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,L.'l

1&lt;-The Daily Sentinel

Page

Thunday, March 15, 1914

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bill would regulate Lake Erie water · usage
l)uckeyes eliminated

Court orders refund

Story, photo on Page 3

See e.&amp;SOE story on Page 12

Wheelersburg advances

40 court cases end

Story on Page 8

Story on Page 12

aily

•

enttne
2 Soctiom, 12 ,....

Vol.32, No.237

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 16, 1984

Copyrlfthted 19U

20 C:...h

A Multim.dto tnc. Newtpaper

Energy costs hike wholesale prices
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Wholesale prices, pushed

bY the steepest fuel-oil price rise since 1979, rose 0.4
percent last month, the government reported today.
U that rate held through the year, u.l4 would show the
steepest ln1latlon in three years.
Energy prices In general rose 0.4 percent, today's
Labor Department report said, though It added that
because of reporting delays the figures mostly
reflected Increases In January, when unseasonably
cold weather sent heating bills skyward In much of the
na&amp;lon.
The eneriiY prtce rise was the Drst in nve montths
and only the second since June.

So far thiS_year, wholesale prtces as measured by
the Producer Price Index for finished goods are rising
at an aMual rate of6.2 percent, compared with rates
of0.6percent for last year, 3 7oercent for 1~ and 7.1

86,000
employes
•
get raises
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- To the
applause of legislative and union
leaders, Gov. PJchard Celeste has
signed Into law a bill giving pay
raises to 86,1XXJ state government,
county welfare and university
blue-collar workers.
The $129 m1lllon measure took
effect Immediately upon the gover·
nor's signature Wednesday. But the
raises of 50 cents per hour or 5
percent- whichever is greater for
an Individual employee - actually
took effect with the pay pertod which
began March 4.
Leaders of majority Democrats
as well as Republicans In the
General Assembly attended the
brief signing session.
The bill also contains a series of
cuts recommended bY Celeste In the
employee disablllty leave program.
It requires newly hired employees
to walt one year before becoming
~llgible for disability benefits. They
have been lriunedlately eligible.
Disablllty benefit levels which
now are figured on 75 percent of an
employee's base rate of pay w!U In
the future be reduced to 70 percent.

LITTLE GIRLS'

SALE

Included are Knit Tops, Blouses,
Tank Tops and Mid tops, Knit
Pants, Denims and Poly/Cotton
Pants.

SAVE

DRESS TROUSERS ........... 112.76

Rtcular 119.95

DRESS TROUSERS ........... 115.96
R•rrlar 129.95
DR SS TROUSERS ........... 123.96
REGULAR 132.95
DRESS TROUSERS ........... 126.36

20%

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

SPRING SHIRT
SALE
Tank Tops, Sport Shirts,
Knit Tops and Short Sleeve
Shirts. Sizes 6 mos. to 24

LEE &amp; WRANGLER brands in regu·
lar and slim sizes 8 to 16 - Husky
sizes 8 to 18 and student sizes 26
to 30 waist. lengths 30 to 36,
stratght leg, pre-washed. Save this
weekend.

Boys'
Boys'
Boys'
Boys'

1

14.95 JEANS .... 11.66
JEANS .. '13.96
119.95 JEANS .. '15.56
121.95 JEANS .. '17.16
117.95

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
SALE

UTILE BOYS'

:'·.
"'"' "'"""""'~
I
/I

/

' · •,-,
· } 1\
·~\
· \ &gt;\

::: ~·~·:::. '"' ii{\:' :I',

SPORT SHIRTS
Solid colors, stripes, plaids.

Our new spring colrection by
Van Heusen and Campus.
Regular and button-down
collar styles. Westerns in·
' · ' •,, eluded. ·
Rt&amp;. 111.95

REG. 16.50 .....SALE 15.19 \
·. &gt;,~\.
REG. ;8.00 .....SALE :6.39 \ \ ~~ ._ ,
REG. 12.00 .... SALE 9.59
vf'F --~ 1 {

HINCKLEY, Ohio (AP) -There
are many uncertainties In life, but
the famed buzzards of Hinkley are
certain to return tothe!rroosttoday.
The large, black scavengers of
ghoulish reputation return to Hinck·
ley Metropark Reservation each
year without fail on M11rch 15, an
event considered the surest sign of
Impending spring.
Buzzard watchers annually tum
out at the park on this day in
anticipation of one or more buzzard
cltlngs.
Park Ranger Roger Lutz was
dubbed the official spotter. He .
planned to start his buzzard watch at
6' a.m., because the first buzzard
Usually can be seen shortly after
daybreak,
Legend has It that the birds were
firSt attracted to Hinckley by the
scent of thawing game carcasses
that had frozen after the Great
Hinckley Varmint Hunt of Dec. 24,
1818. Records of the first annual
spotting, though, have been kept for
aboUt ~years.
Hanger Sue McRitchie said best
estimates peg theslzeofthebuzzard
neck at 75 to 100.
"I've lived In Hinckley all my
" --~
she saki... ~·Once
while
life
~·
... ~In..... a~- you
can see a buzzard before Marcli 15,
but It you do you never admit lt. You
can always see one on the 15th."
· .The township and the 2,(8).acre
park w1ll host thousands of. visitors
SUnday In the annual "Buzzard
Day" celebration. Thateventlsheld

NEW SPRING

JUNIOR DRESS
SALE
Shop this weekend and save on
our new spring dresses, minis,
jumpsuits, short-ails and suits.
The latest sprin~ colors and
styles in Junior Stzes 3 to 15.

Sport Shirts ............. 19.79
Rt&amp;UIIr 112.95

Rec. '15.00 .... SALE 111.99

Sport Shirts ........... '12.29

Re1. 123.00 .... SALE 118.39

Recular

117.95

Sport Shirts ........... '14. 79

um

nomlna&amp;lon. (AP La8erphoto) .

Hls best showing In the early
primaries and caucuses was a
second place in the Alabama
primary last Tuesday. But by then
he was too far in debt and too far
behind Sen. Gary Hart and Walter
Mondale to continue.
GleM, flanked by his wife Annie
and other members of his family,
began his statement wlth a wry joke.
Repeating a line he used often In
his campaign, he sald that when he
began his quest for the White House
he said he wasn't doing lt just to have
another line on his resume. "Turned
out I'm glad that wasn't " the case,
he said.
"I'm reluclantly bringing lt (his
candidacy) to a close."
Glenn planned tony his own plane
to Columbus, Ohio, shortly after the
news conference to make a slmllar
announcement ln his home state.
His Senate term expires in 1986, and
he ls expected to seek another term.
Joins others
GleM joins joins four other

tonner contenders on the sidelines.
Former Sen.George McGovern quit
Thursday, while Sens. Alan Cran·
stan, Ernest Hollings and former
Florida Gov. Reubln Askew with·
drew two weeks ago.
The Ohio senator was "very much
at peace with himself." said one
aide, who asked not to be ldentlfled.
GleM, the first American to orbit
the earth and a two-term senator
from Ohio, rode high In the public
opinion polls for more than a year.
He was able to raise more than S6
mllllon to finance his candidacy and
won several poUtlal endorsements
while presenttrtg himself as the
Democrat most likely to upset
Walter Mondale for the Democratic
nomination and then defeat Prest·
dent Reagan In the fall.
Some Republican strategists held
same the view, and Glenn's cam·
paign appeal was to moderate and
conservative Democrats as well as
independent voters. He called lt the
"sensible center" of !he electorate

- a phrase designed to stress his
middle-of-the-road views.
Campaign flzrJed out
When voters got their say, his
campaign fizzled quickly.
He came In fifth In the lead-off
Iowa caucuses. a dismal tlnlsh for a
man who was e:.peeled to come in
second, and never quite recovered.
He carne In fourth In the New
Hampshire prtmary' but bY then
had beguu to draw on a $2.5 m1lllon
line of credit and had been forced to
shut down campaign operations in
other states.
He decided to make his last stand
ln the Deep South - a region where
his aides once believed he would be
battling Mondale for supremacy.
Instead, he barelyflnlshedsecondln
Alabama and faded to fourth In
Florida and Georgia.
Most of his aides recommended
that he quit after that, and some of
his m05t prominent supporters
signalled that they, too, believed his
candidacy was all but flnlshed.

f

Sport Shirts ........... '10.69
Recular '14.95

1J1LL - Senator Jolll Gleim, D. Ohio, po11e11 for
behind hill Capitol
desk. Glenn announced 1oc1ay 1n
Wuhlngtoo he Is qultlng the quell&amp; for the Democnldc presidential
BACK ON 'l1IE

~hen

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - Sen.
John Glenn, a hero astronaut who
tried to become president, "relu·
cantly" quit the race for the
Democratic presidential nomina·
tlon today after a long campaign
that failed to win a single prtmary or
caucus.
"Although my campaign for the
presidency w1ll end, my campaign
for a better America w1ll continue,"
Glenn said at a news conference
a !tended bY aides and supporters.
Glenn declare&lt;!, "I'd like nothing
better than to stay In this race ... and
to win thenomlnatlonofmyparty."
But he said events of the last
several weeks Indicate that is "not
likely to happen."
" I have therefore decided to
withdraw from the race."
GleM made the withdrawal after
a disappointing campaign In which
he seemed to be a strong challenger
for the nomination, but failed to
excite the voters of the countcy.

Rec.

131.00 .... SALE

'2;4.79

Reagan agrees higher taxes, reduced spending necessary
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presl·
dent Reagan, after face-~face
bargaining with Senate Republican
leaders, has agreed that Increased
taxes and reduced mllltacy spend·
lng w1ll be necessary to combat the
nood of federal red Ink.
Democratic leaders said the
president "finally has awakened to
reality," but they added that a
three-year, $149.5 billion deficit·
reduction package of Increased

revenues and spending curbs an·
nounced Thursday by Reagan and
senior GOP senators is only a start.
"The next question Is whether the
president can bring himself to
achieve the bipartisan compromise
that Is necessary to win approval of a
budget," said House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., D-Mass.
Flanked bY Republican congressional leaders in the White House
Rose Garden, Reagan outlined a

plan that Includes:
-$48 bl!llon In Increased revenues
over three years that would come
from cl05ing a variety of tax
loopholes that affect mainly upper·
income investors and businesses.
The Senate Finance Comrnlttee
plans to wrap up work on such a
measure next week. The House
Ways and Means Committee al·
ready · has drafted slmllar
legislation.

Cheshire-Kygerparents
•
•
oppose reorganiZation

-A reduction of about $40 billion
In the defense spending of $931.1
bl!llon the president has requested
for the next three yaars.
-A reduction of $43.2 billion over
the next three years in domestic
spending.
Domestic spending cuts contem·
plated by Reagan Include $14.7
bllllon In savings from tightening
government benefit programs such
as Medicare and Medicaid, $13.8
bl!llon In savings from general
government spending, $3.5 billion In
savings by freezing farm target
prtce supports.

The study, the superintendent lion," he continued. "And, you are
explained, was directed tv lhe tetl!ngmeyoudon'twantachange.''
"Do you think It (the consensus
CHESHrnE - The superintend· board of education In October 1983.
mt of Gallla County Local Schools The main motivation for lnvestlgat· oplnlon of those present) w!U make
received a clear message here ingthefeaslbllltyofsuchamove,he any difference?" one parent asked.
"You can say what you want to ... "
Thursday night from more than 100 said, was an attempt to seek a
parents who attended a meeting 'ferrectlon of discrepancies In stu· another charged, "but all you have
to do is shuffle your papers and It will
called to gather·public Input on the dent populations at the schools.
feas!b1llty of reorganizing gr-ade
•Toothaker opened last night's be done."
levels at Addaville and Cheshire- sesSion bY assuring· those present
A suggestion bY one parent- that
)&lt;ygerelementary schools.
that the school administration was ~ problems facing the schools
The message: they are opposed. ·"just conducti!ig a study" and that
might be best resolvEd by acq,ulrlng .
In the second of two public "no decision h&amp;s been made.".
a new board of !!(lucatlon and a new
hearings on the Issue, Superintend·
A number of those In attendance, superintendent - drew a round of
ent Gary Toothakel' fielded ques· however, were Unassured by the applause from the crowd.
·
lions and accusations from citizens, superintendent's assurances.
Except tor a brief respite at the
whose oplnlons ranged from total to
The first parent to speak charged
beglnnJng of the meeting - when
.hostile opposition to the proposal that the lll!!f(lng was simply a AddavUe Principal Ron Paxton,
under study
matter OtfOrm, .not &lt;SUbstance Atonepo~t Toolhakerdescrlblid designed to fool !ho8e p~t Into ,whoservesonacomrnJtteestudying
the. mood of themeetl!lg as l' ... the bellevlnitheywerepartlclpatlng!n thepo~.~pot.enJ;~prosc":f:..O;
IIOttest I've been fu In .this School ._a Jlecls!on.J.hat hld already Lbeen _
dlltrlct."
.
made. ·
· of such- li · Chang'l!~ Toothilker
'Ibl!plan understudybytbeachool
·"'lle declalon has not been faced-off with the lari!e crowd tor
fire ....._ the made:," Toothaker ---·--'. "I
over
an how'inand
half.
board - and ..........
.......,
IIUIIl
AII"W"U:U
Included
thea~lved
"pros"
parents - would restrucltul'e' the ~ that theee meetlnp are a ruae
.,.
ICII!Ii&gt;l8 by turning Addaville Into a to fOol parents Into thlnldng they listed by Paxton were: reduction ..,.
primacy (idnclelprten throuih !lave Input .. the reuon We are here class sizes, OeXlblllty In scheduling,
third grade) facilitY, while Is to listen to what you !lave to say- concentration of teacher strengths
. Cheslllre-Kyjer ~ld become an bQth positive ancl neptlve."
and more etrecttve use of the
Intermediate ((olu'th thi'oug1) sixth
' "IiU8f811teeyau.. ,yim!nptltw111• buildings.
grades) school.
ta.v heavily on my r«omrnenda·
(Continued on page 12)

The remainder of the savings in
the plan would come from reduced
Interest on the national debt
resulting !rom lower deficits.
Asked whether the Democrats
would go along, Reagan replied,
"Why shoukln't they? They have
been complaining they want deficits
reduced. After50yearsofraisingthe
deficits, here is a chance to go the
other way."
As Reagan was making his
announcement, the Senate Finance
Comrnlttee was in the midst of a
nearly 12-hour session during which
it came close to completing a $100

billion deficit-reduction plan that
Includes the tax Increases and many
of the domestic spending cuts the
president outlined.
On Thursday, the panel voted to
raise the tax on liquor by $2 a gallon
and to block the Internal Revenue
Service from spelllng out how
employer-paid fringe benefits
should be taxed.
The liquor tax increase, from the
current maxlmum$10.50pergallon,
would not affect beer or wine. A
House panel has voted an evenlarger increase in the liquor tax, to
$14.25 a gallon.

ByLARRYEWING
OvP STAFF

theflrst~ayatterMarehl5each

)-ear and features a caged bliT.zard ·
and a pancake breakfast.

.-

42 through 50. New spring fashion
colors plus basic year round
shades. Big selection. Savings are
great for this sale. Hubbard slacks
mcluded.
Recular 115.95

-Capital equipment costs for modernizing and
expanding U.S. Industry rose 0.5 percent.
If February's overall prtce Increase of 0.4 percent
were to hold steady for 12 months, tb! yearly advance
would be 4.7 percent.
That annual rates, computed bY deparirnmt
economists, ls based on a more precise calculation of
monthly prices than the figures made publ!c.
In all, the Producer Price Index for flnlshed goods
stood at 290.6 in February, meaning that goods
costing $10 in the base year of 1967 would have cost
$29.06 last month.
Over the last 12 months, Inflation at the wholesale
level has been 2.3 percent. In that same period, food
prtces have risen 5.2 percent, energy costs have
declined 3.6 percent and other flnlshed good prices
have gone up 2.3 percent.

Glenn quits presidential race

BOYS'
DRESS
·BLUE JE.ANS
. TROUSERS
Stzes 29 to 42 waist and extra sizes

Don 't miss the savings this weekend on our new Spring tops and
pants tn a complete range of little
girls' sizes.

Buzzard
watch
underway

(

MEN'S

TOPS &amp; PANTS

starting to heat up again." And James Pthera, a
Georgia State University economist, said that lf
prices don't settle down soon "we've got some
trouble."
Other detalls of today's report sald:
-Gasoline costs fell 1.3 percent while natural gas
prices edged down 0.1 percent. The general energy
increase reversed a trend of six declines In the
previous seven months.
-Among food prices, vegetable prices jumped 13.5
percent, almost twice as much as In January, but
there was only a 1.5 percent increase for beef and veal
prices and costs actually declined4.2 percent for fresh
fruits, 2.6 percent for eggs, 3. 7 percent for pork, 2. 7
percent for poultcy and 4.9 percent for fish .
-New car prices rose 1.4 percent, while light truck
prices were up 1.3 percent.

percent for 1981.
Government and private economists said cold
weather caused heavy heater usage, cutting oil
supplies and driving up prices in the February report.
The 8.2 percent rise In fuel oil prices was the biggest
since a slmllar gain In September 1979.
An;llysts also said the severe weather had helped
cause\January's 0.6 percent aurge bY damaging crops
In the South and Southwest'lm! sending food prices
soaring.
·
Food costs rose0.7percent ~February after rising
2.7 peJ'Celll ln the preceding tnonth, the new report
said. ·
Better overall lnflatlon figures are expected now
that wanner weather Is arriving. But Michael K .
Evans, president of EvansEconomlcs In Washington,
said In advance of the new report that "inJlatlon is

•

--

·~--

. ' J •.

1

MAKING A l'OINT -Dr. Gary Toothaker, GaDia
eoonty Sdlool SUperlntendeni,left, and a c1t1ze1t from
the Chelhlre-J(ner Elemi!alary Sdlool COOIIIIIIIIIty
~chanpvlewsduilllg~shea&amp;eddlllco

l~n

oo .pade level reorgiUdzallon at the Gallia CGunty
Scbool. Seated at the front table are A•Wart

•·

Superintendent David C. Campbell and Ron Paxton,
prtnclpai at Addavllle Elementary School. The 130
people altentlng the special meeting ~ any
chaqes propoeecl by the boanl In thell: 8Chool's
~-

�...

The Daily

Ohio

.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO TilE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

=1~=-'='
Early Monday morning ____Ja_me_s_J._K...;;.ilpa_t_ric_k

Aj;b

Si!m~ ~.__.,..., O"T"Wmc::loF=O

'q!v
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

Asalslanl Publloher/ Conlroller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Associ&amp;·
lion and lhe American Newspaper Publisher Assoclallon.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should be less than 301 wordl
lonr. All letters are subject to edlllnr and muse be sl&amp;ned wllh name, address and
telephone number . No unsl1ned letten wUI be published. Lelten should be In
pod taste, addresstnclssues, aot penoaaUUes.

SCRABBLE, Va. -At the risk of
encroaching upon the turf of Ann
and Abby, those veteran dispensers
of advice to the lovelorn, I propose a
few words of counsel today to
affectionate SJF, vibrant WDF and
Christian WWM. They are ISO
mates, but ladies and gentlemen, I
would respectfully submit, you are
advertising the wrong
specifications.
U that lead paragraph has the
sound of gibberish, it is because you
have not been reading the classified
ads in such publications as the
Vlllage Voice, Washingtonian magazine, and even National Review.
This is where the SJF (single
Jewish female), the WDF (white
divorced female) and the WWM
(white widowed male) advertise
their wants and their wares. They

are ISO (in search of) ihe reaUza·
lion of dreams. The ads carry some
of ihe poignancy, and some of the
bawdiness, of Chaucer's "Canter·
bury Tales," You can learn a little
of life and loneliness in 200H.'entury
America fi'Om these pages.
But as- I was saying; these nubUe
women and six·foot men need to get
!heir priorities straight. To be sure,
the MWM, 40, who would like to
arrange "some discreet and inti·
mate meetings" with a warm and
sensuous M/SWF, 3().38, needs no
particular counsel. Most of the ads,
however, come from young people
in search of marriage or a
"permanent relationship," and it is
here that a few observations from
the gerlatiic corner may be useful.
Typically, a female advertiser
sets forth such qualifications as "a

Letters to editor

male who Is about six feet, in his 30s
or 40s, a non·smoker, around 100 to
190 pounds." A Catholic gentleman
seeks a Catholic SWF, about 36-45,
"not overweight." Other ads call
attention to "likes candlelight
dinners," "fond of animals" and
"loves travel." AU ihese are
important considerationS, but I
have yet to see an ad that raises the
two questions ihat are crucial to a
lasting relationship. The questions
do not involve politics, religion,
money, children, sports or cooking.
They are:
(1) Are you a "day person" or a
"night person"?
(2) Are you a creature of order or
disorder?
The human race is divided in
various significant ways. There are
beach people and mountain people.

--.,

Support it, do.n 't knock it
I want to say a word of praise
about Veterans Memorial Hospital,
the staff, Dr. WiihereU, Pomeroy
E.M. Squad and members of First
SOuthern Baptist Church. When I
had a severe heart attack, I could
not have received better care any
place else. They take a personal

interest in each person. People of
Melgs County should be proud of
this hospital and support it in place
of knocking it. They have a good
staff of doctors and nurses. Hats off
to a good hospital. God bless each
one. - Sylvia Zwilling, Syracuse,
Ohio.

Misleading new morality
I have many questions to ask ihe
parental public.
1s ihe parental public really
concerned wiih the youth of today
aild what they wUI be like in the
future? Does the more experienced
public realize that it will be in the
. hands of today's youth, when it is
ihe garrison of tomorrow? Are the
pastors and Christians truly con·
structive in that field of souls? What
is ihls wide quickly spreading new
morality? Who created and SUP"
ports it? Who instigates it? And why
does God permit it?
In a way God doesn't permit it,
because He provides a paih of
victory to true morality. Yet, again
God does permit it, so man may
have freedom of decision to accept
or not this victory paih toward
God's purpose.
Everything starts as ·a thought.
Personally, I know God thinks,
plans, designs and creates. U we,
having these same characteristics,
don't use ihem responsibly, we arc
being dUatory in our obligation to
true morality. By the grace of God,
!learned ihls, seeking with fervent
desire the truth and reality of God.
He surely won't ignore your honest
desire to know the truth!
This new morality, having gone
through the century in disguise, has
deceived the experienced society as
a whole. This "new" is the old
gratification, whUe the "morality"
:Is not moral at ali, Biblically. But it
:is detrimental to thE! youth of any
:day. It is the old ~if gratification of
: ihe senses or mind, totally omitting
· spiritual growth.
; Since pastors and Christians
: know there is only one troe God, you
' know that Satan instigates ali ihat
:man does against God. With man's
:help, he is ihe productive creator of
:lhe concept of manipulation, dis·
; traction and attraction of the youth,
; providing them with the teaching or
:fxperlence to learn this new
, :morality? This basic principle is not
;pew and can be usro for or against
•God.
:; Having learned this principle, it
;!leems to me, the unexperienced
•.Youih cannot effectively and pro:·ductiveiy teach something unless
:(hey have learned or experienced it.

'·

~t:

:::
,....

Now, how do ihey learn unless by
experience or are taught by
someone else? And how can they
experience it unless the opportunity
is given by taking them to it or vice
versa?
The youth are misled by ihis new
morality. One might ask me in
return can we correct the detrimen·
tal situation? We must first ask
who's acco\mtable for correcting
it? Are the pastors and Christian
parents responsible, as those of the
40s, 50s, and 6U'l were answered for
ihe outcome of their generation?
Yes!
With the principle already menti·
oned, used for the right purpose, we
could provide youth with assist·
ance, position, and opportunity to
become Christians, creating a
purpose, progressive in true moral·
ity, developed without peer pres·
sure or temporary sense-mind
gratification, to be given, experienced or taught of a permanent,
more rewarding, constructive, prodllctive inner peace and joy.
We must provide a greater
purpose to give new motivation to
the youth for ihe desire to change.
By ihis a unity of the parents and
children can be reached.
In light of that, God has thought,
planned, designed and created,
through the Daybreak Ministries, a
stronghold for the youth of today.
Daybreak Ministries has ihe
privilege to administrate the
answer to the new morality stigma.
We are a non· profit interdenomina·
tiona! ministry, meeting the spirit·
uai, mental and social youth needs,
promoting the youth particpation in
the Body of Clnist.
We want to draw youih to Jesus
Christ, so He may open hearts to see
that "Young Spiritual Freedom
Helps Eternal Enjoyment." We
then will deliver names and
addresses to the pastors near ihem.
We are giving counselling, direction
and interaction.
Daybreak Ministries presents a
Christian Youth Crusade, March
31, 1!* at Royal Oak Park Rec.
building 7 p.m. We will have
refreshments. AU ages are invited.
- Benedict Anthony Andrew II,
Racine, Ohio.

I

Berry s World

U II ·LL ·

•.,
'•
~.

··.
•·.
··...

..
..

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·'

club to persuade the smaller banks
to make the loans. The pressure has
been brought quietly· by the Fed's
regional administrators.
Volcker contends that the only
way to keep the indebted nations
from defaulting is to continue
loaning them money until they
p~ce their way out of the crisis.
He has rushed to the rescue of one
troubled nation after another with
emergency loans.
Voicker was the power behind the
scenes, for example, who saved
Mexico from bankruptcy in late
1982. I have reviewed a 1()1..page
study by the International Monetary Fund, which began pwnplng
money into the depleted Mexican
coffers. It's ihe fund's function to
provide baUout money to nations in
need, but . private loans to the
faltering government would hardly
be considered good banking
practice.
Yet according to the study, which
is stamped "Confidential" and "Not
For Public Use," 526 commercial

byHEA. Inc. ~·

"Any lctess for foreign policy shffts today?"

There are people who can wind up
spagh4)tli on a fork and !here are
people who need the aulatance of a
spoon. There are people who Jog.
we observe city people and country
people, dog people and cat people,
and people with diametric tastes lor
eggplant, anchovies, coconut and
black-eyed peas. The divlaion ihat
matters moot is division by day and
by night. The fellow who Is gilng·ho,
ready to go and full of good cheer at
6: 30 a.m. wlll never find happiness
with a woman, no matter how
lovely she looks by candlelight, if
ihe woman is the merest lump of
dough at dawn. And vice versa, of
course.
By the same token, o.s "The Odd
Couple" demonstrated, people who
are by nature orderly cannot dwell
contentedly with people who do not
make beds. I have had some
experience wiih a compulsive
dishwasher and ashtray-dumper.
Two tidy people can experience
pure bliss in rearranging a pantry;
two sloppy people can hold hands
beside a dirty stove and neo·er see
the crud.
These imperatives seem never to
have occurred to the young hopefuls of the classified ads. It is all
very well to go in search of a
prospective mate who Is "senau·
ous" (I think ihey mean "sensual,"
but no matter), and I raise not even
an eyebrow at a pubilcly proclaimed desire for a chum whose
pleasures are "erotic" and "uninhl·
bited." It doubtless is useful to know
if a respondent !eels strongly about
hiking, camping, skiing and French
cuisine. The vital questions are
precisely as I have described them:
How does he or she react to Monday
morning - early Monday morn·
ing? Does ·he pick up his socks?
Does she leave hair in the sink?

horizon. HeJ;e are the warnings
cited in the confidel)tial report:
- "The structure of interest
charged on loans have resultl!d in
certain distortions and may affect
adversely the recovery of private
investment."
- "The recently awarded min·
imum wage increase of 30 percent
raises questions about the margin
remaining for wage poUcy during
the rest of 1!* ... Great care wUJ
have to be taken to avoid reigniting
inflationary pressures."
- ''The real effective exchange
ra&lt;~ index shows a significant
depreciation wiih regard to previous years, but it has appreciated
somewhat in recent months."
- "The ban on a list of consumer
goods and items competing with
domestic production ... has to be
viewed with concern."
· - "Mexicb will continue to face
large debt servicing requlrement.t
in the years to come because of ihe
size and term structure of its
outstanding external debt."

God &amp; school prayer_____Ar_tB_uc_hwa___;_:,:_ld
I don't talk to God as often as I president would have checked with
should because I know 'how busy He Me first, before he misspoke."
"Do you believe it's a good idea to
is these days. But every four years,
during the presidential campaign, I have separation of Church and
do check in to make sure what the State?"
"I believe it's an excellent one.
candidates are saying about Him is
Your country has survived for over
true.
The other night after hearing 200 years without getting Me mixed
President Reagan say for the up in your government, and when
umpteenth time that God had been you look around you seem to have
expelled from America's class· more freedom of worship than any
rooms, I asked Him, "Are You other place on the face of the globe.
There are certain countries which
banned from America's schools?"
"Not that I know of," God replied. I'd rather not mention, where the
"President Reagan said that kids leaders use My name to commit
some of the most heinous crimes
don't pray in school."
"U they can't, they're sure doing known to manklnc;l."
"How would You feel about
it," God said. "I hear schoolchUd·
ren's prayers all day long. Of forced voluntary prayer in the
' if kids
course I hear more from those who schools in the morning, so
haven't done their homework, or didn't want to pray they wouldn't
have been caught committing some have to?"
"It would . bother me. All My
infraction that wUI send them to the
principal's office. And there is a lot
of praying when report cards come
out, and when ·college tes~ scores
come in. And then I hear from
almost evel'S' child as gfaduation
gets ne!li'. I can't Understand' why
President Reagan said I've been
banned from' the classroom."
"I ihink wha{ he was referring to
was the Supreme Court decision·
Whlch forbade organized pra~ In
public schoola ,a.,4tle ~inlllng-Of .-,. - · ,... .,.
the day. Did That decision bother

4n~··an~lhe~~:~:~~I~do~=n·~t1~be:U:ev:e~.---i
it.~
~~:_~peoplihey
' ·e
can pray any time,'
C1 . .

banks outside Mexico granted the
government a staggering $5 billion
in loans. Most cit u-. generous
lenders were U.S. banks under
Volcker's jurisdiction.
This is just the beginning.
Declares the study: "An important
source of external financing for 1!*
wUI be $3.8 billion from the
commercial banks." And the study
assumes that the Mexican govern·
ment will continue "new borrowing
in the order of $3 bUIIon to U billion a
year during 198!H!5 ... "
In return for ali these bUiions, the
Mexican government has adopted
several strick !iscill reforms that
have been hard on the populace but
have ·stabilized the economy. Reports the study: "The economic
program adopted by the Mexican
authorities in late 1982 ... has
brought about a sharp turn around
in economic conditions and has
helped Mexico to begin to recover
from the severe economic crisis
experienced in 1982."
But there are some clouds on' the

want to."
"Well,. · why would President
Reagan say You were banned from
pubilc schoOls, if You weren't?" ·
"I have no Idea," G9d said.
"People are always clroppiJJI my
riime in crder to get vote1 duriDa an •
election year. Fralikly I wlah the

children are very fragUe and it
would cause tremendous friction
between thost! who prayed and
those who didn't. I would prefer that
schoolchildren pray when the spirit
moves ihem, and· not when a
teacher tells them to. What your
president should know is that God is
everywhere, and when he states I
am no longer in ihe public schools,
he doesn't know what in the devil
he's talking about."
"Then You didn't tell him You
wanted prayers Qfficially back in
.
the schools?"
"I certainly did not," God told
me. "But I did talk to him about the
asbestos problem.
"The asbestos problem?"
"It's very serious. A great many
schools have asbestos peeling off
the ceilings and walls and it's
getting. into the ·schoolchildren's

lungs, and they can die from it. 1
suggested the president institute a
crash program to see that the Uttle
children were protected from ihis
terrible disease. But to My knowi·
edge he hasn't mentioned it yet. 1
were the president of the Unijed
States I'd be much more concerned
about ihe health of America's
children, than what time of day
they c 1uld pray."

u

"WeU, thanks for Your time," I
said. "I didn't want to bother you,
bill I was afraid if I was against
mandatory prayer in public schools .
You would think I didn't believe in
You any more. Could I put this
conversation on the record?"
"Be my guest. There is too much
talk' by politicians about what I
want and don't want, and as God, it
really tickS Me off."
""*'f~""'*

~pener;

.

Pressure on banks _______J_a_ck_A_nd_e_rs_on

you?"

""":- ot -

.

'AA,YES ... NA11J~ IS SWifUI. IN H£R ~ ~\ti6E WAY. '

WASHlNGTON - There is one
calamity that could cause the sky to
fall. The international debt crisis is
so tense that one bobbie - say a
default by an indebted nation could start an economic chain
reaction.
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker, wiih a great
clanking of the crusader's armor,
has taken charge of managing the
debt crisis. Whether he's Sir
Gaiahad or Don Quixote remains to
be seen.
Meanwhile, Voicker appears
more concerned about protecting
ihe lenders than the borrowers particularly the big banks solvent
until another fix is needed. Now he's
trying to spread the risk by
pressuring the smaller banks to
grant\more loans to Third World
govertments.
These bankers don't want to fiush
good money down the drain after
the bad, banking sources tell me.
But Volcker is using the regulatory

NC State loses NIT

'

l'ltclay, Morch 16, 1914

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

.tlr

~~~

... .....

-..,

Xavie~:

dumps OSU, 60-57

By WILUt\M 1;. RARNARD
Roy Tarpley scored 'll points,
AP Spo:t.. \ . r11er
including 23 in the first half, to carry
There wU1 be no victory celebra·
Michigan over Wichita State.
lions to cap North Carolina State's
T8Jllley scored 13 consecutive
Michigan points during one stretch
season ihls year.
Thede!endlngnationalchamplon
to help open a 41·23lead and keep
Wichita State .winless in six NIT
Wolfpack and Coach Jim Valvano
were ignored by the NCAA after
games.
finishing seventh in the Atlantic
On Monday night, Michigan wU1
Coast Conference with a 19-13
play host to Marquette, which got a
record. But they hoped to make it
career-high 25 points from fresh·
two postseason tournament victoman Tom Copa against Iowa State.
rtesinarowbywinnlngtheNational
The O.foot·10 Copa took charge
Invitation Tournarnent.
with three baskets in 2~ minutes as
That dream ended almost before
Marquette extended a tllree-point
it had achancetogrowwhenFlorlda
lead to 48-37. The Warriors coasted
State defeated the Woitpack 74-71 in
the rest of the way.
Guard Harold Keeling and center
an opening·round game at Raleigh,
N.C., Thursday night.
Nick Vanos, Santa Clara's scoring
After Terry Gannon, a usually
leaders ali season, supplied the
reUable tree throw shooter, missed
punch to lead the Broncos over
ihe first of a 1·and·l with 1:06
Oregon. Keeling scored 21 points
remaJning for N.C. State, Randy
andVanosl8toholdoffasecond·half
comeback that saw the Ducks cut a
Allen's reverse layup with 41
nine-point deficit to 45-43 wiih 8: 57 to
seconds left in overtime gave ihe
play. The victory advanced Santa
Seminoles a 72·71 lead. The Wolf·
pack had two shots miss in the final
Clara into a second-round game
seconds before FSU's Maurice
Monday night at Lamar in Beau·
Myrick came up with a loose bali ,...:.m:::o:::n::.:t,..:T.:e:::xas=..
. _ _ _ _ _ __lL----------and scored on a dunk at the buzzer.
MeanwhUe, Jeff Jenklnsscored30
FULL SPEED - Xavier Vniveralty (Ohio) haH of their National Invitation Tournament game
points,
including 14-14 from the free
ThUI'IIday
night
in
Cincinnati.
Xavier
defeated
Ohio
Guard VIctor F1emlng (10) dt1vesthe baOupthecowt
ihrow
line,
to give Xavier its ~57
State
in
over11me,
80-57.
(
AP
~rpholo).
against the defensive pre88Ure of Ohio State
triumph
over
Ohio State. After ihe
University guard Ronnie Stokes (12) during the first
two teams were tied 53-53 at the end
of reguiation,Victor Fleming, who
had 17 points, hit three straight free
throws to break a 57-57 tie ·tn
overtime.
By KEN RAPPOPORT
baskets befpre ihe Redmen went
ihe Blazers were never able to close
Xavier wlll be at home in ihe
AP Sports Wrtler
into a delay to work for the last shot.
the margin to less ihan four points.
second round against Nebraska,
it was a bad night for prestige Chris Mullin was fouled by Jim
Keith Lee scored 21; points and which beat Creighton on Dave
conferencesintheNCAAbasketbali McLoughlin to force a 1·and·1
Memphis State hit clutch free Hoppen'sfreeihrowwith10seconds
playoffs.
shooting situation, but Mullin, the
throws 1n the closing minutes to beat remaining after a technical foul was
Such teams as Auburn and nation's leading free throw shooter
OraiRoberts.LeeiJitonl2of18shots called on Bluejays center Benoit
from ihe field and grabbed 1l Benj81Jiin.
LouisianaStatefromtheSoutheasl· at 91.lpercent,mlssedthefirstshot.
em Conference. Oregon State from
After a timeout, Stansbury
rebounds.
In othet first ·round games, it was
the Pac·10 and St. John's of the Big dribbled to ihe center of tire court
Playing before a ~apacity home Virginia Tech 77, Georgia Tech 74;
East went down to defeat as and fired his on~hand shot just as
crowd of 11.200 at ihe Mid-South Michigan 94, Wichita State 70;
first ·round action continued Thurs· the buzzer sounded.
Coliseum, ihe Tigers had trouble Xavier of Ohio 00, Ohio State 57 in
day night.
Dayton triumphs
putting away Orallloberts because overtime; Marquette 73, Iowa State
Auburn was upset by Richmond
Roosevelt Chapman scored 29
of the shooting of Mark and J~!f 53 and Nebraska 56, Creighton 54
72-71 and St. John's lost to Temple points and led asecond·halfsurgeas
Acres, sons oftheORU coach, Dick and Santa Clara 66, Oregon 53.
6.').63 in the East Hegional at
Dayton whipped LSU. Chapman.
AcNJS. But Memphis State made 13
Florida State advanced into ihe
Charlotte. N.C.; Oregon State was iheonly senior on the Dayton squad
of 11 free hrows in ihe last 4:31 to second round of the NIT Sunday at
shockedbyWestVirginia67·64inihe and the school's aU-time leading
sewupihegame.
Greensboro, N.C. , against tonight's
1
Mideast at Birmingham, Ala ., and scorer, scored 10consecutivepoints
KariMalbneandWayneSmithied Plttsburgh·LaSalie winner in ihe
·' f
Louisiana State dropped a 74-66 for the Flyers to break open the
Louisiana Tech. playing in its first secondgameofthedoubleheaderat
NCAA tourmment , over Fresno Philadelphia's Palestra. The first
decisiontoDaytonintheWestatSalt game.
Lake City.
With Dayton leading 4140 with
State. Malonescored24points, while . game pairs Boston College and St.
In the other half of the Mideast , about14minutesleft,Chapmanhita
Smith added 16 as Louisiana Tech Joseph's, while Fordham is at
Brigham young defeated Alabama· long jumper, a tllree-point play · two
extended its wlrining streak to eight Weber State in another first ·
~ ·- ­
Birmingham 84~. lnihe Midwest, foul shots and another tllree-point
and snapped the nin~game streak rounder.
of Fresno State.
In other games:
Memphis State stopped Oral Ro- play to put the Flyers up 5143 with
berts92·83andLoulsianaTechupset 10:38 remaining. Dayton buUt its
lleserves Ed Catchings and Eric
Perry Young keyed a 10-0
Bring the whole family fo r o day filled w 1th fun a nd
Fresno State 66-56, and in the other largest lead of the game at 14 points
Booker scored 18 points each as second-half run wiih six points,
bargains. There will never be o better lime to start
lOth· ranked Nevada-Las Vegas putting VIrginia Tech in front
West first ·rounder, Nevada·Las with 2:11 remaining .and played
your family laying flock . Ev erybody 's doin' 11... how
Vegas whipped Princeton 68-56.'
keep-away untO the end.
overpowered Princeton. Booker against Georgia Tech and advanc·
11
Devin Durrant scored23pointsas
The NCAA playoffs continue with
and Catchings scoredl2pointseach ing the Hokies ·mto a second ·round
about vou?
in the second half as UNLV match with South Alabama at
first ·round action tonight. In the Brigham Young overpowered
399 W. Main Street
992 ·2174
Pomeroy
Cou·
Aiabama·Birmlngham.
The
ou tscored the Tigers 14..,c to take a Greensboro. N·C·· Sunday · Georgia
East P.egionai at East Rutherford,
for
Pets
Stables
large
and
Small
Anomal
s
N.J ., it's Virginia Commonwealth gars never traUed after Jim
42·311eadwith14:501eftinthegame. Tech fought back to tie the game
lawns - Gardens
· 'vs. Northeastern and Virginia Usevitch hit a layup for a 7-6 lead
Princeton, which had executed its 55-55 with 7:49 to go on a tllree-point
against lona. In the Mideast at with 16: 421e!t in the first hall.
precision pasSing game almost play by Yvon Joseph. But VIrginia
MUwaukee, LouisvUie plays MoreBYU, the Western Athletic Con·
fiawlessly in the first half, was Tech countered wiih jumpers by
head State and Vlllanovll takes on terence runner·up, surged to a 29-14
unable to puU any Closer ihan nine Keith Colbert and Dell Curry to pull
Marshall.
lead before UAB f&lt;&gt;ught back, but
points ihe rest of the way.
ahead 59-55 wiih 6: 'll remaining,

West V-irginia shocks Oregon State

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Reserve J .J. Crawl stole a pass

.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

near midcourt and hit a driving l1
layup with three seconds remaining
upset 17th-ranked

********************************

Crawl,whohadmissedtlfefi'Ont
end of a 1·and·1 with 21 seconds left,

:
:

stepped
into the
of Alan
Tail's
pass intended
forpaih
Charlie
Sitton,
and

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championship
West Virginia traDed 56-51 wiih

Sitton converted a three-point
play with 5:30 to play, the last shot
the Beavers took in the game. Two
turnoVers by Oregon State gave the
Mountaineers ihe opportunity to tie

1976 TORINO

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the game at 62 with 2: 02 left on a ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~;;;;;;;;;;;;i1
layup by Dale Blaney.
11
Illinois State faces Alabama and
Kansas meets Alcorn State in ihe
Midwest at Lincoln, Neb., and
Nevada·P..eno .plays Washington
and Miami of Ohio tackles Southern
Methodist in the West at Pullman,
'
Wash.
John Newman scored 26 points in
Richmond's 'o(ict6ry-over Auburn.
The Spiders buUt a 48-28lead early in
ihe second half and then held off a
frantic rally ·by ' the Tigers led by
Charles Barkiey.
.
Auburn coach Sonny Smith said ·
tbe Tigers w~re hampered by a
sluggish first !lalf from .wh)ch they
didn't quite recover. ·

9°

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TemPle wins

Tem_ple' defeated St. John:s on
Terence Stansbury's Jumper from
beyOnd the key. ·The Owls squan·
dered a 53441ead and Wlllki Glass'
tap,in lor St. John's with 7: 39lefttied
·,
'
..
ihescore'at57,.
The teams tral:led the .n~t ihree

Win~-Naismith Award ··:

,F.IE'LD SEED
·AN.D
•
_ ..:2,__ 1;- ERllLIZER ~- -~--.

1

ATLAN'I'A (AP) · - Michael
Joi'dan of · North Carolina 'wu
nal'ned tile winner of the 1B8t '
Nalsmlih · Award lor the men's·
CQllegiate balketball ·player of ~;he
year; and Cheryl MDler of Southern
California was selected as the top
women's player. -'

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Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 16, 1984

Rosecrans seek
.third straight title
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Zanesville Rosecrans wUI match Its
ba lance against Missy Cochran,
Newark Ca tholic's record-equaling
shooter. in a bid for an unprecedented third straight Ohio high
school girls basketball title.
"Cochran is the best Class A
player I ever have seen," said
Mansfield St. Peter's Coach Denny
l ~ess ler after the !Hoot-8 senior
scored36points, matching the Class
A state tournament record for one
game. in a 68-63 Newark Catholic
semifinal victory Thursday night.
Kim Gierhart of Ashland Mapleton had hit that total against
Anna in the 1981 semifinals.
Meanwhile, 11osecrans put four
players between 13 and 16 points in
crushing three--time former champion Delphos St. John's 64-50 in the
other Class A semifinal in St. John
Arena.
Rosecrans (24-1) will face Newark Catholic (27-1) at 11:10 a.m.
Saturday for the championship.
The Class AAA and Class AA
semifinals took over the state
tournament today.
In the Class AA games this
afternoon, it was Marion River
Valley (25-0) against Mlllersburg
West Holmes (2&amp;0) and Heath (21-3)
against Orrvllle (22-4).
And tonight it will be Columbus
Watierson (23-2) against Canton
McKinley (22-4) and Mentor Lake
Catholic (21-3) against Cincinnati
Forest Park (2&amp;0) in theClassAAA
semifinals.
Dave Bell, Rosecran's coach,
admits his defense must slow
Cochran II the Lady Bishops are to
become the first team to win three
straight crowns In these nine-yearold girls playoffs. Akron St. Vincent·
St. Mary and St. John's also have
won two girls championships in a

Stallion running back ~.:
feels comfortable now . ;
_j

By'lbe AIIOclllted rr-

row.
"Cochranlsagreatp!ayerandwe
will try to contain her - if that is
possible," Bell said. "Our defense
will have Its work cut out tor It. But
we will not lack for confidence."
St. Peter's, finishing at 21-6, found
it an Impossibility to contain
Cochran, who came Into the Green
Wave's first state girls basketball
appearance averaging 21 points per
game. "We tried to!lghtoffthepicks
for her, butwewerenotverygoodat
It, as you saw," Rissler said.
Cochran missed only nine of 25
floor shots and all four at her tree
throws.
The Newark Catholic star was not
aware she had tied the tournament
scoring record. "Oh, gosh," she
replled when told of her
accomplishment.
Cochran preferred to credit the
Green Wave's defense for the
victory. "Our defense executes so
well it malces our offense go. They
(my teammates) are very unselfish
at getting me the ball," she said.
Anne Hegarty, a 6-2 senior center,
led St. Peter's with 20 points.
Usa Young and Leslie Merz
paced 11osecrans with 16 points
each. Dee Ann Mell added 15 and
Susan Nash 13 for the Lady Bishops.
Monica Ruen and Sharon Heitz
matched 12-point totals tor St.
John's, 25-2, the state champion in
1977, 1979 and 1981.
"Ourspeedandqulcknesswasthe
story," said Bell. "We just outran
them as we do most of our
opponents. We have been so
successful because our teams
always believe than can do It. And
we do not fold in the clutch."
Rosecrans displayed that ability
against St. John's, which crept to
within 34-321n the third quarter. The
Lady Blsllops then went on a 25-7
spurt in the next eight minutes for a
59-39 bulge.

Cold streaks costly
By The Associated Press
Ohio's weather may be getllng
warmer, but cold strealcs cost two
teams a chance to move Into the
championship round of the boys
high school regional basketball
tournament.
Class AAA Worthington watched
Columbus Marion-Franklin put 14
consecutive points on the scoreboard to end the game, andCiassAA
Lorain Catholic couldn't score in the
overt ime period against Willard.
The scoring lapses proved costly as
Marion-Franklin defeated the Cardinals 48-37, and the Crimson
Flashes upended Lorain 70-64.
In Thursday's other Class AAA
regional semifinals, Toledo Scott
beat Cleveland Heights 70-61 and
Akron Central-Hewer got by Cleveland St. Ignatius 52-49. In Class AA,
Akron St. Vincent -St. Mary beat
Youngstown Rayen 62-59, Astabula
Harbor nipped War.ren Kennedy
53-51, Cincinnati McNicholas defeated Columbus Bexley 52-48, New
LebanonDix!eedgedDaytonJefferson 55-51. Oregon Strltch beat Lima
Central Catholic 00-56, Wheelersburg crushed Steubenville Catholic
Central 72-52, and Columbus Whitehall outlasted New Concord John
Glenn S!Hi8.
Norman Macon's 20 points led
Marion-Franklin, which meets
Lima Senior Saturday afternoon in
the Columbus regional final. The
l{ed Devils are 17-6, while Worthington finshed at 20-5.
Nolan Robinson scored 32 points
to pace second-ranked Wlllard, 25-1,
while Paul Wilson's 22 points led
Lorain Catholic, which dropped to
22-3.
In the other Toledo semifinal, Rob
Urbanowicz scored 19 points to lead
Oregon Cardinal Strltch over Lima
Catholic. The Cardinals take a 19-7
record into the final againstWlllard,

while the Thunderblrds finished at
19-6.
1n Canton, senior Andy Juhol's
twotreethrowswtthtwosecondsleft
propelled Ashtabula over Warren
Kennedy. Kennedy had tied the
game with 43 seconds remaining on
a three--point play by Illch Bodner,
but the Mariners ran down the clock
untll Juhol was fouled, setting up the
one-and-one play.
St. Vincent -St. Mary got 29 points
from Jerome Lane to defeat Rayen
In the second Canton semifinal. The
Irish, 20-4 will face Ashtabula
Harbor in the championship. Rayen
bowed out with an lS-7 record.
At Dayton, Cincinnati McNicholas flnaJly turned the tables on
defending state champion Bexley.

Joe Cribbs, who made his first

•

United States Football League
appearance after only one day of
practice, feels more comfortable
about returning to Binnlngham
Saturday night when hts Stalilons
host the Memphis Showboats.
"Each week, I get a little more
familiar with the offense," says
Cribbs, who ran for a personal high
of191 yards In 33 carries last Sunday
as the Stallions beat the Pittsburgh
Maulers 30-18. "I'm more at ease
now and recognize things a little
better."
The game between the Stallions,
2-1 in the USFL'sSouthern Division
and the 1-2 Showboats also features
the return of Meniphls Showboats
quarterback Walter Lewis to Birmingham's Legion Field, where he
starred for the University or
Alabama.
Also on the Saturday schedule are

two day games - the Los Angeles
Express at the San Antonio Gunsllngers and the Oklahoma Outlaws at
the Chicago Biltz.
On Sunday, it will be Tampa Bay
at Denver, New J ersey at Houston,

LOOKING TO VICfORY - ZanesvWe &amp;secrans' captain Usa
Young (14) prepares to jump past Delphos S&amp;. John's defenders ·Monica
Ruen (22) and Julle Matzner (32) In the first halt ofthelr game Thursday
night in Columbus. ZanesvWe defeated Delphos to advance to the
champinshlp game of the high school Class A division. ( AP

11JCSON, Ar~. (AP) - Brook
Jacoby drove in three runs with
three hits, including a two-run home
run, as the Cleveland Indians
pounded out 19 hits for a 14-7victory
over the San Diego Padres in a
Cactus League exhibition Msebail
game.
The victory Thursday Improved
Cleveland to 5-4, whlle Sari Diego fell
104-5.
Jacoby's home run, his second
this spring, and Julio Franco's
two-run double highlighted Cieveland's seven-run outburst In the

second Inning against loser Ed
Whitson, 1-1.
11ick Sutcliffe, 1-1, gained the
victory as hesurrenderedthreeruns
on five hltsovertheflrstfivelnnings.
Brett Butler singled three times
and drove in two runs for the
Indians, while Tony Bernazard,
Broderick Perkins, Ron Hassey and
George Vukovich all had two hits.
For the Padres, Carmela Martinez had two singles and a double
and Mllke Martin had two singles
and two RB!s.

Pittsburgh at Washfniton, Olkllnd
at PhUadelphla and Arizona at
Michigan.
New Orleans wUI play at Jackaonville Monday night.
Crtbbs, one of the USFL's prize ':'
ott-season acquisitions, Joined the
StaUions a daY before thelt opener ,
after a court In Buffalo, N.Y., ruled
in the USFL' s favor In a suit ftled by
hls old team, the Buffalo 8Wa. He
gained only 52 yards in 16 carries
that day.
"People think just becaUBe you '
played a tull NFL season that you
can just step right in with a new
team. That's not necessarily true.
I'm in shape tram a full season, but
there was an dwfU!lot to learn In a
short time."
Quarterb8ck Brian SJpe expects
to be back for the Generals, who won
two straight gameswltha totalof1T7
passing yards without him.
Unbeaten NewJersey,6-12ayear
ago, seeking Its fourth victory, go
· against an expansion Gamblers
team which has won two or Its first
three games behind the passing of
Jim Kelly and the running or Sam
Harrell.

AT
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years in regional play. Guard Keith
Miller scored 16 points, Including
five straight field goals, to push
McNicholas to the final against ·
Dixie, whlle the flfth-ranlced·Llons
finished at 22-3.

Spring &amp; Summer Hours:
Mon.-Fri. 9 to 5
Sat. 9 to 1
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(

Nationwide Ins. Co. .I

1\

of Columbus, Oh.

104 W. lain
992·2311

' )•

~-

."j

-

~ ~ ~ Sunday School Supt.
Ch""'h School9: ~a.m.; Wonldp Servle 10:30
a.m. Cltolr rehearsal, 'l'ueoday, 7:30 p.m.
under dln!&lt;llon d Allee Neue.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA~ . Corner Union 'and Mulberry. Rev.
1'11omu Glen McC1ww. paour. Cyde HerderlOll,
SUpt., Sunday School. 9:ll a.m. ;
mcrnlngwonhlpiO:lla.m.; evmlng-6
p.m.;
Wedlll!lday. 1 p.m.
GRACE EPJSalPAL CHURCH. 326 E.
Main 'St .. Pomeroy. &gt;Sunday servlc&lt;:s: Holy
l'Ol'1l1ft1nlon m 1he 111'11 Sunday d each monlh,
and combined wllh momln,1t prayer m 1he
lhlrtld Sunday. Morning prayer and oermon on
au )1thtr Sundays d 1he monlh. 01urc11 School
an4 Nuraeoy care provided, CcAfeehour In lhe
Partllt Halllmmedlalely following Ih e - ·
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
Main St.. Nell Proudloot, pastor. Bible School
9:30a.m .; Momlngw~nhlp, Jil::l)a . m .; Youlh
meetlnp. 6:00p.m .; Evening worship, 7:00 p.
m. Wednesday ~hi prayer ~ng and Bible
sludy. 7:00p.m.
THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Bu11emul
A~.. I'Onloroy. Mrs. Dora Wlnlnj! In chlrJI&lt;'.
Sunday hollneu meetlnj(. 10 a.m .; SUnday
School, 10:30 a.m . SUnday Sclml. YPSM
Elalat Adams, leadrr. 7:il p.m. Salvation
meetln&amp;. var1ous opealcen and music l(lOC1ab.
'J'huBday, 11:30 a.m. 10 2 p.m. l.adles Home
Le...,., members In c~. aU women
InVIted; 6: e p.m. Thursday, Corpo cadet
0.. IYounj( J&gt;.ople-Biblel , 1:30 p.m. Bible
Study and Prayer IM't~. 10 lhe public.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST. 3.1226Chlldr&lt;n'oHomeRoad iCcunly
RDad 161. 992-~ Vocal music. Sunday Worsl~ 10 a.m. ; Bible\iudy 11 a.m.; Worship, 6 p.
m. Wednesday, Bible Study, 1 p.m .

s. s.
mJd.- -

·

lowjng Sunday Sclml. Youth ...-Jng ewry
Sunday. 7:30p.m.
PRAHAM UNITED METHODIST.
Preaching 9:30a.m ., fi rst and second Sun days of each month : third and fourth Sun days each month worship services at 7: :.&gt;
p.m . Wednesday ev(&gt;nJngs a t 7: JO p.m .
Prayer and Bible SIUdy .
SEVENTH-DAY ADV ENTIST. MulberrY Height s Road: Pomeroy . Mic hael Plonkowskl . pastor: Marte Spires, Sabbath
School Supl. Sabbalh School al 2 p.m . on
Saturd.a y with worship services following

c

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.

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"~;;t.~'I')IJ.OO
Ill
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1.

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Racine 949-2550

THE DAILY
SENTIN'EL

r'o .. a•.8! :;::. Yr'iiiii

JoH f . foltl

MiddleportPomeroy, Oh.

,,_.,

K&amp;C JEWELERS

A~
~ ·

Sundoy
f'Nim

33:1-22

.212 E. Main StrHI
992-3785, Pomeroy

Mondoy
217mothy
r:J-r8

·~
T.-doy

School 9:30 a .m .; Worship 10:30 a .m .:
Prayer meeting, 7:30p.m . Thursday .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. corner Ash a nd Plum. LHII£"
Hayman, pas tor. Sunday School 10:00 a.
m .; MornlnR Wors hip, 11:00 a .m .: Wt'dll('sday a nd Sat urday Evening Storvlces at
1:30 p.m .
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Fa1 Sauer, Dlreelor
Rev. ,..,.. E . Corblll, ANIIIant
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Doa Arc:: her
Rev. RoJ Deeler
Rev. 8eld011 l o h ALFRED - Churc h School 9: 30 a.m .;
W
Woroh I~· II a .m .; UMYF ' 6: 30 p.m .; U '
1'111 r d U('sday, 1: 30 p.m . C0 mm unlon '
first Sunday. (Arche r )
CHESTER _ Worship 9 a .m .: Church
SchooiiO a .m .; Bible Sludy,Thursday, 7 p.
m .; UMw · rl rsl 1'11u rsd a y, I p.m .; Com ·
munlon, first Sunday 1Archer\ .
JOPPA - Worship 9:30 a.m .: Chu rch
Blbl Sl d woo
10 30
School :
a .m .
e u y,
n., .
dalo~tf &amp;tf',;.~~h~C~~rch School 9: 30
Wed ·
a .m .; Worship 7 p .m .; Blbl e S tu d y,
·
ncsday. 7:30p.m .; UMYF, Wednesday,
6:00 p.m .: Communion First Sunday .
!Archer)
REEDSV ILLE -Church School9: 30 a .
w hi Se 1 11 00
(~te 1
mT
.; UPoPrE
s RSP PLrAi
v ceNS s'T PaA
. m~.L
r '
·
Churc h School 9 a.m.; Worsh P 10 a.m .;
Bible Sludy, Tuesday , 7:30p.m .; UMW ,
Th Ird T uesd a y, 7: 30 p.m .; Comm u nlon
F'
s d
A h 1
lrst un c•trJ.r;ALrci.uSTER
Rev . lames E . Corblll
Re Slevea Nelooe
v.
,

Rev . Richard Rothemlc.

~~·.~:OwER.~~

ASBURY (Syracuse I_ worship 11 a .m .
; Chu rch School9: 45 a.m .; ~hatge Biblr
Study, Wednesday, 7 : 30~. m. ; UMW, rtrst
hI
Tuesd ay, 130
0 r Reheanal '
:
p.m .;
Wed
UMW f
th S
6 30
nesd ay : p.m .:
' our
unday. 6: 30p.m. !Nelson I.
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m .;
Churc h School 10 a.m .; Blblp Study, Tues·
day, 7:30p.m .: UMW. First Monday , 7:30
p.m .; UMYF. Sunday. 6 p.m . Choir Rehearsal, 6:30 p.m . Wednesday. (Rothrmlchl
FLATWOODS- Church School,lOa.m .
; Worship, 11 a .m. ; Bible SIUdy, Thursd·
d ay , 1 p .m .; UMYF · S un day • 6 Pm
· ·
(Rothemlch).
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a .m .:
Churoh School 10 a .m .; Choir prac!lc(', ·
W 11 t Tuesda
Tues d ay , 6 : 30 p.m .; UM ' r s
y,
7::lt p.m . I NPIson I ·
HEATH I Middleport)- Church School,
9S:30d a .Tum.: dWorslhOip 10:30UMa.mW.: .. ~bnlde
lu y,
es ay,
a .m .;
' ~·
Monday , 7 : ~ p .m .: UMW Second Monday, 7:30p.m .; UMM. Third Monday, 7: 30
p.m . (Robinson) .
MINERSVILLE- Worship Service 10
a.m .; Church School, 11 a .m .; UMW, third
11
M
1
Ch01
Wednesday, p .m .;
r prac ce. onday,
7:30p.m
.
(Nelson
I.
PEARL CHAPEL -Worship !)('rvice 9
a. m.: Church School 11 a.m .: UMW SP·
cond Tuesday 7:30 p.tn.: UMYF last 1\lesday, 7:30p.m . lub&lt;'nklngl .
POMEROY _Church School. 9: 1~ a .m .
: Worship Servtc(', 10:30 a .m .: Choir rehearsal Wedn('sd;,r, 7: 30p.m .; UMW, sE"UMY F sunday
dT
d
7
ay, : p.m .;
'
'
6con
p.m . ues
CCorbltt)
ROCK SPRINGS_ Church School, 9:15
a.m .; Worship 10 a.m.; Bible Sludy, Wednesday, 7:30p.m .: I:JMYF (Seniors I. Sunh s
day, 5 p.m .; (Juniors) every ot er unday, 6 p.m . (Rothemtch)
RUTLAND_ Church School, 9: 45a .m .;
Worship, 10:30 a.m .; .UMW IEvenlnlgCircle) second Wednesday, 7:30p.m .; UMW
!Afternoon Circle) S('C()nd Thursday, 1 p.

m. (Rub&lt;'nklngl
SALEM CENTER -Church School, 10
a .m .: Wors hip 9: 45a .m . (Rubenklng) .
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 8: 30 a .m .;
Church School 10 a .m . (Rubenklnlit:l
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. dame~ M. Clark
Re Paul McGulv.
· ••
Rev. Orville
While
APPLE GRO.VE
_ ChurchSchool9a.m
.
hi d s
; Worship, 10 a.m. (Firsl and t r
un·
1
days I; UMW,- rn~'!':le~~Y ' ~ ppmm;
Prayer meel ng,
:J'e
•
· •
1
iCB'W/-kANY _ Worship, 9 ;,m.; Church
S d Wed d
School,
.m .; Bible
tu y, Fellowship,
nes ay,
10 a .m .·,10 aDorcas
Wom~n's
(MeG I~)
Wednesday, lla.m . ·
u
' ·
CARMEL~
Church
SthOol and
.9:30Fourth
a .m .;
Worship,
,
~
a.m.
Second
4
10
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Sullon ,
lhlrd Thursday, &amp;:30 p.m . (McGuire) .
EASTLETART-Church!lchool9a.m.
. Worshl'i.i10 1 m second and lourth sun•
· ·
7 30
dar,s: U W llral Tuesday, '
p .m .
FALLS _ worship 9 a .m .;
Church Schooi 10 a.m. (Clark).
MORNINGSTAR- Worship, 9: 4~a .m.;
'Church Scbool 10, 30 a .m .. Bible Study,
-•
7 . 30 m (White)
1'11..'1 ~~ CH~EL
-Church School9: 30
· ,
hi 11
(Whlt4) ·

(C.."~kT

·=

J =oy

l

27: r-••

l

Fridoy
Gone.rls
15:1-2r
S.lutdoy
&amp;odu$
17:r-7

I

I

9 30
Tom SlaiOn, paslor. Sunday School : a .
m .; Evenlnr lei'Vtce 1:30 p .m. Wednesday
prayer rmeetlng 7:30p.m .
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRISTBible
·
.. DuaneMWarden,Wminister.
hi
clan 9:30a.m .; omlng ors P 10: 30 a.
m .; Evening Worship 6:30 p.m . Wednes·
day Bible Sludy 6:30p.m.
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
CHURCH. Sunday Sc hool serviC(', 9: 45 a.
m .: Wors hip serv!ce 10: :Kl a .m .;
Evangellsllc Service 1:30 p.m . Wednesday ; Prayer mee11 ng7 :30 p.m . Thursday .
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. PomeroyHarrisonville Rd. Ro'-n Purlell , mini s·
R R·lrn S d ~SchoolS
tPn
te r : on
e, un ay
uper1n ·
dent. Sunday School 9:30a.m .: Worsshlp
service 10:30 a .m .; Evening worship un ·
day 7 p.m . and Wednesday, 7 p.m .
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
Grove. The Rev. William Mlddleswarl h,
~&amp;lor.
Church servlco 9:30a.m .; Sunday
hool O 30
1 · a .m
BRADB. URY c· HURCH OF CHRIST,
John Wright , pasJtor. Sunday School9: 30
a .m .; Larry Haynes , S. S. Supl. Morning
worship 10:30 a .m .
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE , Rev . Thomas H. Collier, pastor .
Martha Wolfe. Chairman of the Boa rd of
Christian Life. Sunday School 9:30a .m .;
Morning worship 10:30 a.m .; Sunday
ev('nlngworship7:30p.m . Prayermeetlng
7·. J0pm
Wednesda
y.
LIBE
. R.TY
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH . ~x.

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JES US
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Pori ·
land·Raclne Road . William Roush . pa stor .
h
dl
Linda Evans , c hurc school
rector .
9
30
M
1
Church school : a.m .; orn ng wors IP
10:30 a.m.; Wednesda y evening prayer
services, 1: 30 p.m .
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev . Earl
Shuler. pas tor. Wors hip S('rvlce. 9:30a .m .
Sunday SchoollO: 30 a .m . Bible Study a nd
pra yer service Thursday, 7:30p.m .
CARLETON INTERDENOMINA ·
TIONAL CHURCH. Kln~sbury Road. Rev .
David Curfman , pastor. Sunday School
I
S
E
I
9::.la.m .; Ra ph Car t. upt . ven ngwor·
ship 7:30 p.m . PrayPr meeting, Wednes day 7:30p.m .
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Jody
Holland , pastor; Wa llace Damewood,
Sunday School Supl. Wors hip service, 9 a .

m~JIJ~I~LSc~~ ~~~~ NESS CHURCH
.
S
Rev . Thereon Durham , pastor. unday
hi
School at 9: 30 a .m .: Morning wors pa t
!0:30a .m .; SundayPve nlngS('rvlceat 7: 30
p.m .; Thursday servlc., al7: 30 p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION a1 Bald
Knob, loca led on Counl y Road 31. Rev .
Lawrence Glue-sPnca mp , pas tor. Rev.
Rog('r Willford , asst. pas tor. Pre-aC'hlng
serv ices Sunday 7:30 p.m . Pra yermE"f'tlng
Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m ., Gary GrHnth,
leader . Youth groups Su nday evening a t
6:30p.m . wllhRogerandVIoletWIIIfordd
S d ,
leaders. Communion SE'rvlce first un ay
each month .
C
II R D
WHITE'S CHAP EL.
oolvl e · ·
Rev . Roy Deeter, pa sstor . Sunday School
9:30a.m .; Worship St'rvlce. 10:30 a.m . 81ble study and pra ye-r S('rvlce, Wl?dnPsday ,
7:30p.m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Ma rk J a nE'S, pa stor. Bill Nic holson, Sun da y Sc hool Supl. Sunday School 9:30a .m .;
Mornlng Worshlp and Communion10 :30 a.

~

ter . Woody Call, pastor. !)('rvlces Sunda y
10
nd 1
Wed esday 1 P m
a .m . a
p.m .
n
•
· ·
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L.
Wa lker Pastor. Robeit Smith, Sunday
School 's upi .: Sunday School 9:30 a .m .:
Morning worship 10: 40 a.m .: Sunday
evenln~ wors hip 7:30 p.m .; Wednesday
e vening Bible study 7:30p.m .
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Burllnoham.
Rev. Ok('y
"
992132
S Ra
d y
Laundermllt , pastor. Ph.
· 4. un ay
School10:00a .m .: Sunday evening service
7:00 p.m .: WednPSday ('venlng serv ice,
7·00 p m
. DAN. VI. LLE HOLINESS CHURCH,
VI
d
locatf'd on Rt. 325 tx&gt;tween
nton an

·c

.

ay, ·

· ·

Sunday School 9:30 a .m .; S('cond and
fourth Sundays wors hip service at 2:30 p.

m.
MT . MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Main St.. Middlepo rt . Rev . Ca lvin Minnis.
paslor. Mrs. Elvin Bumgard ner. supt .
Sunday Sc hool 9: :l&gt; a.m .: Worship S('rvlce
10: 45 a .m .
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH , Rl . 1. Shade. Affiliated wit h
Southern Bapl\s t Conv€' nt lon . Don Black,
pastor. Sunday School l : JO p.m .; Sunday
wors hip 2:30p.m . Thursday evening Bible
Study, 7 p.m .
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Racine,
Rt. 124. William Hoback, pas1or . Sunday
Sc hool 10 a .m .; Sunday evening service 7
p.m . Wednesday evening service 7 p.m .
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadl&lt; .
Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.m . Morning
Wors hip 10: 30 a .m . Pra yer service. alterna te Su ndays .
MIDDL EPORT PE:NTE COSTA L. Third
Ave-. Rev . Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not tingham . Sunday School Supt. Sunda y
Sc hool 10 a .m . wilh C' laS S('S for all ag('S .
Eve ning services at 6 p.m . WM nesday Bl·
ble s tudy al 7:30p.m . Youth services Fri da y at 7:30p.m .
ECCLES IA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill Sl..
Middleport . BrothPr Chuc k McPhe r son.
pastor . Sunda y Sc hool 10 a. m .: Su nday
even In ~ serv\crs at7 p.m . and Wednesday
servlres at 7 p.m .
NTIQUITY BAPTIST. Ea rl Shul er. pas tor . Sunday Sc hool 9:30a.m .: Ch urc h ser vlcP, 7 p.m .: Youlh mE"f'tlnji!: . 6 p.m . Tues day Bible STudy at 7 p.m .
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 3304~
Hiland Roa d. Pomeroy . Tom Kelly. pastor . Dan ny Lamlx&gt;rt . S. S. Sup!. Sunday
morning serviC't'- at lO a.m .; Su nda y even Ing serviCP 7: JO p .m . Tu~a y a nd Thurs day Services a t 7:30p.m .
WORD OF FAITH . 93 Mill Sl., Middleport. Richa rd Stewart. pa stor . Sunday
mornlnR servic(' 10 a .m .: Sund ay ('Vf'nlng
7:30. Tuesd ay mo rnin~Z Bible- study lOa .m .
Wedn('sday t&gt;v('n\ng 7:30 p.m . Thusday
mornlnJI!: vld£'0 with Kennt'th Copeland 10
a .m .: Frida y PVPninJl: video wllh KennNh
Copela nd . 7: 30p.m .
NEW HAVE N CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE . Rev . Glendon Stroud. pastor.
Sunday Sc hool 9: 30 a.m .: Wors hip se rvi ce-,
10:30 a .m .: Youth sPrviC'&lt;' Suncfa y 6: 15 p.
m. Sunday f:'Ve nlnJI!: S('rvice7:00p .m . WPd nPSday Prayer Me-eti ng and Bible STudy
7:00p.m .
NEASE SETTL E ME NT CHURCH. Sunday aft ernoon services a! 2:30. Thursda y
evening s(&gt;rvlc£&gt;S a r 7:30.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURC H. Mason. W.
Va . Past or. Bill Murphy. Sunda y Sc hoo l tO
a.m .: Sunday ev&lt;&gt;nl ng 7:30 p.m . Prayer
mPPlinli! and Bible s tudy W£'dnt&gt;sda y. 7:30
p.m . EveryonE' we lcomf:'.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST. Sa lt&gt;m Sl. Rev . Paul Ta ylor. pa stor . Su nda y
School1 0 a .m .: Sunday evening 7:30p. m .:
W£'dn£'Sday £'Venlng prayer m['('ting 7:30
p.m .
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH. Silver Rid.'!:('. Duane Sydens tr lcker . pastor . Su nday School 9 a. m .:
Chu l"('h Si'rvlce 10 a.m . Bib lE' Study Wed nPSday at 7:30 p.m . June thru September,
7. p.m . Oct ober lhru Ma y. Sunda y eve ning
Fe ll ows hip 7 p.m . Junt&gt; thru September, 6
p.m . October thru Ma y

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Tilli s, pa s tor. Sonny Hudson. supt. Sunday
School 9:30 a .m .: M or nln ~ worship. 10:30
100
a. m .; S un d ay even Ing7 serv I('('e
: p.m.
WMPO
Wednesday S('r vlce
p.m .
pro-

S. Supt. Morningworshlp1 : a .m .:
·
dre n' s Happy Hour 6: 45p.m . Pra yer a nd
Bible Study, 7:30p.m . Missionary m et"tl n~
fi rst Wednesday of each mon.th 7:30p.m .
For Information call 388-8467.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST. Bill Lillie,
~stor. Steve Little, s. S. Supt. Sunday
hoollO a.m .: Mom 1ng wors Ip, II a.m .:
Sunday ev~ning worship 7: 30p.m . Praypr
meeting and Bible study Thursday. 7:30 P·
m .; Youlh meellng Wednesday &amp;I 7 p.m .
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH,
383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday
School 10 a .m . Sunday and Wednesda y
Evening services at 7:30p.m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF
. R.
d GOD,
Sch Rev
19 30
E . Robinson, pas lor . Sun a y
oo : a.
m .; Worship service, II a .m .; Evening
service 7 p.m . Mid-week service, Wednes day 7 p m
,LANGsVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
Sch 1
Robert E . MusS('r , pastor. Sunday
oo
9: :r. a .m .: Paul MusS('r , supt. : Morning
~ors hip 10:30 a .m .: Sunday evening ser·
vice, 7 p.m. ; mld ·wet'k sPrvtce, Wednes day 7 p m
SYRACsE CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE . Rev . James R Kittle, pastor .
Sherman Cundiff, sup!. Sunday School
9:30a.m.; Morning worship 10:30 a .m .;
Evangell!'t\r service, 6 p.m .; Prayer a nd
Praise Wednesday , 1 p.m .; Youlh meel In~. 7 p.m.
•
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
· pastor. s un d ay
CHRIST, Elden R . Blak(',
SchooiiO a .m .; Rob&lt;'rl Reed, Supl . Mornlng sermon, 11 a .m .; Sunday nigh I services: Christian Endeavor 7:30p.m .. Song
servle!! &amp;p,!lh PJ'l!@Chjng 8:~ p .m. Ml~ week prayer meellng, Wi!cfnesday, 7 p.m .
Alvin Reed, layleader.
H'EMLOCK GRPcVE
HRISTJ•t\..1".
,
· Roger Walson, pas or. Crenson Prall ,
Sunda~SChooiSupt. Mornlngworshlp9:30
. •a .m .; unday
""booI 10: 30 a.m.; Evening
service, 1:30 p.m .
MT. UNION BAPTISTS&lt;
, Jhoe Say!'!', Sun:
day !lchooiSupi.Sunday
oo19 . .-a.m.
..._ Evening worship 6:30 p.m. ; Prayer Meel .,. 1 6 JO m Wednesday
n~U~PJ!'its' PLAINS 'cHURCH OF
CHRIST. Jody Holiand , minister . Deryl
Wells, Supt. Morning worship, 8:00a.m .;
Church School9:00 a.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE. Rev. Herb&lt;'rt Grate, pastor.
Frank Rlllle, ·supt. SundaY School 9: 30 a: ·

m·'

lng wonhlp service 7:30p.m . Wednesday
prayer mH"t lng 7:30p.m .
MT . HERMON UN ITED BRETHRE N
IN CHRIST CHURC H. Localed In Te xa s
Com munity off Cl. Rt. 82. Rev . Robert
Sanders , pastor. Don Will. laylea der. Sun day School 9:30a .m .; Morn ing Worship
10: 45 a .m .: Evening preaching serviceS£"·
cond a nd fourth Sunda y at 7: 30 p .m .:
Chrtsllan E ndeavor. fl n t a nd third Sun day . 7: 30p.m . Wednesda y prayer meeting
a nd Bible St ud y, 7:30 p.m .
JEHOVAH 'S WITNESS. 37319 Slale
Route 124 lone mile eas t of Rutland 1. Sunday : Bible lect ure 9:30a.m .: Watchtower
study 10: 30 a .m .; Tu('sday, Bible study .
7: 30 p.m .; Thursday, Theocratic School
7: :Kl p.m . Service meeting, 8: 20p.m .
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY .
Located on 0 . J . While Road of Highway
160. Pat Ht"nson, pastor . Sunday SchoollO
a .m . Classes for all ages . Junior Church 11
a .m .; MornlnJI!: worship 11 a .m . Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m . Sunday . Young People's, Childre n' s Churc h and Adult Bible
Study , Wednesday at 7:30p.m .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl , ~10 Granl
St ., Middleport . Affiliated with South(&gt;rn
Baptist Conv(&gt;nflon . Sunday SC'hool lOa .m .
; Morning worship 11 a.m .; Evening wor s hip ' 7 p.m .; Wl?dnesday evening Blblf'
study a nd 8rayl'r met"tlng 7 p.m .
BRADF RD CHURCH OF CHRIST. S1.
Rt. 124 a nd Co . Rd . 5. Mark SE'evers. minis·
ter . Sunda y School Supt. St(&gt;ve Pickens.
Sunday Sc hool 9:30 a.m .; Morni ng worship 10: 30 a. m .; Eveni ng worship 7 p.m .
WednE'Sday wors hip 7 p.m .
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURC H.
Corne r Sycamort&gt; and Second Sts .. Pomeroy. The Rev . Willia m MlddiE'Swarth .
pstor . Sunday SChool 9: 45 a .m .; Ch urc h
servlct" 11 a .m .
SACRED HEAR T CHURC H. Msgr.
Anthony Gia nn amort&gt;. Ph . 992-5898. Saturdav E vening Mass 7 :30 p.m .: Su nda y
Meiss. R a .m . and 10 a.m . Confessio ns one
half hour before l"ach Ma ss . ceo claSSE'S.
11 a .m . Sunday .
VICTORY BAPTIST. ~25 N. 2nd Sl ..
Middleport . Jaml"s E . KeE&gt;sl'l". pa stor.
Su nday mor ning worship 10 a .m .; Eve-n·
lng servic(' 7 p.m .; We-dnesday ev('ninj!
wors hi p 7 p.m . Vl sitalion . Thursda y 6: 30
p.m .
TRINITY CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY.
Coolvii If'. Glltx&gt;rt Spencer . pastor . Sunday
Sc hool9 : 30a.m.: Morning St'rv lce, ll a. m .
Sunday ('V('ning serviei' 7:30p.m .: Mld we('k prayer SE&gt;rvice Wednesday 7:30 p.m .
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH .
LawrenCe Bus h. pastor . Max Folm('r. Sr .
Supt . Sunday Sc hool a nd Morning Wors hip
9:30a .m .: Sunday ev£&gt;nlnllM'rvlct&gt;. 7 p.m .:
Youth m(&gt;('ti ng and Bibl e Study . WednE'S ·
day, 7 p.m .
UN ITED FAITH CHURC H. R1. 1 on Po·
me roy By-Pass. Rev. Robt'rt Smith. Sr ..
pastor . Rev. JamE'S Cundiff, asst . pastor .
Sund ay Sc hool 9: 30 a .m .; Mornlnll wor ·
s hip 10:30 a .m .: Ev£&gt;nl nll wors hip 7:30 p.
m . Wome n's Fellowship , Tuesday. 10 a .m .
Wednesda y night prayer S('rv lce 7:30p.m .
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad
St. , Mason. Sunday SchoollO a .m .; Morn Ing wors hip 11 a .m .; Even lnll serviCE' 6 p.
m . Pra y&lt;&gt;r ffi('('ti ng and Bible St ud y Wt&gt;d nesday , 7 p.m .
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
Borde n. pastor . Co rn('llus Bunch. sup!.

m.

:;:Yn~v~:::i. ::~- a~~.:~~Yt'as~~r~~~:
0 30
Chll

SWala. Supt. lllllda1 !lcbool t. 30 a.lll. ev: co~~!•
Sunday
9. 30 lt~y.
a.m.,
''k-•
Wo~p oupl,.
servt.ce
10:30 S&lt;;hool
a.m. Blblt
~
Tufld
7 JO p m

OBSO~- CHIU!n'IAN YNION, Rev.

RWTOI

GroceriesGeneral Merchandise

~114K.-~

Middleport. Ohio

u

m

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

J. lwCIIfoltl

sen

!

Pomeroy

992-3325

l'to. H2-2101

r

Syracuse

992-3978

Lona Bottom: l:tlltl Hart. pastor. Sunday

-·~

.

MEIGS TIRE ·
CENTER, INC.

N! PlANING MIU . RALL'S
Mill Work8EN
.
RANKUN°
Cabinet Makina ~~

181
Wid YOUIIl
r d'll',._.
RAZJ1L w

-· __..___'

-~..\

0w

' · -

I

They don't really know what the:
day lo all abouL But they heard Dan
el.ogtog tn the shower, ..the wcartn'o'
the lCr«n," and saw the color of the
Ue he placed oa lhc door knob.
They don't mtoo a thlDg! That old
Nytng that actions apeak louder than

'
lllnder ol B...alloa
ftARRISONYILLE PRESBY~ERIAN.
CHURCH. '(iorshlp servtee, 9.00 ,a.m..
Cbl&amp;rcb Sehooi1P: 30 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN
CIIURCH. Church Sc111M&gt;19:00 a.m. ; Morn·.
IIIJWIN'Ihlp 10: Ill p.m. BlbteStudy, Tuel·
.WmbliL~~trYice. 11 a.mPran~/~·":·
. d~ -~00..;,.··;m:;- Btblt ·St~y."'!'h~l'ltli.Y,--..,.··~
. ''Rtr:N~- ~':!til Sebocil6:00p.~. -- r•~day Wednetcfay,1 p.m . aye ee o-·
7•ini%'euh: FIRST UNITED PREsBY··
; Wo!"hlp 7 ' 30 p,m ,; qMYF Wednflda,,
"fAuREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
TBIUAN CHURCH. Church Sc11ool10:15 1 '~cV'N~McG=i.EYAN _ Church· CHURCH. Rev. Rob&lt;'rt -Miller, pastor.
. a.~.; )lomiDI Worship II: 30 a.m.; 81~!~
School 10 a.m.; Worship, 11 a.m. ; UMW • Lloyd Wrlghl, Director ol Chrlallan EduSI~J,· lOa.m.; Junl?r and
lourlh 'Moil4ay 7:30 p.m.; Men's Prayer
cation. ~unday School9130 a.m.; Morning
Youtb roup,!U~yF,eGO.OOp.~~ltor
Brealdaot, w-.y,Ta.m •• (Ciark).
worship 10:30 a.m.; Choir prhalcl71~30· Suntm.AND CHU'"'n 01
D. .
•
SUTTON _ Churcb School, 9:30 1.111.:
day 6:30p.m.; Evening wors P • p.m.
JoiUI Evau. Suaday Seho01.10. 00 a. MorniDI wonblp 1o:ts a .m . lint aadtblrd·
Wednesday Prayer and Bible- Study, 1; 30
m.· llueday llomiDI WonhiP 11:00 a.m. llulldiYI; hllowlldP.- wltb Cannel, p.m.
•
.
.
Cibtiriii•o Chiii'C~ lla.ra.: StuldlY ::::
thlrtl. ftuntlay,e:30p.m. tMcGulN) .
DEXTE(\ CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Ina oentco, 7:00 P;m.:
p.m:
KENO CHURCH Dl' llRRiiiT, Oliver
Cllarltt Ruuell Sr. , minister. !U&lt;k,.M•;

. ............................. $14.01
......

13 Weeks
26 Weeks .: ............................... $27.30
~2 Weeks "' '~::I":C""'"""'"""' $15U8

That's why Daa aad I make It a
habit to go to church every Sunday
with them. We want God and His
Church to be u real partofthclr lives,
not ju Kt something they han heard
about.
G h·e your ch ildren a chance to
know God. Go 1.0 c hurch and tal«
them with you .

Phone (614) 742-2777

'

No subscrlpllons by mall permltled In
towns where borne carrier service Ia
available.
·'' ~
...

· MAIL SUBSC(\JPI'IONS - -

•weat.er with~ emcralct&amp;trtpc. The

J. Wm. "Bill" Brown. owner

CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mlddleporl . ~lh
and 'M ain, Bob Mellon, mlnlsler. AI Harl·
son a11oclate mlnlstPr: Mike G er 1ac h •
sunday School Superlnlendenl; Blb,le
Scbool 9: 30a.m .; Morning Worahlp, 10:30
a .m.; ,Everting Worship, 7:00 p.m . Praye r
mttt1111! Wednesday, 7:00p.m .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THEl NAZA~E · Co·paotora Rev. Charles Coyle
C
'
ana
· Nancy
. oy 1e. Bill· While ' Sunday.
Scbobl Sup!. Sunday School 9:30 a .m ..
M~l'lll•• WorJhtp, 10:30 ~.m.; Sunday
-~
"E anpllatlc
meet Ing, 7: 00 p · m · 'Prayer
mfttllllt Wednolday 7:00p.m .
liNITED PIIEIIB'l'TERIAN
··'t . MJN18TB'l'OF
t
MII:IOS COUNTY
aev
Director

POSTMASTER: Send address to The
Da lly Senllnel, lll Court St., Ponferq!r,
Ohio 4~769.

copycal8.

Rutland. Ohio 45715

mi.UDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION , Lawrence Manley, pastor. Mrs. Russell Young, Sunday
School Supl . Sunday School 9: 30 a.m .
E venti1g worship 7:30 p.m . Wednesday
priyer m~ttng 7: 30p.m .
MT. , MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.
Racine. Rev . James Satterfield, pas tor.
Freeman Williams. Supt . Sunday School
9:45a.m .; Sunday and Wednesday &lt;'V('n·
tng services. 7 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
Corner Sheth and PalmPr. Thr Rev . Mark
McClung. Sunday School 9: I ~ a .m .: Da n
Whitt Sunday School Supl. John Riebel .
Sr1 Aist. Supt. Morning Worship 10: 15 a .
m. Youlh meeting 7:30p.m . Wednesday.
tnchadtng Wee Tots, Eager BeavPrs, Ju ·
nlor Astronauts and Junior and Senior
High BYF; choir pracllce 8:30 p.m . Wed·
neaday. Prayer meeting and Bible s tudy.
Wtdnesday, 7:30 p.m .

The Daily Sentinel

green plaid dteee, tt;nd .Kevin hi•

Equipment

a.~MEROY FIRST BAPTIST. Da vid
Mann, mlnlstPr. William Snouffer, Sunday
School Supl. Sunday School. 9:30 a .m .: ·
Morning Worship 10: 30 a .m .
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Pomeroy Pike. David Hunt, pastor: Jack
Needs, Sunday School Dlreecl or. Sunday
Scoot. 9:30a.m .; Mornln~ Wors hip, 10:30:
evening worship, 7:30p.m . Tuesday Vlsl·
taUon, 7 p.m . Wednesday, Prayer sei'Vice,
7:30 p.m .; Million Friends , 7:30 p.m .;
Girls In Action , 7:30p.m .; Acteens , 7: llp.
m.; Choir Practice, 8: 30p.m .
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal·
ley Run Road, ft(&gt;v. Emmett Rawson . pas·
tor. Handley Dunn, supt . Sunday School.
10a.m .: Sundayeve nlngservlce. 7: 30p.m.
; Bible leaching, 7:30p.m . Thursday.
SYRACUSE MISSION, CHerry St., Sy·
racuM. Services, 10a.m . Sunday. Evening
servlefl Sunday and Wednesday at 7:00 p.

Pomery,OH
Phone 992-2976

Patrick'• Day . .. Kathy weara her
hat.a are thoee we brought home &amp;om
laat ntght'l party!

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

216 S. Second

worda is cc rta.Loly lrue aroun4 our
c hildre n . They are rcfiCular little

Kathy ud Kevin celebrate SL

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST ~ HUR H
- SlstPr Harriett 'WarnPr, Supt. Sunday
School 9: 30a.m .; Morolng Worship , 10 : 4~

204 Condor St.

By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR..

COPYCAIS

~~"~~

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; .SERVIa

&gt;he Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio
has set for public hearing Case No 8)-32-ELEfC (Subfile A). to
review the fuel procurement practices . and
policies of the Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electnc Company. the
operation of Its · Electlic
Fuel Component and
related matters. This
healing is scheduled to
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
March 21. 1984 at the
Offices of the Commission. l7S South High
Street Columbus. Oliio
43215.
All lnt~rested parties
will be given an opportunity to be heard. Further lnfonnatlon may be
obtained by contacting
the Commission. -

'This Me8sage and Church

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRIS11AN
CHURCH, CUIIon Lucas, putor. Sunday
Sdtool 9:30 a.m. Mn. Worley Francts. oupt.
l'rt0c111ng servlc&lt;:s ftnl and lhlrd undays (ol-

RACINE
WELCOME
949-2525
The Rockets,~. had been ellrni- t-------------------------.L------:------------------nated by Bexley two or the last three

LEGAL NOTICE

on

TRINITY CHURCH, !leY. W. H. Perrtn,

TESSIE'S CRAFT SliOP

FRIDAY 8:30-12:30
SATURDAY 8:30-12:30
SUNDAY 7:00-11:00

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

,Ohio

"', .

CANDLEWICKING, CROSS-STITCH, YARN
LG. SELECTION OF CRAFT BOOKS
QUILTING SUPPLIES &amp; MUCH MORE

Laserphoto ).

Jacoby paces Tribe's victory

Ponwror Mldd

gr~'V,?~~Oe~~JW~~abF THJ E

NAZA·

RENE . Rev . LioydD. Grlmm , r .. pastor .
Sunday SChooi9: JO a.m.; WorsiP SE&gt;rvlce
10:30 a. m .: Young propl p's servic(' 6 p.m .
EvangelistiC' service 6:30p.m . Wednesday
servi ce 7 p.m .
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St. , Mason, W. Va . E ug('n(&gt; L. Con~£'r . mi nls ter . Sn d ay Blble Sl ud y 10 a. m.; WO rship 11 a. m . a nd 7 p.m . Wednesday Bible
Study, vocal mus ic. 7 p.m .
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding
Lane, Ma son, W. Va. Rev . Ronnie B. Rose.
pastor. Sunday School9 : 45 a. m .: Morning
worship 11 a .m . Evening S('rvlce 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Wome n's Ministries 9 a.m.
I Wed nt&gt;s day Prayer
(meet Inga nd prayer,
a nd Bible Sludv. 1 p.m .
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION . ThP Rev . William
Ca mpbell , pastor. Sunday School 9:30 a .
m .·, James Hughes, sup!. Evening sPrvice
1
7:30p.m . Wednsday (&gt;venlng prayer m('(' ·
lng 7:30 p.m . Youth prayer S('rvlce each
Tuesday .
FAIRVlEW BIBL E CHURCH. L!'tart .
w. Va ., Rt . 1. J a mes Lewis . pastor. Wor·
ship services 9:30a.m .; Sunday Schoolll
a. m .: Evening worship 7:30 p .m . Tuesday
cottage pray€'r met"tlng a nd Bible Study
ed sd
9:30a.m .: Worship service, W Dt.' ay
7:30p.m .
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnul and He nry Sis., Rave nswood, W.
Va . The Rev . George C. Weirick, paSior .
Sunday SChool9: 30 a .m .; s un d ay wors hlp
n a .m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH,Iocalcdon
Pomeroy Pike, Counly R\)lld 2~ near Flal·
woods. Rev. lll~~tkwnod, Jl"Stor . Services
on sunday at 10:30 a .m . a na'!: 30 p.m . with
Sunda)'School9:30 a .m . BlbleSiudy, Wednes d ay, 7: 30 p.m .
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST·, St. Rt. 338. Anllqully. Rev .
Franklin Di•• kens. pastor . Sunday morn·
lng 1G a .m .; Sunday evening 1: 30 p.m .
Thursday evening 7:30p.m .
.
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH . Pastor Rob&lt;'rt Byers.
sunday SchoollO a .m .; W~rshlp service II
a.m .; Sunday e~enlngservlce,7:30 p.m .;
Wednesday evening servtce1: 30
INDEPENDENT HOUNESS
Cll
.Inc., 'Pearl St., Middleport. Rev . O'Dell
Manley, pastor. Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
Morning worship 10:30 a .m .; Evening
worahlp 7: 30p.m . Tuesday , 12:30 p.m . Wo. J!W!'al'!fY.er meeilnJ.: Wednesday , 7; 30

&amp;'i}R

P-~~~b·mr~u~~WuR~~ ~;-

JESUS CHRIST, Elder James Miller. Bl·
ble Study, Wednesday 7:30p.m.; SundaY.
School 10 a.m.; Sunday night service, 1:30
p.~MEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS,
Harrllonvllle Road . Earl Fields, paslor .
Henry Eblin, Jr. , Sunday School supt . Sun- ·
daY School9: 30 a.m.; Morning worship II
a.m.; Sunday evening oer.vlce 7:30p.m .

Prl~~~,.~T"C":Jii~ifW&amp;D.

Joy Clar•,
• pastor. Worshlf servtce Sun· .
day 10 a .m .: Sunday Schoo 11 a.m . Even-

..... , -

Sermonette
Everything we know about Jesus indicated thai he was
concerned only with one thing: to do the wlll of his Father. Not hing in
the Gospels Is as impressive as Jesus' single minded obedience to his
Father. From the first recorded words of Jesus in the Temple, "Did
you not know that I must be busy about my Father's affairs?" to His
last words on the cross, " Father, Into your hands l commit m y
splrlt." Jesus' only concern was to do the will of his Father.
Jesus Is not Savior simply because of what He said to us or did
for us. He is Savior becausl' what He said and did was said and done
In obedlenl-e 10 His Father. Jesus Is the obedient one. The center of
His life is this obedient relationship with the Father. Between the
Father and the Son, there Is only love.
Maybe as many seek to find themselves, grow to be
self-actualized, mature or grow In the Spirit , whatever the
expression Is (jlr , the continuing development In our human
existence, the I!fe of Jesus gives to us as the ultimate source of our
growth, 1) the obedience to the will of the Falher. and 2) the
surrender of self to other in total trust. It is not grabbing and
possessing that enables us to develop the deep relationship with the
Father, enables us to mature to the fUllness of our humanity, enables
us to come tully alive. Finally, It Is the abllity to let !(O. and let God.be.
God, and respond with a Yes to His call as life Invites us.

1--------------------------.1
·•

-.

�•

Pomeroy-.:...Middleport, Ohio

Two Brewer -hurlers on comeback trail
.

By 'The A88oclated Press

OUI'STANDING PERFORMANCE - Despite a 34 point effort by
junior guard Jay Burson, (10) John Glenn lost an 85.Q!CiassAA regional
game to Cohunbus Whitehall 'lbursda_v evening al Ute Convocali!M(
Center al AUtens. Whitehall will face Wheelersburg In Ute regiOnal
tournament champlomhlp game al8 p.m. Saturday.

Wheelersburg rips
Central Catholic
By KEITII WISECUP
ATHENS- TOdd Staker and Jay
Burson packed 'em In and both
all-staters put on quite a show. but
only one winner emerged as
Wheelersburg cruised by Steuben·
ville Central Catholic, 72-52, and
·columbus Whitehall eliminated
John Glenn, 85-68, In semi-final
ieglonal class AA tournament play
here Thursday before 8.524 In the
Convocation Center.
First Game
Wheelersburg's 6-2 senior Staker
drilled 32 points hitting 13 of 18
fielders, grabbed a team-leading
eight rebounds, and made several
dazzling moves to the hoop In the
Pirates' 72-52 victory.
The Pirates will play Columbus
_Whitehall Saturday at 8 p.m.
Winner there advances to the final
four In St. John's In state t6urney
action.
Wheelersburg, now 214, jumped
out to a quick 144 lead and were
never headed, although the Ctusad·
ers from Steubenville narrowed It
to four once In the second quarter,
25-21.
An 11·2 spurt at the start of the
third quarter moved an eight-point
halftime lead to 44·27. The Pirates'
biggest lead ws 20 points on Utree
different occasions.
Staker's teammate and find point
guard Don Brown opened the lanes
for 19 points while dishing out six
assists and coming up with seven
rebounds.
Wheelersburg, not really considered a powerhouse at Ute tournament's start, played a superb
passing game, whipping precision
half-court passes at will. The
Pirates have won 17 of their last 18.
Central Catholic bows out with an
J.8.7 slate. The Crusaders had
advanced to Ute reglonals with wins
over Barnesville 76-49, River Local
6547, Claymont ti3·61 In an upset,
and 57·54 over Morgan.
The Pirates hit on 23 of 42 from
the field for 55 percent and a
blistering 26 of 32 free throws for 81
percent. The Crusaders outre-

bounded the winners 35-29.
sOCond Game
Whitehall's balance overcame
the clever antics of John Glenn's
nationally-known sharp-shooter
Burson, 85-68.
The son of Musklngum College's ·
head coach hit for 34 points but
could make only 15 of 40 shots.
Despite his below-par shooting,
Burton put on a show with good
ball-handling and fancy passing.
Burson averages 39 points a game.
Whitehall, the state 's third
ranked team, had four scorers with
14 or more with Scott Tedder's 24
high. Terry Tedder added 17. 6-6
Steve Corrigan 16, and guard Tom
Matavski 14.
The Rams from Columbus have
lost only to Mt. Vernon In posting 24
wins with many against AAA
Columbus schools. The Franklin
Countlans love the up-tempo game
and were right at home against the
Muskles fast break.
Burson, only a junior, Is nearing
the all-time Ohio high school
scoring record, currently held by
ex-Ohio State star Alan Hornayk.
Barring misfortune, Burson should
easily become the leader early next
year. His Muskles bow out with a
fine 21-3 record.
Whitehall led 42-34 at Ute half, but
a Burson-led rally lowered It to5449
with 2:40 left In Ute third quarter.
The Rams quickly made It 66-49
within the next four minutes.
WHEELERSBURG (72) - S!aker 13-6-32;
Marshall 1-2-4; Sroczynski ~ C. Brown
2-G-10: D. Brown 4-11 -19; Duncan 2-1-5;
McFarland 1-D-2. TOI'Aiil z:l-~'12.
CENI'RAL CA11101JC (112) - Bucclgross
:!-{)&lt;;; Pashk• 6-2-14; Bragg 7-1-15; Haney
2·3-7; Florak 1.().2; Goodpaster2·2-6; AndrN's
1&gt;2-2. TOI'Aiil21-10-12.
Byqwu1en:
Wheolorsbu!'R .................. ... 16 17 20 19-72
Conlral Ca!hollc ................... 9 16 9 18-52

As far as tl)e MJ!waukee Brewers
were concerned, Pete Vuckovlch
and Rollle Fingers were a sight for
sore eyes, even If they still were a
little sore from Injuries.
Both making comebacks, Vuckovlch and Fingers combined to pitch
Ute Brewers to a 5-3victory over the
California Angels In exhibition
baseball action Thursday.
Vuckovlch, making a comeback
from a sore shoulder, allowed the
Angels to tie the game on Jerry
Narron's two-run homer In Ute
seventh Inning after relieving Mike
Caldwell In the sixth. But he got the
win when Ute Brewers broke the tie
In the elghdt when Robin Yount and
Cecll Cooper singled and Ted
Slrnnnons drove In Ute tie-breaking
run wldt a sacrifice fly. Jlnn
Sundberg singled to drive In Cooper
with the final run.
Then Fingers, returning aft er
more Ulan a year away from the
mound because of a hand Injury.
then came on In the ninth and
pitched one perfect Inning for the
save.
In other action, Mike Easler hit his
first home run for Boston and Chico
Walker drove In two runs with a
fourdt·lnnlng single as the Red Sox
beat Ute Pittsburgh Pirates 54.
Storm Davis pitched four Innings
of shutout ball and Baltlnnore took
advantage of sloppy New York play

'

I

to beat Ute Yankees 3-1.
Larry Herndon's bases-loaded
single drove In two runs In 'the nrst
Inning and Detroit posted a !).()
victory over Phlladelphia.
The New York Mets, tralllng 7-0
after seven Innings, scored Utree
runs In Ute elghdt and four more In
Ute ninth and went on to beat
Minnesota 9-7 on Ron Gardenhire's
lOth-Inning Infield hit.
Cia udell Washlnglon's two-run
homer led a 15-hit attack as Atlanta
beat Los Angeles 9-1.
Bobby Jones collected hlts and
two RBI and Dave Stewart retired
the first 11 baiters he faced to lead

Texas to a 4-0vlctory over Houston.
TorontQ capltallzed on four St.
Louis errors, scoring only Utree
earned runs In a 7-5vlctory overt he
Cardinals.
Eric Davis hit two home runs,
Including a tWD-run shot In Ute lOth
Inning, to give Clnolnnatl a 5-3 win
over Ute Chicago White Sox.
John Morris' run-scoring double
In the fifth JnnlnggaveKansasClty a
2·1 victory over Montreal.
Brook Jacoby had three hits,
Including a homer, and drove In
three runs as Cleveland lashed 19
hlts In a 14·7 win over San Dl

WANT TO FEEL BETTER
AND GET BACK INTO
SHAPE?
Atten'd Exer-Danceand start fttl·
lnureatl Every Monday, 6-7 p.m.
at the Carleton School In Syracuse Ap'rll2 thru May 21. Reaister
by sendina name, address. phone
no. &amp; $15.00 Class Fee to:
~enda

Williams

Rt. 1. Box 155
Rutland, OH. 45775
b March 31st

r=:======:::~~~-----------

Bando on cnJlches
TIJCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Cleveland Indians' catcherChrlsBandols
expected to be on crutches for 10
days because of a severe bruise on
his left calf, the American League
team said.
Sando suffered the Injury when he
fouled a ball off his leg during an
Intra squad game last week.
The Indians also said Thursday
Utey have returned catchers Phll
Wllson and Tlnn Glass and lntlelder
Plchy DeLeon to their minor league
camp. The three were among nine
non-roster players In Ute Indians'
major league camp.

place at the Carleton School,
Dorothy 1&lt;arr was nominated as
Ute outstanding gardener and Mace!
Syracuse.
Also announced was the spring
Barton as Ute outstanding garden
club member when Ute Chester regional board meeting at the
Garden Club met Wednesday night Chester United Methodist Church
on April 9 at 11 a.m. 1bere wlll be a
at the home of Mrs. Karr.
Mrs. Karr' s garden wlll be potluck luncheon at noon. All club
entered In Ute outstanding gardener presidents, regional officers, concompetition of the Ohio Association tact chairmen, and regional comof Garden Clubs. Jtwasnoteddurlng mittee chairmen are asked to
therneetlngthat thedeadllneforthe attend.
"Feathered Friends" was Ute
tree and shrub sale Is this week and
that orders are to be placed through theme of the program with
the Meigs S6ll and Water Conserva- members naming an early bird they
have seen In response to roll call.
tion office.
Plans were announced for the Karla Chevalier presented a paper
wildflower walk to be held at Lake on "Help for Ute Birds" and there
Kathryn In Jackson on AprU 18 at 10 was a display of bird pictures, and
a.m. with a buffet luncheon to be tips on what plants attact what
held at Robbins Restaurant, Jack· birds.
Pauline Ridenour present!'d the
son. AnArborDayplantJngwUitake

paper, " Birds of a Feadter Flock
Togedter" and gave tips on how to
protect trees and bushes from
eating up the fruit. She deSCribed the
technique which they follow In
keeping the birds away from a
blueberry patch. Members exhibited bird pictures.
For the March sunshine project,
Greg Hibbs wll1 be remembered.
Re!reslunents were served by
Mrs. Karr and Twtla Buckley. Next
meeting wlll be hosted' by Rudt
Erwin.

SYP.ACUSE _ Appll.catlons
for life guards and swirnmlni
lnstructor are now being accepted at London Pool, Syra·
Geo
Holman manager
today.
'
Appllcants have unW AprD 1, to
submit Utelr appUcatJons.

:-uncedrge

rr:===================::::;
SERVICE ...
REPUT AliON .• :
QUALITY ..•

THAT'S REMINGTON
AVAILABLE AT:

GENERAL TIRE SALES

N. 2ND AVE.

PH. 992-7161

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

TV ANTENNA

I•

Youch sign-up
CHESTER - The annual
sign-up day for the Chester
Youdt Baseball program wUI be
held at the Chester firehouse
Saturday from 10 a.m. untll
noon. For more Information
'parents may call ~-

11ace Your Winter-Damaged Antenna, Now!
1980 FORO - y, Ton, small V-8 motor. auto. trans .. AM/FM·
/Stereo. Super Truck.
·

Church sing
LONG BO'ITOM -The Perry
Sisters. of Kenova, W. Va. will
alng at the Mt. Olive Community
Church, Long Bottom March 25
at 1: :ll p.m. The public Is Invited
to attend.

Legion celebration
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39, Annerlcan Legion and Its
auxiliary wlll celebrate the
American Legion's 65th birth·
day at the post home on
Tuesday, March 2n. Dinner, for
members and their families wll1
be served at 6:15p.m. Entertain·
ment, "Sweet Mountain Music"
will be provided by Roger and
Mary Gllnnore.

Our Reg. 988.88

95788

Tractor Mower
ITHP Trans Axle, electric start float·
ing deck.
'

1979 JEEP CHEROKEE Priced to sell.

8 cyl., auto .• 4 wheel Quad-Trac.

Firefighters
plan meeting
SYRACUSE - Meigs County

area Fire Fighters Association
ivlll meet Wednesday, March 21
at the Syracuse Fire Station at
7::1l p.m.

-14_88

38

lml

6

880ur

Turf Builder Plus 2
Cleans out weeds, and dan-

53.88

Contractor W111elbanow

297 -

44 Your Choice
Our 7.47-7.97

Garden Tools

4-cu. n. capacity to handle
those reoiJv Iorge jol;&gt;s.

G!J
Our 4.97

White Bird Bath
Decorative plastic bird bath.

Bow end rake, round point
shovel or long handle hoe.

POMEROY - The ladles
auxlllary, Order of Eagles 2171
will sponsor a wuuck · dinner
Saturday, March 17, at 7p.m. at
the Eagles Club. There wUI be no
charge hOWeVer, donations will
be accepted .. The event Is for
members and famlly only. A
dance wlll follow at 9 p.m.

•
1982 PONTIAC PHOENIX - 5 dr. Hatchback. V-6 motor. Front
wheel drive. tilt, cruise. AM/FM/Cassette. Air,low mileage. One
owner.
/

1979 JEEP CHEROKEE - Well equipped, air cond. Runs great.
Dark brown.

4-H news

Stand, 2 dr., 6 cyl., runs ~onri.

dlscu....,

1974 FORD VAN ECONOUNE.. ........... S1395

Auto., PB, 302, good .condition.

'1976 AMC WAGONEER ..................... $2195

___
. . . §]
.. . .

4 Wh. Drive.

,. ·2;57
397

1-lb.· . .

2.27:. ~·

Our

1.37

•

AJI.Purpoee Plant Food

·

Our

. .87

20-Lb. • t0+4 FerfHirer
Easy to qppJv for quick gre-

Nulrlltous fertilizer lor houseplonls. tlowet's. treei more.

.......

....

a

lawN. Covers 5,000 aq.n.
.en.......

OU
. r Reg..
3 17

17.321

..

. 1-Gal. Watering C.
Plalllc watering CQI'I for
your garden.-

ScMngal

''DANCE,- FOR JOY"

Aerobic• Dence Cll••
.Joy Compton Kl\1&amp;-lnstructor

fO WHk-Sprlng Session .
20 CIISSIS for 140.00 .

...lnnl111 March 1tth
lon.-Wtd. :..,4:1 S to 5:15
Mbn.-Wtd.-6:15 to 7:15
Tuts.-Thurs.-5:30 to 6:30
•At lilt Senior Citizens lulldltll
lulbtiiY Htlall11. I'OIIItroy
' for lore fnfonllltlon

. and RtllllrtiiOI
Clll812-7773

.., ...
-·--·
- --··------

-

"'"

Sh~k5995
• MaximizeS
Signal Strength
• Minimizes

Interference
Just dial the direction on the control
unit and your antenna turns to that
direction and locks tn pos1t1on .
#15-1225 RotOf cable •••••

Wide-swept 60° elements capture all the
available signal on every channel to provide a crisp, clear picture. Makes color
"come alive", sharpens black-and-white.
Attach it to your stereo for improved FM,
too. Gold Alodized finish fights corrosion
for longer tile. #15-t710

Complete SuperColor
Antenna Package for
Professional Installation!
Include• Antenna
and All Hardware·

3995

Signal Amplifier
BoOsts weak Signals
By Archer" Cleans up reception in frin~JE: and
"problem' areas.
Preamp mounts on
mast. power supply mounts in·
Wofi(S on

treasurer. DaMy Leonard; news reporter,

JaYfll' RUehl•.
The club discussed tho lamb and llOf{
wotgh-ln oo May 26, qualll1catlons !or Sheep
Prtncesl, Queen and Shephmt, and made
plans for a sheep shoW demonstration. 'n1ey
ailo
project needs and rations. The
next meet!ng will bo March~ at7:ll p.m. at
tho Extension Ofllce, Mel"bei's muat havt&gt;
money for proJoct boOI&lt;s allhat ITM!ellng and
what tl1elr radons are or wUl bo. Jaynl' RUehle, f'OIJIITU'r.

ONLY2188

TV /FM Antenna Rota~or ~or
Even Better Receptaon.

N-~

The M•lgs Counly Shepherds Club mot Feb.
23. Eleven members were In altendance.
Offi&lt;X!rs for 1984 were elected as follows:
president, ~ lleoj(le: viet' president,
Ertc Thoren: ""'rotary, Botty Jo Hun&lt;:

1976 FORD MAVERICK ................ S1295

Bring a Vivid Color
Picture Back to
Your TV Set

Mul
no!
Included

Auxiliary dinner

4 Dr., auto., PB, PS, air.

'1975 VW RABBIT~.~;-........................SllU!~s·1

tiona!
fee take-It"
of $5 each
day
for thematerials
"make-It,
work·
shops ($7.50 for both days ).

For more Information, call Dr.
Darts Brodeur, at Ohio University's
Educational Media Center, (614)
594-5404, or Pat Peoples, 984-2376.
Send registration with fees to:
Claude Davis, Washington County
Board of Education, 217 Putnam
Street, Marietta, Ohio 45750.

Chester gardeners meeting held

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Jay Mar Golf
Club Is kicking off the 1984 golf
season and membership drtve
with a dance tee to be held
Sunday at the Meigs Inn. All
area golfers an friends are
Invited. George Hall wUI be
featured at the organ from 7
p.m. to 11 p.m. Those wishing
additional Information are to
contact Bob Freed at 992-:11)14.

Saturday's program f"atures
computer software selection, com·
puter care, goal setting. LOGO,
young adult books and a workshop
on creating mat'erlals for
storytelling.
Registration 1s $8 per day and
Includes lunch. 1bere 1s an add!-

Happenings

1978 FORD lTD II .........•...........• S1895

New top, seats &amp; floor mats.

The S6utheast Region of the Ohio ulum development.
The program, to be held at the
Educational Library Media Associ·
ation and the Washington County First Presbyterian Church, Fourth
Library Media Association are and W006ter streets, Marietta, will
planning a Spring Conference for run from 9 a.m. to 3: 15p.m. on both
days. The topics on Friday's
March 23-24 In Marietta.
The topics and sessions should be schedule Include storytelling, the
of Interest not only to library media new state standards, Interlibrary
specialists but also to . persons loan, copyright, ETSEO, book
Involved In reading, storytelllnl(, selection, computer care, and a
language arts, microcomputers, workshop on creating materials for
Instructional television, and currie- teaching library skills.

RACINE- A s&lt;iupsupperwlll
- be held at the Racine United
Methodist Church Wednesday
wid! serving to begin at 4 p.m.
Vegetable and bean soup will be
served along with corn bread,
sandwiches - and desserts. A
bake sale wUI be held In
conjunction with the supper.

2 Dr., auto.

1969 ROADRUNNER CONVERTIBLE .... ~ SI295

POMEROY "Shamrock
Shenanigans" wUI be staged by
Ute Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi S6rorlty Saturday
night at Ute Annerlcan legion
Hall In Pomeroy. The public
carnival with games and food
wUI be held from 6: 30 to 9: :ll
p.m. Proceeds wUI be used for
the sorority's community
projects.

~~=:i~y

WEDNESDAY

,,.,

1976 FORD PINTO RUNABOUT ...... s1395

SATURDAY

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7 ·

Library spring conference set for Marietta

POMEROY - 1be Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Men's Fellowship wW meet at
the Pomeroy Church of Christ
Monday, 7::1l p.m.

5-7-14; Householder 2-D-4: Osboumo :!-{)&lt;;;
Burson H34: Cunningham J.-0.6. 'IUI'ALS
3f.8.t8.
W111'11!:J1A1L (85) - 11plon 4-1 -9; S.
Teeder 1!14-24: Corrigan 6-4-16; T. Todder
6-5-17; Matavskl5-4-14; NoutzllngQ.J.l: Todd
1-2-4. TOI'Aiil SZ-21-85.
By quiuten:
John Glenn .... ........ .
Whll•hall ................. ..

Auto., PB. PS. air, cruise, good condition.

Calendar

MONDAY

Second Game
JOHN GLENN (Ill) -Adams 2-D-4; C1ouso

1982 MERCURf CAPRI ......... s5495

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, March 16, 1984

. ..

______
...

1978 PONTIAC CATALINA ..... 4 dr. Vinyl top. Air cond. Local one
owner,

Reg. Separate
Items 40.70

• Two Standoff Insulators
• 40-Ft. Ground Wire • 5-Ft. Steel TV
• Antenna Discharge Unit
• 4-Ft. Ground Rod • 4-tn. Wall Mounta
• 50-Ft. Foam Twin Lead
• Four 3'/z·ln, Wood Screws

TVandfM
Shielded Coax Cables

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

J99
1399

so-Foot

SEE:

1M5-1526

-.~SMlll~t~NELSON
.
.

1oo-Foot

11!;:"1527

MOTORS, lNC:.

0---.

. POMEtlOY, OH.

Call 992-217.4

Check Your Phone Book for thelallla-lllllekStore or Pealer Nearest You
A OIV1SION Of TANDY CORPORATION ·

· PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES

DEALERS

�Friday, March 16, 1984
Ohio

Mafth 16,

M~igs

Business Services.

Co. property transfers

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

I

Donald Myers, Pauline Myers to
Gary L. Wolfe, Patricia Wolf,
147.1!n acres, Olive.
Paul E. Gaston, Margaret Gas·
ton to Jooeph A. Gaston, Pamela A.
Gaston, 2.493 acres, Columbia.
Jocelyn Baker nka Jocelyn Bal·
ley, John G. Bailey, Ronald Gillilan,
Carol GUlllan to Ronald GliUlan,
Carol Gillilan, 10 acres, Sutton.

Bobby E. Molden, deceued,
adm., Timothy Wayne Molden
to Raymond L . Patter10n, Adm.
Exec. Deed, Scipio.
Floyd Wyclnskl, Evelyn
ctnskl to Ohio Power Co., Right
Way, RuUand.
C. C. Howard to Columbia Gas of
Ohio Inc., Columbia Gasand Trans.
Corp., Agree.·Ease., RuUand.

Frances F. Droz to Harry
Edward Droz Jr•• Eleanor M. Droz,
Parcel, Lebanon.
Doris Jean Jones, eta!, Jackie L.
Jones, Linda L. Jones, James T.
Jones, Theodore s. Jo~. Brenda
S. Jones, Jewell G. Jones, Delores
S. Jones, Hana Mae Walsh to
Franklin b. Morgan, Maureen A.
Morgan, parcels, Columbia.

The .Daily Sentinel

PHONE
992-2156
Or_DIIIY _ _ ..,..
Ill Cowl II.. _ , , 01111457H

'

. .-."' - -·

Cl•ui/i#d ,.,,, ffl l ' l!r

t .C.... .tf'MIIIIIt .... lol - - 1

O.IUENTATION 'IBAINING - Twenty residenls
. aUended the Pleasaot Valey HOipilal VolwWeer
Servlcee Ol'lentallon and pa&amp;lent OOIUct training

._....at the IIOIIplteJ I'I!CeiiUy. Voluoaeer services 1s
:open to aD residents of Mason, Melp and GaJDa

Counties, 16-yearHid and older. 1be propoam was

conducted by Judy Doty, staff development
coordinator, and Jan Buskirk, coordinator of
volunteer services. ' " - tmere!lted In V~IJ
should codact Ms. Buskirk at m-4340, extension 142.

. . .......

~ '--·
J-"

..
·-

4 -0iw- ...

......
....l.,.._...
..-...... ,.....
''"'"',..

l . .............. -

-

-__
..........

, 1).111-·

65 special interest classes at OU
What are you doing evenings or
weekends this spring? Cornmunlverslty, an educational, cultural,
and recreational enrichment program, offers area residents a
choice of 6.5 short-term, special
Interest classes and activities In
thetr spring program.
Whether you want to develop a
new hobby, reline a skUI, or just
take a class lor the sheer joy of
learning, you wUl find something of
Interest In the .areas of art, crafts,
pbyslcal fitness, personal growth,
professional update, cooking,
dance, real estate, and new techno!·
ogy such as microcomputers. You
~an start signing up lor these
classes on Wednesday, March 14.
. Designed for children and adults,
Communiverslty classes attract
residents from a wide area of
Southeast Ohio who want to enjoy
the many resources and lactuties of
Qhlo University's Athens campus.
The Spring Cornmuniverslty brochure has been malled to aU postal
patrons of Athens County, Pomeroy, Tuppers Plains, Logan, Chester HUl, McArthur and the Belpre
·area. Other area residents may
'obtain a copy by caUing the O.U.
Olllce of Continuing Education,
594-6875. Collect calls wUl be
: ~.
' \
Most of the Communlverslty
classes wUl begin the week of April
9, although some classes ollered for
credit wUl begin March 27.
. Communiverslty's art and craft

classes offer many areas of exploration lor the budding or experienced artist. Painting, drawin~.
photography, stained glass, and
woodcarving are just a lew of the
choices In this area of Interest.
Physical fitness classes lor men
and women Include Exer-Dance,
swtmnastics, a noon-time energize
class, yoga, and beginning or
Intermediate swimming lessOns. A
new aspect of the ever-papular
Exer·Dance will be an Easy·Does·
It program for women who wish to
exercise at a slower pace. A new
fitness class lor men and women Is
Combat Aerobics which uniquely
combines aerobics exercise with
self-defense techniques.
ParUclpants are encouraged to
come hungry and enjoy both the
technique and art of Indonesian
cooking. The magic of microwave
cooking wUl be explored In a
beginning microwave class and a
class lor those interested In cool
cooking recipes for summer.
Dance Club offers couples a great
evening out as they learn or refine
thetr steps In this ballroom dance
class featuring swing, fox-trot,
tango, polka, . waltz, rock and
country-western. A one day
Country-Western Texas Style workshop will feature "Boot-Scootin"
music and dance. Women Interested In beUydanclng will discover
the grace, precision and exercise
benefits of this ancient art that Is
having a resurgence among women

Friendly circle gathers
'

· A program on the importance of
the wise use of time was presented
by Mrs. Stewart and Joy Russell
when Friendly Circle met at Trinity
.Church Tuesday evening.
· Scripture, poems, and a reading
"Time Can Never Be Recovered,"
emphasized the value of time and its
~· Mrs. Stewart accompanied
group singing of "Teach Me to
PI;ay" and "Take Time to Be Holy."
Mrs. Russell had the closing prayer.
During the business meeting
conducted by Pauline Mayer,
president, officers' reports were
glvenandslclccallsreported.Acard
' signed for Nonna L. Jewell.

w•

Elizabeth Flck, SWIShlne chairman,
reported on cards sent. Several Ul
members were noted.
The community Lenten services
on Thursday evening were noted,
and appreciation was exprssed to
the program chairman, Mary V.
Reibel, and breakfast chairman,
Enna Smith, and thetr committees
lor the Ash Wednesday quiet hour.
About 145 from area churches
attended.
A second order of Jelly Maid In
several Oavors will be avaflable
soon, it was reported. A silent
auction wUl be held at the April
meeting. Refreshments were
served by Miss Fick and Mae Mora.

Hearthstone Class meets
.'
'

.

"

••

Don and Edna Wilson hosted the
Tuesday night meeting of the
:lfearthstoneCiassoftheMiddleport
First Baptist Church.
A St. Patrick's Day theme was
carried out with each one attending
wearing something green. Mrs.
WUson extended the welcome with
.Katheryn Met7ger giving the openIng prayer. Yearbooksweredlstrib. uted by Mrs. Wilson. Several
members were reported.
· · Freda Hood was named publicity
·chlllrrnan lor the class. For devoUons, Mrs. Metzger gave devotions

using a St. Patrick's Day theme,
"One Day at a Time," concluding
with prayer. For the program, Mrs.
Wlson used a game of ''words of
wisdom" with Sarah Fowler being
the winner of a shamrock plant.
netreshments were served from
a table decorated In the green and
white color scheme.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
John Metzger, Mr. and Mrs. David
Darst, Mr. and Mrs. TOllY Fowler,
Mary Hughes, Maxine Tucker, Mr.
and Mrs. Milton Hood, and the ho$ts.

.·Philathea women meet

'

. New officers were elected at the
. recent meeting of the PhUathea
Wcmen at the Middleport Church of
Christ.
.- . Followlng the nominating com. inltteereportbyNoraRiee,olflcers
1. . elected were Mildred Riley, presi'· ·\dent; Sharon Stewart, vice presl'dent; Dorothy Roach, secretary;
Betty McKinley, assistant secreI
tary; Farle Cole, treasurer. They
, will be Installed at the April potluck
. IJil!l!(lng by _Debby Melton ;md
· ~ MllilrecfHawJey..
..
' Mrs. . RUey had the opening
- Pl'IIY,t!l'. Mrs. Roach presided at the
-·IJil!l!(lng and officers' reports were
: itven by Mrs. Riley, FarleCole, and
-.Thelma Boyer. Devotkms In March
were gtven by Ra.e Reynolds.
· ' AlayetteshowerhonorlngDonna
Jfartaoo was ·held •tQIIowlng the
rriM:Ing.
A-green8Jilf yellowcoJoio·sciJeme
~ ·canted out In the refreslullent

------

... '

,,lf.ANIIt.fVICIA.....
...._.Tto.

_._

.

voY~~:~~:r:~=~

NEW LISTING - Hemlock
GroYI - Great starter home!
12x60 mobile home with 2
add-on rooms. Excellent condition. Barn, shed, nice patio,
on 2.80 acres. Includes ref.,
range, washer, dryer, wood·
burner, part basement. 'Just
$22,900.00.

lpated In the Right-to-Read Week
NEW LlmNG - l.qsvllle
and gift table .decoration~ with
activities at the RuUand Elemen·
-11111'
- 2.S'act
land .
daffodils and a decora.ted umbrella
tary School.
being used as centerpieces.
Kim Ohlinger, remedial reading
Games were played with prl1,es
teacher, requested volunteers to
being won by Mildred Riley, Kathy
c~ a favorite childhood story
PRIC~ REDUCED _ llitstic:
Baker, Angle Baker, and Sharon
bookandreadlttostudent8enroUed
Hills - A neat 3 bellnoomt
Stewart. Others attending were
In kindergarten through third
home. Electric b.b. heat,
Pam Vaughan, Dorothy Baker,
grade.
'
wood ftoors &amp; carpeting.
Delete Forth, Jared Stewrt, Clyda
One hundred tltty colorful 'felt
insulated. Carport Bargain
Allensworth, Came Hartson, Mary
bookmarks were made at the Meigs
$29,900.00.
Bailey, Flo Strickland, Nattie
County Senior Otblenl Center and
STAmR 'HOllE or Ntiltllllllt
Boyer, Martha Haggerty, EDa Mae presented to the children at the story
hMtlt - Old Rt. 33 -I ·acre
Daugberty,EleanorLohse,Geneva
hour. Vounteers attending the
lot, 1·2 bedroom hoine with
~ Grce _l'~w~ Trudt., and .: !lilsses were_ E!euu~laht::nJ;;~t;;--1-l_;;;nicett;.ltitt~h;~eq,
olltr
Kasey WUllamS, Ruth alld VIrginia
Polly Elcblnget, _M
Updelwood, Martha Childs, Marie
Helen Fisher, Nonga P.oberts, Mary
REALTORS
Francis, Frances Lullthart, Mabel
VIrginia Reibel, Thelma Dill, DoHt"'ltClf~d, Jr.
Walburn, and Clarice Erwin. '
rothy Downie, Trudy Andrews, and
Dottlt lt:1 ri2-51t2
Others presenting gifts were Pat Kat)lleen ~.
Jtln Truuell 949-2660
Wellrung, Carolyn and Roxanne
Volunters are avaDable through
Jo Hill 115·44&amp;6
. McDaniel, P.ochelle Eichinger,
RSVPtorelatethelrllfeexperlences
Lula . Mae Quivey, Glenn and .01141 number d. topics_lorclassroorn
Kathryn Evans, tbe PhUathea
presentation. lnin-,nat!on on the
W&lt;llll!ll, and· the Loyal Men-ani!· programmay-beobtalnedb)'calllng~
Wcmen's Class.
992-2161

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

......,_..._..._
...,_,..,....,,
...............
................
.,...... ....
·~-·-·,_,,

:::. ~-

Something lor everyone Is of·
fered In the area of microcomputers. A sill-evening Introductory
class has been developed for those
who have "computer phobia" but
feel they need some hands-on -;:--:--:-:--.....,,----1
experience In this new technology.
2
In Memoriam
Other hands-on classes using the
ffiM personal computer Include:
beginning BASIC programming;
IN LOVING MEMORY
an analytical class using the Lotus
Of My Husband. Chlrln R.
1·2-3 software package; a class
Hysell who passed away
one year a1o ll1rch 17.
designed for parents Interested In
1983.
learning how the computer can be
March comes with ud rt·
used lor educational activilles In the
1rets.
home; a Saturday workshop on
The d1y, the month. I will
home and business !lie managenever foraet.
ment; word processing using
For in my he1rt you will II·
ways st1y,
PeachText; and and the role of the
Loved and remembered tv·
microprocessor for executives.
Special interest classes will in·
elude the fields o.f sales, Investing,
antique appraising, genealogy, as·
tronomy, homeopathy and bumor
writing. Hobbies such as beekeepIng, skydiving and wine-tasting can • - - - - - : - also be ·discovered by area 11
residents.
Everything from art and cooking
to swimming and gymnastics will
be offered to children of all ages even Infants.
E. Mai11...11i11
Residents can enroll in a CommuPOMEROY,O.
niverslty class in person, by mall,
992·2259
or by phone. Detailed brochures are
NEW
LlmNG
- lllcint available by calling the O,U. Office
Approx. 1 acre building site or
of Continuing Education, Memorial
motile home oL T.P.C. water
Auditorium, Athens, Ohio 45701,
tap, se~Mc syslem partially
completed. Electric availal*!.
(614) 594-6876. Collect calls will be
Includes 15 ft camper triler.
accepted.
Good shape. All for only
$5.000.00.

RSVP helps
in Reading
at Rutland

--

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

of au ages.
Public Notice
Two classes focusing on women
will highlight Communlversity's
PROBATE COURT OF
currlculum this spring. In "Beyond
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Survival: Success Training lor ESTATE OF MILDRED
Women;'' participants will learn to FISHER.DECEASEO
CaN No. 24372 Oockat12
overcome the "superwoman" syn- Page 410 •.
drome and leanr how lo evaluate
NOnCE OF
APPOINTMENT
priorities and achieve goals. In the
OF FIOUCIARY
"Woman Abuse: Stopping the
On March 8. 1984. on the
Violence" class, men and women Metgs County Probate Court.
will examine the ever-Increasing Case No 24372. Mary Ann
Huddles10n. P 0 So, I 04
problem of violence against women Racme.
Oh10 4 5771 . was
and explore persortal strategies for appo1nted Executnx of the
estate of M tldred F1sher. desocial change.
late of 1 Oak Street.
II personal growth is your ceased.
Po meroy Oh1 0 45769
objective, the "Personality Pattern
Robert E Buck.
Assessment" and "Adventures in
Pro ba te Judge
BY Lena K Nesselroad
Attitudes" classes are for you.
Clerk
Those Interested In entering the [31 16. 23. 21c
exciting world of real estate, or
Public Notic:tl
those veterans In the real estate
field Interested In obtaining contlnu·
PUBUCNOnCE
ing education hours, will be InterNOnCE TO BITUMINOUS
ested to know of two special VENDORS:
Sealed b1ds w 111 be recetved
classes: "Special Topics - Techni·
by the Board of M e1gs County
cal Aspects of Real Estate Invest· CommiSSIOners. Court House.
ing," and "Microcomputer Applica· Pomeroy. Oh10 4 5 769 unhl
tions lor Realtors." Other real noon o n !he 27 th d avof M arch.
1984 . r~ nd !he btds Will be
estate classes offered this spring opened
and read aloud at '2
will include: "Principles and Prac· P M of !he 2 7th dav of M arch.
tlces," "Real Estate Law·· and 1984 tor !he tur n1sh•ng of
b1tum1no us matenals tor the
"Real Estate Finance."
M etgs County H1ghway Depart ·
ment. and each month thereat.
ter. b1ds w 1ll be rece1ved and
o pened o n the last Tuesday of
each m ont h lor the foll owtng
mon th"s reQu irement s ESII·
mated qua nt111es o f hQu1d
asphalt requ1red. a pproxtmately

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SJ:RVICE

U ·1ifMIHII..,

u.u-...

... !Ut ......

SPECIFICATDNS FOR THE

Ill OS:

1 - Btd pnce per gallon f o.b.
vendor's plant. and the pnce

per gallon delivered to the
vendor's portable tank to any
locat•on w1thtn the .county as
desognated by the County
Eng1neer: lor the vanous grades
of bttumtnous matenals wh tch
shall conform to the pert1nent
State of Oh 10. Department o f
the H1g hway Cons!r uCtiOO and

Matenat Speclftcat•ons
2 - Vendors shall under ·
stand that no guarantee ISg1ven
to the actual quanh!les needed .
but each successfu l vendor
shall be reQu1red 10 turn1sh all
or any part of the M e1gs County
reQuirements as ordered dur·
tng the btd penod.
3 - 81dded pnces shaH b e
ltrm and 1n ellect dunng the b1d
period
4 - All b1dders m ust agree to
l urn1s h any b1tum1no us mate ·
nals. as req uested 1n Item 1. at
the same pr1ces to aU the
Pohttcal Subd•v1S1ons of M e1gs
County dunng the b•d penod
•5 On the envelope
cont atn1ng each month"s b1d
must be pa1nly marked "" B1tum1nous 8 1d..
6 Pro posals are to be
re turned on b1d form s supplied
by the M e1gs County Eng1neer
or also obta1ned throug h the
ofl1ce of the Board of M e1gs
Co unty Com m iSSioners
7 - The successful vendo r
wt11 be reQUired to turn1sh anv
lab w ork or d es1g n grades as
reQuested by the M etgs Co unty
Eng1 neer.

8 -

-- .··---

.,...............
.........._..
""*"

.

Ju- • .....,.,.

.,,_,. ,.._,
~::=.a.,_.... ...,.

••-a.....

tn - ~

ttJ - ~

---1
........ ...............- 1---------u••••-• o..•-- u .oo

:!::.:~~~~~

........... ... ..,_
U.Mit-•

.....M .......

"· ~~toM+-

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

1.............. .....

Public Notice

Public Notice
500.000 gallons lor the year .

..._......._.
..._,._,...
.......,.
··-Ci
ot lor
,.,_
,._
. ....

Public Notice

PHIWP M. ROBERTI.
P.E .. P.l.
MEIGS COUNTY
ENGINEER
NonCE TO AGGREGATE
VENOORI:

the vendors shall understa n..
that no guarantee tS g rven to the
actual quantitieS of aggregates
to be furn1shed . but each
vendor • sl'\all be re qu~r ed 10
furntsh any pan of the actual
requtrements. as ordered dur·
1ng the b 1d per1od
3 - Pnces onthts btd shall be
f~r m and 1n effect from Aprt l 1.

Sealed b1ds w1 11 be rece1ved

by

..

.,U00

the Board ol Meogs County

Comm1SS1oners at the Comm1s·
s1oners Off1ce. located 1n the
Coun House. 1n the V1llage of
Pomeroy. Oh10 unttl noon on
the 27th d av of M arch. 1984.
and the b1ds wtll be opened end

1984 to Apnl I. 198 &amp;.

4 - Al l btdders must agree to
furn1sh at'ly matena ls at the
same p nces to all the Pol•ttcal
SubdtV1SIOns of M e1gs Co untv
dunng the btd penod

read aloud at 1·45 PM On the
271h day ol March. 19B4. lor

the furntsh1ng of all ktnds and
s1zes of aggregate that may be
reQuired bv the Metgs Countv
H1ghwav Department
Esu mated q uantl!tes o f all
aggregate requ~r ed . apprOxi -

5 -

On the envelope

contatn1 ng the b1d. the name
and address of the ven dor m ust
be shown and pla.nly marked

"Aggregate Bod"
6 - Pr oposals

are to be
returned o n b1d forms supplied
by the vendor. and w1 ll be
opened o n the date and place
spec1 f1ed above
7 The M e•QS Coun ty
Com miSSIOners reserve the
nght to accept or re1ect any or
all .b•ds and / or any part thereof

mately 40.000 Ions.
SPECIFICATIONS FOR
BIOI AS FOUOWS:

1 - B1d pnce per to n I o b
loaded at the vendor's plant tor
the vano us k1 nds and s1 zes of
aggregates that mav be re·
QUired. w h1c h wt ll conform to
the pert•nent State of Oh10
Department o f Htghways Con·
struct1on and M atenals Spec1 h·
cat1ons. e•cept1ng pea or shot
gravel . whtch 1S an ungr aded
ma tenal
'2 - W1th respect to the
atore:..a•d. est•mate&lt;t quant•ttes

M ary Ho bstener

•Wtshers •Dishwllhtrl
•Rengea

•Dryers •Freeaera

EUGENE LONG

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tfc

Ph . (614) 843-5425
3-8·2 mo. pd.

985-3561

Clerk
M e1gs County Board
of CommiSSIOners

{31 9. 16. 2tc

All Makes
•Refrlgeretor~

G&amp;W PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLY
Gaa &amp; Water Pipe
Regulators S.
Fittings
Volume Drips
Sewage Pipe
Gas Appliance•
Bus. Ph. 985-3813
Res. Ph . 985-3837
Long Bottom, Oh.

1·(614)·992·3325
NEW LISTING - Near
schools in Middleport, 3
bedrooms, 1\l baths, new
kitchen, dining. Level lot.
For $23,500.
RUTLAND - One floor, 2
bedroom home. Bath, gas
heat and 2 lots near school.
Only $12,0QO.

POMEROY - Hot water gas
fired boiler, 2 full baths, din·
ing. lots of closets; stove, refrigerator and birch kitchen.
Askin1 $29,500.
.

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Claulflecls and

.Savell I

Wrlllt vour _, ad ardor by mall wlllt
toupon. cence1 raur ad by p~~ane when you
results. Maney IIIII relundlble.

.Ham•--------------------

Add~---------------­

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Factory Choke
12 Gauee Shoteuns
Only

Need A Special Cake?

'DOZER · BACKHOE
'RECLAMATION WORK
'OIL FIELD SERVICES
' DUMP tRUCK SERVICE

We dO Clkea, pill, COO·
klea. for any occasion,
birthdeya, annlveraeriea.

•cONCRETE WORK

'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
'WATER. GAS lo
OIL LINES
JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-720L5-11

New Homes-Extensive
Rtmodtlin1
Insurance Wotk
.C:ultQJII P.olt.Bid1s.
61rlleS
Roofin1 Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidin1s
1 6 Yeere Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683
or 992-2282
11-l-llc

54 Misc . .Merchandiae

Middleport, OH.
holidoyo.

" Wtdd+np "" our S9tcltlty"

Wedding Cthl Topt and
Nov•hy Cake Item• Are On
Dl1plty

PH. 992-5546
Hol(n 8 to 6

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

POMEROY
LANDMARK

L

s14-m21a1

1500.00

NOW
EA.
I-AMANA UP-FLOW
GAS FURNACE

i40.000 eTU-Wis 1704.60

NOW 1600.00
I-AMANA UP-FLOW
GAS FURNACE

()Wenter:l

17. _ _ _ __
' 11. _ _.,...._ __

I fAnnounc:ement

. I IForAenf
1. _ _ _ _ __

2-----3.-------

5.
_ _ _ _ __
4· ---~--

22.
23, __ _ _ __

24:

25. ____,....._ _

··-----27.------to'·-----_______
:M.

2t. _ _ _.....,._

16. ---.....,.0

I ,

30. - - - . . . . - -

31 •. -~---- l.,---·-

32. - : - - - -.......-

31.
------~
3&gt;1• ..._
_ _ __
35. . ........_ _ __

.

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

MIIITitll C•1111 wiiiRemlttllnce

flflll',f!IIJ
.,...,,-.:-,.......~

KELLER'S

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd like to Introduce you to
EnPCe-A·Ctr. the moclorn way
to driva lho vohiclo of your
choice.
No Down Payment
Lower Monthly P1yment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Futor St,.lce
Call 614-992-6737

CUSTOM

B

Six famillea, Thur1 end Fri .

South Chntor
. Pomeroy, Oh .
"Cu1tom Exh1u1t1"

OWNERS:
Rodney &amp; Roger Keller

DOZER

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

BACKHOE
WORK

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

AL TROMM
742-2328

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-tfc •

We Han the
Lowest Rates

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•ZENITH
•SYLVANij\

- Addon1 and r..-nod•ting
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and etectric:ll
work

AND OTHfR fol{uJk BRANDS

We Have A Full Time
Shop Technician

(F""' Eotimatoo)
REDUCED WINTER RATES

on Duty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

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

CHE·STER-985-3307

111 C:.rt lt.

Polnifer,GIL..,. ·-- .....

-

·-----

March 15 end 16. 2317

Ports &amp; Service
1-3-tfc

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

21

Business
Opportunity

BUSINESS

OPPORTUNITY
Hotel with 36 rooms, ca·
ble color TV's, fully
equipped kitchen. 100
seat dining room. 150
seat banquet room, 34
seat lounae and b1r, big
screen TV. staae &amp;dance
floor. Fully equipped
. piua parlor, eat-in or
take out.

The Meigs Inn
IN POMEROY, OH.

SH\l9lt~~l"~~v.~~ll4
NOW,380.00

FINAIICIIIG AYAILAIU

GALLI A
REFRIGERATOR CO., INC.
152 3rd Avo .. Gtlllpolis .
P~ .

114-44C-40M

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843·5191
10-6-tfc

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING .

BISSELL

SIDING CO.

"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimates~ 949-28DI or
949-28o0
No Sunday Calls
3-11 -tfc

ELLIS WELDING
&amp; SATELLITE
SERVICE
PH. 742-2534

in buyinc or leasing
call Bill Childs at the
i!ln. 992-3&amp;29.

NOW

1555.00

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Antennas Start At
11,395.DD
'Full Factory
Warranties
'Free Delivery
'Site Checks
'Complete Systems
&amp; Installation

12· ·II

Public Sale
S. Auction

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. PIOIIOnl, WVa.
Auct . lonnie Neel. Youth
Center Bldg., Camden St.

614-387-7101 .

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
SeMce. Estate, Ferm, An ·
tique It liquidation salet.
Ucenaed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

WVa . 304· 773 -67'5 or
304-773-9186 .

Gutters

Downspouts
Guttere Cleaned
&amp; Painted
Storm Doors

64 Misc. Merchandise

&amp; Windows

949-2263 "

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
GENE WHALEY - RT. 681, DARWIN, OHIO
992'-7013
NEW Chev. Truck Ftnd111 ('73 thru '80) ......... 176.95 .
New Chev. Truck Door~ ('73 thru '10)........... 1149.95
New Chtv. Trude Chrt!mf Bulftllll$ ('73 !hru '80) .. ..169.95 .
- New Cbev. TliiCr-H~dl"('73 t~ru '80) ...:;;.: .. 117U5
New Ford Truck Fenders ·('73 thru '79) ........... 169.95
New Ford Escort Ftndl11 ('11 thru '14).; ........ 164.95
New ford Mustin( Finders. ('79 th111 '14) .. : .... 174.95
. WINDSHIEtDS
Chev. Truck Cle1r w/Anttnna ('73 thru '10) .... 176.95
Chev. Truck Cltu, no,anttftna ('73 thru '80) ... 169.95
'lnlllllatlon Available •Experienced
A~SO OTHER WINDI"IELDI AVAI~BLE
--~

3069.

High cellber person. cereer
poaition with management
opportunity. Age no barrier .
intensive thort treining pro·
gram. commi11ion in exceaa

3 Announcements

Vacancy: Julia's Peraonal
Cere Home . Formerly
Merce£ Convalescence
Home. 18 yeera experience.

Local Pomeroy Retail atore
need fulltime ulea perJOn,
tome light cleaning rt ·
quired. Muat be nut end
courteous and willing to
work with public. Send
complete rtaume to P. 0 .

Bo• 729-8, Pomeroy, Ohio,
46769.

Store manager wanted. Su·
permerket butine11 in Sou theastern Ohio . Expe ·
rienced. qualified person.
Person must relocate . Send
retume to Dailey Sentinel.

Box 729-A. Pomeroy, Ohio.
46769.
Trainee for small butine11
leading to meneger position.
Contact Job Service in

perocn. 225 8th Street,

MEN-WOMEN Career pooi·
tion with manegement op·

port unity. Up to 81 , 150 per

3 :00PM . Coli 304-8766B99.

HElP WANTEOII OJ
wanted, coil 304-676-1393
after 6pm elk for Chuck.

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni ture. US-3159, 3rd. &amp;

Gino's Point Pleeunt now
accepting applications 3

Olive St .. Gallipolio, Oh .

pm- 5 pm, 1 doy only. Sat.

Wanted to buy square dancing clothes. Size 10. any

No Phone Cello Ploaoo.

type. Coli 446-4537.

Mer. 17th. Apply in person.

12

Uoed Mobile Homu
Campen,

Trevel

lo
Trailers.

Situations
Wanted

Will cere for the elderty in my
Went to leaae Hunting righta home. Lot• of references:
on approx. 600 ecre in · Men or women . Call 614·
Mason or Jackaon County. 887-3402.

Approx . 1 acre. wooded lot
in Gallia County, suitable for
building new home, muat
have rural water evailebJe.

Wanted to buy. Now, uaed &amp;
entique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete householdt. Alao complete Aucti·
oneering service. Call

Mercer's Riverview Personal Care Home has vecen ciea tor elderly peraona.
Betty Mercer owner. 304·

773-5B82.

Interior end exterior paint·
ing. sandblasting, water·
bleating, paper hanging and
drywall finishing . Free estimates. fully insured. Call

614-949-2686 .
Will cere for the elderly in my
home. Trained and expe·

Cash paid for fancy iron or , 992-6022 .
heavy iron beds. $160 and
up for certain Meigs Co. Harper•• Adult Care Home
stone jars. Old time .cup· hat 1 vacancy for another
board . coil 1-304-882- resident. elderly person. Cell

Buying daily gold, silver
coins, rings. jewelry, sterlinv
were, old coins, large currency . Top prices. Ed. Bur-

Jenny at Frutho, 992· 3108. 2711

8 puppies to give away to

jllftJd--lwlmo. mother roglo·
tered golden

retriever~

.JCI.!r.

gentle. Coil 61 4-992· 299r.
Flvl Wire Terrier pul)pi11.

Phone 304-882·2499.
Three femele cett one male

cot. All h01uoe broken. 30•·
1185-31597.

wood , cupboards, chairs,
chests , baskets, diahes.
stone jars, antiques. gold
and silver . Write-M . D .

Miller, Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio
45789 or coil 61 4·9927760.

A to Z Handyman Servicea.

Gonerol Hauling and Tr11h
removal SeMce.

E .
EXCAVATING
" •TRENCHING
•lACK HOE •OOzEft

'-·--•END·U)AOEII ~­

•DUM, i'IIUCK fEiiVICE

•WATER, OAti, SEWER

RAIN UNES.
County Certified
SEPTIC TARKS IN$JALLEO
· PIHBnMATH
367-7560-367-767
CHESHIRE, OHIO

3,

Lolt and Fouhd

Ldll 2 female bNgleo, mod.
tlzo. 1 Lt. ton hud, bleck
end whlto, 1 Dk. head. block
ond whlto with blue coHor.
-Co11114-742·2521 or 892·
15242.

1974 1 2•80 all olectric

mobile home. Good condi·

lion. 304-458-17113 .

1 ::-:-:---::-::------:~-

For ule 10 ac. Rio Grande,
CtJ'nterpoint Ad . Cell 814-

fairground• . Home litet Of
3 bdr. brick ranch. 2 ecre1. 1 form . 137,000 firm . Call'
mi . from Rodney, herd wood

floor. 2 lull botho, large LR ,
large kitchen . 2 cer garage,
all electric, wood burner,
good gerden ground. Se·
rio us celt era only. Priced for

quick oolo. Coli 81 4-246·
9269 .

Pomeroy, 2 story home. 2
bedroom a, living room, fam·

ily room. t18,000. Coil
614·927-9886 .

6 rooma and bath, large
entrance way, pantry. lg .
basement end attic, firepll ·
cet. finithed floors. lg. front
porch. partially insulated.
Priced to sale. Call 614·

992· 7887 or 992-5354.

446-2168.

•

•;, aero lot on Mitchell Ad.
Close to hoapitel, ru,.l

w•·

tor, city ,c:hoolo, fll,895.
Call 446-3933.
.

App{.ox. 2 acret. near Centerpoint on Rio· Centerpoini

Rd. County water ovailablo.

Southwestern School Dl•

trict. Partly wooded f2.50Cl.
Call 614-246-5405.
1.8 acre building or mob.
homo. Lot with oublllntlel
road lrontoge on old 1110
near

Porter.

All

utilit. .

ovaililblo, 83.960. Caii8143BB·SB01 .
Loti for ute. Racine. Re-

Beum Addition . 3 bdrmt.
2YJ betha, ac. wood burning
fire piece. 2 patios, woods . 2
acres, gea, TP water ,

Call 614-985-4387.

bile home for rent . nice lot.

Choohiro. Ohio. Call 304773·5882.

duced pricu. Call614-949,
2340 or 949-2671 .
36

Real Estate
Wanted

House that needs repair in
City of Gallipolis or Town·
shipa of Clay, Green 01
Gallipolis. Write to P.O . Box

1 bedroom Apt. 8196. mo. 633. Gollipolio. Oh 46831 ,

including utilities. -~ual
Houaing Opportunity. Con·

Rent als

toct Village Monor Apll.
614-992-7787.
Rivoroide Apll. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens . $1iring bucket
seats, exc. con.. $1400.

41

Houses-for Rent

1960 Ford V-8 . Flathead, Small 4 rooms &amp; bath,
8960. Call 814-992-6814. furnished. loc . 735 rear 3rd .
Avo., Gailipotio. Call 4463 br home, large lot, garden 3870 or 446-1340.
opol. 2806 Uncoln Ave.
$52.000. 304-876-6047 2 bedroom with fireplace.

after 6 p.m .

refrig . It stove. on Raccoon

Creek. $226 per mo. with
lease. Coli 446-0795 or
contract. 304-675 · 7541 446-0093.
6 room house, 1 acre on lend

evenings.
with tip out loti of extras.

304-876-6484 ofter 5 end
anytime weekends .

In town 3 or 4 bdr. houte on
Riverview Or., very nice, 1:10
pets. Inquire at Sheppardl
Sales &amp; Services, Firat &amp;

Olive St .. Gollipolio.

For Sl!ll by owner· Meadow· Unfum . 6 rm. hou01, 1 Y,
brook Addn . 3 bedroom. 2 both, utUity rm. gao INial.
c-eir, 6 mi. from town. Ret.

bath, finished basement.
fenced backyard. patio. Exc.
cond . Convenient location.
Shown by appointment

&amp; dop. required. Rent f300
per mo. piuo ut"ltieo. Call
614-446-4781 .
.

in eo· a.

5 room house 58 Mill Creek.

only. 304-676-4339. Priced
2 story house on large lot.
Broad Run Road. 7 room

32 Mobile Homes

Call Don at446·9319.

Apple Grove, W . Ve. 30.t-

676-2356 .

282-5918.
•
bly priced. Call 614-2561989.
35 ocroo off Rt. 688. bollind .

Have vacancy for invalid or
elderly penon . Private
rooms if prefered. Call 614·

for Sale

$150 per . mo .. t75 dopooit.
Call 446-1 340 or Uli3870.
Unfurnished houae in Pome.
roy. $1 00 per month plua

deposit. Call814-992-7511
after 6 p.m.

Middleport, 3 bedrm, bath
up, living rm ., kitchen,
laundry down, nice yard.

TRI - STATE MOBILE t200 a month. Cell l!ill
HOMES . USED- CARS,
614·992-2449 or
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS . Childo
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL 992-3629 .
614-446-7672.
Smell house for rent . Referlo Adults. 304-875NEW AND USED MOBILE ences
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· 1366.
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS. 42 Mobile Homes
RT 35. PHONE 614-446for Rent
7274 .

RellebJe

1977 12•60 mobile homo. 2
bdr .. lurniohed, good cond., 12•60 2 bdr. modern fur·
e20. end 840. ooch. Fint
e6,300. Call after 4 and on nished trailer, Convenient
floor only. Write · giving Keith 'o Lown Mowing &amp; weekendo. 814-268·8818 . location. Upper River R'd.
directions. Witten Pianot, Trimming Service. Rolloble
deposit req. Call 814-441Box 188. Sordio Oh 43948.' end dependable. Reeaona- 14x70 Kirkwood 2 bdr. 8668.
Cell614-483-1605 .
blo rotoo. Call 446-3159 or mobile home. Centrel A -H.
carpet, underpinning. Cell 2 bdr . trailers, no city taxea.
266-8251
'
Wanted uted treed mill
614-266-6035 or otter beautiful river view in Kaoxcorioor 304-576-2619.
neuge. Fosters Trailer Perk.
Work: Eloctricol, Remodel· 6PM. 44&amp;-8251.
ing, Plumbing, &amp; add jobo. 1 - - - - - - - - - - Cali446-1802.
&amp;hollow well pump, 304· No motter how omoll. Call 1960 Skylihe 10KIIO. 2
896-3338.
Mon - Thun .• 1 :00-6 : 30, room• &amp; beth. no kitchen. 2 BR . mobile homo. C.ll
446 4809
101 up for Sundoy School 446-0390.
'
·
·
roomo, f 1,195. No Sunday
fmplnyllll'lli
eallo. Coil 81 4·388·8370 or 1 or 2 bdr. turn. or unfum .•
nice &amp; cleonm, odulto only,
614-388-8271.
F;n,l nw l
St!l VI Lt!o

Wanted old pianos. Paying

ond dopendeble. Call 446·
31 59 between 9 and 6.

VJ tank fuel oil free, dep . req.

Puppleo. 304·876·61195.
8

6 room, 1 VJ betht, A Freme,
wall to well carpet, drilled
well , .69 of en acre. re11one ·

bath &amp; 'h $32.000. 304882-2407.

1 8 Wanted to Do

acre land. outbuMding. Exc.
cond., Jerryo Run Rood.

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

7314.

304-676-1293.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Bodo, iron,

Cock·a-poo pup, approx . 4

Will care for elderly in our
house. Man or woman , LPN
care given. Cell 614 -992 -

14•70 thru bedroom ,..;.
bile homo. 12x21 femlly

lumituretool Call614-992- 35 Lots S. Acreage
6941 .

73 12•80 Cameron 2 bdr.

Whoever took a Kerosene
heater from porch et Snow·
bell Hill residence in Syrl·
cuse, please return, no quea·
tiona ask. You may contact

months . Fomolo. Coil 814992-7478.

Owner will give hottest deal
in town! Some beautiful

187,500. Owner will help

kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Avo .
Middleport. Oh. 614-9923476.

pieo. Coil614-266-1731 .

880'o. Coil 614-367-0106.

finance or will consider tend
contract with $1600 down
lo peymonll of $660.00.

Whomever this may con·
cern : Just I me11ege to be
pe11ed on the ones that's
loved end lost . Try not to feel
10 down cause someone else
will come around. Experience it the root of love.
Tina &amp; Chris Smith .

7 Yz German Shephard pup-

Cheshire eree, 4 bedrooms.
2 VJ beth a. family room,lerge
gerege, low gea heating .

looking for . Call between 9

1819 Avo. J .. Co . Blulfo,
lowe 51501 .
Rodney Howery 814-898- rioncod . Call 614-992 7231 .
6683.

Giveaway

Homes for Sale

end 6 for interview. Inter·
views will close March 19th.

Wanted To Buy

Call 446 -7516 botwoon
Clifton , W.V. 304· 773- 9AM-4PM .
6873 .

Wanted information on Ruffcorn family of Meigs Co.
Reply to Derrett Ruffcorn,

814-692-6161 .

31

9

W. Vo . Jomoo H. Stoata &amp;
Auoc. Roo. 676-3313, BuoCall inoll 61 4-448-9340.

Georges Crook Rd.
814-448-0294.

4

32 Mobile Homat
for Sell

room. co11 or wood burner.

mo . with unlimited poten·
tiel. This could the one your

614-446-0176 .
SWEEPER and sewing me·
chine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery , Davia Vecuum
Cleaner. one half mile up

Rea l Eslale

4288177 Uc. 429 -84.

448-3672

We would like to thank every
one thetjaelped ua Celebrate
our 50th Anniversary . For
the lovely cards and the
many visita. we again say
thank you . Cheater and Ethel
Carson.

opportunity your looking
for . Cell for confidentiel
interview, elk for M. Dane.

Point Pleeaent .
Mt . Alto Auction . Every
Saturday 6 p.m. Conaign·
menta accepted 1 :00 till ule
time . Emma Bell auctioneer.

1 Card of Thanks

Mother Collie, lather 1. Call
614-388-8419.

NfW-REPAIR

Auction every Fri . night at
the Hertford Community
Center. Trucktoedt of new
merchendise every week .
Conaigmentl of new and
used merchandlte alweya
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304 - 276 -

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chev.·Oida Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

Mixed puppies, 8 wks . old.

WHITESEL
ROOFING CO.

heeting, air cond. • refriger·
1tion work . Send reaume to
Box 1 00 in cere of the

Gallipolio Doily Tribune, 825
Third
Avo., Gallipolio, Oh
sant. 8 tl116 . Furniture, toya, 46631 .
glasawere, men, women ,
teen, children. clothea, baby RARE OPPORTUNITY :
Items. shoes. much more.

Pom•roy, Ohio

Ann oun ce ment s

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

22 Money to Loan

Jefferson Ave .• Point Plea -

Full Service Auctioneer :
Merlin Wedemeyer , Rio
Grande. Oh. Ucenaed &amp;

YOUNG'S

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

Help Wanted

of f1 8.000. with no Umit.
Car n...11ory. Could be tho

AND

Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio

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

If you are interested

21. _ _ _ _ __

15. _ _ _ _ __

2/20/ 1 mo.

Authorized John Dnre.
New Holl1nd. Bus~ Hor
Firm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment

105,000 ITU-WII '657.10

19, -__,--:.._ _
20.
21.

'------- ----7. _ _ _ _ __

•Full Factory Warranties
•Free Delivery
•Site Checks
.
•Complete Systems &amp;
•Installation

Sizes St1rt From 12'x16'

ALi. FARMERS
Our A&amp;ronomy Special·
ist will be on hand from
9:30A.M. to 3 P.M. Wed.
M1rch 14, 1984.
If you want an ipiiOintment
Call Lawrence
64-992-2181

120.000 ITU-W11 '603.30 11.

1 ')For.Sale

614-662-5311

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE , OHIO

PAT HILL FORD

NOTICE

CLEAR OUR FLOOR!
BUY. of A Lifetime
Ono WHk 0~1}'1 Ctoh. &amp; Carry
I-AMANA LOW BOY
GAS FURNACE
t20.000 lTU-W11 1721.31
NOW 1650.00
2-AIIANA UP•FLDW
GAS FURNACES

13. _ _ _ _........
14. _ _ _ _ __

He,;cf,ltJ.JI 1, ·r -~

Baohan Building

VAUGHA~~~L BAKERY

Phon•------~----------

11. _ _.;._._ __
. }2.._..:,..._ _ _ __

912-3325

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

RADIATOR
SER'.IIICE

IIIODLEPDRT - 2 bed·
room home on Mill St. Has
bath, furnace, lg. enclosed
porch and storage bldg. For
$21,000.

SYRACUSE - 2 level lots
w~h 1 six room, one floor.
home. Bat~. utility, carpet•
ing and nice kitchen. Just
$25,000. .

GUN SHOOT

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

CHESHIRE - Lg. level gar·
den spot. 3 bedroom ranch,
natural gas FA furnace, 01k
floors and nice kitchen. Asking $39,900.

POMEROY - Nice 2 story 3
bedroom home with full basement. Hot water furnace
·and modern k~chen within
walking of stores. Only
$39,000.

Ohio

bonded for State of Ohio.
Call614-246·6152 .

'

VIRGIL I. SR.
2.. r.. 2nd Sl.
Phone ·

Guysville,

Ph.

11

Full Ume cook·•ld• pootlon HOME LOANS FIXEO UH&lt;I 2 bedroom molllle
ovellobe. For 11:30 to 8PM RATES Below morbi roteo. homoo,
fumlohocl. 10iol0
&amp; Vicinity
ohlft. Food Hrvo experlenco Flxod convontlonol FHA1 2d2 •••••· Your
• pluo. Apply ot Iconic Hillo VA . Ludor Mortgoge, end
to own a comfortaHurling Center, Mon.-Fri .. 8 AtiMino, collect 81:4-1192- chance
ble home. llrowna ......,
3051.
to
4:30.
E.O.E.
Floe Market. Seturday, April
Court. MlnerevMie. Oh. 8142Sth·8 to 5. Symmoo Valley
982-3324.
High School, Aid, Ohio. • 10.· Immediate full· limo poolllon 23 Prof111lonal
rentel opaco for dulero. Call avoiloble •• client ropr.-.
Mobile homo for ..... 14x70
Service a
814-843-2288.
tetlve for Advocecy &amp; Pro·
8oyvlew, 2 bedroom. doll.
tectlvo 8ervicH, Inc. Mlm. 1
- - -- - - - -o.c., und.,.pinnod. f10,1100.
bocholoro d•· PIANO TUNING Lower Cell982-7380
'FLEA MARKET DEALERS' 'NCIIIIQrnenta
.
in ocitlol wortc, poychol- priced roguior tuningo · 1- - -- -----:::::::
Be port of thelargell merl&lt;et gru
ogy
or
related
fleldo.
Send
In 3 oteteo. The Pride and rHume to Donald Walkor, diocounllto SoniorCitizent, 1 2•80 2 bedroom 1881
Tobocco Flu Martcot hao C·O
Schoolt. Word'o trailer for oolo. f3,700, 1108
Gallipolit Dovolopmon- Churchet&amp;
eddltion opaco for 500 dul- 1-' Cent.,.,
Keyboard. 304-875-3824. lumoca. No Sundoy colla,
OelllpoHo,
Oh
' "· We've got you covered 45831 . Ruumu will not be
814-387-0120.
rain or thine. Join tho conoidorod oftor March 23, Piano Tuning end Repair .
crowdt 11 thit booming 1884.
Brunlcardi Muoic Co .. 448- For Hlo, 12x85, 3 bedrocon!
merl&lt;et. f5 a day lnoido, f3
0887. Skill and intogrity our mobile home. f7500. Cell
outolde. North 28th 8tr_l - - - - -- - - - tredemertc. Une Daniela. 814-742 -2274.
Huntln"'on, wv. Cell Erwin, Junior Student Pogo Chock 814-742-2851 .·
•·
book thelvet for correct
1Ox55 New Moon. 2 Hdmi.
304-1123·2131 .
order. Prefer 14 or 15 yr. old
BOOKKEEP- opplionceo, wooiMir &amp; dfytlr,
otudenll. 3 dayo o -k. 2 THOMPSON
ING Monthly ond Querterly vinyl underpinning, pooch
each doy, U .OO per account•
.. " '"pfj:ii8iiiirif .... houro
welcome. 428 Se- included. Good - n condl·
hour. Cell 448-REAO.
cond Ave. CaN 446·1138.
tion . f3850. Call 304-182·
&amp; Vicinity
3673 oftor 5 p.m.
Experienced Service miln for

8

1319. 16. 21c

II. l."Bud" McGHEE
Brohr-Auctlon Service
Chtryl Le111iey,
Mel1s County Associete
Phone 742-3171

M ary Hobstener.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

PDQ SATELLITE SYSTEMS
Rt. 329

Yard Sale

·-····Galliponi·········

M e1gs County Bo ard
of CommiS SIO ners

Real Eatate General

Co mmiS SI On er s reserve the
nght to accept or re,ect any or
all ~ ~d s. or anv part thereof

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

7

Clerk

.I

The Meogs County

For all your wlrin&amp;
needs; furnaces repair
service 1nd instillation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 992·5875

Complete Gutter Work
Compl•te Remodelin&amp;
Roofin&amp; of all Types
Worked In home area
20 yeera
"Frtt htlm1tn"

lit !'

...... c:... u

MILLER
.. ELECTRIC
SERVICE

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

/BIIf'IMJin, l #lf'pl&amp;mtf' uden,w• ...

.. .

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

35185 01k Hill Ro1d
Lon1 Bottom, OH. 45743
PH. (614) 985-4212
We Use Von Schrlder
. Equipmnt Recommended
by leadinr C1rpet Manufacturers .
'FREE ESTIMATES"
2-27·1 mo.

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

11

Help Wanted

21

Business
Op'p ortunity

Soil the boll. ooll AVON.
March Special· 1 low otort·
I NOTICE I ·
uo,fu. Call814·448-3358. THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHINO CO. rocommendo .
NHd o lody to llva In· my that you do buoineoo with
home In Guyaville, Ohio to people you know, and NOT
help take cere of my Jnvelld

FOUND Dodermon, male, wife. Room, meelo, peroonal
on Rt. 35 Wut Virginia. uH of laundry room and •
304-343· 1898 or 343· oolery WI ogrH on in return
2494.
for wortc. Rov. H.L. McDo·
nlel, P.O. Box 48, St-•rt.
FOUND B!eck Anguo coif In Ohio 4&amp;178 or call 814vtclnity Hidden Velioy golf · 6112· 4880 or 814·1112·
coUIII . 304·675-4271.
8825.

to aend money through the

mail until you hove lnveotigated tho offarlng.

1-----.....:___

14x70 Windoor, total elect·
ric, CA. front &amp; blick own-

Call814· 268-1636 WD be·
lore 2PM .

room , llko now . Cell
814-245-9328.

Coli 446·9689.

10x311 pertlally remodeled,
oloc Golden Folcon compor,
28 ft. eolf contained. Call

3 bdr. all electric. 14JII70.
fum. trailer with wether -;&amp;
dryer, on private lot with

inga. underpinning. 2 bed·

814-~88·81186 .

- -- - - - -- Owner muot oell . 1980

2 bdr. mobile home for rent.

gordon opot, f200 mo. Pluo
utilitieo. dop. roq. Coil 61A,
266-1393.

14xl4 Uberty mobile home.

Loll of extrao. Price to ooll.
Coli 446·3227.

For Sale or Lo01e, Country 12xll0 Champion 2 bdr., g01
Corryout.Daii,UpperRivor fumance. WB, drepeo. op·
Rd. Galllpollo, Ohio. Call _piiencei. new corptlting, on
814-446·2192orS14-4411· rented lot. •5.985. Call
9171 .
448-3933.

Very nice. 1 bdr. mobile
home. completely turn .•
new gas fumence &amp; air
cond.. patio with ewnir1g

and off 8troet perking . E•collent location. in Gallipolis

city. Mull hove dep . &amp; ref.
Call 446-4169.

--- ~.

..

••

�•

10-- The

Page-

42

Daily Sentinel

Mobile Homes
for Rent

They'll Do It Every Time

54

2 &amp; 4 bdr. mobile home. Call
446 -0508 or 446· 1609.

Two bed roo m , 843 112 Sa·
cond Ave .. Gallipolis. One
bedroom , trailer , Eureka.

614· 266·

M obi le ho m e for rent , in

Racine . Ca ll 614 · 367 ·
7148 .
2 bedrm mobile home for
rent, nice lot. Cheshire.

Ohio . Call 304· 773-6882 .
WITH OPTION TO BUY, 14'
wide

all

electric

mobile

home , setting on lot ready to
move into. 8200.00 down

$ 175 .00 MONTH . 304·
576 -2711 '

14x70 three bedroom mo·
bil e home, partly furnished ,
12x2 8 family room. coal or
wood burner, acre land.
outbuilding, excellent cond,
$275 . 00 in advance ,
s 100 .00 deposit, reference ,
Jerry s Run Road , Apple

Grove . W.Va . 304 -675 ·
2356 .

43 Farms for Rent
For rent , 40 acres crop land
in Harrisonville area . Call
614 -742 -3033.

Wanted to rent , Hay bottoms in Rutland area. Call
614-742 -2925 .

49

For Lease
Antique china cabinet S.
buffet. Call614·367-7106 .

Merchandise

64 Misc. Merchandise

51

H ouse h 0 ld G oo d S

Apartment
for Rent

Riverside Apts. Middleport.
'- .., Spacial rates for Senior
\;itlzens. 8 130.. Equal Hous·
i"- ..._f)pportunities . 61499P"~J,

For rent , ; room furnished
apartment . Call 614·949·
2253.
2 bedrm apt. in Middleport,
8175 . plus utilities. Call
614·992· 5545 daytime &amp;
949-2216 evening.

TV &amp; Appliances. 627 Third
Ave .. Gollipolit, 614-446·
1699. Spin washers. goa &amp;
electric dryen , auto
washers, ga1 &amp; electric
ranges, refrigeratori, TV
sets.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waihers, dryera, refrigerators. ranges. Skaggs Ap·
pliance1, Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Crest Motel.
614 -446 -7398 .

APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 814 -446 ·
8221 .

Sofa. chair, refrigerator, ga1
range, upright freezer. Corbin &amp; Synder. 955 2nd.
Ave .. Gallipolis. 446· 1171 .

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
irJcome of less than
8-12 300. Renting for 30
perc'ent "o f adjusted Income.
Phone 304·875· 8679 .

French Prov. formal DR 1et,
new cond., 8500 firm . Call
446· 8237.

Nice one bedroom apt .•
unfurnished. phone 304675· 2218, 8 till 8.
Nice 1 bedroom. utilities
piid, partially furnished in
Pt . Pleasant . 304-61'5 ·
7112 .

Fbr rent Slaeplng Rooms
and light house keeping
reoma . Parte Central Hotel.
qall 614·446·0756.
Sleeping room e116. utili·
tiet paid. Shore bath; male
only. Range &amp; refrig . 919
2nd. Ave .. .Gallipolis. Call
446-44111 after 7 PM.

46

Space for Rent

. COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North ·Of
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Call
614·992-7479.
Orte half acre lot trailer
apace. e5o.oo month. 3
milat to BJdwall Schools.
Call 304~1175· 77411.

Antiques

FOR LEASE approximately
20 acres of hay. Phone
1· 304-675 -4287.

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gallipolis. Naw
S. used wood &amp; coal 1toves,
6 piece wood living room
Furnished efficiency. 8145 . suite with 6 inch flat arm•
Utilities paid . ~ Share bath . 8399, bunk beds complete
607 2nd. Gallipolis. Call with bunkiet S199, 2 piece
446 ·4416 after 7 PM .
antron livingroom suites
S199, antron recliners $99.
other recliners $80. maple
JACKSON ESTATES dinette sets $179, box
APARTMENTS (Equal springs &amp; mattre11 twin or
Housing Opportunity) has full $100 set regular-firm
one and two bedrooms. rent $120, maple dinette chairs
starting at $157 for one S35. wash ttandt S34,
bedroom and $193 per maple rockers $59. 7 piece
month for two bedroom, chrome dinette tat 8149, 5
with $200 deposit located piece dinette set $99. u1ed
near Foodland and Spring bedroom suite•. refrigeraValley Plaza, pool and TV tors. range•. che1t, dre11ers,
ant. Call 446· 2745 or leave wringer washers. TV's, drymessage.
ers. &amp; shoes. Call614·446·
3159.
Furnished apt .• 1 bdr., 920
4th Ave ., Gallipolis. $225
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
utilities pd.. Adults. Call Sofa. chair, rocker. otto446 ·4416 altar 7 PM .
man, .3 table•. (extra heavy
by Frontier), $686. Sofa,
Small efficiency apart., cen- chair and loveseat, $276.
tral airS. heat, 1 professtonal Sofao and chairs priced from
type gentleman only. 446 - $285 . to $895. Tableo, 845
0338.
and up to $125. Hide·• ·
bedt, S440 . and up to
Furnished apt .• near HMC . 2 $625 .. Recliners, $175. to
bdr .. 8235, utiltilet pd .. 243 $375. , Lamps from $28. to
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis . 875 .6 pc. dinettes ·from
Call 446 -4416 after 7 PM.
899., to 435. 7 pc. S189
and up. Wood table with oix
2 bdr. apts .. newly deco· chairs $425 to $745. Desk
rated. utilities part. paid, $110 up to $225. Hutches.
axe. location . Medium in- $550 . and up, maple or pine
come families . A-One Real finioh . Bunk bed complete
Estate, Carol Yeager Broker. with mattre1ses, $260. and
Howard L. Yeager Ill sales- up to $395. B~by beds.
man . Call 304-675-5104 or $110. Mattres1es or box
3~4 - 675-5386 .
1pring1, full or twin, *68.,
firm, S68 . and $78. Queen
New 2 bdr. apts. unfurn., seta, 8195. 4 dr. chettt,
equip. kitch. 5 miles out Rt. $42. 5 dr. cheats, S54. Bed
141, 8225. Call 446 -4477 frames. S20.and *25., 10
or 446· 3888 .
gun . Gun cabinets, $3110.
Ga• or electric range• $316.
Unfurnished 2 BR in Crown Baby mattreues. $25 &amp;
City. 256· 6520.
S35. bed frames $20. $26,
&amp; 830, king frame *110.
Furnished apartment. two Good selection of bedroom
bdr .• washer and dryer. suites, cedar chests ,
Adults only. Deposit and rockers , metal cabineu,
reference required . 11• mi. off swivel rockers.
Rt . 7 on Georges Creek Rd .
Call 446·4571 .
Used Furniture -- Bar S. 2
stools, range1, chairs. dry1 bedroom Apt. 8196 . mo. ers, refrigerators and TV 's. 3
including utilities. Equal miles out Bulaville Rd. Open
Housing Opportunity. Con- 9am to &amp;pm, Mon. thru Fri .,
tact Village Manor Apts. 9om to 5pm, Sot.
614·992-7787.
614-446-0322

44

CB radio, Browning Mark 3
with slider &amp; new D 104.
8350. 11 in. portable color
TV, good con .. S50.00. Call
614-949-2994.

53

Washer and dryer In A·1
shape. Sears heavy duty,
harvest gold, 8300. Call
446·0486 .
23 cu.ft . deep freezer. Call
446-9478 .

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12"·22" stocked
In yord. HEAP vender ,
prompt delivery. 614· 256·
6246 .

1----------

Ume1tone. Sand. Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son. Call 446· 7785.
Will cut and deliver fire wood. Call614·266·1528.

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor-outdoor facil ities .
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Call614·446·
7795 .
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
614·367 -722 0 .

High Tensile Fencing. High
quality. low cost. Available
at: Eno General Store-614·
388· 9038 or Yauger Farm
Supply-304-675·2078. For
in 1tallation information :
Cardinal State Fencing .
Clayton L. Reed. 632 Apt.
10. Cro11 Lanes Dr .• Nitro,
wv 25143. 304· 776-6628.
Free estimates.

Briarpatch Kennels Professional All -breed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cilities. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call614 · 388·
9790.
Oragonwynd Cattery ·
Kenn els. AKC Chow pup·
pies, CFA Himalayan, Per sian and Siamese kittens .
Call614-446 -3844 after 6 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

Registered English Setter
pupa, 875. 74 Maverick.
S200. Call 446· 7152.

2 AKC male beagles, 1 yr.
old . Good pro1pect for gun
dogs. S50 a piece or S85 for
pair. Benny Wilson. Racine.
call614·949·2543.

Hide-a-bed perfect condi tion. Call614-245-5546 .
Saw mill 1981 modal Bell
t&amp;ws, 40' blade with steel
bale, axe. cond. Call 6.14388· 9387 eve.
Brand new 38 cal. Rossi 4 in.
barrett. new halster, 2 full
boxes of shells S1 00. 30 gal.
aquarium, axe. cond., with
1tand, hood tight, heater end
pump S100. Call446·8114
anytime.

61

166 Massey Ferguson; 130
Farmall with cultivators; 26
ft . trailer; harrow; tobacco
baler with cylinder. All in
e111cellent condition.
Call
446· 7838 or 256-9325.

Gold reellnar roC~~M. t!IQ.
Call 304-8711·.11858 altM 4
p.m.

Transporlalion
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eatt·
ern Ave.. Gallipolis. Call
614 -446·2282 .

with Major Hoople "'

B.• R. WOOD SHOP. Patio ·
furniture. picnic tables and
novahlat. Call 304· 8711·
54011.

71

Autos for Sale

72

Trucks for Sale

1977 Mercury Monarch,
PS. PB. air cond.. auto.
trans, good cond .. •1 .895.
Callll14· 388·9905 or 614·
446 -9644 .

72 Chevy 'h ton pickup 327
engine, 4 speed, new tlr11
e1100. · after II p.m. 304·
5711· 2738.

1977 Pontloc Ventura. PS.
PB, V-llenglne, good cond ..
S1,750 . Call 1114· 388 ·
9905 or 614·387·71124.

73

1979 Ford Pinto Runabout,
axe. cond.. S1.895. Call
614-388 -9905 or614· 367·
7624.
75 Monte Carlo need• en gine work. Call 1114· 245·
9283.
1978 Grand Prix low mi ..
AM -FM , air, new radial•.
clean . Book *3.800. priced
$3,200 . Ctll 614· 245 ·
5131 .

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

VW bus-van and Ford tractor, both In good condition .
Call 814·388· 9809.
1980 Chevy Scotldala 4x4,
48.000 mlleo. 1hot1 bed.
e5.700. Call 446 -2107 or
614· 367-0107.
1981 Chevy 1'1 ton van. 3
tpd, AM ·FM tape, raol nice.
e4,4911. John's Auto Solos,
Bullavllle Rd. Gallipolis. Call
4411-4782. Open til dark.

1989 Ford Van, 6 cyl ..
automatic, Naw tires. look•
1981 Chevy Chevette, auto, good. runt good. *1100. c . u
oir. t3,195. 1981 Chevy 814-949-2907.
Chevette, auto, t3.1911.
1980 Renoult LeCar 4 apd,
air, AM · FM tape, sunroof. 74 Motorcycles
82.4911. ~ 979 Plymouth! - - - - - - - - - Horizon, 4 opd, 82,396.
1979 Buick Skyhewk, auto.
air, AM· FM tape, *2,495 . 1981 Honda CR 450, 1otl of
John 's Auto Sales, Bullavllle new porta, e950. Call 814·
Rd, Gallipolis. Call 4411· 2511· 6089.
4782 . Open til dark.
78 Hondo 185 with utru.
1979 Trant AM t-top. 403. 2.9115 mllet . new cond.,
V-8, very sharp, e5,595 . *1100. Coil 614·21111· 111111 .
Call 4411·0577.
1981 Honda CXIIOO Cut·
1972 Codllloc loaded. full tom water cooled, shaft
power. very good condition. drive. low milage, extras.
Shorp. Call614· 367-01174.
11 .795. Call446·0577.
drum Mt.
1973 98 Oldt fully
equipped, one owner. good 1977 Honda 750, Fa FILE
tranoportatlon . Call 4411 · ERROR
8624 after II:OOPM .
75
Boats and
19114 Chevy Belair. Power
Motors for Sale
ataering. 59.000 miles. n palnt. Interior good. Runt
good. II cyt. automatic. Soars 12 ft . Gomeflthor
$1,200 or trode. Call 814· boet ond trailer. 1800. Call
247·4292.
814·985·3623.
19711 Cutlatt Dymo. 1
owner. Very good condition.
Call 814 -742·2539 after 5
p.m.
78 Oldt Delta 88 Royale, 4
dr. Sedan, clean throughout,
no ru1t , good rubber, good
condition . Call 614· 992·
5786. Priced on in1pection.
1977 Grand Prix ,
S1 ,980.00. New paint. new
vinyl top. Phone 304-675·
6289.
1980 Toyota Cellca, outo·
matic. air, sun roof, am-fm.
pt. 83900. firm . After 7
p.m. 304-875-7547.
' 69 Oldt, front wheel drive,
axe. cond.. esoo.oo call
between 9 : 00am to
2:00pm. 304· 675·21165 .
1979 Plymouth Horizon,
axe. cond.. *2.175 .00. Call
304· 675 -2295.
'75 Mercury, Monorch 250
three speed. 85711.00. 304·
675·1326.
1974 Dodge Challenger.
excellent condition, radial
tires. now point In 1981.
e2400. 304-1175·5308 af.
tor 5 p.m .

72

Trucks for Sale

1981 C· 10 Chevy Fleet·
wood pickup, 8ft. bad &amp;
topper, 6 cyl., 3 tpd._. stand.
with gougos, PS. PB, reor
step bumper, new tlre1,
stereo ca1Htte radio. Call
614· 246-11559.
1979 Ford F-1110 L:ariet PB.
PB, air' con d. Priced to tell,
axe. cond·. Call 814· 388·
9905 or 1114 · 367 - 752~.
1976 Ford F·100, 49,000
mi .. good cond.,radlo, tape,

1977 Sao Stor Boot Boot.
115 Evinrude motor. Mercury trolling motor. Depth
finder, all acceto.. *4200.
Callll.1 4· 992· 71139 .
Correct Craft • Ski Su·
preme, family tkl boats.
New It uHd. Parkartburg.
WV 304·422 -8433 or 304·
422· 2387.

8\!und Datliln • atarlj) with
AM·FM, turntable lnd B·
25 . 304-1175·
71771

uiclo . .,

:,t

GENE ' S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN.
scotchguard -water ••traCtion. deodorizers. FREE lttl·
mate1. Reasonable ratea.
Gene Smith. 992·11308.

HE KHEI'I THAT
A THIIEAT 10

-·

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

471 Dietel engine .
$850 . 00 . 671 angina
e1 .000. 3117-0241 late ev·
ening1.
Uke new. headert and duel
exhau1t •v•tem for 19731982 'h or 'A ton Chevy
pickup, will fit 283 through
400 small block motor,
asking $100. Call614-742·
2373 .
Rear window · aluminum
Louver . Fltt 1970 · 74
Comero or Flreblrd e110.00.
Excellent condition. Phone
614·247·2012 after 5 p.m .
or Paul's Barber Shop, Ra·
cine, Ohio.
Billy Lee' s Tlreo and Battery
Stlat. Naw end used tlr11,
alto. tire repairs. 1803 Jaf·
lorton Ava. Point Pleasant.
304·675·54011. Now open
24 hrs. 1 day, m'chanlc on
duty.

77

Auto Repair .

fatty TrH Trimming, atump
removal . Call 304· 1171 ·
1331 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rlanced roofing. Including
hot tor appllcotlon, carpon·
ter, electrician. mason. Call
304 -675 -2088 or 11711 ·
41180.
Wotar Wollt. Commercial
and Domestic . T11t holu.
Pumps Salao and Service.
304· 895-3802.

.

GET your carpet SHIP · •
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN -::
STEAMER . Wotlf removal, "'
furniture cleaning, froo attl·
mates. 304·1175-22g5.
Stork 's Tree • Lawn. Cora.
Landscaping potlo, awning
and undarpennlng. Bockhoa
work. For complete 1-n
core. Call 304· 5711· 2010.
InJured.

82

E • V Body Shop Custom
painting , A · C welding .
Georges Gre.. - Rd. 441·
9304.

979 F d C ri
Pu 4
1
or
ou ar
•
spd., r•dlo. real sporty,
*2,39&amp;. John' t Auto Salol,
BullivfHa Rd. Galllpolla.eall
4411·47B2. Open til dark.

78 '

'Cemping
EqulpiJ'1nt

~

--·,

~

The4's d
quard!

,

Wicker 8. Wallet into
what
it is
todBLJ!

Plumbing
Heating

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
:or. Fourth and Pine
Galllpolio, Ohio
Phone 814·4411· 388B or
614· 446·4477
JIM' S PLUMBING. HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1, Box 31111. Galli·
polls. Collll14·3117·011711.
SHULAW'S PlumiMng and
Hooting, Rt. 2 Neal Road.
Point Pleatont, W.Vo. 304·
876 -5420. Ucansad ond
InJured .

•

~

•

•

'o

•0

Excavating

..•

.

0

~Vellill~ tel~isUJll listi~s------------~------------------m-N_B_A_B•_•_ko-t~-,-,,-ao-.t-on----9-:3_0__B
__CIJ_ ffi__M_a_m_a-·a-Fa_m_ll_y__~~~~~-~-1-.A---~--.-,~--~;;;;,~~~~9ij
FRIDAY

Good-1 Excavotlng, bale·
ment1, footers, driveway1,
septic tankl, landlctplng.
Call anytime 1114· 4411 ·
4637, Jarneo ~ - Davloon. Jr.
owner.

.9

Dotson' s Tree Service. In·
aured • Free Eotlmote. 304·
578· 2897.

&amp;

Electrical
Refrigeration

"

Paoquale Electric Co. all
phuea of electric work, all
work guaranteed . Aerial .
truck rantol. 614 -448 ·
40811.
SEWING Machine repolrs.
11rvice. Aut119rlzed Singer
Soles &amp; Service Bhorpen
Scluora . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 614·992· 2214.

85

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER 8ER·
VICE. CeH 1114·3117-7471
or 814· 317·0,111.
Need something hauled ·
away or tornet.hlng moved?
We~ll' do 9it. Call
4411· 31119
b t
d•
· e ween an u .
• ., "
Drive waya·Limutone
hauled • lprled. Collll14·
379·2133 or 114·378·
oa . Charleo Eh'!lan.
211_ _ _ _ _...;._ __
_,_
JIM&amp; WATE,R SERII,ICE .
Coli Jim Lanier, 304· 11711·
7 397 ·
·

'87

Upholatery

· TRI STATE
,
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11113 Sic. Ave., Gallll!ollt.
114-4411·7833 orll14·4411·
1833.;
.

'-:-'----...

___ _

()) e

EVENING

J .A .R . Construction Co .
Water Line•. Footan,
Drsint. All kindo of Ditching.
·Rutland. Oh . 1114· 742 ·
2903.

84

8:30 Cil Super Book
(JJI Webster
(I]) Wall Stroot WMk Louio
Au keyser analyzes the '80s
with a weekly review of
economic and investment
maners.
8:00 • (I)(!) lagrMn
(]) 700 Club
I]) NCAA Tonight
(J) • (JJI Blue Thunder
e (J) (ID Dalloo Clayton'o
sister J11sica arrives It
Southfork for her brother's
wedding. (80 min.)
(!])Lao Bu101glla
1:30 ill 1884 NCAA lletketblll
Chemplonohlp: First Round
. Game 9
1:411 (]) TIS Evening N1w1
10:00. (%)CD Naw Show
Cil MOVIE: 'A Fomlly
~lkfl Down'
C1J .. (JJI Man Houston
D Cll ® Falcon Croat
Maggio io running out of
time 11 her tumor rapidly
grows and Angela regains
half of Falcon Crest. (80

3/18/84
8:00 • (J)(J). (J) ®
Naw1
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(J) MOVIE: 'Some Tlmo,
Next Yu(
(J) MOVIE: 'Going In Style'
(J) N- TrMsuro ~unt
(J) Coil. lleoketblll Report
'Firtt Round Update of the
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CIJ Andy Griffith
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(J) Dr. Who
(I]) 3-2·1, Contoot
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8:30 e (J) ffi NBC Newt
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(J) e (JJI ABC NeW.
• (J) ® C88 Newt
(J) tlualnosa Report
(I]) Working Wornon
7:00 G (J) PM Mogorlne
(J) Hero Como tha Brides
I]) 1184 NCAA Batketbell
Champlonlhlp: Firat Round
-Oome8
(J) Hogan' a Heroa1
(J) Entortolnmont Tonight
ffi Cho~lo'a Angola
e (J) WhMI .of Fortune
(J) (I]) MocNeii/LAhror

([) Beaoh Boyl 20th
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(I]) MOVIE: 'LAurel ond
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t0:15 CilMenotWorltlnConcert
This Australian rock group
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Ctllfcrnla.
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10:30CilBiondle
11 :00 e Cil (J) G (J) ®
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(J) Another Lila
())All in tho Family
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(J) Kingston Trio and
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11:111 (J) MOVIE: '46 Hours' ·
t t :30 e (J) CD Tonight Show

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• &lt;DI Mualo M11azlna
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CD I Married Joan

1:00

(]) EI'N's SldeUnM
(IJ Enterulnment Tonight
(JJI Newt
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(J) Love Thit Bob
(]) 1184 NCAA Basketball
Chemplonehlp: Flrtt Round
· Oome tO
Cll Btor Soor&lt;~h
(JJI CNN Headline Newt
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(J) Bachelor Fother
(J) N-wa/Sign Off
()D CNN Headline NIWI
(J) MOVIE: 'Tho Happy
Hooker'
(J) Lifo of Alloy
Cll 700 Club
Cil Caven Behind the
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()) 1184 NCAA a..ketbell
Championship: Firat Round
" Game 1 1
(J)
MOVIE:
'Sophie's
Choice'
(J) MOVIE: 'Going In Style'
(J) Rott Begley

e

1:30

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2:00

2:30
3:00
3:15
3:30

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Jefferson•
7:30
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(J)
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Tonltht
• Ono Day It I Tlmo
8:00 • (J) ffi Matter Mox end
the Mlltar try to help a
mother and deughtar gat
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dangerouo land boron. (80
min.)
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(J) MOVIE: 'The Entity'
(J) MOVIE: 'loo•enger
Hunt'
tlnimy and LAMie

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(J) Catllnl
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3:41
4:11
4:30

SATURDAY

,

: Award,wlnning._n~ol
, aorlu Starring . Joe 'FIIhorty, Eur;no Lavy, Andrea

~

M ~8A,.'T':;~ort.

·

12:30

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UPN'a lnticle' Footblll
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Nlll\t- Traoko
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[Closed Captioned]
CI)(JD Whiz Kids Richie
ond Farley try to rescua a
'talking' dolphin that has
baen kidnapped by fora•gn
~ants . (60 mi n.)
CIJ Sentimental Journay1
(I]) Dr. Who S-Ial
1111 Kentucky High School
Batketbell State Cham·
plonthlp
B:30 D CIJ ffi Silver Spoons
Conclusion. Ricky blames
himself for bringing about
0 romance betwaan his
father and a friend's di·
vorced mothar.
9:00 D (IJ ffi. Wo Got It Made
()) 111 (JJI Love Boat A
scentless perfume ruins an
inventor's chance at love . a
femme fatale surprises Julie and a model's obses·
sion with food jeopardizes
her career. (60 min.)
[Ciooad Captioned]
Ill (J) (ID MOVIE: 'Mickey
Spillane's Murder Mo.
Murder You'
-

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gogomontweotopodattha
Hamilton Place Theatre In
Hamilton. Ontario.
(J) Allaa Smith and JonM

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partner

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8 Quite
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out
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16 Kill
19 Member
of the cast

3% Malediction
33 Take up

membership
21 Japanese
36 Hebrew
volcano
lyre
24 Enwnerated 39 Wager
25 Province
le Shinto
of Canada
temple

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Man's
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13 V'tality
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15
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10:30 Cil To Be Announced
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11:00 D CIJ (J) Ill ()) ® Ill (JJI 17 At a
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distance
Cil MOVIE: 'Without a
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18
Trace'
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Weatern Goals Endow- 20 " Mr.
mont
director
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city
Cll All-limo American 23lndication
Songbook
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26
11 :16 (I) TIS Evening News
brogans
11 :30 • (2) ttl Saturday Night %7 Latest word
Live
(sl. )
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28 Quantity
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(abbr.)
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e Stor Trok
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Thlt II Your Lifo
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How tho Watt Woo

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advice-to-the·lovelorn col·
umn.
(I) Not Necas~rily Movies
0 00 D "",., y 11
Ron
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(l) Mora All-New Unexpur·
gated Benny Hill This

rehabilitate juvenile gang
membeJ$. (60 mi n.)

EVENING
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12:00

at Atlonta
()) Gl (JJI T.J. Hooker
Hooker porouadeo • friend
to return to her dangerous
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h 1
old naighborhoo to e P

3( 17/84

Twllltl t Ieino
ICT'ol •1 The comical
chronlclel of mythical Ma.
lonvlllo tolovlllon channel
. SCTV continuo In .lll·now
editions ·of tho Emmy

'
11:41

· -IOfi'lftll·loul Linda Cartar..tr'lcel-tha lnfluenoa• that
hiYI t lhlped har Olr&amp;lr
with ouatt ttaro Eddie Rabblit on4 len Vereen. (80
mho.)
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Wogon'

11.

'I

I spent my life building

&amp;

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

-- -·-· ·- - - . --

I'm Walt Wallet.
afQunderof
this firm!

We can't
git in!

topper, 82100
or batt .offer.
Callll14·
2511· 1371.
N-fandoro&amp;dooro. Chevy
fan'dara U4.911. Chevy
dOol'l •1111. Ford ferrdert
e111. Callll14-2511·12110.

Slfil&amp; -

'

RON ' S Televlolon Service.
Specializing In Zanltll and
Motorola, Ouazar, and
house calla. Call 304· 11711·
2399 or 814 -4411· 24114.

DOZER WORK By Tad
Hanna. pondo. dltohet,
b11aments, etc. Call 1114· •
446·4907. Carter &amp; Evans
Transportation.

76

ANNIE I'IOULO

BRING MR. liM,

Concrete work • Driveway, ::
Jidewalk,basem•nte, act. ~
Free estimates. CaH 1114· 992-2752.
::

111 It flbar gluo runabout
boat, 80 hp, Johnson motor
Good cond. good okl boat
8900. 304· 8711· 1800 Ilk
for Jim Lively.

,. _,... ...

.' .

TOMORR~O~w:;,·/iilf""~

Dick Fuller Home, Improve •..:_ ;.:
menta. Corpantry·Piumblnz
and Electrical. Formerly D -:...,
F Contractoa. Call 441·- 1
3313 .
::::

83

1880 Chavol.a C10 Dletal • 79 Motors Home•
· 8t .Cilmpe,rs
plolcup, a.o .. a.m.,t.m.. P.S.. .
P. B .. eutomatic, •4200;
FARM· IOU!PMENT1 .18f.Q.
.latoh B - r Ill, w~h fr11nt
BURDETTE CAMPER
end · loedor, e4300. Call
S,ACE!I &amp; BERVICE, U.S.
after 8 p.m. 892· 7384.
At. 10, Coolvtlla, Oh 1114·
.. .
71 Chevrolet 'Ao ton, good ' 1117· 33811.
thapo, ,... Jll!int. gocicl tlrat.
30 tt, Cotc~man lith wh..l
304·1175·2147.
campor· trallar. Call 114·
' 3.17-7108. .

Firewood for aale. Come and
gat uo a load, Uo dell·
vered. Call 304·1175-21191 .

CAPTAIN EASY
M!RI ARB YOUR COSTUMiS .--.,.,
FOR TH&amp; CELf:BRATIO"'

Alum. vinyl tiding, ttorm
doora. windowe, guttara.
roofing and room addition.
Callll14·317·0409.

12 ft Saara v . Bohon olumi·
num boat. 7 1,.11, hp motor
t400. 304-875 -3489.

8e.rs 9x12 tent and pro;
19711 Chevy Pickup truck. II pane camp stov,o, 2 bumars, ,
1 fuel tonk, axe: cond..
cyl.. 4 tpd .. ~ ton, goo~
condition, ctll altar II p.m. · 304· 11711·8912.
1114·742· 31411.
---------

BALE ENDS . MARCH 2711
WORLD BOOK ENCYC·
LOPEDIA SALE. Rag. t499.
Bale 8374. Bave t125.
t .armt •1 0 . 00 down;
•22.00 a month. 304· 8'711·
3775.
.

,. . . ,

Fertilizer

==========1==========~

For tale complete hospital
bad and bedtlcle cabinet.
UOO. Callll14·982·8022.

m

&amp;

1979 Pontiac Grand Le·
Mans, 2 door-. auto.. air
John Deere tractor model , cond .. AM - FM 1tereo,
420. 3 pt . hitch. power take cruise. tilt wheel, 305 V-8,
off, disc, plow. brush hog, $3,300 . Call 304· 875 ·
82,400 . Cafl 614· 367 · 1561 .
0256 .
1975 Chevrolet Mvnte
For sale Ford 2 S. 3 bottom Carlo, PS, PB, aircond., new
plows. Case 4 bottom plow,
wheels and tires. dual exuaed pickup disks, 8, 10 , 14 haust. air shocks, $1 ,600
ft . wheel di1k. fertilizer
firm . Call after 3PM, 6t4·
spreaders. 8 row boom 446-4392 .
spray, mowers. balers, and
rakes . Dear Born buzz 1aw 79 Honda Civic 4 cyl.. 4
and pulley, other used equip - 1pd .. sunroof. exc . cond.,
ment. Howe'• Farm Machin- 62,000 mi., 82,950. or best
ery, Rt. 124 &amp; Mayhew Rd. offer. Call 446· 1 012 or
Jackson , Oh 614 · 286 ·
446· 1968.
5944.
1978 Chevy Monza. ex.
Grass seed and ~obacco
d v 6
1 PS PB
.. .· Call
eng no,
•
'
con
supplies. Bidwell mills. 614·
$1,796
814· 388·
388·9688.
9905 or 614-387-7524.

For aaleAM·FM Stero with
caoaette and 8 track. BSR
turntable. Con- 111'4~ 742~
29111:

16ft. cheat type ,;....,,
good condition. 304·1175·
3537.

bale.

U I I'll l HoH)I!

Farm.Equipment

Troy -Silt tillert. Check our
special price before you buy
any tillers. Swisher Implement Co. St. Rt.7 N, Galli·
polis, OH . Call 614-446·
0476 .

AM·FM Stero wit~ caosatte
and 8 track. I!BR turntable,
Call614·742·2916.

Cabinet kitchen· tink and
bathroom tlnk, doors. win·
dowt, ttorm wlndowt ..3~
876-718B.

4000 bales good mixed hay.
S1 .50 bale. Call 614-843·
6138.
~

Seed Sweet potatoes. Call
614·843 -5332.

bad
bedside cabinet. 1
UOO.end
Call814·992·6022.
~

Pluth rug. 1 Ox12, light
green, approx. 4 yrs. old.
exc. cond. t75.00. 304·
675-81162.

For sale. Good condition
hay. $1 .50 a bale., Call
614 -992·7201 .

Seed potatoes - Kennebec
$8 . 50· Pontiac 88 . 20 ·
Cobblers $8 .95 . Boso Agri
Center. Call 446· 2463.

&amp; L1ve slock

Older Maytag dryer. electric
830 .00 Call 614-246·
5474.

Custom draperlao~. , ... venation blinds, vertical blind,
Roman thadu. Samplu
•hown at your home. Free
estimate. P. A. Sayre. 304·
4811· 1078.

, . IJ
1----------...,.----------;

~Y-c; ue:ss

,.

e

Both large round and square
bales. Good quality. Opal
Fitzpatrick. Call 614 -669·
4376 .

Seed

WAL, HnL.O,

WHUT? THEY START
CONSTRICTION ON THE
0' PLENTY IOMORRY .

Appllanca Sarvlct all makat •
&amp; modalt rafrlgartora ,
waaher1, dryare, rangee,
compactors. dlohwathara,
mlcrowav11 . Heating •
Cooling. Sheet Matal Wortc.
Gollla Rafrlgeratlon Co .
14-4411·401111.

Good condition hay for sale.
Call 614· 949· 2870.

65

Home
Improvement•

Marcum Roofing • lpout·
lng. Now lnotalllng rubber
roofo . 30 yeoro ••parlence,
opaciallzlng In buNt up roof.
Call 614· 381·8857.

Hay for sale. Call 614 -256·
6534. if no answer 614 266-6011 .

Mixed Hay, $1 .50
304-675 -5579.

Musical
Instruments

:~~~~y,~Ma~fth~1~6~·!1~~----~----------------------------------~~:·~w~~~~:!~~~~~~~~~~·~Oh~~~----------------------------------~n-~~~~i~ly~~~nh~·M::I~~~a!g~a~11 .

PLASTERING • Now and
rapalr oommerolal and '"I·
dantlol, free astlmat11. Call
814·2118· 1112.

Northup King corn , alfalfaS.
grass seed. other farm
seeds. Call Vaugho Taylor,
614· 245·5064 or614-245·
5816 after 8PM .

57

Sr·r vrr.r ·,

81

Grain

Ground ear corn t&amp; .SO per
1 00. Bring own container.
304· 676· 3308. No Sunday
sales.

~ a rrn SupplieS

Ca1e 310 front endloadar
dozer. S4,000. Call 614·
256-1427.

For sale complete hospital

&amp;

Blue Tick Hound already
treeing, 18 .months old,
304 -576-2779

Gibson V-guitar. black with
white pickup, 8450. Call
614·992 -6980.

1f• horH motor and grinder
mounted on tabte, Fatso
1tove. 16 barn sash win dows 29x30. tubmersible
pump heavy duty one third
horse· 115 volts· 5 amps 60
cycle made by Jaeger 1''1!,.''
outlet. 16' wood boat red ·
wood and fur new. turning
plow good as new. Call
814· 258-1551 .

23ft. che1t freezer like new.
14 inch radilll tire mounted
on Ford wheel. Call 814·
992· 2759.

Hay

by Larry Wright '

KIT 'N' CARLYLE (!)

Farm Equipment

Mixed hay for sale $1 .00
bale. 304· 675· 3997.

2 uphol1tered chairs.
•weeper, 2-6x9 rugs. carpet
and car radio . Call 446·
0429.

COUNTRY OAK FURNI ·
TURE; Cupboards , Pie
Safeo , Round Tables.
Chairt, plu1 many more
more antiques, mi1c. Paul
Conkel, Rt. 7. Tupper Plaint.

61

64

Built on you lot a new home
you can afford. over 1, 100
aq.ft.. 6 rooms &amp; bath,
carpeted, ready to move
into. 826,500. Alto garages
• ba•ementl. Call Patriot
Homes Builders ..446· 8038.
Will consider mobile home
as trade in.

Mobile home 1uppliea: nontoxic antifreeze-$6.50 per
gallon . Water heating ale manti. water heater, steps.
window•. doort, faucets.
breakers, etc . HotPoint
heavy-duty electric dryers.
thlt month only 8279.
Kingsbury Homes Parts and
Acceaoory Store. 900 East
Main St.. old Bookmobile
building in Pomeroy or call
992-5587.

Misc. Merchandise

PHOTO SPECIAL. Now thru Horse trailer, walking horse
March 24 . 6 color prints type, large olze, with ramp,
from your negatives. May matt, pedde&lt;l lnolde. axe.
use 8 different nega tive• If cond. $1,400 or beat offer.
3B
_B
_·_9_7_11_7_. _ _
desired. Ask for your cou· _c_a_II_6_1_4_·_
pon . HOCK E NBERRY 1
PHARMACY NORTH .
14ft. triaxle low boy trailer,
ball hitch $900.00. 304·
Camouflaged Army 9. 10· 675· 6912.
.thing. ~u rplu s Rental - Denim Clothing, Discount Un- 18ft. tandem axle trailer.
Ion M t. d" Adve rt i sing Alli o Chalmers plow. Steel
insulated door. Phone 304Sped .i :1 H.O. ' ' Sam "
So mo. vilh.. 675-3334 Pt. 895· 3471 .
PleaaGnt, Open Fri. , Sat .,
Sun .. 1 :00· 7 :00 p.m . Dis·
play East-Raven1wood.
63
Livestock
1 Whirlpool trash com pactor ..1 3-pc. bedroom suite, 1
gat grill. 304 -675 -1731 .
Save 10 % on Chlcko. Feed,
Supplies. Order by March
Prom dre11 for sale. size 3,
31 . Boso Agri -Center, Inc .
southern belle style light
Call 446 -2463 .
lavender with hoop $86 .00.
Phone 304· 675-3694.
large •action of aggressive
rugged Ouroc boart. Roger
Four prom dre1ses size 6 &amp;
Bently, Sabina, Oh 513·
7 . Different 1izes and colors
584· 2398 .
825, $30, $36. $40. 304 675-2954 .
Registered Polled Hereford
bull, $750. Call 614 -379·
2657
·
2 Polled Hereford cows and
calves. 8626 a pair. Call
614 -256-1427.
55 Building Supplies
Angus bull for sale, 2 yrs.
old. Corn $3 .50 bu ohel . Call
Building materials
614·992 · 6040 or 992 ·
block. brick. sewer pipes, 2841 .
window s. l intels. etc .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande. For sale 1 big Reg. Angua
0 . Call614-245-5121 .
bull, 3 'h yr. old. Call Wilbur
Robinson, 614 -985 · 3829
Shipped Oire ct · lowest after 6PM .
Cost, You build it or we will,
24x48 garage or barn Freezer Beef. Carl Kinnaird,
S1,850. 2 bdr. wilderness 304 -675 -4182 .
home $3 ,960 . See our
model . 1· 614·886 -7311 .
Two mare colts, half Belgueim half Percheon. maNow open for business, ture at approx 1.500 lbt.
Mountain State Block. Rt. Phone 304-576 -2779 .
33, New Haven. Complete
ma1onry supplies. 4 ", 8 ", Pigs. 304· 675· 7353 .
12" block. Delivery service.
Phone day 304· 882· 2222 , Dairy goats AlpineS. LaManevening 882· 3239 .
chas, kids &amp; milkers. excellent 4· H project. 304 -675·
6430.
56
Pets for Sale

2 bdr ., nat. gas heat, carpet,
ce ment pat io with awning,
private lot in Gallipolis. Call
446 -1409, 6·8PM .

Ref . and Dep .
1529.

Friday, March 16, 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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......

Page- 12-The Daily Sentinel

Judge ends 40 court cases
Thirty-five defendants were fined and five others
forfeited bonds tn Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien were Lawrence
Lipscomb, Shade, speed, $21 and costs; Cecil Haning,
Pomeroy, DWI, $500 and costs, 30 days confinement,
IICPnse suspended stx months, stx months probation;
Brian Bass, Syracuse, no operators license, $b:Xl and
costs, 30 days confinement; Austin Darrah, Powhatan, Oh., speed, $21andcosts; Ronald Wood, Pomeroy,
speed, $~ and costs; Peggy Bennington, Wheelersburg, speed, $22 and costs; John D. Beaver, Pomeroy,
speed, $25 and costs: Jean Gerdes, Taylor, Mich.,
speed, $21 and costs: Clair Schwendeman, Marietta,
speed, $19 and costs.
Richard Martin, Nelsonville, Improper parking, $10
and costs: Paul Purdue, Huntington, speed, $27 and
costs; John Eblin, Pomeroy, OWl, $300 and costs, 30
days conftnemnt, operators license suspended for one
year If obtained, no drivers license, $50 and costs, five
days conftnement'l" Theodore Reed, Jr., Pomeroy,
speed, $23 and costs: Tony Gilkey, Shade, failed to
display two lighted headlights, when required, $5 and
costs: Edith Adkins, Gallipolis, speed, $21 and costs:
James Dickson, Gallipolis, speed,$23andcosts: Harry
Garnes, Jr., Middleport, speed, $22 and costs: Held!
Ewing, Pomeroy, speed, $26 and costs: Keith Day,
Pomeroy, speed, $21 and costs.
Michael C. Gheen, Hactne, passed stopped school
bus that was receiving children, $35 and costs; Hollie
Green, Pomeroy, reckless operation, $100 and costs,
left of center, $50 and costs; James Patterson,
Syracuse, assured clear distance, $35 and costs,
license, plates and registration suspended 90 days for
failure to provide proof of Insurance.
Randy Snider, Pomeroy OWl, $250 and costs, three

days conflliement, If attend residential driving school
confinement will be suspended and $150offlne, license
plates and registration suspended 90 days, no proof of
Insurance, left of center, costs only; David Custer,
Reedsville, no operators license, $75 and costs, three
days conftnemnt, If operators license obtained In stx
weeks jail sentence and $50 of fine wlll be suspended,
plates and registration suspended 90 days for !allure to
provide proof of Insurance.
Wllllam Eakins, Middleport, disorderly conduct by
Intoxication, costs and stx months probation: Frank
Haggy, Pomeroy, no perators license, $'75and costs, 10
days confinement; Pat Snider, no address recorded,
criminal trespass.costs, two years probation, refrain
from complainant; Don Johnson, Long Bottom,
criminal trespass, menacing and trespass, five days
confinement each charge, costs, refrain from
complainant, one year probation: Terry Evans, no
address recorded, domestic violence, stx months
probation, costs, refrain from complainant; James
McHaffie, Portland, no drivers license, $'75 and costs,
three days confinement, If obtain operators license In
stx weeks jail sentence and $50 of line will be
suspended, plates and registration suspended 90 days
forfalluretoprov!deproofoftnsurance; JohnRlley,N.
Augusta, S. C., speed, $~ and costs: Steve Morris,
Rutland, stop sign, $10 and costs; Charles Sayre, Lake
City, Pa., speed, $27 and costs; James Casto, Portland,
stop sign, $10 and costs: William Gaddis, Reedsville,
stop sign, $10 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Frederick J . B!aettnar,
Pomeroy, speed, $70; Allen L. Echard, Morgantown,
Steven Harvey, Ironton, and Mark Shinkle, Wllllamsburg, Ohto,$40each, speed; Paul Larew, Thornton, W.
Va., stop sign, $30.

Cheshire-K

yger_c_co_nttn_ued_fro_m_pa_ge-1)_ _ _ _ __

"Cons" listed by Paxton were: lion my children are getting right
lengthier bus trips, additional costs here .. .! don't want them to move."
tn transportation, Increased d!stan-"!don't see any reason to bus,
ces from the homes to the schools when you have an adequate
and separation of family members teaching staff."
attending both schools.
-"Couldn't the money lor busing
The majority of those present, be used to hire additional teachers'
however, appeared to lind no aides to help resolve the problem?"
advantages to the "pros" that • -"We like the small school
outweighed the perce!veddlsadvan- concept, where evel)'one knows the
tages of the "cons."
students and cares ... this school acts
The parents focused on the Issues as security for my children."
of Increased busing of students,
-"Can't the board of education
safety factors Involved tn that find something better to spend their
busing, problems In adjustment to money on than these studies?"
new school surroundings and sepa-"Don't think we are so dumb
ration of elementary students within that we don't see some of the things
the same farnlty.
that are gotngon."
While much of the hostlltty
Included tn those voices raised
against the proposal were:
seemed to abate as the meeting
-"I'm satisfied with the educa- progressed, complaints against the

Mayor Hoffman forfeits 12 bonds
Twelve defendants forfeited
bonds tn thP court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Thursday
night.
They are Larry Cundiff, Middleport, $100, giving false Information
to an officer: Wllltam Ault, Pomeroy, $40, Joseph Lilly, Elkview, W.
Va., $41; Betty J . Woods, Middleport, $40; Don McCade, Gallipolis,
$32; William King, Pomeroy, $40;
Charles D. Yeager, Mason, W. Va.,
$42: Kathy Rhodes, Langsville, $41;
Letha Bwngardner, Letart, W.Va.,
$48; George A. Kearns, West
Colwnb!a, W. Va., $42; James
Lewis, Point Pleasant, $41, all on
speeding charges: Corena Barnltz,
Mason, $50, traffic signal violation.
In the court· last night, Tom C.

Emergency runs
Seven calls were answered by
local units Thursday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 1: 13 p.m.,Pomeroy went to
Bunker HUI for Kenneth Collins,
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 12:55 p.m. took
Hilda Mo!ohan from 367Grant St., to
Veterans Memorial: Middleport at
1:01 p.m. took Fern Smith from
Village Manor Apartments to
Veterans Memorial; Middleport at
10:48 p.m. returned to Village
Manor Apartments and again took
Fern Smith to Veterans Memortal;
P..actne dt 11:28 a.m., took Charles
Bissell from Bashan to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 5:49p.m.
took James Paul Harmon from the
station to St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg and Tuppers Plains at
12: 14 p.m. took Susan Wallace to
Camden-Clark Hospital In
Parkersburg.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
:wtontng nwnber dr11wn Thursday
night tn the Ohio Lottel)''s daily
game, "The Nwnber," was 347.
In the "~ck 4" game, played
·Monday through Friday, the win. ning nwnber was 9988.

••••

"'

Friday'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Scally, Middleport, was fined $10
and costs, gotngthewrongdlrectlon
on a one-way street; Wllllam King,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, driving
while under suspension, and George
McDaniel, Middleport, was given a
nine day Jail sentence on a
disorderly manner charge.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Woodrow Hall, Racine; Jue'tta Hossler, Pomeroy:
Sandra Luckeydoo, Middleport.
Discharged--Matilda Rowley,
Juanita Frederick, Paul Justis,
Noami Br!ckles, Sidney Hayman.

board and administration con-

tinued, often diverging from the
grade level reorganization Issue.
Other complaints aired ranged
ti'Om charges of a lack of school
board representation lor the Kyger
Creek attendance area to a need for
a Xerox copier at Cheshl.re-Kyger.
Following extensive discussion,
Toothaker asked for a show of hands
from those In opposition to the
proposal. The result was unanimously negative.
Asked what he would tell the
school board about last night's
meeting, Toothaker responded:
"I'll tell them therewasn'tone hand
that went up tn support of this
concept ... that there Is no question tn
my mind that there Is a lack of
community support for grade level
reorganization."
"You have made your message
vel)' loud and clear to me,"
Toothaker concluded.
Toothaker told the parents the
public hearing would be followed by
the Issuance of a written questionnaire, designed to generate additional Input on the reorganization
proposaL
He assured them thecommlttee's
final report would " ... be made
available to the community atlarge."
The superintendent further advised the gioupthatthepubllcwou!d
be notified when the board of
education Is scheduled to address ·
the grade level reorganization
question.

Meets Sunday
The Meigs County Genealogical
Society wlll meet at2 p.m. Sunday at
the Meigs Museum. Speakerwillbe
professional genealogist MaiY Sowan of Athens whowlll use the topic,
''Little Used Sources tn Ohio".

Tuesday concert

must
refund
charges

escrow
account,
alongtowith
had been
required
put$554,401
In an
earned tn Interest pending resolution of the rna Iter by the Supreme
Court.
The court said Its clerk will
prepare a plan to distribute the
money to C&amp;SOE customers within
45 days, and that actual refunds will
be provided within another 45 days.
Marshall Julien, public affairs
manager for C&amp;SOE, said the
refunds will be based on the amount
of electricity used during the period
that construction work was Included
tn the company's rate base.

Due To N.C.A.A. Restrictions
ESPN - Marshall vs Villanova
Basketball Game Will Be
Blacked Out In Meigs, Gallia and
Mason County Areas.

SHAMROCK SHENANIGANS :
TRrYOUR LUCK At OUR·

CASINO

••
••
,_

GAllES FOR All AGES; RAFFLES, FOOD, BINGO
SUBPRISES, FISH POND, FAIIILY FUJI
SPONSORED BY: OHIO ETA PHI SORORITY

~·~·~·~

...

ANTACID
ANTI-GAS
FAST RELIEF

$100

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~

1980 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME - 4 dr. low mi·
teage. Real clean. Runs good and looks good.

Ahilil'ED LANDOWNERS~ Laveme,left,IUIII

MarJ ,.....

of lhe Point Rock area of Colwnbla
ill Map County IIWid outside their borne
that .._ claim was claJna&amp;ed by sub8lclena!, the

~

1981 CHEVROLET MALIBU - 4 dr. Extremely low mileage.
One owner. Real clean.

Midd!eport

COLUMBUS, Ohio cAP) -The Ohio Office of the
COIISIIIII«S' Counsel has asked an appeals court to
wertllm a Federal Energy Regu!atol)' Commission
dec!s!ml denying at least a $110 million refund to
Colwnllll Gas Transmission Co. customers.
· The appee1 was prompted by the FERC's refusal
'Wednelday to reconsider the refund. The appeal was
!lied wtt11 the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals In
,Washlnlton, D.C.
; The lecleral comm!sson ruled the gas transmission
company "recklessly disregarded" Its legal duty to

CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE - Dark brown with light
brown vinyl roof. Loaded. One owner.
1980 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE - Silver, cloth interior.
Low mileage. One owner.
1980 CHEVROLET CITATION -Runs good. Good tires. Local
Owner. Priced right.

,., ~····

,· ____
, _ _ _ __ _ _ _t_i_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.::~~---------------- -~ __•___ , ---·~--~-~:
·• - ....

---

III!UIInr of earth after a JoacwaD mactue mines out a
panel of coal. 'lbe .JordaDII have seUJecl privately with

Southern Ohio Goal Co., the~ mining concern tn
Melp and VInton counties.

1980 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88- 4 dr. Real ~lean. Lo~ks like
new. Low mileage. Well eQuipped.
T~e$e Dependable Used Cars

And Much More At ......

were

Pomeroy, -OH.

a

MON.-FRI. 9:00 to 7:00
4:00
-

J

.

--·--------~ -~-- •- - . I
- - - - · - ·..:..!..·-~

~

Editorials ..................... A-2
SportA ..... ...... ... ....... ... C-1-8

March

,.r

.'.

-

Ohio weather:
clouds spread
across state

-PageA-3-

I

•

10 Sectiono, 59 Pagu 35 Canto
A Multimedia Inc . Newapaper

18, 1984

A $1 mllllon appropriation from
thestate'sgeneral revenue lund will
allow the program to get started If
the bll! passes tn the Senate. The
Insurance board overseeing the
program Is required by this !egtslatlon to make annual Installment
payments to repay that S1 mllllon by
Dec. 31, 1989.
Admitting that hewasn'tfamlllar
with the bill, Athens attorney Jay
Wamsley, who serves as legal
counsel for Citizens Organized
Against Longwalling (COAL), felt It

has some merit.
"I think that If It does, In fact,
make It easier to coUect on
damages, then It's a good thing," he
said.

COAL Is the group of property
owners tn Melp apd VInton counties
protesting use of the longwall
mtntng technique by Southern Ohio
Coal Co., a fuel supply dlvtsloo of
American Electric Power Service
Corp. that owns mineral rights tn the
~a.

(Continued on page A3)

COVERAGE AVAilABLE- A cistern In a bam OWDed by Mark
Spezza, above, whose home Is located near Melp Mine 2, was
repol1edly created by subsidence. Legta'a&amp;m that . , _ t the Ohio
House of Representatives Ibis put week provides coverage fm: property
owners whose homes were damaged by underground mining.

customers, which comprise about half of Colwnb!a's
market, would have been entitled to a $50 mllllon
refund if the FERC had accepted the recommendation of the administrative law judge. About 50 percent
of that amount would have been returned toCo!wnbta
Gas of Ohio customers, withe the rest going to users
serviced by Dayton Power &amp; Light Co. and ctnctnnatt
Gas &amp; Electric Co.
Nearly a dozen other interstate p1peltne companies
face s!mllar charges of wrongfully buying higherprtced gas when cheaper supplies existed.

• Althoulh emollo!ll!l, the mood
:'Was flmt glum. Gll!llll and his
,wnuY ~ M~l. facln&amp; '
~SMIUN'G- Sen. John Glenn 111111 his wUe IIIIIIOIIIICeCI Friday Rlomlng at a Washington news
.)VIth smllela Cl'llllllif~fl aM · Ami!~ Jaajb u GlenD Jo~es wllh reporters Friday conference that he W!IS "reluctantly" quitting the
race f~ the Demooratlc prealdenttal nomination.
;,~af~C~!'B!.In_L.~.:-~11 ~- a aewa CGi1ference In poaumbus.G~n
aVl!l'lllllll ·senate heertng room. .
·. ,, · .
,
Anita Dunn, Glenn campalgh candidates at this time, has no
"Cieml'•nmarkl
Interrupted a said. ' ~And I BOlli vel')' tough heart."
~~ times by ~pplal!lt! from
At ~. news coplerence, Glenn aide, said the senator jalows hoW to asplrat!ontobev!cepres!dent-but
•
llllliOilhc!!d ,be would seek re- deal with a failure and always has didn't say he would absolutely turn
used It to his advantage.
. downsuchanoffer-andsaldhehas
election to the U.S. Senate In 1986.
"I think whathe'slooktngforward "no plans whatsoever" to run for
"I Intend to play major role for
Ohio In Congress In 1984 and to work to now·ts wtnntng re-election In Ohio president again.
,
GleM said he d!dn t think his
for · the- lna118Uratlon of a Demo- by the new largest margin·:., Ohio
· candidacy took away from his
~~~~~ o1 them all over the cratlcpn!lldentlnl!IIII,"Giennsald. history," she said.
Glenn sald_htL has. no plans, to. Senate duttes~s;W!g~l!.~ ~e..Q!. • ~-~I!s 1h!"..~ _Jo~;:: gl~~n
-"
tbemofllildeclllon. . "And I Intend lo..wln-I'Hiectlon-too
Ohio were "behind us.
""" on "" cou
•
,
enc!Orseanyittheolherpresldentlal
wu ·heeJ't·rendlnli," Glenn theSenateln1986.''
.
'
.
.
~
--:- ,..._
·:- ~~~-··.;.._....__.
-

f..,

PH; 992-6614

-· ........ ---.

i\lonJt. the IUver ........... Jl.-1-8
Claselfleds ••• •• ••••• .. , ,, ,, ,1).4.7
Dealhii ......................... A-5

WOOSTER. Ohio (AP) - His
third "capital for a day" promotion
gave Gov. Richard Celeste a chance
to announce funding for agricultural
research, employment training and
health programs. talk to students,
pass out Ice cream to senior citizens
and auction off an elephant tusk and
a state flag for charity .
The governor made 13 stops
Friday tn Wooster, starting with a
breakfast for elected o!f!cta!s and
winding up 12 hours later with a
speech to Wayne County
Democrats.
CPleste brought members of his
Cabinet with him to a county he
carrlell by 4,000 votf!S In the 1982
election after losing it to Republican
James Rhodes tn an uilsuccessful
1978 campaign.
He shook countless hands, posed
for pictures and generally seemed to
enjoy himself on the latest tn his
monthly series of road shows. He
made similar stops earlier at
Youngstown and Marietta a.nd said
the J!gXt wj)uld be tn !I&lt;Ullillon on
Aprll24.
The governor touched briefly on
the collapse of the bid by U.S. Sen.
John Glenn of Ohio for the
Democratic presidential nomlnalion saying he thought Glenn made
the ~lght decision tn dropping out of
the race.
·

clbetacta,

'-- .

w.·.

Celeste announces grants
in third 'capital for a day'

•, .WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
·~Ohn Glaln began the last day of his
presideftlll!cand!dacy to the beat of
•Kenny ftllRers.
, A campaign aide said the Ohio
Democrat strode Into his Senate
,office Friday morning playing a
;.ta'pe ~ the singer's tune "The
:Gamblei'."
•. With the lines "you got'lo knQW
when to told 'em" hanging In the air,
..the aide quoted GleM as asking,
•.ry ou 1J*1k I ought to open my press
,confe- this way?"
-. At Ulf news Conference, Glenn
ci!W'Ied bill quest for the presidency,
citing lllsunnountallle financial

mile~ge .

.

Inside:

The case stems from a 1981 filing by the consumer's
counsel charging the pipeline company bought
deregulated gas from sources tn Louisiana and Texas
that were twice the market price o_f fuel. Less
expensive supplies were avat!able from the company's regular sources, the consumers' counsel
maintained.
Columbia Transmission sells gas wholesale to some
70 local distribution companies In eight states,
Including Ohio, plus the District of Columbia. Ohio

buy natural gas at the lowest possible price during
1981. However, the commission fell short of ordering a
refund. Th.e commissioners rejected a December 1982
decision by one of their administrative law judges,
who had recommended a refund.
"This Is a case where FERC cited Columbia of
wrongdoing, but then changed the fraud standards so
It wouldn't order a refund," said Ohio Consumers'
Counsel William A. SpraUey.
Spratley called the FERC decision "nothing more
than a slap on the hand."

on

1979 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS - 2 dr. Looks good. Runs
good.

j;

•

•

~

entittel

treasurer.
The legislation doesn't Include
Industrial or commerctal buUdlngs
as structures that can be Insured.
''The bill will require, with certain
exceptions, that eveiY basic property Insurance policy on structures
must Include Insurance for mine
subsidence, at-a separately stated
premlwn, unless the Insured property owner waives this right In
wrtttng," Mrs. Boster said.

(;leon's mood
far·from glum
last day of
presidential bid

1972 FORD LTD- 4 dr. One local owner. Real clean. Low mileage. Must see to appreciate.

·

•

~l.

'

Consum_ers' Counsel files appeal in Columbia pricing case

1979 FORD LTD - 2 dr. Average miles. Priced for quick sale.

·BAHR CLOTHIERS

FWI'" parers • ·

~

Riopan Plus

· 308 E. Main St.

. OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ·

11o11n wiLl Go rDWtiJ fiF

OR

:oLDS~ZCAD.-CHEVY, INO. -·

--- -

..{: ', ,

~--'lfPJI'o

.,,.•;·""i "·..

By KEVIN KEU.Y
'llme8-Sentlnel staff
GALLIPOLIS Legislation
creating Insurance coverage for
homes damaged by underground
mining Is seen a positive move, but
doesn't answer the concerns of the
group that publicized the Issue.
Amlnesubsldencetnsurancefund
allows property owners to Insure
homes and other structures against
losses resulting from mining caveIns.
Subsidence Is the settling of the
earth after a mine's roof or walls
collapse.
The fund Is part of a blll,
co-sponsored by Rep. Jolynn Boster, l){;alUpolls, that passed the
Ohio Hoose of Representatives this
past week.
The blll also establishes a Mine
Subsidence Insurance Underwriting Association that Is charged with
creating a plan !or"economlcal, lair
and nondlscrlrntnat!ng operation"
of the Insurance fund.
The association will be governed
by the state
of

SIMMONS /

SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 6:30 to 9:30 !8
AT THE POMEROY LEGION HALL.. •

• ;J"'""

··/~~,;:

Mine cave-in home insurance
called a 'positive' step; fails
to satisfy all COAL concerns

Rio pan

1977 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 - 2 dr. One owner. Good con·
dition.

SHOP BAHR CLOTHIERS
FOR FINE
WEARING
APPAREL
FOR
ME" &amp;
WOMEN

'.-

•

Middleport Pomero~llipolit Point Pleasant Sunday,

, .....

~"'"'" ·""'""' 1........

1978 FORD PINTO - Good work car. Great gas
Runs good, good tires.

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

Vol. " ....

:C.p;:'l

LOW SODIUM

PH. 992-6669

(.

.

tnttS

" · ftMOH tt MH1tl

N. 2ND AVE.

'

.

•

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

At 9:30p.m. Tonight.

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy and cold tonight.
Low 30-35. northerly winds 10-~
mph. Saturday, mostly sunny. High
47-52. Chance of precipitation near
zero percent tonight and ~ percent
Saturday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday IJuWsh Tuesday:
Chance of rain each daywMhsnow
po8!llble In the north. IDp ~.
Lows 28-31!·

•

jU\1 •J IIIII flill

12 oz.
BOTTLE

•

,.

James J, Kilpatrick on lessons from college on
the federal government-Page A-2

I UIWIJI ~ ·unjti'AWOI ,

· -n ... r ••

~......

Bob Hoeflich discu88es an auction in support of a
'Jaws of Life' unit-Page B-7

Tu tornJ •

1979 OLDSMOBILE OMEGA - 2 dr. One owner, 47,000
actual miles. Clean and ready to go.

Point Pleasant

,,

brllu11 l u ll ~ dttljtnN

The Game Will Be Carried By
WCHS-TV 8 Charleston, Beginning
675-3398

•

'

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS
,

..

Hart opens Ohio campaign H --D-1

Craftwork for
fun, not profit
-PageB-1

1981 BUICK REGAL- Well equipped. New tires, good gas
mileage. One owner.

NOTICE

The Meigs High School Instrumental Music Department will
present a concert at 7 p.m. Tuesday
tn Larry Morrison Gymnasium ..

&gt;'

' .-.,.:

'

WATCH YOUR SA LT

..-------------------------1

Coaches meeting set
All managers and Interested
adults are Invited to attend a
meeting on the Racine Summer
League Baseball and Girls Softball
Programs at the Racine field house
at 7 p.m. Monday.

C&amp;SOE

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
Ohio Supreme Court has ordered
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. to refund more than $12
million It collected from customers
for construction work on the aborted
Zlmmer nuclear power plant.
The refunds will go out within 90
days and will be shared, although
not tn equal amounts, by about
468,000 C&amp;SOE customers.
Thursday's ruling was one of two
utility matters resolved by the court.
The other rejected an attempt by the
city of Cleveland to enhance through
an Interpretation of law the operation of its municipal light plant.
The C&amp;SOE decision was a
fo!lowup to earlier proceedings
before the Supreme Court and the
Public Utllit!esComm!ss!onofOhio,
in which C&amp;SOE was denied
authority to continue the Zimmer
construction costs tn Its rate base.
Thecompanywll! turnover to the
court $11.8 mllllon which C&amp;SOE

.•

(::tty section and threw stones at ~dvance for possible violence ana
were on the streets even before the
officers.
As o!f!cers formed a line and eight-week trial had ended .
marched down the street todlsperse Thursday.
ACuban-born house painter, John
the crqwd, the youths fled back Into
apartments and shouted: '.'We want Ebanks, told reporters at a hospital
thathewassltttnglnhiscarootaldea
justice. We want justice."
Trash cans smoldered tn the restaurant near predominantly
streets, and roving groups of young black Overtown when a group of
youths beat him up. He displayed
blacks taunted pollee.
Reports of sporadic rock-and long, bloody gashes on his left arm
bottle-throwing were received "all and neck.
"I saw about 12 of them, young
over" the city' said pollee spokesmen, black," he said. "I had the Idea
man Jack Sullivan.
It was the third outbreak of mass they were goln~ to do something to
violence tn black sections of Miami me and I tried to start the car, but
they didn't give me a chance. They
since 198l.
Alvarez, 24, was accused tn the pulled meoutofthecar, and they hit
Dec. 28, 1982, slaying of Nevel! me tn the chest and head."
Johnson Jr., a 20-year-old county
messenger who was shot while the . . - - - - - - - - - - officer was searching for a concealed weapon at a video arcade In
Overtown.
The shooting touched o!f three
days of rioting that left one person
dead and mllllons of dollars In
damage. The acquittal of four white
o!f!cers In the death of a black man
tn 198&gt; also Ignited bloody rtottng, tn
Liberty City, that claimed 18 lives.
This time, pollee prepared tn

'

Marett 16, 1984

Policeman's acquittal leads
to disturbance
in Miami area
,
MIAMI (AP) - Black youths
hurled rocks, looted stores and set
fires today while heavt!y armed
pollee responded with tear gas after
an aU-white JulY acquitted a
Hispanic policeman of manslaughter tn the shooting of a black man.
Upto185peop!ewerearrestedand
two policemen received facial
Injuries within hours of the acquittal
of Officer Luis Alvarez on Thursday
night. Mayor Maurice Ferre said
pollee would do "whatever Is
necessaiY" to maintain order.
By 4: 30 a.m. this morning the
disturbance was "under control"
with only sporadic rock-and bottlethrowing, said pollee spokesman
Juan Santos.
Earlier, o!f!cers fired tear gas into
a crowd of about 100 young blacks
who poured out of a housing project
In the predominantly black Liberty

.

-

W~:.-..;..__"'---:-:--:-:-....,..----·

1

-

·:;...·--·- .

'

-

°:

realities of the results of the
elections from Iowa through last
Tuesday," said Celeste, national
chairman of Glenn's steering committee. "I don 't think it was an easy
decision for him to reach. because I
know he feels vel)' strongly he has
the qualifications and the focus thai
would be most &lt;'ffectiveo come this
!aU's election."
The govemor said h&lt;' was not
ready to endorS&lt;' either former Vice
President Walter Mondaleo or U.S.
Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado for the
nomination, but suggested that they
come to Ohio soon to make a pitch for
the support of state Democratic
leaders.
He also sa id he thought the RPv.
Jesse Jackson 'scandidacy remains
"an Important element of the
primal)' process."
Celeste, saying agriculture
makes a $10 billion contribution to
the state economy, announced
release of $1.3 million tn state lund&amp;
to the Ohio Agricultural Researc11
and Development Center tn Wooster
for a new fuboratoiY tostudydiseasi!
tn !ood-prnduc!ng animals.
He also announced job-training
grants of $124,320 to Wooster
I;lustness College and $12,6'70 to the
Crown Division for Its plants tn
Wooster and Orrville.
Hepresenteda$52,:mchec~tothe

Community Action Prol!ram
Wayne and Medina countleti,

llf
·

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