<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13455" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/13455?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T00:03:35+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44427">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/cc445cb88e9f254d12c65ebf26b67982.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ab47b40f04dc4147e6939749557e32e4</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42140">
                  <text>-~·

'

/

,;,.
!-•

II

•I

.Can Save You Money

,,..fl,

-.

'

Generic drugs can generally. be purchased from the manufacturer at a lower cost than
,Prqj!(sl
mes. Bec;ause they ,cost us less, they cost you less too. Ask your doctor about
gelftn , He is in the positio11 to make the correct evaluation when prescribing the right
druff6i- your particular need. Ask our Pharmacist about the price difference.

Goodnite
support
on

Story, photn

Reds roll over Mets

Retirement announced

Stvry on Page 3

Story on Page 4

See letters

Page 2

•

PRESTO'

FRY,~~~®

Sl 1ce , chop , sh red,
gr a te .
crumb .
Reve r sible cutting

I

discs save sforoge
space and clean -

for durability.

Ing .
Stain l ess
stee l knife blade .

•Less
Mfg . Rebate .

quickly, automatically. Generous !l -Inch
size and high dome coYer accommodate Iorge

roosts, horn s, poultry. Control Mostert&gt; heat

. . . . ... '''.'' ' ' s 5.00
~~*

Tour Cost

,,..

After Rebate

. ,..

contro l maintains a cc urate temperatu res for
automatic cooking, detach es for submersib le
clean-ups in sink or dishwasher . Diamond·
Coot® delu)(e nonstick finish. in side and our .
for stick -free cooking, easy clean ing .

.

Mol'£' than 40 Me igs Local Band l:loosters have
agreed to seek help from parent-teacher groups,
unions and others In their endeavor to effect a change
in the recent firing of Miss Marilyn Goodnite, band
director by the district's board of education .
The board recently voted 3-2 against renewing Ms.
Goodnite's contract as band director and since that
time a wave of public pmrest has taken place .
At last night's meeting of the boosters, held at the
high school, members talked with Rita Slavin of the
Mejgs Local Teacher s Association and with two board
of education members . Robert Barton and Robert
Snowden, both of whom are members of the booster
group.

ROLLS

Gifts for Mom
. . ,, LIPTOI'S .
Electric

with 5 Sausage TUbes

100'

Grind row meats,
fish , cheese . dried
breads . even the
hardest n utmeots.
Powerful. rugged
motor c uts meat
without
tearing ,
mashing or stringing
Strong nylon hopper.
"Fine·· and ··coarse"
discs . Recipe Booklet.
996-28 White .
(

CUITII'

j

"

•

month of May, and construction w il l
begin on the waterline extension in
upper Pomeroy ThoSP announcements wen? made at a meeting of
~

l

l

/)'-t/(JT

. ·,•. · ; Cqmj!lete with HQclks

, . ·, ,, .,.t.. .........r .... ...,..c.

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel staff
Beech Grove Cemetery will be
properly cared for at least for the

MEAT AND
FOOD CRINDER

I

·'

$

.. Soft Pltoble long •
· •wecirlri'g vinyl ·
·•Wipe clean In seconds

·L·uac•·a

'

•
I

.

donations to cover expenses at the

ELECTRIC WOK

c&lt;emetery this month .
It was Indicated that council is
trying to work out a program with

'

Deluxe

Action to m alntain the
cem£&gt;ter:v.
At the s ugges tion of John Anderson, council passed a motion to
aut hori?.£&gt; construction of the w ater ·
line ex tension.
Anderson point!'d out tha t 8.1
percent of the Main Stre&lt;•t por1lon
wil l be completed at the present
tim£' beginnin g at the Kroger Stort'
and traveling down East Main.
Council hopes tncomplet ~ theent\re
\\'aterli.ne extension hut not at the
prC'sent t imP.
11 was n&gt;ported the Condor Stm't
extension would not be ineiud!'d at
this 1imf'.
11 was a lso announc!'d that the
auditor from the Ohio Auditor's
Office will have a report on friday
pmJecting the this ymr' s income fo r
the village.
Mayor Richard Seyler reported
that the parking meter boxes for
paying parking tickets will be
removed . Nter they have been
re moved, (X'Ople r('('('iving rick ets

_. _·
f,,

u.a,. '

•

•

''

Frolic·
Conle"'!poror;y Color • Ott Whit.

·7" ~lgh,

a•' Wide

~···
LASER CUTLERY

.•. ~7r:lJc~~ab,lJ
r· .

1' .

BY REGEIIT SHEFFIELD

1

4-Piece

With
Rack

$699
No. 1005

•

f&gt;

~

?,;

~

7 ·Piece Set
F1 ies w ilh only 2 cups of cook ing oil . I or 2 sef'\1
ings in m1nutes Snap·on lid for storing oi l.
Eliminates spill s and odor . To re ·use , toke off
lid and plug in . Perfect frying temperature .
automatical ly . Nonstick herd surface cooli ng
inside and out for easy cleaning . Fry Baby lift·
and -drain scoop included. Perfect for singles.

With Block

$12 99
No. 10966

~ ~'~~~ .,cou.pleo, •tu.d!!eint!•.i!
! o!i
ny! !o!i!!
ne•._,_.,...;~!!A
• • lfAPPY MOT/1t:R 'S VA Y • f1 APPY MOTHER'S DAY • 11APPY MOTI1t:R 'S DAY • HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY •HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY• HAPPY fVIOTI

NELSO~'S DRUG STORE
lnd

,,

NANCARROW'S PHARMACY
•

Tuesday night meet mg. A delega tion and spokesper
son will attend the board meeting which L' on the same
evening as the annual band banque t.
Day long kindergarten
Mea nwhile, Eastem's Local Board of E ducation
Monday night in special session. votl'&lt;l 3-2 to hold
day-long, aitemate klndergarlen sessioru; in the
district next year.
Recently, the board voted to hold kindergarten at
two centers next y&lt;ear, Tuppers Plains an&lt;1 Chester,
rather than at the one center, Tuppers Pla ins, which
has been operated this year.
Last night's meeting wa s called to determine if the
kindergarten classes were to be held in one-hail day

acid rain.

Ash said that pending tegisial iv&lt;'
approva l , to rontrol

acid rain,

customers electric bills would
incr&lt;'a&lt;;e :lO to 50 percent. The
incl'f'ase would be due to the
inst allation of scrubbers at power
pla nts.
Ash sta t!'d thatth&lt;'S45millionwas
spent at Meigs Mine No. 1 for a
preparation plant.
Betty Bamnick asked abou t thl'
possibility of using the arPa wherP
the railroad tracks were formally
located as a walking and bicycle
path.
Anderson said that the state has
such a program and will fund it.
hOW('V('r, council wou ld have to put
a ll the money up first for th('project
and would be l'f'imbursed when the
project is completl'&lt;l.
following the meeting council
went into executive sess ion.

COLUMBUS. Ohio rAP!- Ohio
polls opened at 6:30a.m . IED'l'l
today. but steady ra in across the
slale apparently dampen!'d many
voters' enthusiasm for voting, say
election officials stal&lt;ewidc.
"We exp:&gt;cted a low tumout today
to begin with. If the weathPr kE'Cps
up it may effett turnout. II it clears
up there may be normal tumout."
said Charles Htock, deputy direct or
of the Montgomery County board of
elections In Dayton.
More than 2.5mlllionofthe sUite'&gt;
5. 9 million registered voters were
expected to vote on presidential
candidates , more than 700 local
issues and a number of county,
legislative and congressional races.
But election officials In Toledo,
Akron, and Cleveland agreed that
early morning rain kept many
people from casting ballots.
Summit County E lections Direc tor James Biggins said he would be
surprised if the turnout In Akron
matched hls earlier forecast of
135,00J to 140,1Xll
There were no early reports of late
poll openings or unusual problems
with voting machines.

•
Polls close at7 : 30 p.m .
Former ViCi' Pn&gt;sidPnt Wall er
Mondale a nd Sen. Gary Hart
campaigned among commulers in
Clevela nd' s Terminal Tower this
morning. doing some last-mlnutc
handshaking before preparing to
rctum to Washington where they
planned to await results from Ohlo
and primaries in three other states.
The Rev . Jesse Jackson canceled
plans to campaign In Toledo today
and left for North Carolina Monday
night.
The Democratic presidential
primary was expect!'d to be pivotal
for Hart, who has yettowin a major
Industrial state.
Voters In Indiana, Maryland and
North Carolina also weiT' choosing
delegates to the Democratic Na ·
tiona! Convention this summPr in
San Francisco.
Hart's Ohio campaign chief, John
Kulewicz, forecast a narrow victory
for the Colorado senator. Chrts
Hagan, Mondale's Ohlo campaign
director , expressed guard ed
optimism.

daily sessronsor In da y longsessronsonalternatedays.
Some 100 pal'f'ms andmterested res.rdents attended
the sessro~ m whrchdunng an approxnnate hour and
one hall drscuss10n was held on the plan to be followed .
S~pt. Richard Roberts r.ndrcated he L' sur£' that a
ma]ortty of those a ttendmg W!'rf' m fa vor of the
establishment of one-half day, druly sessrons at the two
centers. Matcrrai dealmg wrth studies on both plans
was p~ented.
Votmg lor th&lt;e alternate day long sessrons were
board member~, Dorsel Larkins, Rog~rGaulandDale
Machrr. favonng half-day, darly sess roru; were board
members, Susre Hernes and James Caldwe ll .

Pair charged
after robbery
in Gallia area

may pay them at ;illage hall, 1\ew
York Clothing House and Jerry and
E llens' Coin-A·Matic.
Selyer said the new method will
allow the entil'£' licket to be marked
pa id instead of people trying to keep
the small stub . The mayor feels this
will be a much more s ui table
method .
Bruce Reed reported that a
portion of the bulldlng owned by
Amy Kingsland Jones that bumed
located on Court Street was not
Included in the tear down bid
estimate. However, the owner will
pay to have the portion not Included
In the bid tom down. Fill dirt will be
placed on the vacant lots, Reed said.
Ron Ash , manager of Ohio Power
Co., Pomeroy, presented a film on

Rain dampens voter
enthusiasm in Ohio

' '',

:rt

It was agreed to hold a public meeting at 8 p.m . next
Monday atlhe Rock SprlngsGrangeHallon the county
fairgrounds. This meeting is the night before a regular
session of the board of education. The boosters are
asking coal miners, PTA and P1D groups and other
organizations to attend the Monday night meeting at
which time a discussionwlll be held on the approach to
be taken In an attempt to get members of the board of
education tochangetheirmlndson the reemployment
of Miss Goodnite. A spokeman for the boosters reports
that petitions In support of Miss Goodnite have been
circulated and have been signed by 1,OOJpeople. Th('S(' ...
are expected to be presented to the board at Its

EARLY VOTER - Despite an early morning drizzle, Leon
McKnight, Pomeroy, was an early voWr Tuesday morning. Md\night
Is shown as he was aboullo enter the voting booth at the Pomeroy FiN'
Station.

GALLIPOLIS - Charges were
pending this moming against two
U.S. Navy sailors arl'f'sted in

The spokesman sa id Dl?lbert
Martin had been sitting with his
back to the door in the living room

connection with the beating and

and did not hear the suspects
approach hlrn. 'The suspects al-

robbery ol two elderly Northup area
residents Monday.
Lodged in the Gallla County Jail
were HaJ»ard L Eberling, 18, San
Antonio, Texas. a nd Michael E
Campbell, 19, Hutchinson, Kan.
A spokesman for the Galli a
Coun ty Sheriff's Department said
the pair are reportedly absent
without leave {AWOL) from the
U. S.S. .John F. Kennedy, which
docked In Norfolk, Va., on May 2.
Th~y allegl'dly enter!'d the home
of brothers [)colbert Martin, 72, and
John Mar11n. 84. on Norlhupy c llowtown Road off Ohlo 218
around 3:30 p.m. and robbed the
Mar11ns of an undete rmined amount
of cash. the spokesman said .
Th&lt;' spokesman sa id Eberling and
Ca mpbell a llegedly parked their car
a t the edge of the driveway leading
to the Martins' home . from the!'£',
they entered the hou se through the
unlocked front door and used a glass
ashtray to a ttack Delbert Martin .
the spokesman said .

legedly struck DelbertMartlnonlh&lt;'
left side of the head with theashtray.
Delber1 Mart in suffered a cut
No kn ife was used in the attack as
was initially reported , the spokesm an said.

The spokesman said Dl?lbert
Mar11n wa' dazed by the blow and
fe ll to the floor As he a11empted to
get up, the suspects reportedly told
him to stay on the floor and give up
all of his money. He gave them a n
undetermined amounl of cash.
The vic tim' s brother. John. had
bec'n sitting outside during the
a1tack and h~a rd noises fmm rhe
house. He ~ntcred through the
kitchen and as he approachc'&lt;.l th('
living room, EberLng a nd Ca mpbell
seiz!'d him and fum&gt;&lt;l monev from
him .
John Martin was not injurc•d in the
a11ack. th&lt;• spokesma n sa id . The
sus p:&gt;cts tllPn fled the loouse a nd
rctumed to the ir car, a 1%'9 Ford
1ConlinuPd on pagf' f) 1

Oral arguments begin in Plummer issue
GALLIPOLIS- Ora l argument s
we re scheduled to be hea rd today in
Ga ll Ia County Common Pica s Cour1
on reconside ra lion of a c hange of
vpnue motion in thecrtJ:ninal trial of

'~·"

u

Pomeroy Council Monday night.
Council IT'ported It hired Carroll
Johnson to maintain the cemetery
for the month of May. Johnson was
paid all Ihe money received In

C ommunit~·

'

.,

395

-~

I Se&lt;tions, 10 Page'
2.S C..nh
A Multimedia Inc . Newspope'

Ohio, Tuesday, May 8 , 1984

Work begins
on waterline

' k~~lll..
~~.
1

,

en tine

·"

r

..t '' ftii1L SIZE ICE· TEIMII
l,;o;i6.t·,· • . 11,,'1'\'. 1 . With: Nufri:Jsw"et ·
~;;sit!~. '
· or.. OHrt lllvillolllfS

Pomeroy-Middle~orl,

Page 3

Meigs boosters seek outside help;
board okays day-long .kindergarten

Heavy cost aluminum bose resists warping,
distributes heat evenly . Fries, grills, roosh ,
stews or makes casseroles and one dish meals

,,,,, $45.99
.. , , . , , .. ... S39.99

•Reg . Price

•Ad Prlte

Vol.33, No . 1 8
C:Opyriqhted 1984

$21''

FPl

at y

e

11" ELECJJliC

Marauderettes
advance
on

.

Maxine Plummer.
The hearing was conduc t!'d by
Judge James E. Stilwell , the
Hocking County Common Plm s
judge assigned to the case a ft e r
Judge Richard C. Roderick wa s
r"}uested to step down from the
case.
Mrs. Plummer, fanner execufivr
director of the Gallia-Jackson ·
Meigs &amp;l8 Mental Health Board. is
charged with theft in offree and
using her officp to influencr a public

''inconvenience·· not on ly to him ,but

" Although cour!St'l for thP stair of
Ohio d{'sirPs to Pnsut"'C' lhf' right s of

direct or of the 64il board to suppor t
his argument that she can not get a
fair trial In Gallia County .
In hL' stateme nt arguing again st a
changc of venue, Galli a Prose&lt;'utor
J()S('ph L. Cain sa id changing the
trial loca tion- possibi)' to Stilwdl' s

to witnesses involved .
Quoting a 1968 Court of Appeals
dec ision, Ca in said that newspaper
ar1icles dealmg "ith th e defendant' s
character. or lhP crimP he or sh0 is
c harged with , "is not sufficient to
wana nt a change of venue. where i1
appea rs fmm voir dirc cxamlnat ion
of jurors that a -juror who has read
such newspaper accounts can
truthfully say he will decldethecasc
solely on evidence and the law given
by the court ."
Ca in said the trial m ay last mon·
than a WC('k. and a location change
would put dis tance betwpen him and

cour1 in Logan -

his witnesses .

Stilwell agrw'&lt;.l to rcv·icw Roder·
ick' s original ruling, issued in
March. In the ruLng, Roderi ck said
a dt:lC'is ion to a locat ion changr for
the trial would be considerl'd when
at tempts we rr made to SC'a l a jury
Daniel M. Hunt, Mrs. Plummer' s
dC'fenSP attomey, su bmit trd aserirs
of newspa)J(&gt;r articiC's CO\'C"I'ing his
clien1' s activ ities while exPCutive

would bP an

the defendant , this clea rlv will be a
ha rdship to conduct this trral in
another localC',' · Cain said .

The trial has ~Jcocon trntati\·el)
sc heduled fo r MaY 14. Prosccution
a nd ddensc ha,·edra"·n up Ust sofOO
potC'ntial witn PSSf"S for f'ach sidP.
while CaL, 's otliCC' has rccmtiv fii&lt;'CI
diSC'Over:v m ot ions tor such it em s as
articlf's from a \\'f'llston nf'w s.
paper: a ropy· of a wor k !X'rmit
issu!'d by We ll ston Cit\' School;; ami
a job descriptron of an f'mplovw of
Woodland

Cf'n lrrs.

thf'

lormf'r

G-.1-M Communi!\' Mcntat Hea lt h
Center .

contract .

Williamson residents head for higher ground
By Associated Press
Wailing sirens warned resident s
of Williamson, W.Va., to hea d for
high ground as floodwat ers up to 10
feet lllgh forced mol'£' than l.OOJ
people In six states to flee their
homes and tornado-packed thunderstorms spread today from the Gulf
Coast to the Appalachians.
At least 24 twisters touched down
in 1he Southeast on Monday, leveling
a shopping center In Paris, Tenn .,
flipping mobile homes In Alabama
and slashlng power lines In Mississippi . Morvthan three dozen people
wei'£' Inj ured.
Five people were known dead In
the thre&lt;' days of fl ooding caused by

hf'avy r alns moving slowly across

the mid·MissL"ippi and Tennessee
va lleys since Sunday. Thn "' people
drown!'d ln Tennessee. one in
Ke ntucky and one in South Carolina.

In

addition, one

woman was

missing In southwestcm West
VIrginia, where the Tug fork River
gushed over its banks Monday
night, splashing over the town
Williamson' s 44-foot -hl gh floodwall
for the first time since 1977.
Sirens walled a warning, but there
was no way to tell how ma ny of the
town's 5,00J residents fled, said Phil
Duncan, a spokesman for the Mingo
County Emergency Service o!Hce.

.,

"We' I'£' talking about 150homes," he
estimated .
Communities along the Tug Fork
without Ooodwails were harder hit .
Authorities In Kermlt , 25 miles
nor1hwest of Williamson, reported
up to 3 feet of wate r In the downtown
a!'£'a. Matewan, 11 mlles east of
Williamson, had 10 feet of water
swirling through downtown busi nesses, Mayor Robert McCoy Jr.
said. The town was evacuated
Monday night.
"The thunderstorms al'£' pretty
much spl'f'ad out and I don't see any
hope lor a major change In the next
day or so," said HarryGordonofthe
National Severe Storms Forecast

'

Center in Kan sas City. Mo_Gord on
predicted , ainfalls todaY of up to li

inches from the Gulf Coast across
the Appalachians and into New
England .
"You can only· get so much rain
ou t of a thunderstorm , and 6inches
In a 24-hour period is about as heavy
as you can get.'' Gordon ~a id .

F lash Oood watches remained in
effect today In parts of 10 statPs,
Gordon said .
Georgia, Alabama . Virginia.
West Virginia, Trnnesse&lt;' . and
Kentucky a ll had flooding serious
enough to force families from the ir
homes, according to the weather
service.

�Tuesday, May 8, 1984

Comment
The Daily Sentinel
111 Coun Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO mE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON .\REA

Ali:b

f!m~ ~L--r-•~=·~~==~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher

Pi\T WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFUCH

Aulstant Publisher/ Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
Uon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LFM'ERS OF OP INION are weiCClmed . They should be leliA than 300 words
lon(l . ..\llletten are !mhjef'l to t"dUins IUid must bt" 8IK ned wUh name, a ddreAill and
telephonf' number. No unsl1ned leUf'n wUI he publillhed. Letters should be Ia
10od taste, addre!!Aing lslfUefl, not personalities.

Letters to editor

Paga 2-The_l)aily Sentinel
Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio
T

man~'

years to come.
Mrs. Hobert Hickel
Rt. I. Box IIJ
Let art. W. Va. 2125:!

Longs f or board election
I do not have chi ldren attending
Meigs Local Schools, but I am
concerned ov er the rE"C'ent action by
the Meigs Local school board.
regarding the f i rin g of M s.
Goodnlte
Since the board won ·: r PVC'al ils
reaso ns for this firi ng. Jpt 's ju s t
surmise w hat some of thf'Sf&gt; r raso ns
could be.
Could It be possible that a child of
a school board m Pmb£ors wa s Jatf'
for band practice on thrf:'f' diffrrent
occasions? Did Ms_ Goodnite ovPr ·
look the fi r st two limes this child
was la tP? On the third occasion. did
Ms. Goodnlte gi ve this c hi ld a
cteremlt ?
Alter this hap[lf'nf'fl. did the
mother of this chi ld trv to have Ms.
Goodnite remove thi s rle m£'rit ?
Alter M s. Goodnit e refu sed . did the
father of the c hild . who is a board
memlX'r. vot e in fa\'or of M s
Goodnlte's di smissal ?
I am not saying that this rea ll y
happened. but what if il did happen .
would t his be r eason enough for M s.
f'..oodnlte's dismi ssal ?
Does this m ean that a child of a

board m£&gt;mbrr is bett er than somf'
other student ?
I be lieve that it was George
Orwell that sa id "a ll men are
crra tcd equal. but somf' mrn arc
more equal tha n others ."
I don't think that he meant men
only . but that he meant all p&lt;'Opie.
And I am sur~ th at he didn't mean
that the children of school board
mf'mtxors Wf'rf' mon? equa l than
others.
When the students admire and
rpspcct a teacher. and they wil l
back thi s teacher through thick and
then.then it seems to me thai this is
the type of (lf'rson that parents
would wan! to teach their chlldrf'n.
Bu t If seems there is thrt&gt;e board
members thai doesn't see It this
wav .
Il set•ms a !;hame that there isn 't
a a law in the state of Ohio thai
would permit the voters to rPCall
th&lt;&gt; board members that voted for
the dismissal of Ms. Goodnlte.
Let' s just hop&lt;' that lh&lt;'S&lt;' thrf'&lt;'
board m embers run for re-eiE"Ctlon.
Paul Clark
Middleport , Ohio

Lets get it together
I would like to speak out about our
county seat. Pomeroy. Yes. the
once great city that had It all and
made it work but now w e see It
slow ly going to the end of the line the back sea t .
The streets are In shambles. the
wa ter Is off and on, and drunks wa lk
the st reets a t night. Pomeroy is a
town In need of help, not only hy
federal grants to replace water
Jines and fix streets, but help In
making It a town to look up to again,
to clean up Its act and make It a
thriving city again.
Bur only the elected people voted
Into office can make It happ&lt;!n. You
all must work together and with the
people of the town you elected
ottlclals have a job to do and that's
why you ran tor ottice and you

should push for all you have to get
what you can for your town - new
grants for a city park and major
water line replacement, and jobs.
Your town ca n't go on runnin g with
broken old water works and
cra cked and rough streets and no
where for your local kids to play.
So Jet's get It together and make
Pomeroy a city that really works
and runs like a clock. You can dolt .
The people want that and all elected
officials In and around Pomerwy
should dolt. Make the place you live
a better place for all and then you
all can say we made Pomeroy, Ohio
work again.
Floyd H . Cleland
Box 144-F
Middleport . Ohio 45760

•

.

Acid ram: a toughie ______J_am_e_s_J_.K_i....:....lpa_t_ric_k
W ASIDNGTON - On March 19
the SE'nate Environment Committee voted 1&amp;-2 in favor of a blll that
presumably would reduce levels ot
" acid rain" In the Northeast. I look
at the bill, and my heart says
hooray while my head says, I
dunno. This Is a tough one to call.
There no longer Is any doubt that
somethi ng - let us provisionally
call It acid rain - Is wreaking
havoc upon forests and lakes over
much of the Northern Hemisphere.
Here In the United States. we ar!'
understandably most concerned
about damage to the woodlands of
the Northeast, the Blue Ridge and
Appalachia, but the United States is
not alone. A recent paper from the
Worldwatch Institute documented
extensive damage in E urope and
Scandinavia as well. Nearly half of
the lamed Black Forest of Bavaria
has been harmed. Even the Soviet
Union, which rare ly reports anything \&lt;TOng, has disclosed that vast

areas of forest are dying near the
manufacturing city of Togllatti.
The difficult questions boll down
to two Inquiries tbat stubbornly
resist pat answ!'rs: Is acid rain
causing the damage? And what
causes acid rain?
Acid deposition occurs when
sulfur and nitrogen oxides are
transformed in the atmosphere and
fall to earth as acids In rain, snow,
log or as dry particles. The
evidence appears conclusive that
these deposits are responsible lor
ruining many lakes In Scandinavia
and In eastern North America. The
evidence is not nearly as Impressive In the matter of our woodlands .
Neither can scientists agree on
the causes of acid rain. The most
convenient villain is the high-sulfur
coa l that Is burned In scores of
elect rica l generation plants In the
East and Midwest . Doubtless these
plants bear much of the responsibil Ity, but the largest source of sulfur

dioxide In North America Is not an
electric utility; It is the giant
smelter of the International Nickel
Co. near Sudbury, Ontario.
The bill now pending In the
Senate, sponsored chlefiy by Vermont's Hobert T. Stafford, ts
predicated upon several assumptions tha t every environmentalist
and economist can accept: Acid
rain - or whatever - Is causing
Incalculable harm. VIewed merely
In terms of the damage to forests,
the consequences are severe. These
ought to be averted.
But how? Stafford's btll, patt ·
erned closely upon a blll that was
favorably reported In the 97th
Congress, would require that public
utllltles In 31 Eastern and Midwestern states reduce their emissions of
sulfur dioxide from roughly 22
million tons a year to a bout 12
mtlllon tons. The senator has
wearied of further studl!'s. He

believes the a nswers are suffi-

I

So I&gt;\01..,,~
~~~ l~ Gi.mNc,

the field of m usic as her li fe 's work

a nd s tri ves to instill these va lues in
her ~ tudents; to bP the best they can
be.
The true worth of a good band
director Is not the sum of her
paycheck. but the reputa tion of the
band program she produces .
Since Ms. Goodnite was hired at
M eigs. there have been many
improvements made in the quality
of the band. Everyone has seen.
heard and or read about these
accomplishmt&gt;nts. I cannot understand why she must be sacr ificed at
the expense of her students and
thei r parents, w ho so strongly stand
be hind her and the ideals shP
represents. These p&lt;'Ople are all
wry upset and willing lo support
her in the effort to retain her
services. I fail to understand why
she was rejected In view of these
facts.
I am not !'rom Meigs County;
however. I am acquainted with Ms.
Goodnite. Some of us were her
fellow band mPmbers . others
watched her grow up. I trulv
believe in her and her approach to
music. She is a genuine and
fort h-right teachpr who wa nts only
the best for her students.
I slncer!ey hope that those who
serve on the M eigs Local Board of
Educa lion will reconsi der the w ill of
the people and give her a cha n('{' to
continue the job she has started, to
make lhe Meigs Band one !hal
every·one will be vrry proud of for

~

•

Asks board to reconsider
After reading of the Meigs L ocal
Board of Education's decision not to
renew Ms. Good nlte's con trac t as
Band Director at Meigs High S&lt;&gt;hool
I was moved to submit this letrer . I
am an avid fan of high school band
programs and the be nfit s they add
to a good secondary education
program. Among these are: II An
introduction to a ll forms of music
from m arches to the classics; 21A n
enforcement of self-discipline In
prepara tion for the tile after high
school: 3) The knowledge tht hard
work and dM.ication are required in
prepara tion for com p&lt;'lition with
othes in the same field: 41 A n added
activity to m ake high school more
than achademlcs and grades: 51 A
diversion from associal ton with
drugs and alcohol: 61 Developmen t
of self-es teem as well as community pride In the accomplishments of
a fine high school band program. A
st udent's band !'X(lf'rienccs more
often than not, help prepare him or
her to be better eitlzens for the
future .
Ms. Goodnlte has attempted to
make the band program at MPigs
High School one that can be
worthwhile to the students and a
genuine source of pride to the
community. She believes In the
per1ectlon of music. This was
taug ht her from the v ery begi nning
of her association with music. The
high school band of which she was a
member was famous for it s pride
and per1ection . Her band directors
based their teaching on their
principles. The values she learned
In high school remained with her as
she advanced to college and In her
career as band dirPCtor. Sht.&gt; chosr

, IIGy 8, 1984

.....
,..

INlO \\,., I..ESS
COM~Ei\T\C~.

~

By Associated Press

clently clear, and he wants action
now.
The senator's bUl has provoked
something close to clvtl war within
the Senate. The heaviest burden
would fall upon consumers of
electricity In the Midwest. In order
to meet the required reductions,
generating plants would have to
shift to low-sulfur coal or they would
have to Install evE'n more costly
"scrubbing" devices than they
have In place now . A movE' to
low-sulfur coal would throw thou·
sands of coal miner s In Appalachia
out of work. The scrubbing equipment would compel rate increases
ranging OVE'r a flve-yE'ar p&lt;!riod
from 18 (JI!rcE'nt In mtnols to 38
(lf'rcent In Ohio
Stafford sees something wrong
with thi s: " The polluter should
pay." His SouthE'rn and Midwestern colleagues see everything
wrong with it. They contend that
Northeastern sta tes are proportionally worse polluters than the rest of
the country. Calculated (JE'r capita
or calculated per square mile,
emissions of sulfur dioxide are
higher In M aine. Connecticut. New
Hampshire, Massachusetts and
Rhode Island than elsewhere. The
Midwestern attitude Is that the
Northeast shou ld get the smog ou t
of Its own eye first.
The regional connie! has stymied
clean-air legislation for the past
three years. No reconciliation Is In
sight . At the risk of appearing to
waffle, I'm Incli ned to fall back on
President Reagan's recommenda tion In his budget message last
Janua ry He proposed to double
funds for research in this field. from
about $5.~ million in 1984 to $120
million in 19&amp;1, in the hop&lt;' that
defi nit ive answers can soon be
found . If acid rain is causing this
fearful damage, and if high-sulfur
coal is the principal cause of acid
rain, thE' whole country will have to
absorb thE' estimated $8 billion

unearned runs.
Expos 4, Astros I
Steve Rogers worked 52-3 innings,
allowing just three hit s before
leaving with a blister, and snapped a
1-1 tie with an RBI double in the
Montrea l fift h. Andre Dawson later
hit a two-run single in the inning to
gi v e the Expos a three-run lead over
Houston.

Terry Francona, who has seven
hit s in his last 10 at-bats, started the
Expos' fifth with a triple. One out

commission's farcical show of
concern over honest elections wa s
illustr a ted by the way It dealt with
the voter registration lists.
From bitter exp&lt;'rience, opposition leaders charged that the voter
rolls wPre padded. So with much
fanfare,
the commission annou nced a m assive voter "reregistration" campaign. E lection
boards were to compile new,
supposedly hones t . li sts of ellglbiP
voters .

By Marcos would not permit the
opposition to participate In the
re- registration dri ve in the majorit y
of electoral districts . As added
insurance, Marcos will be allowed
to name 17 members of the
assembly himself. This means the
elr ctions arP sta c ked in Marcos'
favor.
ThP snlidly pro-Marcos leglsla-

L EXI NGTON, Ky . tAP! - Th~
doubters thought Devil' sBagwasn't
enough horse for the classics. But
Wood y Stephens w as convinced
there was some good r e ason thai his
colt didn'l live up to billing as the
nex t &amp;xTPtariat .
" SomPt hing was stopping him."
hut StephPns wasn' t surf' what.
He got his an.swer Monday, w hen
w terlnar ians In Louisville found a
subtle chip in the colt 's right front
knee. Devil 's Bag, the 19&amp;1 juvenile
champion who slept while stabl em atP Swa le won the llOtlt Kentucky
f)prby, willret ire toClaiborne Farm
at t hemdoft heweek .
Stephen s. suftering from pneumonia, immediatel y pinpointed when
hC' believE's 1hP inju ry occuned.
" [ knew this, " the aili ng 70-yearold trainer said by telephone from
Louisv ille Monday nigh! . " I think it
happened in the F lamingo ....
" I 've been w atching him awfully

ture. apparently seeking an international stamp of approval on the
charade. invited foreign observers
to m ontror next week's electlon
process. Nine countries, Including
thp United States and .Japan, w ere
asked to send poll watchers.
Seven countries lthe United
Kingdom. France. West Germany,
Canada. Australia, the Netherlands
and Belgium) quickly declined to
lend credibility to the M arcos brand
of democncy. The Unltm States
and Japan stalled.
OppositiOn leaders hold out little
hope of trul y free. untainted
l:&gt;allotlng next week. Some have
called for a boycotl -whic h would
probably IX' OK with M arcos. He
could explain to his naggi ng critics
at t he American embassy that at
least he t r ied. What more can they

c&lt;JrefuL Irs a VC'ry

ask'~

T he president keeps saying that

doesn't buy his cor ned beef sand wiches from thf' same delicatessen
I do
In 19ffi a cornPd beef sandwich on
rve at Ban 's cost me$1 .:i0, Including

Your help
is needed
In the decade between 196R and
1978, the death rate for coro nary
hear t disease fell by 25 p&lt;'r('{'nt and
the death rate for stroke declined by
:16 percent. Despite thi s progress .
nPar ly one million Americans still
die &lt;'ach year of heart disease.
stroke and related disorders.
This is w hy I urge communlty
members to support the li fe savi ng
work of thp American Heart
Association with a special gift or
buslnpss contribution.
Nothing is more Important to any
Individual than the continuing
steady beat of t he heart - unless It
Is the continuing steady beat of the
heart of som eone you Jove. T he
American Heart Association exists
to help keep hearts beating .
Through continued research Into
the causes and treatments of
cardiovascular disease, more lives
will be saved each year.
The American Heart Association
can exist only through the concern
and support•of all Americans. Each
ot us can play a very (JE'rsonal rolE'
In its continuing achievements.
Please make your contribution
today!
James Witherell, M .D .
President
American Heart Association
Meigs County Branch

a nrce largP slice or dill pickle. The
same sandwich today costs $.3.
althoug h I've noticed the ry&lt;• bread
slices are smaller and the pickle Is
muc h thinner. •
"How com e," I asked Be n, " if
Reagan says he's cut down infla ti on
to five percent. your corned beef
sandwich costs twice as much as it
did when he took officp?"
Bf'n wa.s steaming. "If you think
I'm makin g more money on a $.1
:;;andwlch than T was when t1 wa s
$1.00 then you'rp crazy ."
"According to the Department of
Agriculture. food pr ices have been
holding srrady ...
" I don't know from food prices."
Ben said. " But there Is more that
goes Into a cornm beef sandwich

than bread. beef and Russian
dressing."
"What's that ?"
"City taxes. Soci al Securit y and
health benefi ts for my employees.
My Piectrir bill looks like monthly
ren t, and my telephone bill now
looks like my electric bill . How
come those hut shot statisticians In
thP governmen t don't take those
things Into account before they
publish their flgures 7 "
l appar ently opened a ca n of
beans. Ben sa id, "You see that pipe
up there tha t Is leaking? In 1980 the
plumlX'r charged me $30 to walk In
the door. Now he wants $60. So what
does a govemffifnt computer know
about plumbers? "
Ben llited one foot over the

fractur'(',"

St ~phens

sa id "But when a horse is
rmlly good, it doesn't take a whole
lot to make him not that good."
So Swalewill probably goon to the
!'reakness and takP a shot at the
Tl 'lple Crown that had sf'f'm ed a
sure thing for Devil ' s Bag when he
r an aw ay from his comp&lt;'tition last
ym r . The Devil will join Secr&lt;&gt;tariat.
winnf'l' of the 1973 Triple Cr own;
K entucky Der by winners Spectacu lar Bid and Riva Ridg&lt;', and other

Corned beef on rye _______A_rt_B_uc_hwa_Ld
in flation is wa y down, and hf' has
governmrnt st a tistics to prov£' it .
But if it is. Presiden t Reagan

~mall

counter . "I bought these shoes la st
wt'&lt;'k . They cos t me $75. The •arne
shoe two years ago cost $45. Why
don' t you ask a shoe-stor e owner
why it costs $.II more if inflation Is
so low? "
I trl&lt;'d to cha nge the subject .
"How' s your wifP?"

Majors
lh

more runs.
Enos Cabell provided Houston
with Its only run, hitting his second
homer of the year In the fourth
inning.
Cardinals 5, Dodgers I
Darrell Porter hit a three-run
homer and a run-scoring single,
breaklng out of a 1-for-14 slump, as
St. Louis ended a three-game losing
streak. Porter's homer, No. 5 on the
season, came during a four-run
second inning against Dodgers
left-hander Rick Honeycutt, who
lost for the first time In five
decisions.
Dave LaPoint pitched for St.
Louis until walking Mike Marshall
to start the sixth and gi vlng up a
double to Candy M aldonado. Nell
Allen relieved and retired all 12
batters he faced.
Porter's RBI single came in the
sixth inning.
Cubs 10, Giants 7
Leon Durham hit his fourth borne
run in four games, a three-run shot
to spark a seven-run second Inning
as the Cubs ended San Francisco' s
four-game winning streak . Chuck
Rainey took a one-hit shutou t into
the seventh inning when the Gian ts
chased him with five run.,_
Steve Lake also hom!'red for the
Cubs, to open Chicago's big inning.
Bob Dernier tripled home a run.
Ryne Sandberg had an RBI single
and Durham followed with his six th
homer of the year. Lake capped the
rally with an RBI double.
Jack Clark homered in the eighth,
hi s fifth. for San Francisco.

top stallions now in retir&lt;&gt;ment at the
farm south of Paris. Ky .
No one will PvPr know for sure
whether Devil's Bag was just a
brilliant sprin ter or a classic horse
hobbled by an injury .
But the dark-brown colt. marked
by a snowy blaze down hlsface.goes
down as the 20th 2-yea r-old cham pion - and the fourth in a row since 1936 not to make it to the
Kentucky Derby. the Preakness and
the Belmont Stakes .
Lord Avie, Deputy Minister and
Roving Boy, the juvenile Eclipse
Award winners from 191Jl to 1982,
also were knocked out of the T r iple
Crown by inj ury and retired.
F.ven before the fracture was
confirmed, Claiborne president
Seth H anmck indicated the De\11
might be done atthc r ae&lt;&gt; track .
"He went eight-for -nine and was
the 2 year -old champion." Hancock
said at the barn Sunday morning.
"We'll be standing here in the spring
of!989 and sec what kind of sire hPis.
That's the bottom line."
Devil's Bag was so conv incing in
his five victories as a 2-year-old winning by a lol a! of 'II lmgthsthai Hancock conv inced owner
James P. Miils to syndicate the colt
for $36 rnlllion before he had even
turned 3.
Stephens had called Dev il's Bag
" the best [ever had" in a 40-ymr,
Hall of Fame training career.

·n"· . \~·•odah'd l'rt'S.'o
L\"iT

]){&gt;!noll .ol 1\;m~;l s C 1 t~
f1, ,.,1on ,1 1 T1 ·Xil ~. t ill
Minfl l";( ~ , l ,1!

lliYf'IO~

M

I.

I ~ ·I IHII

~·\

111

IU

h f\

~~

I J..:•IIh T'II•n ·
Y!ih• . uokil '
n.-.-d.t llil
\lil'&gt;IHII

1·1
1:1

I~

~ (l

9 1'

1.1

~ill

11

H

J1

[lo

'\.1 '\\

It!

17

9 1· 1
+Il l 11

e+
:r.tl

111,
1:1

E,\ST

M.

1'1

11

~ .....

\!'1

II

\' u1k
Monlt, •a J
l'hll&lt;ti. 'I[Jhi. t
Sl Lo u l'

II

' td

H

:.tinni'SIJI, I

]lo

[~o

' 11.1
:o\lo

1
11

~·.J tl [l

\:o
I'!

l 'l

·~H

1'

I[

[I ;

S. 111

'I

1 ~1

ltnu ston

T 1•x a.'

'i••

\ 'hondu,.l ·,. I ia1111~
~c\1 York :., Clt'\"l' iHnll ~
1\--l il" .1ukn:• I. t lltcaj&lt;o .I
!ll•t m it 111_ 1\ an "' '-~ t'l ty .I

Minni"•illil II, Ca ltromla I
I ~l k land li. ~a111r ~
Tn11 on1 o :11 1'\allinJHr. ppd . l'o ll ll
I lf1 [\ ~ a.ITII'•

1'1

1.1

1:1

n

J.l

'l

, :,
Jti

l', ·t. liB
~';';

~~·~
.&amp;X.l

!'

-

l .1r; 1\nw k-s
S.m Dlt'Wl
Cl nr lnlli.l!l

\9

12

li1.1

17

111'7
}o\ 7

l]

11
H
H

11

lfl

111

1~

."17':1
..r,~

l~

F'r am·lo;o:u

-

c hampionship with an 8-1 win over
Fairland here Monday.
Meigs will pl ay Warren Local at
the Salisbury Element ary fi eld
T hursday at 4 p.m. Winner advances to district play at a site to br
de termined.
The Maraude rell cs will be facin g
Warren for I he third time this year
as Meigs won the fi r st rwo. B-7 and
22-11. Warren. w ho has lost only one
other gamP 1Furl Frye 1 besides 1he
lossrs lo Meigs. defeated Belpre
16-1 in first round tourna m ('n t play.
Hatfield, winner of 11 of Meigs· 12
straight wins, fann l'd five and d id
not wa lk a ba tt er in going l he
distance. The Meigs sophomore
also aidPd hf'r own causL' with thr('{'
singlE's in four trips to thp plc11 r.

ThP Maraudprpttes roc kPIPd out
of lhf' startin g gaiC's wi th s ix runs in
their first plate app&lt;&gt;ara nct•. Coach
.Jon Arnott's C'Tf'W pla ted stn giC'
ru ns i n thf' third and fourth to round

our their scori ng. Fairland broke up

fourth baiiPd flatfi eld out of a jam
as IP!Ifif'lder D aphne D ill ard
hnulf'd in a df'Pp drive to loll c enter
on fhf' run with runnPrs on fir st and
second . MomPnt s later. third
~ a c k c r Carole Smit h went to hf'
~To und in glov ing a shar p groundPr
and taggPd out the runnPr hPading
from second to third whi le lying on
hl'r back .

Otlwrs

hittin g sa fel y for

gles by Maria MusSP r. two sin gles
hv .Jodi Mi ller, doubiPs hv M arv
M oore and Jodi Harri son. and one
singlp apiecf' for .fpnnv Meadow s
and Dillard.
Carol Currv pi tchcoct fur thf' Lady
Dr agon s. now 10-' on the• v'&lt;'ar. and
la nnPd onp whi!P walking five
bailers. E ach !Pam l'ommittcd
thr w PrTor s.
In an a ltf&gt;rf'd srhf'duh· duP to
r ainouts

a nd

tournanlf'nt

ATHE N S -

Musk1ngum Va ll t·c·

riv a ls N P\A· LPxingt on and
Sherid an w ill bat tiP for fh&lt;' cla ss AA
Sff't inna l hasf'ha ll rhamionship at
A l hf'ns Th ursda.v as Npw 1.4..'X
tri ppc'r1 numlwr tw o Sf'N I rk'l prf' ~. :t
a nd Shf'rida n lm ()(' kf'rl orr A ll'\: ·
l.f'&lt;lg'U('

andf'r 7-1.
Shr r idan. thr numbf&gt;r onr ~f'f'cl f'd
team . banged ou t II hits wh il&lt;·
playing erroriPss ball in whipping
th e T ti -Valley Conference Spar ·
tan s. Alexa nder had ddeatrd
Nf'lsonvi ll r ·York C'LJrli r r in thr•
rourn am enl whil r Shrridan r.;;n out
th e fi rst round with a b_
vr.
New Lex. which has ddea t&lt;'&lt;l
Meigs r.J.1-21 and now BPIpre. broke
a 2-2 ti~ wi th th ree run s in the fifl h to
nail down a spot in th e titl e game.

Duc to a rPporti ng e rror, Mt•i gs'
fin C' a thlPtc&gt; and aii -TVC ru nning
back .Jon Perr in was pictun:&gt;d in
Mo nday 's Daily Sentinel instpad of
Cr &lt;.~ig Sin c la ir as ha d bc Pn

reported .

Transartion~
R,\."it-:R ·\1 .1.

r\Jurrlnll1 l.t·~~ ·
HA I : rJ :\1f iH ~ :

:'\'o l.m_ co11ch• ·1
11~1

l&lt;r•:;~lhl

l t~•m

f J f{)( J[.f:S - !'I,H1~ 1

H•( ilf •'ll 'l

1d

!hi'

lnl i · rn, ol ~ona l

'

J ~ ·oJ l.'lW

and e l l! h r ullm~,:

pia .\·.

REY
STOK
"' ,.,,. '

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse. Oh .

TARZAN

Ph. 992 -5776

/VOw· OPEN

BACK BY POPUlAR DEMAND
SPECIAL MIDNIGHT

FOR SPRING SEASON
Complete line of vegetable &amp;
flowering plants, shrubbery, fruit
trees . Azaleas, Rhododendron .
House Plants _ 4" to 10" .

SHOW
THIS FRI &amp; SAT

CHILDREN
OF THE CORN

B k
Foliage &amp; Blooming as ets
Open Doily 9 to 8
Sun. 1 to 5

NelsonviiiP· l-=============~L~~-----------

M eigs is home with
York toda y. at Vint on Count y
WC'dnf"sday . hom P Thursday wtth
the sPCt ionaJ finals, and a t Ff'dC'rai Hocking FrJdav.

BC'Ipn~ ha d ddP J !f'd ( ;;lllitxJiis
fir st round action .

Flowers for Mom
in Gifts tha

111

Gamt• Raim•d Uut
T he M eigs Gallipol is base ball
gam f' schf'(lulf'd al r.all ipoli s M on da v wa s postponrd rlu P ro f ir- ld
conditi ons.
Th&lt;' M a r aud r-r s. c·u tTcnt l_\· 1-.'&lt;:
O\'(' r dll and fighting for thr Ea stl' rn
D i\·lsion c h.Jmpionship in thC' Tri Va iiP \' Confrrrncr with a ti-2 mark .
wi ll hos t Ff'dPral Hoc king in lJa sC'
hall ac ti on thi s r\·f'nin g. Mri gs is
ti ('(i for first i n lhr F: ;lsl&lt;'rn Oivi sion

J

drain fruit ...

&gt;ift !lour . . .

rTht'

(The C:"/,nuh fl, nuft U'! I

~ •'a son co n (' IU ~ io n

measure sugar . ..

'l'r\ 'l' hl'tT iL' ' , , ,

ITiu.· })l11"\

!The Mc&lt;~sunng C u{lll&lt;n&lt;cft&lt;dl

Potted Plants
Vegetable Plants
Cactus &amp; Succulents
Beclcling Plants
Mother's Day Arrangements
Hanging Baskets -Flowering - Foliage

l.nul~

'o.

I~

1 &amp; 3/10 Mi . our S.R. 143 off Rt . 7

''

POMEROY

PH . 992 -651 3

Gatnl"!!
F ra nd!'ol:~l 7

and water plants.
(The W..uerirv; Can B&lt; n1&lt;Jt({'f I
The Tea Ket tie ..

An.Cf' lf'!' I

Bouquer fro m your

Sil ll [) Ill:' • :11 l ' ll! ~ tXJI }! h . P!rl . rain

FTD ' Florist
Mot her's Day
is Sunday, May 13.

13", 14"
&amp; 15"

..
Served with
Mashed Potatoes,
Choice of Salad, Roll &amp; Drink

Dining

Room

Only

~~.:.~.?._,RIST

.. Full Warranty"

352 EAST MAIN

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
OH .

"Where The Rubber Meets The Road "
PH . 992-7161
Middleport,
N. 2nd Ave.

POMEROY . OHIO 45769

614-992-2644 or 992-6298

GENERAL TIRE SALES
Pomeroy.

Hl/llo/ lh'/J

Let your
love shine on
Mother's Day.

DUCKETT'S PLANTS

M n nltr ii ll llou ~lon I
,\tlan l :l K, l'hilal:il'l phia 6
Ctndnm•t l 11. Nrw York 2

~~

,f{,Lo.,/"-~'i

Call w; for deli wry
anywhcn· in tlw U.S.
Mothers' lhv is Ma y I 3.

Retail &amp; Wholesale on Baskets &amp; Vegetables

MOnda.,v'"
r 'tlk ; ~n 1() S.u1

F/, 11o- \rltt1 ,r)ln l•/lh '/J

\\i lh Flelpn' . also ar ii-2.
Winn r r of 1he F: astern Div ision
will halt ]{' thf' \-\'psf w inner at l hf'

.;,c•ho-dul!-d

pH . 992-5432

.J , ~ .

on l in · ~ll l&lt;n lli,..a tllt \1
.\ tik1· You nJ.!. IIUl f tddl'i .

the

Ma raudr rettC' s includf'd thrC'f' sin·

New Lex, Sheridan
in Class AA finals

l

~~

•·

•

advanCP into the class AA secti onal

thf' shutout bid with a singlp t &lt;.~ l ly in
thC' six th .
Twn finf' fi pJding pla:vs in 1flf'

WE\T Dl\'f'OIOS

J)&lt;

lt&gt;

I~

1.

('hic;~ll

~ ~* l: m t.,:

('It,

HOCK SPRING S &amp;&gt;ver a!
outstandin g fi elding pl ays and a
12-hit attack backed the three-hit
pitching of Barb Hatfield as the
undefeated Mei gs Marauderette s

FOR Tit IJR[AK
OF YOUR LIFE'

EARLY BIRD SPECIALS!!

IH\'foiK) ~

Pl l t «bo r~ h

"1:-;TmHHU~

\~ 1n ~,t,

Meigs gals advance
in Class AA Tourney

1n 1

C •llfurni;o . 1n o

..

t', , ]lf.,+nt,o

Clik&lt;ll""

LEADOFF WTI'ER - M eigs leadott hitter Mary Moore Is shown
batting during last night's Class AA Tournament game at Meigs.

Spring is ht&gt;rt' ,
EvPrything is hlooming
Come on out and gPt Morn
Some thing for that Spt&gt;rial Day!

:"&lt;iATIONAt LE.r\t:l 'f :

l'1·1. c:H
Ko:! -

Tnn onl11

y,, k

'y)':, -

t.:l;.\,t•

Clr•.-dand at NPw Y01·k. In !
MU•.oo;nJkf'f' al i'hlrlll!(l. 1111

,\M t-1UC.U'o' I..F..,uon:

NEW YORK (AP I -MarlO Soto Tim Leary, I -2, for three runs in
and Dave Parker kept two streaks
thelrflrstiWTl at bat with the help of
alive as the C!nclnnatl Reds mauled
hits by Ed Milner, Parker and Da ve
the New York Mets.
Concepcion, plus three wal ks. A
Soto has never lost to the Mets and
walk to Concepcion and hits by T om
beat them for the Si'Venth straight
Foley and Soto netted a nm in the
time, 11-2. Monday nlghl. The
third . Doubles by Gary Redus. Dan
fastballing right -hander worked
Driessen and So to m ade it 6- 1 in the
seven innings, allowing live hits and
sixth. A walk to Hon Oester. two
one run in getting his fourth victory
balks by Cra ig Swan and Foley's
in five decisions.
single made in 7-1 In the SPventh
" I left after seven innings because Hom e rWIS by Duane 1\'alker and
I felt I wasn't pitching as well as l
Wayne Krenchick i sealed I he gam&lt;'
should and we had a 10-llead," said
in the eighth.
Solo .
The M ets wpr e tagged fur 16 hi ".
Solo's ERA is 2.75 and he has 45
the most they ha\'L' yiP!ded this
strikeouts, two behind leagueseason. The setback enabltod lh&lt;'
leading Nolan Ryan . Soto is now 17
Chicago Cubs t o tiP the Mets for fi rs t
away from reaching thel.(XXlca r eer
place in t he F:asf('rn Division of 1h l'
mark in strikeouts.
National U&gt;ague.
" I don't regard myself as a
strikeout pitcher, although I do have . - - - - - -- -- - - - a high ratioofstrikwuts . When !was
working in the minors. l was told to
work on a change of pae&lt;' pitch to
ba lance off my speed . l lhink I've
done well enough."
As for Parker, he was batting .:ns
and has a nine-game hitting streak .
53 1 JACKSON PIKE - RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446 -4524
"Oddly enou gh." said Parker, "I
BARGAIN MATINEES SAf &amp; SUN
have yet to hit a home nm this
ALl SE ATS $2 00
season, but I'm working on it. I'll
ADMISSION E VERY TUESDAY $200
bust through one of these days.''
Parker is among tht' leader s in
RBI with 18.
The Reds vie! imiztod Mel s IOS&lt;'r

later. Rogers doubled off Joe
Nlekro, scoring Francona. Miguel
DOone singled, sending Rogers to
third, and, one out later, Nlekro hit
Tim Raines with a pitch to lood the
bases. Dawson then grounded a
single past shortstop, driving In two

Scoreboard ...

"She just got out of the hospital.
Her room cost $400 a day. The sam e
room three years ago cos t $1~.
They threw in a tPievision set free
then. Now they rhrge $5 a day for it.
The doctor used to charge $25 a
visit . Now you have to pay $.')() up
front, and wait twice as long to see
him. Tha t all goes Into the price of a
corned bet•! sand wich.

Sentinei-Page-3

Reds rock Mets., 11-2

Right knee chip
forces retirement

Election charade _________J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rs_on
taken steps to rig the vot e in favor of
candidates Joyal to him.
First. he sought to dignify thp
elections with the appearance of
non-partl,al legitimacy _ The process would be overseen, he announced. by a specia l elec ti on
commission. callm COM E LEC. It
was supposed to have nine independent members.
But until r ecentl y there were only
five commission m &lt;'mbers - all
cer tifiable Marcos cronies. After
more pressure from the embassy.
M arcos addt&gt;d two mor e mPmbf&gt;rs
- one Independen t and another
M arcos minion.
" The commission is a jo kP, " a
State Department source told m y
associate Lucette Lagnado.
But it' s a bad joke, and lh!'
Filipinos aren' t laughing. ThP

Five errors help
Braves top Phils
One down, J9 to go.
Pascual PE'I'I"l has returned to
action after three months in jail and
an on-again, off-again susp&lt;'nslon
for drug use, posting his first
pitching victory of the year for the
A tlanta Braves.
Perez pitched 5 2-J innings
Tuesday in a sometimes rocky
outing, allowing five runs on seven
hits, but the Braves slugged out an
8-6 victory over Philadelphia.
Perez actually made his first start
on May 2 against San Diego, but that
game was r ained out after three
innings.
Perez s(lf'nt three months In jail i n
his homeland, t he Dornlnlcan Hepublic, before being convicted of a
misdemeanor charge of possession
of cocaine and released . Commis sioner Bowie K uhn suspended the
pitehcr until May 16, but after Pel'l"l
filed a union grievance, the sus(lf'n ·
sian was Uftm by an arbitra tor .
Atlanta scored four of Its runs In
the second inning, erasing a 1-0
Philadelphia lead. Dale Murphy,
who hit his seventh homer, and
Claudell Washington each drove in
two runs for the Braves .
Sixto Lezcano homered once and
Von Hayes twice for Philadelphia,
which commited live errors to boost
it• total to 41 in 26 games for 32

annual cost.

WASHINGTON While the
Reaga n administ ration has derided
the " free elections" scheduled by
th e Sandinist a regime in Nicara ·
gua, it has been strangely silent
about a similar charade being
staged next M onday by President
FNdinand
Marcos In th e
Phi II ppines.
It was only a fter president
prodding by the U.S. Embassy th at
Marcos agreed to hold national
3ssembly el(:'('tions. He ev idrntly
was per sua dC'd that a display of
democracy in action might erase at
lrast some of the stain on his
dicta tori al r&lt;'gime that resuiled
from the murder of opposition
lradrr 13.t&gt;nigno Aqui no last year.
Bu t Marcos has a problem . Truly
frf'f' e!Pctions might well rPturn an
anti -Marcos legislatu re. To avoid
this f'mbarra ssment , Marcos has

The Daily

"Order Early"
OH .

31eleOom

.•

·.....•

�'·

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Tuesday, May

8,

o {•

two shutin and sick calls were

reported.
Mrs. Katluyn M ora, Mrs. Jackie
Frost, and Mrs. Denise Mora
presented a Mother's Day program .
Mrs. Altona Karr had the opening
prayer with Mrs. Frost explaining
the origin of Mother's Day. She
conducted a quiz on Mothers of the
Bible. Mrs. Mora told about the tree
of life which is a symbol used by the
World Federation of Methodist
Women . Mrs. Denise Mora read a
story entit led "Happy Mother's
Day, I Think" and gave two poems,
" What is a Mother?" and "Mot her's
LovP."

Installed WPI"e Tpn•sa Drummer.
president: Hilda Weaver, vice
prPsident : F.lmnnr McKelvey, secretar:;•. and Heverly All&lt;'n.
treasurE'r .
In a report school needs. the
commlttet:' recommended the purchase of folding chairs, blinds for the
fifth grade classroom, reading
tables fo r the first and second grade

classes.
The PTO will be sponsoring
ft ngerprinting of studf'n ts at the
Syracuse sc hoo l along with pt't'·

schoo lf'rs_ Permission slips have

Meetings to instruct parf'nts ln

fingerprinting arc scheduled for
Tuesday at 6 p.m . a! I he school. and
Wcdncsda;· at 9: :lO a.m. at the home
of Mrs. Drummer

TUFSDAY
POMF:ROY - Eastern Band
Booster s wtll meet Tuesday at
7:.10 p.m . in the band room .
I!AHRISONVILLE - llarri·
som·ill c Chapter l:lo, 0!-:S. w ill
m&lt;'&lt;'l l'ul?sday, 7: :~J p.m .. Ma·
sonic T&lt;•mple. Mf'mbers arP to
takP art ir k•s for a whitf' r lephant
salP.

POMEROY - Bend Area
Merchants will meet Tuesday at
7: :lO at thf' Meigs Inn to diS&lt;'us.s
UJX'Oming pmm(Jtions.

day at the school. 7 p.m . The
program will b&lt;' by t hP first
grade and I he fout1h grade Outo

WIDNESI)AY
SYRACU SE
Mo therdaughter pot luck banquet a I
Sy·rctl'USl' l)rrsbyrrrian Church
WL"&lt;lnesday at 6:30 p.m . M eat
tx&gt;verage and rolls provided
POMF:ROY
Pomerov
Chapt er and Bosworth Council
"'ill meet Wednesday at 7:10
p.m. at the Temple. There will a
practice for the supPr excellent
master degree following the
meeting.

SYRACUSE- !';yracuse Elemf"ntary P'm wi.U mpoet Tues-

Happenings
Memorial flowers

pvrnr of rain. lh£' fl owrrs will bP
mov0d inro tht&gt; I ra iler bf'sidP thp
rhu r ch

SYRJ\f 'USE- ll1P Wompn 's
Min is try of thfo S~TacuSt' Naza renf' Chu rch is pla nning a
hanquPI Satunlay at I p.m. at
thP Wc·sil'm SinJ in · S!Pak
llow&gt;l'. 1\thms. I p.m ThoS&lt;'
atft'nding JJT' to mN"t at the
rhurC"h atll :-tlam .

Dancing set
POMEORY Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club orga ni1Pd rf'('f'ntly and will
be holding dancf's

f'VC'J)'

Mon -

day IX'ginning May l ..J. at Royal
Oak f{('(Teation Building, Roya l
Oak Park
Club.
All f:ll'lles
mt'mlx&gt;rs
arP Jnd
urgPdl'lf&gt;aus
to attend
All wpstf' rn squ(J rP dancf'rs a rP
im·irc'd .

Man retires after 43 years
with Ford dealerships in Meigs

C'\'f' 0 " Saturday ni ght beginning

at X: :ur p.m
ThPr&lt;' wrl l be all types of dances,
clog~&gt;ing, count ry rock, square
and rock . There will be request
music by "Circle D . Wrangles ."
Red Car r of Coolvllle wUI h&lt;' the
ca ller. Refreshment s wiU be
served The Leg\on ha II Is
located on SR .1.1ll in tllf' upper
end of RarinP.

The U,iJy Sentinel
1l iSI'S f.l!i-960)
,\ Hhision of ~1ultimt' dht , hu·.

$53 9 5 165 / BORIJ
Wt11tewa ll

M('fllht' l
Tht• J\ sstw ia1£•d Pn•!-.!o., In ·
l.llld ltoil v Prf' ~~ ;\ ...,snci a iTJtl &lt;.1n d ttu •
t\nwr·i[";tn. ~t'WSPdPf'l" Publi s ht·r~ A"
S(l(' ]"t ion. Nallona l Advr ni si ng Hrpr·c
sf' nt &lt;.ll in'' . Br;lnham 1\l'W~P il JX'r ~ ;tl r.., .
7:1:1 Third t\ \ "l' OUf' , Nf'W York . N PW
\' urk 1001 7

PR IC!
155.95
65.95
67.95
71.95
73. 95
79.95

WHITEWAll
175/70Rl3
Pi95!75Rl4
P105/75Rl4
P115175Rl5
P115/74R15
P135175Rl5

POSTMASTER: Se nd addrPss to Thr
D~t ilv SPntifl l' l. Ill Crmrt St, l'ornnov
()tJjq ·1~ 7ti'l

FALLS ROADMASTER

SIIISSf"HH"fiON R ,\ 'rt:s
8)" f"arrif'r o r Motor Uoult·

WrPk .

TODAY'S HOSPITALS OFFER THE FINEST CARE WITH THE MOST MODERN EQUIPMENT
AVAilABlE TO MEDICAl SCIENCE. FROM INTENSIVE CARE FACILITIES
TO THE MATERNITY WARDS MODERN HOSPITALS ARE DESIGNED TO BE EFFICIENT
.FOR DOCTORS. NURSES AND PATIENTS.
,.

Pu iJi isht'd f' \'l' n · ;lf tf'rnonn , M &lt;lll cl;l\"
11Hnu g h Frida\. ·Ill Co urt ~!l"f'f'f. b' thr·
Ohin \"allr&gt;:'&lt; Publi -; hing C'o mp ,!ll \" -·Mu l
tinwdi a l nt·.. P•ltnf'mv. Ohi o .J:~i l l~1 . 'IY:.! ~ ~ ~~j; Sn· nnd f'la ~:-. po S!agf' paid .11 Pn
m f'ro \". Ohio .

Disc brake overhaul
We'll lnatalltront brake Pldl, new
front seale end brake hardware ;
rebuild calipers, reaurtace rotor s,
repack front wheel beertng, Inspect
master cylinder end brake hose&amp; .
bleed system and add new fluid : then

road test the car.

. .. $1 J(l
~-1 Hn

01w M o nth

VISIT YOUR LOCAL HOSPITAL MAY 6TH- 12TH ·

BANK ONE,.
M~moo

F"O!C

•••un·:"i

Alumni dinner

Su tJ .... nihl•n not de-..i rin g to pa ' llw r ar
rir- 1 m .n · tf'llli l in ad i" :IOI "I' din 'f' l rn
Thr [);Jih Sf•ntinf'l on :\. fi n t 1:! II IO illh
h&lt;1 s! s C:-rdi 1 II "ill hP g i\"!'n c ·• 1ri r-r r•ac h

HARRISONVILLE Th&lt;'
Harrisonv iliP Scipio Alumni As'&lt;lCia tion will hold it s annual
banquet and danrr on May 2fi. at
i p.m. at Harrisonville School.

;-.,·, suh'-ITip tiu n.. , h_
o, m .lil JX'nnilt c•d 10
IH H!H ' [" ;JI"I" iPr &lt;; f'l"\ '[(' (' jc,
;n·.Jii ,t hle
l fl\\" 11 ~ ~~ hl 'l l'

S l il lSCIU!'TIO I\· ~

1 I \\

l 'f' k ~

We'd like to have the op por tunity to show you what we
mean . .. w1th quality protection and service . Call us
today .

Admission to lhP tx.mquf't and
dahel' ii-i $7 a person. danrr onlv
for adult s $2 and $:150 for
children .

',~

\\ N• k_-.;

~~:;,)'(

:1-1

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

Out:.idt· Ohin

I \ \\ t•t •[.; ;,

H i till

21i \\'1'(1 [.; -..
'1 ~ Wl'i'k'-

:~ :\ 1.20

600 EAST MAl N

$;,~ t . Hil

992-2136

992-2174

POMEROY

Ewing Funeral Home

Blue Tartan
MIDDLEPORT

992 -2121

POMEROY

992-2556

POMEROY

Home National Bank

214

SAVE s200 ON AMERICA'S
n1 PORTABLE COMPUTER!

fft~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j

TRS-80®Model100
Comes Ready to Use!
•
•
•
•
•
Ohio Lottery Terminal now available, at each end

Personal Word Processor
Auto-Dial Telecommunications
Address/Phone Directory
Appointment Scheduler
BASIC Programming
Language

of Pomeroy, OH. Stop and meet our Experienced

8K TRS-80 Model 100

Barbara,

Rhonda,

Vidia,

This Week's Lotto Worth sl.OOO,OOO.OO
PLAY 6 NUMBER LOTTO &amp; WIN
This Week's Winning Numbers- 6, 9, 13, 17, 22, 24
4/6 IJI.OO 5/6 1466.00 6/ 6 1276.761.00
PLAY 'The Number" - "Pick 4 " - "Lotto"
&amp; Our Current Instant Game.

- FREE PARKING AVAILABLE -

7-33 CARRY OUT

Beer

1600 Nye Ave. Wt' ne
Pomeroy. OH . Pop

SHAMMY'S
605 W M . St
· am OH.·
Pomeroy,

PH. 992-6798 ~c:at Dock PH. 992-5786
BOTH LOCATIONS OPEN 6 DAYS
A WEEK - 9 A.M. TO 10 P .M.
P.M. Onl

992-6333

10

JJ

Teresa, Krystal, Kent, Peggy or Guido.

SYRACUSE

RACINE

Stet• Auto
Jf7 ln•urence
o"1..1 Compenle•

599!!
Reg. 799.00

G &amp; J Auto Parts Co.

992-5627

992-3785

POMEROY

Downing-Chi Ids,
Mullen Ins.

MIDDLEPORT

Gravely Tractor
Sales &amp; Service

992-2644

Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy
POMEROY

Raw Ii ngs-Coats-BIower
Funeral Home
MIDDLEPORT

992-2955

992-2975

992-5432

Village Pharmacy
992 -6669

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

992-7034

Baum Lumber Co.
CHESTER

985-3301

~§¥&gt;
992-21 96

MIDDLEPORT

State Farm l'ns.
MIDDLEPORT

992-5141

Kingsbury Home Sales, Inc.

POMEROY

POMEROY

992-2115

POMEROY

Pat Hill Ford

Francis Florist
POMEROY

992-6661

Craw's Family Restaurant
992-2342

POMEROY
you anywhere-fits easily in your briefcase
with room to spare. Features a large, easy-toread 8-hne by 40-character display and a lullsize typewriter-style keyboard. Easy to expand
to meet future needs. Get your own portable
TRS-80 Model 100 today I

992-2139

POMEROY

K &amp; C Jewelers

..

992-2049

POMEROY

Central Trust Co.

heritage house
of shoes
MIDDLEPORT

Get the 24K TRS-80 Model 100 lor
Only $799 (26-3802, Reg. $999.00)
Don 'I be misled! The TRs-80 Model tOO is the
rnly battery-operated portable computer wilh
tve executive management programs and a
telephone modem built in! You can communi·
cate by phone with other computers or access
national information services. Carry it with

Sugar Run Mills

New York Clothing House

POMEROY

EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

RA CI I\ 1·:- Racine Mrthn&lt;lisi
WomPn wi ll hold IhP S&lt;'&lt;'ond
annual mothrr-rlr:Jughtcr ban ·
qurt Saturda_v. Ma.v 12, a t ti: :JI.J
p.m . at th~ church.
Pcrsor1" who plan to altcnd
arc to call !149·2462 or 949·2111 :1by
Mav 111.

Adolph's Dairy Valley

992-2094

~:'l'v!~oeeE:;/l

Banquet set

B
eer
Po,gp.
C
Ice

Smith Nelson Motors

POMEROY

992-2039

Pomeroy

$1 ~ ~,;
$ 2~1 ] ".!

:'h \\ 1'1'""

9'!1~J690 .

Sharon,

"

Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Co.

ln sl!lt • Ohiu

made b_,. ca lling Harold G ra ham
at 742-: ~m or Jov Clark at

Operators :

---

Pomeroy Flower Shop

PRICE
147 00 .
1110
ll 10
18.10
61 10
600

llll&gt;lllh

[1.·1 ,\!L

VETERANS MEMORIAL OFFERS THE
LIFE FLIGHT PROGRAM

NO ONE EVER ENJOYS GOING TO THE HOSPITAL, VET
IT'S SURE NICE TO KNOW IT'S THERE WHEN
YOU NEED IT!!!

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

SINfii.E COPY

Corsage orders
POMEROY - Meigs HERO
Club is taking ordf'rs for cor~
sages, boutonnieres and other
types of fiowers for the proms
and Mother's day.
Orders may be placed at the
high school or by contacting
Suzy Carpenter or any member
of the club. Prices will be

FACING FACTS ....

Firestone Front-end alignment
$]450

grandchildren.
.Jenkinson plans to conhnuc his
hobb)' of caning chairs in hi s home
shop, camping at Royal Oak. and
1oisit ing during the cold months with
his daughter in Florida.

l)np

Variety Jance
JV\ CIN F: - TI1crc will tx&gt; a
,·arirty danc'f' a t Racine AmPri mn i ~'gion Hall Sat urday, May
12, and coni inuing th&lt;'rmftcr

REAR VIEW OF VETERANS MEMORIAL

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

[)(:&gt;adlinf' for reserva tions is
.\!lay 21 RPSC'rvation s rna)' be

Banquet set

A SALUTE TO VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPIT

Curtis ,Jenkinson of Middleport, Jell, retired Friday
from Pat HiU Ford, ending a career of43 years as an employee of a Ford
rk•alerslrip in Meig&gt; Cormty. Here, he l' preseniL'll a gift from Hill.

ava ilablP on rpquPst. OrdC'rs
mus1 tX' paid for in advance.

RUTLAI\D - ThC' Rutland
Church of God will ))(' sellmg
memorial nowrrs in rhe church
parkiJJg lot Thur"llay and Friday, 10 a.m . to 2 p.m In tht•

oJ

RETIRES -

Sou th Third Avf'. loca tion in
Middleport .
.Jenkinson Slil rtcd on Mdrch ,1,
19.T7 wll h R.V . f:tx•rsbach as parts
rn ana~ Pr. and worked therf' until
thr businC'S~ \Vas sold to Jimm~·
Parsons in 19~. lr:tking time our
during World War II Io serve four
_
v f'ars ln the Na,·al Air Force.
Parsons 0\\.-'!)ed thP bu sillf'SS until
1958 whrn it was purchased bv
Gera ld Preston, who owned it until
196"1 when thf' f'stabl is lunC'nl wa.s
sold to Keith Gobd. changing hands
again in 1974 to bPComC' Dan
Thompson r ord. and aga in in 1978 Io
Pat Hill Ford. currmt owner
Jenkinson is marriro to thC'
former Dortha Sattefield and the
coupiP have two daughters, Kav
Williams. Shaclc , and Marv Jan~'
.Jenkinson. Lakclan&lt;l, F la., ~nd two

j:'hone class.

Louis' and was also a philosopher,
A tour
the Ohio University
playwright,
and financier. Born in
Library to be taken on May 16
1694, he was the sovereign writer of
followed by a luncheon was dis·
his Cf'ntury. He had no equal in
cussed at the Wednesday meeting of
ready
satire and placed the greatest
the Middleport Literary Club held at
theories
of science within reacll of
the home of Mrs. Richard Owen.
the
people,
the reviewer noted.
Following the Ubrary tour and
luncheon the club will JIP&lt;'ess for t h e . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - summer monlhs. rPSuming meet ings in the fall . Mrs. Owen,
president, thanked the members for
Middleport, Ohio
their pan icipation during the past
year. The club collect was given in
unison and officers' repo11 s werf'
heard.
T-Shirts, Caps, Jackets, Etc.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace, program
SPECIAL PRINTING
chairman , introduced the speaker,
Mrs. Everett Hayes, who presented
FOR YOUR
a review of Voltaire's "Candide", a
SPECIAL NEEDS
sa l ire on the follies andvicesofman.
614-992-7626
Voltaire. a French writer and critic,
AFTER 5 P.M.
li\'l&gt;d in the time of the three King

CUSTOM SCREEN
PRINTING

Cu rtis .Jrnkin son rf'tirrd at noon
Frirla~· as off icC' managrr of Pat Hill
Ford after 4:1 years of empJO\·ment
with Ford agf'nc ies in thr same

Calendar

4

Special Graphics

Officers elected by PTO
been sen t to thP parents and the
fingerptinting will be done on May
16 at th&lt;' S;racuse C'lcmmtary
gymnas ium .
Parem s of prr~ schoolers arc
asked to take !herr children .Io the
school anytime between 9:30 and 3
p.m. that day. The fmg&lt;&gt;rprint cards
wlll be sent home with the students
unless indJcated oth&lt;&gt;twise on the
permission s lips. Quest ions eonCPrning lhC' !Jrugram should be
directed to Mrs. DrUlllmer.

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Literary club to take tour

Chester UMW meets

Officers for the 191&gt;1-85 school year
wl'rt:• installPd at the rf'Ce nl mt-'E't ing
of the Syt·acusc• Elementary PTO.

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

1984

Page

The annua I mother -daughter ban quet to be held at the Chester United
Methodist Church Thun;day was
announced at last w!'t'k's meeting of
the United Methodist Women held at
thP church.
Plans were aisD completed for an
open house at thPchurch parsonage
on May 7.1 to • p.m., to be hosted by
thp UMW . It was noted that
donations are being made to
purchase pew pads for the church .
Conllibutions may be given to Mrs.
Helm Wolf or Mrs. Katluyn Windon
who are handling the project.
A repor1 was given on plans for the
annual EIPCtion Day dinll{'r. Fifty.

Tuesday, May 8, 1984

992-6685

POMEROY

992-6687

The Daily Sentinel
POMEROY

992-2155

�Tuelday, MIJy

M4dleport, Ohio

8, 1984

$180 million settlement gives
hope to Vietnam war victims
NEW YORK (AP ) - For Dan F ord, who sued the
makers of Agent Orange because be believes the
herbicide gave him cancer, a SOO milllon settlement
means he can continue seeking treatments - even
though doctors told him his case Is hopeless.
For Maureen Ryan, whose lJ.year.old daughter
Kercy has undergone eight major operations to treat
22 birth defects, the settlement means " the chemical
companies are saying she suffered her Injuries In
Vietnam, many years before she w as born "
Seven chemical companies that manufactured
Agent Orange reached a tentative out-&lt;~f-court
settlem ent Monday in a class·actlon suit with
thousands of Vietnam veterans.
The agreement, under which the companies wiU
pay $Jlll mUllan Into a fund for veterans' claims, was
announced Monday just before jury selection for the
trtal w as to have started In U.S. District Court in
Brooklyn.
Four of the five families c hosen as representative
plaintiffs in the suit gathered outside a Brooklyn
brownstone Monday after the settlement was
announced to talk about the cancers, mlscarriag&lt;"S
and birth defects they blame on the compound , which
was used to destroy forests which sheltered VIetCong
guerillas.
"I felt all along the chemical companies were
wrong. They owed me an apology. Today they
apologized ," said Ford, 35, of TemperanCP, Mlch. He
a I tended the nl'Ws conference with his wife. Christina .
Ford. an Army veteran who served In Vietnam In
1968and 1969, said he has twlceundergonesurgeryfor
!he cancer In his leg. He also has twice endured

--.~"

t

-

-·

borough of Brooklyn Mon.m.v. A tentative settlement
was reached Monday abetween seven chemical
t·otnpanieo; and 15,000 Vietnam veterans In a
da.""'action lawsuit a gainst thefinns which produced
tht• defoliant. ( AP Laserphoto ).

AGENT ORA.'IG E \'ll' I'I.MS - Agmt Omngt•
vidims Kerry R~ an, \3, of Stony Brook, Long L• l.Uld ,
left, and Chad .Jordan, 13, and hi.• brother , Mk hat'lll ,
holh of Aw..tin , Tex"" talk to n•porters in"''" \' nrk 's

Pair charged...
s&lt;'dan Tht \
south on 21R
13cfOrC'

r epor '"II\

[C'J\ mg,

ht·odf'd
SUS!)('&lt; 1s

!h L'

disab\ Pci I he Ma1trns telephone b'
rem o\'ing r he p lug . the spok esman
uxpla inPCI J)t:ol ber1 Martm !hen
went 10 a ne1ghOOr's houS(' n(' ariJ\
and had the neighbor c all lhl'
sh~riff' s depart men I
F'1 om tha i phone call. tht• spokP'i ·
ma n sa 1d dPput tC's rPCPI\ ed a
dc&gt;scnpt!on of one of thf• susrx 'f'ts
dlld of thPcd r
ThC' n(·tgh hoJ al S11 rll llf'd th f'
Calh a l·" :v!S \\ hwh t1 ans p01 trd
[)(o!bert M'" 1m to Holzer Mcdll al
O•ntf'r, whC't'f' hr was trt'.J!C'd &lt;Jnd
r t'l r&lt;.~st'Cl He rma n H f'nl"\ d B ur('dU

•lnnllnuo , l!rnm page II

ha\ ('
g1Jt 1t ·n onto Ohio 77:'1 JrHJ PX!I E'd at
Procton tllr
\\.herr 1h L·~ werE'
spOll f'd b' Lawrm cc Counl ) shE&gt;riff' s depu ties
[)(opullf'S b&lt;•ltr\'l'Cl a! fir sl the pa rr
ma~ h3\'(' tnrd to takP Ohio ~53 a nd
dnve mlo Crown Cit ). A deputy was
hrlli'\ 1'..,

lhf' S USpl'&lt;.'(:-,

rTld\

tX&gt;stC'd a t the mtersect ion of 553 and
Oh10 7. the spokesm an ~ id .
L;m rrncc dppu I ll'S sloppPCI Ebe·
r lrng and Cam pbell at ~ ~:; p m on
-)~.

thll'i.' rrult•s \\PSI of Ch0sa~akc

&lt;;;.IIIla Coun t\ lfl\f'SI Jga l ors wC&gt;rf'
.rlt• r It ~I and prc·kcd up 1he pa ,,. at ! he
... crnt of l hf' an·pst.
" 'l11e\ had lhosr
s hogt 1Pci and
t '\ rn th1ng togf't hf'r v. h0n I go t

bo'

nf l n m mc1 l In \C'Sl l.l:'-lrton c~gPn l,
v.. as summomf'd to thr rr 1mt• sn'nt'

t hl 'l l' ...

Eber lmg and Cam pbell 1n•n• m·xr
Sf'C'n ag&lt;H n m I &gt;1 octorviliP, hP;.~ dt '\ I
for t: s o2 l lwspokosmans;mllhal
haS('(J on t liTH' .mel rad io r''1-XJI ts Ill'

W('Je rPt ur nrd to
( ,c~Utpoli s arotmd h .v-J p m . thr
"pokr..,mdn s&lt;:mt

noted

ln H'SIIgatOJ

Cd lll cl

Jamf's \ 1ar nn(' t

Tfu·

p~llr

Meigs County happenings ...
Motors, Honda
takt&gt;n in theft

Dit ,orces sought .
other.~ ~rnntNI
I ~Olll s r11 h l or dJ \()J('f' h&lt;~\f ' \)l'f'!l

f l it'd

Mt

111

Ig'- ( nun t\

( l l mrnon

Film g !01 dt\ \ ) n P \\i ' t , , . lr~.wn
\.\ nn J o hn~m. Tup~ ·J ~ f'l.11n ".
.tgam ~ l \\\.Jtt l- .Juhn , un . Tu~!Jl'l '
Pl,lJn S l\Jit'n ~ l.\rms. KHirlt' ,
.tgam " l .\lflt'(l H 1.\ on&lt;., , .Jr . \1 '\\
~1&lt;.Jt.lmnr d '-, I ~·' I'! ._ll\ I. till · Wtbon.
HJCinf' , .J }..:. Iln s r \ldn

!taunP.

\ 11

1! •.1n

f{P t~. '('{_';j

~) umt't'l l\

l'h1 :Vli'I.C'&gt; Cou nt\ Sh£'1 iff's [)p
]Jd11rnt n1 Ji'f.&gt;IJJ1t'&lt;1 th ai o n Ma y 0,

1H o Pi('&lt; 1r](

P lras &lt; ·ou11

tl \\11 '-rlll

( ,JrJ,., .

d,i.:cllno.,t .ldllll'" ILurJld

D..tlLt'-., &lt; rl1H}!JJ.
lnthP..,drTH ' ('OU!1 IJ!1t'di \ 1Jn
~ 1anH&gt;d and I!\£' rn t~r rl.t,l!r''1l!ssol\ \ ~ ~

motors wcn' stolen
! l oll\ t1 pumpmg Ji1C'k of dn ml and
g.1 s 11 I'! I on McE ih an npv· Hill m
S.:III&lt;.,IJUJ"\ T0\.1.11Sh1p
1\lso t.1kt ·n v. as a ll '&lt;1 Honda thtl?f'
-~ ht&gt;dt ·t from thf' H &lt;:~p !JV HoUm"-

Tht • \f'hl£'1£' v.a-; USPd bv Wf'll
t(' ndt·r&lt;; P1•op1P ha\ Ln f.! an v mfor
rn&lt;~ t 1on ;1 tl' askt&gt;d to&lt;. a ll thf'sher Lff s
off iC"I ' dt ~21R."{I
di'Pd

(;;_t ]f' '. ,

RondJ I l 'r 1mf'l l

v. .1-.

('\\ ,J &lt;,

\\f' ! P

,l.'l.tnh'&lt;.l

,1

dnort't' ft um Lot-. I ( rn ndl em
r hargf'" of g1r.-.. . . m·L:h'( 1rJf dut\ J nd
f'X UT·nw cnwl1 \

M;Jrt l;l gf'..., r:lJ..,..,ul \ Pd \ \t'tf' Pu u l
:\11 Ht'{'Ci •.md H.. tnlOnd (. RC'f'd.
:\lloSf'"

\:1HmJn J. nd \1\ r1k· '\or

J1 Jf h._u d \1 Elliot t and
ThC'rC'SJ .\nn 1- II Jolt , ( harltc:.s M
F'.- and Kalh' I&gt; f" f&lt;rbc&lt;·c"
i.C'Igh Smr lh &lt;~ncJ Llan tC'I ""dwa rd
man .

Sm ith . l tPI)('('( &lt;.t L1•1gh o;;;m1th

1('StOrN:l to h(·r fUJmn

\A.

as

namf' of

HC'lx'cca l.J' Igh l n JW

Tlw Ruck S!Jr m~s ( ;, cmg(' will
met'l at Rpm Thursd"' "'' he h.dl
v.nth L aur'f'l ( .t angr to\ JSI1

Local unit s answcrPCI two calls
Monday. th£' M c 1gs Count y E m Pr
l(m cv Medical Serv ices rPporl s AI
1 11 am . Pom eroy went to Cour1
and M am Si s for B ill T av lor, lakt•n
10 \ietPrans M emorial Huspil al
M lddll'port at 1:54 a. m went to
Pearl St fo r Clara BellP R ilt'V , also
taken to Veter a ns Memor ial

Wealher foreea;;l
M ostly clear and co ld to nrghl w1 1h
scaller ed frost Low 31-.'!9. W&lt;"S II'r lv
"inds 5-10 mph. Wednesday. part ly
cloudy and cool H1gh 57·62 Chancf'
of r ain ~ percent tonrght and 211
percent WPCinesday
Extended Forecast
'lbul'!lday through Saturday:
Fair. Hlgh&lt;i In the 60s Thursday
and Friday and &amp;;.75 Saturday.
Lows 35-45 Thursday and In the 40s
Frl.m.v and Saturday.

Hospital News
IHIIZER MF:DIC ·\L ( 'ENTER
llN 'IIARC.E.~

Area deaths

MAY 7

l1·v.rs Bl&lt;•\' ins. Mi chael Cl.L"un .
nu. mr· D r umm ond. l.tnda F'Prrar.
( dl nh n
(.!!more. Mrs Ra nd\
Cn'f'nf' and son. Ff'rn Hartll'\.
Carol Hrggcn!Jot ham. Flo\'d .l ack

son. Mrs Da na KPt&gt;fPJ and sun
M1 ldr f'd Krng. B rill Kll'in. 1\ola
l..1 m be11. ,Jpnm Lt•po r1. Char lr•s
l.owth&lt;' l. Nellie M rtchPII , lew!'! !
Nida\. l.rn da P1alt'l. SIPphPn
ftrrflc. f{usst•l Rol h. Dorul ll\ Sor
IPau . Doruth v Wembrt'nn('l

HIRTH
Mr ami M 1 ~ .Jpfft f'\ l.t&gt;sli•t , son ,
1\ltnot

VETERA.'IIS ME~IORIAL
i\d m1t t('(l - ( ;n•tchf'n Yeager ,
M ason . W \'a, EdmondMrKmn!'y.
\ ' into n , Bfort ha Za mor._m o. Shade:
Marv W ippd. Pom ero,·
D tS&lt;'hargrd - Donal d L ovett ,
fumd.t ll ·r."·kell Maude Bailcv.
E s thf'r K!~SI:'ll , Juantta Ch apma n ·

,\dmll! crl Gr e!ChPn Y Pager , M a·
son. E dmond M cKrnn ey, V rnt on
fkrt ha 7.:rmorano Sharle; Ma...;·
Wrppcl. Pom£'rov.
·
D ischa rgPCI Donal d L ovell. Ran ·
tl. tll Tackett. M aude Ba il ev. F:st her
Klsst'll .. Jua nita Chapman

Fin' l,'lll"l home
T h&lt;' upstairs of I he J am&lt;"S Bush
r&lt;"Sidencp in Ch&lt;'Shire "'as gutt!'d by
ti re M onday . Middleport Fire Chief
.Jeff Darsl sa id !he frrP sta rt ed in an
upsta irs bedroom There w as also
wa ter and smoke dam age to the
downstairs of the story and one·half
hom e. Four t rucks wer e on the
scenp from 11 · 22 a. m . to I lJ p.m .
Dam ages were set at $!0,tm and
ther e is insu rance. Chief Darst
reported No one was at home when
lhf' fire was discovered.

I

Neva Bolvard, 68. formPrMiddle·
port res idl'nl, died early Tuesday
m or nin~ at the Barnesville Hospital
in Ba rnPsviliP, Ohro . The Rawlings·
Coals· Blower· Funeral Home in
M rdd l epo11
IS
com p l e ting

an

M.ugji]li!]i

21n I ~OOol
l Ann011...: ...,o••u

• o.........
II

Jl H... Mh ~ .o... o

22Mo.,., toloo ~

J ! CI l\l l.floo! ., Fq,. _ n l

I :J. ~mr. ..oo~.,S.""' ''

U •niMiu•o
~ · lollw&lt; ....... ~ .........

Mrs . Ry an stroked Kerry 's hair as she talked to

-

l1
32

o d&gt; o ~ot 1

. .....« ....

lf'lont ...

]

&lt;GI ..

liH~••

n

• .,.,_

u

1]
' "'""" " ,
14 .'".......

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

"""-''"' """'

"" ~''"" ''

..
U

IV II CI !I opo"

,•ew
7 "'.....
·~·' oloOG
""'""'

·~.,.

'"'

~,

JIGO"'I
.....

01

w.,,.do o ~.., ,

II

h~'l'-"'

UF Gol.-..

I

(loll ..

t:-•.,

f &lt;' l " r

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

A so Some Car
Fenders Available

1 -1 3-tlc

3·28-ttn

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

LIMESTONE
HAULED

For

all

~

616

~~

""'00"

0 511
~ J6

l•o~

lN

IM

0uo0ft 011&lt;

"~• •~ G"'"'
11:1 - MaoM

8 111

N o"' li"""

89e;

, ... ..

937

8 .... ...

l t.l . ..... o ...
l 19 w..... .

Call 742-3195

CONTRACTING
' D OZER

BACKHOE

" RECLAMATION WORK
\lo l o11 w" "' Ono d oo ••••••••n
&lt;Jo oo ll - •&lt;lo
f&gt;o,.odoy•noo•&lt;•on
&lt;J0 10 I II W010 o llu~•• •~ oo ' '"'~
l b...,.. . . .... ~., ......

&lt;o&lt; 1\o nl

Your Pet Pullover!

MdrtU, Zip, Palltrn Number.
YOUR NEX1 CRAFl rs 1n our NEW
1984 NEEOLECRAFT CA1ALOG
Over i 70 vaned des1gns. 3 free
patterns Send $1 00
AU CWT BOOIIS. .$2.!10 each

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE
OF
ETHEL
GRUESER AKA EVA ETHEL
GRUESER , OECEASED
Case No 24423 Docket 1 2
Page420
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

Nl..Uand~~d~

uc:•
111r JIOIIIII .. a bl!ldlinc.
13S.Dolls &amp; Clolhes On Palldt
134-14 Quia lladrine Qoilts
133-Fasluon Hlllllt Qulltin&amp;
llZ-Quilt Orili. .

On M ay 4 1984 1n the
M" 1Cl" Co unty Prob ate Coun
C ts• No
2&lt;142 3
Rov T
G tlt ~·s • · r 361 02 Roc k Spr 1nqs
Rouff Pr) tn 8roy Oh 10 45769
WJ 'i •i\PO•n tf&gt;rll\f1mlf"IIS!r a:or O f

l:JD.Sortltll(asllioos-SU.JI.5'

128·EMlope Plkhwtn Quills
IZJ.Af&amp;llm 'n' Dailies
126-Thrifty Crlfll flowen

IZS.Pelll ~Ill
124-bsr Gills 'n' Omam111ls
IZJ.Stikh 'n' Plklr Quills
122-Stuff 'n' Puff Quilts
IZo.Crucbet Y""r Wardrobe
liS-Easy Art of Flower Crocllet

thrc: n Ill ,... Of [·+w l GruP::;.~r u ka
r \d I I 0 1 Gr l lf'', "' r rlP c easP&lt;i
I ll'
I f.&lt;'01 1,, ? R:wk Spn 'lq"
HrJ 11 i 'mn r r l)., Oh •O 4 5 70Y
Ch&lt;'ii iPS f4 Kn1() ht
c,l: !•'l'l Pr u bCJtf• JurlqP
BY I Pn l K NP ':.S Pirnad

li&amp;-Nifty Fifty Quills

[IPrk

I:, 22 3tr

Public · Notice

" OIL FIELD SERVICES

1)00
100()
1 1 011

hd s n SPdi Pd Pn vel or •P m.li~ Prl
]fl l ( ~

n• 111 11r&gt;rd w •llr&gt; or, 4 S77?
n, qh!

t O W II

R,, rl i ' S \&lt;J if ' '&gt; tua le d i:I T th ro
L _r tH ' u' Gdri1P d &lt;~ n d Sou t h
f r11 d AvPro ue •nrlle V• llage o f

M•ddl e p o ll Oh •o The Village
a \ QIJ re d t•r le 10 s a•d real es lumn 2 70 Pa11 e 703 Me1q s
Coun 1y Dr:&gt;t! d Rr:&gt;c ord s
Sal ~&gt; o l sa1&lt;1 rPa l esla tPwa s
&lt;~ utho r l l Nl
by Ord 1nanc e
d(IOP! Pd Jan 12 1981 The
voll;t\I P t P&lt;;erveS thP r1ghl 10
1 PJPC t an y .1 nd a ll b•ds The
&lt;;dlt&gt; 15 pu rsua nl to Sect10n
72 1 03 o r rile Oh 10 Rev1S€'d

Coe1r
t4J 17 2 4 ltlr 1 8 15 22 5tc

3C!S fl 1 fb r 10

hl(i If
ff• 'i f'lv~ • d

!11

" 1'"1

1n~ 1llol

1 '1 80 Oru l rm Fn rrl 11, 11 1• ,j
S tl~ "''iH I &gt;"
\) A ] 1,1 ,, ,, I" "

t, A6ct B.~t~

Pov..PI s\PPt&lt; 'l fl f)'l w('r ,, ... ~., s
SPrn l Nn F37GHC'.G'J }1)0
8 1d &lt;; t o

An tmal des1gn s are top fa shton
news! Kmt lh1s pullover now
A parade of poodle s em ·
brOidered wtfh french knots adds
charm to wonderful sweater Kn1t
1t rn two color s ol4 -ply sport ~arn
Greal wrlh mryth rngr Pattern
7302 Srzes 10 12. 14 rncluded
$2.75 for each pattern Add
SOl each pattern for postage
a~d
handlrng Send lo:

J~8tl

tJf'

n r r n• •• l M ,t'(

1200

ll(J&lt;)Il

Real Estate General

FOR SALE

lloo 163, Old Chehu Sta., New
YOlk, NY 10113. Prlnl Name,
Misc. Merchandise

WANTED

(1) HOUSE IN CHESTER:
Three acres with a nicely
constructed conrete block
home 26x30. 3 beCrooms,
one bath, 12xl5 living
room and 24x24 family
room. Partially carpeted,
fuel oil furnace with facili -

ties

for

woodbumer.

12xl5 block storage build·
ire. 20x30 block garage.
Right off Rl. 248. COUnll)'
settinc. y, mile east of
Chester, Ohio.
(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE:
Downstairs equipped w1th
kitchen. livinc room.
dining room and den;
upstairs has two bed rooms and one bath ;
house also has base ·
ment. Lot size approx .
• 48'x308'. Needs work.

SOMEONE TO
TEAR DOWN
2 STORY HOUSE
FOR MATERIAL

972-2259 or
992-5692
Autos for Sale

SPECIAL BUY!
1981 BONNEVILLE

lf interested contact
The Home Nattonal Bank
in Racine, 949-2210.

White on White
Low mileage. Power
and

new tires . Warranty
good thru 9/86.
Call
Tom Anderson

992·3348

~·

,.GK££
M "R-••
-

•

-

J.*

M. L."Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction Service
Cbel)'l Lemley ,
M1111 County Associate
Phone 742·3171

Gallrpolrs Flea Market Un ·

FREE ESTIMATES

ltm1ted Dealer Space . Out doors all th1s week end only
$6.00. Start anytime after
6PM Fn. mght selling &amp;
overnighttng allowed . Located at Rta . 160 &amp; Rt . 35
Former Thaler Ford Prop

•

ortv . 446 ·7037

ACCENT
FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

FISHERMEN
ANY SIZE
BASS MOUNTED

2'20 E. Main, Pomeroy
PH. 992- 6931

FOR
Thru Monlh of May

SSO

!1,
il iff~

TANNED DEER HIDES
Sutlable for Glovet. Et c

Reasonably Priced
TAXIDERMY SHOP
Rutland. Oh.

"Free Estimates"
Installation Available
412711 mo

PH.

" WATER GAS &amp;
OIL LINES

Authorrzed John Deere.
New Holland. Bush Hog
farm Equipment
Dealer

PH. 446-8038
or992-7119

JIM CLIFFORD
PH . 992-7201
, · 15 ·11

742-2225

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racrne. Oh.

Farm Equipment

&amp;

&amp;

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

GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Parts

STEEL

Ph.

Service
1 3 tf c

614 -843-5191
10·6·11C

.....C~AR~R~OL~L.~S~
LAWN SERVICE
•MOWING
•TRIMMING
•CEMETERY
MAINTENANCE
Reasonable Roles

ChOICe .

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326
Pomeroy , OH 45769
For Faster Servrce
Call 614 -992-6737

Dr. Carol Osborne

YOUNG'S

Veterinarian

CARPENTER

ls At The

SERVICE

Me1gs Humane Society

CALL
992-5949

Mtddleport
From

3 to

- Addons and remodeling
- Aoofmg and gutt&amp;r work

8 p.m.

Every Tuesday

For

Wolfe
Investigations,
Inc.

- Con crete work
- Piumbmg end electuc at
work
(Free Estimates)

THRIFT SHOP

Treatment 01
Animals
5/ 8/ 1 mo

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992.7314
Pomeroy,

G&amp;W
PLASTICS &amp;
SUPPLY

Ohio
11B !Ic

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS
35185 Oak Hill Road
Long Bottom . OH . 45743
PH. (614)
We Use Von Schrader
Equipmenl Recommended
by leadrng Carpet Manu ·
facturors
'FREE ESTIMATES"
3 28 l mo

985-4212

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

614-992-7626

985-3561
All Makes

PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF ALL TYPES

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refngerators
•Dryers •Freezers

4/ 4/i f

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL

GAS - WATER
SEWAGE PIPE
REGULATORS &amp;
FIITINGS
VOLUME DRIPS

SIDING CO.
"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimates,. 949-28D1 or
949- 28o0
No Sunday Calls

Waret.ouse
985-3813
Residence
985·3837
S/7 / 1 mo

3·1 Hie
d

WANTED
All Types of Alum1num
Clean Sheet &amp; Cast
4H lb.
Weeks of April 9·21
Aluminum Auto. Trans.
•a.oo Each
Irony Aluminum
Priced On Inspection

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE
WORK

located 1'1• Mite lut ol

Scipio Energy

AL TROMM
742-2328

Recycling Divis\·on
4"111/ mo

We Have the
Lowest Rates

Paptown on lwp 142

Call 992- 3466

Announcemenls
3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewmg ma chine repair, parts. and
supplies
P1ck up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half milo up
Georges Creek Ad
Call

61 4·446 ·0294
Paul' s Home V1deo located
405 2nd
Ave . in Park
Central Hotel VHS, Betas .
CEDs (disc) Rent movtes &amp;
players Sudden Impact &amp;

PARTS and SERVICE
4 5 lie

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

S&amp;W TV

GOLF lESSONS SPEOAL

AND

AOUL T 6 for '40
STUDENTS 6 for 130
'

"'' •Superv1sed Goll

l

Proaram
' •Bea;mnma now
throua;h season

,

_,•:/1'

••n Aan

S.1turd.1r playmg
IIIQS

~

•On Coorse lnshucl1on
•Awards
INSTRUCTORS John Teafotd
Dave " B•g Hit' Burl
CHESrER, OHIO
4-9-1 mo

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENtrH
•SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
We Have A Full Time
Shop Technician
on Duty

RIDENOUR

&amp;

TV
APPLIANCE
CHESTER-985-3307

Cleland Greenhouse. flow ers, flats or pots . hangin g
baskets , uegatable plants ,
tomato plants , Gerald1n e
Cleland, Vme and Mam St
Racine .
Stobart Green House has for
sale bedding plants, vegeta ble plan IS, &amp; 10 tn c h
baskets . C ounty Ad 100
Racine , Oh1o
'

Cherokee 81ngo May 1 9 20 Will p1ck up by Grey hound , Pomeroy. Pomt Plea sant. Charlest o n
and
Beckly For 1nformat1on call
Lucas Tours and Trl'llvel

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

1·304 · 346 · 7542

46353 Scout Camp Rd.
Chester. Ohio
Ph. 985-4269
If No Answer. Call 985-4381
We Service All
Makes &amp; Models

McDaniel Custom Butcher mg. dur10g summer work1ng
first week each month
starting back full t1me first of

Sept 304·882 · 3224

4

Antenna Installation

House Calls and Shop
Se~ice Available
" Se rw!CP

517 II mo pd

Found Female Doberman
black &amp; tan, m Tuppers
Ptams area Call 614 - 667 -

4 I

old Ca11614 · 256 · 1379

(H

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
&amp;

Vinyl
Aluminum
Complete Gutter Wort
Complete Remodeling
Roofmg of all Types
Worked in home area

20 years
"free Estimates"

yrs. orange collar Male 1
yr . leather collar w1th name
tag Last seen Ambrose area
May 5th Please call 304 675 - 3340 Reward

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Tu e sday
night, Pt Pleasant. WVa
Auct Lonme Neal . Youth
Center Bldg . Camden St

614· 367 7101
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Servtce. Estate. Farm. An tique &amp;. lrqu1dat1on sates
L1censed &amp;. bonded m Oh1o &amp;

Auct1on every Fn n1ght at
the Hartford Commumty
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandtse every week
Cons1gments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304 - 275

3069

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars
Jrm Mink Chev -Oids Inc .
B1ll Gene Johnson

446· 3672
Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters Swain Furnt ·
ture, 446 -3159 . 3rd
&amp;

ttmb er
Call after 6 or
anytime weekends , 614 388 -9906 or 614 - 38B 9617
·
Wanted to trade motorcycle
for sk1 boat Call446 - 2240 ,
before 5PM
Buy1ng dally gold. Sliver
coms , nngs, jewelry, sterling
ware. old coms . large c urrency Top pr1ces Ed Bur·
kett Barber Shop 2nd Ave
Middlep ort Oh 614 -992 -

3476.
Cash pa1d for fancy 1ron or
he111vy tron beds $1 60 and
up for certam Me1gs Co
stone Jars
Old t1me cupboard
call 1 - 304 - 882 -

2711
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE
Beds
~ron
wood. cupboards. charrs :
chests . baskets . dishes
stone jers. antiques , gotd
and silver
Write - M D
Miller, At 2. Pomeroy. Oh1o
45769 or call 614 -992 -

Wanted old pianos Paymg
$20 00 and $40 00 each
First floor only Write givmg
directions
Witten Pianos
Boll. 188 Serd•s. Oh 43946
Ph one 614 -483 -1605

Windows . v a nou s sues .

446 ·3252

Employmenl
Services

1 yr old Norwetgn Elkhound

&amp; German Sh epherd mur:ed
breed, female spayed &amp; all
shots. good w1th ch•ldren

Call 446 ·421 9

11

Help Wanted

Young male rod tnsh Setter

304·458 · 1580

EUGENE LONG
Ph.

1 hound dog. good huntmg
dog . 1 German Polic e 8 mo
otd Ca11446 - 3171

(614) 843-5425

AVON

Sell the best

AVON Call 446 · 3358

2714

Widow would like e middle
aged w1dow for companion
live -in . be able to drtve my
car if needed Free rent . ref

Lost and Found

-

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
DOZERS

BACKHOES
DUMP 1RUCKS
LO·BOYS
TRENCHER
WATER
SEWER
GAS LINES
SEP11C SYSlEIIS
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992- 2478
S/3/ 1 mo pd

Roger Hysell

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION

GARAGE'

498 General Hartinger Pllwy.
Mtddleport. OH .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

PH . 992-2549

Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio

Also Transmission
PH .
or

992-5682'
992-7121
3·24-tfc

Open:
Mon. - Sat. 10 to

6

Construction

A

814-246-9691 dr 614 ·246 ·
5363 oxt . 324.
LOST Small tamale puppy ,
gold color, 12 weeks . old
Lost 600 block of 3rd . Ave

Gallipolio. Coli 446· 8017. '

General
Roofing

LOST. dogs, black male
Cocker Spaniel limps, male
part Beagle . Reward Call

ialty

lost , bast boat pedeetal
seat Seet is brown. Ball Pro
Shops is printed on back of
seat lost
on SR 124
between Syracuse &amp; Ralt found , plea1e cell .

8eturdey. be·

ginning 12:00. 304-875 ·
7722 anytime.
18 Wanted to Do

Rummege Sale, Episcopal
Pari sh Hall, acro11 from
Pomeroy City Halt , May 9th
&amp;. 11th 9 a.m . to 4 p .m .
Garage Sale, Baum Addi tion May 11 &amp; 12 from 9 -3 .
Baby items &amp; much more.
Yard Sale. College Rd. Syra cuse . May 1Oth &amp; 11th . 9 till
4 Children. adult clothmg .
Odds &amp; ends, misc. plus.
Yard sale at Henry Hartman
rea . in Chester, May 11 , 9 to
5 . Childrens clothing, ma ternity, uniforms, salt &amp;
pepper sets, truck topper ,
motorcycle etc 614 -985 -

3839
6 family yard sale , May 9,
10. &amp;r 11 , from9to4 , at238
Condor St . Pomeroy
" " ' "p' ' " ' " " ' " " " " ' ' . . .

t Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
YARD SALE. 3 days, Man ,
Tues . Wed . 2414 and 2416
Monroe Ave 9 00 ull dark

8•1• ·

Yard Sale Gallipotrs Ferry,

266 · 6251 after 6 30
Roofing and gutter work.
metal work , housepaintrng,
carpenter w o rk E.c ref
Free estima t es Call 446 -

3171
Garages. petros . s•dewalk s.
baseme n ts , blo c k work
Reasonable pri ced 35 yrs
ew;penence Free estimates

Call 446· 3394
lawn mowrng and tnmming
done at ia1r pnces 304·
675 · 6347 m 304 · 675 ·

7243

Retail Outlet must employ 3
conscientious , trustworthy.
tnsrde reta1l sates clerks
Immediately Retail expe rience desired. but not ne cessary Must be able to
work wtth mimmum super·
1111ion and be able to meet
pubhc. must be profictent m
basic mathmatics . Oppor·
tunity for advencemant for
nght persona PleaM reply in
own handwriting. referen ·
ce1 required to bo• 800 in
care of the Gallipolla Daily
Tribune, 825 3rd. Ave ,

Gallipolis. Oh 46631

Help Wanted

Party Plan lnterv ewmg th1s
week for 5 salesladies 3 part
time, 2 full time For conf1 dent1al Interview call Mrs
Robbins at 61 4 · 286 -2890
betwe en 9 - 1 1 AM . Man Thurs
WANTED
Part t1me Lt ·
censed Pract1cal N u rse s 12
positions) f o r an mterme diate care fac11lty for the
mentally retarded 1n B1dwelt ,
Oh10 . Current Ohto LPN
License and NAPNES or
Pharmacology Training re qUired, experience tn work mg wrth persons wrth men tal retardation preferred
Contact Dave Weber at

388 ·8195

or

446 · 1642

ext 389 Deadline tor apph :
cants· 5 / 15 / 84 Buckeye
Commumty Serv1ces is an
equal opportunity employ er
Auto bodv repairman . with 5
yrs e~~:pertence Contact Brit
Welsh at Simmons Otds.
Cad &amp; Chev , Pomeroy
General dent1st now hiring
people oriented. enthus1
satic, career mmded ass1st
ants Please send completed
resume w1th references to
P 0 Box 729 A . cot he Dally
Sentmel

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS ·
GRADUATES If you are
wondering how you can get
a JOb without w ork expe
n ence, the West V1rg.n1a
Army Nattonal Guard m1ght
be the an swer f o r you Earn
good mon ey wh de learntng a
sk11t Full ttme pay wh1le you
tram . part hme pay once you
come back home calt 304

completely flir·:
nlehed, nloe lewn. Crown-

City. Coli 814-288·8244: . ·
Art you looking for • fixed
rate home toen?' . N L Ste~·
en1 &amp; Asaoclet11 have IIY.
eral different type1 of f i xed
rete loan• 1tarting et
1 2 76%
Call Jeri Allie.

Bnc k h o me with 4 acres, 3
bdr . 1 h bath , large kit &amp;
DR . BM w wood h e ater &amp;
electric heat. Kvger C reek
School D11t, $ 66 ,000 Ca ll

614 · 367-7238
By

owner

l ovely

2

bdr ,

home on waterfront , boa t
ramp &amp; dock . ero se t o t o w n,
priced $ 34 ,900 W1ll help
ftn a nc e
C all 61 4 25 6

1216
Fo r sal e by o w ner. 3 b d r .
c entral a1r , forced a1 r fur nanc e . buck st o v e. mgro und
18x36 swrmmtn g poo l .
clos e to c 1ty schoo ls

$30.000 Call 446 3204

6 r oom s b asem ent. d oubl e

f1x -rt - Shop m o ved to 86
Burd et1e Add , Pt Pit Re pair vacuum sweeper5 and
lawn mowers Sell sw eeper
parts, belts and b11gs 304 -

gara ge. 1 &amp; on e t hnd ac re
lot. Rose H1ll. Pom eroy

675· 651 2

Owner tr an sferred mu st sell
beaut1ful 3 bedrm b n c k
home
Fn epl ace. d ec k
w oo ds . pn v acv . su n shme

Plow gardens Po•nt Plea sent. Kanauga area Phone

304· 675 · 3292

Nrce ho me n ear c oal mmes
fult busemen t , cellar . 2 bd r
on 1 2 acres o f pr o p erty m
Langs v tll e S2 9 .00 0 614 ·

74 2 2261

Business

21

$32 ,900 Call 1 6 14 678
2513

$63 900 Ca ll 6 14 · 992 ·
5420
- - - - -- - - · lc -

Financial

Opportumty

and Thurs

11

gerege,

61 4 ·379 ·2789

lawn M o w in g &amp; Trimm ing
Reliable and dependable
Reuonable rate1 Ca11614 ·

W . Va below Stauffer Wed

NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO recommends
that you do bu smess w1th
people you know . and NOT
to send mon ey through the
matl until you have mvest 1·
gated the o ffering
$

FIRST TIME OFFERED

10 ro om h ome m Ru t lan d o n
47 x 140 l ot on N Ma.n St
8th h o u se fr o m Salem w est
sid e of street Needs co ns id erable work but can be
bought Well below pr operty
value Call 216 -394 -6741
or wr1t e Box 72 3, Pom eroy ,
Oht o

8 yrs old 3 b edrm. 2 baths.
famrly roo m w 1th wood burner Smgle c ar garag e. on
8 flat acres w rth st oc ked
pond Crty wa t er 1n A acme
Call 614 949 2641

Nat1o na l C o rp now app o mt
mg dtstr~but o r s t o serv 1c e a
netw o rk of e"'s1 stmg b usi nes ses Wonderful ta x shel ter , small ttme reqUir emen t
for unlimited profit pot en tial
M1n1mum ca pn o l $.18 ,000 Fo r detatls c all
Charles Ke nn edy Man &amp;
Tue Only , 9 t o 6 1 -800

241 2294
Opemng for four sup ervi so r
trame es Company c ar, p a1d
uacat1on . m s uranc e For m t er vlew ca ll 614 -379 220 5
Servtce statiOn for lease
downtown Pt Plenan\ Call
614 373 - 8411 . nk for
David
Beer W10e Ca rry -Out Ov er
6 d1g1t f1gur e m gross an n ual
mcom e Beer sales 5 d1gtt
f1gure annually lottery tar
mmal
Conta ct Gurdo J
Gnolaml, 605 W Mam St
Pomeroy
'
Own your own Jean Sportswear. lad1es appareL
or children 's store
300
brand names $12 900 tn c ludes 1n1tial tnventary .
store f1xture s tramm g and
much more Mr Tate 704 -

753 ·47 38

FOR RENT WIT H OPT ION
T O BU Y til 14ft wtde t hree
be droom
b at h and h alf
m o b•l e home Sltttng o n nr c~
lot
re&lt;1d y Ia mo ve mto
S225 00 d ow n S225 00 per
m o nth 3 04 576 2 711

8

yr old thr ee bedr oom
ra nch, 6 mil es from Holz er

S3 9 500 00
7746

30 4 · 6 7 5:

Ow n er t r ans f erred , m ust
sell exc co nd 5 6 6,00 0 .
5 1 1 ,00 0
d own
Assume
8 lf1 pe t
loa n
30 4 -6 75 1529
Bv owner , 2910 M e ado w -

brook Or . 1 t loor plan 3
be dro oms . f am1l v room w1 th
fir eplace. ut1l 1t y r oom re
fng erat o r. burlt tn rang e,
fully carp et ed f en ce d bo c k
vard Ph o ne 30 4 6 7 5 -5 8 5 6
o r 675 2062

3 yrs old , 3 b edroo m . 1 VJ
bath s firepl ace. rural water.
8 m1l es out o f town on At 2 .
On e and a thtrd ac re lo t Bh
a ssumabl e roan Very tow
dow n payment Payment s
und er S400 00 C all 304
67 5- 5848 b e f or e 5 30.
675 -4358 aft er 5 30
St o ry and half , 3 be droo m s,
n e w st dmg new remodeled
hvrng roo m wtth ftrepl ac e

Own your o wn J ean Sportswear. lad1 es apparel .
combinati o n . ac c es sone s.
large si ze st ore Nattonal
brands Jordac he, Chtc Lee
levi. Vanderbilt
hod
Gunne Sax . Espnt , Bnttanra
Calvtn Kle1n , SergwV alente
Euan P1cone . Clatb o rne
Members Only B•ll Btass
Orgamcally Gro wn . Health
tex. 300 others S7 900 to
52 4 .000. inventorv. arrfare
trairun g, ft x 1ure s, gr and op enmg , etc Mr Keena n (3 05 )

3 be d roo m ho u se o n M oss ma n Ave , Bettm ea de Cen tral a1r . ca rpet ed eKce pt
ktt c h en and bath
Mo re
rnform at1on 3 04 6 75 3 168
aft er 5 PM

678. 3639

773 558 6

kle. 762 2521 EO E

22 Money to Loan

Teach e r s and co a c hes
summer e mpt o ymen1.
S900 DO p er month gUiuan ·
teed mc orn e World Book
and Chdd C raft 304 -882 -

32 Mobile Home s
f o r Sale

HOME

675 ·3950 or 1 800 ·642
3619
Green A c res Aeg1onal Cen ·
t e r House at Po tnt Ple asant
Home Ltf e Instructor 1 2
mtdmght - 9 a m m.ntmum
quahftcatron s. 72 semest er
hours of coll ege cred1ts or
tw o years of fullttme pa1d
eJC p errence a s a house par
ent Hygtene A1d e mmtmum
quahftc atton s. h1gh school
graduate or equt v alent and a
re c ord of su c cessful pre VIOUS e11penene w1t h mental
re tarded C o n1act Davtd Ea

2485
WORK AT HOME ladt es be
a supervrsor for House of
Lloyd largest t oy . gtf1 , home
party company Wilt train
demonstrator , ex c rncom e
Free traimng Detarls With out obliga t i on . c all Betty
collect 1 -304-744 -0924
WANTED
Part · ttme li censed Prac t1c al Nurses (2
posttmns ) for an mtermediete care fac1hty for the
mentally retarded in 81dweU.
Oh10 Cu rrent Ohio LPN
L1cense and NAPNES or
Pharma cology Traming re quired, e~~:perience m work Ing with person with mental
retardation preferred Con tact Dove Weber at 38B 8196 Of 446 ~ 1642 , eKt
389 Deadline tor appli c ants
5 -16 -84
Buckeye
Community Services IB an
equal oppo rtumtv employer .

Sell

Queen s1ze mattess end box
springs
Phon e 304 -6 7 5 -

3-8-2 mo. pd.

.very

CIIIHI

I

2 Brtttantes. female 5

Black leb . puppies . 9 weeks

I he Rest

lnetruc·

3484 .

7760

!h al Towers A.bowe

H omet for

don. 81fu Jlloti_or L. Burno.

bottles, old re cords, Tues day , Wednesday , Th ursday

req. Cal!446· 1023 or 1414

THE
QITCHING
,_
SERVICE

BUS.: 985-3813
RES.: 985-3837

Giveaway

1nd 81rHt Defen11

~=========:..12002
Jefferson Blvd Some thmg tor everyone, Avon

G CCC . Annual Fish Fry
May 9 , 6PM Gallra Co Gun 1-:-0:-1r-v_
o_S_•_._G
_a_l_:
lop_o_lo_s:._,.:.
O_h_ _
Club, Buck Ridge , Gallipolis . Wanted to buy standing

6

GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE LINES
FREE ESTIMATES

Yard Sate Chatham Ave .
Wed thru Sat .

WVa 304 · 773 · 57B5 o'
304 ·773· 9185 .

Engage-A-Car. the modern way
to dnve the vetucle of your

New Homes-Extensrve
Remodelrng
Insurance Work
Custqm Pole Bldgs
&amp; Garages
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
1 5 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992 - 2282
11 · 1-Hc

ALL

&amp;

512!1 mo

INrERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd hke to mtroduce you to

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

BOGGS

41 7 d 1~1 1 8 3 tl

Ruder Mail
: 1 ·:
The Doily Sentinel

sunroof

10

i llf!f)PI &lt;;
PLtln&lt;; Ch••&lt;; !••t W !lt&gt; r () o&lt;,lt &lt;( 1

Alice Broob Crafts

Plus,

Business
Services

.rl l I I''&gt;

7302

SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED

DC Cab Call 446· 171 8

rh""' ', w.r
1~-'t 0 1o.,ft tl.l ,.., il(n-or.nn ..,, ., , h'f l
r. ,rl &lt;; on a om ron 1'JBO h;r d
ll,"i lhf'd S!Ll kf'Si d' ! lu\~ VII
3~ I ~' ll fll n f to ,1t '•ll f''' d n1 1\\1!' 1
s tf • r nq Oli VVPr b r o~b • -, Sf' nd

Otl r t s wdl b e rece1v e d u ntil
230nc loc kPM o n th P3 1st
ri ay n t M a y
1984 at t he
Milo; !lr s o f t •ce
2 3 7 Race
SIIPf't for t h e sale of t h e fo l
n ..'ll ,n ·r d esc nhPd r eal e sta le

Yard Sale 7th S. 8th. 486
Upper River Rd (SR 71 .
)11~~---~~~,."'1"11 (across from Gallra County
Rural Water) . Chest. desk. 2
old trunks. stone jars. small
'" •~•• , d1nner bell , rock1ng chair.
b1rd cage , h1gh cha1r . clo thtng.
glassware. and other
•TRENCHING
items
•BACK HOE •DOZER
•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
GAS, SEWER
-HAirN LINES
County Certifi•d

PH. 992-7582

Available
Anytime

"CONCRETE WORK

Gallipolis Flea Market Open
Every Weekend on former
Thaler Ford property. Lewis
Enterprises. Call 446-7037

_ lEiJ 1,~., tAr
1 75601

SALES
SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST

" FREE ESTIMATES"

"DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

r ~ ~ n oPrs f-'la.no;;

NOTICE OF SALE

Work Guaranteed

&gt;Jti _

PUBUC NOTICE

Public Notice

71

992-5875

F r aziers Bottom Flea
Market . Every weekend .
U.S. 36 Frez1ers Bottom.
WVa. 250B2 Don Frazier Operator. 304 · 766~2779 .

CALL TOM HOSKINS
614-742-2834
4118/ 1 mo

Open by chance or
Appointment

DOZER
WORK

"C USTOM BUILT HOMES

Public Notice

WATERMELON
PATCH
500 Lrncoln Hill, Pomeroy

&amp; Commercial

J&amp;F

........ .

~"'

u a••• a. ..... ,., ..

THE

Residential

742-2328

" " ' Codo Joo

tot
-o'"'"'"
l U - CNo~~•

• • " " . 0 .. .

wiring

Cross -St1tch Supplies

needs; furnaces repair
service and installation .

"'" " " ' " wv

~,.

llli -11..,0•••·

. ....
...

your

COUNTED CROSS STITCH
DMC FLOSS
BOOKS
CUSTOM·MAOE FRAMES
Rea1ster for May Basket full of

Middleport
Vicinity

&amp; SidiJW

FREE ESTIMATES

All

VIcinity

&amp;

NEW-REPAIR

4·30·1 mo . pd

RADIATOR
SERVICE

RooliJW

&amp;

Guttero, Oownopouto
Painting , Coating

tho •

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

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

All TYPI$

•Gutter &amp; Downspouts
•Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE - PH . 992-2772

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH. 992 -7013
New Chevy Truck .. ..
FENDER ........... 576.95
DOORS .... .. ...... '149.95
HOODS . .. .... '174.95
BUMPERS .......... '69.95
GRILL . . ......... 542.50
R. SUPPORT.. ..... '84. 95
TAIL GATE ....... '85.00
FORD FENDER .... '69.95
BUMPEIR ........... '69.95

..... ·aaiiijloiii.... ·-··· ·-····-p(;;n8;o;;··-·· ····

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

,.,ll llll ''"''" "''.

~;amo " O f a~'""""'

31

All brick 3 bdr., 2 betho;

•Replacement Windows •Sidewalks. Patios
•Cuotom Built Garageo

AL TROMM

t) , ......oco

"'-' "'"" ' ''" ~ om

OJ Fv 10 l0 ..14

71

.,.,..,oo•••

(. ,..,

u ......... " ""''" ... ~ ·~·

...... ;

t'"'" • v• a•u&amp;ou

u , .,. &amp;.•• •• ,•••

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

11 11el p WU ....

11 ............ ..

,

llotl hUIIWomoo

]Miti

11 l• o... &lt;N IIIOn ood

lll ~ o ll&lt;o

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

J:u .....,,... s ...

Jill"'"''"""

7~ loooo&amp;lolo-•
7 1 .,.,. ~""''

l uil&lt;to"' h p'" "
II Pel! lo• li .. •
J 1 M o oo&lt; ol '"" '"..,." "

H-1..,1011
Ao!G WOH.,.,ut,. So&lt;t

/"ll"''"'lr ,, /,

70

u

H ..,,., .r.~o

I l oo ,.~d ' """"
T , ..,. i o lo looHI "'
II ~v-.&lt; 1 all

( /n •••f•P il jXllfP•

n ' '""-'"" ' ''"
T l \lono •• WD

years
M ea nwhile, the Cornrnerce
J)t:opa rtment reported that the
nation's trade deficit in the first
three months of the y ear hit a
quarterly record high of $25.8
billion
U the tradP deficit continues at
a similar r ate through the final
three quartPrs of the year, there
would be a $103.2 billion imbal·
ance for all of 1984, far above last
year's record of $61.1 billon.

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows

949-2263

PHONE 992-2156-l

71 ....... lo•lalo

Schaol1
Inetructlon

Teklng new 1tudenta In the

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM SIDING

Or

z• ........ o"""""'''

54
The Confer ence 13oard , a
bu smess -sponsorf&gt;d org aniza tion. sa1d it s consumer confidence rndex rose lo97 9percenlln
April from 94 5 percent in March
in a survey of 5,&lt;m fa milies It
was the highest reading for the
ind£'x sinCP98 4 in January.
Ric hard Curtin, director of the
Univer sity of Michigan survey,
sa 1d 40 percent of thP famllles
surveyed sa id !hey would spend
som e of their savings on major
purchases this year. up from 29
per CPn t a year ago at the same
ti me, and the highest level in five

said.

dioxin
Veterans exposed to the compound said they
suffered cancer, Uver and nerve damage, skin rashes
and emotional difficulties. and their children suffered
birth defects.
The settlement came more than 6ve years after th e
original suit was filed. About 15,00&gt; veterans already
have sued. and up to lll,OOl have placPCI their names
on an Agent Orange registry.

18

J&amp;L INSULATION

MAND!Iti

"'"''

,..-o n&lt;o l

t ,ll•"' l&gt;v d P8 d re c-o rded 1n Vo

By i\ssociated Press
Dt•spil&lt;• a r ecord I radP deficit.
d1mbing m011gage ra 1es and
htgher pri&lt;YS for homes, Ameri·
ca ns arC' s how ing renew ro confi ck•nce 1n the nation's E'C'onomy,
two surveys rev!Pal.
The U nlversrty of Michigan
sa 1d Monday· 1t s mdex of consu·
mer confidence rose to 99.5 in the
firs! quart er of !he year , !he
hi ghes t smce it s benchmark level
of 100 rn 1966 The mdex is based
on r esull s of a .January·M arch
survey of 2,0tiR households.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
&amp; Painted
Storm Opors
&amp; Windows

Or Wf1t1 0.111r S.n111111 Qanified Dept
111 Co1nt St., Pomtroy,OIIIO 45769

M

C ood o ll ~ ., kolp ol&lt;l•nod ¥O "&lt; o l

1

an~f'nwn ts

Renewed
•
economic
confidence

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.
NEW-REPAIR

reporters about the suit her husband Michael and
daughter entered more than five years ago because
" Kercy was not an act of God. she was an act of Dow
Chemical." Dow was one ofthe defendants In the suit.
Kercy, whose 22 birth defects Included a hole in her
heart and missing bones and nerves. sat in a
wheelchair and played with Chad Jordan , 13, and
Michael Jordan, 11, each born with a deformed ann
alter their father returned from Vietnam.
Mrs. Ryan, of Stony Brook. N.Y .. said the
·settlement means her daughter w!U be "offered the
same dignity as Vietnam veterans."
Under tenns of the proposed agreement . the
chemical companies did not admit any liability for
illnesses the veterans claim were caused by Agent
Orange, which contained the hlghiy toxic chemical

Ohio

Fine Art of PI Lung, Kung Fu ,

419!1 mo

She was also

Ne\'a Bolvard
"

Pomen~y--Middleport,

Business Services

He called Monday " the greatest day of m y life. even
greater than the day I came home from V ietnam. "
Ford said the settlement wiU allow him to rontrnue
to seek treatment. " Nl'W research Is being done," he

~

N orma Gallaher, 65 , Coolville,
dred Monday at O'Bieness Hospital,
A thens. followrng a brief Illness
Mrs Gallaher w as born Septem ber9, 191R atGilmerCounty,W .
Va . to the late Wooford and Oleta
preceded rn dea th by one infant son
and daughter and t wo brothers
She a m ended Betheny M etllodist
Church in Guysvil le and worked for
Sta ts N u rserv. Litt le Hocking.
She rs survived by her husband ,
Ivan Gallaher three sons, Coleman
Gallaher. Coolville ; Galen Galla
her. K ansas City, Kansa s; Joseph
Gallaher. Lorain. Ohio; one daugh·
ter. Evely n Midkiff. Kettering,
Ohio; three brother s.
Blake
Weaver. Rondo! Weaver and Clem
\\'paver all of Coolv ille; seven
gr an dchilrt•n
Funer al services will be held
Thursday at I p m . at White Funeral
Hom e in Cooh il lewith !he Rev. Roy
Deetn officralrng . Friends may call
at the tune• ai home Wednesday
from 2 to 4 and 7 to9and until time of
scrvJCC' s on Thu rsday .

me.' '

The Daily Sentinel

Nonna Gallaher

F t)'llltrc WPa ver

chemotherapy and radiation treatments, even though
doctors told him "there Is no more they can do for

8, 1984

Tuesday,

Help Wentedll Good Chns t•an mete muSICI&amp;ns and
smgers tor Gospe l Group
· ·saved '' Must be w1lhng t o
travel 304 675 - 3860
Lady t o hve 1n w1th elderly
lady . mu st have go od re
commendation s 304 6 75

1408
12

Situations
Wanted

W1U care f o r the eld erly 1n my
home Lot s of references
Men or w o men Call 61 4 ·

667· 3402 .
Would love 10 c are for 2 or 3
elderly people in my home .

3051
Professional

Serv1ces
PIANO TUNIN G low er
p r 1ced regular tuntngs
dtsc ounts to Sem or C1ttzen s
Churc hes &amp; Schools Ward ' s
Keyboard . 304 -675 - 38 2 4
P1ano Tuning .end Repair
Brunicardi Mwuc Co . 446 0687 Skill and mt egrity our
trademark
Lane Daniel s

61 4· 742 ·2 951
THOMPSON BOOKKEEP
lNG Monthly and Ouorterly
ac counts welcome 428 Se c ond Ave Call 446 · 1 1 36
Unwanted Fac 1al or b o dy
he tr 7 Permanent , p amtes s
removal by European Elec tronic Depilator Mary IS
certified in th1s new co mpu ·
terized d1gital system Call

loday 614 .992 ·6720

Top

ot the Stairs , fult servi ce
sal o n
Professional Electr o lys is
Clinic . Probe Type Electroly
sis AMA , FDA &amp; FC C
approved Doct or referrals

304· 675 · 5668

Rentals
41

Hou se o n d o uble lo t stor age
bld g , n ear sc h no l m N e w
Haven S1 3 00 0 00 30 4

LOAN S FI X ED

RATES Bel o w m 11rket ral es
F1xed c onv e ntiOnal FHA VA le a der Mortgag e ,
Athens
c ollec t 614 -59 2 -

23

S15 .000 30 4 675 5854

Houses for Rent

ret .. loll of T L C Call 949 ·

Cutest Home. Our Loss , But
¥our Gatnll Yourbestbetfor
Savrngs 11 Call 614 992 -

3014 after 6 p m

6941

TA l STA TE M O BIL E
HOMES USEO CARS
TRUCKS
GALLIPOLI S
CHECK OUR PRI CES CALL
614 446 75 72
NEW ANO USED MOBIL E
HOMES KESSEL S QUAL
lTV MOBILE HOME SALE S
4 Ml WEST GALLIPOLI S
AT 35 PHONE 6 14· 44 6
7274
1 965 1 2)( 60 mob1l e h ome
unfurm shed
SJ 900 Ca li

446 1340
1 982 Oakbr oo k fu rn ished
mob1 le ho m e 14 ft w 1de 2
bdr hke n ew S7 500 Ca ll

44 6 803 8
1 98 1 14), 52 m obtl e h o m e m
exc co nd Can be see n AI
J o hn son ' s M r ' rl e PAri~ o n
EAst er n A ve lot 2 9
1 972 mob ile h om e 1 2• 6 5
g ood cnn ct
2 b dr
Ca li
446 7 1 7 1
a ft er 5 446 ·

82 88
Holle y Park 1 973, 1 4 x6 0 , 2
bdr
Ou a1l Creek M obile
H o m e Psrk , ex co nd Fren c h
City Brok erag e Serv1c es,

446 ·9340
Cl ayt o n 1983 12 Jt: 6 0 2 bdr
l1ke n ew . on lot at Oua1i
Cr eek M o btl e Ho m e Park
Fren c h C1ty Brok erag e Ser
VI CeS , 446 9340
72 Wind sor 12 Jt: 70
LA
e xpando . 2 bdt , ut r oo m
new c arp et. c ent . au
drapes. partly furn i shed . un ·
p.nmng . awmng , new stor·
ag e bu1ld1ng Coli 614 - 367 71 N . Roush Len e
CheShire
·
1972 1 2"60 mob1le home

$3 000 614 ·742 · 2261

.

�The Daily

8
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

64 Miac.

They'll Do. It Every Time .

1973 1 2x65 mobile home.

614·

C all 304 · 773 -

7 pc. wood group llvingroom
suite. gooct cond .. brown in

Business Had 22 ONLY 6
lEFT . Siz e s 1 Ox 50 &amp;
12a62 . 2 bedroom fur -

colo•. $200 . Call 614- 266 6647 .

nished . A comfortable home
for a low Price . Brown ' s
Trailer Park , Minersville .
Ohio . Call 614-992 -3324.

30 gal . aquarium complete
with light, fish . gravel,
pump . Will trade or sale . Call

Tr•iler with added room .
large living room with wood
burner. a building &amp; garag~.
large garden space. also fru1t
trees &amp; fenced yard Ideal for
starter home or eldelv cou ·

pie . Call 614 -992 -6712
1974 Kirkwood , 12x60. to·
tal alec 2 bedroom , nice

ca•pet.

P•"'Y fumished , un ·

derpinning .

446-8114 .

H~'l.'

CASC?

33

Farms for Sale

9 . 7 acre farm 1 2x60 mobile
home, tobacco base. new
28x56 house started . lo cated on Hannan Trace Ad
S16.500 Call 614 -256 6620

35 lots

&amp; Acreage

Rio Grande . 1• acre lot. all
3

utilities. driveway &amp; patio.
Ideal for hou se or trailer

s9 .000 . Ca ll 446 8038
1 .8 acres . ex c. bldg . o r M .H .
site with 350 ft . road
frontage . located on o ld 160
near Porter . all utilities
nearbv. S3 .750 . Ca ll 614 -

388 · 8801
Approx . S V1 acres level land
with frontag e o n 2 roads.
exc . fo r building or mini
farm . All uttlit•es near bv off
o ld At . 160 near Porter,

S9 .000
8801 .

Ca ll

I Mill

Supp ll i! S

61

Farm Equipment

A c reage for sale . 304 · 675 7541 evenings .
4 acres off Kerr Harr isburg
Road on V i nev A ol'!lld .

$ 8 , 000 00
3398 .

304 - 895 -

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

675·5386
Condominum Myrtle Beach ,
2 bdr ., 2 bath completely
furnished, ocean view, 3
pools . 24 hr . security . tennis
court &amp; maid serv• ce. Ca ll
after 4 :30 , 446 - 3426 .
~m811 furnished house sin gle
person . ya rd . garden spot .
do wntown . S175 mo , low
utilitites. Call 446 -9283. no
pets .

2 bdr . house 1 mmi . out of
town on Rt
588
Call

446 -2196 .
6 rm . house &amp; bath . 1020
Second A ve Elmer E Ca ld ·
well. 446 -2366 .
Cle an 5 room house in
Eureka . full stze basement .
garden availabl e. Ca ll 614 ·

256 -6547 .
Small 1 bedroom ho me for
rent Tota l electric. located
;n Min er svill e near Bulk
Plant . 992 · 6215

for Rent
jACKS 0 N ESTATES
APARTMENTS {Equal
Hou sing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms. rent
starting at $1 57 for one
bedroom and S193 per
month for two bedroom.
wit h $200 deposit located
near Foodl and and Spring
Valley Plaza . pool and TV
ant Ca ll 446 · 2745 or leave
message .
Small efficiency apart .. ce ntral air &amp; heat . 1 professional
type gentlema n on ly . 446 -

0338 .
Garage apt . furnished 3
room5 &amp; bath . Washer &amp;
dryer . Clea n . no pets. adults
o nly . Dep . &amp; ref . req . Call

446 - 1519 .
3 bdr. unfurn garage apt..
$250 plus deposit
Call

446 -37B6
Furnished effi ciency. 607
2nd , Ga llip o li s S 14 5
Share bath . single . Call
446 · 441 6 after 7PM .
Furnished apt .. 2 bdr., near
HMC . S235 _ Utilities pd ..
Adults Ca 1144 6 -4416 after

7PM

boys BMX bikes. dual hand

Sofa. c hair . rocker . otto man. 3tables. {extra heavy
by Frontier), $685 . Sofa.
chair and loveseat. 9275 .
Sofas and cha irs priced from
S285 . to $895 . Table s. S4 5
and up to S125 _ Hide -abeds. $440 . and up to
S525 ., Recliner s. S175_ to
$375 ., Lamps from $28 . to
$75 .5 pc . dinettes from

brakes. XL 250 Honda. Call
614 -256 - 1778eve.

S99 . to 435 . 7 pc . S1B9
and up. Wood table with six
chairs S425 to $745 . Desk
$ 110 up to S225 . Hutches ,
$550 . and up, maple or pine
fi nish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, S250. and
up t o $396 .
Baby beds,
$ 110 Mattresses or bo x
springs, full or twin , S 58 .,
firm . $68 . and S78 . Queen
sets, $195 . 4 dr . chests.
$42 . 5 dr . chests, S54. Bad
frames. S20.and S2 5 ., 10
gun . Gun cabinets, 935 0 .
Gas or electric ranges $376 .
Baby mattresses. S25 &amp;:
S35 . bed frames $20, S25.
&amp; $30, lling fram e $50.
Good selection of bedroom
su it es. cedar chests,
rockers. metal cab in ets.
swivel rockers .
Used Fu rnitur e · - Refrig era tors. chairs, dryers, and
TV 's . 3 miles out Bulaville
Rd . Open 9am to 6pm . Mon .
thru Fri., 9am to 5pm . Sat

Garage apt
furnish ed 3
rooms , bath, w asher -dryer
and upstairs furnished . 4
rooms . ba th , both AC , clean.
no pets . adults only , dep . &amp;
ref . req Call446 - 1519
1 bdr . unfurnished utilities
paid . no chil dren. no pets. 6
mos. lease required , S50
dep ., $190 mo . Call 446 3667 after 5 .
Nice new privata downstairs . apt . quiet neBr HMC .
1 adult on ly . No pets. ref
req . Drape!. stove , refrig .
Furnished $200 . mo . Call
1 bedroom Apt $196 mo
including utiliti es . Equa l
Housing Opportunity Conta ct Villag e Manor Apt s

614 -992 -77B7
Riverside Apt s Middleport .
Special rat es for Senior
Citizens . S130 Equal Hou sing Opportunities . 6 14 -

992 -772 1.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom furni shed
apanments for rent . Call

992 -5434 , 992 -5914 . m
30 4 -882 -2566 .
1 room eff . apt 10 La ngsville . S100 a month . Call

614 -992 -5692 .
APARTMENTS , mobile
ho mes . houses . Pt Pleasant
and Gallipolis 614 -446 -

8221
TWIN

RIVER S TOWER .

Ap artment s now available to
elderly S. disabled with an
1n come o f les s tha n
s 1 2 . 300 . Renting for 30
percent o f adjusted inco m e.
Ph o ne 30 4 · 675 · 6679

45

Furnished Rooms

TV &amp; Appliances. 627 Third
Ave ., Gallipolis, 614 · 446 1699. Spin washers. gas &amp;
e lectri c dryers . auto
washers. gas &amp; electric
ranges . refrigerators . TV
sets .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrigera tors. ranges _ Skaggs Ap pli&amp;nces. Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel .

614 -446 -7398 .
Good Used Appliance Special Maytag auto washer
S65, Speed Queen auto
washer $95 . Maytag wrin ·
ger washer S125. side by
side refrigerator S195 . 1rost
free harvest gold refrigerator
S150. large chest freezer
S125. couches &amp; chairs S 25
&amp; up. unfinished chest of
drawers S68 . Skaggs Ap pliance s. 559 Upper River

Rd . 446 -7398 .
Mediterrainean style fleJ. ·
steellivingroom suite, 1 sofa
god &amp; red crushed velvet. 2
matching gold c ha irs . 1
flex -steel reclin er . 1 la z-a ·
boy recliner , 2 solid w ood
end tables. 1 solid he:a:igon
table. 2 !lolid bunch tables , 2
table lamps, 1 console dou ble speaker and remote
control TV, Meditterainean
stvle wall hangings , 1 alec
30" ra nge Call 446 -4406
evenings .
Country Oak Furniture . ta ·
bles. chairs, cu pboard s. dry
sinks. pie safes , lo t s of misc .
Co ok ies
Rt
7 , Tuppen
Plai ns . Ohio .
Custom draperies. many
venetian blinds . Roman
woven woo d shades. verti cal blinds. Samples and
estimlltes in your home . P.

A . Sav•e. 304 -458 -1078.

4338 .

Ca ll 614-446 -0756 .

675-3638 .

Possibl e 3 bedroo m house.
ba1ement , ga rage . unfur ·
ni1hed on large lot Rt . 2 N 4
mile• from Point Plea1ant ,
8226 . mon th plus utilities
8 60 .00 deposit 304 -675 3248 after 7 00

Sleepi ng roo m S115 , utili ties pt~id S hare bath . mAle
o nly Rl'!llnge &amp; refrig 919
2nd AvB.. Gallipolis . Cell
446 -4416 after 7 PM

46

Gas cook stove , good co nd

304-676 -1 198.
Will trede old c hina c up·
board for elec range o r
couch and chair. good co nd

304-675-5808
Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park . Route 33 . Nonh o f
Pomeroy Large Iota . Call

New Stearns and Foster.
queen mattreu and boJt
springs, firm , 8400 . 00 .

304 -675 -2719

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

4389 o• 676 -9760
Upper River Rd wat er &amp;
sew•ge furnished, ref . &amp;
dep . Cl'!llll446· 0508 or 446 -

1809 .
Nice 3 bdr mobile home
modern. convenient toea ·
tion on At . 7, no pets . Call

614 -246 -6818.
Furnished 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trailers . Call 304 - 773 ·

6861 .
2 bedroom trailer. kitohen
furnished , co uples OM small
child •ccepted . References.

304-876 -1076

8:00

81

CAPTAIN EASY

Newahour
(fiJ 3-2-t, Contact

Al.l. I EiVEil't HEAR
Ffl.OM THIS G~OUP
I~ HOW HARD TH&amp;'Y
WOJl.K,WA SH.

Home
Improvements

the
•Galaxy-STAR TREK

614-256-1 182 .

1978 CheiiY Monzo II plus II
hatchback. V-6. AM -FM PS.

286 -593 0 .
5 HP Simplicity Rot otiller,
good co ndition Call 992 -

746 2
Gravely tr ac tor with rear
mount till&amp;r Call after 8 p .m .

992 -3 16 2 .
5 Tickets for lndiannapolis
500 Ra ce on May 27 _

614 -985 -4134 .
1 rototiller, 3 hp, all over hauled. Ca11614-992-6901.
Hand made solid walnut gun
cabinet, holds 10 guns .

New Hollnad mower No .
451 rear mounted . See next
to Meth odist Church in
Alfred on St . Rt . 681 .

Baby crib, mattress. bumper
p ads . good conditon .
Wooden toy slide and spring
horse . 304 -676 - 1038

55 Building Supplies

Case hay wagon and 5f1 .
King Kutter disk Call 446 -

6630.
XT190 Alice Chalmers farm
tract or S7500 . Will take

uade . 304-675-7421 .
Used midwest farm truck
bed 12 'x8 ' with 4 2" side -

boa•d . 304-675 -1807.
62 Wanted to Buy

Wanted to buy tobacco
poundage fo r Gallia Co .
Payin g top price . Call 614-

livestock

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St ., Gallipolis . New
&amp; used wood &amp; coa l stoves,
6 piece w ood living room
suite with 6 inch fl at arms
8399 , bunll beds co mplete
with bunkies 8199 , 2 piece
.mntron l ivingroom suites
$199 . antron recliners $99,
other recliners 880. maple
dinette sets 8 17 9 , box
springs &amp; mattress twin or
full 8100 set regular-firm
8120, maple dinette chairs
$36 . wash stands $34.
maple rockera $69. 7 piece
ch rome dinette set $149, 5
piece dinette set $99, used
bedroom suites. refrigera tors, ranges , chest, dre11ert.
wringer washert, TV' s, dry-

era. 8o ohoes. Coll814 -44831 59 .

Now open for busines s.
Mountain State Block . At .
33. New Haven _ Complete
masonry supplies. 4 " , 8 ".
1 2'' block . Delivery service
Ph one day 304 -882 -2222,
evening 882 -3239

St ud service, registered
App . Mansfield Commanche Sundance

54 Misc. Merchandise
Knauff Firewood J)ickup or
Delivered . 12 " -22" stocked
in yard . HEAP vender ,
prompt delivery 614 -266-

6246 .
Limestone , Sand , Gravel .
Delivered in Mason , Meigs,
Gatlia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446-7786 .

Garbage disposal,

after

500, Reg . $100 .00 : g•ade
$76 .00. 4 -H discount. 304 -

882 -2762
Pair Percheros mares 6 and
8 years old. Broke t o all farm
machinery. approx 1 ,500

64

Hay

&amp; Grain

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

Northup King corn , alfalfa &amp;
gras~&gt;
seed , other farm
seeds. Call Vaughn Taylor,

614- 367-7220 .

614-245 -6064 o• 614 246 6815 after BPM .
For lease : 1 .3 87 lbs . to bacco . 50 ce nt per lb . paid in
advance . Call 614 - 246 -

9315 .

9790 .

Call 614-446-3B44 alter 6 .

Alfalfo -Timothy hay , standing or baled . No cloverclean Call 446 -3456. 9 to

5, 614 -245 -5544after5PM
&amp; weekends .

1- - - - - - -- - -

Transportal ion

8 wk . old black part Chow
female puppy, all shots .
worm ed . S125. Call 446 -

3369 .
Whit e baby rabbit s. pedri geed white Rex . Call 614 -

245 -5457 .
AKC Regi!ltered male Brit tany Spaniel pup . S90. Call

446 -4803

71

Autos for Sale

992 -7201 .
AKC Registered black male
coc ker spaniel puppv . Born ,

2 -27 -84 . S150. Call 614 992 -6362 .
- --------lcStud service : CFA Flame
Point Himalayan Cat . Sire is
Oragonwvnd ' s Royal Mai Tai Blue of Tsingling . $100 .
stud fee . No checks . Call

1978 Future, 6 cyl.. good
cond ., 69 ,000 mi. Clean car.
air con d ., PS . Call 446-

"GUY IN

T&gt;!E

PI&gt;.Ri'. f\1-,5 A LOT
OF THE NI~WEI"~.
Ar110h ! IT 15N' T
Ju~-r w~"' 11E
51&gt;.YS ~U T T&gt;\E
W ILD WI&gt;.Y
HE $AYG
I T.

\

standard

Avg .

304-675-2387 .

21

MPG,

81 .800.

$1,800 .

1967 Mustang Convertible
restored to orginal, metallic
blue · black top, 6 cyl., 3 1pd.,
new tires, $3,860 . Call

cyl.. 3 speed. 1-304 -6762919.

446-3466 9 to 6. 61 4-246·
5544.

- - - - --

1980 Chevy truck. 6 cvl..
PS , P8, 38.000 milas .
86.400.00 . Phone 614 446 -1387 o• 446-8064.

1976 Monte Carlo, new
tires, chrome rima, body
good, inside excellent , AM FM 8 track, 86,000 mi .,

73

$700. Ca11446-8114 .

1979 Jeep CJ -5. 6 cyl .. 3

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

83.000. Call 446 -0616 .

1972 Olds Cutlass 4 Dr. Call

1973 Dodge Concession
van has sink. refrigerator,
pop machine &amp; breaker box .

' 68 Camero RS. 283 4 spd ..
new radial tires. priced to

sell.

Call

614 -949-2773

evenings.
1 979 Chevy Caprice Clas ·
sic. 2 dr. ac. ps, V-8 engine.
body good condition, exc .
performance . Will consider
all offers . Call 614 · 992 7412 after 5 p .m .

Camara

restorable.

Call 446- 7048 .
1982 2 dr . Chevy Chevette.
4 spd .. AM · FM tape,

$3,496 . 1 9B1 2 d• . Chevy
Chevette auto. sunroof,
$3 .196 . Johns Auto Sales,
Bulaville Rd . Gallipolis. 446 4782, o pen t il derk .

Call446-9476 or 614- 2466097.
1981 Chev van 47.000
miles, new radial tires. air,

po. pb. 85800.; 1971 Oodge
van,

good

cond.

SHOO.

197 4 Cheverolet Monte
Carlo. fair condition. needs
some engine work . 8460.

74
1962 Imperial Crown
Chrysler. 4 dr. hardtop, a .c,
p .s. p.b. power window! &amp;
seats, antenna , cruise con,
33,700 miles . 82500. Call

614 -593-8623 .
1978 Cheverolet passenger
car, 1-beam 16 in . by 36ft .
long, mixed roofing shingles
$3 .00 a bundle, 2 old school
buses for camp . Call 614 949 -2195 after 5 p .m .
' 73 Volkswagen Beetl e, e.Jtc.

cond, 81,800 00 .
675 -1645.

304 -

1977 Chevrolet Vega, 4 sp.
marroon with black interior

81200 . 304-937-2681
80 Chevette. 4 door hatchback, 4 speed , 80 Honda
Accord , 2 door hatchback,
clean cars. 304 -675 -6286 .
1978 Pinto, good condition.
6 new tires . 304 -676 - 1664
after 6 :00 .
' 81 Celica Toyota. lift back .

304-676 -5149 alto• 6 :00.
1973 V .W , model 412 station wagon . auto. , PS, PB.
new brakes . battery . mechanically great, 6360 .00 .
1964 Chevrolet Nova , 4
door . auto .. 6 cyl., body fair .

8460.00. Phone 304· 676·
2847 .
1976 Buick Skylari&lt;, V -8
auto . 304 - 676 -2714 o•
675-1577.
7 . PS . PB. Ai.cond .. AM -FM
stereo tape, low mileage ,
exc . cond . $4,1 BO or best
offer. 304 -676 -61586 .

72

Trucks for Sale

1979 Harley Davidson au -

pe•glide

1200

CC.

low

miles. like new. garage kept,

83 .995 .
7760.

Call

614- 367·

For sale 1979 Suzuki P.E.
400. 500 miles on it Will sell
reasonable pri c e . 379 -

2834 .
1976 Hondfa C8 360T. 6
speed. new tires. mufflers ,
crash bars. back rest, horns ,
windshield. cruise control.

1978 Chevy wan 1uto, 8 cyl. ,
AM - FM tape , carpeted, cowered spare tire on rear .
ladder, $3,496. Johns Auto
Sales. Bulaville Rd . Gallipolis. 448 -4782 , open til dark .
1960 International 4x4 l,4
ton. flatbed or wrecller with

40.000 lb . wonch , 81.996.
Call614- 367-7624 o• 614·
388 -9905 .
1969 Mack new rebuilt
eng ., 38,000 reers, 4 .17
fifth wheel , wet lin•.

1 980 Honda Goldwing
1100 CC Vener Faring, lots
of extras. 16.000 miles.
excellent condition . 82800

body •

t..d in a•collont

condldon, machenlcal con-

dillon axcallant. 52.000
mllaa. 151100. 1114-992 ·
2849.

..;YOT TIIIIT TIIEI!E'S
/lf'IIIOf'E 0' Of./TSfl!tJ?tii!N '
1
" '-....,.., 11 Sill! -51111- SHIIRH.1

FIISTE!f IF£ TAKE OFF

Tlf!S ttEiiVV SL!C/iE/1,..

here

1978 Kawasa~: K~ 2~09 ~o;'

1 •

.

1--------- - 1979 Harley Davidson ,
Electra-Glide clenic , many
extrat, low mileege , garage
stored. S6,000. or best

ALLEY OOP
I CAN'T BELIEVE
WE GOT USA

offer. 304-676-1269
Boats and
Motors for Sale

1982 Lowe Line, Lake Jon.
trailer 20 HP and 6 HP
motor's, 23 lb. thrust trolling
motor, o•r•. swivel seats.
live well,
gal . • 3 gal . gas

9 :00

What do

~outhink.

Robb1e?

Rover Skinner is

A veritable
jewel!

e

tonko . Call 446-3837 after
6PM .

a natural' Aqem!

Pompeii Part

0

' Concealed Enemies.' Third
of 4 parts . Chambers' homosexuality becomes public

knowledge.
.

2311 .
Crls Cr•ft 36 ft . cabin
cruleer with treiler ,

Trailer on l•rge wooded lot.

BOAT RAMP and dock
opaca. Call B· B ov.nlngo .
304· 875·5441 . Te•mo .

min .l

# 13 The comicol

chronicles of mythical Me·
lonvil!e channel SCTV con tinue in all -new editions.
Starring Joe Flaherty, Eu gene levy, Andrea Martin
and Martin Short.

WINNIE

(1) Fi•ing Line
(j]) Newawatch

JUST WEAK, AND ACHE ALL
OVER. GET ME 01./T OF' h'ERE.''

10:30 ~ Video Jukebox
(I) My little Margie
(!) NFL's Greatest Moments NFL's Greatest Moments presents 'Son of
Football Foll ies.'

I]) TBS Evening News
(jl) Elactlon Report
fJliNN News
1 1 :00 II Cil (J) 0 Cll ® Ol l121
News
C2J MOVIE: 'Cracking Up'
(l) MOVIE: 'Richar-d Pryor

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

Live on the Sunset Strip'

(I) Another Life
(!) SportsConter
crJ Newa/Sporta/Woatho•
(1) Wo•ld at Wa•
(]]) Remembering
Truman

BARNEY

4066 .

JUMP,O~

BULLET

WHAR
'fOU
GOIN'?

LAZY WHELP!!
NEXT THING
I KNOW,

LEANIN'UP

AG'INST

SALES - Professional ser vice for appliances, heating .
cooling and electric . Sell and
Install Amana , Gibson , Kit chen Aid . Residential. Com ·
mercia!. Industrial. 304 -

TH' FENCE
TO BARK

M iulssippi

JIMS

WATER

SERVICE .

Call Jim Lanier . 304 · 675 -

87

Upholstery

614-446 -7833 or 614 -446 1833.

at

~

I1J Tonight Show

a. Allen

CIJ MOVIE:

PEANUTS

I WONDER IF [ S~OULD
TRI' TO PLAY TODAY ... MY
ARM ~URTS, MY STOMACI-l
1-lURTS AND MY BACK llUKTS

PLAY ANYWAY

DON'T LET '{OUR BODY
PUSH YOU AROUND!

'Deadlier Than
tho Malo'
(]) '84 Vote
0 Cll Magnum P.l .
liD All In tho Family
01 (j]) Nighdlno
fJ) O'unsmoke
t 2:30 (l)
MOVIE:
'Britannia
Hoopitll'
(l) MOVIE : ' Loot Horizon'
(I) Jack Benny Show
(]) Nlghtllne
®MOVIE: ' Little Big Man·
OIID NIWI
. 1 :00 II (}) I1J loll Night with

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Nortll

diamond. South was home.

He had six trumps, two
spades and t wo minor suit

East

aces.
At the other table, South
finessed the diamond queen .
When a club ca me back,

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

declarer won it, cashed his

•7

A·K of trumps, and then
played A-K-J of spades .
When East covered with the

queen , South could not avoid
losing four tricks.

By Oowald Jacoby
tuM! Jameo Jacoby
Frank Stewart. wbom we

Frank Stewart , in accordance with a policy of this
column never to offend any
player by using his name in

know only from hiJ deUghtlul articles in the .,CBL

connection with a bad play,
did not give the name of the

"Contract Bridae Bulletin."
has written a book entitled
"Better Bridge lor the
Advancing Player ." He

successful declarer since the

name of the other would
become known .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

61t:ttU• 'tJtrY
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

40 Learn

I Sluggish

41 Snarl

5 Cartel
9 Molding
style
· 10 Gold braid

DOWN
1 Deprivation

2 Make
eyes at
!%3
Loser
machine
at8Down
13 Von Flotow
4 Still
opera
5
Hair~are
15 Pulpit talk
product
(abbr.)
8
Algerian
11 Chinese
city
dynasty
1
Hockey
11 Thrice
great
(Lat.)
8 Massacre
18 Spur on
site
ZO Varnish
ofl876
ingredient
11 Bundles
n Actress
of wlleat
Barbara
23 Hindu god
24 Tonnent

Yesterday 's Answer
14 Covered
25 Loquacious
passageway 27 Censured
16 Actress
31 Arizona
Barbara
cit y
19 Bacterio33 "logist's wire
Chns tie"
21 Layers
34 Indigent
22 Sundering
36 Lau~hing
23 cau to
sound
reve ille
37 Poor horse

~Taunted

28 Scurry off
27 Throat's

patron
saint
Z8 Indeed,
in Ireland
29 Ending
lor duck

31 "-

the season ... " h-+--+---t31 Fairy queen
32 Chance
35 Pabiotic
song

37 Thing

forbidden
38Gaggle's

members
:It Firenze's
river

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here·s h ow to
AXYDLBAAXR
lo

work

it '

LONGFELl.OW

One letter simply stands for another . In this sample A is
th~ two O's. etc. Single lcttrrs.

used for the three L's, X for

apostrophes. the length and formation of the words arf' all
biota. Each day the code letters are di tlNf'nt

CRVPTOQUOTES

DSY
ADK

NXLY

XI

WQNDAGNY

HYL!QD C

I X P WK

AK

AV

DSY

David Letterman

(I) I Morriacl Joan
(I)_ ~_ntortalnmenl Tonight
D Cll MoCioud

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis.

U

(I) Bu'"a

General Hauling

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

State

Alabama

12:00

or

James Boys Wa ter Service
Also pools filled . Call 614 -

Harry

Iii Benny Hill Show
t 1:16 (!) Mazda SportaL&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;k
1 1:30 U (l) I1J Decision '84
(l) Boat of Groucho
I]) Catllns
(]) WKRP In Clnclnnetl
U Cll liD CamP"ign '84
Cll Latonlght Ame•ic•
Olll2l'84 Vote
fJl Twilight Zone
1 1:45 (!)
College
Buoboll:

VOU.LL BE

D. OAY REFRIGERATION

7397 .

WV 304-422-8433 o• 304·
422-2387.

(60

[Closed Captioned]

10:00 (l) SCTV

1978 VIP 80 HP oki equipment. trolling motor, drive
on tr•iler. Call 614-692 -

3

(J)
liD
MOVIE:
'Caribbean Mystery'
Cll (fiJ Americen Playhouse

instant-replay!

in the
stair·
well!

ma ls. (Aii80 min .l [Closed
Capt ioned!
Iii MOVIE: 'Kellv·a Heroea·
0 (l) I1J MOVIE : 'V: The
(})MOVIE: 'The Grey Fox'
(l) 700 Club
(]) (II ll2l Laat Days of

qreatest thi~ to
ndppen to TV since

304 -576 -2010 .

85

+AI

.AKJ71 2
• 106
+752

Pass
Pass

Final Battle' Part 3

He could be the

" I'M

676 - 4819
614 -388 -8274 .

SOUTH

wedding bells sound for ·
Joanie and Chachi, Fonzie
faces the task of adopting
an orphan boy to whom
he' s l!l big brother.(BO min .)
Charles Kuralt anchors this
program which features
views of the people of this
country. the personal impact of important news stories and profiles of famous
Americans . (60 min .)
CIJ (fiJ Novo 'Sign of the
Apes.
Songs
of
rhe
Whales.' This film explores
the latest research in the
dream of talking with ani-

Pome•oy . 614-992 -2284 .
75

• Q 10 8
+J87
+K10863

MOVIE: 'An Amo•lcon

(J) ®American Pa•ade

EAST
+Q9 6 3
.9 5
+K 9432
+QJ

WEST

+ B5

Wea1

U

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

SEWING Machine repairs ,
service . Authori;r:ed Singer
Sales &amp;: Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop ,

+A 9 4

ject 10 Change).
(J) (llli} Happy Daya As

614-949-2288 .
mileage . Co
3266 .

+KJI07 2
"63
+AQ5

fJl One Day at e Time
(!) NBA Tonight
II (l) I1J A Team The A

is one from a Vander-

bilt semifinal.
At both tables the biddin&amp;
was identicaL Frank sot·
gests that the jump to four
~earls was not the best bid,
but both great experts made
it and left it to their partners
to bring it in.
The seven of diamonds
was led at both tables. At
table one. South played out
high cards. He went up with
the diamond ace and pia yed
A-K of hearts and then A-KJ of spades. East ducked
with the queen and South
discarded
hts los1ng

NORTH

Dates and Times are Sub-

down

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

WITH All HER HEART

doesn 't give many hands, but

off Game (Playoff Game

J .A .R . Construction Co. Au ·

B4

LACKEY

Atlanta at Philadelphia

Conference Semifinal Play.

614-446 -4477

Good - 1 Excavating, base ment s. footers. driveways.
septic tanks. landscaping .
Call anytime 61 4 · 446 4637, James L. Davison. Jr
owner .

FAMISH

An unsafe finesse

(!) NBA Baoketboll: 1984

a dime

DIRTY

How she loved the cardiologist -

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Werewolf in London'
(l) Gentle Bon

Someone
dropped

I Answer:

Cil U (J) Family Feud
Cll Dr. Who
liD Wheol of Fortune

W

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

Excavating

0 (l) Tic Toe Dough
(!) SportoCente•
Cil Mojor league Boooboll:

Detective Marlowe guards
I!JJBngster marked death .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

83

ll2l

Q_&lt;lted she•iff. (60 min .)
Philip Marlow•Prlvato

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

ING. At . 1 , Box 355, Galli -

BY A

BRIDGE

Entertainment

C2J

3802 .

JIM'S PlUMBING &amp; HEAT -

Jumbleo · REBEl.
Yesterday's

Team comes to the rescue
of a non-violent cult which
is being terrorized by a bi-

NEW COUN1RY!

Starks Tree Trimming &amp;
Remov al . lawn mowing and
maintenan ce. landscaping ,
10 Pet . off all estimates .

986-3839.

... M-ftlliYt:iE I CW Pt9PilLE

7 :46
8 :00

Water w e lls commen:: ial and
domestic. test holes . pump
sales Bnd service. 304 ·895 -

Yamaha 600 cc motorcycle
$800. 20ft . banner camper.
8 ft . insulated truck topper.
2 60 cc Hondas. Call 614 -

1979 Fo•d F2SO Supor Cab.
track. dull fPI tanke, crul..
control. extra tlraa • rims.

mates . 304 -675 -2295.

676- 2897

Correct Craft &amp; Ski Supreme, family ski boats.
New &amp; Uled, Parkersburg,

Call 446· 4896 .

CAPTIAN

bike, $300. Coli 614 -667 3941 .

111.600. Coli 814- 246 ·
6032 or 304-676·1731 .

olidlng bock gino. am 1m B

WITH

r r xxxJ

I I

(Answers tomorrow)

(llll2i Pooplo'a Court

SHIP

Basements. Footers. Con crete work . Backhoe 's .
Dozer &amp; Ditcher , Dump
trucks . &amp; water · gas-s3Wer·
electrical lines

87 , 600 . Coil 1114·367·
7317 , Mon .-Fri.

outdoor grill. childs bicycle .

carpet

1980 Kawasaki 440 LTO
with cr..h bar . Exc. con ,

1978 Chevy luv PU , 4 opd ,
radio, $1,996 . Johns Auto
Sales, Bulaville Rd . Gallipolis. 446 -4782, open til dark .

your

lland. Oh.614 -742 -2903.

1981 Kawasaki 80 KOX dirt

7 :30

676 -

2600 miles . $700.00. 446 1749 .

10,000 miles . 8900. Call
614-949- 2659 .

Cll

rienced roofing , including
hot tar application , carpen ter. electrician , mason . Call

or

NM: "[ I

Newshour

··.

polis. Call 614 -367-0576 .

1980 Honda XR80. Call
after 5 , 446 -2461 .

I Wfl61lE'/6RW®.7.Y
ABOUr fl\M ~I~ ~00!.

RINGLE 'S SERVICE e•pe-

304 - 676 - 208B
4560 .

gested by the above cartoon.

(])
N lghtly
Buslnoao
Report
®News
(fiJ
MacNoii/Loh•er

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

Motorcycles

1980 Harley Davidson wide
glide. Can be seen at Betz
Honda.

CQ$10 lHI~K ASCOT IT,

2398 o• 614 -446 -2454 .

1331

Hl5 GoETAWAY.
Now arrange the drcled 1eners to
form the •urprise answer, u aug ·

Tonight
fi) Jefferson&amp;

RON ' S Television Service
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Ouazar, and
house calls . Call 304-576-

82

Call 614-992-2382 .

WAS

~;;::----1

scotchguard·water extrac tion, deodorizers . FREE estimates . Reasonable rate s .
Gene Smith, 992 -6309 .

1977 Jeep Wagoneer, new
motor and new tires, excellent condition . $4200. 304-

304 - 882 -

1JIORAAPPLEO H€RE! I

HI·O·R-N-1&gt;.-P-P.L·E:.,. I
WAS JlJST-·f·\fLlDZ

GENE'S OEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN.

STEAMER . Water removal.
furniture cleaning. free esti-

82.500 . 00 .
2012.

~ 61~ CUI.Et€!
'1/H'( CQj'f UN£' filM A

HaLO,JI.,Q( ~ ~UTUS

stone . Call 614 -367 -0409
o• 614 ·367-7244.

SHAPE

1978 Fo•d F150. 4•4. 4

~taXJao

'/&gt;/HAl 'THE F(O!!IEIE~
~AID A5 HE MADE

1

I1J B.J./Lobo Show
0 Cll Wheel of Fortune

H &amp; S Home Improvement s
vinyl siding, roofing , room
addition . storm window s.

GET

896-3416 .

60(,IHAvBl'T

stone . Call 614 -367 -0409
o• 614 -367-7244 .

304-675-2047 .

speed. lock out hubs. VB,

1 979 Mercury Cougar XR 1969

extras .

1973 VW Super Beetle,
good shape . 258 - 1421 .

V8 -automedc tr,namlseion,

3 101 .

shift,

1962 ttalf ton Chevy truck ,
frame very good, no rust , 6

2 -13•10 1 · 12•9.
sliding gla11 door B. screen.

Lowery organ. Craftmatlc
king -sized adjustable bed. 2
yr. old Pomeranian male &amp;
82 Chevette . Cell 446 -

1976 F-100 Fo•d pickup .

6656 .

gold

corpeto

876-2474 alto• 5 :00.

1976 Olds Cutlass 360.
V·8 , PS , PB. AC , auto trans.
AM - FM radio, good co nd.

3637 af1e• 6PM .

~=========J.:======::::::~
--

H &amp; S Home Improvements
vinyl siding, roofing, room
addition , storm window s,

304·882·2418.
TOP CASH paid for late
m odel used cars .
Smith
Buick -Pontiac, 1911 Eastern Ave ., Gallipolis . Call

614 -446-22B2 .

Siamese llittens , 1 male, 1
female, $20 each_ Call614 -

pickup load . Call 614 -246 5804 .
446 -8038 .

1 - 614 - 682 -7319
8PM .

HILLCREST KENNELS

Firewood cut up slabs 816

Doler Work . Free Estimates .

30 cows and 30 calves .
Mixed Charlois &amp; Angus.
Also 2 yr . old Black Angus
Registered bull with papers .

pounds . 304 -576 -2779.

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennels . AKC Chow pup pi es. CFA Himalavan . Per sian and Siamese kittens .

1973 Dodge club cab truck,
56,600 actual miles. 304-

sell. Call614 -246-6190 .
- - - -- -- - - lc -

Call614-985-3891 .

Briarpat ch Kennels Profes sional All ·breed grooming .
Indoor -outdoor boarding fa cilities . English Cocker Spa niel puppies . Call 614 · 388 -

mileage. 51 ,695 . Call614387 -7524 o• 614- 388 9905 .

63

Zuspan. 304-773-6564 .

7795 .

360

exp. Call 614 -388-9652 .

1948 Ford Coupe Deluxe ex .
cond .. new engine . Must

Reg . Angus bull $650. 1
N .J . hay co nd A - 1 shape
$300. 1 JD farm wagon
S200, miniture horse stud
serviceS25ortorsale$250 .

Boarding all breeds . Heated
indo o r -outdoor fac i liti es .
AKC Doberman puppies :
Stud Servi ce. Call614-446 -

ton,

rJ r

()) Entertainment Tonight

BORN LOSER

PAINTING · interior and eJL terior , plumbing, roofing ,
some remodeling . 20 yrs.

8800. Coil 614·992-31 94 .

alto• 5 P.M . 446 -4860.

LUMBER - Rough cut. oak.
poplar, 2x4, 2Jt6, 2xB. h4,
1 x6, 1 Jt8 . 1ength availa~e . 8
ft . through 16ft. Hogg &amp;

Pets for Sale

1

Call 614 -388-9857.

PB. exc . cond .• great gas

379-2437

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

56

Ford

spd .. loaded with

New galvanized corrugated
cu lvert S2 35 ft. up. All
sizes . Fittings . Pipe, beams.
structural steel-new, used .
Big discounts. Delivered!
Anywhere! Now! Estimates
free . 304 -925 -0884 .

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

1976

Weekdays after 4PM , 446 -

304 -45B -1078 .
Long prom dress. worn
once . 304 -675 - 1386.

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. N o w installing r_
u bber
roofs. 30 years eJtpenence.
specializing in built up roof.

engine, 10 ft. bed. 4 spd.

fJl Star Trek
II (l) 11J NBC Newo
00 Rifleman

(!) Mordo Sportalook
I]) Carol Burnett
(]) Clll121 ABC News
1!t (J) liD CBS Newa
(fiJ Bill end Bytes ·
7:00 U (l) PM Magazine
(I) Here Como the Brkleo
(!) Thia Week In the NBA
I]) Sanford and Son

- Co mmercial and residen tial, tree estimates. Call

81,000. Call 446-8328 o•
614-388-9609.

P,_,

ISAYMULj

""'·

WVAH

STUCCO and PLASTERING

73 Ford pickup auto. trans,

I AXMMI
I I I

fil Journey Beyond

6 :30

1981 Chevette, AC. 4spd .•
4 dr .. $3,400, also 1971
Scout 8o 1 976 Honda 760.
Call814-266-1261 .

D Cil CIJ e CIHJD .ID

Nawa
(}) MOVIE: 'The Killing of
Rondy Wabator'
(l) MOVIE: 'Same Time.
Noxt Ynr'
(l) N - T,...aure Hunt
I]) Andy Griffith
I1J N-a/Sporto/W..Ihe•
CIJ
MecNeii/Lahre•

·.

Services

Plastic cisterns state ap proved , pla stic septic tanks,
plastic c ulvert. metal cul verts. RON EVANS ENTER PRISES, Jackson, Oh 614·

614-992-2807 .

614 -992 -7479 .

2 bdr . unfurni1hed mobile
home. 12x60 % mi . pa!lt
ho1pital . At 35 Ca ll 446 -

EVENING

J

Call992- 6913 .

Go -cart 5 HP Bts engine. 2

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and l1ght house keeping
rooms Park Cen tntl Hotel.

Call 446 -8558 .

5/~!84

f

Motors Homes
S. Campers

1980 10 ft . Calvacade load
on truck camper . Like new.

It~~;~;;~;~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 Truck
camper top . Call446 3978 .
44
Apartment
51 Household Goods - - - - - -- - --

New swivel rocker . antique
chair. library ta bl e, large
picture. other small items
Payments acceptiable 304 -

2 bdr trailer fully furni!lhed
good location : sec dep req

If

3386.

614 -446 -

Firm . 246-9246 .

3 bedroom familv room .
basement . near schools and
hospital . Deposit and refer ence required 304 - 675 -

42 Mobile H omes
f or Ren1

304-876- 6462 .

daUv 9 to 6 :30 . Sat. 9 to 4 .
Sun. 1 to 4 . U.S . At. 50 .
Coolville, Oh 614 -667 -

bed couch . 446-2177.

614 -446 -47B 2.
3 bdr. dttlu xe house. 2
fireplaces, pool. garage. Sell
o r lease 2 bdr . apt .. kitchen
furnished . Ca 11675 -5 10 4or

If

BURDETTE CA MPER
SALES 8o SERVICE . Open

Troy -Bilt tillers . Check our
special price before you buy
any tillers. Swieher lmple·
ment Co. St . At. 7 N, Galli-

polia.OH . Call
0475 .

Television
Viewing

a

If

lzisu motor to fit 1978
Chevy Luv truck . Phone

79

614 -446 0322

7PM .

a. Accessories

&amp; L1v eslock

King sized bed and hide-a -

614 - 388

4 acres off Kerr -Harrisbu rg
Rd . on Viney Road. SB.OOO
Call 30 4 -895 -3398 arter

Ohio

Z60 Honda , phone 245 ·
9165 . Call evening .

MUST SELL

1964 1 O~t55 tra il er $2 ,000
304 -895 -3415 .

AKC Rog. Poodle puppln.
Coli 446·0857.

1984

Auto Parts

76

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE :;;

White Welsh baby bed with
mattress. mattress pad .
Winne the Pooh bumper pad
&amp; two shats, $60 . Playpen
$16, folding high c hair $10.

WHEP&amp;'S
MY SUIT·

304-675 -7328 .
1976 Bayview . 14•70
Phone 304 -675 -3817 or
6 14 -446 -1506 .

Pets for Sale

Coli 614-246-6492 .

Closing Out Trail er Renta l

1976 Kirkwood. 14)1[70. 3
bedrooms. 2 full baths. total
electric . 99000 . Call 614 992 -7725 m 992 -3396

66

4 truck tires 900x20. 1 360
Dodge motor. 1 pickup disc .

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 bedroom

1railers
6661 .

Merchandise

1983 utility trailer bed 1lze
54x44 ln. Barnette. Wildcat
CrOSI bow, Delco AM · FM
stereo radio . Cell 448 -3 837
after 5PM .

good condition , w asher &amp;
dryer . 66600 . Call
742 -2274 .

Tuesday, MDy 8, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

mil11 CNN HNdllne Newo ,

.• 1 :30

()) Love Thet

Bob

: 2:00 ()) Bachelor flthor
(!)_ Nawa/Sign Off

VXHNYKD

ZAID

XI

DSY

SQ WBV

OYPYHPQW . BNYTAK
OBPPYN
YestmlaJ'aCryptoquole: HAPPY ARE TilOSE WHO DREAM

DREAMS AND ARE READY TO PAY TilE PRICE TO MAKE

THEM COME TRUE.-LEON SUENENS

�Page- 10-- The Daily Sentinel

Construction worker feels
$18e80 an hour is too much
an hour, or $48.44 for overtime duty
since the contract requines double
pay.
Shortly before he was laid off last
week by the A. B. Dick Co., Celli
spoke out strongly against the latest

WILLOUGHI3Y, Ohio tAPI Joseph Celli figures he's overpaid.
Celli is currently laid off from his
JOb as a concrete raker for one of the

cuntraetors working on the Perry
nuclear power plant under cons t:ruction in Lake County. but when he 's
working he makes $18.80 an hour.
a nd $.37.60 for overtime.
"I make too much money," the
48-year-old Mentor man told the
Lake Count\ News Herald. which
reportro Monday that costs for
building the plant is r apidly appmal'hing $1 million a day. "There
arc somP laborers out at the Perry
plant making $50,00J or $ro,&lt;XXl a
)mr. and most of them just push

increase.
" Our union and membership does
not like the $2 an hour raise-we're
ashamed of it," said Celli, a member
of La borers Loc a! 496 in Madison
Township. "We feel it's excessive.
We don't feel it's beneficial to
unionism. When a kid pushes a
broom out at the Perry plant for four
years at more than :ul,OOJ a year.
does that help the union?"
Charles Pinz.one, head of the
Clevcla nd Building and Construction Trades Council, maintains the
pay is not excessive.
"We don't get a lot of things other
workers get - no vacation, no
holidays, no sick leave, no nothing,··
he said. "The pay is nothing moiT'
than the pay of the average auto
worker or steelwork er, who's proba ·
bly workin g under much better

hronms_· ·
The latrsl t'stimate of the project
cost from&lt;. 'll'\'ela nd F.IP&lt;' tliC' Illumi na1mg is $1 92 billion
Skille·d workC'rs makr a lot more
than iaoorc&gt;rs tike Cdli. The $2
huurl~· Ulcrrase 1hat took effect last

"""'k forth&lt;' 2.849 union em ployees
working on the plant brought the
a\ -(' r&lt;:~ge 1radt' workf'r ' ~ pa:v to$24 .22

Ohioans pay more $$
than state receives
\\'ASH11\I ;Tt lN 1AP ' - Ohioans
ro rkf'd 0\'('r Sl.O!I TO Unrlo Sam fo r
f'H' I-:'&gt; . doUar of federal g r ants-in -aid
th e~ · n'CC'iW'CI in lYHJ, according to a
non-profit tax organization .
TI1e Tax Foundation Inc . said
Monda -' tltal Ohio received $3.6
billion in grant s whiiP paying out an
r'slimatro $:\.9 !Jillion in taxes for
sur·h programs.

Thf' largf•st gra nt programs arc
Modicairl . intPrstatf' highwa:v construct io n gnmt s. Aid to Fami lies

\o\ll h [}(&gt;P&lt;·ndpnl Chtldrt'n . subsid izC"d housing and gf'nera l revenue
s haring

gover nm ent s

CI.FX!-:J...\:-.1[) r.-\Pt The
nurnlx'r drawn Monday
night in tile Oh to Lottet'\·s daily
g&lt;-.~ mt ' , ··Ttw 1\'uml:x'r. " waS 029
·
In lhf' " Pick 4 · gamr. played
:\1und&lt;J.Y through Friday. the win ning numtlf'r was 731:2
ThP lotli •ry rT'pot1E'd 0arnings of
SR.-~-~~) :Jl from lhC' wagC'ring o n its

daily gam('. Till.· earnl.ngs came on
sales ol $1 ,204,985.50, while holders

One With Each Purchase Of
Two Packs Of

One With Each
Purchase Of
ANY PACK OF

r------------------,

BACON

r-----------------.
COUPON
ANY
HANGING BASKET
IN STOCK

Limit I 0 Thru 5- 13-84
C. K. SUPERMARKET

Limit 5 Thru 5-20-84
C. K. SUPERMARKET

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

I

l

Weds.

l

VALLEY BELL

2°/o MILK

I
I

RIPE

:
I

ICE MILK

I Only

$}3 9 GALLON ~BANANA~

Limit I Thru 5- 13-84
C. K. SUPERMARKET

I

I
I

-------------------

t;2

Gal.

$}19

6 Lb:/$11
/

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

1

PRODUCE DEPT.
3 LB .

10 LB.

YELLOW

IDAHO

ONIONS

POTATOES

Tomato, Cabbage
&amp; Pepper Plants

C. K. SUPERMARKET

4

•

•

c

at y

enttne
3 Section,, 16 Pog e'
25 Cenh
A Multimedia In&lt; . N e w~papef

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 9, 1984

I•

.
t

r

sioner candidates on the Republican
slate Tuesday seeking nomina tion
lo run for the term beginning Jan . 2.
1985. Winning the nomination was
lncumbenl David J . Koblentz with
2,009 votes over 1,464 received by a
former commissioner , Bernard D.
Gilkey and Richard R. Rupe who
received 296 votes. Koblcnt z wlil b&lt;'
opposed in the general election npxt
fall by Democrat Don E. Mullen who

received 1,170 votes from his party
in Tuesday's election to win over his
opponen t, Joseph D. Sayre , who

received 892 votes.
In a third Republican race
yesterday, Emmogene Holstein
Congo, incumbent county recorder,
took an easy win over her opponent
George S. Hobstetter, getting 2,498
votes while Hobstetter received
1,1178. In the fall, Congo will be
opposed by Peggy Bowers Brickles
who was nominated to run for

recorder by Democrats yesterday
receiving 1.485 votes.
Meigs County Republicans yesterday gave Jennifer Sheets of near
Rutland 2,968 votes In her unopposed
bid to run for state representative,
94th distrtct, in the fail against
Jolynn Boster, Gallipolis Incumbent. Boster, also unopposed, received 1,959 Democrat votes in ·
M eigs County Tuesday and received
3J69 in her home county of Gallia.
!Continued on Page 51 •

Dr. James Conde

Dr. John Ridgway

DooMuDen

Davld Koblentz

Fire levies given approval
Three Meigs County Townships · mixed beverages by the packager,
gave strong support to new on&lt;'-mlll
under pennlts which authortle sale
tax le\ies lor fire protection at
for off premise oonswnption only be
Tuesday's prtmary elections.
pennllted In Orange Township? 160
In Lebanon Township 114 voters
voters said yes and 159saldno.ln the
favored the levy with 78opposing; in
same township on the question: shall
Letart Township, 115 voted for the
the sale of beer he pennltted 156
levy while 37 opposed It and in Sutton
votes yes whUe !58 voted no.
Township, 500votes favored the levy
Colwnbia Township voters were
wltlt 165opposinglt. The Racine Fire
involved in a one mDI tax levy lor the
Department had a.~ked support or
the levy in the three town'lhipswhlch
Tri-County vocational School in
Athens County .Thirty-four voted lor
it senoes.
the
tax and 103, agalnst.Thosevo&amp;es
In Orange Township, voting was
wiD
he confined with out of county
close on wet and dry·Issues. On lhe
districts
for final results.
question: shalllhe sale of wine and

Richard .Joii!'S

Judge Stilwell moves Plummer trial to Logan
GALLIPOLIS - Over obj ections by Gallia Count y
Prosecutor Joseph L. Cain, the criminal tr·iai of
Maxine Plummer will be heard in Logan.
Hocking County Common Pleas Judge James E.
Stilwell, who has been assigned to th e case. ruled tha t
the trial would be held in his cou rt . Stilwell also
changed the trial dale from May 14 to June 18.
Mrs. Plummer, former executive director of th e
Callla-Jackson-M cigs 64ll Ment al Heallh Board, was
secretly indicted by a Gailia County grand jury last
Dec. 19 for theft in office and using hf'r office to
lnOuence a public ca nt rac t.

She had been dismissed by lhe board in September
following a ttu·ee-part hearing into her activities in
office.
Her at10rney. Daniel M. Hunt of Columbus,
petitionl?d Gallia County Common Pleas Judge
Richard C. Roderick in March for a c hange of venue
in the trial Hunt claimed th at based on extensive
nev,rspaper coverage of her activities in otfiCP, Mrs.
Plummer cou ld not get a fair I rial in Ga llia County .
Cain. in a wr itten m otion filed last w eek, termed a
venue change an " inconvenience" and quoted an
appeals cou11 decision thai said new spaper coverage

of a defendan t 's activities dOf's not nect'ssit ate a
location change if JUrors can still render a decision
based on the evidence.
Along with that motion , Hunt r€'(juestl?d the thd1 in
office charge be dropped. Roderick deniro !hal
r€'(Juest March 14, and put off the deci sion on a
loca lion change for the trial until attempts we remade
to seat a jury.
During an i\pril24 hearing in his court. St il well said
he would reconsider Roderick' s decision aga inst
d ropping the theft in offi&lt;Y charge.
At Tuesday's hear ing. Stilwell overru lro the Hunt's

motion.
Stilwell. a member of the lhreP-judgr· panel that
presided ove-r the Dal e .Jolmston murder l ri aJ in
Logan in January. was assigned loth!' Plummer cast•
by Ohio Supreme Court Chief .Just icl' Fr·ank
Celebrezzc las t month a ft er M r s. PlummPr filed an
affidavit of prejudice against Rodcrick.
Roderick initially refuSf'fl to oow to Mrs.
Plu mmer's J'E'quest to step down. forC'ing l he df&gt;'C'i " ion

in Celebrezze's hands. Celebrezze ad\"tsed thai
RodC'rick remove hi.mseU from thr casf' to a\·oid an~·
hints of impropriety or prejudtce.

West Virginians mopping up after flooding

I

1

------------------J

$} ~0~
TOP SOIL

=~

M s. Castle. one of thousands of
wear y West Virginians mopp ing up
ftum the wors t flooding in seven
ymrs. took refuge at hPr mother 's
house after the Tug Fork swept over
its banks and int oherhomeMondav.
Meeting with Gov. Jay Rock~­
feller, Ms. Castle described how the
second disaster struck as she and

nine neighbors and relatives were
gathered in her mother's kitchen
Tuesd ay afternoon. The blast occurred at a nearby soft drink
bottling plant and sen t a ca rbon
dioxide lank through her mother's
kitchen wall.
" We were in lhe kitc hen getting
r eadv lo fix something when il came

•

99¢

OPEN DAILY &amp; SUNDAY - 9:00A.M. TO 9:00P.M.

SECOND &amp; MILL ST.

MIDDlEPORT, OH.

We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities.

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS &amp; "WIC" COUPONS
ERR

through and just shattered us ail
over the kitchPn, " said Ms. Castle.

.'!7.
"My baby bro thN landl?d in the
den . 11andl?d next to the stove."
Th f€1€' of her rC'lalives were
treated at a hospital and reieasro
Tuesday, and Ms. Castle satd,
"We're just lucky to be alive."

Rockefei!Pr hu ggro Ms. Casth•
and promised his help. Later, hf'
sa id he plannl?d to spend mon&lt;')·
from his C'mer~e n c:v offi('(' account
to )u:olp carrv 1hewoman through the
tragr&gt;d~'·

Williamson \\.'as thr firs t ot tu:o
stops on Rockefeller's helicopter
tour of the fiood-ravag:Pd areas.

made after I he g-ow:ornor dPclarP&lt;I
fow· soulhC'rn West Virginia coun ties- I..uga n. Mingo, McDowP!ta nd
Wyoming - d isastPr areas. Hf'
notro that this W('&lt;'k's flooding
ra\·aged thr samC' !Owns as a
disastrous 1~77 flood s tha t left
thous.:'lnds homeless e~ nd c au~
more than $.10 million in damage .

Hart upsets Mondale

¢

SUPER
MARKET

II

I

-1

FERTILIZER

$499

WILLIAMSON , W.Va . !API Tears streamed down Donna Castle's red cheeks but she pursed her
lips to hold back the sobs as she
talked about floodwa.ters that
chased her from her home and a
subsequent explosion that reduced
her mother's nearby home to
mbble.

GALLON

25 LB. ORGANIC

l

~

FRUIT
LAVORE
DRINKS

50 LB. BAG

1

I
Limit I Thru 5-13-84

8 PACK/16 OZ

HAMBURGER SOFTY
or HOT DOG

I

VALLEY BELL

ETC.

¢ .,.._9_9_¢_....._$_1_9 _9

!

------------------r-----------------,
COUPON

I

I

lf2 GALLON

ONE BOX WITH EACH PURCHASE Of
ONE LB. KAHN'S AMERICAN BEAUTY

ANY FROZEN
FOOD IN STOCK

COUPON

VIT. D
MILK

With Purchase Of

$} OO Off

59 GALLON

Central committee results, Page 5

I

1

I
I

2oAROMTLK

•

Purchase Of

BACON

COCACOLA
SPRITE,

BUNS
59¢
VALLEY BELL....__ _ _ _ _ _ __. ROUGHTON'

2°/o
DUNCAN HINES
MILK CAKE MIXES
1
OG~I.
One With Each
Box
AMERICAN
BEAUTY

0

Four candidates seeking to be
Meigs County Coroner - two !rom
each party - battled il out in one of
the highlight races of Tuesday's
primary electlons.
Dr. John H . Ridgway, Democrat,
and Dr. James F. Conde, Republican, defeated opponents to win the
nomination of their respective
parties to seek the coroner's post in
the fall's general election.
Dr. Ridgway edged out his
Democratic opponent, D r. James E.
Witherell, Jr. , by 26 votes, 1,111 to
l,tll5, to win his party's nomination
while Dr. Cond~ received 2.()l0
Republican votes 1o win the nominalion owr his opponent. Dr . Rankin
Ray Pickens, who has s&lt;&gt;rved in the
post for a number of years . Dr.
Pickens received 1.653 votes.

There were three county commis-

4 CANS/

POTATO
CHIPS

8 PACK

BACON

Two 1-Lb.

5
FLAVORS

O'Grady's

Catsup $1
o
¢

2 1-LB. KAHN 'S

VALLEY BELL

$} ~u~Deposit

COUPON

STOKELy

AMERICAN BEAUTY

Weds. Only
PEPSI
PRODUCTS

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

POP

32 OZ.

One 16 Oz. 8 Pack With
Each Purchase of

FRANKLIN
CANDY

KAHN'S
LUNCHEON MEATS

8 Pack
16 Oz. Btls.

EGGS

$119
8 Pack
Plus Dep.

BOX

LB.

SHASTA

ALLY INVITED

5

·,,

GRADE "A" LARGE

¢

Presenting the Gospel in its simplicity- with sincerityby quiet reasonings from the Scripture.

3 OZ.

Other election results

Coroner's battle
tops Meigs races

LB.

JUMBO ROLL

JELLO R. C. COLA

Vol .l3, No .19
Copyrighted t 984

HOMEMADE

7:30P.M.

¢

99¢

OWE

Tuesday and Thursday Evenings

20 Oz.

oz.

PAPER 79~ DOZEN.

CARLETON SCHOOL, Syracuse

of winning lickf'ts arP l'nt itl ed to
, hare ~ :l70. UIIXI

GROUND
FO$tloz;~cE BEEF
99¢ HAM SALAD
16

BLUE
RIBBON

Will Be Held At

e

EXTRA
LEAN

BOLOGNA

WIENERS

GOSPEL SERVICES

KING SIZE

BREASTS....................... 99¢ LB.
LEGS &amp; THIGHS ............. 79¢ LB.
DRUMSTICKS ................... 99 4 LB.
THIGHS ........................... 69¢ LB.
WINGS ............................ 59 4 LB.
LIVERS ............................. 99 4 LB.

4 oz . .FREE

SUPERIOR

Non-Denomi

~\·mning

CHICKEN
CHICKEN
CHICKEN
CHICKEN
CHICKEN
CHICKEN

Sidh St. , Syracuse, Oh .

614-992-5082

Story, photos on Page 8

Famlly Medicine on Page 7

ECKRICH

Mother's Day Gifts
Flower Arrangements
Handmade Needlecrahs
Baskets and More
HOURS : Mon.-Wed .-Fri.
10 a .m .-5 p.m .
Saturday 10-3
Also by Appointment

Youngsters graduate

SeePage3

Peptic ulcers

BERRY BASKET
GIFT SHOP

natlonwide

Baseball .roundup

CHICKEN

The name of WOllam Stanley was
omitted from Sunday's writeup of
the fi-K r ace. Stanley finished the
event in 22: 3.3.

climbed 4 percent from fi scal ! 982 to
fismi19&amp;1, for a total of$88.8 billion.
Ohio. New York, Ca lifornia,
Pmnsylvania, Illinois, Texas. Michigan. Massachuselts. F lorida and
New .lersey received a total of $47.7
biilton. more than ~ p&lt;'rcent of all
grants

Ohio loll en· winnt•r

FAMILY PACK

Name omitted

Ohio. which shouldered 4.48
perccnt of the nation 's total tax
burden for such programs, ranked
15th m terms of how high a premium
it had to pay for Its federal grants.
The Washington-based research
organiza tion said grants to state and

local

conditions and Is working Indoors."
Plnzone pointed to the time
workers lose because of bad
weather or waiting for materials.
But Celli says that even If.he only
works six months a year, he still
makes over $al,OOJ with unemploy·
ment benefits .
The Perry plant originally was
due f or completion In 1900, but the
latest estimate Is that the second of
the two units won't be finished until
mid 1988. The flrst unit. nearly
completed, is scheduled to start up
next year.
"! don't think It's a question you
can answer with a yes or no," CE!
Chairman Robert Ginn said when
asked if he thought the wage rates
excessive. " I don't want to give the
impression that a guy who makes
$24.22 an hour should take a pay
cut."
But John Porada, headofthelocal
Construction Employers Association, which represents many plant
contractors, said he thinks $24 .22an
hour Is too much, "especially In
compa ri son to the surrounding
areas of northeast Ohio."

ELECI'ION - Busy eledlon night were LaiTy
Speaoer, Cllerk of courts, who kept resldeniA btlonned
by IIIIIIOWICing .-esulls over a publlc address system
and FraU Fraas, newsdirectorforWMPORadiowho

broadclllll resulls by phone from llleolllce of tile clerk
of court&amp; Pictured are, 1-r , larry Spe«vw, Kay
Speneer and Frank Fraas.

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP I -Sen.
Gacy Hart sa id dropping oul of I he
Democratic presidentia l race w as
"the last thing on m y mind " after
Ohio Democrats ignored the recom mendations of top party and labor
union officials and gave Hart a
narrow victory over Walter Mandale in tllP Slate's primary election.
The triumph in Tuesday's ba lloting m arked the first time thi s
prtmary season that Hart had
successfully challmged the former
vice president in a Northern
industrial stale with a strong union
tradition. But Mondale supporters
cautioned that their candidate was
hurt by tlleRev. Jesse.Jackson, who
won 17 percent of the vote.
"The Democrats of this nation are
not prepared tohavethiiscontest and
this debate end at this time," Hart
satd.
President Reagan got 3,7R'i votes
in the delegate-a !-large and
ait.ernat&lt;'-at-large voting, and local
Republicans also gave him 3,261
votes in lhe lOth Congressional
District and district alternate race.
Mondale attributed his defeat to
his failure to "join the debate" In
Ohio.
"I did not do as well as I expected
to do In that indusbial belt," he said.
The Ohio Secretary of State said

unofficial l'C'tums from 13,063 of the
state's 13..119 prec incts. or 98.25
percent. showed M ondale "it h
569.rol votes. or 40 percent , to
594.3.39, or 42 percen t . for Hai1
Jackson had 23.3,1\'21 vot&lt;'s, or 17
percent.
F01mt&gt;r South Dakota Sen .
George McGovern had I perr"Pnt .
while Lyndon H. LaRouche and Sen.
A lan Cr anston were winning less
than 1 percent of the vote eac h.
'111&lt;' News Election Se.-.ice projectro Hart would w in 79 of the 15.1
de legates at stake in tlle primary,

('(Imparerl t o i;~ for Monda!&lt;' and 8 for

Jac kSCin
Preside nt Honald Reagan was
unopposed on 1he R&lt;'publican ballot .
in \..vhich \'Otf'r~ will Sf'nd 89
de lega tes from Ohio 10 th e GOP
natio nal co nvf'nt io n in August .
Gov . Ric hard C'C'lC'Slf', who w ith
othPr top &gt;lat e [}(&gt;mocratic Pi&lt;'&lt;'tro
officials had endorsed Mo ndalc
after the withdrawal of U.S. S..•n.
.John G lenn. dentP&lt;I that thP vo1(•was
a repudiation of stale party leaders.
" I think the fact is IX•mcxTatic
!Con tinued on Page 51

Gary Hart

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="148">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2735">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="42142">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42141">
              <text>May 8, 1984</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2037">
      <name>bolyard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3432">
      <name>gallaher</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="154">
      <name>weaver</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
