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14-The

'

Sentinel ,

~

... ..... _..._.,"':' ...

1 .._

__

-

1984 '

Despite problem, _frozen river not ltkely
CINCINNATI (AP) -The Markland Dam probably wlll have to
weather the winter without an
anti-Ice "bubbler" system, but the
Army Corps of Engineers says that,
barring extreme conditions, other
measures likely will prevent ice
from clogging Ohio River traffic this
winter:
Pipes- for the $140,00l bubbler
system, installed after a massive ice
buildup slammed into the dam in
1978, have slipped out of place along
the river bottom, said Larry
Dickson, chief of the waterways
management branch of the corps in
. Loutsvllle, Ky.
Dickson said the pipes, which may
have to be replaced, probably won't
be repositioned until next spring.
"For some reason, this past year

the thlnll has moved." Dickson said.
"So we've got to relocate It. We
tested It out this Ylla~. and It's stlll
working OK. But the way It was
laying, lt wouldn't do much good."
Installed in 1979, the bubbler
system Is one of several steps taken
by the corps to help prevent a
recun-ence of the massive Ice jam
that floated Into the dam in 1978and
tore barges lose. The dam Is near
Warsaw, Ky., about 40 miles
downstream from Cincinnati.
The system Involves a series ol
three-Inch plastic pipes, with holes
drllled In them, which are su-etched
across the river at an angle. Air Is
pumped Into the pipes with compressors, comes out the little holes
and rises to the water surface,
forming a curtain ol bubbles.

and following year. •'
The corps has set up a communi·
cations netwQrk along:the river to
keep track of Ice during the winter,
Dickson said.
Dickson said the corps thinks It's
well-prepared for normal Icing, but
still would have a hard time
handling extreme conditions that
freeze the river.
"We could get Ice thaf we really
rouldn't do much more with," he
said.

Officials successfully used the
bubbler In January 1982, when a cold
snap frosted tht&gt; river with slabs of
Ice. They'll have to rely on other
methods this winter should the
unusually cold weather continue
and pose problems for river barge
traffic, Dickson said.
Dickson said It will cost perhaps
UJ.&lt;XXJ If the pipes have to be
replaced. Officials aren't sure yet
why the pipes crept toward the dam
in the last year.
he saidIcing
the problems
corps Is
However,
prepared
to handle
with procedures developed after the
severe winters of the late 1!rnls.
"I'm never over-confident," he
said. "I think our system Is better
than It was prior to the winter of
1976-77. We learned a lot that year

squarely In the back near the neck.
"He just stood straight up like a
Greene said he was· passing grizzly bear. I thought I'd kllled him
through the city's East End, an area the way I hit him, but It didn't seem
of urban renewal projects and to faze him one bit," said Greene.
Then, he said, the attacker
middle-class neighborhoods, at
about 3 p.m. when he spotted the reached Into his coat pocket.
. "I tried my best but I thought he
struggle from a distance.
"It looked like they were wres- was going for a gun so I just backed
tling," said Greene, a ve1eranofthe off of him. I don't mind helping
Army Special Forces. "Itlookedltke people, butldon'twanttogetshotln
he was hitting her with his fists, but the process," Greene said.
The attacker backed off and two
then I saw the knife. That's.when I
or
three otlier men chased ll~In;:but
parked my !ruck."
he
got away, Greene said. Another
Greene, who Is from nearby
Hampton, said he grabbed an ax man called pollee. ·
"Nobody moved to help the
handle from the truck, ran to the
pair and pounded the attacker woman,'' he added.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) '- Ohio protection of acid sensitive regions
environmental groups say a $7 fromfurtherdamage,"Sedamsald.
btlllon national acid rain control
"The ttme of waiting for addi·
program they are proposing would ttonal studies before acting to
protect the state's high sulfur coal · controlacldraln Is over," he said.
market while minimizing tricreases
The proposal is a two-phase effort
In electric rates to pay for the requiring a 12 mllllon ton reduction
cleanup.
In sulfur dioxide emissions nationBut legislators from the state's ally, belowl98Jievels,over10years.
coal mining region are calling
Most of the cost of lnstalllng
tnsteadforcreatlonofacommlsslon pollution control equipment would
to lobby against "costly and be paid through charges to electric
unnecessary controJ programs."
utility customers.
The proposals, outlined by both
Costs would vary among states
camps at separate news conferen- with the groups predicting a 7
ces, are lnresponsetoaserlesofbills percent to9percent Increase In Ohio
In Congress to deal with acid rain electricutUltyratesbytheendofthe
pollution from the burning of high Implementation period.
sulfur coal.
The CWTeflt state budget · sets
Stephen Sedam, executive cl!.reCaSide ~million to support promts.
tor of the Ohio Environmental lng methods of making high sulfur
Council, said the proposed federal coal useable. Legislation lmpJe.
plan drafted by liis group, the mentlng the program Is to be
AmertcanLungAssoclationotOhlo, Introduced by Gov. Richard Cethe Ohio Audubon Council and the leste'sadmlnlstratlonthlsmonth.
SlerraCiubwasonewlthwhlchOhlo
Although Celeste has not taken a
stlind, Ron Good of the Sierra Club
could live.
"Our principal aim In developing Ohio Chapter catled for him to
this control strategy was the
attend a congressional subcommltprotection of the Ohio high sulfur teehearlngonacldralntnCieveland
coal market, the minimizing of Jan. 19 "to make a positive
" electric rate Increases and the , . . - - - - - - - - - - - ;

statement and to llve up t~ the
commttments he made to the Sierra
Club l!lld the people of Ohio In the
campaign."
Good said the hearing would "be a
litmus test for Dick Celeste."
Reps. Thomas Johnson, RNew
Concord; Jack Cera, DBellalre;
and Joseph Secrest, D-Senecavme,
were joined Wednesday by coal
Industry and union officials In
offering legislation to create an Acid
Rain Research and Education
Coounls,slon.
Johnson said Ohio would be hurt
by thependlngfederalleglslatlon. "I
have put together a bill which will
help prevent the coal Industry and
COilSUJllel'S from being led into
costly and unnecessary control
programs," he said.
Johnson said the panel would
represent Ohio lind Its coal industry
In federal deliberations on acid rain.

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HIM~~~

Wmter

Special!

I 99¢
PHARMACY
Middleport, OH.

JANUARY CLEARANCE
SALE PRICES ON:
Little Boys' Tops
Little Boys' Coordinates
Little Girls' Sleepwear
Little Girls' Tops
Junior Hang Ten Sportswear
Junior Lee Shifts &amp; Cords
Junior Wrangler Jeans
Women's Coordinate Sportswear
Women's Sweaters
Women's Corduroy Slacks
Men's Shirts
Men's Sweaters
JANUARY CLEARANCE
CHILDREN'S

Coats &amp; Snowsuits
SAVE 40°/o
REG. 116.00 to 163.00

~~/:ed

sg&amp;o To S37 80

JANUARY CLEARANCE
PRE-TEEN AND JUNIOR

SPORTSWEAR

Blouses, tops, skirts, jackets, vests,
sweaters and sweatshirts.

s11.00 ................ SALE s7 .15
s11.00 .............. SALE _sll.05
s22.00 .............. SALE S14.30
S29.00 .............. SALE S18.85
S34.00 .............. SALE $22.10

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

•

GIRLS' ·

LONG SLtEVED

PRINT
.
BEOUSES

T~SHIRTS ·

.

..

NOW
Your "Extra Touch;'

Ftorlat Since 19117 .

~
FLORIST
362 E. Main. Pomeroy
Your FTD Florilt
.,

~

.

~

Winter Sleepwear
Gowns, Robes, Niteshirts and Pajamas.
Reg. '8.00 to 139.00

~~l:ed

S6

39 To

S31

19

Court cases tenninated
Story on Page 8

•

.DRESSES

Save 40%on our remaining stock of little
girls' dresses. REG. 17_00 t~ 136 .00

Sale
Priced

$419 To $2}59

JANUARY CLEARANCE

BOYS' SHIRTS
REG. 17.95 to 124.95

Sale
Priced
JANUARY CLEARANCE
CHILDREN'S

aily

REG. 16.00 .................. SALE '4.50
REG. S8.00 .................. SALE '6.00
REGOlll.OO ................ SALE s8.25
REG. S14.00 .............. SALE '10.50

WINTER COATS

WINTER COATS .
Save 40% on our remai~ing stock of co_ats
.and winter vests.

plans t~
·nierge heat programs

Wrangler, Buster Brown and Toddly Winks:
Many colors. Complete range of sizes for little
girls and boys.

DRESS SLACKS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio's
two borne heating assistance programs apparenlly will be brought
under the ~ government umbrella .to save money aQd help fund
benefit Increases.
A state official said Thursday that
a me1 get plan Is In the wocks and
that under a deadline set by the
Legislature, It wDI be finished by
. July 1.
.
The consolidation asaertedly
would save $11 mllllon In admlnls·
tratlve and other costs during the
1984-1985 home heating season. The
move would not automatically
trigger benefit Increases. ·Howeyer,
It could lead t6 1he Celeste
administration's support of a $19.6
million benefit Increase In a bill now
pending In the House.

Save 40% on quality outerwear for men
and boys.

REG.
lEG.
REG.
REG.

S22.95 ..... SALE $13.77
S24.95 ..... SALE S14.97
S.34.95 ..... SALE S20.97
S59.95 ..... SALE S35.97

In that bill, Rep. Frank Mahnlc
Jr., 0-Garfleld Heights, wants to
hike from $9,!XXI to $12,00l the
maximum household Income under
which senior citizens and disabled
citizens can quality for the Ohio
Energy credits Program which Is
funded exclusively with state
do1Jats,
The other plan, Home Energy

JANUARY CLEARANCE
MEN'S

CORDUROY JEANS.
Sizes 29 to 42 waist in S, M, L and XL
lengths.

.·

Basic and fashion styles In an excellent
color assortment.

2- Sections, 12 Poge1
20 C.nh
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Assistance Program, Is funded by
the federal govenunent. The state
program this winter Is providing
assistance to about 265,CXXl Ohioans
while HEAP Is CWTefltly helping
:BJ,IXXJ.
Mahnlc said his bill Is needed
because Increases In Social Security
and other benefits r,ecelved by the
retired and disabled have pushed
them beyond the present $9,!XXI-a·
year cutoff.
He said the 265,1XXJ people now in
the program are abo\11 OO,&lt;XXJ fewer
than the previous year, due to the
Income limitation which has not
been changed at the top In six years.
Steven Gladman, admtnlstrator
of the HEAP program, said
recipients under that plan are stable
In number because eligibility Is
determined by poverty level Income, which Is adjusted annually.
Gladman, who told of the pending
merger plan, said HEAP benefits
are paid to individuals or families
wtth an annual Income which Is not
moretharil50percentofthepoverty
level. The poverty line now runs
from $7,291&gt; for a .single person to
$14,850 for a family of four.
HEAP benefits r81121! from 13

percent to 40 percentofheatlngbllls
for three winter months while the
state program pays 25 percent for
five winter months. Mahnlc' s bill
would ratsethestatepayments toll
percent.
Mahnlc said he supports the
merger not only because It would
save operating costs but also
because It would weed out "double
dippers" now drawing benefits
under both programs.
To qualify for the state program,
applicants must be 65 or over or
permanently disabled. Some can
also qualify fortliefederal program
and many apparently have done so
although no one knows to what
extent.

Mahnlc noted there still would be
separate plans although under one
umbrella' after the merger. He said
there would hi! one computer and
that double dippers could be spotted
In crosschecks.
HEAP Is administered by the
Development Department and the
energy credits program by the Tax
DePartment. Ostensibly, one of
those agencl~ will be designated to
run the combined operation.

Unemployment
Percent of

ll .G- WOI'k FOI'ce
Seasonally
Adjusted
10.5·

10.o9.5-

~3
Source Oevt of L.abot
JO~

AP

FALLS-

Uoemploymeut feD to 8.2 percent In December the Labor
Department said today. ( AP
Laserphoto).

Fire kills "
4 people
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Four
people, including aa young couple
and their 11-month-old son, died
early today when a fire broke out In
their second·floor apartment on the
cl1y's northweot side, fire ~Uictals
said. Two other · men escaped
unharmed.
Battalion Fire Chief Jerry Lindsay Identified the victims as Kevin
Triplett, 22; his wife, Beth, 19; their
son, Brian; and Triplett's brother,
Tim, 24.
Lindsay said another brother,
Zach Triplett, 19, and a family
friend, Mark McCreary, 25,escaped
without seriolls injury. He said
McCreary was treated at the scene
for a cut, while Zach Triplett
appeared unhurt.
Lindsay said fire officials were
alerted to the blaze at 2:28 a:m.
"At the time we arrived, there
was fire coming out the ttvlng room
window," Lindsay said. He said the
fire was confined to the ttvlng room
area of the Triplett's apartment,
and that none of the other apartments in the buDding was damaged
by fire.
"There was just slight smoke
damage to a couple of them," he
said.
Lindsay said the bodies of Kevin,
Beth and Brian Triplett were found
in a rear bedroon\ and were not
burned. He said TlmTrlplett'sbody
was found in the llvii!g .room "right
adjacent to where the fire started"
and that he "probably died of smoke
Inhalation also."
Zach Triplett was sleeping In a
second rear ~m. Lindsay said,
and escaped through a window, ·

Meigs jobless
rate declirles ·
in November
Unemployment In Meigs County fell by two-tenths of one percent during
November while Gallla County reversed a four-month downward trend In
November by posting an increase in the jobless roles of nearly one full
percent over October.
The Ohio Bureall of Employment Services . reported Thursday a
November unemployment rate of 12.8 percent for Gallla. That figure
represerits a gain of 0.9 percent, up from the October rate olll.9 percent.
Since May, when the county posted a jobless rate of16.9 percent, Gallla
unemployment has declined by 4.1 percent.
Meigs County, withareportedNovemberrateof12.5percent,registereda
two-tenths of one percent reduction over the October figure of 12.7percent.
Unemployment in Meigs County registered a steady decline from May
through August- when It posted Its lowe,! joblessrateof1983-coming in at
12.2 percent.
In September, that figure rose to 12.8 percent. In October, Meigs posted a
jobless rate of 12.7 percent. In November, the figure fell to 12.5 percent.
According to OBES reports, 1,866 of GaWa ·s civilian labor force of 14,584
were without work during November. OBES figures show 1!l! Gallla
Countlans joined the jobless roles that month.
In Meigs, 1,455 of that county's labor force of 11,644 were jobless during
October.
Both Gallla and Meigs counties had jobless rates above Ohio's figure of 11
percent.
While declining, unernploymerit In Ohio continues to hover above the
national average. Nationwide, the jobless rate fell to 8.1 percent in
November, according to OBES figures.
Unemployment percentages for surrounding counties during November
were reported by the OBES as follows (October figures in parenthesl,j;):
Lawrence,l6.5 (16.4); Jackson,12.6 (12.9); Vlnton,ll.9 (11.5); and,Atlie!ls,
9.6 (9.3).

'

- •

.

.. •

'-~

The OBES figures released Thursday are preliminary. geared to county
of residence and are not seasonally adjusted.

Perry Countians to!d
park to help economy
NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP)
- A battery of state officials told
Perry County residents that plans to
clean the area's high-sulfur coal and
develop an tndusUial park are under
way to helP the area's economy.
State officials met Thursday night
with residents In the southeastern
Ohio community, many of whom
are worried about the closing of the
Sunnyhill mine. Michigan environmental officials have ruled that the
mine's major customer, CollSUJ!lei'S
Power Co. of Jackson, Mich., cannot
bum the high-sulfur coal after next
year.
State officials told residents they
would set aside $4 mtlllon to study

ways of removing sulfur from the
coal to make It more marketable.
Officials also said they would work
with Peabody Coal Co., operator of
the mine, toftndnewmarketsforthe
coal.
.
Howard Wise of the Ohio Depart .
ment of Development also tokl
residents that Gov. Richard Celeste
has given top priority to creation of
an lndustrlal park on 600 acres of
unreclalmed strip mine land that
Peabody Is donating.
Officials said the Ohio Bureau·oi
Employment Services will retrain
out-of-wor~ miners for other jobs~
\Nell as for jobs created In the
lndustrlal park.

Mobile
home ordinance ·draws obj'""'""'
.
Is no voted tal(, Wingett ~atned.
He also noted tllat the marina would
SeCI!!eiiiWI
oold
up to 10) boats and he
The recent ordlnaDc!e reeuJating
estimated,
It would generateatteast
the plilcliment, ~ uid occupancy
m.IXXl
a
year
for the vUiage.
of mobile hamel pa,.ro by counct1
Wingett
will
meet With two new
1n Decemlier was llrcJulla up·apln
council
members,
Buddy Cundiff
Th~nlahtatareplarmeetlng
and ·Oris Hubbard, next Monday
of Syra(:uie VIIJa&amp;e Colmcil.
night to explain the marina grant.
Several raldents, both tor and
It was also sugg Ited that a
against the ordinance ~ 1a
meeting be set up ..wlth Vernon
,attendallee.
or garajll!ll.
Main obJection to the CJ!'diii8IICe
A motion was passed, 4 to 2, to Bartles. his attorney, the vU1age
wblchwaspolntedoutlastllllbtwas reter.the ordinance to theordinace solicitor' and counctr. Mayor Eber
the fact ll!et ..\4)1!1'1y OWIII!I'I could • commlttte tor review and possible Pickens wUl set up the meeting as
not pJ8ce a molltl! bol'ne 111 their revision. Voting no were John soon as pollllble.
Wingett reported several contri· ·
propertyb'~.rnembenofthelr Phillon-mMickAsh.
butlons
had been received toward
family. 'lbe ordlnallcie atates that
Robert WIDtett. ifants adJnln1s.
the payment · or the tauill court
modular or dOuble w10e bamel can tratol'lepcll te!1 he II waiting council .
beiocatediDthevlllap.
~~~~tl!e"'-!Dlmatchlnnrant lights. It was~ that letters
.The Qrdlnlbce ~ lllates t,bat . b' the marina wblch has _been be aent to those who donated
thank In!( them for their
· ainoboeiKlmlcll!ltril)'eddletoftl'e,. approved. .
.
.
.
cOntrlbutlons.
•
of God, can be 11111 ret1
WJqeU .ltlld counctl had thr8e
In
'Other
busiiiEIIa,
councll'elected ·
the IIWII!I' wllltout belqlll conb'· opt(N, decide whether It wants.ID .
Wtllle
Guinther,
prelldent.
Jol)n
m11y wta1 the prov1111a , of the . Ule a portloll of the preeent park for
Powell
was named to eerve on the
Ql'dlnaDce, ~ IUCI!,repJaoe. . the marina, oiJtaln•additional~
Board d. Public Affalra.
nat OCCIIlS wllbln
etty 01'~ the project
Gordon Wlnebremlel', a member
tbedlltructllliiClC.'CIII'Id. MY mobile·
Wlqett ltlld the ifllllt was
of the ,Boeid of Public Affairs,
lail.tnlllr placid Ill the
t.•Uy the aame as the ifllllt
~the water~ wBl meet
t. OCli.'IIIJIId by tl!l ~·
Qljtlhwtb' the tauiJICXJWil. There
By KATIE CHOW

Men's '19.95 Cqrds .....Sale '13.99
Men's S22.95 Cotds .....Sale '15.99

•'

'

The ordinance does not apply to
homeowners who raze existing
dwelHng In which they have resided
one year of longer or whose
structure Is destroyed due to fire,
or some other act of God aftef
they have resided In said dweJilng
one year or longer.
Peoplemayalsomakealteratlons
such as porc!les, attac)led carports

veter

JANUARY CLEARANCE
LADIES' &amp; Jl,INIOR'S

DRESSES

Jacket dresses, 2 piece suits, iong and
short sleeved styles.
·
Junior, Misses and Half Sizes. ·

'REG. $26.00 ..... SALE S15.60 .
REG. s20.00 .............. SALE s12.00
REG. S29.00;'............. SALE S17.40
REG. S57.00 :.... SALE $34.20,
REG. S36.0Q ..... ~ ........ SAlE '21.60 '.
REG. S73.00 ..... SALE S43.80·
REG. S45.00 ......... ~.; .. SALE s27 .00
REG. Sl09~00 ... SALE _s~s.4o . REG. S62.00 .............-.SALE s37.20
~--~----~~=-~~·--~~--·~--·~ rl

":

....

~

a-~~4··;

ouc"

w

l.IKI--.,..

vmaae.

I ,,
fl .

\

enttne

.

I

.

Theranksoftheso-catled "dlsoouragedworkers"those not counted as unemployed becatise they have
g!Yl!ll up looking for jobs - shrank by 100,1XXJ In the
fourth quarter, to 1.5mllllon. Since theftrstquarterof
'last year, thetotalnumberofdlscouragedworkershas
fallen by 350,!XXI.
There have been eight recessions since the end of
World War II. The rally In the labor market following
the most recent bus(l)ess slump, the one that lasted
roughly from July 1981 through December 1982, was at
the quickest pace since the 1949-50 recession.
In 1951, the unemployment rate fell by 3.7
percentage points. The 2.5 percentage-point drop In
1983ecUpsed the2.3 percent drop In 1900, follawlngthe
recession of 1500, said bureau analyst Deborah
Klein.
Commenting on the latest unemployment trend,
Janet L. Noiwood, commissioner of labor statistics,
acknowledged that the ever-declining jobless rate
might be due In part to the fact that fewer people than
expected have re-entered the labor force In search of
work.
Many private economists have said that while
they're pleased with the falling joblessness, they
believe many unemployed Americans are delaying
their return tothelaborforce. Sornesaytheratecould
go up this spring If these people return In droves to the
job market.

Le~~lature

·JEANS &amp; CORDS.·

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

.

Today' s report said that more thali 335,1XXJ
Americans went to work last month, and that the total
number of those officially categorized as unemployed
shrank by 2ll,&lt;XXJ, !{) 9.2 mllllon. At the height of the
1981-82 recession, more than 12 mllllon were out of
work.
,
The ·overall,- unemployment rate, Including the
nearly 1.7 ml11lon mllltary people stationed In the
United States, dropped from 8.3 percent to 8.1 percen-.
last month, the report said. .
'

Flannels· Western-Shirts , Knits· Ve·
lours· Sport Shirts.

MEN'S

S15.95 ..... SALE Sll.96
$19.95 ;.... SALE S14.,96
$21.95 ..... SALE S16.46
S29.95 ..... SALE S22.~6 \

percent.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 6, 1984

WASHINGTON (AP) -Qvlllanunemployinentfell
to 8.2 percent In December, continuing the steady .
lmprovenient from the peek clouble-dlglt jobless level
of a year ago, the government reported today. It was
the best post-recession labor market recovery In more
than ll years.
Since unemployment hit a post-Depression high of
10.7 percegt In December 1982, total U.S. civilian ·
emp~t has soared by 4 rnllllon.
The labor market recovery from the business slump
ofl981-82was at the fasteet pace of any post-recession
rally since 1951, the Bureau of Labor Statistics noted.
TheSgencyhadlnltlallyreportedthattheDecember
1982 ·unemployment rate was 10.8 percent, but In
today's report, the BI..S revised jobless statistics for
the past 13 months. The new figures put the Decemller
1982 unemployment at 10.7 percent, rather than 10.8

JANUARY CLEARANCE
LITTLE GIRLS'

JANUAR.Y CLEARANCE

SHOP FRIDAY
TIU 8:00

.... .

JANUARY. CLEARANCE
LADIES'

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE
LADIES AND JUNIOR

I

·Rio Redmen triumph

Nation's' jobless
rate, 8.2 percent

ALL SALES FINAL- NO EXCHANGES- NO LAY-AWAYS

REG. S12.00 ..... SALE S9.59
REG. s1.1.oo.:.sALE s13.59 ..
REG; •24.00 ... SALE S19.19
REG.
S.29.00 ... SALE S23.19
.......

VILLAGE

·,

Story, photo on Page 6

SeePage4

OF QUALITY WINTER CLOTHING

Dressy ·blouses, casual and sporty
. styles.
·

Exclud•ng tore•gn 111m and shdes
One coupon per envelope

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Stories qn Page 4

PH. 992."6491 or 992-31'06

JUNIOR BLOUSES .

From your C-41 negal•ves only

PH.

MIDDLEPORT,

Mon.-Sat. 9:00 to 10:00
Sunday 11:00 to. 8:00·

JANUARY CLEARANCE

for

UVeatherforecast

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Honor WIC directors

he

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'•'

"Special Christmas Hours"

Good color and size selection in regular
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PHOTOREPRINTS

I
I

.

Voi .32,No.ll7
Copyrithtod l9U

Groups offer acid rain plan

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
wtnningnurnberdrawnWednesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," \j'JIS 818. In
the "Pick 4" game, played Monday
through Friday, tile winning
number was 8874.
The lottery reported earnings of
$399,544 from the wagering on "The
Number." The earnings came on
sales of $1,138,003.50, while holders
of winning tickets are entitled to
share $738,009.50, lottery officials
said.
In Ule parimutuel "Pick 4" game,
sales totaled $151,654. Holders of
"winning tickets are entitled to share
45 percent, or $68,271 Any winning
$1 straight ticket earns $8,10!, while
any winning $1 boxed ticket earns
$735.

s
:
·
.
R
H() U
N. 2ND AVE. .

city jall, police said.

Lottery winners

'

. OF .OHIO,
INC.
'

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Bystanders see woman slain
NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (AP) A crowd of about 20 people looked on
as a deaf woman was fatally stabbed
on a busy city street, but "nobody
moved to help" her, says a !ruck
driver who passed by and tried to
break up the attack.
"I just couldn't understand why
people were just standing around
and looking," James Greene said
Wednesday, a day after 41-year-old
VIrginia Price died with what pollee
said were about 20 stab wounds.
A 39-year-old construction
worker, James ·L. Forbes, was
arrested Wednesday and charged
with murder. He was being held
without bond In the Newport News

FRUlH PHARMACY

..

L".~,.. order

\

~

removed'

'-TUl5
. LoGAN, Ohio (AP)- Hoc~

CountyCommon~leasCourtJudge

Jll{ne5 :;!tllwell has lltted an order
forbidding comment from lawyers,
· court officers and witnesSes about
two mutllatloli'sla~ of which
DaleN. JohnstOn stands accused.
Johnston, 50; faces trial on
aggravated murder charges before
a three-judge ·· panel. Stfllwell
·warned he would reissUe the gag
order "U necessary".

• I

•

- '

Monday, Jan. 9. The board will
submit Its annual budget before the
next council meeting .
FrankW.Porterwasappotntedas
vllla:ge solicitor. Voting no were
Cundiff and Hubbard. .
Council passed a resolution,
prepared by Wtngett,_to change the
name of the Flood Road to the Roy
Jones Road. ·
Council also approved a .temporary appropriation of $10,!XXI for the
village and $3,1XXJ for the Board of
Public Affairs.

•'

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.

UCENSJ!:S - For the lint tkne, doc~ are being !JOid to the .
publiC at a Jcicat!on other thaD the Meigs CooJay Auditor's Office.
.&amp;e&amp;tei. the AuditOr's olllce this year~ may purchase doi·
Dcalses at the 'Dirlft Sboppe of the Meigs Olway H~Soclety
.
localed on N. Second Ave., Mlc1dlepori. 'lbe Shoppe Is open
9 a.m. :
to. ~

p.m. Wednellda,ys lbrougb Saiurdays of each week.

licenses ·

-aperqaadkeanel Uoer e11 areSJli.DogownerstoavoldpenaJty
ll!lll&amp; purcbMe doc llorr BIIIO later thaD .Jan. • •In the picture, JUIIIIMa
Miler, left, does the aec
ry paper work mlltllllng a doc license to
Velvey- Keys.

�- 1914

Seventh-ranked Cougars top SMU, 60-59

·Meet the Tornadoes

- By AMoolated ..,_
•

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO THE INTEREST OF TilE MEIGS. MASON AREA

....

~
~m~

.....,_..._....,..,I"T"e2d."""

'qjv
ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press A•socla·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should be less than 300 words
loar. All letters are subject lo edl&amp;lng and must be sl&amp;ned with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
rood taste, adclresslnllllues, not personalities.

...

]twas tough
The job market should be better for 1984 co ege graduates, which Isn't
saying a lot In view of the two preceding years, which were probably the
· . most depressing In a decade or more.
· The challenge to these new job-seekers during the blg recession wasn't
: · nearly as well publicized as, for Instance, the plight of blue&lt;oUar
· manufacturing workers In the Midwest. But It was tough.
...
: : It was tough because, among other things, new graduates are wltb:&gt;ut
: much experience, and few businesses had the money or desire to train
: : them. And, In 1983 some companies laid off white collar lielp.
· But now the post-recession blues are fading, and companies are looking
· to the future. They are Interested In young college grads again, as Indicated
by a College Placement CouncU swvey that suggests hlrlng might rise by
24 percent.
Increases In anticipated hiring at the bachelor's level ranged from 19
percent In the "business" category to 36percent In the "sciences, math and
other technical" category, according to the councU's "Recruiting 84."
Blg Increases, to be sure, but from a small base, and the net result ls to
leave the job market still a bit below where It was several years ago when,
says the Council, engineering grads sometimes received eight job offers.
The news In another part of the job market, that for manufacturing
workers, Is not quite as good.
During the rece$Sionthat ended late In 1982, more than two rnJillon jobs
: were lost In manufacturing, and It appears certain that not aU of them will
· be recovered. Even as the expansion continues, for example, steel jobs are
·lost.
Continental Bank comments that this Is the only recovery of the past six
: .• .''wh!Ch has not regenerated within a year after the trough aU the jobs that
~
were·lost."
And to Jose jobs permanently, as may be the case In autos and steel, ls
•' unprecedented, It says.
Sindlinger &amp; Co., market researchers, offer one explanation: lmports.
.•
Without reallzlng the full extent of It, be suggesls, the spurt of buying at
Christmas helped retaUers enormrusly but U.S. workers much Jess.
· "We estimate that from $6 to f7 of every $10 In 1983 gift -giving bought
goods with a 'country of orlgln' outside the United States," said Albert
Slndllnger, chairman. RetaUers gained, but not U.S. workers, he says.
.•
B4ld as their problems were for a couple of years, the problems of college
grads weren't pennanent, as they may be for many workEirs wl)o know no
• other skills and feel they are too old to learn new ones.

l~ ·Notes
,

•

. .

on Ohio
voter regtstration
.

Houston's Michael Young stole
the show, puUlng the curtain on
Southern Methodist.
"I'm going to Michael Young's
commencernent exercises to make
sure he graduates," SMU cOOch
Dave Bliss said after a fi0.59loss to
the seventh-ranked Cougars Thursday night. "He's really killed us
offensivelY for the last few years.''
Young was not only an offensive
spark for the Cougaa with 24 points,
but personally pulled the game out
with a steal and basket In the last
minute.
"I'm the seluor and lt 's my
responsibility to piCk up the slack,"
said Young."l feel Uke every hal·
!game we play somebody has to
carry the load and I take It upon
myself every game.
"On that steal, I just walled back
and things worked out. I guess
that's what experience does for
you."
With the victory, the Cougars,
11·2, became the first team towln
25 straight southwest Conference
games.
In other action Involving the
nation's ranked teams, No. 1 North

•

Still a bad idea _______J_am_es_J_._Kil..;;...pa_tr_ick_

The Daily Sentinel

Secretary of State Sherrod Brown Is consjdering use of a statewide voter

.· registration form.
•
While he believes such a form would make registering easter, Brown
; said he wants to discuss the mertts of the Idea with members of county
; election boards during their two-day winter conference that begins
; • .Wednesday In Columbus.
If a statewide form Is approved, Btown said It will be easier to
Implement a new state law which permits him and certain sp!ff aides to
register voters who live at any location In the state.
·
The Jaw also permits registrations of anyone by county election board
directors and deputy directors In the horne county of those officials. AU
•• members of the Legislature also have been given autb:&gt;rtty to register
voters In their districts.
· Brown·said It appears there will be plenty of Interest ln the 1984 elections,
and he noted that both political parties see Increased registrations as a key
to their candidates' success.
:. .. "Election analysts say that the presidential election will produce a huge
: · voter turnout," Brown said.
-: · MeanwhUe, State Rep. Jerome Leubbers, 0-Clnclnnatl, wants to look
:: Into voter registration problems which have been reported In his Hamilton
:: . County dlstrtct.
He called a meeting this week at his county election board's
headqUarters as a result of claims that some voters who thought they had
registered were turned away from the polls Nov. 8.
Leubbers Invited other Hamilton County legislators to attend the
·. meeting.
~
He said he is ,.disturbed by charges that several citizens were unable to
: vote ... evert' though they claim to have registered to vote prtor to the
· · -registration deadline."
·
·
The Hamill~ County election board has received local complaints that
smte deputy registrars who signed up voters at places other than board
headquarters did not tum In the cards.
Leubbers sald he cillled the meeting because he wants "to Identity any
: problems which IJUI-Y exist and take whatever steps are necessary to
that slmllar difficulties do not occur again."
•
And for those just settllng back Into the work routlnP following the
-:.- ·holidays, you, might be Interested to know that state employees have
· another three-day weekend coming up, on the heels of slmllar breaks for
the Christmas and New Year's. The neil:! break will start after work on
Friday, Jan. 13.
·
•
The occasion Is the Monday, Jan. 16, observance of the birthday of the
•· late Martin Luther King Jr.
·
·Several years ago, the Legislature designated theJan.15blrtildayofthe
: ctvU. ~ts leader as a state holiday, but specified that when It falls on a
:.· .weekend, the observance takes place on thli closest weekday.
·
··
Congress recently approved and President Reagan signed Into Jaw a bill
·· which will make Martin Luther King Day a national holiday, but that Jaw
.• does not take effect untO 1!e&gt;: .

WASHINGTON
The Rev.
Jesse Jackson brought off his
mission lo Damascus with all the
success of . ihe Great Gretsky
scortng three goals In a single
night: Jackson won the release of
Navy Lt . Robert 0 . Goodman Jr.;
he lefl President Reagan with egg
on hls face; and he revived a
Democratic presidential race that
was about to explre from terminal
boredom.
This was a trlumph. Under the
rules of the · game, Jackson Is
entitled to wring every possible
ounce of publicity and polltlcal
advantage from his enterprise. His
private audacity succeeded where
the government's formal diplomacy had failed . Ho-ho-ho, and as
Everett Dirksen used to add,
heh-heh-heh as well.
But before the waves of adulation
subside, this must be said for the
record: Jackson's success In this
particular Instance ought not to

Q

detract from a long-term public
policy. It ls simply unwise - It ls
also unlawful- for private citizens
to negotiate with foreign goven-·
rments. 'I'h{S has been the rule for
nearly 200 years, and the rule ls
sound.
The wisdom of the rule ls not
dJmlnlshed by the success stol'les
we remember. nie first" of lhi!se
stones, 1!1volving a pacifist and
conscientious objector by the name
of George Logan, Is strikingly
slmllar to the story of Jesse
Jackson. Just as the United States
and Syria today are embroiled In an
undeclared war In Lebanon, so the
United States and France In 1798
were locked Into an undeclared war
at sea. Just as Syria had captured
Lieutenant Goodman, so the
French had captured a number of
American sailors. Even the polltl·
cal situation offers parallels. Logan
was an ardent Jeffersonian, a
liberal Democrat by contemporary

labeling; the president was Federallst John Mama, a progenitor of
today's Republicans.
Logan went to Paris on his own.
He. talked with Foreign Minister
Charles TaUeyrand. He wined and
dined with PhUlppe-Antolne Merlin, ·
head of the Directory, and ex·
changed toasts toward -peace with
him. Logan won the sallors' release
and brought back messages from
Talleyrand. Jefferson later acknowledged that Logan's efforts
"atd much toward preventing
declared war with France."
Adams saw matters differently.
He denounced the "temerity and
Impertinence of Individuals affect··
lng to Interfere In public affairs •
between France and the United
States." The Senate passed a
resolution asserting that messages
carried by private Individuals
rather than by accredited represen·
tatlves should be rebuffed. Such
Interference would produce confu-

~\_ G~~uiA~~~ JE~[ f.l

il

~

~
~~'f?!

I\

.
WEltDME·OO·U:

~ttt
~

,

- ~~ · , \ \I

' I

ROD Ll'l'l1..EP1ELD
J-11, Sr. Guard

1/lf,j,

.

GO®MAN~~1ULA'Oa4S.. Jf5SE1

~· ~W4· ~u~coow- Q? •rr~ REGPr~-(~Mm.

games,

The best way to rtg the final
score, underworld sources tell me,
would be to brtbe a few select
officials. A single, crucial call could
affect the point spread. A corrupt
official could stop a scoring drive or
nullify a touchdown or field goal by
calling a holding penalty. And In
professional football, an official
could claim to see' holding on just
about any play.
Occasionally, the outcome of a
game has been defermlned more
by the "zebras," as the men In
striped shirtS are called, than lit the
opposing players. Now and then,
the aU-seeing eye of the television

camera has exposed that a gamebreaking call was wrong.
The FBI Is not unmindful of the
awful temptation that might be
offered an official, who could gain
more money from a couple of
corrupt calls than from a season of
honest ones'. ndeed, the FBI has
kept a quiet watch on an occasional
official whose whistleblowlng has
appeared _suspicious. But It ls
almost Impossible to prove that a
bad call was Intentional.
During the 1979 football season, _
the FBI conducted an active
Investigation of three National
Football League officials who were
reported to be on the take. The .
allegationS came from· an under·
world source who had turned
llitormer after the FBI .caught him .
In a stolen-goods operation.
Games were being fixed, he told
the FBI, liy- a cabal of used-car
dealers who played high-stakes

poker together In Houston. Dealers
from as far away as Chicago and
~ Angeles came to Houston for
the poker sessions and joined In a
~nsplracy to rtg the point spread,
the Informer alleged.
Their method, he said, would be
almost Impossible to detect: They
selected one or two regional games
each week, depending on where the
corrupt officials were assigned.
They didn't neces.Sartly alter the
game's final outcome but only the
pre-set point spread. Just a couple
of key calls could accomplish this.
The rest of the time, the oHiclal's
calls could be scrupulously honest.
Thetrtckwastolayalotofmoney
ori the line without affecting the
point spread. The sOurce of the bets
also had to be concealed. The car
de;llers solved this· problem by
scattering thelr bets around the
country and laying bets at quiet
times when attention wouldn't be

the Democratic contenders.
But there Is another proverb
worth recaUlng. It Is to this effect,
that success ought never to be
contused with talent. Let us be
grateful that the Syrians, for
whatever reasons of their OWII,
decided the time 'was ripe either to
pursue peace or to play a game ot
political put-down with Reagan.
Jackson's mission provided a
handy opportunity for Syria to
make a diplomatic move without
embracing a diplomatic commit·
ment. The gentleman's chartsmalic pleading, we may fairly
assume, had little to do with the
resulting gesture. Even so, let us
hear a round of cheerful applause.
Welcome horne, Ueutenant. And
thank you, Jesse.

TOM GREATHOUSE

Is?"
"Yeh, It's a piece of plastic that
has your name and a number and
expiration date on it. U you have
enough of them It makes a tenible
bulge In your pocket."
Ma~~?"
"A credit card Is more than a
·~1 represent American Express, piece of plastic.' It Is an agreement
Visa, MasterCharge, Diner's Club between you and the Issuer that It
and every other charge account can he used In lieu of cash whenyou
that uses plastic."
purchase something or receive a
"What do you want from me?"
meal or a ootel room for the night."
"The Plastic Man pulled out two
"Did I use Is for meals too?"
fistfuls of fllms:y tissues from his
"Six-hundred and seventy dollars
pocket. "You seem to have had worth."
quite a Christmas."
"Oh, does my head hurt:·wau a
Toggle took the fllmsles and minute, now I remember. I felt so
studied them. "It does look -like my · good about buying so many things
signature."
for Chrlsimas that after I did my
"Then there Is no doubt ln your ' shopping I took the famUy and my
mind that they are yours?"
friends out to celebrate. Boy, was I
"I don't know. I went on a drunk, but did I have a great time.
Chrlsimas bender aU o{pecember. You should have been here on
I bought 1). I bought things for my Christmas morning. You couldn't
wife, I bought things for
kids, I get Into tbe Uving room It was
bought things for my friends, and I stacked with so much junk. The big
think I ·even bought things for joke was aU the time I was out using ·
people I didn't know. l had too much my piece of plastic, my wife was put
gOOd spiritS.".
·using hers. We couldri't stop
"And how did you budget to pay giggling for two days." •
for aU these't)llngs?"
"I can appreciate how you feft.
"It never occurred to me. No one . Now can we, talk about these
ever asked me for money. They just fllmsles?,"
asked for a credit card. Then they · ·. "What's there to talk about?:'
put the card !lito a machine, wrote
"We need the money these pieces
something on a . form, handed · a of paper represent. I believe they ·
,•
piece of rulnsy paper to me and total up to S8,76l.70. We'd like yOI)r
..
said, 'Have a Merry Christmas.' li!rsonaJ check or cash."
;
Not one ~rson who waited on rile · "I · Juiyen't got t.h at kind of
ever mentioned the word inoqey." . money."
"Are you trying
tell me that
· "Then we'll have to charge 2I
Today Is Friday, Jan. 6, the sixth day of 1984. There l!fe 360 days left tit the
you thought everything you got In a percent Interest a month untU yoo
. . year.
.
. .
· ·
store was tree?"
pay lt.'l
'
::
Today's hlghl.lght ln'history:
· ·
.
··
"I'm jusftelllng you II was drunk . "Thaes fine wtth me."
On Jan. 6, 1838, Samuel Morse publicly demonstrated his telegraph fOr
with spending lJOWer. Everybody
"Ii lin't fine wjth us. We tiave to ·
the first time In Monistown, N.J ..
else In the stores wu too. People, pay for aU the thlnp yilu l!Ought
On this date:
almost came to b~ trying to because We have guaranteed the
.. In 1412, French heroine Joan of An: was born.
\
• . • hand the salespeople their credit. stores and restaurants that you
·· In 17!1, George Washington and Martha ~ Custis were · · cards.'' ,
w.ould fulfill your , dnanclal
:~ ·married.
"Do you know what a credit card .obligations."

"WeU, as long a!l somebody pays
them I guess I'm out of the woods."
"You're not out of the woods, Mr.
T~le. You're up to your hjps In
debt, and I'm here to collect it.
Whether you were drunk or pot, we
can't accept Christmas hysteria as
an excuse for not honoring your
Olmsles."

I

Today'•

Sports. World
BJWmon ,.,
APCaa

aroused.

Nevertheless, the overlords of
organized crime learned what wu
happening and demanded a Q.tt.
At least this Is the story that the
Informer told the FBI. He -cited
specific holding callll, roughing-thekicker penal•!es and an on-side kick
that was ca~ back by the accused
officials . JaU soown on TV to ha~
been wrong calls.

their

"Walt a inlnute. Don't get
excited.'' Toggle turned over to hla
sleeping wife and shook her.
"Honey, there's a guy here !hat
wants $8,760 for what we spent for
Christmas."
Mrs. Toggle mumbled sleepUy
"Well, give him one of my credli
cards. They're In my purse on tilt
dresser."

•

Berry ~ World

.

'

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level.

..
...

..

precaution due to a slight hyperextension of his right knee.
"We didn't do a very good job
against It last week, but we are
woi'klngon It," Stokes said. "I've got
a lot of conlldence that we can
become good at just about anything
weworkon."
.
The Hoosiers are unlikely to give
the Buckeyes much chance to get
the ball Inside to senlor forward
Tony Campbell, the team's leading
scorer with 19.8polnts per game.
Depending upon whether guards
Stokes, Troy Taylor, Dave Jones
and Curtis WUson are hitting, that
canbegoodordlsastrous.
"Our offense wasn't that good last
week, but really, our deefense hurt
us more," Jones said. "We're a
quick team, and altoo~h we forced

'
-~·

'

·.

:

992·3629

"Special Christmas Hours"

Mon.-Sat. 9:00 to 10:00
Sunday 11:00 to 8:00

PH. 992-6491 or 992-3106

LTD Brougham

of the an engineering In a classic, fuJI-size car.

Was 1 12,951.00
NOW 1 11,80ooo

21N STOCK _

-Thunderbird
Was 1 13,306
NOW 1 11,900°0

4fh;e

time.

"Maybe the American League
will be good forme," Nlekrotold the
Atlanta Constitution In an Interview
published today. "I know some
people have suggested not hitting
and running the bases wUl keep me
stronger. The league wUl be a
challenge and, I think, a lot of fun ."
The American LeaguE'o,. uses a
designated hitter.
"''ve never seen Yankee Sta ·
dlum," Nlekro said. "I've never
pitched In Fenway Park. It should
beafunexperleQce.''
~
Both the Constitution and the New
York DaUy News reported Nlekro
had agreed to a two-year, no-trade
contract valued at $1.4 million plus
Incentives.
Nlekro, whoturns45AprU1,asked
for and received his unconditional
release from- the Braves,after the
1983 seaSon · when It · became
appafent he did not figure ln.
manager Joe Torre's plans.

., •.,......., IN ST&lt;.)CK

. Tempo

The '84 Escort

Was

Was 1 8,065.00
NOW 1 7,695°0
Air cond., auto. trans.

84 Country Squire
Wagon
Loaded.
Was 116,446.00

•I
84 Bronco II
Was 1 12,377.50

. . 992-6674

•.
H0URS

$$SAVE$$

ATLANTA (AP) -PhUNiekrols
headed for the Blg Apple.
"We are ple~ to announce we
havereachedatl'agreementwlththe
New York Yankees and consider It
an opportunity tor PhD to continue
his distinguished c~r with an
excellent organization," Nlekro's
agent, Bruce Church, told the
Associated Press Thursday.
After ~ years of facing National
League batters as a Brave, first In
Milwaukee and then In Atlanta,
Nlekro will be taking his knuckleball
to the American League for the first

.NOW 5 11,360°0

Now

DEMO

83 T-Bird
Was

1 12,451.00

NOW

1

99950°

84 Ranger
Was

7 Other
Tempos
In Stock

1 8011.00

1 7495.(¥)

NOW 56995°0

5 7,795 00

84 F250 Pickup _
Was 1 9819.00

NOW

i8695° 0

84 E-150 Clll'go. Van
Was 1 13,268.00

NOW 5 11,900°0

'

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2-FREE OIL CHANGES WITH
PURCHASE OF NEW VEHICLE.
. 'Tttlt , w:es. destinauon dwges extra.

.RING OUT mE OLD. RING IN A NEW FORD 1AT

PAT ·HILL FORD, .INC.
..

-MEIGS INN' AND PIZZA SHACK
· 126 ll1ln St.

MIDDLEPORT, OH

86 N. 2ND AVE.

The '84 liD Crown Victoria

~te

. OPEN ·EVav ~NG 4 P.M. to 12 MIDNIGHT

~

OF OHIO, INC.

PAT HIL.L FORD

ORDER ·AN ORIGINAL PIZZA SHAC_KPIZZA (EAT IN oR OUll

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FRU-TH PHARMACY

.

Niekro
becomes
Yankee

'HAVE A PIZZA.AND BEER PARTY
AT THE MEIGS INN BAR

a lot of turnovers ln the last couple of
minutes tioih times, we need to do
that more. "
The Hoosiers, 7-3, last week .
scored a 72-66 victory over nation·
ally ranked Boston College.

CELEBRATE
THE NEW YEAR
IN A NEW .FORD
FROM
.
.
.

,. ENJOY BIG :scREEN rv oR DANCE
TO THE JUKE BOX . . . .

"I ftJ!JI like ' • prostitute, curbing thfl tiNt~
squad11 }ult 110 ww CMI get AmMiclln arm1!"

fortunate to win.''
victory over Georgia. Tudor was
Top Tea
fouled after Georgia missed a
Sam Perkins scored 21 points to ··chance to tie the game when Donald
lead North Carolina's over Boston ,...:Hartry=.::..:.:.mlssed=:::.;a:;:20-::..::foo;.:.t:..:ju=m=per::.;__
University. The gaine matched Tar
Heel Coach Dean Smith against
(ormer North Carolina guard John
Kuester, who became head coach at
Boston Unlversltty prior to the start
'Oi the season.
" Yes , lt dld feel a little funny to
~31 JACKSON Pll&lt;f - RT. 3S WEST
'COach against a forlner player,"
"""'- - -4524
8AIJI(Wit ~TIIEES SAT .t SUN
Smith said. "Of course, I'd rather
ALL SEAts 12.00
coach against John Kuester's team
A.OIIISSION EVfRY TUESG4Y U.OO
than Billy Cunningham's (head
coach of the NBA Philadelphia
~NUARY
6 thru 1~
76ers) ."
FRIDAY thru THURSDAY :
Kenny Patterson scored 18 points
to lead DePaul over Pepperdlne.
Marty Embry added 17 points .and
pulled down a game-high 13 rebounds for DePaul, ).l:!J,_
Kenny Fields scored 21 points and
gathered six rebounds to pace
UCLA over Artzona State. UCLA led
only 59-50 with five minutes remain·
lng, but the Bruins scored the
game's next 16 points to tum what
had been a rompetltlve contest Into
a blowout.
John Tudor hit two free throws
with two seconds left to seal I..'&gt;U' s

r••••;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

~NDLOUNGE

w

.

ltacloserelatlvethematch-upzones
that the Buckeyes faced In the San
Francisco tournament.
"We probably aren't going to see
too much man-to-man In the Blg
Ten, so we'r:e going to have to get
used to playing against zones and
become more effective against
them," Stokes said. Stokes was kept
out of practice Wednesday as a

"f.

The FBI check.ed out two contro- ·
verslal calls In the Sept. 18, 1979,
game between the Washington
Redsklns and the New York Giants.
The disputed calls against the
Giants so angered New York coach
Ray Perkins that he slammed hla
clipboard on the · ground, and
assistant coach Bill Bellchlck flew
Into a frenzy, gesturing wUdly. The
calfs contrtbuted to a Z7·~
Washington victory, which beat the
polrlt spread.

-

-.

'nat

"l'a\1 no 1o1er - I don't Intend to be one."
Theimim once celebrated as "the world's fastest human" was sentenced
to flvll years In prison In March, 19'19, on a cliarge of deallng In dope but
i~ his release after seavlng 10'months In Texas State Prison.
"I was set up by a friend who once worked with me for an airline," Hayes
said. met him In Brazil. He began dating my secretary. He Involved me
In au his dope deallng telepoone conversations.
"I wlls caught doing him a favor- a $700 transaction. Later, It was found
that I was an Innocent Intermediary. But I was considered 'a dumb cluck
who couJdn 't do anything' lllld the judge gave me five years.
· "I loSt everything- my job, my wife, my good name."
Hayes was one of 59 athletes honored by at Madison Square Garden's
Hall of Fame Club Thursday for having won an Olympic gold medal and an
Indoor track and field title In the national championships.
The awards were made by Mobll, sponsor of the Grand Prix track and
field clr¢ult.
.
It soothed some of tlie hurt that has been churning Inside the great
sprinter'~ chest ever since he feU victim to a mistake which now ls
beginning to take a toll among stars In vlrtuaUy every sport.
The pang liitenslfles every time Hayes enters Texas Stadium to watch
his old team, the Cowboys, play a National Football League game.
"There's a Ring of Honor there for Cowboys who have made
contributions to the team· fellows Uke Bob UUy, Mel Renfro, Don Meredith
and, just recentlY, Roger -Silqlbach. I'm not Included. I have a:tso-been
denied Induction Into the pro Hall of Fame.
"That hurts me as much as anything. ~r aU, I revolutionized the art of
pass catching, just as Jim Brown revolutionized running and Johnny
Unltas revolutionized passing.''
After winning the 100 meters and anchoring the 400-meter relay team to
gold medals In the 1964 G.ames In Tokyo, Hayes joined the Cowboys where
speed and good hands permitted him tocatch365passes for7,295yards and
76 touc~ over 11 years. At one time, he held 21 records.
He became a national hero, honored at the White House, and appeared
headed for tremendous success.
"I was swam pee! with well-wishers," he said. "I had sti!ned a contract to
do COI1lll'M!Itlals for American Express and Miller's Beer and the Hershey
Chocolate ~ple had prepared to put me head of a $3 million project
promoting ttack and field among kids.
"Then thiS thing happened. I was cut off completely."
Hayes, son of.a saloon-keeper. grew up In a ghetto. But lie was befriended
by Jake Gaither, football coach at Florida A&amp;M where he started his
remarkable career.
·
In prison; he was sprayed for Uce, handed a white cotton jump suit and
lhown behind bats with hardened criminals.
·
"I was treatl!it'Oka:Y after a whUe," he said. "Some of the guys In there
were falls. But there were, others who were jealous and leaned on me
hard.''
His-wife divorced him and he remarried ln.1976. He and.hls second wife,
Janice, have o 5on, Bob, Jr., age 6.
·
Does he want Bob, Jr., to be a 'football star?
"No," Bob replies sharply. "A bank president."

mr

~

111

dark clo\ld of dnlg Infestation In sports still tuings over the head of
Hayes, a fallen Idol who Is seeking to resurTect a life shattered by a
of which he Insists he was Innocent.
" ou can't shake It," said the 41-year-old Olympic double gold medallst,
wor record-holder In the sprints and later star pass receiver for the
Cowboys football team.
" It stays with you for life. I was the Innocent victim of people who
couldb't pay the price, losers who take pleasure In brlnglng success down to

see

~- Today i~ _h istory

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - lndlana calls Its basketball defense
man-to-man, but Ohio State guard
Ron Stokes calls It a hybrid.
"Indiana plays kind of a man-toman zones," the Junior said. "It
looks like they're playing man, but
they sag back so much that you
could almost call It a zone. They
force you to shoot that outside
jumper."
·
The Hoosiers and Buckeyes meet
here Saturday.
Zone defenses troubled the Buckeyes last week at the Cable Car
Classic tournaments. The 7-3 Buckeyes beat St. Joseph's but lost to
Santa Clara. Both nights, Ohio did a
poor job of getting the ball Inside.
Indiana's tenacious man-to-man
uses enough zone prlnclples tqmake

STEVE TEAFORD
~. lr. Fonvad

5-f,lr. Guard

Plastic man ___________A_:_rt-=B.::..:uc:.:...:.:hwa===-ld
Toggle woke . up on January 2
bleary-eyed. A man was standing,
by his bed.
"Who are you?"
"I'm the Plastlc Man."
"What the hell ls the Plastic

Carolina dnlbbed Boston University 87·54, No. 3 DePaul beat
Pepperdlne 81-73, No. 6 UCLA
trimmed Arizona State 79-57, No. 9
Louisiana State stopped No. 11
Georgia 81-TI,lOth·rankedTexas-El
Paso hammered 'J. s.International
&amp;'&gt;-59, No. 1.l ;·t. John's walloped
Rutgers TI41, 1.4 !·ranked IUlnols
turned back Mlnrx.'SO!a !ll-53, No. 15
Oregon State trimmed Stanford
64-59 and No. 18 ~evada·Las Vegas
crushed Long Beach State J.03.fl6.
Young's 1~foot jump shot came
aflerhestoleanSMUpassanddrove
the length of the floor. Houston
freshman Rickie Winslow batted a
ball away from Larry Davis to
break up an SMU In-bounds play
with two seconds left to preserve the
.Cougars' victory.
The Mustangs were led by Jon
Koncak, who had 21 points and 15
rebounds In his bjlttle with Houston's Akeem Olajuwon, who fln.
!shed with 14 points, five rebounds
and four blocks.
SMU lost despite outrebounding
the Cougars 45-24.
"Haw can you win a ballgarneand
get oulrebounded Uke that?" said
Houston Coach Guy Lew1s. " I feel

Indiana-Bucks meet Saturday

FBI ·watches NFL _______...:....Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASHINGTON - The FBI
estimates that an astounding $25
billion Is wagered on professional
football each year. With such high
stakes,..•there are bound to be
delinquents In our midst who might
try to Influence Jhe outcome o!

TREVOR CARDONE
f.Z, Sr. Fonvad

~~~E

~

1
1

slon and disorder, and would
"separate the people from their
government."
In 1799, asadlrectconsequenceof
Logan's ml.s_slon, Congreu adopted
what has become kriown as the
LOgan Act, forblddlni such negotta,
!Ions by prtvate Individuals. Undeterred, Logan undertook another
mission In 1810, this time wtth
England - and this time he failed.
Since then dozens of prtvatecltlzl!na
have played a hand at diplomatic
tables. Cyrus Eaton appointed
himself as ambassadof at large to
the Soviet Union. At the time of the
CUban mlssUe cr!JIS, John Scali,
who was then an ABC correspondent at the State Department, served
as a conduit between the Whl~
House and the Soviet Embassy.
No one ever has been'prosecuted
successfully for violation of the
Logan Act, and It Is a lead·plpe
certainty that no charge~ will be
brought against J~'Sie Jacklon.

The

Ohio

SEE: George Harris, Max Miller, or Pat Hill

461 S. Third Ave.

Pomero!

'·

PH. 992-2196.

·

.

.

Middleport, OH.

�- ··

Page

4

•

Th8 Daily Sentinel

Wild card ~eattle
faces LA Raiders

xvm

Sunday.

Three years ago, the Raide rs went
11-o and finished second to San Diego
in the AFC West. They got to Super
Bowl )(V by beating Houston,
Cleveland and the 'chargers, and
won it with ease, whipping Philadelphia 27-10.
"If you'd asked m e If I would be
surprised to be in the AFC game the
firs t of the season, I would have said
yes." said Seattle wide receiver
Steve Largent . "But at this point.
taking them one game a t a time like
we have, I would say no. Last week
(a 27-20 upset of Miami) was no
fluke. We deserved to win ."
TheSeahawks were9-7 during the
. regular season including 38-36 and
3-t-21 l£ictories over the Raiders.
They earned'1!18r. .~Ud-card berth
by beating the New -Yot'k--Glants
17-12 and the New England Patriots
24-6 in the final two games of the
season.
After whipping Denver 31-7 in the
AFC wUd card game, Seattle
disposed of the favored Dolphins last
Saturday to earn Its berth in the title
game.
The Raiders, runaway winners of
the AFC West title, were 124 before
blasting Pittsburgh 38-10 in their
first playoff action last Sunday.
Seattle tied for second in the AFC
West with Denver.
"We're a team that's Improving
and Improving the most In the last
three games we've played," said
Largent. " We're still an unpredictable team. If we can stay In our game
plan and run the ball well, we can be
awfully hard to beat."
.
Not only did the Seahawks beat
the Raiders twice this season,
they've beaten them five times In
the last six mee\lngs.

MEIGS PLAYER QF WEEKLee PoweU, 6-4, sophomore
center, forward has been chosen
as the player of the week by the
Meigs County Jaycees. PoweD
came off the bench to score live
points and grabthreereboundsln
last Friday's M-M loss to Wanen
Local. He made some key foul
shots down the stretch.

Scoreboard
N6J\ results
N~

8Mkftbal "-'.'Wlon
Thunday'• GMW
Philadf'lphla 10.1. Mltwauiwl&gt; 111l, OT
FrlciAYA Gllmftl
Clf'\~and ar Bailon
Ntw Jf'f"SE"Y at Phlladrlpl\la
01.1cago at Washington
Ntw York at [)(&gt;trol t
Phoenix a t lndlaila
Milwaukel' at A Uanta
Kan.sas C1ty a t Utah
San Antook&gt; a ! La! Allg('les
Dallas at San Dklto
Omv£'1' at Portland

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - The
Was)llngton Redsklns' back-tobasics offense - John Riggins left,
John Riggins right -Is warming up
for a busy afternoon Sunday when
the· defending Super Bowl champions play San r.a~~clsco for the
National Football Conference
Cbatrq)tooihlp.
"We are not !!0 bullheaded as to
saywearegolngtorunJohn5(Jtlmes
no matter what," said assistant
coach Joe Bugel. "But you know
that sooner or later John Is going to
get the ball. The fans would kill us If
he dido' t. "
Riggins, averaging 23 carries a
game, rushed for 1,347 yards and
scored a record 24 touchdowns this
season. In last Sunday's playoff
victory over Los Angeles he carried
the 'ball ·25 times for 119 yards, the
fifth straight pbiyoff game he has
rushed for"over 100yards.
Earlier this week, Riggins predicted that h~ would carry the ball
some 37 times.
Bugel, architect of an offensive
line that Includes All-Pros Joe
JactJby, Russ Grimm and Jeff
Bostic, says the Redsklns wUJ run
stralg~t ahead against the 49ers,
moving lrlslde the tackles.
"That's ourcupoftea. Ifyoudoh't
stoP. us there you don't stop us," he
said.

Defensively, the 49ers wUI use
both three-four and multiple fourthree defenses.
"They show you a number of
different looks depending on the
situation," Bugel said.
Bugel, who came to the Redsklns
three years ago after building the
Houston Oller offensive line that
carried Earl'" Campbell to the
rushing crown, saysthe49erdefense
Is loaded with talent.
"There are some guys back there
who can hurt us. (Fred) Dean,
(Dwaine) Board and (Jack) Reynolds are three of the best. Their
secondary Is the best we have seen
this year. All hard hitters and all
talented athletes," Bugel said.
The Redsklns, 15-2, go Into
Sunday's championship with a
10-game winning streak. The 49ers,
who edged Detrolt24-23, last week to
advance to the title game, have won
four straight In raising their record
to 11-6.
The first meeting between the two
teams In three years, It wUJ mark the
first time that a conference championship game wUI feature the
winners of the two preceding Super
Bowls.
"This will be a classic," said
Bugel. ''TheywonaSuperBowland
then we 'Won a Super Bowl. What
more can you ask?"

Redmen rip: opponent
CIRCLEVILLE - Five Redmen
scored In double figures Thursday
as Rio Grande College whipped
Circleville Bible College, 118-59.
Thew in moved theRedmen to15-3
on the season. They will be back In
action Monday when they travel to
Malone College.
The Redmen moved out to a 61-31
Iead,at the half beforeoutscorlngthe
hosts 57-281n the final stanza.
All-American Jerry Mowery
paced the Redmen with 26 points
and seven assists. Joe Verhoff
chipped In 16 markers, John Maisch
13, Kent Wolfe 12 and Mike SmlthlO.
Mal.sch added eight rebounds and
seve)'! assists.

BobLaytonpacedClrclevillewlth
13 points, while AI Sparks added 12
and Rod Hutchinson, 10.
Tiie Redmen held a 54-25 advantage In field goals and were 10 of 18
from the line, compared to the
Crusaders' nine of 12card. F"ourteen
Rio Grande players reached the
scoringcolumn.
RIO GRANDE (119)- Mowery 12-2-26:

2~:

Shaw
Maisch
Fumier 3-2-8:
J-().2:
Penrod2.().4:
Verhoff6-1-13:
7-2·16;
Smllh
5-0-10: Morrison
2.().4: Curry
Ft11Z. 2-o-i: ·
McNichols 2.().4: Rivers, 2-1-5: Wallers W.O .
TotUI M-10-118.
CIRCLEVILI..E tiMI) - Barth 3-3·9: Hut·
chlnson 5-0-10: Sparks 5-2-12: James 0-1-1:
Schellln 3-2-8: Layton lf-1·13: Tabor 2.().4;
Humblt 1-o-2. Totalo 211-9-18.

Warren Local fell to 5-l. The Uttie
Marauders - tlsk their un~aten
s)teln Monday when they travel to
Wellston at 5: 511.

BARLOW - The Meigs Maraude rettes had their four-game winning streak abruptly halted here
Tuesday, losing 7042 to Warren
Local.
Meigs fell to 6-2 In TVC play and
7-2 overall.
Eight Straight Win
The Meigs Marauder frosh made
It eight In a row by defeating
previously-unbeaten Warren Local,
41-30, here Tuesday.
Coach Phil Harrison's llttle Marauders outscored the' Utile Warriors 14-7 In the final six minutes to
break open a close ball game.
Warren had come within two
points late In the third quarter and
trailed by only four going Into the
fourth period.
Guard Donnie Becker led Meigs
with 17 points, many on fast break
lay-ups.
Huey Eason chipped In 10 points
and led In rebounding with 12. Steve
Musser had a fine game also, as he
had eight points and 10 rebouhds.
Other Meigs players leading In
rebounds were Jesse Howard with
six and J. R. Kitchen with five.
"It was basically a hard-fought
ball game. They were a pretty good
baU club with good_size," Coach
Harrison said about Warren Local.
Meigs Is ~ on the year whUe

WAJIREI'! J.A)(;AL (10) - Anclenon 2~;·
Brown f-1.9; c..weu 1-o-2: Harlow 2~:
Huf!mln 4-o-8; Richards 1-1-3. 1'ollll 16-wt.
MEIGS (41)- Kitchen 1.().2; Euon ~-10;
Muuer 3-2-8; Howard 1-2-4; Becker 7-3-17;
Cline I)M; Ktnii)M; Tannehill I)M; Hart

Pvwell ~- 111-11-4117 quarten:
.
Wa!Tell Local ......................6 11 7 7-,ll
Meigs ................ ... ............ 10 10 7 14--41

I)M;

Younc Gala Win
Avenging an earlier loss, the
Meigs Marauderette Junior High
cagers defeated . previously unbeaten Waterloo, 25-~ here

Sa&amp;untat• Gr.nw
Atlanta a t NN' Jersey
indiana at New York
Ptilladelphia ~~ Ck-.'t&gt;land
Wa.shinaton ar Ctucaeo
PhoeniX at Kansas C1ry

Dallas at Dmvt&gt;r
San Anronlo at Goldm Slatt&gt;
SundqAGamM
[)e(rolt at Mllw"aulu'(&gt;
Portland at Seal11f'
Hw.stoo at Los Angries

NHL results
'Thwwiay'11 Gama

HarU:m14. N.Y. lslandl'n 2

Montreal 5. Drtroll 1
PhUadeiphla 7. Wlnnlpt'R 6, O'T
Washlnjltoo ."1, Sl. Lout. I
5, MIM€'5018 ~
Fl1clay'a Gllmfl
Plnslluf'Rh at Nt'W Jl'f'M'Y
s.durday'1 Gamt~~~
N .Y. Ran2('f'S at Bc&amp;ton
Ch.ICClftO at N.Y. lslandt&gt;r5
Buffalo at Washington
Philadelphia at ()(o(rolt

Ca l~ ry

Toronto at QuPt1P&lt;'
Hanford at Edmonlon
Sl . Louis at Montrt'lll
Nf'W Jt'f'!t"y 31 Pitts~
Vancouver a1 Mlnnesol:a
Ca l~a y al Los

A1\Rf'ICS
sw.dq• Gamfll

Washln~oo a t Ph~hla

N.Y. lslandl&gt;n al N.Y. Rangp.-,
Hanford at Winni!X"'I
Montreal at Buffalo
St LoWs a l Toronto
Vancouwr al

ChJat«o

__ ..._

Transactions

broadcaster.
M8KE'I1IAIJ.

Nlltlonal Ballkrthal Mwdadon
MILWAUKEE
B UC KS -S I~~;nt'd
R(I)' Whit€'. forward . to a
Uk tay
ron1rac1 . Plac'E'd Nate Arch1001d. R;Uard. on
In jured I'('S('T'VP list.
SAN DIEGO QJPPERS-Walved tt\t&gt;lr
rlgh!S 10 l loOO Hollin.~. R1J3rd. IPa VInjit
him treP lobe s\jitl'l('d by the Detroit Pistons.

~THE

liiiiLliNO OIVIIION
Seeds · Bird Seeds · Oyster Sh~lls and Grtt · Ferhhrers · Lime · Ce·

monl and Mort•r - Slock S•Jt · water Sollen&lt;r - Remedies · Soli ·
l•tlers · VAccine · Roofing · Ptunts · Rtd Brand Fencing · Baler and
Binder Twine · Sprays· Gates · Hay · Strilw

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lh· dtdn 't ltkt· u .. u t flr l't - hc

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l(lud Ill ht• wttlt " " Hul. wrud·
uulh . at."'4hc m11nttu. wuH· on . ht· I ~·
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Tluu nl llht "" th e fu m tl.1 """M
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11tnw "'tlh u" The miracle had

"'II""""'

&lt;K"·

t'Urn d li e
unc oftn c fomll ~
Yuu !oCC . lhl· C hurc h hwd tuu~~;h t
u~o Ui• t the lm ·e uf God uccc pl~o u~o
cnm !Jit·te h· und un condltionu ll~ We
hud kumc•l thu t
cuulrl lm·c und
urcc pt ~~~~In the N&amp;mc 'A' Il} . In be·
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SENTINEL

Middleport

POMEROY WESLEY AN HOLINESS Harrisonville Road. Earl Ftek!s. pastor .

Henry Eblln. Jr .. Sunday School Supt. Sunday

· aEN
RANKUN'

School 9:;«) a .m .; Morning Worship 11 a. m. ;
Sunday t'Yenlng service. 7: :1&gt; p.m .; Prayer
Meet ing, Wednesday. 7::1) p.m .

Mlddleporl, Ohio

SYRACUSE F1RST CHURCH OF GODJoy Cla rk . pastor. Worship service Sunday ,
10:00 a .m .: Sunday scOOOI. 11 a .m.; worsh1p
service, 7::1) p.m. Wednesday prayer meet ·
lng, 7: :ll p.m .

K&amp;C JEWELERS

~ ·

MT. HERMON UNlTED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST CHURCH. """· Robert Sanders.

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SUPERMARKET
992-as4o

MiddleportPomeroy , 0 .

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pastor: Don WUI,Iay leader. Loca ted in Texas
CR 82. Sunday school. 9::11
a .m .; Morning worshJp service, 10:45 a .m .;
evenl~ preaching service second and fourth
Sunda'ys. 7: XI p.m .; Chrtstlan Endeavoc. first

Community ot!

-

UNITED FAITH CHURCH - RDute 7 011
Pomeroy bypass. """· Robert Smith, Sr.,
pastcr; Rev. James Cundiff. assistant pasta'.
suOOay Sctlxll, 9: l) a.m .; morning worship,
lO::l) a .m .; evening worship, 7:l) p.m .
Women 's FeUowstUp, Tuesdays. 10 a .m .
Wednesday night prayer service. 7::11 p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason. meet .
at United Steel Workers Union Hall. R.atb'Oad

Street, Mason. Sunday School !() 00 a.m.;
Morning Won;hlp, 11:00 A.M.: Evening
Service, 6 p.m. Pray..- mee!lng and Bible
Study Wedneiday, 7:00p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev. Nyte.
Borden, past&lt;r. Comellus Bunch, superintendent. Sunday school9::11a.m.: second and

TRINITY CHURCH, """· W. H.
212 E. Mai~ Street
·
992-371S, Pomeroy
putcr: Debbie Buck. Sunday
fourth Sundays, worship service at 2: ll p.m.
p,ff _ MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Church
School
9:15a.m.;
wonhlp
~
:
;
:JI~~--,.....--------1..10::11 a.m. Choir - . a J, Tuesday
and third Sundays, 7::11 p.m. Wednesday
Main Sts., MlddleporJ. """· Calvin Minnis,
p.m., .,_ dlrectlon ~ Allee Neue.
pray..- meeling and Bible study, 7::11 p.m.
past&lt;r. Mrs. ·Elvin Bumgardner, SUpt.
POMEROY CHURCH OF 11IE NAZA'
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS. 37319 S&lt;Bte Route
Sunday school. 9::1) a.m.; worship serv1ce.
RENE, Comer Union and Mulberty, """·
Rtm.AND. CHURCH OF GOD, Paster,
124 tOne mile east cj Rutland ). Sunday. Bible
10:45 a.m .
'lbomu Glen I\I&lt;Clq, past&lt;r. Oyde Hend·
"""· John Evans. Sunday school, 10 a.m.:
lecturt' 9:30a.m .; Watchtower study. 10:20
BURLINGHAM SOlrl1lERN BAPT1SI'
er1011, S. S. Supl.. Sunday School, 9::11 a.m.:
Sunday wcnhl~. 11 a.m.; Cltlldren's chW'Ch,
a.m .; Tuesday. Btble study , 7::Jl p.m .:
CHURCH, Route I, Shade. Pastor, DonBiaclt.
mcrnlngwonlllplO::IIa.m.; -mnaoervtce
11 a.m.; Sunday evenlni Jervlce. 7 p.m.;
Thursday, 11\oocratlc School . 7:l) p.m .;
Alllllall!d with Southern Bapelst convention.
6 p.m.: mfd-....., ...-vtce, Wednesday, 1 p.m.
WemESda,y -mna ywng tadl.,. auxiliary, 6
Service Meetln~ . 8: ~ p.m.
Sunday school, 1::11 p.m.: Sunday worship,
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHUR€11 - 326 !:.
p.m. Wemesday family w&lt;rltslp, 7 p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY . 2::11 p.m. Thunday evening Bible study, 7
Main St., ~- Sunday oervlceo Holy
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, Near
Located on the 0 . J . White Road ott highway
p.m .
Communion "" the ftnt Sunday of each
Long Bottom. Edsel Hill'!. paster. Sunday
160. Pat Henson. pastor. Sunday School 10
PEI'ITECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Ractne.
mo&lt;1th. andcombtnetlwllhtTIOt'lllJtiprayeron
school. 9::11a.m.; WorshlpiO::IIa.m.; Praye.a .m . Classes for all agf&gt;S. Junior Church
Route 124. WUllam Hoback, pastor. Sunday
lhelhlrdSunday. Momlngpraye.-andsermon
meeting 7::11 p.m. Thunday.
SatUTday
II:00: Morning Worship. 11:00: Adult Choir
Sunday Mond•y Tuceday Wcdneaday Th111'8day
school, !0 a.m.: Sunday evening service, 7
on aU other Sundaya cj the month. Chureh
MIDDLEPORT FREEWn.L BAPTIST,
practice 6:00p.m . Sunday. Young People's.
PMlm Pulm
Eukkl Zechariah Rtvclauon Revelation 188.lah
p.m . Wednesday evenlng service 7 p.m .
School and nunery care provided. Coflee
Cort1E1' Ash and Plum. Leslie Hayman,
2·1·11 89.19-37 34·1-10
14.1-21
19.! 1-21
2(),1.6
Children's Church and Adult Bible St udy.
7·10-26
CARPEI'ITER BAPTIST. Dnn Cheadle._·,
hour In the Partah HaU Immediately followlnl!
pasler. Sunday school 10 a.m.: Morning
Wednesday at 7::4) p.m .
Sup&lt;. Sunday School 9::11 a.m. Morning ·.
the ...-vtce.
Worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday and Saturday
HOPE BAPrlST CHAPEL -570 Grant St..
Worship, 10:ll a .m . Prayer Service, alternate •·
POMEROY O!URCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
EvenJna services. 7::11 p.m.
MJddleport; Sunday School. 10 a .m .; m&gt;rnlng
Sundays.
,,
worhslp. 11 a .m .; evenlng worship. 7 p.m .
Main St., Nell Proud!OOI, put&lt;r. Blblo school,
MEIGS
rnorn1Jig won hlp, 10:45 a.m. (!tnt and tlt1rd
LAUREL CUFF FREE MITHODIST
MIDDLEPORT
PENTECOSTAL.
Third
Wednesday evf:'ning Bible Sllldy and jX'ayt&gt;r
9::11 a.m.; momlng ' wonhlp, 10::11 a.m.;
COOPERAftYE PARJ811
Sundaysl : fellowship dinner with Cormel, CHURCH, """· Rnbert Mille.-. pastor: Lloyd
Ave .. the """· Oark Baker. past&lt;r. Carl. Youth moettnp, 6::11 p.m.; M!tllnaW&lt;rshlp,
UNn'ED ME'l110DI8T ai\IIICII
third Thursday, 6::11 p.m. IMcGuire I
meeting. 7 p.m . Af1Ulated with Southern
Wright. Otrector of Christian Educaoon.
No&lt;ttngham. Surxlay School Sup&lt;. Swmy :
FQ s-, D1reciGr
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Oliver Sunday School, 9::11 a.m.: Morning Worship.
Baptist Convention.
7::11 p.m. Wedraday nJahl prayer meeting
SchoollO a .m . - classes for all ages. Evening
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
10::11
a.m.:
Choir
Practice,
Sunday,
6::11
and Blbleal\ldy, 7::11p.m.
Rev. Jutte11 E. Corl!llt, Alolllanl
Swain, Superintendent. Sunday sc)'OOI 9::11
services. 6 p.m. Wemesday. Study, 7::11 p.m.
State Route 124 and County Road 5. Mark
111E SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
NOIITIIEAIR' a.l!IJI'ER
a.m. ...,ery week.
p.m.: Evening Worship. 7::11p.m. Wednesday
Youth services, 7::11 p.m. Friday.
Seevers.
minister.
Sunday
School
Supt
..
Steve
Ave., ~- Mn. Dora Wining In charJt'.
Rev. 0 . HOBSON CHRISTlAN UNION. """· Tom Prayer and Bible Study, 7: :ll p.m.
ECCLES!A FEU.OWSIIIP, 128 Mill St ..
P\ckens.
Sunday
schooL
9:
:ll
a
.m.:
morning
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST. Clwles
• Sunday ltollneu .-ing, 10 a.m.; Sunday
"""· l1o)'Staten, pastor. Sunday School, 9: :II a.m.:
Middleport.
Past&lt;r ~Brother chuck McPiler-·
worship, 10: lJ a .m .; evening wo~hlp. 7 p.m .
School, 10::11 a.m. SUnday School, YPSM
Rev.- J..._
&lt;'Venlng service, 7::11 p.m. Wednesday prayer Russell. Sr., rrUnister; Rick Macomber, supt .
son. Sunilay School at 10 a.m. Services
Wednesday worship, 7 p.m .
Eloise AdantJ, Ieeder. 7::11 p.m., salvation
ALFRED - Church School 9::11 a.m.: mee~Jng, 7::11 p.m.
Sunday school. 9::ll a .m .: worship serVice.
Sunday evening at 7 p.m. and Wednesday at 7
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER meftlnl, various lj)Hiten and mualc IJlO'
Worship, 11 a.m.; UMYF, 6::11 p.m.: UMW,
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF 10::11 a.m. Bible Study. Tuesday. 7::11 p.m.
p.m .
George's Creek Road. Rev . C. J . Lemley.
clall. Thundoy -11::II a.m. to 2 p.m.. Uulles
Third Tuesday, 7: :II p.m. Community !tnt CHRIST, Duane Warden, minister. Bible
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Rev. Earl Shule-.
pastcr: Paul Poar. Church School Superin·
Home League, members In chal'(!e. aU
Sunday. (Archer)
class. 9::11 a.m.: morning worship, 10::11 CHRIST OF LATIER DAY SAINTS.
pasta. Sunday school 9::11 a .m .; Orureh
tendent . Church school. 9: ll a .m .; rnomlng
wmnen Invited: 6:45 p.m. Thursday, Corpa
CHESTER - Wonhlp 9 a.m.: Church a.m.: &lt;'Venlng worship. 6: :II p.m. Wednesday Portland·Ractne Road. WUiiam Roush, passervice, 7 p.m .; youth ·meetlng. 6 p.m .
wcrshlp, 10: ll a .m: evening servl('(&gt;, 7 p.m .
C.del C1ua !Young Poople-Biblel . 7::11 p.m.
School10 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m. Bible study. 6::11 p.m.
tcr. Unda [\'ans . church school dlrector .
ay Bible Study. 7 p.m.
Bible Study . Wednesday. 7: 00p.m . Classes for
Blblo St\ldy and Prayer meeting, open to the
UMW, ftrst ,Thursday, I p.m.: Communion
NEW STIVERSYILLE COMMUNITY church school. 9::fl a .m .; morning worship,
GOSPEL LIGH1li0USE, l1l45
aU ages.
public.
lint Sunday. tAreher)
C11,1JRCH, Sunday School service. 9:&lt;&gt; a.m.: 10: 30 a.m .; Wednesday eventng prayer
HUan Road. Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, past&lt;r. ,
ST. PAUL LIJI'IIERAN CHURCH, Corner
POMEROY wESTs DE 'CHURCH OF
JOPPA - WOI'Ihlp, 9::11 a.m.; Church Worship service, 10::11 -a.m.: Evangellatlc services, 7::11 p.m.
Dan
bert. Sun!ay Schools..-.·:
ol Syc......, and Seeond Sta., Pomeroy. Tho
CHRisT, 3B16 Cltlidren'a Home Road
School, l()Jl a.m. Bible St\ldy, Wednesday, Service,. 7::11 p.m. Wednesday, Prayer'
BETHL£HEM BAPTIST. """· Earl
ent.
y M..-nlng servlre, 10:00 a.ni.:
tCoonty Road 761 91J'l.!123:1. Vocal music.
7::11 p.m. (Johnloni
meeting, 7::11 p.m.. Thursday.
Shuler. pastor. Worship service, 9:ll a.m.
"""· William Mlddleswartlt, Past&lt;r. Sunday
Sunday ...,entng service 7::11 p.m. Services ·
School at 9:45 a .m . and ChW'Ch SerVices U
Sunday wonhlp 10 a.m.; Bible study 11a.m.:
LONG BCYITOM - Chureh School, 9::II
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Pomeroy· Sunday school, 10::11 a.m. Bible Stu&lt;lrJlJ!!l.
Tuesday and Thursday evening&gt; at 7::II p.m.
p.m .
worship. 6 p.m. Wednelday Bible llt..y, 7
a.m.: Worship, 7 p.m.; Bible Study, Wednes· Harrisonville Rd.: ROOert Purtell. minister:
prayer service Thursday, 7: :J) p.m .
WORD OF FAITH. 93 Mill St .. Middleport:
SACRED HEART, Msgr. Anthony Glanna·
p.m.
.
day, 7::11 p.m.; UMYF, Wednesday, 6 p.m.; St&lt;'Ve Stanley. Sunday school supt. Sunday
CARLETON li'ITERDENOMINATIONAL
Richard Stewart. paster. Sunday morning,
more, Ph. 992-51198. Saturday evening Mass,
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
Communion First Sunday. CArcherJ
school, 9: :lla,m.: worship service 10::II a.m.: CHURCH. KJngsbury Road. """· Oavld
10:00: Surxlay &lt;'Vening. 7::11. Tuesday morn7::fl p.m .; Sunday Mass, 8 a .m . and 10 a .m .
CHURCH - Oltto&lt;1 Lucas, ll&amp;'IClr. Sunday
REEDSVILLE - Chureh School, 9: :II Evening worship Sunday, 7 p.m. and Curfman, pastor. Sunday school, 9:]) a .m .
In ~ Bible Study, 10:00: Wednesday l'Vefling,
Confessions one-half hour before each Mass.
School 9:30a.m. Mn. Worley Francis, supt.
a.m.: Worship 11 a.m. (Deeter I
Wednesday. 7 p.m.
.
Ralph Carl, superintendent evening worship.
7::11: Thursday morn1JU&lt; video with Ke!\11ffh
ceo etas.... 11 a.m. Sunday.
Preoclttn&amp; oerv1ce1 ftnl and third Sundays
niPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL - Church
ST. JOHN Ll!I'HERAN CHURCH. Pin&lt;' 7::11 p.m. Prayer me&lt;&gt;tlng, Wednesday. 7::11
Copeland. .tO:00: Friday evening video ~th
YICI'ORY BAPrlST - 525 N. 2nd St.,
following Sunday School. Youth ,._.ng
School, 9a.m.: Wonhlp,10a.m.: Bible Study, Grave. The """· WUllam Mlddleswarth, p.m .
Kenne&lt;h Copeland. 7::11.
.
Middleport.
James
E.
Keesee,
pastor.
Sunday
every Sunday, 7::11 p.m.
Tuesday, 7::11 p.m.: UMW, Third Tuesday, Past&lt;r. Church services 9::11 a.m. Sunday
LONG BOTIOM CHRISTIAN. Jody
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF 1l!E NAZA· mcsnlng
worship,
10
a
m
.;
evening
service,
7
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST ,
7: :II p.m.: Communion first Sunday. School10::11 a.m.
Holland , pastor : Wallace Damewood .
RENE. RL'v. Glendon Stroud. past&lt;r. Sunday
p.m.: Wednesday evening wonhlp. 7 p.m.:
Preaching 9::11 a.m., !tnt and oerond
CATcher I
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST. Paul Sunday School Supt. Worship service 9 a .
School. 9::11 a. m.: Worship Service, 10::11
School
tO
a
.m
.
VIsitation,
Thursday,
6::11
p.m.
m
.:
Bible
Sundays ~ each month; tlt1rd and fourth
· CEI\'I'JlAL a.l!IJI'ER
Pratt. pastor. Sunday school. 9::II a.m.. t.arry
a.m.; Youth Service, Sunday. 6:15 p.m .;
TRINITY CIIRlSTIAN ASSEMBLY, Cool·
Sundayseechmmth, wonhlpoervlcetta17::11
Rev. lam,. E. CorliMI
Haynes, S. S. Supl.: morning worshlp. IO: :II
HYSELL RUN HOLINESSfHURCH. """·
Sunday evening service. 7:00 p.m. Wedrte;..
ville
GUbert
Spencer,
pastor.
Sunday
Thereon Durham. pastor. Sunday School at
p.m. Wednesday evertlnp at 7::11 p.m.,
Rev. SievenN.....,
a.m.
day Prayer Meeting and Bible Study 7:00p.m ·
school, 9: l) a .m .; morning service, 11 a .m .
Prayer and Bible St\ldy.
Rev. IUcltttrd Rolhemlc:h
RACINE CHURCH QFTHE NAZARENE. 9::4) a .m.; Mornln~ wcrship at 10:ll a .m.
NEASE SE'ITLEMENT CHURCH, !Jo.
Sunday evening service, 7::11 p.m.: midweek
Sunday evening service at 7: l) p.m .;
nald R Karr. Sr .. past(J'. Sunday afterooon
SEYENni·DAY ADVENTISI'. Mulberty
E."""· Thomas H. Collier, pastor, Martha
prayer service Wedl\eSday, 7::11 p.m.
Thursday 9ef\'lces at 7: l) p.m .
Hellhta Road, Pomeroy. Michael Pion·
lin. Rubtnldac ·
Wolle, Chairman ol the Board cj Christian
services. 2:]); Thursday evening service,
MOUNT OLIVE aJMMUNITY CHURCH.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
kowlltl, pu11r. MarteSplrs, Sabbai~School
ASBURY (Syracuse! - Worship, 11 a.m.:
Lite. Sunday School. 9::11 a.m.: mornlrtl&lt;
7::11.
Lawrence Bush. pastor. Max Folmer, Sr.
Supl. Sabbath School ill 11 2 p.m. on !falurday
Church School, 9:45 a.m.; Charge Bible
worship; tO::.&gt; a. m.: Sunday evenln~ worship. Knob. located on County Road 31 . Rev.
FIRSrE\Af'JIST CHURCH. Mason. W.Va . .
Superintendent. Sunday School and morning
wllh wonhlp services totlowlnlal 3:15p.m.
Study, Wednesday, 7::11 p.m.: UMW, !tnt
7::11 p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7::II Lawrence Gluesencamp, pastcr: Rev. RoRPr
Past&lt;r. Bill Murphy. Sunday School, 10 a. m.;
wcrshlp, 9: ll a.m. Sunday evening service, 7
Willford, assistant pastor. Preaching servi·
Run.AND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Tuesday, 7::11 p.m.; Choir Reheanal, Wed·
pm
,
Sunday E.'Ventng service, 7: l} p.m .; Prayer
p.m .; Youth meetlitg and Bible study,
••- Harriett warner a .. M Sunday Scooi
neoday, 6::11 p.m.; UMW,IourthSunday, 6::11
· RACINE F1RSTBAPrlST.Ilon L. Walk..-. ces, Sunday 7: lJ p.m . Prayer meeting
meet in~ and Bible Study Wednesday, 7::II
~ter
'~""
'
p.m. INelson I
Pastor, Robert Smith, Sunday School supt.:
Wednesday, 7 p.m .
Wednesday, 7: :II p.m.: Gary Griffith, leader
p.m . Everyone welcome.
9::1la.m.;
momtng worship, 10:45 a.m.
School
~
rn1ng
hi
Youth groups. Sunday evening, 6: l.lp.m . with
POMEROY · FIRST BAPnST, David
Ei'ITERPRISE- W&lt;rshlp9a.m.: Church
Sunday
, 9: ~a . m .: mo
wors p,
MaM, mlltllter; Wllllam Snou!ler, Sunday
School, 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Tuesday, 7::11
10:40 a.m.: Sunday evening worship, 7::11 Roger and VIolet WUlford as leaders.
School supl. Sunday School, 9:ll a.m.:
p.m.; UMW, P'!nlt Monday, 7::11 p.m.:
p.m.: Wednesday &lt;'Venlng Bible study. 7::11 Communion service first Sunday each month.
WHITE'S CHAPEL. Coolville RD. """·
-•-·-"'p
10·~ m
UMYF.
Sunday,
6
p.m.
Choir
rehearsal,
6::11
p.m.
M~·-• -~· ·- ' .
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH . Roy Deeter. pastor. Sunday school9:ll a .m .;
FIRST SOUI'HERN BAPTIST, Pomeroy · p.m. WednE&amp;day. CRDthemlchl
Pike. David Hun~ puler: Jack Needs,
FLA1WOODS - Otureh School, 10 a.m.:
Burlingham, Ohio. """· Okey Ray Lauder· worstUp service, lO:ll a .m . Bible study and
Sunday School Q!redcr. Sunday achool, 9::11
Worship. 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7
milt, ~tor. Ph. !192-7D4. SundaySchooiiO:OO JX'ayt"r service Wednesday. 7: ll p.m .
Rtm.AND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Dan
a.m.; montlni worship. 10::11: evenlltl
p.m.: UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. tRDthemlchJ
a.m.: Sunday &lt;'Vening service, 7:00 p.m.:
worship, 7: :11 p.m. Tuesday Vilttatlon, 7p.m.;
FOREST RUN - Worship, 9 a.m.; Church
Wednesday evening service, 7:00 p.m. Monlux. pastor; BlU Nicholson. Sunday
Wednesday, Pn)'l!f oeMce, 7::11 p.m.;
School, 10a.m.: Choir PracUce, Tuesday, 6::11
DANVILLE WESLEY AN, Sunday SchoOl, school supt. Sunday school, 9:]) a .m.:
mornlrijt worstUp and communion, 10: ll a. m.
Million Frlendl,7::11p.m.; Glrilln Actions,
p.m.; ' UMW. first Tuesday, 7::11 p.m.
9::1lo.m.; momtngwonhlp10:45a.m.: yooth
Rtm.AND BffiLE METHODIST- Amos
T::llp.m.; Acteerts,7::11p.m.: ChotrPracttce,
(Nelsonl
ll!'vlce. 6:45 p.m.: evening worship, 7::11
1'UIIs, pastor, Sonny Hudson. supt. Sunday
.
HEATII (Middleport) - Oturch School,
p.m.: Wednesday, 7::11 p.m. Prayer and
8::1Jp.m.
school, 9:ll a.m . Morning worship, 10: ll a.m .
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH. Old 9::11a.m.; Worship, 10::11 a.m.; Bible St\ldy,
Pralle.
Sunday evening service. 7:00. Wedll('Sday
Oemr Rd., Oemr. PasiClr Woody can, Jr. Tuesday, 10 a.m.: UMW, oerond Monday,
DANVILLE HOLINESS CHURCH, locall!d
&lt;'Venlng ~rv1ce 7:00p.m.: WMPO Program.
Pastcll'. SUnday Scbool 10 a.m. Sunday 7::11 p.m.; UMM, tlt1rd Mo'nday, 7::11 p.m.
onRoulel25belweenYintonandLangsvllle.
9:00a.m . each Sunday morning.
evertlnl service, 7 p.m.; Thursclay -mna CRobinlonl
"""· Ben Walta, past&lt;r. Sunday SchoOl, 9::11
ll!'vlce, 7 p.m. ·
.
MINERSVILLE - Worship Service, 10
a.m., Bobby Lambert S. S. Supl.; Morning
FAmi TABERNAO.E CHURCH, Batley a.::di. Church School, 11 a.m.; UMW, third
Worship, 10::11 a.m.; Children's Happy Hoor
Rtm.AND. CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
Run Road, Rev. Emmett Raw!o&lt;l, pastor. W esday, I p.m.; Choir pracUce, Monday,
6:45 p.m. Prayer &amp; Bible Study, 7::11 p.m. I
RENE, """· Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., pastor.
7
::II p.m. !Nelson I
Handley Dunn, supl. Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Missionary meeting first Wednesday ~each
Sunday School, 9: :1) a.m.: wocship service,
Sunday evertiJII service 7::11 p.m.; Bible
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service, 9
moath. 7::11 p.m. For Information call
10::11 a.m.: ywng people's service, 6 p.m.
teaching, 7::11 p.m. Thunday.
a.m.: Church School, 11 a.R).; UMW, second
311&amp;8467.
Evangelistic sesvlce. 6:l&gt; p.m . Wednesday
SYRACUSE MJSSIO!'!, Cherry St., Syra· Tuesday, 7::11p.m.; UMYFiastTuesday, 7::11
SU.YER RUN IIAPI'IST, Bill Little,
service. 7 p.m.
'
cuoe. Services, 10 o.m. Sunday, Evening p.m. (RubenklngJ
puler, SteveUttle,S.S.Sup&lt;.Sundayschool,
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller St ..
oervlcett, Sunday and Wednesday, 7 p.m.
POMEROY - Church School, 9:15a.m.;
10 a:m.; morning wonhlp. 11 a.m. Sunday
Masoo, W. Va. Eugene L. Conger, rrUnister.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN Worship serv1ce, 10::11a.m.; Choir rehearsal,
evening wonhlp, 7::11 p.m. Prayer meeting
Many love to sing the glories of eternity; few care to
Sunday BlbleStudy,10a.m.; Worship 11 R.m.
CHRISI1AN UNION, Lawrence Manley, Wednesday. 7::11 p.m.: UMW, second Tues·
and Bible study, Thursday, 7::11 p.m.: yooth
contemplate
the harsh realities of time. The problem is more than
and
7
p.m.
Wednesday
Bible
Study,
vO&lt;·al
puler: Mn. Ruuell Young, Suhday School da y, 7:30 P·l"·: UMYF, Sunday, 6
meettna Wedneodoy at 7 p.m.
music, 7 p.m .
semantic confusion. We've become' a genera,tion obsessed with the
Supl. sUndaY School 9::11 a.m. Evenlna p.m.(Corblnl.
CHR1li'I1ANFEU.OWS!UPCIIURCH,383
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding
worshlp 7::11p.m. Wedneodayprayermeetlng
ROCH SPRINGS - Oturch School, 9:15
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday School, 10
ticking of a clock but always procrastlnatng with the assurance there
Lane, Mas&lt;J'I. W. Va . Rev. Ronnie B. Rose,
:II
a.m.:
Worship,
10
a.m.:
Bible
Study,
a.m.
SUnday
and
Wedneoday
Evening
7: :.¥:~oRIAH O!URCH OF GOD, Racine Wednesday, .7!:11 p.m.: UMYF (Senlon),
Paster. Sunday School 9: (; a.m.; Morning
wUJ lnterruptedly be a tomorrow.
Servlcet 7::11 p.m.
.
Wonhlp 11 a.m. Evening Service 7::11 p.m.
_ Rev.' Jams Satu!rfteld, pasl&lt;r. Montini Sunday, 6 p.m.: tJunlorsJ, every other
CHESTER O!URCH OF GOD,"""· R. E.
There have been moments when we've been so jealous of time.
Wednesday Women' s Minlstries 9 a .m .
worshlp9:45 a.m.; Sunday School10:45 a.m.: Sunday, 6 p.m. (RDthemlchJ
.
RDblnlon, puler. Sunday ocltoot, 9:!!a.m.:
The now moments were so beautiful, we tried, sponge like, to absorb
tmeetlng and prayer!. J'nlyer and Bible
evertlnl wonhlp T. p.m. Tuesday, 7: ll p.m.,
Rtm.AND - Church School, 9:45 a.m.;
worship service, 11 a.m.; evertiJII service, 7
Sludy7 p.m.
the time knowing It would soon slip away. And, alas, It did.
lad!.. prayer..-.,. Wedneiday, 7::11p.m. · Worship, IO::IIa.m.; UMW (Evenlngctrde),
p.m; yooth service, w - . y, 7 p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
YPE.
second WednE&amp;day, 7::11 p.m.; UMW, oecond
LANGSVILLE CIIRIS'I1AN CHURCH,
Back In 1973, among my activities was the writing of a
CHRISTIAN . UNION. The ~ - William
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner ThUniday, 1 p.m. (Rubenltlng)
RDbertE.Muuer. pasiCli'.SUndayachool,9::11
Campbell.
paster.
Sunday
School,
9:
:II
a.m.;
newspaper
column and !'asked my readers to share with me a few of
Slxllt and Palmer, the """· Mark McCtq.
SALEM CEI'ITER - Church School, 10
a.m.; Paul Musaer, supt.; momJng wonhlp,
James Hughes, supl.: evening service, 7::11
Sunday schooi 9:1S a.m.; Don White, Sunday a.m.; Worship. 9:45a.m. (Rubenltlng)
10::11 a.m.; SUnday evenlDioervlce, 1 p.m.;
their
personal
observations on the passing of time. Now a decade
p.m. WednE&amp;day evening prayer meeting,
School aupt., John Reibel, Sr., aut. supl.
SNOWVU.LE - Worship, 8::11 a.m.;
mlll-weelt oervlce,-Wedni!oclay, 7 p.m.
later,
I'd
like
to
'share a few of them with you.
7::11
p.m.
Youth
prayerseovlceeach'l'uesday.
Montini Wonhlp 10:111 a.m. Youth meeting Church School 10 a.m. (RubenltiJt&amp;)
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF 111E NAZA·
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Leiart, W.
One reader wrote, "The strange thing about the present Is that It
,:11
p.m.
Wednelday.
tnctudtni
wee
tllJa,
SOU'I1IEIIN
a.u!JI'ER
RENE
"""·
Jams
B.
Kittle,
pastor.
7
Ya., Rl. 1, Mark ltwln. paster. Worship
.e ..., btevon, lunlor astroonuta, and junlor
Rev. J...,.. M. Oark
S1terman Cundlll, superintendent. Sunday
never seems as good as the past. But when the present becomes the
services, 9::1la.m.; Sunday l'chool. 11 a.m.:
andai!ntorltlab8YF; citoO'pntcUc;e8::11p.m.
1!"~:.~~
School. 9::11 a.m.; MamiJte WOI'Ihlp 10::11
evenll)g
worship,
7:
:II
p.m.
Tuesday
cottage
past, even the bad times don't really seem that bad and the 'ho-hum'
w_.._..y; ~yer rrtefilJtl and Btbleatudy,
-·
a.m.; Evangetilttcoervtee, 6(!.m. Prayer and
prayer meeting and Bible study, 9::11 a,m.
...,._,..
""
APPLE GROVE - Clt\U'CH Sc(!OOI, 9 a.m.;
praise w - . y 7 p m.· ~ rrtefilJtl 7
Urnes even appear desirable ... "
·
Wonhlp service, Wednesday, 7::11 pm.
W~,
'""p.m.
'
, •
'
' 'Doesn't It seem lronlc," wrote another, ' 'that the most beautlfui aspect of time is
CIIIJRCII OF
CHRIST, Mldtlloporl, 5tlt and Wonhlp, 10 a.m. tftnt and""tlt1rd Sundays);
.,_,_
p.m.
MaiD, lltlil' Melton. mtntater: AI Hartaon,
UMW, aecond _Tuesday, 7: ... ~ .-.,~
EDENIINITEDIIRI:I'HRENINCHIUST,
also the most frightening. I'm ta1kJng about that Inevitable by-product known as Chart~&lt;e.
OUR SAVIOUR LU'I'IIERAN O!URCH auoctate mlldlter; Mllte GeNc1l. !Iunday mt!OIIng. Wednelday, 7 p.m. (
)
EldOn R. BIW, putor. SuJ1da,y School 10
Growth Js synonymous with change, but so Is deolh, not just of the txldy. but ol customs
,
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood. W. Ya.
Scbool Suporllltendell .. Blblo Scbool. · 9::11
BE'IliANY - Wcnltlp, 9 a.m.; Ot\U'Ch
a.m.; Robert Reed, lllpt.; Momtng IOI'tnOit,
and our way of. llfe ln general ... "
·
The
Rev.
George
C.
Weirick.
ll&amp;'ler.
Sunday
•
"Someone
once
said
that
ume
heals
alf1Vounds,
and
that
Is
so
very
truE'.
··
reminded
a.m.: rntl'lllng won1t1p, 10:00 a.m.; -mna School, 10 a.m.; lllbllt Study, Wedneoday, 10
11 a.m.; SUnday ni&amp;JII - . Chrfltlan
•
School, 9::11a.m.; Sunday werltslp, 11a.m.
wcnltlp 7 p.m. Wedraday Blblo Study and
a.m.;. Don:u WomeD'a Foltowlltlp. Wed,.._ E-.r, 7::11 p.m.; Son1 oervjce, 8 p.m.;
another reader. ''11me provides a sort of balm; tt helps you forget all those hurts that , a t
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH; """locall!d
~ lfOUP rnea~~ng~, &lt;p.m. .
dll)o, 11a.m. (McGuire)
-.ana, 8:JI p.m. Mill-- Prayer
the ttme, seem so unbearable. Because of time, too, we're given thi' l~.I'Y of optimism.
•
pn Pomeroy Pike. County Road 25 near
MIDDLEPORTCIIURCIIOFTHENAZA·
CARMEL- Churdt Scbool, 9:ll a.m.;
mee~~ng,w-.,.,7p.m.,Aivtn-.lay
With time there Is always the possibility that things will get better ...
Flatw(]OIIs. """· BlackWood, ll&amp;'ler. Services
"~moves on at such uneven speeds," was one observation. "When l was just a·
~
RENE, c.;.put&lt;n """· Charlel Coyle and Wonhlp, 10:45 a.m.; ( - and Fourth
-·
. on Sunday at !O::IIa.m. and-7::11 p.m. with
Rev NueyOoyle 'BID While Sunday school Su~); FeUowlblp ciiMer ·wlth Sutton,
HEMLOCK GROVE .,CIIRIS'I1AN, llopr
kid, 1 thought I would never, but never, grow, up. Then, after the B.g('Of twenty or so. II
·
Sunday
school,
9::11
a.m.
bible
study,
seems Uke I've been on some sort l1 roller coaster. Now, the years speed by. and thl'rPis
supt: StiJ!day achooi, 1::11 ~.m.; ~ ~hlrd 1blrlday, 8:JJ ~.m. (~l
wa-. putcr; a -· Pratt, SUnday
••
Wemeaday, 7::11 p.m.
no stoppln.i them. As. a' youngster; a year-seemed l[ke forever; now, a year seems more
wonltlp, IO:ll a.m.; Sunday
EASTLETART-OiurehScbool,9a.m.; =~~ ~JI~
FAmi FEU.OWSHll' CRUSADE FOR
d
. meellng,7p.m.Pn)'l!fmoollttiWodalldaY
WOI'IItlp,10a.m.(...-!andtourth!iullday?:
T•Ji
' ' Lm.,
•
'
like aTwoyearsearUer
daY. .,."
Ba ba w I
d,ttm pwas
CHRIST- St. Rt. 311, AntlquiJY. Paster, Rev.
Jhadtheopportunltytotalkwtth r ra a ters.an
•
·Fronklln Dickens. Sunday mornlng, 10 a.m.
p.m.
_ _........,., ,_,;.,.,y UMW, !tnt TuesdaY, 7100 P·~J~ )
.1
•
BAPI'IilT, ReV. Tom~
one of the topics we~ssed.· l asked her what shewOI.:lld bedoinj:tw1lh her. ttmelf she
Sunday evening, 7: :II p.!Th Thunday evonJng,
UNrt1ll .....,_, '""""'' .....,_'" • ' LETART FAllJI - w~-a.m.,
Joe lii,Yn! Sunday Sc- ~~
wt!Q' nol on doing the Today program. I had ool expect&lt;!\! her """""""·
. ,
OFMII:JGIICOIJNI'Y,81Y. Wanda--hi 1 ~ I Oturdltietiooi.JOa.iit. (cart&lt;) . •·-:m.- , Sunday acboct 9:45a.m.· ~ ...n111p
.7:JI p.m. .
.
"llhtnk I'd stay home," she said. "I have a Ultle child who Is 210 )"'aTS old: It s a
. STIVERSY1LLE COMMUNITY BAPTIST
dlrclcr. Hardd JcJI-.
"'
MORNING STAR- Wl!l1biP. ·~- •• ·• 7 JJ
..__ ~ f:JJ
'
wonderfUl
think
I'd
be
contented
oowto
brtng
her
up
and
be
able
to
read
a
book
all
....- .
I
• Clllln:ll Sci!DOI. 10:00
Bible_.'!~~&lt; , ~ p.m., ""'"' ••-.. : .P.II!'
CliURCH, Paster Robert B)'Ors. StiJid!ty . ntgltt and not havelo go to bed early •.. and go to a l~le m""\e It I !elt Ilk~ It ... and sleep
SchQCI 10 a.m.; Worship So!vlce 11 a.m.;
' tate 1n the 1TIOI'ttings ... that would be kind~ run ...
.
·
PL,\INS CHURCH OF
Sunday -mna service, 7::II p.m.; We&lt;lnesBut Barbara realized umeruns mainly on one channel and added. "I d Uketotrylt
a.m.
' ··
· rn.: Wl1I'II1IPo 11 m. (White) •
CIIRIS'I\ ~ c. Wallrl, m, miDfller;
dll)o-mnall!'vlce, 7:llp.m.
one
day, but rllltt oow, I'm very glad 1 ha"'' litis job. ll's a unque job ... ve.'!' speclalto
MIDDLEPORT PRISBYTI:fti,\N, a.m.~-~ Scbool, l :ll pm.;
~~
~EPENDEN'l' HOLINESS CHURCH,
me It has allowed me to mee1 the most ImpOrtant people In tiu&gt; world ...
Cllirdll*ial. t LJIL; *:f':m.~ WCJrllllp,7:Jip.m.; t:!MYF.Wocl-.v, 7'JI Wldoloda)'IIDito!Setm,fp.m.
p.m.,
Inc. - Paul St., Mlcldlepcrt. """· O'Dell
· Ttme 1s an lnYeltment ln eternity and we wUl never haw more time to use than we
~. puler. Sunday SChool. 9::11 a.m.;
10:11. . . . ::.\'IWII.Y,
~; Ji111J1e p.m. (Mt:GuiN) 1 • Ot\U'CJ!Sdlo01.10 CHESTER CHURCH OF THE' NAZA-·
have at litis very minute. nme clemands decisions; we choose what will OC&lt;UPY ou.r
l'otl1nllllll
wtnltlp
10:
Jl
a.m.;
-mna
'"""
momenta and theft we pay the price with our very beln!l·Only. one question will remain
~i:"~tJNm:D..niiAY·
~~":.;;:: UMW, fourth , RENE, Rev. ll«bert Grate, pastor.
sHp, Ulp.m. Tueoday, 12:ll·p.m. Wmnen's.
'I'EIIL\N a-IL CIJIImi SdiDOI.lO:ll a.m.;
N""•1 ; 1i 11 p;m.· MID'a Prayor w
Fr&amp;llk IWIIe, aupt. Sullday !ldloo1 t: ll a.
reprdll&gt;i our ..,uvtllelln 19M.
·
.
prayer rnoetq; Pn)'l!f and praise """'ce,
· was It worth the lnVI'Itmeilt? --, By Lee Millet, Keeter. Grace Ch""'h. Pomeroy.
mantDII-- 11:11 a.m.:
W........." Ta ni. (0111&lt;)
· m.; Wonblp .-vi..,, U a.m. IDd 1 p.m.
w-.y, 7:30p.m.
'nalltllt', 11 a.m.: JUdDr aad 111111: 11111t
;;;:roN'_ 'atttm~ Scbool, 9:JI a.m.: Sundaf.. Prayer ftM!ftlllJ~.-\V.~~·! ~.m.
~

9

·a:m.;,

W~=.:.=~ ,.~('?~bsei.ooa.9:ll,

Sllverblrd·
Satellite
SyateMI Reedsville-, Ohio 4.5772
.

'I

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:w."umoN

Ill!•·•

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Yaulb Grattlo.IU!diY•• p.m.

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1\o.

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"s

,_ua7

. For . more information.. CALL: . (614)
. .378-6I.58

MIDDLEPORT, 01:1.

. ..

"For A Real Auction
;att the Real McCoy"
1. o. " Mac" McCoy
11. t, Reedsville, Oh.
985-3944

...

HOME SATELLITE TELEVISION IS
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RUBBER MEETS THE ROAD"

~

214 E.Miin
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"""',.I", ,...,......d.,d hom&lt; . '"

v.·ut. u mtAhl) unhuPP'· liulc t.M~· • ·lth

..

The

GENERAL TIRE SALES

'

Rutland, Ohlo4S715

J . wm. "Bill'' Brown, Owner

~

WAID CROSS
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"'"U u \\'Uts.m
!ijtu, he didn 't C\"Cn w lk

Sennonette

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

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CHECK
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wututr und ull uf u"julncd tn • famil )
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"""·Robert

timedia, Inc .. Ponleroy, Ohlo45769, 992·
2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy , Ohio.

American N(&gt;wspaP£&gt;r

"(')h §ive 'Me ~!~~~~~: ~"SeMre

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SERVICES

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Outside Ohio

GRAVELY
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204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
Phone 992-2975
FALL 8t WINTER HOURS:
Effective Oct. 1 -March 1
Ctoaed Monday
Tuea.-Fri..B to II, Sat. 9 to 1

t Equt'pmentFiIre &amp;

of Columbus, 0 .
104W. Main
H2·2311 Pomeroy

Gallipolis at Logan
Southern at North Gallla
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace
Southwestern at Eastern
Wheelersburg at Northwest
Fairland at South Point
AthensatJacksolt
Circleville at Greenfield
Valley at Waverly
Wahama at Pt. Pleasant
Rock Hill at Symmes valley

Dally .

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

t~~ S

21

2

Nationwide Ins. Co.

@naUon @npany-

Kingsbury Home Sales VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

i'i'~-;";;fs~~~rs~~~'i~9~92~·;29~S;.S;;;:v~;;;;.P~Om=e~ro~y~i

~ -

area games

FOOI'BALL

Nadonal Football l..eiiiUt
GREEN BAY PACKERS- Named HNb
PaiE"rra spedal lt&gt;ams' cood\.

,j~~r.?·,J~.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Tonight's

NEW YORK YAN KE~Ri'ached an

NEW YORK MF.i'S-Announcl'd that
Fran Healy \IIIU repiiK'l' Bud JiaiTf'lw"l as u

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Phonl (614) 742·2777

Ill , . . IIAUI fiiOWl

aRJ1!'1.'fTlE!"I wllh Ptul Nlekro, pltr tw:&gt;r. on a

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EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

SEED AND MILLING
HEADQUARTERS

MSE&amp;\LL

rwo-year contrart.l"amtd Car l "'l'fump'"
Men1ll mana~('f ol thetr Colu mbus a ftillal€'
.-. the lnl€'matlonal Lc~.
TORONTO BLUE JA Ys-Signr&lt;d Ran&lt;1'
Mulltnlks, ltlint baS8T\an, lo a tt~J"w..)'l'a r
contract . and Mark Elct\OOm, ptt rhr&gt;r. to a
one-year contract.
National l.ea«ue
CHICAGO CU BS-SIR;n£'d R ie h l€'
Hl'tilE"r . thlnt ba.&lt;;('fT\an. to 11 two-)'f'a r

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

Pirates-Tornadoes
split two at Vinton ·
North Gallla and Southern spUt
two junior high boys' basketball
contests Thursday at North Gawa.
The Utile Bucs captured the
seventh grade game, 33-25 behind
Larry Jackson's 13 points. Don
Mays added six. McMUian led
Southern with eight points.
Southern took the eighth grade
tnt, 38-36.
The Tornado eighth graders
dumped Southern, JS-36. Turley
dumped In 18 points for the winners
whUe Rusty Denny had 13 and Keith
Burnette seven for North Gawa.

-

OR

Meigs outscored the 4-1 Waterloo
flvt~12-2 ln. the second quarter and

held on for the viCtory. Coach Rick
Ash's ·Marauderettes are 5-2 on the
year. Meigs had lost to Waterloo
33-8 In · the season opener last
month.
Scoring for Meigs was Tammy
Wright with nine, Shelly Stobart
and Missy Woods with five apiece,
Audra Houdashelt four and Teresa
Johnson added two. Stobert led In
rebounding with eight while Woods
had seven. Keffer led Waterloo with
10 points. Meigs plays again
Monday at Shade.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-:-Middlepott, Ohio

thunday.

fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

Houston at Sea11 k&gt;

Quro.&gt;c 8. Bostoo J

Riggins-Redskins
ready for 4~ers

Friday, January 6, ' 1984

l

Marauderettes' win~ing streak .ends
Meigs fresht:nan capture 8.t h victory

Playoff previe:w

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Can a
wUd card team make it to the Super
Bowl? Yes, indeed, and nobody
knows more about that !)lan the Los
Angeles Raiders.
Just three years ago when the
Raiders, then playing in Oakland,
not only got to the Super Bowl as a
wild card. They won it decisively.
Now, the Raiders are favored in
their attempt to return io the
National Football League's showcase event. Standing in their way
are the Seattle Seahawks, a wUd·
card entry in post-season action for
the first time.
"What Impresses me about them
is what Impressed m e about us three
years ago," said tight end Todd
Christensen of the Raiders. "They
appear to be a team of destiny and
that, a lot of the time, Is a lot more
scary than their ability.
"I think we have a collection o(
better athletes, but that really at this
time of the season Is Irrelevant. The
year that we won the Super Bowl.
there were at least three teams that
were better than we were but we
went aU the way because we got the
breaks and we made things
happen."
'
The Seahawks wUJ be trying to
make things happen Sunday In the
American Football Conference
championship game at the Los
Angeles Coliseum before a hostUe
crowd of more than 90,00&gt; and a
national television audience. Kickoff tlfne Is 1 p.m., PST.
The winner wUJ advance to Super
Bowl
at Tampa, Fla., on Jan.
22 against the survivor of the NFC
Championship game between San
Francisco and Washington earlier

•

Pomlroy Middleport, Ohio

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....... -...

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�Ttwi Daily Sentinei- Page--7

Ohio

woman takes
part~ttexchange
YOUth Servtces JOb · ·;~taa~. u;o::~goraJa~!
0

RECEPTION- Ms. Deborah LaVaDey, dlrectoroflheMelpCounty
Health Department's Woman's, Infants and Children Program (WIC) hi
pictured with Gov. Richard Celeste as a recent bption homrlng the
program and held atlhe Governor's Mansion In Columbus.

WIC director attends
reception
..
Meigs County Health Deparunen t
WIC Program Director Ms. Deborah LaValley attended a reception at the Governor's Mansion In
Columbus recently honoring the
Woman's, Infants and Children
Program (WIC) .
The reception marked an Increase In WIC participation by 100
percent In the fiscal year ofl983. The
Meigs County WIC Program Increased its caseload 100 percent
from ~participants to 8721n a four
month period.
This was accomplished through

the combined efforts and assistance
of Ms. LaValley. RN; Dorlha Riffle.
ADP coordinator; Annie Moon.
nurtritional assistant, and Linda
Aikman, part-time nutritional as-

slstant. The local program IS still
expanding and those who feel they
may qualify for the program are
asked to call 992-6626.
To receive WIC funds, the
requirements are: persons must be
certltled as DP.edlng supplemental
food by a WIC staff member;
persons must live In an approved
geographical area as recognized by
the U. S. Department of Agriculture; persons must be eligible for
reduced price or tree medical care;
must receive medical care ttom an
approved health care cllnlc; must
return to the cllnlc for regular health
checkups.
This special good program for
womeh, Infants and children is open
to all eligible persons Tel!ardiess of
race, sex, color or national origin.

· Holiday party given group
Mrs. Mary Lisle entertained the
Asbury United Methodist Church
choir with a party at her home.·
The group sang carols with Rose
Ann Jenkins at the organ, and there
were readings by members. The
home was extensively decorated for
the holiday season, and the refresh·
ment table was centered with a
white birthday cake with one white
candle.
· Thegroupgath'eredaround to sing
• "Happy Birthday,' Jesus'; followed
by prayer by Bill Winebrenner.
The choir presented Mrs. Lisle
with a dimensional picture lm·

printed with "A Letter from a
Friend."
Attending were Cathy Moore,
Stephannle Arnott, Btu and Dorothy
Wtnebrnner, Beulah Ward, Mar-

garet Eichinger, Helen Teaford,

Wendt Harmon, MaryCundltf,Judy
P
Hlld W
Rlly,
and
ape. Rosea Ann,
eaver,Kimberly
Ann Sauvage,
Rochelle Jenkins, Opal Kloes, and
the hosts, Mary and Don Lisle.
When the cboir members left the
party. each one was gtven a small
gift In appreciation for their efforts
during the holiday season by Mrs.
Lisle.

Meigs 0 U students named to .list
Twenty-two students from Meigs .grade point average of 3.3 or better
County have been named to the, on a scale of 4 to be named. They are
dean's list at Ohio University for the Suzanne E~beth Nay, Cheshire;
fall quarter.
Matt Eric Arnold, Anita Sue
Students must have earned a Bernard, Richard Keith Rader,
Chad WUUam Richards, Elton Blake
Weaver, aU of the Coolville area;
Clair Alan Morris, Long Bottom;
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Jewell Marjor,te Ellen Blake, George
recently flew to Norfolk, Va. to visit
Franklin Stewart, Jr. , both of
their son, DPSN Tony Jewell and to
Middleport; Debra Keebaugh
attend the formal commissioning
Buck, Ronald Clair Cozart, Linda
ceremony of his ship, the U. S. S. · Rae Eason, Julie Elberfeld, Jayne
. Shenandoah AD44.
Lee Hoeflich, Cutford J. Kennedy,
The ship, a destroyer tender. is the
Lynne Dee Oliver, all of Pomeroy;
flflh ship In naval history to be
Kathryn Lynn Baker, Melinda Joan
named "Shenandoah" in honor of
Salmons. both of Racine; Ellzabeth
the Shenandoah Valley and the
Ann Collins, Reedsville; Harry
adjoining Shenandoah National
Frederick Kane and Camille
Park.
· Susette Swindell, both of Shade, and
Afler the ceremonies, the Jewells
Margaret Marie Amberger,
attended a rception, toured the ship,
Syi'Jicuse.
. and that evening went to a dinner
Hospital patient
dance at the VIrginia Beach
Pavilion. They were accompanied
Mrs. Gladys Walburn, Middleto Norfolk by Randy Jewell, Mrs.
pori, underwent hlp surgery at
Edna Slusher and Leann Davis. Also Camden Clark Hospital, Parkersjoining them for the activities were burg. She is Improving and would
· Marcia Brecht, Karen and Cindy,
appreciate cards. Her room number
Findley.
is 143.

Jewells return

Sharon K. Buffington. Pomeroy.
a 15-yeal employee of the State
Ll~rary of Ohio and the Ohio Val]ey
AI ea Libraries. Is leaving OVAL to
take a new position as Clerical
Specialist with the Department of
Youth Services In Athens. accord·
lng to OVAL Director. Linda L.
Hartst.
Ms. Buffington first began work·
lng for the State Library of Ohio In
Septembel"l968 as a secretary with
the bookmobile center headquar·
tered In Pomeroy. In 1976, when the
State Library of Ohio transferred
the bookmobile service to the Ohio
Valley Area Libraries. her duties
expand~ to Include a large portion
of the public service runs as well as
office duties.
At the time the bookmobile
operation was transferred to Well·
ston in 1!*12, Ms. Buffington was
Office Manager at Pomeroy. She
supervised many placements from
federal programs and was the
mainstay of that unit during the
move.
Since the transfer to Wellston, she
has been Library Assistant serving
Lawrence, Pike, and Ross Counties
as well as Meigs County.

.Annual
party of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi SorQrlty was held

0

Ms. Buffington has gathered
many memories during 15 years
She can tell stories about break:
downs, ba'll. weather, all the people
she has mef. the work that went Into
moving a bookmobile headquarters. She might tell about the time
the frogs (which were to be the
bookmobile entries in the frogJumprg contest during the Regatta got loose on a Sunday night
and how slje spent the evening
catching them. She might even tell
about sweeping the one she couldn't
catch across the street Into the river
the next day. But her users can also
tell you about the stories she took
time to tell children when business
was slow or about the times she
made sure that a new_book to one of
"her" patrons.
·

G d .
.
00 ntte aSJtI:&gt;a ned

d!Mer, Patty Circle conducted the

business meeting. The meinbers
exchangm gttts and had a carol
s~

'cdup/e retire

((ClASSIFIED ADS sure to gat tesultl)) ·

Dailey birth
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Dalley, Long
Bottom, are announcing the birth of
their first child, a daughter, Sarah
Renee, Nov. 13, at the Holl!l!r
Medical Center. The infant weighed
sill pounlls.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Jacobs, Eagle Rldae R9ad.
and Mr. and Mr. Leonard Dalley,
Long Bottom. Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Jacobs, Middleport, are great·
grandparents.

Mr.andMrs.DonaldBrown,New
Haven, W.Va., who have retired,
have moved to a retirement center
at Lady Lake, Fla.
Mr. Brown was employed for :rT
years at the Philip Sporn Power
Plant,GrahamStation,NewHaven . . - - - - - - - - - - Mrs. Brown worked as a nursefor21
years at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·

LOR I's pIZZA

Bradbury Honor Roll

The serond six weeks gradlnjt ~lad oonor
roll ot the Bradbury Grade School has been
announced. Making a grade oi·"B" or above
In all their subjects to be named to the roll
were:
Flfth grade-Teresa!leem,MissyNelson.
Jasoo Smllh, Ken Van Maire, Darcl Wolle.
Sixlh grade - Mary Byer, Susie CasseU,
Eddie Crooks. Ryan' Harper. Rachel IWI&gt;In·
soo, Cherylo Stevens.
DH classes - Neal Bonl'&lt;'\Jttor. Randy
Carpen~ Wendy C~.-..y, Barbara Cole-

OPEN MONDAY· THURSDAY
11 A.M.-12 MIDNIGHT
fRIDAY

AC001JN'11NG REPBE8ENTATIVE SPEAKS
AT RIO GRANDE - Brian Mmer, center, of £rDe.t
A WliJaney of Columbus, recently IJIOke with
members of lhe Rio Grande Collele Accoulltlnl

&amp; SATURDAY

11

A.M.-1 AM.
WITH LOCAL DE LIVElY
SUNDAY 1 1 A M 11 p M
• •.
• •

AMOdeUon and lnlereated fiiCIII&amp;y lllld student~ In the
Etne.- E. Evam School of lkw!c s ipn Ule lopleof
"Careers In Public Acceurlln1." Miler, a Sealor Stall
,&amp;eewant, explained entry requlreinenl8 for thole

Airman Andrew _c. Goodritte, son
of Mary A. Goodnlte, Rural Route 1,
Letart, W.Va.,hasbeen asslgnedto
KeeslerAirForceBase, Miss.,after tj~~h"urrij!"'o2!:rd~.:.::b:y_:NI:zz:_
. _:on~l~R:ul:to~r,~R:•:nd:yJ.===========
completing Air Force Basic Train·
lng .

CALL 992-6851

Do you really want to quit
~moklng? Try hypnosis. we all
know that cigarette smoking is one
of the major health problems in the
world today. Clinical experience
has proven that hypnosis can be
successful In helping people quit
smoking ... If they really want to
quit.

.

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J

Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy
Announces · ·
Store Hours:

Hypnosis has been successtul for
many other health related prob. lems. It has been used for hyperten·
&amp;ion, asthma, $!Uttering, caesarean
section operations and cancer
therapy. It is more frequently being
used as a way to help a person quit
smoking.
·
What is hypnosis? Hypnosis is
nothing more than a deep state of
relaxation. According to Dr. Her·
bert Spiegel, Clinical Professor of
Psychiatry at Columbia Univer·
stty,hypnosisworksbyopentngthe
subconstous mind to suggestion. rt
is a deep relaxation sta~ that

'

1981 OLDS DELTA 88
V-B diesel. tilt wheel, crui1e
control . air conditioning,
AM /FM/ Stereo, power steering. power -brakes, cloth interior.

Monday-Saturday
8 A.M. -.9 P.M.
Sunday
10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
And 4 p.m..• 8 p.m.

....__ r---------------..

~-,-~"'

SWISHER LOHSE

OLDS.-CAD ~

Pharmacy

I

I

Kenneth McCiillouth. llt .Ph .

SIMMONS CHEVY, INC.

Charles Rlf111, R.Ph .

I PRESCRIPTto••
Sun7.o;'·tO~JO~:'ttfo•tnd·4ot~i~:m.
I
·
PH _,,.,.,
·

Ron•'• "'"'"'· R. Pn.
Friendly Serv in

1 E.""'"
I

Open N••""

till'

Pom"" · o.

state
is necessary
to mental
screen
causeswhich
an Intensely
focused
out most external stimuli.
By doing this, an lndivtdual Is
able to open his or her mind to
]Xlllltlve suggestion. People came
out of hypnosis feeling relaxed, and
with a general feeling ot positive
well being.
·
Smokers 'fill be able to try
smoking cessation through hypnosl$ In Athens at O'Bieness Hospital

"Your Dealer On The River"

I

PH. 992-6614

308 E. Mafn St.

t

P

OH

r-:----;:======-=-=-=-=-=-=-=·=-=-==-=====~================~~o~m~e~ro~y~.~~-~
restriction on the amount ioaured.
ft.80o/o .
1
Q -17%•
1
lOO%
1
l41 Ofo*
So you're not earning rates
7
ANNUAL INTEREST

ANNUAL YIELD

ANNUAL INTEREST

moving. We've got as
many financial solutions as there are
financial needs.
See the Yellow Pages for the office
nearest you.

GUARANTEED FOR 3 MONTHS GUARANTEED FOR 2¥2 YEARS

..

10

.00%

~NUAL

l o -38%* 11 20%

INTEREST

ANNUAL YIELD.

GUARANTEED FOR 6 MONTHS

1o-35%

10.74%*

ANNUAL INTERES'.

ANNUAL YIELD

GUARANTEED FOR 1 YEAR .

10.90%

11·31%*

ANNUAL INTEREST

~NNUAL

YIELD

GUARANTEED FOR 2 YEARS

11·62%•

ANNUAL INTEREST

Calendar

llke -~ese. get

ANNUAL YIELD

GUARANTEED FOR 3 YEARS
There's just no excuse for lazy
Investing. Not with great rates like
these. So get your money over to City
Loan and Savings where st.x different
investment certificate options lock In
high Money Market rates.
Rates that are guaranteed for the
. run tenn you select Rates that provide
high yields for as little as 81000, all
guaranteed by the Ohio Deposit
Guaranty Fund (ODGF) with n

O!}'Loan
&amp;savtnss
•,

&lt;S2&gt; CR..ED!T

COMME~IAL

FINANCIAL NET\\()RK
,1 Con1 rol ~ (M'fhlnY

lfyour money isn't
.earning this Imtch,
it.

•

ROCK SPRINGS - Star
Grange will meet Saturday, 8
p.m. at the grange hall. State
baking contest will be held and
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree,
state convention delegates. will
give their report.
SYRACUSE - The Men In
Missions will meet In the
fellowship hall at the Syracuse
Nazarene -~urch Saturday at 7
p.m.
MONDAY
•
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Education will
hold an organizational meeting
Monday, 7 p.m. In the new office
at the Pomeroy Village Hall .
LETART FALLS - Letart
Falls Pro will meet Monday at
7: ll p.m. at the school.

TIJESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern
Band Boosters will meet Tues·
day at 7:ll p.m. In the band
room at the high school.

,Applications
being_taken

QUICK SERVICE .
BUSINESS LUNCHEONS

).

COMPLETE DINNERS
FROM

$4,95

-

...

.

Commandry
sets inspection

EVERY DAY SPECIAL

PRIVATE PARTY AND
MEETING RQOMS .

POMEROY - The Ohio Val·
CmnrnA!ndery 24, wlil OOid
lr.spectlml in the Order ol
Temple 011 Saturday, Jan. 14,
. 3: :.&gt;p.m. AcliMer wm be•i!l'\18:11
at 6 p.m. IIIII J:ele!I'VII(ilolll•- 'I
bemadewlthDavldF)lx. !E"6616
ley

FR!ENDLY ATMOSPHERE

·or

xr-. ·«

•n

Harold Rice,

· 74UI'll, b11ore Wednalday. In·
opecllria will be · beld at the ·

.· Ptaa&amp;oy~tcTemplt.

'

•

J

cyl eniZ .. fa ct ai r eond ..

"'M'f .

· REMEMBER
WITH
""~ u ro l~ll~

Jt-.,j.:nc'\1

l ltnt'f ~1 ~•• Jnl(t· mo."'

1u\l c'all·or " " '

1 rnof. heuler . au1 11 trans . p st~r . p
hrak('s . p r1oor lod.s . r1ia dock . ('()f'nt•nnJt
l am~ lint ala~~ till o;lf'N wht'el crws.·
,-ool .1m lm rar1m ~ t••rffi ~h'lt"d road whef'l" .
rrm ron! rmrror ~ • · ~ • ;tCT f'fll li!riiUP rol
luxun arnup

Da r k Walnut V-11 f&gt;fUI fat•! a1r c.:,ond . lux
i arl)f't ltttiUp h~&gt;aiN auto nverdnve I tans . p
"'"N p d1sc· hr~k,.,.. f' wind . p sea!. dili!
• lnrk • ·ornl'nnll. lam~ . Haht aroup. lmt alass.
1111 ~ IN'r ~~ohN· I crUIM' nml . am -fm o;tere~1 .

\hdn1ah r r an\·nn red '\' ll•·na . far ·t arr eood .
hr·all' r. aut" rran ~ overdrn·•·- p Slr't'r I' d1M
hakr ~ rhl! dn~ · k tml ala ~s . trll o;lt'f'r whef'l
r· nr1~r· rnn t am fm rarhu ~lf'rt'u . ws~o~. radial
rrn'!'&gt; po!H · .l ~t n~,;rt1 "'1\ef•lo; _ rusr proof . rt'ar

POMEROY
FLOWEI SHOP
(lt., I .. ..

Mf'd1um retl meta lit&lt; V-fl f't'llt .fact air Cflnd ..
:HJtn trans overdn H·. p ~ leer p dbc brakes
I' wmf1

' ' ~ ,.,, ,

p d!!f,r lock !'&gt; d111. clock . in

1rn ;1] "''P&lt;'r" 1m1 Ilia'' 11 h ~ tt&gt;er wheel
cru1sr &lt;"nnl Jm-fm o;terMl "''S"' rad1al 11res
onlvra,;l "' hf'f· l ~ ~~oh&lt;"e l ' H\' f'f"'i rem PO.,.,'er
r nnl nu rr nr ~ rl"a r wmo.,., dl'l Iuthi 11.roup

Ptl ttMIJt • ftJ.\121

r;::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::;;:;;::;~
MEMBER'S
EMERGENCY
SERVICE .
(New Lisiinc)

984

1984

MERCURY COUGAR

Ular·k \ ' II r•na hu·l air r· nnd . heatt'r. auto
trnns nvr·rr1n\'f' . 11 sl('('r . p r1r!M· hrakes. p
winr1 r1111. dnr ·k. rintcod u. la s~ tilt ,; l~r wheel .
int wrpr r ~ r·ruiSf• •·nnl . am -In• rad1n strrtu .
"~~~~ rnrlrnlrrn"' prrlvr·ao,;t ruat1 whe-C'Is . rl'mnll'
runr nurrnr~ . n·ar wrnrl dt:-1 . hli!hl 11.mup
"~

$13,929"
984 FORD

CODNER'S EXXON RT. 124
PHONE: DAY 992-9960
NIGHT 949-2223
The Auto Club of Southestern Ohio

l~::::::::::3:60:;~sec~o:n:d~S~t~.~~::::::o:H:.::~::::::~

SI)W

'12,491

10

THUNDERBIRD

\lf'f!IUn • d!.,.,.rltan luriJI •l"fll.ll}l '. lac• a 1r l'nnd .
hratrr ·, ~ J)M'f1 rr:tns p "'md . pdonr locks .
rornf•rrnt! lamp-. trot alass 1111 ~•"'r wht"t"l
rrm .. tr , nnt w rrror.; rear wmcl c1fof IOI('f\'81
"'' ll)('f'l

SliM' .. ' " -

MERCURY COUGAR

Mf'f!ium rf'f! mrl . V·fll'flit fad air ('ond .. inl
wrprr ~ hf-:-rtN autn trans ovrrdrive-. p
~ •f'f'T"

p hr.lkl's. p '4'rndows . p o;eab . p.•'oor

lodt &lt;: t1rl!ilal rlrw: k IUJI alass . 111! slrer
11 h('('l
r·r01sr 'onr ;, m fm ..;lrn-o. remult&gt;
r•nnr mirrnrs pnlvr · a~t rnad wh('('ls . n•ar
,, rod r1rf Iuthi crnup
S!O('k ' "

S(D(' .. ' "· \I;M

SYRACUSE, POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT

Whr11· \ II ' '"" l ;u 1 .orr • ond lock 11.roup
p.--.•o..r·• tw.111·r au l&lt;• n H ·rdnv r• lr .!ln ~ p st«r
p hr.1 k• •o; p "' 1nt1 r ornPrm ll lam()!l p seal
trl' ~ lrrr 'olt\r.'(•f rrur o;•· r·nnt a m -frn radin
~ 1rr1•u p anrrnna ro;1d "' hl'f"l!i 'oihet&gt;l t'OYf'T'S .
r rar wmr1 drl l11!hl llffJU(')
SO\\

\\ \ ,1\

'""'r - """'"' ,_,,,..·

" \~

'13,012 12
THUNDERBIRD

Ml'rlrum r1N'4•rt rao fi f' VI t&gt;nit .fa c1 arr t:ood.
hratl'f autn Iran!&gt; tl ~ tN•r p c1rH· hrake5
o;t(&gt;('r ~~o·heel
hnrtvs rdr '" Ida ~ . tmt ' ~~:l a o; ~
, ruro;r •·on! . .1m -lm radm -.. tl"r("{{ ..-~ .... radia :
llrr ~
'ol'twf'l I'O\'f'r" luxurv
r'"nwtf' C"OOI
n • 1rror" rear \1 rodo'ol del hllh1 ltfoup

••It

Stock '" tlilr.l
\\ \ S

I.".Cit

$13,670

$14,551 00 •
1984 FORD

~0 \\

$12,125 00

00

"' hill' . f, n-1 mu
1
pivo!rm:z. ~~or nr1 t·nrn lamps. hond 6- dec:-klid
"lrillf'~- rnll'na! WIPf'r~. auto . parkrnc hrakr
rl']/':1"1' . hl'.lll'f ;IUIO ll&lt;IDl&gt;•fl\'l&gt;fdfi\'('. P ' I('('(
n d1M hr.lkl' ... n .,.· inr1nw~ . p sea!. p door lrK'ks.
lv'l'h~rr1r •n idi!" l1nt Il ia ~" 1111 "trer whf'('l.
r·rutSf' •·nol am -ftt • radm Slt'ff'ol t·asSt&gt;lh'.

rnlrn al

""'IV''~

~rnu~

lrl!h1

'10,968 17

lu-.:un r·arpt-1 ('XI at'&lt;'l'f'll
hl'alf'r auto trans
ovNr1 rr' r- p &lt;;tl'f'r p r1rN hrake!o . p wrnd.
p -..r;'ll . 1111!11:1] o·llw·k. rinlt&gt;d ula s~ . lilt ~ leer
.... hN't t·nmw r·nnl am -f•l' r:~rh" "lrr&lt;'" · !'itylt'd
t!fOUP

'"*

rntrr val \\ rJ)I'rs. rornrrmll. lam ItS luxun·
C'a rprt !'ilfltlf'" hoi:H1 h••ali •r auto • trans
.,\·r rd rr\·r p .. IN•r . p r1r"· l&gt;rakr .... . lJ 111 md .
p srar. p t1nor lflf·k ~ . drll.ital dflf:k . Ooor mats.
lint !! Ia"-"· ' '" ~ lf'f'r "'ht"f'l . •·ru1St" ronl . am ftH r:~r1i" o;trrr" t a~!i.Mif' .,.,-s.,., rachal tirNi.
"" IM1 rnMI "'h('('],. , rt'm t·ont mrrrnrs. rear

1976 VOLKSWAGEN SCI ROCCO ............ :... S2495

A· I condit!e_!l.

·

$

2495
1977 OLDSMOBILE TORONADO ................ 13 95
Front wheel drive, good car.
$
1977 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON......... 1395
Auto .. P.B., P.S,, air.
S
1977 OLDS CUTLASS .............................. 16 95
V-6. looks &amp; runs good.
S
1975 GRAND PRIX.. ............................... 1295
Red. aulo .. P.B; P.S.

.

$

\

TRUCKS

s ·
1095
Auto., P.S., flat bed.
$
1973 DODGE CLUB CAB ......................... .. 495
Runs good.
$
1971 FORD F-150 .................................... . 495
Auto .. P.S.
.
_ $
_.
1970 GMC ....................................:......... . 395
1976 FORD F-150 ..................................

Runs good, auto .• flat bed.

·

1982 TOYOTA
CELICA GT

1980 DODGE OMNI

2dr. llflback, fact . a-c. 5 sp . trans ..
. p. disc br .• dig. clock. lint.
1111 st. wheel. c-cont .• am-1m
radio. stereo tape. buck. seats.
Stock No. 46221
NOW

2-dr .. coupe. 4 cyl . eng ., fact a-c.• 4
sp., p.s.. p.b., lint. glass. am-lm,
wsw rad. tires, wheel covers.
Stock No. -3271
NOW

2-dr sedan. 4 cyl. , am radio, wsw
radial tires. bucket seats.
Stock No. 40191
WAS
NOW

vinyl roof, auto. trans., p.s. p.b.•
bodyslde mldgs .• tint. glass. am1m, wsw radial tires, wheel covers .
Stock No. 45292
, NOW
WAS

'3495
'8995
1977 OLDS. 88 ROYALE
1978 FORD
FIESTA
2 dr hardtop,
eng .• fact . a-c.

COUGAR

2-dr . hardtop, V -8
. a-c.
vinyl roof, 47,000 miles. aut. trans ..
p.s .. p.b.. bodyslde mldgs .. lint.
glass. 1111 s-wheel, c-conl., am-lm,
wsw radial tires. wheel covers,
Stock No. 43021
NOW

'3995
'1978 FORD·
FAIRMONT FUTURA

V-~

2-dr hardtop, 4 cyl eng .. auto.
trans.. p.s.p.b.. lint. glass. am
radio. wsw radial tires. wheel
covers.

WAS

NOW

'1795
'1295 $3495
'2495 $2695
$1895
1978 CHEVROLET
1981 CHEVROLET 1980 JEEP CJ-7
BLAZER
'" ton pickup. V-8, p.s. p.b.• long
wheel drive. V -8 , p.s. p.b.,
wide bed, dlx . fibre glass topper.
gauges. locking dill., fact . a-c.
tinted glass, stereo tape. wheel
covers. cream &amp; white.
Stock No. 3T771
NOW

'6495
1979 FORD

$4995

POMEROY - Applications
for attendance for the second·
term of the Glngerbreakl House
Pre-sehool are · now being .accepted by Sandy Luckeydoo,
director. The term will bealn In
F~. and for.morebdonna· ·
lion, resklents are asllled ·to
contact Mrs. Luckeylklo at

992-717'1.

fl

interval wlprtM . •·ornerlnlllamJ)I. ext , accent
anlllll . liRhl 11roup. heater . autn tran11 . P
fl ftl sc· hra~ . p wind p .seat . dill
t lock . linteft RI Al!&gt;. tilt Alet't wheel. CfUIIM'
t·nnt . :1m-fm radio -.teroo. o;ty led road v.· ~ls .
tNllOfl' coot nurrut!ii. rea r ' &lt;lo'ind del t•arp('i

'" ton pickup. V-8 eng .,auto. trans .•
p.s. p.b.• long wide -bed. gauges.
rear step bumper, am radio. wheel
covers. blue.
Stock No. 46031
NOW
WAS

Happenings

·oPEN 7 DAYS

on Saturday, Jan. 21, at 4 p.m. Don
Mannarino, cllnlcal hypnotist from
Cleveland, Is coming to Athens on a
monthly basis to help smokers quit.
There Is an lnUial fee of $40.
Participants can retUrn for rein·
forcement the following· month for
no additional fee. Register by
calling CHEAO, 593-5526.

2 Dr .. auto., P.B., P.S., air, su nroof.

SATIJRDAY

FORD THUNDERBIRD

Dark Cha rcoa l.

(pretldent) of Jackson.

1978 MERCURY MARQUIS ......................

If

\NNUAL YIELD

(eecretary) of MJ~; Brian Miller; Dawn
Swingle (treuurer) of Wellsloo; aoc1 Alaa Terry,

Hypnosis helps break habits

A USED CAR
VALUE
.
YOU WON'T BEUEVEo.o•o•

His wife, Regina, 15 the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. MUton R. Clarke of
·Rural Route 1, Letarl.

who would Uke lo ~e· aa accowalnl ~r. and
cletlned IIODle of the dulletz and responllbllllles which a
public IIClClOUIIdDI job entalll. He Is llhowD here with
the otrlcers of tile AMOdelto11, from left, Robert
Frllby ( vtce pretldenl) of Welllloa; Cheryl Roush

'4495

CJ7. 6 cl. 4 sp .• p.s. p.b.• gauges.
rear bumper, am-1m. bucket seats,
blue-white.
Stock No. 46021
NOW
WAS

$5695

4

gauges. chrome bumper, rear
bumper, tinted glass, am -fm radio,
wheel covers. bucket seats.
Stock No. 3T5182
WAS
NOW

'4995 $6995
'5995
1
1977 DODGE
VAN
'4 ton pickup. 4 wheel drive. V-8.

V-8 eng ., auto. p.s. p.b.
bumper. bucket seats, brown.
Stock No. 53861
NOW
WAS

$4295

'3595

aul.trans .• p.s.• p.b. fact . air cond ..
. tinted glass. am-fm radio. wheel
covers.

Stock No. 54051
WAS

�Pug~!

8-The

Daily Sentinel

I'

~eroy-Midc:lleport, Ohio

White's release
•
tnggers protests

•

9
Friday, January 6, 1914

1984
\

,,

SAN ~CISCO ,(AP) -Concernedauthorlties refused to reveal
any details of today' s parole of Dan
White, killer of ~ayor George
Moscone and the city's first openly
homosexual supervisor, Harvey
Milk, as the gay community voiced
outrage.
To protest White's parole after
only five years in prison, homosexual leaders called for a series of
rallies and a noisy, 15-minute
"outpourtng of feeling" durtng
which all work would stop.
White, :rl, was convicted of
voluntary manslaughter in the Nov.
'1:1, 1978, slayings and sentenced to
seven years, eight months in prison.
Prosecutors had asked for a
verdict of murder but the jury
believed the defense argument that
White, a former supervisor who
wanted his job back. was too
depressed to know what he was
doing.
He served most of his time at
.: Soledad Correctional Training
·. FacUlty.
Authorities refused to divulge any
information about White's parole,
including when and where he would
be freed. Under state law, he could
be released from any prison, county
jail, prison camp or halfway house
·: in California - more than 150
different locations.
Phil Guthrie of the Department of
· Corrections said earlier that White
. "Indicated he has some concern for
safety and doesn't want to confront
·. reporters ... We're not taking any
chances."
The Committee to Protest the
. Injustice urged San Franciscans to
skip-work today and join a noontime
· rally at Union Square and another
:demonstration tonight in the city's
gay Castro District featurtng Ginny

Foat. the former California :'&gt;lationa! Organization for Women
• leader recently acquitted or
murder.
The committee also urged the
15-minute "citywide outpourtng of
feeling" in which everyone stops
work to make noise.
On the day of the slayings, White
- a fmmer pollee officer who had
quit hi' supervisor's post and then
unsuccessfully trled to persuade
Moscone to reappoint him strapped on his .38-ca,\lber pollee
service revolver. climbed through a
basement window In City Hall and
shot the mayor in the head. He then
reloaded his gun and walked down
the hall to Milk's office, where he
shot him to death.
The defense argued that White
was too depressed by financial
difficulties, his job situation and
Junk fOOd to know what hewasdoing.
Because of the junk food aspect, his
casebecame knownasthe"Twinkle
defense."
He received the maximum sentence for two counts of voluntary
manslaughter, less the time he'd
already served before the trlal and
another one-third for good behavior.
The verdict May 21, 1979 touched
ott what carne to be called the
"White Night" riot, in which 5,ml
people stormed a_ty Hall. At least
160peoplewereinjuredlnthemelee,
which did $1 milllon damage to the
building.
Since the kUllngs, Nov. '1:1 is
marked each year by a candlelight
march, and Milk's birthday has
become a celebration in the city's
predominantly homosexual Castro
Distrtct.
A convention center and playground bear Moscone' s name, and
several plays have been wrttten
about the case.

·Latest case proves
AIDS can spread by
.: heterosexual contact
~

· NEWYORK(AP)-Thecaseofa
· Woman who got AIDS from her
husband provides strong evidence
the disease can be spread through
heterosexual contact and that a
. person can transmit AIDS before
·being outwardly sick, a researcher
·says.
The husband apparently contracted acquired Immune defl·
clency syndrome through blood
· .products given to him to treat his
hemophilia, Dr. Arthur Pltchenlk,
· professor of medicine at the
University of Miami, said
Thursday.
Transfusions of such blood pro. ·ducts have been recognized as a
·.Jlkely means of transmitting AIDS,
doctors sald.
This is not the first case in which
AIDS seems to have been transmitted from a victim to a heterosexual
partner. But previous cases dealt
with victims who were Intravenous
drug abusers, and who are known to
.be at
of A)DS.
. 1n
It was difflcultto be
partners
(~~t~~~~~a~b:~use~rs·
not also
drUgs
and
:getting AIDS that way, Pltchenlk
said.
"To me this case is further
conflnnatlon that tliose previous
cases may be true, that It (AJI?S)
·-really was transmitted through
.Intimate contact, heterosexual contact," Pltchenlk said In a telephone

interview.
The case of the couple, reported in
the January issue of the Annals of
Internal Medicine, also demonstrates that a person with AIDS can
transmit the disease before heorshe
is outwardly sick.
The wife had unusual fungal
infections and other ailments for at
least a year before her husband of 50
years got sick, indicating that she
already had developed AIDS, Pitchenik said.
AIDS is a disorder of the Immune
system, the body's defense against
disease, that leaves Its victims
prone to unusual infections and to a
rare form of cancer called Kaposi's
sarcoma.
The cause of AIDS Isn't known,
but because of the way It spreads
doctors believe It is caused by an
infectious agent, probably a virus.
Homosexuals, Haitians, intravenous drug abusers and hemophlllacs
are most likely to get AIDS. It Is
apparently spread by contaminated
needles, blood transfusions and
sexual contact, but not by casual
contact. There is no cure.
As of Dec. 19, AIDS has struck
J,ml people and claimed 1,283lives,
according to the Centers for Disease
Control in Atlanta. One percent of
the cases are thought to have been
exposed to the disease thro!Jgh
heterosexual contact, the CDC says.

•
·.t I
•

I-

. I

'

13

I nauranca

BEAVER lnWe need tobacco poundage. SANDY AND
Co. h11 offered
Will poy top price. Call eurance
aervicea for fire insurance·
1-814-378-2156.
coveragt~ in Gallla County

...

Buying dolly gold. oilver

for elmot t a century. Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needa. Con tact Herry Pitchford, agent.

katt Barber Shop, 2nd. Avo. Phone 81 4-446-1427.
Middleport, Oh. 614-992·
Well, Annlveroaryt, Birth· 3478.
doya plrtlet. Cell Bolloont &amp;.
15
Schools
Co., 448-4313 .
Raw Fur Buyer. Beef &amp; Deer'
Instruction
Balloons for Chrlatmaa, Get

I' '

'

'

•'

.,

.

I. •

. ·~·

•.

.

Hldea-Ginaeng, Trapping

·,

'"·

Gun thoOI Recine Gun Club . Supplioa. George Buckley,
Every Sunday aterting 1 Rt. 2, Atheno, Oh . Phone College student with 8110·
p.m . Factory choked guna 614-664-4761 . 1-9 Daily.
ciate degrees in buaineu

'

only .

administration will tl.ltor atu·

Vacancy: Julle' a Personal
Cere Home . Formerly
Mercer Canveleaence
Home. 18 years experience.

SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices PciJ
For All Cut or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered lo Plent
I¥, M. hst of Pe&amp;evifle
On Township Rd. 141
We Specielize
in Aluminum Only

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bothon Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

10/ 19/2 mo pd

WELL'S GARAGE
Route I
Shade, OH. 45776

CONSTRUcrJON ON SCHEDULE - COIIItnaclloli is oaec~
for a new SU miiBon math and llclence compleX a&amp; IUo Grande CoUeae
and Community CoUege, aooordlng lo Preeldeat Clodwl R. SrnKb. He
said that barring any problems MIOclated with blld wea&amp;her, thefaclllty
will open In Seplember, 1984. "'Ibis new faclllty comee a&amp; a time when

lbe 11tate and nation are iooldng lo lltri!npben COIII'IIelln mathematlcl
lind the ICienCet." Smith said. "We lee! that the new complex will
contribute 1o the continued JIIII'IA!It of academic exceDence In tlda area
a&amp; our lniltltudoa." 'l1le new facUlty wiD bowie U olflcee, 81x c._..,
and a conference room and aeveral Jabs.

By A.......t•ted Press
Telephone companies around the
natlonarebeingswall)Pedwithcalls
from customers asking how the
breakup of AT&amp;T affects their
phone at home, and at least some
people say they want to brtng back
old-fashioned Ma Bell..
Using toll-free "Let's Talk" or
"We Can Help" numbers, the
regional phone companies created
Jan. 1 have fielded tens of thousands
of calls from often-confused
customers.
"The most common question Is
about equipment," Peter Cronin, a
spokesman for New England Telephone, now part of Nynex, said
Wednesday. "Whether customers
should rent or buy, andwho'sgolng
to repair It."
The 22local companies that made
up the Bell Systemwerespunoff Into
seven regional holding companies in
the breakup of American Telephone
&amp; Telegraph Co. ulider an antitrust

settlement With the government.
The regional companies are stlll
responsible for basic telephone
service. There is no change In
dialing local or long-distance calls.
AT&amp;T and Its rivals handle longdistance calls, as before, but
ownership of leased phones has been
transferred to AT&amp;T.
A "Let's Talk" number set up by
Southern Bell, now part of the
BelJSouth, drew more than !ll,ml
calls by the rniddleofDecember, the
latest period ·for which a tally is
avallabie, company spokesman
Dick Mlles sald In Atlanta.
More than 2.:m callers contacted
New England Telephone on Tuesday and 4,1Dl rang up New York
Telephone. Pacific Telephone In
callforniahasaveraged6,:Dicallsa
week,about700clistomersadayare
calling Pacific Northwest Bell, and
New Jersey Bell has averaged 1,400
callers a day since Jan. l.
"There is no question that the

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns
Only

American business requll\!s the
biggest exptalnlng job in history,"
said Jim Maznette, a spokesman In
Seattle for Pacific Northwest Bell.
Customers around the nation can
continue to lease their phone from
AT&amp;T, buy It outrtght, or turn It In
and buy from Independent manufacturers. AT&amp;T will repair only
phones It manufactured and equipment pw-chased from other companies must be repaired by them.
"I tell people that U you're
Interested In economy, in the long
run It's probably better to buy your
phone," said Howard Lewis, staff
manager for New York Telephone
in Albany, N.Y. "Ifyou're interested
inconvenlenceandyoustlllwantthe
company (AT&amp;T) to rualntaln your
phones, then you're probably better
... to lease."
With mllllons of oGstomers expected to buy phones, Instead of
lease, many companies are now

O'Brien ends 52 court cases

Roger Hysell

GARAGE

Notter •s hP.rAby g•VP.n that on

Forty-one defendants were fined
Paugh, Letarl, W. Va., speed, $a&gt; $13 and costs; William Woods,
and 11 others forfeited bond In Meigs
and costs; David Wolfe, Reedsville,
Pomeroy, speed, $27 and costs;
County Court Wednesday.
disorderly conduct, five days con- Daniel Norman,rmeroy, left of
FinE:&lt;! by Judge Patrtck O'Brien finement, costs, on year probation; center, $25 an costs; Frank
were Dale Curry, Pomeroy, unable Terry Hysell, Pomeroy, speed, $a&gt; Musser, Pomeroy, OWl, $250 and
to dim bright lights, $5 and costs; · and costs; Ronald Laudermllt, costs, 10 days confinement, license
Carness Leedy, Cheshire, failed to Pomeroy, trafficking In marijuana, suspended six months, left of center,
display valid registration, $10 and
10 days confinement, two years costs only; Jane Moon, Pomeroy,
costs; Robert Jones, Charleston,
probation, costs; Cynthia Darst, passing bad checks, one year
stopstgn,$10andcosts; Lloyd Shull,
Pomeroy, trafficking In marijuana, probation, restlution, costs; PhiUip
Columbus, failed to yield right of two years probation, costs; James Fisher, Racine, DWI, $250andcosts,
way, $10 and costs; Donald Stitt, Pomeroy, assault, $lm and three days confinement, license
O'Rourke, Vienna, speed, $21 and
costs, one month confinement, two suspended60days, leftofcenter,$ll
years probation.
'costs; Paul Huston, Syracuse,
andcosts,explredoperatorslicense,
speed, $27 and costs; Michael
Sharon Giili!n, Reedsvllle, speed, $50 and costs.
Baker, LongBottom,speed,$21and
' Rickie Bickle, Bidwell, OWl, $150
$21 and costs; George Ackerson,
costs; Dennis Wolfe, Syracuse,
Syracuse, fafled to yield, $10 and and costs, ~days confinement,
speed, $23 and costs; James
costs; Paul Kauff, Harrisonville, l,lcense suspended 60 days; ~
Council, Langsville, no muffler, $5
failed to yield at Intersection, $10 Wright, Langsville, .overweight,
and costs; Earl Pickens, Pomeroy,
and costs; Craig Lldel, New llaven, $616 and costs with $400 suspended;
fialed to display valid license plates,
stop sign, $10 and costs; Elizabeth Wendell Barber, Reedsville, disor$10 and costs; Brenda Bush, The GlOeckner, Pomeroy, left of center, derly conduct, 10 days confinement,
PlainS, speed, $22 and costs; ·Jack $10 and costs; Kevin Payne, custs; Paul J:&gt;ratt, Columbus, speed,
Pomeroy, discharged a firearm $2!1 and costs; Tammy Martin, Pl.
Pleasant, speed, $21 and costs.
from the roadway, $50 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Pete HaMlchilel Green, Zaleski, assured
clear distance, $10 and costs; David ley, Pomeroy, menacing, $45; Janet
Bates, Pomeroy, speed, $23 and Hayton, Columbus, Michael Profcosts; Ronald Downey, Athens, fitt, Ravenswood, James Hoyt,
failure to display valid registration Pomeroy, Franklin Runyon, Clevesticker, $10 and costs; Ma~ land, and James Nibert, Gallipolis,
Thompson, Paneroy, left of center, speed, $50 each; Geroge Burkett,
$10' and costs; Warren Molden, Middleport, and Val Reynolds,
Rutland, speed, , $21 and costs; Morgantown, speed, $40 each;
Donald Koenig, Little Hdcklng, Christy Gray, Pomeroy, speed, $61;
speed, $21 and ~ts; Wllllam . Roger Adkins, Racine, shoot across
Stewarl, Carleton, Mich. speed, $a&gt; a public highway, $45; Charles
Corley, Akron, attempt to lakemore
and costs.
Rodney King, Pomeroy, speed, than one deer, $170.

•Body &amp; Fender Repairs
*Expert Refinishin1
•Insurance Claims
Welcome
*Free Estimates
12/1511 mo.

11

January 14 . 1984 ill 1200

Oh•o

to

5('11 · lor

cash

thfl

IOIIOWIOQ COIIa! P.ral tO WI!

I 350 case Dole• D3 105.

Medical
Transcriptionist

54 Misc. Merchandise

AT

1 JO
038416

ManUf P

Spu'!adP.r.

1 End loadP.r (l or" Tr actor ).

10896

•

I f Old Mowe'. 80607
1 Ford Cor n Plan tAr 109825
ThP. CP.ntral Tr u'it No . NA of

M•ddi P.port . Oh•o rP.sP.rvP.s the
f•qht to b•d at th•s saiP.

Ill

4.

&amp;J

Pomeroy
Landmark _ ..

992-2181
ON All
Hotpoint Appliances
General Electric TV's
Hoover Sweepers

•

•

SKATE-A-WAY

Chester, O'H.
Open Wed .. Fri .. Sat. Niles
7:30 to 10:00
Available for privete par·
ties Mon .. Tues .. Thurs.
Niles, Sat. or Sun. After, noon.
THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI., NOV. 18
CHRISTMAS PARTY
FRI., DEC . 16
PH . 985-3929
or 985-9996
11-14-1 mo.

BOGGS

Bring This Cnu r. : J In

SALES &amp; SERVICE

For 10% Off

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO ·
Authorized John Deere:
New Hofland, Bush Ho1
farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine: Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10-6-tlc

- Dozers
- lllckhoes
- Dump Trucks
- lo-Boy
- Trencher
- Water
- Se•m
- Gas lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

1111Jmopd

Any Service
Expires Dec. 30th
Monday thru Friday
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport. OH.
PH . 992-2725

DEER HIDES, BEEF
HIDES, RAW FUR,
GINSENG &amp; OTHER
ROOTS
1 mile below 2nd Kaiser
Entrance at 102 Carney
Dr .. Corner of St. Rt. 2
and Carney _

Riverview Peraonel Cere
Home now has a vacancy for

Wanted to buy, used bike
exceriaer, good quality .

Harper' a Adult Care Home

Wanted to buy left over yard
uta itema. Mostly clothing .

a elderly poraon. 304-7736882 .
h11

1

vacancy for another

Giveaway

11

Britt mete 1% yrs . old . Free.

•Excavating
•Ponds
·septic Tanks
•Hauling ~ ...

BISSELL

s2500

949·28110

No Sunday Calls

3-ll ·tfc

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
White's Hill Road
Rutland, OH.
(1st Rd. left up
New lima)

742-2789 or
742-2515

5 6. J 1c
Real Estate General

12/ 9/ 1 mo. pd.

To good homo. Full blooded

Racine. OH.

black Llbrador Ret . Male, 1
year old . Gentle and good

with children . 614-992 7774.
Black and white Cocker
Spaniel, spayed, to good

homo, 304-895-3936 .

Five puppiea. four female

one malo. 304-875 -3534 .
9

week old

puppies.

1h

Shepherd. 'h Collie. 304676-4388 .

LOST Milling: Engliah Bulldog disappeared Jan . 2nd.
Ught brown with white
chest and markinga. Childt
pet. Female, Reward. Call

CUT

&amp; WRAPPED

$5.00 EXTRA
FOR SKINNING

PH. 949-2734
Maplewood Lake

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

In Middleport

- Addon• •nd remodeUng
- Roofing end gutter work

(Formerly Lawrence
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)

- Concrete work
- Plumbing 1nd electrical

ROGER MANLEY
Owner
PH. 992-3194 or
992-2388

wott.
fFree Eltlmotet)
REDUCED WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Business or Residential

to a sofa brown &amp;
orange. Found on R..l-'7:""

Raccoon Brid-0.. Cell
614-268-1188.
LOST-Horse. White with

red . 16 yeatl old. Red Brush
area neer Bashan . Reward.

614-949-2293 or 614-9492676.
.
LOST-Mote Brittany Spaniel.

Orange with

white.

Forked Run oroo. 667-6427
after 6 p.ni.

loot-Block pit bull with
white markings on face and
chest and feet . 9 months
old. Si11y. Collar. West

DiScover-.Enpe.-A-Car. the
modem answer to soarine
new car prices! Drive the v.-

hicfe of your choice -~- any
make and model. No down
payment lower montltly
PIYQIIIIts. RNd alllbout it.
Send tor Free Booklet l -16.

Bob Blackston, an authorized independent EnpaeA-Car Broker. Box 326, Pomeroy, Ollio 45769.
Want Faster Information?
Call 614-992-6737

11 11/tln

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
• Lowest Rates
Around
·Dump Truck
Service

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•DOlE A
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER , GAS 1nd
SEWER LINES
•PONDS . RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING
•CONCRETE WORK

BONDED &amp; WORK GUARANIHD

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201 J.l.lf

4·21-tfc

Columbia. 773-5348 .

LOST pair reading glasses in
case. in Point Pleasant 304-

675-6246 .

Challenging Po sitio n ·
Diverte Re sponsibilitie s.
Assistant Director for Pro·
gram. Private, non-profit,
comprehensive family plan ning agency serving 8 Sou·
theast Ohio counties. B.S.
degree and health back ground; minimum 2 years
supervisory experience .
Demonatrated management
ability in servicet delivery.
Energeti.c person with
proven initiative, communi cation skills. ability to
analyze -utilize data 11 man·
agemant tool. Close cooperative work with Director.
Demonstrated peraonnel
skills. Supervise 7 sites. paid
and volunteer staff serving

6.000 clionto . Atheno -

b..ed. Car required . Some
evenings and weekend

watt.. t15,000 plus benef-

its. Send reaume. name two
professional references . Kay
Atkins, Executive Director ..
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio, 8 North Court
Street . Athen a, Ohio

Development 'h· time . Work
load fluctuates . Work with
volunteers in 8 southeast
Ohio counties . Develop ment experience. excellent
communication skills re quired. Team member capa bilities . Car necessary .

$8,000 to t1 0.000 to start.

Send resume, portfolio aelectiona : Planned Parent·

hood of Southeast Ohio, 8
North Court Street, Athans,

Ohio 45701 . Deadline: 1·
20-84. EOE-AA.
AVON Pay your Christmas
bills, make money 2 ways .

CaH 614-i46-3358.
Office clerk for a mineindustrial sales co. Soma
experience preferred involv·
ing: inventory, cardex system , typing. general office
reports. and telephone sales
duties. Sand resume to Box
102 in care of Gallipolis

Doily Tribuna, 826 Third
Avo .. ·Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .
Needed full time babysitter

Phone
1· ( 614 )·992-3325
IN TOWN - On 124 Natural gas furnace, bath, city
water.. I&amp; lot, I~ k~chen and 4
bedrooms. $3,000 down.
ABOUT 5 ACRES - 5 1m.
home, bath, automatic heat,
farm pond in Southern schools.

'

$2,550.00 DOWN - Remodeled 3 bedroom home. Nice
bath, gas furnace, basement
mini garden near stores.
MARVELOUS BRICK VENEER
- Th~ 3 bedroom home ~ for
you. Has 2 nite fireplaces, 2
garages, 2 stories, full ~se­
men! and landscaped lot for

601

E. Main

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - .Chester Quaint country charm' Th~ 3
bedroom home has many
features such as hardwood
flooo, full basement, gas heat
insulated, screened sunporch,
separate trailer hookup, plus
unusual rustic decor, 2 car
garage, approximately 2\1
acres. storage building, assu·
mabfe loan. $36,200.
MIDDLEPORT - Beautiful
home for children, woodburnina fireplace and furna~e for
cheaper healing bills, ~,rage,
basement family room. '811in
great condition. Must be seen.
$49,000.

$125,(0).

OFFER WELCOMED - AskinB
$17,000 for this 8 rm. older
home. Has bath, gas FA furnace ·
and '.i acre in Pomeroy. $1,500
down.
MODERN - 6 rm. ranch with
full basement. 2 baths, carpeting and ~rport ori 2 aeres.
Only $3,500 down.

'

96.5 ~RES - Meigs schools,
free gls, furnace 2 ·nfte
·. fir~ .bank ·ham and
· mi~ $4,500 oo,m.
.

.

FIXED

RATES OF
IIITEIBT

IN THE COUNTRY - Starter
home for the beginning family.
Two or three bedrooms with
everything carpeted. A full
basement to tinker in, aquarter
acre of land to call your own.
$21,500.
.
CHESTER - fiVe acres to give
you· plenty of elbow room.
Remodeled farm house has 3
bedrooms, new kitchen, new
bath. $27,600.
.SYRACUSE - A 3 bedroom
modular home on a ~utifuf
kt Nice retr deck with ~iding
doors to dining area. Storage
building, $36,500.

Hou.cinq
He,ulquarter -~

MEIGS
CAB CO.
WILL OPEN

DEC. 30th
104 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OH .

PH. 992-3383
12-29·1 mo.

Tri-County

B A BEAUTY SHOP

General Welding

"Holiday Special"

Salem Twp. Rd. 180
Dexter, Oh .. 45726
Bill Eskew

Shampoo - Haircut
Blow Dry

PH . 742-2456

S7.00

ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
' And Drip Tanks
"Your Place or Mine"

Call 949-2320

Ask for Tina Pierce

Thurs.-Fri. -Sat.

New Homes-Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cu1to.m Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Gerues
Roofin&amp; Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
16 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583

or 992-2282
11· 1-tfc

'10/ 12/2 mo.

r---- -

NOW IN

SAVE

Pomeroy, Oh.
PARCEL SERVICE

DEPOSITORY
DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
U.P.S. - PUROLATOR

TO .. v,.....DELIVERY

';ioU'U.un

\

PUCEL PRIORITY SHIPMENTS
FO. lESS THAN U. S. IAIL
SAVE lOll TO 50% AND 101£

BRING YOUR PACKAGE~
FOR SHIPMENT TO:

POMEROY
·PARCEL SERVIC~
618 Main St.
Pomeroy, 0~.

.•

S&amp;W TV
AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Qhlo
Ph ..9B6-4269

If No Answr, Call 915-4382

D-ayne.WIIIIIml
a. Scottie Smith .
All Makes and Models
Antenna fnslllltlion
House Calls end Shop
Strvict Avtiltblt

STRIP
COAL

RESIDENTIAL-New
and re-wiring
COMMERCIAL &amp;
INDUSTRIAL
All Work Guaranteed

S3QOO

..

Call 614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.

PH. 992-2280
2-23-tlc

I rt5-J mo. pd.

12·9·1 mo. pd.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S .·
APPLIANCE

SERVICE
985-3561

All Makes
oW11her1 •DIIhWIIhors
•Range•
•Refrtgeretor•
•Dryert•F,..zera
PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tfc

-·-- ·

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

MINE RUN

Allllllllll cI! 1111! Ill s

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992:2196

Middleport, Ohio

1-13-tfc
'(. .

,.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

5:30PM. Monday -Friday .
Call 266-6251 after
Ridg'o and Crob Crook . 6:30PM .
$60.00 reword. 304-676- Experienced swimming in2799.
structors needed for swim-

Two male Blue Tick Coon
Hounds. Between Redmond

Large gray, white male cat ,
lost Rt .2 Jerrico Road area .

Kid's pet. Call 304-6761408
lost pair wire rim glasses
tinted blue. New Haven

B

nastics and youth Red Cross
cla11e1 beginning in mid·
January on Monday, Tuesdly and Thursday evenings.
Must be over 21 and have
current WSI card. Apply
iinmediataly at Gallipoli s
Parks and Recreation De partment, 61B Second Ave .,

Trustworthy middle aged
single lady to live in with

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

elderly ladies . $1 ,000

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleasant. WVa .

month. Send resume : Box
P.30, in care Pt. Pleasant
Regiater, 200 Main St. Pt .

Pl. WV. 25660.
Auct. lonnie Noel. Youth 1 -~------­
Centor Bldg., Comdon St. HELP WANTED. excellent
opportunity . looking for
614-387-7·101 .
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm. An tique &amp; liquidation sales.

someone to take over clo·
thing business . .Jncludes in vantory , fixtures and supplies . 304 - 6 75-1317 or

Ucensod &amp;. bonded in Ohio&amp;. 676-3217.
WVo . 304-773-5785 or 1 - -- - - - - - 304-773-9186.
S AlES P E R 50 N S
WANTED/ We aro now

Auction every Fri. night at expandingsales force in the
the Hartford Community immediate area . Interviews
Center. Truckloads of new will be held on Monday, Jan .
merchandise every week . 9th &amp;. Tues. Jan . 10th,
Consigmenta of new and 19B4. at our Pt. Pleasant
used merchandise always office. Cablentertainment,

welcome. Richerd Reynold• 1410 Jefferson Blvd. Please
Auctioneer . 304-276 - apply ;n person/
3089.
l-:-:o----:-o----:----'-12 Situations
Wanted
9 Wanted To Buy
We pay c11h for late modo! Wilt care for tho elderly in my

clean used cars.

Jim Mink Chov.-Otda Inc.
Bitt Gene Johnaon
446-3872

home. lots of references .
Men or women . Call 614·

867-3402.

Would like to babysit in my
Wonted to buy used coal &amp;. home. Experienced mother.
wood ·heaten. Swain Furni- cloae to Pomeroy Elemen -

ture. 448-3159, 3rd. &amp;. tary tchool. 614-992-8624 .
Olive St .. Gallipolis. Oh.
Hou11 cleaning any type

Standing timor, wilt PlY top Point Ptoount end vicinity.
1

Card of Thanks

price• for ntd &amp;. white oak. Rea1onab!e rates. Referen -

Call 814-388-9906 after 6, coo. Call 304-675-3908.

qr anytime weekenda .

We would like to !honk Gone
Wholey end tho mllfl from
hla Chrlatmaa party, tho
Soerbrough and Corsi faml1111, Dartt glrll and Mlddtaportflredeportmentforyour
help with tho gorago fire.
DonetdfEddle) end Coleen
Whaley.

,.

light dozer work &amp; lands·
capi ng. Kotalic Landscap -

ing. Ca/1446 ·3100 .

Cleaning houses, offices,
et c. Fee negotiable. Call
Bebysining in my home, any

shift . Ca/1446-7761 .

Financial
Business
Opportunity

/ NOTICE/
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends
that you do business With
people you know , and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investi gated the offering .
Cigarett,a Di stributorship .
Instant cash flow l We are a
Bonded national firm expanding into the area . If you
are seeking a secure businen opportuinty. We provide all retail locations and
all neceuary training. Full or
Part time . Investment from

$2 , 000 .00 . WinstonSalom-Kools. 1-800-241 2268.

Stripping Furniture &amp; Metal.
Instant cash flow! First time
in this area . Our expert staff
has many years of 4tXperience and has set up restoration centers throughout
the U.S. and Europe. We
furnished equipment, cham·
icala. supplies. and an extensive training course at one of
our successful centers nearest you . Total cost :

$32,500 .00 'Bonded' Coil
Toll Free: 1800) 241 -2269

or write for more info : U.S.

Str;pping, 1775 Tho E.-

change , Suite 600, Atlanta ,

GA 30339 .

Cigarette or VIDEO Oistrib·
utorships . Routes available.
We provide money for ex pansion, all locations, training &amp; a BONDEO staff to
assist you in setting up your
own part or full time busi ness . From $3, 960 to
$50 .00 . Winston-Salem -

Kools. 1-800-241-2268 .

22 Money to loan
HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12 Y.t% purchase or
refinance, 11 V..% adjustable
rate . Leader Mortgage ,

I:;::;::::;======
Athens, 1-800-341 -6554

23

Professional
Services

in Mercerville area. SAM to

Comm . Bldg . Saturday
night. 304-773-6727.
phone 446-1789.

VIIIGIL B. 511 , RlAU
2h r. 2nd St.

18 Wanted to Do

21

46701 . Deadline: 1-20-84.
EOE-AA.

6 lost
. and
,. Found

Jim Boughman, 614-2666636 .

DEER
PROCESSED

SIDING CO.

742-2328

8 1 tic

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"
Calljor free siding estimates~ 949-2801 or

Al TROMM

6 port Huaky puppioo, 8 wka.
old. Call 614-448-6632 or
448-2203.

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

949-22!n~

614-256-6307 .

6618 .

Help Wanted

Coli 614-367-0686.

HA~LED

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp;Commercial

Emp loymenl
Servtces

nightl. Call304-876-2419.

4

Reasonable rates. 304 -676 -

anytime. 614 ·256-1134.

Wanted -trying to form car·
pool to Marshall Wedneaday

Angora hompltor. Coil 614448-8832 .

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

M.L.
CONTRACTINGRECAMATION

304-676-4280.

304-876-1293.

Puppies to good home. Call

273-3407

304-676-2942.

resident . elderly person . Call

GRAVEL

10/20/ tJn .

Furniture. gold, ailver dollars, wood ice boxet, atone
jars. antique•. etc . Complete

houoaholdo. Write M.D.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Oh
46769 or 614-992-7760.

Oay. Call446-4818 .

BUYING

I .J .IIc

an

stock saie wtll,.:be.· used first to
purchase the enilre ·as5ets of J\1.elgs · · .
Landmark ' at Pomeroy 'with the ·
future possibility of additional
.faCilities In Ga!Ua County. .
MGM Farm City, IJic. serves all
.three counties with'many,products.
Sales e~ $2,001,(0) laS year.
the .GalUa .County Farm Bilreau
bo&amp;rd of trustees has tntormation•
on the new codperatiye; and would
be glad to turnlsh information 1 '·
anyone Interested In pw-chaatng
stock.
. .
.
· 'n)e rarm Bureau has been_
Instrumental In organizing and
supporting many Cooperatives
over tbe past 65 years.

992-7121
3-24-tfc

Year-End
Clearance Sale

Se11al No 303 7303

1 Shar 11 Post PoundAr. nonA
I Mf Hay 8ale1. 2 10 15

or

HEL P WANTfD

nocn a pubhc sale w •ll 00 hP.Id

at 0 J's T1ad•nq Post jold VaiiPy
l umbAr Bu•lct•nq) locatoo at
923 S 3rd AvP . MiddiApon .

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682

Help Wanted

We are now acceptina
applications for experienced Medical Trnscriptionists. Only experienced trnscriptionists
need apply.
Send Resume To:
Veterans Memorial
Hospital
115 E. Memoriel Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
Attention:
Personnel Dept.
E.O.E.

NOTICE OF
PUBUC SAlE

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
Lone Bottom. OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
12-20-tfc

Sizes Start From 12'116'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

BEDS-IRON, BRASS old dent t age 12 and over.

Clifton , W.V. 304-773 5873.

Puppies to giveaway mixed
breed, born Thank sgiving

. AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

making the equipment.
"Business is as brisk as ever,"
said Jim Colgan, manager of a
Radio Shack store In Philadelphia.
"Not only are people buylngpholll!l,
they are asking about hookups
because they're not aware they ca11
hook them up themselves."
Barry Grubs, a sales manager at
Macy's In New York, said he is
having trouble keeping low-priced
phones in stock.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

PH. 992-7844

Rt. 124,Pomtroy Ohio

largest change ever to occur In

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofinl - Sidin1 - Concrete
Patios - Sidewefks N.ew Construction - Remodefinl - Custom Pole
Berns.
·

Rt. 681 West-at Derwin

•

Confused public .ponders . breakup

Mason,

(304) 773-5710 . 773-5118

PH. 992-3466

Clay Baker, President of the
Gallla-Lawreilce Farm · Bureau
Board of Trustees, repo!'\s the
bQard has endo~ the formation ·
of tbe new.MGM Farm City, Inc.
cooperative, with Its ofll~ at 540
EaSt Main Street, PoiJli!I!OY. T!te
new .Cooptlrative fpnned to·
· Gallla, Meigs, and Mason Counties
Is .an . ~t ' agrtcultural
~lation.
. ."
.: ·
'
Shares of the new CotporaUon
StJPPOR'IS' EFFORT ::... '1be Gdla-LaWI'I!IICe
~. center, MGM , F~ Cit)' Iacr; 8opllle . are being offet'ed as follows:
Fann liureu bu ...., on record ..........., the · Swllller, ~ ollhe Flinn.._ baUd. ....
A Preferred - Par Value tl,IDI;
· f01'11116Ja ol the new MGM Fann Cltf, lllc., il
row, C11Qo IIMer, Pa l"eai&amp; ol the Gtlllla:-LaClass B Preferred '- ~ar Vilue
coopen1tve a Pomerily. Farm JlarNu o"'cc•le In Fann Bal-. Bou'll, C. A. DuaciUI ud Beimlul
$.100; Class A Common - Par
.: ... photo .......... .Jacldi! Daft~, llt!CI'fJtary ol the
Woad, ...,S memben.
Value PXI; Class C. Common ·.Gallfii.I.Awaeace Coaalty Fann llarellu; JIICk
Par Value $100. Proceeds of the

•

'

Wanted To Buy

coins. ringa. jewelry, sterling
war•. old coina, large cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed . Bur·

aa.s

I

'

'

senre .,

;

I

9

•i;; ' .

Gallia group endorses
MGM Fann City;ln~.
•

3 Announcement•

Business Services

I

.J .

The Daily Sentinel .Page-9

Ohio

PIANO TUNING lower
prices - regula r tunings discounts to Senior Citizens,
Churches &amp; s, ools. Ward ' s

Keyboard, 304-675-3824,

Real
31

Estate

Homes for Sale

4 bdr. ranch home, large LR ,
full basement, with garage,
wood burner included, city
schools, 2 miles from town.

Call 446 -0276 .

3 bdr .. Bath. Eat-in kitchen .
Oiningroom. Carpet . large
lot. large basement, car-

port . Only $14,900. last
house away from River on
Henderson St .. Henderson,

wv.

Ranch on 5 acres. beautiful
se tting with tall pines
around the house. Spacious
livingroom which overlooks
the pond . 4 bedrooms, utility room and kitchen has a
built -in range . Assume payments with a small down

payment . $58,900. Call
446 -3175 .

6 room house, bath. 3 acres
ground, Oear Porter on Old

Rt. 160. Call 446-2857. qr
446-4202 .
"
2 bdr. home in GallipOlis,
very reasonable .' Call 446 ·

4684 .

Owner Mu st Sell! Fireplace!
Includes some furniture ! Incredible low Price! Middle-

port . Co/1614 -992-6941 .
located in Syracu $e-Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
'bedroom situated on onethird acre lot. Pric;:e reduced
823,600. or will rent for

6240 mo. 304-866-3934.

HOUSE FOR SALE-6
rooms,

basement, double

Experienced mother witt garage, 1 and one third acre
Wonted toblcco poundage. babyalt for one child, my lot. Rose Hill. Pom~.roy .
Call 448-0373.
home on Sand Hill Road, Excellent co ndit io n .
1-;;;,;;;:;;;.;;;;.N.;;,:;;;.~ t60.00perweok: 304-676- $32 . 900 . 1-614 -678 2513.
I
to buy. Now, uaed &amp;. 2309.
antiquo furniture. Will buy 1 1 - - - - ' - - - - - - - 1- - - - - - - -pieCe or complete houae- Work wanted, tree work, f bedroom house with one
hold1. Alao complete Auctl- prunnlng, toppi'ltg, toke plut acre at Mt. Alto, W.Va .
oneerlng tervico. Cell 01by downa. Free Ettimatoa. Priced on inspection. 304A. Martin 814-992-6370. 304-676-7889 .
896-3840 .
'·

•

•J

�..
1o- The Daily Sentinel

31

They'll Do It Every Time

Homes for Sale

3 bedroom home. 2 1h years
old, assumable B'h% loan or

priced low 50'o. 304-6756713 mornings.
BY OWNER. Meadowbrook

tn'N6 '!HE GAS
COh!PAIW'S
OORK··· ·

CAlli? SAVING

'THEY MAI'E '&amp;.+1

IIOME . NGXT
THEY'LL WANT
US 10 I&lt;E:EP

COMPLICJO'SI&gt;
ON PURPOSe ...
NOW 'THEY' WANT
·us TO READ

addition. all brick, assume

8 .6 loan. moderate down
payment. 3 bedroom, 2
baths. dinning room , built in
kitchen . garage with a uto

'THEY I..E:FT A

W~li:NEVE:It

'THE 6001&lt;5
FOil. 'THE:M·..

44

Apartment
for Rent

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes. houaes. Pt. Pleaaant
a nd Gallipollo. 614 -446 ·
8221 .

46

- - .. - · - - - -

o nly . NO R EALTORS .
Phone 304-676-3446 .
Gallipolis Ferry, three bed roo m , brick, four c ar garage.
plu s wood building. Phon e

304-675-6861 .
M tfadowbrook Drive. 3 bed room full bas ement. den,
fireplace. eJtc . home, will
trock Area . New 3 bedroom
home. double car garage, 'h

acre lot. Small down pay-

For Lease

for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
614:·446-7672.
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 614-4467274.
1977 12x6.0 mobile homo. 2
bdr., furnished , good cond .,
$7, 600 . Call 614-256661S.
Must Sell 4 bdr., 12x65,
plul 12x20 room, CA. otorage building, porch &amp; awning. Comer lot at Quail
Creek, French City Brokerage Service. Call446· 9340.

For sale rent. Two story
house, 4 bdr., 8250 per mo.
e250 dep . req . Buy
S29 .500. Call 446-4222.
9 :30-6:00.

2 bedroom lumiohod. f1 66.
Duplex, $260 plus utilities. month plus utilities and
Avail. now, 2 bdr., lR . new depoait. No pets. Country
remod. kit., 8t bath. large Mobile Home Park. &amp;14·
fenced ~ yard . new carpet. 992·7479 .
66S 3rd. Ave.. Gallipolio. 1- - - - - - -- - Coll 446 -2467 or 446- Furnished mobile home. 2
0332 .
bedrooms. utilities paid.
Couple preferred, 1 or 2
6 bdr., 3 lull baths, muot children. 614-992-5443.
have ex . references. Call
614·294-B637. 1n Gallipolil Two bedroom mobile home.
area.
Completely furnished ,
washer and dryer. air-cond .•
4 rooms &amp; bath, fumance carpeted. Maaon, W. Va .•
hoot. at 660'/z 3rd. Ave .. 304· 773 -6751 or 773Gallipolio. Adult• only, no 9620.
pet1. Call 446-1163.
2 bedroom mobile home
2 bdr. unlurniohad $176 $150. per month. Dapooit.
mo . plus utilities. Security located Jorrico Rd . 304deposit req. Cal 446-4303. 676-730S.

I- - - - - - - - --

Very nice house in city,

1- ---------

1976 14x70 Kirkwood "'"
bile home. gas heat. 3 br, 2
baths. large kitchen 8t living
room. underpenning. out
bldgo. Muot Soli. $9000 .
304· 773-5023 .

33

Farms for Sale

110 acre farm. 40 acres
tillable, rest in pasture; good
fences. 7 room remodeled
house, 2 car metal garage, 2
bern1, 2 outbulldingo .
1 O,S70 lb. yoerly tobacco
beoo. Co11614·266-1922.
70 licrea woven wire fence,
1600 lb. tobacco bloe, born
end approx. 20,000 ft .
timber. Call614-2&amp;8-1922.
For sale or rent 40 acrea
farm with 8 room houae on
Rt . . 21B . Coli 614-2688317 .
30 .Croo, 7 roomo end both,
tobacco baot, two berno,
•46.900.00. or with Mil·
HY · Ferguaon tr11ctor and
oqulpmont, •157,900.00.
Phone 304-676-15188 .

36

Lots

Two bedroom furnished or
unfurnished at Southside.
304-676-5166 .

43

Farms for Rent

2 bedroom Apt. in Middleport . $176 . plut utilities.
614-992-6545 dayo and
614-949-2604 evenings.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Small turn. houl8 1 or 2
adulto only. no poll. Call
446-033S .

I- - - - - - - - - -

Furniohed apll. 1-4 rm. a.
bath up. Clean. no poll,
adulto only. Rol. roq . Call
446-1619.

1 room t60 weak lor 1
penon . 870 week lor 2
peraons. 1 room with waterbed 830 e night. Call 446·
2501 .
1 bdr. apt. Call 446·0390.
2 BR Apt., t129 mo.
Utilitiea partially furnished .······· 3 bdr. houH for Nle
on land contraot. 304-6766104 or 304.. 76-63S6.
Carol Yeager Realtor.

SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Golllpolio. Now
&amp; used wood &amp; coal etoves.
8 piece wood living room
auite with 8 Inch flat armt
t399. bunk bodo complete
with bunkie• t199. 2 piece
antron llvingroom sultea
t199. antron recllnaro •99,
other recliners •eo. maple
dinette sets t179, box
springe &amp;. mattre11 twin or
lull t1 00 ott regular-firm
*120. moplo dinena chain
*35, wuh otondo •34.
maple rockers •&amp;9. 7 piece
chroma dinotte 101 t149, 5
piece dinette set e99. used
bedroom suites, refrigeratora, ranges, chest, dresaere.
wringer waahers. TV's, dryon. a. ohooo. Coli 814-4463169 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair. rocker, ottoman. 3 tablea, (extre heavy
by Frontier), $686. Sola,
chair and loveseet, $ 275.
Sofas and chaira priced from
US&amp;. to $895 . Tabloo. •46
and up to *126. Hido-o bodo , $440. ond up to
t52&amp; .. Raclinero. $176. to
1376 .. Lampo from US. to
*76 .6 pc. dinenoo from
$99 ., to 436. 7 pc. $1S9
and up. Wvod table with six
chairl $426 to $746. Deok
t110 up to t226 . 1lutchoo,
t660. and up. maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattreaaea, S260 . and
up to t396. Boby bedo.
S110 . Mattreasea or box
springs. full or twin . $68 ..
firm. t6S. and t7S. Queen
1111. 8196 . 4 dr. chooto,
$42 . 6 dr. cheats, t64. Bed
!romeo. t20.and U6 ., 10
gun · Gun cabineta, e3&amp;0.
Gas or electric rangea t376.
Baby. mattre1111, t26 a.
$36, bed lramao UO. $26,
a. $30, king !ramo 860.
Good selection of bedroom
suites , cedar cheats.
rockers , metal cabinets ,
swivel rockers.
Used Furniture · · bookcaae,
rangea, chairt, dryera, re·
frigerators and TV' a. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri ., 9am
to &amp;pm, Sat.
614-446-0322
TV 8o Applionc01, 627 Tl)jrd
Avo .. Gallipolio, 614-4461899. Spin woohero, g11 a.
electric dryers , auto
washers. gas &amp; electric
ranges , refrigerators, TV
sets.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryera, refrigera·
tore. rangea. Skagga Ap·
pliance1, Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Creat Motel .
814-448-7398.

() ~"IC"'-•

: 2 lotoln Crown City on Rt. 7.
Coll814-2158-1444.
Opoloti!O x 11i. 304·8715·
17811.

..,.,~

n,..,,,.,ua,..,. a T.. Qol

I~=========:r~==~==;=~~~
.

1 "h: HP air compre11or on 80
gollon tonk •3150. Call446·
0499. after 6 446-71116.
naw, $460. Call4411-41114.
South Bend metal bench
lethe 9 ' owing 116 volt one
third HP motor or 3 pha18.
t1 .200 firm . Coli 614-2456671 .
4-12 ' radial snow tlru. V.G.
cond. no. ,Coli 448· 7S2S.
Hoopitol bed a. toblt UOO.
adult wheel choir UOO,
child whael choir UO. Coli
814-3SS-9S07.
King cool a. wood hooter
axe. cond.. und 4 mo.,
U60. Call 446-1735.
Kenmore auto ~ W81her and
dryer . t300 . Kenmore
w11her and dryer. •126. 30
ln . coppertone electric
renga. $100. 30 in. gaa
copportono range. t1 00.
614-742-2352 .
1978 Pontiac Ventura UOO. Kimball piano-U50.
King Woodburnor - UOO .
814-985-3529 .
Kitchen table and chalra
UO . Hotpoint 40 ln. otll
clean electric range. *140.
Kenmore electric
dryer. •150 . All like new.
614-992-62S1 0~614 - 99256113.
14 inch homelite chain saw.
Good condition. t80. 6149S5-4348 .
Excellent condition ,
Kroehler big eerly american
oola and choir. Dork gold.
Coli Andaroono 11 614-94925~4 . •s6o.
New wood burning stove
with firebrick •325 . eoch.
304-876- 167S or 675 7S96 .
Uaed waaher, dryer, stoves,
refrigerator. 30 day war·
ranty. One Baidwin organ,
double keyboard . J&amp;.S Pawn
Shop. 314 Main St. Pt.
Pleaunt .
Frttzar 12 cu. ft . cheat type,
like new; electric typewriter.
Call liter 6 p.m . 304-11763461 .
36" Annie doll with complete wardrobe t1 00. Cob·
bago daoign paper• U2 ..
t40. Quality craftomanohlp.
304-676·6135.

Bunney cagoo. 304-6756162.

66

Firewood for nle, .c ut and
oplit, delivered t26.00 per
load. 304-S96-3336 .
Firewood. Phone 304-468·
1S44.

Building Supplies

Why wolt 1 Build your own
241tx32ft. gorogt or work ohop, t1,595. Coli 1-814888-7311 .
LUMBER - Rough cut, oak,
poplor. 2x4, 2x8, 2x9. h4,
1x8, 1x8. length ovolloblt, 8
loot through 14 foot. Hogg
a. Zuopen, 304-773-111154
doytime.

66
Pets for Sale
---------HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding oil brood•. Soiling
Hoppy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman puppiea: Stud
Sorvlco. Coli 814- 446 77911.
Judy Toylor Grooming. Ctll
814-387·7220.
Brlarpatch Kennell Profea·
olonol All -breed grooming.
lndoor·outdoor boardine fa·
cllltloo. Englloh Cocker Spaniol puppleo. Coli 814 -3S89790.
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennelo. AKC Chow puppies. CFA Himalayan, Peroion and Slomtl8 klneno.
Coli 1114·4411·3844 after If.
2 AKC Rogloltrtd molo
Cocker openielo· blonde 5
yro. old. red 3 yre.. good
blood llno, good temperament. Excellent for breed·
ing. Call 448-9372 after
5 :30PM .
Red molt Douochund . Coli
614-387-0681 .
.

71

1977 Corvette T-top, cover,
loodtd. •s.soo. Call 814·
387-0232.

P&amp;PE' I' HOLDING A
SP&amp;CIAL COCKTAIL. PART-Y
FOR ALL THe eu e~TS. VOU
PROMISIP YOU WERIN' T
CiOING TO tr WORK ING
OH THI ~ VACATION.

FOR

HI~ Ll~! A&amp;AI~ -

Buutlful pupa, pert Cock-A·
Poo ond part Poodle .
•5o.oo. 304-8715-53111.

67

Musical
lnatruments

66 Building Supplies
Building moteriolo
block, brick, Mwer pipes,
wlndowo. llnttlo. ole .
CloudaWinterl, RloGrondo,
0 . Call 614-246-5121 .

77 Sto. wagon Chevy Mo·
llbu. blue a. wooden tone,
good tlru. nlco cond ., only
84,000 ICUIII miiOI. Stt
Eort Tope ou:oll 448-0332
d • y • . or 4 4 8 . o 1 111
· .•vonlngo.
'---------1974 Plymouth Vollont 8
cyl .. run1 good. good work
cor. Coll448-1498.

·SEAMLESS GUTTEA S, Ono
e cu~om fit your home.
1
Guorontoed. Advonced Gutter, (Day 1114-&amp;92-4088.1 .,
(nlghtll14·1198-1206 .)

1982 &amp;porto cor. Dotoun
200 sx. 814· 992-8137.

GET your corpot SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Woter Nmovol.
furn iture cleaning, frH esti·
motoo. 304-11711-22911 .

1983 Ford Gol .. lo, body
good ohope, no motor UOO.
Collonytlmo 304·1176-11208
or 304-41SS- 1727.
1978 Comoro oliver with red
interior, automatic,
pt.
pb, om 8 trock •1200.
304-ll75--41e1.

•·c.

ta82 Z· 2S Indy 500 .
u .8oo.oo Coli J04-117519111ofter llpm .
19711 Hondo Civic lor porto.
rebuilt C8rburator. new front
fenden , new radials .
t150 .00. Call 304· SS22974.

1989 Chevy 1 ton truck;
PI S, boooter broke. 12 ft .
oteel bed, 3110 outomotic.
t1500 . Call 1114-38S ·
9303.

R. G. Mi yoo tnd Son, Diesel
Service and mejor over·
haulo. Exptrloncod In oil
type1, dlosol and guollna
onglnu. lnduotrfll or auto.
hydraulic ond oloctrlol 18r·
vice. Located tl Muon Co.
lnduotrlol Pork, Point Plto·
18nt. 304-6711-7422 .

Farm Equipment

GooH neck horse tr11iler
211' -4 honer w· olltplng
qtro.. t2, 700. Coli 4481769 lftor 12 noon.

1979 Chtvytruck t2,SOO or
blot oflor. Call 814-379·
27211.

Form-all Super C cultivotor,
plow, disc. grater blode, 2
mowing mochintl •1 .1100.
Coli 814·2118-1433.

1977 Chevrolet truck
38,000 milo. AC, PS. PS,
iuto, AM - FM Cllltltt .
U,IIOO or boot offer. Call
814-379·27211.

63

19S1 4x4 Toyota truck .
61 ,000 miloo. Coli 814992-2S81 .

Uveatock

Pig• lor sole-Call 1114-37811185 or 614-378-6221.
uo.

64

'S3 Ford Ranger, muot soli.
will otll very cheap. StHI
under warrantY. 304-8761036 or 6711-41588.

Hay &amp; Grain

Vans
4 W.O.·
Ground oar corn •8.110 por 1- - - - -- - -- 100. Bring own container. 1978 Blazer 88,000 mi ..
304· 875-330S. No Sundoy good ohlpe, 11klng t3,S95.
solos.
Coii814-2411-949B.

I r dilspor l.il lllll
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH peld for lllo
model uood coro. Smith
Bulck-Pontlec. 1811 hotern Ave.. GoillpoNo. Ctll
814-448-2282.

191111 GMC ·30 pooling-.;
bu1 491; 4 apd, good cond ..
n5oo. Coii4~8-2B38 .
1872 Ford van. 302, V-8.
rebultt trana. new weter
pump, ,.built heodo. Nbullt
ota~tr, now fuel pump,
fiiOO. Coli 448· 7S09. '
1877 Dodge von fully cor·
poled • cuotomlztd. 318; 2
blrrtll. outo .. oun-roof. very
ahorp. Coll814· 882-3187.

•

SAVE . lnouloto anic or
whole houl8 with blown In
Owono· Corning Flborglu .
Free eotlmotto. 304· 87539112 .

82

Plumbing ·

&amp; Heating
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
Golllpol!o. Ohio
Phone 814-448-38e8 or
1114-4411-4477

...

JIM 'S PLUMBING 8o HEATING. Rt. 1. Box 366, Golllpollo. Coli 814-387· 01576.

83

Excavating

"

~~Jli~ t~l~isi£&gt;fl {isti~S----------------------------------------------------~--------h-; --sco_m_p_u-to_r_t_o_li-g-ur_o_t_ho_______i_"_h-im-.-,6-0--m-in-.]-------------(I)
--T_B_S_E_v_o_ni-ng__N_aw
__
o __

EVENINQ
11:00 D Cil Cll C!l D ClliiD Ill
(I2J Now•
Cil MOVIE: 'II Flntero'
Cl) New Treaaure Hunt
(J) ESPN'1 Skillin..
(I) little Hou18 on tho

Prolria

(1)8-

llll"-•
D Blnleatlr Goloctlca
11:30 D (J) (!) NIC Now1
Cll Rlfloman
(J) E8PN'1 8por11Wttk
CllDIIJ AIC Newt
D CIJ «&lt;I CIS N1w1
Cil luoln011 Report
II1l Working Woman
7:00 D Cil PM Mogulno
Clllnolclo Tho NFL
ill Allao Bmlth and Jonn
(J) SportiConter
(I) Clrol lumen
(I) Entartolnment Tonight
(!) Chortll'l Angola
D Cll Whael of Fortune
Cll liD MacNaii/Lohror
Newahour

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
Peoquale Electric Co. ell
ph1111 of electric work, all
work guaranteed. Aerial
truck rentel. 114· 446 40116 .

liD

86

I

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SER·
VICE . Coli 1114· 387-7471
or 1114· 3117-01591 .

BlqUoi'
Cil MOVIE: 'Shoot tho
Moon'

Need oomtthlng houlod
owoy or oomothlng movod7
We'll do lt. CaR 4411· 31119
between 9 ond &amp;.

ill Timmy lnd LoNIO

·

(J) EIPN'o 'lnoildo Football

CII

Wottr hauling, Foot Service,
low rotto. Coli 814-21111·
1743.

Dump truck lor hire .. Will
houl 'coill or llmn1ono. 304·
8715-3190.

Apt. lor rent. 814·992·
159
Furnlohod 3 bedroom mobile ,_
_ 0_8_·_ _ _ _ _ __
home with woaher ond ,.
dryer. No poto. 8t4-949· Aptrtmenu . 304·8711 151548.
22113.

N-•

IIJ Poople'o Court
Jelloroono
7:30 D (J) Tlo Too Dough
(J)
NCAA
lukotball
R~port (PREMIERE)
(lj H!'@!l'l Herooa
ill D Cll Family Foud
&lt;1D wtiHI of Fortune
D - II!
Enterlllnmont
Tonight
D Ono Day 11 I Tlml
8:00 D Cil (!) MOVIE: 'Jerk
Too'
Cil MOVIE: 'Alrpionoll: Tho

SEWING Mochine repein.
otrvlco. Authorized Singer
Salol a. Service Shorpon
Scluoro . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 614-992-22S4.

.

•

NiA
Blokotbll,l:
Mllwluktt at All&lt;lnll
Cll D IIJ Blnaon Bonoon.
holplnl with .1 charity tolothon ,·,. . ,a urprllll everyone
when he performs with
Glodyo Knight and tho
~·· [C ioled Captiontid]
DCIJIID Oulcoeo!H~a~rd ·
(J)II]l Weahlnt- Wook/
fto.- Poul Du~al1 jolnod
by top Woohlngton jour-·
noll• · onolyrlng ' lht
, week'• nawa.
MOVIE: 'U'I Abner'

.I

~:10

....... -

;::::. l!ank loJIInt from' ,

~-~~=-=.

TWIN RIVERS TOWER.
Apertmonta nowovolilblllo ·
elderly 6 diNbted With In
i~come ot- 1..... thin
•12.300. R = for 30
.,.,_,t of IMil
I,,m•
.Pilon• 3oe-e711-8171.

Wttk
loulo Ruke~r onolvr••
' the '801 wllh 1 wukly t•
view of eoonomlc ahd lnwetment matters.

______

._

ill' rlluo . Thunder
_ IPftEMIEIIEI ·

: 1:00
1. .

..

't
(

Ellen

haa to fight her o n emow
tlon when aha triea to con·

1/6/84

J .A.R. Conotructlon Co .
W1ter Lines , Footera ,
Drolno. All kinds of Ditching.
Rutlond. Oh . 814 -742 ·
2903.

84

.
•
ill (I) liD Dalla• Suo

FRIDAY

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim Lanier, 304· 8715·
7397.

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

sl&lt;.in of a sartin
paint4-tailed crittera
f it r1qht qood over
oneof 'em!

Joel, Tord1y qot on
We'll be
sum'thin' p1.1t the cart and ate 40ur
l1.1nch!
over th' holes'

cominq tomorrow to
take-l:hem

'

Building remolding, all carpentry, roofing , plumbing
and concrete work . 3041175 -2440.

Good -1 Excovatlng. b•••·
ments, footers, driveways.
18ptlc tonko, londocoping.
Coli onytlme 614 · 448 ·
4637, James L. Oavlaon, Jr.
owner.

61

...TH E" AI!M OR .
GRETA GETTERICH
HAS BeEN ILL FOR
TH E PAST 'TWO
WEEKS!

P-=

1982 Ford F-1110. PS. PB.
twin goo Ulnko. aluminum
wheel' I , axe . cond .. 17.000
mlleo. Coli 1114· 245· 9226 .

liVI:oll/1.~

!fiGHT-

2·1B71 Volkowogon Super
Bootl11, ""collent running
condition, price very ruao·
noblt. Coli 4411-0114S oftor
&amp;PM .

Cot 215 hoa. doraro. crane.
loodero. dump truck . Coli
1114·448· 1142 botwoen
7:00AM 8o 5 :00PM .

/x

MORE EA51L'&lt; ACHIEVED AT

Wotar Wello. Commercial
and Domntic. Teat holto.
Pump• Solo1 and Sorvlco.
304·S911·3802.

1979 Chavy C -30 crow cob
duolly, loaded, low miloo,
•4. 700 firm. Col1448-1769
_lfttr 12 noon.

Sillllll ll''

A ~INII OF COHCEHTRIITION

RINGLE 'S SERVICE experienced roofing, Including
hot tar applioatlon. carpenter, ellctrk:lan. meson. Call
304 -11711-2088 or 11711 41180.

DOZER WORK By Tad
Henna, ponds. dl1chto.
ba11m1nt1, otc. Coli 814·
446·4907. Corter a. Evon•
Tranaportat6on .

f .1r111

'&lt;OU WILL ~E AI7VAHCIN6 TO
A I'IE'/1 PHI\5E , IT FIEQUIFIE5

RON 'S Tolovlalon Service.
Speclollzlng In Zonlth ond
Motorolo . Quuor, ond
houot cello. Coli 304-676·
2398 or 1114-448-24&amp;4.

1983 Chorcool gray Ford
otepllde 'lz ton PU. vii. II ft.
bed, outo., radio, 1un roof.
For 181o· Splnot·Conl01o Pl- vlnyt covered bed. oporotire,
ano Bargain . Wontod - ohlrp, priced to 1811. John'•
Aetpon•ible party to take Auto Solos, Bulovillo Rd ..
ovor low monthly poymtnlo Golllpolio, Ohio. Coli 4411on Spin01 Piano. Con 1le 4782.
HOn locally. Wrltt Credit
Monogor:P.O.Boxl537 Shtl· 197S Ford 1150 Super Cob
4x4, loodtd, IUIO., •4,000
byvllle, ln. 48178.
firm. Coll446-17159 oftor 12
noon.

L,:=======--..1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;J
r
OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Appllonco Strvlce oil mtkoo
modolo rtfrlgorton ,
.w aahera. dryers, rangea,
oompoctoro. dlohwuhtro,
mlorowavaa. Heating 6
Cooling, Shoot Motel Work.
Gtllit
Rtfrlgoratlon
Co .
814-448-4018
.

a.

1978 Sulek Rogal 360 F a. K Trtt Trimming, otump
crul11, oir, PS. PB. tilt . CI H removol. Coli 304-1175 ·
4411·4094.
1331 .

73

*

THIM N,ORET.

r M SUCH A S U CKER~ I
CAN'T I!I&amp;LIEVe 1 FfLL.

EA ~Y,

Autos for Sale

'72 Oldomobilo, For 181o or
AKC Rogiottred block Lab- trodo . Phone 304 -1175rador pupa. Shots and 3180.
wormed. •100. 814 -9921976 Plymouth Vollant, 6
72SII .
cyl. UOO. After IS. 304Regiltertd rod mole cocker 8911-3838.
IPinlol pup. t75. Toy poodle puppleo. Brown molu.
72 Trucks for Sale
noo. 1114-992-2807 .

1 Va year old mare colt. '72
Chevy Nove. Two clarlneta.
304-46S-1675.

1--- -- - - - -

Old Colt rlfl•·1887 . 22
collblr pump. 150 · No
S2Su0n~~:1~~lll. 614 ' 949 '

YeAH , WA•H• TH&amp; PLANE NU/I'&lt;III!!R
N?IIQ, ,,. A MAN ANP
WOMAN •. t 'VI S!!N

Marcum Roofing • SpoutIng. 30 yatra experience.
opeolollzlng In buHt up roof.
Call 814-388·118117.

Sam Somerville' a Army Surplus, East Ravenswood ,
Normally open 1 :00 7:00pm Friday, Saturday,
Sunday. (Cioood lor Repolro
Washers 6 dryera .ex. nice Jan. 14-Jon . 2S). All olztl
variety. Avocado, harvest new heavy clothing· Bootaln
gold, white, turquoise. Alao otock cheap ell winter. We
Meytag 14.16,181b. capac- have Carhart Clothing. 304·
Ity w11hero. Call 814-266- 876-3334.
1207.
Uood onow tireo, 2-E7S 14;
Town and Country LP g11 t40. 2-F78 14. otuddod
heater with blower and line, polyaoter t36 . 304, 875Max input 76.000 btu . Min 1224.
Input 46,000 btu, t160.00 ...
304-S96-3078.
Couch and chair. 304-6766269 .
Antiques

CAPTAIN EASY

PLASTERING - Now and
repair commerclel and resl·
dentlol, frtt tltlmotOI. Coli
1114-2811· 1182.

G.E. matched washer / dryer
pair. Whirlpool heavy duty
washer. Other waahers and
dryan t76 each . Call 614266-1207.

63

Home
Improvement•

I

Firewood delivered . $36
pickup load. 10 loodo UOO.
Call 614·266-1427.

119119.
.menlo in Middleport. Fur1 Ox60 mobile home. 2 nlohod and unfurnlohed.
814-992-6304.
bodroomo. No pe11. 1114· , __
...__ _ _ _ _ __
949-2424.
,.
3 room Apt. fumlohod. No
poll. 814-949-22113.

-------12x80 in Syrocuot. Air ..
wooher and dryer. UOO.
utllitleo ond depooil. ;
12xll0 In 8yrocu•·!
pluo utilltiot ond
dopoolt. Referehcili tt' :
qulr&amp;d. 8i4-112·8238.

81

f

'2 6" conaole color TV, like

51 Household Goods

Si:i VII. I",

Af AU..!

Furnlohed Apt. 814-992·
.11434.

Lot on Davlo Rd. 200x200.
-very ruoontbte. Coil 4484884.

~

FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO BUYII NICE 14' WIDE.
All ELECTRIC, MOBILE
HOME. SETTING ON NICE
LOT. READY TO MOVE
INTO . $176 .00 MONTH .
304· 676-2711.

JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS (Equal
Houoing Opportunity) hao
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting a1 t167 lor ono
12x60 2 bdr. modern fur- bedroom and 8193 per
nished trailer. convenient month for two bedroom.
location. Upper River Rd. with $200 dopooit located
dapooit roq. Call 614-446- near Food~nd Jnd Spring
Volley Plazo;--p"ool and TV
S66B.
ant. Call 446-2746 or leave
Nicly furnished modern mo· me11age.
bile home, in city. 1 or 2
2 bdr. unfurniahed apt .. with
adulto only. Call 446-033S . garage,
adulta preferred. no
2 bdr. mobile home partially polo. Call 446-3713 .
lumiohod. Call 446-4292.
3 bdr. epll. Honeyoucklo
Mobile Home for Rent; Hills t~crosa from Highway
adults only, fully furnished . Patrol. Appliances, water &amp;
aew8r furnished . Rent starts
Call 448-4110.
at 8240 per mo. Call 4462 bdr. lurniohed. adultoonly, 3344 or 446-1134. Equal
no inside pets. private lot. I·H_o_u_•_in_g_O_p_po_rt_u_n_it_Y_·- Also lurniohed ,partment, Nice 2 bdr. apt .. ref. a. otove
men only. Call 446 · 3918 ·
lumiohed, Main St .. Vinton .
Nice 2 bdr. mobile home Caii614-246-6B1S.
good location, kitchen 1- - - - - - -- - rango , 81 ·
h
2 bdr. , part. fum .. newly
•
r1gera 1or. was er remodeled, g11 heat. park
&amp; dryer, carpet, expando, .
natural gae furnance. CA. ·front view. wa't er paid, $176
· t200 mo. includes water a. mo .• ritloroncoo. Call 446traoh collection . Call avo's ._3_9_1_9_.__;_ _· - - - - 446·0264.
,1 bedroom Apt. 8196. mo.
Furnished, nice ' mobile including utilities. Equal
home. 3 bedroomo. All Houoing Opportunhy. Conolectric-centrel air. Good tact Villlgt Manor Apto.
loca11on, ocro11 from pool In _8 _1 4_ ._9_9_2_·7_ 7_ 8_7_·_ _ _ _
1
Syracuse.
$260Dapoolt
per month
pluo utilitioo.
re· Rlvorlldo Apt1. Middleport.
1 d c
•
Special ratoo lor Senior
qu re · all 992 •28 D9 ·
Citiztno. •130. Equol HouoTwo bedroom mobile home lng Opportunitloo . 6'1 4·
12x60, noor PomorDy and 992· 7721 .
Middleport area. 614-992- 1-N-e_w..:._o_n_e_bl_d_r_oo_m
__a_pi,_rt_·

&amp; Acreage

315 acre1 11 Rodney on W.T.
Wa1oon Rll. Owner flnoncing ovelloble. Caii448-S221
after 8 woekdoyo.

.

Mer c h ~ IH!i se

2 bdr. trailer 2 mi .. from
hospital at Evergreen private
lot . Call 446 -0167.

•

1

Firewood
cutCall
up olobo
•15
pickup
load.
614-245·
5S04.

ready by end of month,
unfurnished , all carpeted, 3
bdr .• yard. plenty parking,
quiet neighborhood. Call
Eorl Tope or call 446-0332
days , or 446 - 0161
Priced to 1811. 1979 Sterling _•v_o_n_in_g_•_
· - -- - - 14i&lt;70. 2 bdr .. CA. vinyl 1
skH'ting. French City Broker- Nice 2 bedroom house near
·~ Sorvico. Coll446-9340. Eutern School district .
f1 60 month pluo utilitioo.
AtTENTION-Do you need to Dopooit $160. No pots. No
move into a nice mobile Sunday cello . 614-949 ·
hdmo whhout the ho11lo of 2S01 .
oei-up. We ' hove •a "t979 1 -~-------­
Freedom 14x70 deluxe 1 bedroom garage apart·
mf&gt;dal on a lot in the Country mant. S200. month plus
Mobile Homo Park. This utllitiao. $100. depooit ••·
home has 1 front dining quired. Available Jan .1.
room with wooden bow 19S4. 614-992;1!~71 .
w(ndow, 1 circular kitchen
with Iota of cabinets, 2 2 bedroom house. enclosed
bedrooms, large luxury bath front porch, natural gas. In
w(th garden tub. Price of Chester. References. Phone
812,500. Include• metal 614-774-1498 .
building , patio cover, steps, 1 - - - - - - -- -.,-washer and dryer. Every· Country setting, 3 bedrOom
thing in tip·top condition. remodeled home . new
Aeady to live in. For inform•· forced air furnace, nictl'
tion call 614-992-7034 or kitchen, city water, naar
814-992-62S4.
Tuppers Plaino Ohio. 8226 .
without utiUtio1. 614-667ATTENTION·IIthero such a 3974.
1hlng ••• clo11iclln m9bile 1- - - -- - - - - t(pmes7 When you vJew this Unfurnished houae, 4 rooms
Holly Pork we think you will and bath. Completely car·
Olfroe thoro io. A 1969 petod. Storm wlndowo and
f3x66 Holly Park with 2 dooro. 614-992-3090.
b.clroomo. 6 x 10 tip-out in
living room. Completely sot Houoe with bath and largo
..,..in nice pork. lncludoo 40 yard. Near Recine. 614IOfit patio furnlohlngo, oven 1 _9_92_-_s_s_6_s_
. --~-­
a• )or_aoher and dryer. com- 1·
houM, TV
Two
bedroom
p~fly okirtod and reedy 1o
oCcupy. There Isn't a cleaner room, basement. fenced in
or well .ke'pt home in the back yard . Coli 304-676arae. Just like brand new. 4266 .
You must see to appre· 1 - - - - - - - - - ciated. All of this for Three bedroom, 1 Y2 baths, in
$12.900. Financing availa- country, 304-676-7666 .
ble. Low down payment and
low monthly payments. For 1-:-::--:-:-:-c::----:-::---inlormation cell 614-992- 42 Mobile Homes
7034 or 614-992·62S4.
for Rent
DRIVE A LITTLE SAVE A
LOTII For tho belt buy on a
new or used mobile home
come and SEE USII No
reasonable offer will be
refuted, low down payment.
bank financing available.
ALL STATE MODULAR
HOMES. hall wa~ between
Huntington and Point Plea·
18nl on St. Route 2. 304676-2711 .

Umeatone delivered. e1 0
ton. Coll614-256-1427.

Auto Parts
Accessoriea

Billy lee'o Tlreo and Btnery '
Sol11. New and U18d tlreo.
oloo, tire repalro. 1803 Jtf·
ltroon Avo. Point Pleol8nt.
304-8715-114011.

I WisH~
wou~otl'f I'URR.
~ ).o(J()! I CAA'f
G.~ ANY ~ltep

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 12"-22 " otocked
In ytrd. HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 1114·2586245 .

AOD -ON Woodburnlng fur·
nace. auto. controls. water
heater Included. Never used.
t690. Ph . 614-256-1216.

ment.; Gallipolis Ferry. 2 or
3 bedroom, dining room,
large family room , wood

3~ · Mobile Homes

54 Misc. Merchandise

78
&amp;

.·

Old coino·lndien heed pon·
nlea. Wheat and etc. No
Sunday cell o. 614-949 2S01 .

46

Space for Rent

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE IN

Umestone, Sand, Gravel .
Delivered in Maaon, Meigs,
Gallio or pick up at Richerd•
a. Son. Coli 446-7785.

49

ment and assume 9 .8 pay-

Antiques

Sl eepm iJ roomS 126, utilties
paid. Males only, range &amp;.
ref rig. Call446-4418 after 7
p.m .

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. large lots . Call
814-9,92-7479 .

conaid8 r trade ;. At . 2 Fla-

63

Furnished Room s

Fo r ren t Sleeping Room a
and li g 1 t hCI UH keeping
roo ms. Pr ·k Central Hotel.
Call 6 1 -4 ' 6 -0766 .

IE.h'\ •• • •

opener. Central air -cond .,
large lot. pri ced mid fifttes. .
Shown by appointm e n t

burner. redwood deck , 2 car
garage. 160 ' lot . Excellent
Condition . Will consider
trtade on Mobile Home. J . H.
" Jake" Somerville . Ph .
304-676-3030 or 304-6764232..

1984

Ohio

vince Peter that he ahould
not jeoplrdlze hll future
becauae of her. (80 min.)
(]) Dinner at Julie~a
(J]) Dinner at Julla'a ' Beef:
Braised and Stufftd.' Julla's guests are chef Louis
Evana, Jr. and wint expert
Warren Winiarski. [Cioaed
Coptionod]
·
8:30 (I) MOVIE: 'Cat People'
(I) Sneak Prev'-w .
(ll) International Edition
Ford Rowan hosts this look
at Important trenda and
nawa eventl in the U.S. as
they are reported by fo r~n journalistl.
10:00-U Cil (!) Now ShDw
(PREMIERE)
Tonight's
QUilts are Steve Martin
and Catharine O'Hara. (80
min.l
(f) MOVIE: 'Belt Frlenda'
Cll • IIJ Man Houotoo
C.J . and Matt astilt F. Lee
Belloy who" he hal to dtfond a man who ha l co"fened to killing four
teenagers. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
(JJ tiD Falcon Creat
Chase becomea dete rmined to stop Richard efter
he wlna the election to
build hll race track. (60
min.)
(I) lorooll Diary
[I) Newa
10:15 (I) TBS Evening Naw1
10:30 Cil llondla
(I) lnoldo 8uoln111 Today
liD M~lltrpl- ThNI,.
'The Citadel.' . Andrew's
luck takes a ·turn for the
better when he treita a
woman In a faahlonabl t
boutique. (80 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
11
(JJ-Cil
ClliiD 111

a

:oo a(j}) N_. m•
ill Another Life

NCAA · Blakatblll:
Wtllllneton ltttt VI.
Woohlngton
Cll Dr. Who
D ltn.!!Y Hill Show
11:30 D Cil !.IJ Tonight Show
(J) MOVIE: 'Eating Roour
ill Doblf Gllllo
Cll C.tlln• .
Cllloo
.
D Clll:ioviE: 'Eivlor
(I) MOVIE: 'M•n on tho •
E!JintTro-·
111 Allin the Ftmlly
(11) Klmboll Tonlght'l program celabrttll the ten1h
ann lve,.ary of tho Kimbell
Art Muotum In Fort Worth,
TX.
Nluhtilno
Twilight Zone '
12:00
BCmf #4 Sat II I
lllghtly o.. dy tolavlolon
atation In .mvt~lcal Melon(J)

' IIIJI

vill e. t h.. crazy crew ·m·

. ·
'd
clu d es conmvmg pratt ant
Guy Cab•Hero
(Joe Flah"\
erty). brllh atation manaEd .th p . kl (A dro
gar

'

nc ey

"

•

Martin). oddball Ed Grimley (Martin Short) and loud mouthtd comic Bobby
Bittman (Eugene Levy).
(]) Burna • · Allen
(]) Night Tracka
()) Nightllne
liD MOVIE: 'Tho l~crodlblo
Melting Man'
• Thick• of the Night
12:30 • (f) &lt;I) Friday Night
VIdeos
(]) Jack Benny Show
GtlJZ Mualc Magarlne
12:45 CI:l MOVIE: 'A Clockwork
Orange'
1:00 Ill Eighth Annual Young
Comedians Show
W I Married Joan
Cil PGA Golf: Solko/
Tucaon
Matoh
Pley
Champlonahlp · Second
Round
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Ill (j}) Nawo
1:30 ill love Thot Bob
CIJ Star Search
• [I) CNN HHdllne Ntws
2:00
CI:l Newa
CI:l Video Jukebox
Cl) Bachelor Fether
CD Newa/Sign Off
2:30 (IJ lnalda The NFL
ill lifo of Riley
3:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Boot Frlondo'
ill 700 Club
{]) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City, NJ
liD CNN Headline Nowo
3:30 Cil MOVIE: 'Connery Row'
4:30 ill Roll Bagley

a

7:00

sister from Mulberry Hawk
and Ralph 's past is 1ma 11 y
revealed to all. (3 hra.)
~oaed Captioned]

(!)

Write

of Super Bowl ' XVI' feetur-

(])Alles Smith and Jonea

ing the San Francisco
49er's vs . Cincinnati Ben·
Q!IS .
·

odds on football games.
NFL'a Greatest Momenta NFL's Greatest Moments preaents highl ights

nn
~ Can't Reed, Can't

(I) g Cll HH Haw
(!) Star Search

(]) Or. Who Movie
&lt;ID Setutal
()]) J &amp; 8 Gold Putter
Award
IIIIIJ Solid Gold
e How the waat Wea
Won
B:OO
(I) (l) Diffrent Strokes
Mr. Drummond discovers
that he 11 attracted to an
aerobics instructor that his
company is trying to ,promote. (Closed Captioned]
Cil MOVIE: 'Valley Girl'
(]) MOVIE: 'Tht Caine
Mutiny'
ill MOVIE: 'Cyrano do
Bar;erac'
(]) SportsCtntlr
CIJ NBA Baokotball:
Atlanta at New Jersey
(I) Ill (j}) T. J. Hooker
D (I) liD Whiz Kldl
(fil All Cmtures Greet and
Small
g Switch
8:30 • CI)(l) SIIvtrSpoona Derek cons Ricky into using

9:00

a

'ftllllNt OO'il

9:30
9:46
10:00

C1J Hitch Hikera Guide/
Galaxy
D (]) (l) Wt Got It Madt
(]) NCAA Basketball :
Indiana at Ohio Stato
(I) Cl) ff%1 Love Boat Two
show·biz veterans plen e
scheme to get their me moirs published. an Ill ·
husband meets his exwife 's fiance an.d" Capt.
Stubing is baffled by a
man 's rough behavior tO·
ward his wile. (60 mi".)
(Closed Captioned]
0 (() MOVIE: 'Death Hunt'
CIJ World War 1
W'l fJ) NCAA Baaketball:
Indiana at ·Ohlo State
liD Or. Who
D (]) Cl) Mama's Family
Cil Mon of Company 208
CII ~rtl Cl.,..up
D (]) (!) Yellow Rosa Juliette takes hei father's offer to drill for oil and
Chance meets a woman
wh o has a special interest

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ·
Unscramble these tour JumtMea,
onelener to eaCh square, to form
four Ofdlnary won:ls.

by-~AmoldlndBoblH

~HM~tsf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
%Be irres&lt;li ute
ACROSS
3 Texas shrine
I Fictional
4 Nothing
sleulh
5 Shelf
5 Light beam
&amp; Caligula 's
10 Hindu
greeting
festival
7 Eur. region
11 Refresh
8 Tibetan peak
12 Grand·
9 Eye ports
parental
11 Itinerary
13 Poem
15 Risque
14 Hebrew
18 Widespread
letter
15 ToupeelsLl Zl Teener's
dance
16 Silkwonn
22 Bank
17 Allol
transaction
19 Legislative
body (abbr. 1 Z3 MoUusk
delicacy
20 Refrigerate
Zl Italian city
%% Cartoon Duck
Z5 Babble
Zl Central
Amer. tree
Z7 Shout
of disdain
Z8 Criticize
Z9 Torture
33 Danube
tributary
34 Before

Yesterday's Allswer 1·
Z4 An Italian 30 Circwnvent
cheese
31 Peer
Z5 - over
32 Suit
(study)
fabric
Z7 Throng
37 VamL•h
Z9 Odontot&lt;&gt;ingredienl
gist's study 38 Offer

b:-+--+-+-1

pledge
36 Dirtied
36 Infant
39 Instinctive

117/84

- 40·Qtiose

EVENING
8:00 ill Tho Monrooo
(J)
NCAA Bookatblll:
Mlnn110t1 at Purdue
aD World Champlonohlp
· WrutllnJi
ClliiD Nawo
Cil Undorioo World of
JaoqUH CouttMu
(J]) Oinnir et Julla'a ' Beef:
Br1i11d and Stuffed.' Julla'a gutlta are chef Louil
Evans, Jr. and 'wine-expert
Worron Wlnlorokl. [Cloud
. Coptlontd]
·
D Sttr Trek
8:30 Cil Hlotory of Pro Football
:rhe 84·y.. r history of Pro
Football II pr11ent1d.
Cil MOVI!: ' I'd Climb tho
Hlghllt Mountoln'
&lt;Il•i!!Ntwl

a

IIDCBIN_.

in Hawaii
'"'
s--kotl
Mov,·o
u.11
.........

35 Sacred

SATURDAY

.Cil_eo-m

IT\
t':J1II F
UiLJ ..,
. , U6l
antaay 1I Ia nd
CIJ 8 att1e 1or ca n ino . .
10 30 nn HBO ROCK A' . .. _,
:
I.6.J
:
"euP.... 'f:_·

(]) Not Nece111rily The
News
CD MOVIE: 'The End'
(]) Larry Jones Special

,

II1l Ulo and Atlvtnturu of
Nlohoioo Nlokleby Conclu·
sion. Nlchol11 tevtl hi ~

'

41 Instruct
4Z Legal
docwnent
DOWN

IYELMOPI
I K)
I TRULIAj
I KI

I VIctor

WHAT THEY SAlt?

'1'HAT SNOI!II!JI~

f"'III:C:Uf"INE WA~.
Now orrongo lho circtod lotlorl IO

fonn the aurprile lniWit', u auggoliad by l h o - cartoon.

Prlnr.,warhe,.;: [I
d .

Ye s ~~·

I Jumblol·· CHOKE

XXI ] -(I]

SWOOP. PERMIT
.
.TONGUE
Anawer: What a mtn who drln~a to forget often
.
lorgata- WHEN TO STOP
·

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One le tte r simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's. X for. th r two o·s. etr Sin gle lett ers.
apostrophes. the le n gth nnd form ati on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lett ers are d ifferent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
KJBY
. ROLR

DYJDXY
SJBYK

OL W Y
JAA

L

W YGY YM

Y LKPX E

HPRO

L XPRRXY LXSJOJ X . - D . OLMM P KJG
I Yesterday's Cryptoquote: NIGHT BRINGS OIIT THE STARS
AS SORROW SHOWS US TRUTii.-P.J .BAILEY

•

I

�'

''

......... · '

,,...

•

Sentinel

12-The

OSP releases
1983 report

Buckeye briefs
D~ug

sweep misses big dealers

Grand jury will review evidence

Man convicted in child's death
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A 19-year-old Columbus man was
covlcted Thursday of Involuntary manslaughter for the death Sept.
10, 19&amp;'1, of a W.month-old baby.
·
Common Pleas Judge Paul Martin convicted Cecil R. Woodrum
Jr. In a non-jury trial and also found him guUty of endangering
children, a felony,
Woodrum wUJ stay In jail until sentencing, which w!ll follow an
Investigation.
Woodrum ctalmed he accidentally bumped the head·of the child,
Justin C. Biddle, while putting the child In a crfb. A deputy coroner
testified that the child was kflled by at least one severe blow to his
bead, probably Inflicted by a hahd.
Misdemeanor charges of child endangering are pending against
Peggy J. Vencill, 25, Justin's mother. Ms. Vencill and Woodrum
lived together.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
~Ohio Lottery's dally game, "The Number," was 791. In the "Pick
~~e, played Monday through Frtday, the winning number was

Weather forecast
ExtEIIded forecast

~

At the annual organizational
meeting of the Chester Township
Trustees Gary Dill was elected
president, Ralph W. Ours, vice
president and Roy ' Christy, fire
chief.
The trustees wUJ meet on the
second Tuesday of each month at
7::ll p.m. at the Chester Town Hall.
The next meeting Is Tuesday, Jan.
10.
Attendlng the organizational
meeting In addition to those named
were VIctor Bahr, newly elected
trustee. Darlene Newell, newly
elected clerk and John Riebel, Sr.,
QUI-going clerk,

.
I

0
l.'\...__

.-:a__

. ...

-- -

'

WINTER SALT DAMAGE- A pickup lnlck Hes
crumpled under 24 toa8 of sale and lbe dump bed of a
lnlck Wednesday at 1be Columbus headquarters of

.J

..

·-"'
. --

'

-

Along the River ..... ..... . B-1 -8
ClaMifleds ..... ..... ... .. .. .D-3-7
Deathii ..... ......... ... .. .. .... A-7
Editorials .. ....... .... ... .... . i\-2
Fann ....... .... ... ..... .... .. .. D-8

Sports ... .. ....... ..... .. .. ... C-1-8

state-National .. .... ......... D-1

•

tmts

to ak:ohol. DWI arrests totaled
42,335.
Of all accidents, those not using
avaDable seatbelts amounted to 97
percent.

the Franldln County Engineer office. Employees at
the site said a holst on lbe lnlck broke dwnplng the
salt and bed on the pickup. (AP Laserphoto)

v.t. 11 No. 45

240 emergency runs

Emergency runs

COAL to meet

All Meigs County emergency
units made a total of 240 runs In
December, Adrnlnlstrator Robert
~r of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
Of the total, 178 were emergency
runs while 62 were transfer calls.
Altogether 100 patients were transported during the month with 96
going to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 34 to Holzer Medical Center; six
toPieasantValleyHospltaland14to
other hospitals.
All units traveled 8485.7 rnDes
during the month, an averages of
35.4 mlles per run.

Four calls were answered by local
units Thursday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reports. At5:37p.m.,Pomeroywentto
Pomeroy Cliffs Apartments for
Bertha Diehl, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
9: 02 p.m. went to Pomeroy Health
Care Center for Emma Hayman, to
Holzer Medical Center; 1:17 p.m.,
Rutland, to Langsville where a
truck haq overturned, WUUam Lee
George taken to Veterans MemorIal; Rutlandat8:33p.m. to Salem St.
for Jessamine Lyons, to Veterans
Memorial. ·

Citizens Organized Against Longwalling (COAL) will meet for a
regular monthly session at 2 p.m.
.Sunday at the Vinton Townsl!lp
Trustee buDding on County Road
43-B, off State Route 32, AppalachIan Highway.
The permit application maps for
the five year areas of Meigs Mine 1,
Meigs Mine 2 and Raccoon Mine 3
w!ll be available for viewing and all
Information COAL has collected will
be on hand.

Veterans Memorial

Meets Tuesday

Ohio weather:
. snow flurries
expected to clear
--Page A-3--

tnfintl

-

.,.,._,_andOl.tlra)'s

• Sold ook - . - . (,

-""""

•FLOTiO&gt;nqJOI!yl'nln

By lARRY EWING
'111t-sentlnel SUfi
CHESHIRE-TheGalllaCounty
Board of Mental Retardation has
returned to court In an effort to force
the board of commissioners to fund
the operations of Guiding Hand
School and Gallco Sheltered
Workshop.
Late last week, the 169 Board filed
a complaint In common pleas court
asking that a wril "/ mmdomu• be
Issued " ...cornpelllng (the commls·
slon) to apPr-opriate funds to the
ac(:(Junt of (the board) ~uU!clent to
fund Its operations; and, In particular to appropriate those montes
submitted by (the board) In Its
budget for the year 1984.''
This most recent dispute follows
nearly a year of court action, during
which a clarification has been
sought concerning the CO\IIlty' s legal
"rights and duties" In funding
programs for the mentally retarded
and developmentally disabled.
Last week's complaint came
within days of the approval by the
county of a 1984 appropriation for the
169 Board totallng$97,678.The board
had requested an appropriation of
$638,873.25.
.
The board's complaint calls the
county allocation "entirely Inadequate; "and,chargesthatas ~dlrect
result, County Auditor Ronald K.
Canaday " ...refuses to Issue any
warrants, payroll or payment of any
bills until monies become
avaDable .''

• -ll)'lt&lt;m do!J9Ied0

Sef.dOiing

~

• «Xe&amp;iil&amp;
M cl """"""""

RACINE
PlANING MILL

On second floor

NOW IN PROGRESS

•

Jury trial cancelled

MEN'S SUITS
AND SPORJ COATS

Jurors who were to report for a
jurytrialonJan.9and10areadvlsed
that the trial has been cancelled and
they need not report.

Reduced 20% to 50%

'MEN'S TOPCOATS AND
All WEATHER COATS
· Reduced 20% to 30%

MEN'S SPORT AND
DRESS SHIRTS

CLOSEOUTS

LADIES' COATS
AND JACKETS
Reduced 30%. to 40%

LADIES' LEVI
DENIMS
Values Ia $32

Sale

$2211

Reduced 20%

MOST HEMS ARE ONE-OF-A-KIND
ALL SALES FINAL-NO RETURNS

LADIES' DRESSES

MEN'S SWEATERS
CARDIGANS, PULLOVER &amp;
SLEEVELESS

REG.
'225.95
AKAI 8-TRACK
.
SALE '169.00
REG '50
00 WILDCAT
CH TAPE DECK ..................................
., ·
C
ILDREN'S PHONO/TAPE.. ...................... SALE s37 00
REG . 148.95 RAIG AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO/CASS
SALE '111.00
REG.
'174.95
REGENCY
10-CHANN
........
.
REG ssg 95 KOSS AM/FM PO
EL SCANNER ........................ SALE s131.00
. , · CHAN
RTABLE MUSIC BOX w/HEAD SET ... ,....... SALE '67.00
REG . 36 .95 . NEL MASTER POWER WING CB ANTENNA ......... SALE '27.00
REG. '51.95 CHANNEL MASTER MIRROR MOUNT CB ANTENNA .... :SALE '38.00
REG. '26.95 CHANNEL MASTER MIRROR MOUNT CB ANTENNA ..... SALE '20.00
REG. '40.75 CHANNEL MASTER MAGNETIC MOUNT CB ANTENNA
SAL-Es30 00
REG. '9.99 CAR RADIO ANTENNA
·
.........
.
REG. '29.95 CHANNEL MASTER "RA'8'8'ii"EARS;;·AMPLiFiER ......... s1:~Es;~-~
:~~· :~~g9~WILDCAT PORTABLE RECORD P~AYER ............. :::::::::SALE s59:00
. , . ·AKAI STEREO RECEIVER .............................. ;....... SALE s194.oo
REG
88 0095GEit:sCHANNEL CB .............................................. SALE '6,.00
REG. '27S
REG. '249.95 AKAI S~N AM/FM w/CASSETTE ........................... SALE '209.00
REG. '18 '00
EAKERS ............................................ SALE '187.00 pr.
REG: '16:98 :~~r J~~~k'j(""""""""""""':.......................... SALE '13.00
REG. '31.95 CB METE . C S....................:............................. SALE '12.00
REG '359 95 CRAIG A\'if"""""'"'""""""""'""""""""""'"'"SALE '23.00
REG: 156.25 SOUNDESIGN ~M~~~I~ER w/SPEAKERS ................ SALE 'ls69.00
42 ·00
REG. '54.98 CRAIG AM/FM DIGITA ORTABLE RADIO ................... SALE s41
REG. '46.95 CRAIG AM/FM DIGITAt CLOCK RADIO ..................:.. SALE , ·00
REG. '80.00 TOSHIBA AM/FI . CLOCK RADIO ...,..... :...... ~ ... SALE s35.00
REG. , • TOSHIBA AI/FI ~UARTZ CLOCK RADIO .................. SALE 60.00
49 95
REG '89
95 CRA GI
. ADIO .......................................... SALE '37.00
REG. '45.00 SOU~DE~~R:·CASSmE RECORDER ........................ SALE '67.00
. .
AM/FM LCD CLOCK RADIO ................. SALE '33.00

....

SHOP TONIGHT

·s_~;!;,~

UNTIL 8:00 ~.M.

Reduced 20%
SUBURBAN COATS
AND WINTER JACKETS

LADIES' BLOUSES

Reduced 20%
MEN'S

CORDUROY PANTS
Reduced 20%

MEN'S LEVI
FASHION JEANS

Reduced_20%

. 1 RACK ·OF
LADIES' SKIRTS
Reduced 40%

·~

MEN'S STRAIGHT LEG
LEVI DENIMS' (~NWASHED)
$1950
-. MINIS
DRESS &amp; CASUAL HATS
Reduced 20%

MIN's nowA sua

LADIES' SUITS
By Jantzen, Albee, levi .

Reduc~d

30%
1

1 RACK OF
LADIES' SLACKS
Red1,1ced 30:%

INSULATED COVERALLS
(Reg.". Long)
•

$4995
,,

!

MEN'S LON&lt;;. SLEEVE
KNIT SHIRTS
~educed

20%

LAPIES' LEVI
CORDUROY SLACKS .
30% . ·
.· Reduced
.

BAHR QOTHIERS · ~

.'
ol

j'

.•
-.•
••
"•
r.

i,

•

'
••

Chamber President

James R. WI1Uamll
· sy~KELLV

'11mel Seal'nlil SUfi
GAU.IPOLIS - Gradual lmpi'OI(ement In Oallla County's economiC picture this ~ Is foreseen
by the. president ·of the Gallipolis
An!a Chamber of
Willie he agrees signs ct ra:overy
fiU1I tile recession of 198}83 are
being 5een locally, -1ames R.
Wllllams feels that the region wDI
lag six months to a year behind the
rest ct the nation.
• "I'm cauttoosly optimistic,'' wnuams noted. "But we must be

Commerce:

I
..

..

'

A Multimedia Inc.

New~

aper

Instructions that will enable the agency to Issue the
Instructions to the Treasury Department freeing the
benefit s and sending them to the right bank or person.
"They did it as quickly as possible, " said Brown,
who added, " I don't recall having a problem with that
number of checks In a long time. "
The agency decided not to make any public
announcement about the mix-up. Brown acknowl·
edged the problem In response to a reporter's phone
call prompted by complaints to a newspaper from
people.in Madison and St. Clair counties In southern

3 years ago today: Gallia
County courthouse burns
a~~~~~01-y:!/:O~

of the Gallla County courthouse
was gutted by fire ~ an event
that would alter the relatively
placid course of county

illinois.
"This Involved people who changed banks ... or
representative payees," said Brown, who explained
that some benefits are paid to another party in cases
where beneficiaries are unable to handle their own
funds because of mental or physical impairments.
"In those situations what we have to do Is put a hold
on the old delivery address and create a new delivery
address on the computer tape OJI our beneficiary
records" at Social Security's headquarters outside
Baltimore, Brown said. "The hold took effect , but the
corrections did not ."

Ohio gas
customers
to share
$20million
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - The
operators and purchasers of the
now-idle Cove Point Uquid Natural
Gas Terminal have been ordered by
the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission to return S:Jl mlllion to
natural gas conswners in Ohio.
"This Is a major victory for the
citizens of Ohio, and I have
instructed my staff to begin working
Immediately on a method of
refunding this money to Ohio
natural gas consumers," Ohio
Attorney General Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr. said Friday.
The state pad sued two subsidiarIes of Colwnbia Gas System, Inc.
and the Consolidated Natural Gas
Co. for their handling of the loss of
liquid natural gas to the plant
following an Aprtl 19lll announcement by the Algerian National Oil
and Gas Corp. that it would no longer
deliver natural gas to the Maryland
plant.
The suit alleged that between
April and December 198J, the
companies operating Cove Point
reduced the output from the plant to
a trickle instead of shutting it down.
That allowed them to continue to
recover their operating costs on the
theory that theywerestilldeliverlng
small supplies of liquid natural gas
to their transmission companies,
Celebrezze said.
'
The state claimed that violated
the Natural Gas Act and asked that
Columbia and Consolidated be
required to refund the difference
between their legal "minimal bill"
and the amount they actually
received for the eight-month period.
The FERC agreed that Cove
Point's owners received some $40
million in excess revenue from the
pipeline companies which supply
utility companies, half of which
came from Columbia Gas of Ohio
and East Ohio Gas. The utilities
were able to recover their expenses
by passing-the cost along to their
consumers.

go;:=~ and three floors of
supplement the 169 Board budget
untD the Issue Is resolved.''
In a tetter dated Jan. 3, Canaday
a new courthouse are now under
advised newly appointed 1m Board
construction, and officials are
hoping for a completion date In
Superintendent John Riffe: "Your
March.
'
Jan. 1, 1984 balance Is $992.11l and
pay-lnslntoyourfundtodaywereln
A malfunctioning furnace on
theamountof$4.325.34maklngyour
the third floor of the old
fund balance thlsday$5,318.14."
structure Ignited the building
The $97,678 approved by the
around 9:40 p.m. Jan. 8, 1981,
and within 211 minutes both .
county represents the estimated
revenue E'xpecllld to be generated
upper floors were engulfed In ·
·by the board's·~«•ofllii•A·· ~l..ll'ilb -the_(lrst ~r soon
to follow.
levy. The board will be unable to
draw, or borrow, on that amount
Gaillpolls firemen, assisted by
untU county tax books are opened
several area fire departments,
toward the end of January.
~·~~~the., blaze throughout the
frigid
t. When a grey
Theboard's19&amp;'lbudgetapprop · · morning dawned, all that was
atlon totaled $497,sxl. Of
t
left was a burned-out shell caked
amount, only thOse funds generated
with tee formed by tons of water
by the continuing levy - approximately $97,000- were contributed
poured on the fire during the
nl~~nty offices quickly reor·
through tbe auspices of the county .
The remainder was supplied by
ganlzed and moved Into tempor·
lndeflnltefundlngthroughstateand
ary facUlties, where they refederal grants.
Riffe said Friday that while the
malned untU the spring, when
board was able to meet payroll last
modular buUdlngs were erected
week, the future operations of the
for the commissioners. EMS,
school and workshop remain
probate-juvenile court and 0.0.
uncertain.
Mcln~ Park District.
"We're open now,".. Riffe said,
The health department and
"but, how long w!ll our creditors
county extension services rewaltforpayment...how tongwDiour
main In rented facilities today,
while other offices were moved
::~~ees work without being
Into the new courthouse wing
opened In 1963.
(Continued on page A3)
The remains of the burned
section were razed In April1981,
and for nearly two years, an
empty space remained as a
solemn reminder of what had
once stood In that spot.
An operating levy to build a
new courthouse was soundly
defeated In a special election In
FIRE'S FURY - At the peak ofthe January 8 fire, the waD above the
August 1981, and no action to
rear ealrance to the county courthouse plummets to the ground In a
move ahead on a new building
shower of sparks and bumblg debris.
was taken until early 1983, when
commissioners borrowed more
patient."
Ground was broken for the
ranee claim settlement on the
than $1 mUUon from three local
The reason for the relatively
new
building shortly afterward.
fire.
banks to supplement their !nsu·
·slowW recovery period locally Is the
economy's effect on two Its major
Industries, coal and fanning. While
coal mining activity has picked up In
the past year, farming Is being
effected bythestrengthofthedollar
ment rate subside to the 8.2 percent
WASHINGTON (API- Clvillan 1949, said the B11reau of Labor
on the European market affecting
level last recorded in October 1981.
Statistics.
unemployment fell to 8.2 percent In
exports.
The report said 335,000peoplefound
By
contrast.
the
jobless
rate
fell
Willlamsalsocltedthehealthcare December, culminating the best
only 0.9 percentage point Ill the year jobs In December, while the ranks of
Industry as another factor In the post-recession recovery of any year
the unemployed shrank by 2ll,OOO.
foll&lt;'wlng the 1974-75 recession.
local scene that, like coat, steel and In more than three decades, the
Those classified as "discouraged
Senior Reagan administration
government reported Frtday. Four
finance, Is undergoing changes due
workers"
- no longer counted as
mUUon Americans found work last officials trumpeted the Labor Deto the recession.
unemployed
because they have
partment
report
as
evidence
that
"We're somewhere In the lower- year, but 9.2 million still were
abandoned
the
search for jobs - ·
is
making
good
President
Reagan
to-mld.quartlle on speed In the jobless at year' send.
decreased
by
350,000,
to1.5mllllon In ·
on
his
prol'nlse
to
put
Americans
The total of people holding jobs
recovery,'' he explained. "As long
the
fourth
quarler.
to
work
as
the
nation
recovers
back
as the dollar stays so strong, fanns reached a record 102.9 rnDllon In
Adult men, the traditional family
from the prolonged business slump
December.
w!ll have a difficult time In seillng
benefited most from
breadwinners,
of1981-82.
Labor Secretary Raymond Donograin to European nations, and until
TheAFL-CIOcalled
the
report
"a
the
Improving
job market from
the high-sulfur coal problem Is van said the figures show that "the welcome sign," but said the plight of November to December, when their
Reagan
program
Is
on
target,''
but
solved, Ohio coal won't be readUy
the 9.2 mUUon jobless Americans unemployment rate fell from 7.8
marketable. I do believe this Democratic presidential front- "must be addressed.''
percent to 7.4 percent. These men
ruilller Walter Mondale said unemproblem will be solved."
over
211, who constitute the bulk of
I}Vhlte
House
spokesman
Larry
But wnuams pointed to resur- ployment Is stlll too high.
people
working In heavy manufac·
SpeakeS
said
that
"19&amp;'1
proved
to
be
Since unempk&gt;ynlellt reached a
gence In inlnlng activity as a sign of
turing,
hlid been hardest hit by the
of
promise,"
and
that
the
a
year
the recovery. Southern .Ohio Coal post-Depresilonpeakof10.7percent ou !look for " 1984 Is cause for 1981-82 recession.
Co. called back more than 1,000 of tile labor force In December 1982, optimism. Treasury Secretary DoThe civilian jobless rate for all of
· nilner8 In AprD 1983 following a tile n~te has plunged by 2'h
1983
averaged 9.6 percent, slightly
nald Regan called the latest
.. slx·milnth layoff that affected percentage points. That's the steepbelow
the 9.7 percent level of 1982.
est, one-year decline In the jobless unemployment figures ''one more
employment In the !11-colmty area.
The rate soared tn 1982, held steady
of
the
strength
of
the
signal
rate after a recession since 1950,
"A best giluge of activity Is to
at double-digit levels and then
stand on Route 7 and count the coal when the rate fell 3.7 percentage recovery.''
plunged t~ard the end of 1983. _
Last
month
saw
the
unemploy,points from a 7.9 percent peak In
(Continued on page A3)

Jobless rate decline a sign of recov

1 RACK OF

Reduced
20% .
! 5

•

LADIES' SWEATERS
Reduced 20% to 30%

A county commission memo,
dated Dec. 29, 19&amp;'1. advised Canaday " ... commissioners wUI not

Chamber chief
foresees gradual
local recovery

1/2 Price

MEN'll

who named a different person to handle their benefit s.
Brown said the problem affected beneficiaries In all
parts of the country. He noted the problem affected
only a small number of the system's 36 million
beneficiaries, although he said It Is "outrageous"
when even a single check goes awry.
The agency discovered the problem late last week
and notified Its district offlcles to expect calls from
people complaining their checks were not delivered
or their bank accounts· not credited.
Brown said It has taken a week to rewrite computer

169 Board acts to
force opening of
county coffers

• ~ L.olaft.l'me'

The Eastern Local Board of
Education w!ll hold Its organizational meeting Monday, Jan. 9, at 7
p.m.

9 Sections. 58 Pages 35 Cents

Sunday, January 8, 1984

SocSec miX-up delays 80,000 checks
By CHRISroPHER CONNEU
i\M'Oclaled PreM WrMer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Social Security
Administration said ·Friday that ~.ooo beneficiaries
have not yet received their January checks because of
a mix-up In records.
James Brown, the agency's chief spokesman. said
thecbecks, which should have gone out Tuesday, may
be delivered Saturday.
The victims of the foul-up are people who notified
the agency they wantl!d to switch banks where they
get their benefits on direct deposit, or beneftclarles

Board meeting set

Admitted--Cora Webb, Racine;
Nancy Taylor, New Haven.
Discharged-Paul Schultz, Jr.,
Paul Michael, Diana Tillis, Sheille
Fox, Wald Smith, Ottle Boston,
Victoria Wise.

MiddJeport ~roy-Gallipoli.-Point PleGsant

c.,y......... 1914

Happenings around Meigs County•..

MUSIC DEPARTMENT
-

Bob Hoeflich relates a holiday season spent in
Great Britain-Page B-5

Open door 8e88ion

Trustees organize

James J, Kilpatrick discusses the U.S. withdrawal
from UNFSCO-Page A-2

show 1,487trafflcdeathswlt11Hidue

A chance of rain or snow Swlda,y. PartlY cloudy MoDda,v with a
chance of snow flwTies mlbe nortlleut. ~ fair Tue8day.llllhs
In 1be 40s SuDda,y and from the 3118 to the low 40s Moada,y and
Tue8day. Lows lhrougb the period lllOIIdy In the 208.

--g ~ -

Hearing loss:
local clinic
helps-B-1

The Gallla-Melji Poet ol tlle
Ohloo Highway Pall'()! laat mont!\
Investigated 149 accldentJ 1114
made4!11 arrests In thetwoc:ountlel.
There were no fatalities but 17
people were Injured. There were 38
DWI citations, 414warnlngsand453
motorist assistance given. ·
'
For the ye'ar, trooPers Invest!·
gated 1,211 accidents lncludlna' nine
fatalities In which ·12 people died.
Officers recorded 6, 786 arrests
Including 373for DWI. Atotalol4,L81
warnings anc! 5,(113 motorists were
assisted.
State figures from the Ohio
Department of Highway Satety ·

FREMONT, Ohio - Law enforcement officials In Clyde and
Fremont say a December drug sweep missed the area's big drug
dealers because a pollee Informant got tired.
"There can come a time when you get a multitude of ounce-and
half-ounce sellers," said Fremont Pollee Chief Richard Joseph.
"There are times when your Informant or buyer gets burnt-out, too.':
Clyde Pollee Chief John Scheer said the 3'h-month lnvestlgatlon
reached a point of diminishing returns.

CHll..LICOTIIE, Ohio - The Ross County grand jury w!ll hear
evidence Monday about the death of a newborn baby girl whose body
was found this week In a home near Clarksburg, Sherttf Thomas
Hamman says.
·
The body was found at the home of Robert Ater after his
J.S,yeat-old daughter, Sharon, had been admitted to the Ross County
Medical Center because of hemmorhagtng linked to childbirth
officials had said:
'
The Franklin County coroner was performing an autopsy on the
child, and the state bureau of Criminal Identification and
Investigation In London was analyzing evidence, Hamman said.
A preliminary autopsy report said the child was born alive and had
been -abused, Hamman said. He said the the report Included
evidence of puncture wounds.

Neighbors greet fonner captive--D-1

-V

DEPAR11NG COMMENTS

__.:. l"ressdent RAinald Reagan

lalks to rePorters on the South
Lawn of the White House Friday
shortly hefore departing for a
weekend at the presidential
mreat at Camp David, Md.
Reagan, commenting on a Labor Department report on unemployment, noted that the report
showed that four mllllon Americans have found work since the
unemployment rate hit 10.7
peroont In Declember of 1982.

.

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