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by Dick Cavalli
I WANT TO 60 TO
SUMMER CAMP
AqA/N THIS Y5AR,
5cE ...

Reds sweep twinbill

50 I STARTED 65-11\k:i R&amp;\L

eooo

AND

Story on Page 3

6EHAVI~

LII&lt;E A REq-WLAR AN&lt;:i'EL.

\

5

Local sports results

Property transfers

SeePages34

SrePage8

e
Vol.33, No.12
Copr•ightod 1984

&gt;WHEN

r

WASHINGTON tAP) - The
government's main forecasting
gauge of future economic activity
dropped 1.1 percent In March, the
first decllne In 19 months, the
government reported today in a
further signal that economic growth
is headed ShaJllly lower.

rM

and LITTLE MISS ™ by Hargreaves and Sellers
MY LlFE WAS

YOU'RE THE MOST
WONDERFUL THING
THAT EVER
HAPPENED TO ME!

EMPTY UNTIL
YOU CAME
INTO IT.'

SIIIC !illy .... lUI , . ...
.so-ct: Comm.,-c• 0.Lrm.s1f

OH,

IT'S ABOUT THIS
WOMAN WITH
A DOG CALLED

RICHARD!
RICHARD!

RICHARD.'

RlCHARD!

v-:

NO,NO. NONE

OF 71/AT'S
REALLY TRUE.

CAN

at

en tine
2

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 30, 1984

Section~,

12 Pages

2S Cents

A Multimedia Inc _ New'fJIDiper

BE REII.LLY

QUITE NICE ...

By Cris Hammond
r£s mtrr's
I

ALL TRUE.

BUr-

I~T!

.ECONOMIC INDICATOR INDEX - This graph shows the
Index of leading economic lndl·
cato"' lor March 1983 through
March 1984. The March decUne
was the first fall In the Index
since August 1982.

The Commerce Deparlment re!XJrted that Its Index of Leading
lndlcators fell for the first timeslnce
a small OJ percent decUne lnAugust
1982, durtng the depths of the
recession.
Since then, the Index, which Is
used to predict economic activity six
to nine months ahead, has been on a:
steady upward roll as the nation
recovered from the worst recession
since World War II.
Economist Michae l Evans, head
of his own forecasting flrm, was
predicting a sharp drop of 0.7
percent in the index, which monltors
perlomumce In 12 areas that tend to
anticipate turns in the economy.
Evans based his prediction on
what is already known about
business activity In March , when the
economy slowed perceptibly.
V.'hlle other economists are not as
pessimistic, many see either a slight
decrease or much slower growth
than the 0.7 percent Increase In
February and the 1 percent jump In
January .
The Index ls poised to go lower,
they argue, because the economy,
which surged at an annual growth
rate of 8.3 percent In the first
quarter, has definitely slowed.
Jack Carlson, chief econQmlst lor
the National Association of Real·
tors, said even the February 0.7
percent rise showed signs of
underlying weakness.

lATE EGG lllJII.T - Just a
p:lrt of tlw several hundred
youngsters in four age groups
who were ofl andrunningSunday
at General Hartinger Park in
Middleport is shown abo\'e at the
annual Middleport· Pomeroy Rotary Club Easter egg hunt
conducted Sunday. The event
was poo;tponed for a week due w
rain on Easter Sunday. More
than 1,200 prize eggs were
collected. Big Bend merchants
provided cash and men:handlae
prb.es.

M bottom lett,

By The .\ssoclated l'nlss
Former VIce President Waller
Mondale has picked up the backing
of most of Ohio's statewide elected
Democrats In his bid for the party's
presidential nomination, but chief
challenger Sen. Gary Hart has
gamed endorsements from two of
the state's largest newspapers.
The Dayton Daily News said the
Colorado senator "represents a
confident plunge Into the future,"
whlle The 1Cleveland) Plain Dealer
caUed him "a leader of thought."
"For once, It appears that the Ohio
prtmary could play a pivotal role In
the na Ilona! election campaign,· ' the
Dayton Daily News editorial said In
backing "the underdog."
"A win for Sen. Hart here could
change the course of the campaign,
and, perhaps, If the country gets
lucky, the face of American
government," the newspaper said.
Theedltorlal said thatlfthere !san
extraordinary Democratic presld·

PERSONIILITY.

GIVEN ENDORSEMENTS Two Ohio newspapers this pa8l
weekend, lheDaytoaDallyNew•
and Cleveland Plain Dealer,
mdoned Gary lbut as lhe belt
C'"Nete lor lhe Democratic
l'rMidmtlal nomlna&amp;ton. (AP
I nerphoto).

ency ln the offing. It would he that of
Hart, who "Is building a constl·
tuency for boldness" and who "may
be the best candidate the Democrats
can field for beating Ronald

Reagan."
The edltorlal said that "any of the
three Democrats still In the race,
and someofthem no longer in, would
look good against the outwardly
pleasant but rtgld and limited Mr.

Reagan."
"A vote for him 1Hart) In the Ohio
Democratic prtmary Is a long shot,
rut It's a longshotworthtak!ng, " the
newspaper said.
Mondale offers specific ap·
proaches, such as expanded Medl·
care for the elderly, The Plain
Dealer said, while Hart's candidacy
ls more transfmmatlonal.
"Mondale would place more
government controls on hospitals to
cut costs; Hart would restructure
the Medicare system to concentrate
on more preventive medicine, to
keep people out of hospitals.''
The Plain Dealer, Ohio's largest
newspaper, noted that many of
Hart's ideas are untested.
"He lacks the national leadership
experience of the former vice
president, who has cut the deals, has
been In the center of power and has
represented his country abroad.
Mondale Is tough and knowledgeable, yet sincere and compassionate.
"But Hart has many of those
qualities and others. The appeal of
his candidacy Is expressed well by
something Franklln Roosevelt said
shortly alter his election In 1932: ·AU
our great presidents were leaders of
thought at times when certain
historic Ideas In the life of the nation
had to be clarllled.'
"Hart Is a leader of thought at a
time when the country's Ideals need
to be clarified."
The Plaln Dealer said the Rev.
Jesse Jackson's "idealism and
letvor have great appeal to many
voters, though he has faUen tar short
In his hope to mold a 'rainbow
coalition' of constituents. He Is not a
contender for the nomination."

tbe

big

winners of speclal eggs worth
cash prizes at tl~e annual Easter

egg hunt of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club are
shown. Pictured, Ito r, are Roger
l.uckeydoo, club president; the
Easter Bunny; D. J . Henna.n,
Middleport, finder of the gold egg
worth 525; Sam Cowan, ~llddle­
port, the s ilver egg, worth $10,
and Danny Robinson, Pomeroy,
the bronze egg, worth $5.
Mlddleport firemen were again
on hand to assist with the annual
event which was P&lt;l"tpcned last
Sunday due to rainfall. Jolm
Werner, a dub member. was
emcee.

Two state newspapers
endorse Senator Hart

(-- .

11E

•

Economic
• •
activity
declines

I SAID. "YES; SIR II AND
"NO/MA'AM.," BUT r CiUE55
T OVERDID IT.

' IA..TCJ-IED
NER5 .. .

Elementary class play

Tornadoes leave death., destruction
By Associated Pres.•
MANNFORD, Okla. Four
churches filled wllh parishioners
weN' hit by a tornado Sunday,
sending some worshipers Into
closets and under pews, and leaving
at least one person dead a nd 15
Injured, officials said.
Destruction was within a six-

block area, said Mannford Chief of
Pollee Orlln White. Two schools
were also destroyed, he said.
The four churches- all within a
block of each other- wereelther!n
the midst of services or about to
start them when the twister hit , he
added.
"It was so dark In the c hurch,
then It got light , and it was the roof
coming ofl," said Beverly Varnell,
who was in the First Baptist Chw·ch
when the tornado hi! . " We just
heard that horrible rumbling . The
next thing we knew, things were
flying around us."
Dozens of vehicles in c hurch
parking lots were picked up by the
storm and smashed down on top of
each other. Some were left unrecog·
nlzable because they'd been rolled
Into a huge, steel ball.
First Baptist Church and Assembly of God Church were destroyed,
officials said . Church of the Naza·
N'ne was partially destroyed, and a
fourth was only slightly damaged.
St. Francis Hospltalln Tulsa sent
two emergency helicopters to
Mannlord, a town of about 2,00J
people 25 miles west of Tulsa.
Fifteen storm victims were taken
to Oklahoma Osteopathic Hospital ,
said an emergency room nurse who
refused to glve her name. Some
victims were being processed at
Bartlett Memorial Medical Center.
said a S!XJkeswoman who would not
specify how many.
A third hospital, Hillcrest Mem·

orial Cent er, was awaiting tornado
victims, said a nursing supervisor
who a lso refuS&lt;'&lt;l to give her name.
Loren Athens. about 70, wa s

others craw led unde r pews, and
many c hildren were taken Int o a

in eastern Oklahoma on Friday·, as
wdl as c ausing hPa\·\ damagt' to

ha llway, Couch said .
Nat ional Gu&lt;JrdsmC'n wpre cal led

Terlton a nd Skiatook in northeas t·

killed whe n his pickup truck was
lifted by the tornado a nd thrown
into m•arby Mannford E lementary
School, said Don Couch , pa stor of
Assembly of God Church. At hens

over from Terlton. a town hit by las t
wC'f'k's storms. and SapuJpa . nffi ·
cials sa id.
Su nday's storms could l1ave been
" as s trong or stronger" than the
stOims that struck Ok lahoma last
w('('k, killing 10 and in jurin1Z

had been on hi s way to church to

pick up his wife i&gt;Pcause of the
tornado warnings . Couch said.
Parishioners had a three- lo
five-minute w arni ng that thr tv.rister wa s coming w hen sirens went

off. Couch said . Some hid in closets ,

TORNADO DAMAGE -

hundreds. thP Nat ional Wcat h~r
Ser..·icC' warned .
A lorn ado spa\vncd b.\' last Wf'('k' s
st orm s l evel ed almos t th rf'e·
quarters of the sma ll town of M orri s

Two automobiles

heavily d11111aged by a tornado sit In the parking lot of
one of three churches damaged by the stonn Sunday.

f'rn Oklahoma .
T he sa me funnel that hit Man ·
nford cont i nuf'd to skip northea stward. touching down again in Pn1r
.1nd pr ompt ing anothrr wornin g in

Ba rt lesville .
Diana Warnrx·k . highw l.l .\' patrol
dispatcher in Pawnee. said the
tornado that tou che&gt;d down in Prue,

!XJpulation 5.'i0, dam a g-ed tilrPP c it~
blocks. including one churc h. T here
w('rf' no init ial r0port s of injuries .

was ldDed by the early morning
and up to 50 were Injured. (AP l..aserphoto) .

At least one person
st~nn

�....... ._. -

Commenta•-y
111 Court Street
Pomeroy , Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE INTERmiT OF TilE MEIGS.MASON AREA

...

r"T"'\,..,11.--r""l

~d·~

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

General Manager

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

.

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Nt&gt;wspaper Publisher Association .

WASHINGTON - Cicero said it
In Latin, Gilbert and Sullivan said tt
In song, and various judges and
legislators haye been saying the
same thing In their opinions and
statues. ln any fair system of
justice, the punishments imposed
should fit the crimes committed.
Congress Is grappling with this
age-old problem in several bills that
now are pending for reform of the
Criminal Code. Back In February
the Senate passed a bill , 85-3, to
create a commission to write new
guidelines for sentencing in federal
cases. The House is working on two
bills that would provide a series of

options that trial judges could
exercise In punishing offenders.
.Judges will tell you. If you ask,
that no task Is more agonizing than
the task of fashioning a just
sentence. In six states, according tO
the National Center for State
Courts, juries have that responsibil Ity. 1n the rest of the states and In all
federal courts, the duty falls wholly
upon the presiding judge. He has
probation officers to assist h.lm with
pre-sentence investigations; he bas
the adVice of counsel for beth the
prosecution and the defense; but In
the end the fixing of a just sentence
for a particular defendant is up to

the judge alone.
Historically. a trial judge has had
few options. He could Impose a tine
or a jail sentence (or both), or he
could put the defendant on probation under various conditions. Until
quite recently, these condttlons
typically required the probationer
only to stay out of trouble with
liquor and drugs, and to report
regularly to his probation officer.
All kinds of new Ideas now are
emerging tn our trial courts. The
National Law Journal recently
looked at some of the alternatives
that judges are expermenting with.
In Los Angeles, a metals company

Lt.'1'TERS OF OPINION llrl' welcomed . They should be le~~s than 300 words
long. 1\JJ letters are subJect to edUinJ and must be signed with mune, addrr.AMand

telephone number . No unsigned leUers wUI be publbhed. LetteNo should be In
rood tllS,e, addressing Issues, noc personalitleti.

AFSCME seeks
organization of
state professionals
Maybe all those television commercials showing government employees
at work- "After the parades. aftPr tlle promises" - are paying dividends
for the American Federation of State. County and Municipal Employees.
The union soon will file petilions with the State Employment Relations
Board under Ohio 's new collective bargaining law seeking to represent
about 6,000 engineers. physicians. attorneys and other professionals
employed by the sta te.
AFSCME and it" affiliates already have submitted the paperwork
declaring intent to represent about 37,000 other potential members- state
employees separated into five bargaining unit categories proposed by tile
" Our intention is to fiie for ew ry living soul who breathes," Larry Rubin ,
an AFSCME spokesman. said.
His union is one of eight that wants tD represen t various segments of the
state workforce in bargaining for wages and !rlnge benefits and, at tile
same time. collect millions of dollars in dues or fees from employees.
AFSCME 's large number of flllngs does not m&lt;&gt;an It will go unchallenged
by tile Communicat ion Workers of America-Council of Public Workers,
which has filed pet ilion" to represent aoout 14 ,500 workers, or tile other
labor groups.
Unions need authorization cards !rom 30 percent of the members in a
bargaining unit to file initially. But tllere is a provision allowing other
unions to intervene in a representation election if t hey can muster support
from 10 percent of those ln tlle unit.
" We can intervene in anything they have filed for," Arthur Evans,
direc tor of the CWA-CPW. sa id.

Letters to editor
Not much justice here
Meigs· band stud ents and teachers.

but to everyone else. I remember if
a person did a good job on whatever
they were working ar. that thPy
wer e judged by the good job they
did. but sad to say ln these days
thar 's not the case.

Miss Goodnite is a very good
band teacher and she w as doing
good for the children. SIJ they gil rid
of her
I have lived in Meigs Count y all
my life and the wa y I see it. anvone
who tr 1C'S to do things for our
child ren to help them in life, is put
down . wha t I mean to say is, it
seems as if our children are trea ted
badly. They don't have a dece nt
place to go to. to spend their free
tlme. But everywhere wt' look we
see ca r ryouts and bars. In my

opinion, God is going to punish Jim
Miller and Dick Vaughn and .a Mr.
Powell and Mr. King for what th~ y

and the chldren .
I believe God loves the children
and He won't overlook this thing. I
don't seP how any of thPm can sleep

at night.
l also blame m yself and all of the
pe&lt;Jpie of Meigs county . None of us

takes a stand against the wrong
that is being done, not only this
latest t hing but other things that
havp be-Pn donf'. We all sit back and

hope things will be all right. But
that's the r eason , we don't seem to
have much just ice around here. We
won ' t have to be violent to get
anything done. My sym pathy Is
with Miss Goodnite and especially
with the children. And my prayers
will be t hat God will deal with those
whom He st'eS has done wrong in a
very· sf'vrrr manner. My Lord is
vel)' fair and just with His
punishment. and he shows no

favoritism. - Doris Richmond , RD
1. Middleport. Ohio, 742-2653.

did and are doing to Miss Goodn ite

A not her election coming
I'm not a ba nd txxlster now nor do
haw chldren In the band, but l
belieVP M iss Goodni te has been
givr n a gn•at disservice. The ba nd
this past yea r was t he best band

Meigs L oca l has had since Dwight
Goins left. The Homecoming performanc e was super , as were
others.

I beli evP they should ha ve
discipline and respect their director. From tlle word of band
members I know. I believe they
have these for Miss Goodnite.
(know o ne of t he band members

believe he and all the other
members need this kind of a
director to prepare t hem for the
futun'.

I think our ooard members who
voted aga inst Miss Goodnlte should
think long and hard as to the effect
votes

may

have

on

t he band

members and In good conscience
ca n live wit h themsPives- I pray
for them .
Remember there will be another
election time. Everyone would like
to know their reason lor this action .
Per sonal? - Ida Murphy.

who Intends to mal or in music and l

Applications available
Attention is call ed to the unsa lu -

tary letters recently ~~&lt;Titten by
Jam es Adam s a nd Anna Lesmond .

There seem s to be some lonely
heart Democrats out there. Like all
lonely hearts thPy work up a
phantasmorgia. They Imagine all
kinds of things .
They think no one loves them .
Ma ybe they would like to have
Governor Rhodes back. Governor
Celeste has no time for the little
guy. His admlnlstratlon Is too busy
playing politics for the big stakes.
Lonely hearts, your sweetheart is
right over here with t he backoone
and vast majority of the country
and not with the Santa Claus
minority. You are more likely to
find a sweetheart if you read
something besides the rehash in the
. yellow pages of the liberally biased
·: press.

'

If the Democratic show now
before the people Is an example of
the sta tesmanship the Democra~e
party has to offer this country we
are In for tough sledding. Walter
Mondale, like .Jack Benny. Is good
for a laugh.
What really has got the goat of the
liberals and lonely hearts Is the fact
that they have not been able to pin
anylhlng on President Reagan and
make it stick. Not a fieck of dust has
settled on him. The fault finders are
looking desperately for an Issue,
down to starving babies.
All lonely hearts and bleeding
liberals please take notice that the
nice, broadminded, generous,
peace-loving and forgiving Reagan
Republicans are taking applica·
tlons for membership. Don't be
lonely. -Gayle Price .

recently was found guilty of
unlawfully dumping toxic wastes.
The court's sentencing order requires the company to take an ad in
The Wall Street Journal explaining
Its crime. In Nebraska, a construe·
tton company was convicted of
bid-rigging on a highway job. The
court ordered the company, in lieu
of a f!ne, to endow a $1.4 million
chair at the University of
Nebraska.
In other cases Involving corpo·
rate or white-collar defendants,
courts have ordered contributions
to charities. Often a defendant who
Is put on probation Is ordered to
periorm hours of community service. In cases of theft , restitution
may be part of a sentencing
package. Some a lternatives are
dramatic. A North Carolina judge
last year offered an option to a man
convicted of rape: He could serve a
term in prison, or he could undergo
castration. In Alexandria, Va., a
judge proposed as a term of
probation that a woman convicted
of reckless driving watch the
autopsy of a traffic victim. (The
woman chose to ride for two nights
with an emerge ncy vehicle
Instead.)

of

"If you guys are serious about dropping out of the Games, we can make
you the official Olympics spoilsports for 5 million rubles."

incarceration

are

seen

as

ineffective punishments. Why not
get some mmmunity service from
the drunk driVPr or the petty thief?

Takeover maneuver ______;______J_a_ck_A_;_n_d_er_so_n
WASHINGTON - If any man
can be said to have wrecked the
Reagan administration's hopes for
Lebanon, It would be Hafez Assad.
the stubborn Syrian strong man. He
outfoxed and outwaited the Ameri-

begun among Assad' s would-be

ca n peacemakers at every turn

over.''

until he got what he wanted: Syrian
dominance ln Beirut.
But Assad may not have long to
gloat. U.S. and Israeli Intelligence
sources agree that his health is so
poor he could soon die.
\'.'hen Assad goes to his dubious
reward, Syria could revert to the
state of coups and chaos tha t
reigned belore Assad took control
13 years ago. Even if there is a
peaceful succession - which seems
doubtful - the new Syrian leader
""li probably be too busy consolidating his position In Damascus to
pursu e Syrian ambitions In
Lebanon.
Th!' power struggle has already

The end appears imminent.
Assad ha s always been known as a
meticulous "detaiJ man": now he
has been forced to delegate some of
his duties. He puts In only a lew
hours a day at his office, and drops
entirely from sight for weeks at a
time. His Iron grip Is clearly not as
strong as it used to be.
The greediest, most bloodthirsty
vulture circling over the seriously
Ill president is his brother. Rilaat
Assad. As the regime's hatchet
man. Rifaat has amassed a sizable
private army, which he has recently stationed at strategic locaUons In Damascus. His rivals have
deployed troops out side the cap!tal

heirs. ''The vultures are circltng,'' a

Stale Department source told my
associate Lucette Lagnado. " People are striking out to position
themselves when Assad keels

in a standoff that could coliapse
when the president dies.
Rlfaat's opponents despite him
on personal grounds as a corrupt,

womanizing cutthroat. But It's his
political drawbacks that worry
them most. Rtfaat, an Alawlte
Moslem. is hated and feared by the
Sunni majority, whom he has
butchered by the thousands. The
Alawlte minority are afraid the
Sunnis would drive them ail out if
Rafaat ascPnded to power.
Rifaat 's control of Damascus
gives him the edge over other
claimant s, but it 's not clear that he
could rule Syria even wit h unified
support from his fellow Alaw!tes.
"Ruling Sytia requires a delicate
balance of forces," one I sraPli
official noted. "You need a st rong
linchpin. THat was (Hafez) Assad."
Rifaat i s conslde : : pro -

American. a t !past b~ Syrian
standards. He owns property in the

United Sta tes and has children in
school hPre. In fact. his rivals have
spread the rumor that Rifaal is on
the CIA's payrol l.
The Soviet&gt; arc undoubtedly
aware t hat Rifaat bf&gt;lieves thPir
role in Syria should b&lt;' more
limited. As the Syrian army 's
providers, the Soviets could exer-

cise critical influence In the postAssad power struggle.
The Israelis at this point are
betting that Rifaat won't be able to
stay at the top in Damascus: he just
has too many enemies . The Israelis
predict - perhaps a bit wishfullythat Syria will deteriorate into U1e
anarchy of old.

U.S. policy e xperts aren ' r sure
which way things will fall in Syria.
But if turmoil does indeed f~llow
Assad's death, it could be a break
for L ebanon- and thus,lndlreclly,
for the United Staff'S and its chief
ally In the region, Israel.

Why not another CCC? ____L_ow_el_lW_i-=.ng_ett
dust bcwl Is inevitable unless some
sensible precautions are taken .
More and more farm land is taken
over by corporation as small
farmers find they can not make a
li ving In competition with their well
heeled neighbcrs and corporations
are not good environmentalists.

The country has two vast un tapped sources of manpower for a
CCC-type program. They are our

plisoners under 30 who are whiling
away their time In j ail cells at a
yearly cost of $16,000 each. Then
there are the miliions of unern·
played youths who might be the
prisoners of the future unless they
are rescued from t he dreary
routine of nothing useful to do.
It makes too much sense to ever
expect this administration to do It'

Berry's World

going into sectional tournament

n

Everett

Newell pitched

WHAT DO YOU MEAN I'M GONE - San
Francisco Giants' pitcher Mike Krukow (39) argues
with home plate umpire Salah Avaidson alter
Davidson ejected Kurkow from the second game of
their double-header versus the Ciclnnatt Reds Sunday

attenroon ln Cinchmatt. Krukow was ejected from the
game for throwing at Reds' batter Cesar Cedeno in
the fifth inning, as was Giants' manager Frank
Robinson In connection with the same incident. (AP
Laserphoto).

Foley paces twinbill sweep
CINCINNATI I API - Cincinnati
Rl'ds shortstop Tom Foley is
sharing his clubhouse cubicle with a
tape-rppaired bat and a peninscribed baseball. mementos of
one of hi s grandest daysm tllemajor
leaguE's.
Foley, a backup shm1stop last
season, clubbed his first major
league homer and drove in four runs
Sunda y to ignite the Reds in an 8-1.
7-3 double-header sweep of the
frustrated San Francisco Giants.
The light -hilting shortstop shattered the bat on a second-Inning
triple off st2 rter Jet! Robinson, 2-3,
tllat put the Reds ahPad to stay in tlle
opmer. The ball is the one he
la unched over the right-field wall in
the fifth for a solo homer. his first in
the majors.
" I was shaklng al l the way around
the bases." Foley said. "I don'thave

a home-run trot. because that was
my first one. 1 might not hit another
one for another 100 or 200 at-bats."
He added a sacrifice fly for hi s
third RBI of the game to support
winner Bruce Berenyi, 1-3, who
st ruck out nine in 6 I ·3 innings.
Reds Manager Vern Rappwa"w
impressed that he started Foley at
short stop in the second game as
wpli. moving Dave Concepcion to
third base. I t paid o!f. as Foley
scored the eventual winningrunon a
slngle by Eddie Milner and then
slapped an RBI flipie in his next
at ·bat.
Outfielder Duane Walker chipped
In a pair of run-scoring singles and a
solo homer in tllP nightcap to give
the Reds a four-game sweep or the
Gian ts and their first double-header
sweep since Aug . 4, 1!®.
"We've come a long way s!ncc

we'vp been home." Walker said. "It
feels good to be moving up.··
The Giant s continued their
downward spiral. losing for thesLxtll
and seventh straight times Sunday
to go 0-7 on their road trip. Not since
tlley lost eight slraight in 1979 have
the Giant s tasted such futility.
"I don't know ," Giants Manager
Frank Roblnson sa id, summing up
the fmstra tion . "You' re always
searching. you'rt:' alwa ys tllinking
abou t anytlling you can do to get tlle
club golng. ru keep sea rching. "
The Giants had a promising
opportunity to get back to winning
wa ys ln the second game, when they
got a pair of first-inning runs off
Reds stm1rr Bob0wchinko.1 -0.The
lett ·hander w as making his first
start since 19&amp;1 because scheduled
starter Mario Solo was bcthered by
a sore leg .

Southern sweeps pair from Pirates
\'I NTO!\ - The voung North
( ;a lli a Pir31C'.S gavr thl' Sou thern
Turnad&lt;x.~s

everything thry had
Sa turday.· aftf'rn oon, bu t. when thf'
dust had settled on rh~ Vinton
diam ond, it was a vrteran SouthPrn
crrw tha t eamP hom r victorious 9·.1
and i ·fi in an SVAC doublC'hC'adPL
Sou t hC' rn is now ~-7 over all and ~- 2
in thC' SVt\ C. whiiP North Gal lia is
0:1 O\'Na ll and in thP \eagu0 .
A stOf)' \Vit hin itself is t he fact
that Snut hC'rn won thrfirst gam r ~- .' i
,}Q(':V'

th~ fin~

rrltef pit ching of

Wolfe. v.:ho pitchC'd four and

two- thirds innings ot scor r less
rPiif'f . Wolfr fannPd six anti walked
nn ly two in rr lief of startf'r Charl ie

1\'olfP.
Charlie 1\'olfc• camP back to start
thP sf'C'ond game . bu t two rrrors
ont' of hi s ow n, and two hits again
put Cha r lie in hot water .Joevll'olfe
again c amP on in rrlicf. this time
pitching fi vr innings of r eli ef to gf't
th e win in Pxtra innings. J oe~:
f'annC'd si:x. and wnlkC'd only thrPe.
gi\·in g up just two earnC'd runs
Altogrt twr he ga\·e up j ust two

ea rned 111ns. fanned 12. and walked
fin• in ninC' a nd t wo- thi rds innings.
To help his cause, Wolfe also had
four si ng if's. a double ;Jnd four
HBl's on the day for a ~ rcat
Ironman performance.
T onv f)('('m and Rvan Oli\·er had
;J finf'. first ga m e with two singlPs
apiPce. w hik W adr Connoil~' c1 nd

David E b!'rsbac il added singi&lt;'S .
Glass burn. Thaxton. Holstei n. Cal -

lihan. and .J ohn Diddle had singles
for thr Pir ates . Thax ton pit ched the

three in the third inning, thPn tied

t he score with one in t he fifth when a
.John Diddle triple scorPd Todd
Holst£'in. who was on by a fiPid&lt;'r' s
chain'.
The TornadOPs camr back to go
ah0ad in thC' fifth inning on a walk,
hit battrr , a sac rifice. and clutch
single by David Ebf&gt;rsbach. the
score 6-5. Two walks, two sing les.
;wd an rrror gave thr Pirates a b-l
lr ad in the si xth frame. howt&gt;ver.
th C' Tornadoes tif'CI it aga in whrn
a ft er one out . J()(' Woll&lt;' "'ingled ,
whilr wal ~ we'rE' iss uPd to Con·
nolly . Harri s. the Oliver 10 foreran
ex tra inning.

Ca llihan led off the Pirate
seventh with a walk. but wasPrased
on a fine To ny Deem. Ry'an Oliver ,

Wade Connollv double pl ay. A fin o
co tch by Eber&gt;bach ended the
inning .

Eber&gt;bach led off the bott om halt
of thc srventh wit h a walk as t hl'
sC&gt;cond ga m e was SouthPrn' s
" homf'" ga mr. Jimm y Wolfe. J

sophomore, blasted a double to
deep left field. but Ebersbach had to
hold at third. Tony Deem laid down
a perifft suicide squf'oC'ze bunL
sending the winning run hom e. 7-6.
Other hitters in this game were
Paul Harr is t\vo sing les. Deem
another singlP, and Brian Allen a
sing le. Gl(;l ssburn \ tw o strikPUut s

DALE HILL·
FORD TRACTOR
Your Farm
Equipment

Store
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Pomeory, Oh.

to record

Executing with authority SHS
plated seven markers in the fourth

Farley a double and single. F' .
F arley a single, Wil son a single. and
Brooks a single.

BE

the bases, and Troy Guthrie tagged

The first game or the twin bill was
decided early as Eastern plated
four runs In the first inni ng, one in
the second and six ln the third. In
lhe third frame Eastern's sizzli ng
offense clicked knocking Rob Powell out of the box. Newell and
Tracy Taylor drew walks, leading
off the inning. Fre,hman Greg
Leachman pounded a single. Ti m
Probert roped a two-run double
down the first base foul line, Jeff
Bissell walked. Larry Cowdery
lined a two-r un double, and Royce
Bissell clea red the bases with a

his wa y on for a single , and Tay lor

came to a close, the score at thi s
point 11-1.
Alexander pl ated its first run In

single. WC'bc&gt;r a slnglr , Collin.c; a
single, and Leachman a single.
NeweU and Everett went thret&gt;-for·
four . A lexander hi I ters were Jay

out a bun1 for a ba se hit . Ever f' tl
bunt ed in the same fas hion to load

a long sacrifice fl y. Collins bunted

towering triple. Everett. Jimmy

Guturie a double, Eddie Colli ns a

when Bissell singled. Newell beat

victories.

Weber and Newell collected addt tiona l singles before the inning

t hree, a nd walked one.
Other Eastern hitters were Tro)

HAILSAFE!

walked to force home the second
run of t he inning. Another run came
homf' on a field er 's choice ..Jeff

You've come too far to risk
your fulure ... withoul Golden
Har"\lesl Crop·Hail protection
from Continental Insurance.

Bissell singled . Cowdery singled
hom e one r un. then R oycC' Bissell
smacked a booming thn-"l:.-run

1\ 1 I 'l('H WU h l

'l,l

d, i&lt;,,..,_ !

dn

di• 'l! It\

, ] !1

triple tu complete the scoring, R-1
Mmnwhilr , Newell held the
Spa11 a ns scoreless and his tra m ·
mates coll ected thrE"t-' additional
run s in the seventh 10 lnsurf' thP

('n l "I' h'-' " ,., , H, M ' , o!l , , •u ''' "' I r'l.ll
~ ~ nr ! •,l lo " n, , f&gt;, ~l&gt; - rwlll ' '"' pr.1 lrl

victory Newell fanned fi ve and did

·r~· ·

1 • ~"11

'll· •n•· • o·1 "'"'m·, '

d l • fj ,,. I\JII· .,_., ,1 11 ( ' I'll t&gt;!"dJI ' " "'" " '· ,. ,

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1111·• ,.,1,,, "' • &gt;1.1"' ' ''~

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,. , ,., ' ' • "'' '' •l. oi , j '" . •1"' ,., ' · ol . · '" ., •,

SERVICE
Dependabi Iity
Peace of Mind

1'1"' , I .,. t, .ol rlo •·&gt; t t.l ' " '' ' ' '" l " 1 .,
I•.&gt;• ""&lt;I I" I o J ill • nr·!l~l I ' ' \11 ,, -H , . I '1 ,11

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1' ' 'l " l , 1 I , ' 1, · , .t
, , ., t''-' 1' 1 ,., ., 1 oil. ,~, r h ·' '
&lt;

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the second frame. notched anot her

in the third. then gave the Eagles a
final score in thf' fourth as four

walks by a tiring E veret t. a double.

f. nrol/ed Ju
Praciice

and two errors esult ed in t he
scoring. Mike Collins ca me o n tu
fini sh thE" gamP in relief asn put out

L eachman

two singles. Prohf'rt

added a double, Jeff Bissell a single,
Mike Collins a single, Everett a
s ln~l&lt;'. T aylor a single. In all
EastC'rn's offense, which has been
strong all season long JX)unded ou1
14 hits.
Alexander hitters w ere Allman ::1

double, Chapman a single, and
Wilson a s!ngle. Enroute to the win

Everett fanned five. walked eight.
and gave up just three hits ln the
fivE' inning affair. Collins came on in
the fourth to pick up the save.
Powell and Chapman combined for

two strike outs and five walks
Play ing with confidence and en t hu ·

CHECK THE

•I
'

Hejore riJ,
lnt ern1.d

the Spart an fire, result! ng in the 11 -6
finale.
Eastern hitters were senior
ca tc her Cowdery with a double and
si ngle. Bi ssell a triple and single,
Newell two singles and a walk. and

IIIIIOik• t .. ·
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H. e l '(! 11N C

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BOOKKEEPING

urance Servlc"

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214 EAST MAll'&lt;
POMEROY
902-6687

618 E. Main St .
Pomerov , OH .

PH . 992-3796

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. . . Con11nenta\ ··• ..,....
~· \nsurarw:::e
-. · ·

j-;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::==========:;
Republican
RE-ELECT

David ]. f(oblenlz
Qualified

Candidate for
MEIGS COUNTY

COMMISSIONER
(for Secono Term)

Thank You

Pard lor by the Cand 1date . Rl 3 Pomeroy _OH

4~769

Sou thern wa s play ing \\'ilhnutt hf'

hil wilh

a bat in the t hird inning ,

whil e catching, and being knocked
uneon~ciuu !-i. HP was di scharged
late Friday .
Just a couple of games ea rli£&gt;r,

th!' injur)· plat'lJe had struck the
Tor nt:~rl()('s wh o los t Jam if' Hensler
for the SC'ason . In a game at For t
F rye, Hensler was hit in tllf' face

with a line

driv~

and r eceived a

brokC'n nose and head injuriC's.

BIG TOP

New Lexington ousts Meigs
ATHENS

-

New L exingt on

advancffl to a second round in Class
AA Sectional Baseball Tournamrnt
here Sat urday wit h a 3-2 victory
ovC'r MPigs.

The Marauders. now 6-7. loaded
thf' baS('s with one out in the sixt h.

bul couldn 't score. A foul pop and
strikeout ended thp threa t
The P a nthPrs' Dumott and
Meigs' Dan Thomas wrnt th('
distance. Winner Dumott fanned

st rikeout s. Both walked thrff'. Scott
Gheen and Jackie Welker each had
two hits for Meigs and RBI' s. Trey
Cassell doubled while Ja y Carp&lt;'n
t~r and Bobby Spires each singled.
1\ew Lexington Is now 5-8.
M0ig&gt; r!'turns in ques t of theTVC
titl e today at hom e aga inst
NeiSDnville-Y ork .
By innin gs:
New Lex ... .. ...... 101 010 0-.1 4 2
M eigs .. . ..... ..... &lt;XJl 010 0-2 7 6

bC' six inning, hut thf&gt; second ga me

The TornadO&lt;'s took an earl y 4·0
lead . but the young Pirates "cored

Jim

Alexander score tn the second
stan za. then scored on Eastem 's
only err or of the game. the scor e

re turned to complet e t he last two

Innings in relifef. A lexander pitc hing yielded 15 hits, fanned just

services of Tony Riffle. who was
sc1iou sly injured in T hursday's 9-5
loss to F'Pd&lt;'ral Hockin g. Rifn~ was

distan ce for the Pir&lt;Jit's picking up
five while Thomas had eight
s tJikrout s and 10 wa lks.
B~ · agn.'C'mt&gt;nt C'ar h ga m e \.\'sa to . - - - - - - - - - . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - -

wPnt se ven, as Southern narrowly
won on a last sffond squeezr play.

well

and

second frame on singles by Nf'well

and Everett , and a passed ball . Jay
Farley singled to prompt an

not walk a single bauer _ Scoff

M cClain started for A lexander. but
was knocked out in the third with
just one out , as plt c hln~ ace Mike
Jordan was ca lled UJX:m. Powell

led North Ga lli a.
Aaron Beac h pitch('() thrdi stance
with onP str ikeout and 10 walks.

Sf'V{'n

"Better stand back, this Is a NICARAGUAN
harbor/"

siasm. Eastern exhibited its best
play of the season behind the
excellent l our-hit pitching or Ne·
well. who kept the potent Alexander
attack off stride for seven innings,
while getting som e strong backing
in the field In I he 11-1 victory In !he
1tightcap.
Eastern plated a single run in the

seniors Tom

bchinrl
T he pe&lt;Jple who run our jails and find jobs. The number of city boys
prisons are caught between a rock who have no hope of any gainful
and a hard placP. On the one hand employment Is a national disgrace,
they have bulging facllilles, on I he particularly when we have the
other I he prospect of future dwinRoosevelt example of the CIVilian
dling of the prison population . Their
Conservation Corps to guide us to a
problem Is whether to meet the
way to take black and white youths
needs of lhe present and waste
from the city sidewalks and place
badly needed money or walt unt il
them In useful employment.
thP demand for cell space shrinks to
The Reagan policy of locking up
manageable proportions In present
every criminal and throwing away
lnstit ullons.
the key may make the weiJ.fed
Their problem was highlighted
Republicans rest easier in !heir
last week when the Federal Bueau
beds but is hardly beneficial to the
of Investlgallons released their
coming generations. Right now,
annual crime statistics . They found
while $6 billion ln prison constructhat crime In the U .S. had dropped
tion is under way or on the drawing
seven percent In 1983. Th.ls followed
ooards, It is necessary to let one
a three percent drop in 1982.
prisoner out !he back door to make
William French Smith, Attorney
room for one coming in tlle front.
General, was quick to pounce on the
Instead of building more prisons
statistic as eVidence that the hard
which may prove superfluous In a
approach the Reagan administra few years. why not spend SIJme of
tion has taken toward crim e ts
that money In organizing somefinally paying off. This Is another
thing like the CCC's where prison·
case of I he administration claiming
ers may spend their time In
unearned credit. This decline was
worthwhile empioymenl and get
prodlcted by experts eight years
paid lor It. Sure, some might go
ago, explaining that tlle change is
over tile hill but most would
purely demographic, meaning that
welcome the opportunity. It would
the baby boom boys are growing
be better than drumming their
up.
fingers against the bars of a cell
Most ol you know of, and many
block whlle tlley plot revenge
took part In, the baby boom In the
against society. Florida has been
years following World War D . We
giving such a program a try·out in
had a few years of unprecedented
the Everglades with juvenile ofpopulation growth and most of
fenders with encouraging results.
those children are now In their JUs.
No matter what plan Is adopted,
Law enforcement experts will tell
there will be someone to oppose It,
you that the majority of crtmes are
but the CCC plan has proven merit.
committed by males under 30,
There is hardly a county In the
especially crimes against property.
United States that does not have
In the past 10 years, the prison
some monument to Its success
population of the United States has
almost 50 years ago. Nature does
jumped 115 percent and It Is not
not change In 50 years and
beyond prohabtllty that the next 10 conditions that lead to the dust bowl
years may see a correspondtng of the '30s are apparent In every
deC'Une. Especially If an admtnis·
part of the naton. Soil erosion froTI)
!ration Is elected that wUI make
wind and water Is just as great now
some provision tor the vast number . as It was then with tons ot fertile top
ot young people who are unable to . soU being earned away. Another

By SCO'IT WOLFE
ALBANY - ~or.opletlng one of
Its best outln!;' o' the year, the
red-hot Eastern t.agles, varsity
baseball team rec~rded its fifth
straight victory by defeating the
Alexander Spartans, 11-6 and 11·1,
in a Saturday a!ternoon doubleheader at Alexander High School.
Ea stern, which bad " l r uggled
defensively through the first half of
the season, has been coming on
strong lately. The two big victories
boost Eastern to 6-6 overall, thus
giVing them a surge of momentum
play.
During a performance that rc
fleeted a carbon copy of last
Saturday's oictory over Miller.

seems to have soured on the whole
Idea of rehabilitation. Brief periods

The Doily Sentinei- Poge-3

Doubleheader sweep gives
Eagles five straight victories

1984

The National Law Journal suggests several reasons for the trend
toward "creative sentencing." One
reason is wholly pragmatic: In
many jurisdictions, jails are full to
overflowing, and there may be no
room for additional commitments.
There are other reasons. The publlc

union.

It not only was a shock to the

~y.April30,

To fit the Crtllle ___________________Ja_·~...__. _J_.K__ip_a_t_rw_k

The Daily Sentinel
~
~m~
~v

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pag• 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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�Page

4

By The Bend

Petry one-hits Twins
By JOHN NEL'&gt;ON
AP Sports Writer
Only five days earlier, DPtroit
Tigers right-hander Dan Petry had
tn&gt;n forced to take himself out of a
game against Minnesota with a stiff
e lbow.
He made quite a recovery
Sunda y.
Pet ry came within four outs of
joining teammate Jack Morris as a
no-hit pitcher t his season, hurling
the Tigers to a 0.1 victory over the
Cleveland Indians. Morris no-hit the
Chicago White Sox on April 7.
·· 1 felt like this was it -this was
my day," said Petry, 3-1. who gave
up his first hit . a double to George
Vu kovich, with two outs in the eighth
Inning. With the no-hitter gone,
Petry watched from the dugout as
Willie Hernandez pitched the ninth
inning, giving up Cleveland's only
run on a wa lk and a doubt&lt;' by Julio
F'ranco.
In his pre-vious two at -ba1s,
Vukovich had s truck out and popped
to catcher Lance Panish in foul
terril ory. But Petry got behind in the
count 2-1 in Vukovich· s third trip.
Vukov ich lined thP next pitch int o
the gap in rlght -cenlcr.
Petry walked two a nd struck out
seven in his first winning decision
since April 10.
Kirk Gibson had twodoublesanda
sing le in four at -ba ts. driving in

th ree of Detroit' s runs
\' Mkees 6, Brewers 5
New York snapped a four-game
los ing s tre ak with four runs in the
bottom of the 13th inning- the final
two coming on a two-out single by
Tim Foil. Milwau kL-e
ha d ta ken a "-2 lead with three
runs 1n the top of the inning.
The first of the Yankees· winning

runs sconed on singles by Steve
Kemp, Don Baylor and Roy
Smalley. A walk loaded the bases
a nd broug ht on reliever Tom
Tellmann . who promptly walked in
another run, making It 5-4. Foli then
singled off Tellrnann to drive in the
tying and winning runs.
Milwaukee sconed in the top of the
Inning on RBI singles by Randy
RRady and Ben Ogilvie and a
run-scoring, two-base error by
Smalley at third . Jay Howell, who
faced one batter in the top ofthel 3th,
was the winner.
Orioles 3, Rangers 2
Baltimore won its fourth in a row
and handed Texas its sixth straight
loss with a pair of runs in the sixth
inning. Cal Rlpken Jr. tripled home
the tying run , then sconed the winner
when Eddie Murray singled.
Ripken. who has hit in 10 straight
games . tripled following Jim Dwyer's double. Wayne Gross homered
for the Orioles.
Rangers right -hander Dave Slewa rt now has given up seven home rs
in 28 2-3 Innings. losing his sixth
game in six decisions. Storm Davis.
J-0, wor ked into the ninth. scattering
six hit s.
Whit.. Sox 6, Red Sox 4
Ron Kittle's two-homer, tive-RBI
performance allowed the White Sox
to break a five-game losing streak .
Kiltle hit a two- nmhomer just inside
the foul pole and onto the roof at
Comiskey Park to cap Chicago' s
three-run first inning. His second
homer. lntotheupperdeck.drove in
three 1uns. Kittle now has sL'

homers.
Richard Dotson. 3-2. worked
eight-plus innings. yielding eight
hits. Two of the runs off him were
unearned as the result of a pair of

STEWART- Trac k Is basicly a n
indi v idualist 's sport. but th(' MPigs
Mara uderPttr s di splayed tcam \l,:ork to the utmost . capturing fi rsts
in a ll four rei a~' races a nd winning
thP f'('dpral !locking lnvi tationtll
hPrC' Saturday.
Thf' Meigs lassPs sprinted to %
points, 37 more than second -place
&amp;•rnf' Union i69l . Warren had OH.,
Vinton Count y 62, M or gan 58l!2 ,

Federa l Hoc'ki ng 48. Fori Frye .15 112 ,

Wellston 3:l, Alexander 32, Waterford 29 a nd T r imble 0.
In boys' act ion, Trimble w on wi th

88. Federal Hocking was second
with 69, Nelsonville-Yor k 61, We ll ston 63. Alexander 58, Wa teriord 48,
Byrne Uni on 45. Meigs 29. Vint on
County 16. Skyvue 14, Fort Frye
fl,·e, and Eastern 0.
Ten Me igs girls mak e up the
t6-place re lay squad including
Miss~: Howa rd . Ann Trainer 1who

Pavin captures Houston Open
THE WOODLANDS. Texas tJ\P 1
-Veteran hometown favorite John
Mahaffey had a two- strok~ lead a nd
the s uppon of the gallet)'.
But rookie Corry Pa vln had h.is
wife Shannon and lheirdogWPbste r
and 1ha f was Pnoug h

Sta11 ing the day two s trokes off
the pac€', Pa\-in fired a final round6X

Sundav to sweep past the fading
Mahaffey and win his firs t PGA
tournament by one shot in th C'
$500,(0) Hous ton Open golf tourm ment a t The Woodlands Cuunt rv
Club.
Mahaffey blew to a final roundio
a nd fin is hed In a tie for six th place '"
279. 5-undrr -par. Pavin s urpa ssro
hiS final r ha ll enger. Bud dv
Gardner. on the 14lh hole. wh('re
birdied

and

Gardn(~ r

bogeyed
Pa vin's birdie put him 11 -undr'l
par

for the toumamf'nt but hr

bogeyed No . 17 a nd finished
10-under with a 274 tota l for72 hoi&lt;" .
Gardner was sPCond . his b&lt;'SI
car('('r finis h. wilh a 2-undN par h~l
for a 28 total and Prrat ic l3uddy·

FREE
DESK

Wadkins, the 36-hole leader. was
thu-d al 276 after a final round 70.
Pavin sa id his 25-foot birdie putt
on the• 14th holewasa turning point in
thr match and confirmed Shannon's
premonition.
" I had just talked to Shannon and
she said s he had tha t same feeling as
la st year a t the German Open so I
was confident.·· Pa vin said.

Al though it was Pavon 's first PGA
victol)·. he won t.hree tournaments
in Europe last year, incl uding the
G&lt;?rman Open.
"She does n't play gol f at a ll ,"
Pa\·in said. "Bu t she can JX'rf'Pi ve
"hen r am trnsc and she has

e'cellenl ideas how 10 cope with
situa tions ...

r ;arrlnPr. Mahaffev and Pavin
duelf'fl through the ftrst nine holes
and mad(' the turn in a three-wav tie
at Y-undcr .
·

Cruz.
Mariners 9, Angels 6
Barry Bonnell hit a tlm-'&lt;•mn
homer In the lOth inning to provide
the winning runs for Seattle. which
had blown a &amp;-I lead in the ninth
inning.
California scored five runs in the
bottom of the ninth to tie the score
&amp;-6. sending 11 men to the plate
against five Seattle pitchers. Brian
Downing and Gary Pettis drove in
two runs each, and Rod Carew's
hit-and-mn single scored Pettis
from first with the tying run .
Mariners right- hander Mi ke
Moore had taken a three-hitter into
the ninth, bu t the victory finally fell
to RDy Thomas. 2-0, who pitc hed the
fina lll -3 innings.
Twiru; :HI. A's 2-3
F rank Viola pit ched eight innings
to wln the opener for Minnesota with
some offensive supJX&gt;rl from Houston .Jimenez and Gary G aetti, who
each had three hit s.
Viola, l -l scattenedeight hits over
e ight innings a nd got one inning of
relief help from Ron Davis, who
earned his third save. The Twins
banged out 13 hits off Oakland
staner Lary Sorenson and reliever
Keith Atherlon . Davey Lopes home red for Oakland.
Chris Cod iroli blanked I he 'J'u,ins
with three hilsovprfive innings, and
relievers Tom Burgmcier and Bill
Ca udill comple ted a seven- hitter.
Codiroli had to leave the ga m e with a
split fingema il . Dwa)one Murphy
doubled home two of Oakland' s runs
in the third inning.
Dave Kingman fa iled to hit a
home run, ending April with 10, one
shorl of the ma jor-league record for
the month .

'Sentimental Journey'
through area Monday

IN WHAT A STEAL- Wayne Tolleson of the
Texas Rangers reaches second base safely with a
s tolen base as Baltimore Orioles' shortstop Cal

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

Scoreboard

Tammy

CrPmee~ns.

Second places won by t he Ma rau de rcttes wer e Ha ddox In the long
jump and E nglish in the 100. Shenie
Soulhworth loo k third in the s hot
put and Turner fourth in the 100
Rounding out the Meigs girls
scoring was .Julie Miller. fifth in the
100 low hurdles a nd sixth in the :liXJ

Mike K('nnf'dy scored in four
dlffrrent racf'S and thP Meigs ho~·s
trackst f'rs m ilP rPia y !Pam of Mikr
Willford . .Jon PerTin. Chad Willi ·
ams a nd Grrg Sinclair took a first.
The tw o- tPam of Kc&gt;nnC'dv. PPr ·
rin, Sinclair and Willfor d •.vas
sPCond. v:hilP the 4(X) rf'l ay team of
Da nin Crf'mc&gt;ans. Brad Rubin.'&gt;un.

Ma rk Hamonds and F.d Kitc hen
fini sht&gt;d third .
Kennedv was fiflh in tile milr,
and sixth in hoth lhr &amp;10 and 3200.
\\.illia m s had a sixt h in the 400 to
round out the Me igs boys sco ring.
Meigs prrpared for its O\'.m
Im·itational thi s Sa turd ay with a

home m eet wit h Gallipolis and
A thPn s Tuesday. M eigs v.rill lx• a t

Federal Hocking Thursda)'.

(USPS 145-900 )

A Dt'Yislon of Multime dia, Inc.

By 1'htJ J\.!lllot'l.alt!d Proill
,\ MElti(:AN LF.AGUE

EA."iT DIVlSION
w L

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13

Toronto
Cll'\'dand
Milwauk(l('
Bitltl mn n •

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7

Ill
9
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11

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13

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10

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;..;('W \'ur·K

9

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WEST D~ION

Oakl;uul

10

14
11
12
11

Calilorni;J
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Mlnn(&gt;SOt,l
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Published evrry afternoon , Monday
through Friday. 111 Court StreE&gt;t, by the
Ohio Va l!Py P ublish ing Co m pany · Mul ·
tlmedla. Inc .. Pomeroy , Oh lo45769. 992
2156. Second rlass postage pa id at Po
mer ov, Ohio .
Mf?mhc-r : T he Assoclaled PrPss. In ·

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I)(&gt;( roll

land Dally Prf'ss A. ssod a 1on a nd the
Amer ica n New spaper Pu bllsh('rs 1\s
socl ali on, Na llonal Advpfllsln~ Re prt&gt; ·
sr nt a tl ve. Branham N e ws pa ~ r Sa les,
7.13 T hi rd AVPnU(', New York. Ne w

I '.' '

Dally &amp;&gt; ntlnl'l, 111 Cou r t St., P omeroy,

PKil't.:S
Subscr lbt&gt;r s no 1 d('s iring 1o p&lt;~ y IhE• cat··
riN ma y rt&gt;ml! In advan c!? dl n•c ! to
Thr Da ti y &amp;&gt; ntln C' I on J. I) or 12 mon1 h
ba s is. Cre dit wll! he gi ve n r atTit:.'r C'ac h
monlh .

1Ill

111 BultLJnorf'

~21

.... .. ........ 2~ CC'niS

Dally

, f''\;maeun ~
:-.:r... Y()t'll. of ;uktr:\' 111 ;H Cllk."ilgl l
i llamil~!l•r 1 11.1 111
Sl'a!l lt• •Mir;•t.. ·ll&lt;J 1111 a ! COJIIIor nla
1 \A"ill ·~ II lfi I
1lnl\ J:ilmros &lt;;('h&lt;&gt;dulf'd
1\~&lt;"!iduy'" Garn~

fh-.1011 &lt;II l)l·l tnl! In I
TrllaS ci! Tllronlo. 1111
("1"'-·t'l ...mtl ,1! 13&lt;lllimorf'. 111 1
:"1.,. Y u rll .!l Chinl/..'0. 111 1
K.1nsa s Cit) 111 M ilwauk('('. lnf
Oak land 111 California, 1n1

s ~ ·nlcf'

IS

ava il a ble .
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Otllo
13 Weeks
Sl4%
16 Wf'f'ks
529.12
52 Weeks
. $~ . 24
Outsld" Otllo
1:\ WPPkS .
" $15 .60
26 WP(• ks .
$11.20
~2

s~~um

Wf'('ks .

\ 1mnN:O t;l a t ~a tl\e, r n•
NATIONA.l. LFAGUE
EA.~T

utV..,ION

12

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1-'r"" Yrn·ll
Phil..r• ·IJ!hli!
Motlt rf'ul
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11
11

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10

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Qrt .IM/ ~
$~
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May 5 &amp; 6 -

sso

Game Days

Per Team Plus 2 Balls
A.S.A Approved

A.S.A Rules Except that an ass1gned hitter may be used and
a batter receives two fouls on third strike.

SPONSOR TROPHY 1, 2, 3.4

11

n

and Shirts for 1st and 2nd Places

.'i.o!.lurday'~ Gllrn,,..
S!

SOFTBALL TOURNAMENT

No open or A Teams Allowed

l .our ~

li . M(mtn·nl I
;\TJ.an ta 'o ll nu~ t on J
.'\1'\0.· ~· ork ~ Phll;ull•lphia 1
Cinrlnn,tlt ~ . San F r ancbcf) 1;. J:\ 111

CALL DENNIS McKINNEY-742-2279

MONDAY

:\lkmtn•al h. l..; t Loois ~
r·rnn nrwrr ~ i. ~ n Franc\SI."&lt;I I .!
".;1v. ~ ·.,r k I; l"'hll.uY•IphiEI :!
f1lll ', l.[!l i 1. l ' rll~burgh 1
1,a, ,\ni-:1 u~ h, San Dlfl.:o n
ll·u"'"l k, Atllm !a ~
~1111day'~

:vlonrrraJ &lt;l'almrT
&lt;-;~

1an~ 1Fun.dl
o"i\Hhr I 11. lflf

LEADING CREEK - T he
board of directors of the Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
meet In special session Monday
at 6 p.m.

fiiU"lWP!
~~11

a t l'hilado'lphia

a.·h ..&lt;I

1-'l n sbur~fh

nJESDAY
POMEROY- Womens' Association of Jaymar Golf Course
will have it s organizational
meeting Tuesda y a t JO a.m. a t
the golf course.

for a $10,000 loan
for just $t80.18a month

Compare at 119991

As a homeowner, you have a lot more borrowing power
than you may think. You just need a lender you can lean
on-affordably.

When you buy
this new liv ~
ing room suite
at the regular
price of

CASH IN ON THE
WORD PROCESSING
REVOLliTION.

If 's Simple just get the necessary training
lr's a fau rhar secre taries with word process ing sk iII s have a far be tter ch a nee of being
hired (a nd promoted) .
We train peop le in wo rd p roessi ng skills
t ha t e mplo yers want .
Ga llipo li s Business Coll ege ca n rrain you
tn 5 s hort weeks, one day per week .

854 Second 446-9523
9;30-5:00
Gallipolis, Oh.
Closed Thurs.

Calendar

ChwagfJ i . l'H I ~ll\Jt~ h 1
San lli &lt; ~ll :, l..m A llgt'if"i I
Sunday· .~ Gam'"'

7 DRAWERS
18"x48"x31"

FuRNITuwRiiE---sliiiiiur1

DOWN BY TilE 0-W--0 - These belles and beaus join banjo
playing Matthew GatreU tor a song anddancelo " Down bytbeO-Hi-0,''
during the Middleport Elementary program Monday night. Pictured
Jrom left, front kneeUng are Tome Cremeans, Adam Wyatt, 'foby

n lll'-~

Lean on

Get This New
CoHee Table

Through the efforts of Syracuse
head teacher. Ruth Stearns, the
Ensemble Company of Cincinnati
Opera will pl'f'sent a 45 minute
program at the Syracuse Elemen
tary School on Wednesda y. May9. a I
2 p.m .
Racine and Carleton School
students will join the Syracu.;e
students for the program.
Due to scheduling the program
wt11 not be available to other
elementary s tudents ln the district.
Students will be asked to pay 75
cents
Southern Elementary Principal ,
RDbert Beegle reponed that perhaps next year a program can be
planned to include all students of the
distiict.

Nu s ubscrip Huns by m al l IJ' 'I'nr itiPd in

town -. whf' rP hom!' ra r rirr

CALL TODAY;

446-4367 or 992-7644
REG. #75-02-04728

CALL TODAY ABOUT THESE OR OTHER
HOME EQUITY LOAN PLANS TO $50 000 OR MORE ·
Amount

Monthly

Finane.&lt;~

Montha

Payment

to Pay

$190.45
$7,500
:~57.68
135.18
$253.98
$210.17
$10,000
$180.18
$380.90
$315.26
$15,000
$270.27
Annual Percentqe Rato 18!1.

A "Sentimental Journey
Through Meigs County of
Yesteryear" wUI be presented by
thE' Middleport first and second
grades at the Mlddleport
Elementary School Monday at 7:30
p.m .
Darin Logan will be the narra tor
for the program which will open
with a railroad scenefor "Sentimental Journey.·· In the musical routine
will be Dorothy Older, RDbert
Conley, Micah Maiden. Cory Seymour, Tonya Imboden, J erry
Large, Jessy Young, and Terry
King .
Matthew Gatrell will be the banjo
player for "Down by the 0-Hl-0"
with Tom Crem eans, Emily
He ighton. Ma tt Stewart, Elisha
Meadows. Kev in Whobrey, Jennifer
Fink, Toby Swartz, Megan Evans,
Jon Mattea. Usa Honaker, Adam
Wyatt and J essica Capehan as the
belles and bea us_
In "Thank God I'm a Country
Boy " the roles will be taken by
Charlie Miller, Michael Clark. Todd
McDade, Sam Cowan, Richie Gil·
key. and Jimmy Seaman. Presenting "Friendship" will be Ellen
Lewis, Keawana Qualls, Ryan
Dodson, Danny McCloud, Jimmy
Wolfe. Andy Plantz. Keith Darst,
Chuck Legar. Beth Buskirk, Leslie

Qualls, Amy Hart, Jamie Pennington, Andrea Kropka. and Janette
Foster .
Costumed as hobos for a song and
dance routine to "Side by Side" will
be Tyler Wolfe. Barbie Roslinski.
Chad Duncan, Ann Riffle, Shannon
Pettie, Angie Seidenabel, Shawn
Crem eans, Br idget Jacks, Kevin
Logan, and Becky Meier. Cora See
will be in the role of the teacher for
"School Days" with Ryan Rowe.
Angie White. Robby Baker, Julee
Wolfe, Keith Johnson, Danlelle
Scott. Crocke tt Roush, and Trish
RDush as the "slates and apples.
Performing to the song, "Tie a
Yellow Ribbon ," will be David
Mitche ll. Bobby E llis, Jeff Dowell ,
Shannon Petrie. David Eakins. Walt
Williams. Erin Harper. a nd Misty
Lane.
'You're a Grand Old Flag" will be
the finale number with the Tericia
Cogar, Heather Davis, Kathy Mi ·
chael, Trish McHaffie. Shannon
Wise, Bernice Blake. Stacy F riend,
Kim Ha ggy , and Am y Whit e in the
role of the stars a nd stripes.
First and second grade teachers.
Debbie Da vis. Emma Ashley.
Barbara Logan. a nd Twila Childs.
have been assisted with the presentation by Susan Nickel. music
teacher and a ccompanis t.

Cincinnati
Opera stops
in Syraruse

. ..... SUO
. ... $4.80
. $~i . 2 0

SINGLE COPV

Lam ~

olk ah •n
:.!r, mr

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY :

Pictured are, Jrom left, Tyler Wolfe, Chad Duncan, Ann Rllfle,Snanoon
Pettit, Angie Seidenabel, Shawn Cremeans, Brldgette Jacks, Kevlng
and Becky Meier.

Ohio &lt;15769

Onl" WePk . .
Onl" M o nth .
Orw Year

•T.m;uw 121 :.~r Toronto 1Clanc:.•

('Jp\'d;uHJ

~PRIL 27 thrtJ MAY~

SIDE BY SIDE - Dressed as hobos, thes youngsters will sing and
dance to the song, "Side By Side,' Monday night as Middleport
Elementary School presents first and second graders in a program.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
8}' Carrier or Motor Route

Oakland j, \ 11110l'SGI:J n
I&lt;J ltfomla 10, Sr&gt;a!IIP 1
Balllmorr 0. Tf':rws l
l\1ilwaukl'f' fl. Nt•w York 0
Toronto 6, K&lt;1nsa.~ C'lty 0
:-it.tndsy'.~ Game-;
lKTl"Ot ! ti, ll('\'f' land l
fl.a l1irr¥Jn :1, TPxas ~
r'ttit'agn ti. ~ ! oro 4
Minnf'~l;1 C
o·li. Oak land '2.:1
~11 T1l 1' !1, l '&lt;~ IBornla b, W lnnln~
f',:IJU York 1&gt;. MllwauJjH' ~. 1.11 n nin~
To1&lt;urt o .11 Kan:o;a:o; Cit)". ppd., rain

Moltdu,y's

BARGAIN MA TINCES SAHI SUN
IUL SEArs $ 200
ADMISSION EVERY TUESOA'r" S2 00

POSTMA STER: Send add ress to Tht'

roit 1&gt;. C1f'\l('land 2

Tl'.~ ~~ ~

531 JACKSON PIKE · RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446- 4524

York 10017.

Elooton !&gt;!, &lt;.:hlca,o:o 7

low hurdles; Carol Bailey fifth in
the 300 low hurdles; Turne r fifth \n

the 200: Swartz sixth in the long
jump; Anderson sixt h in the 800.
and Engli s h s Lxth in thr 200.

The Daily Sentinel

Majors

also won OOth the mile and two-milr
ru ns), Erin A nderso n, Rhonda

Haddox. Rhonda Neece. Jenny
Swartz, Dreama English , Linda
Stewart , Charm.-le T ur ner a nd

Rlpken,Jr. appUesthelatetag.Secondbaseumpireis
Durwood Menill. Baltimore went on to win the game ,
3-2. ( AP l..aserphoto ).

!\o. 14 hole.

$29995

S

errors by second baseman Julio

But Ga rdner and Mahaffey bogevr'(] :"&gt;Jo. 10 while Pavin parred to
take lhe lead for the fi rst time .
Ga rdner c harged with bi rdies on 11
an d 12 but lost out on the par 4,
~ :&gt;.1-yarcl ,

~y. Arril30, 1984

Page

Marauderettes win invitational meet

Pavin

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

60
84
120
60
84
120
60
84
120

'

Total of

Payment.
$11 ,427 .00
$13,240.92
fl61215.60
$15,235.80
$17,654 .28
$21,621.60
$22 ,854.00
$26 ,481.84
$32,432.40

• FIXED RATE • NO POINTS • NO CALL • PHONE TODAY!

1312 Eastern Ave .......... 446-4113
(Next door to Pizza Hut)

POMEROY - The .Jayma r
Mens' Golf Leagues will play the
first week in May. Tuesday
Evening League on Tuesday and
Wednesday Eve ning League on
Wednesday . Those wishing to
play in either leagueareaksed to
call the club and sign up
immediately.

Swartz and Jon Mattea. Standing are Emily Heighton, Elisha
Meadows, Jessica! Capehart, Matt St..wart, Kevin Whobrey, Megan
Evans, Jennifer Flnk and Lisa Honaker.

Harrisonville happenings

LEBANON -Lebanon Town
ship Trus tees will meet Tuesda y
at 7 p.m . a l the towns hip ga rage.
FLATWOODS - Su nrise C&amp;;
pel Singers will be at the
Flatwoods UniiL&gt;d Methodist
Churr h revival serv ices Tues·
day a t 7:30p.m. The church is
loca ted on county road 26, one
mile norlh of Five Points

Happenings
Rummage ~le
PQ)I.!EROY - A rummage
sale will be held a t Trinity
Chureh basement by the Happy
Harvesters Class on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday. 9
a .m. to 3 p.m .

Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
attended a square dance festival in
Georgia over the weekend.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Clint on Gilkey have
rcturnt&gt;d home aft er spending the
"-&lt;1nter in Florida.
Mrs. Margaret Douglas. Mrs .
Lola Cla rk. and Ray Alkire.
Columbus. were Sunday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire .
Mrs. Bessie G ra ham spent a
month visiting her 1hree children
and their families in South Carolina.
Mrs. Louat&gt;2lle Eshelman visited
Saturday with the Rev . and Mrs.
Wilb&lt;'r Householder in Glouster.
Easter dinner guest of Mr . and
Mr. Earl McGrath were Millie and
Leroy McGrat h anu children.

Logan ; Charles and .Jim McGrath,
The Plains; Mrs. Larry McGra th
and childre n . Guysville; Henry
Ha 11, Darwin; Tina Roush . Pomeroy; Rhonda Jones, Mike Pierson
and daughter, Rutland .
Mrs. Ida White, Ru tland, is
sp&lt;'nding several days with her
daughter. Mrs. Juanita Bowles.
Mr . and Mrs. James Borgan,
La ncaster, Alen Borgan, Michae l
Borgan , and son, Colum bus; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Birchfield and
children, Mrs. Rosella Birchileld,
and da ughter, Debbie, were Sunday
dinnL·r guests of Mrs. Nel lie Borgan.
Mr . and M rs. Steven Stanley.
Col umbus, we re weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley.

Sunrise service
held in Meigs
Sunrise services at the Apple
G rove United Methodist Church
featured a play. "Resurection
Morning" by Donna Hill, Lori Hill,
Bess Parsons . and Donna Hayman .
Mrs. Russell Roush had c harge or
the 6a.m . service with Jan Norris as
the pianist . The congregation sang
"The Old Rugged Cross." Dolly
Wolle had the pra yer. and several
verses of scripture were given by
Mrs . Rou sh. Mrs. Hill had a poem ,
"Have You Time," Mrs. Bess
Parsons, "The Plea Upon the
Cross," and Donna Hayman , "I
Know He Cares." There was a duet.
"For the Cr oss" by the Rev . and
Mrs. Ca rl Hicks. Wa id Hayman
gave a musical reading. and the
serv ice was followed with a prayer
bv Hicks.
· A breakfast was served in the
church anne x following the service.

Torey Gene Lej!;et

Leget birth
Mr. and Mrs. Nunnan l.Rgel arC'

annou ncing lhr binh of a son. Tom·
Gene, April .1. The infan t weighed
nine pounds a nd was 21 inches long.
Grandparent are Mr. a nd Mrs.
Gail I..eget, Marion. a nd Mrs. Ra,
Proffitt. Rac in e
Great grandparent s are Mr and Mrs. E. L .
Proffitt. Pm1land. Mr. a nd Mrs.
Leget have anot her son. Michael
Lee, l.l

Laurel Cliff
health club meets
Readings on Easter"-&lt;·ere giwn by
m embers a t a r et'Pnt mPE•t ing of the

La urel Cliff Better Health Club held
a t the home of Bertha Parker.
Mrs. Parker read "SI('('ping at the
Foot of the Bed ' .. fva Powell gave
"Happy Polish Easter" . Dcnna
Gilmore, "The Eas te r Bunny Secret" , and Iva Powell. "Ma undy
Thursda y." The prayer wa s given
by Mrs. Gilmore . Thedea th of:vl ary
Cole was reponed. Mrs. Parker had
the contest won by Ka tie Parker.
Refreshment s were served bv· the
hostess to those named and Eva
Robson and Genevieve W H rd

•

- I n the servzce-Meeks
Pte. Estell Meeks Jr .. son of

Estell and Mandy S. Meeks of
Tomahawk, Ky. , has graduated
from the U.S. Air F orce communications operations specia list 's
course at Goodfe llow Air Force
Base, Texas.
Graduates of the course learned
how to operate communication
systems and analyze the effectiveness of communicatlon security
measures. In addition, they earned
credits toward an assocalte degree
in applied science through the
Community CollegP of the Alr
Force.
Meeks will now serve in Wuerzburg, West Germany, with the
103rd Military Intellig e nce
Battalion.
His wife, Melloney. Is the daughter of Bernard White of Mason ,
W.Va.

The priva te Is a 1981 graduate of
Sheldon Cla rk High Sc hool. Inez,
Ky.

Vanaman
Master Sgi. James E. Vanaman,
son of Natha n E. Vanaman of Rura l
Route 1, Rutland . has participated
In Globa l Shield 84, a n exer cise
involving U.S. Air Force. Air Force
Reserve, Air National Guard, Navy
and Marine Corps units. and
elements of the Canadian forces.
The exercise, coordtnated by the
Air Force Strategic Air Command
tSACI. was designed to enhance
r eadiness and the ability of SAC to
carry out orders should deterrence
fa ll .
Vanaman Is a medical supply
supervisor with the 321st Stratetlc
Missile Wing a t Grand Forks Air
Force Base, N.D.
Hls wife, Darlene, Is the daught er
of William J. Snnlth of Rutland.
He is a 1967 graduate of Rutland
High School.

HONORAY AWARDS- At the annual Racine CbapterFFAbanquet
Gary Norm, of Racine Home National Bank. and Lawrence 811!111,
rep._.tbtg MGM Fann Enterpl.rsf's were tbe reoolplents of tbe
0000rary Chapter Fanner Degree awanl. Pldured, from left, are Ron
Parks, Southeast Sectional vice president who was lite speaker at the
banquet, Norris, Bush, and Randy Annes, president of llaclne Chapter
who presented the awards.

AWARDS PRE&gt;ENTED - Andy Rose, left was presented the Star
Greenband award aad Randy Annes the Star Chapter Fanner awanl
at lite annual Racine FFA banquet held recently.

�- . .. -

~day,

Ohio

Easter program

TOPS groups meet
.

New otflcers were Installed at the
Wednesday meeting of the TOPS
OH 14fi6, held at the Salem Center
fire house.
Installed by Shorty Wlight, retlr·
lng leader, were Kathy Reynolds,
leader; Patsy Laudermllt. coleader; Connie Bales, secretary;
Gloria Oller, treasurer; Judy Eblin,
weight recorder; Mrs. Wright,
assistant weight recorder.
A team game entitled "Mission
Possible" was started, with each
team to cllrnb 168 steps by

cantata , "Portraits of A
Saviour, " was presented Sunday ·
evening at the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church.
'f)!{'

.

malntalnng a calorie chart, losing
weight, exercising, and doing special projects. The wlnhlng team will
he treated by the losing team to a
diet dinner. Mrs. Wright lost the
most weight and Kathy Reynolds
was the rwmer-up with Mrs.
Reynolds presenting Mrs. Wright
with a homemade pot holder.
Members were reminded to take in
an Item for TOPS bingo next
meeting. lnformatlon on the club
may he obtained by calllng742·:ll62.

r;==::========:;
HUBBARD'S

Special numbers were presented
by the Rev. Robert Miller, Ida ,
Martin, Shirlf'Y Friend, Brenda ·
Haggy, Sharon Wright , and the ·
children of the church. The choir ·
was accompanied by Darla Hawley
at the plano and Rick Friend and
Steve Eblin on guitar. Narrators for
the cantata were Mike Wright and
Frank Martin.

GREENHOUSE

Syracuse. Oh .
Ph. 992-5i76
NOW OPEN
FOR SPRING SEASON
Complete line of vegetable &amp;
flowering plants, shrubbery, fruit
trees, Azaleas , Rhododendron,
House Plants - 4" to 10".
Foliage &amp; Bloomina Baskets
Open Daily 9 to 5
Sun. 1 to 5

SOUTIIERN RO\'ALTY -Lauren WoUe was voted and crowned
Queen of the Soulh&lt;'rn JUgh School l'rom Friday night. She is the
dooghter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wolfe. Racine. Her escort was Tony
Ritfle. An honor student, Ms. WoUe was crowned by Ml,.;y WoUe, 1983
prom queen.

•

ACS goal 1s sav1ng lives, prevention
" Ha lf of those who die from
cancer could a nd should lJe saved."
said S. MichaeL Pu blic Inform at ion
Chairman of th(_• A m erican Cancer
Socie ty' s MPigs C'uu nt y U nit in
announcing pla ns for the 19&amp;1

educa tional

tundra islng

Ca nce r

C rusa d~ .

" Our goa l is to save as m a ny lives
as poss ible by telling people what
they can do abou1 cancer prf'vf'n·
tl on and f?a rl :v· df'tection ," ."i hf' sa id .
More tha n 50 volunl et"rs are
prepa ri ng to hring llfP-saving infor -

mation to Meigs county residents
during t he Am erica n Cancer Society 's annua l campaign which takes

place d uring May, Cancer Control
:\lonth .
"This year, trainf'd volunteer will
be distributing Information on the
two most common and deadly
forms of cancer," says Michael.
A folder offering a "Quick Test on
Ca necr Risks for Lung, Colon and
Reetum " will be given to all
res ident s dur ing a door-to-door
campail'!ll.

categories are an exception and
must be entered by July 1.
All horses to be shown at thE' Fair,
except registered quarter horses,
should also he entered by July 1.
The quarter horses, to be shown
July 27·29, have no entry dosing.
"This years Fair promises to be
the biggest and best one yet," said
Foust .
The 1~ Ohio State Fair is
sc hroulro for 17 days, August 3-19.
For more Information abeut Premium Boks and entry fees and
dates, call (6141 294-5441.

"Everyone has done built-in risks
personal and family medical
history, age. lifestyle, and health
ca re behavior . By taking this test,
people can lind out how these risks
apply to the m ," addro Michael.
The test also contains sections
that explain the answers and
describes measures to take to help
protect against these cancers.
"I hope that everyone in Meigs
County will have a chance to take
this Important t!'st and give
g!'nerous support to the 1984 Cancer
Crusade," she addro.

I ;r;rdl' SIX AnglP DonahUf', Kl:'lly
Ha tnil l on. M ;trk 1-iu v.. &lt;.trl.l. Dann.\' Ke nm&gt;(\ ~· .
l~ · k\
)\.; rppo •r . Boo r1 if' l\&lt;l ppPr, Wf'ndy
Phrlllp:.

I'll)] W!'l'l ' '
C r ~ rd l'

' •nf'- n.ngl'l' ..\rix. BilliP .r. r Hult'hPr.
JlurctH·r
Ad.r m &lt;..;)h '(' l o.,, \ 1isw

Bob h \ ' .Ju
\ ' :~nn·

(;rad!' IWP ~ l q.:. 1n I ·.~rm.r n
( ' h ,rd
111' -skln s. I ·rvo.,t,rl I ~. n ,d l u•
:..hr ., F rmn,
M f'ron I ol'll( ''&gt;t ' l , J lon ,dd H.1!l ..'-,i di ·, H.rll,
Brook(' Jt rm.rn !. Sh. ru.r1 lnj..:!t•&lt;. . .J. Itll ll'
K{'nm.,.l \, J{hnm l.r 11. 11 m••nd r,,ll \' ,mt ·l· . T1nr
\ ';un'f'
( ; r ttdt ·

thro,
Sh.rnl' lh·., ·ll. link\
Snowd(·n . Mih1· \ 'o~ nn ·
Gr ad(' !our - H('athf'r { .L \)Paut, Paul Sharp.
Tony SUI. , Mark Sti'! nlf&gt;)•. Rl rhh ~ V anC1.:' ,
Ronald V anc&lt;'.
G ra~· flvp Jt• nm; Barn •11 . Gin a A. rn~·tl ,
rtu r·· Kl'tLllt'(h . ·\molmla \1r ldt•n _ \'lrdlt·llr·
~-! . 1!1h1 'W ~ ,\ , rr"n S h 1 ~ ·l•, T! OW\ Srn1 1h

!'hr fifth

~ ix

Wf'&lt;•ks

g-r~U in g

pPrlocl hclnor

llll l nf Ill(' Mlddlrpor! E IPIT1f'T1 1ary School has
t~n an n.,unL"«&lt; Ma ki nj::: 11 grade of H or

. tlxn·r in al l thrlr subjC'Ct&lt;; to br named to !hf'
roll wf'n •:
Firsl gr:1Cir - RobbY B&lt;~kf'r , Sam CowPn,
Kt•nnv C UJTI'nl'l'. Klm .H&lt;igJ{',' , Li;rs Honaker,
.l1r1r :vi. rtlo"&lt;'l . l"il'('k\' M Pif'r. Jam ie Pennlng1on,
,\ml\' l'b ntL Trl~ h Roush. Tya n Rowe, Cor\'
Sl"vmnn ', Sha nnon WISf'. ,Ji mmy Wolfl'. Ty ler
Wolle. Je;s Lca Capt:.'harl, Ke llh Darst, Dadcl
Eakins. . Chark:os Le~ar , K evi n ~an , Shan·
non Pett~ t . Adam Wyatt, Walt WUUam.
~ grade - Rober1 Co ni~. HeatN&gt;r
I l;n.:l". Mt·g;-m E vans. Matt hew Gatrf'll. Eri n
HMtX'r . A1idc:f' t .hwk.o.; . Todd Me Dad&lt;'. Ka th y

gradt• -

Abb~'

Rlake. Tessie

Gru('Sf'r , 1.('(' Luck('ydoo, Tommy Wilson · t'
F'our1h gr&lt;:~df' - Trlcla Baer, Prank B lakf'.
Ry.1n Cowan . Hea ther Davenpor1, Tam
ficrlac h. Darin ~a n . Nikki Meier . Am y
Searls , Mary Beth Sleln, Robby Wya n, DOO le
Clel and, Sharla Cooper, Mary Cremeatu,
Starey Duncan, An~e Goody , Kim Hanning,
Tabby Phillips. Usa Poulln, Mlke 1110mas,
Chl"lssy WeavPr.

,__-

SPRING REDUCTION SALE AT
BEN FRANKLIN OF NEW HAVEN

\:
[)

SPECIAL CLOTHES
.RACKS
All Items Marked

25%

sro &amp; $300

For

Tbe

Entire

25%

50%

OFF

FOR DAD!
Knives, Underwear, Socks, T·
Sblrts and otber Clotblng.

OFF

~
s

An Baby Supplies lucludlng
Play
Peas,
Strollers,
Changlug Tables, Bottles &amp;
Clothing.

25%

OFF

ALL FABRICS
AND PATTERNS

Family

~

FOR BABY

ALL NEW
SPRING
CLOTHING

CLEARANCE

Including ueonvel'8e"

"e nJOY" the delinously new creati ve menu s thal
w1ll help make th1 s amaztng QUICK STARTn.•
plan wo rk wonders for you .
Come on, star1 right now and tip the Kales in

c:!

FREE SHOPPING BAGS TO EACH CUSTOMER
AS LONG AS THEY LAST

SHOES

Sl'" thr Wc 1~h! W:tt c her \ Pro g ram~ ~ eve n

{'

Army.

SALE NOW IN EFFECT

hcnn' Ynu li lo~c mo re Wt'l!; ht 1n the fi r~t two
""cc~~ than l'\Cr hdnrc' A nd y ou 'l l do n the
~c mthlc Wc 1g h1 W&lt;ttdJCf\ ""'iiY Without n ~ kmg ynur
heal th a nd •.qthuut g ct lln ~ h0 rt:d
Th 1.., rrmllrkahlc ne'A d rct v. Prk~ ...o wc ll thitl y nu
c,m Ill"(' WCig ht 20% !J'&gt;ICf In the rlr\1 2 week~ .
~~ ~ ~nu won! get hung~ bl'cau ~c you' l l cat :\ we ll
halanlt.:.d mc al ~pl u 1 1111Jt A-, Yc' . you actu ally wtll

l

Howa rd R. Hartman. 52, Pomeroy, diro Sunday at Ohio State
University Hospital in Columbus
followin g an extended illness.
He was bern at Lebanon, Pa., a
son of the late Percy and Florence
Collins Hartman. He wasemployro
with the Lebanon Ball Co. for 34
years and was a armed forces
veteran having served in the u .S.

Rr ;:rdsha w. P J. Chadwf&gt;ll. Linda CMpman .
Wc-ndy Clark. Bobby Johnson , Sherry J ohn
son, Jr nnlfrr Pf'C k . Gnmt Reynolds, K yl a
Se ll Pr s. H('a the r Franck owiak , T n t t'V ! _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.!_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

THE WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM
THAT'S SWEEPING THE COUNTRY
tee' :m?I:Jm:il IT~~==~:'f~~
WORKS!

I,
"
•

One hundred and seven residents
and 11 firemen attended the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire D€,Jart·
ment' s open housE' Sunday
afternoon.
On display was the departm!'nt' s
llf'W $36,!00 mlnl·pumper fire truck,
aequlred mainly through HUD
Block Grant fUnds allocated by the
Board of M!'lgs County Commlssloners.The HUD grant totaled $28,00l,
the balance was paid by the fire
department .
Other fire fighting equipment was
also on display.
The departm ent presentro a
plaque to the Meigs County Commissioners, David Koblentz, RIchard Jones and Manning RDush for
HUD funds allocated by the
commlssoner to purchase the new
mini-pumper fire truck.
According to Karen Guinther, a
member of the fire and em ergency
department. the Syracuse Fire Department was organized in 1946, but
later abellshed due to lack of funds .
In 1951 the department was
reorganized. Council at that time
named three mem to serve on a
conunittee for the department.
They were Herman London and
Harold Duckworth, now deceasro
and Millard VanMeter.
On December 5, 1958 the first
pump and hose was purchased for
$423. The first fire truck was
purchasro from Pomeroy in 1953 for
$400.
The late Pete Sisson was the flrst

Howard R. Hartman

Mlc ha£'1 , Elisha Meadows, Daniell(' Scott,
Malt S!N-'art, Toby Swartz, Jill Ble~ke , Keith
Johnson, Beth Buskirk, Tericla ~ar, Tnny
Da vis, Am ity Dixon. Chad Dunc an. Jenny
Fink, Em ily Hel ghw n. TC'rry King, Mica h
Malde-n. IA-sllf' Qualls, Ann Riffle, Cora Se&lt;',
Anl'{le Seldt&gt;nablf', A.ng1e While, Kf'vln
'1\rnobrry .

Third

....

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 7

fire chief. The department sold Its
old fire truck to Bashan on May 5,
1955 and aequlred Its first emer·
gency vetUcle on June 5, 1958.
A sulrnerglble pump was pur·
chased August 7, 1958for$701.25.
An International fire truck was
purchased in 1961, an emergency
vehicle In 1!Ki6and anew fire truck in

1975.
The departrnf'nt today stands out
as one of the most well equipped fire
departments In the State ofOhlo.
There are 22 members who serve
on the fire department and emer·
gency squad. The dePartment has
three fire vehicles, including the
mini-pumper, and one new emergency V!'hiCie.
At Sunday's open houSE' rf'freshements were served and door prlzes
awarded .
Winner of the $50 U. S. Sa vlngs
Bond, courtesy of the Home
National Bank of Racine and
Syracuse, was Brtan Zirkle, Pomeroy. Other winners were Judy l..ee,
Syracuse, Don Mullen, Middleport,
Scott Taylor, Symcuse, NadaKlttle,
Syracuse, VIckie Tolley, Charles·
ton, Emmogene Congo, Syracuse,
Ray Pickens, Chester, Danny
Zirkle, Pomeroy, Roger Tolley,
Charleston, Tom l..avender, Syracuse, Fannie Aleshire, Syracuse,
Deborah Pickens, Minersville , Sally
Landers, Minersville, Marie Rizer,
Minersville, Manning Rous h,
Forest Run, Richard Jones, Pomeroy and Bell Ohilnger, Mason.

IN APPRECIATION- An award of appreciation was presented rolhe
Meigs COUDty Commissioners Swtday al the open house of the Syrocuse
F1re Department. 'The collllllhsloners were ln!!trumentalln securing a

S28,000 HUD grant toward the purchase of lhe new mini-pwnper.
Pictured arP 1-r, ~tayor Eber Pickens, Richard Jones, Manning Roush,
and David Kohlentz, commissioners, and Syracuse Fire Chief, Gene
fmhod en.

Area deaths

Meigs County Honor Rolls
T tll ' tlfltl o;j_~ Wt&gt;t •k;, ).!! .ril ing pi'riOtl hunolr
r·ull rrf lht• 11.11 n"l'll l ilh· 1-:l!'rrrPnl:rr-.- Sdr •~ 'l
h;JS !JiY'n .rnnf:· ll llff"' l M ;rk ing ;r J_,rr·;r d r&gt; ,,f H ,,r
a ho\'(· in a ll tht'ir .., ubJ('l'b 111 !){' ncrmo--c:l tu till'

1984

_

Equipment displayed at Syracuse open house

On the Saturday before Easter, an
egg hunt was held at the church for
the children.

Ohio State Fair deadline
for arts, livestock nearing .
COLUMBUS - Entry d!'adllnes
for the 1~ Ohio State Fair have
been a nnounced, according to Jack
C. Foust, Fair General Manager.
The deadline for most entries Is
June W. This Includes Fine Arts,
Family Arts a nd Crafts, Agriculture, Horticulture and Floriculture,
Senior Division Livestock a nd
Junior Division ~ both livestock
and non-livestock. Rabbit and Cavy

~day, April30,

April 30, 1984

-

For Ladles &amp; GlrlB ''LEE" for
Men &amp; Bo)'ll "MAVERICK"

25%

FOR THE GRADUATE!

Tape Pluyen , Telephones, Ld&amp;gage,
wanet8, Timex Watcbes and All
Clocks.

25%

MORE THAN 100 people attended the open house held of the Synwuse Fire De\)arlrnelt held SUnday afternoon.

Three hurt in wreck
Three men were lnj ured in a
one-car accident on Ohio 124 early
Saturday, according to the GalliaMelgs post of the state highway
patrol.
Treated and released from Veterans Memorial Hospital for multiple
bruises were Roger 1... Bissell II, 18,
Coolville; Jeffrey J. Cowdery , 19,
Reedsville; and Donald G . Jones. W,
Reedsville.

Bissell was westbeund, while
Cowdery and Jones were pas·
sengers in his vehicle, at 4; 2'i a.m.
when Bissell reportedly lost control
on acurveand went off the leftsldeof

the road.
The car came back onto the road
and again went left, striking a pole
and severely damaging the ear.
The three were taken to V!'terans
by the Tuppers Plains Emergency
Squad.
The patrol reportro moderate
damagE' to a car driven by Ricky J .
Smith, 24, Rutland, at 7; 50 p.m .
Saturday when it struck and killed a
deer on County Road 30, four-tenths
of a rnlle east of Ohio 7.
The patrol said Smith was
eastbound at thetimeoftheaccident
and was unable to stop to avoid
collision with the deer.

Squads have busy weekend

ALL JEANS

OFF

ALL SEWING NOTIONS ••••••••••••••

OFF

He attended the Evangelical
Church In Lebanon.
Surv1vlng are his wife, Sharon
Bearhs Hartman; two sons, Brian
David and Craig Marshall, beth at

home; four brothers, Percy Hart·
man, Jr., Ralph and Kennf'th, all of
Lebanon; Henry Hartman, Chester; three sisters, Emma Engle,
Manheim, Pa.; Nancy Salisbury,
Myerstown, Pa., a nd J ean
Sc hwartz, Sun City Center, Florida.
Besides his parents, he was precedro In death by a brother a nd a
sister.
S..rvlces will. be held at 2 p .m .
Tuesday at the White FuneralHome
in Coolville with Mr. Gilbert Spencer
officiating. Burial wlll be in the Mt.
Hermon Church Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime today and until time of
services on Tuesday .

OFF

y~
\\ I

Twelve calls were answered by
local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reports.
Sunday calls includedSyracuS!'at
1:44 p.m . to Rustle Hills to
extinguish a brush fire; Rutland to
Happy Hollow a t 9:22 for James
Copeland, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and Pomeroy at 12: 19p.m.
to 336 E. Main for Rebecca Diles. to
Veterans Memorial.
At 6:35 p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
wenT to State Route 248 for Maggie
Nottingham. to Veterans Memor·
tal; 10:59p.m.,MiddleporttoSecond
Ave. for Betty Crites, notransporta -

tlon; Racine, 9:25a.m. toBashanfor
Betty Friend, to Veterans Memorial; RacineatlO: Xi a .m . toRoute338
for Cora Webb, to Veterans Memor·
ial; Racine at 3: W p.m. for Brandf'll
Floyd, from Racine to Veterans
M!'morial ; Syracuse at 12:43 p.m .,
to Bridgeman St. forDa\1d Carmen ,
to Veterans Memorial ; Rutland at
10:53 a .m . to Main St. for Clarence
McDaniel, to Veterans Memorial
and he was later moved to Grant
Hospital in Columbus by LUe
Flight; TuppersPlalnsat12; 50 p.m.
to Owl Hollow Road for Nancy
Deem to St. Joseph Hospital ln
Park~rsburg, W. Va.

Wisconsin winds
blow into Ohio
Ohioans who didn't like today's windy and damp weather
could blame It on Wisconsin. The
northwest half of Ohio was under
a high wind warning fortheday.
Strong wind buffeted west and
central Ohio early this morning,
set tlng a trend that would reach
the entire state during the day.
The wind stalied out of the south
but was shifting to the southwsest as it Increased to 30-40 miles
per hour with some guests a t
higher speeds during the day.
The National Weather Service
says deep low pressure over
Wlsconsin early this morning
caused the strong wind. Temperatures were on the mild side
Sunday night and ear ly today,
generally ranging from the mid
60s to low 70s .
A cold front racing across the
state brought a forecast of a
mid -morning drop in temperatures into the upper 40s and 50s.
Shower s and thunder storms
were to spatter Ohio behind the
cold front and drier air moving
our way v. ill help clear skies
tonight.

PRESENTED i\N AWARD - Kathryn Crow,
center, was presented an award by the members of
the Syracuse Fire Department for her many years of
service IAl the department wbllc serving as a member

of village council. Pictured, 1-r, Mayor Ehcr Pickens,
Kalhyn Crow a nd Syracuse Fire Chief, Gene Imboden.

25% OFF

your favor for a change!

FREE FIRST MEmNG FEE
SAVE$6
Only pay registration fee of $11

MEETING SCHEDULE:

*POMEROY

ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
231 E. Second
Wed: 5:30p.m.

FOR THE BALL PLAYERS!
All Bals, Balls and Ball Gloves!

25%

OFF

LET'S PLAY BALL

FOR MOTHER'S DAY!
Appliances, Jewelry, Panty Hose,
Ungerle &amp; Nightgowns.

25%

OFF

Discover

•LOOKFORTNll~

THAT INOtCATE THE NIW IIEETINQI
ADDED FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE.

NEW MEMBERS: Pleaoe arrive one haH hour before Oblrl ol m-ng lor new progNIII orientation.

JOIN WEIGHT WATCHERS®
TODAY!
~~~~ 1-800·582-1399

5th Street

sPEAKERS- Speaken at Saturday's meeting on ·
o1 Blld gas weD drDIIug held at lbe Melp Senior
~Center In Pomes uy were sealed, Ito r, Lan-y
VIIDOO, cblef, dlvlsloo or 1101181111 water dlstri&lt;D, Ohio
Depal'tlll8lt or Natural ~ Rl'flee a_..,
cblef, dlvltlloa or o0 and pa, and Detmitl Crisp,
tR&gt;penlt!Or of oU and gas, bod! will! lbe Ohio
Department of Natural RMources; back, I l,o r, Steve

story, Pomeroy attorney, and Jbn Lucas. Meigs Soli
and Water Contlervatlon District SupervisOr who
plaDned and presided over Satuntay's meeting.
ApjauxlmateiY 'lO realdenla a&amp;teuded the llell8lon lo
hear • ...,.....,. ollbe oU and gas program- and In the
fldure, IIJiderii'GUIId lime llljectloD proc esae and the
need lor aD Involved In drllllnclo work together.

NEW POLICE CAR- On view Sunday al the open
house of the Syracuse Fire Department Willi the new
pollee cml!!er thai was purchased by village cooocn.

Pictured with the new vehicle are PoUoe Chief Milton
Vorlan and Mayor Eber Pickens.

�-..
Page-S- The

Pomen~y-Middleport,

Daily Sentinel

Loutse Ge!Lhelmer nka JuditH L.
Vance, Affidavit, Bedford/ Chester.
Rozena B. Genehimer, deceased ,
to John E Genhelmer, Betty Anne
Knight , Rachel M Sheridan, Judith
L
Vanl ca, Cert. of Trans .,
Bedford/ Chester

WaJTen K Molden, Kathy S.
Molden, George A. Molden, BernJce
Molden to James Haning, Jr., 17
acres, Rutland.
Clyde D. Stewart, deceased,
Harold D Stewan, Judith K.
Thompson, Cert
of Trans ,
Salisbury.
Harold GUmore, Lucille Gilmore
to Leading Creek Cons. Dlst., Right
of Way, Salisbury.
Rayburn R Wallace, Leona E
Wallace to L eading Creek CoiLServ.
Dlst , Right of Way, Salisbury
Lillian Yerkle to Rodney Down
mg, Correction Deed, Middleport
Village
Oscar R. Weber, Zelda F Weher
to Oscar R. Weher, Zelda F . Weher.
one- half acre, Chester.

Jam es Weber

Katle Weber to

Jack Welker, Lewis Smith, Lots 19
and 20. 1,S of 21, Pomeroy Village
Jack R Welker et al, Paula S
Welker. Lewis E Smllh , CarolynL

Couple's second child
arrives off freeway

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF NORA G BAll,
DECEASED
C... No . 24,393, Docket
t2, Poge4t3
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF AOUCIARY
On April 1 2

acres. Chester
Anna Gcnhelmf'r. aka Anna M
Daught ery to Olan Genhc1mer,
Affid avit, Bedford Chester
Olan Genheimer dPCeased. to
Ruzo•na B Genhe1mcr .John F.d
ward Genhetmer Betty Anne
Kntght, Rachel M a n~ Shendan,
R1chard Allen Genhelm PJ, Judllh

ne

then hegan remembering how
the birth of hls first daughter was
handled
He helped hls wife into an upnght
position, as they had been taught In a
Lamaze class on natural childbirth
before daughter Wendy's birth 2 1~
years ago.

Mergs Coun ty Proba te Cour t
V•rg rn a 25260 was appomtP.d
Executr rx o t the es tat e o f Nora

G Ball decease d late o f 3 19
Ru t land Street M rddlepon
Oh ro 4S 760

Charl es Kn rqh t

ttl\

16 23 30 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio

April t3, 1984
"The baby's head eameout. I had
my hand under there, and I tried to
reach !nand get a holdof thebaby It
just squirted out," Matko said.
Maiko said he held his daughter In
one hand and cleared out her air
passages with the other
The baby began to cry " I knew
(then} she was OK," he said
Mrs. Matko, 32, said Wendy's
birth let her know what to expec t.
"You get a burning sensation
when the baby gets In thP birth
canal," she sa1d "Had thts been our
ftrst child, it would have been a lot
more harrowing."

Matko 34, pulled the caroverand
made one unsuccessful attempt to
flag down a passing motorist before
Jumping back into the car. He said

Pubhc Notice

Cash Reconcii18Uon
as of December

31 t983
Tow1 Oeoos1torv
Bala nces

~al e, ne e

Fund

19.596 00

Trailer

98 1 &gt;~1"';00

Summary of Roce1pts
Exoendrt• ...... '""&lt;"~

1,10800
l7700
t9 .4t9 00
40,39800

Food Servtee

federal
Totals
Recetpts
H.1l tn r ,~ J a n 1
1 'IR l
'

1 1,

r

r

I /11 12700

r

44 000

ul..

f • rr• [ \Pr.

o

t

Jan 1

1983

Distnct Board of Heatth

Pari&lt;

R 1 1n1 •· I ,_.'&gt; , Cl ,t-;1 n rl " 1
fho ~ ' HlriVv!i• 111
u ( ;.&gt; !ll t "'! 11
1 'J 8J
I l' I ( )(1
I t rl fllllrl!f '&gt;
[), I
rTiht~f
\)

"81

Trantfers In

Oecembe&lt; 3 t , t 983
Balance Jan 1.

$99 E:&gt;GS 00

bu 1'd lo r ten per cent o1 hiS bid,
payabl e ro thf' Drrec!or
Brdders must apptv on thr~
propP.r forms to r q ._~ ai ii CB T or
a t lea st ten day s p1 10r to the
da te set tor opPn•ng b1&lt;l &lt;; 1n
acco rda nce wtth Chapter 5b 25
O ht C Rev1sed Ce de
Plans and spec,ftcrH rnns &lt;n e
on lrle 1n thP. Dep art ment of
Transportat•on and the ollice o t
!h e D1s r1ct Deputy Orre ::: to r
The D1 re cto r reserves th e
nght to retec t any and nU b1ds
WARREN J SMITH

672670J
147 57600

F1scal Year ended

1983

Pubhc Notice

Public Notice

...... v, .......
Balances for the

MEIGS COUNTY
GE NER AL HEALTH
DISTRICT

2 IJ'J8 00

3 0 12 00
2 969 00

FedPr,11
TutJI&lt;;

5

~f!

1 (10

Total
Balanc e J an l
19B l
199 52900
Tr Jrlflt Pa rk
1 546 00
Food SPrvrU'
3 I 7 5 De
FP(Ietal
89 65S DO
Totuls
2Y3 905 00
Expenditures
B1li1ll&lt; r Jan 1

1982
P .1r~

TraiiP.r

DIRE CTOR
R~v

114 05 4 00
1 ~0 Oll
2 883 00

8 1 7 73

23

Apr I

30

71 1 15 00

188 202 00

Public Notice

Transfers Out

.~----------------~~

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

FJ l iJ il( ('
1 :!~ l

I

I
I
I
II

I
I

Jrl 'l

1

2 969 00
I 20000

lrt~df'r Pado:
FedPrdl

Ht~lilnCP J m

lo.&gt;r P;1 rk
Fnntl c;rrvtrf'
FP 11•r,d
I nl tl·
t

11 {( l

82 506 00

I

19h 00
/LJ2 (_](}

1SSS800

98 552 00

I t o..

Public Notice

coupon Cancel vour ad by phone when you get
resu lts Money n01 re-hmdable

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Nan~&amp;-----------------------

Contnlct Sales

Contnct

Copy No. 84-408
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
IRG-OOOR (221
FRG-OOOR 1172)
SRG-OOOR 1153)

Sealed proposals will bt&gt;
recer ved a' th e otlr ce of the

O rrecto r of I"'C Ohr o Dcoart
ment of Transporlahon Colum
b us Ohro until 10 00 AM

May 15

mPnts

These cash rates
1nclude discount

1

20
21

3

22

•

23

5
•

14
25

7

26

8

v

I

I
I
I
J

I

l

______

~

•

I
I
I

,..

tO

~

ll

JO.

:!·

~:

t4
15.
r6

33.
3A
35.

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
Tile Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, 011. 45769

I'

I

I

l
l
I
I
I
I

I
1
1

j

~-------~-~--~~-------•

198 4 tor rmp ro1.e

AthPns

Calha

J&amp;L INSULATION

}

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM SIDING

_ ,-;_~,

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE
WORK

CARD OF THANKS
The Sue Goe&amp;1etn famtly

to express their smcere

aporectatton &amp; heartfelt thanks
to thetr relatoves. nt&lt;ghbon &amp;
fnends for the vrsils, prayers,
food. money, phone calls,
cards &amp; the beau1iful flowers
and to those wiio hell*! many
way for the acts ol ~mlness &amp;
concern dunng the illness and
loss of our loved one
A spectal thool&lt;-you to the
Emeraency Squad, Or. R R.
Pickens &amp; the many doctors &amp;
nurses, who pve hef such won-

dl!flul. lovtng coro dunng her
stay at the hospital
We want to edend spec1al
thanks to a dear fnertd, Oscar
Spencer, of the Spencer f unnl Home, Belpre, Ohio for
helptng us to fulfill her last roquest to come home from the
hosllital
We esfliClal~ thank Rev
RIChard Rothm!Ch for hiS frtqueflt vtsits and consoling

words. Also our appreciation to

organtst Gerald Powell lor the
mut hymns Armand Turor ptaymg 'The last Date' ,
of her favorite SOIIIIZ, the
pallbearers &amp;the Ewmg Funer.1l
Home lor thetr courtesy &amp; ktnd·

~

throuah season

Aan

Sat 11rday playtn&amp;
tr1ps
•On Course lnstmct1on

•Awards

CONTRACTING

Addona •n~ remodeling
Roofing and guner work
Concrete work
Ptumb1ng and el ectr~cBI
worlt

lfree Estrmates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

INSJRUCTORS John Teaford
Dove " 81g H1f Burl

992-6215 or 992-7314

CHESTER, OHIO

Pomeroy, Oh1o

4 9 I mo

12 8 tic

.,......._,.IUIII..,.,~~

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

498 Gen. Hartmger Pkwy
Middleport. OH

•MOWING
*TRIMMING
•CEMETERY
MAINTENANCE
Reasonable Rates

498 General Hartmger Pl&lt;wy
Mtddleport, OH

CALL

General
Construction
Roofing A Specialty
4-6-1 mo.

OPEN :
MON .- SAT. 10 to

6

COMPLETE
POOL SERVICE

PH . 992-2549
Open :
Mon .- Sal. 10 to

992-5949

4-6-1 mo.

rn

Ade~rn s Athrms Br own Gill
l1a t-&lt;rqhland Hock•nq Jacksor
Lawcnce M e1 gs M onroP Mar
qan No hiP Prke Ros s St:iOi o
V1n1on and 'Nashr nqton Co un
1 ~" S Ohru un vJ rrous routes
,Jnd SOCI10ns
by applyrng
rr tr orf'flect •ve oolves ter pave
rrPnt •r11 kong marer•a l for
~Pn' r '! l•nP&lt;, pjqp lines and 1ane
lnlPS
Pavemen1 W•dlh - va r1es
Protec t I F'nqrh - 0 00 feel or
0 00 rriiP
v.lrrOu!i lee r
Work Len~1h
Dr Vd ft O US m1IP5
lt1 c Oh 10 Droartment nf
Tr V''i~•ortat• on hPrPby no td •es
all h 1&lt;fdPrs Thdl 11 wrll a tlllffld
ti i.J'I,I I ll~Ure Hl&lt;ll on any I.:OntrJCI
Prl'P tl' f n1r, ou rsuJ r l to th1 &lt;;
JdVf'rtiSCmr&gt;n t rnonorr•y hus1
ness pntpr nrosP&lt;; w•ll be df
lorrl,..d lull oppnrtLHliiY ro sub
m11 b1ds rn r~&gt;s ponsP. 10 th1&lt;;
,nvr1at10n anrl w111 no1 hf.
drscr 1mrnal ed anarns r on the
qrnunrl s o f race color or
n&lt;llronal orrq1n m co ns•de rat•on
fur an awa rd
M•n•mum wage rates tor th 1s
prorec t have been pr edeter
m rnf'd as requrr ed by law and
a1e set forth m the b1d
oroposal
The d ate set tor comp let1on
nf th 1s work shall b e se t fon h 1n
the brddrng pr oposa l "
Each b1 dder sh all be f eQUirer1
to file wrt h h '&gt; b1rf a ce rlif• ed
c hec~ or cash1F&gt;rs c heck for an
amount et.~uat to five per cent
of his bid, btJ! rn no Aven t more
lhFln I It\ lhn1 rS.9nrl dn\1-"11 &lt;: r11 .:1

{11 ,. !f1CI o\d'i ") r P ~ P&gt;l l ••rJ I [I P!
T&lt;~ ln llv 1 oo; polq:•c npr sn n o f IIH'

, ornrn n II

rl,rvVI\ ' r

l1n
i111f'r t.-.. rl

rrp rr•~&lt;"'n t lrl 'l

\\; ilt"-1 n th r

l!Pcl 'i

!&gt;111

ltu • I•IJ, Ifd
ilt1 &lt;;P n l p lt l) f
P)o.flPI•I 011 t&gt; f S l.,\f'IP 'oLJi f.l ( ('
'&gt;L it ', lrl••l( • Clu',l I h\ tona w AI I
Ol lll1 1Vj rr f If Od fr pl&lt;; th,lt 1t 1&lt;;,
ll t r PS" Hy
JllJ .=!rl\ 15clbiP IO
p IS' th l' fuiiO...Vonq lf'SOIL rtoQn 1n
orrtrr r ~, pr"'il'r•e 1nrt pro trct
thf' NOr ~ ' nt thr rl1 s1r ct &lt;Hound

POOLS-PLUS
Sales
Service
NOW OPEN

WARREN J SMITH
I)! RE CTOR
Re~.o81 773

April 23 30

Real Estate General

FOR SALE
(I) HOUSE IN CHESTER·
Three acres with a mcely
constructed conrete block
home 26x30. 3 bedrooms,
one bath, 12xl5 livmg
room and 24x24 family
room Partially carpeted,
fuel otl furnace w~h facilities for
woodbumer.
12xl5 block storage building, 20x30 block garage.
Right off Rt. 248, country
settmg. y, mile east of
Chester, Ohio.
(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE :
Downstairs equipped with
kitchen. living room,
dining room and den;
upstairs has two bedrooms and one bath;
house also has basement. Lot stze approx .
48'x308'. Needs work

If

Interested contact
The Home Natrona! Bank
In Racine, 949-2210.

S&amp;W TV

PH. 992-56B2
or 992-7121

Office: 675-1388

4-4· 1 mo. pd .

3-24 -tfc

MGM FARM CITY . INC

Pubhc Notice

S~&gt;t v ·n~

Mr1gc. G.llll.l M a~~~~

ORDER &amp; TAKE
DELIVERY Of
YOUR SPRING
FERTILIZER.
SPRING SEED &amp;
SEED CORN

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF RAYMOND F.
HOCE. DECEASED
Casa No 24,354 Docket 12
Page 4t4
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF ROUCIARY
On Apfl l 1 2 1984 •n the
Me1as Coun ty Proba te Court
Casf. No 24 354 Ada G Hoce
203 M ulberry Avenue Pome
roy 0~1ro 4 Jj 769 was ap POinted e)(ecutrl)( of the est ate
of Raymo nd F Hoce de cease d
late of 203 Mulberry Ave
Pomeroy OhtO 45769
ChariPs Kn •g ht
Ac tl -'] Proba te l ~dge

low . low Pr 1ces

SALES &amp; SERVICE

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
46353 Scout Camp Rd

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Chester, Ohto
Ph 985 · 4269
tr No Answer, Call 985-4382
We Servtce All
Makes &amp; Model s

An tenna lnsta llatton
Ho use Calls and Shop
Sef\'tce Available

Also Transmission

I2x24 $5,500 installed
14x28.. $6.200 installed

BOGGS

AND

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Special April Only

Ser ~• ce

Farm Equipmenl

tnat Towers Abov P

The

Authortzed John Deere,
New Holland Bush Hog
Farm [qutpment
Dealer

Rest

Parts

Also Some Cor
Fenders Avodable

&amp; Service

4 I m

Will PI SO I € \ C

Tr»rr !urf' be rl tP~.olw•d th ,l l
th' or ,, t•r r c f IJ nqw;,ll m nrrl 1
o;; tl t~ l l r .. , n ro h•brl•· I anvwhf•r!-'
vVtthrn 400 leer of any drs trr ct
W,l r&lt;=&gt;r I 0(' W11Pr 1Jilk W&lt;J\Cr
lrr ttr' f'tlt Dlrlnl r tHnn1nQ &lt;&gt; ll
I nn ff o:;rrvoll or n !hf r 11\flrk o; Lll
!hP lnno;prv (lnly Q,o.,!rtrt l!ll
lt •&lt;;c; Ioiii WI II PII )0r' l ")y )\ l'l
lJivrn hy ll" f' Buar I of Ortf' r tor s
of lhf' l Pfldo no ( , ,-.., ,k ( iJO'i(&gt;r
viliH y n o&lt;i ll u

r1d

:J I

n p :or

hf'I ()Jt., bP!j !lll111q
1'1

11

ITl i lllnq

l tl()ll

Sar r1

p l'&gt;'&gt;PI1
1

I

t

r•'V'rv. rr .ron •s ll f'r Phy
thr&gt; t1r1h ur tv qr:tlll f'ff

fly

SPrl l tl l lfi101 1 ~r' l thr0h•:~

RPvrsp(j (odr Tlw; rP -.,n ll,\r()n
wac, rrqui, Hiy mnvPrl sPoon dPd
l nrl ~ il 'iSP d Th e prr s dPntrhen
1nrl 1vrdua lly pOlled each
mcmbAr who s,qn,hf'Cl n yea
vo tP. 1n tilvor of passage of th ts
reso lut1 0,1 l1 was the unanrm
ous feell rlg of th e Board of
Orrec tors trlat r1 lonQwal l m1n
1nq 15 allowP.d to contr nue
ba~en 11pon past e)(ps nence
that ser1ous and trreparab le
harm wtll result Thrs resolution
shall Pf0 h1 b1 ! a m rne ope rator
fr om bPQtn n1ng or con tu1 umg
lonqwall mrntng unless plans
have been fried &gt;Mth and
approved bv th e Roard o f
01rec toro; of the Leadrnq Cree l&lt;
Consrrvrmcy D•s tr~ c t

141 20 25 30 J1c

MINI FARM - Garden area
frUit trees, small barn and
approx 10 acres of ~und tn
Middleport 2·3 bedrooms, new
cabinets tn the krtchen ONLY

MGM FARM
CITY. INC .
&gt;I·"

.

.

•

~u.ct·

M~GKEE
"R·n'*M-'

r

1\

.. ,, ' fl. ,

. .

o

'

M L."Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction Service
Cheryl Lemley ,
Metgs County AssoCiate
Phone 742· 3171

Vinyl &amp; ft ' ·

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•TRENCHING
•BACK HOE •DOZER
•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER. GAS, SEWER
RAIN LIN ES

985-3561
All Makes
•Woshers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrtgerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4 5 tic

$26,90000
FLAT\\OODS - Really ntce
ranch With 4 bedrooms, 2
baths. big lamtly room wtth
fireplace, utility and garage
Ntce level one acre lot

$53,500 00
RUTlAND - Newly remodeled 2 bedroom home, neat
and cute New cal]letin&amp;
paneling etc Includes washer
dryer, range, relngerator, and
dtshwasher Has a carport and
patio $26,900 00
REALTORS
Henry Cleland, Jr
992-6191
Dottle Turner 992-5692
Jea~ Trussell 949-2660
Jo Hill 985·4466

County Cerllhed

SE PliC TANKS INSTALUO
FRfE ESTIMATES
'

367-7560-367-761
CHESHIRE, OHIO
3 t ·I

JEWELL'S
PLUMBING
and
HEATING

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Jobs - Big or Small
MINERSVILLE, OHIO
Experienced
Reasonable
WORK GUARANTEED

992-6030
3 26 1

New Homes-ExtenSive
Remodeltng
Insurance Work
Cu1t~m Pole Bldgs
&amp; Garages
Roofing Work
Alumtnum &amp; Vtnyl Stdmgs
1 5 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH 992-7683
or 992-2282
ll ·l ·tfc

AlB

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimates,~ 949· 2801 or

949-28o0

No Sunday Calls
3-Jitlc

RADIATOR

SERVICE

We d hh !o mrroduce you to

Engage-A Car . the modern way
to dme the veh tde of your
cho1ce
No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box , 326
Pomer oy, OH 45769

number of these HEAVY DUTY ALL METAL SPECIAL SEWING
MACHINES that sew on all fabrics levi's. canvas ,
upholstery, nylon, stretch, vinyl, silk, AND EVEN SEW ON
LEATHER. These machines are new 1984 models . All carry
Necchi's 25 year warranty.
Manufacturer's Suggested Price

$599.95

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores . We can
also actd bot I and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks .

PAT HILL FORD

LIMESTONE
HAULED
AL TROMM

742-2328
4/ 9/l mo

NOW ONLY $198.00
SORRY, NO TRADE-INS OR LAYAWAYS

BRING THIS AD
Date: Tuesday, May 1st
(1 DAY ONLY)

Place: Holiday Inn - Room A
State Rt. 7, Gallipolis, OH.

Time: 11:00 AM. To 6:00 P.M.
SALE SPONSORED BY

Vance-Leach Home Furnishings, Inc.

POLE BUILDINGS
SIZes Start From 12'x16 '
UTILITY BUILDINGS
S1zes from 6'x6' Up
to 24' x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Ractne. Oh.
Ph 614 843 5191
10 6 tfc

ACCENT
FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
220 E Moen , Pomeroy

PH. 992-6931

II

"Free Estimates"
Installation Available
4/27/ 1 mo

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
All Types Roolmg &amp; Stdmg
Gutters, Downspouts
Pamtmg , Coatmg

NEW-- REPAIR
FREE ESTIMATES
All Worlc

Guarante ~d

Brenda ' s Bouttque . 297
S .Second St. Middleport
now has for rent. vrdeo
players and mO\mn 992 -

3667

Any dogs caught on Lou1e
Plants ferm on Eckard
C ha pe l Road , Mason
County will be shot Srgned
loUie PLants
NOTI CE Any dogs found on
my property w1ll be shot due
to past destruction of property Signed Charles Rttfle,
Mason County

4

Giveaway

446 -4827

8 mo old black-white f emale dog, shots , spad ed

Call 448 -9676 "' 446·
2283
Mal e ln s h Setter. ve ry
fnendly, good w1th chtldre n
olso, assorted colors of
kittens M81gs Co Humane

Beegle rabbit dog 304 -773 ·

52 tO

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked m home area

20 years
'Free Esttmates'

EUGENE LONG
Ph.

All Types of Alum~num
Clean Sheet &amp; Cast
41( lb.
Weeks of Apr:l 9·2 1
Aluminum Auto Tran s.
18.00 Each
Irony Aluminum
Priced On lnspeclion
Louted l "' M1le l ui ol
Pacelown on fwp 141

Call 992-3466
Scipio Energy
Recycling Divis\·on

4/!11 mo

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnsulatron
•St orm Doors
•Storm W1ndows
•Replacement Wm dows
•N ew Ro ofmg

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH . 992 -2772

376 ' nro

35185 Oak Htll Road
Lona Bottom. OH . 45743
PH. (614) 985·4212
We Use Von Schrader
Equipment Recommended
by leadtng Carpet Manu facturers
'FREE ESTIMATES"
3 28 I mo

WHITESEL
ROOFING CO.
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
&amp; Painted
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

949-2263

30 gal electric water heater,

304 675-t 965
6

Lost and Found

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your Wiring
needs; furnaces reparr
service and tnstallalton
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

Announcemenls

Pomeroy Health Care Cente r
1s now accepting applica tions for nurses ardes &amp;
orderlies Expenence prefared
Appl1cet1ons ac cepted M onde y -Fnday 8
a m -4 30 p m through May

Individual to sand hardwoo d
floors Please call 304 675
7717 after 6 p m

304 -675-4374
304-

576 -20t0
HIGH SCHOOL SENIORSGRADUATES If you are
wondenng h ow you can get
a j o b w1thout work uperlence, the West Vtrgm1a
Army NatiOnal Guard mrght
be the answer for you Earn
good money while learnrng a
sk1ll Full t1me pay wh1le you
tratn, part t1me pay on ce you
come back hom e call 304
675 · 3950 or 1- 800 -642 -

12

W1ll care for the elderly1n my
home Lots of references
Men or women Call 614 -

667-3402
M erce r 's R1verv1ew Personal Care Home has vacanctes for elderly persons
Betty Mercer owner 304 -

773-5882
Have room board &amp;. carefor
elderly
Pomeroy
614-9921n
- 6022

Call

Would hke to babys1t m my
home Have 8.11.Cellent refer ·
ences Ca ll614 -992 7038
Harpe r's Adult Care Home
ha s a vaca nc y for another
re s1dent , elderly pers on Call

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

General Haulmg and Trash
re mov al Servtce
R eh ab le
and dependable Call 446
3159 between 9 and 6
Lawn Mowtng &amp;
Serv1ce R eltabl e
and dependable Reaso na ble rates Call 446 3159 or
Tr~mmtng

256 -625t
Auct•on e very Tuesdav
mght , Pt Plea sant, WVa
Auct Lonme N eal Youth
Ce nter Bldg . Ca mden St

6t4 367 7t0t

Raofmg and gutter work ,
metal work . h ousepa rntmg .
carpenter work Exc ref
Free est1mates Call 446 -

304 · 773 9185
AuctiOn every Fn mght at
the H a rtford Co mmuntty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandise every weak
Cons1gments of n ew and
used m erc handi se always
welcome Ri cha rd Reynolds
Au c t•oneer
304 276 -

Opening Flea Market Two
free weekends April 28 29 ,
May 6 6 . Free open arr
spaces, parktng edmtnton
US 36. Fraz1ers Bottom ,
WVa Don Fraz1er · Opera tor

Yard Sale Mev 2 122 Un~on
Av e
Pomeroy Ra 1n or
Shme

3 Fam1ly Garage Sale M t. r

Yard Sale Thurs &amp; Fr1 May
3 St 4. Don Walke r Res
Aacme Butter c hurn. baby
clothes , 0 · 2 yr household
1tems tool s

3rd , 4th &amp;
Second Ave

5th

t , 58

9 -5

McGuue SubdiV I SIOn ,
Debby Dr , May 3, 4 , 5
Gltder. vtolets. Silk flow e rs
b ed. m1tter box. clothe s 1or
all Ca l 446 3918
Yard Sale Georges Creek
Rd . from A t 7 cross tracks
1st road t o r~gh t Ant1ques
books clothes lots of mis cellaneous M ay 4 &amp; 5
Tues. W ed 1 st &amp; 2 n d 3
mtl es, 141 Cente nary Town
House G1gant1c 5 Fam1ly
Beautiful babys c lot hes , Lee
Jeans , all Si zes 1ops bed
pillow. dtshes more

4 Fam1ly Yard Sale lawn
tools cloth.ng . 1 % m1le o ff
Rt 218 on Krtner Rd Watch
for stgns May 1 2 St 3

Yard Sale Tuesday Only,
2018V2 rear Eastem N1 ce
c lothes, hou sewa res
etc

to -1 Ra:n cancels

23

Prolesstonat

W anted to buy New, used &amp;
anttque furn1ture Wtll buy 1
p1ece or complete house
holds Also compl ete AuctT
oneermg sarv1ce Call
Rodney H owery 614 698 ·

Buytng dally gold
Stiver
com s rtngs , Je welry sterling
ware, old co tns, large cur rency Top pnces Ed Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd Ave

M1ddlepo". Oh
3476

6t 4 992

Cas h patd for fan c y ~ron or
heavy 1ron b eds 9 160 and
up for certatn Me1gs Co
stone 1ars
Old t1me cup ·
board
ca ll 1 - 304 - 882 -

2711
CO MPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITUR E
Bed s. tron .
wood. c upboards
c hatr s.
chesu . baskets, d1shes ,
stone Jan. ant1ques. gold
and s1I1J8r
Wrrte - M D
Miller. Rt 2 Po meroy Oh1o

45769 o' call 6t4 -9927760.
Employment
Services

PIANO TUNING l owe r
pr1ced regular tun1 ngs dtscounts to Sen1or C1t1zens,
Church es &amp; Scho o ls Ward ' s

P1a no Tunmg and R epa1r
Brumcard1 Mus•c Co , 446 0687 Sk1ll and tnt egmy our
trade ma rk
Lane Oan1 els

614 742-295 1

11

Help Wanted

Paul 's Home V•deo located
406 2nd. Ave , in Park
Central Hootal VHS. Betas.
CEDa (d1 sc l Rent movu11 &amp;
players. Suddar1 Impact &amp;

T eachers and co aches
summer employment .
9900 00 par month guaran teed m come World 8ook
and Child Craft 304 -882 -

OC Cab Coll448 -1718

2485

4 Fam1ly yerd sa le 2nd. 3rd
4th, beg1n s at 9 30 a m
furmture men 's, women ' s,
ch ildren 's clothes ,&amp; mtsc
Rustt c H1ll s. Sy racuse

·F&gt;t
&amp;

Pleasa.nt
Vicinity

Large. large Yard Sale, May
1 thru 7 5 mT ies out Crab

6t4 -256 t492
t104

0'

446

THOMPSON BOOKKEEP
lNG Monthly and Quarterly
accounts welcome 428 Se
co nd Ave Call 446 1136

AMA, FDA &amp;

FCC

Doctor re f erra l s

304 -675-5568

6695

Real Estale

31

Homes lor Sale

6 rooms . ba se m ent doubl e
garage, 1 &amp; o ne th1rd acre
lot, Rose H1ll Pomerroy

S32.900 Call t 614 -678
2513
Owner transferred . must sel l
beaut1ful 3 bedrm brtc k
hom e F•r e plac e deck ,
wo ods. pr1va cy sun shme
$63 900
Ca ll 614 992 -

5420
- - - -- - - - - - - -- - - - - l c -

B &amp;. M Pa1nttng Res . ln d ,
Comm Free estima t es Call

approved

Homes for Sale

3 badroom , 1 1h story home
newly remode led w1th barn
ch1cken coop, pony shed, &amp;
worksh o p
5 96 acres
fenced rn Only $35.000
Ca ll614 992 2 14 3oreven l n g 614 - 742 2289
Mtc hael

6 rooms &amp; bath
large
ent rance way pan try lg
basement &amp; att1c, f1replaces
f1mshed floors
lg
front
porch parttcally m su lated
W1ll sa l e on land contract
Ca lf 614 992 7887 or 992

5354
FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO BUYT II 14 tt Wide three
bedroom, bath and half
m ob1le home s1ttm g o n mc e
lo t
ready to move 1nto
$225 00 down $225 00 per
month 304- 576 -271 1
Three vaar old tota l el ect n c
h ouse 3 bedrooms fenced
tn back yerd and deck .
S10,000 00 down assum e
8 % per cent loan. pr1ced rn
m1 d SO ' s
Ca ll after 5 ,

304-675 6643

21

Business
Opportuntty
l NOTI CE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB
LISHING CO recommends
that you do busm ess w1th
p eo ple you know and NOT
to send money through th e
ma1l until you hav e mvest1
gated the offenng

Large 3 bdr house for sa leor
rer• In Plantz Sub diVISIOn
No c hildre n no pets C all
614 245 -52 81 eve s
All bnck 3 bdr . 2 b a th s.
gerage
co mpl etely f urnished. mce lawn Crown

Coly Call 614 256 -6244
Middlep ort home. JUmp mto
Sp nng Savmgsl Super speCIBI low pnces Ca ll 614 -

992 6941

s
FIRST TIME OFFERED
Nat1onal Corp now appOTnt mg d1stnbutors to serv•ce a
network of e.11.ststmg bu si nesses Wonder1ul tax shelter , s mall t1me requrrement
for unhmtt&amp;d profrt poten tial
M1n1mum ca pltol $18 ,000 For deta1ls call
Charles Kennedy
1 -800-

24t 2294
LIBERTY FASHIONS mv1tes
you to mvestrgate ownrng
your own Jean - Sportswear.
lad1es lnfan1 Preteen. Ac
cessones or Larg e S1re
Store Nati onal brands Lee.
Le1.11 , Chtc , Jordache, lrod,
Esprtt. Healthtex 8r1ttama.
Evan Ptcon e. Calvm Kletn
300 others
$7. 500 to
$24,500. f1.1ttures , supplies
mv entory. tn store tretnmg
a1rfare grand opentng. etc
Mr Kost ecky (501) 327 -

803t

22 Money to Loan
HOME

LOANS

FIXED

RATES Below market rates
Fuced conventional FHA VA Leader M ortg11ge
Athens, collect 614- 692 -

3051

23

Professional
Services

4 b edr oo m hom e. fu ll basement , 1 acr e lot At 6 2 .
C harl eston R oad 30 4 675
4887 or 614· 446 - 16 75
Three bed ro om br1ck ranch .
2 1 '1 bath, 2 ca r garag e,
edd -o n wood stove m base ment . 12•13 wood storage
bldg , 26)(40 pole barn, frUit
trees, one acre 4 Y2 mtles
from New Haven on Rt 33
304 ·665-2793 m 304 895 ·

6t4 367 0334

The

12x70 mobrl e home w1th
expando all drapertes. kit chen appl steps underp1n
nmg CBrpeted throughout
and cent ral &amp;lr cond tn
eluded Call 446 7751 o r

6t4 25 6 6569
2 BR mobile h ome 12.11.55
comp furn Must see to
apprecrate S4500
256

6409
1977 14K70 Camaron
tra•ler , central a1r . underpm
mng, 2 bedr oo ms . 2 baths ,

304 773 9t 33
FOR

SALE

OR RENT

14x70 1979 Shannon all
elec . 3 b edroo ms panly
furnished m o b1le home
1 2x28 butlt on room wtth
coal or wood burner Exc
cond underpmned 3 n 1ce
porches wel l water ut1hty
buildmg acre land Jerrys
Run Road
Apple Grove

W Va 304 675 2356
Aepo sses ton
2 bedroom
1 2x60 Mad1son mob1le
hom e $600 00 down 60
payments of S1 37 14 per
month ALL STATE MODU LAR HOME S
half way
betw een Hunt1ngton an d
P01nt Pl easant on St At 2

304 576 2711
12x65 1971 mobi le home
woodburner &amp; a c
614
2
o
74 - 272

12 x52, good co ndltton
S4500 Ca ll 614 992 6169
or 992 7667
1 2x60 2 bedrm m o b1le
home we ll cared for good
con
2 porches ac partly
furm shed washer &amp; dryer
g ood metal out bld . pr1ced
for qwck sa l e $5 500 Call

614 -992·6328
1971 K.ng 65)( 12, 2 apa rt
men1 tra1ler Id ea l for r ent
tng
Co nt ac t Hershel
M cC l ure at 614 992 - 6900
t1l 5 p m at1 er 5 p m r. aU
614 -992 -3436

33

Must se ll $2.000 down take
over S3 1 5 per m o pay
ment Te11. es &amp; msurance
mclud ed
Located Plantr
Subdi\ITSTon 3 bdr ranch
full ba sement carp o rt
woodburner . c 1ty schools

Call 446-8002
3 bdr . 2 fu ll baths, large lot
near Holrer Hosp1tal
$29 900 Term s 1f need ed

Call 446 -2957
By ow ner lovely 2 bdr
hom e on waterfr ont boat
ramp &amp; d ock clos e to town
prtced $34,900 W•ll help
f1nance
Call 614 - 256

Farms for Sa le

142 acre farm nea r Rto
Grando good h ouse and
ba rn
Cal l 614 245 528 1
eve ' s
Farm for sale
$59 .900
barn 70 a c m o re or less
rural water house less than
one year old 4 bedroo m s
hv1ngroom
dm1ng room
family r oo m . k1t chen , ut1hty
room 2 full baths 5 m1
from Rr o Grrtnde and 1 m1
o ff Rt 35 Call 614 245

9570

35 lots &amp; Acreage
6 lots Plantz SubdiVISIOn
$2 900 fo r all Ca ll 446

2957
56 acres M l lots of ftre
wo od, p l en ty o f road hon
tage some t1mber ex hun t mg
Ca ll 614 38B 8159
after 5 30

2 lots G randv1ew HfHghts,

St 3 000 00
3626

304 675

1 acre S4 000 or h acre will
prov1de water and sewage
$ 4 000 off St At 160 on
Floyd Clark R d
Bidwel l
Oh 1o
Ca l l 1 304 675

1631
Rentals

House and 3 lots for sa l e
Sl1dtng Creek Road Hart
ford WV 304 882 -2831
Seven year old h ome, three
bedrooms garden spot .
2605 Ltncoln Ave
8 \fz
per ce nt assumable loan
304 · 675 5047 after 5 00

32 M o bile Homes
lor Sale

41

Houses for Rent

5 rm h ouse 44 Olive St
Gallipolis lnqurre at 918
2 nd A ve Galli po lis Ohto
3 b dr
ran c h near R1o
Grande
S235 mo
pl us
sec urtty depos1t no pEt s
Ca ll 614 2 45 5439
2 story house 1n c 1ty $250

TRI STATE MOBIL E m o d epos it u UI Ca ll 446
HOMES USED CAR S 1434 or 446 2 1 92
TRUCKS GALLIPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRICES CALL 3 bdr deluxe h ouse 2
6t4-446 7572
fireplaces poo l garage Sell
- - - - -- - 6 or le ase 2 bd r apt k rtc hen
NEW ANO USED MOBILE furnt shed Call 675 5104 or
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL- 675 5386
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 Ml WEST. GALLIPOLIS. 1 bedr oo m home 10 Mmers
RT 35 PHONE 614 ·446· v1ll e b y Bulk Plant Total
7274
elec tr•c Ca ll614 -992 73 14
or 992 -6215

Bu1l d on your lot a new hom e
y ou afford Over 11 00 sq
ft , 6 r ooms &amp; bath ca r
peted, ready to move mto
$26,500 also garages &amp;:
basement
Call Patnot
Home Builders 446 8038
W•ll cons1der mob1le hom e
as trade -m
4 bedroom. new s1dmg
ftreplace tn remolde d livtng
room
$ 1 6 000 00
304

1965 1 2x60 mob1le home
unfurniS hed, 63 900 Ca ll

446 1340
1979 fully underpTnned
14x70, 3 bdr 2 full baths.
approx '!:~ acre well graded
lot Prtce reduced Call 614

388 9957 afte' 5 30PM

3 b edroom h o u se rece ntly
rem odeled S225 mth , plus
uttht1es Deposrt r equned
Middlep ort 992 7607 . af
ter 5 p m
Unfu rn 1s h ed house
has
ca rp et and wa sh er &amp; dryer

992 3590
14 x70 Rosemont 2 bdr ,
1973 12x60 Detro1ter 2
bdr , 1969 12.11.60 Ray craft
2 bdr Recon ditioned likfl
new Call 446 -0175

675-5854

3 bedroom famtly room
basement near school s and
h osp•tal Oepmut 11nd refer
ence requned
304 - 675

4338

Gun Sm1th.ng Servtce H ot
blumg. parts, ate Tri County

8 yr old three bedroom
ranch , 6 mile s from Holzer .

Spo" Shop
2988

S39 600 00
7746

304 - 675 ·

Call

church reserves the nght to
accept or refuse any or all
btds

3951

Sp nng IS h erett If you 're
sh opp mg fora n ew home le t
N L Stevens &amp; A ssoc•ates
help you w1th your fmanc tng W e hav e home mort
gages With as httle as a 5 %
downpayment and rates as
low as 10 50 % Ca ll Jen
Alhe today 614 -379 2789

12t6

l .,.-:--:-:-:--c-:-:---:---

6t4 -446-0294

810 S Seco nd St. Middle p o rt, Apnl 30 through May
5 Beddtng lmens drape s.
c lot htng
d1shes Jewelry,
pans small appliances, fur ·
nr ture tools toy s, m1sc

31

Serv1ces

s:s

Want ed to do bebysTtttng 1n
Northup area
Cal l 446

Yard sa le at Leona Stewarts,
Mul berry Hetght s. Pomeroy,
May 3rd &amp; 4th 9 to 5

The l tttle Kyger Congrega
ttonel Chns11an Church tS
accepting b1ds on a mobtle
home prevtously used as a
parsonage
All fteld brds
mu st be rece1ved by M ay 1st
and should be g1ven to the
propnetor s of Sw1sher Im plement l ocated o n R t 7
The trBTier cen be v1ewed
Sat April 28 between 12 00
&amp; 3 OOPM Located on Little
Kyger Ad at the Church

1- - - - - - - -- 1
ct··-----------f.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1975 Skyltne M ob1 le Home

Professional ElectrolysiS
Cl1mc Probe Typ e Electroly

Call 614-245-5096

5 f am1 ly yard sale May 1st
through 7 300 We trga ll St
Po meroy (off Butternut)

Creek R oad Ratn o r shm e
Somethin g of everyth tng

Will do garden plow1ng tn
Rio Grande Centerville area

Want ed To Buy

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters Swam Furnl ·
ture , 446 · 3159 , 3rd
&amp;
Ohve St . Galhpohs, Oh

1_4_4_6_·_8_0_3_8_______

4 famrly Yard Sale May 1
and 2 besTde Sugar Run Mtll
garages 1n Pomeroy Ram
ca n ce l s

G 1gant1c Yard Sal e at M a ry
laynes res1dence Chesh1re,
Oh1o May 1 - 2 -3 Ca nce l •f
rains , from 9 t1l dark

Financial

446 3672

1982 Oakbrook furntshed
mobile home. 1 4 ft w1de . 2
bdr , hke new , S7 500 Call

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Flea M arket C hilli cothe Mall
Shopptng Center Chilli cot he, Oh M ay 4 - 5 - 6

Call 446-3394

Garages. pat1os. Sidewalks
bas ements block work
Reasonable pnced 35 yrs
e..:per1ence Free est1mates

3069

W e pay cas h for l ate model
c l ean u sed ca r s
Jtm Mmk C h ev Olds Inc
B1ll Gene Johnson

.._

10 FamTiy , May 3 71 M1ll
Creek Ant1que beds child ren ' s, men ' s women's clothtng , mlSC

M ay 1 -4 1st house Lmcoln
P1ke off At 1 41 at Cente nary Baby clothes fu rm lun~. jeans, Home lntenor

Unwanted Facta! or body
half7 Permanent , patnless
removal by European Elec
tron1c D eptlato r
Mary IS
cert1f1ed 1n lh1s new compu
tenzed dig1tal sy stem Call
today 614-992 6720 Top
of the Statrs full se rv1ce
sa l on

317t

R1c k
Pearso n Auc t1oneer
Servtce Estate , Farm, Antrque &amp; ltqutdatl o n sales
L1 ce n sed S. bond ed 1n Ohto&amp;
WVa
3 04 - 7 73 - 57 85 or

Vicinity

Keyboard 304 ·675 3824

Ke1 t h 's

8

&amp;

.#&gt;

4 -Famlly Yard Sale, 2 m1les
north on 160 from HMC
lots of 1tems Pr1 ce cheap!

Mtsc
Garage Sale Aprrl
30th thru May 4th One m1le
o utR t 218offRt 7

Situations
Wanted

18 Wanted to Do

992-5007

.... Gaiiipoifs..

36t9

446 ·3897
lost at M e1gs Juntor H1gh
School, Wedn esday, gnls
hght grey Ja ck e t , With pres
crtpt1on glasses m poc ket
Reward If found call 614 -

~~-"t&gt;.'l!ihl~~-~~~1:;,._:,,} ~'q,;-VA'I
"

304-755 -2779

304 675 1293

SWEEPER and sew tng ma·
chme repair , parts , and
supplies
. P1ck up end
delivery , Davt s Va c uum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call

614 246 -9421

LOST Spotted female
Welker Coo n H o und ,
Northup-Ptnot area
Ca ll

723t

3 Announcements

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

27 t6

9

(614) 843 -5425

WANTED

6 pupp1es, mother Elk
H o und
Phone 304-675

614-742·2834

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Need baby1itter in Rodney II
at my home references Call

Soc:ety. 992 6505
Collie pupa to gtve away can
be seen at Al1c e Wdhams res
V1ne St. Racm e

1-

ttl 7
Babysiner needed in O . J
Whtte Ad area Call 446 7666 after 6PM

laborers for mowers

3 pupptes 1 mal e. 2 female,
will be small dogs Ca ll

.-

•

Ram cancels May 1 2 . 3 9

3 cute puppies 4 mos old %
Border Col he 1/2 German
Shepherd
Call 614 246

Umted M et hod1 st Church
Pomt Pl easant W ed
May
2nd 10 00 AM t o 2 00 PM

Middleport, Ohto
t -13 -tfc

for Sale
'

45831

lady to ltve 1n 6 days a week

RUMMAGE SALE St Paul

411 8/l mo

Wanted Amb1t1ous . tough
m1nded people who are
w.lling to work hard for an
excellent Income Full or
part time Send resume to
Box 400 '" Care of the
GallipoliS Da1ly Trtbune. 825
Third Ave , Gallipoha. Oh

PArt Beagle pupptes. 2 mos
old Call 446 -3967

9508

9

32 Mobile Homes

Help Wanted

4, t984 EOE

CALL TOM HOSKINS

992 -2 196

3-8-2 mo. pd

No Dealers Please

All STEEL &amp;

mo

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Logan, Ohio

.• un1

SIDING

Now Accepting Listings in Mei s Co

NECCHI Education Department placed orders anticipating
school orders . Due to budget cuts. these orders were not
sold. Necchi has released for sale to the public a limited

Clel and
flow ·
flatsGreenhouse,
or pots, hanging
era,
baskets , vegetable plants.
tomato plants: Geraldtne
Cleland , Vtne and Main St
A acme

675-5254

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE "

11

The Daily Sentinel-Page

'{ard sales

6 puppies. 402 Locust St
Henderson
W Va 304 ·

Undt•rso ld

(4) t 6, 23, 30 3tc

Limited Supply -

3-28-tln

I

608
E . M111n

NEW USTING- letart Townshtp - Approx 4-1!3 acres
butld1ng or mobile ho""' Site
CTP water $7,000 00

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH . 992 -7013
New Chevy Truck .
FENDER
'76 95
OOQRS . ..
I 149 95
HOODS. . ... '174 95
BUMPERS
169.95
GRILL ... .
142 50
R. SUPPORT... . 184 95
TAIL GATE .
, 185.00
FORO FENDER . 169 95
BUMPER .. . .. 169 95

1 3 He

Don I BP Mi'llr·od
W ~· Will N o l R,

CAll JIJ NI WEL t
614 gg:&gt; ?IH I

3 Announcements

Pupptes 6 wks % shephard
'!~ Husky Call 446 -3142

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

May the JOY of known~&amp; her
be a IIiht tn your heart forever.
God Bfess You All
Albert, Husband, Patty &amp;Ray
PiCkens, dauilrter &amp; sotHnlaw: Nichola. "Hoelle &amp; Nancy,
IV'Oddauilrters: Brothars, Sisl·
ers &amp; ~ieces &amp; Newphtws

$18,900 00

6

742-2328

ness

POMEROY, 0 .
992· 2259
NEW USTING - Mtnersv11le
- large 2 story house wtth 4
bedrooms, dmmg room, stor
age bUtldtn~ part basement
plus another house that could
be a rental unit JUST

JIM CLIFFORD
PH 992-720L 1.tf

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION

Public Notice

Thf' Bo ard nl 01rf'rtnr s nl thP
I F1d nq C:rPPk C:on:.Pr,an_y

" CONCRETE WORK
"CUSTOM BUILT HOME S
"WATER, GAS &amp;
• OIL LINES

CARROLL'S
LAWN SERVICE

Call 614-992 -6737

RESOLUTION

"DOZER - BACKHOE
"RECLAMATION WORK '
"OIL FIELO SERVICES
"DUMP TAU C K SERVICE

PERSONALILED
POOLS
PH . 992-2549

(614) 985-4212

H odrng

Card of Thanks

-

.:.~~~r~~~~ now

•All

V&lt;t.

AL TROMM

Me rq s M'lnroe r-J oh le Vrnt on

1

:1• •Supervised Golf
'

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE - PH . 992-2772

O hr o St andd rd Tmre Tuesda'v

menrs rn

'

J&amp;F

CARPENTER
SERVIC(

ADULT 6 lor 140
STUDENTS 6 lor '30

For Faster Servtce

s- l8gol

Sc.l led proposa ls ~\r ll he
rPCeiVf&gt;:&lt;i at lhfi olfr r e u' th e
Ou.~c t or ol The Ohr o DeparT
rnent uf Transpo na110n Colum
bus 0 10 untrl 1C 00 A lv,
Ch10 Sl anda rd T mP I uesrta.,
M ay 1!:&gt; 1~8 4 for •mp10ve

17

~~

GOlf U!SSONS SPECAL

April13, 1984

Copy No 84-405
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
FRG-OOOR (t68)
SRG·OOOR (149)

18

P•'r
.. n,, ,111 rl t•ono; wh ch rnav hP
•I r 1nrJ 11 ',n 1Thr 11 1 Lno·at
$ !l(t &gt;l ()!&lt;;I I III ' 111'1 &lt;; 11 f S
(_) tt rr I Brd• will IJ!' !f'l P rvPr1 at
Thr rl llO\• 11ilmrr1 oll 1!f' tlfltrl
M1v
1
1 •'·1 1)() 1 P M
f 1 I I'!" 0 iVliq rt l T1rT1r drrC
IJLr!lh&lt;ty npo•n• d dl i{ 1 rP&lt;-!d at
!h lt h Oo .r .1n d [)I 11 f
f1Pnnoe F Hil l
Trf'£l '&gt; tiiP!
$()r J!hprn Local
Sfh11Q\ Dr&lt;;II!Cl

rn l &lt;rl !Pr t, Jn c p Jnd rP[ldlr 1&lt;;

Columbus, Ohto

Addre~--------------~·

t'l hcrrll\ (ll.ten 1h,1 t

11N1 h1rl'&gt; wrll \)fl tf'!Pivt"rl hy
StJ tltlwrn I ca l Sr lluu 0 1'\!r1t t
1 r r'd! 1 !1 11 Ill I .1 11 r I1Jr r_H I

3t , ,983

1

1983

I

NOI•Cr
&lt;;P

7 1~ 1 00

Balance Dec
fr

TO BIDDERS

2 982 00

Tm ~ t s

wr 1tt&gt; ybyr own ao and ordeT" oy mail with th1s

) Wanted
)FOf" Sale
) Announcement
)For Rent

rn t h P

Case No 24 393 lsabctte V
Brown Box 3Y2 M ason West

WIShes

Public Nottce

1984

YOUNG'S

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

Wash ngton Count• es r ___________
1
Qh 1o on var ous routes and t
sect 1o ns bv applyong l ast drv
pam ! tor cente r l•nes edge
hnes and lane lanes
Pavemen t W1dth
varres
Pr o 1ect Length - 0 00 tee! or
0 00 mrle
Work Length _ va11ous teet
or viHIOus miles
•Storm Doors
•Gutter 8t Downspouts
Tre Oh iO Depart ment cl
•Storm
W1ndows
•Roofing
Transponat1on hereby not1i1es
all biCiders that rt w1ll afflrma
•Replacement Windows ~Sidewalk s, Patios
11 velv 1nsure rha t •n any con tract
•Custom Built Garages
entered 1nlo pursuant to thiS
ad;e1t1 semP-nt m1n0111V bus1
ness ente rpr rses Wilt be af
lorded full opportun ty to su b
m11 b1ds Hl response to th1s
1nv1tat on and will not be
4 30 i mo pd
d 1 srr~m•nated aga •nst on the
groum1s ot race color or
nd 1onal or•g 1n 1n co ns 1derat 1nn
tor an aw;-ud
Mrn,mum waqe rates for thiS
pro 1e2t hate been pr edeter
m ned as requ.red by lnw nnd
are se t forth rn The brd
propos al
35185 Oak Hill Road
The da te Jet I Of compleuor
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
ol th• s work shall be se t torth 1n
PH.
the b1ddrng proposal
Each U• dde1 sh alt be reqUired
We Use Von Schrader
to 111 e wl!h h1s b d a cen1lied
Equipment Recommended
cneck or Ci1Sh 1er s cncck fo r J",
by Leadmg Carpet Manu amount P.Qual to five per cent
facturers.
of hra bid, but 1n no event more
th an f1ftv tho usa nd d clla rs ur a
We Have the
'FREE ESTIMATES"
bo nd fo r ten per cem af his bid.
Lowest
Rates
4-30· 1 mo
payable to the 011ector
Brdde rs must apply o n the
proper fon11 s tor qu alif1 ca1101l
at least ten cay., pr ror 10 t he
date set for open rng b1ds 1n
accordance wrth ( hJpiFr 5525
and
0~1 1 0 Rev1sed Cod e
Plans and spec ifi cat iOns are
on l1 le .n the Department of
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Oh10
Transportat•on and the o ffice ot
Charleston Rd.
the D str 1ct DPpu t'; D1recto r
Just Past Krodell Park
The D11ector reserves the
rrqht to reJeCt any and all bt ds
and

Pomeray-Middleport, Ohio

Business
Services
.----------"'T-----------,...-----------4

Business"'T__________
Services_

Public Notice

Actrny Probatt" Judge

CLEVELA'ID !API - Da niel
and Elizabeth Matko say they're
happy lherr second child, and not
their first, was born along the
Lakeland Freeway
The couple's 2.'&gt;-minute nde from
thetr Kirtland home to E uclid
General Hospttal east of Cleveland
was about 10 minutes too long
Sunday Matko then pulled his car
onto the Lakeland Freeway herm
and helped his Wile dehver thetr
daughter, Anne Ehzaheth.
Mrs. Matko said they were near
the East 260t h Street exit when her
contractloiLS became severe The
hosptlalts on East Ul5th Street
"At first I thought maybe we
should make a run for it. " Matko
sa id " Then she said the baby was
commgout I dtdn't want It to fall out
and have nobody there to catch tt '

PHONE 992-2156-J
0t ilfltl DIMly s..tiMI Cllu~MIII IJQt .
111 toiN't St..'-"'· 01110 •sn!

Smith to James 0. Huffman. M~ry
Hu!bnan, Lots 19 and 20, '~ of 21.
Pomeroy Village.

Gart h A. Smith, Audrey P Smith
to Dale E. Smith, Thelma J. Smith,
Lots, Reedsvllle
Roher! W Hayman, deceased
Shtrley A Hayman, Cert of Tra ns,
Sahsbury
So uthern Ohio Production Cr
Assoc fka Jackson Production Cr
AssO&lt;' to Kenneth R Utt , Elissa A.
Utt , Parcels Chester

Monday, April30, 1984

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs... property transfers
Paul N Alkman, Linda Aikman
to Honoree Chrtsttna Aikman,
Parcels, Salem
Marton C Dlngey, Leota M .
Dmgey to H enry L. Hunter, Mary J
Hunter, Parcel, Lebanon.
Earl P. Cross, Geraldine M
Cross to John E Murphy, Julia
Murphy, Lot 1218, Sutton
Buhl L Chenoweth, Sr.. deceased, afflda' It Buhl Chenoweth,
Jr, Ronald H. Chenowet h, Meigs
.Jewell J Jones, deceased, Pearl
F: Jones, deceased . Cert of Trans ,
Colurrbta
Harold 0f'al Johnson, Nedra Sue
Johnson to Henry E Hartman, 193
arrPs Chester
James M tller, Maqone Mtller to
Roger Dean Mtller. Sharon K
Mtllet Kenneth Johnson Jr , Lot
120. Olivr
F'r anr1s L PickE-ns M arv J
Pickens to Admm of Veterans
Affau s Asstgn of First Famtly
Mtg Corp . Sh ertff' s Deed,
Rut land
Htlda Clara Schmoll, deceased,
Robert Otho Schmoll, Corr ec live
Cert of Tt ans , Middleport Village
Claude Randolph to Thertll Ran·
dolph '"' lnt Lot 1108 Olive
Eslll Colhns, deceased, aff tda,·u,
Dorot hv Colhns, Sa ltsbun
Dowthy Colltns to Steven Ray
Hoover, Rhonda R Hoover 7 39
acres, Salisbury
Dorothy M Collins to Robert E
Collms, Gera ldine Ann H a nel
.Juvce M H all 2% acres Sahsbury
Marty E Dugan, Ruth Ann
Duga n to Ohto Power Company
Rrght of Way , Rutland
E ld1 ed K. Grimes, M Ka tha leen
Gn me~ to A lan R Wtlson, Ca roline
(; Wtlson, L ots 18 and 1q, Orange
Robert D Roush, L; netta J
Roush to Pa trrck D KeatiLs , I 34

April 30, 1984

~day,

Ohio

304 -675 ·

1976, 12x60, 2 bdr , exc
cond Completely furn1shed
All underp~nntng m c lude d ,

$5 500
6409

Call 6t 4-256

House for rent Hend erson .
Newlv remodeled , 3 br

S250-S275 month, $,00
depoSi t 614 446 01 16

�Ohio
Page-10--- The Daily Sentinel
41

Houses for Rent

~day,April30 , 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
55 Building Supplies

They'll Do It EveryTime

Hou se 2327 % li n coln Awe .
$ t35 .00 mo 30 4 -675 3669 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
.oiOM Till NI&lt;S

A UAIICCIIT
SHOI&lt;IP 1.001'-

2 bdr . trailer fullv furn ished,

LII&lt;f: 'ltlll'l&lt;li
IN 1Mtl AI"MY

good loc atio n . 58C . dep . req

Call 446 -8558 .

NOW···-

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 bedroom

trailers . Call 304 -773 5651 .

Front end loader for Ford
tractor, 8260 . Call 814 -

56

Bush hog estate lawn
mower. 5f1 . with 3 point
hitch . ex . cond .. 8600 . Call

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarll ng all breed1 . Heated
indnor - 'J utdoor facilitiu .
AKC' LJ,~ be rman puppies :
Stt c. :lt. • ca. Call 614-446 ·

614-367-7220

$360. PTO Burr Mill $300.

For rent with option to buy

12x65

two

bedroo m .

all

alec .. mobile home setting
on nice lo t Ready to m o ve
into, $200 00 down

S185 .00 per month . 304 -

Familv of three desires 3 br
house in country w · garden
space in Point Pleasant a..-ee .
Cell 304 -675 · 6559 or 774 ·
6808 Charleston .

Merchandise

576 -2711
2 bedroom trailer, kitchen

furnished . c oupl8s one small
child accepted References

304-675 -1076
3 bedroom. 2 baths, a ll alec .,
$200 . month . $150 . deposit. $35 lot rent 304 -695 3828

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON

ESTATES

APARTMENTS (Equal
Hou sing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms. rent
starting at $157 for o ne

bedroom

and

$ 193

per

month for two bedroom
with $200 deposit located
near Fo o dland and Spring
Valley Plaza . pool and TV

ant Call 446 -2745 or leave
message .
Small efficiency apart .. ce n
tral air &amp; heat , 1 professiona l
type gentleman o nly . 446-

0338
Garage apt ., furnished 3
rooms &amp; bath . Washer &amp;
dryer . Clean. no pets, aduhs
only . Dep . &amp; ref . req . Call

446 -1519
3 bdr

unfurn

$250

plus

garage apt .

deposit

Call

446 -3786
Furnished

eHiciency. 607
2nd
Gatlipolis . !11 45 .
Share bath, single Call
446 -4416 1!fter 7PM

Furnished apt , 1 bdr . near
HMC . S225 Utilities pd ,

Adults · Call 446 -4416 after
7PM
Furnished

central

Mobile

e~r.

Home.

mile below city

overlooking the river . One or
two adults only 446 -0338 .
Furnished apt . for rent 3
rooms with private bath , 1st
floor . 845 2nd . Ave .. Galli polis. Call 446 -2215 .
Modern 1 bdr apt . between
town &amp; Holzer , ideal for
single person . quieting set ting, S 165 mo . plus utilities.
sec. deposit . Call 446 ·

2055 .
Apt

for

rent

downtown .

S175 mo Call 446 -9283
1 bedroom Apt S 196 . mo
including utilities
Equal
Housing Opportunitv . Con tact Village Manor Apt s

614 -992 -7787
Riverside Apts Middleport .
Special rates for Senior
Citizens . S 130 . Equal Hous·
ing Opportunities . 614 -

992 -7721 .
2 bedroom furnished apart ment in Middleport . utilities
included . 5210 . mth . 992 -

7177 .
APARTMENTS. mobil e
homes. houses. Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614 -446 -

B221
TWIN

RIVERS

TOWER

Apartments now available to
elderly &amp;. disabled with an
1ncome of less than
912,300 . Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income

Phone 304 -675-6679
3 bedroom duplew. with full
basement , 2606 Mt Vernon
Ave 8275 . month with 1
year lease . 304 -675 -3030
or 675 - 3431

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel.

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

utili ·
male
919
Call

6246 .

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker , otto man , 3 tables. (extra heavy
by Fronti er). 5685 . Sofa.
chair and loveseat , $275 .
Sofas and chairs priced from
S285 . t o S895 Table&amp;. S45
and up to S 1 25 . Hide-abeds.$440
and up to
S525 , Recliners , S 175 . to
S375 , lamps from S28 . to
$75 .5 pc dinettes from
$ 99 .. to 435 . 7 pc $189
and up Wood table with six
chairs $425 to $745 Desk
S110upto$225 Hutches,
$550 and up. maple or pine
finish. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses. 8260 . and
up to $395 . Baby beds.
$110. Mattrftsses or boJC
springs , full or twin. $58,
firm . S68 . 11nd $78 . Queen
sets. 5195 4 dr. chests.
S42 . 5 dr . cheds. $54 . Bed
frames . S2D .and $25 ., 10
gun
Gun c ab1nets . S 350
Ga s or electr~c ranges $375 .
Baby mattresses. S25 &amp;
S35 . bed frames 620. $25.
&amp; S30, king frame S50 .
Good selection of bedroom
suites. ce dar chests.
rocker s. metal cabinets.
swivel ro cker s
Used Furniture ·· Refrigera tors, chairs. dryers. and
TV 's 3 miles out Bulaville
Ad Open 9am to 6pm, Mon .
thru Fri , 9am to 5pm , Sat.

614 -446 -0322
TV &amp; Applian ces . 627 Third
Ave . Gallipolis , 614 - 446 1699 . Spin wa shers . gas &amp;
electric dryers , auto
washers . gas &amp; electric
rlllnge~ .
refrigerator s, TV
sets

GOOO USEO APPLIANCES
Washers . dryers . refrigera tors. ranges . Skaggs Ap pliances. Uppftr River Ad
beside Stone Crest Motel

614 -446 -739B .
Good Usod Appliance Spe cial Maytag auto washer
S65 , Speed Queen auto
washer $95 . Maytag wrin ·
ger washer $1 25 , sid e by
side refrigerator $195 , fr ost
free harvest gold refrigerator
S 150, large c hest free zer
S125, couches &amp; chairs S26
&amp; up. unfinished chest of
drawers $68 . Skaggs Ap pliances. 559 Upper River

Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446 -7785

2B27
2 story house St3,000 .
1982 Dodgft Colt S4.200
316 S. Main St. Vinton. Oh

Co11614-388-9087
Trailer wheel tri -a.le

RON ' S Televisior Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar. and
house calls . Call 304-678-

RINGLE"S SERVICE experienced roofing. including
hot tar application. carpen·
ter, electrician. mason . Call

Q

Burris 304-675-6512 .

Wanted: Responsible party
to take over low monthly
payments on spinet piano .
Can be seen locally . Write
Credit Manager : P.O. Box
537 . Shelbyvill e. IN 46176 .
Gulbransen
ew.c. cond ..

773 -6783.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Couch. mattress &amp; box
springs . Call 446 -0518

Platform scales. old copper field washer with tub. res taurant pop cooler. gas grill.
Call 446 -2088 after 6
Custom Varmit rifle 225
win. Call614 -245 -5096 .
JD lawn sweeper. ex . cond .,
large type lawn roller Call

614-388 -B1 59 after 5 ·30 .
8 HP Wheel Horse electric
star1 36 in mower deck ,
$700 len N sons Small
Engines
Call 614 - 379 2827 . No Sunday calls
B HP Bolen garden tractor,
32 in_ mowftr deck, $500 .
len N sons Small Engines.

Coli

614 -379 -2827 .

No

Sunday calls
Rifles. shotgun! &amp; hand .
guns. Frank's PAwn Shop,
430 Second Ave .. Gallipolis.

Oh . 446 -0840.
Lawn mowers &amp; tiller s
Frank's PAwn Shop . 4 30
Second Ave .. Gallipolis. 0 h

446 -0840 .
16x6 wood storage build ing Call 446 -7751 or 614 -

spinet piano.
61.200. 304 ·

-----

61

Farm Equipment

0476 .
Corn planter s: New Ford 2
row . used 4 row MF . Call

614 -379-2468 .

w -loader, JD dozer. 2 Ver meer round balers. 120 MF
baler, Gravity wagons
plow s, co rn planter, li m e
spreader, di sc
We buy used equipment!

Coli 614 -446-1675 .
International Hay Baler 420
&amp; good condition Lime
spreader &amp; seeder. Call
before 8 :00 am . &amp; after

800 p .m 614-742 -2337 .
MF 65 . PS. LP. $1,800.00

Chest freezer . $50. two
couches. chair. old half iron
bed . much more C11ll 992 6341 , after 8 p .m

Recliner chair 850. Men's
golf clubs 826. Women's
golf clubs with bag like new;
great for beginner $60.
Westinghouse dishwasher
$30, Armless rust velour
couch -loose cushions S75 .

&amp;3.200 .00. Hay raike N .H
256, $1 ,400.00 . Hay bail er
N .H 66.$600 .00 . New hay
tedder . S675 00 . I .D . 6ft
mower . S400 00 . Used
Bush Hogs, $225 .00 up .
Phone 304 -576 -2328 or

Litton -c ontinous cleaning
electric oven. range . &amp; mic rowave unit, with corning
ware burners . Gibson -frost
free side by side refrigerator freezer . Call 992 -3766

54 Misc . Merchandise
Remmington 1 100 12
gauge with 3 barrells. 8425 .
12 gauge single shot . S35 .

992 -6853. alter 5 p .m

Call 6t4 -949-274 1 .
Maytag wringer washer
$100, frost · free refrigerator
9100, frost -free refrigerator
888. GE heavy duw washer
81 00. gas clothes dryer
866 . automatic washer &amp;
dryer $126 . 30 inch electric
range 846. GE refrigerator

885 . Call 814 -742 -2362 .
55 Building Supplies

Firewood for sale . 920 .00
pickup $30 .00 delivered .
LUMBER -Rough cut, oak.
poplar, 2JC4, 2JC6 , 2x8, 1 x4,
1x6. h8. length available, 8
ft . through 16 ft. Hogg &amp;

614- B43-531 1 or 843 5494 .

MF

40 gos .

576 -2606 .
Cub with
51.600.00 .

cultivator.
Phone 304 -

576-2147 .

62 Wanted to Buy

14.9x28" tractor tire. must
be in good condition. 304 -

63

050 00. 304-676 -203t .

1- - - - - - - - - - Terimite

Backhoe

End -

loader 304 -678 -2010 .

Livestock

1980 2 dr.

0498.
1974 Jeep PU, 4x4, s900 or

Case 310 fron1 end loader
dozer. $4,000 . Call 614 -

256 -1427.
Pigs - 8 weeks good stock,

$35 . Call 614 -367-0624 .
Goats-young billies for pets
or grazing . Call 614 · 367 -

0624 .
2 Registerftd Jersey cows, 3
vrs . old due in June . Asking
51.000 for both . Call 614 ·

best offer . 1969 Camero,
$800 or bast offer. Call

61 4·246 -5096 .
1972 Cadillac Coupe, full
power, climate contrpl, stereo, dark blue, excellent
condtion. Call 446-0677.
1979 MGB convertible A-1
cond, motor just tuned up

Call 6t4-245-5294.
73

Volkswagen

for

salft

with e'Xtras .

S3.000. Call 446-0516

74

1983 Honda V · 66 Magna
1.800 miles, luggage rack.
back rest. mint cond. Call
446-0648 after SPM .
1979 Honda CB 650. wind·
shield. roll bar. cruise. mag
wheels, trunk. low miles.

s1 ,295. Call 445 -4205.
Call

Dairv goats, Alpines and
Lomanchas
Kids and
milkers . Phone 304 - 675 ·

car. Call614-256-9366 .
64

Hay &amp; Grain

Northup King corn, alfalfa &amp;
grass seed, other farm
sfteds . Call Vaughn Tavlor ,

614 -245 -5064 or 614 -245-

Garden seeds, plants, Ken nftbec seed potatoes $8 .50.
Fertilizer, field seeds . Boso
_Agri -Center, 446 - 2463 .

Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

1979 Thunderbird good
cond., low mileage. 1978
Chrysler PW. Horseman's
show saddle. Call 44 -1830

1980 Kawasaki 1300 Shaft
drive. 13,060 miles. Very
good condition. Call 614·
992-7110 after 6 p.m .
1980 Harley Spor1ster blue
with black mag wheels one
owner 6.000 miles, S2,600 .

miles. $1.300 00 . 304 576-2B46.

1972 Olds Cutlass 4 Dr . Call
1976 Pontiac Astra. runs
good. bod~ rough. good
work car. 6650 . Call 614 992·21 43 or eveings at
614 -742-2289. Michael.
1982 Plymouth Champ. ac.
four speed, 10.700 miles.
37 mpg, asking 84300. Call

614 -446-2282 .

1982 Honda custom 900.
Schaft drive, 11 ,000 miles.

Shorp. 304 -676 -2973 .
1981 660 custom Honda.
2000 miles . excellent condi ·
tion . Call after 6 p .m .

304-895-3012 .

Correct Craft a. Ski Su ·
preme, family ski boats .
New &amp; used, Parkersburg.
WV 304-422 -8433 or 304 -

422-2367 .

1981 DHtsun 280 -ZX turbo,
10.000 miles , mint cond .,
Gr Lux. Coupe . Call 446 0648 after 5PM

76

1981 Pontiac Bonneville.
ew.c . con . Call 614 -992 3348 after 5 p .m .

lif11ruck, $1 .800 . Call992 2772 .

lzisu motor to fit 1978
Chevy luv truck Phone

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

5PM
'74 AMC Hornet, auto. ,
good running cond . ,

3869.

895 -3472

or

304 - B95 -

3967 after 5 p .m .

1979 Mercury Cougar XR7,
PS, P8, Air ·cond., AM -FM
stereo tape , low mileage.

78

Camping
Equipment

1980 Dodge Col1 RS. axe.
cond ., new radial tires.

55,000 S3,500, 304· 6755306 .
72

Trucks for Sale

1980 Dodge D 50 PU , 4

3

1978 GMC ~ ton. heavy
duty, 4 WD. auto .. good

WHEN IT $/IAUG£0

cond .. 12.860 . Call 446 8103 .

ON THE MANM
ROOF!

1980 Plymouth Arrown
pickup, aJCcellent condition.
low miles. $3.600 . Call

Pll~HI'.P6 I UJULD
6UMMON THE FIRE
DEPI'.I&lt;TMENT TO

446 -0964.

RETRIE.VE IT/ NO ,

,...--.,r,-,_,,,._,,

OF DUTY :

8606 .
1979 4 wheel -drive Ford
pickup, new tires A. rims ,
right tide has been wreck•d.

Now open for business,
Mountain Sta1e Block, Rt .
33, New Haven . Complete
ma1onry 1upplies, 4" . 8 ".
1 2 " block. Delivery 18rvice.

ing, AC .
7160.

63.000

367 -

14ft. self contained "Joy
Time·· camper . 6650 .00

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Camper s

runo good, 81000 .
814· 742 -2513 .

BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES &amp; SERVICE. Open

·,'
·I

I

ALLEYOOP

Good·1 Excavating. base ments. footers . driveway s.
septic tank s. landscaping.
Call anytime 614 · 446 4637. James l. Dav1son . Jr
owner .

J .A .R.Construction Co Ru -

tland , Oh ,61 4 -742 -2903 .

I I I

I GICARTl
. I KIJ

IYARWIA
I
riJ

II2J

Billy

Graham

B:30

We have d part
!?over has
open for a child never done
about your son',; anyactinq!
aq e!
v:;;;;;;;;:ll.:

9:00

£1) MOVIE: '2001 : A Space
Odyssey·
(lJ MOVIE: 'Tha Block

1984 26 ft . travel trailer.
fully equiped, air. awning .
87995 . Can be seen at 276
Ash St. Middleport. 992 -

and Allie are ashamed
when they discover that
they care more about the1r
possess1ons
than
thev

Call

78 Ford courle:r truck, &gt;Jery
low mileage, 6 on floor. 30

pluo mpg. 83 ,600.00. 304·
B82· 2B94.

'Gustav Mahler : Symphony
No . 6 · Leonard Bernstein
conducts the V1enna Phil harmonic in thiS perform·
ance of Mahler's 'Tr ag1c

,,

5433.

882-2328.

Services
Home
Improvements

phanie runs away from
home to the Stratford Inn
and Dick is propositioned
~ a notorious actress. (A)

STUCCO and PLASTERING
- Commercial and residen tial. free estimatas. Call
Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing . Now installing rubber
roofs . 30 year1 experience.
specializing in built up roof .

Cagney &amp; Lacey
10:t5 (lJ Murder: No Apparen1
Motive This documentary
studies the epidemic of
serial murders in the U .S
10:30 (I) Shirley &amp; Pa1 Boone
C1) Living with Grace Tonight's program follows
the life of a woman suffering f rom Alzheimer's Disease.
(ill Newswatch
fjJ INN News

DAY REFRIGERATION

Call 614-388 -9817.
PAINTING · interior and ex terior, plumbing, roofing,
some ramodeling. 20 yrs.

exp. Call 814·388-9662 .

cellent condition, $60.00.
New swivel rocker 1111 than
half price. 3 piece. antique

fumfturo, 304·1711· 3838.

SALES
Professional ser vice for appliances . heating ,
cooling and electri c. Sell and
install Amana. Gibson. Kit chen Aid . Residential. Com mercial . Industrial. 304 -

675 - 4819
614 -388 -8274 .

11oo

BARNEY

6LOBBLE
6LUB
GLUB

ARE VOU
0\LLIN' ME
NAMES, TATER?

GLUB

GLUB

HE WAS
CALLIN'ME
NAMES

or

Need something hauled
away or somftthing moved?
We'll do it _ Call 446 -3159
between 9 and 5 .

256 - t 141 or 614 -446 1 1 76 or 614-446 -79t 1
SERVICE

Call Jim Lanier . 304 -675 -

7397 .

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis

614-446 -7833 or61 4 .4 46
1833 .
-

a m cu om ®I mw

News
(I) Another Life
(]) SportsCenter
(]) All In 1he Family
aJ News/Sports/Wea1her
IIJ Dave Allen at Large
(fl) Breaking the Silence
'The Generation Aher the
Ho locaust .' Children of
Nazi Holocaust survivors
confro nt the past directly
through the help of support
II!_OUpS . (60 min.l
fjJ Benny Hill Show
t 1:15 ® Inside Baseball
ffi Tonight Show
t 1:30 D
I]) MOVIE: 'High Road To
China'
(I) &amp;est of Groucho
iil Cetlins
® WKRP in Cinclnnotl
li) (fJ Hart 10 Hort A discovery by Jonathan's wine
partner leads the Harts into
an inwestigation of murder
and sales fraud. (AI (60
m i_n.)
([J Latanight America
® All In the Fomily
IIJII2J Nightlino
fJ) Twiligh1 Zone
11:45@ ESPN Special: 1984
NFL Draf1 Preview
12:00 (})MOVIE: 'The Prowler'
(]) Burna &amp; Allan
C[l MOVIE: ·well of Noise'
@ Nlghtline
ll] MOVIE: "A Thousand ~
Clowns'
IIJII2J Eye on Hollywood
fl) Gunsmoke

m

PEANUTS

James Boys Water Servi ce
Also pools filled . Call 614 -

87

GLOBBLE

General Hauling

WATER

'Adam's

U iiJ ®I

69B-6553

JIMS

MOVIE:

Woman '
(I) TBS Evening News

SEWING Machine repairs.
service . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Servi ce Sharpen
Scissors
Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy. 614 -992 -2284 .

B5

Symphonx' (90 min)
Ill liD ® Newhart S1o-

10:00 lV

256 -1583.

D. DAY REFRIGERATION

1976 20ft Stan Craft travel
trailer, fully self contained.
all extras, 83,000 .00. 304 ·

81

9:30

·"

Electric al work, all phases.
free estimates. reasonable
rates. qualified electrician .
Contact Ron Huffman , 614 -

614 -388 -8274 .

SaiUrday's

r

Jumbleo: RURAL BANAL UNWISE IMPORT
Answer: A feelln~ you get when you open your mail
on the first of the month -"B ILL·IOUS"

I

Jolnthl Jumblli Lowen F.n Club•nd__,..ab: ....-wont Super Jurnb6Hewtymonth.
For trw Nmpin
to: JumtiM Loven Ftn Club, clo this AMnpt~. Bo.~; 5241,
Gfllndc.n!:ral StttiOn, New Y(Wt(, N.Y. 10113.1ncludeyourname,
lnd :lpcoclt.

wn•

•del'"'

.Pear Sweetheart,
])o you ever
think ofme?

Just the other
day I was thinking
of you.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

No problem for experts
Jim "This hand is taken

WEST
+K
"QJ107

I'm pretty sure
it was you.

from a catch-as·calch-&lt;:an

NORTH
+A2
"K964
• J 10 7
+9843
EAST

rubber game . You sat South
and opened two spades
North made a very silly bid
of four, but you broke into
Blackwood and assumed
that the ace and king shown
by your partner were the
ace and king of trumps .
Anyway, as Karpin points
out, you always overbid and
then make the besl of your
overbid. The dummy wasn't
at all what you had hoped to
see, but the slam was there
If the srades obeyed as a
good sui should. You ruffed
the heart and led your 10 of
spades."
Oswald· "II anyone wond ers why I led the 10, the

• 9 7 54

"A8532

+8

• 9643

+Q 101

+J65 2

SOUTH
+QJIOR63

"- --

tAKQ52
+AK

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wett

East

Nortb

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

answer ls that it is an automatic safety p1av. If you

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

lead the queen, and West has
either singleton king or king small, he will cover. When
you lead the I 0 and Wesl
plays the k1ng, you can be

•Q

sure that

it is a singleton."

Jim: "So having mad e
your safety play, you had no

problem leading back
dummy's last spade and

By Oswald Jacoby
and Jameo Jacoby

playing your eight to linesse
Oswald: "Fred Karpin
wrote a book on slams back
in 1962 and we have found
considerable interest in it,
particularly as it includes
many Oswald
Jacoby

against

hands."

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

East's

nine-spot.

thus picking up the trumps
and allowing you to claim
your slam ."
Oswald "No problem at

all."

~UM~;r

IIJII2J MOVIE: 'Players'
U ®®I Ka1o &amp; A Ilia Kate

Electrical

D

"K XI I I I I

(Answer! tomorrow)

@

&amp; Refrigeration

SALES - Professional ser·
vice tor appliances, heating ,
cooling and ele c tric Sell and
install Amana. Gibson . Kit chen Aid . ~esidential . Com ·
mercial, Industrial. 304 675
4819
or

gest&amp;d by the abowe cartoon .

Answer here: THE

Stallion Returns'
U I]) aJ MOVIE: 'Adam·
(I) 700 Club

tho~ht.

daily 9 to 6 :30. Sat. 9 to 4,

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as sug·

Court

Cruse de

Dotson's Tree Service. In sured - Free Estimate. 304 -

84

WHAT THEY c:AL.LEP
THE MAN WHO PUI
ISL.A55 I jo.,j/0 THe
I&amp;L.OO WINDOWS.

Jeffersons

Ill

Basements. Footers. Con crete work , Backhoe ' s ,
Dozer &amp; Oitcher , Dump
trucks. &amp; water -gas-sewerelectrical lines .

Sun . 1 to 4 . U.S. Rt . 50.
Coolvil.l a. Oh 614 -667 3386.

Crushed velvet couch . ex-

'/·.30

SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heating , At . 2 Neal Road,
Point Pleasant , W . Va . 304 675 -5420 . licensed and
Insured .

Meigs Ele c tric Service ,
Stftve Barnett. Call 614 -

614-256-1 1B2.

1973 1f2 ton Chevy truck .
360 engine, with original
•teel bad, large mud flaps,
front 1teel mud guards,
e .m .· f .m. radio , 8600 . 992·

VIEW

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING . At. 1, Sox 355 , Galli polis. Call614 367-0676 .

4066 .

oxc . cond . 304 -675-65B6 .

DIIAT.' TriE !JoY5 .HIT£
WA5 ALMC5T MWN

614-446 -44 77

Pasquale Electric Co. all
phases of electric work . all
work guaranteed . Aerial
truck rental. 614 - 446 -

304 -675-2171 .

s5.600 . Call 446 -4205

1976 Corvette, load ad.
S8200 or best offer , 304 -

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614 -446 -3888 or

304 -676 -5462 .

1966 Ritzcraft trailer. ewn -

1970 Chew. Impala, auto
transmission. PS . 45.000
actual miles . 304·675 ·

1978 Chrysler LeBaron.
AM -FM cassett e, CrUISe,
power windows . air condi ·
tion, 304 -676 - 1123 .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

304-576 -2010

1969 Camero 350, 4 speed.

1980 Buick Regal Limited,
PS . PB. cruise. AC, tilt
wheel. good tires . rear win dow defrost. good cond.,

304-675 -5306 .

L/11£-

Starks Tree Trimming &amp;
Removal lawn mowing and
maintenance. landscaping,
10 Pet oH all estimates

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

[]

LEBLE

(.j) (1j) Great Performances

S500.00. 304-675- 1504

1974 Dodge Challenger.
must see to appriciate. ask ·
ing 62,400 .00 make offer .

1.0011 OUT.' llti/T SIYAPPE/J
CA8U IS Whfi'PfN' MWM'

576-2897

$1. 100.00. 304 -675 -1600

446 -3637

ANNIE

Dozer Work . Free Estimat es .

Boats and
Motors for Sale

,.

I I I

Dough
(lJ Fragglo Rock
Cil Bob No who rt Show
IIl U (fJ Family Feud
liD Dr. Who
[OJ Wheel of Fortune
til (H)
Entertainment
Tonight
£1) One Day a1 a Time
8:00 D C1J CD TV's &amp;loopers
and Practical Jokes Dick
Clark and Ed McMahon
hosts this look at some
scenes that were never intended for viewing by an
audience . {60 min ~ ~
ClJ Not Necessarily The
News
(lJ MOVIE: 'Tho French
Lieutenant's Woman'
a; Cisco Kid
(!: USFL Football: Los
Angeles at Houston
(]] Cousteau/ Amazon, Pert
II Second of 3 parts.
Jacques Cousteau's most
dangerous voyage contin·
ues as he and his crew encounter
a
tnbe
of
unfriendly warriors deep in
the rain f o rest (2 hrs.)
:!:) Blue Thunder Chaney
and his helicopter battle a
drug and arms dealer who
uses a remote controlled
plane. (R) (60 m1n.)
0 CIJ ®l Scarecrow end
Mrs. King An Italian scien·
tist is spirited out of Russia
by the agency and placed
under Lee's protection. (A)
(60 min .)
([)(ill Frontline 'Air Crash·
Tonight's program exam ·
ines the plight of the air
crash survivors of Pan Am
Flight 759 as they become
the focal point of an array
of legal maneuwers. (A) (60
min .) [Closed Captioned)

446 -8038.
75

-

D (}) Tic Tac

614 -992 -6236.

ask for Jim Lively .
1978 Ford Fairmont Futura .
3 spd., AC , good cond .,
52.000 or best offer. Call

7:30

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Excavating

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

MacNeil/lehrer

IIJII2J People's

fiJ

3802 .

83

•

Newshour

Water wells commercial and
domestic, test holes. pump
sales and servi ce 304 -895 ·

6747.

$2000. 446-9700.
a11ar 5 P.M. 446-4850 .

&lt;llJ

458-1566

exc . con., 6000 miles, lots
of eJCtraa. Call 614-992 -

1968 International dump
truck, $1 ,000; Baker Fork
TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars .
Smith
Buick -Pomia c. 191 1 East ·
ern Ave ., Gallipolis . Call

,.,... onllnlry -

®News

BORN LOSER

Abston Home lmprovemen.t
Specialist. Homes. addi.tkms, roofing. patios, drywall, concrete, painting. all
types of remolding . ~04r-

1980 Kawasaki LTO 1000

or 446 -266-6485.
1978 Dodge Omni, 2 · tone
gray, 4 spd., good cond

Remolding, siding, interiOr
and exterior, teKtured coating, simulated brick and
stuco, thermo replacement
windows. 304 -676 - 1560

11

u.-omblt- four J....-,

C2l B.J./Lobo Show
U (fJ Wheel of Fortune
Cll Business Report

mo1oo . 304 -675 -2296.

82

e

([J Sanford end Son
(]] Entertainment Tonight

446 -8648 be-

tween 6 &amp; 9 p.m.

1980 Yamaha 650 special.
good condition, 4,100

1979 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Brougham. air. AM -FM ste·
roo. tilt wheeL PW. POL.
48.000 actual miles. new
radial tires &amp;. battery, exc

SHIP

100 CC Yamaha. trail &amp; road

bike

1973 Ford LTD runs good,
fair cond . Call 614 -367·

7217.

carpet

thing. 304-458 -1566.

6 week old roosters for sale.
35 cents each. Call 614 -

949 -2502 .

your

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN

Will haul sand, gravel. any·

Motorcycles

$250 Coli 614-256-1755 .

OUR BOARDING HOUSE &lt;

NAR~OW

loaded

Ca11614-992 -3316 .

spd ., radio 82 ,996 . John's
Auto Sales. Bulaville Rd .,
Gallipolis, 446 · 4782 . Open
til dark .

A

spd ..

245-9598 .

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

TODAYS PUBLI~
~ERVAATS TAKE

1979 Jeep CJ·5. 6 cyl .. 3

1978 Kawasaki 200. 6.400
miles. $750. 992· 6954.

Zuspon, 304-773 -5654.

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

roof. S3, 195

Fairmont Ford, 4 cyl.. auto,
air. $2,895, 1980 Renault
LeCar, 4 spd ., AM · FM. air,
sunroof. S2,495 . 1979 Ply mouth Horizon, 4dr .. 4 spd ..
$2,295. John's Auto Sales.
Bulaville Rd.. Gallipolis.
446· 4 782 . Open til dark.
1 976 Corvette. factory
aluminum wheels. many extras, low mileage . Call 446 -

882 -3110 .

ment Co. 1304-575 -7421 .
A D Smith gas hot water
tank Permaglass I, 40 gal .

4 spd ., AM-FM tape.
$3.495. 1981 2 dr. Chevy

Vans &amp; 4 W .O .

73

Chevette. auto. radio. sun·

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

446 -8038
Lawn tractor. Sears 1 1 H P .,
36 in . cut 19BO. $500 . Call

1982 AMC Spirit. auto, air,
AM · FM , sunroof , $4,195 .
1982 2dr. Chevy Chevette.

Jividen's Farm Equipment.
6 1 4 -446 - 1675 . Long trac tors, Vftrmeftr round balers,
rakes, teddter &amp; mowers &amp;
also a complete line of bale
handling acces ! Tobacco &amp;
corn spravers. tobacco set ters. wagons. rotary tillers,
rotary cutters, blades. culti ·
vators. disc . plows. post
drivers . plastic tanks . wood
splitters . gates . power
washers. Wheel Horse lawn
&amp; Garden Tractors . Goosene ck t ra iler . And see us for a
co mplet e line of parts &amp;
service!

Ferg ., 135 MF. 150 MF

1976 Chevy Monza 4 cyl ., 4
spd., good body, runs good,

440 John Deere with loader.
3 pom1 &amp; P T.O 62600 . Call

Strew S1 .00 bale. Cleaning
out barn. 300 bales . First
come basis . 304-675-3333

245 Massev Ferg . 2 -9N
Fords, 424 I H. 801 Ford , 50

Autos for Sale

&amp;600. Call 614-256-6248.

165 Massey Ferguson 130
Farmall with cultivators,
Harrow &amp; tobacco baler .
Call 446 -7838 after 5PM .

USED EQUIP!

71

6 HP Troybilt tiller. good
shape . Call 446 · 4780 .

5815 after 8PM

256 -6669 .
Shrubs pruned, lawns re seeded . retaining walls .
sidewalks. patios. fill dirt .
topsoil. bark mulch &amp; saw dust . Contact Bruce Oavi sion . Call 614 -256 - t427 .

nox1 1o

6430 .
Troy - Bilt tillars. Check our
special price before you buy
anv tillers . Swisher lmple·
mont Co. St. Rt 7 N, Galli polia,OH . CaH 614 -446 ·

Countrv Oak Furniturft . ta bles . chairs. cupboards, dry
sinks. pie safes lots o f misc .
Conkles . At
7 . Tupp ers
Plains. Ohio .

Wood cuHer special , Bar and
Chain Lube , $3 .89 gal.
$17 .50 c ase . Siders Equip -

MOVING 10 88 Burde11e

446 -1904.

$700 .00 .

Call614 -256-1433.

Addn . All merchandise must
go . Building for rent , Hugh

Whitney upright piano,
S 150 . Call 446 · 0974 or

or 675 -

STEAMER. Water removal,
furniture cleaning, free esti -

rear~===========-~-===========~
I

See

D (}) C2l NBC Newo
(]) Riflemen
@ SportoCenter
Cil Carol Burnett
(f) Ill tl2i ABC News
Iii (fJ ID CBS News
illl Hitch Hikers Guide/
Galaxy
7:00 D (}) PM Magazine
(]) Here Come tho Brldea
@ ESPN Special: 1984
NFL Draft Preview

8:30

1331 .

mower
No .sell4 separately
51
mounted. Will

owner

fjJ Star Trek

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal . Call 304-675 ·

GET

by

Newahour

(llJ 3·2-t , Contac1

2398 or 614-446-2464 .

Sentinel-Page

one 1ot1er 10 NCit oquare, 10 fo&lt;m

DC1:lCIJiiiCili1DIIlt121

New a
(}) MOVIE: 'Enchantmanf
(I) New Treasure Hunt
@ Mazda Sportslook
Cil Prog confd
C2l Nowa/Sports/Wo01her
Cll
MacNeil/Lehrer

Gena Smi1h . 992 -6309 .

1971 MF 135 gas. like new.
with 7 ft. New Hollnad

Methodist Church in Alfred
on St. Rt . 681 .

8:00

scotchguard -water extrac_·
tion . deodorizers . FREE est I·
mates . Reasonable rates .

304- 676 -2088
4660 .

\.!:11

EWER

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN.

..

M-. ....

'i}jt~~ TIIATICRAIIBLEDWORDQAME

~

11ono. Call 614 - 367- 040~ .

Deere corn sheller $350.
firm hand grinder mixer
$1,250. John Deere 2 8t 4
row corn planters . haying
equipment. 8 row boom
apray 8660 . One of the
largest selections of field
ready used equipment in
South er n Ohio . Howe ' s
Farm Machinery, Rt . 124 &amp;
Mayhew Rd. Jackson, Oh

Wanted to lease: Tobacco
allotment . Call 304-6761197 aher 6 p .m .

For sale Spinet-console pi ·
ano bargain . Wanted : Re sponsible party to take ower
low monthly payments on
spinet piano. Can be seen
locally . Write Credit Man·
ager: P .O . BoK 537 Shelby·
ville, IN 46176 .

Call

Complete hospital bed with
rails. owerbed table and
bedside commode. very nice
S250. Very old dining room
table. 6 chairs. and a side board. Misc. household
items and furni•hings, rea·
sonably priced . For sale
immediately. Ca11696 - 1144
after 5PM .

Musical
Instruments

Do1er Work Freft Estimates

Rd . 446 -7398 .

11 :00 AM or after 6 :00PM .

614-992-7479 .

57

Harley Dawison electric rid ing golf cart Ca11446 -1 1 30

304 - 675 - 2991 before

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

2944 .

Ford 3000 gas. $4,500.00 .
Plows $200.00 up . Ford
3000 diesel, &amp;4,500.00.
Disc
S 1 . 000 . 00 t o

Trailer space on Bulaville Ad
Kyger Creek School District

· Park. Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy. Large lots . Call

Kittens for sale beaut1tu1 n
himalayan Y2 siamese. Males
&amp; females . Call 614 -742 -

614 -256-6574 .

Call614-742 -2187 .
46 Space for Rent

Baby rabbits . S 1.00 each 1
full grown male, 1 full grown
female. $3 .00 each. Call

614 -379 -2216 .

Build on your Iota new home
62 Olive St. . Gallipolis. New you afford . Over 1100 sq .
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stoves, ft .. 6 rooms &amp; bath, cer·
6 piece wood living room peted, reedy to move into
suite with 6 inch flat arms S26,500 also garages &amp;
$399, bunk beds complete basemen1
Call Patriot
with bunkies S 199, 2 piece Home Builders 446 -8038.
antron livingroom suites Will considftr mobile home
$199. antron recliners S 99, as trade -in.
other recliners S80. maple
dinfttte sets S179. bow. Firewood cut up slabs $15
springs &amp; meHress twin or pickup load Call 614·245 full $100 set regular . firm 6804.
S120. maple dinette chairs 1- - - -- - - - -- 635. wash stands 934, Limestone, fill dirt. and top
maple rockers $59. 7 piece soil. Call 614- 256 - 1427 .
chrome dinette set $149. 51 - - - - - - - - - - piece dinette set 699. used Lil red &amp; big red shaft drive
bedroom suite s. refrigera · brush cutters, trimmers .
tors. ranges, chest. dressers. 30cc &amp; 40cc gas powered
wringer washers. TV's. dry· engines
Prices hom
ers. &amp; shoes . Call 614 -446- $299.95 len N Sons Small
3159 .
Enginus
Call 614 - 379 -

Call 614 -446 -0756 .
Sleeping room S115.
ties paid. Share bath ,
Qnly . Range &amp; refrig
2nd . Ave ., Gallipolis
446 -4416 after 7 PM

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 1 2" · 22 " stocked
in vard . HEAP vender .
prompt delivery . 614 -256 ·

Home
Improvements

...

The

Television
Viewing

H ftt S Home Improvements
winyl siding. roofin~. room
addition. storm Windows.

45640 , 614-286-6944 .

3 yr . old female Pointer good
hunter. good reason for
selling . Call 446 -4472 be ·
tween 5 &amp; 7 .

by Larry Wright

614-367-71B2 .

Judv Taylor Grooming Call

9790 .

Ca ll 6t4 -992 -7479 .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

246-5096.

Holland 1obacco setter
$300, New Idea maneure
1preader like new $1,260,
Massey Ferguson lever disk
$560, single bo"on pull
plow S 1 00, wheel disk
&amp;600-up. Fertilize spreader

Briarpatch Kennels Profes·
sional All -breed grooming .
Indoor -outdoor boarding fa ·
cilities. English Cocker Spa niel puppies . Call 614 -38 8 -

Very Nice 2 bedroom mobile
home, furnished . S175 plus
utilites &amp; deposit . No pets .

Farm Equipment

60 sheetl of T1 - 11 wood
aiding . Call614 -949 -2437 .

779 b.

Fully furni shed, AC , 2 bdr ..
adults only. C all 446 -41 1 0

61

81

.

~"'~f

....

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

DOWN

1 Renown
5 Street talk
10 Newspaper

1 "On Golden
Pond" star
%Circa
3 Fudge a bit
4 Swruner (Fr ) ~-'.P.
5 Fearful

notic~

11

Prance

13 Not one
14 Incarnation
of Vishnu
15 French
for Duke

' Rod of tennis
7 Gardner
8 Never!
9 Printing

16 ''Three,''
in Bari
17 Blvd.
18 Artisan's
studio
20 Clumsy ship
21-off

process
12 Threefold
16 Bound

19 Evil grin
Z2 Soda flavor
23 Estimate

Yesterday's Answers
24 Noted Atias
25 Cross out
27 Change
back
29 Kitchen
gadget

30 - bleu!
31 Join in

36 "Who am

- argue?' '
37 Apartment
(sl.)

(slarted)
22 Sagan

of science
za caused pain
25 Bequest

i--,--+---+---+-

recipient
· 26 Persian
tiger
27 Depend (on)

28Rested
29 Reversion
32 Go wrong
33 - been had!
34 Was a
candidate
35 Water
channel
37 Scot's
ancestor

38Dog
39 Israel port
40 Not taU
41 Impala, e.g.

DAILy CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's

how to

work

It :

AXYDLIIAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

One letter oimply stonds for another .. In I his .•ample A II
d f r the three L's. X for the two 0 s. etc . Smgle letters,
~:!.t~phea, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Earh day the code letters are d11ferent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
RASQ

HAAZR

AEGQBR
RASQ

VBQ

HQ

EA

LQU

EA

OWTQREQO. -

EA

HQ

EV RE QO ,

RUVNNAUQO

VYO

XGQUQO

VYO

HQ

LBVYXWR

HVXAY

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: THE MAN WHO UVES ONLY BY
HOPE WlLL DIE WITil DESPAIR- ITAUAN PROVERb

�Page

12-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 30, 1984,

Parnervy-Middleport, Ohio

man

killed in
freak accident
County man

VILLAGE PHARMACY'S

OAK HILL - Gallla

was k1lled in a freak accldellt at an
Oak Hfil coal finn this morning.
'The Jackson County Sher1tt' s
Departmentldentlt!ed the vlctlrn as
Steve E . Montgomery, 21, Rt. 1,
Crown City.
Deputy Tony !Wbinson said
Montgomery was electrocuted by
approxlmately 7,:m volts of elec·
tr1clty willie he was adjusting the
brakes on a truck owned by his
employer, C.C. Caldwell Trucking
of Gallipolis.
Robinson said the incident OC·
curred around 8 a .m. He said trucks
driven by Montgomery and James
ca.Jdwell, no age and address
avallable. were parked at Waterloo
Coal Co .. three miles north of Oak
Hill on Ohio 93.
The trucks' beds were raised near
a power line owned by Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Eleclric Co., Robin·
son said. in order for the beds to be
washed. Caldwell - oo relation tD
the trucks' owner, Robinson saidwas washing his truck when
Montgomery borrowed a wrench
from Caldwell.
Montgomery was underneath the
truck working on the brakes when a
strong gust or wind blew one or the
power lines onto Montgomery's
truck. Robinson said Montgomery
was apparently in contact with the
truck when the line struck the
ve hicle.
Southeastern Ohio Emergency
Medical Services arrived on the
scene almost live minutes a!ler the
Incident, Robinson said, followed by
the sheriffs department, Waterloo
Coa l officials, c&amp;sOE personnel
and Jack Jones,

WINNERS - 'These !ll'e the winners of 'lbe Dally Sentinel's annual
Easter coloring contest sponsored by Big Bend merchants. Prizes of
$15, $10 and $15 were awarded in two age categories for first, second IUid
third places.
Frod, Ito r, are Sara Cr.Ug, Pomeroy, first; RyMIWwe, Middleport,
second; Bobbie White, Coolville, third, through age eight category;
back, I tor, MeUssa Miller, !Wute I, Long BotWm, first; Suzanne Gaul
Clay, Chester, second. Third place winner in the through 12 yeW'S
category was Tanuny Klein, Pomeroy, not pidured.

Meigs County happenings
Veterans Memorial

Tuesday meeting

Saturday Admissions .. HomN
Bradshaw, Middleport ; David Car·
men, Cheshire: Maggie Not ~
tingham, Long Bottom .
Saturday Di,charges .. (arro ll
Johnson, Ruth Luthf'ran, Lee
Layne, We nde ll !-'reeke r.
Sunday Admissions .. Ruth Med·
ley. RacinP; R uss&lt;'Ul:larton, Mason.
W. Va.: JamC's Cop&lt;'land, Rutla nd .
Sunday Oischarges .. Qilford Far
rei!. Kenneth Lawson, David
Catmen

Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
Eastern Star, will meet at 7: 45p .m .
Tuesday a t the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple .

MeeLos this t•vening

Sutlon Township Trustees will
meet a t 8 p.m. Tuesday at the

Middlepon PTO will mC'E't this
evening a t 7:30 p.m . Following th&lt;'
meeting a special program, "Spring
Fling" will hf' presented bv the fi rst
and second gradC's.

SALE STARTS TUESOAY, MAY 1ST
DIGITAL

ALARM
CLOCK

100 CT.

IMYLANTA.

PAPER
PLATES

Effective
Antacid/ Anti-Gas

$699

69¢

INSTANT
NESTEA

BIC
LIGHTERS

3 oz.

$239

fast action/low sodium

120Z.

LIQUID

13"

4 PK.

great taste

•

$!69

DIAGONAL

COLOR TV
Model 21310 A.
• Zen1th Tr i-Focus P1cture Tube tor outstanrt;ncl
sharpn es s
• Dependable 100% modular Z· 1 ChaSSis.
• Trans1 SIOr 1zed VHF/UHF Super Video
Range Tun 1ng

• St1m- l1ne ca b1net
'j,i··

GIGANTIC
YARD
SALES

Will have surgery
Greg Bush, Middlepon , son of
Mrs. Celeste Coa ts, will undergo
major eye surgery at University
Hospital in Columbus Tuesday.

This Solid Pine-Trimmed Masterpiece
Is Designed For Pure Country Comfort!

LEE CIRCLE, RUSTIC HILLS
SYRACUSE, OH .

Meets Tuesday

Stand

1 LB. BAGGED

MAY 2, 3 &amp; 4

HARD CANDY
$1 59

9 30 A M

;s~y~ra~c~u~se~M~uru~·c~i~pa~l~B~uil~·d~in~g:·--~====:===·==·===~

Jurors were being Sl.'a!cd this

breaking and f'ntC'ring .

arms . e ~tra · th • Ck 1&lt;.n 1fe-edge cuS'l iOn s a nd a
gorgeou s Qu ,lt ed O ri on Vell;et p 1Ht1 : u ·n;! r S alr!
Pr1 c ed trHs w eek while om Sf()C k la sts

. .turned Queen Anne
with Geniune
lrr•nrhiP top.

'---- ~-- ·

·--

~

{

Jury trial underway
morning in Meigs Count y· Common
Pleas Court for the I rial of I he State
of Oltio against James A. Miller .
.Jack A. Miller and Ronald R. Rone
on charges of gra nd theft and

Not11mg eo1se co fllpa rt&gt; o:; to tn€ co m lo rt eleg;; n c P &gt;) r
h e arlwar m , n ~; charm o l country 5t y 1ong A n d th1 5
Q"OUP has 11 all . sol 1d p1nc tr1 m . m as ~ 1ve knuck le

T h,.,. h ~. lUt 1 l u l p lant s ta nd W'llh
lo vely turnt'd Qu~o' n Annl' ll'9
dnd th(' b1q ll" ro und gen1une

$3 25

OINNG ROOM ONLY
Served with whipped potatoes , chicken
gravy. cole slaw, hot roll, butter &amp; coffee .
Sorry, no substitutes e•cept beverage wtth
a~ditional price .

•na1beltop add!. " vc•y
useful unci dt&gt;c o rilti W look tu •lilY
r oom !11 your homr' H M
&lt;1

•

wrd(' vcm e ty o l u-. (' ~ A &lt;.,, ,l.-~l&gt; l e
in hP.tU!iJ u l frul ' WO&lt;XJ l11 uo.. h

CROW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT

PH . 992-5432

POMEROY OH.

Big Lotto winner
CLEVE LAND iAP t-Oncticke t
lists ali slx numbers drawn in
Saturday's Ohio Lotto ga m l', which
" "I I give itsowncr$4,167,71 4. lottery
offic ials say.
The jackpot is payable in 20
annual insra llmmts of $~ ..'l8.'i.iO
each, ol'ficials said Sunday.
The six numbers drown in rhe
latest w&lt;'t'kly gamewer&lt;'.1. 11 . 22. 23.
29and 36.
Sa les totaled $.'iAm.:m. wit h
$2.~.710 going to the statr. ThP
prizP pool was $5.1:i&amp;!,695. lottery
spokesman Bruce Moses sa1d.

sears

NORELCO DOUBLEHEAD

Speed Razor
$1996

PRE-SEASON CHAIN
LINK FENCE SALE
OUR LOWEST PRICE EVER

Telephone Table

Soff &amp; Sumptuous Sweetheart Country Group
With A Touch Of Brass!

C o11uerrrencl..'

st )·led :n

G\K.

Tt11S maJeSti C nPw grou p captu res tl'1e oerl ect b le nd
ol country styling and ru si 1C c na.m' Dct,catcly
styled s wcet heor1 ba c ks are tJeaiJ III 'JI Iy c ornp trf'1en t ed by ru Sti C nonnail tr1n1 and bOle! knu c kle
arms &amp; WH""~gba c k s The Ouiltecl tOO% O rion Velvet
cove r makes rt 1dea 1 lor act1ve. li't'ed -m •ooms Sa le
1 week wh 1te our
last s

GOTT 30 QUART

for Armadillo V fencing
with economy framework

COOLER
$2296

. Nctver Been

9" EDISON 2 SPEED

Weather forecast

OSCILLATING
FAN

Clear ing a nd cooler tonight. Low
4,247. Winds westerly to 'outhwL&gt;S·
terly 1015 mph . Mostly sunny1
Tuesday. High 62~67 . Chance or rain
20 percent tonight and near LPro
pecended Forecast.
E"tended ION.'Cast
Wednesday through Friday:
Fair Wednesday and Thursday
with a chiUice of showers or
thunderstonns Friday. Hlg~ in the
mid-50s to mid~ Wednesday and
in the 60s 'Thursday and Friday.
Lows in the mld,'IOs to mld-40s
Wednesday, inthe40s'Thursdayand
In the 50s Friday.

$1

36" High
11 V2 Gauge
36" High

SERGENTS SENTRY

FOAM PLATES
$299

FLEA COLLAR
$1 99
SPARTUS QUARTZ

Travel

Prices Reduced for Line-of-Fence
Terminal ~osts and Gates '
PnCf!s are catalOg pnces • Now ava1lable tn our "LG" catalog
supplemen t • ShtPPtng , mstallat1on extra • Ask aboul Sears
credit plans

Alarm

KITCHEN
CLOCK

$799
GRAN PRIX AM/FM

PORTABLE
RADIO
AUTHORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT
GREGG &amp; PATTY GIBBS

N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
PH. (Ohio) 992-2178
(W. Va.) 773-9577

HOURS: Mon.-Tues -Wed . Fri.

9:30 to 5:00

Thurs. 9:30 to 12:00

Sat. 9:30 to 2.:00

~

Jtnllf!IJA.~

. ~~~

l

~

'c ;b

88
• ' \.

'. ......

.( ,.,.,,d I' M\!''' c

12 Gauge

Lc;»w leforel ,

·.. IJ1TIONAL
T A' B .L .E

KORDITE 100 CT.

WESTCLOX

Prlc'~ 'T~Is

$1296

r

" "' ~hT ~ •n · -·t

"''111 1~, . k&gt;v" l'

1~1,

pi\OT'&gt;t' Lo&gt;h i&lt;' l owu~ ~~ " •W' ' " '" ,,.,J l·wo&gt; ~-~ • J ~Mt' IT'
pni«II OTOt"i&lt;'P''&lt;'fi o "'''"I' 1"-nh"' &lt;oll.-. to o ~' -.~·
"'-""• ..., m brd\6 "''"1~ •··· "'"~ ,.,.,,.,olulo, "'"'~ ' ,.. ~, ..
101 It I H~'"'d kTI• M •'o ~ ... -'' &lt; ' ~n&lt; ~ IO • ., . c ~ : .&gt;o.

'Y"· &gt;

L L E C T I 0 N

·~.

•

�SPRING FURNITURE SALE AT MASON FURNITURE CO.
l~tJri.'\IAmerican Versatility ...

WORLD OF WOOD

ROOM DIVIDER I ETAClERE I ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

Buy One Table

.~ ~~
JJI.. ... s c,

ow To Furnish A "Great Room"
Without The Great Expense .

Lamp At

.

Regular
. "~
,, "
Pr1ce
~
A n d Get
~\
'

(,

**'' The Secon
Matching
Lamp Free!

ModoiSZ1927W
• Electronic Keyboard Tuning with
computer~quartz accuracy.
• 157 channel capability including
101 Cable TV c hannels"
• Chromasharo 90 Picture Tube for
outstanding sharpness.
• Dependabte 1()()11) mOdular Z- 1 Chass1s.
• Simulated Spartan walnut cabinet

ly
-

TABLE COLLECTION -

Feature Packed!
Value Priced!

AMERICA

ONLY

C reatively designed.

Exquisite yesterday, even more so today!

• Quartz-controlled Electronic Tuning tor
"comput...,;r- precise" receptio n cha nnel
to c hanne l.

TABLE TOP COLOR TV

$47go0

• Keyboard Touch-Command C hannel
Selection

• Dependable 1OO'Io modular Z-1 C hassis
• Ch ro rt~asha rp 100 Picture Tube to r
exeptional p1cture sha rpness

• Auto-C ontrol Color System.

; •

Computer Space
:::,.l Command 2400
~: 'i-i Remote Control
Wireless remote features Tl/

On/Off, direct access and all channel
scan from the comfort of your easv chair.

Model Z2 5 10PN
Charm1ng Country Amenca n style
co nsole .n Knotty Pme fin1sh Wood
and s1mulated woOd prod ucts
- ____,..
._, '"

Early Am erican
Dl ~•deriEtag e reJEn l e&lt;la• nmen t

lAnier

ne~

KNOTIY PINE

beaU \I IUI I Uf ntKl i:IOWII I~ afl!l ~p&amp;CIOU~ OJI9fl

l ht lvea t or T V , 8 oa.a or A.•l Otli..CI ' MaU
yoo.u room com&amp; ahve with t h•t~ beaut if ul unol

l l nl~h

.-, , liiiiiiJi fl m E~f l) Am!!IIC.!I n P1 n~ ll rl l ~ll

$18995

l•o m Cosanl

Let's Take A Closer Look . ..
1 1\e•e ·l
f• ~·~

Qullrl~

Inch 0 1

A rustic style group ing that can't be beat tor
durab ility, comfort or beauty ! Heffy solid
pine frames wi II take all the living your acltve

1 n d Com l or t I n
Thr~

Beau tli ul Group'

'IOO'JII'iV-.QN~E~V£ 1 C fNTtAMA T(

.. E0

•

8 10 T HI(o&lt;S01.10F0A M CU S1+10 .. S

" ""'"'

o

5 r RA M£5

$~ ""''"

-

denlsty foam seat and back cushions 8re

.., ,. " '"''' " " l&gt;"" f'

• SOLIO 2

extra big and billowy . Come see this room .

"'""

· ···~ "" '"""' '""'''"''J \""'""''""'~"

...,. , ............... , ..... ....•'""'"'' "'''

r&gt;o ' " ... ' ' "'' '"" ...... 'F""! ..... ~ ' ,.,........ ...
~

guy

Ale. Kocm s &lt;an offocd lo

pl e nty foro real ly comfortable recliner. But

o~ly$

'"' ~'"'"'' ~""

REG. $14995
NOW

$9900

7'/lf''N

he doesn'lho,eto, ond neHhe&lt;doyou. Right

ltllle '' msts du,ng ou • 'P""9 sale•

• ._....

The qua/lrygoes m be lore the name goes o n '

with Perma- Set Fine· Tuning.

CONSOLE AND MIRROR

• Zenith Chromasharp 90 Picture Tube
keeps images sharp and bright

A&lt;Jd ~ Ioiii~ /lm"'' , •I r'•• •
r&gt;ld r:lr~v; 111 l:&lt;&gt;u ' n,,~,. ' ' ' "
lh " &lt;lUOI'OI" '" toh 1o o ,,JJ~ I ''""

• Dependable 100% modular Z-1 Chassis.
• Durable cabinet in textured dark
Brown finish .

AL Y COMFORT KING
MATTRESS &amp;
BOX SPRINGS

Your Choice
•Twin
:QFuuellen
eKing

$9900
·

rlh K"'' '' ' f'·.,~ f •., , ,~ ~nd
b..,.. o&gt;&lt;&lt;~ nt• u , 11 ~.,honc~ ' "' d~ r ' " P.rr e&lt;l
ro lu lf' 11o m~ ILOd., 1

l_lkfmr I

The quality goes in
before the name goes on•

SLEEPER SPECIAL.
Comfortable, Seatin~~: And Sleeping For Holiday
Guests •. . For Apartment Dwellers ... For Summer
Cotta~~:es . . . Or Anyplace
You Ne ed Double Duty
From Your Sofa.

* EACH

PIECE

*SETS ONLY!

~wyou' l l enj ~ theluxu~ . go~looksa~ t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
qual1ty of o genu ine lo - Z - Boy ~ rec liner all
the more Becouse you'll toke co mf ort in how

Qua

SUPER
BUDGET
BUYS

emarkahle values
WARDROBE

piece

From
Mason Furniture Co.
Mason Furniture Now
Has 5-Piece And 7-Piece Dining Sets
SOLID PINE
HEAVY DUTY
BUNK BEDS

IN HONEY or DARK PINE FINISH
WITH FORMICA LAMINATED TOPS!
Round Extension Table With Stain Resistant Tops,
Side Chairs Are All Wood, No Plastic!

Sturdy 2"x4" Framing
Built on ladders
Built on guardrail
Bolts together for added strength

$129

95

* BEDDING EXTRA

=-=~~-----~

____ AL

12" Butcher Block
Solid
Hard Rock
Maple

Compare At s2(f0
Hurry ' A&lt; &lt;&gt;ur very spcci,ll price , th ese imcly
m ade butcher blocb won 't la st long ' All solid
hard rock map iL•~t'Jt- h n rw uniqul' because of
the nat ura l varia ti o n s in grL1in . 1\s practical .1s it
is good -loo ki ng, it '"' tht • id t•.ll cutting surface

ior a n y ki tchen . Note thl' s turdy it'Cf to kl'cp it
above damp w un lws . To keep To g ive Hurry
in b ef o rt• they're g &lt;Jnt' limited quantity. Cash
and carry. No phone orders, please.

5 Piece Set
TABLE WITH
4 CHAIRS
Table 42x42x54
Regular 1289'5

• f ull shel' on11 hMIIJN tm

• tna mel br()w n l 1n•sh

LOOK WHAT YOU GET
Fu ll Size Trestle Table in Hone y Pine Fin• sh
1 1.4" Thi c k Ta ble Top w11tl gen ui ne Fo rm tea
laminate .
Four Sturdy, Solid Wood Cheirs are Ouall1)•~
buill for years o f family enjoymen1 Dowe lled
and glued JOints are corn er brac ed and remfo rced

with wood screws .
Co mfo r1 able seat cu shions

$199°

WITH A CONVE A-COUCH YOU CAN HAVE FULL SIZE SOFA
BEAUTY AND COMFORT PLUS AN EASY OPEN HEAVY DUTY
MECHANISM. SLEEP SOUNDLY ON A EXTRA FIRM SOLID FOAM
MATTRESS OR A LUXURIOUS INNERSPRING MATTRESS.
AVAILABLE IN FULL OR QUEEN SIZE.

CHOOSE FROM THE BEST SELECTION
OF SLEEPERS WE HAVE EVER
HAD IN STOCK!

COMPLETE
ALL 5 PIECES

0

FULL SIZE
SALE PRICED
FROM

QUEEN SIZE
SALE PRICED
FROM

$349

FABRICS

Beauty ••. Comfort ... and Durability
Casual Outdoor Furniture at its Finest

7 Piece Set

TABLE WITH
6 OIAIRS

So much beauty .. , so rnuct; conv eni ence . . .
Ta:le ~2x1~·l;~66
SO IT'UCh durability is painstakinql y built into
egu ar
this dining furniture! The tables have stain
$ 4 9 9 9 S a n d _ heat resistant wipe -clean tops and the
cha1rs are so strong and sturdy 1 Great buys
at regular price ... exceptional values now!

l.Loyd'/Aanders

Your Choice of Finishes

All At The Same Price!
MAPLE AND OAK
• Your choice of 42" round extension table stain·resistant
tops that will extend to
with two leaves... The top
is 1W' thick! The side chairs are constructed of all wood '
no plastic!
~Ji1~~~~

66"

'

ONLY

130 " x1 9"x63")

group

UNHEARD OF PRICE
•
•
•
•

Model Z2S04K
Beau t1 tul Trans1110nat styled cons81e
•n gra •ned OaK t1n1Sil w·ood and
Simulated .V::lOd (JrOdu c ts

• VHF/ UHF Super Video Range Tuning

n&gt;rnbm~d ~

EACH
PIECE

59900

·~--~- Limited

/&gt;omC'o&gt;s&lt;&gt;otl /h .... . .q"~"~''\1"

IMPERIAL BEDDING
MATTRESS &amp;
BOX SPRINGS

$6800

EACH

'"'~~ ''""'"~' " .., , h.or o""~''"" " '"''&lt;''

0
$499°

Feetup ... pricesdown! Twin or
A
j,k.
pay
Full Sl'ze

Your Choice .
Of Fine Furnitur~
to
Styles
n \
Remote
Available
,
67900

' "'' ,~ '"''''! '....,. poOl • "'"' '; '"' • "'-"''"'"I

CHOOSE FROM THREE DIFFERENT STYLED GROUPS. ALL
MADE OF SOLID 2"x6" PINE FRAMES. ALL GROUPS
COVERED IN BEAUTIFUL 100% ANTRON NYLON FABRICS
FOR LONGER WEARABILITY.
AND UP!
SIX PIECE GROUPS FROM

SPRING SALCI

'

lh&lt; , ,, .. ~ "''~"'"' '' " ~ ·•• ~nl'lf ' ' tt•&gt;U1hl

active family! Our sale price includes : Sofa ,
Rocker, Chair, Cocktail Table, 2 End Tables .

The LA·Z·DOY®

CLASSICS-

QUEEN ANNE

ful. ..you'll want it In your home for your

*WALL UNITS AND BAR NOT AVAILABLE

Model Z2508P
Etegan1Classic style co nsole m
rich Pecan finish Wood and Simulated
wood products

YOUR CHOICE

family can give If. Thick, reversible high

P.OTHP I'i PJ:I HH UPHOLSTERY

Table and 6 Chairs
MAPLE and OAK
REG. 'S99tl

. A COUNTRY STYLED 5-PIECE BEDROOM SUITE
WITH 6 DRAWER DRESSER WITH STORAGE
COMPARTMENT, HAT HANGING DECK MIRROR,
5 DRAWER CHEST AND FULL OR QUEEN SIZE
HEADBOARD AND FOOTBOARD. THE RICH OAK
FINISH ON THIS ALL WOOD PRODUCT GIVES AN
OUTSTANDING EFFECT TO THE EMBOSSED
"KINGS MILL" SCENES AND BOMBAY STYLING
ACCENTED WITH GLEAMING BRASS FINISHED

4-pc. Perma- Wicker® Spring Base seating group
TWO SEAT
GLIDER
Reg. '209

$154

Ind oor o r outdoor . pool or pat 10

durab,rrty Th1s

4 -pleCe

Pcrma W •cker® offers the look o i w•ckcr

group 1nc ludes low back spnng base char h1~h bac k "&gt;pnng

cha1r, sp r •ng base lounger and end ta ble

Low Back Sprong Base ( ha" REG . S9B.OO
H'gh Back Spnng Ba se (ha,r , RE G. $116.00
1
Base
REG. 519'1.00

1

�PaP,4

I

KC defeats Southern

Teen Institute

Story on Page 3

Get the edge
on inflation••• \

Story on Page 6

Meigs gals top seeded

Meigs school play

Story, bracket!! on Page 4
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _..J.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___Ji.,__ _ _ _ _ _

with

Gibson Freezers

•

e

'
Vol.33 , No.13
Copyri9httd 1984

at

Story, photos on Page 6
___~_

I

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,

en tine
2 Se(lions . 1'2 Pag et
2S Cenh
A Multimedia In c. N~w•poper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 1, 1984

•

•

ODOT will study effects of longwall mtntng
By~Press

and OVP staff reporto

Model RT14F1WM

DON7

Save space with this Gibson and slill
enjoY fhe convenience of il ,

MISS

___ our

M a vtag J e h :le an'"

DISHWASHERS

Mavtng Heawy Duty

WASHERS

• Nobody g8ts your
dishes deaner!
• llevet Jet wash
System
• Micrc.Mash'" Fitter
cleans itsett
continuoosly
• Unsurpassed capacity

No. 1 in:
•length ot lite
• fewest repa1rs

•lowest service costs
• nationwide preference

IBased on a national
survey asking cor&gt;
sumers which brand of
washer they'd like to
own. I

"--&lt;;;--------.:iMtno;:;:de:OI FH16M2

Gibson

$

Convenience features In·

etude movable divider, liftout basket, counterbalanced

lid with muttf.magnet seal,
defrost water drarn, adjustable cold control, and lock
with pop-out safety key.

DRYERS
• Commercially proven
in self-service laundries
• GenUe, energy
efficient drying
• Becuonic, Auto-Dry
or Time Control

Chest Freezer
Just the right size with t5.6
cu. ft ot treezer capacity.

Maytag Big load

95

• Big load drum

tllf'Sf.' MJyUys
Jll' rediiy !mill,.

ce
To The Tri-County
33 Years

• Moylag
Dependability • Large
capacity oven • Solid
State Pilotless Spark
Ignition • Lift up/off
cooktop • Removable
Oven Bottom
CRG 300

f'rost•Ciear refrigerator. New Total
Energy Saving System gives you
exceptional energy efficiency. ,COnv~~;
'nit~ce features include 2 adju.stat,l}!J ., ·
_Qiid\t'&lt;)UtShtlves, fu.IJ Width C(isper;
eonvertible-reversible dQors,

Effects of subsidence caused by longwall mining on
highways and bridges in southeastern Ohio will be
studied by the Ohio Department of Trans porta tlon.
Funding for the study was released Monday by the
State Controlling Board, and the study was termed
"pertinent" to the region by Rep, Jolynn Booter.
D-Galllpolls.
The prtmary result of the study is a quantitative
measure of subsidence resulting from longwall
rnJning, allowing ODOT to create a corrective
treatment for affected bridges and state roads.
Subsidence Is the set tUng of earth after a longwall
machine rnJnes out a panel of coal When the coal Is
removed, the machine moves onto another coal seam
and allows the roof to collapse, causing the ground

above to shift .
Longwalllng was introduced into the area at
Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs mines in the late 1970s
and became the subject of local controversy when
property owners in northwestern Meigs County and
VInton County claimed subsidence was destroying
their homes and depleting local water supplies.
Since then, legislation has been created allowing for
homeowners to buy insuran~-e against such damage .
One of the complaints lodged against longwalling by
the property owners was that it also affected roads,
creating cracks in Ohio 689 in Columbia Township ,
Meigs County.
The controlling board also approved another ODOT
project to study stress-strain relationships and
sttrength of weak shales In the region.
The study's goal is to develop a mathematical mode l
that wUI analyze the stability of excavations and

embankments containing sha le.
Boster said &amp;'\ percent of the nearly $75,fJXl cost of
each of the 12-month projects will be re imbursed by the
U.S. Department of Transport a tion.
Meanwhile, secuti ty a t the Southern Ohio
Cort€Ciiona l Fac il ity at Lucasville, thesceneof recenl
violence among guards and inmates . is going to be
beefed up .
ThP stateCont rolling Iloard released WJ thout di ssent
$1.5 million to allow the Depa rtme nt of Re habilita tion
and Corrections to hire49 new guards a nd somPextra
support persmme L The Department of Mental HPall h
got S559,rol for ex panded psychiatric scr;ices at
Lucasville and the Lebanon CorrPCtiona llnstilutlon.
State officials r c-'(juested thE' funds after thr!'e
separ ate inci dent s at Lucasville in which a wor kshop
guard a nd an Inmate were killed and another guard
was stabbed and wounded .

Model AM 10C4EL
10,000 B.T.U.

Gibson Freezer
Get maximum value with
this bigger Gibson, 21.2 cu .
11. freezer compartment
volume. Featurea Include •

last-freezing shelves, 4
package door racks, 2 juice
can. door racks, lock with
safety
ad·
cold
rol,
and

$

95

By 1be Associated Prei&lt;i
At least two Ohio residents died in
accidents caused by high winds
Monday that gusted upto69miles an
hour and swept dust all the way from
Texas and Oklahoma, playing
havoc with people suffering resplratory probiE'I'IlS.
Officials said an 82-year-old
Amherst man was killed when high
winds toppled a tree onto his
automobile in the northeastern Ohio
city . A 21-year-old Crown City man
was killed after high winds blew a
power line onto his coal truck in
southeastern Ohio.
Tile sweeping winds tore metal
sheets and other materials off the
32-story steel shell of the Standard
Oil Co. (Ohio; building under
construction in downtown Cleveland, hurUng them along Superior
Avenue. Pollee closed several
blocks of the street for about three
hours.
One 12-foot-long metal sheet
crash€d into the first floor of the
Hollenden House hotel more than
100 yards away, breaking two
5-by-16-foot windows, officials said .
About IO,&lt;XXJ custome rs of the
Cleveland Electric lllurnJnatingCo.
were without power for varying
periods In scattered areas as flying
tree branches split power lines. a
company spokesman said.
The National Weather Ser;ice
said an Intense low-pressuresystem

carried dust all the way from Texas
and Oklahoma to central and
southern parts of Ohio during the
morning and aftPrnoon Monday,
reducing visibility to only a few
miles In parts of the state.
Aircraft puots reported the dust
extending as high as 6,00J feet Into
the atmosphere, the weather service said.
.At 10 a.m., visibility at the
Akron-Canton airport in northeast
Ohio was reduced to thrre miles,
with a brownish tinge to the sky. The
weather service said the dust would
leave surtaces such as cars and
patio furniture coated with a thin
layer of dust
Sidney B. Durham, who had
operated a Lorain grocery store.
was killed Monday when a windwhipped tree scheduled to be cut
down smashed into his automobile.
Police said Durham was drl\1ng on
South Main Street In Amherst when
a 40-foot maple tree fell across the
two-lane road about 9:).) a. m.
The National Wpather Ser;lce
said winds gusting up to more than
50 mph were being reported at the
time.
In Jackson County in southeast
Ohio. the she riff's office blamed
high winds for the death of St!"Ve
Montgomery, a coal truck driver,
Centenary in Gallia County. Offi.
cia Is said Montgomery was making
repairs beneath the truck when the
power line fell and electrocuted hlm.

By The ,\ ssocJa«!d Press
Bad wmther in Ma rch cont ti buted to a shar p dip in the
government 's gauge or fu tUIT'
&lt;'&lt;'OnomJc activity, the RPagan
administra tion sa ki. as pri,·a tP
eeo nornist s sa w thE' first d('('linf' in 18
m onths signaling slower grov...1l'! bLJ t

not a recesslon.
"There \sn't any queslion the
economy is slo\.\i.ng d 0\\'11 , bu t

duction and employm ent over the

WIND DEATII - Amhers, Ohio firemen remove
the body of Sidney Durham, 82, from his auro after
high winds blew over a dead tree on the Amherst
man's auro Monday, killing hbn. TI1e death in that

community west of Cleveland was one of two In Ohiio
attributed ro the high wands that swept Into the state
from the Great Plains. (AP La.""rphoro ).

Mondale., Hart seek Tennesse votes
WASHINGTON iAP J - The Rev.
Jesse J ackson Is hea vily fa vored to
notch his first Democratic p reslden ·
tial primary victory today in
Washington, D.C. !"Ven as Wa lter F .
Mondale and Gary Hart look to
Tennessee for thE' resumption of
their Jong-nmningfight fort he party
nomination.

Together,

the

two

primaries

account for 80 nat io nal conve ntion
delpga tes - the begi nning of the
second half of a nominating cam paign tha t has Ma nda te hoping to
pad a commandin g delegate lea d
and Hari pur-su ing a romt'back
strategy , Western style .
Hart and Monda le resumPd their
heated rhetof1c on Monday. with
Hari rais ing thf' Iran ian hos tag e

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knew him, wrote down the license of
his vehicle and tipped off the
Hamilton County Sheriff.
According to Sheriff Allen, Ingles
Is facing a bad check charge In
Hamilton County and Is also wan ted
in Jackson County.
An attempt to extradite Ingles
from West VIrginia failed last
month alter a Mason County judge
ruled that prosecutors failed to show
Ingles was In Ohio at the time of the
robbery .

c ris is a nd Mondalp's term as vice
p rl'sidPnt in a harsh new at tack .

J ackson campa igned in Te nnes·
see and made a brief pUgrlma ge to
the Lorraine Mote l, where the Rev.
Ma rlin Luther King Jr. was
assassina ted in 1968. Jac kson, then a
young King aide, was preSf'nl when
the civil right s leade r wa s slain .
Both Ma ndai&lt;' a nd Hart etfec
ti ve ly have conceded the District of

Columbia primary to Jackson . a
civ il tights leader who has run
strongly earUer in t he y ear in cit it.•s
with large black populations. Wa shington has a n estim a ted 70
percent black popula tion
Maxine Isaacs. Mondale's press
secreta ry, predicted on Mond ay:
"J ackson will win . We hope to do
re spc&lt;"lfully well." The city has 15
dPlega tes a t stake.
Ha rt, Mondale and J ackson a ll
have campaigned ha rd in Te nnessee, where 65 de lega tes arP up for
grabs in the prima ry.

Seventeen local teenagers worked with officers of the Me igs County
Juvenile Court and Jack McQuaid of the Ohio Department of Youth
Services Saurday picking up Utter (approximately 250 bags) along a
six mllestretchofthefourlane highway on U.S. Rt 3Jfrom the Meigs
High School to Darwin, Carl Hysell, Meigs County Juvenile Officer
reported.
Utter was also picked up along the SR 7 Bypass from Meigs High
Schooltocounty road fiv e at Bradbury as well as Highland Road from
Veterans Memorial Hospital to the SR 7 Bypass.
Thepurposeoftheclean up was to make communitlesawareof the
highway Utter problem and to participate in Ohio Clean -Up Week .
Hysell also reported that in the past, duting good wea thPr months.
youth have been Involved in Utter pick up on major routes In the
county.
Workers usually consist of volunteers, youth working otf fines or
ordered to do a number of hoursofcommunltyservlceafterhecomlng
Involved In difficulties at home, school or community and having
appeared In court.

Earl F. Ingles, 38, Mason, wanted
In connection with the robbery of the
Tri-County Bank In Coolville,
November 16, 1983 will be returned
to Athens today to face charges.
Athens County Sheriff Robert
Allen reports Ingles was arrested
Sunday at an apartment In Cincinnati, HamDtonCounty. Sheriff Allen
saki that Ingles had apparently been
llvlnglnHamDtonCounty,buthedld
not know for how long.
Ingles was spotted In a supermarket by a person who apparently

W (-'

a re still go ing to S('(' gains in
economic gTO~A1 h , industrial pro-

B ut even bt&gt; fore the votC'S

cast,

Lhev
. were

turning

rest of the year, " sa id R obet1
Wescot t of 'vVhat1on Economet r ics.
The CommercE' Depa rtmen 1 said
Monda y that the Index of Ll'ading
Indicators fell 1.1 percent in March,
e nding the longest string of ad•·an ces for the indPx since the e nd of
World Wa r II . It was the fir st drop
sineP a sm aU 0.1 JX-'f N?nt dee lin r in

Augu st 19R2.
Commetw Secrc laf)· Malcolm
Ba ldrige sa id the decline was
b~1

aggravated

unusuall:'-·

bad

weather d uring March a nd that a
l:x&gt;ttf'r m easurP of 1he ('{'()nomy was
the 0.5 percent avPragp incn'aSfl in

the past six months. He sa id th is
refl&lt;'&lt;'tPd the more mod erate
growth expected in com ing m onths.
Private

ff'Qnomists

ge n era l!~·

agrt'&lt;'d.
i\ Sf'ries of repons indica ting
much weaker business activi t\

during Marc h tipp&lt;'d off economists
to expect the d&lt;'&lt;'line. Hous ing
cons truc t ion posted the steepest
declinE' on n:lCo rd, unem ploy m ent

fa iled to show improvement for the
first t ime in sLx months and ret ail
sa les w Prf' down sharply .

In other PConomi c devf'lopmC'nl s
Monda:--·:
-Sa !PS

Of

Df'\A'

singlp.. famil.\'

hom es rell 4.9p!'tTPnt m Ma rch a ft er
rising H JX'r('('ni in F'cb111 ar.·. the
[)(:-pa r tmr nt s of lomnwrcP and
Housing a nd L'rban i)(o•elopm• •nt
said.

wrrP
their

attrn1ion to sevC'ra l other statrs
holding prlma r il'S a nd cauc uses
over the

nPlL 1

W('(-'k -

and even

Ha11 's aides w Prf' conceding he

ne&lt;c'ds a win or two to keep his
challenge a live.
Ha n was in Indiana. Ohio and
Ma r; land todav before heading to
Tex~s. Mondaie was stopping In
Indiana and Ohio before hPading to
Texas. while J ac kson was spending
the day in Was hington

Ingles arrested in Cincinnati
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In other action, the board :
- Authorized the d!"Ve lopment department to enter
into a $252.&lt;XXJ contract with Ohio Universit y and
Diagnostic Hybtids, Inc., for a study in volving
strPptococcl a nd he rpes viruses.
-Released $1.8 million to the rtatura l resou rce's
department for a m arina expansion a t the Mosqu ito
Creek State P ark in Trum bull County.

Weather
causes
•
economic
slowdown

250 bags of trash collected

Save now on
Air

w ho have less serious mental problem s.

Two deaths
blallled on
high winds

'

son·

ThP staff addillons are pari of an overa ll plan to
Improve secutity a t Lucasville and to separate
prisoners who are m en tally disturbed.
About 70 Inmates with m ental proble ms will be
transfern.:l to Lebanon, whe re the stale a lready has a
un it for seriou sly disturbed prisoners.
More than $221.00Jof the funds released Monday will
be used to set up a unit at Lucasville to Isola te mma te&gt;

SEEKING TOBACCX) VOTE - Democratic presidential candidate
Wallter Mondale carnpa~pm· tlom a FCX stnre in GreenvDie, N.C. ,
MondaJ'. Mondale CIJUried vCIWrs in one of the nation's largest robacco
areas with a promise to pmectconunodlty programs. ( AP Laserphoto l .

In Texas on Monday, Hart cited
the Iran hostage crisis - when
Mondale was vtce president - and
the dea ths of U.S. troops in Ll'banon
under the Reagan adminstration.
a nd sa id a Reagan-Mandate r ace
would be "a bleak choice between
two tailed pasts."
"We must not a ccept more of the
same , more days of infamy or m ore
days of shame," Hart said .
Monda!!' responded by saying
Ha rt 's remarks suggest "some
despera lion."

Seasona~y

In

A.d1usted f':•gure s

Tho u sand ~

Sourc e U S Commerce

NEW HOME SALES - This
chart shows the nwnber of
single-family homes sold from
March 1983 through March 191\1.
Sales dPcllned 4.9 percenmt in
March, led by the 2Ll pen-ent
decline in the South. tAP
La..erphoto) .

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