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                  <text>-'.!51

. Holne
Improvements

,.etty Tree Trimming. atunip

81

Home
Improvements

Sterk• Tree end Lawn Str·

... .,.ovol. Coli 304-675 - vice. stump removal.
331 .
57t-2ot0.
~otery or cable tool drilling .
"Molt· well• completed t8me
,a.y. Pump Hlee end aervl-

- · 304-896-3802.

82

3QC,-

Plumbing
&amp; Heet!ng

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
· Cor. Fourth end Pine
.
Gellipoli1, Ohio

Phone 614-448-3888
814-448-4477

84

Business Services

I;IIICtrlcal
&amp; R.trlgeratlon

Goocl-1 Excovotlng; bo-

mente. footer1, drlv.weya.
aeptlc . tonko. llndiiCallilll.

---

Coli onytimo 8U-448·
4537, Jo"'" L. DIY!- Jr.

lEWlNG Machine .........
..,..., Aulhorllldllnglr
Bolli • Sorvlol Shor'*'

·8,:=1110fl. f8brlc Shop.

Pomeroy. 814·"2·228-4.

Dozer Wortc lond cloorlng,

lond-ping, otc. F- ootl·
motoo. Coli 81 4-448·8038
"'814-992· 711lonyl-.
Do1er at1d dumptruclc. MrVi-ce•. Q.A. Boeton Exc•vet·

lng. 114·187·8128 or 114·
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT· 378-8288.
lNG. Rt. 1. Box 355. Gampolio. Coli 814-387-0578.

815

General Hauling

$SAVE$
PUSTIC PIPE ·

-CASH SAW. C..

.............. w ..

• 0.0 .. $21-9. """""

Wcls ... I fwuril.....
N-+c M, ...._, 59S·
7191. . . . . . .

•

I

... ,

PRODUCTS

he!-·

4" Sewer .............$3.70

.... ....

CONTINUOUS NO-LEAK GUTTERING
• ROOFING • RESTORATION , •
*SIDING*
OVERHEAD GARAGE DOORS

4" Ell ..........t••·· ...-$1.00

'
J - 8oyo- .....leo.
Aloo poolo - · Coli et 42111-1141 · or 814·441·
11711 or 614-448·7911 .

1" 160# Waltr---19•
I'' Gas Pipt............. 11•

PH: 304;295-7145
·' Mi-al Wtlls,

COIItllTE I

n. WNGAID

Includes DuaM ·Rec:tiYef.
11ousta1 TriCk•. Acti¥11or•.
Clble lnstlllltion....'2050
· tAll 446·1561
. 8&amp;

WE HAVE THE RIGHT lOCATION .• AT THE RIGHT PRICE!
IIADISONAVENUE- GALUPOUS- NICE FRAME WITH VINYL .
SIDING, 4 YR. oto GAS FURNACE. ONE BEOOOOM. $15,000.
BIDWEU - NICE 2 BEDROOM HAS ALUM. SIDING, 2
BEDROOMS, 4 LOTS. OUTBlDG. $16,00l.

Kon'o Wotor Scmtlco. Wolla,
clotornt, poola filled. Phone
114-387-0823 or 814-387:
7741 night or clay.
-

NEAR TYCOON WE - 14X70 MOBILE HOME. 2 STORAGE
· BlDG. LARGE LOT. $19,900.
.

~DAYI CALL;;]

592·4066

RO 1 • ALBANY, OHIO

Flat bed dump truck for hire,
CQ&gt;al, And,·. gravel, hay,

814-992-6881 .

lumber. etc . 304-875·
3190.

ADDISOII - $25.000. BEAUTIFUL RIVER VIEW. 3 BEDROOM
HME HAS CARPORT. VINYL SIDING.
.

87

PAXrON RD. - 3FOR THE PRICE~ ONE. 31«lMES, UVE IN ONE
AND RENT· THE OTHERS. ON I~ ACRES $11,000.

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Soc. Avo .• Oolllpolia.
814·446· 7833 or 614-448·
1133.

VINTON COURT - $32,000. 3 BEDROOMS, FUUY CARP£TE0.
FE~ lAWN. CARI'ORT.
VINTON COUIII. $29,00l. IMMACUIJAJE 2 BEDROOM, FUUY
CARFPETED, ANDERSON WOOD WINDOWS, VINYL SIDING, BUY
ON lAND CONTRACT WITH $5,00l DOWN PAYMENT. BAlANCE AT
12% FIXED RATE. ·
.

A &amp; M Furnltu.,. Menufac-

turlnq. St. ·Rt.
City. Oh. Coli
1470, coli Evo.
3438 . Old
Uphootored.

lOWER RIVER ROAD - $33,00l. BRICK RAN()i, BlACKTOP
DRIVE. FULLY CARPETED. NICE!
ROONEY - $34,000. FRAME RANCH, HAS 3 BEDROOMS,
GARAGE. POOL WITH PRIVACY FENCE, \\OODBURNER.
.
.
66 ACRES - ROUTE 325. $35,00). &lt;lDER HOME NEEDS SOME
REPAIR. 2 BARNS. NICE lAND!

7, Crown
614-258·
614-448·
&amp; now

I

SUNDAY PUZZLER

.

VINTON -VERY NICE FRAME RANCH, 2BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS.
EQUIPf'ED KITCHEN. CENTRAL AIR OOND. GARAGE. $38,500.

, ACROSS
•

ROUTE 141 - $42,500. FIFTEEN ACRES WITH 12X70 MOBILE
I()ME. 2 ADDITioNs. 2 PORCHES.

.

ROUTE 160 - $43,00. NICE 31!£DRiJoM FRAME f«)ME.l.JilGE
I:AWN. ·BASEMENT.
BWGE.
·
·
.
'
'
. . --.
.-~

. TltiRD AVENUE .:.: IN CITY: 46,000, AVE 8£MOOM, 2 BATH;
STONE HOME. LEVEl lAWN, FuU BASEMOO.
BE THE FIRST TO MOVE iflto this newly constructed 3 bedrm.
home in Plants SO. Lots ol privacy on wooded· lot full
basement, 2 baths. $59.000

NEIGHBORHOOD RD. $46,000. NEARLY NEW, 3 BED~ 2
BATHS. FUU BASEMENT. ATTACHED GNlAGE. DECK.

PRICE REDUCED ON INVESTMENT PROPERTY located 1136
-Second Avenue. 2 renta~ was $17.000.00 now $)3,000.00.

WHITE OAK RD. - $48,000. Slx1Y ACRES, 4 BEDROOM FARM .
HOME. POND. ·

WE HAVE THREE PRIME PROPERTIES with acreage along

NEAR ClAY SCHOOL - $49,900. LOW INTEREST MORTGN;E
ASSUMPTION. SPLIT FOYER HA:l 3 B£DROOMS. GARAGE, ABOVE
GROUND POO\., DECK.
ROUTE 554- $50,1XX&gt;. 57 ACRES. ROAD FRONTfoG£. BLACKTOP .
RD PtUBliC WATER AVAfLABI.E.
$55.000 NEIGHBORHOOD RD. - mRDX. 160 SQ. FT. UVING
AREA, 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BAT,HS. FUU BASEKNT, BEAUTIFUL
CARPET. DOUBLE DECK
OYER 3 ACRES - 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATHS, HOME HAS HUGE
DECK, 3 CAR GARAGE. CITY SCI«))l SYSTEM. $59,000.
MIU CREEK RD. - $62,500.'l II ACRES. VERY NICE BRICK
RANCH HAS EAT-IN KITCHEN. ATTACHED GARAGE, BREEZEWAY.
JUST OUTSID£ CITY. $65,00l- 49 ACRES, 3 BEDROOM HOME.
LOTS OF FLOWERS AND TREES
.

KRISTI DRIVE - $65,000. A HOUSE YOU WILL BE PROUD TO
CALL HOME. BRICK AND . CEDAR. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS.
GARAGE, CENTRAL AIR.
.
TARA SUIDMSIOII - ,llJAUTIFUL BRICI&lt; AND FRAME SPUT
FOYER. 3 BEDROOMS, FAMILY ROOM. COVERED SCREENED
DECK, FORMAL DINING, GARAGE.

ROUT£ 35 - COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIM. $68.500. ONE
ACRE PlUS 3.BIDROOMS, U'IING AREA, PlUS LOWER LEVEL
SUITABLE FOR ANY TYPE COMMERCIAL BUSINESS.
I
IN CITY - $78,000. VERY NICE OLDER HOME HAS 3
BEDROOMS, FORMAL DINING. DEN, PlUS 3 BEDROOM
APARTMENT.

1 'n\rong •
6 Decoraies
11 Spire
18 Assistants
19 Forgive

66 PilCh
6_
7 AbeiJ&gt;Ianl
69 Surfeits . . ,.
71 Abstract being ;·
• 73 Prodigies

27 Spanish: abbr.
29 Command
30 Bound
31 .Warmth
32 Evening: poetic
33 Simian
34 IS Ill
35 Pairs
36 Tracts ot waste

currency
·134 Hint
,36 Kind of cheese
. 137 F~r:r:'ale horse
138 Provide. prepare
and serve food
139 Past tense suffix

.

74 Care for

76 Set of games
79 Crown
81 Wetg~l of India

20, Untidier
21 Tipped
23 Harvest
~4 Greek letter
26 Antlered animal

.,

.

~

az·observed

84

140 Flock
_.141 Whtle House

•

BUild
85 Dress protectors
87 Nerve network
90 Harangue

92 Declare
93 Tille of respect
95.Funeral song

97 Mixture
98 Near
99 Me's partner
101 Erases: pririting

42 JunctUre

103 Bow
104 insect
105 Embrace
108 legal mailers
110 Sharp replies

43 Guido's high riote

112 Moccasins

45 Transactions

113 Capuchin monkey

land
38 Wheel of a caster
40 Female ruff
41 Uncle's wife

114 River In Italy·
46 Saini: abbr.
47 S-shaped molding 115 Algerian seaport
117 Ancient Perr;ians
48 Applaud
.
118
Bundle
49 Barter
119 Fruit cake
51 Wall border
52 La1in conjunction
120 Bone
53 Wire measure

121 Morning prayer

54 Couple

123 Ethiopian 1111_~
124 Healthy
125 Collection ol Ients
126 Sever
127 Style of printing
129 Speeches: slang
13 t Lasso
132 Small amounl

55 Robot.bomb
57 Deep yearning·
58 Wireless set
60 Civil injul)'
61 River Island
62 Bevate

.64 Rupees: abbr.
65 Italy: $bbr.

133 Unit of Japanese

2 1·More vulgar
22 Short aria
23 Oi~tLfrbance
25 Chapeau:'
..
27 One who mPveS
swiftly·
28 lndividu.als

30 Melody
., 31. Pil e

86 Capilal ol Oregon
88 Shades
89 God otlo•e
· 90 Piefix:.tdown ~
9 1 Maiden loved ·

by Zeus
94 Measuring

devtc~

96 Symbol lor
g@doli~lum

'
98 landed·
• 142 .Web-looted bird.·
45 Fight belween 1wo 99 .Pledge
.
143 Swiftly moving·
· .· 36 Listen to '
100 ,Charg'eq wllh gas
37 Long . deep cut
current
102 Soli drinks
144 Dinner course
39 Young boy
104 Strong wind .
146 Rorran oflicial
41 Exchange prer'niurh
105 Cavil
148 Move sidew-ise
42 Narrow openmg
106 Ejected in a ;et
149 Signifies
· 44 Good-bye in
'
107 Billboards
Madrid
. 150 Cupolas
109 Mephistopheles
151 Secret agents
47 Leave ou1
111 Points of view
48 Moved rapidly
112 Cronies : colloq.
49 Name
DOWN
113 Identical
nickname

1 Ta~r
2 Ceremonies
3 Rivef in Germany
4 Marry
\

5 Symbol lor

3~

Pacify

50 Biblical name
54 Meditate
55 Baseball glove

59 Regard
59 Deprive ,of

dysprosium

weapons
60 Measure of ,

6 Woody plants-

weight pl.

7 Peruse
8 Demon

9 Roman 1.001
10 Brook
1t Destroys by
.. sut1ocation

12 Symbol tor
tellurium
13 Actual being

14 Chemical
compound
15 Musical instru-

ments
16 Limb
17 Teutonic delly

61 For instance
63 Territory: abbr .
66 As far as

124 Cured

125 BoUle stopper
126 Municipalities
128 lmpreca:t\on

130 Mounlaln on Crete
131 Speed COf"\tests

68 Sellfe comfortably

137 Stubborn animal

71 .Greek leUer
72'Pinch

138 Mohammedan

abbr,
78 Pigpen
80 Highway
83 Linger

Two Wellston
youths drown

118 Aromatic 01ntment ·

119 Bind
122 Keenes!

70 Afternoon nap

73 ROam
75 City in TeMas
77 Federal agency:

f

.116 Nothing

132 Shade lree
135 Paradise

67 Exists

prayer leader
140 Chicken

142 Obscure
143 Tear
144 Roman gods
145 Road : abbr.
147 Servelh~purpose
148 Steamship: abbr.

79,900.

ns. WALNUT 1WP, 4 BEDROOM

121 ACRES - $19,000: RT.
HOME NEEDS SOME REPAIRS.

GEORGES C~EEK 110: - LDYELY INDIA.'~ A STONE HOh£, HAS
STONE FIREPLACE, FORMAL ' DINING ROOM. FAMILY ROOM.
EQUIPPED KITCHEN, 2 BATHS, PlUS GUEST HOUSE.
RT. 160.

$85,000.

L-SHAPED BAICI&lt; RANCH t«lM£.

3 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS,

CHESHIRE - $85,000. HISTORIC BRICK t«lME PlUS DUPLEX.
THIS ONE IS A t.ONEY MARI&lt;ET.
YOUR FAMILY DEsEIMS TH£ I(SI] AHD TitS HOME
OLWJAES. LlJNj WOOO SIDING, GlliM1C DECK SO ~ fAN

ENJOY THE FANrASTIC VIEW. 4 BBlROOMS, 22X20 LMNG

ROOM. FIREPlACE, fUU BASEMENT. 2 CAR GNlAGE. 6\1
IIEAUMJL ACRES, IN(£ ORI\f. RIO GRANDE. «XL FOI! AN

APPOINTMEifl.

GIDCOY - SOVIC£ SJATIOI- Cati'IOUT - PlUS NICE 3
BEDROOM APARTMENT. PRICE NEGOTIHILE!

CAllY OUT - SUf'£11 Rr. 35 LOCATION. BUSY
BUSY, BUSY. If YOU ARE SERWS BOUT BUYNl A GREAt

118 III£EL

INVtSTMENT PROPERlY, GIVE U9 A.CM.U

r

AUDREY F. CANADAY. REALTOR
MARY FLOYD, REALTOR, 441-3383
EUNICE NIEHM. IIIALTOII. 441-1117
215 L0¢!18T STRE!T. GALUJOOUI. OHIO

..
II

·I

MEMORIAL Di\Y OBSERVANCE- Members of Middleport's Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, are shown at
the Bradfonl Chun!h Cemetery, one of a nwnber of locations to
which the gnli!Jl traveled on Monday to conduct Memorial Day
services, LUnch was served at the post home at noon. Meanwlille,
at bottom left, Frank Vaughan, Pomeroy, elghthdlstrictchaplaln
oftbeOhloDepartmentoftbei\mericanLeglon,spokeontheneed
In nnembering the~ and the need forthetradiCionto hepawcl
oo to yoong people when he spoke at Memorial Day services for
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, at Beech Grove
Cemetery Mooday. Seated Is Mrs. Rae.Reynokls, representing
Return Jonathan Chapter .of the Daughters of_the Ameri!JalJ
ReVOlution, wlto'spoke on glvlng!hapksln'the deceased wllo made
Is poeiible fot the Uves of others to l.'DIItlitue. 'l1le services were
held In light rain Mth PG!lt Corrunander Mickey WIDiams
presiding and prayers by Post ChaplalnJamesGIImore. Mrs. Iva
Powell, legion a~.presider~l. was lntrodQCed.
·.•
.
.
.
. . '
. .
'
.' .••;
•

j.

•.

6 ACRE ESTATE - KEMPER HOUOW RO.• 3 BEDROOM. 3 BATH
HOME HAS 2-COMPLETE KIT()lENS, DECK, NICE RURAL AREA

18 ACRES -

enttne

By ROBIN GREENE
United Press International
From sea to sea, th&lt;" natiOI\ honored its war dead with traditional
Memorial Day ceremonies on both coasts and millions flocked tocemetet1es
across the country to lay flowers for those who died fighting for the United
States. 1
In New York City. a ceremonial wreath was tossed Into the Hudson River
from the Oss Intrepid. which has ~n converted Into a museum, and In
Homfuiu, a wreath was laid at Punchbowl - the National Memot1al
Cemetery of the Pacific.
,
Altnough Memorial Day was Initiated In 1868ilsDecorationDaytohonor
victims of the Civil War. those who died defending the nation- from the
Revolutionary War 10 the ·l'i!arines killed In Lebanon- were remembered
Monday.
Those who died fighting at sea were honored ln Depoe Bay, Ore., the
world's smallest harbor, when 50 fishing boats took part In the 40th ;mnual
"FIE;"el of Flowers" ceremony.
The flower-laden boats sailed lnlo the Pacific Ocean to spread their floral
wreaths In the waves while about 1,000 people watched.
In Washington, thousands crowded the VIetnam WarMemot1al, a somber
V-shaped monument bearing Ihe names of 58,022 Amet1can vi~tlms of the
Vietnam War. Many veterans walked by the black stonewalls weat1ngwar
uniforms.
Across the Polomac River , President Reagan placed a red and white
wreath of carnations In front oflhe marble Tombofthe Unknown Soldier at
Arlington National Cemetery.
Sounds came from !he Army band, marching troops, a helicopter
hovering overhead and a 21-gun salute. Reagan stood stiffly as an Army
bugler played taps. then wiped a tear from each eye.
·
Tourlsls walked the grounds at Gettysburg. Pa., theslteofthe bloody lB63
battle that was the tw-nlng polnl of the ClvU War. Grave markers at the
national cemetery were decorated with flowers and Amet1can flags .
A 21-gun salute'was heard In Boston Harbor, whereonecannonflredashot
every minute from " Old Irorjsldes' ' -the U.S.S. Constitution. the Navy's ·.
. oldes.t commissloilell·ship on ~ctlv~_duty. ·
• .
...
An estimated 500.(XX) W(lple !:&gt;asked In the warmth ~t LQS Angele~ and.
Orange County beaches.
.
.
At Coney Island, N.Y .. beachgoers enjoyed Sklegree temperatures:
. Colley Island spokesman Milton Berger sald 2mUllan people jarrimed the
2.5ml!e long boardwalk and beaches for the secol1d day In a row whUe the.
Navy's Blue Angels ·preelslori jet .team entertained.
' .
. .. ~n . Alan Cranslon, D-Calif. wa~ the · main speaker at ll)e :National
Cemetery lit West Los Angeles, where 75;10) veterans·are oot1ed.
Some 15,(XX) people visited the Chattanooga National Mllltary C~metery,
where nearly 28,(XX) veterans and their spouses are buried. Chattanooga Boy
Scouts placed a small American flag beside all the grave markers.
In Rochester, N.Y .. veterans and peace act.lvlsts marched together In the
city's Memorial Day parade. Veterans canceled theparadelastyearrather
than follow court decisions allowing peacP groups to participate.

Will haul anything. Aloo

SECOND A~NUE - IN CITY, $25,000. TV«J BEDROOM FRAME.
lARGE LOT WITH TREES

at y

Nation honors .·
fallen soldiers

ESTI~TES

wantl to buy atumlnum.

copper end br111 1crapa.

WtlH VINYL

FREE

gro-r-~::::;;~~~;;,;;:;;;~;.;~~;:;;~~~;;~~~====~

CHESHIRE $24,500 - 3 BEDROOM FRAME WITH CARPORT.
LEVU LOT. GAS FURNACE .

•

25 Cents

Houl
uftd.
Yll,dlrt. bulk or beg fortllzti&lt;
ond lime. Excoloior : Solt
Workolnc. 838 E. Moln St.•
Pomeroy. 614-.992'3891.

SECOND AVE. - GALUPOUS - 3 BEDROOM, WALK TO
OOWNTOWN, LG. LOT. LAND CONTRACT. $18,200.

il09 ADRIAN ..:. $39,0iio. -3 8£0000M FRAME
SIDING: FENCED BACK YARD. .
··

End of Rt. 7 b1 lei&amp;s Hiefl
· Schoof. Tum ftft, enter Tow~­
ship Rd.79 ond posl drivtWII
on rilht. . ·

•

e

WO~K

Open T~~ts., Wtd.; Fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun 10 til S
Monday 10 '.til a
Closed Thursday
Owner, 'Sarah Fisher

Gen_e rel Hauling

~kme.

GUARANTEED

W. Va.

·Country .Loft
Gift Shop

Al_,. MESH 01511

_ 446-3636~

. .

"Fru Otllrttg"

MAt SPECIAL

Lower River Rd. If you are looking for building lots .- acreage
from 4to 3D acres. call usand we shall be happy to show )hem
to you. Prices range from $60,000.00 to $110,QOO.IJO.

26,1986

Ohio-Point Pleaeant, W. Va.

Times-Sentinel

By United Press lntematlonal
AI least 10 people died In Ohio
during' the Memorial Day holiday
weekend In accidents unrelated Ia
traffic.
In Columbus, a man and woman
and thelr4-year-old twin sons died In
a fire early Sunday In t_heir duplex.
Kllled were Tim r.ooman, 26; his
wife, Vanessa, 22; 'and their sons,
Joshua and Jeremle.
Chief Ral1dall Higgins or the city
Fire Division's 4th Battalion, said
the blaze apparently was caused by
·a lighted cigarette thai !ell Info a
couch.
The halfoflheduplex In which the
family lived was engulfed In flames
when ·nreflghters arrived, said
Hlgglns. Damage was set at $40.00!.
The other half or thPduplexdid not ·
burn and sustained only minor
water and smokPdamage.
In VInton County. 1wo Jackson
County boys drownE'd Monday 1\'hlle
swimming at Lake Ruppert near
McArthur. The vlcttms were ldenflfied . as Jonathan Wrlghl, 1.1. and
Deed Robbs. 8. both or Wellston.
A spokesman for lhP VInton
County Sheriff' s Department said
the younger boy apparently suffered cramps whiiP swimming and
the 13-year-old dove lntothewaterln
an attempt to re&amp;;ue him. Both
drowned about 5: 30 p.m. Their
bodles' wererecovered by a sheriff's
department diver. shortly before 7
p.m.
David Esque, 16, of Lockland.
near Cincinnati, drowned Sul1day
during a flshln' 111p to the
Whitewater River In Whitewater
Twp. EsqUI'and two other teenagers
were playing on supports W~~:~er the
Whltewaler Bride when he slipped,
fell Into the swift CUITI'Ilts and was
dragged undeJWater. Effqrts a1
reviving I he boy failed.
Another OtJtoan. Pamela Baker, ·
22, c&gt;! Centerville, drowned late Saturday afternoon at Brookville

.,.

Lake

Reservoir In Indiana when a swea1shlrt she was wearing became
caught In a boat propeller. She was
pronounced dead at the scene.
Herbert Heeldn, 42, of Anderson
Twp. near qnctnnatl died Saturday
when his homemade aluminum·
frame aircraft,IQlown as a gyrocopter, developed mechanical problems and fell :rn feet. The accident
occurred In Williamsburg, Clermont County.

Celeste ill
COWMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
Rlchatd F. Celeste was treated late
MostdlQ&gt; ,In the emergency room ol
G~ Memorial H08pltalln New
Haven, CoM., for a kidney stone,
and will he Down home, his
secretary said.
Press Secretary Brian Usher said
Celeste. whollad beenlnN!lWHaven
for the Yale University graduation
ol his eldest son Eric, became II
shortly after starting the llip home
Mond11y.

press

Gallia child 'critical' following accident
ByUPiandOVPstaffers
bury. 5, also of Second Avenue, Is
also In stable condition. hospital
Twenty-three people were kUled
In accidents on Qhlo roadways
offlclal.s added. He is being t ....ated
durlng the 78-hour Memorial Day
for a fractufe9 pelvis and cuts..
holiday weekend, thestateHlghway
Two other passengers, eightPatrol reported today.
.
month-old Nicole E. Bateso!Second
The victims died In 20 accidents.
Avenue, and Bt1an Bates. 17, of
Among the victims were slx · Thunnan, were '"'a ted and remotorcyclists, one pe&lt;lestrtan and a
leased. Nicole Bates was treated for
bicyclist.
abrasions and Brian Bates lor
The patrol's fatality count showed !fluscle strain, hospllal officials
lour deaths Monday, three Sunday,
said.
14 Saturday and two Friday night
TheGallla-Melgs post of the State
The count began at 6 p.m. Friday Highway Patrol said Bates was
and ended at midnight Monday.
eastboul1d on 35 and had slowed to
No fatalities were recorded In the make a right turn onto Gallla Co. 8,
GaUia-Melgs area, however, a when a Heiner's Bread truck, driven
four-year-old Gallipolis glrlls llsted l)y Larry E. Clonch, 38, of Rr. 218,
In critical condition at St. Mary's Gallipolis, reportedly struck Bates'
Hospital In · H\Ultlngton, W.Va..
Ford Plntofrombehlnd. Theforceof
following, a two-vehicle accident
the Impact knocked Bates' car off
Monday aflernoon on U.S. 35, just
the right side of the highway al1d
east of the Jackson County Une. ·
through a fence, troopers said.
AnurslngsupervisoratSt..Mary's
Bates' car sustained heavy dam- '
said Cassandra Canterbury of • age In the 3:13p.m. accident, while
Secol1d Avenue is undergoing treat- Clonch's vehicle was modera tely
ment In lhe Intensive Care Unit for damaged.
head ln)ut1es.
Bates was cited by the patrol for
Five other people in the car ln no child restraints and Clonch was
which she was riding, Including the cited for !allure to stop In an assured
driver, 21-year-old Marvin E. Bales clear distance.
Jr., also of Second Avenue, were
According 10 Lt. Dan Henderson
treated at Holzer Medical Center, of the Gallla -Meigs Post !\late
Highway Patrol, 14 accidents were
according to hospital officials.
Bates Is listed In stable condition' investigated overtheMemoriaiDay
aftersufferingabacklhjury,andhls Weekend In which 12 people were
wife, Kimberly Bates. 25, Is also . Injured. Troopers made 253 ell listed In stable oondltlon while allons, 23 for DWJ ; Issued 171
undergoing treatment for multiple warnings, and assisted 103
cuts and abrasions. Andrew Canter- mo1orlsts.

No citations . we,... issued in a
Another weekend accident octwo-vehicle accident Sunday on ·curred Monday in Meigs Counly 011
Ohio 7 In Salisbury To~ship, Su.lton Twp. Road 106, appt:oxlaccordlngtotheGallia-Mt&gt;igspost of mately one mile of Meigs Coonty
the state highway pairol.
Road 28. Troopers sa id a vehlcle
Troopers .said vehicll' driven by driven by Rebecca E. Van Meter,17,
Nella A. Seyler, 45, Pomeroy, Racine. was traveling west when
allegedly struck a vehicle driven by she apparently lost oontrol ofhet·car
Charles Lewts. 61, Pomeroy.
in a curve. Thevehicle ran offlhc left
Thecollisionoccurred at4: IOp.m. stde or the highway and struck an
when Seyler repdnedly nied 10 pass embankmenl. There was heavy
Lewls as Lewls started to make a damage to thecarand acltalionwas
left tw-n iii to a private drive. the issued for f;~flure 10 control her
patrol said. Moderate damage was vehicle following the 5:30 p.m.
reported to both whicles.
accident.

a

Meigs honor students chosen
Alison Tromm has been named
yaledlctot1an and Llsa Ashley,
salutatorian, of the 1-J().member1985
Meigs High School graduatlng
class, Principal James Miller
anoounces.
Miss T!'pnun Is the daughter of
Mr. apd Mrs. Albert Tromm,
Rutlanjt, and Miss Ashley Is the
daughter of Mr. and M!1. David
Ashley, Belpre, and Mr. ~nd Mn~.
Mike s.t!lth of MiddlepOrt.
.
Named hom.rarlans of the class
this year are Tim LeMaster, son of
Bonnie LeMaster ot Pjlmeroy, and :
Frances Hoffman, daughter r:l Mr.

~·
f

and Mrs. Perry Hoffman of
Middleport.
Tromm and Ashley will deliver
addresses to their classmates al1d
guests when the 17th annual
baccalaurea1e and commencement
are held at 4:~ p.m. on Sunday,
June 2, In the high school
auditorium.
The Rev. Charles CoYle .: of
Middleport will denver the baccaulaw-eate $E'mtOn with B.J. GordOn,
treii!IW'Cr of the senior class, giving
the welcome. ·Jodi Miller, secretary
of 1he class, will do the lntfocluctiolls.
'The eeremonles wW move !rilm
baccalaureate tight lnto c&lt;*n-

mencement activities wllh 1he
Meigs High Band providing music
for both events.
The Collegium Muslcum will sing
"Follow Rain and Rivers". Princl·
pal Miller will presen1 the class and
District Supt. Dan E. MorTis will
l!Ccept the class with Richard
Vaughan, president ol the Meigs
Local Board of Education, presentIng diplomas.
Beth Hobstetter. vice president of
the senior class, will do the roll call
(or the presentation of diplomas and
Debra Wef111, class president,' wUI
lead the symbol of graduation.
·;

Frances Honinan

'Ibn LeMMier

�·,c ommenta

Page-2.:-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, May 28, 1985
·t

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
· DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.

ROBER'J' L. WINGE'l'f
Publisher
.

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE RQTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LETI'ERS OF OPINlON are welcome. They should bf Jess tha n 300 wOrd,s
long. All letters are subject to ~lU ng and must ~signed with name. address and
telephone number . NO unsigned letters. will be published . Letters stl,Ould be In
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Democrats,
democracy &amp;

efficiency

Ja,;,es ]. ·Kilpatrick

Mark on the -bench
WASIDNGTON- Ronald Rea- Jimmy Carter and Lyndon Johngan, conservative, · bas put his son. He has attempted deliberately
conservative stamp on evei-ythlng to shape the law by nominating
within his reach - a military Judges who share his polltlqll and
buildup, a reduction In federal judicial philosophy. Carter and
regulations, a sweeping revision of Johnson named liberal Democrats
the criminal i'ode. ~e's going for to the federal bench. Reagan Is
wholesale reform of feder11-1 taxa- naming conservative Republicans
tlon. But one of these changes · Instead.
approaches In Importance the -- This ts the' way our constitutional
mark he will -leave on· the federal system historically has worked.
bench.
George Washl~gton set the pattern
Writing In the current issue of by packing the first Supreme Court
Judicature magazine, Sheldon with loyal supporters of the new
Goldman takes an evenhanded and Constitution. With few exceptions
measured look at "Reaganlzlng the presidents from that day to thi~ .
judiciary." Goldman Is a professor have nominated justiceS and lower
of political science at the University court judges pf their own political
of Massachusetts in Amherst. He persuasion. Franklin Roosevelt had
has made a specialty of judicial eight Supreme Court slots to till; he
a ppointments. In the federal put good Democrats In every one of
system .
_
..
·them, and one of his choices,
His general flndh1g Is that William 0. Douglas, served on the
Reagan, as a Republican, has high court for :1) years after
followed the example of sucl1 Roosevelt had died.
Democratic predecesso rs as
Goldman's data thus provide few·

TRUS1' ~E,

surprises, but the figures are of
Interest nonetheless. Johnson .
named 122 U.S. District judges; 115 ·
were Democrats. Nixon made 179
district appointments; 166 were
Republicans. Carter put :!JZjudges
on the lowest federal bench; -187
were Democrats. In his first term,
.Reagan was able to nominate 129
judges: all but four wer~ Republl- ·
cans. Goldman's study found that
Reagan and Carter had equal
records of naming judges with a
background of "past party act!vlsm·." In both cases, 61 percent of
their District Court nominees had
sought or held some party office.
In many other ways, the Carter
and ~agan judges have been qulte
different. Carter named 29 women
at tl1e District Court level; Reagan
has named only 12. Carter chose 28 ·
blacks; Reagan has nominated but
one. (Attorney General Ed Meese
has observed th;lt only a tiny
majority of black lawyers, black

·

COMPANEROS.
lHESE DON;T NEEO
WIRES.

Some who have been watching the leaders of' the Democratic Party
lately wonder if they have decided the way to start winnlngeiectlonsagaln
is \O substitute efficiency for democracy.
Chairman Paul Kirk, of course, will insist that there has been no change
ln the commitment the party made to reform after 1968, when charges of
· "9Dss rule" soured many rank-and-file Democrats and contrlbut!!d to the
· d~feat of Hubert Humphrey.
·
: :The party installed a long list of reforms after that debacle. Some of them
....; such as giving rank and file, so-called "casual" Democrats more to say
ln party policy-making- made it harder for the leaders to do their jobs in
. wbat they considered to fie the most efficient manner.
. • : Robert Strauss was the hrst chairman to work under the reforms and he
. J'l')ade no bones of his feeling that they complicated his problems of trying to
~rganize and finance the party after the 1972 McGovern dlsasier. Nearly
every chairman since has publicly chafed under the requirements of the
ri'form rules.
Charles Marlatt, Kirk's predec~ssor, helped roll back the reforms after
'.
the l98l election by turning over the party's rules revision commission to
: Gov. James Hunt of North Carolina wttl1 an .unspoken mandate to get the
· professionals back Into the game.
Hunt's contribution was to re~tore power, if not control, in the
presidential nominating process, to party offl~rs and elected officials.
Walter Mondalewas their candidate a nd many believe he could not· have
· won the nomination wlthol!t the Hunt Commission rules c)langes. . .
_ WASIDNGTON - _. Spring fever ·· for tralntngln anocean-front~rt'
- . Enter Kirk, a 111an identJfled with the Edward Kennedy political circle
has hit Washington. As the 11eatand area wl1en training-facilities -ln the
: and assumed by some to be both a Ubernl and a reformer on political as - humidltyglveaforetasteoianother DOE building or at other locations
: well as pu bile policy issues.
here In town are excellent?."
muggy Washington summer, fed·
Kirk turned out to be no such thing. One of his first pronouncements was
era! officials are dreaming of a
"21 Could It cause the secretary
'-a request that the labor· m ovement sl&lt;!nd clear of the presidential · getaway to the beach or the or yourself problems ln explaining·
.• nomiil&lt;i'llnl&lt; p ti&gt;c!ess. 'f-li~t 'ruffled AFL'CIO chief .Lane Kirkland, but ii · IJ10untalns. And inevitably, some why ttils IS happening? _.• : Couid we .
.- ; _slgnaled.-t.o·othrrs that Kirk was out to erase the siamp of speeialtnterest ' are trying to !lgtlre oilt a way to - be cFitlclzed for wasteful -travel?,. _
·
,
· ·groups on the Democratic Party:
have ttie. taxpayers pick uptlie tab. ·· · Fitzpatrick replied: ''Iagree that
• Next, Kirk called for ca ncellation of the midterm "mint-convention" the
At the · Energy Department,
training programs sho4ld be. lo; Democrats have he ld between pres identia l elections sine(' 1!Y74, !illylng It
offlclals chose the beach - Ocean cated so as to minimize travel and
: was a waste of time and money that ought to go Into winning elections. That
City, Md., to be exact, a popular lodging expenses and avoid the
· )511ue has not been settled yet , but If the midterm convention Is junked, It Is
resort for Washington 'refugees.
appearance of 'two weeks at the
_a ~other setback for those who believe party policy should come from the
When the agency's administrative beacl1.' r thin~ the Issue deserves
director;· William S. Heffelfinger, attention at higher level. In the
grass roots.
·: : :Finally, Kirk concocted. a complicatect manuever In the natlcinal
announced that management train- meantime, the Ocean City site is the
: :Qxecutive committee that blocked a route special interest groups were
lng courses would take place ihere closest available for our employees
: ijstng to move Into the party power structure.
this month, another official worried
and I do not want to deprive them of
::: By repealing the ·process for recognizing olflclal Democratic National about the public-relations fallout.
the training. At least they should get
- ;f:(llllmlttee caucuses, Kirk shut off groups representing homosexuals,
·
In a memo fb acting Assistant off-season rates."
- Asian and Pacific Democrats, business iJeople and professionals and
Secretary Donna Fitzpatrick, Gary
In fact, the bill for the two persons
. liberals and progressives ,
Gieslck, director of the Office of that led Gteslck to worry - one for
The black, Hispanic and women's caucuses had nailed down executive
Polley and Management, wrote:
one week's stay, theo!herfortwo: committee seats tJefore the chimge, so Kirk had to settle for less than
"11 Should ouqieople he meeting totaled $1,861, according to his
: complete success. But he appears to be a ma n who operates on the hoary
• but thoroughly professional premise that politics Is, after aU, the art ofthe
.

.

Sum~er

.

!N ToDaY'~ 8U~INeii
NeWS: Tt4e PoLiTiCaL
aCfiON COMMiTTee of
CONGIPMeRa~D INDIJ;&amp;T«iE~~ I
Ha~ PuRcHa~eD

CONTROlliNG iNTeRe~T iN
&amp;eNalOR fil6eRT QOI€!Le'i.• ,

·'. ..

.,

~ Today
'

:
•
·
•
•
:
•

.

in· his-ory

Today Is Tut'Sday, May 28, the 148th day of 1985 with 217 to follow . .
The moon is In Its first quarter.
The morning stars.are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
'The evening sta~ are Mars and Saturn.
Thole born on tl1ls date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
Brltlsll statesman William Pitt In 1759; novelist Ian Fleming, creator of
Jlllllf'S Bond. In 190l; and the Dionne quintuplets In 1934; three survive Annette, Cecile and Yvonne (age 51).
On tbla date in history:
In 1'1'98, President John Adams was empowe,red by Congress to recruit
an American army of 10,1XX&gt; volunteers.
,
In 1871, the Paris Commune was defeated after .)Vhat Is now knoWn a$
..Bloody Week.
In l!NO, the evacuation o! British, Frei)Ch and Belgian troops from
Dunla!rqlle on the English Channel coast of France began; a total of 337,1XX&gt;
men reached Britain safely but 13,«XKJ were killed by German forces.
: 'In 1979, Greece became the lOth member ot the European Corrunon
II

Market.

; A thougllt for the day: 18th century English statesinan William Pitt said,
: •;Necessity Is the plea for every Infringement ot hum&lt;l!' freedom. it Is the ·
argument of tyrants; It Is the creed or slaves."

Moral

judges and black legal scholars
share Reagan ' s conservative
vlews.) Carter named proportionately more J ews, Reagan more
Ca tholics.
Most of Carter's Judges got their
legal education at sUite-supported_
Institutions; Reagan has · drawn
more heavily on private and Ivy
League schools of law. Four
percent of _Carter's District Court
nominees won ratings of "exceptiotial~ w~ll qualified" from the
American Bar Association; seven
percent of · Reagan's were so
adjudged. Carter named 10 judges
with a net wortl1 of more than $1
million; Reagan has named 36.
.Reagan has made no bones about
his concern for the Judicial philosophy of his·nominees. His dellberate aim Is to restore the bl!lance
that was upset by Jimmy Carter.
Toward that end Reagan has
created an eight-man Committee
on Judicial Selection thar meets
every Thursday afternoon in· the
Roosevelt Room of the White
House.
The committee's special concern
Is with vacancies on the 12 U.S.
Courts of Appeals. Carter was able
to put 56 of his nomlnres on the
circuit bench, all but 10 of them
Democrats. In his first term
Reagan named 31 circuit judges, all
of them Republicans. Twenty-two
circuit Judgeships now are vacant.
By the end ot'hls second term,
Reagan probably "will have won
confirmation of more than lJO
judges. Opportunities may well
arise for him to name additional
Supreme Court justices, for five of
the high court 's ntne members are
more than 75 years of age. If his
nominees are young enough , and
steadfastly conservative enough ,
we can expect to see a conservative
cast to the law Into the 21st century .
I
For those of us on the conservative
side, to quote Mr. Shakespeare, 'tis
a consummation devoutly to ·be
wished.

_getaways._____;__J_ac_k_A_n_d_er_so_n_&amp;_J_os--=ep:..._h_S....:.p_e_ar_s
memo. ~ An Energy .Dejlariment -·-us~ Are you a retreat specialist?
spokesman told our assoctafe Do- My people ·a re overworked , a nd 1
nald Goldberg this was cheaper feel It 's necessary. for us to get
than hotel rooms In Washington . away.''
But the two employees in question
Dr. Koch said the. overall cost to
both live In or near-washington, so the government will be only $2,1XX&gt;.
wow&lt;rn'ot need government-pai_d . __ But a SjlQKesman for 'the COOifont
lodgl~gll' if the tt;~,tnlng eou~e were .· ·_sali). the HlJD employees are helng ·
held here.
·
charged ·$68.75 each per day, which ·
Over at the Department of · would make the bill for 30 pers6ns
Housing and Urban Development, more than $6,0oo for the three
the officials-chOse the mountains- nights . A Koch assistant said his
the Coolfont Hotel In Berkeley boss.had mlsspoken.
Springs, W.Va. Dr. June Koch , an
~lnally, at the Agriculture Deassistant secretary, Is taking her papment, some employees are
entire policy develpment and re- accompanying a group of 26
search staff - 30 persons In all American farm wives on an 18-day ·
for a "retreat" there from June 10 tour of Japan, China, Hong Kong
and Korea for meetings wllh
to 13.
When contacted by our reporter government agriculture officials .
Mark Woolley, Dr. Koch said The farm women are paying their
heatedly: "We're not the only own way; the taxpayers' bill for the
government agency that takes four officia l chaperones Is $14,lro.
retreats. Why are you contacti ng

equivale~ce ____;___.. .__B_e_n_~_at_te_nb_e_..::.rg

The subject of "moral equivalence" has moved center stage.
Hard-liners have been frustrated In
recent years by a point of view that
can best be abbreviated as, "So's
my old man." Thus, If hard-liners
should condemn the Soviets for
bruta liztng _Afghanlstan, the rebuttal Is offered that , Afghanistan is
really only the "Soviet VIetnam.''
They're just doing what we did : ·
moral equivalence (M.E. ) If It's
said \h,~~~o mmunlsts are attemptIng to undermine El Salvador, It Is
countered that America Is doing the
same thing In Nicaragua.
And so on. The M.E.s, of c:ourse,
Ignore facts . The South VIetnamese
asked us In, and fought with us. The
Afghanis, on the other hand, were
. Invaded and fight the Russians. The
communist g~errlllas In El Salvador are trying to destroy a. freely
elected government. Contrariwlr;e, .
we are pushing a Nicaraguan
government to hold free elections.
But, It's not just facts that ar&lt;;'
Ignored by the M.E.s, say the
hardliners, It's morality. Weare the
good guys. If we do some unpleasant things In this harsl1 world, It
may well be aU right; we &lt;!o them
for a noble cause. But the communist cause is malign. That's the big
difference; there Is no moral
equivalence.
All this came to · a boll · In
Washlnglon when the conservative
Sqavano Institute 11eld a conference
about M.E. Predictably, liberals
boycotted it.
In subsequent writing, however,
the liberal view surfaced. It's a
straw man, they said. No one who's
serious says that the Soviets or the
communists are our mtiral equival ents, of course they are not. But, as

free people, we still have to point out
our own shOrtcomings with vigor.
Fair enough. That Is th~ ·wise
rebuttal. It represents an important
strain of liberal thought. It makes
some sense.
But that begs the question; Is the
hard-liner argument really built on
straw? Isn't M.E. too ·frequently
part of the liberal arsenal these
days?
.'
Consider the film, "The KUling
Fields." It Is a powerful movie;
mostly an adventure story about a
New York Times reporter and his
Cambodian aide. They are caught
up In the Cambodian holocaust that
..was unleashed by the communist
Khmer Rouge. Ultimately a third of
the Cambodian clvUian population
was purposefully murdered_.
But the film Isn't only about
horrific events. It deals with
causation. What was the cause of ·
this great massacre? 1 Well, brace
yourself, the answer is delivered
clearly In a speech by the reporter
In the movie. It was America! We
did 11! How? By playing geopolitics
In Southeast Asia. That, weare told ,
triggered the whole mess. This
happens to be wrongheaded and
convoluted history. But It Is moral
equivalence with a vengpance.. We
act militarily In good -faith to help
defend an ally in South VIetnam;
the communists slaughter their
own people in Cambodia; we are
both equally guilty!

Ism. No ma tter to J esse Jackson.
To him there Is little dtfferenC£'
between Ayatollah-backed murderWe're as bad ~s they are - for
prs and those who try to stop them.
example, he says, we trade with an
Moral equlvalene('.
ugly regime In South-Africa, and we
set up a "bombing expedition" In_
I have a word of advice to those on
thl' liberal side of thl' debate. If you
Lebanon.
Now, there Is a bad situation In really want to claim that no one
South Africa -but It Is perpetrated who's serious touts moral eq-uivalby South Africans, not us. And wp· ency, you mlglit show good faith by
unmasking those who do . You could
had little to do with the -lebanesP
sta rt with th&lt;' producers of ''The
bombing. But whatever we tried to
Killing Fields" and J esse Jackson .
do was designed to prevent terrorWell, not really, says Jackson. You

see, he says, terrorism Is relative.

Berry's World

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, May 28, 1985

Spend A Buck wins $2.6 milli~n)ersey Derby
CHERRY HILL , N.J. (UPI) -No
one can accuse Spend a Buck,
thoroughbred racing's newest
mul!l-mi!Uonaire, oftaklngtheeasy
road to fame and fortune by
skipping the traditional test of
3-year-olds, the Triple Crown
campaign .
Not alter watching the gutsy way
the Kentucky Oj!rby champion
shrugged off challenge after challenge Monday to wln the Jersey
Derby and a recotd $2.6 million,
bonus-padded payday. ·
The prize vaulted him from20t))to
second place, behind 10-year-old
John Henry,ontheall-timeeamlngs
list wHh nearly$4 million dollars Ina
mere 13 career starts.
"Spend a Buck was just too much
horse," jockey Eddie Maple said .
after his late-closing mount, Creme
Fralche, lost the 1 14-mlle race at
Garden State Park by a neck.
"How can you take anything away
from that horse?" said Sonny Hlne,
tralneroflifth-placeSklpTrlal. "His
race was more imp~sslve than the
Kentucky Derby."
Spend a Buck, owned by Dennis
DiazofTampa,Fla.,andtrainedby
Cam Gambolati, won the Run for~

Roseswtretowlre.But ln the Jersey
Derby, the challenges began-with
thestartlnggun. ·
Under Lafflt Plncay Jr., the bay
coltstumbledcomingoutofthegate·
and into a duel with speedy Huddle
Up.SpendaBuckpassedHuddleUp
beforehe'druntwoturlongs,butthe
D. Wayne Lukas-tralned longshor
doggedhis!ootstepsforanotherhalf
a mile.
Then, about the ttme Huddle Up
started .lading; two !at~losers put
on the pressure: Creme Fralche
came up on the rail while eventua l
third-place finisher El Basco came
up outside.
Creme Fralche actually nosed
ahead on the home turn; but three
touches of the whip by Ptncay were
all the urging Spend a Buck needed
to burst back Into the lead.
PJncay hit him several more
ttmesdowntheslretchtohitthewtre
In 2: 00 35.
" He's a tighter and he can ruri,"
said P!ncay, who was racing the
horsefortheflrsttlme.
Tile photo finish gave Creme.
Fralche the$200,1XX&gt;secondprlze by
a head over El Basco, who won
SUO,IXX&gt;.

·

His stablemate, PUrple Mountaln, took fourth and $1l0,1XX&gt;, one
bead In front of Skip Trial, who
earned ~.«XKJ.
The overwhelming favorite,
Spend ·a Buck paid the legal
minimum $2.10 across the pool.
Creme Fralche returned $2.:!! and
$2.10, and El Basro returned $2.10.
Dlaz and Gambolatl were critic·
lzedforkeeplngSpendaBuckoutof
the May 18 Preakness Stakes, the
middle jewel of the Triple Crown, to
better prepare him for the Jersey
Derby and $2 million Garden State
Park Challenge- which required a
horse to sweep the Cherry HID Mile,
Garden State Stakes and Kentucky
and Jersey derbies.
/ "They all had a shot at him- they
hooked him early and they hooked .
him late. They hooked him Inside
and they hooked him outside," Dlaz
said after the fourth and hardestearned win .
"He proved today that he's the
best horse, a great horse," Gambolatladded. ·~y triedeveiywaytn
the world t o beal'hlm and couldn't.
"It was set . up perfect for the
closlnghorseS,buttheystlllcouldn't

beat hbn. He stumbled badly out ot
thegate-thegroundbrokebelow
hbn. Huddle Up tame .to hbn,
Creme Frate he came to hbn,
everyone challenged him and still
didn 't beat him ."

Gambolatlsa ld heandDiazwould
takethelrtlmedecldlngwhetherto
runthetrBuckaroocoltJune8lnthe
1~- mUe Belmont Stakes, longest
andflnaljeweloftheTriple Crown,
or to on to Saratoga for the

summertime Travers Stakes.
·
"Wewlllseehowhecoolsootand X-ray hbn from head tu toe, "
Gambolatl said . ."Tha t will take
about three days before we make
any decisions aboutthe horse."

•

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Rookie·Lyons' debut features
2 ·home runs in BoSox win
By ,JOE D..LUiZI
UPI Sports Writer
Lou Gehrig's replacement of
Wally Plpp at first. base was only
supposed to be temporary, but the
Iron Horse proceeded to play In a
major-league record 2130 conseculive ~;ames. Rookie Steve Lyons
has no illusions of matching
Gehrig, but he has made an
Impressive beginning.
Lyons, making hls first majorleague start in place of home run
king Tony Armas, had quite an
auspicious debut Monday, clout ing
two home runs to spark the
struggling Boston Red Sox to a 9-2
victoryover theMinnesotaTwlnsat
'
Fenway Park.
"I n your wit des t dreams you think
of 1\)tting the ball out in your first
major-league start," said Lyons,
who played · center . field .. " Hitting
· two homers makes If even rileer." Lyons, who had 14 at .bats prior to
Monday's start, knolo\'s that once
Armas, out with a sore wrist, Is
ready to play again, he'll take his
place on th!" ben~h,
·
Lyons, wl}~.llad tllree hit s ~ ndfour
-RBJ topa_cea16-hlt~ltlJ,Ck , ledoff the
third inning with a homer. He also
drilled a three-run homer oH Ron

Davis In the eighth.
Orioles 6; Ang~ls 4
JERSEY DERBY WINNER- Spend A Buck with . Maple up for the Jersey Derl.y at Garden State
The vlctory, which s napped a
At Anaheim, Calif., SCott McGreRacetrack bt CherrY Hill, New Jen;;ey MondayLalllt Plncayupedges CremeFralche (R) with Eddie
four-game losing streak, was only gor pltcl1ed a six-hitter and Rick
af~moon. UPI.
Boston's fourth in the last 14games. Dempsey drove In the winning run
RogerClemens,6-4,scatteredflve on a seventh-inning sacrifice fly to
r.::==-:-::=-::::~
hits ln62-3lnningsfor thewln.Steve lift Baltimore. McGregor, 3-4,
Crawford finished and earned his struck out four and walked two ln
first save. Ken Schrom, 3-4, took the pitching his second complete game.
Mariners 5, Tigers.2
loss, Minnesota's sixth ln a_row.
Elsewhere, Cleveland blanked
At Seattle, Matt Young and Karl
Milwaukee S-0, Baltimore downed Best combtned on an eight-hitter to ,
CINCINNATI (UP!) - So near In your home park, you don't
California 6-4, Seattle defeated end a ~game Mariner losing and yet so far.
deserve to win, " he said after the
Detroit 5-2, Kansas City topped streak. Detroli had won four In a
Tha t's how _It was with Dave Reds lost their third in a row and
T j!xas 4-2 and Oakland edged New row. Young, 4-5, held Detroit Concepcion of the Cincbtnatl Reds fow-ih in the last five contest~ to drop
York 2-11n 10 Innings. Toronto a t scoreless the first six inrilngs. Best Monday night as he stood on third a game over .500 at 22-21.
Chlci!gOwas rained out.
recorded 111s second save. D&lt;1n base representing the game-tying
r "1 think one of the keys was
In the National League, It was Petry feU to 8-3.
.
· run with no one out ln the last of the gettlngKienchlckiout," said Smith .
Pl111adelphia 10, San Diego 9; New
Royals 4, Rangers 2
"I made some really good pitches
rilnth.
York 8, Los Angeles 1; · San · AtKansasCity,Mo.,GeorgeBrett
Three outs later Concepcion still (three sUders) to Walker, whose
Francisco 6, Montreal l ; Chicago 4, knocked tn three runs to support the was anchored to third and the game been wearing me out .e ver since we
Cincinnati 3; and Houston 4, combined four-hit-pltcl)Ing_ of Bret
was· over. The Chicago Cubs, both played ln the American
Plttsburgh2.
Saberhagen and Da n Quisenberry co-leaders ln the National League A,ssoclatlon, hitting my fastball .
Indians 8, Brewers t1 _
and give · th!&gt; Royals the Ylctoi'y. East, h~d won ~,3en the strong-rlgh\ · And l kept the ball In on Foley to get
.
. " .
.
.
At Milwaukee, Beri-Blyleven
Saberhagen rplsed l1lS record to 5-3 arm of reliever Lee Smith.
him to pop up.
fired a three-hit shUtout and Joe while Dickie Noles tumbled to 2-6.
Smith, In hls ' l8th appearance of · · For the second time in six days, ·
Carter and Brook Jacoby homered·
A's2, Yankees 1
the season, had picked up hls 12th Eckersley bested Reds rookie
to lead the Indians. Blyleven, 3-5,
At Oakland, Catlf.. Dwayne save anc;J salvaged a victory for left-handerTom Browning, 4-4. with
struck out 10 and walked none ln
Muprhy slugged .a homer In the starter Dennis Eckersley, 6-3, to perfect control a key factor.
,
214 EAST MAIN
_ thtvwlng hi§ ttyfd ,shUtout this
_bottom of th.e l()th lnnlng.off Da,ve t&lt;eep tbli CUbs
:
Eckersley.
struck
out
six
and
POMEROY
with the New
season and fifth complete game.
Righetti to·;'tift ' the A's ''over ·the
dldn 't walk a b!lfter ~hile.BruW'n­
.
Yorl&lt; -Mets for first plaC{"; ·.
992~~8:7- . .l
Blyte\.-en's 49th c.a~r ~hul!)u t tie$
Yankees. Jay Howell,o 3-2; got th~
."Blg le~~gue hitters can usually _ ing'&amp;- !Qne' ·walk to his opposing '
· him for:!lth ·on aU-time list
triumph as Righettfsltpped to 3-4-~
-lf4iteAuto
get! he guy In from third with none number ihat load~ the bases with
. . Ill Mil
out," said Keith Moreland, who two out In tho&gt; fifth inning of a
paced the Cubs with 3-for-4 and an scoreless battle proved costly. Bob
RBI. "But Lee shut the door on Demler then lined a two-run double
down the left field line to make It 2-0.
1hem.''
Andthat'sexactlywhathappened
in thE' Cincinnati half of the ninth
after Alan Knicely had led off with a
line drive homer to left, his second
since being r-eCalled recently from
Denver of the American Assocla ·
t lve gold gloves and seven NL nome ces at the plate.
By JOE SEXTON
tlon. that made It 4-2.
The Padres used t hree doubles to
run titles - will play first base In
UPI Sports Writer
DON'T WAIT UNTIL THE LAST MINUTE TO Gn .
Cubs manager Jim Frey ImmeStar ting Wednesday, Mike what is sure to be a controversial' score four times in the second off
diately
called
on
Smltb,
whO
walked
READY FOR YOUI TRIP, TAKE ADVANTAGE OF
starter Sl1ane R&lt;twley. Philadelphia
Schmlqt wUI movetoltrst base. As of shift.
Gary Redus a nd gave up a single to
came
back
with
four
to
tie
It
ln
the
"I'm
wU)Ing
to
move
If
It's
In
the
Monday, however , the Phlllies
OURI SPECIALS NOW
. Concecplon that advanced Redus to
slugger may have at last begun to team's Interest," said Schmidt. "I bottom of the Inning.
second. The Reds then pulled a
have played practically no ltrst
Schmidt started the rally with a
!eel at home In the batter 's box.
doUble
steal with both players
double;
Steve
Jeltz
'
singled
in
the
base.
I
don't
know
If
it
will
affect
my
Tho&gt; 35-year old third baseman,
advancing one bage, Redus came all
at
bat,
probably
not.
ltrst
run
,
and
pinch-hitter
John
concentration
who has suffered since the season's
the way around when catcher Jody
stati through an extended and often . When you are play ing first, there Is Russell, who was later optioned to
Davis
overthrew third base. That
embarrassing _slump at the plate, not much chance to stand around Portland by the Phlllles to make
left
Concepcion
on third with no one
room for rookie third baseman Rlck
nailed three hit s Monday, Including a nd worry."
and
the
score4-3.
A tie appeared
out
While Schmidt admitted that he Schu , cracked a three-run homer.
a three-run homer to help the
imminent.
Glenn Wilson singled ln a thirdP hilliPS out score the San Diego was anxious about his forthcoming
run for the PhlUies and the
Inning
audition
at
first
and
unsure
whether
Padres 10-9.
But Smith bad different ideas.
AFTER REBATE
tied It In the fifth on a triple
Padres
It
amounted
to
the
final
curtain
lor
Philadelphia team officials anWith the Infield drawn in, he induced
nounced after the game that his lllustrlous act at third, he clearly by Steve Gazvey and Kevin McReyWayne Krenchlckl to ground to
Schmidt - winner of ninE' consecu- enjoyed his most recent appearan- nolds' single.
second as Concepcion held third. He
Schmidt's sixth home run of the
then fanned pinch-hitter Duane
year In the bottom of the filth gave
Walker on tl1reepltchesand got Tom
the Phlllles an 8-5 lead .
FoiPy to pop to shortstop forthellnal
San Diego made It 9-9 with three ·out .
SIZES AVAILABLE YOUR COST
runs Iii the seventh when Terry
"l guess It's one of those things
Kennedy singled home two runs.
whef! you've got a guy like Smith in
16.30
A71-13
Philadelphia's sixth pitcher, Kent
the bullpen and It 's late· In the
16.30
117\.13
Tekulve, was the winner, while
seasonsoft heyear . Handy.
ByJEKR\' PICKREU.
game," said Frey. "Sometimes you
The
maps
are
not
free,
but
they
Craig
Lefferts
took
the
loss'.
Distributed hy UPI
have a tendency to lean on a guy like
19.50
E71-14
In other games, New York
Topographic maps aro&gt; an Invalu - can be ordered from the Ohio
that. It wasn't so much that
20.50
1'71-~4
Department of Natural Resour-Ces, pounded Los Angeles 8-1, San Eckersley was tired, more that
able a id to hunters, hikers and
Division of Geological _ Survey, Francisco defea ted Montreal 6-1, Smitty was down there and warmed
fishermen.
21.50
078-14
Fountain Square (Building "B" ) Chicago s haded Cincinnati 4-3 a nd
Thi.'SC la rge scale (1 : 24 ,(0)1
up. He seems to thrive on situations
21 .50
H71-14
Columbus, Ohlo,43224, for$2 ,2.11?ach Houston beat Pittsburgh 4-2 .
charts show land forms In muQh
!Ike that and that 'swhyl'msurehe's
In the American League, Cleve- oneofthe best." ·
plus fi~ percent sales tax. If you'd
grea trr d&lt;'tail than highway maps
F71-11
llke your map sent In a mailing tube land harrunered Mllwaukee 8-0,
or evrn county maps can.
Reds player-manager Pete Rose
21.50 .
(171-15
rather than folded ln an envelope, Boston beat Minnesota 9-2, 13alH· blanked at thE' plate for the second
&amp; •sidrs the obviou s drtulls such
add fifty-cents per map.
more downed California 6-4, Seattle s tra ight ga me, was upset by his
as roads and bridges. topo maps
21.50
H71-15
topo,
send
for
·defeated
Detroit 5-2, Kansas City got club's Inability to tie the score.
Before
you
request
a
show trails. for~sts, swamps. rail11.30
11410o111
afree lndexmapthatshowsallofthe by Texas 4-2 and Oakland edged
roads. streams and many other
"Anytime you get anyone on third
PLIS
IICAPPAIU
quadrangles In Ohio. This wiD he · New York 2-1. Toronto at Chicago base with no one out and don't score
fearures. They can be used tor
18.30
TIADI .
100-111
"scouting" a n area you pian to vlslt
•71-15
your guide to getting only the ones r~w;as~ra~ln~ed;;;ou;t;.:.;::.;::.;::.;::.;::.;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
22.50
before you PV&lt;'r get. there. Once on
you need.
One(' you have the maps In hand,
the scene, a topo ca n be an aid In
HOME SATELLITE
you can make them last longer by
keeping to the area you want to see.
AUGNMENT MOST CARS $1450
carrying them in the field in a
Topos are available In units
TV SPECIALISTS
protective case. A "Zip-Loc" bag
known as quadrangles. Usually
these are na med for the iargest city
makes an excellent map carrier.
·or village within their boundaries.
They can be protected ellen further
by spray,lng them with clear,
Their la rge scale makes It neces606 EAST MAIN
sary to have more than one if you
waterproof acrylic paint from the
WE HAVE THE
plan to Investigate a sizeable region.
hardware store. Coat both sides
POMEROY
more than ·once, an(l let It dry
For example, there are 13 quadran•
completely. This keeps the map
gles within VInton County.
AYAIUILE IN 10'/2' I 8'12'
from soaking up moisture ln humid
There's plenty of room to make
conditions.
notes on s uch Important Items as
When you gpt used to a topograwhere you burled the cash you took
phical map, you'll wonder how you .
out of Home State, where the
1 6
were able to gpt along without It
bluebirds are nesting, or where deer
are seen most often during various
before.

Reds rally too late;
Cubs hang on,win 4-3

tteo .

c.........

Phils shakeup puts Schmidt's
golden glove at first base

.--_;_---------....L.------------

saaa

RETREAD TIRES

Outdoor maps help
hunters, fishennen

B-2

SILVDBIRD

SATIJJ.ITE
Sl'STIHS

RAYDX MESH DISH

Or, lor another example of moral
equivalence run amok, note what
the Rev. Jesse Jackson said on
"Nightllne" about those friendly
folks from the "Islamic Jihad" who
are thretenlng to buicher four
American hostages.
Are these Jlhad·nlks . terrorists?

992·2094

"SEE MRYTHINO MORE CLEARL'I"

"TtJmper your expectations, make a list of your
priorities and call me In !he morning."

..

~

of.

~t.'i d'

378-6158

t

�..
Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, May 28, 1985

•
WID

Eaglettes 'statehound' with convincing
By Scott WoHe
WAVERLY -Asoneofonly fou r
tP'ams remaining In Class "A"
softba ll acllon, the high flying
Eastern Eaglettcs arP "s tatebound " alte r a convincing 10-2
trouncing of highly touted Portsmouth Clay here Saturday afternoon In the Regional Tournament
championship game at Waverly
H1gh School.
.
-The win adva nces Eastern to the
Ohlo State Softball Tournament In
Ashla nd. Ohio to be pl ayed thi s
· F riday at 3: ]) p.m. a t Ashland 's ·
Brookside Pa rk. The finals will be
played Saturday at 1 p.m . at the
l;ltookslde Park.
·

£:astern boosted Its record to 23-5 Inning with a walk, Tony11 Savoy
over a ll, whlleCJay bowedoutwlth a
singled, and Angle Spencer singled
26-3 overall record. Portsmouth
to load the bases. Gaul scored the
Clay was favorite in thls year's game's first run on a sacrifice fly by
tournament , winning the sta te
junior Amy Young.
·
three of the last five years.
Arlene Ritchie drew a walk to
T)ds will be the first llip to the again load the bases, Krist! Gaddis
state for .Eastern in any sport, had an RBI single, and Lesa
highlighting an already succe~sful Rucker had an RBI single to give
1985 campaign. Coach Pam Dou- Ea stern a hea lthy 3-0 lead.
thitt's girls have not lost a game
Senior pitche r Krtsti Gaddis of
since the first half of the season a nd
Eastern was at her best Saturday
ha ve · bee n es pecially tou g h · afternoon. She hurled three shut-out
throughout the tournament trail.
Innings to start the game, pitching
E astern jumped on Clay's pitch- six scoreless Innings overall.
Ing ace In the first frame lor three
After Gaddis had shutthe door on
runs on four hits and two walks.
the heart of Clay's hitting attach,
Senior Lea Ann Gaul .started the

Bastern again put on Its hitting
shoes to score two more runs. In
. that fra m e, senior Beth Ber khlmer
singled, then stole second, Savoy
walked , and Spene('r reached on a
fi elder ' s choice. Amy Young
slammed a hard grounder that
went for a fielder 's choice a nd error
to score Berkhlmer, while another
miscue allowed Savoy to c ross the
plate also for a 5-0 score.
Throughout th£&gt; contest Gaddis
continued to be razor sharp
battling the tough Clay line-up thai
had averaged over ten ·runs per
.game throughout the season. Completely baffled by Eastern's aggrPSslve play •.Clay nearly
to
defeat In the fourth

the Eaglet~CS to plate four more second. setting the stage for both
runs to score on an error tha t
runs.
The usually perfect Portsmouth allowed Kea ton to reach safely, the
defense committed five errors score 9-2.
Eastern added a n Insurance ru n
overall. Following a leadoff fourth
Inning error, Angle Spencer fol - In the seventh .
Portsmouth Clay threat{'ned in
lowed with another slngie, while
the final round when Glenn led off
Young reached on an error that
scored Savoy. Arlene Ritchie with a walk , G&lt;lodballet walked ,
and Craft singled to load the bases
slammed a sacrifice fly, Gaddis
wlthone out At that point Coach
walked, Rucker reached on a
Pam Douthitt and the Eas tern fans
fielder's choice, and Dent added an
RBI single. On tiJi. thi'ow Rucker · started to sweat It out as Cl ay
apparently had regained it s potent
also scored, · giving Eastern a 9-0
offensive ability. Conley, the next
lead.
batter. then ripped a towe ring drive
.With one out In the fourth Inning,
Conley reached on a Infield hit, then far over the head of outfielder Lesa
stole second and third. Wiseman
Rucker.
Seemingly a sure extra base hit ,
followed with a walk and stole
all runners rounded the ba ses.
However, Rucker's extra effort a nd
outstretched arms a ll.owed her to
make a tremendous catch. Rucker
then fired to second for the dou bie ,
p~y and Eastern was in the "Fin ~ I :

Majors

.......

CHAMPIONSWP FORM - Eastern's Lea Ann
Gaul . shows her championship batting form as she
awaits a pitch. Eastern jumped Into an early lead,

coming up with three runs In 'the first Inning, then
blazing a 10-2 loumament tr.aD victory over Portsmouth Clay.

Brookville ousts Meigs gals
MIDDLETOWN - Brookville
scored all three of Its runs in the top
of the sev~nth Inning to score a
co~e-from- behlnd 3-1 win over
Iyletgs here Saturday to claim the
C_Jass
Regional Softball Champ10nshtp and ea rn a berth in the
sta!e seml-fma ls beginning this
Frid ay. .
·.M"'!I.S scored its_lone run in JhP
thtrd in.nmg a nd had made It stand '
up until the Brookville seventh.
Coach John Arnott's Lady Marauders go to 21·3 on the year and
h&lt;Jve.one ga':"e rem ainln.!l)h~ T-VC
· ~~8/!IPIOnS htJ? playoff against Wellst~m·.a t .,. da t.eyet ro·be a nnounC!'d.
-Brookvtlle s. J . Batz, who had ··
thrl'(' stra ig ht hits In three at bats,
opened the dectsive seventh with a
double and scored one out later on a
sjngle by J . Boyd. Boyd later scored
with two outs after stealing second
a ~d third a nd coming home on L.
Edwards' single. Edwards went to
second on an error and scored when
T. Dexter reached on an error.
Meigs dented th~ plate in thPir
third when'fammy Wright singled ,
stole .second. and rode home on Jodi

f:A

Harrison's single.
The Lady Marauders threatened
in the second, fifth. and sixth
Innings but came up empty. In the
second, Marla Musserwalked with
one out and Jennl Couch reached on
an error. Both moved up a base on a ,
groundout, putting runners on
second and third with two out. APOP
out ended the Inning, however.
In the Meigs fifth, Wrigh.t doubled
with two out but was stranded. The
Lady Marauders missed a golden
opportunity In the sixth when
Harrison leg off with a double and
B&lt;irl;J Hatfield •. followed · W'lth a.
single, buiHar~lson was cut down'
at the plate for the lnitlng'sfirst out
with Hatfield taking second on the
throw. She was left there, however,
as a ground out back to the pitcher
and a pop out followed.
Brookville made a serious threat
to score In the fourth when they
loaded the bases with two out on two
singles and a walk. Hatfield fanned
a Brookville batter lor the third out
howver.
'
Hatfield went the distance on the
mound for Meigs and walked only
one batter while striking out three.

"We got of! to one hell of a start,"
said Boston coach KC. Jones. "We
ran very well and shot the eyes out of
the ball.··
over .
After taking a 38-24 lead after one
Like a cool Pacific breeze, the
Lakers eased past Phoenix, Por- . quarter, the Celtlcs outscored the
lland and Denver to qualify for the Lakers 41-2.5 in the second period to
NBA final s aga inst Boston . And go up 79-49. They Jed 1ffi-79 after
whilP they were piling up flashy three quarters and twice held
statistics. the Celtics were accumu- 37-polnt leads In the final minutes.
Thedrubblngwasenoughforeven
lating bumps and bruises from
Cle'v e l a nd ·. Detroit and actor and celebrated Laker fan Jack
Nicholson to throw in the towe!.
Philadelphia.
; On Monday, the Celtlcs, gunning Literally. Seated In the second row,
to become the first club to capture Nicholson made a like a boxer's
. back-to-back championships since handler rEQuesting the punishment
their 1968-69 countl'rparts, did not be stopped. lle flung a white towel
take long to show tht:&gt; Lakers that away to the delirious delight of the
t!ielrdays of Pasy livJngwerPended. crowd ofl4,800.
• They shut down the vaunted Los
In winning thE'ir ninth straight
playoff
game this year, Soston set
Angeles fastbreak en route to a
(ecOrd-smashlng 148-114 rout in the .championship marks for most
)Xlints In a game; most points at the
qpener of the best-of-seven series.
· ;Game21s Thursday night (9p.m . half; largest lead at halftime; best
EJDT) ·at the Boston Garden. The field -goal percentage ( .00!); and
most field goals (62). The Celtics
St?rtes shifts to Los Angeles for
dr alt the Lakers their worst IItle
?ames~- 4 and. If necessary. !\.

~ummer

league results· given

: During local peewee league Hartford scored a 4-1 come-fromRacine edged ChPster 18-15 behind victory over Rutland In a
!tt a high scoring game at Chest~r. great
pitcher's duaL Both pitchers
• Kell£&gt;y Hensler had a sing!£&gt; and .exhibited exceptionally good conlicmc run to lead Racine. while
trol and speed as Indicated by the
Shannon Staats doubled , Michael low number of walks and high
Van Meter singled, and Jimmy number of strikeouts.
R;ilndolph, singled.
B. Nutt~r was the winning
;For Chester, Charlle.Biss£&gt;11 had a pitcher, going six Innings to fan 14,
triple.
walk two, allowing just one hit and
; Jimmy Randolph started for one run.
~cine, striking out five In the
Terry McGuire suffered the loss
process, while Michael Van Meter
with a fine 15 strikeout, three walk
.eame on In r£&gt;11ef to strike out six.
performance. He allowed only four
IQ!an Adams was the catcher.
hits and four runs. 1
:Oa vld Johnson was the Chester
D. Fields had a home run for-the
p~Scher.
winners, whlle R. Green, S. Turley, .
and R. Board each singled .
• In local little league action,
John Evans singled for Rutland.
~tlon.

.

GADDIS FIRES - Eaolem's premier pitcher Kmll Gaddis
pitched one of her greatest games Satuday afternoon as she hurled a
three-hit 10-2 triumph over Portsmouth Clay In the Regional finals a1
\Waverly. The win advanced E88lem to the State SoftbaD Tournament
at Ashland thls Friday at 3:00. Gaddis Is now l&amp;lontheyear, whlleEaslem advances to 23-5. Amy Young Is shown In the background.

west all stars win

T~IO

NN• York...................... 21

Ct" y

N1tk:NI LIMUe

J~

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w...

California ..................... .~ 18 ~"Bl
C'l r,• .............. ,.... 2-1 18 ST'J.

Hl'tT, SIL....................

40 H8 :B S7 .!fi

611.1

Cnu. Hou ....................
MeG«. SIL ....

.tO 161 :ZZ 5&amp; .3G

~

Kansas:

'h
tl .olll ~
Oakland . ........... ;........... Zl 12 .48! 4
Cl\lc8$!0 ......................... I9 20 .18'/ ~
Mlnnt'!lO!a ............. , ....... .'l l

~ottk• ..........'................. .. . 1~ 2-1 .442 · II
Tt ?ms ......................... , .. l~ 2R ,:W,J 1fl
Monday's ~lll

CAl~

EDT I

Mlni'1C90ta 1\'lota 6-JI a t Boston tQirda .
l -1 1. 7: l5 p.m .

Toronto. tS!il•b 4-31. at Chlclijil(l 1Dof...on

2·2t, K::llp.m.
CWI.'t' land rHf:oatc n J.J1 ar MUwa uk(l('
1Haas 4·21. 8:l'i p.m.
·

Kotn.w~ City

!Gublcw 1·2r, 8:;15 p.m.
Wedlte!dat• GIUDeS
Ca llfor nlu a t Ntw Y9"k . nl~t:hl

T('l)l;as 01 Kan sas Cl!y, nlftht

320 400 f --}0 10 :l
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l'lc}aday'l Rl-at8

Pltlla&lt;r&gt;tpnta 10. ~ n Ok&gt;J:o &gt;J

Grey (LP I and Crall .

~f'\4'

\ 'ul"k R. ~...a&lt;; An~1f'loo 1
San F'ranctr&lt;N, 6, Mon!t'l:·tll l
OIIC!JWI t C'lnelnnall .1
ltOU!&gt;IOO -1. Pi11sbuf,l!:h 2
'I*"'ICCI&amp;Y'MG~ (•\lllnws EITf)
ChltaRO tTtwt :i-J 1 &lt;~ I Clnt'i nnall
:l·i l, 7: ~ p.m.
Sl , I~JUL~ lfo'or!iL'hJ-21 at Allanla t&amp;! rkl'r

,, bbs

The Daily Sentinel

141 , i: ,.l p.m.

.

Pltt!'&gt;bur~th

1Robln.o;on :H ll at

1-IOU.~ ton

tMa thls 3·11, K: ~ p.m.
Monll't•at 1Smith :i-! 1 at San D i('WJ
of·'.! I. IO:ffi p.m.
·

Publ lshro ever y afl er noon, Mondav

Romank.ic . Cal &amp;-1; Dodd_lckcr, Bali and

Vklla. Mlnn 6-3: ('lm'l(fl s, ~ and MOrTis,
Dl' ! 1:1-1.
F..amed Run A \'eftlJI'
tllaM."&lt;I on 1 lnnin!l: x nurnb.&gt;r ol ~arm.&gt;8
roc h !(•am ha" played\
r..-attonal LA"aiNI ' - VaJrozlJl'la, LA l.lfl;
Krul!0'4', SF t.TJ; Hl'$il'!h, Mtl l Jll: Goodct'l,
NY 1.89; LaPdnl. SF 1.91.
Anx'r'lcan l.t'a«&lt;K' - Monis. Dl-t 2.14;
l.l"' br.vtdt , KC 2.4."1: Bla(i(, KC 2.48: S tk'b,
Tor H2 : Kl-.y, Tor ~.70.

,.,._

Nat k1nat U&gt;aJM' - Go:xim. f\l' i!l;
Q(ol...con. Pill 'X}: Ryan. Hw E8; Vatmzlll'la ,
IJ\ 67 : Solo. Cln !Jl.
1\ml'liean I.l'a~ - Morris. Oct 6&amp;;
Clmlen s. Do&lt;;.~ : Bo):d , 8oS !Ai; BanniSter,
Chi M: 81ylr\'t1\ . ('leo\' 52.

_...

Transactions · ·

w-~.y" to~Ul'M!!'

Phttnct&gt;tphla ar

--

Nallorla l l.ol'aguc - Hawkins. SO !1-0;
,\ndul ar, SIL S.l ; Mahler. Ati A-3; F..cl!t'rs~.
t;:'hi. Goodm , NY and Solo, Ctn 6-3;
Gullldt!iOO, M!l &amp;4.
Amcrk'all Ll'E.If~UI' - · f'l'lcy , Ot! B-3;

r ~w.·

qk'tij;lO m Cinclrvmtl
Nt·w Ynrk il l ~n Fr.ind'!CO
St. l..o.iis :11 AIJ:anta , nlj.;t!T
1 1'1 1t!ibur~th at H.:.t'&gt;IOf! , nl~hl
Mon!t1'a1il l SUn DIC1i!U. night

Wells·ton
advances
to.state· ,

b

14 : IIC"nde'rSOn, NY and MOS('by . T01· 1:1.

l :i -~ -

Sa voy

Pmllry, 8«1 10.

Col lin"- Oak 17; lll!ler, Ck'Y 16: Garda, Tor

1. Pd. GB

Nf'w Vork .... .. ................ 2l
Cllk'aa;o ......................... 'l'i
Mcfltrt'a l ..... ........... ... 'l'i
St. L.rul~ ............... ......... :o
PhtlDdrlpbiD ........ : ......... 11;
Pln,.burJ« h ' "' ........ ....... 14

B atte ries: Kri st! Gaddis (WP I and

Annas, &amp;ls. 1.1:

Nullo nal LP~f' - Colemail . SI L 29;
McGee. Sd . 17; Dem.ler, Chi 16: GladdM.
SF. Sandbrrlt Chi and Wilson. NY 1&lt;1 .
Aml'rlean Leap:ut' - Petti!, Cal 22:

Ni\TIONAL 1.£\GUE

.• ,..................... 2'1
('Jnd nnill ! ..................... %!
l .()f; Aanr:.'(•l~ ............. .. ... -21
Allnnw .. .. .................. 17
San F'ranctM"O ................ l6

Arr'lcrtcan Le~ -

Brunanskv . Mlnn .and Davis. Oak }2;
KlniiJTUUl: Qak tt: Bar lk'ld, Tor and

Rlpkm. Ba11 32; Baylor. N Y 31.

Toronto at Ct\k~. n!J:bt

1~

LA 7.

-·-

Clr•\'('l;md' at"MIIwaukf'\", nll{ht

-·

Na!lonnll..L'¥U&lt;'
.
- Murphy, Atl 11: Cily ,

Chi, Clark. SIL and Parke!·. Ctn 8: Marshall.

Kenn«ty , SD .'l l .
'
lurlerkan l.t-agu(' - Mantngty, NY :II;
Bn!nons kY, Mlnn 33; Davis. Oak 32 and

Q;l)(IEII!d 81 ~ I'Otl , nlr;l:l'\1

H c:~..~~1 c:11

--

42 Bi'lr411.U

Franco. Ctv ......... ........... 42 158 :18 411 .JM
Hl&lt;'hr. Ml\fl.. .... ...... ........ ol2 1fl6 28 5&amp; .ln

Run!~ Blll&amp;ed

Srartlc ut Baltlmoll', nli:ht

.....

:n lt8lH9 .lll

NaHQrutl Leogut' ....,. Oark and HE'IT. SI L .
.15: MWl&gt;~'. All .'W; P iiirk('r , Cln 32:

MlnrM'!&lt;O IO 91 Elotr!Ofl , nlgtli

.
:
·
'

CJUJ3):H ~'IJl

Brel l KC ................ ...

City 4, Tnu 2

Oakland 1, N('IW York I 110 lnnlnJ;tSI

W

._..._ '

Vn 51,vk,St ...................

Mm~ly , N .......... ,... ., . .... J!l ·1111 Zl 51 .319
Bradley, s.:-..... ..... ...... .... 43 1lrl 'M !r1 .!15

Batllll'IOrf' 6, California 4

Sra ttl(' ~. [}(&gt;frolt 2

'
.
,
.
·
'
:

Ooran , Hou .... ................ f)l517Jt61m
Gwyn n, SO .... ... ............. U 158 29 II .:1M

Brnnsk;_o,·. M ................... 43U&amp;2t!'ll .l21
BucknPr. &amp; .................... 43 1721~ !5&amp; .320

Ck'lo'cllllld Jl, Mllwaukrfo 0

GanMYt

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4J 171 215&amp; m
Murphy. AU............... ,.... 411312848 .323&gt;
Hayt'fl, Pt\11 .................... ol2 1!{1 19 :wt .32.1
Ca •vP)'. SO .... ................ U ltl924~ D

Parker. em ....................

CtqK'r. Mil... ............. ....

Toronto &lt;~ 1 Chkago, ppd.. rain

~~~

N.............

rlbrltpcl•
INn h . Oak ,., ................. ' :N tll :1! &lt;n ~\~
Whllakr. Dt ............... ..... :1! 1~12951 ~m

Bol! ton 9, Mlnnesola 2

~nsas

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4

Mih•oauk-«' ..................... 18 22 ,t.'i() 9
Boston .......................... 19 2.4 .442 9YJ
C1f'Vt'land ...................... 16 'l7 .372 12\1,

T('xllti , tHooton 1·11 at

doubleheader here Sunday, taking
throu~h Frid oJ .t&lt;, Ill Co urt S l. , p Q.
She allowed eight hits. L Edwards
the first 4-3 and winning the
meroy. Ohlo. b y thf' Oh io Vit ll&lt;'y Pub·
hurled all the way for the winners
Jl sh\ng Com pa ny Mu lllmf'd la. In c ..
nightcap 8-0. The two teams were
PomC'rOy, Ohi o 45769 , Ph . 992 - 2 1 ~ . SC'and relied heavily on good defense
comprised of all-district baseball
rond class posla g(' pa id at P onwroy,
behind her as she dld not strike out a
Ohio.
selections from the Southeast
batter while giving up only one
district.
Mf.'mbC'r: Unll £'d Ptrss l n le r·na!Jona l
Inla nd Da ll y Pr('ss Assocla.l lon a nd .th~
walk. She gave up six hits.
Three Meigs players, Dan Tho·
The six Meigs hits Included a
Ohi o Nf' wspapc&gt;r Associa t io n. Na tional
mas, Scot Gheen and James Acree.
Advertisin g Rr prC'sent a tl vC', Branha m
single and double each by Wright
each saw , action In the doubleN(&gt;Ws paper ~a l es , 73.1 T hin] ,Avenu(',
N€&gt;W York , N ew Yo rk -10017..
1!11d Harrison with Hatfield a. single
header. Acree played six Innings In ..
and Carol Smith a single. J . Batz
the ilrst game and was hitless Jn
• 'POSTMA~ER :. SC'nd iH,Id r·c~s c ha ngl'S
had two singles and a double while
1o ThC' D a lly SPn lln t•l , 111 Court St..
two at bats.
Pome roy, Ohio 4:l769
Edwards added two singled to lead
Thomas pitched three lpnlngs,
SUBSC RIPTION RAT•:S
the fourth, fifth, and sixth, In the
tournament. trau that
By Carrier or Motor Routt•
nightcap and allowed. two runs,
OnC' Wf'f'k ... , .. ........... : ................. $1. 10
·ended as _the i'egt·on~J runners-up,
'
,,
-- •·
•. OnE" Monltl ........... :, .... -. ... ... .........1£4 .80
was th~ third highest advancement , . HILLSBORO - _Weliston'earned three hits. wal~ed four and fanned
OnC'._Yepr .............·.............. ~· ..., .. $57~211
!WQ.
by a Meigs High Sch09J team. Both · Its first appeararce into. I}IP stat~
SINGI.E COPY.
PRICE
the 1976 'boys' baseball and 1980
baseball tourna ment with an 8-3 · Gheen caught four Jhnlng~ tr\-the .
Da ll y .... ................ ..
second
game
and
played
two
more
. 2:1 Ce nt s
gfirls' softball teams went one · regional championship win over
frames
In
the
outfield.
Gheen
,
the
Subsr rlbers not d&lt;'slrl ng to pav lh&lt;'cor··
game further before·beJng outsted
Ironton here Saturday In Class AA
ri('r ma y remit In ad\'a ncP ·dlr&lt;'ct to
TVC's
Most
Valuable
Player,
failed
In the state semi-finals . The Lady
baseba ll action.
Tht' Dall y Sr&gt; ntln('] on a 3. Gor 12 mont h
bas is. Cl'rd lt will br !Z h'f'n c lll'riN each
Marauders defeated Belpre, South
Th£&gt; Golden Rockets, now 25-6, to get a hit In three at .bats but
month .
showed
his
defensive
prowess
by
Point, and Gallipolis for the Secpounded out ftve of their 11 hits off
throwing out ·a runner at second
No subscriptions by nia ll IX'fm !ncd In
tiona! crown, shut out Minford 11·0
Ironton ace Larry Collins In the first
towns WhC'rf' hom(' c arl'if• r s(•rvlc.·t• is
base
while
catching.
for the District crown, and had
Inning and coupled with two base on
a va llo f&gt;I C'.
South Point's Mark Ca rey was
whipped Sheridan 13-4 Jn the
balls, scored six runs and Ironton
Mall Suh!&lt;+crlptlons
named the East's MVP for the two
Reglonals' first game.
never recovered .
lnHidt• Ohio
games
as
the
shortstop-pitcher
had
13 \\i('cks .................................. SH.56
.Wellston had defeated New Rich26 WPeks .. ....... ...... .. ............. .... ~:!9. 1 :.!
By Innings:
mond 5-4 In action Friday with ace two hits In three trips. Meigs Head
52 Wf'£&gt;ks.. .............. ,. ........... ... . S5R24
Brook viii~
!XXI OOJ 3-:39 3
Coach-of-theCoach
and
District
Out"ldt• Ohio
J ohn Chafin on the mound. Brian
MC'Igs
001 lXII 0--1 ti 3
Year
Tim
Saunders,
coached
the
U
W!'C'
k
s
..................................
~15. 00
Deck was called on to)mrl the title
26 Wt&gt;Pk s ... ............ ................. .. $.'11. 20
East
squad
.
.
game Saturday and rrs)Xlnded with
52 W£&gt;&lt;'ks ................ ............... $59.80
a Complete game -win over lhe
Fighting Tigers . The Rockets had
upset highly-touted Portsmouth for
the district crown along their
series loss since they werP clob- tournament trail.
bered 129-96 by Boston in 1965.
Coach Pat Hendershot's WEll"They shot very well, we didn 't,"
ston nine will play the Barberton
said Los Angeles center Kareem
regional winner this Friday at 9:lJ
Abdul-Jabbar. "It was a terrible
a .m. In the opening round of the
game for u.s,"
*ALIGNMENTS *"FRONT END WORK
state tournament. The state finals
Danny Alnge. Improving \\1th
are slated for Saturday at 9:30a.m.
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
every game, scored 15 of his 19
on the Ohio State varsity diamond.
LOCATED: !IIIAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO
points In the first 12 minutes to send
By l nntn ~s :
OPEN: 8-6 MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.
Boston on lis way. Ledbythe6-foot -5 Wellaton
820 000 o-8 JI ~
guard , the Ceitlcs shot 59 percent In lron&amp;on
PH. 742-3088
100 002 0-3 7 1
M11ter Car&lt;! and Viea Welcome
Brlun Deck ("'P) 11nd Rob Rice Larry
the first period but their best was to
Collln!li (LP) u.nd David Moritz.
.
come.
Boston made 11 of Its first 12 shots
of the second quarter and opened a
7544 lead. All that was left to do was
to check tbe record books under
1
"Playoff HumUJatlon."
How'd they do it?
- Boston stymied the Lakers'
break, the main reason Los Angeles
was averaging 131 points a game In
the playoffs. The Celtlcs . hit 62
percent In the opening 24 minutes ,
I
I
tiAM-UM, Moo.-Sat.
I
got back on defense and permitted
The
World's
Biggest.
Best
Salad
.
only 3 run-and-gun baskets In the
BuHet'" Includes rwo hoi soups
I
first half.
(all-yOu·can-eat) . cannot be used
I
with othei discounts. la~ not IOCI.:t
panlcipatlng steakhouses CGUitO
..... tor attY fiii\Y slzo.
WIN Uotit 111tiil5

B~~~=igs

10

-

t8115n:t on :U plltf' appearance~ x no. d
,::oi'net•actl i(!llm hal J;hyed l.

" ' L P&lt;1. GB
.. .... .................. 111 H .66'7 -

ru.rd1 .......................... :J4 17 -~
Baltlmxf' ..................... ll 18 572:

(USPS U:&lt;-900)
A Dlvl"lon of Mulllnu..••li a, Inc . .

ATHENS - The West All-Stars
defeated the East In both ends of a

Phlladr.•lphl a - OptiO_II('d til'S! basm'lanCJJifk'ldf'r John Ru.swll ro Por1IE111d Of ttW
Paclflc Coast i..NJ!U(.': calltod up Utlrd
il:lliNTI.an Jtlck Srhu from Portland.

to!; AnJ:l~ . nl~t

..

· -. x--· ·-- ....-.

(

Scioto results

COLUMBUS- (UP!) - Saccharum set a track record Monday
when she won the Ohio Sires Stakes
for three-year-old filly pacers In 1: 55
4-5 at Scioto Downs.
That mark erased the one set
Ft1day by Melvin's Queen In 1:56.
Saccharum, driven by WIU!am
Walters, posted an eight-length win
over Stlenem who was malng her
season debut Melvin's Cartie was ·
third.
Demolition Queen, driven by Don
Swick, won another division of the
Ohio Sire Stakes for tllly pacers,
going the mil~ In 1: 56 4-5, a ll!etlme
mark for her. She defeated Talon

BB.
\

,,

Chopped Steak

Value Meals

.2f0f'$699
you.

Check yo~r white pages tor Ponderosa location nearest
Chopped Steak is U.S.D.A. inspectad 100% chopped beefsteak .

Includes the WOrld's Biggest. Best
Salad Bu«et'' with two hot soups
(all·yOu·can-eat) . baked potato and
warm roll with butter . Cannot be
used ""h otner discounts.Tax not
Inti. ~t participating steakhouses .
~ flll'l 111 11y party lite.

....................-..
WIN Ulllt lt1llll

The large dollar (lgures did not

turn Sullivan's head, but t)le
Loulsvlll£&gt;, Ky., driver vividly recalled spinning In the119th lap ashe
tried to pass below runner-up Mario
Andrettl. Sullivan lost control and
was passed by Andretti, but Sullivan
regained control and eventually
passed the 1969lndy winner to gain
'the victory.
"The man upstairs must have
been Ina good mood because He was
·smiling on both of us," Andrettl said.
"It was one of thOiie things,"
Sullivan said. "We were really too
1!lose lor comfort. Like M;uio said,
somebody up there was looking out

for us."

"Among the awards .for Sulljvan
and the Penske crew was $3,500 for a
traditional winner's drink of milk
after the race, $ro,(XXI for winning a
pit stop contest and $7,500 for having
tl!erace's most .p!Jotogetll~ ear.
Andrettl earited $200,362.50, mak-

ing him the eighth driver above the
$1 mUIJon mark in career earnings
at the speedway. His total included
$20,(XXI for having the fastest pit stop
in the race . Third place Roberto
Guerrero earned $157,112.50.
AI Unser, who placed fourth,
remained the all-time leading
money winner among Indianapolis
500 drivers. Unser earned
$102,532.50 - raising his career
earnings at Indianapolis to
$1,700,00'7.17.
Pole-sitter Pancho Carter had the
fourth largest prize money total
despite finishing last. The Brownsburg, Ind., driver earned more than
_baH of his total from qualifying
awards tor posting the fastest
quallfylngrurt in indianapolis Motor .
Speedway history - 212.583 mph.
Carter ran just six laps.
Johnny Rutherford placed sixth
and earned Sll9,582.50, keeping him
third on the all-time lndylTIOney Ust
. ·behind Unser and A.J .;Feyt:
.·Among '· Rutherford's · special.
awards was one for moving up the
best over his starling spot. The

places. He was llsted fifth before a
one-lap penalty was assessed Monday by U.S. Auto Club officials.
Arte Luyendyk, 31, the first Dutch
driver to drive at Indianapolis, was
named the race's "Rookie of the Year" in a media poll and £&gt;amed :
$7,500 for the honor. He started 20th
and !Jnlshed seventh, the best
showing by any of the six rookie
starters, earning a totalof$99.232.50.
The smallest paycheck·,
$53,21)2,50, went to George Snider,
who went just 13 laps before
dropping out with engine trouble.

SUN FUN ·

·PENNZOIL
s,.e~,,

PEPSI

·$181 .
"Sero •inlf Wi1h A Smil&lt;• "
Llllatod In llllino, OH.

Irwin wins Memorial Tourney ,..T_e_xa_ns_ta_rted_JOt_h_an_dm_o_ved-up......2 4 - l - - - - - - - - DUBLIN, Ohio (UP!) - Hale
Irwin, because he had been playing
so poorly, decided to bypaSs this
year's British Open Championship.
Now he's having second thoughts.
"I opted not to play In the British
Open because I wasn't playing
well," said Irwin, who won the
$600,0XJ Memorial Tournament
Sunday on the dlfftcuit Mulrfleld
. VlllageGolfClub.Coursebyoneshot
over Lanny Wadkins.
"The only way I can play In the
Bt1tlsh Open now Is to win the U.S.
Open," said the two-time winner of
that event, "and that doesn't sound

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
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~ $}99 ;~~~roll'! ~

By JIM SlATER
United Pre8s Intemallonal
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!)
Though he just had collected a
historic purse, Indianapolis ~
winner Danny Sullivan was stlll
marveling over his narrow esca!*
from an lricredlble spin during the
race.
Sullivan and the Roger Penske
racing team received $507,662.50 at
an awards ceremony Monday
honoring the 33 drivers who competed In Sunday's 69tli auto racing
classic.
The highest previous Indy (iayoff
was the $434,000.~ won by 1984
champion Rick Mears.
·.
The total pa'td
!he drivers was·
$3,261,005, breaking !he previous
high of $2,795,9i!9 In 1984. Sullivan's
winnings were more than the entire
field earned In any of the first 48
~ race$', '!P tp 1961. : _'
,

right oi SuWv1111 Is lite Borg-Warner trophy for the \iclor. SulllviUI, ol
Loulsvllle, Ky., won In only his third 500 race. lWI-

record Indy 500 purse

\

RUTLAND
TIRE
SALES
noEniNO VOU TIIERE SAFELV"

The World's

Sulli~an draws

/.,

r;::::::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::=:::====~

~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~-~~~~-~~::- ........

CAP'nJRES INDY 500- Danny Sullivan waves to fans SIUlday after
w1nn11iJt the 1985 IndlanaJt&lt;lUs 500 over Mario Andretll. Behind and to the

to

tourney

Celtic.s blast Lak~rs, I48-ll4
BOSTON (UP!)
In only 7\-2
minutes. the Los AngPies Lake rs
realized theirdaysat the beach were

Eas!f&gt;rn

-

ly Un~Le~i PreM ll*maetxel

Four".

. Eastern hitt er s wete Angle
Spencer with four singles and a
four-for-five outing, and singles by
Tonya Savoy, Krist! &lt;Oaddls, Lesa
Rucker, Kim Dent , and Beth
Berkhimer.
Clay had but three hits: a double
by Gondballet and singles by Craft
and Cpnley.
KriSt! Gaddis went the di stance to
pick up the win with luur walks.
three strikeouts. a nd three hi ts
registered In seven innings of work.
Gaddis hit one batter.
Patti Grey suffered the Joss )Nith
six walks and two strikeouts.
Llnescore:

' Leaders

.utEIUCAN lEAGUE

which you're going to consistently
knock the flags down.
"It was tough today," said
Wadkins, whose final round of
2-under par741efthim at 282 and one
shot short of a tie. "The pin
placements were severe and. with
the wind, I hit clubs I've never hit
here before."
Jack Nicklaus. who designed and
built Mulrfleld , once said it takes a
"U.S. Open type player" to win 'a t
Mwileld.

D. MICHAEL MULLEN
AnORNEY ·AT-LAW .
OFFICE HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
1:00-4:30
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
105 EAST SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY

992-6417

too bad."

:- BIG CATCH- Pomaoy utller Homer Baxtel: 111111 (lllllld8on Ricky

show oft t* Ill loch Northern Pike C8IJiht by Baxlel: whDe vacallonlnl

recently In Quebec, Canada w1t11 Beany
. from Lake Klpawa In Laniel, Quebec-

Ewtna:.- 1be Ills catch came

Steelers' No. 1 draft choice 'a bsent
PriTsBURGH (UP)) - The Monday were quarterbacks · Mark
Pittsburgh Steelers opened their .. Malone, David Woodley and Scott
annual mlnl-campMondayat'l'hree Campbell and running back Walter
Rivers Stadium but No. 1 draft Abercrombie.
Center-guard Tom DixQn, a free
chOice Darryl Slnns was absent.
agent,
was released because he
SJnns, a · defensive end from
failed
his
physical exam. Dixon
Wisconsin , stayed home on the
underwent
a thumb operation
advice of his agent, Ray Galindo.
during
the
o!f-season
and doctors
The Steelers and Galindo have not
feared
the
Injury
had
not healed
reached a contract agreement, and ·
properly.
A
team
spokesman
said
the agent said he feared his client
might be Injured In tlie mini-camp . Dixon will be re-examined prior to
Of the 75 players reporting lor the the beginning of training camp In
July.
'
week-longcamp, '!I were veterans.
Among the veterans reporting

WH0-0~-0

·can help
you?
,CLASSIFIED
ADS

992-2156

Irwin had struggled since last
year's U.S. Open. He ,was 62nd on
this year's PGA Tour money Ust
going Into the Memorial, an unusual
spot for a player who hadn't finished
lower than 31st the last 14 years.
"This win will shed a Utile light on
what will happen the rest of the
summer," said Irwin, "I haven't set
that up yet. Winning breeds
winning."
Irwin shot a final round of even
par 72 Sunday, building up a
·four-stroke lead with four holeS to
play and holding on to win by one.
He finished with a 7-under par281
score for the72 holes, tbesametotal
he had when he won the Memorial in
1!&amp;.
"This kind or proves I've cycled
out of last year's probiems," said
Irwin, who picked up$100,1XXJ for the
victory and now stands llth on the
all-time PGA money Jist.
"I dldn 't think I played up to my
· potential this week," he added .
"Experience more than anything
won for me. That and patience, but ·
that comes with experience.
"I don't want to sar I played
terribly," Irwin said. "If I had to
pick out one part of my game that
was not good, It was my driving. If •
you don't hit lt 1good off the tee, It
doesn'.t!M!tyou up good for the restor
thehole.u
Earlier In the week; after he had
shot back-to-hack 4-under par 68s
the ttrst two days, going 43 holes
before finally picking up a bogey,
Irwin said he was "managlrig my
misseS well."
But, doWn through the 10 yean of
the Me!1101'1al, that's what most of
the championS have done. The
MulrfleldVUlage course Isn't one on

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�,The Daily Sentinel

Computer ·camp planned _at OU
choice or either' BASIC graphics or
ATHENS- "You Don't Have To
an Introduction to a word processor,
Be A Computer Wlzard To Create A
and sprea&lt;lsheet. package.
filing,
Little Micro Magic." This Is agal!l
The
O.V. Computer Camp
the theme of the Ohio University
stresses
active trlvolvement. "It Is
Computer Camp offered for the
Important that t he campers feel ·
second y&lt;'ar to young !)e!lple aged 10
control of the computers Is In their
through 16 this July. This unique
summer experience combines the · hands, that they are making things
happen," says Denise KerVIn.
fun of a traditional camp with the
excitem e nt of lea r ning a bout . director of the Computer Camp.
The camp offers a maximum of .
computers.
hands-on experience and personal
Instruction is offered at the
attentlon .with Instructors carefully
beginning, lntermed_late, and adselected from Ohio University and
vanced levels with aU the campers
area public schools, and the ratio of
being Introduced to computing
campers to computers belilg 2: I or
concepts. dilfer!'nt applications of
1:1.
microComputers a nd software a nd
O.U.'s Comput!'r Camp.ts mor&lt;'
the social' implications of the
than
just comptll&lt;'rs. Residential
computer revolution.
will live in a university'
campers
· Campers with little or mcompurwith experienced coundormitory
lng expe~lence learn LOGO, a
slmpl&lt;' language used to produce selors. R..creatlon and &lt;'V&lt;'nlng
activities Include a wide range of
graphics, and BASIC program·
sports, games, movies: discussions,
mlng. Those with intermediate and
advanced computing skills learn and cookouts.
Space Is still avallabl&lt;' In each of
PASCAL programming and their

the cmap's two fdentlcal sessions:
July.7-13 and July 14-20. The f..,. for
residential campers Is $2!ll and
Includes room and board, recrea·
lion and special activities, health
care and Insurance, learning folder
and camp T-shirt.
For campers who prefer to
commute from borne, or will be
visiting with friends ore relatives In
the Athens area, the camp Is also
taking non-residential applications.
The day camper fee Is $150 and
allows the camper to participate lq
all classes and tours and also to !'at
lunch with r&lt;'Sidentia:t campers.
There Is a special discount for
famllles sending more than on&lt;'
child to the O.U. Computer Camp:
the full fee Is paid for the first chid,
while 20 percent Is deduCted. from
the lee for the second child.
For an Information brochure and
application form call toll-free HDl·
336-5699 (Ohio residents) or 1-614594-6876 collect (outside Ohto) .

Pom~roy

STATEREGENTSI'EAJlS-Mrs.DonaldS.Bialr,
center, the Oblo DaugNers of the Amretcan

Revolutloa .,.eat, gave aNstory 111111 NgbllgiU of the
organlzallon at Retum Jonalllan Meigs
. CIJ!Ipter

Skin cancer highly rurable, ACS says
There are an estimated 400,&lt;XXl
cases of skin cancer a year and a
vast majority are highly curable
basal or squamous cell cancers and
a lot of these can be prevented by
the way we live, according to S.
Michael. public Information chair·
man . of the American Cancer
Society in Meigs county.
Over 90 percent of -skin cancers
are curable . The most serious skin
cancer is malignant melanoma,
which strikes about 18,&lt;XXl men and
women each year.

Those more likely to get skin
cancer are those with lightly
pigme nted skln; living at latitudes
near the equator, excessive exposure to the sun; occupational
ex(Xlsure to coal tar, pitch. creo-

sote, arsenic compounds and 1
radium .
'
Ways In helping yourself In the
prevention of skin cancer are avoid
over-exposure to the sun: use a
sunscreen preparaton; use protective covering; If an unusual skin
condition Is noted have It checked
by a physician.
Basai and squamous cell skin
cancers often look like a pale,
waxlike, pearly nodul&lt;', or, scaly,
sharply outlined patch and melanomas are usually distinguished by a
dark brown or black pigmentation.
They start as small, mole·llke
growths that Increase In size,
change color, become ulcerated
and bleed easily from a slight
Injury. If you note anything unusual

.

Robert Ashley, retiring repat.

DAR hears \Ohio state regent

only the doctor can be sureWhether
II is benign, precancerous . or
·
malignant.
There are four methods of
treatment: surgery, radiation ther·
apy, electrodesiccation (tissue destruction by heat). or cryosurgery
(tissue destruction by freezing).
For malignant melanoma, wide
and d""P. surgical excision and the
removal of nearby lymptl nodes are
often_required.
Protect yourself from the sun this
summer and decrease the chance
of getting skin cancer.
For more Information caD 9927531 or' stop at the office In the Old
Masonic Temple on Tuesdays or
Thursdays from 1-4: 30 p.m.

Mrs. DonaldS. Blair, state regent
of the Ohio Daughters of the
American Revolution, was guest
sPeaker at the Friday luncheon
meeting Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, DAR, held at the Meigs

of

Inn.

'

Mrs. Blair S(Xlke of the early
history or the organization noting
!bat II was founded on Oct. 11. 1890
-and chartered by thrCongressofthe
United States. Eighteen women
attended and that day adopted the
constllition and passed a resolution

making the flag the emblem. The

PAR Is the largest women's
organlzatlonlntheworldandownan
enttre block in Washington D.C.,
Mrs. Blair noted. She said that they
maintain lbe three buildings on the
property with Constitution Hall
having th!' largest auditorium in
Washington D.C. which Is rented for
public use,
The state regent reported on lbe
many schools sup(Xlrted by the
Daughters, along with lbe museum

Nursing convention held,
theme 'Love made visible'
"Nursing Is Love Made VIsible" by Medicare and the impact It
was the theme for tlJe 1985 LPNAO have on the LPNs. Mildred Smith,
Student Convention held In Colum- executive director of LPNAO, gave
an Informative update on the Nurse
bus on May 6.
Practice
Act In relation to the
The student body of the Practical
L.P.N.
Nursing Program from Gallla·
The afternoon session focused on
Jackson-VInton J.V.S. attended.
Barb Steinbeck, Galll(Xllis, secre- the future of LPN's In long term
tary of the_class, was ill chrge of care and home health care.
·Mary Dummitt, class historian,
registration ..Staff members attend·
lng tni::ludl!d .· Mary sue Weiland ; ·~ccepted the iOO perc!'nt inemhercoordinator, and Betty PlYmale shlp.award. This award Is given to
schools who bave 100 percent
al\d P.am Moran, instructoi'S~
The program begati wilb the student mem~shlp in the Student
Practical Nursing Association of
Graqd March of Students. This was
~
I
very coloRful parade with ea~n . Olllo.
Members
·
of
-the
·stlldent body ·
group of swdents tn .their school
ffum
Buck&lt;'ye
'tfllls
Career
Center.
unlfom\: · ~thy Bush, .?omeroy,
pai1tctpated
In
a
.Ong
·and
darire
president of the class, carried the
routine_
relating
to
nursing
school
school bann&lt;'r which was displayed
which was composed by the
on stage with the other school
students.
bann!'rs.
The - student convention Is an
After the traditional opening
ceremonies, Connie Aelker, Galli· annual event which allows the
students to grow educationally and
polls, class representative, ans·
·
professionally.
wered the roll call for Buckeye
Hills, while Tim Litchfield, class
five president, and Sharon Wray,
class treasurer, both from Point
Pleasant, modeled the school's
uniforms.
The keynote address focused on
the changes in hospital payments

.. a

equipment. '!bey are left to riJ!bt, Juanita Nonnan
president; Louise Bearhs, vice president, seated; &amp;nci
Clara Burris, recording secretary; Mary Fobner,
treasurer, and Maribelle Frecker, aeslstnnttreasurer.

which contains artifacts Including
all but two of the signatures of the
signers of the Declaratio!l of
Independence. Sh!'saldthatthelast
number Issued for membersh)pwas ·
· 692,020 with Mrs. Nancy Reagan
belpg the eighth First Lady to
become a member.
New officers were Installed · by
Mrs. Blair lind Include Mrs. Ronald
Reynolds, regent; Mrs. Roger
Luckeydoo, first vice regent; Mrs.
Mark Grueser, second vice regent;
Mrs. Joseph Cook, chapla\11; Mrs.
Robert D. Ashley, r&lt;'Cofdlng secretary; Mrs. Vernon Weber, corresponding secretary; Mrs. George
Skinner, treasurer; Mrs. Pearl
Mora. registrar. and Mrs. Clarence
Struble, librarian. Mrs. Margaret
Ella Lewis, historian, will be
Installed later.
Mrs. Ashley presided at the
m""ting welcoming the members
and guests wilb highlights of early
Meigs County history. Mrs. Luckeydoo led the pledg&lt;' following the
opening ritual, and Mrs. George
Skinner led In the American Creed.
The national def&lt;'nse report was
given by Mrs. Gene Yost with Mrs.
Clarence Struble having the Invocation and ilelledlctlon .. ·
. , .
Gui&gt;sts from Nathaniel MassiE'
Chapter of Chillicothe, Martella
. Chapter, Nabby Lee Ames Chapter
of Albens, Ann Simpson DaVis,
Franklinton and Whetstone .ChaP.
. ters ofthe Co!umllils area, French :
Colony Chapter, GallliPoJis, and Co!.
Charles Lewis Chapter of Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
Hostesses for the meeting were
Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mrs. Robert D.
Ashley, Mrs. J. EdWard ·Foster,
Mrs. Harold Sarg&lt;'Dt, Mrs. Law- renee Smith, Jr. and Mrs. Gene '
Yost.

•.

'

20-VEAR PIN -ThGmas Wolfe, chalnnan of the Board of Directors of
Veterans Memorial H011pilal, pre!leMed a 20 year pin to Walter Lucas,
. hollpllal administrator at Frt~'s recoplllon program which
~'OIICiuded octivllles for NatiGnal HOIIplia! Week.

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WEDNESDAY ...............r9 A.M.-7 P.M.
THURSDAY ................~•• 9 A.M.-7 P.M:
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Elb.abeih AnP. Wolfe

MarY MlcheDe Clatwortit.v
.

.

Other reunion classes with out-ofleigh, N.C .. daughterofSammyRay
county alumni returning for obser·
Clatwort!JY, 1966, and Brenda K.
vimces Included:
Clatworthy, 1967, · who will be
Class of 1940, Maxine Bennett,
attending tJie North Crollna Slate
University, School of Computer Columbus; Wanda Byers Beck,
Fort Myers. Fla.; Betty Jo Roush
Science.
Allensworth, GrovepOrt; Marvel
Susan Lynn Stephenson, Beaver,
Schmoll Wilcox, DeSota, Mo.:
daughter of . John · Raymond SteCharles Entsminger, South 'Chaphenson Sr., 1962, and ·Glorta Sue
rleston,
W.Va.; Charles Brooks,
Stephenson, 1962, who will be
Mansfield;
Gene and Janet Harris,
attending Rio Grande College.
Columbus,
WilHam
G. Suter, BamElizabeth Ann Wolfe, Fort Myers,
well.
S.C.;
Michael
Hackett, Fort
Fla., daughter of Harold W. Wolfe,
1959, and Carol Hudson, 1959, who Myers, Fla.; Martha Robson Cunnlngham, Lima; Charles R. Roush,
will attending MlliigWI College In
Des Moines, Iowa; Mildred Asbury
Tennessee.
. Also awarded at the banquet was Mosley, St. Albans, W.Va.; Dorothy
StewartWhlte,Roscommon,Mich.;
the Crawford-Gray Lewis Scholar·
ship to Miss Ashley.Thescholarship Lenore Bingham Wm; Brighton,
Mich.; VIrginia Mye5 Covert, Rio ,
was established by Dr. EdWard
Grande;
Evelyn Knopp Vog&lt;'lsong,
W,W. Lewis, MHSclassof1934and Is
Wheelersburg;
and Easter Ewing
given In honor or In memory or Dr.
I&gt;~~
vis,
South
Daytona,
Fla.
Richard H. Crawford, H. Burdette
Class of 1945, F.ranklin Ginther,
Gray, Mr. and Mrs. George H.
Lewis, and Judith Andress Lewis as Columbus; Mary Ohlinger
Schelcher, Parma; HarryK Clark.
well as his eight siblings.
L.W. McComas had the lnvoca· . Martha Ohlinger, and Robert
.lion preceding the dinner, with Paul Tewksbary. i()('aL
Class of 1950, Ida Hrtley Roller,
Haptonstall presiding at the bUst•
Waldorf,
Md. ; John Go! hard. Malvness meeting; Martha Heines
em,
Pa.,
Naomi Overturf Durst,
Anderson giving the .secretary's
GaWpolls.
report, James Clatworthy, the
Class . of 1955, Iris Van Cooney
treasurer's . report, and Edison
Baker. lntrod~ction of the reunion
Stanley,
Franklin;
Fred London;
Lewis,
Cleves, James
Puckett,
classes.
Dorothy Gardner Roush an. Winona Fink Buckley. Proctorville;
Scholarships
nounced
the 19ai ofllrers, John Patricia Baker RuSijeli. Fairflll',
Susan Park Scholarship reclp·
Blake,
president;
.J ohn Hood, vice Va.; Barbara Scott Si'!ites, CoJfun.
Ients were announced by Wallace
president;
Bob
Caruthers,
co-vice bus; Phyllis I. Ebersbach, Orchard
Bradford. AU of those selected to
president;
Cherole
Burdette,
secre- · Lake, MI.
receive scholarships awarded from
Class of 1960, Phyllls Hilbert
Interest on the $31 ,131 fund had a tary; and Freddie Houdashelt,
Townsley,
Grove City; Judy Gregg
grade point a,verage of 3.5 or better. treasurer.
Barrows,
Albens;
Carolyn BradThe program l)ook was dedicated
The scholarships were $650 each. '
ford
Ketchka,
_Indianapolis,
Ind.;
Mary Lu Hartinger Boggs, Carol in memory of BU!Andersotl, ciassof
Walburn,
Beverly;
Jan
and
Dennis
Bachtel Tannehill, and Jeanette 1935, who designed the MHS crest.
Cooney
Hauck,
WesterBonnie
Van,
Crooks Thomas served on th&lt;' Music for dancing was by the Mary
ville; Marianna Woodgerd. Columselection commltt,.,.. A total of 63 Lucas Trio, Ga!Upolls.
scholarships have been awarded

Recognition of reunion classes
and the awardlngofslx scholarships
to the sons and daughters of
Middleport High School graduates
'highlighted Saturday night's ban- ·
quet of the Middleport Alumni
ASsocaltlon held at Meigs Junior
High SchooL
.
There to observe his 70th anniv&lt;'r·
sary or graduation was Rodney
Downing of Middleport; their 60th
anniversary, Robert McKay of
Bowllng Green and Jennings and
Francis Daniels Keffer, Columbus;
and their 55th anniversary, Willa M.
Edwards Coats, Middleport, and
R,uby Byers Lewis, Ellenton, Fla.
Ret11rnlng to Mlddle(Xlrt for their
50th anniversary observance were
Jean Reed Vandermade, Milwaukee, Wise. Helen French Morgan,
Tampa, Fla.; francis Curtis Mcintosh, Dayton, Emma J. Bearhs
Webster, Beverly; Earl Rickman,
Ocala, Fla.; William R. Reynolds,
Safely Harbour, Fla., and Clarence
Swearlngton, Columbus. They were
joined by local resld!'nts, Dorothy
Gardner Roush, Langsville; Edison
Baker, .William Bardford, James
Clatwort.hy, Paul HaptonslaU, Kathleen Bush Davis, Virginia Childs
Scott, Mildred Graves Long, and
Martha Helncs Anderson.

RACINE Southern Local
School Board meetS 7 p.m. Tuesday
atthe high ~bOOL '

our better quality

-

Middleport alumni has meeting, gives scholarships

'

Gallpn .

•.

USa Renee Ashley

POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters meet 7 p.m. Tuesday at Ihe
ll!gh school.

'

Belpre; Barry Geg~ r . Malta; Anita
Hall Chadwick, Grove City; Ruetta
Wells Coll ins, Groveport ; Janice L.
.Wehrung Kteker , Mentor; Jonnle
Thom pson Klnny, Richmond . Va.;
Bessie Watson Sylvester, Fla.
Delray B!'ach, Fla.: E rnes t M!'n•
chlni, Trent on, Mich,; Brenda Potts
Hopfer. Spring Va lley; Joe Gilmore, Walworth, Wise.; Louis A.
Diehl, Cuyahoga Falls; Robert
Crow, Zanesville; Tom McGOwan,
Houston. Texas.
Music for the dance which
followed the banquet was provided
by Gentlemen IlL The benediction
was given by Louis Diehl, a nd the
banquet concluded with woup
~inging of the Alma Mater .

All SEATS $2.25·

POMEROY - 'Southern Local
School District OAPSE Clla,pte•r 4531
meeting 7: ll p.m. Tuesday night at .
high school to vote on contract..

ANNOUNCES

.5c?tt..

tJarnar$ lJonovan Hines, Newa rk;
Linda Stockton Watson, Canal
Winchester; Michael Ohlinger , Albany;. 'Linda Cl))w Beegle, Worthington; Barrl&lt;' R. Phillips, E ndicott, N. Y.; Karen Drake Smith,
Gahanna ; Michael Strawser. Reynoldsburg; Marilyn Mart in, Ga lll(Xllis ; Robert Hamm. Struthers;
Janice Gettles, Wellston; Cha rles
Kitchen, Mason, W. va .; Albert
Martin , Vincent; Wllllam Gibbs.
Roswell, N. M.; Brure Stalnaker,
Port Charlotte, Fla.; Mike Roberts.
Newark; Ruth Ann Edwa rds
Parker , California; Mike W&lt;'rry.
Belpre; Ethel Ma&lt;' Hysell, Ashley;
Luanna Leonard, Columbus; J en·
nlfer Brown, Columbus; Phillip
Swindell, Pembroke Lakes, Fla .;
Katie Monirlty Davis, Sunbury;
P.a tricla Hysell ShUt, Ashley; Dr.
Frank W. Port!'r III , Gettysburg,
Pa.; Faye Cramer Isenhour, Con·
over, N.C.; Carla Will Werry,

HONORED ~ Ali educator In
the Pomeroy schoolsfor41 years,
Aaron M. Zahl was honored at
the 67th annual meeting of the
Pomeroy Alumni Association.
Zahl was born and reared In
Meigs County. gr...tualed from
Ohio University Wid was an
industrial arts te~her In Pomeroy High SciJOOI from 1928tmlll he
moved for his final year of
te~hlng ln the new Meigs High
School building.

ADNISSJDN EVERY TU£SOAV $2 .25

Pf. PLEASNT- MGM Rwinl!!g
Club meets at Krodel Park, 7: ll
p.m. All ruMers ·w alkers, joggers
and cycUsts Invited.

1199

NelsonvUle; John R. Weeks, Barb
Scholl Weeks, The Plains; Eunice
Hill Jones, Sikeston, Mo.; Ora Mae
LRelnhart Burton, Loogvotie, Ind.
Patty Watson Buck, Springfield;
Charles Stanley, Mt.' Vernon; El nora Barnitz W!'lls, Warsaw; Ha rold Hysell. Duluth, Ga.; Loullse
Dailey Kelly, 'Columbus; Opal
Howell Caruthers, Beach City;
Homer Walt!'r, Toledo; Richa rd
Rosenbaum, Caurornla; Patricia
Meier Suchaga, Pittsburgh; George
Paulsen, Ashland; John H. Watson,
Canal Winchester; Gene Yeauge r,
Enon; Mary Clifford Uoyd McConnelsville; Roger Gruesser, Logan,
Dn&gt;wHaggy,
C::olumbus; Ray Hines , Belpre;
Bill Hysell, Columbus; Ivan Shum·
ate, Mansfield; Nancy B. Lee,
Columbus; Mary Hemsley Sirnrns,
Gallipolis; Rita Beegle Fisher,
Hebron; Roger Hines, Newark;
Bridget Rusche], Columbus; Jo
Chapman Hines, Belpre; Nancy
Jacobs Hanold, Columbus; Donna
Wildermuth Nibert, Galli[X&gt;lls; Ted
M._Beegle, Worthington; Carol L.
~a.rhs ~hllllps, Endicott, N. Y .;

ii;AA:GAIN MTI"E£5 SAT I .SUN

TUE'&gt;DAV

THE MEIGS .HEALTH SEIYICES, INC.

president; Yvonne Young, Genhetmer Frankel, Belpre; Lu·
s..cretary-treasurer, and April cille Jividen' Swackhammer. MaSmith, assistant s ecretary son; Edna FisherSchcienleb, 1925.
treasurer.
Other out-of-county alumni reOfficers elected for the 1!8&gt; turning tor the banquet Included
reunion were Dan . Morris and Kathryn Leifheit Peters, Arcadia;
Kenny Wiggins, co-presidents; Ken· Martha Hoffn&lt;'r Chan, Finley;
neth McCullough, first vice pres!- WUllam Kennedy, Columbus; Thodent; Yvonne Young, second vice mas Clark, Lancaster; Kathleen
president; and April Smith, Paulton Haweil, Canton; June
secretarr-treasurer. Named to the . Amberger Fry, Columbus Jre
executive committee were Brenda Quisenberry. Casselbet'ry, Fla.;
Morris, Bob Bl,lrton, Earlene Bum- Ruth Huhef Kauffman, Halifax,
gardner, Chari~ Kitchen, Tom Mass; • Geneva Webster Han&lt;'y,
Smllb, Unda Mayer, and Mary Ftnt!'y; Mildred Evans Stevens,
Powell. Appointed to serve on the Huntington, W.Va.; Jeanne Lett·
advisory tommltiee were Joanne wiler. Edward Leltwiler, ColumWlllirut!!iand Mrs. Wise.
, bus; Ida Allee Waddell Carper,
Joe Struble was master of Kirkersville; Richard S. Hartung,
reremonles for the reunion with the Bedford, Pa.; Theda Martin Clark,
groupjolnln¥tosing"America, the Lancaster; MlltonHoudashelt, GaiBeautiful" and "Purple and White" · llpolis; James Edgar Glnlb!'r,
will! Lucille Swackhamn\er at the WaYnesville; Charles Carpenter,
ptallo. TbeRev. WaldRadfordgave . Kirkersville; Fleta Smith· Wiley,
the Invocation.
Columbus; Grace Jarvis, HutnlngThere was recognition of classes ton, W.Va .; Delmar Hamm, South
with Radford being the oldest Webster; Annabel Houdashelt, Galgraduate, 1916. Others having llpolls; F1oyd Grllilth, Galloway;
graduated 60 or more years ago . Marie WUllanos Portsmouth.
r&lt;'Cognlzed were Ffed Goegleln,
Mary Goodwin Bartels, Stevens1918; Rosaltha Mae Ginther Buck, ville, Mich.; · Ora Mae Burton
Waynesville,1920; MarleBichman, Reinhart, Loogvotte; Ind.; Betty
1921; Irving K;ur Jr., Mason, Lou Kennedy Billlngby, Columbus;
W.Va.; Edison Hobstetter, Ger· Bob Jay, Columbus; Mabel Brown
trudeMitcheU, ElmoreSlarkBoice, Bailey, F1orlda; John Matson,
and Aaron Zahl, Pomeroy, and Virginia Crerw, Columbus; Sarah
Howard Ebersbach, Route 1, Por· L. Genhelmer White, Columbus;
tland, 1922; Thebrui Dill, Syracuse, Maryu Zwelllng Roush, Columbus;
~rnadlne Sauders Meier, PomeEarline Hysell lng, Powell; Ruth
roy, 1923; Dr. Roger Daniels, Harbrecht Rosenbaum, Wllmlng·
Pomeroy, 1924; and Lester Hart, ton, Delaware; Agnes Bentz ~.
Helena Phillips Daniel, Kathleen Lilt!&lt;' Hocking; Charles J. White,
Batley
Racine; Hortense Columbus; Elaine Young Rogers,

. .l'lw!M . ... !;2A

CHESHlRE - Cheshire OES
meets Tuesday, 8 p.m.

Thesacramentofbaptlsmandthe
rites of confirmation and member·
ship were carried out at the Sunday
morning service of Trinity Church.
Baptized were Andrew Clayton
Mahlman, and Daniel . Richard
Taylor who was W!'icomed Into
church membership along with
Mrs. Gall Francis. Mrs. Sarah J.
Mahlman, and Roxann Mahlman.
Receiving the rite of confirmation
were Jennifer Lynn Buck. Sabrina
Ann Mahlman, Henry E. Cleland
III, Kimberly Sue Ewing, Donald
Chase Cleland, Andrew C. Mahlman, and Michael William Mayer.
The Rev. Wilbur H. Perrin:
pastor, presided at tbe service.

Page 7

:;31 JACKSON, PN&lt;E • RT. J:; WEST

- Calendar

Sacraments given

Tuesday, May 28. 1985

alumni meets, honors graduat___e

A tribute to Aaron Zahl, an
educator for 41 years In Pomer9y, .
and the awarding of two scholarships were highlights of the 67th
annual banquet of the Pomeroy
Alumni Association held Saturday
night at Meigs High School.
Zahl was presented a n engraved
silver cup. It was noted !bat he had
began his teaching career In
Industrial arts at Pomeroy High
School in 1928 and concluded It at the
newly llullt. consolidated Meigs
High School in 1969.
.
BornandrearedinMinersvllle,he
attended the two-room Minersville
Grade SchOOl. on Minersville Hill
Road. AfterenterlngPomeroyHigh
School, he was butstanding In
basketball, baseball and track,
wining 13 gold medals for S(Xlrts.
After grllduatingfromhighschoolin
. 1922, he went to Ohio University
where he received his bachelor of
scl&lt;'Dce degree In 1936.
ThePomeroy Alumni Association
scholarships were awarded to
Marianne Coleen Circle, daughter
of Patricia Blakeslee Circle, 1959 ·
Pomeroy aiurnni, and Melvin Cirde, Wichita, Kansas; and Michael
RlcbitrdDeWees,GroveC!ty, sonof
Fay Thomas Dewees, PHS 1958
graduate, and· Clarence DeWees.
.C_irele plans to attend kansas
University to pilrsue a major in •,
business administration. DeWees
will go to Ohio State Unlv&lt;'rslty.
Presiding officers 0\t the banquet
attended by 3711 alumni and guests
were Mary Jane Wise, president;
Dottle Musser, first viCe president;
Kenneth McCullough, second vice

annual sprtng luncheon held at the Meigs Inn. Mrs.
Blair inlltalled the 1985-116 office"' liJcludlng, Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds, new regent, left, pictured wUhMrs.

wlll

REC.oGNIZED FOR SERVICE -Corsages were
presented to the officers of the Ladies Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital In recognltloo of their
service to the hospital In the way of volunteer hours as
weD a.~ fund raising ~llvitles lor the purchase of

By -The Bend

"

'

since the scholarship program was
started.
Receiving the scholarships-were:
Michael Richard DeWees, Grove
City, son of Clarence Dewees, class
of1958,andFayDeWees,wboplans
to attend either Ohio State Unlver·
sltyorFrankllnUniverslty. .
Usa Renee Ashley. Middleport,
daughter of David Grayson Ashley,
1966, and Diane Louise Smith
(Zlrkle),l965,whowlllbeattendlng
the Washington Technical College.
Mary Michele Clatworthy, Ra-

--

007,..
-®]

A.VIEW

~Kill

lis; Edward and Ruth Tewksbary,
bus; Jerry L. Fry, Montgomery,
Wellston
; Ellen Mygall Young,
Ala.; Don Grueser, Mt. Lebanon,
Park. Fla.; Clarence .
Pin&lt;'llas
Pa.; K!'nneth · Manley, Arlington
Tacoma,
Wash.; Jack
Clark.
H&lt;'lghts, Ill; Ronnie Wilt , LancasBacon,
Westerville.
C. Asa Brad·
ter; Jeffrey Kokovltch. PhOE'nlx,
bury, Circleville; Charles Gordon,
Arizona.
Class of 1965, Judy Moore We bb, Groveport , Bill Dil&lt;'S , Athens;
Springfield; Roger Roush, Colum- Marjorie Diles Mitchell, Pat ty
b\is; Seren Lewis Livingston, North- DeVol Klres, Joe and Mildred
brook, Ill.; chrlstineBahrWilliams, Bailey, Bidwell; Richard and Marte
GaDI(Xllls; Johh and Gloria Fetty Webb Pickens. Cheshire; E sther
Case, Columbus; DavidCasc!,Lake Gardner Vale,• Monow, Noami
Ov!'rturf Durst, Gallipolis; Joan
Park, Fla.; James L. Johnson,
,
Fairfield, Calif.; Tom Lyons. Pon· Kircher Bonnell, Day ton, Beverly
!lac, Michigan; Martha Nicholson , P!'rrln Dixon, Lake Orten, MI-.;
Largo, Fla.; Tom King, Worthlng- Harold and Janet Frost Hinkle,
Athens; Helen Taylor Fox, IV!arys· ·
ton; Alan Wallace, Canal Winches·
ter; Mary Walburn Taylor, villf, Charles Dudding, Ely ri~ .
Fostoria.
Other out-of-county alumni re·
turnlngforth&lt;'hanquetwereJohnJ .
WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
Dixon, South Charleston; Frances
Drenner, St. All!3ns; J ean McKay
Jarvis, Port Washington; Phyllis
DllesJivlden,Athens; Roger.LightDining Room Only
Served with
foot, Galloway; Robert and Mary
Mitch, Wheeling. W.Va.; ChariesJ .
Mashed Potatoes,
Pickens, Newark; Eleanor Roush
Choice of Salad, Roll &amp; Drink
Quelette, Mary Jane Ury, Gel
Kerwood, Eugene E . Schaaf, Cor·
don and Mary Harris, Lois Diles
Bush, John and Gloria Fetty Case,
Mr. and Mrs, Jerry Roof, ColumPH. 992-5432
Pomf!fOI#. OH.

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

~b~u~s~;~A~ltred~~Sc~a~rbe=rry=,~Jr=·~·G~a=l=ll=po=·~~====================~~~~

DOES PRE-PLANNING HELP THE FAMILY?

II)iiii~--~-----·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiii~iii1

The Da•·ly,Se' nt•·nel

Is Now Taking AppI'•cations f or
Walking Carriers In The
Middleport-Pomeroy Areas.
CALL 992· • 2155
"•lliiiii.iiiiiiliiiiili

5:00

BILL BLOWER

.~~&amp;- C{tJata.f!JI«tteA

Pre -planning for your own funeral arrangements is an utre. mely thouihlful thin1 to do - for your family . This is wht
Pre -plannina takes the burden of making funeral man&amp;e·
ments off the family when they are least equipped to cope
with it -when they are bere ved .
· With a pre-plu. there can be no disaareement amonc family
members om "!hat type of services to have or how much to
spend. The bes1c procedures and decisions are arranpd in
advance. We do suqest tha_t soma ol the matters loss cruclol
to you bt left to the survtvors because it is important for
them to have a feelin&amp; of involvement.
finally, if you pre-plan your arrancements. your family will be
assured that your own wishes for seNices will bt faithfully
honored. This final tribute to 1 d~arted loved one meus a
lot to 1 family wishinl to honor hiS memory.
As funeral directors. we can help you pte-plaq y0ur funeral
arranaements . It makes sense to pre-plan. Please call us or
stop by if you would like more information.

!J;_.a! f()IIU
1114) -SlU

~IDOLII'OIIT,· OHI!).

"S11rl~e

Plut.... Att111tlon to D1ffll''

�Tuesday, May 28, 1985

May 28, 1985

Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinel P

Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

Pu:~::o;~ee

9

8

'{ard saleS

•

• .,._
~r=~;~~;:;:;;:;~;rr:=::::;;::::~=iTt=:;;;~~~:;;;:;:::;-r;::::======:;,-;========:;i
A pu~s~~s~ ,..;.
MILLER
INTERESTED IN A
~-"tij~~l'#--"'i~'".,.;.-.•
dents
tho VHI- of SYI'INEW VEHICLE
J&amp;L BLOWN
AU STEEL &amp;
•
......
"GailfP'oiiii
........
::'~ ~;.,t~~~~.~·':
PLUMBING &amp;
ELECTRIC
~:~~~:.~i"\1::~::.~~':.!~ '
INSULATION
POLE BUILDINGS
&amp; Vicinity
7:30 . p.m. at tho Syrilil\loe
HE
a·TING
SERVICE
to drive tho vohicla of your
VINYL &amp;
Sizes St1rt from 12'd6'
SOl. Mey 26 . 9:00-6 :00, i n
Ele"""taoy Sdlool.
"
ChOICI.
T . TY BUILDING
FOR RESIDENTS
PUBUC MEETING
of

Yard Sale: Fri. May 2~ •

Purpose of Ilia public"-'·
lng • to dlocuu tllo ·poooibfo
abandonment of t11o svrocu""
Roitdaide
loc8ted aJong
Route 12_4Patte..
..., ~
.
u~t~ v••-o.
n..._,
All rosidonto are inllitiCI to
ottend.
JANICE lAWSON
Clett.
W.lc26. 28, 29, 30, 31 (61 2.

317 Norlh Second
Mioltlleport, Ohio 45760

FOR All YOUR
, WIRING NEEOS
Rest' denl'11 I &amp; ommercial

SALrs
&amp; srRVICE
E
11:

c

Call:

,...,,_ IU!INESS16141 •..2-6150

992 " 5175 Q r
742•3195

I'IIO,.

1614 1

11 _14.tfc

NO DOWN PAYMINT
lOWII MOMTHlr PAYII!fNT
BLACKSTON

NEwCAR &amp;

TRUCK LEASING
8o•: 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
ForFtstorServico

U ILl
S
Sizes from 6'•6' Up
to 24'•36'
Insulated Doc Houses

ALUMINUM SIDING
olnoulotlon
•Storm Door•
•Storm
_. Windows
• R e.,.acement
Windows

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

•New Roofing
" FREE ESTIMATES "

·

Racine, Oh.

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
4-1-2 mo. d.

Call 614-992-673

Flea Market . Fraizer's Bott om, WVa. on US . 36 ~""
every Sa !urday &amp; Sunc;tr,v~ - 6 . Open air &amp; cove ed
spaces f o r: ren t , off road
parking.

,Ph.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF RAYMOND W
lARKlNS, DECEASED
.
Caoe No. 24767 Docket 12
,. Pogo 492
NOTICE OF
.
APPOINTMENT
· · ·OF FIDUCIARY
On May 14, 1986. in the
Larkins, · P.

0 , Box

949-2263
or 247-4641

134

Tuppon Plains, Ohio 4578l
was appointed Executri~ of the
estate of Raymond W. Larkins,
deceased, lata of P. o. Box
134, Tuppers Plains Ohio

SALEM CENTER - Front row, l·r, Alll8on
· Gannaway, Randall Jo..-, VIrginia blcas. Back
. 1-r, JeneJI Barker, sixth p-ade teacher, Tina Molden,

45783.

Richard Peyton Jr., Rex. Shenelklld, Melds SWCD
. Supervisor.

54 Misc. Merchandise

wo,.

work
,
(Free E1timate1)

10 HP TRACTOR

$949 95
3 HP MOWER

ONION SETS
SEED POTATOES
GARDEN SEEDS
SEVERAL USED
APPLIANCES
1

All

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

and (iroduation

Copy S.rvkn, E1c.
us Mill sr. Mid~lopori
104 Mulbtrry h. ,...,.,.y

lusinin Form1,

RENT ACAR
CALL
446-4522
"We Rent For Less"

·U·SAVE

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160
North
Glltipolis, Ohio 5.1z.H

5/28/l mo. d.

r,., fill•llrllllllio

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tlc

3/2/tln

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

•Rnidonlial &amp;
Commercial
•Dovolopmenh &amp;
Commtrlial Sitts
'•Single and Multi Unit
Housing
•Wood Modo (abiMtry
Dnign and Planning
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7611
5-7-tfc

YINYL &amp; ALU.NUM
Complete Guner Work

Complete Re'l'odoling
Roofing of ell. Typaa
Wortced in home area

20 ye•rs
"Free Eatimataa"

CAll COllECT;

111141 843-S425

5/912 mo. p1.

BOGGS

REAL ESTATE FOI. SALE
.

HARRISONVILlE '- Front row, . 1-t, Sbwn

White, fourth grade teacher; Mia
Debbie Loweey, sixth grade teacher.

~~Hysell, Traey Smith. Back, 1-r, Nancy

Senti.ner .·. ·

The ·Dai

•.:

-

'·

PHONE 992-2156 ·
Or Writt O~nMy SefttiNI Cltssifitd o.,t.
11~ Court Sl.. ro-n,. t*ie ·~7ri'

........
··_
..
............... __

.

....... t .

room

-

.

,"" ·"""".,..
",...........
......... ..._...

.

I

f:lttulflt•J ,,.,,.,. ""'"' llu•
J••llt•w(lfJI lrl••ttltiiH,. 1•.trh•11 If''I .••

II

Front row,

l·r , Bobby

!
Public Notice

Public Notice

Ohio, . Plaiinutf: County Dwd Aocoid1- .
ogoinot Carl Dovi 11M ond
6ekl nNII -... was apCorolyn Ow.ndoon, et ol .. 0. , . - et 819,500.00
- . . , upon I judgr..... ofSIIe: CMh
.. -od. bliftg c..... ......... be IOid
No. II4-CV·2091nllidCourt.l fur - two-thirds of tho
tiPPI 'nd wlue.
.
iol
- Court,
In ""' door
wil - of fur
et . . fn&gt;nl
Probete
Moigl
County,
tho .....
c.uthouoo
In
HoMrd E. Frank
Ohio. for •pprovel •nd Pomeroy. Meig1 County,
Shoriff of
wtllooi•1l:
Ohio, on the 12th cloy of Jujy, .
Meigo County
CASE NO . 2~ fino1 onc1 198118110:00 O'Ciodl A.M.. (~I 2B (614. 11 , 3tc
Dillributiw Ac:co&lt;nt of Elu· tho fdlowo~g ond -A. - · e-uiri· of -to-wit:
in tho .,._
the E...te'lbf Cloro K. Clorll,
· - of
Public Notice
Docuood.
Mioh..., •t. Melgo County,
CASE NO. 1 . _ T-.ty- Ohio. llolng 125-offoftllo
Filth of - - ond of Lot No. 88.
PROBATE COURT OF
ME,IGS COUNTY, OHIO
Netionll - · Flducllry oltllo
Sold _. opEIIno of ThooNO A. Moy.
~T· "'of'!~liOO.OO
ESTATE OF KATHLEEN
CASE NO. 24182 Fino1 .,d
...,. - : Cllh
FRANCIS, DECEASEO
~ Aca&gt;unt of DoAool . - be liOid c- No. 24771 Dodcot 12
.-yJ. Dwio. Executri• of tho for - lhM - - o f tlw Pogo 487
Eat•t• of P1ul Devil. IIPP"eiled vllue.
NOTICE OF
D 1c1 1.
HoWard E. Frink
APPOINTMENT
CASE NO. 23798 Rnol ond
Sheriff of
OFAOUCIARY
~ Account of 'MIMeigo County, Ohio
On
Moy
8111, 1 981, In t1w
1Mi R. a - , E-..tor of (IIJ 281114. 11. 3tc
Molgo County P"'blote Court
tho " - of ~ N. llomOlt. 1-,--=--c:-::---:c:-:-- c- No. 247'71, F.. nk
D
1.
Public Notice
- · Jr.. P.O. Box 888
CASE NO. 23301 fourtli
Pom.,.,y, Ohio 411789, w~
- - o f ....... V. ·
appointed EliOCUior of tho
Fultz. ExKu~or. of the e....
of KolhiMn Fronclo
NOTICE OF SALE
of...._. Amold. 0.: rartd,

Joimson, Sherey Johnson. Back, 1-r, Caroline Snilth,
fourth grade teacher.

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE OIVISION
MEIGS COUNrY, OHIO
Accounta ....s of
.,. fdlowing
fiducior·

Micl«&lt;lo!Jort,

w•

POMEROY - Front, l·r, Chris Kalghl, Charles
Sec:ond row, l·r, KeUy Lynn Smith, Palrlck

' Kin(~.

.Meigs SWCD winners named

1988,

et time KCOUntl wll be OUi t ....
ond iMilh•lod lnim cloy to cloy
I

Allison Gannaway, Salem Center
Elementary School fourth grader,
received her county co-champion
trophy for the ronservatlon poster
contest from Rex Shenefield, Meigs
• SQJ.I and Water Conservation Distric t supervlsor at an awards
: presentation held at the' school
recently.
The trophy, blue ribbon and S3
~ were awarded to Allison lor her
entry In the fourth grade conserva• tlon posler contest sponsored annually by the Meigs SWCD. Second
·place. winners receive $2 and a red
• ribbon and third place winners
·receive $l and a whlte ribbon.
• • First, second and third place
respectively In the poster contest In

•

Opal Dyer, office seCretary, Meigs
Meigs Local Schools were Misty
SWCD,
for county co-champion In
Hayman, Mandy Sheets, Robert
O' Brien, Salisbury Elementary
the sixth grade essay contest.
School; Linda Chapman, Bobby Second place Winners receive 12
and a red ribbon.
Johnson, Sherry Johnson, Middleport Elementary' School; Shawn
First and second place respecHamon, Courtney Riggs, Shane . lively In 'the essay contest were
Hysell, Harrisonville Elementary Tracy Smith, Mia D' AUIIIIStlno,
School; Sheryl Renee Thoma, Harrisonville Elementary School;
Jason McDaniel, Jody Fowler, Stephanie Walker, John Evans,
R"u tland Elementary School; Alii· Rutland Elementary SchOol; 11na
son Gannaway, Randall Johnston, Molder, Rtcluird Peyton Jr., Salem
VIrginia Lucas, Salem Center Center Elemental')' School; and
Elementary School; Chris Knight, Kelly Lynn Smith, Patrick
Charles King, Kelly Satterfield, Gryszka, Pomeroy Elementary
School.
Pomeroy Elemental')' School.
Each student entering the poster
Kelly LyM Snilth, Pomeroy.
Elementary School, received a or essay contest received a pencil
trophy, $2 and a blue ribbon from with a conservation message on It,
&lt;

'

w:

1---------

~-liuo·-­
""'*"·
tor. - .-a - - cwll
- be
t
on the 28th doy of ~IIIII.

--lo-l*llln:=..: . . - ...

untllllnlly · · - of.
. Any ..... l1il'f
alia 11 -. llld

• wm.n •

ingtott.rtcdbioft:M

- · nat -

....... dlyo
for

'

R-E.IIucll
JUDGE
Conwitoil ,..... Cowt.

-D-.

Moigl County. Ohio

Ill 21. 1110

l&gt;ubllc Notice

0-"'

By 1llrtuo of ..,
SOle
IUued o'-" of the Common

""'
'1, .... of · - ·'
Ohio 411779.

" ' - Court of Molgo County.
Robon E. Iucio,
OHio, In tile COM of Mog...
Pro-Judgo
- _ F.S.B .. Pillnllll, 1911net
ClydeJ, Morlon. II ol .. o.r.nctLlno ~- N-ICI.
-.upon I
Clerk
... -od. being c- No. 181 14, 21, 21, 3tc
8&amp;-CV-171 In llid Court, I will
- f u r - · otlhe frontof the
H01111in ......,._
,.,.,, Molgo ~Ohio, on
1888• 11
.,. 1 2th
Public Notice
10:111 O'Ciooll
.M .. the - - - -- -

judg--

c-t

cloy"'· ·

--:

-wing ond ~lllu W In Otwige TownCounty, Ohio.

ln._

loiH-.,

II, T - 4 - . R - 12
VW... Ohio CouQ!SIIV'a Pur-..·

'llnl'lll

.......
.,... .. ,1

......... _

'

•••
Ill

- 2 1 0...... 1 1,

I

'
•

PI'IOIATE ·cOURT OF
MEIOI COUNTY, OHIO
EITATI OF FREDA M
DUFFY, DECEAIID
'
cNo. 24770 Dodcat 12
Piige48e
NOTICI OF
APPOINTMINT
OFFIOUClAJIIV
011 lilly .... 1. . . In ...

........................
tlonl•-·........... ,.. j;~··•Cou.t
- N o. 4,,._11ondll.
Molgo c...., Pill I'll ilL

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

92, SyrocUM, Ohio 46?79.
Robet1E . Buck,
Probalo Judge

=·'
)\, -==....

M

lid.

'

.....

.

I

I·

II

I

Savelll

I

I ·Write your own ad and c_rd&lt;r b1 mail wittl 111is I
I coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when rou get 1
1 ,r'~uiTS. Money nol retundallle.
1

I

Name
Address•---------

'~' 14, 21, 2B, 3tc

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
c- No. 2489B Docket 12
P-489
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Moy 7, 19811, In tho
Meigo County Pro- Court,
C- No. 24698, Gene Grote,
32 Colo St,..., Mlddlopqrt.
Ohio 45760 WM oppolnted
Execl.l1or of the Mtllte of Jeen
S. ThieM~, decnurt. 18m of
c/ o Pomoroy Cere
Center, Rode Spring• Rood.
Pomeroy, OH 4117119.
RoliiNI E. Buck,
- · · Judge
LeneK.N.-.
Cloltl

(6114, 21 ' 28. 3tc

lI

Phone

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF VIRGINIA I.
EDWARDS, DECEASED
C111 No. 24744 Oocket 1 2
Pogo 410
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIAI'IY
On Moy I, 1 . . . In tlw
Molgo Cauntv ,.,...... eo..t,
~. ,.._ :14744, Yemeni
E....... 100 Union

A-.., Polcwo•· OH....,..
waa ·ppalntld • . . , . .r the

.....

ot Vlillnloo I. ~
1 to
d, loto "' 100 Union
Awra., flol••ov. OH41711.

PtcllltiJI.ICige

" - K. NN11·...,
• .,.._.,..,
Clooll
Ill 14, 11, 21. ito

I

I

:

Print one word in eoth
IJIOU below. Each initial
or group of figuns (OUnll

Circle
Ad

Wcmted

os a word. Count nome
and addrut or phont

3

10

6o

1

number if u1ed, You'll gtt Words day
ftys
day•
doys I
berter resultt if rou dt- --lr--4--r~+---:-1

snibofully, giro price. 1he 1, 15 SJ.Ou ss.oo sa.oo su.ool
tribune r•nnes tht right --+-+-~-t~-J---:1
to tlouify, edit or r•j•c:l
any od. Your od will be 1a 7; SUO $1.00 113.00 $11.00:

1

put in_th pror.er ,Jouifho·-

. I lion II voull &lt;hKk
·I proper box below.
I'
.I

I
I
'I
I
I
I

Public Notice

.._

.

Classifieds and
·

'*'*'

Gryszka. Back roW, 1-r, Darlene Amott, llixth grade
teacher, Opal Dyer, Melp SWCD, oflloo -retary.

1·3-tfc

Curb Inflation . II
Pay Cash for
-1

• 1

MIDDLEPORT -

E••' ...

F~r"'·
~-. t
·Pirfl &amp; Servin ·

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

.,

Public Notice

· Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Ho1
flr!l1 Equipment
Pealer .

HO us~ WITH GARAGE: Small shop and'
·. shower in basem'ent. Four :rooms)nd'6ath;,
. 2 porches: carport, 'new furnace and central
air. Middleport. Ohio.

I

Public Notice

'

HOME NATIONAL BANI
CALL 949-2210-Aslc for Tim

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

.,.,......._
..............
ncs.rv•"..,. ........
._...............
,,:n~:::::-....._. ...

U. S. ~T. SO'EAST _
GUYSVILLE , OHIO -

'

SPLIT L£VH' HOUSE witb 3 bedrooms, 2
complete baths, dining room, living
and large recreation room. Located on 8
acres. La_rge farm pond. Racine area.

D' Au11J811no,•

"·

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.

&lt;

1
1I
I

the 1o 35 $1 .00. 510.00 '15.00 $15.00

C JFor Sale
( )Announcement

11_ _ _ _ _ __

&lt; IFor Ren1

18. _ _ __

L

''·-----21. _ _ _ _ __

- --

---

2. ----3 . _ _ _ __
4 . _ _ _ __

I s. _ _ _ __
I 6.
_ __
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I

1 . .:.__ _ __

I

9 . _ _ _ _ __

B. - - - - -

10. - - - - - - -

11.-----t2. - - - -- 13. - - - - - -

14.
-----15., - - - - - 16.

20.

10-8-tfc

TRENCIING IS 0111

~E

Trenching Of Any Type
Dozer &amp;·Backhoe S.rv1ce
Plumbinc Service
Welding, lowboy Haulin&amp;
Septic Systems
Licensed &amp; landed
FRif ESIIMAUS
WILLIAMS
TRENCHING SERVICE
II. 4, Hynll R,., Rd.
ra-oy, Oloit 45769
(6141 992·2134
or 992-6704

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124,Pomoroy Ohie

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

3-24-tfc

_

A.U ,
304-675-6276
1-10-t.f.n.

EYE THE
WANT ADS
FOR GREAT BUYS

Announ ce ments
3 Announcements

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS
35185 Oak Hill A&lt;Hid
Lon&amp; Bottom, OH. 45743

PH. (614) 985-4212

S~op T~thlelu

We Use · Von Schrader
Equipment ' Recommended
by Ltlding Carpet Manu·
llcturers.
. 'FREE ESTIMATES" ·
3:22-tfn

ts D1ty

RIOENOUR
yy· &amp;-APPLIANCE ..
(I:IESTER...:9•S·3307C
·
, 4/ 1/tfn

ACCENT

FENCE &amp;

SUPPLY
992~6931
.After 5 Call

PH.

742-2027

SWEEPER and sewing mechine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd .
Call

EOE-ESP .

Call the Army National
Guard and ask about our pay
and benefits, including edu cational auistance. Call

· 304-675-3960 or 1-800642 -3619.

1- - - -- - - -- -

Trim off pounds with Go·
Base Grapefruit E~etre
Strength Capsules. Fruth
Pharmacy, Middleport.

Help wanted full and part
time waitress' s and bar·
maid . Send resume to box

711, Gallipolis Ferry, Wv.
Loose those extra pounds 25515 .
and inches now. Safe, sure, 1 --~------­
easy money back guarantee .
Nutritional program, 304 ~

675-1780.

4

18 Wanted to Do

Giveaway

II

· Wanted to fawning mowing
Gallipolis area &amp; vincinity.

Estimates"
Installation Avoilablt
4/ 4/ 11

CLASSIAED ADS
asupermarket

for everything.
73-10 Chevy Tr.

73·79

73-10 Chery. Tr.

80-15 For~ Tr.
- · ......................... $145
11·79 Fard Tr.
lo~i~~~;;;;j"i~~ .......... m .so
lloools......................... It 45
13·15 Ford longer
lloools......................... 1130
U-15 Ford longer
GriHn ...........................• 7l

lor~

Tr.

Doors ......................... '13 S

nJ9mt.:!j"r;:·............. S7o
Griln ..................... 131.50
73-79 Chery. Tr.
Roc~tr Ponoli ..............,I7S
73·79 Chevy. Tr.
Cab Cornors ..................120

;__--'---~

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*ILOWN IN
INSULAnON

---=----

--__
--'}j2&lt;.: __
_;__

New aM Uslll Auto Glass-Latt Model Parts

27. - - - - - -

21.------ I

29. - - - - - -

JO. - - - - - 31. -_
-_32.
____

· No

33.-----3&lt;.------

Sunday

Calls
1111/ifoo

SMALL

3S. - - - --'--

WANT ADS
PAD&lt; '
ABG PtN:HI

Mall This CCIUp•'wllh RemlttlnCI

The Dally Sllltlntl
111 eourtst.
Pomfi'OY, OIL 45769

.....-------------------·

· black: and wtdte, 1 Qray ,

3Q4-676-5043. •.'

/)

: •'

Half Collie and half Cocker.
be•utiful female. good with
children, spayed and had all

hor shota. 304-675-2279.
304-676-140B.

281·1 . RavenswOod, W. Va .

I
CJ

Television Listenin&amp; Dev1ces
· Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All A&amp;es

:i

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

!

i-

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

675-7239 or 675-6367.

*BASEMENTS *SEPTIC' SYSTEMS
*FOOTERS *GRADING
•CONCRETE WORK

PH. 7.42·23.28
' .
,,

oven.

S48,500 . Cell 614-446·
4042.
Ftatwood area In Pomeroy
FR . BN ceiling, vinvl
sidi ng, aluminum window,

tor br ..

17 A. available. Coli 814445·2359 .
3 bdr home 3 yrs old. rural
water . near Mer c erville.

S33,500. Coli 614-256 ·
6694.
New Home for.Sale ; Ivydale
Subdivision. 1 'm i . past
Silver Bridge. $41.500.: 3
bdr. Lot 100X120. no r·e
Commission Involved. Call

l

'

~

Jock 614-446-7630 .
Jay Drive o wner selling 3
bdr, 2 bath, cozy harth for
winter. pool. and AC for
summer. lnterettedonlyoell

614-446-7554 after 5P"l·
5 roOms, bath, 1h basame~t.
2 porches . garage. large lot.
S27.500. New H.a ven . Call

304-675-5739 or 304-B82·
2868.
•
2 bedrooms. iull t-asem•nt,
double car garage. , ,2.
acres. Rose Hill, Pomer6y.

$28.000. 614-678-251:f.
7 rooms and bath on Nelson
Rd . in Dexter area . 614698-6528 . Call anytime.

3 bedroom sectional home
loca1ed on large lot in
,lrbaugh Addition . Tuppers
Plains. 532.900. Will accept
mobile home on trada. C.U

614-992-7034 or 614 -.ll2·
7671 ofter 5:00.
'
Lovely home. 6 rooms, bi.th.
basement, garage. utility
building; hardwood fld"otl.
carpeted. jnsulated, dorft!
doors an·d windows; eGOnomi_cal heating~ ea.ceUen!
location . Will con•id~r' r!'Otor home •• per1 peymwn .

6

2 dogs lost in Salem Center
area . A black German She·
pherd and 1 black and white

Wanted To Buy

We pay Cash for late model
clean used Cars.
Jim Mink Chav.- Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

614-446-3672

67Chevy % tonPUforparta.
Mutt have t jtle. Call 614·

446· 7626.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bodo, iron,
wood, cupboards. chairs.
cheoto, b.. kou, diohes.

cent anum able to•n . garden
spot. fleduced down to

$49 ,000.

21

Lost and Found

Business
Opportunity

6 room house with batt! on
Gallipolis Ferry . City water

I NOTICE!
THE OHIO VALLE.V PUB ·
LISHING CO. recommends
that you do business with
people vou know. and NOT
to send money through the
mall until you have invest igated the offering.

Home . Assembly

Income .
Assembt~· products at home .
Part-time. Details. Call 81 3 ·

327-0896, .... 159.
Are you tired of baing broke
or on a fil'led income?
Unlimited income $200 to
86,000 a month. Initial
investment $32 .60. 304-

!::;:;;:::;:;:::==:::;===
22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS-Refinance

614-949· 2893or 614 · 949·
2949 .

882-3177.
BV OWNER -

3 bedrooms.

1 Ylz bath s. dining room, full
basement witk family room .
24x24 garage, clo1e to
downtown. 304 -675-4604 .

32 Mobile Homes.
for Sale

.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
RT 35. PHONE 614-446 7274.

Plano Tuning and Repair .
Brunicardi Music Co .• 614446-0687. Twentie1h year
of quality aarvice . Lane

comp. furn ., plus block&amp; &amp;
skirting S8600 . ex. cond .
French City Brokerage Ser·

614 -276 -4050 or 614-279 1225.
Schult 1974 12X65 2 bdr.

vice . Coli 614-446-9340 .

llllpluylllell(

Water weiiJ drilled and serviced. Prices on request. Call

Schult 1979 14X70 3 bdr,

St:rv11:1:s

614-742-3147 or614-992Accounting S8rvices. Reasonable rates. Call614 -74-2 ·

Help Wanted

2191 alter 12:00 pm. Gre-

Cu1todlen to clean lpartment • cut grass. live-in .

PIANO TUNING IINO REPAI A.

Summer

rates·

in

effect -free e a tim 1 tel ,
V'_lerd's Keybolfd, 304· 675·

5500 or 876· 3824.

Coli 304-176-5104 or 304876· 6386.
Anembly

Experlo~ce · No

No

tellt aend lllf· addreued

•tamped envelope; Elan

10X56 New Moon, 2 bdr-. all
gal, new c1rpet . air cond .-.
verv clean, e 3450. Call

814-446-0175
86 Broadmore h~tiler
14•60, all electric, uaed only
8 monthi, 81 1 ,400. Call

614 -446-9307 or 814-446·
4144 .
2 largft

patios

&amp;

porches , 1 built In potth,

31

3 or 4 bdr., 3 bath. f1m . rm ..
LR, OR, 2 car garage, CA.

Vito I· 71 I. 3418 Entorprioe
Joy Or. Cell814-448-4307.
Rd, Ft , Pierce, Fl. 33482.

,,

vica . Call 614-446-9340 .

1.3 acre land. 12X66 mobile

Homes for Sale
Soloa. Do· - - - - - - - - - -

Payment .

1112 bath, plus blocks 8t
skirting , like new. 513.900.
French City Brokerage Ser ·

home,

Work!

81100.00 pet 100. Guaranteed

1973 12x65 freedom all
electric, furnished . underpenning and block , 10x12
alum . bldg. S5. 000. l04-

Daniela, 614-742 ·2961 .

Quell c.- oree. CeH 614·
2411· 91 10.

Eesv

or

Professional
Services

23

6006.

11

phone 304-675 · 6391
675·1702 ah"f 5 PM .

For Sale By Owners. 2
mobile homes located on
waterfront lots, Raccoo n
Creek . Large deck. pole
barn. out buildings. tioa't
docks, much more . Call

Middleport, Oh . 614 · 992·
3476 .
Peking ducks . large or
sm•ll. Call after 6 :00 pm .

and natural gas . Mid 20' s.
For appointment to see

675-1780.

46789 or cell 614-992- to low filted rate . Use equity
7760.
for any purpose. Leader
ware. old coins. large currency , Top prictts . Ed. Burkett ·B•rbar Shop, 2nd. Ave .

304 - 675 · 50~7

one and two thirds acre tot at

stone jars. antiques. gold
and 1ilver . Write-M . D .
Miller. Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio

7 room house. 1 11J bam. 4
l:!edrooms •. garage . : On
Graver Hm · in Middleport.
Csll61o{-.99~ - 5714 .

'
3 bedro om home. B'h par·

Fm anci al

304-896-3637; · then cell
304-675-3442 .

Will do bl by sitting in my
home this summer. Rodney-

BULLDOZER &amp; BACKHOE WORK

range,

Full basement with fa"llly
room. gas heat, poalible
9 Vz% l oa n a u umption .

304-675-6622 .

gory Van· Meier AAB. ·

TI.OMM EXCAVATIN

dishwas her,

Mr. Ed ' I Speedy Wooh, high · HaVe an .energy efficient
pressUre cleaning. - liqUid
home built on your lot . Fr:Pm
sand blasting . Mobile
$13,900.00 . Call for eatihomes, buildings, trucks,
mates. 304-675· 3.9 81 . •
heavy eq"'ipment, pools ,
parking areas. boats. Ed·
ward Oesterreicher, 304· Log home 3 aCres, 2 mi ~ out
Jerrico Rd. $64.000 . : call

·
3 9-13-tfn Buying daily gold, silver Mortgage Co ., 614· 592 ·
L..--.:R:.:t•,.:6~1:,:1_.W:,IIf::ll..:h:::;rw:,i:;:n~Oh:::i::,o,;;-;:..,.9:,:92~·7~0:,:1.:..--.LI coins, ringo, jewoloy, sterling 3061 .

Ntw Homes luilt
"Free E1tlm1tn"

PH. 949·2101
or 949·2160

tered in Ohio . All work
· g'u aranteed. Call 3'0 4-273··

old ki_ttens, 1

WHALEY'S AUTO PADS

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

76. _ _ _ _ __

w&amp;.k

9

73-79 Ford Tr.
Forodtrs ...................:..... •41

.......................... '1 so
73-14 Chevy Tr.

2 Six

lARGE AIIMAIS AND
SUIGIIY IY APPOINTMINI
3D4·675·%441

73.10 Chevy Tr.
,,,..., ., ....................... •60

Buy from owner &amp; seve.
Terrific l o c at ion . Kyger
Creek School, 3 bdr .• fi t a·
place. Bullt· in kitchen wlth

1 v••r ·old. Cion 614 ;985· · 2~6.' 152__8 . ·.
42B8.
. . . ..:.:_.:;_~.;___;:___~
. COLEMAN WATER WELL .Call614 · 949-2719. ·
2 white kittens to give away .
DRILLING
Coli 614·949-2618.
Pump sales. service. Regi s- - - - - - - --lc-

I p.m.-5 p.m.
fhursday 3 p.m.· S p.m.
Friday 1 p.m.-7 p.m.
loNrdoy 10 a.no•• 11:30 a.m.

12·3-lln

4387 after 5.

Wouid' like to paint house
· Male bllck cat to give away; _trt~i_lers. ·r.oofa. can 614·

Spaniel. Call 614 -669 ·
5749 or 614· 742-2434.

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

- · ......................... I 12l

Cell oft"' 5PM , 614-446·
.261 1 .

6 yellow kinens. 4 have
Bob-tail, call 9 :00 till 2 :00,

w.-.,

after

Wanted to mow lawns Gallipolis area . Call 614-446·

2 male kittens, litter trai ned .

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

Mototlay 3 p..... s p.m..
Tuesd•r 6:30 p.m.-1 p.m.

Call 614-256· 6251
6:30PM

.

Two young white pigeons,

PT. PlEASANT OFFICE
.3305 JACKSON AVE.
SMAll ANIMAl HOURS

"fret

7746.

Homes for Sale

reproductive

1---- - - - - --

614-446-0294.

TOWN &amp; COUNliY
VETERINARY
CUNIC

OPEN EACH .
THURS. EVE. 6·8

to

45701 . by May 29. 1985 .

Ill, licensed Clinic•l Audiolocist

;u _ _ _ _ _ __
2J.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

PH. 992·5612
or 992,-7121

include dil'ount

_

992-3410

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE ,
HEAOQUARTERS FOR
•Z£NITH
•SYLVANIA
.
·
•SPEED QU(EN LA"UNDRY
•GIBSON REniGIRATOA
·•SATELUII· SAlES &amp;"SERVICE
We Hut Afill Tl••

Al1o Tr111Mit1lo•

Thtn unh rat11

&lt; JWanrod

senaitive

health needs of women end
families . Must be well organized ; have demonstrated
compe1ance with figures
and recordkeeping . Must be
able to work under guidelines with minimal supervi sion and have superior ver bal communication skills.
Reliable transportation flaxi ·
bility of time and ability to
travel locally required . EVening, Saturday and weekday
hour~ are to be e~pected .
Send resume and. twO employment reference s to
Planned Parenthood of Southaut Ohio. 8 N. Court St.
3rd Floor, Athens, Ohio

RCA console TV for parts .
good cabinet. Cell614 -367-

Real Estate General

:•

ful work history in related
field . Responsible position
for a m ature individual ,

PAT HILL FORD

992•3345

Ph.

tion p~efe r red with suc:c aJI ·

•Kitchenettes •Restaurant

RADIATOR
SERVICE

PIUS: Of{ico Supplill &amp;
Furniture, Wtddlng

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-Hc

PH. 667-6535
or 985-4354

Hl

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

valency: additional educa -

•live Entertainment •Free HBO

Gallipolis, ·Ohio
7/ 11 / lfn

5-23-tfn

h1ve H.S . diploma or equi -

8 milas from
Pomeroy-Muon 8rid1e
SINGLE 124.95
304-675-6276

RENTAl
S1. Rt. 1110 North

Call: 7'42·2407

It~

Rl62 NORTH
POINT PLEASANT. W. VA.

U·SAVE
AUTO

31

Help Wanted

Patient Services Aalilta nt
fullti me to coordinate the
ac1Mties of . Meigs County
family planning clinic . Must

MOTU

"IV• Ru1 F" l•""

land~eap­

ing, ball8mer11s, sewage systems, water
and u• lines, water
well drilling and service, trucking (limestone &amp; dirt),

•Waahers •Diahwathera

•Rengea

Formerly !Ieaton
Drilling (o.
•Water &amp; Gas
Well Service
•Myers Pumps
Sales &amp; Service

$114 95

eavati~g.

·~

CALL
446-4522

COMPANY
Will do all types of eK·

985-3561
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

SHADE RIVER
DRILLING

\1 ·~ l :. f H

)

-· ~·'

EXCAVADNG

ag e Sale Thu rs.. · Fri .• Set.
9 -5 . Approx . 1 mi. out· Rt .
2.18. Watch for sign a.

l O·S·tfc

11

RENT A CAR

MEIGS

Statiantry, Magnttir
Signs, lublior Slti,..l,

All Mekl•

-........

992 ·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
. l2·B·IIc

SPECIAL

~J'J/

····-.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

f'IIMI WIY

fi14

..

-·· .-·· ·· ..

FARM CITY

Mandy Sheets, Robert O'Brien. ·Back, 1-r, Kan!u
Walker, fourth grade teacher.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Addons end remodeling
Roofing •nd gut1er
Concrete work
Plumbing •nd electriC~~ I

MGM

SALISBURY - Fronl row, l·r, Misty Hayman,

(CUI OUT Fot FUTURE U511

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-

15L 20, 27: 161 3, 3tc

20

PH. 992-72Q 1

YOUNG'S

Lena K. Nesstlroad,
Ciortc

·~\'

JIM CLIFFORD

4/29/ tfn

'
. Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge

1-r, $tepbanle Walker, John Evans. Back. 1-r, Mar&amp;e
Fe«y, fourth grade teacher, Carol Evans, sixth p-ade
teacher.

Run.AND - Fronl row, l·r, Sheryl Renee
Tlloma. Jason McDaniel, Jody Fowler. Seeond row,

DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER.
GAS til SEWER LINES,
REClAMATION, PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; OIRT
.

NEW-REPAIR
Guuera - Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
Painting
Storm Door&amp;
&amp; Wlndowa
Siding • Soffit Wo,rk

i.

,

CONTRACTING

Roofing Co.

MatAs County Probate Court
Cas~ No. 24761, NanCy

J&amp;F

Writestl

.

W.W.B.C. Boily Chopet Gor-

(114-843 -S191

Public Notice

Howard L.

Che1hire on Rt. 7 acr&lt;t"
f rom Jay 's 'M i ni Mart. Many
items fiom several
. families.

&amp;9000 , Call
1317.

614 -256 -

Must sail. 1983¥ay Sky· ·
liner, loti of e"tr11 incl~ded .

Coli o1tor 5:00, 614-446- .
7200.
.
I

·'

�Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

27' avocado atov~ • overhood fan f35 . TV otand $35.
Shower doors glal8 s 20.
Coli 814-41416·7307 oftor
4 :30PM.

LAFF·A·DAY

1969 Champion t railer
· 12•80 with 1975 add-on
12•24. GQOd condition. Call

614-992-2689 .

.

/ /

C11tle on ·J_4 •ere lot
W1th 18:c26 addition. Central air, urban roof. 2 car
carport. Price reduced . Call

814-992-3119 or614-9923132.
MORE

ROOM :.. in

• home addition by ROOM
ADDITIONS, INC. 1819
Ohio . Call 814-423-6B26.
MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Insured, 20 vrs

e~eperience .

304 -578- 2866 or 5'762998 .

I

. ::-:--::--:----

: Mobile homes $3,996 .00
~ ~nd

'P

up. call K &amp; K Mobile
Homes, Inc. today 304- 676·

_300p.
Mobile home and lot in
Gollipolis, Ohio, $8,000.00 ,
wtll consider trade, 304675-3002.
HOMES
MOVED .
l~tured, 304•57&amp;
20 years
ne'hce.
-2 axpeor·

"Hey -

1 . 28

We Jgot time for a

SLOW One,?"

576~2998.

886

;1981 Schultz 14x70 w~fi
.un_derpenning,
partial!• furh d
7
·nos e · 30 4-675 -3474 or
675"1753·
19
H II
76 0 V Park...._ 14x70 3
bedro~ms. centra~ air, t~tal
electnc. furnished with ap·
pll_a nces only. Need to sell.
prtce negotiable. 304· 468·
.
1727 ·

E:ccellent busineu location.

. : .sfl

124, Racine. Ohio . Call

, .. 14-949-2719 .

: · 35 lots &amp; Acreage

:: 57

~

acres, 25 or more with

timber, 10me bottom land,
good hunting land. creek

1

frontage . riding lawn
' mower. Call 614-388.B6.3 4.

Apartment
for Rent

44

Apartment
for Rant

..

.

..

Furnished efficiency 701
41h Ave .. Gallipolis. f180.
utilit!ea paid, share bath,
adulto. Coli 446-4416 after
7PM.
Upstairs 3 rooma. furni1hed
bath , wilsher· dryer. AC:
clean. no peta, ref.. dep.
req., adults. ~ can 614-4461519.
Ups.t airt Unfumiahed 3 room
apt., c~rpeted, utilities paid.
no children. no peta. Call
,6 14-446-1 637.

Furnished Rooms

For r~nt SIHpin(l RoOms
and light houaa keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
Call 614-4146-0766.
F~:~rniahed ' room, range, re·
fng . 1100. ahara bath, sin·
glo male. 919 2nd. AVo ..
Galllpolio. Call 446-4416
after 7PM .

46 Space for Rent
Mobile homolol. 12'x60' or
smeller, 175 water paid. 4th
8o Neil, GallipoNo. Coli 446·
4416 after 7PM .

Fur.niahed apartment.
... ~·4 acrsJri New_ Hav~tn . 1 "a cre Adults .only: Call 814-446.. ~level, 3 acres woo-d8d . .ci~v . 9523 .or 614-446-1449.
~;:water, ,8 11 ,000, Call 3042 bdr. Apt.s &amp; houHt for
, .676-6739 .
ronll125, 1150, 1200. Coll
:Large building lots, Jerry' s 676-6104 or 676-638.8.
Run Road, $3000. Clyde
Bowen Jr .. ;J04-676'· 2336 F~r_n~shed efficiency . $160
~
.
ut•htrea paid. 919 2nd.,
Gellipolia, .t ingle riiele prlt·
Rentals
ferred . Call 44.8 ~ 4418 after
'
7PM .
.,

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route· 33. North of
Pomeroy. L.iirge Iota. Call
614-992-7479. '

...

,

45

Garage apt .. furniehed. 29,12
Neil Ave., Galllpolia . 1, bdr .•
$235, ul~llieo 'paid . Coli
446-4416 after 7PM .

· 35 acres. 3 mi . W. of Holzer
Hoapitol. Call 614- 44682:l' -

..

Houses for Rent
·Centenarv-3 bdr. brick, 2
bath, garage. lg .lot , adutts,
ref . 8o dep, $350 mo. Call
1-614-643-2644 .

BI~ck.

Building Materials

Furnished apt. 1 bdr: $246.
utlities paid, 607 2nd .
Gallipolis, adulta. Call 448:
4416 otter 7PM .

Trailer •paces. one small
child accept~ . No pets.
304-6_7 5-1 078 .

Merchondtse
51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
82 Olive 51., Galllpollo. New
3 bedroom h'ouse, central
&amp; used wood-coal stoves. 8
air, 8250 per month . Refer·
pc wood LR tuite 1399
ences. 45 Spruce St. Call
bunk bedo 1199. ontron
,614-446 -2158 .
recliners $99, new &amp; used
be~room auitea, ranges,
8 room house for rent, S100 2 bedroom apt. remodeled. wringer washers, &amp; shoes.
mo . Call 304-675 -5104.
central air, 8275 mo., refer- New livingroom suites
11 ~9~1699, lampa, al1o
Haute for rent on Garfield ences, 821 Second AVe. all' buy~ng coal &amp; wood stov••·
·2_1-:-6-B_._ _ __
Ave. 2 bdr, jusl remodeled. _6-:-1_4:-·-4_4-:-6-:Call614-448-3159.
S226 mo. plus ref. and dep . · .
Call 614-446-1828.
Unfurnished apartments.
941 Second Avo , Golllpollo.
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
1 &amp; 2 bdr 1246 mo. utilities
1 bedroom house in Miners- pd.
chairs priced from
Sofea
Call 448-4416 after 1286. and
lo f896. Tobloo, t&amp;O
ville . Beside Mlneraville 7pm .
and up to S126. Hide -aChurch, by~Bulk Plant. Total
electric . Call 614-992 - Unfurnithed 2 bdr in Crown bed a, 1390. and up lo
6215 .
8.560.. oofa bedo 8146
City, Ohio . Call 614-266· Recliners.
1225. to 1375.:
6520.
.
lamp.• frcm 128. to 1126.
2 bedrOOm furnished house.in Pomeroy. 8260 per One efficiency apt. $176 pc. dtnettn from 11 09 .• to
month. Call 614-992-6113 mo.. 1 b'dr .. kitchen, bath. 435. 7 pc. f1B.9 end up.
after 5 :00PM .
table with six cheirl
Call 614-446-92414 9AM · Wood
f2B5 to $746. Deok $110
6PM .
up to f225'. Hutcheo. 1560.
A frame home, Southside,
W. Va . S 175.00 plus refer- Furnished apt. 3 room pri· Bunk bed complete with
ences and deposit, 304- vate bath. reference• re- mattresHs, $276 . end up to
675-1166.
$396. Baby beds. f110 .
quired. 846 2nd. Ave., Galli- Mattreaaet
or boK springs
polio.
Call614-446-2216
.
full or twin, f6B., firm, $68:
2 bedroom housfl, 304t676and f7B. Ouoon 1111. f226 .
5763.
2 bdr. apta. 1149 mo ., 4 dr. chests, 149. 6 dr.
newly decorated, kitchen cheat•. 169. Bed frames.
furniahed . Coli 304-676· 120.and $2&amp;., 1 0 gun - Gun
42 Mobile Home•
6104. ·
coblnoto. $360. Gas or
for Rent
Modern 1 bdr apt. down- el«tric rtngea 1376. Babv
town location. CA. carpet. mottroono, $2~ 8o Ull. bed
Furnithed , air 'cond., cable, complete kitchen . c•t 61 4· framoo UO, ·125, &amp; $30
150. Good telae:
no city taxes. beautiful river· 446· 4383 davaor814·448· Icing frame
tlon of bedroom auitea.
view, Kanauga . Foster's Mo- 0139 ewe.
rockere. me1a1 cabineu ,
bile Home Pork, 614-446 · 1-::::-----:--'----:------- ~odboordo
83B .&amp; up to
, 602 .
Riverside Apte. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior f65.
'
2 bdr. furnished. all utilitfls Citiz.ens. 81 30. Equal Houa·
pd.. except elect.. conve- ing Opportunitlet . 814·
nient location, aecurrty dep- 992-7721 .
oelt reuqired . Call614-446·
2 bedroom epartment8.
8568 .
New Haven, WVe. Newly
Furniahed 2 bdr. in Crown remodeled. In town. 61•·
City. Call614-266-6520.
992-7481.
Upstairs apt . remodeled
private entrance. 2 bed:
rooms. central air. $226
mo1, references, 821 "'h
Second AVe. all 614-4462158.

2 bdr, fully furnished , AC.
utilities paid, adults only.
Call614-446-4110.

=~-&gt;¥

Ciaude Wmters. Rio Grande
0. Ca!1 .6 14-246-6121.
'

·58
car .!!""'tie•·•l•o~o.

1i6

Fruit ·
&amp; Vegetables

71

54 Misc. Merchandt"se
Knauff Firewood Summer
rateS-big loada. May 1stJuly 31st. Doesn't apply to
HEAP . 814~ 266-6246 .
SPECIAL cut slabs 6 PU
loads delivered in dump
truck ~ 100, or 21oadt 8 180.
You PICkup $16 . Call 614246·5804.
Pool People Speci~l:
Shock liquid $2 .65 gal-PH
up $3.60 41b. lnground pool
kits 16x32 $2, 396, 18x36
$2,696. 20x40 82, 895, in
ttock. 35% off test kits,
bruthes. netl, VIC hose. vac
heeds, therometers . Middle· ·
port 614-992-6724 or Gollipolis 614-446-3051 .

Strawberries 11.00 quart.
Coli after 6 :30 304-882- 1976 Chevrolet Station
Bl_ock . . bric~. mortar and 22412 or 882 · 3296. Place Wagon. •uto . trana., runs
maoonrv
oupplies
State
Block,
Rt . . Mountain
33, New ordera now ..
good UOO. Coli 614-38B ·
8621 after 4pm.
Haven. w: Vo. 304-BB22222.
FMIII Suppl1r.s
1982 AMC Spirfl 4 opd,
Low grade . lumber 600
AM ~ FM tape, sun roof. low
&amp;
l1vestor.k
board ft . $60. Millwood.
mileage. $3.199 . John' a
Inc ., mteraection , U.S. 33Auto Sales, Bulaville Ad .•
W.Vo . 2. 304 -273-2622
Gallipollo . Call 614 -446open . 7 a .m . . 8 p.m: 61 Farm Equipment
4782.
Saturday, 8 a .m . .- 3 p.m.
CROSS &amp; SONS
1980 Chevy Monzo Sport
200. 4x4x12 ft . poles.
U.S . 36 Weat, Jackson . Coupe, red, 4 apd .• good gas
$4.00oach . 100. 4x4x16ft.
mileage. mint cond ., one
Ohio. 614·288 -6461 ·poles, 85 ..20 each. 10.000
Maney Fer!aueon, NN
owner. 111 Kineon Or. or
tobacc~ or tomato stake, 16
Holland, Buoh Hog Soleo 8o _ca-:-11-6.,..1_4_·_
44~6:..·_1_:5:.4..:0::..- - cents each . Call M.organ
. Service. Over 40 used
·
Woodlawn Farm , At. 36,
tractor~ to choote from ia 1981 Chevene. 4 dr. auto.
304-676-1286 or 304-738completf!" line of new &amp;
am-fm, 12499. John' s Auto
2342.
used equipment. large•t
Sales, Bulaville Rd. Gallipo·
selection in s.E . Ohio .
lis 614-446-4782 .

56

Pets for Sale

chocken laying neat 10 per
HILLCREST KENNELS unit, Allied manure loader 8
pring Speciei·Patrlot utility Boarding all breeds . Heated ft . pull disc, traffer •xle~ .
buildings on disPlay at two indoor-o.utdoor facilities . Coli 614-379- 2424.
convenient locations, B &amp; s AKC Doberman puppiea ;
Produce, Viand St. in Pt. Stud Service. Caii614-446- 2 horse trailert, 4 ft. buah
Piea~ant, and French City 7795.
hog, 5 ft. puiHyoe dloc. Call
Mob1le Homes in Gallipolis. l-::-:---------'-- 614-446-3252.
9x12 1895. also 10x16 Briarpatch Kennels Profes&amp;996. Delivered and tat up aionat All-breed groonio'ng . John Deere B tractor with
on your lot .
1~~~or-outdoor boarding fa- grader blade and 16 ft
8 h'
c•llt1as. Englith Cocker Spa- trailer. Dua_l tandem axln:
•ve• o 1 bees &amp; miac . bee niel puppi8s. Call.614-388· Good tires on everything .
equipment. Call 614-446- 9790.
_$ 2.000. Can "ee In even·
4933.
•1"!91- Turn right 1.1 miles out
Dragonwynd Cattery Ken- New_Li'!'a Rd. from Rutland .
Pump &amp; filter for swimming nel . CFA·Himalayan. Persian V. m11e on right.
pool, 2 antique pictures 100 and Siamese kitten•. AKC
years old. Several piece of Chow puppies. New litter. Cub Lowboy 16 ineh belly
antique silver. Call 614- Call 446-3844 after 7PM .
mower. Cub Tractor with
38B-9778 .
cultivators. MFJ5 gas
Air C~mpres•ora: ~ahufac - AKC registered Old English MF245 diooel, MF176 die:
eel. 3600 FOrd diesel. 1700
turer haa an ,overnock- · g;:~::~~,.~doq: Male, tOY1 Ford 4WD, ~ltsul;t.dshi ,_. brand neW inciultr:ial grade
ojd . For P.ttt . or ·
10
with· loader. seVeral
HP, ell Cllt iron, ·two stage
C,all 614-992·
us!td mower condltioneri.
pump. 21 .72 C.F.M. dis- Fish Tank and Pet Shop
Fatrplain Tractors Sales, Ai·
placement . 1 SO PSI working
2413
Jackson
Avenue'
play,
W.Va . Coli 304·372pressure. 80 g1llo.rl ASME
tank, American made 12 Point Pleasant, 304 •676 : 9B76..
-_:month limitiad warr~ntv 296_3. F:ilh, ' birds and m()re: 1-:-:---:---:---Poi!J B.Uildinga Conatructed
Slil!~~&lt;~•l,.! roloil •2.196: F!\ie ~e9istered Border Collie for commerclat. .ra.Dei. .
aell~ng to the P.ublic for
tt~ree. ate. Any aiz.e,
*795.00 (pluo freight) . 10 pupp1••· 30.,·674· 21.47..
eotomateo. Call 304- HP models alao available .
A_KC German Shepherd pup- 676 -3981 .
Call1-800-824-0721 .
pies, •hots and wormed ~~;;:====:======
We now build big 6 bedr. after
5 PM. no Sunday cans'
· 53
livestock
(Early American Homes) 3041-876-4663. ·
117,900. See thia dream
homo today. Caii614-8B67311 .
9 yr. old Reg. Appalooao
mare has been sttowri suc·
Fruit
58
Flow~rt.
bedding plants,
ce11fully, ex. halter horae.
&amp; Vegetables
Mngmg baaketa, pots. ve Coli 614-446-3252.
getable plants. tomatoes.
pepper~ . cucumber plants .
7 pigs, Rice't Pig Farm 2
Cleland Greenhoute, Vine Strawberries . Pick your mil eo off Rt. 62 on Ten Mile
St., Racine. Ohio . Hours- own. Claude Wint,rs . Call Road, 830.00 each, 304614-246-6121 .
Daily 10:06 til dark
46B-16B3.
Sunday-1 :00 Iii darl&lt;.
'
Good Ear Corn $2.70 bu· Two female goats, $20.00
UHd trimmera and chain shel, total 1 100 bushel
oaeh, phone 304-6 76 saws . Pomeroy Home and S2.60 busheL Call 61 4 : 721~.
266-6609.
Auto. 6141-992-2094.
Strawberries-you pick br we 3 veer old Appalon Filly •
Adull sized Weotern Saddle pick. Taylor's Barry Patch . 304-676 -3287.
and Hunt Seat Saddle . Call 9AM -6PM . Mon.-Sal. -Coli
Ducklings $2 .00 ..ch . 304·
814-742-3192.
614-446-8692 or 614-245· 676-3249.
5074.
Beautiful eelectton of silk
flowers for Memorial Day . Srawberrias. Rouah't at Un·
Cliff' a Place, next to Heiners ion Campground !Beck Of 64 Hay 8o Grain
Broad Store in Middleport.
New Haven, WVa. ) Picking
starts
May 22nd . You pick·
Firewood $20.00 piekup we pick
. No Sunday Sale1. Quality hay for 1111. Some
load, &amp;30.00 delivered. Call We
need
pickers. Call 1- made of clover, orchard
304-676 -6762 or 675 · 304-BB2·2237.
gresa or mixed. You cut, rak'e
and bole. Coli 614-742. - - - - -- 1 -:2_9_9-:-1_
1
2160 or 814-742-2287.
Small engines and tiller,
304-876·3002.
Ear corn for aall. •2.60 per
1-::---_.:..::_:.:::__ _ __
buohel. Calle 14-B43-6216.
Full~r Brush products (low
available, dealers wanted for
Gallia and Meigs Counties
65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
J04-676-1090.
"

s

I

fOJ ..Ia or trade for lata

1

Tobacco plants for aal~.
Roady 10 aet. Call 614-448 4060.

rr ansport~t1 1111

TOP CASH pold for 'BO
model and newer used care.
Smllh Buiclc·Ponlloc. 1911
Eoolern Ave .. OolllpoHo. Coli
614-446-22B2.

CadMIIc 19B1 , Floolwood
Broughem. 4 door, d .. HI
30-31 MPO, like now'
t&amp;,&amp;OO. Coli 304-6711: .
1n1 oi,I..-IIPM.
18841 Crown lmporill 14811
or boot oftor. Coli 814-41411·
4703.

Furnl1hed 2 bedroom mobile
homo. 304-e75-ell12 ..
2 bedroom. nice, Sind Hill
Road. phone 304-676·
3834.

44

Apartment
for Rant

One bedroom. tOIII el1ctric,
carpeted, e;~~~tre nic.. deposit
requl~ed. e _
1 4-992· 20941.

•

\

Furnlehed apart:ment . 3
rooms end bath. No pets.
Coli 614-949-2253.
1 bedroom apt. for rent.
Nicely locolod. Comocl VII·
Ia,. Manor In Mlddloport.
614 -992-7717 . Equol
Houolng Op,portun~y.

111ee Oldomobllo 98, nona
good, mot11 offer. Coli 814241·91118 .ttor 1 pm.
1887 Chevy lmpolo, "- "
oond .. for mono ln,..,.tlon
0111 814-241-8121. .
1178 flly,_.h llotorl 8 ovl.
IUIO. tr-., PI, good WOrlt
car 1700. Coli -"!go
114-311·8171.

tl&amp;AUTIFUL. PLACE.
1 'fYONDER WHY
Mlit. M&lt;:I&lt;E&amp; 5-Et.IT

Me

t-teRe.

HI!!

:&gt;AlP THii.. !

ee TWO MIN

' l)
WAITING!

TO P1C)(. Me LIP. TH6Y

MUl&gt;T fa loJ H!I&lt;E •

roofing,
new structures,
reD &amp; R Contractors:
Siding,
modeling, decks. patio's .
Free. Call
estimat~s.
Gallipolis,
Oh
614·446 -7687
.

'tt\.1 01\1\'li
I'IHY ARE 'tt\.1
HA~GIH' &amp;ACK?

House painting &amp; trailer roof
tops. Cell 61 4-446-2514 .
Roofing , concrete, all ty~s
of CArpentry . Free Estimates . Coll614· 266 · 1162.
Baird's Home Improve ments aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding, storm doors &amp; windows. roofing &amp; overhanging . Free estimates . Call
614- 367-0409 .
- - - - - -- - - Gene's Deep Stream Carpet
Cleaning, upholstrev .
scotchguard , deodorizers.
free estimatea. highly -re·
commended . 614 · 992 5671 or 614-742-2211 .
D.end M. Contractors. Vinyl
siding , replacement windows. insulating, roofii...g ,
new and; . remodeling, con·
crete. Call 304-773-61 31 . ·

' S Television Service .
81 Horizon 4dr., 41,000ml. RON
House calls on RCA. Quazar,
80 Colt 2 dr., 47,000 mile1 . GE . Speciallng in Zenith .
Coli 614--3 79-2726.
Call304-676-2398 or 6141973 Muatang V·B. auto, 446-2464 .
runo good. needo body worl&lt; .
1325. 1972 Toyota, need1 Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
transmiaaion, $100. Call removal. Call 304 -675 614-379. 2430.
1331 .

J.D. 4 row corn planter, I. H.
on~ row corn picker. metal

19'77 Ford Mavoriclc. tho
flrot f260 trlkoll home. Call
814-268·8~&amp;1 oftor
e :OOPM.
\

2 bdr, completely furnished ,
in country, .real nice. Call
6141-446-9204.

Autos for Sale

~~u~p~.~~;~~~~~

Phone

CAPTAIN EASY

Or;wall, residential &amp;. commercial, quality han·g ing &amp;
fin ithing . Ceiling design • &amp;
repair work . Call James
Plonto 614-245-6669 .

pipaa. l~~~~'":·=====~r::::::::===::!~

w•ndow~.
brick. lintels
sewer , etc .

RICK'S
NEW· Compare
AND USED
F~RNITURE.
our

JACKSON ESTATES 1 bedroomfurnlshedapdor
APARTMENTS (Equal rent. Utilities paid. No pett,
Housing Opportunity) drunks, or dope. John
monthly r'nt .1 tarts at 1169 Sheets. 3"12 mile1 aouth of
for 1 bedroom and 1204for Middleport on Rt . _7 . Phone
2 bedroom, deposit *200, 614-367-0611 .
located near Spring Valley 1--:------ - - Plaza and Foodland, pool APARTMENTS. mobile
t'"d Cable TV available. homes, houses . Pt. Plea1ant
hour~ aa possible 10 am to 4 and Gallipolis . 614-446 ·
pm ond 7 pm lo 9 pm 8221 .
. 33
Farms for Sale
Monday-Friday; Coli 614- 1-----'-~----Apartmentl. New
:·lo acres. mobile hom.e. barn 4 4 6 ~ 2 7 4 6 o r · Ia ave t..ureland
Ha~en. now accepting appli·
; ond shod. 304-755-4664, menage.
cat10n1 for 2 bedroomepart~04 - B82-2471, 14 miloo
menta. Basic rent 8163 .
.Nicely
furnished
mobile
_Rt. 2 North. Point Pleasant:
home, . eff. apt .• central air Inquire apartment C- 1.
and heat in city, adutu only. Equal houaing opponunity.
Call 614-4416-033B.
·34
· -lc Lot with 4 -room buildin.Q.

55 Building Supplies

sale. Sea to appreciate .
Phona 614. 742-224.8 .

t~~~~~::::;::==-T-~==;=======-1p"ces,
save today.
44
304--773-6430.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondition•l lifetime gua ·
rentee . .Local references
furnithed. Free eatimatll.
Coli colleci1 -614-23704BB. day or night . Rogers
8a1ement Waterproofing ..

~eber Charcoal Grill, 22
mch, same as new. 304773 -9556.

Elegant 80 inch round bed
with red velvet scrolled
headboard, matching bedtpreed, Curved bench with
brass . feet at the foot,
matchmg drapes, lamps and
other eccessorlee also for

Home
Improvements

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. Now inttalling rubbll!'r
roofa. 30 yeara experience.
specializing in ~vitt up roof.
Call 614-3B8-9B57 .

ComPiete eatellite •vstam
Installed, atening t895.DO.
Residential Window and
Awning Co. , 304 -876 5262.

Pickens uoed furniture . 304-675·64B3 or 875-1460.

~OBILE

81

Vinyl couch •'\d choir
*80.00. 20 in bike 11 5.oo.
Brown lawn umbrella
$40.00. 304-676-2729 or
576-2242.

Used 12 cu . ft . upright
freez:er · Good condi1ion
Call after 6 :00 pm . 614:
992· 3626.

Watl"!ington 81vd.. BelPre,

Services

870 Wingmester. 20 gauge.
Old doubleiHirrel, 12 gauge.
16 ft x 4 ft above groUnd
pool. new . 304-676-7890.

Country Oak .tebl11. cheirs.
cupboards, delks, ice bo.xea.
ConJclee. Tuppers Plains. Rt.
7 , Hand crafted and
finished .
.

your mobile home? Mobile

KIT.'N' CARLYLE ®br Larry Wright

Tull8day, May 28." 1986
DICK TRACY

Couch and t.wo.chaira, 304·
676 -6676.
.

3 piece liwingroom suite
couch, loveseet, chair, like
new. t400 . Call 614"4463824.

1~•70

NEED

64 Misc. Merchandise

51 .Household Goods
.

28, 1985

Tuesday.

Ohio

we came here
lookinQ for a

RINGLES'S SERVICE. ex-

model motorcycle. 1977 ~erienced carpe~ter . ele't,tri·
Olds Starfire with sunroof . chm. m.,on, peiinter, roof·
Call 614-379·2260 after 7 . ing {including hot tar
application) 304· 675-2088
80 Malibu wagon, 67
or 675-7368.
Cht:tvell, 71 Olds Cutlass, 78 ~--------­
Luv truck . Will take trade . Rotary or cab'fl tool drilling.
Call 814-448-7832.
Most wells completed same
day . Pump sales and sarvi19BO Dodge Aopln. 6 cyl .. coo. 304-895-3802 .
standard. 1972 Plymouth
Dutter. 8 cyl., automatic . B &amp; 0 HOME IMPROVE ._c_a_ll_6_1_4_·_9_9_2_-3_3:_4..-,:2:_·_~- MENTS, replacement windoWs, aluminum soffit, viliyl
1967. -Chevy 2 dQo~ Bl!tlait . ~fding.__cQntlnu9u s.. .gunen.
360 engfne;
free ·· ettimates, · all -work .
Good condit~on-.
guaranteed , s.prinlJ dis ·
nel engin8 and tranlmiision. count.. · call evenings 304· ·
$2000. or lrool offer. Call 676-2644.
614-992-5863.
Starks· Tree and
SerGov't Surplus -cart and vice, stump r~movat . 304·
trucks, u.nder.. t 100 .00 . 676· 201 0.
NoW .a";~-!lilabla in yOur a(ea.
Coil! 1·619·669·0242, 24
Plumbing
82
hours. ·· ·.
·
··.
Monte Carlo $360.00. - - --· &amp;
__H_a_a_ti_n_g_ __
715 Impala. good motor. for
porto, 1200.00. 304-676CARTER'S PLUMBING
7216.
ANO HEATING
'84 Monte Carlo. 304-676Cor. Fourth and Pine
3282 call after 6 :30.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446-388B or
'79 Chovrolol Camero. VB _6_1-:-4-·_4_4_6_-4_4_7_7_~--36~. T top, PS, P8. AC,
cruooe control. $3,600.00. JIM'S PLUMBING 8o HEAT304-882-3286.
lNG . AI . 1, Box 355, Gellipolio . Coll614 · 367-0576 .
'72 Ford 302 engine and C4
automatic transmiuion 83
Excavating
$300.00 . coli 3041 -676:
8786.

phone to call
i:he pol ice !

Gave

a

descriPtion of

For you, Lil!

He had almo~t a
million bucks he
from Mr. Bills'

Peter!
was suche kind
and qentle person!

won't be hard
spot! .Its so
red ...and shin

Peter's car!

1-:------- - -

L~wn

:76

Evening
Telev~ionLMtings
5128185
1 (HBOI1-;;;~~~--~~~~~==~------~~~--------------------------------------~MOVIE: 'Tho Jon
12:15 (I) MOVIE: 'Uiyoooo"
(I) ABC Nowo Nlghtllno
Slngor

EVENING
"'"'(I),.,- (I)

l])) N
8 :00 • "'-'ewe '-'-' -

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

Flctory'

1975 760 Honda $700. Call
814-245 -9239.
19B1 Honda CB860. Coli
814-949-3037.
1976 Honda 760. E;~Ccellent
condition. Lots of extraa.
8120 ICIUal. mll11. f1000.
R. Chevalier I t 614·985·
3B68 oflor 6 :00 pm.
1977 Sporlolor. f1600 .
1979 Kowuokl 400 dirt
bike. t350. Can see under
Pomeroy-Maaon Bridge .
814-912-8B46.
198.15 Honde three wheeler
304-882-2605.
.
Six wheel all tenain vehicle
oloct~c otort. 17 hp Rock:
well motor, 2 extra wheell
304· 773· 96511.
.

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Cobin Crul-. Crloo Croft
31" twtn engine, 1967,
W•&lt;IO' troller, 19.1100. Coli
304·8711·1731 after 8PM,

79 Motors Home•
lo Campers
Wlnnob'!!lo motor homo
23', AC, gonor11or ca'
1972, llko - · 110.100:
CoM 304-8711-1731 oft•

IPM.

Electrical

8o Refrigeration

7:00

SE~I~G Machine repairS,
servtce. Authorized Singer
Sal~s &amp; Service Sharpen
SCISSOrs . Fabric Shop
Pomeroy. 614-992-2284. ·

85

•
1

General Hauling

James Boys Water Service .
Alsp pools filled , Call 614256 -1141 or 814 - 446 1175 or 614-446-791 1.

7:30

K.en 's Water Service. Wells,
Cisterns, pOols filled . Phone
614·367-0623 or 814-3677741 night or day.
Haul_ limestone, sand, gra vel.dtn, bulk or bag fertiliz.ar
and lime. Excelsior Salt
Works Inc. 838 E. Main St .,
Pomeroy. 614-992-3891 .

8:00

flat bed dump tl-uck for hire
co•l. •and, gravel. hav:
lumber, etc . 304 · 676 ·
3190.

87

Sir
Laurence
Olivier, .
Brooke Shields, Charlton
Httton, Dabble .. Reynolds
and George C. Scott help
Bob celebrate his 82nd
I birthday with style. (2 hro.)
Cil 700 Club
(I)
W' MOVIE: When
Dreaf'!ll Come True' (CC)
Ill (I) ClD
MOVIE:
'Brotherly Lovo' (CCI
I]) il]) Frontllno (CC)
:Breaking the Bank.' Tonight's pro(itr&amp;m examines
recent bank railures. 1he affacts that theae failures
had on cuetomers and
what Will be done in the future to prevent recurrences. (60 .min .J
10:00 (I) PKA Full Contact
Karate - Middleweight
Champlonohlp from Pill·
dena TX
"
CIJ Statewide
(fi) NeWIWitCh
(HBOJ Hitchhiker: Face m
Faoe
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Six WMkl'
10:15 CD MOVIE: "lko: The War
Yeera' Part 2
10:30 (]) Colobrlty Chota
I]) Moloughlln Group
IJlJ Adult Yeera
Ill INN Nowo '
(HIOl Vet AtJiin More All·
New Unexpurgated Benny
Hill In his seventh uncen·
sored hour of sketches and
songs, Bawdy Bennv. returns with Hlll'a Angels'7mt.
se~ey back~up dancers.
1 1:00 DIIJ (I) (J) D (I)® Cll
W Nowo
CD Bill Coeby Show
II) Monty Python
IBen_!!Y Hill Show
11 :30
(IJ ClJ Toplghl Bhow
(J) . . .t of c:Jrouohc
OO·Bpo-ntor
,
(I) WKRP In Clnolnnoll
FelkOuy A meniPula ·
tlve con-woman kldnapt
Jody In ''n effort to get
blck It Colt. (A) (80 min.)
(J) Ut.enltht Amedotl

Max
Comedy
Experiment: David Stein·
bo'11_
·
D
NBC NIWI
(]) Riflemen
00 Rovco'o World Claoe
Women
(I) Oomor Pyle
C1J Gl Clli ABC Nowo (CCI
Ill (J) ® CBS Nowo
(I)
Nightly
Buelnes1
Report
(]]) Body Electric
GI One Oev It a Time
[MAX) MOVIE: · 'Hardly
Working'
·
D (I) PM Magazine
CJ)
Chuck
Connor"s
W•atern Theater
(!) Sporteoenter
CD Sanford and Son
CI:l Entertlinment Tonight
CLJ Wheel of Fortune
• CIJ WhMI or Fortune
(() {]]) MecNeii/Lehrer
New1hour
CID Nowo
Cll &lt;Ill Toyo of Yeolirday
I1D Jefferaons
D ([J Tlc_Tac Dough
Cll CJooo Kid
(I") Spom Focu't Julius
Irving
(() Mejor League Beaeball:
St. Loult 8t Atlanta
CI:llll Cl) Family Feud
lD Jeopardy
WI! Wheel of Fortune
•
CI2l Entertainment
Tonight ·
WKRP In Clnclnnoll
D ([J 1JJ A-Toom (CCI The
A-Team reoehtet bad press
when a group of impQttera
terrorize a wild welt show.
(R) .(BO min.)
•·
(I) Gentle Ben
00 NCAA Dlvlolon I Mon'o
LaCroooo Chomplonohlp
from Providence. Rl
(() . . (JJI Thr. .·a a Crowd
(CC, Jack feels threatened
when en amorous friend of
Vicky's come• for a vialt.
[MAX)

8:30

·Upholstery

cv m

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g

(A)

AmoriOI
CeneoredTonight'aapeclal
takea a look 1t the hlatory
of cenoorohlp and lho of·
feet it hll hid on cinema,
TV ond muolc. [80 min.)
(J) ID) Novo CCC) 'The
Foun••••• of Porod lao.' The
. of!ectl thll 1 hydrooloclric
ptaject wm hive on the ,,.
.-nd of Sri Lonko oro o•·

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 1 eJ Soc. Ava., Gallipollo
e14-446·7833ore14 4416 .
1e33.
•
.
A • ~ Furniture Manufacturing, Oh
Sl . Rl , 7 . Crown
Cit
y,
· Con 814-26 8 .
1470, call Eve. 814 . 448
34138 . Old &amp;
.
Uphostered.
n8w

...

(I)

Ill (I) McCloud 'Fifth Man

a String Quanet.'
"••t~ Cl oud re 1uses to believe
that 11 music student killed
,is maestro. (AI (90 min.)

in

TIJCI

.

D(J)Atc-Nith•llno
• Twilight ZoM
{HIIOI Comlntl Attraottona
11:451MAXI
MOVIE:
'Laot
Embree.•
.
1 2:00 Cil lurno • Allen
00 Moldo 8p0rlllook
(I) Bonny Hill ltoow
IIJ MOVIE: 'Incident In Bon
frenclaoo'
al E.,. on HoiiVWOGd

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and Tho Ugly'

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Rules

'
CU Entertainment Tonight
KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by urry Wright
' .

'

~eM~•"*r
by THOMAS
JO~EPH

min.)

(]) Love That Bob
Nowl Joon
1:00 fll
f""ll"\ W
I Married
00 Outdoor• TV Flohlng
....,
Mag.@
FootbaAII uotrallan

AC&amp;OSS
I Tooth
problem
5 Lemur .
10 Agitate
II U.S. induftriallst ·
12 He was a
smash on

37 Melodiously, ;
in music
38 lsrae li port
39 Keep .Core
40 Nudged
by foot

i

DOWN
J Rumanian

cit)/
2 Tinge
3 Avoid
pursuit
(mass media) 4 Old musical II Distrib14 John or Jane not.e
. uted,
15 Lob onlmol 5 Hearty
as cards
18 Seoul unit 8 Make
15 Emergence
. a choice
18 Cit)/ in
I 7 With
optimism
7 Crosby-Hope Ye men
"MA.S.H ."
13 The Fourth

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•

12:30 D IIJ (J) Late Night wllh
_Da,vld lettermen Tonight's
guilts oro corni"al
• guesaor
oviol Glovoky and comedian Bob Sarlette. (60

~lrthdoy

Dlff'ront
Strokoo 'Willy
MOVIE:
Wonke and tho Chocolato

Doz.er. and dumptruck servicea . O.A. Boston Excavat·
2· 197:9 Honda XR 500's ing. 614-667-662B or 614·
Make 6iter. Call 814-246- 378-6288.
9698 after 6 pm . .

84

shaii~CC[b

tlll
[HBO]

74 Motorcycles

1983 Honda V-611 Magna.
like new, low mileage, lets of
oxtrao. $2.700. Coli 614245-e81B .

m.-

""..,

(I) Beverly Hlllblllloo
·
I]) 0 r. Wh o
il]) 3-2· 1, Contool (CCI

~xcavating . basemen~•· foo~ers , driveways.

septiC tanks. landscaping .
Ford wan, customized JA T Call anytime 614 · 446 ·
1977. AT. PS. PB.' good 4637, James L. Dovison, Jr .
cond .. 13,900. Cell 304- _o_w_n_er_._ _ _ _ _ __
875-1731 eflor 6PM .
Dozer ~ork land clearing,
landscaping, etc. Free e!'ltimoles. Call 614-446-8038
or 614-992-71,.9 anytime.

rlout Beateid•"
8 30 (I)..._~
: •
-""' Foui-Upo Bl-/
Blundert Tonight's. Inhouse guest i• Peter Mar·
.
90
D
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Bob H-··
Happy
Homooomlng
In
EnglandRoyol
LonQon Gele SuchAstars
as

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Good· 1

73

(MAX) MOVIE: 'The lnglo-

19 EJCplosive

"highway"

24 Ethiopian
lake
26 Marx man
28 Timid
29 Worship
33 Daunted

21 River mud 35 Pass

inltia.b
8 Ardent
22 Fire upon
beh\-een
20 Political
9 "The Iliad" 23 Actress
peaks
cartoonist
h..-akl
Barbaro
36 After Fri.
21 Mediocre
22 Part of
an opera
Clocking
device
25 - chance
(might
dO It)
28 Nimbus
27 Table !!Crap

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28 Hindu's

re&lt;:lted
word

30 Hockey

great
31 "Hour'

1n Rome

32 Seraglio
chamber
3" Drinking

rx:t

ves.&lt;Wl

36 Barge
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hinta. Each day lhe code lellers are different. .
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STRONGEST OF STRONG •DRINKS, FQR IT KILLS THE
GIANI: DESPAIR. - DOUGLAS JERROLD
i

l

�Tuesday. May 28." 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page- 1 2- The Daily Sentinel

Hunger, confusion, .disease
fear grips ·Bangladesh areas
DHAKA. Bangladesh (UPI) Hunger, confUsion and fear of a
cholera outbreak gripped coaslal
· areas of Bangladesh today following
the killer cyclone and tidal waves
that left more than l,XO people dead
and up to 10,001 missing and
presumed dead .
·
.
With officials saying 2'1.. million
people were affected by Frlday's
stom1, the death toll was almost
certain to climb. But reports that up
to 40,000 people may have been
killed could not be con!lnned.
Rescue ships continued searching
for thousands believed to have been
washed Into the Bay of Bengal by
10-foot to 15·foot tidal waves
spawned by the storm.
Government officials said about
4,UXJ people have been rescued from
the sea.
.
The cyclone, packing winds of
more than 130 mph, lashed a
168-inUe-long estu&lt;~ry dotted with
about 1,UXJ islands and Inhabited by
8'1.. million peoplto.
·
During a helicopter tour of the
stricken areas, President Hussein
Mohammed Ershad said, "It was a
terrible shock ... so many of the
survivors lost toverytWng. I appeal
to the whole world to help."
Dazed survivors told htm about

the disaster, raising their hands
above their heads to show how the
water crashed down on them In the
darkness, teamng away their homes
and washing away villagers.
A woman crted, " !lost my uncle,
my two sons. All I have left Is my
baby,"
Hungry survivors wandered
around clamortng for scarce food
and other relief supplies hand€0 out
by government troops who tried to
console orphaned cWldren.
Authorities, feartng an outbreak
of cholera, began an Inoculation
pi'OgTam and started working to
restore safe water supplies.
In WasWngton, State Department
spokeswoman VIvienne Ascher said
the United States made $25,000
Immediately available for thereUef
effort.
Bangladesh officials roll€0 back
the confirmed death toll from 1,500
to 1,311 Monday; although local
news reports said 3,450 people had
been burled on the islands since
Sunday, and local government
officials said as many as 20,000
pertshed In the storm.
In Geneva, Switzerland, the
League of Red Cross and Red
Crescent Societies esUmat€0 at
least 3,UXJ people died in the disaster

and said some reports Indicated as
many as 40,UXJ may have been
killed.
The govenunent gave no reason
for revlslngltsdeathcount, but local
officials said It apppeared authort· .
ties feared a high death toll would
cast doubt on the military govern·
ment's ability to provide adequate
stom1 warntngs . .
A storm·warnlng center con·
nected to the NASA space agency
and built to avert a repeat of a 1970
cyclone that · killed "500,000 was
working, and officials said the
mainland was spared higher casual·
ties because residents there received a timely warntng.
But thousands on the Islands could
not escape the tid;ll · waves, a
Bangladesh official said.

e
Vot.35, No.32
Copyrlghtod ·1985

COLLEcr BODIES - Bodies were collected from
of Bangladesh's coastal Islands

different parts

M~y l~g

lhe

Emergency squads

,

Admlsslons~Queen.Pome:

answersevencalls

'cyclone which left more than 3,000 people dead. More
than 12,000 people are stiU mls8lng. UPI.

ROLL UP

Veterans Memorial

p·

roy; Jessie HoucWns, Middleport;
Meigs County Emergency Medi· Theresa Flshff, Mlnersvllle,
.
cal Service reports seven calls on
Dlscharges··Errtest Brewer,
·Saturday, four calls on Sunday and John McDaniel, Brian Hayes,
four calls on Monday·
Gertrude Scarboro.
Middleport at 12: 28 a .m. Sunday
·
Sunday
ents, she was preceded In death by
William E. Nichols
her husband, Henry, a son and two went to VIllage Manor Apartments
Admlsslons··Ciara Slater, Mid·
d aug
. hters.
for Martha Maynard to nd
Veterans
rry,
12 42 dlepori·, Margarulette
William E. Nichols, 92, Route 1,
ServlceswUJbeheldatl0:30a.m ., MemortaiHospltai.Rutla at :
Racine· Alfred Derenberger, Al·
Rutland, died Saturday evening at Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home a.m. went to Pagetown for Alfred
bany;
Scarberry, Racine;
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
with the Rev. Carl Hicks officiating. Derenherger to Veterans Memor·
Eloise Watkins, .P omeroy; Beulah
He wasborninMasonCounty,W. Burial wUI to be In the Chester iai.At4:52p.m.Pomeroywascalled
Roush, Racine; Randall Carl,
va. , on0ct.15, 1892, asonofthelate Cemetery. Friends may call at the toBoatwrtghtRoadforSusanBauer · Pomeroy.
.
t;leorge W. and Sallie May Nichols. funeral home anytime afler 7 p.m. who was taken to Holzer Medical
· Discharges··William Quickel,
Center. · Racine at · 11:29 p.mhe.
Okey Kiser. ·
He was an Army veteran of World Wednesday.
war 1 and was a retired farmer . He
transported Troy Glbeaut from t
,Monel
belonged to Meigs Chapter 53,
James H. Kauff
station to VeteransMemortal.
Ad~lsslons··Clar:ce froffltt,
Disabled American Veterans.
'On Monday at12: 29 p.m. MiddlePortland; Ida Dudding, Middleport.
Survlvmg are his wife, Mary B.
James H. Kauff, 62, of Rt. 1, porttransportedShlrleyDavlsfrom
Dlscharges··Randall carl, Ida
Lambert Nichols, whom he married
Rutland, died Tuesday morning at 356 North Fourth to Veterans
Dudding.
the Veterans Admlnlstratlon Medl· Memortal. Pomeroy at 12:40 p.m.
on March 10, 1934; a daughter, Mrs.
Rita v . Moss, Fort Meyers, Fla ., two
cal Center, Huntington, W.Va.
went toMuJbetcy and South Second
Meets Wednesday
grandchildren , and two great ~
Born July ill, 1922 in Meigs In Mlddii'POrt for Mariepuddlngto
grandchildren.
County, he was a son of the late Cecil Veterans Memortat At 4:46 p.m.
Wildwood Garden Club wUJ meet
Besides his parents, he' was andEvaFOleyKauff.
RactnetransportedRobertBoggess .
.llpm Wednesdayatthebome
preceded tn death by three siste~.
A World War II U.S. Army from Letart to Veterans Mell'\orial.
a 17· · · · ..
Pearl Leo)tard . Mtnnie Henry . and
veteran,Mr.,Kauffwasam!lmeber And ai.11:58 p.m. Tuppers Platns; . of~rlsGru~r. · J...
. Ora Sheets.
.
of the Mason,' W.Va .. Veierans of went to Ro!lte 681 West for Dorothy . Revival underway
Serv ic0s will be h~ld at 1 ·p.m . Foreign Wars.
·
· · Reed to Camden·Ciark Memorial
Wednesday at the Hunter Funeral
Survivors Include his wife, Bonnie Hospital In Parkersburg.
Revlv;l services begin today and
Home in ' Rutland with Mr. John Darst Kauff, at home; three
Saturday cans Included: 9:30 · continue through Sunday at the
Evans officiating. Burtal will be In stepsons and daughters·ln·law, Ha· a.m., Col4mbla T~hlp to Roqte .
tland C urch of th Nazarene.
Gravel Hill c~metery at C~hlre. .raid and Reeda O!Jrst of Rutland •.. 689 w~ete a truck ~ed by D~ny •
Net!n Perduelf and Riiv,
Frien\ls .may ca!l · at the funeral,-. Sampson ·and Sharon Da~t of · Turner was on .f[ri',; 12: 24 · p.rh., ·• Dorothy Wblttfugton a.re the evan·
·hOme froin 2 to 4 and 1 tog· p.m ." Rutland, Danny and Sheri Darst of Syracuse, toDu!Chtownfor'Theresa · gellsts. The Sissons wiD be ' seciiil
today. Graws ide military rites will Pilmeroy; a ' stepdaughter and Fisher, to Veterans Memorial;
singers. Services wlll be held each
he conducted.
son·ln·law, DeUUah and Stanford Middleport at 12:33 p.m. to336Park
evening at p.m. and at 0: a.m.
7
1 30 Rev
Cox, GalllpoUs; a brother and st. for Jessie HoucWns, to Veterans
Edna Mae Spencer
slster·in·law, Paul and Francis Memortal; Pomeroyatl:Mp.m. to
Sunday.Publlclstnvltedbythe
·

Area deaths

.ORCH a·LINDS

_

·Roberta

Edna MaP Spencer, 81, Route 1,
Kautf, HaiTisonvUie; two sisters
Long Bottom, died Tuesday at andbrothers·ln·law,FredaandGuy
Bing,
Middleport, Helen and WU·
Veterans Memoria l Hospital.
Capehart,
Middleport; two
llam
Mrs. Spencer was born Dec. 10,
sisters,
Pauline
Serales,
Fostorta,
19m, ·in Chester Township, a
and
Hazel
Kauff,
Lancaster,
Pa.;
daughter 01 the late Cha~les and
andflvegrandchlldren,DawnDarst
Martha Pullins McElroy.
She a !tended the Eagle Ridge and Adam Cox of Ga!Upolls, Corey
ChriStopher Darst of Pomeroy,
Community Church and was a and
and Loretta Darst, of Rutland.
m emberofChesterCouncll, Daugh·
In addition to his parents, Mr.
te rs·of America.
Kauff was preceded In death by a
Survlvlng are four sons, Vance sister, Margaret Kautt.
Spencer, Route 1, Long Bo!tom;
VIsiting hours will be all day
Elson Spencer, Racine; Dayton and Wednesday at Rawllng.Coats·
Waid Spencer, Route 1, Long Blower Funeral Home with tbe
Bottom; twd daughters, Avis Bing, family present from 24 p.m. and 7·9
Route 1, Long Bottom, and Mary p.m. that day. Thursday visiting
DeGroat, Fountain, Colo.; four hours will be until the time of the
brothers, Eugene McElroy, Dayton · funeral at 11 a.m. when a veteran's
McElroy and Virgil Elroy, all of memortalservlce at Middleport Hill
MlnersvUie. and Kermit McElroy, Cemetery will be held.
Syracuse. AJ~ surviving are 18
grandchildren and 20 grea t·
grandchildren. Besides her par·

Route 7 . for
vera Stewart,
to
Veterans
Memorial;
2:29 p.m.,
Rutland to Boyles Road tor Betty
Harrison, to Pleasant VaHey l;inspl·
tal; Raclneat6:44p.m., to23950HUI
Road for Harry Douglas, to Veterans Memorial; Syracuse at 6:54
p.m. toThlrdSt.forAibertHemsley,
to Veterans Memorial.

\

*WIPE CLEAN VINYL SLATS
*PRESSURE TYPE AUTOMATIC CORD LOCK
HOLDS AT ANY HEIGHT
*MATCHING POLYESTER STITCitiNG &amp; CORD .
*6 FT.· DROP ·
· ·.
· -·
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*STOCKED ·IN 4, S 6, 8 AND 10 FT. WIDTHS

Pick 4, 0725
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Mon·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally !'iwnber

946.

'

Ticket sales totaled $854,238.50,
. with a payoff due of$.'9), 700. PICK4

0725.

-. . •. . 3RD .FLOOR FURNITURE DEPARTMENT: ·

ELB.ERFELDS
•

•
J· ~
I

•••

-SPECIAL.OFFER.-

PICK4 ticket sales totaled
$121,993.50, with. a payoff due of
~.959.

' Three lotto winners
CLEVELAND (UPI) -TheOWo
Lottery Commission says three
tickets sold for Saturday .night's
Ohio Lotto drawing bore the same
six numbers as pulled in the
drawing.
Those numbers were 1, 10, 17, 21 ,
29 and 38. Officials said $3,275,462
worth of tickets were sold for the
drawing. ·
People holding tlckPts with those
numbers can r€deem them at a
regtonal lottery office today.
Lottery Commission officials wUJ
learn today how many of the Uckets
have fouroftheslx numbers and five
of the six numbers.
'

Clift lor the Qrsduste
At $peels/ Pricet
-SAVE-

.BUL0YA·SEII0·PULSAR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••200/o
141 ADD·A·BEADS &amp; CHAINS ••••••
2sz~ .
141· GOLD (HAINS &amp; BRACELETS ........... 2 5 Yo
CROSS PEN &amp; PENCIL SETS ..................... 1·0°/o j
EARRINGS .&amp; NECILACES •••••••••••• ~ ............ 10°/o

Weather forecast

t······....

Occasional rain and a chance of
thunderstorms today, with highs In
the low 70s. Cloudy tonight , with a
low In the low 50s. Becoming partly
cloudy Wednesday, with Wghs
·
between 70 and 75.
The probability of prt'Cipltallon Is
80 percent today,~ percent tonight
and 10 percent Thursday.

. WHY PAY MORE?

Ext.endedJOieca!lt
A chance ol8howers each day,
wtth hlp ranging from &amp;he mid
'lOti to mid 888 Thunday and
Friday . . be J1IGIJUy In lhe 'lOti
Saturday. Overnlg!S lows mot!ily
wW rant~e from the mid 5fiiJ to lhe
mid Mil.
••

KING BUILDERS
SUPPLlMl.dltport
992·5020

405 N. S.CIINI Are.

992-205.
Your

Convenient Off Street Ptrltlng

..

•

• JIWEliY REPAIR .
'WATCH IEPAII
• APPRAISAL SIRVICI

113 COURT
POMIIOY, OH.

. .. . ......

.. --··...

26 C411nts

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

··-··- . ..... ...... -·"" ·-·· ..-... ..........
..-

'

.-

WASHINGTON - With millions
voices heard.
the oll depletion allowance ls "going
not what this country needs In terms
of dollars ln. coveted tax breaks
Sen. Bill Bradley, D·N.J ., coto
he
a
problem
fort
he
industJy.lt
Is
of
energy exploration."
under attack from President Rea·
author with Rep. Richard Gegan 's new tax reform plan, special
phardt, [).Mo., of a Democratic tax
Interests wasted ·no ·time circling
reform plan, said he was "elated"
their wagonc and tried to shoot holes
with Reagan's commitment.
In the proposal.
"When I first proposed tax reform
Even before the president went on
four years ago, people laughed,"
· national television Tuesday night to
Bradley salq , In a statement.
announce his plan, Interest groups
"Tonight, they ~augh no more."
were Issuing dire forecasts about Its
. Gephardt said the biggest probeffects on the economy.
lem he saw In Reagan's plan "Is that
They said t~ Reagan proposals,
It appears to give back a lot of
If passed by Congress, would lead to
preferences '(deductions) to a lot of
a major reduction In business
special Interests such as big oil and
· Investment because much of the • (companies that use) capital gains.
Interest on that harrowed money
· "I'm afraid that the people who
would no longer be deductible.
are being asked to pay for those new
They also predicted a dt&gt;Crease In
preferences an! the people In the
housing sales because interest
middle class," Gephardi said.
deductions for second homes would
Several spokesmen fqr special
be eliminated and a hefty increase In
Interest groups generally, believed
housing rental costs because land·
to be tlie iosers In the Reagan
lords would have Wgher costs and
proposal felt It eliminated too many
gun· shy Investors would built fewer
deductions.
DELIVERS TAX.: PLAN- President Reagan deUvers his hlstoitc
units.
"We're concerned that invest tax refonn plan Tuesday In a televised speech from tbe Oval Office. 'The
Reagan
's
Proposals
fared
much
ments
may not be made lithe cost of
President asked Americans to Join ,hJm In "a second American
biter
on
Capitol
Hill.
While
congres·
capital Is greatly Increased ," said
revolUtion" against an "unwise, unwa.nl&lt;ld and unfair" tax system.
slonal · leaders expressed some
Rochelle Bernstein of the U.S.
(UPI).
reseryatlons, they generally ap.
Chamber of Commerce:
· . pl~uded :the president for adv~nclri!;
.. Wayne 'Thevefiiit •.president the .
' tiix reform.
·· - "
.
. National . j'tealty·· Committee, . an
Rep. Dan R&lt;istenkowskl, D·Ui..
association of large · commi'rclal
TAX REFORM BOOK - Pr!&gt;sident .
holdll ·the book
the chairman of the ta:X·Wrttlng
containing his laJt proJIOIISk Tuesday which be wiU Pl'ellelll to lbe
develoJ)ers and Investors, said
Ways and Means Committee,
Reagan's propOsal would ·have "a· .Olngress.. In a televised ~h .from lhe Oval Office, the Pl'l!8ldeDt
asked Americans to join him In "a second American revolution" against
Pl'()miSE'(] strong Democratic SUP.., substantial negative impact on the
· p6rt 1'1f ·, the president's ,plan Js
real esiate industry."
ft!l "ft!~wljl&lt;:, UIIWan~ anc! u~J~aJr.:• tax S)'ll!em ~ IQWell~ • Jil8toric
tefonn plan to cut Individual andboi'po...W.Iax ~ (VPih
I'VetytbiQg he'!i.BYS It Is ." But he.•
· " It \VilLlower property values, It.
.
.. . vowed not to "rubber stamp" the
will ..curt aU Investments and 7\llti·
plan.
maiely II will have to ' (lead to)
During his televised Democratic
substantial Increases in rents," he
response to Reagan's speech, Ros·
said.
Angella Spencer has· been named
are members of the team . The
tenkowskf said Reagan's plan was
A National Association of Homevaledictorian and Tracie Schul, · board, apparently through the poll, t m~rely a "starting point " In a long
builders spokesman predicted
salutatorian, of the 1985 Eastern agreed to change commencement
tax refoim debate.
home sales will drop as much as 15
High School graduating . class. from Friday to Sunday.
. COLUMBUS (UP!)- The Hun. consider the speed at which tlw
He also urged average Americans
percent If the Reagan plan passes.
announces Prin c ipal William
However, someparentsandsome
to participate In that debate by
Lisa Kimbro of the Independent ter Savings Association of Cincin· institution can reopen Home Sta tr
Buckley.
students ;lre voicing strong. objec·
expressing .their opinions to their. P etroleum Association of·A merica, nati submitted a bid late Tuesday to and Us 33 branches.
Miss Spencpr is the daughter of lions to the change of date for
members of Congress so that
whiCh repreSents small drillers, purchase Home State Savings
Mr. ·and Mrs. Roger Spenc&lt;'r, commencement. They say they
Chemical , which refused to alter
special Interests are not the only
said the Reagan plan ellmlnatlng Bank, state officials said.
Tuppers Plains , and Miss Schul Is have sent manylnvltatlonsoutofthe
The bid was announced less than Its offer. even to secure passage of
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs . county and our of the state
four hours before thP deadline given legislation allowing it into the Ohio
Herman Schul 'Of ReedsvillP.
In legtslatlon last week In which banking market, has pledged a June
announcing commencement for
. Spencer and Schul will d eliver Frtday evening therefore, they are
Chemical Corp. of New York was 14 reopening date . a nd has held
addresses to their classmatt's and against changing the date to
allowed to enter the Ohio banking seminars In Cincinnati, Columbus
gOestsdurtng this year's28th an nual Sunday. U the change remains In
and Dayton with depositors .
market.
.
baccalaureate and commencement effect, they wlll havetomakemany
Chemical officials promised ex·
Robe11 McAlister , superi ntend·
exercises in the high school phone calls advising relatives and
citing
nf'w serviCC's for custom€'rs,
ent of the Ohio Division of Savings
auditorium .
and Loan Association, ldenllfled Including sopWstica r€0 banking by
friends - who have already made
Although the las t announcement plans to attendgp F'rlday- advising
H1111ter as a subsidalry of American personal computer for individuals.
late this morning from Eastern
and seminars on foreign invest ·
Financial Corp. of Cincinnati.
them of the change In the date of
High School was that annual commencement.
State officials began work linme· ments for small businesses.
commencement exercises for tWs
Chemical Is paying a $21 million
dlately to evaluate the va rious
The par~nls contend that gradua·
year's graduating class will he
·
premium
to enter the Ohio banking
elements
of
the
Hunter
bid.
They
tionwasset months ago and that ball
moved from Frtday evening at 8 to 6 game should not stand In the way of
market and has required that th&lt;.&gt;
hope to be able to name a successful
p.m. Sunday, there still could be having the commencement asset on,
Home State bidder as early as state furnish $125 million to offset
another change.
Wednesday
or no later than Mon· Home StatP's Hal:li.l lties and pay
Friday: They say that many people
That was the Indication late this have adjusted schedules on the basts
day, a department spokesman said . depositors 100 percent ofthelrfunds .
morplng, when it was announced of the commencement being on
Th£' state plans to use non·tax
Chemical signed Its contract with
that the Eastern District Board of Friday and a change to Sunday will
revenues
to make the payment ,
the state las t Tuesday, and under a
Education will meet In emergency Inconvenience many, rnany people.
newly·pass€0 stafelaw, Ohiotnstltu· Including the sale of short·teim
session at 8 this e'ventng at the high
tlons had seven days to meet or notes backed by state Uquorprofits.
TUesday night,. some 30 parents
school.
Other funds will come from recov·
exceed Chemical's terms . The
And students were at the high school
LOISIHLE
CIIARLO'ITELVONS
It was 'reported that the board was In anticipation of meeting with the
ery on certai n lawsuits the state has
seven days expired at midnight
polled and had . moved the com.
Tuesday.
lodged against Home Staie officia ls.
board of educa lion on the rna tter but
mencement from Friday to Sunday there were no board members on
ESM Government Securit ies, Inc.,
McAlister will make the final
after the Eastern Girls Softball
and its auditor. Alexander Grant &amp;
determination of the best offer. He
hand.
Team won a berth In the state
said he wanted to get "the best dOllar Co .. which Is sa id to ha ve issued a
It wa s re ported also tb&lt;lt. a
.
tournament to be played Friday
fraudul&lt;mt a udit report on ESM .
for the s tate" but a lso would
,deal
majority of the seniors voted
afternoon at Ashland. Efforts to get
Tuesday to keep the Frtday date.
the tlnje of the Eastern game at
"Is a season or softball more
Ashland changed were unsuccess.
Important than 12 years of educa·
fill. Four girls from the senior class
lion?", a parent asked this morning.
Lois !We has been named a alumni queen candidate and plans
Middleport council Tuesday night certain areas of th0cornmun1tyoqly
valedictorian and Charlotte Lyons to attend Ohio University In the fall
In regular session, diSCUssed pnssl· and submit thPm to the next
has been named salutatorian for the majoring In education. She Is ·the
ble annexation of · land below meeting.
1985 Southern High School gradual· &lt;laughter Mr. and Mrs. Charles N,
Middleport
. Mayor Hoffman wlll
lngclass.
It was agr'e&lt;'d to ask Meigs
Ihle, Morning Star Road.
consull an attorney on steps to ·be Juvenile Office Carl Hysell and
Commencement and baccalau·
Miss Lyons has been a member of taken In that direction. The discus·
another individu ~J recommended
reate for this year's52senlors-one the marching, pep, concert and jazz
sian broug ht our the fact that even ' by the Ohio Municipa l League to
of the smallest classes In recent bands, . the drama club, National
though the village does annex land attend the· next meeting to discuss
years - will be held at Bp.m . In the Honor Society, pep club, ahd was a
below Middleport , the maintenance suggestions by Counci lman Sob
high school auditorium and at that m ember of the senior play cast. She
of the brtdge across Leading Creek
Gilmore for the establishment of a
event Ihle and {..yons wlll present the served on the ye3 rbook staff, was
would stUI be handled by,the county. block parent program.
valedictorian and the salutatorian secretary' treasurer of the senior
. At the suggestion of Couliellinan
address.
Mayor Fred Hoffm a n announced
c lass, winner of the DAR Good
Allen Lee King, It was agreed to that the Che•apcake and Ohio
Miss lhle has been on the CltlzensWp Award, a member of the
place a meter at a spot on Cole St. Railroad depot property, being
yearbook staff for two years, and a
honors and all-county band and the
where a meter was fonnerly purchased by the \11lage, has been
member of the Nallonal Honor sCholarship team. She plans to
located.
surveyed and the necessary papers
Society for those two years. She was attend Ohio University majortng In
Council agreed to advertise for
sent to the company for prepl!ratlon
a member of the French club, the biology. She Is the daughter of Mr.
bid,. on a 1974 emergency VE'hl·
of the deed .
computer club for two . years and and Mrs. John Lyons, Racine.
cle, nq longer needed by the fire
A Hudson Street resident ap.
was a PEP club member !or four
The Southern High Band will department.
years. Shewasvicepreslclentofher provide music ·for the commencepeared
befo~ council and asked
In other matters, council dis·
class as a freshman and sopbomore, ment' with the Rev. Roger Grace cussed at length the walking of dogs ·permission to level property wh!ch
treasurer as a junior, She had gtvtng the Invocation, the benedlc· In the business section and It was he has purchased, a step which .
perfect attendance tor one year and tlon, and a · short baccalaureate agreed to have Chief of Pollee Sid WOUld dowllh thedPad endofHobart
. was Ustre In Who's Who two years . address .
Little to draw up recommendations St . He was told the village has no
ANGEUASPENOER
TRA.CIE SCHUL
objection to the process.
'She was In thesenlorclas5play, was
governing the w~Jklng of animals In

··sPenc~r, SchuJ ·

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

of

_

top hon~r. stud~nt~ .
a-t Eastern High

f~L~Io:y:d:D:·:G:r:lm::m·:Jr:·:·pa:s:to:r:.:;:~~::::::~::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
,

2 Sec1i0ns. 12 Pages

'

R
. osebe

tv.

enttn e

Special interest groups
attack tax refonn plan

w~~ Udr;a;I;w;•;v;es;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

Meigs Cof:tnty happenings.. ~.

at y

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 29, 1986

Meets Tuesday
Middleport Elementary PTO will
meet at 7: 30 pm. this eve!Jing
(Tuesday) at the school. New
officers will be elected.

•

~

·

Hunter Savings bids
for Home State Bank

Southern
honor
.
students chosen

'

•

I

Annexation discussed

,.

'

•

~

.

•

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