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...

Page- 16-The Daily Sentinel

Thu~day.April 24,1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sprmg ahead on~ hour
. {f

MIN'S "Ill B" . ,.......

WOI.I
UNIFORMS .
PAIITSt I~ oz. IIO·iron twHI of

'SALE PRICESI

W.Va. ·State hound·'

MEN'S

65% polytler. 35% ooltoo. Foil ·
cut in IJodOitod sins. bar tockod
ot stroin points. Rich pocket.
S1us ll to 50 woist.

TIES

IJ4.95 Pants ...... 111.95

ut.,. Siln)
lb. Siltd

IJ2.9S Shirts ...... 110.35
, ... ShH)

114.95 Shirts ...... 111.95
Ch. Sbtsl

Vol.35 , No.261
Copyrighted 1986

Gil

111.9 S Short Sleeve
Shirts ..................... 19.55

IN STOCIIEADY..ADE

WALLPAPER SALE

REG. 1191.00

PRAPERY SALE

Nn:e assortment of labrics n 111linlld,
ons~lated lonmg or self-lined !tapes.
Solids, prints, florals and stripes
50" widths, 63", n"and 85" leneths:

Give your home a new look!
Choose from hundreds of pat·
tems to compliment any decor.
All are cuaranteed. Most all!
washable and pre-pasted.

SPECIAL

$9900

leg. :10.99 ......Sale Sl.79 pr.
Reg. 14.49 ..... Sole S1t.S9 pr.
leg. 15.99 .... Sole 112.79 pr.
Reg. 19.99 .... Solt 115,99 pr.
"" Solt 111.39

40°/o OFF

0001ntilits Aro limitod

SHEETS .

First Quality no:iron percale sheets.
Each set contlins one fitted sheet,
one flat sheet and two pillowcases.

Twin Sheet Set ........ $13.99

Full Sheet Set .......... $19.99
Queen Sheet Set ....... S26.99

UTTLE BOYS'

DUXTOM

DRESS BELTS

TOPS
SALE

Ssle/
CAPE

By Burton and Lee&amp;in.
ltfany new styles and colors
in this selection. Sizes 30
to 50. Western belts in·
eluded. Select yours now
and save.

DRAPERY
HARDWARE SALE

111.00.112.00

Belts .............. S9.19
IJ2.SO.IJ4.00

Special Sprin&amp; Cle~nin&amp; Sale prices
on quality Kirsch Drapery Hlrdware.
Valance rods, curtain rods, traverse
rods, cafe rods, decorator traverse
rod and drapery hooks.

Belts .............. S9. 99
IJ4.0Q.IJ 5.50

Belts ............ S11.99
116.00-$17.00

Belts ............ S13.19

K~it

COD~

IIISCH

tops, tlqk tops and printed shirts.
S1zes 2T to 4T and 4 to 7.

CURTAINS
Excellent color selection of perma.
nent press, machine washable Cape
Cod ~~rt.a ins. Polyester/Rayon blend
on 68 wodth. Solid color in 24"10 63"
leneths. prints in 24" to 45 leneths.
15.9'1 .... 2A &amp; 30 in.... Sale 14.79
16.99 ............ 36 in .... Sale 15 ,59
19.49 ............ 45 in .... Sale 17,59
19.99 ............ 54 in .... Sale 17,9'1
110.99 ........... 63 in.... Sale 11.79

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

TOWEL SALE

Thick absorbant 85% cotton-14%

polyester blend. Abeautiful as·
sortment of prints.

$2.49 Wash Cloth ... $1,99
$J.99 Hand Towel ... $JJ9
$5.99 Bath Towel.. .. $4.79

S4.00 Tops .......... Sale s3.19
S6.00 Tops .......... Sale S4.79
$10.00 Tops ....... Sale S7.99
$13.00 Tops ••••• Sale S10.39
UMW President
Richard Trumka

SALE

JEANS,
PANTS

SPECIAL SALE!

WOMEN'S

BOYS'

Uniforms
OuaNty brands

Basic denim jeans.
striped jeans and twill

indlllo Crill, Guild
arol Pro Whitn
Pant suits and
drones. S.parotK

REG. 17.00

LIGHT WEIGHT

JACKETS

include slacks,
tops, sllirts arol

Sizes 8to 18. School colors in
the selection plus basic
shades. Some are lightly
lined. •

S16.95 Jackets .... S12.70
s18.9 5 Jackets •••. 514.20
S19. 95 ·Jackets •••• Sl4.90
.$29.95 Jackets •••• S22.40

519.95
522.95
532.95
539.95

Men's
Men's
Men's
Men's

Jackets .. ;S14.90
Jackets ••• SI7.20
Jack•ts ... 524.70
Jackets ••• 529.90

SALE

lab coats.
Sizes 4 Ia 20 and
14 111"' 26'11
llfG. 114.00 to
$45.00

S1le Prlod

S11 19 TO
$3599

By Lord 11111111
Cinch waists or belted styles
in solids and stripes.

Brilliant ~olor performance featuring the conveni·
e~ce of smgle knob tuning. Many deluxe features .
Pme or Pecan.

$111 ~rle1i

$9 59 to

Yo•r Choice

$1599

SALE

REG. 19.00

SALE

$S 59

$ l9
7

REG. $13.00

SAlE

Sl Q39

REG. $16.00

SALE

$12 79

BU&gt;(TOn.
BILLFOLDS
New ones just "ceived.
A fine selection of Ieath·
ers in colors you'll like.
Buy now for grad uatio
cift or yourself.

WASHED DENIM

~.'-..' i
·

',./' . l

_.:.zu.;_,,.,.

S8.00 to 59.00........ Sale S6.80
su.oo to $17.00•••• Sale SIUO
517.50 to SI8.50 .... Sale SIUO
52s.bo s21.5o .... Sale s2o.ao

to

$48800

ICA 19" diagonal Color TV
lrlli•t color perfor-• with the
lolowinl ..... foatoros:
•NtGmOIIc color c.llfrel eM
flnhton. (M' fHtion.

_ _,.... Ind.,.

-s.ptr

Auuflhtr bled lhCIIri1
pktwt tullt.
ttllnlti-M ltt.W~. tho•ls.
.... tematk: rn f••1 {AFT)
oe..~..oyw-

JEANS

Heavy weieht blue den im

Sizes 29 to · 42 waist:
Ch00$1 your correct length
five pocket jean and scoop
front pockets, metro stitch
hip pockets. Watch pocket.
Clusic fit. This sale -

$1150

USE OUR FREE
PARKING LOT

"

plori&lt;•- ..... - . -

~a~

MEN'S

·~· $18.00......... 113.50
SpOrtswtar
·~· $24.00........ '11.00
Sportswtar
leg.l32,00
Sporl1wtar......... 124.00

·

RCII 19" diagonal

Walkine shorts and pedal
pushers.
Junior Sizes 5/6 to 15/16.

·~·
$1UO......... 110.50
Sportswtar

slacks.
Months sizes thru size 7

25" Color
Console

SHORTS

Knits
Iissy sizes to 20.

financial
doldrums
now over

RCA

JUNIOR

Solids.
tops.

uMW's

UTTLE BOYS

SALE

CHILDREN'S

SPRING

JACKET

RED LABEL

UNDERWEAR
Includes Hanes Briefs sizes 30 to 44,

SALE

lined 111d unlined jackets
Denim jackets .
·
Sizes 12 to 14 mos .. 1 to 4,
4 to 6K, 7 to 14.

T-shirts sizes S, M, Land XL, A·shirts
sizes S, M, Land XL and Boxer Shorts
sies 30 to 44.

Hanes 510.29 T-Shirts ......Sale S8.23

Hanes S1G.25 Boxen ... Sale sa.20
Hanes 57.99 Briefs ....... Sale S6.39
Hanes S7.99 A-Shirts ••• Sale S6.39

'9.00 Jacket ..... '6.29
112.00 Jacbt ..... l8.39
'11.0.0 .latUt ... SJ2.S9
122.00·.1atUt , ,IJS.39

Elb,ltldl
fOIUOf, OtiiO
11141 tt2·117J

CHAIGI CAIO
I

\

..

2 Sections. 12 Peges

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio , Friday, April 25. 1986

campaign promises by proposing a !Ml percent income
tax Increase within two weeks after becoming
governor when he allegedly had promlsa:l no new
taxes.
Glllrnor said that he has programs for all of Ohio
aimed at rebuilding the economic cllmale In the state
and develop jobs for Ohioans.
Commenting that he had no negative remarks
aboul other Republican candidates, Gillmor dld point
out that he Is winning Important enoorsements as he
campaigns, the most recent coming from The
Cleveland Plain Dealer and Mayor Donna ()Nens,
Toledo mayor.
In closing, Giilrnor urged a strong Republican
licket "lo retire Celeste".
Other candidates speak
Manning RDush, candidate for reelection as Meigs
Commission, staled he is looking forward to working
with local Republicans for a total Republican victory
in the fall; Sarah Gibbs read a letter W'glngsupport of

26 Cent1

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

the tuberculosis levy facing Meigs voters in May;
Barbara L. Deeds and Jan Seaman, roth candidates
for lOth District State Central Committee Woman,
spoke asking for support, along with William A.
Keslar, candidate for District State Central Commit·
tee Man; Meigs Treasurer George Collins SJXI~ on
behalf of Meigs Auditor William Wlckllne, uoopposed
for reelection.
Also speaking during the meeting presided over by
Mrs. Maxine Goegleln, president of the local club,
were Garry Hunter, Athens, and Myron L. McGhee,
Gallipolis, both candidates for 94th Distr1ct State
Representative. Both Hunter and McGhee were
critical of Democratic Incumbent, JolyM Boster,
charging that she Is not close to the people wiDm she
represents.
·
Hunter commented that the proposed road to the
Ravenswood bridge 10 years from oow is oot
satisfactory. He says he stands for a (Xlllcy through
which able bodied welfare recipients are required to

work for their henefi ts an~poses laws which permit
employees to file double law suits in accident cases.
McGhee commented that Southeastern Ohio has
"no clout" and that Lhe people will have ID stick
together to seek economic development. He pointed
ou t thal lhe OhioRiver is a great asset to Southeastern
Ohio, and suggested tha t, perhaps, boats could be
built and sold here. He staled thal the area must have
highways and the coal mines must he ~pt in
operation for good of the economy . U he is elected
representative, McGhee said he will set up an &lt;tftceln
each of the three counties, Gallia, Meigs and Athens,
in order 1o be more knowledgable of the ooncerns of
the people.
Introduced last night were Carson Crow, assistant
proseculor; Larry Spencer, clerk of courts; Collins;
Emmogene Holstein Congo, recorder; David Koblentz, Roush and Richard Jones, oounty comrnls·
sloners; PhU Roberts, county mgineer, and, Ruth
Frank, representing Sheriff Howard Frank.

Gillmor leads spending race
for gubernatorial candidates

SPRING

MEN'S

•·

ary enttne
or blasts Celeste, not Rhodes

By BOB HOEFLICH
Stmtbtel staff writer
Paul Gillrnor, president of the Ohio Senate and
Republlcan candidate for Governor of Ohio, leveled
most of his criticism at present Goveroor Richard
Celeste and shifd away from any soots at his
Republican opponents, James A. Rhodes and Paul
Pfeifer, when he appeared In Meigs County Thursday •
evening.
Glllrnor was principal speaker al a meet the
candidates night staged at the Meigs High School by
lhe Meigs County Republican Women's Club.
Glllrnor commented "the stale can't stand four
mol'!' years of scandal and mismanagement under
Dick Celeslt'" as he spoke urging Republican suworl
in Ohio in the May 6 elect,lon.
He said Republican suppor1 will give the
Republican governor-elect the suppor1 needed lo
accomplish programs In Ohio. He criticized Govenor
Celeste
he charged, failed to kff&gt;p his

COUNTRY
ROCKER

your eyes

Weekly serniO!Idte on Page 8

•

e

$8.50 &amp; 59.00 Ties ....... 56.35
S10.00 Ties ••·................. S7.50
512.50 &amp;$)3.50 Ties ... $9.35

IJ6.95 Pants ...... 113.50

(l,pe~

.-,

~ ,I

A fine new selection of solids and ·
patterns in four-in hand and ready
tied ties.

lATCHING SHim: Lone toils.
double yoke bock. bulton throuJh
floppod pockets. S1ies 14 ~ to
"~-

Oak -extra
heavy
construction.

J

CHARLESTON: W.Va. (UP!) For the tlrne being, the United Mine
Workers union Is standing on more
solid financial ground.
By raising miners' dues, shuf·
fling investments and seiling Its
Interest In a Washington bank last
year, the UMW has succeeded in
countering financial setbacks
caused by massive layoffs in Lhe
coalfields.
In its repor1, the UMW said
·Thursday an $&amp;a·month dues hike
- from $32 to $10 - allowed It 10
collect more than $13 million in dues
lasl year, compared to $11.9 million
I he year before.
Presiden t Richard Trumka persuaded lhe union to sell lis $70
million share of lhe National Bank
of Washington, purchased .by UMW
Presiden t John L. Lewis in 1949,
because better returns could be
realized Ihrough other inveslrnents.
The union also sold $1.4 million in
coJ1X)rate stock and bough! $18.3
million In other stock.
The repor1 was prepared by
UMW Secretary-Tr~urer John
Banovic, who said the union's
financi al ootlook last year lm·
proved dramatically over the pre·
vious year through better Invest·
ments and other chan ges.
The UMW earned interest of $6.5
million last year, a jump of $11.4
million from 1981, according to the
LM·2 reporl that aU unions must file
with the U.S. Department of Labor.
But much of lhat income was
generated by a selective strike fund
and cannot be used for operating
expenses.
The report said last year's cash
rs:eiptsitllaled $125.6 million, whlie
disbursement s came to $66.4
mllllon .
Cash held by the UMW In bank
accounts climbed from $74 million
at the beginning of I he yearto$133.2
million at year's end, with the
selective strike fund accounting for
nearly half.
Net assets rose from SU).7
milllon at the star! of the reporting
period to $141.4 million al the end,
according to the ro:port.' Nel assets
the year before totaled $41.9 mlllio~.
Banovic said the selective str1ke
fund, collected through assess·
ments from working miners, stood
at $63.3 million at yea~·s end.
Nearly $17 mllUon of the fund had
been invested In corporale stocks
and another $40 million in govern·
ment securities and certificates of
de)Xislt, with the rest remaining in
-Tegu lar bank accounts, he said.

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI)- Ohio
Senate President Paul Gillmor,
R-Port Clinton, outspent his two
opponents for the Republican guiJ.
emator1al nomination during the
financial reporting period just
ended ; · according to the latest
campaign finance reports.
However, reports flled Thursday
showed former Gov. James Rhodes
with $:n6,9Zl available to spend
before the May 6 primary election
- far more than either Glllmor or
state Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus.
Gov. Richard CeleSte, with no
Democratic primary opponent,
raised $1 million since last November' s election and his cam·
palgn fund showed a balance of $1
rrollllon.
The various candidates for statewide office flled Lheir reports of
rs:elpts and expenditures through
Aprll 16 with the office of Secretary
of State Sherrod Brown.
The GUlrnor campaign fund
showed $276,215 received and
$:m,002 spent during the period,
leaving a balance of $57.585.
Gillrnor's report showed $152,500
spent on media advertising.
Rhodes raised $328,180 and spent
$'Jl5.914, leaving his balance of

$,:n6,927. His media buy , which did
not show up on the report, is
estimated at $lXl,!XXI. Rhodes'

in itial fundraiser of last Nov. 9
netted $238,317.
Pfeifer received $101,617 and
spent $93,194 including $19,594 on
media advertising. The fund balancewas listed at$9,217, wlthadebt
of $2,500.
Celeste brought a $1 million
balance tnto the reporting period
last November. He added contributions of $1,003,071 and spent
$1,123,:m for a balance fl. $1,003,149
and loans totaling $.};,779.
The goveroor:s report sbowed
$73,017 worth of in·kind contrtbutions (services performed) from
the Ohio Democratic Party. It
revealed a $3i,OOO donation from
the Lorain County Democratic
organization, and $40,000 from
Peter E . Lewis d Mayfield Village.
Chief Justice Frank Celrore22e
showed receipts of $539,487 for the
reporting period. A total of $48,877
was spmt, leaving a balance of
$532,940 counting a carryover from
last November.
Celebre?.ze's ~ponenl for the
Democralic nomination for chief
justice, J~fferson County Prosecu·

lor Stephen Stern, received only
$6,390. He spent $3,481, leaving a
balanre &lt;t $2,!01.
Judge Thomas J . Moyer of
Coiuml&gt;J s, the unopposed Republi·
can candidate for chief justice,
raised $115,130 and spent $54,213 fo r,
a balana&gt; of $60,8n
Donald Ford, the Trumbull
County appellate judge enoorsed by
the state Democratic party for a
vacancy on Lhe Ohio Supreme
Court, led the spending in that
three·way primary with $79,941. It
included $00,000 borrowed from
Eleanor Grabowski of Warren and
$4,500 donated by her husband,
John.
Ford's campaign fund siDwed a
balana&gt; &lt;t $8,710 and debts totaling
$70,500, Including $al,!XXI botTOwed
from John Paylavlas of Warren.
Ford's opponents, Herbert
Brown and John Connor, Columrus
atlorneys, spent $4,377 and $3,099
respectively. Brown's fund balance
was $27,502 and Comor's was $9li.
Judge Joyce George, the UOOP"
posed Akron Republican who wlll
face the · Ford-Connor- Brown
winner, reponed a balana&gt; of
$7,316.
(Continued on page 12)

an

ALL SMILES - Paul GWmor and his wtfe, Karen, were smiles u
they visited Meigs County '11rursday nlghl to a&amp;iend a meet the
candidate night held by the Meig!l ecu.-y RepubUcan Women's Cklb.
GUbnor Is a RepubUcan candidate for the nomlllatlon to run lor
Governor ol Ohio.

Fonner Pomeroy ·village employe seeks $200,000
Donna Koehler Powers, of Mlddiepor1, has flied suit in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
against Dale Smith, Harlan Webrung and Chester Knight, as

members of the Board of Public
Affairs of Pomeroy Village, Mayor
Richard Seyler, and Pomeroy
council members Larry Wehrung,

Academic proposal
gets board approval
Eastern High School students in
grades seven through 12 with an
average of 88 or better in academic
and elective courses will oot have to
take semester tests this term.
Meeting Wednesday night at the
school, the Eastern Board of
Education accepted a proposal
from the student council supported
by petitions with student signatures
as~lng lor the change in semester
examinalion requirements.
The students asked that anyone
with an A or B average in thaI
course he excused from taking the
examinalions. The board, however,
set the 88 percen 1or better average.
The aclion applies 1o this semester
only, wit h lhe board Ia give
consideration to a permanent pol·
Icy later.
The board acknowledged the
students' Interest and agreed that
the procedu ~;e mighl increase
motivation to achieve higher
grades.
Approval was also given for 60
students to participate in "Hands
Across America." The action followed reading of a letter from Gov.
Richard Celeste and the Supt. of
Public Instruction, Franklin D.
Walters,' by Joe Bailey, student
council advisor, In which it was
suggested that school children be
allowed to participate In the
program to raise $6 mlllion fur the
hungry and homeless of America.
The board approved a driver and
bus expense for 60 students. .
The board also approved a
request from Carolyn Tripp for lour
videos at $45 each lor her English

...

class, "The American Shon Story",
with lottery monies to be used for
the purchases. Mrs. Tripp also
talked on the proposed teachers'
competenancy based testing and
wU giv~ fur1her information ID the
ooard later.
The neEd for a multiple unit
OOokup for the computer system
was approved with the maximum
oost heing$1600of which~wlll be"
expended oow. FUI dirt and seeding
d the softball field at a oost of $350
and half· of the cost of lhe fence for
the Chester Elementary play·
ground, :s;m, was also approved by
the board.
Bulding insu ranre with the
Dmming-Chllds Agency was ap·
proved at $5,7ifi per year. The
ooard also agreed to enter Into a
contract with lhe Trl·County Joint
Vocational Schoo! Board of Educa·
lion as fisca l agent for the
educational media resource center
and to furnish rredla service for the
district for the J986.87 year at a cost
of $1,721, or $1.00 per student.
idndergartm lhrough 12th grade.
Participation of the eighth grade
girls in a career awareness seminar was approved. The Jl'ogram
entitled "Be All You Can Dream"
through the Tri.County Career
Developrmint wlll be held May 8 at
the Hocking Valley Inn,
NeisonvUle.
Mary Price, special education
coordinator, S(Xlke 1o the board on
eniichment day lor the gifted and
talented. fourth, fl!thandstxth, held
Friday at Rio Grande College and
(Continued on page 12)

,,

WUIIam Young, Betty Baronick,
Bruce ReEd and John Anderson.
Powers is requesting judgment of
W,OCO from the defendan ts.
The suit stems from what the
plaintiff alleges was her wrongful
and Illegal termination fo·om two
employment (Xlsillons wllh Pome·
roy Village. On May 15, 1~. she
was terminated from her employment at the village water dlice. On
May 20, 1984, she was terminated
from her postilion as a parttlrne

dispatcher for the village.
The plaintiff alleges that her due
process and constitutional right s
were violated because she was
terminated from her posilions
\\1thout hearings.
Powers Is seeking damages lor
lost wages, and for the embarrass··
ment, harassment and emotional
distress she allegedly suffered.
In other court actions, Columbia
Gas Transmission Corp. of Charles·
ton, W.Va. has filed separate

actions In Meigs Cou nty Common
Pleas Court against Syracuse
Home Utilities Co., Charleston
W.Va.. Racine Gas and Service Co.:
Charleston, W.Va. and Rutland
Fuel Co., Huntington, W.Va.
Columbia Gas alleges that the
three companies are delinquent In
making payments and requests
judgment of $143,033.63 from Syracuse Home Utilities, $58,89S.OO!rom
Racine Gas and Sll9,333.1D from
Rutland Fuel.
•

--··

HONOR snJDEI'm! - Tlee 11 Juniors Mid
seniors or Southem·lfilh School, Racbte, ha~e been
Inmeted In the school's chapter o1 the National HCMIOr ·
Society. 1bey are, front !rom ~II. Diane Slrn(18011,

KeniJieelle, o11nutQ' Wo!Je, U.hel Reiber; lleCOIId,
Mandy HID, Lori Adams, Tammy 'lbelll8, Kbn

Adams; back, Penny Hysel), 1beresa Bm1 and Lisa
Ptll'IIOns: .

�"the Daily

Commentai-y
The Daily Sentinel
'

111 Court Street . -

·U~derstanding Reagan ___W_i_llia_m_F._B_uc_kley_J_r. .

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO TIIEINTERE'i'I'S OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ol Th e Un l!ro Press l n tt'rna tton al, In la nd Dally Prtoss Assocla lton and thr Amc&gt;rira n N ~· spapcr Publis her s Associa tion.

LEITERS OF' OPINION are welromr. They should IX' less than~ words
Jon ~ . All lt•ttl'rs arl:"subjt'C'tto a:litlng and mu st be slgned wit h name. address and
tf&gt;lt'Phont• numbN . No unsigna:l l t&gt;tter s will be publ lshl"d . Let1erS sh ould bf' In

good taste. addr('Ssin f;!' Issues, not pt&gt;rsonalil iE-s.

The Lighter Side

Parker labels suit
'shot in the dark'

Page-2-The Dally $a11tlnel
Pomerov- Middlaport. Ohio
C:ricla'{. Ap~l 26, 1988

When Henry Kissinger went
down to Washington last week to
address a mretlng ol academicians
at what he thought was a closed
meeting, he spoke of Ronald
Reagan and his administration In
terms he would not have used
addressing a Republican rally. But
It yru Ilstmed carefully to every· ·
thing Kissinger said, and weighed It .
comprehensively, you would find
him much rrore ·shocking to
academicians than to Reaganlte
loyalists.
.
Of Ronald Reagan Kissinger said
that, just to clear the air, he was In
no way "Indebted" to Reagan- In
the sense, let us say, that Henry
Kissinger would be bound to
acknowledge being Indebted to
Rlcnard Nixon. He went on:
Moreover, If you meet Reagan and
talk wltll him briefly, you wonder

how he managed to be electlll
governor ol California, let alone
president of the United States.
One can hear the academic
audience !llrring at this !X'int; w tIt
did not anticipate what was to
come.
Kissinger went on to say tllat In
fact Reagan had dominated the
(Xllltics of Cautornlalor eight years,
had dominated the political Ufe c1
the United States for six ytars, and
not Inconceivably could go down as
one of the trost slgnl!icant presidents of the century. · ·
How can this he?
Because, Kissinger explained,
the apparent llmltattons of Reagan
totaUy disguise an intultive . grasp
he has not only for priorities, wt
also for technique. Here, Kissinger
later explained, is a man who
managed to change his entire staff

without a rippled change In policy,
so.clearly'did he himself dominate
policy. A president woo dearly
rutwitted the Soviet Union through
1!&amp;1 and 19&amp;1 on the matter d
deploying theater weapons In Eu·
rope. When Gorbachev arrived In
Geneva It was widely conjectured
that he wpuld "eat" Reagan ~live. ·
But Reagan's Intuitive wit, his
sense ol what to get Into, what not to
get Into - what academicians
might call his retlculatlve sense of
order - ended him up oomlnatlng
the summit. And just as Gorbachev
now believes that by thrmtenlng a
summit cancellati:m because c1
Ubya he wlll embarrass Reagan,
quite the contrary Is likely: Gorba·
chev wlll lose, and Reagan gain.
Now what got reported !rom all
the abcve over ABC was mostly
the business abcut how Kissinger

·Here's a bough
for additive tree

&lt; CINCINNATI (UPI) - The last summer, Parker admitted he
Pittsburgh PiratE$' suit against · began using the drug In 1976 and ·

wondered that Reagan ever got
elected governor of California, let
alone [resident c1 the United States.
Nothing was said about the subtledes of Mr. Klsalnger's extemporized remarks, let alone his statement to the academicians that they
tend to suffer as a class because
academicians tend oowadays to be
either job-seekers or tevollltlonar·
ies. They are, accordingly, not
attemptlngtocai'I'Ytheload, to help
!llblic figures to conceptualize
problems with clarity. As an
example, take Nicaragua. Mr.
Reagan Is . here genuinely handicapped by hls rendering of tiE
[rOblem, Either the problem Is
grave enough to bring U.S. action,
&lt;r It 1'1 not. U It Is, $100 mlltlon Is a
meaningless antitoxin; It It Is not,
then we have no business helping
the oontras at aU. The academic
class tends to Ignore refinements In
stating the question.

CINN

One ootes from Ronald Reagan
Jr.'s amustng and deft piece In
playboy magazine that alongside
the oon-reporter, hiding rutslde the
sumrnlt room ln Geneva was
presidential historian Edmund
Morris, with the same nurnlnou.s
notepad on which he haswntten the
ftrst pari c1 the best biography ever
done on Theodore Roosevelt. It Is
Kissinger's lrnpllclt point that
Reagan deserves a biographer of
tlle subtlety of Morris. But between
now and the consolidation of
Reagan's reputation ID America's
history, commentators need to be
cautious. Last year, Jack Kemp
press aide John Buckley (a ne-phew) bunted a question about
Kemp (Wasn't he too stupid to be
president? ) by citing Reagan
(They $31d Reagan was klO stupid
to he [resident). What emerged In
many news stories was merely:
Kemp Alde Says Reagan Too
Stupid to Be President.

WASHINGTON (UPII - "(be Agriculture Department has figured out
that you and I eat about four pounds of food per day. At least you do.
1 personally am on a diet that doesn't allow me to consume more than
3.!1! pounds daily. But don't let that stop you .
Go ahead. Be a glutton if you like. Just don't ask me to pay your grocery
bill.
Anyway, if you ate food in 1984, you downed about 1.426pounds that year,
give or take a few stalks of broccoli. Or you did if you are average.
Some of us. as I have already Indicated, eat more than others. But,
blessedly, 1984 is the last year for which statistics are available. No telling
what the projection for 1999 .might show.
.
Average annual food consumption has lncroosed from 1,359 !X'Unds In
1965. Or maybe it's the food that has gained weight.
In 1900, when average eaters consumed 1,614 pounds, the menu Included
a lot of potatoes. which probably were pretty heavy for their sl';f!.
•
Since then. fibrous foods, which possibly weigh less than potatoes, pound
for pound, have become big sellers.
In any event, I salute the nation's 2,326,000 farmers and ask where would
we be without them. They provide food for 271 million people, oot all of
them overweight.
Perhaps we would be justified in asking why only 271 million. The
"Our guest today is David Stockman, who built a vast web of confusion
Agrlculturnl Research Service indicates that sclentlflc farming is simple.
For example, tlle service reports that "the pendulum Is swinging back In
Ronald Reagan Is a very unusual
a~d. self-delusion and_ resorte~ to budget flimflam before he signed a $2.4
favor of naturally occurring or derived antimicrobials and preservatives
man, with unusual hablls of mind
m1lhon contract for h1s memOirs and came out smelling like a rose."
In food, medicine, cosmetics and other products."
and manner.
I take this to mean It Is OK to grow additives again.
There was a time, as all average consumers and horny-handed tillers of
the soU are aware, when even naturally occurring additives got a bad
name.
A wmper crop of additives probably wouldn't have been profitable In the
marketplace. The average additive farmer Ukely would have needed to
oorrow money from the government to pay off a bank loan.
But that situation has changed, apparently, and now the pendulum is
WASHINGTON - Rep. Les magnesium batteries, wt the matter shortly. SourCf's told us tlle
could buy lithium batteries for
Aspln, [).Wis., the hard-w&lt;rking Army figured It was worth It, and report wlll say the lithium batteries
swinging .back again.
"SJMflallzed needs and a )!ll'ger
At any rate, researchers report that grocery sroppers are becoming
chairman of the House Armed last year decided to switch.
are better but rrore expensive, and
quantity of cheaper magnesium
suspicious "about the toxicity and side effects of the sy nthetic non-fatty
Services Committ ee, generally
The General Accounting Office, that oome batteries made of lithium
batteries.''
rules on Pentagon matters with the though not sure abcut the Army's and some made of magnesium may
compounds."
Aspln added !X'Intedly; "! would
Presumably, shoppers are switching to products laced with the real
Impartial wlsoom c1 King Solomon. cost figures, concluded that "the be preferable until a cheaper, ~preciate your personal attention
tlling. Which would account for the latest swing of the pendulum. ·
But when a Wisconsin company operatiOnal advantages ol the second-generation lithium battery
on this matter."
When I was living In an.agricultural region, farmers didn't have many
was In danger of losing a lucrative lithium battery justlly the Army 's can be developed.
The Army didn 't take the hint, !ll
pendulums. Mostly, they relied on trac1ors, plows an_d tools like that. But
Army contract, Aspln lntevened decision to trove from magnesium
Against the formidable array of Aspln wrote Sculley again on Nov. 8
ibm, they didn't grow very goo&lt;) additives either.
and, emulating the biblical mo- to lithium batteries."
expert opinion, the magnesium
to Inform him tllat "private IndusAdditive crop failures may be. one of tlle reasons synthetic non-fatty · narch In his most famous ruling,
A study by the Army 'scommunl- battery had only one thing going for
try" had provided technical data
compounds became popular.
suggested that the baby he cut In catlons/ electronlc command [re· It: Ray-0-Vac. The llrm Is tlle sole
that contradicted the GAO report,
Nowhere on the char! I saw was there any mention of average additive
two. And unlike the harlot In the Old . dieted thattheconverslontollthium contractor for the Army's magne- the mainstay rt the pro-lithium
consumption: Not even in 1909, which was before side effects were
Testament story, the 4rtny agreed would save $1.5 mllllon over the sium batteries and has Its head - case. The same day, the congress.
to have Its con tract cut In twllin. next . five years. The lithium quarters In Madison and five other
invented.
man also wrote the Army's auditor
Nevertheless, I applaud the trend toward natural preservatives and
And it was done.
contracts may total $50 million in plants at various locations In
general to express concern.
pledge .myself to buy only organic additives grown with a genuine,
In acquiescing to the chairman' s the firs t year.
Aspln's rome state. As It turned out,
The generals finally saw the Ught,
urging, the Army overrode three
hand-powered pendulum.
this was enough.
and decided to wy roth magnedetailed studies. Here's what
Ray-0 -Vac primed the !X'Werful sium and lithium batteries at least
A third study, by a chemistry
happened:
professor, two -Navy scientists and oommittre chairman with Informa- this year and probably much
The Army wanted an economical two outside consultants, said: "The tion and Aspln set out to change the longer.
replacement for magnesium bat· Army's progra m to concentrate on Army's mind. Correspondenre 00.
Footoote: An Aspin spokesman
terles, which don't work well In lithium batteries Is reasonable." talned by OUf associate Les Whitten
de~nded the Army's switch and
sub-zero weather ·and conk rut The experts found that the need lor includes a letter from Aspln to
Aspin's role In lt. The fact tllat a
altogether at 40 below. The answer more !X'wer at lower temperatures Assistant Army Secretary Jay
Wisconsin cOrporate constituent 'ot
seemed to be lithium batteries, "can realistically be met only with Sculley last Sept. 18 saying: "It
the chairman benefitted was Irrelewhich perform well in the oold, are lithium batteries.''
might make more sense to abandon
vant, he said, adding: "The system
saw the logic and reversed ltseH."
Finally, the Pentagon Inspector the Idea of a universal battery."
I'm some what late about writing help we (the Americans) are more powerful and last longer.
Instead
,
A
spin
suggested,
the
Army
Uthium
batteries
cost
more
than
generalis
scheduled
to
report
on
the
always
there
to
help,
and
now
when
my opinion on Libya but the more I
we oould use a little support we get
toought about it the madder I got.
: I a horn and raised In Germany !lit down and caUed names. That
but I'm now an American and I'm goes for other countries too. I'm
!iroud of it . To come to the point, I'm real disappointed with the Gernnan
· ashamed that I ever was a German, people.
RALEIGH, N.C. (NEA) - The record through a series ol vicious "at- continuing interest only to the far and distinguished record will enable
Erika Garnes
tJecause when ever they nreded
Wilkesville, Oh right-wing zealots in North Carolina tack ads" on television. The discredit- right's "true believers" - the federal him to surmount the Funderburk
once again are inteqt upon destroying ed Morgan was defeated by Sen. John government's decision in the late challenge - but North Carolina's
the integrity of a politician who dares P. East, R-N.C., a Helms protege.
t970s to relinquish control of the Pan- landscape is littered with the bodies
to stand In the way of their efforts to
of those who underestimated the pow- .
When Helms was seeking re-elec- ama Canal to Panama .
dominate the state's politics.
lion in 1984, the Congressional Club
Many political observers here re- er of the Con~ressional Club.
In earlier campaigns, the targets ol financed an eq ually vitriolic - and main convinced that Broyhill's long
the far-right fanatics were moderate equally successfu l - smear camliberal Democrats, but this year the paign against his Democratic oppo- .
:As you know It is prom season. everyone to help, and It Is mt toobj~t
of their scorn is a conservative nent , Gov. James B. Hunt Jr.
Ellstern High School's prom is always teen~gers, sometimes It Is
Republican,
Rep. James T. Broyhill, a
When East was plucked from obtonight, April 25th. Meigs Is Satur· adults. So please be cardul If yru veteran of a dozen
terms in the.House. scurity by Helms and the Congressio$y, April 26th and Southern is are out on these nights and don't
Broyhill's ideological purity has nal Club to run for Senate in 1980, he
Saturday, May 3rd. We the con· drink and drive. Prom night is been certified by organizations rang- was a college professor who had nevcerned students of Eastern High supposed to he happiest night of ing from Americans for Constitution- er held any political office.
Sjlhool are trying to prevent your life oot your last.
al Action, a conservative group that
His term expires this year but he
a~cldents caused by drinking and
Mrs. L. Balderson has been rating members of Congress will not he seeking r~lection be- '
di-tvlng so we are asking for
for almost three decades, to Congres- cause of poor health. As a replace.
I
sional Quarterly, a non-partisan re- ment, the Congressional Club has
search organization that analyzes leg· plucked from obscurity Dayid B. Funisla tors' voting records.
derburk, a college professor who has
ACA calculates that Broyhill has never held any political office.
supported conservative positions in (Helms ha~ insisted, publicly and
aimost87 perp!Ol pf kll.l!.YO\es during privately, that he is not involved in
the 1970s and 1980s, wliile CQ says he Funderburk's campaign - but that's
Rule
~3
Behavior
at
the
bus
stops.
I have received a copy of the
has been a member of the "conserva- a distinction without a difference. He
Sc!tool Bus Conduct Rules, for our There Js no supervision, so how do tive
coalition" 8&gt; percent of the time .. has been too close to the Congressioyou
know
what
goes
on
and
who
to
dliltrict as I am sure every parent
In
addition, the authoritative Alma- nal Club and its operatives for too
did. I agrre we must have rules for give demerits to? Come on board nac of American Politics character- many
years.)
th!Z safety of our children, but I am members, GET REAL! Go out and' izes Broyhill as a "calm, steady,
That
brazen attempt to maintain
U)Jift about the ones concerning the take a look for yourselves at some workmanlike" legislator who' is "one
control
over
both of the state's Senate
of these "BUS STOPS", see how of the most important and hard-work· oo ce.Ued "BUS SIDP".
seats
is
complicated,
however, by the
I :uve In the Arbaugh · Addition, safe they really are. And while we ing Republican members of the fact that Broyhill also is seeking the
and' where my daughter and )1 are talldng safety, how about the House."
Republican senatorial nomination in
But that's not good enough for the the May 6 primary.
otl)er students get on the bus. There tlmes the buses are over crowded
Is !Kl place for them to walt except and the students barely have room NationaL Congressional Club, the
Funderburk's handlers ha_ve sought
In Ihe road or In the ditch. Are they to sit dowrt? How abcut spreding'? powerful fund-raising group founded to discredit Broyhill through a series
to get demerits for not beln!(clear of Some of the buses travel these bad here in 1973 by Sen. Jesse Helms, R- of shrlll, negative television commerroads around here like they were on N.C., and his supporters.
traUlc? Rule #2.
cials that charge the repres~.nlatlve
The linchpin of Helms' political or- "voted for tax-funded abortions," supA5 lor being at the "stop" before tlle trreway. Since there are oo
ganization, the CongresSional Cl ub
for the bus to arrive. Rule #1 laws for.seatbelts In wses, aren't ·routinely seeks to impose mean-spir- ported "the blllion-dollar Martin LuJuir how long would you want them there some laws concemlng over Ited, narrow-minded standards upon ther King holiday" (a thinly disguiSed
to §land outthere In the road, ditch, crowrted and speeding'? Safety for races for House and Senate seats racist appeal) and was "tbe only
Norlb Carolina Republican to vote for
In the min or soow waiting on tlle students? GET REAL PEOPLE!
throughout the state.
" We can't BOTH go to the party wearing the
Tip
O'Neill's big-spending budget."
U&gt;na Cazart,
• bus, which ·may arrive either
When Sen. Rober! B. Morgan, D"Out of Africa" look.
In recent weeks, the antl-Broyhlll
Con~rned Parent
eru!Her or later than usual? Or If It
N.C., was seeking re-election in 1980,
campaign
has
revived
a
stale
issue
of
Tuwers Plains the Congressional Club denigrated his
isn'i yrur chUd, do you even care?

ROUNDS 1111RD - Clndnnall Reds oudlelder-ftr!ll baseman, Nick
l!lilaalcy ( 12) gets a handshake from third base roach Bills DeMars alter

Soto snaps Reds' losing streak with 3-0 victory
HOUSTON (UPII-TheHouston
Astros, woo rallied to win their last
twO games, Thursday night encoun'tered someone who made sure they
wouldn't do It a third time.
Cincinnati Red MarlO Soto spun a
three-hit shutout Thursday night
~alnst the Astros, improving his
·record io 2-1 oo the season with his
,68th career game.
"' Though Soto and hls catcher Bo
Dlaz botll declined to ta.ik to
reporters after the game, Reds
·manager Pete Rose and the rival
Astros had plenty of praise for the
Cincinnati right· hander.
"You jpst have to take your hat
.of! to the man," said Houston
manager Hal Lanier. "He kept the
ball down and he stayed ahead c1

Lobbying WOrks ____J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n_&amp;_D_a_le_Vt_an_A_t_ta

U

;wo-h:t
shutOUt
a.
I(

:: ROCK SPRINGS- Meigs' Barb
l!a111eld continued her brllllant
Pitching with a one-hit shutout 2-0
Win over Logan here Thursday tn
gtrls sottbaU action.
: Hatfield had a no·hllter broken up
In the seventh Inning when Logan's
Evans doubled.
• The Meigs ace turler fanned two
and did not walk a batter as the
Marauderettes llfted their record to
16-1 overall while remaining at 7·0
In TVC play.
Meigs scored the game's only two
runs In the second when Hatfield
and Maria Musser led off with
walks, Jennl Couch singled one out
later to load the bases, Shannon
Hlndy singled In one run, and Cindy
Rlf!le walked to l:lrce In another.
Couch and Hindy had two hits
each to pace Meigs wlile Jodi
HarriSOn, ')'amrny Wright, and
Carol Smith singled once each for
the Marauderettes.
U&gt;gan's Edwards did not fan a
batter while walldng six. Meigs Is
off untO Monday when tlley host
Nelsonvllle-York.

c

Wants safe prom nights

Berry's World

Safety for students??

•

Ayel'll kept on staff

time

'•

'

f. ld j,lres

nat
le
•

Right .takes aim ________R_ob_e_rt_~_al_te_rs

'

almost unhlttable.''
Astra third baseman Phil
Garner, who romered off Soto last
Friday, said the Reds' ace "looked
Uke the Soto of old."
"When he stays ahead In the
count, his chang~ up Is so good you
just can't sit on it. Plus he had the
best velocity I've seen him have In
the last two years," Garner said.
The Reds stayed In contention
throughout the 1985 season, never
losing rrore than four games In a
row. They entered Thursday
night's ,match having lost their
previous four games.
· "Mario's only one of our
stoppers," said Rose, who took

By Ualled Pre!a Intematlonal
The New York Mets and St. Louis
Cardinals are playing this season as
It the last one never ended.
After playing a close season
series In 1985, the clubs have
. ~\~ready gone to extra Innings In
their only two games this season.
"I don't know why the Cardinals
·and Mets do this to each other,"
Howard Johnson said Thursday
,!light after hitting a two-run homer
·to give tiE Mets a 5-4, 10-lnnlng
:victory over the Cardinals.
.. Johnson's romer tied the score
4-4, and George Foster singled
:~ the winning run the lOth.
,!Je[ping tbe Mets extend their
.winning streak to six games. St.
,~&lt;outs has lost four straight.
., Last year, the Cardinals won the
·season series 10-8, with five of the

Disappointed native

.'

the hitters all night and when he
does tllat, It makes his cha,pge-up

himSelf off the disabled list Wednes·
day but did rot play Thursday. "He
was In total .control and after tlle
second Inning, he really threw well.
His change-up was working for him
and he threw llke he's capable of
throwing. Ours!Brtershaven't been
throwing as well as I had toped they
would, but we heat a good team
tonight. I hope this Is tlle start of
something good."
The Reds took a 1-0 lead off losing
pitcher Mike Madden, 1· 1, In the
third.
Eric Davis ripped a one-out
double to left field and stole third.
One out latG", Astro second ba~
man Blll DOran made a low throw
to first on Dave Parker's ground
· ball and Davis meed-home.

Mets edge Cards; Dodgers triumph

Letters to editor

•

his fomth Inning home nm Thursday night at Hou.ston 's Astrodome. The
Reds behind Marlo Soto shutout the hot A!itm, 3-o. UPI.

r

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI I -Ohio
State University bead basketball
coach Gary Williams announced
today tllat Randy Ayers will remain
oo the coaching staft as a part-tim~
assistant.
Ayers has served In a similar
capacity tiE pasi three years.
"Since coming to Ohio State, I
have been very impressed with
RaDdy Ayers as a person and with
his knowledge c1 baskl!tball," said
wuuams, who was named head
coach c1 the Buckeyes March 15 to
replace Eldon Miller. "His expe·
• lienee here plus his background In
Ohio wUJ make him an ilvaluable
. aildltron to our !taft.''

games entering extra Innings.
Johnson's blast and Foster's RBI
single came off losing reliever Todd
Worrell, 0.1, woo entered the game
In the ninth. Roger McDowell, 2-0,
hurled the final two Innings for New
York.
In the lOth, Wally Backman
walked and stole second . Two outs
later, Darryl Strawberry received
an Intentional walk, and Foster
lined his third hit of the night , an
RBI single to left.
PhiWes f, Pirates 2
At Pittsburgh, Mike Schmidt
smashed two home runs and
knocked In all t:lur runs to !llpport
the flv~hlt pitching of 2·1 Shane
Rawley, who notched his second
complete game. Schmidt hit a
two-run romer and a solo shot,
giving him bur on the year, and a
sacrifice fly. Pirates starter Rick
Rhoden, 2· 1, took the loss. .
Cubs 7, Expos 5
At O!lcago, RlckSutclltfe,l-3, hit
a thrre-run homer to lead the Cubs.
The right-hander let up seven hits
and six walks i1 6 1-3 ilnlngs, and
struck out eight. Jay Baller threw
the last 2 2·3 t:lr his llrst save, while
Montreal starter Bryn Smith, 5- 0
against Chicago In 1985, fell to 1·2.
Dodgm8, Braves 3

At Los Angeles, Mike Marshall
and Greg Brock lashed solo ho-

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mers , and Mariano Duncan, who
was hitting oiuy_ .147, delivered a
two-run double to lead Los Angeles.
The last· place Do"'ers, 6-ll,
rommltted ro errors In a game for
the first ttme this season, backing
Orel Hershi ser, 2·2. Tom Nledenfuerearned the first Do~er save of
the year. Rick Mahler,1-4, lost his
fourth straight
Yan !tees 2, lnclans 1
At New York, first baseman Pat
Tabler's fielding error allowed
· Bobby Meacham to score from
second base, giving tlle Yankees
five straigh t victories, an ll-4
record, and their best start in 28
years. Ron Guidry, 3·0, became the
first Yankee to pitch a complete
game this season. Neal Heaton. (J-1,
took the loss.

Nick Esasky jumped on a 1·0
Madden offering, to open the tburtll
and blasted the balldfthescreen In
left to give the Reds a 2·0 lead.
"He threw me a couple of high
change-ups the first time up, so I
was lOoking for it.'' Esasky said of
his third homer of the season.
The homer was the 18th for the
Reds In the young season, good
enough to give them tlle National
League lead In rome runs . .The
Reds had at least one home run In
each of their first twelve games.
, Cincinnati added the final run In
the eighth. Dave Concepelondrllled
a one-ou I single and stole S&lt;fOnd.
Buddy Bell walked before Ron
Oester singled to right to score
Concepcion.
The loss dropped the Astros Into a
first place tie with Idle San
Francisco In tlle National League
West. Cincinnati -trails the leaders
by 3\-2 games.

him is "a shot In the dark to get out
of an obligation," ~ ou11lelder
and Iarmer Pirate Dave Parker
says.·
Pittsbu rgh Associates, new
owners of tlle team, !Ued the suit
Monday, claiming tllat Parker
breached the· nv~year contract he
signed with the club In 19'19 because
of his admitted use c1 cocaine. The
team is seeking relief from de·
!erred payments of $5.3 million to
Parker scheduled to begin In a!S.
"I know exactly what trose
people In Pittsburgh are doing.
They're taking a soot In the dark to
get out of an obligation," Parker
said Iii an Interview published In
Thursday's ClnclnnatL Post, the
first public comments he has made
oo the rnatt er.
"I view this as being very
Ignorant oo their part," Parker told
the paper. "They say I didn't give
my all. wt I played with broken
jaws. bad knres, all types c1 injuries
and Illnesses. All I did was glve·llO
perrent In that town, and trose
owners want to sue because they
say I dldn 't give my all. That's
absurd."
Parker, 34, led the National
League In batting while with the
Pirates In 1977 (with a .338average l
and 1978 (.334, ll rome runs and 117
RBI), when he was named the
league's MosYVruu3bl'e'Piayer. By
1983, his last year with the Pirates,
his average had slipped to .m with
12 home runs .
During the cocaine trafficking
trial of Curtis Strong In Plttswrgh

Trimble trips
Southern, 8-6
TRIMBLE - After leaving the
tying run on second base, the
Soutllern Tornadoes fell to Trimble,
8-6, here Thursday . In non-league
baseball a.ctlon.
After Southern tied the score 5-5
In the sixtll, the Tomcats plated
three six th Inning runs t:lr the win.
Southern drops to 9-6-1 a.rerall while
maintaining an 8-0 SVAC mark.
Trimble's Shuste and Davis
combined to fan t:lur and walk two
while Southern's Jim Wolfe fanned
four and walked live. Southern's
hitter Included Wolfe with a !Dubie
and lwo sln~es with four REI's,
Scott Wickline, Ryan Oliver, and
Todd Adams had a single and
double each, and Brian Freeman
and Kelly Grueser each singled.
Southern travels to North Gallla.
In league game Monday.

SALESPERSON WANTED
DUE TO INCREASED SALES, WE HAVE AN OPENING
FOR ANEW AND USED AUTOMOTIVE
SALESPERSON. AUTOMOTIVE SALES EXPERIENCE
NOT ~ECESSARY, BUT SALES EXPERIENCE
PREFERRED. SEND RESUME OR APPLY IN PERSON
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, BETWEEN 10 A.M. &amp; 12
NOON ONLY.

JIM COBB CHEY.·OLDS.·CAD.
POMEROY, OHIO

became a regular user il 19'79.
Parker testl!iro he continued to
use the drug Until 1982, when he
stopped using it because it adver·
sely affected his perfornnanre.
Asked why he has been the the
player most oltm associated with
the drug trial and mw the the
subject IX a suit, Parker res!X'nded:
"Maybe It's because I'm block.
Maybe It's because I'm verbal and
successful. I don't think many
people thrive on those !acts when
they are ilJt together.
"And I think people are still
trying to get back at me for being
the first mllllon.&lt;Jollar·a· year
player In baseball. No 'imdern.&lt;Jay
player has been through anything
like I have. I've been throogh heU
over and over again."

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has sched·
uled local public hearings
in its case No. 85· 726-ELAIR. In the Matter ol the
Application of Ohio Power
Company to Increase Cer·
ta1n of 1ts Filed Schedules
Fixing Rates and Charges
fo r Electric Service. lor the
pu rpose of providing an
opportunity to interested
members at the public to
testily 10 the proceeding.
The local hearings will be
held at the following limes
and places: Tuesday. April
29, t986, at 6:30 p.m. at
the Lancaster Municipal
Building, Council Chambers.
t04 East Main Street. Lan·
caster. Ohio: on Wednesday,
May 7. t986, at 6:30p.m.
at City Council Chambers.
Room 1t4 , Munictpa l
Building. Find~y . Ohin: on
Thursday , May 8. 19l'3. at
6:30pm at City Council 01·
lice. 2t8 Cleveland Avenue ,
S.W.. canton, Ohio; on
Wednesday , May 14 , t986.
at 6:30 p.m. at the City
MuniCipal Building. Council
Chambers, First Floor. t 13
South Third Street. Steuben·
ville, Ohio.
By its appliCation , Oh1o
Power Company seeks a
rate increase which would
gene rate approximately
$73.390.000 tn additional
gross annual revenues
based an a test year consisting ol the twelve mon·
ths ending March 31.
1986 . As a result of its in·
vestigation . the Commis·
sian's Statt has recom·
mended an increase in !he
range at $t·.438 ,000 to
$t 5,329.000.
The major issue in the case
raised by obj(1Ctions to the
Staff Report are: ·
a) the appropriate allow·
ance lor operating and
maintenance expenses,
b) the proper determination
ol the allowance tor work·
ing capital;
c) the appropriate rate
of return to be authOrized:
d) the appropriate value ol
the company's rate base:
and
e) the appropriate alloca·
lion of revenue responsibilit y among customer
classes .

..'

WATCH FOR·f'
POWELL'S
SUPER ·vALUE
INSERT
IN.·SUNDAY'S
NEWSPAPER
'

BIG BRAND DOLLAR SALE

�Frldly. April.2&amp;. 1988

GOING TO WEST VIRGINIA STATE - Brad lloliiL!IOII, Meigs'
outstanding running back for the pao;t three SC88011S, has signed a letter
of inlent 1o attend \\lest VIrginia Slate CoDege this fall. Robmon, lUI
i\11-TVC per!om1er, c'OOecled 2,i!93 yards ruslingdumghls hllh school
career. He Is shown with Ids falher, Mike stm, left, lUld Coach Charles
ClllUll'eY.

foofbaU coach Clifton Moore followlng Rolinson's slgnbtg.
·
The former Ml!fauder Robinson
could make an Immediate tmpresslon on Yellow Jacket football
tortunes as the NAIA school had 17
of 22 positions manned last year by
either freshman or wphomores
while struggling to a 2-8 record.
· Assistant coach Bryce Casto
agreed with roach Moore as to
Rotinson's bright future In Yellow
Jacket country. 'Bradley Is the best
tailback we signed this year and Is
going to he a dominant force In our
league. He comes with the highest
reccomendatlon from his outstandlng high school coach, Olarley
Olanrey. And when we get a
recommendation trom Olanrey,
we know from previous experlences that It will~ a solid one,' said
Casto.
He added. 'Brad has the opportunity to be an Impact player. We
have talent at tailback, but Brad
should see plenty to playing time
with his physical ablllty and with
his Chanrey-coached oockground
. Is fundamentally mnd,' added the
WVS assistant coach.

By BOB HOI!:FUCH
. S IW Slaff Wrler .
While we all are famlllar .with
April raindrops
that keep falllng
on our headls, we
were certainly
not prepared for
tljls week's snow
shOwers - what
a , , revoltln' '
development.
By the way, you might want to
remember that Sunday Is the day
you move your. clock ahead one
hour as once more we rrove into
'daylight savings time.

(

7 CADILLACS·.IN STOCK .
The tradition continues.
The 1986 Fleetwood Brougham.

OAK HILL - The Meigs girls
rrcentl\' claimed the Oak Hlll
Invitational track meet championship while the Marauder boys also
performE'd well wit h a third place
finish among 16 teams.
Final girls standing were Meigs
79 points, Wheelersburg 74 .5,
Nelsonville-York 53, Wellston 48,
Ross Southeastern 43, Oak Hill 40,
Huntington Ross :l7, Minford 28,
Valley 26, Gallla Academy 17,
Nonh Adams 16. P011smouth East
12. · Meigs Eastern 8, and Jackson
6.5.
The final boys standings were
Wheelersburg 110, Wellston 71,
Meigs 69, Hunllngton Ross 39,
Jackson 34. Oak Hill33, NetsonvUieYork :12. Federal-Hocking 24, Valle}' 19, Portsmouth East 17, Minford
14 : North Adams 8, Chesapeake 6,
Meigs Eastern 4. N011h Adams 2.
and Gallla Academ.v 0.
The Marauder boys raised their
record to 17-2 while the Marauderettes went to 16-0.
Leading scorers lor tre Meigs
boys included Mike Chancey, seco~d place In both high jump and
400 relay; Brad Robinson, second in
400 relay and fourth In long jump;
Gerald Moore, first in pole vault:
Brvan Kom . second In pole vault;
Rix Haggy. second in both 1600and
3lDl runs: Wes Howard , third in :!XJ
dash, second In 400 relay, and slxth
in 300 low hurdles; Scott Nelgier,

Meigs suffers
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs rode
the strong arm of Jeff Nelson for a
9-5'TVC win over Trimble Wednesday. but fell to Logan, again 9-5. In a
oon-league game Thursday at
Meigs.

six th In 8)) and 1600 nms and third The preliminaries and field events finals start around 11:40. The meet
In 3lDl relay; Olris Smith, Dave will begin at !Oa.m. and the running should end around ~
Warth, and Eric Johnson, all third
in the 3200 relay, and J. R. Kitchen,
second in 400 relay.
Adffiissl on Price Policy
I~O·JN"I~ifR
Coach Gordon Fisher's powerful
Bargain Matinees
Marauderettes set meet and school ·
Cinema.,'))
Sot.
8.
Sun ., All Seats S2 .15
records in three dHferent catego- .
.... ,,
Adm . Every Tuesday , S2.25
ries Including Stephanie English's
12.8100dash (she also won the :llO)
Now Playln~
Starts Friday
and both the400andlrorelay teams
consisting r1 Stephanie English,
Dreama English, Tammy Cremeans, and Olarmele Turner.
Other Marauderettes scoring Ineluded .lenni M!Uer, sixth In the
high jump; Wend! Kloes, fifth In
3lnl; Anzy Radekln, fourth In 100
hurdles; Jennl Swartz, third In lJO
hurdles; Tammy Gardner, fourth
in 400; Rhonda Neece, fifth In the
high jump; Mlsst Howard, Jodi
t~.·1· '4 .U.MM lll&gt;l1h '
Taylor, Gardner, and Swartz,
· -~ -- ·· ,_
,_ .......
second In 1600 relay, and Neece,
Howard, Leslie Cart 'and Donna
·
7:00 , 9:00
t:very t:venin•• 7:10, 9:10
Every Evenmg,
Lambert, second In 3lDl relay.
Sat. and Sun. Mat., 2:00
Sat. and Sun. Mat., 2:10
The MHS track teams are
NO MIDNIGHT SHOW
Sat. Midnight, 12:40
currently preparing for the TVC
meet that wlll he held Saturday at
L MIDNIGHT MOVIE I'OR RIPtEY PROM ' WILl .
Meigs High School. Meigs' girls wlll
E "PROM NIGHT" • Rated R • al 12:30 Sat. Night.
~ attempting to win trelr third
straight league meet while tre boys
are expected to give Belpre a run
for the league crown. Belpre has
won tre TVC boys crown every
year since 1976. .
All ten TVC teams wlll compete
In both boys and girls competltkm.
~t,, ~

H l•n'~ .1t .trlh.:Jt RC'h mor(' (•x d11\i\lf'

hv rt'mammg trut• to 11~ tr.uh t•on~ l•kr· 1h tr.l dr!IOn..ll \1/e .. the
lonp,t•-.1lrmlr'l c 1r m o l(~' rn Aml'fic a
[1 ~ \r,nliiiOII.I!JMIWer , .11L'W fur

t'.l{ h yt'¥

UIOU)\hJm • ~ .r powt•dul l .O lrll 'l VII
A1Kl1h lr&lt;itlllum tor tunt'lt..,., •tylrn,i{ ..

,,MIFM ''''It'll r.lditl, .1nd more&gt;. ${'(&gt;it
ltxl.tv-amt dr'tLtNCI wha t Cad!lliK · .

fl ',IIUIIflg ol L fl l'l'l f •l!l. I UI IIIII\III!'• ,fvlt_'

trJrl tlll •n• ,)If' m.ldP oi.

~.~

9~5

'•

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,•

._.

,.,.._.

o;c,11, [')()\Nf'l" wrnclow'i .:~nd door l ock~.
fiU,Il -bu\lun [lee Ironic Cl rmatc (untrnl.

..
:

\.

\~
'. .
I'

H[\!1 11 \II

,.

- - - -- - -

I ErS (;[T IT tOGETHER ... BUOd f UP

' .,

Jim

I

HOURS ·

Mon ., Wed .. fli . 8 .30 to 8
Tuet &amp; Thun . 8 .30 to &amp;:30
5•turdey 8 :JO to 4

(FORMEALY SIMMONS

PH. 992-6614
orr" S.IIOU 1-1
JOB LMA.ST.
POMIROY,

o•.

II

The Century Une. It's only from Walker Machinery
Company! So call one of our sales·representalives today _,_ and discover the deal of the century for yourself!

m

1YOUR CATERPILLAR OEAL E R

.•

Caterp,llal . ca·l and [B are Trademarkso!Caterp•llar T•at:IOI Co

For On the Job Security!

Drop-loaf

1

••

1979 Cad ilia( Sedan DeVille ................ S2995

(KRACO) IN-DASH AM/FM STEREO

, . RADIO &amp; CASSETTE
WITH TWO SPEAKERS

,'egular $499
Lim1'ed Quantities

EVERY LIVIIUi ROOM GROUP SALE PRICED!

6 PC~ WOOD -GROUP
6 PIECE VELYO NYLON SLEEPER
STARTING AT

CHURCH

$999

6TH &amp; PALMER ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SLEEPERS

'799

SALE

...•

36 MONTH

WAIRANTY

by
Webb
Bauett
Ashley

INSTAU£0

NEW PRINTS

FOR'86

JUTE BACK OR RIIBBER, 72 MONTH WARRANTY

COMPLETELY INST AI.LED
"

40%

' ,.

•
•.,

Auto., PB., PS, air.

1976 Ford F-250 ...................:............... SI95

JIrTl

4 Speed, PS.

HOUR!; ·

Mon ., W•d ., frl. 8 ·30 10 II
lu•• • fhurt . B·JO l ct 5:30
S•turd•y 8 ·JO lo 4

Owl ' ' 1~) 949 II@ •

.

$

OCCASIONAL
CHAIRS

\

I
I

'

'

I

COMPLETElY INSTALLED

FREE
With
Wat1r Bed Purchase
Set 01 Sheet5
Mc:illress Pad
lnstollation
2 Pc. Roil Cop
$100 Value

· Qu.aen or King

•19900
H·DA YS

OLDSMODILE CADILLAC

VInyl Solei
by
Armstrong ·
Torkett
Mannington

o•.

H

KITCHEN PRINTS

'9" Sq Yd . tnstolled
REMNANTS
Cash &amp; Corry
$79l

Sq . ld .

We Welcome

I:IIZ.D

21ft 11U.. Stdl
Ttltil~... 2lWIZ1

t-5

7
7
S11 SQ. YD.

son SIDES
WATER
.
QUEEN
BEDS !lfttl WAW S499

DISCOUNT FURNITURE

lfOfiMERLV SIMMONS OLDS -CAD · CHEV I

I

• '

Free
Set-Up

Cosh &amp; Carry

' "

'

·.

$99

$169°0

308 1. MAIN ST.

('

AT

5 Board

1-IEVROLET
POMIROT ,

STARTING

SUPER SINGLE
WATER BEDS

Obi) ~

OPIN IUIIDAT

•'

SQ. YD•

5 lUI WUIAm.;..... IRISH PUPPY PADUFm• GUUANTEI ON ON PADOING

PH. 992-6614

'
~ ~) 253-2706 • Plrkei lbuig (304) 424«i!!O • St.imrJieN&gt;1111 (304) 872-4303 • l.oV,In (»t) 752.()000

s12 77

IN STOCK ROYAL SCOTT

OH

· -*11 00.00 Cash Down or Net Trade-In Allo·
wance. Tax &amp; Title Extra. 60 Monthly Payments
:of '119.00 Per Month.

••
••

$1 7 7

ROYAL SCOTT KITCHEN CARPET .

SALE PRICE '6699.00

••
••

1978 Ford 4 Wheel Drive .. ~ ................ S2895

STARTING AT

FOR YOUR
PORCH

6 Piece

$877

W!Tlf INNIRSPRING MATTRESSES

TURF

S189
7:00 P.M.

$240

WALL-TO-WALL ·
CARPET SALE!

WITH BUNIIES

REV. CHARLES SIMON
APRIL 27-30

$399

SWIVEL ROCKERS

BUNK BEDS ·

-PICKUP

'

$399

STARTING AT

S-1 0

1978 Chevrolet Sta. Wagon ................ SJ395

SAVINGS

J11st Arrived- S.veral Styles To Choose From

•

Maroon, fu lly equipped.

40%

Up To

MONTH

4 Dr., good condition;

1978 Olds Custom Cruiser Sta. Wgn. ..... SJ695

DINING GROUP
Solid Ook

Ill&amp; ROOI

·1986 CHEVY

·

Virginia Ho use

_ _..;,;.;.;;..;,;,.-__'!'II_____________,VVon''t lost long I

$249

~m••rir• ,"ir•n•UI.m.,·

,I

1979 Ford Fairmont Sta. Wagon ........ SJ395

'129

Reg. $499.00

$1' 19~

•
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••
••
•

4 dr., fully equipped, white, good condi·
tion.

Reg . $349.00

'219

LAST OF THE

".'
1

7 Piece

culo• MGtl.
I 3-Pc.

~..-...,.

••

•

• Attracllve financing

.

RE~I~AL
FIRST
BAPTIST

Special singers will he at the
Apple Grove Cllurch Sunday evenIng at · 7 p.m. The singers will
include the McGuire Twins. The
Is Invited to attend.

• Unequalled parts/service availability
• Competitive prices

'179

Cllaln with pl'alol Mol-

2 PC. LIVIIG ROOI GROUP

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
··rJt,.

Sing set

Equipment owners can now take advantage of a complete new line of Caterpillar Equipment featuring:

Auto .. PB, 302.

or vl11lt

A representative of Washington
Technical College wlll be In Pomeroy on May 2 to discu$ toc hnlcal
education l:lr job Improvement
with area residents.
Chrlsllne Little, student development coordinator, will ~ In tre
JTPA office of the Gallla -Melgs
Community Action Agency from 10
a.m. untU 12 noon on that date to
prQVIde lnforma!Dn on Waslington
Technical' College and Its technology programs. Sre wlll also explain
programs available to assist adult
students at the tm year state
college located In Marietta. Perwns wishing to enroll wUI be able to
complete tre application form and
any financl!ll aid papers at that
time.

r:=========11

6000
36d0 TrHtl•·bolt Tablt,
6 (hairs with plaid Htrcu·
lon lflfl,

Nol Exactly u Shown

drt~ ignf'd funeral
arran~mt'nl, jual call

Tech college
• •
rep to v1s1t

THE
GRAVELY
SYSTEM

Auto:, PB, PS, air.

REMEMBER
WITH ToFLOWERS
.end a be•ullrully

f-;;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;::;::;::;::;::::;1

Cliff overall
Kennedy'
s Ma raudersCoach
go to !&gt;7-1
following
tre 11
two games and remain in contendGRAVELY TRACTOR
ing- position In the TVC with a 5-2-1
SALES &amp; SERVICE
mark.
204 Condor St.
Nelson went the dlstanre against
Pomeroy, OH.
n ·imble, fanning a carEEr-high 10
Phone 992-2976
while walking 1lree. Trimble's Rob
SPIING AND SUIIIIIEI HOUIS
Willson and Scoll Shamhart comOPEN MON ••fll.
bined to fan six and walk five.
'
10
5, SAT. 910 1
The Marauders trailed 5-l aft er
four innings. but ~rupted for eight
big runs In the dflh to decide the
issue. Meigs hitters included a
oouble and sin gle by Chris
Kennedy, two singles eac h by
Donnie Becker. Mike Bartrum.

5 Piece

Drep•loal Tulo with

lotory ...., ....... 2

r;::::::::::::::::::fl
II

Minneapolis.
Out of 52 top teams in the state, It
they finished lburth in the B
division. Also Brandln competed In
the mixed doubles with Kim

Rick Wise had a tm-RBI single and
Shawn Baker singled. Jimmy
Holbert !iid Trimble at the plate
with tm singles. Meigs had 12 hits
and Trtrnble six.

300

4100
'
lta 11 tiful~ 1tyled, •!I w'!d colltt:·
tion. Soli wood chavs, wtlh htuy
, idlo back. Thick paddod NOh,
,l:,.n in ri~h. Hrth-tont pla11l
tour. 3h41 lttUit table • "
chain.

Pomeroy Attorney Bernard Fultz
recently marked his 30th year In
Meigs County. Constantly on tre
move, Bernard probably wonders
where all those years have goneIt's Uke that when you 're having
fun. Keep smiling.

Brett and Brandon Hartinger,
sons of David Hartinger, recently
competed In tre Minnesota State
Raquetball Doubles Tournament at
ROseville, Mbtnesota, a suburb of

OLDI·CAO .- CMEY,)

Ro&lt;tl Harrison, and Nelson while

1985 Cad. Sedan DeVille ..... S12,500

I think your birthday annJvel'sary
Is one of the biggest dates of the
year and too often It's forgotten not intentionally- just ooe cl. thOse
things. Certainly, you have a few
friends who would like to know
about your upcoming btrthday.
I'd like to start a "birthday
corner" In this column and I'd like
for you or perhaps, one of your
famlly, to send along to me your
birth date .... just the day ... you don't
have to mention how long you've
been here unless you want.
It does get to a point where you
can feel proud that you've lasted so
long doesn't' it? Al any rate, get
your name and birthday anniver·
sary date to me- no phone calls,
please. Let's make those anniver·
sarles really special occasions. And
why not!

midnight. The party will break up
at 12:30 a.m. Admission Is free and
there wUI be refreshments. And, of
ooilrse, the event Is just what It says
- · plenty of fun without drugs or
alcohol. The party will belnthe high
school cafeteria.

loop loss

SPECIAL

Barnum &amp; Bailey Circus recently
when the show played In several
West Vtrglnla cities, yoo can still
catch tre l9ll6 editiOn In Columbus.
The show wUI be at tre Ohio Center
In Columbus from June .3 through
.June 8 playing trere for the first
time In 12 years.

Drug free entertainment night
will he held at the Meigs High
School again this year on May 10
beginning with registration at 7:30.
There will ~ a talent show with
prizes at 8 and a danae contest at

11 • \(II~H /(

in Meigs

Instructors wlll Include Allen Unda Manley, pediatric trauma;
of Middleport, Dr. James Witherell, child abuse;
auto extrlca!Dn; Bud Sanilrd, Beth ·Stivers and Catlzy Baldwin,
farm extrlca!Dn; LlfeFIIKht acene · hospital communlcat!Ons and Dr.
team by til! Grant Hospital 'David Price, management of
trauma. There wUI he displays of
Trauma SerVices; ·Russ BOrn,
repenJng; - C•.Robert. FislEr, com- new eq ulpment by Parr Emerputer assisted training; John C. gency Products and tre Physlo·
AdklJis and .l:&gt;ill Sigafoos, emer- Control Co.
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
gency medical servtre flld t te law;
serve lunch.
Cllarles Wood, mine hamrds;

wanace, formerly

It you didn't getto the perlbrman-

Shirley Pyles Evans, clerk_.
treasurer of the GreenWOOd Ceme·
tery Trustees, asks that I ~mind all
Cel)1etery lot owners that ,lot care
wlll he bllled In June this year. Also
during the upcoming mowing sea son, all polled and artificial plants
must be placed near headstones to
help workers engaged In the
mowing processes.

rrw-winctow tre.ltmcnl and the leKf'nd.lry
sr ulptl'd !Jnll~ . ln)rd&lt;•, the trad•tional
t u~urv ol s!Jndard ~· x - w.:~y power front

~et

The Daily Sentinei~ Page-5

ces !I the Ringling Bros. and

· Russell Zwilling, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Troy Zwilling of Syracuse. Is
coftflned to a hospital where he has
undergone back surgery. Cards
may he sent to Room 200, East
Chestnut, 4-K. Room t Nortons
H~pltal, Louisville, Ky. 40al2.

RUM FOR COYER!

• '·

Fortman of Richfield, Mlnrt., and
they finished third In the B divisiOn.
Brett, 16, and Brandln, 14.
formerly of Middleport, .have only
~ playing raquetbaU tor two
years and are trained by Soil
Hughes, professional at the Bums·
ville Racquetball Club. They are
nephews of Mr. · and Mrs. Lionel
Boggs of Middleport.

,"Blue Color Blues" L~ playing this
evening and Saturday at 8 p.m. at
the performing arts center at Rlo
Grande College. Suzan Thoma,
daughter of Pat Thoma. Pomeroy,
haS a small role In the production.
Tickets are available at the box
office.

Marauderettes win Oak Hill Invitational

E. Byer, chaltman; H.B. Mullen,
secretary-treasurer, Pomeray;
Dave Davis, Rutland; George
Cummins, Racine; Gene lmbo!En, ·
. Syracuse; Gary Ellis, Middleport,
and Brian Bissell. .Tuppers Plains, .
Meigs County wt11 host an all day has planned tre school wtth a wide
emergoncy medica) school for range of t~lcs ID ~ presented
Southeastern and Central Ohio during the event which qJeDS with
Sunday afMelgs Hlgfi Scbool.
registration from 8 to 8:30a.m.

-EMS class

April StJOW showers

Robinson will join l:lriner Meigs _ ence squad as .a punter Ia§! year
quarterback Bob Ashley at WVS. · . With a 4&gt;.9 average. Ashley, oow a
Ashley Is expected to forego any senior, had the third best punting
quarterbacklngdutlesthlsyearand average of all NAIA schools last
play only as a punter, wll!re he season and earned honorable men- .
excels. Ashley was namEd to the tlon all-American NAIA homrs.
first-team all-West Vlrglnt.a confer·

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO
Aoommlttee mmposal ofRo~rt

..

•

peat of the bend 1

·Robinson signs··with We8t Virginia State
· INSTITUl'E, W. VA. - Meigs
High School's alHJme · leading
rusher and scorer, Brad Robinson,
has signed a letter of Intent to
contlnue his football and educatlonal careers at West Virginia
State.
:J'he 173 lb. tailback Robinson
galloped for 2,595 yards In 31\
carries (7.8 yards per carry) In his
three years as a Marauder ball
earner while scoring 246 points.
Robinson was named the cooffensive player of thl' year in the
TVC while earning first-team honors for the second straight year to
help the Marauders to a 9-1record
thls past season.
The muscular Robinson also
earned second team class AA
all·state booors his senior year.
Brad rushed for !,316 yards and
scored H4 (X)ints, both school single
season records. during tre past
season.
'Brad Is the outstand,lng tailback
we hoped to recruit this year. He
has all the tools to ~ dominant In
our league. We look tlr big things
from him In his carfl'r with the
Yellow Jackets,' said WVS head

.

'

Friday, April 26, 1988 .

Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

II. 2 fnll' .._...
IIIWII Mil. lkl S1t. 1-1·

�Page- 6-The Daily Sentinel

Pon;ov-Micklepott. Ohio

Calendar I happening
'
FRIDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education wUi meet
Friday, 8 p.m , In the high school ·
cafeteria.
SYRACUSE -Jitney supper 5 to
7 p.m. Friday at the Carleton
School, spcnsored by MARC.

Sunday . at the Rejoicing Ufe
Baptist Church, 333 N. Second Ave.,
Mlddlepcrt. Kulkln has appeared.
on the 700 Club and speaks
frequently at chaslsmatic ronferen·
ces. Services are at 7 p.m. on
Saturday and Sunday and at JO a.m.
Sunday.

SUNDAY

RACINE - Registration lor
kindergarten In Southern Local
School District. Friday. 8 to JJ a.m.
and !2:30 to 2: 30 p.m. at the
kindergarten quarters. Parents to
take ali immun17.ation papers and
birth certificate of child.

RlJI'LAND - Ell Denison Post
467 Sons of the American Legion
will spcnlior a "jamboree" Sunday,
starting at 1 p.m., andfeaturlngllve
entertainment. Admission wUI be $3
per person. Everyone welcome.
ATH·ENS - District J:Rputies
and District··Past Councilors Club,
District 13, Daughters of America.
will meet at 12: ~ p.m . Sunday at
Ohio University Inn, Athens; any
member of the organization is
invited to attend.

SATURDAY
HOBSON - Hobson Church of
Christ in Christian Union will
present the film "Burning Hell."
Saturday, 7:30p.m., at the church.
A lree-wUJ offering will be taken.
Pastor Jorge Anido invites the
public.

MONDAY
POMEROY - OH KAN Coin
Club will meet lor regular session
and election rJ officers Monday
evening at RJverboat Room of
Diamond Savings and loan Co.,
Pomeroy; social hour and tradition
session at 7 p.m. Coin auction and
refreshments following meeting;
anyone Interested In coins is
invited.

BASHAN- Red Brush Church of
Otrist on Bashan Rd. will have
special weekend services at 7 p.m.
Saturday and 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Sunday. Denver HUI of Foster,
W.Va. will speak. The public Is
invited
WILKESVILLE - The Wilkes·
vOle Pythlan Sisters l.odge will
stage a smorgasbord from 5 to 8
p.m. Saturday at their haD with a
meet the candida te night to be
featured. Dinner Is $4 lor adullsand
$l.:.l lor chUdrm.

SollbaD loumey
STEWART- The Gary Puiman
Memorial Softball Tournament wUI
be held May 34 at Federal Hocking
High School at Stewart. Entry fee
for tre first 16 teams Is Sli5 and two
softballs. For Information caD
ffi7-6946 or 667·6484.

MIDDLEPORT- Sandy Kulkln
wUI be guest speaker Saturday and

Friday, April 2S, 1986

more

Change in services announced

Slinderella class has meeting

Virginia Johnson lost the roost
weight at the Monday night meet·
ing of the Five Points class ot
Silnderella. Tying for rumer-up
were Nora Fields and Diana
Herdman. At the Tuesday night
Mason class there was a tie
between Mona Legg and Diana
Roach for the most weight lost, and
between lois Ann R.eltmtre, Susan
Howard and Sharon Roush for
runner·up.
New members are being ac-

persons In this Oluntry are Infected
with tubercle baclW. They have a
life-long rtsk of developing disease,
which can be mlnlnllzed by giving
preventive treatment. Additional
cases will occur In new residents ot
this coun!Jy who come frQm other
areas ot the world where tuberculosis Infection rates are much higher
than In the United States.
.The Meigs County Tuberculosis
Olnlc Is respcnslble for ensuring
the control. of tuberculosis In this
county. It Is estimated that 4(l,IXXJ
persons on tuberculosis registers
are currently under treatment or
medical supervision tor tuberculosis and that each year, approximately 200,1XXJ persons expcsed. to
new cases must be examined.
Tubercuklsls control has been
complicated by the global emergence of organisms resistant to
antl-tubercuiDsls drugs. CommunIty outbreaks continue to occur In
the United States.
Much pride can be taken In the
advances made In tuberculosis
oontrol. It really Is a manageable
problem, hut the eradication will
take tre cooperation of the public
and rrtvate sector to succeed.

cAR ,1E, NEEDED

kids and maternity classes. JoAnn
Newsome Is the Instructor.

Omitted

FOR THE SYRACUSE AREA
IF INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL

Inadvertently omitted from a
report 00 tre recent blOOdmobile

~lthreport were tre names of Joel

tc en and Lenora McKnight,
first
p time donors; Naree Hale and
atrlcla Morgan, ooe gaUon 00nors; BUly J. Spencer, a five gallon
donon, and Homer Baxter and
Donna Davidson, seven gaDon

DAILY SENTINEL

992 •21 56

~~~ -/aAf.~jVAir~r~-'ed_i__
nto__
aJI_cw
__
ses_ln__
cJ~
__
gtbe
_ _oo_no_n._ _ _ _~--~------------~----------

.J!%

::::!.'!'L

ll

II

I

=--

SAll nAnS FRI., APRIL 25
ENDS SUN., APRIL 27, 1986
OPEN DAlY 10-9; SUN. 12-6

J111Y IIAKII,

BULLETIN BOARD

Ala!CA'S
MAIIII

GAIDINEI,

AMEIDCA'S

IICOW..NDS ...

EN CENTER

Public Notice

Public Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNrY, OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
Dobra Sut1 Dodrill,
Adminlstrnlx
of the e-. of
Hilde P. McDaniel ,

lleceued.
- 110-

Diono L Frederick.
et el .•

·•.

Defendlnss.
Cooe NO. 24,661

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
In tho pu,..anco of the
Order of tho P10beto Court of
Moigo County, Ohio, Debra
Suo Dodrill, Ad"*'istratrlx.
wiN offer lor sole It pu bltC
auction on tho 28th dty of
Moy, 1986, ot 10:00 o'clock
A.M.• ot tho officeo of Porter,
Uttto, Shoeb &amp; Frockor, 211 213 Eut..., Second Stroe~
Pomemy, Ohio 46769, the
following described

Beginning ot a conoln point

In !ho wwt oide of Ohio Sbto
Routo No. 7, twelvo foot

wosterly from the wootllno of
said llot8 right of woy, ond
100 loot northo!ty from tho
north Uno of Stroul#ltw ond
Bertho Uttte's Lot: thence
porsltot with tho welt lno of

State Route No: 7 tn •
dilllo1oo of 50 loet to n,.;int
12 loot wootOrty from tho -~
lin a for e distenat of 76 1881: to

Ploindff.

-

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

a point onol•md•od fifty (1501
foot northorty from she north
tine of ooid Lillie' a to~ thence
10utho!ty porollel with tho

Motor Cross Racing
1~~':~;u, 6 milts MUth Paiilt
II

off It, 2.

SUNDAY, APRil 27, 1:00

SUNDAY, MAY 4
llariiH &amp; Cyclt Clinic, preAshton Hart Scrambltr
00.00 far ovtral bilct.
IUII.UV onroll AlV.

AIV 10:00 AM.
liKE 12:00 P.M.

.

Mortar

3.97

-

It Pays
To Advertise
CALL
992-2156

lml

Mix

lllect #1 Package

llolelulh
Aa&amp;orled colors and var·
leltes *1 grade Package
rase bull\ Save nowt

*'
lush --.

Do.. ..._ 1.97,
~ Palled 1oM

11a1en1
6.97

77
.
11

I

Our

~

17.97

71-PI. Garden Hose

6.97
3.97

75'~"

nylon reinforced
hose with brass couplings.

......

1.97 ~.47 ~

Mortar Mix ·

60 lb. bag_ Just add water and

use.

------------------------------ ~---~
4

nnt1ed Yarteflea

CAN YOU

Ow 39.97

29.97

AFFORD TO
SS THIS?
$4900
..

,,...

As•rt_, Shade
Ideal shade trHs
turn yards into
restful,

PLUS IEIATIS
01 LOW FINANCE
IATES

COOPER

Chrysler•Plymotirh•Dodge, Inc.
..
rHAl'SUII

1111111

399 S. Third Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614)992-6421

50-Lb.• lag Marble Chips
Decorative marble chips
~2'fracttve landscaping.

......
-r--------------1.-=:.:_
__________

12

-

11-11" Colorodo IIUe
·· ~ Evergreen ""

Ow 3.97

Popular eveigreen is
Ideal for ·outdoor dec-.
oration. Attractive green
growth. 15-18" size.

TRUCKS
HORIZONS
OMNIS
LEBARON ·GTS
LANCERS
WE SERVICE WHAT WE SEUI

40-lb.• Organic Peat
Moisture preserving peal
for lawns, gardens. shrubs.

2•77 ~

44

ON ALL 1986

"THE DO IT ALL DEALER"

"H.~, · --------------------

~

Our Reg. 17.88

(OVER DEALER INVOICE COST)

HURRY, TN/$ IS A liMITED OFFER

oasis.

1-10 ft.

------

cool

1.47 :~.~7

Our Reg. 9.97

--·
-··-""
-=-.,~_

----

7.97

1-Lb.• Can llo-MGrofllant Foocl
Water soluble for better
yleldl and vigorous gowltt
5-lb. • can. Fast acting, all
purpose. -Shop and save!

Miracle Gro
Plant Food
For tomatoes or
roses. 24 oz.

Our Reg. 8. 97

5.97

11-Lb,• IC·Gro• 27·3·3

Lawn Fertllzer

. D~'elops thick green lawns
wlfh vigorous continuous
growth. Covers 5,000 sq. ft.
area.
18-lb." "C"""
"~g. Savel
' Net wt.

NOTICE Of SAI.E
By IArluo of on Ordor of Solo
t II Coull St.. PoJMIOY. Olllt 4$7i!t
luued out of H Common
Court of Mllgo County,
Ohio, In she cooo of Dlomond
Sovilgo ond Lo.. eo...,ony,
Ploindlf, agoinll Robert T.
Southem, ot oi.," Delondonts.
Public Notice
Public Notice
upon 1 Judgment !herein
1011dtred, -g Cue No. B5 ·
lowing root _,,.oltuotod In line of. Chorlio Clark for o CV 322 In oold Court, I wiD
tt. County of Motgo In 1ho dillanco of 150 foot rrore "' offer tn 11M. at the front door
Stell! of Ohio ond In tho lou!o tho mck clf!a1dthonce of tho C&lt;Mthouoeln Po ""'"'Y·
Township of Salilbury .,d oouthorly otong tho 10d&lt; cltf Motgo County. Ohio, m she
bounded and dooaibod • 10&lt; 1 diftanco of 125 foot moro 6th day · of Juno. 1988. 11
or tea to the northwtllt GJmer 10:00 o.m., H blowing
fottowo:
Porticularty dtlnootod .,d of Cho~io Ctark'o lot ond Iondo and 1&amp;~-b, bcoted
located 1&gt;-v.it: Being In 100 thence ' following Mlterty lt124 Foilt101d Drive, Middleere k)t 327 n Sec. 36. Town olong tho north of Ch..tio port. Ohio 46 760:
1 ond Ronoo 13 of tho Ohio Cjort&lt;'o lot lor • dillanco of
Siluolod In tho Vilogo of
c.,..., ..y·o Purd!M8, to-wit: 225,IHt more or lou 111 tho Middleport.
County of Meigs
Being a conaln lot beginning ot - c o m e r of Jomoo ond Stato of Ohio:
Hundley'
1
Iori
d.
tt.
ptof
tha mutheart mmer of thl
PARCEL .NO. 1: Beginning
IOild of Jomoo Hundley whicl1 beginning, being hw-thirdo of north21 dog . 57' WOII, 76.15
'
io she northeost comor of the ., acre. more or leu.
foot from an iron flln locoted ot
Ard rod -dog bumod
lot of Chortle Clark on tho wwt
she ooulheooterly comer ol the
side of tho right of way of State thot tnll\' be locotod on thol111d M. D. Brickloo .2112 ocre tot.
Roult! 7: thonco nonhorty foro heroin c:onv.vod io Owned by which l8id iron J*1 il t.catad
dlstonoo of 7~ foot moro "' Motgo County. ond II 11&gt;1 on the northerly Ina of Gr1nt
loll. olong she woot lne of convoyed by thil-.
Stroot in the Vltogo of MiddleRefenence Deed: Vok.lme pan, Ohio: !honea nonh 20
State Rooto No. 711&gt; the lOUth
line of Minnie Gooogo 111d 285, Pogo 83, Motgo County dog. 28' 81 .10 loot to.
thonllO _,erly lor o - c e Deed Recordo.
poln~ thence north 36 dog.
Soid
,..1
_,ololocotod
ot
of 75 foot more Of tooo along
56' w011 37.15 loot: thonco
the lOUth li\a of Minnie 28601 Stote Rooto 7. Middle- north 53 dog. 5' 0011 136.9
port,
Ohio
46760,
wlidl
io
George to tho M&gt;uthwllt
at the public road; thence
oppn,.tmotaly 1 end '!J rritoo feet
CORUM' of the Mi\nia George
lOUth 58 dog. 3' 0111 117.5
lot end thence we1terly for 8 - - of lj1e VrUoge of feet: thence oouth 'it dog . 27'
diltlll'lce of 76 feet rT'Ore or Mlddtopon en Stote Roote 7 in MOt113 .61oot 1&gt; tho M. D.
lou olong tho south tine of thoHoboon orvo.
Bricldoo line. thonco north 63
Tho promisoa oro opproiood. dog.
Milnie George to tt. aouthw·
8' 29.4 loot to tho
en com• af the Minnte It 19,000.00 ond mull beoold M. D. Brickloa comer: thence
lo•
not
lou
than
two-thirdo
of
George.lot: ond t...,oa north40 dog. 31 "woot80 .36
vokJo, ond tho oouth
t&gt;rlv along tho welt line of lho tho
loot to she ptoco of beginning.
Mi\nle George lot for a t.... of tho ule oro: Cllh.
Save and "'""'P' tho coal,
Dobra Suo Dodrill, wNch . hos heretofore been
distonce of 50 feet end thence
ADI\IINISTRATRIX ....,.od, and subject to all
westartv pareUal with the north
14125: 1512. 9 3tc
easements aind rights of wey ~

-eta

west line of said Slate Route

No. 71orodistl01coof50 los~
than ce Olllerly pnttel v.ith
H nonh line of ooid Uttte's lot
lor o distiOico of 76 .,01 to tho
ploco of beginning. Tho bt

heroin conveyed to 50 by 75
foot 111d il .,bloct to ony
po- tinea right of . .y
t.retofore granted to po't¥11'

lin,. ond this convoys.
port of the some proportv
real conveyed from tho Botby Cool

Company to the Grantor
ostote:
FIRST PARCEL: Situated in horolnboloro """'tlonod, .,d
tho Township of Salisbury, in conveys the aama trtle • thet
tho County of Meigs. '"'d in convoyed by said Botby Cool
tho Stote of Ohio, ond in 100 Company to the Gr1r1tor

opp-

.:re Lot Number 327, and herein .
SECOND PARCEL: Tho lotpanicutarty bounded .,d des·
aibed • foloWI: to -wit:
----------------~--------------~----~~~~~---L--------------~~~ 0

Riverview Garden Club conducts meeting in area
A demonstation on making
grapev ine wreaths and bows was
given by Sandi of Sandi's Gilt Shop
in Belpre at the rcc&lt;'nt meeting of
the Riverview Garden Club held at
the home of Mrs. Donald Myers
with Mrs. Terry Cline serving as
co-hostess.
Mrs. Ronald Osborne used

"Springtime" and "Mother's Day"
as her topic for devotions. For roll
ca ll members !old an April fool
experience. Mrs. Okey Connolly
Introduced the guest demonstrator.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Ronald
Cowdery. Mrs. Harllss Frank, Mrs.

-

tho

Public Notice

Grant- oro granted

an eu!malt '&gt; melnt.ln fMI
. , , _ of she . . . . ......t

...... t h o - · · . . tl'et they IIIII JIOI In - ...
ln-.. with oold gonogo.
Deed Role&lt;111,.: Vokrmo
263, Pago 947: Voklmo 221.
Page 513: ond Volume 214,
Page 49, of tho Motgo Coumy
Dood Recorda.
A P P R .A I S E D. AT
122.6110.00. Tho rvol Illite
cannot 'be mkt tor tau lhll'l
two-thirdo tho opproloed ......

TERMS OF SALE: C..h en
. Sublocl to

dotlvery .of -

menta, to-wit:
"Sitult8 In

tho ViHogo of
P..........,, County of Motgo
ond Stott of Ohio:
And being In 100 ocro lot
No. 306, Town 1. Rango 13,
of Ill!' Ohio Company' 1 Purch-. and being· pon of
Subdivloion Lot No. 106 of
Honon ond Dobnoy Addition,
and

being

lollowo:

described a•

Beginning at a poi\t oorth 0

who do not have any experience in
using a pattern or constructing
garments. Each participant wUI
work on a skirt project and learn
basic constructlon techniques.
Reglslratlon is $2 and
pre-registration by May 2 is

New officer. were elected at the
Saturday night meeting of the
Reedsville Community Buil ders
Club at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Pickens.
They are Ernest Whitehead,
president. and Roy Hannum, vice
preslent. A committee was ap·
pointed .to complete work by t II!
historical marker on the BellevUle
Dan and Locks Perk. They arc Mrs.
Lyle Balderson, Mrs. Denver
Weber. and Mrs. Ernest Whiteread. Refreshments were served to
the above named couples and Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Osborne and Mr.

and Mrs. Donald Myers and guests,
Mrs. Walt Hensch and daugh ter,

Lisa, of Canal Fulton. Next meeting
wUI he at the Weber home.

SLINDERELLA DIET CLASSES
MONDAY NIGHTS
Five Points Claa 6 p.m.-8 p.m.
TUESDAY NIGHTS
Mason Clau, 6 p.m.-8 p.m.

Houoe in Pomeroy, Molgo
Coumy, Ohio. en tho 9th dty
lin• of Cool Stroot .,d of May. 1986, ot 10:16 A.M.•
German Avenue. slid point of

Oouglea,
eke
Frenklin
Dougllll. de ceu8€t

Cue No. 25,103
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On April 8, 1988, in tho
Meigs County Probate Coun.
Caoe No. 25,103, Roger

is elso reserved to transport

coalll'ld mining material ak)ng
any mineral 188m from adja·
cent and other territory.

hoootoloro '-&gt; .....,ad and
oubjoct to all .....,..II and
rights of woy of record.
F&lt;-nher oxcopti&gt;g •d re-

liNing to the former Gr.,tol'l
oufficient reo! ostoto olong tho

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

Public Notice

1 t\W-car

NOTICE OF SALE
pr-Ior
By virtue of on Order of Solo
tho purpose of constructing issuat out af the Common
uid garage. Said garage. H Pleos Court of Motgs Coumy,

oonlb'ucted. lhiU be oonltNCted of conc::rete or concrete bfodta with 8 conaate
roof and Slid mol ohol be
covered withtoilao 1111 to mlllce

Ohio, tn the cue of Central

Tn&gt;st Compony, N. A., Plolndff, agolnst Osby A. Martin
end Mroy A. Martin. 01 ol ..
Oefondonts. · 14&gt;00 a ;utga992-3382
tt. a~rfoca obovo tho gorogo ment therein ...,dtrod, being
conform to the general surface Coso No. 86-CV·38, in oold
of the r.nei'!i\g portion of tM Court. IwiU offer for ootootthe
conveyed horaby, ij bolng front door of tha Court HCIJH
f----------------------------------------------------i lot
undentood thot tho Iormor in Pumoroy, Motgo Coumy,
granto,. ••ervetho leo li111&gt;lo Ohio, on tho 9th dey of Moy,
ownership of ttw parcel of real 1988, 11 10:00 A.M.. tho
The Carleton School lu nch pro·
estate reaerved hereby. How- following lands and tan ll·
gram menu lor the week rJ April 28
Is announced as follows:
Real Estate General
Monday: ravoll, bread and but·
ter, slaw, fruit , milk.
Tuesday: tuna salad. hoi rolls,
bultered Iimas, fruit , milk.
Wednesday: sloppy joe on oot dog
Real Estate General
bun, slaw, fruit, milk.
Thursday: vegetable beef soup, Now you can get
601
super savings on an
stuffed celery, fruit or cookie. mill&lt;.
e·
.
Mi inl.l»tt~U:..al
Ar1Carved
class
ring
Friday: plzm. salad, fruit , milk.
bacl&lt;ed by a Full Lile·
POMERO.Y, 0 .
Recil
time Warranty. This
• . 992 - 725~
PLUS up to $36 worlll
orter expires May 31 ~
' St.
ol
custom
fetlurft
216
E.
2nd
1986 ar&lt;l is to be used
sT. h J4J - ' newer J
FREEl
Phone
only for the pur·
booroom ranch hon-. . 2
1-16141-992 -3325
chase ol ArtCarved
baths. equipped ~tch oo, on
Siladium high school
SILADIUM' H.S. RINGS
approx. 2.35 acres. Includes
class rings.
NEW LISTING - l48 ac res
chicken house. ~orage bu~d ·
in Bedford Township with 2
in&amp; garden space. Price reold houses, barn &amp; other
duced. $31,000.00.
building. All minerals in·
eluded $50.000.
531 JACKSON PIKE · RT.35 WEST
POMEROY - Small busi·
Phone 446-4524
ness located in town. Garage
NEW LISTING - Old hard ·
BARGAIN HATINEES SATURDAY
Ill ! , Mlln, Pomeroy
BRING THIS AD
and land ideal lor mechanic.
ware store lot in Tuppers
171 )·2209
I SUNDAY - ALL SEATS 12.50
$10,000.00.
Plain s on Rt. 7. Good com·
ADHISSI DN EVERY TUESDAY $2.50
mecial local1on.
NEW LISTING - 2 story, 8
NEW LISTING - MIDDLE PORT - Completely remo·
tms., 4 Brs. , gas FA fu r·
deled 3 bedroom home. all
nace, basemoot, lg. yard,
in good condition, fenced in
garden space, Syracuse.
yard, many nice fea ru res.
$25,000.
NEAR BURLINGHAM - 4
$29.900.00.
acres, more or ~ss, in the
POMEROY - Stalely 2 st01y
woods. 2 Br., trailer, I ~
home in tow n. 7 rooms, 3
baths, l. P gas fiJ rnace llld
bedrooms, I\\ baths. base·
buildi ngs. Just $1~.009
ment, nice lmnt setting
SYRACUSE - 7 rm . ranch.
fami ly rm. with fireplace,
porch. $25,900.00.
carpeting &amp; garage. In Rus·
tic Hills.
_
LANGSVIijE - 6.35 acre
country estate. Barn, sheds,
BRADBURY - Good 7 rm.
two ponds. and a nice 1\\
brick, gas furnace, cook &amp;
bake units, fiteplace, 4 Brs..
story home in good repair.
Elet. heat plus a wood·
2 porches, gatage ~ level
burn er lor cheap heal.
tot. Reduced lo $28,000.
SYRACUSE - Want a gar·
$43.!K!O.OO.
den or playgtound? 2 Br.,
RACINE - Have yoo been
one !loot home with new
looking lor acreage with a
kitchen . new range, new ren1ce house? This 3-4 bed fri gerator, washer &amp; dryer.
room ranch is right lor you
Asking $39,900.·
and your lamily. 4.1ii acre
CHESTER - New ~nyl sidSEE VOilA DEALER NOW
lot grues you space. Hen-.
ing, new ~ !chen, 3 Drs., carhas lull basement, lin ~hed
petin g, gas heat, basement.
family room . nice workshop,
Nice lot near the school.Just
electrit BB heal. Make yoor
$30,000.
MilliNG DIVISION
BUSINESS - Are yru ambi appointment $39,000.00.
tiou s for your future? Good
Seeds - Bird Seeds - Oyster Shetis and Grit - Fertili•ers - Lime
opportunity plus 4 rentals,
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
Cement and Morter - Stock Salt · Water Softener - Remedies
etc. Let's talk on this one.
992-6191
Salt - Litters - Vaccine . Roofing - Paints - Red Brand Fencing
Only .$40,000.
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2S60
Dottie Turner.,... 99 ~ 5692
Boler ond Binder Twine - Sprays - Gates - Hay - Stra't.l
Sellin&amp; Pr•bl•mt,

tEAFORDm
Estate~
~

GJ!..~

SEED AND MILLING
HEADQUARTERS

@nation @npany

Mulberry Av.e.

Call !192-3325 '

'

'·.

Frank.

Sherif

County, Ohio
13128: 1414. 11, 18

DEED REFERENCE: Vo- and 25, 5tc
lume 266, Page 423 of tho
Molgt County Deed Record!. I ~::--:-::----:::---Said P•cel wlllappraised at
Real Estate General
820,000.00.
Terms of sale; Cash.

Reel estate cannot be sold
fur le11 than two-thirds of the
appraised vak.le.
Howard E. Frll\k
Sheriff of
Meigs County. Ohio

13128: 1414. 11,
18 ond 25. 5tc
54 Misc. Merchandise

130 ACRES
Huge Dutch style bam,
excellent lake side and
farmland posture and
woods. Asking $400 pet
ocre. For quick sale. Ad,
jocent Pomeroy.

2 BUILDING LOTS
I ACRE PLUS
S4,000 CASH

SPRING STREET
6 ACRES-56,000

'

1S acres wooded land :
h~o poplors, oxctlltn
timber, sunic. Wrigh1
St., Pomeroy.

.....
Save ondexcoptthocolll hes

to enter~ tho

Pomeror, Oh.

apprais«&lt; value.

Howard E.
Of Meigs

thence foUowllg the south li'le
of tho J&gt;.lbic rood to tho
-O!fy boundary of Poraol
No. I: thenceoouth 53 dog. 6'
welt to the place of beyinning,
oontaining approximetaty .16

to make euch .excavetion and

JIRTQlBYfQ'

the following lends and te'l•

reel

goroge. togothor with tho right

Carleton lunch
menu set

tiff. ogslnot Jane Lee Booob,
ot el.. Dof4ndtnto. 14&gt;00 •
judgement therein rondlrod.
being Caoe No. 86-CV -29 . In ..
..id Court. I will.otfttr ior N&amp;e
st tho front door of tho Coort

Mtate
toxoo. Thlo property will be

1988

Route 2 , Pomeroy,
Tho obovo cloocribed nBI Voung,46769,
woo appointed
ertAito is delignoted • lot No. Ohio
ElUICutor
of
sho
ertAite of D.
10 on a plat of FairiMe
Sub-dtvision wfidlil recorded Franklin Douglas, eka . Frank·
In Voi.Jme 4, pogo 15, of the lin Doogleo, doceosed , late ol

•reet ., conltrUct

JO AN NEWSOME

NOTICE OF SALE

By virtue of ., Order a1 Stle
ilaJod out ar tho Common
Court of Moigo County.
Ohio, in the cooe of c..ntn.l
Truot co.,...,Y. N. A.. Ploln-

dog. 30' wot1 142 foot from
the intersection Of the center·

Clothing Construction Class slated for Pomeory
. A beginning clothing construction
class will be held on May 5 from l to
3 p.m and repeated from 7 to9 p.m.
at the Meigs County Cooperative
Extension Service office. Teaching
the class will be Cindy Oliveri,
home economics4·H agent.
The class is designed lor 1hose

Public Notice

beginning being morlcod by an menta, to·wit
Situate In Or•oo Townohip.
Iron otake: thance S""th B9
Motgo
County, Ohio.
dog.
05'
811154
feet
to
on
irpn
oold a~bjoct to tho Unita:l
Being Lot No. 18 of Hic:to&gt;ry
Statal of Amoricl'o ril!ht of lbke: thonco north 13 dig. 66' Aa,.
Subdivioton, In Soctlon
rodo.,..tion 1.11der 28 USC nrt 67 feet to 1 stake; thence 5, Town
4 North, R•go 12
north 74 deg. 25 ' wert 152
§2410 tel .
Howord E. F,.,k feet: ., an iron ltake; thanpe West. Ohio C"""ony'o P.,..
Sheriff of IIKith 3 dtg. oo· wost481eet: dHtle, as described il flllt
Motgo County, Ohio thence south 59 dog. 50' 0111 Book 4, P - 68 ond 59.
94 foot to tho point of Meigs County Plot Rocoldo,
Frank W . Porter. Jr.
beginning.
containing 8890 :rubject to tho b.Jidlng - AII001ey lor Diamond Sovlngo
square f8frt or 0 .204 acre, tions u contained in Aid Pll1
ond l.otr1 C~eny
Record.
more or less.
141 26: (51 2. ·9 3tc
DEE D REFERENCE: Being
It il the intention herein 10
sell ell tho .. rtace owned in pert of the root ostato dot,
satd obove described tract. The aibed in Voume 250, Paut
coal, oil, gas and all other 151 , Meigs County Doect
r
Public Notice
minerals are hereby reserved Records.
Said parcel was appraised .,
and ere not IOid, wrth the right
ntlfiNed to mine. nurove ald $18.000.00
Terms of sale. Cash.
PROBATE COURT OF
develop said coat, oil, gas .,d
Reel estate cannot be mk
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
all other milerals without
Estate of D. Frankttn injury to the llriace. The right for lass than two-thirds of tt.;
accrued

Donald Putman, Mrs. Thomas
Spencer, Mrs. Gene WUson, Mrs. plat records of Meigs County, Scipio Township, Meigs
Coontv. Ohio.
Denver Weber, Mrs. Ernest White- Ohio.
Robart E. Budc:,
Together
with
a
right·olhead, Mrs. Ray Young, Mrs. Lyle
Probate Judge
way CNer the p.~blic road
Balderson, and Mrs. RDy Hannum. loading
Len a K. Nenelroed, Cieri«
to uid property. wlidl
Mrs. Frank wUI host the May wu dedicated as a public 141 11 , 18, 25. 3tc
meeting. The guest demonstrator 11,..1 whon tho uid plot wu
won the door prize.
~-.
PARCEL NO. 2: Alao, tm
Public Notice
following described n:el estIto, oitustod in tho .Vilage· of
Middtopon, Coumv of Meigs,
111d State of Ohio, bounded
ond dnaibod 11 lolows:
requested. Each participant wUI
Begiming at the southwes·
purchase a pattern, fabric and
IBflycom,.. of Poraot No .1 II a
point which will be at thlt
notions of their choice alter the
boundary of the street oonfirst meeting.
on the plat. ra:orded in
For addit ional information or to ta_..ed
Volume 4. page t 5 of tho
register lor the class, residents may Meigs County ~at recorda.
thence in a westerly direction
call 992-6696.
60 feet: thenco north 53 dtg.
5' 0111 to tho public 10od:

SUGAR RUN MILLS
185 UPPEH RIVER ROAD GALLIPOLIS

Public Notice

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wfilt OaiUy St11ti"tl CIHsifitti.Ottt.

Community Builders Club elects new officers
Our Reg_ 5.47

The Daily Sentihei- Page-7

Public Notice

The Daily Sentinel

Tuberculosis: the disease that won't leave
By Jo111 Tewlllbary
behavior problems, not iechnlcal. sanitoriums for lllspltallzation d
Melp TB Nllftle
· We know how to prevmt tubercub- the patients who couklbemanaged
There are some things we wwld sls. W~knowhowtodlagooeeit: We In Ill! Olmmuntty In an ambdatory
like to see In thti tubercu ilsls control .know how to treat it. The basic setting has IJ'OVen oost effective,
program In terms of Sdentiflc problem Is getting til! patient to humane and clinically sound. Occabreak through!. It woold be grEaito follow through on what Is sionally, hospitalization is apiJ'opdiagnose tu.berculosis cases
recommended. ·
riate to establish a diagnosis,
rapidly. Now It takes 4-6 weeks to
Victory over tllbercuilsis In 111e Implement therapy, or treat
complete cultures for tubercuklsis United States seemB! close a lew another condition. Unnecessary
from sputum samples. We wruld yean 880• Many public and !X'IYate hospitalization, or a prolonged
like to have tubercuUn drugs that sector healtlH:are IX'flvtders did not hospital stay, Inflates til! cost of
work In 3 weeks a- 3 rrontiE, mtll!r consider tuberculosis a problem. tuberculosis care.
than 9-!2 rrontiE. or klnger.
This Pt!l rep! ion wu fostered In part
The decline In tubercuklsls seems
The problems we face In tubercu- by tile closlitg · Of tllberwiDsls not !Illy to have staballzed, but
losis control are baslcaUv human
appears to have lncreasoo In some
parts Of tile Untied States. The
problem Is fllrtll!r aggravatB!
because many patients do not srek
Beginning this Sunday a change Dec~ to Follow Jesus" to be medical help untO the disease Is
will take place In the worship presented this &amp;inday under the advana!d.
services at Heath United Metll&gt;dlst . direction of Gay Pippert. MemberIt is lmpcrtant to note that
Church In Middlepcrt to permit ship of the choir lncl\ldes PauUne luberculosls persists as a public
more music In the IJ'ogram.
Horton, Nancy Cale, Betty Fultz, health problem. Transmission of
Rev. Clemente "Sonny" Zuniga Vlcld Houchins, Stephanie Alex- lnfl!ct!Dn continues, as evidenced by
will present a vocal solo, one rJ the ander, Twlla ChUds, Carol Tanne- til! continued occurrence and lack
old lamUiar hymns, beginning hill, IXlma Byer, Sandra Luckey- of decline of ·disease In young
Sunday and this will be continued · dOD, Sibley Slack, Steve &amp;uchins, d!Udren. Tuberculosis mortality
lor a lew Sundays when possible.
Steve Jenkins, Somy ZUniga, Cha- has not declined!
The choir will continue to sing a rles Wayland, David Horton. Organ
Moreover, In 1.91lJ, tuberculosis
special number with · "I Have accompanist is Donna Jenkins.
was the leading cause of death
arrong notifiable diseases. It Is
estimatB! that rrore than 10 million

.

Frida~April25, 1986

Hous1nu
Headquartr·1 .,

.

'

·4 IH:;
'

.

UIOI. '

Business Services
1-------""'T"------,.
EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY
VETERINARIAN

• CUNIC

VINYl &amp; lWMIIUM '

Paul E. Shockey, DVM

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types

PT. PUlSlNT OFFICE

Worked

in home eree

20 yeau

''Free Estimates"

CALl COllECT:

Ph. 16141 843-5425
1·12-2mo.

305 Jackson Ave.
SMAll ANIMAL HOUIS
Mon.-W..t.-Thurs. 3-S pm
luK. 6:30-1; Fri. 1-2 pm
Saturdoy 10-11:30 am
LAIGE AUAL I
SUIGEIY IY APPT.

PH. 304-675-2441

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office

For Hours

304-372-5709

10·14·tlc

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10-8-tfc

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY
PH. 9112·6931
Attar 5 Coli

UKE
DIAMONDS
EAGLE IIDGE
IMAU ENGINE CEIIRI
Parts - Stnice
~49-2U9

'''"''Illig Off11

742·2027

PUSH MOWER TUNEUP•
{Pans ineWdedl

Oi Chango. Sharpen Blod01

'19.95

"Free Estimates"
lnllaUalion Atoilablt

41 f tln

CLC COINS
BUYING
GOlD, StLVfR &amp;
CIIIIENCY &amp; IAH COINS

• SELLING
COINS, GOlD &amp; SILVER
WHOLESALE 14KT.
JEWELRY

PH. 985-3937
AFTEI 5 P.M.

4·1-'86-1 mo.

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP
F11 AN 1't11 Pllttlll

*"''

PWS: OHico Suifllll &amp;
Fwnituro, Woddin1
aONI Graduation

Stationery, Magnotk
Signs, lulobor Stomps,
luiin•• For~t~~,

(•y Sor•kos. lie.
2!5 111111 St., lliclrfloport
104 lltuttMrry •••

,_oy

992-3345

312itln

Turn left at Meigs Memo ry
Gardens. 3 mile off Rt . 7 m
the right

47159 Eagle Ridge Rd.
J.J) ·Hn

"VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
" Free Estimates"

PH. 949·280 1

or 949-2860
No Sunday (ails
3/11 / lfn

Howard L Writtsel

ROOFING

NEW- IEPAII · · ·
Gutters
Down ~pouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2263
or 949-2969

Z-17-16-llrl

�•
Sentinel

Frida~April26,

Pomeroy:-Middleport, Ohio

1988

2&amp;, 1988
..

,. ,...,..

•

_.,

..

ICllt CIUT FOI FUTIIII USE)

,

f

Complfte
Automolt'llf

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

g7'\ _ _

ID

~~!~

~~
.

Seorv•ct

Prescrtplions

L-ocust &amp; Btecl'l Street

"2·"11 Mtddleport

Pomeroy

912-7955

Blown's Fire &amp; Safety
Equl'pment Sdle\
Servtce
dnd

Rutland , 0t11o 4S7H
J. wm. " Bill" Brown, Owner
:. Pnone (fU ) 11111 Hn

Brogan-Warner

APPLIANCE

INSURANCE - -.......
SERVICES
114 E.

" Hast thoU faith?

Mai~

991-5130

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Mill Work·
. Cabinet Making

RALL'S

ilUi. 'f
liS f . Memorial Dr.

tfr

Pomeroy ·

992-2104

Middleport. Ohio

... K&amp;C JEWELERS

A

U

he subj ect of another person's re ligion is rar-

Kerpsake

~-;~;;;~et

212
991-3785.

Pomeroy

is that

we

usually hesi tate to ask, believ i ng

the matter too personal; l ike pol itica l views and
other things . Moreover, wh en we do ask we often
hear, "Wel l, I'm supposed t o be a (whatever). but I
don't work at it ." We then conclude that the reason
th is person does n ot bother to observe the faith is
eit her habi t

or sim p ly the belief that it would be a

waste of time . Now, if thi s describes you , you

m..

MIDDL EPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION. Rt&gt;v . Keit h Eblin .
pastor. Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Wadl'
Hay man. supt.: MornlnJil Worshi p, IO::!Oa .
m.: Sunday ('venlng Sfrv lcE' 7:30 p.m.;
Wcdnesdav Pra yer Met't!ng , 7:30 p.m.
MT. MORIAH OIURCH OF GOD.
RacinE'. Rev. Ja mt&gt;s Sanerfl eld , pas tor.
frf.'('m&lt;t n Willl urru, Sup!. Sunday School
9 : ~ !i a .m.; Sunday and WOOnes da y even ·
in~ Sf'n.rlft&gt;S , 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT F'IRST BAPTIST.
Corn('r Slx~ h and Palmer. Ear! Eden. Paslo r. ' Ray Flelds. S.S. Sup!. ; Dan Riggs,
As.si. Supt. Sunday School. 9:15 a.m.;
M orn ! n ~ Worship. 10:15 a .m .; Sunday
Eveninl? scr\l lce. 7 p.m. Youth ml't'tln g,
7: l) p.m. Wednesday: rvening service 7 p.
m :·ChOir prBc t!cf' 8 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF' CHRIST,
5t h and Main . Bob Me lton . rrrln lslt&gt;r . AI
Ha rtson. assoc. min ister; Mik e Gerlach,
Sunday School Super!ntendenL Blbl£'
Schoo l 9:30a .m.: Mom!n g Worship 10 :30
a.m. Evcntng _WorshJp 7:00p.m . Wrdn cs ·
day, 7:00p.m . Prayer mC'f'tln g.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE, Co-pastors Re'v. Charles Coy le
and Rev . Nancy Coy le. BJJl Whlt e,Su nda )'
School Supt . Su nday School' 9:30a .m.:
Mornlng Worship 10:30 a.m .; Evanll!;ell sll c
meet ing 7:00p.m . Wedn esday, 7:00p.m.
Prayer meeting.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
OF MEl Gil COUIIII'V
Rev. Kea Wllk~1011
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sunday: Wo r.ship Services
9:00a.m .; Church SchopJ 10:15 a.m.; Bible
Study Sunday 7:lJ •p.m,; Prayer Groop
Wednesday at 9:00a .m .
MIDDL EPORT PRESBYTERIAN Church school 10:1:i a .m. Momlng Worslllp U :15 a.m. Tuesday, lO:OOa.m. Bible
Study: Thursday, 7:30p.m . Bible Study.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED ,'R!:&gt;BY ·
TERIAN - Worstdp service 10:15 a.m .
Church School W:OO a.m . Tuesday,10 a.m .
Bible Study; Sunda y, 6 p.m. Junior and Senior High YO\Jih Groupo.
RUTLAND CHURCH 01" GOD, Paotor,
John Evans . Sunday School 10:00 a .m.;
Sunday Morning Worship ll :00 a.m. Chll ·

All ......

106 lottor•t AYI., P-•1• Olt.

992-5141

Read the Best Seier
Read the

CLI\SSIAED RDS

lH

216 S. Second
Pome10y

•R.trlgorotoro
•Dryen •Fr•rers
PARTS •nd SERVICE

I£AI1011 .

992-3325

,THE DAILY

SENTINEL

We Cln re~ir and recore red11tors and
,heater cores. We Cln
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

SER~CE

Middleport·
Pomeroy,"lih.

D~ri•-Q•Ioilt

Al"~lr /~.
Across ,,...

:

.

.

PAT HILL FORD

tho Cowthtuso

992·2198

Mlddllpon, Ohio
'
1·13-tfc

POMIIOY, 01110- 992·6677
Bil Quickie ond Ruth Ann Y•ugor

Fami~

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-915

li!.
~

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

DRAINAGE· FONDS - MOBILE
HO liE S£TUPS - ROAD
BUILDING• LAND

..

.

~

Hllc

RADIATOR

Rawlings-Coats-Blower (row's
FUNERAl HOME
"SerYing Families"
264 S. 2nd, Middleport

•Withlra •Dishwuhers
' •Rengea

-z

•BUUOOZINO •END
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLINE
SEWERS - BASEMENTS
WATER UNES • SEPTIC
TANKS · CIIEEK &amp; FfELD

L1 SA M. KOCH. M.S.

:J: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

915-.3561

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING
Complete Building

and ·
Contracting Serviu
(FrH

"F•IIIIfl Kn 1FIW eMtku"
221 W. Main St~ •-roy
992-5432
.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•lnaulatk)n

•Storm Doora
•Storm Wlndowt

Lo~

•R•~•ment~ndo~

FAITH BAPTIST OIUROI, Hallroad
St., Mason . Sunday School 10 a.m.: Mor nIng worship 11 a.m.; Even ing serv l~ 6 p.
m. Prayer meeting and Bible St\Jdy Wed ·
nesday, 7 p.m.
F'OREST RUN BAPTIST. Rov. Nyle
Borden. pastor. Co mellus BWich, supt.
sunday School 9: 30 a.m.: Second and
fourth Sunda Ys worship serviCe at 2:30 p.

•

"FIE£ ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addona •ncl rernodetlng
'· - Rooftnt 1nd gutter work

- Concntl

.....

-Piu.,.Pg

lottam, Ohio

PH. 949-2649

2·20-tln

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PH. 949·2801
or 949-286'0
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS

ALl STEEL' &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6'
Up to 24'x36'

wo,.
end

Nctriclll

(F,.. Eetlmotool

Start From 12x16'

Insulated Dog Houses

V. C. YOUNG Ill

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

992·6215 or 9'2·7314
r-oy, Ohio

Ph. '14-843-5191

4- 15·'86·1~

lacln•, Oh.

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING

INTERIOR

PAINTING

367-0317

317 N. SKond

0UIT'CIId,1 mele1m1Mcutedog.
epprox. 1 year old . bltek, ten , Ia
white. Oood hon. only. Cell

SALES &amp; RENTALS

614 -.... 8-13&amp;• .

614-446-7283

Llrge neturel 011 heater. Workl
Oood. Cell 114· 992-2440 .

Collect

TemeBiackbeJry pl~ntsto glv••·
way. Cell814-949·2272.

•Home Oxygen

•Hospital Beds •Wheel Chairs
WE BILl MEDKARE AND OTHER INSURANCE
CARRIERS WHEN ELIGIBLE
lOWMAN'S HOME CIIE MEDICAl SUPPlY

FOUNTAIN
RESTAURANT
Located in tha
Saddlebrook Inn

63 Plnl St., GalllpoUa
24 Hr. Service

4-8·'86-1

W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER
FEDERAL-STATE
INCOME TAX RETURNS

Rt. 62. 8 mil11 south of
the Pomeroy-M110n Bridge

4 k&gt;ng ·heirld nice kittens. Phone
304 -676-6784 lfter I p.m .

Ntw lO&lt;alion:
161 Nortlt Second
Middlaporl, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C1rry Ftshlni SuppliN

Served with 4 "Cetobles,
ulad. dessert and drink.

Pay Your Cable l!o
Phone Bills Hero

,...,r - · IUSIHESS PHON!
(614) 992 ·6550
IESIDENCE PHON£
(6141 99

11 :30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
for $4.95
Children 12 &amp; Under

5 &amp; Under fR£1
Our Specialty

PHONE 992-7075
OURS: 9 :00 A.M .-6:00P.M . Mon. thru Sat.
Evenings &amp; Sundey By Appointment

WHOLE APPlE PIES
for

1·15.'86 lin

$4.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt.

124,PomHay

Ohio

or 992-7121

I•
CAMPSITE •••
'

Row, At. n&amp; . or P1trlot Otl.
ar... 2 black, ten &amp; whita
spotted male coon • hounds . II

seen caR Weyne Haniaon. 114 256·5684.

Residential &amp; Commercjal

Call:
992-5875 Or
742-3195

11·14-tfc

ROSE EXCAVA11NG
IAClNE, OHIO
FREE ESTIMATES
Oil Jialrl S.ni&lt;1,

Systams, Htawy Hauling.
St0111 &amp; Grntl Hauling

Own your own campsite ••.
chea r than Rent •••

Efectrkaf 'Wor•
RESIDENTIA~

DIRECnONS
6 MILES
. . BELOW GALLIPOLIS
CROSS:RACCOON CRK. BRIDGE
TURN RIGHT &amp; FOLLOW SIGNS

The GtiiMI·Meigs Communtty
Action Agency't J o b Training
Plrtnenhip Act

~PA l

progr.m

h11 an cp.,in, for 1 boOickMP«
at i11 Ctntrtl Office In Ch•hlre.
A mlnlna~m trf 2 ytlfll e•p•
ritru:a in booldc.eepine requhd,
inducting inputting fininclelln·

formttlon i'lto {Oigttll) comp•· •
tere. Elilpltisnoe In Ftderel pro·

gJiml pt'lftrred. Post high
1d10ol educetion desir.ble. Abll·
i1y to work with alhtl'l e mud .
Send resume to G1llii ~ Meig1
CAA JTPA, Box 272, Ch•hlrt,
Ohio 4&amp;820 by Mey 12. 1 Ill .
For further informetlon call

1614 1 367-7342 "'18141 992·
11629 . EOE.
WANTED: Prior Military Servl"'
Members. The Army Ouerd
need I your e~~:peri.,ce . Join now
for 1 pert -time job whh benlfitl
like rl'!trement tnd lducadonll
1111isten01 . 304-87!-3950 or
1-1100-1142 ·38 19 .

12

Situations
Wanted

Bookkeepflf with 6 ytsrs ••P•
rience lnmnw lex prep••tion.
Taking new client s. Bulin•HI.,
ftrnwrs, truckers, renttll . A. . .

t111ble 'It a . CaU t14 -H2·
2318 1ftlf 4:00 p.m .
1 hll'lt vectncv In my honwfo( 2
ek:lerly people. Plenty of up•
ritnCI 1nd TLC. C1ll envtlme
81•·&amp;&amp;9-301 • .
Dtplndlbll yerd 11Mca. lawns
mowN , , . . .el yard work. light
hlullng. m~nuelllbor. lilt SliCk

81.· 992· 2269 .

Now hive 2 opminga tor an
elderly Of dillbled woman or
mtn h my home tt Tupp«l
Aaina . tO years ••perienct,
plenty of TLC. retaoneble r•t••·
good rllertncel. Ca!lll14·8873402 .. 814· 667· 6329 .

Doteon Tr11 Service. free Htl·
motao, 304· 571·2897.

Yard Sale

7

21

fCinrtild Eloctriclanl

DON lOSE, Owner

949-2493
Homt 143·5340
4/11'1611 ...

Business
Opponunity

r NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends th.t. you
do bulin•• with people you

know, and NOT to aend money
mower. electric HWing me chine, cr~ft itlmt. other it.,s.

....... P.iim'arov......... ..
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

through the mall unlll you hiYI
W1v11tig eted t he offtri,rig .

A CAREER OPPORTUNITY :
Chriltrnll Around The World. A
· AWl connpt h Plrtv pl.,t il ,
now hiring • • aupenrlsor .
Ground floor opportunity for
lhtrp llldy. No lnv•trNnt. Cen
coli-=• 814·654-e8715 .

22 Money to loan
Sele: Trurfl)et, Coel Slova,
Prom Dresses. Furniture, Clo ·
1hing. etc . Chuck Bekera.
Rectne-Ponlend No.lti . Phone

a 14·949-2723 .

....... Pf Pliiasiiiif .....
· &amp; Vicinity
FIN Merketlll Curley' a Euon, 2
milea out Send Hill Ro.t , May J
end 4. For morelnformetion Clll
304 -876·3128 lhll' 6:00 Clll
304-178-3918 .

HOM E OWNERS -Rtfin..,ce t o
low fhced rate . U11 equity for eny
purpo11. Leeder Mortgege Co ..

614·692-3061 .

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR.
rediscover your pieno'a beaullful
tone. ceH 10dey. Warda Key·

' 304·878-5500 "' 675·

6 famUy yard lilt, 2216 Mt.
Vernon Aw.. Thul'ldey end
Frid1y, April 24 tnd 25. 8:00
AM to 4:00 PM.

Fletrocll: YoluntMr Flra Dept.

6 f~mity Oerega Sate. 2018
Marquette Ave., Fri and Sat.
9 :00 till &amp;:00 . Lots of
everything.

BIG

YARD SALE, ten

rNl•

1bove R1venawood bridge nelr'
L on~ BoUo m , Ohio, St. At . 124,
Ssturdey &amp; Sunday, April 28 &amp;
27. 8 till 6 p .m .

9

Wanted To Buy

We pey cnh for IItt model cl11n

uHd car~ .
J im Mink Ch1Y.·Ok11lnc.
Bill Oene Johnaon

31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom hou11. firaplece. 3
mi. 10u1h otGelllpolil. f29 .900.
Celt de'fl 814-448-1e16 or
evenings 81 ..· 4~1 - 1244 .
7 rooma &amp; beth, 1 Kr• more.or
leu. cerpl1ed throughout, vinyl
aiding f26,000 . 12 N, M1ln St. ,
Cheshire. Cell 11 4-441· 3793.
Gowernment homn from f1 , IU
repeir). Also dellquant tu property. C1t1 805 -187·1000 u.t .
GH -41182 for tntormetion.

Spacious ~ bed,r oom in town, •
2Yl btth. gerqt, A much more.

U4,800. Ctll 114·4•11 ·21 7~

1fter 5:00 we..,diVI·

814-441-3872

I

U. S. RT. SO EAST

Larga 3 bdr. hou ... 3 mile from
TOP CASH Plld far '83 model town . 2 full blths. CA. 111• heat,
tnd ,..., uHd cers. Smtth price reduced. Ctll 814-246Buldc-Pontlec, 1911 Elntm 9248.
Aw .. Gellipolls. C1ll 814-4412 or 3 bedroom lg . kitchtn •
2282.
!i't'ingroom. gaa hilt &amp; wood .
W1nttd junk tutos. C1ll 814· burning stove, 3 Jtorege build·
lnga. Locltld 1 chy block from
388-9303.

GUYSVIU£, 01110

Usld mobile hor111 . Cal 814·

BOGGS
Authorized John DMra,
Now Holland, lvsh Hog
farm lqllipmtnt
Doolor

441·0175.

Parlt &amp; Servlee

1·3-'86 tfc

O.W city pool, ICFOII ltrHt froM
aita of new golf co urte. Ctll
614 -388· 8477 o r 814· 3888515 .

11h 11ori11, 4 -5 bdra, 2 blths,'
fi repl ace, full b••'t,14x20 bldg ~
with
on 8.1 ecr11.
Grandt . Ctlt ·

hnn E•alp111..t

All CAMPSITES SHADED &amp; LEVEL

' •

Lost: Bleck fernelt Pitt Bull
puppy. ln Middl1p0rteNe. s ...n
whhe P.tch on ch•t. Cell
114·992-5908 .

COMMERCIAL

• INDUSTRIAL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

WATER-ELECTRIC-BATHHOUSE
... CABLE TV•••

2203 .

17 Miscellaneous

Yard Sala. Aptil 28·26. Floo
HouM Rt. 2. Food will bee•OJed .

PARK YOUR CAMPER ALL YEAR LONG

inform~tkln or inttMtw, celt
Meigs County Humtnt Society
at 8,. · 992-6o127 Of 81"· 9112·

LOST Bleck fece. white on fece.
Lot1 eft Hon.,.tudda Drive &amp; At.
8BB . Caii814· 448·3B70 .

Yard Sele Clerk Chapel Rd . 9 ·6,
Set. April 28. El~trl c t.wn

londnGpilllo losaments,

•.

Female long legg.t a • .., ...
VIcinity of Rio Grande . Cal!
814 ·.... 8·4249 .

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

ton&lt;! Claarlftt, Ponds, Septic

.
..
.

8 Lost end Found

&amp; Vicinity

FOR ALl YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

ACRES &amp; ACRES OF
NATURE'S UN-SPOILED LAND

BIG
FOOT
PAR

8 wtek old pert-collie puppln.
304-175-15093.

J&amp;F
·CONTRACTING

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

•BOATING
•FISHING
•HUNTING
•SWIMMING

tri

kltt.-. •. 30.. ·876-6277 .

....... GiittrpoliS' ....... ..

JIM CLifFORD
PH. 992·7201

NO MONEY DOWN -S50oMONfl

tor. Boarder of Smd AnirNit.

Meige County rnident onty.
Stlery n~gotllble. FOf' more

3-14-lfc

OWN YOUR OWN·

SERMONETTE

White fem•l• Cit, angore, 3

LOST Aewerd. lolt h Smoke

112 Price

107 Sy.:amore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

Po1it ions Open : Telephone
Coordinator, Clalmt lnv•tige-

3588.

Choose from 3 lintsHam, Chickert or Baked Stuk

SUNDAY BIJFET

t88 ,230-yr. Now Hiring . C..
1·8015-187-1000 Ert. R-9801 for current ftderlllitt .

'JkiPPill ell mele, mixecfbreed .
7 ~ weeks okt. Cal 614·986-

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o Tr••••lula~
PH. 992:5682

' ~/wmHAVEN

Giveaway

614-.... 6-7796.

HOSPITAL SUPPLIES FOR HOME USE

. I 20-tlc

The Metg1 CourttV Fieh Md
Geme Club Inc. w!ll not be
re.ponlible or hbtl for M'IY

2- 8 monlh old female bleck Ia
ten Welller crosa coon dogs, Ctll

'

We Deliver

The Confidential Conn~~et lo n ·- •
profeulon 11 dltlng reg It try .
Specl1l frH off~~tr. Rt. 3, Box
213 , Athent. 81•·592-4882 .

4

PHONE 1614) 992·5009
$PECIA11ZING IN WINDOW e DOOR ROLACENENT

*11.0..0 ·

GovernrMnt Job1.

Roulh't Tack Shop now h11
lettering machine for c.pt and
halten. Phone 304-773-6207 .

COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL
-FR££ ESTIMATES-

Cafl

EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI
f714 .00 Ptf 100. OulrafttHCf
Pl'f"'lent. No ...... D... M,:
s.n~ .Cernp_. .,w~ope: E..... .
IIU7, 3.18 Ent. .doo. Fl.
Pltrce. Ft. 33482.

tonal touch Introductions, box
1138 . Charl11ton. W. Va .
28302. 1-304·127·8434 .

Middleport, Ohio

Out of Town Customers

Announcement•

SINGLES . Meet thlt IPi cill
p-.onl Frn •piiCitlon . . Per-

EXTERIOR

Help Wen~ed

11

AII '' IJ[I Ii 1:1: Ill I:Ills

aecldent or dlm-ue to ~nyone or
envttdng on their pr()9ert:y.

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.

Eetlmotoal

"At Roasonalllo Prim"

.oN- Roofing

BUILDING

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Restaw111t

...------------~
dren 's Olurch 11 a.m. ·Sunday E' enlng
matter how l i ttle you feel inclined to do it . You will
worship service 7:00 p.m. Wedn.,da y
Service 7:00p.m. Wed .. 6 p.m. Young La ·
k
,.f
prayer mf&gt;t'tlng 7:00p.m.
m.
dtes' Auxil iary. Wcdn osda y. 1 p.m. F'am.
soon see t he difference 1t ca n ma e tn your 11 e ;
MT. HE RMON UNITED BRETHREN
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Uy Worship.
b
·
II f
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
Main St., Middleport. Rev. Gilbert Craig,
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. ON
a nd even if things seem to e gom g we or you
community
Ct.
Rt
. Rov. Roll0r1
Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner,
011
112
Rt. 124, 3 miles trom Portland-Long Bot ·
h d .
.
h
'II
d
Sanders, pastor. Jeff Holler. Jay leader:
Sunday
School Supt. SundaySchool9: 30 a.
lorn Edsel Hart , pastor . Sunday Sd!pol.
right now, t e ay IS COrnin g W e n you WI nee
Ed Roush, Sunday SChool Sup! Sunday
m.: Worship Servtce. 10: 45 a.m.
9:30 a.m : Sunday morning preaching
help and guidance from an o utside source . Your
School 9: 30 a.m.: morning wors hip and
SUCCESS ROAD OIURCH OF CHRIST
10:30a .m.; Sunda)·evenlngservices, 7:30
children 's ,chu rch, 10:30 a .m .; evm tng
- Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist . Sunday
Bible Study9 a.m .; WorshJp,lOa.m.: Sunp.m
faith ca n prov ide this help, but you will never know
preoch lng ..rvtce on lhe second and
MfDOLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
fourth Sund ays at 7:30p.m.; Chrlst!a11 En·
day evening service 6 p.m .: Wednesda y
CHURCH, Cornt&gt;r A5h and Plum. Ralph
unleSS yOU give it a try.
deavor on the first and third Sundays at
evening serv ice, 7 p.m.
Cundur. pastor. Su nday School10 :00 a.m.;
7:30 p.m. Wedn esday prayer meeting and
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
MornlngWorsh!p, ll :OOa .m.: Wf'dnesday
Bible-study, 7: ~ p.m.
Rt. 124. William Hoback. pastor. Sunday
and Sa turda y EVet'llng Servtces at7:30 P· ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' CHURCH OF GOD OF PROP HECY .
School 10 a.m.; Sunday evening sl'r!' lce 7
p.m. Wednesday evening service 1 p.m.
m.
Located on 0 . J . White Road of Highway
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Doo Cheadle,
160. Pat Henson, pastor. Sunday SchooiiO
.
KENO
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST,
Vernon
Linda Evans, chu rc h school director .
IIIEJGII
Supt, Sunday School 9: )) a.m. Morning
a.m. Classes tor all ages. J uni or Church II
Eldridge,
minister:
Oliver
Swa!n
.
Sunday
Churrh
school
9:30a.m.;
Morn
ing
worsip
WOPERATIVE PARISH
Worsh ip lO:lJ a.m. Prayer service, altern a.m.; Morning worsh ip 11 a.m. Adult
School Supt. Preaching 9:30 a.m. each
10:30 a.m.; Wed nesda y evening prayer
UNITED METHDDIST CHURCH
ate Sundays .
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sunday. You ng Peo·
Sunday.
Sl'rvlces
,
7:
JO
p.m.
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
p! e-'s, Children's Church and Adult Bible
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION,
George
BETJ-n..EHEM BAPTIST. Rev . Ea rt
Rev. Don ArQ1er
Study, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Anedo, pastor. Sunday serv ice, 9:30a.m .:
ShuiE'r, pastor. Worship service, 9:30a .m .
Rev. Roy Deeter
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl. . 570 Grant
Ave. Rev. Clark Bater, putor. Carl Not·
evening
!lervlce
7:30p.m.
Pra
yer
m(l('tlng
,
Sunday Schooll0;30 a.m. Bible Study a nd
Rev. Seldon JohnAOrt
St.. Middleport. Affiliated with Sotlthern
!Ingham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
Wed nesday, 7: :11 p.m.
prayer service Thursday. 7:30p.m.
ALFRED - Church School 9:30a .m.:
Bapti!it Convenllon. Da vkt Bryan , Sr., Ml·
School 10 a.m. with closes IJr all ages.
BE
AR
WALLOW
RIDGE
CHUROI
OF'
CARLETON
INnli!DENOMINATION·
Worshlp . ll a.m.; UMYF6:30p.m.; UMW
n!stcr. Sunday School 10 a .m .; Morning
Even ing servltfl at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl· •
CHRIST. Joseph B. Hoskins, past or. Bible
AL CHURCH, Klngsb~cy Road . Rev. Do ·
Third TuE-sday, 7:30 p.m. Communion.
worship 11 a.m.; Evening worship 7p.m.;
ble study at 7: :11 p.m. Youth services Frl· • •
Morning
Worship
10:30a.
Class
,
9:30a.m.:
vld Curfman, pas tor. Sunday School 9:30
first Su nday. jArchE&gt;r )
Wedn E'S4aY even ing Bible study and
dayat7: :11pm
.•
m .; Evenin g Worship, 6:30 p.rn. Thursda y
a.m.; Ralph Carl, Supt. Even ing wcrshlp
CHESTE R - Worsh ip 9 a.m .; Church
prayer m ~tl n g 7 p.m.
ECCLES lA F'ELLOWSIUP, 128 Mfll St ., ·
Bible Study, 6:30p.m . ~·
7:00
p.m
.
Pra
yer
meetin
g,
Wednesda
y
School to a. m.; Blb!e~Study, Thursda y, 7p.
BRADFORD CHUROI OF' CHRIST. St.
Mlddlepor1 . Brother Chuck Mc Pher1011 ,
NEW srJVmSVILLE &lt;XlMMUNITY
7:00p.m.
m.; UMW. first Thu rsday , ·1 p.m.; Com·
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Mark Seevers, min ispastor. Sunda y School 10 a .m.; &amp;mday
CHURC
H.
Sunda
y
School
service,
9:45
a.
WNG
BO'l'TOM
CHRISTIAN
,
Vfmoo
mun! o ~ . fir st Sunday I Archer ).
ter. Sunday School Supt . Harry Hen- evening serv ices at 7 p.m . and Wednedly
m.;
Wors
hip
service
10:30
a
.m.;
Eldridge,
pastor;
Wallace
DamewocC,
S.
JOPPA - Worship 9:30a .m.; Church
dr ick~ : Sunday School9: 30 a. m.: Morning
servi(.'('S a t 7 p.m.
Eva ngelistic Serv ice 7:30 p.m . WednesS. Supt. Sunday School9: :JJ a.m.; Worship
SchoollO: '10 a. m. Bible Study Wednesda y,
wont hip lO:ll a.m.: Evenlng worship 7 p,
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Ken~elh Smflh,
day: Prayer meeting 1::W p.m . Thu nday.
service. 10:30 a.m.
7:30p.m. 1Johnson1.
m. Wednesday worship 7 p.m .
pastor. Sunday School 9::Jl a .m.: church •
ZION
CHUROI
OF
CHRIST,
Pomeroy·
LONG BO'ITOM - Church School 9: JO
HYSELL RUN HOLI NE:5S O!UROI .
ST . PAUL LUTHERAN CHUROI ,
service 7:30p.m.; youth fellowlhip 6:30 _p. ;, Ha r risonville Rd . Robert Pur1e!!, minis·
a.m.; Worship 7 p.m.: Bible Study, Wed Mike TI10mpson, New Haven, WV, pastor.
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts .. PQm.: Bible study, Thur.dlly, 7:30p.m.
.
ter;
Ste-vf.&gt;
Stanley,
S.
S.
Supt.;
Bill
McEI·
Su nday School at 9:.'lla .m .; Momlngwor·
nf'!ida y. 7:30 p.m .; UMY F , Wedn esday,
meroy. The Rev. William MlddiM~w a rth ,
FlJLL GOSPEL LlGIITIIDUSE, ~
roy.
Asst.
Supt.
:
Su
ndaySchool
9:30a
.m.;
ship at 10:30 a.m.: Sundayevenilgs erviCP
6:00 p.m.; Co mmu nion F!rst Sunday,
pstor. S~ nday SChool 9:45a .m.: Chu rch
Hiland Road , Pomeroy . Tom Kelly, puWor ship servfce 10: 30 a.m.; Evenlng worIArchert.
at 7:30p.m. Thursday services at 7:30 p.
serv ice 11 a.m.
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
ship Sunda y 7 p.m. and Wednesda y, 7 p.m .
m.
REEDSVIL LE- Church School 9:30a .
SACRED HEART CHURCH . Msgr.
morning service at m a .m. ; Sunday ev81·
ST.
JOHN
LUTHERAN
CHURCH,
Pille
m.; Wors•!p Serv ice 11 :00 a.m. jDeeten .
F'REEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald . An thooy Glannamore. Ph . 992·5898. Saturlng service 7:30p.m. Tuesday and ThunGrove . The Rev. Wlll!am Mlddleswar th, . Knob, loca ted Cll 'county Road 31. Rev.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL day Evening Mass 7 :.ll p.m.; Sunday
day Services at 7: ;JJ p.m.
pastor.
Church
service
9:30a
.m
.:
Sunda
y
LawrenCP Gluesmca mp. pastor. Rev:
Ch urch School 9 a .m .: Wor!l hi p 10 a. m.:
Mass, 8 a. m. and 10 a.m. Confessions me
WORD OF FAITH, 93 Mill St .. Middle·
School 10:30 a. m.
Blblt&gt; Study, Tu('sday, 7:.30 p.m.; UMW.
Roger Willford , asst. pastor. Preaching · ha lf hour before each Mass. CC D classes,
port. Sunday morning service 10:15 a.m.;
BRADBURY
CHUROI
0!.'
OlRIST.
services Su nd ay 7:30p.m . Prayermeetmg
Third Tuesda y, 7:30 p.m.: Communion
11 a.m. Sunday.
Sunday evening 7:30. Thursday mom1n1
John Wright , pastor. SundaySchool 9: 30 a.
FirsTSunda y IA rch('or l .
Wednesda y, 7:30 p.m., Gary Gruttth ,
VICfORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd Sl.,
Bible st udy 10 a.m. Wednesday evenlnR ,
m.: Larry Haynt'!l, S. S. Supt. Morning
leader. Youth groups Sunda y evening at
Middleport . Ja mes E. KE.&gt;eSee, pastor.
7
worsh
ip
10:30
a.m.
6:30p.m. wllh Roger and Violet Willford .
CENTRAL CLIISTER
Sunday morninR" worship 10 a .m.; EvenCHURCH OF THE NA·
RACI
NE
CHURCH
OF'
THE
NAZA·
leaders. Communion service first Sunday
Re\·. Jame~ E . CQrble&amp;
Ing service 7 p.m.: Wed nesday eve-nlng
ZAREN E, Rev. Glendon Strwd, pastor . .
RENE.
Rev.
Lloyd
D.
Gr!mm.
Jr.,
pastor
.
each month .
Rev. Steven Nelsoa
worship 7 p.m . VIsitation , Thursday 6: :II
Sunda yScttool ~: :ma .m . ; Wonhlp serv lce, · .
Ora Bass. Chairman of the Board ofChrls ·
WHITE 'S CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
Rev. Melvin FrankUn
p.m.
10:30 a.m .: Youth ~rvlce Sunday 6: 1!5 p. •
!!an LlfC'. SundaySchool9:30 a .m.; Morn·
CHURCH - Coo!vll!e RD. Rev. PhU!Ip Rl·
Rev . Clemen l ~t S. Zual~~: a, Jr.
MORSE CHAPEl. CHURCH - Gary
m. Sundayeven lngserv tce7:00p.m. Wed · · •
10:30
a.m.;
evange
listic
ser·
!ng
worship
denour.
pastor
.
Sunday
School
9:30a.m
.;
Rev. Andrew Ru'benklnK
Holter, pastor. Sund ay School, 10 a.m.;
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study •
vice-7:00 p.m. Wednesday serv ice, 7 p.m .
worship service 10:30 a .m.: Bible study
ASBURY jSyracuse)- Wors hi p 11 a. m.
worship service, 11 a .m.; prayer m(I('Ung.
1:110 p.m.
•
LIBERTY
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
,
Dex and worship service, Wednesda y, 7 p.m.
; Church Sc hool 9: 45a.m.: Charge Blblr
7: ll p.m. Thursday.
NEASE SLTTLEMEN1' CHURCH, Sun- ·:
ter.
Wood
y
Call
,
pastor.
Scrvlcr-s
Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Siudy, Wcdncsdo~y. 7: 30p.m.: UMW . first
da y afternoon services at 2: :J). Thursday
LIVING WORD CHE:5TER CHUROI
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wedn esday, 7 p.m.
Mark Jones, pastor. BUI Nlcbolsm, SunTu&lt;"sda y, 7:30 p.m.: Choir Rehl'arsa l.
evening services at 7:30.
OF GOD -Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sun·
RACINE f'IRST BAPTIST , Steve
day School Supt. Sunday Sctlool9:30 a.m .;
Wedn esda y 6:30p.m.: VMW. fourth Sun day School 9:30 a.m.; Morning service
FIRST BAPTIST OIUROI. Mason, W.
[)('aver, Pas tor . Mike Swiger, Su nday
Morning Worship and Communloo10 :30 a.
day. 6:30p. m. 1 Nelson J.
lO:OOa .m.; Sunday evenlngsPrvlce 7:00 p.
Va . Pastor, Bill Murphy. SundaySdlool J)
SChool Su pt .: Sunday School 9:30 a .m .;
m.
ENTE RPR ISE - Worship 9 a.m.:
m.; Mid -week prayer se .v lce WednfSday
a.m.; Sunday even lng 7 : ~ p.m. Prayer •
Mom!ng wor ship 10:40 a.m .: Sunda y
RliTLANDBlBL E METII)DlST. Amos
Church SchooliO a.m .; Blblt&gt; Stud~· . TUC'S ·
7p.m.
meeting and Bible study Wednesdly, 7: .J) ·,
evening worship 7:30 p.m.: Wedn esday
TII Hs, pastor. Sonny Hudsm, su pt. Sunda y
day. 7:30p.m.; UM W. Firs! Monda y, 7:ll
p.m. Everyme welcome.
·•
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
evening Bible study 7:30p.m .
School 9:30a.m.: Morning worship, 10:30
,p.m.;
VM
YF'
Sunday,
6
p.m.
Choir
Re·
Lawrence Bush, pasto r. Max Folmer, Sr.
RUTLAND FREE WU.L BAPTIST, Sa· : •
1
BVRLlNGHAM
COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
a.m.:
Sunday
even
in
g
service
7:00p.m
.
hearsa l, 6:30 p.m. WednE'sday. !Fran klin 1
Supl. Su nday School and Morning Worship
lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday . •
BurUngham. Ray Lal.llermUt. pastor; R.oWednesday sertlce 7 p.m. WMPO profLATWOODS - Chu rch Schoo!, IOa.m.
9:30 a.JI}.; Sunday evenln g!!ervlce, 7p.m.;
SchoollO a.m.: Sunday ev~M~Ina7 : 00 p.m .; . ·
hf.&gt;rt Q:riirt. assistant pasi(J', Sunday Sdl ool
gram 9 a.m. each SUnday.
: Wor ship. 11 a.m.; Bible Study. ThursYout h meeting and Bible Study, Wednes Wednesday evening prayer meetlng 7:00 · .
10 a.l n.; worship 7 pm .; Wednesday, 6 p.m.
da y, 7 p.m.: UMYF. Sunda y, 6 p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
day, 7 p.m.
p.m.
•
youth meeting; Wed., 7 p.m. church servtces.
tFrank!! nl.
RENE. Rev. Lowell Ford, pastor. Sunday
UNITED FAITH CHURCH. Rt. 7 oo PoSOUTH BETHEL NEW T~TAMENT . •
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH. \\
School9: 30 a.m.; Worship service 10:30 a.
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
meroy By-Pass. Rev. David Wlseman,Sr ..
CHVROI, Sliver RldJ•· Duane syden - : •
mile oH Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J. Watts, pastor .
m.;
Young people's serv lce 6 p.m .
Church School 10 A.M .: Cho! r prac ltce,
pastor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday
strlcker, pastor. Sunday School 9 a.m.; .
Robert
Searles
,
S.S.
Supt.
Sunda
y
School
Evangelistic serv ice 6: 30p.m. Wedn esday
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.: UMW, flrsl Tuesda y,
School 9:30 a.m .; Morning Worship 10:30;
Worship Service, lOa.m.; Sundayev~M~tta: :
9:30a.m.: Mornin g Wor ship 10:30 a .m .;
S~Prvlce 7 p.m.
7:30p.m. !Nelson) .
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.; Wedn esday
service, 7:00p.m. Wednesday night Bible ·•
Sunda y evC'nlng service 7: 30 p.m.; Wed MASON CHURCH 01" CHRIST, Miller
HEATH tMiddl epol't\ - Church School.
study 7:00p.m .
·
Prayer Service, 7:30p.m
nesday service. 7:30p. m.
St., Mason , W. Va . Eugene L. Conc@f, ml·
9:30 a.m.; Morn in~ Worship 10:30 a.m.:
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Lillie,
nlster. Sunday Bible Study 10 a.m.; Wor·
Youth Group, 4 p.m.: Wrdnesday, Church
pastor. Steve Ll!!!e, S. S. Supt. Sunday
ship 1l a.m. and 7 p.m. Wedn esday Bible
Choi r rehra r!ia!, 7 p.m., Thursda y,
Schoo! 10 a.m.; Morning worslp, 11 a.m .:
Study, voca l mu sic, 7 p.m.
Pray&lt;'r Servlrr. 6::l0 p .m .: Biblt&gt; Study, 7
Sunday evening worship 7:30p.m. P rayer
p.m. IZu nlgaL
LIBERTY ASSEMBL Y or GOD, Dud·
meetin g and Bible study Thursday, 7:30 p.
ding Lane, Masoo , W. Va . J. N. Thacker,
MINERSVILLE - Wo,hfp S.rv lco IO
m.: Youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m .
p"asto r. Evenlng service 7:30p.m.; WOa.m.: Church School. 11 a.m .: UMW. third
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
men 's Min istry , Thursday, 9:30 a.m .:
Wednrsday, I p.m .: Choir practice, Mon - 383 N. 2nd Ave. , Middleport. Sunday
day, 7: JO p.m. t Nelson 1.
Wednesday Prayer an d Bible Study, 7: I ~
School 10 a .m. Su nda y evenin g 7:00p.m .:
p.m.
PEA RL CH1\ PF:L - Worship Sf'rvicf' 9
Mid -week serv!cf', Wed ., 7 p.m .
a.m.; Church School 11 a.m1; UMW Se·
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH ,
rand Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.: UM\'F last
HARTF'O RD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
Robert E. Musser, pastor. Su nday School
Tul'!lda y. 7:.10 pm . 1Rutx&gt;nk ln 21 .
CHRISTIAN UNION. The Rev. William
9: .'ll a.m.; Paul Musser, sup!. ; Morn in g
POMEROY- Church Sc hool, 9:15a.m.
Campbell , pas tor. Sunday School 9:30 a.
worship 10 :30 a .m.; Su nda y evening ser .
m.: James Hughes , su pt. Even ln gse-rv!ce
: Worship lO:.'tO a. m .; Choir rffit&gt;arsal
v!ce, 7 p.m.; mid -week serv ice, Wfdn esWednesday, 7:30 p.m.; UMW, second
7: :ll p.m. Wf'dn!lday even lng prayer meet·
"OPEN YOUR EYJ!ll"
day,
7
p:m
.
ing 7: 30 p.m. Youth prayer servlct' wch
Tuesday. 7:.10 p.m.; UMYFSu nda y, 6p.m.
There
Is
beauty
all
around
us, just as there is plenty all around and
SYRA('t JSE CHURCH OF' THE NA·
Tuesday.
1Corblll l. '
needs all around. This may be God9 plan for the earth and the
ZARENE . Rev. Glenn McMillan, JXIStor.
ROCK SPRI NGS- Chu rrh School, 9:15
F AIRVIEW BIBLE OIURCH. U.tarl,
Mary J anice Laven der , Sunda y School
a.m.; Worship 10 a .m .: Bi blf' Study, Wf'd .
W, Va., Rt. I, JamE'S Lfwls, pastor. Worcreatures made In His Image, man.
Supt. Sunday School 9: XI a.m.; Morning
nesday , 7:30p.m.; UM\'F' jSeni on J. Sun sh ip services 9:lJ a ,m.: Su ndaySchoolll
Now that Spring has arrtved, we see much beauty everywhere,
worsh
ip
10:
30
a.m.;
Evangellsllc
set'\'
lee,
a.m.; Even ing worship 7:30p.m . Tuesda y
day, ~ p.m.; !Junior s ) every other Sun6 p.m.; Prayer and Pra ise Wednesda y, 7 p.
trees In bloom, flowerssplas~ngcoklralongthe ground In woods and
day , 6 p.m. !Frank li n \.
cottage pra yer meeting and Bible Study
m.; You th meeting, 7 p.m .
9:30 a.m.: Worship serv ice, WOO nesday
RUTLAND- Chu rch School, 9:15a.m.:
fields and yards. We know there Is plenty all around us here In
7::1) p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRITHREN IN
Worshi p, 10:30 a.m.; UMW 1E ven !n ~ C!r·
America. Gods gift to a Gid-fearlng natbn. However as we look
CHRIST, Elden R. Blakt&gt;, pastor. Sunda y
clf'J se&lt;-·ond \•h:-'dn('Sday. 7:30 p.m.: UMW
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHUROI ,
School 10 a. m.; Gary Reed, La y leader .
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood, W.
!Aft ernoon Clrclf'l st""Cond Thu rsday , 1 p.
around we find a certain and distinct drive under way 1D make of
Morn in g sermon. 11 a.m.; Su nday night
Va . The Rev . Gtorge C. Weirick, pastor.
m. IRutwnkin~ J
America a godless natkln by the omitting of any thing In everyday
services: Christian Endeavor 7: JO p.m ..
Su nday SChool 9:30a .m.; Sunday worship
SALE MCEt-iTER - Church School lO a.
life that says God. This Is the situation we find row that tells us there .
Song service 8 p.m. Preaching 8: ll p.m .
11 a.m.
m.: Worship 9:45a .m . tRutx&gt;nk!ng).
Mld -wf'l&gt;k prayer meet in g, Wednesda y, 7
CALVARY BfBL EC HURCH, loca ted on
SNO WV ILLE - Worship, 8:3lJ a.m.:
are needs aU around . AU we need do Is open wr eyes.
p.m.
Pomeroy P ike, Coun ty Road 25 near Flat·
Church School lO :t. m . ( Rulxonkln ~).
God has told man to carefor the needsd others and not to be selfish
woods . Rev. BlackwOOd, pastor. Services
HEMLOCI&lt; GROVE CHRISTIAN, Rog·
or egotlslcal. The tlggest nred In Arnerlc~ today and especially the
on
Sunday
at
10:30
a.m.
and
7:30p.m.
with
er
Wat!IOO,
pas
tor.
Crenson
Pratt
,
Sunday
SOVTHICRN CLUSTER
Sund&lt;:~y School 9: :.J a. m. Bible Study, Wed·
School Supt. Morn ing Worship 9:30a .m.:
big bend area &lt;1 Ohio Is that people all around nred God, need love,
Rev. Roser Grace
nesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunda y School 10:30 a. m .; Evening serKtv. Paul McGu ire
and
need a godly dlrECttm. Too lll&lt;IIY people consider their
FAITH
F'ELLOWSHlP
CRUSADE
FOR
vice, 7: XI p.m.
Rfv , Keith Radl'!r
CHRIST.
Sl.
Rl.
338,
Antiquity.
Rov.
pocketbook
their God . They vote according to pocketbook and not
MT.
UNION
BAPTIST,
Dona
ld
Shue,
APPLE GROV E- CHurch School 9:00
Frankl!n Dickens, pastor. Su nday mornpastor; Jot" Sayre. Su nday School Su pt .
needs for self and nelghlxlr. Physical well being Is a big help but lots
a.m. Wor ship, 10;00 a .m. !f ir s~ and thi rd
Ing 10 a.m.; Sunday evenlng 7:30p.m.
Sunday School 9:45 a.m .; Eventng wor Su ndays! ; VMW Second TuC'sda y, 7:30 p.
and lots of people financially well ct.! are needing spiritual and moral
Thursda y evenin g 7:30p.m .
sh ip 6: 00p.m.; Prayer Meeting , 6:30 p.m.
m.; Prayer ml'eT!nR", Wed nr-sday,7 p.m.
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAP·
Wednesda y.
help. Wealth has not solved their problems. They have not found
!Grace I.
TIST CHURCH . Palllor Robert Byers.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF'
BETHANY - Worshi p, 9 a.m.; Church
happiness. They have eyes closalto wllat Is reaDy Important.
Sund aySchoo l10 a.m.: Worship service 11
OIRTST.
Dave
Prenth;e,
minister.
Dery
l
School, 10 a.m.: Bib!(' Study, Wednesda y,
Helping your fellowman Is the greatest and best thing lhat anyone
a.
m.:
Sund
ay
evenin
g
serv
lce
,7:30
p.m.:
Wells,
Su
pt.
Church
School
9
a.m.;
Wor
10 a.m .; Dorcas Women 's Fellowship,
Wednesday evening service 7:30 p.m.
ship Service, 9:45p.m.
can do for self, neighbor and community. We need to~ our eyes
W£:'d nPSda y, 11 a.m. (McGu! rej.
INDEPENDENT HOUNESS CHUROI
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA ·
CARMEL - Church &amp;hoot 9:30 a.m.;
and look around to see IDw we can help make this a better place to
•
Inc., Pearl St., Middleport. Rev. O'Dell
RENE . Rev . Herbert Grate, pastor.
Worship. 10: 45 a .m. Second and Fou rth
Manley, pastor. Su nday School 9:30a.m.;
live. That Is why God pul us here and why God gave us the Bible and
Frank Rittle. supt. Sunda y School 9: 30 a .
Sund ilys; Fellowship dinner with Sutton
Morn ing worship 10:30 a.m .; Evening
m.: Wonhlp service, 11 a .m. and 7 p.m .
prayer and eyes and feellngs, God given talents are more powertul
third Thursday, 6:30p.m. (McG ui re).
worsh ip 7: .ll p.m. Tuesday, 12:30 p.m. Wo·
Sunda y. Wednesday, 7 p.m. Prayer mE&gt;et·
EAST LETART - Chu rch School 9a.m.;
.t han satan dirl'ctal mouthlngs and actklns. Every community needs
men '!! Prayer meetlng. Wednesday, 7;30
In g.
Worship 10 a. m. second and fourth Su n,,
p.m. Prayer and Praise serv ice.
LAUREL CLIFF !"REE METIDDIST
God's presence to make It a~ place to Uve and raise a family.
days; UM~ fi rs I Tuesday, 7: .Jl p.m.
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRIST
APOS·
CHUROI . flev . Robort Miller, pastor. Ro·
!GraCP).
Kick out God from everyday activities and soon we find crime ridden
TOLIC - VanZandt and Ward Rd . Elder
'bert E. Barton, Dlrtctor of Christian Edu·
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a.m.:
James
Miller,
pastor.
Sunday
Schoo
l.
streets,
courts ful to overnowtng alldsorrowandselftshness, evU and
tkm;
Steve
Iblln,
assistant.
·
sunday
ca
Chu rc h St'hoo! 10 a.m. (G race).
10:30 a.m.; Worship Service, Sund ay, 7:30
Schoo! 9:30a.m.; Morn lng wor1hlp ]1'):30
••
closed eyes.
MORNING. STAR- Worship, 9:~5 a.m.:
p.m.; Bible StU:~l:. Wf'dn Ef!day, 7-: ll p.m .
a.m.; Choir practice, Sunday 6:XI p.m.;
•
Church SChool, 10:30 a.m.; Bible STudy,
Let us all bpen our eyes Ill the needs of otherJ !!lfd eease being
POMEROY !rr;SLE'tAN HOLINESS,
Even ing worship 7:30 p.m . Wednesday
•
'Thursdety, 7:30 p.,m- (.Rader) .
Harrisonville ROad . Rev. Dewey Klng,
'•
Prayer and Bible Study, 7; 30 p.m.
selftsh, self-centered, nwney grubbing Individuals. Open both our
RACINE WESI£YAN - Church School,
••
pastor; Clinton Faulk, SUnday School
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
10 a.m.: Worship 11 a.m.: UMW four1h Mon.
eyes lo the needs around us and then work to overcome those needs.
Supt.; Sunday School 9:30a.m.; momlng
Charles Russell Sr., minister. RJck Ma·
••
day at 7: :.&gt;p.m.: Men's Prayer Breakfast,
God wants this and we need this. - Rev. Wllllun Mldtlleswarih.
worship,
11
a.m.;
Sunda
y
evenlnr
serv
tcecomber,
IUpt.
Sunday
School
9:.ll
a
.m
.;
Wednesday, 7 a.m. iGraCf) .
'
••
7:!1) p.m. Prayer Meet ing, Wednesday,
Worship aervlce 10; 30 a.m. Blbk! study,
SUTTON - Church School, 9:30a.m.;
7:30p.m.
'l\leoda1 , 7: 30p.m.
·
Morning Wonhlp 10: ~5 a.m.!lrst and third
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
REORGANIZED CHUROI OF JE:5U!
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Carmel
non-Pentecostal.
Worship service Sunday
LATTER
DAY,SAIN'l'S
.Port·
CHRISTO!"
lhfrd Thursday, 6: 30 p.m. .(McGulrfJ,
10 a .m.: Su nda y School 11 a~ m. Evening
land-Ra cin e Road . WIIIJam Roush , pastor .
shou l d pay a visit to your House of Worship, no

TRIMJ'Y CIRJROl . FW&lt;o. W. H. Porrlll.
pasior. O.,bl&gt;e !\x-k, S.OO.y Sclklol Supl.
ChW'dl School 9: 15 a.m.; Wcrshlp Sen.1e 10: l)
a.m. Choir rehearsal. The!.day, 7:ll p.m.
LIJ'll:k:or dlrec:1lon of l...llls Burt.
POMEROY OIURCH OF' TilE NAZA·
RENE. Comer Unloo and Mulborry, Rw.
Th:lmas Gk!l MrCiung, pastor. Norman Pres·
k'y, S. &amp; Sup&lt;., S.OO.y School, 9:ll a.m.:
m::nllng WlrShlp lO:ll a.m.; evmlngsavtce6
p.m.: mkJ."''t'ek S8"\'k:(&gt;, Wednesday, 1 p.m.
mACE EPISCOPAL CIRJRCI!, !l6 E.
Ma1n St., PorTEroy. Sunday st'f'Vkei: Hoty
mrTITlu!Mn on tr. first Sunday oC each rronth.
and combined with mcrn.lng rcayer 00 thl'
thir&lt;kt Sunday. Morning prayer and.se-m:m on
all oUe" Sunda}'3 fA tt.:&gt; rmnth. Church School
and Nursery CaN' provided. Calfee tntr In thl'
Palish Halllmn&lt;'dlatrty lollowlngt"'"""""·
POMEROY CIRJRCH OF' OIRISf. ~2 W.
Main St. rwu Proudl001. past cr. Blblr Sctiooi
9:lJ a.m.; Morning w&lt;nhlp, I):.J)a.m.: Youth
llll't&gt;flngs, 6:00p.m.. Evmlng worship, 7:00 p.
m. Wedne.sday night prayer meeting and Bible
~.nr . 7: mp.m.
1liE S\LVATION ARMY , ll5 B!ttl'lllUI
Ave.. Pomeroy. Mrs. lAra Wining In char~ .
!ilnday holiness ,....lng. 10 a m.: Su!Jday
SChool. IO: :ll a.m. !ilnday School. YPSM
Eloise Adams, k'adl.&gt;r. 7:JJ p.m. Salvation
meeting, various speakers and ~lc s~!als .
Thursday, U:l) a.m. to 2 p.m. Ladles HOI"'V"
t..e~. memben:i In ~- aU WOf1lf'f'l
1nv11w : &amp; 45 p.m. ThW'Sday, COf'JJ3 C.deO
C1asss (Young Palp4e-Biblel, 7:l) p.m. Btble
Studv and Pra&gt;·er meeting , ~ to ttl.&gt; public.
Pt'lMEROY WESl'SIDE QIURCH OF
rnrusr. II'Z&amp;i Ollldren's Horne Road rCount}'
Road ?6 \. ~ 2-r-a:fi . Vocal music. Sunday Wr:x·
sJhp to a.m.: Bible Study U a.m.; Worship. 6p.
m Wednesday, Bible Study. 7 p.m.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE OIRIS11AN
CIRJRCH. Alvtn'Cw15, pastor: LJnda Swan,
Sup4. Sunday School 9:JJ a.m.; preachlnl!: S€1'·
vleet, first and 1hlrd Sunda y foUoWing·9.mday
S:ilool. Yooth mretinJil, 7: ll p.m. (&gt;VPI')' SUnday.'
GRAHAM
UNITED METHJOIST.
Preactl !ng 9: 30 a.m. first and second , Sun days of each month; ~hrd and four1h Sun da~· ea ch month worship sen.rlres a1 7:30 p.
m.'. Wednesday ('V('nlnj,!;s al 7:30 p.m .
Prayer a nd Bib](' Study.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENT IST, Mll!b('rl)' Heights Rolld , Po meroy . LNoy
Bruch. PasTor: Sabbat h Sctlool Superin tendent . Rh onda Mark in. Sabbath St-hool
begins at 2 p.m. oo Saru rday with worship
servtct' fo! Jow!nR a1 3: 15. EveryonE- wel co mf.'.
.
RCTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- Sisll'r Harrll'll Warnf.'r , Sup! . Sunday
School 9:30a.m.; Morning Wors hlp, 10:45
a.m
POMEROY F1RST BAPTIST. LySioo
Ha ll ey. mlnlstPr. Willia m Snooffer. Sun da y Sc hool Su pt. Sund ay Schoo l. 9: .10 a.m .
: Mom in~ Worship 10 : 30 a.m.
FI RST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Po·
mercy Pike. E. Lamar O'Bryant. pastor:
Jack NN'ds, Su nda y School Director. Su n·
day Schoo!, 9:)) a.m.: Mornlng Worship,
10:45; evening wors hip , 7:00p.m . (O.S.T. J
'7:30 (E.S.T.I ; Wl'dnesday Prayer Ser ·
vice. 7: 00p.m. ID.S.T.I &amp; 7:3() P .M. lE .S.
T.): Mission F'rlf.'nds (ages 2-6). Royal
Amhassad ors I boy s ages G-18!. and Girls
In Action tagrs &amp;l81 on Wed n£"Sdays, 7 p.
m. ID.S.T. I &amp; 7:30p.m. IE·.S.T. l ; Tuesda y
Vlsllalion, 6:30 p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH . Sal ·
!ey Run Road . RE'V , Emmett Rawson , pastor. Handi E'y Dunn . supt . Su nday School.
10 a.m.; Sunday £&gt;\'('n ln~ S('f"Vice, 7:30p.m
; B!ble teaching, 7:30p.m. Thursda y.
SYRACUS E MI SSION, CHeri')' St .. Syracus£&gt;. Sen.ricf&gt;S, 10 a .m. Sund ay. Even ln g
sery!CE&gt;S Sunda y and Wedn esda y a~ 7: DO p.

(6141992·2039 Of
16141992·5721

....... • 992·297 s
ely disc u ssed these days. One reason for this

BEN
,
!FRANKLIN

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

I

ROIIR! fOI £Vflf OCCASION

204 Candor St.
Ponwoy, Ott .

II

RACINE PlANING MILL

p,,.,g Flotr~t $k~p
GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

Nati onwide Ins. Co.
ot Columbus, 0 .
104 w. Matn
tt2 ·2lll Po mer oy

GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949-2550

~

SEiVICE

REALTY

YOU'LL NEVER KNOW WHAT FAITH
CAN DO TILL YOU TRY IT
have 1t to lh)'Self
before God ."
- Romans 14 .22

FREE HEARING TESIS WEDNESDA'IS
&lt;!' CoJ111uterized Hearinc Air Selection
z Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

KIN'S

This Message .and Church Directory Spon.•wred By The lnte~sted Ji,~~inesses Listed On This Page.

EU.IS &amp;SONS SOHIO

'

:::::=====r;::::;;~B~u~s::::;:in=e=S=-s~S=e=rv===itCr.e;i;isiiiiiiiii!iiMii!iiWii'l3

· ~·

OR

.

The Daily Sentlnai- Page- 9

8.

to buy: Mobile Home.
I'IIIDneblt. C.l 814·

I

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S t'l ~I !t.t''

3 BR . LR, khchon1dining,, 1'h bl1h, UT RM. 2 cer

=:-=--:-..,.,,...-.,---.,.-- g01'-.r•.. gao hoot, CA. I14·448· :

11 Help Wanted

342!7

Three b&amp;droom homa. largalot. ·
Price reduced . C1!l 81•·448.,
Govamment jobs 116,040 - 2697 .
159:,230 yr. Now hlrlng . •CIU
105-IJI?· IOOO u:t. R-4812 fOr Brick ranch, 3 bdr.,Tbettl, 2 eer
cumnt federellltt.
g.-age. Extr• nice. 1'n mi. from
HMC . Ceii814-....B·M93 .
TtiiiPIIone 101M -to. ~aMI---------­
t1•·,...1·~30.
311111 .. 3Z ......
county
wettr. Rt. 7, Eulllta, ~·
AVON loll Avon mebl50ll. Coli fft&gt;m dom,
114114·«1-3381 .
«1-2208.

1----------

OFFICE OPEN TILL DARK

oil-.

nz,ooo. con

,.

,.

..

..,

'

"

�•
'

Page-1-0-The Daily Sentinel
31

Homas for Sale

'

111 Household Good• ; 114 Mlec: Merchandise
GOOD USED APPLIANCU
Woolron, ......... rolrlg.,ron.
Nft .. l. 1111111 Applllfl!)lt,
Upp.- ...._ Rd. bllkte Stone
c- Motol. 114-448· 7315.

Settle Ett•t• 3 bdr. ranch, 2
Mth, tlrtpltce. glfQt, dNfrablt
GellipoUt ,,.,, w•lk to tchool or
toWfl. Hilltop vie-w:. Ctll 814·
448-0388 after &amp;PM.

County Appllenot, ·fnc. Good
utad appllsin.., 1nd TV lltt.
Open lAM to IPM. MOll tlrN

Beautiful brick r11nch 3 bdr., 2'1:.
b•tha, ftmitvroom whtl fir•
place, 2 ctrQirage. 5 mUll from
town . Ctll 814 -448-0318 after
GPM.

lot. 114-441t.'llll. 127 3rd.
A... llollipolla. 011.

v...,.
Lart•

Fumlture, MW • used.
Metion of quality tuml·
ttHt. 1211 Eu11rn Ave .,
Oolllpollo.

4 ~room home for Mit Good
Hunting tnd good tithing. Can
be negotisttd with owner. Cali
614-985-U92 .

' High pri- 1101 you down I
ChaGk ut out. Mollohan F~ . •
AIIPI- Ollloon• Kolvlnotor. At. 7
North, O.Hipolo, On. Call 114441 ·7•-M. Cr.dh .,.u.ttl• to
quaiH.-:. buyen,

Government Hom" trorn t1 (U
repair). Alto delinquent t••
property. Ctll 1-806-687-6000
Elct. GH -9806 for lnformetion ..
5 rooms, bath, utility gMige.
aluminum tiding, storm windOws, doors, central hut. •ir
condition 614-992-6204.

G,.,,..r,...,,,•.,,,. w WOIId rogl\lt;r~

Ltnge 2 11ory home. Full b•••
ment with wood furntcetnd fuel
o;t furnen. Cltport, picnic lhtl·
ter, trailer hook -up. Appro11 1-2
1cr11. In De1r1.ter. 126,600. C1ll
614-742-2832 .

ol ·2f
....

Ulld furnhure. eofe, ch•lr, fuM
lin hld••bed. ·CJtMn till mat.'
tr• 1nd box
Corbin •
8nrder Fumtcure, 58 Seoond

"""J'·

"I used to date a hypochon- Rllrig. .tor trort ,,.. m . 2
driac, but it was cost_ing me
a ~~~.'b'y"old:~.;:~~
"
n71, 30 .,,
~'ortune in get-We ll Car d S.
_ _ , f75, 30 oloc.
l'
rang• gold t150, 40 h . tlec.

614 -986·3571 .
In Middleport. 7 rooms. 21)aths..
tull basement, gas hut, tir

L..----------T'-----------1
r

33

farms for Sale

44

condlliontd, wel l insultted. 2

----~
Phone 614 -992 ·3585 or 614 992-2860.
6 room hou1e With bath. 1Y2

ttcretlt lntarstction 143 tnd 7.
Tum left. first green house. Ctll
614·992-7453 .
By Owntr. Middleport corner
lot. 3 bedroom home. 1 VJ b1ths,
{las turnace, modem kitck~m.
tilling roo m, dining room. 1 car
gerege, car port. patio, clote to
school tnd thopping. Manv
e~r~.ut ' t
E~r~.ce llent condition .
Good neighborhood . Priced to
1ell. No Sunday cell• pleue.
614 -992-6072 .
Outlitv built 1 1h ttory Tudor
1tyle home on 5 wooded ecret,
10 minut11 from Point Ple111n1.
Send Hill Ro1d . 188,000 .00.
304-895-3363 .
REDUCED EXTRA NICE HOME
- 3 bedrooms. ready to move
into. Centrtl air, pool·declrt,
chti n link fence. gerden plot.
Lots of e11trat. Call after 5 p.m.
tnd waahndt, 304-676-7261 .
Nice two story, 4 bedroom, 2
livingrooms, kitchlen. dining.
bath end ctr port . Racine. Ohio.
132.000.00 . 614-247-3622 .
1'h story hou11, Flttrock 1re1,
30's. 304-675-4008 .
3 bedroom. 2 baths, finished
buement. 1ttached 2 cer gar -

age, hell pump endothiiM'tXtrlt .
M1yo Drive New Htven, 304882-3487 or 304-676-1816
after 6:00 PM.

3 bedroom~ , living room. kit chen. bath, family or dining
room, Potnt Pleasant, 304-6766939 .
1978, U x70 Kirkwood, 3 bedroom. 2 full b•tht, some remodeling, 304-773-6068.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sala
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES . • MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS .. RT 35.
PHONE 11.·U6 -7274 .

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS JEquol Houai"t 0 -·
tunltyl monthly Nnt ttlrtl at
63 acrM, partitlly fenced barn, t171 for 1 bedroom and U12
ltrge workshop. 1 'h story 3 or 4 for 2 b.troom, depotlt a200.
bdr. hou •• · othet out buildings. located nur Spring Vlllev Plua
Htnntn Tr~ct School District. tnd Foodlll'ld, poollndCibleTV
Ctn be purchaaed with or with• 1111illble. office houn H poniout fer m machinfKY. Ctll814 · ble10..-nto4pmand7pm.tDB
' pm Monday -Fridl'f', Ctll 614266-1616.
IM8-2745 or INve m•Nge.

For rent or Hie nice lot ~n
Raccoon Cre.._ Wtter, sawer,
electric, phone 185 mo .. travel
tflilert only. Call 814-2681216 .

----------------1
2
loU with 12x60 MH /r
l~rge

mile off At. 218, 10 mil• from
G•llipolis. Rural wtter, 11curlty
light. building. Ctll 614-241·
5049 evelngs .
For 11le b't owner 4.8 teres,
32M88 bid((., Pf'OPertVtllfenced.
good home build ing 1ite,
022.600 . Coli 614-286 -8522 ,
1-5 acr11,ptrtially wooded lots
nNr approvltd tub·dNitton. T .P.
and C. Wlttr and appro \fed rold
to each lot. Ae•onebty pri~.
will flntn ce with 10 perctnt
down . Ctll 614-986-31594.
16 •cree, loctlltd in Rud111d on
Beec:hgrollt Rd . New g11 •nd oil
well, All mintrll rlghtt. exceflent
hunting, ncluded tree .
014,000 . Coli 814-992 -3901
after 6:00pm.
50 acres, small bam. tobacco
tllotment, mineral rlghtl, rurtl
water, 304-87!5-3828 .
BY OWNER - 1 .5 tcret, Mt.
Alto on St. Rt. 2, tllcellent
building lite with all utllltiet.
drivewty, uptie tyttem ,
gerden, utility bam, fruit tTeW
•nd some l•nd•caping .
119,000. 304 -895-3422 aft•r
5 p.m.

Mtntio·n new lived in 7
mos .. 1111 up in Ch11hire Mobile
Homa Ptrk. Ctll 814-3670522 .
14~t70

121t80 mob ile home , new
carpet Qll furnlce, underpinning. Partially furnithed, U ,600
or bell otfar. Call 814-2666704.

3 bdr home in counuy, VInton
are•. Water-lr.. h tu rniahed.
t200 mo. t160 depottt. Cal
61 4 -398·9686 .
Hou 111 tor rent near Mlrcarvllle,
ni ce locttlon, nice v•rd, good
neighborhood. Raference&amp; depotit requlrld. Call d1ys 814·
446-3159 or 614·251·1552.

1984 Overland Park, 14117D.Iika
new . Totti elec . • consider truc k
on trtds . t15,000. Call 614448· 1724 1nytlme.
1959 Monlfch 121110 2 bdr.
C•ll 614 ·367-7781 .
In Pert1 Gorda. Fla. *11 ,500.
Two bdr .. with appli~tnee tnd
partly furnished, new hett pump
&amp; tir conditioner. florida room ,
carpet &amp; tool thad. Csll 814448 -8699 after 6 :00PM .
1980 Liberty 14~t64 , 2 bed·
room, unfurnished, vinyl under pinn ing included. Mutt tell. CaN
304· 773-5873.
1978 12•60 N11hu1 Mobile
Home in e~r~.cellent condition.
lnclud" nove, refriglf"ttor. di•·
hwather. 10•14 storage build·
ing, awning , concrete steps, lott
of 11ttra1. OwnM moving, Murt
see to apprecl1te. Call614-5926858 -'Ytima.
MOBILE HOMES MOVED: inlUred . re,.onable ratt!ll, Ctll
304-576-2338

On Mulberry Ave. 2 badrooma.
Call814·992-3!61 .
Cu te cottag1 for tlnglt per10n,
furnlhted, utllhiM paid, tSS .OO
Plf' weH, 304-175-3100 or
676-5509.

42 Mobile Homaa
for Rant
Furnished, ctble, beautiful rivlr·
view, In Kanauge, no cltv t111.1a .
Fosters Mobile Home Park. CaM
614 -448 -1802 .
For .. Ia or rent. 141170. 3 bdr.,
1% bath, clo11 to tdwn. C•ll
614-446 -7645 .
-

2 bedroom, naw carpet, AC. In
Gallipolis. Cal1814-448·1409 .
2 bdr 121165 MH 1 child
tcceptlbll, Kyg• Crtt11l School
Dlatrlct. t176, plus t100 depotlt. C•ll 614-448-3152 .
2 bdr . on O.J . Whitt Rd. Quiet
country lifting. Ctll 114·441·
71 !1 efter 8PM

1964, 10d6 V•n Dyke mobile
home. 2 bedroom, living room
with tip out, ntw carpttlnt and
linoleum. U .OOO.OO . 304-676 6613 or 676-2949 .

Tralltr tor rent in Tupptrs Plelnt
Ohio. Coupl• onty. Will conddar
1 child. Telephone 014·1673808 ,

14 ' .. 70' mobile tlome, 3 bedroo ms, underpenning, tppllan CIII inctudtd, NICE. 304·8751418 .

33

Farms for Sala ,

By owner, 110 acre tarm at
Deattr. All htgh ground, beautiful home with dutl heat, swimming pool. Muat IH. P.O.I. By
owner. 114 aCft farm n••
Dtxttr, 2 bema, mod1m 3
bedro·om ' hoult, wiley Mttlng.
C•ll 814 -7,42-2877.

2 bdr..- n.., Sitvtr Brldgt Plua.
Nice carpeting, .,..... 6 gorob1111' paid. Coli 814-448-7 25.
Apartment for rent. Quality 2
BR. 2 bath apartment In prim.
downtown k)cttion wllh off·
ttrelt pt~g . Kitchen fumithed
with refrlg. , ..tf·clean oven,
DW. gOt, dlsp.. hookup lo&lt;
wtthlf/ drytr. For non-smoking
single or coupl1. No child,... or
pets ; All electric. lnc:tudllwtter/ uw./trnh. A one Vllr INielt
requirtrd . Call 814-448·1894
9AM to IS PM.
Fumishld apt ., 1 bdr., 701 4th
A11e. , Qallipolit. a235 mo. utilitill paid. Call 448·.t411 att.f
7pm.

2 bedroom mobile homt. Neer
Recine. Ctll 814-992-6868 .

43 Farms for Rant
34 •era cropland, 60 ac:r~~
PlltUrt l tObtoeo tkn"ment.
Coil 304·878·51 04:
38 acrtl firming ltnd for lelll
on old Rt .33. C1il 6t4-948·
2103 . 4 10 8pm.

44

Apartment
for Rent

APARTMENTS, moillll homoo,
houHI. I't. Pl-ond Oolllpollo: 614·448·1221 .
One bldroom ept, co~
loCOIIon, 304·111·2U1 .

VIllage Pfahzcreff, .t4 piecat,
a100 . 00 ; aatalog price
.175.00. 304·075· 1320 .

64 Miec. Merchandise
Ctllahen't Used Tire Shop. Owr
1,000tl,_, sliM 12. 13, 14 , 16,
18, 18.5. 8 mllll OUI Rt. 218.
Coli 61 4 -211·1281 .
Electrolux VICCUUm cl..,lf't,
A-1 condltion-attec h mente.
lveilable at 172 .00 . C•h or
tlf'ma anengld. CaM 814.. 2469118 or 304-575-0799 .
Pladk: clattm 11:1t1 approved,
plutlc . .tic ttnkl, Paatic
culver1a. metal cutv.rte. RON
EVAN8 ENTERPRISES, Jock·
oon. Oh. 014-288-15830 .

Atfrig•ation 6 AppNan.,_ Ser·
vic.. All brandt uMdeppliencea-

6 Court St. 3 bdr. 1'h btth, t2150
mo ., plut utllhln, rwfnncw a
no pets. Ctll 814-448-4928.

pom. Ulllo'• Rofrig• • AIIPI ..
Ch11hl,., On 814-387-0440.

Fumithld Apt , 2 bdr., U91
mo., water pd. 1 138 2nd. Ave.,
Golllpollo. Coli 814.446-4418
•fter 7PM.

5801 011a backhoe wtth tKten ct.ble boom and ceb. eJr.cellent
condillon 112,1100 . Coil 814543-0115.

2 bdr. utllitl11 partially fum ..
• 175 mo. con 304-675-5288
or 304-175·5104 .
New 1 bedroom IPtrtment. Cal
614-441·0390 .

1 bedroom apartment It 402YJ
Twenty Fourth St., P~nt
11nl. C.H 1·304-571-4024.

PI••

1 bedroom fumilhtd epanment.
Ideal for working couple. No
pitt. Otpoatt required . CaM
814-982-2937.
Small tpartmant tor 1 pMMn.
On Socond Sr. In Mldd~ .
Coli 814·112-8252 . Koy Cor:ll.
For rtnt 1 bedroom tumllhld
oport-r. Coli 11 4-192·1434
•• 303-882-2818 .

46

Furnished Rooms

46 Speca for Rent
COUI'frRY MOBILE Homo Plflr.
Routt 33, North or 'onwoy.
Lorvololl. Colll1 4-812·7478.
Tretter lott1or Nnt on Tounthlp
Rottd 87. School but, Wltet',
14ectric, tefephone. 1 mile from
Memorlel Otrclenl Cemltlry.
Cal Merion Revnoldt at 814985•'329.

M1: r 1.11 d 11111 s1:
61 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12
Olivo St .. GolllpOMo. Now• UMd
wood·C911ttov•. 8 pc woOd lR
tuhe t398, bunk bed• Ull,
tntron reclin• f88 , new •
uHd bedroom tultel, fii'IQM,
wrineer wtth1ra, • aho11. New
llvlng&lt;Oom ouh11 t191 -•8tl.
ltmpt, 11to.buying ooll • wood
ItO VII. C. II 11.t ·448 -31SI .
LAVNE ' I FURNITURE
Sof• end chill,. priC*i from
uu. to •ae8 . Tllbl•, ••o •d
•us. Hid••·b«tt,UIO.
and up to •an.. eofl beda
t141, R1olinen, t221 . to
Limp• !rom •21 . '"
t1215 . pc. dlnett• from 1101.,
104311. 7pc. tiSIMdup. Wood
181111 with tiJI
t211 to
t745. Dook t121 .. to U75.
""'"""· neo. a...k llod
......
pleto wllh . .lb
, U75.
•d ,. to 1381. lllby bodo,
•110 . ·Mattre1111 or box
tpringe, ful or twin, tl3., flrm,

-.to

un..

ell*'

.,,_ .-d ••3 . . au...

m--

.....

t221 . led tr.m•, 120.1ftd
Ul., 10 ... - 0111 collin OIL
UIO. Clot or n n. llllby
1:111 •
f41, bod from•
125, •
--.3o;-lilftghO.•iil ..o. Goo&lt;~
11&amp;eclion of bedroom atit•.

no.

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

roclln. IMUII oeblnttl. held\.

Ullll f,..lluro •• - · . illtl,

TN.Wie llod. --1111111.

3-

........... lid. Open

.... .., lpm. Mon. "'"' ....

114-441·0ll22

Tandy 1000 home co,...,uter,
equipped witt! oolored monitor.
printer, liM C0"1)atlble, ulld
lppfOX. 12 hoUfl. OYII' 12 ,1()0
inwetted . will ucrltlcl for
•1.1100. Coil 814-440 -4171
after !PM.
Color TV 't 1U shape end tillt.
C•ll 614-448-1149 .
Motorized treadmill, excellent
condition, tl500 . Call 814 -448·
31174.
Pink Prom Ora11 tbt 7, full
,.,gill. Call 814-388-9335.

KIJ' 'N' CARLYLE ®by L1rry

Two formtla, ti111J tnd 9 -10.
304-812-3820 .
•

76

BNUttful pink long forme! wtth
whttl ltce mttchlng mlttt, liat
7-8 Must ' " to appreclat•.
304·1182-2904 .

Central 1lr condition• for mo IMit horne, t300 . Call aft•
5 :00PM, 114-388-11100.
1981 EtcOrt ltatDnwagon. one
owner, 38,000 olr, U,995 ,
1171 Iuick LIStbre 4 door,
loaded, on a owner. 11 ,BOO
Cotctunen 18' pop-up campti",
sloops B. •uoo. Coil 814-446 7019.
Htgh btctt couch and chair Mt.
Ntct newt ,981 Cemaro In IJ!od
oondhlon. Coil 814-440·0059.
Lawn mo.., 20 ~ . ClR, also
Ftymo llwn mow.... like new.
SIIIPW 10fa In good condition.
C•U14 -258· 131&amp;.

78

KE100 motorcycl•. Saara Oo·
Cart. Huffy 7 hp riding mower.
Sllrtdryer. 1971 Cam.-o . NIW
EOIO tire •nd rim. Porch railing.
Wil do lawn elfa and plow a mall
gordent. 304-075 ·1U3 .

Now optn from 8:00 until ts:OO
Monday thru Saturdl'f' It Minwevltlt on Rt. U4. Hou• of
lirgllrie and Ohio Valley Sa'-'·
Ike Sy.t~ms . U11d ctothing
lman. women, chlldNn); baby
cloth• ·• .10 up: flowers; new
tMnll tho• fi .OO, ootored:
boy' a drttat aho• 17.96; difterlftt thinll put out everyday.
TONY'SilUN REPAIRS , ilo1 dip
,..,luling. oil ty1111 of gunomllh
work, flit ltt'VIOI, 304-676·
4831 .
Trl Coumy Sport Shop, &amp;prlng
Yolloy "ou, lloillpollo, Ohio.
Ount, ArohetY. TICkle. 814445 -2335.
HALF~ PRICEn FIMhlng •rrow

liOn• UHI Lighlld,.non·arrow
U711 Nonllghtlll *2211 'FrM
Only low loll. 111
locally . 111001423· 0183 .
onytlmo,

I dlomon4 wrop '""'nd ring
onty owm 3 montha,
uoo.oo. 304-175-4415.

~.

Auto Pertt
&amp; Acceaorfes

Cemplng
Equipment

, YOU'RE

i
CHE CKED our

BASY, 50 YOU 'l-L BECONTRO L.S. WITH M6.

1811B Fon TriVII Trolor, 17'1\ft.,
bitt. wtth lhower. u•tlectrlc:
refrig•ator. 3 bum• 111 ttow
with ...... 110. Sloopo 4. 304· ..
773·8170 .

66 Building Supplies

·79 Motort Homes
&amp; Campert

Building Materi1ll

Block, brick,

MWIM" pip•, Win ·
dowt. lnttla, etc. Ct.ude Win ·
Mt'l, FUo Grande, 0 . Call 814245· 5121 .

Building mataritll, cement,
blocks tlltlzet, ytrd or.dtllvary.
Gallpall1 BkJck Co., 123Y.J Pine
St, Golllpollt, Ohio Coli 014 441-2783.
SIVe 8ulldert Supplies Surplut.
Cloteouts . Salveg1.
1 Prehung steellnsultted 8 or 8
panel doortt 89.95.
2 . Prlhung 11M I lnaulttad door
tnd gltn &amp;lite or 111ta t126 .9! .
3 . Double tide lite entrance door
1111 Ya gl111 91itt U99 .
4 Single sidelhe entrance door
seta YJ thetmal gi111 t299.9fi .
I . Commercial double entrtncet
111 brown •II aluminum t599 .
8 . Doub .. sidalit11 entr1nce aet
wood V:. ptnei Ya gltat wdecoratlve trim t299 .915 .
7 . Prehunu interior doors all
Iiiii tnd finithfl 8 grid•
t29.96 ...
8 . Pehung interior 6 ptnel pine
door's 111 tlz11 !B) gr.dea,
U9 .95 11.
9 . Thermt1 intuleted gl111 p•n·
eta 711" hgt. 32'' wide t39 .96

•••

10. Wood door panelt w-full
glaaa 79 " hgt . 34" wide 1 'A
thlclr f39 .95.
11 . Octtgonal window wat•lned lelded gla11 t&amp;9 .96 ea .
12 . Cltlr 1crvll,c t~ee1s 080 and
125 g~l Ievere! SbiM big
uvings .
13 . Plywood handy p•nela
62"1ong 18 " wide Y, thick t . 76·
t1 .00 ...
14. Matonlte primed horl1ootal
Pttrior siding 16'•16"117-16

•2o.oooq.

16 . B-grlde marble vanity to p•
choicullu in atoclrl . 120 .00111 .
1$ , 4'x8 ' netted pine latt ice
*14.915 et.
17. K-lux br ick and stone red and
ttn. rig. t8 .99 ctn now t1 .60
1nd t1 .99 ctn .
18 . EJrter6or key doortock elumi·
num fini1h 12.99ea.
19. Oood usld 8 -2 bulb light
complete w ·bulbs t 16 .00ee.
20. Wood·M•ton!te-btthraom
p•nellng 4'~t8' pc 84 .99 to
t9 .95 .. .
21 . Prtfinlahld tnd unfinls~ed
door and win~w tnd tit fYPII of
trim lttrtlng It a1 .00 tor 8 'pc
22. Aluminum mobil• home •nd
bam roof cotting w-fiber 68ga1.
•23 .9&amp; 100 gal and up t20.95
&amp;gal pall.
23 . Wtllbottd adhesive qt. tubes .
or' 21o1 . t1 .39 11 . or by cue

n .2B ...

24 . P•nlling naill t .79 bolt .
PENN ' S WAREHOUSE ·
Wellston, Ohio 81 ' -384-3846 .
Block, brick, montr end ma aonry tuppilea. Mounta in State
Btodt, At. 33. New Haven, W.
Vo . 304·S82-2222 .

56

67

6B

Musical
Instruments

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Discount prices. Apple trill
t11 .50, Vewt a12 .50, Maples
t8 .&amp;0. Dogwood t8 .50 , Azalitt
te .95 . 2 mi. North of Bridge
014-448 -IHI40. Opon 4 :00 Ill
01111.

f ,II Ill SlijJjJIII! S
&amp; L1ve stuek
61

61

Far,m Equipment

Utility bldg. tpl.: 30'x40'x9',
16 '118 ' llldlng doOr &amp; 3' , . ,,

Farm .Equipment

CROSS e. SONS
U.S. 315 WHt. Jtckaon, Ohio.
81 4·211· &amp;151 .
Masaty Fervuton, New Holland,
luah Hog Sel• I Service. Over
40 used tr1ctou to dtooae from
l IXI"11~ta nne of new • uMd
.:julpment. t.argnt at1ec1ion In
S.E. Ohio.
We will do 111 types of cu11om
f1rm machin"'Y work , Call for
rat• . 814 · 258-88315 .
JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 35 W. Golllpollo,
Ohio. Cell 614-448 -9777. eve.
81 4·446 -3182 . Up front 1rletora wtth wqrr•nty over 71 ulld
1rectors, 1000 toolt.

Autos for Sale

71

78 Muttana V-8, 4 IPd· meg
wheela T ·top, boka&amp; runa good,

door. tl ,266 trtctld . Iron Mking t1.000 . Call 814-379HorM Bldgt. 814·332-9741.

:1430.

1970 &amp;000 Forddl..t13bonom
M111ie F8J8uaon pk»ws. I pt.
trenaport dltc. 6 ft. Wood1
buthhog, •6,996. Coil 614 216-1\1122.

1985 Ford Tempo low mlluge,
-cruise control, tiH, eterto, blue
color, cloth lnterkJr, •uto., e11c.
oond., •&amp;.300. Calt 10AM to
SPM, 814-448 -7441.

Endloeder for 35 F1rgutonend 3
pt hitch disc. Ctll 814-448 ·
4484.

1980 Merced• a.,z SE .tiiO,
PW, PSR. exc. cond.. evertge
rniiNQt, emartld grMn, AM-FM
Cllllttl 111:..-eo, ck)th Interior,
thllfl wholtllle.
will 1111 tor
Coli 10AM 10 IPM, 514-441·
7441 .

Mower for Gra11ely tractor,
UOO . Coli 814 -2118· 11035 .
MtiNY F~rguton 110 tractor,
g11. B speed, live PTO , PS ,
cliff-lack. C•ll 814-440-7322 .
3020 John Deere Trtctor. E~tcel­
lent condhion . 2 ul" low boy
trallar. Call 114-992 -7401 .
Pole Building Spacial. m•ny
coton and llzu, ctll for low
prlcn, 614 -245-9146 .

I••

1986 Pontiac Fl1ro. Loedtd,
eJicellent condh~n . ai&amp;OO. C•ll
614·992·15828 anytime.
1978 · Ford Tlrundorblrd . Good
condition . New AJdiel tlr•. tllt
whtel. AC . full powlf. 814 -9814418.
19 78 Malibu Cl11ti C: 305 V8,

P$, PB, air, CNitt, AM Fldio,

Deutt trtctor, Ptrtt tnd tlf"'lce
at the bel'l price, Siders Equlpmsnt Co. 304-67!5·7421 .

7! ,900 orig~1l mil•. t18150.
080 . Collll14-992· 2386 .

Allis Chalmer 2 row 3 potnt
no·till planter, dry fertilizer and
tnsect 1111ch11mtnt. d•monstrt·
tor t2,800.00. Allis Ch•lmert .t
row p..tll no -till, dry ftrtlllltr ,
insect ltttchemnt, a1 ,900 .00 .
Altit C~tlmett 4 row pull no -till.
78 11ri11, air units, dry ftrtlliur
t6,600.00. Allis Chalmers 8
row dry ftrtlliur, hydr1ullc
markert, innct and t.•blcld t
ettech ment a1 .900.00 . Case
Model 680 911 backhound end
lotder , ctb , 11ery goad .
t8.600.00. International 500 D
d4tisel OOzer hydr.... uc btlde and
wenclt 18,900.00. Ktlftr Service Center, Point P11111nt Aiply
Rood. 304· 895-:11174.

apeed , delu•• interior, IIICellent

ln1ema1ion11 Hay Btler No . 66T,
304-882-2385 .
John 0Hre A limt·ftrtlllzer
spreader, John DHte hay condl·
tionar, c1ll lnytlrf\I!,A340 -B95·
3471 .
'"'

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

-;!

62 Wanted to Buy

1982 Oat10n 310 Hetchbtck. I

1973 Toyota Cellca. 4 speed,
Atd Wit~ good body, runt good.
8andyt Auto Stl• ai!ISO. 614·
982·7403.
1971 Toyota Ctlict OT Uftback.
Sunroof, elloy wh•la. t1100.
Cell 114-892-3214 attar 5 :00
p.m.
1985 Camero. call before 2:00
PM. 304-875·&amp;610.
19 71 Uncoil M..-lt IV . rebuilt
.,glne ~nd ntW battery. Nell
10ma body work, t700 .00.
304-575-2611 .
1973 Oldt 88. good cond, no
rust. aeoo.OO. C•ll 304·571:1408.
1981 Monte Carta, 11 ,000 plut
mlln , loaded, uautM kl1n,
304-075-7852 .

'88 Camaro. n .ooo.oo Of b..t
a11... 304-n3 -606B.

,9n

Plymouth Votare s111tlon
wJgon , •uto .• 318 ang .. PS . PB.'
eir cond., t795 . Phone 304876-1849 .

63

1982 Chevy Citation, 2 doors, 4
speed , 4 cyl., 56 ,000 miln,
AM·FM ca11ette. tl. OOO. 304·
875 · 7431.

Livestock

Bentley Pig Stle. WednHCIIY
April 30th. 7:30PM. Favtttt
County Fairgrounds. Wuhing ·
ton, CH . Selhng 160 hNd of
H1mp, Durocs, Btrrowt • glht.
Roger Bentley, 3112 Reed Ad.,
Stbina. Oh . C1ll 513-!584·
2398 .

bo•"·

Pure bred Ouroc
Roger
Bentley, S1bint, Oh . C1ll 513 584·2398 .
Yearling Cheroltlt bull, 900 lb.,
noo. C•ll 814-448·4447 or
514·446-9762 .
Saddle • work hore• for tile or
trtde. C1ll 814-387-0293.
Double till . Tenn. walking
horte. Mtr• tnd Coke. Aleo
Double reg . TInn. walking horae
Stud a.-viet. 014-742-20&amp;0 .

1978 Sub1ru GF, automatic, 4
cyl.. AM-FM Cltllttl. t1 ,000.
304-878 -7435 .

72

Trucks for Sale

1977 114 ton Chevy pidlup.
•1200. Call 014-446-7637.

Hay &amp; Grein

Want to rtnt hay flekls netr Eno
"'Ponor. Coli 814· 3f18-9832 .
Mixed tl,y ltrge JCIUifl belet,
.1 26 304-571-5079.

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Seed corn Oektlb and Kenworthy. Phone 304-875 -1608
lft1r 8 :00 PM.

Tro nspnr 1a11nn

1982 Hondo CB-710, 2920
814 -448-0122 lfter. 4.
t983 Hondt XR 200 dirt bike,
••c. cond. Ctlll14 -.t48 ·70111 .
1985 VT 1100 Shldow, tow
mlleeg•. eac. cond. Cl•l tfter
6PM, 814 -387-01118 .
1980 ICIWIItkl KOX goodcond.
•400. Coli 814 -448 -3152, .
1971 Hondt 380 for Ale. low
ml...ge. •400 or b•t offer. C•ll
614 -115-:1110) .

71

Autos for Sale

78 Fairmont, good cond .
t1200 . 87 Chevy pickup. good
eond. t700 . Call 814 -21511 ·
1487 .
74 Dart Swlnge,., CJ -1 Jeep
New top. new tirn, sharp. Call
614-446-2708 .
1971 Plymouth Du111r 318
1uto . PS. runa good, loalta good
*3715. 1970 Ford Msv.,ldl 6
cyl., 1uto, nmt good, looks
dec.nt a1115 or offer. s .. at
1710 Chtthtm Avt., G•lllpol~ .
1974 Chevv Nova 8 cyl., runt
exce llent, looll.a~J~od UISO . C11i
114-446 -8101 tnytlm«
1974 Mercury M1rqula auto
trono. Ctll 814-40 -0810.
1979 Thundetbird blue whh
white vinyl top. good cond. Call
rrfllf O:OOPM, 014-448·8264,
1978 AMC Pacw UOO. rune
good. Coli 814 -445 -2824 ,

1819 CB 710 KHond•Motorcyclt. Low mUt~ge . 4 N1 Helder.
t900 or beat offer. Call 114!112-1787.
1980 K1W111ki LTD 1000, be
cond, 304-!7!5 · 6433. .

e wheel llltl"aln vllhlclt, good
co ndition . 30"·882-2887.

1954 Kowolllrl KOX -200 Olrt
Blk1, like new, IHa th•n 160
miles. Anawer SIIW~cer, t1400
or bett offlf, Ctll 304-671518119. Tony Kllthl..,..

75

Boata and
Motors for Sele

1915 lnternatlontl cub 1r1ctor,
cuHivatora, aide drener, ...... nd Qood nuVtinQ 1977 Camaro, ped..tal ~t.!_at~ Yi...Jtrdt Tilt
Tralllr, trolling motor and more.
WOOdl belly mowtr, 111 In A-1 1860.Cilll14-210·8Z78.
1475. Coll014-742-2577. ·
condtUon . !1000 tobtccO ttlckt.
1977 Bolt* Regal . 1978 Chev·
Coii814-ZS5-1259 .
rolet Bla11r. Call 114·4tl· 12 ft bol1.
11ml V bottom
with 8 hp motor. 304-87&amp;2010 John DMrt wkle front ltv. 41541.
M02.
powar, power11wlng, t3,IIJO.
14· T Jotln DMra b1ler till. 87 ChOYoll• Mollbu 3110 4
JDfrln o..,. rHt till. MF dina berNII. tuto .. Cluel •hlult, runa 17 fl. old boot wlllltodolor 18ft.
bound mower with 7 fl . ber like
ocl. 1o11 o1 '"'"'· ••oo. con tto 17 ft . but boll. Phone
4 -378 -2430.
.
,304-171-0331 .
now . Coil 814·ZS6· 11B22 .

a..,.

•

.

IF THE WIZER STILL.
DOESN'T REMEMBER

DON'T SWEAT
IT.1 [ 1 l.L F IGURE
SOME'TH IMG OUT!

ANVT&gt;11NG ~»iEN
WN&lt;ES UP....

1972 122 ttl Yellowetone

camp•. Htf conttlntd with
.wnlng 'and lir cond. Cell
304-575-4113 .

EEKANDMEEK

B1

Home
Improvement•

a&lt;.

ST~IGHT UP
Cl-\~'5fR ~

W MOO 'JJ~ W: M~lt;D
BUr Mr' R:X' FtaS I S/1:l.JLD

\UnH P.

Jusr RW A~CroW ;....·--&amp;....

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINO
Uncondidon1l' Nfetlme g~J~rlln ·
tH . Local reftrencte tumtlhed.
Fr11 •tlmttet. Cd collect
1 -814-237-0488, d.y or ntght.
Roger• leaement
Waterproofing;
·
Root+ng, painting, room Hdl·
llont, ltC . FrH "timatet, 17
vews ••perlence. I
W Con·
.tructlon. Cell 814-441-8588 Of'
814·245-144S IVI't.

a

Concrete • bktclt 11¥ffk. aa.o
cerpentry • painting. 'ttrlfM.
Pltiot, lkMwalkl, blllmema.
FrM wtlrn.tea. ly Job Of hour.
W1'r1 on the 1....1. Call 814· :
:'41-0911.

MR5. STENGLE Aef&lt;E;DME

WHY I DIDN'TDOMY
!-IO\.IE'.\ORK I.Ae&gt;T N lqt-iT.

I TOL.D HER "61L.L.COSBY)'
"F'AMIL.YTIES;' 'CHEERS"

AND "NIG:HTCCUR.T ;•

MR5. 5TENG;L.E OOE5N 1T
HAVE'MWCHOF
A SENSE OF HUMOR -

AND I THCt.I6HT THEY

ISTHEAIR
POI...L.L.lTICN

'NERE E-XAGGEAATIN6!

UP THERE

ASe.ADA9
E\IER'( 600'(

51'1¥.5 IT IS,
FC6TER'&lt;

RON'S Televlalon Serv ice .
Hou11 aHe on RCA, Quuar.
llE. Spoclollng In ZonMh. Cal
304·171·2318 or 11 .t-441 :
2454 .

Fetty Tree Trimming. ttump
removal . Ctll304·171· 1331 .
RINilLES'S SERVICE. lkperiMiced carpenter. tltctrtden.
mMOn, painter, rooting (lnclucllng hoi ror oppllelllonl 304·
175·2088 "'571·7311.

Evening Television Li.stings _____.:....-------------------------~-------FRIDAY

Stlrkt Tree •nd Llwn Servtoe.
londtcoplng. 304-576-2010

Remodeling, etectrlcel, panel·
lng. ,.lntlng. Interior end • •
rlor. Fred Peai'IOft, 304-1714004.

1l2

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

~}25/86
EVENING

7:00

8 cii PM Mogozlno
Cil Allao Smith end Jones
CD SportoCentor

(I) Entertainment Tonight
Richard Crenna dis cusses
hla role as billionaire in·
dusuialist Ross Perot in the
upcoming TV movie, " On
Win.B_S of Eagles" .
Jefferson•
Cl Cll® Wh"l of Fonuno
Cll Nightly Buolnoao Ropon
(JJ Eyewltn••• News
(fi) MacNeii·L.ehrar Newshour
Ill ll1l Dlvori:e Coun
1111 Berney Miller
7:30 II iJ) (I) Now Newlywed

.. rn

Gomo

CD NHL Hockey: Divisional
Flnalo

foil (!) WKRP

CARTER'S PLUMIINil
AND HEATINil
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Golllpollo. Ohio
Phone 814·«8·3118 or 114·
448-4477

B3

Excavating

Good · 1 EJICIIYttlng, battmMt&amp;.
footers, driveways. MPtictlnkt,
ltndtctping. Clll anytime 814441-4137, J1m11 L. Oevilon,
Jr. own..-.

B6

D Cll (!))

7 :35
8 :00

General Hauling

JtmH Boyt Water Service. Al.o
pools filled . Call814·251-1141
or 614·448-1178 or 814 -448 7111 1.
Ken '• Water Service. Well•,
cilterns, poolt •nd w•t•rbeds
flllod . Con 814·387-9823 or
614-367-7741 or 304-076 ·
1247.
Co1l, lim•tone, Qrtvel, etc: .
Delivered 1 ton 1nd up . Jim
Lanltr, 304-8715 -1247 or 175 7397.
B:05

U pholatery

18 ft . bolt, motor a trailer,
1700. Coli 814-2&amp;8 ·11B63.

Sit King 12 ft. Semi·V wHh

r:

&lt;0&gt;

1973 Tttan Motor Home. 21 ft.
440 Dodge engine. QOod Condl·
tlon. MOOO. Coli 114-74220110 .

87

1971 Starcrlft akl bOlt with
rmny txtflt. Wl!lk t~rough
windows. I&amp; Evlnrudt, very
good oond., u,ooo. Coli 814·
441·2164.

QUALITY GON"r~OL..

$0FTWA~E p~oB~!M.

0

1810 (28 ft.)cortlllori&gt;Yikyllno.
Completely .. u.conttlned.
tlliOO . C•III14-742-Z184.

Ctrpenter work, roofing, liding.
ltl.ctrlcel. reltiOnableraflll. gu•
r~ntead work. c:lll 30.t-171·
11011.

mi .... with IX1tll. 114150 C•ll

~OSO'r f:f:tiAVIO~
I!NVI~ONMEfNT ANP

1 9811 .Sunray Travel Trail• 128
ft ,J, Fully ,ulpplll. UHd 1
month. C1ll 14·112-1112 or
304·882-2230 -ondo.

' 71 Toyott for uta. 1600 .00,

1918 Hond• Hawlil 400 m'otorcycle whtl ven• qulcltsltver
ferring, luoeage r•ck &amp; beck
rnt, crulu eontrol. two
hllmeu, excellent condtUo n,
1800. Call 814-245 -15318 until
6 :30.

TWO MA.JO~
INFLuS'NCE$' ON

/

you HAVE= A

1172 T1111 -A-Long 1i ft. tnllfr.
Vety good condition. 11411.
Call 114-182 -8173 or 11&lt;1·
992-1208.

Rk:h•d and lont. lnltrior and
eattrtor pekttlng end wallptper·
InDo plrono 304·115·7147. Ill·
ohlrd D. Purch ....

Motorcycles

TH~i: ~

ROBOTICS
DEPT.

-rn ,.He

PIAGI'Io$TIC coMpUTE"~,

21 pt. Trotwood txc. cond.,
u .ooo. Coli 814-250· 1583.

1978 Ctlevy Bluer, 4x4, 3!50
auto., runs good, body rough.
New tlret tnd two extra rlmt.
:1118-8510

74

A&lt;=&lt;=OflPIN&lt;P

1877 VW motor hon-.,153.000
miles , 111 tra nlc:e , Ilk•
newl2,811. 8 • 0 Motor•.
614-448· 7322 .
.

1983 Ford Ranger 14 ,000. C1ll
B14 ·307-nB1.

304-175 -7568 .

I

11ft. TIQ-a-tong camp• tor Hie
or trtde for JMckup truck, Cell
014-201-1UI.

Rotary or clble tool drMNnQ.
Moat welltcomplated11med..,.
Pump Ill• and ...W:.. 304898-3802

8 ..... old pigs. t30.00, Coil
Iff• 5 :00PM. 304-895-35 19 .

64

1874 ltaroraft fDidout ctmpir.
liMP• 8, oo....,lett with ttove.
let box. Mohtl •link.eac. ODnd ••
Ilk• now. CoN 814·381-1755
-oftor IPM.

oondhlon . UBOO. 080, Call
514-742-2581.

Now buying shell corn or ear
corn . Call forlatettquotu Rlvlf
Chy Farm Supply, 614 -448 2986 .

Pats for Sala

PIANO FOR SALE, Wwntd :
Rnpon11ble p•rtv to a•aima
1m1ll monthly I)IYmtnta on
lllinlf·conto1e ptano. Can ba
..., locally. Wri te: (inclu de
phon• number) Credl1 Manager.
P, 0 . Boa 520, Beckemeye r, Ill
82219

Hllf Prtc:.l Fl11hing arrow stgna
t2181 Ughted, non·t"owt2791·
Nonllghtad 12291 FrM lltt~ttl
Only lew loll. SH lo ..lly.
11800)423-0183, onytlmo.
Control hungwlnd .loae ~ht
with New Ortpefrult· PPH .
Combo. Fruth Ph.,.macy.

j

PU topp••· 8 fl. end llrift .• Ill :.~
..... . Calll14-448·7322.
.

8 hp riding l1wn mower,
Snapp•. ele&lt;: ttart, bagger. colt
*1 ,500 .00 now t1,000.00,
uM II hoota. Homallte XL2
clliln oow. 304 -075· 8147 .

----------Oragonwynd Canary Kennel .
CFA Hlmal1yan, Ptt tltn end
Slam•• kittens. AKC Chow
White metal atorm door, Croll- puppill. New puppill &amp; kittens.
buck atylt, 11·W' • 38 \4 " . Call 446-3844 eher 7PM.
•110.00. Coil 814-441-0123
oflor 8 :11P .M.
Wanted to buy fo• Hound
puppy. Call 714 -537.· 1843 or
Woll puft'CI 1-3 &amp; 1-2 ilo&lt;Oop- writ• 10662 Till Or.. Garden
ower holding tank. Call 814 - Gro ... CA 12043.
742-2788.
Rat Ter rier pups , wormed,
8Etrt 11 cu.tt . frMzar . Call ltlnderd tlze, •tto Aultr~lien
814·2BB· 1891 .
Bk.t1 H...er, ftm1le, 2 yr.
614 -256-1467,
Tumttbl•c:llllttl player 190 .
fUdlog ltwn mowtr *1215, 3a18 Chaw·chow puppln tllver blue.
robblll homo •121 . Coli 614 · AKC Reg. c~1mplon blood lin II.
387-n81 .
Ea. pedlgrMt. Stud nrvlce.
1-8U-256 -12 71 .
Alurrinum aiding brllke, 2 11t1
'-ddir I.Ckl. tool boil tor SA tDn AKC BliCk Labldora puppiet,
truck, 2 in. pip1 utility tiCk, havt hid all ahou, t100 .00
elummum cut table, Ht utlltty •ch. call 304-876-4308.
CIMvll'llllld wort. horsea. C.H
e14 -387-nl1 .

11 ln. glrlt illko, high choir •
ploypon. C.llll4-448-7881 .

Daily Sentinei- Page- 11.

Boett.end
Motort for Sele

111oollnbolfd- oild troller,
8 oyl., ~nglne, "'·, . flOOd. '~
t3000.00, Phone 304-171 . ...
184!---ond mor 7, 304-178318• .
.

11,o00 btu window lit' oond,
•10 .00. Two bolgo1 oolorod
bucket 11eti for 86 ford
..o.oo. 304-178-1325 .

21" con1011 color TV , uking
tSO . Eurclle bike •20. Call
614·2411·1070 before ZPM .

10 gel. tt... barrtlla, 5 mil•
wnt of AJo Orende. On Co. Rd ..
n . Collt14-812-MI2 .

Mobile Homa Ctll 814-448· 1 - - - - - - - - - - 0508 tfttr 5:00 PM.

Now ditplaying our new spring
models in 1ingle and doublewidt
ho mes et reduced prices. Wttt·
wood Homu. 5898 At. 80 E.,
Btrbou r•vil l•. W. Vt . 304·736·
3888 open everv day .

1979. 14x60 mobila home, 2
bedrooms. tottl electric, under Pf'nnlngJ t&amp;.ooo .oo . Phon•
304-27•-5719 .

e

For rwnt Sleeping Roomt tnd
light houM keeping rooms. Park
Central Hotel, Call 614·446·
0766,

1977 Holly Park 12•tO CA,
underpinning , ptrtly fumithedm
e•c. cond. t7,600 . Ctll 6·14·
245-6120.

Pickllftl Uled Furnitura. Good
qutllty uald fumtture. Open 9 to
8 or cell for appolntmtnt.
304-175-5453 .. 875-1410.

Multi colored ltripped couch.
aao.oo. wrv tood con d. pttont
304-075·0221 .

Rental s

Rent. lease. land contrtct, 3br' •·
Rodney ViMagell ; 2 br's·E ureka;
3br Evtnt Heights; Depoah a
referencn rwquired. Bltckburn
Aetlty-81 4-.U6 -0008.

~~~~~
....
, 1 ,000· 2 12,000 tlr
condHionent121N.,30in.gll
range t?IJ. Shggt Appll_,.,_,,
Uppor Rlvo• Rd., 814· 448.
1398.

Furn. 1pt. 919 2nd. Alit. Oalll·
palil. thtrt beth. lingle melt,
t136 mo., utUitl• pakl. Cell
"1-.U 1 after 7pm. .

1 bedroom tpt. for rtnt. Beale
rent stant f215. 1 month that
1ndudn . all utllttl•. Depoth
requked of 1200. Contact VII·
lag~e Manor Apt. Middleport.
814-992-n87. Equol Houol"11
Opportunity.

Houses for Rant

ea&amp;. 11 dry. . your choice

Amana Touch-Ametlc Radar
Range, 1200.00 firm, call 304·
n3 -12J&amp;.

Furn. efficiency a141 mo .,
utllhl11 paid, ah.,. btth. 807
2nd. A"e. Oellipolis. C•ll 4484411 tfttr 7pm.

41

t180, Kenmore wtlher

Nicety tumllhed - mobltt hotM,
tff . apt. , ctnU"III air end helt in
city, aduhs only. Calll1.t-448·
0338.

Two k)tt 1001t150 tld'l. rll·
tricted. Ciry wttlt', S1nd Hilt
Ao.d. Aollirlg Acres, 12,400.00
e 1ch 304-876-4210,

1979 1h 70 Schult with 81t·
p1ndo. 3 bedrooms. 1 Y2 batht,
fireplace. he•t pump, d•dl.
awning, und•rpinning. Ctll61 4·
245-5586.
Pre-owned homeal We heve 'em,
We Fln•nce'e ml Delivered and
set-up tt No Elttra Chargal 74
Victorian t'11?0 17,996. 72
Mtnsion 14d.O t8 .500. Nice
65 Princess 12d0 t6,500 .
Ptymenu to fit your budget.
Else• Home Cent•ra. Chillicothe
614 -772-1220. Clrcltville814·
773 -3927.

1

duty

171 11. while they r.tt, 3 1lr

142 acree with hou11, btmt. 2
lge. pondl, limettont. C.lt 1 •·
245-92U

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

range whitt
Whlrtpool
wuh«
tliJI, GEt85,
wuher
hiiYY

em~l

Apartment
for Rent

lllec . range
ln.

Th8

PomeroY-Middleport. Ohio

DICK TRACY
76

Avo .. lloHipolil. Coil 014 -4401171 .

tar

7 room houoo ;n Ch.,l«. Oh;o.
Price reduced . 126,600. Call

Friday, April 26, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio .

LAFF-A-DAY

f:riday. April 26, 1986

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec. Aw., Oalllpolle.
114-441-7833 or 614-440 ·
1833 .
A • M F!Arniture Mtnuflcturlng.
St. Rt . 7 , Crown City, Oh. Call
614-2111· 1470, c•il Ew. 81&lt;1·
441 - 3438 . Old • new ·
Uphostered.
Mowrtv'e Upholltlring MrVIng
trlcounty trta21 'fllft, The belt
In furniture upho .. terlng. All
work gusrantead 11iait our mod·
em thop at M11on County
FMrground1. Phone 304-171·
4184.

9 :00

in Cincinnati
Jeopardy

(]) Agony
llD WhHI of Fonuno
II) (DI Entertainment Tonight Debbie Allen dis cusses her role in the upcoming film , " Jo
Jo
Oanc"'er. Your L1fe 1s Calling ".
1111 Bob Newhart
Cil Sanford and Son
0 iJ) (!)) Handoomo Horry's A barber-shop owne r
becomes involved in an illegal raffle scheme, thanks
to one of his shady customers. (60 min .)
00 Dorio Day'o Best
Friends
~-Cil Cll (j]) Webster (CC)
Webster womes that by
breaking a cham letter he
has caused bad luck to everyone around him . (R).
f'JI (!) Bonny Hill Show
lit Cll ® Charlie 8r Company
([) MacNeil·lehrer Newah our
IJ]) Wash ington Week In
Rovlow (CC)
1111 MOVIE: 'Thunder and
Lightning'
Cil NBA Beokotball : Playoff
Game Teams to be announced. (2 hrs., 26 min.)
00 Flipper
(JJ Ill {}}} Mr. Belvedere
(CC) Kevin makes a eontract with his pareniB to
call for a ride home it he
drinks at the school prom .
IRJ .
.
fJ) (!) Mtjor League Baseball: Cincinnati at Houston
IIJ.I]) IJD.Loo_8r_Liz.ln_B_o v,
orly Hills (PREMIERE)
(j]) Wall ltreet Week
11 (]) I!J Tho Loot Preolnct ,
While Mel's father makes a
surprise visit. terrorists
steal
a
2QOQ.year -old
mummy case- containing 8
hidden King . (60 min.)
100 Club
(]) CIJ (J2) Mr. S~nshlne

·oo

.

(CCI Paul r.lu c ta n1 1y fil ls 1n
tor 8 missmg ector in
Leo n' s now play .
Ill @® MOVIE: ' He' s Not
Your Sao ' (R).
Cil Ste1ewldo
IIll Great Performances:
Koyaanlaqatsi This film
gives a uniqu e v1ew of th e
mechanics of o ur daily
lives w ithout b e nef 1t of dia Iogue or narratton a nd fea tures the musi c ot Philip
Glass. (90 mm.l (R), In
Stereo.
9:30 {]) II) [2) Joe Balh ICC)
Joe is re lu ctant to give a
cong ratulatory speech for
the promotio n of h1s de·
vious f 1rst partne r.
(JJ WV Jan Festival
10:00 0
CIJ
M;eml Vice
Crockett and Tubbs mu st
stop a Haiti an mobster
whose fanati ca l foll owers ·
are creating a reign of terror m Miam i. (60 min.) (R).
1n Sleroo.
I]) Cl) (j]) Fall Guy (CCI Colt
a nd Howie protect a witness stalked by a h ttma n
160 min.) lA)
G]l News
10:30 (3) Howto Buv Cars Whole.
sale
@ Auto Racing '86 : Formule One Grand PriM of
Spain
Coverage
from
Jerez. Spain (60 m;n ,J
l]) Me)or Loague Baseball:
Atlanta at Los Angeles
l lve .
(J]) Newawetch
1 1:00 0 {]) NawsCentar
(3) Girlfrom U.N.C.L.E.
I]) Ill I]) Cl) (j])
News
(j]J) Eyewitness News
IIll Sneak Previews Hosts
Jeffrey Ly ons and Mi c~ael
Medv ed preview today·s
hott est films.
(]]) WKRP In Cincinnati
1 1 :80 0
\JJ (ii) The Tonight
Show Tonight's guests are
Joan Ri~Jers an d Clarence
Clemons. (60 m;n.) In
Stereo.
Cl) SportsCenter
Cl) WKRP In Cincinnati
fll C!l ® Taxi
Q CIJ Magnum, P .l. Magnum heads into action
wh_en a young prince he befriends is kidnapped . (75
mi n,JIR).
Cil SCTV
&lt;ID Monteith and Re.nd
~ ABC News Nighttine
{I]) Trapper John, M.D.
12:00 (]) Bett of Groueho
(1) Australien Rules Football '86
(I) Myste~t AI Capone's
VaulfSOile oftl1e m ost exciting events of our ti mes.
when th e contents of vaults
owned bv AI Cap,o ne a re
_re"Wellled . (2 hrs.)
fB CD MOVIE: To Ba Announced'
([) Au•tin City limits:
Songwriters· Special Ferna le co untry songwriters, in-

em

U!J lUI

1
"

(DJ MOVIE: ' Darby's Aen~ra'
12:45 0
(I) McGerren A reform ed cou nterfeiter goes
back to his old ways when
he decides to uve a half·
way house from bankruptcy. 17 5 min .) (A).
1:00 (]J Doble Gillis
(J) Amarlce's Cup; The Defender&amp;
Cll (j]) CNN Hoadlina News
1:15 CI) Night Tracks In Stereo
1:30 · C3J Father Knows Beat
2 :00 B (I) NewaCenter
(3) 700 Club
(]) Mazda Sportslook
(I) Pullin' on tho Hits
fll CZJ MOVIE: ' Flash
Gordon Conquers the Univ-

erae'

2:15 1m CNN Headline News
2:30 \A) SportsCenter
3:00 (3) MOVIE: 'Loaded Pistols'
(1] Auto Raclng '86: NASCAR Flrot Union 400
9 Comedy Break
3:30 (BI Inday News
4:00 fll (!) MOVIE: ' Hustle '
@ MOVIE : 'Once Before 1
Ole'
4:30 (]) MOVIE :· 'Square Dance
Jubilee'

SATURDAY

em

m

Vou' ro Dead'
(!) Flahin' Hole
(I) Star Search
fll) (!) Teloolrom tho Derk·
sldo
,
0 Ill® Crazy Like • Fox
Harry finds e stolen wallet
that leads him on 1~e trail
of a murdo•. (60 m ;n.)(R).
(]) Survival Special: The

c lu d ing Rosanne C as h an d
Emmylou Harri s, p e rform
on Slage. 160 m;n.)
® MOVIE: 'Creature from
Bleck Leke'
Cll (j]) EJO on Hollywood
12:30 D (]) (!)) Frldey Night Videoa In Stereo.
(3) Bill Cosby Show
~ rnt~ MoWs

4/26/86
EV ENlNG

7:00

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ACROSS
1 Pilol1
co-pilo t ,
etc.

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tenn

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13 Egg-shaped 5 Meager
6 Fall
14 Playing
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marble

15 EspoUBe
16 Roland's

destroyer
18 Hall
a score
19 Medit.

region

7
8
lO
12

Principle
17 Anecdotal

coUectlon

20 Clamping

·or

31 Ham it up
32 "The Boy'
Wonder"
2~ Man-made
fabric
36 Curve
38 Chess
Z6 Cerebral
c hamp ion
27 Moroccan
( 1000-61 )
city
40 Moisturl'
~8 Lamb ny

Burton

musical

lrr+-+-

30 Risk
33 Wager
34 Siamese
temple
35 U nruly

bunch
37 Winged
39 H acienda
b ric k
41 Wreck
compl ete ly
(sl.)
42 Admit

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lou THOMAS JOSErH

Lions of Eto.ha: King of the
Beasts The family life of a
single pride of lions is explored. (60 min .) .
f)]) Austin City Lim ita: Jerry
lee lewis and 1he Mem·
ph la Beats
[j) MOVIE: 'Flight to Halocautt'
8:05 (]) MOVIE: 'Man Without e
Star'
8:30 1)(2) 9 Facto olllfa(CC)
Tootie realizes that young
Andy has a crus h on her.
(R), In Stereo.
fl) CIJ Major league 881•
ball: Cincinnati at Houaton
9:00 U (]) @ Golden Girlo In
Stereo.
@ Gymnastics
(]) To Be Announced
0 @ 1m Magnum, P.l.
Magnum investigates an
old lriond 's dea1h when he
and Higgins are sum moned 10 England 12 h rs.)
(R).
Cl) WV Jazz Festival
IIll A Prairie Home Compenlon Tolovielon Spoclol Hu morist Garrison Keillor Jmpa rts his favorite stories
a b ou t Lake Wobe gon, Min nes ota in th.is television
"'
version of h;s radio show.
12 hrs.)
9:30 0 00(!)) American Film In·
s tltuta Salute to . Billy

U (]) Too Close for Com-

fort
CIJ Campbell&amp;
(]) Majo r League Baseball's Greatest Hits
([) CiJ ([} [1.1 Hee Haw
foil (!) Smell Wando•
CIJ Wild America (CC)
(llJI Wheel of Fortuna
[I) Newton's Apple tCC)
Cl) (j]) The Concan That
Counts
(!Ji lt's a Living
7:30 II ([) Inside Look
(]) Gun a of Will Sonnett
foil (!) It's a Living
I]) Prollleo of Nature
lm Governor Celeste An·
SWIIrl Ohio
(i.D Wild America : Canyon
Creatures (CC) The creatures that inhab it Monument Valley, the ragged
chasm s of the Grand Cailyon;-- are ua mlned.
(.)]) At the Movies
8 :00 D (2) [I) Glmme a Break
Sem leaves her volun1eer
' little sister' with Nell to
spend lime with a handsome new neighbor. (R), In
Stereo.
(I) MOVIE: ' Bang! Bang !

Wilder Jack Lemmon hostl
this American Film lnsti tute tnbute to Acedemy-

HAZY

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Jumbles: CHESS AGATE BEAGLE RAGLAN
REGARD THIS MATI'ER OF FAME AS THE MUST ·.
: Yesterday 's \ Answer: Whet t~e action In that soap opera worked TRANSPARENT OF ALL VANITIES. - HERMAN MELItself up to - A LATHER
VllJ..E

'

�Poinerov-Mkklapoj.t. Ohio

.Paga 12-The Da!'Y Sentinel

Judge O'Brien finishes
37 court cases
.

Plan flower project
Area mom's can look forward to frEe Mother's Day !lowers !rom
sane of the Racine merchants. 1be tlqwer giveaway was discussed
at a recent meeting of the Racine Merchants' A$;ociatkln. As the
holiday approaches, an announcement wW be forthcoming as to the
times and locations where tlowers may be pcked up.
The merchants' are also sponsoring a giveaway In conJunctkln
with the upcoming Southern High School Prom 111 May 3 and a box
will be placed at the school for ertlrles..The glveaway wlnner wUI ,
receive a certificate good for two dinners at The Club Restaurant, a
prom picture from Rupe Photq; and a corsage.
A suggestkln from Ruth Brooks tn have a town flea market was
discussed but no action was taken.
The merchants also discussed having a farmers' market and local
farmers will be contacted to see If they would be InterESted In such a
·
venture.
Racine merchants are reminded that dues to Join the assoclatkln
are s:fi a year and should be paid as ooon as possible to Tom Wolle at
the Home National Bank.
New merchants to Racine - Tom's Pizza, Racine Motors,
Backstreet Video and The Gun ShOp- were welcomed to the village
and Invited to attend the next meeting of the merchants' association.
The next meeting will be May 19, 7 p.m., at The Club.

Lucille F. Seelig
Mrs. Lucille Fern Seelig, 78,
former resident of both Pomeroy
and Middleport, died Thursday at
Shreveport, La.
Mrs. Seelig was born March 31.
1!0! at ,Markm, Ia.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Eugene Seelig in 1962.
Surviving are a sister, Dorothy
Reed of Markm, I a.; two daughters,
Geraldine Thieman, Sheveport,
La .. and BoiUiie McBealn, Mesa,
Ariz., and a son, Jack Seelig, of
Starke, Fla. Also surviving are nine
grandcblldren and eight greatgrandcblldren.
Services wUI be held at the
Murdock Funeral Home in Marion,
Ia., Tuesday morning.

Edna F. Walker
Edna Faye Walker, 86. 162
Hamilton St.. Middleport. died
Frtday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
She was a daughter of the late
Albert B. and Frankie Starkey
Rupe.
Surviving are a daughter and
son-in-law, !'leva and Richard
Russell, Springfield; a daughter-inlaw, VIolet Long Walker, Pomeroy;
a brother, Alva Rupe, Athens; a
sister, May Cuckler, Lenorr City,
Tenn.; a half brother, Wilbur Rupe
of Columbus, and a half sister,
Myrtle Wolfe, Fort Pierce, F1a.
Also surviving are three grandchildren, seve n greatgran&lt;Xblldren and several nieces
and nephews.
Mrs. Wall&lt;Pr was a member of
White Rose Lodge and the Carpenter Baptist Church.
Besides her parEfl ts, she was
preceded In death by her husband,
Lawrence W. Walker In 1915; a son,
James Walker, and a half brother,
Perley Rupe.
·
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Monday at the Rawlings-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home with Rev.
Earl Eden dficlatlng. Burial will be
ln Rlvervlew Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday.

Wallace (Connie\ Morris, Brenda
Anderson and Lort Ann Anderson,
all of Racine; one sister, Martha
Belle Meadows of Portland; one
brofher, · Raymond Teaford of
Racine; and three gran&lt;Xblldren.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by one sister
and one brother.
Services will he Sunday, 3: ll
p.m., at Ewing Funeral Home.
Burial will be in Letart Fails
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home form 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
to 9 p.m. Saturday.

Harold E. Triplett
Harold E. Triplett, 65, of 401
Lasley St., Pomeroy, died Thursday evening at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mr. Triplett was born Dec. 31,
1920, in Cabell Co., W.Va .. to the late
William and Dora Woodrum
Triplett.
He was a retired electrtcian for
the Kaiser Aluminum Corporation
and was a World War II army
veteran. He was a member of
Pomeroy Lodge 363 F&amp;AM, the
Fraternal Order of Eagles, Pomeroy Chapter Ill of the Royal Arch
Masons, Ohio Valley Commandery
24 Knights Templar, .Bosworth
Council 46 Royal and Select Masons, and tte Disabled American
Veterans.
Survivors Include his wife, Edna
Kitts Tliplett, at home; a daughter,
Rebecca Jane Triplett, Pomeroy; a
son and daughter-in-law, Euooone
,.
and Karen Triplett, Pomeroy; two
grandchildren, Michelle and Russell Triplett of Pomeroy; four
sisters, Reba Deprtest and Mrs.
Sherman (Evelyn) Rogers, both' of
Ironton, Mrs. Vernett (Macy. Lo.ul
Rogers of ~ro and Mrs. Robert
(Myrtle) Smith ot Fostoria; four
brothers. Thomas Triplett of Law rence, Kan .. Orban Triplett ot
Bellfonte, Ky., Earl Triplett and
Merril Triplett, both d Ironton.
In addltkln to bls parents, he was
·
preceded in death by two brothers.
Servlces wUI be Sunday, 2 p.m.,
atEwlngFuneralHome,wltbRev.
Liston Halley olllclatlng. Burial

.
Thlr1y-seven cases were con- lk:eliae suspension, lhi'ee days Iii
eluded Wednesday In Meigs County , jaU, twQ year's probation, OWl;
Court by Judge Patrtck O'Brien.
Glenn Vance, Middleport, $2iO alld
Fined wei'\! Donald E. Russell, costs, six rQontha license suspenPomeroy, $676 and costs, $Dl of slon. ll days In JaU or attend
tine suspended, overload; FranCis resldelltlal treabnent center, OWl;
WOOd, Tuppers Plains, $!m and Michael Pleri:e, Rutland, $100 and
·costs, three days in jan, ffi · day costs, swpencled ll day jaU sentlicense suspension, OWl; Gerald ence, lleeing an officer; Robin
HEfldrlcks, Zanesville, UMJ and Southern, Pomeroy, restitution and
costs, ill days In jail, slx month costs, six months In Jail with aU but
license suspenion, OWl; $75 and five days suspended, one year
costs, live days in Jail, no driver's probation, passm, bad checks.
llcense; costs only tor left of center;
Also fined were Terry Downard
GeOrge Cundlll, Racine, S:ziO and Wellston, $10 and oosts, no reglstra:
costs, three days in jall, ffi day , lion; Steve Burke, Worthlngtoo, $10
license suspension, OWl; Daniel and costs, no registration; Juanita
Sublett, Pomeroy, $:zi0 and costs, Lambert, Rutland, $10 and costs,
three days in Jall, ffi day license improper .backing; &amp;Jmle Rowsuspension, OWl; Jodene Wyatt, land, Stockport, $10 and rosts, lett ot
Belpre, $250 and costs, ffi day center; Tlmoti\Y r.H&gt;anlel, Che-

shire, costs only, tailed tn display Mason, W.Va.. $26 and costs;
registration; Susie N. Abbott, Sheryl Bush, Racine, $25 and oosts;
Shade, $5 and costs, detective Alberto Campos, Parkersburg, ·
exhaust; John Scarbrough, Long W.Va., $23 and costs; Larry Rider,
Bottom, $10 and costs, lett of Pomeroy, $40 and costs; M. Scott
center; Ronnie Eblin, Middleport, DUUnger, Athens, $22 and costs;
$10 and rosts, tailed to display valid Brenda Darst, Pomeroy, $M and
license plates; Cbarles Cochran Ill, costs.
Athens, $25 and costs, Improper
Forfeiting bonds wereJeflr~ D.
passing.
Newell, Syracuse, $50, speeding;
Fined forspeedlngwereOiftord, Cletls Dalton, Albany, $177, overCOI'Inolly, 'Racine, $21 and costs;
load; Keith Cline, AsbvUie, $.1), no
Mlshla Hayman, Long Bottom, $23 registration; ilmblhy M. McDaand costs; Una Chuang Clark, niel, Cheshire, $251, overload; Jack
Wllllamsburg, W.Va., $23 and Jones, London, $170, Illegal deer;
rosts; Carl Mace, Davisville, Billy J. Mltch.e_!l'l, Pomeroy, forfe ·
W.Va., $24 and costs; Ronald !3. lted a 20-guage shOtgun for trans·
O'Neil, Glen Easton, W.Va.,$21 and porting a firearm In a motor
costs; Becky Amberger, Racine, vehicle.
$23 and costs; LancU Morris, ,--..:....:.:..::.:_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Akron, $24 and costs; Ba_rryTaylor,

Emergency squads kept busy

Winning lottery numbei"S

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports eight calls
Thursday; Syracuse fire depart·
ment at 12:51 a.m. to an auto fire on
Church and Hubbard Sts.; owner
Andy Patterson; car was total loss;
Middleport at 5:48 a.m. to Ash St.
for Robert Cundiff to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Tuppers
Plains at 9:33a.m. to Success Rd. fr
Lort Baker to St. Joseph'sHospital;
Pomeroy at 12:50 p.m.. transported
Cheryl Ferguson to Veterans Mem-

nomination, received $113,907 and
sPent $101,469, leaving a balance ot
$12,437.
Attorney General Anthony J.
Celebre-ae Jr., a Democrat unopposed tor the nomination, reported
a campaign fuoo balance d. $1.174
million. His Republican opponent,
Middletown attorney Barry Levey,
also umpposed, reported a bllance
r:t S50'9'!!.
11lese other ba !anres were reported by candidates with no
primary opponents:
Secretary of State- Democratic
(Continued _from page 1)
Incumbent
Sherrod Brown,
the board approved expenses of
$346,tlXl;
Republican
Vincent Cam·
participation.
oanella. $10.!89.
Band camp at Camp Crescendo,
Rio Grande College, July 20-26, was Veterans Memorial
approved, and the board acknowledged a cOntribution of $500 from
Admissions--Alice Balser, RaIn
the Student Councll toward in\· c e; Harry Watson, Pomeroy.
case
Discharges--Wilma Anderson.
Provements on the trop""
'"
·
The board accepted the reslgna- Jamboree cancelled
tlons of 1-i!rbert and June Matheny

State Treasurer Mary Ellen
Withrow, a Democrat, received
$115,61i0 durtng the reporting period
and spent$44,124, leaving a balance
of $197,961. Her opponent, Bryan E.
Icard of Bowling Green, did not file
a report since he raised less than
$1,0Xl.
The Republican candidate for
treasurer, Jeffrey P . Jacobs ct Bay
VU!age, who Is unopposed lor the

Academic

~~e:~an:m~l U,:d ~~~·

dA Jamboree wblch was to be
sponsol'!'d Suooay by Ell Denison
Post 4EiT Sons of the Amertcan
Legion has been canceled. The
Jamboree will be rescheduled at a
later date.

resolution of commendation for
heir rk
I
wo there for the past nine
years. Also given commendations
for their work were Martie Baum,
who resigned as cheerleadlng
squad advisor; and Dennis Eichin·
ger and his health class for their
efforts in establlshlpg an alcohol
abuse program In the high school.
Reports were given by Susie
Heines, board president, 011 the
sign-in procedure for personnel
established earlier, the merits ot
joining the Ohio School Boards
Asrocatlon's legal assistance fuoo,
and the STAR (State Treasury
Asset Reserve) investment aiterna·
tive a
f In
sin
· s a way 0
creo g
revenues. ActiOns were delayed

wUI
he Inmay
Meigscall
Memory
pending
luthermeeting
lntormatkln.
Friends
at theGardens.
funeral
A special
was set tor
homelrom2to4p.m.and7to9p.m. May 1• with the next regular
Wilma c. Anderson, 61, of 22728 Saturday.
meeting to be held at 7:30 on May
Bucktown Rd .. Racine, died late ,------------,----_;28::::_
.
Tuesday at Ohio State University
Hospital In Columbus.
A homemaker, she was born
March 9,1925 in Meigs County tot he
late Harry imd I:.ena Badgley
Teaford.
SurviVors Include her husband,
James A. Anderson; four daugb·
ters, Mrs. Theodore !BoiUiiel WU·
lford of Long Bottom. and Mrs.

r-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
C......tellnl of ¥•1111111 &amp; Row•
Plllnll - ~.. Well, Gtnlni-, IOH ....._ Dogweod, lho....,. &amp; Slnlllltry.
""' ON SPii
SEASON SP CIAL
•7&amp;0 PER FLAT

H·.LL-nf'
I Gr-•• ..&amp;. •• SYRACUSE, OHIO

Ohio Valley Publishing
Company's weekly mystery farm
winner Is Paula DUion, 33100 Pine
Grove Rood, Racine.
The mystery photo which appeared In the Aprtl20 edition ot the
Times-Sentinel, was the farm of
George and Harry Guthrie located
in Sutton Township.
·
The photo was furnished by the
Meigs SoU and Water Conservation
District
.
A $5 prize is being malled to the

I

wi~ty-tbree Meigs County res!·

dentsenteredthecontestwitb22ot :
them correct In their klerltlllt~at~ln l l
ot the Gutllrli! farm.

MOTHER'S .DAY

JACKRS
.EDUCED

I.

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01 992-5896

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ON

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••••• APRIL 21
ONE DAY ONLY-MON.,

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_

Fireman of
the year

The lax refor~ movement isn't dead, says

_Page B-7 1--J_a_m_es_J_._K_ilp_a_tr_ic_k_ _Pa_g_e_A_-2----~
Bob Hoeflich describes how youngsters can
get free admission to the state fair - Page B-8

I

r

Inside:
Along tile River ........... 8-1 -8
Business ............... .. ...... D-1
Comics-TV ............... lnse; t
Ciassifieds .... .. .. .D-3-1-1).6. 7-8
Deaths ........... .............. A-7
Editorial ...................... 1\-2
Sports ........................ C-1-8

Set your clock
one hour ahead
at 2 a.m. today

•

tmts
12 Sections, 76 Pogn. 50 Cents
A Mut~modia Inc. New111111•

Vol. 21 No. 11
Copyrigh18d 1986

Reagan reafrmns U.S. presence in Pacific
By HELEN THOM.-\S
UPI While House Reporter
LOS ANGELES (UP! l - President Reagan ,
moving on to the second leg of his journey to the Tokyo
summit, said Saturday the United States can play a
role as a Pacific power In seeking withdrawal of
VIetnamese troops from Cambodia .
The president reiterated one general theme of his
slow-paced two-week trip - U.S. participation In
Pacific aHairs - du1ing his weekly radio address.
taped Friday night at the Century Pia7.a Hot el in Los
Angeles.
Reagan and his wife, Nancy, left Los Angeles on
Saturday for tre second stop of his 22,00J.mile
Journey, a weekend rest stop in Honolulu. His
ultimate destination is the seven-nation Tokyo
economic summit May 4-6.
In Hawaii . Reagan planned to telephone his "good
friend," former Philippine President Fet·dtnand

Marcos, who wit h his wife, Imelda, now lives in
Honolulu.
Thursday, before leav ing the Whit e Hou se, Reagan
telephoned new Philippine President Corazon Aquino
and invited ber to visit the United States this fall.
Before the summit, Reagan will visit the
Indonesian spice island of Bail to meet with tre
foreign ministers of the Association of Sout~ast
Asian Nations and Indonesian President Soeharto.
In his radloaddress,Reagansaid: "Durlngmytrip,
I'll be emphasizing to our ASEAN friends and the
otrers with whom I'll meet that the United States Is a
Pacific power.
"We expect to continue playing a mnstructlve role
In shaping the turure of tt'eir vibrant and vital part of
the world," he added.
On his journey, his longest as president , Reagan
hopes to reaffirm the U.S. standing as a Pacific power

and to persuade a!Jies at the t&lt;:onomtc summit to sign
on to a joint effort to fight international terrortsm.
In remarks upon arrival at Hickam Air Force Base
in Honolulu , Reagan praised the U.S. military for
serving as a front -ltne defense against "t ~ world's
dictators and terrorists."
"Today. America Is standing tall ," he said. "We're
rebuilding our defenses, setting In place innovative
weapons programSandgivingthe pay andequipment
you need... .
"And , yes, we're showing the world'sdictators and
terrorists that when they perpetrate their cowardly
acts upon the citizens of tre United States, trey had
best be prepared lor the consequences."
Secretary of Sta te George Shultz, who is travel ing
with Reagan, said in an Interview publisred Saturday
in the Los Angeles Times that the United States should
consider covert action and t ightereconomic sa nctions

Exposure derailed
assassination plot

ODOT plans work
on 4 state routes
By KEVIN KELLY
Thne&amp;-Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Nearly $2 million worth of resurfacing work
should make traveling four state
routes in Gallla County easier lor
motorists.
Standard Materials Inc ., Ports·
mouth, bas contracted with the
ObloDepartmentclTransponatlon
for the jobs, scheduled for this
construction season and expected
to repave more than. 20 miles of
highway.
Theprojeetsineludethewtdening
of Ohio 325 between Gage and RJo
Grande, and resurfacing otohlo 564
between Porter and Cheshire, Ohio
141 from the intersection with Ohio
233 to the Galllpoils corporation
limits and Ohio Jffi from the Vinton
County line toatPiferHUioutsldeof
Vinton.
0001' District 10 ciflcials In
Marietta said the four jobs were
sold as a package of two, the first
covering 160, 554 and sections d 160
and Ohio 124 in Vinton Coo nty.
Standard bid $1,518,tlXl on the
project, 0001' said. The second
included the 141 and 325 jobs and
Standard offered !ll93,000.
The most ambitklus of the group
is the widening of 325, covering six
miles In Raccoon and Perry
townships. 0001' p~t the Jobonthi s ·
year's scheeduie because that
stretch of 325 has the highest
accident rate In tte district,
clflclals said.
GaUia ·county ODOT Supe rin -

tendent LaMie Burger said crews
from the local garage have been
doing the widening and crrotlng
space for new berms since last
year, but were delayed by cold
weather and resumed work this
spring.
"The widening had to do!Vo tefore
we could sell tre Job," beex(ialned.
"We think we can get it done In
three weeks.''
Standa'rd will pour one foot d new
pavement after the widening is
complete. The project calls for
two-to-three feet of paved berm on
each side, Burger said .
The 564 and 141 proJects cover
more than 10 miles of highway and
will not include sections paved in
1984, Burger said. These areas
include the elevatoo part of 554 at
Cheshire and the .stretch of 141 at
Centenary. The 551 project was
announced lor 1005 rut was delayed, Burger said . Officials noted
that 233 from the Jackson Cou nty
line to 141 was reswiaced In 1981
and a new surface was put on 160
from Gallipolis to Porter a few
years ago.
Officials couldn 't say when some
oft he projects woold start . although
Burger noted that Standard has
done preUminary work on the 160
job and was already working in
Vinton County from the Appalach·
ian Highway to the Gallia coun ty
lin&lt;'.
" It won 't be too long ·tecausc
trey're coming our way;' Burger
said . "Maybe by mid-month."

against Libya.
"We have a lot of different tools in oorbag, and we
need todevelopmoretools, " Shultz said,adding that if
covert action is to be successful, "We need to have in
this country a greater appreciation of tre Importance
of being able to do some things secretly.''
In his radio speech, the president said the Asian
alliance "has demonstrated examplary responsibility
and leadership concerning Ire Vietnamese continuing occupat ion of this country tCambodla J."
"America, along with our ASEAN friends, believes
that Vietnam should withdraw it s forces from
Cambodia and permit tre Cambodians to determine ·
their own destiny.
·
''The United States has made it clear that it's ready
to particpate in constructing an overa ll settlement,"
he said. "The communist government of Vietnam,
however, to the detrtment their own national
interests, remains intransigent ."

'.

WIDENING WORK - A crew !rom the Ohio Department &lt;1.
Transpor1atlon Gallla County garage Inspects some of the widening
work done on Ohio 325 for a wider highway and new, paved henn, one of
tour projects involvlnR stat• routes In tile county.

By mt 1\NDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPil - A
Libyan-directed assassination plot
using "professional students" that
was uncovered last year later was
traced to the Libyan mission to the
United Nat tons, State Department
officials say.
A department official, speaking
on the bas !son nofurtheridentifica·
lion, said the plot was short·
circuited wher the United States
revealed its exlstence last June.
"We headed It off by going public.
which scared therg (the potential
assassins!:· the o!Dciai said. "But
then we got caught tn a box: Wheli..
you pre-empt a plot by exposing it,
you prevent it from happening and
you don 't have any proof that It
ex isted without exposing your
intelligence sources.''
.
Friday, Britain · banned 334 Li·
byan aviation students from work·
ing on aircra ft at British airports or
flying solo, a new ·security move
that wlll force most ot them to leave
the country.
Another 22 Libyan students and
businessmen who earlier were told
to leave Britain fo r alleged revolutionary activities departed Friday
on a flight to the Libyan capital of
Tripoli.
In revealing the plot last June, the
Stat e Depariment said lt was
directed mainly against Libyan
di ssidents In the United States, but
officials said they learned that
Libyan plans included attacks

aga in s t U.S. o!!lciais and
installations.
The information came about six
months after tre administration
received reports, through an intelllgence source In Switzerland, that
"Libyan hit &lt;quads" wiore assigned
to carry out bombing attacks
against "a target on Pennsylvania
Avenue," presumably the White
House, and otrer Washington buDd·
ings, In c luding the State
Depart ment.
That alert led to the White House
and the State Department being
fortified with temporary barri·
cades, inciuding!Uleddumptrucks,
' anciTater permarnnet barriers.
The State Department oHicla l
·said of those In the p ot: "They were
'professional student s,' Libyans
who never seem to graduate, and
they're still In this country. 1
presume that the FBI Is keeping
more than half an eye on tt'em.''
He had no estimate on how many
Libyan "professional students"
were in the country.
After the alleged plot was
discovered , a diplomat attached to
Libya 's U.N. mission, Farhat
Tibar, 32, was declared persona non
grata an~ expelled from the United
States.
State Department offlclals said
about 12 more Libyans were
Involved In the same case and some
of them quietly left the country on
treir own.
(Continued on page A3)

ly Ja11t1et1 I Castaway

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SA~INOS
SALE PIICES GOOD THRU MAY 3RD
MEN'S UGHT WEIGHT

MONDAY, APRIL 28-9:30-5:00

The

BEGIN APRIL 29
BEGINNERS CLASS
CARLTON SCHOOL

1

THE MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
WELCOMES

Identifies farm

KARATE CLASSES

+~~~~P~H~.~~~-~~~~n~s~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

AND

1be probability of precipitation Is
near zero tnday, 20 percent tonight
and near zero Saturday: ·
Extaded Forecast
Sunday througlt 1\Jesday
· Fair Stmday and Monday; with a
cbamce of showers m Tuesday.
HJchs wW be between 75 and 85
Sunday ud Monday and Ia the lis
'1\Jeaday. Oveml&amp;ht lows geaerally
wW be In the 50s.

· MEIGS CO.
KARATE CLUB

Waiting In Line

MIK OR MATCH

01'111 DAlY t-5; !UNDAT 1-5

-------------4

Partly cloudy today, with highs
between Ill and 85. Partly cloudy
tonight, with a low near ffi. Mostly
SUMY Saturday, with highs near Ri.

.

ortal Hospital; Pomeroy at 1:53 •
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Thursp.m. to Wetzgal Rd. for Harry
day's
winning Ohio Lottery
Watson to Veterans Memorial
numbers:
Dally Number
Hospital; Llfefllgl!t at 2: ill p.m.
1()7.
transported WUrna Anderson !rom
Ticket sales totaled $1,309,388.50,
Veterans Memorial Hospital to
with
a payoff due of $843,941.50.
Ohio State University Hospitals,
PICK-4
Columbus; Middleport at 5:54p.m.
5S87.
to Mill St. for Valerie Laudermllt to
Veterans Memortal Hospital; Ra·
cine at 10:12 p.m. to Trouble Creek
for Mary Kerns to Holzer Medical
Center.

~i)lrrt()r•••• __(~C-on_t_in_~__fro__m~pa~ge-1~)____________

Wilma C. Andei"Son

Weather forecast

Friday,April26. 1986

·w

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIODI.EPOIT

.

20°/o

NASA blasts media accounts
alleging disregard for safety
By WILLIAM HARWOOD
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
1UPll - NASA claims critical
stories In The New York Times,
raising new questions about how
well the space agency was managed and how important it regarded safety warnings, were
"misleading."
"The NASA-industry-university
team has put together an unrivalled
28-year achievement recMd
through tre dedication and compe·
tence of proven professionals,"
NASA said Friday In a five-page
response to this week's stories in the
Times.
" It Is In this context that the
Challenger tragedy and The New
York Times allegations, many of
which are misleading and taken out
of context, should he assessed ."
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration said many of
the "allegations" involved problems 10 to 15 years old and that
corrective action already has been
or Is being taken. The agency also
insisted It always made safety "the
first Consideration."- ~The Times obtained more than
500 Internal and exiemal audits of
the space agency under the Free·
dom of Information Act that the
newspaper said charted an apparent history of waste, safety compromises and poor management.

"The New ¥ark Times' artie les
are inaccurat e in alleging that
NASA disregards audit reports and
neglects proper testing and safety
procedures ." the space agency
said .
The Times reported Thursday in
tre second of a two-part series that
NASA short-chan&amp;e&lt;J the shutlle
program $500 million In safety
testing, design and development ,
despite years of warnings from ·
federal auditors and aerospace
experts. The NASA sta tement
addressed both stories.
The Times said Thursd ay audl ·
tors and experts reported ly warned
NASA that cutting or delaying the
test and development funding
meant equipment wooid be as·
sembled tefore parts were tully
teSted .
But NASA refused. terming the
eliminated testing procedures "not
cost-effective" in the face of
ever-tightening budget restrtcttons,
according_ to audits by the General
Accounting Office, the investigative
arm of Cong'ress, that were obtained by' the Times.
The audits indicate NASA began
withholding the safety testing,
design and development money
from the beginning of the shuttle
program untO tte Challenger's
explosion In January -and some of
tt'e money has stU! not been spent.
The Times said the experts and

audit ors warned that witbolding tte
money would make it very difficult
and costly to mak e changes later,
and ultimately would compromise
reliability. making t be shultie more
dangerous and expensive.
The report said while NASA was
refusing to spend the extra money,
federa l inspectors were warning
the agency It was wasting more
than $3.5 billion through faultY
management practices - waste
that ultimatelY helped create the
very budget problems NASA management cut the safety funding In
order to solve.
Space experts inside and outside
of the government , Interviewed by
the Times, generally confirmed !he
audits, tre newspaper said. The
Times a !so said NASA officials told
tte paper that the audits had been
fair and were generally accurate.
But NASA said Frtday It always
has viewed the audits , both Int ernal
and external, as a valuable tool and
said by paying attention to them the
agency had been able to save $749.3
mUllan between fiscal year 1978and
1985. .
"In fairness , it should also be
noted that many of the audit reports
deal with research and develop·
ment .proJects, proJects which, at a
point In time, must identify a highly
desirable complex technical objec·
live several years Into tre future,"
the agency said.

SCOUI'.Q-RAMI\ - More thalll,OOO Meigs, Gallla
and Mason County Scouts participated in Saturd_!ly' s
TrJ.Stare Area CouncU Scout.Q-Rama at the Gallla
County Junior Fairgrounds. Bob McGinness, Hun·
llngton, head ot the Tri-State Area CouncU, said
approximately 15 trl-oouuty units exhibited dl'lplays
this sprtnc. Besides local packs and troops displaying
crafts, lldl1s and·gamesn-hlp for the pubUc, the
MGM Dlstrlct·Cub Soouts put on a "Pinewood Deri\Y"

~ ·

race. Point·Pleasant scouts were In chiU'&amp;e fA that
event, and in- the abo~ photo ~Icy and Bn100
Adllltl8 o1 Pack 258, Point Pleasant, are seen
prepansg lor the race. Troop and pack members !itt
up booths Inside the Activities Building. Demolll!ltratlons o1 knoi.tylng and dutch oven ciloldng were
amt111g mme of the hlghllgtfs along the "midway."
Order of the Arrow Indian Dance Team wu alllo a
Saturday feature.

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