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Unemployment rate hits 10.4 percent
By MERRD..L HARTSON
AP Labor Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation's unemployment rate climbed to10.4 percent In October as joblessness among blue-collar and full-time workers
shattered the post-war records set only a month before, the Labor Department said today.
Nearly 300,000 people joined the jobless rolls last
month, swelling the unemployment total to 11.6
mUUon.
Overall, the department reported, seasonally adjusted unemployment rose0.3percentagepolnt, from
September's 10.1 percent to 10.4. Since the economy
fell Into recession In tbe late summer o!l981, some3.7
million people have lost their jobs.
The Bureau of Labor Statist ics' survey of some
60,000 households showed that har<lly a segment of the
population escaped the deteriorating employment
picture.
.
Blue-collar workers, hard-hit by business failures,
plant closings and slumping sales, registered a 15.9
percent unemployment rate, up 0.3 percentage point
from September and the highest since such figures
were first complied in 1948.
Joblessness among full -time workers spurted from
10.1 percent to 10.5 while the rate forpart -tlmeworkers
stood at 10.1, down from 10.5 percent.
"We have never had the rate for full-time workers
exceed that for part-time workers," noted bureau
analyst Deborah Klein. "I think that's clearly a sign of
the recession and Its impact on the durable goods
(manufacturing) sector. "
The jobless rate among construction workers alone
reached 23 percent, a new high.
'
For other population categories, new jobless peaks
were reached for:
-Adult men, 9.8 percent, up from 9.6.
- Adult women, 8.6, up from 8.3.
- Whites, 9.3, up from 9.0.
-Hispanics, 15.2, up from 14.6.
-Married men, 7.6, up from 7.3.
For blacks unemployment held steady at the record
20.2 percent reached In September.
Teenage unemployment rost 0.3 percentage point,
to 24.0 percent, matching previous record highs.
At the White House, spokesman Larry Speakes said
The Daily
Voi.31,No .130
Copy•ightod 1982
President Reagan Is "sympathetic and concerned
about the difficulties of those who are unemployed"
but does not Intend to alter his economic policies.
Speakes said Reagan believes his program of tax
and spending cuts "will bring results In unemployment In the in the near futu re . ... We are confident that
unemployment will begin to come down."
The bureau said that total employment plunged by
630,000In October, to99.1 million. Theproportionofthe
population with jobs - at 56.6 percent last month has declined by almost 2 percentage points since the
recession began. The jump In the overall unemployment rate to 10.4 percent happened even though some
340,000 people entered the labor market In search of
work, the department said.
entinel
2 Sections, 12 Pag es
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 5, 1982
1S Cenh
A Mult imedia Inc . Newspaper
Extra-Value Extravaganza
FALL SALE
Fine Furniture Fashions
*RRbEfJ,lliN
•
Jobless rate sets Ohio record
.
WASHINGTON - The unemployment rate In Ohio soared to 13.8
percent last month, the highest In the42 years that records have been
kept, federal and state officials said today.
The U.S. Department of Labor said the seasonally adjusted rate for
Ohio In October climbed more than one full percentage point after a
slight drop In September.
The September rate was reported at 12.5 percent, compared to 12.7
percent In August.
Ohio, with 707,000 people out of work in October, had the second
largest jobless rate among the 10 largest states reported today.
Michigan's unemployment was 16.1 percent In October, the department said. Pennsylvania had a 12.5 pefcent jobless rate.
Nationally, the unemployment rate climbed from 10.1 percent In
September to 10.4 percent In October.
SOFA-SLEEPERS
The beautiful sofa that gives you night-long sleeping com·
fort, now specially-priced for extra value.
Now's the time to add the extra dimension of a Harlequin sofasleeper to your home. In these beautiful styles you get not only
deep-down daytime seating comfort, but also grace and chann
to enhance any room in your home. A specially-designed
mechanism from Super Sagless means extra ease of operation
as well as full queen-sized sleeping comfort.
Queen-Size Harlequin Reg. $820 SALE $479
Celeste likes teamwork
COLUMBUS- Democratic Gov.-elect Richard Celeste has made
a call on the state's Republican governor and a business group,
paving the way for transition Into the governor's office and help after
he is In office.
·
In his first non-partisan spc ~h Thursday since winning the Nov. 2
election, Celeste referred to a current effort to restructure Ohio's
financially troubled unemployment compensation system.
He noted that representatives of business and labor, along with
lawmakers and government officials, are Involved In joint negotiations for a solution satisfactory to all the parties.
Queen-size Harlequin Reg. $860 SALE $499
Pay raise recommended
COLUMBUS - A top state government official today recommended a 10 percent raise for state employees next year and another
10 percent hike In 1984.
William D. Kelp, director of administrative services under outgoIng Gov. James Rhodes, said theraiseswereneededtokeeppay rates
of government workers In line with those In private lfiaustry. '
Kelp's recommendations came In a report to Ire Siate Employee
Compensation Board.
"In even-numbered years, we are required by statute to compare
state pay rates with the rates paid by private industry and by other
states and to recommend changes that will keep Ohio's pay competitive In the labor market," Keip said.
Queen-Size Harlequin Reg. $860 SALE $499
FLEXSTEEE
ANE UPHOlSTERED FURNITURE
Evel)' eft0f1 nas been made to annc•pate reasonable Oemaod However. we cannel au.ura you that 8\lefY rtem 111
lhts cncutar rs 1n stock and avatlable tor .mmed•ata dehvery
Reta•l pr teea may val)'
Lottery winners
Queen .Size Harlequin Reg. $900 SALE $569
CLEVELAND -The winning number drawn In the Ohio Lottery's
dally game "The Number" was 563. In the "Pick 4" game, played
three times a week, the winning number was 5963.
The lottery reported earnings Thursday of $543,752 from the wagerIng on the daily game. Earnings came on sales of $1,015,360, while
holders of winning tickets are entitled to share $471,(Xl!, lottery officials said.
Sales In the parimutuel "Pick 4" game totaled $ll0,301. Holders of
winning tickets are entitled to 45 percent, or $117,187. Any wlnnlng$1
straight ticket earns $4,896, and any winning $1 boxed ticket earns
$Z74, lottery officials said.
FALL SALE
Extra-Value
Feature:
Charisma®
Accent
Chair
Reg.$150
SALE
$99
842 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
The Forecast For 7a.m. EST
Salurday, November 6
Phone: (614) 446·1405
Rain~
Snowf'::·.;J
eLow
STORE HOURS: Mon. & Fri. 8-8
Tues., Wed. & Sal 8-5
Thurs. 8-12
FALL '82 P
Na110nat Weather Servtee
NOAA. U.S. Dept of Commerce
Fronts; Cold....,. Warm ~ Occluded..,.. Stationary ••
WEATHER FORECAST- The National Wealler (orecaslll clear
•'<les . . cooler weather for most ol the natloofor FrldaJ.Snow Durrles .
areexp8ctedfortheGreakLakesandMldwest.Showersarelorecastlor
the Nonhwest. Southwest will be mild. (AP Laserpllato Map).
Ohio forecastS
,{
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'·
Mostly cloudy and cold tonight. Low Zl-32. Winds westerly around
10 mph. Saturday, moatly sunny and not as cold •.lflah 45-50.
Extended forecast
l
I
I)
READY TO LEAVE- Pictured are nine of 30 area leaders who look
part In a caravan fro!n thePomeroyGunClubtotheRavenswoodBridge
Thursday afternoon. Front row, 1-r, Jack Shatl, Earl Mathews, Joe
Clark, Bill Marlin, Dick Yorde; back, Frank Cleland, Henry Wells, Don
Barrett, and Jim Jennings.
Drive resumes for Rt. 33 expansion
from Five Poinis to Ravenswood bridge
By KATIE CROW
Thirty area community leaders ·
participated In a promotion Thursday to expand U. S. Route 33 from
Five Points to the new bridge In
Ravenswood.
Representatives !rom Athens, Logan, Lancaster, Nelsonville and
Pomeroy, met at the Pomeroy Gun
Club. They later left In a caravan
and drove to the new bridge.
Earl Mathews, president of the
Athens Chamber of Commerce, Informed officials the move to promote U. S. 33 got underway after It
was learned by Kenner Bush, publisher of the Athens Messenger and
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council Highway Committee, the project
was not Included In the highway 1m-
provement program.
Local officials feel the present
Meigs roadway to the bridge near
Racine is not adequate to attract
traffic to 1·77 In the Ravenswood
area and a new highway is needed to
provide a better connection accordIng to Mathews.
Mathews observed Meigs County
could do with some help. The high·
way to the bridge is needed for products, Industry and jobs, and is as
Important for one town as another.
Mathews stated.
Construction oi a U. S. Route 33
corridor road from Rock Springs to
the bridge has been listed as the top
road priority of the Meigs Cour\ty
Regional Planning Commis~lon.
Joe Clark, president of the Pome-
roy Chamber, stated there is a definite economic need !or the road lobe
completed to Ravenswood.
"With existing economic conditions, commerce is upper most In
merchants' minds" Clark stated.
Clark commented he was pleased
to have so many interested persons
from other towns to join in the im·
provemenl of the economic growth
of the Ohio Valley.
Attending from Athens were Mathews, John Gibson. of Gibson Motors; Don Barrett, mayor; Fred
Palmer, owner o!WATH and Mark
Snider, life insurance agent and
chairman of the Athens Chamber.
Nelsonville representatives were
Dick Yorde, Yorde Machine Co ..
and Dick Hubbard, pres ident of the
Peoples Bank; Lancaster: Jack
Shatz. member of the executive
board of the Lancaster Chamber
and Bill Marlin of Anchor Hocking
Corp.
Logan: Dick Gutliph. heado! CIC
and Fred Mong, chamber member:
Racine: Frank Cleland; Pomeroy:
Richard Jones and Henry Wells.
commissioners; Clar k, president of
the Pomeroy Cham ber; Tom Reed.
Dr. Craig Mathews. Bill Quickel.
Paul Barnell. president of Bank
One; David Koblentz. and Pat
O'Brien and James Jennings, of Columbus. consultant for the regional
planning commission.
Following the tour, visitors were
dinner guests of the Pomeroy Gun
Club.
Judge expects ruling to be appealed
By ROCH THORNTON
Alfioclated Press Writer
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) - Opponents of a multlbllllon-doilar
windfall profits tax on oil production
are delighted that a federal judge
declared the tax unconstitutional,
but expect the nillng to be appealed.
"We're ecstatic, of course,"
Texas Assistant Attorney General
Andy Keever said of the decision
here _Thursday by U.S. District
Judge EwlngT. Kerr.
"We are delighted that the district
court had the courage to say the
constitution means what it says."
added Keever, who thinks the ruling
will be appealed and upheld.
Texas was among 30 parties who
Intervened In the case, filed in October 1980. The suit pitted a small
Colorado oil company and three
Wyoming oil royalty owners
against the federal government .
Kerr said he ruled the tax unconstitutional because it exempts new
oil produced above the Arctic Circle
In Alaska, excluding the giant Prudhoe Bay field .
The U.S. Constitution requires all
federal taxes to be uniform through(Continued on page 121
Syracuse Council accepts sewer bids
Syracuse VIllage Council, meetlng In regular session Thursday
night, agreed to accept bids on three
sewer Installations on vtuageowned
property.
The bids must be submitted to
Janice Lawson, clerk, by Nov.12.
George Adkins of General Telephone Co., asked council for an easement to village property to place a
concrete pad, 18 feet by 6 feet, where
electronic equipment may be
placed for use for private lines.
The site will be determined and a
decision wlll be made later In the.
month.
Gene Imboden, fire chief, as ked
councll for approval to send 17 !Iremen to schoolfor recertlfication and
eight new members to basic trainIng. Council approved the request.
Imboden informed council Santa
Claus will be at the fire station on
Dec.19, atl p.m. to pass out treats to
the children. Imboden also stated
the Christmas decorations will be
put up later this month.
On Monday, Nov. 8, from 5:30 to
7:30p.m. atreebloodpressurecllnic
will be held and TB tests will be
given at the municipal building.
Imboden extended his thanks for
the passage of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service levy.
John Bentley, councilman, is to
contact David Bumgardner in regard to winterization of the swimming pool. .
A special meeting of council and
members of the Board of Public Affairs was set for Nov.17, at 7 p.m.
Milton Varian, police chief, extended his appreciation for the fine
behavior of the children of the village during the Halloween season.
On trick or treat night firemen as-
s isted in providing a safe
Halloween.
Mayor Eber Pickens announced
an unclaimed two wheel bicycle is at
the fire station and may be claimed
by proper identification.
Attending were Mayor Pickens,
Janice Lawson. clerk; George Holman, treasurer; Varian, police
chief; Willie Guinther, John Bentley, Jack Williams, Mick Ash. and
Kathryn Crow, council members·
Robert Wingett. grants administr;.
tor; Mr. and Mrs. Sampson Hall and
Bill Cundiff.
Goodyear workers approve new contract
cord Industries.
The agreement was ratilled In
voting held Wednesday and Thursday at the American Legion hall In
Point Pleasant.
H. Freel Tackett, local president,
said tbe agreement covers more
than 400 Goodyear employees.
The agreement became effective
following ratlf!cat!on. Wage Increases of 50 cents per year are llelng paid trom:l'lov .1:
qther agrel!ment Improvements
Include
lin .ln. lncnBsed
., ' vacat!Qn,
.
.
crease In shift differential payments and an additional holiday.
Earlier this year, Goodyear management said It provided "substantially" impr.o ved pens ion,
Insurance, hospitalization and medIcal benefits to employees. Other
Improvements Include Increasing
the amount ol sui'Vivor Income benefits and raising the weekly
amount of accident and sickness
benefits.
Negotiating for•Goodyear In the
· agreement . ~ ' were Larcy
Shepler, In4u~ relatloi!S man-
ager; Eldon Wuerch, productlonsuperlntendent ; Gene Gherke,
merchandise and service manager; Jack Carty, quality control
manager for labora torles and envir.
onmental services; Ot(o Roh·
rbough, maintenance department
foreman; and Mike Harrlngion
'
personnel staff.
1'
...
'
For the union, Tackett\!!ci the negotiating team, ass!st.OO:I>Y,lKenneth
Roush Jr., vice pre5\dl!nt; Jack
Stevens; and Roger BOley, URW
International representative.
�Pomeroy~Middleport,
Friday, November 5, 1982
Commentary
Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Basketball
Pessimistic man________J_am_e_.s_J._K_ilp_a_tr_ic_k
The Daily Sentinel
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A final word from
the 97th Congress
But first, a final word from the 97th Congress.
Actually, there will be a lot of words, a nd virtually no action, before it
expires and the 98th begins at noon on Jan . 3. The House and Senate
reconvene in post-election session on Nov. 29, s upposedly to do what they
didn't get done before the campaign.
That session will have an ample cast oflame ducks. Twenty-four Republican House members and three Democrats were defeated in Tuesday's
elections. Two other Republican incumbents trailed in races so close that it
will take the official vote canvass to certify the outcome.Twosena torswe re
defeated and another three are retiring.
There are another 50 congressmen who won't be around nex t year. JOdue
to primary election defeats, 40 retiring.
Party lines held in the Senate, 54 Republicans. 46 Democrats. The new
House will be two dozen seats more Democratic than the current one.
But th at' s enough to make it worthwhile for the Democrats to wait until
next year on anything big. President Reagan won his major economic
victo;ies on the strength of a coalition of House Republicans and conservative Democrats. That coalition is going to be far more difficult to assemble in
the new Congress. Reagan's men say they can do it. but they, and the
president. say it will take compromise.
Reagan set an ambi tious agenda for the lame-duck session in his nationally televised economic address thr('('weeks before the election . He sa id he
w~nted Congress back at work "as quickly as possible to continue the work
of recovery," on a five-part list of "must" measures.
He said he want s action on a dozen appropriations bills, wh ich were
supposed to have been passed before Oct. l. then threatened to veto them if
they exceed his budget.
There may be action on defense appropriat ions. but not without a fight.
Democratic. leader s. and some Republicans. want increases in defense
spending held below the levels the admin istration seeks.
But the rest of the appropriations are likely to be shelved until next year,
with the government financed by resolution. That' s usually the outcome. It,
too. cou ld produce a partisan fight, unless spending levels are held well
wit hin budget boundaries. It was just such a resolution Reagan vetoed to
send the government into a brief. make-believe shutdown about a year ago.
There's also Social Security. A reform commission. created at Reagan's
call, is to draft its recommendations for change next week. That will be a
topic for lots of conversation in the lame-duck session .
But. like most everything else, it is likely to be a ll talk, no action .
Berry's World
WASHINGTON - During the
many years that Ian Smith was
prime minister of Rhodesia, they
called him "the quiet man." This
was fair enough. The unflappable
Smitty fought the lost cause to the
last Inch, s urrendered calmly to the
lnevitable, a nd retired to the back
benches of Zimbabwe's parliament
without a fuss.
He turned up in Washington the
other day, but not on state business.
He has no state business. He was ln
the United States to visit a son a t
Purdue, to get reacquainted with
three grandchildren, to call on fellow breeders of Brahman cattle In
Texas, and briefly to escape from
the twilight in the land he loves. He
is a bit grayer than I remembered
him from his last trip to the United
Sta tes four years ago- as slim as
gray as the bottom rail In a spilt ·
rail fence - but those remarkable
steel-blue eyes, fighter pilot's eyes,
still flash with the old fire. He remains a quiet man, but he's
changed. Call him a pessimistic
man.
He has reason to be a pessimistic.
Ian Smith became prime mlnlster
of Southern Rhodesia, as It was
then known, ln April of 19&1. He In·
herited a ticking time bomb. All
about him the vestiges of colonialism were disappearing. Federation
with Nyasaland had ended a few
months earlier. He was prime min·
ister of a country in which the 5
percent who were white effectively
ruled the 95 percent who were
black. That condition would not prevail indefinitely. Smith knew It .
Everybody knew it.
But Smith's task, as he perceived
it. was to hold on, yielding a little
her and a little there, steadily lmprovlng the black man's lot, suppressing tribal tensions between
the Matabels and the Mashona, a l·
ways looking to the day when a benevolent klnd of colonialism might
survive. It was not to be. In Nove mber 1965 Smit h declared
Rhodes ia's independence from
Great Britain . The U.N. sanctions
followed . Fifteen yea rs of hardship
and civil war ensued . At last came
elections to a new parliament
under a new constltu tlon. The
Marxist government of Robert Mugabe took over In Apr111980, the old
flag came down and a new flag
went up; Rhodesia became Zlm·
babwe and Salisbury became Harare. Smith found himself head of a
20-member white delegation ln a
parliament ln which "Comrade
Speaker" became the polite form of
parliamentary address.
How are thlngs going? Not well.
Exports of tobacco, chrome, asbestos and certaln agricultural products are reasonably healthy, but
lnfla tlon Is running at 17 percent
and shortages of consumer goods
grow steadily more severe. The
white population, once about
2!ll,OOO, Is down to about 170,000.
Management skills drift away. In
the years of breakaway Independence, despite the sanctions, Smith's
government had put together the
best systems of health and educa-
lion ln southern Africa. Now those
systems decllne.
The constitution that became effective two years ago was ex(iected
to ensure a multiparty democracy.
That prospect fades. Mugabe's
Marxist dream of "sclentiflc socialism" has no pla·c e for an opposition
party. Mugable has cut himself off
entirely from even social disCourse
with either Ian Smith or Joshua
Nkomo, leader of the defeated Matabele. Five years hence - or
sooner - one-party rule Is ln
prospect.
Polltical and tribal tensions Intensify. If driven to the wall, Smith
believes, Nkomo's followers will
fight agaln. They have cached
arms; they control key areas of the
country; they resent their ostracism from a government In which
they were expected to play some
useful and honorable role. Under
Mugabe, illegal arrests and detentions are increasing. Incidents of
torture by government agent shave ·
been documented. The judiciary,
tncludlng both black and white
judges, no longer commands therespect that once was embedded ln
British tradition.
Smith Is out of the picture. Under
the constitution, his rearguard ·
party could he wiped out of existence In 1987. Nine of his white colleagues have defected to Mugabe,
thus defeatlng the purpose for
which the white seats were set
aside In the first place. The state .
controlled newspaper and the state
- owned TV regularly denounce Brttaln, the United States and the
Smith faction.
'
It's not a pleasant life, but Smith
has no thought of leaving It. He Is 63,
too old to cut and run. Next week, ·
after a few days ln London, he will
be returning not to Rhodesia and
not splrltually to Zimbabwe. Where
Is he golng? Smith sm11es a thln
smile. "Home," Is all he says. ·
"C 'mon. mister, gimmie a break! I just ran for
political office. Got any idea how much it
COSTS to run for political office?"
Today in history
,Today Is Friday, Nov. 5, the 300th day ofl982. There are 56 days left In the
year.
·Today's highlight In history:
On Nov. 5, 1600, the so-called "Gunpowder Plot" by Guy Fawkes to blow
up Britain's houses of Parliament was uncovered.
On this date:
·
In 1940, President Franklin Roosevelt ,w as elected to an unprecedented
third term.
.
In 1962, Saudi Arabia severed relations wttq the United Arab Republic.
In 19'10, the Vatican reformed the Roman Catholic mass.
In 1979,Iranlan rnllltants seized the British embassy ln Tehran and U.S.
: embassy hoStages began their second day In captivity.
Ten years ago: The polls predicted a landslide r~lectlon victory for
President Richard Nixon over Democratic challenger George McGovern.
Ftve years ago: The Soviet Union declared a limited amnesty for prison·
ers In ·honor of the OOth anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, but
apparently excluded political dissidents.
ODe year ago: The Canadian government and Its nlne predominantly
English-speaking provinCeS reached agreement .on a new Canadian
me, it's when the leaders of the two
major superpowers start poormouthing their own nuclear weapons capabilities.
We saw a disgusting example of
this last week when Leonid Brezh·
nev stood up in front of 500 of his
marshals and generals and told
them that the United States was
ahead In the arms race. He promised his military leaders he would
do everything to rectify the situation by spending more money on
new weapons.
The Brezhnev revelations came
as a surprise to most Americans,
who had been told by President
Reagan and Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger that the Soviets
were ahead of the United States
when it came to weaponry, and we
were the ones who had to spend the
money to keep up with them.
I was so angry at the Brezhnev
speech that I went to see my disarmament expert, Prof. Heinrich Applebaum of the Armageddon
Institute for Limited Peace.
smoBY
10 PlTC\-t!
__ _ _ _ _ --
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N'.' llangl'rs at EdmOnlon
Satunla,y'1t GIU11611
Ruffalo at HarHord
Mtnnl'solu a! QI,K'b('(•
Ntvo Jrrst~· at [}coJmlt
Vflh('()U\'f'r at Montreal
Phii!Kk>lphla at NY [slanr.P rs
Nw.• York Ran"'-'rs a t Calgar'
T oronto at St . Loul<~
Ptttslx.irgh at La; Anj;.'("IPS
~.,
'!
1bttr.Ml».J '~Gamt'fl
Mllwauke(o 101, Atlanta \00
Chic ago U S, 0('Veland I U
Phoenix 119. Utah JIM
Transactions
San Antoruo l(E, Portland IU1. OT
Los An~k>s 131 , Denvf'r J(JI
Fridi\Y'sGamft<
Phllack>lphla at DPtrolt
C LEVELA ND
M•e
Dallas a t Kansas Clly
San Dlf>KO at Mllwaukl!f'
NI.'W York at Seallk'
San Ammlo at Golden Stair
0 A KLAN D
Boston
Nllllonal Le._ue
CHICAGO a.JBS-Stgned Ferguson Jen·
kJ.ns, ptlclw>r, to a two-~ar contract .
PITTSBURGH PIRA.TES-Sign«l Jason
Thompson, first baseman. to a flve--yt>ar
contract.
BASKEJ'IIALL
NllllonaJ Bukethall AMOCiallon
KANSAS CITY KlNGS-slgned LaSalle
3
6
2 11
AdatM Dlvklon
~
A'S-RrleaSf'd
Mlckry
Klulls.lnflelct>r, unrondltiOnaUy.
'Thompson, ('('flier. to a rour-}"-'ar ron·
tract.
FOOl'8ALL
Unk«< S&ate!l Football LriiiUf'
Patrick Dtvhlon
WLTGFGAPtfl
NY Isles
II :1
I 70 42
XI
Philadelphia 8 6
0 ~7 4<1
16
NYRan~6
7
0 53 !M
12
P\ttsburgh
4 9
2 49 ?.;
10
N(>W Jersey .1 R
4 ~~ 65
10
.1
.1
~2
II
411
47
21
l!l
70
44
BOSTON BREAKERS-Sig11ed Sandro
Phillip Ball'S, ruMin~
Vltlcllo. klck£'1',
b.Jrk.
SOCCER
Nor1h AmericM Soccer Leape
VAN COUVER
WHITECAPS-
Stgn«l
Oob Ll'nardU7.7J . tulltllck . and AJan Tar
lor, forward. to Oll('-}'l'ar contracts.
Sports briefs...
By The Associated Press
the New York Yankees. One of his
earliest memories Is of being
dressed up by his father In a pinstriped Yankee uniform. He can
rattle off Bronx Bomber statistics
till your eyes glaze over.
In his Justice Department office
are two treasured souvenirs of the
Yankees' glory days - a baseball
autographed by Yogi Berra and a
smal wood-and-casty· Iron stadium
seat, its blue palnted peellng, from
the House that Ruth Bullt.
The little seat bears only the
number 15 stenciled on It ln black,
but Its saga Is as compllcated' as
that of Citizen Kane's equally beloved "Rosebud." The point at
Issue Is exactly how the seat got
from the old Yankee Stadium to Gl·
ullanl's Washlngton office.
In his four-page letter to me, Glu-
Han! says he got the llttle seat ln
1973 or 1974 as a gift from a law
student who had worked for him ln
the U.S. Attorney's Office In New
York. He unaccountably left It behind when he came to Washington
for a government stint In 1975. But
two years later, after he had returned to private practice In New
York, another former student assistant lugged the seat uptown to
Glullanl's office at 30 Rockefeller
Plaza. No problem so far.
On Aug. 25, 1981, Giuliani, by now
a Justice Department blgshot,
went to New York City on official
business and dropped by his old offlee with Chief Inspector John
Walsh of the U.S. Marshals Ser·
vice. He "had never seen a blg_law
firm," Giuliani explalned. "Durlng
the tour Walsh saw my former of·
flee and the chair. Mr. Walsh then
offered to brlng It toW ashington for
me. I told hlm not to do so."
But within a week, Walsh did just
that. He claimed he picked the little
seat up ln Giuliani's old Justice Department office, neglectlng to mention that he had to go 68 blocks
uptown to fetch it.
Walsh brought It to Washington,
on government time, as checked
baggage on the Eastern Alrllnes
shuttle, and took It with hlm to the
U.S. Marshalls' headquarters ln
surburban VIrginia. There, on Sept.
3, 1981, the llttie seat was p~ntd
to a grateful Giuliani on an Inspection of the marshals' office by Howard Saflr, a Marshals Service
officiaL
Giuliani and Walsh lnslst that the
delivery of the little seat lnvolved
no government expense.
"Didn't you think that was a
lousy thing Brezhnev told his generals the other day? Can you Imagine
the leader of a superpower claim·
lng his country was No. 2 when It
came to wreaking nuclear havoc?"
Applebaum said, "Brezhnev was
only trying to save his own skln. If
he told the Soviet military they
were No. 1, then that meant he
wasn't going to give them more money for new weapons. He had to
placate them by saying they were
way behlnd us."
I said, "Okay, but why did Weln·
berger come right back and say
Brezhnev was lying and we were a
weak No. 2 In the arms race?"
"Weinberger had to say It or Congress would cut his next defense
budget to ribbons. If Welnberger
said we were No. 1, he wouldn't
have a mllltary leg to stand on
when it came to building an MX
missile system."
"So you think they were both gl~
lng us a snow job?"
"Not necessarily. The fact of the
matter Is that neither superpower
bas any Idea who is No. 1 or No. 2.
When both have the capablllty of
blowing up the world, the question
becomes academic anyway."
"Then why would Brezhnev go to
all the trouble of saying his weapons were technologically
Inferior?"
"Because when you're ln an
arms race, you always have to say
the other guy Is ahead. OtheiWlse
Brezhnev would have a hard time
persuadlng the Soviet people he still
had to buy more guns before they
got any butter."
"So you thlnk It was wise of Reagan and Welnberger to call Brezh·
nev' s bluff by saylng we were the
ones who were playing catch-up?"
"They had no choice. Our nuclear
arsenal is second to none, but just
because we can pulverize them and
they can pulverize us Isn't enough
of a deterrent any more. You have
tb develop a third generation of
weapons to wipe out the other guy's
stuff before he can hit you."
"If we do that first, wlll we be No.
"No, because the Soviets Wtu
probably come up with thler oWn '
system to blow up our stuff before it
hits them. Then we'll both have to
start on the fourth generation of
weapons which can penetrate tlie
other fellow's new defenses. The
thlng you have to understand about
an arms race Is that there Is no fin·
Ish llne."
"Then how can you stop it?"
"There Is only one way. One side
has to declare Its nuclear superiorIty over the other, which It will
never do, because It will be too
much of a threat to the other."
"so what you're saying Is that as
long as both sides think they don't
have the right mix to wage a nuclear war, there Is tess chance of
one of them starting one?"
"That seems to be the case. For
the moment I have no objectlon to
tJie superpowers poor-mouthing
their defense capablllties? I'll start
worrylng when the generals on
either side say to.thelr leaders, 'We
think we've got enough stuff."
1?"
"I would like to express
my appreciationforthe
confidence you have
placed in my reelection ..
Sincerely
~~
Po 1d lor by the M 1ller fo r Conqreu Comm11!U . lo nco1 ter . O
IND1ANS-Namt>d
man ~('(' and slgn«l him to a
rontract . Named Blrdl£> Trblll>tts
spt'ciaJ assstgnlll('r'll seoul.
Wale8Co~erm<J!
2
can remain ln title contenlon with a
victory.
two-~ar
NaUonaJ Hockey Le~
9
6
First, Miami figured to be
aroused anyway slnce the Redsklns
Frrraro
Hockey
Mont real
AP Sports Writer
Herb Deromedl says It may be his
biggest coachlng test, taking his
league-leadlng Central Michigan to
play at Miami Saturday ln the Mid·
American Conference football race.
Second-place Bowllng Green (5-2·
01 a nd Ball State (4-2-01. tied for
third with Ohio University and the
Chippewas, meet ln Bowling Green
with the loser a ll but eliminated
from the race.
Ohio, knocked from the lead by
Central Michigan last week, tries to
rebound at home against Northern
Dllnois (24-01 . Western Mlchigan
2-11 playsatToledo (4-3-0) and Kent
State t0-6-0) visits Eastern Michl·
gan (0-6-01.
Eastern Michigan will be trylng
to avoid Its 28th consecutive defeat,
longest current loslng streak ln the
nation.
"We know what we're golng Into.
We understand the Importance of
the game. It may be the greatest
challenge we've faced slnce I've
been here," said Oeromedl, 40-10-2
the
Saturday
..._ .....,..
WashlnRfon at Boston
NPW J t>rscy a t C\{'l.'{'land
WashinRton
at Miami
_ Thu~'A Spom Tnu~adion;
BAS mAll.
Nl'W York at Portland
~- .
11
N""·
-
uro
1.l
Sm,ylht• Dl\'"'lon
l .a;AnJ.,''lt>s ti ~
.1 ~1
!'II
Va!WOU\'t'l"
li
li
l2 +l
CalJllll)
li ;
2 tl 70
Wtnnlpt'f.:
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1 ~ ~li
Edmonton
~~
ti
:1 Iii bi
Thul"!!da,y '!<i <:wnt."i
PlttsiJJ!llh ~ .
.)f'r.!('y t tk'
VanC'OO\'t'r 4. Phtlack'tpl\la .1
Han lortl ~. Boston '!
J\.1ontrt'al II, Minnl"SSOa J
Ca lgary 7, Wlnn~ ~
-
""
~
~~2
61
'
ln his five seasons with
Chippewas.
By GEORGE STRODE
.1 7
'l .aJ :1!
{ 'wnpheU {'onfermt~·
S!. I AJJ~
l)(>frott
Toronto
-
I
~6:1
fllka~o
W L Pci. GR
~
6
Mlnnrsola
AUanUc DI\IWon
Gokk>n Stat!" at Denv£'r
DOONESBURY
FOOI'BALL
NEW YORK (AP) - The chief
negotiators for both sides ln the National Football League players'
strike conceded that they are still
far apart ln their efforts to end the
4!Hlay-old walkout.
For the second consecutive day
the substantive issues were set
aside whlle negotiators dealt with
matters such as meal money, lnjury
grievances and roster sizes. But
both sides acknowledged that progress was·slow.
Tom Cain defeated Frenchman
Guy Forget 64, G-2. Tom Gullikson
was beaten by American Martln
Davis G-3, 64.
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Toclay's birthdays: Cowboy actor-slnger Roy Rogers Is 70 years old.
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'~'boUght for todaY: "VIrtue debases Itself ln justifying Itself."- Voltaire,
FreJJCh phlloiiOPher (1694-lTIB).
__ j _ _
EASTERN OONFERENCE
Saturday's Gamet~
Poor-nnouthingu__________________A_rt_B~_h_~_w~
If there is anything that upsets
National BMkdbatD 1\!IIIOClaUon
By The AMoc:ill&ed Pn!M
Boston at Philadelphia
Detrol1 at Atlanta
Indiana at Washington
San DICORO a t Chicago
Phoenix at Da4as
Los An~Jes at Utah
~efinories,migr~
__a_in
__e_s_____________I_ac_kA_oo
__er_so_n
WASHINGTON -To judge by
the reaction of a high Justice Department official, I've apparently
stumbled onto the greatest scanda l
since Watergate. It Involves a $26
seat from the right field of the late
Yankee Stadium.
If that seems like small potatoes,
just remember It was "third-rate
burglary" that toppled a president.
But any story that can Incite a
four -page, single-s paced letter
from an associate attorney general
of the United States has to be hot
stuff. Especially since the letter
was in response to initial Inquiries
from my associate Tony Capacclo.
Maybe you can figure out what
was so upsetting about the story.
Here it Is:
Associate Attorney General Rudolph Giuliani is a devoted fan of
Qu<•be<
Bullruo
tlantlrd
The Daily Sentinei-Page-3
Central Michigan
Scoreboard ...
Friday, November 5, 1982
Ohio
·'
.
•
�Page-4
The Daily Sentinel
ards for the contests that were to
follow. as well as attracting a hu ge
following along the way.
Eastern cl aimed the first title 22-0
despite a hard fight by the first -year
Tornadoes.
In the years that have folbwed.
Eastern completely dominated the
action, despite some close calls
throughout th e years. Eastern
claimed nine of the first 10 battles
and holds a whopping 16-4 edge in
the fall classics to this point.
In 1972 Southern started a tear
and won a couple rounds of the battle, beginning a tradition that renewed the spirit of the rivalry.
The Eagles of Coach Arch Rose
have been working extra-hard for
the ever Important clash with Southern. Likewise, co-coaches BUl Porter and Darrell Dugan of Southern
have been preparing their clan for
the o ·oss-country trip to Eastern .
CutTently, Southern ranks eighth
ofienslvely in a contingent of 24
teams In the immediate area.
Nelsonville-York lleads the list with
a J7.7 average. Southern owns a 17.0
average, scoring 143 points in nine
games overall.
Meanwhile. Eastern who has had
ofi>nslve struggles against its stWf
competition, has a 7.laverage. EHS
has scored 64 points In nine games.
In the SVAC Southern has outscored Its foe 62-30, while Eastern's
opposition has outscored the loca ls
26-{;7,
Regardless of statistics or past
performances, odds on any
Eastern-Southern game are always
dead even. This year is no exceptbn. Sou therndoes seem to have the
edge based on this year's performance, however, Eastern has the
tradition of winning the late ~ason
classic on Its side.
Both coaching staffs have said,
"We're looking lor a good, tough,
close and competitive game.'' It
shoukl be quite a thrtller.
Kickoff time is 7:30p.m.
Prevk:ms scores:
v....
said.
"Both Garvey and Upshaw have
attacked this office and the owners
bitterly," he said. "U they Included
me In the negotiat ions, Garvey
would try to play off me.''
Rozelle said he _
understands what
Bowie Kuhn went through as baseball commissioner during last year' s 50-<lay major league strike.
Kuhn, like Rozelle, did not participate in contract talks between the
striking sides.
"I have talked with Bowie about
It ," Rozelle said. "I asked what
could he do. The answer was 'nothing.' Bowie could try to get the
owners to accept some sort of com promise, but he could apply no pressure at all on the players. They
listened to Marvin Miller (head of
the baseball players' union.) "
"My case is no different," Rozelle
said. " My relations with Garvey
may be even more strained than
were Bowie's with Marvin."
Rozelle was successful in negoliating the leSgue's five-year, $2.1
billion television contract.
"Ironically, back In 1977, after we
had signed the player agreement
and the big TV contract, someone
remarked. "What problems can we
have now?' I thought at the time our
only problem was whether we could
learn to Uve with success."
The commissioner has helped
smooth strained relations between
the union and owners In past years.
But he says this year's situation,
with the players and owners entrenched In their positions and the
league on strike, is different and that
his presence would "serve no useful
purpose.''
"In 1970, John Mackey was president of the players and Alan Miller
the executive director, " Rozelle
said. " They carne to my apartment.
We watched the AU -Star game together. Their views were relayed to
the owners and we avoided a serious
stoppage."
" In 1974 and '75, It was tou gher.
Finally, we managed to get Dan
Rooney (owner of the Pittsburgh
Steelers) and DickAnderson, who
was pres ident of the players' group,
together and things were Ironed
out.''
Gophers hope to rebound with win
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio !API- Minnesota Coach Joe Salem is warning
his Gophers Iiley will experience
another thra shing at Ohio Stat e Sat ·
urday if they don't rebou nd
mentally.
The Buckeyes are chasing their
second straight Big Ten football title. They share second place with
Iowa at 4-1 to leading Michil?an's
I
U.Cal bowling
Pomeroy Row lng Lanes
Early Wednesday
Mixed l..eagut'
0ctdl8' 'l7. 19PC!
'
Pts.
Team
No.6
Zlde' s Spa-!
52
.1R
Sh~
Tony'sCarryO ut
38
Eagle;' Club
.16
Jl
Smlth- ~elso n
Motor.-
F'etty T)"P('ServiCf'
21
High S(>rlcs - Ra.v Roach 5ffi . Par r a rson
485: Junior Phelp; SL'l , Hf'l£'11 Phe l~ and Mar·
lm> WllsC11484
High game- Ray Roach 2't1, Par Carson
193: Junior Phelps 222. Carolyn Bachner 187
Te-am seri e; - No. 61 f i
TPam gam e- No. 61E7.
Mixed League
Occdlw26,
19~
Team
Pts.
No. 6
44
Zlde's Spa-t ShqJ
Eagtes' Club
38
32
Smit h- Nelson Motors
31
Tony' sCarryOut
No. 4
30
17
Charhf' Van Mt>!Pr 499. Pat
High Sf'fles Carson :'151. Larry Dugan 4R5, Drbl Hens~·
494 .
High game - Larf)· DJ~tan 179. Par Carson
jl)2; Bob Hen.c;lry 195 De-bbl£> Sayrf' 191 .
Team ser1f!i - Smith Nelson M o to~ 1700.
Team game- No. tiffili
Skylne Bowlllllil: Lanfti
Morning Glorif'S
Od.dler 26, 198Z
T"'m
Two's Company
Custom Prints
The Fatrlc Shop
Stmrmns Olds. Cadillac
andC'hev .
Merrl Amsbary
Halrlleolgnel'
.....50
38
32
3t
26
6-0-0 league record.
The Gophers appear to be going
nowhere. They've lost five straight
games, including a humiliating 3121 setback against Northwestern.
Minnesota is tied for eighth place at
1-5 with Michigan State.
Salem said of the 52-14 hammering from Michigan last week: "It
was the worst- performance I've
ever seen from a Minnesota team.
We didn't hit anybody. Defensively,
we played horribly. They came
right at us. We didn't tackle anybody. We didn't even slow them
down."
Salem is searching lor leadership
for a team that hasn't won in Columbus since 1949.
"We have to realize that ther e are
three more Michigan games left for
us," he said of a schedule that also
includes Michigan State and Wisconsin. " We have to get things together if we hope to change the
situation which has been hanging
over us lor the past live weeks."
Salem knows It will be a large
chore against the Buckeyes, the
winners of three straight games for
a 5-3 overall start. Minnesota Is 3-5
for au games.
"Ohio State has better personnel
than Michigan," he said. "IIeltOhlo
State coming into the year was the
favorite In the Big Ten."
The Buckeyes have the revenge
motive working lor them. They
were upset 35-31 at Minneapolis in
1981. a delea t that cost them the
outright league championship.
YOUR
HEADQUARTERS
FOR WESTERN
MelgsiM
15
Ind. high game- June Lamlrr1 1'Tl; Ann
Grover 112: JuneLamtrrt169
E S
1961
196\
IYGI
t9ffi
19ffi
t967
196l
19ffi
\9ill
1971
22 0
50 20
24
0
22 0
44 14
36 26
26 34
28 8
56 0
51 0
0 6
0 7
7 0
15 6
14 0
191'2
1913
1974
19l>
19m
1971
17 22
6J 0
19~
1919
19lil
1981
1!1&!
'Not in position to help~- Rozelle
NEW YORK (AP) - Commissioner Pete Rozelle. who once
thought the National Football
League's only problem "was
whether we could learn to live with
our success," says he's not in a position to help end the 46-<Jay players '
strike.
Rozelle, who admitted Thursday
that he's receiving increasing pressure to get Involved in strike negotiations, says that "under the
circumstances. my presence would
be Intrusion ."
So far. Rozelle has not taken part
In talks between the players' union
and the NFL Management Council.
He did, however. Initiate a meeting
with union Executive Director Ed
Garvey and President Gene Upshaw in September and also met
with 28 player s at variou s times this
week in his office.
"Garvey said he would like to get
me involved . I asked him, "How do
you mean involved?' He said as a
represent ative of the owners only. I told him Jack Donlan !management's chief negotiator) was
speaking for the owners," Rozelle
Saturday's starting lineup
61
0
49
6
28
?
6
'
E-Ken BrONnlng
E-Derm Jewett
T -Dove.Gaul
T-Lan-yLUe
G-Todd Clerroon
Ull
4
Ull
22\
!Ill
!Ill
190
4
4
3
3
3
C-J im~
!Ill
4
Ull
160
160
140
4
3
c-Tom EvB"ett
The Southeastern Ohio
League Sportswriters and Radio
Broadcasters Association wW
meet at 1 p.m. Sunday at Jolly
Lanes In Jackson IAI select the
1982 All-SEOAL lootbaD team.
The SEOAL Volleyball
coaches have already selected
the 1982 aD-stars, and that wW be
announced Monday, along with
the all-star football team.
4
Ull
4
T-Jim~
!Ill
3
190
lBO
160
160
160
160
3
3
4
~
3
140
3
Galllpolls at Portsmouth
Waverly at Athens
Jackson at Meigs
Ironton at Logan
North Gallla at Kyger Creek
Southwestern at Hannan Trace
Coal Grove at Fairland
Symmes Valley at Rock Hill
Logan at Pt. Pleasant
Wllllamstown at Wahanna.
Saturday's game:
Southern at Eastern.
Pos.-Piayer
E-JasonHtU
E-Paul Harr~
T -Oennl! Teaford
T -Chad Robe' IS
FRIDAY
Wt. l'r.
!'Ill
3
17:1
3
.2«>
210
3
2
1115
3
!'Ill
4
!Ill
3
170
170
1fiO
3
I
H&-Wade Conoolty
165
QB-Tony Rlltle
185
3
3
G-RustyFtagg
G-ljlswa GangulY
C-TrevO" Cardone
FB-Kellh Cook
<r Charlie Bas:o
HB-Greg Nease
(Defense)
Pos.-Player
E-JasonHIII
E~lenn
Young
T-Tommy Cummins
Wt. Yr.
170
3
!Ill
3
!Ill
1115
T-Rusty Flagg
NG-Dennls Teaford
LB-Greg Nease
LB-Tony rume
C-Rldlard Dugan
C-WadeConmUy
S-Brlan Allen
S-Richard Lyons
:.140
4
1fiO
2
3
!Ci
4
!Ill
3
3
4
!Ci
I«J
POMEORY - Christmas
Bazaar, 9:30a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday at Kroger's by Wllllng
Workers Missionary Society of
Syracuse First Church of God.
COLUMBUS - Rio Grande College's Volleyball Redwomen recorded their first victory In 14
decisions here ream tly by defeating
Central State University.
The victory pushed the Redwomen to2-20on the season.
They were scheduled to close out
·the regular season Thursday night
against Cedarvllle and Marshall at
Lyne Center.
RACINE Emergency Squad
will sponsor an auction of new
tools ·and toys beginning at 7:30
p.m. Friday at the fire station;
refreshments.
SATURDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange Saturday at Rock
Springs Grange Hall. Potluck
supper at 7 followed by meeting
at 8 p.m . Gallla County wlll be
· guests. All members are to take
a covered dish.
THANKS
To all of you who supported me in Tuesday's
General Section.
Special thanks to those
who worked so hard to
make my election
possible.
MIDDLEPORT PTO wlllliold
a fall festival from 4: 30 to 6: 30
p.m. Saturday at the elementary
school. There wlll be a sweet
shop, hot dog stand and games.
There wlll be prizes and a special
door prize. Tickets wlll be sold at
the door at 20 ceilts each.
·Your efforts on my behalf are greatly
appreciated.
Sincerely,
POMEROY -
Meigs County
Fish and Game
ctub
wm meet
Saturday
at 6 p.m.
Instead
of 7
p.m. so members may attend the
Southern and Eastern football
game.
MANNING K.
ROUSH
Manning K. Roush
Pd . Pol. Adv.
POMEROY - The annual
Veterans Day dinner of the Feeney - Benne!! Post 128. Amerl r an Legion, will be held Sunday
.11 noon at the hall.
The 40 et 8 roundup train will
be there to pick up dues.
THE MEIGS COUNTY Fox
Chasers will meet Nov.l2, not on
Friday, Nov. 5, due to a bench
show In Malta, Ohio.'
Redwomen win
initial contest
Members who have not paid
thelr dues are urged to do so.
Legion dues are $10. senior auxiliary, $7 and junior auxiliary.
'>4. Mrs. Harold Will collects for
the auxiliary and Lanny Tyree
for the legion, and ei ther can be
contracted to pickup payments.
The dinner is lor auxiliary
members and legionnaires.
PORTLAND PTO, 7 p.m Monday at the school.
POMEROY Chapter SO, Royal
ArchMasonswUI meet ln special
session Monday at7p.m. Work In
most excellent mas ter degree,
Harold Rice, high priest.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
GardenerswUI meet Wednesday
at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Ferman Moore. Mrs. HarryDavis and Mrs. Nina Bland wlll be
co-hostesses. The ceramic project will be completed.
HEATH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, 7: ll p.m . Monday at the church. Billie Jo
Krawsczyn to have the pro-
Powerful AM/FM Stereo Receiver
STA-850 by Realistic"'
MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Chapter 53, Disabled American
Veterans wlll meet Monday at
6:30p.m. at the chapter home on
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
RACINE - Athletic Boosters
rF=a·t~So~u~the~r~n~J~un~to~r~H~tg~h~w~u·t~
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POSTMASTER . Sent.! at.lt.lrcss tu The De:11ly
Sentinel. Ill Court St.. Pomeroy , Ohw 4~769 .
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Friday, 111 Court Slretl. by the Ohiu Valtt·y
Pubh~hin,~t Compttny · MultilnctHa, lne ..
Pmncroy, Ohw 45769, 992-2156. Sc{·ont.ll'l<:~ss
pollllt~e pa1t.l1:1t Pomeroy. Ohiu.
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Mrs. Alma Johnson, Springfield,
has returned to her homeafteratwo
week visit with Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Davis. Enroute home she visited
18
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12.00
1979 MERCURY BOBCAT ............................. s2495
Visitors over the Oct. 30-31 weekend at the home of Reino Lind were
Mr. and Mrs. John Kearns and Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Corkerell, McGuffy.
THE MEIGS County Image
Seekers Camera Club will meet
Monday, Nov. 8, at 7:30p.m. at
the Meigs County Museum. Contest on autumn scenes - no
mounts.
Phone
NOVEMBER VALUES
Nancy Whitteklnd, Daniel and
Shawn, Anita Van Cooney, Lonnie
and Tom, Eric, Mickey, Susan, and
Jackie Goode, Sis Stephen.son,Tommy Johnson, J.D. and Scottie.
r-;:::========================~~Ra~nd~y~S~ni~d~e::r.-_!_Al~be~rt~a~R~ic:!h~a~rd~.-~M~is~s·~Do~ro~th~y~Le~lfh~e~it~a~t~O~ri~e~nt~--
SYRACUSE- The Royalrnen
Quartet of Charleston, W. Va.
will be conducting the 10:30 a.m.
service at Syracuse Church of
the Nazarene Sunday. The public is Invited to attend the worship
I~ song service by Rev. James B.
Kittle, pastor.
The Daily Sentinel
j USPS 14>9601
A Dlvl•lon of MuiUmtdbl, lnr .
A farewell dinner was held recently at the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene lor the Rev. and Mrs. Virgil Byrer and children, Richard and
Sherrell.
The family has moved to Danville, N.Y. to start a new Nazarene
church there.
Attendlngthecovereddlshdlnner
werethe'lev.andMrs.CiydeHendei-son, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Walburn, Dorothy Bentz, Nancy Aelker
and Carla, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Neutzllng and chldren, Melissa. David
and Andrea, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Colmer and Billy, Jimmy Snider.
gram; Beulah McComas the
pledge service. Everyone to take
.canned food for the hungry.
RUTLAND- Skating will resume Sunday at Rutland Civic
Center. Hours will be from 2 to4
p.m . Skaters are to take their
own skates; admission is $2
adults, $1 children.
~31
by Candidate
meet Monday at 7:30p.m. Everyone welcome. Parents of basketball players are urged to
attend. Calendar money Is to be
turned ln .
SUNDAY
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
Trustees will meet Friday at the
home of Wanda Eblin, clerk,
Laurel Cliff Road. All meetings
are open to the public.
3
3
185
MIDDLEPORT - A gospel
sing featuring the Royalrnen
Quartet of Charleston, W. Va.
wlll be held at 7 p.m. Saturday at
the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene. Rev. Jim Broome.
pastor, inv ites the public.
RUTLAND - 'County bluegrass jamboree featuring the
West Virginia Mountain Boys at
Rutland Civic Center at 8 p.m.
Friday. Adults, $2, chlldrne, $1.
2
County correspondence
Calendar
POMEROY - Congregation
and Crlends of Grace Episcopal
Church are Invited to attend a 9
a.m. coffee hour Frklay at the
Episcopal Parish House to meet
Rev. Lee Mille -.
r~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
TIRE
GRAVELY
SVSTEIVI
3
3
4
Tonight's games
GENERAL
~THE
Carter
T-Tom E.\'erett
NG-ToO:! Clemsoo
LB-Cilfl Grt!ltth
LB-Troy Guthrie
DB-Ken Browning
DB-Oeron Jewen
HB-Davld Hawthorne
MB-Mark Jores
Check Our
Prices Before
You Buy.
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
Phone 992-2975
FALL & WINTER HOURS
CLOSED MONDAY
TUES. thru FRI. 9 to 5
SAT. 9 to 1
Wl Yr.
225
WINTER
IS ON
ITS WAY.
GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES & SERVICE
3
E-DaveGaul
E-Mark Holter
Sobriety pulled
this athlete through
Minnesota quarterback Mike Hohensee threw lor live touchdowns
MINNEAPOLIS !API - John
and 444 yards and returns to test the
Seymour seem s like just another
Ohio State defense. But Hohensee
high school athlete, until he starts
makes no predictions of a repeat
telling how he spent much of his
upset, saying. " We're not expecting
teen-age years.
any miracles . We've lost a lot of
"Pot was the main thing, but I
morale.''
Hohensee needs 208 yards run- !tied speed, cocaine and alcohol, of
course," said the 17-year-old quarning or passing Saturday to break
.
terback lor St. Paul Academy.
Tony Dungy's school recordol4,724
"About every weekend, I'd get
total career yards.
smashed. I was running a double life
Injuries have decimated Minneof having a sincere attitude and a
sota, once considered a Big Ten conscrew-the-world attitude."
tender. Thirty-flveGopher regulars
After years of being stoned or
have been hurl this fall . Only 10 of
drunk
most of the time, and finally
the 22 starters In the opener are still
being kicked out of school in March
around.
1981, Seymour decided to get
Minnesota lost four more regustraight.
lars against Michigan, right tackle
Steve Bisch, tight ~nd Mike Curtis,
fullback Manny Henry and linebacker Peter Najarian.
" ll they Uelt aU together, they can
be a good team, evidenced by their
first three victories," Ohio State
Coach Earle Bruce said of the
Gophers. " They look very Impressive In the films. They've had one or
two players break down on execution and lt's,caused disaster."
3
(DeferBe)
P08.-Piayer
TEAM
Nor1h GaUra
To name dream team
Carter
FB-Mark Holter
RB-TroyGuthrie
RB-CUft Gn!!ll h
QB-Mlke Jones
SVACgrid
standings
ALL GAMES
W L T P Qf
8 I 0 241 61
~ uthern
4 5 0 153131
Eastern
35!&lal6
Kyger Creek
3 5 I 56 141
Hannan Tra('('
2 5 2 f i l 169
Southwestern
1 80!1!228
SVA.f. ONLY
TEAM
W L T
OP
North Galla
4 0 0 P
157 24
Kyger Creek
3 0 t 36 12
Southern
2 2 0 62 30
Eastern
I 2 1 26 67
Hannan 1)-aC(>
I 3 0 24 118
Southwestern
0 4 0 :w 118
TOTALS
II II 2 3311 339
WL Yr.
Pos. -~er
The Daily Sentinei-Pa~S
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
I
Southern, Eastern in 21st grid clash
By SCOTT WOLFE
While many teams wind down the
season this weekend with a championship game at stake, two rivals,
Southern and Eastern, will be locking horns In a more precarbus bat tle Saturday at Eastern High
School.
This con tes~ dubbed by many local diehard grid fans as "The Battle
of Meigs County," will be t he 1as t
bout In a season-longwar that began
about 10 weeks ago.
Southern has climbed from the
cellar r:f. past seasons to a 4-5record.
while gaining a reputatbn of being
"tough competitors" along the way.
After reigning as kings of the SVAC,
Eastern has tumbled to a 3-5-1
ledger this faiL
This year' s bout will be the 21st of
the Eastern-Sout hern grid rivalry
that first began back In the fall of
1962. That first game set high stand-
Friday, November 5, 1982
Friday, No_,g., 5, 1982
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Save
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For Most American
Cars. Trucks Slightly
TO THE CITIZENS OF MEIGS COUNTY
...
,
25 LB. NUGGETS .................... ~3.80
............... SJ.20
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Mulb!lny Avt.
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HEARTY Ia the dog food lor
MEIGS COUNTY EM~RGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES
VOLUNTEER SQUADS OF
_
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY-RACINE-RUTlAND
SYRACUSE-TUPPERS PlAINS
..
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and meaty aroma-pi_HEARTY
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food at your feed dealer! No
smar11arm parlnM.
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Higher.
YOUR SUPPORT OF THE EMS LEVY
RENEWAL IS GREATLY APPRECIATED
Treat him like a good hand
· and feed him a nourishing
meal. HEARTY dog food Is a
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farm and kennel dogs _who
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�Pag&-6-The Daily Sentinel
Friday, November 5, 1982
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
•
Extension office's Christmas workshop features style, var1ety
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DaUy Senthtel StaH
Whether you were looking for un·
usual decoratin g ideas, handcrafted gift s for Christmas or
effe ctive ways to stem the appetit e
during the holiday seaso n. the annual Christmas works hop of the
M eigs Count y Extension Office had
It all.
Held a t the Lutheran Church fellowship r oom. the wo rkshop was de
signed to inspire the imagination
and increase th(' m otiva ti on of
homemakers as they gear up for the
fetlve days ahea d.
Ther e were dem onstra tion s and
displays at th e aU-day affair which
featured a luncheon of favorite holiday dishes brought by the women
attending.
The flex ibility of fabrics for cr eative pur suit s was fea tu red In several
of the displ ays.
Ann Lambert of the Fabric Shop
showed a vario ty of decorations as
well as gift item sand c iothln gwhile
Shirley Huston of Syracuse displayed a dozen or so co lorfu I and
novel wall hangings framed in
hoops, as well as several ca ndlewlc king des tgns .
There was a varied display of
".\
•
.
;,.
.
'i'
~~
handmade gift it em s including ceramics and novelty thin gs by the
Senior Citizens Center and Vicki
Ault w ho re(('n Uy opened The Wa termelon Patch , exhibited som e of
her cross stit ch crea l b ns.
NuD·ition and food displa ys we r~
on exhibit by I he Extension Depart ·
m ent and the Ohio Department of
Health who cooper ated w ith M rs.
Dale Stoll. ex tensi:Jn agent . in the
wo rk shop.
Food Habi ts
Christine Goodall o f 1he Ohio De
partment of Hea lth discussed know ing personal food habits and then
suggested ways to modify ea ting behavior. She u rged th at short -term
rea listic goals be set, such as a loss
of one to two pound s each week, and
suggested changing one habit at a
time.
M s. Gooda ll urged including
breakfast and ea tin g m eals a t the
regular times. but taking small
bites. chewing foo d thoroughly, pu I·
ting the fork dow n between bites,
and dr inking a glass of water before
mea ls.
Sm all er plates were also recommended by th e dietician w ho suggested serv in g foo d from the pan
rather than family sty le , and resist-
'"-·. .~h
ing second servings. She advised
tha t to lose a pound a week , a person
must decrease their food Intake
each day by 500 ca lories. Decr eas·
ing snacks and sweets, limiting co nsumption of fried foods, and
reducing portion sizes were among
her suggestions forgettin g shape for
the holidays.
Seasonings of the Season
A taste tes t was in cluded as a part
of the program on herbs and spices
presented by Mrs. Stoll .
Reduclngsalt (sodium I as a mea·
sure toward bett er health was suggested by the ex tension agent who
proposed herbs and spices as a more
intelligent choice.
Uses for parsley, basil, dlll, bay
leaf, nutmeg, cracked pepper,
chives, oregano, thym e, cinnamon
were discussed by Mrs. Stoll who
then shared a var iety ofreclpeswlth
her listeners.
Using foods as Christmas gifts
was proposed as an eco nomical and
personal way of remember ing others. Combinatbns of several herbs
were given to those att ending the
holiday work shop.
A r ecipe of particular Interest to
the group attending was one for
baked sliced potatoes. Mrs. Stoll
said that the potatoes should be
scrubbed and dried, and then cut In
one-half Inch vertical slices being
carefu l not tocu !through the bottom
of the potato. then thin slicesafonlon
should be placed between each
slice. and the entire thing brushed
with butter and sprinkled with an
herb blend. The potatoes should
then be wrapped In aluminum loll
and baked In the oven or on a
wood burner.
.. Adding a smidgin of herbs to ve-.
getables or preparing m arinated
vegetables give a special twist to a
meal," concluded Mrs. Stoll.
Decorations From Nalure
Cindy Oliveri, the Athens County
4-H agent, derronstrated and displayed a variety of holiday decorations, m ade at a minimum cos t
using many things from nature.
She showed how to make grapev ine wreaths which can be decorated for any season, cor nhusk
wreaths, and pine cone decorations.
The use of rlbbo nand dried flowers,
along with ornaments, was shown
by Mrs. Oliveri, who also gave tips
and directions on making teasel angels, trees and animals. She also
demonstra ted how to use microscopic slides for glass etchings and
showed the Cherokee leaf printing
technique.
Use It Or Lose It
Monadlne Mattey, the extension
agent from Plke County, gave a
hurrorous talk on getting In shape
through losing weight. She emphasIzed the Importance of dletandexerctse together and commented on the
health hazardsofbelngoverwelght.
Assisted by Bernadette Anderson, Ms. Mattey gave the tests for
weight - " the pinch an Inch" way,
personal assessment before a mlr-.
ror, and the use of ruler to see where
It touches between the breast bone
~
and the hips.
With the phUosophy that one j'.9
never too old to start, Ms. Matt
conducted a group exercise. S
suggested 1!0 minutes at least thr~~
tim es a week preferably to mus~
and advised that heavy exercising
be preceded by warm-ups.
A second workshq:J was announced by Mrs. Stoll for Tuesday
at the Meigs County Extension Offlee, I to 3:30p.m. and 7to9:30p.m.
Registration Is required since the
workshop wUI be limited to 25.
Theme wut be "Sewing and Decorating for the Holiday Home."
~
Frida/, November 5, 1982
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
> fXrERIENCE l11f JOY Of RELIGION
This Message and Church Directory ~l)jrJnsortJ.d
RIGGS USm CARS, INC. " MEIGS TIRE
\ \ CENTER, INC.
A \\'j J~hnPhF .. 992·2101
Fultz, Mgr .
Ray Riggs
Ut
"
Ph . 915-4100
Chester
MIDDLEPORT
BOOK SlORE
Church Oil ice Supplies
Monday
lsa1ah
Pomeroy
·SWISHER & LOHSE
~~~~~!
Prescriptions
'!il
Pomeroy
992 -2955
Kingsbury Home Sales
IUW YORK
CLOTHING tllUSE :l~'j &Setvice ,;;..,:;;.:;::;.;a;;..,
KERMIT'S KORNER ~' f
Modular
Pomeroy,
V
1100 E. Main
· The
Finest
Sectional
Homes
Ohio
RIDENOUR
URNI~!er:!ROWARl
Homelite Saws
26. 1- 11
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
Tue!oday
lsa1ah
61 ·\ -6
116 S. Seco nd
Pomer oy
992 -3325
Wednesday
Luke
,10·1·9
WAID CROSS
SONS SlORE
Complete
Automot1v e
serv1ce
Locust & Beech St
992·9921 Middleport
Fnday
Romans
14.19-23
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E.
HOOPS, HOOPS, HOOPS - Carol Cundiff and Regina Swift look over
the wall hanging display of Mrs. Shirley HustonaUheChmtmasworkshop.
!loops in a variety of sizes and shapes were used by Mrs. Husloo for
displaying her needlecraft gift Items.
NATURAL DECORATIONS- Many oft he best things in life are free,
according to Cindl OHveri, AthensCounty-1-H agent. She displayed a variety
of holiday decorations made from things of nature at the Christmas workshop Tuesday, and demonstrated how to do Cberokee lea f printing, make
Swedl~ h
wood and (' uri ornamPnts. and {'reate grapevine ru1d sumac
wreaths.
OVERWEIGHT? - U you can pinch an inch or a yardstick touches
some place between your breast bone and your pelvic bone, then you're
overweight. Monadlne Maltey, Pike County extension agent, uses the
yardstick to determine B ernadette Anderson's weight slluation here. The
hazards of being overweight and how to trlnn down with diet and exercise
were discussed by Ms. Malley.
BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER
Senior citizen scenes
Holiday preparations made at Meigs Senior Center
As we approac h the holiday seaso n. it is time to make preparation s
to all end act !vii ies scheduled all he
Senior Citizen. Th e Thanksgiving
dinner and quart erly birthday party
will be on Tuesday , Nov. 23.
Preceding the dinner. the Senior
Chorus wil l ha ve a Thanksgi v ing
Program beginnin g at 11: 15 a .m.
Following Thanksgi v ing dinner,
served at noon. st:nior c it izens who
celebra te bir thdays in October, No-
vember , and Decem ber, will be honored. Please cal l the center at
992 -2161 to reserve a m eal for the
Thanksgi v ing dinner no later than
Thursday , Nov. 18.
Several speakers have been scheduled for November as part of t he
Retired Senior Volunteer Program
Fixed Income Consumer Cou nseling proj ect. Thursda y , Nov. II, at
12: 45 p.m ., Jam es L . Schmoll, O.D .,
wi ll speak on v ision care and how
Meigs County happenings
aging affects you r eyes and will
answer any quest ions you may have
concerning vision. Thursday, Nov.
18, Attorney Jennifer Sheets, will
speak at 11 a. m . Mrs. Sheets' presentation will be on the need for a will
and how a will is probated . Tuesday,
Nov. 30, at II a.m. Ron Ash, m anager of the Pomeroy Ohio Power
Company Office will show a film
"Weat herize Your Home" and give
tips on how to save energy . The
blood pressure clinic will be held on
Tuesday, Nov. 16, 'from JO a. m . to
noon .
Mark your calendar for the
Christmas Bazaar on Dec. 2 and 3
from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. each
day . There will be a selection of
handmade crafts, featuring tree
decorations, Christmas Items,
aprons, knitted and crocheted articles to nam e a few. The center will
be serving lunch both days from
11:30a.m . tol:30p.m. Anyone havIng craft itemsforsaleiswelcometo
have their crafts displayed at the
bazaar. Have all items in the center
by Monday, Nov. 29, so everything
can be priced, andreadyfordisplay.
The schedule for coupon pickup
for participants In the Wl C program
of the Meigs County Department of
Health for November wa s announced today.
FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
YOU ARE INVITED
To See and Hear America's Leading
Christian Authority on the Family in a
Challenging Film Series
Those who ca nnot make the appointed day are to pick up coupons
at the health department from9toll
a.m. only on Dec. 3.
l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Preaching 9:JJ a .m ., first and second Sundays of each month; third and foufth Sundays
each rronth, worship services at 7:3:1 p.m .
Wednesday i:!venJngs at 7: JJp.m .. Prayer and
Bible SuJdy.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. David
and Children.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
SIXTH AND PALMER
Rev. Mark McClung, Pastor
MIDDLEPORT
Mann, mJnlster; William Sllouffer, Sunday
School supt. Sunday School, 9:lla.m .: Morn~~ worship 10:30 .m.
FIRST SOllfHERN BAPTIST, Pomeroy
Pike. David Hunt. pastor: RogerThrner, Sunday School Supertntend(>flt. Sunday school,
9: ]) a .m .; morning worship. 10::1); evening
worship, 7: l) p.m . Mldweel prayer meeting,
7::11 p.m.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH, J)(>x .
\('r Rd .. Langsville. Rev. A. A. Hughes. Pas tor. Sunday School 10 a.m . SefV1ces on
Tuesday. Thursday and Sunday 7: .]) p.m .
FAJTil TABERNACLE CHURCH. Ball•y
Run Road, Rev. Emmett RaWson, pastor.
Handley Dunn. supt. Sunday school. 10 a.m.
Sunday evening service 7::r! p.m.; Bible
teaching, 7:JJ p.m . Thursday.
Carefree-stainless that' s specially sized for a
child 's small hand s! The flatware shown is
available in 5 practical set combinations.
Choose from 2 patterns.
SYRACUSE MISSION. Cllorry St., Syra·
cuse. Services, 10 a .m . Sunday, Evening ser vices, Sunday and Wednesday, 7 p.m.
TREASURED GIFTS FOR CHILDREN
Community• Stainless by Oneida
American Made Tableware
MIDDLEPRaf CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Manley, pastor: Mrs. Russell Young, Sunday School Supt .
Sunday School 9: l'.l a.m. Evening worship
7: ll p.m . Wednesday prayer meeting 7:30
p.m . •
How to keep up
s tudy, Wednesday, 7:llp.m .; Sunday School,
10 a.m . Sunday nl ~ ht servlcC'. 7:30p. m .
with the Joneses
Harrisonville Road . Ea rl Fie lds. pastor.
Henry Eblln , Jr .. Sunday School Supt . Sunday
School 9:30a .m .: Momln~ Worship 11 a .m .;
Sunday evening service, 7::ll p.m . ; Prayt>r
Meeting, Thursday, 7: l) p.m .
Do you keep your nose to the grrndstone trymg to g1ve you1lam11y
everything the Joneses have?
Then observe these ne1ghbors carefully They probably have some ·
th1ng that escapes your notice
They have fam•ty. lnends ana matena! possess1ons But they have
somethmg more
Not1ce that the Joneses always all end the se1v1ces olthe11 Crtur ch
They have tound that w1t hout sp1r1tual gu•Ciance the1r othel 1reasures
are worthless AM they have C11scovered new soluiiOns to theu every
day problems They v1ew tile world hom a ddlerent slant lOT they have
lounelthe fa1th to take hie as 1t comes along
II you really want to keep up wrth the Joneses follow the1r !eaa
Frnd and cul\1vate the iatth !hey ·ve tound Go to your Church .or
Synagogue thiS week
and every week
and seek lull1llment to r
your hie
C"'"''-Q'" l9fl ;> ~~, ,.,, A o ,~~ . ,.rq S~ "'..-r
~> o u.o. eo~ • C "•·• ~ u ~ .,,,., ~"Q . ,.,, l :-q()(;
ship 7 p.m. Wed""""'Y Bible Study and youth
group rneoUngs, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE; Rev. -Jim Broome. pastor; BIUWhlte,
SUnday school s upt. Sunday school, 9: lJ a.m.;
morning worship, 10: ll a.m.; Sunday l"Vengellsttc 11'Jf'et1ng, 7 p.m . Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 p.m .
2. Feeding Spoon (rtem C)
3. 3-Pc. Baby Set (~ems A, B, C)
4. 3-Pc. Quid Set frtems D, E, f)
ONLY
$795
5. 6-Pc. Progress Set
Plus Tax
NOW BOOKING RESERVATIONS FOR HOLIDAY
DINNERS AND PARTIES.
MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, OH.
Ph. 992-3629
,,
·
(items A, B, C, D, E, f)
Child's Cup with snap-on sipper top
Save
our RC, .
RC-100, Nehi, Upper 10, Diet Rite•.
Dad's Root Beer
and Decaffeinated RC boHie
caps f.or charity,
''r'•
41Ttademarlts ti
One~a
~~
'Q1Jenlen .
212 1. MAin, Pomeroy
ltd.
REEDSVILLE -
Church School, 9:30
a.m.; Worship 11 a.m.
SOt.ml BETI!EL -
Church School. 9
a .m .; Worship 10 a .m .; Christian Endeavor.
Youth Fellowship, 4 p.m .; Bible Study, Wednesday, 7: J) p.m .
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL - Church
School, 9a .m .; Worship, lOa .m. ; Bible Study.
Thesday, 7:30p.m.; UMW. Third Thesday,
7: ll p.m .; Communion first Sunday.
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. Stanley W. Merrlfteld
Rev. Richard R<llhernlch
Rev. Robert E. RotiMOn
Rev. Robert Rider, Jr.
Rev. ~bert McGee
ASBURY jSyracuse)- Worship. lOa .m .:
Church School, 10 a .m .; C har~e BiblE' Snxly,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m .; UMW, first Thesday,
7: :ll p.m .; Choir Rehearsal, Wednesday, 6:45
p.m.; UMW, fourth Sunday, 6: 30p.m .
ENTERPRISE -Worship 9 a.m.; Churc h
School. 10 a.m .: Bible Study, Tuesday. 7:30
p.m .; UMW. First Monday, 7:30 p.m .;
UMYF, ('Very other Sunday, 6 p.m . Choir rehearsal, 6: ll p.m . Wednesday.
FLA1WOODS- Church School, 10 a .m.;
Worship, 1 a.m .; Bible Study, Thursday , 7
p.m .; UMYF, Sunday. 6 p.m.
FOREST RUN- Worship. 9 a.m.; Church
School, 10 a .m .; Choir Practice, Tuesday,
6::ll p.m .: UMW. first Tuesday, 7:ll p.m .
HEATH tMiddleporiJ - Oturch School.
9: :ll a.m .; ·worship, 10: lJ a .m .; Bible Study,
1\iesday, 10 a .m ; UMW. second Monday,
· 7:.]) p.m .; UMM, third Monday, 7:30p.m .
MINERSVILLE - Worship Sevke. 10
a.m. ; Church School, 11 a.m.: UMW, third
Wednesday, 1 p .m. ; Choir practice, Monday,
7: :ll p.m .
PEARL CHAPEl - Worship SE'TV1ce. to
a .m .; Church School, 11 a.m .; UMW, S('('Ond
Tuesday. 7: lJ p.m .: UMYF last Thesday,
7::11 p.m.
POMEROY - Church School, 9:15a.m .;
Worship service. 10:30 a.m.; Chotr rehearsal,
Wednesday, 7:l'.l p.m.; UMW, second Thesday, 7: lJ p.m . ; UMW, last Sunday. 7 a.m .:
UMYF. Sunday, 6 p.m .
ROCK SPRINGS - Church School, 9: 15
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mkldi"'>>rt,5th and
Roll
Plus Non-Alcoholic Beverage
ALFRED- Church School9: lla.m .; Worship, 11 a .m .: UMYF, 6:30 p.m .; UMW,
THird TUesday. 7: lJ p.m . Community first
Sunday.
CHESTER - Worship 9 a. m .: Church
School tO a .m .; Bible Study. Thursday, 7 p.m .
UMW. tlrsl Thursday, 1 p.m .; Communion
fir st Sunday .
JOPPA - Worship, 9: 30 a .m .: Church
School, IO: ll a.m . Bible Study, Wednesday ,
7:.]) p.m .
LONG BOTTOM - Church School. 9:30
a.m .; Worship, 7 p.m .; Bible Study , Wednesday. 7:30p.m .; UMYF, Wednesday, 6 p.m .;
Communion First Sunday.
a .m .; Worshlp.10a.m. ; Bible Study, Wednesday, 7:00p.m.; UMYF ISenlorsl. Sunday, 6
p.m .; tJunlorsl, ~ry other Sunday, 6 p.m .
Run.AND - Church School. 9:45 a.m.;
Worship. 11 a.m.; UMW !Evening Ctrclel,
second Wednesday, 7:30p.m .; UMW. second
Thursday. 1 p.m
Maln, Bob Melton. minister, Scott Saltsman,
·associate minister. Bible School, 9:ll a.m.:
momlng worship, 10:30 a.m.; evening wor-
1. 2-Pc. Baby Set (rtems A,B)
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST.
Com er Ash and Plum. Leslie Hayman. pastor. Sunday school10 a .m. ; Morning Worship,
11 a .m .; Wednesday and Sat urday Evening
services, 7: :1) p.m .
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, Racln•
Morning Worship 10: 15 a. m . Youth mE(>t\ng
7 : ~ p.m . Wednesday, Including ~ tots,
eager beavers, junior astroanuts, and Junior
and senior high BYF; choir practiceS: 30p.m.
Wednesday: prayer m eeting and Bible study,
Wednesday,7:lJ p .m .
With Whipped ......... ,
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Near
- R£'V . James Satterfield, pastor. Morning
worship 9: 45a .m .; Sunday SChoollO. 45 a.tn.:
evenln~ worship 7 p.m. Tuesday, 7:JJ p.m .,
ladk?s prayer meeting. Wednesday , 7: JJ p.m .
YPE.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Co""'r
Sixth a nd Palmer. the Rev. Mark ~cClung .
SUnday school9: 15 a.m.; Dan White, Sunday
School supt ., John Ri>ibel. Sr. , asst. supt.
Choice of:
Baked Steak or
Ham Steak
Potato Boat
Vegetables
Apple Cake
..
CHURCH - Cllfton lucas, pastor. Sunday
School 9: ll a.m. Mrs. Worley Francis. sup!.
Preaching services first and third Sundays
foUowlng Sunday School . Youth meeting every Sunday, 7: J) p.m.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURC H -
THIS SATURDAY NIGHT
AT THE MEIGS INN
126 Main St.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
Sister Harriett Warner. Supt . Sunday School,
9:Jl a.m. : morning worship, 10: 45 a.m .
Every Saturday, 6:30-8:30, through Nov. 4
bands Knew About Women, Money, Sex
THE DAILY SENTINEL- 992-2156
music. Sunday worship 10 a.m .; Blbk> study
11 a.m.; worship, 6 p .m . Wednesday Bible
srudy, 7 p.m .
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. Mulberry
Road. Pomeroy. Michael Plankowskl, pastor; Rita White. Sabba th School
Supt. Sabbath School is at 2 p.m . on Saturday
with worship services followln~ at 3: 15p.m .
It inclu des:
those whose last
names begin with A through F. Nov.
19; G-K, Nov. 22; L -P, Nov. 24; Q-S,
Nov. 26; T -Z. Nov . 29. Pickup time
all days is from 9 to 11 a. m. only.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 200 W. Main St., 992-5235. Vocal
Hel~hts
NOV. 6-The Lonely Housewife
NOV. 13-What Wives Wish Their Hus-
THE DAILY SENTINEL IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS
FOR CITY ROUTES IN MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, SYRACUSE. A ROUTE IS AGREAT WAY TO MAKE MONEY,
WIN PRIZES, AND MEET PEOPLE.
BURLINGTON SOt.miERN BAPTIST
CHURCH. Route l .Shade. BibleScMol 7 p.m .
Thursday; worship servke 8 p.m .
GRAHAM UNITED METHODI ST ,
TOPICS:
Prayer A Thon today Coupon pickup
Hea th United Methodist Church,
Middleport. will co nduct a 24-hour
" Pra yer-A -Th on" begin ning today
at 10 a. m . until 10 a. m . Sa turday.
Th e public is inv ited to stop for
prayer and Bible reading.
In the afternoon. ladies of the
churc h will host the community
worship cel ebratin g " World Com munit y Day" at 1: 30 p.m . Friday.
The publi c is inv ited .
On Sunday. the church will cel e
brat e All Sa int s Day with worship at
10: 30 a.m. Rrv. Robert Robin son
will use as his theme "Biblical Chat ter or Spiri tu al Revel ati ons."
Pomeroy
flower Shop
"The Way America
Sends I.Dwe"
992-2039 01992-5721
Richard H. Billman II, 0.0.
113 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PH. 992-2920
VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARO & SOFT CONTACT
lENSES
Insurance and Medical
Cards Accepted
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
MaJn St .. Nell Proudfoot. pastor. Bible school.
9: .]) a. m .: morning worship, lO::l} a .m .;
Youth meetings. 6: ll p.m .; evening worship,
7:.]) p.m . Wednesday night prayer meeting
and Bible study, 7: l) p.m .
mE SALVATION ARMY . 115 Butte rnut
Ave .. Pomeroy. Envoy a nd Mrs. Roy Wining,
offtcers In charge . Sunday holine-ss m eeting,
10 a.m .: Sunday School. 10: 30 a.m . Sunday
School leader. YPSM, Eloise Adams. 7:30
p.m ., salvation meeting, vaMous SJX"akers
and music specials. Thursday - 10 a.m . to 2
p.m ., Lad~ Hom e League. a ll women In·
vlted: 7: J) p.m . Prayer meeting and Bible
study, Rev. Noel Herman, teacher.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY. Rev. Wanda Johnson,
director; Harold Johnson, director of
educattoo.
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN,
Wonhlp Service, 9 a.m.: Church School, 10: 30
a.m.
.
.
PhOne (614) 747 1111
SALEM CENTER - 010rch School , tO
a .m .; Worship, 7 p.m
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9 a .m .: Church
School. 10 a .m .
SOU'111ERN CLUSTER
Rev. J""""' M. Clark
Rev. Mark W. Flynn
Rev. Floreoce Smith
APPLE GROVE- Church School, 9a.m.:
Worship, 10 a.m. (tlrst and third Sundays);
UMW, second Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
,
BE111ANY - Worship, 9 a.m.: Church
School, 10 a.m.: BiblE- Study, Wednesday, 10
a.m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowship, Wednesday, 11 a.m.
CARMEL - Church School, 9::11 a.m.:
Worship. 10:45 a.m .; second and fourth Sun·
days); Fellowship d1Mer wtth Sutton, third
Thursday, 6:30p.m.
EAST LETART- Church School, 9 a.m.:
Worahlp, 10 a .m, (aecond and founh Sun·
days: UMW, ttrat Tueotlay, 7:30 p.m.
LETART FALLS - Wonhlp, 9 a.m.:
Churclt Scltool, 10 a.m.
MORNING STAR- Worship, 9:30a.m.:
Church ' Scboot, Ill: ill a.m.; Bible Study,
l'ltUrlllay, 7:30 PJII.
MORSE aiAPEL - Churclt Schoot, 9:30
a.m.: Wanlltp, u-.
·
POR'I1ANI> - Cllurctt School, 7 p.m:;
Wonltlp_ 8 p.m.: UMYF, Wl'llnesday, 7:30
p.m.
RACINE WESLEY AN - Church Scbo<il,
10a.m.; Worship, lla.m.: UMW,!ourthMonday7:30p.m.: llandmaldensoltbeLord,ftrst
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN,
Cllardt Scbool, 9 a.m.: Morntna wonhlp,
!Ott'- Blblo lllully T\leoday, 10 a.m.: Btblo
lhllly, Thurodoy, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRSt UNITED PRESBY·
TERIAN Churcb. .Church School, 10: Ill a.m.:
mon$i worship, 11:30 a.m.: Bible Study.
, Tueoday, 10 a.m.: Juilll;lr and Senior High
Youth Group, Stmday, 6 p.m.
Wednelday, 7 p.m.: Men's Prayer Breakfast,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Paalor •.
!ttY. Jolin Ev.,.. !lwliioy JChoot, 10 a.m.: . w~.7a.m.
SlJ'ITO!'I - Cllu<lt Scltotll, 11:30 a.m.:.
- ) i wonltlp, lla.m.: Cltlldl'fn'o chw-ch,
momilll ~ IO:oltla.m. (lint llld lblrd
llun.; !lundlyeYI!IIIaloorvice. 7p.m.: WedillntlaYil: ~ dinner wrtlt Carmel,
....,sayowe~n~)'OUIII!adlelauxlllazy,6p.m .
thtn111Nntlay, 6:30p.m.
w-.y tll'llily wolitolp. 7 p.m.
'I
lliE .DAILY
SENTINEL
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, OJiv('r
Swain, Superintendent. Sunday school 9:30
a .m . every week.
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. William
Crabtree. pastor. Sunday School. 9::ll a.m. :
l"Venfng service. 7: :ll p.m . Wednesday prayer
meeting, 7: ll p.m .
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duane Warden . minis ter. Bible
c lass. 9: ]) a .m .; mornln~ worship, 10: 30
a .m .; e-ve nln~ worship, 6::11 p.m . Wednesday
Bible study, 6: 30 p.m.
NEW STIVERSV ILLE COMMUNITY
CHURCH. Sunday School service. 9:45a .m .:
Wo rship servtc-e. 10:.10 a.m .; Evange li stic
Se rvtce, 7:]) p.m. Wednesday; Prayer mf'f'l·
lng, 7: 30p.m .. Thursday.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomr-roy Harrlsonvllle Rd.; Robert Purtell. pastor ;
Bill McElroy, Sunday school supt. Sunday
school, 9: l) a .m. : worship servlct: 10: :lla.m .:
Sunday worship service. 7: .]) p.m . Monday
and TUesday evening services, 7: :ll each
l"Venln~ .
ST. JOHN LtJI'HERAN CHURCH. Pine
Grove. The Rev. William MlddlE'swar1h. Pastor. Church services 9:l'.l a. m . Sunday School
10:30 a .m .
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST. Paul
Prall , pastor . Sunday school , 9: l'.la.m., larry
Haynes. S. S. Supt. ; morning worship, 10:30
a.m .
RACINE CHURCH OF TilE NAZARENE.
Rev. Thomas H. Collier. pastor, Martha
Wo lfe, ChaUm"n of the Board of Christian
Life. Sunday School. 9: .l ) a.m .; mornln~ wors hip, 10:30 a.m .: Sund8y evenin~ worship,
7:ll p.m . Prayer meeting, Wednesday. 7: 30
p.m .
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L. Walker.
Pastor, Robert Smith, Sunday School supt.;
Sunday School, 9: ~a.m.; morning worship.
10:40 a. m .; Sunday eve nt~ worship. 7:30
p.m .; Wedni'Sday evenln~ Bible study, 7:30
.
~m .
DANVlLLE WESLEYAN. Rev. R D.
Brown. pas tor. Sunday School. 9::J:l a .m .;
momlnR" worship 10:45 a.m .; youth service,
6:45p.m .: evening worship, 7: JOp.m .; prayer
a nd praise, Wednesday, 7:-.'ll p.m .
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, Rev. Mar·
lin Markin, pastor: Steve Little, Sunday
school supt. Sunday school, 10 a.m.; morning
worship, 11 a.m . Sunday E'Ven!ng worship,
7: .]) p.m . Praye r ITI('('tin~ a nd Bible study,
Thursday, 7:30p.m .; youth mff'tin~ Wednes·
day at 7 p.m.
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH.
383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday School,
10 a .m . Sunday and Wrdnesday Evenln~ Services 7: :ll p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 4 Lib·
erty Ave., Pomeroy. Sunday School10 a. m .:
Worship 7:30p.m . Wednesday Service. 7:30
p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD. Rev . R. E .
Robinson, pastor. Sunday school. 9:]) a .m .;
worship service. 11 a . m :~ evening service, 7
p.m .; youth service. Wedn~ay. 7 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRlSTtAN CHURCH, Ro·
bert E. Musser , pastor. Sunday school, 9:JO
a .m .; Paul Musser, s up!.; morning worship.
10:30 a .m .; Sunday evening service, 7 p.m. ;
mld·week service, Wednesday. 7 p.m .
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZA RENE- Rev. James B. Kittle, pastor. ShE'rm a n Cundiff, superinte ndent . Sunday School.
9: l> a .m .; Morning Worship 10: ll a. m .:
Evangelistic service, 6 p.m . Prayer and
praise Wednesday, 7 p.m .; youth meeting, 7
p.m .
.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pastor. Sunda~
SchoollO a .m .; Robert Reed, supt.; Morning
sermon, 11 a.m.: Sunday night sefV1ces.
Ou"h~tan Endeavor, 7:30p.m.; Song service,
8 p.m .; Preaching, 8:ll p.m. Mld·week
Priyer meeting, Wednesday, 7 p.m., Alvin
Reed, lay leader.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Roger
Watson, pastor; Crenson Pratt, Sunday
Schoolsupt. MornlngworshJp, 9:30a.m.; Sun·
day school, 10:00 a .m .; evening serv1ce, 7:30
p.m .
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Rev. Tom Dooley:
Joe Sayre, SWiday School Supetinte'OO.n!.
Sunday achooL 9:45a.m .; t"Yenlng worship,
7:30 · p.m . Prayer meeting, 7: ll p .m .
Wedneotlay.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST, VIncent C. Waters, Ill, mlnlstl!f:
Hermaa Black, superintendent. Sunday
Scltotll t30 1.1)'1-: . . . . . oervtce, 7 p.m.:
w~ Bible School, 7 p.m.
l::llarER CIIURCH ·OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. llelt>ert Grate, pastor. Frank
. Rtltle, iupl. Sunday SchOol, 9:30 a.m. Worahlp ler'VIce, U a .m ) and 7;:1> p.m. Prayer
meettna, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE ME1110DIST
CHURCH, Rev. Robt!rt MU!er, pastor: Uoyd
WJ'IIItt, DlroctDrol Chrlltlall Education. }!Un-
cia!'
""""'
~~-.:.;)
'~~
~·
M 1ddt eport
0
S.it'Cie<ll)y
'"-"r!~e'•C!Ir> II<IJ .. Socltlll
Long Botlom . Edsel Hart , pastor. Sunday
school. 9:lJ a.m .; Worship 10:30 a.m .;
Prayer meeting 7:30p.m . Thursday.
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED ME'1110DJST CHURCH
Fay Sauer, Dlreclor
Rev. Robert McGee
AModoleDtrector
NOJmiEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Seklon JolnMMI
Rev. Duane Sydenstrlcker
Rev. Rldaant Thomas
804 W. Ma 1n
992 · 2318 Pomer oy
P •1 nll'r OY .
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA ·
Main St., Pomeroy . Sunday sefV1ces Holy
Communion on the first Sunday of each
month. and combined with morning prayer
on the third Sunday. Morning prayer and sermon on all other Sundays of the month.
Church School and nursery cart> provided.
Coffee hour In the Partsh Hall lmfll('('llate ly
foUowing the service.
ot Columbu s, 0 .
Rutland , Oh10 45775
Attend Church
this Sunday
GroceriesGeneral Merchand• se
Racine 949·2550
pastor; Debbie Buck, Sunday Sch6ol sup!.
Church School 9: 15 a .m .: worship service
10:30 a.m . Choir rehearsal. Tuesday 7:30
p.m ., under dlrectlon of AJice Nease.
Nationwide Ins . Co .
J . Wm . " Bill " Br ow n , Own e r
Saturday
II Timothy
S.C. o pl~••s
,,
P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
ElliS & SONS SOHIO
Thursday
luke
19:4! -48
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy
TIUNITY CHURCH. Rev. W. H. Perrin,
RENE. Corner Union and Mulberry. Rev .
VlrgU Byrer. pastor. Glen McClung, asst. pastor. OydE' Henderson , pastor emeritus. Sun·
day School. 9: .]) a .m .. Glen McOung, supt.;
morning worship 10: ll a .m .; evening service
7 p.m .; mid-week servk'e, Wednesday, 7 p.m .
m
2.19-26
1.•
' '
" For A Real A'uction
.111 th e Real McCoy '
I. 0 . " Mac " McCoy
Rt . I, Reedsville , Oh.
985-3944
858-1)
&
GIFTS
99 Milt St.
Middleport
~
McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE
Psal m~
St. Rt.
~
The Interested Businesses Listed On This
Sunday
•••. :"'l
'
The Daily Sentinei-Page-7
a.m.: Ml!m!PW Wonltlp,
10:30 Lm.: ChOir Practice, Sunday, 6:30
lldiDol, 1:!11
p.m.; Evoftinl Wcnltlp, 7!30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer llld Bible_Study. 7:30p.m. .
DEXTER CHUKL' H OF C HRI ~"'T. Char!('s
RusseU. Sr .. ministe r; Rick Macomlx'r . supt.
Su nday school, 9:ll a .m .: worship S('rv\ce.
10:30 a .m . Bible Study, Thesday. 7: 30p.m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LAITER DAY SA INTS.
Portland-Rac\n(' Rood . William Roush, pas tor. Linda Evans. c hurch school director.
church school . 9: ll a.m .; morning worship.
10:30 a.m .; Wednesday evening prayer S('fV1
ces, 7: :1) p.m .
BETHLEHF.M BAPT IST . Rev . Earl
Shuler. pastor . Worship scrvtcC'. 9: :lO a .m .
Sunday school. IO: :Jl a .m. Blbl£' Study and
prayer serv\CC' Thursday, 7: :u p.m .
CARLETON CHURCH. KJn.,gsburv Road.
Jimmie Evans, pastor . Sunday s{'h0ol , 9:.10
a .m . Ralph Ca rl, supf'rlntC'ndPnl; Pvenlng
worship, 7:30 p.m . Pra yer m('('ting, Wednes·
da y, 7:~ p.m .
LONG BO'ITOM CHRISTIAN , Ken KPifPr .
pa stor. Wallace Damewood. Sunday School
Supt. Worship service at 9 a .m . Bib!(' School
to a .m .
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
Rev. Thereon Durham , pastor . Sunday
School at 9:30a .m .; Momln~ wor ship at 10:30
a.m . Thursday services a t 7:.'\1 p.m .
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob. located o n County Road 31. Rev. Law·
renee Glu('S('ncamp. pas tor: Rev. Ro~e r Willford. assistant pastor. Preac h!~ servlc<>s,
Su nday 7::ll p.m . Prayer 111(>(>ffn~ WE'dn~
day. 7:.10 p.m.; Gary GriW th, lead('r Youth
groups. Sunday ('Vf'nlng . 6: J0 p.m. wl!h
Ro~er and Vio l('! Willford as leaders . Com ·
munlon serv1«' first Sunday each m onth.
WHITE'S CHAPEl. Coolville RD. Rev .
Roy OeE'te r. pastor. Sunda y school9: lJ a .m .;
worship service, 10:30 a .m . Blblf' study a nd
prayer service WE'dnesday. 7:30p.m.
RUTI.AND CHURCH OF CHRI ST. Eu
!!('n(' Underwood. pastor: Herb EIUott. Sunday school s upt. Sunday school. 9:30a.m.;
moml n~ worship and communion. 10:30 a.m .
RUTI.AND BffilE METHODIST- Amos
Iiiiis, pastor; Fred Davis, supt . Sunday
school, 9: lla .m . Morning wor ship, 10:.10a.m .
Youn~ people's service. Sunday, 6: 45p.m .:
Sunday ('venin~ S£'rv1ce , 7: l'.l. Wednesday ('V·
en in~ prayer mectln~ . 7: lJ p.m . WMPO Prowarn , 7:30a .m . each Su nday mornln~.
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLIN ESS -
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GO D Not Pentecostal . Rev . Gro r~l' Oller, pas tor.
Worship serviC(' Sunday. 9: 45 a.m.; Sunday
school, 11 a .m .: wor ship service. 7: ll p.m .
Thursday pray('r rTie{'ti~. 7: l:l p.m .
MT. HERM ON UNITED BRETIIRE N IN
CHRI ST CHURC H. Rev. Robcn Sand<'rs.
pa stor; Don Will, lay IPadcr . Loca tf'd in
Texas Community oft CR Rl. Sundav school.
9:3:1 a.m .: Mo rnln~ worship Sf'rvtCt-. 10: -' ~
a.m .; ev('n\n~ pl"'('ac hln ~ Sf'rvlc• <;(>(•o nd and
four!h Sundays. 7: .'\1 p.m .: \hrbtr<~n Endl'a vor. fi rst and third Sunda.vs. 7: :Kl p.m . Wrdfl('sday pra y('r m('('t\n ~ and Bible study. 7:.10
p.m .
JEHOVAH' S WITNESS. :n.1 1~ Sta ll' Roul<'
124 tOne mil<' l.'ast of Rutla nd l. Sunda v, Biblf'
l('('tur£> 9:30 a .m .; W;Jt r htov.w s tud ~· . 10:20
a.m .; Thesday, B!blf' stud _v. i: .10 p.m .: Thursday, Theocra tic School. 7::(1 p.m .: Sc>n·irf'
M ff' Un~ . 8: :ll p.m.
RUTLA N D FR EEW I L L BA PTI S T
CHURCH - Salem St .. Rutland . Dona ld
Karr. Sr., pastor; Bud StC'warL supPri nl Pndent . Sunday School. IOa.m .; f'\'f' ning wors hip.
7: :ll p.m . Wl'dnC'Sday f'Ve nlng sf'rvic('. i · .10
p.m .
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY. Lo·
cared on IlK' 0 . J . Whi te Road off hi~hwa y lliO
Sunday School 10 a. m . Suprrlnl<'nd£'n l J ohn
Loveday, First Wedne sday night of month.
CPMA serv1('('S, second \Vf'dnesday WMB
meeUng , third th rou~h fifth ~·ou th SC IVirf'
Georg(' Cro.vl(', pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - ~70 Grant
St.. Mlddl r-port: Sundav Sc hool. 10 a ffi ..
morning worhslp. 11 a.m:; f'Vl' nlng wors hip. 7
p.m. Wednesday f'Vf'nlng nlblf' s tud y and
pra y('r mC'f'ling. 7 p.m . Affll!ated with Southf'rn Baptist Convention.
BRADFORD CHURCII OF
HARTFORD CHURCH OF c•· liST IN
CHRISTIAN UN ION. The RE'V. William
Campbell , pas to r. Sunday School. 9:lla .m .:
James Hughes. supt. ; evening serviCf'. 7:30
p.m . Wednesday evening prayer meeting,
7: 30 p.m . Youth prayer service ('ach
Thesday .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Letart , W.
Va ., Rt. 1, Mark Jrwtn . pastor. Worship serv1·
l'es, 9:30a .m .; Sunday School. 11 a .m .; pvenfng worship, 7: ll p.m . Tuesda y cottage
prayer meeting and Blb}e study, 9: :ll a.m .
Worship service, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR Lt.m!ERAN CHURCHWalnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W. Va.
The Rev. George C. Welrlck, pastor. Sunday
School., 9: l) a .m .; Sunday worhslp, 11 a .m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now located
on Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near Flat ·
woods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Services _jill
Sunday at 10: l) a.m . and 7: ll p.m . wlth~n
day school, 9: ll a .m . bi~e study, Wednesday,
7::11 p.m .
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST- St. R!. 338, Andqutty. Pastor, Rev.
-
ST. PAUL LUTI-fERAN CHURCH. Cornf't"
of Sycamol"'(' a nd SN-ond Sts .. PomProv . 1l1f'
Rev. William MlddiP.swa rth , Pastor. s·undav
School at 9: 4.1 a.m . a nd Churc h Se1v ic'C's 1.1
p.m.
SACRED HEART, M.<:gr . Anthony C.lanna mol"'('. Ph. 992-5f$8. Saturday f'V('nlng Ma ss.
7:ll p.m.; Su nday Mass, R a.m . <1nd 1fJ a.m .
Confes.<:lons onC'-ha lf hour Jx>for(' f':Jch Ma ss.
CCD ClasSf's, 11 a .m . Sunday .
UN ITED F"AITII U IURCH - Rou! P 7 on
PomC"roy bypass. Rf'v. Rotx>rt S mith. Sr .. pastor: Rev. Jamf'S Cundiff. assL-.tant pas tor.
sunday School. 9:]0 a .m .; morning worship,
\0: .10 a .m .; f'VC'niOR wors hip . 7: :() p.m .
Womf'n' s FPllowshlp. ThPsdays. JOa .m . Wedtl('Sday night pray('r Sf'lvlcP, 7: :lQ p.m .
fAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Ma son, meet
at Unitf'd St('('l Work('rs Un io n Hall. Railroad
S!I'P('l. Mason. Morning wors hip 9: .10 a .m .
Sunday School \0: .'KI a.m . Evf'nlng S('rvlce. 7
p.m . Prayc>r m('('tlng Wrdnf'S<Iay, 7:.10 p.m .
M\dwffk Blblf' Study. Thursda y. 7 p.m .
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - RPv. Nyle
Bordrn . pastor. Cornf'U u.<: Bu nr h. SUJX"rinH'ndf' nl. Sunday school9: .l l a.m .; SN'Ond and
founh Su ndays . worship Sf'IVICf' at 2: 30p.m .
Mr. MORIA H BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main Sts .. Mlddlcport . Rf'v . Ca lvin Mlnnls,
pa stor. Mrs. Elvi n Bum ~ardnP r . supl. Sunda~· school, 9:.'lla .m .; worshlpsef\1('(', 10: 45
am
BURUNGI!AM
~IJfH ERN
BAPTIST
CHURC H. Rou t£' I. ShadP. Pas tor. Don
BlaC'k. Aff!liatf'd with Southf'rn Bap!ist conwntion. Sund::~y sc hool. 1: .10 p.m .; Sunday
wors hip. '! ::10 p.m . Thw·sday Pvenlng Bible
study. 7 p.m .
PF:NTE COSTAL ASSE MBLY . Rac in e,
RoutP 124. Willia m Hoback, pas tor. Sunday
school. 10 a .m .; Sunda y f'vf' nln~ service, 7
p.m . Wf'dn£>Sday Pvf'n ln,l!: Sf'r.•lcP i p.m.
CA RPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
Su pt. Sunda y School9: :\0 a .m . Morning Worship. 10: ]) a .m . Prayf'r Sc>f\•!ce. alternate
Sundavs .
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
AvP .. thf' Rf'v . Cla rk Bake r , pastor. Carl Nottin,R:ham. Sunday School Supt. Sunday School.
10 a.m . - classes for all agps. Even l n~ serviCf'S. fi p.m. Wf'dnf'Sday, Study, 7: :1) p.m.
Youth scrviCf's. 7:30 p.m . F'ridav.
·
ECCLESIA F ELLOWSHI P . .128 MUJ St.,
Middleport. Pastor Is Brolh<>r c huck McPherson. Sunday School a t lO a .m . Services Sunday E'v('ning a t 7 p.m . and Wednesday at 7
p.m .
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. RPV. Earl Shuler,
pastor. Sunday school 9:30a .m .; Church service. 7 p.m .; youth m('('tln,g, 6 p.m . Thesday
Bible Study, 7 p.m .
FULL GOSPEL LI GHTH OUS E, 33()15 HI·
land Road, Pomeroy. Services Thesday, Frl·
day and Sunday evenings a t 7::11 p.m . Sunday
mo rning at \O:OOa .m. Pastor Dou,g Varner.
Sermonette
RU11.AND CHURC H OF THE NAZA
RENE . Rl>v. U oyd D. Grimm . Jr .. pas tor.
Su nday School, 9: :1) a .m .: worship servicE',
10:30 a. m .: young people's service, 6 p.m .
Evan~ellsllc servke. 6:30 p.m . Wednesday
serv lc(', 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRI ST. Miller St. ,
Mason, W. Va . Euf.':C'J'l(' l. Conger. mlnlsler.
Sunday Bible Study, 10 a .m .: Worship 11 a.m .
and 7 p.m . Wednesday Blbl(' Study, vocal
mus ic. 7 p.m .
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH - 12 North
Third Sl.. Cheshire. fnd ('(X'ndent. fundamen tal services . Sunday evening 7: .1 ) p.m . Pastor
R£'v. Or . Rober1 Persons.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Duddln~
LanC', Mason. W. Va . Rev. Ronnie B. RQS('.
Pastor. Sunday School 9: 45 a .m .; Morning
Worship 11 a .m . Evrnln~ Service 7: lJ p.m .
Wednesday Womt>n's Ministries 9 a .m .
(meeting a nd prayerl. PrayC"r a nd Bib\('
Study 7 p.m .
CHRI ~
State Route 124 a nd Count y Road :l. Mark
Seevers. minl st('r; Sunday School Supt..
Stev(' Pic kens. Sunda v school. 9: 30 a .m .:
mornln~ worship, 10:30 a .m .: f'Vf' nlng wors hip, 7 p.m . Wl'drwsda ~· wors h1p, 7 p.m .
J UBILEE CHRI STI AN CHURC H Georgp's Cf('('k Rood. Rf'v. C..J. lRmi£'y, pastor; John Fel\ul"'(', sup£>rinl ('ndf' nt. Church
school. 9: :ll a .m. ; morning worship. 10:30
a.m ; evening serviCf'. 7 p.m . Bible Study
Thursday, 7 p.m . OasSl'S for all agPS.
Nursery provided for worship servl('('s.
VlC'TORY BAPTI ST - ~'l"l N. 2nd Sl. , Mid·
dleport. .James E . K('{'S{'f' , pa stor. Sunday
morning worship, 10 a. m .; f'vcning serv1Cf', 7
p.m .: WPdnesd ay f'v(' nlng worship, 7 p.m .;
Vlsitallon. Thursday. 6: .l'l p.m.
TRIN ITY CHRISTIA N ASSEMBLY . Cool·
v!Uf' - Glltx>rt SJX'fl('('r. pas tor Sunday
school, 9:.l'l a .m .: m orn!~ Sf'r\'ICP. 11 a. m .
Su nday f'V(' ning Sf' rvl('{' , 7: l) p.m .; mid wPek
prayPr servi('(' Wed nesday. 7: 30 p.m .
MOUNT OLI VE COM MUN rry CHURCH ,
Lawrt'nC'f' Bush. pastor: Max Folml'r. Sr. Sup?rinte ndf' nL Sunda.v School and morning
worship. 9:.l'l a.m . Sunday £'\'f'ni ng service. 7
p.m.; Youth m('('ling and IJibiP stud y, Wed·
tlf'sda_v. 7 p.m
·
STAND VERY STILL
Everything has its beauty, but not everyone sees it. The reason
is we are not looking for it. We ca n not see If we do not look. We do not
look because we are not told to look or motivated to look. Our senses
tell us what is around us but we can and often do deaden our senses so
they cannot speak to us. What is beauty for one Is ugly to another and
a nothing to a third person.
We need one thing, to see the beauty or the need around us in our
life. We need to stand very still and listen, taste, smell, look and feel.
No matter where we are something wUI touch us in some wa y. As a
child in kindergarten I learned "Stop, look and listen before you
cross the street. Use your eyes, use your ears and then use your
feet." At every railroad crossing was that big "X" saying Stop, Look,
Listen. God also tells us to stop, look and listen. To do this, all we need
do Is at any time or any place to stand very still and let our senses
take over. God created us with 5 senses. As children we use them all
the time. When we grow older we tend to ignore them. A baby puts
everything In Its mouth. Taste Is the first sense developed . Then we
see them grasp and shake everything to hear the noise as hearing
developes. Then Its peek-a-boo time with sight. As we grow o.lder we
· stop just standing very still and letting our senses have full play. We
miss so much because of this. The song of the bird, the buzzing of the
bee, the rain on the windowsill, the boat whistle, the gently falling
leaves, the smell of the flowers or onions frying In the kitchen are all
missed or Ignored by us. Why did God give us senses? The answer Is
to use them.
SchoollOa.m.; WonhlpSavkella.m .; Sunday, evenlng serv~. 7: :1> p .m .: Wednesday
A quiet time each day Is a must for mankind . A Ume to think, to
wonder, and to remember God and our concern about our fellow
man. The hustle and bustle world should not be so much us that we
do not take the time to just pray and read our Bibles 'and simply let
God Into our very being. All we need do Is let our senses be a part of
us and for a short whUe each day and every day, to "STAND VERY
STll..L" .
t
ley, pastor. Sunday SChool, 9:00a.m .; Morn·
lng worship 10: ll a.m.; evening worship, 7:30
p.m . Tuesday, J2: 30 p.m. Women's prayer
Rev. William Mlddleswarth
The Lutheran Churches
Franklin Dickens. Sunday morning, 10 a.m .
.Sunday evening, 7:30p.m . Thursday evenlng,
~ : 30
p.m.
SllVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAPTIST
CHURCH, Pastor Robert Byers. Sunday
evening service, 7: ll p.m.
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH,
Inc. - Paul St., Mlddl"'>>rt. Rev. O'Dell Man-
meetflllr. Prayer and praile """'ce, Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m.
RIJ'Il.AI'ID APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF JE•
SUS CHRIST, Elder James M!UI!f. Btbt•
•
•
�Sentinel
Ohio
Friday,
Meigs club membe~s ..gather for meetings
•
the death of Jack Robson, husband
of Eva Robson, a member.
The Past Councilors Club meeting was announced for Wednesday
night at the hall. Leona Hensley and
Mae McPeek will be hosteses.
Doris Grueser reported on therecent bake sale noting that it was a
financial success. Proceeds will go
to Dorothy Rllchle's convention
fund.
Charlotte Grant, chairman of the
ways and means committee. asked
members to tum tn money from the
apron project. Elizabeth Hayes
thanked the council for flowers, and
the members for gllts and cards on
behalf of herself and her husband at
their 50th wedding anniversary observance attended by 205 persons.
It was noted that Faye Kirkhart
and Goldie Krackomherger were
reinstated into the membership at a
recent meeting. Inspection was held
at the Oct.19 meeting of the council.
Mrs. RJtchlne, Mary K. Holter,
Marcia Keller, Charlotte Grant and
Erma Cleland attended a reception
and dinner honoring Beryl Faust,
associate state vice councilor, at
Marion recently. It was announced
that there will be a products party
following the Nov. 16 meeting.
Attending the meeting were Fern
Morris, Goldie Frederick. Letha
Ada Morris,
Rutland Alumni
Rutland Hlgh School Alumni AssoctaUon offlcers met Sunday at the
home of Mrs. Joan Stewarl and tentatively set May 28 for the 1~ banQuet. The officers will meet again tn
January to turther plans for the
reunion.
Chester D of A
Members were reminded of the
district fall friendship meeting to be
held Monday at Belle Prairie Council 269, Belpre, when Chester Council 323, Daughters of America, met
Tuesday night at the hall.
The potluck dinner will be held at
6: :Jlp.m. and membersaretotakea
covered dish and their own table
service, along with items for an auction, the proceeds from which will
go to the national committee for the
State Session tn Ohio in 1984.
Carolyn Holley, associate councilor, presided at the meeting attended by 30 members. It was
reported that Jean Frederick is in
St. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg,
W. Va.; that l..eona Hensleyis home
from the hospital, that Cathy Cllfford has a new daughter, and Sadie
Trussell. a new grea t ·
granddaughter, and that Goldie
Wolfe is not well . Also reponed was
November 5, 1982
DAY
Schools
Instruction
Charlotte Grant, Penny Smith,
Ethel Orr, Julie Rose, Opal Hollon,
Mary Showalter, Carolyn Holley,
Erma Cleland,. Ada Bissell, Lora
Damewood, Esther Smith, Everett
Grant, Alta Ballard, Sadie Trussell,
Faye Kirkhart, Elizabeth Hayes,
Mae McPeek, Ada Neutzllng, Cora
·Beegle, Zelda Weber, Slilrley Beegle, Doris Grueser, Virginia Newiun, Ruth Smith and JoAnn Baum.
Betty Johnson, Masoo, W.Va.; Bob
Johnson, Bobby, Sherry, and Wlllle,
Mark, Cindy and Coy Johnson, and
his great-grandmother, Eugta
Johnson, Middleport. Also attending were Ryan's sisters, Bobbie Jo
and Angell\. Sending gifts were Kay
Jotmson, Tom and Barbara Varlan,
and Sarah Jolmson.
American Legion
Phalin
Joshua and Christy Phalln celebrated thelrbirthdaysonOct. 9wlth
a party at thehomeoftheirparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Phaltn. Both
children were born on the same day,
and Joshua was four this year, and
Christy, one.
A "Dukes of Hazzard" theme was
carried for Jushua and a "Smurf''
theme for Christy.
d
Attending the party were their
Joshua an
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Ch · Phal'
Mrs. Richard DeMoss, their pater- ,___ _ _r_IS..;.ty.:.__..,.m.,.....__
nal grandmother, VIrginia Phalln,
Mrs. Sandy Phaltn and Tera Dawn,
Mrs. Lena Bowen and Casey, Mr.
and Mrs. Robin Phalln and Tonya,
Mrs. Kathy Fife, Tracy and Terri,
Kim, KarIa and Marty DeMoss,
Faye Dickens, Mr. and Mrs. John
Amos and Shasta.
Sending gifts were Rlchard Demoss, Gary Fife, and Eddie Fife.
The annual oyster supper of Drew ·
Webster Post 39, American Legion,
this week was again a success with
four World War I veterans and 40
members In attendance.
The annual delivery of bread
from house to house tn Pomeroy
done each year by the post to raise
funds for the Gifts for the Yanks
Who Gave program will not be held
McClure
this year due to the economy and
unemployment. However, donations are being accepted for the program which is designed to
remember hospitallzed veterans.
Jimmy Joe Ryan McClure was
Persons wishing to give this year honored on his first birthday Oct. 19
may mall their donations to Ameri- with a party at the home of his parcan Legion Post 39, P.O. Box 401, ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe McClure,
Pomeroy, OH., 45700, or they may Apple Grove.
call Commander Jerry Rought at
The Pac Man theme was carried
992-5937 and he will pick up their out tn decorations and cake. Attmdcontributions.
lng were his grandparents, Jim and
McClure
The Daily Sentinel
18 Wanted to Do
Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
FRANCIS R. BUSH,
the VIIIJQP of Porneroy Oh10
rwo-th 1rds ot the appr a1sed
Sa1d real estate 1s descr1bed as
valu e of s 18.600 000. to be
foll ows
sold sub1ecr 10 the l1en for rea l
S1tuated 1n the Vill age ot M ides tate taxes Th e r1 ght 1s redleport. County o t Me1gs and
se rved to reJeCt any and all b1ds
Plaintiff.
State at Oh10 . and bounded and
James J Pr ofll!l.
descr1bed as tollows
Me1gs Counry Sher1 fl
FRED E. BUSH,
Be1ng lot No 23,nShet t,eld"s
{1 0129. (1115. 12. 31c
Oefandant.
Add1t1on to sa1d V•llage of M id No. 18.232 dleport !relerence be1ng made
U:GAL NOTICE
to the 1ecorded plat ofsa,dAddl Public Notice
Pursuant to an order of sale tlon). except 100 feet off the
ISS ued by the Cou rt of Cornrnon Wes t end of the prern1ses heretPleas ol Me1gs County Oh10 afore conveyed . con ta1n1 ng 66
LEGAL NOTICE
th e real property loca ted at 34 1 feet fr ont by 92 feet bu c ~
Tr udv G Bresenham. whose
South Second Avenue M1ddle
Oeerl Reference Vol ume
last known add ress 1S 15 12
port Oh1o w1ll be so ld at oubhc 285. Page 743. Me1gs Coun ty
Bar r Roacf Tampa Ftor rda
auctron on the 18th day of De· Deed Records
33603 and the Unknown
cember. 1982 ar 10 00 0 C
Terms at sale Cash .n hand 1-<~"""'" o t Tt udy G Bresenham
lock AM at the front door of thr on dav a t sale for not less than
Metgs County Cou rthouse rn
....
Public Notice
1f any. have been ordered to appear or plead by Janua ry 20.
1983 to a co mpla1nt filed 1n
C1V1 I Act10n No C2 -8 2-783 1n
the United Stat es 0 1Sir1 CI Cou rt
for the Southern 01s t r~c t of
Oh10 Eastern 01v1S•on. Un1ted
Srmes of Amenca. Pla,nt1 tl. v
Trudy G Brese nham. et al . Defendan ts. pr ay1ng tor foreclo su re of a mort gage deed
rf! CO rded 1n Vol ume 14 3. Page
S 7 7 of the mort gage record s of
Me1gs Cou nty. Oh 10. wh1 ch
mortgage deed 1S a lien on the
d e sc r I be d r e a I
S1 tuated 1n the Stale ot Oh10.
Co unty at Me1gs and Townsh1p_
Iprooperty
II ow' n g
Real Estate · General
608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259
8
"11 PERCENT FINANCING NOW AVA1LABLE1 15 YEAR TERM.
FIXED RATE"
NEW LISTING lincoln Hili- 11h story, three bedroom house w1tll
formal dining. storms, insu~tion, free standing fireplace, vinyl siding.
large lot Good condition. Just $22,500.
Public Sale
& Auction
Public Notice
Public Notice
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Yard Sola 6 mlloo Non 160.
1 baby baaaJnet, 1 car seat.
size 8 miaaes clothing & lots
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'.
Insulated Dog Houses
of Olive
Be1ng 1n 30 Acre Lot No
122. desc r1bed as follows . Be Q1nn 1ng 1n the ce nt er of the
For ked Run Roa d No T-272.
1 7 cha1ns east ol the northw est corner of a 30 Acre Lot No
122. also be1ng the nonhwest
corner of a 2 43 acre lot of Harol d M assar . the nce east
179 8 4 feet along the center of
sa1d road . thence so uth 3 7 degrees 20· east 208 14 teet
fpass1ng 6 feet al ong to the left
P&S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine , Oh.
Ph. 614 -843-2591
10-6-llc
3 Announcements
a minimum of oewn (71
deyl should telephone their
local Ohio Bureau of Em-
POMEROY AREA - Rve acres with four bedroom home. Fully
Insulated, storms, two woodburner.; to cut heating costs, two car
garage, outbuilding~ garden space. All tllis for $27,000.
HARRISONVILLE - Atllree bedroom double wide on approximately \\ acrelot Eye calching Iron! bay window, 1\\ baths, dining
room, hving room, family room, equipped kitchen. front porch,
central a1r. All lor $30,000.
SATURDAY, NOV. 6, 1982
7:00P.M.
One Given
.,nay Saturday and
One Given Away
Sunday. Atari Tapes
will be given away
each hour.
. Office
In Memoriam
$1295 SQ. YO. WITH
PAD,INSTAUED
PLUS INSTAU.ATIOII
SJ495
NOW
1295
NOW'1695 s~. YD . INSTALLED
I
VALLEY
ROOFING
l b II
IR II
Yord Sale Nov. 4-6-6. Jr
aizea 6-7. haatalator metal
fireplace . Ina ide If rain , 110
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing & Siding Co.
Texas Rd. Gallipolia.
insurance
Route 1
Long Bottom. OH .. 46743
986'-4193
1011811 . pd
- TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2834
Or 949-2160
for you?
Ask me about Allstate's
Short .Term Health Policyhelps to protect you
between jobs, etc.
Real Estate - General
$$OPPORTUNITY$$
Is wllat this 149 acre Rutland
Farm Offers. Anxious seller
has priced acconli~Wly. Includes rural home, bam, garap, minerals, and much mote.
II you have intetest in agood
counby farm or minerals,
don't pass up this
opportunity.
EXECUTIVE HOME
(Rental)
<._.,....
Of :.H lOUhl" '
12 • II
~
~~
1:'
.'
.i..J.....--•-1
.IV t"' (;
Phone
1·(614)·992-3325
11.)0 ...
l • ~·
r )./\:.....---~---...
House Type door with storm door.
EAFORD
VIRGIL 8 . SR. RWTOI '
216 E . 2nd St.
''
Full 3/12 Roof Pitch
Roof Decking 'h'' Plywood not W'
Rafters 16" on cent&r (Truu)
Roor 16" on center (2lt6)
WaUs 16" on centar (2lt4)
2351b. Seel-tab Roof Shingles
All Maaonite Exterior Pre-Finished
4" Ovemang aoffita 1111 "'faonilitl
.
Full House prefinlahed "-mleu" gutters end
INTERIOR
Total Electric or Gas
200 amp. Breaker Boll
Super Insulation Package
Reel Hardwood Pllnelif)9
Vinyl Welpeper l<itclle{l II 81th
Cerpet with Pad, LR, Hell'- Bedroom
AnnllrOng Vinyl Kitchen, aaft, ~tillty. Rooms
CountJy Style Kitchens, 8ldnl cebineU with
Shelves
.
.
Post formed COUntllr tops with beck lpiuh
Plumbed for Weiher
Wlnld for Dryer
c.blneta _. Washer & Dryer el'88
NEW USTING- Back of Mid·
dieport, with view of Rt 7.Has3
bedrooms, modem batll, Lead·
ing Creek waler, 2 porches and
~rge lot For only $23,500.
NEW LISTING- 340 acres for
less than $500.00 an acre. Has
a 10 room renovaled farm
home with free gas, 5 bed·
rooms, ~rge familyroom and TP
waler. On time, $175,000.
BRICK VENEER - Extra '!lice
2\\ batll family home. large
family room with woodbuming
fireplace, dishwasher, disposal,
range, refrigerator. lqvelr k~
chen, carpeting. cenlral a1r and
hea~ 2 car garages, 2patios and
~rge ~ndscaped lot A-one
shall! for $125,000.
66 ACRES- Fenced,lays nice.
S·ALE.HOURS:
SAT., NOV. 6th 9 A.M~ TO 8 P.M.
SUN., NOV. 7th 12 NOON TO ~ . ~.M.
' I <
14rlf11 FINANCING AVAILABL L
.ReP
11 -J. l mo.
BOGGS
OPEN
WED., FRI., SAT.
SALES &SERVICE
provides Major Medica l
and Hospital/Surgical
expense coverage.
u.s. Rt. so East
7:30-10:00
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,
Private Parties Available
llon.-Tues.-Tbu~. Niles
Sat. -Sun. Afternoon
Check our skate prices
befote buying.
PHONE 985-9996 or
985-3929
I0-2!H mo.
Allstate·
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
You're in good hands.
Farm Equipment
Parts &Service
Allolalt !.&It h••urallDt Ce. Nonh"'"* . IL
See or phone
l ·Hic
Davis-Quickel
Agency, Inc.
"Across From The
Courthouse in
Pomeroy"
MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
PH. 992-66n
10/24/ t mo
Garage Sale Fri .- Sun . Fair·
field Centenary Rd . 3 FamIly. Elec. range , tapes. doll s.
toya. miiC .
Nov. 4 ,6,6. Thurs. , Fri., 1!o
Sat. Antiques. tools, dolls.
misc. Barbera OHutta near
Pomeroy Healt Care Center .
Old rt 33 .
ia uail...e Fnim 8QtiUh'i. daYton' HOiiiee Mile 111M To,Till V't'lth Y4\JU .
· . FREE·DEUVERY & SET-UP WITHIN 100 MILES . . l
Stop By MC1 Tell V't'lth: L8n ......... o.vtc~ · Riggi or. Ernie Shw.r
PHONE·423- 21 .
Leading Creek water and. all
minerals. Good for ltoo~ng.
sheep or cat11e farm.Will sell lor
less than $700.00 an acre.
'
BUILDING LOT - Near Mid. dleport with al ·ulities near for
• only $3,1KXI.
WANT TO BUY 011 AIMD
COIITRACI7 Tlf£11 GIVE US A
CAll WE HAVI SOIL SUE
MURf'IIY, HWII MD BRUCE
lWOIID. AU, II£AI.TOIS.
Hou.•,iny
t Hu,ulquartl'rs
;
...
Custom Combining, corn &
Temple pitchers, occupied
Japan, medium size men 's
clothes. baaeball cards .
George Whites, Old Rt. 33,
between Co. Rd . 18 l!o 19.
YARD
sale.
Mini
flea
market, 2217- 2219 Oak
Street Pt. Pleasant. Rocking
Chain, tools. what nots.
much more. November 3 -4 .
Thursday & Friday.
Public Sale
& Auction
8
WVa State Champion Aucti oneer Rick Pearson . Estates.
antiques, farm , houae hoi ds .
Ucensed Ohio-WVa . 304-
773-6786 or 304 -773 9185 .
For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
& commercial
Call 742·31
RIIVQRUHiijenil
3 Announcements
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandiaa every week .
Conaigmenta of new and
u•d merchandise alweya
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 276 -3069.
9
FIREPLACES
Roger Hysell
o~
St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy,
WANTED TO BUY Oldfurni tu"' and Antiques of all
kinds. call Kenneth Swai!l·
&
GARAGE
AUTO &TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmissio~
PH. 992·5682 .
or 992-7121
J.24-lfc
Wanted To Buy
446-3169 or 266 -1967'"
the evening a.
CHIMNEYS
Buying Gold, Silver, Plati num. old coina, scrap rings
& ailverware. Daily quotes
available . Alao co ina· 8t coin
supplies for sale . Spring Val -
BUILT AND
REWORKED
loy Trading Co .. Spring Val loy Plaza, 446 -8026 or
446-8026.
CALLAL
742-2328
We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnson
10-28-1mo.
•Gutters
•Downspouts
•New or Repair
•Painting
Wanted to buy tobacco
poundage. will pay top
price. Catl614-379 -2166.
Juck
Call614 -246 -6616 .
•Waohn•Diohwuhln•Rorv•
•Rohlgototors
oOryonofPARTS .,d SERVICE
tractor _ Will conaider one
with broken or missing
parta. Also a Radio Flyer
wagon. Prefer good cond.
C. R. MASH
4
CONSTRUCTION
homo. Call 614 -388 -9783
after 4 :00 .
ANY PER SON who houny-
kitchens and
bath1ooms. Remodeling, .
add-ons, • new homes,
Ill, plu1mbi1n1. electric, siding.
1
FREE
ESTIMATES
FREE
ESTtMATES
P.H. 992-6011
Owners:
Oaby A. Martin·
Rodney Howery
PH. 992-6370
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
'"Buutlful,. Custom
l!ullt Goraael"
1
Coli tor fr'.. "dtno
estimates, 949·2101 or
t4t-2tNO. ·'.
.
No Suriclay calls
3·11-tfc
1
COMPlETE HOME
MAINTE~ANCE
•Appliancei ellefripration •Hillin&
.Coollna •Air Cond. •Electrical
•Piuinblnc •Roofina eGutters
Carpentry •Re8idential or Business
Mobile Homes
·
'
j
.
D1scounta to Senior Citizens
.'
'PH. '7 42-2266
.
a. Kandile&lpptlc
10-20-1 mo. pd.
thing to give away and doea
offer or attempt to offer
other thing for sale may
an ad in this column ,
wll be no ch arga to
fumiture, gold, ailver dollara, wood ice boxea. ltone
jara. antiques, etc.. C~m
plete houaeholds . Wnte :
M.D . Miller. Rt . 4. Pomeroy,
Oh. Or 992 -.7760.
Gokl. silver, sterling, jewelry. ringa, okloolna & cur-
rency. Ed BIWkott Barber
Shop, Middleport. 992 3476 .
No Item to Large or to Small .
WIN buy one p•ce or com·
Part-time Communi ty Ser vies Worker to work with
boy handicapped with men tal retardation . A hi g h
school degress and travel required; experience in work ing with p e rs o n s with
mental retardatio n is pre-
ferred . Call 614 -388 -8875
for furth er information .
Buckeye CommuOity Servi ces is an equal opportun ity
employer .
- - - --
Giv e yourself a
Christma s B o nu s. Sell
Avon . Earn good m on ey. set
you r ow n hours. Call 614 -
698 -7111 colle ct.
Want ed-Respo n sib le caring
people . Adopt h ome l ess
dog s, cats. kittens or pup pies . Donation s requ ested.
Meigs Co . Hum ane Society .
614 -992-6505 .
St .. Athen s, Oh . 45701 by
November 12 , 1982 .
PPSEO is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
NEED EXTRA MONEY or
help with college ex pen ses?
The West Virginia National
Guard can help . If you are a
Junior or Senior i n High
School or a Gradu ate. you
may qualify for a $ 1,500 bonus or up to $4,000 co llege
Tuition assistance. plus you
will have a secure part time
job after training . learn
skills in M a int e n an ce,
Supply. Cler ical, Electron ics . Good Pay - Good
Training-Good Benefits . The
West Virginia National
Guard is No Ordinary Part
Time Job! Call Sergeant Lut-
ton 304-676 -3950 or toll
!roo in WV 1-800 -642 -3619
ACCEPTING appli cations ,
part time h e lp . $ 115 .
weekly , 10 - 12 h o ur s
weekly . If you have spare
time and can use extra money, we may have a position
for you in the Meigs. Maso n,
Gallia County areas , show ing CAA County Safety film
for our company. Three, part
time management positions
available . Must be married &
employed in immediate
area . Phone . 304 - 273-
EARN up to $70.000 a year I
Use your wortc skills overseas . Write I.J .O .; P.O. Box
369; Boston, MA 02129 .
12
Situations
Wanted
Oreasmaking
and
altera -
tions. 614 0949 -2202.
Will care for elderly person in
my home. Room, board and
ANTED - largo hickory
phone 304 - 882-
HOM E LOANS 14% fixed
rat e. l eade r Mortgage, Ohio
o nl y 1 - 800-341-8664.
WVo. 614-592-3061
23
Professional
Services
C& l Boo kkeeping
Bo okk ee ping & tax service
for all types of busineasea.
Ca rol Neal 446-3862
PIANO TUNING l!o REPAIR
Ca ll Bill Ward for appointm ent. Ward 's Keyboard .
Baal
lacaw
31 Homes for Sale
5 room house with garage
and
outbuilding
59.000 . Call
0619 .
for
aale,
614-387 -
House 13 .0 acreage & 76
Massie Ferguson 230 and
equip ment . Cell 614-3670 194 .
A C OUNTRY GENTLE MAN 'S FARM lncludu IJ8
acres. horse barn. fenced in
pa sture , large utility building , paved road . all mineral
ri ghts, maturing timber, rid·
i ng trails , fenced in yard ,
Only 30 mlnutea from
Athens . Beautiful 8 room
hou se. nevvly remodeled.
new carpet , 3 bedrooma. 1
bath . Fully Insulated. ltorm
windows. all electric with
woodburner. Washer. dryer.
dishwasher, self-cleaning
oven. side by tide
refrigerator-freezer . Gravity
fed spring water. Complete
Privac y. Cell 992-72015 or
446 -9510 or Write Paul 11.
Lash, 38661 Kingobury Rd,,
Pomeroy. Oh 46789.
2:
Just remodeled ·beautiful
or 3 bdr . home with fireplace, fuly carpeted. lar.
front porch & carport. 81h"
assumable loan. Call 8715-
EDITH A. HAYMAN ruiC
dence on Vine St, Rae.:
ne. Oh. now offered for aale
at $20.000. Property op<
paised at $25,500. For in:
formation , contact Fred W
Crow . Attorney. Pomeroy',
Oh 992 -6132 or Ruth Elllo
Columbus. Oh 614-231 ·
1908.
8 room house, two Iota, very
good location . 680 South
2nd .. Middleport . $10.500.
Call 614 -992 -2602.
For Sale - RepoaaeaaeCI
Hou se. 3 bd .rooma, all refin-ished. new carpet throught.
Sits on 3 acres . located on
Bashan Rd . Exc. terma to
right party. Contact Bank
3 or 4 bedroom houae for
sale or rent with option. 1 'AI
baths. full basement, 1 acre,
Fairview subdivialon . 614·
992 -2064 or 814 -992 -·
6960. .
.
HOUSE Moadowbrod< Ad -'
Chair canllg . Expert seat
weaving. lane Daniela. 614742-2961 ; if no answer.
phone 8t4-992-2082.
surance Co. haa offered servicea for fire inaur"ance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century . Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meat individual needa. Conteet Foster Lewla. agent .
small
22 M one y to Loan
laundry. 614-992-8022.
SANDY AND· BEAVER In-
Have
' h!analwl
One of Pomeroy. 614-992 2 133.
Good cl•n
wood .
~
6686 .
UHd piano.
barn
614 -446 -4380 and aok
446 -4372 .
Patient Services Assistant
to manage M eigs County
family pl anning office . Mu st
have H.S. diploma or eq ui valency . additional ed uca tion preferred ; substantial
traini ng or ex p erien ce in recordkeeping; ability to work
accurately with figures; be
dependabl e; highly orga nized; willing to take respon sibility; and be energet ic and
self-motivated . Mu st have
reliable · transp ortation and
be willing to travel. Evening
and Saturda y hours are to be
expected. Send resu me. in cluding two refe ren ces to
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio. 8 North Court
1traw. Late model 4 wheal
drive vehicle. No trucka'. Call
plumbing • aloctrlcol job to
be' dono. Call 304-8767888 attar 8 p.m.
LPN wa nts to babyait in her
h ome , h o urly, daily or
wee kly . Contact 4·61
Hedgewood Drive or cell
homo. Call 446-2192 .
13
POT belly or wood burning
11o1111. old brickl. reuHble
Experienced mother would
like to do babysitting In her
Person to do babysittin g and
light housekeeping in my
plato houHhold. Naw. u•d.
or antiquo lumhura. 614992 -6370.
814-742-2790.
required . Call 458 -1818.
Ann a.
.
BEDS -IRON, BRASS, old
4-Hc
Viny1 & Alumlreum
SIDING
Giveaway
Call ~14 - 388-8201
w eek. Call Bertha Fllljry.
446 -7811 .
Charlotte Ave .. Oak Hill. Oh
46666 or call administrator
at 614-682 -7717 .
6676.
Child's podol typo metal
7-14-dc
985-3561
All Makes
reusable
Wanted to buy used wood
planing mill, industrial type .
Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
with
porto. Call 614 -388-9303.
FREE EsTIMATES
'tUT OUT
FOR FUTURE! USE"
Cars
Hou se cleaning or baby8it·
ting in my home. 6 days 1
Nur sing in private home.
D ayti m e o nly in GaUipolia or
Pt . Pleasant. Will give ref . if
anytine .
ries. No HO or N. Call 4461822 otter dark.
4746 .
MLT & MT. 69 bed ho spital
with imm ediate openi n gs
forMLT & MT . Complete sa lary and fringe benefit pack age. Send resum e or apply in
person to Oak Hill Commun ity Medical Center, 350
Garage aale . Fri., Nov . 6. 8 8 . Antique dishes. Shirley AVON .
Wanted old toy trains, any
pieces. parts, or accesso-
c.
EXTERIOR
SEPTIC
TANKS
INSTALLED
CALL NOW
Ph. 742-2328
SKATE-A-WAY
Disability lncomt
Protection - when you
become totally disabled.
Comprehensive Medical-
1:. 1
:-:.
or 446 -
446 -1418.
AND HOllE MAINTENANCE
"RoofinJ of aii(YIJOs
Atsidential &·
Commlltiol
"Remodelinc
"Storm W'mdows & Doo!s
FREE ESTIIIATIS
20 y.., Experience
446 -0069
6 Rolls of SOl Nylon
'17"
12 I I
14 It
'H
. I I ?U
'114'1
·1 1 10
'1 I '10
'•\'l '10
PO MI ROY
IA NUMARK
614 992 ?181
This contemporary 4 bedroom, 2 bath home with finished family room, attached
prap located _near Pomeroy
1s available lor tmmedllte occupancy. A month to month
lease can be am~ with
security deposit, and
reference.
5
6 Rolls of Anso IV Extra Good Nylon
s Year Presidential Wear Warranty.
10 II
Call 446 -3368
2166 .
Someone to babysit 2 small
children in my home M on day thru Friday. Mu st have
own transportation . Call
r
- J...,,_•_.c_. ~_
.t.~C~ - . _."----~iii~~
Aluminum lingle hung house wlnctow.
Aluminum aelf.atortng storm windows
2 Rolls of Brown and Blue
3 Rolls Extra
Kitchen
8 It
'l 1l
RCS REALTORS
1-614-593-5571 or 992-6312
rg:;~;
downapouta .
$499
R... '19"
1--------+
IWTOI ·
AVAILABLE lN GEM BLUE, .AMBER, RUST AND
WOODLAND BROWN.
CARPET
Coffee and
Donuts,
Plus Free
Balloons
.,
[g
NOW
lNST!U£0
RC
Cur~o
l II Willi
Call:
. .. . .. .. .. .. .. . ... .. ..... 992-2259
TERMS OF SA.LE : CI\SH OR CHECk
WITH POSITIVE l.D.
C.t"h )(.,
3267 0 was ap-
potnted Executor of the estate
of M tldred Garnet Rh odes. de ceased. late of Penland. Ohto.
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/ Clerk
IS HAVING THE
BIGGEST HOUSING
EVENT OF
THE YEAR
Jean Tru sse ll ........ - .... - ... - . _. • _.. 949-2660
Dottie S. Turn er ... - ... -.-. · - . . _.•.... 992'· 5692
SHERMAN TILLIS: OWNER
DON HART JR .: AUCTIONEER
RODNEY HOWERY : APPRENTICE
ALUM . ROOFING
SPECIAL
Mill er. 23 1 N.E 11 t~ Avenue.
Ocala. FL
'·
REAL TORS!
Henry E. Cleland, Jr ., GRI ... ........ .. 992·6191
54 Misc. Merchandise
23926. Ronald J
24'X40: FOR SI6,900°0
FARM - Cheste1 - Approximately 82.5 acres, 30 acres til~bie,
two ponds, barns, sheds, and a nice tllree bedroom rem<Xieied
home with FA heat ~us woodburner.
S&K AUCTION
Case No
1220 WASHINGTON ili.VD.
BELPRE, OHIO
I·'
for mora detll\ll and to or·
range for an iutat .new. Rio
Grande College io an Equal
Opportunity Employer.
On November 2. 198 2. 1n the
Metgs Coun ly Probate Court.
FALL FESTIVAL OF SAVINGS
Register to win an
FREE
MILLER
HOMES
Home Video
w... e, .. i
POMEROY - Areally nice tllree bedroom home, new chain link
fence, on approximately 1\\.acre level lot Range, ref., carpeting.
$27,001.
AT
Corner of Depot & Main
Rutland, Ohio
2
(I 01 22 29. Ill I 5. I 2. 19. 26
61c
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF ADUCIARY
IL~jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.!.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\:~
SOUTHERN DISTRICT- Outstandingde~gn intllislhreebedroom
home, unusual fireplace. two batlls, formal dining. carport, patio, 1h
acre lol plus rental colt!ge. Ali for $42,500.
TOOLS- FURNITURE
COOKWARE
MISCELLANEOUS
Aprol I I. 1966
PR OPERTY ADDRESS
54525 Curtt s Hollow Ad .
Reedsv1tle. Oh1 0 45 7 72
Failure to respond to the
compla1nt w1tl res ultm an Entry
of Default. Judgment and De cree of Forec losure. sale of the
mortgaged property and exM gULshment of all 1nterest ~ tn
sa1d property
ROBERT M DUNCAN
Un1ted States
01stnc t Judge
(111 5. 12. 19 31c
NEW LISTING - Middleport Nicequiet streell \\1itory,3 bedroom
home, dining room, new furnace. $18,900.00.
AUCTION
of a concr ete water well curb)
thence south 50 degrees 3 4·
west 203 teet to the westl 1neof
2 43 acre lot of HaroiQ Massa r.
thence nor1h 26 degrees 45'
we sl 3 29 feet al ong sa1d l1ne to
the place of beg1nn•ng. conta 1n1ng 1 1/ ac res. more or less
The above d esc r~ p tton was
furntshed by Homer E Hysell.
Regtstered Surveyor. Certifi cate No 2274. per survey of
Earn extra money for Christ·
mas. Sell Avon . Ea rn good
$$$ . Set yo ur own hours .
more .
Interested persona who
have been unemployed for
Public Notice
Public Notice
Yard Sale
7
ployment SOIVicel Offico
Public Notice
Help Wanted
soybean . Call after 6. 446·
Sizes start from 12'x16'
Tho Rio Grande Colege
CETA Program io lOOking
Or Write Daily Sentinel Classtlied Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio45769
11
ALL STEEL &
POLE BUILDINGS
porticiponll for a ......
room okiU ttaining program
for a food - Para pn>feaionalo {This io not •
quantity coo10ng prognom.l
Public Notice
The Daily
Ohio
Insurance
Phone 379-2204.
Are you paying too much for
your hoopltol-heolth inourance .
Call
Carroll
Snowdon. 448-4290.
dition, 3 bedrooma, famlty
"?om with flrepalce, CM'Itflll
err, basement,. phone 304-·
' ' 676-1642.
------
LOVELY 3 bedroom. wall ln.:
.l(oti
sulated, full batemefttl :
fenced back yard,
building, curtiana Include ·
priced reduced e7 .00 :·
Muat aae to ep precllte,·
304-876-4338.
3 bedroom houte and lot on
Plymoto Rd . Gallipolio Ferry.·
F.H.A. Approved . 304-8713008.
• .
FOR lila or rent. 4 nNim
houoa. on Cheotnut Rlclee, •
Iorge lot, •14.000 or ...,. ,
•126. • month.
ooh. phone lfttf 3 p.m . '
304-875-71589.
-·
na . ._.
�.. .
Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel
31
52
3 bedroom houH on 1. 34
acres . ln aide Racine Corp .
limits . 614 -949- 2222.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBIL E
HOMES . USED · CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICE S .
CALL 446 -7672 .
County, County Rd 19. fa cing 4 lane . Call 446 -0602 .
USED MOBILE
576 -2711 .
HOME .
1969 HOMETTE , good con ·
aditlon,
w n i n2 gbedroom
, g a s , patio
h e a t&,
86 . 600 . 00 . 304 - 676 5640. 304-BB2 -2406. ..
1976 12x60 mobile home.
2 bedroom s, on rented lot in
Gallipolis citylimita . Firm
84,000 . 304 -675 -3943 or
614 -446 -4622 .
14x70 HILLCREST mo bile
home. 2 bedroom, all gas ,
kitchtn furnished, excellent
condition , $10 ,000 . Owner
financing available . 304 -
273 -5606 .
33
Farms for Sale
Lots
& Acreage
==~·
=~
l~r·ifN~ :~JJ~I
~\:~J \w~~~
",.,~~.e~v.•,\
..... A9-.A
~
.
tl " \
k~
_.. , •
~~=""
600 ft road frontage on
Cora -Centerpoint Rd . near
Centerpoint . &3 . 000 .00
Phon e 6B2 -6944.
19 acres close to Chester .
Beautifu I wo oded homesite.
Consider le ase purcha se or
land contract . S12 .000 .
614 -9B6 -4321 .
Two acre lot s-150 ft . road
frontage , city water, behind
B4 Lumber. Call 304 -676 6B73 or 676 -361B .
1.027 acre .plot on 8 Mile
Rd . wrth roofed basement .
Unfinished inside. Drilled
well. 815.000 or best offer .
Call 304 -676 -6395 .
6V, ACRES . Harrison Town ship , Gallia County, 6 mil es
out on Rt . 775 . from Galli pol is. $4 .000 . 304 -BB2 ·
2428 after 5 .
Ave tal&
Houses for Rent
Small furnished house, 1 or
2 adults only . Call 446 033B .
6 room house 8t bath . nice
garden space. located 110
4th Ave .. Gallipolis. Call
446-3B70 .
Furnished house 2 bdr .,
8196, water paid . 241 Jackson Pike ,Gallipoli s . Call
446 -4416 altar 7PM .
2 bdr . hou se in city ba se
ment gas furnan ce, carpeted. adults. no pets. Call
446 -096B.
House for rent in CrOYII'n
City . Cell614-367-0242 .
1816 Chatham Ave ., Galli poUa. 2 bdr. unfurnished .
Ideal for elderly couple .
8176 mo. doposh 8176.
Call 613-434-43BB .
2 or 3 bdr. farm home. 4 mi .
from town. garden spots
eveileble, sec. deposrt re quired. Call 446 -0648 . after
6.
House for rent in Addi so n 4
rms & bath. full basement .
Cell 6'14 -367· 7455 alt er
6 :30PM .
6 r . unf . houl8 . 10 Edge mont Or ., Gallipolis. Call
446 -1 370 after 5.
Pomeroy-2 bd.room unfurnilhed houM. 8195 . mo .
Securhy dopo4it. 81 00. plu s
utiNties. After 6 -cell 614992 -228B.
ONE bedroom house for
rent , :JA mile out Sandhill Rd .
phone 304 -676-6620 .
Furnished 2 bdr . mobile
home in Crown City . Call
614-266-6620 .
Mobile home 12x60 for sale
or ,.nt. no pets, deposit required. Allo trailer spoce.
Call4411-3812.
I hOUH treifer, end 1 trailer
lot. Caft 4411-1062 .
2 bdr trailer total electric.
81110 mo .. .1 mi. baclc of
Evetgr..n . Call 1114-246·
11170.
2 bdr.. gu & water furnilhed. pertiiiHy furnlohed.
no poll. 8200. 8100 dop .
Call after 6. 446 -4746 .
For ront trailer fumiahed. for
2 poroono. 8100 per mo.
Call 8711· 7379. after IIPM.
Campletelv turnlahed, AC,
gao ,_,_ 3 belt.• 2 car ..,.
._ Roctftey·Cora Rd, 81711
11
por ...0. Call4411 -18911.
CB,TV, Radio
Equipment
- . .. -·-· ...
··~
..
--~
.
Friday, November 5, 1982
Mise. Merchandise
Kr-1-T. '..:N_'C.;;_A_R,:.LY_L:;E:.'_"..________
by;_L_a_rr..;.y_w_r..;lg,ht
Turkeys for sale. Call 614246 -6B42.
FIREWOOD
10B3.
76
Friday. November 5, 1982
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
The Daily Sentinel-Page
t?
11
DICK TRACY
Boats and
Motor~ for Sale
1981 16ft. 41n. flblrgllu
bl11 boat. 76 hp outboard. 2
llvewells. 81600. 304·5711•
2719.
304 · 46B ·
Handmade cedar cheats.
304 -876-34B9.
76
Auto . Parts
Accessories
&
Have aeverelatt•netora GM
end tome weter pumps •
fuel pumpo. UIOd will 1011
reuonble . C all , 614 66941115.
Misc . Merchandise
Plastic Septk: Tanks. State
and county approved. 1,000
gal. tonk . prloe 8340. Other
sizes In stock, haul in your
pickup truck . Coii614 -2B6·
6930. Jackson. Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES
77
Auto Repair
Wood buming add on fur nence . Still in factory crate.
8460 . Call 1 - 614 - 266·
·1216.
Blue Ridge Mountain fire ·
Rt. 7 North . Gallipolis. Oh.
446 -0476.
42 Mobile Homes
f.or Rent
44
Apartment
12x66 mobile home with
12x22 add -a-room . Call
614 - 3BB · B247 o r 446 9262 .
Etf. Apt . Suitable for 1 or 2
peoP'e. Roush lane in Che shire. Oh . 1 - 304 - 773 6BB2 .
for Rent
2 bedroom trailer . Rea l nice,
adults only . Brown ' s Trailer
Pork , Minersvilo. 614 -992 3324 .
Apt . 1 bedroom furnished .
Utilities induded. Middle ·
port. &190. 614-992 -7177.
POMEROY ·2 bedroom un fumishad opt .. $160 . 2 bed room tioute 6186 . Deposit
$100 . Call 614 -992 -22BB.
Apartments . 304 - 676664B.
For aale-4 bd .room mobil&
home. Also for sale or rent , 3
bd .room mobile home. Also
have for sale 2 acres good
home in Mason wHI trede .
John Sheets, J "'h miles
South Middleport . R-7 .
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes, houses . Pt. Pleasant
ond Gallipoli s. 614 -446·
B221 or 614 -246-94B4.
Total electric . Nice locatton .
614 -992 -3956.
Unfurnished apartments for
rent . Call Automotive
Supply. 8 till 6, 304 -676 221B. 304·676-6763.
Mobile home in Middleport .
2 bd .room, util. inclu ded .
Vi ew of river . 614 -992 6949 .
IN Middleport, 2 room effi ·
ciency apartment, 304 BB2 - 2566
or
614 -992 -7206.
TWO mobile homes, garage
apartment. 6 minutes from
town on Rt . 2, call after 6
p .m .. 304 -675-6277 .
- - - - - - - psOB
btwo bedrotm mobile home .
Kitchen furnishe!l. nice &
clean . $186. plus utilities.
Married couples only, one
small chitd accepted , references. 304-676 -1076.
APARTMENT . 6 rooms .
yard & basement. ground
floor . 304 - 675 - 7641
evenings.
1- - : - : : - - - - - - -
ONE bedroom apartment in
Henderson , 304-675 -1972.
46
TWO bedroom mobile
home. Kitchen furnished ,
nice & clean . $210. Gns,
sewer & water paid . Married
couples only One small child
accepted. references . 304675 -1076.
acre mobile home lot. 1
mile past Centenary on 141 .
Oep. required, $60 per mo.
You pay utilities. Call 614246-6B41 .
51
Secluded . mini farm , all
fenced, remodel farm home.
with 4 bedr., 8300 per mo.
Cleland Realty 992-2269.
I
for rent - Farm homa . 6
rooms, bath . Oil heat. hot &
cold water . Nice lawn. big
garden . Storage room ,
chicken house & garage.
$135 . mo. RainoRd .l . 614949 -2BB9 . Avail. Dec . lat.
Apartment
for Rent
Furnished 3 r. private bath,
845 2nd . Ave .. Gallipolis.
Rat. preferred . Call 446·
2216 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sot., chair, roclatr, ottoman, 3 tables, (exua heavy
by Frontier) . t6B6 . Sofa,
chair and loveaeet, $276 .
Sofas end chairs priced from
$286 . to IB96 . Tables. 838
and up to $126. Hide·•·
beds, $440 . and up to
8626 ., queen size. 8380.
Recliners, 8176 . to 8326 .,
lamps from &18 . to $66 . 6
pc. dinettes from 879., to
e386. 7 pc .. $189 . ond up.
Wood table with aix chairs
8396 . to 8660. Desk $110.
Hutches. 8300. end $660 ..
maple or pine finish . Bed room aultea
Ballett
h
•
7
B
9
6
un k bed
C erry,
·
complete wltfl mattresses.
t260 . end up to $396. Baby
bods, U9. Mettr.. •• or
box springs, ful or twin,
Small furniahed effiancy. 1
professional type male only.
Center air & heat. Call 446033B.
2nd floor furnished effl·
cioncy apt. Apt . 4, 729 2nd
Ave . Aduh s only . 446 0957.
Houses and 1 & 2 bdr . apartments for rent . HUO pro gram available . A -One Real
Estates. Carol Yeager, Real tor. Call 304 -676 -6104 or
675 -53B6.
Nicely furnished mobile
home, central air, 1 mile
below crty overlooking river,
oduh only. Ceii446 -033B .
Flrtt floor unfurnished lptlrtment. Inquire at 631 4th
Ave ., Gallipolis.
•68 .• firm. US. and $78.
Queen 1811• 8 196. 4 dr.
cheots. 842. I dr. chest&.
854. Bed fremoo. UO.end
1
.26 .. 10 gun - Gunce b.ones.
$360 .. dinette choirs 820.
and •26. Oaa or electric
•326 lab
rangOI,
·
Y mo ttellll. f26 & $36, bod
frames 820. f26. & 830.
Usod Fumiture .. bookcase,
ranges, chairs, end tables,
recliners end TV's. 3 miles
out Bulevillo Rd . Open 9om
to 6pm, Mon . thr~ Fri .. 9om
to 6pm. Sot.
446 -0322
..
Furnished Apt.. 1 BR , 243
Jackson Pike. $226, utilities
paid. Adults . 446·4416 of·
ter 7 p.m .
1 bedroom apt. very nice,
&1 36 month, new carpeting, refrigerator and stove .
Call 992 -6BBO.
Furnished apertment. All
utilitiea pold. Adults only.
Ord• couple preferred. Cell
446-9623.
Kenmore ovocedo wooller,
neer)y new condition 8t 25,
GE waoher 1100. KenmoreA
apart . wuher 880 .
number of good uood efect·
ric drvor, v~~rlouo prices. Call
1114-2511-1207.
3 bdr. unfurnished apt. at
103 Court St. f216 por mo ..
$100 dop .. no pets, ref.
required .
8ethofmbautt'*,..,bed.• cobumpnkiiiMta.
wft
exc. cond. Round woOdln
toble on pecleotal bolo• wltll
4 ledder blclc chain. Call
4411·41711.
4 rm furn .• apt.• ldu b onty.
no petl. Col 4411-1945.
3 room unfurnished apartmont in city. Cell446-4068 .
endtobles,andboxoprlng.
Corbin & Snyder Fumltu,.,
441·1171 .
G.- apt.; fumlohed, 28~
w•• •
Gennl Electric
dryer, ttOO Mall. WIIMJ~DC~I
Nllll Ave .. Gaflipollo. 8230,
Ullltlee pd. 1 bdr. Call 441·
4411 8fter 7PM.
.....,., • ..,.,,•• IQ .- h.
JO tlly, Can
a........... .
614-218-1207.
---------------~-
55
Building Supplies
Johnny Stewart fox call
tapes. Cotto"ntail rabbitt,
gray fox pup, plus many
mora . Spring Valley Trading
Co., Spring Valley Plaza,
446 -B026.
Building matarials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Granda. 0 . Call
614 -2 45 -5121 .
Woodbu r ning stove, ex .
cond .. $126 . Call 614-246 ·
5864 anytime .
Build your own garage
2 4x24 all lumber furnished,
$695. Can deliver. Barn
pattern also . Call 614 -886 7311 .
Galvanized chin link fenc ing , 300 ft . All materials
plus 2 gates. 14ft bl , 12 It
double go to . Call448 -1670.
Metal sheets for all building
purposes . Flat porcalian
anamel coated . 4x8 thru 4 x
12. Prices. $7.00 to 89 .60.
614 -667-30B5.
2 atory doll hou.e, hand made log cabin style, furnilhed, nice Christman gift,
&80. Also sma ll tables, cof ·
fee tables bargain priced .
Cell 446 -4630.
'''M lyppllve
• Ll
61
56
POODLE GROOMING . Call
Judy Taylor at 614 -367 7220.
REG . QUARTER HORSES
Training, showing, breed ing, sales and boarding.
Contact Dan Beam. Gallipolis, 446 -01B3.
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow pup·
pies, CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kittens .
Call 446·3B44 altar 4PM.
Would you like a cute Cocker
Spaniel puppy for Chrittman7 AKC Blonda Cocker
Spaniel puppies $150. Have
been wormed and had all
shots. Call 614 -3BB -9766
after 5PM .
Fireplace heater, adjustable
sized, raoatat fan control.
e>U:. cond . Call 446 -026B.
For sale Peavey 400 mixer
PA and speakers, $500firm .
Call 675 -3616 between
6 :00 -7 :00.
For sale American Pit -Bull
Terrier AD BA Registert-·' fe.
male, 5 mos old, white shots
& health record . Call 614 3BB-9616 .
Baby high chair, good condi tion . Cell 46B -1997.
Hydraulic lift for teil gate of
truck . Call 614-3BB-9909 .
AKC REg . English Bulldog
pupptea. Champion blood
lines. 8600 to $BOO. Call
814-698-B671.
Glauwere, depreaaion carnlval -cut-- ruby- preSied cambridge gllll·luncheon
aet· decegon pattern. Call
614-387-7169.
Dalmatio, male 6 mos. old,
Registered. Cell 446· 3077.
Firawood, 836. truck load .
865. 8 cord . Split and deli vered . 614 -B43-3603.
Price reduced . Closing out .
Reg . Blue Tic Coon hound
puppies. 614 -9B6-3666 or
6 14-9B6-432B.
House coa l. Pickup at mine
site. Forest Run Rd . 826.
ton thru Nov. 614-992 22BO or 614 -992 -261B .
SEVEN Beegle puppies, 6
weeks old November 6.
From fine h;unting stock.
840.00 aoch. 304 -876 ·
6146 .
For sale-Hard wood. split
and delivered . $36 . 614992 -72 37 .
57
Cell Robert Herpor for Gin·
aeng end Yellowroot prices .
304-676-1293.
JIVIDEN'S FARM
EQUIPMENT
446- 1876
long tractors, Verm•r bel ~
era 6. hay equipment. Bale
movers It feeders, wagons,
rotary tiiiMI, rotary cutters.
seeders, blades, gates,
disc. plow a. cultivators &
woodburnera.
And aeeustogetacomplete
line of part & service!
USED:
IH hrdro 70. Ford Jubilee.
600 Ford. Ferguson 30. 70
Oliver, Maaaey Harris Pony,
8 - N Ford . co r nplanter ,
plows, disc. round baler, JO
manure spreader, goose
neck grain wagon , end ul8d
woodburnera.
We Buy Uood Equi!Jmentl
Livestock
3 bred Holstein heifers. Due
Nov .• $700 ea. Cell 614379 -2413.
Bred Hereford cows . Con tact Harley Rice, Reedsville,
Oh . 614-667 -3369 .
4 year okt mare. Excellent
diapos~ion . 68 in . tall
Green broke, must sail.
$400. Phone 614 - 949 2062 or 614 -949-2226 .
Two polled Hereford heifer
calves for ule. 6 months
old . 614-742-2014.
Freezer Beef-groin fed . 700
to 1200 lb . 614-949-2194.
64
Hay
&
Grain
1,
J :-~!<~· 'Al
'100 ~
REI'\GHED ~ ;" .,..;;; .:;
i-\P,5 MY
· ~--..:YET_ ??/
1
"l ~
1
#
.,;,w! ·r~.!..~ ! ~
~~
.lt'"'r'c.J~
~
,
..L!.
~AJ ~
>""if
~
(
l .- l
~'h"'~~~
~
i='-151 ~
;1·
··
r
1:;~
'~!t.,
••
\,-1
~f.
.I.C
-.
- ----------- -------·-- ____ . ..
-·· ··- - ~
... --
rr7· -_ ".
w 11 6
- ----M-0~0.
I
1977 Skylark, 305 V-8. p.s..
p.b., au1Dmatic, poaitraction rear and, no rust. good
interior, 82,600. Coli 614247-3931 alter 4 p.m. La·
tart Falla.
HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven We.at Virginia . Over
20 leaa expensive cars In
stoclc.
JEEPS, Cars. Trucks under
t100 evolleble at local gov't
aalea in your area . Cell (refundeblel 1· 714-5119 -0241
ext. 1B56 for directory on
how to pu tehlae. 24 hra.
74 Buick Ragal, good cond .
$600. See at 2826 Jaffer·
son, or cell ;304-876· 7176
alter 6:00.
1971 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill,
radio,
power steering, power
brakes. air condit ioning ,
304 -BB2 -242B .
V-8. automatic,
1967 NOVA 302 . 4spead, 4
barrel, positive traction ,
black on black. 81 BOO.OO,
304· 676-4210 .
72 PONTIAC , good condi ·
tion , 304-876- 1402.
1977 SKYLARK 306 V-8.
power ateering, power
brakes, automatic, poaitractlon , no rust , good interior.
82600. Call814-247-3931
alter 4 p.m . Letart Fells.
72
large round bales *10.826. ' 304 -46B - 1866 or
304-676-7641 .
fiwnepprcwclun
71
Autos for Sale
Trucks for Sale
76 Jeep Cherokee at. p1, pb,
am- fm, good condition,
70,000 mi.e1960. 304676-2700.
1974 CHEVY pickup truclc ,
•660. cell 304· 876-2238 .
73
Vans
77 Bronco 4 -WD . 302, 2
barrel, standard. g9od cond .
Cell 614-268-8068.
1977 J - Wagoneer good
cond.. 82,900. Call 4464670 after 6 :30.
79 Pontiac Bonrievlle. 2 dr .,
It blue. velour interior.
cruise, AM-FM , 8-track.
Cell 614-268-6066.
19BO VW Vonogon, 4 spd,
auxil. heater, good gas mileage, 26,000 actual miles,
Cell 614- 246 91B2.
1976 Camero PS. PB, outo,
rodlel tlroo. olr ohocks,
81,000 mi. Can 446-4730.
es.ooo.
81
74
PAINTING - interior end ext8rior. plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yrs .
oxp. Call 614· 3BB·9662.
Marcum Roofing & SpoutIng . 30 years experience,
apecializi1g In bull up roof .
Call 614· 3BB -9822 or 6143BB·9867.
RON'S TeJevision Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar , end
house cells . CoU 676 -239B
or 448-2464.
IT
6LOW
L EVERYTHING/
Water Wells. Commercial
and Oomesttc. Teit holes.
Pumps Sale a and Service .
304-B96-3802.
ADVANCED Soomleu
Gutter-Doors. Offering continuae guttering, seamleu
aiding, roofing, ganga
doors, free estimates, 814 69B -8206 .
Evening television listings------- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FRIDAY
EVENING
6:00 G (%) Newacenter
(]) MOVIE: 'Kenny Rogers
aa The Gambler'
Cil Tic Toe Dough
([) Carol Burnett
Cll lll Cll em Ill (!)) News
(IJ Newa/ Sporta/Wuther
Cil aD 3-2-1, Contact
6:3() II C2l Cil NBC NIWI
Cil Splh Cherry TrH A poor
farmer gains insight Into
his son's dreams and ambi·
tions . Will Newman, Jarrod
Ross, Colleen Dewhurst.
(I) MOVIE: 'Track the Man
Down'
Cll Sob Newhart Show
CIJID(I)I ABC News
111 CIJ em cas N•w•
Cil Or. Who
[i) Over Easy
7:00 II Cil P.M. Mogezlno
(]) Inside the ·NFL Len
Dawson and Nick Buoniconti analyze this week's
NFL action·and look ahead
to next week's games.
@ 0/C NCAA Foot boll
Preview Jim Simpaon and
Bud Wilkin1on hosts.
(]) Winnera
()) Entertllnment Tonight
Cil Charlie's Angola
8 Cll Tic Too Dough
()) (fD
MecNeii·Lehrar
Roport
emNewo
• (!)) PltOple's Court
7:30 • C2J em You Asked For It
@ ESPN Sportl Contor
Cll Anlll_ Griffith
Cll II l.lJ Family Foud
(J) Bualn... Report
(11) lnalde Bualneae
IJ) (]}l
Entertalnme~t
Tonlll!!.t
(I) C1) Powers of
8:00
Metthew Star
Cil MOVIE: 'Ghost Story'
(IJ MOYIE: 'Body ond Soul'
l])lkopor Book
@NFL Gome of tho WHk
If the NFL Pleyers strike
continues, thla program
will be pre-empted and
' NFL Films' will be aired.
Cll MOVIE: 'Tho Brou
Bottle'
CIJ•CHIS.nltOn Benson'o
younger brother comes for
1 vtalt
"'
alllemDuketofHIDI' •.
ROOFING. repair or lnstollo·
tion . Building & temodalln·
g,interior or exterior. Free
estimates. 304-676-2440.
82
Plumbing
Heating
&
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3B8B or 4464477
84
&
Electrical
Refrigeration
General Hauling
JONES BOYS WATER SER · .
VICE. CaM 514-367-7471
or 1114-367·0691 .
1974 Yemeho EnduJO dirt
bite, 2,900 mlleo; Cell4681997.
Need something hauled
away or something moved?
We'll do~- C.ll445-3169or
614-266-1987 otter
e.
TRISTATE
UPHQLSTERY S~p
1163 Soc. Ave., Gll~a 1
441 -71133 or 446-1833. •
IIJIDlw.......-wMIV
Review Peul Duke it joined
by top Wllhington jour·
the
nellata
enelyzlng
Week's news.
8:30 CIJiwiu family Robinson
@NFL Theetno: · - Evor
MO.WREYS Uphoto•oitt-llt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Ploilllltt
304-11711-4164.
'
•
..
-,----------.;__--- ~ - -- ---'- _, _,._
___
I
min .)
e
Now Houllng hou11 coel,
lump or. st<*er up to 8 ton .
Umt11tone, top Mill, fiH dirt.
Callll14-357-7101 .
bin••·
view of economic and investment matters.
9:00 D Cil Cil Knight Rider
Micheal Knight helps 1 widow defend some cattle
ranc hes from a competitor
who's bound to stea l their
water. (60 min.)
Cil 700 Club
Cll Ill (!))
Greatest
American Hero Ralph
steps in for a quarterback
whose wife has been kidnapped by hoodlums. (60
11/5/82
PAINTING interlo1 & extl·
rior. free estimates, 304676 -1128.
197B Honda Hawk auto ..
7,700 mi. SillY blr, creoh
blr & highWay pogs. Exc.
cond .. 8760. Call 441·
4249.
191'. ft. Bahll old lloat. 1 &o
Mercury. covera & acceMO·
I
COVER ...
RINGLE'S SERVICE expe rienced roofing, Including
hot tar application, carpenter, electrician, mason. Call
304-876· 20B8 or 6764660.
,973 340
Challenger,
318 o:lei. Belling for pey off,
auto..
heed••· crone
C8n, elder brock, Holley, IC· · •4.1100 . Coli 114-3889783 o.fter 4.
oel.• New hndera •
muffler!'- I • M ehlfl ldt,
11171 loaa Tf11Cker111 . Lllie FURNITURE .......d. • tnnew Dlklt •
new, bill motor, needo ,..
arog.; ·trlck ..._,. •
- · Ou8t011fb•
4JO gi. . , Cal 114•317· pek. 81 ..·11111-4331 elter II tlq- ·
304-171-iln-.
,p.m.
02111.
II p .m . •
~--
NOW DON'T GO
FIRING HER JUST YET.
F & K Tree Trimming , stump
removal . Coll676-1331 .
715
-----.. ------·-- -
She
won!
CHRISTIAN'S CON STRUCTION. Constr .. roofing, siding, spouting.
fencing, painting, repeira &
ciNning. 446-2000. coli befono 8 ond after 11:30.
1114-21tll1408after IIPM .
otrtD•. *•·
,_
Wheres Melba,
Rufus? It's final
Me10nary work, Logue Con tracting, At . 1, Ewington .
Cell 614-3BB-9939.
1981 Dodge Ariel K Cor,
front wheel drive, l>uclcet
-t•. maroon lntoertor end
exterior, C epd. m.,uel
tronamlosion, 'AM radio,
1111!1 Muotong gocid cond ..
V-8, 4 opd .. trenomlealon .
Call 614-245-111113.
GASOLI NE ALLEY
CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet
Cleaning featured by Haffeh
Broathera Cullom Carpets.
Free estimates. Call 4462107.
86
Boeta end
Motors for Sale
WM80CK5. YOU'VE
CAIJ5ED ME 10 LEAitM
THAT MY SON HAS
ALLEY OOP
1877 C B 7110 K Hondo. Low
m ..ap, t111od cond.. lild JIMS Water S.rvl... Cell
·C!ff-rlliloan far eellng. A .M- Jim Lanier, 304-8711,7397.
F.M. radio • c-. player,
aloo ferlng . Good tlreo.
8810. 614•8112-1113.
87 Upholatery
12111.
MV APOLOOY. I'iU.Y.
VOU . PLEASE ACCEPT ME. HOWEVER. !lit.
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commercial and residential, free
estimetu. Call 614·266 1182.
Motorcycles
1978 8u.aukl 550 hao been
Neked, mllca offer. Call
451-18117:'
•
REWAIW! ANNIE 15
Home
Improvements
73 Chevy Blazer. 4 wheel
drive . Auto . trans. runs
g ...t. body rough . .600. SEWING Mochlne repairs,
Call 949-2779 alter 4 on service. Authorized' Singer
S.leo & Service Sherpen
- k deyo.
Scluon . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992 -2284.
1973 VW Beetle, ex. cond.
Call 614-246-11182.
OH ... l'VE INSULTED
JUH GLAO S/1E'5
~!!!!:!"""'"' SAFE.'
1972 VW camp mobile.
good con d., new radial tires .
Coll614-268· 1169.
& 4 W.O.
For sale 1979 Ford Fiesta
excellent shape, 4 apd., 4
cyl. Call 446-9789 otter
6PM .
tokeoverbelon~-ed . Call
-
1980 Jeep Pick- up. with
lllf toppor . 21 ,000 miles.
$6 1400. 1973 Cadillac Sa·
don DeVille. •1.000. 814992·2681 .
A/WfNIP? I
00/I'T ~T AllY
MV FRIEl{/)! I 'M
1979 AMC Spirit. 36.000
miles. Exc. cond. Asking
$3,200. 614-949·2696.
Harvest special Whole
shelled corn e6.00 por 1 00
lb. your sacks. $6 .76 per
sacked . Morgan Woodlawn
Farm, Rt . 36, Pliny, WV .
304-676-2276.
-~:.~: million
W~r.':':::'ho~1S::::
porto. Call 4411-
· 1"'~~~~~--=11~j; 1 .~~!'."'~
~--~
<
"'"~ .::' !!:!.!:.~
$lOO
1969 Cadillac, 2 door. New
exhaust, electric windows &:
11111. $496 . 614-992·
7177.
Hay for sale •1.26 1 bale.
Cell 614-3B8-9370.
76 Corvette PS, PB. AC.
Auto, T-top, AM·FM redlo,
newtlras. 88,000. Ceii614367-0894.
-~-:--:-:-:--:------:r-----------L...---------~ 1970 Buick LoSebre body Is
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople · In fair con d., no rust, engine
good running cond . Aoking
!Y
••<:r( A 5Li<iHT DE~~Y.;~- ~ .ili\ICE y \>IIIFJ\1
$360. Cell446-3077 . .
W~A'T'5 'J iri~ iJ_?_!TOI
HOOPLE! I.M,·;~·c
PEAAN;"
MV
IT'_L·~~~
MONEY A . ... c .; ...
SA'" ~ ><o.voNr•
19B1 Cutllll Supreme Dio·
sal with everything . Will
conakler older car as trade
in. 614-742-2416.
""or
Piano cherry fruit wood fin·
ish. French design, &BOO.
Call446-4670 eftar 6:30.
~~6&i-.
•• , iN,~~
1,. 9'.'7
BUDDY? · c 11
;_;-~F
76 Monte Carlo good cond .
Cell614-266-6228.
1978 FORD 4
sodlln.
pa, pb. air conditioning ,
cheep , good condition .
$796 . 304 · 46B · 1B64
evenings.
1976 Corvette red. u .
cond. Must Sell, 88,900,
Jackson Oh. 1-814- 2866160 or 1-614-288-6588.
Musical
Instruments
Wa will MEET or SEAT ony
log~imeto price yourrecelvo
on eny new piano or orrcn.
BRUNICARDI MUSIC 0 .,
61 Court St .. Gallipolis. Call
446 -06B7.
BUYING end selling uoad
heavy oquipment (ogricultural, conatructlon, mining,
chemical Industry, otc .)
through consignment for 8
national company. Starting
ot $16.000. value . Call Ro bert L Harper. 304-6761293 .
uh
Pets for Sale
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg . Doberman& pups and
Doberman Stud Service.
Call 446 -7795 .
Firewood, $1 00, Dump
uuck load. Delivered. Call
614-3BB-96B7.
1
Farm Equipment
63
very good cond ., both ul8d
1 season, fireplace insert
w ith 2 speed blower and
gloss door. $200. 1 Rebel
stove wlth 18'x18 'x30, fine
box. $300. Cell446-1997.
31' gaoronge, owlvehoclcer,
Mod111rn 1 bdr apt. between
hqopi."l & town $180 pluo
litilitl... Coli 446-2065.
FIREWOOD. $26 . pickup
load, 304 -B95-3999. Ask
for Jim.
Cesa Knife Sate Product no.
6231 1'., 2 bladed. bone han dle. List price $18.76, aala
price •11 .26 . Spring Valley
Trading Co .• Spring Valley
Plaza. 446 -B026 .
2 wo<Xt stoves for sale in
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- washers, dryers, refrigera·
tors, ranges . Skaggs Ap·
pliancea, Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446 -739B.
BRASS finish glass top cof fee table & end tables .
$126 . 304-676-2126 .
House coal for sale $24 ton .
Coii614-266 -6B16 or 614 266 -8747.
Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION & FURNITURE
STORE Q2 Oliva St .. Galli polis. Couch, loveaeet and
chair, 8199.; wood end coal
heaters; box spring and mattress. 8100. Recliners,
$80.; 9 x 12 linoleum ruga,
622.; maple rockers, $49.,
wringer washers , refrigera tors. dinette aata, chest,
dress8f'l, bunkie mattress,
S40. Call 446 -3169 .
Potatoes. Humphrey Farms
still has Kinnebeca at $9 .00
per 1 00 lb., ex . quality. your
containers . No Sunday
Sa lea. Get your winter pota·
toea now. ReediVille, Oh
614-37B-6296.
Waterline For Sale 3!. inch
160 PSI $17.96 per 100ft ..
1' 160 PSI $2B.96 par 100
ft .. 1'1.' 160 PSI $47.60 per
1 00 ft . Ron Evans Enterpriaea, 4 miles South of
Jackson on St. Rt . 93, 614 2B6·6930 .
:::
Mvrahwndl&e
43 Farms for Rent
Firewood. Cut to length.
Delivered in dump truck
loads or may be picked up in
yard . Crown City, Oh Junction 663 & 21B . Call 614266 -6246.
Dry sink, bucket bench,
writing desk . corner cabinet ,
oak fern stand , wooden
bread boxes, more hand ·
made. Taking orders for custom made items for
Christmas . Bidwell County
Furniture across from Post
Office in Bidwell. Oh . 9 :00
till 5 :00 Tues through Sat.
COUNTRY MOSILE Home
Park. Rout e 33. North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992 -7479 .
TRAI LEA space for rent in
M aso n. l ocated on Hor to n
St . Phone anytim e. 304 773 -5150.
44
Space for Rent
1.4
·-·- · ~ ·--~~~ - - - -· ·- --~· ··--- ...
'
. .· ...
'
~~-~~~-~it!~'
....,.
·~~~~~T~~~~~.a.
i.:.~..:c~·~~~~ placeinaertsnowinstockat
0 ··~(,!',~
"""'''"'
· -·· " '
Swisher Implement Co., St.
Furnished efficiency 8176 .
Utilities pd , 920 4th Ave .,
Gallipolis. Adults . Call 446 4416 after 7PM .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
.
""\:P.
3 bedroom nicely furnished .
For sale one and half acres
more or less. approximately
41
54
2 bedroom furnished .
Adults preferred . No pet s.
Deposit required . 614 -992 ·
2749 .
26 acre farm fenced . 1980
windsor trailer. barn , out buildings, tobacco base, off
776. S26, 900. Call 446 0B44 .
35
54
RCA Select -A-Vision disc
mov ie machine. New and 6
movlta included. 8260. Two
high quality end t~blea .
Solid wood -Maple. $160.
Cell 304 -676 -7032 after 4 .
Trailer on JA acre in Meigs
. . ....
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Homes for Sale
CLEAN USED MOBIL E
HOMES KESSEL ' S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
RT 36 . PHONE 448 -72 74 .
~
,_lo'
.. ,
.'
..__,
c:::: \
~~,:ri=t
LOutl RukeyMr analyzaa
the 'IOei wfth e wukly r•
1
Ill Cll em Dellu J.A. and
Bobby prepare to do battle
to prove who is the beat
man and entitled to Ewing
Oil. (60 min.)
(I) Next Question
(]]) Body In Question
'Breathless.' Dr. Jonathan
Miller shows that unaccountable breathlessness
may be caused by three
physiological systems. (R)
(60 min.) jCi osad Cap.
tioned]
9:30 @ PKA Full Contact
Karate
(I) Inside Bualneaa
10:00 8 Cil Cil Romlngton StHII
Remington doesn't want to
provide secu rity for a price·
less painting because of
the curse it bears. (60 min.)
CIJ MOVIE: 'Potornlty'
(IJ MOVIE: 'Biymo In Lovo'
(I) TBS Evening News
Clllll (!)) QuOit Art's rescue of a busioad of children makes him a target of
assauins. {60 miO.)
8'(1) (D Fe loon Crest Richard Channing use• his
newspaper to
exploit
Chase's supervisor position. (60 min.)
(]) American Dreamers
()]) Newewatoh
10:30 Cil Ster Tlmo
@ Meaterpleoe Theatre
'To Serve Them All My
Days._' The first woman
joins the teaching staff at
Bamfylde and befriend'
one of the older boys. (60
min.) [Cio11d Captioned]
11:00 • <D 'Newaoenter
@ ESPN &porto C.ntor
Cll Allin tl>e Fomlly
CIJa Cll em • (!)) Newo
Cil NOWO/Sporti/WHthor
(I) DIYI Allen It largo
11:30 a Cil Cil Tonight 811ow
Cil MOVIE: 'So Fino'
Cil Anothor Ute
(I) MOVIE: 'Countdown'
Cll Benny Hill 811ow
a Cll MOVIE: 'Diary of a
T - Hltohhlko(
D Pll L,te Night
All In tile flmlly
IIJ Nightllne
12:00
li!OVIt: 'Emily'
lumo • Allen
@ Top Ronk lloxlng from
Atllndo CitY
I
liD At t he Movies
(I) Nightlini
(lD MOVIE: 'Bewarel The
Blob'
Ill CHI ABC Loto Night
News
..-
12:30 II Cil Cil SCTV Network
(]) Jeck Benny Show
Cll ABC Leto Night News
()) Captioned ABC News
1:00 Cil MOVIE: 'lncrodlblo
Shrinking Women'
()) I Married Joan
1:30 Cil MOVIE: 'Konny Rogors
ae The Oemblef'
Cil My Llttlo Margie
Cll Best of Midnight
~lela
1:45
2:00
2:30
3:00
3:15
3:30
WI MOVIE: 'Gamera, Super
Moneter'
•CHI News
Cll MOVIE: 'THX 113B'
a
Cil
NBC
Newo
. Overnight
(]) Bachelor Father
Cil Newo/ Sign OH
Ill CHI CNN Hoedllne News
C2l HBO Theatro: The
Rainmaker A handsome
stra nger fulfills a lonely
woman's yearning for love.
Tuesday Weld, Tommy Lee
Jones, William Katt.
Cil Life of Rlloy
@ EBPN Sports Contor
Cil 700 Club
em CNN Hoedllno Nows
Cil MOVIE: 'Body end Soul'
@ 0/C NCAA Foot bill
Preview Jim Simpaon and
Bud Wilkinson hoats.
Cll MOVIE: 'Attock of tho
Moo,.~
4:00 (J.) Profeuionel Rodeo
from Meoqulto, TX
4:30 ·Cil Ron Boglay
4:46 C2l HBO Moguino Storrlng
Dick Cavett This show presenti an Inside look at the
shows and start appearing
on HBO.
SATURDAY
11/6/82
EVENING
8:00 a w N-ntor
C2J MOVIE: 'Silo- of tho
North' ·
Cil Amorioan Troll
Cll World Championship
Wrestling
CD God Haa the Answer
Cll Net~re of Things
,()]) Pereonel Finane.
6:30 · • C2J NBC Cil MOVIE: 'TrenoAdontlo
Meny.OO.Round'
Future Sport
~ ai!JN-.
.
7:00
H.l. H - Soolety
P-IFinaC2l Oonoe Fevor
EIPN &porto C.ntor
I
alll~Haw
_
Memorioo
With Lawr_Welk
CIJ All C,..tuo'H GrMt and
8mall
(11) Writers' Workshop
Ill (!)) Solid Gold
7:30
II (Il lnsldo Look
(]) HBO Theatre: Frank
Langelll
In
Sherlock
Holmes The world famous
datectlve unravels 'The
Strange Case of Alice B:30
Faulkner.' Susan Clark,
Stephen Collins.
(]) Screening Room
CD Henna's Ark
9:00
(11) MetlnH at the Bljou
'Wagon Wheel s.' A wagon
train find• its journey beset
with danger. (R) (90 min.)
B:OO D Cil Cil Dlffrent Strokes
Arnold and Dudley make
up a story to get rid of a 9:30
substitute teacher.
(]) MOVIE: 'The Elephant
Man'
10:00
(]) MOVIE: 'Young at
Heart'
(]) ESPN Presents Saturday Night at the Fights
CIJ NCAA Football: Tulane
at MlaaiNippl
Cll lll (!)) T.J. Hooker Sgt.
Hooker pursues a sniper
who has shot 1everal officers. {60 min.)
Ill Cll em Welt Disney 'No
Deposit No Return .' An 11 year-old girl and her 9-
year-old broth er engineer
th eir own kidnapping to
stick thei r grandfather.
Guest
starring
David
Niven, Darren McGavin.
Don Knotts .
()) MOVIE: 'The Private
Life of Henry VIII'
D Cil Cil Sllvor Spoons
Ricky ca lla up some topsecret government plans
on his computer.
II Cl) (!) Gimme a Break
Clllll (!)) Lovo Boat
Ill Cll em MOVIE: 'One
Shoe Makes It Murder'
[D Hitch Hikers Guide/
Galaxy
D Cil Cil Love. Sidney
(]} MOVIE: 'True Confessione'
{1]) Or. Who Movie
II (]) (l) Devlin Connection Nick and Brian
compete to capture a
French criminal. (60 min.)
Cl)
MOVIE:
'SOuthern
Comfort'
(l) Dallas Cow- boys
WHkly
(I) 8 D Fantasy Island A
blackjack daaler defands
Mark Twain from a rivar·
boat gambler and a couple
married seven years finally
go on their honeymoon.
~,....~.rr
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Tooth
problem
1 French priest
5 Beef or
43 " All - Jazz"
chicl<en
DOWN
10 Hide
I Swiftly
11 Wife of Jacob 2 Engendered
13 Water (Sp.)
3 "I doer"
14 Stick
4 Greek letters
15 Tropical plant 5 Atlanta team
Yesterday's Answer
17 Marsh
6 Airport
18 Anglo-Saxon
safety
16 Quebec's
26 Top cards
letter
device
patron
Z8 Sudatory
19 Ending for
7 Irish "alas!"
saint
30 NoveUst
win or sin
8 When
22 Seraglio
Jong
!0 Adherent
blossoming
chamber
32 Spanish
(Suffix)
9 Toast 's
Z3 Macaw
province
!I Subatomic
beginning
24 Gloomy
33 Cap
particles
12 Quadra25 Knowing
36 Exclude
Z3 Conunedia
geslmal
fright
38 Resin
..
dl!ll ·-
%4 American
jockey
%8 Hot crime
!7Gymnast
Korbut
Z8 "Monis,
begone!"
ftjJ!JN}fi}ft
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Q/J ~ ~~·
byHorwl-lnCIBobLM
Unacrarnbte thlll tour Jumblla,
onoleltor 10 uch IqUiri, to lonn
lou< ordinary-.
29 Fairy queen
30 Lambkin's mom
31 Babism
founder
34 Winter
utterance
PAPYL
.r) I
35 Detennine
37 Signora lago
39 Publisher,
Malcolm -
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Page-12
The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy
New taxes may be only answer to deficit . IMeigs County happening8...
By OWEN UllMANN
Assoclatro Press Writer
WASHINGTON lAP)- Reagan
adm inistra tion officials, conceding
the federal budget deficit could approach s:m billion in 1984, say they
don't know how toe! imina te much of
the red Ink without higher taxes and
military spending cuts.
In a post-election confession they
. were unwilling to make until after
Tuesday's voting, olflclals said they
are searching for ways to make sigMeigs Count y, son of thE' late Jerry
nificant progress against the deficit
C. and Katherine McE lwaineWard.
' without violating President ReaHe was also preceded in death by
gan's rule against defense cuts.
two brothers. Melvin and Theodore
So far, they have no solutions.
Roosevelt Ward.
"It 's a terrible dilemma," said one
Mr. Ward was a mechanicspecal- officiaL
ist by trade.
The otlicials, asking that their
He is survived by his wife. Joyce names not be used, acknowledged
An n Maynard Ward; one da ughter.
that preliminary estimates put the
Jamli Mischelle Ward. Trotwood;
deficit for fiscal1984 somewhere be·
five sisters, Marcella Akbar and
tween $150 billion and s:m billion.
Betty F . Fields, Trotwood; ElizaBudget director David A. Stockbeth Milton, Middleport; Ruth Allee
man, who has until mid-January to
Winchester. Colorado Springs,
produce a new budget plan, has
Colo. , and Kattuyn Farrow, Pomebeen described as perplexed over
roy; four brothers, Jerry Ward, Jr.,
how to whittle down so huge a deficit
and George H. Ward, Columbus;
unless Reagan changes his opposiRichard A. Ward, Lucasv ille. and
tion to further tax increases and maRobert E. Ward, Dayion; several
jor reductions in his . Pentagon
nieces, nephews and cousins.
Funeral services will be held Sat·
urday a t 2:30 p.m. at the Rawlings·
Coa ts-Blower Funeral Home with
burial to be in Beech Grove Ceme·
tery. Friends may call at the funeral
A Pomeroy woman was cited by
home today from 6 p.m to 9 p.m.
the Gallia-Melgs post of the State
Area deaths
Foster Lewis
Foster E . Lewis, 70, Rt. 2, Patriot,
died this morning at his r2Sidence.
Born Feb. 4, 1912, in Peniel community, son of the la te David and
Rachel Lambert Lewis, he was a
dairy farmer and worked for the
Gallla County Agricultu ral Conservation and Stabilization Service,
serving as its chairman for eight
years.
He was also an agent for Sandy &
Beaver Grange Mutual Insurance,
was a member of the Gallia County
Soil and Water Conservat ion District, was a 25-year4-Hclub advisor,
a central committeeman for Greenfield Township and a former
member of the Southwestern Local
Board of Education. He also at·
tended Gallia Baptist Chu rch.
Surviving is his wife, Pauline
Miller Lewis; three sons, Oyde of
Columbus, Richard and James,
both of Gallipolis; six grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren; and
five brothers, Walter and Carl, both
of Bowling Green, William of Oak
HUI, Hayden of Waterloo and John
of Patriot
He was also preceded in death by
a brother and a sister.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday in Peniel Church, with
the Rev. Gerald Brown officiating.
Burial will be in Penlel Cemetery.
Friends may call at the KuhnerLewis Funeral Home, Oak Hill.
from 24 and 7·9 p.m. Saturday.
The body will lie in state in the
church one hour before the service.
James Ward
James F. Ward. 42, Trotwood,
Ohio,dledMondayat the Good Sa maritan Hospital. Dayton.
·
Mr. Ward was born Sept. 2. 1940 ,m
Meigs Court news
Eighteen defendant s were fined
and seven others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were: Clara Yinger, Wellston. fail ure to yield at an intersection, $10
and costs; John Man ley, Middleport, speed. $21 and costs: Arthur
John, Owosso. Mich., speed. $22 and
costs; Randall Reiber, Racine,
speed. $25 and costs; Beverly Cum·
mins, Racine, speed. $10 and costs;
Lee Bing, Rutland, improper park·
ing, $10 and costs, fine suspended;
Arlie Malone, Racine, menacing,
two days confinement. costs, six
months probation; Marcella Casto,
Long Bottom, speed, $22 and costs;
Jeri McManis, Gall! polls, speed, $21
and costs; Harold Rainer, Racine,
speed, $24 and costs; Shawn Gilmore, Pomeroy, speed, $41 and
costs; Larry Cundlff, Middleport,
no operators license, $75 and costs,
one year probation, five days confinement , $25 suspended and five
days confinement suspended; Mau·
reen Young, Albany, speed, $21 and
costs; Nelson Morrison, Middleport, unsafe vehicle, $5 and costs;
Thomas Harkless, Middleport,
failed to display valid license plates,
$15 and costs; Barbara Henderson,
Reedsville, failed to yield from private drive, $25 and costs; Gerald
Arnold, Pomeroy, DWI, $150 and
costs, three days confinement, li·
cense suspended 30 days; Rollie Stewart, Syracuse, speed, $24 and
costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Richard
Allison, Bowling Green. Ky. , speed,
$71.50; Mike Pierce, Rutland, no
drivers license, $70.50; Dennis
Stacy, Huntington, and James Thomas, Middleport, speed, $50.50
each; William Curnutt, Letart, W.
Va., DWI, $370.50; June Murphy,
Pomeroy, petty theft, live days confinement , one year probation, costs;
restitution; David McAtee, Belpre,
expired license plates, $45.50.
Woman cited by
patrol after wreck
Edson Hart
Edson L. Hart, 98, died at his
Route 2 Pomeroy home Thursday
evening.
He was a son of the late Daniel and
Martian Story Hart and was born in
Meigs County on Oct. 16, 1884. He
was a farmer.
Surviving are his wife, Anna
Weyersmiller Hart; a son, Thomas
Hart, Route 2. Pomeroy; three
grandchildren and six greatgrandchildren.
Graveside services will be held at
2 p.m. Sunday at the Burlingham
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Ewing Funeral Home from 1 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday. In lieu of
flowers, friends may oaive
to their
'
favorite charity.
Highway Patrol after a collision on
Meigs County Road 25 at 7:45a.m.
Thursday.
Julla WUI, 28, was cited for failure
to yield haif the roadway.
According to the patrol Larry
Longenette, 23, Reedsville, was
southbound on CR 25 when WID
turned northontoCR 25 from CR 26 .
She reportedly went left of center
and struck Longenette's vehicle.
Longener.e's vehicle sustained
moderate damage and Will' s car
was slightly damaged.
A car driven by Denver Biggs, 24,
Pomeroy, was slightly damaged in
a single-car accident on Ohio 7 in
Salisbury Twp.
Biggs was southbound when he
lost control on wet pavement, left
the right side of the road and struck
a mailbox, the patrol reports.
Admitted.. Ben Cotterill, Rutland' Charles Sheets, l;lemlock
Grov~; Eunice Nutter, Reedsvllle;
James Taylor, Portlandi Harold
Jeffers, Pomeroy, and Frances
Martin, Middleport.
Dlscharged-Georganll8 Knapp,
Hanna Higman, Helen Sauvage,
Rhoda yeager, Ben CotterilL
Commission to meet
Chester Township Trustees will
meet Tuesday, Nov. 9, at 7:30p.m.
at the town hall In Chester.
The Meigs COunty Regional PlannlngCOmrnlsslonwillmeetat3p.m.
Monday at the agricultural conference center of the Farmers Bank
Building.
Frank Cleland will report on the
highway users committee; Eleanor
Thomas, on the Meigs county Elderly Housing Corp., and the group
will discuss the property transfer
process and the little control project. A nominating committee will
be appointed.
Board has vacancies
The Gallla-J ackson-Melgs Mental Health Board presently has State
Board appointment vacancies in
each of the three counties.
Anyone Interested In becoming a
member of the board may secure
application fonns and additional in·
formation concerning ellglblllty reqirements by calling the board
office at 446-3022 in Gallipolis, or
wrttlng to the GaUia-Jackson-Meigs
Mental Health Board, P . 0. Box 514,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45640. The deadline
for submission of completed appll·
cations to the board is Dec. 1.
Files for divorce
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court, Naomi Ruth Sims, Dexter,
filed sultfordlvorce against Wilbur
ill
V
Leo Sims, D win, a.
Leaf pickup service for Pomeroy
residents will get underway Monday, Mayor Oarence Andrews
announces.
Residents are to putleaves bl plastic bags and set them at the curbing.
The schedule for the pickup Is Monday, first ward; Tuesday, second
ward; Wednesday, third ward, and
Thursday, fourth ward.
First flurries
Meigs County had its first snow
Friday. However, there were only
flurries and no accumulation is
expected.
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SPECIALS THIS WEEKEND
ON
'
Men's and Boys' Winter Jackets and Vests
- Misses Sportswear (well known brands) - Uttle Boys' Jeans and Slacks Women's Coats - Bestform Bras and Girdles - Girts' Dresses
and Sportswear - Doggonetts Junior Coordinates - Boys'
Knit Shirts - Men's Dress Slacks
SALE ENDS SATURDAY AT 5 P.M .
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Our gift to you. A beautiful
CHRISTMAS
ORNAMENT*
With each sitting!
Lasting color portraits
you can enjoy for years to
come. Fifteen wallets, three
5x 7s and two Sx lOs
ONLY S}295
Buy A
Bird Feeder,
Receive 5 Lb. of
Bird Seed FREE!
•WILD BIRD SEED •SUNFLOWER SEED
•THISTLE SEED •CRACKED CORN
OFFER EXPIRES NOV. 13, 1982
MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main
992-2164
INCLUDING 95C DEPOSIT
• IJnl· J,!lfl Pl'f !i itlm~
• Poses nur sdt.:dum
• lkauttfu l h;n:kgruunJ:; <W<ulahlc
•
A .~ k
.thou! our l kroratllr Porl ratls
"At th e 11me o t s•ttmg you w•ll re cetve
11 coupon redeemable l or a beautt lu l
Ltmlled Edttton Chr •s tmas free
Ornament
6/IICi• ••• ..---185 UPPER RIVER ROAD
GALLIPOLIS
DATES: NOV. 2-NOV. 7
HOURS: TUE.-WED.-SAT. 10-1,2-6, Lunch 1-2
THURS. & FRI. 10-1 , 2-6:30, 6-B
SUNDAY1-4
Pomeroy, OH .
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF,STUFF''
FOR PETS. STABLES. LARGE & SM\LL ANIMALS
LAWNS AND GARDENS
CORRECTION
THE VIDEO SHOWING OF THE KENNETH COPELAND MIN ISTRIES WILL BE MOVED TO A NEW LOCATION .....
FAITH CHRISTIAN FEU.OWSHIP
560 N . Second Avenue
Middleport,
45760
Pastor
RichardT. SteW'drt
560 N. Second ave.
Middleport, OH 45760
1-614-992-2406
JOIN US BY
Drive the
Rabbit:
Broth• Copeland PI'.....U tho "Believ-
VIDEO
or'o Voice of Victory" In redlo broadcl!lta
.,dIn hil momhly publlc.tlon elong wtth
WITH .
®rnl
being tho author of outotondilg
boo!<a that help Chriotiono walk .. d live
KENNETH .
COPELAND
'80 AMC
EAGLE WG.
KENNETH COPELAND
occordlng to God'o Word. Hlo enoiltad
Bible tooc:hing prooonts tho U'lcompromioing Word of God end cha... goo you to
wolk oooordlng to tho Word.
NOVEMBER SOtEDULE
Nov. 4-5 - Law of Faith #4
Nov. 11·12 - Law of Faith #5
Nov. 18-19 - Hilton Sutton-The Catching Away of the
Church - The Rapture
Nov. 25-26 -· Thanksgiving Holiday
No Video Showing These 2 Days
,..
A-C tape deck, 4 WD,
new tires, 1 nice all
season wagon.
$6,79500
'78 OLDS
REGENCY 98
'79 HONDA
PRELUDE
4 dr. "coaled" Including
p-seats both sides and
buill In CB. A True
Luxury Automobile.
1-0wner, A-C Power
sun-roof, AM-FM &
Much 111Dre. A Classic
Sporn Car
$5995 00.
'79 v.w.
$5,69500
'1RUCKS" .
'78 DODGE 0.150
'77 FORD F-100
'75 CHEVY C-20
ALSO
(1) NEW JEEP
(2)
V.W.'S
DASHER DIESEL
'78 JEEP CJ·5
RENEGADE
'79 CHM
CAMAiiO Z·28
WE SOLD. IT NEWt
AM-FM, rNr defroster,
radial !Ires and more;
Tills l.owner with Ins
than 40.000 mlln. Must
be to appreclalel
Till wheel A-C AM-FM
stereo, alum. wi!His~
new ll,.s, CINn & Mean
$4,99500
$AVE $AVE
•6,39500
~
Ohio State ...........35
Minnesota ............ 10
Mia.mi .................23
Central Michigan ......O
Notre Dame ...........31
Pitt ................. 16
West Virginia ........20
Temple ............... 17
Michigan ............. 16
Illinois ............. 10
Clemson .............. 16
North Carolina ....... 13
Northern lllinois .....36
Ohio University .......O
Oklahoma.............24
Kansas State ........ .lO
'
•
tmts
UttbatJ!
Leaf pickup to start
r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
to 'Lunch!
Hospital news
Veteran!! Memorial Hospital
(Continued from page 11
out the United States, Kerr said, but
the Alaskan oil Is specifically exempted from the Crude OUWindfall
Profits Tax of198J
Kerr said he couldn't just strtke
down the Alaskan exemption because that would amount to judicial
lawmaking. If he invalidated only
the Alaskan exemption, Kerr said,
the windfall profits tax would be extended to all the crude oll produced
in Alaska.
The judge said the government
should repay the windfall profit
taxes paid by the Calvin Petroleum
Corp. of Fort Lupton, Colo., and
other plaintlffs between March and
December 198J.
Kerr added, however, that the government should continue to collect
the taxuntU "ahighercourthashad
occasion to pass upon the correctness" of his decision.
Trustees to meet
'Take a Sird
A representative from Congressman Clarence E. Miller's office will
conduct an open door session from
10 a. m.-noo n in the courthouse In
Pomeroy on Wedn esday, No,·. 10.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
at 12:01 a.m. Thursday went to
HemloCk Grove tor Charles Sheets
who was taken to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.
JU dge•••
J
rr---~~~~~~~==~~----~
" ---------
Representative here
Emergency runs
budget.
Progress on the budget was delayed by a White House decision to
postpone work oh politically sensl·
tlve program cuts until after the
election.
Reagan met with Stockman and
other chief domestic advisers Tuesday and Wednesday to review the
budget situation. "At this point In
time, in his mind, he has no plans to
raise taxes or decrease defense
spending," deputy White House
press secretary Larry Speakes said
Thursday.
But in the wake of the election
ga in~ by House Democrats, the
president conceded that he would
have to compromise with Congress,
as he did last year In accepting tax
increases and modest defense cuts
forced on him by his fellow
Republicans.
How far he would go remains
uncertain.
"We won't compromise on principles of what we absolutely believe is
essentlal to the recovery," the president said Wednesday.
"'-··-·-
•
Friday, NoVl'f11ber 5; 1982
Middleport, Ohio
- - - - - - - - - - .....1-~~~.~- ..... ~ ,......~.......
·vol. 16No. 37
Copyri..tod 1982
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.
ttditttl
9 Sectlont, 76 Paget 35 Cenh
A Multimedia Inc . Newtpaper
Sunday, November 7, 1982
Wellston fire destroys
historic city building
WELLSTON, Ohio (AP)- Firefighters this morning continued to
search for the cause of a blaze that
destroyed the historic municipal.
building In this southeast Ohio city.
First Assistant Fire Chief Jim
Hutchison said the blaze was re-
ported shortly after 6 p.m. Friday in
the 100-year-old structu~. a former
mansion on theN atlonal Register of
Historic Places.
"We have completely lost the
building," Hutchison said Friday
night. "The roof has caved In, and
Unemployment rate
produces new calls
for jobs programs
By MERRILL HARTSON
AP Labor Writer
WASHINGToN (AP) -The nation's 10.4 percent unemployment
rate Is prompting renewed calls by
Democrats In COngress and labor
leaders for enactment of a public
works program.
But the Reagan administration is
refusing to budge In Its resistance to
any such New Deal-type Initiative.
Demands for ·governmentsubsidized jobs reached a crescendo. Friday when the Labor
Department reported that in
Unemployment:--.
10.S. Seasonally
Adjusted
Percent of
10.0. Work
Force
9.5.
9.0.
'""October;
· .;,..,9ome U.6 million people were
out of work.
- Unemployment rates among
blue-eollar, construction, adult
male and female and full-time
-.yorkers reached the hlghest'levels
since the"Bureau of Labor Statistics
began tracking labor force activity
• on a month-to-month basis In 1948.
-The number of unemployed In·
creased by 627,(0) since September
when the jobless rate was a postDepression record-level 10.1
percent.
-Joblessness among full-time
workers - tor the first time- exceeded thatofpart-tlmeworkers . .
President Reagan, who has maintained thathistaxandspendlngpollcles will ultimately ease the
empiQYJTlent problem, made no
comment on the lateSt figures.
BUt White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes characterIzed Reagan as "sympathetic and
concerned about the difficulties of
those who are unemployed." He
said the chief executive will continue to fight efforts to enact a public
worksbtll.
Legislation that woold have allocated $2 billion from the U.S. Treasury to put some 250,(0) people to
work rebulkllng bridges and highways was passed earlier this year
by the Jiouse, but was defeated in
the Republican-controlled Senate.
There are, however, some hints
that such legislation might get a
nextweek.
·
Wolfe has been quoted as saying
that the Meigs County Welfare IJe.
partment lias brought suit for political reasons. The welfare
ctepartment tiled the clvtl action on
behalf of the 7-year-okl chlld~li
mother, ~Tucker.
Wolfe Is manied to another
woman and claims he Is not the
father.
.
. AccordlngtoMichaeiSwlfheJ• dl·
rector of the we!We department,
and the depaJ'trnent'~ attorney; Ro-bert Toy, !hestatelsslmplytryll)gto
detl!rmlne who .!he father 11. It 1s
}IIII'IUlng!he.case 90 that !heparent,
and not the state, will support the
CITY HALL BURNS - Wellston city firefighters
battle a blaze that destroyed the city building Friday
night. The historic building, that housed the city hall
and pollee department, was the P.J. Morgan
slon, buUt In 1!104, IUld given to the city In 1955. The !Ire
started In the furnace room about 6 p.m. Few records
were saved. (AP Laserphoto).
man-
PUCO pulls plug on rate hike request;
reduces consumer payment for Zimmer
NDJ FMAMJ JA SO
198~.
82
Source: Dept. of Labor
AP
UNEMPWYMENT - This
graphic Illustrates the natlon.'s
unemployment rate which rose
to 10.4 peroent last month, Increasing the jobless rolls to 11.6
m1111on people, a rise "of 3.7 million since the recession began In
July 1981, the govenunent reported Friday. (AP Laserphoto)
more receptive response since unemployment has breached doubledigit levels.
An aide to Senate Republican
Leader Howard Baker Jr. of Tennessee Indicated Friday that the
GOP ranks !nCongressmaybeless
reluctant to vote down such a
proposaL
Rep. Henry S. Reuss, D-Wis.,
chairman of the congresslonaJ Jo(nt
Economic Committee, called the latest figures "devastating."
Meigs investigator
faces paternity.suit
POMEROY - A paternity suit
against Meigs County sherttf investigator Gary Wolfe will be heard
we're afraid that the walls will be
collapsing now."
Hutchison said a pollee dispatcher and an auxiliary pollee offleer were In the building when the
blaze erupted, but escaped without
Injury. There was no immediate
damage estimate.
· The fire apparently began in a
basement furnace room, HutchisOn
said. "It spread rapidly - very
rapidly."
The building was built in 1900 as
the home of coal mllllonalre T.J .
Morgan and was turned over to the
city In 1937.
Service Director Rick Devlin said
the city Is making plans to temporarily relocate offiees. The pollee department already has moved Into
the !Ire d epa rtment' s
headquarters.
Qty Council has called a special
meeting for 2 p.m . Saturday to dis·
cuss the situ a tlon.
Firefighters fromWellston, Jackson, COalton, Hamden, and Madison
and Jefferson townships in Jackson
COunty, as well as Chtlllcothe and
McArthur, fought the blaze.
The State Fire Marshal had been
called in to investlgale, Hutchinson
said.
Toy, an Athens COunlfassistant
prosecutor hired by the Meigs wei·
tare department, said he does not
believe uH! evidence Ini:ltcates the
allegation of paternity Is politically
motivated.
Wolfe said Swisher first questlmied him In November 1981 about
the paternity of two of Tucher's
children, one born In 1973 and
another In 1975.
According to Wolfe, Swisher lndl- ."
cated he would drop the paternity
Issue If Wolfe halied his union actlvlty, anofferWolfe·sald he would not
aecept. .
The trial begins Monday and the
state Is expected to <illege Wolfe fathered the child boi'n In October 1
By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Assoclatro Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio
tttlllty regulators have pulled the
plug on a $100.8mtlllon rate increase
sought by the Columbus and South·
ern Ohio Electric Co.
The Public Utllltles Commission
of Ohio Friday approved only about
40 percent of . the company's
request.
In addition, It reduced the amount
the utlllty may charge customers
for the troubled Zimmer nuclear
power plant near Cincinnati which
has yet to produce electricity.
Both commission · moves drew
praise from the Ohio Consumers'
COunsel office but generated dismay from the utility.
The COnsumers' Counsel had r~
commended the company be
granted only $21 mtllion with the
entire Zimmer plant excluded. But
It hailed the PUCO decision.
"We're extremely pleased that
the commission has finally recognized in this opinion that there is a
serious problem with the Zimmer
nuclear facility, " Susan Butler, consumers' counsel spokeswoman,
said.
"We would have been happier had
the commission excluded all of the
(construction work in progress) r~
quest that was included in the case,
but this is better than nothing, " she
said.
Ms. Butler said Columbus and
Southern customers have been paying $17 mUllan annually in CWIP
charges for Zimmer. As a result of
Friday's order, the amount will be
reduced to $14 million annually.
next year now appears inevitable.
In its decision Friday, the threemember PUCO approved a $41.6
million rate increase for the utlllty
and served notice It was concerned
about delays in starting operations
at the Zimmer plant
The$1.7 billion facility is owned by
C&SOE (28.5 percenll; Cincinnati
Gas and Electric (40 percent 1; and
Dayton Power and Light (31.5 percent). CG&E is the managing
utility.
Commissioner Dennis S. Pines
said it is not expected to begin commercial operation until sometime in
1984. "That's the realistic target
now," he said.
. In its order, the commission said
it was concerned about the effect of
continued delays on the cost of the
project
Feds order closure of Charleston bank
By The Associated Press
Customers with money in the
First National Bank of South Charleston or the Texas Bank of Amarillo won't lose a cent, even though
both banks have folded, officials
said.
First National In West Virginia
was ordered closed Friday morning
by the U.S. COmptroller of Cur·
rency, and the Texas bank closed
voluntarily, state banking officials
said ..
The First Amarillo Bancorpora-
tlon Inc. will assume Texas Bank· s
deposits and the bank will reopen
Monday as the First Bank of AmarUlo, said Bill Olchesky, a spokesman for the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp.
First National's liabilities will be
assumed by Charleston National
Bank and the old bank building will
reopen as soon as possible as a
branch of Charleston National, said
another FDIC spokesman, Charles
Whitney.
Texas Bank had more than $1 million in uncollected loans, some to
video game companies that flled for
bankruptcy recently, the Amarillo
Globe-News reported today.
First National's loan losses over
the past four years were called "serious" In a statement released by
the fed~ral comptroller's office.
The bank "was unable to remedy
Its problems and losses finally exhausted the bank's capital funds,
resulting In Its insolvency," the
statement said.
Texas Bank listeddeposltsof$11.4
million for the quarter ended Sept. •
31. F irst National's deposits were
approxima telts2'7 million at the end
of October, according to the federal
comptroller's office.
Outside the South Charleston
bank Friday, dozens of stunned customers braved 32-degree temperatu res to read notices of the closure.
"Well , they said It would be a cold
day when the bank failed," said Ben
Murphy, one of those waiting.
.-------..__- Today's Times-Sentinel:------......
The 0.0. Mcintyre Park District, and Its director, Josette Baker are
' 1n
. struggling to cope with the' growing demand for parks and recreation
Gallla Co111Xy. Baker says the park district has ambitious plans for the
future. Only one thing stands In Its way- a lack of money... B-1
T -S Directory
Along tlte river ...•..................................••... B-1-8
BtiSint!SI!i .••.•••••••••• :••••• •••••••..••••• •••• ••••• ••• •. .•• ••• A-7
Clesslfteds. ~ •••••••••••••••••••••.•..••.•••.....••..•.••••.• ~7
Deatlls •..............•.•............. ·-· ..........•..•.......... A-5
Editorial .•..••••....••.................................•.... A-2-3
fraurtll ••••• ••••••••·•••••••••••••• ··••••••••••••••·•••·•••·••••• ~
1975.
Wolfe has reportedly testlfted he
had sexual relationS with Tucker,
child.
Wolfe ctaaraes that the depart- but he could not recall when.
COurt-<~~lleied blood testshavereI!Bit has brouaht lUll IIPinl! him.
,portA!dlysbown119Upercentproba-, ·
fill' Gill! l'!!8BI - - be helped
1•h•he tbe lbertft's department In liW1y thllt Wolfe Is the father of the
cldld born In 1975.
19111.
Marshall Julien, manager of public affairs for Columbus and Southern, said the approximately 7
percent Increase over current revenues provided in the commission
ruling does not keep pace with rising
costs.
"To put It mildly, we're extremely disappointed . We think it 's
an unrealistic award, " Julien said.
"Since our last rate increase in
1979, the consumer price index has
risen over 27 percent. (Friday's
rate) increase simply doesn't cover
the increased cost of providing
electric service since that time," he
said.
Julien said no decis ion had been
made whether to seek a rehearing of
the case or appeal part of It to the
Ohio Supreme Court . But he said
filing another rate Increase request
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
11. November
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Newspaper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
November 5, 1982
hart
lewis
ward