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                  <text>Thursday, January 23. 1986

Jude·pleads not guilty to rape count
Alleged rapist Jimmie Jude, 29,
of Pomeroy, entered a written plea
of not guilty, and not guilty by
reason ot Insanity, during arraign·
ment p)'OCe!!dlngs this morning in
Meigs Coonty Common Pleas Court
before Judge Charles Knight.
A grand jury Indictment was
returned against Jude Wednesday,
charging that on or about Jan. 5, he
did engage In sexual conduct with a
child under the age oll3, pu!pOSely
compelling the child to submit by
use or threat of forcE'.
Attorney Donald Cox, Gallipolis,
appointed by the court to l'l'present
Jude, will bytheendotthemonthbe

entering a wrttten request lor a Kenneth L. Longstl'l'th and Betty
psychiatric examination to deter· A. Longst reth, both of LangsvUie.
Charles Bradbury, Middleport.
mine Jude's competency.
has
been awarded a $3710.01
Knight continued a $100,!m bond
judgment
In Meigs Coonty Com·
as set Ln Initial proceedings In Meigs
mon
Pleas
Coun from Carl Wolfe
County Court.
Jr.,
WaverlY
.
Jude was returned to the custody
of the Meigs County Sheriff's
Depar!Jnent.
The annual Inspection of Ohio
In other court action, Melinda C.
Valley
Commandery 24, Knights
Counts, Pomeroy. has filed· lor a
Templar,
will be held Saturday.
divorce in Meigs County Common
The
Order
of the Temple will begin
Pleas Coun from Sgt . Jeffrey
at
3:OOp.m.,
dinner will be at 6p.m, ·
Counts, charging extreme cruelty.
and
the
full
fonn opening at 7: 30:
Ftllng for a dissolution of thelr
p.m.
Theil'
wU!
be entertainment
marriage Is Gerli Hamilton, Pomefor
the
women
during the
roy, and Brian Hamilton, Syracuse. .
Inspection.,
A dissolution has been granted

Plan inspection

~port

e
Vot.35, No.196
Copyrighted 1986

RESPONDIS TO CHARGES - An Irate West
VIrginia Attorney General Cbarlle Brown respontl! to
charges by a fonner deputy, David Grubb, that he

shook down staff help for money to pay off 1984

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Dtscbarges Jan. 22 - Floyd
Blair. David Burdell. Ma11hew
Cot1rill , Jason Creedon. Jame
Elias, Ralph Fisher, Roy Fisher,
Thelma F'razier, Toby Greer, Mrs.
Wilbu r House and daughter, Me·
llssa Howell. Mindy Johnson,
Shawn Johnso!J, Dennis Jones.
John Markley, Mrs. Danny Men.w
and son. &amp; tty Miller. Emma
Moodispaugh. Melissa NanCf'.
Harve Newman . Robert Oliver,
Okey O'Neill, Rose Plybon, Icy
Rollins. F'red Sayer, Babette Size·
more. Melvin Smeltzer, Emily
Starrel1, Esta Stover. Mona Ver·
non. Yvonne WalkPr. Glenn Young.
Pau l Zuspan.
Birth - Mr and Mrs. George
Thompson. son. CheshirP.
Dil;charges

Jan. 21:
Donald Adkins, Shi rley Adkins,
Delores Deal. Ja mes Brennen.
Debra Burnett. Helen Dempsey.
Lloyd Finley. Car ry Justice, Gre·
gory Myers. Jason Neigler, Shasta
Nibert. Herman Ours, Daryl Pat·
terson, Christopher Rickard. Mar·
jorie Saunders, Debra Shato. David
Smith. Mary Stanbaugh, Opal
Tinker, Michael Vititoe. Marcellus
Waid, Gary Watson. and Darl&lt;&gt;ne
Yeager.
Births:

January 21
Mrs. and Mrs. Dale Brickles. son
Pomeroy .

Legal Aid Society
objects to HMO
CLEVELAND iUPI ' - The
Cleveland chapter of the Legal Aid
Society filed formal objections
Wednesda)' to a state plan that
would make it mandatory for poor
people in Cleveland and Dayton to
panic!pate in Health Maint enance
Orga niza tions.
In a brief field wil h the U.S .
Department of Health and Hum an
Services. Legal Aid lawyers said
the plan. proposed by Gov . Richard
F. Celeste's admin istration , lacks
sufficient monitoring and policing.
Under the plan. more than :ro.OOJ
poor people in Clewla nd and
Day ton would participate in HMOs
in which the starr pa~ group of
doctors or hospitals to pru,·ide carr
to the poor for a fla I monthly fee.
Th e brPif deals solei)' wilh
Cleveland Health Care Allernatives
Inc., the proposed HMO for Cuya ·
hoga County's estima ted J.ll.OOJ
residen ts on ADC· Medicaid .
"We are not opposed to HMOs but

we

have fPSef\'ations abou l this

particular plan," said u .&gt;gal Aid
lawyer Brian A. Glassman. "The
danger of inadequate or dctrriorat ·
lng hca'lth carr lot· thp poor is the
prime concern of our cliPn ls."

56 fi rt• ralls
RA CINE -The 11actnc \'olu n·
teN Ftre Depart ment rec ent!\·
released its a nnu al repo rt for
1 9~5. The fire department ha&lt;1 Ot;
ca lls a nd totaled 880ovrrall man
hours.

Leo C Hill. 58. 641 Lake Drive,

Rio Grande. fo rmerly of Meigs
County. a professor of fine arts at
Rio Grande College. died Wednes·
day in the intensive car&lt;&gt; unit of the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Hill was bom March 25, 1927
at Racine. He was a member of the
United Faith Chu rc h. Pomeroy.
wher&lt;&gt; he taught Sunday School for
35 years. He was a member of the
Scuthern Hills Art Council . a
member of the Rio Grande College
Faculty Assoctation. the French
An Colony and had been a free
Two Meigs County residents
Ian&lt;'&lt;' photographer for 17 years. He esca ped injury when their cars
was an area judge for art activities N ll!ded Wednesday afternoon at
throughout the tri ~st ate area. Mr. the Intersection of Ohio 124 and
Hill was a ,·ereran of World War II Rutland Twp. 70, aecording to the
hav ing Sl'n'€d in th e U. S. Navy.
Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Surviving are his wife. Helen Highway Patrol.
Marlene Sayre Hill; rwo daughters,
Peggy J. Brickles, 37, of 31649
Kathy McDaniel. Long Bottom, and J ividen Hollow Rd ., Middleport,
Sharon Matson, Racine; three sons. was westbound on 124, when
Roger B. Hill. Lake Wales, Fla .;
troopers said a car operated by
Rona ld B. Hill. Chestt'r. and Thomas E. Andenon, 32, of Ru·
Richard Bryan Hill. Cheshire. and tland. allegedly tried to pass
11 grandchildren.
Brickles and an unindent!fied car
Preceding him in dea th were his and struck Brickles as she was
mot her, and an aunt. Ora B. Hi! who attempting a left turn onto Twp. 11J.
reared him .
Bricktes' car sustained heavy
St•rvlces will be held at 2 p.m. damage and Ander&amp;Jn's moderate
Sa turday at the J.:nited Fa ith damage in the 4:25 p.m. roltision .
Church. Stat&lt;&gt; Route 7, Pomeroy, Ander&amp;Jn was charged by the
1\it h Rev. David Wiseman official· patrol with driving left of center.
ing. Bu tia l will be in Meigs Memory
Ga rden . Friends may call at the
Ewing Funeral Home from 2 to ~
and 7to9 p.m. Friday. The body will
II&lt;' in state at the church one hour
Four calls were answered by
prior to the sen·ice. Memoria ls
local
unit s Wednesday. the Meigs
may be SC'nt in his memor:.: to the
County
Emergency Medical Servi·
[lppartment of Fi ne Arts . Rio
ces
repon
s.
Grande College. Rio Grande. Ohio.
At 3: 0'\ a.m., Rutland took Debbie
Gilmore fmm Main St., to Veterans
Memorial; Raj ci ne at 8: 48 a.m ..
Ruthanna Zundel
took Edna Deem from Route 124 to
\'eterans Memorial; Rutland at
Rutha nna Jasper Zundrl. R.J. 8 58 a .m. took Drussie White from
Zanes,·Uie, forme rh of Middlepor1, Boring Road to Holzer Medical
died Tuesday at the Bethesda C('nte r and Syraucse at II : 42 p.m. ,
Hospital in Zanesville.
took Alber t Hemsley from Third
Mrs. Zundel was born Oct. :l. 1901 St.. to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
in Zanes,·ille. a daught er of the late
Frank and Dais)· Nichols .Jasper. Veterans Memorial
She was a teacher in the Middlepon
and Pomeroy schools for sewral
Admitted .. Willlam Jewell. Ma ~
)'Pars when· her husband. Rev. son: Nma Sanders. . Reedsville;
Ra lph C. Zundel. was pastor of the Edna Deem, Racine; Helen Gibbs.
Middleport First Baptist Church.
Ha rtford ; Agnes Dixon. Pomeroy.
Discharged.. Linda Brunty.

No one injured
in traffic accident

JR.COAT
CLEARANCE

to 5.'; and Sunday and Monday 35 to

ti.

CASUAL STYLES

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OUR MISSY AND HALF SIZE COATS
ARE REDUCED 50'/o

LADIES'

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1 Sect ion , 10 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Petit,, Miasy and Extra Sizes. Quality
brands include Devon, Dotty Mann ,
Queen Casual, Blake, Smith &amp; Jones .

tl

.

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I
i'

~

j

i-'

I

"

&lt;Jc9

CLEARANCE SALE!
MEN'S

CLEARANCE SALE

NEW

DEVELOrMENT
Gall!a County's CIC
Thursday employed N. La1nl
Eckman of V oungsfown as Its
economic development dlredor.
His job wW he to help develop
long and short·lerm guals lor
businesses In GaUia Coonty.
CHIEF -

JEWELERY SWEATERS
Slipovers. vests and
coat styles. Pick your
favorite style and
color.

Extra nice group of fall 1nd
winter ;ewelry. Includes
beads, clip Mrringa, ptlrct~d

earrings and braceteta.

Come Early For

Best Selection!

CLEARANCE!
MEN'S WINTER

CLEARANCE!

•

MEN'S QUILT LINED

JACKETS

RAWliNGS-COATS

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

Regular and extra large
sizes. Big Mlection of
styles and colors .
Regularly $29.96 to
$169.96.

BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME
.'i&lt;•rrin/C th e Familv of

EVA VIRGINIA
BARREn
FRIDAY
2·4 p.m.-7 -9 p.m.
Saturday S.nict 2 p.m.

Morgan Ctnttr Lower Chwdl

Your Choice

Colorful plaid patterns,
warm nylon quilt lining .
S, M. L, XL and Big Man
Sizes to 4X.
'

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CLEARANCE!

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MEN'S

BOYS'

KNIT
SHIRTS

KNIT
SHIRTS

S, M, L and XL
sizes in a fine selection of styles
and colors. Regularly priced '15.95
to '29.95.

1/2
SHOP
FRIDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

PRICE

Regularly priced
•9.95 to ' 29 .96.
Sizes 8 through 20 .
Good Selection.

1/2 PRICE

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

tr('nd n?\·ersro. We see outstanding
cducaiOrs and rC'Searchers coming
to Ohio to participate in what is
represented by the Edi,;on Welding
Institute."
Celeste said the institute now
e mploys only 40 people. but soon
will develop pnidur t' and busi·
nf'sses rl'sponsible for 100 titn&lt;'S
that many jobs. "Thul tak&lt;&gt;s time, "
said fhc govNnor. "Wr't'l" sha ping
a future, taking it month by month
and year by year."
Celeste was askPd what the
Edison \\'eldi ng Instit ute would be
like if Rhodes had been go,wnor
for the last 1hrcc years. He sa id he
did not know, but added . "If vou
have a gov!'rnor who's prepared to
walk away from these mmmi t·
ments in tough times ... we can lose
what we've started herP."
In announcing from thP obserYa
tion dPck of Trrmina] Tower iP

wants to con tinue to work toward

building rxce lience in education.
c-reating new businessPS and npw

technology, and marketin g Ohio's
mal and water resources.
Cclrst.e was lieut enant gon'rnor
fmm 1975-79. He lost to Rhodes in
1978 by ·18.001 \Otes dfter a spirit«!
campaign, and then becam&lt;' dim::·
tor of t hr Peace Corps tmdrr
President Ca rt er.
Aft er rejoining his fathPr 's real
estate busines s in 1981. Ce leste ran
for gmrrnor in 19R2. IJar·eJy captur·
ing thf&gt; [}(lmocrl.ltic primary ow•r
Gr neml William .1.
Br0\\.11 . But ht• ('asily dt&gt;featt'tl

1\ttomcy

RPpublican Rep. ClarenCf' Br0\'11

in thP 1\ovcmhPr election.
CelestP is

J

}.. .'l 'aduafl' of Yalt&gt;

Uni,·ers if: and attended Oxford
Uni\'crsity as a Rhodes Scholar. He
!;('rved as rxecutivp ass ist ant to the
U.S. ambass;ldor to India and\vas a
state rcprf'Sf'ntativP for fo.ur ~~ears .

GALLIPOLIS- A Youngstown man has accepted
position of director of economic development for
Ga llia County. aecording to Dan Davies. president of
the Ga!Jia County Commu nity lmpruvemcnt
Corponation.
N. Laird Eckman was hired by the full CIC board
'111ursday,'wit h his first day on the job scheduled to be•
Monda y.
Eckman has been a past-cha irman of the
govE'rnor 's statewid(' prh·a te sector Economi c
Development Counci l and ts cutrently depu(V
director of the Mahoning·Trimblr Count y economic
development organization.
His experience as past-chairman ct the governor's
council made Eck man an attractive candidatP .
Davies sa id. becauS&lt;' "he has been all over the world
trying to recruit bu siness."
Eckman's job will inclu de thr development of
long-a nd shm1·term goals for business in Gallia
Cou nty. devising a mmmun i(V prufile, establishin g
an Inventory o! available lands and buildings and
crt&gt;a tin~ a promotional package for prospecti,·r

Additionally. the new direct or will head a team
designed to empha size the relent ion and expansion of
exiSting industry and the promotion of trawl and
tourism in the area.
. The CIC has pmjected a budget of about SJOO,OOJ a
y('ar to effective operAtr the offirt' and has rPcrivPd a
thrff.. ycar commilment from Paeh political an
ptiva te SC'C'tor agency involved in thC' proposal.
Eckman' s office will be locillcd at !Iii, Stat e St .. on
the second Ooor of the bui lding housing the Ga ll ipolis
Area Chamber of CommcrC!'.
Eckman has received a Bachelor of Science de!&lt;J-ee
from Muskingu m Collcgr. is a graduate of the
Economic Development In stitute at Oklahoma
University. which is sponsored by th£' Amrt·ican
Economi c [lpvelopment Council and became a
C&lt;'rtliied Indu st rial DPvelopn in 1972.
He has a lso served withou t compensa!ion as thf'

Executive Director of the Ma honing Community
Improvement Corporation and as Acting Dirertor of
the Mahoning·Trimbl&lt;' Count\ ' Labor Management
Citlzm s Committee.

industry .

LJJ.S. warplanes patrolling off Libya coast

1/2 PRICE

1/2 PRICE

governor. ''Toda v, we SC'C' that

the

All WINTER COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR
,,

do\\'nt own C'l c\'clantl. Ce leste said
debt.
"Outsumdinr, talent at our unl- tlx· building "reminds u.s of the
vision of an f'tl rlicr genercttiun and
\"('fSi tiC'~ and innova tors in our
businPsses were lmving Ohio be· - !he n?l1~wct.l vi sion of this
generation."
cause they were not in a JJOSition
He !:&gt;a id in the nf'xt four ~'ears, he
where they could flourish," said the

Gallia County's CIC hires
economic development chief

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR

Lotto jackpot
$5.8 million
CLEVELAND 1UPI I - The top
prize in Wednesday night' s Ohio
Lotto drawing went unclaimed.
Increasing thr jackpot to an
estima t&lt;'d $5.R miUion for the
weekend game.
None of the tickets sold for the
mid-week game listed all six of t he
numbers draw n. The numbers
were 2. 14. 26. 35, 36 and 39.
That means the $3.7 million top
prize will be added to pot for the
Saturday drawing.
Although there were no top prize
winners. 369 players picked five of
the numbers to win $l.(Jal each .
Also. 17,272 players had four of the
numbers, winning $58 apiece.
Ticket sales for the mid -week
drawing totaled $5,017,371, with a
total prize PaYOUt of $1,378,156.

DRESSY AND

REG. 59 TO $41

Weather forecast

Tonight .. mos tlv clea r Low in
1h~ lower 2tls.
Fr iday ... mostly su nn,· Htgh tn
I hi' lowpr ~Os .
Extended lor&lt;&gt;cast
Salunlay through Monday
A chanct' of r.Un or snow. Lows
mainly in the 20s. HlgbsSaturday -15

DRESSES

Jr. Sizes S, M, L. -Reg. '43.00 to '70 .00

J,

nort hf'ast wi nds.

llnLE GIRLS'

remaining stock of junior sweater
.,.,,.A1h• and winter jackets is reduced

Emergency squads
answer four calls

Toda\'... most I; · sunny thLs after
noon . High near llJ. Light main!;·

en tine

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Friday. January 24, 1986

COLUMBUS \UP!) - Gov. of the Celeste administration's
Richard Celeste, claiming he has Thomas Edison program aimed at
laid a "rock-solid" foundation fo r accelerating the strengths of Ohio's
leading Ohio Into the HOOs, has technology.
formally declared his candidacy fo r
"The Thomas Edison pmgram.
r!'-election to a nother four·year which is represen\ed by this site
term.
her e ... has in les&gt; than two years
The governor made the official completed 20 projects ranging from
announcement Thursday at three elect mnic beam weld ing for space
different settings in Ohio 's three vehi cles to new techniq ues for food
largest cities - Cleveland. Coium ~ packaging." said Celeste, accom·
bus and Cincinna ti.
panied by his wife, Dagmar. and
"The election of 1986 will pose a sons Eric and Stephen .
choice," Celeste told small groups
"This welding institute, which
of supporters and large groups of has earned recogn ition, not simply
television. radio and newspaper around the sta te of Ohio but across
reponers. "the choice between the nation and indeed around the
building on the rock-solid founda· .world , is just one of many Edison
lion we have achieved or retuming programs uniling 14 universities
to the shifting sands of instabil ity." with 250 private partners to build
In Columbu s, Ce l ~ste appeared entin"" new indu stries for our state."
against a backdrop of automated
Celeste. 48. wasted no time m
welding eq uipment at the Edison ana ckin g one prospective RPpubli·
Welding Institute, which is a can opponent, former Gov. James
pioneer in the nation 's high-tech Rhodes.
welding processes.
"In 1982. when I announced my
The institut e, affiliated with Ohio candidacy for governor, Ohio was
State University , is working und~r like a house built on shifting sand ,"
a S4.1 million appmpri ation as pan Celeste said. "A Republican gover·
nor was repeatedly raising taxes,
yet the state continued to sink into

Area deaths
Sh&lt;' is survived by her husband;
rwo daughters, Sharon Voorhees,
Arlington, Va .. and Charlene Nf&gt;,·ans. Shaker Heights.
F'riends may call at the Bolin
Fune ral Home. 1271 Blue Ave.,
Zanesville. from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday
and from 10 to II a. m. on Saturday.
Memorial S&lt;'rvices will be held at 3
p.m. Saturday a t the Fair Oaks
Ba ptist Chu rch in Zanesville.

at y

Celeste announces bid for reelection

campaign debts. Brown lashed out Ill Grubb In a new
conference, calling the lonner head of Consumer
Prolectlon Division a "phony" and "hyp-ocrite".
UP!.

leo C. Hill

•

on l'age 10

fl ••

t,,,;;

.... ..... .

,
-~-

t ...... h .. .

WASHINGTON \UPI J - U.S.
wa rplanes launched a week of night
operations off Libya today to send a
"s trong message" to the North
African nation that the United
States will not tolera te terrorism.
U.S. officials say.
The flights over the Mediterra ·
nean Sea by fighters, radar and
radar-jamming planes from the
aircraft carriers Coral Sea and
Saratoga will continue through J an.
31. the officia ls said Thursday.
The aircraft may probe farther
south, to the Gulf of Sidra, In a test
of Libyan reaction to the U.S.·
demanded right of freedom of
navigation there. the officials said.
Whether the carriers enter the gulf
depends on Libya 's reaction. they
said .

"They (lhP planes ) may go until
the)' start getting trac~ed" by
Libyan radars. inclu ding those
acPOmpanying a dozen So,·iet -bu ilt
anti-a ircraft missiles being m.
stalled at Surt. on th e Libyan coast
of the Gulf of Sidra . about t50 miles
east of Tripol i, one offic ial said.
Libya claims the gull and its
airspace as il s territory. The United
Sta tes does not recognize the claim
beyond the international 12-mile
limit.
The order fo r the exercise
originated in the National Security
Council Tuesday and was dis·
patched to the Sixth f leet that day,
the officials said.
"Wf! are sending them \the
Libyans\ a strong message," one
offici al sa id. " We want to· keep

them on their toes. Thc~· 're starting
to lean back in thr ir chairs. We
want to let
serious.

thl'm

k now we'rf'

"This terrorism bu sinPss has got
to stop and we' a' prepared to do
something if it doesn't."
The United Sta tes waited until thr
Saratoga batt le woup , whi ch had

!Jepn in the Indian 0cL' an until last
We&lt;'k, linked up with the Coral S&lt;&gt;a
forpp before launching the opera ·
lion - a sign the Navy wanted
sufficient backup ut the cwnt of a
confrontation.

" We' rr not tak ing an~- chanCf's."

a Pentagon source said.

same time.
"We simply cannot keep taking
100 wrcent of what the government
has to offer at 80 percent of the
rost," Hart said in a speech on the
Senat(' floor.
The new Gramm-Rudman act
calls for automatic cut s In October
if Congress cannot agree on a way
to reduce the federal budget deficit,
now moll' than $000 billion. to $144
billion next fl8cal yea r.
Scclal Securtty Is exempt from
the automatic cuts but that does not
prevent Congress from takln~
money !rpm the program as pan •1
Its effort to meet the deficit goat.
"1 think what IS going to happen
... as we do the Gramm· Rudman·
HollLngs caper, we'll' going to find
that we left off the table the bi ggest
Item. where IJ we just removed the
cost-of-living allowance lor a ;•ear
we could save ~billions, " said
Assistant Senate GOP leader Alan
Simpson.

Ferguson pushes
new welfare bill
C'DLL'Mfll'S. Ohio 'L' Pi t State Auditor Thoma&gt; Ferguson is

~a id .

The· bill would allow state exa·
miners to cross-check state tax
Jlousr-pasS&lt;'d bi ll tha t would data "ith recipients of Aid to
Dependf'nt Children. General Re·
gJ'f'LI t ly incrca sf' rhf' .srop0 of
lief or Medicaid to df'termlne iJ
im···stigations into wrl farc fraud .
'rlw stfltr Srnatr Fi nan('(' Com - mwpaym ent s were made.
It also would provide for crossmitt('(' has ;tgr('('(l to hear the bill.
which last ye:n posSPd the House, checks with the state's five ret ire·
ment boards, Administrative Servi·
!)4. ].
Ferguson said Thun;da' h&lt;' res and the workers' compensation
hopro thr mrasurP .. ,,·ould enjo;· and employment services bu reaus.
U the bill passes. Ferguson would
rqua lly stmng bipartis;w suppor t in
be auth01ized to ent er into rec ipro.
the Ohio S&lt;&gt;nate this \('ar ."
Ferguson's offjzy h,1,-be&lt;•n usin!( ral agre&lt;'ments wilh other states to
r xrhangp names. addresses and
r omputrrs to d(•t cct wf'lfarr fraud
social security num bers of Aid to
for ninP .\'f'urs. conr f'ntrating on
Dependent Children or Medicaid
public ~(('tor f'mplo~·mrnt. Ah..1ut tll
t'f'&lt;'ipients to determine if they have
p1iv:Jif' rmploW'r..., in thr sta ff'
been overpaid .
cooperate with thr pmgram.
In September 1985, Ferguson
"Our ~uccl's ~ raft• in catl'hin~
\lif'll nre cheating ts good." F'Pr gu - announced 1hat a fi rst-evert ri· stale
son said. noting that becaUS&lt;' of tho mmputer cht'Ck audit for welfare
pmgram, findin):..rs han' been issued fraud showed that 113 people in
against mon· 1han .).lfiii)X'Oplc who Ohio. Pennsylvania or West Virgt.
illegal!;· t'CCL'iv&lt;'d S.1.o million in nia were on the welfare rolls of two
stat&lt;'S and rE'Ceived $~.277 in
welfar e' p&lt;:1ymrnts .
illegal benefits.
"To allow it to rmch its fuUPst
In September 1981. a joint audit
potentia l. the 1programr nl'("ds to hPtween Ohio and Pennsy lvania
be ablr to &gt;;·srematiea li): ond rumed up 24 cases of welfare
periodically s&lt;:an emp lomwnt dat;, recipient s il legally receiving more
from all sectors of Ohio go\'orn· than $8J,(XX) in wdfa re hPnefits
ment and business ... Fe rguso n from both statPS at the sa me time.
urgin g quk:k S&lt;&gt;na tl' &lt;JCtion on

&lt;.1

Reagan cranks up
budget cutting list

Gramm-Rudman may
hit Social Security
WASHINGTON tUPl I - Senate
Republican leaders, in a repeat of
last year's rwo most controversial
budget Issues. suggest Congress
may have to consider taxes or
Social Security curbs to meet the
severe requirements of Gramm·
Rudman.
Though President Reagan has
said his flscall987 budget will meet
the Gramm-Rudman balanced·
budget law targ!!t without taxes or
changes In Social Security, many
congressmen are having their
doubts.
In addition, Sen. Carl Levin,
D-M!ch .• Thursday l'l'leased a poll
that he said shows 59 percent of
Americans questioned \hink it Is
more Important to ~uce the
deficit than It Is to cut taxes.
And Sen . Gary Hart, D-Colo ..
called Thursday for ~ billion in
hlgtv'lr taxes, beginning with a!' ol!
tax , over the next five years and a
budget cut of $100 billion at the

..\.,:\'OUNCES CAND!Di\C,Y - Gov. Richard Celeste gestures ashe
:mnoufl(·es his intt•ntion to nm for re~leclion in Columbus, hi~ second
campaih1r stop of the dU)'. UPI.

WASHJ NCTON tUPI) - Presi·
dent Reagan has summoned ,..na te
Republican lrad~rs back to the
White Hou"" today for a fourth

PIC)\ OF THE CROP - Award-winning OOiliervatlonlsts Rex
Shenellcld, LangsvWe, and Thomas M. Theiss, Racine, harvest oranges
during a recetJt visit to the Wigwam resort and Goodyear Fanns,
Utchfteld Park, Ariz. They were ~mong the repl'CSEIIIatlves of the
nation's lop conservation district,, participating In the 38th annual
Goodyear Conservation Awards program.

· freight rail earlier to Norfolk
Southern Corp. for $1.2 billion,
cleared a major Sena te hurdle
Thursday when opponents agrl'ed
strafeg\: st'Ssion on winning suppot1
to let the bill rome up for action .
Other agencies that rould go up
fo r his hit list of measu res to reducP
for sale include Amtrak, Washing·
the federal deficit.
ton's Dulles and National airpons.
Reagan . who opposes a tax
increase but Is limited in his ability
tower operations at selected a ir·
to slash go\'ernment spending , is
pot1s, parts of the Postal ServiCP,
now pushing a long·fnvorcd prop· satellites operated by the Nationa l
osal - liquidating goVPrnm~n t
Weather Service and regional
power admi nistra tions.
assets - to meet targets mandated
by the Gramm-Rudman balanced·
Reagan also wants to gt.&gt;l the
government out of the Loan bu sines
budget Jaw.
'
One of the themes of hi s State of by doing away with the Small
the Union address. to be delivered
Business Adminis tration. Eco·
to a joint session of Congress nomic Development Adm!nistm·
Tuesday, will discuss the advan· tjon and the Federal Housing
tages of sc ll tng cer ta i n Administra tion.
government-opPrated agencies to
Th e Conrail sale brought into
the private sector as a way to focus a key aspect of the spending
reduce gover~~nt spending.
plan Reagan lf.Dds to Congress on
One administra tion plan, selling Feb. 4 to keep \he flscal1987 deficit
Com·aJI. the gowrnment · 0\\1tt'Ci at $144 billion.

�•

Friday, January 24, 1986

...

·.;·

(:ommentru.Y

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'I

The Daily

Sentin~l

lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

ts:m~ ,.,...._,.._-r,,.....,.c:;~,,=o

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
: PAT WHITEHEAD
·. Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
•

A MEMBER of The United Press International . Inland Daily Press

: Association and the American Newspaper Publi shers Association .
•
LETTERS OF OPINION are Wf' lrome. They should bt&gt; less than ))0 word s
• , long. All letters are subjt&gt;Ct to editin g and must be signed with namt&gt;. addres s a nd
:~ telephone number . No unsigned leiters will be pu bl ls hE'd . Lett ers should be In
, ·good taste . addre~ sing lssu~ . not personalities.

~: Officials

•

~dealing

differ on.
with terrorism

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, Janu.-y 24, 1986

A millennial proposai ____J_am_fM_J_.K_upa_tric_k
WASHINGTON- "Millennium"
ca rries two definitions , one literal.
the other poetic. A millennium Is •·a
petlod of 1,(00 years." It is also "a
petiod of great happiness or human
pePfection." The propos al advanced last week by Soviet leader
MlkhaU Gorbachev embraces both
meanings. We ought to look at thi s
proposition hopefully - and warily
as welL
This Is what he said: "The Soviet
Union Is projXJsing a step-by-step
and consistent process of ridding
the earth of nuclear weajXJns, to 1:1&gt;
implemented and completed within
Ihe next JSyears. before tl'e end of
Ihis century."
In sta~e one. over the next five to
eight years. hot h sides would
redu&lt;'&lt;' by one-half "t!F nuclea r
arm s that can reach each other's
territory." This would include
long- range homhers as well as land~
and sea-based misslles. At the end

of pha se one. each side would be
limited 10 6,00) war!Fads.
In a 'second stage, beginning no
later than 199J. the two po""ers
would "ellminale" their medium·
range nuclear weapons and freeze
their tactical nuclear systems.
"Stage ttu·ee wtll begin no later
than 1995. At this stage the
elimination of all remai ning nu·
clear weapons ' will be completed .
By the end of 1999 there will be no
nuclear weapons on earth. A
universal accord will be drawn up
that such weapons never again will
come into bein g."
The Gorbachev IJ'OjXJsal oo ntains
other elements. Manifestly it could
not succeed unless otl&gt;:or nuclear
powers- England, France. China,
presumably Israel. possibly India
-joined in the accord . Gorbachev
makes the whole plan co ntingent
upon abandonment by the United
States of development and deploy·

ment of defensive weapons In
space. There would also 1:1&gt; a ban on
"non-nuclear weapons based on
new pttyslcal principles whose
destructive capacity Is close to that
of nuclear arms ." Gorbachev
further suggests the "complete
elimination of such barbaric weapons of mass destruction as chemi·
cal weapons." Finally he proposes
that converitional weapons and
anned forces also become subject
to agreed reductions.
What Is one 10 make of all this?
On the record of the past 50 years,
t!F Soviet Union could not care less
about world oplnlon,but Gorbachev
is a genius at public relations. It Is
truly remarkable to see the !Fad of
the Soviet state. whose troops lately
have been kllling the children of
Afghanistan by bcmbs concealed in
toys, wrapping himself In a messl·
ah 's man tle of peace on earth, good
"ill toward men .

'-

\

:: President Reagan's top Cabinet clftcials are squabbling over how to deal
&gt;with terrorism. Ironically, the man who L&lt;; supposed to advocate diplomacy
·. is hanging tough for a hard line while the &lt;ificial who runs the military
:. establishment is urging caution.
·, Reagan, it appears. Is letting them Oght It out.
~ Clearly, if you take their words, Secretary of State George Shultz and
•Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, who rarely agree on anything,
. have a new feud going on the terrortsm question .
·: To hear deputy press secretary Larry Speakes tell it. there is no rift on
·the proper use of a military response by the two officials. He recently
·chided reporters: "Once again. you're wrong, you're wrong. you're
wrong."
No one dentes the frustration on all sides with dealing with mindless.
.:senseless terrortsm and the victimizing of innocent people.
: .But clearly Shultz and Weinberger have a different approach on when to
·-use force and when to withhold the CNerwhelrning firepower c1 the United
:states.
·
· Weinberger recently warned that military force should not be used
lncjiscrlminately, but advocated such attacks ~ there Is an appropriate
:target.
· "I think there are a lot of people who would get instant gratification from
me kind of a bombing attack somewhere without being too worried about
:details," he said. in what appeared to be an oblique criticism d. Shultz. "I
-thlllk we have a responsibility to take the actions that are effective in
:tleterrtng future terrortsm."
- But Shultz, a former Marine olficer. ls feeling t!F !Fat and has been put
on )he spot more because of his flam buoyant rhetoric and threats. For that
reason he appears to be flailing out against the unseen enemy.
Shultz, who Is more prone to want to invoke t!F mllltary option. said that
:"amligultles of the terrorist threat should not create lmpotenre and a
)Xlllcy filled with "so many qualifications and corxlitlons" would lead to
yaralysls.

• Weinberger said: "I don't think there's any doubt that if we find a very
-good, appropriate target for response to terrorist actions that anybody
would have hesitancy about dealing with lt."
In a cautionary note. Weinberger has added that although the Uniled
·States has " a good idea" where the terrorists bases are located . "a
:discriminate response. an appropriate response is difficult ."
; So far the president, rejecting a "Rambo" image. has prevailed in not
wanting to retaliate against innocent people fo r the sake ci flexing U S.
mllitart muscle.
· He has decided that with compelling evidence that Libya sponsors
International terrortsm. Ihe regime of Muammar Khadafy should he
Isolated economically.
A State Department offi cial discuss ing a white paper on Libyan
~errorism acknowledged there was "no smo~ing 'ku n" in terms of the
evidence, but that the United States has overwhelming circumstantial
$10Cumentation against Khadafy.
Shultz and and Weinberger. who both worked at the lop scale at the
Bechtel Corp .. which builds airports and ot!Fr fac ilities in the Middle East
and other places, have rarely seen eye lo eye on ma jor foreign policy
Issues.
But the secretary of state, who is supposed lobe searching for ways to
mediate problems peacefully and to sea rch for possible negotiation.
appears to want to abandon that route.
· There are unconfirmed reports tha t admin istration ·officials are
considering kidnapping terrorists and bringing them to trial in the United
States. Such a move would he a defianCf' of international law and scra p
silme extradition treaties the United Sta tes has ot her nations.
The United State tried retaliation in terms of the 16- inch guns on the
battleship USS New Jersey after the tragedy of the terrorist attack on the
r.'larlne barracks in Beirut. But while satisfy ing to those who wan ted to
strike back, It did not defeat tenori.sm .

Berry's World

.·

·.
.'..

"/don't care if they ARE always done in good
taste. I am NOT interested in doing an UNDERWEAR AD. "

[foday in history
~; Today Is Friday, Jan. 24, the 24th day of 198i with 341 to li:lDow.
: · The moon Is approaching Its full phase.
. The momlng stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
• · 'lbe evening.stan are Venus and Jupiter.
~ 'Iboll! bom on Ibis date are under the sign d Aquarius. They include the
Rmnanemperor Hadrian In 76A.D., Frederick theGreatdPrusslaln 1712,
, Brltlshsocialtelonnertc;;lr Edwin Chadwick in 1800, author Eqlth Wharian
In Jll9l, actor Emest Borgntne in 1917 (age m) , evangelist Oral Roll&gt;rts In
1918 (~Ill), and COJI'l!!dlan John Belushi In 19~.

Super Bowl is special

,,

'

I

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1·/)

~~.

Hope springs eternal. Ronald
Reagan has said many times that
he shares Gorbachev's millennia!
dream of a world free of the threat
rt nuclear war. Could the dream
turn Into reality? Like all other
accords or compacts or treaties,
this one has Its nne print. The term
"warhead," for example, Is mean·
ingless without calibration In terms
of a warhead's destructive power.
The Soviet Union's warheads
carry, on average, the equivalent &lt;I
4Xl,&lt;XXl tons of TNT. Ours average
about lXI,OOl tons. The bomb that
destroyed Hiroshima In 1945 had
the equivalent of 17,00l tons.
·
Dw-ing this first stage, when each
side would cut down to b,IXXl
war!Fads, the Soviet Union clearly
would maintain a significant ad·
vantage. Moreover, the Gorbachev
proposal apparently would leave It
to each side to 'decide which
war!Fads would be dismantled to
get down to the 6,00l level.
Gorbachev Is noticeably more
specific on the matter of "ellrninat·
ing" tactical nuclear weapons than
he is on subjecting conventional
forces to "agreed reductions." If ·
the United States were effectively
to disband NATO and withdraw our
forces from Europe, would this not
leave our Western all ies vulnerable
to the massive land and air forces of
the Warsaw Pact?
President Reagan 's response
was exactly what th~ occasion
demanded. He welcomed the over·
ture. He would look at It carefully.
While It contained many old
elements, il contained some new
elements alsb. He would direct our
negotiators at Geneva to examine it
with care.
I am skeptical. Hamlet voiced a
warning for all ages: "One may
smile, and smile, and be a villain."
Let us learnaboutthrow-weight; let
us learn about verification; let us
approach this rtfer as caullously as
acatinacowbam: Wemaysmella
rat. But let us also move with a
prayerful and hopeful heart.

lack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta
Iran's terror ------------------------------------

WAS HI NGTON - Iranian diplo·
mat ic facilities in Rome are thC'
principal ce nter for planning 1be
A~· a t oilah 1--1\omeini's terrorist op·
erat io ns thr oughout Wi'sler n
Europe.
.
Our int!'lligrnC£' sourCf:'s now
be iirvP tha t III' Iranian colon)' in
Rome assisted in III' Ctu·istmas
time gu n and grenade attacks at the
Rome and Vienna airports. The
head of Ita ly's militarv intell igence
Sl'J'\'ice repor1ed earlier tha t the
airpo11 terrorist s had been trained
in Iran .
1\'hilr Lib.va has been fingered as
the main culprit in t!F alrpon
attacks. and there is c\oS(&gt; coopera·
lion among Lib)·a. Iran and Sy ria in
terroris t activities. it is the Iranians
who ha,·e be&lt;&gt;n rf'Sponsible for the
kill ing and ki dn apping of more
Americans !han any othC'r Ierro risl
sponsor. Thr grisly "body cou nt " of
Amrr icans

killed

b~·

rorist operations in early 1984.
fo lio\\i ng the Fl'!'nch government's
expulsion of many Khomeln\ supporters from Paris. Brussels is the
S&lt;'Condary ce nter for 1tv&gt; ,·ioient
t'xpor1 ation of Khomein i' s islamic
J'C'\'ol ution.

Thr Iranian lerrmist nPst in
Rome is dim:ted bv Aya tollah
Khosrow-Shah i. Kho m eini's a m·
bassador to the Va tican The son of

a carpenter. Khosrow-Shahi had
be&lt;&gt;n imprisoned by 1he late sha h
for subv£'rsivr acti\'il ies. After the
shah's ouster. Kho srow~Sha h i be ·

came Khomcini's chauffeur, tody ·
guard and tru sted aide. He was
second-in -command of the stude nt
re,·olu tlonaries who seizrd the
Amtorica n Embassy in Tehran and
held its pPrsonnPI hostage for 444
days. He was !&lt;'warded in 1981 "ith
the ambassadorial appointment to
I he \'alican.

lranian-

inspired violence Is 50 times thai of
Lib)·an·backed assassi ns.
Rome lx&gt;ra me the headq uarte"
for Iran 's 1\'rstem European trr·

At least t11iCP, Ita lian poli"' ha,·e
monitored Rome meet in gs ar·
rang»d by Khosrow-Shahi of top
officials in the iranian and Svrian

secret services.
Much oft he plotting goes on at the
Islamic European Cultural Center
at 361-63 Via Noment ana, a large
oomplex purchased at the time of
Khosrow-Shahi's arrivaL He and
his deputy also have an apartment
at 56 Colli de Ia Farnslna. but most
of the work is done In the 60-room
Islamic Center building.
The Italians use long-range ca·
mer as to keep watch on the renter,
but survelliance Is made difficult by
hidden ex lls to two nearby streets
and at least one underground
passage to the Libya n Embassy
next door.
Trunks suspected of containing
arms and explosives have been
delivered to the cenler - Immune
fro m sea rch under diplomat ic seal.
Hundreds of young. bearded Iranians have come and gone over the
past five years, Including one lot of
1hr ~ dozen flown Into Rome
ostensibly for medical treatmentalthough the center has no medical
fac ilities.
One reason the Italians are so

conC!'rned abcut these young Iran·
ians is the secret minutes of a
high -level conference held In Teh·
ran on May ~. 1984. Ayatollah
Mohammed Khatami , Khomeinl's
minister of Islamic guidance. ordered Iranian officials to produce
1.~ to 2.1XXl men for suicide
missions. They were to be under lJ,
preferably unmarried and "com·
pletely committed to martyrdom,"
according to the minutes.
CIA Director William Casey's
comments to a small group of
academics last April are worth
considering. He said: " Probably
more blood has been shed by
Iranian-sponsored terrortsts during
the last few years than by all other
terrorists combined. Tehran uses
terrorism as a major element r:llts
ongoing campaign to export the
Iranian revolution throughout the
Moslem world and to reduce
Western ln!luence - especially that
of the United States- in Ihe Middle
East. ... Libya 's (CoL Muammar)
Khadafy is not In the Ayatollah
Khomeini's league."

Secret weapon __________R_ob_er_t_~_al_te_rs
WASHINGTON (NEA) - When iatures to Co ngress.
Miles Rapoport made his first bid for
Among the 1984 winners it aided in
elective office. the self-effacing 35· ihat las t ca tegory are Reps. Lane Ev·
year-old De mocrat was nobody's idea ans of Illinois. Bob Edgar of Pennsylof a political giant-killer.
vania and Edward Feighan of Ohio, as
Rapoport was a lhoughtfuL iss ue- well as Sens. Paul Simon of Illinois
oriented poli ti ca l organ izer. but he and Tom Harkin of Iowa.
wasn't notabl y charismatic and he
All are Democrats. but thai's hard ;y
faced a seemingly insurmountable ob- surprisi ng given Citizen Action 's " new
stacle in his ca mpai gn for a sea t in the populist" constituency and jts comlower house of Con nectic ut's state · mitment to the empowerment of those
legislature
who tradi tionally have had little influTh e Wesl Harlford district in whi ch ence in society.
he chose to run was r epresented by a
"The brggest problem we have in
IO·year veteran of the legislature who this country," says Harkin. "is that too
had risen to assistant majority leader few people hold too much economi c
and was presumed to be unbeatable.
and pol•tical power." Hea ther Booth.
In autumn 1984. however. Rapoport Citizen Action 's co-director. says the
defeated the incumbent by 180 votes group's goal is to "ensure that people
in the Democratic primary. He then are in control of their li ves and the in·
went on io beat his Republican chal· stitutions that affect it.''
Ienger by 30 votes in the general elec·
The secrel to Citrzen Action's suction two months later.
cess is an army of U OO young men
The key to those two narrow vic· and women employed by its affiliated
tories: The Connecticut Citizen Action organitations for the sole purpose of
Group. This grass-roots political orga - conducting door-to-door so licitations
nization directed by Rapoport for five five hours a night. five nights a week.
years in the late 1970s and early
Although those canvasse rs are rem1980s, produced 300 volunteers who iniscent of volunteers who visited
contributed thousands of hours to his households promoting anti-war or procampaign.
CIVtl rt ~ h ts causes, there is one very
The Connecticut group is one of 23 important difference - the solicitors
throughout the country affiliated with today are paid employees of the
Citizen Action, a Cleveland-based or- groups whose causes they promote .
ganization with an exceptional yet un·
Contribulions typically are divided
heralded record of promoting a 'pro- among the canvasser. a nalional orgagressive political agenda in cities and nization and its local affiliate - a prostates throughout the country during cedure that allows the entire enterthe first half of the 1980s.
prise to be financially self-sufficient.
Some of Citizen Action's most ambi· The ca nvassers contact 60,000 housetious campaigns have dealt with toxic holds a night and more than 1S million
wastes, utility rates, health care and yearly.
other issues affecting the low- and
"The Iowa Citizen Action Network
middle-income reople 11 seeks to unify has a bigger staff, more contributors
into a formidable political force.
_i!nd a better organization than the
But the organization also has played Iowa Democralic Party," says Harkin
a crucial role in contests for public of· in a tribute to the group that commit·
!ices from city councils to state legis· ted 20,000 hours worth of staff time to

his 1984 campaign.
Citi zen Action plans to expand those
elforts in this year's elections, provid·
ing not only canvassers but technical
services to candidates.
Its chances of success are excep-

LOOKS FOR\\' ARD TO SUPER BOWL - Chicago
Bears rurmlng hack Walter Pa~1on is looldngforward
to his ftrsl Super Bowl game Sunday. Payton has long
been one of th{' :IIFL's premier runnin g backs. Thb b

the Bears first ~ppearance ever In a Super Bowl and
ihe team's first championship game since 1963.
During most of Paytlln's career, the Rears were on
the losing side of the ledger. UPI,

Craig paces
Pats~ offense
NEW ORLEANS I UPI! - In the
order of footbal l. Craig,James IS the
exception \o the expectation - a
while man playing what is trad i·
tlonaily a bl ack man 's positio n.
The New England Patriots nm·
ning back does not fi t the sterNt)'p·
ing of his sport, explained team·
mal e Mosi Tatu pu. "We' re pre! I)
locked into the system. the way
life's supposed to b&lt;&gt; in the game.
the ru nning back's supposed lobe
black. lhc quarterba ck's supposed
to be while. the lines, you can mi.'
them in," sa id Tarupu . a native of
Samoa.
"He's a fa ntast ic nmner w ho
combines speed and power. He's
the toughest Caucasian running
back I've be&lt;&gt;n around."
J ames, 6-feet and 215 pounds,
acknowledges that his natural
ability doesn't fit the usual pu blic
t-oncep L
"Just becauS&lt;' I'm big and white
doesn't mean I can't be fasl too," hr
sa id, smil ing.
This season James emerged as
one of the NFL's lop running backs.
gaining 1.227 yards mshing duti ng
the reguiar S(&gt;ason He also picked
up 360 yards on re&lt;?eptions and
tlu·ew for two touchdowns on option
plays.
He is the Ct' nlo' rpirce of Ihc
Patriots ground game as they
prepare for Suj)!r Bowl XX against
the Chicago Bears. His mnnin g
st yle Is to wa lch 1he line and pick hi s
cuts rather \han always following
his blockers.
Whlle playin g at Sou thern Metho~
dlst, J ames all ernated at mnning
ba ck with Eric Dickerson. now of
the Los Angeles Rams. a closl'
friend who is black.
"We used to ca ll oursei,·es 'Salt'
an d ·Pcpprr.' and he uSIXItoca ll me
'AWB' for 'Awragl' White BO\ .'
while I ca lled him 'ABH.'" smd
.Ja mes. who is quite cx traordin.ary .
accordin g lo Tatupu .
"Ail the grea trst lllnning backs
are black. We ail know Ihis gam e is

tionally good, in great measure because its approach is unique. No other
organization of any political persua·
sion is dispatching so many earnest
young people for personal meetings
with people in their homes.

'.

Wi\RMS UP - Patriot's quarierbaek Tony Eason bites hbi tongue
while throwing a pass Thursday during a workoutforSuperllowlXXat
the Super Dome in New Orleans. UPI.
predomin antl;· black and

Member FDIC

Peoples Bank

THE
GRAVELY
SYSTEM

2nd Street
Ma son. W. Ve .
773- 5514

2212 Jackson Ave .
Point Pleasant. W.
676-1121

5th Street
New Haven, W. Va .
882-2135

t he ~ ·

are stren gth to be successful in lhe
business. Craig Is proba bly the first
"Blacks haw the tools as far as white guy I've seen who has those
spe&lt;'d and leap ing ability and same tools ," he said .

good at it." said Tatupu.

PUBLIC NOTICE
.

Driving doesn't
have to be

mrs sus

TUESDAY 11.15

~NUARY 24 thru ~
thru TltURSOAY ~

GTI
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Pomary. OH.
Phone 992- 2975
FALL &amp; WlNRR HOURS

a dra
ILL

NEW ORLEANS iUPl i - IVai·
ter Payton says there is only one
way to approach the Super Bowlas something speciaL
"This is wha l professional football is all about ," Chicago's veteran
running back said Thursday as the
Bears made final preparations for
Sunday's showdown with the New
England Pat riots. "You start the
season wi th 28 teams and only two
get here.
"U that's nol speci al , I don 't know
what is."
Bears coach Mike Ditka said that
while Pa yiDn was held io 32 yards
on 18 carries against the Los
Angeles ful ms in Ihe NFC cham ·
pionship game, he expecis a lot
more from the veteran running
back Sunday.
"Walter wasn't effective in that
game because of the wav the Ra ms
played us." said Dit ka: "But this
will be a special game for him."
"It took me i1 yea rs to get here,"
said Payton . "I won't be around
that much longer, so I have to tak e
advantage of this opportunity.
Going to the Super !lowlis what I've
be&lt;&gt;n looi&lt;jng fo r all these years."
Although Payton, who has he·
come the all·time career mshing
leader during his 11 NFL seasons,
has been tryin g to sidestep his own
importance in the game. many of
his \eammates say they want to win
it for him.
"Walt er Payton is the greatest
running back ci all time," said Matt
Suhey. the olrer running back in the
Bears starting backfield. "He
makes you a better blocker than
you really are. We all fe el we owe
him a lot."
Backup quarterback Steve Fuller
says it's important the Bears bmsh
aside all the oontroversy SUITOund ·
in g startin g quarterback Jim
McMahon and concentrate on
Surxlay's game.
"We've got to do what~vcr it
takes ID win. " Fuller said. "1bis is
our last game in more than six
months, so I don't think eit her side
will hold anylhing back."
Fuller . who started fi ve ga mes
for the Bears during the regular
season when McMahon was ailing,
said Thursday :YicMahon 's current
injury (a bruised buttock) means
IF must be ready to step in at any
time.
"That would be true even if Jim
was hea lthy," Fuller said. "But it
becomes rmre of a possibility with
him a title rmre bange d up than
usuaL Coach Dltka told me last
week, 10 days be fore game time,
that I'd better ru ne it up a bit."

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

~ 3 1 JACKSON ptKE - RT 35 WEST

Berry's World

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

@ It's not a car

'{!JJ It's a Volksw~gen

.

SOUTHERN OHIO COAL COMPANY WISHES TO
INFORM RESIDENTS OF VINTON AND MEIGS
COUNTIES THAT IT WILL BE MINING UNDER STATE
ROUTE 689 FROM AB.OUT 800 ·FEET NORTH OF
THE INTERSECTION OF VINTON COUNTY ROAD 38
AND ABOUT 11 00 FEET SOUTH OF THE SAME
COUNTY ROAD BEGINNING IN THE NEAR FUTURE.
TRAFFIC WILL BE MAINTAINED, BUT THERE MAY
BE SOME ALTERATIONS IN THE· ROAD'S SURFACE.
HOWEVER, SIGNS WIL BE POSTED IN THE AR~A
AND THE ·SITUATION WUL BE MONITORED AT ALL
TIMES. ONCE THE MINING IS COMPLETED STATE
ROUTE 689 WILL BE COMPLETELY REPAIRED BY
THE STATE HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT _AT SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY'S EXPENSE.
IN THE MEANTIME, WE ASK FOR. YOUR PATI- •
ENCE AND URGE YOU TO DRIVE SAFELY,· AND WE
APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY
CAUSE YOU.
----~-~ " I

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Page~4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-:-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, January 24, 1986

Indiana nips Purdue; Kentucky stops Georgia
By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sporls Wrler
lndlana holds No. 16 Purdue to 1
nine minutes, and.
Steve Alford scores 19 or his 'l1
points In the seconds half, Including
the wlllnlng basket In the Hoosiers'
71-'10 overtime victory ••• and Bobby
.Knlgllt talks about flshlng trips.
Get a grip, coach.
point in the 'ftnal

"I

Sat

on this lake fishing

today.

and I thQught about bow lnslgnifl·

cant baSketball really

Is," said
Knight, who forbid his players to
talk to the media after the game.
"Yoo know, there are a lot o! things
In this world more Important than
lllsketball. I bate to leave you, but
I'm going to go plan my next fishing

trip."
: And Knight walked out.
: Indiana rose to 124 overall and
1-2 in Big Ten play. The loss left
Purdue 164 overall and 5-2 in the
conference, a half· game behind
Idle Michigan.
Alford rallied the Hoosiers from
their largest deficit, 69-&amp;1, with tour
minutes to play in regula lion. The
Hoosiers were without their start·
lng front line after two players
fouled out and freshman Rick
Calloway left the game with a leg

Injury
Alford hit three free throws, and
the Hoosiers scored the final 5
points ot regulation to send the
game Into overtime.
"We didn' t have anyone to stop
him," said Purdue coach Gene
Keady o! Alford. "Steve bas made
progress. He has Improved his
game. He was better than us
tonight. We thought if we put a
bigger guard on him in the second
half, it would wear him down a
little ...
Purdue's Mack Gadis missed a
shot with six seconds remaining in
overtime and Steve Eyl pulled
dlwo the rebound, ending the final
BolleiTtlaker threat.
"One ot his options is to take the
shot &lt;r Oip It ott," Keady said. "If he
makes it, great. If he doesn't , we

lose.''
In other games in volvlng Top ~
7 Kansas downed
Mlssourt 81 -77, No. 9 Kentucky
outlasted Georgia 74-lll, No. 10
Nevada-Las Vegas topped New
Mexico State 118-79, No. 10 NevadaLas Vegas stopped New Mexico
State 88-79, No. 17 Bradley nipped
Illinois Stllte 67- 63, No . 18 Texas-El
Paso IDppled Colorado State 65-57,

and No. 19 Alabama ·Birmingham
smashed North Carolina· Charlotte

over New M exico St ate . Ban ks hit
5-of-6 3- polnt goals to help put the
game oot of reach
At Peoria," Ill., Mike Williams
scored a ca reer-high 30 points.
including 4 in ov ert ime. to can y
Bradley over IllinoiS Sta te in a
Missouri Valley Confer ence gam e
Bradley guard Jim Les scor ed 13
points, including a last -second
layup to send !lie !fdme mto
overtrne, and 3 in overtime.
At El Paso. T ex as , Juden Snuth
scored 15 poin ts and hit 4 k ey free
throws
the stretch to gu ide
trrEP to a Western Athletic
Conference v ictory over Colorad o
State.
At Birmingham , Ala., Steve
Mitchell scored 19 pomts an d
James Ponder added 14 lo spar k
UAB to a Sun Belt Conference
victory ovl'r N orth Carolina"
(liarlotte.

81-63.
At Columbia, M o ., Ron Kellogg
scored 'll points, and Kansas
withstood a l ate Mlssourt rally for a
Big Eight victory. Missouri coach
Norm Stewart received too techni·
cals, resulting In four successfu l
free throws, the winning margin for
Kansas. Derrick Chievous led the
Tigers with 31 points.
At Lexington, Ky., Ed Davmder
scored 15 points and Winston
Bennett added 14 to pace Kentucky
past Southeastern Conferene&lt;&gt; foe
Georgia . Kentucky mounted a
26-polnt lead early In t:re second
half.
At Las C ruces, N.M ., Anthony
Jones scoreed 28 points, and
Freddie Banks added 21 to lead
Nevada-Las Vegas to a Pacific
Coast Athletic Association victory

teams, No

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Bull!tbd

Sl M ar) s 71 Dllmlmcan
Nazar«n 6:!, RIT ~
i\:p11 Paul1 1 ~ KinK" 7!1

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Rrandt'is 75 WCJI"{'(""5tf'r 1 PC"h 7'.!

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Hlf.l'k 1JJ11 Sl In DittmA'T i1
Flurk iV:'\ 1Ill Hofstid till
Clarkl&gt; 8."1 WPSIP.•an Iii
r alrtrld Ill lona 66
Gunoon b1l Allinn« ~7
Husson~ S Malnr ~

Nlalil'uru ~. \I('W Hampshlrr 5'•
I\\ ark KJ St R{!l(' H
!\l(na !U \ t•nnoru ti9
Sl ,\1\&lt;rlm 74 A.uurnptlon ti.'t
Sl IJol\1\f'IIIWl' M8, Gro Wa stu n~•l!Jrt )4,
Siolll'h lll 7'1 &amp;&gt;nrlt.-... n
SIOf'l\ ~k 83 John J&lt;n 5i
Trt"Qplf 7b. Pt&gt;nn Sl :li
1\ Vll)t1l11a S!l Rhod(&gt; I sla nd~;

Ma !~W&gt;- M&lt;~c h la!i

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M a l ~ r armtngton 76

Mans i 7:! St Fra iK' I ~ 1Pa 1 3-1
\lassarhuSl'lls ffi, OJQurs!'l' 00
Mm1mack 7 ~ ~·an i 67

5 I Rl.

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S\l ar1hmon' !{,

Rav Rtgg s
Ph. 98S·4100

Chester

Church &amp; Olftce Supplies
GIFTS
99 Mrll St
Mrddleport

NEW YORK '" ~
~tOlltiNG HOUSE : ','"

~.

';(] 11IT1

RMIT ' S KORNER

Pomeroy, Ohro

l•
J/7

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•

LET FAITH DISPEL THE PANGS
OF YOUR TROUBLED CONSCIENC

John F . Fulfl, Mgr.
Ph. 992 2101
Pomerov

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

~~~~~

REACH FOR REBOUND- Illinois' K en Nom u u1 (lclt ) and Ohio

lHE DAILY
SENTINEL

214 E . Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

Mtddlepor t
Pomeroy , 0

JACKSONVILLE Io what
Coach Ron Logan' called a very
expensive victory, the Me1gs Ma·
rauderettes opened up a 13-2 first
quarter lead and coasted to a 61-43
win over Trimble here Thursday in
girls' TVC cage action.
Despite the easy wm. the M arau derettes have lost the serv1ces of
starter Jenni Swartz, who suffered
a badly sprained ankle and 1s
presently on crutches .
Coac h
Logan was not sure when she will be
able to return to acllon, bu t 1s
deflnately out for next Monday
against Belpre.
Meigs' twin-sister comoo. Jennl
and Julie MUle r . were dominating
as Jenni led all scorers WJth 17
points and had ei ght rebounds Julle
added 14 points and led rebounders
with 17. Jodi Hamson and Swartz
both added eight pomts
Michelle Tramer led the Lady
Tomcats with 15 while Jennifer
Lowery added 14
Meigs had a good night at the foul
line, sinking Z3 of 34 for iil per e&lt;&gt;nt
lncludmg eight ct 10 by J ulie Miller

'The Marauderenes, who shot ll per
cent from the field by making 19 ri.
49, ratse their record to 13-1 overall
and 11-1 in the TVC. They remain
tied with Alexander for the league
lead .
The Marauderett es had 43 rl'bounds, 2ii tu rnover s. and commit ted 21 fouls . Trimbl e had 24 fouls
while making 13 of 22 tree throws.
Trimble pulled out the r eserve
game. 31 - ~ . behind Am y f'E'rt's 10
points .
Scoring for the L ittle
M a r auderettes included Nancy
Blankenship and Beth E wing with
· 10 eac h . Jodi Tay lor had fiv e, and
Dee Henderson added four.
Metgs hosts Belpre nex t Monday
oo Parents' Nightv while Trimble
goes to Vinton County.
Mt: tns l fli\1 - Ji'nn\ \1111t&gt;r ~ 7 t: Jutil' MJIIPr
Jodi Ha rri..'IIJf'I J21i Jrnnl(ou:h !l ti Jpnru
S10. am JJ Fl. Trll'Sa lotui.5(M1 0-[).{1 1 amm' "'- nxht
I I J &lt;:;. flt&gt;IJ ' Stobiln Mil. Man a ~hlS..Wt 1 \ .J Usa
l-S I~ .

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TRIMBLE (43) - Mlci'IPIII' Trauwr ~~ 15 Jf'nnlff'r
UMf'l1 ~ 14 l.orl ~~ 1c 22~ Sl!(&gt;ll\. Stu~ ~ h
Ann Pm t.a ! TUTAL\0 l~ll-U

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GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer

By

Ohio State found another way to
lose a basketball game Tbursda}
night
Down by 13 points at halftime,
Ohio State stonned back In t:re
second h alf with a 29-10 spurt the
first 13 minutes of t he per iod . Th at
g ave the Buckeyes a 5549lead with
6 14 to play. but they couldn 't hold

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Tonight's games
North Ga lha at Southern
E as tern at K yger Cr eek
Sy mmes Valley at Southwestel n
Oak Hill at Hannan Trace
Marietta at Ga!Upolls
Jac kson at Log an
A t hens at Parker sburg
Portsmouth W est at Wheelersbu rg
North Gallla at Sout hern
Northwest at Waver ly
Chesapeake at South Point
Coal Grove at Rock HUl
Russell at P ortsmouth
Hunllngton Eilst at Poin t Pleasant
Greenfield at Washington OJ
Meigs at Belpre
NelsonvOie-Yorll at Alexander
Federal Hocking at Wellston
Vinton County at Trimble
Miller at Warren Local

Saturday
Raceland at North Gallla
Southern at Ravenswood
ZanesvOle at Marietta
Waverly at Ironton
Sl- Charles at Logan
West at Jackson

Represf'nta l l\ f', Branham

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1986 FORO
ESCORT PONY

11,1k H1 tl
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$1156

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13 WN"ks

$1560

26 WN:Ok S
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$5980

SUN
SOLUTIONS!

FUTURES IIICUIDE:
•t.AIYCIIC . . . .

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'B&amp;'FORD
RANGERS

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•Milltlll;

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10 TANNING SESSIONS
ONLY

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AS LOW AS

88,388:

\\Yout Solution
To A
Buutilul Ttn

11

FOR BOTH MEN
·and WOMEN
FOR THE BOTH OF YOU
STYLING SALON
Syr!f••

992-3912

DEBBIE POWEll - Owner

UNITED ME'f HODI ST.
GRAHAM
Prmching 9 30 a m first an d s{'C()nd. Sun
da n of €'i1Ch month, lhrd and fourth Sun·
da)· eachmonth wo rship Sf'rv lces at 7 30 p
m , Wedn e5 day Mo'('ll\n ~s at 7 30 p m
Prayf'r and Hlbl(' Stu dy
• SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST. Mulb·
('rl)' H l.'l~ h ts Road. Po m mo~ Lffo~
Bru ch Pastor Sabbat h School Supl"rln
teondt'nl, Rhonda Markin Sabbat h School
begins at 2 p m crt Sa lu rclay wit h worship
S{"I'\I&lt;'C' fo ll o win~ at 3·15 Everyon€' "'£'1
rome
RUTLAN D FIR~T AAPTIST CHURCH
:.... Sis IN Harriett Warner , Sup t Sunda)
School9 30 am , Morning Worship, 10 oi l
am.
POMEROY F'tRST BAPTI ST. Di1vld
Mann. mlnlsl f' r \\ \IIi am Snoofff'r Sunda \
&amp;hool Sup! Sunday School. 9 30 am
Morn lnii: Woro; ht p 10 .lO a m
FIRST SOUT HERN BAPTIST. Po
ffi(lt' OY Pik{' David Hunt, pasto r Jack
N('f()s, Su ndav School D\r('('c-tor Sunda\
Scool. ll 311 a m . Mom ln,ii! Wor ship , 10 :lO,
evPnin l': worship, 7 00 p m TuPsda v Visitation. 7 p m wronPSda\' , Pmyt•r seJvlcP,
7, 30 p m , Mission Frle11 ds 7 lO p m
Girls In Act ion 7&lt;10 p m
FA ITH TARERNAl'l. f_ CHURCH Ba l
lf'\ nun n o.td. H£'' Emm(ln Rail' son, pas
tor H &lt;~ ndi C'\' nu nn '-"Upl Sunda\ !oi.chool
10 a m , sund,l\ "' ('11 1111! ~f'n lrP i 10 p m
Bi bh' 11•,H htnJ! i 1(\ ll m ThUI"d.l \
SYRMTSE \f!SS!Oi\ l l k t 1'\ St S\
1 acu!lf' Srnltrs. lOJ m Sund.r\ E'ronm l-!
ser.•I('('S Sund:1\ Jnri \\'('ll nPHi:l \ at i Of\ p

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10 17h!ffl It&gt; \ -!Iii

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Pl.'! Aw
1!1 ll \ !I Ull I~ I
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paid a! Pomero\'

No subscript ions h-. mcn l permitted In
town s when' home carrif'r Sl'r\'i('(' Is
available

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~~~~~~==~~

Su bscrl t&gt;&lt;n not d ~&gt;Si n ng to pa ~ t hPrar·
rier rna, remi t In adva nce dl recl to
Th e Dall y S£-nllnl'l on a .1, 6or 12 month
basis Cm::I IJ wi ll ~g1n&gt; n ra r rlerf'ach
month

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SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
Onf' WN'k
$1 10
One Month
s-1 80
One Year
S57 20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dal lv
25 Ct&gt;nls

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POSTMASI'ER St&gt;nd addrPSs cha ngf:'S
to Thf' Dally Sfnlln f"!, 111 C'our1 St ,
Fttnlf'rov Oh.lo 4~769

71 I&gt;

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tu ck\. 61 53, and Walsh "'~JX'&lt;i
" In that situa tiOn , against a zone, , - - -- - - -- -- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - wh at we want Is pen etrat ion," sa id
Miller. " But to say the stacy of I he
game wa s that one shot would be
presumptuous. "
The loss w as t he third m a r ow for
Oh1o Sta te and SU&lt; th m 1ts l ast nme
games. dropping the B uck eyes to
~ 7 ov erall and 3-3 In the Big Ten
"We play ed a lit tle h arder th an
I would l1ke lo announce
we had been," sa~d Miller " W e
the openmg of my ~ew off~e 111
won't get down on these kids if I hey
Po1nt Pleasant. West V1rgm1a
co ntinue to Icy to play h ard "
Ohio Stat e start ing guard K ip
OFFI CE HO U RS
Lomax suffe red an ankle sprain 111
Monday thro ugh Fnday
the f ll'sl half and sa w no m ore
900a m. to500pm
ac tion
Open Salurday mormng by appo1 ntmen l
Hopson led O hio State w ith 22
(304) 675 -7300
pomt s.
LOCATED Su•e t13 Medrcal Offoce
"! guess you can sa1 we gave 11
Buddtng at Pleasant Valley Hosprtal
away agam ," sa1d H op son " We
Point Pleasant. West Vtrgin ta
cam e ou 1an d played like gu-ls m the

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mPro\ Ohio bv thf' Ohio \ 'a\)('\' Pu b
Hshm):!' Compan~ Mul ti media · Inc
Pom r rO}', Ohio -15i 69 Ph 992 2156 Sf:'

17!1 1-:' -"'
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ltl ill jjQ
10 f.\ !1
10 6!1 !l
Ill .. r,
Ln ,. Ill
Ill Yl 3
14 1 "I II

II I

Team offense

....,

f...1 •1

O.'k1 B.ir ~ HT
M1kr Half' OH
To 'd d ,\d ,I/TIJ&gt; S.u

1.-11 (

Ashland dowrwd Nm t l1£' t n KPn

At C mc mndtl, B\'1 on Larkin
punqx d m :!..J !X)IIlh and three

Pubtlshro f'H&gt;rv ulll.'rnoon. M ond a~
throu11:h Frldav 111 Court St . Po

.n ·~

Pla.)'tr. tr.m
M IIW I&lt;Pmpl'r 1'01.
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defratcd Cincinnati. :-D ill.

7,; 75

PEDI -\ TRI CS

r;:===========:::;-1

SVA C statistics

1e1

Dl'kr.

M.D.

K en Norman , who scored 15
first half point s for Illinois, took
c harge again , getting 10 of his 12
second-half points in the final 6
minutes and prov iding the Illln1
With a 67-65 Big Ten win.
Brad Sellers, Oh10 State's 7- foot
center. led the Buckey es' second ·
half comebac k, scoring 16 of his ~
points. H e also finished with H
rebounds.
Much of the second hal!, Miller
u sed Sel ler s along with the 6-foot-5
Hopson, 6-foot-5 Jerry Francis and
6-foo t 9 K eith Wes son and 6-foot -1

(USPS ll ~ !Hill l
A Dhlslon of Multimedia, lne

could ha1 c k illed !limo" iliiP hc~ d
goi!Pn off 10 a good sla rt ·
E lsrwhrrr T h ursd£1) n1g hl X,l\

WILLIAM C. CALLIHAN, II,

II

The Daily Senlinel

Leading scorers
(
l l'lK'ttm:Jn
All games

Curtis Wilson.
It was Wilson w ho missed an
18-foot shot w1th 25 seconds rem a in
ing which spelled doom for tiK•
Buckeyes. Bu t Miller didn't criticIll' h1s p layer.

FEATURES
INClUDE:

, • Twin+ltlllllndtfendent !rant
SIISplnsion (~ I 2)
• billy retiiiMiblt J.lllpte
• P-Nirlc oll-so1100 traacl
IIHI-btned radial tills

See Y•local Ford Dealer!

FORD

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIS I
IN CHRIST I AN UNION Rev K(lll h Eb lin,
pastor Su nda\ School 9·JO a m . WadP
Ha,·man, sup! : Mornin g Wo1shlp, 10 30a
m ; Sunday ev('fl\n g sen lrr 7 lO p m ,
W«&lt;n esday Prayer Met&gt;ting, 7 30 p m.
M1' MOR IAH CHURC H OF GOD.
Racine Rev James Sa UNf i~:&gt;ld , pastor .
Frl'tmun Wllllnms, S u~l Sunday Schoo l
9' 45 a.m.: Sundu v and Wednes da y even·
lng sef\ il~ . 7 p m
MIDOLEPO HT FI RST BA PTIST
Corn er Sixt h nnd Pal mer . Earl Eden, Pas ·
tor Ra\ Fit•lds, S S Sup! , Dan Rlgg.s ,
ASSI Supt Su ndav Sc-hool 9: 15 a.m.:
Morn in~ Wors.hip lO 1~ a.m : Sunday
£ \ (&gt;fling st'rV\CC'. 7 p m Youth mt't't!ng,
7· lJ p m Wt'dnC'sday P\'t'ninRsprv!Cf' 'l p
m .. Choir prac tice 8 p m
MIOOLEPOIH CHURCH OF' CHRIST.
~ th t~ nd Mnrn . Bob Mellon, mmlsl er i\1
H 3 1 tson, ,1 ~s0&lt;' mlnls lf'l , Mlkj• Ger lach,
~und . l\ Sehool Supf'lin h·ndl•nl.
Blbl&lt;'
School !j 'J(I a m , Morn i n ~ Worship 10 .JO
41 111 Fvcni ng \\ orshlp 7 00 p m WL&gt;dnr!S
dn} 7 110 p m Pm vPt mt&gt;t'ting
i.iiUDLEPO HT CHURCH OF THI: N'
l".AR ENE. Co-pastors Rf'v C,Mt i&lt;' ~ Covh•
anll Rr1 Nltnt'Y l'o\'IC' Ill! I \\ hill'. Sunda\
~:J 10 ot Supt Sund.r\ St hvul ~ 30 am
Mor·ni n ~ Worshi p HI \ll ·• 111 F:v.m g:C'I i~ltt
m('('fi n~ 7 00 p m \\'l'Ci nrsda\, 7 00 p m
PW Yf'r mP('tln~
,
tJSI'I't:ll PHI:'.SB\'TERi t\N 1\UNISTR\
OF MEIGS COlJl\'T\'
Rf! ~ Kf'n \\'IUdn"on
II ARH ISONV ILL E P ~I:: SBYTERI ;\ i'
CII URC' II _ Sunda' \\ 01ship St•r\ lero ~
9 00 ,1 m ( hurc_•h Sc-hool ttl 15.1 m . ~~ih lf'
Stud \ sund:J\' 7 l l 1, m . P1a\f'r (,roup
W edn~da y at 9 00 tt m
.
MIDDI EPORT PIH SH\ TERI A~ ,
Churc h s&lt;' hool 10 1 ~ .1 m Mur nlng \\ or
ship II 15 a.m. TuC's da~ Ill 00 a m IJ1blf'
Study Thul·~day . 7 :\jJ p m. Blbll' Stud\
• SYRA CU Sf: PIHST UNITED PRESB \'
TERIAN - Worship SC'!'Vit't' 10 15 a m
Churc h SrhoollO:OOu m Tu('sday. l Oa m
Rlblr Study, Sunday. 6 p m Juniorn nd Se
ntor Hlf:!'h Vo utl'l l.roupr;
HUTLA ND CHURCH OF GOD. Pastor
John Evans sunday Sl·huol 10 00 am .
SundaY Mornlnlo{ Wo rship 11 (MJ am Chll
drc n !'i Churd1 11 i1 .m Sunday F.vf'nlng
SCrvit•t• 7 00 p m. We'd., 6 p m Young La
dies' Au)l illll t Y. Wednesd ay, 7 p m Fam
II ) ' Worshlp
HAZEL COM MUNITY CHURCH. N•ar
LOnMBottom Edsrl Hart, pas10r. Sunday
School 9 3U a.m : Won hrp 10 lJ a m ;
Pra}N mt'(l! lng Thursday, 7·30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FHEE WILL BAI&gt;TIST
CHURCH corner Ash and Plum Ra lph
Cundiff. ~s10r. SundaySchooltO·OO a 1't1o:
Morn inA Worship, 11 00 a m : Wed ~e!day
and Sli{urday £v(ln\ng St&gt;rvlcl's at 1: JO P

m

1IT" here IS no pUniShment that One person Can
'LV tnfllct upon another that can equal the burden Of guilt With Which We may at SOme lime

I O 45 am ' Evening preaching serv ices.
cond anrl fourth Sunda} at 7 :JJ p m .
Chrlslmn Endeavor. llrs t ond thi rd s""
day , 7 lO p m Wedn('sday pra)el m('('tmg
and Blb lt&gt; Stud y, 7 30 p m
CHURCH oF coo o F PROPHECY
Loca ted on 0 J ¥lhlt e Roa d of Highwa\
160 Par Henson, pastor Sundav SchooiiO
a m Classes lor all ages Junior Chu rc h II
a m Morning worship 11 a m Adult
Choi r prarllcr 0 P m Sunday Young Peo
pie's, Children's Chu rch and Adu lt Bib le
Sl~d~io iY"t''~;;.~t?Ta~~~P~~ 570 G"nr

~~d~~~.~~~o~ ';"~ ~~~,':;,~•:d~~r~~;P

saddle ourselves. You are aware of thiS If you have

67-65 UPI .

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

ever h ad th e d rea df u I expenence o f tna d ver t en tly
""rhaps e en (O an ant
CaUStng h arm t 0 someone; ~~
V
.
mal. ThiS can come about tn a number of ways, but

GrocenesGeneral Mer chandr se
Rae me 949 -2550

1! is most Often the result of an accident

or an

act

of negligence which could possibly have been
avOided With

what's done

a
IS

little forethought. In any case,

done ; and even the belief that

tt

MEIGS

COUld not have been prevented does little to relieve

COOPERATIVE p ,\RL'H
UNITED METHODIST CHURCII
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Don Archer

the ternbJe angUISh. Th iS IS a lime When fa1!h Can
c o mfort you In a way that nothing else can

ll'R,~vs.e""ldooy ';!eh~:o.

Something l tke thiS ShOUld

ALf RED - Churc h Srhool 9 30 a m :
Wo rshtp, 11 a m , UMYF 6 30 P m . UMW
Thi rd Tu£'sda v. 7 30 p m Co mmunlon,
fi rst Sunda\ 1Archt&gt;r l
CIIESTER - Worship 9 a m · Churr h
S&lt;'hOO! 10 a m , Bib ](' Study, Thu rsday. 7 P
m , UM W. fi rst Thursda\' 1 p m . Com·
t Sunda y tA rcht&gt;r \
munion firs
JOPPA -- \V or, hlp 9 :ro a m Chur"h
•
S" hooiiO :ro, m BibI" Sludy Wedn l'Sday
"
"
~
7•3(1
p.m.BOTTOM
(JohnsonI.- Church Srhoo19 .10
LONG
a m , Worship 7 p m Bible Stud y WPd
nesday , 7 :JO p m UMYf , Wl'd ncsday,
6· 00 p m : Commun ion First Sunday,
l AR_~hi8~WIL LE _ Chur&lt;'h School ~ lOa
•- 1 11 00
0 1 1
m , Worsh Ip .-X"f\ &lt;'e
a m I et' er ·
TIJPPERS l'L AINS ST PALTL
•
'
Chu rch School 9 a m , WorshiP 10 a m .
Bible Study, Tuf'sday 7 30 p m ' UM W
Third Tu esday. 7 30 p m , Communion
FlrstSunday(Archer l
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Re" , James E. CorbiU
Re\' , Stellt'f1 Nehoo
Re~. Melvin Frllllklln
•n.c'!\
- . Cl, emene
t •.
S Zunga
I .Jr
Rev . Andrew Rubeaklng
,\SBURY ~ Sy ra cu s f') - Worship 11 a m
, Church School 9 45 a m , Ch a r~t&gt; Bible
Stud y, Wedn esday 7 30prn . UMW. fi rsl
Tu ('sday. 7 :W p m Choir Rehea rsa l.
Wed nrsdav 6· 30 p m , UM\V. fou rth Sun
daY, 6 30 p.m ~ Nelson )
ENTERPRISE- Worship 9 a m .
Church School 10 a m . Bibl e- Stud y, Tu es
day, 7 30 p.m . UMW, First Monday, 7'30
p m : UMYF Sunday, ti P m Cholr Rf'
ht'a rsal. 6 30 p.m Wl"'lnesdav !F1anklml
FLATWOODS- Church School 10 a.m
Worsh ip 11 a m : Blbll' Stu dy, 1llu rs
da \ 7 p m , UMYF Sundav. 6 p m
! Fra nklin!
FOREST RUN - Worship ll am .
Chu 1c-h School 10 AM Choir prar iiC1'
Turs d r~ v 6 ·" ) p m UM\\ , first Tu&lt;'Sda\
7: 30 p tn 1Nclsonl
HEATH t MlddlPport l - Churrh School
9 .'W a m , MornlnR Wo1 ship 10 30 :1 m
You th Group 4 p m , Wffi nrsdav. Church
Choir rfhcars.11 7 p m
Thu rsdav
l't avC'I Scrv IN'. n 30 p m , BlbiP Stud) 7
p m t7. un lg,ll
MI NF.RSVILI F. - W or ~ hl p Srnlrr 10
a m , Chul'ch School II .1m UMW. thl rd
Wt'Cln r sd,l\ , 1 p m C'hoh pr.lcti('(', Man
da \', i \II p m 1i'f'l!-.nn 1
p ~:AH I CHAP FI - Wmshlj)Sf'rv\cPll
;~ m . Chu1d1 s. h,•••l\1 ,1 m
llM W Sf'
1 und Ttw .. d.r'
~ {I I pm. LM\~ I.J"t
Tup.; (],l\ ';' ,II pIll I HUbC'nldnj:p
l'tl\11 l lfl i - t hill ' h Sf_- hOfll ll t••.l m
\\ l•l~hlp ]It .11 1111
fhm r tf'!W.J I!oi.Jl
\\ N.I nt ·~d .n
i \II p m
UMW SC'Cond
Tu£'sdt~\ , i 111 1) ttl t.:M\' FSunda' , 6p m
tfo rbtl! 1
ROCK S PR I N G.~.; - Church 5&lt;-hool. 9 15
am. Wors hip 10 am . Blhlt:' Study, Wed·
nesday. 1· 30 p m UM YF (Senlorst Sunday 5 p m , jJ un lorsl evt'I'Y other Sun
day 6p m (F'ra nklln J
RUTLAN D - Church School , 9 45a m ,
Worship, 10 30 a m , UMW ( Ev~nlnS( Clrelf' ! S('Cond Wed nesday , 7 30 pm.; UMW
(Afternoon ClrC' If'l S{'('Ond Thur scta y, 1 p
m ( Rubenk ingl
SALEM CEN TER - Chu rch School l Oa
m , Worship 9 45 a m t Rubfonkln gl
SNOWVlLI.F. - Worship 8. 30 a m :
ChtJrc h School 10 a.m. (RubE'nklng l

ever

if

happen tO YOU, gO

to your House of Worship and pray that the Lord

will

forgive you

for what you have done; and most of

ail , that In !1me you Wi ll be able to f orgiVe yourself .

l-------------.:..----------------J

SOUTHt:RN CLUSTER

Rev, Rorer Graef
Rev . Paul

McG•I~

Re'·. K~lth Rad er

APr LE GROVE - CHurch Sthool 9 00
.1m Worship, 10·00 a.m 1llrs1 and th ird
Sund:t\'Sl . UMW ~c ond Tut&gt;s day 7 30 p
m, J1tayl'r mPl'lin g. W f'd n ~ d a) , 7 )l.m
(fi r&lt;:~ce l

BE'THANY - Worship, 9 am , ChurC'h
SchOol, 10 a m. Bl b1{' S!udy, Wt'dnesda\
10 a m , Dor us Wol'll('n 's FellO"Jihlp
W£'dnt&gt;sd.t\', 11 am. (McG ui re I
lAR Mt~ L - Chur&lt;' h Scl'lool ~ JO a m ,
Worship,, 111: 45 a m S{'cond .md Fou rth
Sund:t)S 1-"f' llowshlp dlnnt'l with Sutton
third Th111 sday. ti :lO p m 1McGuire I
EAST LETART- Churc h Schoo19 a.m.
Worship 10 a. m st'Cond an d founh Sun
davs; UMW fi rst Tul&gt;sda)' , 7 .10 p.m
1Grae'Pl ,
LETART F ALLS - Worsh ip 9 a.m :
Church School 10 a.m. tGracC'I
MOHN I NI.STAR -Worshlp. 9 ol ~a m :
fhut &lt;"h &amp; hool 10 :Jla m RlblP STudy,
Thursdav. 7. 30 p m. tll.ader l
HACII\E WESI.E YAN - Church &amp;hOOI ,
lfl a m., Worship 11 a.m . UMW fourt h Mon.
daY at 7- 30 p.m, Ml'n's Prayer Br'f'a ldast ,
WNinPSday 7 a.m tGrace\
SU'n'ON - Chu "'h Sc hool. 9:30a m ..
Mornin ~ Wors hip 10:4Sa m. ttru and thi rd
Sunday s, Fellowship dl nnt&gt;r "' llh Carm('1
thhd Thursday, 6 30 p.m tMcGuirf! \
KENO CHURCH OF CRRIST. Oi tver
Swai n, Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a m cv
NY WN' k . '
HOBSON CHRISTI AN UNION, Rev
Tom Staten pastor Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a
m.: Evening servit:f 7: 30 pm Wf'dnesd a~
prayer met'll ng 7' 30 p.m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duant' Warden, minister . Bible
class 9 JO a m.: Morning Worship 1()· 00 a
m.; Evening Worship 6· .ll p.m Wednes ·
day Bible Stud y 6: l) p.m.
NEW STI VERSVILL E COMMUN ITY
CHURCH. Sunday Schoo! foervice, 9· 45 a
m.: Worship service 10:30 a.m.;
£vangcllstl&lt;" Service 'ts ;Kl p.m. Wednes ·
day. Pra yer met-tlng 7: JO p.m Thu rsda~ .

ZTON CHL'RCH OF CHRIST, Poml'roy
Rd RobC'rt Purl('! I. 1mms
l" r, St"VC' SHlnlcy S S Supt , B1l l MeE t
~
~
rov . Asst Supt , Sunday School q :ll a m .
Worship ~t'n lc-P tO ll a m · E\C' nln~ Y.Or
ship Su ndav 7 p m and Wl'd
CnPSdat'H ~lm
ST JO HN L lJTHERAN HUR · nr
Gro'r Th(' Rt•V. Willi am Mlddl t&gt;SY.Jr lh
pas10r Church sl'l viet&gt; 9 :vJ a m . Sunda~
School l!l ~ a m
13HADBURY CHURCH OF CHRI ST,
John WriJj!'hl ,.pa stor Sunday &amp; hool 9 lOa
m ·. Larry Havnes
S S Sup! Mornlnt:
;r
Y. Or!ihlp 10 .10 am
RA. rt NE CHURCH OF THE NAZA
TH: NE. Hf'V. Tho m&lt;.~s H Colli&lt;'r pastor
OraBass, Chaltman of th r Boal duf Clnls·
1\an Life Sunduy School 9 .~)am, Morn
In ~ \\ Ot ship 10 :10 a m Sunda\' ('\&lt;'Ding
worship 7: 30pm Prav£'1 m('('t! n ~ 7 30 p
m WC'd ncsday
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH j)(&gt;)l
tl't Wood~ Cal l. pastor St&gt;rvk f'!! Sunday
Ill am and 7 P m Wed n~d~:~y, 7 P m

ll&lt;~rn!'ion vll l&lt;'

RACI NE FIRST BAPTIST
Steve
Dravcr Pastor . Mik e S\lool$r er, Sunda}
S&lt;'hool Sup!: Sunda} SChool 9:30 a m :
on a m . Suna}
d
Mornng
I
wor shiP 10 . ....
l'\'l'llin l'l worship 7 30 p m . Wedn i"Sday
rvMt in fi: Blblr study 7 30 P m
BURLINf;JtAM COMMUI\'ITY CHtJ RQ{,
BurUnJ:: ham Ra v Laudermllt. pastor; RoOOrt Col.art, a s.'il~ ta nt pastor, Sunday &amp;hool
10 a m, wo~h l p 7 p m Wrdn~a y, 6 p.m
\oulh rTl£'f'tln_e Wed .. 7p m Church srrvi('('S
PI NE GROVE HOLI NESS CHURCH, ih
mile off Rt J25 Rev. &amp;n J . Wall s, pastor
Lf'(' Ru sst'li. S S Supt Sunday School 9 .10
am Morn!n~ Wo!'!lhip 10 30 a m . Sun
da) f'VC'nlng Sf'rv lct' 7:30 Pm : Wedn es
di!\' ~NVI&lt;'f'. i .10 P m
SIL\ F.H RUN BAPTIST, Bill Li t ti P.
p a~l ' ' l o:.;tP\l' ll!t1P S S Supt S unda~
School l Oa m M or ntn ~ wors lp 11 a m
Sun d,lll'\t'nlflL:I\nrshl p730pm Pra yN
11\ Cl' ltn ~ot .mtl l l h l l' ~ t\H h r hursdtt v, 7:30 p
m \' outh tn• •
\\ , ~lnP~ ct.n at 7 P m
R~:JOIC\ Nf,l .l i· ~ BAP'l' ISTCHURCH
- .l!l.;l N 2nd ' ' • , ~t r.l dl; •port . Sunday
Sctlool 111 3 m Sundav C\'C'niD ~ 7·00 P m..
Mid wrek serv iCP. Wed • 7 p.m
LANGSV ILL E CHRISTl AN CHURCR
Robert E Mussf'r, pastor Sunda y SC'hool
9 30 a m : Paul MusM'r. 5\lpt MornIn ~
worship 10: 30 a m , Sunda&gt; E'VC'nlng ser
vice. 7 p.m : mld ·W('('k servi ('(', Wli'dn £'S
day, 7 p.m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TH E NA
ZARENE. R£'\' Glenfl McMillan, pastor
Mary Janlcr Lavendt'lr. Sunday School
SUpt Sunday Schoo! 9 30 a m , Mornlnf{
~Aorsh i p 10:30 a m . EvanJt:cllstlc sl"rv lce.
6p m , Pra)er and Prai se Wed nesda v. 7 p.
m.. Youth mret!nll. 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BREtHREN IN
CHRIST . Eldl'n R Blake pastor Sunday
School 10 a m , Gary Rf'NI. La)' k'adE'r
Morning S('rmon. ti a.m . Sundily night
services: Christian Endt&gt;avor 7:30 p.m ,
Song serv\c(' 8 p m Preaching 8 30 p m.
Mld·week prayer meetin g, Wednes da \', 7
pm
HEML.OCK GROVE CHRISTI AN.
Roger Wat son. pastor . Crenson Pratt.
S\lnday Sct\ool Supt. Morn ing worsl)lp 9 :Jl
a m ; Sunday Schoo\1(1:30 am , Evenln!Ol
serviCt", 7· 30 p m
MT UNION BAPTIST. Donald ShuE'.
pas1or : JOC' Sayre, Sundav School SupJ
•Sunday School 9. 45 1:1 m E\t&gt;n lng wor
ship 6 30 p.m : Praye r Met-lin g, 11 :Kl p m
Wfdnc.&gt;sda)
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Dave PrentiCl'. mln ili ter. ()(&gt;I) I
Wells, Sup! . Church School 9 a m , Wor
ship Scrvlcf' . 9 ·4S p m.
CHEST ER CHURCH Of THE NAZA
RENE. Rt&gt;v. HerbPrl Crate, pastor
Frank Rlfflt\ sup!. Sunday School 9 JO a
m.; Worship service, 11 a.rn and 7 p.m
Sunday . Wedne!day, 7 p.m. Pra-,.er mrel
lng
LAUREL CLIFF' FREE METHODIST
CHURCH R ~ Robert MIIIM, pa stor Ro·
bert E. Barton. Dir ec tor of Chrl&amp;tlan Edu
cati on; Steve Eblin, assistant Sunday
S&lt;:hool 9: 30a.m.; Morning worship 10 30
a.m , Choir practice, Sunda y 6 30 p m ,
Evening worship 7:30 p.m. Wedn&lt;'sday
Pra]'('r and Bible Study, 7; 30 p.m.
I.)EXT ER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Charles Russell Sr , mini ster Ri ck Ma·
r-ombf&gt;r. supt. Sunday SChool 9: 30 a m ..
Worship serv lr e IO ·JO a.m. Bibl e study,
T\J('Sday, 7;30 p m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LAITER DAY SAINTS. Port .
land·Ractne Road . Willia m Roush. pastor
Llnda Evans, church school director
Church school 9· 30 a m.: Morning wonlp
10 30 a.m , Wednesday evening pray~r
services, 7: :Kl p.m
BE:T!II.EHEM BAPI'JST. Rev . Earl
Shuler, pastor. Worship aerviCf, 9: 30am.
Sunday School lO 30 a.m Btble Study and
prayE'f' servlct" Thuridav. 1: ,l(J p m

CARLETON INTER DENOMINATION
AL CHURCH. King sbury Road Rl''' Da
Yld Cu r fman pas tor Sunda) School 9 30
R
C
S
E
I
h
am , alph arl. upt
H'n nli: "ors tp
7 OU p m PrDYE'r m('('l\n•. Wed nrsda\.
7 00 p.m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Jo&lt;h
Holla nd pasto1, Wal lace DamPwood,
Sunday School Sup t Wor!&lt;ihlp Sf' n 1&lt;'£' 9 a
m , Blbl r S&lt;'hool 10 a m
HY SELL RUN HOU NESS ( !l URCH
Sunday School al 9 31) a m , Morning wor
shlp at10 .10 a m ,Sunday{'\lenln gsen i&lt;'&lt;'
at 7 lJ p,m Thursday Sl'I'\' ICl'!&gt; pt 7 30 p
m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSIO N at Bald
Knob located on Coo nty Road 31 Rev
I awrPnre GluesPnca mp pa stor R('Y
Rogf'r Willford, asst. pastor Prro ch in~:
servi ces Sund ay7· 31Jp m. Pr ayt'rm £'E'IInJ.!:
Wednl"Sday, 7 :'10 pm , Cary Griffith,
lead er Youth group!!i Sunda y f' VAtin'l'at
6 :1} p m with Rogf'r and Vloll'l Willford,
leaders. commun ion sN·v lcr fi rst Sunday
('aCh mon th
WHITE'g
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH _ CoalYilll' RD RC\' Phill ip Rld" nour. P"Sior Sunda)' School 9· 30 a.m ,
'
•
worship
S('f\'iCf'
1030am., Bib!(' stud y
and Y.'or shl p !Servlcf' Wt'd nes da v 7 p m
RUT LAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Mark Jones. pastor Bill NICholson, Sun
day School Supt Sunda \' S('hOOI 9: 30 a.m ,
Mer nlng W orshl ~ and Communion 10 :10 a

Sl . M•dd leporl ollflllal!'d wllh' Soulheon
Bapti st Co n~ent ton Da vid Bryan, Sr . Mi
mster Sundav School 10 a m : M01 nlng
worship 11 a m Evening v. ors hlp 7 p m
Wednesday " 'enln. Bibl e slu dv and
prayer mf&gt;Pting 7 p m
BRADFORD ( HURCH OFCII RIST S1
Rt l24 and Co Rd 5 Mark S&lt;ot'\'ers. m mls
ler Sunday School Supt Hart; • Hen
dn r ks Sundav Srhool9 30 a m Morn m~
worshtp 1U .10 am F.vl'nl ng worship i p
m Wed nl'Sdav 1\0rshlp 7 p m
ST PAUL LUTHER,"
CHURCH
CornN SYcamor e and Speond ~Is , Po
mr ro\' The Rf'\ Wllh .I Ol MtddlPSU! &lt;Itlh
pstor Sunda\ SChool !j· ~~ a 01 Olu rt h
se" )rr 11 a m
SACRED HEAR T CHU Hf'H. Ms~r
Anthon\ Grannilmort&gt; Ph ~ 2 ..l898 S;~tul
day E V£'n1ng I''1 ass 7 "I
,.. cl n
.~ p m
.oun
M ass, g am an d 10 am (' on1('SSitm:; un&lt;'
halfhourbf'fDI('f'ach Mas s CC Dc lass&lt;'S
11 a m Sunda\
VI CTORY BA PTIST ~, 25 1\ l nd ~t
Mldd lf'por! James E KI'('SN" pastor
·Sunday morn ing .,.,orshlp 10 &lt;l m, Evtn
lng serv lcl' 'i p m . W£'dnesdav Pvenlll~
worship 7 p m Visitation Thursdil) 6 1l
P m.
MORS E CHAP EL CHURCH _ Gat\
Hol tl'r, pas1or Sunday School. lll a m ,
worship sPrv It t', 11 a m . prnyC'r m Cf? t ln~
7 lJ p m Thursda)
LI VI NG \\'ORD CHES I EH L H l:Htl f1
OF (,OD _ ( oilbPrl Spcn1r r , pJ sl ur Sun
da\ SC' hool 9 JO .I m , Mur nmg "(''' ltl'
10 oo,1 m , ' unda\ rvE'nl n g~N,Itr7 flOp
m , Mid "Pt'l.: prttvl'r !«'nIt 1 \\ f'dn r:-sdal
Rp
m
1
CH
\tT Ol.l \'E COM MUNITY CHCR
L.m r£'nrr Bush pas tm !\1 .1x Fo \m£'l Sr
Supt Sund av S1 hoot and Mm nlnJ! W01 ~h liJ
9 l0 a m ~u mi.I )I'V£'n l np1'1\iC'C',7pm,
Youlh m('('ti ng and Rib I£' Stull\ Wf'dnrs
da' 7 P m
UN IT ED FAI r H CHURCH rtt 7 on ro
mr rO\ Bi ·Pass RP\ Rob r11~" Smllh,Sr
past.or Mf'ivtn Dra ke. S S Supt Sunda\
Schoo19 m,1m · Morm nf:! \\ O I!·~~ 111 ltl
Fvemn~ WO! shl p i 30 P m \\ ,'\Jn""' 11·•\
Pra\t'r S£-r vlcC' , 7 Ill P m
FAITH BAPTIST CHUIH H Ra l lt uad
St , Mason Sund,,y S&lt;-houl lll .a m Morn
mg wo rship 11 a m . t:vt•n1 n~ ~&lt;· t' t('t' ll P
m Pra''",-l' mt'C'I mn,., and AI bit' St ud v We&gt;d

HARTF&lt;fltD CHt:I RCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Th£1 Rev. William
Campbell. pastor. Sunday School 9 30 a
m., James Hughf.&gt;S. supt Evenlng st'rv kf'
7 lJ p m Wedn sday e\'E'nln g pra y&lt;'r meet
lng 7.30 p rn. Youth prayer servlct&gt; ea d .
Tu esday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , Le tart
W Va , Rt 1. James LE"'A'Is , pastor Wor
ship serv ices 9:30a.m.: Sunday Schoolll
a.m.: Evening worship r· 30 p m Tuesda y
couage pra yer meeting and Bible Study
9: 30 a.m : Worship serv~ce . Wednesda y
7. 30pm
OUR SAVIOUR WTHERAN CHURCH,
Wa lnut and Henry Sts, Ra vtnswood, W
Va. The Rt&gt;v Georgf' C. Weirick:. pastor .
Sunday SChool ~: :l) a.m.: Sunda y worship
11 a. m
.
CALVo\RY BI BLE CHUROI,Iocall!don
Pomeroy Pike, Coonty Road 25 neer Flatwoods Rev Blackwood , pastor Services
onSunda y a!lO::ll a.m. and 7: 30pm wllh
Sunday School9; )J a.m. Bible Study, Wed nesda y. 7:30p.m
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST. St. Rl 338. Anllqulty. R.... .
Franklin Olck£1n s, pa stor Sunda y morn Ing 10 a.m , Sunday even \ng 7:30 p m.
Thu rsday ev(lll inR 7::Jl p.m.
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY SAP·
TIST CHURCH. Pasto r Robtrt Byers.
Sunday Sctlool10 a.m . Worship Sl"fViCE' 11
a m . Sundtly evf'nlng servlce,7&lt;10 p.m .,
Wedn ~day t"V('n\ng serv ice 7:30p.m.
INDEPENDENT IDUNESS CHURCH
Inc., Pear l St .. Mlddleporl. ft(IV. O'Dell
Manley. past o1 Sunda y School 9 lJ am ,
Mornin g worship 10 lJ am : Evmtn g
worsl'lip 7: JO p.m. Tu('sda y, 12:30 p.m Women's Prayrr mPeting Wednes da y, 7. JJ
p.m Prayer and Praise service
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST AP &lt;E
TOLIC - VanZandt and Ward Rd. Elder
James Miller , pastQr Sunda y School ,
10:30 a.m : Worship Service, Sunda). 7 :1!
p m., Bible Study, Wedne!da y, 7:ll p._m
POMEROY ~LEYAN HOUNESS .
HamsonvUie RoaH . OaYid Ferrell , pas
tor; Cllnloo Faulk, Sunda y School Supt ,
Sunday School 9· 30 a m ; momtng wor·
ship, fl a.m.1 Sundayeyenlng servtce 7:ll
p.m. Prol'ff Meeting , Wedn,.day, 7:30 p.

Brownls Fire &amp;

Equipment

SaleS and
Ser v •ce

Rut land , Ohr o ~~77~
' Btl I' Brown , Owner
Phone ( 6 14) 7412717

J Wm

\IOf{I\H BA1 '1 1Sr r ou1 1h and
\1.11nS1 \11ddlf'pnrt ll 1 1 C.1l \tn:vl m m s ·
IJd.'.t I ) \It~ rh In Bum);!,U dnN sup!
"und.l\ S&lt;hooJ&lt;i \(I J m \\ oi~ hlp ~ f&gt;I VI t P
Jll ~i .1 Til
Sl ( ( F SS RO AD! HL RUI OF' CHRIST
- , I(N'ph B Ho .. kln ~ t'\, tti,Cf'il st Sund&lt;r V
1\llllf'Slud~ q,. m, \\ or ship, JU,, m. Sun
rla\ Pll nlng Wl\l (P h pm \\('(\nf'Sd&lt;t\
l \ f•OJng ~P I \ It l '. j p II
PF."'T CCOST AI r\SS[ \1BL \ R&lt;H 1ne
Rt IH \\ 1l11am Holxl&lt;'k pa ~ IIJI Sunday
Sc hnol 10 a m Su nd.t \ 1'\f'nlng Sl' l \ !CP i
Jl nl \\'t&gt;r.Jnt"•d ,J\ ('\ PnlllJ:! ~PI\ tt {' i p Ill
Co\HP F'\TFR HAPTISI' n o n ( hradiC'.
Supt Sun d t~\ Sclwol 'I {1.) .r m Morn ing
Worship 10 3!" 1,r m P1 ,1\ t'l ~ ; ·1 \ H , ., e~ ltt'rn
r tt• Sundo11.s

MIDDL EPORT PENTEC OSTAL , Third
Ave Rev Cl ark nahr pastor Car l Nol
!Ingham , Sundav School Supt Su nday
School 10 am wll h &lt;lasses lor all ag&lt;'S
Even in ~ sf:'n'RP s at 6 p m \\&gt; C'dn esda v Bl
ble stud ) " 7 :ro P m Ywl h '"' "'"' Frl
day at 7 30 P m
ECCL ES lA FELUJ\\,&gt;fUP 11~ Mil l S!
Middlf'POrt Broth('r (h uck M&lt;'.PI'unson,
pastor Sunda' SLhuol 10 .1 m . Sundav
t"venl n!!; ~er.lnos at i p m &lt;~n d \\ t..:lnes day
srrvtr es al 7 p m
Ar\TIQL' Il Y B•\ PT!Sl 1\t•nnPth Smith,
p;:!S!OI Sunda\ S&lt;'h ool q \0 am' &lt;' hurch
~f'l ' U"f' 7 10 f-1 m \Outh 1 !'\ to ~ ~ h 1p 6 30 p
m . U•blr ' IUd' l'h u"'~' 7 .~1 p m
F L; 1.1. (,OS PEL 1.! GHT HUUS E 33045
Hiland Roe~d Pomf'IO\ rnm f\t&gt;l lv. pa s
101 D&lt;tnn' L.1mbL ll ~.; S Supt SuntJav
S d
mornmg ~en IL P dllO am
un i-l\ Pv••n
Jn):! SPIVIC{' 7 .lUpm luPSr.J, t, ,JndThul~ doH
S£'1'\ IC
Ps at
\0 p 41
m Mill St , Mlddl P
\\ ORO
OF
FA7! rH
port Sund.1~ mornmJ:: St'l \ I( 'P 1\J , ~, a m
Su nda ~ rvf'nmg 7 10 Thu rsd,H mornlnfi:
Blblr stud' liJ •• m \\ f'dnrsdav rvpnmg
i ~~\tHl.\ E!'\ CHL'H('H OF 11-iE !'\ A
ZARF:"\F: HP~ Glr•ndon 'i twud ~Jtt stur
Sunda• S" hool" "I '' m 1\'o • sh•p ,,.~ l"e.
'
" '~~
•· ~
tO 30 ._. m . \ outh set\ JCP Sunda' 6 1 ~ p
m Sunda' l'\ I' Rin J:! s£'n I('(' 7 00 p m \\ ed
nPSda' Pra.yt'r Mt•l'llnl: Jnd Biblt' Study
7 00pm
NEASt. s t : I l'L~MF.l\ r CHl•HCH Su n
da\ aftt&gt;rnoon ~N' I&lt;'('&gt;S at ! l!l Thursday
pvpnmg ~{'l \' t(ps .II 7 1ll
FI RST BAPTIST CHURCH Mason W
\' a I ',1stor B1II 1
'•urp
I
h\ .un
S da\.C
S hoo 110
a m Sunda\ r ' rning 'i ~ P m Pt aver
mN&gt;Iln~ and Bibli.'Stud' \o\f'l:ln cs da\ 7 30
p m [H•n.IJI E' wPil'DillP
RVTLA.NOFRFTW III. RAPTISTSa
lr m Sl Rrv Paul l a\·lor pa ~tor Sunda\
S('hool ltl.:J m Sunda v f'\ t, In£ 7 00 p m ,
W(&gt;dnesd,l\ {'\PnmJ~: pra~£'t mN• tln ~ 7 00
pm
SOUTH BF.T HF.I. ~r.w TESTAMENT
OIURL H, SihN Rld~t Duanf' ~yden strlckr r. pastm Sunda \ School 9 am,
C' hurt h S('IVIrt' 10 am Blblf' Study Wed nPSd:n a 1i JO p m Jun r thru Septf.mber,
7 p m Or tobrr th ru Ma\ Su ndave\Pning
FC'IIO\.I ship 7 p m Ju ne thru Scp tt'mbcr , 6
pm Octolx&gt;r!hruMa\

1;:n•:;:s;::d:,••.v:;•·.;'.,:r:;,m~----------------------....,

Sermonette

m.

RUTL. AN D BIBLE METI-K)OJ ST Am os
Tilli s. pas tor Sonn\- Hudson, supl. Sund~ y
School 9 .10 a m , Mornln R wo rship, 10 30
a.m : Sundav l'V ('flin~ s.:•t YIC£' 7 00 p m
Wednesda ) scrv\c(' 7 p m WMPO pro·
gram 9 a rn earh Su nda;,
RUTL AND CHURCH OF T HE NAZA
RENE. Rt'v Low('\\ Ford, pas tor Sunday
School 9.'l1Ja m . Worship s(&gt;f\'IC'£' 1030 a
m.
\' ou nfi( proplr's srr.·lrr fi p m
Eva n~rll s ti cs('l'\ i&lt;'E'G:ll pm Wednf'Sda\
S{'rv lcr7 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHR1ST, Mill £"r
St .. Masoo \\' \' ,1 E u~Pnf' L fonS(f'r, mi
nlst,.r Sunday Btble Study 10 a m . Wor
shlp 11 a m and 7 p m Wt'dn f:'S da} BlblP
Studv, voc;~ l music 7 p m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud
ding Lane. Masoo w va J N ThackE'r
pastor EvenIn~ S&lt;'I'\' IC(' 1· 30 p.m , Wo
men's Mlnlsl r,&gt; , Thursday, 9 .lO a m ,
Wedn esday Pra~f'r and BlblP Study. 7 1~
pm

YOUR PlACE IN THE CHURCII
"For JUSt as the oody i s one and has many m em bers, and all the
mPmbers of t he oody, t hough m any. are one oody, so 11 1s \l'll h
Christ. " I Corin t hians 12 12
.
" Now y ou are the lx&gt;dy of ChrisI . an d m d1vidu ally rnPmbf'rs nf II "
I Corinthian s 12: '1:7
The Apostl e P aul. in his first IPtter to the Con nthians. has
presented us with a won de1fu l ana logy. He wntes of !he bod y of
Christ, which IS the Chu rch. being m ad e up of manv members. H e
uses the ex a mple of the human body to pom t out to us tha t a ll
m embers of the bJdy are n ecessary, and all m em bers at the bJd y are
Indeed of grPat Impo11ance.
Recently. I had In my JX&gt;Ssesslon a copy of a famous paintmg by the
artist Van CA~gh . The cop y I had reflected t he same co lors as thP
origtnal. but the co py was not m ad e w ith ml paints. water colors.
pens, mks or brushes. None of the usual artists' mal cna l s h ad bePn
used. Rather, the copy had been m a d e by tak mg thou sa nds of tiny
little pieces of papPI' of many differenl co lors and glumg lhrm
together in such patterns as to prOO\lce a p ictu re. This pi cturP m adr
me think ot what t he Apo stle Paul had to say abou11he bod v ofCiu is I
which Is the C hureh
In this picture, made of t housands of pieces of &lt;h ffrrcnl t•olorrll
paper, every single piece o f paper was necessa" .. md of g n•.11
Importance to the whole. If one piece of pap er \\er e'" " ' pulled uul.
the Whole picture WOUld SUffer It WOUld he Ob\' H'll' II onr p! CCC " t
paper were missing If one piece wer e missing. Ih• • pu IU I'C \\ 'OIII&lt;I nnl
be complete; If on e piece of paper wer e to he pull ed""' of 1he JliCIUI'l'.
that one plece by liself w ou ld never serve t ht• I"&lt;'J i puq:XJSc of II &lt;
existence.
We all have a place m the Chu reh, w hic h 1s thr bod)' of Chns1
Think of II in f('rms oftjE human body \\1t h It s mam mrmlll'rs, onn
terms of a pic ture made u p of thousands nf pi ecE's of i&gt;&lt;I)J('r. The t rul n
l't!malns You, a s a membe r of the Church are of 1mpo11an ce You.
as a m ember of the church , ar e needed , and the Chu rc h. w it hout vou.
suffers Take your part of the " body" away, an d lh&lt;' bJdy can not
work completely . Or, In terms of the picture. take you r piece ou t of
the picture, and the pictu re won't he whole I t' s obviOus w hen some
part of the body, or a p iece of the picture, is not then" in Its p lacP.

We are of su ch grea t lmportane&lt;&gt; to God tha i Hl• gave H is onl v
begotten Son, J esu s Chr i st , to die l or our salvation. We a 1e of suc h
Importance to the Church , which Is Chrtst's liv ingbJd yon eart h , lhat
the Church suffers when w e pull ourselv es away.

Are

you a m ember of a c hurch • Wha t. exact ly , Is your plae&lt;&gt; In t he
wondrous ov er -all picture of salvation' Pray abJut it

m.

SYRACUSE nRST OIURCH OF GOD

non ·Pentecostal. Worship ltrvke

~n4a y.

JD am.; Sunday School ll a.m. Evenb!.g
, !"oi'lbtp service 7:00 p.m. Wedneotlly
~rayer meettng 7: 00p.m.

,,

"' \ 11

IN CHRIST CHURCH, LOC"dh&gt;d In Tf':\&lt;ts
Commu nll v oil Ct Rt 8j R.- Robcrl

&amp;

Colu mb u!i 0
904 W Ma1 n
qn 231 8 Pomeroy
o(

F'ORFST Rl '\ B,\J'I IST R&lt;•v NylP
llmdPn Jld~l(lt Co1nPhu~ Bunch sup!
Sund,t\ Sdwnl 9 \tl ., m St•C'Ond and
tuu 11 h ..:;g ntla \ ;-, 1\ 01 'lh 1p :)('r\ If l' il I 2 JO P

MT HERMON UNIT ED BR ETHREN

Ftnes t m
Modular Homes
Pomerov. 1100 E . Ma1n
'IRINIT'I' OfURQ{, Re" W H Ptorrtn.
JEStor Debbie Buck:. Sunday Sctoo Sup!
C1JUrch &amp;mol9: 15 a m , Wcrshlp Servtf' 10 :l)
am. Olotr rehearsal 'IUesday. 7 lJ pm
un&lt;n dlrl'ctkm of Lois Burt.
~MEROY OIURCH OF TilE NAZA
RENI1. Corner Union and Mulb.&gt;:Ty, Re&lt;•
'Th:lm.:ts Glen McOung, tmtcr Clyde Hi:'Tidl:&gt;r
son S S SUpt , Sundav School. 9: II a m :
mot nlng wrn'Shlp·IO·lJ a m.. rvrn lngsB'V1("('6
p m. mtdwrek sen~ro. WOOn{'Sda~. 7 p. m
GRACE EPL:;cQPAL OlUROi 326 E
Main St Porrnov Sund.1v Sf'f'VI('('S Holy
communlon on ttl' first Sund&lt;ty of l'arh rronth.
and combln«l Y.i th mornin~ r.rayC't' on thf&gt;
thlrdd Sundav Mornin~ pra,er and ser rmn on
aU othE'r ~ndavs o( thf' month Chwch School
and NuNn' r-are provldffl Olff£~e tv:.ur m ttw&gt;
Parish Halllmm&lt;'dlalrly following !hi' S&lt;'!'VIc&lt;'
~ MEROY CHURCH OF OlRISf. 212 W
Main Sl , Nell Proudfoo, p:15tcr Bib!(' School
9:JJa m M01nlngworship lOJJam. Yw th
rrmlnW' tim p m . ~rnlng Y.'Or'\hip, i 00 p
m WeciJ\('Sday ni~ht pr.!\{'1 tll('('f1nl! and BibiC'
ShXl} 7' 00 p m.
TI-iE SAL\'A.TION ARMY , tl ~ Butt l,-.nut
AV{', Potnl'I'OY M~ Dora W\nlnji!: in chargt.&gt;
Surrlay 001\nt"!i.li rn't"'ling 10 a m , SUnday
Schoot Ut: )) ,, m Sunday Sctxxll. YPSM
Eloise Adams, k.'adC'r 7 Jl p m Salva11on
tn('el lng, \ arious s ~akm; a nd mustcspetlals
Thursday. U :l) a m to 1 p m l..adk&gt;s HOflll"
IPague. 1"11ffniX'T'S In &lt;'hnrJ;'(', all v.'OrM-n
111\~ed. ti: 45 p.m. Thul&gt;day. C"l" Cadol
Classs (YOOnJt Peopk&gt;-Bibl('l, 7 JJ p m. BiblE&gt;
Study and ?rayer rnf&gt;('( ing. ~ t o tl~e publlc
RJMEROY WE'rrSUJE CIIURQI OF
CHRIST :tJ2:Ji Chlldrrn's Han-. Road ICounl)'
Road ?til ~2 51l'l Vocal mus!t' Sunda)' War
sthp 10 a.m , Btble Swdy 11 a m • W&lt;nhlp, tip.
m. Wednesday, Bibk&gt; Study. 7 pm
OLD DEXTER BIB!. E OIRISTIAN
OfURCl l, AMn CUrtis, pastcr; Unda S\\an.
~pi Sunday Schtll:kl9: :tl a.m , jX'rochlnl'l ser\"'cfs, nrst and t h1rd ~Y folkM•tng: SAmday
SchoJI Youth rt"'ft"tl ng, 7::11 p m every Sun
day

Complete
Automotrv e
Serv1c e
Locu st &amp; Beech
q92-9921 Mtddleport

B,~~ER~

Th e

State ' s Brad Seller ( right ) both r each l or a rebound underthe Ohlo State
net during action In Tim ,;d ay Big lU gam e .11 ('ulumbus. Ullnois won,

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

~~

Nat10nw1d e I ns . C o .

."

992 3315

Pomeroy

9tl· l9SS

m

216 S Seco nd
Pomeroy

" .the good that I would I
do not but the evt l
Whi Ch I I\I)Uid not.
that I do "
- Romans ],Jg

!tt

Pre!,CriPf•ons

l w-_,-

The ·Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
TEAFORD REALTY
P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

RIDENOUR

I!: :

LUI

-

MIDOliPORT
BOOK STORE

Marauderettes coast
to 6143 TVC victory Illini defeats Buckeyes; Xavier dumps Bearcats
\l! a_~ h\n ]iiTon

'"

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

This Message and Church
USED CARS, INC. ·"' MEIGS TIRE
~ \ CENTER, INC.

College scores
'nlll'ldiQ ' ~('~

'"' .....

-

.

'

.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By The Beitd

·1

I
I

' ''

Friday,

January 24, 1986

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
The State of Ohio

County, Ohio , to which re ference is hereby made tor
the description
thereof;
thence nonh 9 deg . west
160 feet ; thence sou th 71
deg . 20' west. 203 teet;
thence south 9 dog . east
115 feet to the north right of ~way line of said State
Highway No . 7 to the place
of beginning.
contain ing
0 .63 acre.
Deed Reference : Volume
21 4, Page 346, Meigs County Deed Record s.
Said premises located at
1516 Powell Street . Middlepan. Ohio. immediately ad·
jacent to the Village of Middleport Corporation limits .
Said Premises appraised
at $37,600 .00 and cannot
be sold for less than twothirds ot that amount.
TERMS OF SALE, C8Sh
on delivery of deed .
Frank E. Howard . SheriH
Meigs Countv. Ohio
Douglas W. little, Attorney

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF
PHILIP POWELL, Dec .

DIAMOND SAVINGS AND
LOAN COMPANY, succes·

Page- 6

Mrs. Wilovene Bailey had a
program on " Rockery" a! Monday
night's meeting of the Fernwood
Garden Club held at her home.
She used a shallow tray , filled it
with sand. pebbles and moss to
create a scoene and then planted
agPJ'arum SI'E'd In the tray. To
further carry out the rock theme of
the meeting. members displayed a
"pet" rock with some slxm1ng ones
from other states, the Dead Sea.
some with scenes and pictures. one
made into a rabbit , and also
collector mrks such as armwheads
and spec ial aq uarium rocks.
Mrs. Helen Johnson had devo-

Martin birth
Amsbach. Wesl G&lt;&gt;rmany are
announcing ltv&gt; blrt h oft heir second
child, a daughler. Pamela Mi·
chelle. bam Il&lt;-c . .IJ. The mfant
weighed sLx ponds, 15 oun('('S Jnd
was aJ inches long.
Sgt. aild Mrs. :.1art in. lhP former
Joleen Moodispaugh ci Middleport .
have a son. Joseph Franklin. 1wo.
The family will be tn Germam·
anotlv'r lB monl hs with Sgt. Ma11in
servin g with tlv' l'.S. Arm\ as a
tactical circuit cont rolcr.
Grandparents are Franklin and
Ida Martin, and Joseph and Emma
Moodispuagh. Middlepon . Great·
grandparent s are Rachel Wilson
and Frqn&lt;'f's /&gt;!arlin. Middleport;
Burl Martin. Berkley, W.\' a.:
Alowna :-leal, Middleport. and Ada
Hen!)·. Gallipolis.
'
Mrs. Martin and :vtrs. Moodis·
paugh ha\·e relumed fi·om .r
two·Wf'('k visit in German~· with t ht"
fa mil~·.

Barringer
birthday
Donnie and Kat h&gt;· Baninger
entertained recently with a part\' in
observance of the fow·lh birthday ci
their daughter, Jess1ca Irene. Cake
and other refreshment s w&lt;w
served.
Attending were Keitha Whi ·
tlatch, Harlan Whitlat ch. ~llkP .
Jack!£' and Cory Whitlalch. Ernie.
Ferra Lou and Mit ch Barringer,
Pat, Cindy, Penny, Patrick, and
Patsy Aeiker, Kelly Whitlatch. Erir
Bennett. Kerry. Kat hy. Prgg)· 11 nd
Kerri Lee Herzer. Bonifo and
Amanda Banin ger. and Leoni! Ka,·
Roach . Sending gifts were Kris
Wilson. Car l. Barb and P111rick
Barringer, and Vera and :-Jo1man
Weber.
A ska ling party hon01ing .Jessica
11111 be held at the Skale-a-wa,· 1ink
near Chester on Feb. 9

.Reedsville area happenings

tions using poetry by Helen Steiner
Rice. An article from ~ Garden
Path on spring bulbs was read by
Mrs. Thelma Giles. Mrs . Marjorie
Purtell had an article on the flowers
of ~ month, discussing the
carnation and the snowdrop. She
said that the red American carnation is the state flower of Ohio and
noted that the snowdrop Is valued
because It blooms early, sometimes
even duling the snow season.
A game on stones to test
members' "rock I.Q." was con·
dueled by Kathryn Johnson, Next
meeting will be held on February 18
at the home of Mrs. Virginia Wyatt.

Dave Weber has returned home
after being a surgical patient at
Mount Cannel Medical Center,
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
visited recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Walt Hensch and Lisa at Canal
Fulton, Mr. annd Mrs. Ed Hensch
and Eddie of Canton, and Mrs. Jean
Frydman and Sarah of Hyland·
park, Iii.

UM Women hold meeting

Pamela MicheUe Martin

Sgt. and Mrs. Franklin Ma11in of

Jessica Irene Baninger

in Interest to The Athens
County Savings and loan
Co .. Plaintiff

Fernwood club meets

party.

The annual call to prayer and
self-denial sen •ice was held at thp
rt\'ent meeting of the Fores t Run
L1nited Methodist Women held a1
the horne of Faye Wiggins " ith
Sandi Hawley as co hostess.
Kathleen Scott was the program
leader and opened with too jl&lt;J&lt;'ms,
" For This /l:ew Year" and "Winter·

health. Readings were on several
projects in this country along with
scme international ones in South
Africa. Lebanon, Asia, India, and
Peru .
Hilda Yeauger presided at the
meeting with officers' reports being
given and the love offering col·
leered. Several thank you notes

tim('.·· Thr obsPrvam'l? was in·

were read from mes I'E'Ce'iving frui1

ilia led bv the Women' s Division of
ttv&gt; C.eneral Board of Global
MinL"Prif's of tlv' United Methodist
Church and the of fering Is divided
t&gt;-otween projects in the United
States 'and international projects .
both dealin~ with women and

baskets. Thirty-one sick calls were
reported .
Refreshments were served to
Hilda Yeauger, Katllleen Scott ,
Erma Roush, Evelyn HoUon, Lil·
!ian Napper, Mary Nease. Edith
Sisson, and Noami Wyatt.

.
vs .
MARCIA M. SPAULDING.

I

aka Marcia M. Terry, and
Gary T. Terry , Defendants .

Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer of
Tuppers · Plains visited recently
with Mrs. Lona Chevalier.
,
Charles HaU has returned home
after being a medical patient at
Camden-Clark Hospital, Parkersburg , W.Va.
Carl Buckley has been a patient
at Camden-Clark Hospital, Par·
kersburg, W. Va.

No. 85 -CV-32 1
In pursuance of an Order
of Sakt in the above entitled
action, I will offer for sale at
public auction at the front
door of the Court House in
Pomeroy, Ohio. in the above
named County, on Friday,

tho 28th day of February ,
1986, at 10:30 o'clock A
M .• the following described
real estate , situate in the
County Meigs and State of
Ohio, and in the Township of
Salisbury to ~ wlt :
Being in
Sectioo 29 .
Township 1, and Range 13
of the Ohio Company's
Purchase ,
in
Sali!bury
Township, Meigs County,
Ohio, beginning 70' feet
nonherly from the center of
State Highway No . 7 . and
right angles from the canter
of
highway, at
about Highway Station No.
126 ,.. 93; also 30 feat w est
of the west line of the 0 .57
ecre lot conveyed by Emma
J . Powell and A. E. Powell ,
her husband, to Earl W.
Heiner. by deed dated July
19, 1946, and recorded in
Book 166, at Page 541 of
the Dee~ Records of Meigs

line

GETAWAY

VEH

llkmbers of the Golden Rule
\lass of !he MiddiPport First
Raptis! Church had a program and
socinl hour \\'ith th~ residents of thr

Meigs Count;· lnfirmat)· recently .
.Jean Kloes was pianist lor group
singing and there was a duet,
"Leaning on the Everlasting

UMW program includes
expendirures for church
Purchase of mat erial for pulpit

11ilh Mrs. Barbara Masters, pro·
gram IC'Jdr•r. reading "T\ras the
Night &amp;&gt;fore ,Jesus C'a me." "Love
and Peaer in \9fl6" was the topir
used with scripture hum James 1.
A poem "On !he Wings of Praver"
rlosed !11&lt;• dr,otional period.
(;amPs wC'n, playf'd with prizC's
being awardf&gt;d to thC' winner.

co\'rrs and a coffl?(' makrr for thfo
church werr appro,·f'd at thr r[('Pnl

meel!ng of lhr He&lt;'&lt;b,·ille L'nited
MelhodiSI \\'omen Ill' ill at !he ho me
of Mrs . Pal Man in.
Mrs. M;.lrk'nr Putmdn jH 'f'Sidt&gt;d
at thr ffi('('ting when dut'S \\'Pr&lt;'

collrrl(l:i and :lO shu1in calls \''C'rt '

rrportf'd . Cards H't'IY' signfld fnr
S('\'l~ral frirnd.s . ,\ thank .vou notp
was rffrin"CC from the Pomrro~
Hf•Jith CarP (pntPr for &lt;.1 C'hrl:;tm;ls
donation . Reports wrrP givrn on
\'isits ro t hf' ~li' tg .., County Infirmar.· and on Christ mas gift s for
nE«iy farniliC'S b~· :\1r~ . P1.1tman .
Thr Lort:l's Pr;.t~ t•r in uni~on

op('nrd 1hf' clp,·ut ion a! progri.lm

Anns" bv Betty WiUs and Jean
Eden. Marjorie Walburn read
"What Is Tirn&lt;'" , "What is a
Friend" and "Footpri nt s." Calend·
ars, notebooks and pens were given
to each of the residents.
Devotions were given by the Rev.
Earl Eden who also played his
guitar and sang for the group. The
program concluded with "Amazing
G1·aee" and refreshments of cupcakes. ice cream and punch were

I .

minister the program . Its purpose is to upgrade

the Housing stock in Meigs County . Bids will be
accepted only from qualified contractors who

RPfreshmPnts wpn• served to Mrs.

. have on file at the CAA Housing Office the re ·

\'i\'ian Humphl'f')'. Mrs. Mal')· Al ice
Risr. :vtrs. Masters. Mrs. \'lrginia
Walton. Mrs Mamie Burkley. Mrs.
Doll\' R&lt;'&lt;&gt;d. Mrs. Sue Douglas, Mrs.
1-'utJnan, and Mrs. Lillian Pickens.
Next m('('ting V~'i ll be with Mrs.
Humphre\ and Mrs. Verna Rose.
hostesse&gt;. Mrs. Pu tman and Mrs.
Picken s rC'N'iH•tj door prtzrs.

Quired documentation of Insurance . Workers '

LowPa ments

Compensation. etc . In order to be added to the
qualified contractor's list. contractors should

call or visit the CAA's Housing Office located at
the County Court House in Pomeroy, or phone
Richard McDonald at 992-2393, or Ron Crawlord at 992· 6629 . ·

'1.000 Down, 60 monthly paymtnh of

·1986 S-1 0 PICKUP

'

Why Pay More for
Your Pet Food, When
MGM Form City, Inc .,
Pomeroy, Ohio
61 4-992-2 181
Is lower Pri&lt;ed with
A Better Produtt.

PER MONTH/Tax &amp; Tit!• Extra

$1 s616

•2.000 Down, 60 monthly poymtnl of

rear step bumper .

1986 (HEY, CAVAUER
Tin1od glass. floor mats, intermltte~t

wiper'!, rMr window defogger, 11r
cond .• cruise control, 2.0 liter EFI en gine, auto . trans ., 1ilt wheel . power
steering. AM / FM Stereo .

MO~DA\'

7•9 °/o FINANCING
3 TO CHOOSE FROM

-

,kCi'f 'l

181 28

,,, r! ,f .1N" rdahle l·1rehtrd

feature ~

Ralfi·

tl

un) rlurn.! fe,1 rlw n l'unrwc e \ c itt&gt;111t' lll .'

AM / FM Stereo, tinted windows ,
Air cond .. 2.6 liter l4 engine.
(ash or Trade Allowance

Cutla ss Ciera

'.
' •. J:

5?'--.,
.

.

~

. ·.

Cutlass Sup reme Coupe

OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREME
Aircond ., 3 .8liter, V-6 engine. tlnted
AM / FM Stereo.
Cash or Trade Allowance

1985 CADILLAC
FLEETWOOD

HARRISONV!Ll.F: - Harrison
vilifo Senior Citizrns Club \\'ill mr&lt;' t 2
p.m. Tuesday at thr townhouSf' for
eiecl ion of of ficers. All members
are urged lo attmd . Du&lt;"S are
paya ble a! !his lime.

WAS 125,193

NOW S21,193

,tm

111

.

(,rand Pn.t 11 U 'll/1 a em O/f't'rliJI/OI l'hnice . Now \'flU r·rm
1 0 11
hru!rt•
1 fl'l/ "' hn11n ·~r f"t'f ' i.Jrl' lnr rhr'· Ofll' n mllci ar a !'rice

llwr { 1·err aprc•a/ing.

308 E. MAIN ST.
P.OMfROY. OH.

..

~"'.

1 STORY HOUSE in Racin e
near Elementary School.
OLDER HOUSE with 3 bedrooms on corner lot in Sy-

racuse.

HOrli NAnONAL
UNK
949-2210

work
(Free Estima1e1l

OPEN I 0-5 WIEKOAYS

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992· 6215 or 9n-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
128-t\c

10-2 SATURDAY
Court St., Pomeroy
After 7:00 -367 -0626
t -7-1 mo. d.

-·""'"- -·-

...

------~·-

.....

'

JAN. 25- ONE DAY ONLY
Insert

'
•

"ASH PAN
*GLASS DOOR
*2·BlOWERS
*AUTOMATIC
1HERMOSTAT
*AIR TIGHT

•

YOU SAVE

$4,000!

SAVE

CHOICE Of COlORS ...

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

PAT HILL FORD

B&amp;D MOBilE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE
SHADE, OHIO
Anything That HBS To
D o With A Mobile Home
No job too· small or too
big . W e do Setups and
Underpinning

LOTS

POMEROY
WRIGHT ST.
15 acres wooded land, huge
I rs. excellent \1mber.

"Special Rates for l•nior
Citizens"

I .

2 BUILDING LOTS
I ACRE PLUS
s4.000 CASH

PH. (614) '192·3361
or 9'12·61 00
11-10-1 m

ELUM
REST HOME

lPrt~iousl~

674 Plum St.
Middleport

SAVE

•Tender Loving Care

•Senior Citizens
•Disabled

,.,.,.__. ... ,.

.

..

~ ··-.

~h.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M. ·

CAll COllECT,
843-5425

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
9 30-tl

(614)

1-12 ·2 mo

992 -2.259

Aut!OA

NEW LISTING - 2 yr old .
ranch, tull basement, 3 BRs.
\g. modern eQUipped k1\
and lg. dmmg With serv1ng
bar between Garage and
13 acre !eve lot near 5 pts
Want $70,000
SCIPIO - 12x60 lwo BR
tra~ler. Dbl. garage/shop
and 6 acres
SYRACUSE - 7 rm olde1
home w1th gas heat, bath
and 3.75 aCles.
POMEROY - One fl oor 2 BR
home. f ull basement, hot
water heat. db\. ga rge and
lg lot near the hosp1 \al.
RACI NE - Lg. 2story 3or4
BR tam1ly lrame Lg rooms.
coat stoker &amp; gas fA '"' ·
nace. 2 car ~arage w1\h \g.
block storage. Now only
$44 .500
SUTTON - 300 ac res oi
htlls. woods &amp; w•ldl lle on Rt.
124 Some farm land.
REDUCED - N•ce 6 rm . mo ·
dern1zed home 1n Racme
Above all lloods near the
schools Buoll "' 1957 Gar·
age &amp; mce Lg lot
HANDYMAN - 2 sto•y 9
room or so home 2 enclosed
porches. car port . lg base·
ment. hot water furnace &amp;
tots ol repaus. But a one
acre landsca ped lot Ask1n g
$21.500
Li st Your Home with Us
for Spring Selling.
i:e1tified Appraisals .

Housing
Headquarters

NEW LISTING - Syracuse
- A 2 bedroom home on a I
acre tot. Room lor a mobile
home s1te also. $1 3.5000 00.
NEW LISTING - letart lnexpens1ve housmg is ava1la·
ble w1th th1s 2-3 bedroom on a
large lot. Rental 1nvestment
tor ooty $7.500 00.
NEW LISTING - Rt. 33 near ICWin. Acompletely remo·
deled 3 bedroom home. New
furn ace. carpelln&amp; kttchen
cabmets. and bathroom IIX·
lures. Nothmg to do but move
m1$19.00000
NEW LISTING - Pomeroy
- 5 acres ot wooded land to
en joy are great. Add to thiS a
3 bedroo m, 2 bath home
with basement. garage. and
barn makes 1\1deat for you 1
Near town - good cond1 ·
t1 on . Only $28,000.00.
NEW LISTING - forecto·
sure property pnced to sell
at $12,900.00 . Needs so me
work. but has great paten ·
t~al. Call tor rnlormallon
NEW LISTING - foreclosure
property - up to 3 rental
unit&gt; Purchase as IS, good tn·
vestment, with repaus woold
have good g1oss mcome Steal
at $19,900.00.
NEW LISTING - 2 un1t ren ·
tal 1n M•ddleporl 1n good
condition . $355 .00 monthly
gross mcome. owner wants
$24 .900 .00 and may help 11nance. CALL TODAY'
IDEAL liME TO BUY A
HOME! WE HAVE A 9.8%
RATE MONEY AVAILABLE'
Henry E. Cleland . Jr.

992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jo Hill 985-1466

A

rn

RENT A CAR
CALL
446-4522

U-SA~E

Mak~s

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North
Gallipolis. Ohio

) / \1 / lln

I

EAGLE RIDGE

SMALL ENGINE CENTtR
Parts • Service
949-2969

lnt1oduetory Olle~
PUSH MOWER TUNEUP
!Parts included)

Oil Change. Sharpen Blades

$)9.95
Tum left at Meigs Memory
Gardens . 3 mile oH Rt 7 on
the right

47159 Eagle Ridge Rd .
I· 17 ·lin

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tfc

349 No. 2nd Avo,
Middleport, Oh.

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING

992-3559

Complete Building
and

ANGIE'S PIZZA

FREE DELIVERY

•TRA NSFER CASES•
•TOR QUE CONVERTO R S•
• USED - REBUILT
TR ANSMISSIONS•

614-379 -2220

ll ' 30/ L mo .

992-5875 Or
742-3195

11 ·14 -tic

Shop Techoician
on Duty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHEITER-985 -3307
4/ l/ tfn

PH. 304-675-2441

PROBATE COURT OF
MEI GS COUNTY . OHIO

Exec ut ri11 of the estate of
Maury D . Miller, decea sed.
late of A . D. 2. Wagner l ane .
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 .
Robert E. Buck .
Proba te J udge
Lena K Nesselroad ,
Clerk

Estate of Maury 0 . Miller,
deceas ed . Case No . 25.001 .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On January 10, 1986 . in
the Meigs County Probate
Court, Cue No 25.001,
-.
Mildred F. Miller, R. D. 2.
REAl fOR
Wagner lane, Pomeroy .
L----.....:::=:.:;_..J i Ohio 45769 , was appointed

11117,24.31. 3tc

BEND AREA CALl
Ripley Office

Roger Hysell
Garage

For Hours
304-37 2-5 709

R!. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

Also Transmiulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
THE QUALitY
PRINT SHOP

F01 All Ym Ptinting Nwl.1
PlU!' Oflite !upplie~ &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation

Sfationerv, Mogneti'
Signs, Rubb!l' Stomps,
Business Forrm,
Copy Servius, Etc.
1 S5 Mill St., Midd leport
104 Mulberry b., Pomeroy

J')/lln

Public Notice

Paul E. Shotkey, DVM
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson Ave.
SMALL ANIMAl HOURS
Mon.-Wod.-Thuf!. 3-l pm
1U&lt;!o.6:30-S; fri. l- 2 pm
S.turday I 0 · I UO am
LARGE ANIMAL &amp;
SURGERY BY APPT,

VIe Have AFull Time

992 -3345

Public Notice

VETERINARIAN
CLINIC

•SYLVAN lA
•SPE EO QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSO N RHRIGERAlOR
•SAlELUIE SALES &amp; SERVICE

J&amp;F

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 99

?21 !tr

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

• ZEN ITH

3·24-tlc

DOZER , BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER .
GAS 1!. SEWER LINES .
RECLAMATION. PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

I

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AN 0 SEPVICE
HEADQUARIERS fOR

PH. 949-2649
CONTRACTING

(6 14) 992-bSlO
RES IDE NCE PHONE
\61 41 992-7754

Rt. 2. Patriot, Oh.

Open Mon.- Thurs . 4 · 11
Fri. &amp; Sat. 4 -12

mo

We Also Ca rry
Fishing Su pplies.
BUIIN ElS PHON£

Automatic
TronsmiS!ion Overhaul

REPAIR

1·23-1

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We {)eliw

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.
long pottom, Ohio

317 North lerond
Middleport, Ohio 41 760

CARS &amp; !RUCKS

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial
Call:

Farm Equi~ m&amp;nt
Parts &amp; Se rvice
,_,_,,.

All AMERICAN MADE

Contracting Service
!Free Estimates!

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Oe ~ l~r

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION
OVERHAUL

IN
SYRACUSE, POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
BRADBURY
MASON , W.VA .

Hove Your Weddin~,
Ann iversary or Spec:1al

Ouasicn on Video .... We
Tape Any SpHial Occasion.
CHARlES BARLEY
PH. 742·2050
11 ·28-l mo.

10-14-llc

Announcements
3 Announ cements
SWEEPER lllfld n wbg machine

repair, Parts. 11 nd supplias . Pick
up end deliwerv . 08vi s V'acutJm
Clunar , Dnl!l Mal t mile up
Georges Creak Rd C!!ift 614 ·
44 6-0294 .
Raci!'ll Gun· Sho ot sPo nso red b"'
Raclna Gun Club . Evel'll Sunday,

beginning at 1:C.? p m Factory
Choke 12 i'JI' ~'f sfJo t9uns.
Lonely , nead a

D1te·

di! H} C!ll

tina 1·800-972 767 6

·- Sing los lntrodur. tions. write lor
application, Pet $OnJl Touch Introductions, P 0 Bo~ 6636.
Cherle1ton , W Va 25302 .

-----:--

------30 4 · 576 .

cle" ~~~

Ceramic

2029.

::;=::;;;:=-:-:_·_-_
--4

Giveawa y

Free puppies ~ wMiks old , '"J
Tarrlar fl. !,.; P!: Bu ll. Cell

614 -379-2313
2 killao• one wh 11e &amp; one black
house broken . ver't' affectata
a rou nd children.

cAt bed

8r

accp111 . Call614 ·24 5 ·5192 .
2 female pu~p lo1 , 3 mo . old .

must givllwa yo rsenrtta pound

Call &amp;14 -446 -802 .2
Friendly femalu Guinl!a Pig w ith

Television listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations for All Ages

Cl

-za::
~

USA M. KOCH . M.S.
Licensed Clinica l Audiologist

%:

z

EASY TO INSTAll

ADD-ON
FURNACE

oica cage to giv• 11way to good
home . Ca l l 61 4 992 - 7727
anytime.
6 Garman She phsrd puppie~ to
givaiWI¥· e14 949 -2936 .

- -- - - - FOUNO mtchu m sin brown &amp;

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213 .
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8-lltfn

whi", m•lt dop. Choker chain
na ID. Call e 14.4.t6 8273
LOST Sl.ck &amp; white CoUte pup ,
3 months old . in Norlhup are&amp;

Call 614·446 -9552

- -front--·- ----

LOST:
licerJ se Jlllllte 095 .
CIA . Ca/1614 367 O.i'23

*BURNS WOOD
OR COAL

lost. 2 rod
Ave .,

'

*AUTOMATIC

- reol"l.
---ltncoln

8Pd

Reward . Howlllul Carrie r.

304 -676 -3459

THERMOSTAT

f

$795

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

DOOR BUSTER...
WOODBURNING
AIR TIGHT FURNACE

$399

NO MONEY DOWN
NO PAYMENTS TILL SPRING

BRING YOUR PICK-UP...

- ----

Public Sate - &amp; A uction

RICK PEARS ON AUCT IONEER

Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

HOURS: 9:00 A .M.- 5:00P.M . Mon, thru Sat.
Evening• &amp; Sunday By Appointment

1·15-lfn

3-D AUTO CENTER
IIO'It W, Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 992·6778
BED LINERS SJ7500 full Size .
(1165 .00 mini!

I

OPEN 10 AM·6 PM

and Wilt Vlrglnf• . 30d 713
6785 Ot 304- n.:M~430

;:::;:;:::::::
· ;::;.:----9

Wanted T&lt;&gt; Buy-

We p1yc ..h to r late model dun
uMd ttrl.
Jim Mlnlc'Ch•v .. Qidl In c.
Dill G•n• Johnson
Bl 4-441 ·3872

WANT£0 TO 8UY u•ed wood I
coal htntra. $WAIN'S FURNI ·

TUAE, 3rd.• Oifvt St. G•llipo·
tis. C•l1614 -«e-3159 .

, •

TOP CASH paid for 113 model
• nd newer-, vsed Clrt. S111ith
Bulcl·Pon1lec. 1911 Eastern
Ave., G•lllpollt. C•lt 614-- 448 ·
2282. '
Suylng dlftt gold, sliver coins,
ringS, jtwtfrv, ttt"1ino W•r•. old

RT. 7
6 MILES BELOW GAlliiPOLIS

8

SERVICE. Estate. f~1 n1 , entlqLIC ,
liquktttloi'l ..,... lict'nsed Ohio

PHONE 992-7075

300~~E

Auth orizeil John D"'e.
New Holland. Bush Hog
farm Equipment

l / ll f tfn

"We Renl F~1Lm "

985-3561

POMEROY, 0.

GUYSVIllE, OH IO

No Sunday Calls

\1/ 30/i mo.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

E . M~lnUIQlliu...t

U. S. RT. 50 fAST

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

992-3595

All

SALES &amp; SERVICE

"Free Estima1es"

•24 Hour Care
CALl JOE BOWLAND

ICUT OUT FOR IUIUR£ Ul£/

Real Estate General

BOGGS

New Homes Built

ATIENTION BUILDERS
Th iS property has been
d1v1ded mto 1 aete
acre Sites. ca n be sold 1
• vl\loo"l' lea&gt; water obtam· l
I,

OLD TIME HEATING CO.
·--

Bashan Building

CISSELL
SIDING CO.

101

'AS!! PAN
*GLASS DOOR
'2-BLOWERS
'AUTOMAIC
THERMOSTAT
'AIR TIGHT

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

" VINYl SIDING ,
'AlUMINUM SIDING
'BlOWN IN
INSUlATION

Rutland RHt Home)

SPRING STREET
6 ACRES - 16,000

,....,.,~~

~;:=~=:;;~

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Aemodelmg
Roofing of all Types Worked 1n home area
20 yea rs
" Free Estimates "

992 -2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tlc

GUN SHOOT

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

t11 24. 31; \217 . 3tc

FULl PRICE

Standing Stove

EUGENE lONG

SER~ICE

SUPER SATURDAY •••

PER MONTH/To• &amp; Till• Extra

HOURS :
Mon., Wed ., Fri. 9 to 7
Tues . &amp; Thurs . 9:30 to 5:30
Seturday 9 to 4

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS.
POMEROY, OHIO
__.._,_

S1,000 Down, 60 Mon!hly paymtnll of

OLDS.-CAD.
CHEVROLET

A lu.rury .~port c/ussic.
01

PER MONTH/Tax &amp; Title Extra

A FEW WAYS THAT YOU CAN SAVE

3 TO CHOOSE FROM

lnr nl l fandanl/ f'llllll"l'\ and f'l' r /ormun 1·, •

•

"LOADED"

7•9 °/o FINANCING

_

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE w1th
3 bedrooms. 2 complete
baths . dining room. living
room and large recreation
room. located on 8 acres .
large farm pond. Racine
area .

- Plumbing and elactricol

BURNS WOOD OR COAL

PRIX

. ~- .........

l

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE ·

windows, cruise control, tilt wheel.

TLE'&gt;Dt\Y

t

Caval·er

4 door, cruise control, tilt wheel.

-~~

111 II• IIJ.;

MGM
Farm City, Inc.

'2,000 Down, 60 Monlhly Poymtnto of

1986 OLDS. CIERA

I

I·V11h

&amp;

;

- Concrete work

We Buy and Sell .
Gold &amp; Silver Coins
Also Class Rings
Scrap Silver &amp; Gold

RADIATOR

less than legendary!

- PIINTIACVWE $Ell EXCITDfENT -

Visiting

Al l K1nds of Pet
Supplies
We also have Canary
Gu1nea P1g Feed .

lf.SOO Down, 60 Monthly Poymonh of

PU MONTH/Tax &amp; Titi• Extta

Cosh or Trode Allowance

rw~t·d ' " ' J't ' flll/111 H.ll/1 1/ll'lh'l'll. ,, l't 'dr dt 'C~ ~poile r
.
1m,/ /lliJrl' . 'tandard ' And 11 ' t'lf't 'cra/(1 lor f'IP .\l' 1\.,10 \IO!ddn I

POME ROY - OH M~ l'om
Club will hold a r&lt;'gular business
meeting Monda&gt;· in 1hr Rtvrrb.1a1
Room of Diamond Sa,·mgs and
Loan to plan for a Ma1-rh 21 ro in
show at 1he Gallipolis Holid a) Inn.
A social hour and trading st&gt;ss ion
will start at i p.m. A rain auction
and refreshments will follow IlK'
business mf'f'tlng. Anyonr intPr·
ested in coins is m,·it&lt;&gt;d Ia allrnd !he
meeting.

$

50# Dog Nuggets
Only 19.50
25# Cat Food
Only 17.52

PER MONTH/Tax &amp; Title Extra

Cash or Trade Allowance

Church in Gallipolis. Sarurda\.
from 8 to 11 p.m. Ca ller will U..·
Ralph Rood

.

- Rooting and guttar work

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K Nesselroad , Cle rk

216 E. 2nd St
Phone
1·\61 41·992 · 3325

grant from the Ohio Department of Develop ment's Office of local Government Services.
The Grant was provided to the Meigs County
Commissioners and the Commissioners hav e
contracted with the Gallia -Meigs CAA to ad-

- Addons and remodeling

45760.

Real Estate

soon be soliciting bids for individual home con struction . The Housing Program is funded by a

CLARK
COIN SHOP

CARPENTER
SERVICE

On January 17, 1986 in
the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No . 25.031 ,
Mary E. Showalter, 41076
Grueser Hollow Road . Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 . was
appointed Administratrix of
the estate of Philip Powell,
deceased. late o f 140 Cole
Street ,
Middleport , Oh io

TEAFORD[H

The Meigs County Rehabilitation Program will

In a short class meeting which
followed, plan s were made to go to
Bob Evans Restaurant on Feb. alai
5: 30. Visits to other lacltilies were
discussed. Attending w~re those
named and Da le Walburn, Manning Kloes. ,Jean Thomas. Corrine
Ambrose, Sis Van Meter, Kenny
and Sue Imboden, John and Glenna
Reibel.

having a \\:E'Sff'rn sty lr squarp
dan('(' at S!. Peter's I::piscopal

YOUNG'S

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

Real Estate General

ATTENTION CONTRACTORS

1986 (. 1O PICKUP
~:::rm~r~~!ttra~.s~. :~~e~~~~:
1ng, AM rad10, two tone pamt.

LT t ' IIIJ[j/"

\1124. 31, 2tc

"An Equal Opporrunity Employ"'"

Cash or Trade Allowance

In { 1"fl.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bids will be accepted at
the Pomeroy Village Hall un til 12 o'clock noon Monday,
February 6 . 1986, on a
1979 Chevrolet Impala, as
is. The car can be seen at the
Pomeroy Village Hall.
The Village reserves the
right to accept or reject any
or all bids.
Jane Walton, Clerk-Treas .
Village of Pomeroy

(304) 675-4340

SALE PRICE S6,499 00

.\'othin~

Public Notice

Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV. 25550

servf'd .

SATI'ImAY
GALLIPOLL~ Thr Crand
Squares Square Dan('(' Club will be

Case No. 25 ,031

&amp; BUILDING

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Escape your daily routine. Rugged JeeP. Cherokee will
take you on the road to driving excitement with its
reliable 2.5L engine and shift-on-the-fly, 'NVD/4WD
system. Plan your escape today - test drive a Jeep
Cherokee.

4 speed trans .. AM radio.
1,000 payload

REEDSvlLLE - Ot11·e 'I'0\\11 ·
ship Trustees w111 mN'I in speoal
session Monda,-. 6:ll p.m .. al !he
Reedsville fire,tatlon. 10 mak1• 198ti
appropriations. To\\-nship businf'Ss
will be complell:&gt;d follo11ing !he
approp1iations.

said

f1 I 24, 31 ; !2 17. 3tc

Business Services

IMMEDIATE OPENING
:II"::: : buy loreither
1 ~:;:'develop
VOLUNTEER
men!.
SERVICE COORDINATOR MONTGOMERY
Degree Required
REALTY
614 -385-7419
CONTACT
Collect Calls Accepted
DIRECTOR OF PERSONNEL

Golden Rule class meeting held

Caleru/4r

·- --o. . .:..;.----~---

Public Notice

~r

Susl Mlchael has entertained
recently with two parties In ollservance of the birtlllays of Jeremy,
Terry, and Derek Michael , and
Alrman David Varian who is
stationed In San Antonio, Texas,
uncle rt Jeremy and Derek.
Refreshments were served at
both parties and gifts were presented to the honored guests.
Attending were Joan and Rlcharrd Varian, Jayne Varian ,
Mason. W. Va.; Maxine Michael,
Melvin Tracy, Pomeroy; Chery l
Varian, San Antonio, Texas: Linda
Persons, Chris and Mindy, Chester; Marge Ward , Pomeroy, and
~ honored guests.
Jeremy Michael was also honored with a party in his ldnder·
garten class taught by Debby Pratt
at the Chester Elemetnary Schol.
His mother, Susi Michael and an
aunt, Jayne Varian, hosted thP

Mrs. Mal}' K. Holter, Margarrl
Tunle, Thelma and Sandra Whll r
visited Marcia Keller . Hilda 1Vh11 r
and Charles Bisse U at Holzer
Medical Center Sunday.
~ While tbere they celebra ted the
'btrtlllay of Mrs. Keller presenting
her witb a decorated rake, gill and
cards along with a vase of flowers.
The ~ake was served with coffee
and pictures were taken . Mrs.
Keller underwent surgery
Tuesday.

Public Notice

Meig1 County

•

Birthdays noted

I

The Daily Sentinel

7

The Daily Sentinel-

RUNNING 80 A.ROS BRUSH GUARDS . TAILG ATE PROTECTORS
DUNDEE NEW REPLACE MEN T PARTS

c:oln1, ltrtt CWI'ftney. Top prj.
tes. Ed 1 Bvtlttn lltrblr Shop ,
200. Ava. MldclltPOrt. Ott 814.

992·3478.

.

�8-TM ~ Sentinel

Pill•
I

Wanted

To

Buy

LAFF·A·DAY

IMf .,do..,
•-•·-lngoupO&gt;IIo
WhMt end nhe lilt•. George
. . . ~toy, ~ •• , . . . . 4 · 478t
Houri 12·1 p.m. lMt dme to
lluy ftw lo fobNHV 2. t988

44

~~l7

luvlnt Rew Fur.

~

rtlilfo.t '-'tems, tocka,
ll..,a. etc. Will pey up to •so for
M lort-o. 114· 317·Dt04

OW

K.

7•0\\ SeeonciAVe 3bdr 1190
mo dep r~~quir.cl Cell 814
446 •222 betwaen 9 &amp; 6

,I I_

Furn11had IPt , • room1 &amp; blth,
no .. ,., adult. C1ll 81•·4ot8 ,
11519

f

Furn 1pt 939 2nd Ave GtMI·
pol1s 1 bdr 1225 mo , util1t111!11
pa1d C1ll 4•8 ·4416 1tter 7pm
Oupl•ll for rent. !li68 Third Ave .
Gtll1poh1 2 bdr , IMngroom,
d1ntngroom. new kitchen
fenced back v~rd refng &amp;
r1nge t280 piUI Utllltlll, &amp;
Mcunty depo11t C•ll 614 •46
0690

I :np luym1~11t
St! rvH:t~ ~

Help Wanted

AVON Stll Avon IMV Christmas

bills, ll'nlt..:l tl1n11 start up fn·
FREE CaH lt4 -441· 336B

LMm Ntedlecreft In your home

'"

With flmlty and friends Sehe
. . 1 clau end .. m prizes &amp;
m•dtandil8 Call 8U 388·

"I agree, the Presidency is
t00 big fOf Ofle ffiaJl. That'S
why we should elect a
woman.,

1133

~N::.t't:,~'~~..::"9~j
4PM, 114 441-7148

l•y.m ... nted.t for 1 mo old
i'lf.nt No...,. orw. .hnds Csll
lfttr 5:30PM. 114-448 6568

Went.t Dockm~~~er Immediate
opening tor MIIORII pos1110n
To mtnlll • maintain 1 m~r.ne

ExoeUent pay Mlerv bend on
~p:pwMnce . loMing txplfitnce
helpful, but not ntCIIN!l S.nd
r-.me to Box T8080 '" e~re of

tM Gatllpollt Deity Tribune. 826

Third Ave ,
4113t

Galllpollt

Oh

hiY Aatembty Work! •eoo 00
pet" 100 Gu.r~~ntMd .,.yment
No hp.....,..ce-No Sal.. Det••l•
Mtd Htf·.ctdreulld stsmped
enfik»ll• Elin V•tat -1847 341 8
Enterprila Rd . Ft PllfCI. Fl
33412
EIIY ......,bty wort.:! fiOO per
100 GutrtntMd payment No
UJMrlen~ - no ••••• Oet11l1
_.d aetf-eddra..ct ttamped
envetope:IEien Vltel-715 3418
Ent""riH Ad , Ft P1eree F L
3:1412

Otfic:l cterk-racapllontst
wentld Gen•al office wort! &amp;
typ6ng requlr«t Part time pot!·
tton tl PorNroy Plet" wnte
P .0 Bx 729·5 Porn~ roy Oh
467&amp;9
N..,

•

used veh1c:l1 Stl•
needed Automobile

pet'IOIIII

sales axptmanca necesurv
A•ty In per10n at 399 S Thtrd
St . Middleport, Oh

WE NEED YOUR PRIOR MIL
rr ARY SERVICE EXPERIENCE
IN THE AAMY NATIONAL
OUAA 0 Monthly p~yched
f"'lritement benefltt, lducettonell
Mliltance. end othtr benefits
availablt to our p1n 11me
rMrnMrl
30··117!5· 39150 Of
t·IDO·M2 · 31t9
ARE THOSE BILLS FROM THE
CHRISTMAS HOUOAYS PIL·
lNG UP Join tha Army Net1onal
Guard end yau Willi gat 1 monthly
peychec:l a good ptrt t1me
career. -nd m~ny otht( great
benllftte 30'·1715·39150 or 1 .
2·3119

•09·..

Pan lime hltp. no ptlone cans.
Mf BOnut; 2322 Jackson Aw .

Pblnt PIN,.,.t
tOOth AMN..... ry, Avon to 1111
calll04·875·1429
ASST MANAOER. mllstPOcell
good' llldtf'lhit ._1llt111, htye
delft ~ adv.,.cament llka to
dill on•~ ~one wjth people
INTE.~lOR ~CORATOR
we
a tra~nld ptaeneneed 1nte
riQrdeeoretorlo corr4)1imtnt our
a:~~:l.tlf!g ..... toree Both pos1
tlont offer good wag• tnd
benefh• We sre 1 9fogre11rve
E.O E Mill ruume toP 0 8011
33, Po1nt Pla•••nt W Va
28650
Situations
Wanted

Vacancy tor the elderly 11'1 our
hOml Trtmed 1nd f1h1en yetts

uparlence
73t4

C•ll 8U 992

Will d11n home1 or offtce•
Ea:cellnt refanncn A1k for
Mtria 81ot ·992 -7660 or 61•
912 ·2206

18

Wanted to Do

W'itf dD btby11n1ng m my kome
E""lng1 •nd w..a.ends C•ll
t14 · M8·0t37

N~rM A11t Wdl do prtvlle duty
.. hOIP or twJma P1t11f'1t c.te 8
yr e:~~:p
nrf C•ll 8U-.W6
7037
Work wtntad . hou11 c111n.ng,
hlva rafer•nc11 . 10• 895 ·
3805. have own UlnlpOrtltiOn
Will do blby llllln(l In my home
304·175·5206

Fwanml
21

Bustness
0 ppo rtu n tty

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO \lALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO ntCOrnltMndt thlt you
do
wtth people you
know •nd NOT to stnd money
througtl the mtll until you hiVe
lnv11tigettd the oft•rina

bu•in••

'I.....,•• a.a.n• Own vour own
St... IIUikting 0Hllflhll) Mtjor
mlf'luf~eturer 1etec:tma duler.,
available ,,.., High pot.,.tl•l
profht·~rttlmaorfulltime Cltl
303· 7119·3200 oxt 2407
MIJOt IIHI bullcUng company
hat ,,.. .v•tl•l• fo1 construe

11on Of Nlae oriltnlld dealer
Complete trtlnlng provided no
uperlence nHIItlf'V All cath
IKIIIn. . with IICIIIInt mcome
poten"" Refundlble depo11t
..-quirad Cont.ct Vic Ry1n ·11
, ·100·221 · 4t14
Grocer¥ ttora going out of
~M~atn•s. hew 1hehring coolers
.. d loa cr11m frMitr for ull
. ,• •• 7·72f7

22 Money

to

Loan

HOME OWNERI· Aofln"'co to
IDwtlad riM. UMaqultyfor•ny
, . _ . 1Mt11&lt; Mongogo Co .

,, . . . z.3QI1.

u.• ,...._.

OIIPfUI tv1Hittl1 fot
..., - • • purpooo. Calle14·

••·1172.

~~~x 4 :;·~·:zl; =~ 61~.4~:"

2602

3 rooms p,. bitt\, turn utll
uoo Csll8,4 446 3793

Knchen

furn•shed

F1rst

Ave

no

pen

l226 mo plus ut•bt•es. referen
ces &amp; depoa•t Call 614-446

4926

41

Houses for Rent

5 room1 &amp;. blth newly daco
rated lnqu1re 11 9, 8 Second
Ave Galllpol11
4 room• &amp;. btth newly deco
r1ted lnqune 11 918 Second
Ave G1lhpoha

3 bdr, 8 '-"1 mll11 Pill Holler on
Rt 160 S300mo f150dep
no pflta Call 614 388 9763

31

Real Estale
Homes for Sale

New 1 1nd 2 bedroom furniShed
epts 1nd house tn Middleport
Call 614 992 6304 or 614
446 1552

M)UII for 1111
wuth of Gall1po
Ctll d1ys 6U
n1gtltt 614446

,,_

Remodeled 3 b8droom house on
At 33 New F A furnace large
tot 119 000 Call Clel1nd
Aulty 614 992 2259

k-

Stltely 3 bedroom house at 10
Eut St '"Pomeroy 5 wooded
1cre1 f1mlly room. d1nmg room
F A hett 2 baths basement
g..-•ge $28 000 Call Cl~tnd
R11lty 614 992 2259
6 room• &amp;. blth on 1'11 •ere•
n111 Pomemv &amp; M1ddleport
lnteruc:t1on of Rt 143 Rt 7
tum left f1rst gr&amp;en house C1ll
614·992 7463
Older home m town Racme 3
bedroom b1th kitchen appll•n
Cll InCluded 614 949 2540
$35 000
3 Mel room hou11 2 car gttage
2 1cr" Clf'l water free gas 10
m1l11 from K11s1t For ul• or
loflg term rent 30• 273 2848
Elltenor complete mter~ o r ready
to complete Three bedrooms,
energy eff1clfmt ran cher on one
tcre PfK:ed on 1ntpect1on only
304 875 29tl1
321 J frtnklm Ave for mon'l
mlormallon cal l 304 6 75 1027

32

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

NEW AN D US ED MOBILE
HOMES KESS EL S QU Ali TY
MOBILE HOME SALES 4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOLIS AT 35
PHONE 614 446 7274
1982 Cl1yton UX65 fully
turn wuher dryer AC under
pmnmg &amp; porch E11c cond
M1k1 1n Offlf Call 614 256
1621 or &amp;U -256 6 3 15
1976 14t~70 FIHtwood new
csrpat, woodburner , elect11c ell
1ppl1anc:n 3 bdr 1 '1'1 bttht ~
deckt underp1nnmg 1nd storm
wmdows E11tra nu:e Must sell
810 200 C•ll814 256 6587or
814 868 1687
1978 Bayv•ew U a70 7x24
1•p•ndo 3 bdr 2 bath gu
t'lut •PPhan ces furnished
Pnced to se111 Cell 8 14 388
9814
1978 BII¥ V11W 141165 lOIII
elac:t 2 bdr 2 porches under
pmnrng ex c co nd Cell 614
245 5815

Hooae for rent or le1ae w1th
opt1on to buy 3 bdr garage
centrll 11r all new carpet
feoced m back y•rd lpproll 1'11
m1 from town on Bulav1lle Rd
t326 mo t150 sec dep Call
1tter 5PM or weekends 6 14
446 9280

The Maplas Elderly and H1nd1·
ctpped Hout1119 All ut1htlll!ll
p11d Conven1en tlv located for
11mor CitiZens Off 1treet park
mg Secur~tv 1nd flfl proteCtiOn
l1ve m rn tdent m1n1ger Rent11l
IUIIIance 8VI IIeble Call 614 ·
992 7022 E H 0

3 bdr yerega city gas F A
wood F P S27S mo 1100dep
&amp; ref requ~red C1ll 614 446
1171 Of 61. 446·4305

APARTMENTS mob1le hom11
houses Pt Plea11ntand Galltpo·
11s 514
a221

N1ce duplall houte completet.,
furn11hed water patd S200
mo sec dep raq no rn11d8 pet
In Chelhtra Call &amp;U 246 ·
5818
Homes for nmt la.,a or l1nd
contract Rodney V1ll•ge II
20 18 Eutarn Awe 2004 Ch1
them &amp; Eurlke Depo11t &amp;.
ref•rencn rtlqulf.ci 8l1ckburn
Retlty 614 -Ufi -0008
3 bdr house rn country nHr R1o
Grtnde Sec dep . no pet1
S240 mo Call614 2•6· 5,39
J bch house for rent 1325 mo
plus t150 dep Or tor sale 81th
&amp; 'IJ f1m1ly room loc1tiKI on Rt
588 Call 6 1• 256 6789 or
614 256 6205

New hou$18 ,1 25th Street Po1nt
Pleaunt 2 bedrooms central
au gas l1e1t washer dryer con
nactlons 304 675 12U
For rent w1th opt1on tO buy 3
bedrooms bu1lt 1n k1tchen 2 Cit
garage S220 00 month dep
0111 Nll'\tllll H1ven 304 882
2688
2 bed ro om hvmg roo m k1tchen
lull basement pr1~o~1cy coupl111
onl'l . no c h1 ldren or ltrge dOgl,
dep osit requ1rad 304 773
5118 or 773 5186 1fler 5 00

42

2 bd r fully lurmsh!td 12t~65
co nv locat1on Upper A1ver Rd
wlter p11d IIC dep requtred
Call 61• U6 8558 or 814
446 2430

Small 1 bdr tr•1ler m Ken1ug1
ut1ht1es pa1d $200 mo plu1dep
C1ll 614 4•6 7406
2 bedroom mob1lehomefor rent
nea r Rac1ne Ctll 814 992
6858
8JI40 2 bdr mobile home no
pet• C1ll 814 ·9•9 ·2•2•
J bedroom• furr111hld 1 cMd
No Pill 3 mrlll abovl New
H1v1n 30' 882 · 2486

Dna tnd two bedrooms. Sind
Hill Rotd , 304 876 3834

MOBILE HOME S MOVED 1n
Mired . rettonable tltet C•ll
304 676 2336

44

I ICfl mlnil•rm on McCumb1r
Ad . Rutland for ..... t28 600
or rent. U:IO C1ll 1114·992 ·
2t43 or 814·9B2 1373

Unturmshed 2 bedroom 1pt
yud 1nd buamant 1115 00
UO 00 dapo111 , 304 676 7641
aventnga

45

Furnished Rooms

46

Space for Rent

Mob1le home lo1 , 2 ' •50 or
1maller 175 Wl ter pa1d •th &amp;
Ne11 Gelhpol1s Call 446 4416
1fte1 8PM
Downtown off1ce space Exul
lant IOc1t10n on Second Ava
Clo .. to court houae plt'fect tor
attorney ' s CPA 's or oth1r pro
fetttont lt Beaut1fu l hardwood
floors e. tnm All utthttll p11d
C• ll Tile Wtum1n Agency 814
446 3644

Merchandise
51

Household Goods

2 bdr mob1l11 home 11 Ewe r
green C1!1 614 446 7032

2 bedroom un.Utnlhled tra1ler
depo111 requrred M1ddleport
Oh1o 30• 882 3267 or 30•
773 6024

Farms for Sale

Llurttltnd 1pt1 equ1l housmg
opportunity 2 beclfooml c:11
peted 111 elec 1pt1 for more
mform.t1on 304 882 ·3716

CO UNTRY MOBILE Home P1rk
Route 33 North of Pomlt'OV
L• rgel ots Call814 992 7ot79

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1979 F11rpo1nt 1••70 wlfh
7x2• •xpendo Totti electr1c 3
btdroom 2 full bathl fsc~ory
f1re pie ce. equ1pped knchen
centra l .11r located Rt 14 3
Pomeroy on ranted lot Call
614 992 225, or 614 992
3809

Like new 1981 M1n11on. 10111•
2 full bathl, 3 bedroom• front
kitchen wood burnmg f1r1pltee ,
catch lighted front c.. h price
t12 900 00 No tradem piHII.
wt deliver. K &amp; K Mobile HomH,
304·876·3000

2 bedroom lurn11had and 2
bedroom unfurn11hed 1pt ra
frences and deposrt requited
New Haven W VI 304 882
3267 or 304 773 502•

Housekaepmg room 919 2nd
Awe rengo. refng . 1h11e bath
mtle preferred, ulrhtles pd
S 1 00 Call4•6 U 16 efter 7pm

3 bdr tr11ler 1n EvergrMn
Av1111bl1 now 3 bdt hou11
IIIV1 1i111ble Feb 1 Ctll 614 ,.6
1339 or614 446 3249or614 ·
446 1528

1973 Cameron tr•1ler rn New
Heven. 111 alec ptrtrally fur
n11hed new undarpennmg, mull
1111 , I&amp; &amp;00 00 30. ·882
288B

B6

For rani or ule 2 bedroom
unfurn1h1ed with b•temflflt 1n
Henderson S 180 00 month
875 00 dep0111 304 675
, 18

B1g down p1yment . 1hort 11me
11mployment or c red1t hti!Ory
1toppmg you tram buvmg 1
home 1 Cons1dar • re clarmed
ling le Ot double Wldl E.. mpll
72 Sher~ton 12,.65 2 bed ·
room t160 per mo or 1 78
Rochetter 14t~70 S21 8 permo
•soo clown like over pay
menll Delivered free Else•
Home Canters Chtlhcothe 614
772 1220 Ctrc lewllle614 47 4
57 10

For nle or rant 2 bedroom
trttter m country G11 and Wiler
furn !1hed Alto a 3 bedroom
home Clll 614 742 2170

N1 ce 1 and 2 br •p•nmtntl
do1111ntown 304 675 2218

F01 rent Sleepmg Rooms 1nd
hght house kaepmg rooms Ptrk
Central Hotel C•ll 614 446
0756

14x65 mob1ll!l home on 1 •ere
lot 1250 mo plu1 ut111t11t
V1nton are1 2 children IC
cepted no pe11 C•ll e14 388
9881

1980 l1bany 1 4 t~54 2 bed
room unfum1sh ed vtnyl under
plnntng mcluded Mu 1t tell Call
304 773 5873

••s

Mod•rn 3 b.ctroom ftrmhOUII
near · mmet Sflcunl'tl depo11t
requ1rad S250 month Phone
614 742 2877

Rapouuud mobi le homes
Good sel&amp;ehon $600 down
11ka over p1ymenu Delivered
tree M1d Ohm Fmanctal Ser
wrce Oh10 1 800 826 0752

33

Unlu1ntshed 4 rooms &amp; b1th
apt newly redecoreted utll not
turn 3 G1rf1eld Ave Csll
814 446 7544 S175 P" mo
sac dep req
N1 ce 1 belt •pt rn town good
lOCatiOn Refett!ltiCII &amp; dii)OIIl
requ11ad C1ll The WISeman
Agen c., 614 446 lU4

bedroom
f1tapl.ca 3 m1
Itt S32 500
4461615 or
1244

4

Furn 1pt 919 2nd Ave G•ll1
pohs sh1re b1th lltlQit!l male
S 175 mo utllltiiS Pl!lld Ctll
446 4•16 after 7pm

2 br Inlier tdulh Vou ply
ut1ht iM 304 875 2535
Apartment
for Rent

•

JACKSON ESTATES APART
MENTS !Equ1t Hou1mg Opper
tunttvl month ly rtnt 1t1rt1 1t
$176 for 1 bedroom tnd U12
for 2 Mdroom, depotit UOO
located n11r Sl)ftng Vtlhry Pl11:1
tnd Foodltnel , pool1ndCsbleTV
•w•llable. office houn 11 po11l
ble 10 am to' pm1nd 7 pm to 9
pm Monday Frldty. Ctll 616·
448 ·2746 or IIIWt m•11gs
Nicely furnlstltd mobile homt
eH •pt centrtl 11f tnd heat In
c:1ty aduh• onlv C•ll 81• 446
0338
RedKOt'tted ..,, , 2 bdr , • 150
to *250 Ce1130'·171·5104 or
3D4· 175 · 5381 or 3D4·e75 ·
7B98

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St G1tlrpolls New &amp; used
wood coalstovea 6 pc wood LR
lUIIe *399. bunk bedl $199 ,
•ntron re chnMt 8 99 rwMI &amp;
used bedroom IUttll tinges
wnnger Wllhlfl, &amp; lhoet Naw
ttvrngroom su1111 1199 t599 ,
l1mps 1110 buymg co•l &amp; wood
1towe1 Call814 446 3159
LAVNE S FURNITURE
Sof•• 1nd ch1tt1 pr1ced from
f285 to t89i T1bles. 150 1nd
up to tH5 Hide 1 bedl ,tl90
1nd up to $&amp;60 , 10ft bed1
$145 Rec:llnau 1226 to
1375 Ltmps from 12B to
t 126 pc drnen11 from $109 .
to •3&amp; 7 pc $189 1nd up Wood
teble with sl11 chtlfl 12815 to
$746 Desk 1110 up to $2215
Huteh ll, 16fi0 Bunk bed com
plat• w1th mlltrlllltl , • 275
•nd up to tl96 S.by bed1,
$110 M1ttre1111 or bot~
•Pring• full Of tw~n t83 r~rm
173 and 183 Queen lltl,
12215 • dr chnts U9 5 dr
c h11tt , tl59 Bed h•mu ,
t20 tnd t25 10 gun · Gw.
catunet1 , $350 Gu or elec:trtc
,.ngtl 1375 81by menr11111.
I 35 &amp; U5 bed fr•m• UO,
t26 &amp; uo .. lng lr•m• i50
Good selection of bedroom
1ultas. rocken. metal clbinetl
heedbo1rd1 138 &amp; up to *115
U1td Fum1ture · Ortallt &amp; bed
metal off1ce detkl 3 m•l• out
Bullville Rd Opan 9•m to 5pm,
Mon thru S1t
814-441·0322
GOOD

USED APPLIANCES
W•lhen. dryer1 , refngeratort,
rtngu S .. tgg• Applltnc:es ,
Upper Rrver Rd beakte Stone
Crttt Motel 614 441·7398
County .Appliance Inc Good
uHd appllant:H tnd TV h11
Open BAM to IPM Mon thN
Sit 114· 448 11119, 627 3rd .
Av. GtUipolll, OH
Vallrt Fumitufl ni'W • u1ed
Large HOllon of quality fuml
ture 1218 Eutern Ave ,
G•lflpolia
Mollohtn Fum &amp; Appl Sel11
Gibson
Mt\110. St R1 7 N •
Oolllpolls Cat18t4·44f·7444 .

a.

••o

per load deh
vered Homellte 150 eng •n•
111ner &amp; gas ttnk 150 Ctll
614 ot46 •530 ev•mngs 814
se•6

••a

T1pp1n gu cook top stove. built
1n oven never Uled t450
Hoover porteble dry•r 170 C11i
614 367 7511
New 18 It heeby duty tlndem
•x.le tr11ler w1th slop blck endS.
rtmps t1 SOD Werm moming
woodburner IIOve U50 C1fl
8t4· 268·6149
Grocery 1tore gomg out of
bu11ne11 have shelving cooler•
1nd Ice cr11m frHur for 1111
c.u 614 387 ·7217
4 gr~ve 11t11 m Memot~tl
G.rden1 Mitome S1ve 1600
all 4 t2 000 C'111 8U 367
7t82
Ant1que 1ew•ng machtne baby
bed , 18 ,000 BTU AC bedroom
furmture Call614. 448 3433or
304·676·8217
Used R65 d1tch WitCh trencher&amp;
450 John Deere dozer Call
8 14·69• 7842 or 894-5008

56

1984 Ottch W1tch 8610 272
"" . 129 soo 1 sa• D1tc:h
Wttch 6510, 602 hr t25.600
1980 •so s Cue Oe~er 8 w•v
blade 0 hours on ~~nvma metor,
200 hours on new underur·
rr ege *25 000 1946 Rovers 25
ton low boy, $2500 1965
Prescott t1ndem ule 25 ton low
boy S8500 Law1on tnd law·
aon Inc 614 949 2293 or 616
698 6364
For

S•le Hydrtuhc cyhndan
t1r11 12 Ga Pump
typewrner. other m11c 1tems
C•n be seen •' ok11t11ion •croll
from Mtson F1re Dept Seturd•y
&amp; Sundey
pufT'C)I, used

Bnerpatch Kennell All breed
groommg Adult1 &amp; I)UPPIII
Engh1h Cocker Span11ls 388 ·
9790
Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA H1m1lty1n , P1111an tnd
S11me11 lutten• AKC Chow
pupp111 C1il 448 3844 after
7PM
AKC male Bes1et 8 mo old
good with kids housebroken
Ctll614 4ot6 8085
AKC Reg Dobarmtn fawn , 3
yra old good watch dog good
w1tfl ktds Dog &amp; dati house
*100 Call 814 367 0231
Du1l Reg Pit Bull pupp11s Pnce
neoottlble C•ll61 ' · 446-9370
AKC Ba11en pup1 Trr color
F1rst shot wormed tw1ce $126
Clll 614·667·6957
Rag11ter.cl mlfltture Sct'lneurer
pupp111 S•lt· Pepper females
Ch1mp 1on bloodl1ne1 C•ah
on ly No check• 614 992
2607
Four m1n1eture poodle pup1, two
main two femtlet 30• BB2
3672

57

Musical
Instruments

s••

&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

FREEZER BEEF lor aale call
Cetl Kmn1ard 304 675 4182
For ule e1r corn 12 25 bu Call
before B 1m or after 10 p m
30ot •sa t501

Farm SuppiiR S
&amp; Livestock
61

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 36 West J•cklon Ohio
614 -286-64fi1
M111ey Ferguson, New Holland
Bush Hog S1le1 &amp; Ser11-1ce Over
40 u1ed tractotl to dloo1e from
&amp; CCR1Jiete line of new &amp; used
equ~pmant Lttgen select1on m
S E Oh10
135 MFtrtc:tor, 2bottomplowl
2 row MF com plsnter, 3 pt d11c
$3 860 C.l 614.288 6522

TO NV 'S GUN REPAIRS , hot d1p
rebluemg. 111 types of guntmtth
work flit III"IIICI J04 675 .
4631

930 Cue trtctor With Clb low
hourt. 6 bottom aem1 mounted
plows 4 IQW JO corn pltnter.
U 650 C1161• 286 6622

Senous about lo•mg we~ght1
Cont1ct Glona Grate At 2, Bo11
282. Letart. WV 25263 304
882 3162

Ptow1 Deer Born 2 14 1n 3 pt
hitch, J . 16 1n Call! 3 pt htteh
ldjustlble plows, 5 bottom 16
1n C11e Mml mount plows, 2
bottom plow• to ftt c Fttmall
triCtor 2 bottom drag plow1.
Ohver • bottom drag p~wl • ft
Woods bellv mowetr f1t1 Cub
F1rmall. 0 11v1r 66 ttlctor 1nde·
pendent 11ve PT 0 Wldehontend.
Ol1ver 60 triCIOr 2 new tlrt1run1
hlte new C1ll 614 388 968•

P1cken1 Used Fum1ture good
qulhty Uled turn.ture hourt
9 00 to 6 00 orb'( appo.ntment
304 675 8483 or 875 1460
POLITICAL AOVERTISEMENT
1Ptc:111t1111 , Union mede. ftcto,.,
jobber, dtlcount pr1ce1 Allltem1
Guartnteed S•m Somerville,
304·676·3334
100 AnnNtrllrv A&gt;Jon to sell
3o• 67! 1429
Ant1que bedroom 1u1te ant~que
d1n1ng room chilli buffet
hutch Need the room meke
offer 304 -876 ·6065
Halt bed w1th boJ. sprrnga and
m1ttt111 1100 00 30• 676
ot123
Uled R65 ditCh WitCh trenchet
lnd 450 John Deere dozer
1 6U 894 78ot2 or 7694
6006
Stereo sy111m w1th canette
deck receNer, turnttble , 2
spe1kers 1nd kljuttlblt st•nd
304 675 3868 after 4 00 PM
MOVING SALE 306 13tt'l
Street Pomt Phtutnt th11
week
Ten booth1 felr to good cond1
110n See 1t Woolen '• Lounge

830 C111tr1ctor 12 996 Of bill
offer 340 International With 3
pt hnch , PS, liv• power, live
hydrauliC 11 896 C1fl &amp;1•·
286 8522
81ckhoa t8000 DIVII
Trencher · $5600 197• ChiiVy
PICk up t700 1972LTO ••oo
1978 p1nto wtgon S400 614·
367 7267

2 row 300 gtllon tobecco
lrtnlpllnter
like new
*1 . 100 00 5 ft Bu1h Hog
1260 1 100 g1llon pl•ltiC WI·
tar tenlt t300 D1nu1er • w•y
wood eplitter 1800 00 3 to·
t»cco b1ler boa11 t 100 for 111
lOot 875-1286 or 304 1523
6843

FOR THE: RIDE ..

1980 Mtadt GLC hatchbtck ,
•"· 1m·fm good cond C•ll
61'·'46 9324 alter&amp; 00 pm or
weekends
1979 Chtvrol•t Mshbu Cl1111c.
• door , llf, cru•111 , e11c cond .
Ctlt 01• 446·9324 tfter 5 00
pm or weekend•
1993 BUi ck L•Stbre w~~gon 9
p•Mnger 360V·8 Ac. PW ttlt.
AM FM c::usane. mt wtper.
crutse. utended wen~nty,
'Sl,OOO m1 . 88,900 C•ll ,,.,.
446-2101 10AM to BPM
1980 Oldsmobile Cutla11 LS.
PS PB , AM-FM cru11e A.C. exc
cond Call 81' «6· 2323 •Iter
4PM
Btckhoa 8000, D1v11 trenchar
6500 74 Chevy p1Ck·UP noo.
72 LTD 8400 78 Pmto wtgon
t400 Cell evanmgs 61• 367
7267

Livestock

Hay

&amp;

Grain

Urge round belli of h1y for uta
orlrtdaforcattle C.ll614·••8 ·
1062 1ft1r IS PM
For 1111 h1y naver wet red clover
• orchlrd grtll mlud Ctll
3D4·488· t997
Good clean clover &amp; orchard
gru1 hay C•ll6t•·388·8713
AHalta hty tqUifl bat• Ctll
11,· 44B · 1159Bifltr 4PM
500 blln of h1y lor uta t1 00
par bale ClltenCI Widlline,
Racine Ohio e1• 949 29t8

Blocll. brlcll . morttr 1nd m•·
10nry MIPPIIU. Mountain Stitt
Block, At 33, New Heven , W
Yo 304·882· 2222

Good milld h•y $1 215 bale.
Good cletn Timothy $1 150
bclllant horse h1y Bob Jon•
.. 114·698· tD24 .. 114 898·
1001, At 33 Bufllnuh•m Oh1o

300 .114114' Olk post• Ui . Hdl
or t1200 tor 111. Tobacco 11ldl1
Uc each 304 -875-1211 or
623-5843

100 btl• condttlonad h•y
Newr wet Fir11 cutting *1 215
timothy Hty tt 36 30ot-815
3050

75

1973 Dodge M1m Motor Home
22 ft New eu cond &amp; new tues
e1tc co nd . 15 900 1980 Buldl
S ..vterk lolded *2 800 1977
Chevy Luv truck UOO Call
6t4-256 9351

, • ft ftbervllll bill bo•l. 9 9
Mercury motor. new tfOIImg
motor. drive on trtifet Clll
.,. 3417 0839
Wtnted to Bu¥. 12 toot e luml·
num john bolt and oars. phone
304 n3 li8BB

1981 Delta 88 Roytce2dr , AT,
PS . P door loeb Alf, meroom
lfllidl'-out Ex.celh1nt cond1t10n
H~gh miiHQe. U.996
C1ll
6t4 448 8060
1974 Country Squrr• •eo. •
bttrel 80 000 ongm•l miles ,
cte1n maid81nd oot tt350 C1ll
61• 949 28n trom 9 00 until
2 00
1982 Butck 1kyl1rk. 2 ck • euto,
11r. cru11e, 1m tm, t owner, new
lmyon p11n1 14000 1983
SeMI. 900 turbo ot dr, tuto •II
opt 1on1 . 20 000 m1lee
110 000 .A lso 1984 Pont~ac
2000 Sun bird. '" 5 •P , am fm ,
til1, CfUISI, 1 1,000 m1 , t5500
Jerry Well-61•·992-7&amp;•• aftet
5pm
1976 ford Grenldt 6 cyl IUIO ,
0600 6t4·992·7403
Oat1un 280 ZX 2 2 11lver blue
1c stereo, eJ.c cond 16 ,900
3D4 623 ·5843
1976 Ford P1nto 1979 engtne
new baHery end tllrtlr, •fum•
rum 1lot '*'hHit, 4 cyl , 4 sp
run• exc body greet! .Am-fm
caste He t1pe '' 8•11• G11 &amp; Carry
New Hewen 304 882
Out
2428
1983 Z28 C1m1ro lotded. low
m1leaga. mqutnes on weak days
•her 4 p m . 304-675 8363
1976 Volklwtgen bug , good
1h1pe a;n roof AM FM radto
Gold, f1 500 00 304 882
2283
1979 Ford Fatrmont. 2 door
69 000 mlle1. t2.400 00 304
676·3779
1976 Chevrolet Capnc Cla111C
AC PS P8 run1 good. lfter
5 00 304 675 3t24
'19 T010n.Jo IJIC sh1pe, IVer·
ege m•luge bfack-bltck velour
$4 000.00 or but offer, 304
675 5799

W1n t to buy ' 75 to ·n Hond•
CIVIC, Boll 284 Htrtfotd, W VI
262ot7 or 30• 882 2024 1t1ar
B 00 PM
1979 T· Bttd. 66.000 mil•.
loldael , pnce t4,300 00 304

•

1976 Ford Gr•n•da one owner,
2810MIPIIAve Clll304 876
40t4
1972 Ford Mustang
304 n3· 5873

UOO

Trucks for Sale

1979 Dod;e 4 wheel dnvt , "
ton , club ctb PU truck, with
tnow plow D•lu111 Interior &amp;
111terior Auto. PS. PB AM ·FM.
tift whHI , AC 60,000 mlln.
r.w 11'1Ctlon rldlal trrn. whh
wh1te 1poke wheell. new br•kft,
drums II. rotors. new fronl and
w1th lock out hubt Very ;ood
cond Sell with or without Myar1
hydraulic tnow plow 11.900
Call orl..ve m111ege, 814·441·
2746
1979 l.ft ton Ford 2 whl drive
400 eng low mrln t2000
flfm 614 992 1270
-----:--:--:--:-·lc 1979 1.4 ton Ford 2 whl drive
400 eng low mlln UOOO
fifm 6t4· 992·8270
VW Rtbbltt LX pk:kup new
diasel engine. tc , 1t1r10 48
mpg, eac cond t2 ,600 30•·
523 ·111143
' 71 Ch•vy pldup truck ,
15150 00 304 8715·6277 lfttr
e.oo PM
1978 Ford plckup. AC , PB PS
t977 Okl1 Cutlns Both low
"'""'' 3D4·f15· 628t

T1 FOfd Courier pldtup truck,
whlt1 II)Okl whMII tnd tool
bo• Runt good t&amp;oo . 304·

882 3231

1\LLE\' OOP
SHEESH 1
IT'S LIKE
REASON -

17ftProcr•ftbllllboat 1ri0hp.
o a . pkl• extr11. •e.ooo oo
flfm 304 8715-7322

78

ING WITH

A STIJMP 1

Camping
Equipment

17 h 1969 DeCamp c~m~~er
sleep• 6 , 111c:eltent condition,
• 1100 00 30k,·676-1 lot&amp;

Services

For 111111 1971 Ftet 2 dr ,
roadster good body . good run ·
mng co nd . t450 Ctll81•·ot48·
8276
1980 Pontrac Grend Pili new
ttrn. exc cond , 13 850 Ctll
1fter 5PM 614 ·379 ·231.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

John bott tor 11 1e Call 11•
256 . .17.

78 Olds S t1rf1ra good cond .
good IIIII Cllf 614 446 0643

875· 2464

THIIT ilhti/J5T Se THe Sl/NCif
IWO IITTACN:t7 77&gt;" ~..
0#, t$0LL Y- l?of:RE'5 !IN ,-,~[111

..00

63

64

Utility Bldg Spl 30'1160'a9'
Etvl W· 15' 118 slldlnt dOOf &amp;
wv door · tll2515 erect• Iron
Hor11 Bldgl lt4-332-974l5
collect

APVENTURE'FZ. . I
WA? JUS.T ALON G

t984 Suzukr OR 100. good
cond .
C1ll 614·•48
24.0

1973 Ford 'Ia ton. 302 4 spd .
1400 1978 Chevene, • c:yl .
•uto good work car •eoo C1ll
814·388·9367

55

Kentucky Lump. Ohto Lu~
OhiO Stoklf Ytrd or delivery,
cement bkJck1 •nd bu11dmg
metlflll Gtllipalis Blodl Co ,
Pme St G1ll"h1. Ohlb Clll
ft4 ·448· 2713

Autos for Sa le

72

New 5 hp gil ,., compreuor
t650 00 304-676-8277 1fter
8 00 PM

Bwklmg Mataritla
Blocll. brtclc MWer ptpU Wlf'l
dow• lmtell. ltc Claude Win
ten Rto Gr•nd•. 0 C11t 814
2.S-5121

71

New Holltnd 360 grinder m111er
30. 1578 · 2823

App1loou c ont11t mue
11500 00 L..pord W11tttn Pill
arre Geklmg. 1960 00 Numer·
OUI ht point IWitdS 304·89[5 .
3903

Building Supplies

I HAVE NO OTHER
CKOlCE. EA$'1'!- TK6

'IO IJ' RE- IN
CHAR&amp;e NOW,
?-ONNY.

1r,JIISIJIIrliillllll

Pets for Sale

58

Milled hardwood sl1b1 $12 per
bundle contaln1ng 1pprox 1 Y,
ton , fob Ohto P1t1et Co Po me·
roy, Oh 6t4 991 . . 11

Pege-9 •

L;;:::::::;;:::::;;:::;:;:=1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiWiiii1
=:-:--::,.,---:---:o:-:--I
74 Motorcyclel

Pool t1ble. hide·• bed 2 tlbl11
1nd chelfl bunk bed1 C1ll
614 682 7163

111 h•rdwood tpllt,
1t1cked delrvered 136 • wary
ltrge told Ctlf 814 448 7993

The Daily Sentinei -

1979 Pinto w~gon , ot cyl white.
at, ps IC WM, rtdlo, NmOte
cont mlrrort, top rack, rear
defogg•r Lat• 1t1c;br One
owner Shtrp 12,000 30&amp;·
876 t7t4

Sp1nat-Con1ole p11no b1tg11n
W111nted R11pons1ble party to
take over low monthly payments
on spmet Pltno Can be seen
locally Mr White. 1 800
1574 ellt 608

F~rewood

Ohio

LOOK-'S LI KE

t980 Chevy • whMI drive, PS.
PB, •utometlc du•l link, IPOrt
whMit. black utreciean, 11tlor
trlde, 304·175 ot18t

Snowthrowerwtth new motor&amp;
bl.des W1lk beh1nd, for wa lkl&amp;
drNew•ys 1100 Alto, new
6 000 BTU air cond , 1126 Cell
or leave m1111ge . 6t 4 · 4ot6·
2745

Ut1hty lreller 7x.8ft 11lt bed,
nkmg 1450 C1fl or leeve
meu1ge, 81 • 446 2746

Middleport,

DICK TRACY

W1r c•mper lop ln1ula11d
84,200 30•·&amp;23·58•3 or 175·
1286

C1llth•n'• U1.cl Tire Shop Over
1 OOOttrU,I1ZII12 13, ,. 115
16. 18 6 B m1 ... oot Rt 218
Ctfl &amp;tot 268 1251

fmw~ood

Pomeroy-

'79 Chevy -A . 41 WO . ac. cruise
cont . Sconldele pelt Mtn 0

Misc. Merchandise

F•rewoodtor111e Ctll614· 256·
1528

24, 1986

1919 Ford v1n Auto. bo~ in
good conditton . run• good
e&amp;Oo &amp;t4·992 ·74D3

Whlrpool comp~et euto walher
Hoover compact dryer 304
8715 61504

F~rewood for 1111 130 00 PU
lo1d HEAP eccepted Ctll 614
3BB 93ot1 , Roger Mt.cle

Friday, January

4 W.O.

1979 JHP J· 10 , to;ng wll11l
b•H PU qutdtttrack, 310.
v B. 1uto . 1ir c:ond., PS, Ill,
tlidtng ,.., window, low mlhlga
t979 CJ ·5 Golden Eaglo. v .a . s
tpd . tpoker whetll. AM·FM
atereo. tow milugt Cal 114·
4419700

U1ed w ...,.,.. dryers ela.=tnc
tlnte. refrigerttoJI call 304
175 .7388

Slob... &amp;,_ bundle wholothoy
0 116 4 245 6804
lilt '
t '
'
For"'' hll d1n &amp; h1v Contact
Bruce OSIIIKin , ea 256 1.27

Vans&amp;

1970 Ford window van. Econo·
line. t600 Clll 614 441 ·98150

.4.

Hou11 c:otl lumpS. stok., Z1nn
Co11 co c.u eu."s t•oa

Fum effoooencvopt,p ........ d
qutet smgle workmg person

Professtonal
S ervices

f'tANO TUNING AND REPAIR
rech1cover your p1ano t beaut11u1
tone c111 rod1y. Wards Key
board 304 675 5500 01 675
3824

73

U1ed 1ide by -'de refr~gerator,
3 w1y recliner. 30 rn electric
renge, mlltretl 1nd boa IPflniJ
Corb1n &amp; Snyder Furniture, 9155
Second Ave , Gallipoll• 614·
1171

Furn tf11c1ency $150 ut1lur•
p•id Sh..-e b•th 607 2nd Ave
G1fl1poht Smgle Ctn ·48·
441 8 after 7pm

tllltl apt , 238

In come till tii"VICe Federal &amp;
Stste Wallace Russel l Brtd
bury Oh 814 992 7228

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

Side by 1id1 refrigerator 190
Ctll 614· 2111-1713

54

Newty remodflled 5 room up

23

Household Goods

Furn efficiency S190 Ullht••
pa1d 920 4th . Gall1pol11 Sm·
gle C1ll 446 ••18 1ftar 7pm

1-----------T'"---------"""'i ----------

n.-

12

51

Apartment
for Rent

Tnple drelltr &amp; chett, 1016d
hllvyptne Call81ot·441 -7827

Wllh bohfwith-lkl toMd copper
CaiiiU·441·1821

1

Friday, January 24, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

81

Ten point lead,
Rover' We're

I'll getthe m
ev1dence!

Home
Improvements

scalp~nq them

So he's qone

qet Mrs
wiql

1

Yes'm!
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltlon1t lifatlnM gulrln·
tee Local rlferencea fumilhad
Frea 11tlmttt1 C1ll colltct
t ·81 4 · 237·0481........ night
Roger• Basement
Waterproofing
J and L tn1taelat1on Roofing .
VW'Iyl •kllnv . 1torm doort end
w1ndowt Fr• 11t1m.t11 C•tl
8t4 892· 2772
COLEMAN WATER WELL
DR ILUNG
Pump 11111 IIMCI Regiltlrad
tn OhiO All work gusrantHd.
Ctll 304· 273-2811 Raven•·
wood, W Va

'
~

RON ' S TtiiVillon Strvtce
HouM c .. ll on RCA, Quuar.
GE Spedeling in Zenith CaM
30,·&amp;71 -2398 or IU-4411 ·
2454
Ftny Traa Trimming .tump
removal Ctll 30ot-11715· 1331

F;, •ening

FRIDAY
1/24 /8 6

Sttrkl T,.. end lawn Servi.::..
l•ndsctplng 30ot-571-2010
Rollry or clblt tool drilling
Molt well• completed um1d1y
Pump 111ft •nd 111fYice 30•·
896· 3802
Roofing, 111 lctndl 1ntt1Htd or
reptlred Insured. frea 11tl·
m•t" Phone304-623·31517 or
304·612·6200

82

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth end P1n1
G•lllpolil , Ohio
Phone 8U·44&amp;·3888 or 114·
446 4477
JIM ' S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Rt 1. Bo• 355, G•llipolhr C•M
814 3f1 ·01i7e
Cl1rk Plumbing tnd Ha111ng, t 8
years eapeuence, un1top dfiiRI
New remoelellna · rapllr work
Phone 304·882 20t 2

83

Excavating

Good 1 Exctv111ng buemenu,
footer~ . dnvew•yt. ••pt1c t1nk1,
ltndsc:tpmg Clll 1nyt1me 614·
•46 4637 Jame1 L Otvl1on
Jr owner

85

General Hauling

Jamu Boys Wtter Sctrv1,::e Al10
poolt ftllad Clll &amp;14 ·266· 1141
OJ 6U ·ot•8· 1 176 or 814 •41
79tt
Ken '1 Wiler Serv1 c1 Weill
ci1tema, pool1 ftUed Phone
8 1• · 367 0623 or 614 367
7741 mgt'll or day
W1ugh'1 Wiler Setv1ce Wells
c11terns pools flit. reNible
ltrVICI Clll 6U·268· 1240 Of
614 · 256 1130 A•llon•ble
rate•
Oump trucktng
Co•l •nd
llm11tone Oaltvery Ser111ce
304 675 ·3t90

1- - - - - - - - - 87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
t183 Sec: Ave , Gelllpo h•
814· 446·7833 Of 814·448
te33
R • M FurnitureMinufactunng
St. Rt 7 . Crown Ctty, Oh C1fl
114· 281 1470 call Eve 814
448 · 3'31 Old II. n 8 w
Upho1terad

Telet•i.~inn

EVENING

0 (2J PM Megoz1ne
(]) Ahas Sm1th end Jones
@ SportsCenter
Cl) Entertemment Tantght
lnterv•ew w 1th Jon Votght
C1J Jefferson&amp;
0 I])@ Wheel of Fonuno
([) Ntghtly Business Report
® Eyew1tness News
(j]) MacNeil -lehrer Newsh·
our
CHl Dtvorce Court
@} Barney Mtllar
705 CI) Mary Tyler Moore
7 30 U (2J I]) New Newlywed
Game
(!) Lombardt
fj) (IJ WKRP in C~nclnnatt
0 ([I !Ill Joopaody
([I AgQny
® Wheel of Fortune
(ill Pnce Is Right
(J]J Bob Newhar1
7' 35 (]) Sanford and Son

700

m

D

Cl) GJ) Disney' s L1v 1ng
Seas John Rttter. S•man Le
Ban and Laura Bran tg an
exam1ne the new u ndersea
exh1b1ts at Walt 01sn ey
W orld ' s EPCOT Center (60
mtn)
(J) Dons Dev' s
Best
Friends
(]) illJ Webster !CCI Webs·
ter s
at1empt to
h e lp
George seve hts JOb a t the
tehw •s•on s1at1on ba c kfires
when Webster 1s asked to
aud1tton for the JOb of
!!.e_Ortscester
W 11) MOVIE 'The Advon·
turas of Sherlock Holmes'
Smarter Brother'
0 (]) @ Twilight Zone
(I) MecNetl-Lehrer Newsh·
ou•
liD Waahmgton Week tn
Rev1ew (CC) P out Duke 1S
JOined by top Washingt on
JOurnali s ts enalyz1ng the
week' s news
1HJ MOVIE 'Midnight Cow·
boy'
8:05 I]) NBA Boeketboll. Photo·
delphia at Cleveland
B·30 Cil FIIpper
(]) (]]J Mr. Belvedere ICC)
While Geo rge and Mr Bel
vedere make e pa c t 10 g1ve
up their v1ces Heath e r s
new boyfnend fal ls far
Marsha
tfil Well Street Week Louts
Aukeyser analyzes
the
' 80s w1th a *eekly rev1ew
ot ec onom tc an d 1nvest·
ment matter s
9 :00 1J (I)@ Kn ight Rider M&lt;·
c hael and KITT 1nvest1gate
a ma s ter dlus1on tst sus·
peoted of mu rder (60 m 1n)
in Stefeo
(]) Femme. on the Fauhllne
(]] T~ Rank Boxing
"
CIJ (lZ Dltrrent Strokes
(CC) Arnold be comes ·
turn•

BOO

Listings ____________________-:7-----=--~::-:::--::-----;,;;-;:==::::::::-C!J To Be

"s for brotherly oom pan10 nsh tp
0 (]) J]J Dollos ICC )
(I) St.etew1de
'f4' Greet Performences.
UJJ
Heartbreak House (CCI
George Be rnard Shaw s
play I S brou ght to l1fe (2
hrs)
9·30 (])C!]J He' s tho Mayor iCC)
Aher Carl saves a stray
d og . C1ty Hall IS fl ooded
With h o mel ess animals
Ci) Wa ll Street Week LOUIS
Au keyser
analyzes th e
80S With a we ek ly rev1ew
o f econom• c and m vest·
ment matters
10.00 II (}) [5) M1ami V1ce An
anonymous phone caller
asSIS1S Crockett and Tubbs
1n th e tr 1nvest1Q at10n of a
p ro mment anornev s mur
d er (60 mm) In S tereo
(])(ill The Fall Guy (CC) A
c han ce encounter w1th a
Vt e tnam buddy la nds Colt
on a dangerous mtss1on to
rescue a fnend from a Cam
b odoa n pnson camp (60
m1n)
fl) C1J Odd Couple
lii CIJ® Falcon Crest (CC)
An ge le 's news about Me l·
tss a and Fathe r Chrr st o·
pher c re a tes te n s 10 n b e·
tween Met1ssa and Cote
and Emma ts tn Jured when
Chase's w1ne sh1pment 1S
~acked (6 0 min )
CV Great Performances
Heartbre.ek Hou!le (CC)
Ge orge Be rnard Shaw' s
play IS bro ug ht to ltfe (2
hrs)
(]]) New•
10:20 ([) Sanford and Son
10:30 fl)
INN News
10:50 ([) Night Tracks In Stereo
1 1:00 0 (I) (]) 0 (]) (ill ilJJ
News
[]) Man from u N.C l.E
fJ) CZJ Benny Hill Show
[Ql Eyewltnes!l News
[)) Newswatch
@ WKRP In Ctncmnatt
tt 30 1J (I) llJJ The Tonight
Show Tonight s guests ere
Harvey Kormen and Glen
Campbell (60 mm) In
Stereo
(!) SportsCentar
Cl) WKRP in Cinclnnatt
G Cl) MOVIE: 'The Five of
Me'
® Taxi
(jJ) Sneak Preview
()}) ABC News Nlghtllne
(J]J Trapper John. M.D.
12:00 (3J Beat of Gro~oho
(]) Sportlllne
C1J Entertainment Tonight
lntervtew w 1th J on Vo 1ght
fll aJ Credit Card Mill ion ·
a lra
(]) Wodehouse Playhouse
® MOVIE: !Battle for the
Planet of the Ape-a'
(j]) MOVIE·, ' Kioo Daddy
•
G
oodbye
t2 30 D (I) !Ill Friday Night VI
~·
ll'l Stereo
Bill

m

Announced

® ABC News Ntghtline
"" MO VIE ' Docosoon BO·
&gt;h
fore Dawn'
12 50 ""
W NIRht TrackR In ~ f A rAn
1.00 (]J Dob•e G1llts
([) Puttm' on the H1ts
fl) (1) MOVIE ' Mag 1c '
1.15 @ MOVIE:' Ordeal'
1:30 CIJ fo1hor Knows Bast
({) News
2 00 11 (]] [2) News
C1J 700 Club
C!J Mazda Sport&amp;look
(]) D1ck Clark' s Nitat1me
2:15 @ CNN Headline News
2:30 (I) SportsCenter
3:00 (J) MOVIE. ' D1ary of a
Chambermaid'
C!l Speedwaek
Ell C1J MOVIE: ' Fast Brook'
tiJ Comedy Break
3 ·30 ill World Cup Sk1ing
(HI News
4 :00 1HJ MOVIE. 'Two on a Guol·
iotme'
4 ·30 (]J MOVIE 'Man From
Cairo'
(!) Grand Masters Tenn1s

SATURDAY
1/26/86
EYENINQ

7 ·00

0

f?l'l
1..6.J

Too Close for Com ·

fort
(]) Campbells
l4J College
Basketball:
Southern
Methodist at
Houston
(]) Q ([) Hee Haw
fll CD Small Wonder
CI:l Wild Amertca
(]] Wheel of fortune
!TIJ Newton' s Apple (CCI
Host Ira Flatow exa mi nes
th e SC ie nce of fac ial recon
struct1on
illJ Solod Gold
!]II To Be Announced
7 :30 II
Runeway to Glory
ill Gun a of Will Sonnen
fl) (!) It' I a llvmg
r7rl Profiles of Nature
\.I..!
crD Jeqperdy
(j]] Wild Amorlce
till At the Mov1ea
8:00 II {I)® Bob Hope Super
Bowl Show Bob Hope sal·
utes me mbe rs of the Super
Bowl teams (60 m1n)
C3J MOVIE 'They Got Me
Coveted'
C1J College Basketball. Per·
due at Ohio SUite
fJ) ClJ College Basketbetl:
Purdue et Ohio State
0 (]) (Ill Airwolf
(f) Smithtonlan World· On
the Shoulder• of Gltntl
(CC) Pal ton to iogtst Dav1d
Steadm•n goe• to the Gal·
a pages end Cook tslends
m sea rch of spec 1m1n1 to
help explatn the evolutiOn·
ary th eorv (6 0 mtn)
Cl]) Auat:ln Ci t y Limits· Mel
Tllho/Tho Geez lnolawo In
S te reo
(J}) Thl Redd Foxx Show
!CCI AI c lashes with a
placement counselor when

rn

Tont makes an effort tore·
tu rn to school attar a tw o
year abs()nce
(11} MOVIE 'Who IS Harry
Kollormon l'
B 05

([) Centenmel Jealousy b e ·
tween
Pasq umei
and
McKeag ca u ses them t o
d1ss a lve t he ~r pann ers h•P

10 30 lllJ Angel on My Shoulder
11 ·00 0 CD NawsCenter
ITi Success 'n L1fe
"'-'
(!) SportsCenter
tT\ ':II
rTIII [S) News
Lg..l
~ nn
\.!!..J 1.J..S.1
t:'E\
C1J
Golden
Globe
Awards

@ Eyewitness News
@ Tw 1l1ght Zone
tt OS m 1•• ht T
k I St roo
l.i!.J r"'
-. 1g "" rae
0
5 s d n .,e h
1 1 . 30
~.AJ ..W atur ay 1,-19 t
l 1j ..,veJ h A k b
("l'
,v o n n er erg
c.£i Go lden Globe Awards

12 hrs I
8·30 (lll Benson (CC) Benson s

by THOMAS JOSEPH
AC ROSS
DOWN
I ]\Ill
1 sra nmn
5 Brf',IIIW
llu11 l

fu n to11mg nephew v1s 1ts
an d throws Benson s c al m
life mt o s ha mbl e s
9:00 tJ (]) ~ Golden G1rls
Bla n c he
m ust
dectde
whethe r or not to do nate
o n e of her k1dneys to h er
hated s 1ster (A) , In Stereo
(!) College Basketball·
Maf"'land at Duke
0 (I) G]t CBS Reports
f]) Tr1pods
@ Doc tor Who
(j]) lady Blue (CC)
9 30 1J (]) ® 227 Ma ry mu st
turn to Sandra 1n her e f
forts to get a ne w refr~gera
to r (A) , In Stereo
([I Sneak Prev oaw
tO:OO D ctltiGl Rem1ngton Steele
to Stereo
(]) To Be Announced
([I~ The Love Boat (CC)
W h1le two nvai fraternities
wage war at a college re u
man two wildly d 1vergent
un 1ve rs11y budd res meet
~a1n (60 mm )
fiJ CD Fame
(]) MOVIE: ' Or Who The
Armageddon Factor'
@ News
10 05
J.ecques Coustaau R• ·
ders of the Wtnd Jacques
Cousteau
axpenments
w1th a sail boa t t h at ha s no
58115 (60 mtn )

ht&gt;,\VIh
9 P11 lpourn

I 0 i&gt;'l
n ').( lon

12 R· , n~.~ n
11 1.. 11 )f! ,l ll

111

B&lt;~rt

am mal

20

'A d......

~mp\. n

.1 n

Yes t e rday 's Answf'r
2 1 S&lt;:tllt'l\
29 lh"•ll
22 lt t•,nr~ ~ t lk 30 C hampiOn·
rahn &lt;
s h1 p
23 1'\nt hm~ :ll R1•.:tsl1'r J-l ll'l ('
:-opt•t 1.,1
33 H1n1 p.u1 ~
II ilackllt'\ltl 2 4Pr·rft•th :16 n •I J.!•
15 Sh.tm
25 Wntk
:l7 Surtt~llrH i c-c i
18 Ho lm
26 Sununu
111
7 Ht SJ:W I IIVt
8 &lt;\ud111 a l
~ · J.:
10 ( r111 lwl

.,..--,;;-;;--;;;-

:,.......r;-,:,.::..,..-

21 Dt-sllny
22 Stn r)
24 Tt •ssf' f ol
2S Wa.... h

26 H1•lu•s
27 Ac lor
Vtfotlld:t

28 Ta.~h·
st' ll ~'«'

by Henr 1Arnold and Bob Lee

Un!ICramble these four Jumbles
one lenertoeachsquare, to lorm
fou r 01d!nary words.

-

~ (l in ~

n1 u.., u .11
14 l-"'n1sl
15 E IIAlh ll'
16 !:!i3111U4'1s
nwnlor
17 Hdu sa l
19 Lah

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WOAO GAME

., ~

6

13 L1orH'I

m

JJIJJJWID'il

2 Ailu1 . .,
M
lll l\
3 lll \1.1-:tlf.lll'
4 l'l.l} lhll l:.!
5 Mt lllt '\ I ~ 1 l

32 Ex• ludt•
33 Somt• "hat
34 S lo ra~t·
h rn:
35 Spt•tl
htndt•r
37 lf:md (&lt;I )
38 t.:nu&gt;n.aln

39 Jo hl ess
40 A1vo u a r
n f' f'd

ltvc
\\

41 D1kdtk
,. g
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES - Her•'s ho" to "ork II

r
--....-

I I

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELI. O W

· - ·--- ~

One letter stands for a nother lr: tlus sampll' A~ ~ used

[HEYNOj

fo r the three L's, X for the l~ o 0 s. etc Smgle lei ters :,
apostrophes , the length and formation of the words arc ;a!,
hint.s Each day the code letters are dlfrerent
·'

I I K

BINNGE

rJ

·I

IASOUAEI
K

J

I

THe

I

1·24

e~u::&gt;e-;o- 1!1~:

MAY 5YM~~ IZE TH e
15E61NNINIS OF TH IS .

I. I

R M

E R N R

R
Now arrange tne ct rcled letter! to
form the surprise answer as sug
gested by the at1011e can oon

Prlntanswerhe/8: A ..
Veslerda~·s

CRYM'OQUOTE

A ' 5HOWI:~ H FO~

rI l l I

)"

(Answer~~t t omorro~ l

Jumblel. GUILT EXACT EXEMPT HARROW
Answer: A butcher Is a man leut likely IO put on
thla-EXTAA WEIGHT

U I Z IJ' I.
LW

n z

L IP H.O

XR L

I'

I.

1. 1 H\11

'
L-

H ••

&lt;\ \' 11 X

•

I H .. I) \\ I J '/J,.

'"'

O VVINLll M
'
Yesterday's Cryptoqdote . A'\ I ' &lt;u\\:!: MENT IS .\~
URGE ON THE VERGE OF' ' , ' Jli ,E - Sot ' Hrt=:
OBSCUHE

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
t

a nd entering. Hysell had been
charged in connection with an Aug.
6 incident and Ca rswell in connec·
1ion with a Sept. 10 incident.

The Farmers Home Adminlstratrion, the governmenL's lending
agency for rural America, has
changed the income limits for
eligibility for home loans.
These new income limits ·are
based on the number of persons In
the fam ilv and the Income llnnils
and method of calculation are
based on HYUD limits as man·
dated by Congress in the housing
amendments of 1983.
The income limits are used to
del ermine eligibility' for ru raJ housIng loans and to provide subsidy for
those who cannot afford to pay the
full intet'Pst ra te. The cutTen!
interest rate on rural housing loans
is 10.58 percent. The low Income
mte for Meigs County ranges from
$12,200 fo r a one person family to
$18,550 for a family with five
persons.
Bernard T. Chupka, state direc-

I Area death
Ann Biion

Ann Biron, :,9. 71&gt;\ S. Third AVe..
Middleport , died Thursday at Vet~ ­
rans :\lemorial Hospit al.
Bam Nov. 12, 1926 in Salisbuty
To.,.nship, she was a daugh ter of
SATURDAY SERVICES the late Ray and M. Irene Daniel
Darst.
Leo C. Hill. 58, Rio Grande,
Su rviving are a daughter, Julie
fonner Meigs resident, who was
Ann Bi ron . Middlep01t ; a sister and
a profes.'lOr of fine arts a1 Rio
brother·in-law. Kathif'f'n and C P .
Grande College, died Wedn~
Today.. .sunny. High in the low Williams, Middleport: a bruther,
day at the Holzer Medical
40s. Light eas ter !~· winds.
Hobart Darst. Middleport : a
Center. Servit'eS will be held a12
TonighLcloudi ng over. Low in brother anrl sisrer·in·law. Kenneth
p.m. Saturday at the United
the upper 20s. Light sout heast and Helen Darst, Middlepon. and
Faith Church, Route 7, Pomewinds.
several nieces and nephews.
roy . Friends may call at the
Saturday ...rain likely bv after·
Pr('C('(jing her in death were h&lt;'r
Ewing Funeral Homdrom 7to9
noon. High near 40.
husband , J ules R Biron: a brul hPr.
this evening.
Chance of preripital10n near zero Delmar Darst and her JXll'Pnts.
percent today .. :J:l percent tonight.
Siwices will IX' held at I p.m.
Supper set
and 60 percent Satu rday
Sunday a1 thl' Kawlings·Coats·
Tlw Ladies Auxi li;rry of the
Extended foret·asl
Blower FunNal Home wrth Re1·. Racine Fire Department will stage
Sunday through Tue!'day
!Vlichael Pangio of1tc1at ing. Burial a publ ic spaghetti supper beginning
Rain or snow likely Sunday.. will be in Rin'tv il'W C'emeterT. at 11 a.m. Sunday at lht&gt; annex of
chance of snow Monday .. and fair F ri&lt;'nds mav r ail at the funera l . the Raci ne Fire Station. Prire is SJ
Tuesday. Tumingsomewhat roider home from::! to 4 c~ nd 7 to ~ p.m. fo t·adull s and$1.00 for chUdren with
Monday and Tuesday. Highs in the Sunday.
desserts and beverages additionaL
:10s lllld low in the '!lis Sunday.. and rr==~::::::::::::::::::.;-T_:_
highs in thc low to mid '!lis and lows
generally 10 to 15 Monday and
RAWLINGS-COATS
Tuesday.
MO U NIAI~!(R
'I•

Weather forecast

BLOWER

FUNERAL HOME

Winnin,: lottt'~ numher

!\ ,. rr·i" K th l' FumU, of

CLEVE I.Al' D ' LT'I I - Th ur&gt; ·
day 's winn ing Ohio Lotll'r)·
numbers: Dail)"

ANN BYRON

Numbt.~ r

SATURDAY
2-4 p.m.-7-9 p.m.
Sunday Service 1 p.m.
At the Funeral Home

7~ .

Ticket &gt;ales rot.il(xl S1.1 4 7 .1 ~2.
with a pc11 off due uf Ste.~I .70L :il .
PlfK-1

621o.

Sat. &amp; Sun . '\1:rt. . 2:00
~:11. Midni~hl.

12 :00
'

Mbuntolnear Clnomtl Ripl e y , W, Va.

5

1 Off
50

Any Adult Admission

• e • e e e e • e I e e e e e e e e e •e

•

eo e e I e e e e e e e e e e e Ill . . . . . e,. - - - ·

WEEKEND
SPECIALS
PHARMACY

TIDE DOERGENT
20 oz. Unscented
WITH

f \J

BOUNCE
FABRIC SOFTENER

79c

._.j

...........

OPEN 9-9:30 MON.-SAT.
11-8 SUNDAYS

786 N. Second Stree t
Middleport , Ohio

WHITE

PLASTIC . 1 niGGER BOTTLE

7 -INCH CERAMIC

STOIEWIRE BOWL

Reg.
$141

IN 4 COLORS

3 STYLES

'I" Ea.

METRO

Values

PLASTIC COATED

PLAYING CARDS
Giant 227 oz. •
Fami~ Size

(14 lb. 3 oz.)

99

4

'lP

beSCO ® DISPOSABLES

3 *I 00

~~·

FOR

'510

Value

TRAVEL

204-COUNT
COFFEE FILTERS

WITH BRACKET AND COVER

Fila Moat Bakel Style Makera

5PfCe Cup Mas (llt\Yen.erll spitlprool

Ideal tor
&amp; ac ~t

t.af .

' rucks. boit5 . etc

snaps 1n1t1 )'OUT car • 1ndow's

SUNBEAM PRINCESSE
BATH SCALE WS84

Baked enamel linished platfor'"
with corrtrasting durable vinyl mat
g1ves the Princesse her regal
look. Large easy-to-read d1at m
pounds and krlos.

'6~

Sold

Elsewhere
For Up To

.'

.

'

''r
FABRIC SOFTENER
FOR THE DRYER

THE AMAZING

WHITE
COSMETIC FLUFFS

PASTA
MACHINE

300 C:ltlnt

40 Sheets

or 100 Count Triple Sia

addressed the group brieay on
highway needs in their own specific
areas, including Paul Knotts of •
Gallipolis and Jennifer Sheets of
Pomeroy.
Despite Smith 's optimism,
Knotts, on behall of the Gallipolis
Area Chamber of Commerce, took
a hard line.
Said Knotts in part, "'We In
Southeastern Ohio are angry and
hurt. We are fed up with second·
class road systems that continue to
dampen our efforts at economic
development.
"It is our perception. wrongly or
rightly, that the state is commlted
to economic development as long as
it does not include Southeastern
Ohio.
"To the best of our heal
historians knowledge, we in Southeastern Ohio have not seceded
from the state. Our area wlll never
realize the dreams of growth as
long as we continue to have a
transportation system that does not
satisf',/ the needs of industry."
Sheets reiterated Knotts' position
IX the importance of economic
development in the area and
reminded the group that many
chambers IX commerce up and
down Rt. 33 to Columbus have
"pinpointed the a&lt;X'ess road from
Rock .Springs to the Ravenswood
Bridge as the key starting point for
improvements to Rt. 33."
She noted lhattheS!Ol,&lt;mtroJect
oow underway is "only for a
location report." Meigs Countlans
are also concerned about "actual
construction" of the mad , she said,
adding that "Lowell Wingett," who
has been working on the project for
years , "would like to see it finished
in his lifetime."
Gov . Celeste, who was present for
ju st a portion of the meeting, was
also optimistic about the projects
!Continued on page A41

OPI1111JSTIC - Gov. Rlchanl Celeste Is happy with the progress of
Southeaslem Ohio's current highway projects. He said he's anxious to
see "orange barrells on the highway" as coll'llruction moves forward.

Senate tax writers take to the woods to discuss refonn
WINDOW CLEANER
22 oz. SIZE

PORCELAIN
MUGS

meeting Friday at the Ohio Univer- Transportation.
sity Inn, jointly sponsored by the
Smith updated Southeastern
Southeastern Ohio highways Southeastem Ohio Regional Coun- Ohio's six current projects which
how much longer must this region cil's Highway Users Committee are part of the "Operations Jobswait tor "critical improvements?"
and· the Athens Chamber of Highways" $1.9 billion highway
''These critical improvements" Commeree.
construction program announced
are in the area of transportation
Among those giving remarks at thls time last year by Gov . Celeste.
and the question "how much longer the meeting were Gov. Richard
All the projects are '·on sche·
must thls region wail" was printed Celeste and Warren Smith, director duie," accordlngtoDirectorSmith.
on handouts distributed at a of the Ohio Department of
Locally, a project to complete the
gap In the Appalachian Highway
from Athens to Albany Is expected
to go to bid in August. Final costs for
this eonstruction are expected to be
around $15.5 million .
Studies for the Coolville to A\hens
section of the Appalachian Hlgh·
way are nearing completion he said
and public hearings will be soon be
underway to discuss possible routes
for the highway.
Plans tor widening RL 7 into
Gallipolis are "95 percent com·
plete" lhe director said.
And preliminaty engineering for
the Rock Springs to Ravenswood
access road should be completed by
the end of the year. The access road
would be an extension of Rt. 33 and
a public hearing has been sceduled
for 7 p.m. Feb. 20 at the Meigs
Multi-Purpose Building, at which
time alternate mutes for the road
wUJ be.discussed .
Getting the access ma&lt;l to
construction Smith said, "Is a big
project.
Smith was upbeat in his remarks.
noting that the governor's highway
projects are "pretty evenly distributed around the state."
In regard to tbeentlre "Operation
Jobs - Highways" program, he
said. the governor "does not make
promises lightly." But, he added,
because this year's federal appor·
tlonments to the state will be down
about $100 mlllion, the state will be
ANGRY - Paul Knotts. representing the GaWpolls Are~ Ch1UT1 her &lt;A
working diligently to protect tb:lse
Coounerce, was DOt optlmlslc ill his remarks. KnoUs said the people ol
promises.
Southeaslem Ohio are led up with serond~ mad systems.
Various county representatives
By NANCY YOACHAM
'J1mes.Sentlnel Sial!

992-6421

7 Count Unscented

8 Sections. 54 Pages 60 Centa
A Mult!media Inc . Newsp1per

Middleport-Pomeroy·-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday. January 26, 1986

'

MIDDLEPORT

HOURS: 8-7 Mon.-Fri.
9-4 Saturday

·-Page A-3-·

Officials: need for regional
road improvements 'critical'

CHRYSLER
PL YMOUTH·DODGE

Not Valid Tuesday Eve.
Saturday or Sunday Matinee or
Midnight Movies

Ohio weather:
•
ram,
snow
in forecast ·

entine

Vol. 20 No. 60
~t8d1988

COOPER

• • • • • • • • ••• • • • •••• • • , COUPON • • ••••••• ~ •••••••• • ,.

Sports .................... .... ... C-1-7
Take-One ............. .... .... Insert
Wealher .. ................. ........ A-3

tmts

A dm F. ve ry Tues.d ov $2.25

hi . &amp; Sat. . 7: 00, 9 :00

Along the River ....... ...... .. S.l~

•

Sat. &amp; Sun . All Scats $2.25

Sun .-Thurs .. 7:10
Fri . &amp; Sat. , 7:10.9: 10
~ u t. &amp; Sun . Mat., 2:10
Sat. Midni~ht, 12 :10

Inside:
Deallls ................. .... ...... .. A-5
Editorials ................ .. ... .... H

COOPER CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH DODGE

Adm ission Pr ice Po licy
Bargain Mati nees

!11 ·/IGO H!CK SSHOPPI!G PlAZA

William Buckley on 'muscle power' prevailiJJg
over human rights - Page A-2
Bob Hoeflich discusses a resolution of recogni·
lio~- P~e B-3

1986 Chrysler GTS •••••• S11,900
19 76 Fiat WAgon .•••.•.....•. $900
1981 GMC Pickup ........... S4495
Velerans Memorial
Admissions--Cecil Frazier. Mid1980 Ford Mustang •...•... S2795
dlep011: P auline Derenberger,
Pomerov ; Ann Biron. Pomeroy;
1983 Cad. Eldorado .... 513,595
J::va Lawson. Racine: Gladys
Shumway, umg Bottom; Theresa
F"isher, Pomero; : Estella Condray,
1977 Dodge Van ............ S1 595
Pomeroy .
Discharges.. Agnes Dixon, Thrr
mas Frye. C1a rrnoe Wickline. Jane
1979 Dodge Van ............ S3295
Moon.
_____:_________________I 1981 Ford F100 Pickup ..... S4995
1980 Dodge Omni. ......... s1.995
Cinem&lt;\'i) . ;_
1982 Dodge 400 ............ 54395
1983 Dodge Diplomat .... s 495
IIOW PLAYING
STaRTS FRIDAI, 1-24-86
1976 Ford Conv. Van ..... S299
"Spies Like Us"
"CLUE"
1979 Chrys. Cordoba ..... S1895
PG
PG
Sun .-Thu" .. 7:00

364 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis , Ohio

Game preview
-Page C-1

available to those with the greatest
housing need, Chupka states.
Meigs t'('Sidenls needing additional Information are asked to ·
contact the local Farmer.t·· Home
Administration Office, 105 Butter·
nut Ave. , Pomeroy, phone, 99216644 . .

tor, states the new Income llnnits
will bene!lt those persons with
sevl'ral members In the household.
New deductions wlli also allow
elderly famllies to deduct certain
medical expenses and receive an
extra deduction of $400. The
procedure will make loan funds

Page· B-1

Holzer Clinic expansion

FHA ch.anges limits for eligibility

.Meigs youths get prison tenns
Two Meigs County youths were
sentenced to six months in the
Mansfield Reformatory after
pleading guilty in Gallia Cou nty
Common Pleas.Court to two counts
of breaking and entering.
Dennis Hysell. 18, and Bill M.
Carswell, 19, both of . Pomeroy ,
were sentenced by .Judge Richard
C. Roderick in connection with Ihe
Sept. 16 breaking and entering at a
cabin cruiser mmed by .Jay Hall
and the Sept . 28 breaking and
entering a t Murp hy 's Mart in the
Silver Bridge Plaza.
The two also recei1·t'&lt;i sL&lt; month
concurrent terms in the Gallia
County Jail fo r attempted breaking

Friday. January 24, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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WASHINGTON tUPII- Senate F"inanceCommilt£'e members left the nation's capital on a secluded
retreat to sound each other out on tax reform, sent df
with a stern warning from President Reagan that he
will veto any plan to raise taxes .
Just belore most of the 20·member panel boarded a
bus Friday for the two·hour trip to Berkelt'y Springs,
W.Va ., Reagan met with Finance CommittN'
C'hatnnan Bob Packwood and . according to the
lawmaker, "said no In as many ways as you can say
It" to the idea of Increased taxes.
Packwood. R-Orc., said hP met with Reagan "'to
make sure the president was quite firm on no new
taxes, no value- added tax , no sales taxes, no business

transfer taxes, no broad·based taxes. "
'"And the answer is no, no. no. We don ·t want any of
those. We won 't have any of those. We won't stand for
any of those. He will veto any of those," Packwood
sa id.
Reagan wants a tax overhaul bill that neithe r
increases nor decreases government revenues. but
there have been suggestions that Congress include
new taxes in the House- passed legislation to cut the
federal deficit .
"'I needed that background before I went into thi s
meeting," Packwood said, stressing that he hoped by
the retreat's end to "find out at the outer ex tremilies
the things that people wlll accept and what they won·r

man d the panel and a profes!Drof
sociology at Ohio State University.
"Uppermost In our thoughts were
the rights and safety of the
law·abiding citizens of this state."
The task Ioree recommended
that the number of felony levels be
reduced from 12 to ftve, and that a
panel d judges be appointed to
ensure consistency in sentence
lengths.
Ohio's mandatory three-year actual Incarceration rule for using a
firearm during a felony would
remain in effect under the proposed
recommendations.
Most of the P'oposals-will have to
receive approval of the Ohio
GelleraLAssem bly before being put
into effect. Hearings will probably
be held later this year.
Gov. Richard F . Celeste, who
eonvened the task force, commended the report and said the next
step ls "a vigorous public debate on
the contents of tiE report."
Under one recommendation. the
state woulq lumtsh counties with
S'Dl mllllon to blllld and operate
regional jaUs to house non,vlolent
&lt;Afendel"!l starting In lffl9. This
(Continued on page A4 l

CIRCLEVlLLE - Attorney Jan
Michael Long, D-Ciroieville, will
formally announce his candidacy
for the 17th District Ohio Senate
Seat on Monday. according to a
statement released Friday .
A fmmer Middleport resident.
Long - who now pmctlces law in

War
TO · ANNOUNCE- Jan MI-

chael

Lonr.

D-OrclevtUe. w111

fonnally aftiiOIIJICe his candidacy lor the l'llh Dbtrlct Ohio
Senate Seat on Monday. He
pi- a tour through the dlatrict
that day.

game~

WASHINGTON (UP!l - U.S.
Navy planes launched from two
aircraft carriers began war games
near Libya Friday In a determined
show of resolve to maneuver In
International airspace despite LIbyan claims of sovereignty In lite
area , U.S. otfleials said .
Libya warned within hours after
planes began taking off from the
eonventlonally powered carriers
Coral Sea and Saratoga that tile
United States was "playing with

City layoffs reported
GALLIPOLIS - Unconfirmed
reports were circulating Satunlay
that as many as 11 employeesdt!E
city had been given layoff or hourly
cuiliactt' notlces Friday.
Floyd Wright, president of the
city's local chapter of the American

Circleville - plans a tour throu gh
the district on the day of his
announcement.
Long Is scheduled to appear in the
common pleas courtroom in the
Meigs County Courthouse at 2: ~
p.m.
The 17th Senate District includes

Federation of State, County and
Munlclpal Employees. said Saturday he had been notUled that four
members of his union had . been
laid .off.
According to Wright, the layoffs
(Continued on page A4)

fire" by conducting the scheduled
the Libyan"Ciaimed GuH of Sidra.
Oight operations so close to its
Libyan fighters patrolled In the
coast.
area bllt they appeared to be
Pentagon officials insisted the avoiding the Navy aircraft, th. .
massing of the powertful 21-shlp officials sa id. There were no report&lt;
notllla and the tactics of the sleek ol Libyan intercepts or other
ns flghter·bombers, F ·14 lighters confrontations.
and other aircraft was not intended
At the State Department, spokes·
to provoke Libyan forces Into a man Bernard Kalb said the ~ra ­
reaction that could spark a battle tions ··were Intended to demonsimilar to the 1981 U.S. downing of strate U.S. resolve to continue
two Libyan fighters.
operations In International airsOther U.S. officials said the pace," a ll'lerence to U.S. objecmaneuvers were intended to "send tions to Libya's claim of sovera message" to Libyan leader CoL eignty In the Gulf ci Sidra beyond
Moammar Khadaty that the United · the 12-mue llnnlt.
States will not tolerate his role as a
Left unclear by Kalb's comment .
supporter and backer of terrorism. was whether Navy aircraft will fly ·
The carriers were positioned over the gulf to test their right o! .
about 120 mlles north of the navigation. U.S. officials have said :
undulating coastline but officials the planes may probe fart!Er !lOUth. •
declined to pinpoint the fllght paths over the gulf.
of the aircraft, including whether
SlmUar exercises WerP eonthey entered dlspu ted airspace over
(Contlnued on page A4)

... _..... ""''«'.....

·===-.. _.,... ,

.... Iaiiy ..._

·:.·

Pickway, Ross, J ackson, Vinton.
Athens. Galli a, Meigs and Law renCP Countk's.
If Long wins the Democratic
nomination. he would likely face'
Incumbent Republican Sen. Oakley
C. Collins, Ironton, in November.

near Libya begin

•,

· ~ror .,.,...,.. ,......,.

• IM1 . ~~~~~o. ._

where. unlike the House. there is virtually no limit an
amendments that can be offered.
Sen. Lloyd Bent sen of Texas, a leading Democrat
on the committee. cautioned again st ruling out all tax
hikes. especially an oil import fff .
He sugges ted new taxes eventualiv would look .
better to Reagan as the budget process wore on.
"The presid ent has made those kinds d sta tements
before, but he's found he's had to adjust to
conditions.'·
Bentsen also cautioned that the k:'g1slatio n ""is a
monumental bill and we shouldn 't let ourselves be
stampeded into it. ""

Long to announce for Ohio Senate

Task force reports
on prison crowding
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP! ) Ohio's dangerously high prison
population could be cut by 8,500
through a series of 20 recommendations made by a special governor's
task force on prison overcrowding.
But the task Ioree says that If
nothing Is done to discourage
mandatory jail terms or encourage
furloughs . "'good time" release and
probation, even a $638 million
prison construction program wlll
rot keep up with the prison
population.
The Governor's Committee on
Prison Crowding. in a report on a
16-month study, said Friday the
20,500 enrollment in state prisons is
50 percent more than they were
designed to b:lld, and that the
population Is projected to be almost
~.lXXI by 19ll'i.
The committee recommended
greater use of local jails for
non-vlolenl dfenders and expanded
furlough, good behavior and proba ·
tlon programs.
"We've agreed on a set of
proposals that take Into account the
thoughts of judges, prosecutors,
law enforcement and eorrections
ot!lclals," said Simon Dlnitz. chair·

accept " in a tax overhaul bill .
Severa l Treasury Department officials also are to
a ttend the weekend session, including Secretary
J ames Baker. The lawmakers plan to return to
Washington late today.
The Finance Committee expects to begin hearings
next week on the tax reform bill passed in December
by the Lemocratlc-led House. That proposal watered
down many of Reagan's suggestions and Packwood
said the president reiterated his demand that the
Senate bil l be closer to his original proposal.
However, numerous senators have noted that the
tax overhaul bill that may emerge from the Finane&lt;'
Commill.ee wUI have a tough time in the full Senate.

t

I

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