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, !i~~1i6~~~~~;s~e;m~in:e:l~~;---:-~~----------~--~~~~!]~:::::o:h:~::;;::;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~;;;Th;u:~;:;v;·:;;;2;5;·;1;9;8~5

ELBERFELDS

SPECIAL SALE

FRIDAY

and SATURDAY, APRIL 27th

!AlE PRICES/

-- SPECIAl SROUPf

BOYS' PANTS

GIRL'S' SUNDRESSES

.

..

'

AR'l11Rl'l'L'i CHECK -Bob Uncoln, center, ofthe
Arthritis Foundation, Columbus, received a $'725.61
chO!ek from Peter Crane, admlnlslralor of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center Tuesday afternoon. nre

check represented money rallied lor thefouMefiM by

emplOyes oldie center through en auction sale headed
by Mary Coates, center staJI member at rlpt.

Qldest impl~nt patient ~xpires
'

'

WUrsVIU.E. Ky.-(AP)

-Jack the problem for a while, Lansing dialysis was stopped. he said.
x-rays--showed "a goOd deal ot
C. Burcham, a retired train eng!- said.
·. ·
fluid
had accumulated on the left
!leer who pinned hopes for an
The source of the bleeding is still
sl(je,"
Lansing said.
extended lite on an experimental
not known, Lansing said.
Burcham's blOOd pressure began
artlftclal heart, died !Odaysafter his
Burcham, 62, of LeRoy, JU., was ·
Implant when a large amount of the fifth and oldest reclpl~nt of a falling a Pout 8:00p.m.; and doctors
blood In his chest cavity lnhlbltedhis permanent artificial heart. He had detected blood In the luilgs and saw
heart's pumping, his doctors said suffered kidney problems since that Burcham was having more
today.
· before the Aprll 141mplant and was difficulty In breathing.
Dr. Allan M. Lansing, medical ptit on dialysis twice this week to .
There was rapid deterioration of
spokesman for the Humana Hospl- cleanse his blOOd, Lansing said.
tal Audubon implant team, said
Burcham also .had had difficulty his condition In the30minutes before
Burcham's condition had deterlo- when doctors discovered that the his death.
rated rapidly beginning late Wed; · Jarvlk-7 was too large for his chest . Implant surgeon William C.
nesday ~fternoon. He died at 9:48 during the implant surgery, and' lie DeVries, who was attending a heart
p.m . after his left lung filled with suffered severe bleeding the day ·conference In downtown Louisville
Wednesday evening, . was called to
after the operation.
blood. Lansirlg said.
Doctors lnlt Ially did not know the
He was the second artificial heart the hospital about 9 p.m. and said he
·specific cause of death, he said, but recipient to die, but his tlmewlth the was In Burcham's room of the
an autopsy Identified a large device was the brlefest. Three men coronary care unit about l5 or ~
"jelly-llke"clotaroundtheartlflclal with Jarvlk-7 hearts- William J. minutes before doctors -turned oH
heart.
Schroeder and Murray Haydon In the key that controlle9 the lifeThe upper chambers of his heart
Loulsvllle and an unidentified man support machinery. a
At the tlmeofhisdeath Burcham
were remnants of his own natural In 'sweden remain tethered to
was
hooked. not only to the heart's
organ. The lower chambers were machinery that drives the device
drive system but also to a respirator
made up by ihe plastic and metal with puffs of all;.
··
device. ·
La'nslng said Burcham's kidney that controlled his breathing.
."The cause for . the sudden problem "was aggravated by the
DeVries said everyone In the
deterioration was compression of stress of the operation and the need
the upper left cbamber of the heart for transfuslo~" after theexcesslve room was "really saddened when
we found there was nothing more we
by the blood clot within a confined
bleeding.
·
spa&lt;;e.'' Lansing said. adding that
The kidney function was stable could do."
Asked how lie felt at the time,
the condition Is known as cardiac early Wednesday "but not satisfactamponade.
tory" Lansing said. He was placed DeVries recalled a comment made
The condition normally would on dialysis In the afternoon but by Burcham just before theijlant
show up much earlier than It did In doctors noticed substantially de· operation. "I remember
sayaun;ham's case-but the rigidity of . creased breathing sounds from tin' . Ing. 'You puttheheartlnamU' take
the.plasttc-and-metall!eart masked , )eft 'chest· late In the afternoon and . car.eoflt,"'
DeYrles
said.
.. · .&gt; :
-.
,_ - .

Toddler slze1 2 to 4i Siz814 to ex and 7 to
14. Halter tie• and rib len its.

Denim• In ltripel and navy blue. Poly cotton blenda in siJe• 2 toddler to .4 toddler
and 4 to 7. ·
·

57.00 Sundresses ........... Sale
59.00 Sundresses ........... Sale
510.00 Sundresses,....;... Sale
513,00 Sundresses ......... Sale

Reg. S8.00 Pants ........... Sale S6.15
Reg. S11.00 Pants ......... Sale S8.45
Reg. 513,00 Pants ......... Sale S9.9S
Reg. 515.00 Pants ....... Sale $11.55

55,35
S6. 95
57.75
59.95

SUMMER TOPS
Size• e month a to 24 months; 2 todcjler to
4 toddler, 4 to ex, and 7 to 14. Tank tops,
knit shirts and polos. Solids !lnd patterns in
summer's best shades.

S7.00, Boys' Tops ..............; .... Sale S5.35
sa.OO lays' Tops ................... Sale S6.1 5
S10.00 Boys' Tops ................. Sale S7.75
I

WOMEN'S

S14.00
S1 a.OO
S24.00
S21.00

Knits ......................... Sale
Knits ......................... Sale
Knits ......................... Sale
Knits ......................... Sale

s 11.19
S14.39
S19.19
122.39

TWO DAY SAlE/

BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS

MEN'S

•

Stock# 5334

· ·
·.. .

$11

Savings:

'

$1,18,8

Delivered Price:

.

RTS

Save

20°/o.

$11,999

Miasea sizes 4 to 20 and half aizes
Yz to
26Yz. In .this selection you'll find dr1ues,
pant suits. skirts, blouses. pants and lab
coata.
.
Reg. s 17.00 Uniforms .......... Sale s13.59

leg. S34.00 Uniforms .......... Salt S27.19

SALE! WRANGLER
JUNIOR SillS

SLACKS &amp; CROP PANTS
Junior sizes 3 thru 16. Good selection of
styles and r.olors to wear right now.
.
Reg. . $23.00 PantsM..................
Sale 5I 8.4 9

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

$26.00 PantsM.................. Sale 520.79
135.00 Pants M.................. Salt 527.99
138.00 Pa~ts .................... Sale 530.39

·S

..

SALE PitCH tHiS WEEK ONlYI .

SAlE/
''AILEEN'' SPORTSWEAR-·
lncludea knit tops, pants, shotta .end'crop pants
in turqut&gt;IIB, white. blac~. red or navy. MiaMI.
ol•e• 8 to 1 8 end elao Smell. Medium and Large.
Reg. $1 S.OO •. ~ ...:............................. Salt s11.99
Reg. S20.00 ...................... ~ ............... Salt 115.99
Reg. SJ.5.00 ...........;.,..-........... ~···~· ...... Salt 119.99

Reg. $30.00 .................................... Sale $23-.99
MATEINITY WEAl WE PiKED NOW
IEADY -TO-Will DEPT.-2nd FlOOI

SALEI ·
Good selection olaolid colo'ra and pattern•
in ready tied and fc:&gt;ur-ln hand tiel.

WOMEN'S REG. 122.00

JOGGING SETS

Fleece: lined Iori~ ajseve knit top with
matcl!•ng bottoma. SIJes S, M. l. Select
your favorite color • .

P~:l:o

Boys' .s5.9S Shorts ........;.:.. ;•• Sale S4.7•
Boys' sa. 9 5 Shorts •••;.. ~ ......... Sale S7 .1 a .
loys $13.9 S Shorts .... ;.,...... Sale )1.1 a
. . COOIDINATt WITH 1.0 15' lilT SliD~ .

Reg. S6.50 Ties ..................Sale $4.99
Reg. S7 .50 Ties .................. Salt S5.49
Reg. sa.so Ties.; ................ Sale S6.49 .

$1 71 5 SET _

· GIRLS' TOPS
Knit topa and blouses. short aleeved and
aleevalell styles. plus midriff tops and
tanka. Sizes 2T to 4T. 4 to 6X end 7 to 14.

.ROSE BUSHES
Good selection of varieties and colora in
Redl-plant boxes. florlbunea, cllmllera and
.tee rosea.

REG •. SS.OO TOPS ....................SALE
REG. S7 .00 TOPS .................... SAl£
REG. S9.00 TOPS ....................SALE
REG. S11.00 TOPS ..................SALE

'

SALE I

'

I

SUS
SUS
S6.9S
$8.4S

SALE PRICES
CUSTOM MADE

(Only Title and Taxes are Extra)

FULLY EQUIP,PED JEEP CHEROKEE'S IN
STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIYEiY

s15.19

MEN'S .NECKTIES

SALEI JACKSON &amp; PERKINS
Manufacturer's Suggested
Retail Price:
$13,187

WOMEN S UNIFORMS
14

sus

This salelnclud81 VanHeuMn dreSI ohirts. ell of
our knit ohlrta. aport ahirta, weatern1 In regular
alrea talla and extra large aires. You'll like the
many otyleo, col oro ·• nd qu ..lty In this Mlection.

THIS IS OUR DELIVERED PRICE TO YOU

ByTOMRAUM
AII!IOCiated Press Writer

BOYS' SHORTS

SAVE 200fo

0 5 Speed
Transmission
D Power Steering
O Tinted Glass
D AM/FM Cassette

69

PAIRS$2

Tremendous aelecti.on of basic and fashion
looka. SIJ81 8 to 20. Buy what you nsed
and save now.
Boys' S5.9S Knit Shirts ......... Sale S4.78
Boys' SI.9S Knit Shirts ......... Sale S7.18
Sires Smtll. Medium. large end Extra
BOys 51 0 9 S' Knit Shirts
Sale sa· 61
large. Pick yo'-lr tav_orite atyla and color
.
'
. _·•
.,...... ·
'
from our laru. selecteon ancl sa:v•·
.
•·-··· SJ2.95 Kn1t·
510.21 . - IOYS'
Shorts.,.... ;.., .. :.. Sali SUB

Reg. S29 .00 .......................... Sal, S2 3.19.

D Roof Rock
O Sunroof .
,
O Styled Steel Wheels
D Extra Capacity
Fuel Tonk

Democrats DIX early
·budget plan approval

Reg. 523.00 Uniforms .. ~ .... :•• ~ale SU.49

lncludeo owutero. knit iopa and veatlln ••eel·
la11t looks lor spring and summer wear. Sires S.
M. Land larger alrea 38 to 48.

Reg. S22.00 .............., ..... ,..... Sale S17.S9

0 2Door
D Station Wagon
0 4 Wheel Drive
0 4 Cylinder

2

. leg. s 1.9 .00 Uniforms .......... Sale

SWEATER KNITS

Reg. S12.00 •••••.:..~.................. Sale S9.59
leg. Sli.OO ................;......... Sale S14.39

THIS IS THE EQUIPMENT:

~

MEN'S SHORTS

Ragultr tnd extral'e rgeli:teeln our best selection aver Action shorta. Wellcer lhorts,
·shons for tennis and golf, end dr-y look.
Save Nowl
leg. $5.95 Shorts....M .....: . . . . . . . Salt 14.75
leg. S7.95 Shorts ................. Salt
·leg.
Shortt .................. Salt S7,95
leg~ 114.95 Shorts .............. Salt 111.95

sus

DRAPERIES
'

•

sus

'

Our Nle continues on custom drapes.
'Bring in your me81urementa and aee
. the vtriety of patterns and color• for
your at~lection. Quick Delivery.

Save

50°/o

ELBERFELDS
POMROY

FREE
PARKING

2 Sections. 12 Pages 26 Cent•
A MuHimed.i• Inc . Newap•per

•

Fits siJes 1 0 to 1 3. Full cushion foot . No
bind. atiiY up rib top.
.
.

lag~ar
price ttAlE
2 po1r 13.49

enttne

.

S6.00 Boys' Tops ................... Sale S4.65

.
Crop · pants, thorta, ·knit tops. panti .and .
mini d,.IIBI in sizes S. M, L.

•

.

•

Ponterav-Middleport, Ohio, Friilav. April 26, 1985

·Vol .35, No.9
Copyrighted 1B85

WORK &amp; LEISURE SOCKS

JUNIOR
SP.ORJSWEAR.
..

.

at y

MEN'S DAVIS 41)

SALE! ·BOYS'

REO·/ SALE/·
.

e

•

MAJORITY·MINORrrY
Senate MaJority
Leader Bob Dole of Kamas, left, and Senate Minority
Leader Robert Byrd oiWell ~ialk loreporiers

WASHINGTON CAP) - Senate
Republican leaders, unable to give
the budgel package endorsed by
J7esldent Reagan the early send-off
they · had promised, are scouting
their party's ranks for the votes
needed to keep the ptan aUve.
"I'm not sure I have them yet, "
Senate Majority Leader Robert
Dole, R-Kan., conceded late Thursday after l1fl abruptly recessed the
GOP-controlled Senate rather than
risk a crucial showdown vote he had
spent most of the day arranging.
The Inability of pole to move the
package over Its first procedural
hurdle, coming just ~ hours after
• the president's nationally broadcast
appeal. for tile $52 bUUon package of
spending cuts, dealt the plan a
potent; possibly disabltog, blow.
While Democrats rejoiced In their
Inftlal victory, Dol&amp; vowed to toll
overnight· to find the needed
additional support.
on Capitol HID 1bunday about President BA!egen's
The proposed spending outline,
budget Propo!!elll (AP Laserpboto).
· · painstakingly negolla ted by GOP

leaders and the White House,
contains a raft of potltlcally sensl·
tlve spending cuts, ranging from
limits on Social Security benefit
Increases to termination of Amtrak
rail passenger subsidies.
Dole's hasty retreat from Thursday's ~heduled shOwdown - a vote
needed to brtngtheadm!nlstratlon's
plan fonnallybeforetheSenateasa
package • came even. as switch·
bOards all over the Capitol were
lighting up In response to Reagan's
plea for a show of public support.
Patricia Daniels, assistant chief
lelephone operator, reported that
more than 23,(0) caDs came Into the
Capitol on Thursday - more than
three times theusual7,000. The calls
were running heavily In favor of the
president's package, congressional
offices reported.
But With a partisan battle
expected, Republicans appeared to
be at least a vote or two shy of the
needed majority In the 100-member
.chamber. One Republican, Sen.
John East of North Carolina, was In
the hospital. and tlie support of at
least three GOP members was

.

reported by party sttategtsts to be
questionable.
Republlcans maintain a narrow
5.l47 majority in the chamber. ~
Senta te Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd apparently caught
Republican leaders off guard by
agreeing early Thursday evening to
go ahead with the vote at once after initially dela ying the
showdown.
Absent Republicans were quickly
summoned lo the' Senate floor, as
was Vice President George Bush,
who as presiding officer can vole to
break a tie.
"The vice president looks a little
nervous," Byrd taunted .
Byrd all but daiedDoletoproceed
with the roll call vote. When the
Repu~Ucan. leader backed away,
Byrd said j)emocrats might not be
as accommodating on Friday.
Even If the Senate had held the
vote Thursday, and the Republican
leadership had prevailed. It would
have marked only the beginning of a
budget batlle that Is expected tola~t
at least two weeks.

.

QBA dispdJes proposed Home ,State buyout
. By JOHN CuALFANT
A...ct~led p,_ Wrtt.er .
·
: COLUMBUS, Ohio ~AP) - Chefn!cal New York
CoflJ. says its ·plan to buy the closed Home State.
·sa~lngs Bank Is the, qulckt&gt;St and !e~st.expe11:51ve
buyout proposal for the state, but the:.G)llo Bankers
Association calls It "a pure end run on Interstate
banking."
Executives of the financial giant outlined details of
the deal Thursday before the House Financial
·Institutions Committee. It has opened hearings on a
bill authorizing sale of the Cincinnati-based thrift·.
Chemical President Robert I. Llpp said he was
confident that the actual cost to thestatecould be less
than the $127 million provided In the measure, a figure
which Includes $26 milllon ·ln reserves that might be
refunded .
"I guess we're looking more at a coSI that would be
to the state, hopefully, In the $B8 million (range),
minus all the potential claims tf!l could be-i-ecovered
by the state. Those could be very substantial," Lipp
said.
·
·
Under terms of the .bUI,'the stale would come up
with the $127 million by Issuing economic developmen! revenue bonds. They would be paid off by
settlements from lawsuits flied against Home State

anti others, profits from the state's Uquor mooopoly,
and- certain uncl~imed accounts, .rather than with.

Involvement.
•• ·- . "With the dpllars now Involved, It's questlopable H
' general tjll&lt; revenue. ,
you have to addtJie banking l~nse also," said R;!lp_h
The deal 'also de;;\ends on the availability of SSl· .·•· _ Bolen, .OBA exectitjve vice IJreslde~t. "We know.
· mUI,lon .from too Ohio Deposit Guaral\t~ FUild, nie . Chemicarsgotngtoaskforthat. Wl1yelsew6ukl~hey .
·privately financed, stale-regulated agency which
come In here• It's a pilre end run· on Interstate
Insured Home Stale and other state&lt;hartered thruts.
banking."
Use of the money is being challenged In the Ohio
Llpp rejected suggestions that the slate might be
Supreme Court.
better off to consider Uquklatlng Home Stat.e Itself.
Chemical would pay a $21 million premium and
"If Home State were to be liquidated today, without
provlde$.1) mUUon In capitalization money. In return. 1 anyone like Cheml,c al Bank being Involved, there are
the state would let It turn Home State Into a federally . only certain assets that could be m&lt;~de avaUablerlghl
Insured commercial bank, giving Chemical expan·
away," he said.
'
slon rights In Ohio.
·
"On day one, you mlghl get (depositors) &amp;I cents
The legislation also would authorize a separate
back on tbe dollar. In addition. you would achieve,
proposed deal In which another New York bank,
probably with time, !lQme more money. I'm not
Chase Manhattan Cori&gt;.• could enter the Ohio market
sumstlng that would be the uitlmate payout, you do
as a conunercfal bank by taking over some or tile 17
have other assets. But I think an Immediate
other state c)lartered savings and loans which h~ve
liquidation would give something ilke50ce~ts right on
not reopened for full service.
day one against depositor claims.
· .
The provision granting Chemical a commercial
"We believe that the Chemical plan Is the qulckesl
banking license drew opposition after Thursday's
andlea,st.expensive proposal presented to the state of
hearing from the Ohio Bankers Association, which
Ohio, under which Home Stale deposllors would have
questioned whether such a concession was necessary
Immediate access lo 100 i&gt;ercent of their money,"
to ensure tl)e sale In view of 'the $127 ml)llon state
Lipp said.

~·11:1 !'1 ·Mason

officials hire
development director·

Anti-Nicaraguan
steps ~evi~wed
WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
dent Reagan, his aid plans blocked
by Congress, today ordered a
review of political, ecpnomlc and
other steps that could be taken
against the leftist government of
Nicaragua and In support of the
U.S. -backed guerrillas.
One option, presidential spokes·
man Larry Speakt'S said, could be to
seek money from outside groups for
the Contra rebels.
Speakes said Reagan had dl·
reeled Secretary of State George
Shultz and National Security Ad·
vjse
. ·rr Robert C. McFarlane "to
bilgtn a review of the lull range ofoptions with regard to U.S. policy
toward Nicaragua. Over the next
several days, the administration
will be reviewing the lull fainlly of
measures that can be taken to
Influence the sltuallon In Nicaragua.
"We will not be speclftc on the
options under consideration. They
do Include political, economic 811!1
other measures," he sal,d.
Speakes said, howi!Ver, that no
plans were contemplated for U.S.
military action. "I wouldn't l'!llse
that scare tacite," he told reporters
at a briefing.
"'The Sandlnlstas shouldn't be too
smug." one otflclal said Thursday.
alluding to the House vote Wednesday night that brOUght an end - at
least temporarUy - to efforts to
reach acompromlseonasststingthe
Contra Insurgents.

The official, who asked not to be
ldentlfl'ed, shared a view held by
other government .sources that a
revised . approach could muster
majorities In both houses because of
what they described as powerful
anti-Sandlnlsta sentiment In the
Congress. Key olflclals wiD spend
th&amp; next few days trying to come up
with such an approach, the source$ .
said.
·
Bui House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill, D-Mass., said the collapse of
· the administration's proposal reOected public sentiment on the
Nicaragua Issue.
O'Neill, who has derided the
Contras as "malmers and
. butchers,'' said Thui'Sday lhat mall
and calls to his office were running
l,OOto-1 against the president's
policy.
Publicly, Vice President George
Bush and White House spokesman
(any Speakes said the Wednesday
nlaht vote did 'not mean U.S.
abendonrnent of the rebelll.
"We wtn be back and back and
back untO America does the right
thing," Blish
In a television

Interview.

~- Chemical, which bid It has Invested .abOut ii,OOJ
man-hours and more than $500,(0) In exariunfng
HomeStilterecords thus far.-stUI has more work lodo · · ·
before final dollar amountsca~ be pluggeilln.to the
. bit). · ·
, . ,
. .
•
.
..
· ·.Chemical executives said ihelr financial evaluation ·
showed I hat Home State assels, which had been
carried on its hooks at $630.7 ~llllon, were S373.7
milllon after adjustments.
"To be charitable, I'd say their business practices
were sloppy," said David L. Eyles. Chemical's chief
credit officer.
Commltlee Chairman Robert Nettle, D-Barberton,
said he hoped final figures could be available by the
panel's nexl meellng Monday. He hOPf'l' to wrap up
work on the measure Tuesday.
" The Speaker !Vernal G. Rifle Jr. l is very much
fnteresled In getting It resolved, bl.'cause time just
causes further erosion and bad feelings ail the way
through," Nettle sa id .
Riffe said he ha(! sel no ttmPi able for final action by
the House.
" I'd like to have something on the floor by, say, the
middle or next week Hwe can. But I have not given the
chairman a timetable," Riffe sa id .

said

;'We are not going lo turn our
baclcl on thole who are fighting for ~~
democracy In our own hemisphere , ..
tothetavorofthosewhoaretryingto
lJNII'INIIIHED BUIIINBI!I8- Steve
establish a Marxist-Leninist dicta·
· the tap el a 11-~ IIMkler lo ~ Ule 1111111 boll h!l!dlnl llli! IIIII
torshlp In Central America," he . ' lldvee11 I a' .. " I • .. Col1anba CempiJell wu removlnl Cblalpl
said.
lo r ' 1 • wllh all qer 8iippGi Ill after heavy wind! lore • from 1111

rnouBt. (AP I•

I,

!.,.....,).

POINT PLEASANT - Frank
· Lee, the Jackson County development director 'who earUer this Y«lilr
was loaned to Mason County to help
put together 11,promotlonal package
for General Motors Corporatlon's·
proposed Saturn plant, has come
aboard lull·tlme to promote the
county's business and todustrtal
potential and help boost the econ·
omyhere.
The executive committee of the
Mason County Development Au·
thorlty (MCDA) on Thursday hired
Lee, who has worked li'l the field of
economic development for the past
13 years, as Its executive director.
He ·wUI begin work Immediately
· under a one-year, $40,000 contract .
A motion to hire Lee by G.A. "Al "
Biggs, secretary of' I he MCDA and
posbnaster In Point Pleasant, was
seconded by Paul Watkins, a
member of the authority's executive committee and president of the
Mason County Commission, and
passed unanimously during an
executive commiltee meeting
which followed a meeting of the full
development authority.
The MCDA, In a nOQn meeting,
gave Its' unanimous support to the
economic development program
proposed by a task foree comprised
of representatives of city and county
govemrnent and local business
which has been meeting Informally
lor the past several weeks.
The MCDA also authorized Its
executive committee, cilmprtsed of
Biggs, Watkins, President Jim

Lewis, Treasurer Charles Lanham
and Point Pleasant Mayor. J .J .
Wedg&lt;', to hire an executive director
fo r developmenl. formulai e a
budget and proceed with an
economic development program for
the county.
Lee's contract with lhe Jackson
County DeveiOJlmenl Authority expired this month. along with an
Economic Development Authority
grant for the development program
In Jac!lson County.
Although he had received job
offers from several other areas, Lee
told-, the MCDA Thursday that he
was most Interested In coming to
Mason County.
"(Mason County) ," he s aid, " has
everything anybody would want ."
He said he has been Involved 1n
several meetings with state and
federal officials regarding economic development in West Virginia and added , "This counly has a
better chance than many others at
being successful."
Lee commended the efforts or city
and county government officials
and businessmen who have been
working to get the economic ball
rolling In Mason County and said
that during tile time he was he~ to
work with the county In putting
together the Saturn proposal, hewas
lmpressro with lhe cooperative
spirit he witnessed ,
"The cooperation, the .enthusiasm, was obvious and genuine, "·he
saki.

(Cont lnued on page 12)

•·

'

�Friday, April 26, 1985

Comment

LA Dodgers move back into f~t pl~ce.

Page-2~The

Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Friday, April 26. 1985

'

Majors ·

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
~l"h

~m~
~v

.

f""n...-J..__,.... ~c:::~.~
.

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher / Col!lroller

BOBHOEFUCH
General ·Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The- Assoclatf;(i Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
lion and the American Newspaper P ublishers Association .
LETTERS OF QPIN"lON are welcome. They should be l£'ss than 300 words
lonR. Allletlers are sub)E'CI tocd lllng and musl be signed with na m l", addr ess and
t_el t"phone numbE-r. No un signed II"IIE'rS will be pu bli shed. Letters should bt&gt; In
~~od tas t(' , address lnf:: i s ~ u es , not personalitieS:.

New faces surround
Reagan under Regan
White House-cleaning

ones were playing hide and seek In ·
'the ditch banks and the big ones
were sauntering along the road.
You could observe half a ~n
groundhOgs In the same two miles .
- big guys, cigar smokers, sitting
around in their undershirts. And
snakes. Last year we had a six-foot ·
black snake named Francis who
l!ved In the woodpile. · FranCis
doesn't 11ve there any more.
TIJe chipmunk population is way
down. We used to have a house
covey of 15 to 20 quail, but we
haven't heard that unmistakable
"bob ':l'llhe!" all spring. We usually
rent six bluebird boxes; this 'year,
1)0 takers. The fee&lt;!lngstattons have
been taken over by subway
muggers iii the form of cowbirds. A
&lt;phoebe turned up two weeks ago,
and then ,the phoebe went away.
Clifton Clark, who lives down the

road, has a theory about the birds. never thought I would miss the
He notes that the hawk population IS rabbits and groundhogs, for nor·
way up, and he wonders about the mally we detest them, but I do miss
consequences of roadside spraying. them. Francis, won 't you please
There's ·no question about the come home?
I mentioned this flicker. He is
hawks. They are all over the sky,
tr-ying
to tear our hquse down, and
hovering in silhouette like airplanes
make It yet. Tom Geoghehe
may
on an ldentltlcatiori chart, and then
gan,
who
used to be news director
gilding abruptly out of sight. It's
u.s.
Steel
In Washington, bas a
for
· true that every summer crews
spray the briers and· honeysuckle cottage across the road. This flicker
on Route621, but you wouldn't think already has demolished one wing
so spotty an appllcatton of a and half of his roof. David Brinkley
of ABC lives seven miles away,
herbicide would affect everything.
Whatever the cause, there's a down the road to Cul{"'pper. While
kind of letdown In the spring of 1985. · he is In Washlngton making a
The dogwood ·and . redbud are living, a couple· of flickers are.
Ooatlng through the woods as pink · taking out his window frames .
What theS,I' bullies have ag~nst
and white as a . corps de ballet.
the
press I cannot say , but the press
Eveljllhtng has burst Into leaf and
blossom, jncludln'g a rich crop of everywlwre seems to be held In low
dandelions, and 'tt would be an esteem and flickers will go with the
herd.· They ·a re blg brutes, with
altogether perfect spring but -. I
I
black mustaches and black banda·
nas; they have neck muscles as
strong as hawsers and their pickax·
,beaks are as sharp as stilettos.
Goeghegan Is na!llng patches .all
over hls place and Brinkley has
.ordered new window frames . F;very afternoon I hammer back the ·
boards our flicker has loosened, but
I can't reach the gutters along the '
roof. He's trying to haul those away
too.
It's dispiriting. but not all is lost .
Ort the morning of April 22, a little
after 7 o'clock, a ntght of evening
grosbeaks came· through. They
we~ on their way back from
Florida, I guess, and looked very
snappy In their black and yellow
outfits. We have heard, but not
seen, a pileated woodpecker. For no
apparent reason, because the win·
. ier acorn crop was poor, we are '
overrun with squirrels. Skunks and '
raccoons are down, but possums
are up. · ·

Donald T. Regan, who took over less than three months ago as White
House chief of staff, has replaced almost every key aide to President
fieagan in a qull't revolution that has cemented Regan 's authOrity at the
outset of the second term.
From the president's personal aide to his personal physician and from
lhe assistant handling the paper Dow to and from his desk to the "person in
· ~ :charge of status symbols and perquisites ln the president's house, Reagan
:. : Is surrounded by '!I'W faces.
·
:-: When Deputy Chief of Staff Michael K Deaver leaves after the
·. · president's European trip next month, Reagan wUl be practically the only
; ; veteran of his long march to the White House who still has a n office in the
: · West Wing, the epicenter of presidential power.
: -: All bough Chief of Staff Regan's effectiveness in carrying out the hasty
- - turnover can't be questioned, It reinatns to be seen whether his new team
: : : can le11rn 'to give the president the kind of support and protection that
; .: enabled Reagan to score two landslide election victories and a sertes of
·• •stunning legislatlve triumphs before the second-term changeover.
· · ' When Treasury Secretary Regan swapped jobs with James A. Baker nr'
:in February, each took his closest aides with him, which was to be
: ·expected. But: for Regan, it . was just the beginning of a broader
• housecleaning. I
'
~
- . Underthecommlttee-styleleadershlpo!Reagan'sfli-stterm,Bakerhad
: ·:assembled a legion of aides with the title of as,slstant to the president, the
.
.
----:--------:--------------: . ;highest rank of presidential service.
Lance battlefield missiles .)
: ·' · At times there were more than 15 members of the senior staff who
WASHINGTON - The United circumspect about Its foreknow!- in August 1977 (tipped off tnltlally
States ha(l prior knowledg~ that
.; • :enjoyed at' least theoretical access to the president.
edge of the test. In secret testimony by the Soviets, no less), the United
'l'wo years later .tn Antarctica, a
· · : ~· · The lengthening list·of reslgnations ·has tel~ White House counsel Fred F. . South . Africa ~nd . Isr ael ;vould
to Congress the mont~ after the States announced that the . South
Navy official confided to"Dale Van
Alta that two U.S. spy plan~..had .
' •·' Fieldlng.a~ ~only. member of the !?E'ilior staff Reagan ,mirmid ;onJan. 20, . · . ~xp!ode a .sm~ll nuclear ?evtce ln ..even(CI~ q!fictals tilenttftedlsfael . Afrlcans .w ere abOut' to test a
1!181, wM remains at his post. ·,
.
·
. th!!..fall of 1979, an fuvesflgatlon we
as' the party most llliely 'rewonst- ' nuciea~ · device In the Kalahint hied. to approach the nuclear .test
Members of the new team generally share total alleg!ence to their boss ·have conducted over the last five
ble ,. With 'South Afrtca the runner- ~sert . . Dlploniattc and . public .area but. were tum"!~ away by the
up.
outcry led to the cancellation·of the
South Africans · and had to land
•. - Regan - and a common shyness he Imposes to halt leaks and prevent
years Indicates.
•. •: Jils underlings from capturing personal publicity. . .
. -,
An ;~gtng u.s. Vela satellite, built
secretly in Australia.
In Janui'ry 1~. the GIA gave test.
'' ':: :· : Tlie main message, meanwhile, Is being carrll'l) in the carefully se!,'fpted to •monitor nuclear detonatiOns, . Congre&amp;s a ll(t~.more lnforrnatlon;,, _ . for the next two yea~s. the C!A · But the Navy source, '¥M had
·:·- and flawlessly _read speeChes of 1]1e president himself. -. ·
pic~"!~ up the double-pulse f!ash qf · A _contingent of the .South African kept track of a steady stream of , tracked ttie planes as they pa!&gt;Sed
light .c haracterts!lc ·of a nyciear navy wa~ In the SouthAtlanti~area visits to South Africa by ·Israeli
near Aniarctica~ refused· to go
" • "Maybe he can make this, lOyal 'but tnvi.Sible slat! work for him," one
in private. ·blast on Sept. 22, 1979, beginning a
near the place at the time o( the nuclear :sclentists, techrilclans and
public with this vital nugget of
·. · , departing aide said last week when talking about the new
controversy that stU! has not ended. explosion. Then In June 1~, a defimse offlctais.
Information as Van Alta asked. The
. : "But right now, there's a lot of ronfuston.about who's responsible for what
and how you get where you want to he.' . ·
Two months later, In November secret CIA report to the National
The clincher for the CIA was the
source was afraid of losing his job
1979, a White House sctentlftc panel,
Security Council said the explosion arrival in South Africa of an
and of causing some unexplained
In a report that was not made publlc was probably a tacticel two· or American expatrlat!' who was
Impact on U.S. interests In
unttl the following year, mamtalned
three-kiloton weapon detonated by believed to have shared his know!:
Antaicttca .
,
that the satellite sighting was not a
Israel and South Africa (with edge of U.S. nuclear weaponry with
After-the-fact ' proof of a nuclear
nuclear explosion .at all but some Tajwa·n as' a possible third partner).
the Israelis and then, .at their
explosion was contained In a secret
other occurrence, possibly a tiny
Naval Research ~bora tory report
But the CIA didn't share some of behest, with the South Africans.
piece of a meteo~ striking the its secrets with Congress or with the
The man was 'known to be .an on the Incident ~ very high levels of
' satellite.
White House panel investigating expert in miniaturization, a skill
radiation in the thyroid glands of
~ .• On April 5, 1985, IItke many other
find many reasons and ways to
But the CIA and the Defense the blast. From land, sea and air· that would be needed to scale down
sheep .in Australia. Weather condi:· .: Gallla Co4nty Residents, re~d a pos\pone a trial or even find a . Intelligence Agency - which had
surveiUance - by humans, subma- the test to a barely detectable level.
lions would have carried nuclear
: ·:. leiter to the editor concerning · reason to have It moved to another good reason to know better - were
rlnes and satellltes - U.S. lntellt(The CIA and DIA believe Israel debris over the area and deposited
. ·"' vehicular homicide and the small county. But why do we have these
certain the Vela had Indeed de- gence established that Israel and and South Africa may plan to
It on grass the sheep grazed on. The
: ~: pri~ one person's life was valued laws If they are not enforced. ?
tected a nuclear blast.
·
. South Africa were working together miniaturize their nuclear weapons
high r'!dlation levels were detected
~- :· at. This letter ended, "This could
I know most people have seen the
For some reason, the CIA was . on a bomb as early as 1966. In fact , down to half·kltbton size to use in
the next ·month when the · sheep
.:· : happen again but In your own commercial, "If you drink, it's your
were slaughtered.
::; : fal)'llly ." Well , it did happen again business but if you drink and drive,
'
.
- ..:and In my own family.
it's our business." So, GaUta
On January 12. 1984, Mr. James County, this Is our business.
(Jamie) Edmonds was killed on his
Why aren't these Jaws enforced
. way home from work, on St. Rt. 160
The lOth anniversary of the end of years." That spirit refused the
one Vietnamese family of five who what gumption and hard work can
or.at least more serious punishment
:,near Porter. James Edmonds was
War
is
an
appropriate
the
Vtetnal)'l
Hungar·
hundreds
of
thousands
of
huddled on the top floor of a NI'W accomplish even when almost
issued to people for vehicular
:_not at fault In this twp-cat accident.
few
moment
to
note
one
of
the
.
"tans
who
reached
All\erlca.
York residential brownstone for six every!htng has been lost. In the
homicide and D.W.l. concerning an
··The other llrlyer__jn question was
beneficial
consequences
of
that
months until the father was able to grtm contest called the Cold War,
accident.?
::charged wlfh vehicular hOmicide.
dismal
affair:
the
lmmlgration
of
Then,
after
1000,
caine
the
launch a newspaper for hls fellow- the Soviet Union is far ahead in
:l'!e has not been to trial. Wliy?
Sharon A. Saunders
nearly haif-a-mltilon Vietnamese
half·a·rnlllion
of
them
Cubans:
refugees, in the Vietnamese .· sheer yardage 'gained; but meaRt.
3,
Bidwell,
Ohio
:: Oh! I realize a good lawyer can
.
refugees to the United States.
almost the entire middle class of the
language.)
sured in thesubtier termso!human
America's greatness is very
nation, fleeing Castro's communist
Such people are priceless assets , assets acquired, America has not
largely owing to the talents and
grasp. The Cuban lnDux centered,
to a nation like ours, that some- by a long shot always been the
hard work 'of the successive waves. Inevitably, on southern Florida, and
times seems In dapger of forgetting
loser.
·
ot migrants from other nations who Inevitably caused severe tempor· just how preCious freedom is, and
'
have come here, Oeelng from
ary dislocations and a certain
poverty or oppression, to start a
amount oftll.feeltnglocally. For one
new life. But In the pa~t ll years the
thing,
the Florida school system,
,. Once again, Congress Is being asked to return Americans to the
States
has
been
the
beneflUnited
both
public
and pnvate, was simply
--oil -shortage days of 1974 - not for the gas lines but for the extra hour of
of
succcesslve
lnDows
of
olary
unprepared
to cope with the huge
::dayligftt that was created to conserve energy. .
i'efugees
from
countries
)VJ'acked
numbers
or
Spantsh-speaklngchlld:· As regular as clockwork, those who want to start dayllght-savf!)g time
ren. F,or another, the sudden flerce
· earlier in the year and end later have resumed their Capitol Hill mission, · by·communist aggression, and ti\ey
have
proved
very
high-grade
ore
competition for low-pay!nJil jobs
·
·
: preachlDg conservation, safety and more rounds of golf.
Indeed.
threw many native-hom· Amert:: Whether they succeed or not, daylight-saving time for 1985 begins this
The first to arrive ln large . cans, especially blacks, temporar::Sunday, when most of the nation turns Its clocks ahead at 2 a.m. localtttne.
numbers were the Huogartans In ily out of work. But .gradually
"Let there be light," Rep. Silvio Conte, R-Mass., said Wednesday as he
1957 - • most of them ~vout
Florida adjusted to Its new resi::led a troop of proponents ranging !rom the Reagan adminstratlon to the
Catholics who dete!iled Hungary's dents, and they are now among Its
; nation's 40,000 convenience stores before the House energy conservation
Soviet-backed communist despot· · most vigorous citizens - and, not
• subcommittee.
·
l
Ism. They' participated eagerly in incidentally, some or this country's
: TI!eir, goal is to enact a btll, introduced by subcommittee Chairman
the rebellion that flared in Hungary' most pas~tonate anti-communists.
:·Edward Markey, DMass., that would begin dayllght-savtngtime ori the
In the autumn of 1956; and when It Their votes last November went to
; third Sunday in March and end It on the first Sunday ln November.
was · ruthlessly crushed by ~ Ronald Reagan in a· proportion of
· DayUght time- ~xcept In Ar12ona, Hawall and parts of Indiana where it
Army tanks they fled across the about nine to one.
,
: doesn't exist - now starts on the final Sunday in April and endS when the
border to neighboring Austria.
But ln many ways the most
: clocks are set back an hour the last Sunday In October. .
I was in ,Vienna In that chaotic remarkable refugee tide has been
' Although a longer IJI!rlod or dayijght-sav!ngtimeenjoys broad support, it
December of 1956, and I will never • the Vtetnameie, who fought beside
• hasn't 9ucceeded In Congress because of an Inescapable tact of solar
fOJFI
· the mood in a. refugee us to Sa.ve · their country from .
: physk::s: if you shift the clock to cause the sun to set later, the sun also rises
collection center set up by the communism and had M choice but
: later.
Aua\rian government in subUrban to leave when South Vietnam
Tralaldrchen. Hundreds of men, collapled tn 1975. Thele people
women ·and chUdretl were ware- were not Europeans like the
housed temporarily tr!' double- Hungarians, and wert! forced. to
decker buaks ln ,the .huge mess ball flee, not just across 90 miles of •
Today is Friday, April26, the 116th day of i!llll. There are 249 days left ln
of a· tonner military academy, ·in
water like t~ Cubans, but from
· the year.
the glare of a few bare light bulbs.
:· Today's highlight In history:
Southeast Aala to a strange, cold
"Not very comfortable, is it?" land 10,000 miles away. English
• On Aprll 26, 1607, an expedition of English colonists, Including Captain
somebody remarked sympatheti· was not even their second torigue,
. Jolul SIT\Ith, went ashore at Caj)e Henry, Va., to establish the first
• pen,nanent sett~ent in the NI'W World.
cally to an elderly refugee. and their f!rtlt t.a&amp;k therefore was t9
"All thOS8 farms down there look pretty dam ·
"Listen," the old fellow snapped · learn enough ot It to scrape by.
• On this date: ·
PROSPEROUS to me. "
• In 1'71!5, the American naturalist and artist J9hn James Audubon was · back, "this Is theflrstcteceDt night's Americana with the room to spare
·'
sleep anybody here has had in generously took them tn. (I know of
• .IJOm lit Haiti.

'Mystery
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. ast

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Toron1o
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Or-.l• tand
Claklltlld
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.533

I

.462

'

.«11

RBI- Murptly. Atlanta, 22; C'Davtll,
f'ranctsro, 13; J((&gt;rT, St . Louis.

.·"." --

I

.462

11-i

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.:ll7

2

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·

RUNS -:Mw-phy. Alhtnla.. T:
Ke~~ned;v. San OloPgo, 4: MakhaH, LOll
~. t: Strawberry, New York. f: 9a!'l'
!led With .?.
,
SIOLEN BASES-C'oleman, Sr . Louis, 8;
~SmU h, St . Louli, 7; EDavl.s,
Ctnctnnatl. 6: C.O.ivl1, San Fra ndACO. 5;
Gl~. San Fnncl5co. ~:
M.Wibon. New York. S.
PJ'I'CHING (2 dfrtlSIOnS t-11 Brt' lied With

1.(00.
STRIKEO~tu, .c /ndnnutl. 29:
.J.Ot&gt;Uoon, PUisburgh, 118: Gooden.
· New York. 26: Vak!lzuela, Los.AnRt'lf's, 2.5:

ISf.&gt;BVC'I' 1-01 , Ull

KrukOW, San F~Q. n:
Ryan, Houstm, it.
SA VES-Le.Smlth. Chicago. 4: Rt'ardon.
Montl1'al. 4: SuHer, AUanta.
4: 5 aT'l' tied with 3.

OMrolt I MOITL~ :.!-2 1 at Mllwaultt'e tBur·

..,

J'Oaklat!d 1C. YOURJI 0.21 at Mlnnesoht
1Schrom(}.2 1l. tnt

0.21 at T&lt;":tBS 1Nolfs 1'11.

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AriZOna at Qakland
f'or1iand al U. Angeles

Toronto at Trxas, tn l
canrornta at !it'altiC', 1n1
SunUy'11 Garr- .
Kafi!Ul!&gt; Cl~- 111 Bostoo
C1r\'f'land 111 Balti!Tilw

·, StlndaJ•• GIIINtl
Baltlnlort- "' Tampa Bay '
Bltmlna:ham at JacksorrvWto
Hwston at san Antonk&gt;

Daklo.nd ai Ml~a

OrlanOO

NPN York at ChlCIRO
at MUwauk£(1
T01unto a l Tt•JUIS
Cllllfornla at SNUIP

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Montrt'al 4. St. Louis~
San Francisco i , anctnna!l J
Atlanta l , Houston 2. 10 lnn!n ~
LOll Allw!N 6. San Olef(o :1
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Plnsburl(h 10Plron M1 at Nl-'w Vork
I Oarlln~t ().()1,

By SCOTI' WOLFE
big Inning to score four runs and Johnson.
Freshman hurler Bryan Durst
EAST MEIGS - Taking advan- . take a 5-3 lead In the bottom half of
picked
up the win in relief, his third
tage of eight Alexa nder errors and the second . Steve Horner led oH
victory
of the year. Durst fanned
an explosive 16-htt offensive as- with a line single, Jeff Bissell
three
and
walked none, while giving
sault, the high-flying Eastern Ea. reached on an error, Jtln Weber
gles m ade It three. wins in a rdw as roped a single , Eddie Collins up two runs on three hits In four
they rolled to a 14-5 non-leagu e slammed a two-run triple, Kevin Innings of work. Kyle Davis,
hiumph over the Sl)artans here Barber smacked another ·triple, another tough freshman hurler got
Thursday.
and Royce Bissell followed up with the start and went two Innings .
Eastern also got a superior the third triple of the inning, the allowing just one hit, three runs ,
two walks, and recording two
pitching performance from Its · . score 5-3 .
Only one of Davis' runs
strikeouts.
three pitchers, Kyle Davis, Bryan
Overall, Eastern had eight extrawas
earned.
Ours! and Jimmy Weber.
base hits, lncludh\g seven triples .
Eastern now weighs in at 9-6 on Behind solid relief efforts by
Jim Weber came on to record the
the season, and Is 5-2 Inside the freshman Bryan Durst and .Jim
SVAC.
Weber, Eastern coasted to the win. save, fanning two and walking
Alexander took a 1-0 lead in the Senior Jimmy Weber led the none, In one Inning of work . All
first Inning as Mike Chapman led
Eastern a ttack with two hipies and three Eastern pitchers turned in
a single, Eddie Coutns had a single good outings.
off with a walk, then came home on
Easte rn Coac h Scott Wolfe
an error at third. Eastern quickly
and trtple, Kevin Barber a single
praised
his team for a "super fine
and trtpl&lt;!, Royce Bissell a double
retaliated as Eddie Collins lined a
and
treat hitting attack.
effort"
single up the middle and rnde hom~ and triple, and freshman Steve
Doug
Kelter,
Bryan Wilson and
on a driving triple by Kevin Barber
Horner a single and triple. Brent
Farley
combined
for two walks and
. to tie the score at J.l.
Bissell • singled, Bryan Durst
The Spartans went ahead J.l .In
singled, .Jeff Bissell singled, D. J . four strikeouts, but could not cool
the second' on an()ther wail\, a sharp
Randolph singled, and Jeff Cald- off the East~rn ~is as they allowed
~6 hits..
.,
.
. double by Jerry Martin· and. an well wtn!i,lr!d.
error:tn 1\le outfield, the score now ·
Alexander had four hits,. a lionie ·. Eastern.· hosts · Hannap Trace
3-1. ·
·
··
run by Sanders, a double by Martin, tonight In an SVAC make-up ·game
Eastern ca me back with its first
and singles by Da niels and at Eastern.

EASTi!ZN OONFERENCE

. . L Pet. GB
!0 • .714 -

DMrolt Uti. Nrw Jcr&amp;€"Y 115, OMroll
wins !K'I1C'!I :kl

1n1

Chic¥() I Eck C'~' 2·11 al Phlla&lt;k'lphla
I }( OIJI\n1afl ().() I , I n I

WESTERN CONFERENCE
'l'llnday,.. Aprl •
L.A. Lakf'fl 119, PtooeniX 103, Los ARJJ'"
lf'!l wtns K'Til'll 3-(1

.t\flanla tBcd i'Ofllan ·0-21 at Houston
IKIK'Ppl'l' 1.01 , tnt
San OlfoKo IOn n 'f"dly f).Jt at Uls AI\II:("IM I Hf'Dhl!ill'r ~Hh ," I n I
. _ Clnd M'JII r 'J1~ 0-JI aJ San _Franct~
'• 1Ha-mfJ\lltkrr .a2J."t nJ·

san Antoolo at Om\·l'r
· '

Utah

.I

112, - t.tlllslon ". JOt

_., . ~'k.'l·2- l i

· H~sron

ClncinnHTI at San Frrul('hw:u
Al lllllla ar Hooslon , tnl '

they never rellnquished .
Winner Btll Gulllckson, J.l, allowed six hits and dtd not walk or
strikeout a batter ln62·3lnnings.He
was replaced by Jet! Reardon, who
earned his fourth save with one-hit
relief.
. "That 's got to be the best start I
ever had," ila ld Reardon. "But It 's
the fact we're9-6 that's even better.
Everybody's been picking us to
!tnishlast , and the guys are pumped
up about it. I think we've surprised
some people so fat. "
Giants 7, Reds 3
Chili Davis drove in four runs with
two homers and a sacri!lce Oy and ·
Jose Uribe scored the go-ahead run
from second on an ei)Or by first
baseman Pete Rose ' as -san ·Fran·
,etsco heat Cincinnati.
Uribe broke a 3-3 tie In the seventh
Inning when Rose, Cincinnati's
player-manager, dropped an infield
popOy.
"This is the only place I've every
dropped a popup in my life," Rose
said. " The ball was in the sun. I saw
it and was going to catch It, but then
It started Outterlng."
Mark Davis.l-1, got the victory in
relief of Jim Gott, whodldnot allow a
hit until opposing pitcher Frank
Pastore doubled In the sixth .

Utah ~tl(j'

Unescore:

o-

Ale,.;ander ...... ... ............ UJ CXW
5 46
Eastern ............... , ..... ." 141 152 x-14 16 6

BARGAlH MATlHEES SAT I SUH
All SEATS $2,25
SS IOH EVERY DESOAY

Soml"' tmc-- tnc mo&lt;~ u11hi&lt;do r-~
i)t'('omo· 11&lt;·•('1!.,..,

~0

1st WEEK : 7,

•

~1 April .. . .

.-A""'OI .

at llliilt

t:tab at Houston. TBA, If n('C('SSI!ry
, . . . . . ,, April21

__

Leaders

~

Pt»11and 115.- O.llas 113. Portland wins
l!if1"ics :1-1

AMERICAN l.EAGVE

Transactions

AA'ITINC: 12lt at bat!u-Franro, Ck'\'&lt;"
lan d . .+19: Whita ker, Detroit, .0 : liar·
rah , T&lt;"!'IIIN , .lJ'i; Boctn C', Oakland• •111;

.._,EMIL
...

B rookros. Ol'frott, ~'II\.

01\KIANO A"s-Ca UC'd up Tom Trll·
mlllln. p11cn.:.-. from TiiCOma of the&gt; PIIC'If·
k· Coa.&lt;~t l..t&lt;8f1Uro. OptlonOO Mlkf' Ca~.
. lntlrklrr. to M~to or thr Calllortda

RUI\;'S-MDa\•1!'1. Oakland. IS: Murph:.._
16: Rln ·. Roston. 16: :'! arr liNI
wllh 12.
RBI-M .Du\'l&lt;t, Oalcland, 19: A:rmas.
Bo$1on. 16: G.ThOma~ Srau~; l'i: JAom.
~land.

L&lt;aa\K'.
NlllieMI Le»Pe
CtJm-Acttvutl'd

pwy. Bllltlmon'. 14: PtrkrU. Mlni'II.'Mll&lt;l.

cH I CAG0

'

Ga~·

Wood.'!~.

(J.llnclc:kor. Optk:ln!'d Brian Da,\ 1'11 .
ootftr&gt;ldPI·. to IoWa of the- Am«"k'D n A580- ~

HITS-Puckf'tt . MlnM"!!ta . ~: tTanC'O.

(1('\.'f'lund, 22 : CoiiiM, oakland. 21 : Moll-

ciatlon.

tor . Mllwuukf(', 11 : Tablrr. O;o\'('land, :ll .
00\JBLE\--Lt'mtln. Ol'trolt. ll; On&lt;~ .

1

1...m
ANGELn:;
OOOGER.&lt;;-Actl
\'a It'd
8Jb Ballor, - tnflt"'df'r. opuonro Sid
.Rrram. rlrsr biS{'ITian, 1o AIWQ!Jm!U!' of

&amp;~r . NN' York. !'\:

~~~~iln~t~·(·~~~· ;~.:r;\~~e'!~~·!

lhto Poclflc ('()ilst l.i'lllgUI'.
FOOniALL

ronlo. !'i.
miPLt};- l'rammf'l l _ Drotrolt. 3; Wll·

.r.on. Kansa!( Cl~-. :t: (i·_ walkcf. Chlc:n~to.

NllijoMI f'OOiballn«\M'
lN DIANAPDLIR CUI..'ffi- SIJt!H.'CI F'r"ank
MC'Oa ln, ~1df' r«'f'tver.

&lt;!: Griff£'!.'. !'0('1,1,· Y01·k, 2:: P.Bradlry,
Sf'all k•. 2: f\ol!lo; , Cilllrornl a. 2: PUI.'krtt ,

NEW YORK .JF.TS-A«juln-,:1 Charlrs
JK'k!IOII. Unr-Mrkf'l·, f!UT! tlv&gt; Kansas

Mlnlli'!;IJIU, :!.

RU~S-G .Th0m.1~. ~au k'. 6:
M.Dll\15 , l~kland. fi: ~~· . ~ali i('. 6:
Arma.~. lblon: 5; Anmans~- - Mlnflf"''olll,

HOME

'·

·----·
w-;. .,"
-

,Uenver 111 Sail AntoniO .".

Arlanw at Hausra~. tnt
!=\an oqu at La! An~. on I
, ,". ~,G. . .
~ !..nul~ at Monlrt'al • . ,
PlttSOOr)ttf aJ Nt'W Yor~
' 'Chk'liltO al Pblla~lpi!Ja·
San Dll'ft'O at l,.al A~ii'S

Knn~ Q~- . 6:

A nlonlo 112. ~·rr

lfad' seril'!l H
'
............. 11.

C"Nel.o al PhUattr!PhJ.I, tn )

14.

.................... ·.

m.·San

Ot'llV.l'f

~~ G-.. ,
Sf. Lou ! ~ al Modlnoal
Ptttllb.argh i t ~f"¥' Yor:k.
Clnclrtnilll a! ~n FranciJCO

y .. --·. ,

Braves3,~2

A throwing error by shortstop
Dickie Thon allowed the tiebreaking .run to score an&lt;l. Terry
Harper's run-scoring single capped
a two-run lOth inning, leading
Atlanta over Houston .
Brad Kommlnsk scored from first
base on an Infield single by Date
Murphy 1111d an error by Thon ,
snapping a 1-1 tie. Harper, pinch
hitting for winning pitcher Zane
Smith, 2·1, then singled in Murphy
for a J.l Atlanta lead.
That turned out to be the winning·
run for Atlanta, when the Astros
scored In their half of the lOth on a
hOme run by Phil Garner .
·BIVce Sutter picked up his fourth
save by pitching the lOth for the
Braves. Dave Smith, 2-1, was 'the
loser.
Expos 4, Cardinals 2
Andre Dawson drove In two runs,
one of them with a hOmer that
triggered a two-run fourth Inning, to
lead Montreal over St. Louts.
With one out in the fourth, Dawson
hit a 1-2 pitch by Danny Cox , 1-1, for
his third homer of the year and the
Expos' first hit of the game. Dan
Driessen then doubled and scored.
one out later when Tim Wallach
singled, gtvlng the Expos a 3-2 lead

Eastern rips Alexander, faces HT next

-Game

New 'J('r!ey

1!

NBAresults

Dl'uolt

CindMaU
San Dk'li:O
Houston
·Atlama

!"""'f'• o...

al Denv•r

Mmtphls

i)(o!rol l at Milwaukee
0£'\'f')and at BIJ )IIfMT('. In I

~ Anft('lf'S

In other NL action Thursday,
edged Houston 3-2; Mont·
real tripped St. Louis 4·2, and San
F rancisco stopped Cinclnnatl7·3.
Rick Honeycutt earne(l his first
victory of the season, scattering four

~ Atlanta

United 811R1 Foothal ~e

NPA' York at Ctllca,lt()
ntkland at Mlnnl'IO!a

Plnsbur,R:h

e~ptional."

USFL results

~ .{Jl a1 Se11llk&gt; 1BE&gt;at1le

KaMtl!l Clly at BostCI'I ·

ChkuJilO
NN.· 'r'l)rk

Tied With 2.

HOME

Nrw York 1Whl!500 lUI a t Chicago

SalllrQy'11

IXXJBt..ni-Willadl, Mqntt'('al. ti: 7 a re
~.
TR I P~ -l O 'a n&gt;

.l

Martlr'M'l H I, tnl

0·11. lnl

n:

!led with

Clr l't&gt;llllld 1Ruhll' J.lt at Baltimore tO.

'"C.a' llromla •Zahn

D&amp;eJIO,

Manohall. Loa An~, J); Gwynn. St.-n
Dlt-.go, 1,.; HMT, St. Louis. 19.

1 CI~m s i · 2 T , · (nl

I K~·

s.n

ea~ .

Atlanta, Zl:

.. .

Frida,Y'a GMIW
Kansas Cl!y !Cubid:a IJ.O\ at Boston

Toronto

Sl!n

U; tk&gt;man&lt;k-t, f"I.'W York, 11: JClat~ . !;1
Loob. u.
HI'J'S.-Cn.lt. Houston. Zl : Murphy,

.'l

3. SeaTtle 0

rls 1 ·~ in )

13; E. O~IVIII ,

La AnR'Ms,

hits In eight innings, ;md Mike
Marshall and MlkeSciosctadroveln
two runs apiece to key the Dodger
win .
With the score tied 1-1, the
Dodgers broke it open with a
tllree-run siXth, the first on a
run-scoring single by AI Oliver and
the other two on Scloscla ' s tw~t.
baSes-loaded slrigle.
The Dodgers got their final two
runs In the seventh off reliever Luis
Deleon on run-sebring strigle by
Pedro Guerrero and Marshall's
flelder's-chot~ grounder. Reliever
Tom Nledenfuer gave up a runscoring single to Terry Kennedy and
a sacrtflce fly to Carmela Martinez
. before shutting the door on the
Padres In the ninth.
Honeycutt, who · had surgery
during the off-season, said be's stU!
not 100 per cent.
"Overall, It was good." he said of
his performance. "1 need to keep
getting a little stronger. Asthegame
went on I was able to get better
control of the sinker.
"I'm pleased with the way I'm
throwing. It 'll come with time. I'm
just learning my arm aU over again .
Never having had surgery, you
don't know how It's going to
respond." .

According to their manager, the
Los Angeles Dodgers aren't doing
many things right thesf! days. As a
matter ot fact, winning Is about all
they CIIJI dO.
"Things have been going very
good for us despite the problems.''
said Tom Lasorda said after
Thursday night' sG-3vtctory over the
.San Diego Padres put the Dodgen;
Into first place ln the. National
League West over the defending
league champions.
For the first time this season, the
Dodgers scored as many as six runs.
And for a change, the)! didn 't make
' as many errors, as they usually do.
Along with the offensive and
defenslve deflctences, the Dodgers
have also been hit with a rash oj
Injuries.
•
"The guys have been playing
hard ," Lasorda said. "Ev.erybody~
chipping ln. We're getting the clutch
hits and the pitching has been

Ciw:lnnatl, U: Komm.lnsk. Atlanta, 11;
OOmith. St . Loub. u.

lJ,

Only ~~:amts II('IK'Ciulro

Cl~- Chk&gt;lA In £&gt;xd'ian~ lor 11 1!RI M•••·
fnlh-rwnd drafl ptrk.

~"J''L[N

WASHINGTON REOOKINS-Acqu!rf'd
GrorAf' R~ nmnlt~J~: beCk . f rom rhr

Prrh-DNC; .:.l drocts-.M•-9 arr tlrd

NC'\1-' Orttoan.• Saints In (";;{c hanR(' ror tht:'lr
1~ No. 1 draft pck.
,
1..IIIMed &amp;.1m Fooett.l Le~«W

BASF:S---&lt;.OIIIM, Qakland. to:
Prttl~ . CallfOI'Illu , 7: Grllfln, Oakland. ri:
1\11):!;('b\", Tornrno. ~ : !i all' tkod wtth .1.

wl!h um
S"''RIKEOI.Jffi-Morrl.-.,

TUPPERS PLAINS - The red·
hot Eastern Eaglettes girls' softball
team soared to a 19-8 non-league
triumph over the Alexander Lady
Spartans here Thursday evening In
non-conference play. Eastern is
now 13-5 overall and enjoying a
great season.
After Alexander took a 3-0
command In the first inning,
Eastern rauted as Tony a Savoy led
off with a walk, but was erased on a
pick-off play. Lea Ann Gaul singled,
Angle Spencer drew a walk, and
Amy Young banged a two-run
single. Krist! Gaddis s ingled and
Rucker reached safely on a
fielder's chi&gt;lce to plate the remainIng runs to give EHS a 4-3 lead.·
In ·the third frame after Alexander took a 7-4 advantage, East·

.em again came alive for sev~n
runs. Young walked, Gaddis had an
RBI double, Rucker reached on an
error, Dent reached on an error,
and Beth Berkhlmer walked to load
the bases. Arlene Ritchie slammed
a three-run triple, Savoy doubled ,
Gaul reached on a fielder's choice.
Angle Spencer tpled and Young
again slngted, the score now 11-7.
Overall Eastern had 11 hits .
Angle Spencer was tllree-for-four
with two singles a nd a triple, Young ·
was two-for-three with two run scoring singles, a nd Gaddis ws .
two-for-three with a single and
double. Ritchie tripled, Savoy
doubled , Gaul singled and Rucker
singled.
For Alexander . Loos poullled,

whUe Peterson, Beatty and Kaush
each singled.
Krist! Gaddis came on In relief to
pick up the win with five walks and
four strikeouts II) three innings of
work. Gaddis gave up just one run.
Amy Young got .the start and also
went three Innings as she fanned
one- and walked three.
Beattey suffered the loss wtth 13
walks, four strikeou ts and 11 htts
registered against her.
Eastern hosts Hannan Trace
tonight at Tuppers Plain~ .
Unescore:
Eas1em ............... ......... 407 :ll6 x- 19 11 7
Alexander ...... ...... . , ... ... , 340 100 0- 8 4 8

JAYMAR
GOLF CLUB

McLain fined, gets 23 years·

TAMPA BAY BANDITS-SI,;:nOO Brt't

C1ark.

U'troll . :t;:
Nll'kr0. Nf'.1!.' York. :.!4: '•A!Ntandrr, ToroniO. 'It: Boddlck&lt;"r. Balrtrmno. '.Jt:
Bult'hi'l'. Mlnrno~a . :Jl.

sa l~· .

to a multl ·)'('ar contrat't ,

COLU!GE' •

KANSA.., STATE!...Naml:'d William Moon
, UMl&lt;iitanl allllf'lk dlrt'('tor'.

LOUISlANA STATE-NamC"d JoiiUW

SAVF.S-J.H01A1'11. nakiiUid. S: Rl¢w'fH
York. 5; Waddi•IJ, rk".·t"lanp. 4: Hr l'
nandr'l.. OC'It'OII . :1; NI.II'KV, Sl'811k', 3;

Jont'!l osaiStanr beslectball roectl.
PURDUE-Narnf!rd C"'lit Mdntot h an
aniJtant looltwlll COIK'h .

N~ -

StM irr. Hoo;ton; 3.

Redmen to take part
in loop
meet.
Saturday
.
.

.

'

- ..

Mlnn('S()!a 5, Oakland •

on
~ daylight-saving returns

I

97

~'\1.1

1 9
;'; · 9

Callfnrnlt~

~Time-honored ·battle

I ,

'

1

"'171
."i?l

"n.ll'llldq'• GIUPM
Bal!irtK:II't' 7, Clfo.'f!IJind I
N""· York 5, Bolton I
Mllwauk«&gt; 11, Ol'lrolt 7

.

·'

1

1

T&lt;"Xa~

Immigrant assetst.;;L..,_._______W_i_llia_m_A_._R_us.,......he_r

in his,ory

'

1
1

Sf•&lt;~ II I('

'It's our business'

iToday

'
1
1

' '
'

Chicago
Mlnnt'!!Oia

.

~

' ·""

8•
•

1

Pet. Gl

6

' 9
" 'fftl Dlvklolo•

" Ca llroml'\.

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta

Berry's ·World

wL

•

Dl•l r OII
MIIWIIUit('(&gt;

Letter to the editor

..

.....

Baltlfl'ION&gt;

boss

-~

-.

BA1'11NG !¥1 it b81llt--()nu!ak, P!tu
Wrxh. .fi; M~ . At!IWIIA,
.:83: Walling. Houston, .381: Mart!ner:, San
Dl.fiO, .37S; Publ.
•
Houstoo, .a&amp;'J,
RUNS-M\lf'Pt\y, Atlanta , 15: MaBhall,

AMERIC\N LEAGUE

SCRABBLE, Va. - This Is our
lovel!est spring In at least five
years, but something has gone
wrong here in Rappahannock
County. I am not thinking of the
rucker. I am thinking of rabbits and
groundhogs and snakes. '11\ey seem
to have disappeared .
·
Animal populations have a way of
going up and gothg dc&gt;wn. If man.
doesn't get too much in the way,
predators and disease and weather ·
will combine with rates of reproduction. ·We observe pendulum
'swings when deer 11re scarce, on the
one hand, or an Infernal nuisance,
on theother.Maybewe'reslmply at
a low point in the cycle. I don't
know.
But two or three years ago,
driving the two mUes down to the
Woodville post office, I could count
~ rabbits along the way. The little

By KEN RAPPOPOJtT
AP Sports Wrier

NA'JIONAL 1.&amp;\GVJS

ByTht~Pre.

The Daily Sentinel
11 I Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei.- Page-3

Pomeroy MiddlePQrt, ·Ohio

'

•

RlO GRANDE - The Redmen
trek squad, In action at the Miami
Invitational In Oxford, OhJo, re·
centiy, Is ready lor tomorrow's
(Saturday) Mid-Ohio Conference
Meet at Cedarvtlle.
It was a big day at Miami
University with the dedicatiOn of
· the George L. Rider track facUlty.
Rider was a 44 year coach at
Miami. Attending the dedication
were Brian Carlton, who has a, ·
world class Ume In the 5,000 meter ·
run and Earl Jones who Wl,lS a 1984
Olympic Medalist.
Ray Perr!e was the bright spot d.
the day finishing fourth in the triple
jump (44:6.!50) agallllt strong competition from Eastern Michigan,
Western Mk::higan, Bowllq Green
; and Central State University.
"I thouiht on the whole we ran
very well. The lieat waadetlnltely a
lactoc," uld head coacb Kevin
furcell. He added,."We're looldnrr
tor blper and belter tlllnp to come
thiJ weekend 1t the ~

meet."

the Mid-Ohio Conference Meet.
AI Turner Award

Each year at the MOC meet the
AI Turner Award is presented tot he
best all-around athlete. La.&lt;lt year
Terfa Atkor of the Redmen squad
was the recipient of this award. ·
Terfa will be defending hil title this
year against . strong competition
from his own teammate Ray
Parrte. ·
· Other all-conference contenders
will be Darren Miller In the 5,000
meter run and Mark Pierson in the
3,000 meter steeplechase. ·
Freshman Bill Mangus will
represent Rio Grande well In the
1,500 and 1m meter runs and should
al8o be an all~oference ·contender.
The meG! wlll 'begtn at 1 p.m .,on
Saturday.
--,

.

,

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

_

··1---·
....-,..... '

..... , . . _ Foalltlll ,_...
.tnt~, te lltlll'ttl 1\111110 1ft New Yarlt
l.tD

This weetrend lbe Ri!dmen will

•••'frmn....._

t-'~

trawl to CEdarVIlle to par.tlclpa~ln

'

-

NFL draft order

l•

By FRED GOODALL
AP Sports Writer
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - After
,telling · a judge· he's suffered
"shame,disgraceandhumlllatton,''
one-time major league pitching star
Denny McLain was led from the
courthouse in manacles to bfg1n a

23-year sentence for racketeering,
extortion and drug deallng.
"I'm guilty of greed, avarice 1..
bad judgment. I've heen selfish but
also a lovinghusband," McLalnsatd
during a sentencing hearing
Thursday.

POMEROY
Call Today

992-6372

SPRING· PLANTING?
MAKE US YOUR
HEADQUARTERS FOR •••
- I

GOLF CLINIC

OPEN TO ANY RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY
OVER THE AGE OF 18

LADIES' CLINICS

WILl BE HELD ON THURSDAY EVENINGS
AT 7:00 P.M. STARnNG MAY 2nd

•

MEN'S CLINICS

WILl BE HELD ON FRIDAY EVENINGS AT
7:00 P.M. STARnNG MAY 3rd

FIELD SEED

SUGA~"·~~1~ MILLS
·

..

WILL START SATURDAY, JUNE 8
AND WILl PlAY ON MONDAYS IN
THE TII·COUNTY LEAGUE

FERTILIZER
·

,

JUNIORS

AND

Mulberry Ave.

'" .

Pomeroy, OH.
•

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

JAYMAR GOLF CLUB

POIIIIOY

WIW HILL lOAD

•

·'

'

�;

MHS girls t'ie
Marietta Tigers
for top_spot in
10-team meet
\ 'lNCENT-Metgs' girls tied with . Miller with a second in the high
Marietta for first place honors while jump, Kloes, Amy Satterfield,
·the Marietta boys won outright in a
Linda RJggs, and Kristin Bailey
10-team track meet here.
were "third in the 4-rnile relay, D.
Final results of the girls' stand- English, s. English, Turner, and
Ings showed Meigs and Marietta
Jenny Miller were third inthe sprint
with 84 points each while Caldwell relay, and Haddox, Tammy
was a distant third with 43. Others Gardner, JuUe Miiler, and Calvert
were Warren Local 40, Belpre 37, were fourth In the distance medley,
Federal-Hocking 33, Fort Frye 22,
The on!y winners on the Meigs'
Nelsonville-York 14, Waterford 12,
boys was the 400 relay team of Brad
and Trimble 3.
Robinson, Mark Hammonds, Dar·
In the bOys' results, Marietta had rin Cremeans, and Ed Kitchen.
7B, Trimble 66, Belpre 60, Warren
Also scoring for the Marauder
Local 53, Caldwell 50, Meigs46, Fort bOys included the sprint relay team
Frye 18, Federal-Hocking 17, with a second place consisting of
Nelsonville-York 8, and Waterford
Robinson, Hammonds, Cremeans,
7.
and Kitchen, a second place In the
The meet was ran under the relay long jump with Cremeans and
fonna t, meaning no Individual
Robinson, a third for tile !OJ relay
scores were counted. The top two team of Robinson, Cremeans,
from each team were combined for
Kitchen, and Hammonds, a fourth In
the pole vault with Gerald Moore
scoring.
Winners for Meigs included and Bryan Kom, a fifth in the discus
Rhonda Haddox and Jenni Swartz in with Sean Doidge and Greg La they,
the long jump, the 400 relay team of a fifth In the shot put made up of
Dreama English, Stephanie Eng· Kevin Meadows and Tony . Welch,
!ish, Tammy Cremeans, and Char- and a sixth for the 1600relay team of
mele Turner, the 3:nl relay team of Eric Johnson, Dave Warth, HamRhonda Neece, Swartz, Rhonda monds, and ChriS Smith. The 3200
Hadcjox, and MiSsy Howard, the !OJ relay team, distance medley, and
relay team of S. English, Linda LAP relay teams au finished fifth.
Stewart, Cremeans, aruiTurner, the
Both the Meigs bOys and girls
LAP relay team of Howard, Amy track teams go to the J. R. Ogg
Radekin, Kim Calvert, and Wendu
Inviational meet at Federal·
Kloes, and the 1600 relay team of Hocking. The Meigs girls are the
Howard, Turner, Jenny MU!er, and
defending champion and are ex1
pected to be the team to beat this
Swartz.
Also scoring points for the Meigs' year. There wUI be 11 boys teams
girls included Neece and Jenny
and 14 girls squads competing.

'

Celtics· nip Cavs,
advance in .playoffs
By The As!!oclated Press
Wh11t do Boston's Larry Bird and
Portlantl's Audle Norris have 'in
common?
·
:Well, .at least for 011~. night they
sl)ari&gt;d tlie 'spotilght, leading. tlielr. .
teams to the Nat lanai Basketball
Association conference seml1lnals.
Playing despite a painful right
elbow, Bird retuined to the Celtic~
Uneup \0 score 34 PQints Thursday,
including two fl'e!: ~s with 23
seconds to play to snap a lllH15tle,
and led Boston to a 117-115 victory
over the Cleveland Cavaliers in
Game Four.
Norris, a seldom-uSed forward,
was an unlikely hero as Portland
eliminated the Dallas Mavericks,
115-113, in four games.
"I wasn't really hampered by the
elbOw at all," said Bird, who didn't
play in the Celtics' loss to the
Cavaliers on Tuesday because of
persistent bursitis and oonechlps in
theelbOw. "Onceigotinthegame,I
think the excitement drove me over
tJte limit."
Bird also paced the Celtics with 14
rebOunds and seven assists as
Boston captured the best-of-fivegames.
The Cavs, in the playotfs for the
first time since 1979, were surprlslligly tough in the series, losing the
first twogamesln~ton126-123and
1~ l!li respectively, before winning
Game Three 105-98.
Forced into action when both
Portland centers, Sam Bowie and
Mychai Thompson, fouled' out,
NorriS scored on a layup with 22
Seconds to play to give the Trail
BlaZers a 1l3·1l1 lead. And when
Brad Davis of Dallas sank two free

Frida~April26,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

throws to knot the score again,
Norris sank a 10-foot baseUne
jumper to win the game.
"I ne:ver know how many minutes
I'm going to play," Norris said, "sol
lry'lo make.'the most of them.·· , ..
Norris flnislied with nine pointsseven ·in the final period. Kiki
Vandeweghe paced the Blai.erswith
Tl points, while Mark (\gulrre led
·
DaUas willf39 points·. '._- . ·
· "I 'Youid lll&lt;e to think Portland ·
Won this series, we didri't lose. it,"
Mavericks' Coach Dick Motta said.
' 'We played abOut as well as we can
play and they answered every
ch~enge."
.
"It Was a magnificent series,"
said Portland Coach Jack Ramsay.
" ! give huge credit to Dick Motta
and the Mavericks. They played
great basketball."
In games tonight, Milwaukee
travels to Chicago, Philadelphia is
at Washington, Houston Is at Utah
and Denver is at San Antonio for the
fourth game is each of those series.
Earlier this week, Detroit ousted
New Jersey and the Los Angeles
Lakers eUminated Phoenix to
advance to •the conference
semifinals.
"Bird came through from the
time he came out on the court," said .
Boston Coach K.C. Jones. "I think
' the elbOw was bOthering him a little,
but he's a gutty person."
Cleveland had three chances to tie
or win the game following Blrd's
final points, but John Bagley missed
a three-point attempt, Mark West
failed on a tip-in attempt and World
B. Free's three-point shot was
blocked by Dennis Johnson.

handed.
Jar! Kurri added three goals for
the Oilers, all on setups from
· GretzkY. who had several opportunIties for an eighth point.
The other three series wUl
continue this weekend.
The New York Islanders belted·
Philadelphia 6-2 to avoid being
swept in the Patrick Division. The
Flyers will be at home on Sunday
night. Chicago edged Mlrmesota 7-6
in double overtime on DafiYI
Sutter'stlp-intotakea3-lleadlnthe·
Norris Division. Game 5 Is Sunday
night in Chicago.

1985

Friday, April 26, 1985

Meigs slaps .7•3 loss on Southern nine
I

RACINE -

blned for fan six and walk four.
Grueser. the starter, went the first
five innings and was charged wlth
the loss.
Meigs' James Acree was the only
Marauder with inorethanone hltas
he rapped two singles. Jay CarPenter and Lee Poweil each hit a triple.
Getting one single each was
Hendricks, Mike Chancey, Rodd

Sophomore Dave
Hendricks hurled a six-hitter as
Meigs defeated Southern 7-3 In
non-league basebail action here
Thursday.
·
Hendricks went the distance for
the first time in his l)rlef high school
career. He fanned four batters and
walked three.t Three Southern
pitchers. Kelly Grues~~r. David
Ambergey, and Jay Bostick com-

Harrison, Dave Hoover, and Dan
Thomas.
Darrtn Roush and Scott Wickline
led the Tornadoes with a single and
double apiece while Sean Grueser
and Dan Wolfe each hit a sjng)e. '
The win snapped a two-game
Meigs losing streak and raiSed their
record to 11-7. Southern goes to 1-13
on the year.
Southern opened the scoring wlth

)

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·-

a run in the first but Meigs came
back two more in the second. The
Tornadoes tied it at 2-2 with one the
thlrd. Meigs broke It open in the
fourth with tour nms. The Marauders added a single run in thefi!thand
Southern scored Its final run In the
seventh.
Meigs travels to Nelsonville-York
this Monday.

and Church

Marauderettes score 27-9 victory over Southern
inning except the fourth when they
Tammy Wright.
Karen Hemsley led Southern
failed to score.
Maria Musser led Meigs bOth at ·hitters with three singles whlle
Tammy Holter came through with
the plate and on the hlil. Musser
two.singles. Hlttingtor a single each
fanned six and walked nine in going
was Rachel Reiber, Pam Johnson, .
the distance to pick up the win fOr
and Joy Spaun.
Melg~. She also slammed two triples
and two singles at the plate.
Jodi Harrison alsohadagoodday
battingwlthtwosinglesandadoubie .
while Jennl Couch added single
and triple. Getting one single each
was Margie Smith, Debbie Werry,
Cindy Holley, Carla King, and

RACINE - The Meigs Marauderettes scored in six of seven
Innings and went on to posta27-9wln
over Southern here Thursday In
girls' softball action.
Meigs, now 14-1 on the year,
scored at least two runs in every

'rigers ~blow'
big lead, lose
t~t, top spot

a

The DII:IIY Sentinel

By HERSCHELNJSSENSON

(USPS 145·9110)
A Dl~lslon of MuiUmedla. Inc.

AP Sports Writer
The American League East
couldn't say this at any time durtng
1984 but they'resuretoilke thesound
-the ... serond "' place ... Detroit " '
Tigers.
It wasn't easy, but the Tigers, who
owned at least a share of first place
every day en route to the 19&amp;1 world
championship and so far this year,
as well, managed to blow a 7-1 lead in
the last two Innings Thursday night
and lose to the Milwaukee Brewers
11·7.
That dropped Detroit into
second-place tie with Milwaukee.
one-half game behind the Baltimore
Orioles, who trounced theCjeveland
Indians 7-1.
"We were due one,'' said Detroit
Ma11ager· SparkY Anderson. "It's
the first time we've been beaten in
the ninth inning in a long time. I
won't forget this one right away. I
imagine I'll think abOut ltforawhile.
Scoring 10 runs In .two Innings I'm
sure Is going to give the Brewers a
boost."
Milwaukee hammered starter
Milt Wilcox and relief ace Wlllie
Hernandez for fiye runs in the elg!lth
Inning and jumped on Bill Scherrer
With two out in· the' ninth on Patil
Molitor's gaine-tying solo homer ·
and Ted Simmons' first AL grand

The Meigs
Boxing Club '

. Published every aft ern oon . Monday
through Frid ay. 111 Court St, y the
Ohio Vall ey Publishing Company ! Mul·
llmeclla. Inc., Pomeroy, Ohi o 45769, h.

992 2156. Serond class postage paid at
Pom erov, Ohio

Member The Associated Press In la nd Dally Press Association

and

the

American Newspaper Publishers As·
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733 Third AvPnue, New York. Ne~
York 10017,

a

MIDDLEPORT
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r~~~~~~~~~~~~;,;~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~

The setbacll was Detroit's sixth in
slam.
thelasteig~tgamesiltfer
afH)staft . . .'
Last'year, the Tigers dl!!!l'flose for
the sixth time until their 41st game.
In other AL games, New York
downed Boston 5-I, Minnesota
nipped .Oilkland ~ and California
blanked Seattle 3-0. Chicago, Kan·
sas City, Texas and Toronto were
not scheduled.

•

. , .,

•

TIME

refllly consider llldlat it's all about.

Nationwide In$. Co.
of Columbus, Oh. •

804 W. Main
992·2318

,.

~6· 14

Tueldty

~· I '

II~-~

..

We&lt;!nudoy'
~

3 12o1 (i
'!nul~

Aru
S27-J2
Friday

'

around for quite a few cen tunel The Church. In ca~e you have/; t guessed

I P•w to

4:) 6

~·------· ~~ •- eoo-~. ,,_

SDiur&lt;J.y

GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949-2550

Middleport·
Pomeroy. Oh.

kaolh

· MEIGS TIRE
:; \
CENTER, INC.

I

'I I

~.z

CK

10 IJ

----·
_,.,-.ltllllo

....

Jo~n F. Fultz
J. l1rcus fuiU

SUPERMARKET
992·3840 ,.-.. ,'

Ph. 992-2101

Middleport'

Po11woy

oM•·

--- ·-·

., §; •

Mill WorkCabinet Making

Syracuse
992-3978

'

~~~~-~)!~~ '

---

&amp;EN

Chri stian Endeavor, n r.s't a nd third· Sun
day . 7· 30 p.m . We-dnesda y prayer meeti ng
and Bible Study, 7: 30p.m.
JE HOVAH'S WITNESS, 37319 State
Rout£1124 (on£' miiP east of Rulland l Sun·
da y Sible lecturE' 9 30 am., Watchtower
stud y 10 JQ a m .. TuE"sday, Bible study,
7· JO p m.: Thursday. The-ocratic School
7: 30p m . Servlct' meeting, 8: 20p.m .
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Loca ted on 0 . J . White Road of Highway
160. Pat He nson , pastor. Sund ay Sc hool tO
a .m . Classes for all ages. Junior Church 11
a m , .Morning worship 11 .a m Adult
Choir practl cl:' 6 p.m Su nda) . You ng PeapiP' s, Chlld r£&gt;n's Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wed nesd ay at 7: :JJ p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL , 570 Gra nt
St , Mlddle po11 . Afflllau.&gt;d with Southern
Bap tist Convent io n Su nd ay Sc hool tO a m .
: Morning worshi p 11 a m , Evening wor ·
s hi p 7 p m ; Wednf'Sday ev.;-ning Bible
study and prayer meeting 7 p m .
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. St.
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd . 5. Mark Seevers, m ints·
ter. Sund ay School Supt . Harry Hf'n ·
drlc ks; Sunday School9: 30 a,m , Morning
worship 10 30 a m , Evening worship 7 p.
m Wed nes da y wors hip 7 p m
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHUR CH.
Corner Sycamore a nd Second Sts. P ome r oy The Rev . William Mlddleswarth ,
pstor. Sunday SChool 9· 45 a .m ; Church
sprvlce 11 a, m .
SACRED HEART CHURCH. Ms~r
Anthony Giannamore Ph. 992·5898. Satur·
day Evening Mas.s 7 : J:l p m : Suflday
Mass . 8 am . a nd 10 a.m. Confessio ns one
half hOur before each Mass . CC D classes,
11 a .m. Sund ay
VlcrGRY BAPTIST. 525 N. 2nd St.,
Middleport. James E Ka-S~. pastor
Sunday morning wgrship 10 am,, Even·
lng se-rvice 7 p m ; Wednesda y even ing
worship 7 p m Vlsltatlon .,Thursday 6: 30
pm.

lFRAN~LIN" .

l

Middleport. Ohio

Main Sl., Mlddl epon. Rev. Ca\vtn Minnis,
pastor. Mrs . Elvin Bumgardne-r, supt .
Sunday School 9 30 a .m , Worship st&gt;rvlce
1045am
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OPC HRIST
- Joseph a. Hoskins. eva ngelist. Sunday
Bible St ud y 9 a.m.: Worship. 10 a.m .. Sun da y eve-n ing serv ice 6 p m .; Wednesday
evening service, 7 p.m .
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Raclnt&gt;,
Rt 124 William Hoback , pastor Sunday
Sc hool 10 a m .; Su nday evening service 7
p m . Wednes~a y evening service 7 p m .
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
Supt. Sunday Sc hool 9. 30 a .m . Morning
Worship 10:30 a .m . Prayer!&gt;t&gt;rvicf', altern
al e Sundays

TRINTrY CHURCH. Rev. w. H. Pm1n.
pastor; Debbie' Buck, Sunday School Supt.
Church SChool9: lS a .m.: Wor.;hlp Se!vle ~ Il
a.m. ChJir reheiU'Siil, ~y. 7: Il p.m
under dln!ction cA AUce Nease.
POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE. O&gt;rner Unloo and Mulbeny. Rev
212 E. Main Street
Thomas Glen McClung, pastcr Clyde Hendel"·
992-3785. Pomeroy
son, s. s Supl., Sunday School, 9::11 a.m.:
morttlng worship 10: :Jl a.m.: evening 5m'lee6
p.m.: mltl-week servl«!, Wednesday. 7 p.m.
MEIGS
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 3J; E.
COOPERATIVE PARISH
Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday seiVIceo: Holy
UNITED METJIODIST OH1JRCH
corrununlon on thto ftrsl Solntlay of each mooth,
F.,- Sauer, Dlreetur
and comblned with morning prayer oo the
Rev. Jams E. &lt;An·bltt, .U.Istant
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL Th)rd
t)tlrdd &amp;mday. Morning pra)'&lt;l' and !let1Mit on
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Ave. Rl'V. Clark Baker, paslor Car l Nol ·
aU eX her- Sundays of lhe month Church School
Rev. Doa An:: her
!Ingham, Sunday SchoOl Supt. Sund ay
and Nursery care pr'O'tliied. Coftee lxx1r In the
Rev. Roy Deeter
Sc?hool 10 a m. with classl'S for all ages
Partslt Hall Immediately Iollowlnc the seiV!ce.
R. .. Seld.. loboloa
,Evenln)l! sen·lees at 6 p m . WC'dnesda y Bi·
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRISI'. :112 w .
ALFRED - Church SChool 9:30 a.m .:
hlp slud y al7 : 30 p.m. Youth Sf'rvlcl'S Frl·
Main St .. Nell Proud!OOI, pastor. Bible School
Worship, 11 a.m: UMYF, 6:30p.m., Uw.
da y at 7:30p m
9::1la.m.; Mom1ngworstdp,10:lla .m.; Ywth
Third Tuesday, 7:30p.m. Communion,
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. 128 Mill St ..
Middll'porl. Broth{'r Chuck McPh£&gt;rson.
meetln~. 6:00p.m.; Evening worship, 7:00p.
tlrst Sunday. (Archer)
m..WednesdaynlghtprayermeetingandBlble
CHESTER- Worship 9 a.m .j Church
pastor. Sunda y School 10 a m . Su nda y
study. 7.00 p.m .
School10 a. m., Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.
eve ning services at 7 p m a nd WednHday
TilE SALVAllON ARMY, U5 Butternut
m; UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m .; ComSl'rVIces at 7 p m .
Ave, Pomeroy Mrs Dora Wining In chafle.
munlon 1 first Sunday (Archer).
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Ea r l Shul er,
pra~·er service Thursday, 7:JO p.m.
Surda.Y OOitness meeting, 10 a.m .; Sunday
JOPPA- Worship 9:30a .m.; Church
Evangelistic Service 7:30 p m . Wednes·
pas tor. Sunday School 9. 30 a m .; Chu rc h
CARLETON
INTERDENOMINA·
Stbool. lO:Jl a.m. SJ.Inday SChool, YPSM
SChoOl 10:30 a .m . Bible Study, Wednes·
day; Pray!'r mee!l ng 7:30p.m T hursday
service. 7 p.m .; Youth meeting, 6 p.m .
TIONAL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road . Re v.
P&gt;i-"' AdamS. leader. 7::1) p.m. 'Salvation day, 7:30p.m. (Johnson),
ZION CHURCH Of CHRIST, PomeroyTut"Sday Blbll' STudv a ! 7 p.m .
David Curfman, pastor. Sunday School
P"'fe(lng, vartoqs speakers and muslcsped~ls.
LONCi BOTTOM - Church ~hop! 9: 30
Harriso nville Rd . RobE'rt Purtell, mlnls FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 33045
9: 30a.m.; Ralph Ca rl, Supt. Evening wor·
'J"hwiiday, U::KJ a.m. to 2 p.m. L..acUes HOOle
a.m .; Worship 7 p m .; 'Sible Study, Wed·
te r ; Sieve Stanley, S. S Sup!., Bill McEI·
Hila nd Road Pomeroy Tom Kell y, pas·
ship 7· 30 p.m Prayer meeting , Wednes·
, members · In dlarge, an women
nesday , 7. 30 p.m ., UMYF, Wednesday,
roy, Ass!. Supt.; SundaySchool9:30 a.m .;
tor Danny La mbert. S. S. Sup! Sunday
da y 7 30 p m
6:45 p.m . Thursday, ~ cadet
6:00 p m .; Communion First Sunday.
Wor ship servi ce 10 30 a .m .; Evenlngwor ·
morn in )~!" service at 10 a m.: Sunda~· E-ven LONG
BOITOM
CHRISTIA
N.
Jody
{Young People-Bible), 7::11 p.m. Bible
{Archer)
ship Sunda y7 p m . and Wednesda y, 7 p m
I n )~! S('rVI C£' 7. 30 p.m . Tu('sda y an~ Thurs
Holland, pastor: Wall ace Damewood,
and Prayer moe~.- to the public.
REEDSVILLE -Church SCIIool9: 30 a. I
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
da y Se-rvi ces a t 7. 30 p.m
_
Sunday School Supt . Worship service. 9 a,
MEROY WESI'SlOE CHURCH OF
m.: Worship servtce 11:00 a.m. (Deeter) . · GrQve. The Rev. William Mlddleswarth·,
WORD OF FAITH, 93 Mill SJ .. Mlddl•·
m
.:
Sible
School
10
a.m
.
CHRIST, J.l'lECl\lldrttll's HQmeRoad {County
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAULpaslor . Church seriJ ICe 9:30a.m .: Sunday
pori Sundav mornlnjii: .service 10 15 a m .,
HYSELL RUN HOLI NESS CHURCH
Sunday {'V('nln,~~: 7. Xl Thursday morn I n ~
~ 76) 9925235. Vocal musk:. Sunday Woc·
Church School 9 a .m. ; Worship 10 a .m ;
School10: 30 a.m .
·
Rev Thereon Durham. pas1or. Sunday
111'!&gt;10a m.; lltbleStudyUa.m : Wonltlp. 6p
Bible Study, T(iesday, 7: 30p.m.: UI\IW ,
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Blfile , stud y 1.0 am . Wt'dneS da y evenln¥
ol at 9:30 a.m.j Morni ng wors)llp' at
IJ'l· WE!dnellday, BibleStll'b'•.7 p.m.
Thlrd Tuesday, 7:30 p.m ; Communioh ' . J ohn Wright, passtor. S unday Sc hoo\9 30 . &amp;,ho,
1
,:v) p,m
m. : S\lndayeventugsi!rvlceat'(: 30
btYING WORD C HE~TE R .CHURCH
OlD DEXTER matE cHR.I$FIAN ' First Sunday (Arther).
~
· , a,m .: L'a rry Hay_n,es, S. S. Supi._Morpl.Qg .· l0:30~.
NE W HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
.
.
Thursday.serviceS
at
7.30
p.m
.
.
·.
-·
OF
GOD
Gl
lberfSpencer,
pastor.
Sun
p.th
CHURCH. 0\a.rleS Hatfield, ~tcr, Unda
CENTRAL CLU8TE~
,.,
worship 10~ 30 a ·m
·
ZARENE. Rf'V G lendon Stroud , pastor.
, FREEDOM cqsPEL MJSS ION.at Bald, ""~ , day * hoo\ 9: 30 a .m .: Mor:plng serylce
..... Supi.'Sol-y Sctm ii::Jl am.: lftOdt·
He•. lom.. E. Corblll '
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Su nday SC1ioo19: .'lQ a. m., Worsh lp.servlce,
Knob, located on County R(la(j 31 Rev.
tO; 00 a.m .: Su nda y evenlnQ.servlc£17' 00 p.
Ill~ ftnH aJ'Id ltllrd Sunday rouowtng
an.l&amp;evn ~.... '
RENE, Rev . thomas H Collie r. pa stor~
10: 30 a m : Youth service Sunda y &amp;··15 p.
Lawrence
Gluesencamp,
pastor
.
Rev.
m
,
Mid
-week
·prayer
serviCE'
Wednesda
y
m . S'unda" £'V£&gt;nl ng Sf'rvlct' 7. 0(1 p.m . Wed·
~nday SCtx:lol. Youth meeung, 7:l) p.m. f.'N·
Rev. aldaard a.tbemh$
Marlha W olte, Chairman of 1he 'BOa rd of
wmrord
,
a.sst.
pas
tor
.
P
reac
hing
7
p.m.
Roger
ttrY ~· , _..,..
•
Rel'. Robert E RoblMon , .
Christian Life. Sunday School 9:30a .m .;
n('sday Prayer MHtlnJi! a nd Bible Stud y
servl~sSunday7 : 30p. m . frp,yermeetln~
. MT. OLIVE COMM UN ITY CHURCH.
..lllev. ADdrew fc;benldnl • ,
Morning· worshiP 10 : 30 a .m; Sunday
_.· GRi\HAM
UNITED METHODlST:
..
WMnesday, V: JO pin .• Gar~ C rlftlth,
Law rence Bush. pastor. lt1afl'.fOlr11er, Sr . c'
Su n:
• J,' feJic hhig 9: 30a .m. , flfs;i and second su.n~ _~AS~URY (Syracuil!')- Wor•hlp 11 a.m. ; eV!:'nlng worship 1: 30 p.m. Prayer [_11€(&gt;ting
leader Youth groups Sunday evenln3 at
Su pt SundaY. School a nd Morning Worship
da
y
af ter.n pOn'SC"~ViCE'S at -2130 Thursda y
da ys of each monlh;' thlrd and fourth Sun- ,~· '; Church Schqol 9:45a.m: Charge Bible . 7· :IJ p.m Wf'dnesda y ,
·
li: 30 P.m. wtrh Roger anct Violet Wlllfordd ,.
9· 3!. a.m.: s u"nday. evenl"g·s~rvice, 1 p.Jjt ;
£'Vc n!ntz servfcefi an._OO.
.'
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Dex ·.
da yS'!'ach mooth worsfi(p scrvlc:es at 7:3o '. Stud)', Wedneaday ~ 7:'30 p.m.; 0MW, first , .
lea&lt;ltrs. Corpm~n ion s:erv{Cefirst Sunday
.Yout h rneetlng a nil Bible Stud)'. Wednes ·
. F IRST llAPTIST CHURC H. Mason·, W.
p.m . WCdnesday eVenings at 7:30 p.m .
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.; Choir Reheai'JBI, · tcr . W,oody Call, pa&amp;1or. SerVJcea Sunday
each
month
·
du
y,
7
p.m.
Va . P as tor,-Bill M.utph y Su nda y Schoof 10
prayer and Bible Study.
Wednesday 6:30p.m. ; UMW, fourth Sun ·
10 a.m. and 7 p.m Wednesday. ·7 p m.
WHITE 'S
CHAPEL
WESLE YAN
UN ITED FAITH CH\Jf\C H. Rt 7 on P o·
0:1 .m. , Sunda y C've nlng 7: 30p.m Prayer
' SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. Mulb·
llay, 6:30_p.m. (Nelson).
·
me r oy By-Pass. Rev Ro~rt E Smith. Sr.
CHURCH- Coolvlll e RD Rev. Phillip Ri ·
m('('tln,iil and Blbl~ st ud y Wednesday. 7: JO
r rry Height s Road, Pomeroy. Michael PI·
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a .m .;
denour,
pastor
.
Sunday
Schoo\
9:
30
a.
m.,
,
pastor.
Melvi
n
Drake,
S.
S.
Supt.
Sund
ay
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Steve
.p m Ever yone "'elcomc.
kowski , pastor; Ma rie Spires. Sabbath
Church School10 a.m.; Bible Study, Tues·
worship
service
10:
30
a
.m.:
Bible
stud
y
Sc
hoo19
JO
a
.m
:
Morning
Worship
10:30;
DE-aver. Pastor Robert Smilh, Sunday
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST. Sa·
hool Supt Sabbath School a t 2 p.m on . day , 7:30p.m ; UMW. First Mon'day, 7:30
and worship service. Wednesday , 7 p .m.
Evening Worship 7:30 p m .: Wednesda y
School Supt.; Sunday School 9: 30 a m ,
!e m St. R('\1 . Paul Taylor. pastor. Sunday
lurday with worship services following
P m., UMYF, Sunday, 6 p 1m. Choir Re·
R UTLANB CHU RCH 'OF CHRIST,
Prayer SCrv\cc, 7 30 p.m.
Morning worship 10·40 a.m., Sunday
SChool lO am .: SundayE&gt;vrninjit7. 30 p m ;
~ 3: 15 p.m.
tlea rsal, 6: 30 p.m Wedn~day . { Roth~
Mark Jones, pastor. Bill Nicholson, Sun·
FAITH BA PTIST CHURCJ; , Railroad
E'Vf'nlnji? worship 7: 30 p m .: Wednesda y
Wed nrsda y evenlnR pray!'r m£&gt;eflnp: 7: 30
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
mtch )
da
y
School
Supt.
Sunday
Schoo19:
:.1
a
m
;
St
..
Ma
son.
Su
nda
y
School
10
a.m
,
Morn
e\·ening Bible stud~· 7' :lO p.m .
pm .
-Sister Harriell Wa rner, Supt Sunday
FLATWOODS- Church SChool, 10a.m .
Morning
Wors
hip
a
nd
COm
munio
n
10:
:JJ
a.
lng
worship
11
a
m
.
Evening
service
6
p
BIJRLINGHAM COMMUNITY
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
' SChool9: 30 a .m .; Morning Worship, 10:45
; Wors hjp. 11 a .m .: Bible Study, Thursd·
m.
Praye1
meellng
and
BlblP
Study
Wed
m
.
.
CHUrtCH, Bur\Jngham. R~v , Okey Ray
CHURCH, Sllvt"r Rld,i.!(' Duanf' Sydcn
,a.m.
day, 7 p.m.: UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. AmOS
nestlay 7 p.m
Laundermllt , pastor. Ph. ~2 - 7 324. Sunday
strlcker. pastor . Sundll y SchOol 9 a.m.:
. POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. Dav id
(Rothemlch).
Ttllls, pastor. Jay Stiles. su pt Sunday
FOR EST RU N BAPTIST. Rev Nyle
SchoollO:OO a.m.; Sunda y evening service
Church
scr v!C'C 10 a .m . Blbl!' Stu dy Wf.'d ,Ma nn, minister William Snouffer, Sunday
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 am .;
School 9: 30a.m .: Morning wors hip, 10:30
Borde n. pastor. Cornelius Bu nch, supt
7: 00 p m . Wedn esda y eve nin~ serv ic-e.
ncsday a1 7. 30 p.m . June- thr u &amp;optt&gt;mber ,
Church SQhool 10 a.m ; Choir practiCE',
School Supt . Sunday School, 9· :Jl a .m.:
a .m .. Sunday eveninfij: service 7 00 p m.
Sunday SC hool 9: 30 a.m.: Second and
7·
00
pm
7 p.m October thru May. Su nday ('venin~
~ornlng Worship IO:!IJ a.m ·
Tuesday, 6: 30pm .: UMW, first Tuesday,
fou rth Sund ays worship service al 2 ~ p
Wednesda y servlr;:e 7 p.m WMPO proFellowship 7 p m Jun£' lhru SE'ptl:&gt;mlx&gt;r. 6
, FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Po7: 30p.m . (Nei!Oit).
gram 9 a.m . eac h Sunday.
·
m.
p m . Octobi'r lhru Mav
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH .%
m£&gt;roy PlkP. ,David Hunt. pastor: Jack
HEATH lMiddleport) - Church School,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF' TH E NAZAMT. MORIAH BAPTI ST, Fourlh a nd
mile oft Rt .•125 Rev . BenJ. Watt s , pastor.
Needs. Sunday School Dlr'"ector . Sunday
9:30 a.m.; Worship 10:30 a .m .; Bible
RENE . Rev Lloyd D. Gr imm, Jr ., paS!or.
Lf'e' RusS&lt;' II, 'S S. Supt Sunday School9: 30
~ool. 9:30a.m .: Morning Worship, 10: 30;
'study, Tuesday, 10 a .m.; .UMW, seco'nd
Sunday School 9: 30a.m .: Worship serv ice
'•
a.m .: Mornin g Wors hip 10: 30 a .m .. Sun·
~venlng worship, 7:00pm . Tuesday Vlsl· , Monday , 7: 30 p,m .; UMW Second Mon lO::JJ am .; vo,mg people's service 6 p m.
day e-vc:&gt;ninR serv ice 7:30 p.m ; Wednes·
tatton, 7 P·I,T1 · Wedne!iday, Pray.-r servlceo.
day, 7:30p.m. ; UMM, Third Monday, 7 30
Evangelistic service 6: 30p.m Wednes day
dav st-rvice. 7 30 p.m
7:30p.m .; Mission FriE-nds, 7· 30 p m ..
p.m . (Robinson) .
service 7 p.m .
,
MINERSVILLE -Worship service 10
Girls In Ac tio n, 7 30 p.m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Miller
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. S al ·
am .; Church Schoal,ll a .m .: UMW. tb\rd
SILVER RUN BA,PfiST. Bill Lillie,
St ., Mason, W Va . Eugene L Conger, ml·
le-y Run Roa d. Rev . Emmf'tt Rawson, pas ·
Wednesday, 1 p.m .; Choir practice, Mon·
pastor. Stf'V(' Little. S. S. Supt . Sunday
nl ster. Sunday Bible Sludy 10 a.m .. Wortor Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday School,
day . 7: 30p.m. (Nels oql.
School 10 a.m.: Morning worsip, 11 am :
ship ll a .m and 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible
10 a .m .: Sundayev(lnlngseriJice, 7:30p.m .
PEARL CHAPEL -Worship Service~
Sunday ev!'ning worship 7 :lO p.m. Prayer Study. vocal music, 7 p.m .
·
: Bible teacllin~. 7:30p.m Thursda y.
a.m.: Church School 11 a.m .; UMW se·
meeting and Bible study Thursda y, 7 30 p
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, DudSY RACUS~ MISSION , CHl'rry St., Sy·
cond Tuesday 7: 30p.m. , UMYF last Tues·
m .: Youth meetln~ Wednesday at 7 p.m
ding Lane. Mason, W. Va . J . N. ThUicker,
racusl'. Services, 10 a.m Sunday. Evening
day, 7:30p.m . (ubenk~ng) .
.
pastor. Evening service 7.30 p.m : Wo·
serylc(IS Sunday and Wednrsday at 7:00 p.
POMEROY -Church School, 9: 1~ a .m .
men's Mln tsrry, Thursday, 9· 30 a.m.,
CHRISTIAN
FELLOwSHIP
CHURCH.
m,
; Worship Servh:.oe t lO:ll a.m: Choir re·
383 N. 2nd Ave., Middle port Sunday Wednesday Prayer an d Bible Study, 7. 15
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
hearsal Wednesday, 7:30p.m. ; UMW, sep.m.
TOLEDO. Ohio (AP) - Mennonite Church leaders say they're
School10 am. Sunday evenlnl': 6: 00pm .
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev. KelthEbl\n,
cond Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; UMYF, Sunday,
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR I5T IN
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH,
trying
to start a special fund that would help troubled farmers
pastor Sunday School 9: 30 a .m .. Wad e
6 p.m . (Co rbitt)
CHRISTIAN UNlON . Th(' Rev . William
Rober! E . Musser. pasto r Sunday School
Hayman, supt.: Mo rn~ng Worship, 10: 30a.
ROCK SPRINGS- Church S&lt;:hool, 9:15
among
th,eir membership stay alloat and avoid seiling out to
Ca
mpbell.
pastor
Sunda
y
SthooJ
9
.
'
Vl
a
.
9: 30 a.m : Paul Musser. supt.; Morning
m.: Sunday e vening strvlce 7: 30 p.m. ;
a.m.: Worship 10 a.m. ; Bible Study, Wedm .: JomC"S Hugb es, supt Evening servltf'
wor!!hlp
10:
30
a
.m
.:
Sunday
&lt;'Vening
ser
agriculture conglomerates.
nesday , 7:30p.m.; UMYF (Seniors), Sun·
Wednesday Prayer Meeting, 7:30p.m.
vice. 7 p.m .: mld·week service, Wednes - 7:30p.m Wednsday ('Venlng prayN meet·
. ·MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.
day, 5 P m .; (Juniors) evt&gt;{.Y other Sun·
"Mennonites say that the land belongs to God We would say that
\ng 7:30p.m . Youth prayer service &lt;'aC h
da
y.
7
p.m
.
RaclnC?. Rev . JaTm'S Sattertleld, pastor.
day , 6 p.m . (RothemlcM
Tu('Sday
it
is
a
matter of faith as well as a matter of economy that determines
Fr£1E'man Williams. Supt Sunday School ,
RUTLAND- Church SchOol, 9:45a.m.:
F'AJRV IEW BIBLE .CHURC H, Le lart,
· 9:45am.: Sunday and Wednesday even Wors hip, 10: :11 a.m .: UMW (Evenlnlg Cirhow you treat the l a~d and why you stay on il." says Robert Yoder, a
SYRACUSE CHU RCH OF THE NA·
W. Va .. Rl. I. JamC'S Lt&gt;wls, pastor . Wor·
lnt::: ser;vlces. 7 p m.
cle) second Wednesday, 7:30p.m.: UMW
ZARENE. Rl:'v . Gl~ nn McMillan, paslor.
s hip s rrv iccs 9: 30a .m .; Su ndu y Schoolll
Eureka, Ill., grain fanner and member of a five-person Mennonite
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
(Afternoon Circle) second Thursday, l p ,
Mary Janice Lav('ndf'r. Sunda y School . o.m . Ev('nlng worship 7: 30pm Tuesday
Co rnE"r Sixth and Palme r . GeorRe Rl~W.r ... _rp. (Rubenklng )
fann-crisis
task force.
Supt Sunday School 9: 30a.m.: Mornin p:
collage prayPr met&gt;t lng :.t nd Blbl£&gt; S! udv
Interim Pastor. Ray Fields, S.S. Supt.; \
SALEM CENTER- Church School, 10
worship 10: 30 a .m .: Evang!'llstlc SC?l'V i('(l,
9:30 a .m .; Worsh ip s£&gt;rvtN', Wf'dnesday
The
task
force is backing a proposed fund that church leaders
Dan RIJI:ItS. ·Asst . SUpt . Sunday School, 9: 15 \ ., a .m .; Worship 9:45a .m. (Rubenldng)
6p.m.: P rayer and Praise Wednesda y, 7p
7:30pm.
could
use
to
give
grants dr loans to Its farming members. who
a..m:: Morning Wo111hip, 10· 15 a.m.; Sun· ' SNOWVILLE - Worship, 8: ~ a .m .;
m.; Youth meeting , 7 p.m .
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
~y EIJPnlng service, 7 p m . Y?uth meet·
;Church lSchoollO a .m . (Rube~klng)
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
comprise ahout 19 percent of the Mennonite congregation - most In
Walnut and He nry Sts ., Ravenswood, W.
CHRIST. Elden R Bl~ke, pastor. Sunday
lng. 7:30p.m. Wednt&gt;~da y: e venlnll: ~ -"" ·
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Va The Rev. George C. Weir il'k. pa st01 .
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska.
School 10 a .m.; Gary Ri"ed. Lay lead e r
viet' 7 p m .: Choir prarticl:' R p.m.
He\', Bocer Grace
Sunday SChool9:30 a .m .; Sunday worsh1p
Morning
sermon.
11
a.m
.:
Sunday
nigh!
Locally, ~hurches in Ohio's Williams. Fulton and Holmes counties,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF GHRIST,
Row. Potol McGuire
l'lerviccs : Chri stian Endl'avor 7: 30 p.m .. ,II ~A~hRY BIBLE CHURCij , I&lt;katedon
.
Rev. Kel*' Rader
5tb and Main , Bob Melton, minister. AI
where
many Mennonites llve, supply financial and emotional
Song servi&lt;'&lt;' 8 p.m Preac~in-'l: 8: 30 p.m .
Pomeroy Pik(', Co~ nt y Road 'l5 near Flat Hartson, assoc . minister; Mike Gerlach,
APPLE GROVE- Church Schoolh.m.
support
to familles whose farms are threatened.
Mld
-WN"(:{
pra
y&lt;'r
m('e
tlnR,
WednC'sday,
7
woods Rev Blacl\wood, pastor . Scrv ic!'S
Sunday School Superintendent
Bible
; Worship, 10 am. (First and third Sup·
p.m .
on Sunday a t 10:30 a .m . a nd / .30 p .m . wilh
School9: 30 a.m.; Morning Wo~hlp lO:JO
days);'UMW, Second Tuesday, 7:.'11p.m .;
"There is a lot of guilt •. much o! it over thtngs they couldn 't
Su nday SchOol9.JOa m . BlbleSiudy , Wed a,m , Evening Wonhip 7: 00p.m . Wednes Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7 p.m
control ," sayd Phil Rich of ArchbOld, 11 member of Ihe Mennonite
nf'Sday. 7:.10 p.m.
day, 7;00 p.m . Prayer meeting .
(9race)
·
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN,
FAITH
FELLOW~
HI
P
CRUSADE
FOR
Central Committee. "Tiie church has to demonstrite acceptance to
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
BETHANY - Wonhlp, 9 a.m.; Chur&lt;h
Roger Watson , pastor. Crenson Pratt,
CHRIST. St. Rt. 338, An tlqully. H£'v .
ZARENE, Co· pas ton Rev. Charles Coyle
SChool, 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Wedneaday,
the farmers. It has to say: 'You are still good people. You aren't bad
Sunday School Supt . Morning worshiP 9:30
Franklin Dl cl\ens. pa"tor. Sunday morn ·
and R&lt;'v . Nancy Coyle. Bill White, Sunday
10 a .m. ; Dorcas Women's Fellowship
a .m .; Sunday School 10:30 a.m.: Evening
because of this, and we won't reject you lil this time of need.' ..
lnR
10
il
.m
,
Sunday
l'vt&gt;ninJ!
7:
30
p.m.
Wednesday, ll a...m (McGuire) .
'
School Supt. Sunday SChool 9:30 a.m.,
service, 7:30 p.m.
evt&gt;ni ng 7· :J) p.m.
MornlngWorshlp10:30a.m.; Evangellst\c
CARMEL- Church School 9~ 30 a.m.;
The link between Mennonites a nd the land ,is Ironic because the
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shue, Thursday
ST IVERSV IL LE COM MUN ITY BAP·
meettng 7: 00p.m . Wednesda y, 7:00Pm.
Worship, 10:45 a .m . Second and Fourth
pastor; J~ Sayre, Sunday School Sup!.
church was founded by 16th-century Dutch Anabaptists, most of
TJST CHU RCH . Pastor Roi.&gt;Prl Byers.
Prayer me-eting.
'
Sundays; FellowJhlp dinner with sutton,
Sunday School 9; ~5 a m .: Evening wor·
SundaySchOollOa .m , Worshlpsorv lce 11
' VNrrED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
third Thursday, 6:30p.m. (tllcGulro).
them city-dwellers, said Dwight Stoltzfus, president of Mennonite
ahlp 6: 30p.m , Prayer Mf!eting, 6:30p.m.
a .m .: Sunda y &lt;'Vt'n lng serv lee.7 . JO p m:
OF MEIGS OOUNTY
EAST LETART- Chutch !!&lt;hoot 91.m .
Wednesday.
Mutua
l Aid, an agency that provides insurance and charitable
Wednesday e vcnln~ serv\Cl' 7. 30 p.m
Re•. Wanda .Jolt_.., Dlreclor
: Worship 10 a .m . second and fourth SunTUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
INDEPENDENT
HOLI
NESS
CHURCH
Rantd , . _
days: UMw first Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .
·
grants.
CHRIST. Jody Holland, minister. Deryl
Inc., Pearl St , Middleport. R{"V. 0'[)('\1
•
Dlreclor ot EdueaUon
(Grace) .
Wells, Supt. Mornlflg worship, 8:00a.m .;
The
reputation
of
being
people
who
can
produce
crops
almost
Manl ey, pastor Sunday School 9: 30a.m .:
' HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
LETART FAI:.LS - worship 9 a .m .;
Church School9:00 a .m .
Morning wor~hlp 10: l) a .m .: Eveni ng
anywhere
is
part
of
the
task
force's
plan
to
help
Mennonite
family
cHURCH - Sunday: Worship services
Church SchoollO ti .m (Grace)
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
worship 7:30p. m . Tu('sday, 12: l&gt; p .m . Wo·
9:00a.m.: Church School 10: 15a.m : Bible
MORNING STAR- Wor4Jtlp, 9:45a.m. ·
RENE . ~~~ - Herbert Grate, pastor
farms .
men's Prayer m£1(ltlng wronesday. 7:.ll
Sludy Sunday 7:30p.m. Praye r Group
Church ScbOOI 10: 30 a.m .; Bible StudY.
Frank Riffle, supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.
"Through much or their history, the Mennonites ... have been
p.m
.
Prayer
and PralsC' serv icr&gt;
Wrd"esday at 9:00 a."'.
,T hursday, 7:30p.m. (Rader).
m.; Worship service, 11 ·a.m. and 7 p.m.
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRI,ST
APOS
· MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN - ·
MORSE CHAPEL- Church School 9. 30
Invited
by kings ando queen~ all over Europe to come to their
SUnday. Wednesday, 7 p.m . Prayer meet·
10L1C- VanZandl and Ward Rd . E lder
Ourch school 10' 15 a.m. Morning Wor·
a .m.; Worllllp 11 a .m (Rader).
_
Ina.
countries and try to do sometOJng with so-called waste-lands," said
Jam('S Miller, pasl or . Sunday School ,
RACINE
WESLEYAN - Church
1hlp 11 :15 a .m . Tuesday,lO: OO a.m . Bible
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
lO::.J a .m .; Worshi p SCrvlce, Sunda y, 7: lO
stlijly; Thursday, 7: 30p.m . Bible Study.
SChool, 10 a.m. ; Worthip, U a .m.; UMW
John Hostetter, a Temple'University professor who specializes In the
CHURCH. Rev. Robert Miller, pastor Rop.m.: Blblo Study. Wodn esday, 7:30p.m.
' SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
fourth Monday 7:30p.m .; Meo's Prayer
bert E. Barton, Director of Christian Edu.·
study
of Mennonites and the Amish.
WESLEYAN
HOLINESS,
•.
POMEROY
'l'ERIAN - Worship 1ervlce 9:00 a .m .
Breakfait, Wednelday,' 7 a .m. (Grace).
cation: .Lloyd Wright, assistant . Sunday
HarrisonvillE' Road . David Ferrell, pBs·
.(l!urch schooiiO:OOo .m . Tuoilday,!Oa.m .
SUTI'ON - Churth S.llool. r,30 a .m.;
Church organizations have been otfered 75,00) acres tn
School 9:~ a.tn.: Morntng worship 10: 30
tor ; Cllnlon F a ulk . Sunda y SChool Supt. :
Bible Study: Sundoy, 6 p.m. Junior andSe·
lllornlaa worahlp 10:15 a.m . llratood third
a .m.: ChOir practice, Sunday 6: XI p .m .;
Louisiana. on which Mennonites who have lost their property may be
SundaY' School 9 JO a .m .: morning· wor·
nlior High Youth Groupe.
·
SundayJ; FellqwJhlp dinner with Carmel,
Eventna worship 7: XI p.m . Wednesday
ship,
11
a . m . ;~unday evPnlng serv lce-7:30
I RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Putor,
third Thunday, 6:!0 p.m. (McGuire).
able
to resettle and begin farming again.
Prayer ond Bible Study, 7; !0 p.m .
p.m . Praye-r MeetJng. Wednesday , 7:30 p.
Jpbn E""nl. S.undiY School 10:00 a .m.: ,
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Oliver
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRI$T,
'
'While the number of farmers isn't as great as it once was, the
.
!Jiladay Momlnl Wortbtp 11.00 a .m . Cbll·
SWain SUpt. Sunday: School9·liJ • m ev
Ruuell Sr., minister , Rick Ma· m SYRACUSE
FIRST
CHURCH
OF
GOD.
farmers have always been among the leaders of the
successful
dnn'• Chureb 11 a.m. Sunday Evening
ery wHk
'
· · · ~ Charles
comber, aupt . Sunday School 9:J.'I a .m .:
non -Pe ntecosla l. J oy Clark, past or Wor·
SlrYI~ 7:00p.m. Wed .. 6 p.m. Youna La·
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION ru.v
Worablp l@rvlte 10:-XJ a.nt Bible study.
church," Stoltzfus said.
ship S('fVIce Sunduy 10 a m .: Sunday
4lei~Au~?tary. Wf(tn-.tay, 1 p.m. Fam·
Tom Stau~n. pastor. Sunday khool,9: 30a:
Tui!Sdly.7:!0p.m.
School 11· a .m . Even ing worship Sl'rVlce
"These people have made us what we are. They provided us with
REORGANIZED
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
lb'H1 •~L ~MMUNITY CHURCH N•ar
m.: Evenlnllervlce7: 30p.m. Wed ...day
Wedn~ ay prayer mcetlng7:00
7:00p.m
·
pr,yer mtetlna 7: :11 p.m.
colleges and a bOard of missions, wlth the money to build our
CHRIST OF LATI'ER DA\' SAINTS. Portpm .
LOlli IIOHom. Edltl Horti!.utor . Sunday
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
land -Ractmt Road Wtltlam Roush. pastor.
churches,
all the things that made us a community. It violates our
SCbool 1: 30 a.m.: Won ~- 10. !0 a .m .:
'c HRIST, Duane Warct.n , mlnllter. Bible
MT
HERMON
UNITED
BRETHREN
L.tnda Evant, church tchool director.
IN CHRIST CHURC H, Locatl!d tn Texas
sense of caring to see them suffer."
Church school 9: .II a .m .; Mornlq wonlp
~;:e'~"A.r';~~i.~ ~ST clan 9:30a.m.: Mornlnc Wor•hiP 10:30 a .
Community off Ct. Rt. 82 Rev . Robert
10: 30 a.m.; Wednesday evHIRI prayer
"" RCD H ~-er Aoh and Plum Rolph
m .: Eventnr Worohtp 6: 30 P•m• Wedneo Sanders, pastor. Don Wlll,layleflder. Sun·
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daY Bible Study 6:30 p~ m.
. tervlefl, 7: t!lt,p.m.
Cundtll, p,ootot:. SUndoy SCttoot IO.OOa.m.,
NEW STtVERSVIlLE COMMUNITY
Clay School 9: 30a.m.; Morning , Worship
BE'JHLEHEM BAPTIST. RfY. Earl
Montllll Wonblp, 11:00 a.m.; W...,_y
CHURCH Sund y S.h t
l 9 "
10: 45 a .m.; Evening preaching servtc.- seSlluler,
putor.
Worahtp
oervtce.
9:!0a.m.
•
• '!"let"
oo aerv
cet, a.m.:
:- a .
rond and fourth Sunday at 7: lJ p,m .:
.a hd Saturday Ewnlnl' Servlcn at 7·•
· p · • m .;
Worship
10:.»
SQnday ~hoot 10:30 a.m. Blblo Study and

K&amp;C JEWELERS
7-~- ~.

U

,. ~l:i.'!!£ SETTLEME~TCH URC~.

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Orioles 7,Indlans 1
Roolde Ken Dixon pitched a
three-hitter for his first majorleague victory. The 24-year-old
right -bander ailowed one hit over
the first eight Innings and lost his
shutout bid in the ninth. The Orioles
scored an unearned run without a hit
in the fourth inning and erupted for
six runs against Jose Roman and
Mike Jeffcoat in the sixth as Eddie
Murray, Fred Lynn and Rick
Dempsey ail homered. Murray and
Dempsey hit two-run shots.
Yankefs 5, Red Sox I
Phil Niekro, New York's46-year·
old knucklel)alier, scattered five
singles and struck out nine in 7 2-3
Innings as the Yankees defeated
Boston for the first time in six
meetings this seasort.
Twins 5, Athletics 4
Kirby Puckett greet~ newly
acquired Oakland reliever Tom
Tellmann wlth a game-winning
single with one out In the bottom of
the ninth Inning. Greg Gagne drew a
leadotf walk from Keith Atherton
andd was forced at second on Tim
Teufel'sattemptedsacrlflce. Randy
Bush balled. for Tim Laudner and
Tim Conroy relieved Atherton,
bringing on Dave Engle to bat for
Bush.
An~&lt;!ls 3, Mariners 0 1
Mike Witt, who pitched a perfect
game on the final day ot the 1984
season, pitched a three-hitter for his
first 1985.victory and Bobby Grieb
·-l'lomeo-ect as CaWornia handed
Seattle its fifth consecutive setback
andninthlnthelastlOgamesaftera
6-0 start. W_l!t allowed just five
basenmners, walking two and
striking out five.

Mennonites helping fanners

,,
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:RACINE PLANING MILL , RALL'S

""IDor

I

RIALTOll

' 992-3325

' "'

2.Z4-~8

.~ .

/

216 S. Second
Pomeroy

"""'"

lle\'elatlorl

Tt1tre haPJ&gt;Cns to bee good place to ponder end to judge. one that's be-en

214 E. Main
992·5130

[B

2-4.36 40

thln!jll g~ ~nt:r In Qti"'cf ..,.•ys, the ":pottklon ole ve.yday !lYing (wll,h the bolls ani:l
the diShes ond colds In winter end pc&gt;~~~Jn Ivy '" summer ) cetche1 up. Md so
people noted • loc::~ poinl where th-ey can -igh on e thing ~~"* enothe1 end

INSURANCE
SERVICES

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Wekomes

._

They'reyoung, they're 1n low,lMf.fac:eeac:h other across the table munchin~
hamburg!~ and ~9 c:okeJ They vt rp SUI T$ In their eyes and they're in 1!1
cloud thlt ~1 Of! like a countty lane In l~ac time Ju~t now they don 1 n ~
5l)thing or ~nybody else
It's beoutlful while It lasts, but It doesn't last, 111 leut notlhts w~ . In ~e w~.

Reiber and Gina Nance handled
the Southern pitching chores with
Reiber sutferlng the loss. They
fanned four and walked 14.
Meigs Is oft until Monday when
they travel to Nelsonville-York.

LaSalle
Restaurant

Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
'-""

LILA~

/

The Daily Sentinel-Page 6

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Page-6-The Oaily Sentinel

.----Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Briefs:--~·

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Considered for Qcademy si~e
COLUMBUS iAPl- Columbus lsoneofl25sltesin30states being
considered as the new home or the U.S. Justice Department's
National Academy or Corrections.
"What we want Is a national professional home for the field of
corrections," said Joseph R. Palmer, .president of the academy.
"We're the counterpart of the FBI Academy, only for the field of
corrections." .
A decision on any move Is expected bY. the en&lt;t of rhe yo&gt;ar.
The academy was established. four y{ars ago at the University of
Colorado in Boulder to Improve tr~inlng for p!WJn and jail'
·
· .
correctional of!icers.

Ordi11ance concerns judges
CJiiLLICOTHE (AP) - Some judges In Ross County have
expressed reservations about their ability toroforce a city ordinance
requiring prisoners to reimburse the city the cost of tllelr stays In the
city jail.
"The purpose of City Council's legislation Is laudable.. If we can
reduce the expense of convicted criminals, that's good," said
Common Pleas Judge Nicholas Holmes. "But the problem is that It's
going to be very difficult ·to collect." .
City Council passed an ordinance March 25 requiring prisoners
capable of paying-to reimburse the city the cost of their stay in j&lt;1il. It
only wiD affect people convicted of clty ordinances, not state statutes.
Municipal Judge DaVId Cutright said some will pay voluntarUy
and somo&gt; will nol. He said the courts can't add jail time for prisoners
who don't pay.
qty Law Director James Barrington must sue non-payers.

Ohioan wins Pulitzer
MANSFIELD (AP) - The winner of the 1!Bi Pulitzer Prtze for
drama Ia a Mansfield native who got his first taste of theater in the
Qld Children's Theater productions here.
James La.plne, 35, earned the honor Wednesday for the book
version of "Sunday In the Park with George," a muslcallruipired by
Georges Seurat's painting, "Sunday AftertlOQII on the Island of La
Grande Jatte."
Lapine was horn In Mans!leld In 1949 and attended Woodland
Elementary School before moving with his parents to Stamford,
Co1111'.. at the age of 11.
"To be honest, I don't enjoy doing Interviews," he told the News
Journal in September 1984. "I'm a private person. I have no &lt;leslreto
be a personality."

StQte won't pay temporary help
COLUMBUS (AP)- The state has decided not to help .pay for up
to 25 temporary workers to help the federal Fal'!llers Home
Administration process spring loan application, GOv. Richard
Celeste's office says.
Celeste aide Edward Hopkins said the state decided It was not
responsible for supplementing the federal agency, which makes
• loans to farmers who cannot arrange financing from conunercial
' lenders.
.·'
·
·
It inaJ'ks the third straight yefll' that state and fedenil offiCials·
have not ~:!E'en. abll: to agree Ol! .how the·state can help !lie FrnHA
process the annual spring crush ofoperatlng loan applications lrom
Ohio farmers.
·
·
''Some exist in~ program or !'Orne other program elsewher:e woul!l
have. suffered;" Hopkins said of the decision not to provide state.

Friday. April 26, 1985

'

Couple testifies in Alton Coleman trial
CINCINNATI tAP~- Two Dayton couples say lhey were bound, ·
beaten and robbed by Deb~a Brown
andamananswerlngthedlscrlptlon
of Alton Coleman, her ro-defendant
on murder charges for the beating
death of ·a suburban Norwood
·
. woman, ·
The, Rev. ·MU!ard and Kathryn
Cay, and Dallas and Flossie Davis
test ified Thursday that Coleman did
most of the talking during the
robberies which allegedly occurred hours apart last July 11.
Th&lt;' couples joined a third pair,
FrankA.andDorothyDuveodackof
Toledo, In an attempt to show a
pattern In the actlvltles of Coleman
and Ms. Brown last summer.
Coleman, 29, and Ms. Brown, 22,
both of Waukegan, Ill., are being
tried separately andslmultanrously
on charges which could bring the
death penalty for· the aggravated
murder of Marlene Walters, 44, and
the attempted aggravated murder
of her husband, Harry, 45.
Prosecutors have claimed the
Incident was part of an alleged
six-state crime spree / across the
Midwest last summer by Coleman
and Ms. Brown.
Mrs. Davis said Coleman and Ms.
Brown came to her home to buy

Arsenic traces found
in paramedics' tea

...

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ATilENS (AP) -One of the men who laid the foundation for the
War on PlNerty In the mid-1960s said Thursday that the Reagan
·administration has waged a five-year war against the poor.
"Thirtren miUion Americans got out of poverty since the 19ti0s.
Ten million have fallen Into poverty since Ronald Reagan," said R.
Sargent Shriver, the first director of the Office of Economic
Opportunity under President Lyndon Johnson.
Shriver, a former Democratic vice presidential candidate, made
his remarks here at a conference' examining 3l years of social
programs in the Appalachian region of southern Ohio.
'

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Hospital move undeniJay
CINCINNATI (AP) - Good Samaritan Ha;pltal Is moVIng next
door Into Us new building today and has mobiUzed Ohio National
Guardsmen, rescue squad members and student nurses to help
move surgery patients and mothers with newborn childrro.
The transfer Involves moving the patients from the old hospital
along corridors that lead to the new 16-story building next door,
hoSpital spokeswoman Shawnee Lee Culbertson said. The patients
will not have to be rrioved outside duiing the transfer.
Some parts of the hosiJJIIrl'51llll-bulldlng are being torn down. The
portions that wiU be lett standing are being renovated. ·
'
The new buUdlngwlll keep the private, non-protlthoSpltal'spatlent
capacity at 792 beds. Ms. Culbertson said the new building and
renovation of the old structure cost SlOt rnllllOn.

Innocent pleas entered
CHILUCO'I'HEI(AP~

-A city school custodian and an employo&gt;e
for the city bus . system have pleaded Innocent to charges of
contributing to the delinquency of minors.
Sherltfs deputies · said · they nnade complaints ag&lt;~lnst Gordon
Bowman, 48, a custodian at ChUUcothe High School, and Jerry
Lawhorn, 46, a CI'I'W leader for the city bus system. Deputies said
they answered an anonymous tip and found the two men along with
six girls, aged 12 to 15 years, at a fishing camp.

System down

.

S2QOO

. 2S S.R. HEAVY BREED CHICKS+ SO# ' .
PURINA CHICK STARTER MED.
SO S.R. HEAVY BREED CHICKS + SO# .
$3200
PURINA CHICK STARTER MED.
lOp S.R. HEAVY BREED CHICKS + SO#
PURINA CHICK STARTER MED.

ssooo

We will fill only or~ers pieced with us prior to ·
April 27. All chicks will be Heavy Breed Straight
Run.
.
ICt~lebrate Chick Days Wednesday. May 1, 1985

breaksfromcollege,returnedtothe
job part-time last surruner after a
neuto!;urgery residency at Ohio
State University Hos.pltals while
awaiting medical licenses from
Illlnols and Ohio.
Swango has not been accused of
any wrongdoing tn· Ohio, bill
authoritlestheresaldln.Januarytho&gt;
Quincy . charges had prompted ·
reopening of an lnvestlgatlon Into a
nurse's allegation that Swango
tampered with a patient's lntravenous feeding tube. The patient
allegedly suffered a seizure af!erward but recovered.
Because of the Quincy charges.
Dllnols officials suspended Swango's license In February and havo&gt;
threatroed J o revoke it. Ohio has
begun proceedings . to ~uspend his

'-:,.-::;::::::;::::;:~

992-2164
.
"P.LEASE BRING YOUR OWN BOX"

. ·MODERN SUPPLY ·

.399 W. MAIN
.
POMEROY, OHIO
.
PH.992·2164
.
The Store With "All Ki11ds of Stuff" - For Pets, Stables,
Large &amp; Small Animals, Lawns and Gardens

-··

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomaroy, OH ..
Phone 992·29711
SPRING &amp; SUMMER HOURS

~THE

.
GRAVELY
SYSTEM

'

HILLTOP GROCERY &amp; SERVICE
Phone: Day-992-3947 ·

Nlght-992-3989 ·
'

The. Aytomobilt Ch• of Southeastern Ohio
360 Secilntl St., GoHIJ*il, Ohio

'

"
I

S7,995

"SHARP"

WITH TOPPER

Auto.. P,.M/FM, extra clean, extra . nica,

36,000

•

~·

1979 v,w: RABBIT
FRONT WHEEL DRIVE

With Midwell grain bed. Good ~I rea. good body.

Auto. Transml..ion. One owner. ·Low Miles

$1 199 5

GOOD PRICE

1984 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY ~ ••••••••••••!!v!t:uJIP.tl.S8, 195.00
19.83 FORD LTD WAGON ••••••• 1.t,fA9.1KUI•••••••••••• s7 ,395.00 .
1982 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX LJ ..................:•••• s7.,595.00
1981 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX .J:I.CJr.~ ••••••••• ~••••••••• ss,S95.00
1980 CHEVROLET IMPAU 4 DllfiiU.WP••••••••••• ~.S3,795.00
1979 BUICK REGAL 2 Dl •• ;•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••s3,195.00

SMIT H-NELSON
MOTORS . INC.

500 E. MAIN

~J~L'

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Carmel .notes -

Community calendar / area happenings

GALLIPOLIS - The Grande
:Squares will hold a western style
square dance Saturday at St. Peters
EpisCopal Church, 541 Second Ave. ,
Gallipolis, 8 to 11 p.m. Homer
Magnet wlll be the caller.

POMEROY Twin City
SUNDAY
ShrlnetteS will mret at 7:30 p.m . MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Mason ·
Friday at the Three-In-One girls Softball Association meets
Sunday, 2 p.m. at Mlddleport.Park.
Restaurant.
'
. COLUMBIA - The Columbia
DEXTER-FUrnsonalcoholand
Chapel Christian Church Is ln drug abuse will be shown Sunday, ·7
revival through Friday, 7:30 e11ch
p.m. at Old Dexter Church. .
evening. Bob Purtell Is the speake~.
Eugene Underwood, pastor, invites
POMEORY - ~vlval services
are underway at Whites Chapel and
the public to attend.
will continue through Sunday, 7p.m.
POMEORY'- Spring Carnlval2 each evenmg. The Rev. Amos Tillis
Is the evangelist: The .public is
to 6 P·fll· Friday at the Bradbury
Invited to attend.
School. There wiU ~ giffi'l~ a
country store, cakewalk, tlshpond,
POMEROY -TheGrubbFamlly
baZaar tables with food and beverages and other attractions; public
Singers will present a program at
the Heath United Methodist Church
Invited.
Sunday at 7:15 .p.m.1'he .public Is
SATURDAY
· Invited to attend.
LAuREL CLIFF- The Templeatres gospel grouptromAShland,
POMEORY - A field serv~
·Ky., wW be performing Saturday orientation program wiD be held at
evening, 7:30 p.m., at the Laurel
the American Legion Hall In
CUff Free Methodist Church. EvePomeroy Sunday at 1 p.m.
'
.
ryone Is welcome.
POMEROY - Meigs County
POMEROY -IzaakWaltonClub Museum, BuiternutAve.,Pomeroy,
hold a rreeplantlngworksesslon
will beoper\from2 to4 p.m. Sunday. :
Saturda)' at 1 p.m.; all members
needt:d to help.

- ...,

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HARTFORD- A hymn sing will
be held at 7:llp.m. Saturday at the
Church of Christ In Christian Union
at Hartford, W.Va., with Sudden
Life Five as guest singers.

.

lliYit Hu r. Uti.

Man's

·sest

·fri--·· ?•

Genealogical society meeting held

ROYAL OAK- An open d&lt;10ce wUI
be held Friday, 8 to 11 p.m. at Royal
Oak Park sponsored bY, Belles and
[ieaus. Dale Eddy, Marietta, will be
calling.

INTERNATIONAl 1700 LOADSTAR

clubs to exhibit pressed flower
pictures under glass. Sheila Taylor
assisted In placing ribbons and Jane
Thompson was show photographer,
while Betty Dean and Pat Holter
were the chairmen.
Recognized were Connie Allen,
state president; Janet Bolin. Rutland, first vice president; and Mrs.·
Bates. Reynoldsburg, second vice
president. VIrginia Covert presided
at the mo&gt;etlng, and Pat Holter.,
chairman of the nominating commltto&gt;e. reported with the . recommendation of LucUie Macomber of
Vinton County for reglqnal director.
She will take office ln the tau.
James Caudwell showed slides
and gave a commentary on tours of
·European Gardens and Beauly
SPQts.
Meigs Clubs represented were
Wildwood, Rutland. Star. Fern·
wood, Windin!1 TraU, Rutland
Friendly Gardeners, Chester, and
the Shade Valley Council of Floral
Arts.

Literary· club reiliews Bess ·t iu#uin·

$4,995

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MI~ES

after first -liirthday; a recent
tuberculin skin test , within one year
before entering school. The child's
birth certificate also must be
provided.
All parents expectlnsr to haVP
cl1Udrro enrolled for this fall as
klndergarten or new eri!:ollee students In the first grade are to follow
the schedule.
Questions concerning registralion may be directed to the
prlnclpars office of the respective
school: Harrisonville, Greg
McCall, 742·3000; Middleport, Don
Hanning, 992-3387; Pomeroy, Robert Morris, 992-mO; Rutland
Elementary. Greg McCall, 7422666; Salem Center, Charles Holllday , 142-3223; Salisbury Elementary, John Lisle, 992-3404,

·cues,

FRIDAY
POMEROY -MasonlcLodgel64
will have Inspection Friday, 7:30
p.m. Work ln the Fellowcraft
degree. Master Masons Invited to
attend.

MON.-FRI. 9 TO 5
SAT. 9 TO 1

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

by a cc:mputer hardware problem
that was quickly corrected.

White with Burgandy interior, V-6 engine,
auto .• AM/ FM stereo, tilt, cruise.

····-

(Ntw listing)

Ray Sandusky, facility manager
for AmTote, the l9ttery'scomputer ·
qlerator, said lottery sales agents'
terJn!na1s were affected Thunday

1980 FORD '12 TON

1983 BUICK CENTURY 4 DR. ·

Thrre of the top awards given In Granted to Live;" Betty Dean, first.
"And Peace, and a Sport of Beauly
the spring flower show ;"Our Lovely
Land" at the Region 11, Ohio to Give; '' Sheila Curtis, first, Belly
Association of Garden Clubs, mret- Dean, second. "Our Lovely Land So
lng held at the Hocking Motor PrQud and Fro&gt;e;" and Pat. Holter,
Lodge, NelsonvU!e, over the wre- second, Jane Thompson, third, and
kend were won by Meigs Counly Betiy Dean. fourth, "For AU Who
garden
club members.
Care to Look and See."
row, Donnie Becker, Sean Jeffers, John Swanson,
ATrEND INSTD'UTE -These Meigs IUgh SchOol
Mace!
Barton
won
the
swo&gt;epJuniors placing In the educational
Danyon Magers, Denny Welsh, Cheryl Roush; third
studentsaltendedlhe1885Southe!ISemOhloReglonal
stakes
award,
Betty
Dean,
the
"best
division
were Angle Chapman,
row, Huey Eason, Tamrn1 EbUn, Susan Jones, Darcl ·
Teenqge llllliltute for the Prevention of Alcohol and
first;
Donia
Crane. secnd: BUiy
of
Show"
ln
artistic
arrangments,
Hysell, Shannon Slavin, and Bev Hauff, and back low,
other Drug Abuse held over the weekead at Camp
Crane.
third
,
Alban
Curtis. Amber
and
Sheila
Curtis,
the
creativity
Paul Dalley, Jesse Howard, Sieve MUS8er, Chuck
. AldtanearLogan.Plcturedwlththelradylsor,Jeamle
Thompson,
fourth,in
thelltterclass;
for
design
.
award
Knopp, Sieve Tracy, Kevin Tanner, and Kevin
Taylor, the group consl9ted of, left to rtgbt, froM,
and
Jo
Ellen
Crane.
second In the
Mrs.
Dean
arrangements
was
In
Wendy Swann, Judi Mees, Mayrene 'Thomas; second
MeadoWSthe class, "To Look Out and Enjoy conserv a lion class.
In the horticultu re division, Pat
the Bright Blue Sky," a mOdern
Holter
took a first and a third In
design fro&gt;e standing In a frame,
daffodils;
Mace! Barton took f(\!r ·
while Mrs. Curtis won the creativity
award for an assemblage depleting thirds, and two fourths; Alice
The three day, live-In experience a favorite place, in the "Our Lovely Thompson took a first and a second,
Meigs .High School rnffilbers of drinking and drug problems, suithe Teenage Institute for the cide, the preventable death, self- provides basic factual Information.
Jane Thompson took a second, and
Land So Proud and Free."
Prevention of Alcohol and other acceptance, assertive cornmunJca·- prevention strategies, and alternaDottle Bates, second OAGC vice Betty Dean il fourth. In tulips Mace!
tlon, children of alcoholics, altered tives to alcohol and drugs, coping
Drug. Abuse and their advisors,
president, judgro the show which Barton took two firsts and a second.
Jeannie and Fenton Taylor, spent states of consciousness and dance with feelings, decision making,
Included 56 exhibitors from Athens, and Jane Thompson took a second
the weekend at the Southeastern aerobics. A feature of th!l evening stress management and building
GaUla, Meigs, Vinton, and Washing- and a third.
Winning ribbons for other spring
Ohio Regional Teenage Institute following the dinner was a talent self-esteem techniques.
ton Counties. The total included 15
The Meigs students are particishow.
held at Camp Akita near Logan.
adult exhibitors and · sl1c junior blooming flowers were Jane
The Sunday program began with pating· In various outreach pro- exhibitors from Meigs County.
Thompson, a second, and Mace!
The three day program opetied
Friday night with gei-acqualnted 7: 30 a.m. vespers, and other grams and community activities on
Meigs County exhibitor's who won Barton, third and fourth.
Mace! Barton won ribbons In
activities, skits by a psycho-social activities of the day Included a panel • alcohol. Workshops have been held
ribbons In the various classes were
at
the
Salem
Center.
Harrisonville,
discussion
on
alcoholism
and
prevclasSE'S
for shrubs, fruil trees, and
troupe. a conunrotary on the
Jane Thompson. third In "It Litts
Rutland,
Salisbury
and
Bradbury
.
en
lion
techniques,
meaning of the Teen ll!,stltute, and a
My Spirit on Levels High"' Betty . ornamental trees; wt).lle Allee
The Teenage . Institute .is a Schools, the students were reeently
dance. On Sat!lrday there, were
Pean. Janet Bolin; Shella Clirtlsand Thompson took a second pla~e for
groups ori drugs apd alcohol and prevenUon, edilc&lt;!tion and, training a(theMlddlep6rt PTO,frld&lt;!Y~Ight ­ PatHolter,'nrst through fourth·, "To · ferns: Pat Holler, ·first, Pauline
fl!-mlly dl!l(!ase lnfoimatlon, a pres- program directed. toward high l hey .pal'tlclpated Jn an alcohol· · Look Out and Enj«iy the Btlght Bille Atkins, second. and Thelma
entation on Adolescent Sexuality by school students·· who represent pfe\'entlon ,program at Pagetown,
Sky; " Betty Dean, first, Janet third, for· succulrots, imd· Binda
. Ann To&gt;noglta .and Doug Althause, capable andstrlvlngyouthoftoday. and on Sunday will be at the Old
Thompson, four1h , "For After a Diehl. a second, and Thelma CUes, a
·and workshops on friends with It Is not a rehabUlaiion or treatinent Dexter &lt;;~~urcli lor some outreach
Week of Clouds and Rain; " Jane third. In a mlscellailrous class.
work. ·
-.' · •
progr~ .
. '
.Thomp5on,
first, "And .io H'!'ar ihe Paulino&gt; Atkins a blue and two reds
.
.
Birds Sing and Call to Their Mates.": for · 'A!r,tc~n· vloiets, . w~itg Jane ·
. Ada Holter, second, "!Am·Flijed Thompgon rook a nrst ; alld Allee ·
with Hope and Joy Awake; " Betty Thompson, a third lnotherbiOOmlng
Dean, third. and Melanie Stethem, houseplants.
Fernwood Club was oneofseveral
Independence, Mo. which had been '"give 'em hell" temper as well as a fourth, "For a New Day Has Bero
The book, . "Dear Bess.. , a
compilation or letters from Harry buUt by her grandfather, George T. native charm, a devoted husband,
Truman to his wife, Bess, from 1910 Gates, shortly afterthe Clvll War.
proteCtive father, a common man
Mrs. Fultz noted that Truman with coriunon words. a man w.ho
to 1959, edited by Robert H. Ferrell,
Walter Dunn of Puler Tutor. Con"ention was announced for May
was reviewed by Mrs. Bernard wrote to his wife almost dally shared his doubts and fears with the
Dayton, gave a detailed program 17 and 18 at the Sheraton Plaza In
Fultz at the Wednesday mretlng of beglnl'llng with their early courtship woman he loved .
the Middleport Literary Club held at when he was a farmer near
Tho&gt; .club collect opened the on computers when the Meigs Columbus and several members of
Grandview,
through
·
his
army
the home of Mrs. Marvin Wilson.
mo&gt;etlng. Mrs. Wallace asked the County Genealogical Society met the local group plan to attend. First
Mrs. Dwight Wallace, president, experience In World War l, his years proitram committee to meet the Sunday a r the Meigs County FamUles of Ohio awards wUI be
presented to Michael Parker, Le· Introduced the reviewer who des- In Missouri politics, his term In the first wo&gt;ek ln Ju~. On that Museum.
land
Parker and Robert AShley.
Karen
Werry,
president
.
was
In
cribed theTrumans as havlngoneof U.S. Senate and his presidency. She commlttre are Mrs. Wallace, Mrs.
The
door prize was won by Neal
the most durable and romantic described Bess as a reluctant Richard Owen, Mrs. Wilson Carpen- charge of the meetJng. Several . Marks. Refreshments were promarriages of the century. Truman president's wile and spent as mu~h ter and Mrs. Forest Bachtel. F,orroll more cemetery records were com- vided by Florence Smith. The next
plet~ during the past month
wrote more than l.lro letters to his time as possible away from Wa- call members gave remembrances Including the Gllmbre and Harris ·meeting at 2 p.m. on May 19. ·
wife, and 0ver 500 are included in the shington with her mother ln. of Harry Truman. The ha;to&gt;ss·
cemeteries.
served light refreshments. Mrs.
the book. It was noted that Bess ke.pt Independence.
The Ohio Genealogical Societv
Concluding her review Mrs. Fultz Joan Sorden was a guest.
most of his letters in the old house ln
manwltha

Teen Institute includes Meigs students

Call In Your
.-Chlek Or4er
rn~··•u•

Fumes escape
from plant
CINCINNATI (AP) -Acid fumes
released from a smokestack at the
NW 1nc. uranium plant near
suburban Fernald caused no InjurIes or damages, ·according tot
spokesman Pete Kelley.
Kelley said nitrous nltlcoxldewas
released for between five and seven
minutes Thursday afternoon from
the metal dissolving deparlmrot of
the Feed Materials Production
Center. He said workmen were
repairing the cooling system when a
valve failed. The machinery has
now been clo~ down for complete
repairs.
·
Kelley said the release was not
c&lt;iilsidered reportable to regul(\ting
agrocles. Two workers left urino&gt;
specimens tor tests as a .precaution.

Harrisonville, Salem Center and
Rutland areas are to register al
Rutland.
Middleport Elementary - FrtcJay,. May 3, 8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. 12
noon to 2:30p.m. Kindergarten age
students from the Bradbury and
Middleport areas are to register at
Middleport.
Any child whose birthday taUs on
or before Sept. 30, l!Bi. may be
registered for kindergarten this
fall. Any child whose sixth birthday
falls on or before Sept. :l), l!Bimay
be registered for first grade for this
fall .
Parents registering children are
toprovldearecordoftmmunlzatlon
Including fo11r DPI'; 3pollo Sabin; 1
measles (Rubeola). 1 Rubella
(German Measles; I mumps, all ·

Garden show winners announced

at

MEMIER'S
EMERGENCY
SERVICE

CLEVELAND (AP) - A lechnl·
cal .problem with the Ohio Lottery!
computer system caused abwthalt
ol the lottery tennlnals througlmut
the state to shut down for a'bout one
tmur.

A schedule for registration of
Meigs Local School District kindergarten and first grad enrollees has
been announced by Meigs Local
Supt. Dan E . Morris.
Parents who wish to ·register
. their chlldrro for kindergarten or
as new enrollees In the first grade,
those who did not attend kindergarten In Meigs Local, may
register as follows:
Pomeroy Elementary - Wednesday, May 1. 9 a .m. to 12:30 a.m..
and 12 noon to 4 p.m. Kindergarten
age students from the Pomeroy and
Salisbury areas· are to reglst.e r at
Pomeroy.
Rutland Elementary - Thurs·
day, May 2, 8:30 a ,m. to 11:30 a.m.
and 12 noon to 2:30 p.m. Kinder·
garten age students from the

FOR BIG FEED
DEALS·
.
AN.D LITTLE CHEEPERS

.

.Reagan fighting poor- Shriver

Me.igs kindergarten registration planned-

.CHICK ·DAYS '85

•. , Ant and. rodent. poisons, medlc.al .~llc~e:n~se~t~he~re~·~·_,..~j.__ _:_,_ _~~~~=~~~~~~~~~=~~~~::::~
--syringes and otheiltetnl! seized
r
Swango's. were iniroduced'·as eV!- .
· denC11ThurSday. Thetrallcontinues
today.
·
. .
·
· In all, nearly 5Q lte~ were
iden!III~ by Quiii~Y Pollce'Detec- .
money: · . :· . , _
·~ . . .. ,
tlve.
l3WY ·Meyer &amp;$ havjng been
- · Earlier . this .yi&gt;ar.; ·'Celes'te · offered the use of state clerical ·
·
·round
at Swango's home on Oct. 26,
· employees to help the FrnHA, but state officials said the
after
his
arrest.
.
supplemental employees were to be .used to free employees In the
If convicted, Swango would face litFmHA state office. The FmHA wanted tlie state workers to work
up to seven years Imprisonment on
directly In county offices.
each of seven counts. He has denied
"We needed the assistance in the field offices," said FmHA
the charges. •
Farmer Program Chief Veldon Hall. He said It would take too long to
Swango, who had worked on the
train state workers for jobs in the main state FmHA office.
county a·mbulance crew as a
paramedic during summers and
1

'

INVITES YOU TO.

terrific deals on
• Purina Poultry Feeds
• Chicks
• Purina Health Products
• Chick raising equipment

Friday.April26, 1985
Page- 7

MODERN SUPPLY

I

QUINCY, Ill. (AP)- Traces of
arsenic were found In tea drunk by
six paramedics who worked with
Dr. Michael Swango, a state
chemist has testified at the doctor's
trial.
Prosecutors charge that Swango,
30,splkedhlsco-workers'drinksand
snacks with wison. He Is charged
with aggravated battery In the
alleged · poisonings of · the six last
September and October.
Ausrlne Valaltis, a chemist from.
the Illinois Department of Public
Health, . testified that tests she
conducted revealed the presence of
arsenic In varying degrees In the
paramecllcs' drinks.
She said ant killer !!Onflscated
from Swango's home contained
.arsen)c.

.BY The Bend

tesilfled that Coleman and Ms. was found unharmed, locked In his
Brown robbed them last July 7 but car trunk In Dayton.
They alsO face another murder
WE're l~t unhurt.
trial
In Cincinnati this summer for
Coleman and · Ms. Brown have •
the
death
of a 15-year-old girl; and
been convicted of federal kidnapare
charged
with mur&lt;;ler In Toledo
ping charges for abducting a
Kentucky college professor who and Lake County, Ind.
, _ _...:.,._....;_ _ _ _ _ _ ___;,_ _ _;,..__ _ _ _ _....,

some clothes hanging in the garage
whenshewasbeatenandrobbed.
The Davises said they were bound
with electrical wire and belts, had
their mouths stuffed with tissue
paperandplllowcasespuloverthelr
heads.
"They took my televls'.on," said
Mrs. Davis. "Coleman took Sl50 off
of me ... out of my billfold."
Later that clay, Coleman and Ms.
Brown allegedly showed up at the
Gays' home.
The ll).year-old Dayton minister
said Coleman and Ms. Brown used
the names Paul and Diane Fisher
and that he rented them a room for
$25 a week. Gay said he told the couple he had
learned they were w01nted. He said
Ms. Brown pulled a small revolver
and pointed It at Mrs. Gay, 74.
The minister said thllt minutes
later, he and his wife were tied up
and dragged to a bathroom were
Coleman threatened him with a tire
irOn.
"He started to . hit us with a
crowbar but he changed his•mind.
He said, 'l'mnotgoiQgtoklllyou. We
don't generally leave them alive,' "
Gaysald.
.
The Gays said their car was
stolen. .
,
The Duvendacks, in ,their 70s, .

The' Daily Sentinel

~

-

da::~t~~;~~~~~:::~~!~~~~
and family at Mansfield, Ohio.
Therewere47 present for Sunday
School on Aprll14.
Mrs. Laura Byers of Tenners
Run and Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
VanMeter and family of VIrginia
Beach visited with Betty VanMeter

~:LINGHAM _A revival will

beheldattheBurllnghamCommunlty Church. Friday, Saturday and
Sunday, with Rev. Elmo Adams of
Galllon as speaker. SJnaers
., for the
Religion Singers, Saved and the
services
The Old
;rime
Beulah wUllnclude
Land Singers.
Services
begin 7 p.m. nightly.

J, MITSUBISHI

Complete line of vegetable &amp;beddin&amp; plants, hanain&amp; baskets,
potted plants- bloomina&amp;foli· .
aae. shrubbery, rose bushes,
azaleas &amp; Rhododendrons
OPEN DAILY 9 to 5·
SUNDAY 1 to 5

D J 15
TRA• DI.NG
POST .
992·7301

''
r~afternoon.
an~d~E~u~nl;e~B;r;ln~k;er~o;n~W=ed~n;e;sd~a;J~==~P~H~.9~92~-~57~7~6~==~~~~~~3~r~~~~~~~;;t

PRI~ATE PROPERTY WEEK

REAcr liSIIIgnments
MIDDLEPORT - All members
of the Meigs County REACf team,
volunteer.hel(iersand law enforcers
Will meet at Diamond St., and North
Second st.; In Middleport,Just belo..i
the Sears Store, at 1p.m. Saturday to
receive assignments for Saturday's
!}-K Run · being staged py the
MlddleportChambero!Commerce.

APRIL 28 THRU.MAY 4
REALTORS® - MEMBERS OF THE
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS
WANT YOU 10 KNOW MORE'ABOUT FINDING
A HOME OF YOUR OWN.

Rummage sale

WATCH FOR AN INFORMATIVE TELEVISION
SPECIAL ON WSAZ TV ON HOME BUYING

MIDDELPORT - Heath United
Methodist Church In Middleport wUI
holdarummagesaleMay3-4from9
a.m. to 3 p.m. each day.

SAT., APRIL 27, 1985 Al7:30 P.M.

~other. daupter banquet

"THE .DREAM OF .HOME OWNERSHIP"
Realize it with the help of a REALTQR.®

ALFRED - A mother-daughter
banquet, sponsored and prepared
by the Alfred Youth Group, will be
held Saturday, May 4 at the Alfred
United Methodist Church. Serving
of the chlckro-rioodle dinner will
begin at 6:30p.m. DJnnerprtceswUl
be $3.50 for adults; $1 for childrro
under siX; and $1.7'5 for sf11derlts.
For more lnlorn'latlon call Rutll
Brooks ill 91!1).4152 or MarUyn
Robinson at 985-3829.
.

Hubbard's Greenhouse
MOW OPEN FOR
SPRINt SEASON

Q

· AMitsubish i tractor may just be
your best friend . It'S easy to awn.
Runs cheap . Needs little maintenance. Doesn't mind the weather.
Never gets tired . Never argues
with you. Never runs away frQm
home . It just stays there ready to
serve when you need it. Isn 't that
the type of lriend you need?
Mitsubishi tractors . 15 to 30 hp. 2
&amp; 4 wheel drive . Choose a friend
now .

'

[B
REALTOR"
I

Your Loe.al Realto-, . Are:
TEAFORD
CLELAND
REALTOR
POMEROY. OH.

REALTOR
POMERQY, OH .

·'·

'-·

�•

Friday. April 26. 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Page 8- The Daily Sentinel

Meigs County property transfers.••
J . B. O'Brien . Roberta C.
O'Brien, Don Mills, Patl1cla Mills
• to RDbln Earl Slater, Pa!'CE,'ls, Sec.
· 1:. Correction Deed, Salem .
Don Mills a ka Donald Mills.
Patl1cla Mills to John Partton.
one-half Interest In mine rals.

Theodore C. Fisher, Pt. Lot 48, Lot
:nJ, Pomeroy VIllage.
John R. Argabrite to Mary Jo
Argabrite, Allldavlt, Olive.
Teny A. Willis, Jeannie Willis to
Jay Hall Jr., Bernard V. Fultz,
Parcels, Salisbury.

Rutland.
·
Ronald K. Browning, BUJy Joe
Browning , Anna L. Miller . Noel J .
Miller, Dale J. Browning, Deborah
Browning to Pa ul E . Marr, CoraM.
Marr, 2.57 acres, SalisbUry.
Deanna Baker fna FJsh{,r to

J ames ·Monroe Ha rmon, Linda
Northern Light L. S.C., Jeny W.
Kay
Harmon to Louis M. Christian,
Fridensttne, Trustee, Theresa M.
E
xa
Mae &lt;;:)lristla n, Pa r cel,
Fr!densttne, Trustee, (Declar ation
Coll!fllbla.
or Land Patent), Olive.
Mae Carroll to Ohio Power Co.,
• Anna Mae Mohler. deceased,
·Ease.,
Rutland.
Wanda F. Mohler, J ohn H. Mohler,
Addison
A. Sea man, deceased,
Kenneth D. Mohler, Patl1cla K.
M.
Seaman
, Cert. of trans. ,
Mary
Mohler; Wtllard D. Mohler, Cert. of.
Pomeroy VIllage.
trans., Salisbury.
.

RDbert J. Fortney, Norma Fortney to Philip LaComb, Tammy
LaComb, Parcel, Olive.
Bernard L. Allen, Loretta M.
Allen to Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
Right of Way and Ease., Meigs .
Northem Light L.S.C., Jeny W.
Fl1denstine, Trustee, Theresa M.
Ft1denstir\e, TruS!!"f', (Declaration
of Homestead) , Olive.

The .Daily Sentinel

-

Friday, April 26. 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Business Services
FOR SALE

EUGENE LONG

In Doxtor, Ohio
Wilh 2 Bedroom Apt.
•
in Rear.
lo Po11ibla lo Get
Corry-Out Lietnst.
PRICED AT S11,000

Mer ch ~ nrl 1sI)

1 -Card of 1'hanka (paid in advance)
(paid in advance)
2 -ln Memory
3 -Announcemama
4 -Giveaway
&amp;-Happy Ada
8 -Loal and Found
7-Yard Sale (paid in advance)
8-Public Sale S. Auction
9-Wanled to Buy

Enqlloyrmnl

21-Buain•u Opportunity
22-Money to Loan
23 -Protauioltlll Service•

61·Houoehold Goods
52-CB, TV S. Radio Equipment
63·Antiqueo
64· Misc . Merchandise
6 6· Building Supplio1
56· Peu tor Sale
67-Mulicallnatruments
58-Fruita a. Vegetebles
59-For Sale or Trade

Heal Esliile
31-Homu for Sale
32•Mobile Homeo for Sale
33-Farml for Sale
34-Buaineao 'auildingo
36-Loto a. Acreage
38·R. . I Eolalt Wanted

f arJII Sllppiii!S
&amp; liVf!slor;k

Renin Is

Sl!rVICI!:;

41 -Houou for Rent
42-Mobile Homeo for Rent
43 -Farml for Rent
44-Apartment for Rent
45-Furniahed Rooms .. '..
46-Spii!Ct for Rent
47-Wanled to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
49-For LHH

11·Help Wanted
12-Situation Wanted
13-lnaur•nce
14-Bulinau Training
16-Schoola
16-Radio, TV S. CB Repair
17-Miocellanaoul
18-Wanled To Do .

TriflS JHJrld iiOil

VINYL &amp; ALU.NU

71·Autoo for Salt
72-Trucb for Salt •
73-Vanllo 4 WD
74-Motorcyclea
7&amp;-BOIU &amp; Motoro
78-Auto Parta S. Acce1eorit1
77-Auto Repair
78-Carnpint Equipment
79-Campera lo Moto; Homes

81 -Home lmprov.,...enta
82,Piunbillt a. Heating
83-Excavating
84-Eittetrical a. Refrigeration
86-General Hauling_
88-Mobile Home Repair
87-Upholllary

B1·Farm Equipment
62-Wanled lo Buy
83· Liveoloc:k
64· Hay S. Grain
66· Seed a. Fertilizer

Gallia County
Area Code 614

Ph.

1614) 143·5425

992-Middleport
Pomeroy
985-Chester
343-Pohland
247 -Letart Falls
949-Racine
742-Rutland
687-Coolvilla

Public NQ.t ice

Public Notice

NOnCE OF
doy of Moy, 1985, tt 10:00
PUBUC SALE
A.M., ot the frpm llepo of tho
The .following deacribed Melgo Cou~ Court Houu,
Item wll be fOf public the following described
to !he higheot bidder on .._cy.
the , 1th day of May , 986 It
Tnoct 1: All tho coot ond
,tef\ o'dodc e.m.
mi_,lo petroleum oil.
1981 Chevrolet Chevolte rietu,.. P•. etc. on. in and
llrldoliylng tho folloWing root
Serial Number
1GIAJ0890BY131432. ..... litua1ed in the County
Sale of tho ~ Nllod of Moigo, Stotool Ohio. tnd in
obove will be held on the the Township of Sunon,
,nm~- of lho City Loan and bounded and deecnbed eo
Savings Company, 126 E. followa: Beginning at North·
Mlin S~ POI'IIOr'Oy. Ohio.
Nil comer of Lot 1195:
Torrno of Sate: c-.
d)enco Soyth B2 rodt ond 3
.

eltlte situated in the Town·
lhip of Sutton, County of

ond S\oto of Ohio,
to-wit: 10 ICIWI oft tho
Meiga,

SOUihwMt corner of the SouQuo- of the SouCluortor of Section 1.
Town 3, Rongo 12. Alto 2'h

ecrea-- on tho South by
the Old Town llood Nnnlng in
• curved
Eel! and Will
and on the North by the

•no

Real Estate General

links to .,._ SouthMit Comer

- right to
thorojeCt
righteny
to of Aid lot; ihence Will 31
bid- ond the
ond II bidl. Prior to the - o f · roda: thence North 82 roda
.... ..,..198,.,.118 m8V . be tnd 3 flntco to.the North line.of
, rna!fe to ·lnopect thio ,..,.,.,. Mid lol; tile.,.. EaSt a bout31 '
. diM'bV cofing ~2-~171·.
todl to the pa8~ of beqinning,
conteil"!ing·1&amp;,50 acres, ·more
-Or leu.
··
· r•126. 11e

·•

Public Notice

Of

• PUBUC NOTICE

,.

Atao otl tile coai end oihe.
mineralt. petroleum oH. netu1'11 qu. 811:.. on, in . ond
, unctorlying 1fW folio~ r•l

=-~~tho ~of ·.il4

Mlic.

a..c~~;.~~
.
cNo. 1711
·

~erchandise

· SALE OF IN RALS

Punuontto
ofdooodenl't wil. I wilt offer for 111o
tt public . - on the 11th

1

Card of Thanks

CARD OF
THANKS
THE

. RACINE FIRE
DEPARTMENT
WOUlD liKE TO
THANK EVERYONE .
FOR THEIR SUPPORT
DURING THEIR
RECENT GUN SHOOT
' CARD OF THANKS
We Wish to exprew
· our appreciation end
gratitude for all the
help end kindn.ttowed us during the
time of the loss of
our loved one. Ellie
Jonea. We would Hke
to thank our meny
·friend. and n8ighbort
for Ill their kind·
- · help, and IUpport wMn needed
it the moat. You'l
know
how
: much you lightened
,the load. and gaw us
al I ray Of IUn·
shine when every: thirig looked 10 dark.
' Your thoughtful.and kind- will alwaya be appreciated.
and nev• forgotten.
The Family of
Eloie L. Jon•·
11

Help Wanted

. HELP WANTED
UCENSED PHYSICAL
'niERAPIST .NEEDED
For • managem,nt
polltlon In the Porn·
eroy .,.,., Excellent
worklniJ aonditlona
end benefits. Inter·
estlld appHcent mey
aend rtiiUmB to:

TIM Dallr Sentinel
r. 0. la1. 729-A

p-o,, OIL 45769
.... I ,. g:wet O,p

'-'tr

$AT. I, $UN.

ONLY

EW LISTING -IIIDDLEPO
A nice corner lot in a goo
eighborhood with 4 bedrooms
eautilul bath, lar~e livin
oom, dining room, b1g panjry,
ull basemen!, I car garage.
39,500.
.

AT

BIG
,.

FOOT
PA·RK

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Jr.

992-6191
Dollie Turner 992-5692
Joan Trussel 949-2660

fl]

In Section 8, Town 2. R!'"IJII
1 2 of the Ohio Compeny'o
~- oaw end oxe»pt 2'h
..,. of lond out of tho north
otilo of aold tnict of land now
owned by Thomeo a-.
feoving in -tract .o f .... 10

. IUlTOI

\

CAVEAT EMPTOR ond no
-montln of thte wiN be given.
Horodioi T. Wlm-

E-..torofEottto
of Bltn-ehe Winters

D. D•n EVIN,
Anomev for Emili
of Blenche Winton.

porontlf riglrtJ

end tho odop-

14!12. 19, 26 (6) 3. 10, 2tc '

1ion and chonge .of nome wilt
be granted.
Robert E. Buci&lt;,

Public Notice

Judgeond
Ex-Officio Clerk
14) 19. 26 (51 3. 10, 17. 24. '
8tc

TIUITII
GINIIAL JIIST CONTIOI
614·379·2243 or

614-915·4212

fr• &amp;t'-tft Witt!Mt Olttlptiotl

614-379-

FINE LG. RANCH - Over
2,000 ft. ol floor space. 4
BRs, 3 bathS; office. 2 famill
rms., forma l diing and 1.79
acres .

ALL STEEL &amp;

937~Buffalo

POLE BUILDINGS

Insulated Do&amp; Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh .

992·5875 Or
742-3195

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

614-143-5191

.- .

F11 All

FOR SALE
BY OWNER

"W• R1-1 f, Lu1"

3 BR FARM HOUSE
With ·barn.- 58.5

U-SAVE
AUTO

groin drill, hoy rake. 10ft.

dreg harrow. Cub
mall with mower
plow, 'hay crimper.
soiler •. potato plow,
Nler and more.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTidN

Ferend
1ub
hay

Ntw HDnMS-httnsiwe
R-.ltling

843·5155 or
843-5410

Gallipolia. Ohio

1614 ). 464-3563

312/ Hn

Oltc, plows, corn plan·
tera, 3 pt. bru1h hQi1,

. RENTAL
Sl. Rt. 160 North

Call:

992-3345

FARM EQUIPMENT

.446-4522

acres $70.000.

Copy Str•~••· Etc.
255 Mill St., MiddltpOrt
104 Mvlborrr At., Pomeroy

S&amp;L

CALL

.

~

'·

~

.

Dexcel Receiver
8'. Alum. Dish
Installed

'14ts.oo~::

Expert Service And

Quality Name Br1nds At •
DISCOUNT PRICES

CHESTER AREA' - Excel·
lenl 3 BR ranch, lg. stone 1;,
replace thai ' will heat the
whole house.2 car garage.
2.47 acres. ·
·

Call 992·3561

ACCENT
FENa &amp; SUPPLY
. PH. 992·693l

- Addon• •IMI remodeling
- Roofing and gutter WOfk
- ConcNtewoflt

- Ptumblno and electrical
work

1

v:·C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215 or 992-7314
Poftllray, Ohio
.
12·8·tlc

PEIISONAUDD POOLS
VINYL LINER POOL
ACRYLIC WALL POOL
ABOVE GIOUNO POOL
, Over 400 Cllolcn

"SPAS"
I
lniYriiiWGIG1IliCI C.-cAU
' 4tl .... Hlrftottlw ,...,.
Milia, rt, OW. . •
HRS. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Day
1·614
992-2549

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

I

llithl

1·104
. 771·5614

AffOIDAIL£ • PORTAIL£

&amp; Grilh

Now arttllhod Aulo Glan-lolo Ma4ol

"Free Estimates"
Installation Available
4/4/tln

40031 Sumotr 14.
P_o,,o~.

Middhport, Ohio 45760 • 1
~..,.,, .•

IU51111SS PIIONf
(1141 H1·6S50
IISIIIIKE PltOitl
ilf,..;;jfl (6141 991-7714
1/22/Hc

~MOTEL

RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLEASMT, W. YA.
' • •li• Ira
POIIIIOf·lluol lrlcllt
SINGIJ. t24.95

304-675·6276

olive Enlertiinmont of roe HBO
ol(ifchonettes •Rnfluront

A.U.
104·675·6176

1·10-t.f.n.

..

PH. (614) 985-4212

9' Southern Spun Available'

Use Von Schroder

Call 614·992-673

UDIATOI
SEIYICE

We can repair and re·

core red1ators and
h81ter cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out rtdlttorJ. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD ·
992·2196
Ohla

Miclclltportr

Complete System
with Tracker

1·13·1fc

coMPlETE

·

3-22-tfn

,.

1.1 9. 75

4-17·1 mo. pd .

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Licensed ·Ciiniul Audiolo1ist

Authorized John o.. ro.
New Holland, Busll Hoc
farm Equipm1nt
De1ler

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

E••IP••••
s.,.,...

Speciali~ing

in ,
All Types Of
Residential
Wiring
And Repair

SPflltiR,.~

!ul., Cli~Mt ·
PH. 992-3,. 'i\ .
4-1-

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

llolloona for.Get Well. Annl -

46769 or call 61 4·992-

Georgeo Creek Rd.
614·448-0294 . .

Call

Singing GorriUo. Cell Bol·'loono &amp; Co. 81•·446·4313.
Wanted American . Cancer
So~iety in need of donation
,of twin size aheets. 304-

67.5 -6749.

4

7760 .

Buying dolly gold. oliver
coin I. rings. jewelry. sterling
ware. old coin&amp;,, Iaroe cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed . Burkett Berber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

Middleport. Oh. 814:9923476.

Giveaway

biiCk

f illjllllyiiiCIII
S~:rv1ces

mile German

Rd. ·Owner p~••• cell to

ldttntify-recover. Coli 614440·8199.

Brittny Bird Dog, hunts end

pointo good. 2.,. yHro old,
' 30··882·3397.
6

Loat and Found

aome gray. Anawera to
name of Seril. Lo1t lilt

Mobile Home

~ Sales I

Heating/ Cooling.·

ser ... tee Pro

Service

11

Help Wanted

----------- 0----------Metel Hont11 cratel. Pickup
at Beta Honda Sele1.

Thurldoy neor Molga-Gollio
tint of Rl. 7. II 00 reword.
Coll61•·982·329• or 6-14·
Sl2·0042. Konnoth
VMuger.

Found: 1 ..-ir l1d6e1 gleuea
in CIM, on At 33 In

Burllnghem. Contectl!tdr In

trailer acro11 from MHkl

Grooory In lurll"9hem.

Found In Hemlock Grove
are1. 1 young reddi~h.

brown dog. Call 992· 7893 ..

llect femole long hatred dog
toll on Cornotalk A....

Collar. no name. · Reward.

304-171'· 2482.

Will do l1wn mowing 6 ya rd

Must

work . Coil Keith 11 614·
25tl-tl251 ofter ti :OOPM .

Mil

32 Mobile Home•
'for Sale

3 bdr. r1nch.

WoaJbrooke Subd .. f R,

woodburner. carport. de(: k.
city utilities, .a. tch'o olt.
614 - 4.C6 - 714.C .,~ .~ ..

..
21

Homes for Sele

reduced to 133,000. Ifill

f 1nanr:lill
Businetl
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
liSHING CO. recommendo

UCATIONAL ASSISTANCE. Coli 304-875-3950 . · Built On Your Lot : Big 4 Cor
Garage .S996. 3 bdrhomea
or 1 ·B00-642-3619.

f18.000 .00. No Jetlng. Repeat businesa . Set your own
hQUJ11 Training provi.ded.

.Baby •!ttarJn my home. !Jan.:
Ferry.-Hogsett area . Good
reference, Trustworthy .

12

Situations
Wanted

Res.,.te Care Workert to
care for handicapped children end adults of Gallia
County. ln·home and out·

of-home workoro needed

immedietely. • Preflr prior
experience with handi ·
capJ:ted Jrulividuala. Must
have own traneportetlon .
Write: Qallla County Board
of Mental Retardation-

Developmental Oioabllhlea ·
11 P.O. Box 14. Chethire.
Ohio •ee20 or coM 814·
387-0102 . Appticotlon '
doodNno Moy ,6, 1985.
Plrt·tlmoLPN living In Gollipolia aree . Apply In perton
betwNn. 9AM &amp; 4PM to
Modicol Pltll. 203 Jockoon
Plkt, Golllpotla.

.
Poahlon Avaltoble. part-time

p•raon for local bull·
ne11. Mua be' . .gre•aiw,
and eble to work With public.
Nlel

Pootlbitlty of pooltlon 11
oatlotont Manager II qualified . Mutt hove prevloua
~·· ••perience. S•nd re·

1umo to T.R.M. Corp. 529
Jockoon Plko, Golllpollo, Oh
4111131 .
.

Room end board for elderly.

only. Call614·992·6022 .
Will care •or elderly in our
home. 16 years experience.

Call614-992-7314.

Free Estimates: PaiMI'ng of
houset, barna. ro9f1. etc;

Melgo: 61 4 - 99~ 7416, Gol·
lia : 614-367-0298 .

' Nelaon
7 rooms and beth,
Rd .• Dexter area . Call 6t ...

Mobile ,homo for oalo. 2 br
Holly Pork . 304-6711-3628.

For Ute or reni: Pomeroy. 6
room, 1 Ya bath, nice yard
AduiU preferred . Would
consider 1 child. No pet..
Security ·depot it and refe r·
enctt .requ i red . Sa le

~droo rrts.

1977 llborty, 12x60, 2

flO .OOO: Rent f226 . 6 1 4·
949-2646 .

Bowen• Construction .
Complete remodeling. fire place specialists . Painting:
interior • exterior. Cement,
block, brick work . 26 yrs.
e~eperlence , reasonable
ratll. FrM ettlmltea. work

guaranteed. Cill 0 14-388·
9670 or 614-38B-9B08.

Kotalic landaceping design·
ing. planning, mowing. trim·
mlng, · retail 1hrubb•rv. All
round lewn melnten•nce.

Co11814-446-3100. •

Mow yart, odd jobt. ,P'I .
Ptea .. nt, Gellipolie area .
Rea10nable rtles. C.all 814·

446-6541 .

•

wuher. Need co 1111. 30445~- 1727 .

'·

1975 Camer o n mobile
home. 12x64, 2 br, ell
electric, unfurnished . 304-

676-1777.

33

•

Farms for Sale

•

30 acre farm leon ar~Nto . 2·
bedroom trailer, unfinished
hou11, low 30 'i . weekends

only, 904-696-8429 .

36 Lots S. Acreage
'
'
'
'
Approx . Yz ecrelot on olc1At ...·

180 in Porter, Coll614-388-:
8702 ofter 5P.M.
Work wanted · yard work,·
trimming. houH painting :
inside and out. maintenance. errands, windowa ....

office cleoning. 304-676-:
110B.
lot for sale, nice location . ·

304-875-1090.

Ren1als
41

Houses for Rent

For rent, will rent wtth
option to buy. 3 bdr. .2 beth.
ref .. stove, OW, CA, 2 Clr
garage. city schools, dep.
requirld . Call 814-448 ·

4348 .

4 bdr. in country. f250

mo.

367·0509.

•

plus deposit. Kyger Creek
School District . Cell 814-

Very nice 3 bd..- . home. 2
baths. good size y1rd. •aoo.
3 bdr. home country atmo•
phere, $276 . 3 bdr. home
with rivervieW~ 1260. Refer..
ences a. deposit required.
Call Wiseman Agency, 814-

0

.

.

Fbr sale or rent with option
to buy 8 room• S. t;-ath in
Gallia Co., Hannan Trace
School Dlst., 3 bedroom a. 'h
acre lot in country. county
water, garage, baaement,
~ellar ,
124,000. Call in
morning before 1:30PM,

1971 Free~om good cOnd .

Call614-268-6520.
3 bdr. 14x65 &amp; toe. 2 mi.

coll614-682-7417 .

from ' Gellipolis. Green
School District, good cond ..
large sundeck, 114.600.
will consider trade in of
anything' of value 11 down

Split foyer. 3 bdr .. 2 botho.

payment. Coil 614 -448 8038 :

on 1 acre land. Rt. 664 . Call
French City Mobile Homes;

614-446-9340 .

•

Governinent home from 11
IU repair). ·Also. deliquent tax
property . Call 806 -687-

6000 ext. GH-10189 for
information .

Jay Dr. 3 bedroom, 1Vabath,
living room. large kitchen !t
dining area . laundry room, 2
car garage. central air, gas

hoot. Coil 614 -446•3427.

Nice 2 bedroom vlnyled
home . Remodeled , C!,rpeted , tobacco ball. ·2
acres. Kerr-Harrisburg Rd .

$21,000. Coli 614-245·
5298.

Houll for sale by owner.
Nice 3 bdr. home. full
basement. gas heat. all
carpet, nice kitchen, ett·
ached garage, good location
feeing river w,ith garden spot

Bank Sale-Repollened 14
wid••· Just pay e600 .00
down and t1~e over Piv·
menta . No charge for deli"·
ery. Cal~ today, only six (61
rerpain . .614-772-1220 or

614-773 -3926.
Mutt tell 1 983Jay Skyliner,
lots ot N.tral included . Call

614 ·446 -7200 ofter 6 :00.

12x60 level lot on Rt. 7 i,-.
Crown City . 1 Ox22 ft .

porch . Coll81 4-256-1444.

·1 9'72

1 4x70 trailer

for

85,600 with 21 ,000 BTU

window air conditioner ,

nice. Coll614-44tl-0146.

1.972 mobile home. 2 bdr .,
AC. 12x65. Coil 614-4467171 oftor 6, 614-446·
B2BB.
1 980 Kingaloy 70x14 with
7x24 expando. air, akirting,
fireplace . microwave. ste·
reo, ,•t-up in perk . 10%
down up to 16 yr•. Ca!l

33 bdT. brick ·home. 6 ,miles
from town, price reduced.

614-448-3647, 9·6, Mon.·
Sot..

Coli 614-446-0633 .

1971 Now Moon 12x86, 3

••'!I·

Bu._., from owner &amp;
Territlc location , f(yger
CrHk Sch6ol, 3 bdr .• fire·
place. Built·in kitchen with
dishwasher. range, oven.
Full batement with family
room. gil heat. po11ible
9'YJ% loan ••sumption ,

•4B ,600 .' Coil 61 4-446·
4042.

Step up tp a larger fabuloua
home. Grandview Estates.
fl515,000. Llaving town, 1111

138.000 . Call 614-445 ·
7019.

bdr., cent. eir, 1 Y.t bathl,
•&amp;.900. Very good cond.

Coli 614-446·0176 .

1969 Champion tra iler

1 2x60 with 1976 odd-on
1 2x24. Good condition. Coil
61 4·992· 25B9.
1982 all electric mobile
home. 3 badroome, 2 baths,
central air. porch. awnings
and Jtorage building . ,lo·
cat~ on riverfront lot in

Middfoport. Calf 61•·992·
3348 after 6:00p.m .

1 986 1 4x60 Joy Skyline

Houllr 5 fOOms. bath, buemant. .garage. 122.000,
Taut Ad ., G111Jpolis. C•ll

mobile home on trade. Cell

814-446 ,8334 or 61 4·'441·
7311.

Will plow gardena. large or
email. Point PleeNnt. Ka-

Eaatarn School Distrtct . 1
room home In good repair,
fully ce~ted ba•ment and
carport. 1 . 10 acre1. Nicely
landse~ped amall orchard .
Will Mil furnlahed or unfur·

Work wanted • y1rd work.
trimming, houM . pelntlng
inelde and out, melnte·
n•nce, arrand1. windows,

1976 Holly Pork mobile
home 1 4 x70 3 br. central
air, underpennif)g. furnished
with ' pplianc•• only . NttW

;i2 Mobile Homes
Ci)1614-44.6-0143, or44&amp;, ~..
· l'n Goill~olls City,:6~ Lincoln '
for Sale
'0571 .
.
..,
:sc: •u.spo, n•ed.t iepoir. L ~'--'~~~~-,..-·Call &amp;14-256-1773 · oftor
2 bdr .. cabin on Raccoon
6PM. No land contracts.
NEW AND USED MOBILE C~k. Lease required . 'Call
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
House for sale at edge of ITY MOBILE HOME SALES. 614-446-0093 before 6.
town , GJIUpofls. Owner' will 4 MI . WEST~ GALLIP.6US . 6_1 4-446-0796 of!or 6 . : ..
land . . contract. .Call 614· R'r 35 .. PHONE 61'4-448 ·
4 rooms anq bath .,:'~ o:beH ·
4"46-96'26. ·. ·.
. 7274. : . ' .
~ .' :

cloon yordo or do odd jobt,
304-878 -5752.

nougo, Ohio. Coli tl 1 • ' 446·
40811. 304-175· 7228 ofttr
5:00PM.

te , BOO. OO . 304 · 675 ·
&amp;387.

7 room. full ~aaement. 2
mile down· river. 1260 mo .
dep .~
reference required.

nithod. Colt 61 4·8B5·•386.

3 bodtoom · houeo In Rulllc
HMia. Fully carpeted, otoroge
otfic' ctuntng. 304·1171· building, !ergo lot. Coll61 4'1192-50B5 oftor • :30 p.m.
1108.

•

·rnent, _ fully -c@rpeted~ n@W
paint. unfurnished . Call614-

99.2-3090

2 bedroom houH in Mindr ..
ville . Beside Minersville

Church. by Bulk Plont. lotet

electric , Cell 814-992 -

6215 .

2 bedr'oom furniahed hOun .in Pomeroy. •2&amp;0 per

month . Call 814-892-5113
after 6:00PM .

6 rooms and bath, gar1ge.
full bbsement. gl111ed-in
breezewey, fOrced air heat.
central air . Call 614-949-

2734 .

6 room house in L,ngaville
with ba1h tnd garden sJfa&lt;:e.
•200. • month plus deposit .
References required. 614-

992-7286 .

2 bedroom A frame hotne,

&amp;175 .00 month, 1100.00

d•potit, Southsidtt, W. Va.

304-876-1166.

'
Two country houses on
Route '33, 1 Yz mile eait pf
Foote and Sporn , call 304-

882-2884 .

.

42 • Mobile Homes
, for ,Rent
Furnished. air cond ., cable.
no oity taxes, beautiful river· ,
view, Kanaugs . Foster' s MO'

bila Home Pork, 814-44111602 .
.

Nice 2 bndr . mobile home.
conventent location on At.
7 . Completaly furnilhecl.
$195 mo .. water paid. Call

614-246 ·5818.

'

Mobile home for rent. Call

otter 1 PM , 614·446-0501
or 614-446 -1609.

.,

2 bdi-. fur'nished . 2 mile
~O\(Ifn river. Depoart • reference required. Cell 814·

446-0143 , or 446 -0571 .

2 bdr. trailer, 2 mi. from
. hosp. in country. •17&amp;'ffto .•
*100 dop . Coli 614-n l-

·
tWo' bedroom mobile ho,.. . 1722 oftor &amp;PM .
'"'G.f• heat, located in ~alem
Center. 110,000. Phone· Furnished modern trail.,-. 2
bedrooms with extended
, -6, 4-483-,407.
living room • 1 00 depoatt

Pump ule1, Mrvice. Regis· 614·.46-21104.
cered in Ohto. Aft work
guoront•d· Coli 304· 2~3' HGu• for Nit Etll end, 1 4x70 Cottle on ~ ocro,
2811 . Ravon1wood. w. ¥•. , 1918 E11torn Ave .. 3 bdr .. · 2-c•• oorpon. 18x26 addl·
hea rented apace 1200 mo-. lion . Cafl614-992-31 19 or
Herd, workln", dependlble. Alklng e46,000 . Will toke 61 4·992-3132.
16 yeer Old wantl to mow.

all • lect rfc, new
carpet and underp.-.ntng,

446-3644.

Coii1 ·614·BB8·7=!11 .

'

COLEMAN WATER WELL
' DRILLING
f

304-875 -8743.

*13,996. See Our Models.

in 900 Block. city . Con holp
,llnonco. Coi1814-446-2573
or614-446-1171 .

18 VVanted to Do

19B1 14x70 Schuhz, portly
furn lahed 3 b6droome with
urtder pil nnlng. 304-1715·

1763.

698-81i2B oftor 4:00pm ..

that ft'O~ do buslneu with
people you know, end NOT
to tend money through the
mell until you have inv..ti ~

Auction avery Friday night at
th,e Hartford CQmmunity Handyman. Will do painting.
Center. Truckloeda of new well . papering, plumbing,
merchandise every weak . electric, carpentry, odds
Consigmant1 of new &amp; u11d joba. lewn1 mowed. Cell
merchendiae always wel- 614-266-6496 .
comed . Richard · Rayrlolds,
Auctioneer. Call 304· 276- Wa~ted : I work and I need a
3069.
middle aged or elderly lady
. to ahare mv home. ·Free
rOom and board with private
9 Wanted To _B uy
room-in exchange for helping with ' light hou~ework
'We pay cash for lata model and help care for 6 year old
clean used cera .
daughter in school . Call
Jim Mi"" Chev.· Oids Inc.
Mary Swiaher, 314 3rd. St ..
Bill Gene Johnson
Kanaugo, 614-446· 7473 .

delivery, Devil Vacuuln
C"ener. one haH mile up

lOST Block Toy Poodlo whh

. 1·J·Ih

JOHNSON ELECTRIC

Public Sale
S. Auction

FURNITURE . Beds,• iron,
wood, cupboards, chairs,
chests. basket1, dlshu.
stone jars, antique•. gold
and lil~er . Write-M . D .
Millar, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio

Pick up end

. f-1)_iT;;:-

,.,•• &amp;

Avo .. Gallipollt.

8, 4-446-3672

Found

Television listening Devices
Computerized Heaiin&amp; Aid Selection
Hearinc EValuations For All A&amp;es

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

.

$

y,.r• of ege or older, i:lepen·
dable car and ln1urance.
Domino'• Piru. 900 2nd.

304-676-2737.

Shepherd on NeigHborhood

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

'

'

'.

•'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

. f•r•

Announce me n1 s

veraerya. Blrthdaya. parties.

"10' U.P. Wire Mesh

BOGGS

BlACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
DUCK LEASING

Box, 32C.
Pomeroy. OH. 45769
For Futar Strvico

Phone: 614-669-3761 or 669•3765

· ...---------~

Wt'd like to lotroduco yOU to ·
E•PI•·A·Car. the modorn way
to drive the vohitlt of your
clutiu.
NO DOWN PAYMENT
101111 MOtllllY PAYMENT

Dexter, OH.

:grr~~~ 1~~~ ~\'\:elVER $1,695

L...----.!!:4·!.QIO-l mo.

INTERESTED. IN A
NEW VEHICLE

317 Norlft Stconol

Datre Hobbs

3/11/tln

&amp;'WEEPER and aewirig machine repair, parts, and
'

'FREE ESTIMATES"

16141 915·3105

Sunday Calls

oupplleo.

Equipment Recommended
by Leadinl Carpet llanutacturors.

IUCIWOOD 110M! SPAS

N11

9-13-lln

992-7013

35185 Oak Hill Road
Lon&amp; Bottom, OH. '45743
We

PH. 949-2101
or 949-2160

3 Announcements

'art•

WHALEY'S AUTO PAHS

11. 611 Wool Darwin Ohio

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
. CLEANERS

~

"Fre&amp; Estimatea"

Doort ....................... •ISO
73-14 Ford Tr.
Chromo a....,. ........ $70
73-79 Ford Tr.
Tail Gattt ................... $10
10,1• ford Tr.
, F....rs ........................l90
longer l ·lronco Fondors

PARTS ~nd SERVICE
4-S·«c·

3'24-ttc

Hoi ..... Spo. Stop fty to 101
tM -..ri wf ha" In stodl.

. SALES -&amp;' SERVICE

(FrN
. Eatlmoteal
'
..

,

Co•rH Su,ports ...........S·6S

•Wa•hers •Dishwa1her1
•Ranges
•Rifrlgeretore
•Drver• •Fr""''

filM. y• .,..... in ,.... own

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Headquarters

•1••1••

pt. Cfancelled if rain .

8

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Doors ......................... st35 . fsndtrs .........................ssa
73-10 Chtwy. Tr.
73-79 Ford Tr.

985·3561
All M1k11

l~jty ·-toll rein- lllf•

YOUNG'S

AT 992·3325.
Sut ..,.pity, Millon loush
...!\ Ylrtila!MI
lnoaTaaford

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
. REPAIR

4/1 / 1 mo.

4-4·1 mo. pd.

NOW IS THE TillE TO CALL US

11. 124,1'emoroy Ohio

N.ow taking epplicatl ona
Mon . thru Fri . 1 ;30 to 3:30,
no phone caHs. Must be 18

3 family yard tale Sat. 9-3 .
Oliver Rd. near ~KS. K .Pt. Pl. ,Call 1:612-93.&amp;,1676 Moo·
loolt f~·r sig!JS. • : Fri, 8 AM to 5 P.M CST.

~ILOWN.IN

INSULATION

73-10 Chny Tr.
, 11-14 Chny. Tr.
r...-s .........................'65
Ftn4trs ...................... •l10
73-10 Chtwy Tr.
73-79 Ford Tr.
lloods ......................... •165
73-10 Chtwy Tr.
Chroitt lumpon ........... $70
73-10 Cht•y Tr.
.
Grllto ..........................140
73-10 Cht•y. Tr.
Tiil Gatll ....................$70
73-10 Chtwy. Tr.

·

diy. 403-40B 21it St. Pt.

"ALUMINUM SIDING

31

Wanted experienced tractor·
trailer drlvart. Muat be 25
years of IIJI, hava 2 Y"" of gated the offorlng.
~2 bedrooms. full basement,
interstate experience. exceldouble car garage , 1 .2 .
lent uftey record. Apply In CoffH Shop for ule. Selling acre•, Rose Hill, Pomeroy .
"peraon. J.L. McCoy. B ml . equipment, low price, lease
Yord Sate 246 Debby Dr .. 2 South of Ravenswood. WV . • .. umable . 464 Second 12B.OOO: 1114-1178-2613 . .
mi . out Rt. 141 . Sat. 9 -4 . Rt. 2 .
Avo., Gotfipoiio, 814-448· sofu'hern School Diatri~t .
Moving houses. 3 families .
340l.
Mo"lfiad A-Frame Drl 5
Full time •nd-or pan time
acres . Immediate occu ·
Gigantic Yard Sale Shout· RN po1ition1 open . Flexible
pancy. SH to apprec iate :
ring Ridge, Fri . &amp; Sat. April hour~, uperle.n ced pre- 22 Money to Loan
•3o.ooo. Includes outdoor
26 &amp; 27. 9:00-6:0Q. Down ferred . Apply at Scenic Hilla
working toolt . 614-B4.3·
Rt. 7 to Clipper Mills, follow Nursing Center Mon .• fri .. 9
63B4 oftor 8pm.
signs. 21 Families at 6 to 4PM .
HOME
OWIIERS
-R
1inanco
0
different house,1 . last
house-Kevin D•nnll {red Drlver· Hiesman fo·r Pome· to low fixed rate . Un equity Solid built home in Racinlf,l .
brick) . Motorcycle. king size roy. Racine 1re1. Must have for any purpoee. Leeder Reasonable. 3 bedroom• up,
bod . ping pong table , e~eperience. Send resume to Mortgage Co.. 614-692- 1 bedroom down, 1 Yz bat hs.
3 toto. Cell 614-949-2874.
3061 .
waaher - dry~r . couch e.
The Daily Sentinel, Box
chelr. dog house, hand mede 729E , Pomeroy, Ohio
Four bedrooms. kitchenwind chimes, bird feeders. 46769 .
family room with fireplace,
· 23 P.rofessiorial
afghans. baskets . Baby,
fin iehed · buement. low
Se..Vices
men, women. children, ma - Book,keeper. familiar with
$80'1.' Point Pleeant. 30•·
ternity clothes. Toy1, loti of G.L.. accounts, payable and
675 -3079, evenings.
mioc. itemol Call 614-446- receivable. Our off:ce, pert
2847.
time. Send Inquiries to Box Piano lurling and Repair. Have en anergy efficient
22. Syrocun. Ohio 46779. Brunicordl Mualc Co .. 814 - home built on your lot. From
Patio Sale Clothes, house·
446-0887. Twantloth year
hold furniture, purple martin Baby1tfte1'went~ in home. of quality service. Lane $13.900 .00. Call for e•timoteo. 304-675-3981 .
houses, misc . At . •218 be· Evening . 1 child. 61 4 -742- Do~iota, 614-742-2961 .
'
hind Bolly Chopel Church . 3029 . 0
Arbuckle. 3 bedroom, family
Mon., Tue .. &amp;: Wed . Call
WINDOW TINTING Reoi· room, 1 Vz beth a. •A a c re.
81 4-256-176B.
Junior High Football Coach- dentltl. Commercial&amp;: Auto. , -304-586-91 48.
Southern Local S~hool Dia- Free ·e1tlmete1. Call 614Y'ord Sale 10-1 Sot. &amp; Sun. trict. Individual will be re- 446-9346.
By ownef. 9'h per c ent
l:.ower River Rd. furniture, lponsible for the cOaching
antique dishes. lots of other and training of the players PIANO TUNING AND 'RE · a11umabJe, 3 bedroom. 3
baths, living room, d ining·
items.
for the 1985 football sea - PAIR, Reduced ratealimited room . family room .
son. Contact Bobby J . Ord. time only. Ward's Keyboard,
Moving Sale Fri., Sat .• Sun. Superintendent. Box 178, 304-675- 6500 or 876 - aquipped~ kitchen. patio , air
cond, double garage, low
'h mi . from Rt . 1 on Roush Racine, Ohio 46771 for 3824.
70'1. New Haven, 304~882 ·
lane (North of . Cheshire, position requirements. One
260B.
'
Oh.l.
must have 1 valid Ohio
Real Es1ale
teaching certificate to apply.
6 room house, 2 closed In
Yard Sille 1 132 Second
porches. In Point Plea~nt,.
AVe. 3 Family Sale. Sat. Junior High Girls' Baake~ball
304-676-6456.
.
only, Antiques, furniture, Coach - Southern Local
loU of clothing. 8 till 1
School District. Individual 31 Homes for Sale
Clifton", W, Va .. 6 r~ml.
will be responsible for the
bath, clOsets. sto.r m winYord Sale Sat .. 10-dork, coaching and treinfng of the
460Yl · 1st. ·Ave:' Books, ployero lor the 1986-86 Three bedrooms, cerhral air. dowt and door1, 1ull sized
w•ll paper, carpet baSement . call 30.4 -882 ·
flower seeda, bird cage, basketball seaaon. Contact vinyl
throughout. well Insulated, • 2570 .
kitchen stool. clothing , Bobby J. Ord. Superintend- new paint. attached garage.· ~-...:.~~~~~­
misc .• toy1. old TV. lone ent. Box 176. Racine. Ohio gas outdoor grill ~ ewningl.
Reduced by owner, 5 %
Wam1iey.
46771. for position require- many extras. Call614·446· acres, 2 houses, 2 car
ments . One mutt have a 26B3 tit 5:00PM. ofter
Back Yard Sale 46 Central valid Ohio teaching cartifi· 6 :00PM calf 614 -246· garage, 2 barns, pond. Aeh·
ton. 304-676-2320 .
Ave ., Sat. 1 0·1 Clothes, cate to apply.
6869.
Avon 'boHies, etc.
Mason • 2 story frame.
JOIN THE ARMY NA · lnEstate- 3bdr. onRt. 36, % remodeled, 7 rooms. .2
TIONAL GUARD . GOOD mi. Wool of HMC . Coli bath·a. good condition
PAY . GOOD BENIFITS. ED· 614-446-0603.
throughout. Shop. Garage .

a :.femily .' yard ~a1a·1· Situ·;~

'VINYL SIDING

New Homes Built

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

wife hlk't core of

furniture , alr-con'dltloner,
clothing, books, games,
toys.

to 1.

..-. ! .

*sePtic'

PH. 742·2328

(CUT OUT FOR FUTUII USEI

9 -6 . Open elr It covered
tpaces for rent. off road
parlclng .

Pt Pleasant .
&amp; Vicinity

·• ll•l·tlc

IUli.DOZER &amp; BACK.HOE' WORK ·'

No••iAccaptlng Llstlrtga in Melge Co. ,.

every Soturdoy &amp; Sundoy.

· ··---~ -- -······ · ·· ··· · ·· · · ···

GllfG ROUSH
PH. 992-7611

·. *BASEMENTSSYSTE!"S .
•FOOTERS •GRADII'!IG .
1tCONCRETE WORK

Phone 742·3171

help

1 f! Wanted to Do

· invelid -etroke victim. Must
be able to move' lift victim

e"'

-

TROMM .EXCAVATING-

· II. l. "B•d" McGHEE
Broker-Auction Stivlit ·
·.
· Olitryl Ll!liiiY .
llelcs Count,-Associate · •

Put- tirJ'Ie work during May
&amp; June. Mature women to

Cuotom Polo lldgs.
&amp; Gar- ·
REPS NEEDEDforbusineu
IO.Iint Wqtk
·
o.c c 0 .u n u ·, ·F u 1t tl me
Afuminum ~Vinyl Sidings '· · ·4 foniify yerd ••Ia. 6. mif•i 8 6- o . o •0 o : 0 0 t o·
1,6 Yearo jlxperiance
out ' Jerrya R!'n
Apple ··. ,•a,o .2oo. oo·.oo·oo. :P
_. •orio' ttm, oe.,
Grove. Aprll2o. 2 ; 27th: 9

16 l4) 9°.9.-2568
.

11 · Help Wanted

and perform general health
·cere.
Good pay, C1ll Mra. H.
.
I .
Brown btfore IPM at e14·
Flea Market. Fraiurt Bot- 446· 7028 fOf oppointment.
tom, WVa. on US . 36 open

Insurance Work

4-10·1 mo. d.

7/ll /tln

Real Estate General

Aleo T,...

r,., '"•II•J Nuir

PIUS: Offiet S..,.iiot &amp;
Furniluro. W..Wint
and Gra4uation
Statlan•y, M..notlc
Signs, lubber S!Ofnps,

10·8·11C

RENT A CAR

Real E•tate General

.

Roger Hysell
Garage

11 ·14-tfc

IUiiMII F•mt,

. Tllingl . . buzZin• ir! tho

:· WtWTADS .

·

FILL DIRT

10·6·tfc

HOIJSE OVERnDWING?
ClEANUP WITH
ClASSIFIED ADS

Call:

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

. Sizes Start From 12'Kl6'

Ph.

'

DENNY CONGO

FUTURE T.V. SATEWTE SYmMS

APRil IPECIAl

FAR liS - 122 acres in Eas·
lern, 3 BR ranch and a Ii
acre mini·larm near Langs·
ville with 2 BR ranch .

c.,.. '

12

. OHIO·VALLEY
SATEW11 SYS11MS

RACINE - Lg. 3 or 4 BR
home, lg. lol for privacy. Of·
ler welcomed.

CALl 949.2210-Ask for Tim.

Melgo County, Pomeroy.
Ohio. for the odOPiion of
Michelle DO)Vn Hooduor by
Edwlrd Hirotd Remsburg ond
Melody R- Aomaburv ond
for • chenge of nome from
Michelle Down Hoechar co
Michlfte Down Romlburg.
Should you not - r to
object ID the poti1ion, you wiN
be p o r m - . d y - of 11ft

laby ParokHI,
Cogo &amp; Supplioo ....,•24.75
Pair ,..,., Fincho~
Cage &amp; Suppiiot .... •31.00
Cockotiolo. bolic lirdo
A•ailabit
Svppiitl
Also Sold Soporololy
Call Enningo:

SUPERIOR
E'X111JmJIIIUJI!•IATJ«i (0.. INC.

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bedrooms, 2 complete betha, dining
room, living room and large recreation room. Located on 8 acres.
Large farm pond. Recine area.

DIRECTIONS ... .
-loulftonOhioR.I. 7,11
miles below Oallipotlo.
-erose Reccoon Crk .
lrtdp, turn rtght ·and
.follow algn1.

right to roject enyend II bldt.
The axecut..- II _.ling
under the loglf th-v of

"$'' '• $,11111"

NEAR HOSPITAL
One
lloor 2 BR home. Hot water
heal. lull basement &amp; dbl.
garage, on corner lot.

HOUSE WITH GARAGE. small
shop 'and ahower in be~ement. Four
rooms and bath, 2 porches, carport,
new furn11ce 11nd centralair.. Middle~
port, Oh.

Public Notice

THE BIRD CAGE

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

1

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Business Services

'

GOOD flstiNG -·
GOOD HII\ITING
GOOD FUN

CHESTER-985·3307

Rnidtntill &amp; Commercial

Up to 15 Worda ...One day ineertion ........... $4.00
Up to 15 Worde ... Three day inoertion .. .. ... ..$5.00
Up to 15 Worda ... Six day inaertion ..... ..... .. '8.00

tho.

RNI Estate General

NO MONEY
DOWN
, $50 PEl MO.

992-2772

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'

Public Notice

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

UTILITY BUILDINGS

IN THE
con...,...t by thia 37'h
COMMON PLEAS COURT
Inch~~ t;,
.urile. more or
MEIGS COUNTY, O!'fiO
feH. the ~olf 101doftylng tho ' IN THE MATTER OF THE
,
IIDilw deocriiMid ' 20 II ADDP11DN OF
hlrlby IIJIIWCI.'
M - Down Aa""""""
following
.... _Allo.
_the
In
CASE NO. 24725
Sutton Town1hip. Melg_a
-NOTICE BY
County. Ohio; Boing 3 ecreoln
PUBUcATION .Section 1, Ro""' 12. ~nd TO: THOMAS wiWAM HO·
&lt;T -· 3 of the' Ohto ' Com- SCHAR. hlll)mo.wn oddriol:
poiJV'a "-"""· - • .
!loulf 1, Weot CC!Iu~, W:
Trect IIIKMt wee opprlfled Vo.
,
in llid - • for f2.B76.00
You ""' - . , notified that
and Trect tt above ap- on the 24th ctey of J..,., 1SB5
pnieod in Mlabo f..- tt 10:00A.M. I i.oringwllbe
f1.0795.00.
held in tho Com,_ Pteeo
The eucutor rwervea ,the Court, Juvenile Dlvi1ion.

Housing

*BOAT DOCK
*BATH HOUSE
•WATER &amp;
. 'ELECTRIC

OPII TILL DAII

Gallia

0

CAMPSITE

Real Estate General

POMEROY,O.
NfW LISTING -Remodeled
992-225'
3
BR frame iii Racine with
NE~ LISTING - Middle· ,
"port · - Older two ·st!)ry : .dbl. g~rag~ gncQrner lol. '·
bnck · home.' :Located on ..
Ntw LISTING .:.. 2 ·aJ!S;
good street 2 lots.' Needs
bath , central air &amp; heat carwork. Could be duple• rental
peting, lg. base.ment: Asking
unit Asking $i5,000.00.
$14,500.00, offer wanted,
NEW LISTING - Middle·
NEW LISTING - Remo·
port - Recently rede·
deled 2 story 7 rm. home.
corted, !his 2 bedroom
1.21 acres, some furn ilure.
home is neat and affordable.
$35,000.
33'&gt;50' lot, walking distance
to downtown. $17,000.00.
NEW LISTING - 5 rm.
ranch
at 5 Pis. 3 BRs, car·
NEW LISTING - Middle·
pelin! dbi. gargage &amp; level
port- Garage apartment, 2
lol. $ 6.,000.
bedroom apartment now
rented , 3 car garage could
MIDOLEPORT - Good in
be renled lor car or storage.
town
homes. One with 2
Small lot $12,000.00.
BRs,one with db I. apl., ang a
3 BR one .
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - 50'&gt;120' levellol wtth all utili·
5 ACRE - Waler &amp; elec.
ties availale. Beautiful view o1
ava~lable .
river. Want $8,500.00.
NEW lilA ROAD - This
ranch jype house is in greal
condilion &amp; the family room
, is neal and spacious, 3 bed·
rooms, a nice fenced yard
lor the kids plus above
ground pool. $44,900.00.

hind eold ond cteeded by P Horpold to Cdon McKnight
ond do!ed April 13, 1867,

which .. dncribed .. ~­
Sutton T.o wnshlp,.:. Meigs . , 60 ..,.. of lend oft of the
Will end of 60 ICN Lot 1195

2 .1 8 E. 2nd St. .
. · Phone
H814)-992-3326

County - Approx. 50 acres
of vacant ~·" ;·,ld well,
septic, a. .. so\: ..,rox. :ll
lieautiful, .,eared acres and a
mce stocked QOnd. All mineral
rights Just $15,000.00

lr

'""""'''~~
fiJIIowino
cribed
,_, tho
llhlhl:
Situttlodeoin

. · _ · . ' : MAJ.! - .

NEW LISTING -

OWN YOUR
OWN

indudlng cool) and -loum
oH 1nd noturlf c.. on ond

~I Estate ~

' E . ~in. .

fat-

eection tine Nnnlng Ell! and ' County, Ohio. end boundid
Wett bet\uean Section 1 and e n d - - u
6, Mid 2'h ICrel boint in to-wit: Being 29 ec- of lend
Section 6 ond adjoining firot off of the Eut end of the
mentioolod ~of 10 following deocrlbed 40 ecnoo.
ecreo.
to-wit: 40 ICIWI of land off tho
Tnoct tt: lho minerolo (not Eel! end of 1 conain tract of

TEAFORD
.

Public Notice

Public Notice

•• o•._

4-I· Z mo. d.

•

Public Notice

Wo._.ay 3 p.m.-5 p.m.
T'"""'ay 3 p.m.- 5 p.m.
friday 1 p.OL-2 p.m.
latvrday 10 a.m.• I UC a.m.
UIGI ANIMAlS AND
SUIGIIY IY APPOINTIIINT
304·675·2441
· 12-3-tfn
.,

••s~.,
""'T..
- ~•l•l
f•ll Tltlt
..

" FREE ESTIMATES"
PH.

;.m..
T...., 6:30 p.m.-1 p.m.

3/ 1/ 2 mo. pd.

:m~l~IA

•lntuladon
•Storm Doors
•Storm Window•
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

&amp; Vicinity

Yard Sele· Georges Creek
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
Rd, Friday 4-26, 10 -5pm.
3305 JACISON AVI. - '
Moving Sale Saturday April
SMALl ANIMAl HOURS
27,
9-5 . 383 Debby Dr ..
......, ' p.m.-5

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GilSON R!FRIGIRATOI

JAMES KEESEE

448-Gallipolis
367-Cheahire
388-VInton
,- 246-Rio Grande
258-Guyan Diatric!
843-Arabla District
379-Walnul

--- .

WE ARE YOUR SAL£5
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

675-PI. Pleaoanl
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773- Maaon
882-Ntw Haven
895-.L etart

OPEN E,ACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8

CAU COW(l:

698-7219

Mason Co., WV
A"a Code 30!'

Meigs County
Area.. Code 814

PAUL~. SHOCKEY. D.V.M.

"FrH Eolimatel"

Call David McDonald

Classified page~ cover the
following telephone exchanges ....

IN MIDDLEPORT

Complete Ounet Work
Complete Remodeling'
ROofing of all Type's
Wortc.ed In home aree
20 .yeera

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Flll~flCI~I

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY
CLINIC

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

An 1101111 ce 111ents

Yard Sale

...... Giiiii'poiii.........

SMAlL GROCERY
STORE w /GAS PUMP

PHONE.
992-2156
Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.

7

The Daily Sentinel Page- 9

1 974 Holly Park, totolofect·
ric.

~

bedrooms.

2

air

condltlonera. Cofl614-949·
2536
.
3 bed'room, completely furnlthtd . Washer, dryer. air,
under.plnned. awning . Set

up on N~tod tot. Call 81 4·
992·7.79.
•
Mobile hom•• mov.d. In·
aured. 20 Yllfl •x~riehH .

304-5711 -286$ or 15712998 ..

ond' l230

1

moniti lnctudoo

water. 1ewega and tf'llah ~
See 8t 31 4 3rd. St., ka"

nouga . Cofl614·4411·7,-t73.

2 bdr.. Kompor HolloW Rd,
f200 dep .,_1200 re~t, Colt
ofter 6. 1114-4411 -13114.
3 2 · bedroom mobi .. homee.,

UO . dopoait. f '176 . to.
t1B6 . pfua electric ond eoo.
304-676 -66, 2.
••

43 Farms for Rent;.
Paature for rent. Cell 304-

07&amp; -5104.

�·~-------------------------

The
44

Sentinel

LAFF·A·DAY

Apartment
fo; Rant

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Hout i ng Opportunit\rt
monthly rent ltarts at •113
for .1 bedroom .o nd •198 for
2 bedroom, dopoolt f200.
located near Spring Valley
Plaza and Foodland. pool
.,an.d Cable TV avolloblt.
~ hour~ 11_posJible1 0 am to 4
pmand7pmto9pm

Pets for Sale

Fish Tank and Pet Shop,
2413 J•ckton Avenue.

Point Plea.. nt, 304 -8762083 . Floh, bird• end more .

58

Onion plants just arrived-

white. red&amp; yellow . Swisher
Implement Co .. St. Rt. 1 N .•
Gallipolis, Oh. Cell 614-

Apt. lor rent 1200 &amp; up. Coil
675 -5104 or 875· 5388 .

~48 -0475 .

Vegetable and flower plants,
wholesale and retail , located
Let an next door to gravel pit,
watch for sign or call 304896-3400 .

Furnished 3 rm apt. upattlirt,
utilities pd, t1 95 mo ...

•eo

"I knew you hadn't quit
smoking!"

-45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Room•
and light houae keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Coli 614-448-0756 .
Furnished room. range~ re·
frio. • 100, oharo both. oi~­
gle mole. 919 2nd. AVo. ,
. Golllpolio. Coli 446-44 t 8
after 7PM .
Furnished 1 bedroom apart·

ment, utilltiea paid. 304-.

53

Antiques

For Sale : Antique ' piano,
approx.100yra. old, cherry .
Coil 814-446-8204.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Knaufl Firewood Spilt- 96%
hardwood• . You pick up or
~4-~e~i;~~24"&amp;~~P vende.r .

876-7112 .

46

Space for Rant

Mobile home lot, 12'x60~ or
smaller." *715 water paid. 4th
&amp; Neil, Goillpollo. Coil 446·
44111oher ?PM .
Mobile homo loll, R • R
Mobile Homo Pork. Bulovillo
Ad. Golipolio, Oh. Coil 614446-0527 or 814-446 1283.
Trailer apace for rent. Call
614-446-3243 ovo.
COUNTRI' MOBILE Home
Pork. Route 33, North of
PomeroY . Large Iota. Calf
614-992-7479.
Trailer lots for rent. Mwer
end water furni1hed. will
·, take one omoll child. 304·
1176•1076.

SPECIAL cut olobo 8 PU
loade delivered in dump
truck t!OO,or21oadot180 .
You pickup •16. Cell 81424&amp;-5804 .
Pool People Special:
let ·u l summerize your pool
8100 . 10% oft. oil pumpo
and filtoro. Middlepon 614992-5724 or Golllpollo614446c30&amp;1.
Spring· Speciei-Patrlot utility
buildings on diaplay at two
convenient locationt, B &amp; S
Produce. Viend St. in Pt.
Pleasant, and French City
Mobile Homea in Galllpolla.
ht2 $695. oloo 10~18
t995. Oollvered and oot up
on your lot.
2 rail" motorcycle trailer,
factory built. 1 electric chain
11w. 12 in. bar. 1 gaa chain
saw 10 in. ber. All A·1 con d .
Caii814-246-62S4.
Pooltlltor ID.E.) 875, Sooro
.pool goo hooter 160. Coil
814-448-1111. IStt .. 246
Debby Or.(

' 61 Household Gopds
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
e2 Olivo St.. Galli polio. New
• uoed wood·"""' ltovoa. 6
pc wood LR ouho f319.
bunk beda 1199. ant ron
rec:IIMn U9, now &amp; uoed
bedroom suit... rengea,
wrtnQM wa•ra. • shoee.
N.e ,v livlntroom aultea
•199- UI9. Iampo, tlto
buying c~l • Wood IIOVOI.
Ceil 814-441-3159 ..
lo• •oprlltto, &amp; mottraoo
,..ular or q.....,, dlnotlo tot.
couch eMit, recliner, 'h
tin bed. CoH et 4-448·
3224.
c ·o untry Ook tobleo. chlirt.
cupbOordo, dtlko; leo bo•••·
ConkiM. Tu_.l!'lolnt, At.
7 . H ond cnflod en,d
ft ..........
Plcunt uoed furnltura. 304·
8711-8483 or 8711· 1410.
RICK'I NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. C-peN our
pricft. bldey. Phone
304· 773-5430.
1

•

12ft. St1r-ereft eluminmum
boot et75. Godd 30 in .
etectric ~ange *125. ·Cell
814-246-5439.
Bulllt babv bed with mot·
treaa. all wood. nice condition. mile . beby itemt, •n·
tique 12 01· double barrefl
ohotgun. Coli 814· 44S·
07S5.

Electric box, 1 20. for more
In!. coil 304-676-6576 or
676-6383 .
room for housa or
24 ft.•t 2 ft . 2 yoara
old, bath. 40 gal . hot water
tank, hook up for ~asher·
dryer, ~7.009 viilu~ . Sell
a3500 . Coli 304-57622 8

l-:~=-'-~·:::---:-:-----

2 One-Way ticket• to Honolulu by way of Charleston,
Chicago and San Francisco
to be uoed by May 3. 1985 .
f260. each . 304 - 876 4302.
1984 Honda 3 wheeler.
Schwinn 10 1peed bike, 6
16" old style rally wllaela.
304-676-6828 .
large black leather bar with
morblotop. •100. 304-6762674.
Twin size bed with mattre11,
good cond, 304-676-3731,
after 6 PM.
Golf. clubl. cuatom built aet
of irons. 2 thru 9, PW, leas
then 1 yoor old, tt75 .0ii.
304-676-,804.

.Washer end dryer for sale
ohor6 p .m . 304-675-6483.
3 piece llvlngroom suite,
,30.4 -675-3889.

55

Building Supplies

.
Building Motoriolo
Block. brick, sewer pipes,
windowo . llntolo ; ole .
Cleude Wintera, Alo Grande,
0 . Coli 614-245-5121 .
Biock. brick. mortar and
m11onry suppliea. Mountain
Stote Block. Rt. 33, New
Hoven. W. Vo. 304·8822222.

56

Pate for Sela

TRS-SO modol Ill computer
with 4SK end loll of ooftworo. loot otter. Col 81 4441-3243 ......

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding oil broodt. Htotod
Indoor-outdoor facilltlea.
AKC Doberman pupploo:
Model 77 R uoer 220 owlft,
bull borrtll, with Soyco StUd Service. Coli 814-446. 7795.
octlon wWh ocopo.
4•1 ft. utMity troller with
wonch • Mahto, 1250, Coli JUdy Ttylor Oroomlng. Con
814-3S7-7220 .
81 4-441-2459.

•us.

5 opotcl Bpldor blcyclo1o•c.
co,.d, 145. lntereitH c•ll
11 4·441·31U M-W· F- bt·
8 :00-IO:OOPM.
ATC 70 motorcycle. Full tlu
btd . CoM 114·44S-9701.

Sentinei- Page- 11

Motors Homes
S. Campers

stt ,OOO . Ctll 814-388·
9989.
36 ft . filth wheel. loti of
e•traa. 'h mi. from Rt . 7 on
Ro1.,1sh Lana (North of Cheohiro. Oh .).

8 week old pigo. Coil 814 ·
388 -9602 or 61 4 -3SS ·
8141 .

10ft. alldeln truck camper;
oloepi 6 . t 976 Rlnkorbullt
tri-hull boat with trailer, 81
hp Mercury engine. cell after
8 PM , 304-8S2-2B4S. .

6 year old gelding regl,tered
Quonor Horae. 1500. Coil
814 - ~92 - 5380 .

2 brad aowa, 1 ten month old

I WO&gt;JPEi&lt; IP
THE!Y'LL '&amp;R:IU6
ANY TELEVI~ION
llBPOilTell~ .

Winnebago motor . home,
23' . AC, generatOr, CB,
1972. like now. •10.500 .
Coil 304-875-1731 oltor
6PM .

Hamp Boor. Coil 614•7422724 .
For sale at all times •pringing
Holatene cows and heiten .
304-676-2610. 676-304228.3 .
.

s~ r vlce s

Suppl ws
&amp; live stock

fM ill

.

Ulliaton 4 row no till corn . 1984 VW GTI. low milooge,
plantar, like neW 86,000 . ••· cond. Cell 814-446John Deera 2 row corn 4580, 5 :30-6:00 .
planter UOO .. 8 , 10,13 h .
wheel disc 8460 &amp; up. Plant 79 Must•ng 4 apeed. Cell
•etten $200 . Concrete 614-446-3544 or 614-9~9mixer. John Oaere wheat 22a3 .
drill a626. Wagon 20ft. bed
tande·m VJh&amp;els electric 82 Mercury Lynx 3 dr ..
hatchback. 4 cyl .. FM -AM
brakoa. $1 . 250. 10 ft . culi·
tapacker $175 . Ford 212 in. cassette, 4 spd .. air . sunplow, $275. Ford rakes roof, low miles, exc. cond.
$660 . Fertili~er . apreadar 13,300 . Cell 61 4·446$200. International square 1761 eher 5 call 614-38S·
baler $1 ,260. Heaton big 9811 .
round ·hay baler $3,200 .
New Idea No . 10 complckar 1957 Chevv Belair, auto,
$860. CO· op tractor live vary good cond, $2,600
llrrn. Cell 814-388 -9844 .
power '760. Other field
ready equipment. HoWe's
Farm Machinery, Rt. 124 &amp;
62 Oldt 88 collector items.
Mayhew Rd, Jackson, Oh . 2 new tiies, tail pipe, runs
good. body good, all orginal.
814-286-6944.
43,000 actuel milaa. asking
M Farrhall Tractor for sale. 8800. Coll814-448 -4462.
Good condition. Cell 6 t 4 ·
1979 Honda Accord hatch949 -2658 .
back, clean, good condition,
Wooda 7 ft Bush Hog
•2.750 . Cell 614 -446 S 1 ,600, 26 ft tobacco pipe 13 965.
troiloro (I I $500. , (2)$900 .
Morgeri'1 Woodlewn Farm, 1980 Plymouth Duster e·
Rt 36, 304-876-1286 or cyl. , auto, PS, air, new dr11,
304-736· 2342 .
t2,396 . 1977DodgeAopen
wagon $696. Coil&amp; 1 4 -286Pole Buildings Conatructed 6622 .
for co01mercial, garages,
farm. atores. etc . Any tize, 77 Ford LTO II body good
free eetimates. Call 304- cond ., 8500 or best' offer.
675 -3981 .
Call614-446-7014.
Saara 8hp garden tiller
1250. 304-675 -4237.
1979 Harley-Davidson Cleosic. lots of eKtraS, 8 ,000
miles. $4,800 or best offer.
304-675-1259 .
Farm ·equlpmont · for 11le,
Holland tobacco setter
t325 : Pickup disc U21i.
304-895-3430.
•

1978 Ford LTO, blue vinyl
seats and -top, power tteering and brokoo. outomotlc,
tilt iteerlng, cruiae. AM-FM
stereo with 8 track, air
conditioning. 81 ,500. Runo
good. Good condition . 742·
2510. 1
1977 Ford Mustlng Cobra
2. Good condition. Sharp.
Coll614-992-6523 .

t----------•---------~

They'll Do It Every Time

81
71

73

' Autos for Sale

t 978 Mollbu Cltuic .
t t , 500. 1 8BO Plymouth,
tt,500. 1977 Chevy Novo.
8660. t 979 Molcury. 4
cycle, It .500. Old• convertible, _ •960. 1977 Pon·
tloc Grand Prl•. 1900. s..
at T &amp; G Auto Selea under
Pomeroy · Meaon
brldga.moO

8o 4 W.O.

t 976 Plymouth Voyager 8
pa11enger van •aso. After·
430 coll614-992-2670.
1972 Chov oi&gt;orto van . Aok
1700. 304-458-,086.
Ford ven. cuatomizad. lA T,
1977, AT, PS. PB, good
cond.. 83,900. Cell 304676-1731 otter 6PM .

· 1973 Chevelle Malibu . 360
or\glne. 1 1 26 Eoot Moln.
Pomeroy. Coil 814-992 3408.

74

1976 Cutlaos Oldolor aolo.
8700. Coll614-992-6309.
1 973 Dodge Chorgar with
newly rebuilt engine ,
1450.00. 304-8711-6864.
t 980 · Oldo Cutlooo
Brougham V-8. 281 engine.
••c cond, 15,200.00. 304·
676-2486.

Vans

19n Dodge van .. •t ,000.
89.000 mi. Call 614-4488508.

1983 PlymOUth Tourlamo.
2 .2. P,S .. P.B., AM· FM ,
louvers, 6 speed. Excellsnt
condition . Coil 814 -742 2979 or 814-742-2143.

Motorcycles

2-1979 Hondo XR 600 both
for $1,000. Cell 814-2469598 otter &amp;PM ;
19B3S.uzuki1254-whlolor
wi.th rocko. •eoo. ••c . cond.
Coil 814-379-21B3 titer
_4_P_M_._ _ _ _ _ __.._

1

Harley Davidson super gUde
1973, leu than t 2,000
miles, new pelnt, fat bob
1984 Cougar lS. sun roof. tanka, new pipes • tires.
air cond, t9,800., aher 4 :30 t2,1 00. exc. cond . Call Will
304·882 -3321'
Darnbrough, 8'4 · 446 ·
t 981 Toyoto · Terrcel , l-o_o_4_3_o_ft_o_r_5_:3_o_.____

•a.

1 50.00.
87 6· 2700 .

Phone

78 Mollbu clo111c. loaded.
runo good. e&amp;OO. 304 -875364B or S95-3480.

Home
Improvements

Marcum Roofing a. Spout·
ing. Now Installing rubber
roofl . 30 yeart experience.
epedalizing in buil~ up roof.
Call 614-388-9857.

"('GOT T" PREPRRE'?

HEAR THAT? IT'6
COM/Nq FROM
. Ttf\T 7HICIIE7-

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guorentee, local referencea
furnished . Fru eatimetel.
Cell collect t-614 -237 0488. day or night. Rogers
BaHrrtent Weterproofing .
---------lc0 • M Contractora. Vinyl
and aluminum aiding replacement windowa i n sulating - rooflng ~
remodeling and naw
construction-gutters. Call
304-773-6131.

F'O~

WNUT?_ AGP?_
r YUH !

I'M TAL~ IN'

I

MV GRiiiATEST WlSH IS
TO SURPRISE THE KING
WITH THIS PRIZE,
SIR ALLEY...

J S. L lnsuletlon. Vinyl
aktlng, Footing, replacement
wlndowa, ltorm windowa,
otore do~ro. Call 8 t 4 -992 ,
2772 .
Gene's Deep Stream Carpet
Cleaning. upholstrey ,
ecotchguard, deodorizers,
free estlmate1, highly recommended. 614~ 7422211 or 614-992-6309.

Sporty car!

RON'S Television Service.
House cells on RCA, Quazar,
GE. Spociollng in Zenith .
Cell304-676-2398 or 614 448-2454:

Countr~ place!

hes so rich ..

,j;;,;;T.;;:i:;i;;;;;;i;.;:-;,;;;;;;;

t 969 Harley .Oovidoon. ox- 1
callent condition. 12,000. I.
Tree Trimming. atump
Muot oell . Cell 614-446removal. Coil 304-875 .
1768.
1331 .

304-

1976 Corvette, Silver. air,
pOwer windows, automatic.
tilt whnl, goo~ cond, phone
304-882-3181. '

1980 Honda motor bike
model XR-80 mint condllion. ' 400 · Coil 614 ' 446 1 61 8

_~·--,------1 _1_983
Harley Davidson tour

gli~o. full dr-.o, AM-FM ·
1978 Pinto, stick· shift, iir ltli"tto .ceil.,' new .coiwct .•
.cO,dltloni~ng, · Michelon 11,000· mi. · Ctll oltor ·6PM.
tir4ii, low mileage; no tUft:. 614•446·2115,.
.
. 304.675-4683. . '
.
1984 Harley XLX 900 ' ml.
1978 Toyota· Crelllida auto, Call oftor IIPM. 614-446pa, pb .. 8 cyl. air cond. p.w. 21115. •
_58 ..900 • !hila•· tm-fm
.t rock. •4.350. 304-676 1259 . ·
..
.
.

RINGLES'S SERVICE, •••
periitnced carpenter. electri·
cian, m ..on, painter, roof.
ing (including hot tar
application) 304-675-2088
or 6.76-·736~.

Maybe
he likes
hole of a building?
being
with us
rats!

·I

I
j

Rot~rv ·or cabla t~l drillln!J.
Most well• completed ~•me
day·. Pun)p: ..-lea end Hrvi,,
ceo. 304-895-3802:
. ·.

Ster.ka Tr"- 8t lawn Service .
Londocoplng. oNding, tertii·
i~l(lg, .thatching, f9r compl•t• la:.vn aervk:e, Call us.
304-~76 - 2010 .. ·' ·

.. why did he rent

a room in this rat

I
-

..

8 a. b Homelniprovemerita,
replacement windoWs .
aluminum soHit. vinyl tid·
ing. continuout guttera. frH
estlm~ea, . elf work guaren·
teed, spring discount, caU
·evonlngo 304-678-2644. · ·

1977 Ford Gnmeda, some
body work. Folr. $360.
304-678-3213.

82
1981 KE10D Koweooki motorcycle for sale. Call 61 4·
992·6666 or 614-9923617.

Cadillac t 981. Fleetwood
Brougham, 4 door, diesel,
30-36 MPG, like now,
as.5oo·. con 304-876 1731 oher &amp;PM.

72

1981 Hondo CX500. water
coolttd. ohoh drive. 900
mlle'l. $1,275 .00. 304875-2829.
Cabin Cruiaer, Cris1 Craft.
38' twin engin•, 1957,
W-40' trailer, t9,500. Call
304-675-1731 oftir BPM .

Trucks for Sale

85 Ford F-700 T.LT, cob ..
parts for 1118. see;Ron. 246,
Scottochool Rd. \tinton.

75

1974,Bizer front train. good
cond .. $290. Other parts for
aolo. Coil 814-448-0685.

84 Dodge Ram deluxe ceb,
PS. PB, tilt whtol, t t ,000
mi .. crulu control, topper,
treiler hookup, priced to •II.
Cell 61-4-379-271 2 or 614379-2243.

29 ft. Crest pontoon boet
with 86 hor" power mlr·
cury ~gina . In excellent
condition. 111,000. Aloo
boot troller. 11,&amp;00. 7422180 or 742-2267.

t97S F-100 Ford oho" btd
e2,199 . 1977 F,o rd Wrench
Arrow. outo. air. n .199.
John' o Auto Sein, Bulevillo
Rd. Gallipolis , Ohio
(61414411-47S2.
:-::::-::-:--::::-::--m~si~2'Zh:~a.Coll 814-

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accaaaorias

8 ft . utility bed with compor
top. uklng 1300. Coli 614448-4412.

1978 Ford F210 Suporcob.
Good oondltlon. Prlceil
right. Ctll 814-992•2849.

77

t 979 Dodge one ton with
t 2' Omohe otondord dump
,bed . Muet Ml to beUevtt.
Garaged. Prioocl on lnopoctlon . 992 - 379S otter
7:30pm or contoot Dolloo
Webor.
·

Auto Repair

'Poroono Body Shop. Loculi
Rd. Pt.PINoont. Poot K.K.
FrH Eltlmotot. S14-9854174.

78

' 72 lntor'l 24 It Hoy truck
f2.500. '72 CJ5 JHp, new
eng, point, ohockt u ,500 .
Morg~n•a Wood..wn Farm.
Ctl 304·875-1281 or 304731-2342.

Motors Homes
8o Campers

30ft. RV: GMC 414 onilnt.
41,1100 mi. AC, folding TV
onttnno, AM·FM, "'P"·dock
oteroo, Cl, full Nfrlo.• hot
air h. .tlni. awning, 011
atove. micro-wave. thower,
Iorge clooot, good otorogo,
·1 10 V Ontn generator.
Roady to go, Alklng IlK or
blot ; onytNng g wroneln 90 dlyt, I will poy
tho bill. Colli! 4·211S·9959.
Proferovenlngo. Conbe-n
tnytlmo.

4 W.O.

l878 i:J.e Goldo~ ~oglo,
P8, PB, low mileage, good
cond .. 14,500. Coli 814·
441-1700.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

17 ft. Starcreft and trailer.
140 H.P. , Inboard. outba.rd, tri-haul. life jackets,
skiing equipment, atereo
Included. Coil 814-99275411, ook lor CloUdlo before
11:00 or 304-773-6167 alter
8:00.

1974 Blrer front train, good
cond .. t290. ·Other pans for
oalo. Coll814-448-0666.
•o.lodtomp
Chovv Luv pickup, with flat
bod, belt offer. Coil 614256-6261 alter 8:00PM :

Vane lit

Plumbing
Heating

S.

1982 Ford Eocon. 4 opeed.
a-c. em-fm Hatchback. 304675-1690.

73
Ortgomvynd Cottory Kon·
nol. CFA Hlmoloyon, Porolon
ond 8iemott lllttono . AK c
Chow puppleo. Call 6 t 4 441!·314;4 otter 7PM .

Deily

~973 Wlnnabogo. 24 ft ..

1871 Chev. Eloemlno as.
••• cond. dOVII phone 304·
S71-4230 tvenlngo 304e?l-41153 . .

13 hlveo of beet. 1 ••tractor. mloc. bet equipment, oil
good cond. Coli olttr tl,
., 4 · 441-4933.

The

Ohio

&amp;elf contained, exc. cond ..

Livestock

65 Seed S. Fertilizer
FurniShed ofllcloncy 701
4th Avo .. Gollipolla. l t 8 o . J - - - - - - - - - -.....---------~ -:::-:--:::----'- = - - - - utilitioa paid. ohoro both, -::-:-:-7"--:-::-:--=--61 Farm Equipment
Fertilizer by bag or
adults. Col14 46 · 4416 alter 61 Household Goods
54
Misc . Merchandise
I 103 Filth ·Street, Now
7PM .
Haven . 304-882- 2271 or
Spring Special: 24'x30'x8'
882 -3358.
with 18'x7' garage door &amp;
Up1tairs 3 rooms, furnished.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE . 14x70, 1983 Shulito trailer
nrvlco door , $3,88S
bath. wa1her-dryer. AC. Sofa. chair, rocker. ono- for Hie. 3 bedrooms. ·Excelerected. Iron Horse Bldgs .
clean, no petl, ref., dep. man, 3 til bias. (extra hasvy). ler'tt condition. Singer sew.1 ..
8.14-332 -9745 collect.
roq .. odulu. Coli 814-4411- eeaa. Sofas end chaira ing ·machine. Good condi1519 .
Tra nsport ation
pricod from f2S6 . to f896 .' tlon. Eltctric or podol . Coil
CROSS &amp; SONS
Tobleo. •110 ond up to., 25. 814-992-3454. Will sell ot
U.S . 36 West, Jackson.
Upstairs unfurnished 3 room Hide-a·beda,l390. and up l-r•_•_•_o_n•_b_•_•..:,p_ric_•_·_ _ __
Ohio . 614-288-8451 .
apt!. carpeted. utHities paid, to f550 ., oofo bodo 1145,
Massey Ferg_u son, NeW
no children, no pets·. Call Recliners,. *2,25. to 8375., Wincheater Model 12-12
71
Autos for Sale
Holland, Bush Hog Sales &amp;
814-448-1837.
lamps from *28. to $126 . ge., 28 inch modified barrel .
Service. Over 40 uaed
· pc. dinettes from $1 09 ., to All original. $376. Two H.P.
tractore to chooae from 8t
3 rooms with private Nth. 436. 7 pc. •ts9 ond up . Dayton electric motor, 1111TOP CASH paid for '80
complete line of new &amp;
ret. Requootod . Call 614- Wood uble with eix cheira 230volt. Nearly new. *150.
model and newer used cars.
usad equipment. Largest
448-2216.
f286 to 1745. Delle ., 1 o Kellogg-American air comSmith 8ulck-Pontloc, 19 tt
aalection In S .E. Ohio.
up tto *226 . Hutches, pressor pump. Newly reEaotern Avo .. Galli polio. Coil
New o.n a bdr. eHiciency ·apt . f560 . Bunk bed complete built. f150. Coil Jerry Well
614-446-2282.
1 30 Farm all with cult iva·
CaD 614-446 -0390.
with mottro1111, 1275. ond at 814-992-7844 eftor5:00
tors, exc . cond . Will conaider
up to f395 . Baby bodo, pm.
trade for good used PU 1967 Ford Mustang.
Garage apt .• furniahed. 29!12 1110. Mettre11ea or box
truck . Call 614-448-7838 81.000 . Cell 61 4 · 3BB ·
Neil Ave., Gallipolia. 1 bdr .. springs. fuH or twin, •sa., Canning jars, new dre11e1,
8509.
after 5PM .
1236, utUitloo paid. Cell firm, $68. ond 178. Quoon new 1hoes, and other items.
448-4416 oltor ?PM .
uta, $22&amp;. 4 dr. cheata, Sewing machine, roll -ewsy
190 Allis Chalmer tractor. 80 Chevy Citation AC, PS.
$49. 5 dr. choou. •69. Bod bedo. Call 614-843-6346 .
good running "c ond .. good PB, standard, AM-FM 8
Furniahed apartment . fro moo, *ZO.ond 126 .. 10
track, tilt. Coil 614-266tires. Call 6,4-682·7332 .
Adulll only. Coli 814-448- gun - Gun cabinets, 83150. 3 prom gowns with hoops.
1421 or 614-256-6265.
9623 or 814-446-1443.
G11 or electric ranges 8376. featured in Seventeen, worn
24 ft . 4 ex.le heavy equipBaby mattresses, 1215 &amp;. once. Sil:e 10. Call 6141980 Chryalar La Baron (mement trailer, electric brakes,
Rivenide Apts. Middleport. f36 , bed !romeo 820. t25, 992-2365 oftor 4 :00 pm .
pindel hoOk hitch, $1,800 dallion(, many extras,
Special rete• for , S8nior &amp; t30. king frame •so.
negotiebie. Call 614-388- 55,000 mile a. An e.ll:ceptioo·
Citizens. 1130 . E·q uel Houa· Good selection of bedroom Firewood $20 .00 Pickup '9908.
allv good family car. Priced
lng Opportunities . 614· suites, rockera, metal ca- load, UO.OO delivered . Call
to ooll. Call 814-446-0684
992-7721 .
binets, headboard• $38 6: 3!14-675-8782 or 876 Allis Chalmer tractor. good or 814-448-0665 betWeen
2991 .
up to $66 .
cond .. good tiraa, $760. Call 9AM-1PM.
2: bedroom apettmenu.
614-256 -6689.
New Haven, WVa. Newly Used Furniture --· 6 pc. WANTED-Aroo Spono En1983 Oodga Charger good
remOdeled. In town . 814head boards. -elect- thuliuts that want to re·
4000 Ford tractor, newly ~~~~tion. Call 614-256- .
992-7481.
range and 1 bedroom ceive direct mail apeciale
rebuilt engine. 12.996. Big
suitcu. 3 milet out Bulavllle lilt, an ••citing new mer·
1 65 Mesaey Ferguson diesel
furn!shed apart- Rd. Open 9am to 5pm, Mon . chandiae program, from Tri
tractor •4.496 . SOO Case •1978 Dodge Omni AC. PS.
E. Main St. in thru Sat.
County
Sporto,
304-676,
PB. aUto, new radial tires.
tractor PS , live pwer .
Coli 6 t 4 -992 - 814-448-0322
2988 or write to Rt. 1, Box
$2,696 . Call ' 614- 286 - AM-FM ceu . ltereo,
471. Point Pleoaant, W. Va.
$1 ,260 . Call 61 4 -388·
8622 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Include neme addre11 and
9906 .
1 bedroom, unfumlahed. Washera, dryers. refrlgera- . zip.
Huffy 8 HP riding lawn
Stove. refrigerator. waaher. tors, ranges. Skagg• Aptractor. 8496 . 66 in . 3 pt. 1984 Olds 88 Coupe
dryer. No children. No petl. pliances, Upper River Rd . Wild Turkey Seuon - Army
LONG
tiller, $1 . 296. Call Brougham, air. cruise, tilt,
1 2 miles from Pomeroy. Call beside Stone Crest Mo1el .
· surplus denim
power, V· R, 7,000 miles.
.614-286-6622 .
61 4-992.2S07 .
Sam Some614-446-7398.
like new. Cell 614-4463 pt. PU disc $250, 3 pt . 7002.
APARTMENTS. mobile
hitch 2 bonom plowaf195 .
homea, houses. Pt . Pleaaant
3 Pl.. hitc~ cuJtivatora:., 225 . · 19.87 Ford Cougar 93•R7',
·-·and Gollipono·•. ~ 1 4 ;446.
.
3
pt. hay rake $395, ManeY "$800. Coil614-246 -9802
'
8221 .
.
F.etguson bale S396. Cttll
19"79 Monte Carlo In Ve,y
614·- 2B6-6522 .
:Nice clean apartmenta.
good ~ond. Beat offer. Call
-Hender•on, 304 -675-1972
1975 408 Gravely lawn 614-4,6-3243 eve. ..
'efter 6 PM. ·
·
trector with 3.2 in . cut
~mower, ~HP, e15o. good . -1977 Ford M~veri.ck. bait
cond .; , one- owner . Call ·
Coil 614-266-6261 .
9AM ·9PM. 6_14-446'-7162 .
~ : OOPM. ·
-

·.

79

Wanted to buy. UHd utMity
trailer and trailer hitch.
cheep, 304·875-1 804.

.

..

KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®bJ L.IIITJ Wright
Wanted to Buy

Fruit

8o Vegetables

·

deposit.' 94 locu1t. Adutts
only. Coil 446 -1340 Of
446-3S70 .

62

63

Monday-Friday, Call 814448 - 2745 or have

me11age . -

56

26. 1986

Friday. April 26. 1985

iddleport, Ohio

1--------1 8 h. Sccmy .,.mper troller,
Coli 814-2ee-1417. _

t

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh and Pine
Gallipolia, Ohio
Phone 614-448 -3888 or
814-446-4477

Evening
JfelevMionLMtings.
~
~·~~~------~------------~--------------------------------------~~-----FRI DAy
'
eM.ecutlve a1de bv
min.,
her
son's

4/26/85
EVENING

D (}) PM Magazine

7 :00

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1. Bo• 355, Galli·
polio . Coli 814· 367-0576 .

83

a

Excavating

Good -1 EKcevatlng, ballmenta, footera. driveway&amp;,
aeptic tanka, landscaping.
Coli anytime 614-448 4637, ,James L. Daviaon, Jr.
owner.

7 :30

Ooztr Work lend clooring,
landecaping. etc. Free estl·
motto. Coil 814-446-B038
or 814-992-7119 anytime,

84

'

S.

8 :00
Electrical
Refrigeration

Ed't Appliance Service .
Serving all make• • brands
of refrigerator~, w•ahera 6
d ryen. nove a a. dia hwoohoro. Ciill 814-3677187 or 614-446. 44611. '

rn

SEWING ~achine repairs,
service. Authortzed Singer
Sale• It Sttvlce Sharpen
Sciuora . Febrlc Shop,
' Pomeroy . 614-992-2284.

85

General Hauling

'

•

James Boys Water Service.
Aloo poolo filled. ·c oll ·8t4 258-1 .1 41 or eU-448 ·
1175 or 814-44S-7911 .
Ken ' s Wete; Servke. Wells.
cisterns, pools filled . Phone
814-367-0623 or614 -367·
·
,7741 night Ol"dty.

87

8 :30

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec j Ave., Gallipolis .
lit 4 -448-7833 or 814-4481B33.
·

ChuCk
Conn6r'o
Wettem Theater
(]) Sponacenter
([) Sanford and Son
(I) Entertainment Tonight
(!) Wheel of Fortune ·
C1J Wheel of Fortune
(]) @
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newahour
llQ Nowo
Ill /l2l New Name That
Tune
Ill Jeflorsons
D C1J Tic Tac Dough
(]) Ciaco Kid
.'
(!) NFL Sup~ratars The
Men Who Played the G11me ·
Pat Fischer.
IJ) Allin the Family
(]) 0 Cll Family Feud
rn Jeopardy
&amp;I Wheel of Fonune
Iii {l)
Entortoinmonl
Tonight
fl) WKRP In Clnclnnetl
D (I) (lJ Boat Times
Joanne mis interpre ts Dan's
motives when he asks hAr 1n
attend a Sunday volleyball
tournament with him . (60
min.)
CD L9ne Ranger
NFL' I Greetoat. Moments: Beat-Ever Coaches
IJ) MOVIE: 'Guns of the
Timberland'
(]) G1 lBI Webotor (CCI
George attempts a come ~
bUck wilh a faltering football
team. !AI
Cll [JG MOVIE: 'Arthur
the King '
Cll @ Weohington Week/
Review Paul Duke is joined
by top Washington journal~
ists a1;1alyzing tho week 's
news.
Ill
MOVIE:
' Perfect
Friday'
·
[HBOI Second City 26th
Anniversary Specla' Join
Ed Asnor, John Candy, $h~l­
ley ~ong and more as thiS
comedy troupe Celebrates
its silver anniversary .
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Netlonal
lampoon's Vacation'
(I) Orea&amp;.. ._A dventure
(]) 81 [j)) Mr. Belvedere
(CC) The k_ids get earned
away In a charity drive and
end up bringing home a bag
lady.
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Grosse .' Nikolaus Harnon:
court and the Concentus
Musicus of Vienna perform
Bach 's siK. Brandenburg
Concer-t os. (60 min .)
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Murder'
9 o30 Cll Ill /l2l Off the Reck !CCI
A widow teams up with her
husband's b usiness partner
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Rocka
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of an international businessman as a means to delve
into his father's drug activi·
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(]) NBA Baslr.etball Playoff
Game: Teams To Be
Announced
(]) G1 {j) Me ·&amp; Mom (CC)
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Violoncello CeUisls
Claude ,Kenneson, Paul Tobias and leonard Rose perform oh violin/cellomaker
David Wiebe's new instrument .. (A) (60 min.)
(]Jl News
111 Notional Aerobics
Chemplonahipo
IMAXl MOVIE: 'Mr. Mom'
1 0 :30 (J) Jock Benny Show
r.m Sneak Preview• Film
"-"
critics J effrey Lyons and
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and 'Return· of the Living
Dead.'
, :00 D "" CIJ ~ ... CIJ""' m
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(]) Bill Cosby Show
(]) MOVIE: 'Hondo Acrooa
Tho Tobie'
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1111 Major Looguo BHoboll :
Cincinnati at San Fran·
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a CIJ MOVIE: ' SST :
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Nooea--~ly - -•

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2 :00 D (f) NeWs
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CD Newo/Sign Off
g Wild, Wild West
2 : 1 5 ® CNN Headline News
2 : 30 (I) Blondle "
·
~ MOVIE: ' South Seas
Maaaacre'
[MAX) MOVIE : 'National
U.mpoon'a Vacation'
3 :()0 ([) 700 Club
Elt MOVIE : ' Hell In the
Pacific '
3 : 15 [HBO) Second City 25th
. Anniversary Special Join
Ed As ner, John Candy, Shelley Long and more as this
com edy troupe celebrates
its silver anniversary .
3 :30 C1J Sponacenter /
4 :00 (]) PKA Full Contact
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lMAXl MOVIE: 'The Hound
of the Ba•kervUies'
4 :16 hiBO) MOVIE : ' Mike's
Murder'
4 :30 CD Ross Bagley

CIJ Iii ® Finder of Lost

(I) Seeing Things
fl) Start of Something Big
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9 o00

and Dee Dee try to protect a
s uspected bank robber fro m
a non -discriminating bounry
hunter . !AI (60 min.l
(]) ID Gil love Boat (CC)
• Gopher and Isaac try to proteet Judy from her new love
interest. (R) !60 min .)

30 Tragic
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35 Peruvian
city

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tures Of Sherlock Holmes :
Blue
Carbuncle.'
HOlmes and Watson investigate the disappearance of a
priceless jewel and it' s rea ppearance in a goose . (60
min .l
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9 :30 IHBOI Ma•lmum Security,
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of I he fall of . Saigon . (60
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·

4/27/85

E
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C!l Sportscenter
CIJ
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@ Newton's Apple
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Star Trek
[HBOI Family Pley~ouoo :
When We Firwt Met Two
star-crossed lovers dis · ·
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linked by tragedy.
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211 Stadium
beverage

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27 ~glster
21 Bridal
response

SO Stnpling
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Sound of Ancient Victories,
the Noisa of a Million Ball·
games .' Beer is the subject ·
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8 :00 D /II CD Difl' ,.nt Stroke•
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hint&amp;. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

DEP'oerr eox

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M16H"T !!IE CALL.EI::&gt;.

IYAHNTS±

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(I)
T.J . Hooker ICC)
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teen ago hooker who · ie
being targeted for murder .
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piecas when Douglas falls
for en ugly quckllng who is
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SATURDAY

7 :00

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A HARD STOPPER
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ME THE TRUE VALUE OF THE GIFTS USEnJL TO UFE.
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ANA'roLE FRAN&lt;;_E.

.-

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-

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

---Local Briefs:·~-----.
Stop srrwking clinic slated

Area deaths
'

0

Innocent .pleas entered
by sunrivalist leader

Born May 11, 1914, ln Hallway,
· A stop smoking cllnlc, r»sponsored by the American Lung
Ohio, Mr. Cunningham was:a son of
Association of Southeast Ohlo and Ohlo Unlveslty's Department of
sour! bordt't' after federal agents
FORT SMflli, Ark. .(AP) MemortalservlcestorMadelYMe the late Walter and Murrell AM
Psychology, will begin May 1 and run through June 11.
wrapped up a four.day search that
Cunningham.
Members
of
a
whitE'
supremacist
J . Sauer, Dayton, a native or
For more lnfonnat'lon about the non·proflt Freedom from
turned up 125 guns, lncludJtlg 20
Include
three
daugh·
Survivors
group
returned
to
their
.
rugged
Pomeroy, were held MondaY at 3
· Smoking program, call (614) fl9'£1(8) ln Athens. ·1
·
machine
guns, and explosiveS.
.
ters,
Agnes
Buckley
of
Raclne
•.
aod
Ozark
compound
as
.
t'helr
leader
p.m. In Westmlnlster Presbyterian
Meanwhile,
federal Indictments
·
Patricia
Knowles
and
Linda
Ma·
faced new federal charges !'hat he
' · Chutch In Dayton.
Thursday
In Hot Springs
returned
shaw,
bothofGreenCoveSpr!ng$;
a
conspired to burnagaychurchand a
Miss Sauer attended Marshall
charged
Bruce
Gibson
of Yellville
son,
Melvin
Cunningham
of
Crooks·
Jewish community center.
University and Ohlo University
Students and faculty of Eastern High School are planning a Uvely
ville;
a
brother,LewlsCunnlngham
wlthrecelvlngS!J;,OOJtakenduringa
'
James D. Ellison, 48, founder and
before gOing to Dayton where she
evening of ''feudln' and flghtln' hillbilly sty)e" on Saturday, May4, at
Ukiah,
Calif.,
annored
car
robbery
of
Ohio;
two
sisters,
~thleen
leader of the Covenant, the Sword
taught at the Wogoman and Cornell
~OO~m
·
.
Young
of
Ohio,
and
llene
Justis
of
and
the ¥m nt the LOrd, pleaded t'he FBI says was committed by The
Heights Elementary SchOOL She
Sweei Mountain Sound wm begin t'he evening wltl! folk music
'
was a 'member of t'he Westmlnlster · MWleport; 17 grandChildren; and · Innocent Thursday to ari ln!llctinlmt Order.
followed by students and staff presentjng a series of short skits.
two
great
grandchUdren.
·
The·
Indictments
also charged
charging
him
and
a
tonnl'r
CSA
Presbyterian Church and the COlPrices for the evening of fun and food will be$6for adults and$3.50for
were
held
Aprlll3ln
t'he
Services
Robert
Smalley
of
Fort
Smlt'h and
member
wllh
mall
fraud
and
wlth
lege Women's Club.
chUdren under 12.
Hebn
Funeral
Home
ln
Florida,
County
Sheriff's,
DEputy
Carrol
consptrlng
to
burn
or
bomb
t'he
two
Surviving are three sisters, Mar.
For tickets or Information call Carolyn 'Irlpp at Eastern High
with
burlalln
Sharon
Cemetery.
WUllam
Bruegel
of
consptrlng
to
buUdlngsand·a
natuml
gas
pipeline.
g~t and VIrginia Sauer of Dayton,
985-3329.
•
falsify
flreaims
reco!'lls.
Ellison
was
ordered
held
without
and Mrs. J.A. Walters of Florida.
bond, and authorities said WOllam
Memorial contributions may he Carl F. StiU Sr.
Thomas, t'he fonner member,
made · to t'he American Cancer
MarY Kauff Taylor, Porn~, would be returned from Missouri(Continued from Page 1)
Society.
The long· range plan was revieWed and updated when the Meigs
listed In the obituary of Carl F. StUI where he Is In custody on weapons
FUnds for the operation of t'he
Soil and Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors met
Sr., as a half.slster Is, In fact, a full charges - to ' face !'hose .In t'he
development
director's 'Office will
recently.
sister, relatives report.
Indictment
come
primarily
from the Mason
A film, "Wlldltle and the Fann," was shown by La~ Johnson,
Melvin Cunningham
Funeral services for Mr. Still
has
been
In
the
Sebastian
Ellison
,
County
Commission,
which last
wildlife biologist with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
were, held Tuesday In RawUngs- County JaU since Monday, when he
"approved
Thursday
unanimously
A cooperator agreement was accepted for Wllllam Slater Jr. .tor
Melvin Ctpmlngham, 72, ol Green Coats·Blower Funeral Home, with
.
and
tour
reputed
member&amp;
of
the
the
allocation
of$35,00)
to
the MCDA
l34 acres In Olive Township.
·
'Cove Springs, Fla., died on Aprilll. burllillil RJvervleW Cemetery.
neo-Nazl
group
The
Order
surren·
for
economic
development,
and the
David Burt, district technician: reported that approximately 150
de
red
after
a
four
.day
standoff
with
cliy
of
Point
Pleasant,
which
has
acres has been plantedwiththeMooreunl.drllltlllsspring. Theno-tUI
authorities.
At
!'hat
tl)'Tle,
he
was
p~edg€d
$10,00).
In
addition,
"In
corn planter Is beginning to be used this week.
arraigned
on
federal
charges
of
kind"
services
from
the
county
and
Gordon Gilmore, soil scientist, reported !bat his Initial field review
weapons violations and bond was set the city - Including office space In
for the Meigs soil survey will be next week.
.
at $150,00J.
·
l'he Mason County Courthouse Those attending the meeting besides !'hose named above were
of
CSA
were ;~Uowed to wlll account for$l5,00J.$18,00Jof t'he
Members
Tom 'Illelss, Alan Holter, DaVid Gloeckner, Rex.Shenefield, Robert
return Thursdav to the once heavilv budget.
First, Reid Young and Opal Dyer.
.
anned encampment near the Mls·
Judge Patrick O'Brien completed lights working on t'he rearofvehlcle;
J
forty-eight cases Wednesday 1n Clarence Randolph Jr., Racine, $10
, Meigs County Court.
and costs, left of. center; Marvin
Fined were Kurt Nalstetler, .WoHe, Langsville, $25 and costs,
A Shade woman was cited by the Gallia ·Meigs post of the State
Middleport, $500 and costs wlth$475 expired driver's license; Roger
Highway Patrol fQilO\VIng a tW&lt;rear atcldent Thursday afternoon on
suspended, 60 days In jail sus- Roush, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
u.s. 33.
pended, siX months probation, failed to yield right of way; Betty
.
'
Troopers said Douglas B. Eblln Jr., 20, of Rook Springs, Pomeroy,
refrain from complainant and Headley, Guysville, costs only, left ,
was southbound on 33 when he stopped to ma~e a left tum.
restitution, criminal mischief;
ofcenter,JohMyHolbrook,Beaver,
A car driven by Fonda G. Thomas, 21, of Shade, was also
Anna Aelker, Albany, $250 and costs costs only, overload: Russell Mor·
southboupd when troopers said she reportedly could not stop in tbne
wlt'h $150 suspended to attend ris, Syracuse, $45 and costs,
and struck Eblin's car from blihlnd. Thomas' vehicle then continued
driving school; three days In jail . disorderly conduct; and Leonard
off the right side of the highway and Into a ditch.
suspended, driver's license sus- VanMeter, Middleport, costs and
No lnjurtes were reported In the 5:55p.m. Incident, wblch troopers
pended 60days, DWI; Elmer Crites, refrain from complainant, criminal
said resulted In moderate damage to Thomas' car. Eblln's vehicle
Reedsville, $250 and costs, three mischief.
4.door sedan, V.a engine, automatic overdriv~ transrolsslon ·air cond.
was not damaged, troopers added. Thomas was cited by t'he patrol
days 1!1 Jail, driver's license sus·
am-fm,
power aeat, windows, door locks antenna trunk relel!Se'
,
for !allure to stop In an assured clear distance.
pended 60 days, DWI, costs only for
Fined tor speeding were Austin
l()j:king wire wheel covers. Sharp Car! '
·'
'
speeding; Carol Goodnlte, Middle- Darrah, Powhatan Point, $21 and
00
port, $250 and costs, three days In costs; Ronnie Rowe, Chesapeake,
jail, license suspended 60 days, $22 and costs, Thomas Farley, Point
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports !'hat six calls
DWI, costs only for driving a motor · Pleasant, $21 ,and costs; Monica
tor assistance were answered Thursday.
vehicle without tall lights
Mannon, p arkers burg, WV
.
. a., $19.
Tuppers Plains at 7:10a.m. went to Reedsville for Leroy Richards .
Ulumlnatlng. ·
and costs; Susan Thompson, Pario St. Joseph HospitaL Middleport at 9:46a.m. went to 1ll7 Park St.
4.door, V-8, overdrive trans., clot'h Interior, air conditioning, tilt
Donald Folmer Jr., Pomeroy, kersburg, $22 and costs; Ralph
for Robert BowUng to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 10: 29 a.m.,
wheel, cruise control, new radial tires, local trade.
$250 and costs, three days In jall, 60 Stunn Jr., Marietta, $26 and costs;
Tuppers Plains went to Reedsville for Kelly Spencer to Veterans
day license suspension, DWI; Cindy Steven Legg, Jlelpre, $21 and costs;
Memorial. Middleport at 10:31 a.m. was called to Noble Summit
Workman, Rutland, $250 and costs, Jacqueline Wagner, Mldtlleport,$22
Road for Bruce Bumgarner to Holzer Medical Center. At 1: 28 p.m.,
three days in jail, 60 day Uce.nse and costs: Joseph Shepard, Mason,
.. Middlepo}'t fltedepart!Tlent was called to thesceneQf abrush fire on .
·suspens)O)l, DWI; &amp;?tty.J:Headley, $22 I and CQSts; .:Ta.mes :rerreu:·
·Middleport HilL i\ild at 8: 00 p.m., Middleport
called io 7117:0Uver ·.
'198~
Guysvllle,$250i\nd'costs,'t'hreedays · MlddlejlOrt; $00 :and CO!lts; Jettrey·.
· St. for Martha Buckley who was takeil toVeterans MemortaL
·
lri jall,.. 6(J' day ·license suspension; Wets, NelSOnville, ·s22 iind 'costs;
· ~.:ctooi, V.:S engine, air conditioning, anrfm ~tte. tilt wl\eel, crulae
DWI; Jeannie Jones, Middleport, Ray Wagner, Athens, $21 and costs;
control, clot'h interior, vinyl top, wire wlleel covers, focal car. ·
costs. two years probjl· · John Woods Parkersburg $21 and
.
.
. restitution,
tlon and 30 days h\ jail for each of costs; Wfl~ Alilf, East Liverpool,
.. · · Melgs:J';!aSo!\.glrls softball league~ meet S\lf!4ay, 2 p.m., at
;
four
chaJ:ges of _P&lt;~Ssing had clll!cks . . $22 , and . ·costs· Ressle . Shaffer··
· Mlddll'port Park. -·: · ·. . .
.. .
·
. ·:. ·. .,
... " .. ' ..
~
.
.
.'
·.
'
wlth Jan sentence s)lspendeil eilcept -yheshire, .$22 anjl · ci&gt;sts; 'Ran~ ·
for tbne already !Jilrved.
Rlffle,Shade,$22 and Costs; Chartes
Michael Slcilggs, BidWell, $50 and Rellmlre, Jr., Pomeroy, $22 and
costs, threedayslnjaUsuspended,a costs; William · Osborne, Long
4-door, V.:S, automatic, air cond., am-fm 8-track, rear defog., clot'h
· Several foreclosure actions have been processed In Meigs County
year probation, expired drlv.er's Bottom, $21 and costs; James·
interior, cruise, power .door locks.
Common Pleas Court bY Judge Charles Knight.
llcense; and William Cremeans, Mazzocca, Athens, $2l and costS;
Magnet Bank, Parkersburg, W.Va., has been granted a $27,737.71
00
Rutland, KeMel'h McKnight, Mid· Ruby Marcum, Athens, $21 and
judgment from Clyde J. Morlan, Coolville, et. al., In a foreclosure
dleport, and Carlos McKnight, costs; and Jerry Colmer, Pomeroy,
action Involving property In Orange Township.
Middleport, slx months In jail with $20 and costs.
Magnet Bank has been granted a deficiency judgment ot173,238.17
all but five days suspended,
Forfeiting bonds In Meigs County
from Larry D. Culllp, Parkersburg, In another foreClosure action on
PR~MIE
restitution and costs, a year Court were Sheila Jones, Rutland,
property In Orange Township. The original judgment requested was
probation, petty theft.
$70, no operator's license: Charles
4-door, slant six engine, automatic transmission, alr cond., a~ radio~
~.490.82.
Also fined were Karen Haw· Green, Rutland, $120, assault.
dot'h interior, radial tires. Local Car.
A conflrmatkin of sale has been entered In a foreclosure action
!'horne, Long Bottom, $10 and costs,
Forfeiting bonds for speeding
filed by the Racine Home National Bank against Gene A. Dodson, et.
failure to yield; Gregory Sheets, wereJohnnyHoward,OakHlll,$43;
al., Middleport. The orlglnal judgment of $22,532.91 will be credited
Hemlock Grove, $10 and co8ts, Jay S. Patlon, Delphos, $50;
wltll $17,000 from the sale. No defiCiency judgment has been granted.
failure to signal left turn; Danny Gregory Peltier, Fostoria, $50; and
And Diamond Savings &amp; Loan Co., Athens, has been granted a
RDbson, Pomeroy, $5 and costs, no WayheTitus, Columbus, $50.
judgment of $56,533.65 from John D. Wandling, Albany, et. al., for
property ·In Sclplo Township. If not paid wlt'hln three days of entry,
2-door, l.oaded wit'h extras. ·
the mortgage Is to be foreclosed and the property sold.
Southern Ohio Production Credit Association, Gallipolis, has filed
00
DaUey;whoa coup!~ of years ago
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP) - Un·
foreclosure proceedings against Shennan Ray Marcum, VInton, et.
helped to form t'he Family Fann
able to take . t'he financial risk
al., asking for a $43,739.70 Judgment on real estate In Salem
•
'
Movement
- an organization of
himseH
•
.
a
Madison
County
farmer
· Township. The plalntlff requests marshalling of liens and sale of the
fanners !'hat works to protect
Is sub-leasing land to other farmers
property.
who are planting tomatoes In soU famlly.aperated farms from foreV~. automatic, air conditioning, am-fm cassette, vinyl Interior, new
closure- saki he doesn't have the
that has been called unsuitable for
ltres.
thecrop.
1 money or management expertise to
trY lils hand at tomatoes, so he
Richard
Dalley
has
turned
over
Several marriages are ending In proceedings In Meigs County
sub-leased
the farm to others.
00
185
acres
of
a
farm
he
rents
In
Mt.
Common Pleas Court.
.
Sterling
near
here
to
several
Linda Rathburn, Middleport, has been granted a divorce from
fanners who contract wltllllelnz to
Tomatoes can be harvested from
Richard Rathburn, Columbus, oh grounds of gross neglect ofduty
produce a tomato crop.
his acreage because t'he land has
'
·· and extreme cruelty.
Tomato farming Is not new to ,good drainage and Is ferttle, he said.
A dissolution of marriage has been granted Deborah D. McDaniel,
Madison
County, which tradition·
"It's a crop !'hat Madison and
and Paul L. McDaniel, both of Middleport. Deborah McDaniel's
Short bed, 4 cylinder, 4-Bpeed, power steering, am ·radio, radial tires,
ally
has
yielded
mostly soybeans Pickaway County fanners are
malden name of Brown has been restored.
·
chrome rear bwnper, 30,00J mlles.
.
and
com.
A
previous
effort
by
going to have to take a look at,"
FlUng for dissolutions of marriage are Christine Y. Jacobs and
another company In the late 1970s Dalley saki, adding that tomatoes
, Brtan C. Jacobs, bot'h of Pomeroy; Regina Crump and Robert R.
faDed because of wet cOnditions and can turn a good proftt undertherlght
Crump, both of Pomeroy; and Diana Whaley, Ruttan~ and Brian ·
t'he ground's high clay content.
conditions. Mt Sterling IS near t'he
Whaley, Shade.
'
Madlson·Pickaway county IJne.
And a divorce action filed by Harry D. Games Jr., Pomeroy:
Steve Craig of Sedalia, also In
against Patrtcla Ann Games, Parkersburg, W.Va., has been
Weather
Madison County, agrees. Craig, who
dJsmtssed.
managed the tomato crops !'hat
engine, 3 speed trans., white spcke wheels, custom paint.
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
previously were trted 1n the·county
chance of showerS or thunder·
for three years, said they grew well
storms. Low near 55. Saturday,
but that harvesting l'her:n was a
showers and thunderstorms llkely. .
problem.
Hlghnear75. Thechanceofralnls40
FilmS o~ alcohol and drug abuse wlU be shown at t'he Old Dexter
percent tonight and 60 percent ,
Church, located on County Road 6, ·Sunday, 7 p.m. The publlc ts
Lo
Saturday.
welcome.
Oldoexte11dedlorecaat
'
ttery
Sunday through '1\tesday:
' CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Chance of rain Sunday. Fair
wlMing number drawn Thursday
Monday and Tuesday. Highs In the
s~t
night In . the Ohio Lottery's dally
mld..fJOII to mid·70s Sunday and In the game, "The Number," was 666.
upper 50s and 60s Monday and
Portlemy Youth League will hold tag day Saturday from 9: 00 a.m.
In the"Plclt4" game, the winning
Tuesday. Lows ln the40sand low 50s number was 3781.
io 1 p.m.
Sunday and In the upper 30s and 40s
•'
The lottery reported earnings of
Monday and Tuesday.
$541,!117 from wagering On Its dally
game. Ejll'nings came on sales of
~ek
$1,127 ,ti82, while holders of winning
I
tickets are entitled to share$.'58.'S,il25.
Clean·UP Week In Cheshire has actually be extended to nine days
Admissions - John Ord, Letart,
In theparlmutuel"Pick4" g81tlj!,
- May 1·W- but the message Is stlll this same.
W.Va.; Ebner Messord, Ewlnglon; sales totaled $182,398.50. Holders of
resldellts are urged to clean thorougltly and provide JrOper
~tte Pridemore, Middleport.
winning tk:kets are entitled to 45
drainage far aU lands, yards, vaults, cesspools, sheds and barns and
Discharges - Betty VanMeter, percent of the take, or S82,2E6. A
to haVe all tin cans. truh and other unclean and unslglttly l'!'llltter to
Kat)ty Walker, Michael Hubbard, wlMlng $1 straight . ticket earns
·
be removed before May 10.
Mayme Manning, Mru:vJn Darst, ~,928. A wlnnlng $1 boxed tiCket
Nelson Cllne. ·
earns$247.

Madelynne J. Sauer ·

•

Friday,April26, 1986

Pomeroy-·Middleport. Ohio

---

Annual NFL draft- Page 'C-1
'Traveling
Yesteryear'

Dinner-theater at EHS

Plan reviewed at

SWCD ~eeting

P~B-4

•

Vol. 20 No. 12
l:opyright.t 1985

'lbne&amp;&amp;nllnel S&amp;alf

POMEROY - The state 1s Insuring that
prelbnlnary engineering plans for the corridor road
from the Ravenswood Bridge . to Rock Springs are
·COmpleted QJ1 schedule.
Southeastern Ohioans have been working to
·convince lhe state !'hat an Ohio River bridge af
Ravenswood, COMected to Ohio 7 and U.S, 33 at Rock
Springs, would be a boon to the entire area.
The bridge was opened In In October 1981.
The corridor road then became a priority on t'he
Southeastern Ohio Regional Plannlllg Commission's
list o( proposed .projects. However, state Interest In
the project was seen untU last year after several
southeastern Ohio chambers of commerce banded

PQNITAC BONNEVULE :

979 PLYMOUTH .VOLARE

Was $3,20000 NOW ONLY '2

I and rented for tomato crop .

1976 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL

•2,400

Was $2,90000 NOW

1979 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

. · s.~ver~ ~hla anddecl~l!
"W$i' on POverty." This
partlclpants.)lt a conference !\ere ·
discussed whether those efforts
worked and s!ll)uld. be continued. '
, "We set a.l;!unch of goals 20 years ·
ago, and we mliqhose goals," said
. ·wlnHred ~o; . tljlleraL. w .,
· chalrwomanoft'heARC. "I can say, · ·
wlt'h complete confidence, !'hat t'he
· people of Appaladlla now have- as
never before - t'he capacity to.
compete successtully'wlthany other
region In the Country."
Government statistics show !'hat
the number of famUies In Ohio
Appalachia below the federal pov·
erty level fell from l3 percent In 1970
to 10 percent In 1981. Afederal report
shows educational levels have risen
and that the rate of Infant mortality .
has been halved.
Pizzano, appointed In 1982 by
President Reagan, said lft'heARCis
funded this year 1t wUl probably be
the last.
Some people at t'he conference
said the government has abandoned
Its commitment to the Appalachian
region of Ohio, which Includes most
of the southern and eastern counties
of the state.

Court ends marriages

Was $4,90000 NOW JUST •3.900

1982 CHEVROLET 5-10 TRUCK

'4,900"

NOW

1977 FORD BRONCO 4X4

v:a

NOW

Substance abuse films slated

STOP IN AND SEE
Merrill, Jay or Alan Evans

'Tag day'

Hours: Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
, · ·Saturday 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

for Saturday

Village schedules clean-u,p-

Veterans Memorial

vmaee

..

..

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

..

~

1~.

Newtp•per

MAYJIEI 1 E MciNTYRE

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Senate 1s urging President Reagan
·to reassess his viSit to a German
.military cemetery where 49 of Adolf
Hitler's elite SS troopS are buried,
but his chief . of staff says t'he
president wJil not change his plans.
"He's assessed and reassessed
and reassessed. and we are going to
Bltburg," White House chief of staff
Donald Regan told reporters
Friday.
' .
.
. The Senate resolution, CO·
'sponsored by 82 eenators, urged
Reagan to chanae his Itinerary and
to vlslt Instead a symbol of .modern
Qerrnan democracy to honor '~the
.metnortes ofthemllllonSoflnnocenl
clvlllant and hundreds of tltoulands .
of AmeriCan and allied IOldlers who
suffered and died at t'he banda of the

••

road. Based on Information already gathered, two
alternative routes wrn now be developed by
Woodruff's engineers.
'
Hedrick said Woodruff representatives were In
Marietta Wednesday gathering Information already
on tue at District 10 and !'hat archeloglcal
Investigations are to begin this summer.
According to a schedule sent from the governor's
office, Hedrick expeets a pubUc·lnput meeting wlll be
held In August.
,.
(ContinUed on page A·3)

~Y· FOR dHANOE;.:;.
the "Keeper of lhe . ~ .
Clock" 1n the Indiana County CouriiiJU!Ie, In Indiana, Pa., gets IllS
moves down for Sunday morning when lime tor tnO!It of the country will
skip ahead an hour tor lbe annual pa888g1!1nlo dayD&amp;J!Havin« time. In
all or pari of 48 states on Sunday, dme will sldpfrom ~a.m. to3 a.m. In a
ritual Rrsllnslltuled til World War I. (AP Laserphoto).

0

Multimedia punts fOOtball ·
team owners' purchase bid
CORRIDOR PROJECt'"- Gov.Richard Celeste lncludedSilOO,OOO for
the preliminary en&amp;lneerlng of lhe corridor road lrom the Ravenswood
Bri!lge lo RAick Sprinpln a $1.9 biD1on highway construction package
whlch Includes 2'.1 specific proJects. Eight ol the projects are ln
!IOUtheutern Ohio, Including the rortfdor, -

GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP ) Representatives of the founding
famUies of Multbnedla Inc. have
told the owner of the Washington
Redsklnstheyhavenolnterestlnhls
proposaltobuythecornmunlcatlons
company.
Football t.eam owner Jack Kent
Cooke released a statement Frtday ·
saying hls company Intends to make

anoffertobuyoutstandlngcommon
sfock of Mulfbnedla for approxi·
mat ely $l.tlJbiUion. or $63 a share.
Keni and his associates own
approximately 9.7 percent of Multilnedla's 16.7 million shares. the
statement said.
Cooke's offer Is the t'hlrd outside
proposal Muitbnedla has rejected In
the past monthsincesenlormanage-

ment and members of t'he founding
famlly announced plans to purchase
ou Islanding shares of stock and
"recapitalize the company."
Multimedia Is the parent firm of
the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
which publishes t'he Sunday Times·
Sentinel, t'he Gallipolis DaUy Ttii).
unP, Thl' Dally Sentinel, the Point
(Continued on page A3)

Widow of famed synd~c3ted columnist dies at 101
PI'. PLEASANT
Maybelle Mrs. JiUlles H. White ln Newport,
Hope Small Mcintyre, 101, widow d. Ky, across the Ohio River from
Clliclnnatl. At the time Mcintyre
famed syndicated columnist 0,0.
Mcintyre, died at 6: l5 a.m. Satur· was a 'reporter on the ..Ciriclnnatl
day In the Pleasant Valley Nursing I?ost.
Anniversary Gut
Care Unit
AlJhough
0 ,0. ,Mcintyre never
She was born Feb. 9, 1884, ln
Gatewood
- the house in
saw
Galllpolls daUghter of the late Kate .
Gallipolis
where
her
grandparents,
Gatewood Small, for whom their
Gatewood.
Capt
and
Mrs.
James
Gatewood mansion was named, and
had
llvedafter
It
was
restored,
Ius
Capt. Olarles R. Small.
body
lay
In
state
there
prior
to
his
She and Oscar Odd Mcintyre
were married on his 24th btrlhdlly, funeral. His death came on Feb. 14,
Feb. 18, 1!Q!, at the lllmeof Mr. and 1938. He had bought It as a 25th

Nazis."
Several senators said the resotu·
tlon, whlch passed Friday on a voice
vote wlth no oppoeltlon, Is a clear
inessage to West German Chancel·
· lor Hebnlit Kohl to relleve Reagan of
hls commitment to viSit Bltburg, a
pledge that they said 1s severely
damaging U.S.·West German
relations.
Kohl hJIS 'praised as "noble"
Reagan's,determlnatlOntogoahead .
wlth the vlslt.
But Bltburg Mayor Theo Hallet
said Friday !'hat the people of
Bltburg may themSelves cancel the
May 5 vtslt because they "find
unbearable t'he gushln8 .forth of
abule .and lllander on our city and .
especially on t'he aoldlef!llylnglillhe
cemetery' II

'

annlversafY.gtft for Maybelle.
After his death, ¥rs. Mcintyre
stayed at Gatewood during part ol
every summer until the late 19tills,
until she neared 90 years of age.
Then she moved to Gatewood as a
permanent resident. She was a
Christian Scientist and attended the
Science Church In Huntington. In
her later years she attended First
Baptist Church, St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Grace United Met'hodlsl
Church, and the First United
Presbyterian Church, t'he last being

only a block away from Gatewood.
Ufe!!tyle &amp;called
. '
She disposed of her two Rolls
Royce lilnouslnes In favor of a
Lincoln Continental In which she
toured Gallla County.
Jerry Dillon and the late Bus Lee
were her local Gallipolis drivers.
More recently, she walked tochurch
and elsewhere In town. Her maid,
Nora Mosley, died a few years ago,
and she was alone, except for a
cousin, KathrYn Pin!rock.
The Mclntyres went to New York

City In 1912 aDd achieved literary
and financial success. MliybeUe
served as his nurse, companion and
business manager.
"Took Care Of lluljlness"
In "The Big Town," pubUshed In
1935, Mcintyre wrote of his ~e:
"... My wlfe has for 10 years
attended to all my business affairs.
She arranges and dictates ijU the
terms of my contracts. The net
Income goes tohen,andl stlllfeelshe
has been underpa ld. The gentlest of
(Continued on page A·6)

Tobacco industry in 'mess,'
s3:ys Farm Bureau chairntan

:Senate urges .Reagan ·
to cancel Bitburg visit
• •

lntercllange on Ohio 7 across country to Great Bend.
000'1' then continued the study to the brtdge
approach. In those prelbnlnary stu~les , three or lour
alternative routes were developed tor t'he corridor

'

week, '

... ..

Celeste was carried to the meeting by Bernard Hurst,
ODOT's assistant director.
·
Hedrick said the g,ovemor's message was in
es!;ence - "to pull out all stops."
Phil Roberts, Meigs County engineer, said at
Wednesday's meeting of the Meigs County Commissioners !bat aerial photographs from Ravenswood to
Rock Springs were taken Sunday. Roberts had been
in contact wlt'h George Dougan, District 10's deputy
director.
·
HedriCk confirmed that report, adding that It was
Important to complete the aerial photos before leaves
came out on the trees.
Two years ago at the state's request, Woodruff &amp;
Associates conducted a study from the Rock Springs

WASHINGTON ,(AP) - Amerl·
cans who want to be on time for
church, goH dates, work or other
appointments on Sunday should set
their clocks ahead by an hour.
The annual arrival or daylight.
saving time occurs officially at 2
a.m, Sunday, when ltwUI become3
a.m. In aU or part of 48 states. Only
Hawall, Arizona and parts of
·•Indiana ~Ill\\' topartl~.lllate. , , , ..
· .The change means,It will remain
dark ·later ··Into · the mom!llg~ ...
effectively moving an hour· of
sunlight to the other end o( tlle day.
That allows more tbne for outdoor
acUvltles In the surnriler barbecue,
l'liireatlon ahd gardening season . .·:. ' ~
Setting the cloeks ahead, of
course, means mlssl!lg an hour's
sleep Saturdaynlght. But don't
worry, there'll be an extra hour to
sleep on Oct. 27, when standard tbne
returns.

ATHENS, .Ohio (AP) - An
Appalachian Regional Conunlsslon
official says she knows t'he agency's
future Is In doubt but that Its demise
could be a good t'hlng.
The federal governnient 20 years
a~to directed Its !'~forts at a 13-state

Was $7,50000 NOW ONLY•6,

•2,900

13 Section• 122 Pogea 5o Conta
A Mtiltfmedil

Don't forget:
tum clocks
ahead Sunday

Future of
Appalachian
Commission
•
uncertain

900

Was $3,50000 NOW

together In a petition drive.
.
Gov. Richard Celeste Included $lm,&lt;XXI for t'he
preliminary engineering In a $1.9 billion highway·
construction packaie which Includes 22 specific
projects.
1
Seven of the projects are In southeastern Ohio,
Including t'he corrijlor. 'An elghtli project for t'hls
region has also been added.
A scope of services meeting between the Ohio
. Department of Transportation and Woodruff &amp;
.._. Associates, Cleveland, the engineering fhm hired to
, complete the prellmlnarles, on April 19 at OOOI''s
central office 1n Columbus.
,
· Tom Hedrick, pl;pmlrig engineer lor ooor··.
District 10 office In Marietta, said a message fron1 .

'

00
Was $12,200. NOW •1. 1,
·. 1982 MERCURY MARQUIS

1979 FORD .LTD

·~··

tntint

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant · Sunday, April 28, i 985

By NANCY YOACHAM

1983 OLDSMOBILE 98 REGENCY

Foreclosures processed in cour.t ·

..... , .....

.Raveilswood-Rock Springs road plan on track

"Mark .Down· Specials"

Was .$5'.90000 NOW ONLY

continues Sunda
-Page A-3··
'-"~

tmts

Patrol cites motorist

Softball meeting Sunday

0000 00 00 00 00 000000

Ohio weather:
chance of showe

~

.

·

Buslnes8 •• . , •••••• ··· .•. .... ... .... 1).8
Deaths ••...•••••• •••.. ...........•. A-6
Edllorlals ,;, .. oooooo oo oooooooooooo A·Z
Sports ... .. ,......... ............ . Vl·8
Take-One ...
lnlleri

Bob Hoeflich discusses 'dodging' potholes

County court 'e nds.
48 cases this week

was

t\)onglhe River oooooo oo• oo oo oo8-l ·8

-Page, B-1

Mason

Emergency runs reported

Inside:

James J, Kilpatrick ask!! 'can you make sense' of
liberalism? - Pll@e A-2

PIAN I)EVELOPED- Jack
IJielln, the dullmllln of lhe

J.ooo......,.
a

Flll'm llureltll ~
eon.nJUee,lold
.....,of Galla Cauntyaubllooo
ram- Frtda,y IIIIi a~
Ina ee.m 11M • a " *m' a plan
... lheiU. . . , .... ToiiMm
&lt;lon1p-r .... Ollldd pollllbly,
help uve llle lndul&amp;ry.
'

"""'rilr

By JOHN FRIEDMAN
'J1Jrlal.&amp;ntlnel Stall
. GALLIPOLIS - Despite provld·
lng more than $15.5 mlUlon to OaUia
County's economy over t'he past
three years, the tobacco Industry "Is
In one heU of a mess," t'he chalnnan
of t'he Kentucky Farm Bureau
AdvisorY CommitteeI told a gather·
.
lng of county tobacco growers
Friday night.
Jack Blelln told fanners !'hat
reduced quotas, reduced prices,
Increased bnports and proposed
federal I~slatlon to cut out the.
price support system are creating
havoc wlt'h the IndustrY. ·
JioweVel'. Biehn said · he was
meeting In Wa5hlngton Wednesday

with .two U.S. senators In !lopes of and t'hree cents per pound, agreed to
developing legislation based on a
pick up a proportionate share of the
ten·polnt plan negotiated between 1~ loan ~tocks at catalog prices
Kentucky tobacco growers and the.. and 1984loan stocks at oool prices.
R.J . Reynolds Tobacco &lt;;:o. to sa-Q~ ... "It Isn't exactly what we want,"
Biehn said, "but it's the only
t'helndustty.
In the ·meant line, t'he Reagan , ballgame ln !own."
admlnlstmtlon.• Biehn added, has
Theplanmustalsobeagreedtoby
dropped Its plan to phase out t'he other tobacco companies In sep_ar·
piice support system In hopes t'he ate negotiations, which Biehn $8td
plan developed through the negotla- should be no problem. However; he
tlons will he successful.
added, a problem Is arising becallse
Under the plan, Blel\n said, two companies are hung·up en
among other Items, Reynolds has antl·trust legislation.
•agreed to pay $1.40 per pound for
"Under anti-trust laws, they are
burley tobacco and $1.35 per pound prohibited from setting prices and
for nue-cured tobacco, agreed · to they want legislation !bat wwld
plck up no net charges over the exempt !'hem from any antl·trust ·
mlnbnum amount of between two
(Continued on page A3)

'

.

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