhe!leV~hlnnlngwhenhe •
closing to class .A powerhou~ · Last .Friday, the Maiauderettes ·and recorded one strike out. .
. combined to fan four, Walk six, give .· hwiled down lhe first base line; retrieved an·eJTant throw Md llrecl io
Portsmouth Clay 10.2, but won
gained two· wins over . Belpre
paMy Berentz wentthe distance up seven earned runs, artd 14 hits.
. seoond to cutdown what would have been the tying rutL Meigs won the
three other ga mes over the
Including a 10.3 victory from a for Fro~tier . He allowed 10 hits,
Kevin Barber and D. J. Randolph
game, 6-5.
·
we&lt;&gt;kend .
,
game suspended. earlier In the gav~ up two earned runs, walked
each had three-for-four hitting
Coach Jon Amott's crew, now season, and 7-2 win In the nightcap. four and fanned three In claiming games, Including a double by
' 10·1 on the year, had defeated
In the firs) game, Harrison. the win.
· Barber. Royce JJissell · added two
,The DaUy Sentinel
Wavcriy 9-4 in the. opening game of Hatfield, and Carol Smith led Meigs .
In the nightcap, Eastern buckled more singles, while Jeff Bissell
Tri-Counly _ . . , . ~.eque
,
' (USPS 14~!MIO)
the Clay tourname nt which also ha!J
with two singles apiece and Wright down with some gutsy play to come each singled.
Apr1l t, A
Division of Multimedia, Inc:.
Peebles among the fou r· team · added another single.
alive at the late to support a fine
Jeff Trowbridge, Clay Hughero, Team
., 11tp
PI&amp;
tourney.
Hatfield was tough on the mound pitching performance by freshman · Mike Dalesio and Brian Barbour Fraoernat Order or Eagtes .. .................... 78
. Publl ~ hed evt&gt;ry afteornoon , Monda y
through Friday, 111 Court St. . y the
.•
In that game. Meigs made the with 13 s trikeouts and only four Kyle Davis, who claimed the win, • each singled for Cameron.
·
Btu'sllodyShop ... ,................................ 74
Ohio Valley Publishing Co mpany / Mulbest of four hits as Barb Ha tfield
walks. Belpre pitching fanned two 16-2 over Cameron.
.
Eastern travels to North Gallla RDach's Gun SOOp ., ..: ...... .... .. .. ........ ...... S6
timedia. Inc .. Pome roy. Ohio f.5769, h.
992·2156. Second class postage paid at
fanned 13 batters while walking
and walked six.
·After a scoreless first Inning, , Monday and to Miller Tuesday, ~~k8'~~~~~.:::·:::::::::::::;:::::::::::~
Pomeroy, Ohio.
' · seven. Meigs' hitters lncl.uded
In the second game, Jodi MU!er EHS Crossed the plate three times then hosts Hannan Trace Wednes- Powoll's
Super Vatu ................. ............. J4
H~h · Individual series - Robert Hensley
Member: The Associated Press Indoubles by Hatfield and Jodi MU!er
led the Marauderette hlttlng 'with to break the scoring Ice as Steve day. Alexander comes to Eastern ~ JackPelersonr67; TerrySeldenabeland
land Daily Press Association and the
:· and si ngles by Jodi Harrison and
two doubles while Wright a(ided on Horner and Jeff Bissell singled, Jim on Thursday. .
BUI Smllh 536.
American Newspaper Publishers As•:•, Maria Musser. Waverly pitc hing
two singles. Shannon Hlndv-,
Gina Weber
u_.......:
'Rober1
Hlj!hlndlvtdualgame
- Jao~Peter&gt;&lt;&gt;n23S;
sociation, NallonaJ Advertising Repreo'
ed walked, D. J. Randolph
Hensley 213; Terry Seldenabol196.
sentative, B ranham Newspaper Sales
Follrod, and. Hatfield each tacked slngl , and walks were IssUed to Easoern ..........................000 001 1-2 10 3
Hlghteamsertes-Rcilch';GunSIIop:mJ;
.· fanned four and walked 14.
733 Third Avenue. New York·, NeW
In the cha mpionship game. on a single.
Kevin Barber and Brent Bissell to Fronoter .............. .......... 106 Zll x-13 B 1 Bill's Body Shop 2496; Fraternal Order ol
York 10017.
Eagi&lt;S 2403.
I
. Meigs jumped out to a l·Oiead ln the
Hatfie ld fanned four and did not
orce home another run, the score eameron .... :...........\ ...... 001101 o- 2 4 ~
High team game- Roach's Gun Sbop953;
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
second inning against the awesome
walk a ba tter in this game while
'
.
Easlem ....................
5:11 •-~6 14 2
BW's Body Shop IIlii; Roach's Gun Shop 1151J.
10 The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomff'Oy, OhiO 45769.
1
Panthers, but couldn't hold down
Belpre pitching faMed one and
SUIISCRIPTION RATI!S
the threP-time siatc champion
wreamlkaed
ln bllus.y tThhlseweeMakrawuhedenrettheteys ·.
.
By Carrter or Motor Route
Scioto Countlans as the hosts·scored
One Week .. ........... :........... ..........$1.10
in each of the next three limings for
host Alexand...- Monday, go to
gne Month .. ........................ ....... $4 .80
A Cline had two singles for the contest Eastern ripped Waterford
. NEWPORT ·- The big-flying
nt Year .... ~ .. .......................... ~7 .20
Warren Local . Tuesday, return Eastern Eag!ettes split' a Saturday
a U.l 'lead.
losers, wh!Je Dalrymple, Herlan, 15-llln five Innings.
SINGLE UIPY
•
Fire-balling Adams of Clay
home against Trimble Wednesday. afternoon doubleheader this wee•
PRICES
•
· Eastei:n · hitters were Arlene
Bush and Winland each singled.
Dally ................ ... ........... ..... 25Cents
fanned 10 batters a nd walked four.
and go to Southf&gt;rn· i:m·Thursday.
kend with the Frontier Lady
Krtstl Gaddis was the winning Ritchie with a triple, Lea Ann Gaul
Hatfield canned three a nd walked
Saluntay's G•Subscr'lbers not desiring to pay the cardouble, Krtstl Gaddis a double
three. Musser and ,Tammy Wright
Wovorty .:............................ IXIJ 100 3-4 3 Cougars, claiming a 12·5 win In the pitcher with four walks, four hit .
rier may remit In advance direct to
M&lt;'i2S ................................. 010 J}5 :x-9 4 · first game ,and suffering·a 1lH! loss
batsmen, and five strikeouts en- and singles each by Amy Young,
Ttle Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 motllh
had Meigs' only two hits . . both
Hoflcld (\YP I. Holsinger (l.PI.
In the second. '
basts. Credll wHibt! given carr!@!' each
route 'to picking up the Victory. L. LeSa Rucker and Kim Dent.
month.
'
singles.
Waterford
hitters
were
BurkehlEastern
boosted
Its
record
to
11-5
·
Herlan
suffered
the
loss.
lit
the
Mel•• ........ .. .................... 010 010 II- 2 2
•
The win made Clay 12-1 on thf'
Pons. Clay .......... .... ..... ..... O'l2 213 x-10 7 overall. Eastern rallied for four
nightcap Frontier literally ex- mer and Fulton with 'singles. · ·
No subscriptions by mall permlttOO in
Adams (WPI . Hatr\(lld (LPI.
• year while Meigs droped to 10.1,
towns whe-re hofOl' carrier service ts
Eastern had 21 stolen bilses and
runs In the first Inning as It took an · ploded for 15 runs, while sUenclng
available. .
just two errors, whUe Waterford
early lead and never looked back the EHS bats untU the final Innings,
Mall ~ uMcrtptlon8 .
stole one base and just one error.
despite a perslstent ·effort from the score llH!.
hmkle Ohio
was
the
winning
Krtstl
Gaddis
Fro~tler. Amy Young and Arlene
Frontier had a single run In 'the
tJ Weeks .............. ..... ............... SlU6
~Weeks ..... ............. :............ . , 129.12
rutchle provided the big hits In that first, then awakened with seven In pitcher ' with one walk arid 12 big
Weeks ..... ..,. ............... .. ........ 158.24
RACINE -The visiting Ravens- Carter doubled Stover home with first lnnlllg along with the aid of the second for a l)ealthy 8-0 lead. strikeouts. Gaddis gave up just two
Oubtlde Ohio
(
wood Red Devils plated three runs the fifth and final run. the score 5-o. three Frontier walkJ.
hits. TeeteiiS suffered the loss in
~~ Week• ........................... . sl~.liO
Eastern narrowed the gva 8-21n the
Southern struck back with 'a
~ Weeks .. ....................... .... .. ... ~11.:10
In Ihe top of the first Inning enroute
three and one-third Innings, willie
Frontier notched three runs of Its fourth. but a seven-run llfth Inning
2 Weeks ..... .... .. ...... ...... .. ......... $!19.80
single run In the bottom half of the own In the bottom half of the flrst. merely put the game out c1 reach at
to a 5·1 non-league triumph over the
Burkhelmer ·came on In relief.
Southern Tornadoes here SaturdaY. seventh as Shawn Cunningham but that's as close as they came as 15-2. EHSdldn't give upandmadea
aft ernoon In a vai:slty,reserve singled, and Jay .Bostlck singled for Eastern enjOyed a good second half
respectable finish. the score 15-8.
. ga~~~e that plated three
double header. Southern won the the lone Southern run.
each In
Arlene rutchle had a double.
Starter Jimmy Wolfe·and Kelley the Mh ani! sixth II)JIIngs.
reserve tilt , 3-1.
'
Orueser teamed up for three
Southern suffered a roclcy first
Eastern tallied nirie hits including
a!· ' a triple and single by ' Kim Delli. For the winners, Straight had a
:: Inning. butafterthatsettlcddownto strikeouts, three walks,
lowed eight hits. Grueser gave up Angle Spencer had a triple and
• gtve the powerhouse Red Devils a
and Single: Bush a single, L.
just two hits and allowed no runs In three ~l's, while Lea Ann Gaul, . double
game to the finish. SteveStunnwas
Herlan a d!luble'and Cline a single.
two (nnings of work. M811011 went Tonya Savoy; Amy Young, Arlene
hit wl1h a pitch to leadoff the game,
.
the
distance .for Ravenswood, · IDtchle, Krtstl Gaddis and Beth
Cat;ter singled . and Kip Martin
and
drove a long double to deep left lor fanning five, walking none, and Berkhlmer each singli!d:
In another weekend non-league
allowing only five hits.
·two runs. An error on Paul
Come ln ... ••• lhe newell fe~
In the reserve contest Kermy r--...;..----~---.,--------------11
Fletcher's hard·hlt ball brought
turea In • quellly lewn traclor!
Turley pitched Coach BIU Hensler's
home the next run as two walks
We're offering apeclel veluH
reserved to a 3-2 win, allowing three
on Ill Cub C1d11 trector1 dur',
completed the Inning. the score 3~.
lng lhll lnuocluCIIon perloct.
hits, two runs, four walks, and
Southern threatened In the seWe've got the new l•wn trtCIQf
striking put . four In going the
cond as Scott Wickline singled and
In 11 •1o 1111 horHpower ... geer
.
Brian Freeman doubled, but to no · distance.
1nd hydroltlllic drive,
'
Southern's Barry McCoy went
avail as neither coulq cross the
NEW•••·.UMITED TIMf
two-for-two with twostnkles, Shawn
•
plate.
Amott
singled,
Shawn
Cunningham
Ravenswood plated a single run
••
singled, and Eric MIIUron singled.
.I
In the second Inning on a B. Seaver
Stover had two singles for the
I
single a nd a double· by Paul
Little Devils, while Samp1on added
Fletcher, the score now 4-{).
The Red Devils added some coals a single. Southern d10pped to 1-9. .
923 S. 3RD AVE.
PH. 992-7301 MIDOUPOIT,
Southern hosts Southwestern
to the fire In the third round as B.
(304) 675-1244
Monday In Racine.
• Stover singled, Mason walked, and

and

.

'

.·'· M. .

runs

or

years age.
•
Between ages !i and 40, women
s'hould have a base-Une mammo' gram (bi-east x-ray); at age of 50
and over the society recommends
there should be a yearly mammo·
gram . taken. More and . more,
there's a two.step procedure done If
there's breast cancer.
It Is as follows: Lumpectomy Is
step No. 1; this means removal of
tumor In the breast and possibly
some nonpal surrounding tissues.
This . can ' be done under local
anesthesia If l!lmt&gt; Is In the
superficial tissues; alsocanbedone
on out-patient basis. Radiation
therapy Is step No. 2 and ls dQr!e
with lumpectomy. These proee· ·
dures can only be i:lone If the tumor
ls detected eariy enough.
Breast reconstruction is now also
PQSSible for. women who have
B.lready had radical mastectomies
(total breast removals ). There's
also a Reach to Recovery Program
that helps newly. mastectomies .
patients to recover by the assist~

l'lans tor the annual mother• daugh~r banquet to be held on May
• 9 at 6: l:J ·p.m. were made when the ·
Phllathea WQmenmet recently ·at
the Middleport Church of Christ.
Appointed to committeeS were
Donna Hartsoo, Nora ruce. Phyllis
Baker, ~ Marytn_Wilcox,, program; Colleen Van Meter, Clyda
. Allensworth, and Joann Clark,
tables and decorations; with the
kltchenandglftstobehandledbythe
officers.
·
Clarice Erwin ins)a!led the new
officers uSing candlfs and flowers In '
her presentation. Installed wt!re
,Mildred Riley, president; Dorothy
· ;Roach, secretary, and Farte Cole,
• •treasurer.
.
: &gt;, The 70th anniversary of the group ·
• ·wasobservedatthepotluckmeeting
: ·With the anniversary cake being
·: made by Sharon Stewart. Mildred
, ·ru!ey .opened the m~tlng with the ·
• :Philathea song and prayer. Devo-

. Visiting Eastern plays Satur~ay twinbill

' I··.o_•2.;
.g aI8 .Iose,
·post three ·other wins ·

Ounce of prevention worth itl all ·
'

EagleS.
.
· ·
•
Bush Led oft a three-ron Meigs
fifth wtien he walk!!&lt;~ and scored
when Carpenter hit a twO'OUt double. Gheen an~ Acree toJlowed with
doubles, both driving In one run.
Also hitting for the Marauders
In 1 nd
was Kennedy with a ·S ge a ·
Bush helped his own cause with two
s.lngles. Belpre had put the tying'
run on second base ·with two out 1n
the seventh, but a groundout to
Carpenter at shortendedthethreat
and the game.
·
.
Bush fanned eight and' walked
f ned
seven while Belpre pitching an .
three and walked 11 ..
Meigs continues busy this week ·
as they host Alexander tonight, go

Newberry

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

April 22. 1986

,.

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i'

':

Galendar J happeningj

· MONDAY
CHESHIRE - A spring revJ.
val, with the Rev. BID Banks
speaking, begins Monday endIng April 26, 7: lJ nightly, at
Cheshire Baptist Church. Spe• cia! music and·nursery·seJ;vlces ·
provlc:jed.

CHESHmE - Cheshire OES
meets Tuesday, 7:ll p.m.
POMEROY - Ladles AuxUIary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital meets 7:ll Tuesday at·
the hospital cafeteria.

MASON ·- The Veterans of
CHESHIRE - The Gallia- Foreign Wars Post 9926, Mason,
.Melgs · Community Action
'meets Tuesclay. 7 p.m. - - .Agency holds free clothing day - • MIDDLEPORT - The
. tor low lnCQITle people Mollllay, 9 OAPSE Chapter 17. meets Tues·
·, a.m. to noon. ·The clothing bank day at 7: lJ p.m at the Meigs
Is !ocate~! In theolqhlghschoolat JunlorHJgh SChool. New officers
Cheshire.
will be elected.
MIDDLEPORT - · Bethel 62,
' lntematklnal Order of Job's
Daughters, meets Monday, 7
p.m .. at the Middleport Masonic

Temple.
RACINE - Meigs CoUnty
TuberCUlqsls office wUI, hold a
free !lldn ~ling cl)n,lc Monday,
' ~7 p.m:; at the tire baH In
Racine. ·
. .TUJ!l!IDAY
Ci:OI):GROVE - ~ (Polio United flir Site Releprch~
. meets 'Netday, 7: 1l! p.m. at
Memorjal United M~
Church.

WEDNFl!DAY
POMEROY Wildwood
Garden Club meets at Forest
Run Churclt at noon WednesdttY
for a potluck dinner. Those
attending are to take a covered
dish.
'
MASON - Mason Cluipter
OES 157 will have friendship
nlaht, Wedne!lday, 7: ~ p.m .
PotlUck follows the meeling.
Gfllld visitation will be May 15.
AU OES members Invited to

·~
- ..

KeUy Lynn Bailey.

Bailey birthday

'

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'

FOURTII BIR'l11DAY - 'N·

Kelly Lynn Bailey, daughter of
Greg and Jocelyn Bailey. Flat·
woods Road, Pomery, recently
celebrated her fifth birthday with a
party held at Show Biz .PIZza In
Parkersburg.
Attending were her parents.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J ohn
Bailey and Mrs. Lucy Taylor. sister
Juli. brothers Andy and Chris
Baker. Larissa LQng, Renee Buck·
ley. Tim Barton. Mrs. Darlene
Buckley, Chris Ball, Mr. a md Mrs .
Kevin Buckley and Michelle.
On Easter another gathering was
held at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J ohn Baliey. She
was pesented with a Care Bear and
an Easter Bunny cake. both baked
by her mother. Also attending that
day .were Mr. and Mn. Max ·
Robinette and &amp;ott, Rushville;
Mrs. Katherine' Roblnette,,.Logan;
Andy and Tammy Boyer. Robin
· and Stephanie Holt, Lanc~ter.

. tany DaWD ADey observed her
fourth birthday on Aprl11 at the
borne of her parents, ~and
Connie AUey.
A Strawberry Shortcake
theme was carrled out. Guts
were' presented to 'Dffany, Cake,
let~ cream, potato chips and pop
. were served. .

Hubbard's Greenhouse
· . MOW OPEN FOR
SPRINO SEASON
Complete line of vegebbie &amp;bedding plants, hanging baskets,
potted.plants - blooming &amp;foliage, shrubbery, roJe bushes,
azaleas &amp; Rhododendrons.
OPEN DAILY 9 to S·
SUNDAY 1 to 5
PH.992-5n6

Do You Or A Loved One Need Further
Nu~sing (are Following A Hospital Stay?
Can't Find Reliable Live-In Help?
Why Not ,Consider A Short Stay With Our
Outstanding ProfQssional Nursing Staff
at.

,

THE POMEROY HEALTH CARE CENTER

c•

992·660' for more Information:
'

�•

~~~:.n.~~D~·~·Iy~Sa~~n~~~~~--~~--------~~~----!P~om~~~~~!:~M~~~~~port~.~Oh~ -- -------~----~--~----------~~~~
- ~y~.~~2~2~.~91l5
The Daily Sent_inel
PHONE 992·2156

·!\rea organizations hold meetings

mc-tll,,_,,,OIIoum

•
jollowi.tlf rf!lepltone ezcbnp•... .
.... c-.,
..,.c._,.
...... u . WV'

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

........
·-

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

of the· Dl1trict Deputy
Dinsctor.
.

the Director

Public

~ l.arsgtls - O.OO feet
NOnCE OF SALE
or 0 .00 mite.
.
. Sys'ICUII Vlttege Council
-WM l.arsgtls ""varioua 'f llt w 1 1 - - ....._at~
or Vlriouo milol.
__,..
·~
Tho Ohio -[)apertnses)t of Mui)jclpal ~ Thiod St.,
T~lhM l:aroby notillaa Syn • OH 411179 until 10
11 t:iddlns ll w11 alflrma.. a.m .. Daylgllt 91V1nao Tlrno.
tivoly - . In any on Moy 1, 1988, atwf.lcts lime
oontrocl- 1n1o panuent llso wll be - * and
to tt.- ...,_ • .,.,. ... rnlnotftv publdy .-d. for two veNcl•
tsueln-. - . . . . . wll lee . . .....,. to ....
allu:do:d fiAt ~ 110
!:'pk~ ~~
IUbmlt bide in .... · • to U. 1 910 ·model International
lnvlll:tlon "!!I. not be ponelllyck . .
dlocrinill•llod ep1nri on 11so
The sight lo m . ved by
g""'ndl of ,_, - ·
s
~
nrionosi origin ln'oonsoldl""!"- ,_....,
· - · cou,_
· to
lor In Niard
'
. mjeCt any and el bide.
"Minimum' mtll lor
SYRACUSE
thia projact hew t.on ......
VILLAGE COUNCIL·
llfmir:od 11 ~ by lew
Llweon. Clerk
and 0:w HI lortli In llso bid (41 22, 29. 2tt:

1'81MWI the

right to 51ljact eny and oil bide.

WARREN J. SMITH
DIRECTOR
(41 22. 29. 2tic
Public Notice

NOnCE OF ELECTION
ON TAX L£VY
AND BOND ISSUE
FOR EASTERN-LOCAL
. SCHOOL DISTRICT
. Notice lo ~ lhlt
-to· '
oftha
Board of Educ:rlion of 'the
Elltem l.oc:ai Scbool Diltrict.
osdopted on the 18th day of
Fobrua:y, 1986, tt... w11 .t:oi
..... sitllid to 1 Will of t1sa . IJiapGMI."
.
electon of Ilk! SChool Dlltlict
'"'lse dis• Ill lor Cklmplttion
at . . prima:y aledlon to be o f t h i o - - be-forth In
held-. on T-y. Moy . . bidding ~...
7, 1986, at llso reguior piKW
blddrr - · . _ _
of""""' ~.llso lottOIIN:S'V to Each
lite will: ~ bid • - dllad
. . _ ... _.,.._fclron
qiJOillione II I alssgte - 1 :
1, Tho QUillian of iuulng lmount Oqllfll ~ ,five par oesrt
borsdls of llkl Board of EckQ· of l:il bid, but In "" M11f!1 more
.. tlsa of ...,.
or.
furrtllhing · l 'nd bond lor IllS pas' &lt;&gt;liSt al ~bid.

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

,

, . . . . . . t ......

tv•·c•...,...,
,,......_
a.,
11-fl-,

11-W. . . Te

Public Notice ·

~~~~:o~~a...

B

· COOl caiWI (long} or. ~Y day
dress (shc!rt} . Whip up both ver·
·. sloos ·tor your vacation in very
little lime. For crepe. knits .
-Printed · Panern 4779: · ~alt
Sizes 1o1h to 26'11 , .
$1.00 IQr each panern . ~d 50c
_ iech. pattern lor postage_ and
' "alldllng, ltlld 11: •
.
'

-·
-

--thoislllld-.......

,_

........... Dimiltor.
8iddlra - lor""""·
OS: tho·
-forma,
~tlaos
SOl -

"fiiMI: lftd

.

Pomlfoy,
COIIaioU

ii2-0IIIeitlloln lltld., Weedlidt,
NYII377. PrlntNIM, Addr111,
Zip, Size, l'lttllft Nullllllr.
••

Dlractor..
.'
The Dirlclor "'' rrv. the'
rlglst .., NleCt
and ... tslclss:
WAR";.lN J. SMITH

- IU
ISc:l"''" 1PiltJict
•• - on
end
for taution
the tu duplicalW for ihe v-r
1885 .. which lmount il 1111' '
.., .,. .1.130.000. The

Public Notice

rnAilimum . . , _ of

NOllCETO
CONTRACTORS
,
STATE OF OHIO
,, DEPARTMENT OF
" TRANSPORTATION ·
• Cotumbu1. Ohio
April 12. 19811
Controct Saloo Leool
· Copy No. U-443
"
UMTPRICE
CONTRACT
"'
tRG.(]()OR(49)
::
FRG·OOOR(221}
,,
SRO.OOOR(227

I

=

•
, DIRECTOR
(4122, 29, 21t:

duojng which borsdls
run II -.tv·th,. Ylll'l· Tho
_ , . . additional
•• rate . . tllb-mlt
~~~~~

..,.._ at 1llt oflico of the
D1roctD&lt; of the Ohio Depart·
. . - of TrlftiP(Iftation, 1:9·
lumbul. Ohio. unlil 10:00
A:M.. Ohio SIOndard Time.
T~. Moy .14, 1985, ior
h~LJiNii·••ll H1:

a,

1
1

.....r.

· Write your own ld ll5d
by mail with lliis
coupori. Cancel yos.sr .., by pnone wnen ~ou get
, results. Mone~ not refundable.

Noni•--------~---------­

-·-:ant.

Dilled: April! . 1885

'

I !W.llled

( )For-..te

'

., IAnnllllnament

tp tfsll
SliiliDII!y (4) B. 16. 22, 29, 4ie
1M 'nn ••pu.'
wll till
....... fiAt Qppllrlunlly to
Public ·
.......bidlln I'IIPCI,_ ta thll
kl l•t .. ond .... not be
'a , •• Hd .....,_ on the
NOnCE TO
CONTRACTORS
_ . . . . al
iijJtli:MIIcwlglnln
I Ilion.
STATE OF OHIO
.
DEPARTMENT OF
.. . _ _ ...... - l o r
TRANIPORTATlON
ca.; " • ONo ·
April 1 2. 1.1
•••.............. byt.w
Conirect
U.t.agat
. . -1
In . . bid
CoarvNo. •-444
p
.rlor -sjslollon
UNIT PIIICE
a1 !IW-'! INII:IMitooch In
CONTRACT
. . .11*41 ......... "
SRO.OOOII(230j

IL - -_
--_
19,
_...;..
_-_-_

7.
1. J:.
_
' -_
...
_
-._
. . :_
.._-

-'*"· '-· or

5. _...;;.___,_;,_.__

.................-

....., or....,.,..e..-tcsrlli

=

........
llulln - - Msllouiisdllaltlr&amp;..-r
. . . . . . . . . al . . bid,
DI:&amp;b.
~
-71
r
on 1111
...., _ _ . .eppty,
qo ........

IF ....

ist ........ -

prier • 1111

~ ... p ... tslclss In
aaulclanoe with Cheptlf

-

OND IIMal Ccsdl.

Jllaaar Slid ; lllwtloo• . .
,;;. . . . . h D t 'L '*~ al
TWii $ I Kko 11511 till olllae

'

.

'

1J, - - - - - - - - -:

21 _ _ _ _ _ __

7. _ _..;....;,_ __

sn:: ...

tq •....., . . bid r oatlftocl

2D. _ _ _...:..,_____

21. _ _ _ _ _ __
22. ...;.._ _ _ __

3.------4.·-_.---:-.....
•
•
"--------'···- ----- "· --------a'·-----.------

.'!-' """'

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

IJ. _,..._...;.._ _ __

I ')For R""t

............. --prall-...

, ThiH co,l: rain
include discount

71 . ..,..---.,...--..,

tO.. -_
"_
- _...._
--'11
__

FR0-00011(~)

a.od prou•• ..,.. '
I
I od Ill tlsa ofllcse al
Oto.a al .,. Ollla' Pltaart·
·al To• 1 lljt :. Cblllmlsul. Ollla. .... 10:0D
• A.M .. Ohio IIIIIIIUI 1IoM.

12. - -......-+:---

29.
__
...._
21. -_
--_
-_
:Ill. _ _ _ _.....;_ _

a32. _-_
_-_
-_
--.....
-_

16. _ _ _ _ _....._

:JS. _ _.:,__.;,._ _

Mlllt tiiiiC. . . wlftiR ... ItlaiiCI
. :n.,DaU,S..tlllll

Coo tl • Ohio; on ~
11511 _tlao .. by ....
n11111n11 llid ~
11111a1

'

~

=': ==
•""""*

for flw v-ra.
The ...... lor Aid EIICticsn
wil open at 8:30 o'cloCk A.M.
and rem.in OIMf1 until 7:30
~-~ p
a·...,... .M. of uld day.
I'Y of tho Booed of
EIOctlao •· of Maigo County,
Ohio.

Ewtyr:Ciark
Chalrmlrs

Jono M.
Dollid April 1. 198&amp;
(4)
1

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

YIIIIYL &amp; ALUMINUM .

Complete Outt.r Work
Co"!plete Remodeling
Rooting of ell Typao
Worked in home oreo
20yHra
"Free Eotlmateo" .
CAll (Ollf(l: '
Ph. 16141 143-5425
3/1/2 mo. pd.

99,2·334~ 121 n

.

J&amp;L BlOWN

Card of Thanks

I

lt. 124,'-roy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .

age aystemr, water
end gas linee, . water
-11 drilling end Hr·
·vice; trucking (lif!l81·
tone &amp; dirt).

, ,.........

Cal: 742.2407 '

.

SERVICE

- Plumbing and el.:trical
• work

(Free Eotimatetl
..

. _. .

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

•-r•r. ohio' ·

I Q Loving Memory of
ROLAND TORRENCE
tl's bttn a .year afo today
That you so quic !y went
IWIY

The days seemld lone and
hard to· face
But sWelt memories, now
fall in piau
·
This little town' s, just not
tht sama
Somethin4's missinc, agd
It's pla:n
It's aliltltl!lln in leal and tie
And we will never let his
memoay die.
One of the thin1s. you left
with us
Is tht flOiilics. you likld so
much
.
So, n~turally we willalweys

be
.
.
RejlabliCIIIS like you, strofl&amp;
and free
.

Stvtn childr111 you r1isld
SOIIIIhOW .
Wt loved you thon, we love
,you now
Sometimes we stumblld,
, " but.didn't fall
You were a!Wars very proud
of us aU.
Now, tlio 'days kHp passln&amp;
· br
·
•• want to ask, tayln&amp; not
to cay
Dtar God. kttp our Old
lift rnt ·
He
so hard, and

•

1'1

111 CltfrtSt.

. ~~emil

011:417., .

Rt.

I 60

Gallipolis,

*CONCRETE WORK -

'

us{r.t~ kOC~; M.S.'.. .... -· .

Licensed Clinical

Audi~~t

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

JOHNSON· ELECTRIC
Specializing in
All Types Of
Residential
Wiring
.And Repair

143-5155 or
. 1'43·5410

SP.,Iol•l
ll.1t11 '"
'$111111 Cltlzm

4-10-1 mo. d.

PH. 992-3549 ,
4-1·1 mo. pd.

BOGGS

Well
Point a~d Stolna

FUTURE T.V. SATE_WTE SYmMS

- U. S. RT. 50 EAST' ,
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Dan

H.W.s

Deater,

*10'

Far• E••IP•••t I

l•m••

~

, I·J ~tfc

U.P. Wire Mesh

*Drake 100° LNA
$
*Orakl! 324 RECEIVER .
9'

1 695
1

SOuthern Spun Available

. Complete System
, $
with Tracker
coWL~n

11 9 75

4-17-1 mo. pd.

.....-------~

·FOR SAlE

I

.. Dtlllf, Ohio .

· Witlt't1 hdroom Apti ''
in lear.
.
'
Poailalt to Gel
Cany-Dut !"-·
Is

PIICID AT $11,000

Call Da1W McD-Ill

691·7219

Dottle Turner 992·5692
Jtan Truuel 949-2610

OHIO VAWY

PfiSONAUZED POOlS

SATEWTI SYSTEMS

VINYl liNER POOL ·
ACRYLIC WALL POOL
ABOVE GROUND POOL
O..r 400 Chole01

A,R./l !PEe/At

Dexcel Receiver
8' Alu'm •. Dish
Installed 1'1••
,
S1495.00r..
' Eapert Service And
: Q1111lity Nlme Br111d1 At ·
DISCOUNT PRICES

Call ft2·3561
·

.4f

' '

,

IIAOWOOIIIOIII SPA~
4~sr

s_. ld.
011.

· THE BIRD CAGE
"$,HII $,.,l1/"

...,........,,
c,...

s.., . , .....

. . . . . . . . . . . . . lnittck.

4·4:I mo. pd.

( .... &amp; Sojlpllls .. ,.I24.7S
Pair fiiSCW fklchlt, '
&amp; SQpptlts .... su.oo
(ocka~h. l••fk llnlt

""" ..............Its: ..,.
hvw....,~o,... , ••
lot s,n.., ....

/1~1'

Now H- -htenslwt
lonsodoling
lnsurana Work
(UIIOS11 Polt lldgs,
· &amp; Goro1111
i.Oiing W..-k
Aluminum &amp; Vinrl Si4ingt ·
16 Yoora Experience

GREG -RpUSH
992&gt;7611

PH.

ll·l ·tlc

nSPAS"
HYDIOIICH CHIMICllS

Gtos. llort'""' l'llwr.
...... rt, Oltie
HAS. 10 a.m. to 5 p .m .
Day
Nitht

. 491

1-614
992·2549

1-304
77 ·5634

12

Auction rveryF~day night It
the Hertford Community
Center. T{uckloedl of new
merchandlM every w•k .
Con1igmente ot new &amp; u1ed

Situations
Wanted

Room and board for elderly,
only. C1ll 1114·992-6022.

1-B:....W~e_n_te_d_to_D_o_:....

merchandiH elw.yi w.l ~
comed. Rlchord Reynotdo,
Auc!lonrrr. Call 304· 278 ·
3089.

Will do Ia~" R.'IC»Ning &amp; yard
work. Coli Keith at 814·
2511·82111 after O:OOPM .

9

Bowen.• Conatructlon .
Complete remodeling. llro·
place epeclellat•· Pelntlng:
Interior A ••terior . Cement ,
block. brick work. 26 yl'l .
experlance. reaaonable
retes. FrH eetlmates, worll
guorentMd . Cell 114·388·
9870 or 61 4 -388·98011.

Wanted To Buy

We pay caah for late model
clean uaed cara.
Jim Mink Clsev.· Oide Inc.
Bill Gene Jotsnoon
81 4 · 446·31172
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Beda. Iron.
wood. cupboarda. chalrt,
cheata. baaketa. diahe.e.
oton• jaro, antlquaa, gold
and ailver . Write- M. O.
Miller, Rt . 2, Pomeroy, Ohio
46789 or coli 81 4·992·

Wanted to do plownlng and
brushoglng . In Addison ·
Cheahlre· Ktnauga area . Call
before 2PM . 814·317 ·
0632 .

31

Home• for Sale

32 Mobile Home•
for Sale

Nice 2 bedroom •lnylod
'
home. Remodeled. ctr·
peted , tobocco bau. - 2 --NEW ANO USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
acres. Karr-Harrt.burv Ad. 1TY MOBILE HOME SALES.
U1 ,000 . Coli 814·245 .. 4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS, .
. li29e.
RT 35 . PHONE 11 4-448·:
7274.
HouH far Nle lly owntr.
Nica 3 bdr. home, full
33 · Farms for Sale
beatment. ges heet, atl
carpet, nice kitchen. att·
ached gerage. good locotlon
Moigo County, 113 ..,..
feeing rlyer whh s•rden.opot
with 4 bedroom houu. 2
in 900 Block, c:tty. Can help
berna. 3 panda. 20 acrea
finance. Call 814·•41· 2573
tillobta. 110 plue paature,
or 814·441-1171 .
wi1h new fence, recently
drilled gu wall. Will con·
SyracuH ~ •ere lot facing
eider ootllng tsouu and 1 0
river. City Nwage weter end
a~r~a . MU1t. ..11. ~id 80"•·
old hOUII. s75,00 . Colt
Cell 111 4· 1592·4471 daye
814·827·2347 eveningo ..and $1 4· 582·4624 nighte.
woekendt 11 4·1192· 11974.

.

Eeotern School Dletrict. II
34
Bu1ineaa
room home m good repair.
Buildings
lull~ carplted bo11m1ntand
Will do outaldo tsouu point· c.rpon. 1 .10 acree. Nlctly
n6o.
•
lendacaped email orch1rd.
ing. Call 814·448·261 4 .
FOR SALE OR LEASE1
Will uti turnithad or unf\lr·
Buying dally gold . ollvar
commerc:i•l property lind
coint, ringa,jewelry,atertlng Will mow yards in G•llipoll1 · niohod . Coli 981·4~115 .
now building 7"'•100' with
ware,· old cll;)inl, large cur- aroe. Coli 1114·448·2948.
2
acro, 200' road frontap,
3 bedroom houae in RuotiC
317 North StcOIMI
nb zoing r8quired. 2 .milell
rency. Top priceo. Ed. Bur· Kotollc Landocoplng d*'lnn· Hil).a. FUlly terpat•d. atorlfll
Mlolslaport, Ohio 45760
kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
.
.
•
north of Point Pllaunt, W,
Middleport Oh 81 4·992· In~. plrnnsng, mowsng, trim· ba11ding, largo lot. Coli 114·
V•.
on Rt. 82 .' Phone 304·
992-6086
after
4:30
p.m.
3478.
•
.I
; : mlng. rotall ohrubbory. All
&amp;
875· 1 578 wllkdaye. 304·
round lawn matntenance.
....,, - IUSINESS I'IIONI
Nice older home. Vine St .• , 878· 7898 evening a and
WoniOd to buy: 1 go ·ctr'j. Collll14·441·31 00.
weekend•.
(614) 992-6550
Racine. Living room. kit·lcColi 304·BB2·2862 . .
Would llko to do houee chen. dining. 3 bedroom•.
IE51tiNCE ~HONE
For Nle, 4x10 aluminum' '
cleenlng. Call 814 ·992· bath . lncludea kitchen IP·
, A~OJ::1 16141 992'. 7JU
building.
hae 2•4 framing .
plianctl,
aome
fumlthlngt8359 after 4 :00 pm .
Emplnym1:nl
304-117!1-3884 .
.
.Prlced 140.000 . Phone
WATER
WELL
814·949·21140
rvoningllf·
COLEMAN
St:rv1ces
tor 8 :00 . Anytime on
DRILLING
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
Pump ulea, "rvic8. Regia- weekend&amp;.
11 Help Wanted
terod
in
Ohio.
All
work
•
BENNEn'T MOilLE
guorontoed. Cell 304-273· 24x60 modular home on 2
HOME CONTRACTING
Wonted: 6 to 10 ocr*' for,
2811 . Ravenowood. W. Ve. loti, detached 30•30 twO·
homelitedn Green Twp. C•ll
'AVON . · Sell Avon make
car garage, fully carpeted
~
:;..~:=:lf!j 45%. Call 814·448·3358 . Will do houu cleaning. with electric heat and cen- 114·448·4307.
..... . . . . - . - sops:ir.
tral oir. 3 bldooomo, 2 bath a,
304·875:8218.
-304-812-3632 ........h
family room with flrepllce . Forty two acre• near •.
Needed bodymen . expe ·
-614-446-94 ~~-"~-'' ~.. 5 riancad only . Apply in par- Work wanted · yard work. Fully bi.IIUipped kitchen. Will plow grrdiM1e, largo ~·
eon 238 2nd. Avo., Galllpo·
trimming, houH painting Owners will help finance. ~mill, Point Pluunt. ~
nouga, Olsio . Colll14-44"
inaide and out. mainte- Call 114·992· 5762 . Ap·
lie. Oh .
nance , errand•. windows, ppointment neca1~ry . Price 40811 . 304·11711· 7228 . , .
li:OO PM .
...,_,
Olan Mill• haa openings for
office cleaning. Phone 304- 146,000.
A11 11011 nr: 1!11 11~ nIs
oalos·appt . clerk e. Saliry
875 ·1 1 08.
Four badrooma . kitchenguaranteed, but can earn
te .iiO per hour. Alao hove
Will plow gardena. large or family room with firepllte;
3 Announcements
clpaningo for light delivery emell. Point Pl11aant, Ka - finlahed b1aement. low
work . Apply to: Jane
neuge. Ohio . Coll814-448· 180'o, Point Plrrrnt. 304·
Richerd· William Ann Motel·
4088, 304· 876· 7228 alter 875-3079. evaninge.
41 Houses for Rent •·
SWEEPER and aewing me· Gallipotlo. on Monday, Ap~l
6:00PM .
chine roprir, parte. end 22· 9AM to 12 noon end
Have an anergy efficient
auppliea.
Pick up and 7:00PM to 8 :00PM .-E.O.E.
hom• built on your lot . Frorh 7 room homo with 2 - '
delivery, Davia Vacuum
113.900.00. · Call lor 1111· garage . in Cheohire, 12&amp;{1
F1no nr.1ol
Cleaner. one half mile up R ecept ioniat-Selai-Office
motel, 304·8715-3981.
mo .. plua dep.. odulto only
Oeorgeo c;reek Rd.
Cell work. local company. Send
no patl. Ci:IIS14-317·7271
81 4 -448·0294.
Arbuckle, 3 .,.droom, family or 814 -3117· 7302 .
complete retuma to box
'
room. 1 Y:t baths. ,,.. acre.
2020 in crra of the Golllpoilo 21
Business
.
1· 304-1186-9;48 .
I loot 54 lbe. in lour mo1 .. Dolly Tribune 826 3rd. AVo ..
2 or 3 bdr .• 1 bath, kitci:M:.
Opportunity
Herbol Pion. Aak Me How? Gelllpollo, Oh 45631.
.
atove a. refrigerlt'or. livk(·
log Home, 3 acrea. 2 mll11 groom. dini"9room, garage.
Catl814·448·2081 or 814·
441·3788.
out Jerrico Rotd , gaa furnanca . Located I ·
Re1pita C•r• Worker to cera
I NOTICE I
$84.000.00 . Phone 304· Portamouth Rd, f300 " '
for handicapped children
Trim off pounda with Qo •end odulto of Oellio Coun!y. THE OHIO VALLEY PUB· 676· 81122 .
mo.. oocurity dopoolt 6
Beae Grapefruit Extra In-home and out-of-home LISHING CO. recommend•
references required. C•N
Strength Copautoe. Fruth worken needed lmme· · that you dO buSineas with By owner. , 9~ per cent 614-4411-0254 ....
people
you
know.
ond
NOT
Pharmocy, Middleport.
aaeum1ble, 3 bedroom, 3
diottly. Pra!er prior
b8th1, living room. dining . Far rent, will rent with'
rlence with handicapped In· to send money through the
meil until you have inweati·
Control hunger and lote dividuals. Mult have own
room . femily roam, option to buy. 3 bdr. 2 btlttr,
weight with New trantpon81ion. Wrhe: Gellla gated tho offering.
equipped kitchen, patio. air rot., atovo, OW. CA. 2 ..;
Qropelrult·PPH .Combo et County Board of Menlll
cond. double grrogo, low garage. city achools, dep .
Jfruth Phar1 ml .cy, Retardation· Devatopm~nul Stanley homo producto . 70 'o, New Hrven. 304-882· r~quirod . Celt 814· 448 ·
Middleport. ·
DIAbilitlee at P.O . Bo• 14, NMd IS homemaker• lri
28011 ..
4348 .
Cheahlre. Ohio -4~120 or aurroUndirig erutodrop8nd
cal 114·317·0102. Ajlpll· pick up catalog•. 4 houri. 1
. 4 bdr.'in 'c ountry, •260 mo. .
4
GlveB\'VBY
.oatio~ deacUine May 8 . ~d•Y· 3 dllyaaweeli . ~ari .. rn
pluo . diopoolt. Kyger Crwk.
Hli· et 50.' Cell I 1 4 ·1149·
1986.
.
.
School Dilltric1. Call 114·
2380'.
387-0609 .
.32 Mobile Homea
Tabby a. calico cat, ,female . Pert· time LPN lt.lng in !Jolll·
fo.~ S•le
Va:y nice 3 bdr. home. 2
•
polio •raa . ,Apply In paroon 22- Money
· ·t o Loan
Cell 81 4·4411· 9700. ·
bet-en 9AM &amp; 4PM to
bathe. good lilt Y.lfd 1 t300.
"20 Rhode.[oton,il fled t&gt;eno.to Midiclt Pirro, 203 Jeckoon
"
3 bdr. horne couotrv at~,_ '
give •w~v. ~-·v_ur_e old, Call . Piki. Galtlpoi!• ·
·
-.
·- · · · · . . •· 'i978 Ballgla~- .12XI5. -3 phero; 1275, 3 tidr. hO!fbf
614-949-2617. · _...:..~...:.....:..""'_..:..o.__ 'HOMEOWNER9· Roli~orice bclr.; all· .alactric. AC •
with rlvet'View. U50. Refer· .
·office M•nagar'Wilnted with to loW fixed. rate. Uae equity underpinning ·included. lx. oricea &amp; doj:OIIt reqUired.
4 female Norwegian El· minimum 6 yearaexpirience for any purpoae. Leider cond. Celt 114- 446-3289. Call Wiaeritan Agency, 114·
•
hound puppiea to give away . in accounting. Kno~edgo of Mortgoge Co.. 11 4·592· 1971 FrHdom good cond. . 441·31144 .
Will be ready for a new home computing I.-necessary. Su· 3051 .
Cell 61 4· 2118·8620.
· 2 bedroom houM in Pomli-".
May ht. Cell 814·949· perm1rket upertance would
boo pius. We era looking for
roy. Largo deck and ball·
2849 .
3 bdr. 14xl6 &amp; tot, 2 mi. mont. low utllhleo. 1200.
a profeaaion~l peraon to 23 Profenional
from · Oalllpolie, Greon per month plua MCUrity
Small black puppy. mother · grow with uo. Thll poo~ion
~ervices
School Oiltrict. good cond .. depoolt . Call 814-992 .part Poodle, doddy?. 304· lo in the Middleport ·
torgo oundack. 114.800. 6713.
.
896-3881 or 896-3B20.
Pomeroy aroe . Pte•• 1end
reaumo to The OaHy Sen· PiaJIO Tuning and Repair. will conaidlr tred• In of
AKC Pomeranian dog. 304· tlnol, P.O . Box729V, Pome· Brunicardi MuJic Co .• 814- 8nything of value •• down 2 bedroom hou1e In Minlfapayment. Call I 1 4 ·448·
vllle. 8eeide Mlnerovltlo
676-2200 otter 5 p .m.
_ro
.:.:y:.:.'.:::O""h""io_._ _ _ _ __
448·0687. Twentlath year 8038 .
Church. by Bulk Plent. Total
of quality service. lane
In Middleport, w1itre11 for . Danlalo. 814' 742 ·2961.
electric . Call 614· 992 ·
1976, 14•111, 3 bdr., · Ill 8218.
6 Lost and Found
La Salle. Both mull be 21
and experienced in mhcing WINDOW TINTING Aeai· electric. omall utility bldg .. ln
drinka. Apply In paroon only dantiel. Commercirl&amp; Auto. town On rental lat. Cell
1 bedroom hou11. fumiehed
1114-448-2038 .
or unfurniahed . Adulte onty.
LOST German Sheptsord. during buslnau hours.
F.roe eltl,..teo. Call 814 ·
No pate or children. Count:y
Female , near city lim ita
448-9341.
1 0.&amp;5 1915 N- Moon.
Oriver-ulesman for Po.m elocation . Naer Maige Hiah
(otockyordl. Antwere to 'EI·
bdr.rm.
,
111
gaa,
eir
cond
.•
School. CoU 81 4-992-21127
kle' . Cell 81 4-4411·0858 or roy, Racine area. Must have PIANO TUNING AND RE· ••tro good cond.• 13,450.
after 5:00 pm. AvoMible
e•perience . Send resume to PAl R. Reduced rooao limitad
111 4 -446·4267. Reword.
Immediately.
The Drily Sentinel. Bo• time only. Ward~ a Keyboard. Call 114·4411-0175 .
729E. Pomeroy, Ohio 304· 875- liliOO or 875 ·
Mala rtd coon dog found
1 975 Schult 1 2"85, 2 bdr ..
2 bedroom fumlohod hou·
near Cheater· Sumner Rd. 45719.
3824 .
total electric, exc. cond .
oa.ln Pomeroy. *2110 par
Colt 614·985·3861 .
French
City
Brokerage
Ser·
Bookkrrper. fomllior w~h
month. Coli 114·992·5113''
vice, 814-448·9340 .
alter 6 :00PM .
·/
FOUND bundle of ctotheeon G.L.. accounts, payable and
Reo l Esl ale
exit of PlaaHnt Valley Hoa· receivable. Our office, part
Bonk Sale-Ropoo-ood 14 2 bedroom A frame horne;
pltat. Cloim at 900 MOll· tlmt. Send inquirie1 to Box
widu Jult pey noo.oc
f1 76.00 month. f100 .00
mon Circle, out 26th St. 22, Syracuaa. Ohio 46779.
down and take ovtr PlYdepoeit, Soulheide, w . Va.
Point Pleaaant, W. Va.
31
·.
Homes
for
Sale
menta. No ch•roe for dellv·
lady to live in , care and cook
304·176-1 186·.
ery. Coli todoy, only al•' (8)
Found male beagle at the lor eldOrty lady. Coli 814·
In Eotale· 3bdr. on Rt. 35. Yo remoln. 114-772·1220 or
Free hunting on 2&amp;0 KYK
Cornatolk Fiehlng Lrke. Call 992-3704.
mi. Walt of HMC. Coli 81 4-n3-392B .
year lround . 6 room lol(
304-nl-5908.
JOIN THE ARMY NA · 814· 4411·0803.
cabin , private drlva. Clo11 10
1972 Schultz · 2 bds ..
TIONAL GUARD , 0000
Sporn, K•iaer and Moum:•i·
PAY . GOOD BENIFITS. ED· Muit ••II 3 bdr. ranch. wuher, dryer, AC. ••c .
notr. 304·895-3887 tilt 1 1
7
Yard Sele
:')
UCATIONAL ASSIST · Wootbrooke Subd ., FR. cond. Call814·2118-1822.
a.m.
ANCE . Coli 304·875•3950 woodburnar. carport. deck,
till' utilltioa. &amp; echoola. 2 mobile homro for 1111. Call
or 1·800-842·38 19.
$36,000 . Cell 814· 4411· 814·992-3847.
42 Mobile Homes
•
RAWLEtGH PRODUCTS on 7144.
19119 Champ i'on troller
for Rent
··•
sale this month. Diatrlbutore
needed. For friendly courte- Built On Your lot: Big 4 Car 1 2•10 with 1 9711 ldd·on
&amp; Vicinity
12&gt;&lt;24.
Oood
condition.
Call
ouo aarvlca. Coli Dole and Garee• te995. 3 bdr hom••
2 bdr. Wllher&amp;. dryer. WlheiWilma Wood . Authorized f13,995 . Sea Our Modala. 814-992-2689 .
Coll1·111li-8B8-731 1 .
• traoh paid, 1 milo from'
dealer•.
304·175·
1090.
We
Flea Market. Fraizer• Bot1982 all electric mobile hoop~al, t200rent pluochjo.'
tom, WVa . .on US. 35 opon dlliver.
Nice 4 bdr. ranch, Country home. 3 bedroomo. 2 lslstlt•· Call 1114·448· 1354.
every Soturdoy &amp; Sunday.
Airo Eltatea, 1 Yo bath a, ctntrel air, porch, awning•
9· 6 . Open elr &amp; covered REPS NEEDED lor buolneoo gerage w -workbehch, 'VI and otorage building. Lo· Trallar lor rent . Call 81··
accounta
.
.
Full
time
apacea for rent. · off road
·•
•8o.ooo . oo to aero !tot lot. dack, CA. gao catad on riverfront lot in 448·4225 alter 4PM .
· parlclng .
180 .000 . 00. Part time halt tU9 .00 budget) etor- Middleport. Crlt 114-992·
1 2x44 Kerwood, 3 tonflr.'
f12.000 . 00 to age building. e47.600 . Call 3348 elter 11:00 p .m.
Centenary TownhouH. 3 f1
814·448· 1990.
mi. out of city lim ita, au~
8,000.00
.
No
Mllng.
Re·
Family, Thureday 25, flow1985 14•110 Jry Skytlnr lor 1 oo 2 odulto only. *14b'
peat bualnesa. Se1 your own
era. dloheo. !oro. clothing • houre;
Immaculata brick. 3 or 4 two bedroom mobile hom~ .
mo. &amp; dap. CoM &amp;14·44•.'
Trolnlng
prolltdad.
'dreaaer. drapee , long
bdr ., 21o!. ballet, linlehed Gn heat. tocrted in Salam 3587.
•
Coli
1-812·938·10711
Man·
dreiHI. what-note.
baaement. appllancea, 2 car Ctntar. uo.ooo. Phonr
F~. 8 AM to 5 PM CST.
gorogo, comer lot, Dobby 1-114·483-1407.
2 bd. mobile homo lor rent.'
h..ted With netural IJ81.
ONn Millo heo opening• for ' Or .. Call II 1 4-448·39 1 B. .
1 4x70 Ceatle on 1,4 acoe, edulta, no poto. Call II 14-•
Seiii·Appolntment clarke.
Selory guarantud. but can Houee for 1111 at edge of 2-car carport, 18125 oddl· 317·7438 . .
earn ee .so ptr hour, •leo town. ~Jalllpolla . Owner will tion. Celll14-992· 3119 or
&amp; Vicinity
Treiler for rent 6n Vintori.·
have openlngo for Nght tond contract. Call 114· 1114-992· 3132.
t200 dep. raq., 1200 mo.'
delivery. Apj)ty · to Jane 441-9128.
Mobile hoiMI moved. In· Call 814-3811·9981 ., 114Richerd•. Lowu Motor Inn.
At Henry Hertmrn'e mal· Point Pleaunt. Wad, April For 11le or mnt ~th option oured. 20 ~-- o•parionce. 388·8304 .
dtlncl In Cheater. Baby 24th, 9 AM · 12 Noon. 7PM· to buy 8 rooma &amp; bath In 304 · 571· 2881 or 578.·
clothea . and tablee. 8:00 PM . An equal oppor· Gollil Co.. Honnon Tree• 2998.
3 bedroomo. ,... glil.
School Dlot .• 3 bedroom•. lo!.
dreeMrt, miiC . ltame. Thura- tunill' oonploveo. ,
rant. *50 dat&gt;Oolt. On I'M.
ocre lot In countoy, county For uta mobile home 2 br. 1cr11 In Portland. CoN 114· '
day and Friday. Apolt 26th
w1ter, garige. Heement, 70'•14' . Celt 304-878 · 843·5218 .. 1-283-1728'
llrbd 26th .
caller, t24,000. Cell In 1484.
altar 5 :00pm.
,
12
Situations
morning lillore 1 : 30PM,
Wanted
1 9B4 Schult total llactrlc, 3 Ona lildroom mobile home, '
call814 ·88~·7417 .
.,.droomo. centro! olr, lltnyt 304·878 -4 1114.
'.
&amp; Vicinity
Split foyer, 3 bdr .. 2 bathe. undorpannlng, root, porcls
Handymen , Win do paint In~. on 1 acralond. Rt . 11114. Cell ond oun dack. Cuotom lblld&amp; 2 bedroom mobMo ho- for
·················.····:;':':,····· well
peparing. plumbing, Franch City Mobile Ho-. well to walt book cauo. rant. B urdotto Addn·,'
living room. Pollibte to f178 .00 plue utlltiae ont
Oorege Sale, Tuaodry. 23rd, tltcnic ~ cerpentry. odd• 1114· 441·9340.
lttve on rentsd lot. 304- dapoolt . 304·175·2484.
Wldeseadey. 24th. junatlon jobe. trwno mowad : C.. II
•
Jey Dr. 31:1droom, 1 1o!. bath, 178-8375 .
R!· 2 ·87, 7:00·7:00, flrlt et 4-258 · 8488.
\lvlng room. large kitchen •
2 " br lumioheld tmMif, to.'
houaa on left, hoVI
everything • davenport , Will care for otderiy In our dining • - · loundoy room, 2 11181 Schultz. 3 badrooma catod on Crab Crwk Rd.
wtotslng welt, ourtolno, home. 16 VMrl e•perlllbce . cer garage. central air. gea with undarpenning, 304· 1150. month. 304·871· ·
Call 814·992-7314.
875· t7U.
1208.
.'
heot. Cotll14·448· 3427.
radio.

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

SALES

SERVICE

ito!t-::!;

r--

.....

,

JUST CAll!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
IO·B·tfc

G&amp;W

PLASTICS

lONG BOTTOM, OH.
GAS PIPE
WATER PIPE
GAS REGULATORS
OTHER SUPPLIES

BUS.: 915·3113
RES.: 985·3137
1·11·1 ....

.

..

......aiiiiipoiiii ........

... "'p·,:;.n&amp;;c;;; .........
Middleport

uoo·

• POITAIL£

and

'WILL HAUL

(

SMALL GIOC:ERY
STOlE wl~S PUMP

.

DENNY CONGO

ON.

Phone: 614-669-3761 or 669.3765

. Autltorizld John Dttre,
New HoUand, Bush HOI
fatm Equipment ,.
Dealer

.

.EALTORS
Henay E. Cleland Jr.

73-10 Chivy To.
II·U Chlrr. Tr.
F......o......................... l65
Fondln ..................... •IIO
73·79 Ford Tr.
13-10 Chevy Tr.
- ......................... 1! U
Fondln .........................151
73·10 ChoYy. Tr.
73-79 Ford Tr.
Hoods...................... IIU
Doon ........................ lt50
73·10 Cho•r Tr.
• 73-14 Ford Tr.
Chrom l:lmpon .......... $70
Clw- ls:mpors .........$70
JJ-10 Ct.wy T:.
73-79 Ford Tr.
Grltl11 ...........................140
Toll Guln ................... $10
JJ-10 Chny. Tr.
10·14 Ford Tr.
Toil Gam ................... sro
F..........................•to
JJ.ao Cl:nr. Tr.
Roogor' &amp; lr"!"o Ftlldars
-Courso Sopporll ...........165
&amp; Grllh
Ntw ose4 Utad Aula Gla11-L11o M:soltl Porll
WHALEY'S AUTO PAm
9-ll·ttn
Rt. 611 West Darwl Ohio
992-70!3

-

.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

P1r1e &amp;

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

7.

Page

••P•·

PH. 742·2328
'

North
Ohio
7111 /Hn

leteYisio~ Lisieiiiiie Devices
Computeri~ed Hearinc Aid Selection
Hearini Eyaluations Foa AU Ales

biller 1nd more.

Gllll1

belutifut, ...ted acres and a
nice stocked pond. IAII minfrl(
· rights. Just $15,000.00.

co.

11·14·tfc

*FOOTERS *GRADING

.

Dloc, ISiowa, corn Plan·
11r1, 3 pt . bruah hogo.
grllin drill, hay raka, 10ft.
drOjg harrqw, Cub Frr·
mrll witH :no-r lu1d
, plow, hay crimper. aub
aoltor. potiJo plow; hey

1'1111.

Now

St.

FARM EQUIPMENT

This

septic, a. ··so\.O..,..rox. JJ

U2.:U

992-5875 Or
i 742-3195

1120/1 - ·

AUTO
RENTAL

S&amp;l

County -:- APPIOX. 50 acres
ol vacant laesrl &gt; ·;,ld wei,

Ph!M~I
·ultlnga tn

Call: .

3-21·1 mo.

_.,._,•• best.
Audly: Clllldtlat:

~~

Residential &amp; Commer~ial

.

condition &amp; the (ami!y room
is neal and spacious, 3 bed·
rooms, a nice fenced yam
lor the kids plus above
ground fli!Ol. $44,900.00. .

,.~M.~GHEE, ···~~~

.

U-SAYE

'992-2196

rarft:h type house is in ~real

992-6191

·MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

*BASEMENTS *SEPTIC SYSTEMS

We cin repair and recore radiators
heater .cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out raillators. We also ·
repair Gas Tanks.

LOT IN IIIDDlEPGRT
50'xl20' level lot w~h all utili·
ties' availale..Beautitui' view of
river. Want $8,500.00.

-

1-10-t.l.n.

BULLDOZER &amp; BACKHOE WORK

1.111101 .

NEW LISTIN~ - iliddle·
port ...:. ~rage apartment, 2
· bedroom apartment now
rented, 3 car garage could
be rented lor car or slorage.
Small lot. $12.000.00.

LISTIIIG

A.U.
304-475-6276

_4 46·4522
"IN• R.111 Ff, l111"

Mid••f!Ort,

NEW LISTING ...,. lllddle·
port Recently rede·
-corted , lhis 2 beqroom
home is neat and affordable.
33'x50' lot, walking distance
to downtown. $17,000.00.

NEW

•Kitchenettes •Restaurant

.TROMM EXCAVATING.

SEIYICE ·

NEW LiliA ROAD -

•Uve Entertainmeni•Free HBO

CALL

Caii614-0it7,A.7U

E.MaisoWIIIJ
POME~OY,O.

c... 1• !H To S.llm

RENT A CAR

Poblltror. OH. 4576$
For Futeo Sorvica

NEW LISTliiG - Middleport - Older two story
brick home. located on
good s\reet. 2 lots. Needs
w.ork. Could be duple! rental
unit. Asking $15,000.0(). •

wo,.

SINGlE 124.95
304-,75-6276

'

PAT HILL FORD

- Addont and remodeliifg
- Roofing ond gunor

- Concrete work

.

-lOx, 32C

992-2259

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.
8 miles from
Pomeroy·llason B!ld&amp;e

Pit

TRUCII LEASING

6 I 4-379-2243 or
614·379- 7 2

CARPENTER

Ill I/ :In

FOR ALL YOUR
WilliNG NEEDS

OPEN, With, Tt,on., Fri.
&amp; S.t.-10 Ia 6
Closo4 Mess. &amp; TUII.

10·6-lfc

NEW CAl &amp;

GiNIIAL PISHONTIOL

. hasoaalll1 Prl'n

Ph. 614-143-5191

· BlACKSTON

"Free Estimates"
lnsttllation
. '. ·, . Available

Grave Arrlftltmtrltl
S3, sa. &amp; s12
ALL IRASS.....S1.00 OFF
' FIGUIIINES.....si.OO OFF
POICEIAIN 1110 IEllS
Other Nko Ito..

Racine, Oh .

choi:o DOwN PAYMINT
LOWII liolntl Y PAY MINI\

' , . '""""" ........ Ollllptlell

l·i-__.,.,Y...,..O-U-:-N:-::G,...,-'S,.....-'..,

Calls

Sunday

~
MOTEL

On St. II. 124 in s,.ti::Otuo Silk (net jliasti&lt;l

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Wa'd like to introduco you to
En111e:A-Car. tht modtni ..,
to drive 1111. vohlcla of , your

. TtdlrE .&amp; . .-.

,

.JO'S LITTlE RED BARN

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

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Reill .l;:atate General

'll'llllllliiSUPfRIOI .
EXIDUMIATNi CO. INC.

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

JAMES KEESEE

II

excavating, land~eap­
ing, beoementa. HW·

l · ll-1 -

UTILITY BUILDINGS

•lnaul1tlon
•Storm Doora
•Stoom WlndOwa
•R•pl•cltment Window•
~N- Rooting
·
"FREE ESTIMATES"

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992·6931

·types of

Will do all

Bus.; 985·3813
Res.: 985·3837

Sizes 'start From 12'x16'

VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDINq

ACCENT ·

COMPANY

No

104MttryAw,P-r

Al11 Tr••••leeltt
PH. 991-5682.
or 992-7121

MEIGS
EXCAVADNG

F1u E1tl•''"

3·22-tfn

2ss Mill sr. ••••11•rt

Roger Hysell .
Garage

~=:. 1 ~======
2
In Memoriam

a. 115. 22. 29. 4tc

BERN .

.

~YIROIIMDITAL SYS'IDIS

We Use Von Schrader
Equipmenl Recommondld
by · lead inc ~rpet llanu·
facturers.'

'FREE ESTIMATES"

.. INSULAnON

Public Notice

e

"'I

(""' S..vi&lt;11, El&lt;.

'_...,.._..,.__......__ ·:u. _..,.._____

:n:•Mo:= =..:;
r•
ot.
PI..............F- v..... I\,---·-·--·---·~·-·--••••-·--•,_:
!IW..

_. .
446 941 6

31· --...-----

11.
lt.
·~· _ _ _ __

T.-lay, .... "· 1-. tar
Jt:"!"'"cuu:•••
,..,_., ~ Ho II+

sWit ......

FlEE ISTIMAIIS .

(41 B. 16, 22. 3tc

I would like to
express my thanks to
everyone who was so
kind an¢ thoughtful
to me during my stay
in the hospital and
since my return
home. I sincer.ely
appreciate the cards, ·
flowtrs and other
remembrances. Most ·
of all, I appreciate
the prayers on my
behalf and God for
answering.

.'l.d Wdntt ·d

.

Llna K. NeUelroad,
Cieri&lt;

Phone·~--------------------

.

tlv.ty - h1to panuent
In ..y
ocw•w:t...._.

Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge

CARD OF THANKS

Cin:lf'

JonoM. F~
. Dlractor

StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
46789.-

Addre·~------~-------­

oocrr..,..

The 01110 Depart- of
T..eslll wll:do:: -l:a:wley notillsso
Ill: Wt I tlsaU wlllllfllrml,

cutril&lt; of 1he of
Addl.on A. s-n.n. dacee88d. late of 34 Anne

J-.. . .

S~velll

.,......

.. o....c.

NOTICE OF
AP!'QINTMENT
OFADUCIARY
On Apotl2, 19811!. in the
Mejgo County Probate
Court, Ca11 No. 2~.
Mary M, Seamen. 34 Anne
Str11t. · Pomeroy,
Ohio
4678!1 wu oppoiilted Ex•

,•

Claulflads ancl

.Atheno. Oallla. Hocking.
Mop, Morvct. Morgan, No·
blo, Piny. VInton and Wa·
111111...,.. Countlal. Ohio, on
....... - o n d - o . b y
•··~~~~ ful dry paint , ...
~-one~ ac1ge rn..
--thotan-~
Pl=•wnt Width gmltallon, Ulllit the purcillll
price II paid, but In no Cllli '
' Pnllecit Llngltl - 0.00 orO.dO milo.
'longer th1n twenty·thrH
. Waall Lengltl - verioua -or wr~o.• mlltl.
The ..... lor lllid .. . . .Ill on thio ~ lo wil be_. It 8:30a.m., and
owllln ' 11&gt; llludwntaged remain_. until7:30 p.m. ol
....,_ Ent~ (08~'11 llllid day.
'*lifted u OIE'a in ICCCM'·
By order of the Board of
-with 49 CFR ,_rt 23 by Etectios• of Malgo County.
quollild 110 bid with Ohio.
qDQT . . - Chapllr &amp;125 Of

v.-.

..,.__,

..._. '"'""'

IComH1Diettep Stock oJ Weat hAer,, \, 1 1 ·
1
ea umps, .e ntra ir~
'- .
Q
tiCondlitl oning and Furnaces.
~

GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWER LINES
ElECTRIC LINES

PH. (614~ 985-4212

51"'*-..t'.~'
· &lt;lig11,l
StlbiSps,

D~ L--------~----~------~4-~16~-l~m:o~
. ¢:-~

~H"':1it'"::'a. 0

.Pciy
cGsh·
for.
.
. I .

en-.

ie.tpd propt .... wiN be

r=

Curb Inflation

llmitllllon .., pay . . pri. .
and i - allUde bond•...
Olttillod by the County Audl·
tor. II 1 .37
tar aech 0111

of ..·wl:ich
83.7
for
oach· one hundred dotlal'l of
Vlluat!\in: lnd .
'
. 2. Tho qo I Ilion of tho levy of
onedditton:elll:l&lt;-ofllso
. 1811-mll llit.bitlon tot the'
p u - al paying . . ""'"' of
Pllrchllini dr 11 uom t.cil. .
from tlsa SCitll al Ohio It 1111
1811 of -hall mil lor .....
one doltlr of 11151- ""-'
that in -ywm In wl:ich 1111
ta• - l o r ·- llso tllb·mlt lss•tatlon
II leu then- and ono-hall
rnlh. . . rate .. ln. . - to that mo· whlch II
the difta.ence blt1 ••• tow
mih and llso trli ma for-

IPUiftfltia.4tl IN

, PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF ADDISON A .
SEAMAN. DECEASED

c-.
No.2~
12 Paa!i 478

,, All fHI ,1111111 ,,.,

'

141 19 • 21 • 22 . 3 "' .
Public Notice

New Homts Built
"Free Eatimeteo"

PH. 949·2101
or 949·2160

DITCHIN(\
SERVICE ·

35185 Pak Hill Road
Lon&amp; Bottom, OH. 45743

PlUS. Offkt s.,,its &amp;
Fumltun, WIIWiog
ISibl Grlllhsallon

Sales I Servlc·e

Pool

3-18-1 mo.

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

THE QUAUn
PIINT SHOP

Heating 1cooling

s

L

•

Mobile 'Horne

Wit~

leb lloblt
1-614-992-7191
Jim loach _
'·304-675·1 71 j

CHESTER- 985-3307

u iness Services
____.,..____

tJ

NOnCE OF ELECllON
ON TAX LEVY IN
Public Notice
EXCESS OF THE
TENMIU
.
UMITAnON
NOnCE .TO
NOnCE ilbensl:ygM:nBIOOER8
ln pureua-of a R-utlon of
Svrc- Vllaga CouiK:it · llso Council· of tho Vlttega of
will ICCOp! bidi It .,. Svnse.... Ohio, po- on tho
81 22nd ...., of J.,UifY, 1988,
1
will ·be· lblllsmlttad "' .•
a.m., -Daylight 91V1nao Tlftbl; -of . 1M 'paople of eiid
·on Moy'1, 11188. etwfilc:h dme 9yrec... Vllssge at 1 SPECIAL·
llso' blclo will be _!~paned lnd ELECTION to ·be hold In .tlsa
tsUbli!'IY raod . '"' . 300 . ...... Vlloge al SY!IC-.' Ohio, It
me&gt;ra clr le11, of elate· tlsa regul_rr place of widr:U
JlpaCifbtiao I C 404 • lblpheitlc ~ on T~. the 7th
l!o!·""!' In·" . flllsi:8
·..On ~
. !fay of u-; 198!1. tl)a _qiloo.~ ' .
.. .lion
of~ i n - . of the
. Tho sight il ·by tien snit tlniiO·~~oo~. · lor 11so
Vllssge Council Io benefit ot SyrocUM Vitago lor
sajac:t any and all bldo.
the purpoee of Current
SYRACUSE E - .
vtUAGE COUNCIL
&amp;rid tu being: II) addltiossal
clerk tax of t .. mill 110 Nn for 1
VMI'I atoi'i ...... not ••c:e.ding
(4) 22. 29. ~
L ...
1.8 mlllloriiCh- - o f
va~ur~~on. wlsic:l1
110

r..:.~:: :!'!:*'~ s.,._
of the Dlotoict , Deputy

Diotrtct
dolan o f - parcorrt of the
total .11151.. of •• pooperty In

the Daiiy Sentinel

-n prior 110 . .

~ lor _ . . . blclo In
accordinc:tS with · Chapter
_Q25 ot:lo llevtood Ccsdl.

. . Allie Adfoll l'ltilili;'.t ·!l t
:. ·illllledllll . . .

tors

J-

u,u, •.
• ,IIW
..... ..TintNw IMMI-'I .. , ...... A .IIII
••...,
.... ..,--............•uo

$7900"

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

froo Solar .......

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

u, • , .......o:_ •r ~M~n~eo~"........... u .oo

Eblin property, Sal,labury 1----.;;.,...,;;;_.;.;...;;.~~.;.;;;,.;;;__..:;;;_..;;..;.;._,.
Townolslp, __ r llso -......
lion of Union A... and sRI. 7, on Wod-y. Aprl24,
1985. at 11
attllloflico
of Fred W.
Anolney.

:::;"t;

or

~.ltlu

.

675-1311

*AlUMINUM SIDING
'llOWN IN
INSULATION

*I 6x32
IIAICH SPICIAL *
... grOISIICI Pool

n.,..,..o•.,

__

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

Laurel Cliff notes

Notice·

NNC..ICN

*VINYl SIDING

POOLS PLUS
2101 Jaffor11n Awl't. Pllllllil; WV JISSO

We Mm AFall Tl••

'!JMw

Public Notice

AM c:.-tt•

ANeC....tt4

G~up II

py

,,.,

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

·Thi,·Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

---------~;.,.,--------r----------.----..;,-----1

Civitan

c.-lfle4 , . .. COtJM'

.

Business Services

Grlf~oDollr-etli:Hio'Difl·

1DPS
.'

of Proverbs. A Iota! of 31 sick and -God. Pleandcoffeewereseavedby
•{
shutln
calls were reported.
the hostesses.
PlansforattendlngAreaRecognl·
Mrs. Salser and Naomi Wyatt, .
11011 Day to be held on May 4 at the
Phllo High school were made at the wlt,h Lillian Napper, a contributing
Tl)e Big Bend Clvttan Club on
hostess, seaved a dessert course to
Tuesday night meetlngofTOPSOH
Monday
evening celebrated their
570 held at the church on the T In ~named and Betty Blackwood,
first
aMlversary
with dinner at the
May Holter, Faye Wiggins and
Middleport.
Meigs
Inn
and
the
lnlttatlo!l' ot five
Mary K. Roush.
-Kathy McDaniels presided at the
new
members.
· •
{lll!etlng. Officers' ' reports, were;
Areli Lt. GoVernor David Grimes,
given. Julia llysell won the fruit
a inemlierof the Manetta Club, was
basket. ToplOO&gt;eroftl)e3lrnembers . Artlcieson "Hearf'wereglvenby
present to perform the Initiation
~elghed In was Judy I.laudermlli. Mrs.CarJHor~, devotlonalleader,
ceremony. Inltlli ted were Jolm
An~r'smeetlngwUlfollownext · ai the TUesday nlgllt meeting of
Arnott, Stephen Powell, Sheila.
)Week s meeting.
Group 2.of the MJ!Idleport }&gt;resby·
Powell, Noreen Ondrusko alid
terlan Church held at the home at
Kathryn Hysell. Amott, Ondrusko
Mrs, Francis Anderson.
and the PoweUs were sponsored by
-Madhu Malhotra, a na live of
Mrs. Lewis Sauer was co-hostess Yonlece Miller. Hysell ~as ·spon·
India, who has spent 'the past 13 for the meeting conducted
Mrs. . sored by Jean Moore..
years here, as guest speaker at the .David Cumings, chairman: Mrs:
A guest of John and Debt Foster recent meeting of the Forest Run
Myron Miller conducted roll call
was John's mother, Mrs. Marie
UnltedMethodlstWomenheldatthe
with members answerlng ·w ith the · Foster.
l'l&amp;me of Carolyn Salser.
name of the church they attendEd &lt;in
Lt. Governor Grimes anlwunced
· ·Mrs. Malhotra modeled her Easter.
plans for an Area D family picnic to
w,eddlng dress, displayed several
Gleaning the church pews was
be held near ParkerSburg on June
plece!i of hef native c lothing, and _d iscussed and It was decided tha~the · 22.
t4iked about India, Its people, group will do this sometime soon.
\inguages, customes and dress,
Mrs. Jack Sonlen conducted the
Hilda Yeauger presided at the • least coin and read an article, "Not
meeting which opened with the . 0\!t Peace, But 'f!Urle."
Attendance at the Easter mom·
LOrd's Prayer. Kathleen Scott read
A cam was signed for Katluyn
_
}ng
serviceS at the Free Methodist
pOetry on friendship. Macy Nease _Hysell who Is In thecoronacy unit at
Church was 39. Attendance at the
a)\!1 Edith Sisson had birthdays the Holzer Medical Center. Mrs.
Easter day at the church was 129.
which were noted, and It was
Donald Lowery had the book study
A special SOIIJ was sung by Miss
reported that Elma Holter Is now from Concern Magazine on Zepha·
Anita Smith, The f{oly City' and
being cared for at the VIrginia Bland
nlah. Mrs. Cwnlngs played a tape 9f
· Home. ·
Peter Jenkins concerning his walk Miss Shecyl Collins ·was · at the
plano.
•
,
Sandi Hawley read several versE's
across America and his search for

Monday,April22,1985

t,

f

I

........

Caps l Supflll••
At .. SoN Siparately

CallE¥ .....

614·915-4212

4/1/1 mo.

((UI OUI FOI fUIUIII USil

KEN'S ,
APPLIANCE
SERVIa ' :

GUN SHOOT
UCINE
Fill DEPT.
. . . . . . . .u.l ltlltll

IVDY

915·3561

AIIMe•u

SAT•.NIGHT

owo...... •DIIh-ahore
. •R1npe
•RofrigMeiOra
•D,..,...oF,_..,. .
PARTS and SERVICE

6:30P.M.

~ -5-~c

factory Choke

I2

a.. 5ltotfioote Only

12•5-tfc

...... P"i.PiaiisiinT...

•

�PJge 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

42 Mobile
for Rent
Furniahe~ .

54

One black end white 6 Inch
televlolon with AM · FM re·
dio. o·c. d·c •100. Sklddero
Kleoto and cholno f200 .
1979 Ford automatic trana·
minion, $1 00. 304·875·
8782.

air cond., cable.

ta•••·

no city
beeudful riverview, K1nauga. Foater'a Mo-

. bile Home Porlt, 814-448·
1802.

Fully ·furnlthed. air, utilitiea
poid. 2 bdr .. odultoonly. Call
814-448 -4110 .

66

Building Supplies

Building Moloriolo
Block, brick, aawer pipes,
Wir1dOWI , lintelS , etc .
Cloude Wlntoro, Rio Gronde,
0 . Call814· 246· 5,21 .

. 1· 3 bdr . mobile home: all
utillt-• paid, furnished. no
· pate. oecurity depoo~ . 84211
mo. Call 814-448·1386 call
bet-en 5 ·&amp; 9PM.

Block, brick,

·4 4

monar and
maaonry auppllea. Mountain
State Block. Rt. 33. Now
Hoven, W. Vo. 304 ·8B2·
2222.

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Houolnu - Opportunity!
monthly rent otarto ot 1163
.for 1 bedr90m onH198 for
2 .bedroom. depooit 8200.
loceted near Spring Volley
Plaza ond Foodlarid. pool
and Cable TV availeble,
houroupoooiblo10emto4
pm end 7 pm to 9 pm
Monday· Friday. Call 814·
4 4 e . 2 7 4 6 0 r 18 1 v 0
mellage.
Apt. for rent t 1 25 &amp; up. Coli
876· 6104 or 875·6388 ,
Nicely · turniahed mobile

home, eff. apt., cantril 8ir
and heat In city, odul1o only.
Coli 814-448·0~38 .

Bachelor apt., 1at claae.

newly furniilhad. Ref. req.
U25 per mo. 164 Firat Ave
Galllpolio. Call 814·448·
1815 or 814-448·1243 .
Fwfniehed 3 rm apt. upet11ir1,
~ill1ieo

pd, 1196 mo ... $80
depoolt. 94 Locult. Adulto
only. Call 448· 1 340 or
4411· 3870.
Fl'rnlohed efficioncy 701
4th Ave .. Galllpolio. $1 BO.
utllitieo paid. ohlre bath,
adulto. Coli 448-4418 after
7PM.

UPatairs 3 room a. furniehed.
blth, waaher-dryer, AC,
cl8an, no petl, ref •• dep.
req .. odulu. Call 614-448·
1619.
Upataira unfurnished 3 room

apt .• carpeted, utilitiea paid,
no children, no pets. Call
8~4-448·1837.

2· 2 bdr. apt. fumiohed, pay
electiic. no pets, Mcurity
dopooit. $360 mo. 2·3 bdr.
opll. unfurnlohed. poy oloct·
ric. no pet1 . .ecurity depoait.
t350 mo. Coli 814·~48·
q85 call between 5 &amp; 9PM.

"' · ZZ

56

"We·'ve got food processors
StrainerS

•

ffiiCfOWaVe

ovens and ·We S_
t•u
l have TV
I

...1:--ers!"
.UUUI
.

~~:;::::::~::::::.,-:~:::::::::::::::::1

I ·46

Space for Rent

Mobile home lot. 12'•50 · or
omollar. f76 watet paid, 4th
&amp; Noll. Gallipollo. Call 446·
441 .8 after 7PM .

47 Wanted

to Rent

NICe 2 to 3 bdr. home with
goroge, 'noor Golllpolii .
f260·1300 per month. Coil
614 · 367 - 0324 after
6:30PM. ·

M e r c h ~1HI1 se

61

Household Goods

p

o1

RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. Compare o.u r
price•. Ave today. Phone
304· 773·6430.

Antiques

3 Coon dogo, 1 Plot, 1
Walker, 1 mi•ed breed .
f600 for all. Call 814· 258·
1240.

Registered male Beagle, 3¥2
yeare old. Good hunter. $30 .
Phone 814· 992·81 15.

For Sale: Antique piano,
appro•. 100 yro. old. cherry.
Call 814·446·8204.

Femele Pit Bull end 6
puppleo for oale . Cheap. Call
814-992·2881.

Mi~&lt;:.

Floh Tonk and Pot Shop,
2413 Jackson Avenue.
Point Ploaoant, 304·876·
2083. Fith, birda and mora .

Knauff Firewood Split· 86%
herdwoode. You pick-up or
we deliver. HEAP vender.
814-258-8246 . .

Black Poodle puppy. cheap,
cell eveningo 304 -876 ·
2288..

SPECIAL cut olabo 8 PU
load• delivered in dump
truck t100,or21oedof180.
You pickup e15. Call 614·
246·6804.
.

58

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables

Po'oi'Peopiol Spacial:
let ua eummeriEe your pool
$100. 10% off, ell pumpo
and flltoro. Middleport 614·
992· 6724 or Gelllpolio 814·
448·3061.

Onion plantt juat arriVed·
white, red&amp;. y811ow. Swiaher
Implement Co .. St. Rt. 7 N ..
Galllpollo, Oh . Cell 814·
446·0476 .

Spring Spocioi-Patriot utility
buildin-g • on dia"PI•Y at two
convenient locoliono. B &amp; s
Produce, . )/land .St. · in . P1.
Plalioont, on.d · French .City
Mobile Homeo in Oolllpolla.
8x12 f886, aloo 10•18
*996. Delivered and set up
on your lot.
_

N~ one bdr. •Hlciency :~~pt .
Coli 814· 448·0390.

J d T 1 G
· ..JI. C 11
u Y oy or ""'m'"V· 1
614-387· 7220.
Brlarpatch Kennels Profoo·
eional AU-breed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cllltloo. Englloh Cocker Spa·
nlel pupploo. Coii614· 3B8·
9790.

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel. CFA Himalayan. Peroian
""d Siomeoo killona. AKC
Chow puppieo. Call 81 .4 ·
448-3844 after 7PM.

Modo in Gollipolio Circa
1880 handmade auger cupboard orginal finieh. exc.
cond. Also antique 2 piece
otep back cupboard refin·
iehed in e.:. cond. Call
814·387·7871 .

64
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olive St., Gelllpollo. Now
&amp;. used wood-coalttovee, 6
pc wood LR 1u11e ' f389.
bunk bedo .. ,188, ontron
. roclinero egg, new • UIOd
bedroom IUitH, range1,
wringer wai'h~r•~ &amp; ahoea.
New llvlngroom auitea
t 1 89 · •699 •.' .ltirllpo. aloo
buying coal • Wood lloveo.
Cell 61 4·4441' at 59, ·' ·

Household Goodi

5;)

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
Indoor-outdoor faeilltlee .
AKC Doberman puppioo:
Stud Service. Coll614 -446·
7796.

blenderS - ChOpperS -. ·

-

61

Miac. Merchandise

f ;mn Supp l ies
&amp; L; ves l ock

'N' CARLYLE

Farm Equipment

1-New Allia Chalmers' row
no-till corn planter. We can
set up with 74 plate. unlt1 or
78 air unlto both with
monitors. We can finance
new planters intertet free til
Jon. 1. 1988. Coli on price.
1-uotid Alllo Cholmer.l 4 row
no-.till corn planter dry . fert.
77 air unite. monitor e31SOO,
1-usad Allla Chelmera 4 row
no·till with dry fort. 78 eir
unite with in1ect bo.-es,
monitor i.ued' 1 veer,
$6,600. 1-uoed I row no-1111
dry fort. 60 oerieo plata unito
lneact 81 herb boxea,
$3,()00. Can be cutto 4row
82,600. 1· ul0d 8 rpw no·
· till, 70 oerioo plato unltl
lnoect attoch, dry fertilizer,
and trsnaport $3 ,900. Can
be cut down to different row
widtha, 1-new 2 row 3 point
no-till with 74 plate unite II
Insect bo•es $1 ,900 . 1-used
2 row 3 point no· till with 70
aari_itl .plate.unit a •nd inaec:t
bo•or f1400. Remember.

w••

company on the market with
aAllis
no·till
planter. They
•dll
Chalr:n•re
the firet
have the 1 t r'ongeet &amp; moet
oucconful l.oroltllo planter
on the market . Can be
opoclid from 20" row apoc·
·
40" ~
h ·
1ng to
· ,.,ur aut ortzed
Allis .C halmera 8t New Hoiland Dealer, for thlo areo.
I( 8 8 f 8 r 1 : :::tv c , cent 8 r.
st Rl • B7 • Pt • PI • R.1P10 Y Rd ·
We• era
13 mi.S .of Raven•wood Bridge. 304·B96 ·
3874. .

0

8 :00

•

814· 268· 1141 .

8:30

Home
Improvements

7:00

Marcum Roofing
Spout· ·
~~~;~~~~~;~r~=~=~~~~~~ ing.
~ow installing rubb• ~

Pole Buildings Constructed
for commercial, garages,
farm. atorea, etc. Any aiEe,
free estimates. Call 304676-3981 .
Wanted to Buy

Rototillera. prefer Troybilt,
but will buy any make. anv
size. Coli 1·6 1 4-693-8B36.

'

81

72

Trucks for Sale .

TO
cAs H pold for 'BO . ft.
18B1 GMC Yo ton pickup, 8
P
FIHtolde. 360 dleoel
model and newer used car~ .
Smith Bulck· Pontlec. 1911
engine, .PS, .PB, auto .• bed
Eaatero Ava .• Oalllpollt. Call liner. Contact Mr. George,
"14·448·2282..
814·-"6·0346 BI30AM to
u
5PM ..
19B2 Dodga 400 2 dr..
40 000 1
f3 800
19BO Jeep Cherokke. PS.
•
m " •uto..
•
· PB, locking hubo. good
Call 814 ' 378 ' 2728 · '
cond . Coll614-248'·8841.
197B Dodge Magnum KE
needaaome·work.Call6 14_ Chev.y luv pickup for aale
448·00118 .
fBOO. Coli 8t4·268·826t
after 8PM.
7B Grond Prix SJ now tlreo,
ohockeo. brakeo. paint job.
full power, U,500. Coli
814·258·8439.
1977 Oldo Storflre V·l. 4
opd., hotch back with oun
roof, good tirea, good condl·
lion. Alklng t1,800. Cell
814·379·2280 after 7PM .

1976 2 ton lnternetional
88:ooo mlleo . .... 1flot bad.
auto. trans. power eteering
in good condition elking,
f2.600. Aloo 1874 Chevy
l.uv with camper 4 cyl .. 4
lpd .• Florida truck no ruat.
et.ooo firm. Cell 814· 379·
2280 oftor 7PM .

1974 Volkowagon Bug. new
engine, braket. ehocke.
good body, t1,000. Nogotl·
able. Cell 814·446·4313.
9-8:30 Mon.· Frl.

1976 Chavy 1 ton truck. 4
epeed. good condition .
t 1800 without dump or
t2BOO with dump. Call
814· 982·3194.

1978 Lincoln Mark V.
2B.OOO mi ..• loaded, garage
kept, f6,900. Cell 614·
448·2076 eve.

73

Vans

&amp;4

W.O.

1979 CJ-5 Golden hgle.
304, V-8, PS. PB. opokor
1978 Ford Muotong, · wh"ll, low mileage, exc.
f1,000 . Call 814·388· cond. t4,600. Call 8t4·
448·8700.
l
B609 .
1980 .Malibu wagon. 1977
Novo 2 dr .. 71 Oldo Cutlau.
Will toke trade. Call 61 4·
448·7832.
78 Muotong 4 opoad. Call
814·441·3643.
1988 Camero 398 4 opd.,
·f!l.&amp;OO or will ·trade for
motorcyolo. Cell ~fter liPM,
614·245-8832.
;

1978 CJ·5 Golden Eagle.
1'8. PB. low mileage , good
cond .. e4.600. Call 814·
448·9700.

74

Motorcycles

Honda .· CB- 689 with 2
liolmoto &amp; interbcim. Muit
· ~ell. Ct11 .614·4411, 8153. ·

roofo. 30 yearo e•parianco: •
speciaUEing in built up root: ·
Call 81 4 · 38B-9867.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gue· rontea. Local reforoncos
.
fl!rn I1 h e d . Frea eet•metes.
Call colloct1 ·614· 237· .
, 0488 , day or night . Rogoro
Baoemont Waterproofing .

... 131J\" 'PIJ MI'SSPf.U.W
E"L!&gt;PHAtJT, MY eo.t!

Farm Equipment

m"

'

•

-----....:..--·lc-

7:30

D &amp; M Contractors. Vinyl
end aluminum siding'replocemant windows ·
1 n 1 u Ia tin g. roofIng remo·dellng and new
conatructlon-gutterl. Call
304· 773· 6 131.
J &amp; L lnoulation. Vinyl
tiding, roofing, replacement
windows, storm windows.
otore dooro. Call 614-992·
2772 :

ANNIE
8:00

RON'S Television Service.
Houee calli on RCA, Quazar.
G~ . Specialing in Zenith.
Call 304·676·2398 or 614·
446·24154 .

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 304 · 876 ·
1331 .
.

f··

RINGLES'S SERVICE, e•·
perienced carpenter. electri:
cian, meson, painter, roofing lincluding hot . tar
opplication) 304· 675·2088·'
or 675-731B .

min .)

0 Cll ® Scarecrow and
Mrs. King Lee and Amanda
uncover a white slave ring

when Amanda' s purse is
' stolen , (R) [60 min I
(I) Ancient Uvea (CCI
'Year of the Hyena.' The sur-

Starks Tree &amp; lawn Service.
landscaping, eeeding, fertil izing, thatching, for com - ~
plate law" aervice, Call us. - .
304-876· 2,0 10.

vival of the villagers from

\

1 bedroom furniahed apt.
Coli 614·992·6434 or 304·
882·2568 .
Two bedroom furniahed
apartment for rent in Middleport. utilltloo paid. Call
614-992·6084.
2 bedroom apartmentl.
New Haven, WVa.
-" ~-- · -· --··----·
remodeled . In town.
Used fUrniture •· 5 pC.
992-7481 .
· dinette. heed boerdo. end 2
-------~-- bedroom 1uitee. 3 mllee out
One bedroom. totalel.,ctric. Bulavllle Rd. Opon 9om to
,Nice. Call 614·992-2094.
llpm. Men. thru Sot.
81 4·446' 0322
1 bedroom furnished apart~
ment on E. Main St . in GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Pomeroy . Call 814·992· Watherl, dryen, refrigerai
tors, rangea. Skaggl Ap7314
pllanceo, Upplr River Rd.
beeida Stone Creet Motel.
814· 441· 7388.

. ()]) Uving Planet·CCCI 'New
.· Worlds.' The ehaf19~S of on· ·
vitonment that have taken .
placB over ·hundreds· of ·:
years in Beidha, .Jordan are
examined . (60 m·in..)
. . ~ie Ple~se Don•t · ~;et Me

B &amp; O:Home lmprovamenll.
roplac•ment window a.
elu"'inum soffi( vinyl aid ~·
ing. continuoua gutters. free
llllmoteo. ell work g~•r•n ·
toed, Sprinq Oiocount. call

;1~9~8~1~~~;~~~; ovenl~go

- .·.

IHBOI 'MOVIE: 'Drawl' '
· (Ccl ·
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Over . the
Edge'
8 :30 1!1) Major Lell{luo Baoeball:
Cincinnati at Houston
9 :00 II(}) (1) TV Academy Hall
of Fame (CCI Carol Burnett.
Sid Caesar. Waller Cronkite.
Joyce ·1:1a11, Rod Serling, Ed
Sullivan and Sylvester 'Pat'
Weaver are inducte.d into

lhe TV Hall of Fame . [2 hrs.l
(1)700 Club
ill USFL Football: Son
Antonio at Oakland
Cll Ul llJ MOVIE:
' Marathon Man' CCCI
0 (I) ()t Kate • ·Allie Kate
receives ,an unusual inheritance from an aunt. (A)
Cll ()])American Playhouoe
CCCI . 'Under the Biltmore
·Clock.' A young flapper
searches for a husband in
the 1920's under New
York's Bill more Hotel clock .
(90 min.)
9:30 0 (I) ® Newhart
10:00 ([)Major League Baseball :
Atlanta at Son Diego
0 Cll ® Cagney &amp; Lacey
Cagney and Lacey finger the
wrong man when they investigate the murders of
three cab drivers. (A) (60
min .)
IHBOl MOVIE: 'American
Hot Wax·
IMAXI MOViE: ' A Lcn9
Way Home'
1 0:30 (I) Togo1her: Boones
(I) Writers Writing !CCI
'Telling an Old Story .' Pul·

WINNIE

----- - - - - '

a...

BARNEY
ALL NIGHT LONG
BIG TOE KEPT
TelliN' ME IT WAS
FIXIN'TO RAIN

MV

TODAV

'IOU FIBBER. YOU!!

AN' TH' SUI\fS
BEEN SHININ'

MV .W ASH COULD BE
DR'IIN'ON TH' LINE
RIGHT NOW 'IF
IT WASN'T

ALL DAV.
LONG

' itzer Prize-winning journalist
Madeleine Blais discovers
another Story emerging
from the one. she is writing .

FOR 'IOU!!

•1oo.

- - -- - -'-'--

{j]) Newo ·
11 :00 . . (}) Cll (1) 0 Cll ® ..
llJ News
Cil Bill Cosby Show
()) Monty Python
()]) Heartbreok Turtle The
threat of extinction to the
soa turtle is examined. (R)
(60 min .)
1 1 :30 II ClJ (1) Befl of Caraon
Tonight's guests are Made,
line Kahn and Tracey Ull·
man . (A)(60 min.l
()) Boot of Groucho
Cll WKRP in Cincinnati
D ()) Simon &amp; Simon
Cll Latenlght America
Cit Taxi
•
G21 ABC No)NS
Nlghtllne
g Twilight Zone
(HBOI Not Neco11arily the

~=========:.t=========j

Mobile home loll, R • 1'1
Mobile Home Pork. Bulovlllo
Rd, Gellpollo, Oh. Coll814·
448-0527 · or 614·448·
1283.
Wringer typo woaher. Hke
new. Call .,4·2111·1421.

2 troller Iota. good locotiOn,
Galllpollo. oew~g• fur·
Country Oak tablet, chelre.
nlohed. county ~ater •
electric on loti. Ref. req. Call cupboard a, dellkl, leo boll••·
614· 245· 5851 or814·448· Conkleo. Tupporo Plalno, Rt.
7. Hond orafted and
' 0238.
flnlohad.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Parlt, Route 33. North of 30 Inch electric ronge, •111.
Po....,oy . urr Iota. Call 40 Inch electric range. til.
114-982·747 .
.4o 1nc11 . .,.. ronge.
Kanmore waah• end dryer.
Rontol oplcl for travel troll· f1BO, Mlf·dafrOit rafflgera·
er1. cempera, fold upe. We- tor. e1 00, welhlng m•·
tor. _.,, electric cable
ee11 and up, ollcl1rtc
hook upo. Cell 304 · 773· dryer, ell • end up. Cell
1161 after 1 :00 p.m.
114·742·23112.

•n.

chi-.

Troller loti for rent, eawer
and' water fumlohod. wNI
take ono omall child. 304·
171· 1071.

30 lncll ga• ronge. flO. 11
Inch Zenith .color TV. tiiO.
271 gel. fuel oN tonic on loti•.
•eo. Celll14·112·7207.

Trail., •paoe for Nnt. 304- Plolteno 111M furniture. 304·
871·8720.
1171·8413 or 178·1•10.
~

1'HE:.,.:f'.·S A RUMOR
AfC:OUND 1'HA1' SAMMV
1HE SL.IJG MIGHI'
MARRY..
J.A"Y SNAKE'!

___:

oon-

..fl.

1

,.

.

Y~H. ()'1/f.ft.

MY (;JEA()
&amp;OOY!! .

~

~

e.

______

st~vation during the 'Year
ol the Hyena' is told. (60

min .)

2

Furnished apt. 3 r~ma. .lnd
bath. No pau . Call
814-949-22113.

H01 Potato
Beverly Hlllbllliel
Dr. Who
3 ·2 · 1. Contact CCCI
fll Diff'ront Strokn
IMAX) MOVIE: 'Tho Night
My Number Come Up'
II (}) CD NBC Newo
()) Rifleman
ill MazdeJ;portllook
([) j;afe ot Home ·•
()) G llJ ABC Newo (CCI
0 (I) rlO CBS Newo
())
Nightly
B~oineos
Report
()]) Body Elec1ric
8 One Day at a Time
II (}) PM Moeazine
())
Chuck
Connor' •
Weotern Theater
ill Sportocepter
([) Sanford and Son
C1J Entertainment Tonight
CD Wheel of Fortune
0 Cll Wheel of Fortuna
(I)
liD MacNeil/Lehrer
Newohour
®News
Ul llJ N~w Name That
Tune
f11 Jofferoono
IHBOI Beat of Braingameo
The best game segments
from this series are seen .
II (}) Tic Tac Dough
()) Cieco Kid
.
ill ESPN's Inside Baseball
([) All In the·Family
Cll 0 Cll Family Feud
(1) Jeopardy .
®I Wheel of Fortune
Ul (}2) Entertainment
Tonight
fll WKRP in Cincinnati
[HBOI Fraggle Rock
1J (}) (1) TV's Blooporo &amp;
Practical Jokes Tonight's
practical joke victims are
Heather Locklear and Bubba
Smith . (A) (60 min .)
(I) The Monroes
ill Auto Racing '85:
Formula One Portugal
Grand Prix from Eatoril,
Portugal
([) MOVIE: 'Speedtrap'
()) _, llJ Hardcastle &amp;
McCormick
CCCI
The
house is a shambles and vi tal files are missing after
Mark throws a party. (R)i60

ALLEYOOP

Rotary or cable tool drilling. "!oat wells t9mplet~d same·
day; Pump aalea and earvi· ·
COl. 304·B96·3802 .

' .1978· ·. bloC!&lt; Cemaro. ···•·
' ··
Bently Pig Sale Wed. April cond .. loti of e~~~:trae. Call
1977 Suiuki for aate, •3150 .
24th, 7 :30PM. Fayette 814 266 8003
Coli 81 4·258·628 1 after
County Fair Groundo. We·
·,
·
·
6PM.
•Spring Spacial: : 2ll'•30'•8' shington CH. Sollin..u 160 .1977 C~maro LT PS. ·PB.
head Qf ,Duroc:s. Hemp· . A·C, IUto. - rouvart.
··,..;,~· 1~'•7 '..gorago door &amp;
..
304·6.7!1·:!844. ,
Power Croft 4 cycla.
Duroco cro11 bre'cj •.Biir!OWI .wh.. lo. Call·814,441·1873.
oervi~e door. e~;88· 8
lit ,: Strotton · riding
!.100
$uildlng·
r~modeling; ~•Y·
. 2 ev.e. · .
·~reefed . Jiof. ·J-iorl6· Bldgi . . &amp; gllto. Rog.or ·Bandy 613· · day or :44!1:727
8'xc.
well. Kitch•n-bathroom In·
~a8.fti :.196. Call
5B4·239B
.
81 4· 332· 9746 collect. ·
0394.
ltllled, door-windoW from·
1988 Multang f1 ,000.
ing . Vinyl and alumn siding,
1
year
old
colt
for
oalo.
Call
1873 Multang t300. 18715 2·1979·Hondo XR 100 both roofing. 304·876-2440.
CROSS &amp; SONS
8ft. alu"!'lnum aalelllte di1h,
.
304
-882-2862
U.S. 36 Weot, Jockoon,
Dodge 4·WD truck PS. PB, tor tl.OOO. Call 814·246·
8 moo. old, t2,000. Call
f1 ,ooo. Cell 814-258· 9898 oftor 6PM.
Ohio . 814·288·8451 .
814·268·6826 eftor 3PM .
For sale at all timeaepringlng 1240.
M111ey Fargueon. New
82
Plumbing
Holsta~a cow• and heifera.
Hollana. Buoh Hog Saleo &amp;
2 rail mOtorcycle trailer,
&amp;
Heating
304· 678 · 2266 or 676 · 1975 Dodge Stotlonwogo~. 74 Suzuk1100, 4 opd .. HHo
Service.
Over
40
used
factory built. 1 electric chain
range, very good cond .•
2610.
.
All new tlreo. Runo good. 3,100 mi., uoo. 83 Suzuki
tractors to choose from &amp;
eaw, 12 in . bar. 1 g11 chein
196B Oldo 88 .' Run1 good. 60 3 wheeler llko n-.
complete ilne of new &amp;
AW 10 ln. bar. All A-1 cond.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
used equipment, lllrgeat
Both for •600. Call 814·
Call 814·246·6294. ·
f300. Coll614·388·9060.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
AND HEATING
telection in S.E . Ohio.
992·2883 .
Cor.
Fourth and Pine
VANGUARD PAINTS·
1982 Honda Silver Wing
Gollipolio, Ohio
1978 Ford LTD, blua vinyl lnteretate. 1,000 miles, reQualitY you can truat . John Deere riding lawn
Ebenb1ch Hardware , tractor, 5 spd .• $695 . Inter- Ear of corn. $2 .60 per uata and top. power eteer~ dlo. crulae. craeh bar . Phone 61 4·446· 3BB8 or
notional BHP, 32' cut riding bushel. Call814·843·6216. lng ·and brakea, autom11ic. t2200 . Cell 614 -317· 614-448-4477
Pomeroy. Ohio. Call 814tilt ttHrlng, crul11, AM·FM 7191.
lawn tractor $696 . Call
992·2811.
.
Round bale• for sale. Made 'otereo with 8 track. olr
JIM'S PLUMBING. HEAT·· •
814-288-8622.
of orchllird grass and clover. conditioning. t1,500. Runo 1980 CR 260 good condi· lNG. Rt.' 1. Bo• 366. Galli-'
4.600 tomato atakea, ua.cJ 1
John Deere corn planter $16.00 each. Call814· 742· good. Gocd cond"lon. 742· tlon. 304-676· 1 780.
.polio . Call ~14 · 367 -0576 .
veer. Re11onoble prlceo. 2
2810 .
$396, new &amp; uoed hoy 2692, Gary Harpor .
wheel gsrden tractor with an
8 ~oru Brlggo engine . equipment at 93 Auto Sales.
I
1978 ~ondo Accord. Hotch 76
83 Excavating
' " Larry Exline, Jackson,
BoaU and
• 1 60. Boor Cat 8 cryotlo
'
65 Seed &amp; Fenilizer back. clhn. no rust~ excel·
Oh. Cell 614·286-6622.
ocennar. f100. Call 814·
M otora for Sale
lent condition. AM·FM. AC,
949-2069.
SATOH F-660-G. tractor
153.000 mho. 13800. Call
Good - 1 EKcavati!l9• bll!ll8with 20·30 loader, hydraulic Attention Area Farmeral Get Wendell Greta ot 114·742·
Antiquaa-3 oak deeks. 1
menta.
footers, driveways....
bucket, 2 tpd, live power, your Dekalk aeed corn &amp; 22'1 1, ofter II:OO ' ca)l 814· 16W Thundercraft trl·hull septic tonka, landscaping,, "
player plano; Reetaurant 6
with top. 90 HP Mercury C1ll anytime 614-446·"' :
f2,595 . Ca.l l 814·2B8 · alfalfa seed in Gallla Co. 882·5320.
ft . electric grill; gulter, 3
with powor trim, 1111 then
1622.
from Tim Ma111e . Molt
dryero: New Sound·dooign
Jomei L. Davioon. Jr.
50 hra. on motor; Dilly 4837.
'74
Qramlin.
good
work
cor.
chemic1l1 av•llable aleo.
owner ~
turntable, boat motor--. and
M81SIJV Ferguaon 50, PS, Call 814 · 448-4307 for '78 Suberu Br1t, new pelnt troller·••c. cond. Call 814·
trailer and other miac. iteme.
end tlrao. 113.000 mllu. 448·8098 oftor 8PM ,
live power. with 5 ft. bueh prices.
Dozer Work land clearing,
Call 114-992·9917 or 614·
hog
&amp;
2
bottom
plowo.
304·8711-6217.
992-2611 . Lo Salle,
etc. Free eati·
lan41Caping.
1 ~n
tracter with
U.995. Cell 81 4·288 · Kenworthy Seed Corn,
Middlepon.
mateo. Cell 614·446-8038
trolling
motor.
f326.
Call
8522 .
1973 Dodga Charger with
phone 304·876· 1508.
or 614· 992·7119 anytime.
newly rebuilt engine. 814·288-6582 .
Firewood t20.00 pickup
130 'Farman with cultlva- Fertilizer by bag or ton. f450.oo. 304·876·5884.
load, UO.OO delivered. Call
14 ft. boot with troller &amp; 40 84
tora, axe. cond. Will conaider 1103 Fifth Stroot. Now
Electrical
304 -875·8782 or 676 ·
HP
Johnoon motor. t1.150
trade
lor
good
uaed
PU
1980
Pontlec
Sun
Bird.
2991 .
Haven. 304·BB2·2271 or
.
&amp;
Refrigeration
·or belt &lt;&gt;!for. Or trode for PU
truck. Call 61 4-448· 7B3B 882· 3368.
.1 ,800. 304' 773·9143 .
truck
of
equal
value.
C•ll
after II PM .
WANTED·Arao Sporto En·
1984 Mercury Topoz LS. air 814-448-4337 .
thueiaete that want to reEd'• Appliance Service': .
8 HP Gravely tractor, walk
condition. PS. PB. tilt.
c•iva direct nwll tpeciala
Tr~ n S JIO r l a t lll n
behind, electric atart, highcruloe, II apeed, 4. 700 14 ft. John boat, Evinrudo Serving all makes 81 brands
lilt. an exciting new mertow trena .. 4 yrt. old with
mileo. cullom Interior. Will remote·control trolling mo· of refrigerators. wa•hers 6.
chandl• program. from Tri
mow,r. plow. tiller. duel
con•l•r caah and 1rldl·ln. . tor. Depth IInder and troll or. dryers. etovea &amp; dia County &amp;porto. 304·67&amp;·
Call814-742·2r75. · · hwoohers. Call 814-387·
tlreo
•
choino.
$1.696.
No
304·6711·31 09 boloroi 9
2988 or wr"• to Rt. 1, Bo•
Autos for Sale
71.8 7 or 814·448 ·4486 .
p.m
.
,
trodeo.
Call
814·448·1670.
71
471. Point Pleount. W. Va.
12 ft. S11ro olumlrium boat .
Include name ·addreaa 1t1d
Somh V bottom with owlvel SEWING Machine repairs,
zip.
Dairy goato. Alpine and
- • • ond trailer. Call 814· Hrvioe. Authorized Singer
Saa~n. al110 mlllled ~ubian
1980 Wrecked 210 Datsun.
742·2125 mo1nlngo or Salea &amp; SerVIce Sharpen
PHOTO SPECIALII Dloc film end Alpine, 304 -678·2147 . 304-676-3839 .
evenings.
Scisaon . Fabric ShOp, ,.
Pomeroy. 614·992·2284 .
developing
end
printing
72
Trucks
for
Sale
f2.49. •Now thru AprM 27.
17 ft. MonotM opon bow.
HOCK~NIERRY PHAR·
88 H.P. M1&lt;cury engine.
1981 F·100 Ford •4999,
MACYNORTH.
t31500. Cell 114 · 948·
86 General Haulinq
1 8B 1 Chevy Luv 13888.
19B 1 Dollun U998, 1880 2222.
Wild Turkey Se01on • Army
.D ·IIO Sport Dodge t3889.
cemouflage - aurplua denim
1877 ford F·1110 t249t. All Flohlng boot. 1 2 ft., aluml·
• rental clothing. Sam Borne·
trucko priced to 1011 or !rode. num, wldobody, with troller.
rville'a Eaat Ravenawood:
John'I Auto Baln, Bullville e5oo.oo. Call 114-892·
Fri. Sat. Sun. 1 :00· 7:00pm.
Rd. Oelllpollo. Ohio C8141 1228.
Denirlllocketo t19.00. Fire·
441·4712.
wood, Triumph motorcycle.
17 fl. Creltllner. 1811 Ken's Water Service. Welle,
304-8711·3334.
1978 OMC AM·FM ca11., lnboerd-outboerd, power cieterna, pool• filled . Phone
Couch, Selmer elto ""· 2
ralley wheela. 8 ft. bad, ••c. trim prop, power trim· tabo. 614·387-0623 or 814-387·
7741 night or doy.
• •
trailer bada (matlroll • box
cond. Call lt4·387· 7147 trl·!&gt;aul. 304·878·1288.
oprlngol. 304·89f·3404.
after
J•"'· exe cond, t2,2oo.oo. Umeatone, gravel , lind. fill ~
Prom d,.,,, worn once.
1171 lntemotlonel •o701· Lciw b111 b01t on tr11ller dirt end cool dallverod 304· •
.
lavender trimmed In white.
KT410· 12113 trano. loth. ·~.308.00. Both 875-4412.
II•• 3. 304-1178·2417.
r•n with 18711'1ovwno . •4.200.00. BM Tri County
troller. olumlnum flat with lpon, ooN 304·1171·2188.
87 Upholstery
•
Kolvlnator olio. 32 Inch
"lldee. ltDrlfla ·boa, - c l
. - euo. Uaed only 1
on air. 121.000 for both or 18 foot Gllaarnaater, 1111
monthl, •••· cond. 304·
will - t e: Calll14-247· Inboard o u - . po-r
trim prop, trl·hlul ond
1711-1311.
2083 ..
TRISTATE
troll•r. ••c oond. 10•·1911·
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
'
3111.
· 1113 Sec. Ave .. Oalllpolio. ••
One black • white TV •
1171 ford fi2110 l - b .
am·fm radio a·o, d·c t1 00.
Good condition. Priced
61 4-446 ·7833 or814·448 BklddiH Kleoto end ohelno
right. Can 11 4·112·2141.
1833.
·:
78
Auto Parte
ezoo. 79 Ford automatic
&amp; Accesaorlea
trona. t100. 304-8711·
'72 lntar'l 24 fl HI\' lruok
A • M Furniture Manufac· ~
8712.
U.loo. '72 CJII .leap • . _
turing, St. Rt. 7, Crown •
point. ihoclta • 1 .eoo.
City. Oh . Coli e14-2116 · '
170 WI,........, 12 g - .
Mor111n'o Woodlawn form, 4·17x40•111 ground hog
1470, call Eve. 114·448
343B. Old •
trade, 304·171·
Coli 304·171·1211 or 304-· tlrn. 1M t,.ad, •410. Call
Uphoatered.
c:.:=~~.:..u:::z::~~~:!~~~iLJ , ._7_3._·_234_2_._ _ _ __ 11 4'441·71111 after 7PM.
·2CMO.

61

II &lt;lJ ()) (1) D ()) ® G
())
())
(I)
()])

77 Jeyco camper ileeps 8,
air, awning. eJ:c . cond. Call

81

Autos for Sale

•

EVENING

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Se rvic es

71

Tf!AT IICIIAMILI\0 WORD GAME
by Hoiw1 Amold end Bob '--

4/22/85

1977 Ploy · mor RV, oleepo 8,
lllf-c:ontained , AC . full
bath. range. refrig ., new
tiree, clean. e.:. cond ..
$3, 500 . Call 614~ 446 ·
2297.
.
•

w.

.

Television
Viewing

Auto Repair

llJ No-

0

a

·L ivestock

Ohio

Pereona Body Shop. locust .
Rd. Pt.Pieooant. Put K&amp;K . .;
Frea Elllmatu. 614 -986 .. ,
4174.

79

Allie Chalmero lawn and
garden tractor. 1 wetik epe·
ciel; 1 Modal 6020, 21 hp,
diesel with 5 ft Woods rear
mounted lawn mower
11.200.00. 1 Modll 6016,
1 hp. dieool. 4 wheel drive
with 4 ft Woods rear
mounted lawn mower
•5 ;9oo,oo. 1 Modal912. e
speed.. 12 hp with 42 in.
mower f2,800 .00 . Two
Model 81 8. 1 8 hp with 42
ln . mower $2,860.00.
Keefer Service Cf!lnter, St.
Rt. 87, Loon,
Va. 304·
B96-3B75 .

63.

77

Wrlgllt

....

Woods 7 ft Bush Hog
t1 .600. 28 ft tobacco pipo
tralloro(1 1 $600 .. 121 •900.
Morgan'• Woodlawn Farm,
Rt. 36. 304·676·1288 or
304· 736· 2342.
.

1!2

Monday, April 22, 1985

Monday, April 22. 1985

New•

~

'Tl!EI{ ALL 60 OFF
SIIOPPIN6, AND LEAVE

Nc

IN 'Tl!E

CAR ...

1

BUT I DON T CARE

I LIKE LOOKING AT
ALL THE PEOPLE

WllO PASS 6\':.

AND I LOVE

SNOOPING IN

THE' '

GLOVE COMPARTMENT

[MAKI MOVIE: 'Midnight
Expre11'
12:00 ()) Bumo &amp; Allen
ill Sportacenter
Cll Benny Hill Show
riO MOVIE: 'Tho Black
StaMion Returns'
(l)l Eye on HollywOod
8Guntmoke
IHBO) MOVIE: 'Making the
Grode'
·12l30
ClJ (1) Late Night with
David Letterman
ill USFL Football: Sen
Antonio at Oakland

a

e

CUDIL

(]

I I I

I SULTES~

CKI

WHA"T 5Hc

5Ait:' AT THe

C06iUME PA~

I GELIGG~
I' J V..
f J
~

~

~

Now .,-ange the clrcted letterS to
form thl surprlee anawa-, u aug-

·

~~~~~~~~-=-~-:~::t~::~::tM::~c~oon.

w.."r I I ]-[ I I I
I
conceited
saturday's Jumblol: HENNA
,

(AnawtNa tomot roW)

ARMOR STooGE

POPLIN

guy dld!1't feel the need for a

Answer. That

.

r )"FoR[IJI

vacation because he wea II ready on thiaAN EGO TRIP

·~

I

.Q,

NORTH

An ace goe.s
to waste
By James Jacoby
Reader Mack Meigs ol Baytown,
Texas, ~ubmitted today's deal . He
was apologetic about the bidding.
Because North and South were play·
ing negative doubles, North passed
the one-heart overcall. He expected
his partner to reopen the bidding with
il double, and he was going to punish
his vulnerable opponent for a rash
overcall by exacting a penalty . WheQ
South bid one spade, who of us would
not now risk trying two clubs with the
West cards? But I suppose West felt
he had gone far enough when he bid
one hear~ . After asking for aces,
North made an assumption that South
must . hold a heart void to have
removed to four spades over three nGtrump, and so he bid six diamondo.
The defense was as lacking in ele·
gance as the bidding had been. The
opening club lead allowed declarer
. Meigs .to quickly ,shuc~ his two hearts
on the ":Ce and kirig of dubs. A heart .
was now ruffed •. and a spa!le led .to
dummy's queen and' the ace from
East. A spade was .returned, South
won the king and West discarded a
tlub. That mark&lt;)&lt;~ East with all four
, dlamondo to the _jAck, .5ut he.w"'! help-·
.Jess to take. a trtck as declarer ruff~
spades and hearts back and forth : In
fact, on the last spade trumped in

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Opening lead: +6
·
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.•
du,mmy, hapless East was underrulf·
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·
·' ·
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en had East returned a diamond aft
winning the spade ace. Decla r
would. now have to finesse against the ' ~
spade Ja~k. playing West. to hav.e
starte4 wltll a slngletoi! spade as well · ·
as a diamo~d void.

1

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loy THOMAS JOSEP..
ACROSS 39 Group
I Dilatory
of families
5 Small
40 lni&lt;!ru~if)i
person 41 Crowd

II Culture
medium
12 Songlike
13 Cook
14 Releue

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(Fr.)
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(Sherlock's I 8 Pub measure 17 Chinese
IT Man's
lover)
· 19 "The
city
niCkname 7 Obi!cure
18 Lionllke
8 Put
20 Nautical
heads
chain
toRether
21 English
9 Attempted
river
10 Unstable

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23 Fettered
14 Greek
26 Abhor

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unit
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31 Correct
38 Summit
371 (Ger.)

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23Thorax
26 lntoXi·
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28 Dame Myra

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27 Sprint
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pottery
32 Under
the
weather

..

83 Allegiance
Sol De Lulse
35 More
tldy

37 Otiooe
38 Repeat
perfor·
mance
DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Here'tbowtoworltlt:
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IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands lor another. In this sample A is used
the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
I!JIOIItrophes, the length and r~tion of the words are ali
hlnts. Eitch day the code letters are dlf(erent.
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ED ABOliT THA'l' A D~ON ~ mEIR FAULTS ·
DElJGIITS 111Efd. - ANDRE MAUROIS

•

...

�Page-1 0-The Daily' Sentinel

Pomeroy-iMiddlepon, Ohio

-Emergency squads kept busy

Area deaths

Units of the Meigs County
ported. 'At 11: 25 .a.m., Pomeroy
Ehlergency Medical Service were went to Dark Hollow Rd. for
several nieces and nephews.
kept busy over the weekend. EMS Raymond McCumber to Veterans Dale Sisson
In addition to his parents, Mr. Still
reports that al cans for assistance Memorial. Tile Salem Township
was preceded In death by a son,
Dale SissOn, 79, Rt. 1, Chi!shlre,
were answered during the two day Fire Department at 11: 5B a.m was
Roger and a sister, Lilly Zeigler.
died
at
12::Jl
a.m.
Sunday
In
Holzer
peilod, 10 on Saturday and 10 on called to a brush tire on Ohio 325.
Services wm be held 1 p.m.
Medical
Center.
Sunday.
Racine at 1: 27 p.m. went to County
a( Rawllng·Coat.HIIower
Tuesday
Born Aug. 15, 19(1i,r In Cheshire
On Saturday at 8: ~ a.m.,
Rd. 28 for Betty VanMeter to
Funeral
Home with Rev. Noel
'
County,
son
1&gt;f
the
Township,
Gallla
Pomeroy went to the Pomeroy . Veterans Memorial.
Herrml)lin
officiating.
Health Care Center for Brian
Racine was called to Sharon Rd. lateJohnCarlaridHe!enFI!eS.tsson,
will
be In Rlvervi!!W
Burial
Hartman to Veterans Memortal at 1:46 p.m . for Clarence Congo who he mined coal and operated a store.
CemeteiY.
Hospital. At 8: 22 a.m., the Middle- was taken to Veterans Memorial. A World War II veteran, he was a
Friends may call at the funeral
port tire department was called to Pomeroy at 4: 51 p.m . transported member of American Legion La·
home
all day on Monday with the
fayette Post 'l:l, GaU!poUs, the DAV
the scene of a van !Ire on Ohio 7. Roger Vance from his residence on
family
. present from 6-9 p.m.
Pomeroy at 8:51a.m. wenltoForest Old 33 and County Rd. 26 to Holzer Chapter In Pomeroy aJ¥1 the Gauta
Monday
evening.
Run Rd. for Charles Bissell who was Medlcal Center: At 9:36 p.m., County Senior , Citizen s
organlzat~n.
·
Floyd D. Cleland '
: treated but not transportro.
Pomeroy went to 202~ .East Main
He
married
MaiY
Bradbury,
who
Also Racine at 12: 27 p.m. was St. for Mary Durst to Veterans
Floyd J;)alley Cl~land, 90, 33616
survives, on Jan. ·9, 1945.
Dexter Road, Rutland, who had
called to Sun Fun Pennzoll for Alana Memorial. Middleport at 9:49p.m.
Also surviving are two brothers, made his home at the Scenic f[llls
Butler who was taken to Pleasant took CecU Frazier from Stonewood
Fred
Sisson and Wayne Sisson, both
'
N~rslng Horne lor the past year,
Valley Hospital. At 1: 52 p.m., the Apartments to Veterans Memorial.
of
Cheshire;
two sisters, Mrs. died Sunday at Holzer Medical
Pomeroy unit went to Success Rd. And at 11:18 p.m., the Tuppers
Marvin (Grace) Thomas of Che- Center.
for Francis Andrew to Veterans Plalns unit went to Reedsville for
shire,
and Mrs. Peny (Hazel)
Mr. Cleland was born July 18, 1894
Mernortal. The Ollve Township unit Cindy Mizer who was taken to
Ralph
of Morral, · Ohio; several ·at Point Rock, a son of the late
at'5: 12 p.m. was callro to a brush Veterans Memorial.
nieces and nephews; and two
Daniel and Annie Carpenter Clefire; Pomeroy at 5:31 p.m. WI!S
Eastern students
stepchildren,
Gene
Schuler
of
Porland.
He was a rel:lreQ New York
.caUE'd tp Al!red for Ollle Atherton
tland,
and
Gertrude
Sabins
of
participate
in
everil
Cenl'ral RaUroad employe and was a
who was transported to Camden·
MaiYsvllle.
member of the MidWay Church at
Clark Memorial Hospital. Rutland
Eastern Junior High School
Funeral services will be held at 2 LangsvU!e.
·
at 6: 14 p.m. transported Candl
students took part In the recent p.m. Wednesday In Mlllej's Home
Surviving are his wile, Della A.
Harman from Dexter to Veterans
District 17 solo and ensemble for Funerals In the former WareTurner
Cleland, a resident of the
Memorlal.TheBashanFireDepart·
competition held at Ohio University. hime Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Pomeroy
Health Care Center; eight
ment was called to a brush fire on
Students receiving superior rat· C.J. Lemley officiating. Burial wUI
daughters,
Mrs. Archie (Aundene)
McKenzie Ridge at 9: 24 p.m. The
logs were Lisa Driggs, vocal solo;
be In Gravel Hlll CemeteiY, Wheeler, Dexter; Mrs. Clyle (Jan.
.Racine unli at 9:29p.m. was callro
Jodie Schaekel, flute solo; Robin Cheshire. FriendS may call at the
to a.sStst Bashan.
ice) Hampton, LangsvU!e; Mrs.
White, tombone solo; Laura Haw· funeral ·home from 6-9 p.m.
Oil Sunday at 12:17 a.m., PomeDelbert
tEleanora) Redman,
thorne, vocal solo; Debbie Brooks, Tuesday.
fuy was called to 41816 Ohio 681. for
Pomeroy;
Mrs. Helen Gardner,
trombone and plano solos. ReceivGraveside mUitaiY rites wUI be Rutland; Mrs. Ivan (Frances)
Howard Richards who was taken tO
Ing excellent ratlns were Debbie conducted by American Legion
Veterans Memorial. Tuppers
Cotterill, Columbus; Mrs. Hershel
Brooks, vocal solo; Laura Haw- ·Lafayette Post 27.
Plains at 12: 43 a.m. was.called to the
{Maxine) Wheeler, Athens; Mrs.
thorne, plano solo; Jenn)' CowdeiY.
Pallbearers
wUI
be
nephews
Arbaugh Addition for Bertha Wolfe
bass clarinet and vocal solos; Christ Robert Sisson, Richard Sisson, Mike Louis (Jean) Parsons, Dunbar, W.
whO was treated but non trans·
Va ., and Mrs. Joe (June) Redman,
Spencer, trumpet solo, and Heather Schukerl, Richard BradbuiY, RoalsoofDunbar; three sons, Wendell,
Flnlaw, flute 'solo. Students recelv· bert Han and David Thomas.
Gahanna: Weyland, A-ngola, N.Y.,
log good ratings were Amy Hager,
Entertains Tuesday
and Wayne, Rutland; 47grandchlld·
Oute solo, and Ay Mora, vocal solo. Marie Foster
ren, several great-grandchildren
Mrs. 'Edna F. Schoenleb .will This year's showing Is oneofthe best.
and
great-great-grandchildren.
for Eastern students In recent years.
Mrs. Phil (Marie) Foster, 62, a
entertain the Past Matrons Club No.
Also
surviving
area brother, Sylvan
resident of ~t. 1. Bidwell (Ever·
186 at her home at 7: :Jl p.m.
Rutland,
and four sisters,
·Cleland,
Prom
session
planned
green community) died at 8:25a.m.
TuesdaJI.
Friley,
Pomeroy;
Golden
Flora
today (Monday) In Holzer Medical
Carpenter;
Freda
Davis,
Caster,
Mothers
of
the
Southern
Local
Center following an extended
Veterans Memorial
NPva
Taylor,
School District who are Interested In
Rutland,
and
ltlness.
help pl;ln annual junior-senior prom
Barberton.
Mrs. Foster was a former
Saturday Admlsslons..None.
are
·
to
meet
at
the
high
activities
Besides his parents, he was
employee of the Ohio Vaqey
Saturday Discharges--Steven
at
7:
:Jl
p.m.
Tuesday.
school
precedro In dPath by htS first wife,
Publishing Co .. having served as
Hanning, WIUiam Morris, Richard
Blanch Romine Cleland ln
Neva
book)&lt;eeper
and
head
of
tl)e
class!'
Blessing, Linda George.
1951;
a
&gt;;On, DonaldRogerC!eland;·a
fled
and
circulation
departments
Meets
Tuesday
Sunday Admissions- -Michael
daughter,
Anna Jeanette Cleland; a
three
decades
before
retiring
nearly
Hubbard, Syracuse; Howard Rl·
son-In-law,
Earl Gardner; a grand·
A
tegularmeetlngof
the
Southern
on
Si&gt;pt.
30,
1983.
chards, Pomeroy; Nelson Cline,
daughter,
Janet
Witcher; a brother,
Local School District Board · of
Funeral arrangements wUI be
Pomeroy; Felix Alkire, Pomeroy;
Cleland,
and a sister, Ethel
Henson,
Education wUI be held at 7: :Jl p.m. announced Tuesday by the McCoy·
Betty VanMeter, Racine; June
Bowman.
Tuesday In the high school cafeteria. Moore Funeral Home In Vinton.
Soulsby, Pomeroy.
'
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Sunday Dlscharges .. Brenda
Wednesday
at the Rawllngs-Coats·
'II
S
Darst, Fannie j:lrown.
Carl. F• SII • r.
BlowerFunera!HomewlththeRev.

Monday, April 22, 1985

Meigs C~unty agent's corner .

of labOr

Extension notes
"-' By JQHN C, RICE
Extension Asent
Agriculture, Meiss County
POMEROY - Calendar of
Events - Monday, AprU _22-4·H
committee meeting at 7 p.m. at the
.Extension Oflce; Thursday, AprU
25, 8 p.m. - Dairy Service Vnlt
meeting at the Extension Office.
corn acreage this year appears ll·
kely to be below last year despite
farmers ' tntentlons,.reported In Fe·
bruaiY, to plant 82 million acres,
two percent above 1984. The lower
expectation Is due to substantially
higher sign-up In the 1985· com
acreage reduction program, along'
with a significant Increase In pro·
gram base aores. AU·told, 70.8 per·
cent of the corn base was enrolled
this year compared to 54 percent
last year. F~rther, the total ASCS
base acreage, which Is the average
of the actual planted. and diverted
corn acreage In 1983 and 1984, In·
creased from 81.4-mtlllon last year
to 83.3 mlillon. In both years 10 per·
cent of enrolled acreage must he ~
Idled. With this year's higher base
and higher enrollment, a total of5.9
million acres will be Idled com·
pared to 4.4 million last year. As. a
result, when non-base plantro
,acreage Is conslderro, plantings
are likely to be In the 78·80 mil·
lion acre range compared to lasL.
year's 80.4 million. Of this, al;lout
69· 71 million w111 likely be bar·
vested for grain, somewhat be·
low 1983's 71.8 million acres.
Bedding Plants - Vegetable
Transplants Getting Too Tall and
Spl~dly?- Tall, spindly trans· ;
plants are undesirable tor garden
planting and particularly so If
they have buds, flowers or fruits .
!.

Some causes of tall, weak and
spindly transplants are sowing
seed too iar In advance of planting
time and growing plants too fast
In poor light conditions.
Plant growth can be checked to
produce the&lt;teslred stocky, sturdy
plants In several ways. It Is lm·
por(arit to grow seedlings under •
bright light, avoid over-watering,
overfertutzlng and avold (75:85
deg. F .) growing temperatures.
Cold frames can also be used to
advantage tn checking . plant
growth and conditioning plants for
transplanting Into fields and gar.
dens.
Seed Potatoes - Potato ·plant·
logs are established by either ·
planting small whole tubers ("A"
seed) or cutting larger tu!Jers Into
two-three ounce 'seed" pieces.
BudS, commonly knowtl as "eyes" :
may or may not be readlly visible ·
on tubers of "seed" potatoes. Such •
buds are usually present and the
grower should .not be overly con·
cerned about their apparent absence at planting time.
It Is best to plant "seed" potatoes
before the sprouls- begin to grow.
Seed potatoes which have ~n des·
prouted can still produce a crop ·
from the secondary buds.
For best results, plant certified '
seed stock. Avoid using potato tubers purchased from groceiY s(ore
produce departments as seed po· ·
tatoes. Such tubers usually have
been treated with sprout lnhlbl·
tors. In addition, these producecounter potatoes wlll usually have
more virus diseases than certified
seed. Certified seed Is Identified by
the characteristic blue tag from ·
the state of origin.

·•

Divorce, dissolution granted.
PO~ROY - Several marriages are ending In proceedings In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
·
BIYan J. Wolfe, Racine, has been granted ·a dlyorce from Lea ·
Michelle Wolfe, Pomeroy, on grounds of gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty.
Bellnda J ..Johnson an1f Jimmie w. Johnson, bot" of Racine, have
been granted a dissolution of marriage.
Filing to end their marriages are Kenneth. Romine, Pomeroy,
from Marla Romine, Reynoldsburg, chargll)g gross neglect of duty
and extreme crueltY; Pamela Sue Johnson,•Pomeroy, from Johnnie'
Gale Johnson, Portland, also charging gross neglect of duty and
extrerre cruelty.

Weather forecast

Tonight, mostly·clear. "Low~. .. · Carl Fr~n)Uiil SUI!, Sr.; a,ge-6,7, 0·f Paul Taylor o.tflclatlng. ·Buibil wlll
be .In Miles CemeieiY. Rutland ..
· . -T uesday&gt; · partly· cloudy with .a . 3724D Zion R:d., Rutland. ·· died
·
Friends
. may call at the funeral '
chance of showers and thunder· Saturday at Veterans Adminlstra· ·
(Conttnuro from page!)
home.from 3 to9onTuesctaywlththe .
Ashtabula County. .
storms. High 85,90. The cllance of UonHo,spl~lln Huntington.
family to be present from 7 to9p.m. ~
Born Nov'. 7, 1917 in Middleport,
. , I;lAY'r:QN - .!Wdney W. Rigqpn, 'ralp Is 10 percent tonight and 40
DINING ROOM ON.Y
Mr.."SUIIwai (\ son.-oi the lafe John .. -aod ,anytime until. the sen.·ice on
. "··: .34_, of Huber Heights, In a ·motorcy· ... )etcenr'I)Jesday, • ·.., .. · .. :. . ·
Served · with whipped potatoes, · chicken . Franklin and EtfleConkl~ Still.: .: · Wednesday. . · ; ' · . · · · · '
gravy, cole. sial¥. hot roll; butter &amp; coHeo.
. .. _... ·. ·••. :-- . · ..
-~ · cie ·aecldent · Pn a cqtinty road In :.·•. · _. ···. ~cledFOI'ecast · ..
SortY. na·substiiutes except bel'true·r&lt;itb
Survtvcirs -lnclude· lils wire, MaiY
PTO moolipg sel :
· MontgomeiY County.
·
· W"!!nesdllJI 'hniugh Friday: ·
a~ditional price. .
' ·
·
·
ZANESVILLE- Jean F . Hogue,
Chaace of slmwe1'8 or thunder- StU!; two sons, Glenn StU! of Lake
TheMiddleportE!ementaiYPTO
60, of Adamsville, In a tw~ar siAlrmA thmugh tbe period. Highs Orion, Mich., and Carl Stul, Jr., of
will hear a speaker on drug and
accident on Ohio 931n Muskingum
near80Weditesday, lntheupperOOs Middleport; three grandchildren ,
alcohol abuse when It meets at 7: 30
~H. 992-5432
POMEROY OH.
County.
to mid-'lll8 Thursday and In the 00s Crist! and Shawn of Michigan and
this evening all he school. ·
ELYRIA -Gn&gt;goiYR Maddock, FJ:Iday. Lowslnlbei!&amp;Wednesday, Lois Ann of Middleport; a sister, r----------.-----'-----~-------------------­
15, of Elyria, in a moped accident on
In . the 40s Thul'!lday and In the Ciara Kauff, Middleport; a half
mld-308 to near 40 Friday.
a city street in Elyria.
sister, MaiY Taylor, Pomeroy; and

13 die ·

c. '

$3 25

. CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

on
:r Entire Stock
Playte~ ·Foundations
Now at

.·2· o~

·oFE·.

Select From Such

••

Cru11Your
IIIC111•
1hank Goodnrrr

nAb•

•

bJeal
diamond·JMults·
Sblfla....... . .· , · · .,.
•

support can

leleautlul-

Interior Latex
Semi-Gloss
Wall ,&amp; 1inm
·
·

ICcln'tiiiM
11'1 a Glult'

Your Choice
Interior Latex
fashion in underdresslngs, f!NefV Pldvlex" garment Is extensively
tesle&lt;;l. When 'vOii wear l'loyflex- bro~. panties or girdles• .,OU
con be SUI9 vo.ire wecring the best.

PARKING LOTS

.,

ELBERFELDS

Ust Price $12.99 gallon

Flat Wall or
Ceiling Paint

BecauSe you cie'mand excellenl fit. corrlcrl. performance and

FREE

Best Exterio'S·l·

Latex Flat
H~use Paint

.
499
GAL .

Beat Exterior

·

Latex Gloaa
House Paint

·Ust Price $8.99 gallon

SeePIIf,'I!IO

'&lt;}

e.
Vol .3&amp;. No.6
Copyrighted 1986

•

a1 y
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,

I

Tuesday.

entine
1 Section. 10 Pageo

April Z3, 1985

21! Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

L8ck of planner
causes .c oncerrt
Blakeslee also pointed out that the
By NANCY l'OACHAM
reported he has met with those
county has received appllcatioils for
Involved In tiY!ng to secure a piped
Sentinel Staff Writer
water supply for the Pagev!Ue area
The Pa lienee of key members of the job even though the position has
and the Scipio Industrial Park.
the Meigs County Regional Plan- never been advertised.
. nlng Commission Is wearing thin I Johnson emphastZect that the Blakeslee Said that during a
concerning tbe hiring.of a full-time planning commission has just meeting last Wedhesday, It was
barely held together for the last few
planner for the county.
Indicated to htm that engineers on
the project would seek to separate
Several months ago, Meigs years, but added, "by ~lng the
the Industrial park needs from those
County Commissioner&amp; approp- · commission allve, lots ot things
rlated $al,OOO for the full-time have l)een made possible for the of the piivate residents. Blakeslee
postilion, but as yet, the job has not county,'' lncludlng·the rural housing felt this was a step that should have
·been filled .
numbering system.
'
already been taken. ·
Planner needed now
Corridor~ reviewed
Charles Blakeslee; executive dl·
rector of the planning commission,
Frank Cleland, representing the
However, the underlying tone at
the meeting was that the time has . Southeastl'rn Ohio Regional Plan·
has been serving In a slmUar
capacity for sometime, but, as
come ·when a full-time planner, ning Commission's highway users
Blakeslee pointed out In yesterday's
working solely for the Interests of committee, reviewed on the status
of the corridor road from Rock
regular quart.erly session of the
Meigs County, must he hired .
-planning commission, be spent only
To underscore that point, Blakes· Springs to· the Ravenswood Bridge.
27 full days last year working as
lee noted a "dupltcatlonofetforts"ln Cleland said It was his understand·
director. "And thatlsn'tdolngmuch
the last two years In that "three log the preliminary engineering for·
for the county,'' he said.
separate lndilstrta! surveys were the rqad Is on schedule, .
Phil Roberts, Meigs County
Blakeslee noted that a full time made of the county." The first,
person had b€en recommended for
"Developme11tal Potential Iii Meigs engineer, offered to ~heck on the
County," completed In l!Rl, was outcome of a scope' of servlcl's
the tast 10 years and that In addition
prepared by Buckeye Hills-Hocking meeting that was to have been held
to the $W,OOO appropriated by the
commissioners, he · had · secured
Valley Regional Development Com" last week with ODOT and WOodruff
mission; thesecond, " Meigs County and Associates, Cleveland, th~? firm
from private sources, pledges of an
additional $4500 In funding.
Industrlal Sites'," completed In 1984, which Is to conduct the preliminaiY
Thereon Johnson, planning com- was prepared by the James M. engineertng project.
Discuss concel'nll
mission president; agreed that a
Jennings coru(ultlng firm; and the
Kevin Costello, deputy director of
full -time planner was needed long third, the ''1984 lndustrlal Site and
ago. He said It was his understand·
Building InventOIY," was prepared planning for Buckeye Hills, was
·
present atthemeetlngtodtscusstwo
by Buckeye Hills.
lng the county commissloqers were
current
_projects Involving Meigs
to have prepared a job description
.
, . Piped waler supply
for the pqsltiqn.
.. .
· !Continued 9rl ~ 10) ·. · ,
. In other bus~!".&gt;S· I)~akrsl!-'1'
.
.
'
' .'
''
1

..

Revenue ·battle itt~y continue

SECOND PLACE WINNERS- The SouthernJUgh
SChool learn of Future Problem Solvel'!! took se«llld
place In the State Bowl 1985 ol the Ohio Future
Problem Solvel'!! competition held Satunlay at

Marietta. The team coached by Don. ~.
standing, consisted of, from left, Andy Rose. TOdd
Adams, Sean Groeser, and KeUey Grueser, aD
juniors.
·

Southern team takes second
.· in._ pro.ble~ _,~olv.ing _· - progr~m
•

-

•

TheSouthernHighSchoolteamofFutureProblem
Solvers took second place In Ihe . State Bowl 1985
,
,
-._
r
'
'
GALLII~O~IS- Revtsecl"vatua:'_. ~·an!! county ~vernment: 1'hestate :. F.oii\JWlil~: ~ ;1J1eeting':last th~:.: l'Uil!"~'. Probtem,Solv.lng Pro!n'llJl'll]etd ai Mal'icha
ij)gti. School .S aturday.
• .· ·
·· . .
tlon figures on the Gen . James M. · iBoardofTaxAppealsruledlnfavor . day with tliPstatetre~rer'sofl'\ce,
Beside a plaque for the Schooi, each team member
Gavin power plant at Cheshin&gt;wut · o!the county and the schools and the Johnson said vaiuatlon flgtires ori
recelvro a medal and certtflcate In recognition of
be sent out this week, the Gallla
decision was upheld by ihe state Gavin - and of those poutlcat and
excellence.
Don Salmons coached the team, and was
County Local Board of Education
supreme court lnJuly1984.
roucatlonal subdivisions which
assisted
by
Don Dudding. It was Southern -High
learned Monday, but the battle to · · Johnson, paraphrasing the drawuponmoneyralsedbytaxeson
School's
first
year to participate In the state contest.
keep the money In the counly may
board's attorneys, said the lcglsla· the plant - have been revised for
Adams,
Kelly Grueser, Sean Grueser and
Todd
lion may have been lnlt(ated 1981·83.
not be finish~.
Andy Rose, aU juniors, qualiftro for the contest
A bill that may return the state to
because the appeals board decision
American Electric PowPr Corp.
through a written three-part problem solving course
toe 30 percent re-distribution ' of
favoring Gallla County created · will then be billed by the GaUia
emphasizing evaluation of available materjal,
"more losers than winners."
CountY auditor's office for ·the
power plant property tax revenue Is
technlqUP of attack and creativity. The three-part
currently being written, but has not
The superintendent said he would money lost during that · period.
program dealt with drunk driving, nuclear war and
remain "veiY watchful" . of any Johnson said there Is a posslblllty
been lntrodueed -In the legislature,
education.
explaln!'d Superintendent Nell
developments and would remain In some of that money could be
Of the six teams In the State which qualified for
· contact with local legislators.
recovered this year, but he advised
Johnson.
partlclpallon In the State Bowl, New Lexington-High
The legislation, he explatnro,
The legislation would affect any that was only "speculiltlon" at this
School placed first: Others competlng.weretwoteams
county wtth a power plant, Jolinson point.
Initially proposes to lake 30 percent
.
from Manetta High School, Tecumseh High School at
explalried, bUt leaves other Indus·
"I think It's looking better," he
of the Gavin revenue and have It
New Carlisle, and Miller High School at Hemlock. The
dlstrlbutro tootherOhlocounttes, as
tries In those counties untouched.
said. "Progtess Is being made. I
New Lexington team now qualifies to participate In
"I don't seehowdlfferenttt Is from think (Gallla Auditor) Ron Canaday
ordered by then .Ohio Tax Commls·
the
contest which will take place at Coe College In
a Honda plant or the Busch breweiY will call me when tberevlsedflgures
stoner Edgar L. Lindley In 1981.
Iowa.
Thatdeclslonwasappealedby the
In Worthington," he said. "I don't come ln."
AI Marietta, the problem considered by the tl'arns
Gallla County Local School District
undel'$tand the logic at all."

. Intended to remove predictable, periodic forces from
the calculation, overall-March prices rose0.4 percent,
the same as In FebruaiY.
Coupled with the 0.3 percent seasonally adjusted
gain In February and the 0,2 percent In JanuaiY, the
Labor Department's Conswner Price· Index so far
this year has risen a moderate 4.1 percent at an
annual rate.
This compares with a 4 percent rise for aU of last
year. Analy~ts expect lnllatlon will run at about the
same pace In 1985, giving the United States Its fourth
straight year of moderate lnllatlon.
As recently as 1981, prices soa~ 12.4 percent _In a
and that follqwed a 13.3 percent jump In

.... , " ' MIPI

405 N. SECOND AVE., MIDDUPOIT .

IJEITER DEAL OFFERED - Mlilcleport vlliqe council Monday
niJIII&amp; received a beUeroaerforCableTV service byHIJib Jluclmetr, left,
~ Comnunlealkial Group'a 'Yice-[N a1 'rot of O(M!Iil&amp;lo&amp;l lind
Mary Criawfonl, riJhl, rePonal pnerallllajllpl'. The llnnhalollered a
· 11 channel ballc peclrap laltead of 14 8nd wiD ...t .,.. a 11\'e percent
price~ In llefl. (File Jill*~.

CONVENIINT OFF '

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KI·NG BUILDERS SUPP'LY

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Soaring gasollne prices
sent the lnllation rate up 0.5 percent last month., the.
government reponed today. Food costs held steady .
'. Analysts said the overall increase at the retaU level,
the sharpest since JanuaiY 1984, stemmed mootly
from actual higher gasoline ·costs plus an unusual
seasonal adjustment factor that made the final !lgure.
look even worse.
Food prices, also sei!SQnally adjusted, were liar for
the first time since last May.
.
' But motor fuel costs ended a three-month decline
and rose 3.8 percent. a!ter fa!Ung 2.6 percent In the
previous month.
Without the ,seasonal adjustments,

18Hour

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was on the greenhouse effect, In which the carbon
dioxide In the almosphere ,has created .arl invisible
shield prevent in~
o( the sun's heat tom ~~~g
· reflec)e,d back Into spa_c e. The reS)llt of thi~ being 11()1
·&gt;oriiy a-warmercllmateonearlh, but a higher Sl'a !I'Ve!
due to melting of the AntarCtica ice sheet."
·
The students worked through the process of stating
the problem, alternative solutions through brain·
storming, crlleria for evaluating the alternative
solutions, and coming up with the best solution. The
teams used two hours.in a room where their only book
was a dictlonaiY.
·
The Ohio Future Problem Solving Program,
partially funded by the Martha Holden Jennings
Foundation, l~ part of a nationwide effort to acquaint
students with creative a nd futuristic thinking skU!s
via an adaptation of the creative problem solving
process.
The Ohio program Is In Its second year and has
junior, lnt.e rmed!ate and senior dUvlslons Involving
about 900 students.
Emphasis of the program Is to help students
develop thlnkJng skills riecesssary to adapt to a
changing world.

"!'me

Soaring gasoline prices send inflation rate up

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1979. Both figures were attributed In large part to
drastically higher fuel prices as revolution In Iran
plunged aU markets Into turmoil, causing gasoline
lines In tbe United States and shortages around the
·•·
world.
Since then, crude oU prices have declinro sharply
· al)d, untU recently, have translated Into lower prices
at the gasiJUne pump as well.
Despite the end of that trend at the retail level.
analysts do not foresee the kJnd of runaway rise In fuel
prices experienced earlier In the decade because
there remains a relative glut of crude oil available for
refining.
Oil lndustiY analyst Dan Lundberg predicts pwnp
prlses-will continue to rise for at least the 11ex t few

weeks because of upward preSsure on wholesale
prices and high demand for unleaded gas.
The price for unleaded could be uplO cents a gallon
by mid-May - to an average of $1.26 for regular
unleaded at. self-service stations - because of a
supply Imbalance. ·he said earlier this month.
Lundberg said there Is roughly a 40-day supply of
leaded ga.S In the count iY .a s thl' summer vacation
season nears, compared to a 15-day pool of unleaded,
although 60 percent of the demand is .for unleaded .
Despite the relative _glut of leaded gasoline,
Lundberg said those prices m ay rise along with
unleadro because the different grades traditionally
move In taildem.

Council receives better Cable TV deal
By BOB HOEFl.ICH
already had agreed not to Increase
Se:AI11el Staff Wrller
prices by the five percent In 1985. ·
It did take advantage of the
Cable television· subscribers In
Middleport were handed a better
authorized five percent Increase In
deal than an orlgtnal proposal when
1984. Further, Buckner said that
Middleport VU!age Council met In
senior citizens and handjeapped
regular session Monday night.
people will receive the small ooxes
required for the upgraded 15
Reyresentatlves of Consolidated
· · Communications Group Inc., which
channel system without any deposit
serves the area, met with cOuncil
charge.
· Asked what station would be on
last night wltli Hugh Buckner,
company representative, slating
the channel which Is being addE'd to
that under the planned upgraded · the haste package, Buckner stated
system, customers will be receiving • tluit the company probably will
place a variety of stations on the ·
. 15 Instead of 14 channels under the
baste package. The company also
channel over a period of time and
said that It will not seek a five
then will ask customers to vote on
percent Increase In prices In 1986 as which ~tatlon they would prefer on a
permitted under the ::able Com· permanent hasls.
mun!CatlonsActofl984wlthoutany
CouncU after hearing the add.l·
approval trom local o!ftclals. The tiona! benefits being offered by the
spokesman said that the company companygaveasecondreadingtoa

modified ordinance containing the
new t?eneflts offered by the company. The ordinance approves a
rate Increase of $1.82 a month per
customer. However, the company
has stated that the Increase wUI nQt
go into effect until tbeupgradlngnas
been completro.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
that testiJ1g of the community's
water supply had beeil completed by
the slate and the water meets safety
standards required by laws. A th(rd
reading was given to an ordinance
Increasing water and sewage tap
fees by $100 and the ordinance was
approved.
Cab service coming
Middleport and Pomeroy appar·
ently are going to get a subsidized
taxi service, according to lnformll·
lion presented by Mayor Fred

Hoffman when Middleport VIllage
Council met In regular session
Monday night
Mayor Hoffman said that he has
received word from Ihe Ohio
Department of Transportation that
$20,000 In federal fundS and $6,1m tn
state funds are available for such a
service tor fiscal 1985-86. but that
assurance of federal moneys
beyong that point cannot be given .
The cab service proposal was
made several weeks ago to both
Pomeroy and Middleport VIllage
Councils and the tWo groups met
jOintly recently to discuss the
subsidized service. All that I"Pmalns
is to determine which of the two
vUiages will handle the adminlstra·
lion of the service. A representative
of ODOT wUI meet with officials
(Continued on page 10)

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