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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Crimson Tide
rolls to win

Daily

,in Sun Bowl ·
~~~ · - P~ge 4 ,

Numlu~r

198
Supt&gt;r Louo
12-34-2-23-38-25

•

•

enttne

Vol. 36. No.164
Copyrighted 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday. December 26, 1986

Coal company test~
one-of-a-kind machine
WILKESVILLE - Roy Lan· ·
ning has been accused of sitting
down on the job. And Bob Wilson
has been needled about driving a
school bus at work. Both men are
only test driving the RBD-1000
Frontrunner.
Although that may sound like a
sports car, in reality it's a roof
bolting machine manufactured
by Schroeder Brothers Corp. It
has been at Southern Ohio Coal
Co.'s Meigs No.2 mine on a trial
basis for four months.
Although Schroeder has gradu·
ally evolutlonized the roof bolter
from a more complicated prototype, the simplified machine at
Meigs No. 2 is the only one of its
kind. Its main feature is a seat for
roof bolter operators to sit on
while drllling and installing bolts
into the roof of t hC' mine for
support, as well as while tramming from place to place.
In April, Southern Ohio Coal
agreed to try the bolting machine
at no cost. according to Dan
McGraw, maintenance supervisor, who has been in contact with
Schroeder Brothers since 1982
concerning the design progress
of RBD-1000 roof bolt er.
McGraw worked closely with
AI Hillard. general superintend·
ent at the company's Raccoon
No. 3 mine, and Chuck Bolin,
manager-machinery and main·
tenance for American Electric
Power' s Fuel Supply DepartmC'nt, to form the agreement
wit~ Schroroer,Brot.hers.
Opportunity for changes
This type of agreement gave
Soouthern Ohio Coal the chance
to implement its "human engi-

neering program ..., inco~porat ­ miner's compartment, so that
ing ideas from the·operators and they a re always above . the
mechanics as well as from miners whether they are bolting
management," McGraw said. or tramming. Each canopy can
And, "it gave the company the support 20,000 pounds, said Bill
chance to make design changes · Cobb, Schroeder's engineering
before making a purchase deci· manager- mining.
·
sion, " he added.
Because the operators can sit
Schroeder repr ese ntatives
and do most of their work from
maintain that the new roof bolter under the canopies, Schroeder
has three main assets : safet y rates its machine high on safet y
and comfort, speed of drllling as well. Other roof bolting
and maneuverability.
machines have temporary roof
Speed is enhanced due to the support systems, but they are
ease by which operators can mounted at the center of the
swing the bolting compartments machine and set in front of the
back and forth or up and down to bolting boom.
meet the spots that nred bolting,
"We have to stand up to put in
said ·Harold Reich, technical the resin (Which is piacPd in the
assistant for Schroeder drilled hole I before the roof
Brothers.
bolt) ," Lanning said, but he can
Unlike the dual-type drllls that move the bolter from its comthe rest of the mine is equipped partment as well as move his
with, the Schroeder machine is a compartment up and down and
twin-mast ed bolter with com· swing it back and forth .
partments for two miners.
Instead of backing them ac hinc
Each compartment, with its out of an entry just bolted,
respective temporary roof sup· Lanning swings his compartport and canopy, has the ability ment out a little bit for better
to slide out from the center of the visibility and drives from the
machine, making the bolting front .of the 20-by-:1-foot-long
machine 15.5 feet wide in the machine.
open posit ion.
"We can almost turn the
When both oompartment s arr machine around in a 20-foot-wide
slid back tight into the machine.
entry (mined area)." Lanning
it is ready to tram to another part
said.
of the mine at a more-compact .
Seeking improvement
9-by-6 width and 20-by-3 length.
McGraw and the Schroeder
High safety rating
representatives have constantly
There's also a vertical slide been checking and rev iewing
with hydraulic lift cylinders for
different featur&lt;'s on the machine
moving the ca nopies of each to ..d\5cover J'any rapm for
compartment up and down to improvement. '
'
vary them with the roof height .
To incorporate input from the
· The canopies are design ed · to operators and mechanics who
"follow " the position of the
(Continued on Page 12\

Reagan welco01es
post-Christnlas lull
WASHINGTON 1UPI\ - The
White HousC' today slipped into
an official post-Christmas lull
that President Reagan and his
senior advisers hope to use to
recover from thf' damaging
impact of the Iran arms-Contra
aid scandal.
For . a third consecutivC' d&lt;Jy_.
Reagan planned to remain out of
sight. His and most other White
Housp offic&lt;'s wer&lt;' closed in
accordance with his Christmas
gift to federal employees - a
four-day holiday weekend.
The president and Mrs. Rea gan, who spent a quiet Christmas
with friends, will emerge from
s&lt;'clusion Saturday only long
enough to board a helicopter at
thC' Whit C' House, fly to Andrews
Air Force BasP and dC'part on Air
Fore&lt;' One for Los Angeles for a

2 Sections. 16 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Botched
hijacking
leaves
62 dead

TRYING IT OUT - Faceman Bob Wilson, who filled in on th(•
roof bolting machine at Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs No.2 mine,
adds another roof bolt with the help of the RBD-1000 series
Frontrunner. The canopy above Wilson's head is designed to
"follow" the position of his compartment, so that It Is always abo"l'
him whether he is bolting or tramming.
\

Mercenary claims
Ohioan was a spy

weeklong Cllifornia vacat ion.
Like millions of other Americans, the Reagans spent Christmas day exchanging gifts - a
red Christ mas robe for her and a
horse blank&lt;'! for him - and
swapping seasons greetings with
friends a n~ family members.
Holding to holiday routine, ·
they spent Christmas Eve at the
home of U.S. Information
Agency Director Charlps Wick,
kicking off a final round of
holiday season socializing that
continued Thursday with a
Christmas dinner for 18 at the
White House and will be capped
on New Year's Ev&lt;' bv a black-tie
bash at the sprawling desert
oasis estate of publ'isher Walter
Annenberg in Palm Springs,
Calif.
The Reagans have kept -to a

By NEIL ROLAND
close to Managua.
WASHINGTON !UPI\ - A
Miguel d'Escoto Brock mann,
former mercenary says Sam
Nicaragua's foreign minister.
Hail, the American captured two said Hail fi rst identified himself
weeks ago by the Nicaraguan
to Nicaraguan authorities as a
government , relayed detailed writer and later as an adviser to
data about Sandinista weapons Miskito Indians fighting to overand losses in 1985 to a private throw the government.
U.S. network supporting Contra
Hall succeeded Adams for two
rebels.
or three months in the spring of
' Jop Adams, an American who 1985 as trainer and adviser to
commanded a Contra contingMiskito Indians who launched
ent, said in a n interview Thurs- 'raids on the Sandin istas from
day that he hand-delivered Hall' s camps on the'Hondduran side of
intelligence report to Contra
the border ncar the town of Ru s
President Reagan
leader Adolfo Calero and to Tom Rus, Adams said.
Posey,' an Alabama activist who
Adams said Hall "knew what
has
been
supplying
the
Contras
the
hell he was talking abou t" as
busy schedule of receptions over
1
an instructor of military tactics.
the last two weeks in an C'ffort to for several years.
Hail's
sixpage
report
conHall's directions were translated
dispel suggestions the Whit&lt;'
tain
ed
detaii
Pd
information
into Spa nish by ot her officers,
House has become crippled by
about
captured
Sandinlsta
weaAdams
said.
and prroccupied with the Iran
pons
and
casualties
and
property
Hall
told thC' Dayton !Ohi o\
arms-Contra aid affair.
damage inflicted by rebel at · Daily News in Ja nu ary 1984 that
tacks, Adams said.
he had received military training
Adams' account suggests that in Central America. Europe a nd
Hall, who he said ' trained a nd the United States. The newsadvised 50 anti-Sandinista Indi· paper reported his passport and
ans in Honduras, had a substan- ticket stubs indicated trips since
tial role in the private aid 1982 to El Salvador, Sout h Africa,
network dating back more than Thailand and Israel.
18 months .
Adams. who said he served as a
the Columbus Foundation.
The FBI, which has been bodyguard to Calero after relin·
bus and he wa5 very enthusiast lc
Hurst's last brother Thomas about the Columbus Founda· investigating Posey's activit ies, quishing his job as Indian com·
died Dec. 11.
lion," said James H. Glass, has tried repeatedly to obtain a mander, declined to comment on
copy of Hail's report from how Hall had obt ai ned the
The original estate was $4 hl!sband of Hurst' s niece.
million, much of it in stocks,
Glass, pres ident of th e Adams, but Adams has refused intelligence data · in 1985 or
bonds, real estate and short-term Columbus-based Wildlife Legis· to release it, FBI spokesman whether he had ventu red inside
·
Nicaragua at that time.
, money ma rket invest ments. The · lative Fund of America, said Richard Herman said.
A
federal
grand
jury
in
Miami
Hall's intelligence report con~a),11e has nearly tripled since
Hurst' was active in strip-mine
Robert Hurst's death nearly 20 reclamation In the 1950s, long has been investigating since sisted of data on AK-47 rifles and
years ago.
before environmental legislation November whether Posey and 60-mm. mortars captured by the
other Americans !!legally have Contras, the names of villages
"HE' was a very hard-nosed was passed.
business man · and he was very
The foundation. organized in been shipping guns to the Con- and bridges attacked by the
generous," said David C. Strad· 1943, expects to give away about tras. Adams said he has been . rebels and Indian plans to blow
ley, co-executor of the estate. $6.3 million this year irl grants to subpoenaed to testify before the up various bridges and barges,
"He believed that If you made charitable organizations. Assets grand jury In January. Hall, the Adams said.
Adams said Posey, the head of
money in the community you come from gifts by i.ndlviduals, brother of Rep. Tony Hail,
D-Ohio, told a news conference Civilian Materiel Assistance, a
should leave It to the community. companies and organizations.
"He lived very modestly for
Donors may specify recipients Tuesday in his first appearance non-profit group in Decatur,
the amount of money he had," or leave that decision to the since his arrest that he had been Ala., was Interested in the
Stradley said. "He bought foundation's governing work·lng briefly on a small, information because he was
private mission to gather in tell!· prqviding non-lethal supplies to
second-hand Cadillacs."
committee.
gence
on Nicaragua's Soviet- the Contras, recruiting for them
Hurst was born in Greencastle,
The foundation will have unresand "coordinating" tactics.
Ind. His family moved to Colum- tricted use of Income from made helicopters.
Hall told the Memphis ComHall said in his Managua
bus when he was 9. He worked for Hurst's trust, anticipated to be
mercial
Appeal In Apr il 1985
that
he
arrived
"
in
aJ?pearance
a coal and lumber company, a about $800,000 annually.
springboard to going Into busi"These unrestricted funds are Nicaragua Dec. 10 to perform about Indian plans to blow up
ness for himself.
the most valuable for a commun· "reconnaissance" for a paramil· certain bridges in Nicaragua. He
A distant relative by marriage • tty foundation," said Foundation ltary group consisting of himself identified himself to the ·newsrecalls that Hurst was proud of President James I. Luck. "They and p&lt;lsslbly three other people. paper as director of CMA activi·
Columbus.
allow us' to respond 'to changing He was captured Dec. 12 near ties in the Miskito camps in
P11nta Huete, a military airfield Honduras.
•"!fe was very proud of Colum-__ . needs."

Thrifty coal ntagnate leaves
major donation to foundation
COLUMBUS (UPil - A be·
quest from a late coal magnate
who livC'd very modestly and
bought used Cadillacs is more
than a lump in the stocking of a
local charitable organization.
The $11.8 million destined for
.the Columbus Foundatio'n from
the state of Robert B. Hurst is the
largest gift the foundation has
ever received.
"It will indeed be a happy new
yea r at the Columbus Foundation, " said Chairman Thekla .R.
Shackelford In response to the
money heading to the nation's
seventh largest coummunlty
foundation. It has assets of about
$105 million.
Hurst, a long·time Columbus
resident, had been president of
the Mount Perry Coal Co. and the
Concord Coal Co. He died In 1967,
surviving his wife Alta by one
year.
, The couple had no children.
Hurst's will provided income tor
a brother and two sisters through
their lifetimes, then the re·
mainder of his estate would go to

Mostly cloudy tonight, with
a low n•·ar 30. Partly cloudy
Saturday , with highs near 40.
Th•• probability of precipitation is near zeru through
Saturday . .

..

..

,.

AMMAN, Jordan (UPI)
Hijackers throwing grenades
and firing guns battled security
guards in an Iraqi Airways
jetliner over Iraq for 20 panic·
striken minutes before the plane
crash-landed in Saudi Arabia and
exploded. As many as 62 people
were reported killed.
"The whole drama was 22
minutes long." said survivor
Suieiman Arrar. a former Jordanian Interior Minister who was
sit ting in the first-class cabin of
th e Ir aq-to -Jordan flight
Thursday.
.
He described "t hree or four
hij ackers" racing through the
plane tossing grenades and firing
weapons as they were chased by ·
security guards, who shot and
killed at least one commando
after he threw a grenade into the
cockpit.
Arrar said the Boeing 7:l7iater
crash-landed and some passengers scrambled away seconds before it "blew up in a ball
of fire," throw ing aircraft seats
and "mutilated bodies" around
the area.
"It was like a horror movie,"
said Arrar' s brother, Khaied,
another passenger.
The Iraqi News Agency sa id
the jet, carrying 91 passengers
and 15 crew members, took off
from Saddam Hussein Airport in
Baghdad- at ahou t 10:4;, a.m. It
cras hed and burned at abo ut
12:30 p.rr.., 800 yards from thr
end of a runwav at a remote
airport in Arar, · Sa udi Ara hia.
near the Iraqi border.
The state-run news agencies of
Jordan and Saudi Arabia said at
least 62 people were killed. Iraq
said 59 peoplr wpre killed but
nonr of the r!'port s could be
cont'i rmC'd independently. _
Thirty· two peoplr were reported
injured.
It was not known whet her any
Americans wC're aboard the
plane. ,
If the report s of 62 people killed
arp correct, it would be history's
bloodiest conclusion to a hijacking. Fifty-nine people were killed
in November 1985 In the hijacking and storming of a hijacked
Egy ptAir jetliner in Malta.
In Beirut , Lebanon. a previous ly unheard-of group called
the Revolutionary Work Organi·
zat ion took res ponsi bility for the
botched hijacking, saying it was
staged to press for the release of
three "rC'volut ionaries" held in
Iraq .
In a telephone ca li to a Sunni
Moslem Beirut radio station, a
mun claiming to speak for the
group warned of more atlacks
agai nst Iraqi targets if the men
were not rl'lrased wit hin 72
hours.
The Iraqi NC'WS AgC'ncy ac·
cused the hijackrrs of bC'ing
agent s of Iran. thC' nation it has
been fighting in the 6-ycar-old
Persian Gu lf War.
The Iranian nrws agC'ncv
!RNA sa id in a dispatch from
Tehran toda~· "the Islamic I~e­
public of lmn officially d!'niC'd
any involveml:'nt" in thC' hij acking. It said ";J . pokesma n for thC'
Foreign Minis tr~' stated that thr
Islamic Republic has explicit ly
drclared timC' a nd again that It is
against any inhuma n acts which
may disturb security of civil
avia tion."
Suleiman AtTar said hr wus
sitting in the first -class sect ion of
the jetliner when hr spotted a
man with a gun and a hand
grenade storm the cockpit. Hr
threw the grC'nade and opened
fire as "almos t simultaneously,
the plane:s sec urit y guards, who
were apparently chasing him,
opened fire and killed the man."
Behind him AtTar heard e~p io·
sions and shooting in the air·
craft's economy section a nd saw
passengers tr yi ng to ext inquish
flames with their clothing.
·
"Passengers wc~c shouting fat
help and there was panic," he
said as the plane began "shakin-g
violently" and the jetliner, which
had' been flying at about 37,000
feet, nose-dived .

�Ohio

Commentary
.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

·.

~lb
rs:m;::~ ~.__...,.., ~o;;;~ '"""
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
- Assistant Publlsher/ Conlroller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
AMJ;:MBER of Th~ United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Assoclatipn and the American Newspaper Publtshers Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPIN IO N are welcome . They should be less than 000 words
long. AJII£&gt;tters arC' subj ect to ed iting and ITIJSt be signed with name, address and
telephone number . No un signed lett ers. wlll be published. Leiters should be ln
good taste, addressing lssues , not perSonalities.

.
'

·.

~·

~

~econd

thoughts
burning wood

'

'

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP!) -According to some information I came
across the other da y, wood-burning fireplaces are a leading cause of
$mog in the U.S.A.
· In fact , fireplac es and wood stoves were blamed for much of the
haze that hangs over the Rockies during the winter. II that is true. I
!T'Ust have torched enough logs in my time to stifle all the residents of
a city the size of Aspen , Colo.
: I did so, however, in tlie belief I was saving enough energy to light a
city of Aspen's size lor 24 hou rs.
• Aspen, by the way, has a law against allowing more than one
fireplace in each new building. Maybe that saves the.breath of skiers
out on the slopes but it must be rough on the after-ski crowd.
. Furthermore, Telluride. Colo., req uires hbmeowners and renters
to meet certain emission sta ndards.
• If I thought similar restrictions were about to be imposed on the
East Coast, I would take my firep lace and move to California.
: Publis hed reports say a power company in that state has trimmed
rates for owners of 35,000of the 12 million wood stoves in this country.
: I hope that Includes cities the size of Aspen.
: At any rate, the s ituation reminds me ·of my early days In
Georgetown. Not that there was much skiing in that section of
Washington. Too Oat.
: But In the old days before subway,s came to this area, Georgetown
used to have several streetcar stops. So when I first took up residence
in nearby Arlington, Va., I would park on a s ide street in Georgetown
, and commute the rest of the way downtown by trolley.
This worked out very well in the spring and summer, but owing to
the number of fireplaces in those restored homes, it was dreadfully
s;iloggy in the fall and winter.
•
::Some days, as I recall. I had to hold my breath from my parking
Space to the troll ey stop. so dense was the smoke. Indeed. I was
s;Ubsequently inspired to write a poem as a form of protesr.It went, In
[illrt:
( "On autumn da ys a smoggy haze of woodsmoke
~ " Lays over the leaves of the ginko trees In ol~ Georgetown. "
recommend that sa me procedure to out-of- town skiers who might
find more smog than snow In the mountains this season.
-: Peppered with enough bad verse, town councils in resort areas
sliould ban fireplaces entirely.
~ I fear , howev~ r. what tha f might do to romance.
: we all know what effect open fires have on couples, even those that
tij)ve not been out skiing all day.
.-Moreover, bad verse can lead to stronger stuff.
;shortly aft er composing the above lines about fir eplaces. I was
i~trumental in organizing the Georgetown Parki ng Associat ion of
Northern Virginia to counter vicious propaganda being spread by a
citizens' group.
' Among other things. we lobbied in favor oflaws to require any new
h'.luses build in Georgetown to have garages that would leave more
p}lrking room on the street fo r us commu ters !rom across the
P.otomac Ri ver.
5Hmight have been easier simply to throw another poem on the fire.

:1

....,'--.

..,.,
Letters
to
the
Editor
.
,.- .
_

,The. Reagan· administration,
having brilliantly maneuvered.
the deposing of Ferdinand Marcos as president of the f&gt;hillppines, Is in danger of being
overcommitted to the fragil e
replacement It found for him: the
weak and illegitimate regime
headed by Corazon Aquino.
The trouble Is that Mrs.
Aquino, the sentimental favorite
of the liberal media In the United
States. was pushed into candidacy in the snap p.residential
election called by Marcos lim
February, and ihen declared by
our media the winner of that
election without any convincing
evidence that a majority of the
Philippine people wanted her as
president. The U.S. government
went along with this charade

(but far · greedier). and has face the Philippine vofers In a .
presided lor 10 months over a honest election, that Mrs. Aquino
lackluster regime whose popu- has made her second btg· mistake. This month the new constilarity Is last ebbing.
The election itself. of course. tution was ready to be submitted
was riddled wifn .fraud, much of lor adoption In a national referenIt perpetrated by the Marcos dum. Mrs. Aquino announced
regime. But Marcos retains (as that she will regard its approval •
subsequent popular demonstra- as her authority to continue as
tions in Manila and elsehwere president (or a lull term, without
have shown) very considerable having · to win .the office. by
popularity in the Phi!Jppjnes, and running for it again.
In the circumstances, It is ·
there is no conclusive evidencehardly
surprising that some .of
despite the Indomitable insisther·
political
associates have
ence of ihe U.S. media - that
made
critical
remarks about
Mrs. Aquino ·, actually receiv ed
Mrs. Aquino and have been
the most legitimate votes.
stepping
up the pressure lor a
Mrs. Aquino and her supporfresh
presidential
election. But
ters resolved· the doubts by
Mrs.
Aquino
is
standing
firm,
striking a bargain whh the Army
and
clearly
she
has
the
support
of
and occupying the presidential
the
Reagan
administration
,
palace. When the National Aswhich
has
gone
to
the
highly
·
sembly (which had the constitutional authority to certify the questionable length of opening a
outcome of · the election) pro· widely publicized Justice De·
claimed Ferdinand Marcos the partment probe of · charges of •·
winner. she went even further, corruption made against former ·
rial style as outlined in Fortune suspending th e constitut ion. dis- , defense minister Juan Ponce '
magazine, he did indeed know.)
solving the Assembly, and pro· Enrile.
The Philippines are not ·so
O'Neill then went on to cite a claiming her government a "re·
series of interviews with gener- volutionary" one that would rule richly endowed with capable and
als, colonels and lieutenant co· · by decree unt 11 a new constitution stoutly anti-Communist political
lonels. He asked them If they could be drafted or adopted.
leaders that the United States
could conceive of Lt . CoL Oliver
In · all this, she has had the can alford to destroy them to
North "accomplishing this by steadfast support of, th e U.S. prop up th~ feeble, Ulegltimate
himself."
government and media. although and increasingly unpopular re.
"They laughed." O'Neill said. at this point her regime Is devoid gime ofCorazon Aquino. She is at
America is ei ther laugh ing or of any legitimate authority and is best a passing phase in the
agonizing.
rapidly losing its popularit y as post·Marcos history of tbe ReThis divisive denigration of the welL
public of the Philippines, and the
presidency must not endure. ·
It is in these circumstances. sooner she passes, the better lor
President Reagan has an obli- and because she plainly fears lo all concerned.
gat ion to put suspicion and ,..:::::..::.:::.::.::::.::.!::::.::::::...:.:.::.:_:__--;_~-------­
mistrust to rest, proving he' s
telling the truth or admit he lied.
Only one fall-safe method can
restore Reagan 's credibility.
A polygraph test.
There's ample precedent ofor
public officials. Besides, It's the
president who established the
"Caesar's wife must be above
suspicion" sta ndard lor his administration with the issuance on
•
Sept. 15 ol of executive order No.
. 12564. It requires that all federal
employees holding sensitive posi. tions submit to urine tests
designed to protect drug use.
Let the president confront the
worst crisis in his presidency by
setting a personal exampl~ of
probity. Take the polygraph test.
"If this machine says a man
lied. he lied." boasted former
Philadelphia Mayor Frank L.
Rizzo on Aug. 14, 1973. just before
he flunked a lie.detector test.
beeause It was desperately (and
understandably) eager to get rid
of the corrupt and allng Marcos
before Communist Insurgents
ma&lt;)e further and perhaps fatal
inroads ..
Mrs . Aquino's first mistake
was her decision to force her
fellow leader of·the anti-Marcos
coalition, Salvador "Doy" Laurel, to run as vice president on
her . ticket, instead of the other
way around. Laurel, a seasoned
political leader, was fu lly capa,ble of serving as president, and
Mrs. Aquino would have made a
symbolically magnificent vice
president. Instead, Mrs, Aquino,
Who had never held a political
office In her life, was propelled to
.the lore by relatives and sycophants as inexperienced as she

The cris is that continues to
bedevil national amity in this
season of goodwill Is not hairsplitting over lega:litles in the Iran
arms-Contras arms-lor-hostages
deal, but whether the president is
telling the truth.
President Reagan's confession
of "mistakes" doesn't absolve
him of guili, but it does reveal a
human fragility that eluded
Richard Nixon. In the long run,
an admiss ion of vulnerability
may save Reagan from an orgy
of presidential bloodletting that
Nixon 's arroga nt duplicit y
inspired.
· Nonetheless a Niagara of polls
continues to wash away Reagan's credibility.
It ·s di!ficu It to believe that only
four months ago Americans were
kissing Reagan's ring.
"Why is this man so popular?"
gushed Time magazine in a July
7 cover story.
"What Managers Can Learn
from Manager Reagan," a headline read from the cover story of
the Sept. 15 issue of Fortune (the
business member of Time' s
corporate family ).
For ~ history -shaking exercise
In political education, read these
reportorial con jobs. If you can do
so without retching, "You're a
better man than I am. Gunga
Din. "

/

"Ronald Reagan has a genius
for American occasions ,"
fawned Time. "He 1s the Prosperc of American memories. a
magician who carries a bright,
Ideal America like a hologi-aph in
his mind and projects its image
into the air."
Fortune magazine practically
established him as the model
CEO incarnate.
"Surround yoursei! with the
best people you can !Ind. delegate authority and don't interfere," Fortune quoted Reagan.
"When I've heard all I need to
make a decis ion, I don't take a
vote. I make a decision."
Even if it's a dumb one.
Two months after he dispensed
his managerial wisdom in the
pages of Fortune, Americans are
painfully spilt over its merits.
Republicans tend to give him
the benefit of the dmibt.
Democrats are con.vlnced h~&gt;'s
lying.
Outgoing Speaker of the House
Thomas P. O'Neill has l'uled out
any born-again credibility.
"... I honestly believe the
president knew," O'Neill told an
Interviewer. (II we can have any
faith in, the president's manage.

7e 9°/o

APR AND

$500

REBATE ON ALL
DODGE TRUCKS

TILL DEC. 31, 1986
18 UNITS IN STOCK

Yule Save a Bundle
On aNew
DODGE RUCK

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH .

Phone 992 -2975

COOPER

FALl I. WINTER HOUR~

CLOSED MONDAYS
TUES .. WED .. THURS .. FRt .
9 AM to 5 PM
SATURDAYS 9 to 1

THE
' GRAVELY

Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge Inc.
. 399 SOUTH THIRD
MIDDLEPORT. DHIO
992-(1421

NOifiCE TO CUSTOMERS

OF

THE WESTERN RESERVE TElEPHONE COMPANY

,

The following information highlights these changes:

Fighting the runaround
•

writing this letter, maybe so me
one will see It and get me so me
help. Because r have three kids
they're sure not going to get
much Christmas. I have to take
medicine every day . So when the
people that work. for compensation and the Governor of Ohio
look .at this Jetter when they open
their presents they think about
my kids.
- Something needs to be done
about the way compensation is
run. Because I know I'm not the
only one that Is being done this
way. They almost make you sue
to get any help. But I go to church
and don' t want to do that. I know
.• ,..
God will take care or me, but it
: I have called compensat ion 6 to makes It hard on my wife and
1Q times. One time they tell you kids. I would like to thank Dr.
they got your paper work and It Conde and Swisher &amp; Lohse drug
\jiill be about 2 weeks before you store fo r trusting me and letting
gl&gt;t a number. Then the next time me have medicine. Also the
they tell they've lost your paper. Church of God for getting my
lliork. So all I get Is a run aro und kids medicine.
f(ol)l them. So that's why I'm
Dennis E. McKinney
~ This

is a let tcr to let you know
a,!Jout compensation in the Stat e
cil Ohio.
: I got hurt the 15th day of
September, was taken to the
ijospital at Pomeroy, Ohio. I
&lt;Jldn't have a ny Insurance. My
back was hurt in two places, they
!lilve me three pain shots,
~ouldn ' t let me go home in a car,
St'nt me home in a squad . They
tbld me to go to my doctor the
next day . I still haven't been able
to go back to work and I still don't
lJl!ve a claim number !rom
wmpensation and I ca n't go In
th~ hospital to be treated until r
g~t the number.

.''•'
t

(

·':•

• Effective January 1. 1987 customers will become responsible· for all
telephone wiring and jacks inside their home, office, or business and
therefore responsible for its installation and maintenance:
531 JACKSON PIIIE · RT.35 WEST
4-41-452·
BARGAIN MATINEES DAILY
ALL SEATS $2 . 50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12 .50

oac 21 thru JAN 1
~_:_FR::;:IDAY

t hru THURSDAY !

~~- CLASSIC.

"

Jfortie H. Roush

Hortle H. Roush, 76, of Route 1,
died late Thursday
evening at home.
Born Apri!U, 1910, In Cheshire
to the late Horton H. a nd Laura
Scott Roush, he was a construction worker and farmer. He was a
member oft he Old Kyger Baptist
Church, Cheshire Masonic Lodge
456. Cfieshlre Order of Eastern
Lowell F . Wingett
Star 450 and Little Kyger
Grange.
Lowell F. Wingett
He ls survived by a daughter
Donald Yeater
and son-In-law, · Carolyn and
Donald Yeater, 62, Qf53145Stae Thomas Erickson, of Newark;
Lowell F. Wingett, 77, Syracuse, well-known columnist for Route 61!1. Reedsville, formerly. two sons and daughters·in-law,
area newspapers for many ye- .of Torch, died Christmas Day at Howard H. and Naomi Roush, of
ars, died Christmas afternoon at his residence.
Roc~port; Ind., and Joseph D.
Born in Coolville, son ol tlte late and Carole Roush, of Cheshire:
Pleasant Vailey Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., after a lengthy Brant and Stella Baker Yeater, eight grandchildren; one greatIllness.
·
he was a retired mold maker for grandchild; three sister~.
Born March 20, 1909, at Pratts Pioneer City Casting Co. In . Mildred Swjsher, dl Arcadia,
Fork in Lodi Township of Athens Belpre, where he worked for 30 Fla., Ruth Mack, of Cheshire,
County, he was the son o(the late years. He was a veteran of the and Eunice Bunce, of Upper
William E . and Minnie Whet- U.S. Army.
Sandusky.
stone Wingett. Also preceding
He Is survived by his wife, Ada
In addition to his parents, he
him i~ death were two sisters, Deem Yeater, Reedsville, two ·' was preceded in death by his
Finis Outterson and Ruth Boyer, sons, Donald of Hockinp;port, and wile, Doris Shuler Roush, in 1976,
and two brothers. Wayne a nd · Steve of Torch, two daughters. and one brat her.
Ray.
·
Tina Arnett, Elmendorf Air
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday
Having been a reporter and Force Base, Alaska, and Rose at Rawlings-Coats- Blower Funcolumnist for several newspap- Zimmerman, Belpre. Also sur- eral Home with Rev. William
ersdurtng a career spanning live viving are two brothers, Ora of Price and Rev. Miles Trout
decades, he wrote two columns Coolville, and Ted of Stewart, officiating. Burial will, be in
weekly for Ohio Valley Publish- and two sisters, Pauline Burton, Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends
ing newspapers and others fol- Coolville, and Audry Young, may call at the funeral home
lowing retirement. Those con- Route 4, Athens: one grand- from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Saturday.
tinued until he became Ill in late daughter, three grandsons, and
Waldo Neal
1985. He had also worked as a three stepchildren.
Besides his parents, he was
carpenter and school teacher and
Waldo (Niney) Neal, 81, of
served In the U.S. ·Army during preceded In death by his first
Route
~. Pomeroy, died late
wile,
Freda
Snyder
·
Yeater,
in
World War II.
Thursday
evening at O'Bleness
Survivors Include his wife, April 1981. and by one brother
Memorial
Hospital in Athens.
Mary, a daughter and son-In-law, and one sister. .
He
was
born
in Century, W.Va ..
Funeral services will be held
Ruth and George Strode, Grove
to
the
late
David
and Angie
City; a son and daughter·in-law, Monday at 11 a.m. at the White
Ketter NeaL He was a former
William and Jeanene Wingett, Funeral Home In Coolville with
Hendersonville, Tenn .; a son, burial in theStewa rtCE'metery in
Robert Wingett, Syracuse; two Hockingport. Friends may call at
"THE INN PLACE"
grandchildren, Jim Wingett , the funeral home aftt'r 7 p.m.
. Prt11nt1
Memphis, Tenn. and Brian Win· Saturday and anytime on
gett, Hendersonville, Tenn .; Sunday .
"MEDALLION"
three brothers, Ernest A. WinFRI.
&amp; SAT. 9:30-1:30
'gett, Racine; Paul Wlngi'tt, RD!Wy D. Goodrich
ladiu Pay No (ortr
Ro~ey D. Doolittle qOOd, ieh.
Chie!land, Fla.. and Franklin
Rl. 2 North Point Pltasonl
96,
of·Coolville; died Thursdh l' at
Wingett, Eclectic, Ala .. and a
sister, Jane Yozi, Bridgeport, the Malone Henderson F1•1 m
House. Arrangements wii: be
Conn.
Services will be held Sunday at a nnounced by the Wh · ~ ·
2 p.m. at the Ewing Funeral Ethridge Funeral Home 1
1 t II
!{orne with the Rev. Carl Hicks "' Belpre.
. "
o'lllciathig. Buri al . will be at
Fairview Ridge Cemetery near
Apple Grove. Friends may call at
The Daily Sentinel
the funeral home anytime alter 7
p.m. Friday.
!USPS~~~- ·
Ch~shire,

Breakfast

Home, 24 Morris Ave., Athens,
with Rev. J;:rnes t Stricklin officiating. Burial will be in Greenlawn · Cemetery·, Nelsonville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.
Saturday ..

Beulah E. Duncan

Qne brother. CharlesF.Knopp,ID'
1969.
Funeral services will be at !
p.m. Saturday In Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, with the
Rev. Rankin Roach officiating.
Burial will follow .In Kirkland:
Memorial Gardens. Friends may:
call at the funeral home from 1\-9:.
p.m. today.

.

Beulah Eileen Duncan, 65,
Mason, W.Va., was dead on
'
arrival a.t Pleasant Valley Hospital Wednesday .
Born April 8, 1921, in West
'
Columbia, W.Va ., she was the Veterans Memorial
daughter of the late Carl Clar.
ence . and Eva Irene Knapp : Wednesday · Admissions
Priscilla Shuler, Rutland; H,.len :
Knopp.
She was a cook lor 11 years at Augustine, Middleport; ClarenC!!
Wahama High SchooL
Henderson, Guysville.
Surviving are her husband,
Wednesday Discharges-- Bud '
Melvin M. Duncan: one daugh- . Darst, Pauline Cunningham, .
ter, Mrs. William (Judith A.) Bertha Robinson, John Hoffman, :
McWhorter, Point Pleasant; two Elma Holter, Judie McNickels, sons, Raymond E. Duncan, Point Loshia Mitchell, Walter Barrett. :
Pleasant, and Larry M. Duncan,
Thursday'Admissions- Clare
Marlon; one brother, Andrew C. Boso, Portland; Betty Manley,
Knopp, Columbus; one grand· Middleport.
daughter and four grandsons.
Thursday Discharges - John ·
She was preceded In death by Metzger, Priscilla Shuler.

is open

11:00 p.m.-3:00a.m., New Year's Eve

Make Shoney's the last place you go New Year's
Eve. Stop in and enjoy golden pancakes, sausage,
eggs, whatever you want. As much as you want .
It's a perfect way to top off your night!
Free cabbage with any meal on New Year's Day.

SHONEY~.
Americas Pi!Uler Thble.

SALE
STARTS

SALE
STARTS ·-

DEC.26

A Dlvifl.._ et M•ltlmedl"' ln1•.

Clarence Hendel'!lon
Clarence Lee Henderson, 95, of
the Alfred Community, died
Thursday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
A lifelong farmer in the Alfred
area. he was born Sept. 26, 1891,
in Shade, to the late Sherman R.
and Kate Sargent Henderson. He
was a member of Modern Wood.men of America Camp 10900 and
the Allred Grange.
' Survivors include his wife,
Osir Carr Henderson , Alfred;
,four sons, Clarence Wlison, William Sherman and Harold Lee
Henderson, ;~II of Alfred, and

3 to share jackpot
CLEVELAND !UP[)- Three
·super Lotto pla.vers got a Christmas present - a share of the $5
million jackpot - lor having the
-numbers 2, 12, 24, 25 34 and 38 on
their tickets .
Each of th e thrN', when tickets
are redeemed, will be eligible for
$1.666.667. Taxes will be taken
out of that amount and the res~
will be divided and paid out In 20
annual installments.
The 132 tickets that had five of
thr numbers is worth 520.

Publi~hf'd

rvf'ry aft&lt;-rnoon. Monday

through Friday, 111 Cour1 Sl .. PO·
m('roy. Ohio, by the Ohio Vallc-y Publishing Company / MulllmE'dla, Inc..

Pomoroy. O~to 45769. Ph. !192·21&gt;6. S.·
rond c l a.q~ po.'41a~~ paid at PomC~roy.
Ohio.

MPmbf'r: Unl!t'd Prf's~ JntC~rnatlonal.
Inland Dally PrttSs Assoclallon and 1hf'
Ohl n NrwspapC~r Aslloclation. Nallonal
Ad vf'r l lsln~ R(I-J)f'('SPntarlv{l, Branham
Nrwspa pl"r SalMI:. 733 Third Avenu('.
Nrw York. New York 10017.
POSThtASTER: ~nd addr£1'Ss chan~
to Thr Daily ~£1nlln&lt;'l . 111 Coun ~t ..
Pomcl'oy. Ohio ~!'i769 .

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

By CarriH or Motor Route
Onr Wt'rk ........... .. ......................St.2!i
Onr Month .............. ................... 1~.45

Onr Yt•ar ........... ........ .. ............ $65.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally .... ...... ... ... .... ............... 25 Cf'nls
lhC' car·
rlrr may f('fTlll In advanCf' direr! to
Thr Dally srnrtn f'l on a:\, fi or 12 month
bnsls. CrNIIt wUJ br glv{ln carrlflr t-ach
wrrk.
~UbSC'rtb(&gt;rs not df'!'lrln!l to pay

No s uh..crlpllons b~· mail J)("rmllfNIIn
arros whf'rr ho!TK' carrl« se&gt;rvlet' Is
avallablr.

FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS
FULLY E UIPPED!

Mall Su~crlptlons
, ln11lde Melp tGunty
IJ Wrrks ................... .... .... ....... $17.29
26 WrC'kS ........... ........ .. .. .. .. ....... S34.06

~2 Wl'&lt;'ks ... .... .~ ....... .. ..... .... .... ... 1'6.56

0Ut81d!' Melp Count)'

I3 Wrrks .... ...... ..... .. ................. $Ji.2{]

26 Works .. .......... ... .. .. .. .. .......: ... $3!.10

52 Wrrks ..... ................ ..... .... ... . SU60

'
----· ·--·- --·::
Basemen1

• Customers may: 1) continue to use their local telephone company
through a maintenance agreement or on a time and material basis
2) use an electrical or cable contractor for installation or maintenance'
3) choose to maintain and install the inside wire themselves
'
'

.

• Customers may elect to continue.to have The Western Reserve Telephone
Company be responsible for ~amtenance of their inside wire. If they do
so, t~elr total monthly local btll will remain approximately the same.

Because o! these donations, we
were able to make a lot of
families' Christmas more
merry . Thank you a II, God bless
and m·ay you all have a lovely
holiday season.
The Friendly Circle
of Trinity Church
Evelyn Gilmore,
Treasurer

Pauline Bentley, .64. 'of Rutland, die"d Friday morning at the
Mark Rest Center at McConnelsvtlle. She was born In Zanesville
on Feb. 3, 1922 to the late Ralph
and Lillie Goins and resided In
Rutland for more thim forty
years. Funeral servlc.es are
being arranged by the ' Hunter
Funeral Home in Rutland.

Athens resident' and coal miner.
He also managed Neal Brothers
· Wholesale Florist in Aihhens
from 1945 to 1964 and since his
retirement, has grown mums in
Harrisonville.
'
He was an avid trap shooter
and a member of the Amateur
Trap Shooters Association. He
was active with the former
Athens Airport Association and
. attended Luhrig SchOols.
. Surviving ,are his wife, Winnie
Cline Neal; two daughters, Mrs.
David (Donna) Winefordner, of
Charleston , W.Va., and Mrs .
Russell (Monna) Beckman.. of
Lebanon; • ·two sons and
daughters-in-law, Billy R. and
Fauna Neal, of Nelsonville; and
Jack and Dee Neal. of.Millfield;
10 grandchildren and 11 great
grandchildren.
He was preceded In death by
one sister, Violet Neal, and six
brothers, Harley, Ralph, Clarence, !l.obert, David, and Oscar
Neal.
Services will be Sunday, 1
p.m., at Jagers &amp; Sons Funeral

Llv1n9 Roorn

• In the past, t~is maintenance provide? by the local telephone company
was Included tn th~ mo~thly .local. servtce rate . Customers choosing to be
responsJbleforthetr 1ns1de w1rew111 begm rece1vmg a credit within the next
few months on thetr monthly btiL The PUCO estimates this credit will be
20~ - 30~ for residential customers.

Donations helped make it merry

·.we wish to publicly thank the
!i'pmeroy Elementary School,
l'itr. Lisle, April Smith, all the
teachers and especially all the
siudents who gave us all the
~anned goods they had collected
for our Christmas basket project.
::we also wish to thank all the
rt!fmbers of our church who
dena ted canned goods or money.

Inside wire starts at the demarcation point (usually the protector
or network in!erface device) and
includes all of the telephone wire
and jacks inside the customer's
home or bwiness. The telephone
itself is not considered to be a
part of the inside wire.

••

Pauline Bentley

DEC.26

AT

GRAVELY TRACTO'I
SALES 8o SERVICE

'

'

' of
Ralph Clinton Henderson,
Coolville; one daughter, Margaret Eleanor Follrod, of Pome.
roy; seven grandchildren, Linda
Williams, . of Belpre, Charles
Richard Follrod, of Wort!lington,
Pam Amo~. Susan Pullins, and
Sharon, Robert Lee and Liza
Marie Henderson, all of Allred;
· two great grandchildren; two
brothers, Wilson He~derson , o!
.DeLand, Fla . and Robert Henderson, of McLeansboro. IlL
Besides pis parents, he was
preceded In death ·by one sister,
Pearl Cross. an Infant daughter
and two infant grandchildren.
Services wiii be Monday, 1
~· m., at the White Funeral Home
In Coolville with Rev. Donald
,Archer officiating. Burial will be
In Shade Cemetery . Friends may
call at the funeral home Sunday,
from.2-4 and 7-9 p.m .

Get rid of Aquino~·...,.--------:-W_ill_iam_A_'._Rus_h_~r
.

As a result of a Finding and Order by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
(PUCO) in Cas·e Number 86-927-TP-COI, certain changes to the installation
and maintenance of customer premise inside telephone wiring will become
effective January 1. 1987. This order affects all telephone customers in the
state and is a direct result of federal decisions that are a part of the move
towards deregulation.

;..·

'

.

Take the test Chuck Stone

The Lighter Side

~n

Page-2-The' D!lily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, ~mber .26, 1986

•

• Information about the installation and maintenance of inside wire will
soon be available from the local telephone company.
.
' Reg~~dless oft~~ ~~p~ndi~g change, as your local telephone company we will continue to
provt e you WI
e serv1ces you need and want Customers who want 1 k
·
0 eep their
service arrangement just as it is, may do so.

'86 EL DORADO, Gold

'16 SEDAN DEVILLE, Gray
F1i:tory MSRP

$25,900

OUR PRICE

FICtor, MSRP

$27,900

'19,900

OUR PRICE

'24,900'

Sale Effective Dec. 26 • 3111, 1916

JIM
COBB
e
e

CHEVROLET OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC

308 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, Oh;

.I

•

�.P:f~4::-_fhe _oaiiy Sentitlel

,

Pomeroy · Middleport, Ohio .

I

Friday, December 26, 1986 :.

t'ime$ Thurs~ay to lead No. 14
Alabama to a 28-6 victory over
No. If W&lt;~Shington .
Alabama, a 2-polnt favorite
ent ering the game, led 7-6 at
halft ime. But Alabama scored
two third-period touchdowns and
game into a runaway .
shut out the Huskies In the second
" In the first hal f. I think they half for Its fourth stra ight bowl
I Washington defense) just came · victory.
.
ou t and got after it." Alabama
''We just kept banging, bangquarterback Mike Sh ula said ing and banging and In the second
Thursday. "They controlled the half, we finally broke out," said
line of scri mmage and did a grea t Alabama Coach Ray Perkins,
job of stopping us. In the second whose team finished the season
half, we just executed."
10-3. Washington ended the sea·
Shula threw two touchdown son 8-3-1.
passes in the second half and
When Shula and Humphrey,
Bobby Humphrey scored three
By RICIIARD LUNA
UPI Sports Writer
EL PASO, Texas (UPH
Alabama and Washington played
up to pre-game expect allons for
JO nli nut es in the Sun Bowl before
the Cri mson Tide. turned a close

Bosworth suspended for steroid use
By JOHN THOMPSON
OKLA HOMA CITY (UP! I
Oklahoma Coac h Barry SWitzer
sa ys the steroid usage that has
barred All-America linebacker
Brian Bosworth a nd two Sooners
teammates from playing aga inst
Ar kansas in the Orang&lt;' Bow l
.Jan. 1 occurred months ago. not
during the football season.
Okla homa officials announced
Thursday, shortly before the
third-ranked Sooners departed
for Florida , that Bosworth, offen, (
sive guard Gary Bennett and
· defensive tackle · David Shoemaker had been declared inellgible by the NCAA after testing
posi tive for anabolic steroids.
Bosworth. a junior who. fin is hed fourt h in this year's voting
for the Reisman Troph.1 . "ppar-

for comment. He was expected to
travel to Miami on his own
Friday and attend the Orange
Bowl game as a spectator.
Switzer said Bosworth expertmented with the body-building
drugs in the spring but "doctors
have told me they ca n stay in
your system a year."
"It's unfortunate," Switzer
said . " We don't advocate or
condone it, but it's unfortunate
that the young men did not
realize that it would not be out of
their system because I know they
haven't taken steroids in several
months. never during football
season."
The NCAA announced earlier
this year It wou ld test about 725
footba ll players from 20 sc hools
scheduled to play in post-season

FRIPAY, DECEMBJR 26TH . ·

;
•
:
:

~
:
•

•
:
•

~~

:.

4 DAYS ONLY

Saturday, Monday, Tuesday &amp; Wednesday

,ji

•r

RESTAURANT

•
•

4 AMP

lift75
1
'1.

6.!~p

$2C).83 S34!~. :~~~ 12~-SO

lOAMP

$3785 $4195

Rufllllu .... ..... ,............. ll tJ l 'bl IOii 1;11
( "um phl•ll fonf........ ...
Norr"' Uh·btlon
W I. T Pt .o; . (I F CiA
1'•trj,atfl ... .......... .... ..... u lill:n IU 1111
:\llnnt"'flla •..........•.... .. 14 lti :1 :JI 1:13 l!lt
Sl. l..tltll!oi ..................... l&lt;l I :J 1:141 II lil t~
l h'l r~ .•. ••....... ....•. .•... 12 I ~ I :til 10'! l l.l
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llllitun .... .. ...........•...... lfi !I .fi.lt I'IIIIIUII'Iphi:. ...•••.•.•...... l ~ 1:i .:il!l :t
· " 'a..hlngtun .............. ... !:\ 1:1 .;lilt ;11:
N''"" l'urli ........ ............ . -;- ~ I . '!~ 1 10 11

..

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•

'
l"t•ntral HI,·I"''""
:\tlanta .... .................... l!l li .11i41 Mlhl·ll•kt•• · ··················· '" K . 'ill.( I

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OSU refuses to compromise
By GEfljE CADDES
UPJ Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio I UPI 1
Ohio Stale Coach Earle Bruce.
needin~ a win over TexasA&amp;Mln
.the Colton Bowl to prevent his
worst record In eight yea rs with
the Buckeyes, st ill doesn't plan to
compromise his · bowl game
philosophy .
''I' ve always felt a bowl ga me
is a reward lor a good season,"
Bruce said as he made final
preparations for the trip to
Da llas and the Jan. 1 date with
Southwest Conference champions. "I' m not go ing to take our
players down there and punish
them ."
The Buc~eyes, who lost a berth
in the Rose Bowl when they were
beaten 26-24 by Michigan Nov. 22,
forcing them to share the Big Ten
title with the Wolverines, re-

turned to Columbus today after a
week at home fo r Christmas:
Bruce held an afternoon practice ·
prior to an evenin g flight to
Dallas.
Ohio State Is 9-3, a familiar
record for Bruce's Buckeyes.
who have finished at 9-3 for six
consecutive years, prompllng
criticism amon g some of the not
so faithful.
" I don' t know who this game is
more important to than Earle
Bruce," sa id the Buckeye coach.
"If we win, we're 10-3 and have
the second best record we·v~ had
at Ohio State. If we lose, we're
9-4, the worst record we've had,
and I'll hear about it all winter."
Despite that pqssibility, Bruce
said he plans no special hype Job
for his team along the lines of a
Michigan week or even other
" big" regular season games.

Save
1

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oil)

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1415
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or

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Fm ytJur (.•ntcrta inmen t and
datKinJ.: pk·nsurt. Party favors.

I

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F• lntnations: 446-o090, bt. 306
Dionar Stnict 6 P.M. to Ml.,ight
11r S.vi&lt;l lo lltiO A.M.

Hand-Held Portable Desktop Automatic
Phone Directory
Phone Directory
By Radio Shack

;Q~M~Oft

3•

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nr
t nbrl&lt;•r

EASTERN AVE. STOlE OPEN SUNDAY 11:00 A.M. TILL 4:00 P.M.
'

Sllmllne Tandy 102
Portable Computer

Cut

Broiled
Tail
Twice Bak ed Potatn
Bmccoli Polvnui.re
Rollr and Brrtter
Sbed&gt;el and Cno/?ie

in

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675-2731
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Add 40 watts of power and complete tonal control! 4-spellker fader. tt2-18n

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prnlutt.

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Tone/Pulse dialing' . ~43-315

1

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Autcxiials 30 oftj~n-&lt;:alllid numbers
emet:9ency num·
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dialing'. ~43-605

Off

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$3995

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11995

4915

Discover digital audio! Prcigrammable memory plays up to 15 cuts
in a~y order you choQsa. #42·5001

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..

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Cut

•COVERS AR£ CUT OVERSIZE FOR AMPlE RT

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CD-2000 by Relllstic

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x:Large .................. 159, 9 5

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Memory Combination Remote
Auto-Dialing Phone Answerer/Telephone

Compact
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small garage or shop.

199'5

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AFTER m
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CLEARANCE .·

Reg. 79.95

S6147

Hi-Fi VCR
Model 41 by ,Realistic

N\' llunllf'I'S K. St'w ,ft• n.4,. .1
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Rufluto '! l'hllacMphl u I
H••lrott 3, f hh ·u~ I
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TuroriO I. Mlnnt ~I I U :1 Ht'l' l
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\ "UIIt1HI\'I'r fi. l.utt . \n~l'lt')l I

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Diagonally meaoured

\ 'ant'OU\"I•r ........... ....... lll '!".!3!!:1 11111-10

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AFTER·

IS'! Jr.
l "a iKar,· ...•...•.•.........•.. :!~ I~ Ill
l"!!t
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lftdlun a .... ..... ............ .. l:l 1-1 . 11'! 1 i'
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l -inch case.

AFTER m
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1141·10 #73-50
lUAU 116-505 #I l-ID

IICH.

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SAME QUALITY

Monirnl •.•... ... ...... ..•.. l7 I~ .\:M l:lli m
ll~to• .................. ...... lfi U I .18 IIi' IQ!I
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,\lluntlt• llh bol1in

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Low A• 120 Per Month •

Pertect size for kitchen, bedroom or dorm!
One-tooch automatic line-tuning for.detailed pictule and IHellke crier. Rapid.an
picture and sound. tl6-237

.....•......... .11 17 I :lK J041 :t:l

,\da m!! Dh·"'inn

S••• · · l• •r.,..~· .............•.... 41 19 .:!-UI 10

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CHESTER

Rt·~o lt

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•

~;· 19915 2:~

N\ ' &amp;n«t•rt ............... 1:! Ui 6 :JO 1 :~ IH
\\'w.h111~on

an individual's," Palmer said.
Palmer carried 22 times to lead
the Blue on several scori ng
drives and scored on a 2-yard run
early In the thi rd quarter.
Gottfried also credited Not.re
Dame quarterback Steve Beuer-·
leln for the role he played.
. "I fell Beuerlein played well
and most of It was because he
understood the defe nse," Gottfri ed said. " I think we were Well
organized for the tim e we had to
prepare."
·
Beuerlein and Chris Miller of
Oregon directed the' Blue ·to 427
yards In total offense.

13" Color Television Now

I'IU.oihor)[h ....... ........... l$ 14 S !JI 1211120
Nt"A" ,JI'rM,- ................ 111 Ill "! :J-1 l:t! l SI

f:ll;!OI I••rn C'vnli•rt•nt·i•
·

•
•

iKr.rbattgl(a nf ill4~nt.rr

i'i I .ti5+1 :11~ '!·1':"
ti 11 . ~1 !\0!1 '!IIi
N I .-MI!I 2!111 '!lilt
!I ll . ~1,11 ~'HN "D!i

;hhUIIII ... ... .. .... ...... ... .i
Nf'lt" Orlt•u.n.o; .... .......... 7
x-l'llnt·ht•d dh l!o Mtn tltlt•
y-dlnt·ht•d wild •·ard f' rlday· )l

Portsmouth Hol i day
Tournament
Vinton County, Dayton Dunbar, Col umbu s East and

f unft'l"tnt."f'
Pat rlt ·k Dh·to!lo11
· " " L T Pb. lif COt\
l'hlludt• lphht .......... .. ... t,'i II~ 51 1115 9~
J'li\' l !&gt;ihmdt•r!•L ......•...••• III l:i '! W 1:\:J 119

l'ii'l»l
~·- L,\ Ram s ... .. ..•....... . lll

SEOAL

W alt -,~

t'! tl .'!lll 'm .n M

f' ran~ · ~t·tt .... , ... . IIJ

Gallia Co•nty .Tournament
i At Hannah Trace
Southw estern vs. Kyger Creek
North Ga llia vs. Hannan Trace
Symmes Valley Tournament
Northwest, Ohio Valley Christian, Ashland (Ky.) Filir'vlew
and Symmes Valley .
W.Va. Holiday T\)urnament
At Wahama, W.Va .
Eastern vs, Wahama

By KYLE KULISII
Gottfried of' Pittsburgh said
MONTGOMERY , Ala. (UP!) · Palmer deserved most of th e
- Temple running back Paul credit for the37-7victoryover the
Palmer said his 166-yard perfor- Gray.
mance Thursday at the Blue"We had a few big plays.
Gray All Star Footb,all Classic Palmer had to. do with mpst of
will stren gt~en his position in them," Gottfried said. "What did
April 's NFL draft.
·
it fo r us, I ·think, were the good
Palmer, who finished second to catc hes and good fi e l d
Vin ny Testaverde in the voting positions."
for the Reisman Trophy, entered
Palmer, who sta nds 5-foot-9,
the ga me tninking a team would praised his teammates and
draft him by the fourth round. He coaches . for the way the tea m
· says being named Most Valuable played. ·
Player in the Blue-Gray game
"When you get great at hletes
should make him a higher and coaches on a team, the team
. selection.
bec.omes great and the plays
Blue offensive coach Mike become everyone's and not just

NHL Standing~'~

:11~ 11'!7
i ll .:'llll\!1:\!jM"!7:1
11 o .:m :m :&amp;:.!li

:! II .Mi.l

NBA Standings

'

going to miss all three of the
pl ayer~." University of Oklahoma President Dr. Frank Hor-

frntral

llllrtlord ..................... llt 8511 Ill 1M!

'ALL YOU CAN EAT CHICKEN' ............. $4.25 ·
BAKED SWISS STEAK ........................... $3.95

11014

2 FOI 1

ALL SIZES

11 .7$0 :llili '!!ffi

Dllll"ao. .•••••.••..••••••••.... 0 !IIJ .-t~ :UG :tr.
Plllladt•lphlu ..... ...... ... ~ 111 1 .:1-a t\ti :m

'

A Generous Portion of' Qel!cio~s Baked Steak Simmered in a Creamy
Gravy. or Tasty Homecooked Chicken (All You Can Eatt . Both Served
with Meshed Potetoes • Homemade Gravy, Homecooked Green Beans
wittl Mushrooms, and a Hot Buttered Rolland Coffee, Regular or Decaffeinated , Both Freahly Brewed.

llott

sets
only

~

)"·M'll.!ildn,;to n. .. .......... l'!

BAKED SWISS STEAK DINNER AND
'ALL YOU CAN EAT'
FAMILY STYLE CHICKEN DINNER

1

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Etalll

· ·SUNDAY, DECEMBER 28TH

G&amp;J·PARTS PLUS AUTOSTORES
\.! ~~ \~.. CHRISTMAS SALE!

5
DRAWER

--

!Wlllt k-...... ......... ... ... .. 10 6 D .6t5 !!fifi t~~ :l
LA. Raldl'rs ................ H II tl .iltO :ltl l4K
Stan Dk•ro . ................. l 1:.! D .21141 :1:11'1 3!16
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Queen, King

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Tampa Hu)' .•..• •..•.. ,, •. :! li lt . W :.!:1!1 ~7:1

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Ful~

flndnnaii .................. IO 110 . &amp;$-41111 :\9 ~
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:

SALE PRICES GOOD THIU 1/3/87

Twin,

t'eritrul

::
1t1

Nt•w York Kfl. f hlt •aKfi 115
1112. Phllll1'
F rlii!Q' 'N iiamrs
N.t'M' ,fl'r M,- at C'l••vt'land, II p. m.
tOoldl•a St at Df&gt;t, 1: :mp.m.
Dutllfl iiJ Oflt\'r r . 9:3t p.m .
Ro~lon at Ptw t."'""ill , 10 p. m.
Ht•ullt n Ill L1\ Lkr~ . HI ::IO p.m •.
LA Clppn at ~·lll ll r, 11:30 p. m /
· SIAl urdii)' 'IO (.illmt'M
( 'kovtbnd .a !\it&lt;"' ·lt•l"li t')", nt"~~:ht
Mlhuu""~" Ill NI'IA' l 'ork. AJ~~; hl
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Gnl...-. stall' 1U. All.lllllll, Rl~
ln•MIIilo a1 fhlcup, night
l"hot~lx at Dallll!l, nl~ ·
[)(oa\'rr at SUn 1\lttonkt, nlcti
llual'llun ut Ull'lr!. nl~thl
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PhiiMholphlu Ill Sacra.PH&gt;nto. nl ~~;hl

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Rufflliu ......... , .. ...... .-•.. 1 1'! 11. '!50~': :1-111
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CREAMED CHIPPED BEEF DINNER ........ S3.74

SUB-ZERO HEROES

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4
Size
ONE LOW PRICE :

$ 0 .liM II'! :lO':"
,M!O .... , ........... .. Ill GII ,·illll : 16~ ;{Hti
Mtllllll ............ : ..... ...... ll IIO.iJOO I:IH -1/I!'i

ll ·( ' \i•\ ' l~an d

SVAC

Phot'l'llll ..... ... ...... ........ . l:i I~ ..IHI 7!,
1.,\ l "llppl'N .•.. .. .......... .. 1 "!I .ltiO 1511

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x·l'hkagu ....... ... .. .. .... U
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RECUNEIS

, .N,·..-· EnJ{Iand ., .. ...... 11
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••

INVENTORY SALE

uvi•no
cover •n extra htlvy solid oMI .

M" t T

!&gt;ll . l.llUl"······ .. ······· ··· ··• II I . ~1 :! IM!I:H

ga~m~
es:.~Sthat
~w~lt~zthe
~er~sa~id~
a~ll~h~is~~B~o~s~w~o~rt~h~
's~a~allb~s~e~ofnc~e~·~·w
i~ll~h~are
a~ve~~to~
n~s~alid~ju~s~t~be~f~or~e~bo
3:8:3:2::::::::::::::::::~ :,
players
knew
NCAA
was an impact on
us. ~We
• team'~
charter flight~a~rd~l~n~gth~e~
to Miami. . ~~·:O:U:T:E::7::::::::::::':B:S:·:
~e~n~tl~y~w~a~s~a~t~ho~m~e~in~l•~-,·~in~g~.--~bo~w~l~

$19995

... ~

::

Texas, and could not b&lt;&gt; rPaehed

NEW 2 ~. U.
liVING 1M. SUITt

r\mt'flt •ll!l ( ulllt•rt&gt;nt•t•

•

A Oen~ous Serving of Delicious Creamed Chipped. Beef S.erved Over
Our Popular Hoi, Hom•macte Biscuit, Also Served w1th a Cr1spy Tossed
Salad.

planning to test for steroids.
"I ta lked with them in January
about the new rules, about
players using steroids to ' make
themselves bi gge r a nd
st ronger," Switzer said. "Dbviously they knew What the
repercussions would be if they
tested positive."
Bosworth, 6-foot-2 and 240
pounds, is a two- time winner of
the Dick Butkus Awa rd as the
nation 's top college line backer.
Although a junior because he was
red-shlrted in 1983, he is eligible
for the NFL draft.
Bosworth's off-field personallty has attracted almost as much
att ention as his play. He has
colored his blond hair red and
black and has a tiny pony tail
flecked In magenta.

By l "nlil'd rr..,.,. lnh... nulional

•
'

The Dai!y Sentinel- Page- S

Plllmer paces Blue· to 3 7•7 victory

No games scheduled

Pac ltlc• Dlv~loa
1.!\ Ltr.kl"!i ... ................ ,.\ll H .7¥!1 (iod(~n State ...... ., .. . , ..... IH II •• 3
·l '(l
l'orthut d •.... .............. ... li' It .:IIIII 4' ·t

NFL Standings

•
:•
!

T~nigh~:v!ames

Scoreboard ...

••

thesparksoftheoffense, were on
Humphrey's 64-yard tou ch- with a 17-yardpassto Humphrey.
"Weight is a myt h,·.· Jam&lt;•s
the bendl. outside linebacker downrunstakedAlabamatoa7-6 The sophomore running back said. "Speed and quickness· are
Cornelius Bennett led the charge margin at halftime. Washington then closed out the scoring with a the name of· this 'game. Their
for the stingy Crimson Tide scored on field goals of 31 and 34 3-yard run In the fourth quarter. quickness made it tou gh on our
defense, holding the high-scoring . Yards py J eff Jaeger.
"E~rly in the game, things offense. They chased things
Huskies to their lowest point
"Our offense played poorly the weren't going well for us a nd It down and· put press ure on Chris
output since the second week of whole game, though our defense was tough to rtin," Humphrey (Chandler! . Overall, they are the
the 1985 season, a 31-3 loss to the had a' great first half," said said. "But we felt t hat sometime, best defense we have faced."
Cougars of Brigham You ng Wash ington Coach Don James. something was going to break
Chandler completed ·20 of 43
University.
"We were just not very good. I'1 and 11 did."
passes for 199 yards. ..
Humphrey finished the after- we had kept within a touchdown,
Bennett, 'the ga me's Most
" We got into a hol e and we had
noon with 159 yards on 28 carries we would've been fine. But we Valuable Player, recorded a to throw ," Chandler said. "We
and two scores and gained 43 fell behind by two touchdowns team-high 11 tackles for a n tried .to have a balanced attack
yards on five passes , including and became predicta ble."
Alabama defense which was too and we· killed ourselves with
one for a touchdown. Shula, who
Vince Covington's fumble in quick for Washington'·s bigger, turnovers ..It was their speed aqd
Is the son of Miami Dolphins
the third quarter set up a 32-yard but slower, front line.
ickness that got ·us."
Coach Don Shula, connected on
touchdown
pass from
to r~====::::==========::=::===::;
15 of 26 passes for 188 yards.
Greg
Richardson
with' Shula
6: 24 rema i ni~ g. Shul a later came back

Pomeroy- Middleport, Oliio

I

.•.
••
••
••

•

Sh.ula losses two TO passes as Tide' rolls over HUskies

Friday, December 26, 1986

: 14

:.:&amp;

HALF
PRICE

1415

save
'20

�Page-_6-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, December

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

26. 1986 ~

Tiny batteries pose real hazard to kids' orifices
The button-shaped balleries
By LARRY DOYLE
can be .dangerous because they
UPI Science Writer
CHICAGO (UP!) - Tiny bat· corrode and leak acid capable of
tE'rics that power watches , calcu- burning sensitive tissues. Drs.
lators and toys a re potentially Gregory Landry and ·M. Bruce
hazardous to children. who are Edmonson of the University of
" natural explorers" given to · Wisconsin Center for Health
taking things apart and putting Sciences reported .
But fortu nately, they said,
them In their ears, nostrils and
physicians do not nE'ed sophist!mouths; doct ors wa r ri.

cated mE'dicai Ins truments to
removE' thE' miniatu re batteries
from children's facial ori!lces.
"A magn'et !zed screwdriver
worked very well," the two
doctors wrote Thursday on a case
study described ln. a letter to the
Journal of the American Medical
Association. ·
Jn a telE'phone intervlE.'W,

Landry said, "ThesP button
batteries are becoming more and
more common. A lot of watchPs
and calculators and a lot of thosE.'
hand-held games children play
With have these batt Pries ...
The batteries also arE.' found In
photographic equipment and
hearing aids, and ra nge in sizc&gt; ·
from as small' as a collar button

,....------People in the news-----By IRIS KRASNOW
United Press International
SUN CITY PROCEEDS: A check for $327,617.84, representing
United States and international artists' royalties from the sale
of the ant !·apartheid album and single "Sun City," was recently
presented to the Africa Fund by writer-producer Little Steven
(Van ZaandO. co-producer Arthur Baker and .Manhattan
Records prl'S ident Bruce Lundvall.
Over ~ artis ts agreed to perform last year as "Artists United
Against Apartheid ." Little Steven, Herbie Hancock, Darlene
Love and other members presented a $25,000 advance royalty
check to foretta Scott King, who accepted on behalf of the
Africa Fund, in December 1985. The Africa Fund is a charitable
trust based in New York City and registered with the United
Nations.
·
The income is to benefit political prisoners and their families
in South Africa. educational and cultural needs of South African
exiles and educational work of anti· apartheid groups in the
United Sta tes.
·
SECOND THOUGHTS: Astronaut Rhea Seddon reports on
the U.S. space efforts in the wake of January's shuttle
Challenger disaster on the season's opener for PBS-TV's
" Frontline" : "The fear has alwa ys been there. Most of us come

to grips w!th that. I think you realize you're sitting on a bomb."
The show airs Jan. 27.
Considering the danger, Seddon and her astronaut husband
Robert"Hool" Glhs!)n have changed their thinklngononepolnt.
"We had often said that we might like to go on a spa,c e flight
together, but we don'tthink that would be fair to our child," she
adds in the new TV GUIDE.
A NEIGHBORLY DUET: Singer Robert Merrill, the former
Metropolitan Opera Star, and Page Morton Black are neighbors
In New Rochelle, N.Y. She is preparing to do a new album and
as ked Merrlll if he could suggest any songs.
Merrlll tapped his songwriter son David, who sent over four of
his tunes o~ a tape. Black telephoned David with her
compliments , paying special note to the singer: " Who is that
remarkable voice on the tape?," she asked. It was Robert
Merrill. of course.
·
NOT PRAC'fiCING WHAT HE )'!REACHES: If people
fo llowed palimony attorney Marvin Mitchelson's example, the
celebrity divorce attorney would be out of business. The
Mitchelsons just. celebrated their 26th wedding anniversary
with a big bash at their Los Angeles home, ''I've only lived w!t)l
one woman in my life ... and have only been married to one
wom an, my wife, Marcella," he says.

to as
'

~~~r~~ ~~~..' \~;. t~~k:h~~n;;::~~;.
calculators and watches, a nd
seem naturally Inclined to stick
them in their noses and ears,
Landrv said.
"Children are natural ex plor·
ers," he said. "That' s how they
get into a lot of poisons; that' s
how they get electrocuted ; and
that's why they play with their
faces and slick things into it. "
In one case, a 9-year-old girl
was brought into Landry's office
with a toy watch battery lodged
deep in her left ear by her a
5-ycar-old playmate. After try·
lng unsuccessfully to remove the
disk with force ps, .Edmonson
suggested a magnet.
A maintenance employee supplied a magnetized screwdriver.
which "successfully and pain·
· lessly removed the battery," the
report said.
·
Cases such as this are not freak
occurrences and are reported
more and more frequenlly ,
Landry said. Earlier this year,
another AMA Journal article
reported 10 such cases, and noted
225 Incidents of button battery
inges lion have been recorded.
Landry said parents should nor

NOTICE
EVERY ITEM IN OUR
STOlE DIASnCALLY
REDUCED
FIIDAY, DEC. 26
SATURDAY, DEC. 27
MONDAY, DEC. 29
TUESDAY, DEC. 30
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 31

20°/o TO

SAVE

lf;

•

Thr Sf'COnd six wi?eks grading period ..._'

honor roll at the Bradbury School has been ~
announcw.

ICHAIRS!

tSOFASl
Reg. SALE
•Gray &amp; Pooch Tight Bock Stripes ....... 879 388
-country llue Rust Tlght8ock ....... ... 1~39 ,5-99
•Matching Loveseat to Above Sofa ...... 960 377
. 3 PC. SECTIONAL WITH RECLlNER
Gray &amp; Rooo- Exc. Comfort .. .... 2748

1374

•Blue - Rooo Damask Comet Bock . .'. 1500
•Country Rod and Blue, Oak Trim ........ 996
•Blue Rooe Plaid Tight Bock ........ ...... t 240
•Floral Bluo Oyster. Channel Back .. ... 1316

799
499
b99
855

OVER 200
CHAI~S ON SALE

lOVER 30 SOFAS ON SALEl

a grade of 8

o~ above w ~

wen•:

~

'1t1,

'·

Fifth Grade: Hearher BUrch, Jennifer·/
Fink. Dawn Hockman, Brian Penhorwood, ~
Ann Rltne, Erin Harper, Ellsah Meadows . ~fl

Sixth Gra~e: . Abby Blake, Linda Chap· ·4.
man, Lori Kelly, Terri Currence, Adam :,
Little, Kyla Sellers. Tina Smith. •
4
DH: Tonya Hudnall.

·!:
•
....

' I

TO PRIOR SALE

Reg . SALE

1 fuJI $~ze SetSJp,f l)! ,!It Fq_st~r Dyn.tsW, ~l.atinum ........ '699
1 Full S1ze Set Stearns 8t Foster Dynasty Diamond .. : ..... '880
1 Queen Size Set Stearns &amp; Foster Comfort Plus Supreme ....... '699
1 Full Size Simmons Beautyrest Boxspring ........... : ....... .. '249

I UPHOLSTERY

s144
s329
&amp;399
5339
s99

I
Reg. SALE

IDINING ROOM I
SALE

REG.

8 PIECE

CHERRY TRADITIONAL SUITE . Italian design featuring
52 inch lighted china with silver dr•wer. 2 holt and 4 side chain.

1.495
1.999

44•56 inch table plus 2 12-inch leavM ..... .. ............................... ............ .. .. .... .... 2995
•8-PIECE COUNTRY FRENCH . 6 cane back chairs. loblo and china ....................... 2,880
•B PIECE PECAN SUITE - Our boot burl inlay sculptured table
and large china. 2 host and 6 beautiful ohairs ....... ... .. .. .. ... .. ..... ... . ............ .. ... ..... 4,820
•COUNTRY OAK SUITE - .8 piece group with lighted chino ............................ .. ... 3.682
•All Famous " Cherry Grove" DINING ROOM PIECES at ......... .. ....... .. ................. .... ..... .. .

2,995
700
20% OFF

Contemporary Flame-stitch Sofa by Simmons ............... '949
s299
3 Pc. Sectional by Barclay (Beige, rust, tan) ......... : ....... •1325 s744
Sofa by Fairfield (Mauve, blue plaid) ............................ •1100
'766
Country Sofa 8t Chair (Blue/Rust) by Temple .............. .'1153
ss77
2 Pc. Sectional by Barclay (Grey/Peach Stripe) ............ •1015 s744
Traditional S,ofa 8t Chair (Brown 8t Peach) .................... •1 195
s799
All Hide-A-Beds 8t Sofas .........................................20%-70% OFF
Simmons Hide-A-Bed Queen Size (Beige Vinyl) ............ '1099
s4~9
Simmons Hide-A-Bed Queen Size IBrown / Beige Stripe) ..... .. '899
'499
La·Z- Boy Sleeper Full Size (Blue/Gold plaid) ................. '749
Country Sofa lit.Loveseat by Barclay ............................ '1100

IBEDROOM I

REG .

•5 PIECE AMERICAN OAK SUITE . All wood lifetime quality.
60 inch 7 drawer dresser with mirror, chest, queen bed. nightttand ..... ........ ... ... 2,250

•PECAN SUITE 5 PC . Queen , 68" dretser

a. mirror. N/ S, QueenHeadboard ........ . 1,529

•CHERRY 6 PC SUITE. 68" droner. chest. NS. Quaen Headboard, mirror ..... .. ..... 2.033
•GIRLS SUITE . Cinnamon finish. Chest, twin HB,
.•

SALE

1 '125
765
1350

dreuer, mirror, Nightstand ...... ... .. ...... -···

Values to

s499
s599

All Lamps up to 70% Off
All A((essories 20-70% Off
All Sofas 20-65% Off

IMISCELLANEOUS I

In Los Angeles, actor D·an iel J .
Travanti and housewife Dorothy

your cost eactt

19 ¢ atler rebate

10W30 Motor Oil
Reg. 99e, limit12
THE MCJWI'I 01. WITH l-7

__
·-·"'.......
............._..._
·~

I" "• I '1,'

" "' · ~1

fOW40&amp;5W30
Motor Oils

..... --.........
........
..............·---~~~

........... 0111 ...... _

H

Your

88¢

mfr'arebate

-SO. when yoy buy 2
yourcosl

77 aflor reblto

Reg . 1.49#DSIA '201

~
tJ·;..

Alter reblte

Pylon

MedoLoclr
De·lcer

.

Snow Blades

•WALL UNITS
•LAMPS
•TOSS CUSHIONS

•SOFAS
•CHAIRS
•PICTURES

FURNITURE
GALLERIES
Corner of S.ond &amp; Grape Strut
GaIlipolis, Ohio

•DINING ROOM SUITES
•BEDROOM SUITES
•CURIO CABINETS

BEDROOM SUITES - 20%-60% OFF
DINEnES, Up To· SO% OFF
LAMPS 25% TO 4,0% OFF
•FREE

DELIVERY
·F~EE DELIVERY
•INTERIOR DESIGN
SERVICE
•CARPET

•FREE
PARKING

1

J

OPEN DAILY TO S P.M.
MON. &amp; FRI. TO I P.M.

gil'. John &amp;or:zlng,' sean Braley, Eddie
Crooks, Brandl Dillon, Kfolly Douglas, .
Heldt Caruthers, Amy Epple, Jay Humph·
reys .. Tina Kauff. Kristin KlnJl, Rebecca
Kerr. Bob Lambert , Tracy Let&gt;, Shannon
Newsome, Mlcha£"1 Parkpr, Lartsha Prl«',
Tracie Richmond, Natalie Tromm Mik e
Walls, Carl Wllltama. Sabrina

446•3045.

WHERE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

..........-.........~4~4;6~-0~3~3~2-......-....·~C~U~ST~O;M~D~R;A~PE~R~Y--~ '-~(;o~rne;r~o;f~T:hi~rd~&amp;~OI~iY;t,~G;a:lli;~;li~s. . . . . .~;;;;'S;O:U:R:;MAINCONCERN

reg . 7.99, #WAt0t20tO

10.88

'

moat applications

26.88
32.88

Master BaHery
Heater

some late model

Reg. 14.95, #BH·112

GM applications

15.88

Magnetic Engine
Heaters
Reg . 21 .95. #MHt MH2

77
Atlas
177
¢Atfas

.

10" Ice Scraper

Reg. t .09
#873418730

USA row a .......
Witii.Hoolrs
Reg.11.95. #101113

-1!/JJ///11

199

Wifmart-Ton
\&amp;;na•n Hoist

1

·

Hudson
Leather PaJm
Knit Gloves

Reg. 2.9&gt;
. •8198 10

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK.
.

Store houre 8:30 l:.m. to 8:00 p.m. Monday through Friday,
8:30 •.m. to 6:00 P:m. Saturday 1nd 10:00 a.m. to 6:00p.m. Sun.day.

'

I

~1:!!s

Front, Reg t6.95

Req 1.49. # 9712

69.88

.

Flip- Top Brush
Scraper

1

Wuson.

·'.

rremanufactured
Starters&amp;
Alternators

Dipsticlr Heaters

••
"

2.000FF

Reg. 18.95, #AWF

5.88 -

Ca\vcrL P£'nn.v Clurk. , Charles

FrPShm&lt;'n: Nancy Baker Melanie BeC'·

Reg. From 6.95

MASTERMOTIVE HEATERS

Bakf'r, Michael Bar- ·

Wf'ndy Fry, Carol Glt;x.aut. PauliJ Gllkl'y;·
Jor J:lall, Kimberly Hamm. Cbrl&amp;topher S.
Hanning. Charlotte Hart . (){Ianna Hender·
son, Tony H£'ndr lx . Joyce Hupp. Kpv\n
King. AudrC'y Lambt'&gt;rt. Donlta Manu€'\,
Tract Newlun, Oonlta Poolflr. T1na Riffle.
Laurll' Shcn('fl£'ld , John Sisson. AngPia
Sloan. Kevin TannE-r. Mavrmr Thomas
K{'\Jy Thompson. Sandy · Van Coone~:
TrrPSa Walkflr, Jane-t Wflrry.
·
SophomorE'S: Chrlstlnf' Bus , Laurie
Black , Henry Buchanan. Nlcolf.' Bunch.
Danny Carl. Melodl Carl. Stacy Dalton.
Patricia Davis. David Edmonds Carolyn
Elam, Bfoth Ewlnl{. Terry Fi eldS, Starf:.y
Gibbs. ShE'IIa Hendricks, Todd HoS&lt;'hai-.
Wl'S!ey Howard. Stacy Hysell, l.ol'('tla
Lau~rmllt , Cindy Maynard. ElisE- Mt'ler,
Tony Mohler, Kell)' Ogdln. VIcki Priddy,
Melinda Rtaas. Tina Romine, Jared
Sht&gt;t&gt;ls. Kathy Thomas. Monica Turner,
Debbie _west. An~l'la WhiiP, Tim Wrt~ht .

VoHage
Regulator

.

trum . David Ek'&lt;'~l£1. NanMIC' Btak1\ Cat t\v

ALL GENUINE BRASS UP TO 40°/o OFF

•

Wells

Window
Defogger

Reg . t .49 #LOt '

..

"-g.4.49

PowPII , Amy Radekln. Sally Radford.
Missy Riff'. Cindy Riffle. Krn Ritchie•
Jacklr Robinson , Ch('ryl Roush, Kr!S
&amp;•xton. BrPnda S!nclati-. Dave Smith,
Mark Smlth . M1•1inda Smllh . Mtssl
Sprousr. Dona ld St ein , Mlch('ll(' Strvens.
Kim St&lt;"''8rt . Jt" nn l Sl4·art7.. Rhonda

Jt'rry [)(orenbcr~t'r, SPan Dodson, D£&gt;1orls
Dorst . Jonathan Dunn , Jodlt' Ervin, Laura
Farley, MICh{'IIE' Folmrr. Ro$l er FratE')',

·

4.95

Reg. 19.95, #BD·t

NE'Ison. Su(' Parsons, Mlch&lt;'ll€' PE'Ierson,
Plrrrt'. Kathy PtrkPns, Scott

Cleland. Sh£1rry Coop("r. Cindy Dtanny.

Reg. 49e

From

Window
Defroster

An~Zrla

Mt~r$1: 1r

Aller Rebate

lnterdynamics

Qualco
De· leer

Musser. SIE'v('n Musser. JeftrPY .

Julitors:

Gas Lme
·Antifreeze

14.88

King. Phil King, Susan K\nfZ, Tlmothv
Knolls. Jenny I.A:'t', Judi ME'H . JE'nnlf~r
Mlllt"r. Yonllee Mlllrr. Colcna Mowery

Zlrkl£'.

19¢

Your Choice

Choice

Carol Hrndrlx . Shannon Hlndy. Dare!
Hysell, Julie Hys('ll. Dawn Kt&gt;l'SN'. Darla

•

.

Quak~r Stat~

l21 l Ol i1 US OT i 946 L11Rl

Char l('S Bar rf'lt, Ml ch£&gt;11C' Barr. Randy
BlrchriE'Id. Donna Bowrn. Paul Brlrkles,
Ilona Butchrr. Cor!I'V Carnahan. Rf&gt;IM-cca
Chas£'. April Clark , Marty Cline. Jennlft&gt;r
Coul'h. T odd Cu mm ums. Cr('~ Cun ·
ntn~ham. AnJt:ela Damewood , Tim Durst .
KubM'f Eason. Mary Fta~ll· LorleGarn('S,
Chrlstoph('r N. Hanln~ . Krlsll Ha:vnC's,

Kim

SAVE 20-70% • IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

Reg. 99¢

Reg. 1.0_9, llmltt2

Blrsslnft, Bill Brothers, P£&gt;1(' Burnerri.

Reg. SALE
•Cherry or Ook CED~!R CHESTS .. ....... 339 199
•CORNER CURIO. Dork ook.. ..... ........ 419 299
•WOOD ROCKER, Cherry ............ .. ..... 329 199
•Stiffer Bra11 FLOOR LAMP .. ... ..... .....396 199

Windshield
-Washer
Solvent

--~

Seniors: Eri n · And('rson. Kim Arm·
!itron~. Jt"ffrf'y Arnold. Mt'1anl&lt;' Arnold ,

Marla

saltpriceeach
mtr's rebate ea.

thE' roll Wf'r£':

•Five WALL UNITS, Values to '684- As Low As .......... .. ......... s222

Reg. SALE
•Howard Mitior GRANDFATHER CLOCK in
in cherry. Crank wind. br11s II burl
trim .............. ................ .. .............. 1980 2bb
•Henredon Pecan END TABLE
Boautirul corving with parquet top ... . 339
•Drexel Oclogonal END TABLE .. ......... 649 1

moments during the holiday.
A group of people who call tht'·
streets of Manhattan home ga•
thered In Grand Central Term!·
nat to remember "Mama" - a
homel ess woman th!O'Y said died
as much from neglect as from
pneumonia a year ago.
~·
The mourners. some of them·
fighting back tears. he.ld lighteil
candies and rem inisced about .
the· aged woman they said cared;
for them as much as their own
mothers.
" They said she was just a bag
lady," reca ll ed Harvey Hub;
bard, 59. who has lived Iri the:
streets and alleys around the ·
terminal for the last two years.
"But she treated me like I was a
real person."

11C when you buy 6

ho nor roll at lbf" Mt&gt;lgs High School has

I

$599
•Ladies Oak SECRETARY, Reg. •579 ............................. ........ $299
•Contemporary COMPUTER DESK 8t CHAIR. Reg. '753 ......... $550
•Cor.ner CURIO, Traditional Cherry, Reg . '456 ........................ $188
•Oak Contemporary CURio·. Arch Top, Reg. '578 ............. .. .. .. $289
•Large Oak ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, Reg . 1479 ...... .. ........ s299
•10-Gun Pine STORAGE CABINET, Reg. 1 607 ....................... $399

ton Emergency Center. But 100
people showed up to complete the
work ·imd dinner went on as
·
sched uled.
People opened their hearts and
pocket books to help families in
Chelsea·. Mass., left homeless by
the fire jhat killed three children
this week. Officials reported
contributions are " ju st pouring
in" for the families and children
who survived Tuesday's fire.
In Washington. President Rea·
gan and his wife, Na ncy, Px·
changed gifts and celebrated the
day with friends at the White
House. Reagan gave the .first
lady a red robe as a Chr ist mas
gift and she gave him a horse
,blanket.
There were also more somber

·-

Sale prices in effect Dec. 26
through Dec . 31 , 1986

txom announced . Makin~ a ifadE' of B or
abovP In all th£1\r subjl"&lt;'IS to tM' namtd to

•Oak Roll Top DESK, Reg. '838 ........... ............................. .....

AU Dining Room Suites 20·50%. OFF
All Bedroom Suites 20·50% Off
All Candles 50% Off

"1 contend that we're seeing
the 'Me Generation' turn into the
'We Generation,"' said the Rev .
Cecli Williams, pastor of San
Francisco's Glide Memorial
Church, where 800 people lnclud·
lng Mayor Dianne Fei nstein
volunteered Ia serve the poor.

Wynn were both stars to thousa nds of hungry in a · city
becoming a popular destination
for the nation's homeless .
Travanti, star of NBC's "Hill
Street Blues." ana Wynn workeq
with hundreds of other volunteers, wiping their brows In the
muggy Los Angeles heat ·and
serving thou sa nds of dinners.
"I haven 't seen people this
happy since .. . well, never," said
Arn Crawford, a hOmeless man
who said he came from Chicago
two years ago. "lt' s nice. It 's
Christmas,"
In Vermont , officials feared
they would be unable to serve
Christmas Eve dinner to the
homeless because renovations
were Incomplete at the Burling·

Melp HIKh School
Th£' seco nd s ix Wf't'ks J:rarllng prrtod

SALE

SAVE 20-70°/o

San Francisco agencies faced
the pleasant problem of too many
volunteers to serve some 30;000
·Christmas dinners. and in Bas·
.ton, Jewish volunteers filled in
for the regular staff at a shelter
for -the homeless so they could
spend · the holiday with their
families .

Honor roll

S699 ................................................. AS LOW AS S199

IMISCELLANEOUS

neighbors of crew members
aboard the Trident nuclear sub·
marine Ala bama performed a
Christmas pageant on video for a
surprise show ing on the vessel as
it cruised In the Pacific Ocean.
"What does Christmas mean
with no presents. no family, not
even any daylight?" sa)d Janice
Dey, whose husband was aboard
the sub. "When you strip away
the commercialization and lam·
ily, what do you have left?"
The f a mlll~ celebrated Christ·
mas by playing their ow n copy of
the video.
Across the United States, thou·
sands of volunteers turned out to ·
serve traditional Christmas
dinners to the homeless and the
elderly.

Nevertheless, Goldsmith said,
there wUI be larger numbers of
people suffering from chronle
Illnesses such as cancer and
Alzheimer's disease.

OVER 60 RECLINERS By La-Z 7Boy and Lane Action

All Reduced -

..

It's Christmas;' Americans celebrrate the season

3~

CHICAGO &lt;UPil - The na·
lion's health care system may be
swamped with patients over 65
by the year 2000, but an expert
says by then l)eople will be
generally In better health and
Americans will have a different
concept of old age.
By the tu rn of the century
people 65 and over will be
healthier than the same age
group today and will require less
heath care. Jeff Goldsmith, a
consult ant toE rnst &amp; Whlnney of
Chicago, said in a report released
Thursday.
"The life expectancy should be
about 90 by then; 65 "'ill be
middle-aged," instead of "el· .
derly," he said in a report on 21st
century health care in the Jour·
nal of the American Medical
Association.
Goldsmllh's outlook for the
futur e differs considerably from
other recent reports, which have
predicted a health care system
overwhelmed by aged patients, a
proliferation of health maintenance organizations and techno·
cratlc care with lltlle personal
interaction.
But Goldsmith said In a teie·
phone Interv iew many doomsay·
ers have not accounted for a
generally healthier population
and the power of free market
1
forces.
"1 think it won't be unusual to
have people work until age 75 and
be quite productive; we have a
president who's 75." he said.

ALL ITEMS SUBJECT

r.~ 1 Queen Size Set Simmons Golden Value ..................... '499

Middleport, Ohio .

on health
•
care m next
century

COME EARL VI
J

Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinel- -Page.:...7_

Report made

Lifestyle Furniture would like to thank
you for the pleasure of serving you in
1986. The following is a partial listing of
some famous brands of quality furniture
reduced for our year-end sale•.

•

,
Reg, SALE
•Oyster lo Rooa Lounge . .... .... ... .......... 528 1bb
•Blue lo Rooo Tub Choir ................. . , .. :669 177 '
•Pooch Volvot Occuional. ......... .. ........499 188
•Pin-Dot Ruot Wing Choir .... ...... .... ..... 480 199
oOcc111. Ru11 Votvot, Wood Trim .. ....., .288 144
•Oyllor &amp; Rooo Occulon,t ....... ........ .. 860 144

M~k.lng

In aU their subj~ts to be named to the roll

THANK
YOU
'

I MATTRESS AND BOX SPRINGS

I PARTIAL LISTING J

By MICHAEL COLLINS
United Pre.. International
Christmas 1986 was a day when
a murderer got to play Santa
Claus. an actor and a housewife
worked side by side to feed the
hungry and Americans used
telephones and videotape to
exchangP greetings with loved .
ones away from hom e.
People around the country
paused during a day of church
services, faml[y gatherings ·and
gift exchanges to make sure the
less fortunate , lonely and those
with a recent run of bad luck
e~joyed the holiday.
At t:te Oregon State Peniten·
tlary, murderer Michael Lissy
said playing Santa at a holiday
celebration for inmates and their
famili es was one of his few
chances to "put something back"
into the community.
"One kid had wanted a G.l. Joe
doll for two years," said Lissy,
who is serving a life sentence.
"We !the prisoners) gave it to
him, and tears jus! came pouring .
down his face. Everi old Santa
had tears."
Millions of Americans jammed
telephone lines with calls to
relatives and friends, and some
U.S. servicemen received Christ·
mas greetings via a vldeot ape .
machine.
About 100 wives, children and

try to usc• a m~gnrtlzf'd screw-1~
driver to remove the batteries :1
themselves, particularly if It is .
lodged in the ear canal where I
can be pushPtllnto the ear drum ...
If the ballery is stuck jn a nasal"
passage, however. " It 's quit~
safe to have a child try to blow:;1
their nose If they know how to do.;.
that: that's · how we . got the.,;
raisins out of my own child's!
nose," Landry said.
~
Parents. ''s hould at least be •
aware If those batteries are·
around," Landry said. "They ~
can be Ingested and shoUld be ~
kept out of kids' reach. And
there Is a problem, they should ,.
ge( help Immediately."
!

ISALE STARTS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 26th I

ISALE ENDS DEC. 311

]

.

26 .. 1986

lt's ·nice.

5 Days Only
Year End Sale

5 DAYS ONLY
INVENTORY
REDUCTION SALE

Corn•r of Second &amp; Grape

a nickrl.

Small children typically . get

SAVE-SAVE-STOREWIDE SALE
FURNITURE'
GALLERIES

large as

Friday, December

209 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh.

protects trousers
and carpeting

7.88

Pantsaver Mats
Rear. Reg. 9 95

�·,

P1!!18-8-The Daily Sentinel

.•
•

Charles E . Sayre. Clara L. aka
Clara Sayre, Maiy Ruth Rogers
by atty . In fact ; B.J. Rogers by
atty. In fact, Martha Jean
Drenner by atty. In fact, Darrell
Drenner by atty. In . fact, to
Pomeroy Firemen Assoc., par·
eels, Porn. Vlll.
Robert L. Persons, Bronis
Persons, to James D. Harris,
Barbara F . Harris, parcel,
Chester.
Jimmy Joe Hemsley, to Joseph
Robert Hemsley, Karen Bernice

Meigs
property
transfers

Friday. December 26. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Hemsley, lots, Syracuse.
Donald E . Little, Carolyn S.
Little, Lois J . L!tl!e nka Lois J.
Payne, Kenneth Payne, to Hu·
bert Stafford, parcels, .Salls bury.
Grace E. Campbell. to Michael
David Campbell, Terry Campbell, parcels, Letart.
Norman Baxter, Gilda Baxter,
to Rebecca J. Triplett, tracts,
Pomeroy.
Charles T. Curtis, Dottle F.
Curtis, to Joseph D. Glenn,
Janice M. Glenn , parcels, Sutton.

Riley Lee Cowdery. Dec'd, to
Vivian . Lee Brown, ·Riley Joe
Cowdery, David A. Wilson, Cert.
of Trans., OJ!ve.
Benjamln'H. Ewing, Doris J .
Ewing, from Garland R. Cald·
well, Sarah E. Caldwell, parcels,
Orange.
Garland A. Miller, Slegllnde
MIIIPr, to 'Garland A: Miller,
Slegllnde Miller, Assign .. right of
way , Meigs.
Charles H. Theiss, Bonnie T.

Theiss, to Thomas M. Theiss,
parcels, Lebanon. ·
•'Carroll E. Cleland, Debra J.
Cleland, to Norman Eugene
Neece, Madetlne Neece, Part.
lots, Salisbury.
Paul Sellers, Hazel Sellers. to
Klttie L. Harmon, right of way,
Lebanon. ·

~. Middliport,
POIIIet&lt;l'r-

Friday, December 26. 1986

-.

Calendar
Revival scheduled
POMEROY - Ca lvary Pll·
grim Chapel will be In revival
Sunday through Dec. 31 at 7:30
nightly. Dec. 31 services will be'
watch night services. Rev. Victor
Roush will be speaker. Rev.
Dewey King, pastor, welcomes
the publfc.

-

The Da~'ly Sentinei-P~-9
.;
..,..

Ohio

·u

•=•

&gt; fXPERIENeETHf JOY Of RELIGION
.

.

.

ClASSIFim ADS sure to gat malllti

.,
E.

St. Rl.

MIDDLEPORT

SWISHER &amp;' UIISE
.

I BOOK SlORE
Office

~!':"!.

Church &amp;
Supplies
GIFTS
Mill St.
Micldieport

FRANCIS FLORIST

\f(•ij{~ Couru:v·~

Oldt&gt;!!if

FI1Jri~l

, 352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
614/992-2644
'

Pr&amp;scriptions ,

992-5141

I

•
1

(row's

SONS SlORE
GroceriesGeneral Merchand•se

TRI:\ n'\' f'HURCH. IlP\'. W. H. Prrrln .
l~ • s lm . IXohbiP Ruck, Sunrla~· ~·hool Supt .
&lt;hu1ttl Sc •hi'!QI !1: l!i a.m.: Wr11:shlp !-iN''II' 1fi:.'V'I
a.m. l'holr t 1'hf':ll~:tl 1\le!;rla~·. i :.l'J p.m.
di H~· Ik10

nf li'l ls

Bw·t

P0~1 EIHn C'HUROf nr THE NA7.Arn:~F ( 'r •rlll'r l 'rrion and Multx-m·, Rr\·.
Thom: r)o C11111 ~krlu nj:!. pastor 1'\nrman Pro;·

11&gt;1 . ~ S. Sup1.. Sund:r~· School. !1 .1 l o~ . m .
mnrning 1\0t~ hip lll::fl,tm.: t'l.t 'fl!n,el'tnit'f'ti
p.m : mlfi·WI'f'k !'t'I'VlU'. Wnll'l~ftt~' . j 11m.
Llto\l'F EPL"r0P/\J . (1-il'RQI, 3$ F..

AOVEIITISI.O ITlM POliCI

Elch (If !heM a~M~ I"' is.ed i1ems rs requ11ed robe readilY aya i lab~ tar sale iro
.. ch ~~;roger Sto1e, e•ceor as sl)eeif1callv n(lted 1n !hi! ad If we do run Dlll

COPYRIGHT 1986 . THE KROGER CO. ITEMS ,I, NO PR ICES GOOOFRID..,Y. DEC
26 . THROUGH SATURDAY. DEC. 27 . 1986. IN POlE lOY MD QALIIP'DII~ STORES.

of an advertised rlem. we w•ll oner vau yl)ur d'!01Ct ala comptrable item ,
when awilable rl!fleCllng rhe s&amp;'lle savings 01 a 1a1nchec~ whw;h woll
&amp;n1rtle you ta purchue the ad~ert•S ' 1~em ar rhe ad~e!'lised ~mt:e wulun lJ
days, Only one vendor couoon ... ~r be KCe D1td per otem purt l\3~

DEA~ERS

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED B.fEF

Diet RC
or ·RC Cola

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

8-Pak

Pound

Red Ripe
Salad Tomatoes... ...

Y."
TRIM

PLUS
DEPOSIT
lb.

•
ALL WEEK

'

DOUBLE
COUPONS·
Manufacturer's

:cheese
&amp;• •
•
'Pepperom P1zza......

212-1~ch$5
Medtum

crust

f'lrtn'T'O\', SuntLI\' ~ t,'\'kf'S: Hoi\'
t1•mmllnlnn nnlh' fir~\ Suntlr\ Olmt h rmntli.
.rnd wmhi nn1 11i tt1 mor nlnci JrliYI'I' on lhr
tlurtld Sutltl:r\ M01 nin~ pl '&lt;~:'-'l' l' ,md so ·rrvnon
,rU rtlh•r Sund:r\ s of t tr mmth. Chur&lt;·h Sc.tlool
.Ullll\u I:Of'l7'' 1':11'1 ' Jll'f l\'kiPd. rt ttfl'f' hoW' In I tr
I' rrl~h ll alllmm~II :I WI\ ' tr•ll('!Win~ lhl' sm•i«'.
mMF.ROV f'H UR&lt;ll OF' C'HRI!-o"''. 21~ W.
~ l1in Sl . :'\I'll Proudt•'lfll . P.: • ~1 •• · Blblt;" Sd'lo'll
1'1• , rn : :\l nrning\H~ ·~ hip, fl: :~l:.~.m .: Youth
m~·tin ~. +~ Ill p.m.: r,.,·,·nln~ wor ~hlp. i:OO p.
m \\'itln {"&lt;. fl;.r~· OJph t pr ;t~'t'l' m«'tin~ and Blbl{•
, lull\ . j · t(J r1m
nn: ~·\L\' 1\TIO!'I: ARM~' m Bu!trrnut
,\1r . Jlr •IT'ri'IH\'. Mr!" ll;w:• Wlnln~ In ctmrw.
"um~•;.. hn liru~" TTII't'ltng. 10 ,1 .m.: St.mcl;1~·
Sdt• ••I 1!!: .11 .r.m. Sunduv Srtronl. YP.iM
Flor~ /\.ibm~ lrwil•• 'i:.ll ll m Sah·aUon
mo' •l in~. \':ll'lou.... !&gt;prukn~ :onfl mu.~k · S!X'(·Iul.&lt;
il i UI~I.I.\, n ::fl u.m Tn ~ pm Lildlf'S Hfii'TI'
l .t', IL'\1(' , nwmh:·r" in •har ~J• . :111 1mm·n
lm·lt ul: 11 : ~ :1 p.m. Thw'l'll;l,\' rrrp: C'mlrt
Ch'~' tYI•tll'lj.! Pt~1 pii' · R i hl f'r 7·lJ p.m. Bihl1•
Stutl;. :.nd Pr :t\1 11' mf'f'lin'-!. II'J ffl t111!¥&gt; pul)li(•.
l'flMEHOV \\'ES'J'SIDE fli UROl OF
I'HHJ!-·r. 'tt.!..'Ji Chlkln•tfs Jfnm · Road tC'11u n11·
Htl,td 'ilir 1 (1~.:1!~•. \ 'nr:rl mu~k . Sund~tl' Woi··
,ihp 11\,r .m.: Ri hli' Slue I~· U ;1.m.: Wor!"li.rp lip.
m. \\'l"dnn-.tla1·. Rlh1• · ~uri:-·. i p.m.
(li.J J OE:'\TJ..:R
RJRU; \HRl~·mAN
01\ 'RCH. 11.1\'in Cur h~ . p : 1~1r11 : IJnd;r ~· an ,
Su p! SuTII\:1\ Sr 1'1111) ~l' ll :1.m.: ll't'IWhln!Z !»('!'·
lir; .... !IJ'l&lt;t .mtl 1hll'fl ~nd:t\' fnllowln~ ~"'~~~
~ ·hfw,l Youth rn«•llng. i: ·Vt .p.m. P\lt"''").• Sun·
&lt;til .
I.RAHJ\M . U!S JTF.D METHODIST.
Pn•M hinp: ~Uil :\. m. fu'"l and ~rrond Sun·
~ ~~ ~·sot tutt1 mnnlh : lhirrl :rncl fnur1h Sun·
tl:11 f'ar h mr~nl h wor~ hlp ~('n·lrl"s a! 7: :10 p.
m.' \V('(Im,..da~ pn•nln.cs a t 7::l!J p.m.
P1.r1rr .1 nrl D!biC' Stwly.
SEVENTH-OA\' ADVENTIST. Mulb·
rtr\' H1 · lght~ Rn; ut Pomf"I'O\ , l.rrm·
~rUe h. P:1stor: Snh))ath Sf'hnnl SU\)I"rln ·
trn &lt;h•nt , Rhnntl:r Markin . Sahb:rth School
tl').'! ln" al 1 p.m. (fl S:nun.lu~· with wnrs hlp
~~ · r1· 1r·r hl l h•wln~ at :1; 1!\ EH'I) 'Iltlt' "'rl·
M:1 in o,;l .

WE RESEIIVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QU,I,NTITIES NONE SOLD TO

:CELl FRESH MADE CHEESE &amp;
SAUSAGE OR

Racine 949·25$0

CHAPMAN SHOES

. ,,.,,, ·, o.n, '"' ,,., .
104 £.MAIN ST. POI'IIROY
992-2815

This week your manufactured product• ''cent• oH 1' coupons are worth double at
Kroger . Limited to manufactured products coupons worth up to and includ•ng
50¢ Ott . Coupons worth mQfe thant50¢ are redeemld at face 'llak.Je only . l1mit
0"'11 coupon for each product purchased . L1mrt one coHee coupon. No beer,
wrrte or cigarene coupons will be double. Not '1181id on free coupons, Kroger
coupons or retail food store coupons . The amount refunded cannot uceed the
pnce of the item . You m1.1s't purchne product in sizn specified on the coupon .
This offer applies only to manufactured products : 'c ents off " coupons for items
we car,._, . To assure product availability for all our customers , only one coupon
per s~opping faniil'll , will be doubled on anv brand 1tem during each store.v1s1t

'

After Christmas
Clean-Up Sale

SAVE50°/o
On Selected Christmas
Toys And ·A ccessories
While Quantities Last!

1

eceinber has become the grand

SYRACtiSE·fiRST UNlTEO PRDlBY ·
TERIAN - Sunday School. !0 a.m .:
Cburrh·s&gt;rVIc•. !1 :15 a.m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO, Pas1or.
John Evan!'. Sund ay School )0:00 a.m .:
Sunday Morning Worship ll :00 a.m. Chll·
- Gloria Nowak
&lt;Wm' !ll Churdl 11 a.m. Sunday Eventn2
St'l"'lli('.('
7:00p.m.Wfdn('!lday,
Wrd .. 6 p.m.
YounR
La· .__ _ _ _ _ _...,;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:
dl('s r "'uxlllary.
7 p.m.
Fam·
ily Worship.

HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
R1. 124. 3 mli&lt;"S frnrp Portland·LOJI~ Bot·
tom. Edsel Hart, paslor. Sunda y Scllool .
9:30 a.m .: Sunday mominl!' preach in II
10:30 a.m.: Sunday ~vmln.(t ~prvices, 7: :Jft
p.m .
,.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWilL BAPTIST
CHURCH. Cornf:lr Ash and Plum. Ra !ph
Cundlff. pa!'ltOr. Sun d a~.SchooI 10: 00 a.m.:
~
da Y
Mo•·nin~ Wor~hlp , 11 : 00 a.m.: W ,.,.nf'!l
and Salurd~~· Evrnlng Se-rvicE's at 7::lO p.

,

dlw al i : ,l) p.m.: Mf'n',; PrayN BrC";~kfast ,
W('Cin~dr\', i am. iC::mcrl .
SliTTO~ - Churl'!' S(·hool. Q::Yl a.m .:
Mnr.nlng Worship 10:.:1:'1 u.m . fi rst and third
SttrHI:r l . . ; f'(IJiowsh\p dlnn(lr ~&amp;.• Uh Carm(ll
thlrtl i'hu r~ d&lt;tV . ti: :tl o.m. IMcGu\rn
KENO CHURC'H OF CHRIST SV•·rnon
d
Eldrido ... mlnistN: OlivC'r,., Swuln.
· un a,h\ '
"HH
School Supt. Prrat'hln~ :~ :.11 r a.m C'Ur
SuHm0ln65
v. ON CHRISTIAN UNION IThur·

m.

man Durham ) pastor. Sunday servlcr.

~ a.m:, evening service 7:30 p.m .
9 . "''

MEIGS

P rayPr mf'E'tln "... Wednfday, 7:30p.m .
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHR IST. Jnsrph B. Hoskin.~. pa~tor . Aihl&lt;'
Clas~. 9:.10 a.m.: M~rnln~ Worship JO::U1 ol .
m : E\·r,nln J! Wn r.~ hlp. !i: 1fi p.m T,hursda~·
'"'
Blbl "·Slu dY. n;.,.,p.m.
NEW ~IVERSVILLE COMM UN ITY
CHURCH. Sunda" School "('rvlc~. 9:45 a .
·
.
.
m.·. Wo rsh!~ !Wf\' lt'&lt;' 10:,30 a.m .:
E1· angc-ll"tlt~ rvlcr 7::10 p.m..:.~.W~nf'S ·
oov: Pr3\'tor m('('lrn~ 7: 30p.m . Tr1Ui'!:i!ay
ZION CHURCH OF' CHRI!iT. PomC'roy·
Harrisonville' Rd. Robprl
Bill minJ!;.
M El
s s S PurlC'\1.
lf'r: S!C'I'r St;~nl C'y, · · · · upl. :
c· ·
m~· . A ~s1. SuP,!. : Sunda~· Schnol 9: :vi r• m :
Worship !&gt;('rvlrr- 10:30 a.m.: E\'C'nln~ wor ·
ship Sun&lt;lil v 7 p.m. and Wf'dn &lt;'8 day. 7 p.m .
ST. ,JOHN LUTHtRAN CHURCH. Plnr
Grol'(' Thf" •Rf"v . WllliHm M lrldlN~warlh .
pa stor . Churt'h st'r\'lc·r ~ ::JO u.m .: ~und t•v

COOPER~TIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rn. Don Archer

Rev. Roy Dr.elrr
Rev. Selden .Johmon

ALFRED- Churrh ~hoo\ 9:).') a.m.:
WorshiP· 11 a.m.: UMYFfi:.Ylp.m.: UMW
Third Tursday. 1 : ~ p.m. Communion.
first Sunday. fArchf'rl
CHESTER - Wonhlp ~ a.m.: Church
SchoollOu.m.: Blbi&lt;'Study, Thursdiily, 7p
m.: UMW. first Thursda~. 1 p.m.: Com ·
munto n. first Sunday jArrh£&gt;rL
JOPPA -Wors hip 9:.'VJ a.m.; Churrh
Schoo\10: .10 a.m. BibiC' Study Wf'dnesday.
7::Jl p.m. IJohnson!.
LONG BOTTOM- Churrh SChool 9::KI
a .m.: Wm!~ hlp 7 p.m.; Blbl£' Study. WPd·
nrsday. 7::rl p.m.: · UMYF. Wrdn('Sday,
n:OO p.m.: Communion First Sunday,
IArchrrl.
REEDSVIU.E- Chureh Sthoo\9: :vt a,
m.: Wor~hlp SllrviC'f' 11 :00 a.m . ~OM-It'r \.
TUPPERS PLAlNS ST. PAUL Chur'ch School 9 Jtr.m.: Worship 10 u.m.:
BlbiC' Stu~ . Tu&lt;'!'day. l ::JI p.m.: UMW,
Third 1'\l~da)' , 7::11 p.m .: Communion
Flrlll Sundav 1AN'ftt1"1 .
.
cliNT ..U. CW8TER
lin. ~--II:. Ctrlllll
. ,. .. ft'ftl

S:&lt;~~l6°~~R~m~HlJRCH

OF CHRIST.
John Wr\.e:ht . p.1 stnr . Sund.l~' Sch no l ~: 'Ul :r.
m.: L;,urv H.1.vnC"!-, ~ . S. Supt. Mornln~
Y. nr"hl p 10:,10 ;1,m .
RAC'INE CHURCH OF THF. N;\ZI\·
RENE . Rt ''· Lln~·d D Grimm. ,}I·.. JXISi nr
01·:• B;tss. Chll ir man ol th(' Bn.rrd jJf Chrl!" ·
1lanl.lfr. Sund1n. :Okhonl9::ltltL m : Mo rn·
In~ wnr.~hlp 10 : ~{1 ;1.m : !'\':1ngC'IIslle ~rr ·
vi&lt;'&lt;' 7:00p.m . Wl'dnC'Stla y "C'I'I'ir(', i p.m .
"'LIBERTY ~
\ HRb"TI AN C!l"RrH
~.o '- • LI\'X·
IC'r. Wood\· Call . pastor SN\'irf'S Sunda.v
10 a .m. and 7 p.m WrdnNiday. 'i p.m.

Nelltoll

ILeV. IIH\' .. lfrMW..

Be~.

Clfm•es.z..., •• .tr.

TuE'sdily. 7:30p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRISTOFLAT'TERDAY SAINTS. Port·
lanti·Racin(' Road . William Roush . pastor.
Linda Evans. church school ·dlrectcr.
Church school9:30 a.m.: Momlngworshlp
10:30 a.m.: WE'dnesday P\'Pnlng prayf'r
M
Sf'rv 1C('S . 7:"''p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST · R"\
~- '. Ear l
Sh u1er, pas 1or. wors hiP se rvl""
,., · 9: 30 am
· ·
Sunday SchoollO: 30 a.m. B!blt&gt; Study and
prayE'r sE'rViCf' Thursday, 7: ll p.m.
CARLETON IN'TERDENOMINATTON·
AL CHURCH , Kl ngs burv Road · R rv . LIU
~
·
vld currman, pas t or. S und ay Sc hool 9: 30
I Sup 1. E ven In ll wors hiP
a.m.: n.l
n.ca Ph Car.
7:00 p.m . Prayer m£&gt;EIIng. Wfdn£'Sday
7: 00 p.m.
LONG BOTI'OM CHRISTIAN, Vernon
Efdrld~e. pastor: Wallacr Damf'wood, S.
S S 1 S d S h 19 JOam · Worship
. up . un ay c oo :
. " ,
ServiCC', 10:30 a.m .
0
E""
HYSELL RUN H LIN ;'\ ,., '-~LI
n RCH ·
Mlkf' ThompRon. N~· 1-b\'('n,, WV, pa!iiO•.,
Sunda'' Schnnl at ~::m :1.m ; Morn In~ "·or ·
~ll lp 1.1! 10: :lfl .1.m.: ~unrl;l~' ('\'f'nin~~rrl'lrr
1'hUl'~ Ll\'
1 St'tY 1&lt;'C'S a1
&gt;~I 7::1(1 P m.
· ~.+..:1&lt;1p·
m.
· FRF.EDOM GOSPEL MJS.~JON at R11l d
I&lt; non , IO&lt;'alf'd m ('(lunt~· R&lt;l ~rd .11 .. Rr,·
01
pa,lor R·,·
La" rrnr·('
U N~rflt-a mp ,
· · ' ·
RO.t!C'I "Willford. ;1ss1. pllstoz. Prra thlng
s!• r\'kf's Sun cla y 7: .'lll p m. p r.r yr&gt;r m(l('l.ing
W 1 1
~ ~"
f' u·' C.rlffllh
N: nC'SUl y, c., . p.m. '• · •
·

~~;•.~:r~·.'m':'t~ul\~ ~~~,r~.~d"~r'11~;~:;'~~m~~~~~~

1nn .~ t'l'\' 1CC' ll'&lt;l
1 ' ·sund''\'
IC';~d«•rs.
Cnmmun
"
h
h
C':l~~HTTF.\ · C'HAPEl. WES.LEYAN
CHURCH _ Cooh·JIIP RD. Rl'\'. Phillip Ri·
rlrnnur. pnstor. ~unlit!~ Sthool II: ~(I a m.,
\\'Ot ship srr\'ifC' HI: :m a.m : Blhlf" .~lud v
w~
d
7pm
and
''' "~'" ay.
Rt:~&amp;.'nr:;;hlp
TLA!SD.~C'n'if'r',
CHURCH
OF CHR·IST· '
All! Nl h"-J ·nn Sun
Mur St'llool
k '1onl·~Sup!
. p&lt;lstor.
(' ''~:s...,.'
· ·
ll&lt;t\'
. Suncla,\' Srh ool
3(1 a .m :
Morn\n ~ Worship tm(l Communion 1D:311a .

mR LIT LAND fnBLF.METHODIST Amv"
Jley. Robert M1111oman
RAC INE FTR~T R;\PTIST. Sl('\'('
ASBURY fSyrae'u!lf'l -Won~ hip 11 ;j.m
Til II.., , p.1stor. Sonn~· Hudson, su pt . Sunda.\'
"'0
M 1
hi 10 ·:Ju
0('3\'N, Pa"lor. Mlkf' S~&amp;.• iJll'I' .' ' Sundav
: C'hurdl School ~ : 4!'ii a .m.: Chari!C' Blblr
Srhnol :t:., a.m.: orn n ~: wo rs p. ··
~hool Supt. : Sunda\' School 9: .10 a.m .:
Study, WNinf'!'da~· . 7:30p.m.: UMW . fir~!
a .m.: Sund:r\ C'\' ('n\n~ S(lrViC'&lt;' 7:00p.m.
MornlnJ! ~~.· orsh ! p 10:40 a.m.: Sunda~
Tul"!!day . 7::10 p.m.: Choir R('hrarsal.
\\'lxln('"day S&lt;-rvir(' i p.m. WMPO pro·
" .
hs d v
£'\'('n\n ~ wor.~ h lp 7:30 p. m.; wron (':ll da y
( fl fl'll'.
WC'dnf'!lda~ 6:.'Vl p.m .: UMW. f11urth Sun·
J!ra m :t a. m. r nc • un u ·
IWT LAND FIRST RAPTTST CHURCH
l'\'f'nln~ Rlblr "ludv 7 ~ 30 p.m.
day, 6::Ml p.m. INrlsonl.
·
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA ·
RENF. . Rrl' . Lnwrll Ford, P&lt;!Sior. Sunday
- Si~ IJ'I' H;u'l'll'll Warnrr Supt. Sun&lt;l:.t~
BURLINGHAM CoMMUNITY CHURCH.
ENTERPRISE - Wonhlp 9 a.m.:
Srhool~:3lla . m : Wllrship 'SC'fVit'f'10:30:l.
Bw11nJlh;rm. Ray l.a\ld('rmih. pa.~tor: Ro.
SduHll !I&lt;Ul .1.m.: MornI n ~ Wor!"hlp. 10: ~5
C: hurrh SthoollOa.m.: Blblr-SIUdy, TU('§·
lx&gt;r1 C~at1 . a~ls1an1 pastor. Sund.'l.\1 S&lt;itonl
day, 7::10 p.m.: UMW. Fir"' Monday, 7::ll
m.: You ng pC'Oplr' ~ llf'rv lc£&gt; ii p.m
.1m.
POMEROY FIRST BAP'T' IST. Ly ~ 1on
10 a.m.: wm·~hlp 7 p.m.: Wrdne:r;d~:W 6 p.m .
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir R£'·
E,·,rn ~rl 1st I&lt;· ~N'V !C'I' fi: 311 p.m . Wcdnt"'da~·
vouTh mN'IIng; WM .. 7 p.m. C'hurc'h ~rrvi('('S.
ll. tlli"l', mlnl!"trr \\'illlam Snnuff1•\·. Sun·
hl'ar.~al. ti: ~p.m . WNinrsday. lf'rankllnl
~C'n· tet i p.m.
PIN F. (;ROVE HOLIN~S('HURCH 1,11
tl.r1 Srhool Sup!. S uncl:r~· St·hnnl . ft: :m a .m.
FLATWOODS- Churrh Srhool. 10 a.m.
MASON CHtlRCH OF C HRL~T Mllkr
miTt• off Rt :125. Rrv . &amp;&gt;n ,J . Wallll, pao:; to r.
: Mmnln l! \\' or~ h l p 10::111 :1.m.
: Wors hip, 11 a .m.: Bib\(' Study. Thur!'l·
St .. Mnson. W. Vu. Eu~C'nC' 1.. ConRC'r. ml ·
Robrrt Scarl!'s. S.S. Supl. Sunday Srhool
FIHST SOU1' HER I\: B,\PTJST Pn
day. 7 p.m: UMYF. Sunday, 6 p.m.
n l~ ll'r . SundH\' B!biC' Stud~ I() u m .: WOI'·
m&lt;'l'fl\' r1 1kP. E. l.amar O'Bryanl. pastr•r:
~:.10 a.m.: Mornln~ Wor"hlp 10:.10 a .m .:
1Franklinl .
~ hlp 11 :1.m. il nd i p.m. Wcdn('!; da \' Blblr
Suhda,\• M't'l'llng st"rVIC'C' 7:30 p.m.: Wrd ·
.l.r di l'rt,. l!" Sunda\' Schnnl Oh·N·H'II'. Sun ·
FORE!;T RUN - Worship 9 am.:
Sl udv . \'O{·al mu"i r. i p.m.
I'X'!ld:t y SC'J1•\rr, 7: ~p . m .
t lo~ l SrhMI. ~1 : :111 u m.: Mnrnln,~r Wor·.~ hlp .
Church SChool 10 A.M.: Cholr practlt'f.
LIBERTY ASSEMffi. Y OF GOD Dud·
lfl ..tfl : PI'C'nlnJ:! ~&amp;.'orsh\p , 7:111\p.m. tO.S.T.l
SILVER RUN BAPTIST. Bill .Lttt](',
TuMday, 6:ll p.m.; UMW , flr!'111'ursday,
dlnll! Lnnc. Mason . W. Vo..1. N. T~arkff .
&amp; ';"·'lll tE S.T. I: WC'dn Nldu~· Prayl'l' SC'r
pastor. StrvC' Lilli£'. S. S. Supt. Sundav
7: :l0 p.m. +N£&gt;il~Oft\.
pa,;tor. Evr-nlng s£'1'\'\&lt;'C' 7:30 p.m.: Wo.
vier' . i :fO p m. !D.RT.t &amp; 7:30P.M. tE.S.
School 10 a.m.: Morntn,e: wor"Jp, 11 a.m .;
HEATH iMiddf('pOrtl -Church Schoof.
mC'n '" Mlnistrv. Thursdll:'J. &lt;1 :30 11.m.:
T 1. M!!"sin n Frll'nds U rj:!~ 2·61. Rn~ ·:r l
Sunda,v t'\'l'ni ng \Wlr"hlp 7: 3ll p.m. Pra:vC'r
9:30a .m.: MorninJit Worship 10:30 a.m.:
W !'tt n('sd;.~y Prllyrr nnd Blblr Study, 7: I ~
,\ mt~ r.~~i ldlll' !" 1hoy~ ;r ~o:t·~ n l!'tr . :rnrl G!r l~
mN&gt;tlng and BibIt' s tu~y Thuf!ilday , 7:.~0 p.
Youth Group. 4 p.m.: Wcdn('Sday, Church
in ,ktl&lt;ln (&lt;l~t'S I;.Jj;j r on We~ln~da .\'S, 1 p.
r.n ; Youlh mt'&lt;'11na Wt'dnesday ;11 7 p.m . p.m.
Choir r£'h('arsal. 7 p.m .: Thur!lda~ .
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
m 1D S T.l &amp;· i -.'ID p.m. IE S.Tj \: TUt'!!.d:l,\'
RE.IOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
PrayC'r ~rviC'f'. fi:3il p.m.: BlbiE'Siudy, 7
CHRISTIAN
UNION. Thl' R£'v . Oavkl
p.m. IZu nlRSL
- JR.1 N. 2nd Avf' .. Mlddlt&gt;port. Sunday
\'i•it:lliun n::lll p.m.
McManis, pastor. SundaySchool9: 30a .m:
School 10 a .m . Sunday nvC'nlnli: 7;M p.m .:
Ft\ITH T;\AF.RNA&lt;'LE fHURCH . So• I·
MINERSVILLE -Worship S&lt;-rvire 10
: Sunday momlnJ s~rvlce, 11 a.m.: Sun·
Mld ·Wf'('k M&gt;rvtcC'. wro ., 1 p.rn
IPI Run Hc,,Kl , RC'I'. Emml'll Rnwson. pa~ ·
&lt;t .m.: Church SchOol. 11 a .m.; UMW, third
day
night service, 7;30. WE'Cinesay r:rayrr
1e1r. Hanlllr~· Ounn , ,o;upt Sund:ry Srhool.
t.ANf'MILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
WC'dnrsday. 1 p.m.: Choir prac11('(&gt;. Mon·
meelln~ . 7:00p.m.
10 :r.m .: S unda ~· 1'\'Cn in~ ~ t·n· \ ('C' . 7: .111 p.m.
RobNI E. Muss(•r. pasl or. S unda~ Srhool
day. 7:3Cl p.m. !NrlsonJ.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, lelart,
9::m a.m.: Paul MussN', ~ upt .: MornlnJ!
Blhi&lt;' 1(I;J chin,!!. 7: .10 p.m . Thursli.l\'.
PEARL CHAPEL - Wor.~hlp Sc&gt;rvl('('
W.
Va .. Rt . 1. Jamrs LEW!s, pastor. Wor·
SYH.\C'l!SE MISSION. Chf'rry St .. S,v·
worship 10::\0 a.m .: Sund;ly c&gt;vf'ning :o;{'r ·
9: :'11'1 a.m.: Church SchOol 10:15 a.m .;
ship
servlcNI 9:30a .m.: Sunday Sdtoolll
vic&lt;'. 7 p.m.: mii'I ·WM'k sf'rviC'I'. W«Jn.-.s ·
r : u·u:&lt;~' Sprvlct·~ 111 :1.01 Sund:t~·. En•nlnJ!
UMW s-:-cond Tursday, 7::Jl p.m.: IMU~S ·
a .m.: EvenlnR worship 7: 30p.m. Tuesday
dtl\l. 7 p.m.
~r·rl· h·I':O. Sunday ;md Wt'(ln ..sda y ;rt 7: 011 p.
man1
cotta.(tP prayE-r meE'tlng and Bible Study
' SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
POMEROY -Church ~hoot !t: 15 a.m.
m.
9:30a
.m.; Worship Sf'rvlr£&gt;, WednE"Sday
MJnOI .EPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
ZARENF. RC'\'. Glrnn MrMIII:m . J:e!OIOr.
: Worship lfl:YI a.m .: Choir rf'h~an;JI
7:
30p.m.
11\' C!IHISTJ ,\N liNTON. Rt•v. Kr•ilh F:blln.
Ma ry J&lt;mlrC' l.a\'C'nl'lrr. Sunday School
Wrdn('!;de~ . 7:30 p.m.: UMW . .sro;md
. OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHUI\CH.
Sup!. Sunday School 9::m t1.m.: Morning
fl· 1,10r . Sund:r.' ·'SI"hnnl !t~ ,\.m., W:• dt•
Tu('!;d3,Y. 7::vlp. m.: UMYFSunday,6p.m .
Walnut and Ht"nrv Sts., Rav&lt;'nswOOd, W.
Jl,r1m.m . ~pi : Murn l n ~ \\ors h lp. Til : J(Ia
wor~hlp
10:30
am
.:
Evan~C'!i~l
!nf'n'!C&lt;',
iCorblltl .
Va . Th(' R~v . GeOrg£&lt; C. Wririck, past cr.
m .. sunrl.1 y 1' \'C'nln ~ .~ l' n· kr• 7::111 p.m.:
ROCK SPRINGS_; Chul'rh School. ~:l!'ii' ' · 6 p.m.: PrayN omd PraL~f" W«&lt;n ('Slti :v.; p.
Smday SChool 9· 30 a .m.: Sunday.worshlp
m : Youth m~llnJit . 7 p.m .
m~ l n• '' l l,l\ r r: ri'N Ml'l'lin~. 7::11 p.m
a.m.: Wors hip 10 a.m.: Biblt'Siudy, WC'd·
na .m.
MT M(HUAII CHURCH OF' GOD.
F.OEN UNITED BRF:I'HIUN IN
n~da:v. 7:.l) p.m.: UMYF l ~nlors l. Sun·
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, locater:l on
CHRIST , ('. L&lt;'!lllf' Gillilan, pastnr. Sun·
ll. u 10 •'. Rr1· .l:1mC'S SJ IIrrfiC'Id . pu!"tor.
day. 5 p.m.: !Juniors) ('\' f'I'Y olhE'l' Sun·
Pom&lt;'roy P!Jr.c, Counly Road :5 near Flat·
da.v School 10:00 n.m.: Morning Wor~hlp
Frr, •m.rn \\'l\ll:1mS. Sup!. Sunday S(·tmol
do y, 6 p m. tFrankl\nJ .
woods. RE'v. Blackwood, pastor. Services
~~· .J~ :~ . m . : Sunli&lt;•Y :•nd WrdnCISdal (' \'C'n·
. li: Oil ;1.m Su nd••~ · f'VN11n~ ~ &lt;'r.' IN' 7: 00 p.
RUTLAND- Church School. In a.m.:
on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 7:30p.m. with
m.
Wf'dn&lt;"Sda.
v
t'VC'nin.ll'
pt·ayrr
~f"rvlrc•
Worship.
11
a.m.:
UMW
1Ev£&gt;nlnftCirclt')
In I! ~ ~·n· kt'~. 'i p.m.
Sunday Sehoo\9:30 a .m. Bible StudY. Wed·
7:00p.m.
MI DDLEPO RT FIRST BAPTIST.
~ ('("'nd Wrdn~da~ . 7: 30p.m.; UMW tAr·
nesdav, 7:30p.m.
c or n«'l Slslh 11nd Palmi•r. E:rrl F.:1lrn . Pa .~ ·
t&lt;'l"noon ClrC'Irl .!I('('Qnd Thursda~·. 1 p.m.
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
lnr Roh Parkn. S S. Supt.: Cathv Rl~J.!S.
!Mussman\ .
'
CHRIST, St. Rl . 338, Antiquity. R.E&gt;v.
HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN,
Rog
. \ ~, 1 • ~u pl. Stln(\ay ~hnol , 9: 1.1\ a.m.:
SALEM C'ENTER- Church School9:1!i
Franklin Dickens. pastor. Sunday morn.
t"r Wat~ , pastor. Crenson Pratt, Sunday
M0rn ing Wor.~ll i p. 10: lri. a. m.: ~ndnv
11.m.: Worship 10:15 p.m. IMu~smanl.
1n12: 10 a.m.~ ~nday evenlrtp: , 7: 30p.m.
School Supt. Morning Worship 9:30a .m .:
Evrnln A ~N\' I t'{'. 7 p.rn. ProyN mN~IIn,l!
SNOWVIlLE - Wor11hlp, 9:00 a.m.:
Thursday E'V(Inin~ 7: .xt p.m.
Sunda y School 10: ~ a .m .: EvH~Irtg M!r·
,rnd Bibh• Stud ~· Wrdnr'sdu~· ('\'I'll in$! . 7 p.
rhurJ;tl srhoo19:-45 a.m . tMussmanl
!rrtVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAPvire,
7:
30p.m.
m : ('hlldrrn'" t'hnlr pracll&lt;...~. W{'(\nC"S·
TIST CHURCH . PaMor Rob€-rl 1\yf.rs.
MT.
UNION
BAPTIST,
Donald
Shuo,
&lt;!&lt;~•·. 7 p.m.: Adult choir· priH'l iC'f'. Wrd ., ~
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
SundaySchool10 a.m.; Worship s«vl('(&gt; U
pa&amp;tor; Joe SayrE', Sunday School Supt.
p.m.: Rud\o program , WMPO, Sund}IY.
Rfv. ftot'et Grlk'r
a .m.: Sunday evenln~ s(&gt;IV!ce-,7: 30 p.m .:
Sunday School 9: 4S a.m.: Evenln' wor·
K: .'lil :1.m.
Rrv. Patii McG1ire
Wl!dnPSday Pvenlnt~ sE&gt;rvke 7:30 p.m.
ship 6: :ll p.m.: Prayer Meet in~, 6:30p.m.
1\PPI.E r.ROVE- CHurrh ~rhoo l !t:OO
INDEPENDF.NT HOUNESS CHURCH
WOOnesday.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH Of CHRIST,
:l.m
. Wor,;h ip. 10:00 a .m . lf!rsl and th\rd
Inc .. Pt'arl St., Ml~lttport. Rev . O'Dell
TUPPERS PLAlNS CHURCH OF
!lith and Main, AI Harl ~on. mln!Mrr: Mike
Sunthm;l: UMW ~nd Tu &lt;'S dav, 7:30 p.
Manley, pastor. Sunday School 9: 30a.m.;
CHRIST. Davl' PrlniiCE', minister. Dl.'ryl
(; rlach sundav School Suprrlrttmtk.&gt;nl.
m.: P:ra yt•r m(l('tinJt, Wf'dnrsdiiv,7 p.m.
MornlnJZ worship 10:30 a.m.; EvenlnR
Wells, Sur.t. Church School 9 a.m .; Wor·
~blr ~hOOI 9: :\o a.m .: Mornlnll: Worslllp
tGr;l('('l .
worsh ip 7: 30p.m. Tuesday, 12: 30p.m. Wo·
ship S.rv ce. 9: 4~ p.m.
10 .~ 0 n.m. Evl'llln~ Worship 7:00 p.m.
RETHANY - Worship . 9 a.m .: O!urr h
mm's Prayer meeting. WednE'Sday, 7:00
CHESTER CHURCH· OF THE NAZA·
W~nrsilav, i:OO ·p.m . Prayer mE'('IIrtA' .
Sc:hool. 1{) a.m.: Bibk' Stud1v, WN!n('Sday,
p.m. Prayer and PraisE' 1ervlce.
RENE . Rev. Herbert GraiP, paslor.
MIDDLtPORT CHURCH Of THE NA·
10 a.m.: Dorcas Womrm" F&lt;'llowshlp,
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST Al'(J;·
Frank Rtfflr. supl. Sunday SchOOl 9:30 a.
ZARENE. Frt'd Pcnhorwood , pastor. 992·
Wf'dnM;da~·. 11 n.m. rjMcGulrrJ .
TOliC - VanZandt and Ward Rd. EldPr
m.: Worship service, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
1
~ 2119 Bill Whilf'. Sunday Srhool Supt. Sun·
CARMEL - ChurC'h Scllool 9::kl a .m.:
Jaml'S Miller, pastor. &amp;lnday School,
&amp;lnday, WE'Cin{'Sday, 1 p.m . Prayer me-et·
d 3 ~ ·school 9: :rJ a .m.: MornlnJ!: Worship
Wor"hlp. 10:45 a .m. S&lt;&gt;cond and Fourth
10:30 a.m.; worship Service, Sunday, 7:30
lnR
,
:
~
am
.:
Evo
n,R:f'lhs11c
m«'llnR
7:00
P·
10 4
Sundays: FC'IIOil'~ h lp dlnnrr with Sulton
p.m.: Blbl&lt;" Study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METIIlDIST
rn. wrdnf'sda y, 7·oo p.m. Pravf'r mto(&gt;tlnll'.
third Thursday, 6:lJ p.m. tMrGulr~\ .
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOUNESS,
CHURCH. David Bell, pastor, Robrrt E.
EMIT LETART- Churdl Seh0ol9 a.m.;
HarrlsonvlllP Road. Rev. Dewey Klng,
Barroo, DlrE'Ctor ot Chr1sllu Education:
Wor~hip 10 a. m.' srcond and fourth Sun·
pastor; Cllnt~r Faulk, Sunday Scflool
StevE' Eblin, assl1tant. SundaySdlool9: 30
d:•.vs; UMW tl~t '1\J.~day. 7:.'11 p.m. . a.m.; Morning wor1hlp ~:30 a.m .;TE"tns
UNITED PREHIIYTERIAN MINISTRY
Supt. ; Sunday School 9: :Ml a.m.: morning
IGI'a('(•l .
'OF MEIGS COUNI'V
wouhtp, 11 a.m.: Sunday Pv~lngaerv lce
In Acllmt, 6p.m.; 1EvenlntWor&amp;hlp, 7: 30F..
Rev. Ken Wllklnto11
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a.m.; . m. Wednesday evening
7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting, Wedneaday,
prayer and &amp;be
Church Srhool 10 a.m. lGracr\.
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTEll!AN
7:~p.m.
·atudy, 7:30.p.m . Chotrpracttce, Thui'Jditry,
CHURCH - Sunday: Wonhlp Servic£-S
MORNlNGSTAR- Wonblp, 9:~a.m.;
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF COD.
7p.m.
Church School. 10:30 a.m.; Bible Stud)'
9·110 am .: Church School10:15 a.m ..
non ·Penlf!COIIal. Worship service Sunday
DEXTER CHlJRCH OF CHRIST,
' MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN Wednetdly 10:00 a.m. (McGuire) •
10 a.m.; Sunday Sdlool 11 a.m. Evening
JCharles Ru1tell Sr .. mlnlster, Rtck Ma·
HAl'JNt: Wl:SL!o.:YAN- t"hun'll Sd'tool, ,comber. 1upt. Sunday Schoof 9:30a .m.;
s unday School. 9 a.m .: Church M!tviCfl, '
worship servlrf' 7: 00 p.m. Wednesday
10 a.m.; Worship 11 a.m .; UMWfourthMon·
tO; 15 am.
Worship aervlce 10::.) a .m. Blbl~ lltudy, · • prayer meeting 7:00 p.m.

I

· ;,)

Ill 141992-2039 or ·
.. 11114)992-5721

-l

:i

106 Butternut Awe., Pomerty, Oh,

.•}

--.--

Finale ot the year,
'When festiVe gatherings are planned;
The season ot. good cheer.
No matter what you celebrate
Accordini to your creed,
The holidays commemorate
A joyous time indeed,
When you're invited to renew
· Your. faith without delay;
Your House of Worship urges you
To enter there and pray.
While some light candles with a prayer
And others deck the hall,
.
h
Throughout this sea54]n that we s are
God's kMI will bless us all.

Family Restaurant .

'-----------...J
llll()t •l

.Items &amp; Prices Good
Friday, Dec. 26th., And
Saturday, Dec. 27th.

I

"FNIIII•g Kllllleig FriU C'"A" ..
228 W. Main St., Pomtroy

992-5432

FlOWERS FOR IVERY

7811 NORTH SECOND AVE.

WAID CROSS

Homentesaws

264 S. 2nd, Middleport

.,

992-5130 Pomeroy

RNI~!e':':~RDWAR1
"Sarving Families"

Phone (614) 741·2777

PotneHg Flow" ShoP.

e. Main

21~

BroWn's fire &amp;
and
Equl"pment Sales
serv1ce
Rutland, Ohio 45715
J. Wm . "Bi ll" Brown, Owner

Locust &amp;

II ,

RIDENOUR

FUNERAL HOME

·s

complete
Automotive
Service

'~~
~ ktl ·

'

Rawlings-Coots-Blower

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

I

204 Condor

f'OO+\

St.

· Pameroy, OH.

••••• • 992-2975

As•neg, lne. •·· ......~ .'-·.
Across' from the CourthoUH

.,

POMEROY, OHI0-992-11677

~

liH Quickel a,t Ruth Ann

~

•

"J

~

_.
Veteran$
'
'f•
Memorial Hospital .,.,
115 E. Memorial
p,..,,., •

:l

m.

",.;,.;

2:30 p .

~
,-_
...;

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST. Fourth and
Main S1 .. MlddiC'porl. Rrv . Glltx'rt Craig,
.Jr .. pa .~IO r . Mr.ot. Ervin Baumgardnt'r,
Sunda y School Supl. Sunday Sehoo19: 30 11 .
m .; Worshtp 8&lt;-rvi(C'. 10.4!'i a.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Josrph B. Hoskins. rva n~('JISI. Sunday
Biblr Study 9 a. m.; Worship, 10 u.m .: Sun·
dav P\'(11\fns; "C'rvlcr ti p.m.: Wf'dn('Sday
C'\'N'IIng SNVi('r, 7 p m
570 Grant
wl1h Southern
Bryan.
Sr .. Ml·
10 a.m
.; Momln5r
wors hip 11 . · EvE'IIlnp; worship 7 p.m.:
Wednt'Sday rv('nln~t BiblE' study and
pray{'r meellnfl 7 p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, SJ
Rl . 124 and co. Rd.~. Mark Seevers, mlnls·
ter. Sunday School Supt. Harry H('n ·
dricks; Sunday School9: 30 a.m.; Morning
worship 10:30 a.m.: Evf:lnln"' worship 7 p
•
m. Wednesday worship 7 p.m
.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHUROI ,
Corner Sycamorf' and Second Sts .. Po·
meroy. Thr .Rev. William Mlddleswarth,
pstor. Sunday SChool 9: 45 a.m :: Churrh
servi(.'{' 11 a.m.
SACRED HEART CHURCH, Msar.
Anthony Giannamorr. Ph . 992·~98. Satu•·r·
da y [venin~ Mass 7: 30p.m.; Sunday
1 Mass, 8 a.m . and 10 a.m. ConfPssions ml'
hal( hour bl'for(' each Ma!S ceo claSSE'S,
11
S d
a.m.• un ay .
VICTORY BAPTIST , 525 N. 2nd St ..
Mld.dlrporl. James E . KeC'SrE'. pastor.
Sundav. mom lno worship 10 a .m:. Even·
'
lng srrv lcr 7 p.m.;
WednE'!Ida.V I'VE'RinR
worship 7 p.m. Vl!litaf!Ofl, Ttlursda.v G: 30
p.m.
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH- Chari~:"'·
Norris, paslor. Sunday School, 10 a.m ..
worship s£&lt;rvic£'. 11 a.m.:Sunday nl~ht
worship srrvice. 7:30 p.m.; Mtdwffk
prayer service , 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
LIVING WORD C' HF.STF.R CHURCH
O GOD ~
S
S
F •
- Hilh&lt;'l'l . Pf'nC'f"l'. p;1~1or .. un·
day !=,cohnnl ~ : 30 :r.m. : Morn ing srr\'lr('
Jn·Ofi ,Lm .: Sund.rvrvrnlngsf'I'\'JeC''i:OOp
m .; Mld·Wt'«'k pm,vN S{'l'\'it'l'
i p.m
MT. 01.1\'E '-~OMMUNI TY CHU RCH,
lawrrnff' Ru sh, p.rstor . Ma:-: F'olm t•r. Sr.
Supl . Sund;r\ SC'hoo! :•nd Mnrning Wor.~ hlp
~:M a .m.: ~Undav C'\'Pninl! srn ·l&lt;'f'. i p.m ..
Youth mf'('ling and Blblr Stud~ , WN.Inros
rklv 7pm
u' N."TF.
" .. D F'IT
" H '-~H URCH . Rl . 'r on Po·
m&lt;'rO\' Bv· Pa .~ .~. Rl'\', Dal'\(1 WlsC'man .Sr.
p.· o.•., to·,. Mnh•in
Dl,'lkl'. S. S. Supl Sunda.
'
1ll'
School~: 311 a.m.: Morning Worship 10: ,
Evrnin,l! Wor~h ip i ::lfl p.m.: Wl'dn N-da~
Pr&lt;!YI'I' SN\'k(\ i : .1£1 P m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHL'RC'H.
R:JII ro.rd
'
St .. Muson. Suntlu\' Sr hoollO a. m : Morn ·
ln,~r worship 11 .•.rit .: F.vrnin~ srrl'iel' +i P
m. Pnw,C'r mC'r'!in n J nd B!b)(' Sluci.'ll W('(l·
,..
nN;d;tv. 'i p.m.
FOREST RU N BAPTJST Rr\' . Nvlr
·
Bordrn. pa1&lt;t or. Co rnrllus Bun rh. supl
Sund3~' School ll.::lfl J .m.: St&gt;rond and

Wl'dn~do~ v

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Rl~~~~~~i~~~o~~~~~~~;. ~~~na~V :

SchoollO a.m .: sundav t'\'l'nin~ S('rv tc(' 7 ...
p.m. Wrdn('!ld&lt;ly f'V('nlng SC'f\'ICf 7 p.m.
...
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cht'adiC'. J
SupL Sunday Schoo\ 9 30 a.m. Mornln~ ~
Worship 10: 3(1 a.m Pr;.~yror "rrvi('(l, alll'rn· &lt;~
air Sundays.
o~
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third *
A\'t'. R('v Clark Bak('r. pastor. Carl Nol ·· :
1\n~ham . Sund"Y Schoo l Supl. Sunduy
..,
S&lt;'hnnl 10 tl.m . with clas~f's for all a,I!C'S. ..
F.\ f'nIn i! ~f'r\' !c C'!" dl ti p. m. Wr&lt;l nrsda .v Bl· ..
1&gt;\l',; lud~· ,11 i: :10 p.m. Youlh ~N\'It'r!'. Frl· "
da\· at 7:.ll p.m.
~
EC'CLF.S!A F'EL LOW'SHIP, 12R Mill St.. ~
Michllr•pnrt Bnrthrr ChuC'l\ M&lt;'PhC'rson. ...,
paslnr. Suml:ry S{·hnol Ul ~1. m . : Sunday ..,
1'\'&lt;•nlnl! "rrvlc·M; :11'i p.m . :.1 nd W«::n~da v "'
~r·n·lr·l'~ ,ll i p.m .
~
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Krn nl'lh Sm ith . .~
pao.;l('!r. Sun&lt;l;r\ ~khool !1:'111 a.m.: !'hurch •
.'il' ri'[('P j :&lt;\!)p .m .: yn uth fl'illlii'Ship fi: 30 p.
•
m : Blbi P st ud ~. ThLi t ~(i:r~· . 7:311 p.m . ~ ' "" . •'
f'l:l.l . (;OS PF.l. I.IC::HTHOtf.:.F. .tl04!'i .;
Hil :md Road. Pomrro~ . Tom Kr•\l y. pas · .,·
tor Dann~· L;lmb(•rl . S. s . Supl Suntla~· .,·
mmnlnc: .~t'f'\' 1 ('" .rtlfl .r .m.· SundavC'VI'n· '·
In.I!' ~C'I'\'kf' 7· :10 p.m. Tuf':lldH v ond.Thurs·
d:n Sprv[rro,o; :r1 7:'10 p.m.
J
WORD OF FAITH.' ~·1 Mill S1. . Micldlf"· ~
pori. Sunril1~ mornin ,e sr'I '\'IN•HI:l!'i am .: .i
~un( l ; n· P\·rnln,J! 7:.)(1. Thur,.d:•.' ' morn in g
.•
Rihl (• st url ~· Hl ,1 m. WN: l n r~t l:n Pl'tnlng ..:_
~:1 1p . m .
_
,
NEW HAVEl\' CHURCH OF' THE NA· •:
7./\RF:!\F: Rl'\'. C!rn11on Strt1ud . pa!itnr .
Stl nd . 1 ~· St·hoo l ~ : .10 a.m.: Worship .o;('f\'IN'.
l! U fl or. m : Ynu tn ~ C'n · frl' Sundn y n: 1!1 p. ~·
m. Sum1,11 r,· rnln~~PI'I' Ii'f'7 . 0(1p m. W•'d · ••
nC'~cl :r~ P r,I~'N Ml'l'!ln!! :md ,BibiC' Sludy
ol
; :HO p.m.
~
!'IOEASE SF1'Tt.F:MENT rHURCH . Sun · ~~
d.rl afi Nnfltm !&gt;f'l'\'i(rs at 2'.'lll. Thu r~dav · ~·
1'\POitii! ~ l'l\U~ ;I I 'i: l \

•

•"

FIRST HAPTlST rHL'RCH. M :t~on , W. .~
V:r P,r&lt;.: tnr, Rll! Mu\ ph~· . Sun&lt;l;l\' Sch ool10 ,...
:1m.: Sund ~·~· r\· minp i :ll p.m. Prot.\•rr l
m1~ ·1ln ~ .md Rlh l r ~ lud ,I ' WN:In r•sl l• y . 1::11 ,.
p m El••nnnl'wl'\c'l'lmt•
.,.
RPT Lr\NO F'REE WI LL BA.PTIST, Sa· , .
ll"m Sl. HP\'. P;rul T:r\' lor. p: r~1nr. ~unda~· ; :
Sl·hor. l 111 .r.m.: S und . r~ · C'\ '(\nlng 7:00p.m.: ..\\'I'I'IOl'!id;tl· ('Wn!nl! p r .l~ ' «'r mrf"llnJ! 7:00 .,

·'

p.m

... ·" ./' ,'

SOL'T H RETHF.l. 1\:F.W TF.STAMENT ~
CHl.RCH. Sil''''r Rlt lg1• Duanr Svdrn · 'v
.~ l rickC'r . pa~tnr Sund:l\· Sc·hool ~ :r.m.;. • ·.,
Wnr~ hlp Srl'\'ll'f", 10a.m:: ~undaVI'\'(• nlrtg
~f'l'l' l(·l ' 'i:I'Nl p.m. Wrdn i'Sday nl.ll'lll B!hiC'
~rud Y 7 !KI p m
• •••

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&gt;:

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'

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SERMONETTE

'

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·'·'·'
,I

Christmas memories

•'.•
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.•

The Christmas Carol tells us of one Ebenezer Scrooge who did
nol like Christmas . Then he himself saw in Chrlstma~es pas I.
present and future. Even today we have people who say they do
not like Christmas or it has little meaning for them . I don't think
.·
this Is' true.
Christmas in the future Is not on our minds. We do not think of
special days that will one day arrive. Certainly wet hlnk oftoda~·
and remember yesterday's Christmases. Christmas for this
yea r Is all new and bright. We are filled with a tingling
excitement and bubbly joy. As adult or grown ups, we consider
the joy we will be giving. We have little thou ght of what we will
get In return.
After we get everything set for th is year's Chr istmas we sit
and relax and reSI a bit . This Is especially true the d y aftN
Christmas. Our mind goes back to yesteryear's Christmases
sort of lost In a dusty corner of our mind. We rememb&lt;'r
grandparen ts, childhood, nighttime church programs and whrn
we said our pieces. pretty clothes, snow, sleds and brothers and
sisters, neighbOrs, friends, and the thrills we had and felt.
Memories that are so happy and satisfying are a treasure of the
mind of today recalling the happy past.
We can say these are the treasures of the aged. As we grow
older we can't get around a swell, and we donor want 10 travel as
far, so we s!l and remember more. We remember the past and
consider today. They do get tangled upsomrt imcs. Our children
growing up and having children and we see so much similarity
In parent and child. This can be a thrill for one reminisci ng at a .
happy holiday. We think back to a pair of millrns, a sled, a doll
or a train; a bit of candy or fruit, family, cburrh programs and
the dark night beauty, the lovely decorations abOut town, and
the lovely Christmas Carols sung In churrh . It' s a thrill for u'
but mostly !t Is a thrill of the aging who have these memories
stored In a dusty corner ot their mind. Don't feel sorry for the
sad and aged at Christmas. Grandmas, grandpas. aunts ,
uncles, and parents have a thrill only the aging can have.
memories. Memories of Christmases past mixed wolth
Christmas present. This Is a treasure that can not be taken by a
thief, but It Is also the treasure only of th~ a~ed . - Putor
William MlddlMwarth,- Melp Couat~ Lutherans.
.

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1P~~~:1~0~n.~~U~a~ily~Se~oo~·~~------------------------_!~~t:~~~~~~--------------------~--~F:rida~y~·!D:~~~~be~r2~6~·~1~9~8~6·~

Riverview Garden Club has meeting
Membrs Of 1 the Riverview
Gat den Club enjoyed a holiday
dmner party at the R[edwood
Restau rant In B~lpr e recently
Favors were given to each of the
members who went from therestaurant to the home of Mrs
Oke' Connolly for a gift ex·
change and dessert.
Du1 mg the business meeting a
1eport was gh

en on the

1ree

lighting. Thank you notes were
read from Mrs. Donald Myers
and Mrs. Curt Cauthorn lor
remembrances when they were
111 A thank you note was read
from the Gladys Williams family
lor remembrances when they
were ill. There will be no meeting
m January.
Attending the dinner were Mrs
Lyle Balderson, Mrs. Frank

Bl se, Mrs. Curtis Cauthorn, Mrs.
Terry Cline, Mrs. Okey Connolly,
Mrs. Ronnie Cowdery, Mrs.
Harhs Frank, Mrs Herman
Grossnickle, Mrs. Roy Hannum1
Mrs. Donald Putman, Mrs. Tho·
mas Spencer, Mrs. Paul Thomas,
Mrs Denver Weber. Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, Mrs Ray Young,
Mrs Gene Wilson, and Mrs
Claremont Harris

Business Services
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Mtkll

Layette shower conducted for woman

•Wethers •OI1hwashere

A lave! le s hower honoring
Debbt e Weber was held recently
at the home of Mrs Maxine
Whltehead wt th Lillian Pickens,
Kay Long and Ruth Ann Balder·
&gt;On asslstmg
A teddy bear theme was used
for the shower and g1fts were
placed m a baby WICker basket
Ga mes were played With prizes
"" ar ded to Mel ame Stet hem,
Ma1 gat et Ca uthorn . Barb

PARTS and

Young, Bobbl Karr and J odi
Smith. The door prize was won by
Carol E rwin.
Sandwiches, chips, cake, and
punch were served to Mary Ruth
DeLamarens, Joy Sauer. Mern
Amsbary, Cathy Spencer , Oe·
!ores Frank, Barb Young, Carol
Erwin, Jo Ann Francis , Bobble
Karr, Jan Eichinger, Melanie
Stet hem, Jenny Mache&lt;, Betty

Dean, Nell Wilson, Thelma
Smith, Jod1 Sm1th, Nancy Buck·
ley, Mary Allee B1s e, Ella
Osborne. Vivian Humphrey,
Grace Weber, Francis Reed,
Margaret Cauthorn. Mat l ene
Putman, and Pat Martm.
Sending gilts were Teresa
Smith, Paulina Myers, Nola
Cline, Zelda Weber, Lucille
Sm1th, Martie Baum, and Gladys
Meredith

Carl Nease, Westervlile: John
Nease, Columbus: Mrs Ruth
Powers, Grove City: Susan Pow·
ers, Cleveland; Mr and M rs.
Arthur Nease, Sr., Pomeroy: Mr
and Mrs William Nease, J r , Jill
and Travts Nease, Pm egrove

ViStting

Slinderella class has meeting
MIS Betty D1ll was accepted
1nto the Slim 'n Trim class for
'caching her goal we1ght at the
Monday ni ght meetmg of the
F'lve Pomts Class of Sllnderella
Then• was a tie for the most

Road, Pat Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
James Anderson, Jamie and
Bnan. Forest Run Road. Dwight
Nease, Parkers burg, W Va and
Stanley Nease, Nease
Settlement

weight lost between Roberta D1ll.
Betty Dill. and Lmda Foster,
with Paula Pickens as runner-up
At the Tuesday mght Mason
class, Susan Howard lost the
most weight.

Mr and Mrs. Earl Steiner of
Warren visited over the weekend
w1th his mother, Mrs. Marie
Siemer. Stemer Is on h1s holiday
vacatwn from hiS college teach·
lng posit JOn at Big Rapids, MICh.
Mrs Steiner Is director of the
Cancer Society In Warren

Police ·work Christmas magic
By ROGER BENN ETr
United Pres. International
Santas m blue suJt s performed
a It !lie Chnst mas magtcas police
officers bnghtened the lives of
two little g ~rl s on oppos1te ends of
the count I v who were faem g a
bleak hohday
A newspaper diStributor In
Brooklyn N.Y. found a 3-yea r old g1rl wandering alone Chnst·
mas morning m a dt lvlng predawn ramstorm. police said

mother showed up to claim her
late In the day.
Pollee said they could not
ldenltfy the father. and did not
know the whereabouts of the
mother The little girl's name
tu1 ned out to be the same as that
of her grandmother, Monserrate
CadiZ.

"She was scr ea ming and cry·
mg and veil ing. ""Mommy,
Mommy I wa nt my Mommy, ..
sa td Officer E m1ho Cardona
"" She was scared She had the
chills. Her clothes were soaked
right through and her teeth were
chattel mg '
Cardona and Officer Robert
Goldrick took the girl. who ca lled
herself "" Mousy ... to Lu1 hera n
Mr dlcat Cent er, where doctors
gave her a checkup and found she
was m good health
Meanwhile, the cops went out
and bou ght her a talkmg Ieddy
bea1 a doll. a M1ckey Mouse
gumbali machine, and toy pollee
car w1th a siren
"" She was so happy She was
jubil ant You should have seen
he1 fa ce:· Cardona said. adding
that &lt;he mugged for his camera
and sa1d " cheese ...
""She was a riot ," he sa 1d ""If 's
Christmas Oay. Th1s shouldn't
happen "
The litt le girl was turned over
to the Bureau of Child Welfare,
where her father and grand·

Across the nation In Alhambra.
Calif , pollee performed a little
more magic for a 6-year· old girl
who was about to wake up to an
empty stockmg.
Sgt. Jim Henchey received a
call alter midmght from a
distraught woman who sa1d the
little girl's uncle had dropped her
off for a visit wllh the promise to
ret urn Christmas Eve.
When the uncle failed to return,
Mary RO(Ierlck panicked at the
thought of httle Ch1 Green
wakmg up to fmd no presents,
and called pollee to see 1f they
knew of a place she could shop at
that late hour. Henchey said.
""We couldn't even lind a 7-11
open, .. he said. " Everylhmg Is
closed up tighter than a drum
(Chnstmas Eve) "
Henchey sai d four patrolmen,
two dispatchers, lwo records
clerks and a j anitor dug through
t heir pockets and rummaged
through attics at home, and In
two hours man aged to come up
with a patrol car full of Christ·
mas goodies. which they dell·
vered while the child slept:
The Santas In blue collected a
pile of presents, a basket of

____

candy and cook1es and $35 in
cash. One clerk went home and
returned with a stuffed animal
Others at the station chipped In
with more stuffed animals, Pig!(}
banks and a sweatshirt.
""We brought everything Into
the station and wrapped them
up," Henchey said. "II made
everybody feel pretty good
"When I called the woman
back and told her we had a couple
of stuffed animals she wa s
apprec ~atlv e." Henchey said
" But when the offiCers showed up
with the box full of presents, they
said she looked shocked and
couldn't believe we'd done so
much m such a short amount of
time.""
Sgt. Andrew Harvey said
Thursday night that ""the word
!lltermg back her e Is that Chi was
very happy and very surprised al
•
all I he present s."
The uncle. by the way , showed
up late Christmas afternoon with
no explanation of why he hadn't
pi cked up his niece

Public Notice

UKE

DIAMONDS
1

Card of Thanks

The Famoly of LUCY A .

McKINNEY would ttko
to expraa&amp; their sincere

thanks to all the fnendl
and neighbors who sent
flowers and food dur~ng
the tragic loss of our

NOTICE
NOtiCe II hef'eby given that
the undertl4aned intendl to

1 New locafliNI:
t161 North Se&lt;lllll
Middleport,, Qhio 45760

SALES &amp;SERVI(E

Satd application will be by
pet•t•on to be fteld In nld
Court, on or after 1he 26th
day of Jenuuy, 19B7.
Dllod thio 23rd dov of De·

cember , 1986.
Timothy Jerome Messey.

eke Ttmothy Jerome
Thomp1on
1121 261tc

Public Notice

loved ne Thanks alao to

the Moddleport Emer·
gency Squad, Scott
Reuter. Peggy Lewis.
Eulondt

Ha~y .

Vnuan

Phtlltpl, Mark Tyree,
and the 1taff of Veterans

Mamorral Hoapttel
Wo w11h to e&gt;rtend apecoat thar*o to Deloreo

TY""'· Undo lloylet, Tom·
my Zadel1u, Kelly Buz·
urd, 8111f1de Wylltt. Shei·

to Beven and At Hanoon
Without their ..t .. cia! kondness and low, we
couldn't have mtde H
through thll tlrrible time.
May God bins oach
and every one of you

Buddy McKinney

If family

PUBLIC NOTICE

Public wmr ouppllol . . roqulnJd by State Regulotlon,

Rule 3746·81 -21. 0111o Ad-

nWelaaatNe Code, to routinetv
rnonHo&lt; the nola liicluglcol
qutllly "'the drtnldng- in
thoOr 1\'llom rn
order to Insure lh• solo il being llUJ)tllitd to the con·
Mlmtl'

The

vMitge of SyracuH 11

required to coll~t tnd •• ·
amine a mintmum of ona111
microbioleglcal urn pte uch
month No samplel were
collect6d and analyzed for
the month of November.
The water dapertment het
taken 1tepa to Insure thlt ld·
equete monitoring will be
performed In the future.

Vlllege of SyracuH
1121 26, 28, 29 3tc

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Addont end r~modfllng
-Roofing and gutter work
-Concr.te wortl
-Plumbing and tltetrtCII
work....
(FniO

EVERY
SAT•.NIGHT
6:30P.M. ·
Factery Choke
l! Gall!!• Slloi!JIIIt Only
10·1-tfn

109 MULIEIIT AVE.
POMEIOY, OH.

Entmatosl

V. C. YOUNG In

PH. 992·9949

992-UlS or 992-7314

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
"On December 9 , 1986,
in the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No. 26236,
Marv Jordan and John H
Knotts, Route 3, Box &amp;9,

Albany. Ohio 45710 and 99

Brook Or1ve, Revnoldlburg ,
0. 43068 were appoin1ed
Co-executors of the estate
of ld1 E. Demton, dece11ed.
late of Box 69, Albeny, Ohio

45710."

1121 12. t9 , 26, 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Sealed propouls for the

furnishing of all materials
and performing all labor for
NEW ACOUSTIC
CEILINGS
AND
NEW LIGHTING
FIXTURES

for
RACINE
HIGH SCHOOL
RACINE. OHIO

for
SOUTHERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
w111 be received by the
Sou1hern local Board of
Educa11on. Racine, Ohio
46771 until 12 00 noon,
prevailing local time, Thur•·

doy,

~anuory

8. 1987. ond

MEIGS
EXCAVATING

BISSELL
BUILDERS

COMPANY

64 Misc. Merchandise

HOTPONT

lANGE

30' ELECTRIC

ONLY

S2999S

GE VCR

Hvent 14-Dey Timer

319 95

1

-2~.00

Rebate

529995

GE 19"

TELEVISION
NOW $
ONLY 25,95

As~ng

$25.000.

H e adqu ,lflt'rs

Elceveting

POMEROY,O.

992·2259
NEW LISTING- POMEROY
- Just oul ol town , over 13
acre&gt; of land, great bu tldtng
s1tes. house needs repairs A
good buy at $9.900 00
OWNER WANTS OFFER Cute little llloor plan home
'" Middleport, 50'xl20' loi
Garage, good Investment
property or place to l1ve
WANT $14,900 00

NEW LISTING - ST. RT. 33
- Neat and mce descnbes
th1s one ltoor plan home The
house has a lull basement
wKh ul1itty room, and a 12'x20
~orage butkitng also There IS
pfenty of garden space on this
2 acres
OWNER WANTS OFFER Here IS a really mce home
wtth many fealures Located
m long Bottom, Ohto. Owner
w11i sacrthce and may conSider fmancm ~ Excellent
opportumty - Call l or details
MIDDLEPORT - Vester·
year ha s been restored to
this beauhful coloma! home!
ThiS 4 bedroom, 7 room
home w&lt;th a level lot and 2
car garage has ornate tnm,
leaded glass wmdows and
door. Atttc studiO wrth sky
light Well msulated means
low heatmg btlls Must see to
appreciale $65,000 00

HOOVII

Sf995

Excellent IW Older home
wrth class !ltd a small rental
house Wanl $27,1XXlOO but
will consider olfl!ffl Ftnlftong

VCR TAPES
ONLY $299
GOLDnAI

MICROWAVE

S10995

MGM

FARM
CITY INC.
POMEROY
992-2104

av811able

6 Lost and Found

3033.

LOST
a..1gle
male
month•2old.
black
end pups
white. 6
1

rod, 304· 675 •6 95&amp;

9

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

992-3476.

BUYING RAW FUAS I Gtnseng,
Yellow Root, beef •nd deer
h1des. Also salll~ trapptng
suppliel, Wheat lites. Nlte Lttes
Houri 1 00-9 00 Closed Wed.
GeOf'ge Buckley 8 t 4 · 864·4761

6-17·tfc

SHARPENING
SERVICE

TYs, Antennas
SateUite Sales
· Installation

Service

Circular Saws
Saw Chain
Planer Knives
Drill Bots
Knives
Ch18BII

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES

614-843·5248

204 Condor St.

llASONAILE • RELIABLE
8·20-'86 tfn

PH. 992-2975

Wanted To Buy

11

Help W1nted

QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLD
Cash p11d Pre 19&amp;0'a Smgle or
who.. collectton Call Marc and
Ellen Fultz 614 992 2101 days
or 614· 592·2461 evenmgs and
weelt..,dt

QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLO
Cash p.d Pre 1950'1. Single or
whole collect1on Call Marc: and
Ellen Fultz 614-992·2101 days
or 814· 692· 2461 evan1ngs and
weekends

Pomeroy, Ohio

Gov.rnmll'lt jobl , $16 040
188,230 vr Now hiring Call
805·117 8000 ht R-9805 for
current federall••t

Buytng Jtmk cars Callafttf' 6' 00
614-992 1&amp;48

'-UVIR9 dafly gold, a~ktar corns,
nnge, Jewelry, sterlmg ware, old
coma. larga currency Top prt·
ces Ed Burkett Barbel' Shop.
2nd Avt Mtddleport, Oh 614·

Al1o TranaMitsiOI

J.R.'s REPAIRS

Wanted To Buy

yop c•h p11d lor complete Junk
cart loches towed awav Ph
814-245·9284 or 614-682·
17150

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Located on
Flatwoods Rd . !Co.
Ad 261 at Harley
Haning residence, 2
Mi. from F1ve Points
Watch

9

TOP CASH ptnd tor '83 model
and newer used cars Smtth
Bulck·Ponttac, 191 1 EaS1ern
Ave . Gallipolis Call 814 446
2282

Roger Hysell
Garage

TAGGING NOW

12·5-" 86·1 mo.

ll' !pltl i rt ll~ ll'

Pert tlmt work·h.tll ttma benef·
ttsll Member• of the Army
National Guard can receive 1
monthly P•v chedt, UO.OOO IHe
tniUrMCe, 118,000 educatiOn
a1118t1nce and much more
304·176-3960 or 1-800-642 3111

S ervt,:t! ~

11

Help Wanted

lady to IIIHI!n

light houskeeptng

let Awon heJp you get the bnt of
those polt Chrletm11 btlls and

Ph 304.87!5· 5104.

blu... Fraa g1ft with llrst order.
colt :104-882-2145

REPS NEEDED
For
accaunts fufl.
Tlmt. tiO.OOO 180,000 PartTime. t12,000· t18,000 No
salllng1 NA_Nt business. Set your
own houri Tr11nlng provided
Call 1 812-938·1870. M·f
Bam to &amp;pm (C.ntral Standtnl
Ttma)

bMiin••

Someone to do houttwOrk and
cere for elderly man during day.
304-876 2931
Pari time employment. compu·
tet' ~ground and accountmg
experience a plus. wrne Box
C· 22, c:•re of Pomt Plt~snt
Regiater, 200 MMl St , Pt Pit .

Expertenced babysitter needed
m my homeCatl614·258· 1711

w ••

Now taking appllcatlona fer
delivery pm~ons a~tiltanl man·
agen. Mull be 18, ttave a good
drNtng record Rehlble vahiele
msurance Apply tn peraon at
Domino' s Plu:a .

full ttme position for person
experienced in cosmetic sales
and "'ercltandlslfta. some fitn·
1ng and week end work required
Send reply Bo._ C·23, c~ra Point
Pt....m Aeg11tar, 200 M11n St .
Pt. Pit, W Va

Retrlld ooaple to IN•In tcfloln·
tng ap•rlment, r.-.t free, plut
ulary ln .. changetor lullc.,.•l
Ill patient lend lett8f of appliea·
tion to' 0 Bo• 986, OentpaNa,
Oh10 48131

DIRECTOR OF NURSING. long
term
e~~:c: level POiitlon. setf
st1rter with personel budgetlry.
maftageihent and supervlatog
skills IUteded Knowledge of
ftct«at end 1t1ta l1censure 1nd
certlfiutton rnulat1on. w1th 3
VUfl nurstng manqement m
long term care r~~qulrtd . BSN or
equNelent w1th Gerontologlc11
Nurswtg tkperienc. or training
desired Sal.,. negot11ble Con·
tact Adminlstretor , H1lh11ew
Nursing and Rehabllltataon Cen·

c••·

Airhn• now htr1ng Ftlgtn At·
tendtntl, Agents, Machanlcl.
Cuatomar S.rvtc:e Salariw to
860K Emry lftel paalt1one C. II

-

1~8~0~5-~6~~~-~~~0~0~E~~~A-· 1801

· lc:-

;...________.._________-!'"· 304 -529·1031 .

RADIATOR
SERVICE

MOUNTAINEER
BODY SHOP

PARTS INC.

F-ord l GM Truck Fenders
Eaf'fy •39 - Lata '56
Chrome Bumpara- GM 73·
80 *55-Fotd 73· 77 159
THRU DEC FREE INSTAL .

ON BEDUNERS

We sell top quality parts
and have 3 vr l\llt·through
w1rranty ava1lablity
OELIVEfiY IN TRISTATE AREA

PANASONIC RECEIVER
FUU YREMOTI &amp; INSTALLED

PAt HILL FORD

S4800

Middleport, Ohio

PER MONTH WITH

992-2196

Local 304-882 -3729
lnlkle WV 1·B00-864-U57
wv 1-800 523-2013

au-

·Business Services
r----------.:..---------"11
I 0' MESH ANTENNA

We can repair and !fllcore radialors and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Has Lowerotl Prices

-

12·1·16 111M)

1· 13-tfc

NO DOWN PAYMENT

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET
Hollson ld.

SKATE-A -WAY

•VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
*ILOWN IN
INSULAnON

W1n f..

flitltlltport, OH.

Po~r

(1Hi~llllu5

of \MofPS
Party Dl!r 20

PH. 992 ·6173

I

ii:

~

Port1r '

98 5-391 9 oc 98\ 999[

No Sunday Calls

----~
·- -----...:,

DENNY CONGO .!
WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI

992-3410

7 Years
Maintenance
Experience
Guaranteed

614-446-7126
11-26-"86'1 mo

· - WE

BOGGS

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, 01110

•
'

21

2 bedroom I 3 bedroom ......

992·5766

fAR PIERCING, MANICURING. PERMS AND
ALL YOUR STYLING NEEDS

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·

SIIOWIOOM

yooo ace a

(.,th a lot purchsse
at reaular pnce)

•

•
•'

HOUI~

•NEW FURNACE
•AIR CONDITIONING
•HEAT PUMPS
•BLOWN INSULATION
•REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATE

992-2772

Beautiful new house 1n Pom•
roy Also new one bedroom
furn11had apartment m Mtddht·
port Call 614·446 1112 Of

614-992· 5304

2 bndroom1 In Mtddleport
Completely remodel ad . nff!Ncarpatlng, new cabtnet~ Call814·

992-5868.
for sale or rant. 3 bedroom, 2
bath, all new inside 1nd out. 300
W M1in , Pomeroy Open house
Sunday, Dec 28 at 12 00· 3 00
4 bedrooms. bu1h-m kttchen.
dining room. ltvlng room with
fireplace Avall1ble 1mma·
dlately t1815 p• month. &amp;14
742-2480

2 bdr. all udlltles pa1d except
or unfurn., IIC
deposit requtred Conv.,.tent
loc1t1on Call 814 448 811!1i&amp;B or
814 448-4778

elec., fum

2 bdr fully fumtshed adultl only
util paid Cell614-446-4110.
In Eureka· nice and cle1n. adutts
onty No pats, depos1t requued ,

186 00 mo cai1814-266 1836
before 10a m
2 Bedroom furn is hed We accept
HUD. Beaunful river vtew Fos·
ten Mobile Homa · Park 614·
446-1602
14Jt70 Mobtla HomefOJ rent In a
qUill country settmg on 0 J
White Ad Close to Holzer
Hospital Call 814· 446·71157
after8 OOpm

31

Es1.11e

Homes for Sale

3 bclr . '"· pool, garage N1ce
Comm•cial property, corner
knt • hiGhway frontage Ust
wtth us Wt hM~e bt.t'tlrl A· One
A•al Ett•t•Broker Call 304·
Of

304· 174-6386

3 B1droom home in Centenary.
rlduclld to eell, u•-ue, AC.
fenf*l COf!lpletely, bath &amp; VJ Ph

llo IH-86

Plasttc crstern st1ta approved
plastiC septiC tank&amp;, pl•stlc
culverts, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jack·
son, Oh 814-286 6830
FtrawoDd deliVered O•k &amp; hick

orv. split, HEAP voucher, p1cllup
toad $35 Call614·441· 2223 or
814-446· 3028
Male AKC Bnttany mate Cocker
Spaniel, 261n b1ke 120 00
Swing •• US 00 Ph 614·446

Con.plete Bingo Sy11em Stat·
1ng capac tty of 100 Ph 114·
446-88&amp;9

For rent SIMJ~1ng Rooms al'td
hght house keeping rooms Park
Central Hotel Call &amp;14-448·
076&amp;.

Bar With m1tch1ng twNel stools
1120 00. c:onsolstereo 17!5 00.
cash regietw 120 00 Ph 814

46 Space for Rent

675-3000
Two bedroom tra1ler, a~r conch·
lion, washer • dryer. 1180 00
plus utilities references re·
qulred Gall1polts Ferr,; 304

675-4874

Apartment
for Rent
I
lurn~shed

mobile home
heat. excel loc1t1on.
edults onty CeU14 446 03::18

CA

a.

pm

Furn11hed eftu:wency •175 00
2rms a. bath utiht111 Pd 448
4411•fter 7p m
FurnlshiKf Apt 1210 00 utll•
tin Pd 1 bedroom. ftrst floor Ph
448-4416 after 7p m
Duplex 848 Second. carpeted, 3
bedroom, LA. DR . new k•tc:hen
&amp; b1th, Wlth•r 6 dryer hook up,
8286 00 mo plus uttl1t1• &amp;
eacurlty deposit Ph. 614·0190
1 Bedroom b111c rent 8171 00
plus etectnc: Also requlfed I
S200 00 sacunty depos1t CON
TACT J1ckson Estetes Dept Ph
441 -3997 Equal Housmg
Oppo!1unit y
Unfurnished apt 4 rooms I ba1h
centrellv located References &amp;
Sacunty deposit rttqUtred Ptt
614·446· 0444

SWAIN

Oliva St . Galhpolil. New • us.t
wood -coal stoves. 6 pc wood LR
su•te 1399. bunk bldt •199,
antron rec:hnars 199, new &amp;
used bedroom su1te1, rang•,
WtlnQIII' WllhMI, • sho• Nfw
livingroom 1u1t• f199 11599,
lamt:~ t. alto buying coal &amp; wood
stoves Call814-446· 3169

1978 Fretght hnar. rec:enl tn·
fr1m1 over haul C111 814 446

"1426

Bleck Powder 5 95, Caps 2 28.
Muul.toader Sp-.:1ality Shop
MltlcrHk Rd Htt 6· 8pm, Sat
1-5pm Ph 614-446-2316
MOVING SALE
Var.ous •tems. AafT.-rator
stove, 1ntique bed 6 dr. .ar &amp;
chest. ate Ph 614 448-8819

Maple drop leaf coffee table.
NFL etec:tron•c: footbllt game.
rowing exerciJOr Ph 814-448·
0085
Miltld hlfdwood slabs 112 par
bundle Containing lpptox 1 'h
ton1 FOB Ohto Pellll Co
Pomeroy, Ohio Call 014·992·
8411
Fmrwood, aH hard wood Hellt
~uchert accepted 135 •
ptc*up toad Alone 614-742
24H

Valley Furniture new &amp; uaed
Large section of quality fuml·
lura . 1211 Eastern A,e .
Galhpol1s

mg Open 9 00 AM to 7 00 PM

Shop tor Christmas w1th

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS
Coli 304·676· 1090

Sol11 and ch11rs priced from
1395 to 8996 Tebln 160 snd
up to 1126 Hid•a · bads t380
lo 1696 A1cNnar• 1225 to
1375 Lampa 121 to 112&amp;
D1nttt1J 1109 and up to 148&amp;
Wood table W·8 chatrs 1281 to
1795 Desk $100 up to 1376.
Hulchn 1400 end up. lunll
beda complete w· mattr.....
12fl6•nduptoS388 Babybtds
t110&amp; 11715 Ma«~esoriMNI
springs tuft or twin 183, ftmt
173 and 183 0uMntetsl2215,
King 1350. 4 drawer cheat f85
Dret~ers t89 Gun cabln~ta 8,
10 &amp; 12 gun 'Gu or tltc:tnc:
range 8376 B•by mattrtssll
$36 • 145 Bed frames 120.
$30 &amp; Ktng frame t50 Good
11lec:don of Hdt'oom tuitft,.
metll cabinets headboards S30
and up to 115
Uted Furnllure· Wllhtr &amp;
drylr, gu range. wood t1blt •
2 bench ea. beds, dr•MI', wood
wardroba 3 milet. out
Bulavillt Rd. OpM"t BAM to
&amp;PM. Mon thru Sat
814·448· 0322
GOOD

I :::;::;::::::::::::::;.J~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;~i;;~
1-

Tony' s Gun Aepalre. ho! reblu•
Call304-875-4131

Surplus insulated c1motteuge
d•cron coveralls. tmall. m•
d1um, lerge 125 00: Xll30 00
C•rharts. army 11sue clothtng,
boots, bibs denrm 111 00
Wranoter jlclt.ets, shirts, pla•n
pod(l'tdtnlmpants14ozs Sam
Som1MII1. Junction lndepend·
~nee Road. Old Rt 21 . Eut·
Aavemwood Friday, Saturday.
Sundly, 12 00·8 00 PM other
days after 4 00 P M Aher O.c:
1 7th. open dally 12 00 llill 8 00
PM Phona 304-27:1· 6165
New lull·l•nvth NO""""S'IIn Blue
Fox turcoattornlal2,600 Call
Donna It 3011 n3 6977 or
882· 2114
18" bicycle. 28" otrls 3 tpled
dtshwashlf'. King Wood bomlt
,.n.vt dl1poul. 1973 Buick
standard shift phona 304 1175
4192

ISO 00 304·176· 2231

Aegrstered Beagle dogs. Ow1ght
B1kar, phone 304-896· 3938

67

Whitney Kimball P11no. ltkenew
Ph 814-446· 2961 or814 992
3018

r,rm

79 Motors Homes
'76 Toyota cemper, 4 cyl, auto,
air, $2,200 00 304-578-2661

Servtces
Farm Equipment

81

614·281-6451

Malley Ferguson. New Holland.
Bush Hog Saln &amp; Service Over
40 used tractors to choose from
a. complete hna oi niiW I usad
equipment Larg•t selectiOn tn
S E Ohio
JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SR 35 W Gallipolis,
OMo Call 814·446-9777, eve
814· 446-3692 . Up front trac
t&lt;M'I with werranty over 40 uted
trletOfl, 1000 10011
UTILITY BLDG SPECIAL
27' »t36"x9 'EAVE wtth shdtng
door &amp; servtce door 14.288 00
erected
Iron Horse Buildings Ph 814·

332·9745
Wh1te Firm Tractors, Bllt Prtc:e
In Area, Stdars Equ1pment Co,
Htnd..,on. w. V• 304-676

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gu•ran
tae local r1twencea furmehad
Free "tlmattt C1!1 coll1tc1 ,
1· 814-237 0488. diV or mght.
Rogers Basemen1
Waterproofing
SWEEPER and sewmg mach1ne
repair. pant. and suppll• Ptck
up and diiNery, Dalflt Vacuum
Cleaner, one h•lf mite up
Georges Creek Ad Call 614

446·0294.

FTM General Contracttrtg 13y""
experience Roofing &amp; Con
structton Ph 61 4· 388-9308
Free esllmolites 10% off durtng
the hol1days offer expues J•n

7421

15 1987

Gahl Grtnder-Mtxer New Hoi·
land 7 ft hBVbine 1984 ford
F360 long wheelbesetontruck
22,000 act~M~I m1les An ••eel
lent condition. 304· 273-4216

RON ' S Telev ision Strv1ce
House calls on RCA. Quazar.
GE Spec•almg m Zenith Cell
304 676-2398 or 614-446 ·
2464

OEUTl·ALUS LAST OF YEAR
TRACTOR SPECIALS M.. ol

Fetty Trae Trtmmtng. stump
removal Call 304· 675· 1331

1035 33 PTO HPdtntl. 8speed
power .tearing d•f lock hyd
apool nlue rops with canopy
Sela pnce 18,960 DO Check
with us on all HP ranges. We can
fln!M'Ice on 7 97 pwcent lean
purchase plen NEW HOLLAND
hey tool sale w1th all ca•h
discount~
December Only
Model "51 7 ' mowers
S1 900 00. Model 156 10'
ttdder 81,260 00, Model 266
rlkea 82,000.00. Model472 7'
hl'f'binn &amp;6,900.00, Model474
7' heybtnll t8.400.00. Model
488 9' hayblnu 18.700 00
Model 489 9' hayblnn
17.600 00 Kae fen S•rvica
Center, St At 87 Pt Ple1san1
Rlplay Ro1d Ph 304 895·

3874

62 Wanted to Buy

RINGLES'S SERVICE. experJented cerp~~ntet, electrtetan.
mason. painter, rooftng ftnclud
tng hot tar eppltcation) 304
675· 2088 or 676· 7147
Starks Tree and Lawn Strvice,
Hedges . shrubs bushu
tummed, landtc:tptng and
stump removal le1f removal
304· 676-2010 or 576-2842
RotarY or C:lble tool dulhng
Most walls compltttdumed~y
Pump saiH and tlf\ltce. 304
895· 3802
Ashby Conatruction Clrpen·
tery remodahng, room •dd1110n
cement block work, roofing
Interior and tltterior p11nting
11dmg Roofing FrM estimates
304 175-5446 or 178· 5162.

82
2986

63

Livestock

Grein fed Angus StNrt Ph

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

Now buytng shall corn or e•
corn. Call tor lateat quotes Rtver
City Farm Supply. 614·446·

CARTER 'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814 446 3888 or 614.

446 -4477

6&amp; Building Supplies

64

Hay &amp; Grain

James Bo ys Wiler Service Also
pool1fllled Cell614·2561141
or 614 446 -1176 or 814 446
7911

l!tuUdlng M1tenals
Block, bric•. sewer pipes, win·
dows, llntell, etc Cl1ude WIA·
tert Rio Grandt. 0 C.ll 614·

Large round balls of hay for sale
110 00 IICh Ph . 614 446

T • l Watar deliVery 1nyt1me Ph
114 · 388 · 9732 um e d•y
diiN•rv

Pets for Sale

Dregauwrn~ Catttry tc.nnel
CfA Htmtta¥1n, Penlen ~nd
sttm.. kintnt AKC Chow
INPPI• Call 614·446-liU
.,.., 7PM

Gtoom &amp;. Supply Shop

Prot...lonll S.rvloe, all styl•.
all br.... ltl1t At 141 Gllllpolis. Ohio481J1. JIJIIeWebb. Ph.

"OK ..•Now I sm worried about finding
our way OIJI."

Wanted to buy, front end tor ' 71
Buick Skylark. 1970. 1971 ,
1972, can be used. 304· 676·
4828

7439.

66

W MIM, Pom110y Open hou11
8unct.,, Dec 28 at 12.00.3 00

Ftberglus truck topper, B ft
bed sltding glen wlndowl.
good condlt1on 1260 00 304
882 3236

13 roosten 1nd 2 hans, game
chickens for ~ale W1ll sell
reuonably C1ll 814 387

Pole Buildings by Quatltv
Buiktert, Workaf1op1, carportt,
animal sheH1rs, glfllgtl FrM
est•matu Phone 614-384·
15712

FOf rtnt or ule, 3 Mdroom, 2

2220

&amp; Campers

Sttpplte o

&amp; Ltvestock

85

General Hauling

1052.

Will haul stone. coel. d1n etc
Dned shllltd corn 14 60 p• Vaughn E Tavlor trucking 614
245-5815
ewt Ground t&amp; 00 per cw1
Ground with motan11 15 75 per
• limestone and slabwoodhauled
cwt 31)4..•88 1031
AI Tromm. Rutllnd Call 614

742-2328

It .t ll spnrloltllll

2783.

bldt... new 'niAde ~nd out 300

Musical
Instruments

Budget tr•nsm11110ns used &amp;
t'lbutlt •II types Torque c:onvar
ters &amp; transfer casas Engine
over haulkttl Allison Tranem11·
IJIOn pal"'t and CVC JOintS.
M1n1mum 30 day to lifetime
warranty W1ll deliver, tnh end
carrry or lnetall Ph 814-379· ,

Sam Summ«Ville' a Arff'l'!l Sur·
plut, E11t of R.VIM'IIWOOd Ph
304· 21:1·15156. N•w Hours Fr1
Sat , Sun , 12-8pm

133.000. Coli 114·992·1104

bttw•••

3 year old Beaglee rabbit dcg,

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

814-446·0710

Concrete blocks all tiRI yard or
dehwr, M•son und Galhpol11
Blot* Co , 1 23'11 Pine St ,
GaUipolts Ohio Call I 14-448·

M'"

74 Motorcycles

1-----'------

UaH washer, 304·676 -3633.

245· 5121

2 S10ty, 3 bedroom house with 1
car 11•10• on APfHOI 1 &amp; acres.

2 br, kitchen, 1blthroom. with
laiH\dry room, living room 8t
dining room, all alec. Approa 7
mil• from Pt. Pl. on At 62. 2
tractnppro• 11Cremoreorltts
owerlooking KaniWhl Ahter
uo.ooo Coli 304-175-5440
8 30 and 4·30

AKC registered CoiiiH. S1bta
and White lemale, all shots end
wormed. phone304 458 1058

CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 36 Weat, Jackson Ohto

County Appllence Inc: Good
ueed appllanCIII 1nd TV Nts
Open BAM to 8PM Mon thru
Sat 614· 448· 119i. 127 3td
Ave Gallipolis OH

2 Mdroom haute for ..lfl In
Cltflon IMable Johnson propII"'V) fu41y carpeted, IICently
,emod•ed. new roof Atldng
111,000 C.II3Qol.773-5&amp;34or
304· n3-&amp;7u

Hen~loclk Grove

514·992·2607

New fulty Qlf·c:ontalntd Jacuzzi
spa 19811 Gallla Countv Fair
O•spl.,- Retail S4 900 00 ask·
tng S2 900 00 Paddld cover &amp;
spa chemicals mcluded Ph

I --:---.,-----

Merchanilts~

USED APPLIANCES
Wash~rs. drytrs, rafrigerators.
flnget Skeggs Appliancee,
Upper River Rd b•1de Stone
CrHt Molal 614-441· 7398

AKC Aeg11tered buff female
CockM Spaniel puppy Also
Siamese C.t No chedu Call

61

New 100 1mp alec:ttlc: weldre
Ph 614 388-9853 after 7pm

5178

76

441·1324.

614-441· 1324

'78 cuatom Dodge van. auto
transm1u1on , good runnmg
cond after 8 DO PM. 304 773

puppees 4 lemal• left Shots
and wormed 8100 each Call
614· 949-2940 1fter 6 00

Collf14·211· 1989

Furnished room 91 I 2nd, Galli·
polt~ t1 1&amp; Utilities pd Sh.,a
bath Stngle male Call 446·
.._.10 after 7pm

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

ttres
" lift, nlock
out ·
hubs 6auto.
.aoom00lock304·

AKC Reg11tered S1ber1a~ Huskv

1 electric wheal chair wtth
battertat, 1 m•nual w~ cheir

Rooms for rent d•y Wllell
month 0.1111 Hotlll Call &amp;14~0-9716 Rentaslowast120
month

K &amp; K Mobtle Homes, 2 and 3
bedroom mobile homes. 304::"

1978 Ch""r 4x4 !ruck. oood

Motor cycle trallor, 1981 Ya
maha. 750 Vlrego Call 614446 7414

7023

Furnished Rooms

61 Household Goods

23

Rcol

Callahen's Used nre Shop Over
1.000tlrH.IIzes12. 13. 14, 15,
11, 16 5 8 mtlts Out At 218
can 814-268 6251

I

2 ~room mobtle home. Mid·
dleport , 0 Reference with ••
curity depoSit 304-882 3267
or 304 773 6024

Nicety furnished 2 bdr apt
Adults o nly Inquire at cornM
flrtt &amp; Olive St at Shappards
Sal" &amp; Ser111te

Starb Tree and Uwn Serv.ce
Htd1as , shrubt , bushes
trimmed. llndtcapmg stump
11nd twf removal. 304· 676·
2842 or 578·2010.

64 Misc. Merchandise

2% bedroom apartment for ren1.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park
Rout• 33, Norih of Pomeroy
Large lots Call 614· 992-7479

Pets for Sale

AKC Aag1stered Chow-Chow
Puppies Excellent pedigrees
Ready tor Chnttmas Ph 614
256-1948

2161 .

45

66

Blaek Sprmger Spamel, male &amp;
female 4mo bid. has ahots Ph
814 245 9157

Mobtla Home Stella Court Ph
614·448-0768

Furntshad efftaancy nso ut1l1
tln")ald. share blth. 701 4th,
Gallipolis Ctll446· 4418tfttt8

Professional
Services

51 Household Goods

Furn 1 bedroom apt , first ftoor
8216 OOmonth Heatlndw•t•
fufmshed Raf &amp; dep 304·876

•tc•

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

nH337

APARTMENTS mob1le hom•.
houtet Pt. Pleasant and Galhpo'" 814-446·8221 .

phone 304 676-15918

73

~·-~
~-==========;:=====:::::::~

Ona bedroom apartm.n .n
Mtddleport Fully c1rpetld, total
elec:trtc, equipped kitchen 90od
location Call 814-992·3667 or
614-992-6170

pm

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

,, "'

One bedroom unfurntshed total
electr•c apt Owner PIVI weter
and trash p1ckup Call 6 14-992·
2094

horMa from 11 iU
repair) O.llnqu.m: 1111 property
Repoe~e~tlons Call 806· 887·
6000 ht GH ·980&amp; for current
r.,.a list

HEATING &amp; COOLING

••

1529

1972 Ford Pick·up, good bOdy,
runs good Ph 814·268 1218
:-::~::--:-::-:::-:-:::-- -lc1974 Ford F100 .. 361 engine.
hke new alumtnum toppar,
needs some body work. Excel·
lent work vehtcle Aa Is $750
Phone 614 742 2745

7481

Oowemm~nt

J&amp;L .INSULATION
JAMES IEESI

Veteran)

11JtaJan 1. 1987Call614-268·

lNG CO recommends that you
do bu11n•s w1th people you
know and NOT to send money
through tha mall until you tuwe
rnvetttglted the offenng

1 2ac:rts. Double
car garr.ge Located on Rot a Hill
Blru-in pr1ced 120.000 Call
614-171·2513

•Vonyt, Steel Siding
•Storm Wmdowa
•Doors
"F11Ef
INSTALL~ ION"

2 bedroom apu . New Heven
Also commercial SpiCe sun:abte
for aerob1ct:, tlnntng, crafts Call
304· 882 3681 or 614 992

Nicely

e room houte

•lnauleted Replacement
Window

2 Bedroom house, 842 First
Alit , Oalllpoha No pets refer
&amp;ftcH &amp; deposit reqUired Avatl

Business
Opportunity

114--7023

T't ,.,,,..,,,
PR.OFEISIONAl H,,.,
c..,,

2 hdroom, 1 '12 bllths, loc:Med in
downtown area. Adulta only
referenc:ea &amp; deposit requtr~

Ph 614· 446· 3776

133 Ptne Street
G.lllpolis, Oh 48131
614 448-2532
Wtde Salec:ton · N'w 1987 GMC
.,.c:k·up truckt Low prlc:atfNIIfY
diV Spee;illizlng 1n gtnulna GM
parts. '" stock and spacial
ordenng ave1l1ble
Herb Smtth. Owner

2 and 3 bedroom epartmentt
1111d house• tn Pomeroy or
Mtddleport Furmshed or urTfur
nl1hed Pay own ut•llties Can
days 814· 992-2381
Apartment• for ren1 in Pomeroy
Ona and two bedroom Clean
and mce Call614-992-8211 or
614-992· 7314

44

I NOTICE I

OPEN: Mon .-Fri . 8 am -9 pm - Sat. 8-6
Walk -ins Welcome

9 lo 5 Moro .. Tut1,. Wod. I Fro.
9 to 12 lhuro. 11;.
'·----__;~~:.:.;;;;..&amp;
(If

$160
00 and up.A·1
references
Ph
304 175-6104
Real Estate

Mobile homa. 2 bedrooms.
locat!KI Ashton Upton Road
I 1 60 month plus uttht1n 304
875 4088

1·13 tftl

(304) 675-5251

1-3-' 86 tfc '

411/tfn

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
,

RESIDENTIAL WINDOW. INC.
405 IIAIN Street. Pt. Pleasant: WV 25550

Far111 Equlp111ul
Perfs &amp; Service ,

CHE~I--915·3307

my

174-5104

Authorntd John DHrt,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm lqutpment
Otoior

IIDENOUR '
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

-z (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601

Oebbia Meadows-Owner; lmojean Blevins
Loretta Holsinger. Shelly Ohlinger
Merri Amsbary
11·25·1 mo

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.....,

hefp with thllt spectal
cleantng Job7 We clean home•
rental proptrtlet cfflcu
church• Gla11bum Clean1ng
Services Ph 814-388· 9027

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

271 N. 2nd, Middleport

'

AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENIIH
•SYLYAIIIA
dPIED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GilSON RHRIGERATOR
•SAIRUIE SAliS &amp; SERVICE
We lllo ~ hll Tl•
SIJe~ lll.lhlll

Ne~d

H•m.

' '

' - - - - -- - - 'l"'O·..::S_,
·If.&gt;:..J
c :

m YOUR SALES

614·992-6873.

•

~~~
Styling Sslon

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Work

Room and bo.,d for sanlor
citizens Plenty of Tl~ Call

:1: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

3/11/tfn

D&amp;P
APPLIANCE
REPAIR

Room and board t~r employed
man Ntce home Famtly •tmas
pher. Call 61 4·992· 8873

In
homeanvtime
IWill babytit
you celebrate the Half.

Air "Selection
C!l Col!1luterized
Swim
Molds
•
I
nterpretin&amp;
SeiVices
z

B1tthdu ys (IH• · 111
Pn~o t e

Situations
Wanted

daytl1 Atlarenc:•, .::all 304·
8715, 2487

h~odobiP f,~~·

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

12

• _.,.._______-:"____twl~;;·l~9-:;.'8::6~-..!1-"m~o"-.L while

Nr-w IPor's hr Pnrty
Ore Jl
17 30 uoold Hill
UpPn WPd., Fr~ \ot
7 30 unt" I 0 00

New llomts Built
"Free Estimat•"

Furn;ohod &amp; unrurn,.hod "'''.

Houses for Rent
r~~~~~';~~~:-'t~~:;;;;:~:;=~~=i -:-:---:-:-:-:--:.,-41

We PlY Clth for late model clean
used can
Jtm Mink Chev Olds Inc
8111 Gene Johnson
114·,46 3672

NO SUNDAY CAUS
4-16 .·IIi tfri

Pre-cut trns available

R~nlol s

Trucks for Sale
SMITH GMC TRUCKS

2 to 3 bedroom 1pt Conv•flllflt
locatiOn 1n town All utlltttes,..W
$326.00m0 , rflf•ence• &amp; dep
otlt requued Wiseman Real
Estate Agency Ph 614-441·
3644

Extr1 n1ce 2 bedroom duplu: ,
eerpeted, wash• 81 dryer hook
up, ltO\Ie &amp; refrigerator ex cell tnt
locat•on Deposit &amp; reference
Ph 814 446· 1260

•
VICe-presl
ent m me, and
brings out the woman."

72

2 Bedroom apt nice eerpeting.
w1ter pe1d, Wither &amp; 1 dryer
hook·up stove refng furmthed
avatlable Jan 1 1987 Ph
614-446-7025

Ofl1ce spaca · Storespece In Pt.
Plea11nt. $200 00 A· One Real
Estate Ph 304-1176· 6104

for re.nt Ph 448-1875

Day or Night

CHRISTMAS
·tREES

.
"He destroys
the
semor
.d
,

614-902 2631

PH. 949~2801 ·
or 949-2860

FOR SALE '

, Busin~t~s
Buildings

0

Pink w•h
silver - e Reward If found caU

HtnJY E. Cltlltld, Jr
992-6191

Office...•••....•...•. 992·2259

1976 Windsor, 70•14, 3 bed·
rooms In very ntce condlttOn
MIV stf!y on lot 88000 742·

Brownandwhltt C.lll14 887·
3073

Furntlh.t ,1pt 817&amp; 00 w1ter
2 bedroom 131 'h Fourth
Av• Ph 448-,... 1I efter 7pm

pd

periling Rent •tarts at f199
C1ll Unda Carson It 304· 71&amp;·
6011 or Denise Streib at 614
'883 · 41 11 Equal Houtlng
Opportumty

Red Tu:ll Coon Dog. male,
15mo. old Ph 614 992· 7103

Autos for Sale

1980 Chevy Monu. V· l .
40 000 m•l•, 304 676· 2322

Schuttz, 2 bedrooom
trtller. !ood. condition Prlct
negotiab t Ph 114-441-4063
or 614·448-9424

61H92·7163

mouth retainer In M1cldleport,

out of lhla a rea

J1., Truu1ll ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992·!i692

9pm,

71

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®IIJ Lerry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

New 2 bedroom apt• 1n Milton,
W V• Outet uttina, off streel

1985 mobdt home for ..le
14ll70, excellent condtttOn 2
bedt'oom. 2 full bMht Cell

Po._.. vocln!!y

"At Reasonable Pricts"

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

E. Main..

fernlle Cockll'
&amp; gold Good
Ph. &amp;14-388

44

614-441-7274

1973

LOll Somorimo Frioloy. mono

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES •

•All Types of

Hou st n q

OWNERS WANT OFFER
Property With Income tn l.etatt

SWEEPERS

I '

Phone

each

P~ONE

~

Foul"lllil Female Colll•tvPt pup

•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

lots. mce modern kttchen.
modern balh, panehng &amp;
front porch Sel up lo1 mobile home All lor tusl
$16.000
MODIRN BRICK - 3 BRs,
master 15x39, pnvale balh,
central atr &amp;heal, range, refrigerator. dosposal, 2 wood·
burntng ftreplaces, lg family
1m . 2 paltos, burglar alarm,
dbl garage &amp;lg landscaped
lot. $130,000 ·
83 ACRES ,- Some woods.
some tractor, land, 5 rm
home, bath. cellar ·&amp; 2
porches Mmerals, Racme
area $50,000
MIDDLEPORT - lg 7 rm
bnck on level lol near lhe
school Full basement, 2
porches, dbl garage &amp; dbl
carport
MIDDL£PORT - Remodeled
7 rm 2 still)' home on corner
lol 3 BRs, 2 baths, central
heal, equtpped kttchen &amp; 2
porches Garage &amp; carport
IIINERSVILE - 2 houses.
one m good shape 2nd
needs work Bul asktng tust
$15,000
.
NEAR RUTLAND - 2 bed
room, one lloor home tu st
nght for a couple. Has bath,
gas heal, carpelmg &amp; small
lot $21 ,500
2.94 ACRES - Ntce older
home m good condttton 3
BRs, bath, woodburner, fur·
nace, barn, garage on h3rd
mad $29,900
RUTLAND - 2-rental~ 2 bed
rooms tn each F&lt;Knace. woodburner unit &amp; 2 lots Range m

MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI
WEST. GALUPOUS. RT 35

FOUND· Pony 01'1 WhiteOak Ad
Ph 114-367-0323

11·21-16-l mo.

•landscaping 1
•88eements
•Sewage Systems
•Water &amp; Gu Lines

)-(614)-992-3325 ;
NIW LIST! NG ..., Good 6 rm
home m Reedsvtlle. 2 lg

NEW AND USED MOillE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY

3~

Bob Barton, OWtlor

Pomeroy,

Basltan lulldiig

1 1/J yttr •old
Spanitl white
w1th children
8253 10am to

SUGAR RUN
.ASHLAND

for Sale

Giv~taway

4

REBUILT &amp;REPAIRED

21e e.

Dann1e Hill, Treasurer
(12112, t9, 26
1112; 4tc

Anyone having any information regarding this criminal act are urged
to contact the Meigs Sheriff's Office
or notify Carl E. Smith Petroleum
Inc. at 304-273-9313.

RACINE
FilE DEPT.

YOUN S

32 Mobile Homes

An~uncements

RICM\1 Gun Shoot 'lt(lnaored by
Racine Gun Club Every Sunday,
beg1nning at 1 00 p m F1ctor,
Choke, 12 guage shotguns

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A-OAY
3

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

tfol41 "":"·''

Bobby Old, Superinttndent

A reword of $500 cash is offered
for the apprehension and Conviction of the person or persons responsible for firing several gun shots
in.to a gas compressor station
owned and operated by Carl E.
Smith Petroleum in Portsmouth.
Located on Silver Ridge Rd., Orange
Twp., Meigs County~ Ohio.

GUN SHOOT

Your Cable &amp;
Phon_
e Bills Here
p,r- IUSINISS PHON!
lb 141 9'12-MSO
UStOINCf PHONE

PHONE 992-2156

REWARD

12·16-'86-1110.

We C1ny Ftshlr'lg Suppliea

opened publicly imme ·
dlatetythereafter Propoeala
mey be delivered or mailed.
Each b1dder 11 to designate
on the envelope that it Is a
1Uied bid The name end
address of the bidder shall
also be 1nd1cated
Drawings and apec1flca·
tions may be obtained from
Franklin 0 . Lee, AlA, Archi·
1ec1, 328 Fron1 Street. Ma·
rletu. Ohio 46760 lor a
depo111 of • 10 00 which will
be refunded If the docu·
ments are returned within
WOllam Helll1' Harrtsoo
10 days of the bid due dete
All propoaals mutt be
William Henry Hamson was the accompanied by bid secunty
nmth president of the United States, in the form of a aurety bond
hut he served only 31 days, having or certified check 1n the
caught pneumonia at his lnauguraUon amount of 10% of the base
b1d Failure of any bidder to
and dyinc a month later. He was born enter
into and execute 1
In Berkeley, Va., on Feb. 9, 1773, the contract for the wortc co·
son of Benjamin Harrlion, a siper of vered by the proposal he has
the Declaration of Independence. He submitted, shall cause the
was also the f1rst governor of the lndl· bid security to become forfe ·
by the bidder to the
ana Territory and a maJor general in lted
Owner
aa Wqurdo1ed dam·
the War of 1812
ages and no1 as a penehy
becauH of such fellure on
the part of the IMdder.
A performence end pay·
man1 bond m 1he amount of
100% of the contract Ia to be
furnished by 1he successful
bidder.
The Owner reservH 1he
Or lr1t1 Dl1lly Smhntl Clauit~td DQI
right to accept eny bid, to
tn.c-ut ,_.rar Ollio4!t7n
weinany or all informali1tel
m btda and / or to reject any
or aU bids at hll .discretion .
Bids may no1 be withdrewn
un111 45 deya after being
subm•t1ed.
By order of the Southern
Local Board 'of Education

make applteatton to the Common Pleu Court. prob.te Div•s.an of Meigl County, Oh•o.
for an mdef to change h11
name to Timothy Jerome
Thompson

PH. hJ-3537

PLUMBING

-----------------------------------------'"""1
...._
,

The Daily Sentinel

550 .... SJ,, Mi.Wioport
OPEN 8 A.M.-4 P.M.

•Ranges
•Aefrtgentort
•Dryers •Freezers

Nease family gathering held recently
The tradit ional holiday gatherIng of the f amily of Mr and Mrs
Vernon Nease was held at the
Nease Settlem ent homeptace
Th e group enjoyed Christmas
dm nr r and a g1fl exchange.
\ TIC'ndmg were Mr and Mrs.

GillY'S
BODY SHOP

(CUI OUI FOI fUIUil 11511

Friday. December 26, 1986

71

Autos for Sale

Christmas Specials
84' Ford Eecorl 4-speed ,
53.000ml U .IOO 00 81' Mer·
cury lyna. auto. 70,000ml
S1 ,1581 00 15' Chev'IChevene
I . OOOmi 13 , 991! 00 84 '
Ch1ve1t1 auto , 28, 000ml
t2,HI 00 84' Ford EXP, I ·
IINICf. 43,000ml 13,810 00
71 ' lnttmttlonal Scout 4x4
82,000ml t900 00 Dodr!lis
Aulo Saln Pft 614· 388·961 6
1874 Ford Torino. good co ndi
814· 446

&amp;14-441-0231 .

fk»n •no.oo Ph
2212

Winter t•loft• • spt(llal chrltt·
maagtftatoryourpats Groom&amp;

111• Ford Torino. good condi·
tlon , low mMuge •700 00 Call

Supply 8hop Ph. 114· 448-0231 , _1_ 1_4_
· 44
_ 1_·2-29_2_ __ __

Watterson ' s Wster Hs ullng ,
reasonable retes •mmediflll
2 000 gallon deln~ery , CISler"•
pools, well etc: call 304 576

2919
Coat. Nmntona gravel etc:
Oelrvared 1 ton 1nd up J im
Unler 304· 875 1247 or 878·
7397

87

Upholstery

R &amp; M Custom CouchH and
Reup hol st erv , St Rt 7 Crown
Ctty, Dh 614· 268 1470 E'J e
614 · 446 309 Open da1ly 8 to
6, St~ l 9 30 10 1 30 Old Ill new
Uph osll:t red
Mowrey'• Upholster•ng setvlng
trlcountytraa21~.,, Thebtst
tn lurnltutl upholstenng CaM
3Q4 . e715 · 4164 for free
estim•tes

�...

••

'1 .

Fridliy December 26, :1986 ~

P~~~;1~2~~
~!D~a~Uy~Se~~~-~~·~--------~~--~~----~P~~~me~~~~M~~~~e~~
· ~·~O~hi~o--~--------~=-~--~----~~~·~~~~-----~

r-----Ohio Briefs:-___, N.J. minister receives 20-year .sentence
N.~.

Boxer bound over on rape charge

AKRON ( UPH _:Akron boxer Todd Hickman has been bOund
.
over to a Summit County grand jury on a ra pe charge.
Hickma n, who delayed his Tuesday tnornlng appearance In
f~lony court for abOut 20 minutes by refusi ng to enter the
courtroom, Is accused of raping a woman in Dec. 3.
A bond of $25.000 was continued for the 20-year-old former
Golden Cloves cha mpion·.

Grand jury probes alleged theft

CINCINNATI iUPll - . A grand jury is invesiigat lng
allegations tha i money has been skimmed from proceeds of a
charity bingo g'am0 for the Cyst ic Fibrosis F:oundation.
Marshall Hun t, president of the Cincinnati chapter of the
foundat ion, said he has learned that the HamHton County grand
jury has fou nd thai one ot· two people who helped operate the
bin go games have been ta king mon.ey.
,
The Friday night a nd Sa turday night bingo games are
intended to raise money to aid the effort to find a cure for cyst ic
fibrosis. The amoun t of money allegedly skimmed has not been
disclosed.

SIDNEY 1UP I) - A Sidney man is being held in connection
with a series of early-morning house burglaries he alleged ly
comm itted while dellvet·ing newspapers.
Kevin Burd is, 23, was arrested as a suspect in 10 burgla ries
dating from mid-October to last week, but is being held in the
Shelby County J a il on a probation violation. according to Sidney
Po lice Detective Greg Berquis t.
Authorities began to suspect Burdis in the string of
burglaries. all of which occurred between 2 a.m. and 8 a. m.,
aft er learning Burdis had a Sidney newspaper route delivering
the Dayton Daily News and Journal Hera ld, Berquist sa id
Wedn esda y.

FInancIng
•

•

(Fixed Payment Variable)

NOW THRU DECEMBER 31 sf

ON THE SPOT

Big Diseounts

LISBON 1UP It - Co lumbiana County officials have
approved temporary appropria tions for the firs t three month s
of 1987. but a financial crisis looms on the horizon.
County Treasurer Ardel Strabala said Tuesday the county is
In poor fin anc ia l condition because of a revenue shortfall of $1.4
million for the coming yea r.
The count y co mmission approved a three-month appropr ia·
lions pl an Tuesday, but offi cials will eventually have to face the
money problems. The state requires that permanent approprla·
lions be approved by April!.

•

BANK FINANCIN

UP TO 60 MONTHS FINANCING AVAILABLE

1986 LINCOLN

TOWN CAR
LOAD.ED (White)

IRONTON 1 UP II - A port ion of U.S. 52 eas t of Ironton was
blocked by a boulder that fell onto a car Wednesday evening,
kill ing the driver.
The Sta te Highway Patro l said the highway would remain
closed unti l the Oh io Department of Transportion could get
equipment in to break up the boulder and clear the debris.

15,000 MILES

FORD FACTOR~ S~LE CAR

1986 MERCURY 4.DR.

1986 PONTAIC 4 DR.

TOPAZ
AIR, AUTO, TRANS., PS, PB.

PARISIENNE BROUGHAM
LOADED (Charcoal)
23,000 Miles

(Black)

FORD FACTOR~ SALE CAR

I)

the new machine.
"We can make up thP bolts
ahead of time, so that th&lt;" only
time we wouldn't be under (the
protective canopy I Is when we're
hanging a cable," he said.
Reich was quick lo point ou t
severa l other features of the roof
bOlter, particularly a "safe drill
tram convers ion." That mea ns
when drilling Is taking place, It's
impossible for the machine to
start tramming unexpectedly. he
explained.
Machine meets tes l
And, each operator has separate controls for one compartment only. That means the one
opera tor can' t accidentally atfeet the compartment of the
other, he said.
"Ou r goa l was to make the
machine as safe as we possibly
could a nd still keep up the
production," Reich 5Uid.
McCraw pointed out a noth er
aspect £he company examined
verv closely during the trial
per iod.
"Theoolterhad to prove thatit
will be adequate from a maint!'nance sta ndpoint and that the
machin e component s will r!'main reli able under Mine No.2's
mining conditions." he sai d.
There's a portion of the agreement that allowed the com pany
to tear the mac hine apart to
measure the wear on its parts
after the four-month period, he
added.

1986 LTD BROUGHAM

1986 TEMPO 2 DR.

(2) 1986 COUGARS

4 DR- LOADED

V-6, AIR, TILT, CRUISE, REAR DEFROST

White

AIR, AUTO TRANS., AM/FM
Red.

For• Faetarr Sale Car

For• Factory Sale Car

For• Faetorf Sale Can

Black • Red

LOW MILEAGE

1986 FORD TEMP 4 DR.

(2) 1985 FORD TEMPOS

For4 Ftotorr Sale Car

4 DR.'s- lOW MILEAGE
AIR, COND., AUTO. TRANS.
PS, PB, AM/FM
White • Grey

1985 MUSTANG 2 DR.

1985 DODGE LANCER 4 DR.

AUTO. TRANS., AIR, AM/FM, TILT WHEEl
(White)

AUTO. TRANS., AIR COND.
AM/FM STEREO
(White)

1985 MERCURY COUGAR
V-6, AIR COND., AM/FM
White

AUTO. TRANS., AIR COND., CRUISE
TILT, AM/FM/USSEm
(Silver)

1985 E-1 SO CARGO VAN
POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS,
TILT WHEEL, CRUISE CONTROL
AM/FM CASSETTE
(SAver)

"1985 RANGER PICKUP

1986 FORD

4 CYL., 4 SPEED, RADIO
SHARP
llt. Blue)

CONVERSION VAN- LOADED
· Pat's Demo
Red/Silver

WAGON
AUTO. TRANS., AIR COND., RADIO
lUGGAGE RACK, REAR DEFROST

1984 CELEBRITY 4 DR.

1983 FORD
COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON

1983 F-150 FORD 4X4

. EURO·SPORT PACKAGE
LOADED
(Silver)

l983 MAZDA PICKUP
4 CYl.; 4 SPD. TRANS.
RADIO

'Tis the season for special events and
. d
8-S
memories, Ch arIene Hoe fl ic h f tn s -

9 PASSENGER - lOADED
(White)

1981 CHEV. LUV
PICKUP

Vot 21 No. 46
Copyrighted 1986

4 CYL., 4 SPD.,
38,000 Miles

WAGON - LOADED

Save Hundreds

High court strikes down two state regulations
)'

COLUMBUS 1UP! I - The Ohio Supreme Court
has struck down as unconstitutional two state
laws, includingonMhat gives the Bureau of Motor
Vehicles the right to appeal a trial court"sdeclslon
to · suspenq , driving rights due to the lack .of
financial responsibility.
Also held unconstitutiona l Friday was a state
la w that favors the Importation of ethanol from
those states that allow a tax credit simila r Jo
Ohio' s. Ethanol is blended with gasoline to create
gasohol.
The high court, In a 6-1 decision, ruled that state
law Improperly allows the Bureau of Motor
Ve hicles to override a court decision when a
. motorist's license Is suspended for not being abl e

I

Middleport, OH.

992·2196

to prove financial responsibility.
Motorists are required to prove they have
adequate liability insurance or financi al ba cking
to ·pay damages they cause while driving. ·
The case Involved a South E~dld motorist who
was convicted of speeding. His drlver'·s license .
was suspended and reglstrallon and,license plates
Impounded because he did not have proof of
financial responslblllty.
The 1984 law, which was r!'-wrilten aft er parts
of It were found . unconstilutional, sets up the
appeal process through the Bureau of Motor
Vehicles.
For various reasons, the hi gh"court said the

procedure violates the separatio n of powers of the
various branches of government. The burea u
could find thai a driver was fin ancially
responsiblle and , In effect, overrule a tr ial court ,
the justices said.
The Supreme Court a lso .found improper · a
procedure In which a court clerk accepts
suspended or Impounded licenses, which it said, in
effect, makes I he clerk an agent of the bureau.
The ethanol case was fil ed by the New Energy
Co. of South Bend, Ind. The co mpany produces
et hanol, a 199-proof alcohol, and sells about 12
mllllon gallons a month In Ohio for use In gasoline.
State laws gives a tax credit on gasohol, but a

1985 change tn the law says gasohol dealers cannot
receive a tax credit unless the ethanol in it Js
produced in Ohio or comes from a state that
grants a similar credit. tax exemption or refund,
Indiana does not have a tax credit program. ,
New Energy said the provision makes Its
ethanol unmarketable In Ohio because without the
tax credit its product Is more costly. Thecompaey ·
said (he restriction violates Interstate commer ~e
provis ions of the U.S. Constitu tion.
r'·
Lower courts said the state law provides
incentives on an equal basis to both In-and
out-of-state producers and does not preclude New
Energy from selling in .Ohio. ·

Officials ·
approve
•
Issuance .
of bonds

State bonds to aid
•
carr~er
fimls' development ·bids route
The

~~~t ~~~ar~~~~t $~~.8D~~:f~~
worth of tax-free bonds to aid
companies in financing building
proje c t s and eq uipment
acquisition.
Friday's Issua nce was,the first
for the Ohio Pooled Bond Program, which wa s established as
pa rt of the Ohio Lender Commit ment Program to make available
lower-lntl'rrst flnaneing to companies for new construction,
expansion or renovation a nd the
purchase of new equipment.
Such coml!lerclal projects will
be Ineligible for that type · of
financing after Dec. 31. due to the
Tax Reform Act of 1986.
The program combines an
established method of raising
funds- tax-exempt IDBs- with
a unique concept, pooling of these
bOnds.
The bond proceeds will aid 12
companies and create more than
800 jobs, said State Development
Director Clarence D. Pawlicki.
The projects:
-E.F. Realty Limited Part·
ners hlp , Elyria, $900.000 to assist
In the acquisition, construction
and equipping of a manufactur·
lng plant for lease to Nash
Engineering, a vacuum pump
manufacturer.
-Cary W. J ames, Reynoldsburg. $1 million to assist In the
acquisition and renovation of a
building to be used as a comput er
hardware m an uf ac lu r in l(

warehouse.
-Huds9n PeopleCare Health
Center, Hudson, $800,000 to assist
In acquiring and constructing an
outpatient medi cal office
complex.
-SinterMet Corp., Brookpark,
$4 mlllion to assist In acq uir ing,
relocating and equipping an auto
parts factory.
-Westlake·Ranney Proper·
ties. Ltd., Westlake, $2.8 million
to assist in constructing an office
and warehouse building.
-S&amp;W Realty, Middleburg
Heights. $1. 76. million to assist In
constructing a multi· tenant
warehouse and dlst•ribution
faclllty .
-Pollack Inn Restoration Associates. Youngstown. $3 million
to assist in purchas ing and
renovating an inn adjacent to the
Youngstown State University
campus.
:..Regent Ma nufacturing, Inc.,
Bowling Green, $400,000 to assist
In acquiring new equipment for
R&lt;&gt;gen t's ex isting plant.
· -Carnation Towers Limited
Partnership, Alliance, $5.2 mil·
lion to assist In constructing a
110-room Holiday Inn a djacent to
Carnation Mali.
-Southwest Financial Services In c .. Cincinnati, $450,000 to
assist In acquiring and renovat·
lng a his toric, building.
t
-Norwalk Furniture Corp. ,
Norwalk, $3.35 million to assist in
expa nding the firm's furnitu re
factory .

farewell
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - After 23 years
on a motor route for The Dally
Sentinel, George Korn turned off
the motor of his Bronco four·
wheel drive and settled ba c ~ for
some quieter times.
Friday was his last day op his
85-mlle route servicing 625 Sen·
tine! customers. He was the
oldest In years bf service o( the
Sentinel's tube route drivers.
• Korn started on a motor route
in 1963 wlth 225 customers a nd
has gradually e xpanded the
route and solicited new cus to·
mers until his final draw was 625.
Sometimes snow and ice on the
roads and high water made him
la le. but Korn prides himself on
always having gotten the papers
out "every day one way or
another."
His route went from from
Pomeroy down West Ma in Street
to Monkey Run, then Into lower
Middleport, Bradbury, Mulberry
Height s, Laurel Cliff, Ohio 124 to
Rutland. New Lim a Road , out to
Harr isonville, a nd down Ohio 143
before comi~g back into Pom"
roy . To get his Sund ay papers out
before his cus tomers left fo r
church, Korn alw ays s tarted out.
at 4 a.m.
While he's handled the . morl'

LAST DAY - George Korn stands beside stacks of Dally
Sentinels walling to hP delivered to customers on his
K5-mlle-plus delivery route. Korn, who carried the Sentinel lor
23 years, put in his last day on the route on Friday.
tha n four- hour route himself a
few times, he usually took
someo ne with him. At one time It
was his wife. Jan et, who rode
along, folding papers and stuffing them Into the green boxes
along the road. After her death
severa l years ago, he had one
helper then a nother for a time
until Wayne Leifheit came along.
Wayne has worked with Korn for
the ' past (our years.
Kern lives in the same house on
Breezy Heights, in which he was
born near ly 74 yea r ~ ago. He

spent 20 years away from Meigs
Cou nty and in that time ma rried
his wife, a native of Massachu.'
setts, a nd worked as a hot el cook
in Las Vegas and Reno, Nev. The
couple returned lo Me igs Cqunty
in 19 5~.
A year ago when Korn bought
his new Bronro, he had hoped to
be. on the route long enough to
wear It out. But now , he says, he's
just not physically abl e to
continue.
To be su re Korn will be missed
by his Sentinel cu~tomrrs .

Counselor brings experience
to job as Reagan's point man

THE MAN FOR THE JOB - David Abshire, 60, posing for
photographers with his wile Caroline, has been named by
President Reagan as a special counselor to Investigate the Iran
arms-Contra aid affair. t UPI)

By United Press International
NATO Ambassador David Abshire, na med by President Rea·
gan to coordinate White House
strategy on the Iran arms-Cont ra
aid scandal , brings a mllltar.v
a nd diplomatic background to his
new job.
Abshire Is a foreign policy
expert who helped fo und lhe
Center for Strategic and Internationa l Studies, a n Influenti al
politica l analysis organization
associated with Georgetown
Univers ity.
Abshire, 60. was appointed
March 30, 1983, to the post a t
North American Trea ty Organ!·
zation headqu arters In Brussels,
Belgium. He previously was a
member of the president's Foreign Intelligence Adv isory Board

and the Long Range Planning
Advisory Board for the Chief of
Naval Operations . .
Abs hire has won high praise
from Secretary of State George
Shultz for his work at NATO ·
through a difficult period, win nin g a llied support for U.S .
sanctions against Libya and
keeping the na tions commi tt ed to
the continuing dep loy ment of
Pershing 2 and cr uise miss iles in
Wes tern Europe.
.
He had been considered fort he
job of na ti ona l security adviser
after Vice Adm. John Poindexter
resigned when the sca nda l broke
Nov. 25, but was passed over for
Frank Carlucci, who ha s more
clout with the Pe nt agon and the
CIA.

"David Abshire has what it
takes -bot h the respect and the
experience - to be the pres l·
dent' s pqint man on the Iran
affair," Se n a te Republican
leader Robert Dole of Kansas
sa id in a sta tement issued when
Abs hire was named Friday.
A graduate of the U.S. Milit ary
Academy at West Point. Abshire
has maintained contac ts with the
mllltarv es tablishment In Wa·
shin gton and retains Influenti al
friends 'on Capitol Hill fr om his
days as the State Depart ment' s
head lobbyIst.
Abshire Is a former special
projects director at anot her
political analys is organization,
the American En terprise
Inst itu te.

By NANC.Y YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel stall
POMEROY - Meigs County
. Commissioners passed a t esoiu·
tion Friday a pproving issuance
of $2,600,000 of Indu strial revenue
bonds to build a 100-bed skilled
nursing and intermedi ate care
faclllty in Middleport.
The resolution was passed
foll9wlng ~ public hearing on the
matter.
Bob Jennings, Ci ncinnat i. representing the bond counseling
firm of Peck. Shaffer &amp; Williams,
explained tha t Meigs County will
not be liable for paymE'nt of the
· bonds.
The bonds will be Insured by
the Farmer's Home Administration (FmHA 1 and collateral will
be provided by the Government
National Mortgage Association
(Ginnie Mae Securities). Buck·
eye Federal Savings &amp; Loan Co.
is the lender in the transaction
and Bank One, Columbus, will
act as trustee, J ennings said. The
bonds. will be pu rchased !row
Ba nk One at a 7 ~ percent fixed
rate by The Ohio Company and
then resold to the public al the
current market rate, Jennin gs
explained.
Under new federa l law, this Is
the last year for th is type of bond
transaction. Deadline to finalize
proceedings to sell th e bonds is
Dec. 31.
According to Jennings. conflr·
matlon from the Ohio Depart ·
ment of Development for the$2.6
m lllion has already been received. FmHA approval of the
pro ject Is expected sometime in
late.winter and the money is to be
held in escrow until that t ime.
Bonds wlll not be sold to th e
public until a ll transact ions
through FmHA a nd Ginnie Mae
have been completed.
Je nnings sa id it is antic ipated
tha t ground will be broken In
March 19R7, wi th the fac ilit y to be
opened by Mareh 1988.
Ownet· of the facilit y to be
constru cted In the Page StrPct
arE'a of Middleport will be Meigs
Center Ltd .. of w hich Dr. Harold
Brown Is pres ide nt.
It was no ted at the publ ic
heari ng that this is probabi)' the
largest Investment ,that has been
proposed In Meigs County in I he
past 50 years .

Reagan heads west .to distance self from political crisis

SEE: RICK TOLLIVER, J. R. PIERCE or PAT HILL

461 S. 3rd

highs In the
The •
probability of precipitation .15
near zero
today.

10 Sect lana, 62 Pegea
A Multimedia Inc. NIWII)Ipe'r

Middleport- Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant December 28. 1986

6 CYl., 4 SPD., RADIO
Red

' · NEW 1986 TAURUS

Deaths ........ ........ ........ A-5
Editorial ..................... A-2
Sports ...... ....... ......... C+&amp;

::;et:

•
tmts-

1985 CHEV. CAVALIER

Pat Hill Ford Inc.

675-4340

Gallia County: 1------,------,~~~-.-...,..~~~~
The,year in
' Whilliam A. RucsJJer sumds up the fllACts2in
Along tbe River ..~ ..... B+H
t e )ran anus- ontra ai affair - . •
Buslness, .....................D-1
Comlcs .................... lnsert
R.e.VI·ew, 19'86
1
Classlfleds ........... D-H-6- 7
Partly

COLUMBUS (UP! ) -

Motorist killed by boulder

C-1

Wild card playoffs

.

!

, County to face financial crisis

Don't Take A Chance.

said.
He likened the disciplinary ,.
measures Imposed In his church ,
1
hi h h
.to frat ernity haz ngs, w c
e ~,
said are "an American way of :
life."
::;
Members of the church from "
Miami and Akron told the court
that the beatings serve as disci- .:
pllnary measures used only as a 1.
last resort. The paf)shloners said •.
they do not live In fear 'of their "
leader, testimony that conflicted ":
with statement s made by other. ~
church members at the trial last •
year .
•
-:

PAT HILL FORD
ear End learance ale
•
•
•

Suspect held in house burglaries

If There Is A Question • • •

~

50 cents

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

MASSILLON iUPli - AbOut 300 la id off Superior's Brand
Meats emp loyees are co ns idering a boycott of the company if
the)' are not reh ired.
The workers, who were laid offwith one day 's notice on Dec. 9,
staged a rally in Mass illon Tuesday. Ofli cialsof the United Food
and Commercia l Workers Local 17-A have flied an in junction in
federal court to seek rei nstatement of the employees.

work most closely with the roof
bolter, McCraw ha s condu c ted
· week i,\ ' and bi-week i.v meetings
with the miners, safety officials,
managemen t a nd Schroeder
Bro ther' representatives.
The operators' feedba ck has
been es pec ially helpful In det erm in ing the comfort provid ed by
the seated compart me nt and
control-i&lt;'ver locations, McCraw
sa id. In addi tion, a phys ical
therapist will be contacted to
rev iew the comp art ment design
for operator comfor t.
Lan ning likes the fact that the
levers for ope rat ion arc eas.' · to.
reach and maneuver, and fee ls
the seated co mpart ment a nd
ca nopy is a great safety featu re
as well.
" It was ras ~ to learn, too,"
Lanning said.
Training conducted
Mi ke DelCotto. section supervisor and WISE coordinator
(Work Instructio ns for Safety
and Efflc icncyt a t Meigs No. 2,
was primarily responsible for
setting up tra ining on the new
machine for six roof bolter
. operators . 10 mechanics and fi ve
maint ena nce s uperv isors from
thc three shi ft s at the mine. Th e
operators. in turn. helped tra in
ot her roof ba ll et· operators and
helpers.
Wilson. a for&lt;?man who was
filling in a s a bolter helper, said it
on ly took him a few s hifts to
become reall.v comfortable with

silver- haired religious leader Church slowly developed Into a
had called for a new tr.)al, saying ·cult. Fqrmer members .testified
the beatings of members of his abOut beatings with belts and
ed
1
congregation were a · form of tree branches, a nd fore sexua
"discipline" a nd that be was not forays.
properly repr~~ented In his ,July · The church once had burgeon1985 tr 1·al.
lng congregations ' In Trenton,
1
But Schroth disagreed, and Miami, Dallas and Akron , Oh o.
· sentenced the church leader to But since a Mercer County grand
two 10-year prison ·terms for jury handed up a 22-count Indictbeating a 15-year-old girl a nd ment In 1983, membership has
forcing an 11!-year·old woman · llecllned drastically.
into performing or.al sex on him.
In court testimony Tuesday
1 ,
Founded In 1967 as a well· Thomas denied that his group sa
meaning pentecos tal group, the cult.
Chris tia n Alliance Holiness
"I find that very ins ulting
because I'm a Chr istian, '' he

Sunday

,

Furloughed staff eyes boycott

Coal company tests (Continued from Page

~ The

TRENTON,
tUPil
founder and sell-ordained bishop
k Tr
NJ
of a cult·ll e
enton,
· .,
chu rch has been sentenced to 20
years In prison for comml.tting a
series of sexual and physical
·
assualts on parishioners.
Superior Court Judge David
Schroth ruled that Wilbert ·Thomas, described dur ing a trial last
year as a dynamic cult leader,
will be lnellglbl efor parole fora t
leas t eight years.
·
Before Wednesday··s sentenc·
, lng, ;lchroth rejected Thomas '
.a ppeal to re-try his ca se. Th e

t

By NORMAN D. SANDLER
WASHINGTON 1UP!) - President Reagan
hea ded west , Saturday for a weeklong yea r-end
vacation, having na med a special In-house
counselor for the Iran arms-Contra aid scandal In
an effort to mute criticis m of how the crisis has
been handled.
,
Facing congress ional Inquiries and prostate
surgery a t the s tart or the new year , Reagan
planned a mid-mor ning departure for Ca lifornia,
where he will try to keep some distance from the
press, ~he public and his political problems.
The effort to recover from a plunge In his public
a pproval rating took a new turn Friday with the
appointment of NATO Ambassador .David Ab·
·~·

shire, a foreign policy specialist, as a temporary
In -house counselor to coordinate White Hou se
strategy on the lr an-Contr~ controversy.
The act ion had been urged for some time by key
Rep~bllcans on Capitol Hill out of concern that
Reagan, tn· relying •on outside Inves tigations to
bring out the truth. was perceived as unbothered
by the worst crisis of his presidency.
A statement Issued by the White Hou se press
office said Abshire will assume his new duties
Jan. 5 as " the White House coordinator for the
Iran Inquiry.''
Alton Keel, acting national security adviser
since . the departure of VIce. Adm. John

Poindexter amid the furor, had been na med
previously to succeed Abshire at the North
Atlantic Treaty Orga nization in Brussels,
Belgium.
In Abshire's new role, the White House
statement said, he wlii have "Cabinet rank"' an d
"wlii coordina te White House responses to
congressional and ot her reques ts for Information
In a timely manner, working with senior members
of the White House staff, ass isted by re presenta·
llves from key Whi te House staff offices"
The job descr iption left vague, however , the
breadth of Abshire's mandate and his specifi c
duties.
Reagan has resisted calls ,hat he underlake a n

'

..•

inquiry of his own to uncover and make pulllic
details of his secret U.S. arms sales to 1ran and th&lt;'
subsequent diversion of profit~ fr om the sa l ~.&lt; to
Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
,
Whil e House legal couns ~l Peter Walllson ha s
been conducting a search for document s regard·
lng the matter, and other White Hou se officials
have referred to a c hronology dra wn up by Lt. Col.
Oliver North , the fired National Securit y Coun cil
aide implicated in the cris is. in response to
questions from Congress.
There was no Indica tion that Abshlr&lt;'. whose
selection for the new ass lgnm &lt;'nl had not be~n
expected , would be asked to conduct a fo rmal
In-house probe.

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