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Marauderettes win

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New village lawman

e
Vol.36, No .206
Copyrighted 1 9'86

FIIDAY ·Sl1UIDAY Ofl.Y

Final Clearance

Alsddin.

~JJSJPFIYE
'

BUCKS
OFF

KEROSENE
HEATERS
Aladdin takes pride in the quality of
their kerosene heaters. Aladdin heaters meet new U. L. and NKHA standards for safety.
OO

..$96
REG. S149, 12,300 ITU .......... $10100
lEG. 5169.00, 22,600 ITU ..... $11300

REG. S139, 10,500 BTU-..........
I

'

'~ -

~.

PANTY
SALE .

"&lt;

I.MittO
the limit

Any Junior,
Missy or
Extra Size
Wrangler
Jeans in
stock.

TABLE SPECI

Buy any coffee table, end
table, lamp table or sofa
table and receive a lamp
absolutely FREEl

MANY NEW TABLES TO CHOOSE
FROM
Finishes include Oak, Pine, Cherry
and Pecan

BRIEFS, HIP HUGGERS
and IIIINIS

Band legs; elastic legs
end flare legs. Nylon.
cotton end ecetete.
Sizes 4 to 10

Reg. 1 1.50 Panties .. Sale '1.1·
Reg. •1. 75 Panties •. Sale '1.3
Reg. '2.50 Panties .. Sale •1_,..,,_..
Reg. 1 3.75 Panties .• Sale • ..c..:=r:::r.•

DAV SALE!

BOYS'
"LEE" and

MEN'S

DENIM
JEANS

fabric,

nent p,... with Scotch·re-

leese,

Witch podcet, deep
roomy poclcetw, P1111ta In

alua 30 to 50. Shlrl8 liz•
14'Ao to 20. Solid colora

ISttud11nt sizes 26 to 30 - Slims and
.IRegtLIIall'l 8 to 16 - plus Husky sizes:IPre-Witshed, straight leg styles

ANY 2 or 3 PIECE

MEN'S "lee"
and "Wrangler"

S22.95
BASIC
DENIM
JEANS

Waist sizes 29 to 42 , lengtho
30 to 36 inches. Pre-washed
blue denim, straight leg and

boot

(

--f;;;

"'
./

Sale Prices!

VIDEO
CASSEnE
TAPES

Special sale prices now on many
popular models incuding uprights.
power team sweeper and Mighty
Mites.

S1788

Buy 2 Packages Get 1 FREE

SALE

BLANK

EUREKA
SWEEPERS

SWEEPER BAG SALE

~

-:;))

LIVING ROOM SUITE

Sale Price
.........

'II

.

flare styles .

$488

VIIS

BLANKET SALE!

24 and 30 inch
height. Swivel
seat with back.

Choose from our large selection
of blankets in all sizes. Famous
brands like Chatham, Cannon,
North Star. Electric blankets and
electric sheets included.

Sale Priees

DENIM
SHIRTS
cotton blue

True western style. 100%
denim. Neck siz11 14% to 20. Sleeve
lengths 32 to 35 inch.

Speelal Prhu
Frldav ••• Satar••v O•lvf

$

99

WINTER CLEA
CONTINUES

SAVE 50~/o
-CHI~DREN'S

WINTER CLOTHING ·
-WINTER JEWELRY
-WOMEN'S WINTER CLOTHING
-WOMEN'S WINTER SLEEPWEAR
-MEN'S &amp; BOYS' WINTER CLOTHING

WITH•OUHVIRE BAA

•Teknika Quality
•5 Function Wired Remote
•8 Hr. Recording
•14 Preset
•1 Yr. Warranty Parts &amp; Labor

CEDAR CHESTS
Quality Lane chests in maple,
pine, cherry, oak and cedar.

$33900 · S179toS412

nose.''
Next on the stand was John
Hawley of Route 143 who lives
nearby the Wears residence . Hawley's son, Brian, was a guest at the
party. The witness testU!ed that
about 12 he heard people hollering
" not the kind for the band" because
there was no music, and he said he
went "over there to get my boy."
He said he saw the truck leave, then
got his "boy" and went horne. It
takes about live minutes to walk
over, five minutes to walk back and
he said he spent about 10 minutes
there returning home about 12:25.
On cross exa mination, Ire time
was questiOned and the witness said
(Continued on Page 5)

JOGGING WEAR

SWEATSHIRTS -JOGGING PANTS
HOODED SWEATSHIRTS -VESTS
JOGGING SHORTS
Wrangler quality in sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4,
4 to 7 and 7 to 14.
Reg. 06.00 .... ............................. Sale 04.79
Reg. ·~.00 ...... ........................... Sale 0 6.39
Reg. '11 .00 .............. .. ............... Sale '8.
Reg. '14.00 ......... ...... .. .. .. ... ..... Sale '1 1 .19

2 FASHION SHAPERS"' PLUS BRAS
ComfortF!ea" Shap ... replece metal undlrwirnl

Preaantlng two new nnse"onal Fashion
Shapera'" Plus br11 designed espiiCially for
women who w1nt mulmum tupport and superior thaping In lttrfiCtivejltyllng.

MEN'S
DRESS SLACKS
Regular and Extra Large sizes in
fine selection of solid colors.

REG. S239.95 to S549.95

Sale Prlee• -

Earlier Friday momlng, Richard
DeMoss, 24, of Pomeroy, testified

as to the incidents which took place
at the party. He sald that he had
about four or five glasses rt ll'er but
oo drugs. He . said the first
argument he saw between Tina and
Doug Rosenbaum occurred about
10 when Tina was dancing with
Duane Qualls. The witness testified
that "he (referring to Rosenbaum)
swung her arou nd and then took off
In his truck.
DeMoss testified that when Rosen baurn carne back In his truck
about 11:30 he carne Into the
driveway and pulled the truck
through the yard parking It by the
trees. He said that he dld oot see the
alleged beating Incident rut what
he did SI'E' was Rosenbaum upon
both knees. He said he saw threE'
people trying to help him up, but
that Rosenbaum just sb:lVed them
away, got hold of the door and got
himself upon his feet. He testified
that Hysell was standing 20 or' 30
feet away from the truck at that
time and that he did not see Tina
Rosenbaum. The witness said he
did not see a knife or a bat, that he
left the party and got horne between
12: 15 and 12: 25 p.m.
On cross examinatkm by Prosecutor Crow, the time structilre of
activities was reviewed. Crow
asked the witness about Rosenbaum 's conditiOn particularly any
bleeding from the nose and the
wttness replied that Rosenbaum
"was hurt, he was on his knees, but
I didn't see him bleeding from the

SALE- CHILDREN'S

Two Day Sale!

PlayteM \110\U
LANE

By the Sentlnel staff
Tracy Hysell, 21, of Syracuse,
ch&amp;rged with aggravated murder
In the alleged beating of Douglas
Rosembaum on July 6 at a party
which took place at the Joann
Wears residence on Route 143 nea r
Pomeroy, took the stand in his own
defense late Friday morning.
Under direct examination, Hysell
related the events of July 6.
The defendant said that much of
the day was spent setting up
equipment and then he went to
GaUIJXllis to pick up his fiancee,
Karla DeMoss, who got off work at
K-Mart at 5 p.m.
Returning to Pomeroy, Hysell
said he and his fiancee went to her
home where she changed clothes
and picked up some things , and
then went to Syracuse where he
showered and changed before going
out to eat.
They artived at the party between 7:30 and 8, the defendant
testified. He said they stood around
and talked and played frlzbee with
a group. Later in the evening,
Hysell said he drove "Buddy "
McAngus to Klngsru ry Road to
pick up his girlfriend. McAngus
asked the defendant to drive him
because he (McAngusl felt he had
had too much to drink, Hysell
testified. Hysell and McAngus were
accompanied by Karla DeMoss.
According to Hysell's testimony,
the ttio returned to the party about
an hour later, "about II."
Conley asked thedefendantabout
giving statements about the Incident to the prosecutor's office, and
Hysell replied he had given "quite a
few," He said that .the first was an
oral st~tement the next day to a
deputy wbo was a1the Wears home
when he went back there to pick up
some of his equipment. He said the
deputy asked him to talk to Paul
Gerard, prosecutor's Investigator,
and that he did and made an oral
statement to Gerard. Hysell said he
was told he was "free togo, rut that
they might be contacting him
later."

DeMoss testifies

New

Men's
REG. *17.50 BRAS ....... Sale *14.00 ll. Men's
REG. •18.&amp;0 BRAS ....... Sale *14.80 Men's
REG. *19.50 BRAS ...... . Sale *1&amp;.60
Men's

*19.95
*21.95
*29 .95
•34,95

•

•

enttne

at

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,

MEN'S.
WRANGLER
$22.95
WESTERN

MAPLE

BAR
STOOLS

'14.96 Regular Size
PANTS ........... Sale 011
'16.96 Extr1 Size
PANTS ........... Sale 013.60
011.96 Short SIHve
SHIRTS ................... '9.11&amp;
'1 2.9&amp; Long Sleeve
•
SHIRTS .. ;.......:...... '1 0.3&amp;
'14.96 Long SIHve
SHIRTS ................. '1 1 .9&amp;

0000 OFF

Sale Prices

...,0

.

WORK
UNIFORMS
Heovywtlght
perma-

,

Photo, story 011 Page 12

Febru

SLACKS .... Sale *15
SLACKS .... Sale *1
SLACKS .... Sale -L-"' ...
SLACKS .... Sale

CROSS EXAMINATION - Gary Ftle; Pemeroy, a maer rih the
band playing a party at the Joann We~~n~ borne on Route 143111111July, h
photographed as he tmderwllll CIUII examination by ~atmg
Attorney Frederick W. Crow In 'llul'!lda,v afternoon. Doug RosmbBum
of Pomeroy alle&amp;edJY died of InJuries received when he was sln~d&lt; by a
ball bat wielded by Tracy llyweD, Pomeroy, woo is helng tried on
aggravated munler charges In the common pleas court.

Vandalism investigated
Pomeroy Police are lnvestlgatlng several Incidents of property
destruction which occulTed overnight Tuesday and Wednesday.
Danny Crow of Craw's Steak
House reported that somebody
threw an object through the
entrance, exit and drive-through
signs overnight Tuesday. That
same night. Ute dusk to dawn light
and an outside advertising sign
were damaged at the Home
Entertainment Q&gt;nter, and hubcaps were stolen from a car owned
by Ron Hanning on the Pomeroy
parking lot Another Incident reported Thursday was damage to an
outdoor light fixture at the ctfice cl.

Or. Harold Brown, West Main.
Freda Smith, Pomeroy, reported
Thursday that a blue spruce tree
was cut oo her lot at Beach Grove
O&gt;rnetery: When Investigating, vlllage officials also found that several
monuments In that part of the
cemetery had been damaged.
StW under Investigation Is a
minor accident which occulTed on
Powell's parking lot Wednesday
attenoon. Guy Priddy, Hysell Run,
Pomeroy, was backing tram a
parking place on the lot when he
struck the back right corner of the
parked car of Janet McKee. There
was minor damages. No citation
was Issued.

- '~
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El61tl1ldr
POI(IOY, IMit
tlllt ttl -all

CHAIIII CliO

26 Conti

A Multimedi• Inc .

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HIGH WATER - Pomeror.'s business section Is again lacing a
swoDen Ohio River. The dip between the two parking lots along the river
Oiled with water Thtmiday and the section was closed. 'lbe rusineg;
section Thursday afternoon was expected to squeak by one more lime

without a flood. Crest is predicted todli,Y at t&amp;lld, one bait foot lllder tbe
Oood stage of 46.5 which puis water over the street at the eomer II E.
Main and Sycamore Sis. However, more l'llin Is loreclllll wl*h could
change the predicted crest.

Flood warning stili· in effect at Pomeroy
By United Press lntemational
stage of 46 feet by I p.m. today at
A fiood warning remains in effect Pomeroy.
for the Ohio River at the Racine
Also, flooding of low-lying areas
locks and dam today.
along western Lake Erie from the
Significant rainfall. combined mouth of the Vrrrnillon River west
with melting snow over the past
was expected today. National
several days, has caused the Ohio Weather Service officials said
River to rise alohg the West strong ea sterly winds caused the
Virginia border, the weather ser- lake level to rise above flood levels.
vice said .
AI most points along the Ohio,
1n addition, NWS officials said ice
stages wUI he reaching about being pushed ashore by the high
three-quarters to near bankfull,
winds could cause damage to
except at the Racine locks and dam,
property along areas of shoreline
where the crest Is forecast to reach
oot protected by breakwalls or
a stage of 40 feel by this afternoon.
dikes.
Some minor flooding was llkely In -'- A winter ·storrn inoved across
low-lying areas as the crest moves Ohio today, coVering the northern
downstream, forecasters said.
part of the state with a thick coating
The Ohio was to reach near flood of ice and threateningtodumpupto

five inches of snow in !llme areas.
A winter storrn warning was In
effect for much of the oorthern third
of the state, where sl!'E't, freezing
rain and soow made hl~hway travel
hazardous.
Freezing rain and sleet started In
northwest Ohio just late Thursday
and spread to the non~ast c;ounties by midnight.
Roads were reported to be
ice-and snow-covered and very
treacherous over most of the
oorthern third of Ohio. Ice on trees
coupled with strong winds caused
some power lines and tree limbs to
fall In northwest OhiO.
Ice was reported to be up to three
quarters of an Inch thick &lt;II cars in
some of Cleveland's southern

sururbs.
Freezing min and sleet hlmed to
snow over much of northern Ohio
about midnight Thursday and
forecasters said the snow was
expected to accumulate up to five
Inches In some areas by early
today.
The storm center responsible ror
precipitatiOn was expecled to rrove
north of OhiO by tonight. Forecal;ters said the track of the storm
would determine which areas f1 the
state received the heaviest
soowfa ll.
'Tile !IIOw·was rxpected to taper
to snow nurries by this evening. 1n
soutrern Ohio, rain was forecast to
tum to snow flurries today.

Defense
witness _gives conflicting statements
.
By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentmel staff wrtter

Conflict of statements by Gary
Fife, a singer with a band which
played a party at the homeoiJoann
Wears on Route 143IastJuly6when
Douglas Rosenbaum received lnjutiEs which allegedly caused his
death was brought out by Prosecut Ing Attorney Frederick W. Crow lD
In cross examination of Fife
Thursday afternoon.
Fife Is a wltnesslorthedefenseoi
Tracy Hysell, Pomeroy, charged
with aggravated murder after
allegedly hitting Rosenbaum with a
ball bat at the party.
1n his opening testimony , Fife
said he was a friend of both Hysell
and Rosenbaum and he related
details of the party at which his
sang with the band at the Wears
home. Fife estimated about 70
people were at the party at Its peak.
He testified he had talked to
. Rosenbaum during the evening and
that both Rosenbaum and his wile,
Tilna, were drinking heavlly.
Fife said the incident between
Rosenbaum and Hysell occurred
just after the band had played ils
last number at at)out 11:55 p.m. He
sald he heaid a disturbance at a
nearby truck and Investigating

.
beer oo hand, (16gallonsa keg! but
Fife testified that he saw no other
alcoholic beverages and rodrugsat
the party.

found Rosenbaum had his wife,
Tilna , pinned against the truck with
one hand and was holding a knife
over her In the other. He sa id the
knife had a black handle and was
between six and eight Inches in
length.
"'They were hot," File said, rut
was unable to distinguish their
words.
File said Hysell yelled:
We're oot gonna have any trouble
here. Gel in your truck and go

Cross-Examination
Under cross examination by
Prosecutor Crow Thursday, statements by Fife to lhe sheriff's
department following I he party and
later to thegrandjurywerebrought
into play.
Crow brought out that Fife had
told the grand jury that Hysell had
held the ball bat for as long as two
minutes before he used tt and had
told the grand jury In his statement
that Tilna Rosa!baum was loose
, from her husband and could have
run .
Crow also stressed that Fife had
testified in court that Hysell had
struck Rosenbaum across the right
should with the bat and had
demonstrated that Thursday oot
that he had told the grand jury that
Hysell had struck Rosenbaum In
the middle rt the back.
Fife testified duting crossexamination he did not see Hysell
hit Rosenbaum In the head with the
bat, but said the blow he saw struck
was sufficient Ill knock Rosenrum
down and that he saw Rosenbaum
fall. However. Crow then brought

OOme."
Fife testified that Rosenbaum
turned to look backwards at Hysell
but did not release his wife, Tilna ,
but did not answer Hysell .
Fife demonstrated lor the juty
how Hysell was holding the ball bat
In one hand when he struck Hysell.
Fife testified that he saw Hysell
hit Rosenbaum wilh the bat, across
the right shoulder, that he saw
Rosenbaum taU and that he then
" took off'. Fife said he want back to
the nearby bandstand and started
packing equipment. He said that he
heard a couple more " thumps" but
dld not know what caused them.
Further elaborating on the party,
Fife said there was no one
designated to be bouncer In case of
trouble. There were lour kegs of

oot that Fife had told the grand jury
that one blow WOUld not have been
enough to down Rosenbaum and
that he did not see Rosenbaum go
down. Fife admitted that he was
"out rt there" and dld not see
Rosenbaum go down as Crow
continued his cross examination.
Fife under questioning told of
making his statement at the
sreriffs office or,· Juzy 7 - In the
afternoon after the party and
according to the statement said at
the ttme that he, Troy Brooks and
Hysell were watching out for any
trouble tbat might start at the
party, Fife also said at the time rt
the statement that Rooenbaum had
told Hysell "to stay out of it" when
Rosenbaum had his wife against
the side d. the truck. 1n his
Thursday testimony and before the
grand jury, Fife admitted that he
testified that Rosenbaum had only .
looked back to Hysell oot had said nothing. Crow brought out that In ·
his statement to the sheriff, File •
had said he saw Rosenbaum's wlf~ •
with help put Rosenbaum into the ;
truck. Thursday, however, and 11 was stressed that it was dark In the :
area , Fife stated that he did oot seE' .
Tina Rosenbaum help her husband ·
(Contlnut&gt;d on Page 5)
-

New levy won't cover street lighting increase
By KATIE CROW
Senllnel correspondent
Syracuse VIllage Council Thursday night w.S very much suprised
to learn lhat the cost lor street
lighting within the vUlage wUI be
Increased under Its new contract
wtth Ohio Power Company $2.25 per
light. There are 79 lights.
Meeting with council were Ron
Ash and Larry Hacker of the Ohio
Power Company.
Hacker explained that under the
old contract, which expires March
1, cost per street light Is $4.40 per
month. Under the new contract
each street light wUI cost $6.65 per
month plus the luel clause.
Any additional lights added
would cost the vlllage $13.65 per
month plus the luel clause.
Council last year passed a 1.8mUI
levy lor current expense (street
lights) that generates $5,fm a year.
This wUI leave councll with an

additional $1,500 to pay out of the
general lund plus the amount of the
luel clause. At the present time II
(luel clause! is running $75 per
month. The fuel clause Is less In the
summer due to the shorter time the
lights are In use.
Council is hard pressed as to how
to handle the situation since II just
recently passed a 1.8 mJU levy but
now needs addltlonallunds to rneel
payments.
Council discussed the posslbWty
of asking the voters to add
additiOnal mWeage to the present
levy, enough to cover the costs of
the street lighting system. Emle
Sisson wlll contact the counly
auditor for additiOnal Information
on the present levy and wha I
councll will need to generate
enough money to meet monthly
payments for the street lights.
Emergency measure 1
CouncU under emergenc:( mea·

sure, since the contract expires
March 1, passed an ordinance to
renew Its contract with Ohio Power
to supply electrlcty for street lights.
Hacker also presented an ordinanre which calls for the members
of the Board of PUblic Affairs to
advertise for bids to supplY electrlcy for pumping of water.
The present contract expires
Aprll 1. Under the new 'rontract
there will be a decrease ol 8.6
percent or approximately $500 per
year.
Members of the Board rt PUblic
Affairs will enter Into a contract
following the advertising of bids.
Councll, after being lnfonned
thaI John Lisle had resigned as a
memberotrouncll, namedJimHUI
to fill the vacancy.
Lisle statoo In his letter that due
to conOicting meetings, he would
not be able to serve. Lisle felt it
would 11)1 be lair to the re.ldents rt
'

FREE
PARKING

1 Section, 1 2 Pogoa

7.1986

Defendant
takes stand

LADIES'

.

Sen. Collins honored

on Page 5

'

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SeePage6

~------------------Racine council report

.FRIDAY, FEB. 7 and SATURDAY, FEB. 8

Daily devotions

•

StoryonP~4

'l

'

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~

the vlllage U he was not able to :
serve and serv&lt;' well.
CouncU, In otrer business, aj(reed :
to advertise lor a manager lor ·
London Pool. Resumes must be :
submitted by February 22.
·.
CouncU approved the second :
reading of the ordinance Increasing :
water mtes and 1he second reading ~
ol the annual appropriation ·.
ordinance.
··
Mlck Ash told council he and Bob
W - ~ Interested In putting 111,
an car wllsh on propery klcated on
Third Street owned by Wingett.
Ash asked for a water coritrart
with the vlllage. He was advised
that council would have to discuss
the Wile with members ot the
Board f1 PUblic Affairs.
CouncU did voice approval d.., tre.
proposal Ash felt the ruslness
would not be ready lor operation
untll summer slnre no plalls have
(Conlliiued on page 12)

�I

Commentary
The Daily

DEVOJED TO THE INTER&amp;&lt;ITS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

"qfv

.

,..,..._.._""T",..........,=·""'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

Pt\T WIIITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of The United PresS International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Friday, February 7, 1986

;:F:rida:::::y:,:FebriJ=·=a:ry:7:·:1:9:8:6==========;-::-:::----~Po;m.:;ero~y;-.:.:M~id;d::;lepo~~rt;,O:;;.:;hio;;__ _...;·:' .....--;;----- ----.:..T::.:he:...::D::.:.:.;a
ily_S_:'ltinei- Page--3

Religious clause ~------Ja_me_s_J._K_ilpa_t_ric_k

Sentin~l

Ill Court streel
Ppme,oy, Ohio
~~~
~s:m~

Pege-2-The Daily Sentinel

art&gt; welcome. They should bE&gt; less than lXl words

long. All letters a!"f'subjert to Editing and must be- signed wtth namE', address and
telephone number . No unsigned letters w\11 bf publlshed . Letters should be In

good taste , addrPSslng Issues , not personalitiPS.

U.S. role escalates
in Central America

WASHJNGTON -Few clauses
In the Constltqtlon have caused
more trouble In the courts than
the first 10 words of the First
Amendment: "Congress shall
make no law respecting an establshment of religion." Two recently decided cases are In point.
One of the cases Involved a
blind young man In Washington
state. The other Involved a room
of silent children In a New Jersey
public school. Common sense
and the Constitution triumphed
In the first case.' Common sense
and the Constitution took a beatIng In the second.
Larry Witters, 28, applied al·
most seven years ago to the
Washington Commission lor the
Blind for a vocational rehablllta·
lion grant. He was then attending"
a Christian Bible college in Spo·
kane. He wanted to continue his
s tudles toward becoming a pastor, missionary or youth dlrec -

President Reagan should read "With the Contras" before he pushes
ahead lor a return to military aid for the anti- Nicaraguan rebels while
muting the possibility of a negotiations.
The new book by Christopher Dickey is hair-raising in terms of the
terror, torture and inhumanity as portrayed by the U.S.·supported side in
the Nicaraguan struggle.
Dickey quotes a Contra in a bar in Honduras as saying, "You know there
are people who k&gt;arn to kill and love 11."
The author goes on to say, "These are lhe men President Reagan has
likened to 'freedom fighters ....
Reagan also has likened their cause lo that ol the Founding Fathers and
more recently call«! them "allies of the heart"
Dickey, a foreign correspondent tJr The Washington Post, depicts the
role of the CIA In the· covert attempt to overthrow the Sandlnlsta
government and the intense Involvement of former Nicaraguan dictator
Mastasio Sorhoza's guards.
·
"If you're going to overthrow anyone you have to do il pretty quickly," he
quoted a CIA veteran as saying. "These opt&gt;rations always unravel unless they take over a country - they always make a mess."
. Dickey said CIA [)ireclor William Casey was listening to two voiCE'S, bul
was eventually won over by "cowboy ism: a go- get-'em attitude Ihal said
that now was the time lor the agency to win some certifiable victories over

communism.··
Much of the book focuses on the internal disputes and power struggles
between the rebel lac lions. The spotlight is particularly on La So iclda, one
of the rehelieaders, a lonner Somoza guard whose excesses and rampages
led to his own death by other Contras. Dickey wtites that La Suiclda was
kepi naked and interrogated for days before he was executed by the
Contras.
Hew tiles o1 the fatal news conference g~ven by Eden Past ora, known as
Commander Zero, who met with a handful of reportt'I'S alter they had
takl'!l a hazardous journey to a dilapidated shack on slills in the jungk&gt;.
Among the reporters was Susan Morgan, stringmg for Nt&gt;wsw,...k, and
Linda Frazier. wife flit he Associated Press correspondent .
Shortly after the news conference began a bomb wen I off and "Pastora's
luck held." Morgan was des~JE&gt;rately hurt and Frazier, whose legs were
blown off. died a slow death . Pastora was rushed away from the SC&lt;'ne in a
speedboat . leavin g hehind the reporters screaming for help. •
"Reponers would not remember Past ora lor his brav~ry there," the
author wrote."
Dtckey ttes the rebel offenses 10 a step-up in Sandinista repressions and
increas ing reliance on Soviet suppon . In short. a vicious ctrcle.
He notes that the Unitrd States, which first said it was trying to interdict
arms supplies from Nicaragua to Salvadoran rrbels. had widened its
original goals.
He quotes one of the rebel leaders. Edgar Chamorro. as saying. "If you
know too much. you owr too much There are times when 11 is beter not to
know too much...
ln conclusion. Dickey wrttes·
"The fight continued. now. w11h no end in si¢1t and the con.~tant threat
that thf' Reagan administrat ion, having committed itself to the
Sandinlstas' overthrow, would finally decide it had no option bul OIJE&gt;n
direct U.S. military action if til(&gt; contras falt ered onCP too oftrn or too
badl)•. "
Shad!'S of Vtrtnam and short memories .

STATE REVENUE

Income taxes increased the most
percent change
Personal income
taxes

tor. The Washington state courts
rejected his application.
Witters then appealed to the U.S.
Supreme Court. Two weeks ago,
all nine justices voted to reverse
the Washington Surpeme Court.
Justice ThurgOOd Ma;shall emphasized !hat the proposed grant
would go to Witters lndlvlduallly,
and not directly to the sectarian
college of his choice. Only an lnslgnltlcant portion of the state's program of aid to the blind would go to
ministerial students. If a sectarian
college ultimately received !rlme
benefit, it would not come as the
result of a state actiOn sponsoring
or subsidizing religion.
Ironically, for such are the calls
of the Ia w, Witters may have to
wait another seven years lor his
case to he finally settled. The
WashingtOn ..,Sureme Court decided Wit~' case under federal
law Interpreting the U.S. Constltu·
lion. As It happens, the Washing·

ton state constitution appears
natly to forbid the very kind of
state support for which the blind
student applled, &lt;fQstlce Marshall
remanded the case with a remark
that "the state court Is of course
lree to consider the applicability of
the 'far s~lctor' dictates" of the
state's fundamental law. The high
court's decision was eminently
sound, but it won't &lt;b much lor
Larry Witters.
The second "establishment"
case arose In Edison and Old
Brtdge Townships In New Jersey
as a test of an act passed by the
state Legislature In December
1983. The act says : "Principals
and teachers in each public
elementary and secondary school
-·- shall permit students to obs·
erve a one-minute period of silence, to he used solely at the dis·
cretton of· the lnlvldual student,
before opening exercises of each
school day for quiet and private

contemplation or introspection."
The 3rd U.S. Court of Appeals,
dividing 2-1, held tn December
that the act has no "secular purpose." Even though the word
"prayer" does not appear in the
statute, the Legislature·~ real
purpose was religious_ The Idea
was to provl.de "for a minute of
silence for the purpose of permitting prayer by those who want to
pray." Such a purpose violates
the Constitution.
That decision strikes me as preposterous. How far we have wandered !rom lhe text of the First
Amendment! Go back to the original language: We are talking of an
"establishment of religion," a state-sanctioned church such as the
Anglican Chuceh in the 18th-century VIrginia. The constitutional
prohibition goes to acts of government that entangle church and
state and senoe either to promote
or to . Inhibit organized religion.
That Is what the clause Is all about.
It Is absurd, or ro it seems to me,
to hold that a state law pt&gt;rmlttlng
children to engage In a minute of
"quiet and private contemplatiOn
or Introspection" in some fashion
threatens to !X'Omote an "estab\lsh·
ment of rellglon." Hokum! As dissenting Judge Edward R. Becker
pointed out, lhe New Jersey statute
is pennlsslve. It Is neutral. Theonemlntue pertod may be used "solely
at the discretion of lhe Individual
student." No one Is compelled to do
anything more than merely to be
quiet. A videotape of one classroom
found the pupils in a !Dsture "that
can only he descrtbed as studied Ir-

reverence." ,

The New Jersey act L&lt;; at most
an "accommodatton" statute. II
accommodates tbose children
wbo may wls h to begin their
school day with a silent prayer .

LI

Space belongs to the young_ _J_ack_A_nd_ers_on
WASillNGTON - Christa McAuliffe and her partners In space died
that others might learn. She felt ,
friends recall, that there was so
much we don't know, so much to
learn. so much she wanted to teach.
As the first teacher chosen to
eliplore space, Mrs. McAuliffe was
eager to turn the space shuttle into
history's most dramatic classroom.
She lllped to make schoolwork less
forbidding by teaching the lessons
of space on location. She wanted to
use the excitement of space to
attract students to the tough
disciplines.
I am chalnnan of the Young
Astronaut Council, which co sponsored the teacher-in -space
launch . Fate doesn't always consult
us as to the time or the place
I ragedy will strike_ The horror in
the F1ortda sky, as Chrtsta McAu·
liffe's celestial classroom disintegrated, devastated us.
She had signed up her 8-year-old
son, Scott, in lhe Young Astronaut
Program. We brought his Young
Astronaut chapter 10 Florida for the
countdown. We also arranged wtth
United Airlines tony the teacher-in space finalists, two from each stale,
to Florida .
These IJE&gt;rsonal relationships
made the space shuttle disaster so

traumatic that some of our staff
members became physically Ul.
Yet the Young Astronaut Cooncll
without trepidation has urged
NASA to send another teacher to
take Mrs. McAuliffe's place. For
we have merely scratched the
surface of knowledge so Illimitable,
so beyond our present understandIng that we cannot be deterred by
tragedy.
Indeed. as the technological
challenges have Increased, the
educational standing of young
Americans has fallen. U oor
children continue to tum their
backs on science, the future will
belong to our adllt'rsarles. Here are
the appalling facts:
.- In Comparative tests, U_S.
students are invariably outscored
by students from other industrial
nations. One review of International
tests fou nd that American school
children "placed first never, placed
last frequently."
-The National Science Founda ·
lion reports that Japanese students
far oulperfonn Amertcans in math,
science and problem solving. The
Soviet Union produces four tlmes as
many engmeers IJE&gt;r capita. Explains Dr. Les Kaufman, noled New
England educator: "Our children
lose Interest In science early and

(we) end up wtth a population that
does not understand basic sclentlllc
concepts .. .. "
- u the trend isn't dramatically
reversed, the United States could
forfeit tts technologlca)leadershlp.
Our country relies for its technology
on a small sclentlllc elite. In
contrast, such rival powers as
Japan, West Gennany and the
Soviet Union are building a broad
base. From 70 percent to lKl pt&gt;rcent
of their high school graduates are
proficient In science and math; just
6 perrent of U.S graduates achieVe
the same proficiency.
There's nothing In herentl y
wrong, mind you, with America's
children. They haven't shrunk so
tar from their pioneer stock that
they'll reject the great adventure
awaiting them in space.
After the space shuttle disaster,
we began a dlalogue with Young
Astronauts on our prtvate elecII'Onlc network, Astronet, which
reaches Into· the schools of 500
m9jor cities. The overwhelming •
majortty not only want to continue
space exploration but al'l' eager to
venture into space themselves.
Still, most Amertcan school
children are shying away from
tough subjects that al'l'pl'l'requlslte
to tackling the challenge of space.

As Earl W. Foell, editor in chief of
the Christian Science Monitor, put
it. "No civilization can remain
great If It succumbs to a way of life
that esteems business speculation,
lottery fantasizing and educational
slllrtcuts_"
UNDER TilE DOME: Sen.
Lowell Welcker, R-Conn., says he
hasn't decided whether he'll run for
president In 191J8_ "I haven't made
up my mind," he said. "I want to
take more time. I wUI make a
decisiOn about another Senator
term or some other qltions in about
a year." No word yet from Harold
Stassen, either.
STATUARY LIMITATION :
While Lee lacocca and friends are
confidently raising S250 million to
restore the statute of an allegorical
Miss Llherty. a less !llbllclzed band
of patriots Is having a hard time
raising $00,&lt;00 for a Statute of a
Oesh-and-blood female c1 SimilarlY
Inspirational talent: Katharine Lee
Bates, the Wellesley college professor who wrote the stirring words to
"America, the Beautiful" In 1893.
Inspired byia cUmb up Pike's Peak,
she penned' the poem which, set to
music, came within a high C of
being our national anthem. The
Bates Statute Fund Is In Falmouth,
Mass., her birthplace and childhood
home.

Christa's legacy________A_rt_Bu_ch_wa_ld

Corporate
1ncome taxes

A few weeks ago I wrote a piece
about schoolteachers going up in
space. I speculated as to what kinds
General sales
of
candidates my own teachers at
taxes and
PS
35 would have made If thly had
gross receipts
applied for the ttip. It was a light
piece because, like most AmeliMoto r tuel taxes
cans. I never dreamed anything
could happt&gt;n to the flight of the
shuttle Challenger.
Alcohol and
During the last numbing week, as
tobacco
I watched the television scr,...n. I
got to thinking about teachers.
Altlllugh Mrs. Christa McAuliffe
Motor -veh tcle
wasn't a professiOnal astronaut, she
license ta xes
did leave behind a wonderful
legacy.
State tax revenues rose nearly t5 percent overall in fiscal t984 with lhelargConsider this.
esl single increases in personal income taxes (up 20.6 percent) and corpoFor the past 15 or :ll years,
rate taxes (up t 7.4 percent).
America's teachers could not have
been held in tower esteem. They
were underpaid, underrated and
blamed for anything that went
wrong with our schools .
Today is Friday. Feb. 7, !he 38th day of 198&gt; with m to follow.
It appt&gt;ared the only time M! saw
The moon Is approaching Its new phase.
teachers on TV was when they were
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
on strike or arrested for chUd
The evenlhg stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
abuse. The pt&gt;rceptlon was that
Those born on this date are under the sign on Aquarius. They Include
teachers were people who taught
English statesman and wtiter Sir Thomas More In 1478, fann equipment
because they couldn't make It In the
manufacturer John Deere In 1801. EngUsh oovelist Charles Dickens in 1812,
(!tal) l'l'a l (unital) world.
novelist Sinclair Lewis in IB85, and actor and Olympic swimmer Buster
Except for covering vandalism
and crime in schools, the media
Crabbe In 19ffi.
Ignored what was going on In the
On this date In history:
In 1940, British railroads were nationalized.
classroom. And with reason: If
In 1956, Auther!ne Lucy, the flrst black admitted to tlv:• Unlverslty of
teachers were teaching, and stuAlabama, was expelled after she accused school officials of conspiring In
dents were learning, It wasn't news
riOts tbat accompanied her court-ordered enrollment.
- that Is until the destruction of
Ia_ 1973, the U.S. Senate VOted to set up a seven-member committee to
Challenger.
lnv~tlgate the break-in of Democratic NatiOnal Headquarters at
Suddenly our schools received
Washington, D.C.·~ Watergate complex.
more attention than they have ever
In 1!£3, an Israeli commissiOn Investigating the Palestinian refugee
been given ·before. Seven brave
peopledled that Tlllrning, butttwas
camp massacre In Beirut placed much ct the blame oo Defense Minister
the death of a schoolteacher that
Ariel Sharon and called for his resignation.

Today in history

made our children cry.
When the TV cameras entered
the nation's classrooms to record
their grief, we saw principals and
teachers fighting back their own
tears as they trted to comfort the
students.
The cameras not only focu sed on
teachers but also panned to the
agonized faces oft he students. They
slllwed teacher to pupil and pupil to
teacher - and In thaf rooment of
sadness we witnessed the educallonal process at Its best.
When these pictures came into
our bomes we were reminded of
something we tend to take for
granted : the role teachers quietly
play In the llves of children.
The lesson was not jus! ior
grown-ups. You had the feeling thai
the students had gained a new
respect tlr teachers as well.
It went something like this.
"Christa was a teacher, and Christa
died In space, rut It could have1leen
anybody's teacher - including
mine."
So what was Christa McAuiUfe's
legacy?
When Sputnik went up and we
realized the RUSSians were ahead
there was a great clamor to educate
American children and make our
schools second io none. Then after
the successes of our own space
program, the clamor died down.
Education was dropped as our No. I
prtortty.
At least It was until last week.
After that one mrrttytng moment lib
Flortda, things changed again. The
parent-teacher-pupil bond that had
been !raying for a generation

seemed to he joined again.
when she returned. In death her
Christa McAulllfe's gUt to us Is ll'gacy Is lo give her fellow
rot In the sides but here on eart h. professionals new dignity and
From everything you can read, she lllror. Thanks to Christa, each one
was a teacher hefol'l' she went up of Ihem can say with ptide, "I'm a
and she Intended to he a teacher - teacher too."

Berry's World

Mayor feels Indians need .stronger support

SVAC statistics
Leading scorers
All games
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.fohn Sll(1J1lolrd S\ "

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Team offense
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llarman Tr.u•p
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12 i J '!9 171 J41,
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If mustache goes,
Fingers may join
Reds this spring ·
CINCINNATI iUPii - The
Cinclnnali Reds. who already have
acquired one fonner Cy You~
Award winner since last season.
are considering inviting another to
spnng training.
. A Reds spokesman said Thursday the clu b is deciding whether to
Invite RolUe Fingers to its Tampa,
Fla .. camp, but added that nothing
definte has been arranged .
U Fingers were to join the Reds ,
who traded for fonnrr National
League Cy Young winner John
Denny In December, he would do so
under certain co nditions - as a
non- roster player and without his
handlebar mustache.
A club rule forbids players to
wear a mustache or beard_ Dave
Parker. who often sported one
while playing for Pittsoorgh, was
forced lo shave it off when he joined
the Reds.
· Fingers, 39, has saved a major
league record 341 games in his 18
seasons and in 1981 he won lhe

Tonight's games
Ga llipolis al Ja ckson
Ath(&gt;ns at Marie! ta
Southern at Southwes tern
West at Northwest
South Point at Fatrland
Rock Hill at Chesapeake
Huntington at Point Pleasant
Minford at Waverly
Wllmlngton at Gre&lt;'nfirld
Whe&lt;'lersburg at Valley
North Gallia at Hannan Trace
Kyger CJwk at Oak Hill
Southern at Southwes tern
Eastern at Symmes Valk&gt;)·
Wellston a! Meigs
Alexander al Belpre
Federai ·Hoc king at Nelsonvil ll'York
Mlller at Vinton Coun ty
Warren Local at 1)-imble
Feb. 8 gwnes:
Wahama at Eastern
Gallipolis at SouthPrn 1makeupt
Logan at Nelsonvilll'- York
VInton County at Lorain Catholic
Portsmouth at Wilmington
Waverly at Circl ev ille
Feb. 10 glUlle
Cross Lanes al Southwpstern
Feb. II games:
Ironton St . Joe al Hannan Trace
Cool Grove at Symmes Valley

Amerrcan League's Cy Young and
Most Valuable PlayPr award•. He
was released by the Milwaukee
Brewers after la st season.
Effort~ to contact Fingers or his
agent, Jerry Kapslctn , were unsuccessful Thursday.
111e Reds are looking for middle·
inning relief pitchers and Fin gers is
searching lor a team that wants
him.
"We're not I hat deep. so a
veteran like Fingers might he a big
help to us, " said Reds' Vice
President Sheldon Bender . "He
indicates he's liJO pt&gt;rcenl sound and
he feels thai he can still pitch. He
feels he's got anotlrr year or so left
and he wants to go with a winner. "
Said Reds' General Manager Bill
Bergesch, "I don't know if it's going
to work out, but they !Fingers and
Kapsteln) initiated it. If I believe
Jerry Kapstein , and I do believe
him, he's interested in us."·
If Fingers comes 10 camp as a
non-roster player tha 1 would mean
the Reds would only be obligated 10
him in the event he mak es the learn
As for Fingers' handlebar must ·
ache, Bergesch said there would be
no exceptions to the team rule.

league."
Brown said the pu 11JOse of
increasing the season ticket base is
to give the Indians a stronger
financial found ation_
"You have to make il attractive
to a potential owner," said Brown.
"This team was iast in atlendance
(drawing 655,181 ) in baseball in
1985, but there are many reasons .
"Wl'- don't want to be forced to
make a decision regarding the
transfer of the team. We fee l the
Indians are still viable."
Brown noted the club's effort s to
rebulld its minor-league system
and thereby improve its level of
play.
"A lot of good things have been
done, but now it 's time for
C011JOrate and fan suppor1 to
as fans."
in&gt;rease," he said.
Voinovich. along with Growth
"It's important for the Indians to
Association president William Bry- remrun in Cleveland. Sports fr an ·
ant, American League president chisi's supply the glue that help
Dr. Bobby Brown. Indians chair- keep communities together."
man of the board Pal O'Neill and
O'NeUI, saying he has endured
team pres ident Peter Bavasi. spoke "enormous pressures" to sell the
du ling a news conference Thursday team he is supervising as tne
at Cltv Hall alter a Growth executor of his late uncle F _J.
Association meeting auended by 46 "Steve" O'Neill'ses"!ate, asked that
businessmen_
"This Is an aggressive ca mpaign
to sell season tickets, a good
old-fashioned, let's-band- together
approach," said the mayor.
"The average baseball fran chise
oas 7,500 season tickets, and the

the media '·tx&gt; morr undPr:-:.wnding

CLEVELAND (UPI ) - Saying
he believed the ClevPland Indians
"wUI be a serious contender In two
to three years," Mayor George
Voinovlch said stronger local oorporate support is needed to ensure the
struggling American League's
team future in the city .
"Our goal Is to double the season
ticket base from 2,(00 to 4,1XXl by
opening day In April," said Voinovich. wbo announced that the
Greater Cleveland Growth Assocra t!on has banded together a group of
prominent businessmen lor the
pu11JOse of stimulating sales.
"We want to make certain the
Indians don't move. and there are
plenty of cities who would love to
have a major- league franchise. In
a sense, we mu st prove our loya lty

]r,..;~&lt;:t ilc.

''ThP

million ) and

co nten~r

sta1Us ··

O'Neill I'E'JIPnllt'd hLs rdu&lt;.,;J] trJ
sell the Indian s to any in \('t'' '"1" t t1 , t
"might bock aw a) It urn ,:ucct·\~,
" Stev e O' NPIIJ wan1Nl tr1 h"t ·p
this club in Cleveland." hC' s.t tr!. "!
could've sold thP club a thou;,.JnJ
Urnes to lOOse who would nn1 h.Jn·
ad h"ered to that condl\ 1011.
"But I want to haw, ::J guat,llllt~·
that the team wil l std' hc•rr· 'J !J.tt'..,
what m y uncle SJ1f-&gt;l..tltcrdl\ { \·

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�Friday, Febnu11y 7, 1986

The Daily Sentinel

(Continued from pag&lt;&gt; I)

In to the vehicle.
the truck. She admitted being a
Under Crow's questioning, Fife good friend or the defendant and
said Hysell had a lot ctfrlendsatthe that she did not !mow the Rosenba·
party oot that Rosenbaum did oot. urns. She testltled that she saw
Crow also brought out that In h1s Hysell with the ball bat.
statement to the sheriff, FHe had
Under cross examination, ChapWritten that Tracy had struck man said she and her brother left
IWsenbaum three times In the ribs the party after the Incident which
with the ball bat.
she said took place aboutl a.m. She
' Upon questioning by his own stated she did not see Hysell swing
aJtomey, WUUam Conley, Fife sald the bat, rutthatshedidsaythattwo
he was argubigwith the p-osecutor "guys" put Rosenbaum in the
wben he testUied with the grand driver's side ot the truck. RosenbalillY· He testUied there was "no um's wife was not there when he
way" Hysell could have struck fell, she said. She testified she saw
Rosenbaum in the head with the '\ two males pull Hysell backwards
bat. He also said at one point, Mrs. away from Rosenbaum. She said
~Wsenbaulll could have run· and
there was a knife strapped to
admitted that he did not know about Rosenbaum's belt oot that she
low many friends Hysell or never saw It out of the case.
IWsenbaum had at the party.
Dispatcher ooltalld
FHe said his statements during
Ellen Rought, Pomeroy, a PomeThursday's testimony were the best roy Pollee Department dispatcher,
tlflit he could recall of the July testified as to the calls re::elved In .
incident
regard to the party. She received a
Earner Thursday, Louise Chap- call from Tina Rosenbaum at 1: 16
man ct Belpre, another guest at the a.m. on July 7 asking thai an
ill · fated party, appeared as a emergency squad be sent. She said
witness for the defense. She told ol. Mrs. Rosenbaumseemedupsetand
drinking by the Rosenbaums at the indicated that she thought her
party. ShesaidshesawRosenbaum
husband was dying. Questkmlng
fall and saw two males put him In disclosed that two calls were

Miller cheered; Bucks win
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) When Ohio State Coarh Eldon
Miller was Introduced before
Th~nda.Y night's game against
Northwestern, many of the 11,519
fans In St. John Arena cheered hlm.
Following the Buckeyes' &amp;l6J
Big Ten victory, Wlklcat Coach
Rich Fallt talked r1 h1s feelings for
Miller, woo will leave h1s job of 10
years following the curTellt season.
"I'm really happy that this was a
big win for Eldon and Ohio State,"
said Falk, whose team was never
really in the game after falling
behind 6-0 just 85 ~nds Into the
contest.
"I think they're definitely in the
picture for post season play. I know
they're going to respond to Eldon
the rest of the way and they'll pill.)'
with a great deal ot pride like Ohio
State players always have.
"I always wish the best for Eldon
Miller," added Falk. "He's a class
act In oor league and I speak for all
the Big Ten coaches When I say he's
going to be missed."

Brad Sellers led the way for Ohio
State with 26 points and 15
rebounds, while Dennis Hopson,
despite being under the weather
with the nu, chipped In with 19
points in just 23 minutes of play.
The Buckeyes, with Sellers scor·
lng 17 llrst·half points, led 43·24 at
the In tennlssion and never Jed by
less than 16 points the second half.
The game was a contrast from
the llrst meeting of the two teams
this season, wlthOhloStatewinning
79-77 in overllme al Evanston, JU.
"The difference tonight was we
were able to keep them away from
the goal," said Mlller. "Keith
Wesson did a great job on (Shon)

Manis."

Miller, woo has heard plenty of
boos in recent years from dis-

gruntled Ohio State fans, said he
heard the cheers when he was
Introduced, oot added, "I didn't
think It was very loud.
"I think they were a little hesitant
to do that," said Miller, "rut I don't

blame them. But, that stutr s all
behind us. We've got kid&amp; and:
games to worry about and that's
what's Important. Youdon'tneedto
drag that stuff through the muci ·
forever. Justgom with Ohio State'~
program and the kids woo are '
plll.)'ing the game r1 basketball and
lets get after it."
Northwestern, whose only win in ·
10 Big Ten games was the contest
forfeited by Minnesota, wl!ll led In
scoring by Morris with 1~ ~ts. ·
altlough the 6- foot-10 sopoomore
left the game late with back
problems.
"We certainly can't afford an
Injury to Shon Morris right now,"
said Falk, "so I lx&gt;pe Its oothlng
serious. He's such a viable Ioree lor ·
us In everything we do. I hope he's ·
going to be alrlght, because we need
hlm badly."
Freshman Terry Buford came
off the bench to score 13 points for
Northwestern and Jeff Grosei
another freshman, added 10.

Michigan, Indiana post wins

PASSES OVER DEFENSE - Ohio state's JeJTY
Francis pa881!!1 over a pack ol Northwestern
de lenders, inclu9dlng Brian Schwabe (41) loreground

By KENT McDDL
UPJ Spol18 Writer
The Michigan Wolverines successfully completed the llrst half of
what Is ronsldered their last tough
weekend on the way to another Big
Ten basketball title.
Michigan defeated Purdue 8J. 79
at West Lafii,Yette, Ind .. to raise its
record to 8-2 going into Saturday's
contest at Dllnols. Once that game
is over, the elghth·ranked Wolverines, now 20-2 overall, play five of
their remaining seven games r1 the
conference season at home 'and the
other two al Northwestern and
Wisconsin, where they will be
expected to win .
Center Roy Tarpley led Michigan
with 16 points while Garde Thompson had 14 and Richard Reliford
and Antoine Joubert had 12 each.
· "I'm proud or my boys for how
hard they played," said Michigan
Coach Bill Frieder. "This Is about
as good as we can play."
The game remained close only
because Michigan missed four
one-and-olll? free throw tries In the
final two minutes.
Purdue c;oach Gene Keady;
whose club fell to 5-5 In the Big Ten
and 16-7 overall, said he figured his
team was due to lose a close game.
"It finally has caught up to us.
Over the past few years we have
won more than our fair -share of
close games and you just can't keep
doing that forever," Keady said.
Todd Mitchell had 21 points for
Purdue and guard Troy Lewis
added 17.
Indiana stayed one game behind
the Wolverines In the race for the
Big Ten title by beating WisConsin
78-69, rul the victory was not an

during 'lbirsday night's Big 10 game at St. John
i\rena. Ohio state won ll:J.Ql. UPI.

Louisville routs Virginia Tech
By FRED LIEF
UPI Sports Wrller
Come to these parts and thi ngs
g&lt;&gt;ts nasty.
Louisville. protecting ·its home
territory like a squatter with a
shotgun. routed Virginia Tech
103-1i8 Thursday night at Freedom
Hall behind 21 points by Billy
Thompson.
It was the most pomts for the
Cardinals si nCI' Dec. 12. 19&amp;1. when
they beat Indiana State 1~69.
No. 15 Virginia Tech gets to enjoy
the comforts of home in the Metro
Conference rematch Monday night
when the No. 16 Cardinals visit
Blacksburg, Va. - one of college
basketball's more inhospitable
spots.
Dell Cun·y of Virginia Tech.
averaging nearly 24 points a game.
was held to 13. with only 4 in the
second half. Virginia Tec h shot 36
percent in the first half and trailed
47-30.
Keit h Colbert and Bobby Beecher
added 13 points apiece for the
Hokies. 18-5. Herbert Crook scored
19 for the Cardinals. 15-6. while Jeff
Hall had 14 and Milt Wagner 12.
Elsewhere. co-No. 2 Duke
downed No. 20 Virginia 77-65;
co-No. 2 Georgia Tech beat ~orth
Carolina-Charlotte 87-76; No. 8
Michigan roged Purdue SO. 79; 1\o. 9
Nevada-Las Vegas routed Pacific
92-73; No. 14 Texas-El Paso topped
Wyoming 72-58: and No. IS Indiana
defeated Wisconsin 78-69.
i\t Charlottesville. Va .. David

Henderson and Jolutny Dawkins
struck for 20 points each to pace
Duke. 21 -2. in an ACC game. The
Blue Devils held VIrginia center
Olden Polynice to 7 poinls. the first
time he was below double figures
this season. Mel Kennedy had 23
points for the Cavaliers, H-6.
" We did a good job of keeping
Polynice from having a nonnal
game." Duke coach Mike Krysewsk.i sald. "If you hold him down
it's because of good team defense."
At Atlanta. freshman Tom Ham·
monds seared a season- high 24
points as Georgia Tech. 18-3. sent
UNCC to its lOth st raight loss.
Georgia Tech hit 25-of·:ll tree
throws to 8-&lt;1·9 for the 49ers. M1ke
Milling's 25 points led UNCC.
At West Lafayette, Ind., Roy
Tarpley hit for 16 points as
Michigan escaped in the Big Ten.
ThP Wolverines, 20-2, missed four
l-and-Is in the final two nninutes.
Tod:l Mitchell's 2l points paced
Purdue.
At Las Vegas, Nev., Eldridge
Hudson. replacing injured starter
An11on Gilliann, tossed in 20 points
and Anthony Jones added 18 for
UNLV in the PCAA game. The
Rl'bels. 22·2, have won 13 straight.
Domingo Rosario cl. Pacific scored
25 points.
At El Paso. Texas, Quintan Gates
sco red 14 &lt;i his 18 points in the first
half to spark UTEP in the WAC
The Miners, 20-3, have won at least
20 games four ci the last five
seasons. Fennis Dembo of Wyom-

Marauderettes dump
Lady Rockets, 56-36 .
WELLSTON - The states 16th
ranked Meigs Marauderettes used
a strong fourth period to defeat
Wellston 56-36 here Thursday in
girls' TVC cage action.
The win enabled the Meigs la'Sses
to remain one-half game behind
league-leading Alexander. Meigs is
14-2 in the league with two games
remaining while Alexander is 15-2
with one game left. Meigs goes to
16-2 overall.
Junior Jenni Couch led the
Marauderettes with 14 points while
Julle Miller chipped in 12 and Jenny
Swartz 10. Shannon Huston led
Wellston with 17 and Debbie Dixon
added 13.
Two Meigs girls, Jodi Harrison
and Shelly Stobart, did not play due
to Illness.
Coach Ron Logan's crew led 8-7,
21-17, and li-27 al the quarter stops
trfllre blowing It wide open with a
n -9 margin the fourth period.
Meigs made 20 cl. 50 from the field
tor «J percent and 16 cl. 3.1 atthe foul
line for !i2 per cent. Wellston
managed only eight r1 25 free

throws for J2 percent. Meigs had 00
rebounds with Swartz grabbing 12
and .Jenny MUier. Teresa Jolutson,
and Couch each having 10. The
Marauderettes had 24 turnovers
and 21 fouls.
In the reserve game. Meigs
improved Its' record to 12-6 with a
32-:18 win. Scoring for Meigs was
Miss! Woods and Jodi Taylor with
10 each, Nancy Blankenship had
five. Dee Henderson, Rhonda Zlr·
Ide, and Shannon Slavin had two
each, and Beth Ew ing one. Trlna
Specht led Wellston with 14.
Meigs goes on the road Saturday
to Vinton Coonty and ends the
regular season Monday at FederalHocking. Alexander plays at Vinton
County Monday.
OOX SCORE
MF.IGS Ull - .lmnl COOt'h 4-+H, JuUr MIJJer
-&amp;+12. Jmnl SWartzl-4-\0, Jenny MU•r • 1·9, Tarnrey
Wlia:lll 2~. TPI"'"StS ..Johnson 1~. Marta Mldllf'r
J-0.2, Mlul Wuods 0.1-1. Ll.u P\lutns G-0-(). 'IV'I'AIA

ing had 22 points.
At Bloomington, Ind.. Steve
Alford's 23 points carried Indiana,
15-5. in the Big Ten contest. Gregg
Steinhaus scored 14 points for
Wisconsin. which was hun by foul
trouble.
Also, Army 74, Jona 71; St.
Joseph's 'lli, George Washington 56;
Temple 70. Rhode Island 57;
Auoorn 67, Florida 65; Navy 81,
George Mason 68: Old Dominion 74,
Western Kentucky 61; Virginia
Commonwealth 63, Alabama·
Birmingham 57; West Virginia 61,
Penn State 46; Creighton 48. 'lUisa
46; lllinois State 77. Southern
lllinols 53; Indiana State 54, West
Texas Stare 46; Ohio State 83,
Northwestern 60; Louisiana Tech
73. Lamar 67; New Mexico 72, Air
Force 70; Wichita Sttale 74, Drake
58; Utah State 119, Long Beach
State 95; UCLA 94, Washington ~
toll : Southern Ca l 77. Washington
State 75 (at 1; Arizona 61. California
52; Arizona State 77, Stanford 75;
Ca l-Irvine 00, Fresno State 58.

Th f' Bucki'yPli

2~

By quar1M"S
Mel~

Well.lton
~ldtl~ 32.

!l 13 I~ ~~- $
7 10 10 9-..16

Wt'llston ~-

2~

:W,40i

~

IH

16 8 28.426
12 U 31,225

Smllh's Bodv ShOp
Pomeroy Hfa lth Ca rl!r

10 H 27.551

8 16 25,1i2S
q4'•
6 18 :11;.291
. Team HIKh Series: Simmon 's 01dsl666:
The BuckeyC'S 1660; P a t Hill Ford 1640.
Team Hl•ll Game: Pat Hill Ford 595;
The Buckeyes 578: The Buckey~ 573.
Men'~

Hl&amp;h Series: Ron Smit h 507:

Larry Tucker 480: Charles Smith 463.
Men's Hlrrh Game: Larry Tucker l)R;
Charles Smith 181; Ron Smit h 1715.
Wornm's Hl1h SeriH: Do!!!P Will 490:
W('fldy Tucker :IW; Dottle Ne-lson ~0 .
Women's HIJh Game: Dollie Will 178·
178; Wendy Tucker 150; JoAnne Banks
and Ot&gt;bble NPaS(' 142.

I,

TllAM
Pt. .
Sm lth ·Nelson Motors
8
Middleport Lunctl Room
6
Jim 's Gulf
6
Tony's Carry Out
3
7-33 Carry Oul
2
Eagles Club
0
Hl1h Team Series: MiddlE-port Lunch
Room !140.
Hllh Team Game: Jim's Gulf 706.· · '
Hl(h Ind. Serleo: John Tym :Iii(); Russ
Ca rson 520; Maxine Dugan ~2 1 ; Ht&gt;len
Ptlelps and Pa! Carson ~ Hlrb Ind. G1me: Russt:arson 211; John _
Ty ret&gt; 191 ; Pa t Carson 196; Hel~ Phelps ·

1!14 .

'

Horntr 3-()..6: Tonya Savoy
2· 7·11 : Lt&gt;sa Rucker 4-2-10: Arlene Ritchie
0-1·1: &amp;v Wiga l 1·0·2; and Mt-lante
Mankin Q.O·O. TOI'Allllf.lt-11.
OAK HILL (48)- M. Glll lamorf' 4-IH:
A. . Caldwell 0-0·0: L. Grrt'n 6-2·12; S.
William s J-0. 2; R. Swann 6-2-14; C. Lffdy
4·0-8; S. Cartt'r 1·2·f. TOTALS t!-44.
Soore by IJI&amp;rten:
Oak Hill ..... ............... 12 10 16 10-48
Easlt&gt;rn .......... ............ 8 11 8 1.1-39 ,

OAK HILL - Host Oak Hill steals, and 36 rebounds. Eastern
wrapped up Its first SVAC girls' shot 33 pefCI'nl, hitting 13-39 and 13
basketball championship as It of 21 tram the line.
rolled to a hard-fought victory over
Senior Amy Young grabbed 15 _,..
runner-up Eastern, 48-39.
rebounds, Margaret Homer 7, and
The victory avenged an earlier Arlene Ritchie 6.
loss to Eastern, 67-64, earlier in the
Box score:
year. Oak HUlls now 12-1 in league
Eo\STF.RN 1191 - Amy Yoon~ J-3.9:
play, while Eastern drops to 10-31-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
and 12·7 overall.
Renee Swann paced the winners

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAMD...

"

AT SENIOR CITIZENS BUILDING- POMEROY
MONDAYS &amp; THURSDAY 5-6 P.M.
FEB. 24-MAR. 20 (8 Classes) $20
MONDAY MINI WORKOUTS 6-6 :45 P.M.
FEB. 24-MAR. 17 (4 Classes) '12

.'

EXERCISE DANCE

4

~!~~~hlJhl points,whileL

Eastern was paced by guard
Tonya Savoy with 11, Lesa Rucker
had 10 points. .
In a game unuke the torrid
orrenslve spree of earlier this
season, this contest was a much
more deliberate offensive pattern
oriented game. Oak Hill grabbed
tbe initial lead 12·8, then led at the
half 22-19.
Falling to penetrate consistently
in the nrst half, the Eaglettes had

TO REGISTER. SEND NAME, ADORES, PHONE NO .
&amp; CLASS FEE TO:
KENDA WILLIAMS
RT. 1 . BOX 166, RUTLAND. OH . 45776
BY FEB. 21

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. '•

.,

~~.":~n ~7;u~~~a:~~a~~~ I ~~~~~~S~IO~N~UP~&amp;~S~HA~P~E~U~P~N~O~W~I~~~~: ·:

16·8, the score now J8.27.
EHS made a sllght comeback In
the ftnal round, but fell to defeat
48-:11, despite an eight-point second
half by Tanya Savoy.
Eastern rommltted 32 turnovers,
which led to lis downfall, had 8

~

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''
"
IJ it T

"' '

, ..'

i

iiNj

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'.
I

1980 DODGE MIRADA 2 DR.
Automatic trans., 318 CID engine, •lr conditioning, rear
window defogger, cruise control. AM-FM rllCIIo. 83.870
miles.

SALE PRICE

......

WEUBTON r•l - Shannoo Huston7.J..17. Ofobi:W
O!Jjon 6-J -13. KarLI Md"loud ()..3.3, Chris I)" DllvyO.H
!.Rill')' Spi&gt;IW'f'l" 1·0.2. 'IU'I'W 1+-&amp;a.

~

:10.1)4.1
Pa t Hll\ For d
11 2fl 32.R10
~mtth " s Body Shop
1 ~ 20 :!IUI72
-t;tCn
12 20 2i.742
Pomt•roy H&lt;'allh Carl'
~ 1~ 26.928
Tt&gt;am Hl~th Seri M : Th(' Bud(('~· f's 1659 :
Slm m o n s · O id ~ 1618: Pa t Hill Ford 1S85.
Team Hllh Game: Burkf'\'{'S ~OJ: Pal
Hill Ford 546: Sl m mons · Olds. ~2
Mt&gt;n'" Hl~h Serlt&gt;M : Ron Smit h 515;
Rrlan Hal-\man 4.37: Tom my Ow!"'ns 436.
Men' s Hfah Games: Ron Smith 175-177:
Tim Cundlfl 169: Ron Smllh 16.1
Women' 11 HIK"h Serl~ : Doni&lt;' NPisoo
400: Wf'ndy Tu&lt;'kf'r :194: tlfohhlf• :\£'aS(' 378
Women'11 HIKh tlame;~ : Do!lif' Nrlsoo
l ~i, Brn y Mr KiniC'\" 1 ~1. Do!!\r NPl son

Sim m ons ·O id~

EARLY WEDNE!DAY MIXED
UN. 8,11M

Mar~an• l

I

liOSDo\V SITE liiXED- 1·21HWl
TE :\M
\\' L Total

12 4 32 ,84S

time just about a week ago.

"A ·lot cl. people think they're nota
very talented ballclub," said llll·
nols' Lou Henson. "They are one of
the most talented we've played. We
tried to play them one-on-one and
couldn't do it.
"We're still trying to talte It one
game at a time.! don'tthink we can
play this well every night, especially on the f"Oild," MSU CoachJud
Heatlx&gt;te said.
Illinois' Ken Nonnan led all
scorers with 34 points on 14-of- 18
shooting. He also grabbed 10
rebounds for Illlnols, 14·5 and 5- 5.

MOSDU NITE MIXED/IAN. II, liM
TEAM
W L Total
S!mmon s.Oids
Pa t Hill Ford

he had ftrst beEn asked about the

ence and 10-10 overall.
Michigan State, &amp;-4 in the confer·
enoe and 15-5 cr;erall, kept Itself two
games oo 1 ol. first place with an
!l4-8l win over Illinois. It was only
the second time In 36 games the
lllinl have been beaten at horne.
Scott Skiles had another remar- :
kable nigh!, scorlng25 poipts to lead · .
four Spartan plll,)'ers In double
figures.

Local bowling
The BuckeyPs

Defendant takes stand

Lady Oaks win SVAC championship ~

r--------......,
Local bowling

easy one.
The game had 15 ties and eight
lead changes as the scrappy
Badg&lt;'rs led 34-31 at haUtlme and
had a 40-36 advantage with 16:30 to
play. Early in the second haU,
Indiana, 15-5 overall, went on a 14-4
spurt to take a 00-52 lead and never
trailed again.
"I tlought we had a chance
leading the game rrost of way,"
Yoder said. "You need a big play, a
three-point play, and we oon't have
players who can do that. Once we
got behind, I knew It would be
difficult.
"Wisconsin honestly deserved
better." Indiana coach Bob Knight
said. "They got into some foul
problems and wore down somewhat. We won the game not on the
basis of what we did. It was rrore a
game of attrit.ion."
Steve Alford led Indiana with 23
points.
Gregg Steinhaus had 14 points to
lead Wisconsin, 2-8 In the confer-

S3995

9.9% FINANCING

SMITH NELSON MO:TORS

500

MAIN

• ·

The Daily Santinei- Page- 5

Defense witness --~----~~------------

Friday. FebruiiV 7, 1986

Ohio

Pomeroy-MiddlePort. Ohio

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I· t I

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received by the pollee department
earlier - 10:44 p.m. on July 6 and
12: 10 a.m. on July 7 complaining
about the loud music coming from
the party area.
Another witness for the defense,
Terry Wilson of Middleport, told c1.
the party also. She indicated s~je
was not particularly a friend of
Hysell or the Rosenbaums. She
testified that Mrs. Rosenbaum was
"dancing with several guys" and
termed herdanclngas "dirty". She
said Douglas Rosenbaum tried to
get h1s wile to sit down.
She said she was at her rrother's
hlme closeby when she heard
screaming and so returned to the
party area and saw Rosenbaum
lying on the grountJo. She saw no
lmlfe, she said. The lx&gt;urcouklhave
been 12: :.! or 1 a.m. she noted,
testifying that the party was over at
1. She testified that two males had
~K~t Rosenbaum in the truck, but she
sald they put him m the passenllt'r
side r1 the vehicle. She said
Rosenbaum's wife appeared "cool
about it" but did drive the truck in
which her husband had been
placed, "down the lane fast" when
leaving the party.

MEET LIFEFLIGHT TEAM - Members of the
Rutland unit ol the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service were In altendanre at LlfeOight
Scene Team training at Meigs Mine No. 2 on Feb. I.
Kneeling, (I to rj are EMS members Wlbna

'

(Continued from page 1)

questioned Hawley at the grand
jury session. Conley referred hack
to Hawley's grand jury transcript
to read the questlom as they were
asked by Crow.
Also in response lo questbning
from Toy, Haw ley said he saw a
sheath for a knife strapped to
Rosenbaum's belt, and that the belt
would have had to have been
removed to take the sheath off.

On re-direct examination, Haw·
ley said he contacted the !K'OS€CIIi·
ing attorney's ttflce when re got the
supeona because he tlx&gt;ught It must
be a mlslake. He said that Gary
Blankenship, Investigator for the
defense, came to h1s home later. It
was pointed out that the supeona
was Issued by the state, but Hawley
was called as a wliness ·for the
Also sees lmlfe
Altlough
she did ool see the
defense.
Both Richard M. DeMoss and alleged beating with the bat,
Esther DeMoss, parents of Karla Sherrie Brooks testified tot he rourt
DeMoss, fiancee of the defendant, that she did see Rosenbaum have a
testified as to the time their "hunting knife with a block handle"
daughter and Hysell returned to earlier In the evening.
She sald she became aware that
their Pomeroy, Route33, home that
something
was happening rut front
night Richard said that he was up
at
the
party
when her mother
reading "I never go to bed 'Ill
everyone's in", and that Hysell, (Joann Wears) came around back
Karla anJlhls son, "Buster" arrived to find Anthony and Kim Smith.
between· 12:25 and 12:35. Mrs. Brooks testified she herself told the
DeMoss also testified that they got Smiths to go around front and "get
there about •12: :.! and said she had them (the Rosenbaums) off our
just gotten home from wor)&lt; and Property."
She said she went around front
was getting ready to go to bed.
two
or three minutes later and saw
: "He jerked her (Tina) out of the
Rosenbaum
on the ground, a knife
truck ... put her up against the
beside
hlm
on the ground, and
truck... they were arguing and
maybe
:.!
people
standing around
flghtlng ...Tina fell ... got up... Doug
grabbed her with his left hand- watching.
She placed the time of the
...held the knife to her ...slx to seven
inches from her throat...Tracy sald Incident aroond 12 or 12: :i5 because
something to Doug .. .he turned she and her husband stayed to
around and looked at Tracy ...then clean-up afterwards and were
turned back to Tlna ...Tracy hit lx&gt;me getting In to bed at 1:05 a.m.
because she remembered k&gt;oldng
hlm ...Doug' s knees hit the ground
at
the alarm clOCk. The Brooks live
and he fell toward the truck ... tried
next
door to Joann Wears.
to llt't up oot he couldn't..didn't see
Brooks
told Toy that she didn 't
the knife after that."
know
lnw
the knife got there or
That was 18-year-old Jolut
whose
It
was.
O'Brian Hawley's recollection of
JIIUld member teJIIIIes
events surrounding the Incident last
Gregory
Fife, a member of the
July, in which Tracy Hysell Is
band
that
played at the party,
alleged to have beaten Douglas
testified
as
to Doug and Tina
RQsenbaum with a ball bat, as
Rosenbaum's
appearanoes at the
related In direct questl&lt;inlng to
party.
He
said
they were both
William D. Conley, defense counsel.
Intoxicated
and
that
"Doug was
He said he watched from about
sneaky
acting
with
a
mean
looking
"five or six feet away" and that he
face."
had drunk "one or two beers" and
He testified he heard the commotalten puffs from "maybe three
tion
from where he was packing
joints" of marijuana before the
away
equipment on the stage.
incident occulTed.
When
he
went to Investigate he saw
Hawley told the court he was with
Rosenbaum
oo the ground. He said
Anthony Smith (Rosenbaum's
•
he
saw
Frank
Haggy and Brian
brother-In-law) when Rosenbaum
Hawley
pick
Rosenbaum
up and
showed Him (Smith ) the knife.
put
him
In
a
truck.
He
testified
that
Hawley described the knife as a
Tina
picked
a
knife
up
from
the
' Schrade blade with a brownish
ground
and
threw
It
in
the
back
ol.
black handle.
the
truck.
He said Rosenbaum was intoxl·
He said he did not know why
catect and had been smoking
Rosenbaum
was on the ground and
marijuana ool he didn't know how
he
did
not
see
a ball bat.
much.· He said he saw Doug
There
was
blood coming from
"runnin&amp; around and climbing
Rosenhaum's
nootrlls
he testified.
trees."
Fife
told
Tby
in
cross
examinaWhen Rosenbaum hit the ground,
tion
that
he
did
not
see
a knife
Hawley says "some guy ~ad lx&gt;ld of
sheath.
Tracy" and Randy Randolph took
He said he saw Tim Hysell trying
the :bat from Tracy and threw It In
to
calm his brother Tracy down but
the back of the truck.
he
didn't know why.
He described only one blow to
Fife
also placed the time around
Rosenbaum's right shoulder "so
midnight
because that's when the
he'd drop the knife" and demonband
was
suppo6ed to stop playing
strated what he remembered to the
and
the
band members were
court.
already
tearing
down .
Hawley said he tried to help
"Time's
Important,"
urged ConFrank Haggy and Smith carry
Rosenbaum to the truck. He said he
heard Rosenbaum say something
to theef(ectd "no, I can walk, I can
make it." ·
Hawley 1dlscovered "a little
blood" Otli Ills jeans the next day.
Four calls for assistance were
Haggy, In h1s testimony Wednesanswered
by units ot the Meigs
day, said he also found blood on his
County
Emergency
Medical Ser·
jeans ~ next day.
vice Thursday.
Said special prosecutor Robert
At 8:40 a.m. the Rutland unit
Toy In cross examination, "When transported Ronnie Black frQm
you were asked In grand jury If Meigs Mine No. 2 to Veterans
you'd. been drlnkfng' or smoking Memortal Hospllal; at 10 a.m. the
dope ~u said no. Why did you lle to Pomeroy unlt took Jolut Terrell
the gt:and jury?"
from his Mulberry Heights home to
"I didn't want trouble and I didn't Holzer Medical Center; at3:16p.m.
want to go to jail," answered Rutland was called to Meigs Mine
Hawley, woo was 17 at the time cl. No. 2 for Carlos Rutter who was
tHe party.
talten to O'Bienness Memorial
"Do you, recall saying In grand Hospital In Athens, and at 6:32p.m.
jury you heard a woman's voice the Pomeroy squad transported ..
yelling rut you couldn't hear what Jhn Morris from :DJButternutAve.
she was saying over the musk:,"
to the Holzer Medical Center.
Toy contlilued.
The Columbia• Township Fire
"No. I!Dn't recall that," Hawley Department was called to the Jeff .
answered.
Birchlleld resident at Point Rock
Conley, . In redirect, suggested
a truck ftreThunday afternoOn.
that Hawley may have been . At 6:3.1 p.m. the Chester Fire
"lnterru)U$1" several timeS during ' DePtu"tlnent answered a call to the .
his grand jury testimOny by Charles Radford residence where
PI'OSOCUtlll' Fred w. Crow ni woo !here was a ciWpneY fire.

Kirby named deputy marshal

ley. "How long do you think It was
after you started tearing down that
the incident happened •"
After a pause Hawley said,
"three minutes."
Troy Brooks told the court that he
also saw the knife "shining In the
lights" but he did not know what
happened to it after the Incident
between Hysell and Rosenbaum
was over. He said he didn't see
anyone pick It up.
Questioned by Crow, Brooks
adnnitted he was a best friend to
Hysell and that they served in the
military together.
He told Crow he didn't !iff' a lmlfe
In Rosenbaum's hand but hedldsee
lhe Rosenbaum's fighting.
Brooks had testl!ied In grand jury
that he saw Doug slap hlswlfeTina,
oot he adnnitted to Crowl hat now he
really dldn 't remember for sure tl
that happened.
Brooks placed the time around
12:15 also.
Kathy Fife of Pomeroy also
testified brlefiy on Thursday.
Following objectlom by the
prosecution and discussion at the
judge's bench, testimony regarding
Tina Rosenbaum's "dancing at the
party" was not allowed because
"Mrs. Rosenbaum Is not on trial. "

Officer Joe Kirby was appointed
deputy marshal for Racine Village
when village council met Monday
night in regular session.
Marshall Alfred Lyons is on sick
leave at the present time it was
reported.
Frank Cleland , council president.
presiding In the absence of Mayor
Charles Pyles, admlnlsterd the
oath of office to Kirby who will be
working parttime on a probationary term.
Residents with police emergcn-

Area deaths
LOuise Cross

State Auditor 'Thomas E. Ferguson announced the February dlstriootlon of $63,745,161 In Aid to
Dependent Children to 642,7U
recipients in Ohio. Meigs County
received $253.932 for · 2,678
recipients.

Dance cancelled
A square dance scheduled to be
held at Long Bottom has been
cancelled due to high water.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical CEnter
Dischal'pl Feb. 8 - Thelma
Berridge, Beverly Boggs, Paula
Browning, Loren Coleman, Ml·
chelle Cox, Mrs. Timothy Doles and
son, Bertha Fillinger, David Gen·
try, David Hill, David Holley,
Jacklyn Killen, Jimmy Lambert, .
Mrs. robert Leonard and daughter,
Mrs. Donald McCorkle and son,
Bertha McKentle, Steve McKenzie,
Dorothy Montgomery, Fannie Mullins, Edgar Nelson, Sherry Neut·
zllng, Sheila Nibert, Theodore
Perry, Robert Pickett, Gloria
Roush, David Sands, Amy Sibley,
Michelle Smith, Pansy Spencer,
Charlotte Willis, VIrginia Wright.
Bl11lll - Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Vreeland, son, Gallipolis.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Thursday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Number

645.

'I'jcket sales totaled $1,221,313.50,
with a payoff due of $Sl4,784.
PICK-4
0378•

Lou~ Cross, 67, Langsvllle died
Thursday at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs. Cross was born January 15,
1919 at Sharon, W.Va ., to the late
William D . and Mary Etna Falin
Basham.
She was also preceded in death by
one sister, Carol Basham, four
brothers, James G., Sherman,
Kenneth and Robert .
She was a housewife and selfemployed taxidermist.
She Is survived by one daughler
and son·in·law, Judy and Dallas
McQuire, .Langsville; two grand·
children; two great grandchildren;
three sisters, Mrs. Bessie Floccart,
Middleport; Mrs. Pansy Owens.
Bidwell; Mrs. Myrtle Jeffrey,
Logan City, W. Va.; two brothers,
Carl Basham, Bidwell and Howard
Basham, Oceanside, Calif.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 1 p.m. at the Hunter
Funeral Home with the Rev. Daniel
Bales officiating. Burial wlll be in
Miles Cemetery . Friends wlll be
received at the funeral home
Saturday from 7 to 9.

Ulah W. Swan
Ulah W. Swan, 83. TUppers
Plains, died Wednesday afternoon
at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospl·
tal, Parkersburg foU owing an
ex tended lllnes s.
Born In Hazel in Meigs County
she was the daughter of the late
William C. and Mary Grace Fitch
Smith. She was also preceded in
death by her husband. Stanley, two
sisters, Leone Babcock and Ma')'
Riggs; and three brothers·in·law.
She was a member of the Long
Bottom Christian Church, Daughters of America, Chester. and
Racine Chapteer of the Eastern
Star.
She Is survived by one daught er
and son-in-law, Elizabeth and
Lindsey Lyons ll, Thppers Plains;
three grandchildren, Lindsey

Emergency squads
answer four calls

tor

cies are asked to contact the Me1gs
CountySheriff'soffice. From there,
all calls will be rela yed by radio to
the village officer or other proper
authorities.
Counc il also appointed Peggy
Kirby as bond ciPrk for the village.
Any violators cited tomayor'scoU11
may now post bond wilh Mrs.
Kirby.
The resign allons of Emma Lyons
as txmd clerk and .Jack Wolfe as
deputy marshall wer e ac('('pted .

-

ADC funds ~eived

Ohio lottery winner

Davidson, Mary Ann Myers, Sharon llla&lt;k and VIcky :
Russell. Standing, (I tor) are Paul Patterson, Dave ·
Davis, Jack Peterson, Edna Davis, Larry Edwards, '
Marcia Elliott, Butch Wilcox and ,Jerry Black.

Lyons 111, Parkersburg; Mrs.
Lawrence ILyndall Hasbargen,
Parkersburg ; Lamar Lyons,
1\lppers Plains; six great grand·
children; two sisters. Leota Mas·
sar, Reedsville; Fern Price Heath;
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral Services will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at the Wh ite
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Rev. Richard Thomas officiating.
Burial will be in Sand Hill Cemetery , Long Bottom. Friends may
call at the funeral home today from
2to4and7to9.

Open door session

Sf'l

It was noted that ll'olfr will be
relurning to polie&lt;' school.
An ordinan ce authorizing a $3
charge for res idenls who fail to pay
their water bills b)' the 11th of each
month was passed . The ordi nance

was given its third and final reading·
before passage.
Racine res ident John Murphy ·
was in attendance at the meeting :
and requested clar ifiCation from .
council on the ordinanC£' con cern~:
ing dogs runnin g at large . Murph~
complained of dogs tea ting up his:
trash bags.
·
Residents are reminded that dogs ;
are to be confined to the owner's :
property or the owners wil l he cited, :

to ma~~or's cour1 .
As request&lt;'(( by ThorlciJ Bentz,
also present for the meetin g, the
streE't commissiollC'r and commitll'l' will check for problem area s
within the village where piles of dirt
caused by recent sno'Aplowing need
to be cleared .
F ire Chief Robert Johnson reported !hat lhc village 's new :
(Xlmper lluck was placed in scmce:
last week.
In other business. council approved the appointment of Frank
"Bill" Porter as \illage solictor for
1986, effec tiv&lt;' from Jan . I.
Approved the Home Na tiona!
Bank as the depository of the
village funds and approved the
request of the Meigs Countv Board
of Elecllons to use the Shrine Club
ruildin g as the polling pl ace for the
Racine Precinct.
Council recessed until 6 p.m.
Mondav, Feb. 17.

On Wednesda y, Feb. 12, a
rt?presentati\'E' from Congressman
Clarence E. Miller's office will
conduct an open door session from
11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Meigs
County Courthouse. Anyone ha\' ing r-;:;;~;:;;:::;:;;:;
questions t'Oncerning · 1h(' federal
government should stop by to
GRAVELY TRACTOR
d iscuss them with lhc
SALES &amp; SERVICE
repr£'sentati,·c.
204 Condor St.
Pomery. OH.
Phone 992-2975
Veterans Memorial
FALL &amp; WINTU HOURS
Clostd Monday
Thursday admissions: John
Tuts.-Fri.
'I to 5, Sat. 9 to I
Ivan, WilkesvUie; Ronald Black,
Langsville; an d Frank Wolford.
THE
Vinton.
Discharged: Mayme Manning,
GRAVELY
Clarence Adams, Marie Roy, Fern
SYSTEM
Stansbury, and Carl Alley .

o

....

.--------~

SPECIAL

·

1986 F-150 FORD CUSTOM VAN
•

'

.-.
P.S .. P.B.. cruise control, AM -FM stereo , auto. trans . with overrive. V- 8 engine . Interior includes 4 captain 's chairs. rem ova ble
rear sofa, all in scarlet &amp; grey velour, built-in TV &amp; command cen-

ter. many more features . Full Factory Warranty!

SAVE OVER S2,000

··

1980 FORD PINTO ........................... $1295
4 sp., radio .

1978 CHEVY CAPRICE ...................... $1495
Auto .. P.B.. P.S .. air .

1977 FORD LTD ................................ 11195

1982 DATSON 200SX 2 DR.

4 Dr .. auto .. P.B., P.S .

'•

1979 MERCURY MONARCH ................ S1 000

...

4 Dr .. auto .. 6 cyl., Httle rough .

1977 DODGE CHARGER ....................... S895

2 tone blue, 6 apeed trana .. aunroqf, rear defogger, AMFM stereo, cuaette player, powltr wlndowa, 68.171

2 Dr .. 31 B. auto ., P.B., P.S . .

mil••·

Slant 6, rough .

SALE P,RICE

$5295

·9.9°1. FINANCING

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

.

,

1970 DODGE PICKUP ....;..................... $200

·•.

.J

..~

"
' .I

�.

~·7 fXrERifNCE 111f·JOY Of RELIGION

; .:Page-6-The Daily Sentinel
-

w

twL

.

Friday, February 7, 1986

Friday. Febru.-y 7, 1986

•w

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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This Message and Church
The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

Star grange plans coming events

··""
:J :

USED CARS, I

·"

MEIGS TIRE
~ \ CENlER, INC.

~~4
Joh~~~~!~:~:~gr.
.. .__...;,..______........___

..
..
~•

Rav Riggs
Ph. 985·4100

St . Rt.

'

..
r·

Chester

EVERY PRAYER SHOULD
CONTAIN A WORD OF GRATITUDE

SWISHER &amp;lOHSE

~~~

BOOK SlORE

Prescriptions

n~;i.;}~t {B.

Qt
.
·

J . Wm . " Bill" Brown, Owner

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

m

complete

Automotive
serv1ce
Locusl &amp; Beech Street

-

~

-1,

''Strensthen ye the weak
hands, and confirm the
feeble knees ."

. h
we pray, We are COmmunicating Wit
God; and We S h OU ld d 0 th .IS a t 1eaSt tw·tCe a d ay :
·l n the mornt·ng to ask for the strength and
ability we will need for whate~er the day might
bring, and at bedtime to gi~e thanks for this
di~ine help and guidance. There is no reason

to g 1ve

Grocene!tGenera\ Mercnandise
Rac1ne 949· 25SO

God

a "shopping list" of our material

desires, for He is already aware of our needs
and will grant the things that are right lor us.
.
·11 Iearn th e
At your House 0 f WOrS h ip YOU WI

M ETHODIST .

Prt•achlnl! tl ..10 a m f1rs! .1nd SN'n ncl . Su n
da \'S of rach mflnth. thnl and fourth sun

eta~· pa r h mon 1h wnr ship ~Pn icrs J 1 7· :10 p
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Pta\N rtnd B1blt&gt; Siulh

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MT. MORIAH BAPTIST. fourth and
r'-------------~ Main
St., Middleport. Rev. Calvin Minnis,
Mr. HERMON UNITED BRE:I"HREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located ln Teoxas
Community off Ct. Rl. 82. Rev. Robert
Sanders. pa51or. Jeff Holtor. lay leader;
Ed Rou!b, Sunday School Supt . Sunday
Scliool 9:30 a.m.: morning worllhtp and
children's church. 10 :30 a.m.; "'"'tng
preaching servll't' on the second and
fourth Sundays ar 7, 30 p.m.; Christian Endeavor on theo first and third Sundays at
7::1! p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting and
Bible study, 7: ~ p.m .
CHURCH OF GOD oF PROPHECY .
Located on 0 . J. Whl!e Road ot Highway
160. Par Hensoo. pastor. sunday SchooiJO
a.m. Classes for all a,ees. Junior Church 11
a.m.; Morning worship u a .m. Adult

'•

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IN CllHI STIA :"-. t ' \l!l :"-. . 11Pv ~ Pith r ottn

pastor Sunrl.t\ Sl h•K•I " \rl d m WJdr•
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RCTI.A
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• Sun&lt;la \· M(wnln.l!: Wor-, hlp lt · r~-ta . m . C hll
\o drpn ·s· Ch urrh 11 a .m Sund&lt;lY E\'rnln,e:
~ SN\·Jcf' 7:00 p.rn . W1&gt;d .. 6 p.m. Young L.a
., dJps ' 1\ ux illa ry. Wrdnf'sd.ly. i p.m. Fam
) 1lv Wors hip.
'• ' HA ZEL COMM UN ITY CHURC H. Nra r
1, Long [Jollom. EdsC'I Han. pastor. Sunday
f School 9:30a .m.; Worship 10:30 a.m ;
,• Prayf'r m('('tln~ Thursda y, 7: JO p.m. '
lr MIDDLE PORT fREEWILL B&gt;IP"rtST
• CHURCH. Co rn er Ash and Plum. Ralph
;• Ctrndlff, pns1or. Sund ay School lO:OOa. m.;
~ Morning Worship , 11 :00 a.m.; Wedntsday
'tr.jnd Satyrday Evenl ns Services itl7:30 p.

"'

pastor . Mrs . Elvin Bumgardner, supt .
Sunday School 9: lO a.m .; Worship service
10:45 ~t.m .
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Jo"eph B. Hoskins, evangelist Sunday
Bible Sludy9 a.m.; Worship, lOa .m.; Sun ·
da y eovenlng Sfrvlce 6 p.m.: Wf'dnesday
f"\lf'nlnll service, 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY . Racine.
Rt. 124 . William Hoback, pastor. Sunday ·
School 10 a .m.; Sunday eoveoning service 7
p.m. Wednesday evening servlcf 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle.
Supt . Sunday School 9: lJ a.m. Morning
WorshJp 10: 30 a.m. Prayer tf'rvlct, altt&gt;rn·
ale Sundays.

.

In the past several years, much

has been written about fats and
cholesterol In the diet. Research
has shown that a reduction of total
fat, saturated fat and cholesterol in
the diet Is effective In lowering
tiood cholesteroL Amount of reduction varkis !rom IndividuaL
The Cooperative Extension Service wiD sponsor a class on Feb. 18,
!rom 1 to 3 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. to
discuss ways to reduce fats and
cholesterol In the diet, amounts of
fat and cholesterol In various foods,

MOUNT AI~[( A

Cinema,.'i)

and methods of food preparation to
reduce fat and cholesterol In your
family's diet.

; ;1'," llfnS

MIDDLEPORT PENTEC
OSTAL, Third
Ave. Rev. Clark Baller, pastor. cart Not!Ingham, Sunday Scliool Supt. Sullday
School 10 a.m. with clusf'S tor aU ql!l.
Evenlnlservlces at 6 p.m. Wednes&lt;lly Blble stu yat 7:30p.m. Yoorh '""t""" Fri·
day at7:30 p.m.
ECCLES lA FELLO\\liffiP. 128 MUI St ..
Mkldl-rt. Brother Chuck Mcl'ller•- ,
~......
....,.,
pastor. SWiday S&lt;hool 10 a .m.: Sullday
evenlng services at 7 p.m. and Wednesciay

r-------------------------"""1

Sermonette

..

Meigs Cwnty Gl'8JI&amp;l! baJiquet
were anMJmced at the recent
meeting ~ Star Grang!! held at the

Ray Midkiff, legislatiVe agent,
gave an lnfonnattve report on the
state 'legislatiVe conference held
recently at the Frendly Hllls Camp.
A sympathy card was sent to ·
Catherine Ollwell, and get well
cards were sent to VIrginia Carsen
and John Ollwell. Opal Dyer gavt&gt; a
report on the yooth group.
The literary program consisted
of readlngll, "Winter Rest" by
Maxine Dyer; "Challenge" by Opal
Dyer, "Household Hints" by Ruby
Lambert, "Lovt&gt; Grows" by Linda
Montgomery, "Valentine Wish" by
Bll Dyer, "To One In Love" by
Uu-ry Montgomery, "Cherry Pie"
by Bm Rlfe; and "Halley's Olmet"

and handouts shared by Cindy
Oliveri, Meigs Olunty Home EcoMmics Agent. The class will be ·
held at the Extension Office.
Registration fee Is $2.00 and
pre-registration by Feb. 17 is
requested .
. To register for the class, call the
Extension Office at 992-00!6.

PAGEVILLE - Scipio township
trustees meeting, 7 p.m. Friday at
Pageville To~hip Building.

I

~- ·

POMEROY - Meigs Coonty
Ministerial Association meets Monday in the board room at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. All area minis·
ters are Invited to attend.
MIDDLEPORT - Bethel 62,
International Order of Job's Daughters, meet 7::JJ p.m. Monday at the
Mlddlepon Masonlc Temple.
TIJESDAY
HARR!SONVIu.E - Harrtson-

Leftten

Sun.·Thur.; .. 7:10
Fri. &amp; Sar., 7:10, 9:10
Sat &amp; Sun. Mat ., 2:10
Sat. Midni2ht, 12:10

Not Valid Tualllay Eve.
Soturday or Sunday Matlnaa or
Midnight Movies

I
I

Three Meigs Counttans has been
named to the honor roll of Ohio
State University for the autumn
quarter. They are Laura Jean .
Eichinger, Chester; Mark Edward
Rice, Reedsville, and Jeffrey Bernard Shrivers, Reedsvtlle. A 3.5
grade point average out of 4 Is
required lor listing on the roll .

1979 HONDA CIVIC 4 DR.

con d .• 4 speed trans., rear defogger, 30,733
miles, AM radio.

Air

S2595

SALE P~ICE

9.9°/e FINANCING

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

POMEROY, OHIO

500 E. MAIN

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

I

INSTANT SUCKLE
MEDICATED
MILK REPLACER

FEBRUARY 9, 1986

CHlNESE NEW VE~R
To celebrate Chinese New Year
The Far East Restaurant will have a
drawing for a free dinner on
February 9, 1986.
Stop by anytime this week for Chinese
New Year special lunches or dinners
and to register for a free dinner.

breaklast

The annual lenten break tal sponsored by the women of the Trinity
Congregational Church, Pomeroy,
will be held Wednesday at 7:45a.m
in the social room of the church.
Women !rom churches of ttE area
are Invited to attend.

Three named to
OSU honor roll

••tty hn1"

Mountalnaer

I
I

by Becdcy Rile. Games were
played and there was a qulz by
Ruby Rlfe, lecturer.
A social hour and potluck dinner
was enjoyed alter the meeting.

l

-----------------------·
Cln•- lllplay, W. Va.
:
: '1 50 Off Any Adult Admission l

vUJe Senior Citizens will have a
blood prssure clinic Tuesday !rom
10 a.m. to noon at the towni)ouse.
Ferndora Stocy, R N. will have
charge of the clinic to which the
public Is Invited.

Master, to be the

PI

Sun.-Thur.;., 7:00
Fri. &amp; Sa t., 7:00, 9:00
SaL &amp; Sun. Mal .. 2:00
Sat. Midni~ht , t2 :00

:

Gran~

speaker. Tickets wiD be $5.

Admission Pritt Policy
Bargain Motln!Mt
Sot . &amp; Sun .. All Stots $2 .2!
Adm . Every Tuesday. S2.~ .

"~""''' tf

PS-13

POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Merchants Association meet sTuesPOMEROY - Dance Friday to day at 8 a. m. at Bank One.
midnight, Meigs High cafeteria· Membership fees are due.
after ballgarne. Sponsored by
vocatk&gt;nal class, vocational stuCHESTER- Chester Township
dents admitted for $1. Char~ for Trustees will meet in regu tar
others, $2 single and $3 couples.
session Tuesday, 7:30p.m.. at the
town hall
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Grace Episcopal
RACINE - American Legion
Post litYl will stage a creamed Church will hold a Shrove Tuesday
chicken-noodle dinner from 11:30 Pancake Supper with serving to
a.m. to 3:30p.m. at the post rome. begin at 6 p.m. on Feb. 11. Charge
Menu includes also mashed pota- for the supper will be by donat ion
toes, green beans, slaw, dessel and ooly. Everyone welcome.
bevera~; $3.50 adults and $1.75 for
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
children under 10.
Area Chamber of Olmmerce wlll
hold Its monthly meeting Tuesday.
MONDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Village nOon, at the Pomeroy Trinity
Council will meet In special session Church. Luncheon will be served
Monday, 7 p.m., at the !Ire IDuse. and all members are urged to
Village Insurance will be discussed. attend.
RUTLAND - Rutland Bowhunters Club meets Saturday fok&gt;wtng
the Indoor shoot at the Rutland
Civic Center. Theshootwtllbeglnat
1p.m.

I\ A/A

"Enemr lint"

Calendar/ happenings
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Count)/ Fox
Chasers meeL 7 p.m. Friday at
clubhouse on Eagle Ridge.

·~OPPI~~

Membe!"s of Cliester Cwocll :W,
Daughters of America, are being
aski!d to attend a district 13,
Daughters of America, meeting to
be held at the senior citizens CEIIter
In Logan at 1 p.m. Saturday.
Members wiD practice for the ral!Y
at the Logan meeting.

Starts

Recipes will be demonstrated

~~~~~ f:'~f~~:~li:':.'~~n~~~ x~~gJ:~~

Study, Wednf'Sday at 7:30p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL . 570 Grant
St. Mlddloport. Affiliated with Southern
Bapllst ConveniiM . David B~an . Sr.. MlS
.,
1

proper WQrd S 0 f th e prayerS th a t COn fOrm t 0
MEIGS
coo rERUIVE r .u tiSH
your faith; but whatever they say, the principle
!~~~ip 1'\":"~.:~~~~~ !~';';~ PM o~.~
~SITED METHODIST CHURCH
Stt.ll applies . When we develop the habit Of
Wednesday evening Bible study and
SORT KEAST CLUSTER
7
Re• . Don A•&lt;h.,.
OfumR.CH OF CHRIST. St.
" - " · •-expressing OUr gratitude for e~en the little
n.ev. nu)' ~ltr
Rd. 5. Mark Seevers, minis ·
R" ·· Seldon Jolla...
things , we will learn to decrease our desires
. Sunday Sclioot Supt. Harry Hen
r\L i'.R ED - Churc h S('hool 9: :.l a. m.;
drlcks; Sunday School 9:30a.m.; Morning
Worship. II a.m.: UMYF 6' 30 p.m.: UMW
and be all the more appreciati~e Of the bleSS·
M worship 10: :II a.m.: Ev.. lng worship 7 p.
se!VIcesQat~~· m ·
Third 1\rt.&gt;sda y, i : 30 p.m. Communion,
"' m. Wednesday worship 7 p.m.
ANTI U
BAPTIST. Kf'nneth Smttll ,
!lrsr Sund ay. rArcherl
ings WhiCh We already have.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
pastor. Sunday School9:30 a .m.: church
CHESTE R - Warshlp !} a.m .. Church
Corner Sycamore and St-cond Sis p;
st&gt;rv\ce 7:30p.m.; youth feollowsh lp 6:30 p .
School 10 a m.. Bi bl e Study. Thursday. 7 p .
.•. Th;i,de,,~Rev. Wil lia m Mlddleos~art h
m .; Bible- study, Thursda y, 7:30 ~m .
Ill. , t.: MW. flrs1 Thursda y. 1 p.m .; Com ·
:s1
SChool 9:45a .m .: Church
FUU. GOSPEL LIGHTOOUS • 3ll45
mu nlon. first Sunday 1Archer l.
Hiland Road. PomerO)I. Tom Kelly, pas·
JOPP,\ - Worship 9:30a .m.: Church
HEART CHURCH, Msgr.
tor. Danny Lambert. S. S. Sup!. Sunday
Srh oo l 10: :Ill a.m. Bible Study Wed n('Sday,
Anthony Glannamore. Ph. 992·5898. Satur·
morning service at 10 a.m.: Sunday even .
7· JO p.m. tJohnson I
day Evening Mass 7 : 30 p.m.; Sunda y
lng s•rvtce 7:30p.m. Tuesday and Thun·
LONG BOTTOM - Chur('h &amp; hool9::.l l . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . J Mass, 8 a.m . and 10 a.m. Confessions me
day S€-rvtcf'S 81 7;1) p.m.
J. .m .: Worship i p.m.: Blb\P Study, Wt'd ·
half hour before f'ach Mus. CC D classf'S,
WORD OF FAITH, 93 Mill St ., Mldl!le-.
pori . Sunday momlngservlce10:15a.m
.;
11 a.m. sunday.
nt&gt;s da_
1, -j : .·w1 p.m.. UMYF . Wf'dn("Sda ",.
Sud
vr ....
&amp;:00 p.m .. Commu nion Fi rst Su nday.
VICTORY BAPTIST. 52!1 N. 2nd St.,
un ay evmlng 7:.JU . tnursda y morning
IArThen .
Evangeoltst!c Servtct 7:30 p.m. WednesCARLETON JNTERDENO MI NAT JON ·
Middleport . Jameos E. Koo;~. paslor.
Blblr ~tudy 10 a.m. Wednesday even ing
H.EEDS\. ILLE- Chun:'h Srhool9: ll a.
dar Prayeor met"tlng 7:30p.m. Thursda y.
AL CHURCH , Kingsbury Road . Rev. Da ·
Sunday morning worship 1o a.m .; Evt&gt;n·
7: l1 p.m.
m . \\'orship S.&gt;rvkf' 11 :00 a .m . 1Deetf'r l.
ION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
vld Curfman, paslor. Sunda y School 9:30
lng service 7 p.m .; Wedn('Sday evening
NEW HAV EN CHU RCH OF TilE NA·
Tl 'PPF:RS Plr\INS sr. PA UL _
Harrlsonvlll r Rd. Robert Purtell, mlnls·
a.m.; Ralph Carl , Supt . Evening worsh ip
worship 7 p.m. Visitation, Thu rsda y 6:))
ZARENE. Rtv. Glendon Stroud, pastcr.
Churr h Srh001 y a.m.: Worship 10 a. m.:
teor: StPVf' Stan!,.. S. S. Supt. ; BUI McEI- 7:00 p.m . Pra ye r met&gt;tln j~, Wf'dnesda y
p.m.
Su nday School9: ~a . m.; Wonhtp service.
li lbl r Study . TursdJy . -;· .lO p.m.: UMW.
roy . Mit. Sup t.: unday Schooi9:.Jh .m .:
7:00p.m.
MORS E CHAPEl. CHURC H _ Gary
10:30 a.m.; Youth service SUnday 6: 1~ p.
Third Tut&gt;Sd.J\ , ~ 30 p.m.. co mmunion
Worship servlrf 10: D a.m.; Eventng wor·
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN. Jody
Hollt&gt;r. pastor. Su nda y School, 10 a .m.;
m. Su nday evening service 7:00p.m. Wed F i r~t Sun dav iArrht&gt;rr .
ship Sunday 7 p.m. and Wf:'dnf'Sday, 1 p.m.
Holland. pastor; Walla(_"{' Damf!'Nood ,
worship servlcf, 11 a.m.: prayeor mt:.&gt;eling,
nt'!ida y Prayeor Me.tlnll and Bible Study
cE:\"TRAL CLUSTFlt
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Plneo
Sunda)' School Supt . Worship Sf'rv iN". 9 a.
7 XJ
Th sd
7 : ~. m.
Rt&gt;\'. Jam t':l!l E. CorlNU
Grovt&gt;. The Rev. Wlll\am"M.Jcldleswarlh,
m.: Blblt&gt; Schoo110 a.m .
: p.m. ur ay .
ASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun·
lkv . Sa~,·en N~lson
p~&lt;slor. Church sprvlceo 9: ~a . m .; S'-l!day
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
day afternoon services at 2: .Jl. Thursda y
Rev. Mt&gt;lvln Franklin
School10:l0 a.m.
HYSELL RUN HOI::JNESS OIURC'H .
OF GOD- Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sun·
eveonlng st'rvices al 7:.JJ.
Rt•' . f!f'mPnte s. zuniJa, Jr.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CltRIST, Sunday School at 9:XJ a.m.; Morntngwor ·
day School 9: ~ a.m.; Morn In~ iE'rvlce
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, MasCII , W. .
R.to\·. r\.ndrf'W Ruhfonldrtl
.John Wrtght , pastor. Sunda y School9:30a.
ship atlO: 30 a.m.; Sunday PVEII tng sen: lce
10:00 a.m.; Sunday t&gt;ve nl nf!: service 7:00 p.
Va . Paslor, Bill Murphy. Sunday School 10
ASRLI-{'J' , Syra('usr 1 _ Wo rship ll a.m.
m.: Larry Hayneos , S. S. Supt. Mornlng
at 7:)) p.m. Thursday services a! 7: 30 p.
m.; Mld ·wll'ek prayPr SE'rvlcr Wednesday
a.m.; Sunday t'Ven lng 7:30p.m. Prayer ·
_ l'hureh Srl1tl0 l9 : J5 a m.: C'har ~e Bible
worship 10:30 a.m.
m.
7 p.m.
meetlng and Bible study Wednesday, 7: 30
Stud~. \\' C'dn t'!'da\' . i :lJ p.m : UMW. fir st
RACIN E CHUROi OF THE NAZA·
F1tEEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH.
p.m. Ev{"ryme welcoml'.
Tttr•~d.l \ . ~ .\0 p m.. Choir R'&lt;'h l'it rsal .
RENE. Rtv. Lloyd D. Grimm. Jr .. pastor.
Knob. localt'd oo Coo nl)· Road n . Rev .
Law rrnce Bush. pastor. Ma11 Folmer, Sr.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
\\ i&gt;dm'Sda ~ ti . 10 p m. . UMW, fw rl h Sun ·
Ora Bass. Chairman of lhf' BoardofChriS·
Lawrence Gluest'ncamp , pastor . Rev ·
Supt. Sunday Srhool and Mor nln~ Worship
lem St . Rf'V. Pa ul Ta ylor, pastor. Sunda y
d. 1 ~. t; - ,\0 p m 1~Pi~ on 1
llan l ifeo . Sunday School 9: XI a.m.: Morn·
Roger Willford. asst. pastor. Preaching
9:30a.m.: Sunda y C'Ve nlnR" servtce, 7 p.m.;
School 10 a .m.; Sunday f'Venlng 7:00p.m .;
F:~TE:H PR IS.£ _ Wors hip 9 a.m :
lng worship 10:30 a.m.; t'Vangellsllc serserv ices Sunday ?i ll p,m. Prayer meeting
Youth mH&gt;IIng and Bib!t&gt; Study. Wed nt&gt;S·
Wednt'Sday evening prayeor mH&lt;tlng 7: 00
Church School in a. m . Bib it&gt; Study. Turs·
viC'f" 7:00 p.m . Wednesday servict', ~ 'l.m.
Wf:'dn('Sday, 7:30 p.m .. Gary GrUfllh,
day, 7 p.m.
p.m.
n. 11 - ·1n p m. l'~\W . First Monda ~- . 7:.10
LIBERtY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, UPx ·
Jce. der. You th groups Sunday evening al
UNITED FAITH CHURCH. Rt. q on PoSOliTH BETHE L NEW TESTAMENT
p m. l' J\Wf sund..iy, 6 p.m . Choir Ri"·
tf&gt;r . Woody Call. pastor. St&gt;rvlces Sunday
6:30p.m . with Roger and Violl't Willford .
meroy By·Pass. Re'' Robert E. Smll h,Sr.
CHURCH , Silver Ridge. Duane Sydfn.
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wl'dnt&gt;Sday , 7 p.m.
leadt&gt;rs. Communion service fi rs t Sunday
. pastor. Melvin Drake, s. s. Supt . Sunda y
st rl cker , pastor . Sunday Sct\ool 9 a.m.;
ht•.trs.ll . h ' :top m wron{'Sday . 1Franklin 1
Fl .. HW OO D~ - fhur('h 5&lt;-hool. 10 a .m .
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Steve
ea ch mont h.
School 9: JO a.m .; Morning Worship 10:30:
Church servlet&gt; 10 a .m . Bible Study Wed·
Wnrr:; hip. 11 J m . Blblr Study. Thurs.
l}(la\•er, Pastor . •Mike Swiger, Sunday
WmTE'S
CHAPEl..
WESLE YAN
Eve n\np: Wors hip 7::ll p.m.: WE'dnE"S day
nesda yat7:~ p.m . Junet hruSeptember,
• . .- pm . l .,1 11. F 5 un d d }' . ' p.m .
&lt;"hoo 1 Sup! .; Sunday.,..
&lt;"hoo1 9: 30 a.m .;
CHURCH
- Coolville
. Phillip Rl ·
Prayt&gt;r St&gt;rvlce · 1·· :11 p· m·
7 p.m . Octobfr thru Ma y. Sunday eventn&lt;JJ
u.l\
d
S d RD.
S Rev
h 1930
&amp;
•FrJnldrn l
Morn!njil worship 10:40 a.m.: Sunda y
enoor. pastor . un ay coo : a.m.:
F'A.ITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroa d
Fellowship7p.m. J unfthruSepteomber,6
FOREST RL' ~ - Wor\htp ~ am :
t&gt;venlng worship 7:30 p.rn .; Wt&gt;dnt&gt;Sda y
worshiP service 10:30 a.m.; Bible study
Sl. , Mason . Sunda y School tOa.m.: Morn·
p.m. October lhru Ma.v.
Church &lt;\l·hoo1l til ,\ M ' ' r"no1r prarliC't&gt; .
evE'nlng Bible stud y 7: 30 p.m.
and "-'Orshtp SfJ"\IIC'E', Wl'dn('Sda y, 7 p.m.
T 11 ,~ ,r t.n h :10 p m . L M\~ . first Tuesday.
BURLINGHAM CO MM UNITY CHUROI,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
7 11.1 p m 1 :\f'ls0 n 1
Burlingham. Ray La\Qorm.Ut, pastor; fiD.
Mark Jones, pastor. Bill Nlcholsoo , Sun·
m:,nll ' ;\·llddlf'pOrl l - Church School, trrt Cmarl. assistant pasiCI' . Sunday School
da y School Supt. SundaySchoo\ 9: J) a .m.;
Morning Worship and Co mmunion 10:30 a .
4 Ill .1 m . M0r nin1:: Wors hip 10 ,30 .t.m..
10 a.m.: worship 7 p.m.: Wfd.n&lt;osday. 6 p.r.t
Y0u1 n Croup. ·I p m . Wt&gt;dn f'!'iday. Church
youth meeting; Wed ., 7p.m. chu['('h servkes.
mRLITLAN 0 BIBLE METOODIST. Amos
1"t1111r rr&gt;h i'.lrs,ll. '7 p m.. Thursda y.
PI NE GROVE HOLINESS C H U RC H . ~
p 1 .n l'l :-;, . 1•1 11 ·p , " 10 p 111 . 8\bl t• Stu dy j
ml lr&gt; off Rt . 325. Rt&gt;v . EWn J . Watt s, pastor .
Tillis. pastor. Sonn y Hudson. supl . Sunda y
p m f'.un 1g,1
Lt'£1 Rusw ll , s.s. Sup!. SundayScltool g; 30
School 9· 30 a.m.: Momln [i! worship, 10 :30
Ml:\FHS\'Il .U : - Wnrship Sf"rVkt&gt; 10
a.m., Momlnll: Worship 10:30 a.m.: Sun·
Wa. ~.; S~~day rvlenln7g SE'rY ICWoMj:POOO p.m.
CHURCH IJKE SD.ENCE
·' n 1 (' hurch S.:·I10t•l. II d.m .: L' M\1.' . th ird
da y evf"nlnR M&gt;rvlre 7:10 p.m.: Wednes·
...... nf'S....., y SfJ"\1 re p.m.
pro·
On!'
Saturday
night,
January It was, about 11:30 p.m., I heard loud
Wrdnr~d.n . 1 p m n otr pra('tirt'. Mon da y ~rrvkf&gt;. 7: 30p.m.
gr~~~A~£tC~U1't~~rbF THE NAZA ·
cl.n ~ '\lip m 1 :\'rl~on •
SILVER RUN BAPT'IST. Bill Little.
rock music. My doors and wlnoows were closed bot the sound callll'
l' r:Af{ L CII APEL- Warship Srn·f('(' 9
pastor. S!('ve Lilli&lt;'. S. S. Sup!. Sunda y
RENE. RE'v. Lowt'll Ford. pastor. Sunda y
right through. I was finishing upon my sermon.! toought atthlstime
.~ rn . (' hurrh St·huol 11 o~ . m : l· Mw 5.('
School 10 a.m.: Morning worslp . 11 a. m.;
School 9:.YJ a.m.; Wonhlp ~E'n'ke l0 : 30a .
11WI Tu(·~n:n . ~ 10 p m . L·Mr r last
Sunday •veonlna worship 7:30 p.m. Pra yt'r
m.; Y oun~ peopte·s Sl'rvlCf' 6 p.m .
of night roost propie siDuld be ~lng tobed .l'm sure many were. I'm
Tut":tl.l\ . 7 lfl p m , Rubi&gt;nk ln.'{ ,
m{'(&gt;t\ njil and Bible study Thursda y. 7:30 p.
EvanRE' IIst\ c Sf'rv lct&gt;6: l) p.m. Wednesda )'
used to cars with bad or no mufflers but a radio that loud on a front
!'0\11-:HOY- Churrh School. 9 1 ~ om
m.: Youth mPellng Wednesda y at 7 p.m.
SCr.'ICil' 7 p.m.
porch , surprise. The temperature was 52 degrees.
Wot,.htp 10 V'! .:t m Choir rf'twar !~.al
REJO ICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
MASO N CHURCH OF' CHR IST. Miller
1\'1 -finl' .. d .J \ r '\11 p m _ L' MW sPCond
_ 383 N. 2nd Av~ .. Midd leport. Sunday
St., Mason. W. Va . [Ujilf'fl t' L. Conger. mlWe are polluting the world we live In and oolse pollution Is a major
nistt&gt;r. Sunday Bible Study 10 a .m.: Wor·
Tu•·&lt;:dtt': \l lp m ( ' M \'F s. u nd a~ . 6pm
Srhool 10a .m. Su nda y evf'nln p: 7:00p.m.;
hl 1l
d7
w~
"" Blbl
area.
So many prople are Irritable and an~r quickly, all because of
oCMb m •
Mld·wPE'k sPrvl~. wro .. 7 p.m.
s P a.m. an p.m. lt"..ne!iUd Y e
7
oolse.
They have nochanre to quietly and calmly think or wonder or
HOC !\ SI'RI\' CS- Chur&lt;"h School. 9: 15
LANGSVILL E CHRISTIA N CHURCH .
Studb, voca l music, p.m.
·• m . W or~ hiP \0 ,1 m . BIOI(' Stud~· . W('d . Robtrl E. Muss('r, pastor. Suud ay School
Ll ERTY ASSEMBLy OF COD. Dud·
dream or have a small conversation where only 2 or 3 prople are
tu~d.ll . ~ .1np m . L'~I YF j S('nlorsi'. Su n - 9:30a .m.; Pau l Mu sSC'r , su pt.: Morntn g pd~ns~o~a~~f~~ns,m~~i~:/:p· ~~ck:O:
talking.
d.n . ., p m . r. Junior s1 t&gt;\i•ry othrr Sun ·
worship 10:30 a.m.. Sunda y evening SE' r·
b
c.1. 11 . n p.m , F'rdnk lin 1
\' ICt'. 7 p.m.; mld ·w~k st&gt;n:lce, Wednes ·
men 's Ministry . Thursday, 9: 30 a .m.;
A saying in many Lutheran Churches on walls or In bulletins says
1 9: ..·~.. a m..
Wed nesday Pra yer a nd Blblf' Stud y. 7:15
R l 'T I.,\\·1&gt; - c· hurT h "-h
.-x oo.
day,7 pm .
"God Is In His Holy Temple, let all the earth keep silence before
\\' u1.. tn p . 10 .\11 .1 m . L' Mv.' 1Ew•nln~~: Cir
SYRACUS E CHURCH OF THE NA·
p.m.
Him." This to remind us of ttE quiet time before worship begins
d .-.. , ,1,cond Wt&gt;dn ~ d ay . 7 10 p m .. l'MW
ZARENE R(lv . Glt&gt;nn McMillan , pastor.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
where our tooughts and CoW tooughts might mingle. I call It
Alti"rnnr.on Cin lr 1 &lt;;ffnnd Th ur!&gt;day, I p.
Mary Ja nlc-P Lavl'ndl'r , Sunday School
QIRISTIAN UNIO N. The Rev. William
m 1Rubf'nking •
Supt. Sunda y School 9: 30a .m.. Moming
Ca mpbell , pastor. Su nd ay School 9: 30 a.
CHURCH LIKE SILENCE .
s,., l. F ;\I t'E;\T • :H - Chu rrh Srhool10 J .
worship 10: JO a.m.: Evangelist!(' servlcf.
m .; James Hughe-s . supt. Evening seorvire
We can use this church like silence at home as well as al church.
m . \\'nr .. hip q -1 ~ il m. 1Rul&gt;f&gt;nK in~ 1
6 p.m.: Pra ye r and Praist Wednesda y. 7p.
7: 30 p.m. Wednsda y even in g pra yer mE"f't ·
S"\OW\'IL LE - Worship. 8:30a .m :
m.: Youth me-etlnfl, 7 p.m.
tng 7::Kl p.m. Youth prayer servlct&gt; ftldt
Before bed we Icy to calm our children, woo are rowdy, down a litt le.
t' hu1Th Sc hool 10 J m lRut){'nk\nfi!t.
EDEN
U!'I IT ED BRETHREN IN
Tuesda y.
When they do go to bed they wUI sleep. If they are loo hyper they wUI
CHRIST. Eldt&gt;n R. Blakt&gt;, pastor. Su nday
FAIR VIEW BIBLE CHURCH . Letart.
oot sleep right away. They also need a quiet time. Not evel)1hing In
Sc hool 10 a .m .; Ga ry Rf't'd . Lay leadl'T.
w. Va .. Rt 1. Jaml'S LEWis, pastor. War "'t)l 'TII E RN fUJSTER
Morning wrmon. 11 a .m.. Sunday nig ht
st\lp serv ices 9:ll a.m.: Su ncla y School U
1\4·\ . K o~t r Gru.&lt;'t&gt;
life must be hustle and bustle and noise. Quiet l' nict&gt; also.
Sf'rv!ces : ChrlJ IIan Endeavor 7:30 p.m..
a.m.; EvmlnR worship 7: 30p.m . Tuesda y
R (' \ ' . Paul Mt·Gu lrt
Sitting on a porch swing listening to the crlckrl s at night and the
5ong Sf'rvlcf 8 p.m_ Prt&gt;aching 8:30p.m.
coHageo prayer me-etlng and Bible Study
Rt•' . Kt llh Radt r
soft
voices arourd us Is a very pleasing time. It Is a wonder1ul thlng
Mld·wf'f'k
pra~Pr
mf"t'
lln
g,
Wednf"Sda
y.
7
9:30
a
.m.;
Worship
!ervlcf',
Wed
nPSda)'
\l'PLf: (;HO\'E- CHur('h Schoo! 'J 00
,, m \ \ or~ hip . li)'C10 J m 1 first and thi rd
7
that
we can put away the noise and hurry of the daytime to the
p.m.
' ~JRSAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH .
'o. un d.11" I' :'\1W ~'l · o nrl Tu t 'S d&lt;~ y. ~ 'lOp
quieter
times of evening. A silence that Is good for us. This church
Walnut and Ht&gt;nry Sis., Ra venswood . W
m
\'r.i\1 '1' lll('f•tin ~ . Wt'(]nt•~dJ\ , '7 p m
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN.
l , r . tt , . ,
like silence Is an asset to oor health as well as oor r&lt;'latlonshlp with
Va. Tht&gt; Rev. Georgeo C. Weirick, pastor .
Rogrr Watson. pastor. Crenson Pratt,
Sunda y SChool 9: l) a.m.: Sunda y worship
l! ~Tll"\Y - \\ or&lt;ohlp . 'lam
lhurrh
Sunday School Sup! Morn in g worship 9: 30
each other and also with God. I'm sure God doo; not want lots ~f .
"t1 ~1"•11 . \II .1m Hlhlf' Sl u d~· . WC'dnf'Sd:tl a.m.: Su nda y School10:30 a m.: EVf'nin R II a.m.
shouting
and noise all the time and especially when wr pray or talk
11 , , rn . fJ.,rr!l~ W •1 m('n · ~ fr llowshlp.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH . located on
si'rvlrt', 7: .:1) p.m.
Pomer oy Pike, Cou nty Road~ near Flat·
\\t'dnr·.. ll oi\ , II o1 m tMcGu\rt''
· with Him. It Is hard for us to concentrate with all kinds of noise
MT . UNION BAPTIST. Do~a ld Shue.
woods. Rev. Blackw ood, pastor . Services
( AfL\IEI. - Churrh Sc hool 9:30a .m .
pastor; Joe Sayrr. Su nd ay School Sup! .
around us. A quiet time lets us collect our tiDughts and appreciate
oo~~ayat1~30a . m . and7 : ~p . m . wlth
\\ or .. ht p. 111 -t~ .1 m S1·rond :1nd Fourth
Sunda y School 9 : 4~ a.m.; Evt.&gt; nlnii! wor ·
what
God has glvm us and done for us this day,
Su
nda
y
&amp;
hool9:
30
a
.m.
BlbleStudy,
Wed
·
...,und:11• . Fdl o w ~hi p dm n('r with Sullon
ship 6: 30p.m.; Pnt yt'r Mt't'tl nii!. 6:30p.m.
nf'!da y, 7::11 p.m.
Hmcl Th ul'-11,11 . ti 'Ill p m •;\o1 rGulrt&gt;l
WE'dnt&gt;Sd.ay.
We do not allow our children to roller and screa m all the tlmr
FAITH FELLO\\liffiP CRUSADE FOR
J.' ,,s I' I E r \HT - rhurrh School9 a m .
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
because we know there is no good reason fo r h. Qulel church like
CHRIST, Sl. Rt. 338. Antiquity . Rl'V.
CHRIST. Oa vt Prmt\('t&gt;, min ister . Deryl
\\ "r" h1p tn .1m ,t.,·ond and fourth Sun·
silence Is a time to relax and turn oor tooughts to God our Father. our
F'rankltn Dickens, pn lor . Sunda y morn ·
rl .n ~ I ' \ 1\\' l1r ~t Tu~1l .l ~· i · :Vl p m
Wt&gt;lls , Supt . Church School 9 a.m.; War ·
ln g 10 a.m.: Sunda y evening 7:30 p.m.
d ol ,lf"t I
ship ~rv iC"e . 9:45p.m.
families, and oor neighborhood where we live. A time to thank God
Thu rsday even tng 7: XI p.m.
CHESTER CliURCH Of TH E NAZA ·
I ETAH T ""' LLS - Worship Y d m .
and show our appreclatk&gt;n for family and friends. Each day let u'
STIVERSVILLE CO MMUNITY BAPc·hul('h ~· hnollll,t m •f irac'f'l
RENE. Rev. Herbert Grate . pastor .
TIST CHURCH . Pastor Robert Byeors.
\ IUR\f'\(, ST:\R - \\·orshlp. 9 ~ 5 a.m .
Fra nk Riffle, su p!. Sunday School 9: 30 a .
find time for Church Like Sllence. lt wiD be good forus oneand alL Sundl y Schooi10 a.m .; Worship Hrvlce l1
t hu11·h Sr hor•l. W .1
0 .t m : Biblf' STUd\ .
m.: WorshiP lf'rv tcf, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m .
Plllllor William Mkklleswarih.
a.m.; Sunday t&gt;ven lng servk't&gt;,7:30 p.m.:
l'hur .. d,ll . 7 II' p m tR.Jdf' n .
Sunday. Wed nt'l da y, 7 p.m. Praye r met'! ·
Wednesday
f'll~lngaprvltf
7:
~
p.m.
IL \t 'l\•: WES I.F:YA,'I.;- ChutTh ~hoot.
lng.
INDEPENIENT RlUNE&amp;'l CHURCH
\I I , I Ill . w.. r.. hip II .-l .m.. t.: MW fourth MonLAUREL CLI FF FREE ME:I"HODIST
In c., Pearl St., Middleport. Rf'v . O'J)(oll
d.tl .tl 7 ~I p rn., Mt•n's Pra.\T•r Brealdasl.
CHURCH. Reov. Rober t Miller, paslor. R ~
Manley, pastor . Sunday SChool 9:30a.m.;
\\'('1"\n.-....d.r\, j a.m rGraC'f'l
t1f'Tt E. Barton . Dll'f'C tor of Chrlsllan Edu ·
Mornlng worship_ 10:).1 ·a.m.; Evenln11
Sl "n'O'\- Church School. 9:.ll a .m.;
cati on; Stf'Vf Eblin, assbta nf. Sunday
worship 7:ll p.m. Tutadly, l2: 30 p.m . Wo\1 or nlnj.! \\' or-;hip 10·4Ja .m. first and thi rd
School 9: .J) a.m.: Morn ing worship lO::Il
men' • Prayer meellna. Wednesda )·, 7; XI
Sund.l,&gt;"". Fr&gt; ll o~n hlp dlnntr wllh Carmrl
a.m.; Choir pracll~. Sunday 6:Jl p.m .:
p.m. Prayer and Pratse sff'\1 1~ .
1htrd Thur'iday. 6 .1Cl p.m. ~McGu lr f') .
E'llenln g worship 7: 30 p.m. Wedr.esday
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
Prayer and Btblf Study. 7: 30p.m.
TOLIC -VanZandt and Ward Rd. Elder
DEXTER .CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Ja mN Miller, pastor. SUnday SChool,
KENO CHU RC H OF CHRIST. Oliver
C harlet~ Russell Sr., mlnister . Rick Ma·
10:.'1J a.m.: Worship Servtct, Sunday, 7:30
Swa in. Sup I. Sunday Sc hool 9:30a. m. ev·
comber, supt. Sunda y School 9:30 a .m .;
p.m.: Bible Study. Wednesda y, 7:30p.m.
€'!')' W('('k .
Worship aervlct 10:30 a.m. BibS. study,
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOUNESS.
HOBSON CHRIST IAN UNION. Rev .
Tuesday , 7: :11 p.m.
HarrlsonvUle Road. Oavkt Ferrell, pasTom Staten . pastor. Sunda y School9: 30 a .
REORG.WIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
tor; Clinton Faulk, Sunda y School Supt. ;
m.: E·venln gsl'f\' lce7:30p.m . WednHda y
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Port ·
Sunday School 9:30 a .m.; momlng wor·
prayPr meellnr 7:30p. m.
\a nd -Raclnll! Road. William Roosh , pa1tor.
ship, U a.m.; Sunday tvenln1aervlce 7: ~
BEARWALLO W RIDGE CKURCH OF
Llqd&amp; Ev1n1, churcb !IChool dlr~or .
p.m. Prayer M.. tln&amp;. Wed.,oday, 7::11 p.
CHRIST. Duane Warden , mln lsler. Bible
Oiurch school 9: :Kl a.m.: Momma woralp
m.
(')ass 9: JO a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a .
10:30 a.m .; Wednesda~ "''"llll prayer
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
m.; Evening Worship 6:)3 p.m. Wednet·
servicn, 7: :.l p.m.
non ·Pmteco.tal. Wonhlp .ervlc. SUnday
day Bible Study 6:30p.m.
,_
BETHLEHEM BAPI'IST. Rev. Earl
10 a.m .: Sunday Sdtoolll a.m. Evenln&amp;
NEW STIVERSVtLLE CO MMUNITY
Shuler. (llltor. Wonhlp aorvloe, 9:30a .m.
-.hlp ..,..,,.,. 7:1111 p.m. Wednesclly
CHURCH, Su nd ay School oervlce. 9:451. · Sunclay SchooiiD: ~ a.m. Bible Study and
1DI"I'f'ff mH'ft'117:10 t .m.
m.: Wonrhlp M"n&gt; lc. 10:30 a.m.:
IIUVf'f' llflrvi4"~ 'T'PittNiflln'. T:¥1" 1'1'1 .
'•

=-

REFU:CI10NSTIUO'ro SING - ReflerJio111 wiD be fealured attbe BmdAreaGoepd !lng011
SIUwday, Feb. 8 IIi 7:11 p.m. IIi lbe ~ Brethern cturch, Mason, fealurtng Saved, PoiM
Plelllllllll, ReftecUo• Trio, New Bavm, Zion IIDI Gospel Sln[p!l'!i, OJlumbJs, Ohio and Bolden

Diet meeting slated

Middleport·
Pomerov, 0.

State

D of A to attend

....et,~ley.

1 7

~m ~

Ph0nei614H42·2777

SENTINEL
- Isaiah 35:3

SEYF.::'\TH O,\ Y A!AFST!ST .

Rutland. Ohio&lt;S775

THE DAILY
214 E . Main
992 -5130 Pomeroy

1 '!\ITtD

Co.

,::~;:~:.~~:v ~-~ ~

Nationwide Ins.

Brown's Fire &amp;
and
Equl'pment Sales
Sen1ce

991-9921 Middleport

C I~AHt\ ~1

.

~~~--t

MIDDLEPORT

NEW YORK

'

Upooming eventa lndudlng tile
national sewing contest and tile

hall.
Patty Dyer, master, presidl!d at
the meeting. It wu&amp;IUDIDCed that
the sewing contest wiD be judged at
the March meetlni and that tile
banquet wll be held on Friday, AprU
25 with Howard Caldwell, ObJo

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

TEAFORD REALTY

Tha Daily Santinai-Pag! 7

POITMIIoy-Middlapofi. Ohio

SUGAR ·RUN MilLS
110 MUlBERIIY AVE.

PH. 992·2115

POMEROY, 011.

~

~

FAR EASt J.,.
~

Chinese Resm-1nt

Uppt'r River Ruad, Gallipolis (Nut to Kmart)

WITH ONE OF
THESE ••••••

YOU'LL GET
THESE!
• extended terms
• lowered rates
• service charge free
chec~ing account ~~·,::~~;
• no (eej MasterCard/Visa

~JI JACt(SOH PtKE · At35 weST
Phonl &gt;l&lt;e-4524

IMGAIN MAmEEI SAT l SUN
ALL SEATS l2.15

(t"ur J.if,. of Loan)

ANNUAl
PERCENTAGE
lATE

* Variable late Financing
available through participating dealen

Ask your
dealer about Central Trust financing

USED or

G:r
liiiL-

The Bank That Makes Things Happen.

358 Second ln., Gallipolis

97 N. Second
Middleport
. lvt.,
.
.

..

Member FDIC

LENDEit

Phon·e 446·0901
Phone 992·6661

�I
·''

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

.......

~· -

........

-·

Friday. February 7, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Kiwanis men-only rule is voided
By GEORGE ANDREASSI
.NEWARK. N.J. (UPI)- Klwa·
~Interna~'smale-onlypollcy

BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA

can be "as o!lenslve and l'l'pllg·
nant" as a racial ban, and tbe
service club cannot punish a New
Jersey cbal!ter that admitted a
woman, a federal judge said.
The Thursday ruling brought
cheer$ frQm a New Jersey club
member, but leaders at the club's
headquarters In Indianapolis
vowed to fight the decision all the
way to the Supreme C~rt.
The ruHng, based on New
Jersey's anti-discrimination Jaw
and applicable only within the state,
Involved a Bergen County Kiwanis
chapter and Julie Fletcher, 45, a

ANNIVERSARY WEEK

self-employed art consultant who
joined the chapter In June 1~.
"A membership sign o! 'Men
Only' can be as offensive and
repugnant as the sign 'Whites
Only,"' u.s. District Judge H. Lee
Sarokln said In his i!.jlage &lt;.pinion,
released Thursday.
"Here and by this policy, the
membersofKiwanlshaveexcluded
their own wives, daughters, sisters,
mothers and their business and
professional Colleagues," Sarokln
wrote. "What is It that renders
them all WlSUited !I' unqua!Uled to
formally participate
the meetIngs, labors and good works d.

writtal and reasoned" opinion
might become the basis for s1mjlar
rulings In other states with sex
dlscr1lnlnation laws as tough as
New Jersey's.
.
Spokesmen for Kiwanis tnternationa! said the organization would
be willing to appeal the judge's
ruHng to the Su(B'eme Court.
"It's just the ftrst rowxl," public
relationS manager David Williams
said. "Asaprlvateorganlzatlon, we
have the right ID have any
membership rules we want. The
freedom d. assoclatim Includes the
freedom to Include cr exclude."
Kiwanis has about 300,000
members In S,:nlchartere!i clubs In
the United States and 75 foreign
countries.

In

Kiwanis?"

Fletcher's attorney, Marcia
Bear, said the judge's "beautifully

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE 992-2156
Or Writ I Dai"r St11tintl Cbnih•~ O.,t.
Ill Courl Sl. . Po•row. Oli11 AS16!t

Public Notice

Keeping up with the latest technology
is what keeps today's Boy Scouts in the
know and right in step with the future

•

As Boys Scours grow and develop. they
learn many important things 1n life, like
how to be a caring. compassionate friend

We're proud of our Boy Scouts. for

their dedication to clean living and
good conduct. They're a credit to us all.

...

..

Public Notice

PROBATE COUR'T OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF
PHILIP POWELL. Doc.
Coo• No. 211,031
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On JenullfY 17, 1988 In
tho Meigo County Proboto
Court, Ci• No. 26,03t ,
M1ry E. Showaher. 41076
GNIMI' Holklw Roed. Po-

165, ot Pogo 54t of
tho 0Hd Recorda of MeiQo
County. Ohio, to which re·
Bqok

terence is hereby made for

the description thereof;
thence north 9 deg . west

150 f..t; thenco oouth 71
dog. 20' welt, 203 feet;
thence oouth 9 dtg . tilt
115 !ott to the north rightof-way line of aaid State

Hlghwly No. 7 to tho ploco

of beginning,

cont1inhlg

Ohio 467119 , WOI 0.&amp;3 .....
Deed Rtforence: Volume
_.,ted Adminlotrotr_jpof
tho eltate of Philip ~well, 214, Pogo 345. Molgo Coun·
late of 140 Cote ty Dood Recorda.
S.id p&lt;emloeo locottd 1t
Stntt. Middlepon. Ohio
151&amp; Po-ll StNOt, Middle45710.
Robert E. Buck, port, Ohio, lm.,.dletoly odProbote Judgo jocent to the VHiego of Mid·
dloport Corpor1tlon limito.
Lena K. NeiMirvtd. Clorto
Sold Pnml•• opprelltd
11124. 31: 1217. 3tc
ot 137,1100.00 ond connot
be oold for loll then two·
thlrdo
of thet omount.
Public Notice
TERMS QF SALE: Cooh
on delivery of - .
Fronk E. Howord, Sheriff
SHERIFF'S SALE
Meigo County. Ohio
OF REAl. ESTATE
Dougloo
W. Uttlo, Attorney
The State of Olllo
11124, 3t ; (2)7, 3tc
Melgo County
DIAMOND SAVINBS AND
LOAN COMPANY, ouccuoor In lnt- to The Athena
WANT ADS
County Sovlnga ond Loon
meroy,

-ned.

Fun plays a big part in scouting. and it
beg1ns in the Cub Scouts, where boys
are taught the importance of team work.

Being a good Scout also means be1ng a
good person. Our Boy Scours are taught
to care about the people around them.

Pulling together to get things done,
Scouts learn the value of cooperation
and comraderie in everything they do.

..-..--.---..................

Co .. Plelntlff
V&amp; .

MARCIA M. SPAULDING.
1111 Morcle M. Te,Y, and
Gory T. Teny, Dofendtntl.
No. 111-CV-321
tn purauence of en Order
of 8elo In tho obove ontHjod
oction, I wll offet for Nle ot 64 MIIC. Merchandise
JOObllc euctlon It tho front
door of the Court Hou• In
Po-y. Ohio. In the obove
Nlmod County, on Fridoy.
tho 28th dey of February,
1181. ot 10:30 o'cloclt A.
M.. the following doacribod
reol Htate. lltuate In the
County Molt• and State of
Ohio, ind In ihe Townohlp a1
Sollobury to·wh:
Being In Section 29,
Townohlp 1, end Ranee 13
of the Ohio Compeny'l
Purchooo. In Sollabury
T-.... lp, Meigs County,
Ollio. beginning 70 loot
"'*'Jwrly from the oontor ol
Smt• Highway No. 7. and
ri[jht engle• from tho oontor
t"llt of Mid highway, ot
obout Hlghwov Station No.
t:ll • 93: oloo 30- woot
of the west tine of tho 0.67
ocle lot cbnveytd by Emma
J. ;Po....lond R. E. Po....l.
hor huobond, to Eerl W.
Heiner. by deed doted July
19, 194t. ond recorded in

.·

•',

Scouts are enco uraged to put their
1deas 1nto act1on .. and to tackle tne
challenge of trying new th1ngs in life

Sparking the imagination. as well as
improving the mind and body, is what
Boy Scouting is all about. They're tops.

I'

Ourself-reliant. self-assured Scouts learn
the basics of survival in the great outdoors, and in the world around them.

r

I

'i

Gravell Tractor
SALES
Pomeroy

992-2975

..

.

Pomeroy

992-2174

G &amp; J Auto Parts

'

992-2955

113 COURT ST.
POMEROY
992-2054

f9~

342 2ND
GALLIPOLIS
446-2691

50 Riverview

992-2049

W.

2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.

Chester

915-3301

K &amp; C Jewelers
992-3785

PoMtroy

••I

••

992-66878

992-6687
'

BANK:ON£

Pomeroy

992-6614

Foodland

ATHENS, OH.

••
r•

I

I
t

•'

POMEROY, OH.

.

lngels Furniture &amp; Jewelry

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2635

Middleport

Ewing Funeral Home

Veterans Memorial Hospital

-

'

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy ·

992-2104

, Pomeroy

Pat Hill Ford

..

Central Trust Co.•

'

97 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, Oh.

992-2196

'

Pomeroy Flower Shop
.

Ponroy

992-2039

-

State• Farm Insurance

Middleport

992-6615

'

'

Pomeroy, Oh.

'
'

Home National Bank
RACINE
949-2210-

Rental Assistance Available
614-992-7022
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
B

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

A TI8UE AUCTION
&amp;C LLECTIBLES
1-n

'

Cleland , Realty
601 E. Main

Elderly &amp; Handicapped Housing
All Utilities Paid
Conveniently Located for Senior
Citizens
Off Street Parking
$ecurity &amp; Fire Protection
Live-In Resident Manager

1 mile east of
on Rt. 50, then 1 mile
from Rt. 50 to b11ilding.
-

992-2121

'

Middllport

THE MAPLES

RED HILL AUCTION HOUSE

'

-

'
I

SYRACUSE
992-6333

•'

'·

TEAFORD[H
Real Estate ••u01
216 E 2nd St.

Phone
1 ·(61 4)-992 -3325

........
'
NEW liSTING - One II.
older home next tn Pomeroy
Elem. Sc~'~\.~ 1Rs, II\
baths, r&lt;'!,'v ,"nigerator,
nat. gas f.A. lurnace, two I·
car garages &amp; workshop.
$32,000.

SALEM CENTER AREA - 5
Acres, modern 4 BR home. 2
baths, woodburning lire·
place. elec. BB heal w1th a
wonderful country view.
RUSTIC HILLS -Real nice
3 BR ranch, lg. front porch ,
garage, woodburning unit.
utility rm., carpeting &amp; lg.
lot.
POMEROY -Modernized 3
OR home at a reasonable
price &amp; low heal bill. In·
sulated, l'h baths, range, re·
frigerator, basement &amp; lg.
lot.
BUilDING OT - OveriO{)k·
ing the beautiful Ohio Valley.
RUSTIC HilLS - 7 rm.
ranch, lg. family rm. with
woodburning fireplace, l \\
baths, dining. dbl. pane win ·
dows &amp; higtl lot.
RACINE - 3 BR frame, au·
tomatic coal stoker, carpet·
ing, 8 rms., lor family and
exira lot.
HANOYIIAN - Chan ce ol 2
rentals in this one. Just
$6,000

Cherry sorner cupboard, oak flat walls. (21 oak
Hoosier kitchen cabmets, oak stdeboards, oak
wash stands, oak chairs, rockers, oak supentine
dresser, Lowboy dresser, walnut bed , walnut
night stand, benches, pictures &amp; frames, library
table cherry door with sta1ned glass, amber bot·
ties, Jenny Lind bed, tea kettles~ Slegged round
oak tables, wall phone, candy st1ck phone, stone
jars Donahoe 5gal.; sleigh bells, lots of other fur ·
nitu're &amp;misc. plus lots of furniture that needs re·
paired &amp; refinished .

Terms of Sale: Cash or check with
positive 1.0.

PATRICK H. BLOSSER, Auctioneer
PHONE 304 428-7245

EXPERIENCED

AUTOMOBILE
SALESPEOPLE
NEEDED

Business Services ·
t";:======:::;JP======:::;;r.;::::======:::!=======:;
n
""" Your Wlllll ....
A111i•wsary or S,.oel
ToO:...: : s::C~t:;!:n.'
CIIAUS UUY
_
PH.
742 2050
11·21·1 1110 •

TOWN&amp;COUMIIY

INTEIH HE RM

VETEIINAIIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PUASANT OFFICE
305 Jacksen Ave.
SIIAI1 AIIIMA&amp; HOUIS

INTERTHERM &amp; COLEMAN

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp; COOLING

** **

#1 line of mobile home
By offering a complete
heating and cooling products for the tri·
county area.
"FURNACES
"HEAT PUMPS
'AIR CONDITIONERS
'COMPLETE LINE OF REPLACEMENT PARTS
'FACTORY AUTHORIZED &amp; TRAINED
SERVICE CENTER
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . EMERGENCY SERVICE
CAll (6141 446-9416

Moo ••WIII.· Thurs. 3-5 pm
Tut1. 6:30·1; Fri. 1·2 pm

Saturday 10-ll:SO ..
LAIGI AIIIMAL I
SUIGIIT II APn.

PH. 304-675-2441
SEND AIEA CALL

llpley Office

Far Hours
304-372-5709
IO·l4·11c

CONTRACTING
Complete Building

FREE DELIVERY
IN

Contracting Service
(Free Estimates)

SYRACUSE, POMEROY
Ill DOLE PORT
BRADBURY
MASON, W. VA.

mo.

R/iDIATOR
ERVICE

CIRCLE

ANGIE'S PIZZA
349 llo. 2ttll Au.
lloldleport, Oh.
992-3559

Open Mon .-Thurs. 4 -11
Fri. &amp; Sot. 4- t 2

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

and

JEFF CIICLE, SR.
Lang Bottom, Ohio
PH.

PAT HILL FORD

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1· 13-tfc

949-2649

1·23 ·1 mo.

1-15-1....

Chrysler-Plymouth

Dodge

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashon Building

399 S. THIRD

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Real Estata General

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with
3 bedrooms, 2 COft!!ltte
baths. din in&amp; room, llvin&amp;
room end lqe recrtetion
room. Loc1ted on 81tres.
Llrae farm pond. ·Ritine
lrtl.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauae Shotauns Only
9-JO·tf

I

PElT'S SHIIPEN IP
HAND &amp; CtR. SAWS
CAR8tDE TIPS
SCISSORS - MOWER
BLADES
SMAU .1011

2 STORY HOUSE in Recine
nur Elementary School.
OLDER HOUSE with 3 bed·
rooms on comer lot in Syracuse.

UDY (PNtl CAIIIAHAII

HONE NATIONAL

..... lott- 01. 4S7U

BANK

P'IU-G ·

PAHIUNG

W11 C•ny fi•hing Supplies

Pay Your
Phone Bills Here
~ IUgNES' "!tONI

~so

I£Si,rN\.t rnliNE

16141 992-7754

l i 711 1tln

lurn~ure.

WscWing
ond Gro.,otion

011 Sill

Copy Soni&lt;H, lt&lt;.
US Mill St.,
1 04 Molbtrry h . Pom•oy
992-3345
312/lln

915·4111 er 911-UOI

t-31-IH oo.

Business
Serviees
CUll COIN SHOP

HousiiHL

After 7:00-367·0626

W• Buy and Sell Gold •

c••

Sliver Coln1. Atlo
lltv.,. Gold

IO·lWBIDUl
10·1 !.ITUIOU
c...1st.

•-•r
·1·

..

We Buy and Sell
Gold &amp; Silver Coins
Also Class Rings
Scrap Silver &amp; Gold
OPIII 10-5 WIIDATS
10·2 SA1UIDAY
Court St., Po1111roy
Aftat 7:00-367-0626
1·7·1 mo. d.

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
3·24-tfc

Card of Thanks

1

Th111k1 10 much for 111 the
pray1n1, cards, flowers. calla -•
visiton while I waa in '1the
hoapital. Frienda are grNt. Alto

thanks to my Doctor~ : Holzer.
Strafford. Harder• NurHI. M,.. ·

llflinesl Forms,

Middt•"'

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
0 ILOWN IN
INSULATION

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and atwrtg mtdtint

repair . parts. tnd IUPPii.. . Pick
up and delivery, Dawia Vtcuum
Cleaner. one htlf milt up
G.org• Creek Ad. Call 114-

441·0291 .
Pregn~ncy Tilting: Birth control
servlctl, VO tenino: confidentilll ; tlkting ' " ICIIa; PIMned
Parenthood of S .E.0 ., for appt.
Call 114-441-018&amp; Of 114992·&amp;912 .

Control hunger and to .. weight
with

New

Grapafr~o~I1 · PPH

Combo. Fruth Phtrmacv - Jackson Pika . .,
Racine Gun Shoot1P0n10red by
Ra&lt;:tna GUn Club . Every Sunday ,
beginning at 1:00 p.m. FK10ry
Choke 12 gu-ea shotguns .

"'·2"'Otl11
l1t11i11t11g

Quail, lncubnort, brtecllng p.,s
of all ldndl, ltorlng pant, fiNdart, wat.,.rt, hot p... AI

PUSH MOWER TUNEUP

aqulpmtf'l11nd birdt will beaoW .

lP1r1alncluded)

r--------,

CLARK
COIN SHOP

Rt. 124,Pomtroy Ohio

IAGlllmGI
SIUU EIIGIIII a11n1
Parts - S.nico

THE QUALITY
PIINT SHOP
F11 All fu1 '''"''' N11h
PIUS: Olfict 5upplits &amp;

CIIIIG Tll
UTlm IUIDIIGS lUll
IStrl ........

Roger Hysell
Garage
Alto TtUIIIIIIIIOI

Stotlon:J;.,Magnoti&lt;
SigM, R
Stamps,

949-2210

Rin~crep

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
Now Location:
161 North Second
Middltpert, Ohio 45760
SAUS &amp; SERVICE

16141

Announ ce men Is

Jo8fln Stewart.

COOPER

MIDDLEPORT- Want a n~e
older l'llme near schools &amp;
stores? 6 rrns., din~ g. gas fur·
nace, ~ lot and garage.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 BRs
near stores. one lloor small
home. Gas heat, etc.
We Listltl To Your 1111
Estate Ptobltlll.

OU Chinge. Sherpon Blodos
S1f,95
Turn leh 1t Meigs Memory

La Borne's Quail F•m. C.l
614·985·4345 .

4

Giveaway

Gardena. 3 mile off Rt. 7 on

the rtght

47t 59 Eoglo Rid go Rd .
J-17·11n

1 yr . old tern• Britt.ny SpMfe'
dog, lova kids . Cell 114·44-

1812 .

2 llogiM. f1m11... II pupp'ilr.:J~.....tr'tl~........ll pari Boogie. Coli offoo 4PM.
814 ·3t 7·0102.
Guman wired hllired polntet 7
yr. old tPe'ted tern.~~, hou. .

brokln. gentle. good With dtUd -

..,_CoH 114·:!88·1720.

Good pup ill. I mo. old. rut nice
10 good home. Call 114-317-

BISSBL
CO.
New Homts luilt
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949-2801
or 949-2,8 60

SIDING

746t .

Be~gle

puppill 10 good horM.

Ctlll14-3918.

No Sunday Calls

· 3/11/lfn

. ...

Headquarll'IS
Real

Estatt~

General

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
POMEROY.O.

FEB. 9TH - 1:00 P.M.

•

Phe~rmacy

Real Estate General

'01
e. Miin

MemOli FDIC

.

Fruth

.

Pomeroy

Simmon's

992-2556

Pomeroy

992-2342

·Brogan-Warner_Insurance

Pomeroy

Adolph's Dairy Valley

992-6128

Pomeroy

OLDS.-CAD.·CHEV. INC.
221

Middleport

Crow' s Family Restaurant

Baum Lumber

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.

Rd.,

,.

JEAN GILMO E

Downing-Childs
Mullen Insurance

#

Pomeroy

: Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy
Pomeroy

BOB

Francis Florist

992-2139

Pomeroy

Middlerort Troghies

Smith-Nelson Motors, Inc.

SERVICE

'

The Daily

Ohio

7,1986

991-2259

NEW LISTING - Pomeroy
- Secluded and private, I ~
story, 3 bedroom home on
large kit. GasG.A. hea~ also irl·
sulated. Patio. $29,000.00.
MINI-FARM - Approx. 36
acres, 3 bedroom home, 2
car garage, pond, and pas·
ture. $45,000.00.
POMEROY - · Nice level lot
with a large 2 story home.
Has 8 rO{)ms. 3 becJrooms,
huge lamily room , dining
rO{)m and a lull basement.
$27 ,!KJO.OO.

LONG BOTTOM - II you
need kils of space tor a
growing fam1ly this 7 room,
4 bedrO{)m home is lor you.
Situated on a II acre lot. it
has a lull basement, den,
and fireplace . Owner needs
to sell ar1d will consider any
reasonable offer.
POMEROY - No strain on
your buget to heat this win·
ter' This mobile home with
expando has a woodburner
to warm all3 bedrooms. Garage wilh Wllt'kshop. Large '
fenced lot. Fru~ trees, gar·
den space, $18.000.00.
FIVE POINTS AREA .,- A3
bedroom ranch l'llme on ap·
pro•imalely II acre lol. In·
eludes dishwasher, range,
hood. Electric 8.8. heat.
Garage. Give . us a call.
$31.!XIO.OO.

·

Hltlry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
JNn T111ssell 949-2&amp;6(1
Dottie Turner 992-5692

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10-8-tfc

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•HNIIH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
.OIISON REFRIGERATOR
.SATEWT£ SAlES &amp; S£RVICii
We Hirf A F1ll TIIH

....1"••

s•·~N Dety

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER'-915-3307
4/ 1/tfn

YOUNG'S

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USEI

. KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addona and remodel ing
- Roofing and gutter worlc
- Concrete wortt

985-3561

- Plumbing and electrical

(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
12-8-tlc

Brit1~

Spant.t.":

rew..-dforr.Wm . Ca"814·331 -~

0199 after 5:30PM.

Of contKt
Auuell Wood 81 4-441 -4118 .

FOUND tri-focal SJI•. . In ..... ::

All Meku

WOik

LOST fib . 1

liver &amp; white, IMthiH colialr. _.
antwen to ntma of Bo. Caah +

•Washers •Dithweshers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Freer:tra

PARTS and SERVICE

4-5-!lc

c... on G.arv• c,.. Ad...., ,
Jubtl" ChrilliWI Cent.,, C~
614·441·298&amp;.
...
FOUND Plot dog found na.- :

Meigs County taltaroYftda. C.l .,
~

and identify, 814-441 -3187.

Found : ladi11 lfY• gl•'" fbifg,. ~

calsl on Bank Ona comer F6 'ii
3rd . Stop it Sentinel OffiCI in "''

STEEL &amp;
POU BUilDINGS
Sizes St1rt From 12116'
UTIUTY BUILDINGS
Sizes lro111 6'x&amp;'
Up to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Hov11s

All

Pomeroy.

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VIIYL IAWMUM

Complete Gutter Worto
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of oil Typeo
Worked in home •r•

Y01.1r Complate A~o~to lody .. pair C_.nt..lody Fillws. Sondpopen, l'oli1hiflg C.,.pourwi•. l'oitllt
Uret~ Hontn.n. (Sold U..... WholftCIII To AU)
Dund• Nttw ..piOCM*It Ports For Trucks And Cor~

~lo~n~gu~anm!t~Nd;)!!~

20yooll

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

"Free E1tim1t81"

Iarine, •·

CAU COUECT:
Ph. 16141 843-5425
1-12-2 ....

Ph. 614-143-5191
1·20-tlc

V. Wast Main Street, P'omaroy
Phone 614-H2-677tl

Pii(Soliliolocti
.

on Ann• St. in Pomeroy. Wnr· :!
ing flee coller. Call 81 4 ·992- ·1:
6364.
~

LOST Blue HMf• mal• ~-:~
brawn leathef collar. no name 'pletl, answere to me ntme qt ~

ltu• . 304·882·2363.

FOIAll YOUI
WIRING NEEDS

Resldantitl &amp; Commercii I
Call:
992·5875 Or
742-3195
I 1-14-tfc

PH. 00?_ 'J?I&gt;l

FOUND WtlklfCoonHound. no
name on colltr, c•• tftlf 1 :00
PM and Identify, 304-895 -

W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER
nDERAL-SlllE
INCOME lAX ROUINS
107 Syc-re St., P-roy, Oh.
PHO.. 992-7075
HOURS : 9:00 A.M.-&amp;:00 P.M . Mon. thru Sat.
Evenings • Sunday By Appointment
.
1-15-tfn

Authorlzttl John Dttrt,
Naw Holland. Bush Hoc
Fer• Equipment
D11ltr

E••'t••lf

f•r•
. Plrtt &amp; SINIU

l·l·lfc

~

&amp; Vicinity
~
-------------- --- -- ----·-- ·- ··--·:; '
H..t.:t Garaga Sale 2004 ~
Chetham Ava. Sterta Thursday
Fib. 6th til eYII)'thing goM .
fir•. rims, air conditlonere.
tddlng mechlnas , dlshu .
clothes au ortlld 111•. lot afor

!i
'i
...,

~

Oldlt' IMfi et .

·:::: ;t~i~~~!~nt:: : ·

~"
=

SALES &amp; SERVICE
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

~

Yard Sale

~

BOGGS

U. S. AT. 50 EAST

..

Giillriiolil' ·

CONTRACTING

JIM CLIFFORD

..

3394

~

J&amp;
DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES.
REClAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
• DIRT

.

Found : Mal• wt-.tta ShtiPherd :
dog . Calll14 -915-3851.
' •
~-,---,--,.,----Mala brown Slam•• Olt found ~

7

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

-....(:

Cl

z
i

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearinc Evaluations For All Ages

OAAAOE SALE. Feb . 7 to 1.
Olahaa, 1heeta. chain11w . Home ·"'
lnttrior, new and ut.:l hem1, 6 _.
milll out Jerry• Run, App"1~
Grove

9

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist
:t

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

.

.

.

Wanted To Buy

~(6

We pay cnh tor lata model cl•an

_______

Uled Clfl.

Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc. .l ~
Bill Oene Joh!"ton
: •
814-44&amp;·3872

,_

WANTED TO BUY uHd wood &amp;
coei heattft. SWAIN 'S FURNI -

1UffE, 3rd . • Olivo 81. GtHipo·

Ito. Collt14·&lt;MI·3tl9.

•

�The Daily Sentinei- Page-11
t

I

WE DID 'TOIAO&gt;V.
THAT'.S A ST'AICT!

l'aga-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
9

LAFF-A-DAY

Wanted To Buy

Friday, February 7, 1~6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
44

Apartment
for Rent

64

Misc . Merchandise

KIT 'Nr CARL YLI ®br urry Wright

73

lulck· Pon'dec,

Two 2· bedroom apq . tor rant In
Ponwroy. 1 In town end othtt
•bow Kroe.,.. Call 114 -982·
1211 or 114·892·7314.

Ooocl UMd Rainbow 1weeper
with eM llthc:hm.tt. power
noz111. Clll 114-441-9404 or
114·441·3611.

The Vlltgt GtMn Apta. ere
ICCIPtint IPPIICitionl for OCCU·
pency. Unla are two bedroom.
111 electric:. For more informl·
tkJn. eall 114·992-1174 wen·
lng1 . Equ1l Opportunit'f
Housing.

Buyln, dlliiV gold, lil\ltr colno.
rlnge, ewelry, lt.-!Wtg WIN, old

coina, lerp currency. Top

pri-

c•. Ed. lurQtt ..,.,. Shop,
2nd. Avo. Mlddl-rt. Oh. 814·
992·34741.

1 bedroom tumlehed ept. tOt
rent . In MlddltpOrt. All utilitl•
pold. Colll14·992·1084.
1 bedroom fumish.t . Utili1i11
pold .

fllliilliyllll'lll

One Mdroom total electric.
Cl!fPet.ci epts. ne.- •hopping.
FrM wettr snd tr11h pidcup. C1ll
814·892·2094.

Sl~ f VII.I~o

11

Help Wanted

"...and in the first week of his
diet he lost 8 pounds and his
sunny disposition."

AVON· Sell! S.UI M1b '5%.
Colll14·441·3318.

Mtnlltment trlin• lntln'l•
lionel oo~.-.y h• ap•lng tor
aegrHINe malt or femele 1n
mentgement. ComptMt on th•l-;;:;;::;:=~=;:::=:-r.;~~~~~~;:~~
job treining progrem, depend•·
lllo tronopo,..tion. nut oppoor· 23 Profeaionel
41 H ousea for Rent
•c:e r-.u&amp;red .. For eppointment
Service a
call 114-182·3081.
3 two bedroomhou• for rtntln
E~q~trlenc:ed cook. Apply in
Middlepon. 11150 .. 11111 .. or
perton Holidey Inn, Gtlllpolls. PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR , 1200. per month. DIPOth reNo phon1 calli pf ...e .
red .. coveryour pi.-.o'abteutttul quirtd. No pttt. S,.aty emtone, cell today, Wtrd's Key- ploytd or retired. Kevset 289 N.
Full time AN position evaillble. bo..-d, 304-171-5500 Of 11715 - Third St. in Middleport Of call
1·211·83&amp;-39112
· Contact Pine Cr•t Cere Ctn- 3824 .
ters, 855 Jackton Pike, Gtlllpo111, OH. No phone cella pt. ., .
For rent wl1ir0j1i0n to buy, 3
bedrooms. buih in kitchen. 2 c.Help Wsnt.-1 · Ntld B good
gw.ge, 1220 .00 month, deppiOpit.
01-it. New H.wn. 3~·882 2881 .
No tJtptritnct AIC"AfV, mutt
Two bedroom houM, Poiltt
be IVtillble for i~iete em· 31
Homes for Sale
PIMIInt, Ja. -678 -7183 .
ployment. Hours1PM to 10PM.
11 .200 p«monrtl . CtiiThurs. or
Fri . 10 AM to 3PMforpe..onn.. 4 b.droom houH for AU. HOUN for rent Gallipolis. good
flrep!Ke. 3 mi. lOUth of Gallipo- loc;.ation. big yard , CA . \/My
inttrVIew. Clll 814-441-7441.
lis, 132.500 . Cell day1 114- chNI), 304-17&amp;-1418.
E•v 111ambty workl 1100. per 448·1815 or nlghta 814·441 ·
100. Guer~~nteed pay"*Wt. No _ 1244.
42 Mobile Homes
experience-no Hltl. Detsita
send · lttf· lddt•std stampld 28xl0 unflnthed rsnch MuM, 2
for Rant
tnvelope:Eien Vitll-716 J.t18 c• prage on 1 acre. 3.000 sqft.
Enttrprilt Rd .. Ft. Pieree, F.L 2 ttory unlnlahld homewith full
b...mtiJI. 30 acrea eiNf er..tl:
33482.
bottom lend MKI wood..t hills. 2 bdr. tully furnished, 12d5,
E•y AsHmbtv Work! teoo.oo Beauttful lek•Kte. Cell 114- c:onv. locetion, Upper ANer Ad .,
Wlftf pekt HC:. dep. requited.
P• 100. GuertntHd Ptvment. 371·2213.
Ctll 614-4.41-81558 or 814·
No E~~p ...~CII- No Sal• . Details
· Nnd lltf·lddr•Hd ltamped 5 rooms. beth. utility, g. .gt, 446·2430.
envelope: E'-n Vila4 -5847 3418 eentrll heat. Good condition.
2 bedroom mobile home in
EnterprU Rd. , Ft. Pierc:e, Fl. Coli 114·982·1204.
Evergreen. Call 814-441-7032.
33482.
LPN

or

AN

to corroJttt mobile

32

Exc.tlent p~n ­
tlmt poai1ion. Send r..ume to :
inaurMe~exem~ .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

P.M.I ., P.O .Box 2217 , Hunting-

ton, W. Va . 21!1723.

lndN-idulll to live with .,d ahefe
expenc::H or retired. Mmi-retired

couple to ltvt In &amp;0Jt12 mobile
hon. .tjac..,t to lklerty gent!•
man and provide mNll, hou• ,
ciHnlng. L.undry •nd lawn care
in Uchll'l(ll tor frH rent.
loatt.-1 i1 country Mtting in
Mtivt Coun1y. Rtflf'tnc:.. rt·
lr~quirt It 814-592·
3049"' 814·592· 3788 .

· qutred .

100th Anniverury , Avon , to a.al
call 304-875 -1429
Join the Army Nttion.. Gulfd
for 1 pan-time job, monthly
~eck. tducationel .-.t·
anc:e. tift ineurance, miremtnl.
end m~n-, oth• benefits. 3().1.
875·3950"' 1·800·842 · 3119.
The Army Nttionel Guerd n-.cla
individuals with prior military
ex peri., ce. Many benefits avtilable. Whtrl "" cen you get a
part·time job wHh so many full
time benefita?304-575 -3950 or
1·800·842 ·311 19

12

Situations
Wanted

VtctnC'f tor elderly J*'IOn in m-,
JWNite hon.. 24 hr. Clrt. Act
mMlt. tPtcial dittl , ltrge room,
lV . reasonable. Crown Ci1y.
e14-258-6609

NEW ANO USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. OALLIPOUS. AT 31 .
PHONE 114·441·7274.
1982 Cloyton, 14K85. fully
fum ., wuhlt', dryer. AC, under pinning • pon;:h. Eac. cond.,
Meke 1n Ott•. Cell 814·2&amp;11821 .. 114·218·1318.
78 leyvi..., 14a70, with 7x24
expando. total g•. 3 bdr .. 2 full
bettu . factory tlrapleet ,
-..ipped lt.h:ch..,. with buih in
dlahwsst..-, eentTal tlr, own•
.;!I put eapendo in. efttr mow
will pUll beet out. 112,000 flrm .

Coll814·381·9114.
1980 Llbony 14•54. 2 bed·
room, unfurnlsh.t. vinyl oodtr·
pinning included. Mutt 1111. Cell
304·773-5873 .
1978 CtmlfOn Moblla Homa.
12xSO ft . fo;t' furth• Info. cell
814 ·992·8124 .
1857 Chempio:n Trlii•. 10a50.
11200. 080 . 1972 Olds Cu11111 Wagon. t250. C1U lftlr
4,30 p.m. 814·992·7222 .
1984 S"ulu TraMtt. 14x70, 3
bedrooms. 2 full blthl. bc...m
condltton. 118 ,000. located in
Recine. Ce111-304-925·3293.
bedroom house treiler
13000 .00. Ca" 114-992 -2094.

2

Treiltr. c:entrtlty loeettd, fur·
niahtd. 1175 mo., utllltl• ~id .
Cal\114-448-0544.
Trailer at 151 Beech St. in
Middleport. t1815. Ptf month.
UOO . deposit. Cell 814 -992·
2358 .

lllfiUI, wood-burner. expendo,
gtrden end fruit u .... DIPOiit
tnd ret•~nc811 . Cell 814 -949·
3031 .

2 b«&lt;room mobile home. Roush
Line. Ch•hire, Ohio. Cel 304·
773·5828
12M85 mobUa homa. fumlthtd.
2 bedrooms. gsa httt.l04 -175·
8372 anytime.

2 bedroom. ueil•. fur"ft:he&gt;d,
w11h• and drvlf. 1ir cond.
rlftttnees. 1180.00 mCM)th plus
utlliti•. 304 ·176·11 30 Of 1751711 .
2 bedroom tTIIItt with garden.
weter and garbege p• id ,
1225.00 month diPOIIt, cell
304-&amp;715 -38158

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 lots with treller end 3 tdd·on
roomt. lmmediMt pounlion.
Phone 114-992· 8913 deys.
614-949·2538 nights.

Hl\11 VICincy for room end
botrd in m-, home . Fleaaonabie
Colll14 ·992· 8022.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·
aured. re11onable ratn. Call
304·571·2338

15

3 bedroom double wkle mobUe
home on lot 100123&amp; ft .
129.900. s.. It 116 Meple
StrHt. Muon, W \11 . 1rter 3

Nicety tumi1hed mobile home.
eft. apt .. centrsl 1lr end ht-' in
city. ldutta onl~ . Call ~1 4-4480338 .

Truck Driver School: Job plec•
ment •••iatenc:e. DOT Ctrtific.tlcn, Eligible lnnltutton t~••l
ald. guerenteed .tudent klana,
Home nudy -reaident tflininll.
Start immedittely . United Truck
Mttter. Mineral Wallt. W.Va.
304-489-2027 home office.
Cletrwtter. Fl.

18

Wanted to Do

\ltlent ine't Day!! Mom needs 1
bretk ll btbysitting , reference.
experienced mother . Becky
Miller, 304-675-6939 .

Financial

14 '•70 ', 1981 Windsor, 2 bed·
room. large .. itch.-. •nd livin·
groom, •II electric:. :Z porch•
•nd underpenning, patially fur ·
nithed, 115 ,000.00. 304-773·
1071.
Preowntd mobile hom• like
new , l•ger ul.ction. s.. th..n
et KS.K MobileHomt~lnc . 3411
Jeckeon • •· Pt. Pl. ecro .. from
Jr. HJoh. 304·175·3000.
1980 Htllms"'- 3 br, new ctrpet.
drep .. . 14x70 onty 112 ,800.
Prica inctUdu aetup in K&amp;K
P1rk. 304·17&amp;·3000.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

50 acr... 'h min..-al rjghta on St
At. 143. 122.000. Call Hoblttl·

tet A..lty It 114-742 -30t2.

21

Business
Opportunity

NOTICE!
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO .·rec:ommendl 1h1t you
do busln•• with people you
know , 1nd NOT to 1end money
through the mtil until you hwe
inv.. tlgated the offering .
I

FlORIST BUSINESS : Eleanor.
W. Va .. no co,..:~ethlon . good
1m111 town buaineu. FTO attm ..
tlon . Priced to 1111, 304 ·7270244 after 7 p.m.

Bllutv Shop oorf1)1ttt, tor rtnt.
304·871· 2930 "'875· 3388.

22

Money to Loan

HOME OWNERS-Refintnet lo
lowfixld ,., .. Uu.cpJity loreny
pu~pu.e. Ltldtr Mortgege Co.,
114·192· 3051 .

40 plul acres In Cologne District
witt-! aumrnlf COttllljll Of hunting
cabin. 10-111 1cr• potential
meadow. E•cell.-.t tlunttng po·
ttnli•l. 4 whMf drive
in
winter. 111.000.00. Cell Man·
Fri 8,QQ.4,QO 304·171·3210.

•cc••

Renlal s
41

Houses for Rant

a

room• • bath, ,..,..., decorated. Inquire 11 918 Saeond
Ave .. Gtllipoll•
3 bdr. home large yard, gerden
spot, KC school dlttrict, sec.
dep. req . Call 114·448-0148.

Houtt 4 room•• bsth f\lrnl1htd.
735-R Third Ave. 11211 mo. 175
dap . CIU 441-3870 or 441 1340.

Mod•rn l bdr.. dlningroom.
large kitchen, renge, ,.frlglf'l·
tor. gu ~HI , CA. b11em1111
Unlimited c:epltel IY•IIIble for flni•h_., Clrpeted, nleelocttfon,
lftY bulin•• p.upo••· Cell 814- 1113 Sun1et Dr.. Upp.- 2nd.
2118· 1772.
St .. for rant with option to buv.
C1nftnenca, t350mo. R•Mfvto
movo1n1o. CoN 814·441·25'73.

AediCOrtted spt., 2 bdr., t150
to 1250 . C•ll304 -67&amp;-6104 Of
304 ·875 5381 or 304·176 ·
7898
740 11'1 StcOndAVe. 3 bdr., 1190
mo ., dip . required . C•ll 814·
«6·4222 between 9 • ~ .
Duplu for rent. &amp;51 Third AYI.,
G11lipolls. 2 bdr., INingroom,
dlnlngroom . new kitchen ,
tencld baek y1rd. rlfrlg . &amp;
rtnge . UBO plus utilitl•. &amp;
..curitv deposit. Call 514-•U5·
0190.
Furnished IP' ·· 1 bdr ., 29 1,.; Neil
Aw .. G111ipolls. 1235. utilitl•
p1id, Ctll448-4418 '"" 7pm.
Furn. efficiency I 1110 utilit i•
peid. Sh.,. beth, 107 2nd. A.,..,
Gel\ipolil . Sir191e. Ctll 441·
«- 1e tfttr 7pm.
Ntwty remodeled 5 room updtira •pt.. 238 FWd Ave.
Kttch., turnlstled, no 1*:1.
1225 mo .. plus utillriet. ,.f.-en·
c.. 6 dtPOttt. Ctll 114-441·
4921.
Furn. 1pt. 919 2nd. Ave. Gallipolis. shlrl beth, single male,
t175 mo ., utllltin plkl. Cell
441 -4418 lfl• 7pm .
Nlee 2 bdr . ape., 4 mil• from
Gallipolis. stow. rtfr6g. • wat•
furnished, 1200 mo., "o .,.-t1.
Coli 814·441·8038.
Two bedroom spenment downtown . t210 wfthatrt utilitl•;
1330 with utilltl•. oepoelt
requlr..t. Cell eu.-448-2129
IAM· 5PM .
Downtttln eplf1ment fat rent
compltt.,y f\lmiehtd. Ctlll14441·7572. efter 5 114-441·
7812 . 1220 E11tern AYI ,
Gelllpolla.
Apenment for rent. BeeutHul
becllekw epertment, wood burn·
lnt fireplace. ell utllltin paid .
Fost• Mobile HorTM Park. 814441·1102.

bedroom tpt, 12015 .00
month, good concl. locettd In

Two

Point PIHunt area. 304· n3·
6143

45

Furnished Rooms

For rtnt SINPin; Room1 and
liljlht house lt~~tplng rooms. hrk
Ctntrll Hotel. Clll 614-4460751.

46

Space for Rent

Mobile hOme tot, 12' 1160 ' or
smaller. t7&amp; w•ter peid, 4th I
Nell, Gellipolis. Ctll 448-4416
efter 8PM.
COUNTRY MOBILE HomtPtrk,
Route 33. Nonh of Pomfii'O'f.
Large loti. Calll14-992-7479.
Tralltr epaces, small childr.,
•cc.pted. Rt. 1, Locust Aold,
b... of K &amp; K. 304· 875·1071 .
Treiltf' IPIC• nd house , ~r·
tally turnlthld. Glllipolia Ferry,
304·875·1335 or 876 · 3248 .
Mobile home lot 14a10 or
sm111.- 175 .00 weter. 1ewlf
snd trtatt paid. Ohio. 304 -67153000.

Merchand tse
51

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 12
Olive St .. Gelijpolil. New 6 usld
WOOd·COIIItOY... 8 pc wood lR
sul1e U99, bunk beds 1199,
entron recun . . 199. new &amp;
uHd bedroom suit•. rlngM.
wringer wuh~~r~ , • sho•. New
ll'f'lngroom tuitll 1199· 1599.
lempa. also buying coli • wood
ttoves. Csll 814·441-3159 .
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofu end chairs priced from
1285. to 1895. Tlbt•. 150 snd
up to 1126 . Hid••·beds.U90 .
and up to 1560., sot• beds
1145 . Recliners. 1226. to
1375 .. Limp• from U8 . to
1126. pc:. dlntn• from 1109 ..
to435. 7pc. t189andup.Wood
table with IIi• chlire 128&amp; to
1745. Desk 1110 up to 1226
Hulett•, 1560 . Bunk bed com·
plete with ml11rnstt, 1278 .
and up to t396 . Babv bed1.
1110 Mt11tiUU or box
apringa. full or twin , 183 .. firm,
173 . end 183. Queen 1111.
1225. 4 dr. ch•t•. 149 . 6 dr
cht111, t58 . Bed frtmll ,
120.end 1215 ., 10 11un · GIJl
c:ablnlls. t350. Gu or tlaetrlc
tlngn 1375 . Beby m1ttr1111s.
135 &amp; 145 , bed fi•m• 120,
125 , &amp; UO , king ft1me 150.
Good SllectkJn of bedroom
suitM , rodllf'l, metal cabinets,
haMtbotrds 138 &amp; up to 185
Uled Fumlturt ·· Orttltf, &amp; bid ,
mnel office dellt.a. 3 mM• out
Bul~illl Ad. Open 9tm to 5pm,
Mon. thru Sat.
514 ·445·0322

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Weshers. drytrl, rlfflg•storl,
ranges. Skeg11• Appliances.
Upper River Rd . beside Stone
Crest Motel. 814-448· 7398
Counry Applitnct. Inc. Good
u1ed tPPIIanc;n end TV 1e11.
Open BAM to IPM . Mon thf\l
S.t. 814-441·1199, 827 3rd.
Ave . Gtllipoll•. OH .
Vslley Furniture, new &amp; unci.
l•,v• section of ~a i ity furniture . 1211 E1stern A\11 .,
Gsllipoll1.

bllanc.d 1371 . Motorcydt lut·
11aee trtll• new 1nd fokl fortll't
ltOrJGI, 11rcr1ft eluminum,
wolght copoclty 350 ... •32&amp;.
Amort.., -~ • lug
bolts fits13 ln. Ford. t100. Cttl
114·379·2174.

1171 Dodge ven. 311 ....a.
needt body wo"- rune eood .
WIU trMie tor trudl:. 304·77311873.

G11 ato\lt, gat hot wtter hitter.
good cond.. baby crib a mlttr•• In
cond. Cell 814·
441· 213 .

114143.

Misc . Merchandise

H~M~III

co.J. lump A atok.-. Zinn
Cotl Co . C111 114 -441-1408.
Callth• 'a UHCI TireShop .10ver
1.000tir• ...u.u.13 , 14 . 11.
11. 11.5. 8 mil• out At. 211.
Colll14-211·1211 .
FirMOOd for lilt. C1ll 814 -251·
152S.

Firewood e38. tumlng plow
1300. CUttfvltor 178, pot1t01
diggO&lt; •71. Mmt oprooclw •11.
..,w~ng mocfllno •178 , fllollng
1111111 ill H . CaR 814·.W8·
4830 cw 114·.W•·M41-.

,.,

GE weat'ler &amp; dryer. Cal 114·
448 ·2851 .

Pole Building• by Ouelity
Bulldlfl. Fr" •tlm1t11. Call
5t4 ·819· 3551 .
Control tlunger and 1oM wetght
with New Grsptfrult -PP'H .
Combo. Fruth Phtrmacy ~
Mtddleport . •
1 weddln11 dr••· size 8. Ctll
814 ·992·5320.

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS . hot dip
rebluelng. 111 typH of gunsmith
work. fut HfVice. 304-1754131 .
100 AnntverNry Awn to Nil,

304·175·1U9.
For ule. Big discount on 1 "
venetian bltndl, verticel blind•.
custom draperltl. lnctll\ed . P .A.
s.~,. . 3o•-4&amp;&amp;-1D7B .

GOODWILL COAT SALE - Fob .
2 through 8th. All wfntet COlli
on 11le "AA priea. New node
lrf'ivlnll throughout thl w .....
Point PIHHnt Goodwill, open
d1ity, 8:30·15:00 p.m.; Sunday,
1-5p.m.
Be • awHthetrt end tune vour
Also en .. celltnt Velentlna gift. Werd 'e Kevbo•rd.
304·178·5500 or 171· 3824.
Used King wood snd coal IIOVI
with bklwer, IJICIIII"'t oondi·
lion, 1260. J mtttl t1bl• with
dfiWif, 115.00 Nd\. 304· 5711·
1248.

cam••

Bell end Ho..,ell rno\lie
with •ounds . uc cond.
noo.oo . 304·157·1643.

M1y1eg wring..- wesher . 80 gtl
oil tenk with puft1) , from okt
time nrvlee ltttlon . 304·8754679.
12 speed hilt.• H!5 .00. Phone
304·982 ·3261 .

7 h cell paw 165 .00. Cen be
'"" Mon or Frl bet:wetn 1:00
ond 3,00 PM . 304 ·875· 2135.
New World Book Encyclopedlt

for 1399.00 10150.00 oovingol
ChlldCI'th for 1100.00 wtth the

offar 1199.00 liVIngs). Paymant
ttrme tvaillblt. Cell 304·571·
2897 for appointment.
12 double insulated 1111 in·
WindoW I with ICrHnl, like nM.
Cell lor inf. 304-458 -1588 .

living room sui1e with love Hit.
li.. e new. for ule. 304-175 1514.
For 1111 pipe fittings, 18 2-lnch
socket weld ells. 3,000 lbs
304 ·771-4182 .

56

Building Supplies

Building "hteriel•
Block. brie... eewer pip•. win·
!Sows. tintell, etc. Cltude Win·
ter1. Rio Grende. o. c.n 814·
246 -6121 .
Kentucky lump, Otllc LufT'C»,
Ohio Stoker. Vsrd or delivery,
cement bloc... and bulldinv
meteritl. Gellipoll• Block Co.,
Pint St.. G111ipolit. Ohio Cell
514 ·441·2783.
Utility Bld~j~ . Spl .: 30 '1140 'x9'.
Esve W · 15 '•8' slid ing door I
ltrV. door· tl5256 eracttd . Iron
HorH Bldgl. 114· 332-1748
coli act.
Block, brid, mortar and mt·
tonry suppll•. Mount.in St111
Bloclt. At. 33. Neow H1ven, W.
Vo. 304·982·2222 .

Pats for Sale

Dr1gonwynd Cenerv Ktnn ...
CFA Hlmeleyan. Ptrtian end
Siam•• kiHana , AKC Chow
puppltl . Cell 441-3844 lfter
7PM .
Americ~n Pit Bull puppi•. 3 mo.
old . Calll14 -388-91&amp;1 .

Rag . mtleOobtfman pup ..
bltck • run. wotmtd , lhott,
t1il1 bobbed, papers. 150 . Cell
114·44f-n95.
AKC

Apricot femelt Toy Poodle. I
wMks old. 1150 . Mel• whht
Poodle. 7 months old . 1100.
Coli 814·149·2272.
Aegiltertd maleEngll1h Polnttr,
.715 , OobtrrMn fema6e. biD
and "'"· 110. Call 814-9827458.
AK C Doberman pupt for Mit.
R~ end ruet . 175. e8Ch. c..
114·982· 7170.

67

Mu1icel
lnatrumenu

lowery piano, good cond .
114·317·7188.

-;;=:::;;===::;::==
76

Fmn Supp lll' '
!'. LJVI'sl ,w k

69

61

71

Farm Equipment

For Sela or Tfede

T9 lntemlltktnel dotlf'. 1M ltl·
gino. •1.100. 304·178· 1241.

Boats end
Motors for Sale

Autos for Sale

1980 Otdl AC, PS. PI, CrtJil•.
"· cond. Coli 114·441·2323
.tt. 4:00 .

17 ttPtocreft BueBoet. 1110 hp.
08, piUIIJltFII, 18,000 .00 firm.
304·875·7322 .
•

1977 Aol&gt;bln. CoR 814·388 · 76
Auto Parts
8421 "' oflor 5,30 114·3B8·
CR05S. SONS
&amp;
Accessories
U.S. 3&amp; W•t. Jeckson, Ohio. BB23.
114·291·8411 .
Mlltey Fergueon, NIW Holl~nd, . 1882 Chyrlllf ltleron 37,000
Chev. 350, V-8 rebuilt motqr.
Bush Hog Sal.- • Servl~. Over mlln, eir, tilt. crulsa, ••· nice •
40 used trleton to dlooet ffom cltln, peddld vinyl top . Cell 304·1112·2313 .
.
• OOrf11ilete line of MW II uled 114· 379·2728.
IQuipmtnt. Lergttt •tectlon In
1879 Pontiac Grand Prix Nnt 77 Auto Repair
s.e. Ot.lo.
good. PW. P8. PS, V-1 angtne.
John DNrt 60 trtctor. 1910 u.aoo. 1878 GMC 4•4 11 ton
1018 Long four wheel driva, Itt truck runs good, 12.300. 2 Au1o Painting I 150 end up.
dl1c mower. 10ft. ttddttrakl. 1 hof'lt trelltr with dr..slngroom Bodv work. extra, brake wor1'.
h . John o • .,, tldemount In good cond, 11.080. CaH tune upe, co,.lttl ciNn l.lP
mow•. I ft . .Jotln o..,. direct 114· 391·1832 .
inside&amp; aut . 1220 E11tem A11111 ..
cut sJ1111• held . I h . boxtcraplf'.
Oolllpoio. Coli 614·441·7572.
No Sundl';' Cllt 114·241·9157. 1977 Mercury COLigtr 1900 Of aft..- 5 Clll 814-..._e.u u or
r1110nlbleoffer. Cal 114·441·
114·441·7812 .
136 Mueev Fergu10n Tractor 1187 oftor UOPM.
whh h.h lf'ld low rengt. Plow•
daca. 5 ft. bush hog. All tor 1878 Elec:trt Llmhtd. whhe, 79 Motors Homes
absolutely loaded. 18.000
•3891. Coli 814·281·1522.
mN", wrr good condition,
&amp; Campers
Glhl grinder miUf, New Hofland btrem.ty dtpandlble. U. 795 .
7 ft. heybind, AHII Chalmere, II Coli 114·448·0177.
111 crop pu I type combk'la. Atl
IIi Chovorto CS, 4 .opel .. 9,000, 1974 Kevot umpar ulfIIC cond, 304-273-4211 .
, 31B Oodga engine.
U .900. 84 Cho¥ortoCS, IIIPd .. conteintd
22 ·king,,...,, 1ix, 11.000 . c•u
1.700
mi
..
u
.aoo.
84
Ch...no
1974 Alii Chllmtn, 730 ferm
114·441·20n .
tractor. 17900. Good cond. 4 opd .. 37.000, U .100. 10
Horizon
TC3
auto
.•
51,000
mi.,
304·171· 7421 .
12.000 . n Cordob1 tuto lir,
1980 M.F. 230 di...t triC'tor, PS , PB, PW, '*"' tlr• • paint,
h• •• then 1 150 hours. Also 81,000 mi.. 01.400. 77 Wogo·
bnroh hog. plow ond dloc. n.., 51,000 mi., auto, 1lr, new
paint. rlbullttngint, •2.850. 81
304·171·3928 .
Mustang 211 HP , IIUto •• ponv
81
Home
Yaug« Farm Suppty. Southside. interior, MWtop, shtrp, U.OOO.
S1twlft'
l
Auto
Sel•.
814-378
·
Improvements
W. Ve. Co""'''' lint of t~rm
IUpplia . Now buy'lng sheUed .21a2.
. eom . Clll for lnformetion 3041982 Cutlau Supreme
875·2078.
BASEMENT
Brougham, auto .. V·8. pa, pb,
W~TERPROOFING
air, CNIIe. VGC. 114-992-50811
Uncondlttonllllfttlms guerln·
•ft. I p.m.
t•. local reference~ fumilhtd.
Fr• •limlltes. Ctll collect
19711 F"'d F210. 4•4. 41nch lift 1·114·237·0488,
doy or night.
63
Livaatock
kit 1h38. groundhewg tires. Rogers
Besam•nt
Coli 114·11112·2t711.
Wetat"PtOOflng.
Queil. incubaton. breeding pent 1t71 Nov1. 350 englna. Ma~j~ J .1nd L, lnetatlation . Roofi~,
of 111 k.lndl, ttoring pens, fMd · wt.ela, AM-FM cu..n • . Catl Yinyl 11dlng, ttorm doore ·· •
era, w•t.,.,.., hot p.ta. All 114·1141·2190.
wkulowa. F,.. •tlmat•. C
IQUip mtnt and birds will bt aold .
114·112·2772 .
Ll Bonte's Queil F~rm . Call 1110 Toyota Ctlic1 GT Coupe.
bc.lent condition . New paint RON'S Ttftvlslon Sarvi~t .
814 ·981·4341 .
tnd tif'll. am-root. AC. much HouN cslhl on RCA, Quu.,.,
Grefn·ftd ftHJer bttf. 11 .00 more. Col 114·1112·2782 or OE. S]ltdollng In ZtnKh. COli
., .... 2.2841 .
pet lb. hangfng weight. 1 h . hay
304 ·578·2398 or 114·•40 ·
tldder. Uald onca. C1ll 114·
187..a Pontiac. New ti,.., 1350. 2484.
742 · 3114.
Colll14 ·182·2419. No 5unciOJI Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
Com-tid btet tor 1111. 1.&amp;0 per c•lle. pl ....
remov11. Cell304-175·1331 .
lb. on foot. Clll 814-192·7458 .
1910 TC3 Horizon. bcllltnt RINGLES'S SERVICE. o•oe·
9 year okl IIICII: Ttn'nMHI condition . 12:800 . Cell 814· rlenced Clrptnttr, tltc:tridtn.
Welklf, 18 hands tell, greet 992· 7401 .
muon. pelnter, roofln11 {lnchld·
riding horn, e.y to hendtt.
tng hot tlr tpplicetionl 3041971 T-Bird. 57.000 mil•. One 875
.400.00 . 304·175·8798.
·20888 .. 871· 7311.
owner. glflll• kept, Mow room
9 .,..r old Bay Querter horM condition . An ecceuoriel. the Starke TrM end lewn ServiCe,
mare. Good trtil riding horse. bon. 14. 210 .00. 304·171· londocoplng. 304·571·2010.
15.3 hindi til. E•v to handle, 24114.
304·175·17119.
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
1971 FordOr~ntda. oneo"'"•· Most
well• compl•ed ~trntdl"' ·
prlco Nducod, coli 304·871·
Pump 11111 and aervh::• . 304·
4014.
64 Hey &amp; Grain
891 ·3802
18711 Rolloy Sport Comoro, Pl.
Pl. auto 3110 tnglnt, AC . Roofing, 111 lt.indt lnltelltcl or
For 1111 hiV M\ler Wit red clo\ltr AM· FM etnttte, equtlltlr, repsired . lntured, frH a11i·
ma111. Phono 304·523·3517 or
&amp; orcherd grau mixed. C1ll n .aoo.oo. 304·112·2471 .
304·582·1200.
304·458·1987.
1971 Ford Thunderbird, Town
Attetfl·orchlt'd grtu hay . 11t. Ltundau. 111 power optlona.
2nd .. 3rd. cuttings . 11 .50· whitt whtt btue 1•111• interior, 82
Plumbing
n .oo. CoH 814· 251·1531 .
lllltra •hlfP. 13.200.00. 304·
&amp; Heating
eoo ltrga round bel• oth-r 120 175· 1139
• bate Of' volume ret•. Alto 1971 Ford LTD, good running
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
1qu1re baln 11 .21 ee. Call cond , Wl'tck«f 1971 Ford Elite,
AND HUTING
114-251-14111htr5, oulldev good motor. peril. cell 304·
Cor. FO\Irth end Pine
-..lt.sndl.
875·3037.
Ottllpolls, Ohio
Cheap tll'f will trade for emit. 19815 CtmlfO, lolded, low Phone 814-448·3888 or 614·
Cell lift• SPM , 114-448-10152. mlltiQI . 19,500. 304 · 875· 441-4471
5810 .
Cl8f'tl Plumbing end Hitting. 18
Hey for ..C. m.t. 11 .25 bale.
,,. . bperienee. unttop dra ins.
Call 814-441-0171 .
72 Ply. Vslitnt 13110.; 16 Ford New -remodtllng · rlt~lir work.
PU 1300. 304·481·1138 or Phono 304 ·812· 2012.
Mbltcl lwy. retsonlbty priced a 458· 17211 .
ouy 10 g11 • · Coli 814·441·
4344.
1978 Toyote. CeUct. Felr cond. 83
Excavating
0300. 304-175 ·1295.
Eer com for Nie . Ctll 81 4·843·
1216.
Good·1 E•cl\l'atlng, basemantt,
72 Trucks for Sale
Hay for aale. Cell 814·992·
foottf'l, drtv.ways, IIPIICtlnkl,
553: .
lendsceping . CeH enytlme 6141981 Cultomit:td Dodge Mini 441-4837, J•ma l . Dtvllon.
HIV tor aalt. Cell Art N1111. Aam \llf1, nilleegelow. excellent Jr. ownet".
114· 949 · 2754 or 114-992· condition. Call 11 4 ·441-8342.
1313.
11n Chivy 1 ton Duelly
84
Electrical
l.erge round baln of hay. no. SU\Itnclo pec:klga CMnptr IP•
&amp;
Refrigeration
ciel
4154.
auto
.
lrlftl
..
13.000
Can dtli\ltr. Cell 814-992·
mil", 13000. Cell 114-3797401 .
2428 .
A· 1 Refrigeration &amp; Appliance
1978 Chw., Lu~ 4 tpd. rtdkJ,
Repeir, washer e. dryar. Cell
ll)orty, t1 .791. Joftn'a Auto
614·448·8140 .
For ute 1&amp;0 beln of eondlti· Sal•. luhNHie Rd .• Gellipolis,
ontd hty, nt~~~er wet, tint Oh.
cutting. mixed hay. 11 .215 fl.
86 General Hauling
1974 Chevy C-30· 1-ton duel
mo1hy n .JI . 304·881· 3010.
whetftruclt., 360 4spd. 1911 IH
1 ton tl.l1l wheel 8 c:yl. , 4 apMCI.
Both run tood . Oliver IOtrlctor, Jsmes Boys We Itt Stnti~e . Als o
pools filled . Cell 114 -266·1141
2 new tlr• .. ntw bitt. C1ll
[ I dll SI! ll ll.illllll
or 814 ·441·,..175 or &amp;U -448114· 388·8184.
7911 .
1977 Ch.vrolet. PU. ~ton . Y-8 ,
Ken·• Weter Service. Well•.
euto "'"" · new tir•. C1ll
71
Autoa for Sale 114·441·
8113 or 814·441 · cistern•. pools fllled . Phone
814 -367-0623 or 614-3671201 .
n41 night or dty .
1910 Chevy Citation V· 8, 82 DIIIUn PU . stereo 4 cyl .. 5
Waugh 'l Waltr Service. Wells,
II) d. ITIMI ., 4 new tirel, topper,
55,000 miiM, euto .,
cllttml.
t&gt;oola. Ftu, relitble
41
.000
mi
.
....
lng
t3
.900.
Call
C'oll 814·441·1892.
..•'!IYiee. Cell 514-Ue -1240 or
114· 241 ·8148.
81J ·2.66 -1130 . Re•ont FILE
1971 VW Rabbitt uc. cond.,
ERROR
AC. AM-FM. new 16r11 • fuel 1910 Dodoo PU good cond..
Oerbege Htulln11 &amp;
pu,., 30 MPO, •1 ,500 ftrm. 17.000 act mtl ... Cell 814· Richard's
oth~ hM~Iing . Cstl 1nytime d•y
Coli 114· 448 · 9201 oftor 251·1221.
or rwght . Cell 114 ·387-0121 ,
5'30PM.
1980 FO&lt;d F250. I cyllndor. 4
Coli, !lmlltone, grl'lel, etc.
1918 Ford LTO Country Bquirl spNd, AM ·FM Cllll'tte, ~rullt.
Dellvtrtd 1 ton end up . Jim
stttlo"wagan. New wtter du•l tlf'lb. tetpt*'. ..cellant
Ltnier, 304 - 5711 ~1247 or 675condttion.
14900.
Cell
114·
pu,., Good llrtt. Priced to
7397.
Colll14·441· 1117.
112· 2311.

I ·n·UNK 'tOUR INSTI~TS
WERe RIGHT Ot.I,GUZ!
LOOK DO'N'N HE~E!

It's
well. Skeezix,
next FridaLJ is reall4
the biqda4! nothinq ..

St:rv1 ces

good'""·

••I.

11n PonUec Ventura, AC , 2
,.. tlr•. enow tW.. , new
bolt. .. Coli .14·448·0111 11·
tlf' IPM CN'

11741 Dodoo pldlup 1'1 U&gt;n, good
running ga1r1. N11d1 body
worio. MOO. 304·171·1241.

1t CtrnttO for mort lnforme-

73

..-.,dt.

c.n

1981 Hondo 250 Blo Rod
•1 .100. CoM 814·441·7881 .

rL..----------r---------~ -:

Vaahic• 35mm camere with
cue, 1.,, with c11•. electronic
flesh. eac. cond. Ctll 814-347·
0359.

Mlud h~tdwood slabs. 112 . per
bundle. contllfiW.g epprox. 1 'h
ton, fob. Ohio Peflet Co.. Pomeroy . Oh . 814·992·8411 .

Motorcycles ' ·

Hondl, '83 V48 Megn1 •. ~w
mlletge. very ch-.pt 304 -875t418.

Black. powdtr 15 .95. T·C
HIW'kln 1209.95. 40 lt'tl• of

1100 Remington auto. Blcent•
nisi, perfiCI eond. ntvlf' been
shot. Ca11114·2151 ·1228 .

MOLINrAJN--

Htrley D1vklaon 79 Cl•lic. 'fun
dr•o. •1.000. eou 114·143·
2t03.

Cennon T-50 35 mm camert
with ftpt! a various '*'e. 1....
then 1 vr. old. Call efter 5 ,
114·317·7225.

8ri1rp1tch Kennt11 All -breed
11rooming . English Cock• Spt·
niels. 388-9790.

64

74

40 ecr• of large tlmb•. Ctll
lnytimal14· 318·8437 .

boh bo ..Guns
l. t5&amp;
.95Repelr.
• •7 .18.
Kolbtl'a
Mill
c - Ad. Hrs. M·F , 8·8 PM.
S11. H . Co11814·448· 2311.

!PO T H AT '~ WHY
THE'Y WAN T Ttl
BLOW UP THE

'Ill tnrcU10. 4•4. PS. PB. V 8.
4 IPitd, St.IOO mltel,
•1.800 .00 firm. 304·1,5·

rod

3 pc: . tk&gt;rel ltvingroom tuite
UOO . e pc. pint rec. room with
rl\ltfllble c:uthion• 1200. l(fng
woodbumar 11 00. Queen liat
bed no m•Hr••• 150. Cs\1
814·445 ·3988 .

311nch. elac. GE stove. 130 .00.
304·171·1578.

•s.700. Phono 114·192·7113
-"• 11:00 p.m.

a

56

UNCI btrQainll 3 automtlic
wash••· 2 11•• d,Yers . 3 tlactrlc
dryera. 2 Door refrig•tton.
tltctrle renge, 11•• range, Q.E.
dilhwath.-. G.E. co,..,ect..-.
The Flrutone Stare in
Middleport.

!Loci

181Z J"" CJ7 Lando. Hord·
top, I cyl., I opood. locl; OU1
hubo, 37.000 mlloo. Aollng

40oody-tlrooi80•11 .Uply

MoUohsn Fum. &amp; Appl. StiM
Gibaon &amp; Meytag. St . At. 7 N..
Gtlllpoltl. Ctil 114-441-7444.

1- - - - - - - - - -

3 ""'"" ond both oo t . • In Mlddloport. CoN 114·192·
1212. KIY Ctofl.

okl. u .- flne lhiPe t100. CaU
114· 381·9011 oltor IPM.

plano .

Firewood· ml•tMt seasoned
120.00 1 pic*up fold. you haul
II. Coll81 4·448·4119.

Fum. 3 rooms&amp; bath, upstairs.
cl•n. no pett.ldultl, ref. a dep.
req . Cell 814·4U·1118.

TONY'S OUN REPAIR. flllltimo 4 bodroom houot. -m]ftG
guno-. Hotroblulnt.hours. t -~-. No pelo. Coli 114·
I .._:_
.·._··2_21...;3_.- - - - 111•rt.. 304-171·... 31 .

Service•

downtown. 304-175-2218 .
1·1
---..,------laureiend 1pta. 110\18 It rtfrigtrltor fum , 2 bldroom1, cerpetld,
•ij tlec. 1pta. for mora inform~·
tion 304-882-3711.

FlrMood for Mit 130.00 PU
1oM , HEAP accepted . Ctlll14 ·
381·e341 . Rogor Moodo.

ln Aecina, nl01 2 bedroom
spartrNnt. Rlfrig. end stove.
•171. por I!IO!IIh Dluo -~~1.
No polo. Collla-Mt·2101 .

Profeaionel

Nice 1 end 2 br apartment•

1:--"7--"7-:--:----:-

2 bdr. large Privlttlot, •110 mo.
plus dl!&gt;. Colll14·44t·2231 or
814·441·2181 .

23

APARTMENTS, mobilt homtl,
houHI . pt , PltH1nt1nd Galllpo·
1~ . 114·448·8221 .

3 bedroom. n..r Big Wh ..l,

Vecanc;y tor the elderly in our
hOme . Trained and fifteen yeers
uperien c;e Cell 614 -992 ·
7314 .

pm

In Raeine. very nice. 2 bedroom.
Completely fumithed . 12215 .
plut d-.osit. No pett. C1ll
51 4·949·2801

3 t.froom, turne.hed , good
ciMn condition. 1 c:hlld, no pets.
Coli 304·8B2 ·2488.

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS [Equsl Houaing Opportun ity[ monthty rtflt sterts et
1175 tor 1 bedroom end 121.2
for 2 bedroom. depostt UOO,
locat~ n11r Spring v•ll'f Pl111
end Foodland. poollnd C1bl1 TV
IVIIIeble. offlca hours •• po••l·
~e10 am to 4 pm and 7pmto9
pm Mondey -Frid.-;-. Ctll 814448-2746 or letve m...ege.

Schools
Instruction

Calll14·317·0811 .

77,000 BTU, down drah. 3 yr1.

Ford ~ ton new mountld

W :D .

•uoo.

lntertherm ellct . furnece ,

1111 · E111em

Avo., Ollillpollo. C.ll IU·.WI·
2212.

&amp; 4

1173 Sooul 2. 4x4.
condttkm.
or belt bft..-.
CaiiiH-182· 7084 _,111,10.

TOP CASH plld for '83 model

tnd newer Ylld can. lmhh

Vena

Vena

&amp; 4

W .O .

tlon. Calll1•· 317·7822 .

1tl2 Spirit. opel., AM·FM!Opo,
IUrwoof. wtre rima. ktw mtletge,
•1 .991. J -'o Auto Ill•:
8ut.vlllt Ad., Oollpollo. Oh.
Oldo o-o Mm drtw,
oondltlon, e2.100.

•""-t

Coli- I , 114·.W•·7t41.

1881 Cu01orrilod Oodgo Mini
Rem Ylll , ,.,JI... elow, uctlent
condition. Coll114·441·1342.
11711 CJ ·IOoldonEogto, Y·l, 3
opel ., opollof · AM·FM
ott&lt;oo. low mlloogt. Call 114.WI· t700.

87

Upholstery

•

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 Stc, A~~~t . , G.. ipolis.
814·441 ·7133 or 114·446 ·
1533.
A • M Furn iture Mlnuftcturing ,
St. Rt. 7, Crown City. Otl. Celt
814· 218·1470, coli Evo. 814 ·
448 · 3431 . Old • new
Uphoet1Nc1.

..
!£vening Television Listings _ _ _ _. . . ; . - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FRIDAY

2/'l/86
EyENING

G

(f) PM Meg.rlne
7:00
(f) Allaa Smllh and Jonoa
(!) Spo!UC•n1or
(I) Ent-lnmont Tonight
Victoria Principal of ' Dallas' di1cusses the changing roles of women on teleYilian.
Ill CD Jefleroqno
D (I) 1!11 Wheel of Fortune
(I) Nightly Bualn. .a Report
liD Eyewltneaa Newo
IDl M110Noll·t..hr1r N-oh·
our
Ill (W Divorce Court
IIJa.rney Miller
7,06 Cl) Morr_Tyler Moort
7 :30 G (}) (I) Now Newlywed

0111111

(!) Speedwook

• CD WKRP in Cincinnati
D (I) 1!11 Jeopardy

(I) Agony
liD Whtol at Fortune
Ill (W Prlco I• Right
@ Bob Newhart
7:35 Cl) S.nford and Son
11 (f) 1!11 Mloflto of Sc:i·
ence
·
(f) Doria Doy'a a.i1
Frionda
(!) AWA Wrta111ng
(I) • (W Wobat" ICCI
• CD IHI MOVIE: 'Tho ()o.

a,oo

,.....,.
D ()) liD

-

Twlllflht Zono
i(f) MocNel~t..h...r N-•h·

9

Withington WMk in
R-w ICC) Paul Duke ia
oiMad by top Washington
cwrnalista analyzing 1he
Wlfk'a news.
8,05 J:lli'&lt;IOVI E: . D. .try'
B:30 ([J Fllppor
Cll Ill ll2l Mr. Btlvodtro
ICC)
[j) W•ll StrMt WMk louis
Ault.eyser analyzes the
'80'• w ith a weekly review
of economic and inveStment matters .
II (f) 1!11 Knight Alder M i·
chill and KITT frantically
embark on a cro11-oo~untrv
ran in an effort to stop B
killer who tlaa murdered a
good friend of Michael's.
(80 min.l In Stereo .
(]] 700 Club
.
(!) Top Rank Boxing from
uo Vegao, NV
(I) Star BMrch ·
Ill (I) liD Dollaa iCC)
(I) &amp;totowldl
(jJJ Great Porformancoo'
The Cotton Club Remembtrld Cob Callaway, the
Nlcholll Brothers, and
other original star• of Her·
ten't'l famou• nightclub of
the 30'a and 40'e com• togather to provide an Insider' a look at what the Cotton Club wa1 like during ite
heyd~ . (80 m in.)
(III Olff'r•nt Strokel

l

..

e

(CCI
9 :30 (I) Wall Sti'Mt WNk Louis
Rukeyser
analv:zes the
' 80's with a weekly review

of economic and in\lestment mattert .
Cll ll21 Ho'a tho Moyar ICCI
10:00 U (2J 1!11 Mloml Vice
Crocken and Tubbs track a
Grand Prix race-car dri\ler
after the bOd\' of a slain
prostitute is thrown fro m
his speeding car. (60 min .)
In Stereo.
(f) CBN Ntwa Tonight
Cll lll il} The Foil Guy (CC)
Colt is on ttle tra il of a man
who aets himaelf up for
murder. (60 min .)
fJl CD Odd Couple
Ill (I]® Falcon CrlatiCCI
Lance attempts to free Peter Stavros from his European chateau, Jordan can't
remember her evening activities. and Ch11e forms a
partnerJhip with Ri chard
Channing. {60 min .)
(I) Brown Sugar iCC) The
1930's
are
explored
through interviews with
Billie Holiday, lvie Anderson, Fredi Washington ,
Ethel Waters, and others.
(80 min .)
&lt;ID Newawatch
(jJ NoW.
10,05 Cl) Wreotllng
10:30 (f) To S. Announced
Ill CD INN Newa
()JJ SnHk P,.vltw
11
11 Cll &lt;ll lll ll211!11
Newt
(f) Mon from U.N.C.L.E
Ill CD Bonny Hill Shaw
Cl) To Be Announced
® Eyewltntal Newt
(jJJ The Shoktapoara H0&lt;1r
f--..J. Hatted by Walter Metthau:

:oo

m

a

Mld1ummer

Night's

Dr••m l overs fleeing into
the wood s fa ll under the
spell of the Fairy Kin g end
his hen c hma n. Puck. (60
min .)
(!) WKRP In Clnalnna11
1 1,30 II C2J 1!11 Tonight Shaw In
Stereo.
CJ) SportaC.nt•r
(I] WKRP In Clnolnnoll

Ill rn llD T.. l

lli 'Cil Magnum, P.l. While
investigating 1 rout ine divorca case, Magnum 1p0t1
a womtn h• beiiev11 It hil
wife , who had been reported killed during the
Vietnam War. 12 hrs .. 15
n.j_(R) .
(J2) ABC New1 Nlghtllne
Trapper John, M .D.
12,00 (]] Bell af Grouc~a
@ World Cup Skiing'
Woman's Slalom Coverage
from Megive. France . (80
min .)
()) Entartelnm•nt Tonight
Vic to rie Principal of ' Dellea ' dis cusses the changing roles of women on televitto n.
Ill CD MOVIE' ·The

i

Ill CD MOVIE' 'Como"
Ill (I) llD Alrwalf
lil Marshall Unlvorolty

IMalmoate(
(I) &amp;CTV
.
® MOVIE: "Tho Hound of
the Baakervllloo'
11Jll21 MOVIE' 1'a S. An·
nounced'
12,06 Cl) Nlgh1 Trocko In S1oroo.
12,30 II (f) (lSI Frldoy Nlgh1 Vi·
d.as In S1ereo.
(f) Bill Coaby Show
Cll ABC N-o Nightlln•
lil WodehouN PloyhouH
II) MOVIE: 'Rid Uno 7000'
1:00 (f) Doble Ollllo
(!) Sko11ng: S.lka Sko1o
Amertce Womene Competition
Cll Puttln' on tho Hlta
® MOVIE: 'Doodly Duof
1,30 (f) Father Knowa BNt
(I) Newe
z,oo IJ (f) lll ll21 Newa
(f) 700 Club
(!) Mazda SportaLook
Cll Dick Clark'o Nltetlmo
fJ) CD MOVIE' 'John end

® CNN Hoodlint Nowo

2 '30 (!) SportsCon1ar
3:00 (]] MOVIE: W lnleroof
(!) Volvo Ski Show
@ Comedy BrNk
3 :30 @ Golf: S.nior PGA Tour
Treasure Coast Cla~tlc
First round coverage. (2
hro .)

@ INN Nowt
3 ,45 Ill CD MOVIE: 'S.rpent I•
land·
4 :00 &lt;lJl MOVIE: 'Tho Bndea of
Fu Moncflu'
4 :30 (]] MOVIE: "They MNI
A;oln·

SATURDAY

2/8/86
EVEN!NQ
7,00

II (2J Tao Cloao

far Com·

tort

t1l Campballa
(!) College Bukotball'
North Cero!lna-Charlott• at
W•atern Kentucky
Cll lll (I) 1!11 HN How
Ill CD Small Wondtr
lil Wild Amorice
&lt;ID Wh"l of Fortune
(jJJ Nowton'a Apple (CC)
Astronaut Jeff Hoffman
d11cribes
hi•
voyage
8bo1rd the apace 1huttle.
Cllll21 Solid Gold
@lfo • Living
7:30 IJ (f) Runaway to Glory
(]] Guna of Will Bonnett
Ill CD II' a • Living
lil ProiiiN of Noturl
liD Jeopardy
(!)) Wild Amorlae
(JJI At the Movlee
8«l IJ (f) (}II Glmmo a Break
Nell 11 scandalized when
sl'le discovert tl'lat her
grondflther 11 dating a
much younger woman. In
Stereo.
t1l MOVIE: "The Dark Cam·

'""'

(121 Th• Rodd FoXJO

Shaw ICCI

•
-

........

'

and

Old

Timers

10:30 lill Doctor Who
@ Nows
11:00 II C2J NowaCenter
(I) Succen 'n life
(1) ~rtsCenter
(I) Ill Cll lll ll211!11 News

Ill CD Toloa from 1ho Dork·
tide

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

2 Vc ncrat•
3 Type face

I Ruminate
~ Fashio n
9 -A- in

4 Moist_en

5 !Joc km~

the Head"
10 Good luck
charm
13 One
14 Gratify
15 Word ( Fr.)
18 Trouble

area

6 EAA
spedalty
7 Ex cavated

8 Causing joy,

II

~~:~~~s

hour

25 Monk's 32 Dwelling
title
:J3 Give tht&gt;
26 Tan talize
PIhow
27 Haw
37 IA•gal

17 Countdown 12 Basic
word

18 Purify

pre cep1

20 _ had it!
d'-

181sl.et
19 Mar.;h
23 Cling to

ambili on~

ducum1•nt

28\l eavy
29 D1·rlan:-

24

comedy
partner
38 Squalid

· 40 Proruber·
ance
41 Guarantee

OO'il

un...-,_,.....J_

44 Tobacco

(sl.)

onetett•to..m eQuate, 10 form
four ordlnory wardo.

BAYSS

I I I

AXYDLBAAXR

·:L.,...~- -

Ia LONGFELLOW
)--\..~~~~...j

"'.JL..-....,;1'\--- --'-i

IDINBATj
rx
tNIGDIH j
1I K

()

1

•·r

: One letter stands for another. In Uus sample A 1s ust(d
: for the three L's, X for the lwo O's. etc. Single lelte~·s,
apoetrophel, the length andfonnalion of the words an· all
' hlnll. Each dlly the code letters are different.

HOW A 1!50')(!~
MA1&lt;15 4'\0N!Y.

u-

Now Wt'anat tni elrdlellet*a to
lorm
lh
l -- - ·
gootod
by tho
cortoon.

""'I. . .,IV"""I'I"'""J OVER ( l I I j

Anawer 11ere : .,...(

(M_. 1.....,_.

mand'

Cll Ill

Dunk

Ollm•

Advantage
~THAT SCIWIILm WOIID DAME 42
43 TV's
~ ~~· by Henri Arnold anCI Bob~
•Jeannie"

~jfj}f.\.(t

QU

10:05 Cl) NBA Bosketboll' Slam

~"tit' .

a,3o

Marv'

z,15

Jau F..tlvel
(jJJ Aualin City Llmlll: John
Sc:hnoldlr I Sou1Mm P•
c ific In Stereo .
@ Odd Couple
8 :05 (]) Centennial Hostilities
begin to mount between
between Indians and white
settlers . (2 hrs.)
II (}) 1!11 Tho Fecta of Life
Headed for a special
awardt ceremony, Blair is
trapped in an elevator with
a man with i very special
past. In Stereo.
Cll lllll21 Benton ICCI Port
1 of 2 When George Kennedy comet to the governor 's .mansion to film a
mvstery. he and Benson
find themselves involved in
a real -life murder case.
II) Coli- 8oako1ball: D•
paul It Marquane
9:00 II (f) 1!11 ·Gold•n Girlo In
Stereo.
(!) College Baokotbolll' Kon·
tucky o1 Mlooloolppi
Cll Ill ll2l Th• Lov• Boot
(CC) On a cruise to Egypt,
Capt. Stubing is reunited
with the widow of an old
friend, Doc finds himself in
- l
a my1tery when he buys a
souvenir, a husband and
wife learn more I boUt their
unhappy mtrrlege from a
younger man , and a jaded
actren falls for a reporter.
(2 hro.)
CJ (I) liD MOVIE: 'Biad•
Runner'
()JJ Doctor Who
IJ (2J 1!11 227 In Sterao.

10:00 II ()) ()) Hunter Hunter
1nd McCall track 1he
leader of a street gang
whole members are too
young to proeecute 11 ad·
ults. (80 m in.lln Stereo.
(f) To a. Announcod
Ill CD Feme
(I) MOVIE: 'Dr. Who: City
of I!Nih'

Veeterday'l

I

Jumbtef· NEEOV ADAPT CORPSE TRUISM
AniWir. · That expen 11ve country ctuD "" thii MORE DUES THAN DON'TS

CIYPTOQUOTE
2·7

E Q p

T II \

BQD

IKIZE

0 I I N

HWBQZTRVI

n T. n

T
H ,.

1

:\

I

II

.
J)l ' t.J t' . J
n v t-: \' c &lt;.l..

C N T n II ,. 1; T I&gt;
1; I V
Yeeterd&amp;)''a Cryptoqaote: At-; Etili!IEAD IS A ~1A N
WIIO liAS A LOT IN HIS HEAD A!' II "llTIII N&lt;: ON IT -

F 1 X II V . -

A.llLAI STEVENSON

�School leaders honor
Sen. Oakley Collins
COLUMBUS - State Senator
Oakley C. Collins (R·lronton) ·has
been named "Ohio Legislator rJ the
Year" by the Ohio Association of
l..Qcal SChool Superintendents.
"This honor Is being bestowed
upon you because of your distin ·
gulshed career In the Ohio Leglsla·
lure and because of your unwaver·
lng support of public. education In
this state," School Superintendents
Association President Dr. Charles
D. Buroker wrote in a letter to
Collins.
As chairman of the Senate
Education Co'mmi ttee. Collins
played a leading role this year In
Senate passage rl the best-funded
and most comprehensive education
budget In Ohio history. The Senatepassed education budget wa s
larger than that proposed by the
Governor or passed by the Ohio
House of Representatives.
"Education continu es to be my
top priority as a legislator, and lam
very grateful to ~elve thls oonor

New levy•••
been drawn up as yet.
Gene Imboden, fire chief. reported one of the radios owned by
the department had been repaired
and a second one srn t in to see if it
could be repaired . A new radio
costs $900 according to Imboden.
Imboden reported that the de·
partment last year made 32 fire
runs, had 321 man hours and drove
146 miles.
According to Imboden the emer·
gency squad made 164 runs had

from the Ohio Association of l..Qcal
Sc hool Superintende nts," sa id
Collins.
"The current state budget
adopted by the legislature truly
addresses the educational needs of
our sfilte and gives education the
priority it deserves," Collins con·
tinued . "I am proud to have taken
part In a budget process that has
both given Ohioans tax relief and
gran ted education a substantial
increase In funding ."
Senator Collins, whose background Includes a ~year career as
a school administrator In Southeastern Ohio, holds a bachelor's degree
In Education from Ohio University
and has been awarded an Honorary
Doctorate In Education from Rio
Grande College and Community
College.
Collins has represented Ohio in
the White House Conference on
Edu cation and ha s served as a .
member d. the Education Commis·
sian of the States .
!continued from page 11

--~

1,400 man hours and drove 4,s:D

miles.
Imboden also sta ted that the fire
department would continue with
their dances to raise rroney for the
air bags.
Bill Arnott noted that residents
had expressed appreciation for the
manner in which the Mayor and
general relief workers had taken
care ofthe streets during the time of
the snow falls.

Court actions filed
An action for money and foreclo·
on real es tate on a $29.375.12
indebtedness has been fiiNl m !he
Meigs County Common Pleas Coun
by the Diamond Sa\·ing,; and Loan
against Don and Bl'l ty L. Becker.
Middlcpo11 .
Jerry D. and Trudy A. Swartz.
Middlepo11 . has fiiNl action for !he
collection of $i006 all&lt;'ged owed
!hem bv the Colonial Insurance Co.
of Ca l~omia .
. Linda Kay Carpenter and Roger
Eu gene Carpenter. both of Langs·
vilk'. havr filed for til&lt;' dissolution of
!heir marri age in Ihe court .

Weather foreca.st

SUI'('

Are

Today ...occasional drizzle or
rain. High near 50. Winds becoming.
west 10 to 15 mph.
Tonight...cloudy with a slight
chance of drizzle or flurries . Low ll
to 35. West winds 10 to 15 mph. ·
Extended forecast
Sunday lhroug!J Tuesday .
A chance of snow Sunday and
Monday .. fair Tuesday.ll!ghs :Jllo
3:! Sunday •• lbe ZOs Monday and IS
1o 25 Tuesday. Lows 15 lo 25
Sunday .. lbe teens oo Mooday and
the single digits Tuesday.

Village funds total $20,278.75
As of JB«f . 31, Racine Village has a
balanre of $ll,'l78. 75 in its general
fund; $11,188.74 in the fire fund;
$2900.Siln the slate highway fund ;
$8,523.21 in the street fund; Sl,923.80
In water revenue: $1001.53 in the
cemetery fund; $1627.10 In revenue
sharing; $2465.47 in water deposits;
and $!'llOO In cemetery endowment.
These figures were announced
Monday evening during the regular
meeting of Racine Village Council.
Council President Frank Cle-

SENATOR HONORED - Senator Oakley C. Collins, rlg!Jt, Is
presented a spedlll plaque In honor ol his rooo1111lllon by 111! Local
School SupermtEnclent's A!JJiOCiallon as the Leglslalor olthe Year. AI
!ellis Dr. Charles Brucker.

Mayors fmish court cases

land: Councilmembers Robert Beegle, Dick Wamsley, Larry Wolle
and Scott Wolle, and ClerkTreasurer Shirley Evans were In
a"endance a1 the meeting.

Rutland raises·· water rate

Meets Saturday
Bedford Township Trustees will
meet in special session Saturday at
1 p.m. at Whaley'sGrocery, SR681.

Wise faces 3-count indictment
CINCINNATI - Anthony W.
Ny ktas. United States Attorney for
the Southern District of Ohlo and
William R. Britt , Chi~! Criminal
Intelligence Division of the Internaal Revenue Service, announced
today a grand jury sitting at
Cincinnati returned a three-count
indictment charging former village
Cheshire Councilman Kenneth I.
Wise with wilfully failing to tu~
income lax returns for the years
1979, 1900, and 198:!.

The indictment asserts that Mr.
Wise earned Ihe following amounts
of gross income in the following
years: 1979 - $28,976.38; 1900 36,243.44 and 1981, $26,880.78.
Wise faces a maximum penalty
on each count of one year in prison
and a $10,ml fine.
Nyktas cautioned that a citizen is
presumed not gu ilty until convicted
and that an indictment ls not
evidence of guilt.

you drivin a
hea ache?

Two preliminary games will pre·
cede the main event. At 6 p.m. the
Chester and Tuppers Plains fifth
grades will play, and al 6:45p.m.
the Tuppers Plains and Portland
sixth !&lt;fad~ teams wil play.
Admission for students, grades
one th rough six. will be$2, and from
seventh !hough 12 graes, $2.50. with
adults, $3.

NEW

Whatever Your Need MCI!IY
Be ••••• Home Remodeling, A
Better Car, New Mobile Home,
or Another Appliance •••• You
Can Be Assured PEOPLES BANK
Wants To Help You ••• And We
Won't Stick You With
Unreasonable Rates!
Member FDIC

PEOPLES BANK
@
Second Street
Mason. w. Va.
713-5514

EQU!l HOUSING LENt:lR

1212 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, w. va.

615·1121

Sth Street
New

Haven ~

w. va .

882-2135

SIMMONS OLDS.-CAD.-CHEVROLET
ANNOUNCES

NOW IS THE TIME

TO REMEDY YOUR "LEMON-ON-FOUR-WHEELS BLUES!"

All CAR!i QUALIFY FOR .A 5 YEAR
UNLIMITED WARRANTY!!!
THESE ARE JUST A FEW WAYS THAT YOU CAN SAVE

"THE ALL NEW"

OLDS.-CAD.
CHEVROLET

•variable Rate Financing

301 E. MAIN ST.

HOURS:
Mon .. Wed ., Fri. 8:30 to 8
Tues. &amp; Thurs . 8:30 to 5 :3C
Saturday 8 :30 to 4

POMEROY, OH.

The Bank That Makes Things Happen
tHember FDIC

358 Setond Ave.1 Gallipolis
97 N. Setond Ave., Middleport

--

!!)
UNDII

Phone 446-0902
Phone 992-6661

•

r\Jong the Rivrr ............. .. R-1-8
Business .......... ......... .. .. .... D-1
Deaths .... ............ .. ........... i\-5

Editorials .. ...... ... .... ......... . A-2
Farm ... ................. ...... .. .. E-2
Sports .............. ...... ........ C-1-8

Ohio weather:
snow forecast

--Page A-3-...

tmes

tntintl

&lt;

13 Sections, 84 Pages 60 Cents

lis-Point Pleasant Sunday, February 9. 1986

Copjliyhbld 1986

Both Caprice and Monte Carto are Full Size and Rear Wheel Drive.

ON USED AND NEW CARS AND LIGHT DUTY
TRUCKS THROUGH PARTICIPATING CAR DEALERS

House ·Speaker Vernal G. Riffe's power in
university forging - Page A-2

. H

ON ALL 1986 CHEVROLET CAPRICES
- 11 to Choose From
MONTE CARLO- 5 to Choose From

ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE

The Ohio Senate pat18es a business·oriented
workers' comp bill- Page D-8

-Page B-1

Vol. 20 No. 52

CHEVROLET
THE ALL

the Tiger'

•

Eastern boosters sponsor All-Stars
The Easlern High School Athletic
Department will present the Har·
!em All -Stars. billed as the "fun
makers of basketball" at 8 p.m. on
Tuesdav, Feb. 11, in the Eastern
High School Gymnasium .
The Ali·Stars wil play the East ·
em High School faculty and
coaching staff with all proceeds to
go to the EHS athletic department.

"Year of

We Can Tailor
A l.oan for Youl

Four defendants forfeited bonds threats; Marge Little, Middleport,
and four others were fined in the S!Xl and costs, operatlng a bar after
court of Middleport Mayor Fred hours; Emory Gordon; Cheshire,
HoHman Tuesday night.
$10 and costs, failure to yield the
Forf~ltlng were Richard Payne,
right of way; Patricia L. Grimm,
Bidwell, $40, posted on a speeding Pomeroy, $425 and costs and three
charge; Tim Shane, .Cheshire, $100. days in jail , driving while
and WilliamS. Musser, Middleport, intoxicated.
$100 each, both posted on disorderly
manner charges; Barbara Tolley.
Kenneth Doty, Route 1, Shade,
Rutlnd, $50, expired operator's forteited a $63 bond in the court of
license.
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Fined were William S. Musser, Tuesday night , posted on traffic
Middleport, $100 and costs, and 10 signal violation charge.
days in jail, aggravated menacing

Page A-7

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

City .cuts expenses; balances budget
By LARRY EWING
Times-&amp;DIInel SlaH

GALLIPOLIS - Nearly $150,())) In expenditures
has been trimmed from the city's projected 1986
general fund budget, according to figures released
Friday.
In addition, approximately $100,())) - through the
inclusion of carry-over funds and transfers not
previously Included - has been added to the revenue
side of the municipality's financial ledger.
The end result: a balanced budget for city
operations during 1986.
A line-item review of the municipality's proposed
budget - conducted throughout January by the ctty
administration - had uncovered a deficit of over
too;())) for the current fiscal year.

The total budget reduction -accordingtoPierceca n he attributed to:
- The layoff of employees in the city service.
- Reducing the fUnds transferred by the water and
sewer departments for administrative services.
-A general review and decrease of line items ln the
general fund by the city commission.
With those adjustments in revenue and expenditures, the city wlll have a balanoed budget - and a
slight carry-over - In 1986, according to City
Manager Albert R. Pierce.
·
The city's estimated revenues for 1986 are set at
$4.1l&gt; million - lncluding a $1.44 million general fund
budget. In addltlon, Revenue Sharing and Interest
Income Is expected to generate $163,424.

Expenditures for the year are estimated at $3.78
million. The majority of the Revenue Sharing dollars
- $162,())) - are targeted for the Eastern Avenue
widening project.
In late January, a first round of city layoffs
furloughed eight city employees -- and reduced the
hourly work week of three others.
Three pollee officers and the city's fire prevention
officer were laid-off. In addition , four members rJ the
municipality's blue·coiiar work force were
furloughed.
"The layoffs were needed to balance the budget,"
Pierce said. "Our projections were that expenditures
were going to run about $215,00J over revenues."
"I hated It," he said, "but It was the only way to do

Ohio jobless rate
up .06% in January

Hysell 'gullty'
of involuntary
manslaughter
By NANCY YOACHAM
Tlmes-&amp;Dilnel Staff
POMEROY - Tracy Franklin
Hysell, 21, or Syracuse, has been
found guUty of Involuntary mans·
lauattter In conilection with the
death f1 Z7-year-oldDougiasRosenbaum, who was hit In the head with
a ball bat at an ill-fated party last
July at the Joann Wears' residence
on Rt. 143 In Pomeroy . .
A jury of eight women and three
men deliberated five and one hall
hours before retu rning the verdict
at approximately 10: ll p.m. Friday
evening. The trial began Tuesday
morning In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Hysell , who remained quiet
following the reading of the verdict,
was reman&lt;k!d to the custody of the
Meigs County Sheriff pending
sentencing by Judge Charles
Knight. Knight anticipates sentencing will take place Monday.
Involuntary manslaughter, it
was explained, is an act which
causes the dea th of another as a
result of a felonious assault. A
felonious assault is an attempt to
cause physical harm to another by
means of a deadly weapon.

it."
According to information suppliNl by Commissio n
Presiden l Richard Moore , $12 ,170 has been cut from
the water department 's budget al one.
Those reductions come In !he form d. the
abolishment of two meter readers' jobs. the layoff of
one plant operator, the reduction of two clerks'
working hours to below full- time and numerous line
item cuts.
A proposed water rale increase- pl aced on its first
reading last Tuesday- would generate an estimated
$1!3,271.
That amount - combined with money saved
lhrough cutbacks- would allow the water lrPal ment
plant lo be self-suflicient. Moore said.
IC'onlinued on page A-.31

Hysell faces a possible maximum
penalty of 10 to25years In prison for
the offense. The minimum ls 5 to 10
years but the five year mlnimUJ:!lJ.S
not mandatory.
Hysell was tried on a charge rl.
aggravaled murder.
Judge lnstn!cls Jury
The jury was Instructed by the
judge on lesser Included charges of
murder, involuntary manslaughter
and sell defense.
In his Instructions to the jury, the·
judge explained that to he found
gu ilty of aggravated murder, the
defendant mu st have "pu!p05eiy
caused the death" of Rosenbaum
·' with prior calculation and design.
Purpose to kUI Is an essential
DEMONSTRATES - Traey Hywell, on trial In the Melp Comelement," the judge said. "No one
mon
Pleas Court on aggravated murder charges, Friday decan be found gu ilty of aggravated
monstrated
how he held a ball bat wljch he used to strike the late
murder unless he or she intended to
Douglas
Rosenbaum
at'a party on July 7 as he Is questioned by his
kill."
attorney
,
William
Conley,
Gallipolis. Hysell was found guilty of In·
Three basic elements must be
volunary
manslaugltler.
present the judge said, for a
self-defense plea to hold up - the
" pry" Information from several
de fendant could not he at fault of the danger.
witnesses who were friends of the
Closing Arguments
crea ting the situation, he had to
Final arguments to the jury defendant.
believe that another lin this case,
"It 's rather obvious not everyone
were packed with emotion as
Tina Rosenbaum ) was In danger rl.
death orbodlly harm, and that Tina Prosecutor Frederick Crow rn is telling the truth. And how many
1Continued on page A3)
Rosenbaum In oo way could escape contended that the state had to

COLUMBUS. Ohio IUP! I Unemploymen t In the United Stales
declined slightly In J anuary compared with December, but in Ohio
the rate wen! up six-tenths to 9
percent , the highest among 10 ot l'l' r
comparably sized st ates.
The Department of Labor re·
ported the statistics Friday, and
state officials attributed the higher
rate to a record number of people,
both employed and unemployed, in
the labOr fOrce, whfch JUDij&gt;Ed
40,00J in January to 5.2 million , and
to autumn graduations.
The national unemployment rate
declined two-tenths of a percentage
point from 6.9 percent In December
to 6.7 percent in January . The
department's stallstlcs showed
more than a half million new jobs
were created nationwide.
The number of people witoout
jobs, on a seasonally adjusted rate,
dropped to 7.8 million , the depart·
ment reported , the lowest level
since March 1900 and a continual ion
of a trend of gradual improvement
that started last summer.
Officials at lhe Ohio Bureau of
Unemployment Services said even
though there was a percentage
increase in unemployment during
January, 9,())) people found in the
month to bring tbe total number of
workers wit h jobs to 4.7 million.
The 9 percent figure represent s
468.ml unemployed people in Ohio.
an Increase of 31,000 over
December.

Unemployment
Rate

1 1&lt;1;:::::::=====~

6 %L-~--~~--L-~--~

1982

19B:]

198-1

1985

19Bfl

,•.. '"·

...

JOBLESS RATE - Unllmployment In the United Stales
declined sightly In ,January
compared with December, bul
In Ohio the rate went up
six-tenlhs to 9 peremt, the
highest among 10 other comparably sized states.
"The rise in the unemployment
rate is the result of expansion in
Ohio's labor fo rce during January.
rather than a loss of jobs," said
Roberta Stein bacher, director of
OBES.
Ohio's rate is the highest among
11 large states. including Illinois at
7.7 percent . down a full percentage
poin t from December figures;
1Cont lnued on page A3)

Senate sets hearings on coal research
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Hearings
begin in the Ohio Senate this week
on House-passed legislation provld·
!ng for state bonds for coal research
and development, as permitted in a
constitutional a mendment adopted
last year.
The proposal to sell up to $50
mllllon worth of bonds by June ll,
1987, for testing enterprising ways
of cleanly burning high· sulfur coal
cleared the House three weeks ago.
The Senate Finance Commit tee
will hold its initial hearing Tuesday
morning on the measure, which
allows the state to share in the
profits of any technology developed
with the assistance of state grants.
The House Is in recess this week,
with no commlltee meetings scheduled, and the Senate has set floor

sessions only for Wednesday and
Thursday.
The Finance Committee also will
consider House-passed bills aimed
at discovering wellare cheaters
through Income tax Information,
and providing for the funding of
domestlc violence centers.
Private enterprise will be the
focus ln the Senate Economic
Development and StllJill Bilslne&amp;s
Comml"ee, which- meets Tuesday
morning to dlscu~ " resolutions
asking for support of machine tool
Import quotas and a federal ban oo
Imported cars produced In communist countries.
The Senate Highways and Transportation Committee will meet
Tuesday alterman to take up a
House-passed proposal to designate

Route 42 between Xenia and
Cedarville as Martin Luther King
Jr. Boulevard.
The Senat~ Judiciary Committee
will be busy again this week looking
Into a bill to legalize court-ordered
wiretapping under limited circum·
stances to fight organized crime,
and a constitutional amendment to
provide for the merit selection of
judges. ·
The la"er proposal would have
Ohio Supreme Court and state
appellate judges appolnted from a
list of quallfted candidates recommended by the legal profession.
Thereafter, they would stand for
re-election If they chose.
The Senate Health, Human Servl·
ces and Aging Committee may vote
Wedneday afternoon on a tough

new drunk driving bill proposed by
Sen. David L. Hobson, RSprlnglleld.
The measure reinstates the
72-hour mandatory jail sentence,
ellmlnating an alternative alcohollsm treatment program for firsttime rlfenders, and ensures that the
state law Is enforced within city
limits, which It is not at present.
License suspensioll$ also would be
lengthened for driving while
intoxicated.
The sartte committee will take up
l~latton , introduced last week,
establishing a bill of rights for the
mentally retarded and developmentally disabled, and making
other Improvements In the system
rl. transferring mental patients
from inslltutions to group homes.

Gramm-Rudman ruled unconstitutional
WASHINGTON !UP!) - Con·
gresslonal opponents and supporters of the historic balanced budget
act agree that a federal court
opinion finding the new law unconstilutionalls just the first round In a
wtdenlng budget flghl this year.
A special three-judge panel ruled
Friday that Gramm- Rudman,
which requires automatic spending
cuts If Congress and the president
fail to meet annual de!lcll targets,
unlawfUlly gives the legislative
branch the power to enforce Its own
law. The Constitution gives that
power to the executive branch
exclusively.
The law remains in effect while
the decision by the special threejudge panel ls appealed to the
Supreme Court.

'

The rullng does not Invalidate the
entire law, but effectively snips
Gramm-Rudman of its automatic
budget·cutttng procectvre. A· fa!·
!back provision written into the law
requires Congress !o pass, and the
president to sign, a resolution
approving any 'cuts.
"Ull imately the budget process
may go from automatic pllot back
to . stick shift," said Rep. Leon
Panetta, D-Cali!., who was instrumental In forging a House-Senate
compromise on Gramm-Rudman
late last year, "but the destination
will remalrf the same - slgnllicant
deficit reductions this year."
Rep. Mike Synar, D.Okla., one rl.
12 congressmen who mounted the
legal challenge to Gramm-

Rudman, said after the 111llng It ls
"too soon to proclaim victory."
But fellow Utlgant Rep. Jim
Moody, D-Wis., said the rullng
"exJDsed Gramm-Rudman as the
dangerous sham that it Is."
· Sen. Phil Gramm, R·Texas,
primary sponsor of the legislation,
sa,ld he would appeal the decision to
the Supreme Court, but nevertll.'less had confidence In the fall back
procedure.
"It Is 11'\Y belief ... that we can
make the seconda ry process
work," he said.
"My hope is that we agree m a
b.rdget, " Senate Repubijcan leader
RobertDoleolKansaaaald. "Idon~
think we've lost 8llythlng but the
prellmlDIIIY round. The main event ·
Is In the Su,~ Cwrt."

I

He said the court decisiOn puts
more pressure on Congress to ~
a balanced budget constitutional
amendment and said he hoped to
bring the issue to a Senate vote in
AprU.
Gramm-Rudman requires reducing the federal deficit In large
annual Installments to achieve a
balanced budget by 1991 and
mandates automatic spending cuts
If yearly de!lcll targets set by the
act are not ~nt~t.
The government announced Jan.
15 that this year's cut, scheduled to
take etrect March 1, will be $11.7
IXlllon. The next cut - a much
harsher one - comes ln fiscal 1987
when the deficit must fall below •
$144 billion.

FATAL FIRE - A Charleston-area teenager was kiUed - and four .
other youths btjured - elll'ly Saturday In a house fire on Lower Nine
MUe Rd., Soulhslde, W.Va. Injured were: Tim Skees, 17: Jom Carney,
17, Grabam Cox, 1~; and, Robert Hagar, 16 - aU of Cross Ulnes. They
are lilted In critical oondltlon for rums and smoke Inhalation at
Cabell-Huntington Hospital. The Identity ollhe teen ldUed in the fire was
not disclosed, pending notification of the famUy.
I

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