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                  <text>Ohio

Celebrezze criticized for disciplinary actions
CLF:VELA'\ID rAP! Ohio
Suprome Cou r1 Justice Frank
Celebrf'ZZ!&gt; and Angelo J . Gagliardo. slate diseiplinary counsel,
haV&lt;' used the lawyer disciplinary
svstf&gt;m to flog enemies, The
1\levelandl Plain Dealer reported
ruday.
The oflit't' of Si ale Disciplinary
Counsel was cr~·ated in 1975 under
fotmPr Chief Juslil't' C. William
0'1\eill . Two years laler, n.•l lred
Ohio SuprEme Court .Jus! ice Leonard J . Stern lx'gan handling cases
dS counsf&gt;l .
Strrn, 7~. who has n·m~tin(•don thp
staff , \.\'as repiac('Ci as counSf'l b.v
l;agl iardo in l~K'2 .

PO\\~R POS.~ESSIO:S - ( 'hiPf .Justin• Frank ll . CPit&gt;hrt•z"f.t'sit~ in
t he Ohio Suprt&gt;nw Court. Tht• ( &lt;' l f•vd~uul' Plain Ht·ah·r· rt•puri.o. th:tf
CelebreT.Le ha.'"i amas,o.; t•d ~n·at I"-'"'' ' ~' in hi., l"'"'itiuu . 1:\P Last·rphoto ).

Area deaths
1'; 11 h.1 ·1 . . 1)lit}-: ( ·~ illlrtlU nil\" Col h.•gf'

Lucille H. Hit"! I

llt ·

Mrs. Lucilh• l·h ~· II !lit·ll. 7!1,
Zam·'.SVilk', fonrH'rh ol \ki.L:'
Coun ty , dinJ \l und.t\ .11 ht ·t
residenC'e.
Mrs. H il't t wa . . IJom ( '' ·1 ~II . 1 ~ 11 . t m
R utland, .1 daughlt ·r u! lht• 1.111·
William and Sad it· l brkPd: l'a iL tn 1

She was a mf'mbt: ·r o!

tht · Sh.lltll\
Avenue&gt; Fr('(' ~h&gt;thndi.-,1 ( ·hurdt ut

Zanf'S\"iliP.

Prl'('{"'ding h('r in df '&lt; tlll ht:·.. , idl '"her parf' n ls \AT'rf' hf ·r fir" I hu,lland ,
Daniel H~ · S£'11, in 1~1 47: ht·r :-. t' t'tHld
husband . the Rf'\" l..t• my· l l it'lt 1 I I\
Sept . 14. 1967: :tson .Cf•ot J:t·ht•rtiJl!
H ysell. and two llrnl ht•rs.
Surviving an· two cbu )..!h !t ·r·-.
Mrs. Mona .Jf'an .Jack.". SpritiJ.:"flt ld.
and .Janr l Roh&lt;·rT ~. Zanc~\ ·t llt •. "
srr'P -daugh iC'r . !\1r&lt;.,. Pt1il 1S llll It·\ 1
W ise. fk.'\'t'r ly: 11 ~ranrll'ltildn·rt: U
grpJ l ·grandrh i ldrf'n:
tnu 1· "h ·p
gra nd(' hilclrPn : ltlri't ' " it 'P 1..: 1"1 '-11
granchildrPn. :m e! :1 "i~l! 'I". .\11"
No.:1h
ri.A'JI .' 1 Ch;l'-tn•rr. .It .
Pomeroy .
~:rvit·t·~ -.\'ill IX' hdd .11 Jn .t .m
Thursc.la\" at thl ~ n n·an FUill'J"; d
Homr in Zanf's\·Ult · \\"tlh thr· ! -~~·\
Edw&lt;.~rd Ru . . . . . ctl ,t.-.sis tr'(] h.\ lht·
L i nV~.·o od

Rf'\.

l ·' rb ntrn~:~·r

offi\iating .
F'o ll o~A· ing ~~ · JYin'' 1n Z. rn t '"\ ill · ·
I h(&gt; bod~ · will hf-hrnugh I to 1111 · I I \ -....-1 I
Run l"ommunit~ · I "hurl'h t ltllll
df'\~:ing from J·;{.ll To :_!· ~~ p111
Thursd ~ l .\ "

H tm;tl \~·111 !IJI!ow 111 !lit ·
Milf's Cl•melt'IY. Hul l;llld ( ", tllr!I L.:
hours at lht' Hr:.· &lt;~n t··un''!'&lt;t J lloit\r '
an..., fmm 2 lq -1 .1nd : 111 'I p rn
\\'t'(IDf'SC \a\ ·.

Alil·t• Hullicla'
/\JiC't' llollid;J\ , X"'. 1~ 11\ill'
Dc•xtt'r. di1'(l r·.tr l'. \\•'~'ln•·-...d.!\
morning ;tl Tlw f'om• ·rrJ\ llt ·.tf!h
('Jn•('pntf'r .
M iss 1-lollicl.t.\ n ,1-.. h1 r ll 111"-..d. rn
T own.-; hip dnd v.:;~!'- ,r rLIUJ..:hl• ·r ·lilt• ·
la tf' Alfn ·d and Flora l 1iJJld II ' oll!d, t '.
Sur\"iving dtT :-.1.'\ •·r1u-...tn .... l11llll
Hollida _\·, J-:ugrn1 · I ]iillt!l.l\ .11111
Beatricl' l{inl'iwrt . .rll 11 ! I )t ·\ lr ·l
M yrt lf' Hannin.t.: 1. trll .r . . ll 'l
t 1-...1
I

(\Xlp!'r.

Cnlumllu o.,.

h.\" his wil"(•, Hf'lh
( ·on):n•\"t' Si(•plwn s: hi:- p; trPnl s.
Lllllt'' ,lfld \ ' (~ t.t 1-\napp Smith ,
I" "111\"1\ tXI

l•Jt ·,t~ anr:

]•tlitll

m:t l('rn:.tl h'Ta nd

p.tn •n l ". :VIr. and :vir!-- ()unrl ,\.
l~ll.tpp.
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.
ldfiH·I . lrnn ;..lt'plrl'Ir ~. l.t"&gt;tm; one

l.t'gh.

1 )dt•;rn

! .tort, nnf'
-.. tt •p llloiiH·~ .. Ju ~t·ph Smith. l 'oinl
l 1 lt '&lt; l",tnr. 'Jilt ' ." li'P -; i ~ t l'r. Pam
....:.llllpk tl l :-., l'uint l'll· ~t~ ant: and lwn
\lilt It '·" \\ ·, 11 n ·n .l!ld ( 'harles l\.n ~1 pp .

" l'·lt·l

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Smit h . C,X, SfJuth·

-.. ult · d1nl "J'w·"LLtY ('\"(•ning in
I 'I• ". 1'-. trll \' .. dlt'\ l !tJ., pilal following a
l• HI"..: dint·'"-·
I ~ .m .\ pr il ~ -~. 1 ~ 1!1. ,11 ]{laUe.
l·", t· • ·1!1 l'mnrl\. -.ht • \\"it." lht ·
Ltitdltt·i ,,r ll t1 ' l.il t ' l .; w\ · l'umJ(·y·
I'H i

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hi!"l'rnaf\

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I :.tpll-.. 1 i ·!Hi I I'll t1 ;-...;oullt."idr ·
. . .:. tnl'n tri ;.. .:

dau l-~t w·rs .

lt Jtir

, ll I'

1.11( l1fil'ld. ~&gt;uth
\1 IHI!ll sh t• rnadt• hrr

.\ Jr ,

\l.ltl'_ . tlt'l

'-l tli
\\ tl
lt1·11 t ·. \l1 .... c;I;Hh:-.\\•·lba ndMrs.
1\U!I\ \\1'1!" l)l1ll •lil )f']iJW&lt;t['('.0)1 iO.
,JJrd \Jt.._ \1n.1 !Jtml'"f'Utlt•r. Point
I ' lt ·.l .... .tlil. f·nn ·,n n ~. OtYilk· Lt&gt;t •,
( ll;.dr.lllt.l ~·11\. Olk tr. ('pcil and
J,rlll•"-. hnlt1 1t! l,tl!lll l'li'&lt;IS&lt;l nl. ami

:--,,~nnwl

nl Squ !tl:-.- idt •: fou r siqers.

\ll '- l"lh·rl 1):1"·"· l.; tkt n , :\.1 r :-.. Mury
ll .tll. l'lotrtr l,lt".t'&gt;cill l, ~1r:-.. Muri&lt;'
\ ', ttl( 't '. l 't' ! n, ,md ~lr" . l ~un nit•
l'ulli:t'\.
·1 1.1 : li.l:ht:
and
1·1
;._: r,nuldJtldr t ' ll
S l11 · \\. 1'- pr ·t •( ·• ·d(·d in dt \ lth h\' hc·r
l,u -...h!:l• l. Clt"\rll t· (\ ·{ il Sm ith, in
]•t-;-1 l\\'''-'lll -.. 1-"l;mk ,IJHlJ\tbJ'sh all.

.tl!

.&gt;

I·

It,

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t 11

1 -.J-...' •

r

D .C .. and Shf'tTi. 17. a senior ill
BuC"k( ·~ ·c· II ill s l 'ar('(·r ('(•nter

w·..-ath•·r fort'l·a~l
( ;enc•ra ll.\· ciC'ar tonight. Low
around-1.'&gt;. Light and \·ar ia bl£' \Vinds
Thursday·, mos tt~· s unn~ and quit f'
warm
l llg h 80-IZ'l Chance nl
pr['(' ipita tion 10 percrn tt on ight ancl
20 IJ(&gt;I'C'f'nl Thur&gt;&lt;1a)·.
Exwnded Fo,.,.m•t
Friday through Sunday:
('hanct• of s howPrs thr oug h th(•
po•riod. Lows in the 50s Fliday. ~ i&gt;-55
Sat unlay and 35-45 on Sunday.
High• t;.;-75 Fliday. in tlrr 60s
Satu rday and mainly in till' 50s

LOOK FOR OUR AD
IN THE
SUNDAY-TIMES -SENTI NEI

Super Specials

LEAR

Sunda.~ .

tl\:t·t 1 11· 11 iJI rtw Wilt 'lr:\t'll
l· ·lll\1 ·:.ti ll· 11 1\1·. 1'111111 Pl• ·: t ~iln l .

ShowYour
Appreciation.

Secretaries'~

F"ou r ca ll!- wr ·n· an ..,H·t ·n ~ l II\

April 23-27

,.

I II• .\!

. l I

1~ ~

, tl

un its. thP :'v1rigs I&lt; rn • ·rg•·rll"_\ :"l.lr~l1
ca l &amp;•rvicB rrport s.
WE'Clnf'Sflu.v m(Jrnin g 1' 1 ~ ~ ~i
a.m ., ttlf' Pomr·ro~· l lmt \\t·n! 111 lhr·
PomPtVV HC'alth Can· Ct' nlr ·r fill"
A lief' Holida_
\·. nn tr:lll .-.porLrttllll
rpquin-d . Tursrl:1 _\. &lt;'alb in('hHlr'( \
R ut land at 4 · ~iO p .m to M l'i g~ :vi int' 2
for Nonnan Win•s. tak f'n to fl"BIP
nPSs Hospital. ,\thrn.., : Hadnt· .ll
6: 45 p.m. took Tim Tavlor t mm tt11·
scen0 of an auto ;K-r idC'n l rm
township road 12-1 to \'f'l!'l'i Hl S
Memoria l ancl at Ill :lti ~ m .
Tuppers Plains rook i\l!hPa B.trttm
hum 4Z22"l
ltoulc 7 lo
Camd('n -Clark H rJ:--pit.ll
1n
Parkersburg .

s'"'"

1•{ ) ur

TURNER'S
SATELLITE
•
RECEIVER SYSTEMS

Adm if 1ed--Paul MichaPl. l'om&lt;·

roy: Tim Taylor. Pomnrm.\".
Discharged -Jo hn Scarbrough .
Linda flailrY

L!l DIES'
FLAIR

DISHES

I·

Fiberglas
Mesh

Aluminum
8 Ft. to 20 Ft.

Your First

LOCAL
SATELLITE
WOMAN

.

I .

With

cleaner .
Morgan said K!'yes. w ho was

)

/

Approved

WE ARE HAVING A GRAND OPENING ATOUR-NEW LOCATION IN
THE OLD MIDDLEPORT MASONIC HALL AND WE ARE COMBINING
THIS WITH OUR 1OTH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION!

$2 5 GIFT CERTIFICATE

\f 11 1

•I

I \1 I '

I•

I~

\I I I

I

f \.,11\1!1 1 I

! ' l'

~(

:\

•.t\1 1··11

SATURDAY at 4:00P.M.
We Will Have A Drawing For
Each of the Following:
1100 GIFT CERTIFICATE
175 GIFT CERTIFICATE
150 G
IFT CERTIFICATE
125 GIFT CERTIFICATE
No Purchase Necessary
Stop In and Sign Up!

SAVE ON

SAVE
UP TO

20°/o

ON EVERYTHING
IN THE STORE
*Jeans For the Family
•Work Shoes •Ladies' Wear
• Western Boots •Belts
•LaCross Athletic Shoes

111.1 k (. It I) t I II I I 'I

I(

\ ' I I I .I I t I( . I

I t I II

I If

$999
MEN'S $12 99

Non-Washed

$5° 0 Off
On All Men's &amp; lad ies'
Pre-Washed Basic

LEE and LEVI JEANS

-

BASIC JEANS

$1699
Prices limited To
In Stod hems Only

L•'l" 1l1 I l•t ~ 11 l l1111t r~ ( l!u
!ji ll!

II(

!

l'lll

Iii

I
•

'I

iI\

I&lt;•
( '

l 'k, . . t

I'll) ·-II " ]'
\

'I I

'· I '( "\

( l l l t ' , l l\

Ill&lt;
I I

I

I

lthl

.h k

I. II I ' 1.1 ~ ,\ t t kt I I'
,\ ! I ( I... I I ' I' jilt I

t.

•I

Send the Make·Up
Mirror Bouquet

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"' TI~t •

WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK RLOYAL
IN THE TRICOUNTY AREA - BECAUSE OF YOU WE HAD TO MOVE
A BIGGE

MANY OTHER SPECALS THROUGHOUJ THE STORE
REFRE S HME ~ T S

Popc·orn &amp; RC

SAVE UP TO 75%
Comt' In and Join
Our Ct&gt;lt&gt;hralion!

DAN'S

II flY -I m f'rif·n

106 Butternut

Pomeroy. OH .
PH. 992-2039
or 992-572!

$37500

OVER
IN
GIFT CERTIFICATES
TO BE GIVEN AWAY

Stop In At Our New Location At The Old Middleport Masonic Temple

.

992

Athens antique show

Honor ODOT retiree

See P age &amp;

Story, photo oo Page 14

•

arrestf'd on a war ra nt issued by
John A. "Andy" Wilson. w as also
comm itted Wednesday by an order
of M ason County Circuit Judge
Clar encE&gt; A . Wall to Huntington
StatP Hospital for a pPriod n~t to
exceed 20 days for observation and
examina t ion.
H e said shp will appPar in circuit
court again after the observa tion
pPriod J&lt;pyps' caS&lt;' w ill be bound
over to a Mason Cou nty grand jury
in May, Morgan added.

Charge brings
prison tertn
Keit h Musser , 23. was taken to til&lt;'
Columbus Correctional Facility
Tuesdav after being sentenced in
MPigs County Common P leas Court
to a termofsixmonthsonachargeof
assault accor ding to Meigs County
Sheriff's deputies.
As a r esult of l h&lt;' conviction,
M usser's probation granted earlier
was revoked by common pleas court
and he was retumed to the state
lnstltullon.
While a I I he Columbus CoreeIlona! FacUlty , deputies returned
21 -year old Clifford Murray, Jr.,
w ho Is to appear today In common
pleas rourt on a shock probat ion
hearing.
Murray had been sentenced In
March to a tenn of six m onths to five
years for trafficking In m arijuana.
State law provld&lt;'s tha t a prisoner
after serving ll days In a statf&gt;
1Continued on page 10)

1 Sect ion , 14 Pages
25 Cenh
A Mu lti media Inc New1paper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursda y, April '26 , 1984

Thom as A. Van MeiPr, a former state senator and
candidate for the GOP guberna tori al nominat ion in
1982, the new spapPr said .
Bu t CoUey and ot her sources said that Johnson was
instructed by Reagan campaign officials to back off
his challeng&lt;:' to Colley, if he wa n led to keep his job
w ith the Reagan campaign.
Colley sa id Roger Stone, northeast regional
ca m paign coordinator for Reagan . tl'lephonf'd him
Wednesday to assure Colley that he conveyed that
m essage to J ohnson.
The potential challenge from Johnson. w ho says
he'll decide aft er the M ay 8 primary whether to

oppoS(&gt; Colley, is what triggered the unusua l
gathering of old and new fac es in the Ohio Republican
party.
Part icipant s included fanner Gov. James A.
Rhodes. former state GOP Chairman Earl Barnes.
Cleveland Mayor George Voin voich. Columbus
Mayor Dana G. "Fluck" Rinehart. and R. David
Thomas. the chairman of the board of Wendy 's and a
key financial suppo rter of the Ohio GOP.
Colley, who df'scribf'd the m('('tin g as " unprecedented" in sta teGOP history, sa id he called it because
of concern.s "a bout the polit ica l div isiveness" w ithin
the GOP that could hurt Reagan· s campaign here and
"be counterproducti ve" to fun d-raising.

Rhodes said, "'l'hc);'rr just gorng to havP 10 work
harder."
Onr concern voict&gt;d by onr source centers on the
$455,1XXJ to be spPnt on a drive to registl'f 100.1'00 voters
m Ohio for the ReagaiJ campaign.
The program, funded by lhe national and state
Repuhlrcan parties. aims tu help the Reagan ~ Bush
campaign comm ittee but the rnunPy flows through
lhf' state party, not the campaign eorrunit tee.
A.r;. pat1 ir ipants ar rivC'd a1 lhP fTll"'•Piing at a private
a thi P! ic club in downlov.:n Co lumbus , they Wl'n' g-iven
&lt;'Opif's of an Akron Beacon .Journal story outlining
element s of th&lt;' challenge Johnson and Van '11e1 er
reportedly arr mountin g.
·

Reagan given
•
•
nice reception

Murder
charges
filed

LEE JEANS

b tra1

• llvn 2(KI i\f11 VI I )' t:ks1~n~ In ("hoo:-.t• from

R. JOHNS, LTD.

..

See p hoto on P age 7

CO L UMBUS, Ohio (API Top-level Ohio
Republican s have mPt in private hl"re to head off an
internal party feud that they say threatened Ronald
Reagan 's re-election ca m paign in Ohio, according to
the Da}1on Journai ~ Hera ld .
After the three-hour m eeting Wednesday, Ohio
GOP Chairman Michael CoUey said he was given a
vote of con fidenC'&lt;', as was State Rep. Dave .Johnson,
execut ive dir&lt;'Cior of t he Reagan-Bush campa ign in
Ohio.
Johnson. a conserva tlvP w ho nar rowly lost t he
chairmanship to Colley in 1982. reportedly w as
preparin g to run against CoUey next m onth for the
chairmanshi p, with the help of fellow COilSC'rva tive

BOYS' 100% COTTON

hu !d J\IJ tlablt&gt; at h 1~ h t&gt;r p n~t'~
llll' hmt• w a rranty
1· l'n n: m d u dl'., ~pcc M I op1 1on&lt;; J n d cu'ilnm
HI &amp; I &lt;J K

1 fea i Urt'&lt;. (Fui i· N.lml' Up!Jim

Stories on P ages, 3,4,5

at
e
enttne
Republicans try to head off feud

POINT PLEASANT - A Letart
wom an was chargC'd Wednf&gt;Sday
with murdf'r in connPCi ion wit h the
death of her Jl!, -monlh old baby,
Mason County Prosecuting Altor npy Damon B. Morga n Jr. reported
today.
Sarah May Key es, Tl. was placed
under arrest a t the Mason County
Courthouse hy TroopPr L .P .
Mullens of the Point Pleasant
Detachment of the West Virginia
State Polil'&lt;' in connection with t he
March 28 dea th of her infan t son.
.Jprom e Scott Keyes. Morgan sa id.
Keyps' baby is believed to have
diro from a stab w ound to the
a tx:lomen.
T he pmsccuting attomcy sa id the
ar rest \arne four weeks a ft er the
inciden t beca use Keyes was undergoing treatment at Charheston
Gcnf'r al Hospita l's Depat1men t of
BPhavior, Mf'd i ci n e
and
Psychia l rv.
Ke.v cs was also rC'COVf'ring from
w hat stat!' polie&lt;&gt; described as an
appar&lt;'nl self-inflicted lacera t ion to
her throat and wounds to her
abdomen. The father of the c hild,
Gera ld L. Keyes, found his w lfe
wounded ancl ly ing on the k it chen
floor ancl the infant rn his bed when
hC' arrived hom C' from work, sta te
pol ice added.
Sta te police also sa id tha t evidenc(' d iscov£'red during the inves tiga tion caused them to believe that
Sarah Keyes also ing&lt;'Sted a
quantity of an acid -based bathroom

&lt;;tylt"s in Va ladt um

EXCLUS I VELY BY

••
'

" low Prices"

~t·l lin g

I· .. u ti

~

I , .

hes l

J APOL LO and FLAIR

992-5692 or 992-6565

~

·"t'//1/&gt;i , _, , ., ...

Veteran s M••morial

SPRING VALEY PLAZA
GA LliPOli S. OHI O
CLOSE D MONDA YS

1fer ed at l hrs lo w
We
l doubt you wd l frn d a lower
f lass rrn g prrce this Sp rin g ._
I T his is a lim it ed tim e o ffer trom
It h e m anufacture r. We recom l mend that you act qu ickl y. j ust
I bri n g thi s ad in to our store.

I

To Be Gtven Away Every Day
Tuesday. May 1st thru Fr1day, May 4

H.t\ f 'fl'

Emer gt&gt;n(')' run~

This 1s the fir st time these
ss rings have ever bee n ofprrce 1

PHOTOGRAPHY

l 'ur· ~ ·n •

Tt'(·hnwo~ l ("r , ll t ·r·~ · .111d

LASS RING SAL

~we

pd tT•nt s of twor hildrf'n: Michael. ~0 .
v.: ith th(&gt; U.S. 1\.rm.\· in Washington.

.I! II 'I, I I, \I I ,JTll:t' llll 'llh ; 11 (' Ulldf'l '

lilt'

MetCJ l inl ·: IIJL~I Jf ·lh. •.\.1.., ,. l:t.tdl~oll t
o f BPipn· Hi gh Scht1o l .. 1nd .11 t. ·nrl· ·d
Washingt on

-------------------------------,

1CLI P ALONG THIS LI NE

,til .11 \hi' h1rrnr· of
! f!lll T IHJrsda\·

r

111! ,, tll q )( dh 111·

.tt

49041 Twp. Rd 1059, Reedsv ill e. OH 45772

t11.t\ 1

.tl' ,

was tlw ~·m (J! \\·1 . 1 hrt.IJII) '-,n11tll
and t hP b h · &lt;h\·r ·n I .ug• ·r11 ..., , 1 'I 1111 ·rt-.
t ·mplo\ •'(1

Pard lor by Ca ndrdate. Joseph 0 Sayre. Treas

.1\r('a Cha mbt~r of l'ommE'ITt'
Hc: and his wife. Hann0lor&lt;'.

Positive Lead ership

!.11!

StCph (·n ~. 2';', 7 'JI_:'II) Il.; r . \'.~ r 1·, t'l "
burg. wht1du~l 1-"rrd.t ·, !1 1• t1 11r II I"IJ·-..
sustainn:l in .1 rntrol )"( \ I lt· . tn I, J, ·nr
Burial·\\:t!'- Ill :\ :· lln ~~~~n \ lt ·Jl\II!Ld
Gard(•n. Padwr -.bur ~:

Wd !'-

MEIGS COUNTY

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Joseph D. Sayre
Positive Change

Philadelphia bound

Voi.Jl, No.9
Cop yright ed 1984

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1

l~f1i.

in1~76.

Democrat For
County Commissioner

He r&lt;'Ceived a cwtifimtPfnmr the
Amprican Bankers A sSO&lt;'ial ion's
School of P~ rson nc l Administra tion
in 1972 and has artended numerous
spminars on J variety of banking
subj C'(' tS.
1\ Ga lli&lt;! Coun 1.\ nal ivr. Thump·
son gTE'W up on a 104-a crr fa r m in
M organ Township and is a graduate
of BidwPII-Porlcr High School. He is
r urrpn11y artivC' in t-he Ga llipolis

Spring sports results

•

I·IJd

Athr'ns
Sen : ict '-" will 111 h·ld .11 ~· Jl 11\
Friday at ltH l)I L:1 11\ .l111"d.tr1 !··tnt
f•ral Hom( · in ·\liJ.I n', Hun.tl \\ tl \~
in Nf'lson CJ·ml'lt 't\ l :rlt·lid' I!J,t'.
ca ll at thr· fun, ·r .IIIH•tnt tr 11111•· ' ·1"~
p .m . Thur"(l; l\

Bom F1'11 . :.};,

Harold E. Thompson has be&lt;&gt;n
Plf'Ct('(l pn•sid£"nl of thr sout hern
Ohio di\· i.sion of CPntral Trust Co.,
the bank sa id toda\·
T hompson succ('('(J&lt;.; .Jamr-s R.
Williams. w ho had bC'f&gt;n prPsidf'nl
sinC'f' 19RI &lt;.~nd l'f'~lgJlf'fi two wPPks
&lt;1g0 to pursuf' fX'rsona l intf' r rs ts.
Thompson. H. has hf&gt;f&gt;n with !hi'
bank sinf'f' 19ffi. SPn'ing as a rf'llf'r,
loan officrr. operation~ offif'f'r and
ad mi nist rativ~ oftic~ r.
H ~ was
Plf'C'trd a ,·ic•· prl'sidf'nl of 1hf' ban k

Gagliardo filed a formal complaint against Judge Ruben In
February 19&amp;3. The Board of
Commissioners on Griwanres and
Disclplln&lt;'. which found t he accusations in.,ufficient basis for mlscondu&lt;'l charge. dismissed the complaint .June 6, 19&amp;3, without a
hearing.
Ruben's case w as one of several
rt'Cent complaints filed against
antagonL,t s either of Gaglia rdo or
his ally on the.JuvenileCourt , J udge
John J . Toner , The Plain O..al er
said.

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.1i11 111111

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Th&lt;' complaint camP from lawyer
Robert Wasserman, a fanner
J uvPnlle Court referee who took
exC&lt;'ption to Judge Ruben·s bailiff
explaining court procedures to
accused delinquents and their
parents, The Plain O..aler said.
ThPma ttPrrould have been taken
to an appellal&lt;' court, but Wasserman accused Judge Ruben of
sanctioning the unautlloriz«&lt; practie&lt;&gt; of law. thp newspapPr said .
Supreme Court em ployees to:d
the paper Gagliardo wanted to
pros~utr .Judg&lt;' Rub&lt;'n himSI'If.

Gallia native Thompson
heads Southern Division

l 1111 I tl, '\

F'f)SS,

daVin l';rrkt 'r'-h' lll:

The quasi governmpntal o!!IC'&lt;',
financed by lawyer registration
ft'&lt;'S, gradually assumed primary
responsibility for prosecuting lawyPr and judge misconduct cases.
ThP dulles traditionally had been
shared by the Ohio State Bar
Assoc!arion and local bar groups.
Shortly after mov ing to Colum bus, Gagliardo. 72. pursued a
romplaint against his fX)litical rival,
Betty Willis Ruben. The two had
pngagl'C.l in a biller 198) [)(&gt;mocral ic
primary for a Cuyahoga County
.JuvPn ileCourt judgeship, which she
won . Gagliardo had SJ)C'nt m ort' than
two d('('ades on lhf' juvenile court
bench .

1\UCI'ION FOR BENEFIT - Donations are being
taken for the Beta Sigma Phl auction to henefit the
Pomeroy Emergen cy Squad and purcha.o;e the,Jaw sof
Life will he May 5 at II a.m . to3p .m , hehindPom eroy
Fin&gt; Station. Tiw &lt;-qulpment will he on hand and
demon...tr-.HNI aftf' r th(' a uction. P ietun•d wit h a

sample of the donations ar e. front from l~ft. Betty
Ohlinger , Sony a Wolft•, Mauri• ha Nd .on; hac: k ,
('harlotte Hanning, F or.-..!'4 Tumer, ,\thens audioneer donating hio;; Sf.•rvices , ru~d Linda Uiffle. Donation"'i
may he left at Pom eroy Village Hall, the Ponll'nJy F ir•·
Station or The Baily Sentinel Offi"'·

Cincinnati rated top Ohio city
COLUMB US, Ohio tAP) -Sutton
La ndry of the Grea ter Hamilt on
Cham ber of Commerce may have
offered the und&lt;'r statem m t or the
day when asked about a stud y t hat
listed his c ity as the worst for liv ing
among 14 in Ohio surveyed.
" We'rr&gt; not wild about thPSr
st udies," sa i d La ndry. t he
chamber's group m anager of com munity and business affairs.
A national study by Robert M.
Pier C'&lt;' of the State University of
New York at Cortl and ra ted
Cin cinnati the best Ohio city for
living.
PlerC'&lt;' surveyed 276 U.S. cities.
assigning the m ost weight to the
loca l econom y. Ot her factors. i n
order of importanC'&lt;'. were the
climate. crime, housing. educat ion.
health car e, r ecr eation. transporta ·
lion and the arts.
Landry said such su!&gt;'eys are

probably accura te w ithin thP para m eters they establish but th at
they don'r lake a lot uf things into
considera tion.
''I'd be very curious to Sl'&lt;' what
thf' bas is of his ratings w('rf', "
La ndry said. " Wl'' re less than an
hour away f"rom Cincinnati and an
hour away from Daylon. Vll'e havC'
lull access to all those cultural
ac tivit ies there. B ut becauSl' WC' arc
a ISPpar ate) city we get fault ed for
not having an opera or a full -time
symphony or things like tha t .
"Quantitative analysis is fin&lt;• but
it ignores an awfu l lot of things,"
Landry said .
Cincinnati rated 3-Ith nationall,..
well behi nd Grrensboro. N.C.
wher e Pierf't' found the l iving best.
flut theQuff&gt;nCitywas flrst in Ohio,
ranked ahead of Clevcland 167
over all) , Lorain 1791. Colu mbu s
(891, Canton 1101 1 and Stculx&gt;nville

11151 .
" I havC' to say in til ia iJ:.· wC' 'n•vP t~·
pleased. WP'vr ilPiiPvrd 11 all along.
It's nif'f' to k now it 's hf¥-n \'t:'ri fi C'd,"
sa id Robin Ca lv in. viC'&lt;' pres ident of
communic J tions for thr Grea ter
Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce.
''I'm not sw p 1isrd thai we placed
I he lx&gt;st of Ohio citi es. G06h. we'rc
workin g very hard tu sprmd tha t
mcssagc. A nd ! think the messagcis
nul fuundt&gt;d on puff. I thin k this is a
prrrtv special placr." Ms. Ga lv in
sa id.
She sa id she had not Sl'&lt;'n detail s of
the su r wy which listed Louisville
and Lex ing1on. Ky., and Fort
Wa)11P, 1nd., higher than Cincinna ti.
Ra nked below l hP 138 m idway·
point in th!'studywcrP Toledo (139).
Youngstown 1144 1. Akron 1147).
Lima (154 1. Spri ngfield 11881, Dayton 12101. Mansfield t2141 and
Ham ilton 122'21

PEKINC !API Prrsrdr nt
Reagan. w ho for yPars w~ s an
outspoken cr itic of Communt.&lt;t
China. Jl'Cf' i\' Pd a \ VO rm wclmmr on
his ar r iva l in Peking toda, and wa s
told b.v China's president that thl'rc
is hOfX' I hc " two great na tions" ca n
solve the problems tx•twe&lt;&gt;n them .
i\ftl'r reviewing goos!'St('f)pin~
Rc'() Anny troops and smUing as a
gmup of children c hanted " Wei
com r . war m welcome" a t an arrival
cere m ony. Reaga n W{•nt din'Ctly
in to a meelin p; wit h Prr.osidenl Li
X iannian in the Crmt Hall of lllC'
People.
From the stPps oft he Grea t Hall.
RC'Jga n cou ld look out over massivf'
Tiana nmc n Sq uar£&gt; a nd to lhf'
ma usoleum of t hr laiC' Chinf';;f'
leader M ao T se- tung, who in 194q led
the Comm u nist dctory m·pr a
Na tiona list Ch incsr gm·prnm(•nt
that !(eagan conilnued to support m
C'x ilc for mos1 of his JXJiil ica l car('(•r.
But Rf'agan sa id bc&gt;forf' arri\'i.ng
hf'rC' thai his sLx-da .v tr ip was a
m ission ol" "pea\P nnd friC'ndship'"
that should IX'nefit OOth C'ntrn triC'S
And in his first publi c sta tf'mf'nl
aft f' r his a r rival, Reagan sa id hf'
ca me to l hina '" rPprrscnling thC'
sincf'rr df'sirf' of thC' Amrrican
pro pie to be good neighbors 10 1hr
Chinese prople."
" There are diftNences ilPI\\'l''n
us that shou ld not tx• glussr&gt;d oVl'r
nor denied." Rmgan ac·k now l
edged . Bu t h&lt;' added that· Ihanks to
the hard work and det&lt;'rm ination of
fa r sighted leaders of both our
count ries during the last 12 )'Pars.
our futurv is bright with potential."
In his remarks, prppan&gt;d as a
tuas l fordl•livery at a banquf't givC'n
by Pres ident Li in his honor at the
Great Hall, R&lt;&gt;agan noted hc~;·as the
first Ameria n pres iden t to \'is it

China sine(· normal diplomat ic
rf'la tio ns wrtT' f'S!ablishf'd in 1!1'79
"Whether to commerce. the art s,
sCiPncr. or indus 1r:. ·. our citizens a rr
PSta blishiog pPr sonal bonds of trust
and friendship thai mi tTor lhP good
will found at thr highest lr,·cls."
RPag an said .
·· This hf'Jith)" mtr rcoursP is
PncouragPd IJt•caust' ou r count r iPS.
our IX'OPIP as a whole. ha\'f'
d&lt;'l&lt;'nnim'll thdt what wp haw~ in
common- what WPt· a.n;;~ccomplish
cmd bu i.ld ! ogPI hPr - is vasll~· morr
significant than thosf' things lhGtt
SPparalc us." he addP&lt;l .
Hf' said th &lt;.~t "P\'rn grf'ater
progress can be made if our tu tu ~
dforts arr baSf'd on
mutua l
n 'SIX'('t and mutua I tx•nplit
f'\ "C'Il
w hi le l"f'('Ogniti ng !hrtt W(' do not
tot a ll _\" ;t g rN" on .s omf' ! hings which
wP bclir \'&lt;' imp:&gt;l'lant .··
I •rf'siflf'nl l.i told Ht•ag&lt;m at thf'
s1a11 of I hrir mwt ing 1hat hf'wan tf'd
to C'x prPss his ""warm wrl&lt;"omP to
~·ou and Mrs. Reaga n and aU y·our
fl·iends from the· LinitP&lt;l Sta tcs ...
Li said C h i nf'~f' Pn·mirr Zhao
Zi:.·ang had r('('l'i\"f&gt;d J warm
wolco m{' on hi-" \'isil to We~shing1on
in .Januar_1;, which impruw"Cl ties
tx··twf't'n fh(• two &lt;'OU n l rit:'s, and

add('d. " I hu~·t h ••eurTt•nt \'is i t, Mr.
PrPsidPnf. wi t! furthpr r nh &lt;WC('
rL•I;J tion.., lwtwf'f'rl o ur two
count ric!-Li rcfrrrrd to problems lx&gt;twr-en
China and lilt •Cnilf'll StatPs bu t said
hf' ho(X's thoSC' "problf'm s can be
practiC'ally solvC'd . ··
He said hc• had rmd Reagan 's
statement ~. madf' in ad\·anC'f' of his
visi t . that thf' Pacific t'C'gio n .
including China. arr of r:olilic J I and
('('Gnomic importancf'.
"I sharr your \·iC'\~· s. · · th(' Chinf'St?
head of" SILl!(· to ld HPaga n.

Convictions will carry death penalty
WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) Two Brown County m en could face
the death penalty If conv icted In the
slaylngs of t hree mem ber s of a Lees
Creek family.
After considering th&lt;' case for
three days. t he Clinton County
grand ju ry Wednesday indkted
Terry L . Coffman, 29, and Danny E.
Hooks , 39, In the March 28 m urder s
of Donald L. Danes, his w ife and
teen·ag&lt;' son.
The m en each fare three counts of
aggravated robbery, one count of
aggravated burglary and six count s
of aggravated murder , with deathpPnalty speclflcatlons. They are
being held without bond and are
scheduled to be arraigned Frtday.
Although only three people were
killed, Prosecutor Ronald C. Carey
said he sought Indictments on six
rounts of aggravated mu rder
- I

aga inst each m an because the case
ca n Jx&gt; vlewf'd differently .
H e said the eac h set of aggrava ted
murder charges includes thiW
counts with thespeciflcal ion of prior
calculallon and design, and three
wit h the specifica tion of felonymurder .
"Wp may have to choose between
them ." he said of thP different
charges. " 'This Is a complicated
caSE'. It's like looking at a cube from
three angles. It's different, depPndlng upon which side you look at It
from. I can•t go Into detail because I
would have to dlvulgp Informa tion
about the case."
Carey said the aggravated
m urder charges carry a sentPnre of
death or life imprisonment wi th
eac h count upon conviction.
Charges of aggravated robb&lt;'ry and
aggravated burglary carry senten-

ces of five to 25 years in prison.
Sheriff Patrick Haley said Da nes.
39, his wife . Karen, 39. and their son,
Rodney, 15. were beaten and
stabbed a t their home in r ural
Wayn e Township. A daughter . Usa,
5, was as leep in a bed room and was
not injured.
Halpy sa id that Coffman, an
unem p loyed m&lt;'Chanic, was once a
customer of Danes, w ho was a
salesm an for Mac Tool.
Carey alleged M onday that Cof·
!man and H ooks stole tools and guns
from til&lt;' Danes hom e. l'he stolen
propPrty was recovered from
Hooks' home and an undisclosed
location. the prosecutor said .
A nPlghbor discover€&lt;! the slain
family til&lt;' m orning after they were
killed . Danes' body w as found In his
tool sai&lt;'S van in the drtveway of the
hom e. and the bodi&lt;'S of his wife and
son were In the house, Haley sa id .

A.DMIRING LOOK - First Lady N ancy Reagan looks back at
P resident Ronald Reagan as they llN' greeted durin~ arrlv at
ceremonies Thursday In Peking. In h!U'k i• Chinese President U
Xlannla. ( AP Laserph&lt;JW ).

I

�Comment

The Daily

Ohio

Page-2-The Daily Sentinei
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thu~y. April 26, 1984

Eastern bombards NG Pirates
'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEV&lt;YI'ED TO TilE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publlshee
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

Assistant Puhllsher; Controller

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Assocla·
tlon and the .- \ml'rlc u.n N('Wspaper Publisher A.s§Ociation.
Lt71'1'F.RS OF OPI!\IIOS art&gt; welcomt&gt;d . They should be less than 300 worM
long . .\11 lt"tter!'\ are !;uhje1·1 to P(lltlng and PIU!il be signed with nam e, addres81Uld

h•l1•phone numbrr . No unsigned lt&gt;tters wlll hP puhlMhed . Letters !Jhould be In
KliOd l&lt;lSte. addn-ssln~t lssut&gt;s, not personalltlf'S.

Tobacco road today_______R~o_be_rt_~_a_lte_____.r~
WASHINGTON cNEAl - According to conventional wisdom.
feudalism thrived in Europe from
the 9th to the 15th cent uries but was
then supplanted by more enlight ened forms of political and social
organlza tlon .
The Middle Ages may be gone.
but a latter-day version of feudalIsm Is very much alive In the Cn ited
States. As in earlier centuries,
absentee landlords exercisE' substantial economic contra! ovC'r their
tenant farmers.
Modern feud ali sm is disgu ised in
this country as tobacco farmingand it i s organized. protected and
promoted under the auspices of thC'

U.S. DPpartment of Agriculture.
The system dates back to the
19.l 0s. when the federal government
esrablished what was. in effect. a
licensing program for tobacco
production. T hosf' who owned land
on which tobacco was grown were

An attempt to get
down to business

given USDA allotments that spec!·
fled the number of acres that could
be planted in tobacco and quotas
that limited the amount of the crop
they could sell.
In subsequent decades. most of
the allotment holders have moved
away from their farms. Today
federal officia ls estimate that only
20 percent to 25 percent are actually
engaged in tobacco farming.
Many of the holders of the
approximately 500.000 allotments
are lawyers. doctors. business

to legally retain the production
rights, which they then lease to real
tobacco farmers - a thoroughly
Inequitable practice that pmvldes
an almost certain profit for allot·
men! holders while driving up
production costs for already hard·
pressed farmers.
"An acre of agticulturalland that
otherwise might cost $60 a year to
rent can cost $1,000 or even $1,500 If
an allotment comes with It," says
Rep. Thomas E. Petri, R-Wis .. a
leading ctitic of t he program . "The

executi ves and others liv ing thou ·
sa nds of miles from 1hr neares1
tobacco faiTn .

cost of an allotment can Increase a
farm er's expenses 30 to 60

Until Congress reecntly made a
long-overdue change in the law,
that list also included banks,
manufacturing flrm s. utility compa niflS. sc hools, churches and
assorted ot hPr non-agricul1ural
organiza 1ions.
Thf' absentee owners arc allowed

pt:.&gt;reent.''

Allotments cover all ex('('pt three
of the almost 20 different types of
tobacco grown In this country.
Including the two major varietiesburley. grown principally In Ken tucky and Tennessee. and nuecurr-cl , grown primarily in North

and South Carolina .

When Richard M . l\cxon sPt foot in China in 1972 and beeamP the first
American pres ident to \'!Sit that country, his arrival OJ)f'ned a new era in
t; .S.·ChinNC' rf'lations

a start ling dP\·otopment in the diplomatic world. bu1 it was not a

It was

congressional critics ha ve pressed

·,,;p intended to \.vork out specific problems.

for reforms, but t hey have been
able to secure only modest modifi

Nlxon was followed to China by G€ra ld R. Ford. whosP 1975 journey was
inl&lt;'nded to demons! ra tp that Nixon's opening to China was not JUSt a fluke.
and that thP relationship could grow .
Now Ronald Reagan is following in I he footsteps of his two RPpublican
predec&lt;'ssor s, aftPr an overn ight stop on this South Pacific island . In the
,·ipw of his a1des. his joumey is intend&lt;'() to show that with thP U.S. -Chinese
relationship on a solid footing, thl' two countries can get down to normal

cations and cosmetic changf's.
The allotment system. the lead·
ing cause of economic dislortion

and disruption in the industry.
remain s essentially

bv namC' .
· The disput&lt;'S that make this subj eer e, ·en mor&lt;' difficult than the debate
over thr fut Uit' of Taiwan . the is land ro which thl' Nationalist government
n('(l from the communists in l949. involve ex pori controls and textiles. The
quc•stion of 1rxt ilf's carriPs polirical O\'E'rtonC's made all the morr· sensitive
in a p!'f'sirlf'ntial Plf'Ction .v ear.

White Reagan is unlikely. during his seven to right hours of meetings
with Chma · s m ost senior leaders. to bE&gt;comC' a l radf' negotiator, the subjKt
. is an rmportan l C'IC'm«'nt in his visit.
Th(' texti le quf'stion is considrred the most sensilin" in HIP trade area
bPcause "t hf' tPxtilr industry is flat on its back." the official said.
liP stud thP lhinf'sC' would like the United Sta irs to removp dll restraints

on ll·xtiiP imp:nis .

"Thf'~··d

likr to sell as much as they could," he said.

\\'h('n a L:. S.-Chinr-sf' IPx tik' agr('('ment C'xpiretl and npgotiations for a

ru·"

pacl broke down m.t anuary l~&amp;l. th&lt;· United States imposed unilatera l
import quota to protN.:t thC' Amf&gt;rican textilp industry.
l'f'kmg n •sJ.Ymdf'd h\· lim iting its imports of U.S. synthetic filrrs .
and cnllon .
·A nPw tcxtilf' accord vva ~ rPachPd las t .JuJ~·. but il was opposed by lhP
l~ . S . h·xtii P inclu !-i tr:v That np~.., iti on promptt'd further Chi nesr cut s in
purchasf'S c_:. f l .S. agri&lt;'ul1ural pnxJucts

so\ · lx• &lt;.m~

Letter to the editor
We m-;pect !Hs. Good nit c
r know thJt tht•n· h;l\"(' ht'cn
manv if'rtf'rs &lt;.~bout thP :~ - 2 HJif' of
the Meigs Local Goarcl of Edu"ation
agains t rC'nrwing :Vlarilyn (;ood ·
nitr 's f'o ntra ct. I am \·rr;• rlisnp·
pointed w it h thrir d('(·ision. I ;tlso
fN'I that whate\·rr thr rrason1st
Mr. King. M r. Pnwrll, and Mr.
·Va ugh an had th::tt madr th0m sa~ ·
"no·· to thf' r[' hiringnf Ms. I ;oodnitP
wf'rr probabl\· not \'C'r~.- good . \\'C'
Wf' IT' gp!tin_g to lx' \ "f' r\ g c)(l(f ~~~ whJt

Wf' JrP doing and still arr. but

wilhout the help of Ms. Goodni te. I
f(·C'l th at WP won't co ntinu P
tmproving.
M s. f'tOOdnitr l'l&gt;spt.•cts and loves
u:-. and Wf' love and rPspect hPr: so
plf'aS(', board membPrs. rrnew her
conrract and !lstt&gt;n to thf' prople"s
wi ~ hC's. not your famil _\' 's or your
own . for our sak f'. - A concerned
band mf'ml.x&gt;r, Rhonda Rathburn,

Middl&lt;'pPrt.

•

Today tn history
T&lt;~lilv

i.s Thu rs&lt;la , .. April '2fi , &lt;he lilt h da v of 1!184. Then• arp 249 days IPft

in the \T'&lt;H .
Tod.:l\ ·· ~ Hig hlig ht i n Hislot\::
On ,\ .pril ~ti. lAAl. t hf' ass&lt;..~ssin o( Pr('sident Abraham Lincoln - .John
WlJk('s Booth- was :-.unounded by ft&gt;ckral t rTJOps nPar BowlingCrcen, Va .

and was kil!Pd or killrd himst?lf.
On this da!P:
In lfm. Captain .John Sm ith landmat Cape Henry. Va .. with the colonists
who would ('Stablish thf' first permammt E ngli sh settlement in America .
In 1%4 . a nationwide test of the Sa lk ant! polio vacrinP bPgan.
In 1%1. thP Nrican nations of Tangany ika and Zanzibar merged to form
Tanzania.

A nd In 1981. the Iranian mUitant s a• · ~r U.S. Embassy in Tehran
annou nced that they had dispersed thP American hosta ges in order to
prPYrnt anot h&lt;·r rescur attempt.
Ten vrars ago: A group of army officers In Portugal Sf'ized control of the
gove~ent and an nounrf&gt;fl that Premier A ntonio de Spinol a had resigned.
Five vears ago: The Labor Department reported that Inflation In the
first qu~rier of the year was running at an annual rate of 13 percent.
One year ago: Amid confidence in the economy and good corporate
earn ings repot1s, lhe Dow Jones Industrial Average rose more than 22
points to close above the 1.200 level for the first time ever.
Today's Birihdays: Seismologist Charles Richter Is B4 years old.
Actress-comedian Ca rol Burnett is 51. And singer Bobby Rydell Is 42.
Thought for Today: "Time goes. you say? Ah no! Alas, lime stays, we
go." - Henry Dobson. Engllsh poet 11840-19211 .

inla c t . al·

though the federal gowrnment has
started limiting the number oft hose
holding production rights .
That effort, however. has only
Pxacerba1Pd the si1uatlon beca usP
the natural law of supply and
dPmand ha s produced a si tuation

· bu sin(_•ss, and that means trad('.
As hC' began his Journe)'. Reagan mrt with trade industry
n'prf'srntativcs in Tacome~. Wash ., and told them : '' l go as .-.omC'thingof a
~&lt;.ilf'~man, doi.ng PVC' r-y thin ,~:Z I ran up to !hC' limit ofputfing a 'Buy America'
q ickC'r on my bag ."
U .S ·Chinese trad&lt;• grew m leaps and tx1unds in thf' dPCadr following
Ni.xo n ·~ joumf'y·. but it has faliC'n f0C'&lt;'ntl~ .
F rom an historic high of $5.5 billion in 19Rl, it dropped to $4.4 billion la st
·' ·mr In 1983. the United States suffered a $71 m1tlion deficit with China, the
first such t rOJdt• defiCit since 1977.
··Till' tradp issuPs havP bPeomr hm\·ily polit&gt;Ci7ed and havp replaced
TJiwan as thC' prin cipal irritant in our relationship." said one senior
administration official. speaking on the cond ition that he not be identified

In addition to the allotments and
quotas, USDA also has an elaborate
ptice support pmgram for the crop
which allows farmers to use unsold
tobacco as collateral for guaranteed federal loans at speclfled
levels.
All of these mechanisms are
supposed to keep the tobacco
industry healthy while balancing
supply and demand - but It's
hardly a surprise that none of those
!(oals has been attained.
In recent years, su.,Iuses have
exceeded 500 million pounds about one-quarter to one-t hird of
total production- while the USDA
has lost billions of dollars In
administrative costs. loans. Inter·
est, storage expenses and other
cnsts over the life of the program.
"Because the allotments make
tobacco growing so expensive,"
explains Petri, "the government
has stepped in to prop up the price
at about double the world price for
tobacco."
T he result: This country's cigarette manufacturers import an
estlated 10 to 25 percent of their
annual requirem ent s from Canada,
Brazil, Indi a, Zimbabwe and ot her
nations where the price of toba ceo
is not artificially infl ated.
In recent years, Petri and ot her

wherP ff'wer allotment s IC'ad to

higher

priers fo r

t hose

st ill

available.

A costly toy ____________Ja_c_lc_A_nd_e_rs_on
WASHINGTON The U.S.
Posta l Service would like to charge

Fmncisco.

its mistakes and ineffieiencies to
the people who US&lt;' the mail. This

But i1 is far from cheap. A t a cos t to
lhP sendPr of" $~ a page, custornPr
reaction was predictablr - to
everyonP but the Postal Srrvil'l:',
that is. T hr ('('SUiting nnancia l
fi asco was drsctil.x&gt;d in a rf.•port by
invrsrigators for a House Govern·
mPnl OJ)f'rations subcommi1f('f'
chairf'd b~ 1 Rf'p. Glf' nn E nglish.

could add another nickel to thl' cost
of mailing a first -class letter.
ThP latest example of poor
planning and worse E'Xf'C'ution is
I NTELPOST. thP Postal Service's
1978 brainchild that has turned into
a dismal. S6 million fa ilune. By thP
end of 1983. I NTELPOST had
brought in gross r evC'nucs of lrss

1ha n $6(),000 - and thl'rc is little
hope that lht• l'Ostl y toy will rver
bf&gt;comP

a (.13!-'ing proposi tion .

M~· asscx_· i&lt;::~trs

Donald Goldberg

and

Ind\ Badhwar havr bfof'n
kf'(•ping cloSC' watch on the Posta l
Service. Herr's w hat thP.v 'vr

tmrnl'&lt;l

about the INTF:lJ'O!'T

disaster:
T he projrct v.:as announcPd in
19iH b\· Postmas!f'r (;{'nf'ral \\'illiJ.m BolgPr as .1n Pxpcrimf'nt to
IC'St elf' I i Vf'l'_\" of r l&lt;'ctronic mrssagl's
O\'f'rsca s hy s&lt;::~ l c llitf'
It was
sup)X)sf'd to gi\'f' businpss('s and
individua ls a quick, chpap wa.v to
sf'nd lrllf'I'S abroad from fi vl' major
c ili('s: Nrw York. \\'ashin.[!ton ,
C hi cag o. H o us t o n and San

INTELPOST is quick enough.

0 -0kto.
"To dal&lt;'. INTELPOST has bel•n

evrn comf' closf' to matching
curr0nt E'X )X'nditurf'S in the nPar
futur0. lpt alone recovPr past
cos ts." fhf' report warns.
The H ouse investigators werf'

par1icularly exasperated at the
Postal Service's lack of the most
f'lementary rf"Cords . It couldn't
even tell them the number of
messages that had been s~n t by
i NTELPOST.
"Th&lt;' failure of lhP Postal Service
to compile and maintain informa -

stated by more than $1 million .
"ThC' comm ittE'(' dOf's not critic-

ize thp Postal Service sol&lt;'ly
because it s approach to INTELPOST has failed, " the report states.
"The most serious aspect of the
fail ure is the inability of the Postal
~rvi('(' to d&lt;'monstratf' compl'tence in planning, implrmPnting
and marketing of elec-troni c srnices in a competitiv(' and unn•gu
latC'd pnvironment."

a complrtP failurr in the markrt

tion on the number of 11\TELPOST
messages is, to say thr lrast.
surpr i s ing ." ! h(' invrsti ga tor s
wrofr . "Any managrr would want

Wf'IT' $~.ORO.

to know the numtxor of messages in
ord&lt;'f to be able to ana lyze the
traffic on the system
The
eommitt!'f' is mystifif&gt;fl that th&lt;'

" terminate fNTE LPOST as soon as
practicable."
UNDER THE DOME: One

Postal Srrvicr has not routinely

Leahy, D-Vt.. was welt bricfPd on
the CIA's Nicaraguan mining

JX'Iiormanr(•. ··
Sin('(' 197R. df'\"f'lopmrnt. trsti ng

compiled and made use of I his basic
managemrn1 Information."
Thf' in vf'sligators found that.
over th f' yPars, 1here was little

and npPrallon of I NTF.LPOST have
cos&lt; $fi.2:\2.1X)() This mean' tho

discussion of the costl y boondoggle

sysrr m has !.:lkf' n in lrss tha n onP
pc'rrf'nt of its cost "ThC'rf' is lifti P
n 'aso n to l"}{'lif'\"C' that l"f'\"C'nuf's will

ho&lt;~rd of governors.

r~t

m('f'ltngs of the Postal Servicr's

FutihrmlOrf',

"somp of th&lt;' informa tion r eportt&gt;d
h!"' Postmast er Gen&lt;'ral Bolgpr in
his presPntation to the board was

The bottom line: ThP commi ttPP
urges the board of govrrnors to

paradoxical rpason S&lt;&gt;n. Patrick

opPra1ion is that he missf'd two ke~·

briefings hPid for other members of
the SenatP in telligence comm it tee.
Inst&lt;&gt;ad. he got a persona l briefing
by the CIA. Unlike his colleagues at
thl' group mPetings. Lea hy as ked
the CIA people specifica lly if thl•y
had par1icipatf'd in 1hf&gt; mining.

They said they had.

Argentina bailout ________A_rr_B_uc_hwa_Ld
1\.s ~'OU rna~· haw., r ea d in thC'
n('wspapc'rs. Argentina "":as bailffl
OUI Of ;:j scriou.s debt situation thi s
month [t was ad\·ancrd mo np~' bv
frif'nds so it rould pay intrrf'st on it s
enormous rlr bt .
1
\ \ hiiC' lhis was not big new~. lhr&gt;
faC't that MPxicoand Brazil camP to
t hf' rC'scue ca used a fpw rai sl&gt;d
PyrbrO\.\'S !)(&gt;causf' thry owf' mor('
monpy than Argentin a dOf's . How
does a cou ntry that is brokP it s«:&gt;lf
borrow money Ia bail out ;;~ not hrr
coun try that is also bankrupt?
It' s a ll don(' with mirrors.
The F inance Mini ster of Brazil
g(){'s to a consortium of /\mrrican
and European banks and suys. "Wf'

want to borrow $.'j(] million:·
"But," protE'Sts 1hC' consortium.

''you arP !n1o us for billions al read~·
How ca n we loan y·ou any more
monPy ? ''
"This monC'y isn't for us. lt" s ro
giw• 1o ArgC'ntina so il can pa_\·
interest on its debt."
"Why would you want to give
money 10 Argentina when you can't
pay back what you owe us?"

"W;;~it, thC'rr' s marc&gt;. If Argentina
goes into default. thrn Brazil won't

fC'&lt;'I obligm to repa y hPr loans. i\r('
vou prf'paretl for t hat ?"

"You're blackrnailing us for $50

m omrn1. Look, I'm not asking you
to givC' mf' $50 million in a satchrl.
Thr monry doesn ' t havC' to l0ave

go along with the deal. EvcryonP
looks good. The U.S. doesn't have to
rPsolve the problem unilaterally.

vour banks. It will be purely a paper

and if wr ca n loan monPy 1oanother
country it shows wp'rf' not thp
dPadbf'a ts rveryonc thinks we are
And thl' co nsortium can carry
Argrntina for another six months
on 1hrir books as a g(X)(j cus1omcr."

"It is murP than 00. Thr Finance

transaction. You take I he 50 million
that you're loaning Brazil, and you
just credit it to Argentina's account.

Ministpr from Mexico is outs ide.

Then you deduct lhe :J(] million

and IJp' s going to ask you for $100
mil lion to loan to i\rgentina ."
·· sur MPxico's broke too."
" Who isn't ? If you proptr wa nt to

(jgdinst Argentina 's intC'rPs1. and
you ha ve it aga in to loan to

million ."

sta y in th(' intprnatio nal banking
buslnrss . you'rp going 10 have to
conlinuC' loaning monf'y.· to roun ·
trlrs who wan1 to bail out the onP
w hosP interest is duf' at that

somebody els~ . "
"Does the United States govPrn-

ment know what you' re doing?"
"Thf'y put us up to It. They were
afraid if they balled out ArgPntina
by themselves it would set a
prPCedent. So they got Mexico.
Brazil. VPne7uela and Colombia to

'

"\'\

The Eastern offensive unit. a

Wolfe, Wayland
join MOC leaders

DOWN, BUT NOT OUT - Cincinnati Reds'
pitcher Mario Solo grimaces In pain Wednesday at
linst base altee he appeared to hurt his left ankle
making a play on a hard houncee by Atlanta Heaves'
Terry Harpee In folll'th tnnlng. Allee examination by

the trainee, Soto continued the game. Beav~'S' coa&lt;h
Joe Plgnatano, left, Reds' coach Tommy Helms and
Tony Pceez, Reds' fii'St baseman, check him aftee the
play. (AP Laserphoto ).

Reds hang on, edge Braves
llylillSHEARER
AP Sports Writer
ATLANTA (AP)
It was
anything but a routine night 's work
for Mario Soto, the Cincinnati Reds '
star pitcher.
" I had an upset stomach before
thP game and I was dizzy when I
staried the game." Soto said after
three relievers bailed him out of an
eighth inning jam as the Reds edged
the Atlanta Braves 4-3 Wednesday
night.
But his problems had only just
begun.
In the fourih inning, Atlanta's
Terry Harper lashed a shot off Solo's
left shin that caromed toward first.
After scrambling to field the bat!.
Soto overtlm&gt;w first. allowing
Harper to take second. and then
went down in a heap on the grass.
"It scarm me todeath."Sotosaid.
" I thought it was broken.ldidn't fC'&lt;'I
my foot at all for about 10 or l o
seconds."

"I wouldn't have cared if I had
walked him four times:· Soto said.
"I was pitching him the way I
wanted and the only pitch 1 threw
him that I didn't want 10. he hit out.! I
was a fast ball, right down the
middle. The only wa y he was going
to hi t me was if I made a mistake,
and I did."
The RPds uSt'd power-hit! ing to
account for three of their four runs,
with Tom Law less and Dave
Concepcion each cracking solo
home runs and Gary Redus scoring
the first run after a first ·inning ttip!e
ahead of Eddie Milner's single.
The Reds got another run in the
seventh on Dann Bilardello's RBI
single to cen ter.

Solo retired the next batter to get
out of the inning and said the shin
didn't particularly bother him the
rest of the way, although he put ice
on it between innings.
The right-hander carried a four·
hitter intothe eighthinningwhen the
Braves suddenly cut a 4·1 deficit to
one run.

Gerald Perry delivered a pinch·
hit single to center and Claudell
Washington drilled a 1-2 pitch over
the right field fence . his sixth homer
of the season and his third in two
games against Soto. After Rafael
Ramirez singled. three relivers Ted Power. BobOwchinkoand Brad
Lesley- retired one batter each to
get out of the inning.
LRsley. called up from Wichita
1\Jesday night. then retiJ·m tJu·pp of
four batters in I he ninth to ga m his

''I'm not a home run hittPr,"
Lawless sa id of his S('(.'Ond-inn.ing

shot. the first homer of his major
league career. " I just take 'em when
they come."
Lawlesssaid he didn't think it was
out. "I just happened to be in thP
right ball park. I guess ··

first save.

Soto said he was determined to
keep Washington from hurting him
aga in.

"SupposP

W&lt;'

givP

you

thp

money? What happc&gt;ns whf'n thP
interC&gt;St paym Pnt s on Brazil's loCJns
are due?"
The Financf' Mini s1er of Rrazil
smiles. "Thf'n it will tx&gt;ArgPn1ina's
I urn to borrow thf' mom'y from ~:o u
to loan to us."

Dodgers in thP Na tional lPegue
West.
Show. 3-1. gave up thrPe hit s in
seven innings, and Gossage was
periect over the final two for a major
leagup leading seventh save.
Dodgccs 4, Aslros 2
Fernando Valenzuela pitched fi 1-3
innings of no-hit ball. settling for a
three-hitter. and Terry Whitfield
drove in thrPP runs as the Dodgers
ex tended their winning streak to
four games. Va lenzuela. who struck
out eight. didn 't a !low a hit until Enos
Cabell smg led with one out in the
SPVC'nth

Valenzuela's shutout as Houston

scored twice in the pighth .

hitting onP, and giv ing up six hits.
Riffle's rprord is now :l·1. hi s onl.v

loss being a 1-0 hcartbr·eaker to the
Highla nders earlier this season.

The Tornadoes ..1-2. go back in
contention in lho SVAC title.
SouthPrn is 3-fi overall and has a

Bur lf'son.

&lt;:1

wit-t

bv Pelfre;·. Riffle pitch0d ou1 of a
basf's loaded jam in fhC' sixth framC'
w i1h a strikrout to rnd tlw inning .
Paul Harri s and Brbn Allrn kd
1he TornadOC's with two sing \(' s
f'&lt;JCh . Burlpson lf'd Sou1hwrstcrn

with two singll's whi!P Will Ha&gt;slo~ .
H. Haislop. and Rand.\' La)·tonmch
singled. Southern ptavs FrdNal.
Hocking tonight and North Gal lia in
a doubl0hcadrr on Saturday
g .,

sw

"2

-tm s-.~
..... roo om o-t

on a balk to compiPIP

thE' scoring .
Eastern plated two more run~ in
the SE'&lt;'O nd round on a two-run
si ngle by senior Jimmy Npweil
E as1ern kept up its fin~works in th('
third round on si nglPs by Scott

errors un a hard -hit ball bv Aa ron

run average.
Wolfe, after enjoyi ng a fine
.::;eason with tht:' Rl-'drnen basketball
!Pam is coming on strong at the
plate and again is among league

Beach 1.m xluf'Pd two runs . Vif'an
w hilE'. Thaxton camP on lor t hr
Ph·a tf'S to quit&gt;l thP E a_
g\(' IJi.lf.&lt;i lor
thrf'f' shut -out inn.in~·" · In the' fifth
framf' a walk t(t D Didfllr . a

leaders. steadily improving with
each game.

Piratl ' hittf•rs wPrP fkla ch with
two singiC"s .:.:tnd Moorr with two

singles.
Npwclt led Ea s1rr n hitt r rs wit h a
perfect 1hrpp for-three nigh! and
three RBI' s. Proix'n was pcriPCt
with a l wo-for-two nl ghl. Bissell had
a lripic. si ngle. a v.alk and four
RBI' s. Cnwdrt) also had a fine
ni ght at thf' piJt r with two si ngles
and tw o walks . Guthri(' a rriplf'.
Lf' ~.lf · hman a douhlf' and singiPs by
,)f' ff Bi .-., ~f' ll Tom F.\·rrPtl .. EddiP
Collin."&gt;. S&lt; ·rf!t Trussf'll. Brrnt Norton and .Jim Wf'hf'r . EvrrPtt al.-;o
h;td tllrr' t ' walk:F:asl('rn 1s schPdulf'd for a homf&gt;
j umor \ · a r -. it~ · g.tml' wilh Ff'd.Pral
Hock tng tonig ht . t hrn thr va r sif,\·
tr:t\'f'l -. t f) Al0x :mdf' r for a doublehr-aclf'!" on S.J.turd ~ ~ ~· at noon .
H.\ · inning"
ti:2-l !M ) 10-2:! 17 .1
L1 " tcm .
'\ ( j
1m 111 o- :l 4 7

I'I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

BE

HAILSAFE!
You've come too j,u to risk

your future ... without Golden
Harvest Crop-Hail protection

Fresh green peppers

from Continental Insurance.

and two slices of swiss cheese .

'\1111 H '" '''i

h,J oklo iP,l ·L .In

11\•,1111\

&amp;

onions , sauteed mushrooms

.Jn

I"" !' " ' 1.1 ' ' " ' 1 )1' "' l ·' " ''' " l ' ,, , .. 1'1. 11
~ on do o ll &lt;f""I,IIHI~'l-l il•b i low. l " ' ' l d
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'' •II ' l..&lt; ,ld~·n HJ/\1'' 1 I I '"'I J l!• '
lu•l• ' :hi' &lt; , ,q
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1"'1&gt;"""""1\ d.Wl.ogt·d K.J I , ...... •: I•I IJ' " I"

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lne 11 ra.nceBervloee

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214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
902-6687

1
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1

scor in g

came home

the league with a tough !.72 earned

•ll• ·.&gt;'" I "' •fll J' I ··• "'\" 1• '"' no

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to

Jim

Hf'rnandez

!..---------------'

~
Continent•!
nsuranct&gt;
·.

POMEROY t OH '
Ravenswood,
Pt. Pleasant ,

W.

W.

Va .
Va.

Owned &amp; Operated by :
ES
WAGNER &amp; ASSOCI AT

l_~::::~~:~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::~

('ardinab 7, Cuhs 5
St. Louis rallied fi·om tht·ec run s
down to break a seven -game losing
streak. Willie MeG«" had thrw hit s.
including a triple in the Cardinals'
four-run fourth inning w hich er ased
a 4-1 deficit. The Ca rd s also got two
runs in thl' sixth on pitcher NE'il
i\Jien ·s t rip!P. but 1ht' v1c tor;· went to
.Jet! Lahti. who pitchl'&lt;l the fourth
and fifth innings.
The Cubs chasm Cards stari er
Bob Forsch with a run in the fourth
innmg on consecutive doubles by
Mel Hall and Richie Hebner. giving
Chicagoan lead.

ground out. and singlr

By innings:
. ... 1.10
Southrrn .

ou t

base.

the bases T om F.vcrpt t furn.'tl
homC' a run v.-ith J walk . RovcP
Bissell slam mf&gt;d a t1A·o·run si ng\( '.
and Newell linf'Ci anothpr run·
scoring sing If' for &lt;l 12·0 scon•.
A young, but comp(•ti tivP PiratP
crew, which includt 's sr\'Pn frPsh·
men, went to work in thP thi rd
inning b\' vlatiag two unrarnC'd
Juns. A v.•alk to John Didd)(' and two

snap

sC'i:JSii,V.
horts top.

tv.·o

third

currently in second place behind
MOC leadE'r Malone. Several Red men diamond aces are among
leagur leaders in vaiious catE&gt;gor ies, including Meigs' Jeff Wayland
and Kent Wolfe, former teammates
on the Meigs American Legion
teams.
Wayland is having an outstand ·
ing season on 1he mound as ht:&gt; leads

Montreal's four game wmning
strPak. Gneg Hanis retired the first
two batters 111 the llth before Keith
HernandP7 doublro to the gap in
right -center liPid. Foster followed
wi&lt;h a single bfotw('('n thir d and

r ul t

Singles by Tim Tolman and Ke\'i n
Bass and Greg Brock· s error at first
on a throw from Steve Sa., spoiled

at

Newell later singled, stole seeond,
went to third on a wUd pitch, then

1&gt;,1• ~ · ·d Ia ( "n1HWf11.d hhu","'' '

ostcr smg L"U m an
llt h-inning tun and New York
h
l 'ed

Southern triumphs
RACINE Soutl1Prn's Tonv
Riffle cant inued hi' mastery over
!mgur f(l('s with another strong
·pitching periormanc!' with an R-1
\1ctory over contender Southwest·
ern hPrP Wronesday evening.
Enroutr to thl' win RifnP struck
out nine. while walking only two,

1

MFets~,Ex~ 1.....,~

overthrow

fielder's choice to Glassburn, and e
Beach single plated another run.
Eastern' s big 10 run rall y In the
sixth round wa s a result of six hits
and four walks. the big blows being
provided by Guthtie w ith a triple. a
Probert single. a Jim Weber single
and a Greg Leachman double.
Collins went the dlstanee for
Eastern. cla iming the win with five
stri keou ts and four walks. Beach.
who suffered the loss. Thaxton.
Holstein and Glassburn together
fanned seven . walked 14. and allow
11 hits.

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Two of Whitfield's RBI came on a
home run in Los Angeles' th~.run
third inning. and he drove in another
run Ln the eighth with a double.
Valenzuela, 2-2. retired the first 16
Astros before walking Tom Wiegh aus with onp out in the sixth inning.
Nolan Ryan worked seven innings
for Houston. giving up five hits and
striking out four without a walk
before !Paving for a pinch hitter.

Georgc•

him a run by reaching on an error .

Sohomore Royce Russe!J then
cleared the bases with a hard·hit
triple to left -center field, plating the
fifth run of the frame on an

Trussell, Cowde ry, and an error on
Guth&lt;io's grounder. which luadl'll

Gwynn leads 3-0 Padres win
By JOHN NELSON
AP Sports Writer
Tony Gwynn and his manager at
San Diego, Dick Williams, have a
slight disagreement. it seems.
Gwynn doesn' t believe he'll ever hit
.400. Williams thinks he might.
With two hits in four trips,
including a homerun,Gwynnraised
his batting average to .464 Wednes·
day night against the San Franciseo
Giants. He has 15 hits in his last 26
at -bats for a .577 average.
Gwynn's homer. and another by
Kevin McReynolds. gave Padres
pitchers Eric Show and Rich
Gossage aU the runs they needed for
a 3-V victory over San Francisco,
enabling the Padres to sweep the
three-game set and remain 1Y,
games ahead of the Los Angeles

potent hitting line-up, wasted no
time In getting to Pirate starter
Aaron Beach in the first Inning,
scoring six times on walks to Larry
Cowdery, Troy Guthrie, and Tom
Everett before Mike Collins forced

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College's baseball Redmen are

misleadi ng," the r&lt;"port states. At a
mffting two months a go. for
f'xamplr. thC' losses WNP under-

place." th&lt;' report states. "Through
the end of 19&amp;3. cum ula ti ve Po~tal
SPrv icc INTELPOST revcnuPs
No zpros have bf'cn
omitlf'd from this figurf' ... Norwilh·
stcmdl np: th&lt;::~t markc{ 1C'Sting was
undf'JW;I _
\ for portions of thi s
rx&gt;riod, J SC' l''iC(' !hat gcnr ra tf'd so
littlr l'f'\"f'nur mu st IX' considrrf'd a
failu r p b .\ · an~· mf'asur P of

By SCO'IT WOLFE
CHESHIRE - Exploding for 17
hits and a big 1{)-run sixth Inning,
Eastern's Eagles chalked up a
one-sided 22-3 SVAC league baseball victory over the youthful Noeth
Gall!a Pirates here Wednesday
evening. Enroute to the victory,
Eastern hurler Mike Collins went
the distance to pick up the win foe
the Eagles. scatteting four hits ovee
six Innings. With the win, EHS Is 4-6
overaU and 2-4 In the SVAC.

two-gamf' winning streak.

Tho Tornadoes drew fi rs t blood
when with two outs. Riffle and Paul
Hartis walked and sophomore
standout Ryan Oliver doubled.
In the seeond lnnln!( Southern
plated three more runs on a walk 10
Joe Wolfe. singles by Brian Allen
and Tony Deem. a walk to Wade
Connolly, a fi elder 's choice on
Riffle. and a Paul Ha&lt;Tis single. the
score 4·0.
Four more crossed the plate for
SouthPrn in 1hr fourth stanza on a

Connolly single. and an RBI single
by Riffle. Charlie Wolfe walked,
then David Ebersbach blasted a
long home run int o deep right
center field to drive hom e three
more runs, making 1he score 8-0.

"flee a use .'\cgentlna Is our friend.

Southwestern's only score came

and Latin Americans always help
each other."
"That isn't a very good excuse for
giving you $50 million."
"All right then, I'll tell you
another reason why you should do
lt. If you don't loan us the money to
give to Argentina. she will be in
default on all her loans and then the
Amertean and European banks will
be stuck for the money."
"We'f{' prepared to take the
loss." the consortium says.

In the six th inning on a single to Jay

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�!· - Thursday, April 26, 1984

Pomenty-Middleport, Ohio

Royals dump Orioles;
Indians rip White S•x
By HERSCHEL NlSSENSON

CRUNCWNG OUT - Chicago White So•
catcher Carlton Fisk, left, hangs onto the baseball a•
Cleveland Indians' runner Pat Tabler crashes in
during action In the fifth Inning of Wednesday's game
ln Clevc~and Stadlwn. Tabler tried to score from
second b....., when Chlca~:o llrst baseman Tom

Paclorek ml•playe&lt;\ Indians' Ron Ha.,.o;ey's Une drive,
threw the ball past first hase. and the ball rolled down
the line where Fl•k picked it up and tagged Tabler out
to end I he Inning. Tht· Indians won. ~2. ( AP
Laserphoto).

Trimble defeats Meigs, 4-3
TRIMBLE - T r imble pus hed
acros.&lt;&gt; single runs in thC' SC'Ven1h
and e ighlh in nings ro chalk up a 4&lt;1
extra-inning w\n over Mrigs in prl'P
baseball aclion here Wedne sda y.
The Cats' Greg Koons singled in
the winning run wilh a shot 10 lefl
wtlh two down in lhe cighlh .
Trimble, now 8-2 overall and 4·2 in
TVC play. had tied il al 3&lt;1 in lhe
seventh on a sin gle and lhreewalks.
Meigs' Jay Carpenler pulled th~
Marauders. now ;;.5 overall and slill
In firs I place in lhl' TVC al4·1, out of
the fire in the SP\' Pnl h when hf•
fielded a hoi grou nder al short wilh
thP basPS loaded a nd one out .

s tepped on second. and nipped the
runner at first for an inning-ending
clouiJie killing.
~ick Busl1 hurl ed Sf'ven stro n~
innings for J.n injur;./- r iddlrd Meigs
mound corps. Trey Cassell pilched
lhe e ighlh and suffered lhe loss.
ThPy fanned five and walked eighl.
Meigs' top two

hurler~

in ace Dan

Thomas (flu I and Randy Sl~w arl
(hand) arP out. Both are ex pt.~c ted
back by Saturday.
Mf' ig ~ out fi t the T om c ats 10-.1, but

f'i ght w:dks and the Marauders not
coming up w ith the big hit w f'rr
in~! ru m rn t.:ll in Mf'i gs first TVC
dC'ff'.11 .

Ohio
Sportlight
By Gt&gt;orge Strode

Chris Burdelle ca rried lhe biggest Mroigs b&lt;:~t with two singles and
:t doublt' in thn"E' trips plus two runs
scored . Scott GhE't'n had a single

and dou ble , Nick Riggs two singles ,
James Acree an RBI double, and
Bobby Spires and Cassell each had
a singlE'. Cassell and Walker drove
in the other two Marauder runs.
Coach Tim Saunders noiPd lhe
Meigs failure to produce in g iven
opporl unilies , bul liked lhe Marauder fiddi ng. "We looked good in
Ihe fidd and Jackie Welker made a
super plav didng up the middle a l
second to nail a runner at first."
Mf'igs is to tra n?l to Logan
tonight tn battlf' thE' defending
SF.Or\L c hJmps. Friday. Meigs
gOf's to Millf'r. Saturday marks the
npl"'ning r ound of sectional pia)' at
i\ lhrns Mf'igs will play Saturday if
th ey do not I"C'&lt;'('iW' onf' of tvm S('('(ls
in rnnight's drawing
R~ · innings:
\ lt·ip

1111 tm r•1-: l 111 :1

Trim i l l~

.211

(-~~

11 -·1

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Downs up to t\VO full SC'(.'Onds faster. Stc-'f'lC' hJ !-, Sf'tV'C'd in his present
capacit y since the !rack op:'ned for a brif•f m f'1.•ting in the fall of 1%9
"Th(JJ'S m y drf'am ... Sh ·&lt;'if' sc.~id . " If H '( ' dnn't get one sf'C'ond f a ~ t rr, 1'm

going to crv
Phil Pikeln ~&lt; Scioto Down&lt; d in•c tnr of (Juhlic rd &lt;l t i on~. says thC' track
will ask thr li .S. Troltinp: AssodJ1 ion tor a n ··f''.'al uat ion of ih spf'C'd rat ing
in midseason.

Brandywine. loca tPd in Wilmington . D&lt;'l.. ha s the fastest fl\·e·eighlhs
milP track now with J SJX•Pel ra ting of 2: 0'1 1 - ~ . Scioto Downs ra nks S£'C'O ncl
"';rh a 2:02 2 5 rating.
Pikelny says then• willlx' two a dvanl ages to tmproving th r t ra ck . The
winter projC'C't rt'lurnrd thP banks to thC&gt; track' s turns and rrmovPrl a
crown from !h{' micllilt' of thr track . Th(•dirt from thr outsidf' nn thr turns

had was hed down toward t hP hubrail.
" It will bf' safl'r for thC' hu 1-srs and it will ha\'i' less wt'ar anrltr&lt;lr on thei r
legs,'" hC' sa id . "Thf' hor~.,~:·s won' t h J \"P to n:'ClUCl' lhf'ir ~P'f.'d whrn thP~ ' hit
the turns nov.: ."
Pikelny was askt"(_i l ht• ad vant J,ge of hJ\·ing thP r\o. 1 fi\'('- f'i ghth s m ilr

Irack in lhe nat ion .
'"It givf's us a calling r;u·d for all thf' top hor S5 in thr countr:-·... he suid .
"Thf' owners and tralnC'rs w ill want to come hrrr and grr thrir brst

fiw-eig hths mile lime for breed ing purses."
Thr new racing bill , Pikeln:-.: sa id , also will mean an incrPasf' in Scioto

Downs purses. He lisi&lt;'CI a n&lt;'W Columbu sSpiril invitational series for
3·year·olds and up as one example . The new series will rany $10.000purscs
for the four pn•limil1a1y weeks a nd o!fer$Z&gt;,OOO for !he championship race.
Of the racing but. Slcele said il was long overdue.
··The bcnt'fil of the bill \'l.'ill lX' an increase in our pursP struc tu n::'l.
Hopefully, as a rcsull. it will bring in bcllcr horscs. Thi s was badly
needPd." he said .
The track also has incrras&lt;'&lt;l il s purse lo Wl,OOOfor thc Lill ie Brown Jug
Prfovirw Sept. 9, &lt;t ra cC' th&lt;.lt Sf'l\/('S a ~ a tuneup for a Jpg of pa cing's T r iple
Crown.
Steele sa id lh&lt;•lra ck b chdnging the tnfc~ t" IJPlling fro m $.1 to $2 and
dropping lhe dailY doubh ·
Scioto Downs will ran · n1ghtiY. c·x ccpt Sunrla\ s. for 121 dates lhrough
Sl'pt 15.

easy win w hile the M arauder boys

wf"rf" fourth in a four-team prr p

all s ingles. All four Wildcal runs

trips Anthony Kilche n had lwo hil s
m four trips w hile Edge helped his
C ~lUSf' w ith two HHI"s.
.Jet! Ba rnes. lhe losing pitcher,
r0cordC'd se\·r n s trikroul~ and
issuf'd two walks. K~'gr r Crc-ek,
ll ann.1n Traer ami Sou thwestern
had !)('f'n in a first place tir . The
l li gtll&lt;.l ndf•r~ werC' lx'J tcn, R-1 Wed ·
nf' ~da :--· ell SouthE'rn .
Thf• Botxats nm.v ~-:)host Southw·
('Stc'l"n this rvC'ning while Hannan

Trace hos ts Ga llipolis.
In g irls' soflball aclron , lhe Ladv
Bobca ls bombed lhe Wildkilten~.
17 1 behind Ihe pitching or Cindy
Swlshf'r . Vicky Wise led lhewinners
with lhrce hilS, Amy Roush
slammed a home run and U:&gt;ona

Nibert had lwo hi ts.
Si ilt ancl Doss had two hil s each
for Hannan Trace.

In a nolher SVAC soflba tl game
Wedn&lt;"'da~; evening at Ches hi re.
North Gallia platPd four runs in t he
S&lt;'venlh inning, three on a bases
loaded triple by Diane While lo
dump Easrcrn. f\.7. The Eagles had
s napped a 4-lliewith lhree runs on a
coup iP of walks and rwo rrrors.

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Oul,.idP Ohio

t:l \V('f'k s

figures for the Pistons were VinniP

Johnson wilh 1:1 and Earl Cureton
and John Long with 12 mch .
New York cen1e r Bill Canwrighl
had 24 poinls, hu t no other Knick
playpr had more than 13.

•
WillS

North Gallia
triangular meet
North Gall Ia came out on lop with
72 points in a triangular track meet
\\11h Kyger Creek a nd Easlem at
KC's field Tuesday .
The win put the Pirates in first
place of SVAC !rack teams. The
Bobca ts scored 49 and Eastern had
34.
The lOO.meter event saw Eric
Penick take first place. with fellow
Pirale Scott Williamson placing
second. and Eastern's John Rice
coming in lhird. Penick, Williamson
and Rice repeated those positions in
I he 200.meler.
The @meier was won by KC's
Brian Roush, while Wayne Diddle
and Thurman Holliday placed
Sf'COnd a nd lhird , respeclive ly , for
NG. John Ranegar captured the 800
for KC by placing firs!, with Roush
plac ing second and Holliday lhird .
Ranegar also won the mile, wtlh
Easlern 's Mike Jones coming in
second and Mark Jones third.
Placing first and second In the
high hurdles were Eastern's Mark
Jones and Mike Jones. while Pirates
Earl Mayo and Brian Hawks were
third and fourth. In low hurdles,
Mark Foreman placed firs! for NG,
v.1th Mark Jones seco nd. Mayolhird
and Mik&lt;' Jones . rounh .
Penick wmt to 69 v.1ns and five
losses on the sC&gt;ason by cinching fir sI

place in the long jump. Aaron !:leach
was second, followed by Easlern's
Rice In third and Hawks in fourth
place.
The high jump wa's won by KC's
Rodney Morgan, wtth t::aslern 's
Larry Cowdery coming in second
and Beach placing third for the
Piral es.
Ranegar captured first plaC(' in

lhc two-mile, with Mark .Jones
placing seco nd and Mikc .lones th ird
for Ihe Eagles.
The Pirate learn of Williamson.
Beach. Foreman and Penick took
first In thP 440 rela y, giving them 58
\\1ns and three losses on the season.
Eastern's tmm of Rice . Tim
Probert. Mark Jones and Cowdery
pl acNI second in the eve nt .
The Eagles team . consisting of
Bob Maison. Don Maxon. Prohe11
and Cowdery won first place in the
mile relay, w1lh NG placing second .
The two-mile was won by KC. wilh
NC coming in second. ·
~ a tt Kemper scored his 791 h win

for lhe season in the sholput. with
J .D. Bradbury placing st'Cond for
thP Bobcals. NG's David Ham·
monds was lhird , and MikP Kemper
placl'&lt;l four1h for lhe P ira tes.
Bradbun placed firs! in lhe
discus. with Matt Kemper and
F'orerr1an coming in second and
lhiJ·d, res)J&lt;'l'tiwly, for NG.

r-•-~m_JX_"'_'~_"_"_"'_'"_'_it._•ll_"_"'_'l_ll'_,.r_r_.---~='=2="=." =k='=======·=$:.:5: :9.:00=

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Ph . 992-6669

·

"I was really concerned," he said .
"They were jamming il down our
lhroats. I told them (in a timeout) ro
slow il down and hit lhe boards."
It took I he Pistons only the resl of
the firsl period to calch up, taking
!heir firsllead at 35·34 on a rebound
basket by Cliff Levlngslon wtth 14
seconcls left. A norher rebound hoop
by Levingston , just before the
halftime buzzer. left the Knicks in
front 67·6.'\.

had a three-point play during
D!&gt;troit 's first 8-2 slreak. which gave
it a 97-90 lead with 10: (fl remaining .
Then , afler a thrc'('opolnt play by
King cut the deficil to 99-97,
Tripucka got two more baskets to
start the second 8-2 spurt , which
made II 1(!1·99 wit h 5:22 left. The
Knicks got no closer than seven
points the resl of I he wa y.
JoiningTripucka, Thomas. Laim
he&lt;&gt;r and Levlngslon in double

.. $31.2fl

&amp;

____

worried.

The Pis tons f'm erged from a
seesaw third quarter with an 89-88
lead. an advantage they never lost In
the fourth pertodthankstotheclulch
play of Kelly Tripucka . The Detroit
fmward played all but two minut es
of the game, scored 21 points a nd
triggered two decis ive 8-2 slreaks in
the fourth quarter.
" Kelly is playing I he best ball!'''"
seen him play," Daly said. "Over
lhe last 14 regular·season ga m es
a nd In the playoffs, he's played
ou lst a nding , d e l ermined
baskelball "
Tripucka scored Ihe first three
points of lhe final period, and
Levingston. who finished with U ,

~~:~;

MOTHER'S
DAY

..._

"Our patlern this year has been to
come oul complacent. then we let
down and get killed." Lalmbeer
said . "Thai' s what happened the
other night."
There were no bad halves
Wednesday night. wilh the Pistons
scoring 65 and 54 point s. Bul an 8-0
start by the Knicks had I he Garden
crowd of 18,205 in a frenzy and Daly

$1 5. 00

.

GIVE A CARD

N. 2nd Ave.

the semnd round by heating
Washington In three of four games,
while Los Angeles swept Kansas
City 3-0.
Although Daly and the Pislons.
making their first postseason appearance In seven years, dlscounl
the advantage of leaving New York
in Game 5, they believe the
experience of playing two games at
Madison Square Garden was
worthwhile.
"This is a young team tha i is
learning all the time, " Daly said.
"Our players did not know what
playoff basketball on the road was
aboul when we came here. They
learned In !he first half of Game ~ .
We've played well since."
The Pistons scored 36 points In Ihe
first half of the third game and then
lost 120·113 despite a 77-polnt second
half.

"'

. . ··:

1985.

Mi$ldleport, Oh.

5

Mf\.IL SUBSt:RI PT10NS
lrnoldl' Ohio
1"\ \\'f'f'k s .
$}1156

Automatic
TransmissJon
F7uid

FELL FAMILY.

1

:m

ll

j

I'

flj(t

l1

CH ICAGO iAPl - Wilh one
coach promising it " wil l add a new
element." the Big Ten Confe rence
has approved usc or a 45-second
clock in baskelball games on a
one-year experiment a l basLs, lx'ginning with IPague play in January
"Big Ten bas ketball offers a grear
entertainment value. and thi s
should make it even hetler. " Jim
Dutcher. head coach a l MinnesOia
and a member of the NCAA rules
commitlee, said Wednesday aflcr
Ihe league's athletic dlreclors voled
lo approve I he clock .
"This will add a new elemenl 10
Big Ten baskelball," he said .
The Big Ten's decision comes on
lhe heels of lhe NCAA's rullng
earlier this monlh lo delay for al
least another season the usc of a
45-sc't'Und dock in a ll Divi sion I
bas kelball games.

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lln r' Yc• ;u ·

ThC' Mrl g~ track tf'am.., vis i T C:tllir:ul h
tonight lll!:l.li ns! Tlw Bluf' lkvils onc: l ();rk II ill

MPiJ.:-!i 111 : 7\.ti.~.~" HPwanl.
1\m v Sa rtr- dil'ld . Erin Amkr:-.on, An n
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\1Xll.ow Hurd II'~ -.Ju lie Mill PI r:! r. C trol
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(." f(&lt;~;~· land

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Linda Stpwarl Il l.
ShnT PuT - SIY·n-:-· Soulllworlh 1\ t.
Di scus_ ~h(' tTV Stml hwor!h 111

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Boston already has advanced lo

Majors

POSTM ASH:K · Sf'nd addrrss to Th£'
l):til .'-" Sf' nlin&lt;'l . 111 Co u n St., Pom r roy.

1·'1111

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team win every game.

Scoreboard ...
O.•r rult

Na tiOnal Ad'w"Prtllilnjt flepMsf' nl &lt;ltl vP. Bra nham N('wspal)("r Sa les.
7TI Th ird Avf' OUf', Nrw York, N('W
York 10017

SW&lt;Irl /1

121

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Stf'\"P \•\ 'a ug h JC'd K_,·grr Cr('('k 's nin('
hit Lll t&lt;l r k with thrff' hit s in thrff

!-fll

"The last game wtll he a
knock-down, drag-oul fight," added
Pislons center Bill Lalmbeer, who
hit eight of 10 field goal attempls and
scored 18 points. "Whe re we play
doesn't make a lot or difference."
"Joe Louis Arena doesn't mean
anything ro anybody," said Knicks
Coach Huble Brown , who saw his
team lose des pite 41 points from
Bernard King, his third straight
40-polnt performance. "This will the
first time both teams play there.
We'll both have to learn Ihe bounces
when we practice."
The fifth and deciding games of
five other series will he held tonight .
Philadelphia. Utah, Dallas a nd
Portland, each of whom won on the
road Tuesday night. play host to
New Jersey, Denver, Seattle and
Phoenix , r es pectively. while
Allanta is at Milwaukee In Ihe only
first-round series that has seen llle
home team win every game. The
Nets·76ers series has seen Ihe road

··.

~:

PublishNI f'Vf'ry afiNnoon, Monday
th ro ugh Frld&lt;t:&gt;' . 111 Ccur1 Strl'et, by !he
Ohio Valley Publishing Company . Mul ·
tim&lt;'dta, Inc., PomC'toy , Ohlo45769, 99'2·
:.Wl6. ~'Co nd class pos1age paid at PomProy. Ohio

~or lati o n .

Anrlf'r s~m 1',!1

AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (API - ·The way
teams an' winning on 1he road ln the
National Basketball Association
playoffs, the Detroit Pistons aren't
about to claim a homecourt advan·
" tage for the fifth and deciding game
of their series wilh the New York
Knicks.
·
lnfacl, the Pistons' " home" game
•· Friday night will be at Joe Louis
Arena ln Detroit, miles away from
the Pistons' regular homecourt at
the Pontiac Silverdome, which was
previously booked wllh motorcycle
racing.
"I've never been In Joe Louis
Arena, nor have I even seen il ."
Detroil Coach Chuck Daly sa id after
the Pistons defeated the Knicks
119-112 here Wednesday night lo
deadlock the best·of.flve series 2·2.
"ll's a complelely foreign court lo
me. We just havetopul some people
In it on Friday night."
"No matter where you play , you
have
to put the ball in the hole," said
.,
lslah Thomas, who led the Pistons
" with22pointsand 16assisls in Game

E&lt;\STDMo;;IO!'&lt;O

AmE'ncan NP~'"P"IX'r Publl!! hl'n

-lr.l Hun - .\1i:-. o..v ll ov.. ,1rd r J 1 Hhoml;l
1\:Pt 'I"'P r.l'. F rin ,\n,ff'r&lt;.;~ JII ~~~ ~
l'Xl l ,i!". Hu 1·dh•&lt;.. - C11-n1 H ~1 iiP\" r1 1 lulll'
Millr-r 1'!1 . \ .. rm.t HhtK if'&lt;. trl l

By MLLli\M R. BARNARD

The Doily Sentinel
(liSPS 14~M )
A l)hdslon of Multimedia, ln.:.

Page

The Daily Sentinel

Pistons defeat ~icks, 119-112, series switches to Detroit

B.\' 11M• 1\.-.ill&amp;e-d , _ ,
AMEXU"AN I.Li\(;U~:

M r mlx'r : Thr A~sociated Pr('s s . In land ~:Illy P rf' s:-. Assocla!On and '""

ho.vs ' competition, Trimble was on
top with R4l!2 followed b:v Wellston
with 70 1~ . Alexan d er~:-&gt;. and Meigs

l.on~

the dis tancf', f;JJ1nrd sc\·cn and
\\" tllhf'd sP\"t•n . HC' yielded fi vC' hits.

Dick Schofield cracked a lhrre-

~Ml ll;i&lt;., ll - I Jr·1'.101,1 l :r.g I'- ll 1lr. I "h; ll'n H' I ~ '
TW"ON 1:!1 . .lr'llll\ !Vl illt 'l' 1 ~'1
'\))1"1 H un - Ann T1.1inr'!' 111
HliO Hr'l.l\ - \lr·if'" tll ~:-..·ti ..,..., \ ll illt';ltd

HI gh .l ump NN'(·r

Eighthander Larr)· Edge in goi ng

~===========:::;

I

Angels 5, Brewers I

lrack meet held here Tuesday.
Tolal .scoring for the girls e nd~
with Meigs 130, Alexander 52, hosl
Wellston :l6. and Trimble 1.1 In I he

went a s fo ll ows
parenthE'SC'S).

6 ..t \ ·ictm:-' over liannan Trace.

I am looking for information on the
In the 1880 Census are these items:
Anthony Fell. age 59, farmer
Margaret. wife. age 39, housekeeper
Anna May (daughter). age 10. at home
Hellena (daughter) age 8, at home
Anton. son. age 6. at home
Peter, son. age 4, at home
Francis, son, age 11/12, at home
M_ Katie Hester, stepdaughter. age 16. at home
H. John Hester, stepson, age 14, tanner
The Margaret is Margaret Spaniol Hester, whose second marriage is July 15. 1869. They were located in
the Shade River area . Any information would be of
great help.
Write: John F. Schmittaus, Rt. 7, Box 646
Athens, Ohio 45701

WELLSTON - The Meigs girls
won 14 of 16 events, breezing to an

I ndividual scoring for Coarh
\.onion Fisher's Marnudf'rf'fi('S

Kyger Creek mov&lt;'d into firsl
plocc' 1nlheSou 1hern Valley Alhlelic
Conk1mce Wednesday nigh I wilh a

and Johnson' s two- run shot in the
fourth made it 3·0. The Rangers
pulled within .1-2 in thr fifth on Mnrv
Foley 's lwo·run homer. but lhc
Tigers wrapped II up five runs in the
sevenlh, including Parrish's threerun homer. Loser DaveStewart,0·5,
surrendered all lhrcc Dcrroit ho·
mers.

Blue Jays 11, A's 0
Jesse Barfield drove In tour runs
to pace a 17-hlt attack and back the
flvE'-hlt pitching of Luis Leal whUe
Damaso Garcia set a club record
wtt11 four stolen bases. Barfield,
hitless in his previous 14 at-bats,
snapped out of his slump in the third
inningwtthanRBidoubleandkeyed
the Blue Jays' fivE'-run fourth with a
two-run double. He added a solo
homer leading off the sixth. Leal
struck out six In recording tile Blue
.Jays' first shutout of the season.

Marauderettes capture meet;
Meigs boys take fourth place

Jl.

Bobcats
Scioto Downs opening defeat
Wildcats

By GEORGE ~TIWDE
AP Sport• Wrih•r
COLUMBUS. Ohio I API -Offi cials al Scioto Downs, after retooling
their 26-year"ld trac k, lx'lievc they w1ll haVP thl' fa ., tesl fi ve-eighths mi le
harness racin g oval in thr nation thi s year
'
Rober1 Stee lf', vicf' pr('sid('OI and gpn('ral managPr of tlw trJck th at
opens Saturday night. predict s lhc n•building projecl will make Sc ioto

AP Sports Writer
Thanks to a utllltyman named
Greg Pryor, the Kansas City Royals
haven't hadachancetomlssGeorge
Brett.
"People sometimes forget what a
good player Greg Pryor is. He's
been a very good acquisillon for us.
He won a game for us In 1982 with a
home run. He's go! some pop in his
bat," Manager Dick Howser said
Wednesday night after Pryor won
another game for the Royals with a
tw&lt;H&gt;ut home run in the bottom of
the ninth Inning that produced a 3-2
victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
Pryor has been the Royals' third
baseman since Brett injured a knee
in the fin al exhibition game. And the
34-year"ld veleran, a lifetime .257
hitte r. is batting a nifty .321. Even
Brett wouldn't sneeze a l thai.
Pryor hi I his game-"1nnlng home
run off Baltimore relief ace Tippy
Martinez.
The Royals tied thegame2-2 in the
e ighth on an unearned run wilhout a
hi t. Onix Concepcion drew a walk
from Sammy Srewart a nd wa s
sacrificed losccond. Aller Martinez
took over. Concepcion slole third
and Lrnn Rolx'rts lifted a pop fly inlo
shallow right field that Gary
Roenicke dropped for an e rror,
allowing Concepcion lo score.
The loss dropped lhc world
champion Orioles to 5-13, the worsl
record in Ihe majors and 11 games
behind runaway Detroit in the AL
East.

run homer to suppqrt ,Mike Witt's
seven·hlt, seven-strikeout pitching
as California won for the seventh
time in Its last eight games.SCOOfield's second borne run of the
season came off ' loser Jaime
Cocanower after '!loti Boone's
bases-loaded grounder gave the
Angels a 2-llead in the seventh.
Witt, who lOst to the Brewers 10.1
on April 10, said he "went after the
tlatterthis time. lhadagoodcmve. I
don't know If I was setting It up that
good, but it was working."

Indians 9, While Sox 2
Neal Heaton pitched seven strong
Innings and Pat Tabler had three
hits as Cleveland handed Chicago its
10ih loss In 16 games.Fioyd Bannister suffered his eighth loss In nine
career declsons against Cleveland.
The White So' have scored three
runs or less in eight of their last nine
games.
Singles by Tabler and Brook
Jacoby and a walk 10 Ron Hassey
loaded the bases for Cleveland wtlh
none out in the second Inning. One
run scored on a grounder, another
on Brett Butler's single and a third
on Tony Bernazard's sacrifice Oy .
Cleveland added a run In the fifth on
Hassey's single and wrapped It up
wtth five in the sixlh on a pair of
singles andfivewalks,lhreewiththe
bases loaded .
Tigers 9, Rangers 4
John Grubb, Howard Johnson and
Lance Parrish hit home runs aided
by a 25-miiE'-an-hour wind to power
t he red·hot Tigers to !heir sixth
consecutive victory and 15th in 16
games. Grubb's home run in the
second inning gave Detroit a 1-0iead

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

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Spring events named in Marietta
events each weekend.

"Home!air 84" runs M ay 4-6 In
the Junior Fair Building at the
Washington County Fairgrounds.
Sponsored by the Washington
County Homebuilders Association.
it features 50 exhibitors with wares
10 tant alize and educa fP the
homeowner .

Two theatre productions open thP

Valley Players present Tennessel'
Wil liams' "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"
May 11-12 and 18- 19 at 8:15 p.m ..
P layer Theatre, 2'29 Putnam St. Th~
'Becky Thatcher Theatre brings a
troupe to town to stage "Coin'
Bananas," a va udeville baggypa nt s revue. Held at the Colony
T hea tre, 'lZ2 Putnam St .. during tho
Bec ky's "dry dock " season, th~
show promises

a hilarious and

nostalgic look at America's early
popul ar thPatrr. "Goin' Bananas"

runs May 11 -12. 1R-19, 21-26, at8 p.m.
For reserva tions call 614-373-6()3.1
Marietta's sf'C'ond annual River

Rendezvous will takl' place M ay 19
While bikers ride from Za nesville to
Marietta on Saturday (and back on
Su nday). com petitors in rowing
and crew races and a Hl-kilomPt cr
run wiJI test their fitness and skills.

Instruction and small boat -building
workshops round out the day. T hosr
interested in participating should
contact thr Tourist Bureau. 614 -Ji:l

' 178.
The last day of May is opening
day for NCAA Divi sion lll World
Series Basebal l. T he nation' s top
Divi sion Ill teams mtcoet at Piont,,•r
Park to try to topple the defen ding

By The Bend

champio ns. Marietta College's
Pioneers.
Other local attractions Include ·
Campus Mart ius MUS'I'um and Ohio
River, MusPum , Fenton Art Glass
Company free factory tours and
outlet, the Fearing House, the
Valley Cern Sternwheeler, which
offers hourly cruises weekend and
holidays.
For m ore information about
Marietta and May events, contact
the M ariettt a Tourist and Convention Bureau, :J16 Third St., M arietta,
Ohio 4'i70(J 16141 373-5178. A free
Vis i!ors' Gui dC' is ava ilable.

Eight
Forty Salon
planning anniversary
Plans for the 19th anniversary
observane&lt;&gt; of the MPigs County
Salon, Eight and Forty, on May 4
WPfl' mad£&gt; whl'n the partners met
Monday night at thP homP of Veda
Davis . .
All s!atPolfleershaw been Inv ited
to the observanCP. along with
ml'mbersol thl' Gallla County Salon
612, Athens County Salon 676, Vinton
County Salon 752, and Franklin
County Salon 333.
Betty Van Meter , chapea u, presided at tht&gt; meeting with Floren&lt;'€'
Richards holding a memoria I
Sl'rvle&lt;&gt; for deceased partners. It
was noted that Loretta Tiemeyer.
chlldl'E'fl and youth chairman.
pui'C'hased baskets and treats fort he
children in three famllil's suffering
from respira tory diseases.
Rl'POrtS Wl're given on !he rec&lt;"nt
pouvior held In Columbu s and
attended by Pearl Knapp, Rhoda
Hackett, Mary Martin. and Julia
Hysell . The nat iona l chapeau.

BoardoflntemaiMedlcinelnsul&gt;-specialltlesofCardtovasculardissease
and Medical Oncology , respectively .

sub-spec i a l t~·

amination in his

of

Medica l Oncology.
At the sam e tim e. hi s wifP. Dr . M .

Bachf&gt;lor's [)(&gt;gree from Maliett a

Suzanne Mize, also a Board Certi fied Specialist in Internal Med1cine.
rPCE'ived OOard certification in hf'r

College and his M.D. from the

sub-specialty

of

Cardiovascular

Disease.
Mize and W alker joi nrd Holzf'r

Is

Greif

en Amerlca:s
-sel~

Univer sity of Cincinnati.
Mize, a nat i ve of Cinci nnati,
rf'CC'ived her Bachf'lor·!-1 l).egref'

on display and for sa le a t thi s year's
annual Athens Antique Fair. to l:&gt;f'
held in the Ohio UnivPrs it y ConvoCation Center o n May· 4. ~an d 6.

Sponsored by Communit y Senpe.
proceeds from the even t will
provide fund s for community lx't terment proj('('t S in ttll s uni versit y
town. Hour·s for the fifth an nual
show will be from 6 p.m . to 111 p.m .
on Friday. 11 a.m. to 9 p.m . on
Saturday. and noon to ' p.m. on
Sunday.
The fair . which annually attracts

several

thousand

v isitors.

will

coincide with M others' Wc'&lt;'kend at
the univer sit y, a highlight of It!(•
Spring qu arter.
Over .tO qualit y antiquP dPa lPrs

LEAVE FOR PWIADELPIDA - The Meip High School
CoUegimn MU81Cton (choral group) left early this morning for a
three-day visit in Philadelphia. While there they wW lour historical sites
and present two concerts, one at Fairview Nunlng Home, the other at
Grace Baptist Church to West Mont, N.J. They wW entertain with
several selectloll'l of classical music. One seleclion, "To Us A Child Is
Given" wW be sung In Gennan. Members of the group are, first row
from left, Joy Sauters, Mandy Black, Lots Eblin, Chert Sauter, Kenda

frum the tri -s tatP &lt;:JrPa will partici pate. and this year's fair will
incl ude furniture from primiti ve to
Vict orian, art g lass, china, coppPr
and brass, jewelrv. clocks, books.
dolls and pest ca rd s. Ronald Hilbert
of Uniom·illf' Center, Ohio, is
m anager of thf&gt; C'vent. Mrs. Hom£&gt;r
8. C all of At hens is thi s yrar's

Area pof'ts ca n ag&lt;Ji n a im

&lt;:.~I

0\T'r

this .v ear, but offi cf'rs rf'porl tv.: o
rhangl'S. Out-of-sta tP writf'J'S m ay
f:'n1P r 17 of 1he :12 contf'st s and all

adult s must

pa~·

a$.,"", Pntry ff'f'.

Prizf's w ill be awardN:I a t thf'
annua l OPDA lunc hron on Satur-

day. Oct. 20 a 1 1h0 f{odpwm· Inn 1ust
off I 71 at Dublin-c;ranvillr Hoad.
Thr lunchPOn foJi o....... s d mor ning
workshop and a prN:C'ding f&gt;\·rn ing
of readi ngs S(X)nsorNl by' thP \ '(' r sf'
Writers' Guild of Ohio .
Officer s a lso hope to prf'St"nt an

Ohio P()(&gt;t

of the Year at the

meetings , foll owing srliY'tio n b\'
judges of recC'nl sign i ficant hook s

A preview of the 1984 M eigs
Coun ty Fair nowershowswasglvl'n
by Mrs. Janet Bolin , chairman. at
the Monday nigh! meeting of the
M&lt;'igs County Gard&lt;'n Clubs
AsSOC'Jallon.
Mrs. Bolin noted that "TheCoun!y
Fair '· will be the theme of both
shows. the first to be staged on
Wednesday of lair week , Aug. 14-IB,
and the second to be staged on
Friday.
The shows will feature something
for evPryone with classes for the
beginning as W&lt;'ll as the experienced
arranger. Included in the show

1984 FORD
F-150

c hairman.
Tic kC't s ror thf' show and sa lr.
w ith discount s for studen ts. will
adm it purchasers to all threr days

Stock No . 4808
112 1on pickup, 6 cy l. eng, 3 sp. 1rans ., ps, r ear
step bumper. mirror s. radial tires, r ust
proofing .
WAS
NOW

at th f' fair. which will be located , as
in of her ~~rars. on t hP c'1nooursC'
sur r ounding the m ain noor of lhr
Convocation C:entpr on Richland
A vC'nue I .ight m ea ls, snacks and

'9828' 1

drinks will be ava il ahle.

$7703

T icket s .1 rr $2.~ gf'nf' ral admissio n and $1 studC'nt s.

1984 FORD
RANGER

schedule are classes for bla&lt;'klight
arranget'l'l{'nts, those calling for thl'
use of feathers. fruit and vegetables.
dried matl'rials, weathered wood, In
mobile, stabile, pop art , abstract.
mass, hogarth and modem designs.
Therewiil be24classesforarilstir
arrangements In the two shows
whkh wUI also include honicullure
divisions, junior classes, and educational displays.
Cl ubs were assigned responsibilities .tor the shows as follows :
Fernwood garden Club, staging;
Bend 0' the River, l'ntry and
cl assl1tcation; Rutland , educational

'9863' 5

$7800

1984 FORD
F-150 4x4
Stock No . ~795
1 , ton pickup, 6 cy l. eng, 4 sp . trans, ps-pb ,
knitted vinylsea1, gauges. rear st ep bumper,
limited slip rear axle, 11nted glass, 5P235x75R
all terrain tires, tow mt . mirrors, ru st

f' O\'PIOpP .

T hrSC' mf'f'tings and contl'st.o.;
m ark thP 4Rih celchratlon of OH1o
P()('tT)' Da .\ in the statr. followin g
an onn ua \ pr()(_' lam ~:~tio n b~· thr

proofing .

gon'rnor.

~S

'12,01500

NOW

$9612

PUBLIC NOTICE

ON THE SPOT FINANCING TO QUALIFIEDAPPLICANTS
AT FORD MOTOR CREDIT AND BANK RATES.
1976 FORD LTD

FLEECE WEAR FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY
*JOG SHORTS
*RAG SHIRTS
*JOG PANTS
*LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS
*HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS

1980 VW JETTA

Stock No. 48161

One Owner . 48,000 mi les, 2-dr , VB eng, fact .
air cond, vinyl roof, heater, auto trans, ps-pb,
tint . glass. am-fm, wsw 1ires, wh -covers .
NOW

5

2995

1981 FORD ESCORT Gl
Stock No. 4739t

One Owner, 26, t22 miles, 4-dr, 4 cy t eng. fo ci.
air cond, hea1er , auto trans, tint . glass, am 1m. wsw, wh-covers .
NOW

•5295

and specia l exhibits; Rutland
Friendly Gardeners. j udges and
c lerks; M ldd!Pport AmatPurs, pul&gt;lkity book; Shade Valley Counc il of
Floral Arts. premium and prize
committ('('; Star, hostesses; Chester. class and show signs; Winding
Trail. juniors: and Mlddll'port ,
photography .
Meeting at T ri nity Church, Bernice Carpenll'l'. county contact
chairman, presided at the mf'&lt;'ting
with Ruby Diehl giving the devotions. A discussion was held on
p lanting shrubbery at the Syracuse
Carlt&gt;ton School and it was decided

Real Sharp · 4·dr, 4 cy l eng, fa ct . a .c, hea1e r ,
am -fm .
NOW

5

4995

1983 FORD Fl50
Stock No. 4812t
'1::! ton pickup, 6 cy l. eng, stand . trans., ps -pb.
long wide bed, sliding rear glass , rear step
bumper. am radio, wsw , wheel covers, black.
NOW

5

7495

1979 FORD BRONCO
Stock No. 48171
4 wh -dri ve, a uto trans _. ps.pb, rear step
bumper , red

WAS ';
1

5995

NOW

5

5495

1978 DODGE RAM CHARGER
Stock No. ~7S8t
4 wh -drlve, VB eng, auto trans_, ps-pb, fact .
air cond, am radio .
WAS
NOW
1

4895

5

3995

I

•••
WINNER- Columhus&amp;SoulhemOhioEiedrlcCompany promoted a
c-ontest,a touronhoweledrictyismadeforchDdrenofitsemployees.Lett\nn Redovlan, 10, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ,Jolm Redovlan e•plained a
drawingofhermother'sdutleswlththeelectrlccompany. Mrs.Kedovian
L• a tour guide at Poston Power Plant, Athens. The youngster's drawing
and written statement won her first place in her aae group, 9 through 12.
She was prese111ed a $00 U.S. savings bond and a hard hat bearing her
name. Shown with Miss Redovian Is Jane Shaffer, lour coordinator from
the Columbus office. As a result of her win, students at Chester
Elementary were shown a 6bn on generating electrlcty.

Chester

A program on thl' importan ce of
thl' r ole olwornen in Bibllcal'history
was pll'SPnted by at !hi' n'Cenl
mpeting of the Forest Run United
Ml'lhodist Women held at thl' home
of Hilda Yeauger.
Betty Blackwood used "Mf'&lt;'tlng
Christ on the Journey" as the topic
with members singing , " Kneel at
the Cross" and the r&lt;'Sponslv&lt;'
reading, "Crucifixion of Chrtsl ."
Scripture was read by Kathlf'&lt;'n
Scott from Luke 24.
Mary Nease
noted !hal women were the flrst to ·
gel to the tomb to anoint the body of
Jesus and the first to receive lhP
m&lt;'Ssage that he had risen. She said
Ina! women now are to con tinue to
spread lhP messagl' of sa lvation,
peace and liberation with lov£', faith
and determ ination . The resurrec tion, she said. is a symbol of the nPw
llfP. a nPW begi nning and nPW hope .
T o cloSf' th0 program. Rose Ann
.Jenkins read . "Ask and You M ay
Receive" and "Eastl'r Prayer."
with the group singing, .. Burdens
Arc LlftC'd a t Ca lvary."
For lhP rll('('!ing prcsidC'd over b)'
Evei)'n Hollon. the memtx&gt;rs worf'
t radlliona l Easter hats and com m ent ('(! on t hf'lr or1gin .
Offirers' reports wei'!' givm and it
was noted that 29s lck calls had llPf'n
made. Flowers were sent to Lillian
NappPr who is hospit alized . For thP
M av meting, Ka thlpen Scott w ill

,vexal(

Mrs . I::rma Cleland spent two
weeks In VIrginia Beach, Va ., with
Rev. and Mrs. David Tysinger and
family. She went especi all y to help
care for the new son born to the
TySingers on March 17 named
David Joshua.
Mrs . Robert Berry and son,
Donald. and Mrs. Audra Rowan,
Belpre, calle&lt;.l on Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen and Denzel Cleland
Su nday afternoon .

"OVER 48 YEARS IN THE SAME PLACE
UNDER THE SAME MANAGEMENT"

VITAMINS
(Complete Stock)

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Oh .

Ph . 992-5776

NOW OPEN

SWISHER LOHSE

FOR SPRING SEASON

Phormocy

Complete line of veeetable &amp;
flowerine plants, shrubbery, fruit
trns. Auleu. Rhododendron,
House Plants - 4" to 10".
Foli111 &amp; Bloomina Baskets
Open Dolly 9 to 5

Sun. I to 5

-----1

1

K.-ttiMcOtl........ I .Pit..

.
I . MIIft

POMEROY, OH .

BIG TOP
RUTLAND FURNITURE
·.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 2ND THRU SATURDAY, MAY 5TH
9:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S TENT SALE WAS A HUGE SUCCESS LAST
SEPTEMRER. THE BIG TOP RETURNS WITH EVEN
BIGGER &amp; BETTER SAVINGS UNDER THE TENT AND
THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE STORE AND FURNITURE ANNEXES.

'''
·,

'

•.

.•.
''
'

, """'.,_'·o_.

.'_.
•,.
~

,H . ftt-ttSS

---

Opeft N'-"h tUI 9

" The Middle Shoe Store In The Middle Block "

''

CfYrlullfrtt, R.Ph .

,,..... .., s.t'.,lc:e

MARGUERITE SHOES

ABSOLUTELY NOTHING WILL BE HELD BACK!

IONtlf
R. l'tl.
MeR."'"'
.. .........
,.l :tt 1.m.
to••·"l.
Slttdlw UUO to lil:lO and 4 Ia I D.M.

III.SCII ..TibNI

prepare thP tables In the church
SOC'ia l rooms for the 6: 30 banquet. It
was noted that an election day
dinner wUI be served . The birthdays
of Mary N('ase and N aomi Wya tt
wer&lt;• noled. Others attending were
Mary K Roush, Ada Nease, Sandi
Haw ley , Carolyn Salser, and Faye
Hamilton.
Refreshment s wef!'
S&lt;'rved .

Tiny air bubbles rn t he cus hion ed
rn so les work together with flexrble
soles to grve you a walking-on-arr
feelrng . New Mille r leather sandals
in a wide range of srzes, widths and
su nshine colors.

COMPANY

ALL IN ASSORTED COLORS

FREE PARKING ON THE MUNICIPAL PARKING LOT

to proceed with somP assistanCP
with lhPproji'Ct.
Arrangem ents were made for a
now ' r arranging school to be held
later thi s year with Betty Dean and
.JanPt Bolin to complete the plans.
Mrs. Carpenter discussed lhPGf('('n
Thumb Notes column In The Daily
Sentinel and asked for participation
from all clubs.
The program wa s by AI i('('
Thompson of the Winding Trai l
Ga rden Cluhwhogavpa demonstration on repotting plant s. She also
talked about preparin g seed for
planting.

Forest Run UMW meets

Stock No. ~771
6 cl. eng . auto. trans ., ps, rear step bumper ,
bright low mt. mirrors, am -fm , rust proofing .
WAS
NOW

hy Ohio (X&gt;('IS. This year's Pu lit zrr
PrizP winnrr. M al}' OlivN, v.:as
Oh1o POf't of th&lt;' Year for 1'1Rtl.
sh&lt;1ri ng thf' honor w ith Dais~' LN"
Dona ld son of ra nal Wi nchrs tr r.
Thr con tests c losr on .Ju t ~· 10 .1nd
a foldf'r conl aining ca tf'gorif's and
rul es ma.v br s('{'urPCI b ~ · writ i ng
.JunP A. M argeson. !\1 W. Ken wort h
Rd.. Columbus. Ohio ~32H and
enclosin g a stamped srlf-addrrssr'&lt;l

A publ ic meeting will be held on Monday. May 14. 1984 at 7:00 P
M. to provide citrzen input for possible applications t o be submrtted to
the Ohio Dept. of Development under the 1984 CDBG Economrc Devel opment Competition Program . Any interested citizens are invited to
attend and provide their input for submtsston ol such appli cations.
Written comments can be mailed to Mayor Fred Hoffman. 237 Race St. .
Middleport. Ohro 45760 and mu st be received before 7:00PM May 14.
1984.
Fred Hoffman . Mayor
Vrllage of Middleport

Donhue, Kevin Criner, Krist! Haynes, Anita Smith, Daphne Dillard,
Debbie WyaU, Cheryl Roush and Rex Daggy; second row, Linda IUggs,
Linda Noel, Sherry Sayre, Debbie Porter, Beth Mayer, Tim Sloan,
Susan Thoma, Regina Walls, SaDy Radford, Chris Black; third row,
Shen-y Wilson, Tammy Black, CHnton Turner, Paul Riggs, Melvin
VanMeter, David Hendricks, Zandra Vaughan, and Usa IUggs. Absent
w ere Jeff GOkey, Usa Pulll115 amt Marla Mus.'&lt;'r.

Meigs Fair topic of garden group

Poetry Day Contests set
with some rule changes
31. 100 in Ohio f'()('! rv D a\ Con! Psts

Elaine Schweitzer, Los Alamitos,
Cali!. was the honored guest at the
pouvior and spoke on theprogram of
I hi' Eight and Forty . She announced
Chapeau Day to be held a 1 the
Na tiona l Jewish Hospital in Denver.
Colo. on t he third weekend in M ay.
Various chairmen gavl' their
reports at the pouvior and it was
noled that currently there are 21
goal sa lons with a total of 135
partners needed for goa l stat!'wide. .
Fund raising ac tiv ities for the
children and youth projects \Vere
reported on by Pearl Knapp. The Ia
marche was announced l or Aug. 3
and4 in Columbu s. Lucille Woodling
was mdorsed for a national office,
1985-86. and Dorothy Brady for
Central Division Chapeau. 1984-KS.
The Sa lon made severa l contribu1ions inrluding$100 forscholar ships.
$50 to lhP loc·altuberrulosis nufSl• to
tx&gt; used for a loc-al family, and$72to
the National Jewish Hospital for
several projff!S th&lt;&gt;n•.

from Kenya n College and M D
from thf' l! ni\' ersit~' ol Cincinn ati.

Athens Antique show
planned May 4 6
ATHENS - A wide variet y of
antiques from m any periods will be

..

-

Page 7

RECEIVE !!UB-SPECIALfl'IES - Dr. M. Suzanne Ml"" and Dr.

Clinic to practice Ca rdiology and
Hem a 10!ogv Oncology, respect fully , after completing their sub·
speciall y training 't the Medical
College of Ohio at Toledo.
Th e so n of Dr. and M rs. !som C.
Wa lker of Ga llipolis, he r eceived hi s

•

Thundoy, April 26, 1984

Mark A. Walker of Holzer COnic, have been certified hy the American

Dr. Mark A. Walker, a Board
Certl1ied ·Specialist in Interna l
Medicine r ecently successfull y
completed the American Board of
Internal Medicine certifica tion ex-

'

The Daily Sentinel

nC'xt \H'&lt;'krnd . The Joc·al Mid Ohio

Clinic physicians get certifications

•

Thunday, April 26, 1984

Pomen~y-Middlepart, Ohio

MARIE'ITA, Ohio - Marietta
offers a full month of spring
activities In May, from theatre to
championship baseball. Regular
activities such as riverboat cruises
and museums are joined by special

r • '

j

1i61161il ~

.'

�Page

8- The Doily Sentinel

Family Medicine
By Edward Schreck, D.O.
i\sslslam Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio Unlve...Jty College
of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: I don't have a sore
throat, but my voiCE' has been very
hoarse. What could be causing my
voice problems'! ."
ANSWER:
Hoarsenf:'ss Is not :

a disease process
it self but rather a

symptom of some
underlying problem of the larynx

J

ur voice box. Voice sounds are
produced by complex interactions

of throat muscles and vocal cords.
ThP balance nf'&lt;'dPd for normal
o;ou nds

is easily upsf&gt;t

lloarsness is caused by many factors
Inflammation caused by a cold
often produces hoarseness. Fortunately, such hoarseness usually
resolves Itself within a few days.
Surgery on the neck or thyroid
also often produces hoarseness.
This Is because the nerve which
controls most qf the muscles of the
voiCE' box travels a perilous route
!rom the base of the skull to the
larynx. It Is very easy to irritate this
nerve during surgery, with temporary hoarseness resulting.
Unfortunately, the cause of hoarseness is not always to obvious. In
cases where a cause is not apparent
to the patient, a completE' evalua·
tion 1s tn order.

QUESTION : What will a doctor

by any

nE'ed to find out to detennine why

c·hangp in the muscles or the Uning
uf the \'Oice OOx . Minor irritation

I'm hoarsf'?
ANSWER: First your physician
" ill ask you a number of questions .
He or she "111 want to know if the

suc h as the drainage down the back
uf tht• throat and thr lissue

Thunday, April 26, 1984

PomeR»y-Middlepot1, Ohio

hoarseness Is constant or Intermittent. A constant hoarseness points
to either a lump on the voice box or
a nerve Injury. Hoarseness that
comes and goes may be related to a
dally activity - to the presence of
lrrttants such as dust or toxic
fumes , to smoking or to alrohol
Intake. (These cause an Inflammatory reaction In thP lining of the
larynx which leads to swelling and
thus affects air movement across
the vocal rords.)
Your doctor also will ask if your
hoarseness came on suddenly or

was gradual In onset. A sudden
onset of hoarseness not caused by

an Injury usually points to an acute
viral Infection (laryngitis). More
gradual onset of hoarseness signals
ongoing disease states such as
tumors of the vocal cords or
diseases of the nerves. Your doctor
also Is likely to question you a bout

any other symptoms you may have
-weight loos, difficulty In swallow·
lng, a cough or fever. These signs
may give Important clues to the
underlying cause of the hoarseness.
for example, thyroid disease.
Your physician may decide lo
look directly at the vocal cords. This
Is done with reflecting mirrors
placed in the back of the throat or
with an Instrument called a fiber
optic laryngoscope. These devices
allow a physician to observe tl both
vocal cords move symmetrically
and In unison during different voice
sounds. Tumors or growths on the
vocal cords or an Irritated, red
lining of the voice box may also be

I

measures
often
cause
the problem.
hoarseness,
simple
common
sense
Resting the voice Is the first step.
This means minimal talking.
Another step Is avoiding obvious
Irritants s uch as cigarette smoke
and noxious fumes. You may also
try Increasing the humidity or
water content of the atr you breathe
with a humidifier or a vaporlzor.
This helps keep dry air from
Irritating your throat.
But remember - hoarseness

David E. Reuter, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dunald Reuter of 231\\ MUI
St., Middleport, has enlisted In the
U.S. Air Force's Delayed enlistment program.
Reuter Is a 1982 graduate of
Meigs High School.
Upon graduation
from mllltary
the Air
Force's
six-week basic
training course at Lackland AFB,
Texas, he will receive training In
the Mechanical Career Field.
Reuter will be earning credits
an

associate degree

through the Community College of
the Air Force while attending basic
training and other Air Force
technical training schools.
He is schPduled for enlistment in
Reg u I a r
December.

A ir

I he

TIIDRSDAY

that lasts for more than several
days may be an early tip-off to a
serious underlying disease process.
It needs to be evaluated by a doctor
and treated .

Force l n

~~

JACKSON PIKE · RI3~ WEST

Phorio 446·4524

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
AU. SEATS $2.00
ADMISSION EllERY TUESOoiiY $2.00

soldiers of the 82nd together with
Honduran paratroopers to mount a
training assault on nearby San
Lorenzo Airstrip, testing the tnteroperablllty of the two nation's
airborne forces.
He Is a 1982 graduate of the U.S.
Military Academy, West Point,
N.Y.

SUNDAY

Your "Extra Touch "
Florist Since 1 96 7

POMEROY -Adanceissetat
Pomeroy American Legion Sunday from 8 to 11 p.m. Music by
George Hall. Admission Is $10 a
couple. Advance tickets are
required. Call Elz.a Gilmore or
Mickey Williams.

~
FLORIST

PH. 992-2644
352 E. Maln • . Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

COMING SOON:, "ODDBALLS"

I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

HEAR IT
EVERY
FRIDAY
MORNING

chuted into Honduras in a rPadinPss

9 A.M.-12
80 8 KI NG

Mary Jacobs, president and vice president ol the
distributive education program, DECA; Dave
FoUrod and Ryan Hall, president and vice president
of occupational work experience, and Kevin Knapp
and Tracy Herman, president and vice president of
IIERO, the club of the multi-area jobs training
program.

sl

Ey

NOON

92 FM

GT-160AE
GRASS TRIMMER

Meigs student workers honored
Apprn'lmatd;· ICKJ Mf'igs

Hl~h

School ~ t udf&gt;n ts , thf&gt;ir f&gt;mp loyers
,tnd guPsts ~lltPndNI thp annual
hunquf't for studvnts im·oJv[&gt;d in

wo rk programs hPid at thP hig h
..;&lt;'hool caf1 ·trria Tuesda~· night .
Instruc tors of programs im ·oh-ed
in thl' annual f'\·rnt arc Suzy
(.'(.I rp: •ntpr , mull i -arf'a JOb 1raining·:
1-ton Logan , ocrupa tion&lt;JI work
t •.XJX&gt;riPncP, and John W . AlaPl lnar,
dis tributi ve l&gt;duca t ion.
Pn:-sidents and viCP. prPs ident s of
thl· thr['(' program s prPsentcd

;Jw ards to participating students.
w ho . in turn , pn"'Sf&gt;nted them tn thP

PmployPrs.

Occupaticmal

work

exp&lt;?rienrc employes includ!' Mod·
&lt;•rn Chem icals, Miller Brothl'rs,
Sears Roebuck Co .. Old Fashionm
Snacks, Pomeroy Bownling Lanes,
Smil h-Nelson Motor Co., Dr. B.D.
Brnwn. J&amp;R Sports Shop, Burger
Chl'f. Vi llage Pharmacy, Pizza
Dan ·s. Pullins E-:xravation, HySI'!I's
Usrn Cars. BakPrY and Calc:
e mployers for the year for thP multi
ar(_~a

job train ing program includp

Burger Chef. Dairy VaUPy, Vaugh·
an' s Ca rdina l. Pizza Dan's. Smith
G mcery. Pomeroy Health Care
Cpntrr.

B.'wr 's Market,

Milhoan. James Mourning, Pomproy Health Ca re Center, Fruth
Pharma C!'· Smilh·Nelson Motors
Inc .. Pomemy Flower Shop and th&lt;'
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Serv ices.

E\ving

Apple Grove area happenings
8y Mrs. Herhert JWush
'Vlrs. Dana Lcw1s. C' liflon . W.Va..
wPre !\1r and Mrs HNbet1 rtoush,
Mr and Mrs Rogp1· Rou sh.

Mrs Marshall Roush, .loey and
Counney, Mr. and Mrs. Darwll
NorriS, Tracy and Ryan, An Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Dfoan Hil l and family.
Mrs. AliC&lt;' Balser was the Easter

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Roy, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Warner, fulcine.
vis ited Etha Warner on Eastpr

daughtrrs. Kimhf&gt;rl~- and .lcnniff'r.

Sunday gur-st of Mr. and Mrs. Jack

Sunday.

Eas tf'r Sund ii~' guests of Mr. and

Mr~

:\1r and
Oorsa Par&lt;;;;ons. Mr.
;mrl Mrs. RusSPll Ro11sh and son.

Tht •

mu.d

jn\lllU u/

In a Gas Po we red
Trimmer.

$139.95

LIST

DOLLAR SAVINGS

-20.00

ORANGE TAG

$

11 9 .

ELECTRONIC IGNITION
• L;ghtweoght (only I 0 .1 lbs .)
• Nylon Flocked Muffle, Guocd Help s
Protect Operator .
• Tap -to -Advance Tnmming Head for
Non -Stop Tnmming

• 48 · Shaft for Tr1mming Hard -to -Reach Area~ .

GT-2DDBE
ELECTRONIC IGNITION
•FOR FARM, HOME A~ !"l LI GHT
COMM £ RCIAL W O~t::. 4

For dr f&gt;

$1

SUGGE STED LIST

DOLLAR SAVINGS

-20.00

ORANGE TAG:

$149 .95

fitlf'.~l .~t·lt•t' finn

SRM-2DOBE

nrr d thf' f(H'alf':o;t •·nltu •.
.~marr Rridt· .~

alwa~·-~ dtoo.' it' tla•

~,SU,GGioS TI:D LIST

$249.95

LLAR SAVINGS -

00

$199.95
Combine this with optiona l steel blade
applications and it's the ideal umt for
maintaining large acreage or lightduty commercial work .

ILECTRONIC
IGNITION

... tit. ONE that lad.t
All ORANGE T-G UNIT S ARf SUBJECT TO IN ~ ( NJORY,

FNll14rinfi
f:,q,i .~ill' Papf'n and Craft ., manflhip

ll'i r h a r hoirf' of
f:xclu .~il " f&gt; and Rf&gt;{{ular Rich. Rni."'ed LPttt&gt;rinll

or flt&gt;nuinf' CorJprrplntf' F.n!(radnll

WILKINSON SMALL ENGINE

OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL 8:00P.M.

319 S. Second
Middleport, OH. 45760
Ph. 992-3092

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
4th &amp; Main St.
Reedsvi lie, OH.
Ph. 378-6125

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Mill St.

Middleport
992·2641

PAGEVILLE - Revival ser·
vices will be held at the Morning
Star United Baptist Church in
Pagevlllc. beginning Saturday at
?p.m.
Evangelist Charles !Buck)
Ramey will be the speakpr.
Guest singers will include
Charles and Sandra RamPy. Dun
and Patsy Collins, The Harvey
Family, the Osborne family,
Bluegrass Cosp&lt;?l Slngprs, The
Revelators, the Union Ridge
Bluegrass Gospel Singers and
The Acts 1-8 Gospel SingPrs.
For lnfonnation on services.
residents can contact Elder
Michael B. Perry, 2&amp;llll Ruther·
ford Road. Albany, Box 19ffi.

Republican
candidate's night

lrnrlitiun"'

of _Y our

lf l't~ditiK fr11 ·ilutim1"'
nnd A nrwurrn·mrnt .~ .

rlinnC'r was Sl'rn&gt;fl at n(M1n .
CuPsts of Mr. and Mrs. (;erald

Ha vman fo r Easter wPre Mr. ami
!\Irs. T&lt;'d Hayman and children.
&lt; 'olumbus : Robert and Lil Hart a nd
daughter. IJ&lt;•th. Greg 0' BriPn. Mrs .
BPver l)' C' unningham. 7..ark and
Olf'v la . Cot tagevillf': Phyllis Young,
Mind)' S!'vmo!'f'. Middlepon : l.lona Whitlatch. The Plains: Linda
.lewpll , daughll•r. Barb. Lrtan.
W V&lt;t .. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart
ancl sun, .Jonathan. Columbus:
StPve a nd Kim Young of Marietta :
Kenny Young and a friend of Belpre,
ami MPianiP PEwry and a friend of
('ulumbu s.
Keit h Hayman spent a couple of
days her&lt;' visiting his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman ixofore
leaving aga in forhisemployment on
the riverboat, "ThP James Wright."
Mr. a nd Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
visited Mr. and Mrs . Donald
Barnhart at Langsville reCE"nlly .
Mr. and :vtrs. Marion Parsons of
Ca ldwe ll, Mrs. Ruth Crow and
children, Shawn and Christine, were
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa
Parsons.
Mrs . Debbi Yates and son, Rick,
Clearwater, Fla. are here vis iting
Mrs. Gladys Shields.
Spendlng Easter Sunday with Mr.
and Mr. Dallas Hill wre Mr. and

~Q.STED

Afforda bl e Q ua I.tty

Ables. Vicki a nd Michael.

i .~ d1f' ; .~ .~ uitl!(

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department will
have open house Sunday 1 to 4
p.m. Refreshments will be
served, and there will be door

Revival services

r~~~~~::::::::::::::::~~:::~~~~::::::::~~

i" :dward. David Roush. C' incinnat i.
!VIr am! :vtrs. Ronald Russell.
\ land;· and M)r haf'l. Mr . and Vlrs
t-:dwarcl Hupp . .Jerem.v and .Jam if'.
Issac Lfowis. Clifton : Mr. and Mrs.
Dougla s Sands and .Joev i\ carrv-10

BIDWELL - The public Is
Invited to a ll servcies Sunday at
the Mt. Carmel Church, Bidwell.
The Rev. James Sellman of
Dayton will be the speaker at
morning servic&lt;'S. The Royal
Harmonaires of Dayton will
P"'""nt a roncert in the after·
noon. Sunday School is at 9:30
a.m .. morning service at 10:45
a.m. and afternoon Sl'rvices at 2
p.m. Dinner will be served.

SAVE NOW THRU APRIL 30TH
48 YEARS OF SERVICE

TO THE

RCA 13"
COLOR

ECHO DE&lt;LER AS SOCIATION

POMEROY - The Meigs
County RPpublican Women's
Club will host a candidates' night
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
Inn. The meeting Is open to both
mPn and women. RPfreshments
will be served.

Dance set
RUTI..AND - There will be a
dance Sunday beginning at 8
p.m . at the Rutland American
Legion Hall, Beech Grove Road.
Featured will bE&gt; Van Johnson
and thf' Lone Wolf Band.
Admission is $2 a person. Doors
open at 7:30 p.m. Open to the
public .

.

BLACK &amp; WHITE TV

Portable Video
Cassette Recorders
RCA

VIDEO DISCS
RCA

~·· ·'. iL

'

AS LOW
AS

$799

AS LOW
AS

$199

WE RENT VIDEO
DISC PLAYERS

',al

~-AND~OVIES

•r~'"f'~U"

WE RENT VIDEO
DISC PLAYERS
AND RECORDERS

SPRING SALE WASHER

DRYER

VIDEO CASSETTE
RECORDERS

19" COLOR TV
PORTABLE

$249

HEAVY DUTY

F~9s~r

"'*''*
25" COLOR
CONSOLES

$484

$299

CLEAN SWEEP

WASHER

DISHWASHERS

PANASONIC
MICROWAVES

Model 6650

$349

19" COLOR
PORTABLE

19" COLOR
PORTABLE

$334

$474

GIBSON SPRING CLEAN SWEEP
REFRIGERATOR

REFRIGERATOR

19 CU. FT.

$297

$339

PORTABLES &amp;
COLOR CONSOLES

14 CU. FT.

$469

See
Elliott's
For All Your
Video Needs

~-

SUPER
SPECIALS
25" COLOR
CONSOLE

25" COLOR
CONSOLE

OVER 200 IN STOCK

A11111EW llUORliDl Of COOl

II!

\Vhitt2ol
v.~

AIR CONDITIONERS

At IIIICIIIJ ....U:ed prlcel.
GenerationD~

4

Special meeting
POMEROY - The Shade
River Lodge 453 will meet In
special session Thursday at 7:~
p.m. at the haD. The work w1ll bl&gt;
In the fellowcraft degree.

RCA 25"
COLOR

AS LOW
AS

Rummage sale
POMEROY - The Happy
Harvesters Class of Trinity
Church wlll hold a rummage sale
May 2, 3 and 4 In the church
basement. Hours wUI be from 9
a.mto3p.m.

TV STAND

RCA 12"

RCA

Happenings

education employers for 1heeurn.•nt

macy, Max s Restaurant, Dwight

POMEROY - Revival at
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 212
West Main St. Sunday through
May 4 at 7:30p.m. Rod Kasler Is
the evangel lsi. Transportation
for the elderly will be provided.
Call 99:Z:3379 or 992-7748. Special
music each evening.

LAST 3 DAYS

prizes.

Funeral Hom&lt;&gt;, Kroger' s and Nel son's Drug Store. DislributiVP
sc hool year include Alling and Cory ,
Powell' s Super Valu, Clark Jewel ·
~rs, Vaughan&lt; Cardinal, Bank One
of PomProy. Storv and Story,
attorneys; Swisher &amp; Lohse Phar·

POMEROY - The Big Bend
C. B. Club will meet at 7:30p.m.
at the Grange building on the
Rock Springs fairgrounds. F1nai
plans will bE&gt; made for the coffee
break to be held at Royal Oak
Park on May 6.

Wll..KESVILLE - The Pythlan Sisters will stage a smorgasbord dinner at the Pythlan
hall at Wllkesvllle Saturday with
serving from 5 to 8 p.m .
Adult price Is $3.50 and for
children, $1.50.

r;:==========:;l

wITH

FRIDAY

POMEROY - The RollE'rta
Circle of the Order of the
Eastern Star will meet at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple at
6: 30 p.m. Friday with a potluck
supper. Howard's Stars will he
guests.

Army First Lt. Robert S. Na kamoto, son of Janet L. Nakamoto of
245 Salem St .. Rutland, has para·
exercise call&lt;'&lt;l Kilo-Punch .
A member of the 82nd Airborne
Division, Fort Bragg, N.C.. he and
J'l9 other paratroopers dropped
onto I he foothills of Hon duras, about
:!:1 miles northwest of Tegucigalpa .
The three-day operation brought

POMEROY - The WWing
Workers Class ol Ute Enterprise
Unlted Melliodlst Church will
meet Thursday at 7 : ~ p.m. at
the church.

r'ri~~~~~~~ii

Nakamoto

PRESENTERS - These six young people who
serve as president and vice president of their work
oriented programs at Meigs High School were the
presenters at the annual banquet of th" three gruups
Tuesday night in the Meigs High School Cafeteria.
Pictured are, presidents ,;eated, Kyle Woods and

Calendar

In the service

Reuter

towards

visible.
QUESTION : How Is hoarseness
treated?
ANSWER: If no underlying
disease or growth Is causing the

ThundG,,April 26,1984

AS LOW
AS

Mlaoaawe Ovens

�1~The Dail

Page

Thunday,4pril 26,1984

, Ohio

Pomero

Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
~~~~~

~~---

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LEA \' ES \l EDIO \L EXAMINER'S OFFICE ,Joseph K enned), right, brother of llavld Kennedy.
"atr hes as th•• body of David is put into a hearse at the

II"

PALM llL\CII, F i&lt;~ 1AP&lt; Doctors a1e .ma1Y7.Ulg tL.;;suf' ami
- body flutd tu fmd out "h.tt ktllC'd
28 -year -o ld
D"v td
Antho n y
Kennedv. whoS!' cr rat tc Jlfc and
- battle wtlh drugs m the 1b \mrs
since hPwatchC'f! hts fathct tlS&lt;;.;tsst
• natl'd on tf'IC'\ tsto n had long t roublf'd

Amenca's most famous tamt lv
"Dn.1gs. I would say, arr a st rong
posstbill h ," HJ(. k B lack , m vC'StJgd
101 f01

t hC' Pa lm

· medk·J!

&amp;•aL11 Count\

t~x~tmmt•J . SCJ Jd

c~rtPJ

.m

a utops' v. a~ 1-X'' formro Wcxirws
da\
he's

Wllh lh•• I\ J~'S of ptublems
ht~d
I h'1H' ss lh.i t's not

SUI'lJTISin g

K f'nnf'Ch tht· fourth of ch.Jld of
Ethe l h.t •nn(YI\ .1nd th( ' !atr Sc&gt;n
Rob:•rt F hen n('(l). \\ cl" fou nd b' c.t
Hotel r,;('('t Pl.tn on t ht · fltXJJ b('IWf&gt;f&gt;n
ffiO bt•th uf hiS "Ulte tn t!1f' posh

B1azi1Jan Cuut1 Hot PI
H1s lxKI\ ~ a" to tx· nown 10(ld\ to
VLrginra. sll~ of ht&lt; f,tm th 's lltckon

Hill rs tiJ!£ '

Sd ld d spokC'Sm&lt;.i!l for th f'

(}u ut ti Ph.lum H o !!r•mnn Btl! '-f'
Funrr.t ! H n mt' m \\ 1·'1 1\llrn l-3.l 'dC'h
I-ll' ..mel hi' l !l1 1lh1 ' 1 [)oug Lis, \~ ~w
h.ld lr' ft 1h1 hu!t •l 'h1 d el\ hc!1 11 f ', h,ul

)'

11

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1

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n 11 ~ 11 '

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checked m last week to visit theu
grandmother, 9'1 vea1 -old Rose
i{P nnc'dy, a t the frunily's m ansion
Sf'Yer al miles awav
No drugs or drug paraphernalia
WPI P found in the room. whe1e a
hot£&gt;1 secretary found the body , and
there were no signs of violence or
fou l play, sa td Pol tce ChtPf Joc
Tcrltzzese
"There were no ptlls found tn th e
stoma&lt; h A nd there was no rea l
•1rom a of al cohol but that ts
somcl hmg thai w ill have toawatt the
tl'sull s of thr test s," Black said .
Pa lm Beach PolrcP Sb1 Henry
Ma rchm an sa td 11 w ill be several
da\'s tx&gt;forc c hemical test result s
pmpomt the ca use o f death
L\.. Harva rd Untvl'rs lly dropout .
KL"nnroy had an apartment m
!los ton and had "orked as an mtem
at Atl antic M onthly magazine l or
ltv£' months tn 1982 and 1983
Miles Smti h, " friPnd tn Sac t "
mPnto. Ca ltf . whpr-c Kennedy h ad
ple.Jded gu ilt y in 19ffi to drunken
&lt;1 "' mg" hileundergomg hrs =
nd
10und of dn1g treatm&lt;'nt. said
KPnncdv "sef'mf'd hkP he finally

tho

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ull

76

1n r h,l ll(lP
tr A 1r1rf' l

h&lt;'l

Jo

'

Baron

tools, 3 chain saws, socket sets, slip scrapper
Household : 7 pc. maple dinette sel. maple gun
cabinet. Whirlpool automatic washer (almost new),
Unlco freezer. RCA portable TV, Quasar console
color TV, blanket chest, Singer sewmg machine. 2
real nice bedroom suites complete, vanity dresser,
chest, clothes ra ck and mise dishes .
Antiques : Three pc. bedroom suite. one of a kind all
original finish, Bombay ends, carved cuptd dolls. bed,
dresser, wash stand Must see to appeciate Wash
stand, ~ron kett le , cabinets, heavy carved bed , carved
bench , round lamp ta ble claw feet, cooper kettle,
stone tars, mise
Auctioneers Note : Th1s is a very clean sale The
furniture IS In great condition The tractor and farm
equlpmen1 have been well taken care of . Come oneCome all Don't m iss this one This Is a good quality

()cX111 l..., ll n'-pl l ,dhc

Th('
s t. n h~ !

c \l !ll ~Jt t ..,tl
t '-

1 jj( • ',~,~s ";" li

.t nd

b cutd!l' , t(lt 1

1 n1Lt1: p lln!! [d.J\C ' t

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' lfl d ( 'IJJIH'"f [\'..._l,llll d /ll IIJ\ fht • '\ t '\ \

h,L)f ( I'Jl(UI"\ ]..Jh'l
hf' \\ .1..., c., I tll mr'(•' lil)..:: c lu !) d.11 t ,.., fi om
C'OaS t 10 ('01:1S1. Wtlh O('f'dS IOOdl
J pr~'\

( 11, 10..,!

. ap~·t:nanrP'i

,\

IX'fOJf' pH " 'dem...,

o~nd

Th1!11'4 '0
d1 ·frncl. tnh !ll!if•JI('(l
blmcb 1n l il t ' lOU t ! 1d \ 1Hidlq)( lll
Ma\ 01 Ft c'(l Jl ot t m .r n \\Pdn1 --;d,\ \
ntghl
]{rJb·i l St()n( ', ~ l,.-J4l,
pos t("(j IJ rl , I l h.r I gr ' () f d I l\ In g \A. h l iP
t.ntoxH .llt'\1 rnd \-Il l 1 \ptwd 11

T h&lt; '\

~~~·r t·

c"n"" Dolt' ~l.t \ &lt;'ht i lll uthl' $-YiJ,
dtl\ mg \\ hll( · ttllliXIC'dtt-'d B&lt;•hnrld
Rou ~ h
Vltrl(lleport :';.J''IIl drt\ m g
w hil(' mto:-:tcd tPd , SIP\ ('n H Srotl
Pomc'l m $4--1. Hog( ·t M d lf"llancl
Ca lltpo lts, $4(1, ~tmuPI ll ut lo"
' Ch••sht t'l', $42, Mtlni:lc'an, &lt;.alltpo
Its. $4:1. GIPn BmH•t·s. C;alltpol ts, $42
all on s(X'edrng eh.lr gt•r,;, T tmor hv

CtJI'tt s Long Haltom. $50. t•xpu &lt;'CI
tags Stp\·en T nmf'k M tddl&lt;•pott
$.'J.I. ,JSsured c leor rlt st.mef', 13f'l h
( ;]()(&gt;('knC'r. P om('n)\ $.r.v. "top s1gn
\'IUIC:i t ton. Tt 0v Durham. M 1ddlC'
J:XHI, $1()0, di VJI clf'r lv manrt(' J,
Mtchacl Dl'n, Middlt'pot1, $ 0&gt;1,
spm n Jng 111 "'
:--J m(• ddf'nddnl s \\PfP flmod
Wednf'sd ,l\ ntght and thev arc
D"nghl Ho~lc\ . Mtcldleport $42'\and
eost s and lhrN~ d&lt;.~ vs tn J·lll , driVI ng
whlk mtoxrra tf'd , and $2!) and cost~.
oo 01)('1 alo1 ·, licf'nSf', Kf'V ln Ban.
BicJwpJJ, $Jft .md &lt;Ost s. stop stgn
vio lalton. Sa il\ f'rt &lt;'l', MtddiPporl,
$10. no c htld r est rami, dtld $2'&gt; and
costs. fa1lurf' l o hi.JVP H' hlcll' undf'r
control. Paul Pullins. Mtddleport.
$50 and cost s. dtsorderly manner;
Jeff W Cundtff, M rdd leport. $2'&gt;and
_costs, disorderly m anner; Mlke
Jackson, Middleport , $10 and costs,
traffic light VIolation, Judith Laudermllt , Mtddlcport. $2'&gt; and costs.
open contamer , Doug Starcher,
• Rutland. $100 and costs, criminal
·: !repassing, Curtis R iffle. K ana uga,
$1B and costs, speeding . Anthony
Smit h was given a 10 day j ail
sentence, seven of w hich were
'suspended and w as placed on
- probation for 30 days, on a !he ft
clmrge.

A lung thr way, he wrotp 'One
O'Clock J ump," " Jumpm ' at t he
1\'oodstde." Dun' l You Mtss Your
1\~hv." and ·r Lef1 :\olv Babv "And
hf' pcrfc'&lt;'ft'd the Basic sound b l d sttn g bt c1ss r nst"mblf'S s tmpiP
hurnm.Jhh • r 1ffs and r ou smgsolos a l l
hc lct tog•·ther by h1s ptano, pla ~·rng
back ground transJ!tonsorcomm g to
1hC' forl' !or brK'f solos
WP JU St p ia\ mus1r." hC' oncf&gt;
~ .. 11d "Andv.l'trv to makf'Jt S\\' mg"
H Pwas bom Wi!lwm Ra.s !l' m Rr'Cl
! ki nk N J on i\ug 21 19C~ Ht s
tat hn , Harvl'y, a car Ptakrr and hi s
mot ht't . I. !U tan, wprp both ta lented
.Hll dl f'Ut mu sJ('tan s who gave htm

t 11&lt; · monr'\ il&lt;' nr!'(led for hts 25-renl
mu siC lr·sson!';

1-ias !f' bf'gan as a d rumm~1 m a
school l&gt;Jnd, swll c hrng to the ptano
m ht" t('(·n s
H lsf'ai i.\' car('('! wdsasucrcssion
of dPfX'a i a ncrs m thcatPr s. Spf'a
kPdSI&lt;" hotels and ntghtclu bs often
a l·comp~m v m g vaudt?vtlle acts Hi s
most famous tPachc r was Fat s
Wa llf' t w hom Bast&lt;' laiE't replaced
m an act ca lled K a liP Cnppen and
hPr K tds

F~~

hunt Sunday

T hl' pos tpo n ed communil v
Easter &lt;-gg hunt of the Mlddlepor t PomProv Rotary Club, ramed out
last Sunday. w UI tx&gt; held at 2 p m
thrs Sund ay a t General Hartinger
Park A record numtx&gt;ro!pnzeeggs
"111 Jxo htdden for this ypar' s eVPnt.

Vt&gt;t

at

Thrifl Shoppe

Or Carol Osborne. veteranarian,
will Jxo at the Thrlf1 ShopJX' of I he
Meigs County HumaneSoctety from
.1 to 8 p m each Tuesday, society
o!ftcers sa id today.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND tAP \ The
winning number drawn Wednesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 578.
In the " Ptck -4" game, played
Monday through Friday, the win
ning number was 4324.
The lottery reported earnings of
$467,282.00 from wagering on Its

dally game. Earnings cameon sales
of $1;043,272.50, whUe holders of
winning tickets were entitled to
share $575,!ro

'

n• le&lt;o&lt;l
U7 - l..!lo'&lt;l

oJOO
UOO

uooolew ... .,

o700

Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

, .. .,.,.,._,ou"

949-2263

11• '

, 1 fr r \

P

I

&lt;

&lt;

I

tv

11

11

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11

&lt;

( •

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oil

&lt;

1

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23

rj ddt 1) 1

Just Past Krodell Part.

April

Special
( h• lV I I vnn Kronkn

(
P1 &lt;0j

Real Estate General

Office: 675-1388
4-4- 1 mo. pd .

LEADING CREEK CORP .

Dean Hams, Pres
PIZZA DAN' S, Rutland
RUTLAND DEPT STORE
LaSALLE LOUNGE ,
RESTUARANT &amp; HOTEL
HILLTOP GROCERY
S and K VARIETIES
MILLER ELECTRIC CORP
HOLLEY BROS .
CONSTRUCTION CO
JIM and ANN THOMAS
SHERRY MICHAELS
FRANK and AllEN MILLS
Thank you very much
POST 467 and
S.A.l. 467
Misc. Merchandise

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

Phone·-------------------

Pqttown on Twp 142
Call 992-3466

Scipio Energy
Recycling Division
4!1 111 mo

17

18
19,
20.

2

21

3

•s

22
23
24

6.
7

25. - - - - - - 26

8

27. -- - - - -

9.
10.

~. ----------29. - - - - - - - - - -

11.

~. - - - - - - - - -

12.
13.

ll. - - - - - l2

14.
15.
16.

33. - - - - - - :J.&lt;
lS

1
1
11
11

Mall This Coupon wltll Remittance

:1

Pomeroy, Oh. 457"

t

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE
WORK

80 acres tn

AL TROMM

The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.

~--~-----·-~~-~-~----·

742-2328
We Have the
Lowest Rates

-

&amp; Commercial

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

CARPENTER
SERVICE

SIDING

608
E Moun
POMEROY,O.
992 -2259
PRICE REOUCEO - Near the
Mmes - 3 bedroom ranch on
appro11 'l acres cou ntry
sertm g No• oniJ $18 500
PRICE REDUCED - Svracuse
- At1ract1ve 3 bedroom ranch.
new dec k &lt; n~ large lot Bargam
al reduced pnce ol $32 900
plus a 9 1 ". as)Um(lblr! .1n for
25 ye;m w1th bala 11' •· til

$25 600 mnnlhlv pavments ot
$313 mcludes taxes •mf
rnsurance DoubiP b(lr garn
OWNER WANTS A SALE - On
th iS I lloo&lt; plan 3 bedroom
horne. largfl lot and part

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

MIDDLEPORT - A bea ultful
Shull mob&lt;le home wtlh deluxe
features 3 tM:drooms. ( II;
baths range. rei 10 large
kitchen

un cJerpmn1ng,

also

mce Iron! porch W!lh ra11ing.
Rr~.&lt; e1

vrrw

50' ,d 00'

~t

$19000

35185 Oak Hill Road
long Bottom. OH. 45743

PH. (614) 985-4212

9 ACRES In Chester
Tuwnslup Good 6 rm home
one floor full basement,
lurnace woodburner bath and
TP water $35.000

We Use Von Schrader
[qutpment Recommended
by leodtng Carpet Manu facturers
'FREE ESTIMATES"
3 28 I mo

MIOOLEPORT - Near stores
lhts 3 bedroom home has 1'h
baths new '•lchen and d1nmg
Small lev~ lot OniJ $23.500

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We 'd hh to rntroduce you to
Enpee-A-Car, the modlfn way
to drive the vehicle of your

NEAR KROGEifS - 2 apts, 5
rms . bat h and central heat
down 4 rms and bath up
As'tn~ $34 500 Wants an

choice

otter

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326
Pomeroy, OH 45769

ll KE NEW - Bul needs
ltntshed lg den place lor 2nd
bath carpettng plus 2 bed
rooms Only $18000
POMEROY

-

N&lt;ce olde"

For Faster Strv1ce

home

Vlt:'W of r11Jer centra I
hea t sman yard. modern batt1

Call 614 -992- 6737

AlB
lUliOI

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

All Types

Rooft~

GOII LESSONS SPEOAI.

&amp; Sidtng

NEW- REPAIR

CALL TOM HOSKINS
614-742·2834
4/ 18/1 mo

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Srzes from 6'x6 ' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

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

CARROLL'S
LAWN SERVICE

,

'
!

ADULT 6 for 140
STUDENTS 6 for 1 30

, . •Silperv1sed Golf
Proc11m
•8qrnn1n1 now
thri;IUJh Sl!!ilSOA
*All A&amp;es
Seturday play1n &amp;
ItiPS
•On Cours! lns truclron
•Awards
INSTRUCTORS· John Teafo..d
Dove " 81g H1t " Burt

CHESlER. OHIO
4-9 1 mo

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•DOZER

BACKHOE

'RECLAMATION WORK
'OIL FIELD SERVI CES
'DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
' CONCA ETE WORK

'CUSTOM BUll THOMES
'WATER. GAS &amp;
OIL LINES

JIM
PH .

CLIFFORD
992· 720 L 5tf

CHIMNEY KING
CHIMNEY SWEEP

*MOWING
*TRIMMING
•CEMETERY
MAINTENANCE
Reasonable Rate•

CALL
992-5949

SWEEPER and sewing machme repair, parts , and
supplies
Pick up and
delivery , Davts Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mrle up
Georges Creek Rd
Call

6 t 4-446-0294
Paul's Home Video located
406 2nd . Ave , tn Park
Central Hotel VHS. Betas .
CEOs ldtsc) Rent mov1es &amp;
players . Bruce Lee movtes

Calf 446-17t8
Clelond Greenhouse, flow ·
ers, fla1a or pot s; hangmg
baske1s. vegetable plan1s ,
toma1o plants, Gerald1ne
Cleland. V1ne and Mom St
Racme
Rac1ne F~reDepartment Gun
Shoots have been cancelled
for tt-.e seoaon They wtll
resume next fall They w1sh
to thank everybody part1c1
pating &amp; making the Gun
Shoot a success
Mean Street Bond at Jones
Bar , West Columbia , Fnday
&amp; Saturday from 9 p m to 1
a m Everyone welcome!
Any dogs caught on Loute
Plants farm on Eckard
Chapel Road . Ma so n
County will be shot Stgned
Loute Plants

304-766-2779
Yard Sakt Apnl 25th. 26th .
&amp; 27th Across from Blue
Fountarn Motel t1me 9 .30.
Yard Sale Centenary Town
house April 26 &amp; 27 9 6 .
Lots of childrens clothing &amp;
Jrs 7 &amp; 9

Auct1 on every Fn mght at
the Hartford Community
Center Truckloads of new
merchandtse avery week.
Cons1gments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome Rtchard Reynolds
Auctron eer 304 - 275Next sale Mt Alto Auction
May 6, 1984 Emma Bell
AuctiOneer . Lie
429-84

Phone 304 42B 8177
9

Wanted To Buy

W e pay cash for la te model
dean used cars
Jim Mmk Chev -Oid s Inc
Btlt Gene John son

446 3672
Wanted 10 buy u sed coal &amp;
wood heaters Swam Furnrture, 446 -3159, 3rd &amp;
Olive St , Gallipolis. Oh
Wanted to buy square danc mg clothes S1ze 10 . any

typo Calf 446 4537
Small pop -up camper. good
cond Call 446-4306 after

4 30PM

FURNITURE
B eds. tron.
wood , cupboards, chairs.
chests . baskets. d1 shes .
stone Jars. anttques. gold
and stlver
Wr~te - M D
M1ller , Rt 2, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 or ca ll 614 -992 -

7760

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years
"Free Estimates"

EUGENE LONG
Ph .

(614) 843· 5425

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

614-367 0536

498 Gen . Hartrnger Pkwy
Mtddleport , OH

1 gray krllen w1th g reen eyes
very lovable Call 614 -379

PH . 992-2549

OPEN:
MON .-SAT. 10

SERVICE
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

PAT HILL FORD
Middleport, Ohio
1 · 13-tfc

6

4-6- 1 mo

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - htenSJVe
Remodel tog
Insurance Work
Custo.m Pole Bldgs

&amp; Garages

Roofing Work
Alumtoum &amp; Vtoyl Stdtngs

1 6 Years Experience

992-7683
99222B2

GREG ROUSH
PH .
or
II 1-tfc

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

SERVICE
985-3561

All Makes
42 acrPS tn Orange
1ow11 'i hrn and old !a rm

•Washers •DIIhwllhers
•Rangee
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •F,...zen

03

PARTS and SERVICE
4 5-Ifc

•TRENCHING
•BACK HOE •OOZER
•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

OAS. SEWER
rli~:~~~RLLINES
County C.rtifl•d

SEPTIC IAUS INSIAttED
FREE ESTIMATES

1

7560-'67

JEWELL'S
PLUMBING
and
HEATING

2326

Call614-256-1393
Hued rock Call 446 -0958

3 German Shephard pups, 7
wks old Call446 - 3839
1 yr old muced breed dog
female Call446- 2561 after
4
Free pupptes lab puppies, 7
wks ol d Call 614 -985

3661
5 German Sheppard- Collte

pups Catl 6t4-773 5704
5 German Shep8rd and
Coll1e pup s 304 -773 6704
after

6 00

304-676 6196
Pupp1es and k1ttens

304 -

675-7319

Lost and Found

Lo st - a black short hatr
medium stze dog . no collar I
love htm very much &amp; pray
for h1s safe return Wanda
Wolfe Call 614 -9 85 -3574

Jobs - Big or Small
MINERSVILLE, OHIO

Experienced
Reasonable

Fou nd siamese cot on Snowball H1ll m Syracuse Call

992 -6030
3 26 1 mo

992 -3575
LOST two female boegle. tn
color, brown collar . last seen
Chf1on Reward 304·

lULl

S&amp;W TV

Housing

AND

Hrmdquartet~

APPLIANCE
ERVICE

Reel Estate Oenerel

~ 986·4289

4635 Scout Camp Rd .
hnt1r, Ohio

Ph.
Ans-. Coli Jll-.4382

II l "Bud" llcGHEf
Broklr ·Auctlon St!Vtce
Cheryl ltmley,
lltlll County Auociate

II ••

Wo Service All
M ..oa. Madola

742·3171

•'

Antan11.1 Instillation
ttoult Cells end Shop
S...l&lt;t Arelleblt
"5emce lhll Towers Above
The Rest"

BOGGS

8

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S.

RT.

50

EAST

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoc
form Equipment
Duler

Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

Form

1-3 ,,,

LIMESTONE
HAULED
AL TROMM

742-2328
4/ 9 /1 mo .

Must sell $2,000 down take
o11er $316 per mo paym ent Tu:es &amp; tnsurance
mcluded Located Plantz
Subdrvisron 3 bdr ranch .
iull basement . c arport ,
woodburner. c 1ty schools

Need garden plowed on Rt

82, 304-675 -6596
7·00

Interviews no w bemg co nducted for wattresses , apply
m person, 12 00 -4 00 PM ,
Fri and Sat at Tat's under
new management, Pomt
pteasant .

12

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt Pleasant, WVa
Auct Lonnie Neal Youth
Center Bldg • Camden St

6t 4-367 -7t0t
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
1Service . Eltate. Farm, An tique &amp; liquidation sales
Ucensed &amp; bonded in Ohio B.

WVa 304 · 773 · 6785 or
304-773 -9186

3 bdr , 2 full baths, large lot .
n ear Holzer HoSPital ,
629 .900 Terms 1f needed

Call 446-2957
By owner lovely 2 bdr _
home on waterirant. boat
ramp &amp; dock, close to town ,
poced S34.900 Will help
frnance
Ca ll 614 266

12 16 .

Situations
Wanted

Wtll ca re for the elderlym my
home Lots of references
M en o r women Ca ll 614
667 _3402

l- - - - - - - - - -

Mercer's Riv erv rew Per
sonal Care Ho me has vacan
cie s for elderly persons
Betty Mercer owner 30 4

773-5882
Would love to care for 2 or 3
elderly people 1n my home,
ret , lo1s ofT l C Call after 6

75 1293

General Hauling and Trash
removal Serv1ce Relrabl e
and dependable Call 446
3159 between 9 and 5
Ketth's lawn M owmg &amp;
Tnmmmg Serv1ce Relrabl e
and depe ndabl e Reasons ·
ble ra1es Cal\ 446 -3159 or

256 6251
Rooftng and gutter work.
metal work hou sepamtrng
carpenter work Exc rof
Free est1mates Call 446 -

3171
Garages . patr os. std ewa lk s,
basements. block work
Reaso nable pnc ed 35 yrs
experrence Free est1mates
Dependable lawn mowmg
serv1ces Reasonable rates

Ca ll 304 675 6517 or 675
2199 after 4 p m

Help Wanted

Colt 446-8002

after

Call 446 -3394

Bu1ld on your lo1 a new ho m e
you afford Over 1 100 sq
ft
6 room s &amp; both, car pete d ready to m ove mto
826,500 also garages &amp;
basement
Ca ll Patri o1
Home Builders 446 8038
Will cons1der mob1le home
as trade m
6 rooms, basement, d ouble
garage , 1 &amp; one - th~rd acre
lot. Rose H1ll. Pomeroy

$32.900
2513

Ca ll 1 614 67B

Completely remo deled 2 3
bedroom ho use wtth v 1nyl
s1d1n g fully ca rpeted forced
;m gas furnace . large out
bu1ldmg m exc nerghbor

hood Call 614 992 6161
Owner tra nsfe rr ed , must sell
beaut1ful 3 bedrm bn ck
hom e F tr eplace . d eck,
woods prt11acy sunsh1n e

$63,900
5420
Baum
bnck.
m ent .
patio ,

Ca ll 614 992 -

add1t1on 3 bedroo m
1 % bath s, full base f am 1ly room . carport ,
a c S57 000 614

Babysrtter wBn te d _ '" my
home for 4 ch1ldren . 8 hrs

Financial

W anted Ambtttous, tough
minded people who are
wllhng to work hard for an
excellent rncome Full
part ttme Se nd resume to
Box 400 m Care o f the
Galhpohs Oa1ly Tnbun e, 825
Thtrd Ave , Gallrpolts, Oh

45631
Sell the Be st

Sell AVON

Part t1me babysrtter w an ted
for 6 yr old m Addr son area

Catl614 367 -0637
The Gallta County Cou nctl
on Agmg ts acceptm g appl!
catiOns for a part t1me 120
hour s- week) pos1tion of
Congregate Meals Manager Meals Transporter for Vm
1on area Addtttonal rntor matlon may be obtained
from the Oh10 Bureau of
Employment Servrces and or Semor C1tizens Center
The Galha County Co unc1l
on Agmg IS a privot e non proftt corporation and an
equal opportunrty em ployer
If mterested 1n an applica tion contact the Informa tion and Referra l off1ce .
Sen1or Citizens Center, 446 ·
7000 Apph cat1on must be
rece1ved by 4 OOPM May 4 ,

1984
N eed relrable woman to care
for 2 chrldren 3 mo &amp; 2
yrs , 1 -3 days a week . day &amp;
even1ng sh1h, some Saturdays needed
Reference s
apprecrated Call 61 4 -992-

Seven room ho u se. 1 112 bath .
3 bedroom that cou ld be 5 .
new ac , Insu lated sto rm
wmdows . ca rp eted . plenty
of krtchen cabmets. v. base ment w1th 'I• storage. ca r port w1t h storage large lot .
storage butld1ng Call 614 -

992 2602
FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO 8UV11r 14 tt Wtde three
bedroom. bath and half .
m ob1le home s1ttmg o n mce
lot
ready to mo11e mt o
S225 00 down $225 00 per
m o nth 30 4 · 576 2711
Three y ear old total electnc
house, 3 bedrooms. fenced
rn back yard and deck,
S1 0 000 00 down assume
8 % per cent loan pr~ced 1n
m1d 50 s Call after 5
4 bedroom home, full basement, 1 acre lot , At 62 .
Chatleston Ro ad 304 676 -

Bustness
Opportuntty

Baby sit1er wanted

304-

675-6072
Woman to stay with semiinvalid lady tn north Point
Pleasant. several hours each
afternoon and all day on
Sunday G1ve age and references Write Box P-26 care
of Point Pleasant Register,
P 0 Bo• 237 , Point Plae aant, W Va

a.c.

814·

742 -2720
1976 Skyline Mobile Home
12xa2. good condition .
f4600 Coli 814-992-1118
.. 992 -7687
12x60 2 bedrm mobile
home, well ured for , good
con , 2 porchea. ac. pertly
furnlahed, waaher • dryer.
good metal out bid., priced

for quick lllo *6600. Coli
6t 4 -992-2388
1971 King 86x12, 2 apart ment trailer ldeel for rent ing
Contact Hershel

McClure at 8t4 -992 -11900
til 6 p .m . aher 6 p.m call

614 -992-3438
1974 Knkwood 1 2"80 . total alec , 2 bedroo m . houll&amp;
windows, new carpet A - 1

cond

304-875- 7328

Mobile home, 12JII60 Champton, nice carpeting, wood
burner, drapes , diahweaher,
eJIItre nice and clean On
rental lot close to Gallipolis
and Rt 35. Immediate poaaasalon . 86 996 00 304-

676 -3466
7 3 Mobile Home, 2 bedroom, 1 'h bath , new carpet
1hroughout . Set up on
rented lot in town $7.000
or beat offer 304 -676 ·

1639 or 676 3004
1977 14•17 Cameron
tre 1ler. 2 bedrooms, 2 bath s,

304-773-9133
FOR

SALE

OR

RENT

14•70 . 1979 Shannon all
3 bedrooms , partly
alec
furn1shed mobtle h o me ,
1 2x28 bu1it ·on room with
coa l or wood burner. E.11.c
co nd underpmned , 3 nice
porches , well wa1er , utility
building , acre land . Jerrys
Run Road, Apple Grove .

W Va 30 4-675 -2356
Reposse!uon
2 bedroom
1 2x60 Madi son mob1le
home S600 00 down 60
payments of $137 14 per

month All STATE MODU
LAR HOMES . half way
between Huntrngton and
Pornt Pleasant on St Rt 2

304-576-271 1
33

Farms for Sale

142 acre farm near Rt o
Gra nde. good house and
barn Call 614 -245 -6281
eva·s

3 5 Lots &amp; Acreage
6
ts Plantz Subd1V1110n ,
S2 J00 for all Call 446 2957
Clearvrew Esta1es South of
Gall1pohs, Rt 7 Few re matn, bargam prrces . must
sell Call 446 -2974 or 446 -

0766
1 0 acres, reduced pnce, '"
Chester_ w1th 2 mob1le
homes on property Ca ll

614 -985-4174
One half acre lot on Mttchell
Road . Galhpolts . rural water
a nd c tt y sc hool s

S6 . 995 00
3466

3 04 - 675 -

2 lots Grandvtew He1ghts.

$13 , 000 00
3626

304 675 -

Rentals

House and 3 lots fo r sale
Sl1d1ng Creek Road Hart

ford WV 304 882 2B3 1
I

NOTI CE r

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB
LISHING CO recommends
that you do busm ess With
people you know. and NOT
to send money throu gh the
mad unt1l you have rn11e!!.ft
gated the offenng
LIBERTY FASHIONS 1nvttes
you to mvest 1gate ownmg
your own J ea n- Sportswear.
ladles, Infant-Pr eteen. Ac
cesso n es or Large Stze
store National brands Lee
Lev1, Ch1c, Jordache lzod
Esp1nt, Healtht ex, Bnttan1a
Evan P1cone. Cal11m Kl em ,
300 others
$7 , 500 to
S24.600 . f1xturos. supplres.
mventory. m stor e 1rarnmg,
a1rfare , grand o p en1ng. ect
Call Mr Kost ecky 501 -327

803t
2 2 Money to Loan
HOME

LOANS

FIXED

RATES Below market rates
Fixed co nv entional FHA VA l eader M o rt gage.
Athens , collect 614 -592 -

3051

Seven year old home , three
bedrooms . garden spot,
2605 Ltncoln Av e
8 'h
percent assumable loan
30 4 -675 -5047 afte 1 5 00
4 bedroom , new s1d 1ng,
frreplace rn remolded llvtng
roo m
$16 ,000 00 304

675 5854
4 room house co rner lot
2330 l1nco ln Ave Ph o ne

304 -6 75 -3869
32 Mobile Homos
for Sale
TRt ST ATE MOBILE
HOMES USED - CARS .
TRUCKS
GALLIPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRIC ES CALL
614 446 -7572
NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL S QUAL
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 Mt WE ST GALLIPOLIS
RT 35 PH ONE 614 -446 727 4
1966 12 x60 mobrle hom e.
unfurnished , S 3 900 Call

446- 1340
23

Professional
Services

PIANO

4. 1986 EOE

12xSI t971 mobile home;
woodburner •

4BB7 or 614 446 1675
21

7896
Pomeroy Health Care Ce n1er
1s now acceptmg apphcattons for nunes 111des &amp;
orderlies E•perien ce prefared Appltc a ttOns ac cepted Monday- Friday 8
a m -4 30 p m through May

8288 .

985-4201

304 675-6643

Calf 614 388 9045

Puppies . call

Teachers and coac he s
s ummer employment,
9900 .00 per month guaran teed income W o rld Book
and Child Craft 304-882 -

day Cat1614 -388 -9342

lost· a small female beagle.
named Sus1e, black , brown,
&amp; whtte, weanng c ollar with
ID 1ag, 1 yrs . good phys1cal
con . I pray for her safe
return Wanda Wolfe. Ches ter Call 614-985 -3574

WORK GUARANTEED

CHESHIRE.

Services

Frll dtrt free to anyone Call

4 male pupptes part Al askan
Husky &amp; German Shepard

COMPLETE
POOL SERVICE

H -2 mo . pd

RADIATOR

to

Employment

gages w1th as lt1tle as a 6%
mg
We have and
homerates
mortdownpayment
811

low a• 10 60% Colt Jeri
Alhe today 614 -379 -2789

18

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

Spring is herell If you're
shopp1ng fora new home, let
N L Stevena &amp; Associates
help you with your flnenc -

Help Wanted

2486

19 7a mciblto home. 12all.
2 bclr .. - good oorld. can
441-717t , o1tor II 441·

614-246-5281 eve' s

992-6941

YARD SALE, Friday , 4 fam ily from Columbus . 2610
Jackson Ave , Pomt Plea sant Cancelled tf ram

30 4

27t 1

2 Hamster Call 446 -9650

&amp; Vicinity

Buymg datly gold, s1lver [ - _ _ _-6_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
co1ns. rmgs , Jewe lry_ sterling
ware old coms. large curWanted to Do
rency Top prtces Ed But·
kett Barber Shop 2nd Ave
Middleport. Oh 614 -992

PlEASEIIII lady stop s1ealing wreath and flowers off
El11ott plots
Oorrs M
Coffee

Giveaway

.. -·---p·• -Pieiisa-rli -·-..

Middleport home. Jump 1nto
Spring S&amp;¥ingsl Super ape·
cu1l low prices Call 614-

Wanted to buy New, used &amp; Have room . board. &amp; ca re for
anttque furniture Wrll buy 1 elderly m Pomeroy Ca ll
ptece or complete house - 614 -992-6022
holds Also complete Auctl oneermg serv1ce Co li
Harper 's Adult Ca re Home
Rodney Howery 614 -698 - has a vacanc y for another
7231
res tdent, elderly person Call

Cash pa1d for fancy tron or
heavy Tron beds $160 and
up fo r certem M etgs Co
stone Jars
Old t1me cup
board
ca ll 1 - 30 4 -882

Homes for Sale

Large 3 bdr houae for Ale or
ren1 In Plantz: Subdivlaton.
No children . no peta Call

p m 614-949 -3014

3476

Hc~l Es ldle

6 family Garage Sale· May 1,
2. 3, 4. 6th . Reedavtlle,
Ohio. Ctothes, many house·
hold 11ema. Driveway bes1de
Church of Christ.

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

eccounu welcome . 4211t·
cond Ave. Ctt1448-t Ut .

31

f;;=========+~~~~~~::::::::1

Billie Jeans Beauty Shop all
permonent waves $15 and
S 20 unttl all presen1 s1ock 1s
gone Call 304 -773· 9123

4

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

3 BR RANCH - l g d &lt;mn~
wllh s l1 d1n ~ glass doors bar lg
lrv1np, carpeting, la m1ly rm
about 21x 32 and worksoop tn
full basement Young !rut! on
2 40 acres $39 500

Phone

No Sunday Calla
3 11-tfc

6

nrw woodburn..- msulated
and all ul&lt;hl&lt;es for $28 500

'l92-3325

949·28110

12- tt

One floor f,
rm cMpeted home N1ce bath

HELENCALL
. BRUCE
SUE MURPHY
MillON ROUSH

Opening Flea Market Two
free weekends. April 28·29,
Mey 6 -6 Free open air
spaces, parking, admission.
US 36, fraz:iers Bottom.
WVa Don frazie r- Operator.

SIDING CO.

Pomeroy , Ohio

FURNISHED -

bwldrnp\

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

B

"Beautiful. Custom
Buill Gara_Qes"
Call for free siding estimates~ 949-2801 or

992-6215 or 992 -73 14

ann small lol

lAND -

REALTORS
Henry Cleland . Jr
992-6191
Dottte Turner 992 -5692
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Jo Htll 985-4466

BISSELL

Addona end remodeling
Aoof1ng end gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing and aleetrrcal
work
(free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

•

&amp;Vicinity

Nice black &amp; wh1te pupptes
Cat16t4 -367 -7743

NEW LISTING - 114 acres 11
Jackson County . Oh&lt;o franklin
Towns h1p Owner w1il f1na nc~

CHESTER - 14x 70 mobile
home 3 bed•ootns I ' · baths
pa r11all~ furn1 shrd
uml er
pmned cr.n lrill a1r rA elec
heal tnclu des 12x24 siO&lt;age
burldrng All on approx 1 acre
lol Verv niCe( $19 500

insl ll u i JOn mav r.:quest a shock

WANTED

lotattd H'• Mrltlast ot

NEW LISTING - 218 acres
wrtfl some bmber OOttom land,
2 ponds 3 barns 3 car
garages, II rm house wtth tree
gas lurnace naiural woodwor~
lences on 2 state routes Asktng
$95 000

$24 000

( Continuf'll from pagr 11

4-6- 1 mo

Residential

FREE ESTIMATES
All Worlc Guaranteed

'riced On Inspection

Ractne About hall ltmber and
about 25 lractO&lt; w~h a 5 rm
home lor $60.000

basement Call to r,ee th1s one

Charge..

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation .

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682'
or 992-7121

Types of Aluminum
Clean Sheet &amp; Cast
41( lb.
Weeks of April 9-21
Aluminum Auto. Trans.
18.00 Each
Irony Aluminum

r . 2nd st.

NEW LISTING -

Addre·~----------------­

1
I
.I
I

Roofing A Specialty

YOUNG'S

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

All

Sunon on good road near

Name----------------------

1
I

Construction

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Gutters. Downspouts
Painting, Coating

3-24-tfc

Phone
1· (614) · 992-3325

Wr- 1te your own ad and ordf?.r by ma11 w1m this
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
r esults Money not refundable

'1
1
1

General

...... rii)merov ........ .

3 Announcements

Three acres wtth a mcely
constructed conrete bloct
home 26x30, 3 bedrooms,
orte bath, 12x15 livlllC
room and 24x24 family
room. Parttally carpeted,
fuel otl furnace wrth facih·
ties
for
woodbumer.
12x15 block storage build·
rng, 20¥30 block garage.
Right off Rt. 248, country
settrng, 'lz mile east of
Chester, Oh1o.
(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE :
Downstatrs equtpped wtth
kttchen. ltvtng room,
dining room and den;
upstatrs has two bed rooms and one bath;
house also has basement lot size approx.
48'x308' . Needs work .

2\6

-------------------·

)Wanted
JFor Sa le
) Announcement
) F or Rent

Mon.·Sat. 10 to 6

(I) HOUSE IN CHESTER:

VIRGIL B. ~R .

Not Responsible tor Accidents or Loss of Property.

hroadcast Joca II&gt;
II wa s also m Ka n sa s Cll} th&lt;:~ t
13asre got " btg break m 1935, when
talent scout a nd Jazz c nhc John
Hammond dtscovcred hun leading
the band formC'd bv lhe la te Bennie
MotPn at lhP Reno C lub on 12th
Street.

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH . ljlljl,l- 2

Open:

Real Estate Gener•l

Lie. &amp; Bonded in Ohio and West Virginia. Lie. No .
6684 .
Terms : Cash or check with posttive I. D.

and wPrf"

PH . 992-2549

--···- Giiinpoti&amp;-- ----·--

3069

If mterested contact
The Home Naltonal Bank
in Ractne, 949-2210.

773-5785 . 773-5430

"Conftdmttalh . I haiC'd lhrnamC'
·count. "' Bas t&lt;' satd tn a 19R2
mt crv JP\..\' " 1 wa nlf'd to hr ra iled
Rurk o r Hoot or f'\'C'n A1 kcmsas
Fat s "
8as tr mtroduccd the break fast
dance in Ka nsos Cit v. 1a1sing
&lt;'yebt ows lx '&lt;·auso:• both w hile and
black mu stc ians par1 tc ipated. T he
dances were j ammed e\Pfl' Mon

ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnaulltlon
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

FOR SALE

TEAFORD'

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

April Only

12x24 .. . $5,500 installed
i4x28... $6,200 installed

llf

The Elt Denrson Post
46 7 Amencan legiOn,
Rutland . Ohto. would
lrke to thank these peo·
pie for thetr gtfts and
donattons for our Easter
Egg Hunt. held Sunday
at the Post Home

54

Sales and Service
NOW OPEN
Charleston Rd.

1

D

RICK PEARSON

the announl'('l dSked th l' piams t

Hartin&amp;~rr Pttwy
Middleport, OH .

498 G.,..111

VINYL &amp;

POOLS-PLUS

01 1'i10n 0! Mrocy, County Oh1 0
lor .~ ~ (1 rd rt 10 ChJnqe h''r
1.1 IH 111 ( hrry l Lynn Lo ll1qan
c; 11d "' llPI'l :.tl 10n will he by
p • 1 ' " n I• hP folpd 111 s .:t1d Cou rt
ll r •I !1 ]1 1 l~lP J S l day Ul June
~~

' &lt;,

I I\

WHALErS AUTO PARTS
PH. 992·7013
New Chevy Truck ...
FEND!R ............. 176.95
DOORS .. ..
. 1149.95
HOODS .......... 1174.95
BUMPERS
.... 169.95
GRILL .............. 142.50
R SUPPORT ...... 184.95
TAIL GATE ......... 185.00
FORD FENDER .... 169.95
BUMPER .......... 169.95
Also Some Car
Fenders Available
3-28 -tfn

Public Notice

Administrator

The &gt; oungpran ts t lut thcrOil d wtth
the Gonzf'l \VhttP \ dUdC'v tlJ e show ,
w htch w en I broke and st r andcd him
m Kan sas Ctt y m 1920 It was ther e
that he got hts ntckn am e. fmm a
1ad to a nnounce! v.. ho was musm g
about a " nJv al family" of j d/..L that
would tnclude "1 he D uke of
Elltng1on' dod "l hc Ktng of
Olt\ e1
" H o"' Jbout th'• Count of Baste?"

probation hearing
Davrd M Harmon. 39, Pa rkers
burg was rC'fumed to Mf'igs County
from .Ja ckson Count y, W Va •
WednPSda y evening on c harges of
grand theft as a r esu It of the April19,
theft of car owned by Barbara
Betzlng, Pomeroy.
Harmon was an1'Sted by a West
VIrginia Sta te TrooJX'r at Riple} on
the evening of the day thE' car wa s
stolPn on charges of OWl
Harmon w~ ;yed ex tradlton Wed nesday a fternnoon in Jackson
County Circurt Court . H annon Is
presE'nt Jy being held in Meigs
County Jail pending a bond hearing
In county court .

e. Painted

112 - No"'"'"""

I U - IUGont
Ttl ft&lt;llll~~

uooolt_ .. o.,,.,_..,_
Uo•o•t-••
'" ___ ,...,

FRANKIE R. COOPER

ussa.;;smatlon

da v brlw('{'n 7 an d q

..........

sale

Bandleader Count Basie dies
t ova ll \

17)

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

Auctioneer

HOIIY\\ 001\ Fl.t
,,\Pt Cnunt 1-tt . . lt' dPt~nn f' JUlll iJSV\!ng ·
and on(' nf lht · glf',\ 1 f tL'll r f'" m th&lt;'C'! c1
of btg h._md Jdl' du'(l tnd,l\ .1 1

Hl
-"""''""
HI Looo.,t-

A THANK YOU
lETTER

elevator, small Bush hog, 16" turn plow, hay con
dltloner. 2 trailers, side delivery rake, 180 amp
welder. S hp gas post hole digger (Sears), 1200
tobacco slicks, chicken feeder, fertilizer spreader ,

Fnends and biogra phers said
K ennf'dv had tx&gt;en troubled smce
age 12 when. on I he ntght of June5,
196ll, he sat alone rna Ca llfomiahotcl
room and w a tched on televismn as
his father, a Democrat ic presidentral eand1da le, was ktlled by an
assa ssin aft e r bl'ating Sen. Eugene
M cCa rthy in the California prun
ary. Hi s unc le, President John F .
Kennedy had been assassinated
fi ve yea rs earlier
Larry Newman, a r ellredjoumal' st who lor :JU y ears ha&gt; llved nex t l o
the Kennedy family compound in
H y anntsporl. M ass , sa id the senator had r escued Davtd from 1ht•suri
a t Mahbu thE' day lx&gt;fore lhe

Woln~l

,,.._...,...0._

c ..., ,.

, ,.,,.,.,,,....,.,,- ~n o l

I II

11f

Ferguson bailer,

J 11

~

II I I I

Farm equipment : 454 International tractor, 1952Bn

ahU S('

N
I 11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Massey

o-.-o"

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTV. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF CHANGING THE NAME OF CHERYL
LYNN KROPKA TO CHERYL
lYNN COLLIGAN
NOTICE

1

lbe estate of the late Fred &amp; Mary Cooper will be sold
to the highest bidder . located 4'12 mtles north of Point
Pleasant on Rt. 2. Watch tor signs.

tractor,

2&amp;1

.. .

Public Notice

SATURDAy I APRIL 28
10:00 A.M.

Ford

tH

..... . ...,o......,.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned

11'&amp; ,., " " - '
•w - ~-~

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

mo

ESTATE SALE

had a hold on htmself" when he
VJ stled stx wl'!'ks ago on a sk ilng
vaca tmn
Kennedy's problems w rth drugs
cam e to !Jght rn 1979 when he
report ed berng robbed of $30 tn a
seedy H arlem hotel where pollee
said ht• had gon e tobuy narcotics. He
was hosptta lized w tth a heart
infC'Ctton oftC'n assoctaled with drug

)

ttu,...,.., ...

•ppl1c ll• 11 1 JV!II b,.., l •~
pP\ 1\ 1011 1•1 fu • hlf'd n &lt;&gt;a ool Cn oi l
1111 01 dll• •r thp 1 '-I rl.ly • of J rHi f
1984
0 ,1 \P'; thi S 7nd d[ly o f Ap r I

r.fltfll liV ()hoi)

8

FO&lt;"'
I•"-'
u ......
w........
...,
11._

1' lH4
( h rv l I v•m K n 1 k

ttl -111•
-""
._

t•J- A,.o .• o"

S ud

l !l

..... c-•••

&lt;IU
0 ..
.........
111 - c
_ ,•

loOt ....

It

NEW-REPAIR

...... c......

......cc"''""
....... .
o.~

1&amp; · ~ · .......... , ........
17 "woo~''"'
11
P .. , ~~ ~.,. ..... ~

1IIH] l ll

Pr &lt;JiJ IJ•

q •\

Plllm Beach Medical Enmlner's office Wednesday .
David, 2'7, was lound dead In his hotel room here
Wednesday. (AP Laserphoto ),

Doctors examine tissue, fluid
to find Kennedy death cause

111-··-.. .

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

.....

!or (I n orr1Pr
, hild &lt;; n tm r

'rPr"hV l "·' '' th 11
1

(,IJ, .. '''If''/,''"'""' r~• hflnll"'

wo

"'''"'&lt;••'"

H

Public Notice

PROBAll: COURT Of
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF CHANGING THE NAME OF ANDREA
JO KROPKA TO ANDREA JO
COlUGAN
NOnCE
1

l l ....... . .

~~

•• , ..-~
l_

Public Notrce

No I ' , ,
o •1 I•

72 ,, ...........,.

...-. .

._

- - .. -.,

H """Mole"!'"'"

lJ••--N
,,.._,_,

(h o

'' .....
"·--~·
,,.

ROOFING CO.

( j""'/"''1 J&gt;lllf''~ o"' • • 'r/1 r

71 .......... , . . .

UCI TVII!Mlllhur-•

.'

THOMPSON BOOKKEEP ING. Monthly ond Q"ortorly

l l ._..... .......... ~ ...

11 """"-N

..

lJll ....... •LN&lt;'I

~--~

.. .

~

O Giot•wo,

..
1
·- !:~~~~~~~IRI~ll~s:j;,,:l:~:::s:-'~l~::~::~.:~=~==~----_!~~:!~~=~=~~:~~=~~--~~~~~--~~2~3~P~~~~~;..~~;~~.~p;~~Ti~2~~~~~~··

TUNING low er
pr~ced regular tuntngs discounts to Sen1or Citizens,
Churches &amp; Schools Ward 's

Keyb oard. 304 -675 -3624
Ptano Tunmg and Repa1r
Brumcardt Mu111c Co . 4460687 Skill and 1ntegrity our
trademark
Lane Daniels.

614 -742 -2951
B &amp; M Painting Res • lnd ,
Comm . Free estima1es Call

614 - 256 - 1492 or 446 1104
Professional Electrolys ra
Clinic. Probe Type Electroly-

alo .

AMA.

FDA &amp; FCC

approved. Doctor referrals

304 -875-5668 .

41

5 rm house 44 Ohve St ,
Galhpohs Inquire at 918
2nd Ave , Galltpolts, Oh10
3 bdr
ranch near RID
Grande. 6235 m o
plus
sacunty depos1t , no pets
Call 614 -245 -5439
U n furm shed 2 bedroom
house wtth garage on Salem
St , Ruland S160 a month
$ 100 damage d eposrt Call

614 742 2378
3 bA droom famdy room ,
basem ent. neor schooh and
h osp 1tal Dep osit and refer en ce requ u ed 304 675

433B
3 bedr oom 2 bath s all
electnc
S200 month
S150 depos1t, S35 lot rent '

304 895 3828
Two room and bath fur·
n1 sh ed co ttage ut llttl&amp;s
pa•d . n1 ce yard one adult
S160 00 month _ deposit:

304 675 265 1

42

1979 fully under p•nn ed
1411:70, 3 bd r , 2 ful l bath s.
ap pr ox % acre, well graded
l ot Pnce reduced Cal1614 -

388 9957 after 5 30PM

Houses for Rent

Mobtle Homes
for Rent

2 bdr tratler fully furntshed _
good loca11on sec dep req

Ca ll 446 8558
1971 Freedom mob!l e
home. good co nd _ clean .
reasonable Call 614 -245 -

5549

N1 ce large ho use. near city
sc hools , yard , $300 a mo ,
deposit, uttltttes Call 446

1434 or 446-2192
1 980 14x62 Ltbeny mobile
hom e. exc cond. S6 ,700

Furmshed one BR , beautiful

Call 614-245-9256

W I D. A / C Adults only N~

14•70 Rose m ont 2 bdr ,
1973 1 2x60 Oetroiter 2
bdr , 1969 12 x60 Roycraft
2 bdr Reconditioned hke

pets
$2 16 month plu s
electrtc $200 deposit Ref.
Req Bulav1lle Road Call
Connie 446 0088 eftet 4
p .m

new Calf 446-0175
Fully furn1shed. AC , 2 bdr ,
1976 . 12x80. 2 bdr . exc
cond Completely furn11hed
All underpinning Included.

U , 500
6409

Coli

6t4 -266 -

adultr only Call 446-41 10
Furnished 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trail en Call 304 · 773 .

565t

�--

12-The Daily Sentinel

Page

.... ... .~

PamerDY-Miclclle

They 'll Do It Every Time

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

56

Male Great Dane, ears uncropped, no p•pera, gentle
dispo1ltlon. good watch
dog . •100 or trade for gun .

For rent with option to buy
12x65 tw o bedroom. all
efec .. mobile home setting

57

304·458· 1763

For sale Spinet -console pi ~
ano bargain . Wanted : Re ~
sponsible party to take O'ller
low monthly payment• on
spinet piano. Can be •een
locally. Write Credit Man-

c hicken coop, pony shed . &amp;
w o rkshop . 5 . 96 acres
fenced in. Only $35 ,000 .
Call 614 -992 -2 143 or even ' ng 614 - 742 - 2289 .

ager : P.O . Box 637 Shelbyville. 11\1 46176 .

Mi c hael.

Piano tor Sale : Wanted
responsible party to assume
small monthly payments on
Spinet Console Piano . Can
be 59en locally . Write : (in clude ph .no .,) Credit Manager , P.O . Box 209, Breese ,

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal

II . 62230 .

has~;~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~;~

one
and twOpport
o bedrooms
Housing
unity). renl
starting at S1 57 for one
bedroom and $193 per
month for two bedroom .
with 9 200 depo sit located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza . p ool and TV
ant. Call 446 -2745 or leave
message .

Small efficiency apart .. cen lral air &amp; heat, 1 professional
1ype gentleman only. 446 -

0338 .
Garage apt .. furnished 3
rooms &amp; bath Washer &amp;

dryer. Clean , no pets , adults
only . Dep . &amp; ref . req . Call
446 -1519 .
3 bdr. unfurn garage apt .
S250 plus deposit . Call

446 -3786
Furnished effi ci en c y , 607
2nd . G a llipolis
$1 45
Share bath , single . Call
446 -4416 after 7PM .

Furnish ed apt . 1 bdr .. near
HMC . $225 . Utilities pd .
Adults . Call 446 -4416 after

7PM .
Furnished Mobile Home,
central air, mil e below city
overlooking th e river . One or
tw o adults only . 446 -0338
Furnished apt for rent 3
ro o ms with private bath , 1st
fl oor . 845 2nd . Ave., Galli polis . Call446 -2215 .
1 bedroom Apt . S196 m o
mcluding utilities . Equal
Housing Opportunity Con t act Village Manor Apts .

614 -992 -7787 .
Riverside Apts . Middleport .
Spec ial rates f or Senior
Citizens . S 130. Equal HoUsIng Opportunities . 614 -

992 -7721
Pomeroy . 2 bedrm , car pe ted. with remodeled bath ,
nice -yard Naylo rs Run area .
Security deposit required .
Call 614 -992 -6886 aft er 6

pm
Small furnished apt for ren t

Call 614 -992 -7314
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes . houses. Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipoli s 614 - 446 -

8221 .
TWIN

RIVER S TOWER

Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
i n co me o f less than
S12,300 . Renting for 30
perc ent of adju sted income .
Phone 304 -675 -6679 .
3 room and bath apt . Mt .
Vernon Ave Stov e and ref
furnished E.11c c ond . 304 -

675 -1962

51

lAYNE ' S FURNITURE

Twin beds . c omplete, 8ft
huck topper, canning jars .
RCA black &amp; white TV . Cull

446 -3067 .

614 -367 -7238

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61

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

Corn planters: New Ford 2
row, used 4 row MF . Call

Outten size bed frame with
head board S50 . Call 446 ·

6630 .
Trailer wh eel tri -axle . Coli

614 -256 -6574 .
Couch , matt ress &amp; bo.11
springs . C all446 -0518 .

6 ft . meat c ase with com presser or trade for a glass
doo r refrigortor
One 7 piece wood group
li\ling room suite for sale .
brown, good cond ., $250 .

Haywagon in good cond ,
5375. 5 ft . disc like new

Call 446 6632 .
2 pair new maternlt\1 pants .
si7e 16 . c ream &amp; brown .
$5 .00 each . Call 614 -992 -

International Hay Baler 420
&amp; good condition lime
spreader &amp; seeder
Call
before 8 :00 a.m &amp; after

8:00p.m

5524 .

GOOD USED APPLIAN CES

Coleman Pre sidential electri c furnance. S45 . 40 chan nel CB . S4 5 . Call614 -992 -

Washers . dryer s. refrigera ~
tors , range s. Skeggs Ap ·
plian ces . Upper River Rd
bes1de Stone Crest M otel

Massey Harris tractor.
mower. front - end li ft .
wagon , plows. $2,500 .00 .

304 -675 -5809

5524 .

614 -446 -7398

Firewo od for sale . $20 .00
pickup S30 .00 delivered .
304 - 675 - 2991 bef o re
11 :00 AM or after 6 :00PM .

Coun try Oak Furniture, ta bles . chairs , c upboards, dry
sinks, pie safe s. l o ts of mise
Conkles
At . 7 , Tuppers
Plains , Ohio .

J W . Commentari11e 3240
rifle. Remington 870 TB. 12
gauge. full choke . vent rib

---

Remm1 n gt o n 1100 12
gauge with 3 harrells. S425 .
12 gauge single shot , S35 .
C all614 -742 -2187

304 -773 -5446 .
Gri:lvely tra c tor and mower .
' 72 Honda ~50 low mileage .
1 hp elec motor Metal
l athe
D u al wheel s for
Gravely . 20in . push mower
15in Fo rd pick up truck rim
All sales cash 304 -895 -

Ernly Ameri c an cou ch and
chair . e .11c . con d . S200 .00 .

304 895 3595
Portable co lor TV . baby
drassing table video game
with 3 c artndge . 304· 882 -

3974
Wood cutter special, Bar and
Chain Lube. $3 .89 gal.
$ 17.50 c ase . Siders Equip ment Co . f304 -675 -7421

2935

Used 2300 Ditch Wit c h
Tren cher and 1 150 Cas e
Loader . 1 -614 -694 -784 2 or

3349

4289

-

Used livm g room suite . ru st
co lor. good cond . S125.00.

USED EOUIP!
245 Masse-y Ferg . 2 ~ 9N
Fords. 4241H . 801 Ford. 50
Ferg .. 135 MF. 150 MF
w -loader. JO dozer. 2 Ver meer round balers , 120 MF
ba l er , Gravity wagons .
plows . corn planter. lime
spreader, disc
We bu.,. used equipmcntl

694 -5006 .

Call614-446 -1675 .

55

62

Building Supplies

Building materials
block . bn c k , sewer pipe s,
w1ndows . lintels , etc .
Claude Winter s, Rio Grande ,

304 -675 -608 3 .

Jividen 's Farm Equipment.
614 -446 - 1675. Long trac tors, Vermeer round balers.
rakes, teddter &amp; mowers &amp;
also a complete line of bale
handling acces.! TobaccO &amp;
corn sprayers. tobacco set ters, wagons, rotary tillers ,
rotary cutters. blades, cu lti vators, disc , plows, post
dri\lers, plastic tanks . wood
l Piitters. gates. power
washers. Wheel Horse Lawn
&amp; Garden Tractors Goose neck tra iler And sse us for a
complete line of parts &amp;
service!

Wanted to Buy

Wanted t o lease Tobacco
allotment Call 304 ·675 1197 after 6 p .m

0 . Call 614-245 -5121

46

Space for Rent

54
C OUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33 . North of
Pomeroy large lols. Call

614 992 -7479
MOVING to 86 Burd ett e
Addn All merchandrse mu st
go Building for rent . H ugh
Burr is 304 -675 -6512

.
47

Wanted to Rent

Mise

LUMBER -R ough cut . oak .
poplar . 2M4 , 2x6 . 2x8 . 1x4 .
1 .116. 1 x8 . length available , 8
ft . through 16 ft Hogg &amp;
Zuspan , 304 -773 -5654 .

Merchandise

Knauff firew oo d Pickup or
Delivered . 12 '' -22' ' stocked
in ya r d
HEAP vend e r ,
prompt delive ry . 614 - 256 -

Now open for bus1ness .
Mounta in State Block. Rt.
33 . New Haven Complete
masonry supplies. 4 ". 8 ",
12 " blo ck . Delivery service.

6245 .
L1mest o ne. Sand . Gravel
Delivered in Mason. Meigs ,
Gallia or pi ck up at Richards
&amp; So n . Call 446 . 7785 .

Phone day 304-882-2222.
evening 882 -3239.

56

1 0 " Poll en c hain saw S75
Want ed h o u se to rent . have
child and pet. Within 20m1 of
Holt er Hosp C all 304 -773 -

532 4

Merchandise
51

Household Goods
Firewood c ut up sl abs S 1 6
pickup l oad . C all 614 -245 -

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gallipolis . New

B. used wood S. coal stoves .
6 piece wood living room
suite with 6 inch flat arms
S399 , bunlc beds complete
with bunkies S 199, 2 piece
antron livingroom suites
$199 . antron recliners S99 ,

other recliners &amp;80, maple
dinette sets $179 . boM
springs &amp; mattress twin or
full $100 set regular. firm
$120, maple dinette chairs

$36. waah stands $34,
maple rockers 869. 7 piece
chrome dinette set $149. 5
piece dineHe set $99, used
bedroom tuitet, refrigere torl. range1, chett, dre11era.
wringer wa1hen. TV'1, dryer~. &amp; 1hoes. Call614 ~ 446 -

3159 .

Pets for Sale

Call614 -256 1528.
Build on your lot 8 new home
yo u afford . Ov er 1100 sq .
ft .. 6 room s &amp; bBth, c ar·
pet ed, ready t o m o ve into .
S26 ,500 also garage 9 &amp;
ba9em e nt
Cell Patriot
Home Builders 446 -8038
Will consider mobile home
8!1 trade -in

6804 .
limestone . fill dirt. and top
•oil. Call 614- 266 -1427
Lil red &amp; big red shah drive
brush cu1ters, trimmers .
30cc &amp;. 40c c gas powered
engine• . Prices from
$299 .95 Len N Sons Small
Engines . Call 614 · 379 ·

2827 .
2

story

house

813.000 .

1982 Dodge Colt $4,200 .
316 S. Main St ., Vinton , Oh .

&amp; Grain

REg . Polled Hereford bull
appro.11 . 1300 lbs . Call614 -

379 -2657 .
Case 310 front andloader
dozer. $4 ,000 . Call 614 -

S35 . Call 614 -367-0624
Goats-young billies for pets
or grazing . Call 614 -367 -

Taylor. ~~;;;~::;;:;:;:;~::::::::::::;::;;;~

614-245-5064
seeds. Call Vaughn
or614 -2455815after8PM .

come booio . 304 -675-3333 .

65

Seed

&amp; Fertilizer

Garden seeds, plants, Ken nebec seed potatoes S 8 . 50 .
Fertilizer. field seeds . Boso
Agri -Center, 446 -2463 .

Trans port at ion
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for late
model used can .
Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eastern Ave .. Gallipoli•. Call

1972 Ford Torino station
wagon . A · 1 cond . A lot of

TLC. $800 . Call 614-388 ·
9362 .

AC . 446 - 1853
1981 Datsun 280 -ZX turbo.
10.000 miles. mint cond ..
Gr. Lux . Coupe . Call 446 0648 after 5PM
1976 Monte Carlo 61 ,000
mi. asking $2,000. 1979
Cougar XR7 58,000 mi.

asking &amp;3.1 00. Call 446 3709.
73

Volkswagen

for

sale .

$250 . Cell 614-256 -1755
1977 Dodge Aspen, slunt 6,
4 dr .. PS, AM -FM stereo

$1 ,700. Cell446 -8158 .
1980 Buick Regal Umited,
PS, PB. cruise. AC. tilt
wheel, good tires. rear window defrost, good cond .,

S5.500 Call 446-4205 .
1975 Chevy Impala excel lent cond .. 51.100 . Call
446- 1211
1975 Chrysler Newport cus tom fair cond. 5650 or best
offer. Call 446 -6322 .
1976 Chevy Monza4cyl .. 4
spd .. good body, runs good,

$600 . Call 614 -256·6248
83 Oodge D50 Spon . 6,900
mi. , marroon trimmed In
silver. like new. Ronnie

Sheats . Call 614 - 256 1484.
1981 Dodge Omni excellent
condition , 59 ,000 miles.
great MPG. stereo . new
radials . $2 ,995 . Call 698 -

6269
1982 AMC Spirit , auto, air .
AM -FM. sunroof. $4 , 195 .
1982 2dr. Chevy Chevette ,
4 spd .. AM - FM tape,
Chevette. auto. radio. sunroof. S3 . 196. 1980 2 dr .
Fairmont Ford. 4 cyl .. auto.
air. IS2 . 895. 1980 Renault
leCar , 4 spd ., AM -FM , air,
sunroof, $2,496 . 1979 Plymouth Horizon, 4dr .• 4 spd .,
$2,295 . John's Auto Sales.
Bulaville Rd . Gallipolis.
446 -4782 . Open til dark .
1976 Corvette. factory
aluminum wheels . many eM tras, low mileage . Call 446 -

0498 .

3517.

_7_7_9_5_._ _ _ _ _ _ __

614 -742 -2814.

614-446 -7389 .

614 -367 -7220 .
Briarpatch Kennels Profes sional All -breed grooming .
Indoor -outdoor boarding fa cilities . Engli sh Cocker Spa niel puppies . Call 614 -388 -

Autos for Sale

1980 VW Scirrocco 6 speed ,
a .c. aluminum wheels with
steel belted radials . Call

tl_;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,...l:=========:.J

74

Motorcycles

1980 Yamaha 650 special,
good condition . 4 . 100
miles, $1 , 300 .00. 304 -

614-446-7389 .

676 -2B46.

1978 Chevy Caprice Clas·
sic, 4 dr, am-fm stereo tape ,
p .s, power windows &amp; door
locks. velour interior. new
paint. Must see &amp; drive to
appreciate. 614-446 -7389.

1983 V -66 Magna Honda.
3.000 miles . EMc . cond .,
never abused. good tires.

1978 Camero Z-28 . $3500 .
Cell 304-882-2546 .

75

1974 Chevy Vega station ·
wagon GT. Auto .. ps. good
tires. 9300. Call 614 -949-

2202
1978 Honda Accord, ac , 5
speed. motor needs work ,
good tires &amp; shocks . Only

$560. Cell 614 -992-2143
or evenings at 614 -742 ·
2289. Michael.

$3 , 400 . 00 . 304 - 675 3288 .
Boats and
Motors for Sale

Correct Craft &amp; Ski Su preme. family ski boats.
New &amp; used, Parkersburg.

WV 304-422 -8433 or 304422 -2367 .

76

2 white miniture male poo dles. 8 mo. old . Also puppie1
ready to go by May 1 Call

446·0857 .

614· 388-9000 .
7 yr . old male Amazon
Parrot tame &amp; talks. Brightly
colored . healthy, comet
with a very large cage .

8600. Call614 -388-9989 .

CAPTAIN EASY
NOTHING 5 TART5

MY PA'I OF
J OANNE,
YO ~

ATA Ll

Ford Mustang 4 spd., clutch
plate. bell housing shifter,
ect. for 351 Cleland engine ;

614 -742 -2289. Michael.

after 8 p.m .

1981 Dodge Omni. e.~~cel ­
lent condition , great mi ·
leage, new radials, stereo ,
59,000 miles. Must sell

lzisu motor to fit 1 978
Chevy Luv truck . Phone

S2995 . 614-698 -6269 .

WANT TO BUY Ford FMX

1982 Plymouth Champ, ac ,
four speed, 10.700 miles.
37 mpg, asking $4300 . Call

614 -992-5236 .

304 -676 -5462

82,200 00 . 304 - 675 3182.
1975 Chrysler Newport.
exc . cond .. 304 -675 -1402 .

AMC Concord
$2,250 Phone 304 -895 3828 .

transmission for 1978 Ford
T - Bird. Ca ll 304 -675 -2047 .

78

Camping
Equipment

1962 White Cadillllc con vertible. all original. e:xc .

cond. 304 -882 -3437 .
'81 Celica Toyota GT. lift
back. AC. tilt wheel. tinted
glass. AM-FM stero, 36,600
mi. 304 -675 -5149 after

5PM .
1974 Grand Prix 400, AC ,
P8 . PS, after 5 call 304 -

675 -1285.

72

Trucks for Sale

New true"- fenders &amp; doors
Che11y fenders $75 . 95
Chevy doors $166 . Ford
fenders $75 . Call614 -256 -

1260 .
1981 Chevy Pickup ; 1932&amp;
1936 Ford Truck; 1977
Chevrolet Van . 446 -3243.
Wanted to buy good l 1/2 or 2
ton truck . Flat bed preferra ble . Call 446 -8034 .

1980 Dodge D 50 PU. 4
spd ., radio $2,995 John's
Auto Sales. Ruleville Rd ..
Gallipolis. 446 ~ 4782 . Open
til dark .
1976 Chevy half ton truck

$1.500 .00 .

1982

450

Honda cullom , eKc cond .,
low mileage $1,400 .00 .

304 -773-6081 .
' 68 Chevy half ton with
topper. good cond .,

$760 .00 . Phone 304 -675 5304

8ft . slide in truck camper ·
,with 2 double beds . stove.
refrigerator, furnace , converter, never used . Call

992· 6384.
14ft . self contained " Joy
Time " camper. $650 .00 .

304 -675-2171 .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
1969 Hi -Lo camper. $650.
good cond . Cell 614-367 -

7238 .
BURDETTE

CAMPER

SALES Open Daily 9 to 6 :30
Sat _ 9 to 4 Now for vour
convenience Sun 1 to 4 .
1978 27 ft. ltaska motor
home S17.900 . 1976 25ft .
Coachman S5,500. 1975
23% ft . American Traveler
64, 200. 1972 19ft . GotLtgalong. 1975 StarCraft tent
camper $1,295. 11ft .
Nomad truck camper $995 .
1 975 380 Suzuki motor
cycles S395 . 1983 26 h .
Yellowstone min• home with
5 .800 mi. it was demo .
loaded with roof air genera tor. running boards. roof
rack and ladder, care free
awnings, 2 dr . refrigerator .
digital clock, TV antenna .
shades on all windows .
monitar pannel. Ford 460
engine. air. cruise, tilt, AM FM stereo cassette with sell
for 828,900 . Now through
May 1 sa11e up to S2,500 on
all in stock motor homes and
tra11el trailer . U .S . Rt. 50.
Coolville. Oh 614 - 667 -

3386.
BUAOETTE CAMPER
SALES &amp; SERVICE. Open
daily 9 to 6 :30. Sat . 9 to 4 .
Sun . 1 to 4 . U .S . At . 50,
Coolville . Oh 614 - 667 -

3386 .

Vans &amp;

4

W .O .

1979 Jeep CJ -5 , 6 cyl. . 3
spd ., lOaded with u1ras .
53 ,000 . Call 446 -0615 .

13 ft _ camper. $900. Call
between 5PM &amp; 8PM only,

446-4138 .
13 ft . camper . $900. Call
between 5PM &amp; BPM only,

446-4138
14ft. camper. awning. good
condition . s 650 Call 614 -

992 -3992
1974 Coachman . 20ft.
$2,800 . includes hitch .

304-875-2881 .
1983 Ford Ranger 4x4. V. 6.

4000 miles, new cond . Call

446-0038 .

1975 20ft Start Craft travel
trailer. fully self contained.
all extras, SJ.OOO.OO. 304-

882 -2326 .

74

mJI

PURr'{, Pl!RrY,

II)

FURT'(~

7 :30

PURTIEST

Fl..C»Jf,R I
E.VE:R

1'17 MOWN
WHERE YOU WEHE
1 WOULDN'T Hi'lVE
IF

HE'S DOWN

W!Tif 1HEM .

Hf\ HI\! l'VE
e&gt;EEN DOWN AT
THE LAB MIINY
l1ME5. ANNIE!

~y Fl/'ll1ERNIIILS

NOTHiNli

LEFT!

I'IOARY

TO

WE 'VE
BEEN PIOiiNq

SOUNDS

UP!

3738 .

Services

1983 Honda V -66 Magna
1.800 miles , luggage rack.
mtck rest. mint cond . Cell

448-0848 alter 5PM .
1979 Hondo CB 850. wind·
shield, roll bar, cruise, mag
wheel1, trunk. low mile•.

S1.295. Call 446-4205 .
1974 Hondo XL 100. Call
614·256-8338 .
1978 Kowauki KE 1 00 runo
good 12DO. Call 814·9923992 .

81

(]})

Home
Improvements

Excavating

Good -1 Excavating . base ments. footers . driveways.
septic tanks. landscaping
Call anytime 614 - 446 4637. James L. Davison , Jr .
owner .

ATn'o. SOY !

8:30

HOL D IT
R.IGHT
THERE 1

Starks Tree Trimming &amp;
Removal Lawn mowinq and
maintenance . lands caping ,
10 Pet . off al l estimates .

..

G ASOLI N E ALLEY

It'l l cost

[t takes A carpenter to put the
a thousand four men, window in, a plasterer

buds to replace

your window~

Doc~

f-:#ii11l and a painter 1

Thecontrdctor
to hand you
the bill!

9 :30

El ectrical w ork , all phases ,
free estime~t es. reasonabl e
rates . qualified electrician .
Contact Ron Huffman . 614·

10:00

HELPLE55 A5
I DO? ALL
WE CAN DO

SEWING Machine repairs .
service. Authorized Sing er
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop .
Pomeroy . 614 -992 -2284 .

WHILE I MAKE SURE YOU
BROUGHT WHAT
'YOU

IS 51T AND

WAIT.. . ··

10 :30

11

TATER'S
GOTA

BALL OF
YORE YARN,

GO GET IT AN'
PUT IT BACK IN MY
SEWIN' BASKET

Call Jim Lanier. 304 -675 -

LOWEEZ'{

Upholstery

Coll614-388·9867 .
PAINTING- Interior and ex·
terior. plumbing, roofing.
aome remodeling . 20 yrs.

oxp. Call 614-388 -9652 .

TRISTATE
UPHOlSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave .. Gallipoll•- "
614 -446· 7833 or 614·446· •
1833.

Blues

IIQJ Knots landing

fj) INN News
My Linle Margie
Cil T8S Evening News
® Bits and Bytes
fjt love American Style
CIJ
(jijJ

ClJ

:oo u m o m

mw

(})Stevie Nicks in Concert
Thi s s olo co nc ert was tape d
at the Fo)( ·Wilshire Theatre
in los An gel es .

Cll

Best of Groucho

(]) Catlins
C1J WKRP in Cincinnati

0

(()Trapper John . M .D.

Gonzo disco11ers that h is old
college buddy is fakin g a
deadly disease . {A) (60 mm )
(]) lmenight America

® All In the Family
&amp;l (]! Nlghtline

PEANUTS

SOME

MO~NIN65 YOU

1WPJKt UP KNOWING TI-l AT
1"'"'v YOU'RE GOING TO DO

SOMEnliN6 REALLY' 17UMB
87

II rn CD Hill Street

11 :15 Cil Mazda Sports look
11 :30 IJ (I) CIJ Tonight Show

AUNT

Need s om et hi·ng hauled
away or somethmg moved?
We ' ll do it . Cell 446 -3159
between 9 and 6

SERVICE .

Duck Fac1ory

(]) Another life
G) SportsCenter
(I) News/Sports/ Weather
fi) Dave Allen at Large
[i) Tony Brown ' s Journal
F.Jl Bennv Hill Show

General Hauling

STUCCO and PlASTERING

II CZJ CD

News

614 -388 -8274

James Boy s Wat er Service
Also pools trlled . Call 614 -

P&lt;:~ s~

When l 1ilmae fall s 1n her ef ·
fon s to mak e Cht p confess .
sh e d ectdes to w reak v engean ce . (R) (60 mm .)
CID N ewswatch

614 -388 8274
SALES
Professional ser vi ce for applianc es. heating,
co oling and el ectric . Sell and
install A m ana . Gibson. Kit ch en Aid Residential. C om mer c ial . Industria l 304 ·
675 - 4819
or

~+

Pas s

0 11J

698 -6553 .

OAV REFRIGERATION

4 :--.JT

An acgu-

50 '{OU 60 INTO
THE KITCHEN FOR
BREAKFAST...

WHEN YOU FORGET YOU 'RE
NOT HAVING PANCAKES,
AN!l YOU POUr&lt;. S'I'I&lt;.UP

OVER YOUR COLD CEI{EAL ..

IT'S NICE TO

GET

IT OVER WITH

!

d umm v an d J U. s{ ard of th e

Vuln erable · North -S outh

5 NT

mtn .)

PROMISED/

BARNEY

t A K ~)
+ A Q3

Pass
!'as s

CZJ MOVIE: 'The Betsy '
cu &amp;l (]} 20/20

Meigs El ec tri c Service ,
Steve Barnett . Call 614 -

SALES - Pro f essiona l ser VI Ce for appliances. heating .
cooling and electric Sell and
install Amana , Gibson, Kit chen Aid . Residential . C om mercial. Indu strial
304 675
4819
or

JS m w1th th e q u e~c· n . but he ~ ~
also a dead duck A he a rt
lead wil l allow J ruff 1n

5t

Ch1ef Dan1 els tel ls Ca p t Fur1110 that he may mak e h 1m
th e new c h•ef an d a stran ge
m an mounts a o ne -m an
cam pa1gn for may or (A) {60

PUT YOUR HANDS ON
THE HOOD OF MY
VEHICLE, AJ{{) POIY'T tHOV/!,

00 YOU FEEL A5

256 -1583 .

256 - 1141 00 614 -446 1175 o• 614 -446-7911 .

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting . Now installing rubber
roofs . 30 yean experience.
tpeciallzlng in built up roof.

+K Q J 64

Pass
I 'ass
Pass

II CZJ CD Cheers

ti on for the end play . T hen
lead the Jack of hea rt s We~t

• A6

P a::. .~

Neighbors

your baby c\uh in pr epara -

SOliTfl

4+

MOVIE: 'April Fools '
Ties Alex

and on th e f ounh one chuck

+

+K8 5

Pass

CZJ MOVIE; "Mother Lode·

WINNIE

• H7o 43
• 9 6 :1
J 10 9 4

E a ~t

Marty cluim s that Ver on 1c a
Ham el1 s h1 s d at e for th e An nie Awards ceremon1es

4066 .

7397

• K Q 10 9
• 10 1 6

dure.

North

II (I) ffi Family

Now for the whole proce Ta ke the- heart. dra w
tr umps. ca sh fo ur diamonds.

EAST

Wes t

A .J . an d A1 ck are h1r ed by a
w1dow to prov e th at her
husband 's death 1n a sk yd 1v 1ng acc•den t wa s ac tual ly
murder. (R) (60 m1n .)
(I) West Virginia Jazz
Festiva l
® Mystery! ' Shad es of
Darkness .· A boy d 1sco vers
that the aunt o f a fn en d
draw s li fe from htm to rev1
tal 1ze herself (60 m 1n )
(Clo sed Capti o ned I

Electrical

Pasqu ale Electric C o all
phases of electric work, all
w o rk gu arante ed
Aerial
tru c k r en t e l 614 - 446 -

.,

West w ith th e queen

club qUeen . whJ!L' a club JcarJ
run s up !o SfJUt t1 s A-Q
Th1 s hand W3S pla _v ed
many ~· f' ar:-. ago Mod ern
b1 ddtng would get to the
sam r spad(' : ; lam . but tlu..'
openmg bid would be twn

~o uth

2+
fi +

C'lu bs b \' South ~orth would
n ·spu n·d t wo dJamond '-'.
h a~· e

saymg " I
w ant

b1d

W

nothtn g I
Tt1c n

two

s pod(•s

b_v SPu 11J . thr eL•
spa des by North . whPrf' upon
Sou t h w o uld go 1ntu th e

By Oswald J arob y
a nd James J acoby
To a n expert. tht s ha nd
look s like a cmch Jt 's so
easy that i f it were played m
th e l as t rou nd of t.h e Blu e-

Bla c-k wood r nu\l n P &lt;1nd
rr&lt;1(h th(' :-&gt; &lt;~nw ~ l&lt;~rn
Wh v wo uldn't a modcrn1 " t
North. JUmp to four sp d de~·,
Beca use modcrm.s ls usf' thai
Ju mp to fou r to sho w tiH'

Rtb bon Patr s. ('Vtfv dccLJrer would wr ap up .12 tr]('b
with out lifting J n l',Yt' hrow

sa m e hand Wllhoul lhf' ;H·, .

of spades
l-:-.;TJ:Iii'HL-\1-.

&lt; NE'~'S I' .-\I'EH

-\ '&gt;~ ....

,

® 700Ciub
(I) lil ~ Two Marriages
0 (I) ® Simon &amp; Simon

&amp; Refrigeration

614-256 -1182.

+
WEST
• 872

The ke y to the whole pl;..v
JS based On the ktn g of hearts
lead U nl cs~ y ou a re play mg
agatn st a r eal desper;ldo
who rna v also be s ltghtlv
drunk . that kmg lrad mar k's

~ - 26~ 8 ~

NORTII
+ A 10 9J
• J2
• QJ4 3
762

hos t s Neal Ga b ler and J c f
fr ey lyon s tak e a look at
what' s happen1ng at the
movies .

m ent dev elo ps b etwee n
Sa m and Dtane when Sa m
tell s her that he lo ves her (A)

304 -576- 2010 .

WATER

A textbook end play

Dea ler : South

III Good

' ,, ....

INFECT

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

(AI (60 m;n .l
(]J ill) Sneak Previews Co ·

(jj) New Tech Times

9 :00

GIGGLE

Wh a t th ~ l frustr a ted astronau t was always
do in g at h ome - BLASTI NG OFF

BRIDGE

That ' s

beco me s de pend ent upon
diet pill s for en ergy when he
begin s h1 s stud1e s for the
col lege board e xa m s . (R )
(I) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City, NJ Top Rank
Bo xing pr esents a 10 - ro und
M•ddlewe1ght bout f eatunng
Tyrone Crawl ey v s Effr a1n
N1eves.

tland. Oh .614 742 2903 :

576 -2897 .

Answer

Now bac k In s lock . Jumbl e BOOk N o S i~ hll ll &amp;ble lor $2 25 pl us 5!;c post age and
h andling !rom Ju mbl e c/o lt1 is newspaper Box 34. Norwood, N.J OTS-48. Include
yoor name. add ress. zip codo 11 nd m ak @check IMyl!bh• 10 Nll w ~ p dptt r boaks

Cll ®I Magnum P.l.

I'll

WE'VE GOTTA
DI~NV! C MON
STRE TCH THP.T
A~ 1 TIG HT.1

Basements. Foot ers. Con crete work , Backho e ' s.
Dozer &amp; Oitcher , Dump
trucks , &amp; water - gas -sewerelectrical lines

JIMS

W

Magnum befriend s a young
prince. not realizing th at he
is the target fo r t err on s ts

J A .A .Construction Co .Au -

Dotson ' s Tree Service . Insured - Free Estimat e . 304 -

Jumbles NOBLE SH EAF

I

Incredible!

SHULAW ' S Plumbing and
Heating, At . 2 Neal Road.
Point Pleasant , W . Va . 304675 -5420 . Licensed and .
Insured

· Commercial end residen tial, free eatlmate•. Call

Entertainment

&amp;l

Cll

polis . Call 614 -367 -0576 .

,d
'i"

Wheel of Fortune

What You Want'
(l) Circus
ffi Nfl's Greatest Moments NFL' s Gre ates t Moments presents highlighls of
the 1982 Miami Do lph1ns

ING Rt . 1 , Bo.11 355, Galli -

85

Yesterdays

(I) MOVIE : 'The Person als'
(I) MOVIE : 'Just Tell Me

.., THAT:S THE PA INT ·
OF T"E UNDERWATER

_ I
_ I
_ I
_
"v~ X

(Answers tomorrow )

Samantha is torn when a
male classmate trie s to tak e
advanta ge of her fear o f the
future . (R)

WHEW. 'DADDY".'

Now arrange the ctrcled loners lo
torm the su rprise answer. as suggested by the above canoon

Print answer here :

(I) Tic Tac Dough
(l) Coming Attractions
Cil ESPN's Speedweek

fl) One Day at a Time
8 :00 II (I) CIJ Gimme a Breek

'OAOOY" HAS MEN 5TATIONEI7
WfW DEEP DOWN 01'1 TN'

A LTHOU 6 H MAN DOE5
NOT LIV E B Y 6-READ
ALONE, HE MAY 6EI
e,y ON TH IS .

News
~ People's Court
Jefferaons

Tonight

Motorcycles

83 Honde 760 •hadow ,
2,100 miles. exc . cond . 2
helmet•. Call 614 - 446 -

fa
II

®
Ol

JIM 'S PlUMBING &amp; HEAT-

D

b
II I

IBUCTAD

Cll 0 Cll Family Feud

SE:E:f.l l

614 -445 -4477

84

I GETURT I

Baseball:
Cincinnati at Atlanta

Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614 -446 -3888 or

83

rJ

I

([) Major league

D DAY REFRIGERATION

So ,fadtemp

73

BORN LOSER

OCt:llN FLOOR?!,.. AN'
CARTER ' S PlUMBING
AND HEATING

(I) Wheel of Fortune

(]]
(jj) MacNeil/lehrer
News hour

ALLEY OOP

1980

1978 Mustang 18.000 mi.
See at Thomas ' s EMMOn Pt .
Pleasant. WV.

U

ANNIE
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

(jj) Newton' a Apple
U (I) PM Magazine
Cll Here Come the Brides
(]) SportsCenter
Cll Sanford end Son
(I) Entertainment Tonight
CIJ B.J./Lobo Show

0

$1,100 .00. 304 -675 -1600
TR 7 hardtop sports car.
good body. runs good ,

7:00

Water wells commercial And
domestic. test holes. p ump
sales and service . 304 -895 -

82

NARBD

CIJ Business Report

458 -1566.

6200. Call 614 -992 -5967

1969 Camero 350, 4 speed.
ask tor Jim Lively.

Abston Home Improvement
Specialist . Homes . addi ·
tions, roofing, patios, drywall , concrete , painting . all
t-ypes of remolding . 304-

U Cil &lt;Il 0 &lt;Il 00 1D G!

CIJ ID (]! ABC News
0 CIJ ® CBS News

mates . 304 -675 -2295

Will haul sand, gravel, any thing. 304 -458 -1566.

byHenriArnold and Bob l ee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square , 10 form
four ordinary words .

([) Carol Bumett

STEAMER . Water removal .
furniture cleaning . free esti-

Remolding , siding, interior
and e11.terior. textured coat ing, simulated brick and
stuco. thermo replacement
windows . 304 -675 -1560.

~THAT SCRAMB~ED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~

Newa
II) MOVIE : ' Cracking Up '
II) MOVIE : ' Honkvtonk
Man'
(]) New Treaaure Hunt
(]) Mezdo Sportslook
(() Andy Griffith
l1l Newo/Sports/Weather
(JJ Dr. Who
(fi) 3-2-1 , Contact
fl!l&amp;tar Trek
6 :30 8 (I) crJ NBC News
(l) Rifleman
(]) Numero Uno

304 -675 - 2088 or 675 4560 .
-------------------GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

9790 .
Oragonwynd C.atterv Kennels . AKC Chow pup pies. CFA Himalayan . Per sian end Siame•e kittens .
Call 814 - 446 -3844 after 6

8 :00

3802.

1976 Pon1iac Astra , runs
good, body rough, good
work car . $660 . Call 614 992 · 2143 or eveings at

1983 VW rabbit 4 dr. GL.
am -fm stereo cassette, P·• ·rear defogger &amp; wiper . 992 -

1982VWRabbitdiesel.4dr.
auto. am -fm. steel belted
radia ls with low mileage .

Judy Tavlor Grooming . Call

71

Straw $1 .00 bale . Cleaning
out barn, 300 bales . First

Jersey milk cow. very gen tie, for sa le. $400 . Call

1

EVENING

rienced roofing. including
hot tar applic ation. carpen ter. electric ian . mason . Call

Northup King corn, alfalfa &amp;
gran seed. other farm

256 ·1427 .
Pigs- 8 weeks good atock,

GENE ' S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN,

RINGLE "S SERVICE expe-

A. I. Springer Holstein heif ers Call 614 -388 - 8419 .

Beautiful ladiet 14K dia·
mond ring JA klrat. ap -

614-388 -9624 .

Hay

HIllCREST KENNElS
Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor - o utdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies :
Stud Service . Call614 -446 -

Reg . Pit Bull pups. 10 wk• .
old. $20P or trade. Call

ceuettea including frogger.
donkey kong . s 100. Call

Livestock

0624 .

Call 614-388 -9087.

praised $700, sell lor S500.
Atarl 2800 video game. 11

64

$3,495 . 1981 2 dr. Chevy

63

4/28/84

1331 .

13

THURSDAY

51one . Call 614-367-0409 .

2398 or 614 -446-2454.

1J Jri}Nl fB}'\l

Television
Viewing

H &amp; S Home Improvements
vinyl siding. roofing. room
addition . storm windows.

Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola . Quazar , and
house calls . Call 304-576 -

6430

3010 .

20 gallon long aquarium .

PRelf\c.~
\I-IAN
Mil(e ~

The Daily Sentinei- PQ!Ie

Home
Improvements

Fetty Tree Trimming , stump
re mo11al . C all 304 - 675 -

1977 Pontiac LeMans 2 dr ..
body good. 76.000 miles.
V -9 301 . am radio, PS .. PB ..

843 -

AU '.&gt;o MUCH

Dairy goats. Alpine&amp; and
Lomllnchas . Kids and
milkers. Phone 304 · 676-

446-3637 .

or

f~e~.~~s

Thunday, April26, 1984
DICK TRACY

81

RON ' S Te levision Service.

6

614 -843 -5311
5494 .

CPM.~
1\e~

W&gt;W

576· 2193 .

$325 . Call 446-6630.

440 John Deere with loader ,
3 point &amp; P.T.O . S2600 . Call

by Larry Wright

2 veer old half Belguim
mare. 1400.00 cell 304·
675· 6812 otter 6:00PM.

hor••-

1978 Ford Fairmont Futura,
3 spd ., AC , good cond .,
$2,000 or best offer. Call

HP John Deere riding
mower 30 in cut manual
start. good cond . Call 446 -

'N' CARLYLE ®

•&amp;oo.oo.

614 -446 -2282 .

165 Massev Ferguson 130
Farmall with cultivators.
Harrow &amp; tobacco baler.
Call 446 -7838 after 5PM

--

scotchguard -water extrac ~
ti o n, deodorizers . FREE e•tl~
mates . Reasonable rates.
Gene Smith . 992 ~ 6309 .

Farm Equipment

614 -379 -2468 .

TV &amp; Applian ce s. 627 Third
Ave ., Galli poli s, 614 -446 1699. Spin washers . gas &amp;
el ec tric dry e rs . aut o
washers . gas &amp; elec tn c
ranges . refrig e rators, TV
sets

- - - -- --

Gulbransen spinet piano.
ex c . cond .. 304· 773 -5783 .

0475 .
Troybilt tillers S400. 10 in .
rad1al arm saw S1 00 . Call

Call 614 -256 -6647

Two livin g roo m su ites , e .11 c .
cond .. blond end t ables and
c off ee ta bl e
3 04 -67 5 -

637. Shalbyville, IN 46176 .

- - · - ·- "'- - - - - - - -

304·

riding

8803 .

614 ·446 -0322

For rent Sl eepmg Room s
and light hou se keA p mg
roo ms Park Central Hotel

Sleeping r oom $11 5 . utili 11es pa1d . Share bath. male
only Ran ge &amp; Htfrig . 919
2nd Ave . Gallipoli s Call
446 -4416 after 7 PM

304 &amp; V-6. 199-231 lor
J eep, $40 each . Studebaker
engine V -8 with trans $1 00 .
1980 650 Yamaha 4 .500
act u al miles . $1 . 200 .
Homelite X · 12 chain saw
and a Sears Craftsman saw
tor parts $60 for both. 23
channel Bearcat CB base
with 0 - 1 04 mike , ground
plane. S125 . Call 614 -388 -

Used Furnitur e ·· Refrigera tors , chair s. dryers. and
TV ' s. 3 miles aut Bulavill e
Ad . Open 9am to 6pm. Mon
thru Fri .. 9am to Spm. Si:l t

Furnished Rooms

Call 614 -446 -0756

Misc . Merchandise

Bolen s 800 8 H P rid ing
mower (need s engine rebuilt) $300 . Headers V -8.

' So fa , chair , ro cker, otto man, 3 table s, ~extra heavy
by Frontier). $686 . Sofa.
chair and loves eat . $275 .
So fas and cha1rs priced from
S285 _ to SB95 . Tables. S45
and up to S 1 2 5 Hide- abeds . $440
and up t o
S525 .. Recliners , $175 . to
S375 ., Lamps fr om S28 . to
$75 .5 pc . dinettes from
S99 .. to 435 . 7 pc . S1 89
and up . Wood tab le with six
chairs S425 to S745 Desk
$ 110 up to $ 2 25 . Hutches.
S550 . and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses , $260 . and
up to S395 .
Bab-y beds,
SllO . Mattresses or bo.11
springs, full or twin . S58 ..
firm . $68 . and $78 . Queen
set s. $195 . 4 dr. chests.
S42 5 dr _ chests. $64 . Bed
frames . S20 .and $25 ., 10
gun
Gun c abinets, S350.
Gas or electric ranges S375 .
Bab-y mattresses, $25 &amp;
S35. bed frames $20. 625.
&amp; S30 . king frame $50 .
Good selection of bedroom
su1tes . ce d a r chests ,
r oc kers , m e t al c abin e ts ,
swivel rock er s

Si nger sewing machine w1th
cabinet , e.11c . co nd .. S65 .00
Call aft er 5 :00 304 -895 -

45

54

Household Goods

Wan t ed : Responsible party
to take over low monthly
payments on spinet piano .
Can be seen locally . Write
Credit Manager : P .O . Box

-·-

Go.tl for Ale, 11sorted
ogH. Coil 814-992·5624.

Good

3 bedroom . 1 112 story home.
newly remodeled with barn,

KIT

livestock

Golden Palomino gelding.
gentle trail horse.

Musical
Instruments

· - - -. - -

Thunday, April 26, 1984

p .m .

Farms for Rent

44

63

- - - ·-

'Ohio

Whttt duckl • mele &amp;
female . 115 . Coll614-992·
5524.

Call 614-992 -8967 after 8

o n nice lot . Ready to move
i nto . S200 . 00 down
111186 .00 per month . 304578 -2711 .

43

Pets for Sale

.~ .d.--.. -.J.:.-~.'-- &gt;.

...;,

g) Twilight Zone
11 :45 (]) Top Rank Bo•ing from
Atlantic City, NJ Top Rank
Box ing presents a 10-round
MiddleWeight bout featuring
Tyrone Crawley vs. Effr ain
Nieves .

12:00 II) MOVIE : ' Firelo•'
I1J Bums &amp; Allen
(()
MOVIE:
' Perfect
Friday'
CIJ Nlghtllne
® MOVIE : ' Ale• and the
Gypoy'
'
Ill (]! Eye on Hollywood
g) Gunamol&lt;e

~.~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

2 Actress
Blackman
rul er
3 Bouquet
5 Iranian
4 Pile
export
5 Lurch
II Skin opening 6 fen d off
12 Disinclined
7 Ring arbiter
13 Celebes ox
8 Tnmrru ng of f
II Turn down
9 Pith
15 Comrade
10 Squirrel
17 Prof it
m onkey
18 Epoch
16 fen cing foil
19 Adored one
21 - long
20 feminine
22 Paddle
suffix
23 Nautical
21 Bard 's adverb
r ope
22 formerly
24 Part of th e
23 Bog
" diamond "
25 Patti or
25 Bo Geraldine
26 Subside
27 Thrice

I Ex-Iranian

26 Restaurant

31 Spa ni sh

empl oyee
2i Touchd own

pr OV InCE'

lS i. )

29 Histone
frenc h
30

town
Sea or snake

32 Subst&lt;Jntia l
35 I nclined
w ay
37 Actress.
Charl ot te

( Lal.i
28 Pooch cry

29 Passing
grad e
30 Machine
part

33 Asian river
34 Upbraid

36 Arr anged

ln rows
3S Pavarotti
rendition
39 Twine about
~ - liquor

41 Cheap
whiskey 1sl )
42 Drama

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SHE IS NOT BEAUTIFUL AT SIXTY .-OLD SAYING

�Page

Thu~y ,

14- The Daily Sentinel

Long-time ODOT
employe retires

Area deaths
George j. Couladis
George J . Cou ladis, 82, 37 West
Stare Street , Athens died Wednesday morning at KJmes Convalescent Center, Athens.
Couladis was born in Constantinople, Thrkey the son of the !at&lt;• .John
and Ka lliope Filas Couladis.He w as
also pl'l'&lt;'l'!!ed in death by one son.
Johnny. two sisters and two
brothers.
He was a seaman with the Greek
Merchant Marine before coming to
the U nited States.
He was a stL:.el workt:'r fur
\\iheellng Steel Corp., at Man ins
Ferry and Yorkville. Ohio . He
Owned and operated restaurant s in
Stu benville and Barnesville . HE'
moved to Athens in 1937 and later
owned and opera ted The Hot Dog,
'The Union Gr ill and I hE' !::squirE'.
H e was a mem ber of Masonic
Lodge Pa.-amuthia Lodge25 F&amp;AM
and the Chapter Council and
Commandery all of A thens. Scott ish
Rite Valley of Colum bus. Allad in
Temple of the Shr ine. rolumbus,
Athens County Shrine Club, !':piscopa l Chu rc h of the Good Shepherd.
A thens. Annunc iation Grc'&lt;'k Orthodox Church, Columbus.
He is survived by hiswi.fc.Aspasia
Gevas Coulad is; thrC&lt;' sons, PPtt'r
and Alexander. Athen s. and Stephen of Willi amsville. N. Y.; one
sister. Alexandra Mams. South
Dayto na, F la.; two grandchildrc&gt;n
George and Da niel Couladis, Willi
amsv ille: SC'VP ral niecPs and nf'
phl'WS in Greece and U nit ed Sta tPs .
Funer al se tv ices will be helc
Satu rday at 11: 30 a. m . a t thE
Episcopa l Church of the Good
Shepherd w ith the Rc\'. Fa ther
Anthony Sarris of Columbus.offi .
ela t ing . Burial wiU be in West Union
Street Cem etery, Athens. Fnends
may call at the Hughes Funera l
Hom e F r ida,_· f rom 2 to 4 and 71o 9.
Masonic sen:iC'f's wil l bf&gt; held at
the funer al hom(• F r ida~· at f p.m .
and the Thric&lt;' Hot,· H)mn Pra_
v&lt;'r
services w ill be ro nducf('Ci a t 7: JO
p.m Fr iday
In li£&gt;u of flowers contribu tions
may be m ade to the E piscopal
Churc h of ThP Good Shepherd,
O'BienPss H ospit &lt;-~ 1 . or A nnuncia tion GrPPk Orthodox C'hu rrh .

ger, Pomeroy , and B ill E ichinger,
Sy racuse. and one granddaughter.
Funeral services wUI be held
Saturday at 11 a.m. at the Firs\
Unitm Methodist Church. Girard.
The body will lie in state at the
church from 10 a.m . until t ime of
services.
Friends may call at lhe Blackstone Funeral Hom e, Liberty
Street, Girard, Friday from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9. Masonic services will be
held Friday al 9p.m . Burial wiU be in
Girard City Cemet&lt;'ry ..

.

In addi1ion to sLx cousins listC'd as
su rvivors of Alirf' Holliday, ?S.
Route 1. Dexter, who died Wcdncs
day, tll&lt;'r&lt;' aJ'f' l hr&lt;'&lt;' other cousins.
They are MadPline Gruescr. Well
stan. Harold Pond . Jr.. and &amp;tty
Pond. Wilkcsvill('.

Marketing seminar
can I sell M ore of What I Have" will
be prcs('ntm this evening by
Mariet l1! College at the M eigs Inn
from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
The seminar is being sponsored
l:ly I he Pom er oy Chamber of
Commer ce. Registrat ion is $15 and
may be pard at the door.

Veterans Memorial
Admil ted--M abel Hetzer , Pomeroy; Jua nita Chapman, Pomer oy;
Ortha James. Pomeroy ; Lee
Layne. Racine; Carroll Johnson,
Middlepor1.
D ischarged--George DeLong, Ti mothy Tay lor, Ir is Rou sh, Georgi a
Swauger, Richard Jeffer s, M argar et E llis.

Mr. EichingPr was tx:&gt;m Ff'bt1Ja 1y
1.1. 1901in Pom eroy the son of the lo tc
William and Cla r a Pa r1 low E ichin
ger . H&lt;' was also prr'('cded in dea th
by a bmt hN. Ro)· who died March
19. 1984 .
Mr. E ichinger workm for l ' S.
Stpel in McDonald as a rull tu m Prfor
:12 y&lt;'ars h"ving l'l'l mod in 1961i. HP
was a ml'mlx•r uf 1hl' First U nih'll
Method ist Church. Girard. thP
William Farr M ason ic Lodg&lt;' 67~ of
Girard, The Gira ,-d EaglPs. was a
charter mPm ber of th&lt;' McDonald
Conservat ion Club and Cirard
Senior Cit izcns. HC' was a w• tf'ra n of
World Wa r I having s('r.·m with lh• ·
U .S. Armv .
H e is su rv· ivC'd by his wiff'. An na .J
H oudas hf' lt Fichingf•r w hom ht'
married Dec£'mbc r 24. 1 ~l'&gt; : om•
daughter. Mrs. Shtr !Pv A. Oa,·is,
Niles. O hio: six sisters. Mrs _l\o1ma
Houdas helt . Syr;wuS&lt;': Mrs. Eclna
Wayland. Midd leport. Mrs. Mi ldrf'd
S&lt;'yfr ied. Gallipolis Mrs. Ru th
Leifheit . Akron ; Mrs. riara Sa \'I'~.
Pom eroy: Bctt).' Onrst. Mi&lt;lmisbu rg; tu.·o hrothf'rS. ,\ll~'n Eit'hin -

DST begins
this Sunday
direc tor of the Ohio Drparlmcnt of
Liquor Cont rol. r~m i nd f'd ;~II pp1·
m it holders Wh&lt;'n thP r lock Slrikes
2 a. m . it will. in facl. be :t a.m .. :lit

minutes pas t lhf' legal clo.sing timf'
for permit hold£'rS Pnfi t\ed to b&lt;'
open until 2:.10 a.m . Therefor&lt;'. all
sales and consumpt ion of liquor
must ceasf' a t 2 Ll.rn .. whf'n clocks
should lx' LJdvanrPd onf' hou r.
Di rec tor Care,· sa id.

Weather forecast
Generallyclpar tonight . !.ow nf'a r
00. SouthPr ly winds around 10 mph .
Friday, part ly sunn,- and continuf'd
unseasonabl ~· warm with a slight
chance of showprs and thunder storms. High around k'7. Chance or
precipitation 10 percen t tonight and
30 percen t F r iday.
E xtended forecast
Saturday through Monday:
Showers and thunderstorms
likely Saturday and into SWiday.
Fair on M onday. Cooler through the
period. Lows ~ Saturday, 45-55
Sunday t111d in the ~ Monday.
Highs in the 7o. Saturday, the 60s
Sunday and»«! on Monday.

LEA~
P+iOTOGRAP+iY
SPRING VALEY PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO
CLOSED MONDAYS

Sale

NUANCE

LANE CEDAR CHESTS
E.O,M, SALE PRICES ON QUALITY
LANE LOVE SEATS

Cologne Spray

Th e tdeal gtlt for grad ua tton Large selectton of styl es and
woo d l1n1shes. Use ou r Lay -away Plant

_-; ILE l'RIC E.'i

.W .tRT AT 0\/ , r

- 2.5 fl. oz.
- 1 11.75 Value
Sprcinl

$14900

LADIES'

Price d

$7 19 $1999
To

MEN'S s100 PACKAGE

Van Heusen Handkerchiefs
3 ~'erman e nt press ha ndkerchiefs in package
65% polyester, 35 % cotton .

$2 39

PKG.

S8.39

$10.50 Pkg_ 13 Handkerchiefs ......

Knit Tops &amp;
Spring Sweaters

CHILDREN 'S

MEN'S PARK PLACE

Spring Jackets

SHORT SLEEVE

New sprtn g co lors tn knt l lops
Swea l ers tnclude slee vel ess,
pul lovers and cardigan s

Jus! nght fo r t he cool spnng wea ther.
Vt nyl Jac kel s. nylon Ja ckels ltn en tac kets
and ratn park as.

Mtsses and exit a stles

Reg. 17.00
Sale 15.59
Reg. 19,00
Sale 17.19
Reg. 1 12,00
Sale 19.59

DRESS SHIRTS
Regular

LI!tle g11l s s1zes 12 to 21 mos 2 lo 4, 4t o
Ltltl e boys Sties

Reg ,
Reg.
Reg ,
Reg ,
Reg,

12 to 24 mos . 2 lo 7.

19.00

.. ,.... Sale 17.19
su.oo ..... Sale 18.79
115.00 ... Sale 111,99
119,00 .. ,Sale s15.19
1 26.00 ... Sale s2o. 79

T wo-Day S ale

""""'

Sn ap front
two sn ap flap
poc ket - lo ng ta~ l s · short slee ve
styles. By Wran gler. Ely and
Ca mpus. Plards an d l&gt;l ue cham brays Stzes"S . M. l an d XL

JEANS
Ge num e Lee Rid ers 100% cot
ton pre-was hed blue demm .
Stratght leg style.

Men's 111.95
Western Shirts ...... 19.59
Men's 114,95
Western Shirts .... '1 L 99
Men's s15.95
Western Shirts .... 112.79
Men's 117,95
Western Shirts ,... '14.99

121.95 Student Size
(26 thru 30) .. ...... .... 115.39
1 19.95 Boys Sizes 8 to 14
(Slims &amp; Regulars) ...... 113.99
S2J.95 Husky Size
(8 thru 18),............. 115.39

•

SALE!

Bandana Handkerchiefs
Our best selling - fa st color 100%cotton. Basic blue or
red pattern s and the popular fancie s, assorted bright
color patternt

REG. 99¢ ................ SALE 79¢
REG. s1.19 ............. SALE 99¢

•

at

'

•

enttne
Section ~ , I '2 Page\
'15 Cenh
A M ult imedio In c Nt"w\pop t'r

'2

Pomeroy- Middleport , Ohio, Fridoy, April 27 , 1984

Thursday night and early today. Civil Defense offices
r eportm six people dead and 30 injured in M orris, a
town of 1,:l00 people about 40 miles south ofThlsa, and
one dead and 25 \njured In Terlton, a town of 155 people
about 30 miles west of Tulsa.
Three other tornado- related deat hs were "scatter ed around " Okmulgee County, where M orris is
loca ted. Sher iff Gene R ice said. All survivor s were
evacuated from Mor r is, wher e National Guardsmen
assisted local officials in r escue efforts.
" Downt own MotT is was dev astated, " said Dennis
Nic kles of the Okmulgee County shenff' s
department.
In Minnesota, 88-year -old Frances Schrag died of
iniurif's aftPr a twister hit her home and destroyed a

I

L ONDON (AP ) - Libyans left
their London embassy today to star1
their journey home, ending an
11-day siege thai began when a
sniper in the building sprayed
gunfire at dissidents and killed a
British poltcewom an .
" The siege is over ," dec larf'd a
spokesman for Scotland Yard. "Al l
the Libyans have left the embassy ."
The Libyans began em ergin g
from the embassy at St. J am es' s
Square at midmorning in grou ps of
flve, lm by an unidentified Libyan
who had been acting as go-bet ween.
A total of.~ Li by ans were escortm
into waiting vans. Video pictu res of
the PVaeuation w ere aired by the
Britls h Broadcasting Corp.
Police motorcyc lists cleared the
\\'a}; _for _the convoy, which headed
west across town in the direct ion of
the Heathrow airpor t . A dozen wh ite
police vehicles escor1Pd the convoy
and a police helicopter circlm
overhead .
A Libyan pl ane was due at
Heathrow at 4 p .m . I 10 a.m . EST. 1
The plane filed a flight plan to leave
fou r hours later , airpor t officials
said.
The siege began April 17 when
policewoman Yvonne Fletcher , 25,
was killt od during a peacefu l
dem onstrat ion against the regime

of Libyan leader Col. Moamm ar
Khadafy. The shots that killm her
w er e fired f rom an embassy
window . British poli&lt;'e and sharpshooters immediately ringm I he
Pmbassy.
B ritain brokP r elations wit h Libya
on Sunday and demanded l h&lt;'
L iy ban s holed up in the London
embassy leave the cou n try within a
week . The beachfront B riti sh Em ·
bassy in Tripolt , Libya. also was to
be closed.
Depa rtun'S from the f\vo coun tries began Thursday as Brit ons and
Libyans flew back to thPir hom e
counlries. Eighteen lead-lined canvas diplom atic l:lags also were
removed fmm the Libyan "People's
Bureau ... Ioadm in an air-freight
van and taken to Heathrow airpo rt
for return to Libya .
In accordance with diplomatic
conventions, the large w hite bags
were not sear chm , despite Brit ish
officials' fear s that the Libyans
w ould use the bags to ship ar ms and
explosives out of t he embassy.
Thirty Brit ons from Tripoli. led by
Ambassador Oliver Miles' sons
Hugh, T om and Joe, em er ged from
a planP London's Gatwick A irport
wavin g a big Union Jack and were
greei Pd
b, - Foreign Offi ce
ministers.

Racine firrn submits low bid
HPmlock Pipeline Inc .. Ractn(',
was the appar ent low bidd('r for lh&lt;'
w ater line ex tension In Pom er O)'.
councilman John And £'r son said
today.
Anderson reported Hemlock
Pipeline's bid totalm $219.919 and
wlll be paid through a Housing
U rban Development iHUDl grant .
The w ater line will be laid from I he

Kroge r Stor &lt;' down Eas t Main to
Spring Ave., up Condor StrPE't and
alon g st reels runn ing from Condor
to M ain .
A tot al of nine bids w Pre rece ived.
Council will take action on the bids at
their next regular m eetingonMay?.
lf a bid is accepted, work should get
underway in the very near futu re
Anderson stated

shopping center in St. Anthony, j us1 not1h of
Minneapolis. Thursday nigh!. E ighteen people wer e
trea tm for injuries and fiw others wpre hospil altzm.
Bl izzard warnings for eas1ern Mont ana and
nort heastern Wyom ing were extendm this morning
to weste rn South Dakota, wher e the stonn was
C&lt;'nler ed with winds blowing steadily at 30 to4U mph.
Just under 00 inches of snow wcrP on t he ground by
loday in Rm Lodge, Monl .. where Police Chief
Sm okey Owen declar ed it the worst stotm since 1956
Owen could not lind his patrol car under the snow and
said therf&gt; was " no place to put the snow ·· that driftf'd
20 feet high outSide some bu sin('SSl'S
A search !'o r four people who had gonP fishing
Wednesday in Sheridan. W yo.. was abandon!'d

Thursda~' when plow s and PVf'n snm\.mobiles wc&gt;rr

slopped bv 2 fN'I of snow on C.S. H. said Johnson
County Shcrdf Btll Johnson. Th&lt;• wind cht\1 dropped
the temj)('rature bf&gt;low zPro
Scores of sl a IE' and count~ · roods and large .s&lt;x·t ions
of ln rPrsta t~ RO and 90 w r r r closed in Montane~.
W)'Omin g and South Dakota .
Tcmp&lt;:'ratures va rifoct Vvild l}' on thf' tvvo sid PS of lhC'
cold fr ont . I t was lll d&lt;'gr·N's in CustPr. S.D .. T hursda\'
ni ght, whilt' on the castC'rn sid&lt;' of the sWtf' th&lt;'
m et-cur,· hit thP mid-70s in th&lt;' aft&lt;'rnoon .
At lmst eight hi gh tPmp&lt;'ratun' m·ords f~ll
Thursda)'. wilh th e 102 dPgn'('S at Corpus ChristL
Texa~ . sPit ing a r(•cord fur all uf ApriL

Hart says Mondale's trade position outmoded
CINCINNATI (AP I Sen.
Gary Hart today urged Ohio
business leaders to r esist " the
seduction of protectionism ."
saying dom estic content legislation being championed by labor
unions could prompt international trade wars .
The Colorado senalur, spmk·
ing at a breakfast of t he Gr&lt;'a ler
Cincinnati Cham ber of Com m erce and the P ru[Pssional
Women's Club at a dow nt own
hotel, said the pos it ions of
former Vice Presiden t Wall er
M ondale, one of his r iva ls for the
Dem ocratic presiden tial nomination, a re as outmoded as those
of Presi dent Reagan.
" We must resist . as m~~
opponent in thts race has not , l h&lt;'
seduction of protectioni sm."
H art said. He said he fears
domest ic protection IPgislation
could trigger " one of th&lt;' m ost
dpstruetiv&lt;' trade w ars of thts
century."
Hart sa id Reagan ·s econmomic policies have Pncoura~Pd mergers and conglom eratE'S wi thot·t crea ting nPw jobs.
But he indirc'Ctl v cr iticized
Mondale for backing w hat hr
&lt;'OnsidPtlod Pqually outmoded
policies . incl uding cor por al&lt;'
bailouts.
Hart sa id. if elect,'(], that he
w ould strenj:;ihen e-d uca tion and
carC'Cr tr ainin g progra m s to
prepare futur~ generations for
r ap idly c hanging technologv.
"[[ I had lu charactcriz&lt;' th~
JX'fiod we ' rt• li\·ing in. it's a
period of chan ge," he sa 1d . " My
candidacy for til&lt;' pres idency is
based essentially on t hat fac t .
"Tltis el ection is not simp!,. a

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.- ···~
.

'~

'

\.

!.

FATSO .&gt;\ND TilE T\\1 NS - St•n . Gary Hart
hold• " Fat..,," th&lt;' fam ily do ~ of lleidi lllld !loll~
H Pndn•n , after h(" toured thf•ir famil y's far m near
rcofcrt'ndum on thf' policiC's of
Ronald Reagan .... II is. in fac t ,
om., or those ran' opportunit iPS
this coun(r:.· has to mm·p forward into 1hf' fu t m o or to drift
back mto I he past ..
Har t also appea led to t hr
women in hi s audiPncC', saying
h&lt;' suppor iS passag&lt;•of lh &lt;' Fqual
Rights Amendmen t and th~
Econom ic Eq uit ~· Ar t . \\'hir h
f'nsurC's eq ual pa ~· for ('{JU&lt;ll
work.
" Wf' havf' to haYP pollc iC's tha t

VIrgil Walk&lt;'r . 57. Rl. 2. Raein('.
pscapcd inju ry Thursday when his
ve hicle ran ovPr an embankment on
SR 124 int o t hP Ohio River
The Callia -Meigs Post Sta t&lt;'
Highw ay Pa trol said Walker was
travdin g cast when he lostcunl m l of
th&lt;' car . The vehicle ran off thProad,
st ruck lhP embankment and ended
up In the r iver . The car had heavy
dam al:e in the 11. 10 p.m . accidenl.

~

'BEN
-~~ng~r!

·TV

~r

MEN'S BIG BEN

WORK UNIFORMS

Permanen! pr ess work pa nts and
m~ !C h ln.'! sh1rts 65'~n oolve ste1. 35 ~.,
co tton Watch pocket · statl ak leg seams
· I foot dfep roc my pockets Pwpor
t1o ned ttl tor ex tra comf()r!

.Johnstown, Ohiu T huNda )'· H a rt m adt• thC' "iiOp "'hih·
('a mp a ignin g

in Oh io

a nd

K4 · ntud\ ~· -

1 -\ P

l..oL~e rph o to) .

f'a sf' wom rn in t o thr workplarf' .
tlwt mak C' l hf'm N")Ual f'n tr&lt;'Ptl'nPurs w ith m Pn ... Hart said.

Later . Hart p lannru to tour a
Cincinnati indu snial plunt IX'·
forr lea\'in g Ohio for Trn nr sS('('
On Thursda)'. Hart cam
pa ig-ned on a muddv r&lt;•n tral
Ohto fo tm . H e r Ptumr&gt;d to th e
stair Thursda;.· pvpni ng anU
rr•p&lt;•alr'd his char ges that Monda!C' was using spt_::•cial -intl'rf'st
funds tu fin ancP hi s campJ ign.
" l l1ere is no doubt! will ix' the

Df'mocr;rl lC' par~ ·:-. nommf-'&lt;'
and df'lcar M r Hf•;tg; m ll('XI
falL "" H ;u·t tolr1 r· hf'fTin g 1&gt; ~·:.... ­
ta ndf' r :-. 1n th e \\'p...;tin Hotel

lnhiJv .
Han sa id h1 ~ ramp&lt;.~ic:n \\·iJ~
nor fin a nrf'd h\' ~ J:X\ci al i.Jl!l' l'P'-.1 ~
but rha t Mond"ll'\ i s. Hl'
iJC'cusl'd rhr lormt&gt;r \ 'icr prrs idcnt of \'OwinL; nor to 1Jkl' mont&gt;~
from Pol it it'al Act ion Com rni tIPP~. thl'n lurming inUf'pl'mh'nt
eurnmittPf'S to accPpt don&lt;::~t iun s
" throug h thr backdoor .··

1 12.95

Regular Size

12

to

I

46)

PANTS ...... .... .... $10.39
113.95

Extra Size 148 and 50)

PANTS .... .. ..... ,.. $10.99

111.95

I

~-

Regular Size 114'1&gt; to 17th)

SHIRTS ... , .. .... .... $10.59
' 12.95 Extra Size (18 to 19 '1z)

SHIRTS

,.._.

I
I

\
I

\

--~~

--

-

I
I

~

SALE!

Men's Leather Belts
ClUCK DAY -More than l,'lOObaby chicks arrived

ss.95 Black P/4' Wide ......... .........SJ.OO
S6.95 Black or Brown llf4' Wide ..... ss.50

A Carlis le man wa s eitf'd for
assu1'C'd clea r d isranrP b~· thP
Ca lli a Meigs Post of th&lt;' Ohio
I-lighwa.1· Pa trol fo llowing a lwov~hicle accident on Ohio 124 within
thl' iniPrspc tiun of Count y Road 10
Thursdav
Offi&lt;'&lt;'rs cit ed Jam es A . M urphy .

!.usher. -10. Lm gsdlc .
Murptl\ 's \'f'hide had mod Pra tt '
damage· and Lu~hC'r ·o.; . ll g ht
dama g&lt;'.
Mranw hilr. &lt;1 t ll.JCh. which m ·t' r turned on Ohin 21R in H ;ltTi.'On
T0\\11Ship. (; ;d lia C ount~. wa ~
hC'm·iJy dam;1.grd in a 10: :{1 a m

3.1.

arcidPnt

v.rho was traveling west on the
statP highwav ands t ru~k a car to the
r!"ar opera led by Richard F. .

DST begins Sunday

I

Genuine full grain bridle cowhide - snap-off
buckles, Sizes 30 to 50. Save Friday and Sa:
turday

POMEROY OHIO

FREE
PARKING

Story, photos on P ages 7-8

.-BIG-

WESTERN
SHIRTS

BOYS LEE DENIM

Brackets, story on P age 3

• •
Car hits river, man escapes InJury
MEN'S

lf EE K -E.I\/ D SAL E

sg_oo

Solid color s blue and tan - al so
whtte. Neck sizes J411? through 17.
65% polye ster, 35%cotton .

6x. 7 to 14.

Rutland variety show

11-day siege ends

Jackets, Blou ses, Vests, Skirts, Shorts,
Slacks, Knit Tops and Jean s.
Jr. Sizes 3/6, to 11114

$]89

CO LU M BUS- Da)·li ghl s;l\'ln gs
time return s to Ohio a nrl mo~ t of 1ht ·

n:•m a inder of th£' natio n a t ~a . m .
Sunday, i\pril 29, R~e harrl L Can'\.

Super Specials

Sportswear Sale

tn g and summer selectt on. Excell ent styl es and
co lo r selectton . Buy what
you need now and sav e
- your chorce.

Class AA pairings

By DANA FIELDS
Associated Press Writer
Ten people in Oklahoma and one in M innesota were
killed as swarms or tornadoes raced over the
Midwest, ahead of a blinding storm that l:ly today
buried parts of M ontana In nearly 5 feet of snow
dri.fting W feet high . Hundrms of m iles of highways
were closed in the Plains.
More than two do7Pn tornadoes were confirmed in
Minnesota, Iow a, Kansas and Oklahom a , created
when a cold front stretching fm m South D akota to
Texas collided w ith r ecord heat over much of the
East , the National Wea ther Service reponed.
The worst tornadoes hit northeastern Oklahoma on

PRE-TEEN

SWIM
TRUNKS
Stzs 8 to 20. our new spr-

See chW'Ch section, P age 5

Oklahoma tornadoes leave 10 dead

LOOK FOR OUR AD
IN THE
SUNDAY-TIMES-SENTINEl

SALE PRICES GOOD THRU MONDAY, APRIL 30

BOYS'

Wingett's colmnn on P age 2

Voi.JJ , No. 10

END OF THE MONTH SALE
E.O.M, SALE

Weekly serntonette

Copyrighted 1984

Beach.

Three calls were answered by
local unit s Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 12: 09p .m ., the Middleport Unit
look E dgar Butcher from Middleport Hill to Holzer Medical Center ;
Middleport at 5: 11 p.m . w ent to
Broadway for J ack Bechtel. taken
to Holzer M edical Center, and at
9:56 p.m ., Syracuse took K enneth
Lawson from the Syracuse flood
road t o Ve ter ans M em ori al
Hospital.

'Fried mush'

e

ELBERFELDS

Earl W. Eil'hingPr
Earl W Eichinger . R3. 133 OlivP
Street. Gi ra rd , Ohro died of a hm 11
attack Wrdnest1ay morning at
Nor1 hside Hospit al. You ngstov:n .

Emergency runs

RIITIRES - Bill Eichinger of Syracuse retired recently after 44 t111d
one-half years with the Slate Highway Depariment of Transportation. lie
is shown holding a plaque that was presented to hbn in appreciation for
his many years of service.

A seminar on marketing, " How

Hollidav survivors

Syracuse Asbury United Methodist
Church.
He and his wife, Margaret
celebrated tbf?ir 47th w edding
anniversary In M arch. They have
four chlldren, M ary Jane Gibbs an4
Linda Boyd both of Parkersburg,
Nancy H ubbard, Syracuse and John
E ichinger of Lancaster. They have
five grandchildren .
E ichinger and his wife have
resided in Syracuse for the past 37
years.
He and his wife, son, John,
granddaughter , Traci and sister,
Clara Sayre recently vacationed in
Flor ida.
They saw the space shuttle
launched and
M rs. E ichinger
visited her brother in Venice, Fla.,
and M rs. Sayre her son, Don in Coca

Bill E ichinger, Syracuse. after 44
and one-hall years of devoted
service retired as a heavy equipment operator with the State
H igh way De p art m e n t of
Transportation.
Eichinger was a division man
having worked in nine counties. He
worked under eight governors and
90 different superintendents not to
m ention the times he w as called out
at all hours and in the coldest of
wea ther .
Eichinger and his late bro ther,
Roy owned race horses for 40 year s
until recently .
Eichinger served with the U. S.
Anny during World War II , from
1945 to 1946, and is a m em ber of the

Bing sunoivors
Survivors of :'vlount Vernon Bing
who died Apr il l 6, not publishm due
to an informationa l error inc lude his
mot her-In-law, Pearl Hoffman,
Middlepon; daughter-in-law. M rs .
Vernon !Darleen ) Bing; sons-in·
law , Pau l i Bill ) McE lroy and Terry
Sa)'rf&gt;, Pomeroy, and Donald Hudson. Cheshire; broth&lt;'r s-in-\aw, E dwin Ash. M inersville, Fred Hoffma n
and Perry Hoffman, Middleport .

April 26, 1984

a1 Melp County's Modem Supply 'l1lunday morning
for deUvery to area growers. 'l1le annual Purina Chick
Day al!lo featureS "specials" on feed and health
_products as w eUas OOUJIOIL.'l for future discounts on feed ·

''

purclwed, 'l1le chicks were heavy breed straight run
suitable lor either layers or broilers. PI!Sured here
with some of the boxes of chicks are Marvin Glasgo,
owneNllllllager, and Donna Evans, an 1mployee. ·

WASH I NGTON iAP1
Daylighl -sa\'in g t ime begins
Sunday a t 2 a.m. and across
America people will be selling
their clocks forward one hour .
T he excep t ions are in Arizona.
H awaii and m ost of Indian a.
w hich rem ain on standard tim £' .
Thl? Census B ureau issued a
report Thursday showing population lewis in each of t h&lt;'
country's time zones and not
surprisingly. the Eastern time
zone Is way ahead.
The bureau found that U4
million people - 50.5 percent of
the popu lation -live on Eastern
tim e. That is folk Ned l:ly 30.1
percent on Centra l time, 13.9
percent on Pacific time and 5
percent on Mou ntain time.
The sm allesl populations are
on Alaskan time, 0.2 per cen t,
and H awaii -Aleut ia n lime,

whi ch C'O\NS 0.4 perC('nt . ba sPd
on ual a from the 1~80 census.
That hcadcoun l pu t thp total U.S
popu lation at 226.C! million; it has
sinCf' grown to m•drl~ · 2.1.'"l
mil lion

~ ·r str rda\ .

arl'orrling tn

stai r t r oopers
Thr dri\'er .. ldfrrv A. l.mk . :!:\.
Rt. 4. Gall ipoli s. lost control nf his
V&lt;' hiCif' no11h on t i l() hi gh wa~ nra r
Township Roc~d ~ The truck Wf'nt ol1
thP road .
Ina 10 : ~ 'i p .m ;wcidl'nton Count \'
Road 2 in Addi ...,on Townsh ip. a ca·r
driven b\' .J:imt 'S r: ,J ohnson. ''l. Ht
4, Gallipoli~ . !HYin'tl mod0ratf'
damagf&gt;.

Trash~

animal
warnings issued

RPs idf'nt s \\'('rPwarnC'd toda\· tha 1
pruspcution will ta ke placC. for
Sf'Vl'ral offPnses bei ng mmm itted in
M lddlepot1.
Garbage and trash arC' bc&gt;ing
throv.Tl ovf'r thr ri\ 'f'rbank on I\or th
Front St ., in \·iolation of law and
offenders will be pmSPPuted, M avor
Fred Hoffm an and Chief of Pol ic~ J.

J . Cn:•m('a ns ~,.~, - arnL.l(j. Also dogs a nd
ca Is are runn ing loose w ith thf' latter
climbing onto cars and causing
considerable damages by scratchIn g, police sa id Owners of animals
running loose will also be pmsecuted, officials warned.

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