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"

Sbap
: t\berfe\ds
for

20

Days 'til
Christmas

';1 -

MAPLE BEDROOM ·FURNITURE

FREE.

~(f ( PAJAMAS
'-· _1
1y,~
J•
.,

Re~.

8X10

FESSIONAL
PORTRAIT

Sim S 134-36), M
131-40), L 142-44)
and XL 146-41). Salid
colors and stripes coat style top.

&lt;,:/
\\.~· ; l,

511.95

25 Cfints

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

•New questions .surround Reagan·involvemerit

.by Honey Portraits

LOW SALE PRICES -

MEN'S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday. December 5, 1986

.·

Excellent quality- laminated tops. Buy only the pieces you need I
Dressers - Desks -Twin Beds- 4 &amp; 6 D111wer Chests- Lingerie
Chests - Bunk Bed - Night Stends - Bachelor Chest.

OIFT SALEI ·

3 Sections, .40 Pages

· Yol.36, No.160 ·
Copyrighted 1986

·PHOTO
SPECIAL

.
enttne
'

at y

•·

1

(;lear tonight, with a low In
the lower 20s. Mostly su·nny
Saturday, · wllh highs in -the
middle :Ws. The probability ·of
precipitalion is near zero .
today through Saturday,

042
PICK-4-

•

OPEN STOCK

(M·
~~~/.

Daily Number .
8528

e(lte\\81\t· QU~
efr\end\y
Sa\espeop\e
•Servite After
t"e Sale ·

If;'~~

Ohio .Lottery

IN UVING COLOR

.

PHTOGRAPHER'S HOURS:
FRI., ~EC. 5-11 TO 7
SAT., DEC. 6-10 TO 4:30

Pa1amas ....................... S9.59 ·
Reg. $l7.00
Van Heusen P.J.'s ........,S13.59

,,
,

".••
'

Iranians would persuade Moslem extremists In
Lebanon to release six American hostages
inCluding Beirut CIA station ·chief William
Buckley. The Re\C, Benjamin Weir was the only
hOstage' freed In September 1985, Buckley's
captors announced in October 1985 that he was
dead.
'
·
Meese said Reagan was "Informed generally"
of the first shipment after the fact. The president
did not make ,a lormal decision or "finding"
approving the shipments until January 1986,
Meese said.
House and Senate leaders announced Thursday
they will form two new panels to Investigate the
scandal.
White ijouse spokesman Larry Speakes, who
announced Thursday he was leaving his job for
Wall Street In February, said Reagan would walt
for a recommendation from both Republicans and

. By DANA WALKER
.
WASHINGTON (UP!) -New questions were
raised today as to President Reagan's first
Involvement In secret arms shipments to Iran.
The. New York Times reportecj that former
' national ·security adviser Robert McFarlane
testified Monday belore a senate panel that
Reagan approved In aqvance the arms sales,
contrary to what Attorney General Edwin Meese
said In his bombshell Nov. 25 news conference that
first disclosed the diversion of arms sale profits to
the Nicaraguan rebels.
Quoting three unidentified sources familiar
with McFarlane's closed-c!oor testimony, the
newspaper reported that jl,jcFarlane said Reagan
used him In August 1985 to Inform braeli
representatives the president would '"condone"
an Israeli arms shipment.
·
The first shipment of missiles was made the
following month with U.S. officials hopeful the

attorney general's requ est that il appoint an
Democrats before deciding whether to call
indepehdent counsel to take over the criminal
Congress back.
.
,Reagan scheduled a meeting with Republican · investigation, and an announcement was ex·
pected as early as today.
leaders today and White tJouse spokesman Dan
Meese, under crlticjsm for his role in the probe, .
tJoward said, "We're still discussing the idea" of
a special session of Congress to start work on the
took the unusual step Tuesday of publicly
announcing his decision to ask for the independent
formal Investigation. Senate Republican leader
counsel,
as It is called by law. The job is simUar to
Robert Dole of Kansas favors an immediate
that of the special prosecutor who conducted the
session but Senate Democratic leader Robert
Watergate investigation.
Byrd of W~st Virginia wants to await the new
FBI Director William Webster told reporters
Congress when Democrats wUI control the
Senate.
Thursday that Meese waited four days after the
discovery on Nov. 22 of a key National Security
With questions remaining about the exact
Council document that Indicated Improper staff
structure of Capitol Hill Investigations, Indica·
lions mounted that an Independent counsel soon
activity before he asked the FBI to enter the
wUl be named to determine whether any criminal
investigation. Webster said Meese turned down
his routine offer of assistance Nov. 21 when
wrongdoing oq:urred In the Iran-Contra
Reagan first ordered the attorney general to find
connection.
out all the details of the arms sale.
A special three· judge panel was considering the

Pictures ytMI Be lladc llfore O!rislmas

MEN'S

SPORT SHIRT
SALE

Our tntin st•k of
Caatltt Tapes is rttlucttl
for this wttktnd. lily
now for Christmas.
lEG. 15.7. to S15.79
SALE
to

SAVE NOW MEN'S AND
BOYS' DEPARTMENT-1ST FLOOR
BIG SELECTION - FINE ouAun
B

leouliful Hltclion in lizt S 11414'/d,MOS-I5'!d,LII 6. 16 ,M

and XL 07-17'1!1. Fino quality,
fvH cut anti tapered llyle.
·
, I IUS
Sport, Shirts ............. sll.81
116.95 .
Sport Shirts ............. 113.48
111.95
sport Sh'lrts ............. IIS.18
12U5
~ Shirts ............. 117.41
T_rt

$4 65

$12 65
SALEI
Christmas

• oys

MEN'S STIETCH

' Demm
' or Corduroy J eans

I

•Men's Flannel Work Shirts
•Men'$ Buxton Billfolds
•Men's Basic Denim Jeans
•Men's Genuine Leather Belts
•Hanes Thermal Underwear
•Men's Sweaters
•Quilt Lined Flannel Shirts
•All Boys' Shirts
•Men's Dress Slacks
•Men's Work Uniforms

Big s.ledion .
12.99 to 14.19

R~g.

run. and man.

~~::i=::~~::==~=~~~~----~.-~~~"

MEN'S

CHILDRE~'S

JACKETS

TOP$&amp;
PANTS

SPORTSWEAR

Abig stlection af stylts and
colors. ltather jackets indudttl, regular and utra
Iorge sitH.

Sele Prlee

$2 39 to

Sa" on quality

blousH, tldrls, kllit
tops and pallft for
littll girls and bop . .

Pttite, lllitsy 1ft! tx1ra silts.
DHon
ts-. Jacbts,
lloutet, 111ft, Skim, SWMIen. Give hlr • ..a.... DHon

sr.:

lhit Christmatl'I"""' J

Sale Prices

$319

SALE
PRICES

dtdis. kikhM......., .....,_

'WINTER

Wrapping Paper

IOYI.

Y'llit our House.- D11 hwnt
onthtfintflooraMIOvtGIICoollwart, eltctricalwlancor, dithn.
~ mlcrowa .. . _ - . ,

1111111. pocbt
,

Sole

$525
to

Save

$4650

.-

DENIM JEANS

luy lee and Wrangler ltgular fit and 1111n'1 fit
sizts 29 Ia 50 waist. luy
your favorite now and

SAVE ON HOUSEWARES

:Leading consumer advocate
;urges veto Qf -tort measl.lre
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
. COLUMBUS &lt;UP!) - Consu·
· mer groups and trlallawyers 'are
·. lrying to Induce Gov. Richard F.
: Celeste to veto. a comprehensive
· overhaul of Ohio's civil justice
and Insurance regulation sys, tel'l'\s. saying the bill would
· restrict the rights of workers and
: consumers to obtain fair compensation for injuries.
,
The bill, recently passed by the
General Ass~bly, Is 011 jts wa)l
to,tlle gov""'nor's desk for action.
"Your role as· governor Is to
uphold fundamental principles of
access to justice, not to yield to a
slamjlede of assertions without
evidence · and unwarranted as. saults on victims' rights," consumer advocate Ralph Nader said

25°/o

WOMEN'S

"""•u•'" Miss·THE Low
SALE PRICES
ON THESE QUALITY, ITEMS
Women's Dresses
Children's Coats
Women's SIHpwear
Entire Stock Jewelry
Coty Fragrances
Children's Snowsuits
1Angel Treads Cozy Boots
little Girls' Dresses.

CHAIR SALE

Quality Berklint rtclilws, Nctric pawtr rtdintn, rock-a-loungers and wafl-awar rtdinerL
Aha on sale it our entire stoclc of sw1"f r•ktrs
and wood rDCkerL
·
frH Dtlinry for Christmas

-.

1/4 OFF ALL CHAIRS

MEN'S

WESTERN SHIRTS

Abit ttlection of colors and palttrns
ill paly cott011 blends and flannt!L

RCA Stereo V'Hieo
Cassette Recorder

ltgUior, tall and bill sizn.

Sale Prices

•Infrared temote control
•Up to 14 dey, 2-evont pro-

MEN'S

(ORDUROY JEANS
AWo 11y W,...., solid c••· Waist
sizes H to 42 and 111ra tlzes U lo SO.

. gr•mmer

•107-channol, 80-poehion
broad·CAitl cable tuner•
•Now image-ehetpenlng
High Quality VHS !HOI

-..-

Sawt Now.

·

119.95 .............. Sole 115.99
122,95 .............. Sole 11o.Y1r/

•c'** vowt foul cMM c_,....•,..,.._.~o

Quality Wrimgler
Blouses, Knit Tops, Pants
and Tank Tops.
Tops Sizes S to XL
'Pant Sizes 3 to 15
and 6 to 20

Sile Prlee4

$599 'to
$1949

MEN'S

KNIT SHIRTS

Solid colors, stripes, nonlty prints,
dressy and casual 'tyltL S, M, ~ XL
- Nationaly kno~Wn brands.
S12.9S Knit Sllirts ..... S9.70
S1S.95 Knit Shlrts ... l11.90
119.95 Knit Shirts ...SlUO
122.95 Knit Shirts ... 111.20

SALE PRUlESI

CHRISTMAS SALE!
VAN HEUSEN

BOYS JA(KETS

DRESS SHIRTS

Stla Prleae

Ntck sim 14 1/1 lo 17 1/1,
tleen lengths 32 to 35.
Whitt, solid colors and neat
patttl'm. Choose taptrotl
or full cut stylts. ·
111.00 Van Heusen
Shirts ................ 114.40
'21.00 Van Heusen
Shirts ................ 116.80
122.00 Van Heusen
Shirts ................ 117.60
123.00 Van Heunn

Shirts ................ 111.40

Sl1es I to II
lt Tlpt &amp; (Ompul

SAUl lEN'S &amp; BOYS'

TUBE SOCKS

Men'ul~ts9

to15, !lays' 9 toll. Whiltar grey
with calOr tops. plus wliitt. W by Honts- for
that Hltlt utro ..t.

.... '1.75 ............~......i .....Salt 11.21

.... S2.2.5·.........................Salt 11,65

.... •t.so ......................r. s... •1.aa
LADIES'

THEIMAL UNDEIWEAR

SO/SO IMIY/cetten llletlcl. Assorttd
-. coltrs ·and printj.
Sitts: S thru XL
79
Only 4 1

$

........,....

£,.,,.,~. 11141 ·

··ll

CMMI&amp;I CUD

•

1

SHOP FRIDAY
TIL 8

Lt. governor's office
readied for occupant

SAtE!

WRANGLER
SPORTSWEAR

·~

Thursday In a letter to the Influences."
governor.
Nader said the legislation will
·The Ohio Public Interest Cam· do nothing to guarantee the
paign said the bill should be availability of liability Insurance
vetoed because it · "severely at reasonable rates, but will
limits" the rights of victims to . subject courtroom justice to
collect ·damages from accidents "!actors o! power and money."
caused by defective products and
"This legislation will freeze the
companies' negligence.
evolving potential of Ohio's com·
Trial lawyers maintain the mon law. the compassionate
legislation would wreck the deli· evolution of which has deterred
cately balanced civU justice unsafe practices, disclosed
system.
dangers to a wider public, and
The bill was pass~!!! In holle5 of expanded respect for huma!lllfe
ensuring available and .afforda- · that dlsUnaullhes OIU' countey
ble commercial 11alllllty lnsu· !rorntmost Other nations,'' Nader
ranee by cutting down on the wrote.
OPIC issued a handbill headed
number of frivolous lawsuits and
with a skull and crossbones and
excessive damage awarjls.
"I urge you to be the leader the caption: ~ 'Never Again." It
your Intellect can have you be said recipients should write
and side with the Injured or sick Celeste and request a veto.
OPIC said the legislation would
victims, not the overcompensated Insurance executives, and restrict Ohioans right to protect
veto Substitute Senate Bill 330, as themselves against such hazards
amended," Nader told the as asbestos. the Dalkon Shield,
dioxin, Agent Orange and the
governor.
explodlng
Ford Pinto.
"Otherwise your -legacy here
"Most legislators who voted
wUI be long remembered in
anguish by harmed people and by for It really did not know what it
a less safe Industrial system would do," said the handbilL
subject to fewer deterrent

Trooper Daniel L. Hopkins

Post selects
'
top
trooper
Trooper Daniel L. Hopkins,
27, has been selected 1986
"Trooper o! the Year" by his
pee~s at the Gailia·Melgs post
o! the Ohio Highway Patrol.
The announcement was
made today by Lt. Dan Hend·
erson, post commander.
Hopkins was selected in
recognition of outst ~nding service during 1986.
The selection was based on
leadership abilities. pro!esslqnal ethics. courteous treat·
ment of others, enthusiastic
work attitude and cooperation
with supervisors, peers and
the general public.
Hopkins is now a candidate
for district qnd state awards,
to be announced later.
Hopkins joined the G-M post
In 1984 after graduating from
the palrol academy.
Originally · from Augusta,
Ky., Hopkins graduated !rom
Bracken County High School.
He attended Eastern Ken·
tucky University, where he
earned an associate degree In
police administration. He
served as a police officer on
the Augusta Police force two
years prior to joining the Ohio
State Patrol.
Hopkins and his wlfe Teresa
reside on Rt. 2, Gallipolis.

TV COMPETITQRS - The Melp High School
Quiz Team will be on television Saturday evening,
on Cbiulnel 15, MAP, Parkersbur , W.Va., in
. -.
!W"''II lit
SoCiety." , lnclu~ed In lhls teleYised .honor
program; lor seniors only, are 20 learns !rom 20

'r

Reagan spokesman will step down
WASHINGTON !UP!)- White others as victims.
House spokesman Larry
Speakes, on the !Iring line lor
The resignations later in the
almosi six years, is heading to day of White tJouse drug policy
Wall Street In a move he adviser Carlton Turner and
describes as coincidental to the White House physician T. Burton
crisis that confronts President Smith did little to quell rumors of
'
Reagan.
a po~sible staff exodus.
Praised by Reagan for "cool·
"These are three unrelated ·
ness under pressure" and "pro· resignations," said deputy White
fessionallsm and effectiveness at House press secretary Albert
times of crisis and ' calm, " Brashear. "None of the them has
Speakes announced Thursday anything to do with one another."
that he is going to work Feb. 1 for
Interior Undersecretary Ann
the Wall Street giant Merrill Dorr McLa ughlin, who worked
Lynch &amp; Co.
for White House chief of staff
"A great opportunity pres- Donald Regan at the Treasury
.ented Itself and I took .It, " Department, was considered a
Speakes said -In an Interview. "I strong candidate to replace
wanted to be certain the presl· Speakes. who may triple his
dent was comfortable with my $75,100 salary on Wall Street.
decision and my timing and he
Other possible contenders In·
was."
elude: Sheila Tate, a. former
The announcement was not press secretary to Mrs. Reagan ;
unexpected, but served to fuel Brashear, and Gary Schuster,. a
speculation that the scandal over former Detroit News and CBS
arms sales to Iran and diverted News correspondent now work·
profits to Nicaraguan rebels lng as a consultant to the White
would hasten departures of some House.
White House aides - or claim
Another potential candidate,

COLUMBUS . (UPI) - The larger - not significantly larger.
Ohio lieutenant governor's of· It's a very constrained budget,"
flee, vacant since July 1985, Is she said.
being spruced up for Lt. Gov.·
Leonard Is looking for a chief of
elect Paul R. Leonard, who will staff and a receptionist. He
move In Jan. 12, becoming the already has hired Beckl Bean,
office's !irst occupant In 18 Allen's secretary, as his sche·
months.
duler and director of constituent
Leonard, the mayor o! Dayton, affairs.
is conducting job Interviews
Suzanne Fraley; executive sewhile his quarters across the cretary to former Celeste chief of
corridor from the governor's stall Raymond T. Sawyer, will
office are cleaned, repainted and fufill the same role for Leonard's
recarpeted in part.
chief of staff.
Jan Alien, deputy chief of staff
to Gov. Richard F. Celeste, ~s
directing the transition. She said
some new furniture may ·be
purchased and that the refurbish·
lng will cost $6,000 to $7,000.
"Primarily, Paul's going to
make do with what's there," said
Allen.
The lieutenant governor's of·
flee has $197 .2651n its budget this
fiscal year even though there Is
no lieutenant governor. The last
lieutenant governor. Myrl H.
Shoemaker , died In 1985 shortly
after the current budget was
enacted.
Celeste and Leonard have said
that the new lieutenant governor
wUl play a key role In economic
development and will serve as
the administration's liaison with
local governments and the bus!·
ness com~Runlty.
,
"The governor and Paul are
working on the development of
what his role will be," $31d Allen.
Allen Is preparing the lieu ten·
ant governor's budget request,
which must be su bmltled this
week to the state Office of Budget
LOG REINDEER - Melule Slethem of the Shade Valley
and Management.
Council of Floral Arts, who Ia alsa a parent volunteer at the Chester
The current two-year appropriElementary School, worked with Mal')' Ja Buckley's class to
ation Is $394,429. and Allen said
create a log reindeer lor a lawn decor Ilion. Here Harvey Bartlmus
the new one wUl be "a little bit
ftnlahes ofi"Rudolph" with a bright red nose. ·.

I

area schools. Meigs will be up against the quiz
learn !rom Fort Frye In Saturday's program.
right, are Meigs Quiz Team
From lett
•· I'Midi _ilf} r L8t•,·"-UCilJW,'DeliliJW•h
and Jennl Swartz, and th~lr advisor, Rita Slaven.

Marlin Fitzwater, press secretary to Vice President George
Bush, scotched talk Wednesday
that he would succeed Speakes.
Denying he was "abandoning
ship," Speakes said the Iran
arms-Contra aid uproar, which
has created a massive public
relations problem, was the reason he decided to delay his
departu re until Feb. 1.
" I wanted to stay on for a
longer period than one normally
would have, " he said. "The 60
days will give us an opportunity
to talk to the public. I am
convinced the president has been
doing the right thing and I think
by the time I leave we'll have pu1
a lot of this behind us ."
Speakes, 47, who will become
senior vice president for commuplcatlons for Merrill Lynch,
said he took pride in having buUt
"a press office as good as any
that has ever been" and said, "If
I could wrile my epitaph, it would
read: 'He told the truth.
Always. " '

lawn
children. They made colorful bows
them to lhe tree.
Taking part In Ihe project lrom the left, Shain Lo.clar, Raymond
Tipple, Tommy Shuler, Travis Cain, ..arvey Bartlm\18, Thomas
Baslm, Alex Dowler and Tom McKlty, wllh teecher Mary Jo
Buckley.
'

I

�•'

Commen:t

The

Page 2-The DaMy Sentl1181 '.

,.

Po!fl8rov-:-Mkldleport. Ohio
.Friday. December 6, ·1988

Ohio

.' '

The Daily Sentinel
ll1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohl() ·
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREsTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb.

.

ls:ffii':i:! ....,..__.._-r,..........,doo=o
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

-Ottawa's hot potato

William A. Ru.sher

·.

By Unlte41

Brian Mulroney, the Progres. shlngton during World War II.
minister, that Norman was In no·
cent
of · all wrongdoing, the
slve Conservative prime minisAs recounted earlier In this
ter of Canada, Is trying to decide space, a book recently published conventional liberal wisdom
what to do with the hottest potato In Canada ("No Sense of Evil," ever since has been that Norman
that has yet landed In his lap. by James Barros, a ·professor at was driven to suicide by false
Before the year Is over, he riiust the University of Toronto) makes charges.
•
make up his mlnd.whether to try It clear that Herbert Norman, a
But Professor Barros thoughtto cover up one of the worst Canadian foreign service vete- fully appended to his book on
security scandal s In Canadian . ran who committed suicide In . Norman a bOmbshell Involving
history, or to. publicly acknowl· 1957, was a lifelong communist Pearson: the full text of testlnledge tha&lt; one of his predecessors and probably an agent of Soviet ·ony by Elizabeth Bentley, who
as prime minister (and one from 'intelligence as well.
had been ~ a courier for the
the opposition Liberal Party at · Since liberals at the time of Perlo-S IIvermaster espionage
that) may knowingly have supp- Norman's death accepted the ring In Washington during World
lied classified Information to a assurances of the late Lester War II, before a heretofore
Soviet espionage ring In Wa- Pearson, then external affairs secret session of ihe U.S. Se-

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

' Press
AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally

Associa1!on and 'the American Newsp3:per Publis~rs A.sSQciaUon.

LETTERS OF OP fNION ar(' W£'lrome. They shoold bf&gt; less than .llO words
long. AlllNiers aresUbjl'Ct to edit ing and rtJJ.st be slgn€d with name, address and
telephone nu mber. No unsigned leiters will be published . Letters should be In
good taste, addressing lssu0S, not personalities.

...AND WII@N fOU PriLL
/T.l'A~ ITS~T&amp;..?OP$

·The Lighter Side

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON IUP1 J -Now that Thanksgiving Is out of the way ,
perhaps we can get down to some serious Chrlslmas shopping.
Baffled over what to buy for the proverbial man who has
everything? Well, permit me.to pass along a few suggestions from
Michael Korda, editor of Si mon &amp; Schuster, a publishing house.
Among olher things, he lists a 34-hour day, a "platinum" credit
card. a "personalized parking place" a "perfect" secretary and a
·•permanent" brass nameplate.
Korda, as you can see, goes in big for "p's."
I cim see where a 34- hour day might come In handy In the book
business although opinions may vary as to what constit utes a perfect
secretary.
· Anyway, a platinum credit card should take care of the man who
has everyt hing. But what abouo the kid who has everything?
' Probably you are shopping for some children who already have
been given portable tape players, television sets and computers.
Have you considered they might like to find under the Christmas tree
a•gift-wrapped rechargable batlery?
· I can tell you from bitter experience there is no grea ter
dlsappointmenl than get tin g the battery -powered· dev ice you asked
for. only to discover tha t ol' Santa has forgotten the batteries.
· The Phillips Home Products company of Akron, Ohio, a
do-it -yourself manufacturer, estimates that Americans spend about
$"l billion doll ars a year on batteries.
· Except on Chr ist mas morning when all the neighborhood places
that might sell batteries are closed.
By giving the kid a rechargable battery , you could become a bigger
Ctorlstmas morn hero or heroine than if you shelled out for one of the
billion-odd battery-powered products now on the market. ·
· And the children on your lisl don' t have to worry about il running
d&lt;iwn. All they need do is plug It into a wall sockE't and- presto! - the
appliance is as good as new.
AI least the power source is. I'm not respo nsible for what
youngsters can po to a computt&gt;rlzed toy ·or game.
·But maybe th e kid who has everything already has a battery
recharger. Kids nowadays weren't hiding behind the door or out
s!lm~where buyin g batt eries when the brains were passed out. It
does n't take them long to figure out their stupid parents likely will
forget one essenti al Ingredien t.
·
In that case, mayix' you would llke to gift-wrap a robot.
· According loa magazi ne article l saw earller this yea r, Ihe robOt
tnaus try "Is In a d ~pressed state," mainly because many potential
rustomers now realize the factory automation Isn't the answer to all
.their problems:
: So you should be able to pick up a robot fairly cheap. Particularly a ,
.ascd robot.
: If children on your list became the first kid on the block to own a
•Osed robOt, oo· a n automated factory, lt could help prepare them for
)at~r life.
: 1 mean. if they got fin ed $!00 million or so for stock market
:Insider" trading, they could instruct the perfect secreta ry to toke It
&amp;ut of petty cash.
. ·
·

.

'

Letter to the Editor
•
••

A thank you for the help

•
: 1would take thi s opportunity to
rhank the merchants of Pomeroy
and Middleport for the donations
that were made to the Salisbury
fall Fest ival.
•• Also to thank the teachers and
our sec retary and princlpal for
t)le ma ny differen l jobs a nd ways
t-hey helped Into making the
evening run a little smoother. A
~ecla l thanks to I he Shady River
Sbufflers for addi ng a new event

to the festival, In which the
audience rea ll y enjoyed. Also. to
Rev. Melvin Franklin, for ending
a nice evening with a deli ghtful
auction , which everyone really
enjoyed, which was also a new
Idea to the fes tival. And again to
the pa rents who helped in any
way.
Sincerely,
Becky Broderick
Chairman of the
Wavs and Means

~~l.. fviARVtN GARPEN&amp;
I~

PUTTING ToGETHER
A LEVERAGED BU't'ouT
OF PARK PLACE .

'foday ln history
TOday. Is Friday, Dec. 5, the 339th day of 1986 with 26 to follow.
'nle moon Is moving ~oward Its first quart er.

,••:

-·

II

S .t3H -

s

,

Central

Turning inventive

College Cage Scores

3%

II IS .2711

1

3 13 . 11\11

8

Petroll

1

1 .SIMI

5!;
11~

K 10 AU
C~ ri~~W~d
i 8 .-1311
Wt•li4ern C'rmfl.,l!llc:e ·

lnllllllll

Utllh

'II

.

om,·r.r

li

HouHton

s
s

7 ,M.'J
' .411

t \1

~ ,&gt;IJ!I

I"!

r

l2 . ~.t

t

.583

3%
.a

.m

S%
10

Su Uie lt9, San Alllnnlo 102
Nt&gt;w \ 'or!.: 9,1. LA. CllpperN 9!
Golde• Stile IIi. LA l.RkPn~ 106
Portland 100. &amp;cumento 102
Frld!I.)''K Gam('tO
AUant llAIIndl'ua, ~:311 p.m.
Phllru:telphl~a at Do~ on, 7:.'Nl p. m.

(Fia)

~I

Maln~t·armi•Kton

FIQrlda Tech tt, Palm Bc,h AUutk: ~~

(Hy.) at, B~.-ml•l' 1111
Kenl.eky Wet~lf')'llll IS. Kt&gt;nluckl' St. 111
LSU 13, ArkMRM St. tl
N.E . Lout..llll'l~t '7t, Ml1111. Colle![!"~
Uf·Marlln Ill. Union U•lvtr~~lly to
Va . CoinmOnlr'!"eall h 73, Willi run&amp; Mlllr)'

New fork.U Utah, 9:30p.m.
Sttlurd""'" Gamf'!l

Wllflh. A Lee 1D, Gtei'Mhoro :JA

We!!l ern llllno~ f.a. Morrhnd Sl: 79
\\'llf')' C ollfire ~&amp;. lA. Collere 7.J

~·ldt11• Ill Hou!llon, nil hl
f:hlclt«~fltt Slla Antonio, nl~ ht

Ealll. llllnolrl il, NW Mh!!lo•rl

l'lw 1.. ,b: aii.A fUpperl'l, niJ(ht

llllno~

•

Ulllh lW !oilll'riUlll'lliO, ni~~:H
Dull~ at Golden stale, niKbl

• Wnii'Pi ( "nnleren CI'
l'ut rl ck Dl\'lo;lon
nr I. T PI~ . OF Gi\

Nl'

U 6 U

M 101

1 12 fl tO

!IK 110

I!

Molltr eal

1:! II I :10 101 u
1.1 7 :1 ~ 1«1 'H
J:t 10 J ~ 92 113

RU!Iton
Bufhlln

II II .J 28
~ 16 3 1:1

,

.

!\rhona 110, SIUI Olero

01 !olan

~ fiX

t.t

75 M7

lt7115

15 tl 2 32

t~ iM

911 4

HOUSTON (UP!) - For the senior linebacker from Birfirst time, a linebacker -and an mingham, Ala., led the 12th·
Alabama player - has won the ranked Crimson Tide In forced
Lombardi Award.
fumbles, quarterback sacks, and
St MarJ~'~ 'n. S.F . Slatf' 45
Cornelius
Bennett
became
the
tackles for losses.
~ ~ . Mlll'llnli ~. Sht'IM!t-·lllt!kl'ion 88
U( ' San Dk&gt;«&amp; .W, Bobof' St. !I!
first
Alabama
player
ever
to
"Cornelius ls a great football
USF K3. UOP 75
•
receive an Individual postseason player," said Alabama line" 'estrrn WII.Kh. 8&amp;, Northwt'llll ' ollc•~•
award Thursday when he gar- backer coach Sylvester Crooms,
nered the 17ih Rotary- Lombardi who accompanied Bennett In
Transactions
Award,
given annually to the best head coach Ray Perkins' abHa~otohall
lineman
In college football.
sence. " It's been a privilege just
l'lthhurP - Slped frte·a~~:ent out·
lleldel"'llut ch Davl!ol and Tommy Dunbar
"
For
all
of
the
fans
of
Univerto work with him. He's not the
to Trlplt!&gt;A t'!O ntrat'tN; appolntrd Funk
Franchi and Terry l. oa:an I!C.'OOlba~
sity of Alabama football that kind of athlete you coach - you
.o;upervilout'!l.
have followed Alabama football ' just observe, shake your head.
Selilt Ut!- PIIICed pitcher Let Guell!•rfor so long and never had a and make sure he gets to the
m• and Otllfkollk!r Mlk,. Wl!!.lln~"kl on
Ihe rO!Iter ol l:~~o l a:Ul' of I he PllclllcCoao;t
· major-award winner, and lor me game on time.
t:earue.
Colle.,.,
to be the first one, means a whole
"He's always been wllllng to
Gleavllf' CoUtlt 1\\'. Vil..) - Funk
lot
to
me,"
said
Bennett,
who
was
make
himself the best he can
\'lnCPnt rHiped • •ud coach.
Lock Hl&amp;l't!ll- Annount:ed rMI~•Ifln
chosen over Miami's Jerome possibly be. He won't settle for
of loot hall c~ ilt h .lark Fl•her.
Brown, Oklahoma's Brian Bos- anything less. I thank God for
Hoc.·k~·
NY RM~s - . Sui tf'fl w in~~: MI..
worth, and Ohio State's Chris . giving me the privilege of being
Uonne:lly io New fi~&amp;ven of 1t. A.HL .
Spielman.
associated with someone like
·
"It will (mean a lot ) for the rest him ."
'
of my life. I'll never forget this
"He practices every day llke
moment. I'll remember It until he's trying to make the team,"
the
day that I die. To be known Perkins said. "He's tile LawCochran's Exxon, Karrle StePhens, 323;
Mooney's Body Shop, Kathy Butcher, 528;
along with the other winners •of rence Taylor of college football.
Eleclrlc Motor Service. Rachel Whitehair,
the prestigious award Is an honor U I had to put'together a team,
427.
'
200 or over gam es bowled : Llllian
and a prlvllege."
college or pro, Cornelius would
Wilson. 213; Hazel Marcum, 201 ; Kathy
Bennett,
a
6-foot-4,
235-pound
be one of the first ones I would
Butcher . 201; Elaine Ryan, 210.
choose."
Chlc.oo St. 101, M11,.&amp;en1 Coli. !l7
&lt;;olorado St. ill. Denn" Sll
Redlilnd; 58, Menlo foil. 58
So. Utah St. 9'l. \\'elll'r St. 00

67 1K

"

lliO "I ~ I II H 96
C 'al~lll'.l'
H II I 'l9 !1-1 !f'l
LoN i\n~f'lj'!li
II I~ 2 U li lt 121
Van (VU\'er
1 IIi 2 16 X3 IO:l
Thuro,;dw,v ' s fko ~ ull "
Mlnr,t'SOta S. Nt&gt;w ·h•rsf')' 3
F.Aimont11n

ROKton a.

st . 1M

Bernadl•o 110, S~an Dlep u. 113

Ca llfnrnl a 1\0, N .C •.C::hl&amp;rlott e 6.1

H &amp;I

9 1:1 2 tl
115 5 II

coming off tough Monday night
game In San Francisco. That
should make the difference ln an
otherwise even matchup. Washington 20, NY Gl~nts 17.
NY Jets (plus 6) over San
Francisco - Two 49ers rookie .

Bennett captures
Lombardi award

.....

'

('hkll«Q
Sm)'lht&gt; lllv~lon
\\1n nlpeif

5~

i\lr f'or~ i$, Doant' ColleJ{e 53

f.11.mphl•lt Cnnfft'l'l1 l'i'
Norrt.l Dh•bllon
W L T l'bl. fiF Gl\
MlantosOia
II 11 2 2~ 182 9~
Toronto
10 II -1 l'-1 ltl 116

OetroH

i

Valpanlllo 13. IIUnoiK Te1.il 83 '
" 'IKoonsln n, Sou till Cam\lna u
Soul hwetll
Florida 119, lioUthern Methodist 11)
Ntw Mexlt.ou St. IH, New Mtdc,:o 82
Ta811 AAM K&amp;. Snuthwft4t Tna.'l 16
Tuba!W, Cal·lrvln e N
W Te~tM St. 91, \\'e st New Me~t lt-o 71

,\ fwtll; lllvl"'-"

Qiu•hc•t'
llllrtrord

1M

st. JOM(!flh'l' (Ind.) 103, Trlntl;)'

I~ 5 ~ 3M IOK 57
IJ K I :Jl 9i X3
13 10 2 ttl &amp;1 u
12 II 2 'ai JOG ll.f

RltftJif'l'!i

tt. Chlcaau St.

By DAVE RAFFO
NEW YORK (UPI) - Selections of this week's NFL games:
Sunday
NY Giants (plus 3%) over
Washington -The Redsklns are
at home and the Giants are

e2

lowa\st: 14. WI~CONIIft.Grtfa Bay n
Kan11• R2. M'utdnaf;on 811
Kan!iM Si. 12. Texlltl Trch 1!
Mln•HOt•1S. Euh't'n MichiiiUI"
Nil Mlcbl~lll U. H•ron (S.D. ) 18
Notre Dame 60. CorDell Sll
Sartnaw Valley U. Sprlna~ Arbor oli

NHL Standings

W~hlnglon

Mldwt~il

Qtll'hl•1· :!

Hur1f(lrd t, Phllllllelphlu 1
Cilla:IU'Y -1. f hltllKO I
l.oM ,\nl{t.&gt;lt!!o t Torvnio :1
Frtdao·'li Game~
St. Loot,. Ill Buftl&amp;lo. 1:35 p.m.

Montreal 1'1 ne.rol. 11M p.m.
F..dmont(ln Ill Pllll'lllu rt~:h, 1; 3$ p.m.
NY Rll•lt!nl at Wlnnlpe_., M:OI p. m.
N\' hdWICSI'I'!o Ill Vanc'tMI\'t'r. K:05 p.;n ,
SatllrdMY'~'~ G11mt'l'l

Phllalelphht Ill Boston
Buffalo Ml Nrw ,)('1',..,, niJ(ht
Dt.&gt;lroll ~ Haf1tGrd. nlr:hl

. '

Local bowling
THURSDAY SWINGERS
Team

Standings for No\' . 20, 1&amp;86

\\'

L

,5 ................................ ... ..... ... ... 70
Plant s Exxon ............................ 6a
Mooney's Body Shop .................. 58

·

26

Cochran' s Exxon .. .....................
Giovanni 's Pizza ........................
Albarcon , lrt c. ..............
.. ......
Jordan Gas Service ..................
Joe Cain. All y .......... .......... ... ....

28
38

48
44
42

48
52
M

40
38
..... 36

56
58
,;o

Rutland Min e Supply
El['('trlc Motor Serv\("(' .............. 36

60

Pla nts Exxon, FloA nne RifO€', ~58 ;
Jordan Gas Service, Kim Greene. 400;
Albarcon , Inc.. U&gt;e Br adshaw, 45G:
Rutland Min«' Supply, Linda Peterson,
423: Joe Cain. Alty .. ElainE' Ryan, 464;
Giovanni ' s Pi zza, RoS£' Cooper &amp; Geneva
Atlktns, 405: 115. Lillian Wil son, 553:

'The Daily Sentinel

'

crlbes how Caterlne Littlefield ter Mlckl Siegel. That's why she
So here~s a toast to designing
Greene. a widow with five happened to Invent "jonny mop," women. And, while we raise our
children, was a major contrlbu- a plastic handle fitted with a glasses, let's click rims for
tor to the Invention of the disposa ble. flush -away cleaning Elizabeth Flanagan, a.'NE'w York
landmark cotton.gin. Ell Whitney pad. I've been a "jonny mop" barmaid during the Revolution:
was one of her boarders when she consumer for years, but was ary War. She concocted ·a potent
complained to him how troubl e· unawar e of It s Illu strio us potion of rye whiskey, ruf(l and
some It was to separate cotton genealogy.
fruit juice and embellished th~
from lis seeds before s'plllnlng
Wh en Rodgers wasn't cleaning drink with a feather from a
the flufl Into thread. Whitney's the bathroom, she fashioned rooster's tall . The French officer
first deviCe In 1792 was a !allure _ other useful llems, Including who took his first sip cried· "Vlve
- until Greene suggested he use sewing patterns made of washa· le coq's tall!" '
.
wire Instead of wooden teeth to do ble fabrics and bookgames for
Let's make that "VIve the .
the job.
children called I he Turn and mothers of Inventions!"
·
It m_ay seem out of character, Learn Books.
but one-time glamorous actress
Hedy I,amarr co-patented a
secret torpedo-control system
for use during World War II.
It ls understandable that much
of women's Inventiveness has
centered on the house and
· children where, of course, we
have bOuntiful expertise.
·vyhat mother hasn't been
thankful lor disposable diapers?
Well - you guessed It - they
were dreamed up by another
mother, Marlon Donovan. Ac·
cording to an article In "Good
Housekeeping" (September
1984), the New York City housewife experimented first with
shower curtains , cutting and
folding pieces In different ways,
until the scheme was leak-proof.
She also created diaper snaps, a
big Improvement over diaper
pins. After obtaining a patent In
1951, Donovan startf\1 her own
manufacturing company and, In
•
just five years, sold the business
~
,.
for $1 million.
'
While composer Richard
'
Rodgers was sitting at ,the plano '
writing hit songs for "Okla·
'•
homa" and "The King and I," hi s
·~
wife, Dorothy, was cleaning the
bathroom. "I thought there just
,J
had to be a better way to scrub
" You ha~e been a VERY BAD BOY. I told you
••
toilets than the old-fashioned,
- we Will NOT negotiate with terrorists. "
•
unsanitary brush method," she
,,
told "Good Housekeeping" wrt-

!USPS t4~9i01
A DIVLI"tloa of Mul~lmcdla, Inc.
PuiJlishf'd

PVt'f ;r' afll'rnoon , Monday
Friday. lll Court St.. Po·
m('rey. Ohi o. by 1h&lt;' Ohio Vall ry Pub·
llshlnJ! ,Compan y /Mulllmf'dl a. Inc..
P,o mf'roy. Ohio ~ fi7 G9 , Ph . 99'.2·2156. SC'·
rond class po.~ ta~ e paid at PomNoy.

thr~h

Ohio.
MPmbPr: Unllrfl Prf's .~ l ntcrn n tlonal.
Inland Dally Prrss Associ at ion and t hf'
Ohio Nrw!lp._prr Associat ion. Nat to nal
Adv('rtlslng Rcpr&lt;'SE'nl a tlvf:', Branham
NC'wspapor Sal€'5, 733 Third Avenue'.
N('u: York. Nt'l'' York 100,17.

POSTMASTER: Send addrrss chan_gps
to Thr Dally S('ntlnd. 111 Court !'it..
Po meroy. Ohio 45769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
C~tr rl e r or Motor Route

By

OnE' Wf'f'k ...................... .. ........... $t25
OnC' Month ........... ......... ....... ~. .. .. S5.45
Onr Yf'ar ..................... ....... !.... $65.00
~INGLE COPV
PRICE
Dally ............................. .... .. 25 Cents

Berry's World

,

3

..
r:..

Subscriber s not d('sirl n ~~ttopay the car·
r lf'~ may r C'm\1 In advan('t' dlr('ct io
Th(' Datl.v SenllnE'I on a :l, 6 or 12 month
ball Is. CI'('(Ut will br ~v(' n carrl f'r each
W('l'k .

No s ubsc r !pilo n ~ by ni:-tll p•rmlttC'd In
ar('as whrrC' homr carrier scrvlcr Is
LI\"Uilabll'.

THURSDAY MORNING STARS
Team
W
Kempers Const .......................... 61
Governor's Girls ....................... 58
Creati ve Clrtl(' ........ .... .. ............ 57
Dobbins Co nst. . .. .. .. ... .. ......... .... 56
Swaln.s Au ct ............................. 48
Amer ican Ll·~· ............. ........ .... , 36

L
43
46
47
48

28

Kemper's ConsL took 6 polnl!'i from
Dobbins Canst . to remain In lsi place. High
series for Kempers wa s F. Marcum, 177,
hi gh series. 455. High gam e for Dobbins
Consl. was W. Dobbins, 189, hl~h serll'S,

DID YOU KNOW?

483.
Governor's Girls look 6 points from
American Legion to pur them In 2nd plare .
Hi~h ga me for Gov . Girls was R.
Cremeens, 204, high serifS, 471 .
Swains Auct. took Gpoints from Creallve
Circl e to remain In 3rd . High game ror
Creative Circle was P . Owens. 158. high

st'rles. Glenna Henderson, 409. Hl p:h p:ame

Court St., Gallipolis

Swains Auct. was C. Vanwinkle. 167, high
ser ies, 446.
Converting split s: J . Swain. J. lO; V.
· Grover. 4·5 &amp; 2·10; C. Vanwinkl e, 4·5·7; C.
Vanwinkle, 9·10.

Tonight's games
Warren Local a t Jackson
Logan at Marietta
Gallipolis a t Athens
Portsmouth at Ironton
Russell at South Point
Greenfield a t Miami Trace
Wheelersburg at Minford
Waverly at Portsmouitll West
Kyger Creek at Southwestern
North Gallla at Symmes Valley
Southern at Oak Hill
Hannan Tr ace at Eastern
Vinton County at Meigs
Saturday's games
Jackson at Wheelers burg
Cambridge at Warren Local
Chesapeake at Gallipolis
Portsmouth at Zanesvllle

NOW SERVES
LUNCH

-

I

II

·-----------------------

--

,

SPICTACUlAR ~5~~:0NS
675-4340

1980 Chevv C-10 Pickup !Diesell •• $~595

Auto, PI, PS, Air, St,OOO miles.
Auto., 6 cyl. topper.

1980 Chevy Lux, 4 spd •.•....•••• S895
1978 Chevy.lmpala .·~··············S1595
·4 dr., auto, PB, PS, Air. GoOd conciihon.
1979 Chevy Malibu Sta. Wgn ..... S1695

BIRDS!

Aulo~

-

6 cyl. Auto .

·An inexpensive feed to keep the ground feeders on the ground, squirrels, pigeons, etc.
Preferred by tree Sparrows, Mourning Doves,
Dark Eyed Junios and uplond birds.
'
·-·

SUGAR
·RUN
FLOUR
MILLS
180
Avt.
·

Pomtroy, Oh.

992-2115

Air. Rack.

1978 Ford Fairmont Sta. Wgn...:.. S895

CRACKED CORN

Mulberry

.

1978 Ford Club Cab .............. S1495 .

FEED
THE

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1111!

OR CUT YOUR OWN
Lacattd on Cherry Rldgt. Turn East at Darwin onto Rt.
681, go 4 mi. to Mlltpost. Turn South an granl road,
1•12 milt to grove.
WATCH FOil SIGNS .
HOURS: I 0 'Til Dark

__

USED CARS

..................... $18.20

~'SH~uP!~v!!ES

992-2156

thru Saturdays

Don't Take A Chance.

26 We eks.
....................... $35.W
!2 Weeks ........... .... .... ............... $61.W

~I

CALL

II :00 A.M.-4:00 P.M.

Weeks ......... .. ..................... S6fi.56

CHRISTMAS TREES

It Pays .
To Advertise ·

OSCAR,.S
RESTAURANT

OuiHide Meip Count~

I

BULLETIN

56

13Werk s ......... ... ......... .... ........ $17.29
26 Wocks ........................ .. ...... S14JI6

]J.We('kS

cornerback s will cure Jets' pass·
Detroit (plus 4 ~) over Pitts,
lng problems. NY Jets 24, San burgh - Lions have 10 days
Francisco 21.
,
between games, Steelers had
New Orleans (minus 4) over rough overtime game against
Miami - Saints' defens e should Chicago last week. Detroit 1.7,
be up to the task of stopping Dan Pittsburgh 14.
Marino. New Orleans has slim
Philadelphia (minus 4~) over
playoff hopes riding on outcome, St. Louis - Cardinals won first
plus the home field. New Orleans meeting and there's not enough
21, Miami 14.
difference between these teams
Indiana polis (plus II) over for a sweep. Philadelphia 20, St.
Atlanta - Falcons' offense lsil't Louts 14.
good enough to run away ~lth
Tampa Bay (plus 17) over
this. Colts will battle hard to Chicago - Bears can sleepwalk
escape record-tying 14th straight through this game, and they
loss, ,but have too many weak probably will. Chicago 20,
spots. Atl~nta 21, Indianapolis 13. Tampa Bay 6.
Denver (minus 5) over Kansas
Houston (plus 7) over San
City - Broncos would like to put Diego - Oilers are tough to pass
AFC West race behind them as against and Chargers will miss
soon as possible. Chiefs seem to pass rush of Les lie O'Neal.
have run out of gas. De nver 26, Houston 20, San Diego 17. .
Kansas City 16.
,
LA Rams (minus 5) over
Cleveland I minus 31 over Buf- Dallas - Look for repeat of last
falo - Browns are one of few season's playoff game, whenNFL teams used to the type of Eric Dickerson ran CowbOys
December weather they'll get In ragged. LA Rams 34, Dallas 17..
Buffalo. Cleveland 24, Buffalo 10.
Monday night
Clnclnatl (plus 5) over New
LA Raiders (minus 2'h) over .
England - Despite loss to Seattle- Raiders put It ali on the •
Denver, Bengals might be play- line here, and they've come too
Ing at their highest level of the f~r to let playoff chances slip .
. season. Lacking of running game away. But It won't be easy:
has to. hurt Patriots eventually. Seahawks seem back on track
Clnclnnatl27, New Englanoj 26.
and have won lour straight at
Green Bay (plus 3) · over home against Raiders. LA Raid·
Mlnnesot a -Packers a're rested, ers 23, Seattle 17.
loose and at hom e. Must-win • Best bet -LA Rams Last week '
situation could burden VIkings. - 5-8-1 Season record - 73-92-3 ,
Green Bay 28, Minnesota 24.
Best bets - 7-6.
'

If There Is A Question • • •

Mall SulNcrlptlons
Inside Meigs Couhly
~2

.

.

to start the second half and
chipped away at Detroit's lead
until tying the game at 66-66 wit~
4: 13 left.
. '
i
Toledo went on another scoring
spree, shutting out the wlnles;s
Titans In four of the last five
minutes.
:
Gher scored 13 points, one qf
four players In double figUres.
Blake Burnham led with 2ll
points, followed by Andy Fisher
with 17 and Mark German with
11.
•
Archie Tullos led Detroit with
27 points, which Included five of
eight ·attempts from behind the
three-point line. Brian Humes
had 12 and Marvin Owens 10. :
In other games, Mount Unloll
downed Washington and Jefferson 85-69, Otterbein beat Rolllns
(Fla.) 81-71, Wright State edged
Northern Kentucky 63-60 and
Walsh edged Find! ay 76-73.
Three Ohio colleges host tournament.s beglnnlng tonight. Den!,
son hosts the Big Red Tourney,
Malone the Pioneer Classic and
Youngstown Sta(e the Holiday
Classic while Urbana plays In tbe
•
Berea (Ky.) tourney.

Browns, Bengals are weekend picks over foes

6l

JeotJ;ey 1M PtllliMIPiphla, niJ(~ ·
Den\'1'1' w l&gt;etrol, nl.-hl:
HMo• at Clc&gt;\'f'IIWld. nl.-ht
Ne.·

Philadelphia
Pltll'lhurl{h
Plo'l' b landel"!i
Ne-w .J rr.~l'3·

70

Geor~awn

C hlc~W~ Itt Phembl, lt:30 p.m.
Dallll'l iU Lt\ lak!•n, 10: 20 p.m .

I

..

Rolin~~

,leallt'Y 79,,Brllllldeifl S3
.• I')'IU).I 61, SOul bern C!lnnetilrul 5~
CGnn.-tilq~t 62. O@ldral C~:mnflt'tlcul $!

Denver at Nrw •ll'f!tey, 11 p.m.
Milw aukee a&amp;t \\' W~hlaaton. Kp. m.

the planes' civilian potential.
Among the missions that could be •
cheaply and effectively handled 1
by an RPV arepollce observation .
of smuggling or other criminal ;
actlvl'ty; pipeline patrols check- ,
ing for sabOtage or natural '
threa ts; river patrols; disaster •
rescue coordination; pat~ls of ~
offshore oil rigs and livestock :
surveys over vast areas of open .,•
range.
· 1
CORRECTION: On Nov. 24, we l
reported that two former high· ~
level government officials had
been Involved In the secret ,
arms / hostages negotiations with •
Iran. One of them, ex-CIA official
Thomas Cllries, we reported, had
been Indicted In an arms scandal
in 1984, had pleaded guilty to
filing false Information with the .
DE&gt;fense Department, and had been fined $10,000.
That Is not correct. According '
to his attorney, John Ellsworth .
Stein of Washington, D.C., Tho- mas Clines has never been .
Ind icted for anything. Systems ·
Services International Inc. , a ·
company In which he held stock, .
was Indicted In the arms matter,
however, and did pay a $10,000
fine.

II,

F1arlda 1to, Southern MethocMMI 70

Rusty Brown~

'

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Temple' 11, Drex:tl5ft
The ('lta4el 81t, A,rmy ~
UrsiDUH &amp;5. Phil Pharmacy S1
"SDUih
Alderson-Broaddu1 M. WlleeUnr71
B•efteld 112, Brlltol (T~n .) Ill
C.mberl•d (KJ.) 81. Man HUI 1!
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role, but is generally not enthusl·
astic about the little planes. The
General Accounting Office,
which favors wide use of the
low-cost drones, attributes the
Air Force's lack of Interest to a
longstanding "pro-pilot bias"
and' a "perception of RPVs as too
drab or unexciting to generate
much enthusiasm." A GAO report adds:
"Therefore, while RPV s are
acc!'pted during wartime for
very high risk missions of mundane jobs such-as chaff dispensing and leaflet dropping , during
peacetime they are not regarded
with as much favor as thE'
high-technology aircraft."
The Army, Navy and CIA are
more enthusiastic about . the
RPV, and the Marines are
experimenting with a remotecontrol helicopter.
The Soviets, al!'rted to the
RPV's usefulness in Lebanon,
have deployed dozens already
with Syrian troops . A secret CIA
report predlcJs the Soviets will
eventually. produce hundred s,
possibly thousands, for · mass
deployment In Eastern Europe.
Meanwhll!' the Israeli RPV
producer. Mazlat, Is promoting

.m

9

DM~ton

Atlanta
Mllwauke

. . '~'
I

3 .HI -

l:'hiiiUllph
New .Ieney

Spy in .the sky______J. .ac_k_A_n_d_er_so_n_&amp;_k
..
. _D_al_e_Vt_an_A_;_t_ta_:_

•

1'

II

New fork

years.
,
But early In November, Dr. :
Alex Kindy , an M.P. for Calgary ·
·East, rose ' ln the House of ;
·Commons and placed on ·the 1
Notice Paper four sticky ques- ,
tlons concerning the Barros I

Wanted: Women to Invent
sti ck-proof honey- Jar lids ,
puncture-proof automobil e tires
and "plll " -proof collars for Ox·
ford cloth shirts. ,
Why not women? They've
already come up with some
dandles, Including Improvements for cars and satellites,
breakthroughs In medicine and
scores of household Invent Ions ..
You can thank Mary Anderson
for being able to see ahead when
driving through a rainstorm. She
Invented the wlndshlld wiper In
1903.
And In the space age, engineer
Yvonne Brlll, recently retired
from RCA's astrospace dlvlslon,
Invented a satellite propulsion
system that keeps communlca·
tlon satellites In orbit longer.
Forty .-ears ago, mlcroblolo·
gist Dr. Gladys Hobby was a
member of the research learn
experimenting with Injections of
penicillin. She went on to help
develoop streptomycin and codiscover terramycin. Think of
the lives she's saved. Yet, in a
classic understatement, she once
told an Interviewer: "It's been a
good life. I feel I've contributed
something."
Have you ever gasped as
hang-gilder pilots ran off moun·
taln ledges to soar hundreds of
feet above ground? Well, an
adventure-loving woman, Gertrude Rogalla, Invented t he hang
glider In 1948. (Psst! Her Husband helped.)
My grandmother could not
have kept house without her
Bissell sweeper. It wasn't electric, of course, but I remember It
had "Bissell" printed on It In gold
letters. Now, I've learned a
woman, Annie Bissell, created
the crumb collector that swept
her name Into millions of American .households.
The "Woman's Almanac" des·

Bo.oton

WMhiiiJLtn

ros;~.;:~h~eth;~o~lg~':sa~~~ ~
under the rug for another 30 :

WASHINGTON- In a series of control model airplane equipped
secret programs, the Pentagon with a small TV camera.
and the C1A are developing and
The advantages of RPVs over
deploying nearly $3 bll)lon worth manned aircraft are many and
of sophisticated flying drones obvious: They cost a relative
(known formally as Remotely pittance compared to the price of
Plloted Vehicles or RPVs) .
fighters and reconnaissance
This flying transmitter may planes . Needing none of the
became the workhorse of the equipment that keep pllots'allve,
int~lllgence business. Already,
drones burn a fraction of the fuel
some a reoperating as spy planes used by manned planes ·and can
over El Salvador and Nicaragua. also be maneuvered at speeds
The Israeli s demonstrated the that no pilot could withstand.
usefulness of RPVs In Lebanon Their ground controllers are far
where they provided "llve" tele· cheaper to train than pilots vision coverage of Syrian and and of course wben a drone Is
'other forces, tricked anti- shot down, no one Is killed or ·
aircraft miss li e ba tterles In to captured .
turning on their radars .(thus
giving away their locations) and
The RPV Is extremely hard to
se rv e d ot her battl ef ield knock down because of Its tiny
purposes.
radar "signature" - derived
Oddly enough, It was the from its size of no more than
Americans' use of drones In about 14 feet - and from Its
VIetnam that led to Israel's minimal heat output, which
interest. Jet -powered target thwarts Infra-red trackers and
drones launched from transport heat-seeking missiles. Its single,
planes flew more than 3,000 muffled low-horsepower engine
reconnaissance missions In VIet - makes little noise, a nd at high
nam, and It was an American altitudes the drone Is practically
engineer, Alvin E111s. who sold Invisible.
ttie Israeli military on RPVs in
The Air Force plans to buy
the early 1970s. His concept In · about 250 mid-range RPVs for a
effect was an oversize remot e- supplementary reconnaissa nce

nlrftl

Chl caKO allAN ..,nple~~,

ConfcrNct•

W L Pet . GB

Russians.
I
The response In Canada to this:
double whammy - the exposure;
of NormaD and the evidence;
agalsnt Pearson .- , has been, ,
understandably, rather ragged .;
Reviewers of the Barros book •
have tended to hem and haw over i
Herbert No~man, and .to Ignore:
the deadly testimony abOut Les· •
ter Pearson altogether. Give the;
near total dominance of ilberals ·
and leftists over the pqnclpal :
Canadian communication cnan· :
nels, until recently It seemed

Hints for the kid
who has .everything

J'Jolllrullll W•blnlloft. alrhl

~llllllllc DlviMkln

nate's lnternl!l SecurltySubcom-;
mlttee In 1951.
Bentley (whose veracity as a;
witness has withstood every test)·
told the subcommittee that hei
Information gatherer In Cana·:
dian circles In Washington was aCanadian communist named Ha-:
zen:;Sise, and that Slse told he~
that Pearson, then Canada'ssecond-ranklng diplomat In Wa -:
shlngton, "knew Slse was a;
communist and was willing tO&lt;
help." The subcommittee's coun-;
sel, Robert· Morris. nailed down,
the charge:
MORRIS: "Then he used to!
give the Information he obtained·
to Hazen Slse?"
t :-· •
:
,BENTLEY: "That Is correct.:

an1n~e ~~:s~~~!: :~ ~ne·;~

By GENE C,t\DDES
do everything I would like," said
team In the.Big Ten, although the
UPI Sports Writer
Williams, "but you like to have
lack of depth may catch up with
After Thursday night's 101-57 him there at the end of the game.
them on the road,"
blitzing of Siena, Buckeye coach He's like..a guy t had 'at !3oston
Ohio Statf,''whlch led 44-25 at
Gary Williams still Isn't sure just College :.... Michael Adains ~"
Halftime and by as mahy as 50
how good his 3-0 Ohio State team ·
Wilson, Burson and Hopson
late In the game, hit 24 of 32 free
Is.
·
were the main Ingredients of the
throw attempts, while Siena
The Buckeyes .left little doubt Buckeye press with a combined
failed to go to the free throw line.
to !be outcome against Siena, 16 steals.
"I didn' t think the officiating
scoring the first nine points oftlie
"I don't know what It Is abOut
was poor," said Deane. " It was
game to add the Indians to their our press," said Wilson, "we just
just the nature of the game. The
Jist of victims alongside Bucknell work-hard. It takes a lot out of us , offlclatllig certainly was not a
and Western Michigan.
physically, but It wins games. It
factor."
"The press was good again," you · practice hard and play
Ohio State . plays Its fourth
said Williams, whose team together, lt pays off."
.game In eight days Saturday
forced Siena Into 18 first half
First year Siena coach Mike
night when It host s Ohio Univerturnovers and 33 for the game. . Deane, an assistant coach at
sity In what has ·become an
"I thought we were sharp Michigan State the past tour
emotional rivalry, with St. John
. tonight defensively," said Willi· se~ons, said his team "shopld be
Arena already sold out.
ams. "I tqought we played embanassed." ·
·
"I think we'll have a more
Intelligent basketbalL But, I'm
" Hopefully, they'll respond emotional game against OU,"
not sure how good we are."
positively and come back," said said Williams. "But, at this time
Dennis Hopson and Curtis Deane . .' "! told my players they of the year, you can't dwell on one
Wilson led the Buckeyes In should !lOW realize how good you game." ·
scoring with 24 points and 23 have to be to play at this level.
Elsewhere Thursday night,
points, respectively, with Jay Coming to St. John Arena, I knew Jeff Gher hit seven free throws In
Burson adding 13, John Anderson wha,t to expect. I don 't think our ·the last 27 seconds to give Toledo
11 and Jerry Francis 10.
a come-from-behind 79- 73 win
players did.
Wilson, besides his 23 points,
over
Detroit.
"Ohio State Is going to be a
·also dished out six assists and . "Very difficult team to beat here,''
Toledo found Itself fighting
had six steals.
add!!(l Deane. " I think they're back all evening. The 3·0 Rockets
"Curtis Wilson doesn't always going to be a very Interesting scored seven unanswered points

Caht*'Y at Cluebec , nl!lli
Mlnn~etli Jd PIU11hurlh niJIII

Pre~~ lni('I'~IIUonlll

Eat.~l('l'n

'

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslant Publlshef/ Controller

NBA Standings

Siena five, 101-57 ·.

te

1980 Chevy Citotion ..•••.•...••• S1295

4 dr. auto. Looks aiid run• good.

·

1979 Chevette ....................... S1095

4 dr., 4 spd. Runs good.

,

�Page-4-The Daiy· Sentinel

Frida • December &amp;. 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Pomemy~.Middleport, Ohio

The Daly Sentinel-Page-'S

Manning paces 82-68 Kansas
' .

:Yictory .o ver Washington five
By BILL WOLLE
UPI Sports Writer
- Washington Coach Andy Russo
.praised Kansas forward Danny
'Manning' s dominating play quite a comp!imenUor a player
'who Is "not assertive enough."
, The 6-foot-11 junior, still trying
to shake the "not asserlive
enough" tag attached to hlm!aS\
year In an off· the· cuff comment
~Y Coach Larry Brown; hit 15 of
.20 shot's and adQed 9 rebounds
Thursday night to spark the
fifth-ranked Jayhawks to an 82·68
victory over the visiting Huskies.
' 'We did well in all areas except
,; topping him," said Russo,
whose team fell to 2·3. " He did
-not get free for many shots; he
just shot over us.
· ' "He was the difference. I can' t
.remember a nybody th a t
;aom!nant."
; Manning scored 18 points in the
'first half when Kansas built a
10-po!nt lead. and had 5 straight
; points In the second half to help
pad the 3-0 Jayhawks' !cad. The
6-foot·ll forward then showed his
passing skills, assisting on'three
Mark Turgeon layups.
"It'll probably come up again
when I don't score enough points
and we lose." Manningsaidofthe
assertiveness question. "So it
wtll probab ly always haunt me ...
. • Turgeon scored 14 points and
Mark Randall 12 for Kansas.
. Washington was led by Ch ri.•
Welp's 16 points .
· In other games involvi ng Tnp
20 teams, No. 14 Illinois pounded
visiting Chicago State 92-78 and
: No. 20 Temple drubbed Drexel

a 15-point, second· half deficit.
Holmes came off the bench to hit
7 of 9 3-po!nt attempts, including
a basket that put the Black
Bears. 1·1, ahead tor the first
lime. Matt Rossignol led Maine
with 23 points, and Darryl
Johnson scored 2.3 points for the
2·2 Spartans.
At Madison, Wis., Trent Jack·
son scored 15 points and Shelton
Smith added 14 to lead Wisconsin; 3·1. South Carolina. 1·2, was

led by Darryl Martin's 17 points.
South Carolina haQ only eight
players available for the game
because of the suspension of two
players. ·
In other games,' it was Connec·
ticu~ 62, Central Connecticut 52:
Dartmouth 73, · Holy Cross 64:
The Citadel 69, Army 65; Rhode
Island 73. Penn State 65; Florida
State 97, · South CarolinaSpar! an burg 69: Florida 110,
Soul hern Methodist 70·

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7th
"ALL YOU CAN EAT"

HOMECOOKED FAMILY STYLE CHICKEN

R~PEATED - This scene of a child on Santa's knee wiU be
repeated many times at the Pomeroy Health Care Center
Saturday. An event, "Cookies and Milk With Santa," wUI be staged
at the center at 2p.m. with all area children cordially lnvlt\l(l. Free
pictures will be available and refreshments wiD be served.

AND

HOMEMADE MEAFLOAF DINNER

Both s'rved with' Mashed Potatoes Ill Homem,ade Gravy.
Homecooked Buttered Corn; a Hot Buttered Homemade
Biscuit or Hot Roll and Coffee (decaffeinated or regular
freshly brewed).

'All You (on Eat' Chicken ....S4.25

~-. Local Briefs·-~_..__,

Meatloaf Dinner .............$3.89

EMS units respond to 2 calls

TRY OUR TEMPTING DESSERTS

Homemade Pies: Charry. Apple, Pumpkin. Raisin, Black
Raspberry; Hot Fudge Cake. Cheese Cake, Sherbet, Hand
Dipped Ice Cream, Soft Serve Ice Cream.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports two calls ·
Thursday: Middleport at 8: ()3 a.m. to Lincoln Heights for
Evelyn Knight to Veterans Memorial Hospital;Racine at 12:39 .
p.m. treated but did not transport Susan Adkins at the scene of
an auto accident on Ohio 124 . .

KEEBAUGHS of CHESTER
RESTAURANT
RT. 7
985·3832
CHESTER

Southern Class to honor member
· The Southern High , Sctlool class of 1985 will have a party
honoring Steve Teafo r.d, Saturday, beginning at 9 p.m. at the
Holiday Inn. Gallipolis.
,
Teaford, serving In the U.S. Navy, w!llbi&gt;ieav!ng the country
on a tour of duty. Anyone wanting additional Information on the
get-together may contact Lois !hie, 949-2306, or contact the
Teaford home, 843-5250.

: 78-58.

: Also, Maine upset Michigan
;state 84-81 and Wisconsin nipped
South Carolina 47-45.
, · At Champaign, !!!. . Ken Norman scored 26 points, Doug
~!tenberger had 14 and Tony
; wystnger 17 for Illinois. 3-0,
• which raced to a 20·0 lead. Shawn
:Bell- who led C)licagoState. 1·2,
; with 12 points - scored his
team's first points on a jumper
with 13:26 remaining In the first
, half.
At Philadelphia, Howard
: Evans scored 16 points and Nate
· Blackwell added 14 points and 7
: rebounds to lead Temple. 4-1.
; Evans scored 13 first -half points
as the Owls ga ined a 41- 2!i
• halftime lead. Drexel, 1-2, was
: led by John Rankin's 17 po!ntF.
• At Bangor. Me .. Jeff Holme'
: scored 21 points -all on 3- poin t
: shots- to bring Maine back 11 om

Club sponsors dance tonight
The Belles and Beaus Square Dance Club Is having a western
style square dance Friday, 8 to 11 p.m. at Royal Oak Resort
Park, Caller will be Bill Bumgarner.

Visits from Santa scheduled·

Howtobea

J&amp;R
Ka\"J81ald

'

SPORT .SHOP

741 East Main
992-2114

Pomeroy

The Rutland Fire Department will sponsor viSits from Santa
&lt;)t the Rul!and Branch of Bank One for the next threeSaturdays,
9 to 11:30 a. m. Parents are Invited to bring In their children for a
visit with Santa.

•
111,msg
•
,,, 111 g
••
11on
•
g om1n

Eye specialist clinic cancelled ..
'

Norma A. Torres, R.N .. nursing supervisor of the Meigs
County Department of Health, announces that the eye specialist
has cancelled the Dec. 9 eye clinic due to his unexpected
operailng room schedule. Clients will be notified of a new clinic
date.

Settlement reached in suit

•

A $142.000 settlement has been reached In an action In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Stonewoods Ltd., et.al. , against
Benedict , Bowman, Craig and Moos, et.al.
In other court matters, a temporary restraining order has
been issued against the plaintiff, Emma Elizabeth Milam, In an
action filed by the plaintiff against Jerry Matthew Milam.
And a reciprocal act ion lor child support has been filed by
Nancy E. Aeiker against Charles Ray Aelker.

.

•

'

POINSEniA

·'•

'•'

FIOM$375 .
UP

'

w

••
•
•••

·-..

~ ("-_O_P_EN_9_AM_·_9_PM_,_7_D_AY_S..;..A_W_E_EK---J)

FA
290 Wtst Main

RKET Pomeroy
'

'
'
v
----~-----------~--~--------------

throughout bree&lt;;llng. you
can r~y upon us for service and top-quality
products. And we handle morfi~ than feed.

.This Week's Special

.

.

PURINA

CAT CHOW

DOG
... ,

Admissions - Nancy Ackerman, Pomeroy; Evelyn Knight, .
-Pomeroy: Judy ·Tyree, Middle· .
port; Harry Douglas, Racine.
Discharges - Bobby . Hook,
Olivia Conlllfe:

20 Ll. •

50 LB: •

BAG

s1 ..'I

40~

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY

399 W. Main St.
992-2164 .
Pomeroy, OH:
The Store With "All Kinds of Stuff" For Pels - Sbbles Large and $mall Animals - Lawns - Gardens

-

GRAVELV TRACTOR
SALES 8t SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH .
Phone 992-2976

ClOSED MONDAYS
TUES ., WED .. THURS ., FAt .
9 AM to 6 PM
SATURDAYS 910 1

THE
GRAVELY

DAVE RIG,GS, YOUR H .
DOES IT AGAIN

BOY,

'2 DAYS ON'
L
Y•
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4th
.
• SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5th
•

Sl,Ooooo

FlOUF.OX WilE SEIYICE

Open House
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6
. 9 A.M. til 5 P.M.

·'-:

'•

'

ANY NEW MOBILE HOME AT .OUR .ALREADY
.
DISCOUNTED PRICES
EXAMPLE:
THIS 1986 REDMAN RIVERVIEW 3 BEDROOM &amp; 2 BATH
I

for All Occa•ion•

Mason W. Va.

1

·~.:..,..-~"'L.-..2~-;---.!:c'
'·!"'!£.
!: '•"-..--~·!::''•~
· '•L'..-~_.C.''"'''
'"'-'':_,_ _ ~
,, . ..,..,,.
------I

t.!'·II'IO I

'

•.

ecis/1
Pomeroy
is the
Plaee to
Sh·op,

Ponteroy
Dail_y Sentin~l

CATHEDRAL CEILING WITH BEAMS, GARDEN TUBS, EXTRA
INSULAnON AND MANY MORE OPnONS
· WAS s17 ,~soooo

-2,20000 1986 DISCOUNT
.NOW $15,50000
-1,000 BONUS CASH REBATE
$14_,500 YOUR ACTUAL ~OST
SEE DAVE IIGGS, OWNEI; 01 WANDAMA.II, HOUSING CONSULTANt

OR CALL

\

992-2156
DEADLINE MONDAY, DECEMBER 22

.

CASH
REBATE
GET ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS .ACI WHEN YOU BUY

.lHE fLORAL BOUQUET
"FrH D iw r "

•

·,

'

, STOP IN AND •oWSI AIOIND...
Flower~

YOURS TO USE FOR
w·HATEVER YOU WANT

'

•Refreshments •Door Prizes
We Have All Arrangements:
Weddings, Funerals Sprays,
Grave Blankets
Planters, Cemetery Cans, Fresh
We IHt Table Arra1geM111tl

2nd Street

:

FAll·&amp;WINTER HOUR$

C!tiba nk, Whestley Heights, N.Y ., has filed an action In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court against Roger Holman, Rutland,
req uesting judgment of $4,102.92.
BFG Supply' Co., Bu'rton, has filed action against Jeff and
Tracy Thornton; Racine. requesting judgment of $5,086.24.

South Central Ohio
Clear tonlgh t,•With a low In t~e
lower 20s. Mostly, sunny Saturday, with hig~ In tl)e mh)dle 30s.
The probaQ!!Ity of preciplt a·
lion Is near zef o today through
Saturday.
'·:. · ,
Wln~\l'f!l be light and varia·
b!e t.o)litfth'• "
· ·
OhiJ:'txknded F,orccusl
S ufld~.!llrough Tuesday
A chalice· -of r aln or snow
Sunday, wlt h fair. weather Mon·
day and t.tlesday. Highs will be
between 3.'i and 45 Sunday and In'
the 30s Monday and Tuesday.
Overni~ht lows ·will · between 25
and 30 earttS~nday and ranging
from 15 to , 25, Monday and
Tuesday mormngs.

CONTACT

.•'

livestock possible. From
birth to market weight and

Veterans Memorial

Ohio weather

•II

We have a personal interest
In your livestock. ~ your
complete-line Purina dealer
we take pride In helping
you produce the best

PURINA

Firm files judgment aCtion
'

We're a
Fun-Service
Purina Dealer

: James E!selsteln, Alberta .R.
Elselsteln, to Jame W. Wolford,
Charlotte A. Wolford, l.OA,
Chester.

.

I

,,,
olidsg

Vi rgil Parsons, Geraldine Par·
.sons, to Gary F. Hysell, parcels,
Salisbury.
Chester Johnson, Margaret E.
Johnson, to Leading Creek
Consv. Dist., right of way, Salem.
Lawrence Milhoan, Dec'd, Dallas Weber, Aff!d., Mldd. V.
Dallas Weber , Tamela J .
Weber, to John P. Ash, Diana L.
Ash, parcels, Mldd. V.
Charles R. Simms, Emogene J .
Simms, to Dallas K. Weber,
Tamela J . Weber , parcels ,
Salem.
Harry A. Pavls, Dec'd, to Veda
E. Davis, Affld., Porn. VIII.
Meigs County Commissioners
and Alvle Partlow, Anna Mae ·
Partlow, ease, right of way,
Meigs.
Ashland Oil, Inc., to Hershel B.
McClure, Rho jean V. ·McClure,
:parcel, Meigs.

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--.For everyone on ·your list - Save ti'me, money· and
energy- Shop Pomeroy, your hometown- You'll
-find lots of .great gift ideas!
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, POMEROY
MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION
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BELPRE,' OHIO

. 423·4665

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1986

Ohio

The DaHy

Pomeroy-Middleport, .Ohio

~ .Seat

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Olde11 Florill

362 'EAST MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO 4iJ789
814/892-2844

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
, .j
ol CotumDus. 0.
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804 W. Matn
99l·llU Pomeroy

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RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Work· ·

" MEIGS nRE
\ \ CENTER, INC.

ft\
w, \
1

John F. Fultz, Mgr.
Ph. 992-1101

v

Pomerov

RALL'S

l

992-3978

"S1ning .Families"

Memorial Hospital
1S I. Memorial Dr.
992-2104

264 S. 2nd, Middleport .

Pomeroy

A
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K.~

~~;~;~:et

212
992·3785, Pomeroy
He who helps in the
saving of others,
Saves himself as well.
- HartmannVon Aue

"...whatsoever good thing
any man deeth, the same
shall he receive ol
the Lord "
-Ephesians 6:8

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
non-Pentecostal. Worship setviCf' Sunday
10 a.m .; Sunday School 11 a.m . Evening
worship SM"VIce 7:00 p.m. Wednesday
praye-r m~lng 7:00pm.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
Communlty oU Ct. Rt. 82 Rev. Robert
Sanders, pastor. Jeff Hulter, lay leader·
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt. SundaY
School 9:30a. m.: morning worship and
children's church 10: 30 a. m.; evening
preaching senrlct" on the second and
fourth Sundays at 7:30p.m.; Christian En-

~o.-------.;;;.~....;;,-----------------.J
deavor onWednl"Sday
the first and
thirdmeeting
Sundaysand
at
_
7:30Pm.
prayer
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE I' All ISH
UNfrED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHfJAST CLUSTER
Rev. Don Archer
Rev . Ro)' Deeter
Rev. Seldon Johnsm
ALFRED- Chun:h Schoo 9:30a .m.;
Worship, 11 a . m ; UMYF'6.30p.m.: UMW
Third Tuesda y, 7 30 p.m . Communion,
first Sunday. (A rchf'r\
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m : ChuJ'('h
School 10 a.m.: Blbi('Study. Thursday , 7 p
m : UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.; Com·
munlon. first Sunday (Arc her).
JO PPA - Worship 9: 30 a.m : Church
School 10:30 a. m. BlblrStudy WPdnf'Sday ,
7:30p.m. (Johnsool.
LONG BOTTOM - Chu rch School 9: 30
a.m.; Wor.at.p'l ..m.: Blble81ad)' , ,1!l~
nes(lay, 7·30 p.m.; UMYF , Wedm.•sday.
6·00 p m : COmm union Flrsl Sunday
!Archer\ .
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REEDSVILLE -Church Srhool 9: 30 a
m.; Worship Serv\ct' 11:00 a.m. 10£&gt;E'terl.
TUPPERS PL.A:JNS ST. PAUL CbuiT'h School 9 a.m . Worship 10 a .m.;
Blblr Study. Tul&gt;Sday, 7: 30 p.m.; UMW,
Third 1'uf'S day. 7 30 p.m .: Communion
rtrst Sunday I Arc~er \.

P~~E~~~:~,,;.rrRST BAPTIST. Lyston
.,.,.,i, ..t , .
. William !\nouffl'r. ~un

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. ~u nduy Sc·hool. 9: :m ,t m.
WOr!i;h!p 10. :10 il.ffi .

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SOtrrHF.RN

BAP'I' I~'T.

Po-

, .. .. ,mri' O\' Plkr . E. l .: tma r O ' Bry &lt;~ n1 . p;l!i tor:
t , Jack Nml~ . SunduY ~&lt;· ht'IOI Ol t't'f tor Sun\ ~duv s,·hool, 9:'~ ,t.m : Morn i n ~ Won• hip.
• • •10:'45, C'vrn tng \l.'orshlp. 7:00p.m . 1D . ~ . T .1
7:30 (£ S.T. I; Wcdn rosdu y Pr;~y(lr Sl'r·
, 7:00pm . t D . ~ . T.I &amp; 7::lfl PM . rE .S
M ls~ lon Friends 1&lt;~2~ 2-tl t Roval
'lirrthil'""'lor.&lt; i bo'~ a,l!f'lo: ll- 1~ 1. and Girls
!U~P.i fJ..UII on W('(!n psda :vs. 7 p.
) &amp; 7-,'111 p.m tF. .S .T. I. Tu('sd,IY

fHt: RCH OF CHRIST
"' IN
.
.. p.1,.10r .

' Rf'\·. Kc·ilh Eblin .
·
9 . ~ a .m. Wndl'
· · ~ n~·m an . ~pl . , Mor nlng_Wor~ hlp , Jn:.1fln
• m .. Su nd.n f'\'l'rllng ~rn· t tr i : :vl p.m ..
Wcdn f'Sd,l\' Pru wr Ml'rtl n)!. 7' .1(1 p.m .

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: ~ MT. MORIAH lllURCH OF GOD.
.._. iiwtnr Rr\·. Jamt'!' S.t!H•rflt•ld . pus tor
Fr('(' m.tn William ~ Supt Sund.•v School

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!1. 4'1 .l.m., Sunda\' and Wl'&lt;lnc&gt;&lt;:CI,ty f'\'C'O
lnJ! s.('r\' lCI'!I. i p m.

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MIDDLEPORT FIRST RAPT IST.
•;!2rm'I'SLo,:Jh an d P:tlm&lt;&gt;r. F:.•rl EdPn . P &lt;t~ ·
~-

Bob Pt•r kC'l' , S .S . Sup!. : C",t thv Ri ):! ~ ...
Supl Sunll a~ Sc·hOol ~ : l il : ~om ·
~~~t·nln ~o: Worship 111: 1;, ot m .: Sunday
'
t'TliniZ ~C'n' iN', 7 p m. Pr,tyC't mM'tln ~
~ .-n d Bibh• Stud\ WNIO N;d&lt;ly 1'\'Cnin)!. 7 p
~·_.,n. : C'hlltl t r•rf&gt;~ choir prartrc·C', WN:In('!l·
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7 p m . ,\! lull rh~i r pra(•tlC"c. Wrd .. 8
•' m ; R.1dio pr~ra m , WMPO. Sunday.
~t4:1 : ~om .

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~· IDOLF.PORT CHURCH

OF CHRIST.
t1 and Main . AI Hart son . mln J!;ter: Mlk r&gt;

"'

rlac·h. Sundnv School SupPrlntrndent
J;l~l blr Schoo19· ;1o am .: Morn ln.: Wor ship
"""' 10·:m a.m. E~·('nln,IZ Worship 7:00 p.m

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, • Wnlni&gt;S&lt;lay. 7: 00pm Pr avcr m ('et1n,~:t .
",, MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF 11l E NA ·
1 ., ZARENE. Fred P£1nh0rwood . pastor. 992·
,-. ~289 Bill Whil&lt;". Sunda \•School Sup! . Sun·
·• " dar School 9. :10 a.m.; Mornln.'( Worship
10 :4~ a.m.: Evanl{l'llst lc meetlft,; 7: 00 p
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WednMdav. 7: 00pm Prayf'rm("('tbl g

UNITED PRESIIYTEIIIAJ\1 MINISTRY
OF MEI08 COUMrl'

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Rev.--·-

·.• HARRISONVD.LE PRESBYTERIAN
- SUndoy: Worship Serv lcos
9:00 a. m.: Church School10:15 a. m ..
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN Sunday SchoOl. 9 a .m.; Ohurch !J("tvl~ .
]0:15a .m.
SYRACUSE FIRSTUNITEDPRESBY ·
TER IAN - Sunday School , 10 a m :
Chu rth ~l'r\'I C'£'. 11.15 a.m.
,'~ )!UTI AND CHURCH OF' GOD. Pastor,
. ~hn ~~van s Sunday School 10:00 a .m.;
!tinda y j\.fornlnlit worship lJ ·OO 11m . Chll ·
drE!l'l Church II o.m. Sundoy Ev.,ln g
s.rvtce 7:00p.m. W&lt;d .. 6 p.m. Young La . JUtS" Auxiliary. Wednesda y. 7 p.m. Fam: IIV !'lorahlp.

j •"('}}URCH

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"Fifllll'l IC11tuig Ftlti Cilllh1"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
992-5432

.,.,.!•!1141
t-----/=~
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Middleporl. Ohio

K&amp;C JEWELERS

"'"'&lt;"'=~ · Ye terans

Across from tht CourthiUII
POMEROY, OHI 0~-~9:!.92!:-66:!:.77..,1

. . . . .

!FRANKLIN•

Syracuse

A~tnog, /110.

1

HONE

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Vernon
mlnlstf'r: Ollv~tr Swain Sunday
&amp;:hool Supt Pr£'0.ch l n~ 9:30 a . ~ each
Sundav
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION l'lllur·
. man Durham \ pastor. SUnday setvlce,
9:30 a.m.: evening se-rvl~ 7:30 p.m .
Prayer meeting, Wedneday, 7·30 p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF'
CHRJST. Jos(l)h B Hoskins. pa11tor. Bib!('
Class . ~: :lO a.m.: Mornina Worship 10:30 a.
m : Evf'nlng Worship. 6:30 p rT'!. Thursday
Bible Study. 6: :!0 p m.
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
CHURCH. Sundav School service. 9: 4~ a.
m.:
Worship !;('r\'i{'(' lO::Kl a.m.,
Evarl~ltsllc ~"· ~r 7:30 p.m . WOOnf1iday~ 1-ravM" m~tdR 7:30p.m. Thursday.
ZION CHURCH -OF CHRIST. Pomeroy·
Harrlsoov lll r Rd Rob&lt;'rt Pur t&lt;'ll. mlnistf'r; St('i;(' Stanlry. S. S. Supt .; Bill McEl roy. A~o~ s t . Supt .: Sunday Srhool 9 ~am .·
Worship Sl'I'VICC' lO:lJ a.m.; Ev&lt;'fllng worship Sunday 7 p.m . .lnd W£'dn&lt;'5da v, 7 p.m,
ST . JOHN Ltrl'~RAN CHURCH, Plno
Grovl",. 11w Rl"v. William Mtddlf'S W&amp;rth.
past or . CHurch SC'rvke9:30a. m : Sundav
SChool 10:30 a.m.
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BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST.
John Wright , pastor. Sundav School9: 30 a.
m.: Larry Ha ynf's , S S. Sup r Morning
worship JO:.Jl a .m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE , R('V. Lloyd D Grimm . .Jr .. pas! or.
Ora Ba5:s, C]lalrman ofth&lt;' Board of Christian Llf£'. Sunda~ School9;¥1 am; MornlnR worship 10:30 a.m.: rvangf'llsl!r r.f'rvi('(' 17; 00 p.m. WfdnC'Sday .sC'r\' iCf'. 7 p m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. ll!'x!f'r Woodv Ca ll . f,W.!ltor. Sf'r\'(C('!&gt; Sunday
10 ::~. m . and 7 p m WC'dn esduy. 7 p m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Rog("r Watson, pastor. Cl'('flson Pran, Sunday
School Supt . M_orning Worship 9:30a.m.;
Sunday School lO: XI a.m.; Evening service-, 7: ~ p.m.
MT UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shue,
-pastor ; Joe Sayre, Sunday School Supt .
Sunda y School 9: ~5 am.: Evening worship 6· 30 p.m.: P"yer Meellng, 6·30 p.m.
Eldrld~c .

CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev . .Jamm E. CGrbht
Rel'. Stnen Nel1111
Rev. Melvm Franklin
Rn. Clemeule S. Zunl11, Jr.
Rev. Robert Mussman
ASBURY lSy racuse\ - Worship 11 a. m.
: Church Sc-hool 9:45 a.m. ; Chara-C' Blbl l'
S!~y . W&lt;'dnesday, 7:30p.m : UMW, fir st
TuPsday. 7:30 p. m ; Choir Rehearsal
Wf'dncsday 6: 30p.m .. UMW, fo urth SUn:
day, 6 30p.m. (Ntlsoot.
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m ;
Church SchOollO a.m: Bible Study, TU('S ·
day. 7·30p.m .; UMW, FirstMonday, 7. 30
p.m.: UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. ChoW Rehearsal. 6:30p.m . Wl'dn£'Sday. 1Franklln1
FLATWOODS -Church School . 10 a. m.
; Worship, 11 a .m.; Bib\£' Study." Thu rsday. 7 pm. ; UMYF, Sun..[lay. 6 p.m.
I Fran k lin ~

WEdn esday.

FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a .m.:
Chu r&lt;h School 10 AM .: Chotr, pracllcr ,
Tu psd~:~y, 6:30p.m. , UMW, fi rs! Tuesday .
7· 30 p.m. l N£&gt;1sc•t l
HEATH (Middlf'(lorll -Church School,
9:30a.m.: Mornl n!i{ Worshi p Ht:JO a .m :
You th Grou p, 4 p.m., Wrdnl"Sday, Churt:'h
Choir t't'hcarsa l, 7 p.m .: Thursday
PrayN SrrvicE.\ 6· 30 p.m.; Bible Sludv '7
p.m. ! 7..u~tga t.
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MINE RSVILLE - Worship Scrvic• IO
a.m.; Churc h ichool. 11a .m .: UMW third
WrdnE'!iday, 1 p.m.; Cho ir practlct'.' Mon

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School tO am. Sundav evt&gt;nin l-!' 7:00p.m .;
Mid-week sPrvice. Wed .. 7 p.m
.
LANGSVILLE CHRL~TIAN CHURCH.
RobP rt ~ - Musser. pas tor Sunday School
9·30 a. m.: Paul Mu~srr . ~~=.upt. : Morning
worship 10:30 a.m.; Sunday f'V E'nln~ .~ er ­
vlce, 7 p.fil. ; mid ·W('('k serv l(.'(', Wednes·
day. 7 pm.
SYRACUSE CHUijCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE. RN. Glmn McMUlan , pastor
Mary Janice LavendPr. Sunday School
Supt. Sunda y School 9:.10 a .m.: Mornln~
worsh.lp 10: :W a m.: Evana:ellstlc servlct'.
6 p.m.: Prayfr and Pralse-WftdnE"'day. 7 p.
m : Youth m(l('fln ~ . 1 p m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHI!.EN IN
CHRIST. C. l.t&gt;tillo Gillilan. pastor. Sun·
day School 10:00 a m.: Mornlng Wor ~ hlp
11:00 a.m . Sunday f'Vrnlng serviCE' 7:00 p.
m. WE'dnf's day C\fenlng prayer srrvi{'('
7:00pm

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
Mike Thompson. New Haven, WV , pas lor
Sunday School at 9:.10 a.m.: Mornin g worship at lO:JO a .m.; Sundayf'Venintz: sl'rVICP
a! 7: 30 p.m. Thursda y S&lt;'rvlc-('!l at 7:30 p.
m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob. loca ted m County Road 31. Rev .
~Lawren('(' Gluesencamp. pastor. Rev.
Roller Willford. asst. pastor. Proocfllng
sE&gt;rvices Sunday 7: XI p.m. Pra:vcrmt"&lt;'tlnJr
WE"dncsday, 7:30 p.m., Gary GrlfUih ,
lrodrr Youth groups Sunday l'v€1ntng at
6.:l0 p.m. with R~('f" and Vlolrt Willford.
lt"adrrs. Communion servlc-t' first Sunday
C'ach month.
WIDTE'S
CHAPEl.
WESI.EYAN
CHURCH- Coolviii•RD. Rov. P~llllp Rl ·
dffiour. pastor: Sunday Sf'hool 9:30 a. m.;
worship S&lt;'rvlce 10:30 a.m .; Bible study
and worship scrvlcC&gt;, Wfdnesday, 7 p.m.
Rtrl'LAND CHURCH QF CHRIST.
Mark Jon€'S, pastor. Blll, NlcholsM . Sunday Sch90l Sup! SundaySchool9:30 a.m.;
Morning Worshtp and Communion 10 :30 a.

m.

RUTLAND BIBLE ME"l'JfJDIST. Amos
T1l ll s, pasTor. Sonny Hudson , supt . SundllY
Si'hool9:30 a.m.: Mornlntz: worship, 10:.10
it.m.: Sunday evening Sf'rVIC"e 7:00 p m.
Wrdnrsda,v servict' 7 p.m WMPO pro~a m 9 :1.m. ('ach Sunday.
RuTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE R€1\' Low('ll Ford. pastor Sunday
Sf'hool 9' l.1 a. m.: Wor!&gt;hlp sPrviC(IlO · 30 a.
m:
Youn~ propiC''s servlcf' 6 p m,
EvanfZf'llstlc sen' IN&gt;6:ll p.m . Wednesdav
S('l"\"\rr 7 p.m .
·
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St . Mason . W. Va . Eugcne-L. Ccngf:'r, ml·
nlstrr. Sunday Blbk- Study 10 a.m.: Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednl'5dav Blblf'
Study, vocal music. 1 p.m.
·
Ll BERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud·
din g Lan&lt;'. Mason·. W. Va. J _N. Thack(lr.,
pastor. EvewlnR 5C'rvlcl' 7:30 p.m.: Wo·
mcn's Ministry . Thursday. 9:30 a.m.:
WOOn Mday Praye r and BlbiP Study. 7: 15
pm.

Bible study, 7:30 p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Located on 0. J . WHite Road oi Highway
160. Pat Henson, pastor. Sunday S~hool
tO a.m. Classes for all ages. Junior Church
11 a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m Sunday. Younsc Peo·
pie's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
STudy, Wf'dnesda y at 7:30p.m.
HOPE BAPI'IST CHAPEL . 570 Grant
St., Middleport. AHIIIated with SOuthern
Baptist Convention . Davjd Bryan, Sr.• Ml·
,nlster. Sunday School 10 a.m.; MorninA"
worsblp U a.m.. Evening worship 7p .m ;
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer meeting 7 p.m. '
BRAD.FORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.
Rt.l2' and Co. Rd. 5. Mark Seevers, mtnls·
ter. Sunday School Supt. Harry Hendricks\· Suaday School9:30 a.m.; Morning
Wouh1p 10:30 a.m : Evening worship 7 p.
m. Wedm.'ljday worship 7 p.m.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts , Po:
meroy. The Rev. William Mlddleswart
pastor. Sunday School 9:45a .m. Church
ser~lce 11 a.m.
SACHED HEART CHURCH, MsJ&lt;I',
Anthony Glannamore. Ph 992-5898. Sarur·
day Evening Mass 7:30 p.m.; Sunday
Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Confessions one
hall hour before each Mass. CCD classes,
11 a.m. Sunday.
'VIC'I'ORY BAPTIST. 525 N. 2Dd St ..
Middleport. James E. Kef.'See, pastor.
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m.; Even·
lng service 7 p.m.; Wedne-sday evening
worship 7 p.m. VIsitation Thursday 6:30 p,

m.

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: Charles
Norris, pastor. Sunday School, 111 a.m.;
worship service 11 a.m.; Sunday night
worship service 7· 30 p.m.; Midweek
prayer service Wl'dnesda y 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HO·
LINESSCHURCH.Inc., 75Pear1St., Rov,
Ivan M)'("rs , acting pa1tor ; Roger Manley
Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
9:30 a.m.; MomlnR Worship 10:30 a.m.;
EvonJna Worship 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
evenlag Bible stud)', prayer and praise
service, 7:30p.m .
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD- Gllbl.•rl SpmC&lt;'r, pastor, Sunday School 9: l:l a.m.: Momtn~~: sNvlc&lt;'
10. OOa.m .. Sunday f.'V£'ning s£'tvll'f' 7· OO p
m.; Mkl-wec-k pray('r S£'n'ic'P Wl.'dn rsday

Porlload Elem..,.ory

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MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Main St .. Middleport. Rrv Gilbert Crab~ .
Jr .. pastor, Mrs. Ervin Baum2ardner ,
Sunday Sl'hool Supt. Sunday Schoo\9:30 a
m.; Worship 5('rv1Cf'. 10:45 am
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Josrph ~ Hoskins, evan~£'liSI. Sunday
Blbll' Study9a m , Worshlp.lO a.m.; Sun day rvcninjZ St'fVICf:' 6 p.m .. Wednf'Sday'
(&gt;Vf.'nlng•servlcf:', 1 p.m .
,
PENTECOSTAL ASSEI)IBLY . Ra &lt;i no,
Rt. 124. William Hoback. pa!&gt;tor. Sunday
Srhool 10 a.m : Sunday rvenin~ S('rvlcE' 7
p.m. Wl'dn&lt;'S day rv~nlng sPtvic(' 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Ch•adlo,
Sup1 Sunda y SChool 9:30 a m. Morn ing
Worship 10· 30 a.m. Pravf'rS('I"\'ice. BIIE&gt;rnatP Sundays.

!a!~:s ~~~u~~i85ha~~g~a~~=~=

.

Doorprize winners .

;~!~t~· s t~u~~l~n~u~s~~~r:a~~

MBDDLEPORTPE~ECOSTAL~

Av£'. Rt"V. Clark Bak«. pastor. Carl Nottingham. SUnday School Supt Sunday
School 10 a m. with l'lasSf\!1 for all ages.
Ev('llinJ': servlct:'S at 6 p.m Wrdnf1ida y 81·
bl e study' at 7: 30 p.m. Youth s('rv ic('S' rrl ~
da y at ·7::Kl p.m.
.
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. 128'MIII Sl.,
Mlddlrport Bro1h('r Churk M&lt;'Ph&lt;'rSon .'
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.: Sunday..
evC'nln ~ serv ices at 7 p.m and Wf'dnesdav
srrvlcf:'s at 7 p m. '
·'
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST.' Kenneth Smtih.
pastor. Sunday S('hool 9· 30 a m.; rhurch'
servlrP 7: ,10 p.m.; youlh fl'llowshlp 6· 30 p.
m.; Bible stud y, Thursday. 7:30 p.rr..
1
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 3.1045
Hil and Road. Pom!'roy. Tom Kt'lly, pastor .. Dannv La ml){'rt . S s. Sup! Sunday
morntn_g ~rv lc-f' a110 a m.; Sunday l'v~n ­
lng Sl'rvlt'£' 7.:W p.m. Tui'Sday and Thurs -•
dav SNvl('(&gt;s ar 7::JJ p.m.
,
WORD OF' FAITH. 9J Mill Si., Mlddte·
port Sunday morning s(lrvice 10:15 a. m.:
Sunday ('VE'nln~ 7•30. Thursday momlhi
Blblr study 10 a. m. WN:inf'Sday cvf'niJ,~
7:30p.m.
•
NEW HAYEN CHURCH OF THE f&gt;M.
ZARENE, Rr\' GJ(•ndon Stfood, pa!i16r.
Sunday Schoo1 9: JO a.m ; Worsh\p srrvi~&lt;'.
10: 30 am : Youth Sf'rvlrf' Sundav 6: 15,.p .
m. Sunday rvrnln2 srrvice 7· 00 p M. WOOnesda y Prayf:'r Mfrtlng and Bible Study
~00~ ~
'
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sqn·
day aftf'rnoon S£1rvlrf's ar 2: 30 Thursda y
f'VenlnJ! sf'rvlrrs at 7· :10.
•
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason. W.
Va . Pastor. Bill Murphy. Sunday SchoolflO
a m.: Sundav rvmln~ 7; ~ p.m. Pra~r
m('('flnJi!: and BibI~ study WC'dn('5da:v, 'i:fJO'
p.m. Evf:'ryone W4•IC'Omt"
Rtrl'LAND FREE; WILL BAPTIST.~ -,
if'm St. R('v. PaUl Taylor. pastor. Sundi v
SChOOl IO a.m.: Sunday evening 7-llll p.t :
Wrdnf"Sday ('\'('nina prayer ffi('('tlnR 7.
pm .
.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAME T
CHURCH . Silvrr Rldgf' D~,J u n f' Syden·
strlckf'l'. pas tor. Sundav School 9 a.f!1 .:
Worship Srrvlr£', lO a.m.; Sundayrvl'nlhg
!&gt;f'rvlcr. 7· 00 p.m. wronrsda v ni~ht Bl"l e
~ tudy 7·00 p m.
1

$

5........ 86 DELTA 88'S

STARftNG AT
I'·
I

LIFE

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Cub·Scout pack
__ display pictures
. ,
Pictures on nature and conser·
vatlon were made by the scouts,
displayed and judged during the
evening whe n Cub ~out Pack 249
inet recently at the Church of
Chr[st

Morrissey, Tom and Carrie, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Karr, J essica
and Valerie, Mr. and Mrs.
Horace Karr, Mr. and Mrs.
William Buckley , Jeremy, Ryan;
Brandon, and Brent , Mr. a nd
Mrs. Ray Karr and Garrell, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Karr, Wesley and
Whitney, JaneAnnKarr, Mr. a nd
Mrs. Woodrow Mora, Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Frost. Mike and
Debbie, Mr. and Mrs. George
Mora, Heather and Andy, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Mora, J ennifer
and Jason. Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Eblin , Ashley and Juley, Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Grate, and Tim Darst.

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HARRISONVILLE
ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL
DECEMBER 6, 1986:

lO 'A.M.-5 P.M. .

SPONSORED BY
HARRISONYILE

no ,

TABLE SET-UP $5,00 :
,
CRAFTS, BAKED FOODS
&amp; REFRESHMENTS
EVERYONE WELCO.I,II

t:..==~==:::..::.:::=::._t::::::::::::::::::::::::

Winners In the judging were
webelos, Jason Witherell. first,
Jbsh Heck, second, and Lee
Husk, third; bears, John·Jeffers,
first, Matnhew Morris, second,
and Jeff Darriell, third. and
wolves, Andy Sanders, first,
Shawn King and Jason Roush,
tied for second.
The wInning pictures are on
display at Davls·Qulckel Insurance. All of the scouts received
ribbons fo r their artwork.
The pledge to the flag led by the
webelos In candlelight opened
the mfi!l!tlng. Emphasis was on
being polite In a game conducted
by George ' Wright, cubmaster.
New membership cards were
dlstrltiuted. A living circle was
formed to dismiss with Wright
reminding the scout to be polite
In their everyday associations.
· The Farmers Bank wtth Its
shimmering green trees • and
giant white snowflakes Is such a
nice touch to the Pomeroy
community during the holiday
seuon. .Makes l! easter to keep
. smiling. ·
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FRIDAYI SATURDAY \
&amp; SUNDAY

$13,00.0

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4-86 CUTLASS SUPiEMES

!

Cutlass Supreme Coupe

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••

Mrs. Purley Karr entertained
with a Thanksgiving dinner
party at her home.
Grace ' was given by · Roger
Karr. Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Karr and David, Mr.
and Mrs. Ron Spencer, Trlsha
and Donnie, Mr. and Mrs. Pal

BAZAAR

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CHRISTMAS ·

Mrs. karr hosts holiday dinner

8.80

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Hayman.

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Anna Salisbury , Gallipolis,
spc nl the weeke nd here with her
grandpar ents. Dorsel and Phyl·
lis Larkins.
Millard Ball Is visiting In
Columbus with his son, Donny,;
and family.
•
Ernestin e Hayman spe,nt
Thanksgivi ng wllh Mr. and Mrs.
Elbert Fitzpatrick a nd family,
Lancas ter.

3 DAYS

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The Lon g Bottom-Reedsville
Girl Scout Troop en joyed an
overnight at the community
building recently.
·
Elza .Larkins and Pauline
Myers are among those Ill in the
community.
Mrs. Kathy Bitler and Sarah,
Mrs. Sharon Fitzpatrick and
family of Lancaster have been
here visiting Mrs. Ernestine

.. OtUY

l

l&lt;•

By MELODY ROBERTS
The Long BottOfll Community
Assocalton wUI meet Dec. 17 at 6
p.m. for a Christmas· potluck
dinner. There will be a $2 gift
exchange with (he wotnen to take
gifts for women and tbe men to
·take i!lfls for men. A comforter
will be awarded during the
evening.
Joseph Wells has been a
pat1e11t at the St. Joseph Hospital
In Parkersburg .

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SAVE · .I ,000••••

/

is upon us .

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The other day Kroger em·
The second six weeks grading perl04:
· · Basketball is underway at the
honor roll at the Portland Elementary
ployes
gathered
at
the
Court
. ;_pomeroy Elementary School
has been announced. MaklnJI: a
Street · t;nlnl·park to present an School
!With 43 players and 24
gradt of B or aboveo In all their subject• To
Ohio flag to the town ... The flag be named to th~ roll were:
'-cheerleaders.
First Grad£~&gt; : Jonathan nalley. Angel
was raised In brief ceremonies- Harrls
: Coaches this year are' fourth
l Ashley McKinney, Jayme MIIIE&gt;r,
and practically as soon as It went Todd Rizer, Jenny Selll"rs. Amanda Smith ~ '
.lgrade boys, Rick Edwards ; fifth
up, the flag was gone. No one Lindsay Smith. Zach Ward .
·:grade boys, Hank Cleland; sixth
second Grade: Gary Coopf'J', Emily
&lt;grade boys, Rick Johnson and . seems to know what happened to Duhl, Hillery Harris. Greg McKinney,
Amy Rh:er. Sarah Wallbrown.
lt. Great! ,
•fourth, fifth and sixth I!Tade J?lrls.
Third Grade: C.J. Harris. Woodv
Ri chards, ~nlse Rough, Gabf- Smith ·
:Don Anderson. Kay Gardner Is
'
Fourth Grade: Mlchel1f' Harris', David
The Racine Merchants
Associ•, supervising the cheerleaders.
Pickens.
,
ation
has
set
Its
Christmas
Fifth Grade· None
'
I
parade for Dec. 13 at 1 p.m. with
Sixth Grade: Nick Adams. Eddl£' Harthe lineup to take plac·e at 12: 15 at 1 rls, RaC'hael Ros e,· Barb!(' Roush, Shawn
Wolft-.
the /unlor high ball field.
D H.: Allcl' l£-wis , Chris Hamm , James
•University stuaents wno wm oe
Parson
. Forrf'lit Teaford, Alvin Phillips .
The
merchants
would
be
dE!'
•}receiving degrees at commencE!'
.
lighted.
to
h
~ve
you
take
part
so
•ment ceremonies tomorrow in
please call 949-2800 or 949·2140
~the James 'A. Rhqdes Physical
and
let someone know that you're
: Education Building on main
Door ' prize ' winners at lhe
1
:campus. She Is Nadine I.'Gpebel.
' PomeroY: Flower Shop open
!41342 Route 7, ReedsvUle, who
house Sunday were Donna Jones,
the field by 12:15.
·
:wut receive her master of
Pomeroy,
first ; Margaret We'st,
On parade day, Santa will be
·•science degree.
Ractne.
second;
and VIrginia
moving about the town until 8
·
Hoyt,
Pomeroy,
third.
p.m. and some of the stores wlll
Amber Nicole Hayes, flY!!'
remain open until that hour.
· .s ear·old daughter of Mr. and
stl)re will be doing Its own t~lrd place winners In both the
Each
•Mrs. Greg Hayes of Middleport
give away program with no religious aod seCular,categories.
. ~- who, InCidentally, just loves
purchases required for participa- To get logged, In just call the
., carrots - was delighted the
tion. Another feature of the day
same numbers as listed above. In
'other day - an!l thiS was after
will
be
carolers
at
the
village
regard to parade participation.
,;the weather turned freezing- to
Christmas
tree.
Judging
for the lighting contest
, !harvest her late crop. The
A
home
lighting
contest
wUl
be
wlll"be
on
bee. 22 and ml!rchants
· ,l,veath'er didn't · affect ·the crop.
year
In
I
he
Racine
featured
this
· ,One of the carrots was lO ih
will do their glv!!'aways 0~ Dec.
• ' inches long with a top diameter of area too, bul you must enter to be 24.
judged. There will be Irophles
· 3'% Inches. Hang In there with awarded
for the first, second and
· •those carrots, Amber- they are

m.

Ma:

=

Scott birthday

Honor roll

da y. 7 p.m.
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Po
mf'rov Bv·Pass. RPv. Da vid Wis&lt;'man.sr ..
pastoi- Melvin. Drak&lt;'. S S. Supt. Sunday
Sch ool 9; 30 a.m.: Morn in~ Worship 10· 30;
Evrnln~ Worship 7:30 p.m ; WE'dn esday
Pray&lt;'r Scrv lcl'. 7•lJ p m
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad
St .. Masoil . Sunday School lO a.m.; Morrllng worship 11 a.m.; EvC'nlna- s('rvlc£&gt; 6 p.
m. Pra~rr me&lt;-t lna- and Sibil' Study Wt'd·
ne-sda y. 7 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rov. Nvle
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch. su'pt.
&amp;mday School 9:30 a.m.; Second and
fourth Sunday!&lt; worship Sf.' r\.I IC(' a! 2:30 p.

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Davt&gt; Prenu~. minister , Ceryl
~ells . Supt. Church School 9 a m.; Wor·
ship Sf.'rvlce, 9:~5p . m .
7~m
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CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
RENE. Rev. H()rbert Grate, pastor
Lawrence Bu!&gt;h, p..'lsror Mnx Folmer. Sr
Frank RifflE', Slpt. Sunday School 9:30 a.
&amp;!pt . Su_nda y School and Morning Worship
m., Worship Sl'rvice. 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
9:30a .m.: ~undD. y('Vl'nlng sPrvicP . 7p . m .:
Sunday. Wednesday, 7 p m. P raye-r mef'l·
ing.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE ME"l'HODIST
CHURCH David S.ll,, pastor. Robert E.
day, 7•30pm . !NPISOO\ .
Barron . Director of Christian Education:
StE'Ve Eblin, uslslant . Sunday ScbooJ 9::.1
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Sl'rvl~
a. m,; Morning worship 10:30 a.m.: T("(&gt;fts
9:30 a.m.: C hu rrh School 10:15 a.m .;
lnAct lon, 6p.m. ; Evening Worship, 7:30p.
UMW Serond Tuesday. 7:.10 p m.: tMussm. WE'dnesday evening prayer and Bible
man l
The Advent season ts upon 'us. We prepare'!or Christmas and
study . 7:30 p.m. Choir practice, Thursday,
POMEROY - Chun:h School, 9: t5 a.m.
the
coming of the Christ Child. Advent Is the season of four '
7p.m
.
: Worship 10: 30 a m ; Choir rf'hearsal
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
WP.dnl'Sday, 7: ~6 pm.; UMW, second
Sundays just before Christmas. Some say the first Sunday in :
Charles Russell Sr., minister . Rick
Tut"sday. 7· 30 p.rn . UMYFSunday,6p.m
Advent Is the Sunday closest to St. Andrew's Day, NovemberJO.
comber, supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m .:
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRI!JT IN
ICorblli i.
If
you remember the apostles, Andrew was the one who was •
Worship sorvtce 10:30 a.m. Blbl• study ,
CHRISTIAN UNION. The' Rey . David
ROCK SPRI NGS- Church School, 9: 1~
Tuesday. 7: 30p.m.
McManis, pastor.SundaySchool9·30a.m.
a.m.: Worship JO a.m ; BJbl e-Study, Wedalways bringing someone to Christ. The Advent season Is one of ~
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUI
: Sunday morning service, lla .m.: Sunnrsday, 1•30 p .m.: UMY F ISeniors). Su npreparation for the coming of Christ, who will appear tn the :
&lt;loy night rerv lce, 7:30. Wodneoay )l'ayer
da y. 5 p.m.; 1Junlors1 f!'V~ry o!h('f" Sun- CHRISTOFLA'ITER DAY SAINTS Portland-Ra&lt;'lnE" Road . William Roush. pastor.
meeflng, 7:30p.m
"
flesh at Christmas and who will come again In Glory at the last •
da y. 6 p.m. !Franklin).
'
Linda Evans, 1church school director,
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letar1,
RUTLA. ND - Chur('h School, 10 a . m.~
day.
,
Churchschool9:30a.m.: Momlngworshlp
W. Va, Rt. 1, James Lewis, pastor. Wor·
Worship, 11 a. m : UMW (Evenln gCirclel
Sunday
became
the
start
of
;
During
the
eighth
century,
Advent
10:
30
a.m.;
Wednrsday
evening
prayfr
ship
servlces·9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
Schoolll
second Wednesday. 7·,10 p m ; UMW (A.f·
services, 7:ll p.m.
a.m.; Evening worship 7:30p.m . Tuesday
trrnoon Clrr lel se-rond Thursday, 1 p.m
the ecclesiastical or church year. Many customs fit Into Advent. t
BETHLEHEM BAPriST. Rev . Earl
coltag• prayer moollnR and Bible Study
/Mu ssman\ ,
,
The
most famous ts the Advent Wreath. It Is used In churches I
Shuler. ~st or. Worship service, 9; aD a.~m .
9:30 a.m.: Worship service, Wednesda y
SALEM CENTER- Churc h School 9: 15
Sunday chool 10: .1) am. Bible Study and
7:30 p.m.
and homes alike. A hoop or ring of greenery Is made with four
a m.; Worship JO· lS p m. f Mussman},
prayer service Thursday, 7:30p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR Ltrl'HERAN CHURCH,
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9·00 a.m.;
candles wlttch represent the four Sundays of Advent. The color I
CARLE"l'ON INTERDENOMINATIONWalnut and H•nt'l' Sis.. Ravenswood, W.
church HC hool 9. 45 a.m. { Mu s~anJ
for Advent Is purple, which stands for royalty. After all, Christ ~
AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Rood. Rev. Da·
Ya. Tho Rtv. George C. Weirick, pasior.
vkl Curfman, pasTor Sunday School 9; 30
9Jnday SChoot9:30 a.m ; Sunday worship
Jesus Is the king of kings. The flrst,A.dvent wreaths used white •
a.m.: Ralph Carl. Supt. Evenlng worship
11 a.m.
·
or
red candles, but being purple Is the color of Kings, it Is most
· 7:00 p .m. Prayer mooting, Wodn.,day
CALVARY BIBI.ECHURCH,tocatodon
SOUTHI!KN CLUSTEII
used
today. Some may add a white tal!er candle In the middle ;
7:00
p.m.
•
Pomeroy
Pike,
County
Rood
z
near
Flat·
&amp;ev. lo«er Gr.u.·t&gt;
LONG BO'ITOM CHRISTIAN, Vemm
Woods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Sorvtcei
for the Christ Child, to be lit on Christmas Day.
RE"'. Paul McGuire
:
Eldrldgl•, pastor; Wallac!f DamewOOd, S.
on Sunday at10:30 a.m. and 7:30p.m'. with
from
the
Latin
"Coming."
I
pray
you
all
may
~
Advent-comes
APP LE GROVE -CHurch School 9:00 S. Supt. Sunday School9: 30 a.m .; Worship , Sunday Schoot9:30 a.m. Bible Study, W&lt;d·
grow
more
excited
as
Advent
leads
you
to
Chrl,stmas.
Maybe
~
a.m. Worship . 10:00 a.m ! firs! and t hird
Service, lO:Xl a.m.
nesday, 7:30p.m.
Sundays l; UMW S.cond Tuesday, 7:30 p.
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FAITHFELJ.OWSHIPCRUIADE FOR
you and yours have that growing feeling of Christmas joy just as !
1
m ; Pra:vt'r m c('ting, wron&lt;'Sday ,7 p.m .
CHRIST, St. Rt. 338, Antiquity . Rev.
a rolling snowball grows bigger as It nears the bottomofthe hill.
!C.racf'J
Franklin Dickens, putor. Sunday mornBETHANY .- Worship. 911 m : Church
C
lng 10 a.m.; Sunday evftllng 7:)) p.m.
What better way than to plan now ·ror you and yours to be In :
Sc-hoo\, 10 a.m .: Bib if' Studv, W!'dn£'l'ida y
RA INE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Thursday eventng 7:30p.m.
church
on Christmas Eve or Christmas morning. Most of our ·
Ill a m.: Dorca c: Womm · ~ F&lt;'IIOWshlp: Deav("r, Pastor. Mike SwiRer, SUnday
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAP·
churches In the area wlU have Candlelight Chrls\mas Eve or
Wron,day, ll a .m tMcG uir&lt;l
School Supt.: Sunday School 9:30 a.m.:
TIST CHURCH . P11tor Rollort ByOI'I,
CARMEL- Chu J'('h School9 ll a .m :
Mornln~t worship 10:40 a.m.; Sunday ' SundaySchoollOa.m.: Worlhtpservtcetl
Chrlstm~s morning worship. If not; then go to your friends '
Worship. 10:45 a.m S«-ond and Fourth E&gt;Venln(l worship '1: 30 p.m.; Wednesday ~ a. m .; SUDday evening Hfvlct,7:30 p.m.; .
church with them. May your Christmas this year be as colorful ·
SundU \15, Fc&gt;llowsh!p clinnf:'r with Sutton
evtnlnR Bible study 7:30p.m.
Wednetday evening aervlce T:Jl p.m.
third Thursda y. 6:30pm . !McGuirt' I.
!IJRLINGIIAM COMMUNITY CHUROI
INDEPEN!ENT lllUNESS C11U11C1
and as rich as a stained glass window.
fallior WOllam •
EASTLETART-Churt'hSchool9a.m;
Burlingham. Ray l.atltlormllt paolor: ~
Inc., Peart Sl., Mltltltep&lt;rt. Rov. O'Dell
Mlddleswarlh,
Melp
County
Lutherans.
\
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Worship 10 ,a .m. s{,'('Ond and rou n h Sun· bert ~r1. a!l!llstant patter. Sunday School
Manley, pastor. Sullday School 9:00a.m.:
•
1
Mornlna wonhlp 10:!0 ' a.m.; Eventna
days: UMW first Tuesday. 7:ll p.m. ~~,-hm~~P p.m.; Wedneeday, 6 p.m.
•i
rGr""''
,_ "-'"'~' W..r .. 7Jlm. churduervlces
worship 7· 30 p m Tuoada 12 30
w
•
LETART FALl.~ - Worship 9 a m
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH ~
mE!l'l Pr~yer meetln!l. ~od~ .. .t~· 7;~
•
Church School 10 u m. tG rac(l).
' "
mlleotf Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J . Watts. p~st'or
·p.m. Prayer and Praiauervlce.
•
MORNING STAR- Worship, 1' 4h m · ~rl Searl,., S.S. Sup\. Sunday School
CHURCH OF Jl:SU! CHRIST APCS·'
Chur&lt;h School. 10:311 a.m .; Btb'to siu.iy . - ~~nd:;.m.: ~mini Worship 10:30 a.m.;
. TOLIC- VonZandt and Ward Rd. Elder
•
Wodnes&lt;lay 10:00 a.m. (McGulr•l .
netday
1 7~ 7, 30 p.m.; Wed ·
Jamea MUter, paolor. Sundoy School
RACINE WESLEYAN- Church School '
ce, · 30 v.m.
·!0:30a.m.; Wo(lhlpServtce,Sunday, 7:30
IOo .m Worshlplla m.: UM Wfou ~hMon:
SILVER RUN BAI'l'IST. Bill Lint•.
:p.m.; Bible Study, W&lt;dneJday, 7:30p.m.
cia~ ot 7·:11 p rn : Men'• P ra)&lt;r Brcaldasl, ~~ 0~- 1 ~lt&lt;Ve L:::l•, S. S. Supt. Sunday
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS
00
?
W!'dnl'lida,v, 7 a .rn lCrace) .
a.m., omlng worslp, 11 a.m .;
HarrliOJIVUie Rom. Rev. Dewey King'
••
SUTTON - Church School. 9:30a.m .: SUnday fVenlng worship 7:30p.m. Prayf'l'
pastor; Clinton Faulk, Su,nday School
Mornlna Wors hip 10:4h.m. fir st and third : :~~!:hn~~~:!t;_.~Thursday, 7:30 p.
Supt.; Sunday School9: 3:1 a 1m.; momlnl
Sunda ys; Fellowship dinner with CarmPI
ft&amp;JOJCJNG
B nf'lllily at 7 p.m. • ·worship, U a.m.; Sunday evenblaservlce
•
ihlrd Thursda y, 6::11 p.m. (McGutrei .
:
38.'1 N 2 d A
AP'I'lST CHUR(]I
7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting Wedneodoy
"
r .::.___ .__n
ve., Middleport. Suttday ~ ft ' 7: 30p. m.
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Advent

By BOB HOEFLICH

'

lii:::ii:::::T.=;:":ij:::::-f"-..!II~II!.,;Q~u~ic~kol~ .,!•111 Ann
tn~ts·Biower Craw's Family Restawant

BEN

Cabinet Making

•

A rea couple saluted
on 50th anniversary

will

TRACTOR SAliS
204 condor st.
Pomeroy, 011.
992-2975

Happenings irz the lnng Bottom area

a recommended healt h food.
~-Staff
Writer
Seatlnel
Jogging,
chopping
firewood,
• • Congratulations to Jane and
., Russell Bri&gt;wn,
~klilng, shov~llng snow and other
winter workouts can be refresh·
I on g · t ,, me
lng- but they a}socan be deadly.
Pomeroy restTom Murray, director of Ohio
dents and such
University's adult fitness pro: active members
gram, pcilnts out that blood
., of the commun,vessels constrict in cold weather,
:'. .lty. 'rhey will be
forcing the heart to work·harder,
·· marking their
'50th wedding anniversary on . even without exercise. As a
result cold weather and exercise
,Friday, D~. 12.
combined cari overload the heart
Laura Scott
or pop a blood vessc}, Murray
The Chester Volunteer Fire
warns. So'do watch lt.
~ Department
\lave a "blggle"
--~
:•...with Its a11nua1 Christmas party
T;lme
marches
on _and the
~ at 6 p.m. on Dec. 14 al the !Ire
Laura Scott celebrated her
establishment
of
ferry
services
,. station.
86th
birthday recently with a
' No~ only Is the event open to all between Mason County and the
party
given by. her niece, Lorena
Pomeroy-Middleport communi·
members of the department and
Lauderml\t.
.
ties appears at the moment to
• their faQIIlles . but also to rest·
Attending
were • Dorothy
have bogged d9wn. '
1 {le,nts who helped with tile county
Bryan,
Betty
Armatrout, and
Meantime, work Is scheduled ·
·: fair booth . and the chicken
to start on the repairs to the Mrs. Loercla Evans. Mrs. Scott
.-· 'barbecues and their families. •
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge in Feb· was also remembered on the
; , The department Is providing
ruary although It Is not known lilt occasion by Sharon McMillion
:the meat and beverage and those
will be necessary to actually and her brother, Bennie Scott.
attending are to take covered
close the brld~e af that time. Cake, Ice cream, mints, chips,
!llshes' for a buffet. Santa will
However, time seems to . be and puJTch were served.
_. make an appearance for the
slipping away and the · closing
• children and there will be door
will become reality.
• : prizes awarded.

FRAN(IS FLORIST
Meig• Counry•

of the Bend

Sentinei~Page-7

FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY· ONLY
3 DAYS ONLY YOUR· . $
CHOICE .
1 ·

11 900

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I

Chevrolet,

t

'••
~

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.

MOfll YJIIES.IfORI SERVICE. MORE SAVINGS•
.,.·1((

EXCHANGE

'
Meln St .
Rutland, Oh .

UJN nun

PDMIIOY, OHIO
'

I

. ~to.,.:£~

PH. 742-3088
t fll.l~ Oll l.hltl';JI ad! base
lfVNhblo,

illlof41118b

204 North ~twood
Rio Grande. Oh.
PH. 246-6131

.

�.'

~Paga 8-The Daily Sentinel

Calendar
FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE - . Scipio
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment Is sponsorlng·a· Chr.is tmas
' auction Friday, 7 p.m. , attile fire·
house In Harrisonville. Ali n&lt;'w
.·-merchandise. including toys and
' tools. Door prizes too. Jim
·Harkless, auctioneer. Everyone
welcome.

' POMEROY - A Christmas
bazaar. sponsored by Ent~rprlse
United Methodist Church, will be
held Friday, 10 to 7, and Satur·
day , 9 to I, in the former
Ebersbach building. Gift s. ba ked
goods and Ilea market items will
be sold.

SATURDAY
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Fire
Department will stage a Christ·
mas dance at Syracu's e Elementary School Saturday, S.ll p.m.
Cost is $2 pe'r person, refresh. ments available. Music wlll be
provided by disc jockeys Kelly
Cou nts and Wayne Lyons.
RACINE -Tile United Methodist Women of Racine Met hodist
Church wlll hold their annual
Christmas bazaar Saturday,IO to
4, in the church basement. Lunch
will be served.
POMEROY - There will be a
Christ mas Bazaar in the former
Ebers bach building Friday, Dec.
5, from 10 to 7, and Saturday,
Dec. 6, from 9 to 1. The bazaar is
spo nsored by Enlerprise Uni.ted
Methodist Church and will fea ture gifts. baked goods and Ilea
market items.

•. POMEROY - Christmas baz·
~ar hosted by Enterprise United
Methodist Chu rch, Friday. 10
a. m.-7 p.m .. and Sat urday, 9
a.m. -1 p.m., former Ebersbac h
f{ardware Building, Pomeroy .

MIDDLEPORT - There will
be a Christmas bazaar and
luncheon In tile basement of
Middleport United Methodis t
Church , Saturday, starting at 11
a.m. Sweet shop. bake sa.le and
handmade . gift items wlll be
featured.
RACINE - United Methodist
Women of Racine Methodist
Church will hold the ir annual
Chris tmas . bazaar Saturday, 10
'
a.m. -4 p.m., in the church basement . Lunch wlll be served.

.

'

.

l"naay, December 5, 1986

Oecembe; 5, 1986

dessert a nd one vegetabl~. At· . p.m., Charles ·Hayman ·GymnaMONDAY
Coolvllle. School, which Is on
hl etlc , boosters wlll provide the
POMEROY ~ DAV meets Main Street. Tllere,are some 40
slum1 Southern High . School.
·
meat and drink.
· Admission . tree, but donations Monday, 6:30p:ni., DAV Hail, 124 . qtsplays ol cratt~ exJJ&lt;l~ted.
Butternut: Ave. Dinner wUl be
'
. .
wlll be accepted.
&gt;..
'
SUNDAY
•
served
..
.,
Annual t hrblmlll' dipner
POMEROY -Community SinPOMEROY - Carleton Clinic set
CHESTER - The Chester
gers, directed by Sue Matheny,
HARRISONVILLE - · Harrl· Volunteer Fire Depai;tment wlll
Church, Kingsbury Rqad, Porn~
will present a Christmas cantata
roy,' will be .showing a !llrn on sonvllle Senior Citizens wlll have hold their annual Christmas
at Mount Hermon United Metho- juvenile drug abuse Sunday, 7 Its regular monthly blood pres· . party and dinner ~~ the ChesteF
. disf Church, Texas community,
sure cilnlc on Dec. 9, 10 a.m.· firehouse QP Sunday at 6p.m. The
p.m.
Sunday, 7:30p.m. Public i9vifed.
noon. Ferndora Story, R.N .. w!ll department will provide meat
, CHESTER - A,i'ts and crafts be 1~ charge. ·
and beverage. All lire depart·
RUTLAND - Euchre wlll be show, Chester Elementary Christmas breakfast
ment members and famili es,
played Sunday, starting at 4 School, Sunday, 1l a.m.-6 p.m.
COOLVILLE - The' Cooivllle !mxlllary' members and families,
.
'
p.m., Rutland Legion Hall. Cover Captain D's will have a fish fry , ' Elementary
PTO is · havipg
a and ,anyone who .assisted the
charge, $3. for more Jnforma'
with serving frornn: 30 a.m.-5: 30 craft sale· and breakfast with department at the ·fair booth or
tlon , ca ll 742· 2266.
p.m. Table space lor craft show Santa Sat.urday. 'B realtfast will bar·be·~:uess, and t,hetr families, '
a'{allal)le at $5, can' Jane Coates,
be tron\ 9 a:m, · to ·to a.m. for are ·invited to 'at(erid. Santa will .
RACINE - Southern .High 9&amp;H327, or Lila ·Van Meter, chlldrep ' eight aM uilder . .The make an app.earance for. the
School Choir and Band annual 985·3951.
cost Is '$}. The craft sale wlll be ·childr(tn anp door _ prlz~s will. be
Chr is tmas concert, Sunday, 2:30
from 9 a.m. to '3 p.m. at !he awarded.

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POMEROY - Mason, Gallla
and Meigs Crusade for Christ will
have a gospel sing, Saturday, 7
p.m ., Hysell Run Holiness
Church. Singers will be Kim
Williams. the Charity Trio and
. Jim and Gw inn Cra ft.
MASON.' W.Va. - Bend Area
Gospel Sing. Saturday, 7 p.m. !O
midnight, ,Chrlstfan Bretheren
Church, Mason. Several singing
groups will perform dur.lng the
,E'venlng.
·

Reg. 89.95

PORTLAND - Ron Rigsby
Band wlll be featured at Portland
Elementary School Sat urday evening. Chicken noodle dinner will
be served from 5-9 p.m., Christmas bazaar and cakewalks will
be held.
~

••

~rea man assigned
~: Airman Ronald B. Denny. son

of Earl and Betty L. Denny,

Middleport , is on a three-year
assignment at Tempel hof Cen·
't nl Airport In West Beriln . HC' is
an antenna technician.
&gt;'His wife and daught er. Brit·
tft'lly, have joined him there. Mrs.
Denny. is .the former Bonnie Sue
Smith, foster daughter of Arthur
and Myrl Gibbs, Hartford, W.Va .

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C,i)unty resident, is confined' to
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453.' Paducah. Ky.

EAST MEIGS- Eastern High
Sc hool fall sports banquet Saturday, 7 p.m.. EHS gym. Parent ~
and guests asked to .bring one

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'

a

house. Refill the contalqer dally
as the tree abs(lrbs water.
Be sure the tree Is well
supported and ·away from fireplaces, radiators, television sets
and other sources of heat. Don't
use lighted candies or open
flames on or near the tree : Also,
In line with safety practices,
check electrical lights -and connections. Don't use frayed or
worn electric 'wires or cords.
Avoid overloading .circuits.
Looking for an evergreen ,for
wreaths or garlands? All Christmas evergreens may look alike
to the consumer. but some are
fl)ore suitable for decorating
than others.
There are several ways to tell
pines; firs and spruces apart.

Usually , II the needles are long
and in clusters of two, three of
five , It's a pine.
Pines are one of the longest
lasting evergreens for Interior
use. Scotch and white .pine are
especially riexlble to work with.
They give an informai , graceful
e!fect to wreaths, mantles or
table decorations.
In spruce or fir, the needles are·
attached to the twig singly and
are shorter than pines. To tell a
spruce from a fir, strip the
needles · from the . branch with
your thumb. In a spruce, needle
removal will leave small bumps
on the twig; In a fir, there are
small depressions in the bark
where the needles were attached .
Spruce loses Its needles fast as

.

..

it dries out. It will give the mqst
satisfaction If used In outdoor or
Indoors. for only a few days. "'
Balsam fir Is a traditionallY
popular Christmas green . • Jt
holds Its needles well,and Is t~
to worl\ with . It wlll fit Into most
holiday decorations.
Be careful when decorating
with live greens. They . can ,be
flammable If allowed· to become
dry, so t~ey should be kept away
from candles, fireplaces a.ll!l
other flame.
Did You {\now That: A hand·
somely decorated commem(ll'a·
tlve plate memoriallzes August
lmgard , a German tailor who set
up and decorated the first Christ- ·
mas tree ·In Wooster, Ohio, .'Jp
1847.

''

...

; : "Protect Our Chlldr~n" was Kids and Parents'' \'{as distrib• the 'J}rogram theme when the uted to the families for home and
" : IV!odern Woodmen of America, community group veadlngs, and
Camp 10900 met for a Thanksglv· alarm whistles were given to
lng dinner recently at the Alfred · each child.
•' Church:
'
The Woodmen pledge service
Athens County Deputy Sheriff was led by Warren Van Meter,
Robert Daugherty provided an Sherman Henderson and Calvin
educational program on the Hawk. Alfred, and Ida Livingsubject of missing and exploited ston, Guysville. Thanksgiving
children. He also recorded fin- recitations Included "In Grand·
gerprints of all chUdren attend· rna 's Kitchen" and " That
ing the meeting in emergency Blessed Day" by Jessie Brooks,
Identification kits provided pro· ' Coolville. Charles Carr, Alfred,
• vlded by the Modern Woodmen.
led the group In singing, "Over
the River and Through the
Daugherty emphasized that Woods" and "A Church In the
each year in ihls country thou- Wildwood": accompanied by
sands of chlldren disappear, and Marjorie Maline. Coolville.
he proposed that by working
Thelma Henderson, Alfred, led
, together, citizens and law enIn prayer and an ·offering was
• forcement officials can help ' taken for CARE. Anthony Sar; prevent chlld abductions and gentl shared news from the
' -help recover children who are Athens County Historical Society
missing from their families .
·and Museum "Civil War Round
A pamphlet "Safety Tips for Table." Cheer
cards and

•

, Holiday activities and remem·
, berances were planned during a
• recent meeting of the Rutland
~ Friendly Gardeners held at the
; home of Suzy Carpenter.
, Fruit plates and fiower arran·
: gements wUI be prepared for
r several community shutlns and
: each member wUI make an
: arrangement for someone on the
• llst. The visit to Stahls Nursery
' this week was discussed and a •
: report was given•on the recently
• county Christmas fiower show In ·
( which Lorrl Barnes won best of
: show. Janet Bolin took two blue

Quarterly birthdays were ob: served when Chester Councll323,
• Daughters of America met r~
• cently at the hall.
; Honored were Charlotte Grant,
Thelma White, Jnzy Newell, Alta
Ballard, Mae McPeek, Ada Bls·
: sell, Eileen Martin, Sandy White,
· and-Esther Smith. JoAnn Baum
: presided at the meeting .
Membi!rs read the 23rd Psalm,
gave the pledge to .tbe flag and
sang the national anthem.
. New officers were nominated.
· R~ported Ill were Sadie Trussell,

•

10~Mt

4415
Reg. 49.95

Create a 'melody and choose
from 10 rhytHms and 4 "voices"
to accompany it. 10Q.note ·

memory. *4~-4003 BaneriQ extra

:Slinderella. meets
''

Members of· Sllnderella en~ Joyed a diet covered dish Thanks·
: giving dinner at last week's Five
: Points class meeting.
· In the teen class, Missy Foster
:lost the most weight while In the
·adult class, Linda Foster wa• tile
:top loser with Betty Dill and Julie
:Nichols as runners-up.
At the Tuesday Mason class,
:Kristin Torres lot the • most
:weight whUe there was a tie In the
•adult class between Connie Good- ,
:nile and Naomi Young with
:reresa Ord as runner-up.
' ~.

flowers were taken to shutin
members.
New members welcomed were

Jennifer and Michelle Caldwell,
Shannon and Billy Breedlove,
~ark and Andrew Rood, and

\'I

, FINGERPRINTED - Children attending the Thanksgiving
dinner meeting of the Modern Woodmen of America were 1
ftngerprlnted by Robert Daugherty of the Atbens County Sheriffs
Office as part of lbe "Protect Our ChUdren" program. Pictured
being ftngerprinled by Daugherty, left to right, are Mindy anCI~
Mike Guess, Tuppers Plains, Bradley Kearns, GuysvUie, Shannop,:
Breedlove, CoolvUie, and Melissa Guess, Tuppers Plains.
·

•',,'

Kelly Naylor, Coolville, and
Layne Pottmeher, Waterford.
The camp's annual Christmas

party Is scheduled for Dec. 14 -at
Coolvllle Elementary Scholll
cafeteria.

Your Social ~icy

New ofllcers were Installed at
a recent meeting of Racine
Chapter 134, Order olthe Eastern
Star.
· They are Judy Wllllams,
worthy matron; Jim Hlll worthy
• patron; Debbie Wolfe, associate
• matron; David Fox, ' assoeiate
patron; Margaret West, seer~
, tary; Barbara Dugan, treas·
' urer; Kay Spencer, conductress;
; Pam Diddle, associate con~uc· ·
· tress; Ann Wiles, chaplain;
: La'Ura Circle, marshall; Shirley
: Johnson, organist; Vicki Nor: thup, Adah; Crestlyn Hlll, Ruth;
Brenda Johnson, Esther; Donna
: Johnson, .Martha; Patty Struble, .
· Electa; Lynne Crow, ' warder,
: and Larry Spencer, sentinel.
: At Monday night's meeting of
• the chapter, the charter was
: draped In memory of Anna
; ,Wheeler. The worthy matron
· announced that her project for
, tile year wUI be the purchase of
: new chairs for the East. Christ·
· mas party.andgtftexchangewas
: held following the meeting. Mrs.
: Northup and Debbie Wolfe will
• serve refreshments· at the Janu: ary meeting.

•

Cut -

PRIZE WINNERS- A Pilgrim and Indian costume contest was
held In conjuncllot\ with the annual Thanksgiving observance of
the Modern Woodmen of America Camp 10900. The winners were,
from left to rlrhl, Jason Yokum and Calvin Hawk, Alfred; Shannon
Breedlove, Coolville, and Melissa Guess, Tuppers Plains; and
back row, Joyce Yokum, Thelma Henderson and Martha Elliott,
Allred, Jessie Brooks, Coolville, and Valerie Dunfee, Lillie
Hocking.

Officers installed

:

Medicare: two-part insurance coverai,f
By LOU RORVATH
Field Representative
How about some Information
on Medicare? Before you readers
under 65 move on to the next
column, consider the following.
Although you may not hold a
Medicare card yourself, you
probably"have a parent, friend,
or relative who could come to you
for assistance with medical mat-

ters. Understanding the basics of
this program that affects over 30
million Americans Is very
Important.
Medicare is an insurance consisting of twQ separate parts.
Hospital Insurance (called Part
AJ Is funded by a portion of the
SOcial Security tax on earnings
and helps pay for In-patient

Eight and Forty holds
annual Christmas dinner
PRE-HOLIDAY FESTIVAL- The Portlaad PTO wW have a
pre-holiday fe~~tlval_ on Saturday at tile Portland Elementary
·Sehool, 5 to 9 p.m. Featured entertainment frjlrn 7 to 9_p.rn. wm be .
the Ron Rigsby Band, a country-western group. A chicken noodle
dinner wJU be served throughout the evening and there wm be a
Christmu baz!UU" and cakewallt.s. Proceeds wUJ go to the PTO.

group plans cictivities

ribbons and a red, Kimberly
Willford, a white, Margaret
Edwards, a red, and Iva Sisson, a
red.
The annual holiday dinner
party for thli group will be held at
the Dqwn Under In Galli pols Dec.
17.
It was noted that the Meigs
County Fair nower show received a superior ·rating In the
state judging, as did last year's
county Christmas newer show
and the regional flower show.
Janet Bolin mentioned the tour
to the Calloway Gardens In

.DAR unit observes birthdays

Reg. 159.95

THIS BlOCK COSTS
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needles better than others when
placed In a warm room.
The place you decide to put the
tree may determine the quality
of tree you buy. Premium quality
trees have four complete sides.
You may want this quality If the
tree will stand In
picture
window or In the center of the
room. If the tree Is to stand In a
corn~r. or against a waU, only
three good laces 11re needed. This .
calls for a lower. quality tree and '
a lower price.
Give the tree proper care.
Select a fresh , green tree and saw
off ,the butt end on a 'slight
diagonal and at least 1 to 21nches
above the original cut. Keep 'the
butt end standing In water during
the entire tim~ the tr.ee·is In the

'

~ -Rutland garden

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'100 .,

By Tandy

By Cindy S. Oliveri
for your presents.
,,
Ceunty Exteulon Arent
Checking a few measurements
Rome Ecolljlmlcs/ 4-H
before you leave home and while
Christmas trees and ever: you are shopping can avoid spac·e
greens are In the Spotllght this problems. First, decide where
week: These tips are shared by you w.fll place tile · tree. Tlien
William Cowen, Extension measure the height and width of
Forester.
that space. Also measure the
·Before you buy, measure space height of the stand In which the
and Christmas tree .. . Ohio· tree will . be placed and the
grown Christmas trees come, In ornament that wlllgo on top. Apd
many 'sizes ~ .from those ]liSt take along a yardstick or measright for, a table top to others 12 uring tape on your shopping trip.
·feet tall.
Look for,a freshly cu( tree. The
'·· Before you shop for a tree, be fresher the tree, the fewer
·sure you know what size you needles , will drop during the
need, If the tree Is too small in a season If you keep the bu It end in
large room, both you and Santa water: .Ohlo-grown trees are cut
·' may have trvuble seeing lt. It the close to or during the Christmas
: tree fills the entire room, Santa "season. Remember also that
; may have trouble finding room · certain kinds of trees hold their

J

.

POMEROY- Tri·County Minstrel
Association will be h ~vlng
: POMEROY - Weekend rev igospel
sing at Hysell Run Holival at Freedom Gospel Miss ion .
ne:;s
Church,.
Saturday, 7:30p.m.
Church, Bald Knob, Friday
tt\rough Sunday. Services 7: 30 Pastor Mike Thompson Invites
nightly. Special singing a nd the public. .
speaking by Rev. Lawre nce
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Gluesencamp feat ured. Public
Masonic
Lodge. 363 F&amp;AM will
iuvlted.
·
have Installation of officers SatPAGEVILLE - Scipio Town· urday; 7:30p.m. The Installation
s hip Trustees meet Friday, 5: 30 wlll be open for all members and
p.m., township building In Invited guests. Refreshments
following the meeting.
Pageville.

.

Exterzsion forester ,. offers tips on handling Christmas trees

~

Reg. 389.95

.IH3'1230

In the Spotlight

The Daly S8ntinei-Pa96&lt;9

.

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Most Stores Open Late ~
·Nights Until Christmas!

-~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

::Modern
Woodmen .
'
Y.unit holds dinner

System 300 by Aeallstk:"'

HARRISONVILLE - Harrl·
so nvllle Lodge 411 regular meet·
ing, Saturday, 7:30 p.m., open
ins tallation of officers. Potluck
dinner to follow.

R!CEDSVILLE -Olive Tow n·
ship Trus lees meet Friday, 6:30
p.m.. at the' Reedsville fire
station.
POMEROY - Pine Grove
Holiness Church will be in
revival Friday through Su nd ay,
Dec. 14, with tile Leroy Manns
family. Services are 7:30 nightly.
Everyone welcome.
·

Friday,

Pomaroy-Middlepprt, Ohio

--.....
' MIDDLEPORT -

Installation
of officers , Evangeline Chapter
' 172, O.E.S ., 7:30p.m. Friday at
the Temple. Miles Crawford a nd
' Oalcenla Loeue, paSt patron and
past matron of Sallna Chapt er,
Malden, W.Va. will be the insta l·
ling officers.
·

.

'

Faye Kirkhart, Gay Gaul and
Thelma 'McManis who report·
edly broke her hlp In a fall.
Members were Invited to the
Inspection ' and anniversary of
Guiding Star 124, Syracuse. to be
held at 7:30 Dec. 11 at the
Prebyterlan Church.
The Past Councilors Club will
meet at Mom Perry's, Ravens·
wood, W.Va., at 6:30 Wednesday
for a holiday dinner. Attending
besides those named were Lora
Damewood, Erma Cleland, Dorothy Ritchie, Mary Holter,
Doris Grul!ser, Elizabeth Hayes,
Virginia Lee, Marcia Keller,
Goldie Frederick, Ethel Orr,
Everett Grant, Iva Powell, Eva
Robson, Margaret Tuttle, and
Beulah Maxey.

Childrens' needs same
COLQMBUS, Ohio (UP!) What chlldren ask Santa to bring
them · tor Christmas hasn't
changed much over the yea~s.
but the toys are becoming more
refined and more delicate to
make, say gnomes who have
been working at the North Pole
for hundreds of years.

Georgia on April 4 noting that a
$25 deposit Is required. Signs
purchased by the club to be
placed at either entrance to the
vlliage were displayed by Mrs.
Barnes:
The Nov. 25 therapy program
at the school was discussed by
Margl Bishop. Sandy Titus and
Mrs. ·Bolin assisted, and Mrs.
Bishop and Mrs. Barnes provided refreshments.
Mrs. Wlllford brought reindeer
made of corn cobs as a suggestion for the December therapy
program. A thank you note from
Mrs. Wlllford for a baby gift was
r~ad .

For roll call members brought
copies ol a favorite recipe. Mrs.
Carpenter had Thanksgiving devqtlons. Tips on gardening were
given by Joan Stewart who
suggested that plants can be
rejuvenated by removing a lew
of the oldest canes from mature
shrubs at the ground line. Fruit
trees should be pruned while they
are dormant with weak, crossing
and lnier!errlng branches being
removed. Now is not the time
however to prune evergreen, she
said, although shade trees can be
pruned anytime In the winter.
Margaret Edwards gave a
program on "Plants for Holiday
Arranging and Decorating'' sug·
gestlng the Chtistmas cactus,
poinsettias, holy, evergreens,
boxwood, and yew. She also
talked about grapevine wreaths,
silk and dried fiowers, and the
use of bows an ornaments In
decorating. Small llghts can be
put on house plants, she said, or
they can be decorated for the
holidays by placing them In a
fancy basket or other container.
Iva Sisson won the traveling
prize and Joann Fetty won the
door prize. Mrs. Barnes and
Margl · oavls displayed
arrangements.

Annual Christmas dinner of
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, was held Monday
night at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy.
Women of the church served
the dinner at tables centered with
red tapers. Gilts for the ex·
~hange were placed around a
lighted tree as was foo.d which
was brought for families of cystic
fibrosis chlldren In the county.
Following the dinner, Pearl
Knapp, chapeau, presided at a
brief business meeting with a
communication being read from
Ohio Departemental and a card
and 'letter from Mary Martin,
who Is reportedly Improving
from Injuries in an auto accident.
The winter pouvlor was an. ·nounced for Jan. 10 at the
Ramada Inn North, Columbus. A
Christmas luncheon will be held
the same day ·at 12:30 p.m.
Members were asked to promote
the Denver. Hospital endowment
fund .
The program consisted of "A
Pattern lor living" by Mrs.
Knapp, "The Little Wolf who
Worshipped Baby Jesus'.' by Iva
Powell, "The Christmas Letter"
by Loretta Tiemeyer, "Keep
Christ In Christmas" by Veda

Davis, "Could I Know" by Lula
Hampton who led the partners In
singing "Joy to the World,"
"Christmas Is" by Marge Fetty,
"A Christmas Candle'' by Catherine Welsh; "C hristmas
Thought" by Fern Cheesebrew,
"Taking Christmas to Others"
by Florence Richards.

Wolf Pen personals
Thelma Giles and Carrie
Wears were Friday visitors of
Iva Johnson and Ida and Peggy
Mu rphy.
Spending Saturday with Mrs.
J.R. Murphy were Barbara Da·
vis, Ashli and Joshua, Eagle
Ridge Ro~d. Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Evans, Tyson and Jonathan , Racine, Mr. and Mrs. John
E. Murphy. Racine. Mrs. Murphy's birthday was observed.
Robert Murphy visited Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Purtell
were recent visitors of Iva
Johnson at the home of Mrs. j .R.
Murphy.

hospital expenses. A person wtH&gt;
Is eligible for monthly Socktl
Security bene!lts will also :be
eligible for thi s coverage at age
65.
: •
Medicare Part B Is Supplem$tal Medicare · Insurance al\a
carries a monthly premium tor
all wbo enroll in the progra~.
whether or not there is eliglbllltt
for
Social Security benefit's:
People 65 can enroll for Part
which Is designed to help off~
the costs of phYsicians services
and certain medical supplies and
services. The 1986 premium costs
Is $15.50 monthly but will be
Increased In January 1987.
· Like other kinds of insurance&gt;
both parts of Medicare have
deduct abies . A deductable Is the
amount for which the covered
Individual Is respcnslble to pay
before Insurance payment begIns . The Part A deductable
amount reflects the cost of one
day in the hospital and stands a.t
$492 for 1986. That is the cost lor a
Medicare enroliee for the first
,,
through the sixtieth day.
While the Part A deductable Is
considered for an admission
period, the deductable for Part B&gt;
applies for medical expenses.
incurred in a calendar year,
' After a covered person reaches
$75 In approved expens·es, Part 8
reimbursements start. Medicare
pays 80% oft he ap~roved charges
and the lndtvldualls responsible
for the remainder.
"
There are other ways to t:&gt;e
eligible for Medicare and more to
know about both parts. We'll talk
more about this In the next
column. In the meantime, we
have some excellent free pam·
ph lets on medicare you can have.
All you need to do Is either give u~
a call at 992-6622 or stop by ouroffice at 22llfl Columbus Road tri:
Atllens. We're open from 8: 45;;
4:30 Monday through Friday

-a

I

OLD ;;- Tbla plloto, about 40 yean old, II the
properly of Jeanne Anne Bradbury of Middleport.
In the picture are memben and some children of
rnemberl of tile Middleport Firemea'sAuxUiary.
Mrs. Bradbury reporll the pholowaslaken In 18oM
or 1947. The group lncludee, fronl, Ito r, Charlee
Waylnd, Ferne Braclb11ry, Lo111Ae McElblnaey;
Karen McElhinney i Audrey Frost, Mary Rich·

r

'

'

._4,:

Donna Russell;
second, I to r, Mn.
Demosky, Jessie
,Hennessy, Mrs. Emma Wayland, ·Fraacls Klein,
Mu1ha Ranerty, Mrs. Murray, Mrs. B.F.
Parmllee,. EMber Gibbons; back, I to r, Janice
&amp;anlell, Mae Swlllber, Addle Hoeflich, Lena
McKinley, Earl MI!Kinley, Beatrice Robson,
Mu1ha Anderson, Glady Vrom~.

'
·•
'

~:

r
'

• •

�..,..
10- The

Sentinel

·-'

Pome10y-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Bu~iness i Services

PHONE
992-2156
Of
Sotltitltl
0191
Wt~t Do~y

Clau~itll

Announcements

Public

Pubhc Notice

R1clne Gun Shoot aponaored by ..
RtclneGutt Club Every Sunday,' ~
bogln,jng ot t 00 p m Foctoi-/
ChH• 12 9UI8t ahotoune

Public Notice

of begmntng

NOT ICE O F S AL E

Common Pleas Court of

'

Metgs Cou nty Ohto , tn the
Case of Moore s a D1vesion
of Evarts Produ ct Company,
Plamt 1ff vs Everett L
Crow Jr • et at , Defend
ants, u pon a Judgment
t hdrem ren der~ being Case
No 86 C V 142 on 10od
Cou rt I Wlol offer for sale at
t he front door of th e Courtho use tn Pomeroy, Metgl
Cou nty Oh1o on the 30th
day of December 1986, at
10 0 0 o clock am
the
followmg la n ds and tenement! locat ed at Tuppers
Plams Ohto 45783 and
Route 7 Po meroy Oh10
45769 resp ect ively
"tract One A certam tract
sttu ate m Chest e r Townsh1p
Me1gs Cou nty Oh1o more
fully descrabed as follows
Bemg m S ec ti on No 2 '"
Tow n No 4 , an d Range No
12 of the Ohto Company' s
Purchase be g1nnmg at the
sout hwest corn er of sa1d
Sectton No 2. thence North
o n the West lme of said
Sect to n 186 rods and 8 hnks
to a stake t hen ce East 146
ro ds to J o hn Shumways
West lme t he nce South
along J o hn Shumways West
l1ne about 54 ro ds to Jtm
Jo hnso ns North hn e thence
Wes t abou t 36 ro ds to J 1m
Joh n s on s N o rthwest
co rner thence South 109
rods to t he South line of sa1d
Sectton No 2 thence West
o n t he sa1d S outh hne of satd
Sect1on No 2 109%: rods to
the place of beg mn tng con
ta1nmg One Hundred a nd
Twenty Ftve (1 2 5 1 acres
m ore or less
P n or I ns t r ument
Reference
• Oeed Book 2 5 3 Page
445 Deed Boo k 268 Page

863

I

In tho Township ol Sallo
bury. County ol Meigs ond
State of Ohio 8ogonn1ng ot

the Southeast corn• of a 60
acre lot formerly owned by
Thom• Sptller in SectiOn 3.
Town 2 and Ronga 13.
thence North 47 Dog. West
4 rods thence North 25 dog
East 8 rods. thence North 48
Dog - t 4 rods thenco
North 12 dog Eat 18 rods;
thence North 59 Dog Wool
10 rodo. thence North 9
Dog Eut 7 rods, thanes
North 78 Deg Eaot 1'7 rods

MEIGS COUNTY MEMOIY GAIDENS
POMIIOY
(61•1 592-6151

------~---------r.

271 N. bel, IUtldleport
OPEN: Mon. · Fri , 8 am-9

992 ·57 66

pm-Sat B - 6
Walk-ina Welcome

TEAMS OF SALE Cash
on dolovery of Deed Subject

Real Estate General

J.R.'s REPAIRS

Attorney for Moore'•

Real

Estate~~

E 2nd St - .-,
Phone
J· (61 4)· 992-3325.
216

SUMNER - 5 rm fram e
balh, gas heat at wellhead
pnce carpet1ng and 2 5
acres for $25.000
66 ACRES - of woods, old
house mrnerals 10 Section
25 Rutland Township next
to Franklin Real Estate
$32 100
RACINE - Good one floor 6
room hom~ Blown 10 1nsula
t10n overhead Buck wood
stove carpelin&amp; hv1ng about
12x24 and I&amp; level l:ll
$24000
20 ACRES - Lebanon
Townsh1p, 14x70 Kirkwood
trailer furn ace, Ill bath ~
12 ft sundeck and dnlled
well $27,500
46 ACRES - In orange
TownshiP, dug well, 2 spots
for tra1lers and somebottom
land plus mmerals Askmg
$30,000
IOQILE HOlE - 12x65
fa~rmont 2 bedrooms na
tural gas furnace range refngerator &amp; some lurmture
Ask10g $9,800
145 ACRES - In Sc1p1o
Township, good barn &amp; m1
nerals on State Route 143
Tractor tillable
SEUfNG PROBLEM?
CALL 992·3325
Housrnlj
rlcildquartf'IS

SIZE 23X30X007

2s(

EACH

USES FOR ALUMINUM SlEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMMERED LArtl' SHADES.
CAN BE PURCHASED DAlY AT THE
DAILY SENnt«l nl 3 P.M.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Iathan hilding

EVERY

E

M.inl.lli
POMEROY,O.

NEW LISTIIIG - SYRACUSE
- NICe brick ranGh style
home Has 4 bedroom~ 2
bath~ famo~ r0001 w~h wb fi.
replace 2 car garage and
many other mce fealures Has
a mce cement dnveway Ask
lOg $49,900 00

POMEROY - N1ce I floor
home 1n town 3-4 bed
rooms 2 bllhs, full basement, Indiana Sandstone fl.
replace Extra lots for park·
mg. an 1n good cond1bon
$39,90000
older co1oo1al w1th all mo·
dern features mclud1ng onground pool, f11eplace cen
tral llf, formal dm1ng room
2 baths family room and
more JUST $43 900 00

915-3561
All Mtku

PER MONTH WITH

NO DOWN PAYMENT

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET

Hobson ld.

.

HeH St Bemerd end v.t D..h "
Hound very gentle to e good \ '
homo Ph 814·446-4058

•R•nget
•Refrigerator•
•Dryers •Freezer•
PARTS and !:EIAVIIC~

KHthond Dog to gNe to good.'
home 40 lbt • Hen tpeyed
Nice with chlld,en Cell 114
992 7194

REPAIR

LOST one smlll bleclc ternele .. t
klnen. long hair nHr Bille
School ohlld 1 pot, REWARD
304·175 1&amp;04,
'.1

REMODELING
INTERIOR

FOUND smlll while long haired
clog Salt Crllk ar11 304-8762856

PAINTING EXTERIOR

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
317 N. S.c111d

Mltlclltport,

o•i•

..

----------- ,~
••
7

Yard Sale

COAWIRCIAL - RESIDENTIAL
-FREE ESTIMAtES-

· GaiUfiolr&amp; ······ ·

PHONE (614) 992-5009

..

&amp; Vicinity

. . ,....

fPECIAUZINI IN WINDOW I. OOOR REIIACE.,fENT

.

··· "Pfl'leiisiirit'' · ·

TROMM
EXCAVAnNG

&amp; Vicinity
Five fem1ly yard ule complete hounhold goodt otd McClung
Store Ntw H1ven Frt end Stt "

742-2328
11· 7·86·1 mo

lO·S·tfc

Atoth•i•od lehtt DNrl,
New Helland, lush Hog
Farm ilj11pmont
Dealer

SKATE-A-WAY

J&amp;L BLOWN

CHRISTMAS
TREES

INSULAnON

Holiday Schedu le

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIOING

rJ () . . '} 1

TAGGING NOW
Pre-tut tr"saYailable
Located on
Flatwoods Rd (Co
Rd 26) at Harley
Hanong residence, 2
Mi from Fove Points
Watch for Sogns

•lnsul litton
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows

BODY SHOP

No

1',

PH. 992-2772

"'

l
'I

;

Pr1r tV

.."
111

'

9HI l'l/ 1 IH\ 119'16

11· 7-1&amp; I 110

AND SERVICE

HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITlt
•SYLVAN IA
QUEEN LAUNDRY

'®

Wantetl To Buy

We PlY cath for lilt model clean
uHCI cars
Jim Mink Chtv Olda Inc
Bin Gent Johnaon
814-448·3872

\,

CIICLE

"H"

35109 Titus load
Mklclilport, Ohio
Ph. 7 42-2592

•AUTOS •UOHT TRUCKS

4/1/lfn

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

YOUNG'S
- Addona end l'erftOdeUng
-Roofing .nd gutter work
- con...- wort.:

- Pru...,lng and oloctrlcel

•All Typea of
Excevetmg
•LIIndocopong

•BeHmenta

(FrMEatlrnotul

•Sewage Systems
•Water lit Gu Unto

V. C. YOUNG 1ft

•Water Well Drilling
•Truckmg

work

992-l215 ... 992-7314
,_oy,

Call: 742-2407

11· 28·86·1 mo.

RADIATOR

SER~eE
We can re~lr and rt'!
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out rad iatoh. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

11-4·16·1 mo

Window • Wood • Paper
Plastic • Truck

Silk Sc11enma
Boat Lettenna · Realty

of TLC, Ctll Grtndmeln Vmton
Ph 814· 318·8193
-::-:---:-::----c:-~---- '
Buying dtlly gold. tltvilr coln!t1 , ~
rings jewelry ll•llng were. old 1
coint large currency Top prJ.
cet Ed. Burkett Btrbet ltlop. ~
2nd A.. Mlddior&gt;ort Oh 814· •
192 3478
•
Wanted to buy Sltnding t1mber
Coli 814 742 2328

992·2198
Mlddlepon. Ohio
1·13·tfc

S1:1 v11:1:o

lliddloport

11·7·86· 11110

:t

r

''
J'

ro•

,,'

11

Help Wanted
I •

SIGNS Of AU DIDS
S!EGFRElO

1

hides Alao telling trapping
suppUta Wheat Lit" Nltt Litts
Hourt 1 00 I 00 CloMd Wtd
Qeorge Bucklav 114 814 4701

JERRY'S
SIGN SERVICE
R1 7

&lt;

.,

f lllplliVIIII:III

JERRY

•'

set .. peopi•Full or Plrt time to

.'
I

ttll cemtt_,. a. mtrch C.ll ~ 11
814· 44.· 3515 or 114 192 4 "i t
1111
' rt
'

BISSELL
BUILDERS

"' "

JACK'S
TA• SEIVICE

40625 St.

Rt. 681
P-roy, Ohio

24 HOUR SERVICE

614199!-7119
W. VA. Rtsitlenls
Cal (olltct

to be haPPY,

32 Mobile Homes
• for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

APARTMENTS mobile homll
houo• Pt Plouonrond Golllpo
_h_o_6_t_4_44_8_a_2z_1_ _ ___
Unfurnished apartment lor rent,
2badrooms Y"'dondbosomont.
1160 month 304 875 7541 .
ovenlngs

Uvt Xmas u... 122 Mulch,
stonl coal firewood, dWtv•ecf
flaap voucher• accepttd Don s
Lendac.ptl Ctll 614· ••8 ·
9646

e

•

Several pleca1 antique aUvar,
8MX llkollko now 131 00, 8o•
Qnule Hunteng Bow 6. Arrowt 6.
Quivlf 14000 Ph 8144411
6398

Vanity 1hop on At 315 undar new
menegement Latrae 1uortm.rt

~

recapa mud • 1now tirll, new
Chriom
.. gtfta u•ed tlr•.
t1ret
guaranteed
Whltoo m1101 detactoro now •
ulld model• low prtcn Pt1
114 446·0548
Grain Feed Fr11ur leaf for lila
coil 814 24&amp; 1084

CUSTOM IIILT

HOMES &amp; GAUGES
"At Rtatonabil

Pricts"

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY
(

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
Truck, auto, •
heavy equipment
repair~ and weldlnq
(All makH lit modela)

REIUilT &amp; REPAIRED

PH. 949-2893
or 949·2756

109-....YAYI.

John I.IMtz

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
POMROY, OH.

PH. 992·9949
... ltil'ttll, o - r

11·28-IS-1 mo.
1

'

Melntenenae pnon to live in
IPartment c:ompl• Call 304- •
871 5104
"r:
GOOD MONEYI
Wleklyl
Procntlng MaHI
INFORMATION!
Sond oelf
.ddreued. 1temped tnvMope to ••
P 0 loa 2712 Etat ltvtfJM)OI ... 1
Ohio 43120 0712 •
Alrlln• now hlrl.ng Flight At
lend1nta Agent1, Mechtnlot
Cultomtr hr'flaa. 8alarl• to
lOOK Entry iowel oooltlono Cal
1-10&amp; 187 8000 Ext A· IIO&amp;

,' .
t "',

,,

· lo-

, ,

Oovornmont )Obo t 11,040
1111,230 Y' Now hiring Col
801 117· 8000 Ext R-8801 for
cun•
list

'

1979 Chevy SWB 4 wheeA
drive loaded, new 1Ox SO tires
66 000 milts t3 800 00 or fair
off• 1968 Jttp with '74 6 cyl
motor Everythi, new t 900 00
or fair offer
04-571 2842
otto• 6 PM 576 2010

.

•

74

~~~-~";""~~~;~~;~r~=~~~~====~~
..

66

•

1978 J11p Pr1eed On lnlpltt'"
tlon 304 876 6704

P ets f or Sale

Pu,a bred blltCk German Sh•
pad femtll papers 3yrs old
Calt l14 ... 6 0848

Nfl tltctrlc tootbell geme
Smsll turniahed IIIP.Irtment 1 t20 00 rowing eurcl11r 67
Mus1cal
-lnf.,tond ·
r - • , Mon
bedroom h groundd floor, 1225
t2&amp; 00 Will do babv•ittlng\ ln
f ....
Instruments
..1971
Festival
1.4x70,
tottl
2
bdr
ell
utllttln
paid
txcapl
fu
•-d
-·me lltctric 2 bedroom Ph 814- • alec fum or unfurn uc month
aft an wettl'
r· my home evening•., w... •d•
d.. thru •••oy
rnu
_, · Ph 814·448·0085
'
aM,.,.•ceato P 0 Box 4&amp;2, 317 0181 altai lp m or 814deposit required Convenient niahtd Adultl
only,
rlttrence
2851
675
30
Point Pleelent W Va
441-0112 at 32 before I
location Call 114 441 8651 or ' end dapollt
"
Mtxed hardwood alab1 t12 per Vemeht 200 Gu1t1r w1th caaa
614 44&amp; 4778
bundle Cont1mlng approx 1 '12 •100 00 Ph 614-367 0172
Lot Awn help you got tho boll of 91 Ookbl'ook u p - 3 bed
45 Furnished Rooms tons
FOB Ohio Pillet Co
In
Eurek•
nice
and
cleen
tdultl
tholl poSt Chrlstm.. bfllt end room, 2 full baths nove 6.
Oabro excellent condtllon Can
Pomeroy Oh1o C1ll 814 992
b4utl FrH gift wlt:h fiTJt order relrlg•ator, nii'W carpet Mult only No pat:1 deposrt raquirtd.
be seen tt 111 Third Ave or call
For
rent
Sleepmg
Rooms
and
848t
180 00 mo coll814· 258 1838
coli 304 882 2845
·~I.Jli" 814 379·2587
614-448 1841
light hou11 keeping rooms Perk
before 101m
central Hotel Call 814 448
Price Werl Half pricei Flethlng
Part time temporary telephone Big down payment short time
Peavey P A Syltam )(R700
arrow signa t2891 Ughted
Very niCI 14x70 Windsor 2 0758
work. appty in P•ton 405 Mem ~mploymll'lt or p11t credh his
mix•
with apHkerl monitors
non
arrow
t2791
Unlighted
St Friday Dec. IS 10 00 til tort atopplng you from buying? bdr • 1lh b•h• OinWtg Am ,
mlcroptlon.. ltlnd Ph 304
Rooms
for
rent
dey
week
t2391
F'"
lett~r~l
Set
locally
Consider a r.ctaimed 14x701 unfurnlahtd water ptkl refrlg
5 00
875· 3978
month Gllltt Hotel Call 614
Factory 1 800·423 0163 any
lf'llot' and atovt Call 2411
8600 00 down ...umable
4otl
9716
Rentaalowas$120
t1me
5818
loan• No charge for delivery
month
12
Situations
lnterostodl c.ill 800 828·0752
Fo~r 111 Supplir.'
Student roll top d..k Used VlfY
Two bdr , pnvate lot turn or
Wanted
Furnished room 919 2nd Gllll
llttlt Would make excellent
unfurn • carpet dl1hwuhar
1974 12x50 tlltlecl:fiC porch
&amp; L1 ve,tuck
polls n 15 Ut1lldt1 pd Share Chri1tm1s gift Call 114 982
und•plnn•ng tultv carpeted, tie gerblge dlapoNI. andoslld pt
bath
Single
male
Cell
448·
3358
tlo
2
miles
on
Unooln
Pike
off
of
down 1traps Building in excel·
U 1&amp; after 7pm
PARENTS!I
141 Securltv deposit required
lent condh1on M1y buy trailer 6.
Tony s Gun Repeirt hot rtblu•
Stntl will vlatt your child It rent llf'ld 2 1/J ml N Pt Pla111n1 Coli 448·4303
lng Opon 9 oo AM 1o 7 oo P.M
61
Farm Equipment
home Believer• clll North Pole Ph 614-446 3005
Call 304-875 4831
814 245 9&amp;&amp;3 for dllaill
2 Bedroom fuinlahed We tccept 46 Space for Rent
1978 BaY\'IIW 14x70 good HUD, Beautiful rivtr view Fo•·
CROSS &amp; SONS
Shop for Christf{ln with
conditiOn Ph 61 4·446 1426 ten Mobile Home Park 614
U S 3! Wett Jac:kson, Oh10
FULLER
BRUSH
PlfOOUCTS,
1B Wanted to Do
446·180Z
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Ptrk.
814 286 6451
6 00
Routa 33 North of Pom•ov Coi1304 875 t090
Maaaev Ferguson Naw Holland
2 bdr mobile home Upper Rlvtr Large loti Call814 992-7479
19815 mobile home tor stle
Bulh Hog Sel11 II Strvlca 0\l•
Andarsllfl
•
High
Pertormence
Rd
'
Y
J
mile
from
Gallipolla
2
14x70 excellent condition 2
Will do b1by1htlng In my home bedroom, 2 tul bltht Call childr.. accepted Call e14- Business or Office Space for wlndowa 1till in carton Ntv• .a uaed tractors to ohooaa from
boon uood 304·675 -5478 CoW &amp; complete lme of new &amp; u1ed
3 4 days • w11k Including aome 614 992· 7163
446 0508 •
rent Naw Haven 304 n3
4tquipmant Llrgat 1elect:ton 1n
after
6pm
~Hkenda Prefer 3 or 4 v•er olds
6024 or 304 882 3287
SEOhio
Coli 614 2415872 oft01 4p m
2 Bedroom fully furniahld
3 bedroom Fumlshed w..h.,
PRICE
WARI
HoH pricol Flaoh·
Aduh1
only
An
ut1ht1n
paid
dryer. tif. twnlng Completetv
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
lng 1rrow aign1 82891 Ughted
Dear Cut t16 00 Cut • Wtap set up on rented lot t6700 Cal tJ~cept gas a. electric Owner
CENTER SR 36 W Gtlhpoll1
no 00 10 y,.,. meet cunlng 6t4· 992 7479
non-arrow
U791
Unllgh,ed
PIVS wet• a. sawega mowing
Mer cII~ 111i rs 1:
82391 FrM lm•sl Sea IOCIIIy Ohio Call 814-448·97n eve
experience Calll14 448 38915
1nd truh pickup Cebtt TV
114· 448-3692 Up front trac
Foctory 118001423 0183
IVI\1~1 Ph 814·448 n93
tort with warranty ovlf' 40 used
Will c•• for children 1n th81r 33
anvtlme
Farms for Sale
trealora 1000 tool•
homo, 304·511· 7298
Treiler apece acr011 from Ohio
61 Household . Qoods
camflauge
da
Surplus
lnluii!Jt!Mt
Pallet on C R 20 TPC water
UTILITY BlDG SPECIAL:
cron coverall•, smlll med1um
Coil 814 992 2941 evonin9o
27'
EAVE with slidmg
Flllrlllr:Jril
6 acres MI L 4 bedrooms brick and 814 992 t481 deyl
large U.S 00. XL t30 00 1nd doorx31'•9
6. 1arvlce door t4,288 00
ranch 3 b1th1 full basemenl,
copy this adv Carhart. ..-my
SWAIN
•ecttd
30 1132' qarage rurll water fr" 3 bedroom furnished W81htr
I nut clothing. boott. blb1 dlnlm
gas and mcome. More ICfttgt end dryer Air and awning UOO AUCTION • fURNITURE 62 t16 00 Wrtngler jechta. Iron Hortt BUildings Ph 614
Olive St , GaiNpotla New &amp; uNd thlrtl plein poc*et dentm P•t• 332·9745
avalltble. $96.000 00 304- plua depo.it end utllitt .. 81 !
21
Business
wood coal stDVII, I pc wood LA 14 oza S.m Somi'Yillt, June·
458-t876
992 7479
suite $399, bunk beds 1199. t1on Independence Road Old For seta J D 460 Ooztr 6 way
Opponunity
bltda. winch and canapy
1ntron rtclin.. 199 MW •
2 bedroom 1 child no pats C1ll uted bedroom aultM r1nges, .,. 21 , Eut Rl\lenswood. Fri. Tromm Excavatlng Call 814
34
Buemess
Sot
Sun,
12
00
IOOPM.304112 2481
wringer walh••· &amp; aholl New doyo oftlf 4 00 PM Phono 742· Z328
1
I NOTICE I
_Buildings
llvlngroom 11Uit.. •111 1198.
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
12d5 trtiler, fully carpeted 2 lamps. 1110 buying coal&amp;. Wood 304-273· 5651 or 304· 876· Whtte Farm Tractor• B11t Price
3334
lNG CO recommend• th. you
bedroom gu tumace I acr11, stoves Ctll 11 • ·«8-3169
tn Aret Siders Equipment Co
do bualn•• with people you
1260
p•
month
plus
utllltia
Hendarson W Va 304 875
Wlnchntar
12
gauge
pump
1hot
know and NOT to tend money Office 1pace Store ap.ce 1n Pt
&amp;14 882 2016 or 6t4· 992· County Appliance Inc. Good
gun t xc cond 1100 00 2 7421
throuth the mel until you have PIMIIM A One Retl Estate Ph
7764
uHd lpplianc. and TV aets
304
176-5t04
one tltc Hondo II l.lt
lnvllllg•ed the offering
Open SAM to IPM MQfl thru guitars
Pliul copy wtth ces• •1M oe
d
2 bedroom. completely fur
Sof 514 448 tltt 827 3rd
One
Acouotl
c with cooo 6 2 Wante to Buy
Bulin•• Opportunity operating
noshed No polo Coll814 848
Avt
Oatllpolll
OH
1126 00 Both In good cond
Nr dub 3 000 sq ft on 2 ac:rn. 36 Lots • Acreage
2283
1980 Honda Odauay 1400 00
304 570 3609 evoningo
Valley Furnhure ntw &amp;. used
304
812 28Z1
2 bedroom mobile home. Mid
Now buying shall corn or tar
Lerve 1ectlon of qualjty fuml
7 acres 2 btma 1 aeptlc tank dleport, 0 Ref.arence whh •• ture 1218 Eutern Ave •
com Call foi llltett quotea River
Weight benet. tnd wliatl" City F•rm Supply, 114 441
curlty d-olt 304·882-32t7 Gllllpolls
snd rural wattt' for 7 000
23 Professional
horoflv uood •so 00 304-882
5t
4·446·8819
or
304·
773·5024
2885
Services
2715 after e 00
LAYNE S FURNITURE
K 6. K Mobile t4ofMI 2 lnd 3
CCC Generic Ctrtlflcttea 304
Crthtmln . 10 tnch radl.. trm 875· 1107
bedroom mobile homll 304·
Sofe1
and
chitin
prictd
from
w brand new nev er bHn
Rentals
Piano Tumng and Rtpatr Clip
en~
t396 to 1196 Ttbl• 180 and ..
uood 304 875 5478
this ad for 25 PII'Ctnt dl1count
up 10 1126 Hldt I bldl 1390
Lane Daniels 114 742 2911
Mobile home, 2 bedrooma. to U91 Reclln111 t2215 to
63
Livestock
26 Inch Zeruth color conaole TV
loceted Alhton Upton Rold. U71 Lompo tz8 to •us
rec1ntly repa~red 8 100 00
t150 00 month plus ut11itiH "" Dinettn t109 end up to ••915
Starks T'" end lawn hrvict
41 Houses for Rent
080, 304·875 6604
Htdgu thrubs. bushes
304··75·4088
Wood tabla w 8 ohtlfl t285 to
Pollect Cherolela Bulls growthy,
tnmmld landscaping atump
S78&amp; Oook •100 up to 1375
correct 800ib1 Woodward•
N1wly remodeled 3 bedroom
Top
ot
the
Une
CA
Waterbtds
and leaf remcwal 304 1578
Hutchu t400 and up Bunk King S i ~e Splendor" soft· OhiHco Farmt Ph I 14 379
hou•• Close to ctty school•
284Z Of 175 2010
44
Apartment
bedt compllte w mlttr.... 1idtd walerbed Les• than 30 2697
InQUire It 63 Garfield AIM
12915 tnd up to 1385 Baby btds daya old 20 YIIJ warranty Two
for Rent
1110.t171!i MeHriiHIDrbox (2) solid l Ute ha&amp;tera metal Y11rUng Pulled Hereford Bull Ph
'
&amp;mall 3 bdr hou1e. n1ce n11gh
eprlngs full or twin *13 firm frame to f1t 1tandard bed, 814-367· 7224
borhood. city achoolt, no pets
t73.andt83 Oueensats•221
couple or couple with children
nanderd 1htet 11~1 WIU sell for
Nicely furm1hed mobile homt King t310 4 drawlf' ch•t til
1300 per month Deposit 1 yeer CA &amp; heat
helf price Will show IIStmbled Simmenlll Bull 4 yten old Ph
location
Driii«S
t89
Gun
cabin
...
I
014 379 2330
..... Rlf•enoea reqwred Cell aduluonly Cell814 4410338
bv eppolntment only 304 871
10,
•
12
gun
Gu
or
electric
114 '1411 0122 oft• 4pm
31 Homes for Sale
range U715 Baby mettr11111 1578
6 Whlt•faced Hllfers for 18la
51 3'h 3rd Aw 1 bdr prlvttt t31 6 Ul ltd fram• UO
Hou" on TaxM Ad for rant
F1rewood 826 00 pickup load Coli 014 892 7789
bath
•
140
per
rno
Depot
It
3 bdr au. pool. garage Nice
t30 a King frtmt •eo Oood 304 875· 717t
Mobile horne on BttUe Ct Ph
reqwred Call 814 Ul-*222 •flection of blclroom suit"
Commerclei PfOPM'IY comer 814 448 0715
2 hoga for •ale 1 boer and 1
betwaen 9 &amp; 5
mltlll cal,.nets hMdbOtrda t30 Melal office de1ka drtw. . or lots • highway frontage Uat
Coll814 992 3888
end up to tl5
with us WI h...l buytn A Ont 2 Bldroom hou11, very clean
typewriter peltform with edlus·
Fum11hed
efftC
IIftCV
t150
utiliReal Eattt•Brok• Ctll 30•· e1&amp;0 DOper mo tll 00 dap
tabla IWI\lOI chair both lor
tin P•ld shert beth, 701 4th
U1ed Fumltur~- With• •
074 &amp;104 or 304·874-5388
64 Hay lit Grain
o11t located I Whhe Av. Ph
1125 00 304 372 2801
Golllpollo Coll44tl·4418 oft«8
ga1
rangt
wood
table
&amp;
drylf
448 3870
pm
2 benchu bids drttw. wOOd Arewood tao 00 dump truck
3 Bedroom, bfeeze \WIY 2 car
wtnltobl 3 miles out
garag1 1 'h acre app 5 mil• 2 Bedroom hOUM. 13 Otrfllld
toad deltvered Naw Commo• Dried lhtllld corn f4 60 per
Fumi1hed
3
rooma
and
beth
from Holzer Hoalpitel route 110 A~anua Aat•enoea required
Bulovlllo Rd Opon BAM to
dote 128 co mputer, disc dnva cwt. ground •a 00 per ewt
cl
..
n
aduftt
onlvo
no
pet1
Call
5PM,
Mon
thru
let
coll 814 388 9301 .,e14· 388· Adults prel•red
' 614 446 1619
printer acce110ries 11500 00
ground with molastH S6 75 p ar
614 448 0322
9708
Phone 304 571 2842 or 1576
cwL 304·468 t031
4 Room house. OM heat btg Nicely fumiahed 2 bdr apt
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 2010 aher 8 00 pm
2 Bedroom tMM!It loc.ted II yard. f1 50 00 plut utillttea Ph
Adult1 only Inquire at corner W11h1rs dryers refrig•atora
Mill Cr... 11110 OOmo. 175 00 8t4 448-0974
Contemporary couch and lov•
F.lrst &amp; Oliva St at Shepplrds range• Sk1ggs Appliances
depo•lt Ph 114 441·3870 or
M l t 1 tlrth tone strip• with
Salet&amp;
Service
Upptf
Rlvar
Ad
beside
Stone
814 448· 1340
3 bedroom walking dlattnce to
toose cu1h1ons good cond1tk»n
Crtet Motel 11• 448 7311
city school• 1360 00 P• month Fuml1had apartment uptttln
1200 304 676 2183
6 room houtt 1 2 ecr• Double 1350 OO ' Socurlty Oopoolt Ph
Aduh• only an ut1lhlel paid Ctll 11 yard• ot used cerpel. noo
cargerage LocetedonAo11HIII 8 t 4 448 4081
Ukt New - 27 Inch Huffy 71
Autos for Sale
8t4 448· 9523
Htat pump t 100 Roll•ex•d· 828
Sartain prie.ci 120 000 Cell
12 opoed t75 00 304
tor
146
Coli
014
251
)287
614 878 2513
8 Room hoult, 1\1 beth 3 :F-ur-n:loh:-a-:-o:..ff
d :,l-,
clon
_ o:y_t"1"7"&amp;-oo
"'",
876 1847
bedrooms
Ulillty
rm 081 h.... 2rms a blth utilhtll Pd 448
House tor tale. 380 Gr1nt It
Gaaollne
8u1h
WICk•
with
c 1lr din or Moraga lml from 44 18 1 ft 7
Dog house medium size dog, Mor- 1978 400SEL4 door
blade 1125 00 Toyo atove exotllent condhlon ell box XX Sharp lo.cted will trldt
Middleport 8 room beth gar· town Ref &amp; Dep requiret rent
er P m
keroaent hut• with blow• apring1 e xcellent condlt6on. t · l14 888·7311
aga work shop 823 700 Make 325 OOmo plus utllittll Ph
Lernt 1n.,mlflt 2 bdr fur
1225 00 Ph 114 441 7Z08
olfor Coli et4·992 2802
814 445-4751
•
•
U&amp; matching m1ttrt11 h'11
nlllhed claM. water paid
wtth box. apnngs wood grain. 1983 Old1mobllt Aoyala. Peel
Located
on
Main
St
In
Chelhlre
Complete Searl Winnie tht Poo draparv rods •1 0 each 304
l•t condition PS, PB, cruiN
Government hom• from •1 IU 2 bedroom housa far rn In
t200 per month C.ll UIS·
Nufllry Colltctionl
control rear defrod• crnhld
repair) Delinquent 18 proptrtv Mlidloport Complotooly lomo·
~76
8678
5818
Bed drauar lamp prnalng
RepoAMtionl Ctll 8015 887
vetvet lfetS • dr 1ilvar Priced
dettd New cerpthng throuth·
tabla~ ceiling ligh1. wall
1000 Ext GH-9805 for currllflt out New cabln1t1 t27!S f"'
to soli It 14500 Coli 446 0840
Apartm.m for '""' AI utllttltl
hanging• end curt1lna Nevtr
or 441 1428 eftw lpm
repo Mit
month plus dapoah Cell e 4
65 Buildmg Supplies
p1ICI
Mtxt ~o Rio Qrandt
t ftc4
betn u1ed 1260 00 Ph
99Z 1858
CoiiiQt t226 per month CIH 814·448 1324
1981 Celebnty 4·door 2 8l 8
2 bedroom house for sell in
448-8883
Cyl MPFI Auto AC AM FM
Clifton (Meblt Johnson prop- 8e1uttful new hou11 In Pom•
Building Materitla
Eleotrlc white range widt oven
erty) Fully e1rp11ed recently rav Also new one bedroom
tt•to clock rust proof under
Apartments for ftnt t1 00 00
toOd condition Ph 614-,...8· Stock brick. 1ewer pipn, win coat gaug• trip odom. lftterm
remodeled. new roof Aaldng furnlahtd apartment m Middle1150
00
1200
00
Ph
304dow• lintel• etc Claude Win
84110
•te 000 0.11304 773 6634 .. port Call 114 448 1152 or
wlp•t. ntw t1r• fiOOf m1t1, olH
878 6104
tel'l A•o Orlnde 0 Ctll 114- HrYice recorda local own•
304 773 1784
814 992· 5304
"000 Ph 814 245 &amp;120
Sofe ' Chair In zood condition Z46 5121
Oakwood 1pta modtrn 1 bed· 1250 00 Ph e1 250· 0002
Largehouaewlththrealotl 810 3 bedroom In Middleport Gas
room units 1186 00 plue utili
Concrete blocks ellsi111 yard or 1981 Flrlbird exc:ellant condl·
E Main Pomii'OV t 18,000 furniiCI Wah• dry• hook-up
tin llO pita lingle p1r10n Moytog goo dryer noodo roopolr
delivery M11on sand Gtlllpolll tion Call 1fter 6 p m 304 175
Coli 814 985·4427 oft• 8 00 carpeted t225 per month plus
prelonod Coli 114 448 2015 t25. Coli It 4 -892 7789
Block Co
123 ~ Pine St
3109
ulllitill 1200 dlpOIIt C1ll
P")
aft• tp m
Gllllpolla Ohio C1ll 814 441
814-892-7607
Devenport lowaut tnd chelr
Z713
75 Ch8VIJY Monte Clrlo, body
2 br Jdtthen bathroom with
The Otkl Apartments We are Like new Old coH11 table end 2
Pluff motor good lhtpe, runs
leurwtry room Nvi09 room &amp; In M1ddlaport e rooms. 3
now
having
1
December
movt-ln
end tabl.. Call Erma Roulh Pole Buildin gs by Quality good t400 00 or bllt offer
dinmg robm, .U tltc: Appro. 7 bedrooms. 1Vt bi\'h Fully c•
special
on
r..,t
6.
depot
it
t119
Builder• Workshops carpons Inquire at 84 G1rfield 1\tB
814 BIZ 5651
m1l11 from Pt fit on At 82 2 peted endoted back porch
Is til you pay to mo\ll In for
tnlmal ahetta" gar1gn FrH
tractaapprox 1 acremor•Ofl . . lovollol Call814 892 3510
Dtc~mber Gt1 In on the action
aatlmetes Phone 814 384 1815 Mutteng 2·door, 302
Pic:ktn1 Used Furniture Good
ovtrlooklnt Ktnewhl River
tor more information Call qu1lh.v used fumhura OpM &amp; to 6752
11 600 00 Ph 814 379 2436
uo.ooo Coli 304·875-5440 Llrga fa,m house In counlry 8 &amp;11•ell882
7170 Terry Htle Ra1
I or ctll for appointment
betwean 8 30 tnd 4 30
mlln from town, frM , ..
1-:c983::-:Piy
,--m-o-ut"'~-Turi-,-m-o-.....1 ~
Mngr E H 0 Mon~god by U8 304 875·8483 or 876·1450
304 e11 41100 1 oo to 4:00
lhtlt•
Corp
engina.
2
door
15
000 mllll.
Cl- well molnt~lnfll, oluml
PM
66
Pets for Sale
Lady Kenmore porttble ful 1111
nloo, UOOO 00 Ph 8t4-379
num 1kled. 3 bedroom• 1 V\
Nice 4 room l!:!ally furnllhed coppertona butch• bloalc top
be1hs tormtl dining. rec room Two story. • bedroom• 2 b•h•
2728
oop1 In - . ,
lon, 12110 00 dilhWIIhlr t125 00 304
l•ge Ht· in llltchln 2 car nM kitchen newly redoorated
mo plua utMHI• Ph 114·448· 773 5259
g•ag• New fuM efflc:lent fur· U7&amp; DO depoatt and r.trenctt.
Dragonwynd Cattery Kenntl 1181 2 2 Engine. Auto a AC,
488?.
noce, 304 875·41104
CFA Himalayan PersiiO 1nd 11 .000ml llka new •• 926 00
304 812· 2095
Couch. lovMeet and redln•
Slemae khttna AKC Chow Ph 814·379 2721.
2 end 3 Mdroom 1pertmtnt1 304· 773 1485
pupploo Call 814 44&amp; 3844
2207 Weahlngton Av.nue. I
end
hou..
In
Pomeroy
'
Of'
32 Mobile Homes
oft« 7PM
77 Chovoll Molllxo 1716 00
room• end balh t271 plu1
Middllport Furnished or unfur
'79 lntamatlon" Scout. 4x4
utMitl11 r.t•ence end diPOaft.
for Sale
nllhtd Ply own utlhl• Cell 64 Mi.c. Merchandise
G•oom &amp; Supply Shop
I t 000
304·178·2551
doyo 814 192 2381
Proi ..IIOntl Service aU styltl, 81 Mercury Lyn•. automatic. air
all brHd• lttlt At 1 41 Gelllpo
81 8911 00
for rent 2 bedrooms, In
1 •I'd 1lh bedroom apt available
AND UIED MOBILE HOUII
lis Ohio 41!1131 , Julia Webb Ph
84 Ford Escort, 4 -speed
New
Havlfl.
t
110 month Depat
Riverside
tor
rent
Be-'o
rent
CeiW.an••
Utad
nra
Shop
o
v.,
KEIIELI QUALITY osit required 304 182-2583
614 448 0231
12 895 00
ltl11t It t179 pht• utllltl•
1,000th'81 tian12. 13 14 16
HOME SALES, 4 Ml
Ph 814 388 9815
t200 •ecuritydapo11trequlrld
11 115 I mil" out Rt 218
OALUPOU8 RT 3&amp;
Aeolu erad 10wk old Toy Poo
lnqul•o 11 614·882· 7787
Coli 814 208 8251
PHONE 814 448-7274
dlal Call 114-448-2196
1980 Flr&amp;blrd Trana AM power,
42 Mobile Homes
elr ...., ca new enginl 22
I
Plutic
ctn.n
nata
approved
1973 Vlndele12d&amp; wtlh 7•14
for Rent
AKC Regiat•td ltegl• pupa 1 MPG Exctlltn' malntenence.
dupl• Fully Cll'polod 1200 plutlc looptio tonko, plootio
-.p~ndo Totlltlectrlcsttupfur
w•• old Both p•entl ucel not e hot rod t 4 800 00 or beet
per month plue utiMtlll C.ll cutv.t:a mete~ cutvena RON
no odll wner Oood Can~
lent hunters no tech c.n off• m" uad, Ph 114-441814· 941· 2801 or 814 149
EYANI ENTERPRI&amp;EI Joclo
Ph et4-2411308bolw_ •• 2 bdr fultv tuml1hM edultt only
6, 4 98&amp; 4450
2748
utll
psld
Coli
814-441
·4110
2880
ton
Oh
114-281
&amp;930
8

Tronsporiolion

1-----.,.-----

iln~Ro~~~n;.~.;;...,;;;nl;;c:o;:2!1;b,;;dr;;oo;;m; '

1970 Br&lt;lnco 4 wheel dnve e
cyl 3 speed Run• excell..,l
body rQugh 1460 Cell 114
992 3595

0

I'

Httdtr panet, grill and tront : ~
bumper, for 1981 Gntn PtY , ~
mouth Fury C.r u" from l ,
1878 1982 Chrysler Ne w ~
Yorklf' Ntw Port or Ply Fury
Coli 814192· 7075

Jackets • T·shirts

992-7460

PAT HILL FORD

,·.

Mon thru Friday I 30 10 1 .....

lorno &amp; lop11r

4

8 8 t 4·448·8113

BUYING AAW FURS! Ginseng
Yellow Root Hllf end dter

CARPENTER
SERVICE

you're not SUP-

'84 ChrNy c'Uttom van, like new
26 000 milll lo.clld Phone
8t4 992 842t

••ctt

Old quilts C81h p-'d
Cell 1 ~
814·2·5 · 9441 IYtntngl or II
write Rt 3 BoM I C Rodnev n 1
Ohio 41131
~~ ..

Will do blbyslttlng In my homi.

24 Hour Wrecker Ser.1ce
Full

~·.
••

TOP CASH pold for 83 model 1
ll'ld n.w• Yaed c.,, lmhh 1,
Buldt· Pontiac. 1811 Eutwn •
Ave Goltlpollt Coli 814· 448
~ ~,
2212

ott~&lt;

AUTO

1Efll8EIITO~

CHESTER--915·3307

9

Uttd SniP On toola&amp; ch•t Call

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

6-17-tfc

~

,.,

• lilly

or 992·7121

i], I

I

1

We HtrJ AFell Tl•
Stitt Ttehltlte

992~5682

,,

I

JAMES KEESEE

.SITWITf SALES &amp; SIIVICE

AI•• TruQll11lo•

(,;

/1)

"FBE EmMA11S"

•Gl8SON

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

. I'

"

::~~~~~~------ '&lt;

P(rrly

: h·r-;f!l'il\

•Roplocomont Windowo
•Now Roofing

•SPEEO

Ohio

Tllrlrlk·,qr·•trrq Prnt~

lh

--..WE
~~"'="..........
ARE YOUR SALES

Roger Hysell
Garage
It 124, ,_,.,

·~

1·13 Hn

FOR SALf

111416lmo

PH.

Understan d

Nicely furnished , tint floor one
bedroom apartment with att
ached glll'qt No lttpe ldaal tor
oinglo or couple So•ry no poro
Phone Wlngen Raclna 814
949 2441

W .O .

1179 Jeep CJ6 Good condi
t1on RebUilt engine Ctll 1ft•
3 00 pm 014 7U 287&amp;

I p.llce living room auhl, 2
wtelc1 Did ~ Alao house for rent
Coi1448 17&amp;1

MeVWD Dlthw81her like new 2
Acouttlc Guitars Ph 814 448
01558

a. 4

t••

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

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Handm.de eftlhMI
V.,kKII
cok»rl Will mike nlct Chrinm•
gifts 1~5 ooch Coll317 7123
1ft• 4pm

Vans

1979 Chevy Panlll Van ~ ton ,
auto. PS PB I ply M &amp; S
Ph 614 ~45 9666 oret4 245
513t

•tt•

OH.

Mlcllllepert,

BUILDING

LOST
Gray Schneuz• in 1..
viclntty of State St • Heda•
wood Ph 014 448 2105
lo1t Dec 1st Chi non Sup• 8 .-.
movie cemertin old Pomeroy Jr ~
High Spring Ave arN Reward
Coli 814 992 8110
~

PH. 992·6173

•W11hlr1 •DithWII .. rl

IIACIIIE - 14 acres and a
n~ ranch type home with IJa.
sement and detached earaee.
3 bedrooms. balh, mce let Will
garden space $23,«Kl 00
·~

h~r

DENNY CONGO

GUYSVW, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT - Beautiful

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE

(CUT OUT FOI FUlURl USII

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

U. S. IT. 50 EAST

room home With unf1mshed
lam1ly room on approx 811
acres, mos"y wooded Gar·
age, close to State huntmg
and park $15,50000

10113/. / tlll

Your Cable lit
Pho&gt;no Btffs Here
IUSINI!S PitON£
16141 992-6550
llliiiNa PHONE
16141 '192~· 77.54

REUAILE
8·20-'86 tfn

Fadary Cholet
12 Gauge Sholglltl Only
10·8-tfn

I :--:-:-:---:----:-:---...:.,,
.,
Long
femlle dog 11 mo old .,

$4800

We Cany Fishing Suppllet

RUSONAilE •

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

•'
Puppie1 pM't a..gte Ph 114 •
245· 5009

FUU Y REMOTE &amp; INSTAlLED

SALES &amp; SERVICE

614-843-5248

SAUS &amp; SDYICE

LOIIG BOTTOM - A 3 bed

OPIN DAllY 9 AM-5 I'M

Ntw Location.
161 Norlft Second
Midolltport, Ohia 45760

Mobile service

BOGGS

PRICE REDUCED - MORN·
lNG STAll ROAD - Here IS a
beaublul ranch type home
w~h a full basemen~ WBFP,
on 1 acre of land with pler11y
of extras Country setting 1n
great neighborhood' NOW
$53,90000

70 1 2111llve.
Gallipolis, Ohio

PLUMBING &amp; HElliNG!

Electronic Organs

GUN SHOOT

10' MESH ANTENNA
PANASONIC RECEIVER

Real Estata General

992-2259

HEATING CO.

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Servke

1

..

Ma•g• County, Ohto
GERALD W TOWNSEND

Duplex 141 S.ccftd cerptted 3
Mdroom LA DR n.w kitchen
• beth Wll._.l: dryer hooll-up
n•l 00 mo plul utlltles •
IICUrlty dtpostt Ph I 14 0190

73

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br LlllfJ Wright

Ntedad. a.byattter tO our home

3 Pupplta lwklold, 10 givuwey ~ '
to 1 good home Ph 814-24&amp; •
9520

Retriwer, good with chlldrenr
Ph 014 448-3820 oftor 4p m •

Debboe Meadows- Owner: lmojean Blev1ns
Loretto Holsinger, Shelly Ohlinger
Marro Amsbory

to accrued 1988 real eatate

taxes

54 M1sc Merchandise

nogotilblo. ContoctAolmlnlotro
tor HNivioWNOIIIIna•Rohoblll
tltion Cl!ll• 304-l28·11031

7 month maee y, Latbr.ctore

EAR PIERCING, MANICURING, PERMS AND
AU YOUR STYliNG NEEDS

appratsed value

54 M1sc Merchandise

'

"

Parcel One was apprataed
at $30,000 00, and Porcoi
Two was appra11ed at
$22 500 00 Tho reolootato
cannot be sold for I•• than
two-thordo (2 / 3) of the

ORDINANCE No 1175 86
An Ordmance to
appropriate addittonal
funds tn the Revenue
Shanng Fund within the
Vtllage Treasury
Be 1t ord11ntd by the
Councol of Village of Moddle·
port as fo llows·
Sec I Thotthe opproprla·
tton for 1986 tn the Revenue
Shar1ng Fund be mcre11ed
by $4300 00 since oddo·
uonal funds have been re
cetved for thiS purpose
Soc II That thooo fundo
be used m the followtng
manner
Street
Maintenance
$1485 00
Genorol
Govemmont
*2815 00
Soc Ill Thoo Ordinance
shall take effect and be '"
force from and after the earhast date permitted by taw
Posoad tho 24th day of
November 1986
Attest Jon Buck Clerk

't"eura
POSED

'4...-'-a=ivc::e-aw
_a_
y _~.~

resetvateon of minerals

Public Notice

"Y0U dOn t

ViN·MIIWrelrd··get your Cll'd1 '
TODAY'I Alao new credit card,1 t
NO ONE REFUIEDI Coll1 118 '''
419 3141 ht C-1980, 2~ ";_
houra

Firewood dellv•ed Oak • hldt·
oly opllt, HEAP vovchlf pldlup
loodo31 0.11814·44&amp;· 2223•
014·448· 3021
'

Apartmantl for r•• In Pomeroy
One and two bedroom Clean
1ndnlee Ca11114-982·8215or
814 812·7314

DIRECTOR
NUAIINGOF
Long.Wm Cll'l llHUt~e l•el
po11tion s.H etan. wllh per
1
oonel budgotory mon~g. ..n
1 end IUPif'V•t Hlllt needed
K-odgo of lodl!ol•d ototo
Fndal'hr llcaniUre •nd o*tiftcetlon r.tgu·
'~J
latton, whh 3 yHra; nurting
I"
""""'..... in long torm •••
,.,.~Ill 18Noroquloiolontwltlo ..__ _ _ _•_ _ _ _ _ _,__ _ _ _,_ _ _ _ _~
Gorontologlcol
oxp• r
.,,..., or trainingNu!olno
d•lrld Bel_.y

No hunting or tr .. p•slng '...

Fum1shld Apt t21 0 00 util•
,,_ Pd 1 bedroom ~ tim floor Ph
448 4418 oft• 7p m

2 bedroom fumlahtd apt In
Mlddlepon All utilltlw p1id Cell
814, 98Z 5014

"""'oy to oomlnuo your
collorlol - · you drop out
ool tho Army llotlonol Guonl fur
ffll lnform•lon on ~r Huce
tton 1. .tence .progrn 304011·39110 or 1· 800 842-3&amp;19

Myntt ferm loCI'ted Chntnut
Aldg• Road
'

Reference
Deed book 288. Page 17
Excepttng any previous

~-­

I

J

Hills, SvrKUSt Ohio 114 812·
6524 Watch for lignt De· tV'
comber 4th 5th, Oth t 0 00 ,
7 00 Everyone welcome,
Relfeahmentsl

Pr.or lnatruct•on

A Otvtaon of Evant
Producto Company
(11)21 , 28 (1215. 12, 19
5tc

t971 DOuun 210 4 - .
lluno good, 4 oopood
UIO. landy"t Auto Iaiii
814·11$2· 7403

Tatdng orders for Chrlttmll ~
Cotonlll rtylt doll c:rldl11 and
O.~eon atyla tay chNt, made
oturdy 114·912·3302

thence South 26 dog West
8 rods, thence South 16
Dog Waot 34 rodo to the
place of begmneng

HOWARD E FRANK,
Sheriff of

__., WGII"'•·

-~---'------·· '

to sa•d Spiller' • East hoe.

Tract Two A certain tract
conststtng of t wo pa rcels
Situa te 1n S alis bury Town
shtp Me 1gs County, Ohto
co ntal ntng an agg regate
4 75 acres more Or less and
be1ng more fully descrtbe d
as follow s
In Sect ton No 3 Range
13 Tow n No 2 m the Ohto
Com pany s Purchase begm mng on t tle hne of Sect1on 2
at the So utheast corn e r of a
traet of land formerl y owned
by Thomas Sp1ller. thence
South 8 9 deg east 3 chama
an d 1 5 hn ks to t he Pomeroy
an d Chester Road, thence
No rth 28 deg east 6 cha1ns
a nd 86 hnks along t he satd
road t hence North 39 Oeg
2 c hams an d 75 hnks along
t he road to a stone. thence
No r,t h 3 7'11 Deg West Pill·
mg the North s tde oftheroad
to e stone, thence North
Prestdent of Council
31'h Deg West passtng the
(121 5, 12, 2tc
Nort h s1de of the stable 2
c ha ms a nd 50 hnks thence
Pubhc Not1ce
North 7 Oeg East 3 chams
to ,.• n Elm troe on thai - -- -- - - - - Southwest stde of the Run
NOTICE OF SALE
t he nce North 46 '11
Offers wtll be rec~ttved at
West 1 c ham and 75 hnks
the offocoo of Porter Utt,.
a stake thence South 19Y2 Sheeu &amp; F - r 211 -213
De( West 3 chams and 37 E11t Second Straet, Pom
li nks to a Gum tree thence aroy Oh1o. for the purcheN
by tfle former line of sa1d of
the reoodonco of the
Tho mas Sptlle r to the place late Truman A Ru-. deceased
The property il
located on Uneon Avenue.
Pomeroy, Ohio. noor H1lond
Rood (county Rood 75) A
heauty shop 11 odjocent to
the residence ldNI for home
and business May be seen
by appointment Coli 992·
6689 All offero will bo con
11dertd until 12 00 noon on
Froday, December 12, 1986
Terms of oole Cash upon delovory of deed
Joy C Ruoooll,
Admtntltrator
(1 21 3 4 5 7 4tc

ONLY

Home Dec:orlfing Open Houst
at Tereu ~offman'a, Aultlc

(If,.. oro I
Voteron)

64 Mile. Merchandin

1 bedroom apt tor r• a.•lc
rent ltlrtl t21&amp; a month thlt
lncludll al utllitt• Oepoth:
raRuired ol •200 Contact VII
lege Manor Apt Middleport
114-992 7787 Equal Houalng
Opponunh.v

Uv•ln ld1¥11wMktoc•efor
P•lent c•e
""" Cali 014-812· 7471

hunting or t,..paulng dtV or 1 ~
on ttlt Chert• E Volt r

Also tho following dOl ·
By virt ue of a n Order of
Sate ISS ued out of the crlbed parcel of land situate

Apanment
for Rent

44

F

Wsnt li\lt In mlddli aged
woman to watch 2 childr.n 1
chlkl In 1chool Light house
wqrk. mod•na cooking S•terv,
room tnd bawd Ca11114 7422050 ofllf 7 00 p m

lll Collt!St , . . . , Oltio 4571t

Publi c Notoce

LAFF-A-OAY

Halp Wanted

Nttd babylln• Muet h.,e c~r
Come to my liqme. W•ah one
child I dey• 1 week Cell aft•
7 00 p m lt4 742· 2060

•

All''''':rll.illli:llh

3

1~
'

The DaYy Sentinei- Page- 11

Pome10y-Middleport, Ohio

Friday. December 6. 1986

71

Autos for Sale

1$84 Chevette 4 speed AM
FM Tapa w1ra nms S2 499 00
Johns Auto Seta, Bul ... llle Rd
Gtlhpolls
1970PiymouthDusterV 8 runl
good Ph 014 448· 0658

Motorcycles

1886 Hond1 70 3 ..whteltr
1986 Honda126 4 whHiet" Ph
814 446 7414
- , - - - - - - - -- - - 1985 Hondt 4 wheeler 1985
Honda 3 wheel« Ph 614 4ot6
7 414
19U Honda XA 80 • 400 00
excellent cond1t1on 1979
Honda CA 126 1200 00 Call
814 388 8897

1986 Tunsmo 2 2 I apeed
spoilers, louvw1 AM FM, new
tlroo Ph 8t4 448· 3324
19671mplla Convertabla Super
Sport runs not wreck.:l Seen
foced ol 0160 00 Ph 614 245
9694
'85 Sky Hawk ' 81 Chl'lettt 81
Charg• '77 Honda. ·eo Honda
'74 Ouster, '74 Dalaun Truck
Ph 614·446-9933
Must sail 1978 Datsun 200SX
55 000 actual mil• IS speed
transm1ulon look• 6 run1 good
•t zoo 00 Ph 814 6808
1970 VW ~qu~re btck Sedan it
needs work t160 00 Ph 614
446 9224 Cell 1fter 6 00
1986 Plymouth Dulttl' 2-door
t port model automet1c loaded
16 000 miles Ph 814 246
9656 or 6t4 245 &amp;131
1979 Chevrolet Mom:a 4spted
runs good 8400 Sandy 1 Auto
Salat 614 992 7403
A1 11 1978 Dodge Al Pin 4
door 8 cvl 4 speed New snow
tires and battery Needs fly
wheel t175 Cell 814 9B5
4312

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessorres

Budget tranl mlsllons ustd •
rebuilt Tool converten &amp;
trantftt cues Will dehvtt C.sh
&amp; Carry or Install cell 814 379
2220
C &amp; M Auto Parts St Rt 110
814 446 8ZZ7
73 to '80
Chevy truck lendera, 834 96
doors S89 00 t al lgatu
859 00 bed sides 8175 00
81 to 81 Chevy fenct.s
149 00. doon S89 00 te ll
gates 886 00 73 to 79 Ford
truck fanderl 835 00 80 to
86 Ford tender• 849 00 73to
86 Ford truck doort 176 00,
tatlgatn, S76 00 large t elae
tlon ot body pans

Used auto t1res 815 M11
matched snow t1res 1 10 Truck
t1res 120 and up Call 814- .
992 5344
Four Atie• Studded Snow Tirn
L78x15 mount ed on nms
160 00 each 1204 Oh10 St
79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1936 FOt'd five wtndow coupe
on a No\la lrama NaiMI budden
title UDO Ca\1814 992 3696

1966 17 tt Trotw ood c1mper

1970 Oldsmobile Cutlas Con
vartablt Runs good need•
paint 18&amp;0 Lot a of new parta
Coil 614 992 3596

Serv1ces

1980 Cutlln Suprema. PS PB
power window•. cru11a tilt
whHI ~w mtlel 304 882
2788 after 1 OOPM
77 Cordaba good cond phone
304 675 7978 cell 1 1 00 AM
1977 Chevy Impala 4 door
auto PS P8. t600 00 phone
304·882 2080 otter 6 00 PM
t 989 Chov~l SS
304 875 7250

$600 00

1978 ptymouth Trill Duater •
wheel drive 318 V -8 304 675
3121 1fttr e
1976 Vol•• Ford ready to go
good condition 1695 304
875 4359
1984 Pontttc 1 000 t2 B&amp;O
Phone 304 876 6141
72

Trucks for Sale

1983 Chevay s 10 4 1peedh•
camp,et' top call &amp;14 448 75150
1985 Ford 160XL 2. tone red
PW power door lockl AM FM
stereo faetorv air CC til t
ateerlng wheel DB factory
mstalled tf11ler towmg plclcega
chroma bumplf Ph 814 388
S874
'86 Ford ~anqer pickup 4 wheel
dri'IO ltt nd•d 1ransmlu10n
Raal1h1rp Call61• 992 6421

$1 000 00 304 676 7867

81

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uneonditlonel hfetlme guartn
tee Local refarancas furmshed
Frt1 estimate• Call collect
1 114 237 0488 day or ntght
Rogar 1 Baaament
Weterproof1ng
SWEEPER and 1awmg machmt
repa1r parts and suppl1• P1ck
up and del1verv Davit Vtcuum
Clllntr one half mile up
Georga Creek Ad Call 814
448 0294
RON S Teltv1110n Strvlce
House calls on RCA Quazar
GE Spaclallng In Zenith Call
304 576 2398 or 814 441
2454
Fetty Tree Tr1mmlng a1ump
removal Cell :!04 875 1331

Starkt Tree 1nd Lawn Service
Hedges 1hrubs bushn
lrtmmad landscap ing and
1tump , tmoval Uaf removal
304 578 20t0 "' 578 2842

Two 1973 Whtte frttght lin••
both good cond 19?6 motor
home cltss B for 1111 or tredt
304 458 , 729
'
1950 Ford truck good cond1
t1on flat head 11x, S1 200 Also
1975 Ford Pinto ang1ne end
trensm la1lon good condition
304 876 51Z3
1986 StO, 4 o:yl 4 opood
AM ·FM CUielt lhdingwlndow,
olher txtral 304 882 3487
1980 F 700 Ford. 2 ton 14ft
flat sttll bed good cond
It 000 00 304 458 t783
1987 GMC half ton 6 cyl. 3
spltd new H1t bed, new shlfttr
1450 00 304-875 42t0
1910 F 700 Ford 2 ton 14ft
flat sttel bed good cond
11 000 00 304-418 1783
1987 GMC half ton I cyl 3
speed nii'W flat bed new sh1ftar
1450 00 304 875-4Z10
1910 F 700 Ford 2 ton 14ft
flat stllll bad. good cond.
.1 000 00 304 418 1783
1987 GMC half ton 8 cyl 3
tpeed nawflltbed newahlfter
1410 00 304·87&amp; 4210
1978 Chwy short whHi bllt
Side Step ph:kup 350 tuto PS
lookl and drives n1ca
11 .450 00 304 676 8758 or
878 4181

1977 Datsun fickup 8 800 00
304 578 291
1974 Ford F-100 LWB new
G&amp;O WS r~mt good work trucll
1300 00 1975 Ford F1 00
1971 30Z four oopoad ladder
recke good tlrn . t8 000 00
~04 · 578·2842 otto 8 oo. 304
678 20t0
73

Home
lmprovementa

Rotary or cable tool drilt•ng
Mo1t well t compltttd aarned1y
Pump 11111 1nd s.vice 304
895· 3802
Ast&lt;lby Constru1f!1on, carpen
tary ramodehng room ldd1tton

cemant block work, roofing
tntarlor 1nd exterior paint1ng
sid1ng. Roofing Free lltimates
304 &amp;75 544&amp; or 875 6t62
82

Plumbmg
Heating

&amp;

CARTER S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pint
Galhpohl Ohio
Phone 114 448 3888 or 814
446 4477
85

General Hauling

Jem•• Boy• Wattr Service Also
pools fill ed Call614 266 1 1•1
or 6,4 448 1175 or 814 44 &amp;..
7911
T &amp; LWa1er delwery anvt1me Ph
614 388 9732 u me day
delwerv

•

Cotl tnd limllton a haultii ~ :
Tromm EMCIVItlng Call 81 ... . ..,
742 2328
W1 tten on • Wate r Htullng
rauonable ratea Immediate
2 000 gellon delivery c•sternt,
pools well • tc c all 304 578
Z919

•

Co1l ltmestona g ravel ate
Delivered 1 ton and up J lm
Lanter 304 876 1 247 or 671
7397
Coal Um tstona s•nd and gravel
dehvary 304 875 3190
Coal hillY wood. lumber m1sc
thlng l 304 576 6724

Van•. 4 W . O.
87

1179 Jeep CJ 7. GOOd cond
mil• 8 o:vl. 3 oopood
IZ496 Coll814 448 9855

n.ooo

Upholstery

1179 CJ -6 Golden Elgie V 8
3 apaed l poker whtell AM FM
IDW mlleagB Ph I 14
446· 9700

''"'to

R &amp; M Custom Cpucha1 and
Reupholt tary St At 7 Crown
City Oh 814 258 ·1470 Evo
61 4 446 3428 Open dally 8 to
5 Sat 9 30 to 1 30 Old &amp; new
Uphostered

118• Ch..,ey Bt auvllle Win
dow Van Air Cl'lllll. n•aa
Aehr wh..ta. 3011 HP 400
Trono} 4tonPh 814 245·8511
., 81•·245-8131
,

Mowrey • Upholstering a.vlng
ln c:ot.mtytrH21 Ylltt Thtbtat
In furniture upholstering c.n
304 875 · 41 ~4 f or hoe
_
oo_tl_
m_ot_e~
• _ _ __;_ __

•

•
I

�!P~~g~a:!1!2~n.~·~o.~~~Sa~~n~tiN~I--------_:--------------~~me~ro~y~M~~~d~~~rt~.~O~hi~o------------------~~~~~F~~~~~Y~·~OE~am~~;r=6~,1~98~8
Rutland; Joseph Davis. Middle·
port; Anna Fitch, Middleport;
Charlene Estep, Rutland; .Floyd
HoiUday, Dexter; Mildred BlevRoush, Ewi!lglon; 'Wayne Upton, Ins, . Pomeroy; Judy Roberts,
Reedsvllle; ,Jane Manuel, Ra - Racine; Martha Chambers, Mid·
' cine; Ivan Powell, Pomeroy;
dleport; 'John VanMeter, Ru·
Linda Jacks, Langsville; . Eliza- · !land; Dale Luster, Pomeroy;
beth Bartee, Long Bottom; Wll· Wendell Williams, Pomeroy;
llain Smith, Pomeroy; Chiirles Mickey Baltic, Racine; Allee
EUls, Pomeroy; Amarda Scyoc, Wa msl ey, Pomeroy; Mary
Coolvllle; Cora Smith, Pomeroy;
Shuler, RaCine; Betty GUkey,
Debra Nelson, Pomeroy; Greg Middleport;
Basil Haynes,
Taylor, Pomeroy; Joy Hysell, Langsville; Authur puckworth,
Middleport; Gene Chaney, Ra · Mlddlewrt; Edwin Cleland, Ru·
cine; Kathleen Carpenter, Ru· tland; Katherine Sexton, Langs·
!land; Carl Gorby, Langsvllle;
vllle; James Crisp, Langsville ;
Cheryl Lemley, Rutland; Ronal&lt;!

;Grand, petit jurors are .drawn
I, The names of 250 Meigs Coun-

: tlans have been chosen In· Meigs
• County Common Pleas Court as
: prospective grand · and petit
~ jurors for the January 1987 term.
' Fifty lnilividuals were s~lected
l• for possible grand jury duty,
;. Including Michael Wilfong, Mid: dleport; William Hayes Jr.,
: Syracuse; Joan Childs , Middle·
~ -port; Louise Burbridge, Albany;
. Deborah Young, ReedsvUle; Ro' bert Lee, Racine: Edna Ed·
: wards. Minersville; Larry Tho; mas, Pomeroy; William Harris,
Plains; Diana
: Middleport; Robert Johnson, Ra· Shields,
Roberts, Tuppers
Ra~lne; James Snyder,
• cine; Marjorie Hoffner, Syra- · Langsvllle; Robert Schmoll,
' cuse; James Wilson, Racine;
Middleport
; Mary
: Qeborah Parsons, Portland ; Long
Bottom;
Mary Andrews,
Reynolds,
· Charles Lee, Syracuse; Eda Pomeroy; Esther Bukey, Long
·. counts, RaCine; Robert Riffle, Bottom; Earl Arlx, Pomeroy;
. Racine; Esta Roush, Portland; Glenna Snowden, Rutland ;
' Sharon Michael, Syracuse; Ly· Bruce Bumgardner, Middleport;
; vonnla Young, Pomeroy.: Virgil Harold Kautf, Middleporr:
• Hlll, Racine; Charles Scott, Teresa West, Reedsvllle; Lorene
: Middleport; Donna Knapp, Ru- Goggins, Middleport.
; tland; Jackie Wagner, MiddleAngela Houchins, Middleport ;
. port; Deanna White, Racine; Linda Priddy, Pomeroy; Jeffrey
; Raymond Burns, Ewlngton; Wrlkeman, Reedsvllle; Roger
: Brenda Haggy, Middleport; Net- Brown, Pomeroy; John Taylor,
' lie Parker, Pomeroy; William Middleport; Ruth Reeves , AI·
; Ca rleton , Racin e; Darlene bany; Jay Warner; Middleport;
• Wheeler, Albany;
Russell Lyons, Middleport; Ray: James Large. Langsville: Cha- mond Stewart, Middleport; Ann
rles Harvey, Reedsvlllr ; Clar· Biron, Middleport; Wilma Tillis,
ence Hayman, Racine; Helen Reedsvllle; Charles Williams,
Norris, Pomeroy; Hester Eblin,
• Rutland; Diane Molden, Langs: vllle; Janelle Call, Middleport;
: John Hetzer, Reedsville; Nor. man Weber, Tuppers Plains;
Randall Stewart , Middleport;
Harold Hamm, Syracuse; Ethel
, Rife, Dexter; Jeffrey Dilcher,
' Racine; Thomas Cross. Syra' cuse: Wanda Johnston , Langs·
~ ville; Lllllan Burt, Pomeroy;
· Dale Hysell, Middleport; Dona
. Tillis, Ruiland; Robert Caruth. e rs, Middleport.
: Selected for possi ble petit jury
i duty were the following 200
Individuals:
• Lawrence Swain, Reedsvllle;
: Shannon Bailey, Middleport;
Eblin, Middleport;
: Hyllia
! Grover Klein, Pomeroy; Vesta
t Bartrum , Middleport; Wanda
• Gardner, Rutland; Frank Col; well, Rutland ; William Morgan,
: Albany: Grace Abbott, Pome; roy; Ira Eblin, Syracuse; Jose: phine Ward, VInton; Rebecca
• Reed, Pomeroy; ·Paul Brown,
: Ewlngton; Richard Gilbride, Ra·
; cine; Leslie Fultz, Pomeroy;
· Denise Phllllps. Albany: Herbert
: ljoover, Middleport; Sandra
. Butcher, Pomeroy; David Eli klns, Tuppers Plains; Leafy
i Chasteen. Middleport; Thomas
· Sarver Jr., Pomeroy; Eugene
: Underwood, Middleport; Carol
; Tannehlll , Middleport; Harold
; Lohse, Pomeroy;· Mary Chan' cey, Syracuse; James Grimm,
Pomeroy; VIckie Combs, Ra ·
, cine; Cathy McGuire. Rutland;
: Eddie Smith. Racine; , Edward
·
: Rall'lllburg, Rutland ;

..

William Chapman, Tuppers
Plains; Debra Werry, Pomeroy;
Myrlam Ruthchlld, Pomeroy;
Joseph Davis, Middleport; Anne
Adams, Syracuse;
Jerry Wayne Richards, Long
Bottom; Cecil stacy, Dexter;
Mary HlndY, Middleport: Laura
Harrison, Pomeroy; . Dianne
Walker, Rutland ; Michael ·
Wright , Pomeroy; Martha Hag- ,
gerty, Middleport; Nancy
Plantz, Cheshire; Rose Mary
Bartlmus, Reedsvllle; Uretta
McKinney, Middleport; Garland
Caldwell, Pomeroy;' Floyd Cle·
land, Rutland ; Edna Schaefer,

· ht A hie Mid
Pomer.oy·, Gary Hamon, RuP omeroy; Dwtg
s y,
· !land·, Floyd Dalley, Racine.
dleport; Warr!ln Stearns, Ru·
d
tland; Donna Tillis, Middleport;
Present for the jury ra.w 1ng
Roy Miller, Fiomeroy; Bonnie were Meigs Common Pleas
Baker, MlddleROrt; Phyllis Eng- Judge Charles Knight, Deputy
lis~. PomeroY,; Carol . Cro~, Ruth ·Frank, Jury Commlss~o~Pomeroy; Seth Hill, Racine;
ers Wallace Bradford and · · ·
Etta Will, . Pbmeroy; James McCoy, Meigs Clerk of Courts
Powell, Racine; April Ellls, ' Larry Spencer, and Deputy
Rutland; Melvin VanMeter Jr., · Clerks Marlene HarriSOn and
Pomeroy; Barbara · Taylor,
Diane Caruthers.

.

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Cross, Langsvllle; Roher! Jac obs, Pomeroy; Sarah Mahlman,
., Long Bottom; Dennis Durst.
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: Reedsvllle ; Norman Hamilton,
: Dexter ; Bonnie Barringer,
Reedsville; Denver Co tterill,
• Pomeroy; Robert Hart , Vinton;
' Teri Roush , Racine; Valencia
l Hovatter, Middleport; Robert
· : Beegle. Racine; Edwin Ober' hol zcr. Albany; E llenore Land·
• ers, Pomeroy; Craig Mathews,
: Middleport; Wanda .Williams,
i La.ngsvllle; Gladys Machlr,
: Pomeroy; Debra Spurlock,
1 Tuppers Plains; Margaret West,
1 Racine; Angela Rucker, Reeds' vUle; Sheila Cundiff , Middle; port; Mary Marcinko, Tuppers
: Plains; Betty Kleinert, Reeds·
· vUle; Ruby Pickens, Racine;
: Tommy Simmons,. Middleport ;
' Charles Price, Long Bottom;
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; lee Erwin, Mlddleporl ; Emma
• McDonald, Dexter; Kenny Os; borne, . Rutland; Fred William: son, Rutland; Russell QuUlen,
' Racine ; Robert Montgomery,
' RaclM;' • Frances Hewetson,
I Pomeroy; Mary Lee, Albany;
; Julia Flagg, Syracuse; Brenda

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hostages In Lebanon.
Reagan's concession came slightly more than a
month after news first broke of the startling
clandestine overtures to the Islamic government
In Tehran and 12 days after he said he was "not
fully Informed" of the diversion of up to $30
million to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua .
VIce President George Bush offered the first
administration concession of error In carrying out
the secret arms dealings with Iran on Wednesday.
His speech, approved by Reagan beforehand, was
generally heralded as a positive administration
move.
. Until Saturday, however, Reagan has stead·
lastly refused to acknowledge any mistakes In the
Initiative.
"While we are still seeking all the facts, It 's
ol)vlous that the execution of these pollcllis was

1

The annual fee IS $50,

•I

Is 50

11 Sections , 90 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newspeper

answers," he said.
"I'm deeply disappointed Ibis initiative has
resulted In such a controversy and I regret It's
caused such concern and conslernatlon,'' Reagan
said. "But I pledge to you: I will set th in gs right.
That's what I'm doing now."
In the Democratic response to the president' s
address, taped Friday, retiring House Speaker
Thomas O'Nelll called on Reagan to admit th.at
sending weapons to Iran was a "terr ibledecisiori "
and to condemn the waging of "secret wars" by
US~M~
'
Senate Republican leader Robert Dole said
Saturday, "I believe when Ronald Reagan says,
as he has now done publicly, that mistakes were
made, that will go a long way in lying to rest some
of the criticism. It will also help his credibilit y
with the American people."

flawed and mistakes were made," the president ·
said. " Let me just say It was not my Intent to do
business with (Ayatollah Ruhollah ) Khomeinl, to
trade weapons for . hostajl'es nor to undercut our
policy of anti-terrorism.'
"I realize you mu st be disappointed and
probably confused with all the furor of the last
couple of weeks," he told listeners, falling back on
his famed skills as a personal communicator in
apologizing - something hi s critics· and friends
alike have been urging him to do since the outset
of the scandal.
"You must be asking what were we doing in the
Middle Eas(. What was our policy? Where was It
wrong? Were we engaged in some kind of
shenanigans that blew up In our face?
" I can understand that these are the questions
you're asking and I'd like to provide some

Jobless
figures
•
m area
decline

President plans
no staff firings ·
WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Pres·
lden.t Reagan, continuing his
efforts to put. the Iran arms Contra aid scandal In perspectlve, says he is not going to fire
chief of staff Donald Regan or
.CIA Director William Casey
without proof of wrongdoing
because it would be "throwing
.people to the wolves."
Reagan met· with Republican
. congressional leaders Friday to
discuss whether he should convene a special session of Congress to launch an investigation
Into the secret operation th.at
funneled Iranian arms sales
profits to the . Contra rebels
fighting Nicaragua's Sandinlsta
government.
Two special congressional
committees, one from the House
and one from the Senate, are
already being fo r med to convene
when the tOOth ~ongress convenes In January.
'. In the afternoon, Reagan met
with the two leaders of each
party In Congress, and all but
Senale Republican chief Robert
Dole advised against a special
session. Senate Democratic
1 d
R b 1 B rd f w
o er
'f o
est
ea er
VIrginia cautioned such a move
could create a "circus
"
t
h
a mosp ere.
" M..
P
Se
I I R.,....
. n. ete Domenc,
called the meetl g "f
n
ree·
wheeling" and said the pres ident
d em'ed ear IY k now led ge o C t he
diversion of Iranian arms sa les
profits to the Contras.
" He Iooked r Ig ht at eac h one of
us and said, 'I knew nothing
about lt.' I don't think anybody
challenged him," Domenlcl said.
Although the GOP leaders said
they believed Reagan's version
of what he knew about the
scandal and that his pledge to
cooperate with various lnvestlga·
lions was correct , Sen John

Chafee, R-R.I., sa10 some
members suggested personnel
changes In the White House.
"The president took the view
that he didn't want (o throw
anybody to the wolves without
adequate cause. ... He didn't
want to throw people up to the
wolves tlecause others were
asking for lt. He wants a
rationale or good reason to do
so," Chafee quoted Reagan as
saying.
Chafee and olher participants
said Regan' s and Casey's names
were mentioned in discussion
about staff dlsrqissals. Regan
attended the meeting.
· Domenlcl confirmed that some
members asked Reagan to con·
sider firing some of his aides,
but, "The president continued to
take the position that to his
knowledge they had done nothing
wrong and they would stay there
and help him."
-

THEY WVE A PARADE- Hundreds lined the
streets of downtown Gallipolis Saturady for the
annual Christmas parade. Crowds In the above

pboto view the Starilte Twirlers pass on their way
through the business district. Story and additional
photos are on B-1 of today's edition.

GOP governors to era_ft new de'IreCtiOD
•

By JUDI HASSON
PARSIPPANY, N.J .' (UP!) _
The nation's Republican governors, their numbers boOsted by
the November election, gathered
Sa tur day t o beg Incar
h tl nganew
dlrecllon of the GOP for the next
two years.
At th e top o f the agen da of th e
Republican Governors' Assocla·
lion meeting were sessions on
d rugs I n soc Iety an d th e f u tureof
the party, whlch lost control of
the Senate In November.
Treasury Secretary James
Baker was scheduled to speak.
One of the keynote speakers
scheduled to appear at the
function Is Richard Nixon, who

resigned the presidency In 19741 n
di
d
h w
sgrace ur 1ng t e atergate
scandal.
Nixon was to appear Tuesday
to t a lk a bo ut foregn
1 po 11 cy a t a
pr ivate session with the 24
Republican governors . Hi s
daug ht er, J uII e Nl xon El sen·
bower, was scheduled to appear
Monday to promote her new
book , a bl ograp hyo fh er mother,
Pal Nixon.
New Jersey Gov. Thomas
Kean, incoming association
chairman , said he did not think
Nixon's appearance would cas ! a
negative light on the' GOP
gathering.

In Washington, President Rea·
gan Is facing the worst crisis of
his presidency, a mushrooming
1ore 1gn policy scandal thai has
been compared to Watergate.
Th e probl ems began w 1Ih reve1a·
S
1 o1secret U. . sa 1es of arms
tons
to 'Iran and the diversion of
profits from those
Nl
b I sales to the
caragua n re e s.
A special prosecutor has been
requested to investigate cri minal
wrongdoing In the Iran-Contra
a in scandal and Congress Is
co nducting probes of the affair.
"We Invited him (Nixon) to
give us a briefing on foreign
policy," Kean said. "I don't ihlnk

there's anyone more qualified lo
have than him . The governors
are getting more involved in
foreign policy because of trade
Issues. I suspect he will be very
helpful to us. "
Kean said thn Republican
c

governors would focus on how to
build the GOP for the next few
years a t the three-day session
tha t officia lly hegi ns today.
"Senators
· and congressmen
don't
build parties.
They ca n' t.
They're in Washington. Covernors do. For the Republicans to
~~;e :;;:; ~~n~e~ov~~~f;: a~~
represent can play a very lmporta nt role In
,.. Kean said.
1988

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Unemployment In Gallla County during .
October dipped below the 10
percent mark lor the first time jn
months and Meigs County continued to r ecord a decline In Its
jobless rat e.
Unadjusted figures provided
by ·the Ohio Bureau of Employment Serylces Indicated a
downward trend In joblessness in
all area cou nties with the exception of Vinton.
Statewide, Ohio's unemployment rate was 7.8 percent In
October, 1.2 percent higher than
the nallonal average of 6.6,
OBES's preliminary figures reveal. The state 's November
jobless rate declined to i.2
percent, the U.S . Labor Depart ·
ment reported Friday.
Ga llla County was at 10.7
percent in September and fell the
following month to 9.6. a de·
crease of 1.11, OBES said. The
jobless rate for October 1985 was

10.8.
The figures showed that from
an estimated work force of
12,400, !here were 11 ,200 peopl~
employed in the county during
Octolier.
Meigs' October jobless rate
was 11.1, a drop of four,tent hs of a
percent from the September
figure of 11 .5. OBES reported
th at out of an estimated 8.800
people ellglbl~ to work in Meigs,
tContinued on A·3l

Athens-based program
focuses on children

appomts
•
•
mternn
•
executive

'Consult your tax adVisor for specific cond nion~ and r.cl ails.
~
•-The current AP~ is 1&amp;11. This is a varia bl.: rate anu may changt monthly

Today, cloudy. Hlghnear54l.
Tonight, rain or snow Ukely.
Low · near 35. Chance of

Reagan admits ·aides erred in ·arms bargain

•

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Along the River ........ B-1·8
Business ............. ......... D· l
Comics ..... ,.............. Insert
Classlfleds ...... D-2·3-~5-6-7
Deaths ........... :............ A-6
Farm ....................... D-2·3
Sports ..... ................. C·1·8

Middleport-Pomeroy-Ga ipolis~Point Pleasant, Decem~r 7, 1986

CIC board

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SANK ONE, ATHENS, NA
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No. 43

By IRA R. ALLEN
. WASHINGTON (UPI) - For the first time,
President Reagan said Saturday the way his aides
conducted the secret arms-to-Iran deal was
"flawed and mistakes were made" and promised
.to "set things right ."
Under tremendous politica l pressure from
Congress to admit error, and staring at public
opinion polls showing a majority of respondents
do not believe him, Reagan addressed himself In
his weekly radio speech from Camp David, Md .,
.to the "concern and consternation" his listeners
felt.
But In his sixth public address on the Issue In the
past three weeks, Reagan continued (o defend the
aim of his policy - to open the door to Iranian
"moderates," to provide a bulwark against Soviet
·expansion In the Persian Gulf, to stop the
Iran-Iraq war and to win release of American

..,

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Art Buchwald poses some humorous questions
on the Iran arms scandal - Page A.·2

• Vol. 21

,•

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: port; Ethel Jacks. Syracuse;
; Marc French, Middleport; Dean
• Hawk, Tuppers Plains; VIrginia
i Davis, R:aclne: Gerald DUI Jr.,
: Racine; Paul Alley, Racine; Ira
: Showalter, Reedsville: Ella
i Schultz, Racine; Matthew Little' field. Racine; Jeffrey Thornton,
; Racine; Robert Grossnickle,
: Reedsville; Jerry Johnson, Ru·
• tland; Beatrice Dugan, Rutland;
: Pamela Napper, Langsville;
! Marshall Slater, Albany: Jan
: Knapp , La ngsville; William
• Ault, Middleport; John Mitzger,
' Middleport; Dean Hill, Racinr;
' Harley Boring, Albany; Laura
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• Albany; Pamela Jude. Langs·
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' Louise Bearhs, Pomeroy;
· · Klmmy Pierce, Langsvlile; Son, dra Koenig, Pomeroy; Cecil
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.,
WELD·IN'G
17 COLE ST.

;
,.

By KEVIN KELLY
11mes-Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Retired edu·
cat or and administrator Thomas
E. Hairston has been appointed
Interim executive vice president .
of•the Gallia Counly Community
Improvement Corporation by the
CIC's board of directors.
Hairston, 65, accepted a $25,000
donation from Ohio Valley Bank
CICDONATION -AW,OOUonatlonfromOhlo · Interim executive vice president, Thomu E.
on Friday as part of OVB's
Valley Bank to the Galll,a County Community Hairston, center. Daniel P. Davies, president of
three-year commitment to fund
Improvement Corporation wu made Friday by the ere board ol directors, watched at left.
the CIC's efforts to attract new .
OVB olflclal Jeffrey Smith, right, to the CIC's
Industry and business to Gallia
County.
move to Gailla County.
CIC Board President Daniel P.
following an Interviewing pro- three-year stint as superintend·
Davies said Hairston's appointThe CIC began advertising lor cess, he said It's possible that the ent of Gallla County Local
ment Indicates. that the CIC Is
a permanent replacement for , replacement can be hi red by Schools- and has also served 17
moving forward .following the E~kman last week In the Wall mid--January and begin running years as a college-level admlnls·
departure of former executive Street Journal. To date, 10 the CIC office by March 1.
trator at Ohio State and Kent
vice pre~ldent N. Laird Eckman. resumes have been received for
Hairston, Rt. 1, Bidwell, has State universities.
Eckman was discharged by the the position, Davies said.
served 17 years as a teacher and
He has been working as a
board on Nov. 17, primarily
Davies said the cutoff date for administrator In Ohlo;s ·public corporate consultant for the past
because he had not completed his applications ·Is Dec. 15, arld school system - Including a
(Continued on A-3)

••
•

ATHENS (UPI) - Dr. Ben·
j amln Speck Saturday was the
first of many nationally known
authors and child specialists
scheduled to participate in the
first national call-In program
focusing on topics related to
parenting and c hild
development.
Bobbi Renz, a veteran of public
broadcasting and lhe mpther of
two children, developed Ihe program "The Ch ildren's Journal"
to provide an opportunity for
parents to share Insight from
their child-rearing experiences
and discus s their concerns with
professionals.
Renz, of Athens, produces the
program a nd Is Its host through
Llvy Mor r is Productions Inc., an
Independent radio production
company started by Renz, located In the Ohio University
Innovation Center. It Is broad·.
cast every Saturday at noon on·
National Publlc Radio
that choose to air lt.
During the one-hour segment
Saturday, Speck spoke on a
range of child rearing issues and
answered questions about family
life.
,
Speck said when he began hiS

st.

pediatrician praclice in lh&lt;•
1930s, the major co ncern of
pa rents was cont agious disease. '1,
Now parent s don · t have 10 worry
about di sease if I hey lakr t hr
right steps. hr said. bul the
problems t hry do face ar&lt;' s till
c hallenging.
He said drugs, lecnage preg nancy, divorce, compellliwness .
violence. excessive materia lism
are what parents worr)' about
today .
On divorcr. Speck, sa id child·
ren cannot escape unscath ed a nd
he said the most important timr
for them to see the absent parent
Is during the firs! two Y&lt;'a rs.
Speck said hr sees too many
mothers us ing vlsilatlon as a
weapon.
Spock-sald roo many Ameri&lt;'a n
children today grow up feeling
they have no obligations. and
that they should be taugh t lovolunteer for various activities.
"I don't feel how many
slons they have or w hat
get up in the morning is Important," he said "Jt 's that they feel
considerate. "Too many kids reel
they are In the world to satisfY
themselves or to fu Ifill
themselves. "

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