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•
Page- 14-The Daily Sentinel

I

Racine. council okays .
$116,949 1984 budge(.

Area deaths

James F. Edmonds

Thullday, January 12, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mary Deeler of Florida; a half
brother, Bill Smith of New Brighton,
Pa. , and two grandsons, Gregory
Gene Wells and Christopher Earl
Wells, both ofOsseo.
Services were held at the Van
Horn-Eagle Funeral Home at
Hillsdale with Charles Van Eaton
officiating. Burial was in the Allen
Cemetery.

A $116,949 appropriation resolu- hearings on revenue sharing. Coun:·
tion for 1984 has been approved by ell noted that senior citizens are
Racine VIllage Council.
especially Invited to attend.
Breakdown of the budget Is as
follows: general fund, $50,814; fire
Council instructed Its clerk tD
fund, $8,1XXl; water board, $32,835;
write a letter to the countY
state highway, $4,1XXl; street fund, commissioners reQ\!estlng that vO$16,m. cemetery fund, $2,100;
Iages be Included In the list to obtain
revenue sharing, $3,1XXJ.
material at the county price when
In other business, council re- the county bids for ltlghway
elected.Frank Cleland president of materials such as gravel.
council and appointed Glen Rizer as
Monlhly~rt
street commissioner.
Pollee Chief Alfred Lyons reThe resignation of Betty Sayre as
ported that during December he
a member of the Board of Public drove 345 miles, made 7 arrests,
Affairs was accepted effective Jan.
answered seven cans, and collected
14. Named to flU the post vacated by
$634.70. During 1983 Lyons drove
Sayre was Hen!l' (Hank) Moore.
5,412 miles answered319calls, made
Moore wiD begin his term onJan.15.
101 arrests and collected $5,949 In .
George Mara, engineer with
bonds and fines.
EMH&amp;T reported on the recent 'IV
Mayor Charles Pyles and council
Inspection of wen number two. The
members commended and thanked
company recommended that ImLyons for his dedicated 5erv!ce.
mediate action be taken to have the
. The street commissioner was
well screens cleaned. A price of
authorized to obtain cold mix for
$3,500 per wen was quoted.
street repairs and Larry Wolfe and
Mara also reported that he had Robert Beegle were named to a
responded to the FMHA letter In
special committee In regard to trash
which they (FMHA) cr!tlzed the
and water b!lling and collection.
village for not having meters and
David Spencer, owner of the
having more than average per
Snack Shack, requested that the
capita water comsumptlon for a
street light at the Intersection of
village the size of Racine.
Pearl and Fifth Streets be moved In
Mara pointed out that the village
order that It would light the front of
has some high consumers naming
hls establishment and the sidewalk
the three schools and laundramat.
going to the junior high.
Mara also noted that installation
Council Informally agreed preof meters would cause a financial
hardship because the village would viously not to set a precedent of
have to borrow all the money needed moving street lights, but agreed to
vt€w the area foUaw!ng the meeting
for the system.
Council set Monday, Jan. 23 at 7 Monday night and make a decision
p.m. and Monday, Feb. 6, for public at the Jan . 23 meeting.

James Fenton (Jamie) Edmonds, 32, Rt. 3, Bidwell, died this
morning in a traffic accident.
Born Nov. 4, 1951, in Ashton,
W.Va.. son of the late Sanford
Edmonds and Kathleen Meadows
Edmonds, who survives at Ashton,
he was an employee of Southern
Ohio Coal Co.' s Meigs Mine 2 and a
member of Palestine Methodist Malcolm Hartley
Church, Glenwood, W.Va.
Malcolm Hartley, 75, a former
He married Mary Riedel, who
Pomeroy mayor and newspapersurvives. on July 4, 1975.
Also surviving are a daughter, man, died Monday in Tampa, Fla.
Mr. Hartley was part of a three
Elizabeth Jam!; four brothers,
Frank and Woodrow, both of genera lion family which had been
Glenwood, Charles of Ashton and involved with some 20 Meigs County
Paul of Mount Alto, w. Va.; and six newspapers over the years. The
sisters. Mrs: Phyllis Parsons, Mrs. start of the newspaper involvement
Jean Cornell and Mrs. Lucille began with Mr. Hartley's grandCornell, all of Ashton, Mrs. Mabel father, Charles A. Hartley whose
Bennett and Mrs. Margaret Strait, son, Oliver A. Hartley was closely
both of Ravenswood, W.Va., and Identified with the newspaper
Mrs. Bonnie Floyd of Charleston, profession as publisher, editor and
commercial printing and as part
W.Va .
Funeral services will be held at 1 owner of the weekly Tribune
p.m . Saturday in Vinton Baptist Telegraph and The Dally Tribune In
Church, with the Rev. William Pomeroy and later The Democrat
CUrfman officiating. Burial will be which later became today's Dally .
in Vinton Memorial Park. Friends Sentinel.
Hartley, a son of Oliver A.
may call at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton. from 2-4 and 7-9p.m. · Hartley, was a graduate of Ohio
State Universlty'SSchoolofJournalFriday.
lsm and was a staff writer for The
EarlL Wells
Athens Messenger In Pomeroy and
served as mayor of Pomeroy
EarlL. Wells, 74, a retired captain starting in 1938. He resigned near the
FOOD FOR THE NEEDY - Sun Sua Paarnao sits In her East
for the Ohio River Sand and Gravel end of his third term to volunteer for
Dallas apartment an.d feeds her son some of the food she was given
Co., Parkersburg, and a former mWtary service in VVorld War II.
Tuesday. Dozens of people responded to a story In Tuesday's Dallas
resident of Meigs County, died Dec. Mr. Hartley returned to newspaper
Morning News and deUvered food and shoes to the city's hidden hungry.
ll at the Hillsdale Community work after the war, first locating In
(AP I.:aserphoto).
Health Center Hospita.
Mansfield. In 1950 he became editor
Mr. Wells was born at Porlland, of The Lorain Journal. ·Mr. Hartley
Jan. 29, 1909, a son of the late Lestesr was preceded in death by hls first r--------------~-------------------------------and Elizabeth Roush Wells. He had wife, Mae.
resided in St. Marys, W.Va., before
Surviving are hls wife, Betty; two
moving to Hillsdale, Mich., where sons, Joel of Lorain and Lee of
he resided at 81 Hillsdale St. He was Columbia, S. C.; three .stepsons,
a member of the Baw Beese Church David Shannon of Tampa, and Eric
of Christ in Hillsdale.
and Richard Fullerton, both of
He was mamed Nov. 10, 1933 to Lorain; a brother, Earl of Fort
the former Clara E. Wells who Myers, Fla., and 15 grandchildren.
survives. Other survivors are a
The Reidy-Scanlan Funeral
daughter, Wilma, at home; a son, Home in Lorain Is In charge of
Gene of Osseo, Mich.; a half sister, arrangements.

..

Weather forecast
· Increasing cloudiness tonight.
Low 25-00. . Winds easterly to
$0Utheasterly 10-l.li mph.- Friday,
cloudy with a chance of raill. High
near 40. Chance of precipitation
near zero percent today tonight and
40 percent Friday.
.
Extended Ohio Forecaat

SaturdaY lhroup MondaY:
Fair SaturdaY except for a few

fJurriM acrih~MIIt. Fair apia Suaday. Cbanceol- Moada,y.JIIIhs

Ill lhe mld-201 to low 80illalurdaylll
lhe 201 Sunday and In the mld-1111 to
mld-80tl Moaday. Ovemf&amp;bl lowll
1N1 ell'l)' s.aanlay1 IH5 Sunday
111111 JJ.aell'l)' ~.

'

,.

Pete Rose, an Expo?

Cholesterol levels
Story, photo on Page 12

aily enttne
BCI agent's testimony

..

Voi.32,No.192

C.,rithtocl t 914

2 Set:tions, 12 Pages
20 &lt;Ants
A Multimedia Inc . New5paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 13, 1984

criticizes Logan police
LOGAN, Ohio (AP) - Logan
pollee Investigating the mutilation
slaylngs of two teen-age lovers
possibly damaged evidence In the
case, a state crime Investigator
test!tled In one of the victim's
stepfather's aggravated murder
tt1al.

Dale Johnston, 50, Is charged with
two counts of aggravated murder

CRmCIZES POUCE - Kennan Henry of the 111ate Bureau of
Crlmlnalldenllftcatton and lnvellllcadon, who testified ~ In the
IIIIJ'IIVated munler llial of Dale Johalton, criticized the way Lopn
poUce handled an lnvellllcailon of lhe cue. In lhe backp-oond Ill a
manikin lllled to de8crlhe wounds of lhe two victims. (AP LMerphoto) .

By BOB HOEFLICH

Ottls Taylor, Thornville, speed, $23
and costs; Kevin Thornton, GalllpoUs, speed, $21 and costs; W!IUam
Uhl, Lucasville, speed, $23 and
costs; Carron Orem, Wlll\llmStown.
W, Va., speed, $20 and costs; Caryl
Canterbury, Gallipolis Ferry,
speed, $20 and costs; W!IUam
Sorden, Pomeroy, speed, $29 and
costs; Frederick Reed, New Haven,
passing bad checks, restitution,
costs, one-year probation; Michael
Smith, Pomeroy, speed. $24 and
costs; Daniel Norman, Pomeroy,
stop sign, $10 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Mark
Beegle, Racine, Randy Stevens,
Portsmouth, Timothy Chapri'lim,
Pomeroy, and George Kovach, New
Haven, speed, $50 each; Derek
McKelvey, Springfield, speed, $47;
Donald Wels, Logan, speed, $40;
James Holbrook, South Point,
speed, $46; Frank Antoun, Clnclnnat!, speed, $70; Jerrel McKenzie,
Blatrsv!lle, Pa., speed, $45.

labeled "structurally deficient,"
,
Claypool said.
No plans or decisions have been
made about the buildlng's·future at
this stage.
"I think they're looklilg at
different alternatives on the admin-istration building," Claypool
remarked.
Claypool and GDC administrators who have run the center since
Dr. Robert K. Zlmmerman'sdeparture as superintendent In November
1983 Indicated the move Is an
economy measure on the state's
part because an existing building Is
being ut!l!zed.

-· .
CHILDREN'S

CLEARANCE! -

BOSTON TRAVELER

COORDINATE .
COATS &amp;
SNOWSUITS "SPORTSWEAR
~

selection of styles and Blazers, Skirts, Pants and
Most are machine wash· Jackets. Misses Sizes.

SAVE

40o/o

1
/2 PRICE
CHILDREN'S

JUNIOR

MEN'S SHIRTSKnits, velours, flannels, and sport shirts. Sizes S, M,
l, XL Good selection. Save 40%.

S12.95
S15.95
S19.95
S24.95

Admltted··Dlxle McDaniel, Racine; Shirley Rousll, Pomeroy; Carl
Rairden, Hartford. ·
Discharged--Charles Frazier, Jr.,
Neva Nicholson, Mary Pickens.

~e~cyruns
Local units answered two calls
Wednesday evening, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports. At 4:34p.m., the Racine
Unit took Klm Lawson from the
Yellow Bush Road to 'Pie&amp;sant
Valley Hospital and Racine at 11:57
p.m. took Gary JohnSon from
township road . 100 to- Veterans
Memorial.

. Ohio lottery winriers

SHIRTS .................. :.. S7J7
SHIRTS ....................·. S9.57
SHIRTS ................... su.95
SHIRTS ................... Sl4.97

MEN'S AND BOYS'

MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR
I

WINTER
SPORTSWEAR

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

Special rack of blouses,
jeans, slacks, sweaters, velour shirts, vests and skirts.

Warm winter weight gowns,
robes, and pajamas.

REDUCED

·MEN'S BIG BEN -

30%

WINTER
JACKETS

CLEARANCE SALE
PRICES CONTINUE

Good selection. Boys sizes 8
to 20. Men's S, M, L, XL, XXL

•MEN'S FLANNEL WORK
SHIRTS
*BOYS' DRESS AND
SPORT SHIRTS
*MEN'S CORDUROY
JEANS
•MEN'S DRESS SLACKS&gt;

INSULATED
COVERALLS

ON

40o/o

REDUCED

CLEARANCE!

CLEARANCE!

Veterans Memorial

-VAN HEUSEN

MEN'S SWEATERS DRESS SHIRTS

Slipovers, Coat Styles and Vests. S,
S, M, L and XL Sizes. Olivewood, M, Land XL
Navy Blue, Brown Duck. Warm nylon
•
quilt lining. Not all sizes.
'16.95 SWEATERS ..... ~ALE S10.17
'21.95 SWEATERS ..... SALE '13.17
REGULAR S49.95 ....... SALE S29.99 124.95 SWEATERS
..... SALE '14.97
.
1
REGULAR *54.95 ....... SALE s32.99 29.95 SWEATERS ..... SALE. '17.97
.
.

Men's Sizes Wh to 17 Neck. Sleeve '
teftgths ·32 to 35 inches. Solid colors arid
patterns. E_!ltire selection. Save 40%.

s11.00 SHIRTS .......... SALE s10.20
Sl9.00 SHIRTS .......... SALE Sll.40
s21.00 SHIRTS .......... SALE S12.60
'2t00 SHIRTS'
.......... SALE '13.20
'

I

ClEVELAND (AP) The
wlnn1ng nwnber'drawn Wednesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally

game, "The Number," wu 3:f7. In
the "Pick 4" pme, played Moaday
tJuwib Friday, the wlniiiDg .
numberwu29IMI.

c

SeePageS

with death penalty specifications in
the October 1982 k!lllngs of his
stepdaughter, Annette Cooper Johnston, 18, and her fiance, Todd
Schultz, 19.
In the second day of the trial, on
Thursday, Herman Henry, an
Investigator for the state Bureau of
Cr!m1nal Indentlflcation and Investigation, criticized Logan pollee'
handling of the case.

Part of the prosecution 's case
rests on the claim that a boot print
found on the bank of the Hocking
River matches the print from a boot
found In Johnston's mobile home.
The couple's torsos were found in
the river 10 days after the couple
disappeared. Two days after than,
other body parts were found buried
in shallow holes in a nearby
cornfield.
Henry said the cornfield had been
walked over by the time he arrived
the day the body parts were found .
"It had been damaged. People
had walked all over the area," he
testified.
Defense attorney Thomas Tyack
asked Henry whether this could
have made footprints that didn 't

belong or "obliterated evidence."
"It's possible," Henry said. He
said he saw no point in staying at the
scene that day and left almost
Immediately.
Henry, who originally was called
as a prosecution witness, also
criticized a Logan pollee interview
with Johnston.
Hesaidhewasp~tpartofthe

time that Logan Detective James
Thomp50n questioned Johnston
about five days after the body parts
were found.
Henry said Thomp50n told Johnston that he saw blood stains on his
boots and healing cuts on Johnston's
hands.
Henry said he saw neither.
"The manner of interrogation

was different from what I was used
to. It depends on whether you use an
easy type of interview or the hard
type. I use the easy type," he said.
Henry said Thompson also either
"Ignored or rejected" information
that might have led to someone
other than Johnston.
Hocking County Sheriff Jim Jones
testified that it had been about 15
days between the time the footprint
near the river bank was supposedly
made and when authorities took a
plaster cast of it .
Columbus meteorologist Jym
Ganahl testified that because of
weather conditions, the current of
the river and type of soU, it was
possible for a footprint to be there
after that length of time.

No more Sunday practice for Meigs teams

(Continued from page 1)

The bullalng houses offices for the
superintendent and administrators,
as well as a regional advocacy
agency for the mentally retarded.
Claypool said planning, covering
a number of stages, Is still being
prepared and contingent on the
controlling board's approval, It
could be a year before the project Is
complete.
The move Into the dining hall has
been mandated because meals are
now being served to clients in their
cottages to achieve the state's goal
of a normalized existence, leaving
approximately half of the building
empty.
The administration bul!ding- an
example of turn-of-the-century architecture that was then deemed
functional for state structures was bullt 'when GDC was originally
the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics. In
~nt years, the building has been

Story, PhototJ !Ill Pap 4

•

30co~cases

GDC offices

Property transfers

Story on Page 6

O'Brien finishes
Twenty-two defendants were
fined and eight others forfeited
bonds in Meigs County Court
Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
· were Daniel Horvath, Crown City,
speed, $20 and costs; Timothy Hill,
Raclne,speed,$21andcosts; Randy
Hysell, Rutland, hunt rabbit during
closed season, $25 and costs; Brian
Simcox, Youngstown, hit-skip, $300
and costs, three days confinement;
JohnMitchell,Langsville,stopsign,
$10 and costs.
Also Howard Barr, Rutland,
speed, $23 and costs; Michael
Dalley, Long Bottom, stop sign, $10
and costs; James Story, Pomeroy,
speed, $22 and costs; Michael Trent,
Pomeroy, speed, $21 and costs;
James Coleman, Vienna, speed, $25
and costs; David Case, Loulsv!lle,
Ky., Improper right turn, $10 and
costs; Ferl!n Baisden, Chesapeake,
attempt to take more than one deer
duringthegunseason,_$75andcosts;

Marauderettes lose

Sentinel !lalf
Practice for athletic groups will
not be scheduled for Sunday
altl1iii00ns iii' the future, a&lt;;cordlng
to an lnfonnal decision reached by
the Meigs Local School District
Board of Education Thursday night.
Board President Bob Barton sald
that he had received complaints
from several ministers against the
practice sessions held for athletic
teams at the high school on Sunday
afternoons.
While the ensuing discussion
brooght out that the practice
sessions have been held because
competltlvecontestsaresomet!mes

held on Monday and the Sunday
practices are the final ones which
can be held, the board agreed
Informally that It rpust be sensitive
to .the ronce~ of theiCOlllJllunlty
a boot Sunday activities. The discussion also touched upon the fact that
sometimes athletic events are held
on the evenings when schools have
been closed due to Inclement
weather and Asst. Supt. James
Carpenter expressed concern about
this. Also entering discussion was
practice sessions held by vocal and
lnstl'lll)lental groups on Sunday
afternoon or pertollTI'Inces held on
Sunday.
Rather than pass a hard line

Wholesale prices
show big decline

policy on the problem, the board
decided that Supt. Dan E. Monis
will issue an administrative request
to coaches asking that they retrain
tronrscchedullng practice sessions
on Sunday afternoon. If coaches do
not honor the request, It was
Indicated that the board will take
action forcing the Issue.
Purchase three buses
The board last night agreed that
the Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Board can use the Meigs High
School fac!l!t!es for a Class A
sectional basketball tournament
Feb. 20-24 and the board will receive
$100 a night from the athletic board.
It was agreed to purchase three new
school buses and accepte&lt;j were the
bids of Gibson Ford, Athens, on the
chassis at $19,319.49 each and the bid
of Edwin Davis and Son for the
bodies at $9,901 each. The State
Department of Education has

approved the purchase.
A request from the VIllage of
Pomeroy foruseoftheparklng area
behind the former junior ltlgh
structure In Pomeroy was reviewed
and It wasagrero to allow the village
to use the area providing It provides
no confilct with thetransferofschool
students from one bus to another
near the junior high. It was pointed
out that lfthes!tuationdoesnotwork
out, the permission can be revoked.
Sylvia Neece. a cook, was granted
a 90 day leave of absence.
Supt. Morris asked members of
the board to study the recent North
Central evalua tlon of Meigs High
School for a discussion later.
Resignations accepted included
-those of Coty CUrtis, substitute
secretary-aide, and Gregory
Drummer as reserve boys' baseball
coach.
Granted professional leave were

Drummer, varsity basketball
coach, to attend the state tournament In Columbus, March 23;
Gordon Winebrenner, athletic director, to attend that tpurnament at a
5-1 vote with Board Member Robert
Snowden casting the dissenting
ballot; Marilyn Goodn!te, band
director, to attend the Ohio Music
Educators Convention in Dayton on
Feb. 3; Martha Vennari and John
Redovlan, guidance counselors, to·
accompany high school principal, ,
James M!ller, to an Ohio Career
Information Service meeting at
Nelsonville on Jan. 17, and Dale
Harrison, electronic Instructor. to
accompany M!ller to a vocational
trade and industry education workshop in Columbus on Jan. 26 and 27.
A service contract with E. C.
Babbert for the Me!s High School
waste treatment system was renewed. Supt. Morris presented a

WASHINGTON (AP) - Whole- Jysts have said consumers wiD face
sale prices rose a minuscule 0.6 substanttally higher meat prices
percent last year, the smallest gain throughmostof1~asaresultofthe
In two decades, the governmer!hjld smaU herd sizes.
today.
As for energy, those prices overall
Gasoline prices fell a record 10 tumbled 9 percent In 1983 after
percent; home 1\eating oU costs showing almost no change In the
were off 15.8 percent.
previous year. The drop was the
The overall lncreasewaslessthan sharpest full-year fall since such
one-fl,tth the 3. 7 percent ga!.n in 1982. . records were ftrst kept In 1974.
As 'for last month's report, prices
The department offered these
rose just 0.2 percent, the Labor other specifics of price activity:
·Department said, as a 1.0 percent
-Food prices last monthrose0.7
decline In energy prices offset sharp percent after a sharp 1.0 percent
meat prices gains.
drop In November. Fresh fruit
before today' s Producer prices tumbled 6.3 percent and
Price Index for finished goods was prices for vegetables were off 0.4
Issued, · analysts were hailing the ~nt. Poultry prices jumped 4.5
economy's performance last year.
percent while dairy product prices
Allen Sinal, chief economist for were down 0.8 percent.
the New York Investment firm of • -Natural gas prices rose 0.7
Lelunan Brothers Kuhn Loeb Inc., percent as gasoline prices tumbled a
predl~ted the new report would be
sharp 1.6 percent. Prices for home . '
' "~ capstone of a year of rather
heating oil feU 1.1 percent.
~tlonal statistics on Inflation."
The energy price calculations
' Added Thomas Th0111110n, chief reported today were for November.
econorrilst for San Francisco's That component of the wholesale
Crocker National Bank, "The news price measure Jags a month behind
II ~t tor 1983."
·
because energy companies report
Not alnee 1964 -when prices rose their prices too late for inClusion In
~~~Jy~ave wholesaJe the most recent Index.
-Automo'blle prices rose 0.6
They were up 7.1 percent In 1981 percent, up fron1 0.4 percent In
and 3,7 percent In lllll2.
November. ~to.; smaJ1 trucks
The eood news aboot prices last feU 0.3 percent.
•year wu JaraeJy 'attributed to the
~ttalequlpmentcostsrose0.2
moderate 2.2 percent lJicreue In percent last month.Thotlepr!Cesare
bid pr1ce1, aboot the Arne as In for the machinery and transporta· ,
19112. MI!Ch of the food . price don equipment used by bUsiness and
NJ:W Qlh\R'lERS .:... 'lbe aew quafterll for lhe
vt11a1e of Pomeroy spent $28,000 remodeiiDg lhe 10
lmpi'ovl!rnlllt came u a l'eiUlt or
lncluatiY.
.
'
.._&lt;lou~~&amp;)'._.. of'f\ll.,..lfl are now located on
rooms
uplltaln uslnc SIO,OOO from lhe sale of lhe
.
W1lolesa1e
pnees
rose
0.2
percent
pr;lctdeoiiMI palll!d throulh1111 I8Ciiad floor .. lhe r-oy Vlllap lid, lhe ... fonner city halandS18,000thl&amp;they bomlweil. 'The 10
OUt the fall u procb:el'l tnuulled InSeptember,cllmbed0.3percentln
..._. Pw1a.. 8ea1or 11111i B"'ldlnl· '11mlday roomsarei'I!JittngforSIIOOa~. 'lbeeouiltylio!lnlls
their hl!rdlln the face of ak\YI'OCket· October and fell 0.2 · ~t In
November• .
..aw.....;lhe......,Jiolpidor, WDamDeecoawas
pre1 e~·lllllnc council chunben Uid lhe rooms are
lllateed lft'el.
llilldq Ml •. 5 ... Gillie 11 1'001118 thM wll be
llppi'O\'ed. 'Die electrlcal~~J~tem has beEuapproved by
I · But Jlel:anber'l report, lhDWIDI
Wboleele prices actually fell In
percct lllrbllfud tlua llllliiUII last year. The oo ItlbJ tile Ollliii&amp;J '-rd. Utbe rema« hi oftbe WIII'MI C4WIIb' of Reedlvllle. ShOwn Ill one of lhe
. . ..... JDcaW.tlle'**llllleCJIIIIehr'' , . . . 1'001118 thM luotilfl'b' boUied tbe oflce of lhe IICbool
\lllllllld'UJ&amp;OIIdbpadc, . . . . lhlrpalt moatbly drop was the 1.1
I 'I . . 1'001118 wll be....., lar OC*'IJ
........,.,... are .Jolm Ander-, left, .. esldeu&amp; of
flab evldlace that tllat tNDd may perceat ct Jlllllll'Y·
.
"
~_...,to
y_,, ~. 'lbe couadllliid Bll y 011111·
be rewnbli· IDdeed. 1111111Y 1111·

Even

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•

•

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"*'

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OPEN FRIDAY
EVENING TIL 8:00

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detailed report on planning and
goals for the district over the next
four years. All members of the
board were present for the meet!,ng
as well clerk-treasurer Jane
Wagner, Morris and Carpenter.

Board okays
$1,902,369
appropnallon
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Temporary appropriations totaling $1,!m,369.04 were approved by
the Meigs Local School District
Board of Education which met in
Middleport Thursday night for Its
annual organizational session.
The temporary action was approved by the board pending the
completion of the permanent appropriations for the entire year which
Mrs. Jane Wagner. treasurer, plans
to have ready for the board's
consideration at the regular meeting in February.
Breakdown of the temporary
appropriations includes general
fund, $1,332,100; bond retirement,
$157,1XXl; permanent Improvement
fund, $110,'700; food services,
$115,400, and' other which includes
student activity accounts, state and
federal funds and principals' funds,
$187,] o9.04.
The board reelected Bob Barton
as president for 1984 with Arland
King being elected vice president for
this year. Regular meetings were
set for7 p.m. on the third Tuesday of
each month and payment for board
members Is $40 each for regular
sessions.
The board agreed to review at the
same time It reviewsadjustmentsof
admln!stratlvesa!aries the compensation for the treasurer with the
amount to remain -at $20,931 annual
for the time being. Treasurer
Wagner was authorized to pay all
accounts as they are presented
provided funds are available and to
report monthly to the board that
those b!lls are paid. Membership In
the Ohio School Boards Association
was renewed.
Authorization was given for the
purchase of bonds for board
president, treasurer. superintendent and assf$lajlt superintenden~as
was Uabil!ty Insurance for board
members, the treasurer and
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administration.
The treasurer was autbor!zed to ·
seture advances from the couniy
auditor when funds are available
and payable to the district and was
authorized to invest Inactive funds
at the most production rates when
Inactive funds are available. Supt.
Dan C. Morris was designated as Ute
agentoftheboardtorecelve,expend
ahd account for federal funds.
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The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Villanova upsets Georgetown
Good .question _________( _n_on_G_ra.;.;...iff

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO 1'HE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFUCH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Maoager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ne!"S Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

Jesse Jackson's Syrtan caper
. I don't think there Is one, there
was a subject I had decided not to being so many interrelated pros
address.
,
and cons to be weighed lnvolvtng
That changed when I was the potential for disaster in the
accosted on the street by my local current Mideast crisis, the mlldng
newspaper's inquiring photo- of foreign wUcy and domestic
grapher who wanted to know: 1) ltl politics, the rules- or lack of same
thought Jackson should have under- - of presidential campaigns and
taken the mission to sprtng cap- the nature of the Jackson
tured Navy airman Lt. Robert 0.
candidacy.
Goodman Jr.; and 2) whether . Taking that last first, from where
Jackson's candidacy for the Demo- I sit it is the most encouraging
cratic presidential nomination had development In the 1984 presidenbenefited as a result.
tial contest to date. As columnist
It was Immediately apparent Jack Anderson observed back In
why I had preferred not to address November, Jackson "has sucthe subject. I have no easy answer. ceeded stnglehandedly in lifting the

Democratic presidential race out of
the terminal doldrums that threatened to bore us an to death."
I would qualify my agreement
with that assessment In only one
respect: not merely the Democratic race, the selection of a
president period.
The Jackson campaign Is skillful
and. professional. It has not been the
exercise in "stridency and radicalIsm" predicted by columnist Pat
Buchanan, another expert observer
of the political scene. At least not in
the definition of anyone not sharing
Buchanan's vehemently conservative convictions.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subj ect to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUJ be publllhed. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Why workers strike
. A study of why workers strike has produced the tantallzlng theory that
·most walkouts originate In matters having little to do witlh money or
:renettts.
· Woodruff Imberman, a consultant, claims the seeds of strikes are sewn
when worker "needs, wants, and ideas go unheard, unheeded or
·Qnanswered," leaving them to see managers as adversaries.
. Imberrnan' s study, published In the Harvard Business Review, Is
oonsidered especially significant in view of the relationship of strikes to
·defense buildups, such as the one now under way.
: :1mberman looked for distinctions In 28 "strike" companies and 28
~wllontzed "non-strike" companies. He found quantitative dltferences in
11ve areas: How grievances are handled; Thlrd-shlft working conditions;
Attitudes toward overtime; Use of seniority In considerations for •
l:lromotion; Methods of disciplinary action.
,
. In strike plants, Imberman found managers stressed that the letter of
: the contract be observed and took the position that the purchase of labor
;:under the contract was the same as bylng a ton of coal.
~ That position, he found, led to foremen making little effort to resolve
··t&gt;roblerns but, Instead, to telllng workers to file grievances. And
mllnagement responded more slowly In the strike-prone plants.
: . The "foresaken third shlti," he found, was a source of much discontent
· that eventuatly developed into thoughts of strikes.
:. Attitudes on the shlti are seen as an indicator of how rank-and-tne feel
::i!bout management and of a plant's strike potential.
·.: The reasons are many: equipment, materials, parts and tools are often
faulty, misplaced or scarce, and maintenanCe Is often poor in strike-type
companies. Foremen are inexperienced. Personnel representatives are
: rare.
~ WASHINGTON - Operating at
· Research showed that non-strike companies had far fewer complaints the subterranean level of Latin
. from tlhe third shift than did the strike-prone companies, where irritations America politics Is a far-fiung
·festered.
network of afflllated death squads.
:: Imberrnan found strike-prime companies Inclined to insist-on overtime
Their purpose: to Intimidate
·rather than hiring additional workers. In contrast, other companies suspected leftists and deter moveperiodically suspended overtime, enabling workers to plan outside ments that threaten the status quo
: activities.
throughout Latin An:erica.
• In the 28 strike-prone plants, union leaders accepted no deviations from
Their methods: kidnapping and
: the seniority rule - applied to promotions, layoffs and recalls - because assassinations, secret pacts, In' they distrusted management's motives. Imberrnan found th~ non-strike trigues, terrorism and biackmaU.
'plants operate differently, In part because labor and management were
But what is truly appalling is the
•
able to discuss matters.
possibility that the idea of an
: In 12 strike plants the foreman could effectively terminate a worker's anti-communist Murder Inc. was
: employment, although official tirtng was handled by tlhe personnel germinated at CIA headquarters.
~ department or plant manager.
·
Sources familiar wltlh the secret
~ However, in only once Instance in tlhe non-strike plants did the toreman
Industry - including a former
: have such power. In theotlher27non-strlkecompantes the foreman's hands covert operations specialist for the
:were tied in one way or another on the matter of tem\inatlon, said CIA - say the death squads were
:imberman.
first formed under agency sponsor:· In such areas, he suggests, are the origins of strikes. Seldom, it seems do
ship in l!li4. Thls is denied by CIA
.· strikes begin over money.
officials.
Whatever thetY origins, the death
squads clearly got out of control.
Dedicated to the physical elimina-

Political

Electorate

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"ALL the kids our age are precocious. It 's SO
BORING!"

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:L etter to editor

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ThaTJ,ks Ohio Power employes_

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KNOCKS HIM DOWN -Gene Smith of Georgetown getalmocked
to the court by Ed Pinckney of VWanova, during the first hall ol their
game at the Capital Centre Thursday nlgta. Georgetown was awarded

the ball after Smith was nm down by Pinckney while trying for a two
point play. VWanova upset Georgetown 65-03 In double oveittme. (AP
Laserphoto).
/

MAC leaders
play Saturday

Some of this year's most Important elections In states throughout
the nation almost certainly will be
decilled by voters who don't even
live In this country.
That may appear to be scandalous, but it's quite legitimate
. because the absenlt!e batlots will be
cast by voters who are fully .
qualitied to participate in elections.
They're citizens of the United
States who are living in other
nations - a special category which
Includes more than two milUon
potential voters whose political
predilections have become increasIngly important to lioth major
parties.
The RepubUcan National Committee maintains a Republicans
Abroad organization, which, In
tum, sponsors local chapters In
almost 40 locations ranging from
Brunei and Malaysia to Belgium.
and Mexico.
In addition, the RNC has established· a special fund-raising operation called the Envoys Club which
solicits wealthy Republicans living
in other countries for contributions
of at least $250 per year.
·
In return for those donations, the
Envoys Club promises its members
"special contacts for you, your
f;unlly or your firm when traveling
.abroad" and "tnvillitlons to a
rnJnimum of four events a year.
including luncheons with key Republican offlce-liolders (and) special receptions."
,
The Democratic . National Committee sponsors Democrats
Abroad, bui iti ertorts to attract and
retain the support of pOtential
votel'l! has been somewllltt less
ambitious than the GOP's ·- with
the notable exception of representIng voters Dving abroad at the
party's quadrennial preSidential

tion of suspected leftists, they
recruited assassins from the mUltary services, pollee forces and
security agencies of right-wing
governments.
Today, the death squads are most
active in El Salvador, Guatemala
and Honduras. Dormant death
squads exist In almost every other
Latin American nation. In all these ·
countries, they are protected by
high-level military and government
officials.
Their activities are loosely controlled and coordinated by a sinister
International organization, known
as La Mano Blanco (The White
Hand) . ,"Our movements . are all
coordinated out of Mexico City,"
said a leader of the Honduran death
squad. "The name of the front
group there Is CAL - Latin
American Anti -Communist
ConfederaUon."

CAL Is the Latin American with our own spies in the university
aftlliate of the World Anti- and labor unions.
Communist League, a right-wing
"We'v~ eUminated 16 people so
organization linked to ultra - far. They were either labor unioconservative groups In Asia, Eu- nists or university professors - all
rope and the United States. A confirmed Marxists."
Mexican lntelllgence source said
El Lobo explained how hls deatlh
CAL was founded by a neo-Nazi squad operates. "First we investisplinter group afte~ World War II. gate and follow a suspect who has
"CAL Is also called The White come to our attention," he said.
Hand, The White Force and the ''Then, it we decide the case merits
White Brigade," said the source.
. further action, we either kidnap tlhe
My associate Jon Lee Anderson, victim or leave him an anonymous
working through a contact in the warning."
The usual warning, he said, in a
Honduran secret pollee, arranged a
face-to-face meeting with the Hon- scrap of paper with the message:
duran death squad leader. I'll cali "Men don't tight with fiowert, tlhey
hlm El Lobo, which means "The tight with bullets."
"U the suspect heeds our warnWolf."
El Lobo said he and some friends Ing, and we confirm his rehabilitation, we leave hlin alone," said El
founded the Honduran death squad
in 1979 with 85 members. "Now we Lobo. "It he doesn't, we machine
have 400," he boasted, "ar.d we've gu~ him." He did not explat.n how
successfully Infiltrated the leftists they can be sure the victim simply
failed to understand the cryptic
warning.

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abroad _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _R_ob_e_rt_Wt_al_te_rs
be assigned to a1. organization
called the Latin American Regional
Democratic Party:
The more than tlhree milllon U.S.
citizens Uvtng outside thls country
-about two-thirds of whom are old
enough to vote) include about one
mUlion members of. the arrnfd
forces, 22,500 civllian employees of
the. federal government (most of
whom are assigned to embassies
throughout the world) and 430,&lt;XXJ
spouses, qhildren and other
dependents.
The largest single group of
non-government employees is composed.··of penple who work for
multinational corporations based In
thls. rountry living In West Ger-

many, about 300,&lt;XXJ apiece in
Mexico and Canada, 125,&lt;XXJ In
Great Britain and lOO,&lt;XXJ In Italy.
At the bottom of the scale, the
State Department has Identified 90
U.S. citizens' living in Mauritius, 89
In the Congo, 8lln the Seychelles, 72
In Laos and 51 in Guinea-Bissau.
For those living outside this
country, participating in domestic
elections has tradlflonally been
difficult. Requesting a registration
form, submitting It and then
repeating that process with an
absentee ballot can require as
many as six Intercontinental mailings, each subject to the vagarfes of
local mall service.
Some states require that absen-

tee forms be notarized, a procedure
which can be complex and costly in
some nations. Other states have
established tight deadlines which
are almost Impossible for those
living In rural areas of distant
countries to meet.
But the political stakes are hlgh
enough to justify the continuing
efforts to surmount those dltflcultles ...The number of tl!ls country's
citizens living In other nations Is
equivalent to the 34th most populous state.
With fiercely contested elections
regularly decided by very slim
margins, those votes can be crucial
to both parties and to candidates In
every state.

Mancini-Chacon fight set Saturday
RENO, Nev. (AP) - "We're
going to get In there and pla;Y a good
game of catch," says Bobby
Chacon.
"I hope not," says Ray Mancini.
"I hope I'll do aU the pitching."
But the game the two friends play
Is not basebaU, but boxing, and .
critics say both catch too many
punches, bleed too much.
Both men claim they h~ve more
boxing ability then they generally
are credited with having.
Thursday, they tried to laugh off
their detractors at a news confer-

I

"We both love to hlt," said
Chacon, the fonner World Boxing
Councllfeatherwelght and super
champion. "We both

·"'"I've been trying to bleed all
during
training, but it won't come.
lovetohlt.
The doctor did a good job."
In hls last tight lnwhlchherallied
to win a 12-round decision over
Cornelius Boza-Edwards last May
15
at Las
Vegas, to
Nev.,
Chacon
needed
24 stitches
close
cuts.
Some observers thought the fight
shouldhavebeenstopped.
"I wore red today because
ev~rtxX!y talks about how much
blood there's going to be," said the
22-year-old Mancini, of Youngstown, Ohlo.

THE MEIGS. INN
IS OPEN!
HOTa DESK: .8 A.M~ to 12 Midnight
BAR &amp; LOUNGE: 4 P.M. to 12 .Midnight
PIZZA SHAcK: 4 P.M. to 12 Midnight ·

fam1lles, on a niost imporll!-nt time
:which was in the paper on Jan. 11, of year. I'm sure they would have
:alxiut the iiOWer outage.
rather been home, bill they put·
.•- In addition· to the ,ones already their job before their fa~.
:uuml!ed. I think they forgot some.of
E;ven ·thougb I had eli!ctrtc on:the most important PeoPle tn- Christmas· Eve, I'm taking this
·volved, which are the men from opportunity to personally tha!lk
:0hlo Power who were caned out to · each and every one of thein for a lob
.
:restore the power. These men were wen done. Ialsohopetllatitterthey oomtnattna conventions.
At this year's Democratic Na:cut ,in the elements of sub zero got tllaw!!d out, they had a very
Weather, for eight to 10 bours · merry Christmas! ! ! - Paula. Uonal ConVention, ftve delegate
votes wiD be cast by IlerJ19crats
without the benefit of heat either.
Wood, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, Ohlo.
Abroad
and anothel; five votes wiD
• • They alsO were without tlhelr

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ence tor their scheduled 15-round
tigbt Saturday night for the World
Boxing Association lightweight
championship held by Mancini. ·
The 32-year-old Chacon, of Oro·
Ville, Calif., will be bidding for a
thtrd world title In the bout on the
University of Las Vegas-Reno
campus. It will be televised live by
Home Box Office beginning ai1out
7:15p.m., PST.

. ·OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
(BAR ONLY IS t:LOSED SUNDAY

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a slx-!Xllnt deficit in the final 23
seconds of regulation. Michael
Jackson's 22-foot jump shot at the
buzzer sent the game Into overtime
at 59-59. .
Neither team s~red In the first
overtime as trth teams misfired
from the t10u.· ar 1 the free·throw
line.
in the second oliertime, VIllanova' s Frank Dobbs, who had missed
two shots'in theflnal13seconds of the
first extra period, scored tour quick
points to put the Wildcats ahead. A
jump shot by Ja~kson and two foul
shots by Patrick Ewing, who had
been held scoreless for~24 minutes,
tied It and lett it up to WUbur.
Wllbur scored 10 points while
Pressley had 17 points and 17
rebounds.
Top Ten
North Carolina and Maryland
played on even terms in College
Park, Md., until the final two
minutes, when the Tar Heels pulled
away In the Atlantic Coast Conference matchup.
With North Carolina leading 63-62
and 2: mleft, Sam Perkins scored
five consecutive points and Michael
Jordan added four to seal the
victory.
Perkins scored 18ofhls26polnts In
the second halt and Jordan added 21
as undefeated Nortlh Carolina won
for the nth consecutive time.
Len Bias had 24 points for
Maryland, which had a nine-game
wtnntng streak snapped and feU to
10-2.

Houston's Akeem Ulajuwon asserted hlmseit with 18 points, 10
blocked shots and a career-high 25
rebounds as the Cougars won tlhelr
28th consecutive Southwest Conferencegame.
Michael Young led the visiting
Cougars, 14-2, with 21 points.
Houston raced to a 25-8 lead and
never got within six po!r1ts the rest of
the way.
Tempers flared in the second half
when Texas Tech's Tony Benford
and Houston's Eldon Franklin
exchanged blows and were ejected.
Sophomore center Dave Felli hit
10 of 12 shots from the field and
scored acareer-hlgh 24 points to lead
Texas-El Paso. The host Miners,
14-{), took the lead two minutes Into
the Western Athletic Conference
game and stayed ahead the rest of
the way.
. SecondTen
Senior forward Bernard Thompson scored 17 points as host Fresno
State had little trouble with CalSanta Barbara.
Thompson scored eight of his
points In the final two minutes of the
first halt as the Bulldogs, 11-2, took a
35-24 lead .
Ed Catchings scored 18 points to
pace visiting Nevada-Las Vegas.
The Runntn' Rebels scored the final
nine points of the first halt to take a
43-26lead .
Nevada-Las Vegas improved to
13-1 with the Pacific Coast Athletic
Association victory.
Steve Harris scored 25 points and
Ricky Ross had 24 as Tulsa held ott
crosstown rival Oral · Roberts.

Tulsa, 14-0, took the lead for good

when Ross sank a half-court shot at
the halftime buzzer to give the
Hurricane a 39-37 edge.

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~NUARY 13 thru 1!]
fRIDAY thr' THURSDAY:

Purdue defeats
Buckeyes, 63-52

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gene
Keady, the coach of Purdue·~
unbeaten Big Ten basketball. team.
just shakes hls head over the
development of Jim Rowinski.
"He's quite a story. It's unusual
for a walk-on todowhat he'sdoing,"
Keady said.
ByGEORGESTRODE
· athlete that he's going to score,"
What Rowinski Is doing Is keeping
AP spons Writer
Hedric said. "The thing I Uke about
Purdue, picked to finish ninth In the
Danny Nee, Ohio University's hlm Is hls improvement in reboUnd· league, in the early Big Ten title
coach, fears Ron Harper, but he lng and defense. He's worked hard chase. The Boilermakers are 3-0
knows he cannot devote all of the on them."
after cUpping Ohlo State 6J.52
Bobcats' deterisive time to Miami's
Hedrtc admits he was satisfied to Thul'!day night.
star Saturday In their showdown for come out of a December nonThe 6-foot-8, 240-pound Rowinski,
the Mid-American Conference bas- conference schedule with a 6-3 a college starter for the first time as
ketbatl lead.
record. The Redskins beat Indiana, a senior, muscled Ohlo State for 21
"Harper's really the key to Dayton, Xavier, Cincinnati and
points. "The biggest thing was they
Miami,'' Nee said, "but an of Davidson in that stretch. "We couldn't match up with Rowinski,"
Miami's starters are close to 10 played every NBA team once," the
Keady said ofOhlo State, 0-2 and 7-5.
points a game. That's fine balance. Miami coach cracked.
"I'm not surprised we're 3-0.
It means It you concentrate comMeanwhile, Ohlo has matched We've beaten some good teams this
pletelyonHarper, therearethefour Miami's 9-3 record for aU games season." said Rowinski. His 16-potnt
other guys and the bench that can with the 1983 Mid-American touma- scoring average has helped Purdue
hurt you."
ment champions losing at DePaul,
to a 9-3 start.
Harper, the 6-foot-7 forward who Duke and Ohlo State.
Rowinski preferred to pass credit
Hedrtc has Saturday's game all for Purdue's first league road
was the league's 1983 Freshman of
the Year, leads the Redskins with figured out. "The team that
triumph thls winter to the defense.
averages of 19 points and 8 executes best and stays out of foul
''Thekeytobeatlnganyteamwith
rebounds. Chuck Stahl, John WU- troublewillwin,"hesaid. "It'smore quick guards is containing the
Ioughby, John Marx and Eric important for us because It's at . guards. That's what we did tonight.
Newsome average between six and home and it's against the team that
Our big early lead helped us control
l.s su pposed to win th e
lOpolntsforMlamL
the tempo," he said.
The Redskins, picked to finish championship."
Rowinski scored seven of his
fourth in the Mid-American race,
Ohlo likes the inside power game team's first eight points. leading
have buzzed by three straight revolving around 6-9, IDpound
Purdue to an S.2 cushion the
opponents. twoofthemontheroad, center John Devereaux and 6-7,
Boilermakers never lost.
to match title favorite Ohio's 3-0 235-poUnd forward VIc Alexander.:
"We felt we had to get the ball into
league record.
Devereaux, all-league last season,
Rowinski, contain (Ron) Stokes and
In other Mid-American games averages 17 points and Alexander
(Troy) Taylor and clamp down on
Saturday, Western Michigan (1-2) 14.
(Tony) CampbeU," Keady said,
plays at Central Michigan (2-1), Ball
The game will give the Bobcats a
Although Taylor shook loose for~
State (0-3) at Bowtlng Green (1-2), shotatrevenge. MiamlclippedOhlo
points, Campbell settled tor 10 and
Kent State (1-2) . at Eastern Michl-, twice last season, knocking the Stokes for six, a combined 18 points
gan (1-2) and Northern illinois (1-2) Bobcats out of the Mid-American's
under their averages thls season.
regular-season title race, won by
at Toledo (2-1).
"We were too tight at the
Darrell Hedric, Miami's coach, BowlinJ!Green.
beginning," said Eldon Mtller, Ohlo
expected Harper to provide the
"That was one of the blights (for State's coach. "We put too much
scoring punch in the Redklns' 9-3 us) on an otherwise super year,"
pressure on ourselves""
overall start. "He's a good enough Nee said.
Ohlo State. with no starter taller

deaths~----,-------Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rs_on

Berry's World

() 11184byNEA, Int

Jackson was · the hlt of the
year-end fund-raising tour by. the
Democr.atic Pa'rty's hopefuls, demonstrating that political pros are not
Immune to the oratorical style that
has been tyrnlng on black lt!enagers for years.
White as well as black audiences
are responding elsewhere, as reported by political writer Robert
Wagman on Jackson's pre-primary
swing through New Hampshire.
Of course, there is no telling at
this point how much ofthls attention
Is curiosity and how much may
translate Into votes and delegates.
But there never Is, even with great
communicators, untO the votes are
In, Is there?
U I were plotting Republica11
strategy - and would I ever be out
. of place - I would be beginning to
be worried about Jackson. Not as
the likely Democratic nominee,
which remains exceedingly unlikely, but .for the stimulus he has
brought to the Democrats who, in
accommodating hls candidacy, can
only gain.
So he Is challenging the nominatIng rules thls time around. Why not,
It they give him an Issue? As they
do.
·
That's polltlcs. Just conceivably
winning politics, whoever the Democratic nominee turns out to be. U
Jackson succeeds In effecting
changes In those areas where black
registration still" lags, the party
stands to ·be the big gainer on
Election Day.
F1ytng off to Syria was also
politics, but of a type not without
precedent. Dwight Eisenhower,
we've been reminded, went to
Korea.
Jackson might have .botched It,
tor hlmsett, for Goodman and for
u.s. policy.

By 'lbe heodalecl Pre11i
Dwight Wilbur told hls VUianova
teammates during .a last-second
huddle tluft he would sink the
winning basket to upset fourthranked Georgetown.
He didn't belive It, though.
But when a Villanova play
designed to go elsewhere broke
down, Wilbur got the ball in the right
comer and hit an 18-footer that lifted
the Wildcats to a 61&gt;-63, doubleovertime victory over Georgetown
In a Big East Conference game
Thul'!day night at Landover, Md.
A few miles away, top-tanked .
North Carolina stayed unbeaten by
downing No. 5 Maryland 74-62. in
other top games, No. ?Houston beat
Texas Tech ~; No. 8 Texas-El
Paso breezed by San Diego State
75-59; No. 13 Fresno State topped
Cal-Santa Barbara 69-51; No. 14
Nevada-Las Vegas roUted San Jose
State 105-77 and No. ~Tulsa topped
Oral Roberts 84-78.
With the score tied ~. VUlanova used its last timeout with 16
seconds remalning to set up its final
strategy. It was thenthatWUburtokl
HaroldPressleythathewouldmake
the winning shot.
"I didn't believe it then and I sttll
can'tbelteve It now,"Wtlbursaid. "I
was the last -option on the play. We
were going to go to Pressley and it
we couldn 'tget inside, then oneofthe
guards would shoot."
"When I shot the batl,l thought we
were in for another overtime," said
the sophomore guard.
Georgetown, 13-2, had overcame

than 6-7, has been at a height
disadvantage In nearly every game
this season.
MUier dismissed that by saying:
"One thing we can't do Is get bigger,
but one thing we can do Is play
bigger. We can 't get any
consistency."
Ricky Han and Steve Reid, the
Boilermakers' guards, supported
Rowinski with a combined 21 points,
11 of them by Hall,one of five Purdue
seniors.
Campbell, all-conference last sea·
son, stretched his double-figure
scoring streak to 46 games. He
stuffed a field goal in tlhe last minute
to reach double figures.
Greg responsible
Eifert and Rick
Bullock
were
for slowing
Campbell.
"We {ell our forwards were good
enough defensively to keep the ball
away from him. And there's a secret
about playing hlin I won't tell you
until after the next timeweplayOhlo
State,' Keady said.
in other games involving Ohio
teams Thursday night. Youngstown
State downed Austin Peay 73-63and
Akron posted an 89- T1 victory over
Murray State in the Ohio Vatley
Conference, Kentucky 'Wesleyan
·nipped Ashland 47-46 In a G~at
Lakes Valley Conference game, and
Walsh cruised past Mount Vernon
Nazarene gg.73 in the Mid-Ohlo
Conference.
Youngstown State's surprising
Penguins boosted their record to 9-3
overan and 2-{) In the OVC behind 17
points apiece from sophomore
guard Bruce Timko and junior
forward Ray Robinson. The Penguins also had 15 points from junior
forward Troy Williams.
Senior guard Joe Jakublck went
7-for-7 from the fioor and made
seven tree throws in the second halt
to spark Akron. He wound up with 35
points, seven above hls seasonal
average, for the game. The lead
changed hands 19 times 1n the first
halt before the Zips broke thtngs
open.

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Friday, Jom~Gry 13, 1984

...-

Logan's crew wlth 14 points and 11
rebounds. Rhonda Haddox, Jenny
Miller, and B. J . Gordon aU had six
each. Gordon also added eight
rebounds.
Lisa Freshler led the winners
with 14 whUe teammate Amy Jago
added 13.
The loss dropped Meigs from a
second place tie In the TVC with a
7·3 slate. The locals are 8-3 overaU.

M"Iai made 16of 48trom the floor
for 33 percent and six o( 16 foul allOts
tor 38 percent.. The Lady
connected on ntne of 18 from the
charity stripe tor 110 percent.
The Marauderettes had Z1 rebounds, 2f turnovers, and were
called for 17 personals. Federal
Hocking was whistled for 18 fouls.
In the reserve gall)e, Federal
Hocking defeated Meigs 31-25 In

Lancers

0\lertlme. Meigs went to 6-4 on the
year, fyfarta Muaaer led Meigs with
13 and J!lllll MIUer added six. Kim
Chapman led the winners with
seven.
.
Meigs Is In action again Saturday
when they travel to Miller. The
reserve game -tarts at 6 p.m.

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The Daily Sentinel

Published every afternoon , Monday
throuah Friday, Ill Court St,...t , by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company . Mul·
tlmedla , Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 4.1769, 992·
2156. Second clan postage paid at Po·
meroy, Ohio.
·

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The Dally Sentine l on 3, 6 or 12 month
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Sports World
By ww Ql1mlley
AP Cormpoadeal

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lntlde Ohio

STEWART- Not allowing Fed·
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in any one quarter, the unbeaten
Meigs !rash rolled to a 51·23 win
here Thursday.
J . R. Kitchen led 11 Meigs scorers
wlth 14 points while Donnie Ilecker
added eight. Huey Eason led In
rebounding with six while Mark
Elliott had five and Scott Powell
and Wes Howard had three caroms
each. Meigs lsnow1~ontheyear.
"We played well overall, especially In the third quarter when we
put It out or range," said Meigs
coach Phil Harrison.

Meigs hosts the same Federal
Hocking crew this Monday at 5: 55
p.m. Federal Hocking replaces
Miller for that date because Miller
no longer fields a freshman team.

13 w..k, .... .......... .... .. ............ Sl4.04
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~

TRINITY CHURCH, Rev. W. H. Pen1n,
putor: Debbie Buck, Sunday School aupt.
GroceriesChurch School 9: Ill a.m.: wonhlp lt!tvfce
GeneroJ Merchondist
IO:JI under
a.m. Cholll
' reheonol,
1\lesday 7:JI .._,_ _ _ _ _Rocint
f4f·_
2SS4.
p.m..
dln!ctlon
ol Allct Neue.
___
_ _...1
POMEROY CHURCH OF 1liE NAZA· ~
RENE, Corner Union 11tc1 Mulberry, ~­
Thomas Glen McOuna. putar. Oydt Hend·
Wtdneoday evenln(l YtlUf\1 ladleo awdllary, 6
..._ S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.:
p.m. W - y family wcrltalp. 7 p.m.
rnornJncwonhlptO:lla.m.: ......,.._
IIAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, Near
Long Bottom. Edlel Hart, putcr. Sunday
6 p.m.:
WOclneaday, 7 p.m.
GRACE EPISCXJPAL CHURCH - 3'l6 E.
ICitool, 9:30a.m.: Wcrshlp 10: Jla.m.: Prayer
Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday ...-v1ceo Holy
meeting 7:JI p.m. Thurltlay.
Sunday Monday T - Wodnetdly Ttu1day Frday Saturday
&lt;Mnmunlon on the first Sunday o1 HCh
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTISI',
Woe
.......
PuJm
John
Puln'l GaAatioN
L.uke
month, and ccmblntd with mornlna prayer on
Corner Ash and Plum. Leslie Hayman.
22:24·30 80:1·22 72:1·20
1:1· 18 87:1-7
3:21
2:8-21
thetltJ)'d Sunday. MomJnaprayer and sermon
pastor. Sunday school 10 a.m.: MornJng
4:7
on au other Sunday• o1 the month. Clurch
Worship, II a.m.: WEdnesday and Saturday
School and nunery care provided. Collee
Evening services, 7: Jl p.m.
hour In the Partah HaU Immediately loiiOwlng
Jbt aervlce.
MEIGs
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, :ZU W.
COOPERATIVE PARISH
MaJt! St., Nell Proudloqt, pastor. Bible 1&lt;hool,
IJNITED METIIOIIIIIT CJIUIICII
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
9:JI a.m.: rnomJna worship, 10:JI a.m.:
F11 - · Jllred&lt;r
· HOBSON CHRISI1AN UNION. Rev. Tom
Y!J!Ith meetlnp, 6: Jl p.m.: evenlnjJ wonhlp,
Rev. Jtunel E. Cor!JIU, ~~
staten, pastor. Sunday School, 9: Jl a.m.:
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS.
NOII'I1II!WIT aAJSTER
t&gt;Vening servtce. 7: Jl p.m. Wednesday prayer
Portland-Racine Road. William Roush, pas7: ll p.m. Wedneaclay nf8ht pra)'ef meeting
and Bible study, 7:ll p.m.
~.lloo An:lw
meetlnjJ, 7:ll p.m.
tor. Unda Evans, church school diredor.
church school, 9: J) a .m.; morning worshlp,
111E SALVATION ARMY. ru Butternut
~- lloJBEARWAU.OW RIDGE CHURCH OF
Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wining In~CHRIST. Duane Warden, minister. Bible
IO:ll a.m.: Wednesday evening prayer
services. 7:JI p.m.
Sunday hollnt!u ..-Jng, 10 a.m.: Sunday
ALFRED - Chw-ch School 9: JJ a.m.:
class, 9: Jl a.m.: m&lt;rnJng worship, 10: ll
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev. Earl
School, 10: ll a.m. Sunday School, YPSM
Worahfp, U a.m.: UMYF, tic J1 p.m.: UMW,
a.m.: evenina wonhip, 6: Jl p.m. WEdnesday
Shuler, pastor. Worship service, 9::11 a .m.
Elollo Adamo, leader. 7:ll p.m.,lllvatlon
Third n-lay, 7:JI p.m. Community f1r1t
Blblestudy, 6:Jip.m.
..-Jna, VIJ1oul Jpeallen and mlllic apo.
Sunday. (Archer)
NEW STIVERSVIJ.LE COMMUNITY
Sunday school, 10: ll a.m. Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7: Jl p.m.
ctala. Thurwday -11! lla.m. to 2 p.m., Ladles
CHESI'ER - Wonhlp 9 a.m.: Chw-ch
CHURCH, Sunday School se!Vlce, 9: 4~ a.m.:
CARLETON JNI'ERDENOMINATIONA!..
Home Leque, membtn In chlrlf, aD
School tO a.m.: Bible Study, Thunday, 7p.m.
Worship oeivtce, IO:JI a.m.: Evangellstlc
women Invited; 6:45 p.m. Thunllay, Clqlo
UMW, flrlt Thunday, 1 p.m.: Communion
Service, 7:JI p.m. Wednesday; Prayer
CHURCH, Kingsbury Road. Rev. David
Curfman. pastor. Sunday school, 9: ll a.m.
flrlt Sunday. (Archer!
meeting, 7:JI p.m.. 'fhunday.
Cadet C1u1 (YOUJII Poople-Bible). 7:JI p.m.
Ralph Carl. superintendent: evening wcrshlp,
Bible Study and Prayer~. open to the
JOPPA - Worship, 9:JI a.m.: ·Church
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Pomeroy7: :11 p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday. 7: ll
public.
School, 10: Jl a.m. Bible Study, Wednesday,
Harr1sonvUie Rd.: ROOert Purtell, minister:
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
7:JI p.m. (Johnson)
Steve Stanley, Sunday school supt. Sunday
p.m.
OIRIST, 33226 Children's Homo Road
LONG IIOTI'OM - Cburch School, 9:JI
school, 9:lla.m.: worshlpservice!O:Jia.m.: · LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , Jndy
(County Road 76) 992-6235. Vocal millie.
a.m.: Worship, 7 p.m.: Bible Study, WEdnes·
Evening worship Sundat. 7 p.m. and
Holland, pMtor; Wallace Damewood.
Sunday School Supt. Worship service 9 a.
Sunday worship 10 a.m.: Bible lludy II a.m.:
day, 7:JI p.m.: UMYF, Wedneaclay, 6 p.m.:
WedrM5day, 7 p.m.
wcnhlp, 6 p.m. Wedneaclay Bible otudy, 1
Communion First Sunday. (Archer)
ST. JOHN Lt.m!ERAN CHURCH, Pine m.: Bible School tO a.m .
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH. Rev.
p.m.
REEDSVILLE - Church School, 9:JI
Grove. The Rev. WUUam Mlddleswarth.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
a.m.: Wonhlp II a.m. (IJeeterJ
PBJt&lt;r. Church services 9: J1 a.m. Sunday
Thereon Durham, pastor. Sunday School at
9:ll a .m.; Mornlng wocshlp at 10::JJ a.m.
CHURCH - Oilton l.ucu, pastor. Sunday
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL...; Chw-ch
Schooi !O:JO a.m.
_.J.. • ..:.. • ·
Schooi9:Jia.m. Mrs. Worley Francis, ltlpt.
School, 9a.m.; Worship; to a.m.: Bible Study,
BRADBURY CHURCH OF O.:HiilliT, Paul
Sunday evening service at 7· Jl p.m.:
Prftchlna ...-v1ceo lint and third Sundiys Tuesday, 7:JI p.m.: UMW, Third Tuesclay,
Pran,past&lt;r. Sundayschooi,9:Jia.m.,Larry
Thursday oervtces at 7: Jl p.m.
FREEOOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
lollc1Ning Sunday School. Youth ~
7:JI p.m.: Communion first SUnday
Haynes, S. S. Supt.; morning worship. IO:ll
every Sunday, 7::1) p.m.
(Archer!
·
a.m.
Knob. located on County Road 31. Rev.
RACINE CHURCH OFll!E NAZARENE.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
Lawrence Gluese~~C~~mp, pasta": Rev. Roger
Preachlna 9:ll a.m .. lint ·and lltCOnd
CEift'IIALaAJSTER
Rev. Thomas H. Collier. pastor, Martha . WUUtrtl, assistant pasta". Prer:hing servi·
Sundays o1 each month: thfrtl lltcl fourtll
lleY. I...,.. &amp; Corbllt
Wolfe, Chairman o1 the Boanl ol Christian
ces, Sunday 7:JI p.m. Pra}'&lt;r meeting
Sundays each month, wonhlpaervlt.'ftat7:ll
NWe. Sunday School, 9:JI a.m.: morning
Wednesday, 7:JI p.m.: Gary GrtHith. leader
Youth groupo. Sunday evening. 6: Jl p.m. with
~· Wednelday evoniJtp at 7:JI p.m.,
::::
wcnhlp, 10:Jia.m.: Sunday evening worship,
yer and Bible Study.
I
...., .,
7:JI p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7:JI
Roger and VIolet WIU!ord as leaders.
Rev. Ail*ew'PI
Communion service first Sunday each month.
SEVEN111·DAY ADVENTISI', Mtilbeny
. p.m. '
llttlhts Rood. Pomeroy. Michael Pion·
ASBURY ;Syracuse) - Worship, 11 a.m.:
RACINE F1RST BAP11ST, Don L. Walker,
WHITE'S CHAPEL. Coolville RD. Rev.
Roy Deeter, past&lt;r. Sunday schooi9:Jia.m.:
- · putor: Marie Spires, Sabbath School
~;"h w~~:~ :;m.: ' ~ S:~
Pastor, Robert Smith. Sunday School supt.:
wocshlp service. lO::n a.m. Bible study and
Supt. Sabbath School 11 at 2p.m. onSatunlay
y,
ll
• ~-:::;~, •WEd
Sunday School, 9:ll a.m.: morning worship.
prayer service WEdnesday , 7: Jl p.m.
With wonhfp servlt.'ft lollowlng at 3:1!1 p.m.
1\lesday, 7.,;. p.mUMW
.:
hS nda•
...;
10:40 a.m.: Sunday evening worship, 7:ll
Rt.ri'UND FIRST IIAPTlST CHURCH- ' nesday, 6: ~p.m.:
· 1ourt u y, 6: ~
p.m.: WEdnesday evening Bible study, 7:JI
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Dan
Monlwt, pastor; Bill Nicholson, Sunday
Silt« HatTiell Warner, Supt. Sunday School,
P-~~J;'~E _ Wcrshlp 9 a.m.: Chw-ch
p.m.
school supt. Sunday schoot 9::1) a. m.:
9:JI a.m.: mornlllll Wcrshlp,10:45,a.m. ,
O
Blbl Sud
~--•~
BURUNGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
POMEROY FIRST BAPTISI', Davtcl
School, I a.m.:
e 1 y, ·~Y. 7: ~
Burlingham, Ohio, Rev. Okey Ray Lauder·
morning worship and communion, lO:lla.m.
Mann. minister; WWiam Snoufler, Sunday
p.011.: UMW. First Monday, 7:.:D p.m.:
milt. pastor, Ph. 992-7324. SundaySchooiiO:OO
RUTLAND SIDLE METHODIST- Amos
6
TIUis, pastor; Sonny Hudson. supt. Sunday
Scltool sup!. Sunday School, 9:JI a.m.:
~~=:y.6(~i.,~~:"hearsal, ' ll
a.m.: Sunday evenl~ servtce. 7:00 p.m.:
school. 9:ll a.m. Mornlngworshlp,lO:]) a .m.
MOI'nillaworshlp IO:JI .m.
FLATWOODS_ Church School. 10 a.m.;
Wednesday evening service, 7:00 p.m.
Sunday evening service, 7: ~- WEdnesday
~~~N ~· k~ Worship, 'II a.m.: Bible Study, Thunday, 7 ·
DANVILLE WESLEY AN, Sunday School,
evening service 7:00p.m .: WMPO Program,
sw.ia School
pass~ a~hool 30
p.m.: UMYF. Sunday, 6 p.m. (RDthemlch)
9:Jia.m.: rnontlniworshlp10:45a.m.: youth
9:00a.m. each Sunday momlng.
Y
"'·
Y
• 9'
FORESTRUN-Worshlp,9a.m.: Church
""""""'·6:45p.m.: ......,ung worship, 7:ll
a!!~,."' '"!'"1 :_~~.."·v 10 'Jal!; evening
Schooi,!Oa.m.: Clloli'Practlce,'nlesday,6:ll
p.m.: Weclneoday, 7:ll p.m. Prayer 11tc1
7
w~- .... : ~p. m . ·~Y
uon.
~--•·
7· ~ pm
Praise.
- p.m.:
p.m.: UMW • •-t
~·
•~Y.
.~
..
W -y, Prayer --~
~·~~. 7: ~ p.m.;
(Nelson)
DANV!LLEHOLINESSCHURCH,Iocated
RUTLAND CHURCH OF 111E NAZAMlulon Friends, 7:ll p.m.: Girls In Actlonl,
HEA11I tMidtlleportl _ Church School,
on Rouh! 325 belwoen VInton and LanpvUie.
RENE. Rev.' Uoyd D. Grlmm, Jr.. poster.
7'll p.m.: Choir Practice,
Sunday School, 9: lJ a.m.; worship service,
~::p.m . :
9: J1 a.m.: Worship, 10: lla.m.: Bible Study,
Rev. Ben Watts, pastor. Sunday School, 9:JI
lO::Kl a.m.: young people's service, 6 p.m.
: ~AY COMMUNITY CHURCH Old
Tuesday, 10 a.m.: Ut.jW, second Monday,
a.m., llolJby Lambert S. S. Supt.; Morning
Evangelistic service, 6:.J) p.m. Wednesday
~ Rd Oextor p
7:ll p.m.: UMM. third Monday, 7:ll p.m.
Worshfp, 10:Jia.m.: ChiJdren's Happy Hour
W"""'· ~-u J
se!Vlce, 7 p.m.
~·~
·•
· u 1cr ....,. ~ • r.
(RDblnson)
6:45 p.m. Prayer It Bible Study, 7:ll p.m.
PUler. Sunday School :o a.m. Sunday
MINERSVD.LE _ Worship Servl..,, 10
Mllllonary ..-Jng flrlt Wednesday oleach
MASON CHURCH OF OIRIST. Miller St ..
Mason, W. Va. Eugene L. Conger, minister.
......,.. - · 7 p.rn.: Thunday evenln(l
a.m.: Cllw-ch School, II a.m.: UMW, third
month. 7:JI p.m. For Information caU
Bible Study,IO a.m.: Worship II a.m.
~ ~:SERNACLE CHURCH. Bailey Wednesday, I p.m.: Choir practice, Monday, ~vER RUN BAPTISJ', BUI Uttle, Sunday
and 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study, vocal
7
Run Road. Rev. Emmett Rawoon, putcr.
' ~/A"::i.'=h _Worship Service, 9 put&lt;r. StevoUttle,S.S. Supt.Sundayochool, music, 7 p.m.
10 a.blm.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF .GOD. Dudding
lfandleySunda ~~~~~~unday
a.m.: Church School, 11 a.m.: UMW. second
10 a.m.: rnontlni worship, 11 a.m. Sunday
Lane. Mason. W. Va . Rev. Ronnie 8. Rose,
Y "'~~.
~
..ce : ~ p.m.: 81 e
~--•
~
ev-•·~
--•··
••7~
Th"-•·
•~ay, 7:~p.m.: UMYFI as ,~.-•
·~ay , 7: ~
"~-. worship, 7:JI p.m. Pra,_ ..
~~ ...
Pastoc. Sunday School 9:45 a .m.; Morning
t~ac·~•· : ~p.m.
w-Y·
p.m. (Rubenklng) .
and Bible study. T!otnday, 7:JI p.m.: youth
Worship 11 a.m. Evening Service 7::1&gt; p.m.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St., Syra·
POMEROY _ Church SChool, 9: 1~ a.m.:
meettna Wedneod,oy at 7 p.m. .
Wednesday Women's Ministries 9 a.m.
~
~=· 10nda~~Y· &amp;venina
worshlpservtce,10:lla.m.: Choir rehearsal,
OIRISTIANFEJ.LOWSIIIPCHURCH,J83
t meeting and prayer). Prayer and Bible
• u aRTyaCHURCH OFyOIR,
p.ISTm. IN
Wednesday, 7:JI p.m.: UMW, second Tues·
N. 2nd Ave., Mldtllepol'l. Sunday School, 10
MIDDLEPO
Study 7 p.m.
·
day, 7: :W · p.m.: UMYF, Sunday, 6
a.m. Sunday and Wednesday Evening
HARTFORD CHUROI OF CHRIST IN
CHRISI1AN UNION, Lawrence Manley,
p.m.(Corbltt)
Servloes7:ll p.m.
OIRISTIAN UNION, The Rev. William
put&lt;r. Mrs. RUI!tll Young, Sunday School
ROCK SPRINGS _ Church School. 9: Ill
OIESI'ER CHURCH OF GOD, Rev. R. E.
CampbeU, pastor. Sunday School, 9:ll a.m.:
Su~~~ Sc~ a.m.
o.m.: Wa"shlp. 10 a.m.: Bible Study,
Robinson, putor. Sunday ochool, 9:JI a.m.:
James Hughes, supt.;· evenlng service, 7:lJ
w_
: p.m.
prayer
Wednesda~. 7: J1 p.m.: UMYF (Seniol"l .
wonhlp oervtce. II a.m.: evening oervtce. 7
7: ~ p.m:
p.m. WEdnesday t&gt;Venlng prayer meeting,
Sunday
P m . (Juniors! ~ other
p.m.: you~sr.;tce· Wednelday, 7 p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD. Racine
"
' ""'
LANGS
CHRISI1AN CHURCH,
7:llp.m. Youthprayerservk:eeachTuesday.
Sunday,' 6 p.m.' (Rothemlch)
FAIRVIEW BI,BLE CHUROI, Leiart, W.
=-~· Jarnes Satterfield, poster. Morning
Rt.ri'UND _ ..Church School, 9:45a.m.:
RobertE.MIIIIft',past&lt;ir.SundayiChool,9:ll
Va.. Rt. I, Mark Irwin, pastor. Worship
wtnn~p9:45 a.m.: Sunday School10:45 a.m.:
worship, IO:Jia.m.: UMW (Evening Circle),
a.m.: Paul Musser, supt.: ltiOI'IIIn&amp; worslilp,
services. 9:Jia.m.: Sunday School. II a.m.:
evenln(l wonhlp 7 p.m. Tuesday, 7:JI p.m.,
seccnd Wednesday, 7:ll p.m.: UMW. !lt'l'Ond
10:JI a.m.: Sunday eveniJig · 7 p.m.:
evening W(X"ShJp, 7: :1) p.m. Tuesday cottage
ladlel prayer~- Wednesday, 7:Ji p.m.
Thursday, ! p.m. (Rubenklng)
mid-- aervlce, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
prayer meeting and Bible study, 9:JI a.m., .
YPE.
SALEM CENTER - ChW'Ch School, 10
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF 1lfE N~·
Worship service. WEdnesday, 7:JI p,m.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPI'IST, Comer
a.m.: Worship, 9:l~ a.m. ,Rubenklngl
RENE - Rev. James B. Kittle, pastar.
OUR SAVIOUR Lt.m!ERAN CHURCH Sixth lltcl Palmer. the Rev. Mark McCiuna.
SNOWVU.LE _ Worship, 8:30 a.m.:
Sherman CUndllf, superlnh!ndenl Sunday
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, w_. Va.
&amp;lnday O&lt;hool'9:., a.m.: Dan Whlh!, Sunday
Church School tO a.m. (R~benklngl
School. 9:JI a.m.: Morning Wcrshlp 10:ll
The Rev. Geor!!' C. Weirick, pastor. Sunday
School~" John ~bel. Sr., asst. sup!.
SOIJ'I1IERNQ.U!R'IIJI
a.m.: Ev..,.U.Ucoervtce,6p.m.Prayerand
SChool. 9::1) a.m.; Sunday worhslp, 11 a.m.
MornJng onhfp 10:1!1 a.m. Youth meeting
Rev. 1.,.,. M. Clark
praise Wet!J!eoday, 7 p.m.: youth~. 7
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, oow locatEd
7:JI p.m. Wednelday, JnclutllnjJ wee kb,
ReV. Paul McGtdro
p.m.
on Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near
!!r" bel~ JunlorYF uhotroalrnucula, and
J.Unlor
Rev. 0rvtJ1e
EDENR UNITED
_._
BRETIIRENSundayiNScCliRhooi!STO,
Flatwoods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Services
.Naenlor._.8 : c pra ce 8:~ p.m.
GROVE. Elden . 81- · pista".
I
on Sunday at IO:JI a.m. and 7:.11 p.m. with
w~ prayer meetlna and Bible study,
a.m.: Robert Reed, sup!.: Morning sermon,
SUnday school, 9:ll a.m.. bible study,
W - y . 7:30p.m.
a.m.: Sunday night ...-vlceo, Christian
Wi!iln-..day, 7:JJ·p:m.
-- GHURGIIOF-GIIRISTTMidtlleport, 5th and
7: JJ-p;m;;-Sona"-servlce~8·p.m~
FAITII FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
Main. Bob Melton. minister; AI Hartson,
a.m.: Chw-ch Preaching, 8:ll p.m. MJtl.- Prayer
OIRIST - St. Rt. 338, Antiquity. Pasta", Rev.
autlclall!' mlnllll!r; 'MIJte Gerlach, Sunday
Wedneaclay,IO meeting, Wednesday, 7 p.m., Alvin Reed, lay
Fl'anltlln Dickens. Sunday, morning, 10 a.m.
School Superln-t. ,Bible School, 9:JI
a.m.:
Wednes· leader.
Sunday evening, 7:Jip.m. Thundayevenlng,
a.m.; rnornJnc wonhip. JO:Jia.m.: evening
day, 11 a.m. (McGuire)
JIEMLOQ( GROVE CHRISI1AN. ~
~~p.m.
•
WCI'IItlp 1 p.m. W&lt;dnootlly Bible Study and
. CARMEL _ Chw-ch School, 9: J1 a.m.:
Watlon, · put&lt;r. CreiiiOII Pratt, Sunday
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAPTISI'
youth IIWP mtellnal. 7 p.in.
Worship, 10:4~ a.m.: (Second and Fourth School oupt. Morning worship. 9: Jl a.m.:
CHURCH, Pasta" RDbei1 Byers. Sunday
MJDOLEPORTCHURCHOFll!ENAZA·
Sunda)'&gt;l : Fellowship dinner with Suttoo, SUnday IChool, 10:Jia.m.: evenln(l - ·
School 10 a.m.: Worship Service 11 a.m.:
RENE, Co-puttn, ~. Olarl01 Coyl&lt;! and
third Thursday, 6:ll p.m. (McGuire I
7:JI p.m.
Sunday even~JW servtce, 7:00p.m.: WEdrtes·
Rev. NIIIC)' ~· BID \Vhlll!, Sunday 1&lt;hool
MT. UNION BAPTIST. Joe Sayre. Sunday
•
day evening servtce. 7: Jl p.m.
Supt. Sunday l&lt;hool, 9:30 a.m.: ltiOI'IIIn&amp;
EAST LETART_ Church School, 9 a.,;;:: . School SUpt. Sunday SChool 9:45 a.m.:
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURQI,
I"CC''Np, 10:30 Lin.; Sunday
Worship, tO a.m. (seccndandlourthSundays:
Evenlngworshfp6:40p.m.: Prayermeellng,
Inc. - Paul St., Mldtlleport. Rev. O'Dell
~ 7p.m.PrayermeetlngWedneoda)'7 . UMW, first Tueotlay. 7:ll p.m. (Ciarlt)
6:JI•p.m. WEdnesday ..
Manl~. past..-. Sunday School, 9:JI a.m.:
'
LETART FALLS - Worship, 9 a.m.:
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
Morning worship 10:30 a.m.: evening WCI'·
'Church School, 10 a.m. (Clark)
CHRIST, Vlnct!ot C. Wata:s. m, mlnllll!r;
lJI'IriED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
·ship, 7: Jl p.m. Tuesday, 12: ll p.m.' Women's
OF MEIGS OOUNI'Y, Rev. Wanda' Johnaon.
t,IORNING STAR - Won hip, 9: 4~ a.m.:
Herman lllact. aupor~a-. Sunday
prayer meeting; Prayer 11tc1 praise servi..,,
tllnlt:t&lt;r. Hartild Johnlon. dln!ct&lt;r of
Church School. IO:ll a.m.: Bible Study,
School 9:JI a.m.: eW!nlng IIII'VIce, 7 p.m.:
Wedneoclay, 7:JI p.m.
·
education.
Thund4Y, 7:JI p.m.' (White)
. w~ Bible School, 7 p.m.
HARRI90NVILLE
PRESBYTERIAN,
·MORSE CHAPEL- Church School, 9:30
CHESTER CHUR.CH OF THE NAZA·
Rt.ri'UND APOSTOUC CHURCH OF
a.m.: . Wt&gt;f?hlp,ll a.m. (White)
~
RENE · Rev. Herbert Grate, pastcr.
JESUS OIR!5T. Elder James M!Uer. Bible
Wtl'lhlp - • - 9a m · ChurchSchooiiO:ll
... ·-· · ·•,
· ' ·
PORTLAND - Church School, 6:30p.m.:
Frank Riffle, supt. Sunday School9: 30 a. · study, Wedneollay,7:llp.m.: Sunday School,
~:~DLEPORT
PRESBYTERIAN.
Worship, 7:Jip.m.: VMYF, Wednes4ay,7:JI
m.: WorahiJl service. II a.m. and 7 p.m.
10 a.m. Sunday night servtl:e, 7:ll p.m.
Cburdl !lehool. 9 a.m.: Morning . wtnhip.
p.m. (McGuire) .
,
Sunday. Prayer meetlna. Wed., 7 p.m.
'POMEROY \VtSLEY AN HOLINESS 10:11. Bible 11111t1y TuOiclay, 10 a.m.: J!jllle
RACINEWESLEYAN-Cllw-chSchooi,IO
lAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
HarrtlonvUie Road. Earl Flekil, l!Ut&lt;r.
ollltlf, 'fhundt"• 7:JI p.m
a.m.: Wtlrahlp, 11 a.m.: UMW, fourtll
CHURCH.~- ROOert MJ11er, putor: Lloyd
Henry Eblin, Jr., Sunday School SUpt. SundaY'
uNrrED PRESBY·
Monday 7:ll p.m.: Men's Prayer _,.,ut,
Wrllh~ DlrectCI' ol Cltrtatlan Education.
School 9: Jl a.m.: MOrning Worship 11 a.m.:
'I'EIUAH 01uldl. Clnlrdl !Jehooi,IO:Illa.m.:
W&lt;dnootlly. 7 a.m. (Clark)
, · SUnday School. 9:lla.m.: MomJna Wcrshlp,
Sunday evening oervtce, 7:JI p.m.: Prayer
mandltl WGIIdp, 11;30 ~.in.: Bible llllltly.
Sllri'ON - Church School, 9:30 a.m.;
10:30 a.m1: Choir Practlc:e, Sunday, 6:30
MeetlnjJ, Wednesday, 7:JI p.m.
111 a.m: Junior 11tc1 Senior llllb
mon111t1 woni1Jp. 10:45 a.tn. (lint lltclthlrtl p.m.: Evenlna Wonhfp. 7: ll p.m. Wednesday
....;,.f,_6_p.m.
!!untllll!: .lellowlblp diMtr with Clrmel,
Praier and Bible Study, 7:ll p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GODQ1UR01 OF GOD, Putcl'.
1l*d 'l1iln!"l~:ll p.m.(McGulrfl
DEXTER CHURCH OF CliJUST. Olarles
Clark. pastor: Worship service Sunday,
R.v Jolin J:va1a lluDda)' IChooJ. 10 a.m.; • KENO UIVI&lt;OI OF CHRIST, OIM!r. Ruae11, Sr.,.mlallll!r; Rick Macomber. sup!. ·Joy
10:00 a.m.: Sunday -.n a.m.: worship
a.m.: Qdloftn's c11urc1t.
Swala. ~t. Sunday 1&lt;hool 9: ll
Sunday achool. 9: ll a.m.; WCI'IItlp """"""'·
·seMce; 7:ll p.m. w~ pt'IIYel' meet·
11 a.m.•
evonlnl oenl&lt;e. 1 p.m.: • a.m....,.-.
10:lla.m. Bible Study, T\leldaY• 7:Jip.m.

7

alad dessert

FARiml'l'
Artzona St. 64. Waahlnli!'on St 1\2. OT
Colorado St. ~ . Air FOIW 46
F'rP!.ro Sf . ~. Cai. ·Sanla Barbara 51
F\iUmon Sl . fil , Pa&lt;'lfit' fB

SONS SlORE

Today'• modem woman may head e corporation, pilot a
jet or ride the rapids of the powerful Colorado River. You can
see It In her face ... the same pride ... that same brave spirit
that kopt the early p1oneet woman going.
ContinUally she loolu for the new, the exciting. Sometimes
she b disappointed and ,_, justiu then, she will tum to that
...,. p1t1ar of strenglh. The source of power that is available to
us all.
k 11 the spirit of God. passed on to us by the ploneets of the
Christian faith. centered I n - and His Holy Word. DlscOYer k
anew thil wool&lt; In wonhip.·

r:.ct

ValUe-Meals

TPXas-EI Paso 75. San Dit&gt;ao Sl . !ll

N. CaroUna 74. Maryland 62
Samford 81. M~r 78
TA'Inesst"(' Tech 10. E. KE"IUUC"ky ~
Va . Commonwt&gt;all h 64. N.C. CharloUt&gt;

Moon roof, air, PB &amp; PS, twin comfort seats &amp; velour interior, wire wheels, low mileage, one
owner.

Several Cheaples available in both Cas &amp; Trucks,

Ribege StetJk

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Ark.·UIIIe R.lx'k 79. GEorR1a Soollwrn

Thlsa 81, Oral Robforu 78

54

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.'

!!OUI1tWDIT

BapUst
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Centenary 69, Hardln·SimmoM ~
Clladt&gt;l 71. Chark'stoo, W.Va. ti2
f'.l('()rida St. 61\ SE l.oul•lana 57
Houston BapUsl ~ - NW l.outslana ~
JadtsonvUie Sl . UN. Aub.·MonlfllOrnt'fY

WAID CROSS

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'

'

•

•

.•

Nationwide Ins . Co .
of Columbus, 0 .

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992 ·2311 Pom eroy

Equipment

&amp;
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Rutlan~. Ohto 4S77S

Middleport

J . Wm . " Bill " Brown , Owner

Pf1merov . 0 .

Phone (614) 747 777 7

lng, 7:ll p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRE.TI!REN IN
OIRIST CHURCH. Rev. Robert ~.
pastor: Don WUI, lay leader. LocatEd In Tel&lt;8S
Community oil &lt;;R 82. Sunday school, 9: :ll
a.m.; Mcrntng worship servke, 10:45 a.m.;
t&gt;Venlng preachlng service serond and fourth
Sunda)'&gt;, 7: :ll p.m.: Christian Endeav&lt;r, first
and third Sunda)'&gt;, 7::ll p.m. Wednesday
prayer~ and Bible study, 7:JI p.m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS, 37319 StaU' Roote
124 (One mile east &lt;I Rutland! . Sunday, Bible
lecture 9:JI a.m.; Watchtower study, 10:20
a.m.: Tuesday, Bible study, 7:JI p.m.;
Thunday, Theocratic School, 7:JI p.m.;
Service Meeting, 8:20p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
' LocatEd on the 0. J . White Road oil hlgl1way
160. Pat Hen&amp;On, past&lt;r. Sunday School 10
a.m. Classes for aU ages. Junior Church
11:00; Morning Worship. 11:00; Adult Choir
pract"-" 6:00p.m. Sunday. Young People's,
Children's Church and Adult Bible Study,
Wednesday at 7:JI p.m.
HOPE BAPTISI' CHAPEL- 57UGrant St.,
Mldtlleport; SundaySchooi. IOa.m.; morning
wcrhslp, 11 a.m.; evening wontup, 1 p.m.
Wednesday evening BUlle study and prayer
meeting, 7 p.m. AllillatEd with Southern
Baptlst Convention.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF OIRIST Stab! RooU' 124 and County Road ~- Mark
Seever;, minister; Sunday School Supt., Steve
Pickens Sunday ochool, 9: Jl a.m.: m&lt;rnJng
W&lt;rShip, 10:ll a.m.; f"Yening wtnhip, 7 p.m .
Wednesday worship, 7 p.m.

ST. PAUL Lt.m!ERAN CHUROI, Corner
of Sycamore and Second Sts., Pomeroy. The
Rev. William Mldtlleswarth, Past&lt;r. Sunday
School at 9:45 a.m. and Church Services 11
p.m.
SACRED HEART, Msgr. Anthony Giannamore, Ph. 992-68911. Saturday evening Mass,
7: Jl p.m.; Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m.
Confessions Olll'-half hour before each Mass.
CCD Classes, 11 a.m. Sunday.
VICI'ORY BAPTISI' - 525 N. 2nd St.,
Mldtlleport. James E. K£esee. pastor. Sunday
m&lt;rnJng worship, 10 a.m.: evening SOfVice. 7
p.m.: Wednesday evening worship, 7 p.m.:
Vlsliatlon, Thunday, 6:JI p.m.
TRINITY CHRISI1AN ASSEMBLY, Cool·
vUie - GUbert Spencer, pastor. Sunday
school, 9:JI a.m.: m&lt;rnJng service, 11 a.m.
Sunday evening service, 7: Jl p.in.: midweek
prayer service Wednesday, 7:JI p.m.
MOUNJ' OUVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lawrence Bush. pastor; Max FolmB', Sr.
Superintendent. Sunday Sclml and m&lt;rnJng
wcrshlp, 9: Jl a.m. Sunday evening service, 7
p.m.; Youth meeting and Bible study,
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
UNITED FAITII CHURCH - ·RooU' 7 on
Pomeroy bypass. Rev. Robert Smith, Sr.,
pastcr. Rev. James Cundttt, assistant pastor.
sunday School, 9: Jl a.m.: morning wor.;hlp,
10: Jl a.m.: evening worship, 7: Jl p.m.
Women's FeUowshJp, Tuesdays, 10 a.m.
Wednesday night prayer service, 7: Jl p.m.
FAITII BAPTISI' CHUROI. Masoo, meet
at United Steel Wcrker's Union HaU, Railroad
Street, Mason. Sunday School 10:00 a.m.:
Morning Worship, 11:00 A.M.: Evening
Service, 6 p.m. Prayer meetjng and Bible
Study Wedneiday, 7:00p.m.

•

1
'--------__.
CK SUPERMAR
MIDDLEPORT

r.
.K""E: ~
- so •·

•,

·.

·-'•
'

·-.
•.

·-

FOREST RUN BAPTISI' - Rev. Nyle ' :
Borden, pastor. Cornetlus Bunch, superintendent. Sunday school9: ll a.m.: second and

I

'I

fourth Sundays. worship SOfVice at 2: Jl p.m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTISI' - Fourth and
'Main Sts., Mldtlleport, Rev. Calvin Mlnnls,
pastar. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardnei', supt.
Sunday school, 9: Jl a.m.: worship SOfVice,
10:45 a.m
BURLINGHAM SO!m!ERN BAPTISI'
CHURCH, RouU' I, Shade. Past&lt;r, Doo Black. •
Alllllated with Southe'n Baptlst convention.
Sunday school, 1: Jl p.m.; Sunday WU'Shlp,
2: Jl p.m. Thursday evening Bible study, 1
p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Ractne,
Rooh! 124. WUUam Hoback. pastor. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.: Sunday evening servlct', 7
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTISI', Don Cheadle.
Supt. Sunday SChool 9::1l am. Morning
-.
Worship, 10: Jl a.m. Prayt:&lt; Service, alternaU'
Sundays.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third .,
Ave., the Rev. Oark Baker , pastor. CaJi. •
Nottlngbam, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
Schooi!Oa.m. - classes for aU age;. Evening
services, 6 p.m. Wednesday, Study, 7:ll p.!Jl.
Youth services, 7: :1) p.m. Friday.

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 MID St.,
Mldtlleport. Pastor b Brother chuck McJ&gt;her. .
son. SuOOay School at 10 a.m. Services
Sunday evening at 7 p.m. and Wednesday at 7
p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTISI', Rev. Earl Shul..-,
pastoc. Sunday school 9::JJ a .m.; ' Churcl\
se!Vlce, 7 p.m.: youth meetlnjJ, 6 p.m.
Tuesday Bible Study, 7 p.m.
FUJ.L GOSPEL LIGIITIIOUSE, 33045
HUand Road, Pomeroy. Tom KeUy, paslllt.
Danny Lambert, Sunday School Superintendent. Sunday MornlnjJ service, 10:00 a.m.; :
Sunddy evening service 7: Jl p.m. Services
Tuesday and 1'11\U'SdoY evenings at 7: Jl p.m.
WORD OF FAITII, 93 MUI St., Mldtlleport;
Richard Stewart, pastor. Sunday morntng,
10:00; Sulllay evening, 7:JI. 1\lesday mom
lng Bible Study, 10:00: Wednesday evening.
7:ll: Thursday morning video with Kenneth
Copeland, 10:00; Friday evening video with
Kenneth Copeland, 7: Jl.
.
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF 1lfE NAZA· .
RENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, past&lt;r. Sunday
School, 9: Jl a.m.: Worship Service, 10: Jl
a.m.: Youth Service, Sunday, 6:15 p.m.;
Sunday evening service, 7:00 p.m. Wedn&amp;
day Prayer Meeting and Bible Study 7:00p.m
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH. Sun·
day aftPrnOOrl services, 2: :1); Thursday
t&gt;V•nl~ servict', 7: Jl p.m.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W. Va.
Paster, Btll Murphy. Sunday SChool, lOa. m.; .
Sunday evenill!: service, 7:ll p.m.: Pra)'l!!'
meeting and Bible Study WEdnesday, 7:JI
p.m. Everyone welcome.
RU'Il.AND FREE WILL BAPTISI' Salem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
SChool, 10:00 a.m.: Sunday evening service,
7: Jl p.m.: Wednesday evening prayer·
·
.meeting, 7: Jl.
SOlJl1! BETIIEL NEW TESTAMENr
CHURCH - Silver Ridge. Duane Syden• strlcke', pastor. Sunday School 9 a.m.:
church serv1~ 10 a.m. Bible study, Wednesday, 7:JI p.m. June thruSeptember, 7:00p.m.
October thru May. Sunday evening feUowshlp, 7:00 p.m. June thru September, 6:00
p.m. October thru May.

Sermonette
Were you afraid to get out of bed this morning? I'll bet some people
were. These are not Christian people however. Why be afraid to get out
of bed this morning? It Is Friday the 13th. Bad luck day. Ever watch
people on quiz shows and how often they pick the number 7-thlnklng It is
a lucky number. Think also of how many times It Is an unlucky number
for them. It appears that we are brainwashed into thinking some things
are lucky and others are unlucky. So Friday the 13th. Unlucky day.
Don't you believe It. Every day can be lucky for us or unlucky if we
forget our Christian upbringing and believe In superstitiOns.
You are most likely getting this paper late today so you can't
change much. Do look back over the day and consider how the day went.
Did good lhings happen or bad? We may only remember the bad things
but pause to look for the good things that happened. I'm sure many good
things did happen to us and for us. If we would lpok back at any day we
.
could find this true. Nice things and bad things and many things tl)at just
happened are not good or bad but just events. Life Is like this. Victor
Herbert wrote a song for one of his operettas saying "life upon the ..
,"I
,'I
wicked stage Is never what a girl expected." We are told so many times
what must be happening on certain d~ys or In certain places that we
•
· begin to- believe-them- with- no_proof they are true. If It is aJL old 1 ~,._.--1
superstition then It most always Is not true. Friday che 13th, black cats,
•
spilled salt, and ail the nonsense about weddings, are just that,
....
nonsense. How silly. we humans can be about things.
·~
The best advice anyone can give to another Is turn 10 God and live :~
your life to the fullest. Do not limit yourselves with sayings and cliches
'
that are pure superstition. Our llv~ will be hectic If we do follow these ·'
sayings and silly beliefs, Trust in God and your good sense and try to be
of service to God and man and aU will be well wlth you. You will not need
to fear days or signs that have no truth behind them. A stop sign ma}' ·~
save your life because of another car having the light of way. A black
cat crossing your path may make you change your direction but will not
'
save your life simply because the color Is black.
.
April and July will also have Friday the 13th's In them. Look back ' .
. over today and then when April and July come around remind
:· :
yourselves that with God on your side and Chrtstlanlty In your lleart .,
there is no fear of numbered day of the week that can cause you any
trouble. We make our own trouble. Our enemies may make us trouble
but In the wotid of superstition there is nothing that can trouble us.
Jesus said, "Tiiou shaillove the Lord your God with.aU your heart and
1T11n4 and being." If we are doing this aU will be weU with us. Jesus told
Satan, "It Is written, Thou shall worship the Lord Thy God and Him only
shalt thou serve." So you see ... do not worship or obey or consider
superstitions ... or Friday the 13th's. - Rev. WUIIam Mlddleswarth,

·-

-

. ..
~

...
,.-·

a

......

,.
' · -~·~- -

,,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
804

·

Attend Church
this Sunday

Rev.-.
::!'::"&amp;"=

OH.

~
.

SENTINEL

Rev.-,_

SYRACUSE, POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
CODNER'S EXXON RT. 1~4
PHONE: DAY 992·9960
NIGHT 949-2223
The Auto Club of Southestern Ohio
360 Second St

~. Lynchb.lf"R ~
MIDWtliT
Akron fB. Murray St . T1
Cob-ado 00. Mal'qU('nt 62
C'rriJll\100 78. s. Dllnol.4. 62
IO"A'a 42. Nonhwt'stm'l ."D
Kan.4.as St. 64, E. WashlnR1on 57
Mlchlli!an 00. MinrftOia 62
fl'urdi.Ko lit. Ohio sr. 52
W. lllJnols 62, SW MI&amp;SOJrl :'16
WJchlla St . !ll. Drak(' 77
Wls ..Crt'f'fl Bay 74. W ls. · Par~ldr 61
Wlsron.ln 81, Mlrhlli!M St . 74'
Youngstown St 73, AuAfln Pray 1\1

Pfnn Sl. 6.1, [)uqu(&gt;snP 53
Rhcldl&gt; Island !II, W. VlrRtnla 9l
Sl. Francis. Pa. 82, Falrk&gt;lli!h Dickinson

"'

. m .21

w..,ks ............................... 129.64
~2 w..u .....
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26

W. Cardina

Gforll"" MaiiOI\ 96, Bauoo u. 82
GeorlilP WashlnR100 72. St. 8onavPnlurr

n.

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~- Ta4alo =-7-61.

EAST
~-Canls&amp;ls 68. New Hampshln&gt; 62

Ill

w...~u

(Naw Li stina)

College scores

.

~2

MEMBER'S
EMERGENCY
SERVICE

MEIGS (51)- Kitchen 7.().14: EaJon 2-2-6:
Musser 2.().4; Howard 3.J.7: Becker ~:
Cline~ EUio« 1.().2: Kl~ 1.().2: Tannehill
~ Hart 0.2·2: Nelson 1.().2; Powell 1.().2:
Fields~ c....u~ Werry 1.().2; HIIQO'

~,,&amp;t\0~·1· ·
1977

available .

Meigs freshmen post victory

He is a lean, hollow-cheek kid of19 wlth strtngy hair that's always falling
down in his eyes. He looks lost and frightened In the big, money-swamped
world of professional tennis, but don't let appearances fool you.
Put a mid-sized racket in his hand, turn him loose on a llned court that
meaSures Zlx78 feet and he can be as harmless as a rattlesnake or a
sub-machine gun.
Mats Wllander (pronounced Vee-Lon-Der) of Vaxjo, Sweden, and Monte
Carlo may be the best tennis player in the world at this moment. Top-seeded
In the Volvo Masters, the Super Showdown of the year-long, world-girdling
Grand Prix tour, he Is out to prove It this weekend at Madison Square
Garden.
He may and he may not. He is still quite young. He Is looking down the guns
of the modern day heavyweights- flashy John McEnroe, dour Ivan Lend!
and feisty Jimmy Connors- but is facing them unafraid.
"I don't say I'm going to win this tournament or any other tournament I'm
playing in," he says, "but I think I've got as good a chance as anybody."
It's hard to Imagine this kid pounding his way through such awesome
obstacles.
He stands 5 feet, 10 inches and weighs a mere 155 pounds. If he played
football, he'd be on the schoolboy team: If he hung around a baseball
diamond, they'd have hlrn running bats.
But already, with only three years of experience ori the tour, he has
demanded respect from his rivals and attention from the International
•
tennis realm.
Going into the Volvo Masters, Wllander was center of a controversy that
made the college football ran kings look Uke an exercise in tranqulllty.
"Who's No.1?" everybody was asking.
According to Grand Prix ratings, a point system based on a point system
covering the entire year's schedule, Wllander was on top ..He was closely
followed by Czechslovakla's Lend!, McEnroe and Connors in order.
Yet the Assoclatic;; of Tennis Professionals (ATP) computer placed
McEnroe first, followed by Lend! and Connors with Wllander fourth. This
conformed with the World Championship Tennis' separate Nixdorf system
Connors was second ahead of Lend!.
The Grand Prix Masters' windup this weekend is supposed to clarify the
picture. Personally, we think - win, lose or draw - young Wllander
deserves No. lfor 1983. He played In more tournaments and won more than
any of the other top contenders.
He faced McEnroe three limes durtng the year, beat hlrn in all three- the
French Open on slow clay, the ATP Championships in Cincinnati on cement
and the Austral!an Open on grass.
He hasn't played Connors, but he defeated Lend! in the finals both in the
ATP andAustrallan while losing at Brussels and in the U.S. Open. He lost to
Yan nick Noah in the French Open final.
Unfortunately. blgtlme tennis is a mishmash of talent. No one man has
been able to take the game by the throat and dominate It, as Big Bill Tilden •.
Don Budge, Jack Kramer and Rod Laver did in other eras.
Nobody was able this year to win two of the four·Grand Slam events
(Australian, French, Wimbledon and the U. S. Open). Budge won all four in
1938, Laver scored the slam twice, once as an amateur and again as a pro.
Noah won the French, McEnroe the Wimbledon, Connors the U.S. Open
and Wilander the Australian.

SPECIAL

No subscriptions by ma ll pt&gt;rmltted In
towns wht'rP homt' carrlpr K'rvlce Is

Dave Han1s photo .Include ABce Jaco (18), Lilla
Mlller (~). ArnyJago (40) andLIIIaFresher(22) and
Marauderetle B.J. Gordon (2f).

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Locust &amp; Beech Street
"H921 Middleport

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rler may remit In ,advance dlr('('t to

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POSTMASTER: Send addr(ISS to The
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Ohio 4~769 .

CONTRO~ REBOUND- Jenny Meadows goes
up for a rebound agalnlt the Lady Lancers In
Thursday's TVC rame at Meigs IDghSchool. Federal
Hocking took a 43-38 victory. Lancers shown In this

~

Pomeroy

V

Pomeroy, Ohio

land Dally Press Auoclaton and the
American Newspaper Publishers As·
soclallon. NaUonal Advert Ia Ina; Reprto·
sentatlve. Branham Newspaper SaiH,
711 Third Avenue, Ne~ York , New
York 10017.

Today's

tut

216 S. Second

'ohn F. FUJII, Mgr.
Ph. "2-2101
Pomeroy

Member: The Alsoctatrd Press, In ·

CLOSE DEFENSE - Melp' Jenny MIUer (U) shoots over the
outstretched ann of Federal' Hocking's Lori SlnneU during action bt
Thursday TVC encounter at Meigs. Tile Lancer Ladles held on to defeat
the Marauderettes, 43-38. Dave Harris photo.

"

·" . MEIGS nRE
\ ~ CENTER, INC.

NEW YORK ,..· ~
~lNG
IOJSE ~·l:·~
ICERMIT'SKORNER '. rl

(USP814fi.HO)
A Dl\11110!1 of Multimedia, Inc.

II

tW

The Interested B1111ineaes Luted On ,Thu Page.

and Church

Metp .................. .. ............. 9 6 8 ~:JI
Metg~

aws

·.

FEDICRAL HOCIIINO (tl) - Frethler
4-6-11: Burcio«e 2.J.5: MUJer J.1.3: Amy Jaao
fl.l-13: Allilo Jaao 2~: Sinnett 2~: Hart
~- 'llllal!t11....
MEIG8 (a) - Hacldo• ~: HaJTIIon
1.().2: Meadowo 6-2-11: Miller 2-2-6: Gordon
2-2-6: Dean 1.().2: Re&lt;!vest.o-2. lw.a
By--.:
Federal Hocklna .. ................8 17 9 II-(!
- ... - Federal Hocking 31,
(overtlmo J, ·

..

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

Pon1My Middleport, Ohio.

&gt; fXrERIENCE lHf·JOY Of RELIGION

'Lady Lancers stop Marauderettes, 43-38
ROCK SPRINGS- The Federal·
Hocking Lady Lancers built up a
third period 17-polnt lead and held
on for a 43-38 win over the Meigs
Marauderettes here Thursday.
Meigs narrowed the huge
Federal-Hocking lead to 11 heading
for the final eight minutes, but could
close It no lower than the final five
points.
Jenny Meadows led Coach Ron

-

~u

Friday, January 13, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

�............ -

·~The

Page

eet theMarauder

. NICK RIGGS
IHl, Sr. Guard

CINCINNATI (AP) - Veteran
major leaguer Pete Rose $ays that
baseball teams have always under·
stood he Is not demanding to play
every day, but he said writers have
been criticizing him unfairly.
Rose, released by the Philadelphia PhWies as a treeagent,expects
to come to an agreement with one of
several teams perhaps as early as
next week.
"AU he's looking tor Is !he
opportunity to prove he's still able to
play baseball on a regular basis,"
said Reuven Katz, Rose' lawyer,
Thursday. "He said, 'I want to play
every day.' Any day that Pete Rose
says he doesn't want to play eVery
day, you know there' saproblem. He

Friday, Janliary 13, 1984 ,

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) - If
Cliff Stoudt had remained with the
Pittsburgh Steelers, he said, he
would have expected to start next
season as the No. 1 quarterback of
the National Football League team.
Instead, he was assured by his
new boss Thursday, he will get the
starting nod for the Birmingham
Stallions of the United States
Football League.
Stoudt, 28, fllledlnfortheSteelers
this season after Terry Bradshaw
waslnjuredandledthemtotheAFC
Central Division title before they
lost a playoff game to the Los
Angeles Raiders, now headed for

6-2, Jr. Forward

Simons has lead
in Hope Tourney
five-day, 9().hole event with a 132
total, 12 under par.
RoMieBlack, whoscoredhisflrst
Tour triumph last season, was
secondat135aftera68atBermuda
Dunes.
Johnny MUler, John Mahaffey,
Tim Norris and Jack ReMer were

Rio Grande annouoces students· with high grades
118 listed on term honor roll
One hundred eighteen students
have been named to the honor roll
for the fall quarter at Rio Grande
College and Community College.
In order to qualify for the honor a
student must earn at least a 3.75
grade point average (on a 4.0!!Cale)
for all work taken during the
previous term. A student must have
been enrolled for a minimum of 12
hours for consideration and must
complete all courses:
Named to the list were:

I

CHECK
OUR
PRICES

Stoudt signed a t.hrel&gt;-year contract reportedly worth about $1.2
mllllon.
,
Stoudt called his switch "a great
career move for me. I'm as pleased
asptmchtobehere.lthlnktheteam
has a great future. I have a lot of
confldencelnmyseltandamlooklng
forward to the team going au the

James L Baht, Long Bottom; Kan&gt;n A.
Bak«1 Wellston; Dianna L. BeaW'I", GaiUPQUs: Susan E. Bennett , VInton; Catherine A'.

Black. Oak Hill: Taml D. llo6Jic. Palr1ot:
Kllthtyn S. Bowron and S. JayneBu'll"f. both
ot GaUlpoU.: Slophen V. Cochran. Jackson:

..

GENERAL TIRE SAL_ES

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of DAR
Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Heath
United Methodist Church. Guest
s~aker wUI be Betty Oark,
GaUia County Extension Agent
who will speak on early foods .

"WHERE THE RUBBER MEETS THE ROAD"

RED TAG SALE!.

lh

SUNDAY
POMEROY -

Hundrtd1 of UIWdvertiMd Price
Cull II Rldlo ShiCk 5101'11 1nd
P1rttclplllng O.lerel

sagg
• RNIIItlc STA-2290 Digital Synthellzed Receiver'

• Two Mlch On.- SpHken With 15" Woofer,

Transactions
BASEJIAU.
_.._..,_

Liquid-Cooled Mld111nge sncl Tweeter Horns,

Genuine Wslnut v.Mer

·tJ. ·tJ. -:(). -()
. ...

BOSTON REO SOX-Signed OoMght
Evans. outflekler. to a thrf:te-yt&gt;ar con-

• LAB-2100 LIIMIIr·Tricking Tllmtlble With
Resllltlc/ Audio Technlca Dus~Mfi$1"et Cartridge

nne

ohma

~~~~~~:Jet':':':~
minimum
8 THO
21
no more thin Into
o,os..

_......,.

__

tract (!l(!l"!Uion.

t:.ai

ANGEUS

Teny Whllf\E'Id.

OODGERS-Signt&gt;d

oottieldPr. ,lo a three-

Save 510-Deluxe
Stereo Headphones

._

year contract. Named Wrs Parker and

t Von .JO&amp;b.la as minor

~

lnstnK'ton.

SAVANNAH CARDINAI.S-NIUTIE'd H.B.
''Sp«'' fUchardson pnosldenl .

BASKEIWL

Nova"'-.40 by Realistic

Nlldoul~"-'d....,.

I N D I A N A PACERS-SIJUI('d Tracy

Jaot'loon, guard, to a 10-day

contract.

Cut
40°/o

IIOXING
NEW

JERSEY

STATE

ATHLETIC

COMMISSION-AnnouncE'd th£' res!gnaUon
of commlssiOrK&gt;r Jersey JOP Walrot1 ef·
fl'ctlvf&gt;

Jan. :n.

FOOTIIIt.LL
NolloMIF...............
CJNONNATI BENGALS-Namf'd Jim
Arodl&gt;nlon ofll'Mtvt&gt; backfte.ld roach.
UM&amp;ed 8&amp;alel FOCIIW l.eJ~~Ue
ARIZONA WRA!"GLERS-Sll&lt;ned Rot&gt;
ert Smith, defen!lve md, to a mJIU·yt•u

32°1°
Off

Slip' 'em on for comfortable, exciting listening! Large elements with 31/•" drivers
produce full-range sound, from deep, rich
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contract

.IACKSONVJLLE BUIJ.S-SIW'f'd Rusty
T o w €' r y , quartMback , and Cluck
McOurk&gt;y. t!Rht md. to thr'ef'-year con·
L(J) ANGELES EXPRESS-Named Poktv Allen ddmslvf' romtinatCI" and Krith
Glit~ertson dcfmsiW' llnr coach.
PITTS 8 U R G H MAUlER ·
S-Have
¥J'('f'd to contract t('I""T'M wtth Doug Hot·
lk&gt;, defenstvf' md.
WASHINGTON

·

HOCKE\'
National Hocley Le~~~~W
BLACK HAWKS-Traded
nm HIQW, rljlht wing, to the New J('f"·
M'Y Devils lor Jeftl.armtr. r'Jthl wtnjt.
DETROIT REO WINGS-Returned
MurnY Cravm. center, to Medicinf' Hat
r1 the Westem Hodcey LE'a(tUe. Waived
Ted Nolan. lef1 wing.
HARTFORD

WHALERS--

,..,....m. d ilol&gt; Cuey. dlr«&lt;or of
PJbUc relations.
NEW YORK RANGERS-AisitiO&lt;d
MIR BLalsdell and Robbk&gt; Florek, for·
wards. to Tulsa or tiM.&gt; Cf!\tral Hockey

LeoitUO·

WINN!PEC JETS-Tra&lt;lcct

per.

)eft

nm

Trlm-

wfn«, to lhr MlnnNOta Noi1h
0oua1as- left wine-

Slln ..- Jarcl)l

~
Team USA-t'\lt Rich Coltelto, forWard.

Cut 33°/o

39!'

59.95

•

Range-Boost Antenna
System Extends Signal
1nd Improves Reception
Ideal for keepi

REMEMBER
WITH .FLOWERS

Reg.

in touch
Includes

· on the ~~I
.Ch. 14 ~s:._~ optional
crystals lor up to two more
chlnnell. 121-1635

Winter scene tree ornaments
were made during a recent work-

Reg. 69.95

By Realistic

Half P.r lce

ODCAGO

llr

4788

cas•tte Recording Tape Sale

FEDERALS-SIJOI&lt;'d
Tom Broehers. cmter.

·60 Mlnutet

Dmg solutions

Rotary or Tone Dialing
·. By Radio Shack

. .- -

·~· 1.99 Elc:h .

Reg.
511.95

Tone Dilling.

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AM..Ii

90 Mlnutet

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- . . . - - , 89;85

2 for278

~· Ready to plug in . .

BroWn. #43-304

Reg. 2.70 Elch '

Tone. For blnk-bv-llhone ·

· Special oxide for!nula isaures high outpUt and wide fre. ~~ 111'101'11181 bill lilting. HIQCI 8IOf8Qe
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up, no Hmlll 14 4 8021803 : ·

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2 for 188

••••
••
•••
••••

WEST POINT, Pa. (AP) American research and development In phararl'iaceutlcal tecMology may otten have Important
health benefits for people or
underdeveloped nations.
A disease caUed "river bllndne&amp;s," prevalent In Africa, Is the
second leading cause of blindness In
the world, according to Merck
SharP &amp; Dohme research laboratories here. Now, early research
_:_~. lndlcates_the_d_tsease -;- cauSE!!~jly_
parasitic )VOimS - may be treatable with a new dru&amp; called
tvermectln. now In use In the u.s. to
cure parasitic roundwonn diseases
In lx&gt;rseil and c;atUe, It saye. .
'I1te drug tlrmalsosaysmore than
l)OmUllonpersonsaroundtheworld
have been protected from measles,
mumps, rubella, meningitiS, pneumonia and hepatitiS B with vaccines
developed In the u.s.
..

'

anct 1ow-l'lte long dfat8nce
aervtcea. Tone eervlce requtnru. BroWn. #43-308

Correction

To Knd,.
bfaurifr,~!ly dni~tnrd

lunr11l

~n•nJterMnl,

;.,, oil

or visir

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

1..,.... '" A;.~w ~~ l.nr..-M

EpUn. Jackson: Mary Ervtn. WeU.&lt;oo: John
D. Eva111, Oak Hlll: Megyn Evans. Jackson:
Chllta J. Ev1ck. Point Plealant: Jennller L.
Fain. Wellston: Cltr!JU G. Fellure. Galllpolla:
Randy L . Fergu1011 and Anna M. Felldlng.
both ot Jackson: Dwayne D. Forgoy.
Thunnan: Roger D. Fr11by. WeU.too:
Margie Gilmore. Thurman: Kathy S. Haley.
Middleport: Rooald L. Hammond, Patriot:
Vickle Hauldrell. Galllpolll: Bentada«e M.
Hickey. Jackson: Ooro&lt;hy s. Hollman. Rio
Grandt.
Jean Hoi~ . Bidwell: Cltrll Howard and
Christina L. Howard. Oak Hlll: Sara R.
Jamloon. Rio Grande: RDbin A. JOIIIU,

Quartet wut be featured at Mt.
Union Baptist Church of Carpenter Hill Road Sunday at 6: 30
p.m.

Little, J ackson: Br~ Loucks, VInton :
Teresa Lovett , Oak HJIJ; Beverly Mahlt&gt;,
Wellston: Sharon McCain and Shane Mc(;oy,
bolh ot Oak Hill: Lot1 Meadows. GaUJpbill:
Karen Merver~ Jack.son; Sandra Mershon,

polrlol: ROOin' Meyer. Wells&lt;on: Michael
Milliron, G&amp; lllolls; Robert Moses. Thunnan :
Gayla Mullen, Galllpolll: Waoida Nanna.
Jackson; Teresa A. Neal, Patriot: Donna
Parlleeu, Wellsloo: Donna Puq\IAie. Gallipo.
, Ill; Barry A . Peters. Wellston.
Klmborly Phllllpo and Loretta Po&lt;U!o'. both
d Oak Hlll: Lenora V. Rhoads. Ewlngton:
Olano lt.. Richard. Wellston: Sheila G.

Sau.-o. Northup: Betty Sean. Welllton:
Jerry Slmpoon. Jackson: Bamara G. Smith.
GaJJipoUJ: Brenda Sola , Thurman: Susan
Soplut. Oak Hlli: Tammie Starcher. Racine:
Jeff Steele. Gallipolis: Laura SwO!Ijler. Oak
Hlll: 111)'11 A. Taylor, Jackson: Mlqare1
Thaxton. BidWell: Sherrt Thurston. Oak Htll:
Saundra K. Tillis. RvtJand: Kent Walker.
Vinloo: M. Colette Walker. Logan: Ivan B.
Walker Jr.. Bidwell: lleloorah WlnU!o'l.
Welistoo: John Wiseman n. Galllpoll&gt;:
Marlene J: Wood. Patrlo&lt;: Klla Youllj!.
- : Lorna Yoong. Jackson. and John
ZUreiler, Pomeroy.

One hundred and thirty-three
students have been named to the
merit roll for fall quarter at Rio
Grande College and Community
College.
In order to qualify for the honor a
student must earn a 3.4Q.3.75 grade
·point average (on a 4.0 scale) for all
work taken during the previous
term. A student must have enrolled
for a minimum o( 12 hours for
consideration and must complete
all courses.
Students named to the list
·Include:

Brown, Ow!Bhlre; James E. Brown, Wellston;
Teresa Bryant, Patriot: Jeffrey BurtlE.'1t and
Woodrow Burnett II , both ot Addison; Teresa
J . Burnette, GaUipolls; Melinda Bumslde,
Oak Hill : Chrtsta Bun1s, Point Pleaunt:
Scot! Bursoo. Potnt Pleasant ; Sco!l Bur.;on,

Leanna M. Alx&gt;le. Wel.bton; JoaM Adkins.
Ewlngton; Kaori Akahane, Rio Grande; Neal

Michele Jenldns, Jackson: Gina Johnson,
Rutland: Scott Johnson, Pomeroy: Mary
Kaha, Rio Grande.
Kelll K Kemper. Bidwell: Crysta l S.
KJigour, Oak HW : Janet Kuhn, GaWpoUs:
Brenda L.atferre, CrCM'Il Ctry; Michael Leach
and Suzanne Leach, both ot Jackson; Patricia
Lehman, Patriol: Bradley Logan, Thurman ;

Alison and TamJ

'·

Hill;

'

(

Boyd, Jackson:

Ellzabe1h

Susan M. Clark . Jane Dalley and Rick D.
Dalley, all of Gallipolis; Arthur Daniels ,
Bidwell; KJmberly Davis, Galllpotls: Lylena
Dean, VInton; KJmberly Dt&gt;ttwUier, Porn(&gt;+

roy: Rebecca Edwards. Long Bottom;
Sharon ExJint&gt;. Wellston; Tony Garlic,
Gallipolis; Hea ther J . Gray, Oak Hill ; Taml
HaUer, Jackson; Kerry Hamilton. Ga.Wpolls:
Charlene Hammons. Bidwell: ~loge&lt; L.
Handley II , Point Pleasant ; Teresa Hennesy
and Rober1 S. Hlli. both of Gallipolis:
Masatoshl Htrota , Rio Grande-; Jean Horton ,

Mlddlepon: Melvin Irish. Gallipolis: James
M. Jacobo. Bidwell: Dana Je11ers. Gallipolis:

shop conducted·by the Shade Valley
Councll of Floral Arts with the
teaming dlsabtllty class of the
Chester Elementary School.
Betty Dean and Melanie Stethem
had charge of the workshop. The
ornaments were made from two
piece plastic boxes with scenes
being created from miniature
figurines, cotton, pine and holly.
Christmas cookies and punch
were served to the children.

of Jackson: Peruzy Phillips. Gallipolis:
Barbara Potier. WeiL'iton ; Lynn Rees: R1o
Gral"'dt'.

Richard Roos . Gallipolis: Gerald Scon and
Teresa Sco!l , both ot Wellston: Donna Shato
and WUiard A. Sheets. bolh of Gallipolis:
Hlsayo Shlmlzu, Rio G r arl~X&gt;; Geraldine
Shupe. Bidwell: Linda Slanley, Ga UJpolis:
Masako Tahata , RJo Grande: Robert S.
Taylor and Alan Terry, both ot Jackson;
Nikki Thaxton. Bld\t.tell; Misako UekJ.

Elizabeth U nderwood~ Mary Underwood,
au of ruocrande: Dla
Vance, CrownOty :
Cardyn S. Wel&gt;b. Oa Hlli: Joseph West.
VInton; Judllh Whltieoy, Crown City: Sonya
WUllanu. Patr1ot: Ti:tmmy WUllamson, Bidwell; Jonda Wll5on . Oak Hill; KJyokazu
Yamashlta, Rio Grande, and Ruth Yoder.

Point Pleasant.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
Phone 992-2975
FALL Ill WINTER HOURS:'
Effective Oct. 1-M•rch 1
CloMd Mond•y

$1995.00

12.

looker.

The 1984 Ohio J unlor Miss winner

$3995.00
1977 FORD F250

Arrangements were made for a
sunshine gift for an honorary
member. It was noted that the
February meeting will be held at the
Chester Methodist Church \\1th
Janet Koblentz and Crystal Raybum to be the hostesses. An
"anyt)tlng goes" auction wUI beheld
to boost the treasury and members
were asked to take things for the
auction.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Chevalier. Mrs. Barton, and
Pauline Ridenour.

3/4

TON TRUCK

Automatic transmission, V-8. A little rough.

$1795.00
THESE TRUCK SPECIALS AND MUCH MORE
AT

"Your Dealer On The River"

O
NS
CHEV., INC.
SIMM
OLDS.-CAD.

308 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH.

Ph, 992-6614

9:00 to 7:00 Weekdays
Saturday 9:30 to 4:00

HOURS:

Philadelphia.

Rates of Taxation for 1983
ln ·pursuance of Law, I, George M. Collins, Treasurer of Meigs County, Ohio, in compliance w1th revised Code No. 323.08
of State of Ohio, do hell!by give notice of the Rates of Taxation for the Ta x Year of 1983. Rates e•preued in dollars and
cents on each one thousand dollars tax valuation.

TOWNSHIPS
SCHOOL DISTRICTS

••
&lt;•
••
o&lt;

AND CORPORATiONS

••
BEDFORD
CHESTER
Eastern
Meigs

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri spent
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. But
Wilson and son at New

COLUMBIA
LEBANON
Eastern

Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy
-Announces
Store Hours:

1.00
1.00

1.50
1.50

.50 .031564
.50 .030837

.01t516 35.70
.010354 37.70

4.30 3.00
4.30 3.00

16.00
14.00

.40 .30
.40 .30

1.00
1.00

1.00
1.00

1.50
1.50

.50 .039411
.50 .041551

.041561 39 .00
.044863 37.00

4.30

18.10

.40 .30

1.00

1.00

1.50

.50 .151080

.184861 44 .10

3.70

1.30

1.50
1.50

.50 .046050
.50 .047455

.035461 38.70
.037417 36.70

4:30

3.10

14.00

.40 .30 1.00

1.00

1.50

.50 .045060

.030335 37.10

Eastern

"4.30

3.10

16.00

.40 .30

I .00

1.00

1.50

.50 .046003

.034407 39.20

ORANGE
Eastern ,
RUTlAND

4.30

1 .5~

16.00

.40 .30 1.00

2.00

1.50

.50 .035033

.028355 38.50

4.30
4.30

1.30
1.00

24.00
14.00

.40 .30 1.00
.40 .30 1.00

2.00
2.00

1.50
1.50

.50 .038698
.50 .080997

.026420 36.30
.042085 40.50

4.30

1.70

24.00

.40 .30 1.00

2.00

1.50

.50 .032564

.011494 35.70

4.30
4.30
4.30

1.70 24.00
.10 24.00
.10 24.00

.40 .30 1.00
.40 .30 1.00
.40 .30 1.00

1.00
1.00
1.00

1.50
1.50
1.50

.50 .031564
.50 .064194
.50 .069314

.011494 35.70
.048114 41.40
.054499 40.00

1.00

I .50

.50 .039909

.018463 37 .90

1.00
2.00
2.00

1.50 .50 .035773 .013081 36.10
1.50 .50 .115666 .071764 44.70
1.50 .50 .069370 ..075767 39.90

2.00

1.50

Rutland Village
SALEM
Meigs
SALISBURY
Mtigl

Middleport Village
Pomeroy Village
SCIPIO
Meigs
SUTION

Southern

Racino Village
Syracuse Village
SUTION
Meigs

Phor•1•,.

1.00
1.00

1.00
1.00

Meigs

SUJISHER I OHSE

.40 .30
.40 .30

.40 .30 1.00
.40 .30 1.00

OLIVE

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

14.00
16.00

4.30 1.70 16.00
4.30 1.70 14.00

Southern

'

1.70
1.70

4.30
4.30

Meigs
Eastern

Day.

4.30 3.90

14.00

.40 .30 1.00

4.30
4.30

24.00
24.00
24.00

.40 .30 1.00
.40 .30 1.00
.40 .30 1.00

4.30 2.10 , 24.00

.40 .30 i.OO

PO

2.10
.60
.60

5.50

8.10
5.80

10.10
5.30

.50 .035660

.013081 36.t0

Real Ettote.laxes which hove not l'oeen paid at the close of each collection carry a penalty of ten per
cent. -rUes
be paid at the office of the county treuurer or b~ m~i. ~least bring your last tax receipt, and if you poy b~ mall be Jure to locate your property by laxtng dlStrtct..and enclose stamped self-·
.
.
•
addreaed envelope. ·
Always eum1ne your lax receipt to Jet that it coven all your property. Offtce Houn 8:30 A.M. to
4:30P.M., MotiCiay thN Friday, Clooed on Saturday.
·

m•r

( ....... ltiHit, lt .l'...

ltOftltd ............ "'·

Mon. ttw'U $1f.I1Me.M. Mtt-111.

_ , 10:10 to 12:10 1111 4 .. 1 '"'!:
Olttft NlfMl H.. t

Tun.-Fri. 9 to &amp;, Set. 9 to 1

TRUCK SPECIALS

Spending Christmas evening with
Mrs. Etha Warner were Clarence
and Inez Roy and son Rex, Tom and
Janet Warner, Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Warner and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson of Pt. Pleasant
called on Mrs. Warner New Year's

FrfeMiy ltrlln

Gallipolis: Cathy J . Moore.

Revlon, and Republic Airlines. wiU represent theStateofOhlolnthe
~THE
Each provide additional scholar- American Junior Miss program
GRAVELY
which wiU be held In Mobile Ala. In
ship opportunities for the girls.
EIVSTEIVI
State sponsors for the 1984 the summer.
program are Colonial Men's Wear,. , - - - - - - - - - - - -....- - - - - - - - - - - Curtis Hotel, First Knox National
Bank, Maza 's Restaurant, Ohio
Coca-Cola Bottlers Associations,
Uhlman's Department Stores, and
Wise Jewelers.
The Junior Miss candidates will
1975 FORD F350 TON TRUCK, CAB &amp; CHASSIS
parilcpate In numerous program
4
spd.
transmission, heavy duty, V-8, Well maintained. One
activities and reheasals during the
week prior to the program. A new
local owner.
three performance program has
been Incorporated for the 1984
program with Friday, Feb. 10 and
1977 FORD F250 3/4 TON TRUCK 4x4
Saturday, Feb. 11, preliminaries.
Finals will be held on Sunday, Feb.
Automatic transmission. Lock out hubs, roll bar, V-8, good

LETART

l'ltllOittPTIONI

of

Syracuse: Carson Mummey , Rlo Grande:
Bruce Neal. KeUI Oliver and MltzJ Parker , aU

Meigs Junior Miss readies for pageant

Southern

'

Wellston ; Angela McGuire and Michael D.

Miller, bolh

Julie Love and Ronal Lynch, OOth of
Gal:llpolls; Cannen J . Manuel and Jenny
Manuel. both of Racine; Deanna Martin ,

Happenings around Fairview

IDIIbelr &amp;Qiden weddiDIIIUIIYer-

•

Brenda

Jackson: Kellh Oark. Cheshire.

Chester Garden Club meeting

I.Miift

I

both ot Wellston:

Bane. Gallipolis: Mary Barket:. Patr1ot:
James Bays. Gallipolis: Gert Betts, Bidwell:
Card Blal-tild. Gallipolis: Denise 'Bigler.
Sycamore: Bobby Blackburn. Ewlngtoo:
Lenora Bostic. Gallipolis: Ginger Boul5. Oak

Paula Swindell, Meigs County's
Junior Miss, attended the one day
orientation for the Ohio Junior Miss
POMEROY - The Meigs
Scholarship
Program recently at
County Men's Fellowship will
the
Mt.
Vernon
Memorial BuUdlng.
ml'f't Monday at 7: ll p.m. at the
, The Mayor or Mt. Vernon, Betty
Bradford Church of Christ.
K. Wlnand, presented Miss SwlndeU
with a key to Mt. Vernon upon her
arrival. A Meigs Hlgh School
student, she was one of 32 senior high
school girls attending the orienta
lion session In preparation for her
recently with Mrs. Howard Young wee!! long stay for the Ohio Junior
at Paden City, W.Va .
Miss Scholarship Program In
Holiday visitors at the home of February.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene WUson were
More than $12,1XXl In cash awards
Peggy and Bob Sarns or Weston,
and
over $75,1XXl In scholarships are
W.Va., Gale, Libby and Adam
Sarns of Weston, W.Va .. Bobby, being offered by program organlzDebbie and Benjamin Sams or Alun ers.SponsorcontestsareunderwrttBridge, W.Va ., Ramona and Cha- · ten by Hershey, Kraft, Coca-Cola.
rles Congrove of Zanesville. Dee.
Gary, Jeremy, Jason and Jessica
McNeary of Zanesville, Joyce.
David, Mike, Matthew, Joshua
"New Beginnings" was the theme
Zacharlan or Wooster.
or the Chester Garden Club meeting
Holiday guests at the home of Mr. held Wednesday night at the lx&gt;meof
and Mrs. Warren Pickens were Fay
Carla Chevalier.
Sauer of Middleport Rd., sur and
For roll ca.ll members comGladys Meredith and grarnldaugh·
mented on the "mlsllt" gifts which
ter, Teni of Beverly, Ernest and
should have been returned. Macel
Maxine Whlthehead of Reedsville,
Barton gaye a program on housearid granddaughter Sarah Frydplants, their likes and dislikes, and
man of Hylandpark, Ill., Denver
Jennifer Machir, had a program on
and Grace Weber and son, Mark.
planting a rock garden using posters ,
Dave and Debbie Weber, and Ruth
to show her plans for a home
Anne and Kay Balderson.
planting. Members exchanged
Mrs. Jean Frydman and Sarah of
houseplants and slips.
Hylandpark, Ill. , Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Hensch and Eddie of Cuyahoga
Falls, and Mr. and Mrs. Walt
Hensch and Lisa of Canal Fulton,
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead during the holidays.
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Ernest Ruth has been a patient at
Christmas guests{)! Mr. and Mrs.
the St. Joseph's Hospital, Chester,
Charles Lawson and Wilda were Ed
Teddl and Lori Mundry, and Ruth
Lawson and son Eric, Harold
Anne and Kay Balderson visited
Lawson a nd son Charley of Letart,
with Mrs. Helen Archer at the
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson,
Crestview Nursing Home at
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Michael
Lancaster.
and children Jeff and Tara. Qar- Mrs. L. Balderson
ence Lawson and son Jason.
Michelle Morris of Pomeroy and
Eric La'rson of Syracuse spent
New Year's weekend with Wilda
Lawson.

KtnMfttMcC•fl"""' i,,_,

at Middleport Flrllt Baptllt
Qurch &amp;mdly, 2 to 5 p.IJI.

A~ .

Wllliam Amott , Syracusp; Kr1sty E . Arthur.
Wellston; Richard N. Asua , Rio Grande; Jeff

MONDAY

Due to a typesetting error, Mr . .
and Mrs. David Ruuell Mills were
IIII!Tied 'Jan. 12, 193&amp;, not June 12,
lJ.'M 81 staled In SWida.Y'• Times·
9eattnel. TheccuplewiDbecelebrat. llill)'

,. llt·llll• tn-snt

\

Penny R. Edwards; Oak Hlll: Carol J.

Well•&lt;oo: Jenell Kelly , Mlddlepon: Andrea
R. Kleollng. Gallipolis: · Marilyn A. Kll1l! .
JackJon; Suzanne Lanham, Rio Grande;
Tawnya M. LarkJrw, Long Bo!lom; carla M .

Shade Valley Council aids therapy

Bum-in microphone for taping notes,
personal memos, "talking" letters. Cue/
review helps find sal acllous in fast-forward/
rewind. Pau8e and tone controls. ACibat·
tery operation. #14-813 a.nortn extro

traC1L

The Gabriel

Mrs. Mabel Hetzer, a former
resident or Reedsville, recently
celebrated her 91st birthday at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Attending were Marlon and Shirley
Hetzer of Toledo, Judy and Christine Loomis or Burswick, Arthur
and Nancy Hetzer or Belle, W.Va.,
Brent, Allcla and Sherry Robertson
of Charleston, W.Va., James, Cecile and Samantha Hetzer or
Columbus, Edwlr!, Patricia, Travis
and Tara Hetzer of Belpre, Frank
and Mary Allee Btse, Jacklyn,
David and Leigh Ann Bigley,
Fredrick, Therese and Dian Blse of
ReedsviUe. Refreshments were
enjoyed and gifts were presented to
the honored guest, Mrs. Mabel
Hetzer.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Buckley
and Mr. and Mrs. Randal Coulson
honored their daughters, Ann Buckley and Joy Coulson with a Teen
Birthday party at the Skate A Way
Roller Rink at Chester. Attending
were teenagers from Eastefll
School District and Federal HockIng School District. Refreshments
were served and gifts wffe presented to the girls.
Mrs. Chester Buckley and Mrs.
Connie Rucker visited with Mrs.
Buckley's mother, Mrs. Margaret
Neuman at Athens during the
holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blse visited
with Lt. Col. and Mrs . . Fredrick
Smith and family during the
holiday~ at Dayton.
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith visited

\

· o::-:o · V
- -- ··•· --·

Jamet Downard, Wellston.

133 named to merit list

Reedsville personal notes

LOOK FOR THE RED
TAIS Alii SAVEl

i_!!~l :A

RDilen .M. Colvin. Galllpolla: Olristy D.
Corvin. Wellsloo: Nancy E. Crusan and Joan
CutUp. bofh ot Jackson: T....,.. D. Danner.
GaUJpotil: James D. Derrow. Welislon:
Albert L. lleltwlller. Pomeroy: Kerry
Dobbins and Lorena J . Oobbfns, bolh of
BldweU: John G. llouglat. Rio Grande:

Calendar

~~
:m~~~:.:c~~r-an_o_th_ff_s_tro_~__ba-c~k-at_~__- _______th_e_s_u~__r_Bo_w_t._____________w_a_y_to~th-e_c_h_am_p_t-ons_hl_p_._.. _____j~~~~ID~D~L~E~PO!R~T~,~O~H~.~~~~~~~~~P~H~.'~99~2~-7~1~6~1~
provided him with a three-stroke

Ieat! Thursday In theserond round of
the five-round, $400,1XXl Bob Hope
Desert Golf Oasslc.
"l'.ve gone back to Jimmy Ballard
(a well-known teaching pro) and
that's helped," Simons said. "I'd
worked with him before I won the
Memorial five years ago. Since
then, I've kind of gotten
sidetracked."
And, he said, dedication to an
exercise program has provided him
with added length.
"I'm aU the way up to average,"
said Simons, who now combines his
Tour play with a concurrent career
as an Investment executive for a
national financial firm. "I've never
been that long before.
"It seemed like the courses were
aU getting longer and old Jim was
getting shorter.
"It's given me a good feeling
about this year."
Simons, In a mUd slump most of
last season, did not make a bogey In
his solid effort, missed only one
green at Indian Wells and played a
fine third shot to within five feet to
save par there.
He rolled In five birdie putts from
the 8-12 fpot range, made a long one
ofaboutllfeet,camewithln4lnches
of holing a &amp;-Iron shot for an ace and
capped his effort with a 4-wood
second shot over water that set up a
2-putt blrdle-4 on the final hole.
He completed two rounds of this ·

Friday, January 13, 1984
-Page 7

BEFORE ·you BUY TIRES ...

But he said he became Interested
In the Birmingham team last July
when he learned that RoUte DotsCh,
a former Steeler assistant, would be
the . coach. And Dotscl) said he
started ta1klng with Stoudt as soon
as he teamed he would be avaUable.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

didn't say, 'lhavetoplayeveryday.' · theydecldetheclubdecldesltwants
But lnsteatl of a good thing called hlnm.
"We're sort ot tom 'within the
desire, this has been reported as a
orgMizailon about whether we
bad thing called demands."
"I've never seen any player take want to sign him," said spokesman
as much criticism · as I did for Richard Grlttln. ''There are so
wantlrig to play every day," said many pluses and so many minuses
Rose, 42. "What would they have Involved. ~~~t tor our own good, we'll
said tfl only wanted to play Monday, have to decide within a week."
Wednesday and Friday? When you
Seattle General Manager Hal
sign a contract, It says you are paid Keller said he Is still Interested In
for services rendered. Itdoesn'tsay signing Rose.
services rendered for 1ll or '140
"They're aware of our Interest.
games," said Rose, a former Reds The position has never changed. We
player.
.
understand his position and I'm not
Both Katz and Rose declined to golngtomakeapestofmyselt," said
discuss the situation ·1n detaU, but a Keller.
'
Montreal Expos official said that the
"We're stU! listening to everybhe Is confident they wlll sign Rose If ody," dald Rose. "We have not
narrowed It down to one team or two
teams."

Stoudt joins USFL's Stallions

JAY CARPENTER

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) Jim Simons cited two factors - a
retumtohlsteacherandanexerclse
program - that helped produce
what he called a "once In a blue
moon" round.
- Simons, a t.hrel&gt;-tlme winner In 12
:&gt;revtous seasons on the PGA Tour,

-,

Pomero't'"""Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

""-·-·--1fl.:j-.....-n-:,,..~-·

'"" · ttJ.JtSI
.........,,0.

GEORGE M. COLLINS, Meigs Co. Trea5.

..

,,

•

'

�Page

Friday~ January 13, 1984

8-The Daily Sentinel

FBI considers
suicide in Army
General's death

Hutchins
gets stay
I

SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) -An Army ReseiVe general found hanged
at Fort Sam Houston could have disguised hls suicide as a murder by
looping a noose around hls neck, tying hls .hands behind hls back and
stepping off a second-story stairwell, the FBI says.
FBI agent Julian Delarosa said Thursday that Investigators have
discounted terrorism In the death of Maj. Gen. Robert G. Ownby, who was
found bound and hanged Wednesday In the headquarters bulldlng at the
fort, where he led the 90th U.S. Army ReseiVe Command.
'
The FBI, meanwhUe, said a handwtitten note had been found In Ownby's
second-floor office saying that he had "startled" some Intruders In the
bullding and was going to Investigate.
In Wa.Shlngton, Pentagon officials told The New York Times that the
Investigation centered on suicide, although murder had not been ruled out.
The officials said they were looking Into Ownby's mental condition, the
status of hls business and personal affairs and related matters for a
possible motive.
Pinned to Ownby's sweater was another note bearing the typewtitten
message, "Captured, tried, convicted of crimes by the U.S. Army against
the people of the world. Sentenced and executed."
The gen~ral's glasses, jacket and wallet were found In a neat stack near
the body and there was no sign of violence or foul play, the FBI said.
Blood was found on the general's body, but th!! FBI quoted Bexar County
Medical Examiner VIncent DIMaio as saying the blood could have dripped
from Ownby's nose and mouth during the hanging. DIMaio ruled
asphyxiation by hangtng as the cause of death and said the general had no
"preliminary marks or bruises Indicating a struggle."
Investigators placed the time of Ownby's death sometime between late ·
Tuesday and 6:40a.m. Wednesday, when an employee found the body.
The note left In ~ office said, In part:·
·. "I started out of the bullding and caught a glimpse of some people In the
bullding who moved toward the back of the bullding. I don't know who they
are or what they are doing. They were apparently startled. I came back
liere to call the MPs (mltltary pollee) , however, I cannot get any of the
telephones to work. Just as a precaution I am placing my office keys In my
shoe. I will call the MPs as soon as I can get to a phone. "
Bob Butler, who described himself as the general's "dearest friend," told
the Fort Worth Star-Telegram he doubted Ownby killed himself.
"This was the most perfect father ;ptd husband In the world," said
Butler. "In my own mind, somebody was waiting In there. I just feelllke It
was somebody he recognlzed and they made a martyr out of hlm."

:R eunification plans ·
for Taiwan discussed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Chinese Premier Zhao Zlyang, greeted
by enthusiastic applause from
members of the largest Chinese
community In the United States,
said reunltlcationofTalwan with the
mainland would not mean a
"swatlciwlng up" of the Island.
Experts said Zhao's detatled
description Thursday night of the ·
freedoms Taiwan would retain
under' reunltlcatlon could mark a
"welcome advance" In bringing the
two sides together.
Zhao said Taiwan would not be
taxed by Peking and could keep Its
QW11 armed forces, maintain an
Independent judiciary and political
system and have representation In
Peking.

'

'

"It ·· will not be a case of the
mainland swallowing up Taiwan or
Vice versa," Zhao told morethan300
Chinese-Americans. "We have proposed that after relinltlcation,
Taiwan and the mainland shall be
both part of the People's Republic of
· China, and Taiwan will become a
special administrative region.
"This means that Taiwan wlll
enjoy full autonomy and enjoy some
exclusive·powers that don't exist In
other municipalities and autonomcius regions" of China, said Zhao,
delivering hls remarks In Mandarin
Chinese which was then translated
Into English.
Unlike the Autonomous Region of
tibet, which Is still under strict

Chinese control, Zhao said "the .
mainland will send no representatives to Taiwan, neither troops nor
administrative personnel."
Zhao asked the guests, who were
Invited by the Chinese Consulate In
San Francisco, for suggestionS on
how reunification could be achieved
and urged them to promote it among
Chinese leaders In Los Angeles and
Seattle. The premier took no
9uestlons from the audience, but
shook hands with several of those
attending as he left the hall at the
Fairmont HoteL
Zhao continues hls tour of San
Francisco today with a ceremony at
City Hall, wherehewillgetthekeyto
the city, and a tour of the Lawrence
Hall of Science at the University of
Calltornla-Berkeley.
He will be guest o!honortonlghtat
a dinner given by Gov. George
Deukmejlan, thenlsscheduledtotiY ··
to New York on Saturday for a
twOilay visit before traveling to
Canada.
Zhao received the loudest applause when he talked of the
"honor" Taiwan would retain .
ProfessorTomFingar,dlrectorof
the U.S.-Chlna Relations Program
at Stanford University, . said that
whUe the speech was "not funda·mentatly different from previous
statements," It represented a "welcome advance" because of the
detalls of freedom Zhao mentioned.

HUTCJONS' WIFE ARRIVES - Geneva
Hutchins, middle, wife of coavlded murdered James
Hutchins, anives at the goveruor'a olftce iD RaJelch,
N.C., Thursday mormq, for a meeting with Gov. Jim

Hunt. )Wh Mn.Rutchlnl are Herb Gay, left, chief of
capMol8eCIJI'Ity and her llilter, Emily Roper, right.
(AP I aaerplloto) .

Governor requested to· stop
supplemental sal,ary paymen.ts
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Citing an Ohio Ethics
Commission opinion, the assistant House minority
leader Is calling on Cov. Richard Celeste to stop
supplemental payments to Lt. Gov. Myrl Shoemaker's salary and says Celeste should fire some aides.
Celeste and Shoemaker would not comment
Thursday on the opinion from the Ethics Commission
over the use of campaign funds.
Neither was available to answer reporters'
questions about whether their controverslal agree.
ment In which Shoemaker Is to be paid $60,00! In
campaign contributions over four years would be
altered or abandoned as a result of the panel's
opinion.
Without speclftclatly mentioning Democrats Celeste or Shoemaker, the six-member commissionthree Republicans and three Democrats - declared
that public officials shouldn't accept money from
political campaign funds.
Rep. Waldo l3ennett ~. RLima, assistant House
minority leader, reacted by calling for the governor to
end the practice .of supplementing Shoemaker's
salary and saying that Celeste's aides who helped
make the salary arrangement "should be tired
Immediately."
Rose said the Ethics Conunlssion conducts Its
affairs "In a highly professional and competent
manner, and to me It Is Inconceivable that the
governor will go forward with this ... " He sa!sUhe
governor "owes Shoemaker an apology."
The commission order'ed Its staff to research Jaws
governing supplemental pay for public officials last
month after the Celeste-Shoemaker agreement was
disclosed. ·
Paul Costello, Celeste's PfellS secretary, said the
governor would have no response to the panel's
action.
"No comment. That's all I've got to say," Costello
replied when questioned about the commission's
finding.
"I'm told there's no comment," a secretary In
Shoemaker's office said.
Joel Teaford, treasurer of 1 The Governor's

tommlttee from which the payments are made, said
the commission statement was "not a legal opinion"
but declined other comment about it.
In a statement Thursday, the commission said a
public officlal should not accept political campaign
funds and that the practice, In certain cases, could be
Illegal.
"The Ohio Ethics Commission concludes that, In
general, receipt of compensation and other things of
value by a public official or employee, other than
from the governmental entity with which he seiVes, Is
contrary to public policy, and Is, under certain
clrcumstances, prohibited by Ohio law," the
statement said.
"The commission accordingly concludes that a
public official or employee should not .. : accept
anything of value, Including money ... from a political
campaign fund, political party, political action
committee, or similar organization," the statement
said.
It also decided to prepare a report to the Genera!'
Assembly which may Include recommendations for
Iegtslation covering such matters.
.
Stephan Stover, commission executive director,
declined to elaborate, characterizing the 'panel's
comments as a policy statement.
"I'm n6t going to say It's not a warning but ... I
would characterize It as a statement ofpublicpollcy,"
Stover said.
The Celeste-Shoemaker agreement, wtitten In
December 1982, provides for the lieutenant governor
to be paid $15,00! annually for four years for services
to the Celeste campaign as a consultant.
Both officials have denied that the money Is a
supplement for Shoemaker's salary, although the
governor has frequently said Shoemaker Is doing two
jobs for one salary.
·
Shoemaker earns $-l&gt;,OOJ a year from the state as
lieutenant governor, the post to which he was elected
In 1982. He also seiVes - without pay - as natural
resources director, a job Celeste appointed h1m to last
year. That cabinet level post normally carries a
salary of about $00,00!.

Meigs County property transfers.•.
. Wilbur ba:Uey to Moha.mmad
Said Saaty, Shawbo Saaty, 88.21
acres, Columbia.
Pat E. Mitchell, Marcella Sue
Mitchell to Bessie M. Fisher, Lot
123, Middleport.
'.Eugene M. Fink, Kathleen Fink
to James Monroe Fink, .43 acre,
Rutland.
Felix R: Alkire, Mildred Alkire to
Leslie Hayman, 9.75 acres,
Lebanon.
Constance R. Wllllams, Constance R. Enslen, Glenn E. Enslen
to Brent Arnold, Parcels, Bedford.
Ava J. Greenless, deceased, to
Carolyn Fraley, Rose Barrows,
Cert. of Trans., Scipio.
F1orence E. Reynolds to Alma
Slayton, Lot 90, Middleport.
· William R. Reynolds, deceased,
Florence E. Reynolds, Affidavit,
Middleport. ·
Margaret Amburger to James E.
Diddle, Right of Way, Sutton.
.. Richard Gaul, Betty J . 'Gaul to
'James E. Diddle, Rlgbt of Way,
Chester.
Charles Eastman, Robin Eastman to James E. Diddle, Right of
Way, lllidrord.
·
Helen
Swartz,
Harry
Swartz
by
, I
'· Atty. In fact, to james E . Diddle,
Rlgbt of Way, Bedford.
Paul Haynes, Janice Haynes to
James E. Diddle, Right of- Way,
Bedford.
.
Theodore Pullins, Leona Pullins
to James E. l&gt;!ddle, Right of Way,
Chester.
Thomas J. Kibble, Suzanne Kibble to James E . Diddle, Right of
way, Chester.
.
Albert Roland EasllJ!ai!, Doris
Eastman to James E.·Diddle~ Right

Friday, January 13, 1984

of Way, Bedford.
Gerald R. Dou~las, Eleanor

The Daily. Sentinel

Douglas to James E: Diddle, Right
of Way, Bedford.

t""""E
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
DONALD F. JOHNSON
PLAINTIFF
VI GEORGE MIU.ER, ET Al
DEFENDANTS
· NO. 83-CV 242
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to an ardor oi sale
•ssur.d by the Court ol Common
Pleas. Me•gs County. Oh• o. l w111
offer lor sale at publ 1c auclton
on the 18th day of FebiUary
t 984 at t O 30 am on th~
Cour t House Steps. Metgs
County COUll House Pomoroy
Ohoo the OIL AND GAS
underly•ng the lollow 1ng des
Utbed real estiliP
Botng thr&gt; ool and gas only
undr.flytng thn fouowmg IAal
nstat e S• tuatOO .n t 'lb anon
lownshtp. Metgs County Ohto.
BA•ng the sou th hal f ol 100
acre Lot No 16 7 bP.:Jtnning at
the southnas1 corner at Satd

Ill

CIIARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)• The president of the United Mine
Workers union Is rapidly rising as a
media star, and his latest conquest Is
the syndicated daytime Interview
program, The Phil Donahue Show.
Rich Trumka, 34, wlll take part In
a session to be taped In Chicago on
Wednesday, according to Donahue
producer Sue Sprecher, who said
she wanted to do a show "with a
major labor leader to look at the fact
that although we're coming out of
this recession, there still Is a great
number of blue collar workers }Yho
have lost their jobs for good. "
She selected Trumka, she said,
because "In speeches he has made,
and In news media lnteiVIews, he
seemed to be sensitive not just to
coalworkersbuttopeopleacrossthe
.board who are losing jobs tlu&gt;t wtll
never be regained."

I) ?0 27 31C

Small Doilies!

··-·--·-............

.....
....
............
·-ONE RACK
LADIES' ~ JUNIORS'
DRESSES

20%-r:eSOo/o
. LITTLE GIRLS'

FUR JACKETS
SIZES 2, 3, 4
ONLY . $ 1 2 8 8

MEN'S &lt;Xil.oR
THERMAL TOPS
SlrH S, M, l, XL
Black, Grey, Maroon

$4 44
. .

..............
~~-­
nu..w

BLANKETS
REDUCED

20°/o
MEN'S CARHART
QUILT-LINED BIB OVERALLS

IN THE

follows: Begmnmg '"the center

COMMON PLEAS

CARHART l!NUNED BROWN DUCK
BIB OVERALL .

-poilllloll.

Plllnlllf.

"

VL

RICHARD M. YOUNG, ET
AL.

BOYS' ROBES
Slz• 4·20
ALL REl)UCED

Dllll,.,a.

'

No. 18-428

-N01ICI! OF IIA1EPursuant to an.Drder of Sale
tssued by the Common Pleas
Court of Meigs County, Ohto. I
will offer for sale at public
auction on the l'Sth day of
February. 1984. at 10:00 A.M.
on the steps of the Coon House
of said county in the Village of
Pomeroy. Ohto, at the follOWing
descnbed real estate:
1he followmg •eal estattt
situated in the Townshtp of
SaliSbury. County of Meigs and
State of OtriOo
Parcel 1: The following &lt;eal •
estate situated. in Fraction No ..
2, Salisbury Township. Meigs
Co~ nty, Ohio. and described as

...

'

Public Notice
Range 13 of the Uh•o com-

Public Notice
Mary Patn c•a Young. by &lt;.leeds ·

IIUiodltt w

recorded on Vol 184. Page 485
descnbftd as follows: Beg1n- and Vol 184. Page 65 7 Deoo
formerly Ray Brown lot; thence . mng at a stake in the m•ddle of Records of Me•gs Cbunty.
North 36 deg, 28' "Vest ·54.8 the paved road leadtng from Oh•o. and lunher exceptin g the ·
feet along the canter of said, Kerr's Run past the Fair Ground coal and the nghts along the
State Htghway No. 33: thence and also the cOrner of What was coal seams m and under said
North 54·deg. East 125.6 feet: ' 'form~rly Ray BroWn: the~
I"fiiS.As m accordance with
thence North 59 deg. 56' East runn•ng along what was for· orA
the exceptions . 1n a deed to
82 feet to the west line of Lucille merly Ray BrOwn's ,line. N. 59 'Will1am Brown. 'leonard Brown
Jes$8's 1 acre lot. recorded m deg. 56 min. E. 208.71 f.eet: and Lewis Brown. from Charles
Deed Book 162. Page 589 thence N. 36 deg. 28 mtn. W. P. Greenough, Dante/ A. Russell
Deed.Records of Meigs County: 208.71 feet: thence S. 59 deg. and Fra ('lk 0 . SQu~re. TrustAes
thence south 36 deg. 28' East 56 min. W. 208.71 feet to dated J~n. 11th. 18S5. and .
68 feet to the Southeast corner center ot road: thepce along the recorded by Nov 8th. 190 h n
of the satd 1 acre lot: thence road S. 36 deg. 28 mtn. E.l Vol. 97. Page 492 of the Deed
1.
South 59· deg. 56' West 208.7 1 feet to the place of Records of Meigs County.
208.7'1 feet along the South beginning. contalntng one Oh•o. . .
.
line ol the said 1 acre lot to the acre. more or less, excepting
Reference Deed: Vol, 264,
place of beginning, containing h0W81181. tllat portion of said Page 257 Deed Records Me1gs 1 '
.30 acre, ·
•
. real estate as conveyed by Val County. Ohio.
Along with the easement for E. ~rown B(ld Maggie Brown to
Terms of Sale: Cash for not
purqoses of tngress and 'egress Luc•lle Jesse .by deed beanng loss. than two ·th~rd s of the
as IS described In deed re- date of Dec. 15. 1932. re- appra1sed value.
•
corded in Vol. 194. page 19 of. corded in Vol. 139. Page 74 o1
Par,ct\1 1 app1a 11ed at
the Deed Records of Meigs •the Dee&lt;l Records of Meigs s 19.000.00. and Parcel 2
County, Ohio.
County, Ohio. 10 which refe~­ appratJed a1 s 1·2.300.00.
Parcel 2: The following des- er'ce is made. further excepting
cribed real estate ·sit~ated in the .30 of an acre corweye&lt;l to
JAMES J. PAOFFITI ' ·
Township of Salisbury, County George A, Young and Mary
. SHERIFF.OF .
ofMe•gsandStateofOhio.and Patricia Young. by deedS con•
· MEIG$ COI,IN'!Y, OHIO
in Fractton No. 2, ,Town 2. veyed to G,eorge .R Yqung and (11 13. 20. 27. 3tc .
·

.,

54tlem

117-EIIf Art Ill lltetlilpoinl

Northwest corner of what was

MAMEIGIO
. .NCD,OUSNTYAYI'NOGHSIO •
DI
l ·O ~ N C 0 MPAN Y• 1

$3498

a

_

of State H•ghway No. 33 at the pany's Purchase. bounded and

COURT OF •

"OVER 48 YEARS IN THE SAME
PLACE UNDER THE SAME MANAGiMENT"

'

Public Notice

Public Notice

"
'
--.,.--·
_
_
:::::..__
_
,._
_

··-::-:,. _ ..........
===-- ··,,._-...,
-- · -.,..,,....
...._
_, ....
.....,..,.....
••
_N..
...........
....,..........·--·-U.·
--···
................

---- ---

collec:tor meent duetle••

114(ampllll .......

112·Prla AIPIM
lii·(IIJ All II Hairpin Crochet
10$-Siw+lllit (lillie tiaue lncl)
107·11111111 Serriltl
.
106-lllllltlt Fllllloit
104-llllllni·.....,
llla-15 Qtlllts for Totlar

64 'Misc. Merchandiee

·Year-End

Clea·rance Sale ·
AT
""'
Pomeroy
Landmark
992·2111.
ONALL '
Hotpolnt Appliances
General Electric-TV's
Hoover Sweepers

..

uu.

11

11-1·1 lito

pd

KEN'S
ASPEPRLIVAINCCEE

eote remov•l .
•1 II% Dlocount

Montho
of Jenuery end Fobruery.

•Cell now to protect your

'emily.
PH . 949· 2739

MILLER

YOUNG'S

ELECTRIC

CARPENTER
SERVICE

985-3561

All Makes
•WIIhero •Dfohwuhere
•Rengeo
•Refrlgeretoro
•Dryoro •Froerere
PARTS end SERVICE

4~5 ·tfC

SERVICE
For all your wirina
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

--

- Addono end romodolllltl
- Aoofllltl end ,.,_ -~~~

- Concrete work
- Piw.mbh'Q end electrlcel

(Froe Eotlmetoo)
REDUCED WINTER RATES
V. C. YOUNG 111 992-6215 or 992·7314
'oDieroy, Ohio

Now Open

Roger HyseU·

Jerry's Custom

E. Malr•Wtllli
POMEROY,O.
992·2259
BALD KNOB ROAD - Beauti·
lui 12 acre building site in !he
country - on a paved road
an&lt;i much potential, reclaimed
sprin&amp; could have gas.
$7,00J.OO.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT - 5
bedroom home, enclosed sun
porch, iarl!l! kitchen. spaCIOUS
dining -livtng room, pan basement. 3 car gaf!ge, 2 bedroom
rental house for extra income.
Large lti $39,900.00.

GARAGEo•to

SLAUGHTER
BHf and H01s
"From the Farm
to the FrHzer"
Cut and wrapptd to your
specifications. Fast, Deptndable Service.
CALL: 742· 2789
or 742·256
1·11·1mo.·pd

11. 124,P-oy
. AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Coin-0-Matic
Formerly D~ds and Suds
Attendant on duty.
Clothes Washed &amp;
Dryed $2.00 I Load
One Day Service
Phone: 992-5937
1·5·1 mo.

MEIGS

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-Extensive
Remodel ina
Insurance Work
Cult~m Pofa Bldas.
Garaps
Roofin&amp; Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinp
16 Yeera Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992· 7583
or 992-2282
11·1-tfc

CAB CO.

WILL OPEN

DEC. 30th
104 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-3383
12·29·1mo

992·2196

VIRGIL B. SR . ~!'!!!!~
216 r.. 2nd Sf.
Phone
1-(614) ·992·3325

or

CHESHIRE - level .65 of an
acre on Rt 7. Six room ranch
home, new natural gas furnance and drilkid well. Aluminum siding · and insulated.
$4,000 down.
2 BEDROOMS - One floor 4
room ·small house. Balh,
furnace and large lot in·
Middleport $2.100 down.
IN TOWN - Nice lot. 3
bedrooms, all city utilities. hot
water hea~ basement storm
windows and OOIS. Walk to lhe
stores. $4.000 down.
SYRACUSE - 10% down wiN
buy you lh~ home on a 30 yr.
fixed mortgage. One floor, 3
bedrooms, . nice large lot.
automatic heat.
· 12 ACRES - Nice 2 bedroom
ranch home with gas furnace,
rural water, full baSement, ~ ·
cellar and bam. Only $4,00J
down,
GORDEN l, HELEII L. SUE
IUIPHY AIID IILTON

'IOUSII - IEALTIIII$.
Housmg

Headclllarters

FO

UNO email Beag le dog .

Coli 446 -3386.
Public Sale
8t Auction

refinance. 11 1!.% adju sta ble

night, Pt. Pleuant, WVa .

rate . Leader Mortgage .

Rick Pearaon Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm , An tique &amp; liquidation sa les.
Uceftoed • bonded in Ohio &amp;

Services

WVo. 304-773-6786 or PIANO TUNING Lower
pr ices - reg ular tunings 304-773-9186.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE . OHIO

SIDIN~

BISSELL

CO.

SIDING
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Gereges"
Call for free siding es·
timates~ 949·2801 or

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoc
farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

949·28o0

No Sunday Cella
3-11-tfc

l

Curb Inflation II
Pay Cash for
I
I
Classlfleds and II
1
Savelll
..
I
1 · wr;"' rour
and
by mall w;ltl tills 1
own ad

onter

coupon. Cancel your ad by phone
, results. Maney not ret..-te.

when

you

get 1

1

I

Nam•----------1

Add~-~--------------

1

446-3672

Standing timber. will pay
top prices for red &amp; white

ook. Coli 614-388-9906
after 5 ,
weekends .

or

anytime

We need tobacco poundage.
Will pay top price. Call

1-614-379-2166.

Pay top dollar for used
mobile homes and truck

Wanted uaed Stihl chain a.w
any size &amp; condition. Call

446-7126.

Wan ted to buy. New, used &amp;
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete house holds. Also complete Aucti oneering service. Call Rod ney
Howery

614-698-7231 .

Buying daily gold. silver
coins. rings. jewelry. sterling
ware. old coins. large currency . Top prices. Ed . Bur-

kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Avo.
Middleport, Oh . 614-9923476.

BEDS-IRON, BRASS old
Furniture.• gold. silver dollara. woOd ice boxes. stone
jars, antiques, etc. ComPlete
households . Write M . D .
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Oh

A1111 oun cemen 1s

Empl oym enl
Se rvic es

3 Announcements
SWEEPER ond sewing me- 11
chine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery . Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Georges Creek Rd.
614-446-0294.

Call

Balloons for Christmas. Get
Well. Anniversarys, Birth days parties. Call Balloons &amp;

Co .. 446-4313 .

G'un shoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday starting 1
p.m . Factory choked guns

Mercer Canvalesenca

Home. 18 years experience.

Help Wanted

NOW IN

( )Wanted
SAVE

( lForSate

PtJmeroy r Oh.

( )Announcement
( )For Rent

PARCEL SERVICE

1. _ _ _......,_ _

DEPOSITORY
DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
.r U.P.S. - PUROLATOR
~~DOOR TO nni'I.D · ~

\ DEUVERY '
PARCEl PRIORITY SIIIP~ENTS
FOR LESS THAN U. S. IAil
VE Ill% TO !IOURD WIRE ,

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:
POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE ,
Main

&amp;ra

st. ·

· Pomeroy, Oh .

17.------

18.
-----19, _ _...__ __

Part

Time Help Wanted

World Book. Call (304,
882 -2486.

Riverview Personal Care
Home now has 1 vacancy for

Pink sale. Open house. Cos-

Straight percentage of earn -

. 50 70
inga. sponsorship and good
mettcs
percent oH. routes'available. Caii1-304McCoy home. 8th otroet in
Syrecuoe. January 12.13- 1-67_6_·_2_3_18_._ _ __ _
10om till Spm. Jonuory l- - - - - - - - - 14 -hm till 12 noon .
2
s·rtuations
s .Sayre a~d c . McCoy. Coli 1
992·5082.
Wanted
Kid's Praise! l .. .a musical

2. -_
. ._
. -_
-3.
_
_ 4. _ _ _ _ __

21.
'
22.

23-----,s. ______ 2
4.-----7 _ _ _ _ _ __

25. - - ' - - - -

attend.

B.------

26. - , . - - - 'D.
- -_
--_
-21. _
_
_ ,

______

'

schools. 2, miles from town.

Colt 446-0276.

3 bdr .. Both. Eat-In kitchen.
Oiningroom . Carpet . Large
lot. Large baaement, car-

port. e14,900. U.st houoe

away from River OQ Henderson St .. Henderson, WV. ·.

Ranch on 6 acres , beautiful
s etting with tall pines
around the houM . Spaciou.a
livingroom which overlooka
the pond. 4 bedroomo. utility room and kitchen has a

built-in range. Attume pay-

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

Rt. 160. Coli 446-2857 or
446-4202.
Owner Must Sell I Fireplace!
Includes some furniture! Incredible low Price! M iddle-

port . Coll614-992-6941 .
3 bedroom ranr,h

sty~d

homo . Call 446-0109 after
5:30.
3 bedroom. Superior location . 10 % down , 10%
financing
We have buyers for homes in

tho $40,000 to S55.000
range . List with us. A -One
Real Estate. Carol Yeager

Realtor. Coli 675 -5104 o;
676-5386.
Sell or trade for farm of
equal value. 3 bdr. house
Sanders Hill , city Schools:
garage, kit -dining area. cen -

tral AC, ges heat. Call
446-2151 4PM to SAM.
located in Syracuse -Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot. Price reduced
$23,500 . or will rent for

$240 mo. 304-856-3934.

rooms. basement. double
garage. 1 and one third acre
lot. Rose Hill. Pomeroy.
Excellent condi t i on .

S32 ,900 . 1-614 -678 2511.
House partially furnished .
I 21 7th Avo. Middleport,
Ohio . Owner will finance .

barn. ba sement. carport. on
Rose Hill in Pomeroy. Good
condition , $26 ,000. plus
furniture -$2 ,000 . Total :

1- - - - - - - - - - S28,000. Call Edison Hobing for someone to buy out
and take over clothing busi ness. Includes inventory,
fixtures. supplies. 304 -675 -

preoented by the Rutland
Nuerene Youth. Sundey
evefllng. January 15th.
1984 It 6:30 PM. Rutland
Church of the Nazarene.
Deboreh J . Gilmore•. director. The public is Invited to

20. - - - ' - - - - . -

4 bdr. ranch home, large LA .

full boOOfJient, with garage.

Ave .. Gallipolis, Oh 46631 . Contact Ralph Pran. 227 S.
Share 'ride to O.U. for 8:00 5th. Ave. Middleport, oh.
class. M-F. Call 446-8580. 7 room house. 1 111 acre tot.

o elderly peroon. 304-773- ' 1_3_1_7_o_r_&amp;_7_6_-3_2_1_7_.- 6882 .
,.
AVON MEANS MONEY .

I
I
I
I

Homes for Sale

HOUSE FOR SALE-&amp;
Office clerk for a mineindustrial silas co. Some
experience preferred involv·
ing: inventory, cardex system. typing , general office
reports. and telephone sales
duties. Send resume to Box
102 in care of Gallipolis
Daily Tribune. 825 Third

CIIfton , w .y . 304-773- Business opportunity look6873.

E sl ~l e

campers. Coli 614-446- ments with a tmafl down
payment. $68 ,900. Call
0175.
446-3176.

Phone 614-446-4298.

Vacancy: Julia's Personal
Care Home . Formerly

Thesecashrates .
Include dlscoun1

Upholsto•y. 304-676-4164 .

wood burner included, city

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni-

Want to buy Indian artifacts .

only.

•Body &amp; Fender Repairs
•Expert Refinishing
•Insurance Claims
Welcome
•Free Estimates
12/ 15/ 1 mo.

season prices on f• rniture
re- upholstering . '-towreys

Wo poy cooh for loto model 31

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofin&amp; - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodelina - Custom Pole
Barns.
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
lone Bottom, OH . 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
12-20-tfc

Vinyl 8t Aluminum

TWO MONTH SPECIAL.
Jan. and Feb. 1984 off

Wanted To Buy

clean used cars.
-Jim Mink Chav.-Oida Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

10/20/ tf.n.

742-2328 4-21 -ttc

Keyboard, 304-676-3824.

Re al
9

742-2328

'Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

discountl to Senior Citiz.tns,
Churches &amp; Schools. Ward 'a

3069.

AL TROMM

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

22 Money to Loan

every Tuesday

Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Canter. Truckloads of new
merchandiae every week .
Consigmantl of new and
used merchandise always
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304 - 276 -

GRAVEL
HAULED

Ohio 45769.

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

Auct. lonnie Neal. Youth Athens, 1-800-341 -6664
Center Bldg .. .Comdon St . 1
~ ~~::;======
614-367-7101
23 Professional

2-23-tfc

Discover Enpee-A-Car, the
modem answer to soarinc
fiiW car prices! Drive {1t v.
hide of your clloic» ... any
and model. llo doMt
IJIYIMI1l " - monthly
PIYftiiiiiS, Reid alllbout it.
Send for Free Boollell-16.
Bob Blacbton, 111 authorized independent EnlaltA-&lt;:. llrolier. Box m~ flo-

mail until you have invettigated the offering .

RATES 12 1/l% purchaae or

PH. 992-2280

LAND CONTRACT $2,500.00 down. $215.10 a
matrth at 13% for 180
payments- Has 3 bedrooms.
modern lub bath, natural gas
with 45x 146 lol Sale Price
$19,500.
4.n ACRES - Near Pomeroy.
7 rms., bath, carpetin&amp; full
basement 2 porches and large
carjM $3,00J down.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBFOUND on Rt. 141 big LISHING CO . recommend•
b8ro11wnFdog1. fLooko like Pit that you do buainett with
u .
or n ormation call people you know . an d NOT
446-2708.
to aend money through the

45769 or 614-992-7760.

I

WELL'S GARAGE
Route 1
Shade, OH. 45n6
PH. 992-7844
Rt. 681 West-at Darwin

992-3194
992-2388

Business or Residential
L----- 12-2J.l tro

Jerry and Ellen's

Factory Choke
12 Gauee Shoteuns
Only

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

PH .

Business
Opportunity

.,

Au ctio n

COAL
$3QOO

Owner

21

HOME LOANS FIXED

STRIP

ROGER MANLEY

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL

6:30P.M.

'

::.~~~ot8~f;';43u.ooio

ture. 446-3169, 3rd. •
Olive St .. Gallipolio, Oh .

RACINE
FIRE ,...,,.-; .
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

PAT HILL FORD

;;~~e:J~o

MINE RUN

3-24-tfc

GUN SHOOT

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

40 old hono. e14-949 - 8obyolnlng In my homo.
2e44.
125 woek per child . cen
446-7402 .
2 boyowfnterjocketo to give
Fm~nml
6 end 10. 614-

MANLEY'S
In Middleport
(Formerly Lawrence
(Dobbia) Manley's Route)

9

18 Wanted to Do

Giveaway

8
TRASH SERVICE

Sentinel-Page

2 Kl«eno. 3oL76-2991 .
6 Lost and Found

•Wire bru1he1 for creo·

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Do«ie Turner 992-5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

Bott 163, Old Clllllll Sll., New
Yorl, NY 10113. Print N1111e,
Acldr-, Zip Pat14m Nu11blr.
YOUR NEXT CRAFT is in our NEW
1984 NEEOLECRAFT CATALOG
OYer 170 varied desians, 3 free
patterns. Send $2.00.
AU CUfT 11001($. .$2.50 NCh
All Boob ltld Catafol-itld 504
uc1t for fiOIII&amp;t .. hlntllin~
13S.DIIII &amp; a.lilll On Pllldt
134-14 QllclilllcltfM Qtlifts
133-FIIIIlon IIDIII Qulttina
132-QII" Orialnall
13l·fd4 I llilct Qtllfts
129-Qulcl 'n' Elly Trltllf111
12a.£nw~opt Patc!IM Quilts
126-Tlnlflr Craflr Flowtt1
IZS.PIIal ~Its
121-Pf...

..

FOR FUTURE USE"

cfoenlng.

Ill DDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
ranch home on a qutel street,
- cule kitchen, large utility room.
· outstanding storage.

PHONE
992-2156
· Clllritt DoiiiJ- ClouWiH o.,t.

==·
=
=
,.=
,.
___
_

lOOt

MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom
ranch home, separale utility,
kitchen · dimng with ref.-range.
Nice lot with patio. $24,00!.00.

Add lovely touch to tables. the
corne• of a room. anywhere'
Dotfies make such lmly, uselui gifts' Use No. 30 cotton for
9" fern. IO" Iacy and 9\1" pineapple doilies. Use bedspread cotton lor slightly lareer size. Patlern 7128: directions.
.$2.75 for each pattern. Add
501 each pattern for postage
a~d handfina . Send lo:
Ahce llroob Crafts ::J i 'd'
Rtadtf Mall

11111

''CUT OUT

u

- J.o.BOy
- Trllfcfitr
- Water
- Stwtr
-Gas lines
•'"'p11 S
- .. c yltems
LARGE or SMAU JOIS
PH. 992 •2478
ll IH IIIO ·pcl

Antltlna Installation
Hou11 C.lls and Shop
Sttvlct Available

&amp;

POLE BUILDINGS
Siz11 Sllrt From 12'116'
T1UTY BUILDINGS
51111 from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Do1 Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine: Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10 .6.tfc

:~~~~ckl

.• 1 ~~
••~ndlll"!_~

ELBOW ROOM - Approx. 33
acres w~h nice 3 bedroom
ranch, 2 baths, full basement
w~h summer kitchen, family
room with fireplace, patio, large
melal barn. $47,500.00.

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
winning number drawn Thursday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, ''The Number," was 366. In
the "Pick 4" game, played Monday
through Friday, the winning
number was 1959.
The Ohio Lottery reported earnIngs of$872,507 .50fropl the wagering
on "The Number." The eantlngs
came on sales of $1,071,372, whtle
holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $198,864.50, lottery
officials said.

::-.:;.

1
"' 04289
P h . 98 .,.
~~~Y.I ~ ~

"

ALL STEEL

- Dozm

If No Answtr, C.ll 915-4312
D-•vne Wflllem 1

SALEM TWP. - Nice molile
home. huge I)!Crttc shelter, gara~ and extra trailer lot
SJO.OOJ.OO.

Ohio lottery·winner

.

APPLIANCE

SWEEP

305 M Ptgs County OePd
Records
Satd o•t and gas ca nnot be
solrt tor less than tw o thHds o f
thP appra•sed valuP of

PROFFITI
SHERIFF OF
ME IGS COUNTY OHIO

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

AND

ptao! of l&gt;Ag•nnmg. conta•n•ng
50 aetAS more 0 1 IP.SS
RPhmmcP Volume 709 page

The Daily Sentinel

:

CHIMN

S&amp;W TV

lhP run lo a post thence non h
40 ltnks to a post thence wes1
79 c hatns to a IX&gt;St ,n thP west
line o f sa•d lot thencP south 6
r ham s 1'5 111 l1nk s to the
southwest co rner ot o; a•rl lot.
thf'ln CP. P.aSI 80 ChJ1IlS tO thP

Ill Coo~ II .. - ,, lllllo 4S7U

-....
·
:.- ........

CHI
KING

shtp tn the Oh•o Company's
Pur chase thence north 5 73
r ha.ns to a post thn sout heast
1 ornP.r of P M ,lnd N A Atc heyj.
one ha ll of sa•d 100 aoe lot
thence nort h 1 75 chatns by a
ltne pass•ng over the mtddle of

Trumka will
visit Donahue

IHa.t¥ ..... 1. . . . .

II

100 acrP lot 167 l awn 2

JAM ES J

4

~::;;;;;::::;,;:========;r;:======::::;r;:=======:'i:r-:=======~

Ranqn I 1 •n LPbanun Tovvn

S3 t66 67
Terrns of Saln Cash m hand
on day of sate thP. ng ht 1S
rr•Sf'HVf'd to rPtP.Ct any or all btds

The

Business Services

Public Notice

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A
federal Judge In an Impromptu
hote1·room contecence blocked today's execution of convicted police
killer James Hutchins, and the U.S.
Supreme Court must now cleclde
whether the state can proceed with
the lethal Injection.
Chlet· Justice WaiTen Burger.
refusing to rule on an early 'TIOrnlng
appeal by North Caro1t a otflclals,
l'eferred • the case to a court
l'Onference today, said Supreme
Court spokeswoman Ton! House.
Judge J. Dickson Phi!Ups of the
4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
stayed the execution at 12:a; a.m .
today, Jess than six hours before It
was due to be carried out.
It the Supreme Court removes the
stay, Hutchins could sill! be exe, cuted today, prosecutors said. State
law requires a condemned prisoner
to be executed between 6 a.m. and6
p.m.
Hutchins, 54, was sentenced to
death In 1979 for the rifle slaylngs of
two sherHt's deputies who were
Investigating a report that he had
beaten hls teen-age daughter, and
that of a state trooper who later
pursued him.
Phlillps' handwritten orderdelaylng the execution "pending fUrther
orders from this court" was
delivered from a Richmond, Va.,
hotel room where he met for 50
minutes with lawyers.
Shortly after hls ruling was
announced, two sisters of the slain
trooper demanded to see Gov. Jim
Hunt and were adiiutted to the state
Capitol but not to the governor's
office.

•..

Ohio

statler at 992 -2464 or
George S. Hobstetter at

992-7763. Will consider
financing part of it.

3 acres with a nicely con structed concrete block
home 26x60. 3 bedrooms,
one bath, 12x 15 living room
and 24x24 family room .
Partially carpeted, fuel oit
furnace with facilities for
wood burner. 12x 15 block
storage building, 20x30
block Qarage. Right off
Rt.248 . country setting, 1f2
mile East of Chester. Ohio.
Home National Bank -614 -

949 -2210 .
home. Lots of references . 1- - - - - - - - -

Will care for the elderly in my

Men or women . Call 614 -

House for sale or rent in

667-3402.
Middleport . 5 rooms and
1- - - - - - - - - bath: Call after 6 p.m.
House cleaning any type 614-742 -2435.
Point Pleooent ond vicinity. 1- - - - - - - - Realonable rates. Referen- BY OWNER , Moadowb•ook
ceo. Call 304-676-3908.
Addition, all brick , assume

"·------

311.

VFW Poot-Maoon W.Ye. Rey
8 .5 loan, moderate down
Von Meter • Tho · Country Herper' s Adult Care Home payment, 3 bedroom, 2
Connection. Fridey • Satur- has a vacancy for another baths. dining room , built in
dey from 9 till 1. Dence.
reoident, elderly pereon. Cell kitchen . garagt), with auto
304·676, 1293.
opener. Central air -cond .•

12- - - - - - -

31.-----

4

13. - - - - - -

32.
32. --..,.--...;.....
_ _ _ __

.9. _ _ _ __

29. _ _ _ _ __

10. - - - - -

14.
15. _ _ _ __

16. - - - - - -

:u.
35.

Mall This Coupon with Reml...nct
The Dally Sentinel

111 CollrtSt.

Pomeroy, Oh. 457"

Giveaway

13
Insurance
Meno ferge ohlrts. Col/614- 1- - - - - - - - 388-8769.
SANDY AND BEAVER In'II Huoky female dog 1 yr. surance Co. has offered
old, gentle, good watch dog. services for fire insurance
Coli 448-1836 or 446- coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm.
2203.
homo ond peraonol property
Klneno end ceto to glvo coverligeo are ov,Uoblo "'
eway. Femelo end mele. moet lndlvlduel noedo. ConGood petl. Call 614-985- tact Harry Pitchford, agent.
Phone 614-446-1427.
3884.

large lot. priced mid fifties .
Shown by appointment

only . NO REALTORS .
Phone 304-675-3445. ·
Gallipolis Ferry, three bedroom. brick, four car garage,
plus 6, years old. Phone

304-676·6861 '
By owner. Gallipolis Ferry,
throe bodroomo; two baths.
100x200 lot. 9.8 per cent
auumable loan . 304-6752183.

•

�Page-l 0- The Daily
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

78
61 Household Goode
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
82 Oliva St .. Galllpolla. New
• ueed wood • coalllovea.
8 piece wood living room
auita with 8 Inch flat erma
*399, bunk boda complete
with bun: lea *199, 2 pll"'•·
antron llv'ngroom aultea
*199, • · tro•1 recllnera *99,
other ·•..li. • a *80. maple
.dinette aeta *179. box
aprlngs &amp; mattre11 twin or
full *100 oat regular-firm
*120, maple dinette chelra
*35, Wllh 1tond1 *34,
maple rockera *59, 7 piece
chroma dinette aet S149, e
piece dinette 11t t99, uaed
bedroom aultea. refrigere·.
tore, rangaa, cheat, dreuera,
wringer waahora, TV' a, dryera. • ahoea. Coii814-448 31&amp;9.
- - - - -- - - -LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Solo. choir, rocker, otto·

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL ' S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
AT 35 . PHONE 614 -4467274 .
1977 12x60 mobile home. 2
bdr., furnished . good cond .•
S7, 500 . Call 614 -256 ·
6618 .
Must Sell 4 bdr .. 12x65,
plus 12x20 room. CA. stor·
age building, porch , 8a awn·
ing . Corner lot at Quail
Creek, French City Brokerage Service . Call 446 -9340.
Priced to sell. 1979 Sterling
14x70. 2 bdr .. CA. vinyl
skirting. French City Brokerage Service . Call446 -9340.
1972 mobile home. naeds
0063 .
1978 Shultz 14x70 central
air, all new furniture, ex.
cond. on rented lot. Call
evenings 446-2076 .

by Frontier). '685 . Sofa,
~~~=~~~~~~~=====~~~~u' chair
man.
3 tablea. taxtro heavy
and loveaeat, •276.

~

41

Houses for Rent

44

Apartment
for Rent

Sofaa and chalrar.iced from
U85. to *895 . oblea, f45
and up to *125. Hide·•·
beda, S440 . and up to
*625. , Rocllnora. *176. to
$375 .. lompa from US. to
t75.5 pc. dlnottoa from
*99., to 435. 7 pc. 8189
and up. Wood toblo with aix
cholra *425 to t746 . Daak
S110 up to f226. Hutchea,
$560. and up, moplo or pine
finlah. Bunk bed complete
with mettreaua. ueo. end
up to *395. Baby bada.
8110. Mottreaua or box
apringa, full or twin, •sa ..
firm, •ea. end f78. Quoen
1011, $196. 4 dr. cheoto.
*42 . 5 dr. cholla. *54. Bod
from11. UO.ond f26 .. 10
gun · Gun coblnato, *,150.
Goa or electric rengoa *376.
Boby mottreaua. $25 •
$36, bad fromea
$26,
• $30, 1dng fromo *60.
Good ulectlon of bedroom
auitea, cedar chaeta ,
rockers, metal cabinets.

Umoatona, Sand, · Grovel.
Delivered In Mooon. Malga,
Galllo or pick up at Richard•
• .Son. Call 448· 7785.

11

Umoatono delivered. *10 o
ton . Coli 814-268-1427.
Firewood delivered . US
pickup lood, 10 looda
Cell 814-256-1427.

noo.

81

For ule 85,000 BTU Warm
Morning gas heater, 1 yr .
old, ex. cond .. f426 . ~ell
446-8221'

Equipment troller tandem.
16ft. 81 .000. Alao Gravely
backhoe, 81.200. Coli 614266 • 1427 ·

66

THEN 1 GOT TO THINKING ...--..., OH, EA;Y ... WH AT
'NOMEN WERE RIBHT.
CAN I 7 AY ~ I
YOU ARe' THE- M07T IMPORTANT
COULDN'T L6METHIIIG IN MY LIFE . I DON'T
NOW. I LOVE
NEED ANY WILD· OOO~E
YOU.
CHASE7... I NEED YOU~

VOU'IIll fOlio!&amp;

THO~E

fliGHT OVIP!,

ANffi~A&amp;
SUNtA~OW.

TO

Appliance Service all mokoa
• modela refrlgertora .
waehers. dryen, ranges.
compectora, dlahwuher•.
mlcrowovea . Heeling •
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work.
Gollle Refrigeration Co .
1114-448 -4066 .

Pets for Sale
71

Drogonwynd Cattery·
Kennell. AKC Chow pupplea. CFA .Himalayan, Per·
lion and Slomoee kittens.
Coli 814-448· 3844 after 11.

a.

no.

a.

v.

1----------

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

no.

'

\

Home
Improvements

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
lng. 30 yoors experience,
epaclollzlng In built up roof .
Cell 814-388-9867.

If
~~~=~=~=~~~~~~~=~·~-·~•~~~~

a.

•

·'

PLASTERING · New ond
repelr commercial and real·
dentlal. frH utlmotoa. Coli
814 -258-1182.

7 pc. wood group. $800. 15
KW electric furnonce f60 .
Call 448-8326 .

old. exc. cond .. *876. Coli
large sire buck stove. 1 yr.
446-8221.

.•'•

•

Firewood cut up aloba *16
pickup load. Coli 814-2466804.

Will cut and deliver fire·
wood. Coli 614-258 -1528.

•

•

••

S1: rv1t:t:s

no.

______

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceeaorlea

Billy Lu'~ Tlroa ond Battery
8alao. Now end ueed tlroo,
•••o. tire rapolro. 11103 Jof·
faroon Ave. Point PleoNn1 .
304· 875-5405.
.

1O'x20' garage. Will move
House with beth and large
to your lot. Cell 446 -1102.
~,- yard : Near Racine. 614Brand new 2 bedroom du·
197912x65liberty. unfur.,
992-6868 .
Dorer with end loader Case
plex apt., on one floor,
gas heat. gas stove. axe.
310, •4.600. Call814-268·
equip. kitchen. utility room.
cond. $6,400. 614-388 2 AKC Raglllarod mala
1427.
House for rent . 4 rooms and carport &amp; storage room,
9326 or 614-245 -5176 .
Cocker apanlelo· blonde 6
bath. Fully carpeted. storm large lot in country Htting,
yro. old. red 3 yra.. good
Matching vanity • bed, 860
1979 Bayview 12x60 with windows and doors. Unfur- but city achool oyllem.
motorcycle, old lanterns, blood line, good tempore·
Garden apoce, 8260 per
12x8 expando, AC, axe. nished .. Call 992-3090.
Iampo. 4 chaira, chlldo pi· ment. Excellent for brHd·
month plua depoait. Coli
cond. Call 446-9416 or
lng. Cell 448-9372 after
ono. deak . Coli 448-8263.
446-2217.
Nice 2 bedroom house on 448-4477 or 448-3888.
5:30PM.
black top road in Eastern
Kodak film 79 canto 1 roll .
1972 Mobile home 12x65, School district. $150 month Nice 2 bdr. carpeted apt. in
Lhoee Apoo pupplaa AKC
Cell 448-4718.
unfurnished, 2 bdr.. good plus deposit, no pets. No Kanauga with washer •
Regllterad will be ready Jan.
cond. Call 446-7171 after Sunday calls . 614-949 · dryer hookup, S1 76 plua
96 piece Norltoke Chino, 2111.8200. Call448-0708.
2801 .
utilltiea. Call 1-304-273·
6. 446 -8288 .
gold trim, newer ueed for
9745 .
ule or trade for good ueed Raglltarad Englioh Pointer
1980 14x70 Fairmont Bay- Extra nice two bedroom
pupa, champion blood Uno,
plano. Coli 814·388-875 1.
view 2 bdr.,largeLR . 1 bath. home. 304-876-3798.
large two bdr .• modern, In
*100 oa. Cell 814-245town, good location, off·
den. alec. range, gas heat,
Woodburner-Used Homes- 5027 or 448 -2107.
street parking, $190 mo ..
washer -dryer. CA. furtea~er wood and coal burn·
deposit, references re ·
nished. In Rodney rented lot:-' 42 Mobile Homes
ing. May be ooen at Rutland Groat Dana 8 mo. old, S35
quirod.
Coif
446-4601
.
paid water, trash pick-up.
for Rent
Bottle Gao office. 814-742- coat of ahota. Call 448·
Assumable 7 yr. loan
9280 before 5 or 814-388·
swivel rockers .
2611 .
Furnished 1 bdr. downtown Used Furniture -- bookcase.
13.29%. $2,000 down. Call
9783 after 6.
apt.. carpeted, extremely ranges. chairs, dryers. re446-1016 after 5.
12x60 2 bdr. modern fur·
New water bed. King alze
nice, 8200 plus Utilities and frigerators and TV's. 3 miles
nished trailer, convenient
with hood board. $600. AKC REglaterad Doberman
depoolt. Call 446-1788.
1970 Vindale expando
pupploa. ledo • blocka. ne'
out Bulovllle Rd. Open 9am 614-992· 7201 .
location. Upper River Rd.
12x63. 2 bdr .. central air,
CAll 448-7795 .
to 8pm, Mon. thru Fri .. 9em
depoait req . Call 614-446·
Middleport semi-furnlahed. to 5pm, Sot.
deck, awning. underpen- 8668.
Mobile home supplies: non·
2 bdr., apt., S160 plua 814-448-0322
ning. Call '614-245 -9222.
toxic antifreeze-•6.60 per If Flah apeclela ore whet you
utilities and deposit. Call
Nicely furnished modern
gallon. Water heating elo·
ATTENTION -Do you naed to mobile home. in city. 1 or 2 446-1788.
TV • Appliencea, 827 Third mente, water heater.· stepe. oro looking for1 We've got
move into a nice mobile adults only. Call 446-0338 .
Avo .. Galllpolia. 614-448- windows, · doors. faucets. them galore. Zebra 2 for
f1 .00; Gholl Shrimp 2 for
2 bdr. trailer below Eureka. 1899. Spin Wllhlra, gao "' breakero.
home without the hassle of
etc. HotPolnt
set-up. We have a 1979 2 bdr. mobile home partially adults preferred or a small electric dryers, auto hoovy-duty electric dryera. f1 .00; Black MoiHao 2 for
child. *136 por month. Coli washers, gas
Freedom 14x70 deluxe fumiahed . Call 446-4292.
electric thia month only U79 . f1 .00; Smell Naona 2 for
614.266-1157.
model on a lot in the Country
ranges. refrigerators. TV Klngabury Homoa Perto and f1 . 00; Red Fin Sharks
*1 .60 11ch. Floh Tonk,
Mobile Home Park. This 2 bdr. trailer · 2 mi .• from
sets.
Acceaaory Store. 900 Eoll 2413 . Jeffeaon Ava .. Point
home has a front dining hospital at Evergreen priVate 1 bedroom Apt. 8198. mo.
including utilities. Equal GOOD USED APPLIANCES Moin St.. old Bookmobile Pleaunt.
room with wooden bow lot. Call 446 -0157.
building in Pomeroy or call
Houaing Opportunity. Con- Washers, dryers, refrigera·
window. a circular kitchen
992-6687.
with lots of cabinets, 2 With or without fu;n., tact Village Manor Apta. tora. rangoa. Skegga ApMueical
bedrooms. large luxury bath 12x60, 2 bdr .. nice &amp; clean. 614-992-7787.
plioncea, Upper Rlvoer Rd. Rofrigeroter-Seora ColdS · 67
with garden tub. Price oof No pets, dep. req ., ref .
lnetruments
baaide Stone Croll Motel. ' pot. 16 cubic fHt . Coli
812.500. ln~lud11 metal preferred. Call 614 -256· Rlveraide Apta. Middleport. 614-446-7398.
992-6174.
Special rates for Senior
building. patio cover. steps. 1836 before noon.
Citizens. 8130. Equal Houa· Used GE refrigerator, West·
washer and dryer. EveryComplete set of young- For eele-Splnet·Conaolo PI-,
thing in tip-top condition. 2 bdr. trailer comp . fur- ing Opportunltitio. 814- inghouse ele-:tric range, livstown kitchen cabinets, 38 eno Bargain. Wonted ·
Ready to live in. For informa- nished. 3 miles from Holzer 992 -7721.
lngroom suite, familyroom
in . electric ranga, dining Rooponlibla party to taka
tion coli 614-992-7034 or in Evergreen, ax. cond. Call
suite, table &amp; 8 chairs.
4 ·chelra. 814-992- over low monthly payments
3 room Apt. fumished. No Corbin • Snyder Furniture, table,
614-992-6284.
on Spinet Plano. Con be
614-246 -9170.
5703.
peta. 614-949-2263.
956 Second Ave. 446 111n locally. Write Credit
1972 Skyline, 1 bedroom House trailer at 322 Third1171.
New wood burning stove Menager:P.O.Box 537 Shel·
fumiahed . Ideal for couple. Ave .. edulta only, 446-3748 Furnished Apt. 614-992· 1- - - - - - - - - with firebrick *326. each. byvllle, ln. 48178.
6434.
Ready to move in. $4750. or 614-266-190~.
Baby crib
mattress, like 304 -676 - 1678 or 676 614-992-7479.
now. Call 448-2637.
1 ut of Ludwig druma. Aak
7898.
for Brian, 814-379-2700.
12x60 2 bdr. unfurnished on Apt. for rent . 614-992·
12x66 Mobile home located Rt. 36. Dep: • ref. required. 6908 .
Whirlpool convertible Used washer. dryer, stoves, - - - - - -- ·lcHertford. W. Va. 304-882· Call 446-4369.
washer-dryer will sell pair or
Wanted o!d plonoa. Paying
3 bedroom furniehed Apt. in sep1r1te, A -1 condition , refrigerator. 30 day wer2794.
and *40. oech. Firat
renty
.
One
Baldwin
organ,
2 bdr. furniahed.adultaonly, Syrac~ie. 614-992-7689 f136 each. Call 446-9626. double keyboard. J•s Pawn floor only. Write giving
'69 Schultz mobilo "home, no inside pets. ptivate lot. otter 5 p.m.
Shop. 314 Main St. Pt. directlona. Written Plonoo·
two bedroom. new carpet, Also furnished apartment,
Nearly new washers &amp;: dry. Box 188 Sordla. Ohio
Pfeaunt.
2 bedroom Apt. in Middle- ers, reconditioned guarancentral air-cond., needs men only. Coli 446-3918.
43948. Phone 614-483·
port.
8175.
month
plua
aome work. 83,400.00 .
teed 30 doya. We apociallze Coal and wood furnace, 1606.
304-675-4819 or 304-895· 2 bdr. mobile home fully utilitiea. Dayo-614-992 · In woaher &amp; dryera only. Call
phone 304-676-2766.
3472.
. fumiahed , aduita only. Call 6645. Evoningil-614-949- 614-266-1207 .
2216
.
446-4110 . .
ECONOLINE HOME INSU·
f,Jrlll Siiilll l ii''
Very nice walnut dining LATION. Llr.ensed in Ohio
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
Semi-furniahed.
1
bedroom
table with 4 captain• chaira.
&lt;~ I I VI!: !Ill.~
Doublewide; 3 bdr., 1V.
and West Virginia. Owensbath, newly carpeted, unfur· Apt. on 2nd. floor. Coates Good quality, 8196. Call Corning Fiberglas. Free esti36 acres at Rodney on W.T. nished. in Green School building in Middleport. 446-9627.
matea. 304-676-3962.
Watson Rd. Owner financ- Diatrict. Coli 614-446- N.2nd. Ave.' Coli ot Apt.18
or
call
614-992-7347
or
Kenmore automatic washer 1 year old mare *600: 72' 61
ing available. Call 446-8221 0682 or 304-676-3000 . .
Farm Eq"ipment
614-992-2610.
end dryer. 8250. Moytag Nove Sports Rally, new tlroa - - - - - - - - - after 6 weekdays.
wringer washer-$100. 30 and good condition f1 000. Farmoll Cub tractor with
Furnished, nice mobile
For aole City lot in Bidwell, home. 3 bedrooms. All Pomeroy Cliffs Apartments in. electric ronge-t1 00. 30 304-937-3164.
cultivatora ~ turning plowa
8800. Call 446 -4113 or electric-central air. Good is now accepting applica· in. gas range-$86 . Self
and old mowing machine.
for
one
bedroom
aparttiona
defroat refrigerator· 81 00.
446·6609. .
location, across from pool in
All whHI welghto In good
ment.
Only
Handicapped.
614-742-2362.
Syracuae. 8260 por month
55 Building Supplies
condition. *2Jl0.9, firm.
plus utilities. Deposit re· disebled or 'goa 62 end 9ver
Coli 448-4120 llr.r 6.
need apply. Equal Houoing 40in. White Hotpoint stovequired. Call 992-2659.
Rental s
Opportunity. Cell 614-992· · oven. warmer drawer and
1-Ford 3 pt. hitch dlak, exc.
Building materials
1Ox60 mobile · home. 2 7772 from B am to 4.30 two storage drawers. Call block. brick, sewer pipes, cond.. *400. 3 pt. hitch
p.m.
week
daya.
304-675-1394.
bedrooms. No pets. 614windows. lintels. etc. plowa. 2 bottoma • 3
949 -2424.
41 Houses for Rent
1 bedroom apartment in Nine piece set of family Claude Winters. Rio Grande, bottoms plua dreg typo dlak.
Randy Evena. Ru11 Rd. Call
0. Call 614-246-6121.
Furnished 3 bedroom mobile Middleport. Furniohed and room furniture. includes
614-288-1608.
utilitiea
paid.
Call
992Iampo
and
tablea.
$300.00,
home with washer and
LUMBER
-Rough
cut,
oak,
'
For sale rant. Two story dryer. No pets. 614-949- 3190.
only two years old. Wooden
house. 4 bdr .. t250 por mo. 2263.
child's highchair, $30.00. poplar, 2x4. 2x6, 2xB. 1x4. 62 Wanted to Buy
1 x6, 1 x8. length ovailoble. 8
APARTMENTS. mobile Call304'-676-3631.
8260 dep. req. Buy
foot through 14 foot. Hogg 1 - - - - - - - - - 829,600. Call 446-4222, 2 bedroom mobile home. homes. housee. Pt. Pleasant
"' Zuapan, 304· 773-6564
9:30-6:00.
New carpet. utilities paid. no and Gallipolia. 814-448 - Uaed bedroom auite; cook daytime.
, WANTED TO LEASE to·
end heating goa llovea,
pots. drunks. dopo. 1 kid 8221.
bacco allotments in Maaon
Duplex, &amp;260 plus utilities. accepted. John Sheeta, 3V.
coffae and end table set.
County. Phone 304-458·
Avail. now, 2 bdr .• LA. new miles South Middleport. R· TWIN RIVERS TOWER. Miac. all llbck at coot.
56
Pets for Sale
1078.
Aportmentonowavoilableto Repair all amoll eppllancei.
remod. kit .. • bath. Large 7 . 367-0611.
elderly • dieebled with en F.ix·it Shop, 2101 Jefferaon
fenced yard , new carpet.
668 Jrd. Ave.. Gallipolis. 2 bedroom in Middleport. income of leaa than Ave., Point Pleasant.
HILLCREST KENNELS 63
Livestock
Call 446-2467 or 446- Furniahed -$225 monthly. 812.300. Renting for 30
Boarding ell breeda. Heated
0332.
Utilities paid. Deposit and percent of adjuatejllncome- I ·
53
Antiques
indoor-outdoor facilitiee.
references required. Call .Phone 304-876-8879.
AKC Doberman puppiea: 3 helfero Anguo .. Hereford
6 room ltwo atoryl house 66 992·7~41 .
Nice 1 bedroom apartment, , Old gluaware, atone jars, Stud Service. Call 814-448- mixed. Coli 614-256·1871
Garfield Ave .. no pots and
must give raferences. Will Furnished. nice mobile utllitiea furniahed, 304 -876- radloa, clocka, etc. No Sun· 7796 .
if no an'swer try Again.
take two or three small home. 3 bedrooms, all elect- 7112.
day calla. 614-949-2801.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call Plgo for eele-Cell 814-378children. lnq~jre in rear after ric, central air. Good loca814-387-7220.
10:00AM.
8186 or 814-378-8221.
tion, across from pool in In Middlepo[l two room
Syrecuu. UOO. per month efficiency apartment. Call 64 Misc. Merchandise
Briarpatch Kennels Profee2 bdr. hou~ on Bulaville Rd. plus utilit,eo. Depoait re- ' 1 , 304-882-2668.
• Ref. S. dep. required . no quired. 814-992-2669.
Kneuff Firewood Pickup or aional All·brHd grooming. 2 cowo for oale or trade. Cell
peta. Call 446-4344.
Two bedroom apartment Delivered. 12"-22" atocked Indoor-outdoor boarding fa· 1114-992·7898.
Two bedroom all electric pertly furnished . Yard ond In yard. HEAP vender. cllltlea. Englloh Cocker Spa3 bdr. house on Chatham mobile home, Aohton Upto• baaement. *176.00 month. prompt delivery. 814 • 266 . niel pupplea. Call-8.14-388· p 0 L LED- HE-REF O·R 0
9790.
BULLS- From A.l. breeding
Ave.. Gallipolia for aole Road. 8126. par mo. $60.' 304-876-22'8 4- evenlriga or 8246.
818.000. 10% down end dopoait. 304-876-4088.
614-446-3703 deyo.
1-;;:;:~;::;::;::;::;::==l=========:.Jto the top bulle In the
10% interest or for rent
lo
country. Agee - 8 montha
$176 mo. Call Jack Neal .
to 3 yHra. Price 75 Clfltl per
46 Furnished Roome
446-0157.
pound. Co•tect ARROW
44 Apartment
FARMS, Athane, Ohio .
for Rent
2 bdr. houee, 2 blocka from
Phone 1-814-1193-8274.
For rent SIHplng Rooma
city park. *200 month plua
and light houae kHpl•g
utllltlea. reference. available
roomo. Pork Central Hotel.
now. Cai1448,-2419.
84 . Hay 8t Grain
Small turn. houee 1 or 2 Call 614-448·0768.
edulto only, no pets. Cell 1 - - . . : . . . . - - - - - - Modem 3 bdr. ranch. gar· 446·0338.
SIHPing room *125, utili· ·
age. near town. *285 mo.,
tleo paid. Molal only. rlngo
Medium olza round baleo oi
deposit &amp;: r'eferences . re- 2 BR Apt., 1129 mo. • refrig. Cell 4411-4418
hay for eale. Flrot c.u ttlng.
quired. Blackburn Realty, Utilltlea partially lu!flilhed.· after 7 p.m.
Evanlnjlo: 814-9811-3848 or
446-0008.
.
882·73q2.
· •··••• 3 bdr. houee for eele 1-:::::==~:::;;===
o~ land contract. 304-676- I·
Country eettlng. 3 bedroom 6104 or 304-876-6388, 46. Space for Rant
Have ovar 300·bu. ear corn
remodeled homo, new Carol Yeager Realtor . .
for oala. 14-.00 bu. 814·
forced elr furnace. nice 1-----~---­
742-3010.
kitchen. city water, neer JACKSON ESTATE COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Tuppora plaine Ohio. t226. APARTMENTS lEqual Pork, Ro~te 33, North of
Nice hoy at Cooi+Hia and
without utllltleo. 614-667- Houalng Opportunity) hea Pomeroy. Lorge loto. Call
Rutl~nd. Dlacount. for largo
3974.
one end two badroomo, rent 814-992-7479.
quariltiH. 1187·3131.
..
ltortlng at e157 for one
Ground ·ear tlorn 111.50 per
8 room house. Basement, bedroom alld *193 por l-:c::---::--:--"""'-..,......
100. Brlllll own corittl•ar.
nature! gao. rural water, 1 month for two bedroom, 49
For Lea... .
304-871-3301. No Iunday
kid ·accepted. Lorge yard. with UOO depoolt located
HIH.
'
'
garden, no patl, drunks or near Foodlan'd and Spring
dope. John Sheeto. ·. J'h Velloy Pla~a. P!IOI and · TV
nilleo South Middleport, R· int. Call 448· 2741 or leava For IHH, Chavrol! Statloil,
Hay for i•l•. 304-171M11on area. GOod IOcatlorl. ·
299~,
•
7. 3117-0811 .
·
. ....._._
mes~ll••
304-8711;29112 8ft« ipm.

'"

Page

Mt! l t: li di lllt , ,!

TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · CARS ,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
614-446·7572 .

some repairs, with 1 Y2 acres
very reasonable. Call 446-

Sentinel

The

Friday, January 1 , 1984

Pomeroy-Middle rt, Ohio

Sentinel

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH pold for leta
modal uled cora. Smith
Bulck-Pontloc, 1911 Eoll·
ern Avo.. Golllpolia. Cell
814-448-2282.

RON ' S Televlaion Service.
Specializing In Zenith end
Motorola , Ou11ar. and
houao colla. Coli 304 -676 23118 or 814-448 -2464 .

1978 Chryalor Cordoba
1974 Cadlllalc Coupe Deville both In very good cond.
• now point. Reaaonabla
priced or will trade for 4WD
pickup. Call 814-379-2314
or 1114-379-2898.

F • K Trae Trimming. atump
removal . Call 304 -676 ·
1331 .
RINGLE'S . SERVICE experienced roofing. Including
hot tar eppllcation, carpen ter, electrician, mason . Call
304·876 · 2088 Or 676 4580.

1980 Ford LTD PS. PB,
AM-FM 8 track, crulee. low
miiMga. axe. cond. Call
814-258-1333.
1978 Plymouth Champ
48.000, olr cond .. aunroof.
4 apd. with 2 apd axle. Coli
after 4PM. 4411 -7414.
87 Ford 'LTD good · body,
extra p8rts. runt perfect,
f800. 70 Ford nHda trenamlulon. *260. Coli 814·
268-1318.
1975 Detaun truck, 1985
Chovelle wagon, 71 Dodge
Colt. Cell 448 -7832 .
87 Ford LTD good body,
extra parte, runs perfect
74 Buick nHda trena·
million *260. Coli 814·
258-1318.

•eoo.

1979 T· Bird, one owriar.
extra sherp, new radials.
cullom whoela, f4.000.
Cell 814· 258-1141 oftor e.

Water Walla. Commercial
and Domestlc. Test holes.
Pumpa Solu and Service.
304-896-3802.
SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One
piece cuatom fit your home.
Guarontoed. Advanced Gut·
tar, lDoy 814 -592 -4066.1
lnlght 814-698 -8206 .)
GET your corpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water removal.
furniture cleaning, frM esti·
matoo. 304-875 -2296.
R. G. Moyoa ond Son, Dloael
Service and major overheula. Experienced In all
typoa, dloeel and goaollne
engines. Industrial or auto,
hydraulic and elactrlol aor·
vlco. Locoted at Mooon Co.
lnduotrlel Pork,· Point Plaeeent. 304-875· 7422.

Blue convertible. 71 Flat Building remolding. oil cor·
Spider 850 aarlea. 4 apd., pantry, roofing, plumbing
good cond.. UOO. Cell "lind concrete work. 304 876 -2440.
1114-448-8290.
1974 Audloox good cond ..
or beat offer. Cell
814-388-9906 from 9-6.

•aeo

1979 Ford Pinto Runobout.
40.000 milaa, ex. cond.
f2.196 . Coli 614 -388 9905 from 9-6.

Mother says it
was so small a
sparrow could
have carried it!

.,

Lockamlth Service. Shor·
paning Service. Gla11 end
Screen Wire Installed .
Subken Service Co.. 304·
676-3894 .
82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1971 Volkswagen for eele.
Coli after 8 PM. 992 -3981 .
1989 Chevy 1 ton . rebuilt
motor, new rediator and
heater core. new tires .
Mach. A-1. Coli AI ot
814-742-2328.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Golllpolla, Ohio
Phone 614 -448 -3888 . or
814 -4411-4477

1874 Olda Cutloll. Low
·mileage . Runa good.Coll
992-2707.

JIM'S PLUMBING. HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1, Box 366, Galli·
polio. Coli 814 -367-0676 .

1967 Muotang. aix cylinder.
auto, good condition,
*1.260.00 . 304-468 1666.

83

1970 Plymouth fair condition. reasonable price .
Phone 304-773-5800.
1981 Oldo Cut1111, 304875-7476 otter 8:00.
TR 7 Hardtop aporto cer,
good body, runa well .
$2400. 304-676-3182 .
72 Ford Maverick. 304·
876-4897.
72

Trucks for Sale

Excavating

FRIDA y

DOZER WORK By Ted
Henna, . ponds, ditcfles.
beaemonll, etc . Coli 614·
446-4907. Carter &amp; Evens
Tranaportotlon .
Cat 21 6 hoe, dozers, crena.
loadera. dump truck. Coil
614-448 - 1142 between
7:00AM • 6:00PM .

Good-1 Excavating. baae·
menta, footers; drivewaya,
aeptlc tanka, / •ndacaplng.
Cell anytime 614 · 4464637. JomoaL. Devlaon. Jr.
owner.

1983 Chov. S-10 oxt. cob
pickup, Tahoe equip. pkg .. J .A .R. Conatruction Co .
Water Linea . Footers,
v~s. air. power steering.
AM· FM Coli. tape, allding Dreino. All klnda of Ditching.
rear window. 2 tone paint. 4 Rutland. Oh. 614 -742 WD. 4 apd .. 17.000 mi., . 2903.
exc. cond. Call 448-9384.
1977 Ford 1 ton, V·8ong:, 4
opd. trano •. low milooga. like
new. Coli 814-387-0294.

84

1974 Dotoun PU. Coli 614·
266-8808.

Peaquelo Electric Co. all
phaees of electric work. all
work guaranteed . Aerial
truck rental. 614 -4464066.
'

1981 Toyota long bed, elr.
AM· FM tepo. 5 apd, excellent cond. Call 446-0844.
1979 Ford pickup, F-1.00,
good cond.. f2,996. Call
814-388·8805 from 8-6.
197.8 Dodge truck. holt ton.
four wheel drive, 46,000
actual mll11. Exc. Cond.
304-676-5424.
73

Vans &amp; .4 W.O .

1879 J - CJ·S, 8 cyi.. 3
opd., loaded with oxtroa, ax.
cond.. S3,300. Coli 4480515.
~1178 JHp CJ-5. axe. cond.,
li\'111 1111. Call 448·4053.

1878 Fcird 4 WD, excellent
celndltlon, like n.,., 22,000
. mn... loaded.
187.1
VW, · excellent · co"dltlon,
814-448-~014 or
' 448-1387.
'
.

saeoo.

·neeo.

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING Machine repoira.
aervlce. Authorized Singer
Selea &amp; Service Sharpen
SciUQ_rs. Fabric Sho-p,
Pomeroy. 814-992· 2284.
B6

Boata and
MotQra tor Sale

h:

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17
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Answer: A real hothead! Lets you know about goings·
on underground-A VOLCANO

1· 13

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :
AXYI)LBAAXR
Ia

LONGt1ELLO~

One letter simply stands for another. ln this sa mple A is
used for the three L's, X for ~-he two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
CURUPHUPAU
KM

OKGU

IKHVNSH

IKHVNSH

JZUPQZUPH

ANPHKPSJOOD
ZUPQKPB

HVU

RSZRKPB
OUJG . -

QKOIDP
.
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: BE STILL SAD HEART AND CEASE
REPINING; BEHlND THE CLOUDS THE SUN IS STILL
SHlNING.-H.W.LONGFELLOW
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This ahoW featurel a prevIew·of the Sonlor'Bowl.
C1J NCAA . - - 1 :
KentUcky ot Auburn
C1J e llJ Blnaon A boy
atort• a oompaign to get his
widowed mom and Sanson
to the ohor. iCiolld Cop·
tlonld)
.
ll!l Charlie Brown
SDIOIII 'Ia Thlo GOodbye,
Choriie 8rown1' Tho . world
of tho Poonilll gang Ia
turned .upalde 'down "!hon
Linu11nd Lucy movi 1w1y.
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JIMS W,t.TER 'SERVICE.
Call Jim lonlar, 304-875·
73117,

'.·

NBC Nawa

(I) SporteCentar

e.

1d3.

CIJ

liD World,ng Woman

7:00

N11d aomethlng houiaa
away or aomathlng movod1
We'll do it. Call 448•3159
bat-an 8 ond

:tRISTATE
IIPHOLITEIIY SHOP
' 1113. he: Ave.. Galllpolli.
124·4411·7113 or814·448- · · · "

-tar

o.lectlco
Ill
1())Rifleman

CIJ e Ill ABC Nowa
e()) Bulinlol
C1J il!l CBS Newa
Report

JONE8 BOYS WATER SEll·
VICE. Call 814· 387·7&lt;!71
or 814·387' 0581.

.

9:00 (I) 700 Club
C1J ellJ Blue Thunder The
Blue Thunder bettles a right
wing group that uses a fightar plane as air suppon. . (60
min.)
Ill C1J &lt;JD Dallea J.R.'s ca·
pacity for double-crossing
comes close to running over
as he sets up for a ride in
risky offshore oil explorelion. (60 min.)
(I) SesalOn '14
(ll)lnsldetheWhlteHouse
Four veteran White House
correspondents, who will
lollow the election cam·
paign, discuss preparations
for the primaries and outline
the kay areas to watch.
9:30 CIJ ln,ldethe White Houao
Four veteran White House
correspondants, w ho wt'II
follow the election campaign, discuss preparations
for the primaries and outline
the key areas to watch.
liD lntomatlonol Edition
Ford Rowan hosts this look
at trends and news events
as they ere reported by lort!!gn journilista.
10:00
Ill (!)_New _Show_To.·
night's guests ore John
Candy a11d Paul Simon. (60
min.)
(I) MOVIE: 'Volley Girl'
C1J TIS Evening Nowi
• C1J e l)t Matt Houlton
Matt helps an ex-cop track
down o killer who has stran·
gled 19 yo•ng women. 160
min,)
CIJ &lt;ID Falcon Crall Mi·
chael Ran1om must face his
pe1tand perform surgery on
Sheriff Robbin&amp; to 'save his
lila. 160 min.)
C1J laroell Diary
liD Nowa
INN Newa
1 30
CIJ
"'
C1J Ina~ Bualnoee Toctey
• liD .,...~ T h 'The Citadel.' Andrew esll·
blishes hfrn.aelf ss • doctor
for tho rich end becomes In· .
valved with' one of hla 'mer· .
ried petlonta. (60 • rr&gt;in .J

OHparate DrHm•

6:30

Benny Hill Show
(I) Ill Tonight Show
CIJ(I) Cat!Baotl. of Groucho
ns
C1J Soap
• (()MOVIE: ' Birth of the
Beatlee'
(])MOVIE: ·~1'1. Wiggs of
the C.bbage PM:ch'
&lt;1D All In the Family
liD Foil • Rloit of R. Perrin
e llJ Nlghtllno
•
NCAA Basketball:
TenneasH
Tech
vs .
Morehoed .St.
11:45 (I) MOVIE: 'Thingl Are
Tough All· Over'
12:00 (])Burna &amp; Allen
(I) Night Tracks
(J) Nlghtline
1'10 MOVIE: 'Zornbloa of
Suger Hill'
12:30. (]) (!) Friday Night
Vldeoe
(I) "MOVIE: 'Honey'
(I) Jlck Benny Show
• Cll Muelc Megazlne
1:00 · (I) 1 Menied Joan
. (I) NFL'o Groetaat Momenta NFL's 'Greateot Mo·
menta presents highlights of
Super Bowl 'VII' featun'ng
the Miami .Dolphins vs.
Wa"hington Redskin&amp;.
I]) Enten.lnment Tonight
• (lJ News
1:16 (I)HBOROCK:AirSupply
in Hawaii
1:30 (J) love Th8t Bob
(I) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City, NJ
CIJ Star.Soerch
&lt;JD MOVIE: 'Vampire
Lovera'
ellJCNN HledllnoNIWI
2:00
(I) Nawo . ,
(I) MOVIE: 'Silent Rago'
(I) - ! ! i f Father
lll.Nawo/819n Oft
2:16 (I)
Tho NFL
ll!l CNN HHCIII~ewa
2:30 ~ Ufe of Riley ' .
3:00
700 Club
3:15
MOVIE: 'Valley Girl'
3:45
MOVIE: 'CIIIh of the

of economic and investment
matters.

(I) SportsCenter

~ ~ ~:~

e
11 :30 e

Louis Rukeyser analyzes the
'80s With a weekly review

CIJ ilD 3·2·1. Contact

6 ,30 .• ~cJ'tac Newa

CIJ All In tho Fomlly

(I) Dr. Who

time to tell Webller the
lacll ollile.
Ill CIJ Ill How B. Bunny
Won the West
C1J liD Wall StrHI Wllk

EVENING

General Hauling

U,pholatarv

C1J e Ill W-or Kather·

ina and George decide it ' s

1/13/84

8:00

87
76.

E'f!ening television l i s t i n g s - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

'

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�.... -·

Page

..

12-The Daily Sentinel

,,

CINCINNATI (AP) -A 10-year of heart attacks by reducing blood
national study shows conclusively cholesterol levels through diet and
that men who have never suffered by quitting smoking.
heart attacks can lessen their risk of
"Those who have significant
having one by reducing blood cholesterol lowering but continue to
cholesterol levels, researchers say. smoke should not assume they have
Dr. Charles J . Glueck, a Un!ver· It made," he said. "Know what your
slty of Cincinnati researcher who · risk factors are, get them mea·
participated in the national study, sured, deal with them and modify
said Thursday he hopes similar your Ufestyle appropriately."
studies wlll be done to determine
The study, which Involved the
whether the findings are true for two University of Cincinnati Medical
other groups - people who have Center and 11 other centers In the
suffered heart attacks and people United States and Canada, was
who have heart bypass surgery but performed entirely on men who had
are stlll a t coronary risk.
not suffered heart attacks and had
Hall of the men who participated not shown symptoms of them. The
in the study used a federally centers used standardized testing
approved drug, known to physicians methods and subjects from the
for a decade, to reduce their blood same 35-to-59 age group so data
cholesterol levels. The other half of could be meaningfully compared.
the more than 3,!lXJ men who
Men were chosen as subjects
participated took placebos - harm· because they have a greater rtsk of
less, unmedlca ted preparations heart attack than women, Glueck
to se(Ve as a control group.
said.
Glueck, director of the University
The study showed that the
of Cincinnati's Lipid Research participants were able to reduce
Center, said people can further their rtsk of suffering heart attacks
insulate themselves against the risk by 20 to 50 percent, depending on

how closely they followed instruc·
tions, Glueck said.
They were asked to digest six
packets - 24 grams - dally o( a
powdered drug, cholestyramine,
approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration for reducing choles·
terol. Neither of the two groups was
told which was being given the
placebo or real drug.
Participants mixed the drug with
water or other fluid . Cholestyram·
ine Is not absorbed by the body and Is
expelled with other wastes.

Meets January 17
The Chester Township Trustees
meeting scheduled for January 10,
has been changed to January 17, at
7:30p.m. at the Chj!Ster Town Hall.

Dies in Indiana
Mr. and Mrs. James Teaford and
famlly of Syracuse received word of
the death of a cousin, George D.
Teaford, English, Indiana.

Happenings around Meigs County•••
Damages sought
in $40,000 action
A suit totaling $40,000 has been
flied In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Kenneth Cook,
Middleport, against Rex Hurley,
Middleport.
According to the entry theplaintllf
states that on January 3, 1983 the
&lt;jefendant, Rex Hurley struck the
plalntllf, Kenneth Cook with his fist
and or hands.
The plaintllf Is asking for $20,000
for compensatory damages and
$20,000 for punitive damages and
costs.

Meigs County sheriffs deputies
investigated a breaking and enter·
ing that occurred at Harrisonville
Elementary School sometime Tues·
day.
The lock on the gas pump inside
was taken off and 26 gallons of
gasoline were stolen from the
outside gas pump. There were no
slgnsofforcedentry.Alsotakenwas
oncecaseofmotor oll.
The department Is also investigat ·
lng the theft of a 1976 Ford 133
style-side pickup truck taken Janu·
ary 12, between 1: :ll a.m. and 6: m
a.m. and was owned by George
Lowery, Harlsonvllle.
The truck Is yellow in color with a
black topper. Atthetimeofthetbeft
the truck had a full tank of gas the the
keys were not in the ttuck.

Veterans Memorial
,Adrnltted.. Beatrtce Blake, Ra·
cine; Edna Buchanan, Pomeroy;
Charles Searles, Cheshire; Earl
Artx, Pomeroy.
Dlscharged .. Courtney Scar·
berry, Cora Webb, Andrea Cleland,
Nancy Taylor.

Injured in wreck

Longwalling meet set

A Pomeroy man was treated and
released from Veterans Memorial
Hospital Thursday for a cut to the
chin following a 4 p.m. accident on
Ohio 7 ln Salisbury Township.
TheGaUta-Melgs Post of the Ohio

Citizens Organized Against Long·
waUingwlllmeetat2p.m .Sundayat
the Salem Township Volunteer Fire
Department buDding in Salem
Cen-ri:. meeting Is to provide
information to the people and
property owners In the Meigs Mine 1
area. There will be maps ofthe five

Highway Patrol reported the in·
jured victim was Denver R. Biggs,
25, Who was also cited for !allure to
control his vehicle.
Blggswasdrtvlngftomaprivate
drive onto the state highway. He lost
controlofhls carcauslnglt tostrtke
guard rall. The vehicle swerved off
the road and went Into an
embankment.
Biggs' vehicle was moderately
damaged.
He was taken to VMH by private
vehicle.

A regular meeting of the Meigs
County Fire and Emergency Asso- .
elation will be held at 7: :ll p.m.
Wednesday at the Middleport Fire
Station. A visual demonstration on
the chemistry of fire, combustion
and extinguishment wUI make up
the program.

To end maJTiages
In Meigs Common Pleas Court,
Richard M. Elliott, Albany and
Theresa Ann Elliott, Albany flied for
dlssolutionofmarrlageandBUUeJo
Sweet flled for support under· the
Reciprocal Agreement Act against
Henry David Lemley.

/ ·Area death

f

Georgia G. Anderson
Georgia G. Anderson, 58, of
Mason, died Thursday in the
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was born August 12, 1925, 1n
Jackson County. She Is the daughter
of the late George Anderson and
Leplla J. Fields Miller of Mason.
Also surviving, in addition to her
mother, are two sisters, F1orlda L.
Casto and Susie E. McGrath, both of
Mason; one step-sister, Savannah
WUson · of Point ~leasant; and
several nieces and nephews.
11
Shewasaninspectorattheformer
Gerlach'sManutacturingCompany
in Point Pleasant.
Funeral services will be held on
Sunday all: 30p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home in Mason with the
Rev. George Hoschar offlclating.
Burial will follow f!l the Kirkland

Memorial Gardens.

Friends may .call at the funeral
homeonSaturdayfrom2-4p.m.and
7-9p.m.

:

year coal mining permit appUcatlon
of Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Mine 1, Meigs Mine 2 and Raccoon
Mine 3. There will also be a sUde
presentation. AU interested persons
are Invited.

Emergency runs
Two cars were answered by local
units Thursday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reports. At 10: '56 a.m., Middleport
firemen y.:ent to Hartinger Parkway
where a car was on !Ire and at 2:09
p.m., the Pomeroy unit went to the
Forest Run Road where a cardrtven
by Steve Nelson had turned over. No
transportation was required.

PTO meeting set
Chester PTO will meet Monday,
Jan. 16, at 7:30 p.m. at Chester
Elementary School. Chlld care and
refreshments wUI be provide. Per·
sons asked to brtng Campbell Soup
labels.

•
LRC·CPPT

Maniage license
A marriage license was Issued in
Meigs County Probate Court to
Franklin Eugene Lemley, 45, Por·
tland, and Anna Louise Holsinger,
61, Portland.

Meeting postponed
Degree Day scheduled Sunday
by the Meigs . County Pomona
Grange will not be held. A new
date will be announced later.

irst study in humans to es
)nc/usive/y that Jowr
10/esrero/ reduces

PUBLIC NOTICE
Jan. 13, 1984
Notice is hereby given that the Village of Middleport. Ohio, has
made application to the United States Department of Agriculture.
Farmers Home Administrtion, for financing assistance in order to
construct eighteen single family Sec. 502 Loan Eligible Homes in an
approved FmHA subdivision. The project would be within the
boundaries of the Ohio River flood plain. The purpose of this notice
is to obtain comments from the general public on (I) the impacts of
locating this project within the flood plain, (2) alternative project
sites, and (3) methods of avoiding or reducing flood plain impacts
and hazards should there be no practicable aternative to the pro·
posed site.

CHOLESTEROL STUDY - Dr. Basil Rlfldnd of
the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute,
National Institute of Health In Bethellcla, Md. and Dr.
RA!bert Levy, right, of Columbia University take part

In a Washin,Pon news conference Thiii'IICiay where a
repori was released saying that lowering bleod
cholesterol can reduce the incidence of heart altack
and coronary dl!iease. (AP Laserphoto).

Along the Wver ........... B-1·8
Bwdnese ....................... D-2
Claa8ifleds .. ............... ,1).3.7
Dealhs ............ ............. A·5
EdlWrlals ..................... A·2
Sports ...... ..... .... ..... .... C-1·8
State-N~ .... .. ......... D-1

Vol. 11 No. 46

Fire knocks WOWK off air
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.(AP) Engineers hoped today to Inspect
broadcastlngequlpmentburnedin a
fire that knocked a Huntington
television and MUton radio station
off the air and sent 46 people to the
hospital.
The fire began at 3:20 p.m.
Thursday in a building on Barker's
Ridge, about 10 mUes from.MUt()n :
that housed and
the WNST·FM,
transmittersfire
of
WOWK·TV
officials said.
The fire released a chemlcal used
In broadcast transmitters, and 46
people were examined at hospitals
for exposure to the substance, said a
Cabell County Emergency Services
spokesman.
No serious Injuries were reported
after area hospital workers exam·
!ned firefighters, station employees,
reporters and others who gathered
a t the nre:
The fire was put out about 9:30
p.m ., but rekindled at least twice,
said WNST chief engineer Dick
Johnson.
Huntington firefighter David Ball
said the chemical, dlphenyl oxide,
Southern Athletic Boosters wUI
meet Monday, Jan. 16, at the high
school at 7:30p.m .

Weather forecast
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
Fair on Sunday, scattered Ourrles
Monday and a chance of snow.
Tuesday. Highs In the 2&amp; Sunday,
~ Monday and In the 2&amp;
Tuesday. Lows mostly ~IOSunday,
~u Monday and 1~00 Tuesday.

Irritates the eyes and skin a nd can
cause Internal damage If Ingested.
He said a uthorities tried to
decontaminate everyone who was
a t the scene.
Johnson and WOWK chief engt·
neer Charlie Goode said today they
were assuming their station's
transmitters were destroyed a nd
had no Idea when broadcasting

Judge denies Lee retrial motion

Uncle Ben's

CHICKEN PALACE
S

GALLIPOLIS - A defense motion to retry Charles Lee D for the
murder of a GaUia Count y teenager
was denied Friday by Common
Pleas Judge Richard C. Roderick.
Roderick Issued a lel)gthy judg·
ment on the motion, tued In
December by Galllpolls attorney
Hamlin King, who defended Lee
during the nJne.day trtal
Lee, 17, Point Pleasant , was found
guUty Dec. 9 by an eight-woman,
tour-man jury In coMectlon with the
shooting death of Barbara L.
Twyman, 17, Rt. 1, Ewlrigton.' He
was sentcencecl to 15 years to Ute In

N'

D
at 1te a nee
Doug and Madolyn
Benefit.
· Van Johnson

Carr

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ARTCAAVED SILADIUM•
H.S. CLASS RINGS

$74~t

PLUS up to S38 worth of
cuatom IMturH FREEl

Every rong os backed by the
ArfCarved Full Ufetlme WWwr.,...,ntnty
Thos oiler exp.res May 31 1984
and 15 to be used only lor the
purchase ol ArtCarved Stlad tum •

class rtngs

.I
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J -0000

Cl1i84 ArtCtrved Class AltiQI . Inc. 883

prtson.
King fUed a retrial motion Dec. 20,
making several claims of "error of

MEN'S
INSULATED

SLACKS

Coveralls

ARE

REDUCED

IN REGULAR &amp; LONG

V2 PRICE

40o/o

ONLY

By Jantzen

Lee'sorlginal trtaldate was set for
Sept . 21, butwasdelayedwhen King
added a plea of not guUty by reason
of Insanity to the defendant' s
Innocent plea, entered May 19.
Furst's allegations about Lee's
activities provided "suffldent just!·
ficatlon" for the sheriffs depart·
ment to provide her with taping
equipment to prove her statements
about Lee's alleged threats.

Roderick ruled that thts activity
didn't make Furst "an agent or the
state."
"She was merely, In thts court's
opinion, a private cltlzen trying to
document the crtrnlnal " activity
which she feared ," the judge said.
Roderick added that King "re·
peatedly asserted" that the entire
several tapes be played to the jury to
show the rela tlonshlp between Furst
and Lee.
"The fact that thts IJial strategy
proved unsuccessful does not make
the tapes Inadmissible," Roderick
noted .
,
At a heartngon themotionJan.10,
King called witnesses testifying to
the presence of two sherllf' s

PT. PLEASANT- Three people,
Including an elderly Mason couple,
were 'killed and one man critically
Injured Friday In a head-&lt;Jn colll·
slon on U.S. 35 neM Beech HUI,
accorcling to Troopet M.S. Smith of' •
the Point, Pleasant Detachmen.t of
the West VIrginia State Pollee.
Smith Identified the victims as
Otis M. Rice, 84, his wife, Opal, 75,
and James M. Mills, 46, of Tornado.
In tbe car in which
Another
Mills was riding, Danny Cooper·
rider of Cross Lanes, was trans·
ported to St. Mary's Hospital In
Huntington where he was listed
Saturday In critical condition,
according to tJ'ooper Smith's

'

$4995

Roderick also briefly addressed
several other Issues raised by King
In the retrial motion.
Lee was arrested by the sherllf' s
department Aprll 6, 1983, several
hours after Twyman's body was
found In an abandoned well near
Ewington.

LOGAN , Ohio (AP) - Dale
Johnston said his lamlly often took
off their clothes at home to be
comfortable, but he denied having
sexual relation&amp;
1!11th his step.
daughter, · a
former pollee
c a p t a In h a s
testified.
Johnston, 50, Is
charged with two
counts or aggra·
vated murder In
JollnstGn
the dlsmembennent sJaylngs of his
J.S.year-&lt;Jld stepdaughter, Annette
Cooper Johnston, and her 19-year·
old boyfrtend, Todd Schultz.
HocldngCountyProsecutorChrts
Veldt claims Johnston killed and .

man

report.
State pollee said the accident,
which occurred at approximately
4:40p.m., Is under Investigation. As
qf Saturday morning, they had no
Indication of how the crash oc·
curred and there was no report as to
who was driving eltber car.
Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire
Department Chief Jim Wood said
his department . was on the scene
and used the Jaws of· Life equipment to free the victims from the
wreckage. Two squads from the
Point Pleasant Emergency Medl·
cal Service also responded, Wood
said.

deputies in the courtroom at all
times during the trtal, casting a
"highly prejudicial" Ught on the
proceedings.
Roderick, noting that feeling
among spectators in the trial was
" running very high, " said the
deputies maintained order. Lee was
never escorted to or from the jall in
manacles, the judge asserted.

Common l'1eas Judge
Richanl c. Roderick

Officer: Johnston
had nude photos
of stepdaughter

in Mason
accident

.

BROWN
DUCK

Roderick noted that Furst had
testllled in a suppression of evidence
hearing that Lee "attempted to
choke or strangle" her on Aug. 12
and that he tried several Urnes to
convince her not to testify against
him.

Three die

-------~~~~~------·

1 RACK OF
LADIES' LEVI
BEN DOVER

law" and alleging the trial was
conducted In a "circus-like
atmosphere."
One of the chief "errors" noted by
King dealt with the Introduction of
several hours of telephoneconversa·
tlons into the trtal. The tapes,
considered the main part of the
prosecution's case against Lee,
were recorded by Shirley Furst ,
who was also the chief prosecution
witness.
King has claimed that the tapes
were Illegally obtained, and that Lee
was not apprised of his rights when
the recordings were made because
Furst was acting for the Ga!Ua
County Sherltl's Department when
thereco~gswere~. ·

'

WINTER CLEARANCE NOW
IN PROGRESS
ALL
LADIES' SUITS,
SLACKS, SKIRTS
AND ·BLAZERS

Ohio weather:
bland forecast
for weekend
-Page A-3--

11 Sections, 70 Page• 35 C.nts
A Multimedia Inc. NeW'fKifM'

Middleport flon•ror Gallipolit-Point Pleasant Sunday, January 15, 1984

C.,•'ll•ed 1914

'
I

TRIPLE FATAUI'Y - Three peo
. pie, Including
OtlsM. Rice, 84, andhlswUe,Ojlal, 75,ofMasoo, West
VIrginia, were ldDed when the cars above collided
Funeral arrangements for the
Rices wUI be a nnounced later by
Foglesong Funeral Home in Ma·
son. Mr .• Rice was teacher and
principal In Mason schools for
many years, a spokesman for the
funeral home said.

head-oo on U.S. 35 near Beech Hill Friday, according

to W.Va. State Pollee . (photo bY J udy Morgan)

The deaths bring the number of
traffic fa talities In Mason County In
the first two weeks of this year to
four . Margaret Deal, 68, of Ashton,
died following a single-vehicle
accident on Route 2, one a nd
one-half miles from the Cabell·

Mason county line, on J an . 6.
In addition, a Hannan High
School senior, Carl E . Treadway Jr.
of PUny, was kllled when the car he
was driving collided with a tractortrailer on U.S. 35 In Frazie rs
Bottom In Putnam County on Jan 6.

mutilated the pair. because he was
jealous over Miss J ohnston's rela·
tionshlp with Schultz, her fiance.
The day after the mutilated
torsos were discovered, .Jounston
and his wlle gave pollee photos
showing Miss Johnston in the nude,
former pollee captain Steve Mow·
ery testified Friday. He said the
photos were taken when Miss
Johnston was about 13 years old.
Th~ torsos were found in the
Hockmg River on Oct. 14, 1982.
Other body parts were discovered

buried In a nearby cornfield a few
days later.
Pollee were given the photos.
three of which showed jti&amp;t__. ·
In&amp; marks 011 bel-~. lifts~
requested pictures to help ldent:Hy
the bodies, Mowery said.
Mowery said that on Oct. 21, 1982,
pollee questioned Johnston for six
hours.
Mowery said Johnson revealed
he and his wife, Sarah, often went
nude in front of his stepdaughter
and her sister, Michelle.
Mowery said he then asked
Johnston If seeing his stepdaughter
naked excited him. Johnston answered that It dldn 't, but added that
on occasion he became aroused and
"I had totakecareoflt rtght away."
Mowery testified Johnston dlci
not explain what he meant, but that
he denied having sexual relations
with his stepdaughte r .
Mowery testified Johnston said
Schultz was considered "one of the
famlly" untU one day in the
summer of 1982 when he found the
gtrl and Schultz changing into
bathing suits in the same room.
Johnston then told Schultz he was
not to come around any more,
Mowery said.
1Continued on page A3)

Meigs .students testing abOve national average
By BOB HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local high school
students,are testing above the national average In the
ACT and SAT tests administered each year.
This Information was Included In a four year
comprehensive program of goals set forth by Meigs
Local Superintendent Dan C. Morrts to the district's
board of education Thursday night.
Morrts pointed out that some of the goals outUned In

his detaUed plan can be carried out in less than the
four year period Involved. Morris was complimented
upon his report by board Member Larry Powell and
several board members expressed their pleasure a t
'be positive progress that Is being made. The m!Ulon
dollar tax free bond Issue that was given the district
under former superintendent : David L. Gleason. has
been most beneficial, they said, making It possible to
get aU of the buildings of the district Into good
condition.

Gallia foreclosures decrease;
show reversal of state trend

8C
,.z

reached Its pe;tk In the county In
. 1981, when56foreclosureswerefUed
GALLIPOLIS - While a cltlzens . In Gallla County common pleas
court. 1983 figures show a decline of
lobbying
says the number of
nearly 36 percent over tbe past two
home 1oreclosures contin11es to rise
In Ohio ' such legal IICtions are . year period.
Chief Gallla Deputy Bob Hartenbdeclining in Gauta County, a recent
ach,
who handles sheriffs' sales for
study by the clerk of rourts office
the county, confirmed that ~
ShowS.
·
The Ohio PubUc Interest Cam· number !if pubUc auctions held in
palgn said Thursday, that the front of the courthouse - where
numbei" of home foreclosures ~ ofdl!rs of sale are ·executed - has
15 to 00 percent across the state last , decllne4r¢entiY . ·
· "llulven't h8d a sale for nearly a
~M.
.
the moqth,:' Hattenbach said Friday,
In GaUia County'1 however,
niunber of foreclosures has de- "a couple of ~ ago we were
creased during the past two years, having .five-to-six sal!!S a month."
A~ross the state, ·however, OPIC
with 19113 showing a decline of 21
director
Michael Dilly said, "The
percent below the previous year.
Crisis
Is
gotng
to ge\ worse before It
'!be number of 1!0f11e forec~~ In
.
Galllll County 1n 1983 was 36, gets jletter."
Lenders, who. say !hey often lose
C&lt;Jnll8l'l!d \Vlth 45 in'l982,
(Continued on page A3)'
. The number of actions to foreclose
. ~
tl

By LARRY EWJNG
nn-&amp;ntloel Staff

L.....---...J

group

BOSWORTH

PLUM

I

Inside:

tnfintl

tmts

Any party wishing to comment on the proposal should provide written comments within 30 days from ihe ·date of this notice to:
Bernard T. Chupka
.
State Director
Farmers Home Administration
200 N. Hi&amp;h Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215
A map of the location of the proposed project is shown below.

SYCAMORE

Meigs columnist Bob Hoeflich continues the tale
of the musical Christmas canl-Page B-5

•

The Farmers Home Administration will offer low interest financing
to qualified home buyers to purchase homes. The total mortgage va·
lue of these loans will be approximatley $798,000.00.

,.-----___,

Conservative James J, Kilpatrick discusses civil
ri@hts for whites-Page A-2

.,

The proposed project is within the Village of Middleport and is legally described as the General Hartinger Subdivision.

BROADW;.;.A;_Y::..__ __

.law speaks for itself--D-1

d hearr artack cle&lt;" •

Trash pick-up days
Trash pickup In Racine will be
held Tuesday and Wednesday
next week rather than earlier
d ue to t he c Ios Ing of t he Ian dflll
M d
on__o_n_a_Y_·-------~

Pre8enring
Black
History
-PageB-1

\1AJOR FINDING

Boosters to meet

.-------:7-:-_______

Meets Wednesday

.

Pomerov--Middleport, Ohio

'

National health study reveals
reducing blood cholesterol
can cut heart attack risks

Deputies check
theft complaints

.

...

BAHR CLO-THIERS

~.

~·

..'..•:

. MIDbLEPORT

Gallia
foreclosures

1979 -1983 '

Morrts, in his report, brought out that he wants to
complete a .revision and upda ting of the board of
education policy manual. He wants to promote and
assist in the development a nd implementation of
comple ting broad educational programs in English
composition, mathematics and reading both on the
elementary and high school levels. This brought out
questions by the board on how the district can
ascerta in If It Is providing the necessary training for
students going on to higher education.

Search for new GDC .super
yields •disappointing response'

YEAR ....... .. ...... TOrAL
l.lrl9 " " " " " " " " " ' " " " " 17
1980 " ...... """""" ...... .35
1981 ....... " """ '""""".56
1982 ......... :......... :....... 411
198s ••••••••••..••....••.•...•• 36
FORECLOSURES DE·
CREASE - Figures recently
complied by the .Gallla County
Clerk of CowU Ofllce show a
decreMlng Jmnber of propet1.y
foreclolluree over the past two
.yean. Foreciolurea In the
COUll&amp;)' ' reached &amp;heir peak
1111 the palt five yean Ia l~l
·whea 118 lldl!lal were flied wllh
·the CQUit, LMt year, S&amp;fiiiDp for
·forecloiUre were poeted.

*"" .

By KEVIN KElLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- The search for a
new superintendent of GalllpoUs
Developmental Center has gone
back.to the drawing board.
· t;)lsappolnting response to the job
has forced the Ohio Department of
Mental Retardation to readvertlse
for appUcatlons, said a department
spokes'pefS9n.
The jQb has been vacant since
Nov, :ll when Dr. Robert K.
Zimmerman's resignation became
effective. Since then, adrnlnlstra·
tive staff lulve been running the
center tor mentally retardedcUents .
But twice a week, Jim Spiess, an
administrator' at Orient Developmental Center, has been filling in as

'

an acting director.
Unless a new superintendent is
named soon, Spiess may spend
moretlmeatGDC in his temporary
status, as Orient Is being phased out
as a developmental center to
become a new state prtson.
Cheryl Claypool ofODMR said the
position would be posted again soon
because the department received
only three applications in.Itsorlginal
advertising.
.
"f;'or a position of this type, with
that kind of responslbUlty, they felt
there should be more candidates," .
shesald. .
Claypool noted that the depart·
ment would entertain appUcations
from within ODMR but would also

take applications frrom other mE&gt;n·
tal retardation professionals.
The job requires the superintend·
ent to beresponsible forthecenter's
operation and initiate a nd adminls·
ter planning, prepare a two-year
budget and tableoforganiza tlon and
monitor current expenditures.
Zimmerman, who had been
supertntendent since April 1981,
submitted his resignation to ODMR
In early November after being
offered a position as superintendent
of the Shelby County 169 Board of
Mental Retardation.
Zimmerman had come to CDC In
July 1978 as an assistant ' to
then-Superintendent John Beattie.
Beattie left GDC to become an
ODMR administrator.

,·

~

'r

Supt. Morris was asked to keep in touch with
students going to college and get feedback on the
adequacy of the distric t.
Morrts pointed out tha t he wants to promote and
assist and the development and implementation or
new courses of study in all subject areas. He said he Is
currently meeting with · epresentatives of the Ohio
Department of Education to discuss the vocational
program for students a t the high school. He wants to
(Continued on page A3l

'

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