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*'

Inside today:

Church directory...Page 5

Weather

estern

to

By the Beod ........ Pages 6, 7,

Clas8llleds ....... Pages 8, 9, 10
QJmlcs.TV .......... ... Page 11
Deatbs ................... Page 12
Editorials .......... ...... Page 2

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want at the .... price when It becomes available. We reHrve the right to limit qu•ntltlea.

Sporili ...... ........... Pages 3, t

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Vol.34, No.4S
Copyrighted 1984

•

at y

•

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 15, 1984

2 Sec:tiont , 12 Page'
2 5 C.nfl
A Multimedia Inc. New•paper

Food costs down, energy prices up
By ROBERT FURLOW
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The sharpest food priCl'
decline in almost two years held wholesale prtces flat
for the second straight month in May, the government
said today.
The two-month showing was the best since last
spring.
May's food costs, paced by cheaper priCl's for meat,
vegetables and eggs. dropped 1.2 percent, the must
since a 1.4 percent decline In July 1982. said today's
Labor Department report on lhe Producer Price
Index. Food costs had declined 0.6 percent in April.
Balancing the falling food prices was a 1.5 percent
spurt in energy costs. including increases of 5.2
percent for fuel oil and 2.0 percent for gasoline.
So far this year. wholesale prices are rising al an
annual rate of 3.5 percem , a bil better than
economists' predictions of an increase from 4_5 to 5
percent for ail of 198'1. Last year's increase. the best in
20 years, was only 0.6 percent.
In May, today's report said. food price declines
included 14.7 percent for vegetables. 14.3 percent for

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Health screening clinic.•.Page 7

and 40 pereent Salunlay.

Ends Saturday, June 23rd

•

Veterans come home...Page 2

mph. Salunlay, partly cloudy
wllh scaltered showers and
Urunderslonns. High near 85.

eggs, 7.8 percent for beef and veal. 4.9 percent for
poultry and 2.0 percent for pork.
Fruit prices rose 10.6 percent; dairy prices edged
up 0.2 percent, and fish costs gained 0.3 percent.
As for energy, the May increase followed a more
moderate 0.7 percenl rise in April and included a 0. 7
percent rise in natural gas costs.
In other details. today's report said:
-New car prices fell 0.7 percent after declining 0.3
percent in April. Light truck prices held steady.
-Capital equipment costs rose 0.2 percent after
gaining 0.3 percent in each of the previous two
monlhs.
-Clothing plices rose 0.7 percent and non·
prescriplion drugs were up 0.9 percent while
household appliances priCl's moved ahead 0.1
percent.
The two months of steady overall prices provided
the best wholesale Inflation performance since prices
declined OJ percent and then were flalin March and
April 1983.
If May's rate were repeated for 12 straight months,

It would result 1n a 0.4 percent decline for thai year, a
price decrease too small to be reflected m the
rounded-off calculation for lasl month.
The actual increase for the last 12 months was 2.6
percent.
In May. the department's index stood at 291.5.
meaning that goods costing $10 in 1967 would have cost
$29.15 last month.
All of the figures were adjusted to discount for
normal seasonal \"ariatlons.
In advance of today 's report, private analysts
commented that continuing food priCl' declines would
hold down prices overall in coming months.
Donald Ratajczak, director of Georgia State
University's Economic Forecasting Projecl in
Atlanta, said he expected lower prices for a wide
range of foods, including vegetables, eggs. t&gt;eef, fish
and pork.
Michael K. Evans. president of Evans Economics
in Washington. said, "Inflationa 1y pressures continue
to dlmlnL&lt;;h."
And Allen Sinai , chief economisl for Shearson
LehmanAmerlcan Express Inc . in New York. said. he

expected a modest overall price increase "reflecting
another month of good behavior on food prices."
Ratajczak did say he saw bigger increases ahead .
Prices have t&gt;een rising rapidly for crude materials
that will later be tumed inlo finished it ems for sale to
retailers and Ihe public. he said.
"These especially sensitive priCl's suggesl thot
industrial demand for commodities continues to
intensify." he said . "When food priCl's again
strengthen , as expected in the s ummer. prices for
finished goods could be increasing at morp than a 6
perCl'nt annual rate."
Still. he said in a recent r&lt;'port. '·the wf'akness in
food inflation will continue to rPstrain OOth consumer
prices and the PPI."
Fears have t&gt;een expressed that the rapid growth of
the national economy in the pasl year could mean
much higher inflation. partly because factories mighl
not be able to keep up with heavy demand for their
products. Scarcities growing out of such production
bottlenecks might be expecled 10 mean higher prices
for products in short supply .

Bush breaks tie vote, defeating MX ban
By TIM AHERN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (API - TheMX
missile has survived a nother close
call in Congress as Vice President
George Bush cast a rare, lie·
breaking vote to give the Reagan
administration's prized nuclear
weapon its narrowest victory yet.
Bush broke a 4848 tic late
Thursday In the Republican·
controlled Senate. casting the ballot
that provided a 4948 defeat of an
effort to ban 1985 production of 21 of
the !().warhead weapons.
His vole capped eight hours of MX

..

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149 88

THAT WAY - President lkagan gesruN'S during a news
conference in the White House East Room Thursday ni~hl. lteagan said
he L~ willing to meet with Soviet leader Konshud in fhl•rnenko without
any prior assurances that such a stos..,.ion would prodtu'l' eoncrete
results. ( AP Laserphoto ).

ruaa

debate. during which Presidem
Reagan lobbied by telephone for the
weapon.
Shortly before lhe vote. Reagan
appealed in his nationally televised
news conference for Congress to
"support our strategic modernization program 10 keep America
strong and convince lhe Soviets It 1s
in their best interest to choose the
co urse of negotiation, not
confrontation ."
Earlier in the day. the Senate had
voted 5:&gt;41 to kill a proposal that
would have elimlna ted ali money for

the MX. That measu)"'[l was more

sweeping than the amendment on
which Bush voted.
The votes came as the Senate
worked intolheearly mominghours
today on a bill authorizing the
Pentagon lo spend $291 billion In the
fisc~ I year starting Oct. I.
In other votes, the Senate:

-Voted down. 5543, an attempt to
limil the Pentagon increase nex t
year to 5 percent. rather than the 7
percent hike now mthe measure.

videO , the vice president casts his

-Killed on a 4~45 vote an
amendment ai med at providing a

vote in the affirmative and the
amendment fall s ... Bush said to the
hu shed chamtx&gt;r

'If they're ready, so are we,'
By MAUREEN SANTINI
AP W!tlte House Conespondent
WASHINGTON tAP) - Pres!
dent Reagan, softening his tone
toward the Kremiin, says he's
opening the door to a possible
swnmit with Soviet leader Konstan·
lin Chemenko. while acknowledg·
ing he's not quite ready to extend an
Invi tation.
"The door is open." the presidenl
declared at a nationally broadcast
news conferenCl' domina ted by
U.S.·Soviel relalions . "And eve1y
once ina while. we're standing in the
doorway, seeing if anyone's coming
up t he steps ...
Bu 1 when asked if his remarks
could be taken as an invitation to his
SovJet counterpart, the president
replied: ·we haven'l reached thai

point yet."
Reagan also said he hasn't given
"a flat no" to Chemenko's sugges
tion that the superpowers negollat e
a ban on antl ·satellite and other
space weapons. "We're studying
that whole situation."' he said.
Several times, Reagan spoke
positively about his willingness lo
talk with Chemenko. At one point.
the president said. "U they're ready
to talk. we are. too." At another: "!
am willing to meet and talk any
time." And, al stUI another. "We're
ready, willing and able ...
At the 25th news conference of his
presidency Thursday nigh I. Reagan
also said:
- "! would look forward lo a
debate" ~&gt;1th hls Democratic oppoll('nl during the fall eleclion

5.5 percent pay hike for lhe 2. 1
million men in uniform . R0agan
proposed a 5.5 perc·enl hike. bllllhr
Armed Services Comm ill cc
trimml'd it to 4 percent.
Bush, who only votes in caSf' of a
lle. entered the chamber as the MX
debat e wound down and il became
clear the cffm1 by &amp;&gt;ns. La"~ on
Chiles. D·F'Ia .. &lt;•nd Charles Grass·
ley, R-lowa. m1ghl pass.
"The Smate being cquaUy di ·

campaign.
- His campaign never received
1he briefing book prepared for
President Jimmy Carter before
their political de bale during the l'l&amp;l
election campaign. Although copies
of a "Presidential Debate Briefing
Book" were found in the files of al
least two campaign aides. Reagan
said "the so-called debate briefing
book of lhe Carter team nevPr has
been in our possession ... ail thai was
uncovered were some position
papers ...
-He'U sign legislation ra.sing
taxes only if he has assurance Iha l
legislation cut Un g govcrnmml
spendi ng wa s on ilsway.
-He supports a HouSl'·passed bill
imposing fin es on employers who
hire illegal aliens because it will he lp

Reagan
America rega in control of il !-,
borders. But he said care had to be
taken to avoid discrimination by
employers who don't wan I to bother
to determine " whelhE'r an indiv1d·
ual is legal or not ...
-U re-elected in November. he
intends to serve all four years of a
second term. " Whal the devil would
a young fellow ilk&lt;' me do if I quit Ihe
job... asked Reagan. who is 73.
-H£''s not willing to say yet
whelher he'd support changi ng the
federal civil rights laws to prohibil
job dis cr imination agai nst
homusexuals.
- There's been "no discrimina tion of an_v kind in this administra tion " and he' ~ donP morf' for
minorities than any othC'r WhitE'
House occupanl.

Celeste says if's still too early for refund talk

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CA'Ics te said he has supported legislation for tax relief In caSl' of a
large surplus. but legislation which would have authorized a refund
is still in the Ohio Senate after ha,•ing passed the House at the first of
the year.
The June 30 balance is expected to be $131 million, he said. but that
doesn't take into account some obligations which may still come due.
O&gt;leste said there will be new expenses. including $16 mllllon that
must be paid to the Thomas Alva Edison partnership program, a
program to help business take advantage of research opportunities.
Also. Q&gt;leste said. the state may have a $00 million llabillty to the
federal government for an unresolved issue involving 10 years of the
CETA 1Comprehensive Employmenl and Training Act) program
and another $40 million liablllty because of a court case the state lost
recently on the state's tax on utilities.
The s1a1e·s income tax has been a matter of contention sinCl' the
Ohio l.egislalure passed the permanent 90 percent increase iasl
year. Opponents lost a referendum to repeal the increase.
GOV. RICHARD CELESTE.

Showboat Becky Thatcher remains high and dry

Associate Store Home Owned
liP~ 137'17

Use Your Crelllr

alMost Parflr:lpaflng

79c=:.':"

CINCINNATI (API -Ohioans shouldn 't start plan ning on stat e
tax refunds yet, says Gov. Richard Celesle.
Celeste said Thursday it is too early to tell if the sla te's budgel
surylus will be large enough fo r the state 10 make refunds 10
taxpayers.
"We're within a half of one percent of what we anticipated in terms
of our fund balance for the end of the year ... said Celeste. "I would
rather us handle our finances prudently and keep our commitment to
schools and others than to fall all over each other to find more ways to
spend this money ."
The governor was in Cincinnati for lhc dedication of a new group
home for the mentally reta rded and a speech to Cincinnati hospital
officials.
He criticized "people who ar&lt;' rushing into talking about surplus··
for not understanding that the state has commitments that must be
met with thai money .

12 537 B

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va . (APl
- Repairs should begin soon on the
showboat Becky Thatcher, which
was high and dry on shore 101 days
after It was raised from the
Muskingum River mud It sank into
March4.
The 58-year-old stemwheeier was
ralsedoutofthewaterontoafloatlng
dry-doCk repair barge Wednesday
afternoon at the Polilt Pleasant
Marine Co.
The operation exposed a dozen
creases and holes In the boat's steel
hull for the first tlme since It sank

near Ma rietta. Ohio.
Marion Clendenin. plant manager
at Point Pleasant Marine. specu·
iated that the bottom of the hull
probably was wrlnkled when the
boat sank on topoftheoldlockw'IU in
the Musklngum River.
The Becky Thatcher remained in
the Musklngum unlli workers from
a Pittsburgh salvage finn raised In
May 10. It was towed to Point
Pleasant May 12 and remained
there untll dry dock space became
available Wednesday.

The boat's sternwheel was re·
moved and now sits on shore.
The Becky Thatcher is likely tD

remain at the shipyard upto30days,
workers said.
Jack Ottenheirner, president of
Ohio Showboat Drama, said Thur.;·
day that he will authorize repairs as
soon as he gets a report on the
condition of the hull !rom Teny
Weber, a marine consultant from
Wheeling, W.Va., who has overseen
salvage operations tor the boat since
It sank.
Weber examined the Becky

Thatcher Wednesday afternoon out
would notglveadamageestJmateor
say what repairs will be needed
Ottenheimer said he will allow
Point Pleasant Marine to make
whatever repairs Weber deems
necessary. Repairs w the boat could
be anything from spot patches to a
complete new hull overlaid on the
existing one .
"We will replace as much of the
hull as necessary to, one, repair the
damage; and, two, bring the entire
hull up to Insurance company
spectflcatlons," Ottenheirner said.

State fire marshal to probe blaze
A flre in Tupper Plains Thursday ~vcning \\i ll be inv£'stiga led bv
the State Fire Marshal 's offiCl'. said Meigs Coumy Sheriff James J.
Proffitt Friday.
A Tupper Plains residenl . Steve Cremeans. called Orangp
Township Fire Departmenl at 10: 47 p.m . lo his residence wcsl of
Tupper Plains on Stale Route 681.
Cremeans smelled smoke and heard a smoke a larm as hP was
nearing his residence from Marietta .
Cremeans extinguished the fire before the fire dep a rtment
arrived. the sheirlff's report stated.
The screen of the rear sliding door had been sUI and hay pu I inside
and set on fire. according lo the sheriff's report .
A chair, the carpet and wood trim on the fireplace were damaged
but no dollar amount of damage was set, Proffitt said.
The sheriff's report stated Cremeans' residence was destroyed by
fire In August. 1983.

�Friday, June 15, 1984

Commenta•!

William F. Buckley
Memo to: GMY--------------

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomero)', Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE

INTER~T

OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

..d~

~m~ r"T"\.-'~~· r"'T"'E2=•~==~

.

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
General Mana,er

.4 .ssistant Publisher/ Controller

~~2-~ Daily Sentinel

Po!neroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday,. June 15,=1984
,

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

From: Whiz. You asked for a
memo from your "closest friends "
(thanks, boss, and I reciprocate) on
how you should take it from here. So
here is my analysis, and my advice.
1. Take tlle vice presidential road.
Why? Because as I told you two
months ago when Fritz began his
comeback. if Fritz beats Reagan in
November, Fritz is going to be
rPnominated in 1988. But If Fritz
loses in November, ll'le chances are
thaI Teddy wili wi n the Democratic
primaries in 1988. Being vice
president Is a job a lot of people

make fun of who would give their
shirts to be vice president. Besides.
the history books will teD you that
vice presidents graduate Into pres!·
dents about 40 percent of tbe time. If
you don't get the vice presidential
nod this time around, the chances
are - l think fast about these
things, boss. which is maybe why
they call.me Whiz- you'll be about
as Important a figure on the
American po!lt!ca! scene as John
Anderson. Rememher John Anderson? He's still a!!ve. by the way.
2. Now If you go with me this far.

let me suggest how you should go
about it. Delicate stuff. You want to
maintain the pressure on the
Monda!e camp and on the conven·
Non, but at the same ttme you have
to he a little more Ingratiating. It' s a
good idea to rna ke vague references
to the "u nfltiished business" tha t
wili face the convention. That
makes it sound as though the
primary contests left a whole lot
undecided. (In fact the y didrt' l:
Mondale can do whatever he wants,
and you and I and the insiders ali
know it.) But the press w!ll play

:\ \-tF.MRER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Associa-

tion and thP American Sewspaper Publisher Association.
I. ETTERS OF OPIMON art' wt!lt·omed. They 8hould be ll!!ls than 300 worrb
long . :\11 lf'tters are suhjed to t•ditlnM: and must hf' !iilgned with name, address and
tt·lt'phonf' number . No unslgn{'d lt"tters wUJ be published. LeUI'rs should be In

guod ta..;tt' , addrPS slnlit issues , not personalities .

3. Now here is a tricky one. I've
been clipping for you now for over
slx months. and I'm ready to
announce a very definite trend. The
opposition to the Republican Party
has become, to use a rea! fancy
word l !earned at co!leg&lt;:&gt;, anthropomorphized. A year ago - he!l,
you remember - the talk was
mostly about the economy, and w&lt;:&gt;
eased off on that when w&lt;:&gt; pu!ledout
of the recession. Then there was
unemployment. and we've eased up
on that. But m ore and more, both
you and Fritz- and certainly Jesse
-have been talking abou t Reagan.
"We are governed by a single
mandate: To save the country from
Reagan." That's how you were
introduced l hl' ot her night.

Stalled talks
As President Reagan moves into his n•electioncampaign. the argument
he is making for lack of progress in controlling nuclear weapons is that
Soviet leaders are too confused 10 doc!de, even to reopen s!Jllled talks with
the United Srntes.
"We're so accus10med," he told reponcrs at the London summit, "to
viPWing the Sov iet s as engaged in various kinds of machinations, and so
fon h. II' s beginning to occur to some of us tha i maybe the silence is because
ll'lev don't know what to say righl now."
The notion ll'lat Konstantin U. Chernenko is not firmly in ll'le saddle in
Mo,;cow four months after succeeding Yuri V. Andropov could deflect
cnticism that Reagan has not tried hard to reswne the talks after a !apse of
more 1han SIX months. There would not be much point in making proposals
to an adversary incapable of framing a response.
AI his economic summit news conference in Londaon, Reagan said the
West was willing to di,;cuss with the Soviets "whatever is on their mind."
But the problem, he suggested. was the Soviets were uncertain about what
they wanted to say across the bargaining rnb!e.
As ll'le campaign gets rolllng, the Democrats are likely to emphasize the
dangers posed hy the slump in U.S.·Soviet relations, not the least of which is
a steady buildup in nuclear weapons on both sides.
Liberal and moderate voters, who may hold the key 10 the outcome in
November. have nPver been convinced that Reagan Is committed to
reaching an agreement wit h the Soviet U nion. Walter F. Mondale, his
probable Democratic opponent, has already said he would impose a
temporary halt to the tc•sting. prod uction and deployment of nuclear
weapons m a l1id lo get ll'lc Russians back to ll'le table.
Four vears ago, Reag;m 's campaign attack on the SALT I! treaty as
"fatally· flawed ... co ntributed to President Carter's decision to withdraw
ll'll' agreement to reduce US and Soviet strategic weapons from
consideration by the Senate
Reagan was slow to autllorize negotiations after he took office. His initial
pmposals. including the dismanllmg of all Soviet SS-W missiles aimed at
WPstf'rn Europ&lt;.'. were unaccep!Jlble to Moscow. However, he adjusted the
U.S pos ition several times before the talks fe!l apart late la st year.
Apparently. the shift was not enough to conv ince the Soviets to keep
talking. They left the Euromissile negotiations in Novemher to protest the
lfnpcnd ing installation of 32 U.S. cruis&lt;' and Pershing 2 ml"iles. and
refused in [)pcember to agree to schedule another round •Jf S&lt;'parnte talks
on longenangl' nuclear weapons.
With Andropov's death in February came confinnation from Moscow
that he had been seriously ill for most nl the 15 months he was ostensibly in
charge. This limited what he could get done. but since he remained in
power. also kept others from seizing the initiative. .
.
RPagan now is saying the indecision has earned forward mlo the
ChernPnko period, and I hat confu sion within ll'lc Kremlln rather ll'lan his
own hard ·l ine altitude is ll'le reason the Soviets are unwilling to reach an

agrecmC'nt or pven discuss one at Geneva.
For· his part . Reagan keeps saying the United Stales is ready to he
flexiblP on tcrms of an accord - provided the Soviet s resume talks.
Critics dl'mand more of the White House. Some have proposro
incentlvcs to Moscow. such as an offer to com bine the E uromissile and
START talks . Others propose yearly U.S. ·Soviet summits.
In 1he meanllfne. thr admlnislral!on is planning to spend ~'258.6 billion for
defense in fi,;ca! 1985 while Reagan insis ts ll'le arms buildup corrected an
imbalance favoring the Soviets and reduced t he r isk of war.

Impressed ...

thf'ir ra usP at thP MPi):;s Loca l
Board of Education rnPt&gt;ling on
Tuesda v . .Jun!' 12.
f' m imprf'ssf'd .. . rhat in thC'SP
days of widi'Spr!'ad apathy, so
many Pf'OPIP hav(' becomP involv('d
in and committNI to righting a
percC'ivf'd injusticP.
I'm imprf'ssC'd
that so ma n.v
individuals, C'spec ially young pro.
piP, carr drf'ply f' nough aOOut an
Issue to forPgo an pvenin g uf
pc'rsona l piPasun• 1o make a public
statPmrnt by thPir presence.
I'm impr!'ssed ... with I he qu iet
determination and prrscvrrancc of
this group in thf' face of official
indiffprence
No doubt, cynics will laugh and
say that I 'm too easi ly impressed .

Now my advice 1s tn C'aSC' up on
the Reagan business . Much better
to condescend to him than Ia attack
him as a human being . There isn't
anything you and Frit z can do I hal
is going to convi ncr the Amrrican
people thai Rl'agan isn't a nice guy.

Spirit of Camp David ______Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASHINGTON - Of ali nations.
Morocco may emerge as I he
surpri se catalyst of a renewed
Arab·l sraPil pP3CP procPss. Thi s is
lhf' impression thl:lt was brought
back fro m the Morocca n capital of
Rabat last month by visiting Jpws .
They includE-d rabbis. mC'mbers
of the Israeli parliament and
mayors of Israeli cities This
remarkable delegation was led by
American tvcoon Edgar M. Bronfm an. chairman of Seagram's and
majoril)' stockholder in Durx&gt;nl,
who is abo l.Hl'sidPnt of the World
Jewish Congress.
They participated in a truly
amazing rvf'nt. Thf' Moroccan
governmf'nt rollf'd out Thf' rf'd
car{X' t for 300 foreihlll Jews who had
been invi tPd 1o a confer encC'
organized by Moroccan Je\vs. A
numbl'r of gc-sturPs by the govC'rn ·
mC"nt gavP the Jrwish confPrenc£'
uniqur )XJlitical slgnificanc('.
Se nior Moroccan officials wpl coml'&lt;l the delegates and attended

conference sessions. Bronfman
mel privately with Prime Minister
Mohammed Karim Lam rani at the
royal pa!aee. At the close of the
conference, Bronfman w as seated
between L amra ni and Crown
Prine!' Sidi Mohammed at a
banquet the prince hosted.
Even more as t o ni sh in g,
members of the delegation including rabbis -were permitted
lo visit the mausoleum of King
Has&gt;a n' s father. Previo usly, lhl'
shrine had been closed to au
non-Moslems. And for till' enl!re
period, the Rabat Hi!lon. whl're the
Jewish visitors stayed. "Cas offi ·
cia lly deemed kosher bv 1he
Moroccan gO\'emment .
These strange happenings, which
passed unnoticed by 1he world
press. could open a quiet dialogue
between Israel and Morocco. This
is the assessment of I srael Singer. a
roving ambassador for the World
Jewish Congress.

Though he is devoted to easing
Arab-Israeli and East -West l en·
sions. he is no pie·in·the·sky
dream er but a hard r ea lisl. He seps
MorOcco's King Hassa n as a
pragmatic yet visionary ruler who
wants to restore his counl ry to its
for mer prominence.
Morocco is a land of contrasts,
tan and white against I he MeditPr·
ranean blue, wit h tranq uil shores,
rugged mountains, deep chasms
and vast stretches of desert . II is
located strategicall y at the far
western end of the sun!!t Islamic
C'IT"scrnt that spans rwo co ntinents.
The king is occupied wit h impe·
ria l schemes and dream s for
estab!!shing Morocco as a bridge
between the Arab and Western
worlds. In fact. he would like to
build an ac tual bridge across the
Strait of Gibraltar. Traders and
tourists, he believes, would now into
Morocco and revitalize his country .
ThP king Is trying. therefore. 10

create a propitious atmosp hrre b\
extE&gt;nding Jews as much hospitali t\
as !s consistent with Morocco's
Islamic roots an d his need to
appmse Arab fundamentali sts. But
be is willing to pul thl' Star of David
alongsid£' the dam£'. curve, cross
and minaret in Morocco.
King Hassan wi!l also risk the
wrath of ot her Arab League
members to w in a close sPCurity
arrangement with the United
Stales- a!! the w hile taking care to
maintai n a visible independence of
foreiRTt control.
The scenario envisioned by those
w ho hope lo revive the bright
promise of Camp David· Morocco
wi!l continue it s dialogue with
israel. This might embolden Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who
now feels isolated bv his Arab
neighbors. The pursuit of a Middle
East settlement by Morocco and
Egypt mi~:ht induce Jordan' s King
Hussein to join in th&lt;' process .

Art Buchwald
The vets come home ---------------------------------

Letters to the editor
f 'm
i m prP.ssl~cJ
wiI h IhC'
numtx&gt;r of concf'rned parC'nts a nd
sludC'nl s who carnl' out to sup~rt

along. And espec!aliy the delegates
will play along. 'They like to thlnl&lt;
they're going to San Francisco to
act other than as mere automatons,
or executives of Mondale's w!l!.
Remember , when you say this,
that It is both a good Idea and . a
dangerous Idea to !Ink up with Jesse
Jackson. He's going to make a big
noise In San Francisco, but that's ail
It's going to be. He will thunder a lot
and get a lot of press; but three
months form now Jesse will be half
the ftgure he is right now. So use
hlm - so that you can ride on his
own statements that a lot has yet to
be settled before San Francisco is
tucked in. But stay away from any
suggestion that you are acting !n
concen.

Pl'rhaps. Bu t I firm ly bf.l ieve our
nation is still a dC'mocracy, and that
perso ns in public ~sitions will
Pvl'ntua lly hear lhP vuicP
the
prople. The ballot box still speaks
for us.
F'inally, far from making a ba d
exa mple of Meigs as has been
charged. the Concern!'d Cilizf'ns for
Miss G()(X)nit (' may bf' s£&gt;nri ng as a
beautiful example of I he America n
spirit in action. We are Americans
- not English colonists- beca use
years ago anolher small group of
determined people challenged ly·
ran ny, injust ice, and off! c la!
indifference.
T hai apparently unequal stru ggle and Its oull'Om&lt;' has always
impressed me. too. - Dorothy J .
Oliver. 213 Union Ave. Pomeroy.
Ohio.

Or

Today in history
Today is Friday. June 15, the !67th day of 1984. There are 199 days left in
ll'le year.
Today's highlight in history:
On June 15, 1215, tlle Magna Carta was signed by King John at
Runnymede, England, granting his barons more liberty.
On this date:
1n 15W. Pope Leo X denouncro the wrttlngs of Martin Luther, and
ordered him to recant.
In 1836, Arkansas became the 25th state of the union.
1n 1846, the United States and Britain signed a treaty agreeing on the
boundary hetween Canada and the United States in tlle Pac!!!c Northwest.
In 1849, James Polk, the eleventh president of the United States, died.
1n 190l, More than l,IDJ people died when tLre broke out aboard the
steamboat "Genera! Slocum" in New York's East River.
1n 1944, American forces during World War II began their successful
invasion of Sa.ipan in Ute central Pacific.
Ten years ago: President Richard M . Nixon received a wann welcome
as he anived in Syria for an overnight vis!!.

A group of cub reporters was
silting in a bar in Washington when
sev&lt;'r&lt;.t l old-timers from the 1984
Democratic Primary V('tcrans As·
sociation came in .
We w&lt;:~tcht:&gt;d in awr as thf'.v
ordPred their drinks.
Mike Gretsche l said to one of
lh&lt;'m. " I guess you guys saw a lot of
action ...
The griuled vrt sa id proudly.
"Wf' saw if all . From the caucus
hails of Iowa lo lhe ex it polls of
Newpxt &amp;&gt;ach. We wer e there in
thp snows of New HampshirE', and
we tough! in the peanut fu rrows of
Geor~.~· But we're not heroes. We
we~u s1 doing ow· job. Someone
had tu cover lhf' Democratic
presidential primaries. and better
us than our wlvC'S and children."
"Wha t do you mean wives and
childrf'n?" a woman vet wea rin g a
nf'two rk baseball ca p said . "I was
there too''
"Sorr~.
Sarah," th e V&lt;'l
apologized .
"What was It really like. si r .
covering MondalP, Hart and Jack·
son ?" a young reportcr askf'd.
A vet loaded down with campaign
pins stared in his bePr and said , "I'd
rat her not talk about it. "
The vel sta nding next to him
whispered lo me, "He lost his best
friend at a Hart fund ·rai s!ng
barbec ue In Waco, Texas."
"What happened?"
"'The friend was listening to Gary
Hart explain how he differed from
Monda!e on the nuclea r freeze for
the 165th tim e. and he fr&lt;'aked out .
They took him away in a
slratghljaeket."
One of the vets held up his glass
and said, "Here's to Johnny
App!eseed."
"'The other vets all solemnly
lifted their glasses, drank, and then
s mashed them agai nst the
fireplace.

" Who was Johnn y Appleseed?"
one of us ask!'d .
"He was the greatest," a TV
veteran said. "He threw himS&lt;Clf on
a Mondale mimeograph machine
which was turnin g ou t a press
release on Hart's cre&lt;libility gap
and saved all our lives. He was
awarded the Media Medal of Honor
posthumously."
A not her vet wa s wearing combat
ribbons from Syria . Ca nada and
Mexico.
I ask!'d the man next to me.
"Where did he earn I hose?"
" He covPrf'd .Jesse Jackson 's
campaign, and was one of the ft&gt;w
r eporters who saw action in the
Democratic primaries outside the
United Stales."
I turned to the Jac kson vet, " I
guess you wert&gt; in the thick of It."
The Jackson vet said. "! saw

enough lo last me a lifetime. You
neve-r knew when you wrote a story
about Jackson wh&lt;'ther the Reverend Farrakhan would threa ten
your life. WP had to wear bullet proof vests &lt;'VI'ry lime we at tended
a ra lly. T guess those of us who
covered Jackson saw mor.:- ac tion
than anybody else . When il came to
campaigning he was another
George Patton."
I bought a Mondale vel a drin k .
"It's hard for sommne on I he home
front to lmagin&lt;&gt; what you people
went through."
"You don't think about il until it's
over,'' he said. "Monda le was
always sniping al Hart, Hart was
always dropping bombs on Man·
dale, Jackson's people engaged In
hand· to-hand combat for delegates ,
and all three were trying to burn the
Dcmocralic Party lo lhe ground .
Everyone look lht&gt; !ow ground .

Whoever sa id. 'Democra tic prim·
aries are hell ' knew what he wa s
talking about. "
"I can 't wait to rover one,'' J said .
"That's because you've never
seen a primary close up. All you
saw Is what they showed you on
television, and what you read in the
paper. They never showed you the
boredom between the speec hes and
the debates. You never saw us
huddled in Holid ay Inns and airport
waiting rooms wailing for something- anything- to happen. You
never heard the same speeches a
thousand limes. No one who has
been there would ever want to do !I
again."
"But at least you have something
lo tell your grandchildren."
" I doubt !1. Who the hell will care
In Wyears w hat the Mondale, Hart,
.Jackson w ar w as all about? Nobody
even cares now."

Late-inning homer sinks Bosox, 12-11

Scoreboard ...
Majors
By De~ Pw:M
AMDUCAN urAGUK

EAST 111\'tiJlN

W L Pc:t. Gil
Toronto

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WEST DJVfiiO"'-'

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21

31
211 :r;
T7 ;,;
Te""'
'lbunday"s Games
MUwaukl'f 3. Baltirnor!.' 'l
Oaklafld 7, ClE'\'f'land 6
SE&gt;aniP 4. Kansas City 1

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fii

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67

4- .')t. tn l
Chicago t Bums 2-1&gt;1 ;~t Oakland tKrurli!Pf 4·21. tn I
Salunls.y'~ Gsm1.w
Boston at Toronto

1111

G8100!io

Ptlll.adl'lphia
St l.uuls
Mont!""f'al

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t'tnc1nna1 1

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Houston

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SEA TIL£ SUPERSONl CS-SIWlt'd Jack

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runnin.g back. lo ttu'f'f'-yrar

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OEVELAND BROWNS--Sl£f!ffi Tf'rTv
NURmi, quart!'rback. 10 a Sl'r1 f"S or OI"H"' _Y('ar
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klt'kt'r

Atlant&lt;c 3. C'lrw;: lnnatl 0

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Mann\'
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F'itt&lt;J:lurgh 3. MontwaJ 2

SAN F'RA.~OSC'O ~:I ER..'T-~cru-d .Jim
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SF.ATTI ..r SEAHAWK.&lt;:;.....I\,mm:l Mlkr
Allman db"'1"'(' 10r of pli l'r"f'l" pc•rsonnl'i
SignPd John KaJ.~r. llnPt&gt;;IC'k l'r
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COLUMBUS. Ohio tAP) -Glen
Mason and Bob Tucker, Oh!oSta te's
offensive and
defensive coordinators, have been
freed from coaching individual
positions on ll'le Buckeye squad.
Mason had served as the offensive
guard and eenler coach. a position
that will be filled by recruiting
specialist Steve Devine. Thcker had
guided the inside linebackers.
Bill Conley. who resigned as
Middletown High School head coach
to join the Buckeyes' staff, will
replace Tucker as the linebacking
coach.

Scioto Downs
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAPt - Qu!ck
In Action lived up to hi s namP as he
rt"Wrole thP record book for aged
trotters in 1he first of 1hree Ohio
Sires Srnkes ca. features Thursday
night at Scioto Downs.
'The 4·year-old trotted I he fastest
mile ever for his division in ll'le
stakes, winning by 11 lengths in 1: 59
3-5"1th Greg Wright in thesulkyand
paying $2.60. $2.40 and $2.20. Shand!
was second, returning ~'i60 and
$3.40, while third -place Cagey
Brady paid $6.40.
Quick Trip, the fastest female
trotter in the history of the track,
won the third CO·feature by 1\1,
lengths owr J L Coaltown in 2:00 2-5
with John Hogan driving. Quick
Trip returned $2.&amp;:l, $2.W and $2.W, J
L Coaltown paid $2.40 and $2.W and
third·pla.;e Jack 'The Knife brought
his backers $2.60.
Barb's Edition extended his
current unbeaten streak to four In
tlle second co-feature. ·'The 4-yearo!d, driven by Dan Shetler, was the
victor by 13,4 lenghts over V Anna
TriCk ln2:024-5andpald$2.:1lacro.ss
the board . Anna Trick returned S3
and $2.60. South Star Meddy pald
$2.8J and fln!sheq third .
'The ninth race trlfecta of 9-1(}.5
returned $692.60.
Acrowdof4,007wagered$299,935.

v

GRAVELY TRACTOR

FORD CELEBRATES WITH

liW;lr rontr.lM t&lt;f'lt'd.S('d :\llk i' WUHmns.
~&gt;1d(&gt; Jll('(']V('I""

0 hi o sports briefs..• rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J
COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP) - Busi ·
nessman Jerry Galbreath and Dr .
Bernie Masters are heading ll'le
ownership of a C.lllumbus franchise
in the American Indoor Soccer
Association opening in November.
The owners say the Columbus
team will play at the6,00seat State
Fa!rgmunds Coliseum and will need
an averagl' of 2,800 fans per home
game to break even.
They say ticket prices will be in
the $450 to $5.50 per r ange. Other
teams in the A!SA are Kalamazoo,
Chicago, Canton. Fon Wayne and
Milwaukee.

Brewers 3, Orioles 2
Dian James' two·run single off
Storm Davis in ll'le seventh inning
gave Rick Waits, 3.2, a home victory
over the Orioles.
James' hit off Davis. &amp;.3. came
after a walk, an infield hit and a
sacrifice .
Ro!l!e Fingers picked up his llth
save for Milwaukee, getting out of a
bases· loaded scrape in the eighth .
O&gt;cil Cooper homered in the
fourth off Baltimore srnrter Dennis
Martinez. II was Cooper's 200th
career home run and foun h of I he
season.
Twins 3, Rangers 2
Frank Viola scattered six hits
over 7 2-3 in njngs and Tom
Brunansky homered as I11P Twins
handed thl' Rangers thPir first loss
after slx wins at home.
Viola. :r 7. a!lowed hits to three of
thl' first !!VI' batters. thl'n srl tlf'd
down. striking out five and walking
one. Ron Davis gained h1s 11th save.
~lariners 4, R&lt;lyals I
Pinch-hitter AJ Cowens broke up a
pitching duel in theKingdomewilha
twa. run single inthesLxll'l inning and
Barry BonneU hit a two-1-u.n homer
in I h&lt;• eighth locarry the Mariners to
victor y .

Royals starter Bud Black, &amp;.5,
after walking two batters with one
out in the sixth, dropped a throw at
first base to load the baseS.
Cowens, hitting for Ken Phelps,
then lofted a single down the
right -field line to give the Martners a
2.0 lead.
Seattle's Jim Beattie,:;. 7. lost his
shutout in the seventh when Jorge
Orta homered into the righf.f!eld
seats.
A's 7, Indians 6
In Oakland, Davey Lopes' tworun bases·loaded single in tl'le
seventh inning brought the A ' s back
from a 6-5 deficit over Cleveland .
Lopes drow in three runs and
scored two while Dave Kingman hit
his !eagul'-!eading 16111 homer and
Carney Lansford added a two-run
homer for thl' A's.
Keith All'lerton improved his
record to4-3 "1th the victory and Bill
C.audill pick!'d up his 13th save.
Ernie Camacho, 1-i. took the loss.

*

PHILAD ELPH IA
E.A.I,;U.;S-SJ~ nrd

Lou Piniella, who announced his
retirement effective Sunday earlier
in the day, was J.for-3 and scored
three times for New Y ark .
AngeL• 9, White Sox 3
Seldom ·used Rob Piccio!o droVI'
in a pair of runs and Gary Pettis
tripled in two more for the Angels
against the visiting White Sox.
Ahead 4-3, tlle Angels added five
runs after two were out in theeighll'l.
Three singles and Chicagoshmtstop
Scot! Fletcher's error on Dick

Schofield's grounder made it &amp;.3.
Pettis then trlp!ed to center fie ld
and Juan Beniquez's infield single
scored Pettis.
Roo Romanlck. S.5, scattf'red
' seven hits and six walks over 6 2·3
innings and Doug Corbett came on
for his third save.

*

FOOmALL
NadoMI Football l..eJ~Ktll'

!! ...,

P'ula&lt;k&gt;lphla 11. Chl&lt;"a/&lt;(n 2

tAndujm 11~ 51. tnt
Los i\n).,'fllros rPf'n•t

n•lal~ns.

GR

TIIuniday'll G~
San FrallC"IS&lt;'O :.. San Dil'$10 2

tPastOff'

Nllilooal l.eaaut&gt;

Cl.JPPER..""--1\amrd SI'Jltt C"annldi;Jt&gt;l. dl

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l toclnnatl

Cotul"lbl.s, Plf(!('ttvf' Surxl ay.

!ff1or of media

GOLF

In other American League action,
the MUwaukee Brewers beat tlle
Baltbnore Orioles 3-2, the Oakland
A's edged theC!evelandlndians7-6,
the Seattle Mariners bested the
Kansas City Royals 4-1, the Minnesota Twins outscored the Texas
Rangers 3-2 and the California
Angels downed the Chicago White
Sox9·3.
Randolph's blast atoned lor his
two fielding errors, the second a
ca;tly miscue in the eighth when tlle
Red Sox rallied for six fWIS and an
l l·7lead.
The Yankees unloaded on Stanley, 1-5, !n the four-run ninth . Three
singles and an infield out narrowed
the Boston lead toll-S. One out later,
Mattingly knocked Stanley's offering over the Boston bullpen, giving
him f!vp RBI on the night.
Ray Fontenot, 2·5, replaced
reliever Clay Christiansen in the
eighth and was credited with ll'le
victory. Dave Righetti pitched the
lOth and earned his ninth save.

Scotland (AP) - Jody
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Rosenthal of Edina, Minn. , tlle
Pomery.OH
21-year·o!d U.S. Curtis Cup golfer,
Phone 992 · 2975
won a place in the quarterfinals of
Spring &amp; Summer Houn :
the British Women's Championship
Mon .- Fri 9to5
will'l a pair of impressive victories
Sat. 9 to 1
over U .S. Amateur champion
Joanne Pacil!o of Seattle 3 and 1and
~THE
then former French titleholder
GRAVELY
O&gt;c!lia Mourgue D' AJgue 2 and 1.
liiV&amp;TEIVI
FOOTBALL
WASHINGTON (AP ) The
District of Columbia has filed a $2.5 r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - --L-- - - - - - - - - - milllon lawsuit against tl'leownersof
the Washington Federals footbal!
team 'Thursday, saying they
breached the lease agreem ent lor
Robert F. Kennedy S!Jld!um when
they decided to sell ll'le team and
move it to Miami.
'The su it was filed in D.C. Superior
Court against Berl Bernhard. Fed·
·era is chairman and chief executive
officer, and two ownership groups
he heads. Washington football
Partners. Ltd.. and its genera l
partner. Capital Cit y Sports
Management .
TENNIS
LONDON I API - Defending
champion Jimmy Connors out·
lasted bard serving Steve Denton
6-4, J.6, 9·7 and top-seeded Jolm
M cEnroe defeated Steve M eister
64,6-3 to move into thequarteriinals
of ll'le Queen's Club grass court
tennis tournament.

mooN,

fmrn Columbus." effective F'rtday Re-called Brian DoyMI, outfielder. from

IIASKFrnALI.

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JJ
Z..1
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WE'T 01\'l'SJON

PIH .~!'an~ h cr\nl..mn
rSmith S.5 J. 1n c

Robertson. s hortstop. to Columb.is of the
International l.RaguE&gt;, £&gt;ff{'('ttv(' Frtday
Rlxalled Bobi:IV Ml'oc·ham. shorl!;top.

National Baskctt!all r\~atlon
LOS
ANGELf: S

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Phila&lt;k&gt;lpl\1,1

Sports
briefs ...

l'tlect!Vf' SUrday, so heo may 0Cocolll(&gt; finit
IJa.'lf' ("(lflch and
hilt!~
Instructor.
Anrouncf'd thr move of Roy White.
first bast&gt; roach. 10 special assistant lu
the gme:·al cnanC~Ber. Optioned Andre

anc:l asslgnl'd hlm to Ll111l• Falls of
lilt• NPW York -PMm IE&lt;tgUl'

:w ,.

:r2

Hrusloo .1. La;

'I ANKE~- Announced

YORK

NEW YORK METS·---Sh;:nf'd .li'fl li rtWf'S.

Nt"W York

~~

NEW

thr rMlre'm«ll of l...&lt;N Plnk'Ua. oultleldfl,

p11c~.

W L Pt: t

r-; f'\.1' York 6,

'ialflt'S. outtleiO&gt;r. and JO'I(' OornJnRUez.
pitcher. A..sslgned 'iall""IC5 to EUzabethta.vn
of th(o Appalachian l...E'ague and D:lndn·
gu~ to V\sall&lt;1 of tile r.aJifornla League.

International l~&lt;tgur
LHICAGO C~t lon«l l1on MPI"('dith a11d Porfl Altamlrano, ptlchrrs . Md
H('lliJ' Cuno. ootfieldPr. 10 lCM•&lt;J of the
American AssoclaUon.

[)l•tn!lt at Mllwaukl"t'
MJI\n('9(Jta at Kansa.s Clly
CIE'\'t'land at CaiUornia. tn l
I 'hie~ at Oa kland. tnt
TPXa.~ at ~111r. InJ
NATIONAL LEAGUE
FAST DIVtiiON

Atlanta

Tran8action8

OC&gt;ll Washln,o:1oo, outfielder . OptloiK'd Trm·
liall"'r. oul1ll'ldt?r, to Richmond of th~

fniton nt Toronto
BaltlrTI(}('(' a1 NPW 'fork

s.... .n nt.-w

Los Al1g(&gt;le5 at Hooston, 1n1

A'I'LANT,\ BRAVES-Reartlvated C'lau·

Baitlrrono at Nt:'W York.tnl
C'hlcago at Oitlt)&lt;Hid.&lt;nt
Detroit at Mllw&lt;Jukcr&gt;. tn&gt;
Minnesota ut KanSi:ls Clly. t n t
(lp;pJ.and a1 \ali!o rnia, tnl

Plttsbur,::h

Pittsburgh at Mortreal
Clnctnnatl at AIJanta
New Ycck at St. LaJI.s
Phtladf'lphla ar OUcago
San Francisco al San Diego

DE'TROtr TJGER.&lt;;-Slgnffl Ray Ra&gt;·
tmhausler. sOOrtst~. aJtj assigned him
to Lakeland ol tht' Florkla Statt&gt; Leagul!.
MINNESOTA ~ed F.dclle

Fridii,Y'11 GIIIDE'!t
Hoston ~Nippt&gt;r 0.11 at Toronto tAlexan·
!k'rS-2\ . 1n1
Ralllmort' 1Boddldu,.- 7-31 at N{'W York
IShJrlf'Y l-01 . 1n1
l)ptroit tPf-Uy !J-,11 vs. Mllwl:lukel' llli
r anwt•r 5-51. em
Mlruwsota tButeh!.•r 4-41 at Kansas City
tGubiCUI J.Sl. tnt
Cli'Veland ! Hrulon ~·3 1 al Ca iUornla
a..ahn 7·3t, tnt
TPXa.~ tHnugh 6-61 ;;t Seanli' tLangsl on

Chicago

~nJ

~a Game~~

BASEI!AIL

Only j;!aJnP.Ii SChPduled

Sunday'~

SalurdQ'1 Gamat
Plttsturah at Mortreal
Ptliladr:lphla at CNcago
Oldnnatl a t Atlanta, t n J
NeYo· Yc.-k at St . Loots, tn)
Los Angelee at Hou.stoo. ~ n I
San Frand&amp;co at San Dk.¥J,

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

New 'lar k 12. Bostoo 11. 10 IM!ngs
Mirlllf'SOta .1. TC')(as 2
Callklrnla 9. Chica£Q 3

ar S.•attk2.

(Whitson ~J} , (nl

41-z

_q

,1J

2'1

..

.&gt;tO .,, 3
.469
4\.&lt;j

"

"

Kan.sas C ity

1{)~

!"fi! 131ry
.«i(J J7

,. "
"

Tt•lla.\

By JONATHAN vrrn
A Sl3!fV"'e•ert Press Wrler
The Boston Red Sox died by tlle
sword they !!ve by in Fenway Park
- the late-inning home run.
W!llle Randopb drilled Bob Stan·
ley's first pitch to him in the lOth
inning Thursday night for a home
run and a 1.2-11 New York Yankee
victory. The lOth inning was
necessitated after Don Mattingly
tied the game with a thi'ee-run
homer with two outs in the ninth.
After two late-inning losses to tlle
Red Sox earlier in tlle four·garne
series, the Yankees took it all in
stride.
''Strange things have been hap·
pening this season, " Randolph said.
"Runs disappear in a hurry in this
park," New York Manager Y og!
Berra said. "We can come back,
too. "

San Francllm tROOtnion 3-fi) at San

l&gt;kJfo

..

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

Pome10y--Middlepott, Ohio

/· I

I

1979 VOLKSWAGEN
VANAGEN CAMPER
Extra Sharp - One Owner

URNPIK

of Gallipolis

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mol dmgs ·Gauge package • Bnght front
bumper • Black rear step bum per • Oelu1e whe el
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Save $322' on a front -wheel dnve Tempo GLX
4-door equipped wtth a SpeGial Value Oplton
Package which tncludes : 5-speed manual
transaxle • Ttnted glass • Power st ee nn g •
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guard s • LighUConvente nce group • Front seat
fold-down armrest· Console ·AM 'FM stere o
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Values during the

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�Page

Four share lead
in.U. S. Open

Braves continue jinx, blank Reds, 3-0

MA\1ARONECK. N. Y. iAP) The monste r tha t was Winged Foot
one dreade ago was tamed , a nd

ing a one-hit shutout through seven
innings, Atlanta Manager Joe TaiTE'
knew that he'd had enough.
" He just ran out ol gas tnnlght ,"
T aiTE' said Thursday night after
Donnie Moore completed the last
two innings of a 3.() victory over the
Cincinnati Reds. " I think he's got to
get used to the heat. He was gptting
awa y with some high breaking
pitches late. "
Barker,~. said he was breathing
heavily In the seventh irming, then
stumbled gomg to the dugout. Torre
said !hat when pitching coach Bob
Gibson asked Barker how he was
feellmg, " he said he was about on
empty."
"They pobably didn't have to
ask." Barker said. "They kind of
rea lized it. When I carne in !here
1the dugout ), I almost feU on lhe
ground . I'm here to keep us in
games . It doesn' t matter to me who
gets the win."
Moore retired aU six batters he
faced for hls third saye of the year.
He extended his scoreless innings
s trmg to 17, mcludlng the last five
without a baserunner
" I guess I'm just a seven·inning
pitcher, " Barker sa rd . "With the

By WILLIAM R. BARNARD
AP Sports Writer
Although Len Barker was pitch-

The large group at 69, one shot
back, included Spain's Seve Ballesteros, David Canipe, Lennie Clem ents, Fred Couples, Curtis
Strange, Mick Soli and U.S. ama teur champion Jay Sigel.
Unlike most of the golfers who
competed over this 6,93J.yanl ,
par·70 west course at the Winged
Foot Golf Club, ltwln found the
bac k·nine easrer !ham lhe front. He
s hot par.J.'i on lhe front and 2-under
33 on lhe back with birdies at No. 11
and No.l7.a444-yardpar4wherehe
holed a 6(}.foot bunker shot.
Green, a non-winner on the PGA
Tour s ince 1981, shot 3J.35, amd
'Thorpe, one of the few black players
on the Tour, shot 32-36. Donald, tied
for third three weeks ago a t the
Kemper Open , had 3J..35
A bogey on lhe44&amp;yard, par41Bih
cost Thorpe sole possessron of lhe
lead
"I think I can win now," said
Thorpe. who led thefirstround ofth&lt;"
U.S. Open in 1981 before faltering .
" It'll ta ke under par to win."
The group a I 70 included Greg
t\ormam. Gil Morgam, Manis Haralsky , Andy Bean, Mike Sullivan,
Fran MarreUo and Michael Reid .
Norma n made the tum at 34,
brrdied the lOth and 12th holes to go
3·unde r. then gave it back with a
bogey a t l3and adouble-bogeyon15.

Ha lf' l rw m was one of t hose w ith the

whip .
Rcturnmg to the s ite of the first of
his two lJ .S. Open triwnphs, Irwin
shot a 2·under·par 68 and tied 1977
O p~.·n (' hampion Hubert Green . Jim
Tl)orpe &lt;uld Mike Donald for lhe
firs l·mund lmd Thursday al the 1984
U.S nc~tKJna l championship.
" Winged Foot is not quite the
mo nstrr 11 was," In.vin said . But
both he and Green warned it could
tum 1t.gPr aga m. i1 cornered
Tl'n \ 'C'ars ago, a t age 2Y, ln.vin
ca ptu r«i the Open wtth a 7-over -par
2R';' I t w, ts ra iled the "Massacr e at

Wmg&lt;'Cl Fool.· as no more than
sevm golf&lt;•rs could bfl' ek pa r for IR
holes m am of 1he four rounds
On the' frrs r cta, · this time. 11
plaH•r s bmkt• par 70on a course tha t
harl tx~·n madP purposely ea s ier
1ha n 11was 10 years ago
''ThC' rougl1 is mm P rnanagt:•abll',
.md thl' g n:l('ns a il' mtPnl!Onall\
~I owl' I," sa id Invin , who also won
rh('()pen m l979 a t lm·emess
1\atn tha t fc&gt;ll Wednesday fu rther
..; JowC'd 1hf' grwns and thE'V m ig ht
'l.t\ that \~·a~ a while longer a fter a
thu ndf' r·storm l 'hursday: evC'ning
'~ hrth rauSPd a 45- rmnute halt u1
pl d.\ T tlL' cit' lay for c ed SLX player s U1
th1· J;x-i- m dn flf'ld to ftnL';;h th C' fi rs t
round uxicn Tr m{X'ra tu res wC're m

Norman was in a threesome with

Jack Nr cklaus, who was only three
shots back al 71, amd Raymond
F loyd, who shot 72 .

t hP m td -ROs Wi th a ('()()\mg, cl 0anng

llf'nd pn:'CiiClt'Cl fo r today·

J.( l( , ·\:\

HPfon·

Wh f' n

d; 1r k nf':-.s

bLittiPd t n a -~ . ~
dP.Jd lo&lt;'k .J I! C'I eq:::ht full mn tn )!'-'
hf' J( ' \\ •'&lt;:lnt'"dtl\ m~h ! ThP .c.m w
h.H I !)( '&lt;'n
c;c h&lt;•d ul&lt;'d fn1 ni nr
lni llfl .L: &lt;.,

,\ml

cl II St d )(1 ( i\t\ t\ I

HcJ. Il-" ]ill'kf'cl up tn .1 !J2 hl clu,tl fm
tht' l' n lt tl ' g,l lll t ' Thorn a-. fan nPd
'-.1'\E'tl

\\ ,t] k l 'tl P tg hl , ,tnd , IIJ U\\Pd

t•n hth f1t,, tb I.\ htfiL·d 1 ~ hith '' "·
n.dkr'CI but nn1·. ,t nd gd\ (' up fi \'f'
..., t '\

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

The Daily Sentinel
1\ Division of Multlmt'dla. In c ..
Published ew r y a f1t&gt;rnoo n, Mond ay
thro u~h Frida y 111 Co urt Strfft , b y thf.
Ohi o Va liC' y Pu b l l s h ln~ Compan y· Mul·

$45 95
#408 INDEXED REG. '60.45 SALE $50 45
#408 REG . '55.95 SALE

THE MEIGS CO.
FISH &amp; GAME ClUB

BLACK-BROWN-BURGUNDY
THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY WHILE SUPPLY LASTS

WILL HAVE A
CLEAN UP WORK SESSION

This is for the
Kids' Fishing Derby

"Mill St .

OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL 8

Middleport
Book
Store
MILL ST
MIDDLEPORT

Homohlo Saws

.

992-2641

sL uri's

...tr , Li~ht . awa.v IJar-thrr.-. holt~ that J{cneraU.v

IS

,J\

$11 56
$29 12
$:1H 24
$15 60
$11 20
$.'1Ci RO

1978 Ford Country Squire .... s2495

1977 Ford LTD 11 ................ s1995

Classified Coupon

47,000 miles

POMEROY F IRST BAPTIST, David
Mann , m ini s ter William Snoufff'T . Sund a y
School Su pt Su nda y School. 9 30 a .m .
Morn i n ~&lt;: Wors hip JO· 30 a m
FIRST SOUTHER N BAPTIST Pom«."roy Pike David Hunt. pa s tor: Jack
NeedS Sund a) School Diref'ctor. Sundil y
Scool. 9 3U am: Mornin g Wor ship, tO 30.
('V£&gt; nlng worship, 7 30 p m Tue sda~ VIsi tation, 7 p m Wed nPS d ay. Prayer serv tce.
7 30 p m . Missio n fr iends, 7 30 p m ,
G irls In Action, 7. 30 p m . Acteens . i 30 p.
m ; ChOir Pract\CP 8 JO p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bal·
!f'Y Ru n Roa d. Rl'~ . Emmett Rawson pa sto'r Ha nd lev Dunn, supt Sunday Sc hool,
IOa .m . ; Sundaypv(' rung ser vice 7 JOp m
; Bible teaching, 7 30 p m Thursda y.
SYRACUSE MI SSION. CHl'rry St. , S y·
racuse Servl cl."S. JO a m Su nday . Ev('ning
s('rv\ees Sunday a nd Wedni?Sday at 7 00 p
m
MIDDLEPOR T r HURCH OF CHR IST
IN CHR IST IAN UN ION , Lawre nce Man ·
i(' y, pa s tor. Mrs Ru ssf' tt You ng, Su nda y
Sc hool Su p t Sunday School 9· 30 am
Eve ni ng w or t; hlp 7. 30 p m Wedn£'Sdav
prayer mN&gt;tlng 7· 30 p m
Ml
MORIAH CH U RCH OF GOD .
Rac ine Rev J ames Sattlf'rfl eld , pa s t or
F ref'ma n Wllllamo:;, Supt Sunday School
9 45 a m , Sund ay an d Wedn£'Sday even
ln g Sl' r\' ICE'S , i p m
MIDDLE PORT
FIRST BA PT IST
Corner S\xtll and Palml'r. 'I he Rt&gt;v Mark
McCiun Ji!: S und aY Sch ool 9 15 am .: Dan
Whlte, Sunday School Supt John R iebf'l .
Sr 1\ sst. Supt M01 n lng Worship 10 1~ a
m . Youth mf'E'IInR 7· 30 p m . W&lt;'dnesda v.
Includin g WN• Tots, Eagl?r 8(&gt;avers, Ju nior Ast ro na uts and Junior and SPnlor
High BYF; choir practlcf' f! : .10 p.m . Wf'd
nesday PrayPr mf'f'tlng and Bl bl {' s ludy,
Wf'd nes day. 7 30 p m .
CHUR CH OF CHRI ST, Middleport . 5t h
a nd Ma tn, Bob Mell on . mlnlslf' r AI Hart son. a&lt;;;soct aiP minister. MikE' Gerlach .
Sunday SchOol Su pcrln tf.'nde n t. Bt ble
ScllOo t 9: 30a .m, MornlnJO: Worsh ip, 10 30
a m . E\enln p: Worship, 7 00 p m Prayer
m('(&gt;ting. Wednf"Sday. 7· 00 p.m.
MID DLEPORT CHU RCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE, Co-pa stor s Rev Cha rl Ps Coy lta nd Rt&gt;\ Nancy Coyl,p Bill While, Sunda y
Sch oo l S up! Sunday Sc hool 9 : 30 a .m ..
Morning Worship. IO :.W am .. Sund a y
Evan¥1?1\stlc mee ting, 7 00 p m Prayf'r
meeting WMnesday 7:00p .m .
UNITED I'RESJIYTERtAN
MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY

Full y equr pped

4 Dr auto . PB. PS.

a tr

1975 Chevy Caorice Classic .... $895

Stal10n Wagon, run s goocf

1977 Thunderbird ............... s2195

Auto , PB. a1r, good condrt10n .

Fmest

1n

Sect•onal

214 E . Main
992 -SllO Pomeroy

Rn. Wanda JohMon, Director
Harold lohnson
Director ot EduuUoa
HARRISONV ILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH Wors hip Sof'rvlcf', 9 00 a m ..
Church Schoo l 10 : 30 a m .
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYT ERIAN
CHURC H. Church Schoo l 9 OOa m, Morn
inl Worship. 10 15 p. m . Bible St ud y. Tues
day, 10·00 a .m .. Bible Sluy, Thursday .
7
'
FIRST UNITED PRESBY
TERtAN CHURCH. Church Sc hool 10· 1:,
a . m ., Morning Wo rstl.tp 11:30 a.m . , Biblt •
Study Tuesday , 10 a .m .; Junior and Se nl01
Hllh Youth Group Sunday, 6· 00 p.m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD. Pa stor .
R~v . John Evans. Sunday School 10:00 a
m .: Sunday Morning Wors hip 11: 00 a. m
Children's Church 11 a.m . ; Sunday even
In ~ servlc.. 7:00p.m.: wronesday even
1n1 Youne Ladles ' Auxiliary, 6 . 00 p.m
Wednesday , Family Worship 7:00pm.
HAZEL COMM UN ITY CHURCH. near
Lone Boltom. Edsel Hart . pastor. Sunda}'
SchoOl 9: 30 a .m .: Worship 10 ·30 a .m ;
Prayer m('(&gt;tl na , 7:30p .m Thursday .

I Want To Round Up

A Classified Ad

50¢ Off

~y~CUSE

(Cosh Ads Only)
(Yard Sales Not Included)

•

They come in any s tage ,
By whi Ch they earn the1r wage.

"----------------1

They drive a truck or till the so1l,
Wh1le some m offices w11l toil

And others are rettred

Regardless of your father' s held ,

He helped you get along.
In trouble, he became your sh teld
And showed you right from wrong.
Your father 's wtsdom, fatth exalts
And asks you to forgive ,
Whatever may have been h1s faults.

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE P&gt;\RISH
UNITED METifODIST CHU RCH

Fay Sauer, Director
Rev ..James E. Corbitt, Assistant

He taught you how to ltve

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Don Archer
Rev. Roy Det-ter

- Glona Nowak

Rev . Seldon Johnson

Re\'. Andrew Rubenklng
1\SBURY ISvracusf.'l - Worsfllp 11 a m .
, Ch urch Sc hOol 9 &lt;15 am . Charp:f' Bibl &lt;'
Stud v Wf'dnt&gt;sday. 7 .10 p m . UMW . fi rst
Tuesda~r, 7 30 p m : Choir
Reht&gt;ar sal.
W('dnesda y 6 30 p m; UMW, fo urth Sun
da., , 6 30 pm 1Ne tson 1
ENTE R P RISE Wor~hlp 9 a m
Chu rc h Sc t10ol 10 a m . Bibl e St udy , Tu&lt;'s
da~r. 7 30 p.m . UMW, Fir s t Monday , 7 . :m
p m . U MYF. S unday, 6 p. m Cho ir RP
hear sat . 11 .'10 p m WPrl nPs dil y 1Rnt hf'·
mlc hl
F LATWOODS- Churc h SchOOl. 10 a m
Wor s hrp, 11 &lt;J m . Bible Study . Thursd
da }'. 7 p m
UMYF Su n da:,.. 6 pm
(Ro th('mJchl
FORE ST RUN - Worship 9 a m,
Chu1 c h School 10 am. Choir fllractic f'.
T u('sd.1y 6 30 p m : UMW. firs t Tues d aY
7 30 p m IN('lso nl
HEATH IMiddleporn- Church !;choo l,
9 10 e~ m. Worship tO 30 a m . B lbi P
St udv . Tuesdav. 10 a m UMW se&lt;'o.rd
MondaY . 7 30 ·P m .. LM W S&lt;-co nd Mon
day . 7 3fJ p m , U MM Th ird Monday 7 30
p m 1Robinson 1
MI NERSV ILL E - Worship SerYICf' 10
a m .. Chu rch Sc hool. 11 a m .: UMW , lh ird
WPdnesday , 1 p. m ., Choi r p ractice, Monday 7 30 p m (Nelson I
PEARL CHAP EL - Worship &amp;-rvice 9
a m . Chur ch School 11 a m .. UMW se&lt;'ond Tue sda y 7: 30p m; UMYF la s t Tu~ ­
d ay . 7 30 p m ( ubenk l n ~ l
POMEROY - Chu rch Sc hool. 9 15 a .m .
, Wors h ip Scr YIC&lt;' , 10 JO am, ChOir r'&lt;' ·
hean:a l Wedn&lt;'sday, 7· 30 p m, UMW , S(&gt; eund Tuesdav. 7 30 p m. UM't'F S unda y,
lip m 1Corbit n
ROCK SPRI NCS - Church Sc hool, 9 l S
am Wors hi p 10 am. Bibl e Study, Wed
nf'sdav. 7 30 p m, t...:MYF (Senio rs ~ . Sun
da) !1 p m : 1Jun1ors1 every other Sun day, ll p m !Rotllemlchl
R UTLA:"'D - Cllu rc h School, 9 45a m .,
Wo1 s hip 10 30 a m. UMW IEvPninlg Clr
rtf' I sf'co nd Wednesday 7 :w p m : UM W
1AI!Nnoon C\rc l£&gt;1 seeon d Thurs dav , 1 p
m 1Rube nking l
SALEM CENTER - Church &amp; hool. 111
a.m .. Wors hi p 9 · 45 a m / Rubenktngt
SNOWVILL E - Worship, 8 30 am :
Churcll Sc hoo l10 am . 1Rulx&gt;nkln~p
SOUTHERN CLUSTER

Re" JamH M. Clark
Rt"v. Paul McGuire
Rev , Orville WhUe
APPLE G ROVE- ChurchS&lt;:hool 9 a m
, Wors hi p, 10 a m (First and thi r d Sun
days ) UMW SecondTue sda)&lt;'. 7· 30p.m :
Pr'c.vcr mN!tlng, WPdnf'sday, 7 p .m
!Clarki
BETHANY - Worship. 9 a .m , Church
Sc hool 10 a .m, Bi bl e Study, Wedn&lt;'sday,
10 a m . ; Dorca s Wome n's Fellowship.
Wed~da y, 11 am (McGu lrl" l
CARMEL - Chu rch Scllool 9 30 a m .
Worsh ip, 10. 45 a m S&lt;&gt;cond and Fourth
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Sutto n.
lhlrd Thursday , 6 30 p m (M cG u irf'l
EAST LETART- Ch urc h School 9 a m
: Wors hip 10 a m s econd and fourtll Sun
days; UMW fir s t Tue sday , 7 30 v m .
tCiarkl
LETART FALLS - Wo rship 9 a .m ,
Chu rc h School 10 a . m tClarkl .
MORNING STAR- Worship . 9. 45 a m .
Church School 10 30 a m , Blblf' St ud y,
Thun~day , 7· 30 p. m tWhll~l .
MORSE CHAPEL - Chu rc h Sc hool 9 30
a m .: Worship 11 a .m iWhttel
PORTLAND- Church School 6: 30p.m
, Worship 7:30p. m ., UMYF Wed n&lt;'sday,
7:30p.m. (McGuire ) .
WESLEYAN - Ch urch
RA CINE
School, 10 am , Worship. 11 a.m.: UMW
fourth Monday 7: 30 p.m .: Men's Prayer
Breakfasl, Wedn~day , 7 a .m . {Clarki .
SUTTON - Ch urch School, 9 30 a .m ;
Morning worship 10· 45 a m . llrs t and third
Sundays: Fell owship dinner wtth Carm(&gt;l ,
third Th ursday, 6: 30 p.m . t McG u lrel
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Olive r
S\.1/alo . Sup!. Sunday School 9 JO a .m . ev ery wN&gt;k.

HOBSON CHRI STt AN UN ION, Rt&gt;._.
Tom St aten. pa s to r Su nday Sc h oo'~ 3n a
m , Evf' nlng s ervice I 30 p.m Wednesday
pravcr mC('fl ng 7 30 p m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRI ST Duane Wardf:'n , mini s te r Ri bl e
class 9· 3U a m Morning Wor!:i ht p 10 · 30 a
m Evening Worship 6· 30 p m Wed nes
day Bible St ud y 6 30 p m
NEW STIVERSVI LLE COM~UNITY
CHURC H. Sun da-, Sc hoo l scrvl('(' , 9 -J5 a
m ,
Worshi p
sPrv tc e
10 :w a m ,
Evang t•tlsllc Serv ice 7 30 p m WPd ne "
da y, Prayer meellng 7· 30 p m Thu rsd a v
ZION CHURC H OF CHR IST, Pomeroy
Harrl sonv1lle Rd. RobPrl Pun etl , mint s
ter , Ron R iffle . Su nda y School Super I nt e n
df'nl Sunday School 9· 30 a . m . Wor sll\p
ser vice 10 30 am , Eveni ng wor s hip Sun day 7 p m a nd Wednesday,-: p. m
ST JOHN L UTH ERAN CH URCH Pine
Grove The Rev . Wll l.a m Mlddl rswarth,
pa s tor Church service 9 : 30 a m , Sund a y
Sc hool 10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHR IST.
J o hn Wright. passtor. Sund ay Sc llool 9:.10
a .m .. Larry Haynes, ~ S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 am
RACINE CHUR CH OF T HE NAZA
RENE. Rev T homas H Co llier, pas tor
Martha W otfe Cha irm a n of the Boa rd of
Chris tian LUe S unda y Sc hool q :m a m .
Mo rnin g worship lU: 30 a m : Su nday
eveni n g worship? 30 p m Pra~N meeting
7 30 p m Wed n esday .
LIBERTY C HRIST1AN CH URCH. De x·
t('r Woody Ca ll. pastor. Serv ices Su nday
10 a m and 7 p m Wf'dnf'sda y, 7 p m
RACI NE FIRST BAPT1ST. Don L
Watkt'r, Pastor Robert Sm ith, Su nda v
Sc hOOl Supt . S unda} School 9 10 a m ,
Mo r n In~ wm s hlp 10 40 a m . ~und ay
l' ve n ! n ~&lt;: wo rs hip 7 30 p m
Wedn ('sda y
Pvr nlng Blbll' study 7 30 p m
BURLII'\CHAM COM MU I'\ITY
CHU RCH. Burl ingham Rf'v Okl'y Ra y
Laundermllt. pa s tor P h 9~!2 - 73~~ Su nda y
SC' hool10 00 a m , Sund av PvPnlng se rvlcf'
7· 00 p. m; Wed nesd ay t'V'-• nln ~ o;t'rvi&lt;:P
7 00 p rn
DANV ILLE
HOLINESS C HURCH,
locat ed on Rt 325 1&gt;e 1wee n Vi nt on and
Langs ville Rev Bt-n Walls paslu r Su nda y Sc hoo l. 8 30 a m Rohhy Lambf'rt. S
S Sup t. Mo rni ng wors hip 10&lt;KI a m , Ch it
d r('n' s Happy Hou r ll 45 p.m Prayer and
BrbhtStudy. 7 30 p m Mlss lonary me('tln~
first Wf!dne,.da v of each m onth 7 30 p m
F or In form a tio n ca ll 388-8467
S ILV ER RU N BAPTIST. Bi ll Lilli e.
pa stor S U'VP Lilli e, S S Supt Sunda y
Sc hool 10 a m . Mormng ,.,orsip. 11 a m .
Sund av f'Vemn~ worsh ip 7· 30 p m Pravf'r
mf'etln2 and Blbles\ud v Thur sdav. 7 30p
m . Yout h mePtlnp: WPdnl:'sda:,. at 7 p m
CHR ISTIAN FEI.Lf1WSHIP CHURCH.
383 N 2nd Ave .. Middleport Sunduv
ScllOol 10 a m Sund av and Wedn f'sd a v
Evenln p: Sf'rVICl'S at 7 3o p m
·
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD. Rf'v R
E Robin so n. p astor. Sunda y Sc hoo l 9 30a
m, Wors hi p s('rv !C'c&gt;, 11 a .m : Eve n ing
serv iC'&lt;' 7 p m Mid · WPf'k SPT\ icl'. W Pdnt&gt;~ ­
dav. 7 p m
LANGSV ILL E CHRIST!A:'-1 CHURCH,
Robr r · E Musser, pastor. Sund ay School
9 30 a m, Paul Mu sser , supt . Mornlnji:
wors hip 10 · 30 a .m : Sun day f'Vf'ning S('r
\'IC'e. 7 p. m , mid W('(')\ S{'T VIC'P Wednf'S
da y. 7 p m
SYRACS E C IIURC'H OF THE NA
7.ARENE. Rev. James 8 Kitt le , pa s to r
S herman Cu n d llf. supt Sunda v Scho ol
9· .10 a m. Mornlnp: wors h ip 10 30 a m
Eva n ~('l\s llc ser vice 6 p m . P ra) f'r and
Pra lsf' Wednesda\' 7 p m , Yout h me&lt;'t
in2 . 7 p m
II'
E DEN UNITED BRETHR EI'
C HR IST. Eldt•n R Blakt:•. pa stor Sund av
Scllool 10 a .m .: Rober t Reed, Sup! MornIng s('rm on , 11 a .m : Sunday niRht sc•r
Vil'E'S: Ch ristia n E ndeavo r 7 30 p m . SonR
st&gt;rvkf' 8 p m Preaching 8 :lC'I p m Mlrlwt&gt;ek prayer meeting , Wedn£'sclay , 7 p m
Alvin Re«t, Jayleader
- HEMLOCK GROVE
CHRISTL\ N,
Rog('r Y. atson. pastor. Cr en son I' rat t .
Sunday Scllool Su p! Morning wor s htp9 lO
a .m . Sunda v School 10 JO a m . EH•nt n ~
S('rVl Cf', 7 30 p m
MT UN ION L \PTIST, Joe Sayrr. Sun
da y S&lt;'hool Su pt Su nda y &amp;lloo t 9 45 a m .
Eveni ng worship6 30 p m P rayPr Mf'f'l ·
ln g. 6: 30p.m . Wrdnf'sday
TU PPERS P L1\I NS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Jody Holland. mlnlst£'r DNv l
Welts. Sup! Morning wo r t;;lllp. 8 00 a . m .
Churc h &amp; hoo t 9: 00a .m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA ·
RENE Re v Herber t Grat e . pa s tor
Frank Riffle, sup! Sunday Schoo l 9 . 30 a
m Wors hip service. 11 a m . and 7 p m
Su nd ay Wednesda y., 7 p m . Pray!!r m £'{'1

lng

LA UREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH . Rev. Robl?rt Mltl~r. past or
Lloyd Wright, Dl re&lt;: Lor of Christian E du
cation Sunday Sdtoo\ 9 · 30 a . m : Morning
wol'shlp 10: 30 a .m : Choi r practice. Sun d a y 6: 30p.m .: Evening worship 7· 30 p.m
Wedn('sday Prayer a nd Bible Study . 7. 30
pm
DEXTER CHUR CH OF CHRIST .
Ch arleos Russell Sr • min ister . Rick Ma
C'O mber, s u pt Su nda_:,. School 9 30 a m .;

Wor stl lp sf'r ... lc e 10:.10 am B1blc s tud"&lt;' ,
Tu csduY . 7 :m p m .
R EOR GAN IZED CHURCH OF JESUS
C' HRISTOF LATTER DAY SA I NTS Por i·
la nd RacinP Roa d William Rou s h, p as tor
Linda Eva ns , c hurch scllool d irec tor
Church sC' hool 9· .m a m , Mormng wor sip
10 10 a rn . Wedn esda y PVl'ning prayer
serv ices. 7 .10 p m
BETHLEHEM 8,\PT IST Rev E ar l
S llulf'r , pa stor Wors ll lp sC"rv!C"e , 9· 30 am
S und a} Schoo l 10 10 a m Btb le Stud y a nd
prayC' r srr v lce Thur sda v . i 30 p m
C ~ R L E TO N I N TERDE N OM I N A

T1 0i' AL CHL:R CH Krngsbur v Road RPv
D a vid Cu rfma n pa s tor Su nda y School
9 ;JQ a m . Ra lph Car l. Sup l Ev('n\ n J;: wor
&lt;&gt; hlp j· 30 p m Prayer mf'E'tlng , Wednes
d o~ ~

d av

m!i

J()

a m

Sund av Sc hoolll a m Evf' n

wor~ hlp serv tiT 7 JO p m Wf"dn esd ay

pray(&gt;[ m('('ltng 7 .10 p m
MT H E RMO N UN IT E D BRETHRE N

II\' C H R I ~ T CHURC'H. I ocated in Tf':o&lt;a s

All work should be admrred;

MID DLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHUR CH . corner Ash and Plum Lesllt•
Ha)man. pas tor S unda y School 10 00 a
m . Morning Wor sh ip. 11 00 a m .. Wed
~sda y a nd Sa turday Evening Services at
7.Yi pm

SY RAfU SE FIRST CHU RCH OF GOD
J oy Cla rk , pa s lor Wors hip serv 1re Sun

As vaned as the JObs they hold

GrocenesGenera 1Merchand 1se
Racrne949 · 7SS()

Rev. Richard Rothemlc h
Rev. Rohert E. Robln§On

-

Attend Church
this Sunday

SONS SlORE

7 :\0 p m

LONG BOTTOM C HRISTIAN . Jod\
Holl and. pas tor : Wa llace Da meu..ood.
Sunday Sc hool Sup! Worsll ip ser vlcf' 9 a
m : Bible Sc hool 10 a m
HYSELL RUN HOLI NESS CHL'R CH
Hf'\' T h('reon Du r ham, pastor Su n day
S&lt;' hOol at 9 JO am. Mnrning worship a !
10 30a m Sund ayevenm gserv lcea t 7 · 30
p m Thursd ay sN ... ices at 7· .10 p m
FREEDOM GOSP EL MI SSION a! Ra ld
Knob, locat{'{] un Count y Road 31. Rf'\'
Lawrl' nCP \. lu e senca mp . pas tor R t?\ '
Rog('r Wllllord , as st pastor PrPach lng
s£'rV! C(' SSu nd a v 7 30pm Pr·a ver m Peti ng
Gary Griffit h ,
We dnPsda :,. . 7 30 p m
IPad er \'outh grou ps Su nda y evPnlnJ.! a !
6 :mp m wllh Ro ~t-r a nd Vl ol£'t Wltlf01 drl
f('ad r r s Co mm un ion ~ f'f\' ICf' h r o:; t Sunda y
Pa ch rn on th
WHIT E'S CHAPEL , Cootvt llfl R D
Rev Ro y De£&gt;1N pas stor Su nda }' S c hool
9 30 a m: Wo rs h ip ser vice. 10 JOa m 81
ble s tu d) and prayer sE'r v ic P, Wrdn PSday
7 :JO p m
RUTLA .\ 'D CH URCH OF' CHRIST
Ma rk Jones. p&lt;rs tur Btl! Nrch olson. Sun
d&lt;r ., School Sup! S u nday Sch0oi9 30 a m ,
Morning Wor ship and Comm uni on 10. 30 a
m
RLTLAND BIBLE METHODI ST Amos
Tlltt" past or Sonnv Hudson, supt Sund a\
Sch~~~ 'l ,lU ,l m ; Mornin,g worship , 10 '10
a . m , Sunday c&gt;VPnlnJol: ser v ir c e 7 00 p m
W('d npsda .. s prvlcf' i r m WMPO pr o
gram q ,, rTr f'a c h Sund ay
R UTLAND CHU RCH OF' THF: N AZA
RE NE Rev U ovd D G 1lmm .lr . pas tor
Sunday SCh ool 9 :m a m. Wor s lp se r vlcl'
10 30 a m . You ng peop lr s SC'rvl cP 6 p m
Eva n ~elis ti c se r \ 'l &lt;'l' 6 .10 p m WC'dnPSd ay
S(' rVI('e 7 p m
MASON CHU RC H OF' CHRI ST . M!liN
St . Ma son. W Va Euge n e ~ Conger , mi nl s tC'r Snday Blblf' Study 10 a m . WOr
o:; hl p 11 am a nd 7 p m WednPSda y Bible
Stud v. vocal mu s ic 7 p m
MASON ASSEMHLY OF GOD . Dudding
L a nr . ~t aso n W Va RPv Ronni e B Rose .
pa s tor Sunda y Sc hool 9 4J a m Morning
wor sh ip 11 a m Evening sNV ICE' 7 .10 p m
\\'ed nf'sday Women' s Mlnl strlf'S ~ am
1m eetl n ~B: LJ nd pra yer), Wedn(' sdav Pravf'r
a nd Bl bll:' St ud :-;. 7 ~ m
HARTFORD C'HllRf' H OF CHR IS T (r\
CHRISTIAN UN ION Th £' HP\ WtltHlm
Ca mpbell pa s tor Su nday School 9 3Cl a
m .. .J am f'S Hu.'{hes . supt Evt-nl ng spn•icf'
7 JO p m Wednsday f' Vf'ni ng pra ve r mwt
1ng 7 30 p.m . You th praye r scr vl('(' l'a ch
Tu('Sda y
FA IRVIE W BIBLE CHUR CH. Le tart .
W \ 'a . Rt 1. J a m f'S Lewis . pa s to r Wo r
sh ip &lt;:l'r vic('s 9 JO am . Sunda\ Sc ll ool 11
a m , En•ntng '4 m s htp I 30 p m Tut•sday
coltago? p ray er mf"£'tlng and Rthlf' Stud}
(I :10 a m Wor s lltp ser\' lC'C'. Wrdn ~da y
7 30 p m
OUR SAV IOUR LUTHERAN CHU RCH
Wa lnut and ll en r v St s. Ra\' en swoo:l. W
\'a Til &lt;' !{ev Crorge C Wrirlck, paslor
Sund &lt;J:V SC ilO ol 9 30 a m , S unda v wor s hip
llam
CALV&lt;\HY BJOLE CHU RCH. loca tf'd on
P om C'rov Plkf', Cou n1v Road 25 n C'ar Flat woods R('v Blackwood , p astor Servl cf'S
on Sunda y a 110 :11 a m and 7 ~ p m with
Sunda v School 9 .10 am [ll blf'S tudy, Wf'd
n~da}· , 7· 30 p m
FAITH FEL LOW SHI P CRUSADE FOR
CHR IST, St R t 138. Ant lq ult) RP\
Fra nk lin Dl r kf&gt;Tl s. past or Sunda y m orn mg 10 a m : Sunday e v&lt;' nlng 7 .10 p m .
Thursda) f'VE' nin ~ 7· 30 p.m
ST IVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAP
TI ST CHU RCH Pas tor Robert Byer s
Sund ayS&lt;'hoollO a m . Wor shlp ser vi c(' ll
am , Sund a y e ve ning serviC'l', 7 30 p.m ,
Wt'dnesday f'VE'nlng sf'rv ice 7 3D p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH
Inc, P{la r l St . Mlddlf&gt;Port . Rf'\ 0 ' 1.){&gt;11
Mani£&gt;Y . pas tor Sunday &amp; hoot 9 30 am.
Morning wors h ip 10· :ll a.m : Eve ning
worship 7 30 p m Tu£&gt;sda~. 12· 30 p. m Wo
m('n' s Pray('r m et•1lng . Wednf'Sday, 7, 30
p m Praylt'r an d P ral&lt;&gt;e Sf'rvlce
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHR IST , Elder James Miller B l
biE' Study, Wednesday? · 30 p m ., Sunday
Scllool lO am ., Sundav night sof'rvlce, 7 30
p .m

POMEROY WESLEY f\N HOLINESS,
Harrisonville Road. Earl Fields, pastor.
He nry Eblin, Jr, Sunday School supt Su nday School 9: 30 a .m .: Morning worship 11
a m ; Sunday evening serv ice 7: 30 p .m .
Pra vrr m f'!Ptlnf;{ WednPSdalr' , 7· 30 p .m

Rt . 1, Reedsville, Oh.
98S· l944

Nationwide Ins . Co .

Middleport
P11merov . 0

fathe r can be young or o ld,

Reo~~ I McCoy"

1. 0 " Mac" McCoy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

&amp;

ALF'RED - Church Sc hool 9 30 am .
Wo rs h ip, l1 a .m : UMYF . 6· 30p m . UW.
Thi rd Tuesd ay, 7. JO p m Communio n.
fi rst Sunda y 1 Ar:chen
('HEST ER - Worship 9 am . Chu rc h
Sc hoo l10 a .m. Bible Study, Thursday, 7p
m. UMW flr&lt;;t Thursday, l p m. Co m
rnun lun. fl rsl Sundav iArcht&gt;rr
.JOPPA - Wor!';hip 9 :lO a m . f' hu rc h
Sc hoo l 10· 30 o m Biblt&gt; Stud v. Wednt&gt;s ·
da y , 7 .10 p m 1Johnson\
LONG BOTTO M -Chu rc h School Y 30
a m . Worship 7 p m Alhlf' Study , Wf'dnt&gt;sda\" . 7· 30 p m , UMYF. Wed nes dav.
6 00 p m . Co mmu n ion Fi r s t Sunda y
IArlill' l l
REEDSVILL E- Church School9 .10 a
m . Wor s hip Ser v ic{' l1 00 a m 1DN'ter l
TUPPERS PLAI NS ST PAUL Chu rc h S c hoo l 9 a m . Wor s hip 10 a m .
Blbl r Study. TuE"sday. 7 30 p m . UMW .
Third T ues da y, 7 30 p m ; Co mmunio n
First Sunday iAn·h&lt;'r)
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev . lames E . Corbitt
Re\'. Steven Nelson

m

" For A Real Auction

_._c:au the

Complete
r~
Automohve
~
- ·-:ServiCe
Locust &amp; Beech Street
"2-9921 M1ddle por l

SENTINEL

A

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

WJS &amp; SONS SOHIO

Modular Home~
Pomerov,1100 E. Mclin

E

a.m

How about you roundin' up
a classified ad? For the Month
of June, if you clip out this
classified coupon you can
get SO¢ off the cost of
your ad.
(Cash Ads Only)
(Yard Sales Not Included)

c ondrtron .

Tne

wlCk.-1
d!noctJon of
Allee Nffisfo
POMEROY
CHURCH
OF TilE NAZA· •
RENE. Corner Unkrn aOO Muiben'y, Rev
Thomas Glen McClung, pastor Oyde Henderson, S S Supt., SUnday School. 9:l:l a.m.:
morning worshJp 10: :r&gt; a m , ~ servke 6
p m : mid-week service, Wf'drlf'!lday , 7 p.m.
GRACE EPISCOF. \L CHURUI. 326 E .
Main St., Pomeroy. S\. 'lday services: Holy
communion on the first Su. '&lt;lay of each montb ,
and combined OA1th monu. '~ prayer oo the
thJrdd Sunday. MOI"'Ung prayt."' and sermon on
a ll other Sundays r1 the month. Church Sdtool
and Nu~ care provided. Coflee OOUr In the
Parish Hall Immediately following thE&gt; servlct&gt;
POMEROY CHURCH OF CIIRIST, 212 W
Main St., Nell Proudfoot, pastor Bible School
9·:rl am , Morning worship, 10: lla.m, Youth
rneM.~. 6:00pm: Evening worship, 7 OO p
m. Wednesday nlghl prayer meeting and Bible
s tudy 7:00p.m
TilE SALVA110N ARMY, 115 Burtl'mU1
A\1(' . Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wlrllng In chargw&gt;.
Sunday hoUness rll«'tlng, 10 a .m .; Sunday
School, 10:30 a. m. Sunday School, YPSM
E loise Adams, leade1 7· :i:l p m . SaJvarion
meeting. various speakers and mustc spEd.als
Thursday, U ::J) am to 2 p.m . Ladles Home
League, members In charge, a u women
InvitEd 6 45 p m Thursday, Corps Cadet
Classs I Young Propk&gt;-Bibl.el. 7 :II pm Bible
Study and Prayer met?tlng , ~to the pubUc
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHUROi OF
CHRIST 33226 0rildren's Home Road (Cwnty
Road 761. OO'.l-52l"l. Vocal music. Sundav Worslhp lOa .m .: Bible Study 11 a.m. : Worship. 6 p
m Wedrlt'sday, Bible Study, 7 pm
OLD DEXTER BffiLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH. CWton Lucas. pastor Sunday
School 9: lJ a m. Mrs. WorlPy Francts. supt
Preach in~ servlrt&gt;S fiP-;1 and thlrd undays fol lowing Sunday School Youtll meeting f'Vf'r-y
&amp;ulday , 7: XI p m.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
Preach ing 9 30 am , firs t and s~ro nd S undays of eactl month: third and fourth Sun
days each month worship serv ices a t 7: 30
p.m Wedn('Sday evemngs at 7 30 p m
Praver and Bible Study
SEVENTH· DAY ADVENTIST. ~u ll&gt;
erry Height s Road, Pomt?roy Mich ael Pl on kowskl, pastOr: Ma rte Splrl's, Sabbat h
School Sup! Sa bb ath School at 2 p m on
Saturday wlth wors hi p serv1ces follow ing
at 3: 15 p m
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- Sister H arriPit Warnf'r . Su p! Sund a :v
Sc hool 9 30 am. Morning Worship, 10. ~ 5

\'o s uhser tpt lo ns b\ mat l pt'lml tt f'd 1n

Just messin' around
the Classified Corral
tryin,' to round up
some Classified
Bargains for you!

a hiP to shoot for either of rn.o ne" cars in the OavP
\ppalal'hia gulf tournament ,J une 21.
llt':.lt•r .Jt•rry Swint&lt;'k of Ath~ns told Bank Om•'s Bob MiUcr he'd he
tl•·lightPd tu takr part in thP t•vt•nt, and ~ offering a hrand n e w car to

1980 Pinto ........................ s2195

~-.: , ,..
&amp; .xtYJce
·~ •

·\-7
.J/

TRlNITY CHURCH, Rev . W. H Penin.
postor : fll&gt;bbko Buck, Sunday S&lt;'hool Supt
Chu rch Schoot9: 15 a .m .: Worship Sof'rvte 10 .J)
am Cholr rehearsal, Tuesday, 7lJ pm

Howdy Pardner!

(;olft·r-. now wiU ht•

-=-

091-]]15

THE DAILY

WAID CROSS

Subs nibf&gt; r&lt;&gt; no t d Ps lrln g 10 p3\ the cat
riP r nrav lt'm tt m ad \a nc r d trec t to
Thl' Da iiv ~(' n t m f'l on .1 fi o r 1 ~ m ont h
ha st&lt;; Crl'd!t wrl l b&lt;' gl\'f'n carr ier Pa ch
mo ntt1

MAIL Sl' BSCRIPTIONS
hr sJdt' Ohw
ll\\('t•h
1ti \\f'('k ~
cl 2 Wl't'kS
OutsidE• Ohto
13 Wf'f'k s
26 Wel'kS
52 Wl'f&gt;ks

116 s. second
Pomeroy

Kingsbury Home Sales

PR ICE~

S I Xth

SPRING SAVINGS

Pomeroy

FURNI~!e':!RDWAR:tI

SUBSCIUPTION R-\TES
By Carrier or Motor Koute
Om• Wt&gt;t' k
.. $1 10
Onf' M onth
$4 80
OnC' Yf'at
$ ~ 7 2(1
SINGLE COPl'

town s wh('l'l' ho me eurn Pr se r vtce
,11Lrbl 1•

VIRGIL B. TtAFORD SR.

RIDENOUR

CLASSIFIEDS

\-\I' ll!'l(l(j iH.! 10- ( -, !
l 11g H l
(0) }fY) ]IJ- \ 7..!
1'1111rl"l.IS .md Htffl r f1.- ,al" &lt;~nd VP!,lt

ha()Jli'm·d to tht• \it·i~ and :\1a'i0n area," ~.aid the Athens
... port~man - IHtsinPssrnan. "and we j ust want to piti·h in and do our part
lo ..,pp I hat tluo whnlf• thing is a first clas.s d(_•uJ. I'm just g lad to lw a part of
i1 ' .'

Middleport

ICERMIT'St&lt;ORNER
Pomeroy, Oh1o

rA-

Preicqphons

NEW YORK '.. ~
a.ontiNG HOUSE : ,•_,

T ht • Ass(}('l &lt;tlt'd P r Pss, In

was

a hoiP·in-ont• on the lith hole. The lith is a
plays at ahout 190 yards.
Sv. inh' k is pnttin.u; up a 19X4 Sissan Dal'iun 200 SX hatc hback turbo W
. lrl.\ Uill' , induding thf• h,andful of profes.liilonal"i who'D he in th(' 18- hole
l1111rn.tlm·nl . whn (·a n at·t&gt; thf' 11th !\nd S\.\ointek alr;o will twa partidpant
111 tlw ..,,xth ~ annual Uilt •.,. dtarit~· da.~"''k.
E.~rlwr . 1\ tt lliU Ford of .VIiddleport again put up a 19!W Ford ES&lt;•ur1
f11r .ut y om· who .u;t•ts . t holt•- in-one on the ninth hole.
Thus . for ltu .. f'H' nt , there'll he two cars up for ll;Tai)S, plus prizes for
do~~ -... t tn Uu · pin on .lll s ix of the Rh:ers ide GoU Cluh' s par three hules.
( ~l l lf1 · N •··'" win"' ate lws , golf hall~. golf s h oes or a loin ofbef'f on the par
tlln ·•· hniP~ . PowPII '~ S upt•r Valu, C lark' s .Jew e lers and S imon' s
l"u - \ · Pair arr ( '~I(M'ratin g ~po nsors on the project.
Ttu· 1najnr "ipommr ot th~· ew•nt is Kerr Distributing of Athens. Kenny
l{ (• fr , prPsidt•nt Of lht• ht'\f'ragt• l'Om pa ny, is Sport._~ring th(' Charity
aH . tir for thf' sN·ond slraight year. " It's the h£ost thing that' s evt_~r

~~~~!

GIFTS

limf'dla , Inc. P omt&gt;rov, Ohw45769. 992
2 1 ~ Seocond c lass poS1aJ::e pa id at P om eroy. Oh io.

=

HE DID IT FOR YOU

Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

&amp;

POSTMAST E R S,-.nd addre ss to ThP
Du lh' SrntinPI, I 11 Cour t St l'om e roy
Otllo .;:,769

Thompson Chain-Reference Bible

~1

Chester

WHATEVER YOUR FATHER'S WORK,

John F. Fultz
J. Marcus Fultz

5

The Interested Businesses Listed On .This Page.

Sponsored

" MEIGS TIRE
\ \ CENTER, INC.

If'\ \

MIDilEPORT
BOOK STORE
Church Office SUPJhes

t USPS 1.&amp;5-960)

l and Dalt v Press A ssoclnton and the

THAT HE IS THE GREATEST

Ray Riggs
Ph. 98S·410G

St. 111.

1he Daily Sentinel,.. Page

Ohio

-

This Message and Church

American N('wspapc'r Publi shers A s
soda llon. Na tional Advt?r!l s \ng Re pr('
"t'nta ll vt•, 8 1 a nh a m Newspi!JX'I S a lt-' s
n.:1 Third A\&lt; f'nu f'. Nf'w Yo r k Ne w
York 100 17

Hilf·~-

2 Dr 4 sp . goort

Steve Carlton, 4-3, was the
beneficiary of the lusty hitting
support. He allowed two runs on five
hits for eight Innings, a nd struck out
six to increase his all-time leading
total to 3, 785.

GaryMat1hewslmockedlntworuns
with a single in the eighth for the
first -place Cubs. whose lead In the
East was cut to a half-game over
New Yark and one game over the
thlrd-place Phlllies.

Memlx&gt;r

Extra new car to be
given away at tourney
whu

Juan Samuel keyed a four-run
second Inning with a three-run
homer and Tim Corcoran added a
two-run shot ln the sixth as
Philadelphia won with a 15-hit
attack at Chicago.

A GREAT GIFT TO SHOW

B\ tnni n gs

O.. t ' tl U UO.., h U\A t 'Vf' J

:ul) mw

Phlllles 11, Cubs%

LUi

Pomervy Middleport,

KING JAMES VERSION

Bnng Grass Cutting Equipment

f'ac h smgled t w tce for Loga n .
MC'igs returns home after seven
consecutive road gam t:&gt;s this Saturda y' wh r.:•n till'\' host Parkersburg
South for two gamf's Meigs travels
to McArlhur for rv.o Sunda\ . Both
a n.. , 1 p m game.:;.

R tgg•. ;. afl£' r grtlln g on h~ an error .
\1 ; 1s "in.c lt 'd rn "N'ond b\' Jac kir
\\ '(']kt'r'" hunt . a nd scorrd slidi ng
IIllO h&lt;1 nu • !Jlat &lt;' u n a fiPid l' r 's
c tJ&lt;t t&lt;P H.tggs injUJI'd ht " .mkiP on
1h t , pl,t \ , I ml h,1d 1u IC'J \ L' t hr ga rTH '
T h•• trt]Ul \ \\ ,1" n u t tu bt • bPl iPvPd
thf'

singled .

Reds.

Mike Schmidt had two RBI with

two doubles for the Phlllles, while

M ('lg s onJ v ot h C' r h1t \\.'As A s m glP b~'
Tr f'y Cassf'll Conrad a nd Wright

hth
MC'ig" -;corM a run m thC' first.
b u t paid lh(• pncp S h o rt s top Ntck

:\1f'J [!&lt;; lOilk d { ~ ]p,Jfl ln

W ISP

this season against Clnclnnatl with
Its seventh straight tr1umph over the

u

sac rifir ro to second b~' WPlkPI. and
sroH&gt;d on Thomas' triple T on v
R tfflr 1hPn s ing lt_;,Q tu score Thomas
fu1 thf' go-ahf'ad 1un.
Logan tied in thC' Sf'\C'nth on J
two-out singlf', two stolen ba ses.
a nd Wnght's singlf'
Rot h te ams put two run n ers
,dJOa 1d m thC' eighth. but cou ld not
dent th e pla lc
&amp;&gt; sidC's lhr h1t .'i 11stf'd ahovf'.

pr t '\·, u l1·&lt;1 \I!'t g" a nd l .oga n ,\mPn
f' t~n l.t ~E.; Hm tl'.lm'-'

j ) , Ill Th n rll . IO..

R ICk

bullpen we have, you nave to let
them do the job."
Elsewhere in lhe National
League, San Francisco beat San
Diego 5-2 , Philadelphia bombed
Chicago 11-2, Pittsburgh edged
Montreal3-2, New York blanked St.
Louis &amp;0 and Houston tripped Los
Angeles 3-1.
Barker retired the first eight Reds
before walking opposing pitcher
J e f1 Russell, 2-8. Then Eddie Mllmer
got Cincinnati's only rut , a twohopper up the middle, to open the
fourth .
Atlamta , which ended a five-game
losing streak, lifted Its record to 9-1

SAT., JUNE 16
AT 8:00A.M.

Logan, Meigs Legion
battle to 3-3 deadlock

-) fXrERifNCE 111f JOY Of RELIGION ~
Friday, June 15, 1984
. ,.. r

Friday, June 15, 1984

l'llmemy-Middleport, Ohio

4 The Daily Sentinel

Commun itY o ff C! Rl 82 RPv Robof'rt
S a n d&lt;'r ~. pa s tor Don \\Ill, laY lf'ade r S u n
day Sc hoo l 9 30 a m Morning Worship
10 ~5 a m £vpmn g p reacll1 ng serv tcf' sP&lt;'Ond and fourt h Su nd ay at 7 30 p m .:
Ch r is ti a n E ndt&gt;avor, first a nd third Sun
day, 7 30p m Wednesday praver rnt't'tlng
and Bib le Stud y . 7· .10 r m
J E HOVAH'S WITNESS. 37319 Stall'
Rou iP 12~ lone mile easT of Ru!land~ Sun da y Blb lt&gt; h:•c turf' 9 30 a m , WatchlowPr
s! Ud y 10 .10 am, TuPsd a y, RlblP t;;IUd} ,
7 30 p m . T llursday. Theocratic Sc hool
7 30 p m Sprvl c e mf'E'ttng , 8 20 p m
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
Loca !\"d on 0 .J White R oad of Hlj:;hwa y
lliO P a t H{'nson , past or Su nda y Schoo l 10
am Cl a ss('s for a ll ages JunlorCh urC'Illl
am . Mor nrn g wor sllip 11 a m Adult
Choh pra c tiCe 6 p m Su nd a y Yo ung Pf'o
pte's, Cht ldr('n s Churcll and Adult Bible
Stud v, Wt&gt;dnP sda\' at 7 30 p m
HOPE RA PTIST C'HAPF L. 570 \.ra ni
St . Midd l£'po r1 Afflll atf'd wit h Sou t llern
Baptl:;l Conv(' nlion Sund av Sc hoo l lO am
Murnln).! wo rs hip 11 a Ill, E"e nrn g wor
s hip 7 p m . WPrl nesday Pven ln ~ Bible
~ tud y an d pruy f" r mN'Im g 7 p m
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRI ST , St
Rl 1N and Co Rd 5 Mark SwvP r ·~ . mini s
tl'r Sunda~ Sc ho ol Su pt S!Pvf' Pi c ken s
!-iunda v Schoo l lf · 3U a m , Mornmg wa r
o.; lllp 10 30 a m . Evening wor ship 7 p m
Wt•dn f'S d &lt;l~ WOIS hlp 7 p m
ST
PA UL LUTH ERAN CHU R CH,
Corner Syca m orf' a nd Sec ond Sis .. Po
rnpr ov Tht• Rev Wtlll a m Mtddl eswarth.
pst or Sund av SChoo l 'J· 45 a m . Churc h
Sf'r v tef' 11 a . m
SACRED H EART CHURCH, Msg1
An tho ny \.tann a m ore P h 9C!2 5R9R Sat urday EV&lt;' nlng Ma ss j 30 p m , S u nda v
Ma ss. 8 am a nd 10 am Confess ions one&gt;
t1 ,df l1our bPfm e Pach Mas~ Cf'Ddilt;;Sf'S,
II am Sunday
VICTORY BAPTI ST . 525 N 2nd St.
Middleport Jam('S E KE'f'Sl'E'. pa s tor
S unda\ m or nlrr g wnrt;;htp 10 am. Evf'n ·
1ng sl'rvte (' 7 p m . Wednesday f'Vf' nin g
wor &lt;&gt;lllp j p m VIsit a ti on, Thursday 6 30
p.m
TRIN ITY C HHISTIAN ASSEMB LY,
Cool vill e. Gilbert SpPncer, pastur Sundav
Sc hool 9 30 a rn . Mornmg sPrvtce. 11 a. m
Sunday PVPn lng Sf'rv\ce 7 30 p m : Mid
wl'f' k pra yf'r se rvJc(' Wednesda y 7 30 p m
MT . OLIV E COMMU N ITY CHURCH .
La wn&gt; ncP Bus h. pastor Max F'olmf' r. Sr
Su pt Sunda\' Sc hool and Morn ing Wors hip
9 30 a m , Sunda\' eve ni ng ser v lre, 7 p m .
You lh m&lt;'ellng a nd Biblt&gt; Stud y. Wt"'in ~ ­
da v, 7 p m
U NITED FATTH CHUR CH, Rt 7 o n P o
mer oy BY P ass Rev Robf'rt Sm ith . St
pa s tor Rf' v. Ja m ~ Cundiff . t~St;;l pa s t or
Su nd iiY Schoo l 9 JO am. Mornin g w or
s hip 10 30 a m , E\'£•nlng worship 7 30 p
m wo m r n 's FPII OVIs htp, Tuesday, li' a m
Wedn{lsd ay ni ght prayer se nd C'f' 7 JO p m
FA ITH RAPTIST CH URCH. Rail road
St . Maso n Sunda-, SchOol 10 a m , Morn
1 n~ wo rs hi p I I a m . Even I n ~ sP r" ie P 6 p
m Praver m('('tln~ and Blb iP Stud\ Wt"d
nes d.n. 7 p m

ol Col umbu s, 0
804 W Mam
991 · 2318 Pomeroy

f~

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equipment ;:~e~s~:end
R uliand , Oh10 4577 5
J Wm "Bill " Brown, Owner
Phone (614) 741 177 7

CK

1

SUPERMAR~--E"-~ ?;
MIDDLEPORT

_.,"'

F'ORE:ST R Ur..: BA PTIST Rt&gt; v Ny le
Borde n. pa s tor Cor nrltus Bunch. sup!
S unda y Sc hool 9 30 am . SC&lt;'ond and
fo urt h Sund ays wor sllip serv ice at 2. 30 p
m
MT MORIAH BAI Yf iST. Fourth and
M&lt;~ln St Mtddleporl Rl'v Cal vin Minnis,
pastur Mrs Elvin Bumgardner s upt
Sunda ) Schon! 9 .10 a m Wor s hip serv ice
10 45 a m
BURLI:-.l'GHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH. Rl 1. Shadt' Afft ll a ted w ith
Sou thern Baptist f'.o nven lmn Don Black,
pastor. Sunduy Scllool 1 30 p m .. Su nd ay
worship 2 30 p m Thu rsda y C've nln g Bib le
Stud y , 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY . Ra&lt;'lne,
Rt 124 William Hoback pa s t or Su nd a y
School 10 am .. Sunda y e\•enlng servl cf' 7
p m Wlf'dnf'Sday 1:'\it'nlnJO: se1VIl'l' 7 p m .
CARPE NTER BAPTI ST Don Chf'ad lf',
Sup t S unday Sc hoo l 9 30 a m Mo rn ing
Worship 10 30 a m Pray{'r se n 'ICf' . a ltern
ate Sund a Ys .
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTA L. Thi rd
Ave Re v Cl a r k Bakt•r . pa s tor Carl Nol
!Ingham , Sunda v School Supl S unda y
Sc hool 10 am with cla sse s for all age s
Evening se r ... l&lt;' ~ a1 6 p m WE'dnesda v Bl
bte stud y a t 7 30 p m Youth seldt·Ps Fri day at 7 .10 p m
E CCLES IA FE LLOY.S HIP , 128 Mill St
Mlddf('port Brotllf'r Chuck McPhers on ,
pas tor Su nda._. School 10 a m Su nd a\
evf'ntng Sf'rvl ces at 7 p m and Wf'dnPsda v
sprvtces at 7 p m
NT1QU IT Y BAPTIST Earl Sllulf'f pa stor Sundil"&lt; Sc hoo l 9 lfJ ;1. m , Church se r
v1c e. 7 p ni, Youth meeting. 6 p m Tuf' s
day Bible STudy at 7 p m
F U LL GOSP E L LI GHTHO L:SE , 31045
Hil a nd Roa d P o mero~ To m Kell) p&lt;t s
to r Da nny Lambcrl. S S S upt Sund ay
mo rnln~ se r v\C{' at 10 a m . Sunday l?' ven
\n g s of'rvlcof' 7 30 p m Tuesda y and Tllurs
da y S&lt;&gt;r v tces a t 7 30 p m
WORD OF FAIT H, Q3 Mil l St . M1ddiP
port Ri c hard StPw art , pi! t;; IC\r Sunda y
mo r nlni! sf'rv Jc r IU a m Sunda y c ven !ng
7. JO Tu(&gt;Sd av mo rning Bi b le stud y lOa m
W'-&gt;dn es d a ~ f' \ ' E' Illn ~ 7 10 p m
Thusda y
mo r nin g \'ld{'() with Kenneth Copeland 10
am . Frida y ('vemng vldN wi th Kenneth
r oj)('la nd. 7 30 p m
NE W HAVEl' CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE fiev GIE'ndon S troud pa s tor
Sund av Sc hoo l 9 .10 am , \o\lors htp SC"rvl c£'
10 30 a m You!h s('n Ire Sunda y 6 15 p
m Sund ay P\enl ng seJ'.\ c£''7 OOpm Wpd
nE'sda\ P ra ye r Mef'ltn l2 and Bible STud~
7 00 p m.
NEA SE SETTLEMEI'\T C' HL' RCH , Sun
day afl ernoon Sf'f\' irP" aJ 2 10 Thurs d a \
PV('nlng SN\ Ices at 7 3U
F IRST BAPTI ST CHCRC'H. Mason , W.
\Ia Pas to r. Bill MuqJh&lt; Sunday Sc hoo llO
a m : Sunday f'\P ning j 10 r m Prayer
m('('tln~ a nd B ible s tud \ \\ C'dnesda ) 7 30
p m E vC'r yonfl welcomf'
RUTLAND FREE WILL Bo\PTIST , Sa
II'm S t R€'v Paul T a ~ lo r pas tor Su nd a y
Sc hOol 10 am. S unda \ f'\Cnm~ I 30 p. m ,
Wednf'S da y ('VeninJ.! pra yf' r mt&gt;etlng 7 30
pm
SOU TH HETHL L '\C\1. TE STAMENT
CHU RCH :.tt&gt;w RldgC' Dua nC' Svd e n
stri&lt;'krr. pastor S unda\ Sc hool 9 am:
Chu rc h &lt;;F"rvlcf• Hl,. m R1 hl t&gt; Sru d Wl::'d
n&lt;' sdav at 7 ,\II p m Junf' thru Sep tembf&gt;r .
7 p m Orl obf'r thru Ma~ Sundav f'VC'nlng
FP11 uws hl p i p m Junt' lh r u St•plf'mber , 6
p m 0('10bf'r tll r u !Via \

Sermonette
Yesterday was F lag Day. It is not one of our government's "Big
Day Off Holid ays." It is a holiday of the people. A day 10 lei lhe
comm unity or neighborhood know we love our country. A. da} to say,
I am nol as hamed to call myself American .
Congress on June 14, 1977 first authorized Ihe Red, White and
Blue flag of America. This is the reason we obserVe Flag Dav on
June 14. It first fle w on August J, 1m on land now known as Rome,
New York . It was under tire only three days lat er Th1s flag of Stars
and Stripes has s tilTed a lot of people. It has touched Ihe hearts of
m a ny men, women and chlldren. Ask a nyone w ho hac:; been overse as
tor a long time how they feel when they set foot again on Amencan
soli a nd see tha t Red, WhltP a nd Blue banner of Stars a nd Stripes
wavtng In front of a Post Ol'ftce or a sc hool or wherever So man)·
have said, "It stirred my heart and put a lump m my throat I felt 1
was n o w home a nd safe agai n."
Remember the story of the " Ma n Without A Count ry"" He wa s
destined to never set foot nor cast his eyes on American soilagarn
After 55 years a t sea ashe lay dying, he asked about whrch new sta te s
there were. He had drawn a map and had entered some sta tes he had
learned aoout. How many stars In lhe Flag would ha\·e told him
quickly how many states there were at that time
Pride In our country a nd our nation's fl ag is not a bad thmg It rs
also not contra ry to the words of Chrtst or the Bible . Our first
Allegiance Is to the Creator God. Son a nd Holy Ghost. But love of
country should not be slighted. Christ Himself sa id to render to
Caesar w hat Is Caesar's and put God In His rightful place. first. God
has Indeed blessed Am erica . Let us pra y this living Triune God will
continue to bless America and its nag a s a free la nd where aU are
a ble to worship God In the manner of t heir choice. In our Pledge of
Allegiance to the Flag remember the words, "One Nation. Under '
God." Indeed God has blessed America. Let us make II the best land
on earth and the free-est. Let the Amer1can Flag- Red. White a nd
Blue, be our symbol to all the world that we her e are free to worship
God a nd can love our country both. That we !hank God we have a
country where the flag reminds us ol our freedom to worship God as
high as the stars are hlgh.- Rev. WOllam Middl~swa rth. Lutherans
of Meigs Coun ty.

�Friday, June 1S, 1984

Ohio

OU Medical School graduates
largest group in facility history
The Ohlo University College of
Osteopathic Medicine graduated Its
largest class of osteopathic physi·
clans June 9 when 70 men and
women received their Doctor of
Osteopathy degrees durtng the
unive rsi ty 's co mm e n cemen t

exercises.
The osteopathic oath was admin·
lstered to the students Friday, June
8, by forme r American Os teopathic
Association Pr&lt;&gt;sldcnt Dr. Donalrl
Siehl.
During the Oath and Awards
program, the college presented
Class of 1984 students with awards
for outstanding pertormance In a
variety of areas.

ALL .&lt;\BOARD - 'This historic train is part of the
Hocking Valley Scenic Railway, which Is sponsoring
trips tttrough Athens County on the Baldwin steam

locomotive each weekend tttrough October, departing
on two runs each day.

Historic train plans Athens area trips
111e Hocking Valley Scenic Railway
has announced the tr l984 scheduleof
operation.
Special trains will de part from a
rum-ot'-thf'-&lt;'C'ntury raihva y sta tion

at Fulton Street and U.S. Route 33.
SchedulE'S v.ilJ be noon a nd 2 p.m ..
WCf'kends now to rheendofOcroher.
A 19 1G Ba ldwin s team locomotive
and old· time passenger cars will be
used to relive history that has buill
American heritage .

The Hocking Valley Scenic !{ail -

way 1s a nonprofit. all volunteer
organization dedica ted to preserving ra il history, and has, since 1972,
been running thE' trains, repairing
the trace and p&lt;&gt;riotming maintenance on the locomotive and cars
throughout thE' year.
N&lt;&gt;w for thE' season is a 25-mll&lt;&gt;
round trip thr ough East Clayton.
Diamond. Ha ydenville and to Logan. A shorter H)-milE' round hip to
Diamond will be avaUable with a
stop at the Foreshy Museum on the

campus of Hocking T!'Chnlcal
Coll&lt;&gt;ge.
Durtng the ride, passengers can
relas, listen to a narration of history
and the nostalgic sound of the steam
locomotyive whistle echoing in the
scenic hills of Southeast Ohio.
Details can be obtained by ca lling
weekdays , 10 a .m . to 4: 30 p.m.,
513-335-0382; weekends call 614-TJ3953l or writing Hocking Valley
Scen ic Rauway, PO Box 427,
Nelsonville, Ohio, 45764 .

Special needs children for adoption
to be published by photolisting service
COLUMBCS

~

Ohio's speclal -

nC'f&gt;d" c hild rrn v.:ho arC' Jpgally frC'e
for adoption will soon ha\'(' f'xposurP th roug h a !Jhnrolisting srrvlcc.

The Dcpnrtmcnt of Puhl1c We tfar&lt;' ha s contracted w ith thf'
Adopti o n Li sting ,S('rvict.' o f Ohio

1ALS01 to publis h a photolist ing of
spPcial ·n('(&gt;ds c hJldrC'n which wUl
includP a narrati ve about Pach

ch ild . The p hotolis ting will be sent
to all Ohio public and pr!valf'
adoprion agenrios in mid-June

SpPCial-needs c hildre n are c hildren with physical or mental handicaps, or emotion al problems; child ·
r cn of minori ty or mixed racial

keep the photolisting c urrent.
Those imcrcstcd in seeing the
photollsting should visit a public or
private adoption agency in their

area.

background; older childre n; and
sibling groups Once thought unadoptabte, special-needs c hildren
ar"!' now being successfull y placed

The photolist ing and biweekly
upd ates a re a lso avo il a ble through
subseript ion for $50 a y0ar. For

with new parents .

information , wri te to the Ohio

The sta te welfare department 's
one-year contract \'v il h ALSO calls
for 500 childrm to be included In the
photolisling . Biweekiy upda tes will

Departme nt of Public Welfail',
Adopti on Reso urce E xc han ge,
Alln : ALSO ..10 E. Broad St .. 30th
Floor. Columbus. Ohio 4321j.

Meigs county property transfers
Elza l.arkins. Sadie F I .ark ins 10
Da niel L. Sidwell. \"anf'ssa M.
SidwPll. ParcPl, Ol ivr&gt;
Li nd a Strwa n. Roger Srf'wa n to
Leadin g Creek Co nsf'r va ncy Di ~ 1 .
Right ol \Yay. Sa lisbury .

Hogrr Jeffers . .Junct Jeffers to
Leading Creek Conscr va nc:--· Dis. t ,
Right of \.Va v. Salisbury .
Rogl'r .Jdfrr·s . .Ja nl'l J!'ffpr s to
Leading CrN'k Conser \'anc,v Dis·
trict. Right ot Way , Sa li sbury.
Gn•g-or_v AIIPn MarkiP\ 10 Ma riam !\anc'~· M nrk iPy, Parrf'ls.
Sci pio
Oanif'l ()"()dl, df'cPa.sf'C.I, C'arolf'

O'flell. Ccrt of Tra ns . Bcdforrl.
Damcl O'Del l. deceasPCI. Carolf'

0 ; Of&gt; II. Affida\·it. ll&lt;'dlorcl
Amy Hum phn·y~ fk a ,\m.\' Hill
nka , Oale H ill ro Y\·on nP 1-1 ScJ IIv
1,.2
int . L ot ~o. ...J undiddecl ,

Middil'J)Orl \'illdgl'
Vf'rnard OalP Humphrf'yS, AJicr
Humph rP\"'1 ! (I Y \·r·nw• H . Sca ll y .
Lot ·l undi\·idt •tl I ! inll'rt'st. M iddlt•

port Village
Willi am H . CajX'hJ r l , .Jr., Ca ndv
K. Ca vf'h an to P;tris R. Hess, Robi~
R. Hr•ss. 1.111 ;wrf's Rufland .

J o hn W. Hughes. Susa n J.
Hug hes. Hubert Stafford, Mary E .
Sta fford. Carol Moody. Charles J .
Mood y. Edward L. Hug hes. Georgia A. Hughes to Marv L. Stafford .
Lot 89. Pa lmer 's Add .. Sa lisbury.
.James W. Burkr. Oiana Sue

Wa y. Columbi a.
Maurice E . Durst . MarcPll a
D urst. Roland Durst. Bonnie Jean

Ja mes D. Houdas h£'11. Nancy A.
Houdashe lt to F ranklin M. Rizer.
Wnnda M . Ri zer, Lot l. Syracuse.

Durst, Ca rl F . Hendric ks, Dorothy
Hendricks to Ca rl Hendricks Doroth y Hend ri c ks. Lot l H. L~t 9J.
PomProy Vlllagf?.
Fra nklin M. Rizer. Wanda M .

James E. Qua lls to VIllage of
Pomeroy, Rig ht of Way. Pomeroy ·
Village

R izPr to JamC's D. Houdas helt
Na nc~' A. HoudashE-11 . SvTacus~

\ 'illage
·
Arthur Dellx•rl Eisclstein . dect.•ased . to La ura F:iselstein, Cecil
B. Eise lsteln. J a m&lt;&gt;S Ha rlan Elst'l stcin . L'rrt. of Trans.. PomProv
Village.
·
Laura E isPlstrm, decased, to
C('(' il B. E iSf'ls tein , .Jam es Harlan
E i sPist ein. Affirt&lt;-lvit . Pom eroy

Barbar.J Ann Sl a m ('!', William E .

Mount Vernon Bing, de&lt;.·rasC'd,

Post Co. I nc .. l .rbanon.
J amPs L. Of'nison to Billy L.
W illi am ~o n . JJnPt L. Willi a m son,

Bertha E. Bing. Affidavll. Letart .
Mount Vemon Bing. deceased,
Ber tha E
B ing, Af f idavit.
Salisbury.
Mount Vemon Bin g. deceased,
Bert h a E. Bing, Affidavit.
Salis buiJ·.

M elvin E Cross . L ouise Cr oss to
Louise Cross. ParrC'I. Sa lf'm .

Me li ssa

Hubbard

Hubbard . P t

to

Lot :).'\.

Jplfrey
SyracusC'

Vil lage.
Con nie I. Hl&gt;&lt;' il to HobPrl C
H_
vscll. K;llh:'-· ,\ H_
vsf' IL l .ots 2 .1 nd

:1. Pomrrov Villagf'.
Eddie Mooda \' Turley, e t a t.
Admi ni stra tor of Vf't rrans A rtai rs

Sheriff 's Deed. Le tart.
Robert L. Ma s h. Ta mara Mash to
Robert S. Burdette. R. Sha ron
Burdf'rtP. Parcf'l. Salisbury .
Charles R . Mas h Ill . J anice K.
Mas h to Rol~·rt S. Burdette. R
Sharon B urclf'IIC' , J62 Sr1lisbu11' .

Art exhibit
at Marshall
A free art exhlbil by Marshall art
students began Wednesday and
will continue tttrough June 29.
The exhibition is in Srnlth Hallin
Blrke Art Gallery . The works
featured include painting, drawing,
watercolor, mixed media, sllk
screenlng and woodcuts.
'!be gallery Is OpE'D !rom lOa.m. to
4p.m. dally.

Rizc&gt;r. Lots 2 and 3. Crook's 2nd
Add . Sullon.
Carl Va novPr, Arlett a Vanover to
James D. Houdas helt . Nancy A
Houdas helt . Sheriff's deed. Syr acusf' Village.

Starnt'r to :vtc:\ rthur Lumbpr a nd

Scott Folm f'r to William Folm er.
.1. f olmf'r, Parcels, S~ li s bur)l

to Franklin M. R izer. Wanda M .

Bur ke to r.a s tl and Energy, Righ t of

Village
·
Cecil B. Eiselstein. deceased to
J ames H E isclstein . Affidavit ,
Pomeroy Village.

Parcel s. Rutland Villa ge .

Wanda M. Rtzer. Franklin M Rizer

CoeU J We therholt . deceased ,
Ma nning Wet he rholt , Douglas J .
We therholt , Cen . of Trans .. Sutton .
Herbert Noel. Patr icia Noel to
He rald Oil a nd GAS Co .. Rig ht of
Way , Salis bury .
Mary Kathry n GrePr to Milla rd
LPster Rous h, .Jr .. Marv Ulllan
Ro ush. 2.27 acres. Lot
Sulton.
Harry Potts, Jr .. Peggy Jo Potts ,

Donna Young, Frank You ng to

VIllage of Pomeroy. Rig ht of Way.
Pomeroy Village.
Hershe l Mc C lur e. Rho jea n
McClure to Doris Haynes. Pt Lot
59. Middleport Village.
Donald Pigotl to Da nie l L.
Sidwe ll. Vanessa M. Sidwell. Parcel. Olive.
Iris Beul ah Ro ush, deceased,
Lois Ann Cunningham. Affida vit of
Deat h, Meigs.
Lois Ann Cunni ngham. Ra ymo nd
Cunningham to Raymond Cunningham . Lois Ann Cunningham ,
Pt. Lot 294 . Middleport Village.
Linda Lou J et t to Village of
Pomeroy. Rig ht of Way. Pomeroy
VU!age.
Connie D. Branner, Cledythe
Hixson to Village of Pomeroy,
Right of Way, P omeroy Village.

r - - -- - - - - - -- - -

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS
1'-&lt; ·"" •I ,, I I' ,~ ,. "~""'t
l u n~ r J l ·" ' .lfiJ!'"flH "rH

"" ' , AI ·· • ' " "

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

:m:

r-------------L------------=-1

APPRECIATION SALE
AL COHAID, OWNIII 0# fJOINr-MASON AUTO OI.ASS WOULD
LIICI TO SA!' fHANICS TO rHII'IOI'LI OP rHI JIII.COUNTY A lilA
POll t.nTING US SilVIa YOU• OI.ASS HIIDS POll rHI PASF
I 3 !'I.US... AND TO SHOW' OUit AI',.,ICIA FIOH WI Alii O#PI.IHG

2 Free Meals At

DuH's
IN OALLIPOLII. ONtO

IP WI INSTALL YOUI W'INDSHIILD
DU•INO JHI MONTH OP JUNI.

ILll

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS

aN-77i-S710
..... II. WI.
..._·~-----.._.,.-,....,...__ _ _~------:.;,;,_;A,:;-~KIA A fOUl alllllllnl"

Among those honored were John
Flood, Stude nt Government Service Award and Professional Activ·
!tiC'S Award; Barba ra Bennett,
AMW A Scholarship Achievement
Citation and Dean's Award; Larry
Hall , East Central Regional AwB rd.
Outstanding Student. Osteopathi c
Medi c ine a nd Basic Scie n ce
Award; Thomas Maj cher, Cent ra l
Ohio RPgional Award; James
Walker. Southwest Ohio Regional
Award; Robert Deedman . Out s tanding Clinic al Perform ance
Award.
.lohn Adams. Purdue Frederi c k
Research Award, Os teopathic Heritage Award a nd Southeast Ohio

Regional Award; Louis Kasunlc,
Family Practice Awa rd; James
Burkhardt, Medica l Humanities
Award ; Todd Forrest, Northwest
Ohio RPgional Award ; Andrew
Locks ha w, East Ohio Regional
Award; Steven E lsenstat. Nor·
theast Ohio RE'gional Award and
Stuart Ed miston. Martin A . .Janis
Gerontology Award.
Also participating in thP awards
program was Dr. Carmin Maietta ,
Ohio Osteopathic Association pres! ·
dent ; Charles Ping, Ohio Univer·
sity president ; William F . Dorrlll,
dean of the College of Arts a nd
Sciences; and Steven Eisenstat,
class of 1984 repr esentative.

Music festival planned at Farm
RIO GRANDE ~ An annual
tradition for many of the Appalach·
ian region's finest country a nd
bluegrass e nler1alners is the Coun·
try Music Convention he ld each
June at the l.lOO·ac re Bob Evans
Farm near Rio Grande.
The Sixth Annua l Country Music
Convention. June 16 and 17, is
expected to be tl te largPst yet,
drawing top fiddle, banjo, flat top
guitar and m a ndolin players, and
bluegrass bands from severa l
states.
The con vention will ll&lt;' packed
full of great music, beginning a t 10
a.m. each morning when all
mu sic ians in cl udin g non competitors- are Invited to play in
open concerts. A covered outd oor
stage surrounded by bi g shade
· trees Is the setting for most of the
convention. e xcept ror the jam
~es.s ions following each day's com petition in the enclosed s helterhouse on the Bob Evans Farm.
AI noo n on Saturday a nd Sunday
specia l gu&lt;&gt;S ts. Roben Sha fer and
Ke nny Sidle, will periorm. Sidle has
been the stalE' fiddling cha mpion in
Ohio. Pennsylvania and West Virgi -

nia, while a lso ranking twice in the
Top 10 at the Nashville Grand
M asters Champions hr. A two-time

winner of the flat top guita r
comp&lt;&gt;tition a t the Count ry Mus ic
Convention. Shafer is also the 198.1
National Flat Picking Cham pior.
from the Wa lnut Valley Compet ition in Winfield. Kansas.
Preliminary competition hegi ns
a t12: 30 p.m. Sa turday, tollowed by
the final competit ion on Sunday.
Contestants must register Sat urday
from 9 a.m . to 12:30 p.m. with a $2
per·event fee a nd $5 for bands.
More tha n $1.800 in cash pri 7.es and
trophi es wil l be aw arded to wi nner s
of the five competiti ve categories.
The nostalgic c hygging sound
made by old-fashioned automobiles
will fill the a ir a t t he Bob Eva ns
Farm June 24 during the eighth
Annual Antique Car Show spo n·
sored by the Appalachian Old Car
Club .
Regis tration for competlllon beg ins a t 9 a.m . with car ow ner s
competing in 30 different cat egories. J udging is a t noon. All cars
mus t be a t !Past 25 vears old and in

running condition to qualify for the
show , with a prize awarded for the
oldest vehicl e registered.
Ka ng ing from Model T Fords,
AntiquE' Open INon·Ford), Classic
ca rs and Mustangs [throug h 1966)
- a wide va riety of antique cars
will be on dis play in the farm's
fields. F arm tours will a lso be
ava ilable throughout the day .
For more informa ti on, c all the
fa rm a l614-245-5305 or write the Bob
r.vons Farm , Box 330, Rio Grande,
Ohio 45674.

r-------------

Prevention office open
for possible dependents
COLUM BUS- The Ohio Depart·
ment of Public Welfare today
announced the crea tion of the Office
of Prevention Initiates. The new
office will focus on the needs of
Ohioans who arc at risk of
becoming dep&lt;&gt;ndent upcn public
aid.
Mildred Madry , form er chief of
the Division of Social Services, has
been named director of the new
office. The Office of Prevention
lnit.iatl ves Is pan of a larger
reorga nization.
On July 20, the s tate welfare
departmen t will hecome the Departme nt of Human Services. What
was once the Di vision of Social
Services, form erly headed by
Madry, is now the Division of
Family and Children Serv ices.
"The Idea Is to combine the
human services res ources from
both private and public agencies in
order to provide a wide umbrella of
services to those on the threshold of
crtses, " Madry said .
" For example. a single mother
receiving public assistance, who Is
overloaded with slr('Ss may be in
danger of turning a bu sive )oward
her children_
"By directing her to services
such as counseling. whi c h may not
be available through the county

By The Bend

that will allow her to better cope
with he r situat ion." Mad ry said.

Tech list
announced
Eight Mason County residents
were named to the West Vtrglnla
Tech Olean's List in Montgomery,
W.Va.
.,... j
'fbose attaining a 3.25 grade pcint
aYerage or betler were: Jef1rey
Bumgardner of Mason, Jennifer
Clark of Letart, Leslie Durst of
Leon, Mark Fowler of Mason, Anna
Parsons of New Haven, Donald
Roush of New Haven, Charles
Stodola of Mason and Douglas
Workman of Point Pleasant.

Cremeans enlists
MARIETIA - A local resident,
James E . Cremeans, has enlisted in
the United States Marine Corps
Delayed Entry Program. This
unique program enabled hlm to
enlist now, reserve an opening in
the field of his choice and delay
training untU graduaUng from
schooL
Cremeans enlisted into the Infan·
try field and wtll report to Martne
Corps Recruit Depct, Parris Island,
South Carolina on July 17 lor boot
camp. Time spent In the DEP is
credited as lor\~evlty for future pay
raises.
A senior at Ml!lp he Is the son of
Roma a.-1 Delort~· C~remeans, Rt. 1.
Rutland , Ohio.

GIRLOFTHEYEAR-UndaFaulkwasrecentlynamed"Girlolthe
Year" for the Ohio Beta Phi Chap!A!r of Beta Sigma Phi Sorolily.
Selection Is made oo the basis of service to the chapter and popular vote
by the membership. She was presented atrophy. Ms.Faulkhasservedas
vice president of the chapter.

Patient

Calendar
FRIDAY

SUNDAY

MIDDLEPORT - There will
be a young adult and teen rally
at the Cluistlan Fe llowship
Chureh, Middleport, Friday.
7:ll p.m .

POMEORY - Meigs athletic
Boosters need contributions of
pies and cake for food booth to be
operated Saturday at fairgrounds in conjunctlon wtth
WMPO Spring Expo. Contributors take to Rock Springs
Grange Hall Sarurday or call

LOWER PLAINS - Hymn
sing and praise service a t Zion
F'reewlll Baptist Church, SR 682,
Lower Plain s, Sunday at 2p.m .
HYSELL RUN - Third an nual homecoming of Hysell Run
holiness Churc h. SR 124, Sunday.
Sunday School a t 9:30 a.m.
followed by worship service.
Lunch served at 12:30 p.m .
Afternoon servcies at 2 p.m .

MONDAY

FENCING

RIJTLAND- Square, round
and show danc ing Saturday at
Eli Denison Post 467, American
Legion, Rutland, trom 9 p.m.
untll 1 a.m .

POMEROY - The Mens'
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churehes of Christ will meet
Monday at 7: 30p.m. at the Zion
Church of Christ.

Happenings

*FARM GATES
*POSTS
*FENCING
INCLUDING
BARBED WIRE

Everything for the Job

HOLZER CLINIC LTD.
URGENT CARE CENTER
NEW WEEKEND HOURS
The Holzer Clinic Urgent Care Center is now open
every Saturday and Sunday from 1:00 P.M. to
9:00P.M. at the Main Clinic on Route 35 nearGal~ipolis. P_hysicians from the Departments of FamIly Pract1ce and Pediatrics will be available for
treat"'!e~t of urgent illnesses and injuries. Enter
the Cltmc at the Hospital Emergency Room Entrance. Pediatric patients should telephone 4465287 for a time to be seen.
URGENT CARE CENTER HOURS
MONDAY-FRIDAY
5 PM-9 p M
SATURDAY-SUNDAY
1 P.M.-9 P.M.
HOLIDAYS
1 P:M:-9 ·P:M:

Dancing
RUTLAND- There will be
square, round and show dancing
Saturday from 9p.m . until] a.m.
at Ell Denison Post 467, Arne ri·
can Legion, RuUand.
There wlll be a snack bar and
refreslunent stand. Donaations
al the door a re $2 for adults and
$1.50 for children. The public is
invited to attend.

Hill reunion

Edith Cogar, Syracuse Is a
surgical patient at University Hospital, Columbus. Her room number is
10J7. Cards may be sent to her in
care of the hospital.

An open r!'C€ptlon In observance
of the 90th birthday of Bessie
Genevine Webster will be held June
24 from 2 to4 p.m. at St . Paul United
Methodist Chureh In Tuppers
Plains.
The celebra lion is being hosted by
her family . A resident of Meigs
County for nearly her entire
lifetime, Mrs. Websler Is now
residing in Tuppers Plains. She
fonnerly llved in the Long Bottom
community on what was well known
as the Webster Fruit Farm.
All friends, neighbors and rela -

Dewhu rst. Evening services a1"!'
a t 7: lJ p.m . Pastor Tht'ron
Durham invites the public to
a ttend.

Ice cream social

Adams,
Gertrude
Roush,
Mitchell,Florence
Willle Maude
Coates,
Eva
Robson, Genevieve Ward, Polly
Eichinger, Josephine Smith, Paul
Smith.
George Queen, Dortha Neutzing,
Margaret Brown, Beulah McComas, Lee McOlmas, Helen Fisher,
Nettle Boyer. Elizabeth Oay, Vida
Green, Rhoda Hall, Thelma DIU,
Edith Reiser, Anna Turner. Mary
Stewart, Daisy Blakeslee, C. E.
8lak£'Slee, Frances Roush , Dayton
McElroy, Beatrice Bell, Lula
Hampton, Eva Dessauer, Joan
Sorden, Marilyn Powell , Mildred

Ihle.

Others assisting were Judy
Spencer, Peggy Harris, Ruth
Spencer, Jessie White, Louise
Dixon, WUUs Anthony, Faye Wal lace, Hannah Queen, Joyce Vitftoe ,
Lawrence Stewart, Ma!yV. Reibel ,
Kate Jarrell, Mary Elizabeth Chap·
man, Allee Freeman , Doris Carder ,
Karen Grimm, Gayle Imboden .
Esther Harden, Bonnie Friend,
Linda Friend, Ange la Sellers, Anna
Blackwood, Binda Diehl, and Dale
Lester.

rr:==========:;
Specialty Graphics
Middleport. Ohio

CUSTOM SCREEN
PRINTING
T·Shirts. Caps, Jackets. Etc.

SPECIAL PRINTING

FOR YOUR
SPECIAL NEEDS

614-992-7626
AFTER 5 U .

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

A POUND OF LOVE FOR DAD
16 OZ. T-BONE STEAK
OR

16 OZ. KING CRAB LEGS
YOUR CHOICE

S1Q.95

Also LaSalle Will Present

Complimentary Kav Chain for Dad

rt============:;l
Bessie Genevlne Webster

FOR SALE

PH. 992-2377

LOWER PLAINS- There will
be hymn sing and praise service
a t Zion Frwwlll Baptist Church,
SR 682. Lower Plains, Sunday,
June 17, at 2 p.m. The singing
Rays of Parkersburg will be
featured . The Rev. Eddie Boyer
invites the public to a ttend .

Homecoming

Weyersmlller, Glaeys Brothers,
Jessie Curtis, Marion Ebersbach ,
Lola Clark, Mlnnlne McGrath,
Philomena FoUrod, Nettle Hayes,
Dorothy Downie, Dorothy Davis,
florence Smith, Nonga Roberts,
Mabel Frecker, Jenevee Chesher ,
Janice Daniels, Katy Anthony .
Ullle Randolph, Rva Beach,
Tersa Byer, Kathleen Scott, Mary
K. Roush, Florence Richards ,
.Jessie Martin, Erma Roush, Mary
V. Easterday, Dale Roush, Richard
Curtis, Vemon Nease, Pauline

WEEKEND SPECIALS

HOUSE &amp; 3 LOTS
IN SYRACUSE
-GOOD LOCATION-GOOD PRICE-

Hymn sing

POMEll OY - The Mens'
Fellowship of the Meigs County
ChurchC'S of Christ will m eet
Monday , June 18, at 7:30p.m .. at
the Zion Church of Christ .

More than l50 non·protesslonals
volunteered hundreds of hours In a
variety of ways tothesuccessolthe
four-day multiphaSic health screen·
ingcllnlc held last week at the Meigs
Multipurpose Bulldlng on Mulberry
Heights.
Sponsored by the Meigs County
CouncU on Aging, more than 500
residents tookadvantageofthewtde
range of medical seiVIces and
examinations offered at the clinic.
Rutland emergency medical
technicians working at the clinic
were Iva SissJn, Edna Davis, Ray
WUford, and Shorty Wright. Beta
Sigma Phl Sorortty volunteers
Included Velma Rue, Ruby Baer,
Roberta O'Brien, Nonna Custer,
Teresa Swat:z.el, Jane Walton,
Clarice Krautter, Mary Morris, and
Janet Theiss, Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter; Maurish Nelson, Char·
lotte Haning, Johanna Schuler,
Carol McCullough, Carolyn
Grueser, Libby Sayre, Cathy Johnson, and Dee Sp&lt;&gt;ncer, Xi Gamma
Mu Chapter; and Kaye Walker,
Sonja Wolfe, Connie Dodson, CindY
Harkless, Patty Circle, Sharon
Stewart, Patsy Ogdln, Vicki Ault,
and Darla Staats, Ohio Eta PhJ
Chapter .
The Retired Senior Volunteer
Program men and women assisting
were Faye WUdennuth, Mary
Buck , Betty Christopherson,
Thelma Henderson, Nina Robinson,
Myrtle Sisson, Erma Yoho, Betty

Open house
planned June 24

tlves of Mrs. Webster are invited to
join in the celebration.

PORTLAND - The d escendants of the late Alber! and Eliza
Hill will hold their annual reunion
Sunday, June 24. at Portland
Park with a basket tllnner at
noon . All relatives and friends
are invited.

HYSELL RUN - The third
annual homecoming of Hysell
Run HoUiness Chureh, located of
SR124justoff countyroad15 . will
be held Sunday, June 17.
Sunday School at 9:;}) a. m.
followed by worship service.
Lunch will be served at 12: 30
p.m . Afternoon services at 2p.m.
Speaker will be Kim Dewhurst
with special singing by Becky

7

Health screening clinic volunteers
make event successful in Meigs

992·23'TI.

HEADQUARTERS FOR

Friday, June IS, 1984
Page

SATURDAY

agency, she can receive guidance

The Daily Sentinel

ENTERTAINMENT
In the Restaurant

In the Lounge

ARMAND
THE
RESTAURANT
992·6836

MUD RIVER BAND

LaSALLE
MIDDLEPORT

LOUNGE
992-9917

Group to meet

BASHAN - An ice cream
social will be h€'ld by the Lat!ies
Auxiliary of the Bashan Volun·
leer Fire Department on Friday
evening, June 22. II had earlier
been announced for August.
Members of the Auxiliary are
currently soliciting in the communlty for donations of money·
with which to purchase the
ingredients.

COH!Ntl SOOW "BACHELOR PARTY"

WE WILL GIVE EACH FATHER

A ''FREE'' SUNDAE
ON FATHER'S DAY
SUNDAY, JUNE 17TH

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
"At the Foot of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
PH. 992-2656

DRIFT OUT AND SEE US!
AT THE

SPRING EXPO CAR SHOWING
"SPECIAL DEALS &amp; FINANCING "

SATURDAY, JUNE 16-MEIGS CO. FAIRGROUNDS

�court
Forty-two defendants were tined
wlu&gt;n they appeared before Meigs
County Court Judge Patrick
O'Brien Wednesday and seven
others forielted bonds.
Ftned were Troy Edwards, Mid·
dleport, speed. $23 and costs;
Edward Rickard Jr., Letart, W.Va.,
failurP to control, $'JJ and costs; Bill
Tallman, Davisville, W.Va. , speed,
$24 and costs; Sterling Nevllle,
Rutland, domestic vtolence,oneday
confinement, costs, one year
probation.
Jarold Lambert, Coolville, voycu·
rtsm, 30 days confinement, costs,
one year probation, refrain from
complainant and famlly; Carl
Cas tee!, Pomeroy, DWI, $250 and
costs, $100 suspended, attend drlv·
ing school, license suspended 60
days; Jeffrey Parks, New Martins·
ville. speed.$~andcosts; Robert H.
Biehl. Cuyahoga Falls, speed, $26
and costs.
Barry Baker, Wooster, speed, $'JJ
and costs; Ben Coppick, Middleport, speed, S~ and costs; Earl
Pickens, Syracuse, stop sign, $10
and costs; Delbert Fridley, Pomeroy, left of center, $10 and costs;
Michael Connolly, Pomeroy, DWJ,
10 days confinement, $250 and costs,
licens&lt; suspended six months.
Rodger Kelley, Racine, domestic
violence, five daysconfinement,one
year probation; resisting arrest,

June 15, 1984

Ohio

Sentinel

cases

three days con!lnement, one year
probation, costs; Reheeca Crow,
Racine, speed, $22 and costs;
Randall Hornsby, Coolville, speed,
$22 and costs.
Michael Saunders, Ravenswood,
W.Va.,speed, $25 and costs; Robert
Baldwin, Ravenswood, speed, $21
and costs; Nathan Roush, Syracuse,
failed to display valld Ucense, $10
and costs; Albert Roseberry, Long
Bottom, expired registration
sticker, $10 and costs; Carl Carless,
Cridersville, speed, $24 and costs.
James Mason, Logan, speed, $19
and costs; Timothy Barton, Bremen, speed, $'JJ and costs; James
Allen, Mason, W.Va., stop sign, $10
and costs; Joe Lantz, Reedsville,
assured clear distance,
and
casts; Juanita Bachtel, Middleport,
speed, $28 and costs.
Richard Bailey. Middleport.
failed to display vallld registra lion,
$10 and costs; James Welch,
Coolville, Uttering, $25 and costs;
Michael L. Roush, Ravenswood,
failure to display valld registration,
$10 and costs; Lee Gibbs, Hartford,
W.Va., stop sign, $10 and costs;
Richard Caruthers Jr., Pomeroy,
unsafe vehicle, S'i and costs;
Benjamin Fentz, Dover. speed, $25
and costs.
Mark LaudermUt, RuUand, hit
skip, $100 and costs, five days
confinement, no operators license,

no

The Daily Sentinel

1

0. Writt Dolly Stotlotl -HIM Dtfl.
Ill C.•rt St.. .....,., .... 45751

WASHINGTON (AP ) - New
Justice Department merger guide·

Gospel sing set
A gospel sing is being sponsored
June 17 by the Farm Museum,
located north of Point Pleasant.
The event wUI fea ture the Narrow
Way Singers and Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Clark.
The outdoor event wUI begin at
1:45p.m.
Members of the Narrow Way
Singers are Mary and Larry Van
Mater, Robin Satterfield and Carolyn Jones.
The public is invited to bring lawn
chairs. There is no admission
charge.

Ice cream social
An ice cream social wOJ be the

event of June 28-29 in the Trinity
Chuch of Pomeroy.
The event wUI held from 11 a.m. to
8 p.m eac h day.
Homemade ice cream in flavors
of chocolate, vanilla, peach. lemon,
banana. strawberry and pineapple
wUI be sold.
Advanced orders for Ice cream
can be made by calling 992-3222,
992-2383, 992-377'7 or 992·5480. The
orders will be taken until June 26.
Also featured at the social will he
sandwiches. coleslaw, potato salad,
baked beans, pie, bever ages and bot
fudge topping .

lines provide companies in older,
smokestack industries "1th a
clearer picture of when they can
turn to mergers to fight off Import
competition.
This was the biggest change In the
Reagan administration's second
revision of the merger restrictions in
two years. The new rules were
announced Thursday by Attorney
General William French Smith.
New York attorney Ira Millstein.
a leading private antitrust lawyer
and scholar, applauded the decision
to spell out the role of foreign
competition in merger evaluations
and to look favorably on domestic
efficiencies produced by a merger.
He said thcSl' changes were
particularly Important, "because

Two calls reported
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reported only two
calls Thursday.
The Pomeroy squad was called at
4:19 p.m. to 410 Spring Ave. for
Audra Arnold , who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Tupper Ptalns squad was
called at 10:47 p.m . to the assist In
the fire In the Steve Cremeans
resldPnce.

on .

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Wesley
Manley. Middleport; Thomas
Scally, Middleport
Wednesday discharges- Garnet
Ashley, Mabel Kesterson.
Thursday admissions - Mar·
garet Julian, Pomeroy; Robin
Riffle, Pomeroy; John Edwards,
Pomeroy; Nellie Price, Pomeroy;
Linda Cozart, Pomeroy.
Thursday discharges - Raymond Little, Virginia Dean.

Missed more and more
as the days come and
go.

By his wife. lucy Gaul

Tllli WEEK'S CARRIER Nine year-old Penny Lewis 11!1 tbe
8Ubject ol tbls week's Carrier
Comer. Penny Is tbe daughter o1
Bob and Pem 1..ew1s, SoutJJ
1'lllrd Avenue, Middleport. She
...._.. MlddJeport Elemeutary
School and Is In tbe fourth 8J'IIde.
Penny enjoys smglng and swtm.mlng. What Pe~UQ' likes most
about ber route Is taiJdng to her
50 ru8lomers.

BISSELL

MEIGS COUNTY
CO MMISSIONE RS
Mary Hobstett er.
Clerk

16) 15 ltr.

SPECIAL
IN STOCK
MODELS ONLY

2 WHEEL MODELS
4-5240 8 H.P. Hand Start
1-5260 8 H.P. Elect. Start
2-6545 12 H.P. Hand Start
With "Free" Tiller &amp; Snowblade
or "Free" 30" Mower &amp; Snowblade

4 WHEEL MODELS
1- 8122 12 H.P. w/"Free" 50" Mower
1-8179KT 17 H.P.
w/"Free" 50" or 60" Mower
l-8199KT 19 H.P.
w/"Free" 50" or 60" Mower

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum

20 years
" free Estimate!"

EUGENE LONG

LEGAL
PUBUCATION

Ph.

l-8-2 mo pd.

The Town of Mason tS
accept mg sealed btds o n the
followmg vehtcles
1 196 6 In ternatiOnal
Dump Truck
1 - 197 7 Dodge Sedan
1 - 1978 D odge Sedan
All vt:!hH..:I!::!~ wtll Ue suld ·· as •s"
and ar e 10 be rernoved fl a m
town pr o pe rty w1th1n -1 8 hour s
Btds musr be sealed and
delivered to the Mason C• tv
Buddmq on or bel ore July 2
Cou nctl reserve s rhe rtghr to
acce pt or re1ec t any or all btds
LOtS A Test.

PERSONALIZED
POOLS
498 Gen . Hartinger Pkwy.
Middleport . OH.

o~ ~ ;s o r\
.I

~

PH . 992 -2549
OPEN :
MON.· SAT. 10 to 6
POOL SUPPLIES &amp;
MAINTENANCE
C. L. KITCHEN
5/22/ 1 mo.

M~GKEE
'R,ni*J+

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

Now

in

O'Nn

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Will Open May 21st

Sizes Start from 12'x J6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6 ' Up
to 24 'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614 ·843 -5191
In b rt•

Co .

•d and orot:r oy mall with ftlis

(1) HOUSE IN CHESTER:
Three acres with a nicely
constructed concrete block
home 26x30, 3 bedrooms,
one bath. 12x15 livi~
room and 24x24 family
room. Partially carpeted,
fuel oil furnace with facili·
ties for woodbumer. 12x15
block storaee buildirw.
20x30 blocll garap. Right
off Rt. 248. counby settit1,
\lr mile mst of Chester,
Ohio.
(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE :
Down·
stairs equipped with
kitchen. living room,
dining room and den;
upstairs has two bed·
rooms and one bath ;
house also has basement. Lot size approx .
48'x308'. Needs work .

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

If interested contact
The Home National Bank
in Racine. 949-2210.
Real Estate Genoral

TEAFORD
VIRGIL B. SR .
216 E. 2nd St.

SWEET SHOP OPENS- Employees Sheryl Little, Sbarl Bladiwell,
Vlclcy Peavley and ownerJuanlla UUiestand beblnd the counter ofthe
newly opeoed Sweet 'n' Eat shop on East Main stred. The smp opened
Thul'lldl\v and leatures sandwiches, Ice cream, pie and lunch specials.
AD menu Items are for carryoot. The shop wDJ be open from 7 lUll. to 6
p.m. Monday through Saturday. Juanita Uttle wll8 lonnerly employed
by Crow's steak House, tbe R4!ptta Inn, Court 8tred Grill and King's
Food Host In Scottlldale, Ariz.

Phone

1· (614)· 992· 3325
NEW liSTING - 4S acres tn

Rufland Tows;: '\;\)"' home.
other blcC:,•\1'•• pa~ure ar.d
all mrner.o. On~ $35,000.00.
)Wanted
&gt;For Sale

JAnnouncement
&gt;For Rent

t. -_
-_
-_
-2.
__
_
3. _ _ _ _ __

··-----5. _ _ _ _ __
6 _ _ _ _ _ __
7 _ _ _ _ _ __

RACINE - 2 5 acres near
Sou. H1gh. 3 bedrooms. central
arr. porches. garages, etc.
$35.000
RUTlAND - One ft. 2 bed·
room frame, bath, gas heat 011
a I~ lot. $12.000.
POMEROY - 4 lots and fi10d
5 rm. homewrth full basemen~
and furnace. Askrng $14,000.

8. _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ __

MIDDLEPORT - Good 2 bed·
room hom~ bath. gas heat and
tg. tot $16.000

tO. - - - - - 11 . _ _ _ _ __
12. _ _ _ _ __

RUTLAND - 2 level ~. 3
bedroom home. outside cll im·
ney. I~ bath£

13.
!4.

POMEROY - Wnght &amp; Mul·
bert)' Sts. 6 rm. one fl , lull basement home. Hot water heat
and 2 car garage.

15. - - - - - 16.

Mall This Coupon with Remlttllnce
The Dally Sentinel

m court st.

Pomeroy, OIL 4576f

- Roofing and gutter w ork

73 ACRES - ~e "' ~
drilled wei, 2 ponds, and J!I)Od
spring on hard road. .

Housing
Headquarters

- Concrete work
- Plumb ing and electrical
work

Real Estate General

(Free Estimates)

Al so Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992 -7 121

113 W. 2nd St .. Pomeroy. OH

Open: 9:00 to 5:00
Closed Thursdays
5-15 1mo

or 992-7314

Pomeroy , Ohio

FISHING REEL
REPAIR

New Homes-htensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custqm Pole Btdgs
ll Garages
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992 -7583
or 992 -2282

Parts. Service &amp;
Cleaning

For Garcia, Zebco. Shi·
mano . Johnson. Oiawa .
Quick.
STEVE FINLAW

PH . -985·4266

11 -l · llc

Rt. 1
long Bottom , Oh.
L----- 1-14·1 mo

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

NEW-REPAIR

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere.
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment

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

Parts &amp; Service

949-2263

3-2-tfn

"'

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE
WORK

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS
35185 Oak Hill Road
long Bottom. OH. 45743

PH. (614) 985-4212

742•2328
We Have the
Lowest Rates

"'

We Use Von Schrader
Equipment Recommended
by leading Carpet Manu ·
factums.
'FREE ESTIMATES"
6-6-1 mo.

608

NEW LISTING - POfllefoy A 2 ~Ofl o~er home 1n good
condition. 4 l»drooms. l 'h
baths. ~orm wmdows &amp;doors.
n.~f.a. heat full basement
good ne1ghborhood .
$38.900.00.
NEW LISTING - Middleport
- Third Ave. - Neat home 1n
good location. 3 bedrooms.
bath. fireplace $17.90000.

JONES BAR
West Columbia
LIVE BAND EVERY
WEEKEND

"Mud River Band"
Featuring Lanny Tennant

Something Special
For The Ladies
Every Sunday Night
9:00 to 1:00
6/ 14/ l mo.

ACCENT
FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
220 E. Main, Pomeroy

NEW LISTING - Middleport
- Good location. 2 bedroom
home. garage, gas I.a. heat
fe!lced yard. 1ncludes washer
&amp; dryer. fireplace. $29.900.00.
NEW LISTING - Middleport
- Nice older home. Very ooat
well maintained, new spouting
soffitt. FA heat 3 bedrooms.
!root porch. full basement
pnvate parkrng $37,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Th~ house
you should see! Pomeroy
location. Completely remo·
deled. 1nslde &amp; out New "'nng
&amp; plumbing J.4 bedrooms. 2
lull baths, pretty krtchen. new
furnace, central a1r. Decking
$43.900.00.
NEW LISTING - Portland 2 bedroom home on appro•i·
mate~ I acre lot Knotty prne
paneling 1n krtchen &amp; din1ng.
Full basement, fi10d condmon.
Needs to sell' $21,500.00.
NEW liSTING - Eastern
District - Cute ~g home'
Approx 1\ acre lot I bedroom,
bath, krtchen. living room.
Range hood. ref., electric b.b.
heat plus woodbur11e1. Home ~
6 years old. Great lor a couple.
"' an unusual craft"' antique
shop. located oo main roote.
$26.000.00.
'
REALTORS
Hervy. Cleland. Jr.

992-6191
Dottie Turner 992·5692
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Jo Hill 985--4466

AW

PH. 992-693 T

Wolfe
Investigations,
Inc.

304- 346· 7642 .

Giveaway

4

Call 742·3195
Or 992· 5875

6 14- 256-6758
German Shephard puppies

Cell 614 -367-0581
6 small breed puppies. 5
male. 1 female . Ca ll 614 -

74 12.
Adorable seven wk old kit tens; both gr ay and black
tiger stripes. also callico .

Cell614-949- 2614
Free to good home. part
border collie&amp;. part au stra lian shepherd f emale dog,
spayed. Call after 5 p .m .

614- 742· 2446 .
Give away , 1 whit e female

985-3561

"CO N CRETF. WORK

All Makes

" CUSTOM BUILT HOME S

$]5,000
Call:
(614) 464-3563
(614) 881-5784

• wAT ER. GAS &amp;
OIL LIN ES

•Ranges
•R efrigerators

JIM CLI FFORO

•Dryers •Freerers

PH . 992· 7201

· -lfn

lie

are

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•lENITH
•STLVANIA
•SPUD QUEEN LAUNORI

Fenders Ava i lable
J - 21 · 11~

304· 882· 3734.
Ad orabl e cuddly long haired
kitten . 6 weeks o ld . 2 white
mat es. call after 5 :00 PM .

614 · 992 ·7574.
Kitte ns gray and white. tiger
strip e. furry Phone 304 ·

675 · 2864 .
To give away . Found sm all
black and tan mi xed bre ed.
female . Call 30 4 - 89 5 -

3510 .

6

lost and Found

LOST 4 Walk er fmc hounds
all wearing collar with R .C
Dudding. Southpoint. Oh . If
found contact Arn o ld

Stump . 614·367 · 7554 .

9

LOST on At. 588 between
Mitchell Ad &amp; Fairfield
Vance Ad . small red tool box
with various tools. Call
446 -0471 Reward .

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
LISHING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investi ·
gated the offering .

HOME

11

LOANS

lost . blond . cocker spaniel.
amwers to nam e of Spike .
ch ild 's pet. in town of
Pomeroy. Call 992 -21 81.
ask fnr Mark .
lost Black glasses with
black case, lost in Pomeroy ,
Tuesday around Nelson &amp;
Br oga n Warn er . Call 614 -

992-3 150.
lost . baseball glov e on fi eld
behind Salisbury g rad e
sc hool
Please ca ll 992 -

Help Wented

3051 .
Homemakers Dream! No
experience needed to earn
25% co mmission demon strati ng in friends ' h omes.
You control hour s and in come. Absolutely no invest·
ment ! Also booking parties.
Call 446 - 1270 or writ e Toy
Plan , Johnstown , PA
Phone surveyo r work in
Gallipolis office, 5 -9, S3.60
hr . plu s bonuses. Call aher
3PM ask for Joyce . Call

446-4597 .
A ss istant O rganist needed
at Grace Episcopal Church .
Government Jobs. $1 6 . 569
· S5 0 .553 year . Now Hiring.
Your area. Call 1 -806 -687 -

23

Professional
Services

Home Wor k opprtunity in
Multi-l ev el M arketing. Unlimited earnings . No selling .
for detail s m ail a selfaddresse d, stamped envelop e to: Box 142, Durand.

PIANO TUN IN G Lower
priced r egu lar tunings discounts to Senior Citizens
Churches &amp; Schools _Ward ' ~
Keyboard. 304-675 · 3824
Piano Tu nin g and Repair
Bruni ca rdi Music Co . 446 ·
0687 . Ski ll and int egrit y o u r
trade m ark . lane Daniels.

614· 742 -2951
Professional Electro l ysis
Clinic . Probe Type Electroly sis. AMA . FDA &amp; FCC
approved . Do ctor referrals .

304-675- 5568 .

Ml 48429 .
Help W ant ed experienced
sales clerk . part time only!
Hours must be flexible. send
resume to Box S - 11 in ca r e
of Pt . Plea sant Register. 200
Main St. Pt . Pleasant, WV .

255 50.
Part time JOb. 18 years and

olde, . Cafl 9 · 6 . 304-675·
7873 .
Ashland Oil is expanding in
Gasoline. quick service f ood
store business . with it s
Supe r America stores and
off ers real ground fl oor
opportunity for ambitious
individual seeking growth
orientated cBreer _Respo n si bilities include recruiting,
hirin {l and training store
personnel, plan wmk sche dules, salary ad minstraton.
evaluating employees . Run
and supervise general main antance. Minimun of 2 y ears
coll ege required. several ye ars retail experience pre·
f erred. Must be will ing to
relocate
For information
send resume to Box C 12
car e of The Po int Pl easa nt
Regis t er, 200 M ain St .,
Point Pl easa nt , W . V a
25550 . Equal opportunity
employer , male or femal e.
Part time job, 18 years and
older . Call 9 -6 _ 304 -675 -

12

Situations
Wanted

Rea I Estate
31

Homes lor Sale

4 bdr. , 1 VJ bath , 5 acres.
garden spot, 'h mi below
Eureka _ W orkshop with car -

4222 . $29,500

p ort

Au ction every Tuesday
night, Pt . Pleasant, WVa .
Au ct Lon nie N eal. Youth
Center Bld g., Camden St .
Rick Pearson Au ct ioneer
Service. Estate. Farm, An tique &amp; liq uidation sales.
licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

We the family of Ina Wi se
Ellis wish to express our
appreciation a nd thanks for
your prayers , flowera. food
and kindneas shown during
the sickness and death of our
beloved mother . A spec ial
thanka to pastor Keith Eblin.
singer, Paul McKinney , Doctors, nursea. &amp; hospital
staff. God Bless you all, The
Ellis Family .

3 Announcements

One acre lo t with large
in -grou nd pool , torn lin er.
and parti ally fini shed basem ent. For informati on ca l l

813- 665- 1232
3 b dr., 1 V:~ baths , Ia rage
rooms . fir eplace . wood
fl oo r s. new c arpet i ng .
fenced yard , in town. ncar
shopping &amp; schools. owner
m oving $39 .900 Call 446

7905 .
Reduced . 2 - storv . 3 BR .
f enced yard . 2 car garage,
separate entrance . 1 5 Vin
ton, Glp s. S29,900 . Call
446 -208 1 nights .
House for Sa le by owner 4
BR house on lower A tver
Rd . 3 mil es south o f town
Woodbur ning fir eplace. gar age, basement. new fur ·
nace, and roof . overlooking
the Ohio Riv er.Call dayt 1me
446 - 1 615 . night 446 ·

! 244
Redu ced 2 story . 3 bdr ..
2 -c.ar garage . fenced yard .
sep arat e ent rance. 15 Vin
to n. Gallipolis . 446 -2081.
ni ght s. S29,900
Small farm f or sale. o n 8
acres. hou se. barn. out
building and tobac co base
With a down payment pas·
sibl e land co ntact. Cal l 614 -

Buying daily gold. si lver
coins, rings , jewe lry. sterling
ware. old coins . large currency. Top pricaa. Ed. Burken Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave .

Calf

Cash paid for fancy Iron or
heavy iron beds . $160 and
up for certain Meigs Co.
stone jars. Old time cup-

boerd .
2711

call

1 · 304 · 882 ·

614· 256· 15 40.
Attractiv e smal l home . sma l l
yard at a small pr ice ! M 1ddle ·

Denny ' s Aut o Painting. g uaranteed painting at reasona ble rates. Collision w ork
welcomed . 14 yrs . expe rience 614 -843 · 5468.

6 rooms , basement. double
garage. 1 &amp; one -third acre
lot , Rose Hill. Pomeroy

$32 .900
2513 .

Call 1-614 -678 -

8 vrs . ol d. 3 b edrm . 2 baths .

18 Wanted to Do
Lawn Mowing &amp; Trimming .
Reliable an d dependabl e
Reasonabl e rates _ C ali 61425 6 -6251 after 5 :30
Roofing and gutter work ,
metal work . ho u sep ainti ng,
car pent er work Exc _ ref .
Free estima t es. Call 446 -

3 !7! .
General Hauling . For sale
limestone. fill dirt, and top
soil . Call Call 614 -256 -

1427.

family room with wood
burner Single car garage. on
8 fi at acres with sto cked
pond City water in Ra c in e
Call 6 14 -949 -2641
Nico h ome in country. near
mines. fu ll bi:l sem ent , ce llars . 2 bedro om s. 12 ac re s in
langs ville. 529 .000 Call

614 -742 -2261
12 miles from Pomeroy
outstanding 8 sided home
wit h 9 acres . 3 bedrooms . 2
bath s, 3 sides dec ked . Full
basement &amp;. barn . Total
privacy for 550,000 . Call

614-985 -3575

plow

tobacco .

Call

6!4 -256-1528

446 · 4957

0'

675- 5803 .

Dozer w ork . ground clearing
&amp; excavating . $25 per hr .
Con 446 9638 .
Baby sitter needs work in her
home or will sit with elderlv
in their home . Ca\1614 -446 -

For sale by owner, Clarence
Hill. Immediate p ossess ion .
price negot iabl er or owner
will help fin ance. Bi . level in
Rusti c Hill s, Syracuse, Ohio.
2 full bat h s. 3 bedrooms.
family room with firepla C"e,
spiral st aircase. liv ing room .
dining room . kit chen with
dishwasher &amp;. garbage d is posal , c h ain link fence .
1611.12 barn tor st orage.
insulat ed Ca l l 614 -247 -

7475

4! 34 .

Water wells , drilled &amp; ser vi ced . Free estimates. Call

Financial

Rutland : 10 room s o n
4711.150 lot . North Main
S4995 N eeds work , but lot s
o f possi bilities . Call 216 ·
39 4 -6741 or write Box 723.
Pomeroy, O H 45 769 . I s 8th
hou se hom co rner of So lem
on w est side . Make an offer

Business
Opportunity

Rustic H ills . Syracuse 3
bedroom . famtly ro om . cen tral air . chain link t ence,
storage buildi ng . 532 .000 .

614-992 · 6006 01 614· 742 ·
3147.

Wanted To Buy

Wanted to buy u sed coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni ·
ture. 446-3159. 3 rd . &amp;
Olive St .. Gallipolis. Oh.

barn . Call

pon . 614 -992 -6941

Painting interior &amp; ex terior .
For free es timates. Call

446-3672

&amp;

Call 992· 6022 .

Au ct ion every Fri. night at
th e Hartford Community
Center . Truckloads of n ew
merchandise every week .
Consigmants of new and
used merchandise always
welcome . Richard Reynold s
Au ctionee r . 304 · 275 -

Mtddtepon. Oh . 814-992 ·
3476 .

SWEEPER and sewing machine repair , parts, and
supplies .
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one hal • mile up

Georges Creek Rd.
614· 446 ·0294 .

There is a vacancy for an
eld erly person in Ha 1nes
Boarding Home. Pomeroy .

Will

We pay cash for la te model
clean used cars .
J im Mink Chev .· Oids In c.
Bill Gene Johnson

446 ·

256 -6663 .

WVe. 304 - 773 - 5785 or
304 -773 -9185 .

In Memoriam

Ca ll

21

Former Burger King, Chesa peake , K-Mart Ceiiter. sublease . 2 . 160 sq . ft .. up to 17
yrs . at 82000 . mth . Chuck
Warner &amp; Assoc . Realtor ,

614-221 -8300 .
SNAP - ON

TOOLS Inter·

ested in owning your own
busine ss and being inde pendent? Existing dealership available in Maig and
Gallia Counties . No fee .
lnventor v Investment r equired . Buy back guarantee.
Above average income .
Complete company training.

Cot! Vern Roe 1 · 800· 582 ·
7497. or Gene Schroer
t -614· 887· 4708.

Cafl614· 992 -2521 or 30 4 ·
882 · 31 97.
0 w n er must sell. family
toom ha s 20 h of windows
for pastoral view , finished
double garage. fireplA ce ,
large porch. 40 tt deck .
woods . privacy, near Royal
Oak Park . $63 .900 Call
614-992 -6420

7 Room house . laundry
room , 4 bedrms. Fifth St.
Syracuse . Can be seen at
Oris Hub bard res . Call 992 ·
2239 .
Baum
brick,
ment.
patio,

Addition , 3 bedroom .
1% bath . full base ·
family room . carport ·
a.c .. 567.000 Call

61 4· 985 -4 201 '

taiiipoiis
&amp; Vicinity

Yard Sale Saturday . June
16. 1984 9 :00AM thru
5 :00PM . Buck Ridge Road
Briel! house across from Gun
Club.

Fraziers Bottom Flee
Market . Every weekend .
U.S. 35 Fraziers Bottom ,
WVa . 25082 . Dealers W el come
D o n Frazier Operator . 304 - 755· 2779 .
Flea M arke t Sternwheeler
Regatta . riverfront Ports mouth , Ohio June 22 - 23 24 . Set ups 614 -775 -4966
nights .
Big Yard Sale . Baby items .
adults, misc. 2'h miles off
Rt . 7 , Bulavili e- Addison Rd .
Fri -Sat ., 9 -?

6000 . Ext . R-9806 .

6250 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

FIXED

RATES Below market rates .
Fixed conventiona l FHA VA leader Mortgage ,
Athens, collect 614 -592 -

787 3.

9
2

Page

Business
Opportunity

Services

farm . 992-6544 .

Announcements

CHESTER- 985·3307

AIM Some Car

. 21

22 Money to Loan

Empl oyrnenl

ASS ISTANT MANAGER .

3 puppies. p art white Ger ·
man Shepard . part Elk ·
hound, 7 we ek old. wormed

Country Aquarium Fathers
Dav Special. All equarium &amp;
pump s on special . Coral &amp;
shells % off. Talking cat fi sh ,
S2 .59 ; Platy 's S1 .; Black
mollys . .S1.; Fancy Tail gup pies, S2 .50; plus m uch
more, near Bradf ords tree

~

We Hove A Full Tim e
Shop Technician
on Duty

IIOORS ........ .... It49.95
HOODS ............ 1174.95
BUMPERS ... .. .... . 169.95
GRILL ...... ........... '42.50
R. SUPPORT.. ..... 184.95
TAIL GATE ......... '85 .00
FOlD FENOER .... 169.95
BUMPER ............ '69 .95

675 · 2075.

3069 .

II '1111

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH . 992-7013
New Chevy Truck ....
FENDER ............. '76.95

2 yr . old, mole Cocker
Spaniel. full bl oode d . 304 -

614 -367- 7101 .

"D UMP TRUCK SE RVI CE

Real Estate General

For Sale by Owner
3 bedroom farm
house with barn,
60 acres.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
"RECLAMATION WORK
"O IL FIELD SERVICES

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

7760.

Ca11614-992 - 3968 .

9 kittens, ready to go ,
assorted color s. Males &amp;
females . Ca ll 614 - 992 -

8

·DOZER . BACKHOE

Ul

REAL ESTATE

Call 614-99 2·6737

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

~ ~

FURNITURE . Beds. iron,
wood , cupboards, chairs,
c hests, baakau . dishes.
atone jert, antiquea, gold
and silver . Write - M . O .
Miller, Rt .2. Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 or call 614-992 -

15904.
Puppies to giveaway . Call

For Faster Service

"C UT OU T
FOR FUTURE USE"

4

For all your wiring
needs ; furnaces repair
service and installation .
Residential
&amp; Commercial

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Bo•. 326
Pomeroy. OH . 45769

4 t "

PARTS and SERVICE

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Engate-A·Car. the modern way
to dri\'e the 11ehi cle of your
choice

PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF ALL TYPES

Installation Available

I

We'd like to introdu ce you to

614-992-7626

II

"Free Estimates"

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•Was hers •Dishwashers

Wanted To Buy

Nice hou se

E.Main

NEW LISTING - Middleport
- 3 bedroom ranch home oo
a QUiet street cute krtchen.
large utility room. outstm:l1ng
storage $32.500.00.

Bingo games at Charleston
Civic Center Ju ne 27th . Call

446-8104.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

l H~r

992 · 2259

67.500 .00

742 - 2361 .

AL TROMM

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

POME'ROY,O .

and

Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

I

FOR SALE

676.

ca t. Cafl 614 -992 -6250

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

PH. 992-2975
210 CONDOR ST.
POMEROY. OH.

Call Lucas Tours and Travel
today reservations limited
on following trips: Altantic
City, June 21 thru 23:
Opryland July 13 thru 15;
Worlds Fair July 13 thru 18
and Aug 10 thru 16: Myrtle
Beach July 13 thru 16:
Cincinnati Reds vs L.A .. Aug
3 thru 6 " 2 nights 3
games "; Also , Big Bingo at
Cherokee, N .C . July 6 thru

3 kittens. 2 male. 1 female ,
all long haired Call 614 -

8 0 08

(611 2. 15. 21c

(6141 843· 5425

- Addona and remodeling

~wt"

TOM'S
SHOE REPAIR

Co111plete Gutter Wort
Complete Remodeling
Roof ina of all Types

Public Notice

Town

Control hunger end loae
weight with New Shape Diet
Plan and Hydrex Water Pilla .
Fruth Pharmacy, Jackson
Pike.

8;

Worked io home area

Real Estate General

Addre1u.-~------

5

1 I I ilt

!61 13. 14 15 3ic

MANNING ROUSH - OWNER

Name•---------------------

We'll Gladly Help You With Your Shopping

No Sunday Calls

The Farmers Sank and Savtng s Cn mpany . Pomeroy. Oh1o
res erves the rtght to btd at thiS
sale, and to Wtthdraw any of the
above collate ral pnor to sale
Further. The Farmers Bank and
Savm gs Company reserves the
r1ght to reJect a ny or all btds
submilled
Furt hef. the above are sol-:t 1n
the co nde!ton th ey are• nwtth no
expressed or •mphed warr an t•es gNen

GARVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

, results. Money not rehmdabte.

Excellent Selections -- Fine Quality

949·2860

01

Complete Financing Available
To Qualified Buyers

coopon. Cancel yoor ad bY phone when yOtJ grt

MANY Gl FT ITEMS
FATHER'S DAY GIVING
SALE PRICED

AOA065C210690 M1r No

SIDING CO.

""Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages "
Call for free siding es·
timates, 949·2801 or

54 Misc. Merchandise

Real Estate General

· Wrlrn vour

Father's Da Gift Sale
j

PUBUC NOTICE

and the Family

ELBERF
•

AvatlabiP. fu nds amount to
$132.677 00 Th• S ftqure tn
1
eludes funds expected to be
rP.ceNed th1s yea r p lus unao·
propnated fund s from prev1ous
entttl~ment penods
Senter Ctt•zens and oth er
sp ectal 1nteres1 groups are
encouraned to anenn

Curb Inflation II
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

Camp meeting

..

NOTICE OF
PROPOSED USE
HEARING
1986 REVENUE
SHARING

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

CharlesW. LegarSr., isasurglcal
patJen t at Riverside Methodist
Hospital. Columbus. His room
number L&gt;~l.l Cardsmayhesent to
hlm in care of the hospital.
Edith Cogar. Syracuse, is a
surgical patient at Universtty Hospi·
tal, Columbus. Her room rumber is
1037.
Cards may he sent to her in careof
the hospital.

CARRIER CORNER

Public Notice

Oris Gaul

In hospital

Service,; at Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church wlll be not he held
June 17. June20and:Mdurtngcamp
me&lt;&gt;ting services at Morristown.
Ohio.
There will be Sunday Sehool
serv ices. however.

Public Notice

Not1 ce IS hereby g•ven that un
Saturday. June 16th. 1984. at
1 0 00 a.m a publtc sale wtll be
held at 105 Unton Avenue.
Pomeroy. Ohto 45 769 to sell
for cash the follow1ng
collateral
1980 AM C Con1_:ord - 2 Dr
Mfr
Ser1al
No

9

The Daily Sentinel

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

Public Notice

lr----------..!.----------11
FATHER'S DAY

Justice releases merger guidelines

3 Announcements

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

The rest dent s of M e tq s
County are tnvtl ed to prov•de
wnn en and oran comments
co ncern tng the oosstble uses of
Gene r al Rev enu e $ hJ flng
funds at the orooosed us e
hean'lQ 10 b e held on JunF 26
1984 . ·a t th e Metgs Co tmty
Comm •ss toners· oflt ce tra m 2
PMto3 PM

Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Business Services

PHONE 992-2156- ·l

$7S and costs, live days contlne-

ment; Eugene Anns, Pomeroy,
falled to yield right of way. $l5 and
costs; David Salmons, Racine, no
motcrcycle endorsement, $50 and
Public Notice
costs, three d!lys confinement,
suspended If obtain el!dorsement In
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
JO days; Kenneth Wtlt, Pomeroy,
ESTATE OF LESLIE W .
DWI. $250 and costs, lhrPe days PRICE. DECEASED
confinement, license suspended 60 C.. No. 24432 ~ 12
days; Roy Sansbury, Mlddleport, Pogo 424
NOTICE OF
DWl, $250 and costs, license
APPOINTMENT
suspended 00 days, lhrPe days
OF FIDUCIARY
On May 29 . 1984 . 1n the
confinement, jail sentence and $1.50
Mergs County Probate Co 11rl.
of fine wUI be suspended If attend Case No 24432 Vtrgtnta
residential driving school.
Crew. 18 15 Forest Wtllow
WUilarn Gaddis, Reedsville. shoot Court. Columbus . Ohto. was
Exe cut11x of the
a wtld bird from a motorvehlcle, $25 appointed
estate of Leslte M Pr1 ce.
and costs; Gene Johnson, Middle- deceased late of I 8 15 Forest
port, and David Grindstaff, Racine, Will ow Cou rt. Columbus . Oh10
Ro bert E Buck.
fishing without license, $15 and costs
te Judge
each; Daivd Wolfe, Reedsville,
BY lena Proba
K Nesselroad
Clerk
crtmlnal mischief, costs only; Phtl
Fisher, Pomeroy, disorderly con· (6 1 1 8. 15. 3 ic
In Memoriam
duct, $100 and costs, refrain from 2
conplalnant.
Forfeiting bonds were Jeffrey
In Loving Memory
Smith, Pomeroy, Edwin Justice,
of
Wheeling, W.Va.. and Michael
Manny, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va ..
speed, $50 each; Albert Banks,
Who Passed Away
Pomeroy, expired registration, $30;
Michael Welch, Reedsville, and
June 15, 1966.
Scott VanMeter, Reedsville, Utter· Another year has passed
ing, $45 each; Connie Bibbee,
and gone,
Parkersburg, W.Va., passing in a
But memories still
hazard zone, $45.
linger on and on.
Year after year, more
precious they grow:
Only those who have
lost understand this l
the next big wave of mergers is
know.
going to come from smokestack
As
the song says, "I
Industries which, llke the steel
have
Never Been
Industry, want to ratJonaUze (or
Homesick Before."
streamline1 themselves In the face
In God's word. He
of a global market."
says that the· old
Smith and Assistant Attorney
General J. Paul McGrath, the
must pass away and
antitrust chief who drafted the
the young may.
revisions, have been criticized by
According to nature and
rusinessmen and some Reagan
the signs of the times
administration colleagues, led by
These memories may
Commerce Secretary Malcolm BaJ.
soon become reali·
drtge, over the handllng of a major
ties:
steel merger earlier f.l1ls year.
But until they do. with
McGrath had rejected the merger of
the help of the
LTV Corp. and Republic Steel untU
lord,
the companies agreed to sell off two
With joy we will carry
steel mllls.

Friday, June 15, 1984

Yard Sale June 14, 15. 16
Third h ouse b ack o1 Clay
School

F&gt;omerov ·
Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
Large Yard Sale Fri . &amp; Sat .,
June 1 5 &amp; 16. Appltances .
collectors items, tires, toys,
tools &amp; mise 512 East Main
St .. PomRoy, 1st house beM)w
Ohio Bulk .

large Yard Sale, behind
WMPO Radio station . Friday
&amp; Saturday only .

Pt Pleasant

2 Family Garage Sale 334
Debby Dr ., Gallipoli s. Boys .
men , womens &amp;: maternity
clothes . rototiller. many
other things. Fr i 9 4 , Sat .

9 -2 .
Fri Sat _ New wicker&amp; paint
left from wicker house .
Household misc .. cl othin g.
muchmore Call446 · 1747 .
d own Rt 7. turn right at
C lip per Mills on Shoestring
Ridge. Watch f or sign s.
Gigantic Yard Sale. 14th .
15 th . 16th Rt 141 onto A t .
775 , Patriot , Ohio. Ram o r
shine.
Estate Sale -some antiques.
furntture , applian c es. linen s.
dishes . etc 90 Pine St .
Saturday only 9 -6 .

&amp; Vicinity
Inside moving sale. Man and
Tues . 128 S. Park Dr . 10 :30
ti ll ?
Flea M arket . every Satur ·
day , park1ng lot Caseys , At
62 North. Point Pleasant .

304

675 · 4808

fo,

informat i on .
Yard Sa le . 23 12 Madiso n
Ave . Fri and Sat . from 9 :00
till 6 ·00 .
Carport sale. 3 320 Howard
Ave . Bellemeade . Pt. PI .
Saturday
Clothes . toys .
mt sc. household 1t e m s .
motor cycle .

1~~~;===~~=~~~~~~~~~~~
31 Homes for Sale
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

FOR REN T WITH OPTION
TO BUYtll ,4 f1 wide thr ee
b edroom . bath an d half.
m obil e home sitting on nice
l ot . re ady to move into
S225 00 down $225 .00 per
m o nth 304 -576 -27 11 .
7 ro o m ho use. 4 l ots on R t
62 . center of Eleanor Pr1ced
for quick sale by owner
304 -586 -3572
Seven year o ld h o me . three
bedroom s, garden spot.
2605 lincoln Ave 8 1/1 p et .
assum able loan 304 . 675 ·

5047
Older home three bedroom ,
new siding. n ewly rem o deled li vin g room 304 . 675 ·

5854
Ne w li stin g, moving need t o
sell . 3 bedroom 2 full ba1h s
Meadowbrook addn 8 'h per
cent assumable lo an Lots of
e•tr as. pri ced 60s 304 -

675 -6425
3 bedroom. central air , F A .
furnace . large 2 stall garage,
assume 9 per ce nt FHA loa n .

536,500 00
652 1

304 - 675 -

For sale or trade. 2 '1~ bed ro o m all modern hou se with
bath, attached garage, vinyl ,
steel. alu mn Sell or trade f or
late m odel 2 or 3 bedroom
trailer and land 304 -882 ·

3590 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sa le
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSE L' S DUAL ·
lTV MOBIL E HO M E SALES.
4 Ml WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
AT 35 PHONE 6 14 -446 ·
7274
1979 3 bdr mob1le home. on
' 12 acre lot. wel l shaded
Must sell bot h together Ca ll

614 -388 -9957
1973 12J:6 0 remodeled
tr ai ler, new ca rpet . door s,
pl umbi ng. electric , AC Call

You Better Hurry for a
co mfortable mobile home at
a low price . Had 22 . onl y 3
left . 12~e52 &amp; 1 2x44 sizes. 2
bedroom f urnished . Closing
out rentals. Brow n ' s Trail er
Park , Min ersv ill e, O h 614

9 92 3324
Trai ler o n lar ge wooded l ot
BOAT RAMP and dock
space C~l1 5-8 evenings
304 6 75 6448 _ Terms
1981 Hol lypark , 14x70 .
exc
co nd ., 1 2x8 deck.
und erpenning and large
roo m air cond . inclu ded .

304 - 895 3895
3600

o• 895 ·

,982 C layton, 14x70. 2
b edroom , 2 baths . dts ·
hwasher. steroo . ce ilmg fan .
f~repl ace. m icrowave. c en tra l a1 r , co ncrete steps and
underpenninq . S1 5 .500 00
ftrm 304 -77 3 555 0
1980 Holly Park . 14•70 , 2
bedroom , 1 ,,., baths, tota l
electric . centra l air cond .,
di shwa sher . porch with
awnin g, underpenning, star
age building
304 - 675 -

2604

33

Farms for Sale

Small farm (1 8 .25 acres ) tn
Portl and, Ohio . bordered by
Ohio River &amp; highway N o
build i nqs. some trees. 'h
m ineral right s. Fair m arket
price. S40 ,000 . For informa1i on . wrtte B . Graham .
4615 Emera ld , N acog doches . Texas 75961 .
Pliny, WV . 250 acre worktng
farm Wtth nice 3 bedroom
home Cal l for m or e details.
345 - 5095 ERA Mallory
Group· As soc
Ashton area 6 1/1 acrr.s, 2
hou ses. 2 barns, 2 c ar
garage. pon d. $55.000 .00 .

Phon e 304 576 -2320 .

34

Business
Buildings

446 -02 2 1
1979 14x70. 3 BR . 2 full
baths on .441 acre we ll
shaded lot . Call 614 -388 ·
9957 after 5 PM .
1 976 2 bdr . N ausha mobile
home, located in Quail Creek
Mobile H ome Commun it y
Good cond . Call for appoint ment , 614 · 379 -2588

Building for sa le in Rutland .
3011.60 block building with
re str oo ms &amp; newer fur ·
nan ce . located o n SR 124,
has six - tenths of an acre .
Ca li John S Evans. Pastor
Churc h of God Rutland at

614 -742 -2060 .

35 lots S. Acreage

1972 12 X 65 Flamin go, e x
condition S6500 Ca ll 614 -

379 -23 14 .
8 X 32 Trai ler, 2 BR . new
paint . n ew ca rp ot . idea l for
camp si t e Call 614 446 -

9283
1976 Bayvtow 14 X 70 ,
Refrig . stove , CA , WB , good
cond . Cal l 614 - 446 -1506
Closin g Out Trailer Rental
Busines s Had 22 ONlY 6
LEFT . S i zes 10~~:60 &amp;
1 2)(52. 2 b ed r oom fur
nish ed . A co mfo rtabl e home
for a low Pri ce . Brown 's
Tra iler Park . Min atS\Iille .
Ohio . Call 614 -992 3324 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

N ear Racine in country. 3 .1
acres with 1 4 x 70 mobile
h ome . 2 be droo m . 2 bath ,
cent ra l air . porche s &amp; 1 2x 1 6
bern . Call after 6 :00 p .m .
614 -843 -52 40

4 'tl acre lot restr~ ced 2 '1;&gt;
mil e from Gallip o lis &amp;
H o ller
Reduced tO
510 .60 0 Call 446 -3 485
Survey ed lot with water &amp;
elect ri c hookups . approx ~ ~~
a . tn qu1et subdiviston near
Rodney . 2 mi . fr o m Holler
M edical Center Call 446 .

1380
For sa le 1 ac re l ot in Poner
Call 44 6 -8076
l ot for sa le in M ercerville .

Cell 6 !4 · 256 -66!8 .
1 Ox 50 trailer on larg e
w ooded lot , 7 mil es below
Gallipolis on Ra c oon

$10 .995 304 675 6448

Rentals

1- - - - - - - - - -

For sa le - 1969 12x60
Schultl mobile home . Com pletely furnished . including
ac. WAsher -dryer , micro ·
wave , &amp; 60 ft wooden
porch _ Call 614 -992 -2889
like new. 3 bd.-m . sectional
h ome on beaut iful 'h acre lot
in Arbaugh addition .
Tuppers Plains . excellent
n eighborhood . $32 .900 .•
includes new refrig .. range .
washer &amp; dryer, finan cing
available with low down
payment to qualified partie!l .

Celr

614 -992 -7034 days,

614·992 ·7671 evenings

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr . house delu:~~e , ce ntral
air. pool etc . Call675 -5104

or 675 -5386 .
3 bdr . house in Rio Grande.
accept ch ildren , deposit re quired Call 446 · 0157.
House for rent on St . At .
218 , c lo se to Mercerville .
Deposit required , S250 per
mo . Ca ll 446 - 3159 days ,

614 -256 · 1552 eve .

�.,.,

...

----·- ----

....;.

Poge-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
41

Pomervy Middleport, Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

Houses for Rent

1 bdr house in Crown Ci1V.
ref requered . Call61 4 -256 ·

54 Misc.

Used lawn mowers, sweepers. Repairs on 1nowera.
sweepers. chain saws and
misc . B 8t S Fix -it- Shop.

EGGNOG IS THE
COf#PVTERS TIC/&lt;""

House for rent , 1310 Ohio

304-875-8612 .

Street . 304 -773-51 15 .

WITHOUT
HIM WE'I7
HAVE TO
CLOSIO LIP

Modern 3 br house. full
basement. garage, cent ral
alf . heat pump. fenced yard .

Clothes line pos1s. heavy
duty , lawn , kids swing

'"mos. au types . Sch . 40
pipe. 304- 675· 3677 .
Piano M - Schulz Company,
upright 6260 .00 . Swivel
rocker $30.00. 304 - 675 -

f or Rent

3534 .
Gu n, 303 British Enfield.
bolt action, clip holds 10,
with n ew bo x s h e ll s,

1

Ca ll 446 - 8558

$80.00. 304· 675· t 145.

2 bdr mobile home . furn .. all
ele c tr•C adults o nly . no pets

John Deere riding mower. 6

Call6 14 367 -7438

'fEili"V SHIMMINS,

M o b ile horne for re nt Ref &amp;

6SL.OIT,

or

44

Apartment
for Rent

Refrigerator , AM C Av o cado. side by side. 22 co ft
Apt

for

rent

Hender son

S200 . Coli 614-992·2740

304· 6 75 · 1972 .
Unfurn1shed m obil e home,
'? mi le past HMC su itable
to r one perso n . Call 446 ·
4369 or 675 · 9760 .

2 bdr unfurnis hed , Ho lley
ParK mobrle home. 1 2x60
· .' mile past HMC
Ca ll
446 · 4369 o r 675 · 9760
2 bd r mo b ile home at
Ev ergreen Cal l 446 · 7032
2 BR . AC. close to hosp 1ta l
Ca ll 614 388 - 9760

45

Furnished Rooms

For r ent Sleeping Roo m s
and light house keeping
roo m s. Park Central Ho t el
Ca ll 614 446 · 0756.
Sleepin g room S 1 1 5 .
t1os pa id Share bat h.
onl y. Range &amp; re frig .
2nd A ve .. Ga ll ipolis .
446 · 44 16 after 7 PM .

utili·
male
919
Call

1201.60 2 bedroom m obile
hom e. part ly furn ished , Ra
ClflC area
Ca ll 614 · 992 ·

46

5858

Trailer lot on Upper At . 7 ,
S65 rna 367 . 0232 or 446 -

2 bedroom mobil e home,
aJults only For sa le or rent
Cal\ 614 992 259 8
2 bedroom trai ler , kit chen
f urn 1shed. c ouple one sma ll
~ h il d accepted
30 4 · 675 ·

Space for R e nt

C OUNTRY MOBILE Ho me
Park, Rout e 33. N or1h of
Pomeroy large lo t s. Ce ll

5553

Apartment
for Rent

Tra il er lo t s fo r re nt . 304 ·

ESTA TES

APARTME NTS (Eq u a l
Housmg Opportun ity) has
one and two bedrooms. rent
st art ing at $ 1 57 f or o ne
bed room an d S193 per
month for two bedroom ,
wit h S200 de posit loca t ed
ne&lt;lf Fo odl and and Spring
Va lley Plaza. pool and TV
ant Call 446· 2745 or leave
me ssa ge
3 b dr u n lurn ga ra ge apt .,
5250 plu s d eposit
Cal l
44 6 · 378 6
Furm sh ed apt 919 2 nd ,
Gall•p ol1 s 5 175 Men o nly
Ca 1144 6 -4416 afte r 7PM
Ne w lv r emodeled 2 bdr .,
equ1pped kitchen . central
;m , S250
821 \ J Second
Ave . Ga llip olis Ca ll 446 ·
2 15 8

4 rooms &amp; bath, unfurnis h ed
pa t , ut1lit1eS pa•d . adults
o nl v. no pe t s Call 44 6 ·
34 37 or 446 -311 1
Unfurni she d 2 bdr m C rown
C1ty Ca ll 61 4 . 25 6 · 6520
2 bdr u nfurn i shed . ex rr a
nrcc. 2 mt. out on A t . 588 .
5200 mo adul ts only Ca l l
446 2300
Deluxe one bedrnom apt .
Galhool rs. ga rage . no pets .
no c h1ldren . re fer ence . avar l ·
able Jun e 16 Ca ll 6 14 · 256 ·

1529
l BR
Apt
furnl!'; h e d
ntce ly . S lOO mo . ~ l so wi ll
pay wr;man to stfly 5 d ays a
wee!. no t muc h wort.. re ·
qUiu~ d mLJst be able t o drive
mv c&lt;u Ca ll 6 14 446 · 1414

t bP.dr uo m Ap t 5 196 rnu
m c lud mg utd t!t es
Equ&lt;t l
Hou sm g Opporlu mt y Co n
tac 1 Vtllag!:' M cmor Apts
614 992 7787
R1ve rs1de Apts Middleport
Spec•al rates for Seni or
C1 t11en s S 130 Equa l Hous·
•ng OpportunttlflS 6 1 4
992 7721

2566

-----Furn 1shed 1 &amp; 2 bedroom
apArtm e n ts. M1ddleport
Adult s. no pe t s. secunty
deposrt
Ca ll 614 992

C u stom draperies . mini
venetian blinds. Roman
woven wood shades, verti ·
cal blinds . Semples and
estimates in your home . P .

A . Say•e. 304· 458 · 1078 .

54

Misc . Merchandise

Limest o n e. Sand . Gravel .
Delivered tn M aso n , M eigs.
Gallia or p1ck up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446 · 7785

A pMtments n ow available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
1n c ome of l ess t han
S12.300 Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income .

Phone 304 . 675-6679 .
Nice 1 and 2 bedroom
unfurnished apartments .
3 04 -675 - 221 8 befor e 6
p .m .
Gara ge apt . 1 bedroom with
utility paid and furnished .

co n 304-675· 3420.

HILLCR EST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor · outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies :
Slud Service . Ca11614 -446 -

Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
Briarpatch Kennels Profes sional All -breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cilities . Pi c k up and deli very
service . English Cocker Spa niel p uppies. Call 614 - 388 ·

9790
Profe ssio nal All Bre ed Dog
Obedience Training . l n divid ·
ual &amp; c lasses availabl e. Ca ll

7838 ohe• 5PM .

61 4 ·949· 2844.

2 row
cult;voto•s . &amp; 1Uming plow
AC

t ract or

7

with

foot

mower .

.

r~~;;~~~~;~~~~=~==.,~·~~~-~·~-~~
71

Autos for Sale

304 ·

1980 Renault LeCar deluxe,
sunroof. AM ·FM . AC was
$2,495, new $2,196. Johns
Auto Sales, Bulaville Rd .

1975 Freighliner, 1974 Fru -

$3 .000. t 978 4 dr. blue
John Deere. l row cultiva -

Impala V - 8 . 63.000 milea.

tors . 304- 273 · 3447 .

$2 , 500 .
2705.

Ford 2.000 diesel Massey
Ferguson 65 . 4 ft . Hico
bushhog S.340 . 5 ft. Hico
bushhog $350 . 304 - 576·

2328 o• 304 -576 · 2606 .

Call

74

1981 Cheverolt Corvett&amp;
black with red interior.
33.000 dry miles. Showroom cond . Call 446-0648
after 5 .
For sale or trade 1968
Roadrunner great shape.
serious inquirieS only. Call

446 -3449

992 · 2488 .

1978 Mercury Cougar
loaded. new tires, 192,800,
negotiable. Call 446 -0269

1977 Honda CR 125 Elsinore. Call 614 -256 · 1778
eve.

Black Angus bull . Call 614 -

a. 448-9513 .

256 · 1528.
Reg . Polled hereford bull &amp;
cattle . 8ft . homemade metal
pipe cow rack . Call 614 -

256 ·9364 .
Sell or trade 18 HP 6 speed
garden tract o r 3 pt . hitch .
Too big for my yard . War ranty good til 5 - 1 - 87 . Cell

614 388· 8824 .
Reg full blooded Arabian
stallion. 5 yrs . old. purebred.
bull Simmental. Call 614 -

1978 Chevy Impala AC ,
62.000 miles, $2,300. Call
446 · 0983.
For sale or trade 1978
Thunderbird, 63.000 miles
w ill trade for truck good

cond. Call 6t4-268- 6215 .
1973 VW Super Beetle good
cond .• serious inquires onlv .

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa . c h ~t ir . ro c ker . o tt o·
ma n. 3 tabiRs, (ex tr a heavy
by Fro ntier). S6 85 . Sofa.
ch ai J and loveseat . S275 .
Sofas and c ha ir s pnced from
$285 t o 5895 . Tables. S45
and up to 5 1 25 Hide · a·
beds . S440
a nd up to
55 25 . Recliners . S175 to
$375 . lamps fro m 528 . to
5 75 5 p c dinette s from
599. to 435 7 p c $189
and u p . W oo d t a ble with six
chair s S425 t o S745 Desk
5 110 up t o 5225 . Hutc hes.
5550 and up, m aple or p ine
f1ni sh . Bunk bed co mple te
wit h mattresses . S250 and
up to $395
Baby bed s,
5 110 . Mattresses or box
spr ings . full or twin , $6 8 .,
fi rm . S6 8 . and $78 . Queen
sets. S 195 . 4 dr c he st s.
S42 . 5 dr . ch ests . S54 . Bed
fra m es. S20 .and $26 .. 10
gun
Gun ca binets . S350 .
Gas or electric ranges $375 .
8aby m attresses . S25 &amp;
535. bed frames S20. S25 .
&amp; $30. king fram e $50 .
Good selection of bedroom
s u•t es. cedar c hests .
r oc k ers . metal ca binets .
swi vel r ockers.
Used Furnitur e - · C hairs.
dryers . and TV 's . 3 miles out
Bulavillft Ad . Open 9am to
6pm. Mon thru Fri .. 9am to
5pm . Sat .

Shrubs pruned, lawn re ·
seeded. retaining walls .
sidewalks, patios. fill dirl.
topsoil. bark mulc h &amp; saw dust Conta ct Bruc e Oavi sion. Call 614 - 256 - 1427

TV &amp; Applian ces. 627 Third
Ave. Ga llipoli s. 614 · 446 1699 Spin washer s. gBS &amp;
e l ec tri c dry e r s. au to
we~ s her s .
gas &amp; electric
ranges , refrigerators , TV
se t s

Why pay m ore . Trade Ce nter
Furn•tu re Outlet . At . 7 .
Kanau ga . Oh . Open 9 -7PM .

S500 . Cal l 614 2 45 · 55 75
"'614 · 379 ·262 1.
2 grS\Ie lots. 2 va ults. 1
marker . Ohio Valley M em ory
Garden s . Ca ll 614 · 379 ·

2659 .
28 " hay elevat o r. like new
Sears ce m ent mi xe r. ch ain
hoist an d o ther misc . items
cal 614 · 256 · 1529 .
10 in . Homelite chain saw
brand n ew . never used S85 :
gun ca bine1 . h o ld~ 1 2:
$125 ; swing se t . $25 . 245 ·

9441 .
Queen size h•d -a· bed so f a

Call 446 · 2177.
Murray garden tractor wilh
mowing deck &amp; snow blade .
Call 446 · 3875
18.000 BTU Bir c ondition er,

S250 . Co11 446- 2598 .
Monclair c h est type freeze r,
ea:c . working cond . S100or
best offer . Call 446· 8114
anytim e
Woodburner with magic
heat, refrigerator, dinette
set. weights &amp; ben c h. many
more items . Call 446 · 8257.
Saw mill, 3 block mill. 62 "'
b l ade with n e w 1eeth .

$2 , 396 .
2341 .

Ca11

614 · 379 -

Cabinet Model White Sewing Machine with cams . Ex .
condition . Call 614 -446 -

4159.

b1odos. $260.
843· 6106

Call

614-

1- - - - - - - - - - For sale - washer &amp; dryer .
1950 each or S76 a pair. Call
304~882 · 3799 .

4 :00PM .
6 men ' s suits, eJCcellent
condition, size 40 tell . Call

814 -742-2430.
Used

CarpM for rentals for S3 . 99

sq. yd. Col1 814- 992 -8173.

&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

1957 Harlev
chopper. exc .

Davidson
condition

S2600
2620.

614 · 992 ·

Call

61 4 · 446-

Call 614-367-0221 o• 614·
367-7242 .
1980 Pontiac Grand Prix.
lots of extras. $6300 . Catl

614-379 · 2314

R · 40

Ditch

Greenbrier Stables. we buy,
sell or trade horses . 304 -

T•anchor. 1 · 814 -894-7842
a. 894 -5008

1978 Kawasaki KZ · 200.
6.400 miles. $650 . Ca ll

614-992· 6954 .
1979 Kawasaki KZ 750with
faring &amp; radio , e1tcetlent
condition . Asking S, 200

Coli

614-992· 3530

afte•

5 :30p .m .
1 980 Kawasaki , 000 LTO .
excellent condition. 7.000
miles. new tuneup , extras
92300. or bes1 offer Call

1978 VW Rabbit D iesel.
good cond . S2200 . Call

1980 Honda 750 SS 1400

61 4 -446 · 0989

miles . Call evenings . &amp;1 400.

675 · 6799 .

Hay

304·675 ·7138.

&amp;

1979 Chevy Caprice Classic. 2 dr. ac. ps. V -8 engine.
body good c ondition . exc .
performan ce . Will consider
all offers . Call 614 -992 7412 aher 6 p .m

Grain

Mower c onditiond hay for
sa le . $ , .25 bate in field .

Call 304-882 · 2237 .
Strawberries . Taylor ' s Berry
Patc h
BAM -BPM . Mon .-

Sat Ca11446· 869 2 a. 614 ·
245· 9557

446-3929

o•

256· 6233.

Ronnie Skeens
Baled hay in the field - round
or square . Cell 614 -985 -

3846
Round bail ed hay in the field .
Call Coleman's at 614-742 -

lb . Call 614 -446 -8692 o•
245 ·9557 .
Fruits &amp; Vegetables. clean
Strawberries. pi c k your own
9 -8 . Sorry no c hec ks . W e
ac cep t food sta mps. pea s
are ready 40c lb . $9.00
bushel. Happy Hollo w Fru it
Farm . Gallipolis Ferry . 304 -

576· 2026

hay, $1 .25 in

65

Seed

&amp;

Fertilizer

1981 Honda XL500S . 304·
675 - 6810 after 5 p .m .

sale

tobacco

Transportation
Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for late
model u se d cars .
Smith
Bu ick · Pontiac , 1911 East·
ern Ave ., Gallipolis . Call

Chrysler LeBaron. 32.000
miles. 4 new tires, exc cond .

304 · 773 ·

72

Trucks for Sale

1 962 Chevy PU truck . Call

1980 XR 250 Honda . 1980
Kawasaki

126.

304 · 675 -

3993.
Vespa motor scooter less
than 100 miles . First

$425.00. 304· 675 · 4454 .

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Chris Craft cabin cruiser. 36
ft . with 40 ft . trailer

1983 5 t 0 long bed p;ckup. 4
spd ., 4 cyl.. AM -FM like
new, S5.996 . Johns Auto
Sales. Bulaville Ad . Call

446-4782. Gollipolis.
1976 Chevy Luv with
topper . good cond .. 34 .00
miles. Call 614 · 379 · 2705 .
1974 Ford 11• T .. super cab

!SIDER !

~DC't:.N?

Tl"\E

1"\~~

4spd,4 cyl. AM FM . tope,
vinyl cover bed t3695.
John 's Auto Sales Bulaville

Rd . GollipoHs , 814 - 446 4782 .

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN .
scotchguard-water extrac tion. deodorizers . FREE esti mates. Reasonable rates .
Gene Smith. 992· 6309

V -8. hoadors,

white spoke wheels. aharp,

$2800 .
1300.

Coli

6472
Correct Crah &amp; Ski Supreme, family ski boats .
New &amp; used. Parkersburg.

wv

304· 422 · 8433 o• 304·
422· 2367.

.•'

•

2398 o• 614 · 446· 2454.
Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304 - 675 -

1331 .
RINGLE ' S SERVICE e•pe·
rienced roofing, including
hot tar application , carpen ·
ter, electrician. mason . Call

304 · 676 - 2088
4660 .
GET

you r

SHAPE

o•

675 ·

carpet

SHIP

GASOLINE ALLEY

WITH CAPTIAN

Vou works

STEAMI;:R. Water removal.
furniture cleaning. free esti·
mates . 304· 675 · 2295 .

fer her I !ihes
jes'callin' !"-~.:&lt;:'~
you whdt
you i:;!

Water wells commercial and
domestic. test holes. pump
sales and service . 304 - 895 ·

3802 .
WATER ·

PROOFING Unconditional
lifetime guarantee. Local
references furnished . Fre e
estimates . Call collect 1 614 - 237 -0488. 9 a.rn . to 5
p . m . Rogers Basement
Wal erproofing .

r..

Remodeling. siding, interior
and exterior, textured coat ·
ing , simulated brick and
stucco, thermo replacement
windows . 304·675·1560

i

614-992- 3921.
1975 Dodge ·~ ton "uck V8
good tire• &amp; body, mutt

76

eoo. 1211. otMio
exc . cond .
u.aoo .oo. 304 - 4118 -

flat

te10.

bed,

WU LEFT ME IN
CHARGE HERE WHILE
ON AN

IN

MY

PERFORMANCE ?
YOU KIVt'W I HAD
NO PRIOR EXPERIENCE,

MOOM .. • /Y"' "'"'-",'&lt;.!

YOU KM"'H' I WAS

ILL-PREPARED FOR
SO MUCH
RESPONSIIIILITY/

304-675- 2440 .

82

I DON' T UNDERSTAND ITf IN THE
SHORT TIME YOU'VE 6EEN HERE.
YOUR FIANCEE GOT MCK
WITH HER EX-HU:51li~N·~

AND YOU'RE

''PI6APPOINT!f0"

lnterior· Exterior . Concrete.
roofing. electrical. etc . Ex·
perienced and affordable .

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEAT ING

Evening television l i s t i n g s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

J1M'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT ·
lNG . At . 1. Bo~e 355. Galli ·
polis. Call 614·367 -0576 .
SHULAW ' S Plumbing
Heating. 21 1 Sixth
Point Pleasant , W . Va .
675-5420 . licensed
insured .

83

and
St .,
304 ·
and

EVEN ING

2 Craiger 14"' rims and tires .
Ca11614· 266- t528 .
Two 8ft . pickup toppers. 1
alum, 1 fiberglaas . Russell
Young , West Columbia .

78

Camping
Equipment

16 ft . truck camper . Self
contained . S660. or b'e&amp;t
offer. Call 694- 6816 ext.

167 ..

d•v•j

614· 992· 7300.

evemngs .

Basements. Footers . Con ·
crete work . Backhoe ' s.
Dozer &amp; Oitcher. Dump
trucks . &amp; water-gas -sewer ·
el ec trical lines

84

l

8 (}) Cll NBC Nows
(]) Rllleman
(!) Mazda Sponslook
Cil C•rol lumen
(I) D (!} ABC News
D Clli!D CBS Nows
()lJ Workine Women
7 :00 D Cll PM Magazine

SEWING Machine repairs .
service . Authorized S1nger
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors
Fabric Shop .

85

General Hauling

James Boys Water Service .
Also pool s filled . Call 61 4 ·

256 · 1141 o• 614 - 44 6 ·
t 175 o• 614 · 446· 791 1 .
Johnson Water Service . Call

6t 4 -256 - 1743 "'61 4 · 256 ·
t t20 .
JIMS

WATER

SERVIC~

Call Jim Lanier. 304 - 675 -

Motors Homas
8o Campers

BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES &amp; SERVICE. Open
dally 9 to 6 :30. Sot. 9 to 4,
Clos'&lt;! Sundoy. U.S. At. &amp;0,
Coolville, Oh 8 14-lt7 33&amp;e.

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec . Av81 , GalllpOiis.

614-448-7833 or 6.14- 446-

t833 .

~

8 :30

Electrical
Refrigeration

Pomeroy . 61 4 · 992· 2284 .

0 Cll Cil fiJ CIJ !lUll

News
(I) MOVIE : "Grease 2 "
(I) MOVIE : "Chartie Chan
and the Curse of the
Dragon Oueen '
(]) New Treasure Hunt
@ ESPN 's Horse Racing
Weekly
CD Andy Griffith
ill News/ Spona/ Weather
(J)
MacNeil/ lehrer
Newahour
rfi) Great Outdoors J1m Ta·
bar looks a1 the bas1cs of
cross-country skung and
ca tches the excitement of
Maine' s w inter dog -sled
races . [C losed Caption9dJ
f!18 Star Trek

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

7397 .

79

6:00

E&gt;&lt;cavating

t1 and . Oh.614 · 742 · 2903 .

with Enos , the Dukes come
out in a wild race to head
h1m oH (R) ~60 min .)
(jJ (ll) Washington Week/
Review Paul Duke is JOined
by top Washington journalIStS analyzmg the week 's
news

FRIDAY
6/'15/84

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

solo, call 992-8886 .
1976 International Harves-

WINNIE

YOU WENT
EXTENDED

All building and remolding .

&amp;

61 4 · 446 ·

cab . automatic, transmi&amp;·
sion, recently rebuilt, p .s.
p .b, new flat bed, winch ,
$800 . Will contlder tandem
axle trailer on trade . Call

CME

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

19 1;2 h . Aristocraft fiber ·
glass boet.inboard ·outboard
with trailer . Call 614 - 256 -

Sell or Trade. 1977 Jeep

CJ5, 304,

AH~ THIS

St10ULD BE 61C.
EHOUC.H FOil THE
C~EATUI'IEI!II.~
· ~

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

J .A .R .Construction Co .Ru·

Call

1982 S10 P.U .. 4spd,6 cyl,
AM FM . vinyl cover bed
$5696 . 1981 Chevy Luv.

IT'S

e•p. Call 614-388-9862 .

Doz er Work free estimate
Call anytime. 446 · 8038

cyi.AM.FM.Iike new $5995 .

IF YOU'D

HECH,NO!

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

304- 676 ·

$11,000 .

1731 after 6pm .

1983 S10 P U .. 4 opd, 4

::;c.RP.,PE THE
611.Rf'.6E FOR
PI'.INTIN6,
l:'D RELON -

"

Call 6t4- 388 · 9867 .

2508.

675-2540.

$4 , 600 .00. 1979

$600. Call 614· 256-6049 .·

AtM. Tl"\E
P"'IN'I Df&gt;..'l
Tl"\P..T
DE LI&lt;SHT~
To&lt;E RO~E

~

Marc um Roofing &amp; Spouting . Now installing rubber
roofs . 30 years experience.
specializing in built up roof .

614· 446 -44 77

cond.

pickup. $660 . 246 -9441 .

with Majo• Hoople 0

..•..

~·

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

1978 Lincoln Cont . Town
Car , fully powered. exc .

1976 AM C Sport -a -bout
PS. PB , AC , auto trans

OUR BOARDING HOU SE 0

,

;,

__•

1973 Harley Sportst er .
many new parts. 304· 676 ·

304 · 67!; .

614-379 · 2859 .

,.
71

after 5 :00.

bed,

9•100 . can 446-4599 .

Home
Improvements

1982 Honda V-45 Sabre.
exc cond.. 5 ,000 miles,

1981 Yamaha Special 11.
maroon. mag wheels . new
tires. battery. nice. 5 . 000
miles. $1.200 00 . 304 ·

$3 , 500 . 00 .
5944.
For

·•'.

304 · 675- 1145.

Good

61 4· 446-2282 .

Strawberries . Pic k 1 fl at fre e
f o r each 2 flats you pic k ; 25
lb. minimum . Happy Hollow
Fruit Farm , Gallipolis Ferry,

1979 Mercury Capri. 6 cyl. ,
AM · FM cassette. AC, auto.
radial tires , $3,000.00 firm.

• 1. 260 . 00 .
6761 .

2237
Strawberries . Taylor's Berry
Patch. Special for Sat . &amp;
Mon . only . Pick your own.
1 21b . or more 45 cents per

new 28 MPG. Ca1161 4 -992 6810.

'73 Volkeswagen , good
body and tires . Runs well .

f; eld 30 4 · 676 · 5579 .
Jam Strawberri es 1000
quarts o t good jam berries
60 ce nts per quart . Pick your
own . 2 miles ba c k of New
H aven a1 Union Camp
G round . Clat 304 - 88 2 -

1982 Cavalier. auto .. p .s.,
a .c .. a.m . f .m ., rear defogger. 20 ,000 miles, like

2125 .
mi~eed

81

BASEMENT

61 4-992·5747 .

ter No. 1
Witch

Call

$2,000 .00 . 304 -676 -5486

Strawberries .. Vo u pi c k 75
ce nts o r we pick $1 . 00 per
qt . 2 mile s back of New
Haven , WV of Union Camp
Ground . N o Sundav picking .

WV. 576 - 2026

61 4 - 379 ·

$1000 .
0193.

6799

Va. 304A53 · 1153 .

58

Call

61 4· 388· 9696.

1973 Dodge D -200 club

245 · 5032 .

3229 .

Repossessed Kimball Con ·
sole piano. low monthly
payments , Dan Ferg u so n
Music, At . 60. Ceredo. W .

Greenbrier Stables now
boarding horses . 304 - 675-

OF C.OLJR~t:..

Rockwell 10 inch band saw.
'll HP motor stand, 4 new

Freezer Wards frost free . 20
cu .h . upright . Call 446 -

167 days; 614-992 -7300

52,450 .
2802 .

1974 Ford Comet 2dr, 6 cvl.
64,000 act . miles, ex . cond .

Avenmgs

64
1969 International C01 BOO
t ruc k. 18 h . flatbed , air
brakes. go o d tires . go od
cond .. S3.000. 1970 Inter ·
national 1 600 goo d co n d ..
good tires . 66 ,000. 53,500 .
Fayette 9 ton tag -a-long
trailer good cond .. 51,800 .
Massey Harri s 30 fa r m tra c tor goo d co nd., S500 . 1972
Buick Electra 225 . PW . air ,
power seats, tilt , m echani·
cally soun d. some ru st .

Freezer . 23 c u ft Gib!lon
Upright . S200 . Call 614 -

1 · Oak buffet . 1 oak c hest of
drawers. 1 -60 vr. old table ! i x chairs . Valley View Apt .
436 . Rio Grande after

Reg . Polled Hereford bull 3
yrs . old. $750 . Call 446 -

1983 Honda Shadow 750.
showroom cond . 3000
mile, helmet &amp; ac cessories,

1975 Kazuka Street Bike ,
3400 miles. price $225 . Ca ll

1981 Z28 Camara. blue &amp;
si l ver . 20.000 miles. $6500 .

367 ·0493 aile• 6PM .

1981 Yamaha GT 80 street
&amp; dirt bike, only 280 miles,
includes helmet with visor,
exc. cond . Call 446 -1304
after 5PM .

Coli 446- 1608 .

Reg Quarter mare with colt .
2 ye~~r old Aqha mare.
Reasonable . 594- 5816 eJt:t

Spinet Piano, excellent con dition, S500. Call after 6
pm . 614 · 949-2677 .

1983 Hond 200X ATC .
$1 , t95 1984 Hondo 250R
ATC $1.695 both in showroom cond . Call446 -7621

9905.

Blonde Wuli1z er spinet pi -

83 Honda 750 shadow.
excleent condition. 2 . 300
mil&amp;s. 2 helmets . Call 614 ·

and 446- 2799

Sunda~ .

ano. S600 . Call 446 -0254 .

! Oloi•V ~AlP
01;:! ,.,.,.

stone . Call 61 4 ·3 67 - 0409
o• 614 · 367-7244 .

Motorcycles

anytime.

5 yr . old Sorrell Quarter
horse mare, 2 yrs . Eques trian training . Merideth
manor, S650. Call 614 -

675 · 2288.

Instruments

304- 676·

446· 3738 .

Livestock

Firewo o d c ut up slabs $ 1 5
pickup load. Ca ll 614 · 245 -

Musical

ehauf flatbed
6864.

61 4 · 379 -

3 yr . old polled hereford bull
Call 614- 388-9900 after 9
p .m . or all day Saturday or

57

1977 Chav. truck . 'h ton . 6
cyl , std shift. PS . spoke
wheels . Good co ndition .

1978 Monte Carlo Landau
green. V · B , 54.000 miles,

Full blo ode d bla c k p oodl e
puppies . 9 week s old . 304 -

Built on your lot a new home
you can a1tord over 1 . 100
sq . ft .. 6 rms . &amp; bath . ca r ·
peted. ready t o move int o
$26.500 . Also garages &amp;
basements . Ca ll Patriot
Home Builders anytime
446· 8038 . Will consider
mobile home as trade in.

Trucks for Sele

Coil 446 -4782, Gallipolis .

6417

5804 .

72

$1 ,500 . 00 . 304 -6 75 ·
2195 .

61 Oli ve St . Gallipolis . New
&amp; u sed wood &amp; coal stoves.
6 piec e wood living room
suite wi1h 6 inc h flat arms
S399 . bunk beds complete
with bunkies S199. 2 piece
an tr o n livingroom su it es
5 199. antr on re clin ers S99 .
olher r ecli ners SBO. maple
din ette sets S179. box
spring s &amp; mattress twin or
full S 100 set regular -firm
S 1 20 . maple dinette chairs
535. wash stands 534 ,
maple rockers S59 . 7 piece
chrome dinett e set $ 149, 5
piece dinette set $ 99 , used
bed room suites . refrigera ·
tors . r anges. chest. dresse rs .
w rin ger washers . TV ' s. dry ·
ers. &amp; shoes . Call 6 14· 446 ·

12 mo . old Reg . Pit BulL Ca ll

CAPTAIN EASY

good cond . SBOO.OO. 304676-5115 afto• 6 PM .

1&lt; {,.Wltf{('

1979 Ford Courier XLT
sports package. PB. rack ·in penning steering.new tires ,
auto . transmission . 4 cyl. 32
mpg. selling price $2495 .
retail $3025 . Call614 -388 -

8 wk . old Beagle pups, $25
ea . Call 614 · 256 -9352 .

'~ -

Call

1 980 Agro Power 11 3hp .
farm tractor. PS, remote
hydro . line, 6 cyl. diesel.
16.9JC34 tires. Used 10

houn . $12,000.00 .
468 · 1610.

'

0212

614 · 388 · 9790 .

286 · 5930 .

6 14 446 7398 .

R IVER S TOWER

l

Services

614A46 · 3249 .

Washer s. dryers . refrigera tor s. ranges Skaggs Ap pliances . Upp er River Rd .
beside Sto ne Crest Motel .

TWIN

[~ ~~

1971 Scotty Camper, hard top, sleep• 8 , self contained.

130 Farmall tractor wRh
cu ltivators, axe . cond. &amp;
tobacco baler Call 446 -

Cot1ee table stereo . stereo.
dinette table . Call614 - 256 -

Apartment m Pomer oy . 3
rooms &amp; bath Ca ll 61 4 ·

8221

l REMEMBER!

2544 ohe• 4PM

63

Pets for Sale

614 ·367 · 7220 .
Knauf1 Firew ood Re duce d
price s thru July 31st . Have
your own season ed wood
this winter . 614 · 256· 6245.

Alli s Chalmers tractor. disc
8t plows. New paint, good
running condition . Call446-

SWA1N
AU C T10N &amp; FURN1TURE

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

AP A RTMENTS . m ob 1l e
h omes . houses . Pt Pl easan t
and Ga ll rpo li s. 614 · 446 ·

11

8t4-992- 8159.

51 Household Goods

Merchandise

3874

992 ·5621

Now open for business.
Mountain State Blo c k , Rt .
33 . New Haven . Complete
masonrv supplies. 4" . 8 "'.
1 2"' block . Delivery service.
Phone day 304 -882 - 2222.
evening 882 · 3239 .

56

614 .446 · 0322
1 &amp; 2 bedroo m furn tshed
apts Call614 992 5 4 3 4 or
992 59 1 4 o r 30 4 · 882

~~f~ ~~~~

814- 256-6472

y1

P

Sentinel

1977 Yellowstone 28 '
Camper $2 ,500. firm . Call

Plasti c c1st ern s s ta te ap proved . plastic septic tanks .
plasti c culvert . metal cul verts . RON EVANS ENTER PRISES . Jackson . Oh 614 -

3159
Fu r nts herl Apt .. 920 4th ,
Gallipo li s
S22 5
Uttl ities
pa1d Ad u lt s. 1 bdr Ca ll
4'16 · 441 6 Afte r 7P M

88 2·2 612 .

67 5 1076

-----·-- - - J A C K SON

Simmons h ide -a -bed sofa.
ex tra good co ndition . An tique . oak flat t o p desk .
36inx60in . Refinished . 304 -

LUMBER · Rough cut, oak ,
poplar, 2x4, 2x6. 2~e8. 1x4,
h6. h8 . length available. 8
ft . through 16 ft . Hogg &amp;
Zuspan . 304 -773 -5554.

6 14 992 · 7479

30 4 675 6615

44

C~ll

The Daily

Pemervy-Middleport, Ohio

0

1979 Skylark travel trajler .
16Y:J: foot, tandem axle . Self
contained. Care free aw n ing. Exc. condition . Call

Farm Equipment

614 · 992 · 5479.

55 Building Supplies

7795

n1shed . a~r cond. m o bile
hu m e. 41 Bu rde tte Addn

2 Ued roo m co m plet ely f u r·

5 piece bedrm suit. cost
5 1200 new will sacrifice for
5600. 1 Norge upright
freezer . S150: 1 Hotpoint
dishwashtu, same as new,
5200; 1 10 in . elect Home·
lite c hainsaw , S35; Call
614 · 985-4322 .

4265

Wareh ouse or stor ero om .
2 5x75 , f o r f u rn i tur e.
lumber . roofi ng . in su lation.
panelin g . equipment or
o th er use Ca ll 1 614 · 486 ·

10 76

15, 1984

DICKTRACY

~Campers

nlca.

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51 Household Goods

tor

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International model 430
baler . Good condition . Call

new $50 . 304· 675· 7141.

M ob ile ho rn e fu r n1s h ed . AC ,

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beaut•ful nverv•ew F as t ers
Trailer Pa rk Cctll 446 · 160 2

afte•

Kirby vacuum c leaner . good
condition. all attachments
940. 1 e~eercise bicycle like

WISC ·

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hp , 304 · 675 2359
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1

Mqtors Homes

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42 Mobile Homes

446 -05 08

I

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Perry 21 ft ., sleep• six. very

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&amp; L1v es1 ock

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ter 5 p m . and weekends

Ca ll

by Larry Wright

246-6121 '

Baseball card to sell or trade .

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yood locat•on. sec dep req

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Friday, June 15, 1984

.

7:30

(I) Here Come the Brides
(]) SportsCenter
(]) Sanford and Son
Cl) 1D (!}) Entertainment
Tonight
CD Wheel of Fortune
0 (I) Wheel of Fortune
(j)
Nightly
Business
Report
(]D News
[IJ
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newahour
fl) Jefferson•
II (1) (]) Major League
Baseball: Cincinnati et
Atlanta

CIJ Maxtrax

(!) Inside the USFL
Cl) Family Feud
C1J love Connection
Cl (I) Family Feud
Cll 0.. Who
(]J Wheel of Fortune
&lt;D People' s Court
• Major League Baaeball :
Pittsburgh et Montreal

e

8;00 (}) MOVIE ' 'Rocky Ill'
(I) MOV1E' 'Marilyn'
()) Timmy and Laaaie
(!) ESPN S-Ial : 1984
U.S. Open Golf Championship - Second Round from ·
Wlng.d
Foot Country
Club, Mamaroneck, NV
Cl)
!D Benson Benson
recei11es an honorary degree
at Pete·1 alfftl mater . (RJ
(Closed C•pttoned)
(!) Mnter Malt and the
Master get involved in an ex tortion scf\ame tha1 pits the
Ma~t« against a fellow Nlnja
warrior . (R) ~ min.)
D Clllll Dultft of Hu..&lt;d
When a hit man breaks out
of priiOn 10 Httle a ICOfe

a

su.,...

8 :30 (])
Book
(]) II a! Webster Webster
1s afra•d when he feels hiS
compos1t1on w1ll reveal that
he has a crush on his
teacher. (A)
(I) ® Wall Street Week
L OUI S Ruk eyser analyzes the
·aos w1th a weekly rev•ew
of econom1c and mvestm ent
matters

9:00

(]) 700 Club

(]) e

G) Blue Thunder An
enraged Chaney. framed by
a nval pilot. 1s pulled off the
Blue Thunder team and IS
sent to patrol the streets . (A)
160 min .)
CD MOVIE : 'Dracula"
g (() ® Dallas With the
fight for the family company
finally reso lved . the Ew1ng s
make fut1lo attempt&amp; t o re pair the w ounds in their lives
caused by the contest. (A)
(60 min.)
(]) Statewide
(ffi Fall &amp; Rise of R. Perrin
9 :30 Cl) Enterprise ' A ll m the
Garno." Tomght"s program
looks at !magic's efforts to
cope wit h the w eakemng video game industry . !A)
(Closed Captioned I
(jj) Fall &amp; Rise of R. Perrin
10:00 (I)
MOVIE :
'National
Lampoon 's Class Reunton'
([) G G2l Matt Houston
Matt Investigates a case
where a former policeman 15
Jailed on murder charges . (A)
' 60 min.) [Closed Captioned\
1!1 (I) (jJ F•lcon Crest T he
G10ber1• family is trauma tiZed by Julia' s deadly bullets and Angela dcc1des to
move m for t he final kill. ~ R)
160 min .l
(J) Evening •t Pops
(fi) Wipi"9 Away Their
Tears
10:30 U (II To Be Announced
CIJ A ...utted Nuts

CIJ My Uttle Morgla
Cll TBS Evening Ne-

(fl) Muterpiece Theatre
"The Good Soldier." An allstar British cast stars in this
adaptation of Ford Mado1t
Ford 's novel that traces the
relationship betwaen two
w ealthy Edwardian couplel .
(R) 12 h" l (Closed Cap1ionedl
•
Independent Network
News
11:00 • Cll Cll • Clli!D • IJt

Nows
(I) MOVIE' 'Fotlclty'

Cll .A.-. Llf&lt;l
(]) BportoC-Of
(I) Newo/8pMo/W-

(I) MOVIE : "Horae Feath ers '
@1 Odd Couple
11 :15 CIJ PKA Full Contact
Karate
11 :30 1J (}] C1J Tonight Show
Cil
MOVIE :
'National
Lampoon's Vacation '
Cl) Best of Groucho
Cil Catlins
Cll 01 (!} U.S. Open To·
n1ght"s progr am features
h1ghl1ghts of the day ·s play
at the 1984 U S. Open Goff
Champ1onsh1ps fr om the
Winged Foot Golf Club. Ma·
maroneck . NY
0 (J) MOVIE : "Salvage '
00 All In the Family
fj) Gunsmoke
12:00 (I) Burns &amp; Allen
([) Catlins
(() WKRP in Cincinnati
® National lampoon
II (lJ Nlghtline

12:30 8

(})

m F•ldav

N;ght

Videos
(Il ·MOVIE : 'The Hustler'
(}) Jack Benny Show
([l Night Tracks
(I) Nlghtline
® MOVIE: 'The Devil's

Eight'

CD (1Z News

e

MOVIE: "Night of the
Cobra Woman '
12 :45 (I) Mazda SportsLook
1 :00 (]) I Married Joan

CIJ Solid Gold
1D (j2J CNN Headline News

1 :45

I])
(I)
(1)
(I)
(])

2 :00

0 Cll News

1 : 15
1 :30

MOVIE : 'The Hunter'
ESPN's Speedweek
love That Bob
Star Search
Inside th'e USFL

(l) Wiping

Awav Their
Tears
CI) News/ Sign Off
2 :1 6 (]) SportsCenter
2 :30 (]) Top Rank Boxing from
Las Vegas . NV Top Rank
Boxmg presents a 12·round
bout featunng Tommy Cordova vs . Freddie Roac h lor
the
ESPN
Lightweight
Champ1onship
Cit CNN Headline News
2:45 Cil MOVIE: 'The Riddle of
the Sandt"
3:00 CIJ MOVIE: 'Ft"t Blood'

1J (1) Dance Fever
'] ) Major League Baseball :
Cincinnati at Atlanta
8 :00 10 CIJ CD Oiff"rent Strokes
K1mberly dec1des that she
would ra ther go to Italy tha n
~ to college 'A)
~
MOVIE :
"Doctor
Detroit '
(]) MOVIE : 'Space Hunter:
Adventures In the Forbid den Zone '
(l) MOVIE: 'Bang! Bangl
You 're Dead "
(]J USFL Football : Bir mingham at Memphis
CIJ Gl ~ T.J . Hooke•
0 {I) (Ril Mama Malone
(ffi Remblin'
fi) Cousteau/ Amazon
Pert 3
8 :30 II CIJ ffi Silver Spoons
RICk y faOi aSileS that he IS
Pres•den t of 1he Un1ted
Stillt es iR)
fi) CIJ IJQJ MOV1E To Be
Announced
(]] Country Express
9 :00 II (]) CD Mama's Family
Vmt gl:!tS a b1g head after
w1nn1ng a talen t competit ion
and Mama ha s to stra ighten
h1m out (R)
(]J li) (j2) love Boat Two
show·biZ vet erans sc heme
10 get a publ1 sher mterested
1n the•r mamo1rs

Wrestling

7 .30

D CIJ ® News

®

6 :30

Great Outdoors Host
J1m Tabor gets outfitted for
while wat er raft 1ng and re ·
catves a lesson 1n nature
draw1ng from art1 st J •m Ar·
no sky !Closed Cap tiOned]
@I) ABC Masters Bowting
Tournament
Cl) MOVIE : ' The Oarto:
Crystal '
(f) MOVIE : 'Catastrophe '

CIJ Oi l~ News

0

1:00

(I) Concem
®C BS News
(fi) Sneak Previews Neal
Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons
take v•ewers to the Dnve·ln
and look at 'lnd1an a Jones
and tho Tomple of Doom· as
well as other Dnve-ln favo• ·
lt 6S
0 '::Il News
IIl Alias Smith and Jones
(]) SponsCenter
Cil Down to Earth
(I) II C1J Hee Haw
Cl) Star Search
([) Dr. Who Movie
® Ufesryles of the Rich
and Famous
(fi) All Creatures Great and
Small

01

~

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g) How the West Was

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~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ,_
b,-HennArr.oldendBobLee
Unscramble lhese tour Jumbles.
one lener to each square , to form
four ordinary words

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M.D

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4 :45

(I) Roll Bagley
C2)
MOVIE:
' N•tional
Lampoon's Clasa Reunion '

SATURDAY

6!16/84

·-- ·-

Cil Maxtru

Cl) The Monroes

(J) Auto Roclnt '114' SCCA
Super VHS Coverage of
this racing event Is presented from Milwaukee. WI
(60 min.)

Ill World Ctt.mplonshlp,

43 Living

paramour

expenses
DOWN
1 Tranquility
%Pooped
3 Wrinkle

6 " The
Anderson
11 Choice
1% Lonely
13 Shrub
14 Burn
15 One in

4 Willow
genus

5Make

the pock
17 Surpass
18 Compass

reading
(abbr.l

19 Had dinner

zo Now II!. I
21 Japanese
river

notched
6 Savor
7 Muslim name
8 Type of
bridge
9 Overfill
10 OITLing loss
16 Greek letter

21 Single

Yesterday"s Answer

:!2 Why
Z3 Room

30 Cautious
31 Compare

Z4 Marshall

:12 llBppening

33 Makes
TV role
one's way
Z5 Tax ; strain
28 Disputant 341 Heavy
reading
Z8 Musical
38 Fish
note

%%Unshorn
sheep
23 Duplicate
26 Gift getter
rl Suffer from
26 Stitch
29 Caesarean
salute
30 Toss
31 Man's
nickname
34 Sea !Fr. )
35 Superlative,
ingrammar
37 Lee of the

1=+-+-

39 Symbolic

I GERME
II I

40 Belgian
painter
41 Correct

a text
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how lo work ll :
AXYDLIIAAXIl
1rr

I RETIGOj (]
I KI
Prlntanswernere ·

YesteJda~ · s

I

LONGFELLOW

One letter si mply ttands for another . In thi s sample A is
used for the three L's, X for tht two O's. ('lf" . Sin~le letters.
apo1trophes, the length and formation of the words a~ all

Now arrange the Cirded lefters to
torm the surprise answer, 11 sug·
gested by the above cartoon .

ITJ ( r 1 X I ]
(An1Wt11'1 lotnorrOW)

EVENING
6 :00

(2 Slender

I Helen 's

arts

(]) 700 Club
4 :30

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

martial

..... ,_.__.....

1

~NM!li'U'

Jumbles NOVEL LINGO SATI RE GRATIS
A-nswer She didn't tru st the guitariSt beca use he was
trying to do tt1 1s-SiRING HER ALONG

hints. Each day the code letters are dllt'erent .

CIIVPTOQUOTES
IWZ

DREU

SRDD

ZT U

Z J
XU

s1c

C J F

HJJM

XU

Z TU

S J F 0 A

S I C

CJ F

CJ F
lWZ .

A B.
W B 1M U
YHienlly'o Cryptoquole ' A FLASH OF COLOR BENEATil
11iE SKY: HATS OFF ! THE ~' LAG IS PASSING BY .
HENRYHOLOOMBBENNETT

�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Pome10y-Middleport,

Ohio

Friday, June IS, 1984

Ex-IU football player's widow files wrongful death suit
INDIANAPOLIS (API- Saying
she was "disillusioned" by police
and federal probes tllat found no
wrongdoing in the police-action
shooting of a former Indiana
University football piaye,, the
player's widow has filed a wrongfUl
death suit against the city of
Bloomington.
The suit, filed Thursday by
C'ynequa Smith of Gary and the
couple's 9-month-old daughter, Ambrosia, in U.S. District Court here,
se&lt;'ks $.1 million in the death of
former TU tackle Denver Smith, 24.
of Dayton. Ohio.
The suit alleges civil rights
violallons. improper use of deadly
force and general negligence by the
city of Bloomington, where four
whit&lt;' policemen shot and kliled
Smith. who was black, Sept. 12 in a
struggle along a city street.
A citizens' advisory group appointed by the Bloomington mayor

and a police review board both
concluded tllat the officers Involved
in the incident acted property under
the ctrcwnstances. The U.S. Justice
Department, which also studied the
case, found no evidence of civil
rights violations.
Investigators never learned of
any explanation for Smith's behavIor, and an autopsy failed to reveal

f Area deaths
Earl Denny Sr.

Earl Denny Sr., 85, Pomeroy.died
Thursday In Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Born Jan. 7, 1899, In Longstreth, he
was the son of the Ia te Alonzo and
Nora Copas Denny.
He was also preceded In death by
his wife, Cora F. Smith Denny, In
1979.
He was a coal miner and a cab
driver.
Surviving are his son and a
daughter-In-law, Earl Jr. and Betty
Lou Denny of Middleport; a
grandson, Ronald Bruce Denny of
Middleport; and a sister, Mrs.
Mildred Tomlinson of Chlllicothe.
FUneral services will be held at
1: ~ p.m. Sunday in Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, with the
Rev. Mark McClung officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery, Middleport. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2-4 and7·9
p.m . Satu rday .

Fair royalty forms
now available
Applicants for the Meigs County
Junior Fair King and Queen contest
may pick up applications at the
Meigs County I::xtension Office
Monday through Friday from 8: ~
a.m.to4 : ~p.m .

Pan iripa nts must be 16 years of
age as of .Jan. 1 of this year, not
married or been ma rried, nor have
oome a child.
Panicipants must also be enrolled in a youth organiza tion
exhibiting a t the fair such as 4-H.
FHA, F'FA. VlCA. Glri or Boy
Scout s.
Applications afl! due at the
ex tmsion office by July 6. inter' 'IEws wili be heldonFriday.Julyl3.
For additional information contact
the Meigs County Extension Office
a 1992-6696.

I

any physical cause.

times.

Pollee said they received a call
tllat Smith was threatening motor·
ists In the street with a tire tool.
When police confronted Smith near
a city maintenance garage, a
struggle during which he ripped a
policeman's gun trom Its holster,
but didn't shoot it, and also grabbed
an officer's nlghtstlck .
Smith continued to struggle as
police tried tocalmhim,andofficers
thentrledtosubdue himbystrlking
him with their nightsticks, police
reported. When he continued to

The suit charges that Smith was
"brutally and savagely beaten" by
the omcers In the Incident and was
subjected to "unlawful selzw'e and
confinement. "

Steven Sharpe, Randall Keller,
Richard Hunter and James Ratliff;
and the Bloomington Board of
Publlc Safety.
The case alsocltes lack of training
by the o!flcers involved In the

Besides the city, the suit also
names as defendants the Blooming·
ton Police Department, o!flcers

Lonery winners

Grange contest
Hemlock Grange will sponsor a
baklngandtotebagcontestatthelr8
p.m. meeting Saturday at the

mo-,. I'\O""i' l he OP' 'O" ro purt:hOij} "'""
at Ieaiie end ol o P••ce to be "EIQOI•Oied
"'''h lhe d~'""' ottecne ·ncepr.on "~'
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preparing wtitten charges. A series of hearings wPre
he ld by the board in mid-September, followed by a
fina l board vote to dismiss Mrs. Plummer.
Since the indictments were handed down. Mrs.
P lummer's defense has won two victories- a change
in judges a nd in the location of the trial.
In March, a motion filed by Hunt sought dismissal
of the theft in offi ce indictment and a change of venue,
citing newspaper coverage of his Mrs. Plummer's
activities Hunt claimed would jeopardize a fair trial
for his client in Gailla County.
Gailla Common Pleas Judge Richard C. Roderick
denied the former claim and said a location change
would be considered when attempts were made to
seat a jury.
Nearly a week later, Mrs. Plummer petitioned

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Roderick to step down from the case, claiming,
among other things , that political pressure would
prevent him from ruling fairly over a trial.
Roderick refused to remove himself from the case,
forcing Ohio Supreme Court Justice Frank Celebrezze to formally request Roderick to step down.
Roder ick bowed to Ceiebwae's request, and Hocklng
County Common Pleas Judge James E. Stilwell was
assigned in Roderick's place.
In May, despite vigorous opposition from Gailla
Prose&lt;'utor Joseph L. Cain, Stilwell recons idered
Hunt' s motion for a change of venue and ordered the
case transferred to Hocklng County.
Both prose&lt;'ution and defense have subpoenaed 60
witnesses each for the trial, which is expected to last
about a week .

Industrial production
up 0.4 percent in May

FCC regi stered. NoiiOJ coin or party line use Backup battery tiJ:tra ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

5

o..+..o•l! •l&gt;'• _ .... 1. O.j.&gt;~.o&gt;'t

" knowingly authorized or employed the authority and
influence of her office" to obtain contracts employing
Jeffrey Plummer as a part-time janitor in 1978 and
1979.
Represented by Columbus attorney Danie l M.
Hunt, Mrs. Plummer pleaded not guilty to both
indicirnenis at an an11ignment.
Mrs. Plummer came under fire when a state
review group's report, released in January 1983.
criticized her operation of the ooard, citing
"extravagance," and recommended her resignation
to resolve "program management problems"
between the board and the former G-J-M Comm unity
Mental Health Center.
Mrs. Plummer refused to resign , and after several
months , the board voted to dismiss her after

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1171 .M

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paymef'l Of'\d 11111 mon111 ' leoH! OO•
men\ Olt" Que 1n OCIIIIOnce l t!'O"' 1uble.::o ro

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----·
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By The Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Jury selection and a visit to
former Community Mental Health facilities in
Jackson are expected to dominate the first day of the
trial of Maxine Plummer Monday in Logan .
The former executive director of the Galiia·
Jackson-Meigs 648 Mental Health Board is charged
with theft In office and for a llegedly using her office to
influence a public contract.
Those charges were leveled against Mrs. Plummer
last December, three months after the 648 board
voted to dismiss her from the position she had held
since 1971.
The grand jury indictment a lleged Mrs. Plummer
authorized pay vouchers to her son, Jeffrey, from
January 19'78 until February 1900 for work "not
performed." The second indictment alleges that she

Reg. 149.95

41

Cot~~ 11t;rym.,.1

tnttS

Middleport Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, June 17, 1984

Cordless Telephone With AM/FM Clock Radio

By RealiStic"'

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1984

unba

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~~~~··~·~-•c~;~~i~~
u..tu'&gt;®tli&lt;O 5focu"ly Oorco&gt;•'

Along the River ............... IH8
Business ........................... A-3
Deaths ............................. A-G
Edllorlals ......................... A·2
Fann ............................... C-8
Sports . "".""" ...... """ " .. C-1·5

Ohio weather:
•
warm arr,
scattered showers
--Page A-4--

Plummer trial set to begin Monday

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James J, Kilpatrick discusses the push for a
national drinking age-Page A-2

v.l. 19 No. 19

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PHOTO EXPRESS

----l-============

and 21 and will cost $40.
The older chlldren'sciass is from
1-4 p.m. June 19,21 and28. The cost is

Go easy on yourseH. Leasing Is a fast
and aflotdable way to drive an aerodynamic Topaz. Hurry In lot details!
a Red Carpet Lease through
Ford Credit
lor qualified
lessees.
Tompikl
Galfii!OIIs
can ona"il•

"1 Hour
Film Processing"

U:pJilghhlcl 19&amp;&amp;

The Junior League Golf League
will meet Monday for its initial
session a t 1 p.m. at theJaymarGcif'
Course.
The program is open to youngs·
ters from nine through 17. Free
golfing instruction will be provided.

Take the path
of lease
resistance.

tournament tab inside today

A UMW official says he welcomes women wanting
to join in running the union-Page D-1

Village Pharmacy

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Golf meeting

Although the classes are sc he·
duied for the office in Gallipolis, if
e noug h c hildren pre-register
classes may be held in Pomeroy ,
said Barbara Kemper of the schwl.
'!bose interested may contact the
business office in Pomeroy or
Gallipolis. Oasses are limited to 10
to 12 students.

It's Coming To

CLEVELAND &lt;API The
winning number drawn Thursday
night In the Ohio Loitery's dally
game, ''TheNumber,"wasOO.
In the "Pick 4" game. played
Monday through Friday, the win-

Computer classes available
GradP school children will have
the opportunity to learn aoout
C'O mputers from the Gallipolis
Business College.
1\vo separa te classes will be held.
for children m grades 1-4 and for
those in grades :i-8.
ThP classes will introduce the
students to the computer and the
baste commanrls. ThP older students will bP taught mathematica l
equations to u.se on I hi&gt; computer.
The class for the primary grades
will be held 9 a.m. -12: ~p.m . June 19

Diles

Incident as a factor in Smith' sdeath.

VE1'ERAN ON THE JOB- Tom Harris, a Vietnam-€ra veteran, is the

t t':=be=

employed In GaDlaCowtty undertheEmergencyVete....,..Job
Act. Aulo Trim Center, GaDlpoils, will provide training lor
11an1s
a two-year period, nine month&lt;; ol which the employer wlli
receive a l!O pereent reimbursement on wages paid tAl Harris.

GALLIPOLIS The first
Vietnam-era vetera n to be employed in Galiia County under :he
Emergency Veterans' Job Trai m ng
Act started work last week.
Tom Harris. who served a, a
Marine from 1960 t hrough 1' JJ&gt;o.
began his new job with Auto Trim
Center in Gallipolis on Monday .
Established in 1~. the act
provides funds for the tra ining of
Korean Conflict a nd Vietnam-era
veterans.
During the training period. normally six to nine months. the
employer receives a 50 percent cash
reimbursement on wages paid to the
e ligible veteran- up to a maximum
of $10.000.
Harris says he was unemployed
for nearly a year prior to his
participation in the veterans' program . He worked as a foreman with
ACF Industries in Huntington,
W.Va ., unttill!llU , when he was laid
off.
He then was employed with the C
&amp; M Machin&lt;' shop in Piketon. but
was injured in an indu strial accident. After nearly a year layoff as a
result of that accident. he moved to
Sarasota, Fla ., where he worked as
a roofer. He retu rned to the GaUia
County area after being laid off from
tllat job.
Bureau of Labor Statis tics prove
that in periods of high unemployment, the jobless rate among
veterans remains far aoove that of
the general popu Ia lion.
During a recession , they tend to be
laid off first ; and, their layoffs
endure longer into the recovery
period.
Those layoffs arc primar ily due to
a lack of seniority. Their years of
active duty delay entry into the
clvlilan job market ands trip them of
the years of seniority gained by their
contemporaries.
The federal program under
Harris is being trained was initiated
out of a concern over that disparity
between veteran and non-veteran
unemployment ra tes.
In his current on-the-job setting.

Harris is tra ining lor work with
upholstery, body repair and au10
trim.
"The job market is pretty tou gh, "
he savs. " it seems to be getting
bettor. but it's still tough.
"Wit h all t he veterans I krowwho
are unPmployed," he adds, "I hope a
lot of rhem take advantage of this
program ... it provides training you
can take l!.ith you anywhere,"
Harris adds.
For an employer to take ad van ·
!age of the funding they need only
have a training program approved
by the Veterans Administration.
Once the program is a pproved the
employer can hire at a ny time.
Because funds are availa ble on a
first -come, first -serve basis, if an
employer anticipates hiring at a
later date, they should apply for
approval as soon as possible.
(Continued on page A-4)

Veterans registered
with local OBES
Gallia fAlllnty
Korean Conflict• ...... ............ 40
Vietnam-era•• ................... 429
Meigs County
Korean Conflict ................ N/ A
Vietnam-era ........ .... ........ . 180
•&amp;-Zl-50 through 1·31·55
"1!-i&gt;-64 through !i-7·75
VETS REGL'lTERED WITif

OBE"l - Acconllng to Tom
mute, veterans employment
representative for the GalliaMeigs area, there were &amp;19
Vielnam-€ra and Korean veterans registered with the Ohio
Bw-eau ol Employment Services
in both counties as of April of this
year. statistics show that neart,y
hall of all vete....,.. registered
"ith the local OBES senoed in the
two combat eras addressed by
the program. 1lle number of
· Korean Conflict veterans regl.,.
tered in Meigs County was
unavailable.

CourL upholds Robinson manslaughter conviction
ByKEVINKEUY
'11me!I-Ser&amp;lnel Stall
GALLIPOLIS- On a split vote,
the Fourth District Courl of Appeals
has upheld a voluntary manslaugh·
ter conviction In Galila County
Common Pleas Courl.
Appeals Judges Homer E . "Pete"
Abele and EarlE. Stephenson voted
to let stand the ronv1ctlon o!Russell
Robinson, Rt. 1, Cheshire. Judge
Lawrence Grey dissented.
The 26-year-old Robinson was
found gullty ot tbe charge, reduced
from an original indictment of
munler, on AprU 8, 1982, following a
three-ilay trial.

He was cllarged In the shooting
death o1 Paul E. Spencer, 24, Rt. 1,
CheiJidte, on Jan. 27, 1982, during an
.argument between themselves at a

mobile horne on Buiaville-Addison
Road.
Robinson was sentenced to six to
25 years in the Mansfield R.eforma ·
tory by Judge Richard C. Roderick .
Galilpo)4 attorney Ronald R.
Calhoun, who represented Robin·
son, cited eight errors "Intentionally
conunltted by the state which had
the cumulative effect of creating an
unfair trial tor the defendant. "
All eight objections raised by
Calhoun were rejected by Abele and
Stephenson, while Grey supported
two of CalhOUn's contentions.
Specifically, the objections were:
- That Robinson's character was
damaged when prosecution witness
Gary Wolfe, an lnvestJgator for the
Meigs OJunty Sherltt's Depart· .
ment, said Robinson was oot a

"' truthful" person.
-Testimony by Clarence Hay·
man, the victim 's stepfather, was
" Irrelevant" and "prejudicial" be·
cause Hayman testified RDbinSOn
once produ~ a handgun to
Hayman and said hP krew how to
use it and "would use It If
necessary."
-Statements from arresting of·
fleers about Robinson confessing to
shooting Spencer when Robinson
had already admitted the deed.
- Not allowing defense counsel to
view a report by Bureau of Criminal
Investigation Agent Herman Henry
that Henry used in testimony.
- Allowing Prosecutor Joseph L.
Cain 1o tell jurors they were "part of
the chain In the prosecution of
cr1m1nals.',

-Presenting voluntary mansia ughter as a lesser c harge fo r the
jury's consideration.
-Failure of the court to instruct
the jury tha t Robinson had a r ight to
aim a handgun a t the victim when
Spencer approached Robinson with
a knife.
-Failure of the court not to find
for Robinson because of the abovementioned errors.
Abele and Stephenson said they
found no prejudicial elements in
either Wolfe's or Hayman's testlm·
ony or in those of the officers who
testified to Robinson's admission of
shooting Spencer. The judges ruled
tllat Henry did not use the repori
during testimony, but used It several
days before offering testimony.
(Continued on page A-4)

By The Associated Press
The Labor Department sa id
inflation held steady in May, with
food costs plunging at the steepest
rate in nearly two years and overall
wholesale prices frozen in place for a
second straight month.
In fact, overall prices actua lly
declined very slightly, officials said.
But the change was too small to
show up in the rounded-off official
figul'f's released in thedepartrnent' s
Producer Price Index for finished
goods.
Slow or no inflation could indicate
an economic slowdown since producers find it difficult to raise prices
when demand for goods slackens,
analysts said.
The Federal Reserve Board
reported that industria l produ ction
rose just 0.4 percent in May, the
smallest gain since last November.
The reports were hailed by the
Reagan administration and private
analysts as signs the recovery was
cooling to a more moderate pace.
Presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes said tha t taken together.
the reports "provide a double shot of
confidence tha t the economy is not
overheating ."
"The PP1 is the temperatur·e
ga uge" for the economy. Dcnald
Ra tajC"Lak, directorofGeorgia Sta te
University's Economic Forecasting
Project, said of the Producer Price
Index . "The repons show the
economy is moving forwa rd but not
overheating ."
Amid

renewed

fears

economic s lowdown,

of

an

the stock

m arket ended its worst W€'€k in

more than four years with a broad
decline that depressed the Dew
Jones industrial average to a
15-month low.
The Dow Jones average of ~

~
~
111984

196!= 100
Seasonally Ad1us!ed F1~ures

SotUCfi ~ ~~ deral Resetvt~ Board

IND liSTRI!I L

PRODLf ·

TION - Production in the
nation 's factories and mines
roSI' just OA percent In Ma)·, the
smallest gain sin{·e No\'ember,

the Federal Reserve Board
reported Friday. Th&lt;• overall
May incrca...w, foUowing a 1.1
percent ad\'an~e in April. was
the smallf&gt;St sinct&gt; th~· 0.2 pen.·pnt
gain of ~"•;O,' t"mber. (AP

Laserphoto ).
in dustrial issues fell10.71 to l.ffiil.!()
on Friday. its lowest close s ince II
finished at ].(81.40 on Feb. 22. 1983.
For the week the widely watched
average was down 44.35 points- its
biggest weekly loss s ince it dropped
58.62 points Oct. 8-12. 1979, when the
Federal Reserve announced a
major shifl in is mon&lt;:'lan policy.
Friday's stock market drop came
as two governmPnt repons indi ca ted' that thP na tion's rf'd ·hol
economy was moUng off.

Drop in corporate tax
confuses state officials
By ROBERT E. Mil J ,ER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP) - It may
take several months for s ta te
officials to learn the cause of an
ex]li!Cted S143.1 million, or 19
percent. drop in corporAte tax
revenues during the fiscal year
ending June~. a state official says.
Deputy Tax Commissioner RI chard Levin and others said Friday
tha t the state's lag behind the
national economic rcrovery is one
factor.
But he also speculated that
companies are using tax credits
they gained from recession-rela ted
losses and said that Ohio's corpora·
lions recently received some adjustments in their tax liabilities.
Both Levin and Budget Director
Cristina Sale said the reasons were
oot clear except that Ohio, which
still has an unemployment rate of
10.2 percent compared with 7.4
percent nationally, simply has not
reaped the advantages of the
national recovery tllat most other
states have.
Levin pointed out that many
companies, which are a llowed to
pay their taxes In three payments-

in January, Mar·ch . and Ma~- - still
are sending in monp~·. ··.Junr i ~ a big

C'O llection mon th." he sa id . adding
that in ali, thrdrparrrncnt procrsscs
about100,00l corporate mums.
He said somf' corpora tion.or;, f'spcclally those in such indu"ries as
auto and steel. may ix' claiming
credits accrued by them in business
losses during the recent r('('('ssion.
"They can carry losses forw ard for
up to five year s." Levin said .
He also sa id that some mmpaniPS
may lx&gt; taking advantag&lt;• of
industrial tax breaks the statp
provides on the purchase of new
equlpment and machinery.
But Douglas Trail, spokesma n for
Ute Ohio Manufacturers Association , said he thinks the drop in
collections can be attributed aimost
entirely to the sluggishness of the
state's economy.
"I think the simple answer is that
they (state officials) just overesti·
mated. The economy in Ohio hasn't
snapped back as we a ll hoped it
would ," he said.
Trail said "I don't mean that as
pessimism. Our peopll' are optimistic . We still expect the times to get
better."

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