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1986

Ohio-Point

Area personn~l file

.,,,.

Howard E. Stevens

DanaE. Waldo

r
COLUMBUSc have been made

Four promotions
by Columbus &amp;
; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
.: Howard E. Stevens has been
~appointed administrative assistant
~after serving as Wellston area
He Is. being replaced at
·.Wellston by Dana E. Waldo of
·r WestervWe, whtle Robert R. Wht;. !latch has been named manager of
.fC&amp;SOE's new general services
: _department.
! Stevens, who joined c&amp;SOE as a
~·residential representative In 1955,
'!,Spent 12 years In the marketing and
:-.customer lservlces department In
i-the Athens division and as assistant
i to the division manager. He
~ replaces Ronald G. McDade, who
: was appointed &lt;;;alllpolls area

;,manager.

~ manager.

- Stevens Is an ·ohio University
' graduate and a member of the
, Athens Rotary Club.
; Waldo, who began with C&amp;SOE as
; a temporary employee In 1900 and
: joined the utility full· time In 1974,
: was construction bllllngcoordlnator
'r In l!rl9 and·serve&lt;lln that capacity
; ·untll1982. He also served as a senior
: accountant and' staff accountant
• with the company and as a forecast
:·analyst with American Elec.trtc
: ·Power Service Corp. before being
; 'named to his current'post.
· Waldo majored In accounting at
: Ohio State and Franklin universities
_.and holds a bachelor's degree from
· :Franklin.
: Whitlatch, wh!) ·joined the com-

Robert R. WhltlaWh

IKaiser reports loss .

--~.

-

Catalog Sales

during first quarter

OAKLA!ID, Caut.
kaiser ments In the first quarter of 1985
Aluminum and Chemical Corp. totaled 168,!500 tons, 10 peroent
reported a net loss of $18.5 mUllan, be(ow shipments of llli,:.xl tons In
or 44 cents per common share for the same period last year. Approxi~ first quarter ot 1985.In the same
mately 95 peroent of shipments In
pertpd last year, the company had the 1985 QUarter were In the form of
net Income of $14.6 mUllan or 33 fabricated products, up from a level
cents per share.
ot about tll percent last year.
Sales In the first quarter rose to
The Increase In earnings from
$816.6 mUllan due primarily to Kaiser Aluminum's real estate
Increased trading activity: In the subsidiary, Kaiser Development
. first threemonthsofl984saleswere ~· was due to higher sales of
$696.8 mUllan.
conunerclal, and Industrial properCornell G. Maler, Kaiser's chair' ties In both northern and southern
man, said the company's real California and to Increased residenestate subsidiary "more than tial sales at both Rancho Callfomla ·
doubled Its pre-tax earnings to $24.9 and Hawaii Kat. "Results from this ·
mllliori In the first quarter, but thts activity ·In the remaining quarters
outstanding pertonnance could not or the year will not equal those ott he ·
offset the operating -loss from first quart~r. but full-year earnings
alwnlnum activities.
'
of Kaiser Development wUI be very
"Our fabiicated products sales substantiai and should exceed the
· volume and prices were both down 1984 level," said Maler.
substantially In the quarter comEarnings from the company's
pared•wllh the 1984 pert!XI," Matef · lndusti:lal c~emlcals business de· said. "In addition, In lastY!!ar's first cllned .In the first quarter of 1985
quarter we reported. earnings from because or price weakness In most
the delivery imd sales of primary of Its markets, Desp!te higher sales,
alwntnum purchased earlier at international trading recorded a
favorable prices, but because ofthe greater loss compared with thE"
recent low market price for prim· same year-ago period, due to
ary metal, we made only selective negative results from petroleum
Ingot sales this year."
trpdlng.
Mater said the aluminum dlv·
Maler said Kaiser Aluminum Is
!stan's pre·tax oper~tlng loss of making Important progre~s In Its
$56.3 million In the first quarter was programs to restore the competl· .
substantially below that of 1984's live ability of Its alurrilnum division ·
fourth quarter, mainly because of a and to Improve Its financial
large decllen In unprofitable Ingot position,
·
sales.
"We also bega11 to realize a small
portion of the · very Important
benefits we'll gain from the major
modernization of our Trentwood,
Wash., rolling mill," he said. "The
.
elements of this $230 million
program that are now In place are
operating well, and aluminum
division· productivity wUJ Improve
° greatly when the output of this
facility moves higher."
&lt;
· The company's aluminum ship·

ager. He ~being suc~ed by
Thomas M. Wolden, formerly
transmission and distribution civil
engineering superintendent.
Whitlatch has been a clvU
engineer, ctvllenglneerlng design
supervisor, clvU engineering design
director, staff assistant, projects
management division manager and
clvll engineering manager for
C&amp;SOE. He holds a bachelor's
degree In clvll engineering {llld a
master's degree In business, both
from Ohio Unlv~rslty.
Wolden, whoworkedpart-tlmefor
C&amp;SOE before joining the company
as a transmission line engineer In
, :'pan~lntOOl,wlllhe~dadepattment 1975, hru; sl!lce beeJI project eng!· .
:·thai eomblnes the bullding services,
~ing . supervisor'. .transml!islon.
-omces services and iransporfutlon · line engineering director and Civil
engineering superlntepdent.
sections. ·
.
1 H~ previous Job had been as
, He holds a bachelor's degree In
clvll
engineering from Ohio State
. tf'BilSmlsslori and dlstrll!Utlon con··
lJnlversfty:
·.·.- ··. .
. struCUOf! !Inti . ~ajnt~nce man·
. .

NEW HOUIS
MON.-SAT.
9:00-6:00

Montgommy Ward

••• SCIENCE FiliON ...

'

Yot.35 , No.1 0

.. .

•

•

at

" " " en t 1n e
1 Section. 10 Pages 25 Cenh
_A Multimedia lnc :·Newlpeper

Pomerov-.Middleport. Ohio, Monday, April 29, 1985

1986

'.

Center

..
391 W. MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

third at 18: 55; and n.»otg Hoke,.fourth at 19:01. First
. place winner Malty D&amp;go811Do was not pret~ent lor the

MEN'S5KWINNERS-Topoverallmen'llwlnners
In Saturday's Middleport C of C 5K Run were, left 1o
right, Troy Bartley, 8eL'Ond place at 18: ~: FredWoUe,

'

1985 PONTI·AC FIERO GT
V•6." 2 ~ 8 EFI engine. · AM ~ FI',1-cassett8; with graphic
equali~er, air conditioner, 4 speed standard shift.

~

ELBERFEtDS
.

.

Pre-Summer Sale
Casual Outdoor Furniture

- • •,,,.
1

---.

.

Now's your time to
get a jump on
outdoor summer
living!

·over 50 In Stock
Many
More
Due
In!·
'

htdoor or outdoor, pool 01
patio - Ptrma-Widcer offers the look of wicker pi•
dwcalty..... baked pOIyestw finitli .I esisfs rust
and is · dllignld to withstand all weatl• concitions. Choose from an array of IUII..III' colors.

I

r'&lt;f't
J''
.. I

'

CuStom • Deluxe • Scottsdale • Silverado
EXCELLENT COLOR SELECTION

..

5·,,10, LONG AND SHORT BEDS;

Reg. '81.00 Low la~k

E"TENDED CABS
2 and''4
. WHEEL DRIVES.

·

Spring Base Chair ....;.........Sale S68
Reg. S96.00 High Bqck
,Spring Base ~flair ..............Sale $81
Reg. '179.00' / ~
· .
\ ..
Lounger .......~r··~ .•:............. Sale S15 2

."We are detertnlnaa t~ tntka y·ou a eu1tomer"
.
....
COME IN AND LU'S DEAL!.

.... •1a6.00

I ·.

Loveseat Glid,er ............... Salt s158
leg. '241.00

3-Seat Glider .......-..;........ Sale S21 0

I

.... '262.00

.

lawn Swing.................... , Sale S222

·Chevrolet-Olds, Inc.
446-3672

Stoey, p~ C11 Page 10

•

~:-

1616 EASTERN AVE., GALLIPOLIS

.

Home

We are out 'to set a sales record in
May on New Chevrolet Trucks •••

I

Copy~lghted

$50 million heist ·

.

e

We have all STAR TREK
movies in stock there's no fiction quite
like Scitnce Fiction Movies the whole fam·
ily will enjoy.

·,

•

awards presentations.

WOMEN'S WINNERS - Overall winners for the
women In Satunlay's run were, lett to right, Brenda
Reed, flr$t place with a finish of 23: 4&amp;; Laura

GaUoway, second at 24: II; ,JUI Dillard, third at 211
m~Vut•!!l Oat; and Edith Raker, fourth at :51:0:1.

Chemical Bank. sets·deadline

for the firs! quarter, compared to42
cents, for a 10 percent Increase. .
Revenues for the first quarter
INSTRVCI'OR - Mtke Apdtotaled $73,8&gt;7,ml, compared to
erson,. llllles representative of
$65,938,001, for a gain of 12 percent.
Simmons OldsmobDe-CadiiJac.
~roadcastlng revenues IncreaSE:(!
Chevrolet, Pomeroy, wu infrom $27 ,512,llXJ to$31,250,001 for the
struction ot a COIBlJDel' JJIIIth&amp;.
quarter, while newspaper revenue
matlc8 claM at Wahama Hlp
went from $24,685,0)), to$22,613,00l,
School on the aubject of new and
for a 9 percent decrease.
WJed car buyiq lor llOIIIIIUDel'8. ·

I

l'lloto oil Pap$

·JUST ARRI~EDI "THE HOT ONE"
.

NEW :TRUCK SALE
.

See ...... lioalw~Papl

PhctltCIIPip'

r

·Multimedia earnings increase
·· GREENVll.LE, S.C.- Mulllme·
dia Inc.'s net. earnings of the first
quarter of 1985 were $7,631,0)),
according to Walter E. Bartlett,
president and chief executive
officer.
· That represented a 9 percent
Increase over the $7,032,ml earned
In the first quarter of 1914.
Earnings per share were 46 cents

Eastern prom

Middleport · run·

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - As · sale and allow Chemical to operate the state, argu'ed that extending the up with an additional $127 mtllli&gt;n to
lawmakers resume deliberations thea:J.branch Institution as a bank.
order Issued by Franklin County ensure that Home State depositors
' this week on a blll that couldteuntie · HO!!se Speal\er 'Vern ·rutre Jr., CoolmQn Pleas Judge George c. -receive all their money .' Chemical
H&lt;ime-State ~vJngs Bank d!!PQ!!I· D-New l,los!on, ·~~as set riO ·speclflc ·Smith' would endanger the Home · ,would pay the state $21 million a·s a
·tors wltti their money, Ohio officials· timetable, alihollghhesald he would ·State sale. .
·
·
..
.prelnlum for entering Ohio's finan· ·
_have been given until June 15 to· like to see the bUi reported ouf cit
}fbwevl!r, !tooetf B. 'MCAlister: ·. elal Oiilfket and .plit up $301n11Uon
approve a sale agreement with the comtnlttee and brought to a House the st~te savings and loan supertn- · for operating capital.
teooent, promiSed 1,n an affidavit
Leaders of both parties appar·
NewYorkbankthatwantstobuy the Ooor vote by tl!eena oftheweek.
~~ C:lnclnnatllhrlft. .
.
·
However, • the Re,publlcap· · that no actlori would be taken to
enUy have a consensus.Qp a plan to
:. C!)emlcal New .York Corp. Pres.l· . ,contl'Q)Ied .Senate couldllalk·ll,tthe llquldate. the ·lund before a. May 8. sell about $127 'million In n6n·tax
· - derif Robert Llpp confirmed Ft1day · 'bill, wblch Is attracting.bll)ai11san · Supterm.\ Court heanng.
revenue bonds.to come up with tfie
that If the deallsn'tdosed by tlien , support In the House.
.
John.c. Elam, a lawyer tor ·thE" sJ.ilte•s·· share. ··However, · Senate
"the .agreement wUI no longer he
Thep~s.aleofHoineState ODGF,saldthatlessenedhisworry
Republicans say Gov. Richard
valld," The Columbus Dispatch
also Is contingent on a Constitutional . that the state would try · to under·
Celeste and othpr state Democrats
reported.
chaUenge to the anticipated U9l! of mine court jurisdiction.
·
gave Chemical too good a deal and
Llpp said he would not predict $81 million from the Ohio Deposit
Besides the $81 million from
that thE" nation's sixth· largest bank
whatwouldhll]lpen'lrt.helssueofthe Guarantee Fund as part of a $211! OOOF, thestatewouldhavetocome
will have to pay mol'l!)efore the
proposed purchase dragged past
mllllon. enticement package for
·Republicans back· the bilL
June 15.
Chemical. ·
But he said "you would have a ·
The ODGF Is a private fund that
serious problem· In terms or the formerly Insured Home State and
•
franchise" as depositors turn to other state--chartered S&amp;Ls;
other banks and operating losses
The Ohio Supreme ,Court on
mount.
Friday refused to extend a lower·
•
The House Ftnruictat 1nstltutlons court restraining order obtained by
Committee today was to hear · t)le ODGF to keep the state from
additional testimony on thE) blll .liquidating 'the fund.
which would permit Home State's
Kathleen McManus, a lawyer lor

~Rll;'~

t. .., .
C·otro..QC£

.

.Board threaten.s
potential strikers
.RIO GRANDE -Teachers !rom teacher's association and the re·the Buckeye HUts Teachers Associ· qulfement ot six hours or additional
atlOf\ who strike Wednesday \VW be education before teachers can
met with "every legal remedy advance beyond the · 11th salary
available" according to a telegram st4D.
.
sent from Gallla-Jacllson-VInton
gjQSePh Mllllous, a fact-finder
JVSD SUJlPrlntendent Jerome appointed liy the State Employee
Brockway to Kevin Whitby of the Relations Board, developed spectnc
Ohio Education ASSQCiatlon.
language on the two Issues at the
"It Is the opinion of the School request of tile _association In an
District," according to the letter, attempt to clarifS' the Issues.
·
."that · the proposed strike o~ the
However. the BHTA rejected the
\Buckeye Hills TeachersAssocljltlon Interpretation, and voted on Aprtl 18
has no basis In reason, fact, fairness, to walk ott their jobs on Wednesday.
or the law and the Boilrd wlll
Mllllous heard argwTJenls In
attempt every legal remedy avalla· August
1984 on ~ Issues of dispute
bie against eVery teacher who
between the board and .BHTA that
strikes."
•
,during contract negutiatlons.
Brockway's telegram wa~ In arose
Both
sides accepted MUUous ' rereply to a cable from Whitby to the commendations,
the association
dlsirtct, offering to hold contract relused to sign thebut
contract
pendlrig
negotiations over the weekend In the outcome of the ctanflcatlons.
attempts to avoid a walkout.
Mllllous ruled that he had not .
'1'1\e teachers association has attempte&lt;l to change board policy on
sceduled a rally for6 p.m. tonl!lflt at the additional education. Brockway ,
Bob Evans Farm and are then said the slx·hour req1,1lrement has
expected to attend a special board been a part of board pollcy since
meeting, scheduled for 7 p.m. at the 1981.
SchoOl offlclalssaldlastweek they
school.
At the centeroft~dlsputearetwo have made provlalons to protect
Issues: the retroactive date of the students and conduct ~lasses In case
contract between the bo;lard and the of a walkout.

.

.

15 die on Ohio roads
By The AIIOCfatecl ~
The Highway ·Patrol says 15
people, tncludtngtwomotoreycllsts,
were kllled In weekend traffic
accidents around Ohio.
The pafrol counted traffic deatlls

'

FAST RUNNING CHAMBER MEMBER - Dick Owen, II, Jell, of
~19ln Middleport, received ~ \~ph,y mug lor
being the fa.'llt....t ruMlng Middleport Cluu.nher of Commeni~ member In
Saturday's 5K run. Owen ran lhe .3.2 mUe L'OIJI'Sf In ~&lt;W. S.•veral
chrunher members were participants In the ,noce." ' 801 Blower,
Mtddlt•port chrunher president, made the prtoscnt111ton. ..
I'
Heritage Hou'le-Locker

'

from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight

Sunday.
The cloliest fatality was Mark L.
Winter, ~.ofWWiamsport, who was
ia!led In a one-car accident on a·
Pick away County road Saturday,

A IIUU)'S EYE VIEW- \WI IIU chicken rule the.._ at the 14th
AmluaJJpt=~ Cl*:ken Flying Meet! lllrdll of mally feathers will

.

Two.persons hurt
Annual chicken flying in weekend wreck

aiiiO flock lopther at lhe IIOUihelllltern Ohio Bob Evans Farm to try to
crack the world'• chicken flying record. The winning fowl wiD pad his
. . . with 11100 cash.
..

event slated May 18 ·
RIO GRANDE - ·No Yoke, folks ... an eggstenslve search Is on
lor t~e world's furthest and fastest Dytng chickens to compete In the
14th Annual International Chicken Flying Meet (I.C.F.M.) - the
"Olympics" or chicken games. Hundreds of chickens arc expected to
fly the coop May lB at the annual eggstravaganza whi ch lakes place
on the 1,100-acre Bob Evans Farm near Rio Crande.
Poultry pilots need not put aU their eggs In one basket at thlsy ar' s
J.C..F.M. since there are several events In which chickens and
humans can C~?ffipele. Cockle-doodle·doos will fill the air as early as 9
a.m. when the "roster crow contest" takes place. During the
"chicken run contest" the fastest chlcken-on·two-drumsUcks
completing the 40-yard dash with the best time wlli get the worm.
No entry fee Is charged for all Of·thls flighty fun with cash awards.
With the top flying chickens getting $500 for cracking the currt!nt ·
flying record of 3021eet eight Inches. Exlr'a chickens are available to
borrow at the meet on a first-come first·serve basts so everyone can
participate In thla eggstravaganza.
,
An Olymplc·style procession will precede the l p.m. chicken flying
contett led by a torch bearer with the ternal torch lit tram "Mount
Egg." Wearing their finest feathers, the chickens and trainers wlll be
Judaed tOr being the "most unique chicken," the "most outragrous
trainer," "best matched chicken aiul trainer," and the "best team
award," lor gnJUJJI of more than a coop-le. Tlllj first' International
. Chicken .Flying Meet was held at the Bob Evans Farm 13 years ago
and hal continued each year alnce. Bob Evans, the International
Flight Commander, began this barnyard sport aner recalling his
boyhood eggsperlences of growing upon afarmand tosslngthtckens
from bam lOtts to see how far they could fly. To date, ch(cken Dying
IQuadl'Onl have hatched In 22 states from Calllornta to New York.

.

I

Two Meigs County residents were Meigs County 40.1.
treated and released at Vet erans
Olll,ando .W. F;loyd, 58, was
Memorial Hospital Saturday even· northbound on 40..1, when he appar·
lng for Injuries suffered In a ently lost contml ofhtscar and went
three-vehicle accident on~ 124.
offthe right stdc of the road and Int o
Rbger L. Jones, 22, of Racine, was · a ditch at 12: a.m. Floyd's vehicle
trea ted for a cervlcal·muscle stra ln sustained moderate damage In th~
and a passenger In his car, Danette accident. the patrol said.
Jones, 20, also of Raci ne, was
No ln]Uiics w!'rc reported In a
treated for a Cl'rvlcal musclcstraln, two-vehi cle arrldcnt Sund ay l'ven·
hOSpital officials said.
lngthat Is still under Investigation.
The Gatlla-Melgs post of the State
A pick-up operated by James
Highway Patrol said Joni'S and a Marcum, 54, 'of Rt. 4, VInton, was
Mack truck dttven by Stanley parked on SR~25when a southbound
Holler, :10, ot Portland Rd ., Racine, car driven by Anthony Cardillo, 28,
were stopped In tralrtc on 124, ofRt.1 , La~vlllc, reportedly came
appi'Oxlmately ·etghHenths of a over a hlllcr·est and struck Mar·
mile east or U.s. 33, for a vehicle cu m's vehicle at 8:33 p.m. Crdlllo's
attempting a left turn. A truck car sustained moderate damage
driven by James R. Foreman, 25, of and Marcum's ptck·up light dam·
Por,tland, · also eastbound, appar· age In I. he accident, troopers added.
ently co~ld not stop In time and • A Racine man escaped injury
struck Holter's vehicle from behind. when he plck·uphe w ~sdriving went
knocktltg It Into Jones' car at 6:55 off the right side or Mei!(S County 32
p.m., according to troopers.
and struck a dit ch early Saturday
morning.
Foreman was cited by the patrol
Troopers said WllllamF. Scott ,35,
for fallure to stop In an assured clear of F1atwoods Road . was westbound
distance following the accident.
on 32, approximately one-tenth of a
A .Pomeroy man was cited by mile west of M&lt;'lgs County 28, when
troopers for OWl and driving under he said an rostbound vehicle
s~spenslon following a one-car
reporteQ.Iy fo rced him olf the
accident early Saturday morning.on highway.

"l

�Monday, April29, 1985

Commentary .

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. Monday, April 29. 1985

Flunking the test _______

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
PEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~ ·

Bm ~
~v

r"'T'""L....J r...,_-r-·

~c:::::f·~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
Ge11eral Manager

PALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER or The Associa ted Press , Inland Dally Press Association and the Amer ican Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTE RS OF OP lNJON ar.:- we lcome. They should bt&gt; less than 300 words
long . All letters are subj PC tlo et;lttlng and must be Stgnt'd wi th name, addr.ess and
telephon e number. No unslgnf'd leUE'rS will be published. LetTer s should J:x&gt; In

goocltaste, addressing Issues. not i)ersonalllleos.

Network. Counting two TV techniWASHINGTON - · Comedian future, Defense Secretary Weln·
cians and ' a wire service pbotoMark Russell made a joke of it . He berger announced last year, a
grapber, the ()0(11 was to consist of
. said that with the Invasion of · small pool of correspondents would
Grenada, U.S. armed forces de- be created. Under pledges of strlct 10deslgnatedpetsons. They were to
report to Andrews Air Force base at
feated a l small but exceedingly secrecy, reporters woul be advised
hostile and stubborn enemy - tbe when and where to report for 4 a .m. S11nday.
Amer1can press.
transportation. I was among those
The correspoqdents were 'Informed only that they would be
To some of us wbo have spent our who assured Weinberger, from the
lives In ne\vspaper1ng, tbe Pentag- bottom of my heart, that "ot .course going to li hot an&lt;! rainy place.~·
arrived at And.rews on the dot. They!
on's decision to bar press ci&gt;verage the · press can lie trusted to keep
recelvc!d shots against tropical
of that Invasion was no laughing. such a summons secret."
Well, let us eat crow. At about 6 diseases; they ate a quick breakfast
matter. With few exceptions, prowith the 101st Airborne; and oft
fessional joul'lllll!sts feel strongly o'clock on Sunday evening, April 20,
they
went - not to an actual
that reporters must be permitted to Col. Robert O'Brleti set In motion a
Invasion,
but to ainllltary exercise
cover military operations. Other·
test of the pool plan. O'Brien Is
wise the . people get only the deputy assistant secretary for In Honduras. Michael Burcli, assist·
government's' se If -se rv lng
pub1lc affairs. A duty officer ant to O'Brien, says the correspondcommuniques.
telephmied -a prearranged contact ents themselves were "just super."
We raised such a howl about
at three newspapers, Newsweek They never leaked a thing.
But the hum!llating and embarbeing excluded from Gren;~da that
magazine, The Associated Press, .
the Pentagon . relented. In the
Mutual Radio and Cable News TV rassing fact Is that In this first test of

0

-c.overing tracks,
shifting blame'
Conservative GOP Rep. Robert E. Netzley, who often ·finds hlmsell at
odds with his moderate Republican colleagues. thinks some of them are
walling too long to get Involved in a legislative Investigation of Horne State
Savings Bank.
Nettley, R-Laura. said in a lPtter Thursday to Sen. Richard H. Finan,
R-Cincinnatl- who will he~d the investigation- that the administration
of Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste has not cooperated fully In other
Investigations into tbe failed savings and loan InstitutiOn.
.
"What we have accomplished Is to give them time (over six weeks) to
cover their tracks, hide their responslb!llty and try to sblft the blame to the
Ohio General Assembly," he said.
Finan could not be reached tor Immediate comment on Netzley's IE'ttPr
but leaders of both polltical parties pointed out that thE' state already has
naJlll'd a special prosecutor- Lawrence Kane of Cincinnati, a Republican
- whO has started a crtminal probe of Home State.
· Kane already has been given Horne State records that were held by the
Ohio Department of Commerce, they pointed out.
The legislative investigation is supposed to prtmarily Involve state
statutes and rPgulatory procedures which ·may need to be changeil to
prevent the recurrence of a fiasco such as Home State's.
_
Hbwever, Ne\Ziey said he thinks Finan should resign as chairman of the
Senate-House commiTtee unless he starts thE' Investigation lmmediateJy.
Meanwhile, divorced or separated Ohioans who are awarded alimony
payments for a fixed period of tlmP cannot go back to the court to havp the
.
.
payments extended.
.
·
WASHING,...N · Whc
s
So says .the Ohio Supreme Coun in a case In which a Medina County
·•v n .a U. ·
woman, Marcia B. Ressler, tried to get her aUmony continued beyond the
spy satellite reported an apparent
five years set by the court that Issued the alimony decree. .
nuclear explosion in the ocean off
he
rt
id
that
th
d
·
rt
South
Afrtca in September 1919,
In It~ opinion this week, 1
uprerne ou sa
e ecreemgcou
President Carter appointed a panel
lacks Jurisdiction to modify a decree unless 11 Pl&lt;Jl~ly reserves
of dlstlnguls''""' scientists to deterjurlsdictlonatthPoutset.
.,
.
. . .
·. .
. tl
· ""''
"In $o ruling, we are PIYmoting the concept that alimony decrees sho.uld
mi ~ exactly wha1 'had trlg~red
,.
,. ,
id ·
the Satellite's signal. - ·
·
·I • . • · After studying the mait~r for
express·a d~ of flnallty .an() ·certa!n,,," _the court sa · ;
lnl9'i8,Mrs:Resslerwasawarded$200amonthforfiveyE'atsfromher
several months- lncludlng ev!husband, unless shP remarried, cohab!tated with anotber man, or died.
dence from the CIA and the
her 0 ff! h
ed
Ell With
And, State Treasurer Mary
en ·
row says
ce as parn
Pentagon - ihe panel o( Scientisis
more mo.,ey on us investments this fiscal year than in any C?!f!PaFab!e
cQnclUded -that certain diScrepanpetlod irl stAte history. -·. ' ..
·
,· · ·
· · · &gt; ·· · - ·· ..cl~ In the ·satt!ntie's·s!gn!!l ·were·
. As of. April 18, she said earnln~ .lorlh~. fi!!Ciil year:whlch lifarted July' 1. . · pro·ba·bly not cau·· sed by·an "earth".
1984 stood at $146.4 million, compared to $146.1 million In !be previous
·
..
everit, such as a nuclear blast but by
recdrd year of 1982 _
Among other things. thP treasurer attributes the incrpase to the
a "space" event, possibly a collision
11
s
k
d
·
with
a small meteoroid.
'
ffi
Installation of computers linking her 0 ce, to a treet mar ets an
How did the scientists reach this
changes in certain banking procedures Involving overnight deposits and
surprising decision, which contra·
clearance accounts which now earn dally ln!Prest.
dieted 'evidence .that the Sl)telllte
had, In fact, accurately reported a
nuclear test?
·Rep. John Conyers, D·Mich., and
the Washington Ofllce on Africa, a
public· interest group, think the
White House panel may have been

squeIched report

s

c

w

pemj-anjuk's 8-year
continuing battle
. An eight-year battle to remain in tbe \]nited States may he ending for

aecused Nazi death camp guard John Demjanjuk. His lawyer, however, ,
says the fight ls just beginning.
.
WhUe the 65-year-old retired autoworker sits in a federal prtson In
Missouri, attorney Mark J. O'Connor has taken the legal battle to another
lront - the 6th Circuit u.s. Court of Appeals In Cincinnati.
Briefs filed Mmiday seek to overturn separate orders that Demjanjuk be
e/(tradlted to Israel ro stand rrial for allegro war climes and bedepmied to
his homeland, the SoviPt Union.
'- After u.S. District Judge Frank J. JlattisU approved Isr~el'sextradition
request last week, O'Connor noted !be case was finally free of Battisti's
Cj)tlrt. O'Connor has clashed wlt.h thP judge over the PX!raditlon. accusing
the judge, tbe Justice'Dcpartment.lsraPI and the,Soviet KGB of conspiring
against his client.
· For the first time, O'Connor said, thE' evidenCE' that led Battisti to strip
Demjanjuk of his U.S. citizenship In 1!*11 will get "its first Independent

review."

'

•Jilefore O'Connor entered the case, thP denaturalization decision was
u~Id by thP appeals courl and the Supreme Court declined to hear the

case.

•

In one of the two briefs fUed Monday; O'Connor said there Is new
~idence to show that the Soviet govemmentintentionall)l altered a Nazi
•'SS identification card" it provided the U.S. Justice DepartmPnt to.make It
appear that Demjanjuk was a sadistic guard lmown as "Ivan the Terrtbie"
at the Ti"ebl!nka, Poland, concentration camp.
.
,... . ·Oemjanjuk has steadfastly denied aiding the Nazis, saying be was a Red
~Y sol fer held by the Germans as a prisonPr of war after his capture.
.O'Connor said he gave the appeals court a sworn affidavit in which he
c.aun.s that Valery G. Kubanov, the Soviet first secretary and sonsul based
in ,\Yashlngton, "disclosed that Soviet government officials intentionally
altered incriminating Nazi I.D. card evidence."

Letters
to editor
:#
. .
.
lust a good samaritan

I would like to thank tbe person or
persons who wrote to !be President
ot the United States on my he half. It
trulY was an honor and a joy to
receive such a letter from President Reagan. Tbere are just a lev/
things'I'd like to say- I hope you'll
understand.
When I stopped to help that
Individual who had the misfortune
of having an accident, I d!dn't·do It

thinking I'd be-In nne lor any glory.
The reason i stopped was to help
my fellowman wbo was unable to
· be!p himself. The sad thing Is tbere
were a lot of people who went rtght
on by without even stopping to help.
Please stop and give a helping hand
If you see someone wbo needs a
hand. Maybe some day you'D need
a helping hand. ~ Larry Babbitt.

Thnnks contributors
The Orange Township Volunteer
Fire Department would like to
tlulnk aU the people whO contrlb-

•

uted to our annual fund dri'::er Lamar Lyons.

,·

1J.Ii Uti' 1"\t: 'DC'I"'..V..I'&lt;1ji'I10N
"'\' V'

.

l\li'I.W

.

ImpraCticable to hlghJack a Wheel
chair and seek a tobacco store was a dustorner In a scanty hoapital
gown with no money would lmJne.
dlately attract the pollee.
My only
was the

recourse

...

Jack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear ·

.

!nOuenced by political consldera·
sort of soutbern Afrtca "Camp had been briefed by tile Navy ' '
lions. That, at any rate, Is 'tbe view · David" agreement. which would researchers, but received only
expressed In a draft report prehave been a foreign ·policy triumph "preliminary" Information. As for
pared by researchers for Conyers
for the president. Such an agree- the Conyers-Washington. Office on
and the Washington Office on
ment might not have canceled the Africa draft report's criticism of a
Afrl
"Th
In!
!
lengthy delay. In the release of the ,
ca.
er~rtcerta yra~ . Tehran hostage crtsts · - which
.Interesting ,guesl!ons," · Conyers . ·· erupted while lhe panel was stU! ·· White HouSe pa'nel's report, Press
told our associate Vicki Warren.
deliberating - but It Wliuld na,v e. said thllt the infonnatlon was undEit
' "But l ' carinot second guess the
helped.
·
·.te\itew for several months. · ·
Carter Whiie House on"' \vhat
Frank Press, who was Carter's
Actually, tbe White House panel's
U he 11 t ·•
exac Y t po t c.., considerations
science adviser, discounts the. conclusion was judiciously amblgu"
What 1! .said was~ "Although
w;~ ca;,e for ~ltticaf med.dllng : .~~~e~:;e~:,.u:~il t~~~:i:o~: 9us.cann9t
!'ljl.e-ou,t.t!!e pOssibUity .,
· ~ fi(lrnethlng like ihls: A pres1• sideratlons at ~belline,'.' he ·sald. · .'that this (liatelllte)
'signal was ol .. -~
de
·
·
·· ·
·
nt 1a1 e 1ect1on was coming up.
The Conyers· Washington Office nuclear origin, ihe panel considers ..
Israel _was suspected 'as, South . on Africa draft report makes mucli it more likely that the signal ws ol
Africa's partner in development of
of tbe fact ' that Nally Research one of tbe 'zoo' events (unexplained
a nuclear weapon; If they had
Laboratory study, which was done anomalous signals obtained from
indeed exploded a bomb, by law
at thettmeandconcludedthatthere Vela satellltes), possibly a conseUS
Ill
ld
I
I
I
. . m tary a to srae wou d
had been a nuclear explosion, was quence of the. Impact of a small
have to cease .. Thfll would have
"suppressed" by the White House meteoroid on the satellite."
been polltlcal dynamite.
and apparently disregarded by the
Footnote: Several members of
Furthermore, Carter did not
scientific panel. The details of the the White House panel said they stlll
want to oHend the South Afrlcan:;to
Navy study have been kept under believe the explosion was nonthe point that they would have
wraps until now.
nuclear and that nothing was
scuttled his efforts to bring about a
Press said the White HOUSE:. panel "suppressed." '

Somehow we people wbo write
newspaper columns labor uoder tbe
delusion that our readers are
Interested in some unusual aspect
of our pr1vate lives. Maybe tbey are
not but we continue to force our
lives orl them. Durtng tbe last few
months this column has appeared
erratically or not at all. I have tried
to explain that It was due to a
shattered hlp suffered the day alter
we returned to Florida to spend a
miserable wintPr. During the 10
years. we lived there I bad never
gone out of.my_way to make friends
because some of tbe community
events we attended bored beD out of
me and I quit going. Mary, wbo has
more social stamina than I, con·
tlnued with church and Senior
Citizen acUvltles and became quite
popular while I sulked at borne.
My friendless state was forcibly
brought hom to me t be first day In
the hospital when my 00 year habit
of smoking cigarettes was threa·
tened. We Uved In Chiefland about
40 miles southwest of Gainesville
where ·I was a patient In Alachua
General Hospital. The hosplta)
would allow no personal long
distance telepbone calls. Neltbe~
were the doctors and nun;es overly
enthusiastic about cigarette smokIng. Most ol ·tbem seemed to
subscribe to tbe poular theory that
cigarette smoking wa• responsible
!or every aUrnent from lung canoer
to heel blisters. I'll admit I
panicked! I had visiOnS of going Into
a series of nicotine fits whlli! tied to .
a hospital bed wltbout a China-'

:~==~~~:f~~~~~

tbe pool plan, the press flunked. ·•
Somebody leaked. Apparently the
man In charge at Mutual Radio,
thinking he was doing what was
expected of him, blabbed to the
bureau chiefs o! eight otber radio
networks. By 1: 20 a.m. Sunday,
three hours helore tile troops were · •
to take olf from Andrews, the word
was all over town. News directors
at CBS and NBC got wind of a
possible big story. Burch was up all
night !Ieiding Indignant calls !rom
news organizations wanting to
"
know what was gillng on.
In the wake or thiS fiasco,
according to The Washington Po5t.'.
"media executives said that many
pool detaUs had not yet been
worked out with tbe Pentagon; they
saw the test as se&gt;mewhat
premature."
.Horsefeatbers! The basic arrangements for a press pool were
worked out months ago, · Every
major news executive In the
country was aware •'that !be Pen- ·'
tagon would test !be pla!f. The
networks, the wire services and the .., •
major magazines and newspapers'
long ago designated tbeir corres·
pondents. This was a fire drill. It
broke down.
U.S. Marines and Rangers In·
vaded Grenada on !be morning of
Oct. 25,1983. Undertbecommandol '"
Vice Adm . Joseph Metcalf, our ··
forces were able to make tbe most '· '
of the element of 'surprise. Metcalf ,'"
dellberat~ly kept tbe American
press In, tbe dark. Suppose we had
had the pool plan then? Would the
vital element of confidence .have
been kept?
Last weekend's abortivE!' test
surely will give comfort to mllilary
officers; their natural hos,tlllty to .
clvUian busybodies has now been
fortified.

II

. we·

a

Moving from Florida
t&lt;;&gt;lephone In my room·even If I had
to reverse the long distance
charges. I would call some of tbe
people In Chiefland with whom I
had transacted business lor tbe past
10 years. True, most of tbe
transactions had been one-way,
transferring money from my
pocket to theirs, but I thought there
were surely some who wouldn't let
a good customer die of nicotine
deficiency. Once again I was fotled.
I didn't have Chiefland telephone •
book and the only two telephone
numbers In the world I had
memorized were our borne phone In
Chiefland and my son, Bob's, In
Syracuse. So I called both to let
them know of my• desperate need.
Both were properly sympatbetic·
and Bob even talked to tbe nurse
who assured him that they 'had
never yet allowed a patient to die of
a nicotine fit. I was not exactly
reassured but I do remember
telllng Bob, "Don't worry about me.
I have no 111tent1on of dylpg In
Florida. I haven't even. enough
friends here for pall-bearers." .
Mary had a colla~·vertebra In
ber neck and was unable to dr1ve a
car but she promised to come to my
rescue the next morning, which she
did by hlrtng a · neighbor lady to
drive her to !be hospital. It was not
untU I was. safely borne that I
·learned the oarton of cigarettes had
cotil us about $25 •. I think It was
during this period o! desperation
that I resolved to leave Flor1da
forever. I doubt that I wW ever
again go south ol !be Mason and
Dixon line where all Yankees are
r'nlltakenly viewed as rtch sucken
who are easier to pluck than cotton.
As soon as I advanced to the crutch
stage or my recoYI!l'Y I cance~~ec~·
tbe deal 1 had with a real eltate
agency, lqlocked hll elibt percent
cqmrnlalon !rom the llalel price .

Lowell Wingett ·

and advertised property. "For Sale
by Owner." We had 30 prospective
buyers the first week and sold to a
nice coup!e from Grant, Michigan.
Mary was not exacuy 1hrtiled
with the prospect of selling our ·
pl~ce in the middle or winter But I
convinced her that people ilo not
buy property in Florida In the
summer time. It's too damn bot to
sign the papers! .We had tentatively
agreed to give tbe new owners
occuapncy by April1 so they could
live in the place a couple of weeks

before going north to tbelr Michl· "
gan home for !be summer. Even ·
with the usual legal delays which
poslpon~ finalizing t~ !\ille until
March 22, . 23 tried to keep our
promise but our last days in Flol"lda
were hectic ones with most of tbe
packing, etc. piled on Mary's
over-burdened shoulders. No
wonder she spent the last few days
threatening a divorce at the first ••
county seat sbe came to. She didn't "
and hPre w~ are!
To Be Contlnu~! .

...

Berry's Wc&gt;rld

''

....,
..

'

0

•

., .

'·
' I

., .

'

'I

., • C.·
"'

.

~·

people of our frlotbCOLONY."

Strange things happen
in late ilming victory
By BEN WALKER
cracked a two-out single In the
Padres 1, Dodgen 0
AP Sports Writer
· Again, Fernando Valenzuela bottom ol t~ 11th Inning to drlve
The longer the game lasted, the
pitchro a superb game. Again, hiS home the .winning run In San
stranger It got.
record fell - to 2-3 - this time Francisco.
The Pittsburgh Pirates used a
Green was batting Just .001
because of Tony Gwynn. ·
nine-man Infield. Pirates pitcher
Gwynrl homered with one ou!'!n (2·for·33) when he got his gameRick Rhoden pinch hltforoutflelder
the top of the ninth Inning for the winning hit olf Cincinnati reliever
Doug Frobel.
game's only run. It was the second Tom Hume, 0.2.
The New York Mets used Rusty
Ex~5, Canllnals3
and last hit or the game for visiting
Staub In theoutfleldforthefirst time
No game In !be major leagues has
San Diego.
since June 1983. He kept switching
1be home run accounted for the been rained out this season. Tboseln
positions depending on wbo was
first earned run off Valenzuela In 41 charge in Montreal seemed pretty
batting - and wound up making a
1·3 innings. That streak broke the determined that Sunday's game
game-saving catch. "I lmow you
major-league record for most wouldn't become tbe first.
can't call what I do a sprint, but Iran
Thestarto!thegamewasdelayed
consecutive Innings wltbout an
as last as I could," Staub said.
earned run at the start of a season, a by rain lor 2 hours and 43 minutes.
Finally, in the bottom of the 18th
mark previously held by Hooks When It linaUy began, Steve Rogers,
Inning, Oint Hurdle hit a hard
Wilson of the 1912 New York Giants 2-2, pitched five Innings !or the
grounder that went illrough the legs
victory.
at 40 2-3lnnlngs.
of Pittsburgh first llaBeman Jason
PhUlles 3, Cum 2
Thompson for an error Sunday that
' 2, Braves I
Rick Sutcliffe will not go through
Asiros
gave. the ME'ts a 54 victory over the
this season with a 16-1 ~rd. which
Pinch-hitter Enos Cabell Uned a
Pirates.
·
he did last year for Chicago In two-out double in the bottom of the
The Mets got a llrst-lnnlng grand
wlnnlngthe1!184 Cy Young Award.
ninth Inning to barely drive home
slam from Darryl Strawberry off
Two errors by the Cubs and a good Alan Ashby from first base. ·
Mike Bielecki. But Strawberry's
effort by surprtse starter Kevin
With one out, Ashby singled off
sixth horne run of the season and
Gross of Phl!adelphla pinned the Terry Forster. One out later, Cabell
first career slam was the last hit
loss on Sutcliffe, who Is now 3-2.
hit a balllntot~lert-centergapthat
New York got unlll Rafael Santana
Gross made his first start since left fielder Brad Kommlnsk just
singled to lead off the 12th.
last September after scheduled missed catching with a diving try.
· The game lasted 5 hours and 21.
starter Steve Carlton had some
Center fielder Dale Murphy
minutes. Itwas the longest.game,ln · shoul&lt;;ler stiffness. It was only. the backed up the play and relayed the
tenns of Innings and time, since Los
seventh time In his 14 years with the ball to shortstop Rafael Ramirez,
Angeles beat Chicago 2-1 in 22
Phlllles- a span of471 starts- t)lat whose throw to catcher Rick Cerone
Innings in a 6 hour, 1Q.m!nute affair
Carlton has missed a starting was sUghtly up tbe third-base line,
that began on Aug. 17, 1982, and
asslgiunent.
which allowed Ashby to slide safely
ended the next afternoon.
Gross, 2-2, pitched six shutout borne.
In other games Sunday, Montreal
Innings before Larry Andersen · Astros starter Nolan Ryan
heat St. Louis 5-3, Philadelphia
came on for his second save.
pltchedsevenlnnlngs andstruckoul
nlppedChlcago3-2,SanDiegoedged
Glants2,Redsl
seven, raising his all-time leading
Los Angeles 1-0, Houston tipped
David Green, mired In a season- strikeout total to 3,roll. Dave Smith,
Atlanta 3·2 and San Francisco
long slump, picked a good time to get 3-1, worked the final two innings for
defeated Clnclnnall2-11n 11 Innings.
his third hlt o! the year. Green thewln.

Martin back as Yanks' boss

CARTER BLOCKS THE PLATE - New York
Meta' catcher Gary Carter.._ l'lttiiiJursbl'lrate&amp;'
runner Doug Frehel In the air and oot as be tries to
!lllOfti In the 14tlllnnlnl Sunday at Shea Stadium. It

a

NEW fANKEE MANAGER- Billy Martin dllplap alal'psmlle

sUnday nigh&amp; after belnl m~ tbe N- York YllllirMI'IIUIIIIIpl" lor
tbe fourth 1.1me. (AP LuerphOto).

The

never

•

jl

tenn - provided he lasts until
tonight's game in Texas.
ThemoveovershadowedTommy
John'sflrst victory slncelastAugust
as CaHfornla handed Seattle its
eighth straight setback 2-1, Walt
Ten-ell's llrst American Le_a gue
shuiO(It as Detroit dOWned Mllwau- .
kee !Hl and · Mlnnesota,-·s · eighth -consecuttvevlctory,al0-1potlndlng
of Oakland. Elsewhere. Baltimore
edged Cleveland g.7. Toronto' beat
Texas 6-3 aJ.ld ){ansas_City, defeated
Boston 5-2 - ·
·" ·
--· ··

._. ¥ii,M~r$t .-

capped the Twins' five-run sixth
inning with a two-run single. He tied
Tony Oliva's team record of nine
straight hits and came within three
ofthe major-league record or 12, set
by MlkP "Pinky" Higgins of Boston
in 1938andequaled byWaltDropoof
Detroit in 1952. Hatcher alSO tied
severalplayerslorlheALreC9rdo!
rune hits in ·two ·consecutlve nine- ·
Inning games. Mike Smithson
allowed seven hits and extended his
strJng·ot shutout innings Jo 16 2-3
before .suri-endeiing aJ'I . eighth· innlngrun. ·

Tornmy John allowed 'seveit hits
In 5 2-3
Innings
lorleaving
his fits!
since
last
Aug. 6,.
tbevictory
game
wben he strained an abdominal
muscle.

r•~ii!~~~~~~q

11gers 5, Brewers 0
Terrell, wbo entered !be game
with a 5.68 earned run average,
hurled a lour-hitter whl!e Alan
Trammell and Lance Parrtsh
cracked eighth-Inning homerunso!f
loser Teddy Higuera. It was the
third straight victory for the Tigers
after a briel slump In which they
dropped six o! eight.
'l'wln! 10, A's 1
Mickey Hatcher went 4-for-5,
extending his consecutive hit streak
to nine at-bats beloreflylngout in the
seventh Inning. Hatcber, who went
5-for-5 Saturday, scored twice and

531 JACKSON P1KE - RT.35 WEST '

Phone 446·4524

BARGAiN MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
.
ALL SEATS $2.25
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2 .25

1 ,, ,,. . ""l '''

,

r r ru

\!tl&gt;

rr.,

'~A'..S~
"""ll'!l&lt;!'l."'ihi.• OYN un~il 111.'1, . '

r.......,".... 1 .....

Walker available too

. Even at No. · 18, with Payne earning $«4,00l,
',I1IE WOODLANDS, Texas (AP)
"One way or another, It was a
- Alter three weeks of frUstration, .. Stewart. making a charge and Lohr
and Frost in till' clubhouse jJ.ISt two thrill," said Lolli-, 24.
Raymond Floyd was beginning to
Floyd was overcome with emostrokes hack, be intentionally aimed
doubt himself.
his approach shot beyond tbe tion, hiS volcewavertng as bespokE'
, "The last three tournaments I've
~_,,..
water-guarded green, bopingforthe with reporters.
gone to bed 6n Saturday night wlth
"It's
been
a
longtlmecominf,"
he
rough or a bunker and setlling for
the lead," said the 23-year veteran
the
bleachers.
said of the 2%·year victory drought.
alte( shooting a 69 Sunday to win the
"I was not going to lose tbe "No matter 11&gt;w weD you play,
$500,001 Houston Open by one stroke
over Tour rookies David Frost and tournament,'' Floyd said. "The only there's sliD !be doubt."
way to blow the tournament was to
F1oyd, whole last win carne In the
Bob Lohr. "It was important to my
put It In tbewatet."
1982 PGA, played nearly flawless
career to take advantage o! leadinli
That's where Stewar1 wound up· goll, breaking out o! the pack and
and Mt let another one slip away."
for the second time In the final holding a two-stroke edge through·
He didn't.
After blowing third-round leads at round, ~ectlvely killing his out 1n011t of the day unlll !be bogey on
'chances.
No.&lt;!&amp;
·
Greensborv, N.C. and In
"I'm a tittle depressed, I guess,
Stewart llnlahed at 279, tied with
Masters, Floyd charaed. onto the
that I dldn.' t win," Stewart said. Bob Murphy, · Ruis C«hran and
111!111 7,ot2-yard TOIIl1IIIJIIllll Play·
"But
I was
leading and hltthe Keith FI!JliUS.
era CCJurse at 'lbe Woodlanda 011
watertoomanytlmes.lshouldhave
Masten champion Bemhard
Sunday with blrdlel 011 the ftrJt two
knDwn
better
...
t.anger,
teylng to become !be first
11o1a llldnever DJbd blct111route
Stewart's
watery
dem1le
opened
aolfft' since 1lml !o wtn three
to an ll·under·pa!" 117 IIJtal. It W81
Tour Yic1111Y No. lll for Floyd,llld II lhecloorb' t.obr llldFrolt tocashln ' aJIIIE(.UIIve toumarnents, ftnlshed
their blqeat paycheck~ eYI!I', eadl with a 71 fir • tour-round total of287.
w•lmpdrtal1t·

·.

Inning. (AP Laserphoto).

Berra forced _to walk plank;
Angels, Tigers post victories

the

Martin, w~o twice was fired by
Steinbrenner .. and once resigned
under beavy pressure from the
owner, was working as a consultant
and scout for the Yankees since
being replaced by Berra after -the
1983 season.
That job, though, did not qffer the
excitement that Martin coveted.
"Anybody Who tells you rE't.lrementIs a lot of fun, they're crazy,"
Martin said Sunday night. "How ·
many times can yon ,water the
garden? And I'm tired of playing
golf."
Berra saki he did not know
whether be would take another job

was the second Ume that Carter had nailed a line
runner at tbe plate. The Meta finally won l&gt;-41n tbe 18th

.

'
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) with the team, if Steinbrenner comment was veteran Don Baylor,
considered one of the team's
-. Billy Martin is back. Yogi Berra Is
pres~nted one.
. By HERSCiiEL NBIENSON
The Yankee . players, · whose emotional leaders, who had once
gone. ThP Bronx Zoo Is back In
AP Sports Wiiter
business.
bumpy flight to Dallas-Fort Worth vowed he would not play again for
Ozzle Gullien and Yogi Berra both
"I'm very happy. 1never did leave
International Airport symbolized an Martin.
took a hike - but Guillen's was a
Martin, who said he did not "feel happy 90-foot trot to (Irs! base while
the Yankees," Martin said Sunday already bumpy season, were visibly
night, bours after he was named the upset when tbey arrtved at their any pressure at aU" working again
Berra walked the plank.
as Steinbrenner's manager, said
NewYorkYankeesmanagerforthe
botel.
.
.
.
OwilerGeorgeSielnbreilnerofthe
fourth dlfferentitme in hi$ career. ,
Phil R!zzuto, who played with one . o! hiS 'first 1&lt;\Sl&lt;s. with the. · NewYorkYankeeswasontheflrlng
- Yankees pr1ncipal owner George . botjl Martin and Berra With th~ Yankees would he to get .the players lbie again Sunday. Sixteen gaines
.steiilbrehrier'flred Berra after the Yankees and now· Is a broadcaster "In the proper frame of mind."
Into'
~a.Son, Steinbrenner reThe New York clubhouse was
team loSt 4-3 Sunday In Chicago to with the team, stopped lor a minute.
canted his promise earlier thiS year
the WJ!Ite' Sox. During spring
AskedwhPtllertberoughrldehad glOQ1llY follOWing Sunday's. loss,
that Berra's job was safe for 19ffi.
which bccurred· when starting' :wtn or lose.
•
,, · ··
,tr_alnlng,. Stelnb~!Jner pmlnl~ affected ,the team" FU~Jo said,:
.• 'thaLBeiTI!'S job W:Qti!&lt;J'be intact lit : _:'N&lt;i, they are il,ll upset ~w;e Yogi pltcherJ~Co)Y.leyw.alkedhom¢tl1e
.Shortly after ~ Y!lll)&lt;ees lo8t for
' wfnnlhg. l'l!n 'In the. l:!oflom oftlie' . the third time'ln rowantllflth inl6
· ·1985. ·• ·
·. :
. _ . ··· · wasletgo'." .·• .
.·
· ·
· games th.;, young seas6n :..:_ the
"Yogi wUI he the manager this · Among the players who declined ninth lnhlng.
year. A pad start will not affect
Chicago White Sox beat them 4-3
Yogi's sla tus," Steinbrenner said.
when Joe Cowley walked Guillen
That all changed Sunday -after
with tbe bases loaded and two out In
just 16 games. The loss was the
the bottom of tbe ninth Inning to
team's third straight and lOth of
force In the 'winning run - the
hard-to-please owner !Ired Berra
seasop.
"The action was taken by the
and replaced him with - who else?
-Billy Martin.
Yankees and we felt it was in the best
Interests of the club," Steinbrenner
"He's the boss," said Berra, who
had been hearing rumors of his
said In a statement.
Ironically, Martin was in Arllng·
dismissal all week. "I had an inkling
when you hear It every day. This
ton, where thP Yankees open a
weekend? I don't think lt had
three-game series against the
anything todowlth it. What can you
Rangers tonight, when Stein·
do when you lose three one-run
brenner telephoned Sunday
games? This Is a good ballclub.
afternoon.
they'll get It together."
"He called me and said he wanted
It was thE' 12thmanagerialchange
me to take over the club, and here I
since Steinbrenner purchased the
am," Martin said. "I never had any
hard feelings wlth'George.l have no
Yankees In 1973 and Martin's fourth
problems with George."

Floyd takes Houston Open

.

"NoW, .,., ... Cllll ... do to help you Mid , .

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Giants edge Reds, 2-1

•

--~--~--------~~~~--~~----~--~~~~~--~~ ·
J_am_·es_J_._K"-=-·tpa_tr_ic_k

The. Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

NEW YORK (AP) - Included draft or a supplemental draft, which
with all those tens of meat on the hoof would be held this summer. Kosar
up for auction Tuesday at the chose the latter, which would allow
National Football League's college the Cleveland Browns, who hold the·
'draft Is some prbne, well-seasoned first supplemental pick, to take him.
The Oilers say that would harm
beef- Herschel Walker.
TheHelsmanTi"ophy·wtnnerwho them because they would lose an
left _thE' University of Georgia a year extra draft pick acquired in a trade
early to join !be Infant United States with Minnesota on tbe condition that
Football LeaguE' Is eligible to he Kosar would be available for the
selected by an NFL team this year. VIkings to draft on Tuesday.
He's In his third year running for ,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
the New Jersey Generals and hiS
contract carries throUgh 1981- but
BEGINNING
. the speculation Is that !be Generals
•
•
and the rest of the USFL may not be
running next year, much less five or
Startl. .
six years lrom now.
That makes Walker, !be USFI..'s
THUIS., APIIL 30
runaway rushing leader, a tempting
6:oo· P.M.
target for an NFL team.

KARATE CLASSES

But It's alSO a gamble. !\11 NFL
team selecting Walker Instead of a
collegtan could wind up with an
empty draft pick, wasted if the
USFI.. survives In 1986.
Another "Iffy" situation Is !be
status of !he draft Itself. Tbe Houston .
Oilers notified the league they were
prepared to
a lawsuit today,
naming Commissioner Pete Rooelle
as defendant. It woold seek a
temporary restraining order that
could delay the draft unlll a court

rue

reviews the comrnlssloner's decl·
slon regardlni the status ot Bernie

Kosar. ,

The Oilers are dlstreued over
Rozelle's decision which allowed the
University ot Miami quarterback
the option ot entering !be regular

At The Carleton School
In Syracuse
fw f..ther lnftlf'MGtllll

ClU 992-5421

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL AllERGIST
CALl (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

..
'.

�. · Pege-4-T!le Daily Sentinel

Monday. April 29, 1985

Monmw.April29,198&amp;

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page-&amp;

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Sorority installs new officers
New offlcers were Installed at the 1 Scott and Jean Ward, presented the
recent meeting ot the Alpha Founders Day program. As Miss
Omicron Chapter of Delta Kappa Scott and Mrs. Essman read the
Gamma Sorority held at the achlevemenis of the 12 founders, '
community building In McArthur.
· Mrs. Ward Uta candleforeachone.
Installed by Barbara Litter and The table was centered with fed
VIOla Gettles were Jean Ward, roses and other Delta Kappa
president: Eleanor Essman, first Gamma emblems.
vice president; Rebecca Zurcher,
During the business meeting
second · vice president; Nellie thank you cards were read from
Parker, secretary; Esther Elalne Van Tllburg, state president;
Maerker, treasurer: Viola Gettles, Fay Sauer, Esther Maerker, .M ar·
parliamentarian.
garet Benson, and Meny Dawn •
Eleanor Essman, membership Sinnmons, Get-well cards Wei'¢
chairman; assisted by Dorothy ·stgned for Edith Hoffman an~

-

.

~

Carleton School
participating in
special olympics

GeneVa Nolan. Mrs. Ward an·
MUDced the September meeting to
be held at Lake Hope; Sept. 23.
" Happiness Follies", a singing
group of Vinton County sixth
graders directed by JacqueiY!I
Fain, presented several songs. The
hostess committee of which Myrtle .
Fri is chalnnan, served a bl!ffet
supper. Roma Nlcke~ gave the
InvocatiOn. A,ttending from Meigs
County were Mrs. ZUrcher, Mrs.
Parker, Carolyn Snowden, Chris
Rouse, andJoAnnH;Iyes.

' 'Carleton School athletes, under
the guidance of Ray Pullins, wtll be
among the participants at the 1985
Regional Specl.al Olympics Track
a nd Field Meet to be held Sunday,
Msy 5, at Goldsberry Track, Inside
Ohio University's Peden Stadium.
The day's events Will begin at 8
a.m . With registration of athletes,
followed by a non-denorntnatlonal
church service at 9:30 a.m. At 10
a.m. the athletes will march aroui:ld
the track lead by the. ROTC Air •
Force Color Guard and the Ohio
University Marching Band. The
meet will last until approximately 3
p.m.

May Fellowship Day obs.ervance set

--•

.....-•

-··

the rule for participants In Middleport Chamber's llrst
annual ilK run.

MINGLING BEFORE THE RACE - FeeHngs of
comradery usually prevails among nmners. Such was

'

May Fellowship Day will be year's theme challenges church
observed by the Church Women women . traditionally lnvolved In
United of Meigs County Friday at caring for victims of social lnequl·
the Fltst Baptist Church of Racine.
ties to deal with root causes and
Each woman attending Is to take a become directly Involved In action
sack lunch. The beverage and · that brings about social change.
dessert wUI be furnished by the host
Church Women United has a long
church. The aMual business meet· history of addressing the causes of
lng will follow the luncheon and the social injustice and taklngpartln the
program entitled "Our Piece of the political process to accomplish their
Action" wUlbeglnat 1: 30p.m.
goals of empowerment of women,
May Fellowship Day Is an annual economic justice, human rights and
event spoQsored by Chureh Women peace. It Is a national movement
United to bring Christian women and the catalyst that brings Protest ·
from many traditions together in an ant, Roman Catholic and Orthodox
ecumenlc~l worship experience to
women together into one common·
address their social concerns. This tty of caring. Representing a broad

~

(

port C of C's 5K Run held Saturday attemoon.

LIMBERING 'UP·A MUST-CarlaShuler, an avid
runner, strekhes her legs before beginning Middle-

spectrum of reltgtous tradition,
race, age, economic status and
ethnic background, these church
women work ecumenically through
a national unit, 51 state units
lncluding one ln Washington, D.C.
·
and 1,!m local units.

Athletes wUI compete in such
events as the 50m dash, 400m retay,
400m ruH,Iong jump and high jump,
100m and mn dash, the softball
throw and a variety of special
events.

Hemlock Grange
tn4king plans
Hemlock Grange made plans at a
recent meetlng for a May 18 visit
from Racine Grange with a potluck
dinner at 6: :ll p.m. preceding the
meeting.
During the Hemlock Grange
meeting, Helen Qulvey, women's
activities' chairman, announced
that judging of garments will take
place on April :ll.
A general discussion was held.on
herbicides and pesticides.
RosUee Story, lecturer, gave a
presentation on Oag etiquette.
Refreshments were served fol·
lowing the meeting by Zlba and
Sylvia Midkiff and Golda and Bob
Reed.

ROY ALTV - Beth Berkhlnter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Jolmon, and D.J. Randolph, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dorset Randolph, both
seniors, were named 1985 Eastern 10gb School Prom Queen and lUng
Satu~ nlgbi. Joe Runyon, president of the Junior class, Is pictured
crowning the queen. The high school .auditorium wll1! elaborately
decorated to carry out the prom theme, "You're My Inspiration," with
Don Eichinger, faculty member, Serving as sponsor and advisor for the
annualjunlor·senlor evcnl.

News of the Long Bottom area
By Melody Roberts

'- ·
THE RACE IS ON - A shot fired by Middleport
Chamber President BW Blower, far right, signaled the

start of Saturday's Middleport C of C 5K Rim.
Appro~ 50 rwmers participaled In the eveot.

Wahamfl staff
attends seminar

Hysell, and local pollee groups, received high praise
from participants in the race for _o utsWtdlng safety

PACING 111EMSELVES - Runners paced
themselves early on in Saturday's 5K nm. Melp
County's REACf Team, under the direction of Guy

control.

Athens Countian wins Middleport run
32:10 minutes In the upder 12 age
Approxlnnately 50 limners partie· ribbons were presented at an open the women In this age group.
lpated in the first annual Middleport house at the boxlng club. Refresh·
In the 31-36 age group, Larry· category.
CofC5KRuna3.2mileroursewhtch . ments for the open how;e and prizes Hoffman, 19: 33; Dennis Roush,
Comments on the race are being
began at2 p.m. at.theSears' parking for the random diawings Were 25: 07; and Danny .Grueser, T/: 07
loi on North second St. and finished donaied by several .MiddlePort were uip5 for the . m~n; RebecCa ·.
at the Holzer Clinic parl?ng lot.on merchants.
· Rugton, T/: 55;, ·and Carla Shuler, blgger.and better with the addition
MUISt.
of a ioK event.
·
The MlddleportBuslnessAssocla·
28:33, for the women.
Marty Dagostino of Athens lion, a ·division of chamber, helped
There were no women entered In
crossed the finish line first at 16: 53
prorriot~ the 5K run
sales went
the '!142 or 4349·age grmi~ ~t for ..
mln\)tes, n~arly tw(l'in!nu~·l!lttOiit
on .at most stof!!S In honor. on~e themen,Cal'l'OllLovejoY;22.36, and..
. ,. · . .
• •
.: .
of second pl;tce FtJMe'r TrOyBaitley occasion. .
jo11n GoinE'z,' :16: 47 plaCEd in thP
Overall male winners in the 51&lt; · 3742 group and Liui'y May,l9:~;
..
.
· at 18:45 minutes. several' runners
felt the race was "extremely weli
run were Marty Dagostino, 16: 53;
Bob Dillard, 21: 22; George Nichols,
Meigs' baseball and softball
organized" and that markers wer·
Tl'oy Bartley, 18:45; Fred Wolfe,
22:0!; and Thomas Smith, 23:06 teamsweretop-seededlndrawtngs
en't even needed becauseofflne jobs
18: 55; and Doug Hoke, 19: 01, taking placed in the 4349 group.
SundaY held In .Athens. In the boys'
of directing by volunteers.
Mica Jones finished the run in AA tournament, first seeded Meigs
first, second, third and fourth places
respectively.
drew a bye. Action begins WednesThe Mlddlewrt Police Depart·
Overall women coming In first,
day, May 1 at 4 : ~ p.m. when
Majors
men! led ruMers, red markers second, third and fourth were
6-8 plays NelsonvilleSheridan,
pointed the way and members of
B.r n.,. 'rod,. .. fWJIR
Brenda Reed, 23: 49; Laura GallO.
York,
5-6.
Meigs
wtiJ play the winner
AMDICAN LEAGUE
Meigs County's REACf Team were
way, 24: 11; Jlll DWard, 25 mlnutes
·
ofthatgameat
1p.m.
Saturday.
posted at each Intersection. Water
WLPd.GB
Oat; and Edith Baker,~: 03.
GAllipolis, second seeded at 11-10
1 l 6 .fW7 provided by the Meigs Clvttan Club
BaltlR"IOI'f'
u 7 .611 'h
First place overall men's and
plays
belpreat4:~p.m. Thursday.
was available at the two-mile mark
Toronto
IJ 7 .611
~
New Lexington wUI battle Alex·
9 9 -~ 'l:~
""'loo
·and times were given at both one and women's winners wlll also receive
MUWB\Ik«'
8 9 .rn a
ander on Friday, May 3. The
two miles. Just for precaution, Mid· $25 sayings bonds.
CIPVf'land
T U
..'JC9 ~ i,&lt;i
in
the
13·18
age
group
Winners
Winners of the Gallipolis-Belpre,
NN.• York
6 10 ..175 f!l!
dleport EMS and fire department
WN DtvWan
21:
29;
were
Howard
McLaughlln,
New Lexlngton-Aiexander games
picked up the rear. The Rutland and
Ca lifornia
l2 7 .632 - •
Chris
Stout,
21:
44;
Brian
Nitz,
21:
52;
will
meet at 4 p.m. Saturday. ·The
Chicaac
•
rn1
t'h
Pomeroy Police Departments and
' 7 .., 2
Kunsas Ci t)"
and
Mike
Amos,
~~
17.
There
were
champlo1'ShiP
game is scheduled
Meigs County.. Sherttt' s deputies
910 ' •
.'I&gt;; I
MlnJM:'!iOI:S
no
women
entered
In
this
category.
for
Tuesday,
May
7 with the winner
.f74 ;'J
were also involved with the race.
Oakland
'7 12
10
s.:&gt;ank'
In the 19-24 age group, winners
advancing
to
District
play at
..!68
.294 '6
Money raised from this year's run were Doug Hoke, 19: 01; Mike
'
12
Chillicothe.
SMI,...,..M GarneM
will be donated to the Meigs County Kennedy, 19: ~; Ron Cisneros,
KaM.'ls en;.· !'1, Boston 4
In girls' AA actiOn, Meigs was
DMroh l . M\Jwaukre 2
Boxing Club in Middleport, headed 19: 29; and Charles Whittington,
top-seeded . Belpre plays Meigs
Minnesota 8, llikland 6
by Roger SteWart and Carl Hysell.
Chk'ago l 1'0(1\1' York o&amp;. U innlng§
19:42. No women In this category
Thursday May 2. South Point drew a
C'k&gt;\'C'Iand 10. Baltimorr 4
T·shirts !or each runner were either.
· Drst round bye and wUI play the
Toronto 9, T~s 8. 10 lnnt.ngs
provided by Central Trust Bank;
Ca!UornLa 6. &amp;&gt;ank&gt; 1
In the 25-30 age group, Dean
Meigs winner. at 4 p.m. May 6.
S...sQ'1G.-nM
Dean Harris of Leading Creek Berry, 19: 14; Charlie Marshall,
Fairland 14·1 and Gallipolls14-3wUI
Kansa!l Ctty !J. bo&amp;ton 2
Corp.; Craig MattheW, D.D.S.;
lia II irnJn&gt; ft. ('\ewoland 7
19: 24; Jeff Steele, 21:03, and Danny
play on Thursday, May 2 at 4 p.m.
MJ~a 10. Oakl111d 1
Dan's; and Rawling·Coats-Blower Harrtson, 21: 24 took top honors.
The
championship round is sche0\lcalil'O 4, N""" York 3 .
Funeral Horne.
Dr! roll ~. Mllwaukt&gt;P 0
Edith Baker at 26:03 and Debbie
duled
for May 9 at 4 p.m .
Tu'omo &amp;, Teus 3
Following the race, medals and Grueser at 29: 14 took top honors for
Ca llfor:nla l. Sean IE&gt; 1

~~~=~o~:~e::.~~~::

and

Meigs top-seeded

·in AA tournaments .

Eastern ·splits
:doubleheader
:with Trimble
GLOUSTER - Durlrig a Satur- which all hands were. safe oil Steve
. day afternoon doubleheader at Horner's hit ball , and a two-run
· Glouster City Park. the hard-hitting single by Jim Weber. Eastern
; Eastern Eagles rallied to1upset the plated a single run late In the game,
. "red-hot" Trimble TomcMs In the hOwever, two Eastern errors and a
: first game. 9-1. then dropped a cl~ sharp Jtne·drlve home run by Chuck
· 9·5 decision In the nightcap to split in Davis put the game out of reach .at
9-5.
: two hard-fought games.
Eastern collected seven hits led
· With the win In the first game
: Eastern made it four wins in a row by W.eber with a double, slngle, and
· and now owns a 10.7 record. . a walk. Kevin Barber elpped a
: Trimble of the Tri·Valley Confer- double, while Royce Bissell, Bryan
: ence was coming off consecutive Durst, Jeff Bissell. and Jeff Cald·
well each singled.
· Wins over league leaders Meigs and
Chuck Davis had a horne run for
: Warren on Wednesday a nd Friday
the
Tomcats, while Gatchel and
: night.s respectively, but now falls to
Downs each doubled and
Chris
: 10.11·1 pn the season overall.
Buddy
Lent, Sonny Cain, Carter
. In the nrst game sophOmore
and
Steve
Campbell each singled .
. Eddie Collins pitched to perfection
Durst was charged with tbe loss,
: as he silenced the usually hOt
whlle Weber went stx full innings to
· Trimble bats. Collins went the
record five strlkeouts, allow just
· distance to pick up the victory.
three hits l!,nd one earned run.
; scattering just three hits and
; allowing only one earned run. The
Dillinger picked up tbe win, while
: young flrebalier walked two and
Davis, Wilson and Campbell each
· struck out one In a great effort.
posted shoJi relief stints. Trimble
· Trimble sent three pitchers to the
pitching walked five, tour of which
. mound, Scott Gatchel who was
were chaPged to Dtlilnget, tanned
· tagged with the loss, sophOmore
five; . and gave up seven hits.
: Rob Wilson, and Mark DUIInger.
Eastern plays at Kyger Cleek in the
: The trio gave up 10 hits, walked
SVAC shOwdown on Monday, while
· three . .and fanned four .
Trtmble goes to Alexander.
In au Trimble plated six runs In
Lbi6&amp;tGie.
, the first to take a 6-llead. Eastern
Game a.e-:
rallled for a &amp;4 game In the fourth
Eastern ................ .............. O'l2 ~ W 0
Trimble ............................ 010 00 -I 3 0
canto on three straight walks to
Game two
Royce Bissell, Brent Bissell, and
Eastern ....... .. ..... ............ .'100 :DJ 1-5 7 ~
Bryan Durst, a fielder's choice In- Trimble .......................... .101 DJ x-9 ·s 3
I

•

'

I

. ...._,.. GarJW~~~
Ck'\'f:'land IHI'aton 1-01 at Kansas Clty

•Black H•.

The DaJiy S'entlnel

tnl

NM'' York tGukby 1-21 at Texas tTan·
ana IJ-..11. tnt
Boston cB~n 1}01 .11 1 0H il1ornla •Ro-

(USPS lts·HO)

A DlviAion of MuiHmed.l•, l•c.

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Subscribers not des iring to pay the carrier may remiL In advanet- dlr~t to

No aub.scrlpllon!l: by mull permitted In
lowne where homf'o carrier service Is
available.

I'Ww; Y&lt;rk ~ PUtJbiflh t. 18 IJV~inaa
Phlldlptdl 3, Cl'llcllo 2
San D1!F I.
0
San Frandlco 2. &lt;Jncktl'llll l, 11 In·
Hwllon 2, Att.rlt• 1

POSTMASTER: Send address chanRrs
to The Dally Senllnel, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio 45709.

The Dall)l Sentinel on a3, 6or 12 month
basts. Credit will be Ji{lven carrier each
month.

....,..a...

lAo-

-

\i,

Pltnburgh l N&lt;'W Y&lt;rl 2
Monl rHI B. St Lwls 3
ClnciMid 2. San Frllldlro 1
PhUidelphla 6. ChlctiO 1
Atlanta ~ HOUlton 2
San Dievo 4, U... A.._,. 3

.....

the·

'

.

cmm:R~mm_ .:. . ,'lbe ~~tar chapter fanner·~·...,.

a.etne FFA was presented .to Andy Ro!ttl, left, by Tom Wolfe of .·

~e_.Horne
'··.

National Bank.

'

·

·

.

--

""'"'"

OVERALL WINNER - Marty Dagostino, veteran runner, crossed
the finish line well ahead of the pack to bet.'Ome the overall winner in
Saturday's 5K run with a time of 16: 53.

.

Malt lillhocrlpllona ·
lllllole Ohio

•

13 WMkti , ,, ... .... .. ..... ,,, ..... .. ...... ,'114.56

~

:«&gt;u ...,......... ............... m .12
..u ............ ...................... t!l8.24

OutiOido Olllo
~ :«&gt;u .............................. ,... st5.1io
~2 w"":-' '"'""""' '.......... ,....... .. $31.20

ee

1 ...................... .. .. ........ ~ .80

Th~ . persons from Wahama
High .School attended the annual
principal-counselor's seminar held
recently at Hocking Technical
College In Nelsonville.
Rich Northrop, assistant prlncl·
pal; Blli Greer, vocational counselor; and John Corrtveau; counselor,
we~. among the 60 persons from
throughout Ohio attendlng. ' !he
.function .
Featured speaker was Dr. Cha·
rtes Gott who presented an enter·
talning and humo/'Ws deUvei): of
: 'Rlgl\t-Lefi Jlrain· Throry -;,., .A
ComrnunlcaU&lt;?,DS ·· Model.'' .· :Also .
speaking were Dr. John ·J. Light,
Hocking Teclinlcal College presl·
dent and Dr. Roxanne S. White,
associate director of Glttlnger
Assessment Center and dean of
students.

and sons of Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
John Henderson of Portland were
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Lawrence and sons.
. Mr. and Mrs. Ron Murphy were
weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Murphy of lforch, Ohio.
Rodney Pierce, Kathy Hanes,
and Tammie Pierce were In North
Carolina recently to move Kathy
back to Mount Ollve.
VIrgil Miller and Sherrt Driggs.
local, were married recently so
... congratulati9ns_ to ihe ne\v. l:lrtde.
" aM groom.
·.
..

Buckley birth

HONORARY CHAPI'ER FARMER AWARD - 'l1le honorary
chapter fanner award for the Racine FFA was presented to Sandra
Boothe, left, and Aaron Sayre.
'

Awards presented during
Racine FFA banquet
Awards were presented at the
aMual parent-student awards ban·
quet of the Racine Fu~re Farmers
of America:
Awards prsented and sponsors
Included: Star Chapter Farmer,
Andy Rose, Racine Home National
Bank; Star Greenhand, Brian
Dally, Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.; Agriculture Processing, Andy
Rose, Jackson PCA; Placement In
Prnduction, Harold Roush, Star
Supply; Fruit and Vegetable Production, Andy Rose, Twin City
Machine Shop; Creed Speaking
Award, Tim Willis, Gene· and
Charles Yost; ExtemporaJl('Ous
Speaking, Andy Rose, Jackson
PCA; Prepared Speaking Award,
Brian Freeman, MGM Farm City,
and Sheep Production, Andy Rose,
MGM Farm City.
Other awards presented, provided by the chapter, Included
Geenhand Degree, Mickey Eakins,
Curtis Jones, Jerry Grueser, DencU
Hudson, Scott Bickers, Hatvey
Martln, David Amburgey, Tim
WUlis,JoeyRitOe; ChapterFarmer
Degree, Kevin Roush, Brian Freeman, Tom Allen, Matt Combs, Todd
Kimes, Scott Kiser, Craig Brown,
Brian Dalley, Richard Hudson, Jay
Pickens, Todd Hubbard, i&lt;evtn
Clark; urban soil Judging, Harold
Roush, Harvey Martin, Bl1an
Freeman, Jeerry Gruesesr; rural
soli judging, Andy Rose, Curtis
Jones, Todd Hubbard, Tim Willis;
swine production, Charlie Wolfe;
•

- ------'---'· '"·

Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Buckley,
Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, an·
noul\(.'e the birth of their second
daughter, Miranda Lynn, March 30 ·
at the Camden Clark Memorial
Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Buckley
have another daughter, Michelle
Dawn, four .
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Starling Massar and the
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs . Roger Buckley. Maternal
great-grandparents are Leota Mas·
sar and Eleanor Boyles. Paternal
great-grandparents are Mr. ai:ld
Mrs. John Bailey and Ben Buckley.
Paternal great-great-grandparent
Is Mae Reltmlre.

I

Calendar

.,_

Etza Larkins fell and hurt his hlp
as ·well as Mrs. Rosa Ball. One can
send cards to them at LongBottom.
Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hauber and
Melody were Easter guests of Mrs.
Osa SinClair. Other guests were
Charles and Marg~ret and Chad
Sinclair, Robert and Mary Bowles,
Mike . arid Diana and Nicklas
Bowles. Delores and Robbie Hawk ,
aU of Pomeroy.
Visiting at thP Hauber home were
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Hauber and
Kim, Scott Hauber and Crls Arnold
and . Delores a·nd . :Robbie .,Hawk, '.
Charles Sinclair and Ora Sinclair.

· ·-. ··

•..

Hubbard's Greenhouse
NOW OPEN FOR
SPRINt SEASON
Complete line of wattible &amp;bed·
dire plants. harwirw baskets,
potted plants - bloom ire &amp;foli·
aae. shrubbery. rose bushes,
mleas &amp; Rhododendrons.
OPEN DAILY 9 to 5
SUIIDAY 1 to 5

PHJI,at-5776

.:'-·: ~o
:·_ ·NE
··· .~ · ~ ,.--:···
~~
,
(}

'•'

·

... - ..

•'

BEEF TIPS AND
NOODLES DINNER
We st.a n with USDA Choice beef tips simmered in their own tasty
juices and heaped over piping hot noodles. Then we top it off with
creamy, real mushroom sauce. Now at Shoney's.
-PLUS-

All-you-care-to-eat soup, sai;Id &amp; fruit bar!

$499

I

fish and wildlife, Charlie Wolfe,
Mike Johnson; work experience, ·
Kevin Roush, Jay Pickens; agrtcul·
MONDAY
ture mechanics, Scott Klser, Matt
POMEROY- Pomeroy Chapter
Combs, Brian Dalley; diversified
No. 80 will confer thedegreeofroyal
crop prnductlon, Brian Dalley.
arch 1 mason, Monday evening, 7
Aaron Sayre and Miss Sandra p.m., at the Pomeroy Masonic
Booth, both Southern High teachers, Temple. All royal arch masons are
recelv€d the Honoraary Chapter Invited.
Farmer Award. This award Is
presented to deserving lndlviduills
RUTI.AND - Rutland Garden
who have helped to promte the FF A Club will meet Monday, 7:30p.m.
Chapter In some way .
(daylight savings tbne). at the home
Various state and national of Mrs. Marvin Wilson: NE'W Lima
awards were presented wit!\ the Road.
State Farmer Degree going to Andy
Rose. He was rated In the top two
TlJESDAY
percent of students In the State of
POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu
Ohio. The Racine FFA Chapter
received a superior rating In state Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SOrority.
w111 meet Tuesday, 7 p.m., at the
competition. ·
County and district awards con· home of Carol McCullough. New
slsted of: fruit and vegetable omcers will be Installed.
prnductipn, Andy Rose, who was
first place In District 14; agriculture
processing award, Andy Rose, who
Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson,
was second place In the disU1ct;
are announcing the
Cambridge,
placement in production, Harold
EticJohn,
Aprll19, at
birth
of
a
son,
Roush, second place In the dlsU1ct
the
Guernsey
Memorial
Hospital in
with Ai:ldy Rose receiving a branze
Cambridge.
The
Infant
weighed
rating the' the District 14 extempo·
nine
pounds
.
raneous speakljtg contest.
Mr, and Mrs. Anderson have a
Public speaking Is a major part or
daughter, Kelly, age three. Mr. ai:ld
the agriculture program. In this
area, Brtan Freeman received a •Mrs. Lloyd Wright, Pomeroy, are
maternal grandparents and the
silver ra tlng In pubitc speaking in
maternal great-grandmother is
District 14 competiton; Freeman
Mrs.
Beulah Oehler, Pomet ay. Mr . .
was elected as District 14.secretary,
and
Mrs.
Jolm Anderaon, Lakeand president of the Meigs County
wood,
are
paternal
grandparents.
Junior Fair Board.

Anderson birth

.

Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Thorton

The sanctioned meet wllllnvolve
over 250 a thietes from Meigs,
Athens, Perry, Hocking and Wa·
shington Counties. To be eligible to
compete, athletes must be enrolled
In developmentally hadlcapped programs which are members of the
State S~tal Olympics.
The Athens County Special Olym·
pies Coordlnatlng committee is
p!,;CSCntly working on securing
V61unteers, donations and sponsors
for this meet. For more Information
on the Special Olympics Track and
Field Meet, contact BOb Gallagher
at 592-m or write to:·
Special Olympics Coordinating
Committee
10 Stoneybrook Dr.
Athens, Ohio 45'101

BREAKFAST
·BAR

$299

WNCH

SPECIAL
Monday-Friday, II a.m.-3 p.m.

Monday-Friday Mornings
tillll a.m.
(except holidays)

Shoney's All-you-careto-eat soup, salad and
fruit bar

What could possibly be better
than Shoney's All-you-care-to-eat
Breakfast Bar? How about more
items than ever before at a great
low price!

$299

' .

···----------·----------

S!2~!YS
Dinner Table.,

�Pege- 6- The Daily Sentinel

·-~-·----

Monday, April 29. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The ·Daily Sentinel
"

Buslness
Services
-----------...;---,.---------...,------,.-----------------~

,,

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.

'

• 1_,

..

. Monclily, April 29, 1986

.

•

•

111 Court st;, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*llOWN IN
INSUlATION

Tel evis ion · Listeninc Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Heari ng Evaluation s For All Aces

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Licensed Clinical Audiol01i st

Announce men Is
1-Card of Thanks ( pal&lt;l in advanca)
2 -ln Memory
(paid in advance)
3-Anr~ouncements

4 -Giveaway
&amp;·Happy Ads
8-loot and Found
7 -Yard Sale (paid in advance)
8 -Public Sile &amp; Auct ion
9·Wanted to Buy

21 -Busineu Opportunity
22-Money to loon .
23-Profeaaional Servic11

Real Estate
31 -Homeo for Sale
32-Mobila Home• for Sale
33- Farmo for Sale
•· ·
34-Buaintll Buildings
36-Loto • Acreage
36-Real Eotate Wentad

Employment
Services

41-Housll for Rant
42-Mobile Homes for Rent
43-Farmo for Rent
44-Apartment for Rent
46-Furnilhed Rooms
46-Spi!Ce for Rent
47-Wanted to Rent
48- Equipment for Rant
49-For le11a

71 •Auto1 for Sele
72-Trucb for Sela
73-VeneS. 4WD
74-Motorcyclaa
75-Boet• &amp; Motore
75-Auto P'1111 8o ACCIIIOrill
77-Auto Fhpelr
78-Cemplng Equipment
79·Compera • Mo.t or Home•

51 . Household Goods
62· CB, TV &amp; Radio Equipment
63-Antlqueo
64- Mloc . Merchandioe
56- Building Supplin
56· Peto for Sole
57 - ~uolcailnotruments

68- Fruitl • Vegatablea
59 - For Solo or Trade

F;m11 Supph1!s
XI Livestock

Rent.1ls

11-Help Wanted
12-Situation Wanted
13-lneuranco
14-Busineaa Training
1B·Schoolo
1 6-Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
1 7-Miscellanaouo
18-Wantad To Do

I I MISIWLI'IUII

Mcrr:t1 .lrlllrse

Financial

•

81 - Farm Equipment
82-Wanted to Buy ·
83· Livestock
84- Hey &amp; Grein ,
&amp;&amp;- Seed • Fertllzar

Ill otice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
., • STATE OF OHIO
"'•. DEPARTMENT OF
~ ' TRAIIISPORTAnON
Colulnbuo, Ohio
- · Aprii12, 198&amp;
Leaoi
~· .. copy No. 86·443
)_ "
. UNIT PRICE
·&gt;- •• • CONTRACT
IRG·OOORI491
FRG-000Ri221l
. ,, .
SRG-OOORI227
~ PI~DIIII wiU be
II the office of tho
DiNctor ar the Ohio Dop.n·
of Trenopo&lt;tation. CohnbUI. Ohio, until 10:00
A:M.. Ohio Standonl Time.
Mev 14, 1985, for
1--mentl In:
Athena, Go/lie, Hocking,

• controct s-

..-v.

~.Monroe, M~. ~

1111. PeiTy, Vinton and WI·
- ali/ngton Countioo, Ohio, on

IOUIOOand IIICiiona. by
ilfiPIYing flit drY point for
Nnoo and edge inM.
- hvement Width - Vlri81 .
. Ploject length - 0.00 orO.OOmlit.
Worit Length - verioua or
miiel.

:~;~~::~r::t

E

submit bkJs in respon• to this
invitation and will not be
discriminated agailll't on the
grounds of race, color, or
national origin in conlideration
for an award.
"Minimum wag8 rate• for
thio project hevo been prede1ermined •• required by ~
end are 181 forth in the bid
proposef.''
''The dote set for completion
of thio worlc iihell be 1181 forth in
the bidding propoul."

Each bidder aholl be required
to file with hia IMd e cortified
check 011 cashier'• check for •n
amount equal to five per cent
of his bid, but in no event more
then fifth thou1end dotter•. or •
bond for ten per cent of his bid,
payable to the Director.
Bidders must apply. on the
proper forma. for qualificlltion
at least ten deyt prior to the
date let for opening bids in .
accordance w ith Chepter
5525 Ohio Reviaed Code.
PlaM and apecificetiorl1 are
on file in tho Oepartrpant of
Trantportation end the office
of the Di1trict Deputy
Director.
The Director raserves the
right to rwi4ICI ony and oii!Mds.

WARR
~N J. SMITH
• , ·· DIRECTOR

occ:or-.· 1 14f~2. 29, 2tc

Public Notice

t .

Card of Thanks

::cARD OF·THANKS

••

.Tbe family of llary way....__. · hes I tha k the

0
n
it-Is Memorial and
Holllll Medical Center
.....,_ &amp; ·ernplo-s, and
..,..,.
,..
tspec:illly the 2-West
nUI$H at Holzer Medical

•..,.. WIS

.Center

:rq,q

lor their special
care. Also Mount
Church members

'*ir\d'""""

llr. and . Mil. Robert
Slnden, pastor, Pomeroy
....
.Cllurth ol ....
rist members

with Pastor Neil Proudfoot
ltir their prayers, cards, vi·

•• flowers

and food.
~ill thanks to Swisher

•-• Pha
nd. ....se
rmacy, po-

'iniroy llerthants, Monkey

...,_ Ne"""bors friends

-""''

.,,

lAd- ~ives

'

and various
chun:ltes . for Howers,
pni,.,S. cards and visits.

-~

to Ben Ewing and his
·.iliff fOf their kindness.

.

·I~ lhouahtfulness has
~

so muc:h.
The Wayland and

• ,.

,,,. the Andrews Families

Bltimated •V8flt98 additional

to• rate outside thli ten·mHI
limitation 10 PlY the pr;ncipot
end intonnt of ouch bonds, ••
certified by the County Audi·
tor, Ia 6 .37 milia for eech one
dollar of velustion. which
emounta to 63.7 centJ for
eoch one · hundred dolilro of
valuation; and
2. TheQUIIIion oftholevyof
•n edditionolt.. outaide of the
1iin-mll Nmitation f&lt;&gt;r tho
purpoo8 of paying the coata of

p;

;.tLOSEOUT SPECIALS
•

&gt; ••

- 1 ONLY FISHERMAN 12 FT. JOHNBOAT

.l•. i ,•
rr:~ ·

..

t- .•

SUGGESI US'I1612

NOW

$399

,;:-·t ONLY LAKER 12FT. V-BOnOM BOAT
,;!UGGEffiD USI'729 NOW

'·
"'·'
••

$419

1 ONLY 14 FT. SPORTPAL CANOE ·
.,.,..,.
(!lit~Jtly Damaged Lintrl . $395
•

p&lt;

,t•

SUGGESTED UST 1659

NOW

J'

"' ·
.(HESHI

fJom the State Of Ohio of the
rote of one-hoi! mil for NCh
ono
of voluotlon •cc:opt
that in yooro in which the
........ for debt ouuido the ten-mill imitation
is less than three and one-hlff
milia, the rote aholl be in·
creooed to that rate which Ia
tho difl&amp;hNQ b e - four
milia and the tax me for dobt
outJide tho ten-mil
timitation, until tho "'"""price it peMI. but m no cese
longer than twenty·thrH

!loll••

yeero.

The polls for Hid election
wil be Open ot 6:30 a.m., end
"""ain open until7:30 p.m. of
aeid day.
By onler of tho Boold of
Boctlons of Meigo County,
Ohio.
Evelyn Ciaill
CNiinnan
Jane M. Frymyor
DIAICtor
Dated: April1, 1986

BAUM LUMBER
915-3301

Public
Countiea. Ohio. on varioUs
rout• and MCtionl, by fur.
. nilhing end inatelling . . .,...mem marker meterilll.
Pavsment Widlll - Voriea.
Pn&gt;lect l..enritl1 - 0.00 1wt
or 0.00 mile.
Work length - vertouolwt
or vellou• mllel.
The Ohio Oepanrnem of
Trenaponotlon heiOby no1lfloo
al bidden that k will .tlimw·
~ lnaure that In -•hct ant-Into pUnU111t
to thll
minoritv
etltliijiollw w11 be
alluded. full opponunlty to
oubmitbldlln"""""•"'""'
lnvite11on and will not be
dllcrlmlneted
on tho
grounda of , _, color, or

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

875-Pt. Pleuant
468-Leon
676- Appla Grove
773-Muon
882-New Heven
891- Lellrt
937- Suffalo

Now Ho--ExtoMi¥1
•-•lint
lniurarltt Work
Custo111 Pole lldgs.
&amp; Garages

loofint Work

G.IEG

ROUSH

PH. 992-7611

Up to 16 Words... One dey Insertion . ....... ... 84.00
Up to 16 Words ... Three "ey lnaertlon ....... .. •&amp;.00
Up to 16 Words... Six dey Insertion .......... ... 8.00

-......t

a.-

_

....., In

~~

~

~ ... n - - fo&lt;onoword.
"Minimum ietH for
thla project hiYI boon predetennined aa required by low
and ,,. eat lonli In tho bid
propclloi,..

.

"Tile- aecf&lt;&gt;r eomplellon

now.m....,..

Nonce To '
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTAnON
Columbus, Ohio
April 12. 198&amp;

s-

Public Notice
IIIOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TENMIU
UMITAllON
IIIOTICE le ha""'y given that
in purluonce of 1 R-utlon of
tho Council of the Vllege of
Syrocuae. Ohio, poAid on tho
22nd day of J......,, 19811,
there wil be IUbmltted to •
- · of the poopio of aeid
Syracuse Village II a SPECIAL
ELECTION to be hald In the
Village of S.,..._, Ohio, It
the ""'...... p~ace of
therein. on Tueedoy, the 7th
dey of May, 15815. 1 h e tion of levying, In ....,... ol tho
ten mil Nmitotlon, for tho
baneflt of SV'ICUII Village for
the purpose of Current
E x -. ·
Seld tax being: In eddltlonet
tax of 1.8 milia to run for 6
yean at a rate not exceeding
1 .8 mila lor IICh one dollar of
valustlon. emounto to

weng

eiahlllit

I!:~I!L'equallo flwi
but In

ten days prior

let "" opening In
accordance
with Chapter
6525 Ohio Reviled c-.
1'11111 and epeclficltiona ore
on file in
Dopfrtment of
end the office
of
Dlatrlct Deputy
DlniCtor,
The Dinctor tho
right to reject eny and • - ·
WAAREIII J. SMITH
DIRECTOR
141 29: (6). 6, 2tc

11

Help Wanted

HELP WANJED
LI(ENSED PHYSICAL
THERAPIST NEEDED
For a management
position in the Pomeroy area . Excellent
working conditions
and benefits. Interested applicant may
send resume to:
The Daily Sentinel

P. 0. Box 729·A
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
,.,.,

r.,.~o,..,.,

cent1 f&lt;&gt;r MCh one

. hundrod ~ of vaiUition,
for five ysare.
Copy No. 86-444
The for aolcl Election
wll
1:30 o'cloc* A.M.
UIIIITPRICE
CONTRACT
and remain _ . ...til 7:30
SRG-OOOR(230j
o'clodl P.M. of llid dey.
FRG·OOOR(222j
By-ofthaa-dof
Seoled 1J1 09&lt; I wil be Electlona. of Molga County.
oecelved, It tho office of tho Ohio.
Director of tho Ohio Dopa!'l·
mont of Trw~. Columbuo, Ohio, umll 10:00
A.M.. Ohio Standard Time.
T..-.,, May 14, 188&amp;,""
'
D - April 1' 191&amp;
Athena, Gollla, Hocking,
Moiga, Monroe. N-. Vln·
(41 8, 1a. 22. 29, 4tc
ton, MOIIJOn ond Woatmgtctn

eontr.ct

1..ogo1

. tho .

o-•·••r

CLINIC
PAUL E.

SHOCKEY,

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT. PlEASANT

Offi(E

jLM.

flEE ISJIIIAlES

446-9416

Fri4oy 1 p.oo.•l P·""

n.so .....

10 ......
I.AIGE AIIIWS AND
SUIGEaY IY AI'I'OINTMENI

I

. ' 992-2259
(
NEW · usr.fiiG ·~ ·-a;lu,.
County .:... Approx. .35 iicre .
corner lot, aereaiDr septic
syslem, I\! car garage wilh
workshop, city water. $12,000.
lllddlt-

pprt - Slateiy '*ler home wilh
up ·lo 4 bedrooms. a 24x28
recreation room, family room
and basement, 2 car garage on

agood street You musl seelh~
one! Now )42.900.
and

ranch in Syracusee. He wanls
an · offer. Call today for a

soowing, Ownei musl consider
!!lien ridict.Jious oilers.
SYRACUSE 3 bedroom
ranch, large deck, nice lol. Gas
FA heat Owner needs lo sell!'

$32,900\

VINYL LillER PODL
ACRYLIC WAU POOL
ABOVE GROUID

o..r 400 Cltolcas

,.-sPAS'.'
IIYDIOIICI CIIIMKALS
. 491 Gen. Hart.......,.
lift put~ Ollie
HRS. 10 1.111, to 5 p.m.

0.,
1-61'
992-2549

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- AddOM lnd remodeting
- Roofing 1nd gutter worll
- Concrete wofif.
- Plumbing artd ·etectricel

IF- Eotima!~•l

OWNER IIUST SELL &amp;WANTS
OFFER Due ' lo . tealth

reasons lh~ 10 acres and nice
home musl be sold. Country
setting near Mi:ldleport. Barn
and other buildings. Call lor
your showing and make an

offer.

POIIEIIOY - Agood oounlly
selling - quiel, with wide open ·
Sjllces, for a handyman's
dream. Private, 3acres, a Jarae
garden area, yet
1o lawn.
I ll story older home, convenientfy arranged 6 rooms, bath
and basement Mlcing$17,900.

"Wt Rut F., uu"

U-SAV.E
AUTO
RENTAL
St. lt. 160 North

: f '

Y. C. YOUNG Ill

992-11215 or 992-7314

P-oy,

Roofing Co.
NEW-HPAII
Gutters - Downapouta
Gutter• Cleaned
Painting
StormDoora
• Window•
Siding • Soffit Work

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

..

hiiJ Peutkael,

( ... &amp; Sowllt•·---'24.75
Polr f-y firlclttr,
( ... &amp; s ,.111•-··'31.00

Cecutltlt. b•lk

II~•

a..••••

( ... &amp; Sotppllos

Alao S.W S.,.notely
Col h .....

614-915

mo.

~
MOTH
RT. 62 NORTH
POINT PLWANT, W. VA.
I mllas lro11
Pomerow-llason Bridat
SINGL£ 124.95

A~ll

"ECIAl

Dexcel Receiver
8' Alum. Dish
Instilled ,.
114ti.Oh~
hpert Service And

Q111llty lime
DISCOUNT

Irina At

PRICES

Cal 992-3561

. H-1 mo. pd.

.·.

992-5875 Or ·
742-3195

FARM EQUIPMENT

Doors ........................, llSO

Dlec, plows, com plantara. 3 pt. bruoh hogo,
grain drill, Niv rake, 1Oft.
drag harrow, Cub Far·

73-14 Ford Tr,

(lromo ••. _. ......... $70

73-79 ford lr. ·
'
Toll Gotn .................... $10

mall with mower and

plow. ~oy crlmpsr, eub
oollor, potatq plqw. hay
baler and more.

843.- 5155 or
843-5410

9·13-tfn

4-10-1 mo. d.

.TROMM. EXCAVATING'

BULLDOZER &amp; BACKHOE WORK
*BASEMENTS *SEPTIC SYSTEMS
*FOOTERS *GRADING
. *CONCRET.E WORK .

11

·:

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnlulation
•Storm Qoors
•Storm Windows

•Replaciment Wiqdows
•New Roofing
"FREE ESTIMATES" ·
JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992·2772

~oclge

Haven,
. w. .v 1 , WHIII m.,t
Jr.
O.U.A.M
Now . Reapit e Care Workers t o
every Thursday night at 8 :00 ·c.re for handicapped child·
PM .
ren end adult • of Gallie
1
County. In-home and QUt·
G iveaway
of-home woilleio -clad
,4
immedllitely. Prefer prior
I IC Ptr la nce w ith handl ·
Metal Honda crat... ~ic lcup cepped individuala. Mutt
have own trantportation .
at Betz Honda S1lea.
Write: Gallia County Boord
6 Adorable puppies , Y:. of Menhl Retardation Border Collie, 1A Ge rman DevetoprMntal Dlubilitlea
Shepherd. v. huskey . Call at P.O. Sox T4, Cheshire.
Ohio 45620 or call 014'814-3&amp;7·71117 evenlngo.
367 -0102 . Applicot i on
Mother cat end 3 klttena all deedlino Moy a, 1986.
'houoebroke~ . Coli 1114-448 ·
Pan-t ime LPN living in Galll 7027,
.
.pollo aru • .Apply In psreon
Dog to Qlve a,vey to good bet ween BAM &amp; 4PM to
home . .Male dOg. 1 yur old. Medical Plaza, 203 Jeckoon
Part G~rm•n Shephpert A•· Pike. Galllpoiia.
trlever. Collll14-948. 24311.
Position Avollable. pen-time
FrH pupplea ..Part Collie aad 11111 per1on for local busi·
part Beegle , Coli 1114-985· ne11 . Mutt be tggr.,sive.
and oble to worit with public.
4188.
PoooibiNty of po11t1on ae
2 pupa. good home. mother aallatant Man1ger tr qualified . Mu1t have previous
dog. 304-875 -5164 .
11111 experience. Send re-sume to T.R.M. Corp. 1128
Jackoon Piko, Gallipolis. Oh
8 Lost and Found
4a831 .
Found in Hemlock Qrove
ll!r,e . a young.· reddilh,
brown dog. Coli 992· 7893.
7

Yard Sale

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
Wt'd lilt lo introduco wou to
Enptt·A·Car, the inodorn WIW
to drivo 1he nhicle of your

clloiu.

NO DOWN PI Ylllln
LOWII IIOIIIIlY PAYMINI

ILACIISTON
NEW (AR I
TRUCK lEASING

. PIIIU. SHOP .

Call614-992-673

992-3345

· 10-8-tfc

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

•ZENilH

· Sizes Start From

•SYLYAIIIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
Wfe H~tt ·~ F1ll Tl . .
nep Tteblelll

12'xl6'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated .Do&amp; Houses

e• ••., : .

P&amp;S 'BUILDINGS

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE.

Aacioe, Oh.

614·143-519)
I 0-6-tfc

Ph.

CHESTER-985-3307

4-1·2 mo. d.

Flea Market. Freizera Bot·
tom, WVe . on US . 36 Open
oveoy Saturday &amp; Sunday,
9-8 . ,Open air &amp; covered
: 1p1~1 for rent, oft road
parking.
GravelY perta , reco ~ds
(70' s!, clothos, drapsa, Fen·
ton gle11were . Thura ., Fri.,
Sat . Ward Rd . off Rt. &amp;54 .

PlUMBING &amp;
HEATING

PIONEER CARPET
. &amp; UPHOLSTE~Y
CLEANERS

I (Ul OUT FOI FUlUIE USEI

EUGENE LONG

KEN'S

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

35185 Dtk Hill Road
Lone Bottom. OH . 45743

SERVICE

APPLI~NCE

PH. (614) 985-4212

985-3561

We Use · Von Schroder
Equipment Recommended
by Llldin&amp; Carpol lllnU·
facturers.
'FREE ESTIMATES"
3-22·tfn

•Wa1hers •DI1hwa1her1
•Rangel
•Refrlger.tors
•Dryers •F,..zera
PARTS 1nd SERVICE
H ·tlC

JOHNSON ELECTRIC

BOGGS

317 Norlh .....

MI.,.,,.,,, 01t1o '5

760

SALES &amp;.SERVICE

$tielfl R.MII /It
'SIIIIOI Cltlllll

PH. 992-3549
4-1·1 mo. pd.

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

Compltto Gunor Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types ·
Worked in home area
20 years
"Fr• E1timate1''

All Mtku

Ph.

CAU comer.
16141143·5425

. 3/ 1/ 2 .... pd.

FOR .SALE

SMAll GROCERY
STORE w/GAS PUMP

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST

ln ' Dider, Ohio

GUYSVIL~E. OHIO

With

Aul~orized John DHrt,

New Holl1nd, Bush Ho&amp;

1/22/Hc

AffOIDAIL£ •

POITAII£

~
-..,... ...... lti_ ...
,_..ta r l l a -. 1111'·

•oo11

s-w 111.

r-oy, OH.
16141 915-3105

.

4-10·1 mo.

(all Dawid McDonald

' 691-7219

I ·l·tf&lt;

r, II 11111111&lt;.1' Ill/! 111.1
''lc3::--:A-n-no-u-nc_•_m_en-ts
-

lt. U4,P-rey Ohla

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR.

Altt Trllt•lttl..

PH. 992·5612
or 992·7121
3-24-tfc

Apt.

(arry,Out lkiMt.
PII(ED U $11,000

F•r•
.E•••~•••t
P•rt• &amp; St,.lee
Roger Hysell
• ·Garage

2 ledroom
in leor.

Ia Poss•le to Gtt

firm EquiptMnt
Dllltr

·~f.- IUSIIISS PIIONI

16141 HI-UJO
iiiSIDIIICI 1'110111
i,.-11t:'i 16141 9'2-7714

4 Family, Childrena, adults
clothing, golf club1, 1hoe1,
lots .. : 610 Third Ave, Tht,~n
• Fri 9·5.

··--··Pom&amp;;o;;·········
l\llidtlleport
&amp; Vicinity

~ 8 '(\'anted

to

Do

Home s for Sale

Will care for aldef1y person in · 7 rooms and beth, Neleon
their homo, 304 · 773· 51211. Ad .• Dexter area . Call l14 ·
898-11528 oftor 4:00pm ..
P1lntlng. e d erior, 20 yura
exporlenc a, 304-a7&amp; ·a384 . . For u le or rent: Pomeroy. 6
room, t V. beth ,nice yard.
Aduhe pr.terred . Would
consider 1 child. No pet1.
i llldlll.lol
Security deposit e nd refe rence required . S a le
130.000. Ront U25. 1114·
948-211411.
21
Buslneaa
2 bedrooma, fun beaement.
Opportunity
double car prag~e , 1 .2 .
acre1. RoN Hill, Pomeroy.
128.000. .. 4-678-2513 .
I NOTICE I ·
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHIIIIG CO . rocommenda Southern SchOOl DlatriCt. ·
thlt you do bu1ln111 whh Modified A.fqN on 6
.,.aple you lcnow. end NOT acre1 . lmm"e dlate occu .
to Mnd money thro~gh the pency. SH to appreciiUI.
mall until yOu have inveat l· 130.000. Includes outdoor
working tools. 614-843·
gated the offering.
5384 after Bpm.
CoffN Shop for aole. Soiling
equipment. low price. leaae Solid built home in Racine.
aasumeble . 464 Second Reasonable . 3 bedrooms up.
Ave.. Ga/llpoli1. 614-44a · 1 bedroom down. 1 YJ b1th1.
3 1ota . Call814-949·21174.
3407.
' Bu11nen Man' Open ateel
building deolerahip high po·
tential. profltaavaileble. pert
time or full time inyour1r11.
Clll 303· 759-3200, ext.
2407. .
.
22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS-Refinance
to low fixed r1te. UM equity
for any purpo11. leader
Mortgoga Co.. 614-692·
305t.

Co-Ed Travel. lllatlonal Co .
now hiring (8) to work •
travel with young bu1ines•
group. Training program
with exP.,nMI paid. Transponation fumlahed. Adven ture job with nidlp advance ment. If you are energetic ,
ambiou1 end frH to travel .
Apply to Poul Blackburn,
Wed . May 1, from 10:30AM
to 4PM at Holidoy Inn,
Gallipolia . Absolutely no
phone calla.

23

Junior High Football Coach ·
Southern Local School Dietrict. Individual will be re1ponaible for the COIChlng
end trlining of the pleyerl
for the 198&amp; football Ma·
aon." Contoct Bobby J . Ord.
Superintendent, Box 178,
Racine, Ohio 45771 for
polition requirementt . One
mult have 1 valid Ohio
INChing oertificate to !'PPiy.

PIANO TUNIIIIG AND RE·
PAIR, Reduced rtteolimltad
time only. Ward' a Keyboard,
304-675 -5500 or 675 ·
3824 .

1---------

31

Profeuional
Service•

Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardi Mu1ic Co ., 61A.
446-0887. ·Twentieth year
of quality serVIce. Lane
Daniela, 614· 742-2951 .
WINDOW TINTING Roai·
dentlal. Commercial&amp;. Auto .
Free eatim1te1. Cell 614·
446 -9346 .

Reol Estolc
31

Homes for Sale

Built On Your Lot : Big 4 Car
G•rage *8995. 3 bdr hom..
f13,995. See Our Modola.
Cell 1-61 4 -886-'73t 1.

34

Bualneas
Building s

&lt;

--~--------------)
t..rge building Jot" for ..... •:
Cio n to M.eiga High Schoo l . ~
Crew Rd. 9U-ae3e .
35 Lota

a. Acreege

ApproJt , V:t acre lot on old At.',
1110 In Porter. Catlll4·388· '
8702 aftor &amp;PM .
'
4 2 ecre1 "nHr Forked Run
Uke . Hll ga• w.ill, etect nc;
line, telephon• cable. pri~
v.acy, qu iet, good place fo
hOUH . 7 ICrll cleared. Ce.IP.
6t4-378-8207 .

--------------~'
Lot for 1111. nice toca tiop.!
304-675-1090.

(

-Urg' building lott , ·Jerry'_-;
Run Rood . 1300() . . Ci""'
Bo-n Jr.. 304-,57&amp;-23311 .1

'·

Rentols
41

Houses for Rent

f

Four bedrooms. kitchenfamily roam with f ireplace,
finished baaement. low
IBO 'a, Point Pleaent, 304·
675 · 3079. eveninga.

For rent. will rept wittl
option tq buy . 3 bdr . 2 batht
ref.• stove, OW, CA. 2 ca~c­
gerage, city ~ho~a. diP,
required . Ce ll 814 · ··~ ~
43 48 .
•

Have an energy efftcient'
home built on your lot . From
It 3.900.00. Col! for ooti·
mateo, 304-675 -3981 .

V•ry niC41 3 hdr. home, t ,
b'tha, good size yard, 1300~
3 1bdr. home country atmo~
phere, 1276. 3 bdr. horNJ
with riverview , 1260. Refer..;
encea &amp; depolit required ...
Cell Wi11men Agency, 8 14 ..
446-3644.
•

6 room houae. 2 closed In
porche1. in Point Ple11ant.
304·8J 5· 5456 .
Clifton . W . Va ., 5 room1,
bath. clo1111. atorm win·
dowa and do,ora, full 1i1ed
buitment, cell 304-882 ·
2570 .

2 bdr. cabin on Raccoon
Creel&lt; . l.eaae required. Call
6t4-446-0093 before 6 .
614-446 -0795 ofter 5.

ICfll,

Reduced by oWner, &amp;'h
2 hOUitl, 2 car
garage, 2 bar'no, pond . Aah·
ton . 304-676-2320 .

4 room• end bath . 'h basement, fully Clrpeted. naw
paint. unfurni1hed . Call81"·
992-3090 .

M11on · 2 story frame ,
remodeled , 7 rooms, 2
bathl, good condition
throughout. Shop . Ger1ge .
304-67&amp; -6743 .

2 bedroom houH in Miner•
ville . Bealde Mineraville
Church', by Bulk Plent. Total
electri c . Call 814· 992 ·
6215 .

Price reduced. 4 bedrooma.
full baaement, 6 miles from
Point Ple1unt, acre lot.
phone 304 -446-11175 .

2 bedroom furnithed houH .in Pomeroy. 1250 per
month . Coli 814-992-&amp;t 1~
after 5 :00PM.

6 rooms end beth. gerage,1
full batement. gleSMd' ift
breezeway, forced a ir heat;
central air. Cell 814-949 ..
2734.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEl'S OUAb·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS .
RT 35. PHONE 614 -446 ·
7274.

6 roo,n house in Llnpvil..
with beth and prden apece:
*200 a month plus depo1it.
References required, 8140!.
992-7285 .

1971 Freedom good cond .
Cell 614-256-6520 .

42 Mobile Homea
for Rent

Hou11 for ••I• et edge of
tow.n, Gallipoli1 . Owner will
land contrict. Call 614·.
448-9826 .

3 bdr . t4x85 &amp; lot, 2 mi.
from Gallipolis . Green
Furniahed, air cond., cable;
School Di.triot. good.cond ..
no·city tax,,, .. .udful rtvef- .
larUa aundeclc, *14 ,600.
view. K1naug1 . Foner·a r.,o.:
F,qr ul8 or rent y.tith option will ·consider trade., in of •bile·c Home · Pail!, 614-441:
1602. .
.
.
to buy 8 room• &amp; both In i.1ything of vlllua •• down
Gallle Co.. tfannan Tr~ce payment. Cell 1114·446·
Nice 2 bndr . mobile honie,'
Sohopl D!st .. 3bedrooma, 'h 8038.
.
conv.,ilnt location on RJ .
10' 1 lot •n countoy. coun!y'
watef, u•rag~, ~ baHmertt ,., B•nk _5ele~Repoa•aud 14 · 1 .. ComPletely fumi•hesl.
•collar · $24 ooo, - Coil in ~i.d•• ·:·.··,J ~~~ " pay · •&amp;oo.po-.. ·. $195 mo,,·. w~ter Peid .. Call
.
;'
be,f
. '1' "0PM
down and 'fak• .o.vor pay -. 8.14-245' 5818 .
li'I•PI•w&lt;&gt;oa ·
morn ng
· qre · ·· ·"
· ' · lilt~ft. Nd Chatiltf"fOt dellv, .
.
. .
14
682
417
caJill "
·
·
eoy . Call today, only six 161
Mobile hom~ for rent. Cat\
ofter 1PM, 614-4411·0508
remain . 6t4-772 -t220 or
Government home from $1
or 814-446-t809. .
'·
IU repair). Also deliquent tax 614-773-3926 ,
propsrrty. Coli 805-687·
Furniahed modern trailer, 2
6000 e•t. GH- 10189 for Mutt aell 1983 Jay Skyliner.
Iota Of extr1s included. Call
information .
bedroomt with •~tended
6t4-446·7200 after 5:00.
living room 11 00 deposit
Nice 2 bedroom vinylad
and t 230 a month Include.:
home . Remodeled , car - t 2x60 tevel lot on Rt. 7 in water. aewege and tr111h.•
peted, tobacco .base. 2 Crown City . 10x22 ft . See at 314 lrd. St., Ke -!
1crea. Kerr -Harrisburg Ad. porch. Call 614-2116-1444.
nouga . Coli 614-448-7473,'
Ut ,OOO . Col/ 8t4 -245 ·
1972 14x70 tr1iler for 2 bdr .• Kemper Hollow Ad,~
5296.
·o5.500 with 21 ,000 BTU
$200 dep .. 8200 rent . Cfll,
1ir conditioner . oft•• 5, 6t4-446-13&amp;4.
•
-::-::---::::-----:-- - - - - 1 Buy from owner a 11ve. window
Garage ule at 340 Page St .• 12
Situations
Terrific locotion , Kyger nice. Cell 614-448 -0148.
CrHk School, 3 bdr., fire·
3 2· bedroom mobile hon'lft~
Mi~dlepart. May 1at, 2nd. ·
1980 Kingsley 70xT4 with
Wanted
piece , Built-In kitchon w~h
eso. deposit. .. 75. , ...
3rd. Woodburner. dish
7x24 expando, air, skirting,
dl1hw11her, · r~nge , oven.
t185 . plua electric and gal \
waataar, miac .
•
Full basement with family fireplace. microw1ve, ate304-875·8512.
Wanted : I work and I nHd • room, 1111 heat, po11ibl• reo, aet· up in perle . 10%
Yard ule at Ted Ruuell'eln
dOWJl up to 15 yr. . Clll
2 bedroom furnithed with'
middle •ged or elderly lady 9 '13 % loan 111umption,
Mineravllle. May 2nd and
to 1hllr1 • my home. Free •48,500. Call 6t4-448 · 814-446-3547 , 9-6, Mon. · we1her &amp;. dryer, air condl·
3rd. Children'• clothe~ end
Sat.
room and board with private 4042.
tion, 8 miles nonh PoiftL
misc. itlfl\1.
Plaaaont. Rt . 2. 304-875-•
room-in .,,change for help1971 New Moon 12•85, 3
.
5051 .
ing with light hounwork Must tell 3 bdr. ranch,
bdr .• . cent. air, 1 'n baths.
end help care for 6 year old Weatbrooko Subd ., FR.
8
Public Sala
15,900. Very good cond.
doughier in achoill. Call woodburner, c.rport, de~;lc,
Coii614 -446-0t76.
· &amp; Auction
43 Farms for Rent
Mooy Swi1har, 314 3rd. St .. City utilitlll, Ia IChOOII,
Kanaugo, 814-446-7473 .
111duced to f33,000 . Coli
1973 Arlington 12x60 with
614-446-7144 .
12x18 add on 2 bdr . under·
Auction every Friday night et Fr" Estimates : P1inting of
Peature for rant. Call 304-;
pinning, atove, new carpet, 675-5t04.
the Hartford Community houaea, blrna. roof•. etc; Step up tp a larger flbuloua
•
16 ,000 . Call 614 -4411 ·
Center. Truckload• of new Molga: &amp;14-992-7418, Gal- home. Grandview E1t1t11,
7080 .
U5.000. Leaving town, aell
merchlndiH every weelc . lie : e 14-357-0298 .
Will rent farm with option
138.000. Coli 814 -446 ·
Conaigmenta of n.w &amp; used
buy . In H1rriaonville . *20q ....
t977 Regent, t4X64, 2 bdr. a month. 992 ·3596 .
merchendiH alwaya wei· Raopsning Rutland Nurolng 7019.
:
'
Call 814-246-6288.
comed. Richard Reynolda, Home . Room for. 2 mare
Auctioneor. Call 304-275 - reolclanta. 742-2332 or992- Hou1e. 5 room1. beth, ball ·
19&amp;9 Champion tr•iler
3595.
mont . garage. f22.000,
3089 .
44
Apartment
t 2xaO with 1975 odd-on
Te•oa Rd.. Goliipolio. Call
for Rent
t 2x24. Good condition. Cell
814-448 -2604.
614-992-2&amp;89
.
9
Wanted To Buy
18 Wentad to Do
Riverside Apta . Middleport.:
Houae for 11le Eatt end ,
1982 ell electrtc mobile Special rates for Senior•
1918
Eaatern
Avo
.•
3
bdr
..
We pay Cllh for late model
horne. 3 bedroomt, Z,.Petha. Citi1101. *130. Equal HoU• ~
haa rented opec• UOO mo.
clean uaed cara.
centr1l air. porch, aWning• ing Opportunit ies. 814 -.
Aaklno
•45,000
.
Will
take
Will·do
lawn
mowing
•
yard
Jim ·Mink Chav .-Oidalnc.
..· :
•nd storage building . Lo- 992 · 7721 .
woill . Call Keith It 8 14· mobile home on trade. Call
Bil• Gana Johnson
CJIIted on riverfront lot in
614-448
-8334
orll14-44a
2156
·&amp;261
after
!1:00PM
.
514-448-3672
Middleport. Cell 614-992- 2 bedrOom apartments . ~
7388 .
New Haven. WVa . Newly
3348 otter 5:00p.m.
Bowena
Con1truction
.
1
-COMPLETE HOU8EIIOLOS
remodeled . . In town. &amp;14· '"
Complete
remodeling.
fire - ~ For Sale By Ownen. 2
FURNITURE. Beds, Iron,
198&amp; t 4xll0 Jay Skyline 992 -7481.
wood, cupboards, chsira, place specialiltl. Paintirig : mobile homn located on
two bedroom mobile home.
interior
•
axterior.
Cement,
w1terfront
Iota,
Raccoon
cheata , ba•lceta . dlahea ,
. Ga• heat, loc1ted ln. Salem 1 bedroom furniahed apartatone jera, antlquea, gold block, brick wail!. 25 yro. Crllk. large dack, polo
Center. *10,000. Phone ment on E. M•in St. in
experience,
reasonable
barn,
out
buHdinga,
boat
end sliver. Wrlti · M. D .
Pomeroy . Call 614 -992
1-614-483-1407.
rat••··
FrH
eatlmatll,
work
·
dock'l.
much
more.
Call
Miller, Rt.2. Pomeroy. Ohio
7314
}
guaranteod.
Coli
1114-3811·
814
·275•4050
or814-279
·
45769 or call 014-992 14x70 Cat tle on ~ . acre,
9870
or
814-388-tsoe
.
,1225
.
778b .
2 -car ·c arport, 18x25 eddi· Two bedroom furnished ,
tion. Call 614·9g2-3t 19 or apartment for rent in Mid·
Kotollc
lendecaplng
dooign3
bdr
.
homo
3
yro.
old,
80%
Buying daily gold, oliver
dloport. All utilitlea paid.
614-992-3132.
planning,
mowing,
trimcompleted,
rural
water,
3
lng,
coins, ring•. jewelry. at.rllng
Cal/'114·992 -5084 .
:
ming.
retail
ahrubbary.
All
bldl
.,
'h
acre
fronts
on
out
ware, old cains, large cur·
3 bedroom. completely fur·
round lewn melntenence. Rt . 21 B • Rock Uck Rd .
rency. Top prlcea. Ed . Bur- Coli
niahed . Washer. dryer, air, APARTMENTS , mobile '
a14-448-3100 ,
Henn1n Trace Schoota .
kett Barber Bhop, 2nd . Avo.
homea. houses. Pt. Pleaunt ~
under~nned, awning. Set
f33,500. Cell 814 -25aMiddlor'rt, Oh. 114-892 · Mow yare, odd joba, Pt. 8194 .
up on rented lot. Celll14· and Goll/polio. 814 -4411 · ;
3&lt;175.
8221 .
:
992-7479 .
Plao11n~ Gollipolla area.
Rnoonoble rateo. Call 114- Jev Drive owner nlllng 3
MoWle homes moved . In· Nice clean apartment a. ;
bdr .. 2 bath, cozy hanh for
448-81541 .
· · :fliiiVIIIi'OII
aured. 20 yNra experience . Handoroon, 304-875- 1872
winter, pood end AC lor
304 -&amp;76- 28&amp;11 or 5711 · otter 5 PM .
COLEMAN WATER WELL 1ummer. Interested only cell
:' I' I 'v II I'
2998 .
DRILLING
814 -441 -7&amp;114 oftor 15 .
One bedroom garage apt. '
Pump · Ales, AfVioe , Regie19711 Holly Pail! mobile unfurhilhed except refriger- ~
tared in Ohio. All work Help-Help· Owner wanll to
home 14x70 3 br, central etor and ·stove, living room \
guorant•d, Cot/ 304-273- Hll hOUN· Make us on offer.
1 1 Help Wanted
1ir, underpennlng. fumlehld curtainlli, hardwood ftoora, 1
2811 . Rovenowood. W. Va. Call 814-441-0278 .
with appliance• only . New good locotioft, good nalgh- ,
Baby oltter In my home. Gall . Will plow prdano, large or Eamrn School Dlotrict. ·s • Wllher. Need to Mil. 304- ~rhood In m..,._ POint!
Plellunt. utifltiu not fur- ,
468·H27.
Foroy,·Hoo•tt aroo. Good email, Point Pleasent, Kl· room home in goad ·repair,
ni1Kad, car gar... not in· j
relerenoe, Trustworthy . no up, Ohio. 0.11114·4411· fully csrpettd basement and
19715 Cameron mDblle cludH, '140.00 month .!
304-a78-2737.
4081, 304·1711·'7221 1fter oerport. 1, tO ocreo. Nicely
home . 12xll4, 2 ·br, ell 304•875-211711 .
•
llndiCiped small orcho~ .
1:00 PM .
•IIQJrlc, unfurnished. 304·
4 -'nga •ltlno Merri 1-~--------- Will •II turnlahed or unfurLlureland Apartment•. New t
1171-1777.
Mac'o100 por oentgueran- Work wonted · yard wortt. niahed. Clllet4-881-43ea.
Haven. now accepttng eppli~ ~
line of glfta, toys, home trimming, hou• painting
198&amp; Now Moon mobile cations for 2 bedroom epart-:
decor, your houro, no IIIYitt· in1icll and out. malnte- 3 bedroom hou• In Rullic
home. 12•86, 12.000 .00 menta. Iaaie rent e1U J
ment, J04-B75·1711 or 1· nanco, errendo. windowa. Hilla. Fully carpeted. otorege
firm, f1ir cond. 304-175· Inquire apartment C· 1 .
800-113· 1077. looking office cloanlng. 304-11711- building, largo lot . Cali 814 ·
Equal houotne -rtunlty.
3044.
homa and oeteloo psrtlaa.
1 101.
982-IIOBa oftor 4 :30 p.m.

.r

1----------------

.

.

Specializing in
All Types Of
Residential
Wiring
And Repair

Peraon with stationwagon
to deliv8r US mail. t hr. per
day. C1llevening1 on week·
doya, 1-21 1·888· 8732.

The Daily Sentii"Nii- Page

.

992 ~ 3410". ·.

Box, 326

Pomerow. OH. 45769
For Faster Strvico

Full time and-or part time
RN positiOn• open . Flexible
houra, _experienced pretarred. Apply 11 Scenic HHia
Nuraing Cantor Mon.-Fri ., 9
to 4PM.

Female vocalist wanting to
trevel. Coli a14·388-8438.

&amp; Vicinity

May 2: 3.and 4th. 9am to
5pm:Rt. 143. Loto of otuff .
lf• mile from Rt. 7 .

304·1175-6276

A.U.
304·.75-62711

Halp Wanted

Junior High Girl•' Bell&lt;atball
Coach-Southern Local
School 0/ltrict. Individual
.
'
will be roaporialble lor the
coaching and tr11ining of the
ployero
for the 19811-88
Eaatern Band Boosters yard
ule .at Cheater Fire Houae . basketball 11110n. Contact
-May 3rd from 9 :00 Until 8qbby J . Ord •.Supeiintand· ·3: 30. ·. New and uHd itema: ent, Box 176. Recine. Ohio
· 46771 . for pollition iequlrit·
1HE QUAii1Y . ·_ rain or lhlne.
manti. Qne must · have .a
j\'ard ule May 1at, 2nd. and valid Ohio teaching certifi·
3rd. 9am to 4pm . Same· Cite tO: appty.
F, All ~"' ltllll•t NH11
t~ing for everyone. An·
JOIN THE ARMY N~ · PlU5o Office fupttiits &amp;
' liq~ea. Salem St.. 1'1 uti and .
TIQ.,AL GUARD GOOlD'
1• ,
'
5th houte on right
f,urnltwo, Wttlding • .··-·
. .. .
PAY , GOOD 8EI'!IIF,ITS . ED: .
·, aii!l Gratlvalilll
. .
.UC'A'T'IONAL AS.SIS'f..'
· 4 f•ll1ily ... At
ANCI! C II ·3 04 •671-39110
Starlon:tAIOtnati&lt; ·
lake. Recine. Ohio : May 1at or 1 -800-~42- 3819.
Signs, I
r SI-t,
thru 4th. 9:00·1 Clothing
lull .... Forlll,
Uerger Iiiii), bedspreads,
Copy !trvkn, Et&lt;.
curtalna. rugs and miac. REPS NEEDEDforbuolneoa
account• · Full time
hem a.
2SS MiN St., Mid'!apart
f6o.ooo . oo to
104 lllultitrry b. ,,_,,
fBO,OOO .OO . Port time
H~g~ ytrd ule , James 0 .
Swa1n re1idence. Locust •12 . 000 . 00 t o
·] /2/tln
Grove Road, 3 milea 10uth •18,000.00 . lllo sellng. Reof TUP.pet'l Plains. May 3rd peat bu1ine11. Set vour own
and 4th. Furniture, nice hourt. Trllining ' provided.
toys. clothing. 1 0 apeed Cell1 ·1t2· 938·1075 Monbike. many miiC. items. Cell Fri, 8 AM to 5 PM CST.
814' 885-4219 or614·9492603.

PH. 742-2328

11 -14-tfc

tht .....,. •••,. in ......
I~UWOOD NOME SPAS
l·

,................................•sa

73-79 Ford. Tr,

Announcements

······aaiiiiioiia--··· ····

S&amp;L

Fondtrs ...................... l110
73-79 Ford Tr.

liMESTONE .
GRAVEL --SAND
TOP SOtL
FILL DlRT

NEEDS .
Residenliai &amp; Commerci1i
Call:

Htt Sarir9 ,.. Stop loy II ,.

Co.

11 -14 Chevy. Jr.

. WJIIING

' FOR-ALLYOUR

IJijty

NOW

4-17-1 mo. pd

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAY,L
JUST CArL!

olive Entertainmenl of roe HBO
•Kitchenettes ofles!JurJnl

OHIO VAWY
SAftWII SYSIIIIS

C~ft!e::~~~::eni cowttn $1 1 97 5

MILlER
ELECTRIC
·, SERVICE ,

J&amp;l BlOWN
INSULATION

949-2263
or 247

HO.t.r.n.

THE IIRD CAGE

1,69 5

Southem Spun AveiiBbkJ,

Gallipolis. Ohio
711111/n

.

Howa~d L. Wriit,tcel

.

9'

1111 Wost Darwin Ohio - 992-7013

CALL
446-4522

992-2196
Middltport, Ohirl

lliglot
1-304
773-561'

Wire Mesh

10-14 Ford Jr.

RENT A CAR

PAT Hill FORD

POOL

' work

REAL ESTATE FOI SALE
SPLIT LEVEL HOVSE with 3 bed·
rooms, 2 complete baths, dining
room, living room and large recrea·
·tion. room. Located on 8 acres.
La!ge farm pond. Racina !lree·.
. HOUSE WITH GARAGE. small
1Hop and a.hower In be•mant. Foflr
rooms and bath, 2 porches, carport,
new furnace and central air. Middle·
port, Oh.
CALL 9.&amp;9-2210-Ask for Tim.

1

;"

PEiiSONAUm POOlS

U.P.

3

Garage Sale One mile out
Rt. 218 off Rt . 7. April29
thru May 3rd.

musl see lh~ nice 3 bedroom

REALTORS
Henry E. Clol1nd Jr.
992-6191
Dottle Turlltf 992· 5692
JteR TFIIutl 94!l·ZGIIO

Real Estate Generel

11.

4_16_1 mo. pd.

'

•10'

614-669-3761 or 669-3-765

WHALEr'S AUTO PAUS

We can re~ir and re·
core rad11tors and
heater cores. We can
also acid ~oil and rod
out·radiatol'$. We also
te'pair Gas Tank

"Free Estimates"

E. M•I•ol..l
pOMEROY,O.

HAS lransferred

.,_i

RADIATOR
SERVICE·'

FENCE &amp; SUPPL J
PH. 992-6931

POIIEIIOY - Kin&amp;llluly lOIII
- Need an acre lot? Mobile
home or building !lite. Rural
Wiler and elm available.
Qve usa call. • ·

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

.

Phona:

Dexter, OH.

Jail Gatll .................... $70
ftndtrs ., ........ - ............."10
73·10 (htvy. Tr.
.
langor I ••-• Fandtn
(ounl 5Upporto ........... '65
&amp; Grill
Niw and Uud Aut• Glass-l•t• MMtl P•rt1

ENYIRONMEIITAL $YSTDI8

ACCENT

304-675-2441

IHIWNER

Grillts ..........................' 40

·13-10 Che•r• lr.

US

TlillriHy ' , .....

PRICE REDUCED -

Hoodt................. - .. .... s165
7·3-10 Chtvr Tr.
('"'om IIOIIiflln ........... $70
73-10 (htvr Tr.

Pumps, Central Air r-r:;;., i{~Q
itioning and Furnaces.~U

.....,,,.....,.......
........,, .......s,,.........

s.tw&lt;~oy

,, \q

fCompllete Stock of Weather -

3305 JACKSON AVE.
SMALL AIIIW HOUIS

Tuot4oy 6:50 IL""•I

- .......................... •1u

13-10 (htvw. Tr. .

Sales a Service

D.V.M.

c»se

_.at

Fondtn ......................... l6!
73·10 (ht¥y lr.

Heating/ Cooling

IN MIDDlEPORT

Due ....,

11-I ·Hc

Mobile Home

VETERINARY

FUTURE T.V. SATE-.ut£ SYSTEMS
•orake 100• LNA
$
•Drake 324 RECEIVER ,

Alu111inum &amp; Vinyl Sl4ingr
1 &amp; Yeare Experience

TOWN &amp; COUNliY

Sunday (ldls

,, n ' ""

Business Services

Columbus, Ohio
April19, 1986
ContniCt Salol Legl/
Copy No. 85 -48'7
UNIT PRICE
CONTRAct
Sealed prGPDI. will be
•• tho office of tho
Dlrectcw of the Ohio Departmem of Ti8nlpCilttition, Coiumbuo. Ohio, until 10:00
A.M.. Ohio Standald llme.
Tueoday. May t4, 1983. 1&lt;&gt;r
lmpt'OYii'nllitl in:
Pans 1 to 22 lndualve ore
offered u one comract end
wiUbeconeldonidonthoof the total amount bid. ·
Pens 1 to 22
Atliolia. Golllo, Hocking,
Melli. Vinton endWeahlngton
Countlol. ·Ohio. on twentvtwo brldgea on veilouo rout•
and _ . _ by cleaning and
pointing, and nilltied
worit.
Field Pointing of ellilting
lleot. .
.
Project length - 0.00 lwt
cw 0.00 mile. ·.
Wo!ti length - 0.00 filet or·
0.00 mile,·· ·. ' ·
'"rhede11i aetfo&lt;completion
of thil worit lhlil be ao 111
fonh In the biddlntr .._r,"
Eacli-..... be_....
to file with hla bid • chactt or Cllliie(o chactt for en

or 949-2160

No

Meaon Co .. WV
Ar11 Code 304

Meigs County
Area Oode814

992-Middleport
446- Gelllpolls
Pomeroy
367-Cheehlre
986-Chester
388-VInton
. 343-Portland
245-Rio Grenda
256-Guyen Dlatrlct .2 47-Leten Fell•
843-Areble Dlllrict 949-Recine
742-Rutland
379-Welnut
867-Coolville

Public Notice

of t h i l - " ' - beaet forth in
(4) 8, 15, 22, 29. 4tc
the bidding ............. ..
Eoch- aholl be Nquired
to
file With hie bid a eettilled
Public Notice
.-or-ochacttforon
amount """" 10 five per cent
IIIOTICE TO
of lila bid. 1KJt In
•
BIDDERS
·' 'thonflft!ilhoulind-.cwo
Syr~~;uie Village Council
bondfo&lt;ian pill'Dintofhilbid,
wil occept bids at the p8yoble to 1he Diloctor.
M..,icipal Building. Thild St.,
muot apply. on tho
Syroc,_ OH 4a779 until I 0
- · for quelifiOitlon
a,m., Deylight Sovingo T/mo, deyo prior to the
on May,l, 188&amp;, atWhlch•ma -at - aet""'
fo!' liPeniQg bide· 1n
. tho bill• wil be _..,.t .al'l!l accordonce w.lth Chapter
publicly . Joed few ~· tont,
Ohio Reviled Code.'.~··
·m ore : ·or· ,.... of· ·t t1ie- ' -111125
·· Plana.end arieclfleadonl IN
apecifocation 404· Uphaltlc on fllo In ths Department of
hot-mix .in place on villege Tronapoitotion end the office
streets.
of the Diotrict Deputy
The right Ia ..wrved by DiniCtor . .
Syrocuae. VIMege Council to
The Director ....,..,.. tho
reject •nv end • bldo.
right to rojact •nv and all bide.
SYRACUSE
WARREIII J. SMITH
VILLAGE COUNCIL
Janice law.on, Cterk i4) 22, 29. 211: DIRECTOR
(4) 22, 29, 2tc

NO neE O.F ELECTION .
.ON TAX LEVY·· ·•
A'ND.{IOI\ID .ISSUE
· FOR eASTERN .t.OCAL
, SCHOOL DISTRICT
Notice il herebY given 1hat
purtu.-rt to 1 retOiution af the
Board of Educetion of tho
Elllem local School Oillrict,
iidopted on tho 16th day of
febf\leoy, 1985, there will be
aubmlttod to a vobt of the
e6ec1ors of uid School Oiltrict
II tho primery election to be
held ~n. on T.-.av. May
7, 1985, It the reguler piocos
Public Notice
ar voting therein, the following
quel'tiona u a lingle propoul:
1. The question of isOlling
NOTICE OF SALE
bonde of l8id 8oord or EducoSyracuse Village Council
lion for tho purpose of con- will occept bido at the
atructing , furnishing and Municipal Building, Thild St.,
equipping o new high school.
SyrecUIO, OH 45779 undl tO
improving, renovating, ramo· a.m .. Daylight Sovinga llme.
doling. equipping and turniah· · on May 1, l985, atwhichdma
ing existing . buildings and
tho bids will be opened and
tocil- for ochool p . . _
publicly
...... for two end improving school sitos in tho villego
wilhn to HI~
en amount sufficient to raiN namely: e 1965 model Chev·
the net bonded indebtednrolot 1 / 2 ton picll-up ond a
ot the Eutem locel School
19 80 modal International
District to within five thoutand
ponal truck.
dol'-of
-·
percont of tho
The right Ia ,...Mid by
total value of a• ·property in
Syracu11 Villoge Council to
ooid School District aa ~lied reject any end oil blda.
and e-.ed for teqtion on
SYRACUSE
the tax duplicate for the yaer
VILLAGE COUNCIL
1985, which emount Ia IIIIi·
Jenice lawson, Clorlt
mlted to be 81 ,630.000. The (4) 22. 29, 2te
maximum number af · .,...,.
during which aold bonds .... to
P.ublic Notice
run Ia twonty·thr11 y11ro. The

~--·-·--------~::::~~pu::~:::·ng~ci:l~fK~
:
54 Misc. Merchandise
.,...., ....

•'-' I:

Public Notice

PH. 949·2101

/:I .

73-10 Chnr Tr.
Public

Built
.. Free Eatlinetea'.'

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

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges....

Gallla County
Area Code 814

B 1 ·Home lmprovomenll
'82 -Piumblng • Heating
83-Excovatlng
84-Eiectrical • Refrigeration
86-Gen.-ol Hauling
86-Mobila Home Repair .
87-Uphol•tery

New Homes

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

-~----~----~~~~-

tv:

.

1- - - - - -

1-- ---------------

------------·

1- - - - - -

SWEEPER and aewlng machine repair. porta. ond
ourttlllaa.
Pick up ond
delivery, Davl1 Vecuum
Cleoner. o.. · Nilf mila up
Georgao Crllk Rd .
Call
814-448-0284 .
Trim oft pounda with Go
leae Or•p.tr.ult Extra
Strength Capouloa. · Fruth
Pllarmacy, Middleport .

,.

,.

\

�---------I

·pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
44

•

·- ·i ~AFF·A·

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol
Houa i ng Opportun i ty )
monthly rent starts at 1183
for 1 bedroom and
2 bedroom,

61

•j

loc.tted near
Plaza and

and Cable TV
hourt •• postible 1 fim
P.m and 7 . pm , to 9
Monday-Friday, Call

446 - 2745
me11age.

or

loov

Apt. for rent $200 &amp; up.
875-51 04 or 675-5386.
Nicely furnished mobile

home, eff. apt., c::entral
and heat In city, adulta only.

Caii614 -448-D338 .
Furniahed 3 rm apt. upstairs,

onHitiot pd . e1 95
. e6D
depotlt. 94 Locut!only. Coli 441 -1340
446-3870.
Furnished efficiency 701
4th Ave., Galllpollo. $180,
utilities paid . there bath,
odulto. Call 446 -4416 olter
7PM
·
Upatillra 3 rooma. furnished.
bath , wuhar· dryer. AC .
clean, no pets, ref., dap.

req., adulto. Call 614-446·
. 1519.
Upttlirs unfurnilhed 3 room

ap't ., carpeted. utilities paid.
nO children. no pets. Call
614-446-1637.
3 rooma with privata bath,
ref. Requel1ed . Call 614·

446 -2215 .
New one bdr. eHiclency apt.

Call 614-446-0390 .
Garage apt., furniahed. 29Ya
Nell Ave .. Galllpo_llo. 1 bdr.,
f236 , util~iea paid. Call
446-4416 after 7PM .
Furnished apartment.
Adulll only. Call 614-4469523 or 114-446-1443.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping RoOms

and light haute keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
Call614-446-0756 .
Furnished rpom, range: re-

frig. $1 00. ahlire bath, iingle male . 919 2nd. AVe .,
Gallipolla. Call 446-441 6
after 7PM .

3 rms . &amp; bath, furnished,
utilities furniehed , $200
mo .. 641 Third Ave .. Gallipolis. Call614-446-3793 .
Furnished 1 bedroom apart·
ment, utilities paid. 30~-

675-71-12 . .

' :._

'.

"You fool, Ed! You've
• ted yourself m"tO a COfPam
ner and you won't be able to
attend Joan's leCture With
fie.'f"

5 1 H ouse h o ld G 00 d I

54 Misc. Merchandise

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair. rocker, ono-.
man. 3 tables. (extra heavy),
8685 . Sofas and ch•irs
priced from 1286. to 8896.
Tables, 160 and up to 1126.
Hide-a-beds,8390. and up
to $1150., oola beds 1145,
Recliners. t226. to f376 ..
Lampe from 828 . to 8126.
pc . dinettes from 8109 ., to
435. 7 pc. 1189 and up.
Wo~ t~ble with six chairs
1285 to 1745. Dook $110
up tl' 1225. Hutchet, 1550.
Bunk bed complete with
manre•aaa, •275. ll)llhd up to
$395 . Boby beds, 1110.
Mettreases or box spring~.
full or twin, 858., firm, 888.
and 8 78. Queen Mts, 8225.
4 dr. chests. 149. 5 dr.
cheeta. 869. Bed frame•.
· 820 .and $25., 10 gun· Gun
cabinets, 8350. 081 or
electric ranges $376. Baby
menre11e1, •2&amp; &amp;. *36, bed
frames $20, $28, S. $30,
king frame t60. G9od Ieite·
tion of bitdroom auite1,
rockers, metal cabinets,
headboard• 838 &amp; up to

Kniuff Firewood Split· 96%
hardwoods. You pick up or
we deliver. HEAP vender.
614-256 -6246 .

us.

Furniture ·· 6 pc .
dinette. head boards, electric range and 1 bedroom
suites. 3 miles out Bulaville
R&lt;!. Open 9atn to 5pm, Mon.
thru Sat.
614-446-0322
Used

GOOD USED APPLIAN.CES
Washers. dryers. refrigerator~. ranges. Skagga Appliances, Upper R.iver Rd.
beside Storie Creet Motet .·
61·4 -446-7398 :
-~

Space for R imt

Mobile home lots, R • R
Mobile Home Park, Boleville
Rd, Golipolis, Oh. Coli 61 4446 -Q527 or 614-446 1283.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Texas Instrument 99-4A
computer, vOice synthesTrailer space for rant. Call izer, 11111ortment of loftware , progrcm recorder
614-446-3243 eve.
$360, electric razor $25 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Coli 614-448-9330 .

SPECIAL cut slabs 6 PU
loads delivered in dump
truck $10D,or21oodo•18D.
You pickup $15 . Call 614 245-5804.
Pool People S~cial :
Let u• 1ummerize your pool
$100 . 1.0% oH, all p~mpo
ond filtorlt: Middleport 814992-11724 or Gallipolis 81 4 446 -3051 .
.
Spring Speciai-Petriot utility
buildings on display at two
convenient loc•tiona, B ·&amp; S
Produce, Viand St. In Pt.
Pl11111nt, and French City
Mobile Homee in Gallipolia.
9x12 1695, also 10K16
$995. Deliwered and aat up
on your lot.

TRS-80 modal Ill compute;
whh 48K and lots of software. Best after. Call 614446-3243 eve.
6 epeed Spider bicycle, exc.
cond, 145. lnteretted call
614-446- 3538 M-W-F- between 6:00-10:00PM.

ATC 70 motorcYcle. Full aize
bed. Call 814-446-9709.
Restaurant equipment. SS
link, ealad bar, coolers, caeh
reg.. coffee malter. much
more. 1114-682-7018 or
614-682-11392.

Pomeroy. Large loti. Call 14K70. 1983 Shulill trailer
for sale . 3 bedrooma. Excel614-992-7479.
lent condition. Singer sewTrailer tots for rent , sewer ing machine. Good condiend water furnished. will tion. Electric or pedal. Call
take one small child, 304- 614-992-3454. Will sell at
reasonable priCe .
675-1076 .

For Leese

For Lease Vary good com -

mercial store front for any
tvpe retail buslnlll or proftlsional office, 1600 tq .lt ..
can be expanded to 3000.

All utilities paid, excell'"t
location corner of Second &amp;
Locust St.

Merchan[J isu

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
.
a. FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Golllpollo. New
&amp;. uNd wood-coal noves. 8
pc: wood LA suite 8399,
bunk beds 81 99, antron
recliner~ $99, new • used
bedroom 1\lites, ranges,
wringer waahert, a. th~t.
New llwlngroom tulttl
1199-$599, lompt, alto
buying coal &amp; wo.od atoves.
Call 61 4-448-3159 .

~UCTIO.N

vl.lley Furniture, new •
uMd. Large section of quality furniture. 1216 Eaetern
Ave .. Galllpoll•-

Winchester Model 12· 12
ga .. 28 inch modified barrel.
All original. $1376. Two H.P.
D•yton electric motor. 116230 voh . Nearly new. 1150.
Kellogg-American air com·
pretaor pump. Newly rebuilt. $150. Call Jerry Well
at 614·992-7B44 after 5 :00
pm.

Wa1her and dryer for aale
alter 6 p.m. 304- ~75-1483 .

BulldiC,g Material•
Block, brick, sewer pipes.
windows. lintels , • etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . Coll814-245-512'1. ·
Block. brick. mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain
State Block, Rt. 33 , New
Hoven, W. Vo . 304-882·
2222.

66

Pets for Sale

HIUCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breed1. Heated
indoor-outdoor facllltlaa .
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Call&amp; 14-4467795.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220.

896-3400.

I

3 piece lhdngroom eulte,
304-875-3869.
Control hunger end loH
weight with New
Grapefruit· PPH Combo. at
Fruth Pharm.acy.

W•lnut table, 4 Ghelrs. Cell
614-446-4547.

Electrio range. refrigerator,
1171.00, good ·cond, coli
304-1175-2970.

Wo!nut gotoieg toble, !I
metchlng chlirt, dry eink,
Singer taWing mochlne with
coblnet, child's rock.,, 304882-2096 .

country Oali toblu, cholro,
cupbolrdt. detke, Ice boJ~;tJ,
Conkl... Tuppers Plolno, Rt. Sharp VC,. new, regular
1 . Hond croftod ond •499, will .. n 1300. 304flnithed .
875-11419 .

Mogle Chef g .. ronge for 1984 Hondo 3 wheller
..1• . Nlct. 8 yNro old. Coli 200S, llko now. I 1 5-lnch
1114-742-2143.
old otyle roily wheelt . 3048711-5628.
Pickens uted furniture. 3046711-1483 or 6711 ·14110.
Custom dreparies; 1 Inch
venetiln bllnde, verticel
RICK'S NEW AND USED blind•. Roman woven wood
FURNITURE. Compare our ohodeo. lnstolled ot cllocount
prices. Nile today. Phone prlceo. Frao tlllmetes, ~.A.
304-773-5430.
S1yre. 304-468-1078.

KIT 'N' CAlLYLa ®br tMry Wf'lllllt

65 .Seed &amp; Fertilizer

'

BIG CLEARENCE SALE
Buy Everything atWholeule FertHizer by bllg or ton .
1 103 Fifth Str..t, New
prices.
NEW- MF 240 dol., tractor Hoven, 304· 882-2271 or
'
· tillers. wheat rakea, bar 882-3358 .
rekea . tedder comb .,
mower, drum mowen.
plow. disc., tobacco Nttert,
seedera. lime. fertilizer
TrdII s[lllf Ial ilill
spreaders.
·
Comple1eline of King Kutter
equip .
USED· hey rake1. cunera. 71
Autos for Sale
NH 477 haybine. tobacco
•etters. J D 5•18 eemi
mount plow 1600, diac:.
mowere, baiera, MF 1 660 TOP CASH pold for '80
model and newer uaed care.
roUnd bat.r.
TRACTORS- MF 311, 135 Smith Buick-Pontiac, 191 1
g., &amp; dloeel. 66 dol., 255 Eostern Ave .. Golllpollo. Coli
dtl. Fordt, 8N, 9N gu. 814-446-2282.
3000, 4000 ..5000 dtl. Farg .
20,40. Cub tractor with 6 80 Chevy Cltotlon AC, PS.
toolo. Oliver 877 W·L PTO . PB, ttendord. -"M·fM 8
track, tilt. Coli 814-21111·
1421 or 1114-2&amp;6·112511.
Jim's Form Equipment Cen- 1978 Dodgo Omni AC. PS.
ter, SA 35 W.. Golllpolls.
PB. auto, new radial tlrea, ·
448 9

f

Iii

I

: mor

Alllo Chalmtr troctor, good
cond .• goodtiraa, *750. Cell
614-266·6689.

11,250. Call 614·388·
AM· FM Cltl . stereo,
99011.
1984 Olds 88 Cpupe
Bro~gham ; lilr, cruise. tilt~
power, V-B, 7 ,000 mllea.
like new. Coli 614-446·
7002 .

M 'll Supp l 11 ~c

I&gt;

it V I~ ~. IIii.k

71

Auto• for Sala

1917 Choverolet' Che,.tte.
4 cylinder, eutomatlc, new
tire1,naw benerv, ~lr conditioning, very cleon. 1!160.
ConteCI Elden Wolburn !I 149t2·28211.
1980 Oldo Cutl011
Broughom Y-8. 281 engine,
exc cond, •6.200.00. 30457!1-2486 .
198.&amp; Cougar LS, sun roof,
~r cond, 19,800 .. oftor 4:30
304-882-3321 .

1981 Toyoto Terrcal,
13, 1110.00. Phona 304676·2700.
1976 Corvono, Sllvor, olr,
power windowe. eutomatlc,
tilt wheel~,goad cond. phone
304·882-3881 .
.
'

6:oo a m oo m a m !l) •

Motorcycles

1983 Suzuki 1 26 4·wheolor
with reeks. 1800, axc. cond.
Coli !114-378-2183 oltor
4PM.
Honey Dovldoon aupor glide
1973, lela thon 12,000
rT1ila1. new paint, fat bob
tonko. new plpoo a. tlr11.
U. 100. oxc. 09nd. Coli Will
Dornbrough , !11 4 - 4411 0043 otter 5:30.
19!8 Harley D1vidson, excellent condition, 12,000.
Mull eoll. Coli !114-44617&amp;8.
1977 Suzuki Endur.a. beat
offor. C. II I 1 4 · 266-625 1
~.,1:00PM.

Hondo CB 650 with 2
helmet• &amp;. intercom. Muat
1111. Con 61 4-44!1-8663.

M Fermall 't'fact:or for sela.
Good condition . Call 614949-2568.

® 3 -2-1, Contact ICCJ

IH80l Coming Anractions
[MAXI MOVIE : ' The Man
Jtetween'
6 :30 II (]) ID NBC News
CII Rifleman
(J) Sportscenter
(I] Sale 01 Horne
(J) 1D (l2l ABC News !CCI ·
0 (J) ® CBS Newo
·· • (J)
Nightly
Business
Report
.
® Body Electric .
IB One Dey at a Time
IH80l Life on Earth: The
Flrot Forests
7 :00 Q (]) PM Magazine ·
· CIJ Chuck
Connor' •
Wesiem Theater
(J) USFL Football: Orlando
at New Jersey
([) Sonlord and Son
(I) Entertainment Tonight
ClJ Wheel of Fortune
0 (J) Wheel of Fortune
(J) (l1J MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
®Newo
(j2) New Name That

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout;
ing. Now Installing r~bb·~
rOofs. 30 yeert eJr.perience.
epeciallzing in built up roof,
Call 614-38B-9B67 .
.

ESCALA'IOR

..

John Deere 2010 row crop
tractor . Good condition.
12, 500 . Call 614-992 33111.
Pole Buildings Constructed
for commercial. garages,
farm, itores, etc. Any size,
. free estlmate1. Call 304~
675-3981'
Farm equipment tor ule,
Holland .t obacco sette,
8325 . Pickup dioc $326 .
304-895-3430.

.

63

1

Ci1a~ll26~1o4z-2:X4~5e·~6;88;;i.4~. ;;;;;;;:

'

Big prett~ A eg.' 6 yr. old
sorrel gelding, shown in
Western Pleasure. Call 614286 -6522.
Reg. sorrel stallion Impress
Me First. Grand eon of
lmprenive, will trade for
filly. Colll14-286-8622 .
Quartarhor~e.

breeding. two
registered Stallions. Irish
Aoy, by AAA Chomp Tonto
llor Quast $150. 8ee Gee
Fiddler 150. Coli 614-4463889.
Murray Grey Bull, registared, pure bred, gentle,
large fr11me, 2 ye1r1 old,
proven sire. ready to wortc.l
Coli 614-187-6181 oltar
8:00pm or weekends.
For eele It all time• springing
Holatene cow• end heifers.
304-576-2510. 675-30422&amp;3 .

72

Trucks for Sale

6&amp; Ford F· 700 T.LT. cob.,
parts lor eale. Bee Ron, 245,
Si:onochool Ad, Vinton ..
1974 Blror front min, good
cond .• *290. Other pert• •or
..1• . c1n111 4-«e-oella.

'

1977 Buick Century, 360
cu. in .• auto. trans., loaded.

livestock

197&amp; Dodge, custom Van,
body folr condition, Inside
excollant condition, 11700.
304-67&amp;-7231.

I

1974 Bl 1 er front tl'llln, good

cond .. 1290. Other porto for
solo. Coll814-446-0185.
81 280 ZX. 5 ipd.
· lo,lodtamp
T-top, $9000. Call
Chevy Luv pickup, with ttot
446-3807 or 614-446· bed, belt offer. CoM !114·
2760.
2111-8251 otter 1:00PM.
1978 Malibu Claooic,
$1,500. 1980 Plymouth,
$1,500. 1977 Chevy Novo,
•6110. 1 979 Morcury, 4
cycle, 11,600. Oldo c~n­
vertlbla, 1950. 1977 Poll·
tloc G,.nd Prix. 1900. See
at T A G. Auto Sales under
Po meroy·Mason
brldgo .msO
1973 Chavalle Malibu. 350
engine. 1126 East Moln,
Pomeroy. Call 81.&amp;-992340B.
1978 Cutla11 Olds for Nla.
1700. Coll814-992-6309.

1 tell Mustong convertible.
Candy-apple Nd. Excellent
condition. •a.ooo. Phone
614-742-21110 orll14-74222117.

'ji:::::::::::::::::::::::l.=::::;::::::::::::::::::::~

They'll Do It Every Time
SI'EAI&lt;IfO/G OF PARTY'
FAIORS-CAH
IM0!Hii
~AT PiOPL6 l'tiO PAIVA
~6)(P5CT?

84 Dodge Rom doluxe cob,
PS, PB, tlh wheol. 11,000
mi., crufH control, topper.
trollor hookup, priced to tell.
Cell 614-378-2712 or 114·
379-2243. - -.-.
1978 F-100 Ford thort bed
12,199. 1177 Ford A.,..
choro, 1u10, olr, t2,119.
John's Auto Selao, lulovllle
Rd, Golllpolls. Ohio
1!114)44!1-4782.

75

Boats and
Motor• for Sale

J &amp; l Insulation. Vinyl
eidlng, roofing. replacement
window•. ltorm windows ,
otore do oro. Call 81 4-9922772.

!iE'G

FOLLOW1/r'q
II 6CENT/ Tiff!
.46P'5 SCEtfT.'
Cl),t!EON/

17 ft . Starcraft arid trailer.
140 H.P .. lnboord, out·
boord, trl·houl. Life iocketo,
alillng equlprnllnt, otereo
Included. Coli 614-99271411, oali for Cloudlo before
6:00 or304-773-5157 otter
8:00.
.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND H);ATING
Cor. Fouri"h end Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-446-3888 or
814-446-4477

8 ft. utility bed with comper
top, ooklngUOD. Colll11448-4412.
Junk Chevy ·truCk for JM~rta .
1972-1979: Colll14-992.7217.

11811 Chtvy PU . Colll14·
286-9352 olter I .
1•76 Chtvy truck, •100.
1973 Oldo Dmego, 1700.
C~lll1 .. 742·2810.

Poroono Body Shop. Locuet
Ad. Pt. PINunt. Post Klolt.
FrN Eotlmotet. 114•9811 4174.

1979 Chw. Elcamlno 88,
exc cond, day• phone 304875-4230 ..,.nlngo 304875-4853.

;7;3=;v.:n:a=;&amp;;:;4:;W;:;.o;:_:
..

78

Motor1 Home•
It Campe!l

-1.

•a,

1 877 Dodge von, I 1,000.
18,000 mt Coli !114·114!11101.

Fltttwinll I ft. truck
comper. ltovt, dlnttM, lea
bolt, IIMpa ·lour. Good condhlon. Colllt4-742-2143.
10ft. - I n truck ctmper,

1 872 Chev opone ven. Aali
1700. 304-411&amp;-1011.

CAOSS lo 80N8
U.S. 31 Well, Jeckeon,
Ohio. 114-281-14111.
M•-v Forguoon, NHolland, Buah Hog 811e1 •
Borvloe: Ovor 40 ueed
traoton to choo• from •
complete liM of new lo
uted oqul..,..ont. Llrgllt
eeltcllon in 8.E. Ohio.

Ford v.,, cullomlnd, '14 T,
1177, AT, PI, PI, good
aond.. t3.100. Coli 304·
171-1731 -IPM.

trl-hull boot with troller. 88
hp Mtreury '"'-Int. callelter
I PM. 304-112· 2141.

Motorcycle•

Wlnnllb- moto• home,
23', ' AC, generetor, Cl,
1872, lito new, 110.100.
Coli 304-171-1731• oft..
IPM,'

1111Herley-DnldoonCioealil, lOIII of lxtru, 1.000
......... 4.100 Of ..... - 304·115·1211.
.

t 173 8torarott 22 ft. tonclem oxle travel troller whh
elr~atream aupe'nelon.
lf•pa I, with dlnnone on
end, Gelobo on side, 1 I ft.
rool up owning. lorilld elr
1u.- with twa 20 lb po
botdel, no eir cond, ••c
oond, t:l,200.00. 304·87112171.

74

190 · Alllt ChOim., troctor,
good running cond., eood
tiree . Cell 614-182-733~ .

~~~~~~=

oleept 8. 1t71 lllnk.,bullt

~heir

Dozer Work land clearing.

BARNEY
PATCHWORK
QUILT?

Electrical

dream

~ News

,.

-.

dlr~M..,t1Zf'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 37 Sam-,
I Greensward · ex mgr..
II Put
Minn.
together
Twins
10 Turkish
38 Types;
ciasse&amp;
regime nt
11 Hindu · 39 Orient
social
40 Bullock
41 . Field
groups
13 Hades river DOWN
. Answer to
14 Open, as an I Endure
' ye~~tenlay's puzzle.
envelope' 2 Sacrifi15 Philippine
cial site
12 Deli
25 Cautious
peasant
3 Leading
counter
27 Fido's'
18 1 love
4 Put the
devic•
neckwear
· (Lal)
Kibosh on 16 Canyon
29 Bowling
17 Greek
5 Sagacity
mouth
score
Jetter
6 Fine ho4'"' 19 Bell sound 30 Coarse
18 Plt&lt;:hcr's
7 Dolt
22 Spar; pole
seaweed
8 Make
23 Gennan
34 Colombian
plate
20 Twitch
room for
· P.O.W. camp river
21 Lacerated 9 At th•
24 Taste
36.8om (Fr.)
22 Fashion
beach
sources , 37 - &lt;-ulpa
23 Arena wall
In old
Rome
25Desert
~rosser

.

Martha Mitchell

1111 Benny Hill Show

11 :30

General Hauling,

Jamee Boya Water Service(
Aloo poolo flllad . Coil 614+
261 -1141 or 614 -446 1171or614-448-7911 . ,

1J ffi

[1) Beet of •Caroon
Tonighr's guests are Marieue Hartley. Alice Neel and
Bill Johnson . (R)[60 min.)
(]) Best of Groucho
(!) Sportscenter
(J) WKRP in Cincinnati
0 (J) Simon lo Simon
(J) Lotenight America
®Taxi
Q
(j2)
ABC
Nows
Nightline 'Nightline visits Hq
Chi Minh City in Vietnam to
examine how things have
changed since the fall of Sai-

gon ten years ago. (60 min .)
• Twilight Zone
1 1 :45 [H80) SocOnd City 25th
Annlveroary Special Join
Ed Asner, John Candy, Shelley Long and more a5' this
comedy uoupe celebrates

Ko~·· Woter Service. W•li
clst.,ns, pools filled. Phoni
814-317-0823 or I 1 4-3!177741 night or doy.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 Ito. Ave .. Golllpollo.
114-448-7833 or !114-441•
1133.
• •

.4

.,

(J) Monty Python

®

SEWING Machine repairs,
Mt'Vice. Authorize~ &amp;lngen
Soloo S. Service ShorSclllort. Fobrlc Shop,
Pomeroy. 614-992-2284.

.,

By Jame• Jacoby
If you've been around the game
awhile, you know tha t bridge dea ls
have a healthy share of the bizarre
and improbable. Witness today's deal •
from a pairs tournament.
l
These North-South pairs who bid a
• A 10 6
small slam in either minor suit... or in
.1 091
· no-trump were successful , usually
tQ 2
9coring an overtrick. In diamonds,
. AK764
declarer would · simply draw trumps
Vulnerable: North-South
and take a club finesse, first playing
Dealer: South
the club ace to guard against a singlew... Nartb East Soulb
ton queen-in the West hand. However,
i[ clubs were the trump declara tion,
Pass
54
declarer had to be careful to take a
Pass
Pass 6NT
first-round club finesse to guard
.Pass
Pass
Pass
against the actual holding - fou r
Pass
clubs to the Q-8 with East. In notrump, even with a spade lead,
Opening lead: t6
declarer would win the spade ace,
cash ace ol clubs add A-K of hea rts.
and then run all the diamonds. At the
.
.
,
end, East would be squeezetf out of
tthe stx of dtamonds by miStake. The
either the hear• Q-J or the clubs.
The ·actual contra.c t reached in· the diamond .was won in .dummy and the.
bidding box Se'eJllS ,as . if it· _s hould first-round club finesse t~ken . B~t on
' inake, ·Certainly ·it ' would against the ,th§ s.;comt club lead, East playeU-. the
normai lelld ol thli_spade king. But the •queen:· ~larer relurn.e d to ctu111.my
hand was played late in the ..,..lon · with a thud club, but now bad no ":•Y
and West was a little weary. In reach- to get t? h1s hand Without Eas\ takmg
. ing for his spade !\onor, h~ pulled oul the se.tltng .l rtck .
..
·

jL.------------....J

.,

• CI1 Bill Cosby Show

Ed'a Appliance Service .
Serving ell makes &amp; brandt
of . refrigerators, washer• •
dry ln. stove• S. dis-• \
hwoohero. Call 814-367-7 187 or 614-446-4486 .

Upholatery

.J

. AK3
. AKJ10853
10 9
WEST
EAST
.KQ 87542 . J9 3
• 72
.Q J865
. 976
. QB 52
SOUTH

3.

home when

:oo o rn oo rn o

&amp; Refrigeration ·

87

1·29·85

·---

.3

Harvey'gets a promotion. (A)
(60mln .J
fll Soap
IHBO) MOVIE: 'Reuben,
ReUben'
IMAXl MOVIE: 'Chom piono' ICCJ
10:30 CIJ Together: Boones
· (J) Writero Writing ICC)
'Pieces of a Puzzle: Court·
land Milloy o f the Washington Post illustrates the·
revision process.
(ffi News
IIIIINN News
11
Cll o~

Oood-1 Excavating, baee·mtntl. footert, drlwewave.
uptic '\ankl, landacapingl·
Call anytime 614 - 4.&amp;6 ·
4637, James L. Davi1on. Jro·
.,
owner.

86

NORTH

'killing lead

Irom Larry . [RJ ·
® FOR: An American
Hero The life and legacy of
Franklin Delano Roosevelt is
examined. (60 min.)
10:00 IJ Cil ClJ Missing ... Have
You Seen This Person?
(CC} The mysterious disap·
pearances of 9 people are
reenacted and ' viewers arc
urged t6 call a toll free number if they have seen these
people. (60 min .)
(!) NFL Draft '85
· ([) Cousteau/ Mississippi:
Reluctont Alley
0 (]) 00 Cagney lo Locey
The Lacey's go in search of

Excavating

moteo. Coli 614-446-803!'or 814-992-7119 any)lma.

IUnpremeditated

.•· . Afrtcao pri~_cess .flriae ex-

(!) ESPN'elnside Baseball

31 ft . fifth
loto of
..t,.o. ~ mi. from R1. 7 on
Routh LIM INonh of Che·
oltlre, Oh.J.

1978 CJ·II GOt~ Eoglo,
PI, low mlleogo, -.1
&gt;ond .. 14,100. Con 114441-8700. ·

James Jacoby

CIJ Tic Tac Dough

shocked when Stephanie receives a r:narriage proposal

Plumbing

lahd~eaping. etc. Free eeti-

FEINT THRESH WISDOM

Anawer; What e good shrink !s suppo$ed to be4 MIND SWEEPER

torian England . [R) [90 min .)

JIM'S PLUMBING S. HEAT ;
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 356, Gallipolis. Call 614-367-05711. •t

Auto Repair

I Jumbtos: PIECE

(Answers tomorrow)

BIIIHIE

9 :30 0 (J) ® Newhart Dick is

&amp; Heating

84
77

5

r

XI I XX1 I

pe;:ience . viole-nt prejudice .
when they . returri · to· VIc-

8 • 0 Hon1elmprovementl,
replecement window·a,
·aluminum soffit, winyl aid·
lng, continuous guttere, frH
11timate1. all work guaran·
teed, epring discount. call
evening• 304-576-2644.

82

Auto Parts
It Acceaeories

d ,
Satur ay

e...

..•

Now arrange the! circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Answerher8: VERY"(

CIJ Cisco Kid
([) All In the Family
(]) 0 (]) Family Feud
·ClJ Jeopardy
ffOI Wheel of Fortune
8 Ufl Entertainment
Tonight
ill WKRP In Cincinnati
IHBOI Freggle Rock
8 :00 1J []j ClJ MOVIE: 'Adam'
!CCI
CIJ The Monroes
([) MOVIE: ' The Revengers·
•
(])
li)
~
MOYIE:
'Apocalypse Now' iCC!
0 (]) ® Scarecrow and
Mrs. King Amanda sets.out
to find the real culprit ·after
she has been fingered as a
leak in the agency . [RJ [60
min .)
(() Don't Eat the Pictures
'Sesame Street at the Me·
tropolitan Museum of Art .·
The inhabitants of se·same
Street discover the world of
an. (RJ(60 min .)
® Princess Grace Re·
membered
fj) MOVIE: 'My Favorite
Year· '
IH80I MOYIE: 'The Magic
of Lassie'
IMAKI MOVIE : 'Loain' It'
!1;00 !l) 700 Clul! · 0 (I) ®!·Kate &amp; .-1\IUe Kate
and Allie come up with an
unusual plan in · order· to ·
avoid a drastic rent increase.
[RJ
, (J) Sailor's Return ICC)
.; British. s~e.il capt.f!in ana hiS

ANNIE

WHAT FOII!M
OF 5P£::ECH
15 t70U!!IL.E·TAL.~?'

ISARGYS!

e

7:30 IJ

""w

76

I DOLfUN~
I J j

til Jefferson&amp;

D &amp;. M Con·t r,a ctora. Vinyl
and aluminum aiding ·
replacement wind~wt ­
i n 1ulati n'g - roofl n g remodeling and new
conetruction· gutters. Call
304-773-6131 '

83

J

.Tune

_:._~-----le ­

1984 fibarglata ban boat,
with treilor, 105 Chrysler,
Cryttalgraft lot1 .lote
more. Aalilng 14,000. Call
oltor 7, 114-379-26118.

29 ft. Crtst pontoon boet
with 85 horse power mer.cury engine. In e•cellent
condition. 11,000. Aloo
boot troller. 11,1100., 7422180 or 742-2287.

.

I I·

1111 Dill' rent Strol&lt;eo ·

2

1978 Mercury Cougor XR7,
power ate•rlng, pOwer
brokoo. olr condhlon, AM·
FM, 814-44!1-26611 .

t

(J) Dr. Who

· Home
Improvements

--

_, _ _ _ _

(II Mudo SporUiook

'77 Mercury Monarch.
66.000 mlln, V-11,
metic, air cond. god ""'"-"' _1 1975 Hondo CB 380T, lott Gena's Deep Stream Carpet
11,750.00. 304 - 675
of txtraa, low mlloogo. 1·9 73 Cleaning, upholstrey,
1828.
Yorn11ho DT 2110. Call 614- scotchgl,fard. deodorizer•.
25!1-118311.
' free estimates, highly re ·
1972 Pontloc Cotinio G.C.
commended . 614 -742 304-675-4567.
1 lao Horley Dovldoon ouper 2211
gHdo, lot~ of ••troo, 4,800
1977 Ford Gronodo. oomo mllto, like new, •4, 100. Coli RON'S Television Service.
body work. Fllir. 1350. 614-446-7383.
Houn calls on RCA. Ouazer,
304-1175-321 3.
.
GE. Speclallng In Zenith .
Have 1 1 984 Honda Shadow
-2398 or 6141982 Ford Eocort, 4 speed, motorcycte for 1111. Uke Call304-676
446-2464,
o-c. am-fm Hotchbock. 304- new. Out of atata. worltlng.
675-1690.
'
mUll Mil. Also hove 1 1976 Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
Ford LTD lor sole for work removal. Call 304-675 Codllloc 1981 , FIHIWOOd car or part1. Call 8141331 '
Brougham. 4 door; di1111. 742-2304.
30-35 MPG, like new,
RINGLES'S SERVICE. tk·
18.1100 . Coli 304-17&amp;perlenced carpenter, electri·
1731 oltor 6PM.
·1981 KE1 DO Kowoukl mo· cian, ma1on. painter1 roof·
. {lncludin.g hot tar
'75 Monte Corio 1350.00 torcycla for ale, Coli 6.1 4- · fng
·912-IIUO or 114-982· oppllcotlon) 304-675-2088
firm, 304-1711·721!1.
or 675-7368.
3817.
'74 Duo,.r, 1800.00. good
· Rotary Qr c8bi!J tOol .drlii~Q·..
tltapa; 3011-·75-2149 ;_
_Most·w•lll corhpl.et!fd ~!!~• :_
,day; Pu.'mp .plea ·and. servi· ..
·volkoswov.n Dollhei
cii: ao4-895 -38D2'.
front wheel drive, axe cond,
11,000 . 00. 304-171'·
Stark• Tree &amp; Lawn Service.
4838c
1
tertii- ·
Cabin ·CNiNr. c;;la• .crett-,
CO""!
•7av Toyoto ,.~=~~~:Q!:~·~:j36
: twin
engine,
· Con
-w-•o·
:tritller,
· U;500.1957,
CoU
..- ...· tli.
f ~iord . ~ruck;,:
304·8711·1731. olteriPM .
... '

following
will be
I
public ale to the hlgheot
bidder on the 1 1th of Moy,
1985 ot 10:00A-,.. ' 1972
Chovrolotjllhillbu 2 dr. tport
c o u p a', S e' r . N o .
1D37F2B568671. Sola of
the eecurlty liated above will
be held at the Commercial a
Sawinge Sank. SII'J8r Bridge
Plna, Galllpoll•~ Ohio.
Terme: Cash. SellerreHrvea
the right to bid and the right
to reject any and oil bldo.
Prior to the date of the ule,
arrangement• mey be mlide
to ln1pect thit merchendi. .
by coiling !114-4411-01182
between tM houra of
9:00AM ond 4 :00PM.

*h

&lt;II Beverly Hillbillies

CAPTAIN EASY

BASEMENT
WATER PROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua-•
rantee. Local reference•
furnlthed. Free eetimatet.
Call collect 1-614-2370488 day or night. Ragen
Base~ent Waterproofing.

Unwamblethese four JumbMis,
one latter to
squart, to form
four ordlnery worda.

I I t ] I

(j2) News
(J) Hot Pouno

·.,a ·

Spring Spaclol: 24'k30'K8'
' with 16'x7' gorogo door lo
aervica door , *3.888
erected. Iron HorN 81dgs.
614-332·97411 collect. ·

9 -.

74

.~

EVeNING

~~=~~~~~~~::;:;~~~~~C&gt;~-~"~"'-~N~- ~ -------~

M••••v

fflrm Equipment

24 lt. 4 ule heovy equipment trailer, electrk: brak•:
plndel hook hitch, •1,800
nogotioble. Cell · 814-388-

4/29/8_5

Ser v 1cus

81

115 Muoey Ferguton dieoel
tractor e4 ,496 . 800 c...
tractor PS , live pwer. 1979 Monte Corio ln . verv
12,895. Call 814 -286- good cond. Bett offer. Call
614-4411-3243 eve.
6522.
Huffy 8 HP riding lawn 1977 Ford Mawerick, beat
tr•ctor. $496. 66 in. 3 pt. offor. Coli 814-256-6251
LONG tiller, 11,296. Call olter 6:00PM .
614-286-6622 .
79 Muotong 4 opaed. Call
J pt . PU disc t250, 3 pt, 614-446-3544 or614-949hitch 2 bottom plowo a195, 2283.
3 pt. t-.itch cultlv-.tor~ e226.
62 Oldt 88 collector ltemo.
3 pt . hay rake 8396.
Ferguson bale U96. Call 2 new tiree, tail pipe, rune
good, body good. all orglnal,
614-286-8522.
43,000 tctuol mileo. aalilnil
1975 -408 Gravely lawn •Boo. Call 614-446-4462.
tractor with · 32 in. cut
mower, 8HP, e760, good 1979 Hondo Acco;d hotchcond., one-owner ~ Call back, clean, good .condlt~on.
9AM-9PM, 614-446-71 62. $2,760. Call 614-44!13965. '
lilliston .a row no till corn
planter, like new *5.000. 1980. Plymouth Ouster 8
John Deere 2 row corn cyl., auto, PS. air, new tires,
plonier 8400. 8, 10,13 ft. U,395. 1977 Dodgo Aopon
wheel dltc 1450 lo up. Plant wagon t595. Call814-28811ttera 8200. Concrete 8622.
mixer. John Deere w:heet
drill 1525. Wagon 20 lt . bed 1976 Ford Pinto runs good.
tandem wheels electric e360. Coll614-256·6469 .
.brokeo, •1 .250. 10ft. culitapacker 1176. Ford 2 1 21n . 77 Ford LTD II body good
pfow, 1275. ford rakes cond .. 81500 or batt oHer.
8660. Fertilizer spreader Call614-446,7014.
8200. International aq·uare
baler 11 ,260. Heston big 1982 Toyota Tercel .a dr ..
round hay baler 83,200. AC. 37 MOP. one own81",
New Idea No. 10 corn _p lcker e4,37tl . . Coli 614-2458860. Co-op tractor live 9118.
power $750 . Other field
ready equipment. Howe's 1979 Toyota Cellca GT,
Farm Machinery. lh . 124 &amp; hatchback, AC, sunroot, low
Mayhew Rd. Jackson, Qh. mileage. exc . cond ..
U,976 . Coli 614 -245 614-286-8944.
9118 .

a

61

I

. ,·

Television
Viewing

1973 Winnebogo, 24 ft ..
self contained. exc . cond.,
$11,000 . Coli 614-386·
9919.

/

The

Ohio

30 lt . RY: GMC 454 engine.
45 ,000 mi. AC, folding TV
1 ntenna, AM· fM , tape·dack
ottrtio. ca. full rafrlg .. hoi
;!llr helting, awning. gal ,
stove, micro-wave, 1how1r. ,
large .closet, good Jtorage, "'
11 0 V On an generator . •
-R11dy to go. Asking 1 6K ol
belt off•r; lnythlng goea :
wrong 1n 90 doyio, I wHI poy '
tho bill. Coll614-286-1 959 .
Prefer evenlngl. Can be aeen
anytime.
18ft. Scotty camper trailer.
Call'S 14-256· 1467.

~~~:!:~:~o.

~~~~~~~:~:4

Monday, April 29, 1

79 Motora Homes
&amp; Campers

,.

New Holland baler, Nq.27~.
cond._ C,all 6_14-388-

Briarpatch Kennels Profeasional All-breed groqming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fecilhiet&gt;English Cocker Sponiel puppieo. Coii814-388Firewood $20.00 pickup· 979D.
load, 830 .00 delivered. Call
304-675 -6762 or 676 - Dragonwynd Cattery Ken2991 .
nel. CFA Himalayan, Persian
and Slameae kitten•'· AKC
Electric forced air furnace Chow puppies. Coli 814with 2111 ton central air and 44!1-3844 otter 7PM.
hardware. ~04-876 - 2700.
Fi1h Tank and P~t Shop,
Adi:t a room for house or 2413 Jackson Avenue:
tniiler, 24 ft .Jr.1 2ft. 2 years Point Pleetont, 304· 675old, bath, 40 gol. hot woter 2063. Fleh, bird• and more.
tank. hook up for waahardryer. $7,000 value. Sell
13500 . Coli 304 -576 - 68
Fruit
2218 .
&amp; Vegetables
2 One-Way tickets to Hono·
lulu by way of Cherlenon,
Chicago •nd San Franeiaco Veget1ble and flower plents,
to be uoad by Moy 3, 1985. wholeule end retall.loceted
$260 . eoch . 304-675 - Letartnextdoortogrovel pit,
4302 .
watch for sign or coli 304-

Box springa • mattreu
r11gul1r or queen, dinette stt,
couch, cheat , recliner, '12
tire bed . Call 114-4463224.

Seeri Kenmore, waeher,
dry.,, heavy duty. CoH 6142411-628!1.

'

Elee;~l-lq poitt~ bolt trliler.
ridinG lawn mower, chain
hoi•t. wringer wa'i her, 6
1tring banjo . Call 61.&amp;-2661529.

Park, Route 33, Nonh of

49

/

t::::::::::J::::::~=:::;:::::;=:::=14oOO
Ford tractor, newly
rebut' lt engine, 12,995. Big

Cotielty AJ)pliinCe . .: Inc .
Good used appliance• and
TV 1811. Open SAM to 6PM.
Mo~ thru Sai. 1114:44_
11.Mobile.home lot, 1 2'x50'
1699, 627 3rd. Ave. Gallllri1ert,r.., ~76 water •••w, .~ .....·, ,polis; OH .. · ·
·.
.. 'lo' Nili, Gafllpolio.
'.· 4416 oltor 7PM-.

46

Farm Equipment

Monday, .

29.1985

its silver anniversary .

PEANUTS
.
I HATE &amp;EIN6 LEFT
ALONE IN TI-lE CAR :.

CIJ Bum• • Allen
(J) USFL Football: Orlendo ·
et New Jeroey
(]) Portrolt of America:
Tennoo...
(J) Benny Hill Show
®MOVIE: 'Diery Of Anne
Frank'
• (j2) TBA
1111 Ounomoke
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Repo Man' .
·12:30 8 ())(!)Late Night with
oevtd Lttt.,...n
(]) Love That Bob
()) ABC Newo_ Nlghtline

'

IT'S SO 80RIN6 ...

Tl-lERE'S ABSOLUTELY
NOTI-l1N6 TO DO ...

EXCEPT FLI~T WITH
TI-lE METER MAID!

.A lo M Furniture Monuf~i.­
turlng, Bt . At. 7, Crown
City, Oh. Col 81 4-2M14?0, ooll Eve. 11 4-4411·
3431, Old &amp; no.•
Uphootorld.
· ::

I

12:00

necessity
28 Zest
27 'Folsom
Prison"
singer
28 Nickname
or 1936
29 Classified
31 Malay
gibbon
32 Usc a skill
33 ' - and
Coca-Cola"
(1946 song)
31 Without
key, in
music
DAILY CRYPJ'OQUOTES- Here's how to work II :

ln-+-+-+-+-+-

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for anolber. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc . Single letters,
aposirophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. EAch day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

4-29
EWOOBYM
· LWCLOW
· HW

BE

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PROOWJ

ROO U RKW

EWOO ,

RYJ

OBABQW.J

QC

EROWEAWY , GCN
EC AWQUBYM

QURQ

ZCI!- HBOGWNJ

R.

QC

BYPOIJWE
LWQWNECY

YNterday't Crytoquote: NO GREAT WORK HAS
EVER BEEN PRODUCED EXCEI'T AF'i'~;R A LONG
INTERVAL OF S'ni,.L AND MUSING MEDITATION . WALTER BAGEH&lt;YI'

'

�I

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 29. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ot)io

Public
·h earings
seton
rate hike

Area deaths
Phyllis D. Fultz
Graveside services for Mrs,
PhyUis Duerr Fultz, 70, who died at
her home at UO High St., Pomeroy,
early Saturday morning, were held
at 10 a.m. Monday at Sacred Heart
Cemetery with Monsignor Anthony
Gtannamore officiating.
Mrs. Fultz was born at Pomeroy '
on March 8, 1915, a daughter of the
late Ernest P. and Lydia J . Lasch
Duerr. She was a graduate of
Pomeroy High Sclilol and Ohio
University where she was a
member of Chl Omega Sorority.
Surviving are her husband, Leslie
F. Fultz; a son, Michael Fultz,
Chicago, Ill.; two daughters, Mrs.
Thomas (Terri) Becker, Rochester,
N. Y., and Mrs. ·Alan (Cathy)
Telzrow, Hudson; a sister, Mrs.
Geneva Hallerman, Norwood, and a
brother, Mark G. Duerr, Syracuse.
Besides her parents, Mrs. Fultz

was preceded In death by a
daughter, Patricia Ferherdlno.
Friends may make donations In
Mrs. Fultz' memory to the church or
charity of their choice.
·

Mabel M. Blac.k
Mrs. Mabel M. Black, 72, 146
Mulberry Ave.. died Sunday mornIng at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center.
A housewife, Mrs. Black was born
June 8, 1912, ·at Leon, W. Va., a
daughter of the late Preston and
Jenny Jeffers. She Is survived by
two nieces, L,uciJJe Hendricks and
Mae Scarbro, both of Middleport,
and a nephew, George Knapp,
.
Middleport.
Besides her parents, she· was
preceded In death by her husband,
Walter Black.
The Ewing Funeral Home is In
charge of arrangements. Ther.e will
he no caning hours and no services.

Meigs County agent's eorner

Extension notes•••

The Publlc UtUitles Commission
of Ohio (PUCO) announced today
that It wiD hold 10 public hearings
throughout OIJ!o on General TeJe.
phone &lt;;:ompany' s pending rate
Increase request The hearings wDI
take place In 10 different cities
starting In Athens on May 29 and
concluding In Englewood on June
26.
.
Hearings wUI !Je held at night for
th'e convenience or working
OhioanS. PUCO Chairman Thomas
V. Chema noted the Importance of
public Input In the ratemaklng
process, "We are pleased to be able
to announce these hearings. It Is
Important that we listen tp the
comments and concerns of General
Telephone Company's customen~.
The PUCO Is committed to allowing
the maximum In public Input on
these Issues which affect consu·
mers' pocketbooks."
These public hearings are formal
proceedings before the PUCO.
Consumers are encouraged to
testify on the record aboutjssues In
the rate case. General Telepljon,e
Company has requ~ted a $58.1
mllllon rate Increase. The utility
has 485,00) cuSJorners in !l&gt;ofOhlo's
B8 counties. A aectslon by the PUCO
Is expected In July of this year.
Hearings are as follows:
Wednesday, May 29,'- Athens, 6 p.m. City

By JOHN C. RICE
and wholesome. Third, there Is a
Extension Agent
pent-up need to lash .out at big
business to release our frustra lions
Agriculture, Meigs County
TRUCK USED IN ROBBERY - A WeDs Fargo called one of the biggest robberies In hi!Jtory. Pollee
POMEROY - Termites - We · and resentment.
truck, with one of Its side windows smashed In, sits .sal4 as much as $110 miUion was stolen from the New
All this explains why chemical
don't like to think about termites or
under the Brooklyn Bridge where It was found york garage of WeDs Fargo. (AP Laserj,hoto).
'
the posslbUity that we could have · companies geJ .bad press, why most
abandoned Mond!ly alter what New York City pollee
them In our home, but that people don't believe that dpse alone
possibility exists, according to determines toxicity, and why np
WOllam Lyon, ·Extension entomolo- one seems particularly reassured
gist at the Ohio State University.
by a one-In-a-million pesticide risk.
NEWYORK(AP)-Fourarmed I've ever' heard of," LeSchack said.
found no guards on duty when they
Swamrtng termites . are about
Farmland Values, Equipment
men
overpowered
Wells
·Fargo
one-fourth to one-half Inch long. Sales Decline :- There's a saying
The men, described between 40 ' arrived at the garage early today • Hall. Municipal Court Room. 2nd Floor, 8
employees
at
the
company's
termiThey are black, normally. When that "when the farmer suffers, rest.
to 45 yf'ars old, ordered the four and In accordance with standard East Washington Street, Athens , Ohio '"
nal early · today and ned In an employees at gunpoint to open a operating procedure, they made a
Thursday, May.ll -BowllngCreen,6p,m.,
you see a warm, usually that Is the of society suffers."
Cit
Admlnlstra!ion Building, Council
search ofthe building. It was atthat Chaymbers,
first Indication of an Infestation.
For several years the farmer has armored truck with as much as $50 vault where the money was held,
lM North Church Street, Thlrd
point, the four men jumped them Floor, Bowling Green, Ohio 43102.
· However, the swarmers do not been plagues with poor weather million In one of the largest then handcuffed the men.to a hand
Wednesday, June 5- HUron, 6p.m ., Huron
robberies In history, police said.
and ordered them to open the vault,
cause the damage. These black, conditions at spring planting and
truck, . according .to Chief Robert
High
ScljOOI Gymnasium, 710 Cleveland Road
The four men, armed with Johnston, chief or operations for the JohnS!On said.
flying, ant-like swarmers mate and droughts durtng the growing sea·
West, Huron, Ohio 44839.
handguns, stole the truck from the Pollee Department.
start new colonies.
· son, Inflated costs of many products
Johnstonsaldhedidnotknowwhy·
Thu.-.day, Jlllle 6, - Marton, 6 p.m.. City
Hall, Council Chambers, 233 West Center
' Termite workers cause the dam- he buys and .clefiated farm prices, company's garage lnlowerManhat·
The employees "were told they there were no guards at the garage. Slreet,
Second Floor, Mar1on, Ohio um.
age. You will not see the workers higher Interest rates and shrinking tan, said pollee spokesman Sgt. Ed
weren't going to be hurt" If they
When pollee responded to a cat!
Tu...tay, Ju"" n · - Columbus, 6 1p.m..
Borden BolldiJIR, llth Floor, Room A; lliJ
LeSe hack.
unless you happen to dig Into the net worth because of lower land
cooperated, according to Johnston. shor(ly after 1:50 a.m., they found
Easl Broad SlrEet, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
"It's
the
largest
(robbecy
)
that
nest or break open an Infested piece values, · and reduced borrowing
Johnston said the four employees the vault open and the , four
Wedneoday, Ju ... 12- Celina, fi::l'l'p.m.,
of wood. They are wingless, white poWer, to name a few.
empJovees
handCUffed
tO
the
band
M~rcer County Court House. Audllortum,
J
Main and Marko!, Celina, Ohio 45822.
Fazmland values In the Midwest
or off·whlte and work In darkneSs,
truck, Johnston said.
Thursday, June 13 - Brunswick, 7 p.m.,
meaning they live or nest In the declined by 5.6 percent In the last
Asked about the amount of cash
Brunswtck Muntclpal Compt&lt;!,t, City Council
Chambers, First Floor, 4095 Center Road,
ground at\d tunnel their way Into three months of 1984. Data collected
stolen, Johnston said "We don't Brunswick. Ohio 44212.
wood portions of your home. frofTI bankers In Indiana, Illinois,
know. They (Wells Fargo) don't
Wednesday, June19- New Philadelphia,
Workers may buUd mud tunnels on Iowa, Wisconsin and Michigan
know." The report of $25 mUUon to 6::.1 p.m., Municipal BuUdlng. Second Floor.
166 East High Avenue, New Philadelphia,
the Inside of foundation walls In were basis for the determination.
$50 million, he said, was "a ballpark
Ohio 4466.1.
·
their efforts to contact wood where
This was the· sharpest quarterly
·
·
figure."
•
Thursday,
June
00
P&lt;&gt;rtsmwth.
6::1l
c. E. Blakeslee, presl~ent of the
In response Blakesleerecounted a
·
p.m .. Municipal BulkHng, CounciiCha~bPrs,
they·
·
Previously, theJargest sum every :ns Second s.,...,,. 5eeQnd Floor, Room 3.
· . feed on the· &lt;iellulose
. . .This decline since the downturn Jn land . Meigs County Pioneer and Hlstori- history of th~ acquslllon .. of tl!e
·. feeding - ~e~~~ens·, t!Je tlm!Jers· In values begaiJ In 198i. It bn;mghtthe · · cal Society forl.5ye&lt;\I'S, andlilswlfe, building In 1969 .with most of the· stQiep- from ·vv,ells_' Fargo wa$ $6:3-· . Portsmouth, Ohio «iQ;::. _
_ _ ·" _
fro th
· ·· •
Wednosday, June 26 - Engle)wood. 7 p.m.,
your house, --:h!Ch eve~tual)yleads- decreaSe for the ent)re year to 15
Daisy, who has also been actlv~ In · funds helng lhe_$30,m! contributed m Ullon, •~•
""'en . m . e company s - Englewood Governltll!l1t Center Oty Council ·
. · to expensive· repairs. ·
percent. And, compared to tlie 1!il1
the development of the · Meigs to J. William Herscher, other fund ·. terminal In Memphis, Tenn., on Chambers. 333 West Natio~ai -Ri.ad, Englethere is no need to panic, peak, values have fallen 29 percent
wood. Ohio 4.'i.'ll2.
Museum, wete honored Sunday at raising projects and contributions, ThankSgiving Day ala. '
'
l)owever, Tezmlt~ d!l"ger Is slow on average. WhUe data for all ~tales
.an open receptlq!l atth; museum.
~modelbtg and th~ develop~':lt of
On Pee- 12, 1982,. two men broke
and graduat A f~. ~eeks ~r will not be av!!Uable untO late May, . ... Margaret . ·P~rker,_ .. pre~ldent, . displays. • . • ·:
.
.
) 1\to tl)e Sentry Armored · Car
I.'
.·
• · '· ..-,
months lllliY be ne,ces!13ry ,before . ·It . seems. llk¢1Y that ·~~llney ·Of' · .. gave .a .ti'll;&gt;lite 19 the: c;ouple· before "'
Blakeslee counts the. J)ubllcatlon ·Courier Co. office tn·New YorKCity ·:- · ··
one can.determine If the infestation slmllar ·magnltudes·ha·ve &lt;X:cutriid
pl'esentlng l'llrn with a plaque imd of the historY 1J96k. as- the most . and robbed It' of SJl'mUfion : then . . Tonight, clear. Low 45-5!L Light
Is large enough to need professional· In ·surrounding states, Including . the two of them with an engraved significant project of the time he \he largest cash robbery ·In U.S. andyarlablewlnds. TueSday, sunnY
pest control service or If the Ohio. ·
hlstocy.
and pleasant. High In the mld -'ms.
a;nup.
Suver tray In appreciation Of service served as President. of the ..,
homeowner can do It. The most
Fazmland values have now fallen
But
perhaps
the
blgggest
robbery
The
chance of rain Is near zero
totheSoclety.
·
Refreshments Including a decoeffect!ve contra11 s usua UY aceoinp· back -to roughly the.1977·78levels In
In
history
was
1n
1976,
·
w
neq
a
tonight
and Tuesday.
Several others attending spoke In -rated ca~e were served following
'guerriU;~
forcetookadvantageqf(he
Extended Forecast
~~~~a~:/ licensed pest control ':a~~~ s~hgne~~~:n~':~sl~l~f ~~~ "' appreciation of Mr. and Mrs. the recognition program. Visitors clvU disorder In Beirut to blast the
Wedneeday
through ll'rkliay:
Blakeslee's work and dedication toured the musuem which . has
More ~prlng T IPS - If you worth for landowners - by some
vaults of the British Bank or the
Fair on W!!dll'esday. A chan~ of ·
recently been redecorated.
haven't already done so, remove estimates as much as one-third . through the years.
Middle East, cli&gt;arlng out saff' nm "111undsy. Fair again Friday.
winter protection from rose bushes. decline since 1~. For farmers who
deposit boxes and escaping with Jnghs Ia !be low alB to low 'lOs
Prune the roses back. Cut out all rely on credit for operating capital,
between $20 million and $50 mUllon. Wecblsclay tlnd 'lblqllday and the
dead canes and shorten others to this erosion of net worth combined
In 1983, robbers took more than mld-1108 to tnlcJ.als Friday. Lows bt
desired length. Remove tops and with lower net farm earnings has
three tons of pu're gold worth $37.5 the mld-408 to mJd.I!Os W~,
dead leaves from asparagus and substantially reduced borrowing
mUllon from a Brinks Mat ltd vault the 40s 'Thursday and the mld-308 to
rhubarb plants and fertlllze them capacity, which has contributed
at Heathrow, England.
mld-40sFrlday.
.with a nitrogen sl\ledresslng. Re· significantly to the current flnan·
In 1!1!2, Rustenburg Platinum
move mulch trdm established clal stress In agriculture.
Holdings Ltd. In South Africa
strawberries before growth begins.
Land values are expected . to
reported that theives stole ·$13
Apply pre-emergent herbicides for decline further, reflecting low fafll)
mUllan In preelous metals from the
CLEVELAND (AP) - Thecrabgrass control.
earnings, distressed land sales and
cpmpany.
holders
or the two winning tickets
Pesticide Dose Determines Ef- Investor reluctance to buy In
"Ohio Lotto" game
from
Saturday's
feet - Toxicologists have long expectations of these price
will
share
a
jackpot
worth$2,6ll,784.
known It, and educated laymen give decreases.
,
Tuesday_practice set
The
winning
numbers
from the
It lip service: The Dose Determines . Because of these escalating
5,
18,22, 28
drawing
Saturdaywere3,
the Pol~n. In other words, there's misfortunes at the farm level, farm
The Rutllmd Pee Wee Girls
and40.
nothing so toxic that In small equipment sales declined again In
Softball team will practice at 5: 30
The next estimated jackpot Is $1
enough amounts would be harmless. 1984, continuing a downward trend
p.m. Tuesday at the Rutland Field.
mUllan.
to a living organism; and there's that began In 1979. Tractor sales
nothing so safe that large enough last year · were down slx and
amounts would be fatal to that one.half percent, sales of propelled
creature. The ramifications of this combines off lO';h percent, forage
scientific truism IS Important to the harvester sales declined 13';h per·
agrichemlcal Industry and should cent, sales of grinder-mixers, were
be a moderatlllg Influence on the oown 40 percent,_ and sales of
j t
trend to regulate pesticides to the mower-conditionerS and small ·hal'·
ever more minute panicle.
ers were both off eight percent.
HON'OREJ) - An open reception honoring Mr. and Mis.
E.
Nell Orloff, director of Cornell
Since tbe 1979 peak, tractor sales
Blakeslee was held SWiday at the Mlllp Museum.' Margaret Parker,
University's Center for Environ· have declined a total of 52 percent;
president, rl&amp;fd, presented Blakeslee with a plaque for his fifteen yean~ as
mental Research, has proposed combines, 6P percent; Siiles ,of
president of the Meigs County Pioneer and Hlstorleal Society, and Mr.
three psycholOgical reasons why balers and mowe~:.condltloners , ·
and Mrs. Blakeslee with an engraved llllver tray for their help In
Americans fear pesticides. First, each ~ percent; and the sales ·of
developing the Melp Museum.
I
there's the emotional need to find a grinder-mixers, forage harvesters
scapegoat for dreaded dlseases·llke and corn heads have fallen 70
cancer. Second, there's the In- percent or more. Declines are
THE HISTORIC RECORDING
grained belief that nature ,and Its expected to continue In 1985 but
P,roducts must be essentially pure perhaps at lower rates.
.

$50·million taken in anned robbery
as

Historical society
honors Blakeslees

_Weather £orecast

Two winners

TOOLS FOR RENl

Emergency squads answer seven calls
Seven caDs were answered by
local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency MediCal
$ervlee reports.
At ll: ll a.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
tookMarvlnDarsttrom19E.Locust
St., to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland at 6:24 p.m., took Walter
King from King Ridge Road to
I
Veterans Memorial; Syracuse at
7:04 p.m. took D~ette Jones from
Minersville to Veterans Memorial
and the Rutland Fire Department
answered a car fire caU on Shotgun
Hollow atlO: 17 p.m. ·
·
On Sunday at 11: 25 a.m., Rutland

Meet this eveni~g
The Metgs Athletic Boosters will
hold election of officers when they
meet at 7: 15 this evening at the high
school.

"WE ARE THE WORLD"

.

went to Weber HIU Road for Paul
Van Meter, to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 6:38p.m. took
Audrey Arnold from 410 Spring
Ave., to Veterans Memorial and at
7: 32 p.m., Racine took Brtttney
RltnefromCpuntyRoad28toHolzer
Medical Center.

. ...

. I.

Veterans Memorial

:saturday Admlsslon··Sharon E4·
wards, Neyo Haven.
Saturday Dlscharges..Annetta
Pridemore, Jack Kitchen, Jolin
Ord.
Sunday Admlssloris .. oarimce
Mattox, Jr.. Pomeroy: Edgar
Brewer, Portland; George Green,
Albany; William Morris, Pomeory;
Karl(ll Brown, Lanpvllle.
'
Sunday Discharge-- Karen ·
GOkey.

'

Available on Cassette, LP,

35 and Sheet Music

-ELBERFELDS
\

'

C.EMENT MIXER
CONCRETE VIBRATOR
BULL FLOAT
TRANSIT LEVEL
ELECTRIC SEWER SNAKES
.SCAFFOLDING
EXTENSION LADDERS
3000 WATT GENERATOR
FLOOR SANDER.
HAMMER DRILL
·cARPET ·CLEANING SYSTEMS
HYD·RAULIC LOG SPLITTER
And Many More Items

KING BU-LDERs· SUPPLY

•os N. Second Ave•.

Middleport, OH.

·I
992·5020
Convenient Off-Street Perking end Loedl~g

e
Vol.36. No.11
Copvrlghted 1985

•

•

at y

enttne

'

1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. April 30, 1985

Section~

10 Pages

25 Centa

A Muttimedia Inc. Newspaper

Committee vote near on HOme State legislation
..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API -A bW permittlngthesale
of the failed Home State Savings Bank neared a vote
today In the House Financial Institutions Committee,
although final details or the sale contract still were
Incomplete.
Chairman Robert D.-Nettle, O.Barberton, Indicated
that the details can be plugged In later, saying he
·wanted' to get the legislation on to the rules committee
for assignment to a floor.vote.
He and other sponsors are pressing for prompt
action on the bill which could result In about 53,ml
Home State depositors getting access to their funds
within two weeks qr so.
However, the proposal may run Into serious
opposition il)theSenate, wheresomekeymemhersare
saying that Chemical New York Corp., the proposed
Home State purchaser, Is getting too good or a deal. '
. The ·legislation also Is opposed by Ohio's bankers,

the acquired Institutions were required to continue to
operate as savings and loans.
"This Is a major departure from that principle and
one that we have difficulty with," Sweeney said,
adding that If Chemical were to acquire Home State
and continue to run It as a thrift, "We would applaud
their,entry (Into Ohlci's financial market)."
Nettle and other sponsors of the bW have defended
the proposed $90 nillllon-$127 mllllon expenditure as
.legitimate becausethefundswouldcome from the sale
of non-tax revenue bonds and not the taxpayers. The
bonds would be paid off mostly with state liquor profits.
In addition to the $127 million, tl)f' Chemical
transaction calls for another $81 million to be
transferred from.the Ohio Deposit Guarantee Fund
Into what would be Chemical Bank-Ohio as part of an
arrangement under which Home State's depositors
would regain control of 100 percent of their funds.

who testlfled against Its major provisions In Nettle's
committee Monday.
·
Their opposition apparently will not halt the bill In
the House committee. "I think wf' can crank it out
tomorrow," Nettle said.
Ralph E. Bolen, executtvevlcepresldentoftheOhlo
Bjmk.ers Association, and Gerald Sweeney, vice
president,of AmeriTrust Balik of Cleveland, objected
prtmarUy to the expected Infusion of $00 mllllon·$127
rnUllon In sta'te money Into the deal. .
•
They also objected to the f~t that the sale of Home
State, which collapsed March Sand ttouchedoffOhlo's
recent S&amp;L crtsls, would give Chemical an Ohio bank
chBfler under the Qill as prescently written.
The bankers don't like the Idea of competition from
New York. Bolen said that In three other ~tales where
falling thrifts were taken over by out-of-state banks,

For~casting gauge

The ODGF Is the priva tely managed entity that
formerly Insured Home State and the 69 other Ohio
thrifts that were shut down untU they could get federal
Insurance. All but 17 have s ln~e met that qualification
and reopened.
Chemical, as Its part of the deal, would pay a $21
million premium to enter the Ohio financial market as
a bank and put up another$,}) mUIIon to helpcapitaUze
the new Institution.
· Under questioning by members of the House
Financial Institutions Committee, Bolen conceded
that no Ohio banks made an offer to acquire Home
State. But he said that during talks between bankers
and the admlnlstratlon of Gov . Richard Celeste, the
bankers were told that any Institution acquiring Home
State would have to make good on 100 percent of the
deposits.

Wells Fargo heist
put at $8 million

declines in March

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - The In aircraft sales. ·
NEW YORK (AP l -A videotape tro said.
government's main economic foreThe trade deficit, which ran a
and an abandoned armored car
Pollee and the FBI agreed the job
castlnggaugedecreased0.2percent record $123.3 bUlJon last year, is
couldyleldvaluablecluestoanearly appeared to have been the work of
In March, reversing a two-month being blamed In targe part of
$8 million robhecy of a Wells Fargo professionals.
gain and hinting of lagging business lagging economic growth bt the
depot In )VhiCh,four masked gunmen
Three of the men wore ski masks
'
United States, partlcularly tn the
activity later In the year.
ambushed and disarmed four and a fourth had a turtleneck collar
.Moreover, the report Issued today manufacturing sector.
guards, authorities say.
puUed over his face, police said. All
. by the Commerce Department
Today' s disappointing figures In
Investigators "hav.e some vecy were white.
revised downward the gains posted
the leading Indicator Index, a report
encouraging leads, " said Kenneth
Officials said the robbers left
by the Index ofleadlnglndlcatorsfor
designed to give Insight Into the
· Walton,deputydirectoroftheFBI's more money in the vault - $12
the past twomontbs-dropptngthe ' likely shape of. the economy six to
New York office. "I think we'U have million- than they took with them.
Februacy lncreasefrom0.7percent
nine months Into the future, could
The money they took Included bills
a break. In this relatively soOn."
· tq 0.5 perceqt and ihe J'!nilary_galn : cause.fl!rtlie~ reassesSment of those
. ' The four thl~es . carryfng hand- .."of all different ctenominatiQns, no1
from l~ percent to 1.3 pet&lt;;ent: · . predictions. ·
- ·
.. ·
.,
guns,s1JrprlsedthearrJ1edguarilsat · ' traceable:" Walton5ai!f. · - · ~ · ,
On the other ruind, tilt\ negative
Tl)e tndex·has not -riSen for three .
Wells Fargo's . five-story garage
John~ton ,.ald1here are.normally
consecutive months since last May. figure could revive hope amang ·
near the Hudson R,lv~r ~bout 1: 20 'no guards on duty Sunday night, the
--Most analym had been expecting Investors that the Federal Reserve
a.m. Monday, pollee said.The only night when lhe depot Is
at .least some gain In the March Boanl might be lncllnelj to 1ooseu .
$7,896;!ro haul'may.have been the unguarded. Following standard
lndell. as a ~lgnal- the economy.was credit,. lower!ni Interest rateS, to
procedull', the guards searched the .
largest I.J.S, eash robbery ever. .
ready to pickup ~team .after ~first .· ~vetheeronbmy.a stiot tn ihearm. ·
The men waited untll. the guards builiJing upon anivinfi\lWoi'j&lt;early .
quat1er In wi,Jich .groWth, as · T.lte titOcl\ market, generaUy
. had oJ)eried a vault where abou·l $20 Monday, then owrieu ' til~ va4it. AI
measured by the gross national :ariJtclpatlngatleastamodestgalnln
mllllon In cash was kept, then that poinl. th~ four thieves jumped
the eeonomlc .IndiCator report,
product, was only 1.3 percent.
them , handcuffed them to them , pollee said .
disarmed
SWORN IN - Mrs. Donna Grlflln, 51?.1'7 Slate Route681, was sworn In
The Reagan admlnlstr(\tlon has suffered Its biggest decline of the
han~truck
and loaded cash onto
The robbers broke inlo an
a
as new polltmas&amp;er o( the Reedsville Poet Office Monday afternoon by
based Its budget assumptions on year on Monday, partly beCause of
the
van
themselves,
said
Chief
adjoining
structure, a mallroom
Lou Jordall, U.S.PostaiSystemExamlner.Mrs. Griffin has served as a
projections of 4 percent growth for concern that the Treasury's quarRobert
Johnston,
chief
of
and
storage
center of Menill Lynch
clefk at the Reedsville Post Oflice lor 23 years and alSo has been serving
terly refinancing plan to be outlined
the year.
Pierce
Fen
ner &amp; Smith. then
operations.
as the olftcer bt charge at the Tuppers Plains Post Offtce since March I,
Although many private econo- later today will call for a blgwaveof
The
van
was
found
empty
several
punched
through
a cinderblock wall
1984. She succeeds Marglll'd Neilselroad, who retired Nov. 30, last year,
mists view that as a bit optimistic, new borrowing.
hours
later
on
the
other
side
of
on
the
second
noor.
as )IOIIImaster at Reedsville. Mrs. Griffin and her husband, Byri, have
Heavy government borrowing,
the majority of them ·have been
three daughler8, Kaf1JJ BuM, Colwnbus; Carolyn Spurlock, ReedsvWe, · Manhattan.
predicting an annual growth rate of coupled with no action to lOOsen
II was being examined by police,
,and Sharon Grlflln, a student at Otterbein CoDege, and· one
well over 3 percent for the year.
credit, would put upward pressure
as
were "some implements" the
granddaughter, Kristen Bush, 7.
On Monday, It was announced onlnterestratesandfurtllerstymle
robbers left at thesceneofthecrlme,
that sales of single-family homes buslnessactlvlty.
Chief or Detectives Richard T.
climbed In March to the highest
Seven of the 10 IndiCators In
Nicastro told a joint pollee-FBI news
WASHINGTON (AP l - Legislalevel In a little more than a year.
today's report were down.
conference.
tion thai would provide money for
In another report today, the
Only the average workweek,
Also under scrutiny was a clearinghouses on missing children
Commerce Department said the buildlngpennltsllndaveragelnltlal
videotape made by automatic ha s been annou nced by Rep.
United States suffered an $11 bUllon clallns ror unemployment tnsu·
television cameras in the depot , he Edward Feighan, D.Ohto.
foreign tradedeflcltlastmonth,only ranee Increased.
said.
Congress has appropriated $'l
Walton said authorities had no million In grants for state and local
The department said the most
a slight Improvement from the$ll4
RIO GRANDE -ltappearsas If a basedonMIUious' findings following reason to belleveltwas an Inside job,
negative Influence on the March
billion deficit run up In Februacy.
organizations that work to pll'vent
strike by the Buckeye HIUs an August 19M hearing.
although Nicastro said It • was or solve missing-children cases.
In March, Imports rose 0.7 Index came, In order, from net. Teachers Association against the
Whitley said that during his possible a former employee was
percent despite sharp- drops In buSiness fonnatlon, contracts and GaUia·Jackson·VInton JoL,t VocaFelghan said Monday that his bill
meeting
with the board In the
shipments of petroleum and cars to orders for plant and equipment,
Involved
.
would
earmark at least one-fourth of
tional School District scheduled for executive session he attempted to
"I would say that you had to have that monl.'y for clearinghouses,
tbe United States. Exports were up. manufacturers' new orders for Wednesday Is Imminent.
"convince them we very much want some knowledge of the premises
3.3percent,reflectlngablglncrease consumer goods and materials,
nollngthat It wouldprovldestart -up
Following a one hOur forty minute and need to bargain. Ifwedon'ttalk,
and1he adjoining building," Nicas- funding for a clearinghouse in Ohio.
vendor performance, change In
executive session Monday evening, we know what's going to happen.
sensitive materials prices, stock
the board recessed without taking We've flied our notlceoflntent,:• he
prices and money supply.
'
action. Ohio Education Association added, referring to the strike, "and
representative Kevin Whitley and they're forcing them and us to do
BHTA president Marlin Baker met what we've said we're ~lng to do."
with the board for 40 minutes during
Baker said he felt the board was
still attempting to make up Its mind
the session.
"They haven't said they won't
about negotiating the point with the
By LARRY EWING
Lawrence Counties. The jobless
A Point Pleasant Junior High talk," Whitley said following tbe association. However, he said the
ra te fell In Athens, Jackson and
OVP
Staff
Writer
School teacher died Monday morn- meeting. "We hope they will talk to effects of a walkout would not he
A
March
Increase
In
the
jobless
VInton
Counties ..
Ing In St. Mary's Hospital, Hunting· their attorneys and get some advice good.
rate
pushed
the
number
of
unemAll
counties
In southeastern Ohio
"A strtke," he said, "would be
ton, W.Va .. tram Injuries received In and we hOpe they wllladvlselhem to
ployed
Meigs
Countlans
to
ll.5
now
have
joblcs~
rates above 10
a one-ear accident lnMasonCounty. talk. Not to talk Is just crazy. It very detrimental to the educational
percent,
reports
the
Ohio
Bureau
of
percent.
A funeral for George Michael appears as If they are just looking to process fqr a period of time. I .hope
OBES figures show 1,326ofMelgs'
we dOn't have to go through this Employment Services.
Clendenin, 35, Rt. l, PotntPleasant, break the union."
figureup
from
March's
higher
esllmated
workforce of l 1,528 withSuperintendent Jerome Brock- process that way,"
has been set for Wednesday In
10.9
percent
represFebruary's
out
work
durin"
March.
way refused to say following the
The disagreement, Whitley
Crow-Husseu Funeral Home.
ents
the
continuation
of
a
trend
added, "would be easier to solve
The Point Pleasimt detachment of meeting whether or not negotiations
Seasonalv MtuSted FICJ"~'
between
the
parties
were
scheduled
today than In the emotions after a toward Increased jobless rates
the West VIrginia State Pollee said
Area jobless
In Thousands
before
the
strike
date.
However,
he
walkout. We would prefer to work It registered throughout the first
Clendenin was northbound on Sand
Sourc•: c~u:•
quarter of this year.
rate in March
Hill Road near Country Club Road said the school would be open and out at the table. There's not a strike
hall
of
1984
the
During
the
last
"certified personnel" .would be yet, and emotions are already high.
NEW HOME s,u..g;; -Sales Sunday· at 3:(11 p.m. when ,his car available
County
rercenlage
be harder to control." . Meigs jol)!ess rate feU steadily but
to lnstru.ct students If the And they
reportedly left the roadway atal!lgh
of alngle-famlly !Jomes climbed
closed at 10.6 percent .
teachers
did
strike.
Emotions
ran
high
following
the
·rate of speed and struck a tree.
In March to the hlgllest le\'et In a
lnJanuacy, Meigs' rates.toodat
Athens ................... , 10.0 ( IU.2)
Clendenin, a physiCal education · The only · point of contention meetlng1 which was attended by a
little monJ than a year, IOVent10.4
percent. February figures
GaUl
a .................. .. . ll.2 ( 11.0 )
between
the
parties,
Brockway
.
ctmtlngent
of
teachers,
when
a
teacher at PPJHS, was taken to St.
ment 80Uroe&amp; said Monday. (AP
refiected an unemployment rate of
added,
Is
language
concerning
Jackson
....... .. ......... 12.3 (12.6)
student
confronted
Brockway
con·
Mary's by the Point Pleasant EMS.
LMerpholo)'
Upercent.
graduation from the · 11th salacy cernlng the slhja tlon.
Lawrence ................ 17.9 (15.4)
Meigs' March (!gure stands 1.8
Meigs ............. ........ 11.5 (10.9 )
step. Teachers are required to
"Do yourself a favor and talk with
percent
above lhtl' state's average
Vtntoo ..................... 15.0 ( 15.3)
obtain' six hours of additional the teachers," the student. said.
education · before they can move ' "You got people out there begging rate of 9.7 percent; lind, 3.7 percent
JOBI FSS RATE - ReP!rtfor !I quaUty education. And you've above the national rate of 7.8
Christina Smith, 19, formerly of locations. Smith was arrealed at the beyond the 11th salary step.
percent
ally,
a mixed bag of unemploygot good teachers here. Nobody can
Bailey Run Rd., Pomeroy, entered a Rickman ·,tore by Deputy Randy
Statewide, March unemployment
ment
rate Increases and deIn
Issuing
a
ruling
attempting
to
teach
·
me
the
classes
I
need
to
voluntaiY plea of guUty to two Forbes of the Meigs County Sheriff's
rose
four-tenths
of
one
percent
creases
were reported
clarify the Issue, facf.flnderJoseph graduate like my teachers.· ~
' charges ·of breaking and entering , Department..
from
9.3
to9.7
percent,
according
to
throughout SOttlhea.&lt;;tem Ohio
MUllousruledthathehadnottriedto , Brockway assured the student
when she appeared Tuesday mom·
Snilth appeared for preliminary
theOBES.
between Fehmary and March,
change
board
policy
on
the
rule
and
that
"the
school
will
he
open
and
you
tng in Meigs County Common Pleas heartngonNov.5. Regionally, Meigs' Increase was
n•ports the Ohio Bureau of
Brockway
maintains
the
slx·hour
willgetaqualltyeducatlon.
Come
to
Court. before Judge Charles Knight
Judge Knight has ordered · a ll"QUlrernent hi!S been board policy class and you will see." The classes, part of a mixed bag of jobless rate
Employment
Services. AD court. Smith adinltted that on Oct. 29, pre-sentence lnve!tlgatlon In the
Increases and decreases reported
ties
In
southeastern
Ohio now
since
1!111.
Whitley
disagreed,
Brockway
assured
onlookers
would
she' .lllegaUy entered the R!&gt;bert matter with final sentencing sche-throughout southeastern Ohio.
have
JobleM
rates
above 10
saytn&amp;
the
board
Inserted
the
phrase
he
taught
by
personnel
cer:tlfled
by
W'llf -.·dr., resklenceon0hlo1~. duledforJunell. BondonSmlthhaa·
In addition to Meigs, unemptoy·
pen.oent.
"In
IICt'Ordance
with
board
policy"
the
Ohio
Education
Association
In
·aiicJt i1ZJnlllckman Store on Ohio been continued until that tllne.
ment Increased In GaUia and
Into. a contract between the parties the particular fields or Instruction.
124 and took Items from both
'.,.,.
.
I

Missing children
funds appropriated

.Strike imminent

-at voc-ed school

Meigs' March jobless
rate at 1,1.5 percent

Teacher dies
in car wreck

wiD

Guilty plea entered

'·

'

I

"

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