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                  <text>sfor you

has a

Baseball
roundup
on
3

Southern graduation

Title hopes still alive

Senior Citizen Day

See Meigs game on Page 4

Story, photos on

Stories

Page

Story on

Page 6

SUPERIOR- SEMI-BONELESS

•

Whole
SUPERIOR-SEMI BONELESS

Voi.JJ. No .24
Copyrighted 1984

LB.

HALVES

$1
99
CENTER CUT HAM SICES ..........
•

SUPERIOR-SEMI BONELESS

BE KJ!Io'D TO ANIMALS WEEK - Gwen Gerber of
the Consolidated llumane Organizations of Southe..-1••m Oltio ''"~' filnc• and Dannelgraph to teach ahout the
nr&lt;'d• of peL• at t he Salisbury, Middleport, and

Ground Beef 99~

Pet week observed through area
As a pat, of the Meigs County
llumam• Society"s observance uf
" Be Kind 10 Animals Week" Gwm
GerbPr. n!prt•s;&gt;ntatiw of Consoli da ted Humam• Organizations of
Southeast em Ohio, presented pro-

grams on

{X't

carr Friday to

children Ln severa l f'lC'mPntary
schools.
Ms. L;.orber compared the needs
ot animaLs 10 thf' nfl€&gt;ds of humans.

insofar as food . watPr and shf'lt(•r

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

,. .

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

.

USAf\ WllliNER Gina
FoUrod, Meigs High School, ha.•
he••n nruoc..t a 19llt United States
National :\want winner in for·
••ign languagp hy lht• United
Stak~ Achievement Academy.
Sht• W.&lt;L~ nomina.ted for the award
hy ~-rL'&lt;i Baloy, SpanL&lt;Ji teacher.
St'lf•dion nf t JSAA winners i."i
ma,k• on recommendation of
lA"af'ht•" 1 ·oru:·h~. (~ounseloN, or

other st·hool sponsors and is
ha."''('d on a.t•adr rnit· rwrforman&lt;O&lt;'. interrst and aplltudt•,
lmdt•rship quallti&lt;'S. m;ponslhility, ••nthu'iiam, motivation to
l~am and improve, citil.ensltip,

an' mncerned, discussed the medica I needs, the problem of overpopula tion. the necessity for licensing, and the need for exerci sing a
dog on a leash.
She said that "being a good cit izen
goes hand in hand with being a good
pet owner" and noted that dogs must

Scarbrough and Miss Hawthrone
accompany various c hoirs and
productions atEasternHigh School,
and other student s pertorm at
various churches In the area. Amy
Louks is now studying with Nancy
Zlpay who is affiliated w ith the Ohio
University School of Music.
Following the recitalthe students
honored Mrs. Machir with a gift
cer tificate and refreshments were
served totheOOpeopleattendingthe
recitaL Mrs Machir is a graduate of
Ohio University School of Music
with a bachelor of music degree ln
music education. She teaches piano
and voiee privately, directs the
Chester United Methodist Church
choir, and serves as assistant
organist at the church.

GROUND CHUCK ...................... $1.49 LB.
FRESH LEAN GROUND ROUND .......... $1.79 LB.
HILLSHIRE

SUMMER RED SKIN

HOMEMADE

POLISH SAUSAGE

BOLOGNA

HAM SALAD

RTA

to meet

Thf' Rf'li rr'(l T1•achPrs i\ ssoc ia
ttnn will hold it.., lunc hPon m('('finu

Satun:la\. Mav l~all2 :~lp . m at thr'
:vlt&lt;idiPpoti Masonw 'i'Pmpl&lt;'.
HP..,..n " &lt;.~tion s ma ,· lx• madr h.\
c&lt;.~lling

992-51:.6. P ,11 l'a rlf •r and
SkinnPr will Px pla in lh(' Big
lkolhPr Rig SisfPr progr~un .

Mdl~-

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-5776
.rvorr orFrv
FOR SPRING SEASON
Complete line of vegetable &amp;
flowering plants. sh rubbery. fruit
trees. Azaleas. Rhododendron.
House Plants - 4" to 10".
Foliage &amp; Blooming Baskets

THURS.

WED . ONLY

99¢

79 c LB

PIECE

DR. PEPPER

7-UP

R.C. COLA

7-UP

$129

$139

$129

B Pack 16 Oz .. Plu s Dep .

8 Pack. 16 Oz. Pus Dep .

8 Pack. 16 Oz. Plus

ALL WEEK

DR .

VALLEY BELL

REG . OR
PEPPER DIET

$139

2% MILK

tp9

VALLEY BELL

VALLEY BELL

CHOCOLATE MILK

ICE MILK
'/, GAL $ 29

VIT. D. MILK

$ 99

GAL

Kahn.'s Americ an Beauty Baco n.

ca n

Pcuc1 by by Geot ge S. Hobstener
215 Mulbe rry Ave Pomeroy. Oh 45769

Kahn "s American Beauty Bacon .

CHILLY POP
24 Pack ONE

VALLEY BELL

Oz. Plus Oep .

8 Pack,

10¢

ONE

1o~

All Flavors

Qt.

With the

Purchase of 3 Packs of Kahn's Lun cheon Meats .

Bacon .

VALLEY DELl

ORANGE JUICE

COT AGE CHEEESE
24 OZ. ONE

DRUMSTICKS
6 PAK. ONE

1Q¢

10¢

With the puchase of two - 1 lb .

With the
Eckrich

STOKELY 32 OZ.

1Q¢

of two 1 lb.

With purc hase 3 Frozen Food Pro·

HOTDOG BUNS
8 Pack ONE

APPLES

10¢

10¢

3lb .

With tho pur chase of one lb
Kahn 's American Beauty Ba con .

Kahn's Wieners .

With the purc hase of two packs of

VALLEY BELL

COUPON

I

PEPSI COLA

:

I
I

10¢

$119

16 OZ.

8 PACK

I

2°/o MILK

I

99¢

~----------------------,

6 PACK

C.K. SUPERMARKET

BROUGHTON'S
FRUIT FLAVORED

EGGS

DRINKS

89¢

DOZEN

With the purchase of two 1 lb. Kahn 's
America n Beauty Bacon .
Limit 4
Expires 5 -20 -84

I
I

1
1

NO tll.m
E•pires 5 -20-84

1
1
1
I

Plus Depostl on all Bottles

VALLEY BELL
y, GAL

Tomato, Broccoli,
Pepper, Cauliflower,
&amp; Brussel Sprougs

$1

oz.

39¢

29oozEN

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUNDAY . MAY 20TH

With the purchase of two packs of
Kahn's luncheon Meats .
limit 4
Expires 6-20-84

•

•

SUPER
MARKET

NO
SALES
TO
DEALERS

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

COUPON

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

SECOND &amp; MILL ST.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

We Reserve the Right to L oit Quantities.

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS &amp; "WIC" COUPONS

Open Daily 9 to 8

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS .

Sun. 1 to S

\

COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP ) - Hearings got under way in the House today
on a new, $530 million capit al improvements bill w hich legislative leader s
say should be on Gov. R ichard Celeste's desk by Memorial Day.
Finance Chairman William E. Hinig, 0-New Philadelphia, and Senate
Finance Chairman William F . Bowen , 0-Cinclnnatl, both promised
prompt action 1\oesday when the proposal w as unveiled by B udget
Director Chris Sale.
Unlike past proposals which have stressed new construction, Celeste's
bill emphasizes renovation and restoration of existing facilities by setting
aside m ore than half the money for those purposes.
It earmarks 60 percent of the total for h.igher educa tion while dividing
most of the rem ainder between m ental health and mental retardation
facilities, parks and re&lt;:reational areas, and renova tion of adu lt and
juvenile correctional fac ilities.
Ms. Sa le sa id the proposal costs le&gt;S than any biennial capital
improvements bill since 1977.
" It is a prudent capital budget, one that we can pay for," she said.
The $530 million total disregards a capital impmvements reappropria tions bill which brings forward $324 million in projects left over from the
last capital bill ($614 million ! passed three years ago.
The new bill provides $318.9 million for higher education.
Mpnta \ health and mental ret ardation fac ilities are to get $70 .3 million,
and $82.4 million is provided for parks and other natu ra l resources
department project s. The bill provides renovations totaling $13.5 milli on at
adult prisons and $9.o million at youth facilities.
Ms . Sale said the bill also puts special emphasis on high technology
development by includi ng $6.'i million for research and technology centers
at the Univers ity of Akron, $22.1 milli on; University of Cincinnati, $8
million ; Medical College of Ohio at Toledo, $.1 million; Day ton Research
Park , $5 million; Oh.io State Univer sity, $ll million; University of Toledo,
$7.9 million ; and Wright State U niversity, $8 million.

Cottage Cheese

CELERY

renf''w\.:al of Ms. Goodnite's coni rae I .

After the tie vote on M s. Goodnite, the board moved
on to other business which was completed in less than
an hour. Snowden and Barton. hpwcver. did cast
negative votes In the acceptance of April"s meeting at
which the Goodnite contract was not renewed. In the
other busines s. board m embers Wl:'re unanimou s in
thPir voting.

'

Improvements
bill proposed

VALLEY BELL

24

tion against the J'('Ilf'\Val or Ms. Goodnite's ront rac t in
ApriL
Snowden 's motion to give Ms . Gocx:lnite a one year
contract was given a second by board president Bob
Barton with OOth of them casting affinnative votes in
favor of Ms. Goodnite. Voting against the one year
cont ra ct offer wen:' members, Richard Vaughan and
Larry PowelL Fift h member of !he board . Artand
King , was not present. However, at the A pril meetm g
Vaughan, Powell and l&lt;in g had votP&lt;l agamst the

Meigs woman
hurt in wreck

•

89¢

$129

firing of Ms. Goodnlte. Arnold said the outcome would
ha ve been different had the board been given aU of the
facts before taking its April action not to renew Ms.
Goodnite's contract.
Arnold charged that district teacher s are not going
to eontinue to be trea ted as they have been in the past
two years, but commended the board for its
successful negotia tions with teacher associa tion
contracts in the past. He presented petit ions signed by
between 900 and l,(XXJ resident s of the district in
support of M s. Goodnite along with suppot1 ive letters
fmm two miners unions. Arnold pointed out that
between 95 and 98 percent of the people asked to sign
the petitions did so, and they w ere from a wide area in
the district. Arnold warned that the group support tve
of Ms. Goodnitewill inform the public and may secure
legal aid. He also critic~ the county superintendent
of schools for beconning involved in the recommenda-

$530 million

LARGE BAGS

99¢

ALSO

10¢

contract was not renewed. Continuing, Snowden said
the document used as the basis for failing to renew
M s. Goodnlte's cont ract in A pril was one actually
designed to upgrade teachers, not to dismiss them.
Snowden reported he had talked to the Meigs Local
Teachers Associa tlon and as result of M s.
Goodnight's dismissal the MLT.A. will demand
arbitration In it~ next contract. He predicted teachers
will strike If they don't get it.
" We serve the people that elect us. We had the
people behind us, but we don't now," Snowden
commented. Snowden warned thar the people will not
reelect board m embers who go against their wishes
and that the people might even go to recalL
Plea for boosters
Bobby Arnold, representing the Meigs Local Band
Boosters, made a presentation stating that the people
blame the administration and not the board in tlie

ICE

BUTTERMILK

GAllON

BREAD

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel staH
With one member absent, the Meigs Local ~hool
District Board of Education deadlocked in a tie 2-2
vote on a new con t rac t for high school band director,
Marilyn Goodnite, at a regular meeting held at the
junior high school 1\oesday nig ht .
At the opening of the meeting, board member
Robert Snowden made a motion to otter Ms.
Goodn ite. fired at the April m eeting at a 3-2vote, a one
year contract as instrumental instructor and band
direc tor. He said Meigs band students have had too
many directors over the past few years. Some current
band students have had as many as fiv e directors, he
stated. Snowden also pointed out that the North
Central evaluation had given Ms. Goodnlte a good
reconunendation.
Snowden charged that all of the facts were not
presented at the Aptil m eeting when the director's

'---~!:J~~~!~~- ___ ,

$109

KING SIZE

20 OZ. ONE

GET 1 8 PACK FREE

BEDDING PLANTS

39¢

L----------------------r-----------------------1
C.K. SUPERMARKET

1

PRODUCE

LETTUCE

COl tPON

I

1

1

VALLEY BELL
ICE CREAM
SANCWICH

un••nn

TOP SOIL

L----------------------~

10¢

I

!

Depostl

E•pires 5 - 20 -84
C.K . SUPERMARKET

25 LB.

C&lt;)liPON

ONE

Plus

I

~---------------J

One with purc hase of two 10 lb . bags of
Idaho Potatoes .
limit 4
Expires 5 -20-84

ANY SIZE

---~------------1
~
COUPON
"h , I
.&lt;...'"' BUY 2- 8 PACKS OF ee ' I
I.
COKE AT REG. PRICE

~----------------·

1

10¢

ONE

Bag

With purchase of two pac ks of

a ny c heese.

ONE

SHERBET
ONE 10~ WITH

VALLEY

-----------------------C.K. SUPERMARKET

¢

'h GAL

Purhase of two 1 lb . Kahn' s Ameri ·

R

VALLEY BELL

ONE

$159

GAL

8 Pack. l6 Oz. , Plus Dep.

8

CATSUP

GAL.

8 Pack,

ALL WEEK

PEPSI COLA

'h GALONE

LB.

0

0

With the purchaSe of Two 1 lb

or

Thirt\ ·fnur :--f'nior~ of E;J ~ If'rn
High X· hool will if' J\"l ·\"i ii chJ n~ 'I "I'd
hu . . Su nrla _
\ for ~ ~ tr ip to lhP
\Villiam~ I Jurr:. \ "a . tlr£'d .
T h£• gTOU!""J will ~ Pf·nd on(' di..l\" on d
tour o f Colonial Williamshurg
inc luding thr ( ;oyr·rnor"~ PJ IJI"P
and will hu\·t• a randl!'ligh t tou t of
1hf' his !Oric JI cit~ · onP ('\"f'nin~ . Th~·_, .
\.Vl ll \ "isil DuSC'h Cardt'ns. ,I .J mt·~
town. Yo rktuwn. thl ' Norfolk navJI
.station und muS(•u m and will h&lt;t \"{'a
day ar Virginia El&lt;'J&lt;'h
Chaperon&lt;" will includ&lt;' .Jirn I luff.
Bill Buc kh' \ . Caro l\ n Tnpp. Mar·
garf'l C:.wthornP , cllld DorSC'I t.~nrl
Phyllis L• r kin.'

LB.

MANY THANKS
For Your Support
In The
Meigs County
Election Held
May 8th, 1984
GEORGE S. HOSTETIER

j,(~r uf :\ugustint• Clund1 and Ow
J..'TO.Ulddaughh' r
Philornf'na
F'nllnKI, Ponwru.\'.

lB

SUPERIOR

attitude and eoorw•rativc splrit.
d••1wndahilil~ . She b the daugh-

Senior trip
planned

$199

SMOKED SAUSAGE
oR POLSKA KIELBASA

89¢

2 Section~. l'l Page'
15 C•nt'
A Multimedia Inc. New$pape'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 16, 1984

.

FRESH - LEAN

be licensed and always on a leash
when out of the house or the yard.
She cau tioned the children about
leaving an animal in a closed-up car
In hot w eather and suggested that
the humane society be contacted
when they see an animal being
abused.

Recital held recently
A spring rrcital was held Sunday
at th&lt;' Chester United Metholdst
church by students of Jennifer
Machir
Pianostudentspartlcipatingwe!'&lt;'
.JenniferGrover,LauraHawthrone.
Suzanne Clay, Lisa Hoffman, Angle
Sloan, Tom Hunter. Carrie Morrissey, Melissa Scarbrough!, Sar ah
Machlr. Jeremy Buckley, Susan
Wolf. Heather Farley, Kim M clntyn'. DebbiP Brooks, and Amy
Louks.
Vocal students were Jennifer
Grover who presPnted two solos,
and there wa' a flute solo by Nancy
Morrissey.
Several of Mrs. Machir'5'tudents
participated in the Ohio Music
Education Assocation solo and
enS&lt;'mblc competition at Oh.io
Univers ity this spring.
Miss Louks played Schu be rt' s
''l mpmmptu Op. 90 In A-flat" and
received an excellent rating. Miss
Scarbrough played Schubert 's "Impromptu In E -flat" and rceived a
good rating; Miss Grover. a
sul)l'rior r&lt;Jting on he r piano solo,
"Sona 1ina Op 13 No. 1" by
Kabalevsky. and vocal solo, "He
Shall Feed His Flock " f rom
Handel's Messia h." Laura Haw·
thorne was Uland unable to attend.
Miss Louks, Miss Grover, Miss

LB:

FRESH-LEAN

Pomeroy Elementary Schools Friday. Here she is
assisted by Tonya Waugh and Crystal Arnold of the
Pomeroy kindergarten.

•

at y enttne
e
Board deadlocks on Goodnite vote

LB.

HAM

Page 7

Ei\STERN HONOR STUDENTS - Randy Bahr, right, has heen
named valedictorian IUld Lori Ritchie bas heen named salutatorian of the
19M graduating class of Eastern High School. Bahr Is the son of Mr.IUld
Mrs. Henry Bahr, Rural Delivery, Long Bottom, and Ritchie is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilhur Robinson, Route 2. C....lvllle.

..

.,f.J··., ~·l'
·,·,','.

. ..

,

;q

'

A.

··:·

I

"

A Pomero:.-: woman was t reatf'd
and t"!'leased from Veterans M cm ·
erial Hospital Tuesday following a
lat!? morning accident on Ohio 14:t
1njur"Pd in thP accident was Alice
M . Plantz, who was taken to
Ve terans by the Meigs t.:MS.
She was a passenger in a car
driven b,· Cltlford C Plant z. 61 ,
Pomeroy. that M llided with a
tractor trai ler at 11::\0 a.m ..
accordin g f(J thf' staH' highwa~·
pa trol.
The patrol soid Pt"nlz wa s
backing from pri\·atr drin' ami wa s
srmck by the truck. driwn bv Da ,·id

Pierce, 34. PomerO,\'. Pie1·n· rpport -

ALUMNI QUEEN CANDIDATES - The Racine
Alumni Association has heen working vigorously in
preparation for the upcoming alumni dinner and
banquet slated Saturday, May 26, hPglnning at
Southern High School. Just re&lt;: ently, candidates for
the 1984 Alumni Queen were chosen and wer(• tn

attendance at tllfo las t a.'t."ttciation meeting. Titi~
year's qu l."t'D c::Ul dida.t.es aN&gt;, front, 1-r, (diagonally ),
.Jenny Bentley. B••cky ,Johtl.';on, Teresa Hill. Standing

ln back are Beth Hart and Lisa Deem. The theme for
this _,.ear's hanqut~ and dancf' l"9 "Mysterif's of tht•
Orient."

edly used his brakes, but was w1able
to stop in time to avoid collision
Pla ntz' s car was mOOf'ratel,\·
dam aged, and I he patrol cited tum
for failut&lt;' to v ield .
No citations weiT' tssut'd in a
two-vehicl e accident at the inlf'rSf'("' tion of Chester Township rmds P..1
and 156 TuPsday .
The patrol sa id Frdncis Wf'U. 3'2.
Long Bottom . t'&lt;'pol1rdl)' pulled
from !56 ont o R1 int o thr path of a
\'ehicle dri\'f'n b,\' Robrrt T. South ·
ern. 17, Middlepon. Both vehi cles
colhded. co using modPratrdamage
to Sou thern's vehicle and slight
de m age to Well's pickup 1 ruck

Expansion program may qualify for loan
By KATIE CRO\\'
Sentinel .taft
It would be worthwh.ile for any
business In M eigs County wish.ing to
expand or remodel to contact the
M eigs County Commissioners concerning the possibility of an EDA
loan.
This information was the direct
result of a message delivered by
Kim Shields, consultant who attended a m eeting on Econom ic
Development in Columbus recently
on behalf of the commissioners.
According to Sh.ields, people wno
plan to remodel or expand thei r
present business may contact the
Meigs County Commissioners concerning a loan through thP Economic Development Competit ive
Program.
An eligible applicant for thi s
com petition may request funding
fo r projects that do not exm..'!l
$350,lXXl and provide a minimum of
at least five jobs.
Other factors to be considered

include that an aver age job shou ld
cos t not morl" that $5,{XX)to$10,lXXlin
Block Gra nt doUars. The interest on
a loa n through the t::conomic
Development Competitive Program is seven percent. according to
Shields.
The money loanPd to bus inesse~
through the Economi c Development program would be paid hack to
the coun ty commiss ioners. plus thf'
seven p:&gt;rCf'nt intrrPst , a nd would be
used for capita li7.a lion of a rf'volv ing
emnomic development loan lund .
All loans arc dependent on
r easonably sound business or busi nesses Indica ting thcy w UI be sound.
Shields sa id. He also said rheremu st
bc private sector financial support
on a 3-1 basis. That is. a business
would have to pruv iue S30,CXXJ for a
$!0,CXXJ loan that must have a
committment tha t the local m on~y
is available. Also, owners mu st have
15 percen t equity in the business.
Shields also pointed out the
commissioners never h ave to pay

lhf' monf'y back. it sta~'S in Meigs
County as dcvclopm!'nt mone)'.
M one)· borrowed by businesses will
be paid back to the commissioner
and pur in a spec ific revolving loan
fund fo r future ventu re; .
Shields informed t hemmmission·
NS tha t they w ill again be rPCeivin g
fltnd s undN th e HUD C'ommuntty
DPve l op menr Block Grant
pmgram .
Money will tx· appot,ioned to all
non·metmpolitan muntiPS and c it
ics on a formula allocation basis.
Also meeting with th&lt;? commis ·
sioners was Sid Edwards, dim·tor
of Community Action concerning
appointment s to th&lt;; Pti,·atl' Indu s·
ltv Counc il of SDA ·24 undPr the .J ob
Training Partnt&gt;rshi p Act.
Appointed to rept"Pst,nt Meigs
County to PI C were E leanor
Thom as. Lincoln Hill. Pomeroy \o
fill !he post held by Sam Boston.
lenn ending 19R6and .James R Hill.
Rustic Hil ls, Svracuse. to fill the post
held bv Marvin Boxdorter, tenn

endin g 1~ .
In ot hf'r matll'r~ . commissionC'rs
Jg-JT'f'd to ad\"C'I1iSf• for thl' counf\·
highway a one-half ton pickup truck.
l:l light fou r whwldrin·vdticil'dnd a
sin gle a..x lcdump truck .

Film crew
joins search
ATiiENS. Ohio tAP&lt; - Crew
members working on thr film
"' HC'ar1 and Soul"' donJtrd two Wi..l\"

radios and joi m'fi in thl' sf.arrh for ~~

NPisonvillP tx;~ luund ~all ' aftf'r
spPndinga ni~ h t in thP\\"()( x.l~.!Ji l liC' P

said
K('nnf'th 'LdJi4'r. ~1 . wa s lound
hudd J('(] b\ 3 IIT'f' J1 &lt;.tixJUI i:.'~l&lt;Lm.
Tu0sda\ b\ nne of about 2:il:l
\·oluntl?f'rs whn comtx&gt;d tht"' wooc..Js
for him aftf'r ht ' disappf'a rf'd
Monda\ night .

Recreation committee leases former junior high building
The former Pomeroy Junior High
School w ill apparently be leased for
$1 to the Meigs Coun ty Recreation
Committee for a three-year period,
according to a motion based
1\oesday night by the M eigs Local
Sc hool District Board of Educa tion.
Severa l members of the r ecreation conunlttee which has been
planning a county-wide rccrea tiona I
· faclllty met with the board Tuesday
night with Bruce Reed serving as
spokesman.
Reed said that the committee had
hoped to build a recreation bulldlng,
but found thai new construction Is
out of the question from a cost

standpoint. He reported also that no
grants are available on new
contruction . The committee, he
said, would Uke to convert the
former junior high school ln to a
recreational complex to serve the
entire county. Grants for buildings
already In e&gt;Cistence are available,
Reed said.
At first It appeared the board
would discuss the m atter In executive session and then authorize Supt.
Dan E . Morris to proceed with a
lease to the conunlttee if the board
members were In agreement.
However, the board decided that the
~Ud!ng should be appraised, but

went ahead to agreed to a three yea r
lease for $1 and the opt ion to buy for
the committee.
The board established a sc hool
calendar for the 1984-85 year with the
first day for teachers to report to
buildings being Aug. 24. Students
will report on Aug. 'll. The final day
of classes for students next year will
be May 30 and the final day for
teachers, May 31. Included in the
cal endar Is a week -long sprtng
break, three teachers meeting,
La hor and Memorial Days, a
Christmas vacation and a Thanksg1vlng w eekend break .
The board accepted the statement

of a ('()mmi tt ee wltich has been
studying the use of school fa cilities
on Sunday but a boardpollcy chan!'!l'
will have to be made to Incorporate
provls lort' of the statement.
The resignations of Karen Walker
and Gary Walker as head and
assistant volleyball coaches effective May 15wereaccepted. Merri C.
Amsbary was employed as a
substitute in cosmetology for the
remainder of this school year.
The board employed Mike Gerlach, history; Robert Ol iver, mathematics, and Dorothy Ollver, English, to serve as surruner school
teachers. Authoflzatlon for classes

will be dependent upon student need
and enrollment judged sufficient to
jusrify operation of a class. The
summer school at Meigs will SPrve
also students of the Southern and
Eastern Local Districts.
Approval was given of a list of 140
seniors for graduation this spring
pending fulfillment of all board and
school requirements. The board
renewed a contract for next year
~&lt;1th SEOVEC' andwithETSEO. the
educational television service .
Tim Flesher, guidance counselor
of Meigs J unior High School,
presented aspects of a written

guidC'n plan which h3s tx&gt;en com .
piled by guidan&lt;'f' p!'rsonnet and an
advisory commitlw The board
accepted rhe plan and Flesher and
his mmmittcc v.err commended bv
Supt. Mon·is who said the pi a~
would probably be copied by 'othPr
districts in Ohio. David Dodson was
accepted as a tullion student for thp
rest of this year.
The board th!'n moved into
PXE"CUtive session to discuss person - .
nel. finances. and pending litigation.
After that session. theboardvotectto
movPtheJunemeet ingfromJuneJ9
to .June 12.

�Wednesday, May 16, 1984

:Comment

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pome!Or Middleport, Ohio
Wednncla , Ma 16, 1984

The writer's art _______..:.:.W_:_:il_:_lin_m_F_._B_u_ck_ley.:...__]r.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON MtE.%

SOmeone recently sent along an
editorial from a newspaper In
Wlsconsln denouocing me and all
my works, or I suppose more

accura tely denouncing all my
works, on the grounds that they are
strrwn with unusual words . And I

ROBERT L. WI:-.GETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
.\s~istKnt

BOB HOEFLICH

Publlshn ( onlrollt&gt;r

Gf'nf'ral Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JU .
"f'W~

EdItor

am glad the whole subject came up
bf&gt;causf' I havP been lookmg for a
)Jf'g to celebrate the publication of a
book tha t Is useful. exciting and
ix'autiful. namely James Jackson
Kilpatrick' s "The Writer's Art."
The protocols of full disclosure
rr•quirp that I instantly eommuni-

:\ :\1EMBER of Tht&gt;

A~sodated

Prcs)l ,lnlund Dally Prf&gt;!ois

:\~soda

lion and tht' .\nwrka.n St'w...,papt•r Publisher Assol•iatlon .
LE:TTERS OF OPI~IO~ art• wt•h·omt'd. 'l' ht•y should ht• lcsslllltn 3UU words
&lt;\lllt&gt;ttt'rs art&gt; ... uhjt&gt;l'l tol'dUtng and mulit ht'!ilf{nt&gt;d M'tth namf', addr..,.s 11nd
lt•lt•phont• numht&gt;r. ~·o un:o.IKnt•d h·lt~·n• M-ill lw puhll!oht•d Lt&gt;tll'r''i !ihuuld ht• In
J:UUd ta.-.l i', !Addrt·~ .-;ln~t t...sut~, not pt'rsooalltlt•s.
lun,~t

Overheated
•
economists

catr tha t I wrote the introduction to
that book, but also quickly to add
that I wa s not paid for it, and have
no finane1al slakp in the OOok 's
success. But wP all have a huge
cul tural stake in 1he book'ssuecess,
if\\-'(' carC' about thp dearest part or

patrimony. which 1s our
language.
But first , on the matter of the
unusual word. "No advice," JJK
writes in one chapter treating oflhe
do's and don't's of writing, "Is more
our

Plementary. and no advice is more
difficult to accept: WhPn we feel an
impulse to usP a marvelously exotic

word. let us lie down until the
impulse goes away." And the
gentleman proceeds to fratricide:
" My brother pundit, Bill Buckley.
falls into sin even more easily than
1." Mr. Kilpa trick prOC&lt;'rds to list a
dozen words culled from my books
and columns that fall, one is invited
to assume, in to thE' proscribed

category .
1 quarreled with him in my
introduction to his splendid book. I
said that l have a private theory, a

theory so simple, so rudimentary.
thalli almost embarrasses to trot it
out . But think II over. II is that we
tend to belleVP that a word is
unfamiliar because Ills unlamlllar
to us. In fact 11 hold! if .John and
Jane each knows the meaning of
words, you will find thai there
are 250 words .John knows and uses
and 250 words words Jane knows
and uses which words arc not
known to each other. So that when
John uses those words, Jane sniffs
at him as an exhibitionist. And

s.rm

when Jane uses a word John doesn't
affectation .
Co ncede, of course, that thl'rP arC'
words neither John nor Jane knows.

Should those words be quaran·
tined? I wrotE' in my Introduction.
"Tht"re

are r easons for using words

IN 1)1( MIDfiLI OF
1lif NIGifr Awp I
Tl&lt;INK, 'HE~ .. ·

Dunkelix'rg, of the Nationa l Federation of Independent Business, which

Jl"I'C'Cill" \&lt;'&lt;lr mrltPr hut far lx'iOw thl' :Ul p&lt;"rC'Cnl i0VC'is of 19~] and 1982
Thr su r,·r.v showrd Jn Pf'tTPnt of r omJ.Xtnirs actual!~ · lowrrrd priers. "an
t•scrptionall.\ h1gh numtX'I' tor thi s !Xlint in th e rrco\·rry ."
0\rrall. thf' ff'drril tion's optimism indPx. based on 10 f'&lt;:'onomic
indicators. rrmainrd nl'ar thfl hi gh~ 'st point of its Hl.vrar histor)·,
mPJsurin~ 1C:t9.~ in Apnl eompart'Cito l(1 S."' than 7:l fow ~·ears &lt;.~go '11w _v('&lt;.tt

J97l&lt; I&lt;JUO[S }00
Dunkl'ltx•J g ~II t nbu tt.&gt;d CJ t Jpast (Jd 11 of t lw f'eonom.v 's hea l! h tu t t](' 1ax rut
Whi Ch, tH• Sdi d, JJ!"OYiLJC'tJ busitl f~S \\'i t h a flOW Of funds tO finanC'f' flXpd nsion
out of cash nuv. ral twr than OOrrowing
HP. along w ith f'(:unomist .Jonathan Scott o t So uthC'rn Mrthcdist
Univ{ ·rsit~ and W 1lliam Dennis. N FIB IT&gt;sC'arch dirf'('IOr, said I:X:HTO\\'lng m
thP first thrPC' months of thr _vrar was &lt;:1! nrar·r('('()rd lmo~. 1('\"Cis.
Onh :r':-1 fX'IT f'nt of :2 . 1~i r o mpam~,s f'xami m'Cl in th(' s urvp~ · l'f'JX)r tf'CI
OOITO\\ in_g on a r('gu Ia r bas is, jus! onr IX'I'C('nt agr point J to\'P I hE' low of .1X
J)f'rCE'nt in 1~J8, prompt mg the l'f'Sf'arr hf'rs to S&lt;t~·. "II short ·trrm bu sinPss
borrov.in_g 1s nsmg. 1t 1s not 1d01ng so J among thP m1llions of sm a ll
businPs!'t'S in thf' United Stat&lt;•-; ..
Dunkrllx&gt;rg addrd. howrvf'r, th &lt;:~ t more bustnf•sSf'o;; soon must rntrr
rn'dit markPts and that JnfPI"'('Sf r atr prf'ssurf' might thf'n mtensify For
atxJul a .\ cd r. he &lt;...tid . IhP cost of shorl ·tPrm loo ns has !l'm~lln('d around U .'l
JX•r crnt
ThP "UI'\'£'\. clatms a h tgh 1['\"f'! of ;wrur.W\' Thr npt1m1sm 1ndex
prf'dictcd rf'al grow th of morr tha n 9 prrcPnt in thr first quartf&gt;l. whirh thf'
~ FIH lrrm s "a rPiatiVf'IY arruratf• forN'ast in compJrison to othPrs."
\o\"hllf• ;wtua l first-quilrtrr gr owth. as mf'asurt'd b.\- thP Cnmmt&gt;n'&lt;'
IX'pa11m1·nt. came in a t an annual rat r or x.:~ fX'rc&lt;·nt. many \\.'Cil - kno~All
1'C·nnom1sts and institutions had forf'('ast a IPvPllcss 1.hc.m hLllf thdt.

Letters to editor
Let's change their minds
w,l&lt;.. .11 Th4' Tnl't'llng of rtw
I&lt;&lt; ISWI"n l . oc ~J ! Boc~ r ll of FducJ IInn
on .'vl..l\ 7 I\\ .1-. thf'rP br•caw,f' I ctm
a parrn t ,tnd I \~L•" n1 Ll\"01 hn tht'
tlalf cLn pro ~•r.tm 1411 rll\ !'h il d .
\\'h4 '1l thP olht•t pan •nt..., \\l 'l"f'
g l\ · m ~ thPi r n · .t .., tm ~ \~ h \ thf'\ uf'tf'
m f;t\'nr for h.ilf d ,t\ sp s&lt;., Jnn o; \~ P
hacl I\' n ho:1r·d nwm bt ''.., \' ho look
tnmP thl '\ ( 'f iU]riC.!IP] (' ..,._Uh ; tfH('
hacl r, ,..,, 1\
1

I can

that Su•&gt;il' HPI !l t'S.
J :tmf'" L tldwell Jnd "OmC'tim(' "
D&lt;~lf' f\.bchir listf&gt;n to wh ~J! v.·(' h ;1d
tn o;; a ,. Du t t hf' ot hf' r tv. o d1dn 't f'\'f'n
·'"muc h look likr thf'\ rL~rf"'d tor thr
mN'I 1ng
I hoJX' wf' c an ch; •n ge !h('! J' mtnds
on the d a\ io n ~ &lt;.;f'&lt;.;S Jons
So t nmr on . parrnts grt tngr thrr
... n \~f' r an c hangr lhPir minds :\Ln-r w r.ur,;;;s, TIIPPf'rs Pl&lt;11ns
'&gt;d\"

Ohio

L/HW hacks
l 'niH'(\ \1 Jnf · \\"nr·ket " nf t\m(•r
\C,t . l.OI. a]]l{-~, J]"(' in fuJI sUp!X'rl O[
Mf'l ~S l.tll'al School Te...tchPr " t\s&lt;;,o ci,tt lon .tnd an' \f'J"\' d ts plf'a sf'CI

1n t lllh• · 80ARllCW Ull'C\TIO'&gt;
f01 firing tf'a Chf'r" \~· it hnul &lt;I reasnn
l h ttrh• &lt;,;
,wd unju s t!\ .
Champr·r &lt;... Prf'&lt;&gt;ldf'nl I. r·

r:
H~~ ~

teacher.~

L'MWA . .John .I Ct,llllino. \' .P
L. L' . L'M\\'A 11m. Willi.un A
Wooten . Chairm dn, :vt1n1 ' Cornm .
I. l ' . l~ll. (;.-·ne Wtst'. L L' JR9!1.
~l ikr .lohno;, on.
\'i('r Prf'Sidf'n t.

Luea l }1(\/,(i, Rill OilPr. COMPAC.
Lucll l:«h. Orlf'\ \'nrr. Prf's idf'nt .
l.ucal 11(\/,(i.

Let's fight for our children
Thr Ma~· l m('('ting of thr F.astPrn
l.()('al School Board WiJS d tnt al
ft asrn fmm start to finish . Onr
parf'nt ~ pokP in favor nf full -d a .v

cla sses . The ot her 1!111 pa r&lt;' nts stood
for om•-half da_
..,. clas.sf's Thrsr
opimons wriT' cnmplPtrl~' ignorPd
h:.- thr hoard . Full da~· classPs wrn•

scheduled aga in for fall &lt;lespitr
parrntal protPsts .
T hr ~ t;J!Pd purpo ..;~ · of kindf'r ·
g;ntr n is 11 1 In intwllU('{' ('hildn.•n
to school: r:l1 Pncouragp social and
r mol inn;Jl df'VPIOpil1('1ll. [ 11 d ll'l'('t
ron tra ctio n is thf' full &lt;:~ l! Prn a tf' dar

prol(rom
Thls program hcto; I:Jppn in
two yf'ars

USf.'

ror

Many problt&gt;ms hctvr

arisen with this program Including:
lire. overtired rhlldrm. IX'havlor
problems. long bus routinl', confu ·
ston as to days of week, 01r.
l:loard members Heines and
Ca ldwell a re to be commended for
their foresight and concern tor the
r hllclren 's future. K""P up ttK&gt; good
work .

As r ill7Pns - pa rent• or not - II 's

tlmf' ro unilf' for tx"-tlPI progr '-lm~
and schPduling for our school s This
con bf&gt;s t tx&gt; J ccomplis hf'CI bv
working with a concf'rnf'C! sc hool
boJ r d A OOard that car('S aOOut
morr than monry-· and grandc hild ·
rrn in ( ,JIIia county.
In m.v opinion it is timE' to recall
hoard mf'mbf&gt;rs- Larkins , Machir
and Gau l Th('sc mcmbf'rs ar('
unca r ing rrgardmg parf'nts' views
nn school ISS UPS. T hPy werr also
vf'ry' ruriP to parrots at thf' Ma y 7
mf'f'ling
Thr rf'signation of Suf)f'rintf'ndPnl Rnhf&gt;rt s would bf&gt; timel y duf' to
his tntal disregard of parPntal
opinion

In view of thr high -hand('{}
derision making b~ Mr. Roberts
and the hoard - what other Issues
have bern decided in thP same
manner ? Js this thP way we want
our schools run? Lrt 's fi ght for our
children. What's best for the
chlldren benefits all of us -[)('bra
GasJlf'rs. Thomas A GasJl"rS.
Loreft-!1Gasj)('rs

whole business amusPS.

Kllpatrick knows thf' names of
more Dowers and trees and shrubs
than 1 know names appropriate to
describt' Sovif'l p&lt;\licy. Are we
supposed to admire the cook whose
menu Is unchanged?

John Updike ts what one ought
safely to he ahle to call a

UnlV('J s i l~ !JIU[l'SSUJ.

cldLms mOIL' than "',6Q J(() memlx&gt;r firm s, discoun1C'd notions that the
f'C'Onum\ w ~t s m · prhPLitm~ and hf'adcd for a fa ll this s ummrr .
'''lllPt P d lT' ovPt hPatPd f'C'Onom1sts but not an ov('rhE'dtC"d econom~·. · hf'
said .
As a w ho If'. he sa id, ' ' the C'C'Onom.v is far strongl'r t han many proplf' had
C'X()("CI&lt;&gt;d. and it v.:on't cool a" much in thC' nf'xt two qua rtf&gt;rs as man~· haw•
fon"'Cast. ..
Am ong rpa ....ons for optirr11sm. hf' r1tPd h1 g c op1tnl slJC'nrling plan s.
cont muPd dforts to n·build 10\'f'n toru•s. J nPar l'('('Ord lcn:•l of hwi ng
inl£'nlton o;; and an ctcttwl dP('Illlf' in thf ' J=M' rcrntagf' o f rnmpanirs pla nning
pn('(' in('J f'asf&gt;s
Tllf' prrt'('nt.agf' 1lf rompamcs pl.mmng pncr mrrf'&lt;l St' S frll in thf' Apnl
sun ·c·~ · 14 J ::!J pr!Tt'nt of Jll comp. mics. highr1 thdn thP r('('ord -lov. of IR

t~

lound m~'&lt;'lf wondering whE'ther II
is sufficiently J'('('Ognized that writ·
ing tS, as Mr . Kilpatrick's book title
advises us. an art WC' do not expect
the amatf'ur to try to play the
"Flight of the Bumblebee" on the
piano. but should we be r=ntful
that some can do it ?

li

I ncomPs will lx' up. tht• JObll'ss ra tP will lx' down - r&gt;t'I haps to as low ,.,

But

1 havP recently pursUPrl thPwhole
question In anothf'r connection. and

I

-; ~ IJ('It'l'nt- and gross ndl iun.tl J.noduct is likrol\ tu advan('{' al:xJut n.:,
(X'ret.'nt in thP spcond qu;.~rtPr. s:..~ id William DunkPlbt:•r_g, a PurduP

JouSf'Wort . .~ How is that for a
defiant g~ture'~

"JX&gt;rfOMTiing wrilf'f." at whose
hands thf&gt; taxing df'mands of

langua,.
Wh ~reas

are ronfidmtly met .
mo' t prople don't paint

canvaSM or pla~' a mu sical instru men t , f'VeryOnf' writes The mis·

take L&lt; to s uppo'~ that one should
discourage thr profusion of verba l

forms

Olympic hypocrisy _______Ja_ck_A_n_dc_.rs_on
WASHli\GTON -

Thr Soviet

bovcott of thf' Summer Olympic'
(;a nws prrsf'nts an opportunit~' to
takr a sober, S('('ond look at this
sports SpPCtacu lar There IS an
urgrnt nf'('(!. tor a top-to-bottom
ovf'rhaul of thf' Oly mpiC structure .
Thf' t1mr has come to stop
pr£'trndmg t h&lt;'lt thC' gfl mes an"'
abovP politiCS T hf' SoVlf't -h\Of'
nat1ons havf' always used Ol.vmpic
st i.ldium.., as polll ira l arrnas.
Thrv have been ass isted. incredi -

blY. bv the International Olympic
Commiii&lt;'E'. which has rigged thC'
rules of the gamPs 10 give Sovil't·
hlor ut hiPtC's an advantage. Com muni-.t rountr if's count all their

athletes us am3teurs. though thev
arr subsidized b;· the stale. EvPry
living. brm thing Soviet athlete. for
Pxample. is Pligible for Olympic
com()f'tilion .
If\ contrast. AmPrica's proft.•s
sional Jlhlptt•s an... mu s t!~, barn:.d
f rom thP gamPs, I ho ugh tht• rulps
h.lH' bt'l'Omt' so OOilixPd thai sumP
prufpssion;J]s a n• acct&gt;ptf'd as a rn a·

trurs a nd somf' amateurs arE'
considr red professionals.

mdtgna tion of fanner TrC'asur~\"
S(&gt;crr tary· William Simon. v•.:ho 1s

For exa mple, amateur track ·
and -fi eld stars. if they happen to
pia~ professional footba ll , have
lx'&lt;'n rull"d ineligible. Ye t other
amateurs can acct&gt;pt money for
track events and product endorSPm £'n ts, without PndangPri ng their
0\~1 mpi c
amf'ltPur standi ng pro\'ldPd thf' money is placed in a
trust fund. It ran he doled out topa~
li\'ing, training and ot her f'Xpcnsrs.
Profess ional baskPtball teams
can' t comp&lt;'tr in the Ol~mpics unless thPV happen to pia~ tn a
INlgue that the International Ba s·
k~ tb.tll Fed~ralion recognizes as
amatE'ur. An AII -AmPrica play£'r
from WichiW StatP, for Instance.
was allowed to try out for thP U .S.
Ol.vmpic !Porn , though he earned a
rrporH'd $200,00J last ~eat piavtng
tn thP l taltan Basketball League
Ami lhP nrw Olympic tr nnis
compptitiun w1ll tw open to profc-s ·
sionals if lhPv hap!)('fl to bf&gt; undPr 21
vPai s old .
Thf' hvpocris ~' has aruust&gt;d lhC'

prestd&lt;'nl

of the U.S. Ol,&gt;mpic
Commit i&lt;'C' Ht?'s .J veteran polttical
sk irmishf'r. whose visage looms
ch('('rfully abovC' thC' wrf'C'kagf' of a

hundred ballles . Forcefully, h~ has
railed on hiS l)f'f'rS to reform an d
simplify thP eligibility rules.
But thf' Intf'rnational Olympic
Commillre is m sconced behtnd
walls that won't msil~ crumble
ix'fon· the trum p&lt;'IS of reform .
BPhind those' walls. the Ol~mptc
barons tmd to ix' deaf to arg'Ument
and indifferent to Injustice.
ThC'

most

practical

solut ion.

therefore, mtghl ix' to throw ou t the
t'iiglbilil~" · rules and O)Jf'n up the
Olvmpics to all athiPIPs. "If we
can'l ha v&lt;• hon PSt amatf'urism."
Sim on sta!Pd , " then l('t' s OJX'n it
up.
ThC' 4·xi s! i ng r ulf's &lt;.1 rP so riddiPd
with lnophoh'S as S\.vi ss c hC'f'Sf' and
"rncoura_gf' our vo ung ath iPt Ps tu

chrat," he told mP.
Simon's li ps curiPd in o gar govlf''s inward gnn as if he s&lt;::~vorf'd

th£'

romi~

rnnfrontation.

INSIDE: THF. WHITF. HOUSE:
While House polls show that Garv
Hart ' wou ld make a stronger
s howln~
than Walter Mondale
against I'N&gt;sident Reagan in NovPmbff. But thf' prPSidrnt isn' t
worried. "If wr have to go against
H an." tK&gt; cracked to aides. "all
we'll need is a barher to win the
election " He expl3ined that Hart' s
John F' KPnnC'd~' ha1r-do C'Oncea ls a
pair or juJ;! P&lt;Jrs. '' If\·uucust his hair
above tho&gt; ears," said Rt&gt;agan.
"h£&gt;'11 look like a sail plan&lt;' ."

-

ihr prPsidpnt 's campaign

st r ateK~SII art' f't'iiPH'CJ UVPr thP
n~sulls

of ¥noth&lt;"r poll, whi('h show

that thr "slpa;.-p" issuP rna:-,.'
baC'kftl'l" on t hf' Df'mocrats Tiw
s trat('}Osts sav tha t hv harping on
th(' "s l('azt' fac tor ." thP [X&gt;mocTat!':i
h&lt;.~ v{' giYen thr impr('s.-.;iun that
thev'rr conducting a srnPa r cam ·
paign, that thc v thcmselvps art- up

to lhelr&lt;'lbowsin sleaw. In tht'Pnd,
t hr~· mav wind up splatlf'ring morr
slf'aZf' Oil themsf'IVf'S than on
R&lt;'agan.

The Ohio primary _______L_owe_LL_W_'in..::.:...ge_u
Ohio got its first crack at the 19l'1
P£'" idrntial rlf'C ti on procpss la st

v.1thdrrw from thf' r;H'f' Whf'n 11 w as

evident his campaign would go

v.:N•k v.-h('n \"Olf'r s ha ndl'd Gary
Hart a two pt:'rCf'ntagP point win
on•r \\'altf&gt;r Monda If' in thP Dl'mo rra tir prima~· . It v:as one of thf'
h•w industrial sta irs Ha rt has won
hut l hf' loss of a bout a dozrn
df'l cg~11 rs hrn• and in Indiana madp
onl.\ a sm&lt;:~l l df'nt in Mondalc&gt;s hf'ftv

nowhf'r(', now has a $.3~ milllon
d&lt;'hl as his solP souvPnir of hts
prrsidf'ntia l ambit io n. If hf' is
sucrrssfu l in r aising half that
amounr. thr FC'df'r&lt;JI F:l('('lton

&lt;lP tegute lead
Profrs.,ing to lx&gt; \·astl\" f'ncour·

morr ragPr than anyone rlsr to pay
for a dPad horsr
Thrrr is a wf'ak movpment undPr
wa~ in Ohio to promotP Glenn as a
ca ndidate fur viet.• presidPnt but
that rnovemPnt is E'Xpected to dir

agc·d b~· h1s narrow \ 'ictoriPs, Hart
hJs \'nwPd to rontinue on 10 thE' ninf'
staff's rrmainin_g which haw' a total
of fi.fj6 df' lf'gatrs I adm1t r am
notnnousJ~· \\'f'a k in mathf'matks
but P\'rn I canS('{' that Hart has n't
got a Chmama n 's chan('(' of
rraching l hf' mag1 c number of 1.Y47
drlrgatrs bf'forf' he runs out of
stoiC'S with primaries and ca ucusPs
.Junr :i whf'n thf' last fivr statPS votr .

The delegate count after lh&lt;' Ma;• ~
primarif's was: Mordak. J::)27:
Ha.1. 90.1: .la&lt;"kson, 2R2. II is true
ttwrr JrC' 543 unrommllted deJ('gatPs but thry are so widely
srpararrd by dlstancf' and interest s
that thry arC' unlikely to go to any
single candidatE'. Therr arE' 666
deh•l(ates ypt to be elected and

Mondale n£'f'ds

o nl~

440 of these to

r each the magic numbflr .JunC' ~ As
hr natTow~ the gap more and m orf'

of lhP uncomm it ted delegates will
be hurrying to gel on the band
wagon lx&gt;fore it is too late.
Although the~ say that anything
ca n happen In politics, and fre·
quenlly does, it seems that the
nomination of Walter Mondale is all
over but the shouting at ttK&gt; San
Francisco convention. Mathemati-

ca lly, there Is no way that anyone
can go Into the conv!'ntlon with as
many pledged delegates. The Ohio
vote tor Hart was largply the result
of the shellacldng Mandai!' had
given favorite son, John Glenn . In
the early primaries. Glenn. who

Commi ss ion

will

pick

up

the
rPmaindrr. HowC'vc r. that is a b1g
· IF" because politicians are no

beat the San Diego Padres 64 and
the New York Mets !'dged the San
Francisco Giants 7-6 in lllnnlngs.
Andujar, who was 15-10 In 1982
with two wins against MUwaukee In
the World Series beforelnexpUcably
losing his edge last year, was In totid
control against Atlani&lt;t. He scat·
tered eight hits, struck out six and
walked none In running his record to
6-3.
But he was prouder of hts home
run, which he stroked left-handed. It
was th!' fifth homer of his career, but
the first from the left side of the
plate.
Cubs6,Reds3
Gary Matthews had four hits as
the Cubs won in Cincinnati.
"When I hit, II seems iike we're
wmning" said Matthews, acquired

tirkl'l should ix' ba lanced g('()gra·
phicallv . Siner Mondale is from
Minnesota. pol it iC'al \Aisdom favors
a running matf' from thE' dff'p

South. Most frequently mentioned
for the post if Sen. Lloyd Elt'ntson of
Tf'xas who flew to Austin to
introduce Mondale durtng lh&lt;'
Texas campaign with these words:
"Let me tell you why Fritz Mondale
Is going to win. Wail untillhal ntghl

\.\ hf'n wf' §("(' thr two of thf'm face to
faCC' on TV- and Ronald Reagan's
"1thoul a TPiePrompTPr. Then tht•
era of ltK&gt; Teflon PrPSidcnn· will
pass." Sm. Elt'nlsPn may not be
chosen to tx:&gt; \'kf' prPsident but hf'
has aptly taggpd lh&lt;' present
administration as "Thr Teflon
PJ'('sidmcy," a nick name that will
b(' hf'ard mon· and morf' this year.

It may becomf'

famous~

Berry's World

un born . Earl v a !l acks by Glenn on
the Cartcr·Mondale administration

from the PhUadelphla PhUUes just
beforethestartoftheseason. " Wh!'n
I hit, It seems like we're winning. I
was glad to come out of my slump
today.''
Dlclde Noles relieved Scott Sand·
erson who suffered back spasms
after pllching to two batters and
went six innings , allowing five hits
and one run. Tim Stoddard !lntshed
up for his second save.
Pirates 3, Astros 2,
Tony P!'na's two-out single In the
lOth inning with the winning run, bu I
it was a squeeze that failed that was
the key to the game.
With runners a1first and third and
one out and the game tied in the
ninth, Houston tried a sulctde
squeeze. But Bill Doran pulled away

Cubs stop Reds, 6-3
winner and send th!' Padres to their
sixth straight def!'at.
Bryn Smith got the win, his fifth In
S!'\1!'11 starts. Dan Scha tzeder al ·
lowed only one hit over toe ftnal four
Innings to gel his first save.
Philltes 12, Dodgers I
Mike Schmidt became the 19th
player in big league history to reach
the 400 home-run plateau and Len
Ma tuszek and Luis Aguayo also
cracked homers.
"Eleven year s ago when I came
up I never dreamed I'd hit 400,"
Schmidt said.
"But anything's possible if you
can sl&lt;ty healthy," he said "The only
thing l kind of wish tllis one had been
a game-winner As for any other
milestones , I feel the same about

from the plich by Pirate reliever
Rod Scurry and Enos Cabell was
caught In a rundown, thwarting the
rally.
Scun)', making his first appear ·
ance in Pittsburgh slnceund!'rgoing
a month-long treaiment for a
cocaine problem, received a warm
hand from the 2,9'7ll who showed up
In 'IQ.degree weather.
Expos 6, Padres 4
Pete Rose. relegated to the bench
with a heel injury, pinch-hit a
two- run double that keyed a
three-run sixth inning rally in
M ontreal's come -from behind
victory.
Rose's double scored the lying
runs and Doug Flynnfollow!'d with a
single to send home the game·

Latest victory puts
California first
By JOHN NELSON

AP Sports Writer
Sometimes, it's the little things
that gE't a team going, Brian
Downing says. Sometimes, it's
bigger things.
The Cal ifornia Angels were off to
bigger and beller things Tuesday
night, mov ing into first place In the
Amertcan l.Rague West with a 5-2
victory over the defending World
SC'ries champion Orioles.
The Angels got their Hrsl run off
Baltimore IPfl·haoder Mike Flana·
gao, 2-3, in the fourth Inning on three
Infield hits, then Downing broke out
of a 5-for-38 slump with a three-run
homer to cap the four-run Inning.
The victory, coupled with Minne·
sola's ;&gt;-2, \0-lnnlng loss to Toront o,
moved the Angpls, w ho finished fifth
in the i\L West last season. a
hall-game into first .
Eddie Murray homered off An·
g0ls rooki0 Ron Romanick. 4-3, in
thl•sixth inning.
In the rest of the league, [)('trait
t&gt;c•at &amp;•alliL• 6-4, Chicago edged
Kansas City .1-2, Cleveland defeated
Boston 7-5, New York beat Oakland
9-ii and Milwauk&lt;'&lt;' shaded Texas

1-2
Gary Pettis slatied the Angels
fourth with a bunt singi&lt;' and stole
second. PettL' went to lhird on a
grou ndout and scored on ReggiP
.Jackson ' s shat1&gt;IY hit single that
glanced off Flanagan's pitching
hand. Doug DeCinces then beat out
another infield hit before Downing
homered .

The Angels had lost six of their
previous seven games, while Balli·
more had won eight of 11.
Blue ,Jays 5, Twins 2
Toront o li!'d thP score l -1 in the
ninth. then scored four more runs in
the lOth - rwo on George Elt'll's
ttiplc - to upend the Twins . Mitch
Webster sco red lhP lying run, and he
drovt' in one of the runs in the lOth.
!Vtrr consecutive singles by
Damaso Ga rcia and Dave Collins to
stan the lOth, Lloyd Moseby
knocked in the lie-breaker wit h a
slngiP Willie Upshaw then walked,
an d Wcbsll'r followed with a
run-sc·or ing doubiP. Bell's ttiple
dnwe in lhP final two runs of the
inmng .
The 1\vms

came

back with one

run in the boll om of the lOth on Tim
T0ufel' s RRI grounder
Toronto lied it up with thP help of
an Prror by Minnesota first base·
m"n Kent Hrbek in the ninth.
Tigers 6, Mariners~
K irk G ihson and Howard Johnson
drove' in two runs apif:'('{' to back

.J"ck Morris to his seventh victory
Morris pit ctK&gt;d seven innings, and
Willie HPrnandrz struck ou t flvP in
the final two innings for [l('trolt. now
21\-o and eight games ahead of
Toronto in the AL East.
Both of Gibson's RBI came on
sacrifice nics. Johnson drove in two
t1Jns in Detroit's three-run third
inning.

Spike Owen hit a three-run hom!'r
for the Mariners.
Morris walked five and struck out
three in an outing that saw his string
of tour straight complete games
snapped.
White Sox ~. R&lt;&gt;yals 2
Rich Dotson pitched a four -hitter
for his fifth victory. and Julio Cruz
singled home the lie-breaking run In
the seventh Inning.
The score was tied 1-1 when
Royals rookie Danny .Jackson hit
leadoff baiter Dave Stegman with a
pitch In the S!'Venth. Stegman stole
second, went to third on a sacrifice
bunt and scored on Cruz's single.
Cruz went to second on a balk and
scored on a single by Scott Fletcher .
The Royals pulled within one
whenJorgeOrta , who had two of the
hits off Dotson, tripled to lead off the
ninth and scored on a sacrifice tty by
Hal McRae.
Indians 7, Red Sox 5
Andre Thornton had thre€ RBI,
including one in the eighth inning
1ha I broke a 5-5 tie and en a bl!'d
Cleveland to beat Boston. Thorn ·
ton's single came after consecutive
wa lks lo Tony Elt'mazard and Pat
Ta bl!'r . Another run scored on a
sacrifice fly by Julio Franco.
Thornton's sacrifice fly in the
sixt h snapped a 44 tie, but th0 R!'d
Sox lied it again when Rich Gedman
homered in thE' seventh inning.

The Red Sox trailed 4-0 at one
point before batting back with four
runs after two were out In the fifth.
Dwight Evans had a two-run single
In the Inning.
Yankees9, A's6
Omar Moreno drove In four runs
in his first sl&lt;tri since April 22, and
Ron Guidry survived an 11 -hil, 7 2-3
Inning ou ting to even his record at
2-2. Three of Moreno's RBI came on
a bases -loaded t1iple in the seventh
inning.
The A's, however, chased Guidry
with thre€ runs in the eighth on an
RBI double by Mike Heath, a pinch
single by Jeff Burroughs and Joe
Morgan's run -scoring pinch-singl e.
New York erased a 3-2A's lead In
the fifth inning on run-scoring I riples
by Toby Harrah and Dave Wtnlield.
After Guidry l!'fl, Curt Brown
relieved, and Dave Righelli pitched.
the final l 1·3 innings for his fourth
save.
Brewers 3, Rangers 2
Milwaukee scored three runs in
the seventh inning to beat Texas.
Elt'n Oglivle had a two-run double,
and Bobby Clark scored a run on a
wild pitch by DaveTobik.
Robin Yount sl&lt;trted the innmg
with a bunt single. Oneoutlater, T!'d
Simmons blooped a single to right.
and Mike Mason walked Clark.
Oglivie then doubled to right-cE-nter
for two runs, with Clark going to
third, and Toblk then threw the w ild
pilch.
Don Sutton work!'d seven Innings.
scallerlng seven hits, for his third
\ictory In five decisions.

Horse trainer faces theft charges

still rankle wtth old-line Dl•mocrats
who rcmembE'r t he Cartt.•r adm inis
!ration as onP _gf'nuinely eonerrnf'd
with world l)f'aC('and human 1ights
Hart can also be ruiPd out (;ts &lt;.1
fpasJa blf' vicC' presidential candi
datr. r rga rd less of his showing in
the last nlnP state primar iPs and
ca ucusf's. In a speec h at Trxas A. &amp;
M. during th&lt;' Trxas campa1gn. hr
excori ated thf' Cartcr-MondalC' ad ·
ministration for its "da~·s of
shame" during the Iranian cnsis
and sa id. "America was SN'n as an
unN'rt a in power. unlikPi y to stand
up for its own interests .. This
sf'tf'ms to be a rPmark m ore suiiC'd

BURLINGTON. Ky. !API - A
Chi cago horse trainer remains free
on $J,(XXJ bo nd while Kentucky State
PoiJ('f' se€k to have him extradited
to Boon£&gt; County to face charges of
1heft of a race horse from a
Minnesota owner.

Ban-y Menafe€, :!6, CIC€ro, Ill.,
was indicted May 4 by the Boone
Cou nty grand jury for stealing a
thoroughbred horse by claiming II
was dead .

Michael DuShane, Plymouth,
Minn., claimed his horse. Swift Joy,
a mare, was actually sold and wf'nt
on to win more than $ll,(XX) running
aI Latonia here.
Kentucky State Police at Dry
Ridge said Tuesday they are trying
to extradite Menefee so he can ix'
returned to Boone County to stand
trial.
DuShane now has the horse back
and Is breeding it.

I

a Drmocra lic SPnator desirous of

•

}~.
~·
''

"He blames his not knowing !row to cope w1th
frustration on us being over-mdutgent
parents."

MAKE US YOUR HEADQUARTERS
FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS!

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON. W, VA.

those that I feel about 400 ... it ih&lt;'

Lord ts wtlllng, I'llget th!'re. But I'm
not thlnklng about any other goals."
J!'n)' Koosman won his third for
the Phillies . Bob W!'lch, 34 . wa' the
loser.
Mets 7, Giants 6
Keith Hernandez, balling with the
bases-loaded and one out after
Manager Frank Robinson ordered
light-hitting Jose Oquendo walked
intentionally, stroked and lllh·
inning sacrifice Oy.
Darryl Su·awberry and Hubie
Brooks each stroked t wo·I·un singles
in the eighth inning as the Mels
scored four times to take a li-S lead .
But the Giants lied it in the bottom of
the inning with a run off Jesse
Orosco, 3- 1, whoeventuaUy became
the winner.
J!'ff Leonard had a three--run
homer in the first and Jack Clark a
two-run shot in the lhtrd as the
Giants surgf'd to a ~- 0 lP.ad . Mark
Davls, 0-~ . was thP losf'r.

WANTED
large bus needed for
ball team trip to The
Columbus Zoo, May
19th. We will pay gas
for the bus and pay the
driver. If interested,
notify:
Sharon Johnson
PH. 949-·2846, or
Jeff McKinney
PH. 949-2978
CAUGHT IN THE ACf - Chicago Cubs'
infielder Uyne Sandberg pul' the tag on Cincinnati
Jteds' haserunner Eddie Milner for an out during the

fifth inning of their National Lcagu~ game at
Riverfront Stadium Tuesday night. I AP Laserphoto ).

•

Smarts help more than quick starts
CINCINNATI !API- Cincinnati
Reds ouliielder Gary Redus has
learnl'lllhat bases arP stolen more
by smatis than by quick starts.
The speedy outlielder has stolen a
remarkable 16 bases m 17tties thi s
season, leading a team that is easily
the best in the National League so
far in base theft s.
"1 know thepilchersa lil tleheller
than last year. " satd Redus, who
sto le 39 bases in 53 tries last SPason
"l think it 's a matter of knowing

Last sf'ason, h1s first with lhc
Reds, Redus admits hC' was
guessing when to run somt&gt;lirnl':-;.

thC':o.·'rC' new to thP '\Jat ional Lragur .
Ill s ~t ra tC'g)' agcu nst thrm is 10 lrarn
.ts much as pos:-;ibiP a s qu1ckl~ a s

Th at' s

JlOSS tiJ I~

changed

this

ypa r,

as

eviden ced in a game when he sto lr

"When I get on fir st. I t ry todr"" a

two bases off Philadelphia Jeff.

throw to first so I can SN? h.is movP,"

hander Stf'\'C' Carlton, who has onr
of 1he most tricky and ront rovers tal
m oves to frrst base ThPs('('ondsteal
sct up a game-winmng run.

Redus sa id .
The Reds have \x.lf..•n Vl'I } ' succPSS·
fu I in stealing so far. taking 56 bases
in 721 rics. Rt'Cius 1hinks th.tl has a lot
to dO\Vilh thP !Pam' s n•cpn t win ning

"I could Sl'&lt;' hts whole bod) ' well,"
Redus satd . " I could tell when hf'
was throwing to first base, and when

when to run and whPn not to run

he was throwing home .' '

"When you've got a pitcher wllh a
good movNofirst base, ll'sbellerto
hold rathl'r than to run into an out. "

most problems now are thoSE' he
ha sn' t seen many times becauSC'

The pitchers who give h1m the

SV AC players now
in district competition
AJi thr&lt;'E' area SVAC t rack teams
were successful Tuesday in plactng
team memlx'rs mto district compe-

lilion this We&lt;'kcnd following th r
sectiona l track meet at Belpre.
Trimble took first place in thr
event, followed by Federal Hocking.
North Gallia. Crooksvi lle, Kyger
Cr&lt;'E'k, E:astern and Miller. The lop
four team members in PilCh rvcn t

will go the dis! Jict . set for 10 a.m. aI
Wheeler sburg
From North Gallta , Eric Ppnick
was the school's fir st athirtl' to
qualify In four events for thedisl ricl.
He won In the 100, nl, anchor('{} the
~me ter relay team and was
fourth in the lon g jump.
Mall K emper won his third
consecutive Sf&gt;C tional

champion -

ship in shotpul, hurling the shot ol
feet, 73;, inches. He also pla r'-'d
fourt h in the discus throw, which
was won by Kyger Ca-•pk's J.D.
Bradbmy, who will also go on to the
district. Bradbury was also second
in the shot compel ilion.
The Pirat..,;' 3-2-1}() relay team
placed third with a new school m ark
of 9: 28. The team consisted of Shane
Glassburn. Mike Kemper. Wayn&lt;'
Diddle and Thurman Holliday.
NG's 400-meter rel ay team won
the sectional championship with in
47.3 seconds. Team memix'rs arc
Scali Williamson, Aaron Beach.

Mark Forr man ::~nfl Pf'nick.
Other Pirates placing in thP
section al, but not scorin g. WPIT'
Todd Holstein. sixth in milP: Wavne
Diddle, SJ)(th in 400-metN: 13C'ach.
siX th in long jump: milf'r ele~y tl' drn,
filth .
In addition to Bradbury's capturmgof thedJS('US. KC'sJohn P.anegar
won the two mile and placl'li second
in the mile. while Brian Roush look
first plaf'C' in the BOJ-mPter r ace.
Rodnf'V Morgan placed fow·th in the
htgh j~mp comrx•t ilion . Th0y will
represrnt
the Bobcats at
Wh""lersburg.
F.astcrn's Mik&lt;' Jones dislin·
guished himS&lt;'lf by placing fourth in
the mile. high hut dlt•s and two-mile
"11tc Eaglt,;' rela~ team of Don
Maxon. Tim Proix'rl, Paul Collms
and SC'oll Upton placed fourth In
competition and will travPI to the
district, along wit h Jones.
Also pat1icipalmg in the m&lt;'E'I was
Eastern's mile relay team of Bob
M aison, Probert. Maxon and Larry
Cowdet-y, whiJP Angie Spencer won
the girls' 110 low hurdles, 80vcri)'
Wi gal qualified for the girls high
jump, and Melissa N u~ cr quali fied
for third in shot put
The top four selrcted from Uw
district will go onto the regional
me&lt;'t at New Concord set for Ma;•24
and May 2ti

5 31 JACKSON PIKE RT 35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524 - -..,
BARGAIN MATINEES SAl .1: SUN
oi\LL 5[/oTS S&lt;'O O
ADMISS ION EVERY W[SDM $) r,o

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IO ~uol ... l

streak .
··we're not going to h1t a lot of
home runs.' he said . " \Ve'\'c got to
dosomf'thin g We can' t pl aybasf'to

bas&lt;'. We can't afford to take thrre

hit s to score on(' run."
Redu s s.1 id hP a nd his teammate'S
simply h&lt;-IV(' hf&gt;en PxPrcising good

judgment. alnng with th0ir legs. to
he so suC'rf'ssful m stea ling .
" It's a mL1ttcr of not runnin g into
ou ts." he satd. "Nobody is going to
nm when thC'~··re not gP1ting &lt;:J good
jump.

FOR THr BF£AK
Of YOUR LifE'

We Would Like to Thank
MR. &amp; MRS. JEFF HARRIS
Of Harris Farms . Portland . OH .

For sponsormg Portland Independent Men's League. Thanks
to Billy Long who will be
missed as he is out with a bra·
ken shoulder.
Coaches:
Terry Brewer, Red Wallbrown
Harris Farms Softball Team

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50 GALLONS

DO IT YOURSELF BIRDENERS ...

to President Ronald Reagan tha n to
future membership in ttK&gt; Senate
and the Democratic party. How·
ever. Ronald Reagan forgave the
culling remarks of George Bush In
I he 19&amp;1 RPpubltcan prtmarii'S
about "voodoo economics" so
perhaps Hart thought Mondale
would be equally forgiving. [l('mo·
crats may forgive but they never
forget!
In my opinion, the vic.&gt; pri'Siden ·
tlal candidate will not come from
I he ranks of 1hi' seven Dernocra tic
hopefuls. Political strategy says the

Br~ves;

know, he I hinks her far-gone in

~OA1f1lMEf I W41(f

ThC' c•c(mom~· is !ike!~.; to rPm(:~ in stronger over the npxt two 4uarll'I"S than
most ~pular fOI 'f'C'asts f'm·ts ton. a small -bu sinPssgroup sJi d Monda~· aftpr
SUf\'('~·ing !,()XI of its ml'mlw.• r s .

even when ttK&gt;y are unfamiliar. II
ca n be a matter of rhythm, It can he
a mart.rol the exact tit- and II can
be so~thing by wa y of obelsaflC(&gt;
to the people whose honed verbal
appetites created the need for such
a word, which ttK&gt;rPfore came Into
being. Call II supply-side linguistics; but whatever you call II, pray
be thanldlll that someone invented
the word 'velleily' and that a few
refuse to permit II to die, even as
others would die to preserve ttK&gt;

Cardinals .bomb
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Sports Writer
Joaquin Andujar, who plwn ·
meted in one year from World Series
hero to a 6-16 loser, ts making like
Babe Ruth this year. Both on the
mound and at bat.
The St. Louis Cardtnal right ·
handerequalled last year's win total
Tuesday by beating the Allanl&lt;t
Braves 9-1 and chipped In with a
grand slam homerun- lhatllkf'the
legendary Babe he called befor!' he
hit.
In other National League games
Tuesday, the Chicago Cubs beat the
Cincinnati Reds, 6-3; the Pittsburgh
Pirates edg!'d the HoustonAstros3-2
in 10 innings; the Philadelphia
Phtllies crushed the Los Angeles
Dodgers 12-l; the Montreal Expos

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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MIDDLEPORT

�Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomen~y-Miclclleport,

Ohio

Wednesday, tkly 16, 1984

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

PomeR1y-Middleport, Ohio

Carpenter's home run gives
Meigs big win over Belpre
ROCK SPHI ~GS - Junior third
basPm&lt;::l!l J ay Ca rpt:"n tPr ddllec.l a

pitching gavp Meigs an Important
win over TVC rlval Belpre here
Tuesday.
T he Marauders collected bu t
thre&lt;&gt; hits off Belpre righty Todd
:l~2

1hrf"f'·run homer O\ 'C' r the 330
leftfi el d markpr in the first inning
and Juninr Da n Thomas· finC'

Baker, but they camp tn succf'ssio n

in the first frame. With one out.
Scot1 Gh!'&lt;'n singled, Trey CassPII
singled. and clean ~ up hitterCarpen·
fPr did PX8Cf]y that with his rourth
hom~r of the year.
The victory was of major impor ~

We Ra181Va The
Umit QuantitiM

l ance as the Marauders now own a
half ~gamP lead over Belpre in the
tight Eastern division race. Belpn•
needs to win their final tv.ro games
tWarren and Federa i ~ Hoc kingl to
havr a shot at t~ring the MaraudPN,
if Meigs can def ea t Jowly
Nelsonville ~ York tonight at Mdgs.
Meigs i&gt; 9~3 and Belpre is 8~ 3 . Coach
Tim Saundt•rs' l Tl'W is now 10-9 on
the vear.
Thomas fanned 13 batters while
walking only thre&lt;&gt;. Belpre's only

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHPRICES IN EFFECT THRU SAT., MAY 19, 1984
\

two runs ramr on a t wo-run homer

by the Eagles· aii ~ TVC ca tcher
Mike Meriwether following a .Jay
Lockhart single in the fourth .
Thumds escaped a cri tical sixth
when Belpre loaded the bases with
one out. Belpre's Newberry missed
the ball on an atte-mpted suicide
sq ueeze bunt and Meigs' aii ~ TV C
ra trhe r G hf'en tagged ou t BakPr at
the plate . Thomas then fanned
N~wberry to end the threat .
Belpre 's Baker fannPd fi ve anrl
also walked thrC&lt;'. He allowed on!;
one MPigs runner as far as SC'C'ond
hasp after lht• first inning.
"Our kid s showc•d " Jot of h1Jis.
get ting only three hits and still

.--~

\\'inning a big gamC'. I thou gh t wt:&gt;

,»;'

'\'%:.

played outstanding defense and
\\ith 13 strikeout s. ~·our chancPs for
mistakes are limited I like to thank
the fine turnout of"fans." said Coach

('H£( 'K.~ SWING- Ml'igs'

Nkk Bush checks his swing intimeforball
lour during Tu!'Sday night's import;Ult TVt' encounter ag-.UIIS( Belpre.
Mei~ won 3-:! to n:~main in the confert•nct- race. ,Jay Carpenter's three
nm honwr and tht&gt; pitching of Dan Thomas, provided the margin ol

Sa unders after th~ gnme.
By innings:

\'id.ory·.

n;1krr rl .P1 :rml
1\\P i a nd (JhN ·n

/ From the WiJd...
Jly KEI'nl WOOIJ
.\1Pig-~ fount~·

Gamt• Proh•dor
Th&lt;· Oh10 'Pring turkt'\ SL•ason
cndf•d
\ ' f'l~\

(In

S ~Jturdd\ ·.

i ' \('f']]('n!

VLn· 12 . \\·ith a

Shl.SI Jn

ftJ I-

lhU ~ ('

&lt;.ll"f' th r top 10 llal'\'f'St coun tiPs for
r his .H ' J r.
Vinton, 2:11: Hocking. 1&amp;3: Ross.
~n: J ac kson. n6; Ml'igs and Athens,
"'i:i; Holmt&gt;s . 54, Pern·, 4R; AJarns
and C a llia, :~; Pike . .1:1; LawrPnce.

t'tll"l\· mnrnin g g nbhlr· r hums. Thf'
SUCCI'SS (U] h;H\'f'St ra n he&gt; attrib·
utC"fl rn an incn·o;~ sr in hunff'N and
~ond w c t~thf' r cond itions. Thf' 1 ~*44
season br•gan on April 2.~. tlnd
continu r d throug h Ma\ 12 . MPigs
( 'ounr\ r;t nkP(] fifth in ltti' si~1 ! P
along v,-ith Attlcns Cnunl\ u ·ith a
IoL-II (1\ :l;, hire! &lt;.; tl dl"\'f's tf"'d . Sr.Jtf'\\: i(Jf' un offici ;Jll\" wa:-; l.lK.·~ birds.
I'Omp cm"C.l rn la st .v ear ·s ha rvrs t ot
71).1 hm.h . :\ f(l !dl of :n countif'sn
Ohi1 ),., X.'&gt;\ cuuntiPs ;trr pc•rmi!IC'd to
hunt tht • o..,pri11 ,1.; lrunr Li&lt;.;~f'(j t&gt;&lt;•low

:lO
To thosf' su ccC'ssful turkey hun ·
IPr~. congTatula tion s on a job WC'II

done. To thos~ of us thai didn't gel a
turkP~'.

wPII. you can het wP'll
probabl.\ · bf' ri ght back out thf'n" for
th(• 198.'&gt; Spri ng hunt with antic ipation of" gf'tli ng onC' of rhosP war:;
birds For now \.\.IC''II just g('t out and
fish until nf'xt fall Wh('n the hunting
season ix'gins agam. Ha\'r a sa f"P
1.1nd f'njoyablr summE'r SC'ason anrl

FISH OH IO.

COU ' VJHt ·s. Ohio 1.\Jl , - Thr· '-trJn '11 rhr athlf't r wh(J h1.1s sprnt yf~ars
(;t &gt; int l n~ rm~·a1 d d n i Jl\ m~.J&lt; ~~ ,JrJ m('&lt;.l&lt;JJ J.c., d familiar onf' . Then thrrc• s thr
c·~ I S ( · of Darin ,\ ll f•n
!\1!1 ·n. I lilt · 1)f • •1ght find, '"'" 1n 1h~&gt; l:lh· JJound class for t.hP Olympic OOxing
1rial~. :-.; 1\ .... ~w r. 1·\ • ·: :.._;1· • • : .; " , ( 'd r ·~ J .os A ngPIPs Gamt&gt;s a Sf'rlOU-" 1hough!
unt ill··~ ·b n.Jd r'. . ·•· h• ·r 1 • .~, k ·.~ ~ r --: J not hPr f.1m ily mrmlx&gt;r turned his thinking
"r\Jund
' \1\ brr ilhf ·J 1[1 , ,.- . n ..l rl i · mr·co met om\'Sf'nSf's, "AJ IC'n sa id . "J-Irm ad(•
m P J"f': lli;r [ \I.;J ..,\ \ (J&lt;...!Jngm·,· talrnt ·
.-\lit ·n h;1d l:x ·~ n 11llc· "&gt;tnu· thf• Ohio Staff' Fair tournamPnllast .. \u gust until
F ebr11an ( Jn t"f· hr· I r·o.., umPd trai ning. he mad£' up for lost Ume in a hur-r~·.
\l,·inni ng tfH · ( )J \ mpr( f ·.d~ll' rn Regional tournament in his c lass last wwk
1•\T·n 1ll().n...:h tl\1 · l 'l \"('a r -old npvrr thought of himself as an Olympic
hupdul un r1l n'(nll l·. 1\io.., t·oach, Rill Cummings, has bPPn fon't'asting
.-\llr ·n f: ,,

\ ~ 'J J "

" \lr I ·ummln l!"" b,11 .-: thrPf• or four yedr~ ago, wh 0n WC''d go plares to
li g ht . iu ' ·d, 11',\·;r' ..., 1i 1I j)l'op lf' I hat hf' had a young m a n who was going tomakp
1hr · ":-&lt;.-1 It'. t m r r (';II m · hr· mf'an t mP." AJIPn said
Cummin e" '&gt;&lt;lid .- \ ll1 ·n ·· h ; 1s r·f'al fa st hand s. hf' mO\'f'.S wpJJ . hP can box and
hf' h;p., &lt;1 " U(.I\ ·J"ll ld"l j;dl Hut vnu"vp got to bf'a uniQUE' indi\'idualtO\vantt o
I.Xl\ "

/\ lien. wl1r1 h; t-" d \I )X. 27 ;tm; tlr•u r r'f'f'Ord. sa id. ··It· s J"'f'u!Jy sc:·ar:.·. having t hP
01_
\ ·mpi t Tri;t]..., corn1n~ up ... wh0n y·ou think ab:Ju t all thP fights you've
fou~hr in \!Ill! lih · . .tnd IWI.'.-. vd1 ,tt vou J"l'all.v Wdnh\Cl. it's only thn'Pfight ~
"'Thr·sf• n~·xf thrN· fig ht:-.. 11 .... t.PJI dramatic I m('an. if I los{' one, it'sov('r ··
' lh ' ( l]_\ mpw Iri;1l s op-·n . lunt ' h in Fort v..:ort h, TPxa s.
A llf'n &gt;;; ti d his s hnv./ mg undf'r prf'S." Ul'f' in thf' rPgi ona l toumamPnt
r·on\" lnr·t·d him hP ra n .lf'rnmplish bigge r things.
"'Th i ll "s 1 winni ng tht' rf'hrional1 what makPs mP ff'f'l bf&gt;ftpr aOOut thi s than
an~· thing ·· ht· "; lid . "Thr p rpssun~ wa .'-i thr rr. it was do nrdir. and I handJPd

I
SIGNS FOR COLLEGE
Kim Brown signs a
national letter of intent as her father, Tom Brown,
Pomeroy High School graduate and native Meigs
Countian, and former coach, CUH Hahn, serve a.•

witnesses. The Port Clinton senior is the fiNI player

from the school's girls' basketball program toe am an

Port Clinton ace earns scholarship
Kim Brown. daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Bnw.·n. Port Clinton, and
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs~
Virgil Brown. Pomeroy. has been
JWardPd an athletic sc holarship 1o
Labette Community College in
Parsons. Knnsas.

Last Tucsdil~· after spending the
wrekmd at Labett~. a college with
an enrollnwnt of 1.500 in a
community of H,IXXJ, Brown signed

Brown becomes the first player
flum Port Clinton's girls' basketball
program to receive an athletic
scholarship as a high school recnlit.
She averaged 15.2 points per game
this season and totaled 7'i&gt;l car!'&lt;'r
points as a four~year varsity letter
;vinner~ Her former coach, Cliff
Hahn, sajd thai it is difficult getting
college basketball recruiters inter~
ested in a player whose team won

n'

(H:l x -.l :; o
\1l•m1·r' th N
Tl111 md .~

Celtics
bombard
Bucks
BOSTON tAPt-Duringthepast
two weeks, the Boston Celtics wen•
hardly gratetul toward New York as
they fought for their lives aga inst the
Knicks. Now. they rmlizf'wh a tfhp~·
gained from that hotly cont estPd
seric&gt;s.
As it did in irs four Eastprn
Conferc•nce semifinal v ictoriPs OVPJ

the Knicks, Boston jumped in front

Parlyl'uescta:--· night and cru L5('(! to a
1 19~96

romp owr the Milwauk('('
in the O)X'nPr of their
best ~of Sf'Vm Eastern Conference
final.
''We came out aggressivrly, ·· sJ ld
Celtics' guard Ge-ra ld HPndPrson. " I
have to thank N~w York for this
On('.

Marauderettes post
18-16 victory Tuesday
!{lin: SP HINCS .lt • nn~· Couch'~

Freshman
grand sl am homf'

run p;tcl'd thf' ~1Pigs Ma r aullPretles
In a wile! 18-1 t1 win over Belpn• in
softba ll art ion hrrr Tuesday.

T hl' l\kigs

lasq~s

\..\'Pre up 16·5
innings. but had to survive

aftt'l" fi\'P
11 F::tg1Pit0 runs in their final t\\'O at
bats Tht' M:naudC'rrtlC's are now
Yl·l ov0ra1l :Hld 11 -0 in TVC play.

Lakersdump
Suns~ 118-112
INGLEWOOD. Ca lif. rAPt WhilL' F.arvin ··Magic" JohnS00\1,13S

handing out a rf'C"orcl numtx•r of
assiq s, l..os Angdcs Lakers Coach
P~i t J1ilp:--..: was pJy·ing him a rather
IInif]Uf' c omplim0nt hP wasn't
JraiJ~· notic ing

" Ht•

it PVCi)' nigh t." the
I .;~ker.s coach said .Jftrr .Johnson
had a Na tional Basketball Associa ~

\\'hiiP Milwaukf'f' wrm it ~ co nff'r
f'nrf'semifinal serif's last Thursday.
Boston was ru shc'&lt;i to the limit- the
SPVC'nt h game· h r r l' Sunday·
against the suq:t rismgly stmng

Angf'IPs' 11H·102

Knick s~

Phoenix Suns Tu C'sd ; t ~ · nig ht.

"! 'rn sur&lt;• the fact that thcv had
not plavf'd in a whilr had sornet rung
to do wit h ihPi r starling slow."
Haston forv:ard Cedric Maxwell

lion pla.\ul'f

n"Curd :2-t a r..; sists in Los

A lxlul ~ .bbbar

\ "if'llWV UVPr

thp

sa id of Johnson's

rf&gt;&lt;·onJ outing : '' It d()(&gt;Sn't SUflJrise
11s. He does it all th~ time; he's

said of the Bucks. ''And. I'msurpour

playing Sunday and then toda;·
h~Jpm us . We juq go t right back mto
the now ."

throur:hout his r arf'&lt;'r ..
.Johnson's 2·1 assists rrwrotf' the
pla\'llfl m·ord of 20 set by San

Tiw Buck s, whn sv..T•ptlhe Ce ltic"
in fou r gamPs in las t yC'ar' s
confcrcncP Sf'mifintl ls. ma naged
just six points in thr f"irst sPvPn
mmutes . An H-:2 r ins ing nm brought

them to within 22 ~17 aftcr on ~period.
But Larry Bird, who led all

s(·urPrs wit h 24 point s, sparkt'Cl a Ia tr
surge that put the game
firmlv in the C~Itics' gnsp.

S&lt;'Con d ~ half

l ead ing:li ~ :n,

hcsank

thrf'f' frrf' throv..·s to k~ c k off

a J7.q

burst that stretc hed the margin to
C&gt;'l42 at halftime. Bird had nfnc of
thoS&lt;' l i points. The Crlti~s· lead
ranged from 11 to2.1point s thcrcst of

Meigs plays host to Nelsonville ~
York tonight.
Couch added a single to her bases
lodded homer while Barb Hatfield
and Carol Smith each singled twice.
Also singling once apiece were Jodi
Miller . .Jenny Meadows, Kim Ste~
wart. Debbie Werry. Mary Moore
and Gina Foil rod .
Hatfield won hPr Bth gamP.
hurling the first five innings. Jodi
Harrison cmd Malia Musser fin ished up. Hatfi&lt;•ld walked two and
the relievers nine more. Belprp
pitching walked 10. The Eastern
division champ, Marauderettes will
play the West champs. Wellston. for
the TV\ championship at a Ia1er
dat~.

only two games in two seasons .
In recognition of her outstanding
abllity, Brown this year received the
Lady Redskins' most valuable
player award, and was also pres~
en ted trophies for servingascaptain
and leading rank ip the top lOot Port
Clinton career scoring leaders~ She
also rec&lt;&gt;ived honorable mention in
the Sandusky Bay Conference.
After her visit to the Kansas
school, Brown said that she was
impressed both athletically and
academically. The school's basket~
ball schedule includes opponents
from Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas,
Nebraska, and Oklahoma. The
1Pam a lso com!)('tes in a holiday

The Ouily Sentinel

who've lost ju st one of their 10
p!a)off games this year, a 2-0 edge
ovpr thE' Suns in thf' bPst -of~seven
1
\\ f's lcrn
Confc&gt;rencf' Championsllips . Thr cluh" now swi tch to
Phoc·nix fur gamPs Friday and
Sunda.v .

.Jotmson pla;-C'd down his rf'COrd.
sa _
, ·ing : "Righ t now, it fpeJs good.
but wp have' not Cll'('Omplished
any·thing su bst J. ntial :Vf'l. We can't
sit bac k now and think about

an; thing hut grttmg ready lor
Friila;·.
i\WuUJhbar !Pd thf' well ~
ba lancC'd Los Angeles scoring "1th
21 point s, as spvcn Lakcrs scored in
double figures. .James Worthy and
Hob VlcAdoo came off the bench to
chip in 1~ and 1ti points.

Publl~hl'd

P\"f'r\"

dltPrnoon.

Monda\

" I kept

m .1

clC'dicotinn ;~nrl did what I was supposed to do. J think I finally

pro\"('fl m_v s(•l f to somf' pPop lt• Now it 's ju st thn·lf:) morP fight s. Threr- moff'
fi ght s ··

··we

Sterling Chance wins featured race
COLLJMHLJS, Ohio 1 AI' 1 ~Sterling
Chancr. riddm by Sam NohiP Ill,
ran tht' mile in 1 : 59~:1 to win thf'
f&lt;'a1ured sevent h race at Scioto
Downs TuPsday.
lllt) sop~lomort' colt. m aking o nly
his third Iif~timPstart. picked up his
second victory in !.he featured $2,0CO
pace and pa ld$2.60, 2.~and 2 . ~.
Looped was second, two and
one.quarler lengths back, and paid
$2.40 and 2.~. and Atypical paid 2.40

to show.

Moving Gesture. driven by Scott
Mogan, won the co-featured $2,00o
ninth race with a nine and
one-quarter length vi~tory over
Noble Way .
Moving Gesture paid $9, 5.40 and
4.00~ Noble Way paid $16.40 and
10.40. while Sovereign Sam paid
$1Ui0 to show.
The 4~ 1 -5 trifecta paid $1,SI1.WJ.
Tuesday's crowd bet $225,314.

our tempo."

Milwaukee's shooting was way off
- just 18 percent in the first qun rter
and 42 percent in the gam~ - and no
Buck had more trouble than veteran
center Bob Lanier. He made just one
of eight field-goal attempts and
scored only two points.
What about last year's humiliating playoff losses to MUwauk!'&lt;'?

"It's been forgotten. It's so far
bebind," said Henderson. "If was a
freak accident."

H
](ll ,

1~

1~

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1ti

.':f.l l 1]1,;..

1~

1~

441

17

4.1..1 1:1!,~
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nlio' ;t,g

MinnPSOt
Oaklnd
St&gt;al11
Kansa~

n

"Th"'T mv~JO,\'
~~
lfi
!PI
1i
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lafifornl

Cty

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12
12

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Cube Steak • • • •

t1

]! '

oM;

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11,,

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6t.

.m : .

~r'liGIUTI"""

&lt;·l•"·r&gt;tand

7. Boston:.

SWIFT'S BEEF or PORK

J)ro!rolt fl. Sl-aTth· 4
Chi•·ago ."1 Kansa s 1 lly ~
Tonmlo ;,_ Mlnrv"'tl!ll :! . HI mning ~

SIZZLEAN ... • • • • • •

Gwntos

12 OZ. PKG.

11 1 al Mil"lnf'SI.I!.t

Toronto IAIPXaJldN
IHodl...'t:' I ll

Boston 1E rkt&gt;~ IP\ l ·lr .,, Cl("'l·•·land
rFanO-Il r In!
Calirorru11 rWiTI ~ :! • a1 B&lt;lltlrnon· , J:lo:J
dkkf&gt;r .l." l•. 1n,
Sr o "l•• 1Younc 2'l r ,11 DP1111il 1Wilm x
ar

New

York

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Round Steak • • • •

LB.

·Dcuwln :\41 " &lt;II Milw;wkn• •l'rH

1Hunnl.stf1"

Srocond c ia'"

pu ~ T ;q.;!"

paid :11

&amp;:t:'tlm 11 1 cr, ....(·hmd, 101
;11 Toronro. 1n•
Tt '"a~ at Mllwaukf'f". rn '
Onl\ gam'"' st:twduh&gt;d
:"'IU10~,U. LF..Ata :F
Ct1ir·~~~

j'(J

mr&gt; rov Ohio

Mf'mhpr · Tlw A"'tll" i:r"Pd l'r ·r ,~ .... . In
land !Jail~ · l 'rf'..,~ ,\ ~,llf" l .ttrru :tnd rlH·
Amf'rlcan :\t"·' · ~paJwr · l'uhlhhf'l..., .-\:-.
soc iatlon. 1\;;.~l r nn.J I Adn •r' i !- 1 11~ Ht ' j)l"('
sf'nl a liw•. !1r, tnho~ m ~· ·\' "P·IPt'r Sah'"·
7."U Thrrd ,h ·r·nut •. \r··,.., Y n r·h ~\r·11
Yurk HWI1 7
POSTMASTJ·:H St •nd :tddn•,-., '" Thr •
D&lt;1ily Si•nrrnl'\ . 111 (our! ~I . l 'o nwr&lt;l\
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St 8St"RJPTIO!'oro KATE ~
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a\"ail&lt;-lhlf'

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St .

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COLUMBIA SLICED

lB. PKG.

Bacon ..... .••••••••
2

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Pittsburgh .l Houston ~. fll innm!V'
('hle&lt;q&lt;nli. fl n.-innall 1
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\\'l'dl~v's G!Ulll'N

l'oN· York ITP!Tf' ll :1-l • a t San
clo;n) II A~f"\' ]-&gt;!I
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~aria J.J •. 1n•
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rif'r ma .• r+•rnit in ;Hl\": lnr ·(• di n•cl to
ThP Dnily ~cntinf'l un .'l. ti or 1:! m o nth
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Hmedla, Inc., Pomt&gt;rov . Ohio4~7i.J!l. ~~ ~12 ·
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Ott\-' Rarrlf'!! schl'dulf'd

$~J'I . KI !

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B
.
BAG
Onions • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Leaders

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

KUNS: HJpkm . Ba t1 1mono ..11: Tram

rTM"fl. Dl&gt;lrott . 11 ; Whihtkf"f. Dl'lrol l. ::tl:
Upshaw. TtrOnto. :M: Buii('T", Clp,•t&gt;land.
:n: Dt&gt;ClnN&gt;s. Ca lifornl;~. Zl: C.a11.·la. Tilmnro. t1
RBI : Murray, Balllroort&gt;. l2: Ktnwnan.

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

GRASS $ 99
q. Yd.
CARPET

Brown

or Green

2°/o Milk • • • • • • • • • • •

QUI:IaJ1d. ll: ~'TTtun. Dt&gt;trott . .n : D.lds
28: 1)(&gt;('\nl't'S, Cn lifo mla, "li:

PLASTIC GAllON

Mll54.&gt;bv. Toronlo. ?J
HITS r.arrla. Toronto. &gt;IJ: Trnmm€'11,
Ill'lroil, tl: Rlpkm, Hilltlmol"t'. &lt;l'l: Whl1a
kt&gt;r. [)(&gt;l rof l, 4.'1 ; r.&amp;il. Tumnto. .W

Boo!\(". l'a llfnmta, 10:

[)(L

l'lnt:'es. CaUfornia. 10: GB£&gt;11. Torortlo. M1
P!ICton.&gt;k. Chicago. '1 : Rlpken. BalHmol"l'.
!l: Trammcll, [)('troll, '1: Upshaw. Toronro. 9
llUPU~: RLaw. Chlf'aJi:U, ~ : 01A'f'n.
St&gt;allk&gt;. 4: 7 ar1' fl('(l w ltll J
HOME Rl~ KlnRffian . Oakland. ll:
Rlpkm, Baltlmol"l'. 10: Davts. Sl&gt;attle. 9;
Armas, E!CIIIOO., 8: Ups haw. Torooto. !l.
S'I'OI...EJ",' BASES: Gan:"ia. Toronto. 16:
&amp;tiM", Ot"Vt'land, L'i; &amp;&gt;rna;r_ard. C1P\it'!100. Oakland.

INDOOR/OUTDOOR

BROUGHTON'S

St&gt;attle.

DOUIJl..F.lj:

Office Hours by Appointment Only

3

t\MERI("AN LE.&gt;\Mif(
BA1'TING 11fl a l h&lt;II S I (i,ub':&gt;. Df"
troll . ..nr,: RU!w. C lll("ago . .." li(~ LEWII,
Tonll110. .:fiR: ll"amnwll. Dl!•tmtt . .Y.R;
DtJ,15. St"a1Tlr . .J47

land. 14: Pt&gt;ttls. !&lt;t ll!omla. Ll RHmdrr

PITCHING

10.
r4 d!!ctsluns r:

SOeb. To-

rmlo. ~- 1.(00. 2.15: CaudUI, Ookland, ~

o.

l.IOJ. :uw: .LPa.J. Toronto. &lt;HI. urn.
2.84: !..opel. Dl&gt;!roft. Hl. urn. 1.4.~: Slf'Wan . Baltlmow.Hl, l.(UJ, .L"II: WUCOOI . [)p.

w.

troll.
I.(DJ, J.J2
sntiKDR11"S:: Blylf'\1('1\, l lf"JJ?Iartd. 47:

Stieb. Toronto. 4..'1: MorriS. Dt·tmfl. fl
Nlekro, N~"&gt;'" York. 41 : Smlllwon. Min
~a. 4J: Win, California. 41.
SAVES QuJSmbefTy. Kansas City. !t:
f1~ . Milwaukee. 7: Davis, Mt.nnesaa.
7: Caudill, Ullk land. li; Stanley. Bostm, 6.

GRADE A LARGE

PEANUT BUTTER

Jif •"• •••••••••.2! ~Z~J~R• $}9 9 Eggs ..... • • • • • • • • • • • •
DOZEN

ARMOUR

Treet..

FLAVORITE

Ice Cream

12 Oz. Can

• • • • • •• • •• • ••

••

NATIONAL LEAGUf:
8ATfJNG f70 al 08\AI: Franrona. Mort
treal. .:HI: Gwynn. Sail DleRO•. .162; Bn&gt;n·
b', Sart f'rlllKiiJCO..E; R.alneA. Montn&gt;al.
.M3· Oarll. San l"randiro, .333.
· Rl11'5: Re lnt'8, MontrN.l. :!!: Wlgglrul.
&amp;an DteF. 11; Samuel PhlladrelpNa. :.ti;

""'""""·
Pldlodel- "' Sax. ""' .....
lcs, ...

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. VA.

BUCKET

Cilli "&gt;14

( '&lt;~lifomlct :i. RiiiTlnur• · "l.
;..&lt;t'W York 1!. fluki&lt;Jnd ti
Milwaukt&gt;!• l Tf'll&lt;.l.~ ~

~u t ­

Ohio Vallr.Y Publhhing Comp;un·

tht:&gt;way.
"It· s trw:.•. we had a c hance to I"E'SI,
but that might have worked to our
detriment ," said Marques Johnson,
who led the Bucks with 18 points.
were rested but w~re nrwr into

tfli

l:l
14

Through F'l"ld&lt;~ v . 111 Cou 1"1 Sf rf'f'l. l&gt;v 1h(•

113 SECOND AVE.

Antonio 's .Johnr1_v Moon' last year.
ThP v ictor~' gavP lhl' Lakers,

J."l

Nr"'IN Yrk

fOP\"
I'KIC"ES

POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

~lfl

Cl~·dnd

Sl~4iLI-:

MULLEN INSURANCE

~

MJJwaukP

Ti':&gt;&lt;a~

One YI' ;!J

AND

Pt'l.
GR
.84f\ -

I.

:JI

Oak!Wid 'Wa m'fl .l;,
•F"onwnor 1'-'1• . ' "'

-

II

\\"

,\ Dh·lslon ol Mulllm.-dia, lrH·.

Om• Month

DOWNING-CHILDS

Chicken • • • • • • • • • • •lB•.

t:A...,· r· DM&gt;;JON

(l 'SPS 1-15-96(])

1

Md~~

LEG QUARTERS

11w&gt; ~iawd fln'N"
,\MF..RU "J\N l.F.AlilJE

8.)&lt;

WtG!Mdu:v'~

Brown plans to stuil)' criminal
justice.

By Innings:
tOO Hl.1 R- IG ~
I}R:J 102 .'I - lK 12

Majors

tournament in Florida

0!1in

Gt· lpr·f'

Scoreboard

d(I('S

ama?ing with his talC'nl s and it' s
somPthin g he has clone all yrar and

Milwaukr&lt;', which will try to even
the Na tion;~! Bask~tball A ssoci ation
playoff sNiPs hc•n· Thursdav night.
ncvpr did.

several thousand hWJters in the
state to bag a "deceitful turkey."
Thl• 19 pound gobbler sporting il
10" heard wa.• taken in Meigs
County May 5.

athletic scholarship riglot out of high school.

tOt 2rll !1-2 7 o

MP!~ .~

With Boston

,J\Ad \ .

BAGS TURKEY - Steve
Erwin of Chester joined the
ranks of the exclusive few of

hf:•r nat ion a l ll't1er of int ent .

Bucks

Ohio
Sportlight

~u cc r'"" ! fJI"

Fk&gt;lprf' ..

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

PH. 773-5554

RBI : CartA". Montrelll, J:J; Sdlmldl.
~ ll; Waahlnlltoo, Atlalrta. 27:
CJart. S&amp;a F'T8ndle0, Z: Devil, CNCftitl,
2 5 ; Marshall, {.(a A.~ '25:

Me-

San '"""'· ...

ll11'!t (JwyM. ... '"""''

LEMONADE
8 Qt. Can
#8A 105~ 050+8

PAPER TOWELS

$149

Jumbo

Roll

Limit Ont Per Customer

At POMIH's
Expit'IS Sat, May 19, 1984
Only

(I;

Ramel,

Morltr9l. ti; ~. Mr:.ltft-111., &amp;.\;
S o m o o l . - &lt;0; Sand...... CN~
cago, tl: Sax. Lol A.nge&amp;es. ...

E RIBBON

COUNTRY TIME

•

•••••••

3/Sl

limit Three Per Customer
Good Only AI Powell's
Offer Expires Sat., May 19, 1984

•

. COUPON •••••
. . . ..
- CLOROX BLEACH
Gallon

79¢

limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offe1 Expires Sat., May 19, 1984

�~The

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Mr:Jy 16, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
be held at 2 p.m .
At gradua tbn ceremonles, Lee
Dill will give the valedictory address
and Laren Wolfe the salutatory
address.
Presentation of the class will be
made by Bobby Ord, superintendent, recognitions by James Adams,
principal.
Gary Evans, president of the
board of educatbn will present the
diplomas.
The band wlll present the proces-

Southern
graduates
74 seniors

Graduaton ceremonles for 74
seniors will be held at Southern High
School in Racine Sunday, Maya!, at
8 p.m . BaccalaurPate services wUI

slonal and recessional, " Pomp and
C!rrumstance."
The Invocation will be given by
Debbie Michael and benediction by
Corey McPhall. The band will
present three numbers, ''A Festive
Occasion," "Still," and "How Do We
Say Goodbye."
The Rev. James Clarkwllldellver
the sermon at Baccalaureate
services.
The high school choir will present

the processional and recessional,
Pomp and Circumstance under the
direction of Mrs. Lee Lee.

The emir will also present
"Festival ADelula" and "Rlsln' Out
of My Soul."
The Invocation will be given by
Rusty Flagg and the benediction by
Anne Adams.
Members of the senior class are:
Anne l...own' Adarris, Brian Mltc hPil Allen,
Cindy Jo Allefi. Jane Ann Ambergor, Samuel
l..t't" Amburgt&gt;y . Martin Donlin Andrew,

IW&gt;dy Allen Annes. MltcheU Thdd Bab,.,,
Rkhard Allen Bable. Jenny Lynn Bfontley,

Amv Lou UttleHeld, Rodnt&gt;y Childs Lltth&gt;f!cld. Hugh Corson McPhail, Jane Lee
Manuel, Tracl L~·rm Meanl!i .
Becky Jo Michael, De-bra Lef. M ichael,
t.aura t.ynn Michael. Cmd lt&gt; Lou MIJHron,

David Arnold Bryant , Kimberly Sue Buckley.
James Matthew Buah. Trevor Lee Cardon£'.
Clltton Wade Connolly,, Keith Allen Cook,
Pa u1cla Iva Pauley ; Erich Lewb Phllson ,
Orenda Lynn CUnningham, Erk' Dean
CUnnJngham, Kevtn Leo Curfman, AntOOny · John Philip P:lckens OJ. Linda Dtane Proffi tt.
AliCE' F av Riffle. AnthOny 8 r1an RJI'fte. M ark
Wayrw Dreem. Usa Rl&gt;~ IJeem , Daniel
·Allen s.lrser , Ste ll:l LOuiSe Sarson, Ernest
Michael De~. Gregory Alle n DuVall.
Sl:&gt;llPrs. Rhonda Kay Smith, Kat rina SnodGerald Lee DUI, Jr _
grass, Me lls~ JunP Sl:over, Dennis Dwayne
Timothy AliMl Evans . BruN" Wa)1lP
Teaford. Troy Eugene Ward, Dorothy DaJpne
Fisher , Steven PhJIIip F'~ hcr , RussPII Charles
Warner , Geor ge Danl("l Waddle, Julie Ann
Flagg, Gary J oe F oley J r .. Kimberly Ann
Wtllls , Charles Bryan Wolfe. JOSi"ph Androw
Sayre Gtullan. Lam· E dward Harmon. Paul
\\'olfc.&gt;, Laren Mae Wol fe, Thomas CIE'nn
Brya n Harris . Beth Ann Hart. Jason WaynP
\\'olf&lt;', Carrie Mali(' Young and G le nn
Hut, Richard Brtan Hlll. Tina Mali(&gt; Hill ,
Francis Young
Sherr\ Lynn Bt&gt;ll Holma n. Brian Lf'&lt;' Hunt .

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Wednesday, Mr:Jy 16, 1984
Page

7

Hockingport revival scheduled

Rebecca J('an Johnson, M ark AIIC11 K lmPS.

New Spring Cr,op

'
.

-~

""'

I

'-~ :'

/

The Hockingport United Metho- fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!
dlst Church will hold rev ival
services at 7 p.m . beginning
Wednesday with a hymn sing and
concluding with homecoming servi ces on Sunday at 2 p.m .
Royal-Aires Evangelistic Team
of Columbus will be at the
homecoming services on Sunday .
Rev . James BonDurant , an Ohio
evangelist who conduct s Agape
evangelistic Services across America, will be the featured speaker.
May 17-20. He has pastored Methodist Churches for 15 years, preached
evangelistic services , youth and
~­
family camps, and camps meet .
ings, took mission tours to Haiti In
1966 and Honduras in 1970-71, tou!'Pd
the Holy Land and the Lands of Sl.
Paul in 1972 and In 1980 spent thre
weeks preaching in conventions In
South India . He founded the
BonDurant Agape Ministry In 1969
FOR BOYS, GIRLS, STUDENTS
and is now PXf'('utive difE'Ctor of
BonDurant Agape Min 1st ry
MEN &amp; LADIES
Bowersville.
BonDurant beli eves "t hat the
es.sence of God 's nature Is Agape Ia
Greek word which means the divin e
OUR SALES PEOPLE WILL
love ot God 1 and that agape is God's
BE WEARING THEM FOR
answer lo the needs of man kind and
THIS PROMOTION
the society in which we live.··
In cooperation with BonDurant
Agape Ministry, the Hockingpon
United Methodist Chu rch has been
Involved for several weeks In
prPparation forthe agapeevangelislic service. according to Pastor W.
Eric Starr. The public is invited to
attend.

"STRIPES ARE
TOPS
IN
BOTTOMS"

~

•
•
•
•
•

AND DAN'S HAS

20°/o

THEM
OFF
ALL STRIPED

DENIM JEANS

Ear

THURSDAY-SATURDAY

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
foth of 1he1• od.,•nl••d ll•m• 11 requl••d to be r•od lly o ... ailoble lor 1ole
In ecJ(h t(rov•r Store ••tept ot tpedl/( o!iy not•d In lfth ud . If w• do run
out of on odverflted it•m w• will aH•• you your &lt;:hole• of o &lt;: Ompon;~b~
when ovo llobl• . refl•ctlng th• tam• to.,ings oro rolnchec• which
"' Ill •ntttl• you 111 purcha1e th• ad.,•rth•d lt•m of th• ad.,•rtlt•d prlc•
within JO doyt O nly o n• v•ndor coupon will b• ou•pted per item
p..,rc hot•d

HONORED - Given spedal recognition at Senior
Citt.rens Day Tuesday were Frankie Mwnaw, 95,
Synacuse, seated, and standinl(, Jelt to rldtt, Roscoe

It•"'-

Meigs Senior Citizens honored

TOTAL SATISFACTION vUARANTU
f.,•rythlng you b..,, o l M:rou•• it \jiUIHDnl••d for your fatu i urli1foction
r•go rdl•u a f man .. fa ctur•r If you ore 11111 tOfltfl•d II: tOte• will r•ploc•
you r lte,., w i th th• Ill"'• brond o r o !o mparobl• bra,.d o r refund you•
pur&lt; hot• gr i&lt;l

COPY liGHT 19/!14 THE KROG ER CO IUM5 AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY MA Y
13 THR OUGH SATUR DAY M,t, 'l' 19 19114 IN C.ftrpolrs •~ Poi!Woy
WI IUSfiiVf THE IIGH1 TO LIMIT QUANTITI£S NONE SOlO TO OfAlERS

Lipton
Tea Bags

$

KROGER
WELCOMES
YOUR FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

08

Vidalia
Onions
lb

''

·!

sgc

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Llt!'rary Club memhers
will me&lt;&gt;t at the home of Mrs.
Ricahrd Owen, Rock Springs
Hoad, 12 noon Wednesday.
From there they will go lo the
University Inn for a luncheon
followed by a tour of the Ohio
University Inn.

Crest Toothpaste

GET ONE

Ripe, Sweet
Cantaloupes

c

6.4-0Z. TUBE Crest Toothpaste

FREE!
Clorox
Liquid Bleach

c

KROGER GRADE A LARGE BROWN EGGS DOZEN .

NON RETURNABLE
TAB, SPRITE .

Diet Coke
or Coca Cola

Serve 'N' Save
Wieners

MIDDLEPORT - 1 ne a nr1ua1
mother-daught er banquet or the
Middleport Pres byt er ian
Church will be held at fi: :10 p.m.
at the church fellowship hall.
Me at and dessert will be provided and those attending are to
take a cooked vegetable or salad
dish.
SALEM CENTER - Meigs
County Fire A'i&lt;;OCiation will
m eet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at
Salem Township Fire Station in
Salem Center. Program on
ventilation.
CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees will meet In
special session Wednesday at 7
p.m . to appint a township clerk .

Happenings
POMEROY - The annual
Meigs Junlor High School vocal
concert will be held Friday
evening at 7: 30p.m. at the school
auditorium. Approximately a
hundred seventh and eighth
graders will participate In the
program. The program will
include a variety or music along
with several specialities with
dance routines. The publlc Is
Invited to attend the free concert.

93'

Holly Farms
Pick Of The Chix

Middleport Alumni banquet and
dance will be held May 26, wi th a
buffet dinner to be served at 6: 30
p.m. Armand wlll provide dinner
music .
The dance will be held following
the dinner from 9 p.m. to l a. m .
Mas ter or ceremonies will the Rev.
Dr. Edward Lewis.
Tickets are on sale locally a t
Middleport Department Store. Per~
sons may also mallr rPservations to
P. 0. Box 355, Middleport or cal l
Carolyn GruPSer at 992-:lR'&gt;.l
Tickets are $10 for alumni and $8
lor guests.

Harrisonvzlle-Scipw
The Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni
will be held May 26, at Harrisonville
School.
Dinner will be at 7 p.m . followed
by a dance at 9 p.m. Deadline lor
reservations Is May 21 and may be
made by calling Harold Graham at
742-:ll.'l.l or Joy Clark at 992-3690.
Adult tickets are $7, dance only $2
and children $3.50.

Chester Alumni Association 's
annual banquet and dance will be
held June 2 at the Chester
Elementary School with the dinner
to be served at 6::10 p.m . by the
Chester PTO.
Music for the dance to follow will
be by the Glen Thoma band with Red
Carr as caller. Reunion classes wUl
be ll919, 1924 , 19:B, 1934 , 1939, 1944,
1!W9, and 195l.
Victor Barr, Ma1y Rose, BUI Will,
and Howard Knight are on the
decorating committee. Officers are
Donald Mora, president; Norma

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK

c

c

MiddLeport

Chester

Junior high concert

12-oz.
Pkg.

CORN DOGS

54 4

WITH FRIES ................ $1 .04

lb. .

ADOLPH'S
~
~

DAIRY VALLEY
"At Tho End

Ill tho

p,,....,,.Ma_,

Bridge"

-....

I

IIIII

~

~
til

,

til

,._.~
.....
Y.OH
. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~
.•.•~_..,.s.u._...

.,

SAVE UP
TO

Mabel Heller, Anna Hart, Ethel
Hoback, Dana Hamm,EdisonHart,
Walter Hoffman, Norman Hellman ,
Iva Johnson, Marcia Karr, Evelyn
Lewis, Mabl Lee, Lessle Luck ,
Helen Lochary, Clara Miller, Mar trio MoUihan , Frankie Mumaw ,
Mabel Meller, Hazel McCallum.
Uswin Nease, Edith Oakland, Cora
Pullins . Junie Pierce, Esther Price .
Ben Quisenberry, Henry Roush .
BPrtha Randolph. Gladys Robson.
Maude Ross, Dora Roush, Ora
Price. Sammie Ra irden. Cora
Roush , Esta Roush. Bertha Russell.
Floyd Richards, Harley Roberts.
Frank Samatovietz, Edythe
Spencer, Bertha Spencer, Julia
Stewart, Fern Stansbury, Goldie
Swartz, Jessie Saunders, Clarence
Triplett, Maude Van Meter, Gamel
Williamson. and Mrs. M. E. Wilson.

40%

Reunion
speaker set
in Middleport
Dr. Edwam W. W. Lewis.
Henniker . N.H . long a booster of

McCain, first vice pres ident: Starling Massar, second vice president : Dale Kautz. third vice
preside nt ; Roy Christy. fourth vic~
preside nt ; Mildred Gaul. secretary ; Dorothy Karr. assistant
secretary; Maxine Goeglein. treasurPr: a nd Betty Newell. a ssis tam
treasurer.

science, master of arts, master of

Rutland
The Rutland Alumni banqu et and
dance will be held May 26 wilh
dinner at 6: 30 pp.m. followed by a
dance.
Reservations are S7 and may be
made by sending to Rutland Alumni
Association, P . 0 . Box 125. Rutland.
Ohio 45775 or they may be pur-chased
at Rutland Department Store or
Miller Brothers in Rutland.

Racine
Ra cine Alumni dinner and dance
will be held May ~6. withdinnertobe

ON
SELECTED
STYLES

The brand that fits~M

DAN'S DEPARTMENT
STORE
MIDDLEPORT

Middleport and Meigs County , will 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
be retummg to Middleport Me mor- j.
ial Day weekend.
Lewis will be returning to at tend
the 50th reunion of his graduating
class at Middleport High School, the
class or 1934, and ....ill be speaker at
the Middleport High School Alumni
reunion on Saturday nlght. May 26.
and will speak on Sunday morning,
May 27, at 10:30 a.m. at Heath
United Methodist Church.
SUPERIOR 8IG RED
The thin! of nine c hildren born of
the late Mr . and Mrs. George Harry
Lewis of Middleport, Lewis holds
lour degrees , including a bac helor or
HOMEMADE

Alumni events set

WEDNESDAY

6.4-0Z . TUBES

Grade A
Large Eggs .

Hollon. Chester, 89; Mrs. Llllian
Gress, Mddleport, 88. and Early
Roush, Racine, !§l.
Mrs. Brown noted that Lula
Murray. 103. Is now at the
Ravenswood He alth Care Center,
and that Maude Balley, 101 and
Belve Groce. 10&lt;1. are at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Other Meigs Countlans on the90to
99 year old list rPad at the
obs.irvance werP Ora Arix, Ottle
Boston. Edith Burton, Lena Baxter,
Maude Betz, Violet Cole, Hazel
Curtis, Mabel Cleland, Sylvia Carpenter, Grace Colweil, Ethel Chapman. Faye Dunlavy, Nora Damewood. Helen Douglas, Estella
Deem. Mary Furbie, Hattie Frederick , KatieGuth, BlancheGUkey,Joe
Guess, Nora Gilmore. N01ma
Goodwin, Ada Gilliland .

Calendar

I

36 SIZE

KROGER

Senior citizens over 80 were
recognized and given corsages and
boutonnieres at the annual observance of Senior Citizens Day held
Tuesday at the Senior Citizens
Center.
Approximately 150 persons at tended the dinner and program with
AI Smlth of Athens, representing the
regional office. as a speaker along
with several county officials. Group
singing was led by Ron Ash with
Jennlfer Sheets a t the piano.
Local committee for the observance was composed of the Rev.
William Middleswarth, Mary Frances Bumgardner. Margaret Brown
and Edith Rizer.
Recognized as the oldes t person
attending was Frankie Mumaw of
Syracuse. 95.
Others receiving
special recognition were Roscoe

!

100-Ct.

Kroger 0.5%
Lowfat Milk __ ..

Ullian Gress, Middleport, 118,

Hollon, 89, Chesler, Mrs.
and Early Roush, 88, Racine.

theology and doctor of divinity. He is
listed In several "Who's Who"
publications. has traveled ext ensively both in the United S1a1cs and
abroad.
Speaking at Heath United Methodis t Church, Lewis ' topic will be
"The Unfinished Biography." The
church is extending an invitation 10
all residents who would like to renew
their friendships with Lewis. The
late Art "Pappy" Lewis, All
Ame rican and professional fool ball
player who la ter coached at
Mississippi State and West VIrginia
University was a brother of Lewis .
At the Sunday services. the Rev.
Robert Robinson, pastor of Heath
United Methodis t Church, will
present Bibles to the l!JJ4 graduat es
of the church.

BOLOGNA ...............l.B. ••••• 97¢
HAM SALAD ............l.B. .. s1.59
SUPERIOR
BULK WI ENE RS.......l.B.. $1.4 9
SMITHFIELD
BOILED HAM ..........l.B. .. S1.98

OHIO COLBY lONGHORN

3 lB . BAG R[O DELICDUS

CHEESE ...... .. JL 11.59

APPLES ......... J~s;.. s1.29

12 OZ . KRAFT SINGLES
16 SLICE SWISS PROCE SSED

NEW GREEN

CHEESE ......... r~li-. 1 1.95
t lB KRAfl PARKAY QUARTERS

MARGARINE ... rAA. .... 89 1

CABBAGE ...... JL ... 37'
LB . NEW YEllOW

ONIONS ........ JL s1.59

1 LB. BOOTH

•===========:;'"" PERCH FILLETS .......~~&lt;~. s1. 99

served at 6 p.m. at Southern High
School.
1
Mysteries of the Orient Is the
theme and James Ca rnahan wUI be
the speaker.
The semi- formal dance will be
from 9 p.m. until midnigh t. Music by
Gary Stewart quintet.
Tickets for the alumni are $6 and
must be paid in advance. Admission
a! the doorfor the dance Is $4 .
Alumni officers are Jel'f Thornton. president. Janis Carnahan ,
Betty Wagner . Dale Hart a nd
Barbara Pierce.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Syracuse. Oh .

Ph . 992 -5776

2 LB. BANQUET ASSORTED PIECES

FRIED CHICKEN...... ~ll~. s3. 49

NOW OPEN

FOR SPRING SEASON
Complete line of vegetable &amp;
flowering plants. shrubbery . fruit
trees, Azaleas. Rhododendron.
House Plants · 4" to 10'.
foliage &amp; Blooming Baskets
Open Daily 9 to 5
Sun. I to 5

20 OZ. DEL MONTE

PINEAPPLE CHUNKS .~~~ .. 89¢
16 OZ. DEL MONTE WHOLE

GREEN BEANS ... .z.c~~s ;s1.19
10 OZ. VIENNA

NEW
SHIPMENT
BLOUSES, SLACKS &amp;
BERMUDA SHORTS
SGOO to S1200
2 PC. SUITS S1495
ASSORTED COLORS
--

--

•

4• -

~-

!FACTORY OUTLET
IN THE REAR OF SIMONS PIC-A-PAIR
IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

HOT DOG SAUCE ... .z.c~~s/99¢
7'12 OZ. CAN CARNATION

SPREADABLES ........~~~. s1.29
175 COUNT KLEENEX WHITE

FACIAL TISSUES ............ 79¢
9 OZ. KEEBLER FUDGE MARSHMALLOW

COOKIES ................~~&lt;~-. s1.19
7% OZ. CHEEZ-UM

PRING LES ...............~ttllr. s1.19
16 OZ. VLASIC KOSHER BABY DILL

PICKLES .................J.AA. s1.19
101f• OZ. CAMPBEll'S CHICKEN

NOODLE SOUP ..... lc~~~.. /79¢

�8-The

Page

Daily Sentinel

l'omero~

Middleport,

16, 1914

Ohi o

Ecology p
conducted
America, Camp lO!lll. Alfred
The chldren studies environ·
menallnformatlon, planted Dowers
and trees o n the sch ool grounds.
made ecology posters , and planted
flowers for Mother's Day. Designed
to build awareness of ecology and
environmental Issues. the project
led c hildren to improve and beautify
their unmedla te natural surround·
lngs. Modern Woodmen of America
seeks to mvoive youth in the
protection and preservation of
natural resources for the present
and future gen erations

Nonce 15 hereby q 1ven that
( o n co nn~t• Bell Lonq D•stance.
lnr has apploea to The Public
to

Comm•S&lt;;

nn 1 w r •11 P"' &lt;;JJie
mPnT dP!I I n q &lt;;,1 11 IP , ISO n•, ~ I\

hP Hln(J Ill l' l

,1fl u1 ,1\II S t o !""" P

f)r
&lt;;

&lt;'

'l1,1t1PI

Cl•"'l u1t=&gt;rl on
bm •ltr'o 1 b y thP

H am~!

E

of Ga llipol iS

rPSJXJnsJblt:&gt; for da\ to-d on su pervJ ·

began work rccPnlly HS Extpns1on

sion of v.urkt'J s m thr ExtPnsion
Dt:&gt;partment, a nd f01 st:' IPCt JOn a nd
pU! chase of matPnals
As Exten sion Llbra n an, -; h('

Consult an! for ! he Ohto Valle\" A rPa
L ibraries !OVAL! tn WPIIston
As Ex t~n s lon Consultant Ms
Hamel wlll be rPsponstbl ~ for the
federall\ funded boo kmobtte a nd
boo k~

~ Pn. ICPS

b' m.ul

hdped d evelop

lool
r a llf'd Commu mt\ Stop Ana l\ s1s

prO\ 1dC'd m

a research

w hich analyzes a C'ommuni tv 's
!)Opulallon, dtstance from a hbran.
an d other factor s which would he lp
.:t local hbr a I!' staff and Board of
T r ustees locatc the best Sli Ps fat

eoopPr Cl!l(Jn v. ll h local public llbr ar

1rs m A lhl'ns. Hocki ng, .J ackson.
Ww1r nrP. Mf'tgs Plck;.t \A. a\, Pikl'
Ross. Sc1oto. a nd Vtn ton Countt cs
Sh(' \\111 a lso sen. E" as ronsult&lt;Jnt to
m f'mlx&gt;r hbt dllf'.s 111 the areas of

ixX&gt;km oblle stops

In 1983, the OhiO I lhrHr\' Assoc1a
t1 o n a warded Ms Hamel th£' D1ana
Vf'Sf'Phus MPmon a l Award Th1s
award IS g1ven annuallv to an Oh1o
L1branan who 1s under liJ yPars of
agp or who has w orked fl vf' yPars or

J nd OUfff'dCh Sf' IV \CC'S
Ms Hamrrs appomtme nt IS c1
promotion from hPr pnor pos ttion
as Extf'nsiOn L1brartan for OVAL
In th1~ position shiP \l.as dlrff tlv
E'Xff' n SIOn

!ewer 1n the library profess ion. To
qua!tfv lhe mdh'1dual must s how
ou lstandmg promise in suc h areas
as the d evelopment of innova tivE'
m e thods and program s for out re-ach ser VlCf&gt;S a nd expansion of
l1brarv se"·tN's to all prople of the

l~ y
MFJI'y
..,, ' " l,l ;

Ar' r

CJ•

A mother-daugher ba nquet was
hel d Thursday evenmg at lh&lt;"
Middlepor1 F'U"st Bapttst C hurch
Nadtnf' Bar1on had the b lessm g
pn:'CCdlng a chtcken dmner served
bv Carolyn DavLs Donna l.ru&lt;"ser.
Mmily n W!Utams. Am~ Roush.
H o lly \\'til tams a nd Tracy Grueser
F'or entena mment Tasst Cum
mms sang "" I i\m a Promise· w tth
mustc b~ Chris Rouse. Beulah Whit&lt;'
hod spec tal rmdm~'S and Manha
Klem ;md Durma C1 ueser gav!'

1

Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks
Our sincere thanks
to everyone who
sent cards. flowers, prayers during
the loss of our
loved one. Your
kindness will always be remembered.

devol tons. Amy RollS(' sang ""I'm So
G lad ""
The women enjoyed "" Mothet' s
Exe11enres" with Ca th&gt; Riggs
winning the prtze for the best

fonner Linda Fisher, San Diego,

CaJH.,

announce the birth of their
first child, Ryan ,John, sev~'ll
polll1d'l, 12 oonces. C.rnndparents
are Mr. and Mrs. ,Jhn Navaroli,
Dayton, and Doris Fl~er, R.a·
cine, and Philip Fl~her, Radne.

Bolyard

Hawthorne
birth announced
Mr

Mise Merchandise

Good Used Gas &amp; [lee Dryers .
Washers to mate~ . Upnght
freezers SptA Was~ers GE.
Whirlpool Maytag

studen ts have been
sel ec ted throughout the TV:J vtew·
tng area for the honors. a nd from
M eigs County. Lee Dill of Southern
Hrgh School and Paula Swmdell
Chancey of Meigs High School were
selected
Dill will be featured dur1ng public
SC'rvice announC'E'ments whi ch w erE'
!aped at a lunchron for the students
M rs Chancey did not a ttend the
luncheon a t the Huntington Galler·

Real Esta1e General

Bas han

*4"11!i'k'4·cgg·
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Public Notice

hPII! ,tl I for, !J n on 4 , f•no 1o•
Pomcr ('\ Ot '" I' Jl f-,9 tr &lt;;t ll
l or c .t 'ih thr
t n n .~v.n r 1
colla!PI,)I
19 /7 Qldsmroh dP J U r Ht

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3J57 A24502A
1976 Plymou th}_ IJr Ill Mlr
SP.r•al
NJ
VL29C6G 1599'i8
19 76 Chevrolet I Or T111 ' k
Ml1
Ser,al
Ni!

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112
1ft;

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hito&lt;o

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Public Notice

(l N I•1~Hl•l l7q )

Jl &gt;l ' f-d • 'T\f r~, R , 111k ,l nll

S '"'

or•1 1 ( IJr'ln,tny Pn mr•rnv

O ho p
thP n q h t In l1u1 .-11 T h o ~

..,,tit• 1nd to w thrfr ,lw tny o f tht'
ri /1 ()VP r

nll. tiPr ,d

p11 ! ll

IO S~lll

l h o F&lt;~rrrlft r ~ Ban~ a n ct
S r1~orn'l 5. (u rnp ,tnv IPSPfVPS the
r 1r)hl tro rr&gt; t ~&gt;&lt;! ,try o r all horls
Fo,r!hf"r

Siillllll!lf.'d
rwHwr !hP .lbOVP .:!I P SOld lf1
ThP r: r trrdrt• on thf'y i'lrr: rn wo !h no
P~prP&lt;;&lt;;r•d

c r ~m rlrfld warran

I If'S ' l l\ J:)n

151 lf) 17 18

~"·-

il 'ltn

I t S.•~•

r f"&lt;;~'&gt; r V f"i

'M

o•oo

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
~ ~ ' " &lt;&gt; " I " '·l n.- q rvr&gt;n 11 11 r•
S.\1 orrl&lt;~ v M rv ' ' •th t ' •A·I ,11
1 0lll d "• IP II !olo ' 111 ......, ,lit ••

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iootttoo ll...,t

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1 1(

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATlO OF LEROY EtCHIN
GER.OECEASED
C... No 24408 Docket 12
Pogo 416
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF Ft DUCIARY
On Ap11 2!:&gt; 1984 n lhe
MAoq -. :::: ounty Prob.111' l (~ 1 1r!
C:t "'.f' ~ o 244 08 Clara S dyr~
Hi /9 1 Wo lf PFn ArJar! Po one lOy Me•os Cor 1ntv O ho n was
appoonlflrl Admon•slft'lfm: ol lhP

Rober1 E Bw~

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTfiTE OF ROBERT R
YONKER . DECEASED
CaM No 24415 Docl&lt;et 12
Pogo 417
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Apr il 25 1984 111 lhP
MP• f1'· Coun tv Pr obatp Cou n
Ca&lt;;r ' No ) 44 15 Ray L Yo'lker
HHl 3/2 ACR APO NY
09452 wns rmnntntPd bPcu
lpr nl thl' P.StFI!f! ol Ro be•t A
YonkPr r1ec eas.ed latP of Route
No 2 Rod Spr ongs Road
Pomeroy Ohro d S769
Rober! E B11Ck

Proba re Ju d qr

Judge

8..,. I en,1 K Nesselro ad

Bv Lena K Ncssel,oad
Cler k
2 9 16 3!C

e&lt;:tatr n l LP.roy [ rch ong er

di&gt;
IJfP o l Pome1Qy Poke
f-lom~&gt;ru v OhrQ 45769
CI"!JSPd

!/Ji;Yj'df)J

Public Notice

151 ' 'J 16 Jrc

( IPrl1

151

furnace with

THRIFT SHOP

~ud·

M~GKEE
'R,enlt.:*

storage building,
20x30 block garage. Rtght

block
off

Rt. 248, country setting,

'h

mtle

east of

Oil to.
stairs

equrpped

kttchen,

ltvrng

dtntng room

if

U

Co .

Wi II Open May 21st

E

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Vinyl

VIRGIL B. SR .

&amp;

Aluminum

SIDING CO.

We Have the

"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"

Lowest Rates

M9-2860
No Sunday Calls
1 11

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

~,

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Ramodeltng
Rooftng of all Types

LISTING

Beauty

heat

'' bath

2 rm s front

porch and carp:Jrt V1ew ol
nve1 fm only $14000
NEW LISTING- 7 rm 2 story
home 1n RU!Iand on 21evellols
I '6 baths. 2 enclosed porc h~

ftreplace and
wood burne t

room

lor

room addition w1th garage
1ecently added Ma~n house
h~ 6 rooms Use for rental or
1em1XIel lor your home
50'xi00' lui Only $1600000
NEW LISTING Eastern
Distnct - 3 bedroom home.
oo aproXImately I acre Ha~
basement enclosed porch
Some lurnrture. n ~ heat plus
woodburner Out bu1ld1ogs.
patiO $24.900 00

NEW LISTING - Tuppers
Plains · Keller Ave. - One
storj frame wrth 3 bedrooms &amp;
electriC baselx!a rd heat h
nanc1ng avat~ble wrth $500 00
down payment, at 1311. Klier·
est With payment Sllf $381 65
lor 30 years $35,000 00
NEW USTING - lltddleport
12 Un~ lurmshed apart·
ment bu1kltn&amp; good return.
always rented On~ Interested
part""
need call
Want
$69.90000
REALTORS
Henry Cleland. Jr .
992-6191
Dottie Turner 992 -5692
Jun Trussell 949-2660
Jo Hill 98S-4466

2.53 ACRES - Near Southern
H1gh 6 rm home. n1ce bath
central heat lull basemen t 3
ootbuddmgs and good i''den
spot Reduced to $35.000
SYRACUSE - lot 245 ' I 15
and a 7 rm home w1th bath
and
all
u t1 1 ~1es
Askmg

$25.000
POMEROY Remodek!d 6
rms pat~. garage. central heat
and good carpelmg

I

ACRE PLUS Good
renovated 3 bedroom home.
bath. VInyl sKim ~ ce nt~al heat
garden and I&amp; storage
RIVERVIEW -

3

bedroom

frame with central heattng,
bath. basement and 2 porches
COUNJRY RANCH HOM£ - 8
yrs ~d One ftoor 3 Bedrooms.
all electr1c. 2 baths. lull
basement carport . storage and
2 acres
$16.000 - We offer these 2
homes ooe ff . 2 bed1ooms. and
bath Ill MntJieport
MIDDLEPORT - Good 8 rm
stl.ICco oome on tile nver
F11eplace, central he&lt;( basement and mce Sile level klt
INTEREST RATES ARE
RISING - BUY NOW

f.S

FREE PARKING
.
HELEN,CALL
BRUCE
SUE MURPHY
' IIILTON ROUSH

' 992-3325
.
Housin9
H e:1dc{uarter _.,

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
J 14 tlc

35185 Oak Ht ll Road
Long Bottom. OH. 45743

PH. (614) 985-4212
We
Use Von Schrader
Equtpmenl Recommended
by lead1ng Carpet Manu ·

facturers
' FREE ESTIMATES""

FISHING REEL
REPAIR
Parts, Service &amp;
Cleaning

For Garcta. lebco. Sh !·
mano. Johnson. D~awa.
Qutck.

STEVE FINLAW

PH. -985-4266
Rt. I

Long Bottom, Oh

' - - - - - - - - 5-1 4· 1 rna

or 992-7119

Ph. (6141 &amp;43-5425

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

5/2/1 mo

5-8 2 mo pd

All

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH. 992 - 7013
New Chevy Trvck .
FENDER
176.'15
114995
DOORS ..
HOODS
1174.95
BUMPERS
169.95
GRILL .. ...
142.50
184 95
R. SUPPORT
TAtt GATE
IBS .OO
FORD FENDER
169 95
BUMPER . .
16'1 '15

Also Some Car
Fenders Ava•lable

COUNTED CROSS STITCH
DlitC FLOSS
BOOKS
CUSTOM·MAOE FRAMES

THE
DITCHING
SERVICE
GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE LINES

Rqrster for May Basket full of
Cross-Strtch Supplies
THE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WATERMELON
PATCH

614-992-7626
PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF All TYPES

lmcoln Hill . Pomeroy

Open by chance or
Appo1ntment

992-7582

&amp; Stdtng

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

Painting. Coating

Downspouts

NEW--REPAIR

Gutters Cleaned
&amp; Painted

FREE ESTIMATES
All Work Guaranteed

CALL TOM HOSKINS

614-742-2834

Storm Doors

&amp;

Windows

949-2263

3 2 ti n

I 1H I "'"

BUS .: 985-3813
RES.: 985-3837
51711 mo pd

Wolfe

Types Rooftng

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.

Gutters. Downspouts

FREE ESTIMATES

Investigations,
Inc.

PH.

Also Transmission

PH. 446-8038

EUGENE LONG

500

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Available
Anytime

years
""free Est tmates""

One floor 6

-

Installation Available
4/27 / 1 mo

Rt 124 Pomeroy Ohto

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

"FREE ESTIMATES"

20

111 fh

NEW LISTING - Syracuse Needs work but Muse has a 3

DOZER
WORK

Worked in home area

parlor eQUJpmenl , and t.:entral

"Free Estimates"

367-7560--367-767

II

rm home on lg oorner lol Near

NEW

'l'i"

Counry Cert1f1ed
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED
FREE ESTIMATES

Call for free siding estimates. 949-2801 or

216 r . 2nd St.

2 car garage w1th storage

220 E Main, Pomeroy

•TRENCHING
•BACK HOE •DOZER
•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER. GAS . SEWE,_
RAIN liNES

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

AL TROMM
742-2328

BISSELL

Residential
&amp; Commerctal
Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

TEAFOR-D

the hospital Hot water heal
cellar lull basement and ~

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

CHESHIRE. OHIO

BACKHOE
WORK

SIDING

For all your wmng

Reel Estate General

NEW LISTING -

Service

AND

5 15 I mo

needs ; furnaces repatr

'"11'

&amp;

DOZER

Open 9.00 to 5 00
Closed Thursdays

contact

NEW LISTING - 18 ae~es lots
of bonom dnlled well small
house and several outbUikJ
fm a bargam ol $1 2 000

11 1 tf (

Announcemenls
113 W 2nd S1 Po"*oy. OH.

has base·

Pome10y

RT. 50 EAST

Farm Equipmenl

Services

room .

NEW LISTING - NICe 7 rm
home. mod kitchen w1th

10 b 111

3 1 -

w1th

1n Racine. 949-2210 .

S

Parts

and den .

interested

GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583
or 992-22B2

Racme. Oh.
Ph. 614-843·5191

ACCENT

Auth oflled John Deere .
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

TOM'S
SHOE REPAIR

upstatrs has two bedrooms and one bath ;
also

15 Years Experienca

SAlES &amp;SERVICE

Chester.

(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE ·
Down -

&amp; Garages

Roofing Work
Alummum &amp; Vmyl Std1ngs

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Business

UTILITY BUILDINGS

BOGGS

Phone 742-3171
in

New Homes- Extenstve
Remodelmg
Insurance Work
Cui!Qm Pole Bldgs

Stzes Start From 12'xl6'

Insulated Dog Houses

For Treatment Of
An1mals
5/8 / 1 mo.

M l.""Bud"" McuHEE
llloker-Auction Service
Cheryl Lemley.
letgs County Associate

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

All STEEL &amp;
POlE BUilDINGS

G&amp;W

SARAH COVENTRY
JEWElRY

PLASTICS &amp;
SUPPLY

- 10 Fashron Show D1r ec
tors Needed
- No E.~. per renee Nec essftrv
- No Money N eeded
E~~:cellen1 Pay Plans
Earn an $ 800 Jew~l"'l Kit

Wm Tnps and

Pr~zes

Call 992-2063
Between 9 00 A M 5 00 P M
59 I mo

GAS - WATER
SEWAGE PIPE
REGULATORS &amp;
FITTINGS
VOLUME DRIPS
Warehouse

985-3813
Residence

985-3837
517!1

In Memoriam

In lovmg memory of Allee
Holmes Freeland on her
birthday S1ster Dorothy
Roller
The H1lltop 4 -H Club would
lill:e to thank Mr Dtddle
T J 's Pennzotl. and everyone who participated m
the c:ar wash Saturday . May
12 (Would the gentleman
missing back floor mats .
please contact Tern Carsey
at 949 -2455 after d~trk )
Thank you

3

Announcements

SWEEPER and sew1ng ma ·
chme reparr. parts. and
supplies
Ptck up and
del ivery, Oav1s Vacuum
Cleaner. one half m1le up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
614-446· 0294
Cleland Greenhouse. flow ·
ers. flats or pots . hangrng
baskets. vegetable plants .
tomato plants . Geraldine
Cleland Vme and Matn St
Aacme
Flowers for Memor1al Day
N1ce select1on. Cl1ff' s place
Powell St . lower Mtddle port Next to Stonewood
Apts

mo d

S&amp;W TV
AND

APPLIANCE

'DOZER BACKHOE
•RECLAMATION WOAK

•OIL FIELD SERVICE&amp;
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
'CONCRETE WORK
'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
'WATER . GAS &amp;
OIL UNES

JIM
PH .

CliFFORD

992-7201

SERVICE

46353 Scout Ca11111 Rd

tr

Chester. Ohl8
Ph . 985-4269
No Answe1 . Call 91$-4382
We Service All
Makes &amp; Models
Antenna lnstallahon

- DOZERS

- BACKHOES
- DUMP TRUCKS

lARGE or SMAll JOBS
PH .

Serv1ce A1111lable

'St,vrcf' that
Thp

TRENCHER
WATER
SEWER
GAS LINES

-S EPTIC SYSTEMS

Hous! Call s and Shop

Engage-A Car the mo&lt;lern WiY
to drive the vehicle of your
chotce
No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment

- lO-BOYS

-

INTERESlED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
Wed like to rntro&lt;luce you to

992-2478

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box . 326
Pomeroy . OH . 45769

For Faster Serv•ce

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2198

Middlapon, Ohio
1 1l ttc

ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•CtBSON REFRIGERATOR

We Ha'f'e A Full Ti,.
Shop Technician
on Duty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

sso

Thru M onlh of May

McDanrel Custom Butcher
.ng. durmg summer work1ng
f~rst
week each month .
startrng back full ttme f~rst of
Sept 304 882 -3224
PHOTO SPECIAL! Now thrv
May 31 · color repr1nts from
your negat1ves
12 for
$1 .89 May use d1Herent
negat1ve for e111ch pnnt 11
destred Hockanberry Phar macy North 304 - 675 2113
Giveaway

Spayed female . 2 yrs old .
fJJendly English sheep dog.
to good home 379 -2228 or
eve 245 -5648
King stzed bed to g1ve away .
also 3JC 1 2 round swtmmmg
pool Call 614 -245· 6B70
Hay on
4298

share

Cell 446-

5 black 8t whtte pupptes .
part Collie Call 614-379 2168

4 month old male pup Good
w"h k'd• 304 -675 · 7833 .
Small brown and white male
puppy
Good with kid1
304-675 · 5253
4 box clothing for yard 1ale
304 -675 - 1777

TANNED DEER HIDES

985-3561

Su rl oble lor

•Washers •D•shwathers
•Ranges
•Refngerators

•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
451t&lt;

J

ANY SIZE

BASS MOUNTED
FOR

All Mokes

CHESTER--985-3307

FISHERMEN

G love ~

ft r

Reasonably Priced

TAXIDERMY SHOP
New l1ma Rd . Rutland Oh

PH. 742 -2225

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars
J1m Mink Chev - Oids In c
Bill Gene Johnson
446-3672
Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
.wood heaters Swain Furnt
ture, 446 -3159 , Jrd
&amp;
Olive St , Gallipolis. Oh
Wanted to buy standing
ttmber
Call after 6 or
anyt1me weekend s. 614
388-9906 o• 614 388
96t7
Baby furmture 1n good con
d1t1on Call614 256 6674
Buymg da1ly gold stlver
cams, r•ngs. jewelry. sterling
ware, old coms. large cur
rency Top pnces Ed Bur
kett Barber Shop. 2nd Ave
Middleport. Dh 614 992
3476
Cash pa1d for fancy non or
heavy tron beds S 1 60 and
up for certam Me1gs Co
stone Jars
Old t1me cup board
call 1 - 304- 882
2711
COMPlETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE
Beds. tron
wood, cupboards chatrs
chests. baskets . d1shes
stone Jars. ant1ques. gol d
and stlver
Wr~te - M 0
M1ller At 2. Pomeroy Ohio
45769 or cell 614 · 992
7160
Wanted old p1anos Paym g
$20 .00 and $40 00 e11ch
Ftrst floor only Wnte gtvmg
dtrect•ons Wttten P1anos
Box 188 S11rdts. Oh 43946
Phone 614 -483 -1605

Ant1que Steam Organ Calli ope Franzen Brothers Cn cus New Haven Ballpark
May 22 only

Benjie type mother dog and

" CU T OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

Auct1on every Fn 01ght at
the Hartford Community
Center Truckloads of new
merchandtse every week
Consigments of new and
used merchand1se always
welcome. R1chard Reynolds
Auctioneer 304 - 275
3069

Sea the Worlds greatest and
grendest aggregation of ap paloosa ponies at the Fran zen Bros Circus on Mev 22
at New Haven Ballpark

Norge dryer to give away for

Rl"sl

IE

Rick Pearson Au c tioneer
Serv1ce Estate, Farm , An
t1que &amp; l•quidation sales
licensed &amp; bonded 10 Ohio &amp;
WVa 304· 773 - 5785 or
304 -773 -9185

Would like to buy exottc
animals, btrds. etc Franzen
Brothers C~rcus New Haven
Ballpark May 22 only

pans Call 614-742 -2453

''
RADIATOR
SERVICE

Auction every Tuesday
ntght. Pt Pleasant , WVa
Auct Lonme Neal Youth
Center Bldg .• Camden St
614 - 367· 7101 .

Snarlmg ltons and t1gers
await you at the Franzen
Brothers C~rcus on May 22
at the New Haven Ballpark

Call 614 - 992-6737

• 11 "" f"1

Tower ~ Abo~e

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Good Baled Hay Franzen
Brothers Ctrcus New Haven
Ballpark May 22 only

m

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Man 's wat'ch m Bellmeade
If found call Ma Phelfry.
675-1930 Reward

WBtch OkhB the elephant
pull up the Franzen Brothers
Ctrcus btg top at the New
Haven Ballparll: on May 22

4

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Road . 4 month old black and
wh1te German Shepherd
pup Contact Bill Buck 304675-3594

The lady who wanted to
weave my rugs on wh1te
warp. w• ll you please call
614 -992 -3704

THE NEW

Is Expandmg
I R Thts Area

2

Lost. 2 dogs. 1 is black. short
half, medium size mala. no
collar; the other bla ck , tan &amp;
wh1te. amall beagle with
collar. answerstoSua1e Call
614-986 ·3574

9

6

lost and Found

Lost Norwagum Elkhound.
gray-black tipped. Mt. Olive
School area Reward 304678 -2106 m 676·2138.

Employment
Services
11

Help Wanted

'83 LTD

from
Ad 32.
Bashan to
QueenCoVictoria
, somewhere
R1 7 through Pomeroy to
~::~r aree Ceii614 -949 -

8

11

The Daily Sentinel

, Ohio

22

Money to loan
'{ard

Lost 1n v1cintty of Route 2.
between Y and Jericho

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE - PH. 992-2772

Stzes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'

Middleport

From 3 to 8 p.m.
Every Tuesday

facili-

central heal and garage In

RUTIAN D- It you are look1ng
fo1 COUntry liVIng but slill CW
to town tho IS for you 3
bedrOOrT"t\ carpehn&amp; rem1&gt;
deled krtche n and bath.
aluminum ~dtng, storm wtn·
dows and worksoop All oo
llood sae lot tor $19.90000

"""nt•,

c........
• .., a.......
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" ' ' " ' " . , . . . . . .b .. .

0/M"""o"""'"'"' Ron1
t l . ....,. ' "' "'"'

·~ !1&lt;00....

J"l!"""' ll rd' / '"'"' ' ,

""'" ~"'"

'

•. ..··&amp;· .....

' • ~" "''" ' r.-.~•••

I

fuel oil

4 BRs 2 lg walk '" closets

I /fl o• •/ " ' / 1'"11 ° ' '"' ' ~ 1/1'

I

IIWO

ume

U ~ ... "m""'l ''"

I

71JIIoo llt,.c •O&lt; o

H Ptlo '"'So..

11 r, ... , '• *•'•
H 1~,..,.., ""''d•••

tes for the tapings
The seleclions were of the top
ranked high school seruors In Ohio,
K e ntucky and West VIrginia.

I
''
• •«•otn•••
,. ....
I ,.. a-··
11

H ~Ooll""' "' ' " ''d

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

Southern High School

Is At The
Meigs Humane Society

•

ties for woodburnet". 12xl5

dtshwas.her range. d1sposal.
ntce wood cab1nets. carpetmg,

a 3 4 bedroom house lor rental
unit or tenant house Approx 1'4
·~ Asklllg $26.750 00

Lee Dill

Vetennanan

carpeted.

1-(614)-992-3325

hea1ers and vent fans Includes

'I

Dr. Carol Osborne

Phone

g1eenhouses w1ll allow you
extra space Complete wrth

~Jj:

Partially

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
677 lid Ave. Gall1pohs . OH
Ope~~ Da11y &amp;Satu1day 11 16 PM
PH 446 1699

bustnes.s7 Th ree wood frame

f

Velma Ntcktnsly
Assoctato
Ph 742-3092

servtce and tnstallatton

NEW LISTING - Near Portl&lt;lld
- Are you 1n the produce

annouoced
Over 100

and Mrs Timothy D H aw
thorn&lt;' of Chester announce theb~rth
of thetr first child . a son TLmothy
Rvan The e tght pound. eight o unce
mfant was born o n M a r c h t o a! the
H olzer Medica l Center Paternal
grandparents are Darrell and
Norma Hawthrone, C hesler . and
the maternal grandparents arP Roy
S
and Frana Riffle. Ches ter
M a ternal great -grandparents a"'
Mr
and M rs lhar!PS BisSI'U.

room.

The Home Nattonal Bank

54

NEW LISTING - Pomeroy 3 bedroom ranch bath
alum1num s1dmg, 111su!ated
Gas heat N1ce k1tchen w1th
~ange &amp; hood I OO"x 18" lot
On~ $25 00000

HUVf!NGTON, W Va - Two
Metgs county st udent s have been
honored by W SAZ televis ion 3 and
General Motors. m a saiutp to the
""Best of the Class 1984."" It h as been

constructed concrete block
home 26x30. 3 bedrooms,
one bath. 12x15 livq
room and 24x24 family

Neva Mowery

992-2259

area grads

nicely

house

Vicki Cummms wmning prizes

WSAZ,GM
honor two

a

ment Lot SIZe approx .
48'x308" Needs work .

e xpenence. and !here was a game
on · What Mother Means "' wtth
W a nda Shank, Mar1ha Kle m and
G r oup singmg v.as enjoyed and
the door pnze w as w on b y Ca thy
K.izzee Cake and coffee were served
to c lose the fellowship hour

with

The Family of

POMEROY,O .

NA\"1\ROU BUtTH - Mr.
and Mrs. Randy Navaroli. th&lt;-

FOR SALE

•Storm Windows
•Roofing
•Replacement Windows •S•dewalk s. Pat1os
•Custom Built Garages

~J01mopl1

Real Estate General

' "• ~ '

•Gutter &amp; Downspouts

•Storm Doors

Broker

fH [ PIJHI I\ UTI! I I r~ CO M
MI S SION U f O HI O

LOUIS&lt;' Ham e l bega n her Ubrary

Mothers, daughters honored

Pomeroy, Oh•o

Hobstener. Jr .

Real Estate General

car('('rs as a children's lJbrartan at

Ontario. L ondon. Ontano. Ca nada

s

1)

com muni tv

!he Dr Sa mue l L Bossard :\lemor
1al Llbra r :v m Gallipolis She IS a
graduate o f Alma College. Alma
M1c h . c~nd rece1vf'd hPr Mast er of
Library Sctenre degree from the
Sc hool of L tbrary and Inform a tion
Scten('('. U mvers1ty of W~te rn

992-6215 ., 992 - 7314

NEW LlsnNG Beautiful.
1mmaculate, quality and excel·
lent buy descnbes this 3 or 4
bedroom home 2 batl"o.
spacmus 1tv1ng room wrth
!~replace. custom drapes. fuH
basement Ideal loca hOn '"
Middleport Call for det01ls

POMEROY. OHIO

Three acres

Susan Siatet Watkins underwent
surgery Monday at Mount Carmel
H ospital, Columbus. Her parents,
Mr and Mrs. William Slater, were
m Columbus wtlh their daug hter.
Cards m ay be sent to her a t Room
h.'l.l Mount Ca rmel H opsttal, Coumhu s. 43222

Geo

C. YOUNG Ill

V.

HOBSTmER REALTY

MEIGS INN

(1) HOUSE IN CHESTER:

OVAL nqmes extension consultant
Lo uts~

Experience Destred
Must be at Least
19 Years of Age
Apply Tuesday-Friday
11 A.M.-4 P.M .

aopt cant h{'r •'•r&gt; Fu nh r r •ntor
ffiJjo (Jn m,ly r)f' l) t"'t1cl iflN1 tJy
r r ntJI t rnfl T!)• P, t&gt; or U t d •I•P~
Cn rnn11 ~~ 111
t
()h r &gt;
3 ? 11
S r l P1 H 1qh 'St " r 1 r 11
r1 t oJ'
Ch o' 4] ;J l

Real Estate General

Cooks, Waitresses
Waiters

a n d a n J C('lmp,l r'y• n rt r" (l Uf&gt;SI

()1,11

Help Wanted

HELP WANTED

lh"' (O Plr nl ~, ',l&lt;l!l lo~\ P I\ P&lt;; WI&lt;!
1+' "1 &lt;';! lt Pill• !l lf&lt; I tn t 'l d ! ,,I I P C!

Hospitalized

planted and then took home to their parenL•. and RaW Curtis and Tany a
Watson display their ecology posicrs. They are pictured with their
wacher, Danita McLaughlin.

11

or [)f&gt;f orfl J1 .n " ') 1981 Un tpss

thf' C.lSfl '"' '''

A dance w UJ be hel d at the
American Legion H all in Racine
Saturday, wtth clogging. country
roc k, square dance and r ock "n ' r oil
included The Cll'Cie D Wranglers
will proviode the music, and Red
Carr will be caller. Refreslunents
wUI be served .

work
(Frae Estimates)

ot OhiO lor

provode on ter Citv
lu nq rto siJr""l&lt; p IAIPCommun1ca
t• (l n &lt;; ~ f' • vt ~"S 1n th P Stat e of
C h•n A.n\ •nler es!f!d person
lr r1 o r 1(1' dt•n n or ent1rv Nho
' '" &lt;; '11 1&lt;111 qo n d r tuSPV\r"ly suc h
l lPil lto n n
-;h ul •'
not tw
qr antPd Sil l1 u 11 !liP w11h the

fQ I

Dance set

PS Co mm• SSIQn

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM SIDING

- Addona and rem odeling
- Rooftng and gul1er wofk
- Con cret e work
~ Piumbtng and electrtcal

Middle

lost and Found

Loat· hub cap off

J&amp;L INSULATION

CARPENTER
SERVICE

LEGAl NOTICE

Utol ot

6

r::':=~~;~~~~::il;::::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::;i
YOUNG'S

Public Notice

&lt;t u th r r11y

Pomeroy

Business Services

PHONE
...... 992-2156
.,....... ..,
Ill CHrt ll. ,_,., OMD 457M

Memben;oftheCoolvUleEiernen ·
tary School participated In "Let's be
Partners," an ecology program
sponsored by Modern Woodmen of

ECOLOGY EMPHASL'i - "Trees are bnportant" was the theme for
ecology pooo;ters prepared by children of the Coolville Elementary School.
"""' Kt•ni Cunningham displays pots of Dowers which the children

__

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 16, 1984

Help Wanted

Reta1l Outlet must employ 3
conscientious. trustworthy.
1ns1de retatl sales clerk sImmediately Ret11il eNpe rience des1red . but not ne
c:essary Must be able to
work w•th mm1mum super
v1ston and be able to meet
pubhc . must be prof•ctent m
bas1c mathmatt cs Oppor
tumty for advancement for
nght persons Please reply m
own handwr1ttng . referen
ces reqUired to box 800 tn
care of the Gallipolis Da1ly
Tnbune. 825 3rd Ave ,
Gallipolis , Oh 45631
Government Job s
$16 . 559 - $50.553 v•a•
Now h1nng Your area Call
1 · 805 -687 6000. "" R
9000
Maybe you 've seen our ad
before and thought 1s
sounded to o good to be
true .So d1d o ur Demo n
strator in your area Ask
herl call 446 - 1270 or
wrne Toy lad1es Party Plan
Johnstown. PA 15904 Al so
bookmg partte s
Scemc HillS Nurs10g Cent er
536 Buckndge Ad . Glallpo hs. Oh lnterv1ewtng for
part -t1me AN 's &amp; LPN 's
Call 446-7160 between
SAM &amp; 1 2PM only
Mature mdl'lltdual to repres ent established lrfe 8r: health
Insurance Co . excellent p otential for Increased earmng
&amp; advancement . We 1re an
equal opportunity 8mployar
For morf!ll Information ,
please ca ll People'a life
Insurance Co 614-887 0065 between 8 30om llo
4 30 p m weekdaya

Asaistant Organ11t needed
at Grace Epiacopel Church
Cot! 61•· 992-3968
HIGH SCHOOl SENIORS ·
GRADUATES If you are
wonder~ng how you can get
a JOb without work expenence, the West Virginia
Army National Guard might
be the answer for you Earn
good money while learntng a
sktll Full ttme pay while you
tram, part t1me pay once you
come bac k home call 304 675 -3950 m 1-800-642·
3619
Room prov1ded for vanety of
dut1es perf ormed around
hotel 675-6276
Need ec:onomtcally disadvantaged person to tram for
small business Contact Job
Care 675 -2770
Now Htrtng!lladJesll Sup8r·
person needed to hire . train
demonstrators for House of
Uoyd . largest toy. g1ft home
party company, flex•able
hours In home position
Exc mc:ome Business e
Exc xpenence helpful For
details Without obltgahon
call co llect Betty 304 -744·
0924
Th e new Sarah Coventry
now has 14 carat gold.
diamonds. costume Jewerly.
luggage We are htrtng f111sh1on show d~rectors Show
our new line Exc pay plan
Can earn pnzes tnp s. Caribbean cruise Also. can earn
$800 00 k1t of Jewerly
Management opportumty
Sound exc1tmg l For mterVIBW phone 304 · 773 -5197
ask for Ruth
L1ght delivery, must have car
and kn ow the area Apply m
person FOP lodge. Neal
Road Pt Pleasant between
14pm
People to do ltght office and
telephone work Apply tn
person FOP lodge. Neal
Road Pt Pleasant between
1-4 p m
OWNER OPERATORS
WANTED TRANSAlL OIV·
ISION OF PilOT FREIGHT
CARRIERS 48 STATE AU·
THORITY TEAMSTERS UN
ION LOCAl 505 COM ·
PANY PAID INSURANCE
AND PENSION LOCAL
AGENT 407 6th STREET
POINT PLEASANT. WV
304-675 - 1612
SAlES AGENT WANTED
Nat1onelly known calendar
manufacturer and specialty
adventsmg company offers
an opportun•ty for an mdustrtous self -starter for full or
pan -ttm e work We need a
sales onented person to
present our exclustve ca len dars busmess gths and
extenstve adverttsmg sp e
cialw assonment to flfms
within th e bustness com
m u n1ty
The Thos
0
Murphy Co ts a pioneer m
the advemsrng f1eld s1nce
1888. so you know we' re
here to stay If you can
organ1ze your own t1me and
determme your own suc cess, wnt e Pat Murphy , The
Thos 0 Murphy Co . P 0
Box 382 , Red Oak Iowa
5t566

12

Situations
Wanted

Dependable Wake up Servt ce $10 mo , $12 lo ng
dtsta nce
Call 614 -446 7549 after 5PM
Wtll ca re for the elderly 1n my
home lots of references
Men or women Call 614 667-3402

18

Wanted to Do

Lawn Mowm g &amp; T r~ mmtng
Reliable and dependable
Reasonable rates Call614 256-6251 after 5 30
Roofing and gutter w o rk ,
metal work , housepamt1ng,
carpenter w ork Exc ref
Fre e estimates Call 446 3171
Garages . pat•os , Sidewalks.
bas e ments , blo ck work
Rea so nable pnce d 35 yrs
eJCpenence Free es umates
Call 446 3394
General Hauling For sale
l1mestone f1ll dtrt . and top
s01l
Call Call 614 256
1427
W1l1 d o tutormg can start
1mm ed1 a t ely
Call 446
7426
Garages pat10 stde w alks
basements . done at reasona ble rates Call any t tm e for
free esttmetes Call 614 256 · 1632

Financial
21

0

Business
pportumty

HOME lOANS FIXED
RATES Below market rates
Fixed conven1ional FHA VA . leader Mo rtgage,
Athens, collect 614 -&amp;923051

23

Professional
Servtces

PIANO TUNING lower
pri ce d regular tumng sdracounts to Semor C tttzans,
Churches 8t Schools Ward's
Koyboord. 304 -675-3824
Ptano Tunmg and Repatr
Bruntcardl Mu sic Co 44606B7 Sktll and mtegnty our
trademark
lane Oamels.
614· 742 -2 951

Something Diffe re nt
Proven breakthrough m low
cost ho ustng National manufacturer i s seekmg reps m
selec t area for &amp;teel framed
homes and complete hne of
me tal butld1ngs 60% more
energy efficient , mam1enance free . 93.960 rnvest
ment reqUired , 80% refun dable . For complete
1nformat1on package call Mr
Bruce at 1 · 800·433 · 5655

Frazters Bottom Flea
M arket Every weekend
U S 35 Fraziers Bottom .
WVa 25082 Don Frnter
Operator 304 -756 -2779
Yard Sale Rodney Method !It
Church. Rt 5BB May 17th.
18th 9AM -5PM C hurch
benefit sale
3 Fam1ly Garage Sale Thurs .
Fn Sat 2 m 1 from At 141
on Netghborhood Ad
Pa t 1o Sale Thurs Sot 1 0 -5
H1d e a bed, c hma hutc h .
wheel c h atr. lots m tsc
2004 % Chath am Ave. rear

Pr ofesst o nal Electrolysts
Chn. c Probe Typ e ElectrolySIS
AMA. FDA &amp; FCC
approved Do cto r ref errals
304· 675 -5568

M1ch1g an Sale 50 Net! Ave
Clothes. baby furn . toys.
dresser. b1kes. d1shes. po1nt .
c locks, curta ms Startmg
May 17
Garage Sale 606 J ay Dr Ft1
&amp; Sat Ma'r' 18th &amp; 19th
Pomeroy .
Middleport
&amp;

Vicinity

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

By owner lov ely 2 bdr .
home on waterfront boat
ramp &amp; dock . close t o town
pn ced S34.900 Will help
f1nan ce
Call 614 2561216
For sale by owner. 3 bdr
hom. · 7 .cr.. fullv C. rP.t.d • b Ul It 1n range. d ou bl e
garag
Otstnct
e Kyg
Interested
er Creekpersons
School
only. $49 000 Call 446 4262
3 bdr ren c: h style home on
Senders H1ll Ommg room ,
k1tchen, bath . attached gar
age. AC. has gas heat .
S48 500. c1ty schools Call
446 -2151

Garage Sale-G &amp;W Plast1cs
Warehouse below post of
ft ce m long Bottom Thurs
17th &amp; Fnday 18th

House &amp; lot m Oe11ter. 4
large rooms. m et al roof.
cement porch . hand du g
well near mm e no 1 Pn ced
to sell $6500 Ca ll 614
669 3761
1 Y1 story. 2 3 bedrooms 6

acres . leban on TWP wt lh
out butldmg s N atural gas
heat Asktng $14.000 Cal l
614 -843 -5231
H ous e for sale by o wn er
Clarencfl H1ll Pnce negot•a
ble tmmed1ate possessiOn
Bt -level RustiC Hills Syra
cuse. Ohro 2 full baths. 3
bedrooms llvtng room . dm
tng ro o m . k1tchen d1s
hwasher gar d1sp osal tam
1ly room w1th ftre place
16x12 barn for storage
ch am hnk fence Call 614
247 4134
Must see to ap preci ate 2
bedr oom 1 % bath dmette
kttchen . &amp; hJtng room . plus
nver nghr away On 338
across fr om Kats er Alum
Call 614 -247 30 12
For sale by o wner. house &amp;
land on SR 338 Ra c on e Call
614 -949 -2215

8 yrs old, 3 bedrm, 2 baths
fam1ly ro om w1th wood
burn er Sm g le ca r garage on
8 flat acres wtth stocked
pond C1ty wa te r 1n Rac• ne
Ca ll 614 949 2641
s1d1ng
storm wmdow s, gas furna ce
&amp; wood burn er Front &amp;
ba c: k porch . ca rpo rt . range .
retngerator . dt shwa sher. &amp;
mtcrowave Ca ll 614 -992
7285
FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO BUYIII 1 4 ft Wide three
bedroom . bath and half .
mobtle home S11t1ng on n1co
lot , ready to move 1nto
S 226 00 down $225 00 per
month 304 -576 2711
Pnce reduced 3 bedroom
home. 1 acre of land . Rt 62
Charleston Road 304 -675
4887. 614 446 -1675
2 b edrooms w1th garage, 3
lots 1n Ma so n. W Va 304 88 2 32 88

K&amp;K Park . Lot 29 Thurs Fr1
Sat 9 00 to 7 p m 4 -famtly
Baby bed, d1shes, matermty
clot hes. qutlt top, stlver
ware Zemth alleg'o quadro phontc stereo tapes re
co rd s. bed frames Bulova
watch
R&lt;un cont1nued
M o nday
Thurs Fn 17th &amp; 18th
4 -famll y ya rd sale Gall•polis
Ferry Across from Sta uffet
Toys. clothes. all s•zes
Yard sale 5 nu les up Rt 35 .
He nderson May 17 &amp; 1 B
12 Famtly yard st~ l e M ay
17-18 - 19 8 01 m ram or
sh• n e Next to Powells
Barber Shop
Ga lltp olts
Ferry .. WV l ots of mce
clot hm g household tt ems.
vacuum cleaner . fu ll bed .
laue seat st!vera l cab mets.
w ash basm and cabmet, 185
Suzukt moto, cycle, good
co nd•l•on , para ~ eet and
cage Corne early Lots o f
bargams

5 fam 1lys - 6 miles out Jerrys
Run Road Apple Grove

31

32

~~~~=====~==+~M~ay~1=7=1~8~1~9~9=1o=l==
Homes for Sale

Owner 1ran sferre d
must
sell . exc con d S66 000
S 1 1 000 d own As su m e
8 V1 pet
loan 304 675
1529

3 bedroom Ra nch o n At
160 S3B.500 00 9 per
cent assumable loan s ca ll
304 · 675 -7746 o• 675 ·
21 83

Baum Addttt on
3 bed
room s. 2% ba ths. a c. fam•ly
room With f~r e plac e. 2 acres
$67.500 N o down pay
ment , own er w tll ca rr y at no
Interest for 5 yrs Loan
assumpt1on possi bl e l ease
o pt1on avarlable June 1st ,
SSSO per mo 614 -985
4387

Yard Sale. Thurs and Fn
9 -5 P1ano toolt, a little b1t
of everyth•ng 2616 M t
Vernon Ave Po1nt Pleasant

Yard Sale, on 124 outs•de
Ractne, Sat May 19,10 -- 3.
Htlltop 4 -H Club

Catch Spnng Fever l W1th
ho me m Mtddleport El(tra
l ow pn ce 11 Ntce loca t10n
Call 6t4 -992 -6941

Owner transferred. mus t sell
beautiful 3 b edrm bn ck
home Ftrepla ce. deck
woods. pnva cy. sun sh•ne
$63 900 Call 614 992
5420

Btg Yard Sale Leon Baden
Road . 2 mtles oH 87, Mev
16-26

G1gant tc yard sa le, 8 m tl es
Rt 2 North Second house
on ngh t bes1de Bud Chatton
Road Cloth1ng . f urmt ure,
appliances . mtsc Thursday ,
Fr1day, May 1 7 &amp; 18

Seven yeM old h ome th ree
b ed ro oms. garde n spo t .
2605 Lm co ln Av e
8 1/ 1
percent assu ma ble loa n
304 675 50 4 7 after 5 00

6 rooms basement double
garage. 1 &amp; one-thrrd aero
lot
Rose Htll, Po meroy
$32,900 Cull 1 -6t4-678
2513

&amp;Vicinity

Yard sale - Wens &amp; Thurs
May 16 &amp; 17 Corn e• of 5th
&amp; Palm er Stree ts. Mi ddl eport
Stero &amp; some
furnttur e

N1c:e 3 bdr ho m e on 1 acre
more or less. 1 1h m t fr om
Oak Htll on State Highway .
outbulid1ngs and ntce
garden $34,000 Ca ll 614
682 7159

3 bedro om frame house . 39
Ch1lltcothe Rd lar ge eat 1n
kttchen . wtth H unter cethng
fan bath. attached garage
wtth opener . AC g as heat
(well msulated) fully carpeted. lots of storage space .
c1ty schools lmmed1ate possession Carr 614 446 -2583
or 614 -245 -5859

.... Pt.Pieiisa·n·t .. .-

Vicinity

THOMPSON BOOKKEEP·
lNG Monthly and Quarterly
accounts welcome 428 Second Av e Call 446 - 11 36

3 bedroom. alum

t NOTICE t
THE OHIO VAlLEY PUS·
USHING CO recommands
that you do busmestl wtth
pe o pl e you know and NOT
to send money through the
ma1l until you have mvestlgated the offertng

Sales

Galilpoils
&amp;

Poge-9

3 y ea r ol d total ele ctnc
ho me 1enced backyard an d
deck 8 1J1 perce nt assu ma bl e
loan l ow SO ' s 30 4 675 6643

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TR! STATE MOBilE
HOMES US ED C ARS .
TRUCKS
GAlliPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRICES C ALL
614 -446 7572
NEW AND USED MOBil E
HOMES KESSEl S QUAl
lTV MOBilE HOME SAlES .
4 Ml WEST . GAlliPOliS .
RT 35 PHONE 614 446
7274

Mobil e Homes
fo r Sale

197 4 Knkwo o d 1 2x60 to
tal etec 2 be droom mce
ca rpet partly furn1 shed un
derpm nmg
MUST SEll
304 -675 7328
121(65 H T
stropped
2
w1ndow
a1r
co nd $4 500 00 , 9 00 to
4 00 Phone 30 4 675 2976
after 4 00 304 -675 2562
Used 50x10 mob•le hom e
$895 00 30 4 675 4424
Tra tl er on large wooded lot
BOAT RAMP and dock
space Call 5 8 evemngs
30 4 675 644 8 Terms
73 Cameron 1 2x60 all
el ectrtc
Ca ll 304 675
6730
Sale or ren t 1 41(7 0 1979
three bedroom Shanno n all
e l ect ri C mobile hom e
12x28 bwlt un fe~mtly room
wood coe~ l burner exce llent
cond1t1on some lufmfure
well water acre land Jerrys
Run Road Apple Grove
wv 304 -675 2356

33

Farms for Sale

60 acre farm 4 be droo m
home 6 miles N Pomt
Pe asant 1 m1le oH AI 2
304 675 5B09

1965 1 21160 mobtle home .
un1urm shed S3 .900 Ca ll
446 1 340

35

Holley Park 1973 . 14 x60. 2
bdr . Oua1l Creek M ob tle
Home Park . ex cond Frenc h
C1ty Brokerage Services .
446 93 40

3 -5 acre homes1t es for near
Rt 35 at Rond ey 3 m t from
Holzer Ho spttal Ca ll 446 8 221

C layton 1983 1 2x60 2 bdr
ltk e new on lot at Ouatl
C reek M o b1l e Ho me Pa rk
Fren ch C1ty Brokerage Ser
VICeS 446 -9340
1 972 Kttkwo o d un fur
ntshed und erpmnmg very
good co ndttlon Call 446
7693
1971 l1 berty 12x60 rem o
deled ms1de w oodburn er
A sk1 ng S5 000 Call 614
379 2 115
1976 Nova Tn StRr 3 bdr 1
bath
shag carpet -LR &amp;
bedr ooms
a ll e l ectnc
sktrt ed. rang e. refrrgerator
W 0 hookup . exc cond
Movmg must sell S7 000
Cell 614 446 3588
1970 Elcona M ob tl e Ho m e
1 2x70 With expando Excel
lent con d 446 -7751 o r
256-6569
1979 Duke Crown Roy al
14x70 2 be dr oom. fam tly
room , AC . m• cro. underpm
nmg Call 446 -9845

73 Manor 14 x7 0 . 2 bdr . hk e
new , S7.900 69 Detro 1ter .
12x60. 2 bd• . $4 900 Ca ll
614 446-0175
197B 14JC70 al l electn c 2
bedroom . 2 baths
Ca ll
446 3243
Clos1ng Out Tratler Ren tal
Busmess Had 22 ONLY 6
LEFT
S•zes 10x50 &amp;
12JC 52 . 2 b edr oo m fur
n1shed A co mfortable home
for a l ow Pnce Brown 's
Tra1l er Park
Mmer sv tll e.
Oh1o Call 614 -992 -3324
1976 Kirkwood. 14JC 7 0 3
bedrooms 2 full baths. to tal
electnc $9000 Call 614 992 · 7725 or 992 3396
12 x60 mobtle home new
furn ace new 1tv1ng room
car pet
good co ndtt1 on
Must sell Cell 614 -949 ·
2958

2 bedro om trailer . new
carpeting , part•ally remo deled $3000 . no less Can
be seen on Rt 124 across
from Hysell 's Garage

lots

&amp;

Acreage

28 acres •n W VA borders
C h1 ef Cor nstalk l oc&lt;t t ed off
M11l Stone Rd
Mostly
wooded tobacco lotmen t
all mmeral r1gh t s hu nte rs
parad1se S 11 500 Ca ll
614 367 727 t
'l :t acre lo t With rura l water &amp;
septtc tank $7 000 Ca l!
446 3243

R1ver lots for rent -ca ll Cha
rle s Gnff1th at 614 992
5782

Rentals
41

Hou ses for R e nt

A mce 1 bdr house 414 E
Colleqe St Rt o Grande on
corner of College Call 446 0157

Good house for ren t on Rt
160 Cal l 614 388 9909
Sm all 1 bedroom home for
renl Tota l c lec t nc loca ted
tn
M rnersvlf le near Bulk
Plant 992 621 5
4 bedroom house L1ncoln
H1ll Pomeroy S 300 Oep
os tt &amp; ret Ca ll 614 992
2815 o r 992 2362
House to r rent 7t h Avt!
Mi dd leport Call 614 992
6028
4 bedroom house goo d
locaho n call after 6 30 PM
304 675 35 13 or 675
3177

3 be droo m hou se o n Rt
160. S300 00 month Oep
os1t and relerence reQUired
304 -675 7746
2 bedroom house S1 SO
month References &amp; S100
depOSit 304 -675 -4684
Unfurnished 2 bed r oom
hom e, Seco nd Street N ew
Haven
S1 75
304 882 ,
2505
3 bedroom . 2 ba1h . furnrshed . washer &amp; dryer
S150 month $100 deposit 304 -895 3828

�Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

They 'll Do It Every Time

56

Pets for Sale

Redbon1 Coon Hound , 1 yr.
old. not trained . Rudy to
run $60 .00 . 367· 7815

2 bdr hailer full y furn ished,
good locat•on. sec dep req
Call 446 -8668 .

Yorkshire Terrier , male . reg .
with pepers. 5 years old .
Blue &amp; gold StOO. 367 -

ni ce 3 bdr . mobile home ,
furn1shed , convenient loca t ton on Rt 7 , no pets Ca l!

7815 .

614 -24 5 -58t8

Sale or Trade: AKC Reg .
Male Brittany Spaniel pup .
Must sell 446 -4803 .

2 bedroom m ob il e home on
Rt 2 , Pt Pi t.. 5200 .00
monthly, 304 -675 -44 24

Registered Dachshund
puppy male miniature, 5
wks . old $95 . Ca ll 446 -

lady ha s new mobile h ome.
Wants C hris tia n woman to
move in and sha re ex pe n ses .

4576 .

30 4 -675 -6874

4154

Apartment
for Rent

Puppies . mother Doberman
father l 4 black male . have
been wormed S 10 00 each .

"'-~
&amp;RUCc
17. QIAINN .

304 - 675 - 3575
5258

o•

675 -

000 CASCAPC- ""-·

APART MENTS
! Equa l
JACKS
0 N ESTATES
Hous i ng Op ponunityl has
one and two bedrooms. rent
su rtin g at S157 for one
bedroom and S 193 per
m onth f or t wo bedroom,
wtth S200 depos•l localed
near Foodla nd and Sprmg
VH II ey Plaza. pool and TV
ant Call 446 -27 45 o r leava
rn essaqe
SIT1a ll e ff ic 1ency apart , ce n t ral a1r &amp; heat . 1 pro fe ss ional
tv pc gentleman only 446 -

03 38
Garage apt . furnished 3
ro o ms &amp; bath Wa she r &amp;
dryer Cl eun . no p ets. adult s
o nly Oep &amp; re f reQ Ca ll

446 t 5t9
3 bd r
S250

unfurn garage ap t .
plus dep o s•t
Ca ll

446 3786
Fu rn 1s hed etf• c •e n cy. 919
2 nd Galltpol•s S 145 Sm g le Call 446-4416 after

7PM

Gara ge apt
furn1shed 3
rooms . ba th . washer -dryer
iln rl upslans fu r n ished . 4
rooms . bath. bo th AC . clean .
n u pe l s. adults only . dep &amp;
rul req Call 446 1 519
N1 c~--'

new pr~v ;He d own
sta1 r s. ap t quu:ll ne&lt;H HM C
1 adult only Nu pets. ref
req Drapes , stuv l:!. refr•g
f urm shed S200 mo Ca ll
1114 -446 -4782
2 bdr apts . newly d ec .
u tiliti es partly paid . S 145
mo Call 675 -5104 or 675

5 38 6
U n lurm!'ihcd 2 bdr 1n Crown

C•ty Ca ll 446 · 7838
2 bdr part furmshed . park
fr ont . newly remodeled. wa
ter &amp; hot wa1er paid Cal
446 39 19 alt er 5
N ewly remodele d 2 bd r .
equipped k1t c hen, centra l
an. 821 1 · ~ Sec ond Ave .
Galli po li s Call 446 2158
5 13 3rd Ave .. Gallipolis 1
bdr S 135 includes water .
depOSit req , adults o nly
C all 446 -42 2 2 between 9 &amp;
5
3 room apt . 5235 Bach lor
.1pt S 150 R ef p lu s dep . 6
m o lease Ca ll 446 ·0952
1 hPrhoom Apt S 1 96 mo
•n c ludm g utihtu~s
EquHI
Hous in g Opp ortun1ty Con ·
t ac t VIllage Manor Apts

614 992 77R7
R1v er stde Apts M•rlrllepnrt
Sp oc wl rate s for Sen1nr
C 1tu en s S1 30 Fqw~l Hous·
tng Opportuntlie s
614 -

992 7721
2 be dr oo rn apts in M1ddle·
p o rt Wat er &amp; electnc pa1d
Ca ll 614 9 92 -2381 dily s or
992 2509 eve nm gs
Eftt clen cy apt lor rent fo r 1
o r 2 people. Ro ush Lan e.
Cheshtr e 304 773 -5882
Apt f or rent. 2 bedroom.
turn• she d 1n M•dd le p ort
Util lt tes 1ncluded . 52 05 a
m onth Ca l1 6 14 992 7177
1 ber oom turn1 she d apt
S 190 Dep os1t &amp; r ef re ·
qu•r Ad . Call 614 -992 - 2815
or 992 2362
APARTMENTS
mobile
h om es . hou ses Pt Ple asa nt
and Gall•polls 6 14 - 446

8221
RIV ERS

TO WER

Apartmer1 Is no w av&lt;ula bl e to
el derly &amp; disabl ed w •th an
1n co ~ e
o f l ess tha n
S12 . 300 Rentm g for 30
p er cen t o f adjusted 1ncome
Ph one 30 4 -675 -6679
3 room ap t and b a th N1 ce
1o ca t1o n . referen ce and d ep
os tt required
304 6 75

t090

===~ ~~~45

~~~~~~~§~~~~T~~~;~·~4 m~I'-~~~~~-~~~~H~-=~

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keepmg
room~ Park Central Hotel.

Call 614 -446 -0756
Sleeping room $115 . u t•lt ties paid Share bath . male
on ly . Ran ge &amp; refng 919
2nd . Ave ., G11llipolis C 811
446 -4416 after 7 PM

46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot for rent No

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AU C TION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Ol1ve St .. Gallipolis . New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stoves,
6 p•o ce wood living room
s u1te w1th 6 inch flet arms
S399 bunk beds comp lete
w1th bunk1es $199 . 2 p1ece
a ntron l1vmgroom su1tes
$199 . antron recliners S99 .
o ther rec l•ners $80 . maple
d•nette se t s 5 179 . box
s pnn gs &amp; mattress twin or
full S 1 00 set regular -firm
$1 20 . maple dinette cha11s
5 35. wash stands S34.
maple rockers $59 . 7 piece
c hrome dinette set $149 , 5
pt eCP. dinette set S99. used
bed room suites, refrigera tors . ranges . chest. dressers,
wnnger W8Shers. TV's , dry ·
e rs . &amp; shoes Call 614 -446 -

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
S ofa . c h&lt;m .

rocker , otto ·
man . 3 tnble s. (ext ra heavy
by Frontter) . S685 . Sofa,
c hair and loveseat, S275 .
Sofas and chairs pnced from
S 265 to S895 Tables, S45
and up to S 1 25 Htde -a be ds . $44 0 . and up to
S 525 ., Reclin ers. S 175 to
S 375 , Lamps from S28 to
S 75 .5 pc
dmettes from
599 . to 435 7 pc . S189
and up W oo d table with six
c ha~r s 5425 to S745 Desk
5110 up to S225 . Hutches.
S 550 and up. maple or P•ne
f i n1sh . Bunk bed c omplete
with mattresses, S250 and
up to 5395
Baby beds .
S 1 1 0 Mattresses or box
springs, full or twtn . S58 .
firm . S68 and S78 Queen
sets . S195 . 4 dr . ch ests .
S42 . 5 dr chests . 554 Bed
frames . S20 .and S25 .. 10
gun
Gun cabinets. S350 .
Ga s or electnc ranges $375 .
Baby mattresses . S25 &amp;
S35. bed fram es S20 . S25 .
&amp; SJO. kmg frame SSO .
G ood select 1on o f bedroom
suites. cedar c hests .
rocke r s. metal cabinAts .
swtvel rockers
Used Furn1ture .. Refr•gera ·
tors. cha~rs . dryers. 11nd
TV 's 3 miles ou t Bulav•lle
Ad Open 9am to6pm . Mon
thr u Fri 9am to 5pm. Sat

614 -446 -0322
TV &amp; Appliances. 627 Third
Ave . Gallipol is. 614 -446 1 699 Spin washers . gas &amp;
P.lec t11c dryers , auto
washers. gas &amp; electric
ranges . refr.gerators . TV
se ts

Farm Equipment

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

by Larry Wright

M F. 10 ton sUage wagon ,
used 3 seasons. S3,600.00.
One row M .F, field chopper,

$3,500 . 00
1610.

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

614-992 -7479 .
2 trailer lots, 1 small child

ecceptod . 304·676- 1076.

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Deli-vered . 12"-22 " stocked
in yard
HEAP vender.
prompt delivery 614 - 256 6245 .

57

tors. ranges . Skaggs Ap p lian ces, Upper River Ad .
bes1de Stone Crest M ote l

61 4 446 -7398
Early American H1de -a - bed
Cou ch Ekcellent c ondttton .
Brown pla1d , full SIZe , S250 .
446 -7813 after 5 P.M
Kll c hen cu pboar ds. p1e c up ·
board . playe r p1ano. Smger
sowmg machine. oa k table .
stone 1ars. d olls Call 446 ·

3 945
K1ng s1ze bo x spnngs . S20
bed fr8me . 510

Ad1ust~tbl e

Ca ll 304 -675 - t55t
Whulpool refng . kitchen
tablft ·4 ch atrs. RCA disc
playAr Call after 4 00 •n the
evenmg 446 - 2892
U sed bedroom suite, Hybri d
waterbed and set of bed dm g Corbin &amp; Snyder Furni ture . 2nd Ave , Ga llipolis.
446 - 11 7 1
C aptam ' s half bed w 1th
mattress . drawers &amp; book
shel ves . llkew new . 5100

C all 6 14

256 ~ t662

Country Oak Furniture . ta bl es . c ha~rs . cu pboards . dry
smk s. pm safes . lots of mise
Co nkle s At
7. Tuppers
Plam s. Ohm

Instruments

Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Deli&gt;Jered in Mason. Meig s.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Cell 446 -7785 .

2 Peevee speaker cabinets
cheap . 304 - 675 -4180 b efore 5 ·00 .

Plast1c cistems state ap pro&gt;Jed. plastic septtc tanks .
plasti c culvert metal cui ·
verts. RON EVANS ENTER ·
PRISES . Ja ckson . Oh 614 ·

58

286-5930 .

Kenmore washer &amp; dryer
S 125 Gas dryer S65 . GE
refrigArator S65 . Self rlefrosttng refr•gerat o r
S 100 . Maytage wringer
washer S100. Call 614 -

64t7 .

Vegetable plants S1 00 and
up on At . 33tn letart . Watch
for o ur s1gns .

Wedding sets 1 OK &amp; 1 4K
gold $49 .95 &amp; up . Weddmg
bands $30 &amp; up New &amp;
preowned
Frank ' s Pawn
Shop. 430 2nd . Ave .. Galli poliS, Oh . 446 -0840

~----

304 - 46B -

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

ft Ford tiller for farm
tra c t or . 304 - 882 · 2847 .

Tractor . model 8 w1th cult •·
vators Call 6 14-256 -6417

Firewood cut up slabs $15
pickup load Call 614 - 245 ·

Farmalt M 2 row mounted
corn picker. $1 .500 1 row
pull type corn pi cker . Co -op
$300 2 row pull type JD
corn planter. $300 3 pt
pickup disk. S250 3 pt
grading blade, S150 Ma ·
nure loader, S 150 New Idea
hay rake , $100 . Hay baler

5804
1982 Chevette loaded l o w ery organ . Crahmati c ktng
sr.led bed . Call 446 - 3101
after 3 .30 .
Video cassette recorders
new &amp; used . Precision VCR .

66 . $150
1427

Call 446 -6566
Only Sat . May 19, 1 OAM to
6PM at 419 Fourth Ave 1
couch and matching c hair . 2
upholstered rockers. 1 sin ·
gle bed , springs and mat ·
tress. 1 record stand , 1
teleph one stand. 1 washer
and dryer , misc . c hetrs .
lamps, sm . table s end stools .
For information. may call
Audrey Canaday, 446 -3036
best to ca ll 446 -1301 on day
of sale

5100

Burdette's

For sale 4 grave lot s in Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens .

Call 675 -4235
450 B Case trac tor c rawler .
1981 . used 2200 hrs ; 450 C
Case Backhoe. used 2200
hrs . Both for 538,000 . Call

F~rewood for sale.

S20 00
ptck ·up load , S30 .00 deli vered Call before 11 ·00
after 6 00 . 304 -675 - 2991 .

SURPlUS ARMY Camou flage , de mum. rental cl o·
thing. boots. tubber -leather.
packs . ch1ldren camouflage
Open Fri. . Sat ., Sun ., 1 to
7PM. Sam Somerville 's.
East -Ravenswood . Plenty
free parking on South -West
side near large wh1te block
building

Po wer K1ng tractor with
mower . snow blade S3 , 800
Stihl c ha in saw S 100 . Call

614 - 388 -8409.
12 in . plow fits most 12 o r
14 H P garden t racto r s. never
used , $50 . Call 614 ·36 7 ·

Stanley co o ler. 430 lb. 1ce
machine. d1g1tal cash ragis ter 1 -304 -273 ·5643 .

03t5 .
2 John Deere balers. one f o r
parts &amp; John Deere hay
co nditioner S575 Call after

55 Building Supplies

5. 614 -367 -018t .

New gai&gt;Jantzed corrugated
culvert S2 35 ft . up . All
SIZes Ft ttings P1pe . beams.
str uctural steel -new . used .
B1g dillcounts
Delivered!
Anywhere! N o w! EUimates
free 304 -925 ·0884 .

New bush hog . 3 point hitch
equipment , 1 5 ft lawn
mower S925 . 2 6 ft blad es
$300 each . 1 7 ft blade
$825 . 1 earth mover S575
Auoc Fabricators Call

6t4 -992 -5t0t .

lUMBER -Rough cut . oak ,
poplar , 2x4 . 2 .. 6 . 2x8 . 1 x4 ,
1 J~6 . 1 ll8 . length available , 8
ft through 16 ft . Hogg &amp;
Zuspan . 304 · 773 -5554 .

Boarding all breeds Heated
Indoo r outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppiu :
Stud Service . Call 614 - 446 -

675 ~ 4424 .

Bedroom

Suite.

$300 . 675 -32t 4
12 windows . appro~; size
66 " x32 " . 12 .storm win dows with !lcreena. approx
size 66 "x32" 2 windows,
includes storm and 1creans
38"x28" . All exc . cond .
Must sell ant ire lot . 304-

Judy Taylor Grooming Call

614 -367-7220
Briarpatch Kennels Profes·
!!lional All -breed grooming.
Indoor -outdoor boarding fa cilities . English Cocker Spa niel puppies . Call614 - 388 ·

9790.
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennels . AKC Chow puppies, CF A Himalayan . Per·
sian and Siamese kittens .

Call814-446-3844 aftor 6 .

00

71

614 -286-2496
20 rnos . old gelding 1/2
Arabtan 1h POA Horse Call

Autos for Sale

1975 El Camino will con sider trade. good cond . Call

614 -367-0t64.

78 Chevy Monza 2 plus 2,
hetchbock. V-6, AM -FM,

614 -245-5090 .

PS.

PB. exc. cond .. $1,650 .

Call

614 ~ 388 - 9905 .

Re gis tered Polled Hereford
bull , 4 yrs . old Would trade .

1977 Rally Sport Camero ,
light &amp; dark blue, good
condition . Call 614 -985 -

Cal l 614 -256 -669t or
2 56 -1196

614 ~

1 and 2 yr . o ld Angus bulls .
By Powe r Play &amp; Power
Pack . ouc of Shoshone &amp;
Pow er Pl ay Daughters . Goe bel Angus Farm. Coolville .
614 -667 3838or614 -667 -

6623

1975

$275

Ford

l TO

wagon,

Vans &amp; 4

w_o_

1979 Jeop CJ-5. 6 cyl .. 3
spd ., loaded with extras .
$3.000 Cell446 -0515 .
1980 CJ-5 Renegade pack ·
age, hish back bucket seau,
full carpeting , exc. cond .,

$4.500.
9506 .

Call

6t4 - 985 ~ 3565

Che&gt;Jy Camero. 350
corvette motor. orange with
black stripe Call 614 -992 -

'81 Celica Toyota. lit1 back .

5511 o• 773 -5823 .

304 -67 5 -7337
Reg is ter ed Poii P.rl HerAford
cattle. 2 bulls 1 8 months 10
ye arling heifers
Contact
Diam ond L Farms
304 -

675 -1888

Hay &amp; Graon

2189 .
77 Dodge Aspen 76 Ford
Elite _ 72 Chevy Impala Call

304-576-2372
576 -2285

end

304-

' 78 Cheveue. 4 door, auto.,
new tires, 1980 engine low
mileage, runs good, good
shape, 51,500 .00 . '78 Ford
Pickup, body rough . runs
good, PS. PB, auto,

$700 .00 . '76 VW Rebbir.
high mileage, body fair, runs
Quality hay for sa le 111 field
S1 50 per bale Call 304773 -5381 o r 773 -5170

Tra nsporlalion
Auto• for Sale

TOP CASH paid for late
mo del used car s
Smith
Bui c k Pont1ac 1911 East ·
ern Ave, Gallipohs Call

6t4 -446 -2282
~--~~---~

1977 OudgP. Charger Specia l Ed 1t10n , extra clean, exc
co nd , black with t -top,
loaded . $2 ,000 Call 614 -

245 -5818 .

good.

$500.00 . '79 Olds

Cutlass Supreme. good
tires. auto .. fancy wheels.
PS, PB, air cond , AM -FM
stereo console, low mileage
gas engine. $3800.00 firm .
'63 Jeep station wagon . 4
wheel drive. engine and
drtve train good. body real

mugh . $250.00 . 304 -675 7642 .
1978 Capric Classic. 304 -

675 - 1393.
'79 Mercury Cougar XR7.
PS. PB, Air -cond .. AM -FM
tape . low mileage. eJtc .
cond $4.000 00 or best

offe&lt;. 304 -675-6586 .
'76 Cordoba . air -cond. PW.
PB. PS , $1.100 .00 or best

offe' 304 -675-7591
1968 El Camino 307 en gina . 3 spd transmission ,
great cond . 61 ,000 act .
miles, S1 ,99 5 . Ca ll 614 388 -9905 w ork . 614 - 367
7524 home
------~-

1980 Bui c k Regal L1m1ted .
PS . PB. CC. t1lt wheel. good
tire. rear wind det . good
co nd Ca ll 446 -4205
80 Chevy Mazda hatchback ,
cl ean . 4 cvl .. auto. good gas,
S2.500 77 Olds Omega
Brougham . run good . $950
Call 614 - 245 - 5405
198 2 2 dr Chevy Chevette.
AM - FM tape ,
4 spd
53.495 1 9 81 2 dr . Chevy
Cheve\le auto, sunroof.
S3. 195 Johns Auto Sales,
Bulaville Ad . Gallipolis . 446 ·
4 782 , open 111 dark .
One Family Car 1978 Lin c oln To wncar
25 . 000
mil e~. good condi ti on . Call
446 -2502, after 5 :00 446 -

4759
1971 Cad 1ll ac L1mousme
exc. con d .. tinted windows.
S3,500 firm . Co li 446 -1833
or 446 -7833 .
1977 Dodge Aspen 82.000
mil es. 51.500 . Ca ll 446 ·

8t58 .

78 Olds Delta 88 Ro..,ale. ac,
ps. pb , tilt wheel , cruise,
am -fm radio. linted glass,
very clean, good condition .
Priced to sell after 5 p .m .

304 - 675-2663 .

1979 Chevy Capnce Clas ·
sic, 2 dr, ac. ps. V -8 engine.
body good co nditton. eltc
perf o rmance Will consider
all offer s. Call 614 - 992 7412 after 5 p .m .

.;:::::::::::::::::::::_L:==========E-VEN
H;..vE

TO

ROI&gt;.R

1979 Honda CB 650, wind shield. roll bar. cruise con trol. mag wheel. truck. low
mtles. Call 446-4205 .
1982 CB 650 Honda, low
mile11ge. siuy b!lr. chrome.
case guards, 2 helmets.

1980 Kawasaki KZ1300. 6
cyl. engine shaft drive. Many
extras, very good con ., Call

6t 4- 992 7110 alter 5 p .m .
For sale, 1980 Kawasaki
KDX 250, good condition .

$600. Cell 614 -992-2859
0' 992 -29t2 _
1982 Honda V -45 Sabre .
4.000 miles. water -cooled .
shaft-drive. digital clock .
fuel. temp .. and tripmeter
gauges. Much more. exc .
cond . Call 304 -675 - 2520 .

3tt9

72

Trucks for Sale

·10 model Chevrolet 1% ton
dump truck, S1,500. Call

614 - 388 -9303 .
1982 Chevy S- t 0 . 4 sp .. 4
cyl.. AM I FM. tape . vinyl
covered bed. sport wheels,
$5995 . John's Auto Sales.
Bulav1lle Ad .. Gallipolis. Oh .
446 · 4782 . Open till dark .
66 Dodge truck , 6 cyl .• Slant
6 engine, runs good, body

mugh . &amp;160 367-7815.
1981 Chevy luv 4 spd.,
AM-FM tape, vinyl co&gt;Jered
bed, $3,995 Johns Auto
Sales, Bulaville Rd . Gallipo lis . 446 - 4782, open til dark.
75 Chevy Luv new frontend
parts, tune up, good cond .,

1960 International 4x4 1.4
1on. flatbed . with 40,000 lb.
wench. $1,695 . 1979 Ford
F - 160 Lariat good cond .,
S3, 196. 1979 Ford Courrier
good cond .. new tires. new

peint. 62.695.
3BB- 9905 .

Cell

614 ~

1980 Chevy 'hton. ps, tb,
auto. a1r. am -fm cassette.

Call

'79 Chevy Luv, 4 spHd, 26
mi.. gallon. long wheel base .
676 ~ 1848

or

'73 Oatson 110. runs good.
new aterter, reworked head.
new brakes. good drive to
work car . 8300 .00 . 304-

675-1349

0'

304 - 773 ~

9144 no calls after 9PM

1967 Chovv dump truck 12
6 cyl . 1V: ton, good

tt . bed,

condition .

14 ft. aluminum John boat
trailer &amp;: cover. purchased
new 1983. has 2 swi&gt;Jel
fishing seats 8r motor guide.
electric foot controlled trol ling motor. Call between
7 -9PM weekdays. anytime
weekends , 614 - 245 -5820 .
19 ft . Fiberform SS 185,
4 70 Mer cruiser motor. open
bow. stainless steel pro·
peller. boat has only 26 hr.
since new, has been stored
in garage, exc. cond ,

$9.000
Call 6t4 - 367 7750 0' 614 -367 -0185 .
Correct Craft 8t Ski Su ·
preme, family ski boats.
New S. used, Parkersburg,

wv 304-422-8433 0' 304 -

81800.

Clyde

Bowen J,_ 304-576~2338 .
1975 Datsun 620 pickup.
t600. 4 speed. currant
eticker. recently overhauled
engine. John D . Gertach.
304~ 675~ 5253 .

your

carpet

SHAPE WITH

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614 -446 -3888 or

'78 Honda Accord. 5 speed,
2 door hatchback. AM - FM ,
air. PB, new tires . 675 ·

7B

Camping
Equipment

1 976 Starcraft travel trailer .
Self contained with aU ex -

tras. $2800. Call
2326 .

304 ~ 882 -

l - - - - - - -- -- 79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES &amp; SERVICE. Open
daily 9 to 6 :30, Sat. 9 to 4 ,

Sun . 1 to 4 . U.S. Rt . 60.
Coolville. 0~ 614 - 667 3388.

7. A~ 1 cond .. t5.000. Cell
614-388-8274 or 614-38B9983 .

1------------,-

1977 18ft contained
cemper, air, bath, IIMpl 8.

aae to oppreclote. 304-876·
11912.

,.. - r , _.,. _

"";
:.
')
--•". , ·.
\

7:45
B :00

rr~;.j·-~~==

!./-:...:.~~

Conference Final Playoff
Game (Play off game dales
and 11mes ar e subjeCt tu
c hange) .

[]) Bob Newhart Show
CU Q) (1%) Fall Guy T ern 1s

AH, HERE'S BONGO.'
HE CAN G IVE YOU
DIRECTIONS.'

Met:
A
Century
of
Performing
Arts
ldl1an
G1sh, D1na Mernll and Glor•a
Vanderbllt are the ho sts as
the Metropo ht an Opera ce le
brates •ts ' 100th birthday
(3 hrs .. 30 mtn )

fll
8:30

9 .00

GASOLINE ALLEY

Pert

if you'd pa1d the
rent this would n't
have happened'

At least l qot an
ext ension on our
1
:-ent PdL!

MOVIE : 'The Sons of

Katie Elder'
CIJ Major league Baseball :
Atlanta at St . louis

0

(1) CD Facts of Life M&lt;S

Garrett Install s a t alk•n g
computer 1n he r gourmet

Sure. we save $9 z~; on late
charqes.and Rover miqht have
made millio ns!

shop IRJ

ffi

America
Crossroads

at

the

(I) Ol (j2J MOVIE : ' Rerum
of Marcus Welby , M .D .'

aqent

9 ·30

U

(1) Cil Double Trouble

Kate and Allt son p i!rtiCipat e
tn a twln -le st.ng re sea•ch
proJect

those
people

10:00 IJI]) :D St . Elsewhe,e SI
Elig•us s P. mergen c y room 1S
closed down and A usc hiAn
der s hver
c ancer gel s
worse (60 m1n )
(I) Five American Guns
Thts documentary t ocuses
on f1v e peop le who have had
fru;ihten1n g expenences w•th
guns .

WINNIE

ffi MOVIE : 'Richard Pr(O'

Good - 1 Excavating . base ·
ments. footers . driveways,
septic tanks , landscaping
Call anytime 614 - 446 4537. J8mes l Daviso n , Jr
owner .

Live on the Sunset Strip'

fiiiNN News
10:30 (!) Numero Uno

fiJ
1 t :00

love American Style

u (]) IIJ 0

IIJ ®l Ol ( j~

News

CIJ

llend, Oh ,6 14-742 -2903 ,

Another life

rn SportsCenter
(J) News/Sports/Weather

f1J

Benny Hill Show

11 .15 (!)Auto Racing ' 84 . World
Endurance · Monza 1 000
Coverage of th1 s auto ra ce 1s
presented
lrom
Monza
It aly !60 m1n I

576 -2897 .

1 t :30

BARNEY

'IOU CAN HAVE
A TABLECLOTH.

STOP FUSSIN:

TATER

TOO

4066
SEWING Machine repair s,
servtce . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 614 -992 -2284

0

(1) (!) Tonight Show

(]) SCTV #1 3 The c omtcal
c hromc le s of my th1ca l Me
lon-vttle channel SCTV continue •n all -new ed1t1on s
Starrtng Joe Fla herty , Eu ·
gene Levy . Andrea Mart•n
and Marttn Short
Best of Groucho
ffi TBS Evening News
()) WKRP in Cincinnati
0 (])Police Story Cheruco
and W ebber try to prevent a
rumble 1n the barno when an
all -female gang seek s re venge aga•nst nval gangs

rn

IRJ 160 m tn I
Cil Latenight America

B5

@All In tho Family
Gl ~ Nightfine
fll Twilight Zone
12 :00 CIJ Burns &amp; Allen
CIJ Catlins
Cil Nightline
®l MOVIE : 'Pride And The

General Hauling

James Boys Water Service .
Also pools filled . Call 614 -

256 - 1141 0' 614 446 t175 0' 6t4 446 -79t1 JIMS

WATER

Call Jim Lanier. 304 -675 -

B7

Passion '

PEAl"UTS

Elll!

SERVICE .

YES MAAM , I HAVE
ERASERS ON MV FEEL

7397 .

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave , Gallipolis .

614 -446 -7833 0' 614 -446 1833 .

M ONEY

WELL , I WAS A LITTLE
LATE THIS MOK:NIN6, AND
I FORGOT MV SANDALS ...

I DIDN'T

Eye on Hollywood

Ell Gunsmoke

YOU'D
MIND IF I BORROWED
A COUPLE OF CHALKBOARD
Ti-liNK

ERASERS ...

CAN YOU GET A
DMINUS ' FOR. HAVING
ERASERS ON YOUR FEET ?

12:15ffi MOVIE : 'Enter the
Dragon·
(I) ESPN · s Horse Racing
Weekly
12c30 U (]) CIJ late Night with
David Letterman

CIJ Jack Benny Show
CIJ MOVIE : "The Cat

and

the Canary'

Cil Eve on Hollywood
0 ffi MOVIE: 'S tunt
Seven'

El® News
12:45 ()_) Mazda Sportslook

1/ALU EL

PRA YER

Wh at 1he down and o ul poe 1 0 1rJ

' ODE - EVERYONE
Jom the Jumble Lo••ns Fen Club and receive 51• l'!lhl·word Super Jumble s e~ef)' month
For lrfill samples write to Jurnbto Loyers Fan Club, clo th1 s newspa ptlr. Bo• 5241
Grand Cent11l Statton. Newv Yoril. N 'f 1016J.Inclucle yoor name. address and r1p code

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

From every angle

WEST
+K 8

Is th f'r(' an ntr " l' hance''
Indeed th('rc ts' Yo u can
ma ke the hand w1lh a ll
finesses wrong If Wes t hold~

~ - tfi · H4

JU St K-x of s p a dt' ~ . or tf
spad es arc 3-3. or If E a ~l

.,

llold s the kmg
Le t' s stud v t hat e xtra
chance . Yuu · wm the cl ub

EAST
• !0 !I i 4

• 98
+KI U9fil
• .11 0 9 .1

lead . play onr roun d ol
tru m ps,

• 7 4 :\ 2

dumm y
tru m p

Vu l nerab le · N&lt;'tther
De a ler South
Wt·sl

r\orth

E&lt;t~l

I'J !iS

3+

I';., ~~
l 'a :-.~
I ';1 ~'

f'J :-.S

of

cl uhs

lead

a

end play Yo u ha\'1:' stnpp C'd

+ I 4

IJ.4•

ace of

We st ts caught tn an r&gt; ar l v

tAQ

Pa.-.:s

the

to dummy &lt;.~nd a
spade ba ck to y our Jiif' k

+AQ H
• QJO ;d 2

l'a s.s

cash

spades. stn p yo ur hand a nd

+(J Kfi 2

SOl iTII

Opemng lead

,.

Soulh

.1.

:,•

I'·'""

+.J

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
Some ehrnmauon play s
arc easy to work out O th er s.
l1ke t·o day ·s, a r e
very

htm of h ea r l ~ A. ( lub le a d
will g1v e you &lt;~ ru ff and
dJsc·nrd . A d1.1m ond lead will
t ake vour ftnesse for v ou J nd

&lt;.dso

be CJ

I user

-

L ei" s supposP W l's t ho d
one mo re spad l' and It'd Jt
ba c k Your SIX o f s p&lt;:ldc s wtll
b('com e a wmner. on v.lu ch
you ca n gt&gt;t nd of dummy 's
dt am ond l osf'r S11ppose Wt&gt;st
wa s dea l t four s pad P~ Y our
contra c t t ~ doom e d h(_·r;,Hst
th e d Ja m ond f l ll t'"-" ' ' J:-o[fs id tc
The twi.lut\' nf th1 ~ l tn f' nf
pl d~· IS that 11 (·an nnt h urt
vo u
If Wes t hold s l our
Sra dc:-; 1o thr k mg . ~· ot , L'&lt;W
still try t he d1 amond fi ii t'SS ('

complicated Sitting South.

II Eas l hold' lh r spode k1ng

you are 1n 11 mt ght y good
slam. You need one o f two
fine sses. but nellh er ts
ons1de

thrn rf'pf'atf"&gt;rl spade lea d-"
from dumrny wt ll ~ ('t 11p a
spade f o r a d1amon d dJ.st·ar d
!NEWSPAPE R

ENTt: H f' IH ~W

o\ S.',r&gt;,

1

~~·'Hid'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
4ll Englis h
1 Legal action
river
Modified
II
l:leveragr
5
or ganism

9 Oct
birthstone

DOWN

I Volcamc

13 Actor, -

peak
2 Summit
3 Escape with
a whole skm
4 Old note

Cook, Jr.
15 English

5 Appear
6 Italian

10 Imitate
12 U.S.S.R
river

river

Yrstf'rday 's An.'iwrr

16 Confined
19 l.leep mud
1 Friend,
in Dijon
21 Monopoly
8 Purchasing Z'l Pilot
place
23 Puny one
II Dancing
25 Valley
lady
14 D1d penance 27 V enerate
composer

16 Before
1prefix 1
17 Sleeping
setup

ffi MOVIE : 'Tootsie '

J A .R .Construction Co Ru -

Pasquale Electric Co . all
phase s of electric work , all
work guaranteed. Aerial
tru c k rental 614 - 446 -

Jumbles JOK ER
Ans wer

k1dnapped and Colt p ut s t o gether an army of stummen
to save her (60 m1n )

0 ffi ®I MOVIE : 'K im '
(]) ® In Concert at the

as his

1

+A K 7

(1) MOVIE : 'Oh. God''

ALLEY OOP

With

I

+ .1 K

(!) NBA Basketball : t 984

,.

Yesterday s

• A K .I i :;

CI! Flipper

r

I I I I I )-[ I I

"[

NOHTII

night"s program features
Sarah Purcell" s wedd1ng to
Or Robert A McClint o ck . a
traditional Hawauan luau an d
the Fifth Annual Underwater
Pogos11ck Champ• o n sh1 ps
(60 mm I
CI) MOVIE: 'WarGames·

REMEM8ER.'

Excava1ing

1----- - -- --

Starcraft bunk house
camper, 26Yr h. long. sleeps

.

.

6286.

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

MAYBE I WOKE UP 5UF!E.' THAT'S (:i0T
DUf\IN ' TH' NIGH T T'E&gt;E IT! 1 WAS SO
AN ' SAW IT ON
TUCMEAED OUT I
TM ' BERCH ..
DON'T EVEN

;~'c·~' ~J

touch
Rover'

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Now arra nge the c~rc l ed len er s 10
form the surpnse answer. as sug
gested by the above cartoon

• ;) :ll

... TH' SEA COULf?'VE WASHEC' MY
SLICKER ASHORE ... BUT IF A
'l'iAVE FLUNG IT OVEfl lfJE
WHILE I WAS 5LEEPIN' I
SURE WOULD'VE HNOWN IT!

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT -

B4

AT WHAT AGE
WEI&lt;:E THEY
MA RRIED ?

Newshour

@ Wheel of Fortune
El ~ People's Court
f.j) One Day at a Time
(!) NBA Tonight
U (1) CD Reaf People To

won't

B3

MacNeil/ lehrer

m o,_Who

6t4 -446 -4477
ING . At . 1 , Box 355. Galli polis. Call 614 - 367 -0576

[]

(Answers tomorr ow)

fl) Jeffersons
7 :30 0 (]) Tic T oc Dough
(I) SportsCenter
([) Bob Newhart Show

614 -237 -0488, 9 a.m to 5

Dotson 's Tree Service In ·
sured · Free Estimate 304 ·

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

li01 News
CITl

WATER '

76

10ft. aluminum boat $100 .

I]) Wheef of Fortune
(I)
Nightly
Business
Report

p m
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

82

Answer: T~TE

U (1) PM Magazine
lil Here Come the Brides

PROOFING Uncondit•onal
lifetime guarantee . local
references furnished Free
estimates . Call collect 1 -

Remodeling, sJding, intenor
and extertor, teKtured coating , simulated brtck and
stucco . therm o replacement
windows . 304 -675-1560 .

1

ANNIE

Absten Harne Improvement
Specialists. framing, roof ing. siding. concrete, remo deling. painting , etc . Free
estimate . 304 -458 - 1566.

BASEMENT

News

CIJ Family feud
0 I]) Family Feud

CAPTIAN

3802 .

I

0

0

SHIP

Water wells commercial and
d •..t mastic, test holes. pump
sales end service . 304 - 895 -

fll Star Trok
1J (]) IJ) NBC

rr J
EGMAIPj
rrr

ffi B.J ./Lobo Show

M~LF. ..

675 -

304-675-2119 afta' 6 p.m .

422 -2367.

w~

'
!'

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

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

614 - 992 -

1976 Ford F100 truck ,
auto . a .c .. p .s .. 51.000
milea . Call 614 -742-2880 .

62500 00.
676 -6613

Boats and
Motors for Sale

'OJltllt-~K

j

RINGLE 'S SERVICE expe&gt;

0'

[J

(]) Inside the PGA Tour
(I) Sanford and Son
(I) CD G}l Enterta1nment
Tonight

BEl'l.m)

t 331 .

STEAMER . Water removal ,
furniture cleaning. free es1i mates . 304 - 675 · 2295

$2,250. 992 -2 381 or 992 2509 .

AW\11~ 'Itt.

STLq::::

Fetty Tree Trimming, sfllmp
removal. Call 304 - 615 -

1 982 Honda Silver Wing
Interstate . Air ride 8r full
dress $1,996 or constder
trade for PU truck Call
614· 367-0172 after 5PM .

1977 Honda Goldwing
Gl1 000, full dressed. new
ace., all the extras, ex . cond .

fON I..CU&gt; CO

ou:;'LL ~ _.L-------T---1\t-\~

614 -446-2454 .

$1 , 500. Call 446 -3989 .

1971 BSA good cond ..
extended front end. S650 .
Ca11614 -367 -7424 after 5 .

7:00

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

304 -675 - 2088
4560 .

I I I

1

(])Rifleman

BORN LOSER

srono . Call 614 -367 -0409
or 614 -367 -7244 .

0&lt;

NAJOB
INERREDI

Contact

John Bragg shows host J1m
Tabor basic rock cltmbmg
tec hntque s and Tabo r g1ve s
some t•ps on th fl prF!ven1!on
of blisters \Clo sed Cap ·
t1oned]

H &amp; S Home Improvements
vinyl siding, roqfing , room
addition , storm windows.

GET

1980 DifHel Rabbit. ac, 4
speed. 4 "'door, radio, 43 to
50 miles per gal . 304 -675 -

65500 .
7354
~OME

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

75

$600 fi,m . Call 6t4 -379 21 t 5 .

1975 Ponlta c Astra. 4 cyl. ,
stAn d ard. goo dcond .. S650 .

..

@ Great Outdoors Cl•mber

or 6t4 -367-7244

2398
1982 Z28. loaded with
everything, black,
S10,000.00 firm . 304- 675 ·

3~2 - 1 .

(!) Mazda SportsLook
CIJ Carol Burnen
(1) Ol ~ ABC News
0 ffi @J CBS News

H &amp; S Home Improvements
vinyl siding, roofing, room
addition, storm windows,
stone. Call 614 -367 -0409

Bronco 1978 loaded with
extras. exc . cond. Call for
appointment 446 - 1050.

Motorcycles

6 :30

oxp Call 614-388-9652 .

scotchguard · water extrac tion . deodorizers . FREE esti mates . Reasonable rates .
Gene Smith, 992 - 6309 .

74

AM. EASY. CAI':OL AND
1 &gt;lAVE SE-EN OVER TO
THE LAMS ~RTS FORDI~~ER. HER HUSSAND WORkS WITH
COMPUTERS, TOO.

_

rJ
r
.._
··-··----·- -·--

Wolf

fl) The Enterprise goes
• too lar~ STAR TREK

PAINTING - interior and ex terior. plumbing. roofing,
some remodeling . 20 yrs

GENE"S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN _

992 ~ 6939 .

1 Kt.JOW WHERE I

~

1978 Chevy van auto. 6 cyl..
AM -FM tape, carpeted, covered spare lire on rear ,
ladder, $3,496 . Johns Auto
Sales, Bulaville Rd . Gallipo·
lis . 446 -4782. open til dark .

304-675 -5149 after 5 :00.

4 yr . old Palomino geldmg.
broke to rtde . 304 -773 -

0!" THE- CITY. eVERYTHING S!'~MS
SO PeACEFUL HERE-.

614 -446 -

3187 .

Small bdly goat, best offer.

64

4200 0' 985 -4244 .

73

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

MacNeil/lehrer

(fiJ

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout ·
ing . Now installing rubber
roots 30 years experience,
specializing in built up roof

lives1ock

Hol ste1n bulls from DHF
tester! . dams w -20.000 lbs .
of milk or more . Also Hol stein cow AI s~red. Call

"Lono

~

Newshour

I'D LIKE TO I.IVE- II.J THI5- PART

614-266-1182.

Ca11614 -388-9857

6UY?

HILLCREST KENNELS

Home
Improvements

- Commercial and residen tial . free estimates . Call

675 -4 58t

63

Cil ®J Ol

(]) MOVIE: 'Rocky Ill"
(1) New Treasure Hunt
(!) Fiahin' Hole
CIJ Andy Griffith
Cil Nows/Sports/ Weathe'

CAPTA IN EASY

Wante d to buy old junk saw
mill f or pans Phone 304 -

I

Pets for Sale

u (]) I]) 0
McQuade'

2 . 000 lb toba cco base. until
the last of May . Call 446 9777 or 446 · 3592

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one letter to ea ch square. to form
four ordtnary words

EVENING
Newa
(]) MOVIE :

81

ID11

11)}\f~

~ ~ ~~ 1M.

/

STUCCO and PLASTERING

masonry
.. , 8 ",. ~
12" blocksupplias.
. Delivery 4service
Ph o ne day 304 -882 - 2222.
eveni ng 882 - 3239 .

56

Sales.

62 Wan1 ed to Buy

Ca ll 614 -388 -9905 .
Wood ch uck . model STW C
12 Brush Chipper . exc
cond
94 . 650 00
All ic e
Chalmers model DO road
grader. all hydraulic , 6 cy l .
diesel engine . $8 .500 00
304-458 - 1610 .

Camper

6:00

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

71

446 0452 .

'!

Services

614 - 379 21t5 .
Jim's Farm Equtpment Cen ter , At . 35 W ., Gallipolis ,
OH 614 -446 -9777 or 446 ·
2484 We specialize i n King
Kutter equip . See us and
save on the following N ew
King Cuner tools, brush
hogs - 40 " - 4-5 6 - 7 ft
plows 1 2 bottom, cultiva
tors 1 - 2 row. Chiesel plows
5 · 7 -9 shank, rear blades
4 · 5 1f~- 6 - 7 - 8 ft . post hole
diggers 9 - 12". York rak es.
rot otillers 40 - 52 - 60 -70 .. ,
potatoe plows . boom pole s·
regular &amp; HO . Carry ails.
sunflower rakes. ttatlet load
o f barb w~re 521
roll .
tobacco setter . 2 aKie
tratlers · 17 ft . long. USED
Wheel d1sc . 3 pt disc . 2
small pull type 16 hlades .
plows - 2 -3 · 4 bottom . post
dr1ver . shaver. rotary hoes
NH . MF . Ford mowers
Rakes 3 -P MF . Nl pull type
gravity boxes with wag o n s.
10 ft Chiesel plow. used
tractor parts, Ford . Ferg ,
Oliver 60 -77, farrnall H -M .
other used parts for plows .
balers
We buy farm &amp; indus trial equipment.

ACTUALLY, IT MAY
BE : CONSPIRACY TO
DEFRAUD IS A FELONY.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Television
Viewing

Pull type 42 " double d1sc for
lawn and ga rden tractor

9N Ford tractor with 12 in .
plows, good shape, S 1 .500 .
or S250 for plows . Ca ll

Stroller. 2 bar stools. stnk &amp;
faucets. standard size win ·
dow. old sc hool desk . Baby
bed Call between 8 &amp; 1 PM .

7795 .

Surplus stock , now and u~ed
applian ces. furniture . 304 ·

676 ~ 1811

C•ll 614 -256

,. YOU MEAN TO 5AY SELLING
THE LIKES OF THESE ISN'T A
CRIMINAL ACH

U.S. Rt. 50, Coolville. Oh
614 -667-3386 .

304 -675 -7642 .

DON'T

30 m c h wh ite electric range ,
exc con . S100 . 19 inch
color Ouaur TV $160 . 25
inch TrueTone co l or T\1

Piece

Farm Equipment

DICI( TRACY

1956 International tractor,
wide front end , 3 pt . hitch,
ltve power , spinout hub a,
2 -way hydraulic , good ties .

5 yr . old Registered Here ford Bull Pnced on call

61

Ohio

WEEK ONLY Mov 13-20 .
4

Call

Shrubs pruned . lawn re ·
seeded . retaining walls,
sidewalks. patios, fill dirt ,
topsoil . bark mulch &amp; saw dust . Contact Bruce Oavi ·
si an . Call614 -256 - 1427 .

742 -2352

5

Fruit
&amp; Vegetab les

Red &amp; white sweet po tat oe
plants Call 614 256 65 7 4
after 3 30 .

CoHee table stereo. stereo .
dmette table Call 61 4 -256 ·

Now open for business.
Mou ntain State Bloc k , At .
33 , New Ha&gt;Jen Complote

Musical

May 16, 1984

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
FREE Care free awning (Up
to $666.50 value) with the
purcheae of any 1984 motor
home or tra&gt;Jel trailer . ONE

1_1_1_0_ _ _ __ _ _ __
Pu.p pies AKC co llie . Has
shots and wormed 304 ·
675 - 3638 ·

614 949 2293 0' 6t4 - 698 GOOD USEO APPLIANCES _6_3_6_4_ _ _ _ _ __ _
Washers , dryers . refrigera - 1

pets . Cell 614 -367- 7438
COUNT RY MOBILE Home

layen
cac S75
. 304Him
-675
Reg
is tered
female
a··

54 Misc . Merchandise

3159

Fu rn1 shed M ob 1l e Home .
c entral a1r . mde below city
ove rl oo ki ng th e nver One or
two adu lts o nly 446 -03 3B

TWIN

61

304 -895 -3382

Half Bobcat kittens 3 with ·
out ta1ls $60 00 or 1 w1th
tail S30 . 00
304 - 937 2666 .

1 bedroom mobile h o me
5125
month
30 4 -675 -

44

Wednesday, May 16, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

18 Greek

letter
20 Gold I Sp. I
21 Tooth
23 Destruction
24 Ward off
25 Actress

Z9 Falk or
I•' ondd

33 .John Clenn·s
wLf l'

34 Nl' Cd)

36 In th&lt;· past
31 Snatch

Irene

26 Climb
27 Declaimed

violently

28 Designate
211 Hides
30 Greek

letter
31 " All About

32 Faucet
35 Find
31 " - ,
Nanette"

38 Jolly 39 Late New
Yorker
cartoonist

DAILY CRYP'I'OQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Ia

L 0 N G F E L I. 0 W

One letter simply stands f o r anothN ln t h1 !' sample A i s
used for the three t ·~ . X f orth(' tw o o ·~ . l'l r ~i n~ lt' lt•l t ('r s.
apoalrophes, the length :md formati ?n o f ltH~ ~nm1 s arr all
hints. Each day the code lett ers are d1fferrn t

CRVPTOQUOTES
PBIGDSTSAR

vs

LV

PG B

HEEHDALDA

PGH P

J B

BQYBELBDIB

W S D' P

M DH I M

PGB

JSF.TW

GHXB

LP . - UHQ

SN

p

s

NELVIG

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: THE MILK OF HUMAN KINDNESS

SHOULD BE BROUGHT FRESH TO THE TABLE EVERY
IW)RNTNG .- AUSTIN O'MAu.EY

�Page

Wednesday, MGy 16, 1984

The Daily Sentinel

12

Pork, milk prices cut April grocery bills Meigs County happenings...
By aYITEN TIMBERLAKE
AP Business Writer
Grocery prtces edged down
onP-tenth of 1 percent In April.
matching the March decline. according to an Associated Press
marketbasket syiVey.
Prices lor pork chop:; and milk
fell. Eggs were more expensive.
"Obviously, its good for thP
consumer bf'cause it means you're
paying less- even If it's not very
much less," Donald Ratajczak, a n
economist at Georgia Sl&lt;lte Unlv&lt;&gt;r·
sity In Atlanl&lt;l, said Tuesday.
"Unfortunately, this is not the
beginning of a downward trend.

This is the result of unusual
circumstances," he added .
The marketbasket bW decreased
In nine cities, falling an average 2.7
percent, lfNf&gt;oN York Is not Included.
Counting Nf&gt;.N York, where a llf&gt;oN
checklist st~re In a less expensive
nelghborhooa was used tor the most
recent survey. the average decline
in the nine cities was 4.7 percent.
The l&lt;lb rose In three cities Chicago, Philadelphia and Salt
Lake City - with an average
increase of 7.4 percent. Salt Lake
City had the biggest jump, 19.33
percent, primarily because of a big

boost In the prtce ot sugar there.
If New York, which had the
biggest decline, 21.12 percent, Is
taken Into acrount, the overall
marketbasket bill was 1.7 percent
lower than In March.
Atlanta had the secorxl largest
decline, 4.96 percent.
From January through April,
grocery prtces rose 2.5 percent, not
Including New York, and1.3 percent
If that city Is Included. Seven cities
had Increases, at an average pace of
5.3percent. The six that declined did
so at an average rate ot 1.4 percent,
without New York. lncludlng New
York, the decline was 3.5 percent.

Board adopts
new calendar

Area deaths
Rilla Lewis
Rilla Lewis. R7, Rt. 1, West
Columbia, W.Va., died Tu&lt;&gt;sday in
Scenic Hills ~ursing Center .
Gallipolis.
Born Nov.

14, 189G. in Wf•sl

Columbta, daughter of thf' late
Benjamin

Thomas

and

Nancy

Virginia Edwards l.ewis. shewas an
employ&lt;'&lt;' of Robinson's Dry Clean
er s for 45 years and a mPmbf'r of
Salem Commun ity Church.
Shew as preceded in death by four
sisters. Christena Fisher. Rosa M.
Lewis. Vina M . Mc[)(&gt;rmitt. and
Alhertha M . uwis: and by five
brothers. Ezra E .. Emcst R .. LRwis
T .. Harry B. and Herbert LRwis .
She Is survivt"d by sPveral nil-'l'es
and nephews.
Funeral serv ices will be held at 1
p. m . Friday in Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, W.Va .. with the Rev.
Fred McCallister and the Rev .
Jerry Scott officiating. Burial will be
in Lewis Family· Cemetf"ry at WC'st
Columbia. Fri&lt;'nds may ra il at tlle
funeral homP from :l-t and 7-C! p.m.

Thursday

Paul M. Oamt'll
Pau l :"vl . Dame ll, Sr, 69, 7:11 High
St., Middlepmi , well -known Meigs
County resident , dim Tuesda,·
morning a1

VetPrans Memorial

Hospital .
A retired emp loye of thP Ohio
Valley E lectric Corporation, Kyger

Creek Plant, Mr. Darnell was born
at ThP Plains on Dec. 26, 1914, a son
of the late Samuel and Stella Gould
Darnell. Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by two sisters and
a brother.
Mr. Darnell was a member of the
Bradbury Ch urch of Christ and was
a veteran of World War IL He was a
member and a past master of
M iddlep011 Lodge 363, Free and
Acceptrn Masons. Hewasmasterof
the lodge for two years and
secretary for eight years. He seiVed
th&lt;' l2t h Masonic District as its first
di st tiel education officer. He was a
past patron of Evangeline Chapter
17'2, Order of Eastern Sl&lt;lr, Mlddll.'part, and was past associate
g~m rdian of Bethel 62, Middleport,
International Order of Job's Daughters. and also was past associate
gTand guardian of the State of Ohio.
He an an advi'i&lt;lr lor the Order of
[)(&gt;Moiay in Middleport.
Mr. DameU was a member ot the
Ancient Accepted Smttis h Rite.
Vallev of Columbus. He was a 32nd
degree master Mason and was
presently serving as ambassador In
Meigs County for the Ancient
1\ccepted Scottish Rite. Hew as past
high priest of Pomeroy Chapter 00,
Hoyal Arch Masons, and was past
illustrious master of Bosworth
Council 46, Royal and Select
Masters in Pomeroy. He was a past
commander of Ohio Valley Comm a ndary 24, Knights Templar,

Mayor's Court
Alfred 0. Roush of !Rtart. W.Va.
forieited $l,IJ75 on five different
charges when he failed to ap(Jf'ar In
the court of MiddiPport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Charges against Roush and the
bonds he forfeited wPr&lt;' driving
while intoxicated, $4.10: fie&lt;'ing an
officer. $Z25; driving under suspen·
slon, $200, possession of marijuana.
$100; open m ntainer. $100.
Others forteiting bonds in lh&lt;'
court were Gary Tcrr:-·. Dale. Incl.,
$41. speeding: WilmPr Halfhill.
Middleport, $.10. no opPrator's
license, and $450 driving while
Intoxicated; Earl D. Snider, ChP·
shire, $450drlvlngwhileintoxica ted.
Fined in the couri were Ed Van
Meter. Jl)(' Van MPte r, and Lawton
T&lt;'mpleton. ail of Middleport, fined
$.10 and C'OSIS each In charges of
disorderly manner. and Paul H.
Alley. Pomeroy, $11i and costs,
speeding .
John C1arncck i.

Flint,

Micll

forfeited a $44 bond on a charge of
s peeding in the &lt;'Ourt of Pomeroy
Mayor Richard Seylor Monday
night.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted: Opal Barr, Middil.'port; Mary Erlewine, Long Botlnm,
James Reynolds, Middleport, Pau·
line Cunningham, Racine, and
Bernice Molden, Pomeroy.
Discharged:Ciyde Tucker, OWe
Gonzalez, Gretchen Yeager, Randall Tackett, Mary Casto, and May
First .

There will he dancing at ),;li
Denison Post 467, American Legion.
Rutland. Saturday, May 19, from 9
p.m . untlll a.m.
There will he a live band, snack
bar and refreshment stand. Square,
round and slow dancing will be
featured. Donations arc$2foraduils
and $1.50 for children.

The 1984-85 school calendar was
adopted when the Eastern Local
School Dlstrlct Board of Education
met In special session Tuesday
night.
Students will report for their first
day of classes on Aug. ~ with
teachers reporting on Aug. 27. Final
day of school In 19~will he May31. A
spring break is Included in the
calendar with any needed calamity

Paul M. nameD
Pomeroy, and a member of Ohio
Priory 18, Knights of the York Cross
of Honor. Mr. Darnell was a life
member of The Masonic Veterans
Association of Ohio.
Surviving are his wife, lla Slater
Darnell; a daughter and son-In-law,
Llrxla Lee and Don Mayer, PomProy; two sons and daughters-In· law,
Samuel Ray and Barbara Black·
more, Matthews, N. C.,andPauiM.
Jr., and Linda Darnell, Pomeroy:
grandchildren, Michael and Kim·
herly Blackmore, Bethany Jo and
Michael Mayer, and Jeffrey and
Melissa Dawn Darnell; a brother.
Hershel E. Darnell, Sprtngfleld; two
sisters, Wlllo Calvo, Bartow, Fla.,
and Margie Aldrtdge, Columbus;
his mother-in- law, Mrs. C. E. Slater
of Middleport and several nieces
a nd nephews.
Services 1'1ll he held at 2 p.m .
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with Mr. John Wrlght officiating.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire . Masonic
rites wiil he conducted at 7:30p.m.
Thursday at the funeral home by
Middleport Lodge 363, F &amp;AM.
Friends may contribute to a
memorial fund In Mr. Darnell' s

St1lte over
[)(&gt;partment
Education
to
days
the five of
allowed
by the
he deducted from that break period.
The board approved a list of 81
seniors for graduation pending the
completion of requirements. The
next regular board meeting was
changE:&lt;! from May 21 to May 31 at
7: ~p.m . and future board meetings
were set for 7: 30 p.m. until further

There will he a dance at Rutland
Civtc
. Center F n'd ay. May 18 from 8
. b y "I tumtc
.
p.m. 1o 11 p.m. music
Sounds." Admission is $3 a couple
a nd $2 a single.

r;:========:::i;:::;l
Special Graphics
Middleport, Ohio

CUSTOM SCREEN
PRINTING

T·Shirts. Caps, Jackets. Etc.

SPECIAL PRINTING
FOR YOUR
SPECIAL NEEDS

Board meeting set
Southern Local Board of Education wW meet Monday, May 21, at 7
p.m. In the high school cateterta.

Battle of bands set
There will be a battleofthebands
at the Long Bottom Community
Building Sunday, May 20, from 1
p.m. to 4 p.m .
Five bands wW he featured. There
will he a va riety of music, bluegrass,
gospel and country. Refreshments
will he sold.

notice.

April arrests at II 7

There will b county wide prayer
m eeting Sunday, May 20, at2p.m. at
Bald Knob Mission. Glen Bissell is
class leader.

Meet&lt;;

Thursday

The Magnolia Club wlll meet at
the hom£&gt; of Burton Smith at 7:30
p.m . l'httr'SCiay \"t.th
the program to
'
be Jll'&lt;'sn' 111 hy Cora "---le.
~~o
Members an' to t~ke items for the
Pomemy Health Care Center
proje&lt;'t

The Middleport Pollee Depart ment made 117 arrests during April,
Chief of Pollee J. J. Cremeans
reports. Ten accidents were lnvestl·
gated by the department and
parking meter collections tol1lled
$1,001.50 while merchant police
collections amounted to $62. There
were 5a'i parking tickets wrttten and
a ll vehicles were driven 5.057 miles
during the month.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

MAIN ST.

RUTLAND, OH.

.

$1450

Spring
Special

Alignment.. ................ ..

4 Tires

ROTATED &amp;
$
COMPUTER BALANCED ............. .

RADIALS

Pl65/80Rl3 firestone ..... 37.50
Pl75/80Rl3 firestone .
38.00
P185/80Rl3 Firestone ..... 38.50
Pl85/75Rl4 Reynolds
44 .00
P!95 / 75Rl4 Reynolds ..... 46.00
P205/ 75Rl4 Reynolds ..... 46 .50
P215/75Rl4 Reynolds ..... 47 .00
P95175Rl5 B.F. Goodrich ..... 39.00
P215/75Rl5 Re nolds ..... 48.50

1595

P225/75R Reynolds ......... 51.50
P235/ 75R Crestwood ..... .. 53.50

TRUCK TIRES

10.00-15 Desert Dogs.. ....... '65.50
10.00.15 .F. Goodrich Radia1 ..... 1 ~.00
33xl.50xl5 RWL Streaker. ...... 84.50
750-16 B.B. Goodrich Super Tractor
68.00
8.00-16.5 Cooper Rough Tread .... 55.00
36xl4.50xi6.5 Kell S rin ield .. 99.00

MANY OTHER TIRES IN STOCK

Prices Include Mounting &amp; Bubble Balance

Weather forecast
Clear tonight. Low near 40. Light
and variable winds. Thursday,
s unny and warmer. High near 75.
Chance of rain near zero percent
through Thursday.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
Fair on Friday. Chance of
showers or thunderstonns Satur·
day and Sunday. Hlghs75-80Frlday,
In the 7&amp; Saturday and in the
mld-G&amp; to mid·70s Sunday. Lows In
the 50s Friday and Saturday and the
mld-4&amp; to mid-~ Sunday.

Computer Balance '4.00 Per Wheel
WE ALSO INSTAll SHOCKS
OWNERS: EARL FIELDS &amp; MARTY DUGAN

A FRIEND WHEN YOU
NEED A

Public Is Invited

United Pentecostal
Church
873 S. 3rd
Middleport
Refreshments Available

SINCE I!3'JH

5th STREET

LH ETH IUDCI:

$200

$100
Source :
Office of Managemem

Budget

House bill
authorizes
$285 billion

83 . 84 • 85

86

Estimated

DEFENSE BUDGET UNDER DEBATE - The House of
Representatives opened debate Tuesday on the $285 billion Pentagon
spending package. S]l('aker Thomao; P. O'Neill Jr. predicts the House
will virtually scuttle the $26 IJUIIon MX missile program In the package.
( AP Laserpholo I.

Fabulous selection of
beautiful drapery fabrics
to compliment any room
in your home. Satins, brocades, casements and
prints.
_,,.
. '

Take your pick from standard, deluxe and ultra-full
pleats or the new continental rod pocket heading.

.

..,

li~4~

""" ...

Bring In Your Measurements or We Will
Measure For You!
HURRY IN - SALE ENDS JUNE 10

•

enttne

at

1 Section, 14 Paget.
25 Cents
A. Multimedia Inc. Newlf)Qper

Three face theft
charges in Meigs
The Ma y 4th breaking and
entering of Royal Oak Tradin!( Post
has been cleared with the arrest of
two adults and one ju venile th('
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
reported.
Arrested were Gene Buddy
Thompson, 18. and Brian Georg~.
18, both of Middleport and a 17-year
old, Rt. 1, Cheshire youth.
The juvenile is being held in the
juvenile sec tion of the county jail on
charges of breaking and e nt&lt;&gt;rlng
and theft according to the sheriff's
department.
Thompson and George are being

chargE:&lt;! with contributing to the
deli nquency of a minor, breaking
and entPring and theft.
Taken from Royal Oak park were
cigarettes. cigars and ofhPr miscellanro us items.
The trio are also being c harged
wilh theft as a result of coin boxes
taken from newspaper racks at
Mark \i, Fruth's, J ones Boys,
Powells, Smtinel Ofice a nd the
Kruger Store.
Assist ing in the arresl of the trto
were Carl Hysell , juvenile office.
and J .. I Cremeans. Middleport
Police Chief.

Miller pushes Wayne Forest funding
WASHINGTON !API - Rep.
Clarence M111er, R-Ohlo. has urged
a House Subcommittee to earmark
funding for the purchase of an
. additional 6,00) acres for Wayne
National Forest in southeastern
Ohio.
In a Jetter to the House Approprla.
lions subcommittee on the interior,
Mliler asked the panel to Include $2
mUIIon from a land and water
co'f"rva!lon fund to buy land for

-

NEW OWNERSIUP - Carroll Casto, president of
the new Point Industrial Park, Inc., presents a check
for the purchase of Point Pleasant Malleable Iron IAl
Ralph Mclntrye, president of Warren Tool and Dye
Co., Warren, Ohio. Shown above at the facility located
a1 Kanawha Street and Camden Avenue arc, front
row, left IAl right, Jack Fruth, a'isl.tant treasurer of
the new mmpany, Moses Zegeer of the Governor's

Office of Economic and Conununity Development,
Casto, Mcintyre, Paul R. Somerville, vice president,
and Barry Casto, secretary: and back row, lefl to
right, Charles E. Lanham, treasurer, Jim Mt-Comb of
Pleasant Valley Realty, ,James E. Mitchell, general
t'Ounsel for Warren Tool and Dye , John R. Hart.,
assi'llant treasurer, and Point Pleasant 111ayor .J.J.
Wedge.

Reagan's missile package cut

$300

Fiscal Ye8&lt;s

CUSTOM-MADE DRAPERIES

•

located near the fairgrounds. "We are hitting a
different market," he said. The facility will he
available for'' ... small businesses and industries from
l,OOJ square feet to 85,00J square feet."
Officers of Pomt Industrial Park, Inc., in addition to
Casto, are Paul R. Somer.,·ilJe, vice president, BarryL.
Casto, secretary, Charles E. Lanham, treasurer,Jack
E . Fruth, assistant secretary, aU of Point Pleasant,
and John Hart, a Charleston engineer, assisl1lnt
treasurer. These officers are also the sole stockholders
of the privately-owned company.
Casto said the new company is working closely wit h
several agencies, including the C'rllwrnor's Office of
Economic and Community [)(&gt;velopment .
Moses Zegecr, industrial development rcprescnta tivc with the GOECD. said the office will be
"marketing this !facility 1 every day."
"That's what we're here for," he added. " to bring
industry into the s tate and to help exls11ng Industry.
"We're s truggling ail over the s tate to develop jobs,''
he said.
"Wp apprvdate the efforts of the parties Involved
.. Casto is a local entrepreneur who lakes pride in the
sta le of West Virginia and Point Pleasant." Zegeer
added.
·nwsal(' was negotiatE:&lt;! by Pleasant Valley Realty.
Casto said.

Defense Spending Debate

BELPRE. OHIO 45714

FLAT

992-6513

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA . - A group of local
business people. under lhe corporate title of Point
Industrial Park, Inc .. toda y 1Thursday! purchased the
Point Pleasant Malleable Iron Company from Warren
Tool and Dye, according to Carroll Casto, president of
the n£&gt;w corporation.
Casto, who wou ld not disclose the cost of the
purchase, said the corporation has bc&lt;'n npgot iating
with the Warren, Ohio. firm for about lhree months.
He added that Point Industrial Park, Inc . will begin
renovation of the 8.45 acres of property, located at
Kanawha Street and Camben Avenuc. in aboutlOdays
in an effort to br ing business a nd industry into Point
Pleasant. Genera l clean -up of the fac ilit y will begin
immediate ly.
" It will be a complete ne w look . Cas to said, t£&gt;rming
the venture "an industria l condominium."
The company alrmdy has a potpntial tenant, a fimt
which would require about 16,JOO squan' fept of the
approximall' 2 acTes o f the property which is under
roof, Casto said. Nq::otialions an• underway with a
spcond firm which would usc• about 3.';,00) square f&lt;'&lt;'t
and has the potenlial to bring about 40 jobs to the area.
he added.
In addition, stockholders have been in contact with
at least five other companies. he sa id .
Casto said the planned industrial park will not he in
competition with th&lt;&gt; Mason Count v Indus trial Park .

(8el'11nd Post Ofl•ce)

COOLVILLE. OHIO 45723

THESE PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY

POMEROY

Story on Page 6

Business leaders
buy Point facility

ELBERFELDS

MEMORIAL DAY ARRANGEMENTS .............. S495· &amp; S795
HANGING BASKETS-Foliage &amp; Flowering ...... S550 to S}OOO
GERANIUMS IN 4" POT ......... -·- ................................. 95¢
POTTED TOMATOES IN 6" POT ................................... 95¢
POTTED MUMS ..................................................... s5so
POTTED HYB. 1M PATIENTS .................................... s425
SWEET POT ATO

1.3 Mile out State Route 143 from Rt. 7.

Stories on Pages, :J.4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 17, 1984

125 LEE STREET

$800

HOURS: MON.-SAT 8:00-9:00
SUNDAY 1:00-9:00

Alumni banquet plans

Voi.JJ , No.25
Copyrighted 1984

l1nd

SPRING PLANTING SPECIALS
TOMATOES
MARIGOLDS
CABBAGE
GERANIUMS
CAULIFLOWER
PETUNIAS
AND MORE!

Baseball roundups

e

WH ITE-ETH Rl DG E
:Fwrw7'ai Lw 423 -6300
6613110

DUCKETT'S
VEGETABLE &amp; BEDDING PLANTS

Stories on Page 4

FRIEND

614-992-7626
AFTER 5 P . M.

See letters on Page 2

$400

Graduation Exercises
MAY 25TH
7:00P.M.

Meigs teams triumph

Congress is seeking to cut President Reagan's
defense spending authorization in the fourth year
of his five·year buildup plan The cutback will
affect the $26 biftion MX missile program and
other projects.

TINY TECH

FOR PRE-SCHOOL

Issues draw opinions

Prayer session set

r-;=====================:::::;

name at the Bradbury Church of r===========~
Chrtst. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND iAPl The
winning num ber drawn Tuesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, ''The Number," was 063.
In tlle "Pick 4" game, played
Monday through Friday, the winning number was 5671.

February saw the largest In· Emergency runs
crease in more than three years.
The 2.1 percent average surge was
Only two calls for assistance were
blamed on bad weather.
• answered by units of the Meigs
1n the latest month, pork prtces County Emergency Medical Servi·
declined because fanners, who
ces Tuesday. A 1: 12 p.m. the
could not work their fields on
Pomeroy squad went to Sl1! te Route
143 near the Mount Zion Church for
account ot wet weather, instead
slaughtered an unusually large
Allee Plantz who was t1lken to
numbers of livestock, Ral&lt;ljczal&lt;
Veterans Memorial Hosll1ll. At 5:57
said. 1n addition, a late Easter
p.m . the Middleport squad anspressured meat prtces: many
wered a call to the Stonewood
consumers tum to fish and chicken
Apartments tor Joe Carson who was
during Lent.
treated but not transported.
"Unfortunately, neither of those
(factors) are expected to persist,"
he said.
Dances announced

natuml resource and recrealional
development in the forest.
Miller's office said the U.S. Forest
Service has ldentifled land In
Washington. Monroe, Hocking,
Perry, Athens, Lawrence a nd
GaUia counties for addition to the
forest.
The 176,01XJ.aere national forest Is
one otl54 administered by the forest
service.

WASHINGTON (API - President Reagan will get fewer than half
the MX nuclear weapons he wants
and even those missiles will he t led
to renewed U.S.-Soviet anns talks
under a compromise approved by
the House and supported reluctantly
by the Reagan administration.
"The White House suppot1ed us
only after they saw tlleycouldn 'twin
the whole thing." said Rep. Les
Aspln. D-Wis., chief architect of the
plan, which won 229-199 House
approval late Wednesday after
seven hours of debate.
Minutes before Aspin's deal was
approvl'd, MX opponents failed by
only six votes, 218-212, to kill the
weapon Rmgan has made thP
centerpiece of his rf'('Ord Pentagon
buildup.
Heagan sought 40 MX w&lt;&gt;apons in
the fiscal1985 budget. But the votP
by the Democrat-controlled House
authorizes only 15 of the glnnt
10-warhead weapons, and then only

if the Soviets don ' t return by next
April! to the arms talks theywalkrn
out of last y&lt;&gt;ar.
That proviso is intended "as a
carrot to tll&lt;' Soviets." Aspin
explained. "If they're as afraid of
the MX as they say. they can return
to the talks and try to bargain it
away."
Left untouched by the House
decision was last year's congressional approval of the firs t 21 of the
100 MX wmpons Reagan wants to
build.
Assisl1lnt \\1lite House press
secretary Kim Hoggard sa id a ftpr
the vote, "We are pleased ... but
there are more hurdles along the

wav ."
Hoggard is right. The House vole
was part of a $285 billion Pentagon
authorization bilL If the Republican controlled Senate later approves a
different MX package, the differen ces will face a conference commit tee and more House and Senate

••
Improvements
quick action coming
COLVMBlJS. Ohio !API 1'he House is preparing to act
quickly on Gov. Richard Celes te' s proposed $530 mllllon
capital improvements blil, a
measure the administration acknowledges would not be possi ble without the state's highl'r
income tax.
Chris Sale, director of CPIeste's Office of Budget and
Management, did nol directly
mention Celeste'' 90 percent
state income tax increase, up-

held by voters lasl November.
during her testimony before the
House Finance Commit tee
Wednesday.
R£&gt;portedly. no funds were
a ilocatrn for Meigs County .
Gall!a County was a lloted
$4,418,500, including$1, 218,500 for
the Gaillpolis [)(&gt;velopnnental
Center and $.1,200,00) for Rio
Grande's Community College.
Rep. Willlam Hlnlg, D-New
Philadelphia, finance committee
chairman, said a vote was
scheduled today. Expected approval would c lear the way for a
vote by tlle tuJl House, probably
next Tuesday.
No major changes In the bUI,
which also must be approved by
tlle Senate, are anticipated.
At sl&lt;lke are $5.tl million In
construction projects at stall.'asslsted universities, mental
health, mental retardation, natu-

raJ resources and other
departments.
She hinted there wasn't much
room for legislators to e xpand
the measurp by inserting pel
project s.
Ms. Sale sa id debt serviC&lt;'
payments are not expected to
exceed ~.6percent of the generalrevenue fund budget. That is
below the 5 percent level which
she sa id bond-rating agencies
prefer.
Also (Jf'nding before th~ General Assembly is a separatP bill
reappropriating $325 million for
other capital improvement projects previously a uthorized .

votes. There will also befuturevotes

on whether to appropriate the
authorized money.
Still to come as the lloUSt'
continues voting on the defense bill

Wednesday that Reagan had
r hangro some votes.
The president has proposed
putting Hl'J of the weapons he calls
"Peac&lt;'k&lt;'&lt;'per" Into existing Min-

are dff'isions on a number of other

uteman silos near Cheyenne, Wyo ..

weapons. such as new nerve gases.
space weapons and PPrshing 2
nuclear missiles.
Reagan had pushrn for the full
MX package, but HouSC' Minority
[..('ader Robert H. Michel. R-IlL .
blunliy told the president in a
meeting hours before lhP vote that
Aspin 's package was the best
Reagan would get.
The presidPnl teiPphonl-'d some
members of Congwss and m('t
personally with others Se&lt;'ki ng
suppo rt for \h(' ~&lt;eapon he a nd lh&lt;'
Pentagon say is needed to replace
th~ aging missiles in Ihe la nd -based
par1 of the U.S. nuclear force.
House Speakpr Thomas P . 0' Neill
said ea r tier in the week tha t MX

starting m 1~.

opponent s would w in. but ronceded

During thf' seven

hours and

thousands of words of debate. MX
opponents continually noted tha t the
Pentagon wants the MX chieOy
bc·cauSf' thf' Minu teman is vulnera ·

ble to a Sov iet firs t strike.
ThPy arguE:&lt;! that putting the MX
in :v1inuteman silos makes thE&gt;

wcapon just as vulnerable and
makes no 5(-'nS(' unl&lt;'ss the Cnited
States plans to start J nuclear war
b~· firing first.

However . :"v1X suppor1&lt;'rs argued
that the SO\iet' wou ld he deterred
from attack because thP othPr rv..·o

legs of lh&lt;' nuclear triad- bombers
and missile-firing subma1ines
would rf'main to rPta!iate_

Angel Company hegins
work on Racine cable
Racine Village could possibly
have cable TV In opl'ration by the
md of June.
Angel Communicat ion' will ix'gin
installing cable next wwk and plans
call for the tower to ix' erected n&lt;'xt
Monday .

After Ma:v '!:1, a represf'ntati\.'f'
from the compan,- will be in the
village to sign up customers.

Channels on the basic system will
ix' 3, JJ, and 23 from Huntingt on. JO
from Columbu s, 17 from Atlanta. 19
from Cincinnati, 2U !rom Athms.
MTV. CBN, ),;SPN, and 43 from
LOJTaine.
This ac1ion was announCf'd at thi ~
wff'k's Racine council m('('ting .

in ot her matters. E. A. Wingf' tt
met with council mncerning the
flatboat. Adventure Galley II .
similar to the one used by themrly
settlers. sloping In Raclneenmuteto
New Orleans.
It was requestrn that organizations pay a $200fee to tlethecrat1 up
at Racine where the public can vlew
it .
Council agreed it would be
educational, but, council cannot
spend tax money for that purpose .
In other business, council discussed the recent passage of the one
mill fire protection levy in three
townships seJVed by Racine Fir£&gt;
Department.
It was noted that the village
solicitor and jl'OS€Cullng attorney

" 'ill ix' contartro tu handle t11e
contracts belwN:'n thf' \illagf' and
the tm.1.-'T1ships
Parking of \'Ph iclPs on \'illagf'
!-i idewalks was discussed along \.\.'ith
the bi&lt;X'king of sidPwa lk.' Council
instrurtf'CI M:1rshal Alfrf'd L.\'ons to
rontart offc'nd rrs and ask tor
r oopPration anrl if thf' ,·iolations
conrinur to issuP 1ickl'f s.
Council alsn rtiscus.,;;;f'd.complai nt s

lodged regarding two school huS&lt;'S
parked ncar ini PrS('('tiOns. Supt .
Rober1 Ord will lx· contartro m
order to COIT&lt;·ct th&lt;' problrm .
ThP (')('rk wa!-i in!-itructC'd to rtirf'Ct
a thank )'OU IPII&lt;•r to Mr. a nd Mrs . E.
A. ~'ingpr t fur thrir \\'Ork in
trinuning s hrubbc•t)' a long SR 124.
Mars hall Llu!l,· rl'port for the
month of Apri l show&lt;'&lt;l he .had 11
calls, eight compla int s. ninrarrPSts,
invf'stigatf'd onf'

acddent. traveled

443 miles and collect'-'d $728.40 tn
bonds.
Hon Ash, manager of Ohio Power
Co .. Pomeroy. disttibutedllterature
ronccrning acid rain.
Council gave Robert Johnson, fir£&gt;
chief permission Ia obtain prices lor
a new overhead door with automaUve closer for the fire house.
Council discussed the possibility
of using rPvenue sharing money to
place brick facing on the outside of
village hail. Prices will be obtained
and a decision made later.
The next meeting of council wil be
on Tuesday, ~ay 29. at 7 p.m .

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