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                  <text>. ~'R~~~-~y CHRISTMAS·M.ERRY CHRISTMAS•, ~~HM~I:P\SI;.bY CHRISTMAS•MERRY CHRISTMAS· M'nfitMII~~liUl6.61&amp;11:119~
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DAYS 'TIL CHRISTMAS

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ELECTRIC

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KITCHEN APPLIANCES

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All this week save on our entire
stock of quality brand na~e
kitchen appliances. Below is a
partial listing of the great values!

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TOASTMASTeR

WAFFLE MAKER~''.~\. '28.

PRESTO

·&gt;-

DEEP FRYER ...•.~~,!~\ .. ,35.95
RiVAL CROCK POT.. .. 19.75

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CHAIR SALE

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U!I!S'"a

OSTER

._,;;.;;,;;;;;_o

1 1

ICE CRUSHER ... !' ~ .A!.. 35.95
GE IRON ........... ..I.'.!~!~'.. 20.65

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Quality BerldlneWallaway recliners,
rock·a·loungere and raclinm. Many
styles, eizes and colo11.
Flo
m 0 nly
· From Only

ROCK-A-LOUNGERS ......... 209

BLENDER .. ..... .~~,!~\ ... 33.25

RECLINERS .. ........ f.~!!'.~.'Y. 223
FREE DELIVERY _fOJLCHR~

AUTOMATIC

POPCORN POPPER 1.'.!.&lt;!~~ 13.45

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OUI ENDIE SlOCII Of
PIE-IEC,OIDED
for teens ® for Christmas CASSEnE TAPIS IS
· REG. S5.79".............. SALE 54.65
IEDUCED FOI..
lEG. S7 .79 "''"""'"'"SALE S6.25
CHIISliiU
,S9.79 _,.; .......... SALE '$7 .85
GIVING

WALL-AWAY RECLINERS .. 231

HAMILTON BEACH

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WEST BEND ELECTRIC

GRIDDLE ....... ..... !1:1.1.'~~- 39.55.

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GE ELECTRIC

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SKILLET .............. ~~5.1~. 35.95

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MIROMATIC ELEC .

PERCOLATOR .... ~~~~~ .. 23.85
GE TOASTER ......~.~~~~.. 19.75

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GE ELECTRIC

CAN OPENER ..'!':~,!~\ ... 16.65
MIXMASTER ....•.~~,!~\... 79.95

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wo•N'S

CitllrttflftSIII

SLEEPWEAR

ON
CHilDREN'S CLOllUNG

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Warm fall styles and calor in long gowns
and robes, short gowns and robs, teddies,
nile · shirts, pajamas, dusters and bed
jackets.
Sizes Small to 4X.
R~g. SID SIHpwtar ........ 5ale 17.99

DR ESSES. SUPS
GOWNS
PAJAMAS
SWEATERS
PANTIES, COATS
SNOWSUITS

·~Work
Clothes
Insulated coveralls, blanket or
(f)

LITTLE BOYS'

0::: quilt lined jackets nad coats.
I lined and unlined bib overalls.
vests and hoods. Regular and
U exta large sizes,plus shorts and
tails.

R~g.

SIS SIHpwtar ...... Sale
R~g. 120 SIHpwtar ...... Sale
R~g. 125 SIHpwtar ...... Sale
R~g. S30 Sleepwtar ...... Sale
R~g. $3 5 Slttpwtar ..... Sale
R~g. 140 Slttpwtar ...... Sale

SHIRTS
SWEAURS
WINTER COATS
SNOWSUITS
OUTFITS
PAJAMAS
PANTS

Sale Prices

Cbtllfllltl

OUR ENnR£ STOCK IS INCLUDED

UTTLE GIRLS'

~ MIN'S CAIHAm
~ BROWN DUCK

at y

enttne
Consumer prices climb 0.3 percent

Vo1.35. No. 173
Copyrighted 1986

111.99
115.99
119.99
123.99
127.99
131.99

SALE PRICES!

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MEN'S

MEN'S and BOYS'

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DRESS
SLACKS

Hanes®
UNDERWEAR
Hanes Red label men's and boys' under·
wear- the perfect gift. T-Shirts, Briefs,
A·Sh1rts, Boxes. Famous Hanes quality at
sale pnces.

SAVE

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Sizes 29 to 42 waist. Plus
big sizes 44 to 50. Big se·
lection of fashion colors.
Well known makes.

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Slacks .... l15.27
Slacks .... 117,47
Slacks .... 123.87
Slacks .... 527.67

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111.95
121.95
129.95
134'.95

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2 Sections, 12 Paget

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 20. 1985

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ccnsumerprlcescllmbed
0.3 percent In November, spu!Ted by rising load and
energy costs, lhe Labor Department reported today. ·
The 0.3 percent rise In the consumer price Index for
November - It also rose 0.3 percent In &lt;A!tober brought ln!lation for lhe first 11 months ri the year to
3.6 percent
The !nllaUon rate over November 1984 also was 3.6
percent.
''There was quite a jump In food eaten at home and
energy prlces" In November, said Labor Department
analyst Doug RDhertson. "Beef and wal went up
quite a bit - so did pork, poultry and also fresh

vegetables."
Energy costs also rose sharply In November- fuel
oil, coal and bottled gas rose by 4.1 percent AnalySis
said the ~ISing cost of heating fuel was triggered by an
early winter blast In the Midwest, which occlirred
sooner In the seasOn than usual.
In comparison; from May until September the
consumer prlce Index rose 0.2 percent each month. It
then rose sUghlly In October to 0.3 percent - but
doubled In November to 1he 0.6 percent rate.
Grocery store food prices rose 0.9 percent In
November, following an October Increase of 0.2
percent

Cons:u mer spending keeps
national product growth down
.

SUNBEAM

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26 Conti

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

There was a sharp rise In the cost of meats, poultry,
fish and eggs - up 2.3 percent In November and
accounting for four-fifths ri the November increase tn
the Labor Department's "food at horne" category. ·
FUel oll prlces advanced sharply In November,
rising by more than 4 percent. In lhe preceding two
months, fuel oll prices had Increased by 1.6 percent
and 2.4 percent.
Despite the sharp rise, however, the Labor
Department said fuel on prices were 9.8 percent
below the peak level of Aprll1981.
Costs for renters rose 0.7 percent while for
homeowners they wenl up by 0.6 percent

The cost of medical care continued to lise. Medical
care Increased by 0.5 percenl tn November - the
same rise reported by the Labor Department In
Seplember, &lt;A!tober and November:
The cost of drugs and medical supplies also went up
0.5 percent. The cost of seeing a doctor rose 0.7
percenl and It cost an addllional 0.2 percenl to occupy
a hospital room.
Apparel costs Increased 0.2 percenlin November,
following an &lt;A!tober rise of 0.6 percent. 'llw Labor
Department attributed the moderation to tower
prices for women's and glrls' ctolhes, "reflecting
larger lhan usual seasonal price reductions."

Proposed Tax Rates
Tax reform bill passed by the Ho,use simplifies number of tax
brackets. Example is for married couples filing jointly compared with
current rates for 1986- although final legislation is not expected to
affect rates until 1987.

had the Impact on housing that
50%
we've seught," he said.
I
New housing construction during
I
November was 4.4 percent behind
Current
September's pace.
40% t- tax rates
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!-·-..
1-·- ·Berson also said, the .GNP will
38%
continue to be dragged oown by lhe
35o/a
'nation's poor trade picture, whlch
Proposed
has diverted production from do·
30%
tax
rates
mestlc businesses to foreign com·
I-J25o/o
Analysts say diminished car panles. Economists do not foreseE&gt;
sales wUI account for much ri the any major gain In thls area untU the
20%
mqrcted fourth-quarter drop In middle d next year. .
•
consumer spending, In contrast to
Deborah Johnson, an economist
:15%
the lhlrd-quarter, when strong car with Prudenti&lt;Jl Bache Securities,
sales ~ntrlbuted to a 4.3 perrent mted the lhlrd quarter GNP also
100110
rise lmthe GNP.
: got a big boost from government
: "The tone of the economy In the ,, SP'111d!ni· .\VIth defense ,spendlp!!;,. . .. ,
• foutlh quarter Is weak," Allen and heavy purchases of grain from
Oo/o
Sinal, chief economist forSbearson· farmers by lhe government's Com·
0
Lehman, s~ld Thursday. "In ger.. rnodlty Credit Corp. accounilng for
$180 $200
$160
$120
$140
$80
$100
$60
$20
$40
0
eral. !here's weakness In retail auto much of the Increase.
Income in thousands of dollars
sales, In eonsumer spending. We're
UPI Graphic
Standard deduction of $4,800 prouosed for non-itemized return
loOking lor the 'flash' GNP to be In
Most analysts forecast dlmln·
the 2'h percent to 3 percent range." !shed government spending durlng
called for In the lax overhaul legislation pa8lled by the
CHANGE! NOO'ED - The newschart above
David Berson, an economist with the fourth quarter. Johnson, who
House. II shows the proposed IWI rale8 for married
hlghlighls one of the maJor changes In tile lax code
Wharton Econometrics, forecast forecasts a 2;5 percent expansion in
couples
tutng Jotn14'. lWL
an even sloWE'r 2 pei'CI'nt pace of fourth· quart.e r GNP, noted that If
growth for the fourth quarter, citing ~vemment spending had been
weak consumer spending as well as excluded from the growth figures
sluggish !Dusing construction and durlng the third quarter, GNP
would have expancled a weak 1.5
CLEVELAND (UP!) -The U.S. disbursers oft his money iO use it In year.
sales.
Twelve bridge repair jobs and .n
"Lower Interest rates have not pei'CI'nt.
House and Senate passed a $368 our county."
Cuyahoga County Is set to receive highway projects have been tar·
billion catchall spending bill Thurs·
•
day lhat Includes $.}).6 mUUon in $16.5 miUion In discretionary dol- geted for the federal funds by thcr
discretionary funds lor highways tars for highway work and another Nortll&gt;ast Ohio Areawide Coor~i ·
and transit systems In Grea·ter $14.1 million for the mass transit natlng Agency.
Cleveland.
The Cuyahoga Valley National
syslern In lhe current fiscal year,
The discretionary funds are part which began &lt;A! I. 1. In addffion, the Recrealion Area and tilt, Wayne
· of almost $70 rnllUon set aside lor county Is to recelve$alrnllllonfrom National Forest In southern Ohio
transit, highway and national park formula funding, granted every also were recipients d I he spending
bill.
projects In the Cleveland area.
CUyahoga Valley received $.'i2
The biD was sent to the White
mUllan, most 1111 to buy land, whlle
House for President Reagan 's
the Wayne National Forest was
signature and spoki'Sman Larry
$1 .9 milUon for land
granted
Speakes satd the president was
Clli$Se!l ol the Melp Local
acquisition.
expected to sign lhe measure.
Schools dismissed two houl'li
Cuyahoga County qualified for
early today, the ftnal day before
the extra funding because of Its
the Christmas holiday, due to
agreement In 1979 to forgo compte·
this momlng' s snowfall which
tion of 7.9 mites of Interstate 490.
was creating Icy roads.
The blll was guided through the
Eastern Local Schools dJ&amp;.
Flve OWl arl'!'sts wore made In
House by Ohio Democratic Reps.
missed at 10:30 a.m. Friday
Gallla Count y and one In Meigs
Mary RDse Oakar and Louis Stokes;
rnomlng due lo the snow.
durlng lasl wrekond during lhe
both of the Cleveland area.
The Southem District was stW
Ohio Stale Palmi's announced
"Congressman Stokes and I were
operatlntr at II a.m. and did not
crackdown
on drunk drfvlng.
Instrumental in gettlng lhls mmey.
plan an early dismissal. AfterLt. [Jan Henderson, commancler
and I want It used In our county,"
noon kindergarten classes were
of lhe Gattla·Melgs post, said no
Oakar said. "We have among the
CIIIK:elled
acclclents wei'!' reported during the
worst Infrastructures In the coun·
Patrol's 13-hour crarkdown un
try, and I am counting on the
Friday the 131h "whlt h was
Important. "
"There 'A JS ol JOI Of talk" about
lhe crackdown. Hondcr!'O n sa id,
"so the poinl was made anyway."
Statewide. lhf' patrol madr J9()
OWl arrest ' during lh&lt;' !Jhour
COLUMBUS. Ohio &lt;UPI i -Gov. ties of govermr should that become period In whlr h only one latatily
Richard F. Celeste says he Is necessary. And so I think It 's a was reportl'd In alcohoi·J1•Iarcd
accidents.
talking with Ohio House Speaker naturai for the two or us to talk
Vernal G. Rifle Jr. In an attempt to about It and lor hlm to give It
convince the speaker to be his serious corislderallon," the gover·
running mate next year.
nor said.
"I think there's no question that
"He also has both responsibilities
anybody who knowntate govern· and loyalty to the Ohio House of
ment In Ohio realizes that !here's Represeruauves, where he has
nobody better prepared to join a been a leader for longer than
leadership t~am and help make anybody In the history of the stale,"
state government work than Vern Celeste added. "And !hat's really
Riffe," Celeste told 1he Columbus what has to be weighed In his mind
Citizen-Journal.
as we think about thls."
Celeste Is seeking a replacement
Celeste satd he ropes to announce
for lonner Lt. Gov. Myrt SIJo. a running mate by late next month.
emaker, who died earlier this year.
The governor didn't name any
other
possible running mates.
Political obseiVers say Riffe, of
However,
Sen. Richard C. Pleltler,
New Boston In Scioto County, would
[).Columbus,
and Sen. Eugene
help Celeste, who Is from Oeveland, In drawing votes In ooulhern Brans tool, [). Utica, have been
rnentlored by others as possible
'
BREAD'NJT wml !IANTA- '11le pre lldloilen mondq. After the younplen had bn;akfll8t, eacb .Qhlo.
choices.
"There's
no
ooe
rrore
qua
lUted
to
and prlnulry ciMa rl the CarletGn School were peala one had a spedal time on santa's knee.
VERNAJ,. RIFFE, Jr.
step In and haljdle the responslbltllor a IIJalldatlt wtlh Santa at Pleaeen 'lbursda,y

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
gross national product grew at a
surprisingly strong 3.2 percent
durlng the final quarterofthlsyear,
according to thl&gt; government's
"Dash" estimate released today,
but revised figures showed thirdquarter growth was less lhan
reported earlier.
Most economists agree one of the
biggest factors that will keep
growlh sluggish durlng &lt;A!tober,
November and December Is consu·
mer spending, whlch conlrlbutes to
about two- thirds of lhe GNP, the
total output of lhe nation's goods
and seiVIces.
~..Eoonoqll(~Jmpc~to~ over the last.
two months have shown weak
spending by consumers, who have
lnclirred high Jevels d. debt
low
savings. The government's report
on retail sales durlng November
showed a lackluster 1.1 percent
Increase. following a 4.2 percent
plunge In October, the biggest
one-month slide on record.
"Consumers are reining In their
spending to reduce debt burdens
and replenish savings," said Jack
Ca,rlson, chief economist lor the
National Association of Realtors,
who 'ts lorecast!ng a 2 per~nt

expansion in lhe fourth-quarter
GNP.
The government today also releases lhe November consumer
prlce Index, which rose 0.3 percent
during October. Aleading analyst IS
predicting a 0.5 percent rise In
November's prlces, spurred by
higher mea! and fuel costs.

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Highway funds included in package

Classes out early

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SPECI~L S~LEI

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MEN'S FLANNEL

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WORK
SHIRTS
Save on wr fine selection ol

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solids, colorful patterns men's

!Jlaity flannel shirts. Regular
sizes tal~ and big sizes to·20.
100'11 cotton lu! tal~. two lllt·
ton flap pockets.

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S16.95 flannels ............ s13.50
S18.95 flannels ............ su.oo
$21.95 Flannels ........... s17.50
95 Flannels ........... 518.30

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BLOUSES

WOMEN'S
DRESSES
Missyand Hall Size fall dresses.

MEN'S

BUXTONe
BILLFOLDS

Missy and edra size open
stock blouses. Casual and
dressy style in an array of
colors and prints.

Reg. sa

All new shades and designs for
the season. Missy sizes 6 to 20;
Half sizes 1211 to 24 \\.

S1J75 to
~/:.d .S502·5

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REGULAR 56.59

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VHS FORMAT - T~20

louses .......... 16.39
Reg.S14
.
Blouses ••••••• S11.19
Reg. $11
Blouses ....... 514.39 .
Reg. 121
Blouses .....:. 516.79

Rtg. '15.00 to 167.00

An excellent ·selection ol quality leather bill·
folds in popular styles and colors. Boxed ready to give. Save!

$up81 Sps~lq/

113.00 to '14.00 ......... Sale *10.10
115.00 to 117.00.--.5alt *12.80
117.50 to '11.50 ......... 5ale 114.40'
125,00 to '27.50 ......... Sale 120.80

$488

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TIL 8:00 P.M.

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fl6trtelia :
'MillOY, Mit
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POMEROY, OH.
l&gt;
MERRY CHRI~TMAS • MERRY CHRISTMAS• MERRY &lt;:;11RISTMAS• MERRY CHRISTMAS• MER~Y CHRISTMAS· MERRY CHRISTM AS~ lll
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WOMEN'S

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·MERRY C~RISTMAS·

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OSP makes point
during crackdown

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Celeste wants Riffe
as his running mate

�''Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON ?.REA

~~ I"T'-...._..,...,.........,c:;l,.,.,.

csm~

'q:lv
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

•

PAT WWTEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Aulstanl Publlsber/Controller

General Manarer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor

Page-2-The Deily Sentilel

Friday, December 20. 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Friday. December·20, 1986

OSU tops Flyers

Mad at whom?______---.,..w;_i_llin_m_F_._Bu_ck:...._ley...:...._Jr.
They are au saying tbat the
House Rfopublicans' Initial refusal
to go along with the tax bW ls a
great, perhaps even a conclUsive,
defeat for the leadership al Ronald
Reagan. Waal, Jet's look again at
that one.
It Is not unfair to say that a Jot of
Republican congressmen.are sore.
AI Reagan? Alittle bit, because Mr.
Reagan's timing was off on this one.
He was cool toward the Rosten lwwski bW over the weeks and
months ol Its development, and
when stumping for a "tax relorrn"

bW the hazy Impression went out wled overwhelmingly (60 ilerrent
that he was tlr a bill, but not quite to 40 percent) for Reagan in the last
this bW. He lett, yes, the Impression election, Stakbanovlte gerrymandthat It wasn't too good a bill as ll ering by the state legtslaiures
stood 001 that when It got to - following the 1~ Census visited
conference, 1llE' Republican Senate upon Congress a House of Reprewould fix It up. Mind you, these sentatives composed 60 percent to
were Impressions-at-large. The 40 percent of Democrats. So tbat to
president's fonnal approval·of the begin with, the Republican conDemocratic bill wasn't enunciated gressman feels !bat he is being
until a lew days before the vote.
cheated by the DeJT~~~Crais.
·
Meanwhile, Republican conThen there was a real tug-d.-war
gressmen were every day, In every aver wbo should be SEIIted !rom
way, frustrated. Although the southwest Indiana, ' the Democrat
majority of tJII&gt; American people or the Republlcan. About tlis one

LETTERS OF OPINION are welco!TM.'. They should bf 165 than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to edltlng and musl be slgnt&gt;d with name, address and
telfPbone number. No unsigned lettt'rs will bt pubUshed. L&lt;'tters should be In
good taste, addrt"Ss,lng Issues, not personalities.

What lawmakers
want from Santa
- Members of Congress are using their franking prlvllege to dispatch
·· letters to the North Pole assurlng Santa Claus they have been good and
· . therefore deserve gtn-fllled stockings.
· • Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., l!lld Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., with visions of
jelly beans dancing In their heads, both want the same big white bouse on
·Pennsylvania Avenue !bat features an oval-shaped office.
But so do Sen. Robert Dole, the Republican leader !rom Kansas, and
other lawmakers, which presents a dilemma for the blpartlsan St. Nick.
Sen. Jesse Heims, R-N.C.. made it rE'iatively E'asy lor Santa by asking
only for CBS.
RE'p. Phil Crane, R-111., has his hE'art set on a private parking lot at
Washington's Nallonai Airport with a big sign warning "Supreme Court
justices and ambassaors wtJJ be towed away.''
Arlen SpEcter, R-Pa .. wants to chair a Senate healing that will attract
enough media coverage to sate his hunger for publlcily for at least 24 hours.
Witnesses would include prostitutes, drug deaiE'rs, junkies, molested and
runaway children and abused spouses of either gender.
Sen. Phil Gramm, the erstwhile Texas "boll weevU" wbo defected from
tJII&gt; Democrats to tJII&gt; Republicans, wants one rl those tOy magician's sets
that will make It appear he bas figured rut how to balance the budget.
Rep. Bill Alexander, D-Ark .. a lower-ranking member of the top House
leadership, would like a junket to a warm climate on which he Is not Dying
lree aboard a huge and virtually empty Air Force DC-9.
Sen. John Warner, R-Va .. wants to take aver as chairman c1 the SenatE'
Armed Services Committee. but the former spouse of screen beauty
Ell2abeth Taylor knows be cannot ask Santa for the job until Sen. Barry
Goldwater relires In 1987.
Rep. Silvio Conte, R-Mass., wants a truly loud sports coat .- one even
noisier than those already in his closet and which wlliland him a spot Cll the
Jist of AmeriCa's worst-dressed men.
To dispel the notion that only congressmen are less adept at flstlcu!fs
tban baseball players, Rep. Robert Dornan. the conservative California
-Republican, wants a rematch c1 his skirmish to "straighten the tie" of
- •Jlt&gt;eral New York Democrat Tom Downey .
:
Rep. Henry Gonzales, D- Texas., wants at least a handful of trurlsts In
"'· the gallery when he makes those long speeches to an empty House
: . chamber durlng "s..,...ial orders."
·
"'. On tJII&gt; Senate side,
..--Democratic leader Robert Byrd of West VIrginia
: would like a few listeners on hand wbo are more adept as students than
: : glassy- eyed reporters when he lecfures bootomlzlngly on the history of
: · "the world's greatest deliberative body."
:
Democratic Rep. Barbara Mikulski told Santa she wants the Maryland
•• seat in tbe Senate being vacated by Republican Charles Mathias.
•• Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fia., born at the turn rlthe century and at Ri the
; · oldest member d. Congress, got an early Chlstmas gtn- a phony doctoral
-: degree in psycboiOI!Y !rom a Los An~les "diploma mUI."
: "I always wanted to be Dr. Pepper," quipped the Dean rl Capitol Hill,
:: wbo credited his staff Investigators for demonstrating how an estimated
: • half mllllon Americans, including practicing physicians, have been able to
: : buy fraudulent degrees and credentials.
. What Pepper really wants from Santa are full stockings for lbe nation's
: - elderly.
&lt; And in this season of giving, his congressional colleagues want for
: ; ~r a lot more Christmases.

r.·Letter to. editor

Big city mayor complaining

..·

Cleveland Mayor George Volnl: : vtch 1.1 using strong language lately.
::

: •He says congressional leaders and
: · the Reagan Administration are
• "cowards" lor the way they plan to
• • cut the de!lclt. Votnlvich sees awfUl
: : things happening to Cleveland
· :residents It the planned proposals
'· •.110 lhroUgh '
;• Volnivlch wants taxes raised and
; ' more money p&gt;ured Into social
~- programs. There is a new book rut
. :called "Losing Ground, by Charles
·.;Murray." This book is popular
:;reeding In Washington. The book
, .explains wbat a colossal !allure the
~:welfare program has been. The
:·mlef beneficiaries of the welfare
:: p-ogram has been the people that
•.admntster it. Governor Richard
:;Lamm. a leading derrocratlc voice
~·in America also thinks our welfare
;p-ogram as is bas been a faUure.

..

.

A fair assumption Is that Mayor
Volnlvich thinks that the federal
deficit ls a horrendous and Inexplicable blight to tbe American way d.
life. He likely wants It cut but
doesn't want the cutting to affect
him.
Mayor Volnlvlch didn't complain
loudly when some of the major
cities Including Cleveland got specialized treatment !rom ihe tax
wrtlers in Washington wben they
were given the privilege of floating
oonds to bulld a dome covered
sports arena. Cleveland needs a
place to play. This remindS me ct
the ancWr!t Romans. The empire
was falling to pieces. It was
recorded that an the people thought
about In those days was "bread and

"Whose great idea was it to involve Britain in Star Wars?"

there was simply no doubt on the
question of wborn the majorlty of
the voters wanted. But there was
the technicality .. . and slnre the
Constitution says tbat the Congress
Is the sole judge of the qualifications
of Its members, the Democratic
Congress, arrantly using Its major·
tty powers, seated the Democrat.
By that time In the House or
Representatives it was near
Hatfield-McCoy tlme.
So Mr. Rostenkowskl's committee takes .up the Idea of tax reform,
which was the Idea, in the first
instance, of two Republicans,
Kemp and Roth, then the klea d
another Republican, Ronald Reagan, followed by here and there
some Democrats like BradieyGepbardt. But the Republicans
tried and tried to rescue In the bUI
those provisions that made it
especially attractive In the first
lnstanre. But is was not easy to
llJerate. In that committee, their
membership was reduced to 2-to-1.
So that they laced a quit extraordinary humiliation. Though representing the party tbal bad won 60
percent ct the vote, they wielded, in
committee, 35 percent of the vote.
Now the bill goes to the Door, and
grouchy Republicans are appeased
only by the conviction tbat when the
bill comes up, individual weaknesses in It can be !'Jbllcly
discussed and voted on In the run
House. But ydU see, in order to get
the bill approved In the first place,
Mr. Rostenkowski bad had to
guarantee special interest groups
that he would protect the rozy little
anomalies, and since these were
extravagantly vulnerable, his strategy required that the House be
denied the ~portunlty to look them
publicly In the face, and tell the
world they were spinach and the
hell with them.

War by proxy_·..___ ___;.___Ja_ck___,;_An-:-d-e_rs_on_&amp;_D_a_le_~_an_A_tta_
WASHINGTON - The evidence
is overwhelming tbal Iran is
waging an undeclared war on the
United States.
We have disclosed Iranian culpability for tJII&gt; torture-lndured death
of CIA agent WUJiam Buckley In
Tehran last April. We bave also
disclosed the contents or a telephone Intercept tbat proved reyond
question Iran's collusion In the
bloody hijacking of a Kuwaiti plane
a year ago; it resulted in the savage
murder of two American government employees.
Since that tilcklent In December
1984, even more evidence has been
uncovered that adds to the (X'OOf .or
Iranian involvement. Several of the
pieces were first disclosed In a
recent Reader's Digest story by
Nathan Adams, "Anatomy of a
Hijacking."
From tbal evidence and other
sources, we have put together a
chronology of the Kuwait Airways
FUghl 221 hijacking:
Nov. 22, 1984: Four men mel In ·
eastern Lebanon to plana hijacking
with American and Kuwait passengl!rs as their targets. One ot the
plotters was a young Lebanese
ShUte Moslem, All Al-Yafl; another

was Iran's amiJBssador to Syria, The White House ordered that a
crack anti-terrorist unit be put on
Ayatollah Mohtashami.
Dec. 3: A dozen men, possibly alert for a possible flight to the
including Iranian government offi- Middle East.
cials, conversed earnestly throughDec. 5, morning: Al-Yafistrutted
out tJII&gt; night In the Tehran airport up and down the plane aisle
restaurant. long after closing time. displaying Iranian newspapers
Dec, 4, pre-dawn: Thirty minutes with graphic reports of Hegna's
after Filght-221 took off from Dubal murder. Delivered with the papers
airport In the United Arab Emi- were coils of rope and an additional
rates, lour terrorists hijacked the pstoL
plane and forced tiE !Iloilo land at , Dec. 5: Another AID dflclal,
Tehran. Tbe dozen men left the William Stanford, was shot and
airport restaurant after the plane thrown out of the plane. The two
remaining Americans aboard were
landed.
Among the passengers on Flight tied up and one was nearly choked
221 were two Iranian agents posing to death with tbe Iranian-supplied
as students. Their job was to mingle rope.
Meanwhile, AI-Yafl was conwith the passen~rs and report any
ferring with Iranian negotiators
resistance plans.
Dec.4, late morning: Charles linked to terrorist training renters
Hegna, an Agency lor International In Iran. Two of the d.flcials were
Development official, was shot and overheard using the hijackers' real
dumped rut of the plane onto the names.
Dec. 6: Kuwait's prime minister
tarmac.
sent
an urgent request to Tehran·
Dec. 4. · early afternoon: The
National Security Agency Inter- thai Iran take "all necessary
cepted a telephone call between measures" to protect the bostages's
Ambassador Mohtashaml and 1llE' Jives. Kuwaiti offtclals requested an
foreign ministry In Tehran. The call ee.rly rescue attempt, but Iran later
clearly established the Iranian claimed It didn't bave Kuwaiti
government's involvement In the permission to storm the plane.
Dec. 7: An Iranian foreign
hijacking, and Included a discus·
ministry
official Interviewed reslon about flying the plane to Beirut .
0

•

leased passeng!!rs and asked If
anyone had considered trying to
overpower the hijackers. One
foolishly saki several passen~rs
bad weighed the posslbUity. Within
minutes, Al-Ya!l threatened to
shoot another hostage unless the
plotters Identified
themselves.
I
When nobody confessed, AJ-Yafl
made all the Pakistani passen~rs
. swear on the Koran tbat they would
not resist.
Dec. 8: The two surviving
American hostages were brutally
beaten and burned with cigarettes.
Dec. 9: One of the hijackers
changed !rom his jogging clothes to
a suit and tie. Minutes later, an
obviously choreographed rescue
was made by Iranian securtty
forces. The hijackers were never
tried. Ali ballistic evidence was
removed from the bodies d. the two
dead Americans before they were
turned over to the U.S. authorities,
so the murder weapons could never
be traced.
Footnote: Only after President
Reagan and Syrian President
Hafez Assad secretly accused Iron
of complicity In the hijacking did
the Tehran government stage its
rescue.

Incompetence champ.______Ro_b_er_tWt_a_lte_rs

PHILADELPHIA (NEA) - If there Roscoe L. Egger Jr. aays tbe clalma severe problel!ll was disclOIMid. the Other service centers have their
is a shrine for taxpayers who have are "sheer, utter _
_..
Pblladelphia facility had a reputatioo share of problellll (IRS olficiall acyearned for retribution against the InOn the other hand, an lnvestiption lor rudeness and it~~ensitlvlty In deal· knowledge that a supervisor at "the
lerna! Revenue Service, It is a squat. completed lui month by tbe General 'ing with tbe public. Letters are unan- Austin site last year ordered the
undialinguished building on the north- Accountinc Office showed tllat the awe~. telephone calls are !pored shredding of 6,000 letters of complaint
ern edge of this city.
Philadelphia Service Center waa and payments are unrecorded In many from taxpayers) but Phlladelpbla's
It Is here that the IRS finally has re- ahead of the nine llimllar IRS facilities imtances.
· laal·place status remains ~ndiaputed
ceived Its comeuppance, auffering in every cateeory of ·incompetence
and unchallenged.
through the misery, humiliation and aad Inefficiency.
embarrassment it sometimes imposes
Tile service centers, which process
upon taxpayers.
all tax retu1111, are located In PhilaThe Jist of ..-nt calamities at the delpbia; Atlanta; Cincinnati; Andover,
IRS Philadelphia Service Center ia a Maa.; Austin, Texu; Brookhaven,
catalog of virtually everything that N.Y.; Fresno, Calif.; Ka111111 City, Mo.;
.:auld have gone wrong - including MemphiJ, Tenn.; and Olden. Utah.
massive computer breakdowns, major \ All received ·new·mainframe COJJI.
management miscalculations and em- puler systems laat year, but only In
ployee lncompentence of extraordi· Phlladelpllla did the triDIItlon tn th•
drcuSes.''
nary magnitude.
new equipment become tllorou£hly
First, It was Ted Turner and em. nlen It was General Electrlc and
Item: Earlier this year, a malnte- . befouled by both technical problellll RCA. Now It's the American Clvll Liberties Union and the Justice
Gayle Price
nance employee examining a trub and personnel inadequacies.
• Department.
barrel on a loading dock came across The subsequent errors and delays In
"We thought we'd get rur bid in early," said ACLU Executive Director
more than 100 envelopes containing processing returns produced a delu~
Ira
Glasser.
•
. scores of tax returns and checks total- of telephone calls and correspondence
The ACLU, tongue firmly In cheek, offered Wednesday to takeover the
ing SUO,OOO - all of which had been from Indignant taxpayers - wblcb the
thrown away.
service center also was Incapable of nation's law enfon:emenl agency, mtlng II would be right in keeping with
Item: On two occasions lut year, handling.
President Reagan'-' desire to turn over government programs to the
private sector.
·
·
dozeoa
of
tax
returns
that
had_
been
Durlngmucho!lhecrisls,tbepublic
r
.
.
at
the
center
were
diSCOvwas
misled
and
deceived
by
the
IRS
procu1ed
'"llte Justice Department has abandoned its obligation to enforce the
;: TodaY Is Friday. Dec.:!&gt;, the Ii4th day of 19111 with 11 I~ foOow.
e~ by Cllllodians after tbey bad bee,n which refused to acknowled&amp;e the ex: nation's clvU rights laws," Glasser said In a telephone lntervkiw from New
• : The moon is moving toward Its run phase.
dumped Into wastebaskets 10 women 1 tent of the disaster until contre~~~onal York. "It's been fair to say that in the last few years, organizations like the
•· '!be morning stars are Mercury, Venus. Mars and sa tum.
waah~committees, newspapers ani! the GAO ACLU have had to function like ~lvate attorneys general."
•.' '!be evening star is Jupiter.
Item. As many as 175;000 taxpayers lalmched Independent investl•atlona
GJai,ter said that when he learned last weekend ofReagan'sintent to sell
•. 1'lloSe born on this date are Wider the sign r1 sagittarius. They include in the Mld·Atlantlc states bave re•
·
The one-story buildlnJ here, wblcb the Federal Housing Administration, "It seemed as If the administration
: ' laduslrlalisl Harvey Firestone in llMII, philosopher Susanne K. Lan~:!!r In celved notices from the Pblladelphla
nucleer pbyslclst Robert Van de Graaff In 1901, and actress Irene Service Center IDCOrrectly alleging sprawls over an area the slae of six was trying to rid Itself d. all government obligations.''
that they were delinquent in submit- foott.~il fields and emrloys about
· . Dunne In 1901 (age 81). ·
ling returns or payments to the IRS. 3,800 people at the peako the tax sea· ' '!be administration, saying many go\lernment agencies would qJerate
·: On thiS date In history:
·
1n addition there bave been recur· son, serves Pennsylvania, Maryland, better aa part or the private sector, also has tried to sell the goverrment's
: · In 1800, the United States formally took over territory acquired !rom rent reports ~f frutrated employees Delaware and lh\ District of weather satelllte retwork. The Transportation Department oow Is working
to arrange the purchase of Conran, the government-owned rau freight
shredding, sluffing Into drawen and Columbia.
: ' France In the Louisiana Purchase.
.
'
.
: In 18M, Union Gen. Wllllam Sherman completed his "march to the sea" carting away coundess returns
The service center rn:::.ers aay system.
avoid having to process them.
· they are "deeply cooce
" about
Glaaaer said be has not beard !rom department d.!Jcialsabout hlsrlfer.
• aci'OII the defeated South and arrived In savannah, Ga.
Tbe
numbers
of
returns
run
through
their
battered
reputation
and
claim
to
Attorney General Edwin Meese was oot available for comment
: In 19:zl, the 14 Russian republics we~ combined to form the Unbn of
paper shredders baa been varlouly es- be "workllll diligently" to make need- Wednesday, oot a department spokesman, IJBrely containing a snort of
Soclallst Republics.
'
tlmated at 7,000, 20,000 and ~0,000, ~ lmprovemenllln time for the lth derision, said: "Must bave been a slow day at the ACLU In New York.
. : In 1976, Ml\yor Richard J. Daley ot Chicago died at age 74.
but lbole allegations have never been t.u:: season.
Otherwise, no comment."
.
• In 1983. Greyhound oos drivers ended a fl1 ay strike.
confirmtd and IJlll Commissioner
But even before the recent spate of
(

Justice Department snorts
at ACLU pu~chase offer

,

::1895
•

•

f

·:Soviet

,f

•

By United Press International
The big play for No. 18 DePaul
Thursday night came In the form of
a little jumper.
Freshman Rod Strickland hit a
short field goal with just 14 seconds
left and added a pair of free throws
with only two seconds to go, lifting
the undefeated Blue Demons to a
70-67 victory over Northwestern.
Northwestern opened a fivepoint lead early In the second haU
and stayed with the bigger Blue
Demons for the entire contest.
Northwestern fell to 5-3 with the
loss.
Kevin Holmes led DePaul with 18
points, 14 In the first half.
Northwestern led 32-31 at the half
and scored the first four points of
the second half to take a 36-311ead.
DePaul scored seven of the next
eight points to take a ~7 lead.
Freshman Rod Strickland capped

the outburst with a three-point play.
Northwestern battled to within
~5 with 59 seconds left on two free
throws by Shawn Watts, but
Strlcklaillf made the jumper and
tlten the lree throws to close out the
victory.
In other games, North Carolina
State handled Wake Forest 77-64,
Ohio State defeated Dayton 80-73
and Washington beat Brigham
Young 74-68.
At Raleigh, N.C.. Chris Washburn scored 22 polntsandgrabbeda
game-high 12 reboll)lds to lift North
Carolina State past Wake Forest in
the Atlantic Coast Conference
opener lor both teams. Washburn,
who scored 16 points and grabbed 9
rebounds In the first half and Wake
Forest's 5-!oot-3 Tyrone Bogues, the
smallest player In the ACC, scored
15 points.

"The Stockings Were Hung
by the Chimney With Care ..!'
.

' 11

A little ·extra care is always a good idea
around potentially hazardous holiday fireplaces, candles and decorations.
So please be careful! Happy Holidays
from your Grange agent.

'

f

~ "'',
0

next

TIGHT DEFENSE -Dayton's Negele Knight gets his shoulder Into
bhio State's Curtis Wilson as he drives around Wilson to the hoop.
Looking on at back Is Dayton's Anthony Grant. Ohio State woo the first
contest between the two schools In 112 years. UP!.

Players' union still opposed to _drug
NEW YORK (UP!) -Themajor
league baseball players' union
Thursday reasserted' Its opposition
to mandatory drug testing for
players and announced tbat major
leaguers would promote mateliais
urging children to avoid drugs.
Donald Fehr, executive director
of the Major League Baseball
Players Association, said at a news
conference that the union's executive board discussed Baseball
Commissioner Peter Ueberroth' s
repeated calls for mandatory drug
testing at Its annual meeting two
weeks ago IJi Hawaii.
"The conclusion of the executive

The Daily Sentinel

board was that approach was
simply not an app~prlate place to
go," Fehr said.
"On a very fundamental basis,
the kind of approach which suggested mass urine testing of all
Individuals - Including the overwhelming majority that everybody
agrees are not suspected of any
Inappropriate activities -Is funda mentally inconsistent witlt some
very basic and fundamental values
that this society is based upon."
Fehr said the players' union had
come to the "reluctant conclusion"
that the team owners were not
Interested In negotiating a joint
resolution of baseball's drug
problems.

To combat some team owners'
recent insertion of drug-testing
clauses Into Individual players'
contracts, Fehr said the union had
amended an existing complaint
before the National Labor Rela !Ions Board. The union contends the
owners are trying to avoid negotialions on the Issue by writing
drug-testing clauses into Individual
contracts:
Fehr said the players want to
contribute to the long-term solution
of drug abuse by teaching children

stay away from them."
The Players Association wUI
work with Playmore, Inc., a New
York-based publisher, to promote
the sale a! coloring books and books
of games and puzzles based on the
theme, "It's OK to Say No to
Drugs," Fehr said.
The books will be patterned on
another successful series, similarly
titled, which dealt with child abuse.
A spokesman lor the publisher said
4Y,r mliUon copies of lOOse books
had been sold In a year.

'

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at an early age to avoid drugs.
"The message has to be gotten .J.
out to children," be said. "Getting. •
involved In drugs fi bad. It's going
to be bad lor you and you ought to

A Dtvtslon ol Mulltmedla, Inc.

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1985 SEDAN DEVILLE Front wheel drive,

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18th
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FRIDAY DECEMBER 20th
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''Loaded
wlflt Suggested Retail Price 522,652.00 SALE PRICE

0,,,••,. . .---------------------

I

in history
0

DePaul defeats Northwesterrt

By GENE CADDES
"They got down eight, took a time
UPI Sports Writer
Let's hope Ohio State and Dayton out and came out and executed
don't walt another 52 years before their offense and won the game.''
Miller was happy with the way
they meet again In basketball.
Thursday night's Buckeye- Flyer his team came hack against the
clash in St. John Arena, won by Flyers.
"From the time we were down
Ohio State, lll-73, was a winner !or
eight, I was pleased with our play,
ooth teams.
.
The Buckeyes, down 53-45 five both offensively and defensively,"
minutes Into the second half, put he said. "Dayton doesn't give you
together a 19-.'1 run over a s 1x and a anything. They make you earn
half minute stretch to go on top 64-56 things. Nothing comes easy when
and never led by less than five the you play Dayton."
Donoher, ·too, was complimenrest of the way.
tary
to the Buckeyes.
During that time, UD lost
·
"The)&lt;
showed me a lot the way
starters Anthony Grant (13: 52) and
Damon Goodwin \8: 11) on fouls and they came back," said Donoher.
had another starter- Dave Colbert "During that stretch, they had the
_- pick up a costly fourth personal. balll2 possessions and scored on 11.
"We took Colbert off \Brad) Most of the lime, !bat wUI win the
Sellers and put him on (Clarence) game fqr you."
Dennis Hopson, wbo entered the
McGee," said UD Coach Don
Donober, "and they started posting game as the nation's leading scorer
McGee. II was a chess game out at 28.3 points per game, led Ohio
State with 23 points, while Sellers
there.''
McGee scored only 10 points in and Curtis Wilson had 13 each and
McGee 10. Sellers also grabbed 17
t~e game, but nine of them came
after Colbert picked up his fourth rebounds.
Colbert lf!d all scorers with a
foul.
28 points, while Ed
career-high
Donoher felt tlte loss of Goodwin,
Young
bad
22
and freshman Negele .
who bad four personals in the first
Knight
15.
balf, was particularly costly to his
"Knight is an unusual freshteam.
"We didn't have Damon rut their man," said MUier, who tried to
tonight," said Donoher, "but, wbo recruit the 6-foot-2 guard from
knows, he might not have scored Detroit. "He's not a regular
freshman. He's one of the best point
anyway."
Aner the Buckeyes fell behind by guards In the country."
Elsehwere In Ohio oollege basketeight points, Ohio State Coach
bali action Thursday night, Wright
Eldon Milier called lime out
"I told them the
guy who State rolled to a 107-79 win over
shot !rom the outside wouldn't play Northeast Ullnois; Eastern Kenagain for a montlt," said Miller. "! tucky whipped Wlimlngton, 78-6;J;
Grove City (Pa.) nipped Baldwinstressed getting the bali Inside."
Asked the turning poln~ Donoher Wallace, 57-55; and Tampa
thumped CedarvUie, 99-72.
bad a very simple answer.

·..·

~:Today

The Daily Sentinel Page-3

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TUESDAY, DECEMBER 24th
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FOR YOUR SH4)P.PING CONVENIENCE

•
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..

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�\

.Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 20. 1985 .

Friday, December 20, 1985

Cincinnati acquires Gullickson in six player trade
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The Cincinnati proved that it's on the an estimated $!Dl,mla year, was a
Cincinnati Reds and Montreal move up,) think the future wlll blld factor In the Expos trading him.
Expos Thul1!day traded six play- a lot of happy moments for the "But I think the principal reason
ers, including four pltch\!rs, In a Reds."
was that they WI!!\ ted two or (hree
move that both teams hope wlll
As for what the Expos got out of young feUows to give them more
bolster their starting rotations.
the deal, GuWckson figured they starters. Gull1ckson couldn't do It
The Reds acquirEd pitcher am were "looking for a Cllllple of himself."
Gullickson and reserve catcher Sal pitchers to fill their staff."
"They got three pitchers that
Buterainexchangeforpltchei'$Jay
"In the last couple of )"!ars, the were in the big leagues last year
Tibbs, Andy McGafflgan, John Montreal front office has changed and that should help them," Rose
Stuper and catcher Dann quite a bit," he noted. "They're said of the Expos, the team he
Bllardello.
trying to rebutld. We were supposed played for half a year before
"I think we're going to have the to win It an In the early '80s and rejoining the Reds.
finest pitching staff that we'veever never Uved up to the bWJng."
GuWckson wW join Marlo Solo,
seen," said Reds' owner Marge
Reds General Manager BDI Tom Browning and recently ac·
Schott, "and now (manager) Mr. Bergesch said It was his under- qulred John Denny in the Reds
(J1:te) Rose has no excuse not to standing that Gullickson's salary, starting rotation. A week ago,
give me a World Series In 1986."
Rose said he did not understand
why Montreal wanted to get rid d
the right- handed GuWlckson, who
had a 14-12 record and 3.52 earned
run average last season. He has a
career mark of 72-61 and a 3.44
ERA.
"! don't think there's a manager
in the league that wouldn't want
Gullickson," Rose said. "He told
me last year during the season he
wanted to go somi'Where."
Gullickson admitted he had been
a little more spectflc than that when
he Chatted with Rose.
"When Pete played for us, I
NOW EXPO!i - Catcher enjoyed playing with him," said
Dam Bllardelo, tqJ, and Gullickson. "When he went to
pitcher Joho S&amp;uper, boUom, Cincinnati I was wondering If I
were &amp;wo of four pJasen traded could get tNer there. I was ready lor
. . Thursday by the Clncbmali a change. I mentioned it to him
around the batting cage.
Gel Our CM-.t Clllor 1111111111' It No Clllrll
Reds to lbe Moatreal Expos fGr
"I feel honored Pete wanted me
Wilen You ~ 1 Tllldy _, Cont!lutlrl
righthander pltdler Bll Gullick· to play for him. Last year,

Cincinnati acquirEd Denny from might end up In the minor leagues
the Pblladelphl~ Phlllles In ex· because the club has declded to
cl\ange for relief pitcher Tom carry only 24 players on the Reds
Hume and outfielder Gary Redus. roster next year ln a cost· cutting
RosesaldglvmgupTibbswasttle ·· mdve: RoSe' said the Reds wlll
hardest part of the deal. Tibbs, 23, probably carry two catchers, Bo
was 10.16 With Cincinnati last year Dfaz and Dave Van Gorder.
and 1·2 with ttle Reds' Denver farm
McGafflgan, 29, will be returning
team.
to Montreal. He came to the Reds
"Tibbs is a tremendous prospect, last year In a trade for Dan
but Gulllckson's not an ad man. To Driessen. He was 3-Jlor Cincinnati
get quality you've got to give up and 11·5 for Denver last season.
some quality," Rose said.
Stuper, 28, who worked mostly in
Butera, 33, batted .:nl In 67 middle relief lor the Reds, was S.5
games for the Expos in 1985. He has last season. PrPVk&gt;Usly, he played
also played for Minnesota and for St. Louis.
Detroit. Rose Indicated that Butera

r--.....:..---------------------------------------.
~EJ
Most Stores Open Late

Pride, inCentive for Buckeyes in Citrus Bowl
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -Ohio
State coach Earle Bruce feels pride
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Buckeyes in tl)eir Citrus Bowl
meeting Dec. 28 against Brigham
Young.
The Buckeyes, who finished a

disappointing 8-3 season with backt&lt;rback losses to Wisconsin and
Michigan, leave for Orlando, Fla.,
at noon Saturday and will hold five
woritouts there prior to the game.
"We really want to win this
game," said Bruce. "We don't want
to lose three In a row. I think our
klds have a lot a pride. We're not
· losers by any means."
. · Ironically, the only olt¥"r year an
' · Ohio State team coached by Bruce
; · has lost three consecutive gall)es, It

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EASTMEIGS-Attertratllng4·3
after the llrst period of play, the
Eastern Eaglettes reserve girls'
basketball team rallied to post a
25-14 win over Federal Hocking.
Beverly Wigal led the winners with
10 points. Jenny Cowdery grabbed
seven rebounds.
Federal Hocking was led In
scoring by Jamie Glass with 8.
Overall, Eastern's reserves are 2-3
and 1-2 In the league.

' ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii!:~~iiiiiiii~

• scr.- S1IIID Cnmtle 11ec11

·santa Claus
will be here
Sunday
December 22nd
12 Noon

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Pomeroy-;-Middlaport, Ohio

F

INGELS
ITURE .&amp; JEWELRY

Middleport

106 North 2nd
992-2635

$199

REGISTER FOR DEC. 24th DRAWING
OF SlOO OF CUT FLOWERS!

•
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FLORIST

llloifo Cou••y'o·Oidur Floriol
Ill IAitT MAIN

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POMEROY, OHIO •578D

e 1A I e '2 • 2 e 4 4 11:;.
,.
Send your poeetlnp with specitl W' cue. -

Middleport,

786 N.

Second St.

Ohio

�Page-6-The Daily Sa 1tinel

-

Friday, December 20. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

....
~

By The Bend

.·-

Taylor birth
Ell!~m~e'~N~:~o , SWISHER l LOHSE

Au;:~~:~··Str.O~
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Prescriptions
99l· l91S
Pomerov

~

Rutland, O~io U71S

wm. "a ill" Brown. Owner

Read the
(lf\SSiffD
ADS

Pomeroy

992·3325

m
1..1:::!
MillO~

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949·2550

Middleport·
Pomeroy.'Oh.

214 Clllin
992·5130

Phone (614) 7&lt;7 1771

216 S. Second

·

- I Corinthians 7:7

INSURANCE
SERVICES

TEAFORD REALTY

ReadtheBestSeaer

" ... every man
hath his proper
gift of God."

~. ·.

Brown's Fire &amp;
and
Equipment Sales
Serv.ct
J.

GOD SENDS THE GIFT OF HIS LOVE
FOR us ALL T'0 SHARE

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins . Co.
of Columbus, 0 .

104 w. Main
"2-Ull Pometo-y

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John F . F.utt1, Mqr.
Ph . "2· 110t
Pomeroy

II

RACINE PlANING MILL ', RALL'S
Mill Work·

Cabinet Making

~~~~:·~N ·

Syracuse
992·3978

••

1- • •

TRINrrY CHURa!, Rev. W. H. Pmtn.
postor; Dobbie Bucl&lt;. SUnday Schcd Supt
Onlrell School Ula.m.: WorshlpSetvtelO:ll
a.m. Q10ir rehoarsal, 1\lesday, 7: :JJ p.m.
wvlet' dln!dlon ci Lots Burt.
POMEROY CHURa! OF TilE NAZA·
RENE, Corner Unioo and Mulberty, Re.&lt;.
Thomas Glm Mc:Oure. JIISior. Qyde Mender·
son, s. S. Sup&lt;.. SUnday School. ~:JJ a.m:
""""""'w&lt;nhlpltt:lla.m.: evt'lllng...W.6
p.m.; mJd.weelc service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURO!. 326 E.
Mala Sl.. ~ - Swxlay 5&lt;.'1Vic.'es: Hay
l'OITII11U1IIon on the (Irs! Sllnday ci each month.
and almblnod with ~ prayer ... ~
lhlrdd ~- Momng tn)'el' and sermon on
all other &amp;u1days &lt;I the month. Olurch SchoO
and Nu""'Y care p!'IJ'o'ldtd Gonre hour In lht

Parish Halllmmfdlaloly following the SE!VIce.

POMEROY CHURa! OF CIIIUSI', 212 W.
Mala St.. Nell Proudfoot, postor. Bible SchoO
9:l&gt;a.m.; MornlngY~tnhtp, lO:lla:m.; You1h
111fft1ngs. 6:00p.m.: Evmlng 11\nhlp, 7:00 p.
rn. Wl'llno9day "*hi prayer ITlC1.'1Ing and Bible
S1udy.' 7:tJl p.m.
'J1IE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butlemul
Ave .. Pomeroy. Mrs. lml Wining In cflarie.
Sunday hOlinEss rnet.'llng. 10 a.m.: ~nda.Y
SChool, 10: JJ a.m. Sunday School, YPSM
Etwe Adalm. _ . _ 7:Il p.m. SaJvatm
mE!l'tlng, various speakers aid music specials.

'Ilnmd3y. U:lla.m. 10 2 p.m. Ladies Homo
Uagut', membets ln ('1\arge, an Wt'fTl'l'l
Invited: 6:45 p.m. Thw&gt;day. Corps Cad!'1
Qasss 1Yoong l'oojlle-Biblel, 7:JI p.m. Bible
Study and Pray..- """'~· q&gt;enlo the pulllk.
POMEROY WESTSIDE OIURCH OF
CHRISI'. 3:!226 01tldml's Home Road 1Coun~

Road 76). m -sna. Vocal music. Surday Wor11111&gt; !Oa.m.: Bible Study 1l a.m.; Worship. 6~
m. Wedlll!llla.Y, Bible Sllldy, 7 p.m.

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHR.ISTIAN
CHlJRCH. Cl1art&lt;s Hatfield. pastor: Linda
SWan. SUpt. Sunday SChool ~:II a.m.: prcecll·
tng - . 11n1 and third Sumay follmWig
!Oinday Sdml. Youlh rnet.'ling, 7: ll p.m .,.
ery Swllay.
.
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST,
Pre-aching 9:30a .m. first and second , Sundays of each month; thrd and fourth Sun·

day each month wonhlp sen·tces at 7: ll p.

m.; Wednesday ~venings at 7: 30 p.m.
Prayer and Bible Study.

SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST, Mull&gt;
nry Heights RA1ad, Pomeroy. John Swel·

gart: Sabbath School SUp!. Louise Staats.
Sabbath SChOOl, 2 p.m. Saturdday with
worship servl~ following at 3: 15 p .m.

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CH URCH
- Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sund ay
Sctlool9: :l) a.m.: Morning Wor ship, 10:i5

a.m.

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST , David

Mann, minister. William Snouffer, Sunda y

SCbOol Sup1. Sunday School, 9: 30 a.m.;
Morning Worship 10: .Jl a.m .

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Po·
mE'roy Pike. David Hunt, pastor: Jaek

Needs. Sunda y School Dlreector. Sunday
Scool, ~: ~a . m . : Mornlna Worship, 10:]);
evtnlnp: worship, 7:00p.m. Tuesday Vis!·
tatlon. 7 p.m. Wednesday, PrayC"r ser vic('.
7:.'JO p.m.; Mission Frtends. 7: 30p.m.:
Girls In Ac tion, 7: l) p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURC H. Bal·
ley Run Road, Rev. Em men Raws on, pa s·
tor. Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday School.
10 a.m.; Sunday evenlng servlce , 7 : 30p.m.
· Bible teaching, 7:l&gt; p.m. Thursday.
' SYRACUSE MISSION, CHerry St ., Sy·
racute. St&gt;rviCH , 10 a.m. Sunday. EvenlnR"
servlcPI Sunday and Wednt'Sday a t 7:00p.

mMIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRt sT
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev. Keith Eblin.
pastor. Sunday School 9: 30a.m. , WadP
Hayman, supt.; Mominp: Worship. 10:lla.
m.: Sunday evening Sf'rvlcP 7: 3&gt; p.m.:
Wedne-sda:v Prayer Mt&gt;etlng, 7::JJ p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF C.OD,
RaclnP. Rev. James 5atterftrid, pas1or.
Fr.ttman Williams, Supt. Sunday School
9:45a.m.: Sunday and Wedne5day t"VE'n·
tng services, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
Corner Sixth and Palmer. Earl Eden , Pu
tor. Ray Fields, S.S. Supt.: Dan Riggs,
Assl. Supt. Sunday SchoOl, 9: 15 a. m.:
Morning Worship, 10: 15 a. m.; Sunday
Evening service. 7 p.m. Youth mt't'tlng.
7:30p.m. Wtdnesday: evenlngservlce7p.
m.: Choir practice 8 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF C HRIST,
5th and Main, Bob Melton, minister. AI
Hartson, assoc . mlnlstE"r: Mtkt&gt; Ge-rlaC'h,
Sunday School Superintendent . Bible
School 9: :K&gt; a .m.; Morning Wors hip 10:30
a .m. EvPnlng Worship 7 : ~ p.m . Wed nrs·
day, 1:00 p.m. Pray('l' meeting .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE. Co-pastors Rev. Charlt&gt;s Coyle
and R.Pv. Nancy Coyle. Bill White- , Sunda~
School Supt. Sunday &amp;chool 9: 30 a.m.;
Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.; Eva ngelistic
meeting 7: 00p.m. Wednt'Sday, 7 : 00p.m.
Prayer meeting.
IJNITED PBESBVTERIAN MINlliTRV
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Rev. Ken Wllldn•oo
HARRISONVILLE PRE.SBYT.ERIAN
CHURCH - Sunday: Won hlp Services
9:00a.m.; ChurchSchool10:15a.m .: Bible
Sludy Sunday 7:30 p.m.: Pray er Group
WednesdaY at 9:00 a. m.
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN
Church 5c hool 10:15 a. m. Morning Wor·
ship 11: 15 a.m. '1'\JE'Sday, 10:00 a . m. Bible
Study: Thursday, 7:30p.m. Bible Study.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
TERIAN - WOr!hlp ,.rvlco 10: 15 a.m.
Church School 10:00a.m. Tuesday. 10a.m.
Bible Study: Sunday, &amp;p.m. Junlora ndSt·
nlor High Youth Groups.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD. P allor,
John Evans. Sunday School 10: 00 a.m.;
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00 a.m . ChlldNn's Church l1 a .m. Sunday Evl'nlng
service 7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. Young La·
dies' Auxiliary. Wfdnesday, 7 p. m . Fam.
II)' Worship.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Ncar
Long BottOm. Edsel Harl. pastor. Sunday
School 9.30 a. m.; Worship 10: 30 a.m.;
Prayer meeting Thursday,.T::rJ p .m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum. Ralph
cundlff,.pastor. Sl.lnday School tO: OOa.m.;
MornlilgWorshlp, 11:00 a.m.: Wednesday
and Sa~raay Evtptng Servict&gt;S at 7:ll p.
m.

•

Mr. HERMON UNITED BREI'HREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
Community off Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
Sanders, pastor. Don Will, layleader. Suaday S.hool 9: ll a.m.; Morning Worship
10:45 a.m.; Evening preachlncservlce second and tounh Sunday at 7:.'JJJ'.m.;
Christian EMeavor. first and thlr Sun·
day, 7: ~p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting
aDd Bible Study, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPIIECY.
Located on 0. J. White Road of Highway
160. Pat Henson, pastor. SundayScllool 10
a.m. Classes for 1111 !lges. Junior Church 1l

·"' MEIGS nRE
\ ' CENTER, INC. ·
ecem be r h as become th e gran d
Finale of the -ar,

BEN
;fFRANKLIN•

"f

J""'

Middleport. Ohio

No matter what you celebrate

K&amp;C JEWELERS

A.

u

~i,~i~ :O~Wc~\ t:.·;~~~~. ~!'t:;,gA#~'

When festive gatherings are planned;
The season of good cheer.

According to your CreeQ,
The holidays commemorate

J&lt;ccpsakt

A joyous time indeed ,

212 ~.·;;-;;;:,t
992·3785, Pomeroy

When you're invited to renew
Your faith without delay;

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARiliH
IJNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NOBTHEAST CLIJSTER
Re\', De Arclaer
ne•.S.ldOBJobu'"'
RoJ o ..•er
Re•.
ALFRED - Church School 9:30a.m.:
W hi II
UMYF 6 ~
MW
ors p, a.m .;
: oN p.m.; U
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Communion,
rlnt Sunday. lArcherl
CHESTER
W hi 9
Ch h
ors P a.m.:
urc
SchoollOa.m. ; Blblt&gt;Study, Thursday, 7p.
m.; UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.; Com·
munton,
JOPPAfirst Wor!hlp
Sunday (Archer
9:.ll a.m.:
!. Church
SchCJ91 lO::Jl a .m . Bible Study Wednesday,
- m . (J ohnson; .
7: ~p.
LONG BO'ITOM -Church School 9: 30
a.m.; Worship 7 p.m.: Bible Study. Wed·
nesda y, 7: 30p.m.: UMYF, Wednesday,
6: 00 p.m.; Communion First Sunday,
!Archer}.
REEDSVILLE- Church School9:30 a .
m. : Worship SE-rvice 11 :00 a.m. (Deeter l.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Church School 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a .m .;
Bible Stud)', Tuesda~ . 7: 30p.m.; UMW,
ThF lrdSTudesday, 7:hll p.m.: Communion
lrst un ay ~Arc en
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. James E. Corbitt
Rev. s.evea N~
le\'. Mel\11• Fraaklla
lie&gt;. C l e - S. Zoalaa, Jr.
Re-v. Alldrew a.1NIIIllar
ASBURY (Syracustl- Worship 11 a .m.
; Church Scb6oi9:45 a.m.; Chargt&gt; Bible
Study, Wednesday, 1:ll p.m.; UMW, first
Tut&gt;sday, 7:30 p.m.: Choir Rehearsal.
Wf'dnesday·6:30 p.m.; UMW, fourth Sunday, 6::.&gt; p.m. /Nelson) .
EN'TERPRJSE - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church School10 a.m.; Bible Study, Tues·
day, 7:30p.m .: !IMW. First Monday. 7: ll
p.m .: UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Re·
hea rsat, 6:30p.m. Wedn~d.ay. (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church Schoo\, 10a .m.
; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday. 7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m .
(Franklln L
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church School 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
Tuesday, 6: 30 p.m.; UMW, rtrs1Tuesday,
7: 30p.m. INelson I.
HEATH (Middleport 1-Church School ,
9: 30 a. m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Bible
Study, Tuesday, 10 a.m.; UMW, SE'COnd
Monday, '7: 30 p.m.; UMW Third Monday ,
7: 30p.m. IZuniga!
MINERSVILLE - Worship Sl&gt;rvlc"" 10
a .m .: Churrh School, 11 a .m.: UMW, third
Wednesday. l p.m.; Choir prac tice, Monda y, 7:l) p.m. !Nelson) .
PEARL CHAPEL- Worship Service 9
a .m .: Church School II a.m.: UMW Se·
cond Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m.; UMYF last
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. jRubenking l.
POMEROY -Church School, 9:15a.m.
: Worship tO: 30 a.m.; Choir rehearsal
WednfSday, 7:30 p.m.: UMW. second
Tuesday, 7:llp.m.: UMYFSunday, 6p.m.
(Corblll).
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: 1~
a .m .: Worship 10 a.m.; Blblc Study, Wed ·
nesday, 7:30p.m.: UMYF (SenionJ , Sun·
day. 5 p.m.; (Juniors) every other Sun ·
day, &amp;p.m. (Franklin) .
RUTLAND-Chu.rchSchool, 9:45a .m.;
Worshlp, 10: 30 a.m.: UMW iEvenlngCir·
cle ) ~and Wednesday, 7::11 p.m.: UMW
(ArternOCII Ctrct•t ,.cond Thursday, I p.
m . (Rubenklngl .
.
SALEMCENTER-ChurchSchooi!Oa.
m .: Wcrshlp9:45a.m. tRubenktna: J.
~ a.m.:
SNOWVILLE - Worshi p, 8:IN
Church School10 a.m. (Rubenklng) .

Your House of Worship urges you
liO enter there and pray.
While some light candieS With a prayer
And others deck the hall,
Throughout thiS season that

we

share

God's love will bless us all.
-

Gloria Nowak

l-----...-----------------------'
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Pomeroy·
Harrisonville Rd. Robert PurtE'II, minis·
tt&gt; r: Steve Stanley. s. ~· SUpt. ; Bill McEI·
roy, Asst. Supt.: Sunday School 9: :J:la.m.:
WouhlpservlcelO::lla.m.; Eveonln~twor·
shlp Sunday 7 p.m. andWodnosday, 7p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN'CHURCH, Pine
Grove. The Rev. William Mlddlrswarth,
pastor. Church service 9:.J) a.m.: sunday
School tO: :ll a .m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST.
John Wright , pas! or. Sunday School9: ll a.
m · Larry Hayn., s s Supl Mornlno
..
'
•
worship
10:30 a.m. ' ' '
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Thomas H. Collier, pastor.
Ora Bass. Chairman of the Board otChrls·
llan Life. Sunday School9:ll a.m.; Mornlng worship 10:30 a .m.: sunday t"VE'nlng
worship 7:30p.m. Prayer mef'rlng 7::.1 p.
m. Wednesda y.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN .CHURCH. Dex·
ter. Woody Call, pastor. Services Sunday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday. 7 p.m.

CARLETON INTERDENOMINAT!ON·
AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road . Rev. David Curfman, pastor. Sunda~ School 9::ll
a.m.; Ralph carl, Supt. Eventng worship
7:00p.m. Prayer l'l'leetlna, Wfdne,day
7:00p.m.
,LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN. JOOy
Holland, pa5tor; Willace Damewood,
Sunday School Supt. Wonhlp servletl, 9a .
m.; Bible School tO a .m.

.

!['·:

fl.m .

'

LaMT. OLI VEhCOM MUNMITYFCIHURCSH,
wrenct&gt; 8 ua , pas 1or. ax o ml.'r, r.
Supt. Sunday School and Morning.worship
9:30a.m.: SundayPvenlngservicr, 7p.m.:
Ydaouth meeting and Bible Study, Wedn es·
y, 7 p.m.
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Po·
meroy By-Pass. Rev . Robf:ort E. SmJtb,Sr.
pahsooltor . Me IvIn Dra ke. S . S. Supt. Sunday
9: 30 a.m .; MornlngWorshlpl0:30:
Evening Worship 7: .'1) p.m.; WednE'!Iday
Prayer Ser\llce. 7:30 p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad ·
St .. Mason. Sunday School ~0 a.m.: Morn·
lng worship 1t a.m.; Evening services p.
m. Prayer m('(ltln~ and Bible Study Wed ·
nesday, 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. fk&gt;v . Nylp
SBordden. pahstor . c ornPltus B~Anch. supl.
un ay Sc oo1 9: 30 a .m.: ox:rond and
fOurth Sunday!! worship SP.rvlcf' at 2:30 p.

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST , Steve
Deaver, Pastor. Robert Smllh, Sunday
School Supt .; Sunday School 9:l:l a.m.;
Morning worship 10:40 a .m.; SundBy
evening worship 7: )) p.m.: Wednesday
evening Bible study 7:30p.m.
BURLINGHAM OOMMUNITY CHURCH,
Burlingham. Ray Laudermllt, pastor; Robert Cozart, assistant putc:r. Sunday School
lO a.m.; w&lt;nhlp 7 p.m.; Wednesday, 6 p.m.
youth meeting: Wed ., 7p.m. churchsen1res.
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH,!!
mile off Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J. Watts, pastor.
Ln Ruuell, S.S. Supt. SundaySchoo19: :KJ
a.m.; Morning Worship 10 :30 a.m.: sun day evening serv~ce 7:30p.m.; Wednet·
day service, 7: :It p.m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Lillie,
putor. Steve Little, S. S. Supt. Sunday
Schoo110 a .m.: Morning worslp, n a.m.;
SWlday evening worship 7: :1) p.m. Prayer
meellnr and Bible !lludyThur5day, 7:30p.
m.; Youth me.llng Wednesday at? p.m.
REJOICING UFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunda y
SchoollO a.m. Sunday e\lenlng 7:00p.m.;
Mld·Wflek s•rvtce, Wed., 7 p .m.
LANGSVlLLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Robert E. Musst&gt;r, pastor. Sunday School
9:30a.m.; Paul MusSfr. supt.: Morning
worship l0:3J a.m. : Sunday evening ser·
vice, 7 p.m.; mid-week service, Wednesday, 1 p.m.
~
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE. Rev. Glenn McMIII•n. pastor.
Mary Janice Lavonder, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday Schooi9:.'J) a .m.; Mornlng
'In
wors hi p 10:...,
a.m.; Evanaellatlcaervlce,
6p.m.; Prayer and Prate Wednesday, 7p.
y lh
In
m.; ou meet g, 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BREI'IUIEN IN
CHRIST. Elden R. Blako, pastor. Sunday
SChool 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay Eader.
Morning sermon, 11 a.m.; Sunday night
services : Christian Endeavor 7:.Jl p.m.,
Song servlce 8 p.m. Preaching s: J'J p.m .
Mid
k
w
·wee prayer meet 1ng, ednesday, 1
p.m.

,,

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and ~
Main St ., Middleport . Re-v . Calvin Minnis, .''
pastor. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardner, supl.
Sundav School 9:30a .m.: Wor9hlp service :
10:45
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST •
-Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist. sunday :.
Bible Study 9 a.m.; Worship, 10 a.m.; Sun· •
day evening service 6 p:m.; Wednesday r
P\lenlng service, 7 p.m. .
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine, ..
Rt 124. William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
School 10 a.m.; Sunday t&gt;venlng service 1
p.m. Wednesday evening service 1 p.m . ;
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
Supt. Sunday School 9: ll a .m. Morn Ina
Worablp 10:30 a.m. Prayerstrvlce, altern- ,,
ate Sundays.

a.m.

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave. Rev . Clark Bakl"r, pastor. Carl Not· ,
ttngham, Sunday SChool Supt. Sunday
School 10 a .m. with classes ror all aget. '
EvenlnM Sf'IVlC'es at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl· :.
ble study at 7:30p.m. Youth services Fri·
day at 7:30p.m.
ECCLESIA FELLOV.SIUP, 128 Mill St ..
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson, ·
pastor. Sunday School 10 a .m.; Sunday .
evening servlC'es at7 p.m. and Wednesday
ser'vk'es at 7 p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,
pastor. Sunday School 9:-" a .m.; church
service 7:30p.m.: youth fellowship 6: ao p.
m.: Blblestudyr Thursday, 7:30p.m.
·•·
f11LL GOSPEL LIGHTIIJUSE. 3314!1 ''
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pal· l '
lor. Danny Lambert , S. S. Supt. Sunday ·
morning !fel'\llce at :k) a.m .; Sunday even-r l
tng service 7:30 p.m ..Tuesday and Thursday Servkes at 7: ~ p.m.
WORD OF FAITH, 93 MJII St., Mlddt ..
port , Sunday morning servlcr 10:15 a.m .;
Sunday evening 7:30. Thursday momlng

Bible 5tudy 10 a .m. Wednesday evening ·
7

' ~~WmHAVEN CHURCH OF n!E NA·

'

ZAR~E. RPv. Glendon Stroud, pastor.
Sund.ay SChool9: ~a. m.: Wor!lhlp ae-rvlee, ·•
10:30 a.m.: Youth service Spnday 6:15 p. ,.
m. Sunday evt!fllng:aervlce 7: 00p.m . Wed· ..
nesday Prayer MeetlnR and Blbk&gt; Study
7:00p.m.
NF.ASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun- '
day afternoon snvlct's at 2:30. Thursday ..
evening services at 7:ll.
·

FIRST BAPTIST CHUttt.:H . Mason, w.
Va . PaS!IIord, BIU Murphy . S!!!'daySchoollO _
a.m.; un ay f.'venlng 7: &lt;JU p.m. Prayer·~
meollng and Blblo study Wedn01day, 7: 30"'"
p.m. Everyooe Wflcome. ,
.. ..., '
RUTLAND
pFREE
T WILL BAPTIST,Sa· ~·
S R
1em t. ev. au 1 a~lor, pastor. Sunday
School 10a.m.: Sunday("venl:h~t7 : 00p.m .;
WEdnesday l'Vl"nln~t prayer meottlng 7:00 r
p.m.
,.,
SOt.rrH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH, SJivl'r Rldfi!:!'. Duanp Syden· ·
Stricker, pastor. Sunday SChool 9 a .m.; -:··
Church servlc• 10 a.m. Blbl• Study Wed·
nesdayat7:30 p.m.JunelhruSeptember. ·•
7Fcp. mw. 0chllpobepr.mlh.ruJuMnayth. ruSun depayeemvenbertn,g"',·.
110 0 7
0
5 1
6
p.m. October thru May.
• :;

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH .
Sunday School at 9:30a.m.; Morntna. wor·
~
ship a110: ll a.m.: Sundayf'Vft11ngservlce
at7:.l) p.m. Thursday services at7:130 p.
m.
·
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 31 . Jb?v .
LawN&gt;nce Gluesencamp, pastor. Rev .
Rog('r Wlllrord , asst. pastor. Preacrblng
setvlces Sunda)l7: 30 p.m. Prayer meeting
Wednesday, 7:ll p.m.. Gary Gr~tltb,
leader. Youth llJ"OOPS Sunday eveaiDg at
6:l) p.m . with Roget"lnd VIolet wu(ro_rd ,
leaders. Communion service flnt su;ooay
each month .
. .-l.
WHITE 'S CHAPEl.
WES~YAN
. rm··-------------------------~
CHURCH -CoolvtlleRD. RE"Y. Phlll~pRI r dt'ftour, paator. Sunday School9!30 a.m·.;
worshlp~· .tervk'e JO::K&gt; a.m.; Bible ltudy
and wor5hlp service, Wednesdav, 1 p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Mark Jones, pastor. Bill Nlcttolsm : Sun ·
day School Supt. Sunday School9: 30 a.m.;
MornlngWorshlpalldCommunion 10:l)a.
m.
•
RUTLANDBIBLEMEI'IIlD!ST. Amos
TUII!I. pastor, Sonny Hudson, 5Upt. Sunday
• School 9:30 a.m.; Morning wor1hlp, 10:30
a.m.; Sunday evening service 7:00p.m .
Wednesday service 1 p.m. WMPO pro·
gram 9 a.m. each Sunday .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF TilE NAZA ·
RENE. Rev. Lowell Ford, pastor. Sunday
Schooi9 ::JO a.m.; Wouhtp service 10:30 ' ·
m.; Young people's service 6 , p.m .
Evangellstlcservlce6; l) p.m. Wednesday
service 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mitior
St. , Masoo, W. Va. EugeneL. Conge~. mJ .
nister. Sunday Bible Study 10 a .m.; Wor·
ship ll a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible
Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
j
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud- 1
..
ding Lane, Muoo, W. Va. J . N. Thacker,
pastor. Evening service 7: 30p.m.: Women's Ministry, Thursday, 9:30 a.m, :
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7:
p.m.
HARTFORD CHURcH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION . The Rev. William
C
bell
S
The poet said "Everywrere, everywhere, Christmas tonight."
amp
, pastor.
JJ
M ...._ unday School 9: ~ a .
This Is so true. Weare now In treAdventseason. Thlslstht' beginning
m.: ames u&amp;'.e5, S~pl. Evenbtg ~;ervlce
7:]) p.m. WfdMdayt"..entngprayermeoetrl. a new church year. Advent always begins four Sundays before
ing 1:.:.&gt; p.m. Youth prayer service mch
TuOiday.
Christmas Day. It means anticipatiOn. I guess yoo roukl say a
FAIRVIEW BIJn.E CHURCH, Letart,
looking forward. It touches our llves even If we wish It would not.
W. Va .. Rt. 1. James Lewis, pastor. Wor·
ship services 9::11 a.m.; Sunday School u
Christmas Is romlng. We can sre It everywhere. You might say
a.m.; EvenlnR worship 7: l) p.m. Tuesday
Christmas Is like a hearth fire, wecanseelt andfeellt andhellr 11. We
cottage praye-r meeting and Blble Study
9:30 a .m.; Worship servlc~. W~nesday
can see tht' names danclng,!eeltht' Itt'a! and ht'arthe crackling WOOd
7: :11 p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
Can 't we say the same thlng for Otrtslmas? We can see It on the
Walnut and Henry St! ., Ravenswood, W.
Va. The Rev. George C. Weirick, paJtor.
faces of young and old alike. Its joy and happiness that Is contaglous
Sunda)l SChool9: 30 a.m.: Sunday wouhlp
to one and aU. We can ~ellt In the air and aU around us, a sort of
11 a.m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, localod on
warmness tbal can't be explained except that It Is nearing
Pomeroy Plke, Coonty Road 25 nNr FlatChristmas. It Is hard to dlscrtbe a feeling but It ts trere touching us
woods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Servlce!l
on Sunday at10: 30 a.m. and 7: ao p.m. wtih
all. You can't help but hear Christmas also. Its tre excitement In the
Sunday School9: ll a.m. Bible Study, Wed
voices
of young and old alike. It says I am happy and excited and
nesday, 7:30p.m.
can't help but bubble Inside. All this because a baby was born 1n
FAITH fELLOWSIUP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST. St. Rt. 338, Antiquity . ,Rl'V .
Bethleht'm.
Franklin DJckens, pastor. Sunday morn Today we hear many say Christmas ts too commercial. We must
lni 10 a.m.; Sunday evenlng 7:.'1) p.m .
Thursday even ina: 7: .J) p.m .
put Christ back Into Christmas. I hear oome rl. you talk about a lew
ST!VERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAP·
T.V. preachers who are gung Ito about an anti-commercial
TIST CHURCH . Pailor Robert Byors .
Sunday S&lt;:hoollO a.m.; Wonhlp service 11
Christmas. I think Its just a lot of hot air. They need to go back and
a.m.; Sunday ev"'lna ·serv1Ce,7:30 p.m,;
read the life of Chrtst again and again. We are busy buying or making
W£'dnetday ~tntng servle~ 7: 30 p.rri.
,,
IN!EPENOENT lf:JUNESS CHURa!
gifts to give to OilErs, friends and family and even strangers. Isn't
Inc., Pearl St., Middleport. Rev. O'Dell
this what Christ wants us to be mlng, thinking and caring for others.
Manley, paator. Sunday School 9: ll a.m.:
Mornlng worship 10:30 a.m.; Evfnlng
Maybe Santa and Rumlplt are a bit ever done but II does get us Into a
worship 7: ll p.f!l . Tuettlay,l2: 30 p.m . Wohappy state of mind. We become caring persons, and Isn't this what
men's Pray~r meeting. Wednesday, 7; ~
we preachers preach all year bog, care about your neighbor, your
p.m . Pray~r and Praise service.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APC6·
friends, yoor famUy and total strangers. It would be better to have
TOLIC - VanZandt and Ward Rd . Elder
this i!elingall year long, true. If it Is mlyforthe month of December
''
James Miller, pastor. SUnday School ,
10:~ a.m.: Worship Service, Sunday 7: 3J
at least Its a start. Advent Is anllclpatlOn and Christmas Is the event.
1
p.m.: Blblo Study, Wodneoday, 7:30p.m.
·
Let
us just CaJTY It on t&gt;r a longer time. Lets nol try to pul a wet
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS,
5
' c

SQIJTHERN CLUSTER
Ro1er Grace
Rev. PHI McG•Ire
Rev. Kellh Radet
APPLE GROVE - CHurch S&lt;hool 9:00
a .m. W,Orshlp, 10:00 a.m. tflrst and third
Sundays}: UMW Second Tut'sday, 7: 30 p,
m .: PrayPr m('('tinjl. WednE'Sday.7 p.m.
HEMLOCK GROVE Cl:IRISTIAN.
(Grace).
Roger Wa tsoo. pastor. Crensoo Pran ,
BETHANY - Wonhlp, 9 a.m.: Church · Sunday School Supt. Morning wonhlp 9: 30
School, 10 a .m .: Btblt&gt; Study, Wednesday,
a.m.; Sunda y School 10:30 a .m.; Evening
10 a.m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowship,
service, 7:30p.m.
WednHday. 11 a.m. IMcGulrt'l.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Donal4 Shu•.
CARMEL- Church School 9: 30a .m.:
pastor: Joe Sayre, Sunday School Supt .
Worship, 10 :45 a.m. Sf-1,nd and Fourth
Sunday School 9:45a .m.; Evening wm··
Sundays; Fellowship din ner with Sutton
5hlp 6: :II p.m.: Prayer Meeting , 6::1) p.m.
third Thursda y, 6:30p.m. !McGuire) .
Wodnesda y.
EAST LETART - Chu rrh SChool9a .m.:
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
Wonhlp 10 a .m. secand .1ntl fourth Sun.
CHRIST. Jod y Holland, minister. Deryl
day!l; UMW flr5t Tuesday. 7: :Jl p.m.
Wells, Supt . Morning worship, 8:00a .m. ;
(Grace) . I
Church School 9:00a .m.
LETART FALLS - Wor&gt;hlp 9 a.m.:
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Church SChool10 a.m. cGrace1.
RENE. Rev. Herbert Grate, pastor.
MORNING STAR - Wor~hlp , !'1 : 45 a.m.;
Frank Riffle, !UPI. Sunday School 9: ll a .
Church SChool , lO::.wt a .. m.; BiblE" STudy,
m.: Worship service, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Thursday, 7:30p.m. tR"Jder l.
Sunday. Wednesday, 7 p.m. PrB)'t'r ·meet·
RACINE WESLEY A~·- Chun:h School.
lng.
10 a .m.: Worshlp 11 a.m.· UMW founh Mon.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METIIlDIST
day at 7:ll p.m.; Mf'n's Praytr Breakfast,
CHURCH. Rev. Robert Mlllor, pastor. RoWf'dnesday, 7 a.m. (Gmet') .
bert E . Barton. Director cl Christian Edu·
SU'ITON -Church ';chool, 9: 30a.m.:
calion: Steve Dlln , aaslstant. Sunday
Morning Worship 10:65 a .m. firs t and third
School 9: l) a.m.; Momtng worship 10: ~
Sundays: Fellowship dinner with Carm~
a.m.; Choir practice, Sunday 6: ill p.m.;
third 'thursday, 6:30p.m. (McGuire}.
Evening wonhlp ?: ,;) p.m . Wedneaday
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Oliver Prayer and Bible Study, 7: ll p.m.
Swain , Supr. Sunday School 9: :n a.m. fl.•.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
ery week.
Charles Russell Sr., mlnl!ter. Rick Ma·
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. Rev. comber, aupt. Sunday SChool 9:JJ a .m .;
Tom Staten, pastor. Sunday School9: JJ a. Worship service 10;30 a.m. Bible atudy,
m .: Evenlna aervlce7:JJp.m. Wednesday TuHday, 7: ll p.m.
prayer meeting 7: .Jt p.m.
REORGAN12ED CHURCH OF JESUS
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Port·
land·Raclne Road. William Roush , palter.
CHRIST, Duane Warden, mlnlater. Bible
clan 9i 30 a .m.; Morning Worship 10: 33 a. Linda Evans, church school director.
m.: Evening Worship 6: ll p.m. Wednes - Church sdlool 9:30a.m.: Momllts worslp
da\· Bible Study 6::II p.m.
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening prayer .
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMIJNITY . servlc~. 7:ll p.m.
CHURCH, Sunday School service, 9: 4!1 a.
BETJn.EHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
Shulerr paalor. Wor~hlp .ervlce, 9;30a.m.
rn .; Worship service 10:30 a .m.;
EvanR"tllstlc Servl~ 7:3&gt; p.m. Wednet·
Sunday Scllool IO:lla.m. Bible St11dy and
prayer a.rvlce Thufiiday, 7: Jl p.m.
day; Phyer meetlng7: l1p.m. ThUrsday.
.

Be".

pte's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday at 7: ll p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
St.. Middleport. Afflllaled with Southern
Baptlll Convention. David Bryan, Sr .. Ml ·
nlster. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Morning
wot'Jhlp 11 a.m.; Evening worship 7 p.m.:
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayor meeting 7 p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, Sl.
Rt. t:lhnd Co. Rd. 5. Mark Seevers, min~·
ter. Sunday SChool Supt. Harry . Hen·
clrlcks: SundayS&lt;hool9:30a.m.: Morning
worship 1():30 11 .m.; Evening worship 7p.
m. Wodnesday worship 7 p.m .
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN GIURCH,
Corner SycamorE' and Second Sta., Po·
rneroy. The Rev. William Mlddt.. warlh,
pstor. Sunday SChool ~ 4!1 a.m.: Church
service 11 a.m.
s ACR ED HEART CRURal, Msgr.
Anthony Glannamore. Ph. 992·5898. Satur·
day Evening Mus 7 : l1 p.m.; Sunday
Mau, 8 a .m. and 10 a.m. Confessions ant&gt;
half hour before each Mass. CCDclasses,
II
S
a.m. unday.
VICI'ORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St.,
Middleport. James E . Keesee, paator.
Sunday morning worship 10 a .m. ·, E~n- .
1ng service 7 p.m.; Wednesday e-\lenlng
worship 7 p.m. Vl5ltatlon, Thurs~y 1i: 00
~~
' MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH- Gary
Holter, pastor. Sunday SchooL 10 a.m.;
worship service, u a.m.i prayer meeting,
7 00 p
Th od
:
.m. ur ay.
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD- Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sun·
day SchooJ 9: l&gt; a .m.; Morning S('rvlce
10:00a.m.; Sunday evening service 7:00 p,
Mid-week prayer service Wednesday

••
Rebecca LyM Taylor

SERMONETTE

New officers were elected at the
Tuesday night meeting of Group II,
Middleport Presbyterian Church
held at the home of Mrs. Wllllam
MotTis with Mrs. Don Lowery as
&lt;»hostess.
Elected were Mrs. Harry Moore,
president; Mrs. F..ddle Burket~ vice
president; Mrs, Dwight Wallace,
secretary; and Mrs. Myron Mlller,
treasurer. Mrs. David ·Cummings
presided at the meeting with
members giving a Christmas wish
In response to roll call. Dues were
paid.
Devotional leader was Mrs.

Santa Shack
hours set
The Racine Santa Shack wlll he
open for community children
nightly unUI Christmas, 5 to 7 p.m.
There will be live entertainment In
the Christmas spirit In downtown
Racine. All area businesses will he
open nightly unlt19 p.m. The Santa
Shack wOI be closed on Sunday._

Cummings who read an arllcle on

"Peace Making" from Concern
magazine. Mrs. Jack Sorden ron·
dueled the least coin offering and
read an article "Signs of the Times"
from the magazine. Christmas
cards were signed and mailed to
some former merbers and several
shu tins.
The program ronslsted of each
member reading . a Christmas
story. A dessert course was served
from a decorated table and tht'
entire MoiTis home was decorated
In !Itt' Christmas theme. A glft
exchange was held.

·Turkey shoot
Racine Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment wiD sponsor a ham and turkey
shoot Saturday at Its Bashan
BuDding, beginning 6: 30 p.m. Five
matches.each will be shot for both!'
turkey and ham to tot at 10. All
participants welrome.

Open tonight
The Club Restaurant will be open
after Friday's Southern · Southw·
estern basketball game.

OAPSE holds Christmas party
Chrlsbnas party of the Ohio -fls for door prizes won Laura
Association of Public School Em· Circle, Joe Foremlut, Patty Circle,
by

J!IOYes 453, Southern Local School
District, held a Christmas party at
Southern High School recently.
Gifts were extended to Dan Smith
and D.J. TradlngPost!ordonatlng

Bob Dudding, Btu Hoback. VIcki

Northup, Hazel Sellers. Esther
Wolfe,, Phyllis Baker, Dave and
Dorothy Sayre.

Trinity Church plans service
Annual Christmas Eve candle- Bethlehem.'.' The choir wUI present
Ught service of Trinity Congrega. special m~c, "Join the Al)gels
tiOna! Church of Pomeroy wlll Song", and the Rev. W.H. Perrin
begin at 8 p.m.
wilt deliver the Christmas medlla·
There wlll be plano and organ . tlon. The service will ronclude with
music by Beth Mayer and Ralph the candlelight service and tre
Werry beginning at 7:lJ p.m. with singing of "Sllent Night."
an otgan-plano duet, "Stars Over

TOPS 570 conducts meeting
Julia Hysell was the top loser at
the Thesday night meeting of TOPS
570, Middleport, held at the Word of
Faith Church.
Pearl Knapp was runner-up In
weight loss, and Mrs. Hysell won
the fruit basket In a drawing of

Reports on rompletd hollday
projects were given when Frlenly
Circle met at Trinity.. Church
TheSday evening.
A volunteer rommlllee will assemble the food baskets to be
delivered later this week. Several
Utank you notes for Christmas
remembrances were read and
holiday greets from teh Rev. Ralph
Keuther of Tydron, N.C. were

those losing weight for tht' week. It
was noled that there will be no
meetlnlit on Christmas Ev'e. Weigh·
In will lake place from 5 to 6 p.m. on
New \ tr's Eve. Lennie Bell
Aleshire presided at the meeting.

Rutland Garden Club members
held tht'lr annual Christmas dinner
at Crow's Steak House Monday
evening and then went to the home
of Margaret Belle Weber lor a
meeting and party.
Mr. Weber gave devotions read·
lng, "Holly and Greens" from
Ideals and a Christmas meditation
from the Upper Room closing with
prayer.

Church women's
fellowship
has meeting
New officers were Installed at lhe
recent meeting of !Itt' Women's
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churches of Clirtst held al tht'
Bradford Church.
Installed were Elleeti Bowers,
president; Martha Wrtgbl, first
vice presldenl; Phyllis GUkey,
second vice pf'ellldent; Dreama
Pickens, secretary; Jane Hazelton,
treasurer; Anna Lockhart, assist·'
ant treasurer; Ida Murphy, news
· reporter; and Eleanor Hoover,
card chalnnan.
Mrs. Bowers was the song leader
and Mrs. Wright had devotions. Ida
Murphy ronducted the business
meeting during which time II was
decided to send the Christmas
money tree to Peggy Russell, a
missionary, who Is branching oul In
the ministry In New Mexico.
. A meeting of ofllcers and chair·
men was announced lor Jan. 9 at 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy Church of
Christ. Next regular meeting of th
group wOI be on Jan. 23.
Refreshments were served.

Cookbook sale
planned ·by group
The special projects rommltlee
of Trinity Congregational Church

.has received another shipment of
cookbooks for the holiday season.
The book conlalns over 250 recipes
from members and others of the
rommunlty, plus a section of basic
kitchen lnfonnatlon. Copies of the
cookbook can be purchased for $4
by ronlactlng tht' church, Box 429,
Pomeroy or calling 992-54!1l.

Community calendar I area happenings
FRIDAY
CHESHIRE - The annual
Christmas program of tht' Sliver
Run Baptist Church will be held at
7:30 Friday night at the church.
SATURDAY
RllfLAND- Dance Saturday at
Rutland Civic Center, 8 to 11 with
music by Music Unlimited and
ltomlc Sounds; $2, single; $3
couple.

Page-7

ooted. A card was signed for Mary
E. Chapman.
New program books prepared by
Nonna Louise Jewell were dlstiiJ.
uted . Tile Otrlstmas Eve candle·
light service was announced for 8
p.m. with plano and organ music to
begin at 7: 30 p.m. Delightful
Chrlsdmas stories by Mary Vlrgl·
nla Reibel, program chairman,
Included "The Land Between tlte

Two Rivers" by Arthur !gordon,
and '"The Love Tree" by Jo Jones.
Devotions were reflections on
Christmas prayer.
An exchange of handcrafled
articles was enjoyed by 14
members and a guest, Sarah
Mahlman. The social room was
decorated In keeping with the
holiday season. A candlelighl lur·
key dinner served by a rommtttee
of the church preceded the meeting.

Rutland Garden club has meeting

Group II elects officers

.

Friday, December 20, 1985

Friendly Circle hold[ meeting

Marvin and Sheila Taylor, Ches·
~r, are announcing the birth of
their second child, a daughter, born
on Nov. 23 at the Holzer Medical
Cen~r.' The six pound, 14 ounce
Infant has been named Rebecca
Lynn.
Grandparents are Jim and Bev·
erly Bailey, Tuppers Plains, and Ruth Taylor, Chester. Great·
grandparents are Harley Llnthl·
Cum, Thppers Plains, and Estel
Sampson, CoolvUie. The Tayklrs
also have a son, Michael Aaron.

This Message and Church Directory Sponsf!red ·By The Interested 'Businesses Listed On This Page.

The Daily Sentinel

program Sunday 9:30 a .m. at
Middleport Independent Holiness
Church, Pearl Street ; theme "For
Jesus' Birthday"; public welrome.

CARMEL - Carmel Sutton
Oturch wlll have Its Christmas
program Sunday. Dec. 22, 7:30p.m.
Everyone welrome.

A memorial was held for Mrs. C.
0 . Chapman a charter member.
Pauline Atkins read an original
poem. Edith Williamson, Eva
Robson, Mrs. Weber, Stella Atkins,
Ruby Diehl. and AIUI Elizabeth
Turner told of visiting several shops
observing open house.
Ruth Erlewlne told of touring a
holiday house at Newark and Eva
Robson of her visit to the Regency
Center In Columbus for tht' festival
of trees.
Mrs. Williamson won !he travelog prize donated by Neva Nichol·
son. Margaret Paroons will provide
the prize for January. For !Itt'
program Mrs. Williamson had

prayer on "Festive No Fuss Plants
to Deck the Halls." Mrs. Roberson
read an article on amaryllis, and
Pearl Canaday, one on Christmas
cactus. Dorothy Woodard read
"Trees for the President, and
horticultural hints were given by
Mrs. Thrner. An arrangement
featuring a figurine was brought by
Mrs. Robson, and displaying
Christmas decorations made from
the garden were Mrs. Canaday,
Dorothy Woodard, and Mrs. Nichol·
son. Mrs. Robson and Mrs. Atkins
tumlshed Dower blankets for
graves. A gtft exchange closed !Itt'
meeting.

-People in the news-.
By WILUAM C. TROOT
United Press lntematlonal
MS. WOMEN: Ms. magazine's ·•women of the Year" Include
actress-comedian Uly Tomlin, Presklenl Reagan's daughter, Patti
Davis, and a Harlem Globetrotter. Davis, an aspiring actress and
wrtter, was singled out for "retaining ht'r own Identity despite
pressures of being a presldent'sdaughler" while Tomlin was chosen
for "making ordinary women Into stars and vice versa."
The Globetrotter Is Lynette Woodard, a fonner Uitlverslty of
Kansas player who Is "challenging popular stereotypes of skill and
strenglh." The other winners are New Mexico Indian activist Mae
Chee Castillo, Chicago urban renewal activist Gale Cbtcotta,
Molown Productions President Suzanne de Passe, feminist uterary
critics Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar, gerontoklglst Elaine Brody,
AIDS researcher Matltllde Krlm, Los Angeles Councllwoman .Joy
PklWl and Penay Harrlnglon of POrtland, Ore., til! llrst woman
pollee chief of a major American city. The winners will be on the
magazine's January cover.
GATLIN MUSIC lOTS HOME: I..arcy Ga&amp;Ua says !be song
"Runaway Go Home" is'llie "biggest commercial dlsjlster" In tlte
Gatlin Brothers' history bul he has 110 regrets. Gatlin wrote Ire song
after seeing a blllboard In Joliet, Ill., tbat said, "Runaways go home
free on Continental Trallways."
CBS Records released tht' song In September and Gatlin says Its
message reached at least one persom upon hearing the record, a
young prostitute In Sacramento, Calif. rontacled her parents and
returned home to Montana. "I'm not an expert on the runaway
problem - I'm a songwriter," he 5ald. "But If we Cilll move
somebody with music, let's do It"
Gallin recently joined the Department of Heanh and Human
Services In a national effort to help runaway kids. The campaign
provides a network of "safe places"- Including stores, res! au rants
and other designated businesses -where teenage runaways can go
If they need help:
·

It's For
The Birds!

LONG BO'ITOM - Christmas
program at Long Bottom United
Methodist Cliurch, 7 p.m. Sunday.

aname.

Harrlsonvllle Road. David Ferrell, pu-

blanket over it. Otrlstmas Is romllig, It Is evErywhere seen, felt and
heard Hooray, I say and have a meny Christmas and may God
Hess you one and all, all year klng.

tor: Clinton Foulk, Sunday Sdlool Supt.;
Sunday School •9: 30•a.m.; mombtg wor·
ship, 11 a.m.; Sunday evenlng servtce7: 30
p.m. Pray•r Meeting, Wednesday, 7: XI p.

Jft·

I

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF qDD.
jOOil·Pentecostal. Worship JOrvlce Sunday
10 a.m.; sunday Sdlool u a .m. Eveplng
wonlllp IW!I'VIce 7:00 p.m. Wodnalloy
prayer meetlna 7:00p.m.
•

I •

-

•

•

ONLY ....
8.5%/u month
9.3%/60 month
OMAC Fixed Rate

A.P.R. Financing

per
month

•aooo.

. . priOo
11000 cooh _ , ortrldo oqulty. amountftllnOid •7000
110 rnontho at 9.3% RXEO RATE OMAC Amuat -ta;tll118 Financing'
110 UIOII-IIy JIO'i-111 of n47 ]lOr montll. Tu• and tltlo h. INIIItrl. •

Visiting
M. Sgt. (U.S.A.F. Ret.) David
Weaver and family visited his
mother, Mrs. E. J . Brinker, New
Haven, W. Va. over the Thanksglv·
lng hoUdays. Weaver Is now a
captain with Air Midwest Skyways
Dying out of Little Rock, Ark. where
they now reside.

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 20, 1985

.UC heart transplant recipient has first meal
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Doctors say ~ Kentucky
man recovering from a heart transplant, who
Thursday ate his first meal since the operation and
spoke a few words, is improving but not yet out of
danger.
. A doctor said Charles Ashcraft, 41. of Cold Spring,
. Ky., lsdoingreally well, according to a spokesman for
the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, where
Ashcraft had the surgery early Wednesday morning.
The spokesman sald doctors were hoping to let
Ashcraft walk Friday.
But doctors said they must walt at least four more

days to lind out if Ashcraft's body w1ll accept Its new
heart.
.
"I think we woukl have expected him to bounce
back a little slower, " said Dr. David Melvin, an
asroate professor of S\lfKI"ry at the center. "He Is In
better shape than expected." Melvin said Ashcraft
coukl possibly return home In 3~ weeks.
The quick transfer of the heart from a donor "In
good shape" In Birmingham, Ala .. to ClnciMati Is
partly responsible lor Ashcrall's improving condltl·
on,said Dr. Josef Fischer, chairman of surgery at~

medical center.
The donOr was Terry Miller, 28, of Talladega, Ala.
M!Uer;-artinsurance ·manager, was.lnjured In a car
accident Dec. 9 and declared brain dead early
Tuesday afternoon. His kklneys and eyes were also
donated for Jransplants.
Fischer said a key to Ashcraft's recovery wUI be a
psychological healing, which Is why fiunlly suwort Is
essential.
"I can't bve~phas!zethefact that when you know
your family's being taken care of ·yoo're able to put

'

a.m. EST news conference today.
fight in 19£0.
the accident at Chappaqulddlck
Kennedy also said ~would leave
The 53-year-old senator said he that k!Ued Mary Jo Kopechne July
on a trip across the rountry today discussed his decision with his 18, 1969, to his wife's bouts with
"to try to bring borne to a · childrm, Kara, Teddy and Patrick, alcohollsm. On Jan. 21, 1981,
prosperous America the truth that and o~r members of the family. Kennedy and his wife, Joan,
there Is still another America His said his chUdren "would have announced they were ending their
nearly Invisible In our midst been at my skle through any 1911! marrtage rl. 22 years.
where people are suffering."
campaign, but I am aware ·of ~
When President John Kennedy
The announcement ended wides· burden that would have been placed was assassinated In 1963, It was
pread speculation that Kennedy on them and ail the members rl. my assumed by many that ~ next
would run again lor the White family."
1
surviving brother, Robert, was the
House -:- speculation spurred by
It was the second time In as many heir apparent to the presidency.
everything from his trip to South presidential races that ~ only Robert Kennedy was assassinated
Africa last year to a diet that has surviving Kennedy brother cited just l!fler winning the Democratic
trimmed his weight In recent · family respons!l)!l!tles In removing Cal!fomta primary In ~ 199!
months.
himself from the race. He also presidential campaign.
"I know that this decision means chose not 10 run In 1984.
Democratic kingmakers wanted
that I may never be president ..But
Kennedy said he called a number Edward Kennedy to run lor
the pursuit of the presidency Is not of Democratic Party leaders to presldE:nt In 1968 and 1972. He
IllY. llfe - public service Is," advise them r:t his decision.
refused and cleared the way for
Kennedy sald. "I will run lor
Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Call!., who Jimmy Carter - a little ~nown
re-election to the Senate."
ran lor the nomination In 1984, said: fanner Georgia governor - to win
There has been talk of Kennedy "I think it's (Kennedy's decision) a In 1976.
'
as a presidential prospect since he grea( Christmas present lor Gary
Kennedy - with the backing of
was ~lected to ~ Senate In 1962. Hart and· Mario Cuomo, the two labor unions and other liberal
Bul he k&gt;st his only run lor the most llkely nominees."
elements of~ Democratic Party
nation's top office to J lmmy Carter
Personal tragedy has baunted - challenged Carter for ~
In a bitter Democratic primary Kennedy's polltlcal career, from mmlnatlon In l!JIK).

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CHAILES BAILEY
PH. 742·2050

11·21·3 mo.

Public Notice

;i
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Dacembor 18, 1985, in
11ie Moiga County Ptabete
Court, Coot No. 24969, Fred
W. Crow, P.O. BoN 488, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 was appointed.Exec!llor of tlio ootato
of Ruth L. Maag, doceasod,
late of tho Village of Middleport, Meigs County, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck,
Probete Judge
Lona K. Nouelroad, Clorlo
112)20, 27;' (1)3tc

WON'T RUN FOR PRESIDENCV - Senator Edward Kennedy
(D·Mass.) IUDIUncedoverlwoBolllonlelevisionstalllmsTimrsdaythat
he wl1 not seek the Democratic presidential nomination In 1888. UPJ.

control, S25 and costs; Magda
Wolfe, Racine, driving while intoxicated, $250 and costs, three days In
jail and license suspended lor 60
days; Charles Cr!sllp, R;iclne,
disorderly ronduct, one day jail and
costs; James Aldridge, South
Point, hunt upon the lands r4
another without license, $%i and
costs, line suspended; Myrna Lin·
kour, Shade, reckless operation,
$100 and costs; John Ingle!s,
Diester, reckless QilE'tatlon, costs
only; disorderly umduct, $100 and
costs, too years probation, 30 day
jail sentence suspended.
Forfeiting bonds in the court
were Judy Welch, 'Belpre, $44:
speeding; Jack RUehle, Portland,
$50 speeding; Dwayne Morris,
South Point, carrying and using a
special deer permit of Blither, $00,
and auempt to take second deer.
$00; Larry Anderson, Charleston,
W. Va., proceed across raDroad
crossing without due safety result·
lng In a train-car collision, $%;.

Emergency squads
81l8Wer five calls

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOfNTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Dtcomber 18, 1986,
in tlio Meigo County Pn&gt;beto
Court. Caoe No. 24983, Ho·
· word S. Eberoboch, Jr., 17
Plouant Lee Drive S.E .. Nowork. Ohio 43055, wu ap·
polnto!i Exooutor of tlio H·
tilt of Howord S. Ebero·
boch. Sr .. docoasod, late of
64297 N- Portland Rood,
Portand, Ohio 4&amp;no.
Robert E. Buclc,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Naaselroad, Clerk
(12)20. 27; 11 )3

2

In Memoriam

In Memory of
CHELSIE LfiGH WOOD
om July 10, 1985 • Died
Jaly 19, 1915. Dlu~ter of
Donnlt llld Shelly'Nood.
Somotin111 your worst lt•s
CCIIII true,
tlilnp Jill tllnl don't hlplllfl to

,..,

Aacond child. tltby. llhollht ...
ltlcio 11111 old ond lor !un
IIOPPI4
011 1iaW h liurts, II~ poln i01iilo,
ltothln11 did cotld hOI&gt; hlr al~o.
tlio 111rt Mid Old of "'~ dal,
Is tliull(lils CJI 1 nilhlllllro tho Is
11111 lo s!Jy.
PlciUios, blonkot,lootprlnh, hair.
Pul In I mit II tlio top ol lho
ltaifl.
Ptlllfll to loot at. until, and rt-

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

t -13-tfc

8-13 «n

BOGGS

THE TAXIDERMY SHOP

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

"ew lima Rd.

Rutland
742-2225

Authorized John Deere.
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

VINft &amp; AWMINUM

$19,900.00.

CALL COlLECt:

Ph. 16141 843·5425
·

11·12-2 mo.

$30,000.00.

.

POMEROY. - . I \i story
frame on two lots, 3 bed·
rooms, lully insulatoo, elec·
tric b.b. heat &amp; patil. $17,9JO.

KOUNTRY 1
~..
KlUI
·.
Gelf
Equipment

.I

~ 1111 I t $2.50 to.
Golf ... ... $6.00 Dot.
•New II: Prior Owned Clubt
•Cuttom Clubt
Youth Clubl

-

a.-.

t

t.

PHONE 992-7075
~

=

'

We Wlch All Our
(
Callomars AMarrr
f
Chrlstmu and AHappy '
New 1earl
11·29·85 I mo. pd.

~

JOHN RAFOID
Cliooter,

STANDING TIMBER . AI
Tromm . Call : 61 4 -7 42 .
232B .

Vacancy for the elderly in
our home . Trained and fifteen years &amp;Kperience . Call
614 -992-7314 .
.
Will do house cleaning . C.ll .
514-949 -2863 .
Will do baby sitting in my
home . 304-875-6879 or
675-5797.

-=;;::::;;===;::=;==:::.
-.:

18 Wanted to Do
Buying Raw Ftr . Beef end - - -- - - - - Deer hides. Selling -trapping
.
supplies. Wheat and nita Seal each window in plastic.
lites. George Buckley, 614- Prevent he&amp;t lou during the
684-4761 . Hours:12·9 p.m. coming winter. Bill Slack,
614-992-2289 .
Pine post and rail logs. For
prices or for information, Will do odd job1. call
stop ~Y or call 614 -667 · ' 304-675-2419 .
6716. B to 5 Monday thru
Friday . Saturday 9 to 6.
Located Twp . Rd . 313 (Rice
Financial
Run
Road)
_
__
_ Tuppers
__:__ _Plains.
·lcStanding timber, hardwood
&amp; plna. Richard Boitoy-514992·3861 '

Employment

Services
11

Help

Wa1nted

One cenified Medical Tech nologist weekdays. Send
resume or apply to Medical
Plaza, 203 Jackson Pike.
Gallipolis. Oh 45631 .
AVON Sell Avon pay Christmas bills, limited time stan
up foe· FREE . Coll81 4-448·
3358.

Government Jobs $16 ,040·
$59 .230 yr. Now hiring.
Coli 805·687 ·6000 Ext. A·
4682 for current federal list.

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LIS HI NG CO . recommends
that you do busin·a u with
people you know. and r,IOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investi·
gated the offering.

Small engines sal~ &amp; repair
busineas in Middleport for
sale . For more information
call 614-992 -3092 or 614·
992 -3762.

22

Money to Loan

HOME OWNERS ·Rallnonce
to low fixed rata. U1a equity
for any purpose . Leader
Mortgoge Co.. 614·692·
3051 '

23

Professional
Services

Piano tuning and repair, tuna
up for the holiday1, special
dlocount. Ward's Keyboard.
304-675 -5500 or 6753824 .

Real Eslatc
1-::-.,.---:-:-- --:--::-:-31 Homes lor Sale
1- - - - - - - - By owr\er . Mu1t Hll-moved.
3 bdr. ranch, one car prage,
walking dlatance from Nonh
Gollia High School. Reduced
to t29,900. Call 814-388·
8711 .

Small 2 bedroom house. 6
miles south of Galllpoll1.

Lost and Found

Easy Assembly Workl
8600.00 per 100. Gueran·
teed payment. No
el(perience -No aalas. Details
send self-llddressed
stamped envelops : ELAN
VITAL-6847 3418 Enter·
prise Rd. Ft. Pierce, Fl
33482.

Beautifully decorated 3 bdr.
home, new plush carpeting
&amp; coordinating window
ueetments, country oak
bath , nice friendly neighbor·
hood. Call 814-288-6110
for funher details.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Indoor Floe Market. Every
Sat . &amp; Sun, 8·5. Routoo 36
&amp; 180.
RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER SERVICE . Ellato,
farm. antique, liquidation
oeloo. Llconaed Ohio and
Wool ··VIrginia. 304· 773 5786 or 304-n3-6430 .

9

Easy A11embly Workl
$600.00 per 100.Guaron·
toad Paynunt. No
EMporitnce -No Salas. De·
tallo oand ooll-addra11ed
stamped envelope: Elsn VI·
tal ·715 3418 Entt&lt;priH
Rd. Ft. Pleroe, FL 33482 .
Christian piano player for
"Raflectlona" Goipol SingIng Trio . Call Evelyn Roush
at 304-773-5533 or 304·
882· 2049 after 5:00 p.m.

WANTED:ENporloncod Pro duce manager. No leas than
3 years experience . Good
PlY S. benefits. Sand reaume
to The D•lly Sentinel ,
Bx .729 C.
ASK THE ARMY NA ·
TIONAL OUARD RE ·
CRUITER ABOUT VACAN CIES FOR QUALIFIED
PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE
INDIVIDUALS . Part-time
joba wHh full·tlme bonollto .
Coli 304-875-3950 or 1•
800-842-3819 .
BE A PART OF THE NEIGH·
BORS HELPING NEIGH·
BORS TEAM I Join the Army
National Guard and you
have a good part -tim e
career .. good ben e fit s · ·
monthly paychock .. NO
LAYOFFS . Call 304 -6763960 .. 1· 600·642, 3619 .

. Wanted To Buv

We poy cooh for toto modo!
clean uMd ears.
Jim Mink Cflov.·Oido Inc.
BHI Gene Johnson
et 4-448-34172
WANTED TO BUY uaecl
wood • coet heeten .
SWAIN' S FURNITURE. 3rd .
&amp; Olivo St. Golllpollo. Coli
814-448-3159.

Semi Driven
y11r1 over road
1 year ht bed,
older . Phone
9391 .

Wanted, 2
pperience,
23 years or
304 -273 ·

DISTRICT SALES REP .
needed by one of South' •
fargelt , fe1t11t grownlng

home manufacturera. Must
have a knowledge of con -

4 bedroom house for 1111,
fireplace , 3 mi. lOUth · Of
Galllpolio. a32 ,600 . Call
doyo 814 · 448 -1816 or
nights 614·446 ·1244.
3 bdr.. t'l• bath, family
room, 3 1JJ miles out St. Rt.
6881n Oren Townohip. Coli
614-256-8789 or 81 4-2686205.
Government Honea from $1
(U -repalr). Also deliquent
tox property . Call B05·e87·
6000 EMI. GH-4562 lor
information .
By owner . Remodeled 3
bedroom house on Rt. 33.
New F.A. furnace , large lot.
623,000. Collect 614-423·
6289 .
By owner. Stately, 3 b8droom house at 10 E. St. in
Pomeroy. 6 wooded acra,J,
familv room. dining room,
F.A. heat. 2 baths, base·
mont , gerego . $27 ,000.
Collect 614-423-6289 .
5 ro om house near Pomeroy
for sale or rent . Call 814992 -3675 fo r appointment
Why re nt when you can own
this 1 bedroom house in
Pomeroy for 65000 .00
caoh. Call 614 -992-6871
eves.

6 room house in town. ntce
location, forced lir fu.r nace, .
lergo lo1, $32 ,600. Owner
finan cing evailable . 304 ·
676·1090.
Rt. 2. Alhton. ArringtOn
Houae. 3 bedrooms. 1.1h
bath1 , modern kitchen.
buement . 1 acre plul ,
priced in the 40's . Clyde
Bowen , Jr.. 304-578 -2338 .

struction and packaged pe -

nalized housing. Al so, fi no nc ln g and mortgn ge
bank ing preferred . Send r u·
sume an d phon e: Ken Cock·

TOP CASH paid for '83
model and newer used cars.
Smith Buick·Pontloc, 1911
Eaotom Avo .. Gallipolia. Coli
814·448·2282.

arhom, P.O. Box 4908.
Mortinrvillo, Vo . 24116 .

Wanted to Buy: Standing
dmber &amp; pulp wood. Con·
Uict Alvin Johnoon 81o6·
I 3117-7410.

Baby alttor for 2 amall
c:llildrtn In Chrlotion Home.
Rt. 2. Point Pltaunt. phone'
304·675-61 61 '

•ShoM •Trophl•l
•Aepalr

Middleport, Oh . 6t 4-992 3478 .

Situations
Wanted

3 bdr. otory 'lt. lull baooment, fuel oil heat, fireplace.
'12 acre, Centenartv . city
wolftr. Call 814·448-3044.

12·2·

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

kett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave .

12

Port· time. Muot be 21. All
shifts and weekends. Coun·
try Corry Out, 681 Upper
River Rd., Gallipolis.

8

fiiu£.STREAK CABCO~l

ware, old coins, large Q!JFrency. Top prices. Ed . BUr-

Housekeeper &amp;· cook . Call
614 -446-n53.

Color TV. Worloa. 304-875·
419B.

Pupplta. 6 wooka old. All
maloo . Cute . 304-875 ·
3213 .

LOST:sablo 8o white mole
Collie. On Laolay St . Mul·
berry Ava. aree . Dragging
chain . 814-992-8818 oft. 4
p.m.

P.M. Monday-Soturday

.

I .J,tfc

Complttt Gutter Work
Compltl&lt;l Romodollng
Roofing of oil Typoa
Worked In home area
20 y•ro
• "FrH Eotlmatoa" :

6:00

108 Vine St.
Gallipolis
446-9244

Have Your Trophy Mounted By A
Full Th111 Taxidermist
Comptte Qufllg, Not M~s

Parte &amp; Se,.lce

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

742-2778

9:00 A.M. •

Firm Equlp111111t

EUGENE LONG

or

gold. silvar

Help Wanted

RN, part·tlmo, Sat &amp; Sun ..
Send resume to Sox T•
5050, Care of Galllpolio
Daily Tribune, 826 Third
Ave.. Galllpolio, Ohio
46631 .

Found: puppy In Lou rot Cliff
area. Black and white Beagle
typo, appro•. 8 wko old. Colt
814-992-5819 .

2 LOCAnONS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Buying daily

11

Priced by owner for quick
sale . New wall to wall
carpet, rural water, electric
and out building . from Galli· .
polis go down river on Rt. 7,
tum right on Rt . 218. than
about 2 mlla1 or firat road
right to Kriner Ridge Road, •
ftvt hundred feet on Kriner
to lirat houoe on right . Call
614·446·2917 .

Oscar islostl Will you please
help him get home7 Oocar io
1 block mala Bolglen Sha·
pherd dog, he hit a shiny
biiCk COlt With I Whit&amp;
bruit and white pawl. He Is
shor1 haired. Oscar Is tiK
yoaro old. He hu loot hlo
collor and I.D., If you oeo
01e11r, wHI you pleaae call
814·448·0535 or 814 -25868447 Reward tor hl1 ro·
tum. Oscar's home ialn the
Sowardo Rldgt Rood vlcinlty, )ust off Stoto Routo663.

~ licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

12 weeks old black femele
Labradora Retriver. 304·
675·2249 .

6

Television Listenihg Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

0

Wanted To Buy

Library Desk Aoslotant
Aloe plants to give sway. Working knowledge of fie·
Call 614-742-2488 .
tion, non -fiction and child·
rens books. panicularly cur5 klttana to give oway. 4 rent titles. Familiarity with
montho old . Coli 81 4· 742· basic reference tool1 such 11
2488 .
Granger' a poetry Index, an·
cyclopedia~ , atlases. Who's
Registered female Dober· who's etc. Must type acu·
man and 1 Guinea Pig to give rately minimum of 26 words
away to good home. Call per minute. Be abkl to run
614-9B6·428B.
16mm protector. photocop·
tar, microfiche reader , 16
7 male fuzzy puppies: 8 and 36 mm microfilm read ·
weeks old. Shephard &amp; ers and printers. Knowledge
Collie mixed . 814 · 992 · of buk mailing rates end
7458 .
Nleo helpful. Knowledge of
A.L.A . filing ruloa. Ability to
Mala Cock-a -poo to give work with the public under
away to good home . Has had various conditions. Ability to
ohoto. 8 montho old . Call work with and communicate
614-992-7449.
orally and writ1en with fel ·
low omployoeo end ouporvi·
Cato to a good homo. sor. Evening and weekend
304·875-3954.
hours a mult. Starting talary
of $4.90 per hour. Ability to
2 female Calico kittano, operate menu driven com·
mother cat Yellow stripped, puter program with two
304·875· 7876.
file1. Ute of bar code wand
helpful. For appointment
Puppies to give away, 304· call 446 -R EAD Bouord Ll·
675·1246 .
brary. No Students.

2 year old part blue Marril
collie. 304-675·6043 "'
675-1890.

to 24'x36' ·
Insulated Dog Houses

Ollllpollt,

No Sunday Calls

HOME NATIONAL
BANK

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up

U-SA~E

New Homes Built

HOUSE with 3 bed·
rooms on corner lot in Syrcuse.

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

"W1 R1n1 F0t lm"

"Free Estimates"

OLDER

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

CALL
446-4522

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

: 3 BEDROOIIMOBILE HOllE
on 3 lots in Sy11cuse.

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dottie Turner 992·5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

~pt'r!&lt;'llCI'

i-

f'•&lt;,

Comrlrte Front f11 d
PMII illlrl Ser·we
I r •f ' /',I • 'J (:1 !\,/

*VINYl SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

2

12 VOLH VOlt

4

Female puppies to good
homo . Coll614-446-8022 .

Call:

4·5·11&lt;

MIDDLEPORT story
home on quiet street. 3 bed·
rooms, garage &amp; patio areA.

3 YEAR WARRANTY

'Spacial

3 dogl · AKC Reg .
Schnauzer. Call 614-448·
2631 '

Ph. 985-4141

All Mek11

POMEROY - In town plus
elbow room. Neat split level
home with 3 bedrooms. din ·
ing.room, f.a. electric wrth
heat pmp. central air, stor·
age building, on a 2.li acre
lot. $61,900.00.

AGRI BOSS

Uoe your old discorded dollo
as cash at the new and used
i-ummage room, Dec, 20 .
2 I, 22. six milos out Jerrvs
Run at Apple Grove, phone
304·676-2636.

2 German Shephard puppieo. Call814-448-1149 .

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Long Bottom, Ohio

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Drvert •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

MIDDLEPORT - Nice I ~
story home on double lot &amp;2
bedrooms. in good neigfi·
borhood. Storage building,
garden space, in )Jlod con·
dition. $29,900.00.

COMPLETE LINE OF
FARM AND AUTO
BAlTERIES

Flotwoooh Rd., Co. Rd 26
2 Mi. from Fin Points
Watc:h For Signs
11·26· 1 mo.

Residential &amp; Commercial

985-3561

RIGGSC~EST ADDITION Beautiful newer split foye1
home in a great neighbor·
hood • plus an in -ground
swimming pool. Very attrac·
live &amp; in great condition!
Owner wants olfer!

Battery Sale

The lzoak Wahon Club will
have their muzzel loading
primitive weapon• ahoots
Sundeyo, December 22nd.
29th and Januory 5th. Start·
ing time for each date, 1 :00
p.m. No ICOPBI permitted.
Prize1-bacon. turkey and
cash. Shoot• will be bench
and off-hond. Located 3'h
milet south of Chester on
Shade River Rd.

Notice. singles.
meet that special person!
Coli or wr~afor application.
Personal Touch lntroduc·
tiona. 304·744-4485, P. 0.
Box 8536. Charlollon. W.
Va . 26302 .

MARCUM
CONTRACnNG

- Addon1 end remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- ptumbing t~Jnd eltctricel

POMEROY- Rt. 33- Cozy
2 bedroom home on approx.
9 acres, mostly wooded for
hunting, house has been re·
modeled with nice kitchen &amp;
balh. Economical gas heat. 5
minutes from town . Asking

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp;PINE CONES
FOR WREATHS

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

*Complete Remodeling
*Room Additions
*Roofing
*Siding
*Garages &amp; Pole
Buildings

lie M1w1 AFall Tl1111

992· 2259

64 Misc. Merchandise

10·14·tlc

RESIDENCE

A.A.A.
304-675-6276

SWEEPER and sewing machine repair, parts. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georgeo Crook Rd. Cell
61 4-448-0294.

Adorable Christmas puppies. Call814-246-6888 .

Also Transmission

pond.

304-372"5709

HAILEY HANING

•Uve entertainment
' Free HBO •Restaurant
•Olympic Pool

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bodo, iron,
wood, cupboards, chairs,
chests , baskets , dishes.
stone jars. antiques, gold
and silver . Write · M . O.
Miller, Rt .2, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 or call 614 -9927760 .

Every Sunday. beginning at
1 :00 p.rri. Foctory Choke 12
guage shotguna.

PRE-CUT TREES
AVAILABLE

. SINGLE $24.95

Announcements

Racine Gun Shoot span ·

AlSO

POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.
8 miles trom
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

Only

9

sored by Racine Gun Club.

BEND ARIA CAU
Ripley OHice
For Hours

9·30-tf

Anno uncemen Is

coins, rings. jewelrY. sterling

PH. 304-675-2441

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

IN YOUR COLORS
Manv Other Crafts
Available

PRINT SHOP

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson Ave.

UIGE ANIMAL &amp;
SUIGEIY BY APPT.

Bashan Building

CROCHETED
HATS

Paul E. Shockey, DVM

Mon.·Wed.-lhun. 3-5 pm
lu11. 6:30-8; Fri. 1·2 pm
Saturlfoy 10.- 11 i30 am

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

115 BliCK ST.
POMEROY

16141 992-7754

TOWN &amp; COUNTIIY
VETERINARIAN
CUNIC

SMAU ANIMAL HOURS

GUN SHOOT

AT

~~~
lfll bt uaMrtht raontllcf ll ' ll~~~~
DtcMblr.
To:l'll bt 11 on•lontlis lOp olour
608
trM,
. E . Main
Beuuseyou'llllwlyl be with
POMEROY, O .
IIIII, DHdy ••d .... '

-=

..

Down from Rutland Post
Oflice, will be ruhninguntil
after Christmas. New &amp;
used toys, something for
the whole family. dolls,
tools, novelties, etc .
. 12-4-85 I "'·

OPEN IHURSDAY
THRU lUNDA~

RESIDENCE PHONE

Copy

INS IDE YARD SALE

THE HAT RACK

••btr.

..-ontllot..,,.

•

11·22·1 1110 .

, lqe raaution r00111. f.o.
cad on 8 atres. IMp In

PHONE 992-2156

-e.

Rate~ - Reliabla

3

wortc

: Happenings around
Meigs County••••

"'*""""'·

Ree10neble

(6141 992-6550

PHONE (6141992-6100
12· 20·85 I mo.

NANTES, France (UP]) free 21 people on Thursday while extremist Ma.lem that we met In the third was · a Moroccan who
Three hl.&gt;avily armed men who had another 10 people reached freedom prison, ThloUel and me. He told us claimed alleg!cncr' with a Palestiheld a courtroom full of peoplt! today. That left lour men held about his struggle and what he nian guerrilla group.
hostage lor more than 27 hours Ded hostage.
planned to do when he got out of
Witnesses said the trio came wt
the courthouse in a van today, each
The cameraman who filmed the prison. Rather than waste all my one by one, each armed with a .~7
chained to at least one of the four scene, Bernard Dussel, saidKhalld time In prison, 1 decided to ally Magnum pistol and hand grenade
remaining hostages, witnesses claimed to be a member of the myself with his cause."
and got Iillo the mini-van they they
said.
Palestinian extremist movement · The gunmen's Renault mini· van had ll'()uested from poUce.
The gunmen's departure came associated with guerrilla leader departed toward the center r4
minutes alter Courtois appeared on Abu Nidal.
Nantes with several ot'her vehicles
a courthouse balcony and, while
French news reports said Khalkl behind. One car had policemen
ha,ndculfed to Hailbache, randomly was paroled Nov. 29 after serving wearing bullet-proof vests, witfired over the heads of reporters two years of a five-year term lor nesses said.
SHARING- ID die zero lempera&amp;ures, Tinker, a dllbuahua, peers
and toward poUce. No one was armed robbery.
out IJml hill cumforiable JIOIIIIIDn IMde the jacket of Ills owner, Oils
The group's destination was not
;McNutt, M.- County resldenL
reported Injured.
"He told us that he wanted to give Immediately known.
"We are not afraid of death," ~ French government a slap in
'
The gunme~ had been holed up in
Coo rtols told a radio report.ercalled the face and held up phota; of the ~ courthouse southwest of Paris
Into the criminal courtroom. "Let war In Lebanon. He said that In two lor more than 'l7 hours. Two of the
us leave or the worst w!U happen." months, it wUJ be over for France In three were defendants who had
The reporter said later the three Lebanon," Dussel said.
been on trial when the takeover
gunmen were "very tense" and
Courtois klent!fled Khalk! as "an began at 11 a.m. Thu~y, while
that each was carrying a hand
.,
grenade and a .357Magnurn pistol. , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The gunmen tried to escape
before dawn today' but were forced
back inside. A court clerk escaped
In the confusion.
Virgil Klng of Bedford Township
The incident began Thursday
Of Wrilt Oa1llr St"lllltl Cltsstl!ti Otpl.
Five calls were answered Thurs- when Khalkl, freed from prison
and Richard Koblentz of Chester
Ill Co•rt St .. Pollltro). Otlfo 07U
·•Township were elected to tenns on day by local units, the Meigs County three weeks ago, burst Into the
tlie Meigs County Agricultural Emergency Medical Services courtroom, fired a shot Into the air
·
Stabilization artd Conservation reports.
and disarmed live guards.
At
8:al
a.m.,
Rutland took Jana
Conun!ttee.
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Bowersack from Long St. to Holzer
King was elected to a three year
He gave lhe guards' pistols to
• term and Koblentz was elected to Medical Center: Syracuse at 8:27 Courtois andThlollet. Courtois ~n IN THE COMMON PlEAS
and nlllll ofldn of Camttn K10r; doacrlbod In Volume 280,
NOTICE OF
complete a one year unexpired a.m. took Grace Holler from Vine allowed a television journalist COURT OF MEIGS COUNI'Y, . Clinton
Ar1hur Karr, whose Pogo 733, Molgo County Deed
APPOINTMENT OF
St.
to
Veterans
Memolial
Hospital;
"ferm.
OHIO
Inside the rourtroom br!efiy Thurs:
1111 add,.. II Ill· Rooorda, lllform,. to wlic:lo is
FIDUCIARY
JOHN T. ORUESER
: -Koblentz and King w1ll serve at 11: rtf a.m. Tuppers Plains took day ·10 film him as lie strode about
known. ond to .. ... - . herol&gt;y mode.
On 'Docenillr 16, 1986,1n
ond
c~~&lt;•=onctllllllollm a~ c...
Vou m requlrtd to enswar the Moiga County Prublto
Slong with Wallace Bradford to Harold Smith from Rwdsvllle to like a lawyer, lecturing ~ judge
JUANITA P. OAUESER,
ton Ar1lv Karr; Etllol ...._ • dlo Complelnt 28 dayo Court. c - No. 24982. D•
Compose the ASC Committee which Veterans Memorial; Tuppers and the other 34 hostages, who all
Plli1tiffl
KarT• ..._ lui lonown ed· altwtlio laot ptoblaollon of thil vtd O. Smith, 1695 Gr.,d·
vs.
serves as a policy making board tor Plains at 12: 53 p.m. took Bernice sat In silence.
d'* II '"'""-'· and to ol nota wll be publohld view Rood, Rlclioator, Midi~
ARTHUR
WA. ET AL
tlohoin,dovioooolndnooilal . . , , . _ , _ t o r l i l c gon 48084 I.Rvacy
from
the
Boy
Scout
Camp
the Meigs County ASCS Ofllce. The
oppolntod
The group fired several shots
o.........
ldn cii'Etllol R~ ICorr; and ........... 'lllo lilt E..C!l!Of of tlio ntoto ol Vio•omce handles programs such as the Road to Veterans Memorial and though the day but none r1. them hit
Cue No. 84-CV-333
to Anvlln• Korr. whose laot publication wll be made on let Smith. dew111 tl.late of R.
NOTIC£ BY
,agricultural conservation pro- then to Holzer Medical Center; at anybne.
" " - ' ....._ II unkno...,, J-.~ry 'Ef, 11115 and tho 2111 D. Rood111Nit. Ohio 45772.
PUBUCAllON
gram, feed grain and what pro- 2:19 p.m., a minor lire was
Robert E. Budo,
and to .. ""' "'"· . . . . doyo for - - wil comA SWAT team soon ringed the
To
a.r.
wi10H and.-olimof~..,e
Ptabete Judge
grams, burley tobacco program, extinguished at Veterans Memorial courthouse and negotiations began. 1aot known Korr
od- II 111In .... of your ·lolurt to
Lona K. Ntllflr.,.d, Citric
Kerr:
and
...
lolown,
ond
to
...
.....,.,...,
Hospital.
,wool program and the comodlty
A Fepresentatlve of Morocco's heln, do\ I 1, and ,.Jd al ilt1 d - . . unlonown 11101 INWII" or ott. ..... rllfPOnd 11 2) 20, 27; II I 3
8nd lac!llty loan programs of the U.
with ........'" .... 11 required tw t1o OliO! Aulto
Embassy In Paris, Mohammed
1- b e -.., - ... of CMt Pmoaclurw. tu.-rmont
of
Korr
Boor:
.s. Department of Agriculture.
Lasfar, Wll5 Involved In the talks, - . -· taot-od· honby r'GIIIIed lhot IOU hMl by clofault wll Ill IWidond
Public Notice
d - :, ...tonown. ond til .. _ , namod DwfsiCIIIoll In 1
. :Jhe Meigs County ASCS Ofllce Is Two cantatas set
police said.
ogoinll yau for ""' raliof
8CIIon entitled John T. ~ 1n tho c.,.,tont.
JQ!:ated on the second Ooor of ~
llllo1own
.
Eventually ~ gurunen agreed to ""'
ond neoct
d ldn ol Alllu
11aor: logal
Oruooer
and Juonlta P.
PUBLIC NOTICE
·Fsrmers Bank BuDding In Porne·
Oladyo Korr, whonllllilnown ON-. l'lllnliffl, ... Alllu Dotod: Nov-19, 1985.
Two cantatas, Gathering at the
lido will be accepted ot
· Lony Spwullt'.
-ll..,lonolMI, and totht
roy and can he rontacted by phone Manger by Terry Kirkland, by the
Clortc of' Courto, llie Pomeroy Vllloge Hall.ununlonown '*'. dovloooo, and - · Et AI., Dolw .....o. Tllio
Veterans
Memorial
at 992-6646.
MoigaCountY tll I 2 o'clock ..,on Monday
hit-.
8111gned
c
children's choir and Love Beyond
MXt of kin of llladyo Korr: Numbor 84-CV-333 and II
Common ·Pteto Court Januory &amp;. 1988, on a 197i
Meaure by Michael E. Parks, by
laot pending In tho Cca'" of
Cllovroltt Impala, ao lo.
Meeting on ~. 30
Adm!tted..AJan Wilson, Syra- Wllllr Katr. Jr.. the adult choir will be presented ai 7 cuse; Grace Holter, Racine; Max- known .add,.. II unknown, Common Plou a1 Melga )11)22, 29;
The car can be aeen at the
ond to lht ..... - -.ond County, Pomeroy, Ohio. )12)8, 13. 20, '£1 , etc
Pomeroy
Village Hall.
. . .A special meeting of Chester p.in. Sunday at the Racine First ine Hobbs, Dexter.
neoct olldn al WJr.; 411789.
Jane Wahon
'rbwnship Trustees wUI be held at Baptist Church. The public Is · Discharged--Albert Hemsley, ~10lyn ICorr, whoH loll
The ol&gt;joct of tho c.,.,toiu
Clerk-Trooauror
invited.
II far porti. ., d tho ol and 1111
.,
Vlllego o1
oil Dec. 30.
lo1own II
Shannandoah HlnkJI&gt;.
..·""'p.m.
·~
~
•
1/ '
(12) 20, 27
~
ond to .. ""' holrl, - - ' " -' In ,..,

.

985-4189 .

Business Forms.,

Underpinning.

EBLIN

Rt. 2, Coolville

We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.
IUSINilS PHONE

PH. 949-2649

''I(

B&amp;D Mobile Home
Repair Senice

failure to proceed with caution Ball, West Jefferson, failure to tag
through on ye!Jow nashlng traffic deer, $25.and costs, and aft.e r taking
signal, $10 and costs; John K. a deer carrying a possess gun in the
Pullins, Pomeroy, no muffler, $5 field, $150 and costs; Hollie Varner,
and costs; Dor C. Coates, Middle- Parkersburg, passing at an inter·
port, ' tallure to control, $al and section, $30andcosts; Larry Rider,
costs; John McGuire; Cheshlfe,left Middleport, unsafe vehicle, $10and
rl.center,$10andcosts; JamesCoy, costs; Sammy Maynard, Jr., WU·
Wellston, Insecure load, $15 and kesvllle, driving while intoxicated,
costs; Carl Crabtree, South Point, $:!i0 and costs, three. days in jaU,
failure to deliver deer to an r:tf!clal l!cense suspended 60 llays; costs
checking statk&gt;n by noon the. only on a left of center charge;
following day· of harvest, $~ and Jerry Moore, Harrlsonv!!Ie, no
costs; taking and possessing a deer driver's license, $75 and costs, live
not properly tagged, $00 and costs; days in jail, jail sentence suspended
Andy BaiT!nger, Coolv!lle, driving and placed on probation for one
while Intoxicated, $250 and costs, year; Donald Stobart, Pomeroy,
thrEe days in jaU, 60 day !lcense . driving while Intoxicated, S250 and
suspension; Paul H. Edwardsln, costs, six months In jail with ail but
Ironton, hunting deer without 1985 , 10 days suspended; six • month
special deer permit, S2i and costs; !lcense suspension, $100 of line
RoiPrt Lee Thompson, Galloway, suspended, costs only lor not having
transport In a motor vehicle a driver's Ucense and driving Jeft ·of
loaded Drearm, $50 and costs; Jefl center; Douglas Raines, Racine,
Robinson, Ashville, hunt deer with· speeding, $'/7 and costs, Sal and
out an article d hunter orange on costs, fictitious plates; Judith !.auouter clothing, $25 and rosts; Craig dermllt, Middleport, failure to

K•.

WE HAUL_:BIG OR SMALL
PICK UP WEEKLY

Contracting Service

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.

Gunmen flee after holding jury, judge hostage

King, Koblentz
elected to ASCS

HEATING
317 North SKond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

long Bottom, Ohio

O'Brien completes county court cases
Forty-two cases were processed
in the weekly session of Meigs
County Court Judge Patrick
O'Brien.
Fined were Barbara Mathews,
Pomeroy, $21 and costs; Scott
Dingle, Athens, $23 and costs;
David Messina, Athens, Sal and
costs; Thomas Hall, Mishawaka,
Ind., $%i and rosts; Gary Hysell,
Middleport, $23 and costs; Johnny
Ratl!tl, Middleport, $22 and costs;
Kenneth Bin ton, Olive HID, Ky., Sal
and costs; Fred Rochester, J..osan,
$~ and costs; Thelma Walton,
Racine, $23 and costs; R. Mark
Allison, Gallipolis, $ai and costs;
Gary Carter, Columbus, Sal and
costs; Dana Holland, Beverly, $21
and costs; Scott Soderstrom, Rey·
noldsburg, $23 and costs; Jimmy
Carter, iteedsv!lle, $23 and costs;
Wilson Ugwu, A~ns, $23 and
costs; Walter Canary, Columbus,
$25 and costs, ail on speeding
charges.
Also Ronnie Rowe, Chesapeake,

HUDNALL
PLUMBING .&amp;

GARBAGE SERVJ&lt;E

JOH" (.

I '2utfc

:X:

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 9

Business Services

your energies more Into getting better yourself,"
Fischer said.
"It's a lot easter when you're surrounded by
familiar surroundings and friends when you •re
confronted with a very difficult llfe·threatenlng
situation," he said.
Doctors said that w!t!Wut the .transplant, Ashcraft
might .have lived only two or three months because of
impaired blood now to his own heart.T.hey also said 8J
percent of heart transplant patients can expect 10
survive for a year and that 50 percent to.OO percent of
~ patients will survive for at least five years.

-Kennedy, candidate for senate, not presidency
BOSTON (UP!) - Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy, stunning~ political
· World with his announcement that
he will not srek the Democratic
nomination for the White House In
1911!, says he realizes he "may
never be president."
In his statement, the Dve- tenn
:MassachuseUs Democrat said, "I
have decided that the best way 10
advance till.&gt; values you and I share
- peace on earth, economic growth
at home, and. compassion lor all
Americans - Is to be a United
States senator, and not a candidate
for -president."
Kennedy's announcement Thurs·
· ~y night removed him asoneolthe
Allljor Democratic front-runners
:tnd boosted the presklenl!al aspirations of two other leading contend·
ers, Sen. GaryHartofColoradoand
Gov. Mario Cuomo of New York.
· "tn a taped television announcement broadcast on two Boston TV
stations, Kennedy said he will seek
4 sixth Senate term and woukl
elaborate on his decision at a 10: 30

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

32 Mobile Homes
f o r Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. OALLIPO(IS,
RT;35 . PHONE 814·448·
72 4 .

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

·. 1982 Clayton, 1 4X$6. fully
·fum.. w11her. dryer, AC.
underpinning llo porch . Exc .
cond .. Moke on· Offer. Coli
614·266-1&amp;21 or614-266·
8311.
1 1110

libenv

14.&amp;4.

LAFF·A·DAY
~ 'tl&gt;-~-'

51 Household Goods

2

: underpinning included.
•Muat nil. Call 304-773-

·5873.

Valley Furniture, new lc
used . Large tection of qu1l ·
ity furniture. 1218 E11tern
Ave., Gallipolit.

MOBitE HOMES MOVED:
inaured, reasonable rates,
Coli 304-576 ·2336
· 1980 libany 1 4x64, 2 br
··unfurnllhed. vinyl under:'penning Included. Mutt Sell.
·304-773-5873 .

. . . . ....

priced to aell aell u
11,600 .00 . 304-57541&amp;4.

33

Farms for Sale

Applo Grove 100 ocreo,
largo bom 120x2B, 1,300h
frontege on Jerry'• Run
Rood, . 6 mlloo from Goo&lt;l'f..r Plant. Mineral righll.
Wont offer. Clyde Bowen,
Jr. 304-878 - ~338 .
For ooie or trodo.' livo oc,.,
of lend with water and
electric. price reduced, 304676 · 2449.

34

Business
Buildings

-Small engintl Hie&amp;. reptir
~ bualn ... In Middleport ior
11le. for more infonnation
. con 614· 992-3092 or 614: 812-3782.

: ·36

Lots &amp; Acreage

Farm for aale: no house, 2
barna, county water &amp; Mptlc
tonk . Coll814· 379-2258.
Why PIIY double prictl We
build big 4 bdr . Eorly Amerl·
con Homao ·I1B,995. Now
· model open. Call 81 4-B88·
7311 .

Aelll il ls
41

Houses for Rent

~

"''·····-- \,....... . . .....,..•......... . . ''"'

FJWniohed houoo. 241 Jock·
oon Plko, Galllpollo. o200
.woter INikl. 2 bdr. Coli
448·4416 ott.r 7PM .

1----------.,.-----------1
42

Mobile Homes

e room hou ••. open garage.
In AlfredCummunity. Refer·

·. encn 1nd depoa.tt required.
Call 814-9B&amp; -3849 .

: Hou" or apt. for rent .
Furnished or unfurniahed .
· 614-992-23B1 doyoor814992-8723 ovoo.
Modern 2 bedroom stone
homo. goo hoot. llreploca,
full basement, two car garego. Cell 81 4 -992· 7366
o'h or 6:00p.m .

4

~rooms.

wood burning
flraploco. No poto. Call
814-949 ·2263.

3 two bedroom hoUHI for
ront In Middleport. 1150.,
f18&amp; .. or 1200. por month .
DepOsit required. No peta.
Specify employed or retired.
Coil 1-216· 836 -3962 .
Efficiency cottage. $56.00
wMk, utiUtill paid. phone
304 -87&amp;·3100 or 676 51109 .
Ulrt~~

house 1nd 1partment,

~nlurnlohod . 304 - 676 -

1311&amp;.

3 bedroom. living room.
dining room, family room.
tNoth end-hell. bonmont.
304-676 · 3030 or 875 3431 .

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

P11

rt

ment
for Rent

1-- - - - - - - -

Wether. dryer, ewning .
1200. pluo dapeloit and
utilitioo. No poto. Coli 614992·7479.
Application now being token
for thrH 2 .bedroom mobile
homoo. 117&amp;.00 per month.
1200.00 depooH. no poto,
Hud occoptod. call 304876-3000 till 5:00PM .

' 2 bedroom total e'-etric,
1150 . 00 par m11nth,
0100.00 dopoo~. no pelt.
reference required, Rt. 2,
five minur .. from town. Hud
A..lloblo Jon. 1. 1988. accoptod, 304-875·3000
Completely rodecorotod. 3 till 6:00 PM.
bdr . home. nice lot, nice
neighborhood, well lnou· 2 · br Inlier in Pt. Pleaunt
leted. Move in condition. area. f180 dopooit; 1200.
Coli 814- 288·&amp;1 10 for pot month. 304-876· 1843
or 675-&amp;714 .
further detaiiJ,

• lri Mlnorovillo by tho Bulk
_ plant. 1 bedroom houoo.
Total electric. Portially furnlohod. 814-992-8215 or
.. 14·992·7314 .

A

2 bdr. unfurn. 1 2x80 , Furniohed apt. 9204thAvo..
wooher llo dryor hookup. 'h Gollipolio. ono bdr .. 1280.
mile poll HMC on Rt. 35. utilitioo paid. odu~o. Call
Coll814·446-4369 or 304· 446-4416 alter 7PM.
87&amp;·9780 .
Upstairs furn . apts. cleen. no
12X80 2 bdr. central olr. pet1, adulta, utiltie1 paid.
new carpet. Che1hire. Call Rei. &amp; dop . roqulrod. Coli
814-387-0221 or614-387- 814-446·1619.
7242 .
Nice 2 bdr apt, 4 miles from
One bdr. furnithed. g11 Gallipolis. stove. refrig .. It
furnace. CA. petio with water turnl1hed .. 8200 mo .
awning, oft ltrHt parking, No Poto. Coli 814-448HCurity light, nice location 8038 .
in city. Mual h.we referen·
coo &amp; dopoolt roquirod. Call Modern 1 bdr apt. convenient location, no pets, Sec.
114-446-4169 .
Oep. &amp; References. Call
614-448-205&amp;
ohor 2pm.
14x70 lurnlohtd 3 bdr., 1'h
both, f250 mo., 841 3rd
Avo .. Golllpolio. Coli 814- Apt. for rent in Henderaon ,
WV, 1126 mo . Call814-48446-3793.
.
9662.
2 bdr. mobile home for rent
adults only. no pets, ref. &amp;. 2 bedroom apartments.
dop. required . Coli 814· New Hewen, WVa. Newly
remodeled. In town. 814·
387-7743 .
992-74B1 .
2 bodroom troller 12x6&amp; .
Aloo oftlciency opt. Both Effaneiency aplrtment . 2
locotod on Rouoll Lana, rooms, beth, full banment.
Cheohiro. Oh . 304-773- furnished . In Pomeroy
obovo Krogoro. 614-992·
&amp;B28.
6216 or 814·992-7314 .

bdr ., l1rge kitchen, nice
utility room. 1 Clr ger1gt,
f296 mo. Ref. llo dop
required . Cell 61 4-441 ·
1;368.

3 bdr. houn lurnlohod. 3&amp;
VIne St., rei. roq . 8260 mo.
Coll614-441-1214 or 614441-0B36.

44

for Rent

"3

N- 2 llo 3 bdr. houHo.
UIO ,.o., R ockopringo.
Ohio. Coll814-441-1&amp;12.

~

"I don't want to shatter your
dreams, but did you ever
notice the number of musical instruments in hockShOps?"

3 bedroom . furnished .
Ranch atyle, nice 2 bdr.
homo, 2 lull INitho. 'h bl..
from Wuh. Elem.. *328.
rol. roq. Coli 614·446·
21&amp;B .

"'

~

/

2 br trailer in Pt. Pleeunt
oreo. I 1&amp;0 dopoolt; 1200.
per month. 304-875· 1 643
or 678-&amp;714.
2 br troller for rant. You INIY
utliltloo. Oopoolt Requifod.
Roloronco. 304-675-2&amp;3&amp; .

6 room unlurniahed apt. Coli
614·992·5434 or304·8822&amp;88 .
1 or 2 bodroom opto. Utilities included. 1210. plut
dlpoolt . 814 ·992·7177 .
APARTMENTS . mobile
homes, hou1e1. Pt . Plaeaant
and Golllpolio . 814 -4488221 .

2 br epertmentl in Henderoon. 304-676· 1972.
Nice 1 end 2 br apertments ·
downtown. 304·676-2218
• B·6

46

44

Apartment
for Rent

1- - - -- - - . , - JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol
Houtlng Opportunity)
monthly renl otorts 11 1169
for 1 bod room and 1204 lor
2 bedroom, deposit 8200,
located near Spring Valley
Plaza end Foodlind. pool
and Coblo TV ovoiloblo,
office hours 11 pouible 10
em to 4 pm 1nd 7 pm to 9 pm
Mondey-Frlday, Cell 8144 48 . 2 7 4 5 or leave
meoooga.

1--..;.______

Nicely lurnlohod mobile
home. eff. apt .. central air
and hoot In city. odulto only.
Coli 814-446-0338.

Housekeeping room, range.
refrlg.. 1h1ro bath, m1le
preferred, utilitie1 pd. I 1 26.
Call446-4418 oher 7pm .

1- - - - - - ' " - - - -

Furnlohod opt. 2 bdr .. 1 31 V.
4th. GoUipollo. 1196 water
paid. Coli 446-4418 ohor
7PM .

1- -- - - - ' - - -

740V. Second AVo. 3 bdr ..
I 190 mo.. dop. required.
Coli 614 -446-4222 be twoon 9 &amp; &amp;.
Del\lllll 2 bdr. downtown.
complete kitchen, 111 carpet.
washer . dryer, electric heat
&amp; AC. Oop. roql!ltod. Call
doyo 814-448·43B3, eve. &amp;
wookondo 814-446 -0139.

Furnlohod, AC. coblo, no city furnished 1pt., 4 rooma &amp;
,t llllel. beautiful river view In both, no poto, oduho. Avolio·
.K1n1uge. Fosters Mobile ble Doc. 1 . Coli 814-448Homo Pork . Call 614-44&amp;· 1&amp;19.
1602.
1- - - - - - - large 5 room upstairs tpt.,
2 bdr. fully lurniohod. lurnloh~ kitchen. f200 mo.
12x85. conv. location. pluo utllltieo, 238 111. Ave.
1 Upper River Rd., woter INIId, Rei. &amp; dop, no poto. Call
- · dop. roquirod. Coli 614-446-4928.
814-448-8&amp;&amp;8 .
1- - - - - - - 6 rooms &amp; bath. Located
Crown City. Newly docoNice 2 bdr . mobile home rated, electrlcJtovel refrig.
turn .. convenient loqotion' No poto . Coli 814-288 on Rt. 7. water paid. Call 1222.
114·248 -6818 .
1--- - - - - Furn. opl . lor rent, utllltioo
3 bdr. mobile 'homtl lorront. peld. 12311 mo: Coli 9AM·
Call 814·448· 4253.
IIPM. 814· 448·9244.

Space for Rent

Mobile home lot, 12'x60' or
smaller, 876 water paid, 4th
llo Neil. Galllpolio. Call 446·
4418 ohor &amp;PM .
Mobile home lot in Rio
Grande, Ohio . Call 614·
446 -9882.
Garage lor rent. alley bock of
Thom11 Clothiers. Cell814·
446 -2419 or 614- 446 3949 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Porlt. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. large lots . Call
814-992· 7479.
Trailer tpaces. Small child·
ren accepted . Out Rt . 1,
Locuot Road, bock of KlloK .
1 ·304-875-1078.

Rodocorotod opt. , 2 bdr ..
f150 to . f210. Coli 304875-6104 or 304-875 6386 or 304-676-789B .
Upotoiro unlurnlohod opt ..
carpetad, •II utilities paid, no
children, no poto. Coll814·
446· 1137.

Furl'!shed Rooms

For rent Slnplng Roomo
and light houte keeping
roomt . Perk Centr1l Hotel.
Coll614·446·0766 .

46

M1:1G II~ IHii se

51

64

Misc. Merchandi8e

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Ul'ry W~lj~t

73

GOOD USED APPLIANCES Machine quihed comfoner1,
Waahers, drvara, refrigera· 150. Hond quiltod qullto,
tor:s. rangea. Skaggs Ap- I 1 00. Baby quiho. I 16 . Coli
plioncoo, Upper River Rd. 614-992-2466.
beaide Stone Crest Motel.
Solkl maple Early Amerk:1n
614-448-7398 .
bedroom oulto. 814-742 ·
County Applionco. Inc. 21B5.
Good uHd oppllonceo and 1---- - - - - - TV ooto. Open BAM to 8PM . TONY'S GUN REPAIRS.
Mon thru Sot. 814-448 · holdlprobluolng.olltypeoof
1899, 627 3rd. Ave. Galli - gunomlth W!lrft, foot Hrvlco •
polio. OH .
304-675-4831.

· bedroom, unturniahed, vinyl

Small one bedroom mobile
homf, very good cond,

Friday, December 20, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Household Goodt

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Soils and ch1ir1 priced from
f2B6. to f89&amp; . Tobleo, 160
and up to f126 . Hldo-abedo. f390 . and up to
f650.. oolo bedo 1146,
Recliner•. f226 . to 1375.,
Lampo from 128. to 1126.
pc . dlnettoo lrom f109 .. to
436 . 7 pc. 1189 end up.
Wood tabla w~h ol• cholro
0286 to 0745 . Deli&lt; f110
up to t225. Hutcheo. f660.
Bunk bed complete with
mattriililo. 1275. and up to
0395. Boby bedo, 1110.
Manre••• or boJII iprings.
lull or twin, f03 .,1irm, 073 .
end 183 . OuMn ooto. f221 .
4 dr. choato, f49. &amp; dr.
chaoto. f&amp;~. Bod !romeo.
f20.ond 128., 10 gun - Gun
coblnoto, f310. Goo or
electric rongoo f375. Boby
mottrooooo, f21 &amp; Ul. bed
!romeo f20, 02&amp;, &amp; 130,
king !ramo flO . Good oolectlon of bodraom ou~tl,
rockers, metal cablnata.
heodboordo UB llo up to

tea.

Uood Furniture·- Druaor. &amp;
bod, ntOtll office deoko. 3
mlleo out lulovHio·Rd. Open
9om to 6pm, Mon. thru Sot.
814-448-0322
•

53

Antiques

2 old qullto. Grondmu
Flower Garden. 4 pre11ed
beck cholro. 5 old collectors
pocket knlveo . Call 814·
949-2801 alter 5:00p.m.

64

Misc. Merchandise

BIG MOVING SALE. 1008
Simpson Place. everything
gooo, living and bed room
fumtiure, 11wing m1chlne,
desk, antique Grandfathera
clock. 304-675-31 OB .
Pickena Used Fumtture hatf
mile out Jerricho Ro,d .
Open 9:00 to 6:00 pr ,by
appointment. Bedroom
suits, 16 chest of drawer•
and drelltrt IIIOrted Iilii
and 1tyle1, werdrobes, full
and twin tilt bedt, maHren
and box springs, twin end
full 1ize roll away beds,
cedar chests, datkl wood
and metal, livlngroom tuits,
chain , coffee tllblei, end
tablet, lamps, large dinning
room sutts. dinette sets,
OAK china cloaet, refrigerator. Wither and dryer, jewelery, glallware, 1mell IP·
pliancet, children clothes.

Hou1e coal . Lump &amp;. stoker.
Zinn Coal Co. Call614-4461408.
Sur plu I· Carhart . Army . .
Denim dothing, [intulated
Collohon'o Uood Tiro Shop. Oecron coveralls camouOver 1.000 tires, aizes 12. flage. orange. brown
13,14 , 15, 16, 16.6. 8 mileo 125 .001. Sam Somorvllle'o,
out Rt . 218. CoN 614 -256- E11t-Ravenswood, Junctk)n
6261 .
Independence Rood -Old Rt.
21. Fri. Sot, Sun. 1 :00· 7 :00
Chrittmat Trees. Rodney- PM (until Xmn altar &amp;:00
Bidwell Rood. 1114 mllas PM open[ . FREE DELIVERY,
from Rodney . CJII Fisher: 304-87&amp; - 3334 IKidt
814-245-1248.
Camouflage).
1981 Hondo CR BO. good
cond., 8400. Single size
hollywood bed. with mottrill &amp; bolll springs. White
Fronch Provincial heodboard
140. Coli 61 4-446-9308
ohor4PM .

New brown leothtr flight
acket with fur coller. Fur
ined , sire 46 lruns small) .
Gilt never worn, 304-8711B69.

j

Hand crafted wood doll
crodloo. Only ninaloh. 304676 -4636. Hondtroon, wv.

Firewood. hardwood. apllt,
stacked and delivered . A
very largo load, 13&amp;. Cell Amanda 18 ft. fro11 frM
814-446-7993 or 614 ·448· refrigerator. 30" electric
B636 .
Hit-clean rongo $360. ooch.
304-576-2069 .
Whito3 pc; , bdr ouite. f200 ..
Baby crib with mattreu
•7&amp; .. Playpen $26 .. 2 car 55 Building Sup plies
Halt f16 ooch . Coli 814·
446·2840 .

1,000 gel. water tank with Building Materials
pump &amp; hooo $400. Call Block, brick, sewer pipes.
windowJ , lintell , etc .
614-643-0068.
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,
16 inch girl's blka with Lo
_. _c_._n_6_1_4_-2_4_5_-5_1_2_1_.__
training wheela, 3 mo. old. •135. Coli 814·448 · 1422 or Kentucky lump. Ohio'-ump,
Ohio Stoker. Yard or deliv61'4-448-8080 otter 6pm.
ery, cement btockt and
Magnus cord organ . good building material . Gallipolis
125 .. bod oprood, twin , ~ke Block Co .. Pine St .. Golllpo·
new t10. TV atond f6 . Call lis. Ohio Coli 614-446 2783 .
614-446-0990.
Black powder S6 .95, muzzteloadlng ICCIIIoriea spe·
cialist, Koebel'• Gun• a.
Ropolr, Mlllcreok Rd. Open
5·8
Mon. thur-2318
Fri. Sot.
1-6. P.M.
Colll14-446
:

Block, brick, mortar and
masonry tupplill . Mountain
State Block, At. 33, New
Hovan, W. Vo . 304-882-

=======

! ;~~:::: :·
2 222

Pets for Sale
10 K 56
etc. 1- - - - - - - - - -

Jeworly line 14K &amp;
cfulten , tolltlire •
Gold pockets watches .
Franks Pawn Shop. Call
446-0840:
Motel lathe ooll or trode. Col
614-246-9258.

Brlorp,tch Kennel• All breed grooming . Adulta •
pupploo . Englloh Cocker
Spaniels. 388-9790.

1- - - - - - - - -

Dragonwynd Cattery Ken·
Ciose - Out Ammun ition nel. CFA Hlmoloyon. Poroian
Salol 1300 boxes of Win- end Sieme11 kittens. AKC
c:helter, Remingtom &amp; Fed· Chow puppleo. Call 446eral Clrtridges at prlcea 3B44 ohor 7PM .
11 .00-12 .00 . 8olowK· Mort 1- - - - - - -- or Heck1. All shotgun aizet, Live Teddy Booro: AK C
tome platoiJ, riffle. lnclud· Registered Chow Chow
ing 10me r1ritiea. All new· puppiet . Ready for Christ·
current manufacture . mao. Coll814-258-1271 .
Acro11 from Blue Fountain
AKC white 14 moo . old
Motel .
to mole Toy Poo~ie . Woigho
Snow thrower w-new motor opprox. 4 lbo. Good w~h
llo blodu 112&amp;, now 8,000 children, hou11 broke 8150.
BTU AC f160, 8 h . ~h bod Coll614-448-741&amp; .
trailer w·fold doWn ramps l- - - - - -- - - und for golf cart, onow AKC Reg . Doberman pupmobile or off road vehictas plfs, 6 wks. old, 2 black
1450. Call oltor 7PM . 814- mole. 1 rod malo. Coli
446-2746 .
61 4-448 -7795.
fuel oil healer with thermostot 176. Shower choir with
wheal• novor usod 020. Coli
814·38B-B824.
8 h . truck topper 160. Call
814-448-1214 after &amp;PM.
Mixed hordwoodolabo. 112 .
bund~. containing IP·
prolll: . 1 'h: ton, fob. Ohio
Pollet Co .. Pomeroy, Ohio .
Phone 814-992-6461 .

PM

Wood. f40 .00 1 ton . Ac cepting h..t vouchers , 814 742-2488.
Standing timber, hardwood
&amp; plna. Richerd Bailey· 814 ·
992-3861 .
Storm windows snd framea,
30x32 . Coll81 4-992· 2021 .
Now qulho lor oole, f25 .
ooch . Foothor plllowo, fl .
each . Stuffed toyo(mon koyo. kongorooo end Pigo}
fl. ooch. Call 814-'1422889 or 1114·742·247&amp;,
2 Riverview Cemetery loto
lor oolo. Coli .1-218· 835·
3952.
Mink coot lor Hie. L. . now.
Coiiii14-949-30B8 .

AKC Reg . Laoo Apoo puppill. Re1dy in time for
Chrlatmu. One male, two
fomolo. Coli 814 - 448 0708.
Germ1n wirehair pointer
pupo, AKC. exc. ohow &amp;'
hu ntlng bloodllneo . Call
61 4-3B8 ·8720.
Just In time for Chrittmaal
Reg . Pit Bull puppioo. llwko.
old, chomplon bloodlinoo.
f300. Coll614-218 -1281 .
AKC Gormon Shephord puppioo, 7 wotko old, 175 oo.
Coli 814-388-8469 .
Beoutiful whno Collio pupo
to give 1w1y to good home.
614-949-2908.
Purebred Red or Blue H"ler
puppleo (Auotrollon Cottle
Dogo). Coll614·742· 3104.
AKC Lhloo Apoo pupo,
maleo only. 20 cholf!Pionoln
padigrao, gentle, quiot ond
loving do go. 304·87&amp;·5137
or 878-2223. " to IIIUIIUO
lvoe u1" .

1-orokooto,
- - -bobioo,
---broodero,

oo91o. Coli lftor 1:00 304876·&amp;030.

a

·~

Porneroy- Middlepert. O.hjo

.....·-

The

Daily Sentinei- Page-11 · ,

I

'-·

W.O .

1983 Ford Escort. FwD: 4
sp .. E.C . $3400. 614-742 3063 .
1977 Ford Choteau E-150,
window van, 304· 882 ·
3361 alter &amp;:00 PM .

"14

Motorcycles

19 81 Honda 60 oxproas
$160 . 1982 CT1 10 Honda
!Trail 901 $400 . 1982
CB900C Honde $1,400.
Call614-367·0482 .

1----------

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olivo St .. Gollipolio. New
11o und wood-coolstOVII, 8
pc wood LR ou~o f399,
bunk bedo f199. ontron
recllnoro 199, new &amp; usod
bedroom sulttJ, range1,
wringor wuhero, &amp; ohooo.
Now llvlngroom oultos
*1 99 - $599 , Iampo. oloo
buying coal &amp; wood otovoo .
Coll814-448-3159.

.

1976 Jeep CJ 7. 8 cyl ..
stanerd, ffont winch, hun ·
tors opociol. $1 &amp;00. 814 742 -2700 days or 614·367·
1
0857 eveo .

1----------

RCA TV, 19 inch, 0100 . All
chonnolo. worlto good. Got
new console for Christm••·
304-876·8B48 .

· 'fs1cK TRACY

·;9BS ·

1972 Ford van 6 cyl.,
standard . $350. Call 814388-9303.

lump hou11 coel.limeltone,
gravel. aand delivered, one
ton and up. Jim Lanier,
304- 675-7397 or 67&amp; 1247.

E-Z Credit Mollohon Furni- 1
---------turo, Rt. 7 North of Golllpo- GE Jide-by·Jide double door
frolt freerefrlgarator, white.
Ho. Coll614-446 -7444.
1300. Exc. Cond. 304·67&amp;Refrigerator 1ftd electric 7479.
otovo, oolld heavy pine triple
dreonr llo choot. Call 814 - Cool lor 1110. Lump, stoker.
egg. Picked up or delivered.
448·7827.
814-448-9200 .
Country otyle ook furniture,
hond crohod and linlohed, 8' proioctorTV ocroon. mode
1ntique reproductions. Paul by Advent. Elite. cond. ParConkol. Rt. 7 . Tupparo feet picture. Must Hllf800.
Plaino.
304-67&amp;-7479 .

Vans&amp;. 4

j Friday, December 2o;

66

Pets for Sale

61

1978 750 Kawasaki must
sell. Sacrifice $300 . 304 875 -7479 .
Farm Equipment

75

AKC Boston Terrier pupptes,
ready by Chriotmoo. Call
304-87&amp;·3862 olter &amp;:00

ATIENTION formers if the
new lax lew pe1111 in 1986
which II highly probeble you
Rot Tonier Puppioo, 304· will 1011 the ten percent
675-1808 .
inve~tment credit tu . If you
need a new tractor, buy
AKC Garmon Shepherd now. we can sell you a new
pupo, 3 lomolos. Shoto end Duetz·AIIi• diesal tractor
wormed. M1ke an offer. from21 HPto1BOHPatloss
304-4&amp;8- 1628.
price than we told a tracotr
lor In 1980. Koolor Service
2 mare cotta. Gentle broke to Cantor, St. Rt . B7. Point
work or ride, 3 yeerw 9ld with ' Plttaaant, Ripley Road, call
2 bridles and 1 ooddle. 304-896-3874 .
1250. 1 Pony gelding 9
yooro old, nddle, bridle and 1980 Mauey Ferguson
hohor. Very good with kido. tractor. PS. spin oUt wheels.
170. 304-676-21 OB .
locking dllorontal. 500 hrs,
n.ooo.oo. Phone 304·
576-2147 .
57
Musical
Instruments
Wurlit1er Spinel piano, top
cond.. priced to ooll. Call
614-448-8580.

f .1r111 Su pp l11:s

63

Livestock

2 Reg . Sorrell quarter
marea, 1 8 mo . old quarter
colt. Coii814-2B8 -6622 .

~ Llvt:s to ck

64
61

Farm Equipment

CROSS I&lt; SONS
U.S . 3&amp; West, Jockoon.
Ohio. 614·288· 6461 .
M11ooy Ferguoon. Now Holland, Buoh Hog Soloo llo
Servk:e . Over 40 used treetort to chooSe from S.
compl-'ellne of new&amp;. uud
equipment. Largttt selec·
tlon In S.E. Ohio .
Jiviclono Form Equipment.
YearEndSalewith6percent
lnter•st. long Tractors,
Grain B1rn1, I&amp; full line of
Agr. Equip. Complete line of
Vermeer Hay Equip., Round
Bolo loodoro . f7B.OO.
Grinder mlxera. 3 pt. hitch
tutory tillero. 11 lt. load
bunkl • 1 1 0 .. poll Driver
1760, 8 HP Woodoplittoro
8960 .. Check our prlceo on
gatea &amp; Conal penel1 ,
pickup rackt, seeders, min eral feeder1, wt.el horse
lawn mowers. wood
burners, fre11t1nding, fire·
place lnMrta &amp; furnace
add-ont. Good aelection of
usld tractors &amp; other uJed
equip . Co11814-446-1676.
136 MatiiV Ferguson traC·
tor runs good, clean.
12,960. 6 h . buoh hog good
12.950. Call 814 · 2B8 6622 .

Hay &amp; Grein

Largo round boloo of hey $20
eo . Coll61 4-446- 1052 oher
5PM .
Mixed hay lor oole. $1 .00
per bale. Robinaon Farms
814-9B6 ·3829.
Top quality conditioned
mixod hoy. *1 .30 per bale.
Call 61 4·949-3059 ohor
6:00p.m.
Good hoy fornlo . 614-992·
6633 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

Transpnrt at1 on
71

Autos for Sale

Serv1ces
81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua ·
ran tee. Local references
furnished . Free estimates.
Cell collect 1-614 -237048B, dey or night. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing .
O.and M. Contractor~ . Vinyl
siding, replacement windows, insulating, roofing.
new end remodeling, concreto. Coli 304 -773-6131 .
J.and L. Installation. Roofing, vinyl tiding, storm doou
and windows. Free esiimatos. Call614-992 -2772 .

RINGLES ' S SERVICE , experienced carpenter, eleclrl·
cian, maaon, painter, rooting (including hot · tar
application[ 304-875-20BB
or 576-7368 .

1973 VW Super Bootie good
cond . Call614 ·446-3028 .

Get your carpet in thip shape
with Captain Steamer. furniture cleaning·water damage
work. 304-676-2295 .

lale Mode18N Ford tr1ctor,
4 spd, cream puff, not uud
hard, 4 new- tires, 11996.
Call 814 -2B6-8522.

1976 Ford Tempo black
with red stripes, runt good ,
looko good . Call 614·446 ·
4482 .
'
1978 Pinto auto . PS .
60,000 miles . 1600. Call
614-3BB-9303 .
1969 Rambler runo $160 .
Call814 -367-0149.
1977 Chovolle Malibu. 2
door, 306 engine, good
tranaportation . 8360 . 614 742 ·2502.

~ ~=:::::;:======
82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolit, Ohio
Phone 614-446: 3888 .or
514-446 -4477
JIM 'S PLUMBIIIIG llo HEATING. Rt. 1. Bo• 355. Gallipolis. Coll614· 387-0576 .

83

Excavating

Good-1 Excavating, bue·
man11, fO'Otars, driveways,
Mplic tankt . lendtcaping .
Cell anytime 614 -4464637. James L. Davison , Jr .
owner .
Dozer Work land clearing.
landscaping, e1c. Free esti·
mates. Coli 614-446 -8038
or 614·992 -7119 anytime .

79 Cadillac Fleetwood
Brougham 1 owner, good
cond . black IJrown metalic
General Hauling
with leather interior, See at 85
32 Warwick Rd ., price
U,&amp;OO. Call 304- 676 ·James Boys Water Service.
2684 lftor 7PM .
Al!o pools filled . Call 614 '64 Buick. 4 door. herd top, 256 - 1141 or 614 -446 ·
70,000 mlleo. very good 1175 o• 614-446 ·791 1.
oond, 1850.00. Phone 304 ·
Ken 's Water Service . Wells.
&amp;78-2147.
cisterns , pools filled . Phona
1980 Chevy Monzo . 4cyl .• 4 614 -367 -0623 or 614-367 .
speed, pretty good condl · 7741 night or day.
tion. ooking $1.1&amp;0. 304 ·
Waugh's Water Service .
896-3013.
Wells , cisterns , pools. Fa!t ,
' B6 Dodge Arieo LE, 3,000 reliabl e servic:e. Call 614 ·
miloo, AM-FM, AC, tilt 256 - 1240 or 614- 256 ·
whaol , quiot, 19,000.00 . 1130 . Rea1onable rate, ,
Phone 304-675-2979 oltor
Would like to haul gravel
6 :00.
sand . fill dirt. etc . Cell atte;
81 Cutllu. Co!l ohor 6 pm. 3. 614-446-7447
304 ·176-6336.
Dump truck service. will
deliver coal. limeatone or
other . 304·676·3190.
72 Trucks for Sale
1972 GMC truck V-8. PS.
PB. long wldt bod. price
0650 . Coll304 -468·1997.

73

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

1986 Chevy pickup 4-WD,
full power optlono. loaded
with "troo. 1 2,000 mr.
Black with charcoal interior.
ooklng f11,&amp;00. Coli 614·
448 -9384.

You been sick 1

Fetty Tree Trimming, 11urnp
removal . Call 304-6751331.

Rotary or cable lool drilling.
Mott wells completed same
day. Pump salatandservlca.
304·895 -3802

1969 Pontia c Catalina .
97,000 miles, 2nd owner,
runs good, always starts.
1400 or boot offer. Call
614 -245-9157 .

a dislike t, lh f'ool
truck!

knOW40U i5

RON 'S Teloviolon Service.
House calls oo RCA. Quazar.
GE. Spocioling In Zenith.
Call304-676· 2398 or 814·
448-2411'4 .

1981 Monte Carlo loaded ,
43.000 milu . Coli 814 266 · 1444 or 304- 676 1328 .

1983 Ptymouth Turitmo ,
2.2. &amp; spd. 42.000 miles .
Call 614 -446 -7414 · oher
4 pm.

Miz'Beck~ ,

You shouldn' be
up, Miz' Beck4l

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump sates, 11rvice. Regis·
tared in Ohio . All work
guarenteod. Coli 304-2732811 . Ravenswood, W. Vo.

Starks Tree and Lawn Service, landscaping . 304-5762010.
.

Plymouth Valiant Scamp .
V· 8. 2 door,318motor, AC .
PS. redial tire"J, radio. Call
614-246·9698 .

GATES 4 fl. 10 18 h . Ovor
300 In otock . Heavy Bole
Foodoro. December Salt on
otool lenoo polt. 5 lt. polt
f1.92. Horn Food f148.10
ton f7.1111·100 lb. YAUGER
FARM SUPPLY, 'RI . 311.
Southoiclo. wv.

John boat for sale . Call
614 -256-6417 .

1977 Pintd"'wagon. Califor·
nil car no ruat. new tires .
Coli 614· 286-6622 .

Gravity box, auger driven,
groin loodar f276.. buoh
hog 129&amp; .. poot hole digger
•176 .. manure spreader
'450. Coli 614 -286 ·6622.

Now Holland hu 0% Financing tor 2 years on ntw or
used Hay &amp; Forage products. Grinder mixers, ma·
nure spreeders . Now is the
time to buy box m1nure
•readert large cash discount•. December Specials:
1 -New Model 21 3 Now
Hollond 108 bu. Manure
Sprooder 12BOO. 1- Und
Model 317 Now Holland
Tonk Sproodor f1200 . 1Uood Model 676 Now Hoilend Bcx Spreodor 2 Boatoro. Tonden Axle, 260 BU
13100. 1- Ulod John Dotro
Model 700 Grinder Mixor
$2400. 1-Uoed Model 35&amp;
New Holland 100 bu .
Grinder Mixer Hyd-Orivo
uood very little $5600. 1·
Ulod Model 311 Grinder
Mlxor01460 . 1- NowModol
353 Now Holland BO bu.
lerge tir11 Grinder Mixer
18400. 2- Uood Now Holland Model 851 Round
bolero Hydwrop 16500. 1Uoed Now Holland Model
270 Boler 11BOO. 1- Uood
Super 88 N- Hollond
Square Boler 1800. 1. Now
Holland Model 488 9 h .
Hayblne Demonstrator
18200. 4· Good uood model
51 &amp; 256 Hay Rokto from
1800 to f1400. 1· Uood
Model 707 3 point Chopper
with both heodo f1900. 1Uoed Gthl Forogo box
t1500. 1-Uiod Super 717
Chop,., with 1 Row Hood
1 1800. 1• Ulod N- Holland 718 Chopper llo 1 Row
Hood 13300. 1 -Now Hoi·
lond L-462 Skid Steer
Loodo&lt; Domonotrotor 100
houro f12,500 . 1-Uood
Glenco 7 Shonk Soli Savor
now mold boordo &amp; polnto
13110P. Kooloro Sorvlco
Conter, St. Rt. 87. P1.
Ploonnt WV, Ripley Rd.
304-811-38 74.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

87

Upholstery

TRI STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
116 3 Sec. Ave., .Gallipolis.
614 ·446-7833 or 614 446
1833 .
.
.

R &amp; M Furniture Manufa c.
turing. St. At. 7 . Crown
City, Oh . Cell 6i4-258 l470. call Eve. 814-448 1976 Joop CJ -5. Collll14 - 343B . Old &amp; ·
448· 317&amp;.
Uphoatered.
n8 w

Et•ening Television Listings

__

12·. /20/.85

..'--

EVENING

7:00 • ())PM Meg~~tlne
(I) Courtship of Eddie' s
Fa1her
,... Collene BoakotiNIII:

=
•
Richmond

- TimesDlopotch
1~1
Somi-Finel Game ~1 . (2
hro .}
CIJ Entor1alnmont Tonight
Interview with Whitney
Houston.
CD eqJWheelofFortune
Ill EyeWitn"o Nowo
(Ill
MocNell-lahror
Newahour
e Clll Divorce Court
• Jofteroono
7":0&amp; CIJ Milly Tyler Moore
7:30 D (]) All Now Lot' a Make
• DH1
n •
(I) Please Don't Eat Dalaloa
'
Cll Now Price lo Right
CD I I (I) J - d y
Cl) Nightly Buoineoo Roport

lltWMel of Fortune
• Gil Price II Right
e
Cricket In Tlmeo
Squaro
7:35 CIJ Sanford and Son
8:00
College Baokotboll:
Kontucky
lnvitotlonol
Tournament
(]) Dorio Day' a Boot
Friondo
CIJ e &lt;Dl NFL Football:
Denver at SHt11e (CCI
CD Andy WIHiorno and the
NBC Kldl Search lor Bonta
Singer Andy· Williams and
several NBC child stars go to
Scandinavia In a musical
search forSt Nick . (60min.)
a oo llDl Twilight Zone
Cl)
·MocNoii-Lohntr
Nawshour
[IJl Waohlngton Week In
Review (CCI Peul Duke is
joined by top Washington
journolisto analyzing the

e (])

week 's news.

~~

[HBOI l\IIOVIE: 'Johnny
o-eroUIIv' CCC)
[MAX} MOVIE: 'No Small

8 ,06

ru'-=~~0.\....otboll:

Loo
Angoleo Lalloro ot Clevo·
land
8:30 CIJ Tho Lono "-"'
Clll Well Strut Week Louis
Rukoyoer analyzeo the '80'a
with a weakly review of
economk: and , investment
matters.
e MOVIE: 'Moot John
Doe'
9:00 ()J 700 Club

CD Collego
Rlchmoud

lllokotboll :
Tlmoo·

~~nol G.:,~

two .. 30 mln.l
CD C...,._o Dr01m Mr. T
and Emm1nuellewls star in
the otory o1 o latchkey child
learning &lt;he true mooning of
Chrlatmas from a klndy
olc:tewol&lt; Senti. (60 mln .l.
(RI. '
'

DCI) 00 •00owi-D~de.·,·,·,-.C-C)_ _ _ _ _ _"'!c:"o..n•op"':lr•acy-:",- - - - - - - - ••·a•rc•h•f•or•..-m•ls•sl•ng-Sa•n•ta_ _._ _ _
St•e•reo·.- - - - - - - - - 1o··.· OO-IJ_
I ])
_ "_H•u•n-to•r·De-o-Do-e'

5111

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Boryncooh1:

"...,' •
•
By n.p With
ThAmorfclln
E
- Ad Thoelf•
1s mmy war ·Winntng
program features the choreogrophy of Twyle Thorp
end the dancing of Mikhail
Boryshnikov . (60 min.) (R).
9:30 CI) Woll Street Week Louis
Rukoyser onalyzoa tho ·eo· a
with 1 weekly review of
economic and invea1rnent
matters.
[HBOJ Not Noceourily tho
N - Thio comedy serioo
presents sketches , news
and film footage satirizing
currant events .
10:00 e (]) CD Miami Vlco
Crockett end Tubbs encoun·
tar two naive young men

n~

12:20 [HBO} MOVIE: 'Of Unk·
~~:~day - Night Vi·
12 : 30
deoa In Stereo.
(])Bill Colby Show
Cl) e
Clll AIC Newa
Nl
ghtline
12:60 Cll Night Trocko
1 :00 Cll Wendy and Me
Cll Puttin' on tho Hilt
Ill MOVIE: 'Thirot'
e Clll Nowo
1 :26 (MAX] MOVIE : 'Revenge of
the Nerdt' (CCI
1:30 CilloveThetBob
Cll Nowo
1:46 e MOVIE: ' On Any Sunday'
1:66 !HBO} MOVIE: 'Tho Soduc- '

lj(i)

lion'

2:00

smugg~ngc::ocaine~filled_ sta·

tuoa for a murderous criminal. (60 min .) (RI . In
Stereo.
II(J)IDiFalconCreat(CC}
Chase supports Colo and
Melissa when their tNoby
needs an operation, while
Maggie's n~~w novel outrajleS Angola . (80 min.}
CIJ Woohlngt&lt;Mt Wook In
ROYiew (CCI Paul Duke Ia
joined by top Weohington
journatiltl analyzing the
wook's newa.
·
(Ill Nowowotch (CCI
[MAXI - MOVIE:
'Eivlo:
Thot'o the w., 11 lo'
10:20 CIJ Sanford and Son
10:30 CIJ Vorloty
Cl) College Baokotboll:
vs. Freano State
(]]) Snu11 Preview
10:60 Cl) Night Trocki
,, :oo •oomCDe oo® eClll
N(I) Men from U.N .C.l.E
Cill Chrlotmoo 9poclll
With Luclono Povanml
e lenny Hill 8 1 1 :30
(!) The Tonight
Show Tonight's gues1s are
Jacklommon and Sade. (60
min.) In Sttroo .
·
(]) &amp;portaConllr

M.,.._.

e (])

Cll WKIII" In Cincinnati
~=VIE: ·o-erouo
()!». TOJCI

atimeClll Dick Cleri&lt;'o N~oe ~ Step 8oyond

1 1 :60 (HBOI Hhchhl&lt;or A men
staying over II 1 friend's
house begin1 an ..ne rata·
tlonohlp with a otroy dog.
'
!MAX} MOVIE: 'EIn a-l&lt;ok'
12:00 ()J Boot ol Oroucho
(]) Golf: 1 98&amp; Mazda
Chempiono C,_lc Flrot
Round Coverage from Mon·
t~o 6ay, Jomalco. 12 hro .l
liJ
Tonight
Interview with Whitney
Houlton.
Ill MOVIE: 'The Bhutterod
Room'
•
MOVIE: 'Bilek n.L

E--

~

2 :16
2 :30
3 :00

3 :30

D (]) N Cil 700 Club
CD NFL Oeme of tht Week
()) Dkk Clark'• Nttetime
IDi CNN Hoodllne Nowo
CD SportaCenter
CIJ MOVIE: 'Wheel of Fortune'
CD Spoodweek
(MAX} MOVIE: 1VIdoo·
drome'
CD Col'- BookotiNIII:
Richmond
TlmeoDlopotch
Invitational
Semi-Final Game -I . (2
hra.j

3:46
4:30

e

MOVIE: 'Pumping Iron'
IHIO} MOVIE: 'Touchod'
C1J MOVIE: 'Th- Foceo
Woot'
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Avalanche'

12121185
(\IENING

e

I]) Chriotmoo Dreem
Mr. T and Emmanuel lewis
atar in the s1ory of a latchkey
chikllearnlng the true mean·
ing of Chrittmas from a
kindly oidewalk Santa. 160
mln,l (~1.
CIJ Gocfo Hoort
Brooko Whh Love
CD e Clll Colloae Bookotbolll W"t Vlrgfnla ot Vir·
glnlo Tech
CIJ .e (I) HH How
CD Amorico
lltWMel of Fortune
Cill Newton'o Apple (CCI
lr3 Flatow demonttrates the
phyolco behind punting e
footbell. (60 mln .l
e Small Wonder
7:30 CIJ Laromlo
7:00

•

mo._..

Ill Call the GovornG!
• ~- •• Uvlng
(MAX} Altum Flooh: Stevie'
Wonder New_ videoa from
St•vte Wonder" 1 le1est al·
bum 'In Square C~clo ' are
featured, along w ith eJCclualve Interviews and back·
11191 visita with 1he Oscar
end Gremmy winner.
B:OO e (I) College Boakotboll:

Claus leads to o roco for

Cl) Snook Provlewo F1lm

in

critics Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons e~eamine the film
industry's fascination with
aliens .

$250.000

negotiable .

bonds. l60 min .)

~er!~mme e Break In
_(I) ,.,., Alrwoll

.,.

""'

Cl) Spoclol Oporotlono Ex·

A.~~ ..··4d

ocutlva

(Ill Auotln City

~iJ:~

Umlto:

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Juice Newton

til lndopondonco Bowl:

41 lh· lt •ad.~ tht•
hi! p;.lrath• IMI•OI ~
Barbara
42 l..;u ·..ralt•
5 Swf •t•tlwart 43 Human ro;tcl
9 Vt•m•zut•lan DOWN
t "UIIj .W r
J Bihfif ·al
t:l'n tt•r
IIIWt•r
10 Potpourri
2 BolOilJ.l :o~ hf'
II f " t lll\' t ·.~ · ·• r
3 lt a11k
ACROSS

Mlnnoootl vo. Clemoon
Live from Shreveport, LA . l3
hrs.)
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Juot the
Wey You Are' (CCI
I MAX} MOVIE: ·er-n.

•

I r\4trt•s!-i

ecape'

8 :06 Cll NBA Booketboll: Boo·
ton ot Phllodelphle
8 :30 CD The Facto of U1e Mrs .
Garrett holpso nervouo Tootte prepare for her driving
test. In Stereo.
9:00 CD Collage Boakotboll:
Richmond
TlmooDlopotch
lnvltatlonol
Chomplonohlp
Cll e (jJ) Lody Blue (CCI
CD The Goldon Girlo Rosa
makes a fatal mistake when
she allows her boyfriend to
spend tho night with her . In
Stereo.
I I (I) 1Di MOVIE: 'BLuing
Soddloo'
Cl) Tripoda
(Ill MOVIE: 'Dr. Who: Koo por of Trokon' .
9:30 CD 227 Mary goea to ex tromos when she attempts
10 compensate for the doni
she put in a man's car. !R[.In

Williams

12 Bum·u

· ,·xpt•n

21 I'"'Y'""''
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23 l' lrmgP
24 l lnld
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27 I list aff
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OAILYCRVPTOQUOTES - Here's how to work It:

.J

AX YDL'BA A XR
lsLONGFEI.I.OW

(J K )

· Mswe!:
veaternay'l

()

One letter stands for another. In t hi.• sample A &gt;S used
for the three L 's, X for the two
etc. Sin~l c l etters,
apostrophe~ . the length and fomlt'rtum of the words arc all
hints. Each day lhe code letlers arc d1flrrent.
CRYPTOQUOTE
12-20

o·,.

Now lflaogt the cln:led l«tera to
IOITfl the aurpt"IM aniWif, u aug.CJOI!Id by tho obovo - n.

r xI I x
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40 l 'rrrmony

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32 t 'm11·d
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or vt •nial
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8 Marilyn
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38 "1.a
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19 "••r
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Bullt•nnilk 16 SHnc·tln NI

15 Tt·rrninar"
16 ( 'hiOI'.''il'

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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~
~~·
by Henri Arnold and Bob LM
Untcramble thtM four JumbtM,
one letter to etch equare, to form 1::;:::::;::~~)
tour ordinary warda.

\!:!.1

pieces her lifo on jeopardy
when she Investigates a
murder connected with the
porno mov ie _indus try (60
min.l iRI. In Stereo.

)tHE

"r I x r r

(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbltl: LINEN AHEAD BIGAMY CLO~EA
Mtwtr: Whi t 1he tald to h•rMU wMI') the c•rd·

ptlytr Pf'Opoeecl marrlltf'- ''NO 810 DEAL "

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G .J I C X S L J U G N
ll R 0 C .1 T I c;
v ..terday'o Cryptoquote: TilE FlllST STF.I' TOW.

(I) MOVIE: 'lt'o o Wonder-

ARD IMPROVEMENT IS TO LOOK TilE FAL'TS IN THE
FACE ._: OLIVER WENIJELL H&lt;n.MF.s '

Kontuokv

Toum.ment

ful Lh' .
(I) Tho Fall Quy ICC) Colt's

�-.
..

2-The

.

08cember 20. 1985.

Ohio

·Shultz, President disagree
on use of lie detector tests
WASHINGJ'ON (UPI) - An
open spUt Is apparent In the
admlnlstratlon over lie detector
tests, with Secretary of State
George Shultz saying he would quit
If his honesty were questioned.
Shultz, hiS voice thickened with
emotion, told reporters who asked
:abOut his views on lie detector tests,
"'The minute In this government I
am told that I'm not trusted ts the
day that I leave." He then turned
and left the room.
Shultz was expected to meet with
Reagan today, but the time ot the
meeting was oot avaUable.
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said Thursday Cabinet
officers are among those who might
be asked to take the tests.
AWhite House official declined to
comment on Shultz's statement,
saying, "We're going to have hiS
~

·Weather forecast
Today... snow .. accumulating an
Inch or so by l"Venlng. High in the
:mld 20s. South winds becoming
-west 10 to 15 mph. .
· · Tonlght...cloudy with scattered
Oiu-rles. Low near 10. West winds lo
to Ill mph.
Saturday...partial clearing. High
near Ill.
Chance ol snow... 100 percent
-today .. 50 percent tonight and 10
:percent Saturday.
•
ExCeoded loreclllit

Sllnda.Y lhrougb Tqesday

words and explanation stand on its

HOLIDAY
SPECIALS

determine how they a(lmlnlster
these tesiS from senk&gt;r ofllclals on
down," he said. "The specifics
(are) still to be worked oot."
President Reagan recently ordered polygraph tests for officials
with access to national security
lntmnatlon In order to cutdown (II .
leaks and espionage.
The directive, which was revealedafteraflurryolspyarrests.
has been portrayed as a tool to
protect national secrets from lor- 'jj'-------....:...J;....:;.;,.:_:..:;.:,:___.:,...,::.,:.:..;_:_:.:;_..:;.:,.::,:...:;____~
elgn powers, but the administration
has In the past considered similar
measures kl halt news leaks.
The American Foreign Service
AS~JJCiatlon, which represents U.S.
diplomats In their deaUngs with the
department, denounced the lle
detector tests, saying, "The careers
of public Se!Vants should not
depend on the results of a machlile
that classifies CJie- third of all
· honest people as llars, but falls to
reliably detect real liars."

~."

The official said !hat Reagan was
"aware" of Shultz's position. Ouring an Interview earner In the day
on the NBC "Today" show, Shultz
said, "I've taken It up with the
president."
The olficlal pointed out that a
counterintelligence !ask force ls
currently working out details and
timing of the polygraph program
which ls expected to start In early
198&gt;.
"While we have 4.2 mUllon
employes who have security clearance, thls poUcy affects only about
100,(0) who deal In classified
(material),'' he said.
He also · noted that cabinet
tttlclals go through "stringent
ba kground
c
" lnvestgatklns before
they are appointed and also during
their confirmation.
'E
' ach agency will have to

OPEN 2 HOURS

SPECIALS GOOD THRU
!DECEMBER 31st - OPE·N
CHRISTMAS DAY!!

______

.Great Selection of
Christmas Trtel
• sCokh Pint $1 to $ 1S
Whitt Pint $I 0 to $ 1S
Uve Blue Spruce 3' to 4'

.

W

i

u

Pepsi, Diet Peps~ Pepsi Free &amp;Mt. Dew
W

~

111_,

I

winne~

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Thursday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Nwnber
943.
Ticket sales totaled $1,178,289.50,
with a payoff due of $315,61ll.50.

su

••=+•'•·-

I
I
1
I

Whitman's Sa111Jier
REG. t5:75

PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$182,540.50, with a payoff due ol
$82,156.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$6,384. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays$266.

'

·nL a:oo

"

$399 .

PLUS DEPOSIT .

Din COKE - TAB- SPRITE

COKE -

99C

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80&lt; 2 LITER

TABU &amp;
AMBUSH
OPEN
SUNDAY
10 Ul.·
I P.M.

40°/o off

MiddleP2f1-Pomeroy-Gal!f21is-Point Pleasant Sunday, December 22, 1986

'

SUNOAY
ONLY/

From United Press International
'llme&amp;Sentinel Stall Reports

The calendar conflnned Saturday what most
Ohioans have known for the past several days- that
winter Is here.
Winter officially arrived at 5:08 p.m.. but with the
snow and cold weather of the past several days, It's
appearance wQI hardly be lett.
It's also the shortest day of the year and four days
belore Christmas and Ohioans are hoping for that
white Christmas.
Those hopes got a boost Friday when at least three

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (UPI) United Mine Workers members
hopefully would return to work for
A.T. Massey Coal Co. mines within
a month; an "elated" union pres!·
dent said Friday after signing an
agreemen_t recommended by a
. federal mediator.
"I'm elated," said UMW President Richard Trumka sald.. "Mas·
sey has finally owned up to the
truth."
Trumka said A.T. Massey's
admission of being a common
employer means the union's 15month-old selective strike IS eflectlvely ended.

MeCulloltgh. R.Ph.

601

Chwl.. Rlffl•. A.Pft,

AoNIId Haning, A. Ph.

ORANGE
JUICE

1\.

~

Mon . ttuu S.t . 8:00 • ·"'· to 9 p .m.
SuMiv 10:30 to 12:30 tnd I to I p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS

$1~~M!

SAVE 40t

PH . 912 ·11515

£ Main
Open Nllfht• til I

POTATO
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Di'amonds 25°/o Off
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KREMENTZ 14K Gold
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EASTERN STAR RINGS
BLACK HILLS GOLD

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HOOPS

PEARLS
BIRTHSTONE

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9CJ. ~
'

ANTI FREEZE
I

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HOTDOG

2 99C
3 99&lt;
12 oz.
CANS

Inches of snow fell in the area, creating hazardous
condltklns for area drivers, forcing the early closing
of schools In Gallia and Meigs counties and the
cancellation of four basketball games.
Roads quickly became sllppery and were a factor in
more than 30 vehicular accidents, according to area
law enforcement agencies. No Injuries were reported
In the accidents, many of which caused minor
damage.
The road conditions also led to the p)stponrnent of
the entire slate of SVAC basketball games. One game,

STRIKE ENDS - United
Mine Workers President RIchard Trumka Friday aonouned
the end of lhe union's seledtve
striJre Mai.nst the A.T. Massey
Coal Co. 111•1 Its subildlarles,
which has dragged on lor 15
montlw.

E. Morgan Massey, president of
A.T. Massey, said his company was
"delighted" to announce the
agreement.
The union president said he ropes
the "Christmas spirit" would enable the sides to resolv~ their
differences.
. "I would hope that if there's an
ounce of decency In (Massey) , he
will say he wlll hOnor the obUgatlons
he has entered Into," Trumka said.
Trumka's statement followed
announcement earner by the National Labor Relations Board on tbe
settlement !1 a series !1 unfair labor
practice charges by the UMW
against A.T. Massey .
A.T. Massey agreed thls week
and the union signed Friday a
settlement proposed by NLRB
Cincinnati Regional Director Emil
Fl!J'kas. The pact means A.T.
Massey and Its affUiated companIes agree to bargain as .a single
emplcyer and are required to
bargain as such with the UMW
upon request.
Trumka sald he hopes the 1.100
members litvolved In the often
violent selective strtke In southern
West Virginia and eastern Kentucky since October 1984 can return
to work within a month.
Tile agreement means members
on selective strtke are covered
under the 1984 Bituminous Coal
Wage Agreement because Massey
has signed the contract, Trurnka
said.
The settlement Ls on terms very
similar to those proposed by the
company lo the NLRB last May and
rejected by the union , Massey sald.
The settlement has a provision
saying A.T. Massey did rot admit to
(Continued on page A3)

Hannan Tl'ace at North Gallla, has been rescheduled
for Jan. 21.
·
The Ohio State Patrol said Saturday rmming thai
main highways were mostly clear with some Ice and
snow-covered patches while county and township
roads were mostly snow covered. Galli a Coonty road
crews were at work Saturday morning In an attempt
to Improve traveling conditions.
Clouds remained over the rest of the state Saturday
morning and flurries persisted In the northeast. About
four to six inches of fresh fiuffy snow fell in the

FIRST SNOW - A Galllpolls City Scltool District
school bus driver examines his vehicle prior Ill dte
early dismissal of classes Friday. 'lbe first
.

snowbelt area east of Cleveland during the night.
Warmer weather begins Sunday and temperatures
are expected' to climb the first part of the week.
The warmer air plowing Into the cold air may touch
off some snow later Sunday. In the extreme south, the
snow may even change over to, or be all rain.
The milder trend should end around Christmas.
Colder air wUI return by Christmas Day and there Is a
chance. for snow in the holiday forecast, making a
white Christmas a posslblllty even though much of the
snow will mell.

SOFT DRIN,KS

RUBE
SAPPHIRE

•• oz.
CUP

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Tcytng to avoid being
cast to tread pol!Ileal waters, Gov. Richard F. Celeste
reluctantly let legislation making abortions more
restrictive for teenage girls become law without his
signature.
The legislation, which takes effect March 20,
requtlres vou,!2. unmarried women llving at horne to

in!onn ihetr J,arents before having an abortion.
The governor told a press conferenre he personally
opposed the measure as a "miSdirected attempt" to
solve a parent-child communication problem. But he
acknowledged that a veto would have provoked more
"singularly unproductive" debate In the Legislature,
ending in ~ override of hiS veto.

992-3715

TM

59C

SUPERAMERICA

MAIN TIED
POMEROY, OHIO

adopted by the Hou se. 70-24, and by the Senate, 26-6,
Ia te last month.
Celeste admitted not enough votes could be
changed to sustain a veto. He said his course of ac tion
was dictated by personal, poUIIcal and public policy
judgments."

Instead, Celeste said, he is appointing a special task
force of pro-choice advocates, abortion opponents,
parents, teenagers, educators and health care
specialists to formulate future public poUcy on
teenage sexuality and unwanted pregnancy.
Heavily favored by al!ortlon opponents as a step
toward limiting the surgical procedure, the bitt was

Legislation creates Northwest
Ordinance Bicentennial panel

279 WEST
•FREE GfT
WRAPPING

substantial snow of the season dumped an estlmaled 3
inches on the area,lorclng canoollattons !t mmerous
activities, as weD as causing dozens d traffic
accidents.

POMEROY - Six teen lathers
were In Meigs Coonty Common
Pleas Court Friday morning to face
allegations of being In contempt o(
court orders to pay chUd support.
The men were advised by Judge
Charles Kttlght of the possible
criminal penalties and possible jail
sentences if the court lound them In
contempt.
Kltight explained that Ohio law
now requires the court to summons
Individuals to court when they an'
more than 10 days delinquent In
payments.
"You are not being singled out,"
the judge said, "others wUI also be
called In by the court."
Fathers found by the judge to be
In' contempt ol court orders to pay
support were sentenced to 10 days
In jaU with sentences suspended if
payments are made and kept
current.
Wages and unemployment compensation of some lathers were
assigned by the cout1.
Others fathers, found not "will·
fully" delinquent by the court, were
advised to report to the court on a
monthly basis, three places where
employment had been sought.
The judge noted during llle
proceedings that "child support, .bY
law, takes priority" over all other
debts. "You gotthat?" he asked one
father.
·
Sheriff Howard Frank was unable to serve court orders lo some
fathers who were to appear before
Knight on Friday. Aheartngdaleol
Jan. 31 was re-scheduled for these
men.
Jean VIneyard, director of the
Meigs County Bureau of Support,
and David Jenkins, of the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services. were also present In ·
cou r1 .

Celeste 'reluctantly' allows abortion_bill to become law

MANY OTHER SPECIALS THROUGHOUT
THE STOlE
•
•FREE RING
SIZING
•FREE
ENGRAVING-

11 SectiOno. 72 Pogeo, 50 Centa
A Multlmedlo Inc. Nowopop•

16 fathers
•
appear 1n
court Friday

fOR

QUINCH YOUR THIRST

··Page A-3-

First snow Friday; winter a1rives Saturday

SAVE

IUFFLES

•

Vol. 20 No. 46
Copyrlg/tted1985

3.1 9

Pharmacy
IC.~neth

ILK

CONCENTRATED
COLOGNE S$PRAv
lEG. t4.95 Only

SWISHER LOHSE

---.;
...

,Eiherfel.ds

,1.2
OZ.

Take-One ........ .......... ... Insert

tmts

HOMOGENIZED

BILLFOLDS

40°/o off

Editorials ...... ................... A·2
Sports .......... .. .......... ..... . C1·8

snow possible
on Sunday

•

•

~::""

EVElY EVENING

James J, Kilpatrick on the proposed cigarette ad
ban ..... Page A-2

AMITY

nMEX WAtCHES

CHRIS1MAS .

Only

16 OZ.-_
8 PACK

SAVE S1.20

ONE POUND

a.m.

FOR

•

OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M. nL I P.M. ·

'

Along the River ............... B-1-8
Business.......... .... ......... .... D-1
Deaths ............................. A-4

UMW ends strike
agai.nst Massey

W

SUNDAY ONLY SPECIALS

PICK-4

Ohio weather:

Inside:

I!

A cllance ol 8IIOW Swxlay.. lab- !I!
•
•
..
MOIIda;t'.. and a clulllce of snow or ll
· Free CoffH • Cookiea
rain 'l'lle!lday. Jllshs In lhe • to
PH. 99 2·6776 .
lower 38s Sunday and In lhe 30s II l'eitwniol- Wrea1hs -llallging WtllGnm llaotUts
MOIIda;t' and Tue8clay. l.Dws 1n lhe liiiiB;S••••••••••••••nlllltiiQIW••••~~~~'
*lie dlclls Stmd~ and the Ills r---.:.........--------------~1
Monday and '1\Jesday.

Ohio lottery

-Page B-1

Page E-1

Bob Hoeflich discusses one man's role at
Chrislmas - Page 8-8

·7·DAYS A WEE.K

Newly Remodeled Store!

Hubbards Greenhouse
NOW OPEN
9 A.M. til 8 P.M.

~
~

miracles

Christmas 'past

Stop By and Visit Our

r-------------___:~_:_

~

A time of

SIGN!I BilL -

Gov. IUchud CeiiJiU .....

Iecl b'hiacre t'egaNortllwei&amp;Or.IIIICli!IIIOIIIItennill CoisMl I II a to orpalle lbe Illite'I ··p~~a to
eel IJn&amp;e the hhlorlc eveal. From left 1o dpt are:
otaadlng. Gary N-. Dlnlclor, Ohio IDIIorlcal

~·

Socllqr; Dr. (:lwtlll Cole, Executive Director, Ohio

HUIIIIIIIIIN c-tJ 8e1ted: Rep. Jol)'mt lloA!r,
l).()eQipc+; Ocw. Celute; and, Sea. Robert Ney,
&amp;-Bellaire.
~

••.. ....J. - --------

.

COLUMBUS - Gov. Richard F.
Celeste has signed leglslatloncreatlng a Northwest Ordinance Bicentennial Commission to organize
Ohio's celebratkln tbe bUI passed by
congress on July 13, 1787 which led
to the state's creation.
Celeste also appointed 14
6htuans, including Re. Jolynn
Boster, D-GaUipolls, to serve on the
commission's Executive Committee and inaugurated an exhibit at
the Ohio Historical Center.
The ordinance, submitted by
Thomas Jefferson, and one c1 lour
main documents of the original
American union, provided a means
of temporary soverelgnlty untn the
terrltm1es could become stalt!s In
their own right - on an equal basis
with the ot1glnal 13 colonies.
"This event ls a perfect vehicle to
bring national and international
altentlon to the tremendous progress we have made In rebuUding

••'

this part or the country," Celeste
said. "Let us use the months
leading up to this event to rededlcat.e ourselves to the Ideals
embodied ln this tar-sighted
document.''

Following the ordtnan!F's adoption, settlementS In the territory
were quickly constructed. The Ohio
Company founded Marietta, regarded as the oldest pemtanent
settlement In the state In 1788, while
an association or New Jersey
residents establlshed Columbia In
1788 and Cincinnati in 1789. The bill
also allowed the French 000 to settle
Galllpolls in 1790.
The blll also (:I'Ohlblted slavery In
the territory, which subsequently
yielded Ohio, Indiana. Illinois,
Wisconsin, Michigan and parts of
WISCOnsin.
During 19tll, the mobile exhibll
I

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will travel to 10 Ohio cities.
including Akron, Cincinnati, Celina,
Newark, Mentor, Canton, Maumee,
Lima, YOUI\l(Stown and Chillicothe.
At each sll e. represenlallves ~
Ohio's coUeges and universities wUJ
complete the exhibit with presenta ·
lions on the ordlnan!F.
Joining Boster on the Executive
Committee wUI be PhUllp R.
Shriver of Columlxls, President of
the Ohio Historical Society; WOllam H. Eells of Columbus, Midwest
Regional Manager of the Ford
Motor Co.; Marlena Mayor Nancy
HoiUster; Dan L. Heinlen ot
Columlxls, Director o! Alumni
Affairs at Ohio State Unlverslly;
Ohio UniverSity President Charles
Plng; Charles Taylor of Cleveland,
Director ot Corporate Contributions
and Community Affairs for Sohlo;
Dr. Michael Rapp or Cincinnati,
Execu tlve Director of the Jewish
Community Relations CooncU.

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