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'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page---12-The Daily Sentinel

Thul'lday, Match 3, 1983

Meigs County's ·'battle of words' scheduled Monday
Seventeen school spelllng bee
ChaJDP!ODs.wW go Into the battle of
words for top honors when the annual Meigs County Spelling Bee Is
staged at 7: 30 p.m. Monday at
Eastern High School.
A champion and an alternate
have been selected In each of the
schools through school contests. In
case the champion Is unable to participate, the alternate will represe nt the respective school at
Monday's event.
Champions and ;llternates, respectively, Include: . Chester Elementary , Michelle Malhotra,
fowih grader:. daughter of Mr. a,nd
Mrs . Raj K Malhotra; Amy Ruth
Mann, fifth grader. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. David M. Mann; Eastern
Junior High, Travis Newll!n, eighth
grader. son of Mr. and ·Mrs. Ernest
Ne.,lun; Renee Kaylor. seventh
grader, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Musser, eighth graaer, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John M~~SSer; M!ddlepQrt
Elementary, -Cat!na Lee Wolfe,
fourth grade, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Wolfe; Geoffrey Eugene
Cogar, fourth grader, son of Myrtle
St. Clair, Middleport.
Pomeroy Elementary, Lesley
Carr, sixth grader, daughter of Ronald Carr and tloMa Carr, and
Laurte Wayland, sixth grader,

Terry Kaylor; Riverview Elemen_tary, Michael Martin, sixth grader,
son ot Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Martin;
Lisa Driggs, sixth grader, daughter
ot Mr. and Mrs. Larry Drtggs;
Tl!ppers Plains Elementary, Angle
Murphy, foUrth grader, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Murphy, and
Michelle Frash, foUrth grader,
daughter at Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Frash.
Bradbury Elementary, Elise
Meier, sixth grader, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Meier; Amy
Luckeydoo, sixth grader, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo;
HarrtsonvWe Elementary, Jarod
Sheets; sixth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Sheets, and Marc Howard, fifth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. ElwoOd Howard, Jr.
Meigs Junior High, Michelle
Barr, eighth grader, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr· Steven

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jelllllngs
Wayland.
Rutland Elementary, Stacy Bysell, sixth grade, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard HyseU, and Billy
DoCz!, tltth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Andy Doczl.
Salem Center Elementary,
Cindy Maynard, sixth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mickey
Maynard, and Jody Levingston,

Chest clinic slated March 10
'

The Meigs County '1\rberculos!s
Chest Clinic with Dr. Roy L. Donnerberg of Ohio State University
Hospital In cl;latge has been rescheduled tor Thursday, March 10, from
l.p.m. to 3 p.m . .
All patients who have been notlfjed of anearllerdatearetonotethe
change. The clinic Is held at the TB
office In the Multi-PurpOse Build·

ELBERFEL

log, Pomeroy.
Thesk!ntestingscheduleforfood
handler cards Is as follows: Monday, '1\resday,Wednesday and Frtday from 8: 30 a.m. till noon until
March 11. After March 11, !twill be
necessary to call for an appointment as the TB nurse will be worklng In schools In the county. For
more Information
992-3722

sixth grade~', daughter of Mr. and
VanMeter.
Mrs. Daniel LeVIngston. ·
' ' ·' Solithiirii
Salisbury Elementary, Heidi ca.
nold~ eighth
ruthel'S, Mh grader, daughter at
Bl!l Arnold
Robert Caruthers and Diana CaKarla
ruthers, and Mike Parker, Mil
ter of Mr. and
grader, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Syracuse
Parker.
Pape, sixth graldel
Letart Elementary, Carol
and Mrs. James
Fisher, sixth grader, daughter of . Stout, sixth
Mr. · and Mrs. Drew Fisher, and
Mrs. David
Crystal Hill, sixth grader, daughter ·
Tom
of Mrs. Patrtcla Hill. .
·
Eastern High
r prOPortland Elementary, Sabrina
DOWlce the words and
wiiiJie
Mahlman, sixth grader, daughter · Rii:hard Roberts,
DistriCt
of· ·Mr. and Mrs. Wade Mahlmari . Superintendent; .
Morrtii,
and . Becky Evans, sixth grader, . Meigs 'L ocal Su1li!' J1leMI!llt: aild
daughter of Jo4r. lind Mrs•. Denny
Bobby 0 r d,
·.. Eva Ill&gt;.
·
Supertittendent.
. Racine Elementary, Amy HarrtThe county wlnnerl:wll!
son, tltth grader, daughter of Mr.
state event on AprU
and Mrs. Craig Harrtson, and MeCenier In ~-~:~1:~::~
lanle VanMeter, sixth grader,
te
daughter ' of ·Mr. and MrS. Roy .

Kl''"""

Littlefield paces
Tornadoettes victory
in district tourney

Middleport native's
project gets praise
from Pres. Reagan

Page 3

Page3

11
·

NEW SPRING STYLES
LITTLE GIRLS'

4th

Voi.31,No.215
Copy•ighted 1983

DRESS SALE

SPRING
JACKETS

3 ~ece coordinates, pinafore dresses, 2
piece skirt outfits and coat and dress
styles. Poly/cotton blends and knits Sizes
Newborn to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to Gx, 7 to
14.
REG. $9.00 ..................... SALE $7.19
REG. $12.00 ................... SALE $9.59
REG. $17.00 ................. SALE $13.59
REG. S22.00 .................. SALE $17.59

V2 Price

SALE PRICED

FROM ONLY

. LAY-A-WAY FOR EASTER!

LADIES'

SPRING
DRESS SALE

MEN'S
LIGHTWEIGHT

LADIES'

UNIFORM
SALE

JACKETS

All whi1ll unif01ms, all white separate pants
and sllirts. WMe and jllstel tops Dresses,
jllnlsuits and s~it leg big styles. Jr. sizes
5/6 td 13/ 14; Misses sizes 4 to 2fr, Ha~
Sizes 141-'l to 261-'z.

SAVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Men's $22.95 Jackets .. Sale $18.35
Men's $24.95 Jackets .. Sale $19.95
Men's $29.95 Jackets .. Sale $23.95
Men's $34.95 Jackets . Sale $27.95

REG. $12.00 .............. SALE $9.59
REG. $18.00 ............. SALE $14.39
REG. $24.00 ............. SALE $19.19
REG. $31.00 ............. SALE $24.79

LAYAWAY FOR EASTER
AND SAVE!
Reg. $23.00 ............... Sale $18.39
Reg. $29.00 ............... Sale $23.19
Reg. $35.00 ........ :...... Sale $27.99
Reg. $42.00 ............... Sale $33.59

SALE!

-.

JUNIOR

MARCH

SPRING
DRESSES

IN HOME FURNISHING DEPT.-1st Aoor
20" in diameter, 25" tall. Quaity wood componen1s,.' easy to assemble. Perfect for any room.
Regular $11.95

CHAIR
SALE

2 piece poly I cotton mini looks, 2 piece
plllirie looks, belted styles, sleeveless
and ll sleeved. pullovers. Beautiful
spring cOOrS. Junior Sizes 3 to 13.

sggg

Wall-Away Recliners - Rocker/Recliners - Swivel Rockers.
FAMOUS BERKUNE QUALitY

~~ED
$}759
FROII ONLY

SAVE

KNIT SHIRTS
Our new spring selection of styles and colors
you'll Ike. Sizes are from S·through 20. Crew
neck styles, tank tops, see through shirts,
cut-offs, rugby styles. Buy what you need now
at these sale prices.

SPECIAL TABLE OF. PINS,
NECKLACES, EARRINGS AND
BRACELETS.

You'Hlove this new spring selection in
sizes S, M, L, and XL Crew necks,
styles with collar.;, tank 1Dps, number
shirts, cut offs, dressy styles il1d casual kloks. Solids and stripes.

Boys $6.95 Shirts ................... $5.67
Boys' $8.95 Shirts ................. $7.37
Boys' $9.95 Shirts .................: '8.17
Boys' $12.95 Shirts .............. $10.57

¥2 PRICE

len's $7.95 Shirts .......... $6.29
len's $9.95 Shirts .......... $7.89
len's $12.95 Shirts ...... $10.29
. len's $14.95 Shirts ...... $11.89

'

MARCH FURNITURE SALE

SALE! WRANGLER

ROWE SLED ER SOFAS

BASIC JISANS

BRAS and PANTIES

atoose stnli&amp;lrt lee or boot lllre style in sias 28 to 42
Wlist. Pre-washed 14\1 ounce No-Fau~ blue denim t1111
.won't smnk, wrinkle or pucker. AeaUar price $22.95.

-S&lt;* cup, ooderwire, front closure and ightly lired bills.
-Bikinis and brief styles panties.
'

~een and Full Size All hive Serta Perfect Sleeper lnnerSIJfil'll Mattresses. Early American, Modem, o1 Contemporary' Styling.

REG. $756.00

YOUR
CHOICE

$499

$}688

TWO DAY SALE

¥4

JEWELRY
CLEARANCE

KNIT
SHIRTS

DANSKIN

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel sWf
An ordinance combining the
offiCes of clerk-treasurer effective
May. 1, was approved when Syracuse Councll met In regular session
Thursday night.
·George Hobnan, treasurer, will
resign his post to assume duties ,as
lTUillllgEI' at London Pool. Janl~
Lawson, clerk, will assume the
duties of the office of the 'treasurer.
Holman, who attended a two day
nlanagemen!,-IIIChool, received a
certlftcate for satllfactoty completIng a counre or Jnstruetion In
. swtmrniDg pool ooperatlons conducted by Hydrocepls, Iflc.
Council also !!PProved three

-Popular Sizes and COors.

OFF

SHOP FRIDAY 'TIL 8:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 'TIL 5:00P.M.

'

. ,,

c

I

'

'(

.,

.

plane so there will be room forreporters, and Instead of piloting the
plane, he plans to sit in the
passenger section talklng politics.
Glenn doesn't plan to formally
enter the race for the 198&lt;1
Democratic presidential nomination imtil April.
Four Democrats - Sens. Alan
Cranston of California and Gary
Hart of Colorado. former Vice
President Walter F . Mandate and
former Gov. Reubln Askew of
Florida - already have declared
their candidacies.
One of the sites being considered
for Glenn's announcement is his
hometown of New Concord, Ohio,
pOssibly' In the gymnasium of John
Glenn High School.

.

~.a

.

Glenn 's schedule next week
includes a combination of set
speeches, party events and fundraisers.
In addition to Boston, he plan s
appearances In Atlal)ta, where he
wUI join other presidential · aspirants at a Georgia Democratic
Parw·• dinner; Jackson, Miss.,
where he will addresss a joint
session of the !eglslature; New York
City for a dinner speech to the Bond
Club and then to New Hampshire for
appearances on Friday evening and
Saturday.
Glenn concludes his week's
travels with a speech to a party
dinner Saturday night In Richmond,
Va.

In testimony prepared for the
congressional Joint Economic Committee, Janet L. Norwood, commissioner of labor statistics, noted that
"In the two months between
December and February, payroll
jobs rose by 150,!XXl.''
Ms. Norwood said there was
likely no further ct'ecllne In civilian
unemployment because businesses
were assessing prospects for an
economic turnaround before recalling laid off workers.
Altogether, 11.5 million people
were· unemployed last month, an
Increase of 44,!XXlover January that
bureau analyst Deborah Klein
called ''negligible."
Total employment also held
relatively steady at W.1 million.
·Despite burgeoning signs of an
economic recovery, only 5,00)

, They said s he blames the president's position on "poor guidance,"
primarily from the Justice
De~rtment.

Anson Franklin, the assistant
White Hou se press secretary travel·
lng with Reagan In California, said
there would he no comment on those
remarks.
In a related dt'&gt;velopment, The
New York Times reported that
Deputy Attorney General Edward

C. Schmu!ts told Mrs. Burlord
Thursday night that the Justlce
Department would no longer repl'es('nt her or the agency In matters
reia ted to congressional subpoenas.
The report quoted unnamed admlnlstra tion officials.
An administration official told the
newspaper the Justice Department
could no longer represent EPA
officials because the president had
ordered the department to Invest!-

Pine Grove resident burned
while escaping hazing home
'

The Roy Frecker home at Pine
Grove was destroyed by fire f!arly
Friday morning.
The Chester Fire Department
answered a call to the residence at
2: 23 a .m. Friday and was on the
scene until 6 a.m. The two-story
frame home was practically gone·
when the deparbner\t arrtved. A
. neighbor spotted the blaze and

called the fire department.
Frecker received bums In escapIng from the burning house and was
taken to Veterans Memortal Hospi-tal for treatment by a Meigs County
sheriff's deputy.
Cause of the blaze was not known.
A monetary figure for loss of the
home and its contents had not been
set this morning.

gate charges of agency
mismanagement.
Therefore, representing Mrs.
Burtord, who is under a contempt of
Congress citation for withholding
documents al Reagan's request,
would represent a conflict of
Interest.
An EPA official said Mrs. Burlord
was extremely angry about and
decision, and felt that the White
House and Justice Department
were leaving her "high and dry" to
defend herself, the Times said.

J,

the largest monthly rise since July
1950.
.But these same analysts cautjoned lhal the retum to t~e labor
force of large numbers of Americans seeking work could put
pressure on an economy that has not
ye1 created new jobs or caused the
rehiring of people laid off during the
18-m0nth recession.
Ms. Klein agreed with that
assessment, saying "I guess we
should walt 10 see another month's
figures. If people perceive therE' are
jobs out there and re-enter the labor
force, that (heightened competition
for work) could slow the growth of
employment. "
•
A separate bureausurveyshowed
thal total payroll employment
declined by 18J,!XXl In February,
following a substantia l 330,00J gain
in January, producing the net
150,00J rise over the period. Bureau
analysts had · said earlier that
unseasonally warm weather In
January had swelled tarat employ(Continued on page 12)

Meigs' jobless rate
climbs..two percent

'

From Associawd PTL'SS
OVP staff Reports
While Ohio's unemployment rate dropped for t11c second st raight
month to 13.6 percent in February. the Labor Department reports
the jobless rate in Meigs County- and throughout southern Ohio-Increased by approxlrilately two percent between December and
January.
, The January rate for Ohio was 1,4.0 percent. December
unemployment was a record high 14.5 percent , with 727,(0)
unemployed. That number dropped to 700,fXXJ in January and 686,(0)
1
In February, according to government figures .
In Meigs County, the Ohio Bureau of Employment SeJvices
repo\'led a January jobless rate of 18.5 percent. Me igs ·
unemployment rate· for December 1082 was 16.7,percent.
Reported unemploy!llent !e&gt;vels In sun'Oundlng counties for
January were as follows (December 1982 rates In parenthesis):
Gall!a, 15.9 (13.5); Jackson, 20 (18.71; Vinton, 21.2 (17.6); a nd,
Lawrence, 18.3 (16.61
Adams County recorded the state's highest unemployment ra te
for .January at 32.5 percent, the OBES reported Thursday.
Scioto County had a jobless ra teof23.8 percent, Huron and Monroe
counties had rates of 23.6 percent. Ashtabula County recorded 23.3
percent. a nd Harrison County had 23.0 percent for the month.
All but three Ohio counties recorded double·digit jobless rates. The
lowest jobless rate was recorded by Hancock County, a t 9.2 perr·ent,
the bureau said.In February,. Ohio continued to have one of the highest
unemployment rates In the nation.
Among the 10 large -Industrial states for which figures were
released today, Michigan had 14.8 percent in February compared
with 15.5 percent In January a nd 17.1 percent In December. A year
ago, Ohio's unemployment rate was 11.4 percent.
Pennsylvania had 13.2 perceht in February, 13.6 perCPnt in
January and 12.6 percent In December.
·

.
:
:.
.

Mrs. Burford's aides' disclosures
came on the same day that Sen.
Rudy Boschwltz and Rep. Vln
Weber, both Minnesota Republicans, urged Reagan to replace Mrs.
Burtord with a "politically Independent person of nationally recognized scientific qualificatiOns."
A day earlier, White House Chief
of Staff James Baker said "at the
present time" there were no plans to
dismiss the EPI\ chief.

·syracuse council combines cle•k-lreasurer's job

'

200/o

.

.

W~ll"GTON (AP) -AnneM.
Burford. trying to restore public
confidence In the Environmental
·Protection Agency, Is asking President Reagan to give congressional
Investigators full access to agency
documents, her aides say.
One close aide said Thursday
nignr that Mrs. Burford, the EPA
administrator, has repeatedly
urged the White House togo further
than It has In letting lawmakers k&gt;ok
at all documents. She has so far been
rebuffed, aides said.
"The key is to restore coiifldence
In the programs. Aslongastherelsa
perception by the public and
Congress that some Information Is
being withheld, that Is going to be
impossible to do, " said one aide,
who like the others asked for
anonymity.
,
Mrs. Buiford believes the EPA
controversy can only he solved by
giving congressmen complete access to documents, so long as they
keep .sensitive rna ter!al confidential, the aides said.

.

MEN'S
SHORT SLEEVE

BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE

.

Director Burford backs full disclosure

LAYAWAY FOR EASTER!

Decorate With A
70-72 Inch Round Table Cover

111ey are, from second left: Alan Cranston, CaUfornla; Edward Kennedy, Maasachusetts; Ernest Hoilings, South Carolina; . and Dale Bwnpers, Arkansas.
(AP Laserphoto).
',
·

WASHINGTON (AP!- With aU
the •trappings of a presidential
campaign but a fo,nnal candidacy,
Sen, . John GleM , D-Ohio, has
chartered a plane and laid on a full
week of tra ve ling and
speechmaklng.
.Glenn aides called politiCal reporters on Thursday to line up
~sengers for the Glenn campaign
trtp which starts Monday In Boston
with a lUncheon speech to hi-tech
executives.
The former astronaut nonnally
flies his own small plane back and
forth between Washington and Ohio
or for speaking engagements In
other parts of the country.
But for his travels next week, the
Bl!li;ltor has chartered a 10-seat

Reg. $54.00 ............... Sale $43.19

WOOD
ACCENT TABLES

'l1IE POINT IS ... - Sen. John GleM, ~hlo,
left, lllllllesapolntThUl'lldaynlptatalund-ral&amp;erfor
the MaMacbusett&amp; Democratic State Committee In
'BostonasfellowDemocratlcSenatorssharealaugh.
.

WASHINGTON lAP)- Civilian
people re-entered the labor force,
unemployment held evlm at 10.4 according to the Census Bureau's
percent In February as large survey of some 60,00J U.S.
numbers of jobless Americans households.
awaited further slgnalsoftmproved
President Reagan and his top
hiring prospects before resuming economic advisers, while heartheir search ·or work, the governtened by the 0.4 percentage point
ment reported tod~.
drop in civilian unemployment
The unchanged' Unemployment from December to January, have
rate resumed an 18-month pattern said th~y are prepared for further
of rtslng or stand-still joblessness. rises in that crucial jobless figure.
That trend had been Interrupted
"There may be a month where It
only by last month's healthy
(the unemployment rate) might
decline.
level off or come up, say a llttl\"
When ihe full-employment, 1.7- above the 10.4," the president said
mlll!on-member U.S. mllltary work last month . " I don't think that you
force was Included, February's · will see it come above the high mark
overall unemployment rate also of 10.8" reached In December. That
held steady at 10.2 percent, the figure represented the highest.
Labor Department said.
joblessness since the Great
Government statisticians said Depression.
that, In Interpreting the health ofthe
In advance of the release of
February's jobless figures, severa l'
private analysts pointed to the
growing
signs of a business recov~~~J~~~a:.;e~n:;~:~~~~ ery, 'noting
the robust 3.6 percent
drop in January might have been gain In the Index of Leading
exaggeratedbytheBureauofLabor Economic Indicators In January,
~=~· seasonal adjustment

Senator. Gle.nn hemns ~~:i~n~~~:nt~:~~tha~;:~·i~
.
·•
stumping trips M0 n day

New lllsses and half size dresses. Sundresses, 2 pc. suits, shirtwaist style~ party
dresses, sailor styles and more. Spring
prin1s, stripes, dots, ftolllls and border
prin1s.

Ideal for Spring and Summer wear. Excellent new selection in sizes small, medium,
large and extra ~rge.

:20 Cenh

A Multimedia Inc. NewspapM

Nation.,s jobless
rate unchanged

Were $14.95 to $19.95- Most all are .
14~ oz. No-Faun blue denim pre- .
washed. Basic and fasioo styles. Regular and slmsizes 81D 14,SMentsizes
26 to 30 waist
.

, Waist length jackets, Spring coat~ hooded
jackets and parachute jacke1s. Lined and
unlined styles. Com(Jete range of lit11e
boys and ~ r1s sizes.

1 Setlion , 12 Pagu

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 4, 1983

DENIM
JEANS

CHILDREN'S

Page 5

at y ""'enttne

e

BOYS' WRANGLER

SALE!

See photo page 8

•

Special Weekend Sale Prices On New Spring Merchandise!
MAR~H

Redus will ,' ilarl ;
Walker frustra tt~d

•

MARCH SALE

SALE BEGINS fRIDAY,

Right to read
week obseroance

,\

"'

given on March 9, at Pomeroy,
lntersectio~ of .Seventh St.. and
under the direction of Legar.
·Third be moved to a different
He announced that burning ·location. Councll agreed to contact
permits must be obtained for an
the Ohio Power Co. to have the light
open burning. Permits may be
relocated.
obtained from Imboden, Chris
Councll went Into executive
Jacks, Mayor Eber Pickens or session for an hour and a half
Clyde Triplett.
following the session.
Gene Imboden, !Ire chief, reCouncil approved the purchase of ·
. ported that advancect !Ire training five gallon of foam for the fire
Council recessed and Will . meet
will he given March 10, at Syracuse 'department.
again on March 10; at 7: ~p. m. .
with Charles Legar as Instructor.
At the suggestion of Mrs. SampAttending were Mayor Pickens,
The training is mandatorY' for au son Hall, councll also
to Wlllle Guinther, John Phllson, M!ck ·
members of the fire department. If purchase blades for the tracotr.
Ash, John Bentley, Jack Williams
a·member falls to take the training
.John Bent!ey, councllman, was and Kathryn Crow, council
he or she Is automatically dropped
authorized to secure costs on members, George Holman, treasas a member of the department.
placing lights at the tennis courts.
,urel', Janice LawSDn, clerk, MUton
Imboden also reported that- a ·
Mllton V-arian, pollee chief, Varian, poUce chief, Mrs. Hall and
basic fire training course wlll be
suggested that the street light at the
Bill Cundiff.
readings of an ordniance for the
Improvement of SR 124 between the
western and easter1,1 corporation of
the village by the Ohio Depatrnentof
Highways.
An ordinance to Increase water
rates was given the second reading.

aereect

&lt;ot

F1LE8 - EDen J. Roll3ht, Pomeroy VUiage clerk-treasurer, ·.
Thunday afternoon !lied her petition eeeklng the Republican nomina- ·
t1011 to nm for lbe poe&amp;. Mrs. Roulbt wu appointed clerk-treasurer· ·
April I, 1882 !IDd has been llet"VIIIc In lbe poeltloa !!looe that time. So far, ,
Mill. Roupt Is the only candidate for the poe&amp; to file at the Meigs County ·.
Board of Elections oftlce.
··

.

�1983

Commentary

!1

Page 2-Tt. Daily Senlinel

~

Poe•-r-:-Midd!eport, Ohio
Friday, March 4, 1983

'

James]. Kilpat~ick
Success for ·a change
sutferin~gL.-:;th::e:-:p::rt;:-v::a::te:-:sec::::t::o::-r;::has~ma==-de:::-na:=val::;--chan-:--ce-to:-s-:lgn_o_n_llgaln:-':"'"'_-:'tbe::-"'!A--

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Stl'ffl
Pumt!ruy,Ohin

114-992-2 15&amp;

nt~ \' OTED TO TilE INTE R EST OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE A

11~

'ql"

t:;!m~ ~._....,..,~d·-=o

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publl~twr

BOB HOEFLICH

P-AT WHITEHEAD

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
N~wli

Editor

A Mf.MBER ul .r~ Alili•lfiakd' Pm~.
Amt'rinm Nt'\Hipilpt'r Publbhl"nl A¥SI)fUitlua.

IIJal~

Daily Prt'Si'l Assntillliun

;,~nd

wASHINGTON - Our town trouble. The fleet was
feeds on flubs, foUies and fatlures. ·from serious problems of morale,
Let a president foul up his figures,
made worse by the use of narcotiC.
and It is Page One stuff for the aboard ship.
morning Post. The hounds of the
JohnF.Lehman,secretaryofthe
House are baying after Anne Bur· navy, isn't going to contend that ev·
ford, adrritnlstrator of the EPA. In erything is hunky-dory now, but in
the midst of the gloom and doom,
an interview last week he made a
it's rare that a success story comes convincing case In .support of .his
along,butlhaveonetoday.Thesun view that smoother sailing lies
is shining on the U,S. Na\iy.
ahead.
Two years ago, the picture was
Tl)e cntlcal problems of personquite different. More than half of nel, he says, are plainly on their
the ships In the U.S. fleet could not way · to solution. Several factors
be fully manned. Hundreds of ca· have contributed to the brightening
reer petty officers were leaving the picture. A hefty raise in payhas
service. Naval aviation was in deep
Severe unemployment in

service mroe attractive to yOung ·
men. Two years ago, the figures on
re-enlistment rates were appal·
ling: The Navy simply could not
hold its expensively trained technl·
clans after a first or second l)ltch.
Things are looking up. The reenlistment rate, overall, has
climbed to 79 percent. M(lre thai!
half of the flrst•termers are signing
on for a second.term. Asb~consequence, the Navy is now able to get
rid of its troublemakers and non·
performers; more than 12,&lt;m men
have been effectively sacked in the ·
past two years by denying !hem a

thl'

LF:'M'ER.COi OF OPINION lilT • ·d('omt:d . Tiley ~htltlld be lt!ls Uum J00 word!l lol'l(. All
'i«IM!d wiU. IUUJM.', addrt'lni and lele~me
number. Nu unt~igllt!d ldlt&gt;rs will br.publllhed.lktkn 11bi1Uid ~In jr!nud tas~.lldd~l.._

ldtt'r:- 11 rr tiul)jt!&lt;'l lo NiliDK 1" m•sl bt
lssul"!i, not pcrlktflaliUa;.

The big business
of selling houses
A survey of real estate brokers has found that 89percent of them operate
from slngle offices, specializing in a local community and maybe even a
neighborhood within them.
But big business is planning to change that.
.
: The threat to the small independent broker isn't new, having begun
·be !'ore the near-collapse of real estate markets three or four years ago. But
now. as markets recover, big-business real estate is gathering strength
ag~ in .

Sear s-Roebuck. long known as a purveyor of retail goods; Control Data,
generally thought of as a computer maker; and Menill Lynch, popularly
·identified with common stocks all plan to expand their real estate holdings.
: Ali three companies are al59 big in financial services, of which real
:estate is but one aspect, and intend to use their expertise in areas such as
finance and insurance to deliver "total packages" to homebuyers.
As real estate activity picks up, the names offour big outfits, all of whom
have had their growth plans stymied during the recession, are likely to
become bigger factors in real estate through advertislng and promotion.
Century 21, Electronic Realty Associates. Realty World and Red Carpet,
:the four biggest franchisors, all plan marketing campaigns as the .
:economy Improves, according to the National Association of Realtors.
: Red Carpet, which 9ffers a national affiliation with independent
· management of local offices. has concentrated its activities in the West, ·
. South and more recently the Midwest. but has ideas of entering many
other states.
ERA was purchas.ed last year by Commercial Credit Management
·Corp., a subsidiary of Control Data. By the end of 1982 it ha.d opened 45
:c ont rol Data Homeowner Centers, off!!ring homebuyers first and second
:mortgages. insurance and closing and relocation seryices. It hopes to add
· 500 franchisees next year.
Menill Lynch Realty and Relocation has been buying well-managed
local real estate brokerage businesses. It 0\hiJlS 26 firms in 40 metropolitan
areas. with 300 sales. offices ~;~nd S,!XXJ sales. person. It has expressed
intentions of having a presence In the top 50 urban markets within the next
se\'era l years
SeaJS ROf' bllck has been building its presence through ownership of
:Coldwell Banker. a real estate company that established affiliates iri .
· nearly two dozen major metropolitan areas.
The motivation behind the big-company activities is the realization that
real estate is ripe for professional management and training. and
homebuyers.ripe for salesmen to present a variety of other services.
What the small real estate broker can offer is human services and
human rather than computer know-how about the local scene. That is, the
personal touch, an elemeni that has disappeared from so many industries
·
' today.

Berry's World

·.
·~.
C IB1byNE~. Inc. ~
"Instead of just relying on contributions from
individuals, we ought to go after some of that
PAC money. "

PR and foreign

.'

problem hasn't been cured; · but
Lehman is satisfied that It hall been
greatly relieved. To be sure; the
Navylsstlllshortaboljt14,1Dlpetty
ot!loers, but this nwnber will steadUy decline as younger aJ¥1 ies&amp; experienced saUors cUmb tJM!.lf~
·of promotion after time·11) 11i!ju!e.
Today,saysLehrnanJ t•Aii:grour
ships and all ot our ~0~ deployed marine units liill' tully
manned, and all of our ,aircraft
squadrons are very lll!tll'ly at flill
manning levels."
,-;;;;
At the momenr. I,eJutlan's partieular pride and Joy tS;,the recommls- ·
sloned battleshlp New Jersey. She
was brought on line in December,
five weeks ahead of schedule and
$11 mUllon under budget. For a total outlay of $326 million, he con·
tends. the taxpayers have bought a
handsome bargain.
The refitted New Jersey may be
40 years old, but the old girl hall had
a facelttt. She is newly equipped
With formidable weapons- Toma·
hawk mlsslles, Harpoon canister
launchers and sohlstlcated systems
of communications. Her awesome
16-lnch guns a~ capable of throw·
lng 2.700-pound shells at targets
more than 20 mlles away. In a span
of 30 minutes, Lehman points out, a
battleship can del,lver as much ~
lnlctlve gunfire as 18 or 19 destroy·
ers could provide In the · same
period ..- and II can deliver at much
longer range.
A year hence, the New J~
wiD be !oDowed by the refitted bat·
tleshlp Iowa On down the line, the
Mlsaourt and the Wisconsin are in
prospect. And lest anyone suppose
that the old wagons are slowpokes
at sea, Lehman has a reassuring
word: At 33 knots, despite h~ displacement of ~arly 58,&lt;m tons, the .
New Jersey can keep up with any
capital ship afloat.

..

·'
/'

·'
'
·

.,

Tontadoettes ·advance ·to finals

background.
Had then been curious enoilgh to
make one telephone call to tl)e Jus·
tlce Department, they would have
learned that MacKenzie was- and
still is -a Haitian agent. They aiso
might have discovered the striking
simUartty between his contract
with Duvaller's government and
the USIA grant to the group that
sponsored MacKenzie's little
seminar:
The Haitian contract. a matter of
public record, states that Ml!lcKen·
zie's finn wiU be paid $360,001 !or,
among other things, "media rela·
tlons and national bnage promotion
services.''
TheUSlAcontractsaysotMacK·
enzle's program: "The purpose of
these seminars is (o provide media

'·, . By scmT WOLFE
WAVERLY - After streaking trJ
an eariy 11-4 lead in the t1rst period.
Southern's Tomll(loettes continued
their rampaging pattern enroute to
a 45-25 trlwnph over the Portsmouth Clay Panthers here '!bursday evening Ill girls' District
basketball play at Waverly High
School.
The big vlcto!Y was Southern's
t!rSt-ever triumph In district play
thus advancing It to the district fi.
nab against Bishop Flaget this Sat·
urday at 3 p.m. in the Waverly High
ScliOol gymnasium.
' SoUthern · Is 20-2 overall, while
Clay flnlshed at 10.13. Flaget,
Southern's next ojlponentS, comes
with a 14-9 mark.
A complete team etlort again
proved to be the winning comblna·
tlori for the Tornadoettes, who were
led by the dominating scoring

,] r--.--------Tournament
results
0...\AA,.........
M.!O:IIelown 72. Hwnltfoo .'119
O:dord T&amp;l8wandll 67, Ctn. SycBIT'IOit' ~

,ar,

Xenia 67, Wllminaton 41
O....U'I'Dbr~

-~

O..A-

ctn. St . Bensard

!W, Cin. Academy 46
56
0.. AM 'l'ounwneall
Col. Beerncroft 63, ReyrnldsWrp: 36
Upper Arlln«ton ~ Col. Walnut ~
~own IJ), Rlp~

"

C.. A~
CCII. WNu-lr 81. LlckJntr Hts. ~
w. J(lfferson ~. MWersJJM t.1
JotinstiJIIIIJl Nm1~ 74, New Alba'\\'

00

Cltr. 81, Mark&gt;n CaUt

Wor11UJlj:rton

!\ti

a..AAA.r.. .......tt
G~

Canton

:11. Unklntown LakE&gt; fl.'!

Spr1nR- South 76, Day Waynt 43
'J'rotwOCJd.MIIdilon «S. Day. Stt'bblns

a-.u. 'r..-nt"JJIa

~

John Gk.&gt;nn 83. Mays,1lk' n
Mor'Ran 67, Rlvt'r V~· ~2
Steuben~

!11. Stf'Ubmvtlk&gt; Cath. 71
Weusvtlk&gt; 8t, BarnesvWe it
O..AAA'I'Iw-O.y. Ountar Ill. Bl-aVt'f'CT"Cf'k t9
Fatrmottl East 61, Centmllllt ~
· Xenia·C'i. WUml~ 411 ·
~ Sllm11 South 76. Day. WayN! ol1

~ Madison 6-"i; Drill.''· Sttbbln.o; !'tl

Girls tournaments
a-AAA~

Cln. Wltl'll'tM- 61. C1n. HURfR 46
a-.'u\o\~

Athl&gt;m 54. £ . Llwrp:l0149
l.antsVIUE&gt; ~Z. Lancasn 5t

O..ABuckf'\ot' Centn1l .'Vi, Co11W W.

~-"

11

Mans. St . Pete-r 62, l...akeskk'- &amp;2

O..A-

..
•'

Anna ~- Hwstm -II
Fort Loramlr 6t, Botldns 416
Marlon 61. Wayra6eld 48

NN

~

n

.

UppPr Sdolo

'tlu\!!lt of Amy IJtUefleld, who neiUnlike p&amp;at etlorts where the
ted a pme-h!gh 26 points.
SoUthern offense is totally doml·
Selllor guai'ds Tonja Salser and . 1lllllt, Thurst!ay's·malri spark came
j\1el · Weese also connbutl!d good as the result ot excellent defensive
floor games.
•
play.
Susan Conley paced tbe Panther
A tight SHS defeiiSl' antagonized
attack and assumed team leilder· the potent Portsmouth Clay otlense
ship with 13 markers.
all evening long, fencing ott the usu·
ally high scoring laurels of Susan
An enthused crowd flooded the Conley. ~ Wolfe aliChored the
Waverly nger ~ lbr the start of base line stand and grabbed nine of
the opening tip, which Southern .Southern's 13 steals with an out·
·controlled to begin Its quest for a
standing effort.
score. Southern'$ first drtve proved
trultless, sending the quick PanthIn a low-scoring second ,frame
ers to their end Whe!'l! Susan Conley Southern remained patient, out· ·
broke thli scoring lee with short scOring the Panthers S-4 to take
jwnper to give her club a 2.0 Jead. · command of a 19-8 halttlrne lead.
IJttlefleld quickly tied the score Weese, despite scoring Just two
at 2-2 and Tonja Salser added five points, proved to be a valuable
markers in the first frame as the Southern asset, displaying a great
Tomadoettes galned momentum passing game and settling the Tor·
whUe claiming an 11-4 advantage at nactoettes' pattern offense. Mean·
the conclusion of the first round.
whUe Cindy Evans .was having a

a

Va~·

_

l.nfteld, I I

BasketbaU locker rooms were
remodeled, parents of band .
members repainted the school band
room and the Boosters Club
repainted the interinr of the football
stadium.
"The entire last school year we
worked on these different projects,"
Best said.

I

'

r.:==========::i
•

p~

FIOMf Shop

"The Wly America

the Chinese refuse to pay off on the
.
. ,
sinklng fund ."
"I Intend to seize three Chinese
restuarants in New York Qty. Pek·
lng has to realize they can't fiout a
federal Judge's order on defaulted
railroad notes and get away with It
The Integrity of Wall Street's bond
market Is at stake."
"I'm happy for you, Marvin, but I
have to tell you something. I never
dki buy that' story that you found
the lp on the Hukuang Railway In a
fortune cookie. TeD me. the truth.
Why did you invest?"
"The truth? Ollay. One day I in·
terviewed J.P. Morgan. I asked
him, 'What Is the secret of your sue·
cess?' and he replleft; 'I -mwaysbought Chinese Imperial Bonds
when they were low, and I always
sold Chinese Comunlst bonds when
they were high.' "

,.

Sends lAM"
992·2039 or 992-5721

~~~

fiiiiMAA~

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:1-a
[)(&gt;lpii)S St. Jot-n w. Kalida 51
Kansa.o; Lakota 63. £V(&gt;~n 41
Sorian1m ?8. F. l~"OCd. ~
OftO'IIlk- !'13, Fort Jrnnii\J5 49

•NI'IO.,

: Cage

PB, PS, Riel

standings

'

I

x-Porismouth

X·Atbeni
• C"..elltpoUs
, . Lopil
· Northwest

14 7 1331

'

tl~::::

10 12 12!8 12:18
9 ll 1287 1287
8 13 1257 1318
8 13 tl!! l29'l
8 13 lJ27 1317
7 14 llll! HOI
2 18 988 1317

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Alounder

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~elp

X·St1U 1D tournament
Wldied.,-:ll'eRIIia:

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Pauklng 47, Ottawa Glandorf i.!

Art Buchwald
biggest holder of Hukuang RaUway
Bonds in northern New Jersey."
The years passed and Marvin
and I lost touch. Then I read the
story In The Wall Street Journal
that the federal judge had ruled In
favor of 280 bond·holders in a class
action suit against the Chinese government. I Immediately called
Kilman to congratulate htm.
"I have to hand it to you," I said.
"MerrUi Lynch Is not going to call
you 'Crazy Marvin'. any more."
He said modestly, "I can't take
all the credit. I owe a lot ot ·It to
Nixon." .
"Why Nixon?"
"He opened upnewrelationswtth
the People:s Republlc. If he"hadn't,
' we never could have sued him. I
wouldn't he surprised If Nixon
owned some Hukuang Bonds
himself."
"What happens now, Marvin, If

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~by !B. F.lfdl !':6 ,.
Tol. !ron !'i9. Or-eflon Cla,y 4.1
~

Ritharil H. Billman II, O.D.
113 Court Street

special committee.'"
Verity, who lives in Middletown,
visited the school.
'-'Armco gave some materialS,
and people were wUUng· to help
themselves. It was a very fine
community etlort,'' Best said. "A
number of our parents worked and
completely redid some old locker
rooms and built weight equipment,
"Another project was a baseball
field that we completed with
ctonations and volunteer help. Now
we have one of the few high school
ballflelds in.Ohio that has a grass

a.tp as. Astnabull Hartlor 62

Mans. Madison :.:;,

..

BEND AREA.
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

W~~~0BE

.._ ... IJWo1ct

.._ .......

_ , . (M) - w~ 1-M; Saller 4-1·9;
Llttlellel!) J3.0.26; W&lt;ile 1.0.2; Evans 1·1·3:
Johnson 11M; Michael H-3; Botttley 11M;
lloulluloell 11011. Talolo ~~~
Clay (il) - Per1c1n! IW1l; Adams 2-H:
. Crall ~: Glenn (H)O; Lei.... (H)O; C&lt;lllley
6-1-13; llld&lt;llellertim 1-M . Tolalo t-'1-11.
lkoreby_.,.
Southern ...... ..................... ll 8 ~ 14--45
Clay ................................... 4 ' 4 12 5-211

TOM'S STEREO CENTER
Gallipolis, Ohio

0...-'AA ....fti
Aleron Burllte-1 S}, Akron Easl 46
•
, A.kl'l:a:S. '.~-a. '..Ji4iiy M, C'ufll ·

~Fallll~

a

Clay's 25 by Evans' six, IJtUefleld's
five, and J.aren Wolfe's five. SHS
committed 11 turnovers, 13 steals,
six assists, and 12 personal fouls.
Clay tallied 15, five, six and eight in
those respective categories.

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1983 FORO LTD BROUGHAM

:Today in history

Car Cassette

By AeaHslic

SAVINGS LIKE THIS:

Bonds."

"But you don't have any money.."
"That's the ·point. They're now
selling on the market for $10 on t])e
thousand. For 200 bucks, I can own
Today is Friday, March 4, t'Ie 63rd day of 1983. There are 302 days left in
$20,1Dl
worth."
. the year.
"But
if you can get them that
: Today's Highlight In History:
.
.
cheap,
they
must he worthless."
· on March 4, 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt launched the "New
"How
can
they be worthless?'" he
: Defl]" recovery program In hls firSt inaugural address.
sa,ld.
"They're
backed In gold by
: On this date:
.
.
1~the
Manchu
Dynasty."
In 1681, England's King Charles II granted William Penn a charter for .
"Where did you get the Up on the
what is now Pennsylvania.. .
bonds?"
· In 1789, !lie first U.S. Cqngress convened In New York City, but had to
"If you promise not to tell anyb.adjourn because.there was no quorum.
ody,
I found It in a fortune cookie. It
In 1791, Vermont became the 14th state.
said,
'This Is your lucky day. Invest
. And, 1n 1917, Republican Rep. Jeannette Rartkin of Montana became the
In
the
Hukuang Railways Sinking
first woman to serve In the U.S. Congress.
·. .
Fund.'''
Ten years ago: 106 American prisoners of war released by North
""'ou found that in a fortune
VIetnam arrived at Clark Air Force Base in the PhUipplnes.
cookle?"
· Five years ago: A large snowstoiTTI caused transportation foul-ups In the
. "It was a very old, soggy fortune
northeast u.s.
1
·
One year ago: Secre!arybf gtate Alexander Halg metwithEI Salvador's · cookle, and didn't taste very good,
but the messap was loud and
vice ptesldent In Washingtllll. The meeting came In the wake ot reports
clear.
I'monlypa.ulng thelntonnalllat a Nicaraguan military man allegedly captured in El Salvador had .
tlon
on
to you ~use you're a
escaped from custody and had taken refuge at the Mexican Embassy in
friend, and jlecauseTve invl!llted so
San Salvador.·
1.,
;..

good Inside game .btlth ways, col·
lecting a game-high .six rebounds.
. Southern notched the first score
of the second half on a follow-up
jumper by IJttlefteld. IJttlefteld
took c6ntrol of the second half with
16 point tear from the field. AI·
though SHS seemingly took command of the third !rame, a late
Panthe~ attack resulted t.. an even
fight, but SHS led 31·20.
Southern again went on a scoring
· blitz _In the finale, ellrn1natlng any
Panther hopes with a 14·5 demise
and the 45-25 victory.
Southern hit 21 of 54 field goal
tries for 39 percent and hit three of
eight at the line for 38 percent. Clay
canned Just nine of 43 attempts and
seven of 15 at.the line for 50 percent.
Southern collected 00 rebounds to

1978' fiiNTO •.••....•..•...........•.......................S1695

Crazy Marvin
There is quite a flap going on be· heavily in railroads, I can't afford
tween the People's Republic of to pay for my lunch."
China and the United States conA few years later I met marvin
cerning some railroad bonds the on the street.
Manchu Dynasty issued in 1911 to
"How are you doing with your
build a raU line between Canton and investment? ''
Peking. A federal judge in Ala "My bonds are worth $20 J&gt;er
bAma ruled that the present Chithousand," he said. "On paper I've
nese government had to make good doubled my investment."
on the bonds held by Americans,
"How did that happen?"
which have been in default since
"When I placed my order with
the 1930s.
Merrill LYJ:Ich I drove the price up·.
The Communist government You'd be amazed what $200 can do
now In power refuses to honor the to the market in defaulted Chinese
judge's decision, and is threatening railroad bonds."
to seize U.S. assets in China if
"Why don't you sell out, and take
America makes any move to seize your $4:00?"
Chinese property in the United
"First, because the CIA reports
States to pay off the$41 million pl~ , the railroa-d Is going strong, and se5 percent t~e judge ordered Peking condly, l'ye.. been reading Time
to remit.
Magazine and they still believe Chi·
I have a friend named Marvin ang Kal-shek will take back the
Kilman, who Is the TV critic for ' Mainland. Once he does I could
Newsday on Long Island. In 1963 he make my big score. I'm now the
was a free-lance writer and one day
he said to me, ''I think I can get out
of this rat race."
"How so?" I asked him.
"I'm putting every last nickel I
own In Chinese Imperial RaUroad

03Jlrle HUI 73. Gc:.tft Ell

N01'1h

'

.

'

MONROE, Ohio (AP) -An Ohlo
hlgh school project President Rea·
gan praised when he challenged
television networks to report only
good news got a boait from the
chairman of Reagan's commlttee
on volunteerL~m.
The project Reagan cited Thurs·
day as an example of good news
probably saved the southwestern
Ohio school district $50,001 to
$60,00), Lemon-Monroe HighSchool
Principal Gene Best said.
Volunteers built a weight training
room, remodeled locker rooms and
made a baseball diamond d~
the Jast 18 months, Best said.
The bnpetus for the projects
came trom football Coach WUiard
"Buddy" Moore, former Middleport resident and foiTTier high
school coach at Gallipolis and
Eastern, who organized a few
volunteers among his players and
their parents to build a weight room.
AcrorctingtoBest, theproJectgot
a big push the day one of the
volunteers talked to William Verity,
the retlred Armco Inc. chairman
whO beaded President Reagan's
spectal commltteeonvolunteerlsm.
"Mr. Verity was having his hair
cut by one of the parents, who was a
barber," Best said. "He made the
comment that, 'That's the type of
thing I'm working with on this

Dayton Duntllr 83, Beavercl'1!'l'k 49
Fainnont Ea."it Gl. Cent~~ 57

il'l\lning assistance to (forelgll) govemment officials and tbelr anned
forces ... to strengthen their effec.
tlveness in the 'War of Ideas,' and
specifically, In media relations and
ov~all Information preparation
and distribution."
Interestingly, USlA officials objected to the characterization ~
MacKenzie's seminar as a course
in "handling" the American media.
Yet the description of the seminar,
after mentioned the differences lJe. ·
tween the American and foreign
press, states candidly: "The under·
standing at these differences is essentlalif the attendees are to learn
to handle the media to best advantage; · I.e., not defensively, but
assertively."

.

'

ag~._e_n_ts_._______Ja_ck_A_n_de_rs_on

affairs, Henri-Robert Neree.
The seminar - including all ex- ·
penses for the visiting flacks -was
paid for by USlA.
Curiosly, in the appllcatlon ior
the $170,001 US~grant for the seminar, there was no mention of the
fact that Mac~nzle was a regis·
terCII foreign agent for the Haitian
goverpment. He did disclose that
among his past clients was the government of the ]ate Anastasio
Somoza of Nicaragua. According to ·
the Council on Hemispheric Af.
fairs . MacKenzie was Somoza's
mosi "active and ardent" agent In
Washington.
When my associate Lucette Lag·
nado asked USlA officials about
MacKenzie's clientele, she was told
they were unaware of his

WASIDNGTON - It's a clever
public-relations man who can get
paid by two separate clients for doing the same piece oi work- especially when the clients are two
different governments. But Ian
MacKenzie managed to puU it off.
He was paid by the U.S. Inform a·
tion Agency for a seminar to show
foreign publlclty people how to handle the American press; at the
same time, he was being paid by
the Haitian government to push Its
cal!se In the United States.
The USIA invited MacKenzie's
Haitian client to send representa·
tlves to the press-handling seminaI;
last December. The invitation was
accepted by the director of information, Guy Mayer, and the foreign ministry's director of political

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,,

�.

.

Friday, March 4, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, March 4, 1983

Houston wins Southwest Conference title
.Indiana walloped No. 20 Purdue
By KEN RAPPOPORT
64-41, 12th-ranked Wichita State
AP Sports Writer
edged Bradley 97-96 in double ·
Benny Anders averages just 5.1
overtime, Illinois upset No. 14 Ohio
· points a game coming off the bench
State 74-73 in overtime and 17thfor the Houston basketball teamranked Memphis State rolled past
but sure picks his spots to standout.
Florida State ~7.
· One of ihose times was Thursday
Aj'kansas, which entered the
night, when the 6-foot-5 sophomore
game with an eight-game winning
. reserve scored 18 points to lead tbe
streak and a 21!-garne winning
top-ranked Cougars to a 74-66
streak at itsown Barnhill Arena, led
victory over fifth-ranked Arkansas
only twice in the game, at2.{)and 9-8
in a Southwest Conference show·
midway through the first balf.
down game.
From then on, It was all Houston.
"When I hit my first two baskets, I
The Razorbacks pulled within one
got my confidence," said Anders.
at 57·56 with 5:48 left In the
point,
who connected on six of his seven
game,
but never could catch the
shots in the first half to help the
I
Cougars take a J4.27lead at the half. Cougars.
Top Ten
the triumph gave the . Cougars
Kentucky, which clinched the
their fltst regular-Season basket·
regular-season Southeastern COn· baD championship in the SWC,
which tbey joined in 1976. The ference championship earlier this
. Cougars, 15-0 in the SWC and 24·2 week, used Its Inside one-two punch
overall, now have a 19-game of Melvin Turpin and Kenny Walker
to beat Mississippi.
winning streak, longest in the
Turpin got 23 points and Walker
nation.
In other gam es involving the contributed 17 to extend KentuckY's
winning streak to eight games and
nation's Top Twenty, No. 7 Ken·
luckY tripped Mississippi State Ole Miss' string of Consecutive
61-58, No. 9 Nevada-Las Vegas losses to three.
Sidney Green scored 21 points and
stopped San Jose State 67-61, No. 11
.
.

.

--

\

Ft.YING BY- Ohio State forwanl Joe Concheck drives by DIIDols

Ross will join USFL in 1984
CINCINNATI (AP) - Mike
Brown. assistant general manager
of the Cincinnati Bengais, says the
new United States Football League
has shown it is willing to do things it
vowed not to do.
Brown cited the apparent loss of
his tight end, Dan Ross, to the
Boston Breakers for the 1984 season
.and beyond. and the New Jersey
Generals' signing of Univrsity of
Georgi&lt;' r unnlngback Hershel
Walker.
"At first the USFL said they
wouldn't do' this type of thing. They
said t hey would not sign our
(National Football League) play·
ers, just as they said they wouldn't
sign college players while they have
eligibiliry remaining. That's not

been so," Brown said Thursday ..
"This should alert us to the fact we
have tough competition on our
hands that is free and easy for
words. So we'd better look out for
our own interests," he said.
Ross. 26, was a second-round
draft choice out of Northeastern in
1979. He became an integral par1 of
the Bengals' controlled passing
attack that led them to.Super Bowl
XVI.
He is upder .en tract to Cincinnati
through next season. Through his
agent, Tom Toner. Ross reportedly
agreed to a contract starting in 1984
that would pay hlm$1.6 milllon over
four years In the USFL.

;

CDLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Kevin
Bontem'ps called it the biggest
. moment of his coUege basketball .
career.
Bontemps sank two free throws
with 10 seconcls left in overtime
Thursday night to give Illlno!s a
four-point lead over 14th-ranked
Ohio State enroute to a 74· 73 Big Ten
Conference co llege basketball
upset.
"In my four y~ars here, those
were the most pressure free throws
I've ever shot. l tried to relax. They
just fell in, " said the 6-2seniorguard
of Ius only points of the game.
" It was such a big game for us:·
he said. "This is 1lle closest we've
come to winning it (the Big Ten
championship) in my four years."
, The victory kept the lll!l)i In Big
Ten title contention. They are% In
the conference, compared to the 11·5
record ofleader Indiana and the 10-6
mark for second-place Ohio SUite.
Illinois Coach Lou Henson

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mouth."

With that statement, MOler left
the interview room and accepted no
questions.
Ohio State closed the gap --:ith one
free throw by Ron Stokes and two
more foul shots by Hugglns as time
expired.
Huggins was fouled by lllil)ois
freshman' Bruce Douglas, but the

r-----------i
The Daily Sentinel

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Phone 992-2975

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Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, lll Court Street, by the
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tlmedla. Inc.. Pomeroy, Ohlo 4511ll. 992·
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BAUM TRUE VALUE .

In

..-. TAMPA. Fla. (AP)- Now that
• his contract disagreement with the
lcindnna II Reds is over. outfielder
·' Duane Walker can devote more
~ attention to his equally clouded
! playing status.
: WaiJ«:r, the last unsigned player
• in the Reds' training camp, had his
"' contract unilaterally renewed by
~ the ballclub Thursday. Walker was
~ asking for $37,001, which Is $2,001
~ more than the minimum salary
: which the Reds were offering.
~
"We've talked lor several
•' months, and
I hated thatl'm the last
.
person to slgn," Walker said
: Thursday. "We had a few
~ disagreements.
~
" ... l'mdisappointed lt'sUikenso
:; long. I understand the club's
~· situation in our disagreement. They
• have to undersU.nd that I'm entitled

towns where home caJTier service Is
available.

Ohio State Coach Eldon Miller
took the defeat hard amt conducted
a pOst-game news conference that
lasted less than one minute.
"To say I'm embarrassed would
bean understatement ," sak!Mlller.
"If .somebody mentions champion·
ship again, I may puQCh them in the

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STAR SUPPLY
RAONE

~al

The· Meigs
Elementary
.
• ;1burnamentwill beheld Saturday at
: , Meigs High School.
~ : 'the fourth and filth consolation
between Pomeroy Hawley
~ •and Bradbury Glbbl wt11 be held at
t
and tbe fwrth and lltth
~ ~pio11$hip game between Brad·
t :oory Meadows and Pomeroy
: ;Wright wUI be ptpyed all:ll p.m .
: , At 3 p.m . the' sixth grade
· : consolation game will be between
: Salem Center and Pomeroy Barton
• . and at 4:ll p.m; the sixth grade
; · championship wUI be played be~ tween Bradbury Baker and
~ Harrisonville. ·
! Trophies wUI be awarded to the
: teams and Individual trophies will
~ be presented tothemembersofthe
: championship team. Individual
will be llWarded to the
numer-up team.

: :game

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SEED POTATOES &amp; ONION SETS.
LAWN MOWERS &amp; TILLERS
399 W. 111n StrHI
The Store With

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MODERN SUPPLY'Oil.

" ' Because Walker has less than a
~ ~ar·smajorleagueexperlence, he
~ had llttle bargaining power in talks
: with the Reds, who could unllater·
• ally renew his contract.
•• Walker played in 86 g-ames in
:v Cincinnati last season after. being
,. called up May 24 from the Class
: AAA Indianapolis club, where be .
: was hitting .'MI. Walker was hitting
; .296 at the All·Star break, then
: slumpedotfto.177in the second half
.. oftheseason.

•

BLUE GRASS

+FIELD FE NCr
1 flOUUflY Nlll irit:
I WlLDtU f A8HIL

Mu Iberry Ave.

.

:. Reds renew
=..Walker's pact

CHESTER

people's minds."
The Reds like Redus' balance
betweenpower,averageandspeed.
Althoughheplayedlnjust20games
with theRedslastyear, his11stolen
bases was the sixth-highest total on

\

\

HOw can you have fun outdoors, meet nice people, and make money all at the same time7 By
becoming a carrier for The Daily Sentinel. We are
accepting· application for walk routes in Middleport, Pomeroy, and Syracuse.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:

"I think I'm a tree swinger,"
Redus said. "I don't get up there
looking for a base on balls. In the
minors, I didn't get anypl&lt;jce by
walliing, and I'm not going to start
now. I'm going up there swinging,

THE DAILY SENTINEL
PH 992 2156
•

GREEN
GABLES

THE

UNDER NEW IIANAGEIIENT

Pre•enu

"THE MIDNIGHT
RIDERS"
tCOUNTRY &amp; SOFT ROCK)
FRI. &amp; SAT.

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Spot11l

Dr1ft

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,,.,

·f

An Open Letter to the
Citizens af Meigs and Vinton Counties
Southern Ohio Coal Company has been criticized recently for what has been called its "lack of
concern" for damage allegedly caused by longwall mining, primarily in .Meigs County.
We take these accusations seriously. Such criticism reflects on management policies which
have continually demonstrated concern for individuals who own property in the vicinity of our
longwall operations. In communicating with these property owners, we have always at~empted
to be forthright and honest.
. .
It has been openly acknowledged that damage and inconvenience from longwall mining
may be a "possibility." We have willingly offered-'-despite our property mining rights-to fairly
·
compensate property owners .for damage which might occur.
· We believe this to be a sound approach and cannot suggest a more equitable solution.
We fully recognize, however, that our evaluation of fairness in settling claims may not
always satisfy the property owners' expectations. But Southern Ohio Coal Company has always
been willing to negotiate on a one-to-one basis for a fair settlement. This is why we have been
reluctant to publicly discuss the issue of subsidence with citizen groups. We believe each and
every case is different and requires individual attention. After all, these are private matters
and should be treated as such.
·
·
Southern Ohio Coal Company is extremely important to the American Electric Power
System. It is the principal supplier.of coal to t4e Gavin Plant.
Had conditions been norinallast year, some 4.4 million tons of coal would have been
mined. The economy, however, did a flip-flop and caused a serious setback, affecting not only
the operation of Southern Ohio Coal Company, but other AEP mining companies as well.
In fact, it is public knowledge that coal mining generally has been seriously affected
throughout the country, as well as here in Ohio. No one knows that better than employees of
Southern Ohio Coal Company who have been laid off from their jobs. Most of these employees
are members of, and represented by the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA).
Under normal conditions, the payroll at Southern Ohio Coal Company would total nearly
2,000 employees and exceed $78 million in direct labor and benefits costs. Of that, over $60
million in wages and salaries would have been paid to UMWA employees ·md other company
personnel to be spent locally.
Last year, Southern Ohio Coal Company paid approximately $1 million in real and personal property taxes. We ~)so paid nearly $4 million for a variety of outside services in addition
to some $28 million for materials, much of which came from local suppliers.
'
So~thern Ohio Coal Company is proud of the contribution it has made and continues to
make within the local economy.
We are equally proud of our record in the fair treatment of our neighbors during the five
years of longwall mining activity.
With an investment of over $20 million in longwall mining equipment alone, we have an
obligation to protect our' investment and to do so in a manner acceptable to a majority of local
citizens. We fully realize that even though we have the right and privilege to mine, we must do
so in a fashion reasonably compatible with the welfare of our neighbors.
The Southern Ohio Coal Company and the AEP System as a whole subscribes to an established policy which applies to all of our associations with customers, regulatory agencies, em'
'
ployees and people living next door. That policy proudly states: "Working Together is the Only
W:ay. "
But we of Southern' Ohio Coal Company and the local citizens must continue to ·~work
together" if all expeCt to survive and prosper.
.
The company has been and remains ari integral part of Southern Ohio. It 'is a, vital force .
within the economy. The future promises a continuation of prosperity for the company, its
employees, local suppliers, local governme-nt, and the people living in the area only if "working
·
·
together" is taken seriously.
We pledge to do our part. We hope all the fine people in this area will do theirs.
We care and we hope you do, too. ,
·
·

Southern Ohio Coal Company

' ::.. .medtiJI

,_
I

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

r~the:cl:ub~-~Milne::r:led~wl=th~18~.~·--~and~then~~I'~lls~tart~runnlng~~~·"_ _j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~P:ri:e•:s======Ch:":''~

..,
got off to a slow start
•..• lastHouseholder
spring and was unable to snap
! out of the slump. Redus is wary of
: duplicating the situation.
;: "I usually get off to a slow start."
.., Redus said. "And that Is one thing I
: want to get away from this year. I
"' wanttoshoweverybody I can really
:1: do the job. Ifl getoffto a fast start, I
~ wUl remove a lot of doubt from

POSTMASTER Send addn!5s to The
DaUy Sentinel, 111 Court Sl, Pomeroy,
Ohlo

•· agiven
theaccompanying
starting right pres~re
field Jobnd the
to
' produce-lastsprlng.Hewentonto
, hit .211 and lose his starting role
· during the regular season.
' Undeterred, the Reds plan
another rookie experiment this
spring by putting Gary Redu~ in left
field. Manager Russ Nixon thinks
things wUI work out better this time.
"!4'dus is different," Nixon said.
' "Talk about him being umler the
' same pressure tas Householder) is
wrong. He is more mature. He is
older. and he has had tbe benefit of
learning from the hard row to hoe."
'. · The 26-year-old Redus also has
produced some Impressive minor
: league sU.iistlcs. The former high
school star Iri Alabama was the
Reds' 15th pick In thel978drafi, and
v/ent on to hit ·.462 at Classs A
,, Bllllngs of the Pioneer LeagUe that
: year - the highest professional
: batting average since 1913 when
· WalterMalmqulstofYorkhit .~77 in
: the Nebraska State League.
Redus hit .333 at Class AAA
Indianapolis last season with 24
' homerunsand93runsbattedln,and
' stole 54 bases to lead the American
: Assoclaton. ·
: Redus wa• called up to Cincinnati
: late in the season, and hit .217 while
; stealing 11 bases In 20 games.
! Nixon wants to put Redus In lef\
field, second-year veteran Eddie
~· Milner In center and Cesar Cedeno
::' In right to start the spring training
• season, with Householder getting a
•• chance to chaUenge.
"I'm going to approach this
:
" season like l have the last two,"
' Redus said. "I'm not going to put
;, myself under pressure."
;
Healsodoesn't expectanyspecial
;: favors when it comes time to fill out
"' the lineup card.
•
"I want to be treated like
:; everyone else. If I don't do the job, I
,: expect to be pulled out of there,"
;: Redus said. "l intend to earn my
::. way. I don't want to be handed
: anything."

Brailham Newspaper saJ.es. 733 1'h1rd
f.venue, New York. New York 10017.

thought his team's U.ller guards
helped the lllini win for the second
time this season over Ohio SUI t.e.
"We think they have an advan·
U.ge with their quick guarcls, but
we'vegot an advantage with our big
guards," said Henson, fighting a
bout with the flu .
illinois' starting guarcls. Bruce
Douglas and Derek Harper, -com·
bined for 43 points, outscoring Ohio
State's backcourt duo of Troy
Taylor and Larry Huggins by 15
points.

TANIPA, Fla. &lt;APl - The last
. time the Cincinnati Reds gave a
( highly-touted rookie a starting job
·· on o~ing day, the experiment
flopped.
Rookie Paul Householder was

VMI 83-68·

officials ruled there was no time
remaining. So Huggtnssank his two
free !brOws with no players at the,
foul line, foUing Ohio State's
chances at a rebound basket on a
misSed free throw.

A DMilon Ill Multimedia, Inc.

Nixon giving Redus starting ·~
·.n od in Reds' leftfi~ld post

surgery Monday night , but he sat In
street clothes on the bench Thursday night after receiving a twominute standing ovation from the
crowd of 17,3121n Bloo~on.
xavier McDaniel scored34 points
and pulled down 20 rebounds and
Zarko Durlstc converted two free
throws In the second overtime to
lead Wichita StateoverBrad¥-Y.
Substitute Kevin Bontemps'-two
free throws with 10 seconds left In
overtime gave Illinois a four-point
lead and the lliinl withstood a rally
by Ohio State to beat the Buck·
eyes.Thectefeat kntx:)&lt;e9 Ohio State
from a share of .t he Big Ten
COnference lead wtth Indiana.
. Andre Turner and PhWp aaynes
combined for 42 points,as Memphis
State routed FloridaState.Tumer, a
5-foot-10, 150-pound freshman, led
all scorers with 22 points, while
Haynes, a junior, added 20.
Others
In other action, Cli1f Trlbus
scored 21 points as Davidson set a
school record for ft.eld goal accu·
racy with 71.1 percent in downing

Illini upsets OSU Buckeyes
behind Bontemps' free throws

'

fOIWanl Anthony Welch during first half action in Columbus Thursday
night. ( AP Laserphow).

grabbed 10 rebounds to lead
Nevada-Las Vegas over San Jose
State, the Rebels' first victory.since
a two-game losing streak knocked
them out of the No. 1 ranld112.
The Runnin' Rebels erased a
12-polnt halftime deficit by outscor·
lng San Jose 154 In the opening five
minutes of the second half to traU
42-41. Nevada-Las Vegas took the
lead for the first time since the
o~ing minutes of the game on two
free throws by Green with 1: 15
remaining, 63-6L San Jose missed
two soots in the final minute that
could have tied the game.
Second Ten
Randy Wittman scorro 16 PQints
and Indiana's defense held Pu,rdue
scoreless during a seven-minute
stretch In the second half as the
Hoosiers snapped a two-game
losing streak to defeat •the
BoUermakers.
lt was all Indiana. The Hoosiers
Scored 12ofthegame' s first 14 points
and never ttalled In an emotional
game whlcb saw injured foiward
Ted Kitchel make an appearan·
ce.Doctors removed a ruptured disc
from Kitchel's back .In a four-hour

idd .......... Ohio

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page:-b-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 4, 1983

Heart ·diseases leading death ·cause in 1982
·u
.
.

Heart rela ted diseases_continued entne; arteriosclerosis, seven; pneuings; 36 syphllis screenings; 12
to be the leading death ca use In monl_a , seven; accidents, six; suiherpes screenings; 28 mycobacteIii
Meigs County during 1982, accord· cides, three; kidney !allure, two;
a smears; 45 cultures; 25 strep!ng to Meigs County Health Depart- asthma , one; cirrhosis Qf liver,
t o co c c a I d! seas e s ; 104
ment records released tod ay. one; dehydration, one; diabetes,
staphylococcal and 65 gonorrhea
During last yea r. 69 deaths were one ; gangrene, one, and small
smears sent to the Ohio Departa ttributed to hea rt d isorders. bowel obstruction, one.
ment of Health.
I n a ddltion , th e Ioca I. department
c
,Cancer was the second leading
ommun!ca ble diseases con·killer with 21 people claimed.
tlnues to be an integral part of the · checked the following: 12 chicken
Other causes were emphysema depar tment's workload .· The re
pox cases; four encephalitis; three
or respira tory failure. 12; strokes. were 52 gonorr hea c ultu rescreen- vira l hepatitis·, eight. influenza·, ..-.
w
measles and ruiieUa; two rubella;
four mumps; six s.taphylococcallnfectlons; two streptococcal ln1eclions; and gave 13 tests for·
prellmlnary tuberculosis.
Cert!flcates of permits issued by
t he department included, 1,743
(1,539 birth and death) and 204 burial permits.
Permits Issued Included: sewage, 35; food service, 103; lnspections of ~ood rv1
se ce operations,
140; vending service operations,
three; trailer parks, licensed seven
wi:th 1
4 Inspections; school lnspectlons, 40; public swimming pools,
three inspected d three lJ
sed
.
an
cen ;
Other bathing place InspectionS;
two, signed nuisance complaints,
67; with 67 inspections and
consultations.
Concerning rabies control, 86
dogs and cats were Immunized.
There were 77 bites reported an Increase of 29 over the preVaus year.
Each was Investigated with 12
animal heads transpOrted to the
Ohl De rt
f H
o
pa ment o ealth 's lab,
none were positive.
Under nursing statistics In thereport,' there were 619 pediculosis
checkups. One chlld suffering from
cal\cer was referred to specialists.
PAID THROUGH TAXES -These Meigs Qlunty Health Department employes are paid through ~lelgs County tax revenues. They are,
In addition, 17 blood diabetes
screenings were made and refront, I to r, Pearl Scott, Nancy Ackennan; back, I tor, John Jacobs,
Norma Torres.
ferred to specialists. There were 84

urine screenings; 2 PKU babies
screened and referred; 82 venereal
nin
elisease screenlng: ""
'" scree gs
I or allergles. thel!!ldocrlne system,
nutritional and metabo!Jc diseases.
Other activities Included:
Tllreescreenlllgs fer blOOd and bloodtonning diseases; 39 ~ screened for mental
retanlatlon and retel1'8d 10 Carleton School;
42 screened IO&lt; poycOOneurt&gt;Uc and penoonaitty disorders and re!e!TO!I to Mental Health;
10 screened
lor epllepoy and otber seizure dlsoro.rs;
75screenedlorheartngdlsorders;
68
screeneolorvtslon problems; 2t screened lor
n&lt;rious syst., and sense organ disorders;
2&amp;l screened for bean-related dlsorder:s.
Three screened lor rheumatic lever; 22S
screened for diseases of theclrculaiory system; 29 screened for diseases of the resptra tory system; 50 screened lor diseases of !be
digestive system; elght screenedlordlseases
of the genltourtnary systems; J50 clients
screened tor pregnancy and pregnant compUcatloos; three screened lor arthrttlc cond!-

2CJ_ )0,1 , Jl, ,

-

· ··

'

l
0

~

J ' ).6~- !~

, ,. " u " " ''
If. n w ., ~ ~~ 12

'• 1-111__-~·n l'l&gt;'
.;·;;.--~-::,.,:;;;;;;::;;;;.;-~1

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

MARK V STORE a~·

Middleport f?.~

dons; 42 screened for bone and organs ol
movements disease; four screened w1th congen!tal rnaHormatlons and referred; l'i
clients "'rvlced r... p-ematurtty; 14 clients
serviCed for other diseases of early lntancy:
76cttents screened lor "'nlll!Y and referred on

when appropriate.
one client servk:ed with Reye's syndrome;
1,273 clients g:lven healtl:J promotion intorma ~
tlons; 3,012 anemia screenings; 524 dental
screenings; 922 Denver developmental
screening tests: 1,284 blood pressure screenJngs; one lead poisoning blood test drawn; 12
blood tests drawn tor PKU tPhenyll&lt;etonurta) ; 18 pregnancy tests done only while prenatal program e&gt;dsted.
Eight throatculturt's t~n for S1reptocop:t
(none posltlvel : 101 children to age 21
screened lor vtsual disorders 1n Crippled
Children's Otnlcs; 556 total clients served vta
WIC services; 556 screened for hematocrit
and hemoglobin (blood Iron); 889 screened
dortng WIC ard wen Child Olnlc for height,
weight; U9 screened during WIC and WeU
Chi WI Clinic lor head and chest clrcumferences; 87 head start children received lmmuntzations, physical exams. bloOO screenings
and referrals to approprtate agencies: 81
sc....,nlngs In ortbopedlc clinics; 900 Well
child conferences d!&gt;ne wltb parent or relaUve; 172 screened In P.O.O. cli.pJ.cs (hearing) ;
2.1 examined In Cardiac lhean) clinic; 3l'l
children ex.amlned In weu ChUd Clinic; !I!
screened In D.O.P. (Vt.•lon&gt; clinic; six plastic
cllnlc children gtven follow-up: 401 Nutrition
counsell!ng completed; Parenting skills
classes to a totAl of 137 Jnd!Vtduats; services
provided bY Health Departmeru classes to total 2,5:10 indlvtduals; 002 roce!ved .Jnlluen:&lt;a

Phone 992-3480 ' .§&gt;

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
104W. Main
992-2311 Pomeroy

/
/

.

l

Dr. Selim j. Blazewicz, M.D.
Meigs Health Commissioner

TIUNITY CHURCH, Rev. W. . ''"Ttn,ll
pastor. Debblo Buck. Sunday
.

S5 per chUd plus l.mmuntzatlons plus urine
cultures plus Hematocrtts fee: 52 pol iO: ·$2
OPT; S2 Hematocrtts; $5 MMR; S5 mumps:
$5 measles-rubella.

·tor. Clyde Henderson, pastor emerttus. Sun~y School, 9: :rl a .m .. Gltm Mt'Oung, sUpt.;
rntli'TllnR' worship 10: ll a.m.; evening Service
7p!'rn.; mld-weekservtc~. Wednesday , ?p.m .-

l
'I

-$100 to $500 for male sterilization; · $150 to $1.000 for female
sterilization.
The surveY was conducted by
Couple to Couple League members
in Salt Lake City. and by Kevin
,Banet. the organization's publicity
director in Cincinnati.
"The survey is fairly informal,
but , l think the ~sts are pl'{'tty
accurate," Banet said. "I went to
drugstores and compared diffe rent
~ mar riage .
pr ices. arid they made several
That depends, to some degree, on
phone calls."
how active a couple's sex life is.
In contrast, the U.S. Department
~ed on having sex three times a
of Agricultul'{' last year calculated
lfeek - and the marriage lasting 30
'
tha t It costs $L'l4,00l to haVJ' and
support a child until age lB. The
principal items in this are an
estimated $36,645 for food; $41,121
for housing; $:D,355 for transportation; $12,129 for clothing: $6,703 for
medical care; and miscellaneous
costs totaling $15,173. .
The Couple to Couple League,
AKRON, Ohio (AP ) - By the end
The institute also will work with
founded In suburban Minneapolis'In
of the decade, a patient with a weak Akron's hospitals and the Northeast
1971 by ·John and Sheila kippley, is
heart could have it replaced with a Ohio Universitie; College of Mediheadquartered in Cincinnati. It has
self-powered, manmade model if cine in Rootstown, said Louis Hill,
18,00)
members, Banet said.
combined research by medical director of the university's engiThe organization usually proexperts and private industry Is neering department.
motes natural family planning on
successful.
Hill said the Goodyear contribumoral grounds. The cost-of: Doctors at Cleveland Clinic, one tions would make possible complex
avoiding-pregnancy approach is a
In
artltlclal
of' the countrv'
s
pioneers
research
of
cardiovascular
dis.
.
new one for the organization .
heart research, satd Thursda y that orders - "the nation's No.1 killer."
"Wf! don't emphasiZe cost too
they, the Goodyear Tire &amp; Ru~ber
The clinic 's artificial heart would
muc h. but we talk about all the
Co. and the University of Akron wilt be a significant improvement over
try to jointly develop -a totally the one used in Salt Lake City on - reasons for people to use natural
impi&lt;~ntable artificial heart. ,
Barney Clark, the first human to · family planning," Banet !laid. "If
they decide to use natural family
,Representative; of the three_say receive im artificll!,l heart, said Dr.
planning because of cost, that's
the effort, bolstered by· funds from Ray Kiraly, research ilitector at the
fine."
dooctyear , would beat the universi- clinic's department of ·artlficlal
The league offers a ~ class
tY's Institute for Biomedical Engi- organs. ,
Banet says will produce the same
neering Research.
"That heart is quite a simple
results as thousands of dollars of
Calling rubber "the heart of the device," Kiraly said. "It takes a lot
art!flcial birth control de.vtc.es.
artificial heart, " Goodyear Presl- of outside equipment that powers It
"The course consists of four,
d(int Tom Barrett gave the univer- pneumatically. The device we're
classes of two hours apiece," Banet
sity $Zi0,000 and _pledged an working on will have some sort of
said. "It Includes the -Instruction, a
motor . Inside and will function
additional $230,00l for 1984:
book that's almost 300 pages long, a
:••we felt we had an obllgatlon to totally within the body."
.Dr. YuklhlkoNose,directorofthe • subscrlptlon to our newsletter, a
gtve the project a shot in the arm, to
1,thermometer and charts for one
put It on Its own so It could a ttract clinic's department of ' art!flcal
year. ''
other funds," Barrett said. " We' ve organs, said the first goal is· to
The thermometer is to me~sure
develop
a
totally
implantable
left
worked on the rna terlals and the
basal
body temperature,onelndicaventricular
assist
pump
by
1986.
clinic is doing some good things, but
!Dr of a woman's reproductive
!hey didn't have the research That device would be implanted
cycle. Thechartslndlcatethedaysa
capabWtleS. Now, they'll have the next ~o a weak he&lt;m and help It
woman Is llkely to get pregnant.
ln5tltute and our research people." pump blood.

..

Goodyear, college
~nnounce program

y

"The basal body temperature
shifts at the time of ovulation,"
Banet said. "The temperature
shows one of three symptoms we
look for; a shift about the middle of
the fertile time tells a woman that
the end or her fertile time Is
approaching."
· The onset of that fertile period in
the middle of a woman's menstrual
cycle can be determined by the
secretion of cervical mucus and by a
change in the cervix, Banet said.
"You watch for mucus, which is
what allows the sperm to live and
swim io the cervix," Banet said. The
cervix Is the opening to the uterus,
where a fertilized egg develops.
"You watch formucusandcervix
changes -the woman is doingthese
internal obsel'\fa lions- every day;
the mucus and cervix indicate tliestart, and the temperature change
·
Indicates the end.

I

POMEROY CHURCII OF CHRIST. Z12 W.

Main St., Ne li -Proudfoot, pastor. Bib!~ school ..
9: ;I) a.m .: mom!~ worship. 10: l) a .m.:
Youth Jl'le("t\np:s. 6:.'1) p.m.: evening worship,
7: lJ p.m. WE'dnesday rU~ithl praye r ll'lEellng
~ Bible studv, 7: ;I) p.m.

I

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPI1ST.
Comer Ash and Plum. l.eslk' Hayman,
pastor. Sunday sctm 10 a .m.; Morning
Worshlp, 11 a .m .; Wednesday and Saturday
Evening setvtces, 7: l) p.m .
MEIGS
COOPEIU.TIVE PARISH

CHU RCH . Rouh·
Thursday; wor.:

' CHESTER -

'

CHRISTIAN

GRAHAM UNITED METHODI ST.

PreaCh!~ ~:JJ a .m .. rl rst and f«''nd Sundll ~ of ea ch month: thlrdandfourt hSundays

padJ rronth.. worship se.rvlces a t 7: D p.m .
WednPSday f'Vf&gt;nJngs at 7: .l J p.m .. Pra.vE"r and
Blbk.&gt; Study.

Rtrru\ND FIRST BAP11ST CHURCHSister Harrlelt Warner, Supt. Sunday Scmol,
9:~ a.m .: morning w&lt;nhip, 10:45 a .m .

POMEROY F1RSf BAP11ST.

David

Mann. mlnlster: WUUam Snoutfer, Sunday

Scmol supt. Sunday Scmol, 9:lJ a.m.;

Morning wcrshlp lO::IJ .m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPI'IST. Poml!'oy

Study.

Wednesday, 7::1Jp,m,; UMYF, Wednesday,6

PastiJ". Sunday SChoO 10

a.m. Servk'E!s on

:FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, BaUoy

Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastcr.

!landi&lt;Y Dwm, supt. -Sunday sdlod. 10 a.m.
Sunday ("Vening seivlce 7::1) p.m .; Bible
te81Ching, 7::Jt p.m . Thursday.

SYRAaJSE MISSION. Cherry St .. Syra-

cuse. Services. 10 a .m. Sunday.1 Evening
servk'eS. Sulliay and Wednesday, 7 p.m.

MIDDLEPROT CHURCII OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrenre Manley,
past&lt;r. Mrs. Russt&gt;ll Young . Sunday School

Supl, SUnday School 9::1! a.m. Evening
wcnhlp7::1Jp.m. Wednesday prayer meeting
7:ll p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF -GOD~ Racliie
. - Re&lt;. Jam .. Satterfield. posttr. Morning
wtrShlp 9:!5 a.m.; Sunday ScmoiiO:45 a.m.;

School. 9a.m .; Worship, l&amp;ilm.; Bib~ Study,

Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, Tblrtl Tue.day,
7: ll p.m .; COmmunkln nrst Sunday.

·'

6::1! p.m. ·

ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.: Church

School. 10 a.m.; Bible Stud)'. 'l'uesda)\ 7::}1

p.m. ; VMW. Flrst Monda,v. 7:JJ p.m .:
UMYF. Sunday. Gp.m . Qlolr rehearsal. 6:])
p.m. Wednesday.

FLA1WOODS - Church Scmol. 10 a.m.;

FOREST RUN- WoMihlp, 9 a.m.; Church
HEATH 1Mlddlepoct 1 - Church SCmol.

9:.11 a .m .; Worship; IO:.l ) a .m .: Bible Study,
Tu('Sday. 10 a.m.: UMW. S('C'Ond Monday,
7::1) p.m .; UMM. third Monday , 7:lJ p.m .
MINERSVn.LE - Worship Service, 10
a .m .: Churc h ScOOol, 13 a.m .: UMW, third
Wednesday. l p.m .; Choir p-actiCf', Monday.

7:ll p.m.

PEARL Q{APEL - Worship Service. 10

a .m .: Churctlot5chool. U a .m .; UMW. second

Tuesday. ~ p.m.; UM)'F last Tuesday,
7: :11 p.m.
POMEROY - Church Scmol. 9:15a.m.;

Worship serviCE', 10:.YJ a.m.; Choir rehearsal,
Wednesday, 7:ll p.m .; UMW , Sf(Ond
Tuesday. 7::Jl p.m.; UM)I'. last Sunday. 7
a.m.; UMXf'. Surxlay. 6 p.m.
.

ROCK SPRING.~ - Church ScOOcll, 9:15
a.m.; Wor:shlp,__](l a.m.; Bib!~ Stud)'.
Wednesday, 7;:1J ,p.m.; UMYF !Seniors&gt;.
jJunlors), f!'VeJ'Y other

SuOOay, 6 p .m .;

SUnday, 6 p.m.
R1.1l'LAND - Church SChool.

YPE.

Worship, 11 a .m .: UMW fEvcntng Clrclel.
second Wednesda,v. 7:l&gt; p.m.: UMW, second

Main. Bob. Meltoo. minister; AI HartsM.
assoda1e mlnlster; Mike Gerlach. SUnday

Scmol Superintendent. Bible Scmol. 9::Jl

a.m.; mcrn1ng wcrshlp. 10:.'1} a.m.; eventng

wa-shlp 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible Stl.dy and
youth group meetlni!S, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCII O!'TIIE NAZA-

. :RE'NE,Re&lt;.JimBroome, posttr; Bill White.

,Sunday scOOcll supt. Su"""y sdlod. 9::Jla,m.;

JmcmlngwCI'Shlp, lO:J)I.m.: Sundayevengelllstle meetlng. 1 p.m·. Prayer meeting

Wemesday 7 p,m.

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY, ReY. Wanda Johnson,

director;

Harold Johnson, director or

education.

WonhlpServlce, 9 a .m .: Church School,IO: ll

a.m.

•MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN,

.

,Church School, 9 a.m.; Morning wonhlp,
lfll15. Bible Study Tuesday, 10 a.m.; Bible
o,y, 7:30p.m.
FIRSI' UNITED PRESBY·
IIJ'Cb. Church Sdlool,lO: :m a.m.;
momtac won1tlp, 11:30 a.m.; Bible Study.
II a.m.; Jlllllor and Setdtl' flllh
~p.m.
OF GOD, Putor,
Rf'v. Jolla Ellono. liWIIIo,y ochool, 10 a.m.; ·
Sunday WGrlldp, 11a.m.; C16ken'1 church,
11 a.m.; Sunday ......W., - · 7 p.m.;
~!lday nenllll )'OUftlladlel auxtUary,6

!1

9 :4~

a.m.:

Thursday. I p.m.
SALEM CENTER - Church School. 10
~ . m .;

Worship. 7 p.m.
SNOWVO..LE - Worship, 9 a .m .: Church
~hool10 a .m .

SOU'DIERN CUJSI'ER
Rev• .fllltles M. (;lark
Be&gt;. Mark W. 1'\vm

--,.,..,.""Smith .
APPLE: GROVE- Church School. 9a.m.:
Worship, 10 a .m . (first and third Sundays1 :
UMW, se&lt;'Ond Tue-sday. 7::n p.m .: Prayer

mooinR. Wronesd•v- 7 P-'1'·
·
BETHANY - worship ~ 9 a.m .; Chureh
ScOOcll. 10 a.m.; Bible Stl.d.v. Wednesday. 10
a.m.; Doreas WomC'I1's Fellowship. Wedne\-

day, 11 a.m .
CARMEL - Church School. 9::1} a.m .;
Worship. 10:45 a .m. : second and fow1h
~ndays l: FeUO'HShip dinner with SUtton,

third Thursday. 6::Jl p.m.

EAST LETART- Church School. 9a.m .:
Worship, ~0 a.m. (st'COOd and fourth Sundays; UMW. first Thf5day, 7: 30p,m .
LETART F'ALLS - Worship, 9 a.m .;
ChUrch School. 10 a .m.
·

MORNING STAR - Worship, 9::ll a,m.;

HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN,

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, William

Portland-Racine Road. William Roush, pastor.. Unda Evans, church school dl.rector.

CrabtiW. pas!or. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.:
f'\lt&gt;nlng S('rvlcE:'. 7:l) p.m. Wednesday prayt&gt;r
mePtlng. 7: :1) p.m .

church school. 9::1) a.m.: morning worship,
lit lJ a.m.; Wednesday evening prayer

CHRISf. Duam- Warden. minister. Blblr
class, 9::JJ a.m.: morrUn2 worship. 10:30
a.m.; evening worship, 6: 30p.m . Wednesday·
Bible study. 6:30 p.m .

Shuler, pastor. Worship .service, 9::rl a.m.
Sunday school, to::ll a.m. Bible Study and ·
prayer service Thursday, 7: 1l p.m.

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY

CHURCH , Sunday &amp;hool SPrvlce, 9:45a.m .;
Worship service. 10: :JJ a .m .: Evange Us!lc
Srr.1ce, 7: :J) p.m. Wednesday: Prayer meet1!12. 7: 30p.m .. Thursc:;lay.

ZION CIIURCH OF CHRIST. Pomen&gt;I'·

Church Schoo1, , lO:Xl a .m .; Blbleo Study,
Tin•rsday, 7: 30p.m .

.

. . MORSE CHAPEL - Church School, 9:30

1'
PORTLAND -

a .m. : Worship.

a .m .

ST. JOHN LlJI'HERAN CHURCH. Pine

Grove. Thl' Rev . Wllll~ m Mldd)(lswarth, Pastor. Church services 9:Xl a. m . Sunday School
10:30 a.m .

BRADBURY CHURCII OP CIIRIST. Paol

CENTRAL Cl.USI'ER
Rev. l'iitanley W, Men1fleld
Be&gt;. Richard RGihtmlch
Be&gt;. 11Dherl E. 11Dblai&lt;Nt
1\e\&gt;. RDherl Rider, ~r.
ASBURY 1Syracuse1 -Worship. 11 a.m.:
C hurch Schod. 9:45 a.m.: Charge- Biblt'
Sttdy. Wednesday . 7: :11 p.m .: UMW. first
1\Jesda_v. 7 :IJ p.m.: Choir Rehearsal . .
Wednesday. O: :llp.m.; UMW . fourth Sunday, ·

1."\/enlng wcnlip 7 p.m . Tuesday, 7::JJ p.m .,

lad!"' prayer meeting. W~esday, 7::Jl p.m.

REORGANIZED CHURCII OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATIER DAY SAINTS,

TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL- Chun:h

SChool. 10 a .m .; Choir Practlre, Tuesday.
6::JJ p.m.: UMW. first 1\Jesday. 7::D p.m.

'nleS&lt;I&amp;Y. TtiJrsday and Sunday 7::1! p.m.

CHURCII OF GOD OF PROPHECY.

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Oliver
Swain. Superbltenden1. Sunday school 9::w

.

Pratt. pa stor. Sunday school. 9: lJa.m .. Larry
Haynes, s. s. Sup!. : morning worship, 10:30

a.m.
RAONE CHURCHOF THE NAZARENE.

Rev. Thomas H. Collier, pa.l31or. Martha
Wolfe. Cha irma n of the Board of Chr!slla n
Life. Sunday &amp;hool. 9: ll a .m .: mornln2worshlp. 10:30 a.m .: Sunday~, evening worship.
7: l) p.m . Praye-r 1Tl("€'ting, WC'dnesday. 7:.10
p.m .
RACfNE F'lRST BAPTIST, Don L. Wa lker .
Pastor. Rober! S mith . Sunda y School supt. ,
Sunday School, 9:30a .m .: morning wors hip.
10:40 a .m .: .S unday e-ve ning worship, 7: 30
p.m .: Wednesday f'\'e nlng Bible- s tudy, 7:30
p.m .

DANVD.LE WESLEYAN, Sunday Scoocl,
9::n.a.m. ; morning worship 10:45 a .m .; yrulh
serV~. 6:45 p.m .; evening worship, 7:30
p.m.; Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Prayer and

PraJse.

servtces. 7::ll p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev. Earl
CARLETON CHURCII.

10a.m.

FREEDOM GOSPEL Ml&amp;'liON at Bald

Knob, loca~ on C.:OlUlty Road 31. Rev.
Lawrence Gluese~amp, pnstor: Rev. Roger
WUlford, assistant pastor. Preaching services, Sunday 7: ]) p.m. Prayer meeting
Wednesday, 7: 30p.m.; Gary Grit:flth, leader
Youth groups. SWlday even1ng, 6: :Jlp.m . with
Roger and Violet Willford as leaders.
CommunJon servke first Sunday each month .

WH!'l'E'S CHAPEL. COOlville RD: 1\e\&gt; .
Roy Deeter. pastor. Sunday school9:lla.m.;
worship ~rvlce, 10: lJ a.m: Bible study and
prayer servt~ Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

RIJ'lLAND CHURCII OF CIIRIST. Dan

CHRISTIAN f'ELWWSHIP CHURCH.
Middleport. Sunday School,

)) a .m . Sunday and WBinesday Evening
Services 7: l) p.m .

UBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, 4 Lib-

erty Ave .. Pomeroy. Sunday SchoollU a. m . ;
Worship 7:30p.m . WedneSday ~vice, 7: 30
p.m .

CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD, Rev.R. E.

Robinson, pastor. Sunday school, 9:30a.m.;
W(I'Shlp sa-vice, 11 a ,m . ; evening servic e, 7
p.m .; youth servtce. Wednesday , 7 p.m .

LANGSVR.LE rnRtsTIAN CHURQ{ ,

ROOeft E.- Musser. pastor. SundaY school,
9:l&gt; a.m .: Paul Musser, supt.; m ~T nlng
worship, 10: 30 a.m.; Sunday eve nlng service,
7 p.m.; mld-week service. Wednesday, 7 p.m.

- Sunday

evening

. EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST. Ehlen R Blake, pastil'. Sunday

. Schod 10 a·.m.; Robert Reed, suJj:.; Morning
sennon. 11 a.m.; Sunday night servtces,
Christ tin Endeavor. 7:30 p:m .: Song service.
8 p.m.; Preac~, 8::J:I p.m. Mid -week
Prayer meeting, WednEmday, 7 p.m., AMn
Reed, lay leader.

HEMLOCK GRO\IE CIIRISTIAN, Roger

WatSln, pastcr;

Crenson Pratt, Sunday

SChool supt. Morning worship, 9::11 a .m . ;
Sufld'Y'-~bool. lO::JJ

a.m.; evening service.

7:ll p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Rev, Tom Dooley ;
Joe Sayre, Sunday School Superintendent.
Sunday !Ch:lol, 9: ~ a .m .; evening wocship,
7:3) p.m. Prayer meeting, ?. :t1 p.m.

Wemlnday.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF

CHRIST, Vincent C. Waters, ID, minbter:
Herman Black, supe-mtendmt. Sunday
Scbod 9:30a.m.: e~nlng serv~e. 7 p.m . ;

Wemlnday Bible School. 7 p.m.
OIESfER CHURCH OF THE NAZA-

RENE, Rev. Herbert Grate, pastor. Frank

Rl_!!ie, SIIPt Sunday Sclx&gt;d, 9:30 a.m.
Wonhtp service, 11 a.m . and 7:l) p.m.

Prayor ~- Wemlllday, 7: :IJ p.m.

Ev an~f'listlc

Cannel,

a.m . .

John Loveday, First WEd1esday night or

CHURCH, Route 1, Shade. Pastor, Don
Black. Affiliated with Southern Baptist con wntlon. Sunday scOOol. 1: :ll p.m.; Sunday
worship, 2::1) p.m . Thursday f'venlng Bible
study, 7 p.m.

- . S r., m1nll1er; Rk:kMacomber,supt.
!ltntlay IICI&gt;Jol, !!: 30 a.m.; worship oervtce,

10:;11 a.m. Bible Study_, 'l'lieoclay, 7::ll p.m.

S(!"Vic-P.

Q&gt;orge Croyle, pasta-.

·

HOPE BAPriST CHAPEL - o'JU Grant
St .. Mlddlepocti Sunday School, tO a,m.;
mornin~wochslp.ll

a.m.; &lt;&gt;VE&gt;nlngwocship, 7

p.m . Wednew:tay evening Bl~e studv and
prayer meeting. 1 p.m. Affiliatec:t' with
Southern Bap!lst Convenlion.

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST -

State Rout£&gt; 124 and Coumv Road ~. Mark
Sef&gt;vers. minister; SundaY &amp;hool Supt.,
Stf'\ll' Pkkens.. Sunday school. 9:.l1 a.m.;
mornl.,g worship. to::V. a.m.: ('Venlng
wcrstup. 7 p.m. Wednesday wcrshlp, 7 p.m .

JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER George's .crt&lt;'k Road. Rev. C. J . Lemley,

pastcr; Paul Poar. Church School Superintendent . Church school, 9: :1) a .m .; momln£

wtTShlp, lO::rJ a.m ; evening setvlce, 7 p .m .

Bible Study. Wednesday, 7:00p.m. Classes

for aU ages.

BURLINGHAM SOIJlliERN BAPnST

PENTEOOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Racine,

Route- 124. WWiam Hoback, pastor. Sunday
scl\ool. 10 a.m.; Sunday evenlnR: service, 7
p.m . Wednesday E'Vt'nlng servt.C(' 7 p.m.

CARPENTER BAPI'lST. Don Cheadle,

Sup1. Sunday School 9: 30a.m . Morning WorshiP. lO:JJ a.m. Prayer SPrvlce. aitl!ml . ·

Sundays.

MIDDLEPORT PF.NTEC(8['AL, Thlrtl
Ave .. the Rev. Clark Bakf'r, pastor. Carl

Nottingham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday

Scho61l0a .m . - claw-s for all ages. Ev~
serv~. 6 p.m . WedrK&gt;sday. Study, 7: ll p.m.
Youth services. 7::lt p.m. Friday.
ECCLESIA FEU.OWSHIP. 128 Mill St.,
Middleport . Pastor ts Brother. chuck McPhee. son. Sunday School at 10 a.m. ~rvlces­
Sundayevenlng at 7 p.m . aOO Wednesd4y a17

ST. PAUL UJI'IIERAN CHURCH. Corner

p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev . Earl Shukor,

of Sycamore and second Sts .. Pomeroy. The
Rev. William Middleswanh, Pastor. Sunday
School at 9: 45 a.m. and Church Servk-E&gt;s 11
p.m.
SACRED HEART. Msgr . Anthony Gtanna ·
more. Ph . 992-5898. Sa!urda:v evf-ninR Mass.
7: 3l 1p.m .: Sunday Mass. 8 a .m . and 10 a.m.
Confessions onE'- half hour be-fore- each Mass.
CCO Classe-s. 11 a .m . Sunday.

pastor, Sunday school 9::lt a.m.: Church
.servtcc, 7 p.m .; youth meeting, 6 p.m.

dlep.:n1 . James E. Keesee, pastor. Sunda,v
morning worship. 10 a.m.: evening servlct". 7
p.m .: Wednesday evenin!{ worship, 7 p.m .:
VIsitation, Thursday, G: .ll p.m.

10:00; Sunday eveonlnst. 7: .'1&gt;. Tuesday mom~~ Bibl&lt;' Study. 10:00; Wednesday even~.
'i: lJ: Thursday morning video with Kenneth
Copeland. 10: 00: F'rld&amp;y evening video with
Kenne-th Copeland. 7: ll.

VICTORY BAPTIST- 52!! N, 2nd St .. Mid·

TRINITY CI!Rts'TIAN ASSEMBLY . Cool·

'l'uesdav Bible Study, 7 p.m.
FUU. GOSPEL LIGIITHOUSE, :ro15
H_lland Road, Po'f"'roy. 8e&gt;Vic&lt;s Tuesday,
Friday and Sunday evenJngs at 7: l1 .P.m.
Sunday mom!ng a.t 10:00 a .m . Pastor Doug

Varner.

~

WORD OF FAf111, ~1 Mill Si., Mlddlepcrt;
Richard Stewan, pastor. Sunday rnornJniic,

service, 6:30 p.m. WednE'!!lday

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIS'{', MOler St. .
Mason. W. Va . Eugenr L. C011fi{er. ministe r.
Sunday Bible Study, 10 a.m.; Worship 11 a .m .
and '7 p.m . Wednesday Sibil' Study, \lOCal
music, 7 p.m.

..., .

MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding
Lane. !VIason. W. Va-. Rev . Ronnie B. Rose,
Pas1or. Sunda y SChool 9: t5 a.m.: Mornln,
Worship 11 a .m. Evening SEoryice 7: l&gt; p.m .
Wednesday Women's Ministries 9 a.m .
!meeting and prayer ). Prayer and Bible
Study 1-p.m .
-~-~

.

Sermonette

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. The Rt'V. William
7: 30 p.m . Youth pray('r s e rvice each

.

FAIRV(EW BIBLE CHURCH. U&gt;tart . W.
Va :, RL 1, Mark Irwin, pastor. Worship services. 9:30a .m.; Sunday School. lla.m.: evenIn~ worship. 7: ll p.m. Tuesday oottagp
prayer mef'ting and Bible study. 9::0 a.m .
Worship service. Wednesday. 7: :l) p.m .
OUR SAVI OUR LU'hiERAN CHURCH~
Walnut and Henry Sts .. Ravenswood. W. Va.
Th~ Rev . Geoffi'P C. Weiric-k, pastor. Su~ay
School. 9: 30a .m .; Sunday worhslp.ll a.m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, noW located
on Pomeroy Pike, Cou_nty Road 2:) l'lfar Flatwoods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Services on
Sunday at 10:30 a .m . and 7: :1) p.,m . with Sunday school. 9:30a.m . bible study, Wednesday,
7: :D p.m .

·'

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST-St. Rt . :DB, Antiquity . Pastor, ~ .
Franklin Dlc-kem. Sunday morning. 10 a.m.
SUnday evenlna-, 7:30p.m. Thursday evening,
7: Jl p .m .

S'ITVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAPilST

CHURCH, Paslor Rober! Byers. Sunday
School10a. m.; WorshlpServkella.m .; Sunday e-vening service. 7: D p.m .: Wedne!day
C'llentng servtce, 7: ~ p.m .

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURa!..
Inc, - Paul Si .. Mtddlepoct. Rev. O'Dell Manle,v, pastcr. Sunday SChOol, 9:lla.m.; Morn·
lngw~blp10; .'1la.m.; evenlngwa-stdp, 7:lt

momiJQI wcnhfp, 10:45 a.rn: (tint allllll*d
th_ird Thursday . 6: :J') p.m.

pastor. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardner, supt. Sunday school. 9: :II a.m.; worshlpservtce,10;45

servicf', 7 p.m.

Rtrru\ND A.POSTQLIC CHURCII OF
JESUS CHRIST, Elder James Muter. Bible
study, Wednaday, 7:;1lp.m.; SundayScmol.
10 e.m. ~nday nlaht ...-vtre. 7::Jl p.m.
POMERoY wE'll LEY AN HOLINESS -

Sunda.vsl: teUowtlhlp dinner wllh

FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev. Nyle

Borden. pastor. ComeUus Bunch. superintendent. Sunday school9: ,'J) a.m.: second and
fourth Sundays, wonhlp service iu 2:30p.m.
MT, MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and

RU1LAND CHURCH OF Tim NAZA-

p.m.

'LAUREL CLIFF FIU;E METHODISt
CIIURCII, Rev. Robert MUter, pastor; Uey(l
RACINE WESLEY AN - Church ScOOol, Wright, Director of Christian EducaUoo.
IOa.m.; Worship. II a.m.; IJMW.fourthMon- Sunday School,!!: :Jla.m.; Morning Worship,
day 7:aop.m.; Handmotdenaoltllol.ad,tint IO::Jl a.m.: Choir Practl&lt;e, Sunday, &amp;::il
Wedneotlay, 7p.m.; Men'• Prayer Broaltlut. p.m.; ~ Wonhlp, 7;l! p.m. WednosWedneotlay, 7 a.m.
clay l'n)w ml Bible Study_, 7: :Jl p.m.
SU'M'ON - Church Sctlool, 9:;11 a.m.; . DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST. O&gt;arles

nesday night prayer·SffV\ce, 7:3:1 p .m .
FAITII BAPI'IST CHURCH, Mason, Mf'el .
at United Steel Workers Union Hall, RaUroad
Street, Mason. Morning worship 9:30a.m.
Sunday ScOOol 10: 30 a.m. Evenlrig Service, 7
p.m. Prayer meetlng Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Midweek Blbl.e Study, 'Thursday, 7 p.m .

RE NE, Rev . Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr.• pastor.
Sunday School. 9: l1 a.m.; wors hip SE~rvlce,
1Q:30 a. m .: young propit&gt;'s service, 6 p.m .

p.m. Tuesday, 12:.1) p.m . Worner~'s prayer
meeting, Prayer andp-al5eservk'e, Wf'dnesda,v 7:.llp.m .

ChurcH SchoOl. 7 p.m.;
Wonhlp. 8 p,m.; UMYF, Wetlnosday, 7:30

10:30 a.m.; evening WOnihlp, 7:~ p.m.
Women's Fellowship, Tuesdays, 10 a.m. Wed-

Program. 7: :Jl a.m. each Sunday morning.

Tuesday.

EYangellstlC servia!, 6 p.m . Prayer
and IJ'alse Wednesday, - 7 p.m .; yooth
meeting, 7 p.m .

p .m .; Youth meeting and Bible stOOy. Wednesday, 1 p.m .
UNITED FAml CHURCH -Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypaSs. Rev. Robert Smith, Sr., pastor. Rev. James Cundltt. assistant pastor.
sunday School, ·9:30a.m .; rOOming worship,

service, 7: :n Wednesday

Scmol, 9:30 a.m,; Morning Won hlp 10:30

a.m.;

IIlOI'IIIn!!

evening prayer meeting, 7::J) p.m . WMPO

Campbt'll , pas tor . Sunday School. 9:.X.a. m .:
James Hughes. s upt .: f'venill$!; service, 7: 30
p.m . Wednesday evening praY£'f mt'E'tlng.

""'t&lt;r.

and

Rt.m.AND BIBLE METHoDIST- Amos
tlllls, pastor; Fred Davis, supt. Sunday ·
school, 9: lJ a.m. Momlng worshlp,10: ll a.m.
Young people's service, Sunday, 6:45p.m.;

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE - Rev. James B. Kittle,

Shennan Curxllfr, superlntendmt. Sunday

pertntendent. Sunday School

worship, 9: :II a.m. Sunday evening service, 7

Monlux , pastor; Bill Nicholson, Sunday
school supt. Sunday school. 9::11 . a.m.;
morning worship and communJon.10: lJ a.m.

SR.Vl:R RUN FREE BAPilST, Steve

38.1 N. 2nd Ave,

MOUNT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH.

Lawrence Bush, pastor. MaxFolmer,Sr. Su-

Located on the 0 . J . White Road off hJghway
160. Sunda.v School 10 a.m . SujX'rlntenct2nt

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS . CHURCII,

Rev. 'Ibereon Durham, pastor. Sunday
School at 9:30a.m.; Morning worship at 10: lJ
a.m. Thursday servtres at 7: lJ p .m .

.

Llnle, Sunday scOOol s'upt . Sunday schoo~ 10
a.m.; mocnlng worshlp, 11 a.m. Sunday
eve_n lng worship. 7:30p.m . Pra yer meeting
and Bible study, Thursday , 7:ll p.m .; youlh
meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m.

Klngsi&gt;Jry Road.

Brother Mark&gt;n WUllams. pastor. Sunday
school, 9; :J) a.m. Ralph carl, supet1ntendent;
evening worship, 7:30 p.m . Prayer meeting.
W~ay, 7: l'l p.m .
LONG I30'TI'OMCHRJSTIAN, Ken Keifer,
pastor. WaUace Darrwwood. ~ay SchOOl
Supt Worship servtce, at 9 a.m. Bible SChool

vtUe - Gilbert Spelftr, pastor. Sunday
school, 9:30a.m; morning service, 11 a.m.
Sunday evenlng service, 7: :1) p.m.; midweek
prayer service Wednesday, 7:~ p.m.

Maln Sts., Middleport. Rev. Calvtn Mtnnls,

month. CPMA services , second Wednesday

Eve-ning worship Sunday, 7 p.m . andWPdnesday, 7 p.m.

a.m.; Worship 11 a .m.

school, 9::Jl a .m .; mcning wcnhip, 10::»;
evening wc;tstip, 7:ll p.m . Mldweel prayer
m££'4lng, 7:ll p.m.

MIDWAY OOMMUNITY CHURCH, Dexter Rd.. L.angsvllli&gt;. Rev. A. A. Hughes.

Service M{'('ttng, 8: 2JJ p.m.

WMB meetlmr. third through fifth yooth

REEDSVIu.E - Church School, 9:30

Pike. David Hunt, pastcr; Roger Turner.

SUnday Scmol Superintendent. Sunday

124 (Onemlh:•east of Rutland I. Sunday, Bible
lecturE!' 9 :ll a .m .: Watch1ower study. 10 : ~
a.m.: Tuesday, Bible study. 7:.1) p.m.:
ThUrsday. Throcratl(' SchQol. 7::n p.m .:

Tr8lHiposethlslntoyourown llfe. St.rtkc n ment.o.lmatchand let. It
shine In the darkcomcl'8, showing you the things you'w: hidden from
your-self. Self rcvclo.UOn Is Mood for us and once we'\'c seen those
dust.r corners, ma~ we should do something about them .. . llke
restortnA our habus of regular weekly worship.
·

H&lt;tnisonvUie Rd.; Rolx&gt;r1 Purtell . mlnl.sler:
S1£'ve Stanley , Sunday school supL Sunday
school. 9: lla.m.: wo~h l psetViCf' 10: lla .m.;

w Ors hip. 1 a .m .: Blbl.e Study, Thur.iday, 7
p.m .: UMYF. SuOOa_v, 6 p.m .

wemesdiy, 7::Jl p,m,
.
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Middleport. 5th and ,

\}

Bib~

p.m.; CommunJon Ftrsl Sunday.

R I BL~

Worship,

1 p.m .;

study. 7 p.m

ScOOOI su~ .• John Reibel, Sr.. asst. supt.
Morning Wcnhlp 10: 15 a .m . Youth meeting
7:3) p.m . Wedne;day, Including wee tots.
eager beavers. junior astroanuts. and junior
and smilr high BYF; chOlr·pracllce8:JOp.m .
WeO-Iesday; prayer meeting and B1bl.est\Kly.

eo.

WNG BO'ITOM - Church School, 9:30

a .m.;

Heights Road. Pomeroy. Michael Plankowski, pastcr: Rita While, Sabbath School
Supt. Sabbath Scmol Is at 2 p.m. on Saturday
with Wli'Shlp Sf'I"Vtces kJiloofllng at 3: 15 p.m .

pie Leaper. Clnc'nn.,, aad Salt Lake City, recently
.....,...... a 1111'\'ef 1111 bbth control costa to 811111
couple• coaaltlulal Slaving children. ( AP
U.rpbato).

School, 10: l) a.m. Bible ~rudy, 'Wednesday,
7: :JJ p.m .

muslc. Sunday " ' l'l'hlp 10 a .m .; Bible s ludy
11 a .m.; worship. r, p.m . Wf&gt;dnesd ay Bible

OLP DEXTER

i
L

9 a .m.; Church

UMW. rtrst Thursday, 1 p .m. : CommuniOn

CHURCH - Cl!flon l.ucas, pa s tor. Sunday
SchOOl 9: ~ a.m. Mr!'. Worlt'Y Fra ncis. supt.
Pl"Pachl~ S(lrvlces fi r" ' l.lnd third Sundavs
follow\~ Sunday SchOOl. Youth ml.'etin~ Pvl:'f'Y Sunday . 7::ll p.m .

SPmAL - 'l'hese Meigs County Health Department employes
are worldn11 here because the department strive&amp; to further meet the
needs of county residents by oblalnlng •pedal federal and state grantll.
They are aealed, I tor, Debbie LaValley, GlOria Palkovic; back, I tor,
Carol Tannehill, R.N., Annie Moon.

Wo~htp

first Sunday,
JOPPA - worship, 9:30 a.m.; Church

..;;ttadt&gt;. BlbleSc h!
.;ervk:'E&gt; R p.m .

.

.

SchooiiOa.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.m.

' v!ITHERS

Wednesday prayer meeting and Bible study,
7::1J p.m.
. JEHOVAH'S WITNESS, 37319 State Route

Ever have the llghUi go uutsudden\y, maybe during a storm? The
d&amp;rkneHH beoomt:e a tangible thing. you can feel It around you, a
cloud closl.ng ln. Then you remember the cnndle out. on the hall
table. You put. a match to it, and rou'rc 1!1 business again. And It.'s
llltiO.ZlnA: how much you cnn see b}' the light of a single candle when
you've been in the darl«.

a.m. every week. ·

ALFRED - Church SChool 9::1) a.m.;
Worship, 11 a.m.; UMYF, 6::Jl P-1)1-: UMW,
THlrtl 1\lesday, 7;:ll p.m. Community first
Sunday.

POMEROY
!.!-.T'SIDE C'HUI;U·i uF
CHRIST, 200 \\ Main St .. 99'2-52'1.''1 . \ 'oc al

•;

pastcr. Don Will, lay leader. Located ln
Texas Community otf CR. 82. Sunday school,
9: I&gt; a.m.; Morning worship service, 10:45
a.m.; £"'witnlng preaching service second and
fourth Sundays, 7::11 p.m.; Christian Endea·
vcr. first and thlrd Sundays. 7::lt p.m.

FOJSouor,Jllrector

Rev. Seldcm ........._
Rev. IUchard Tbomu

to 2 p.m. Ladle; Home League, menbers tn
charge, all wmm Invited; 6:45 p.m.
Thursday, Corps Cadet Class fYoungPEopiPBI~ ). 7: :11 p .m . Bltie Study and Prayer
mE!l'11ng, om to public.

BiJRLINGTc

MT. HERMON UNI'I'ED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST CHURCH. Rev. Robert SanderS.

UNITED ME'IBODIST CHURCH ·

tltORTIIEAST CLUSTER

SUnday sct-ool9:15 a.m.; Dan White, Sunday

'I

!Chool, 9::1) ~m . ; Wonhlp lO:ll a.m .;
Prayer meeting 7: :ll p.m . Thunday.

-llelllroctor

MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner
Sixth and Palmer. the Rev. !\lark McClung.

••111111·

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, Near

R ... 11obeftM&lt;Gee

Sunday, HoUne;s meeting 10 a.m . Major
Glenna Rwnmel (R) s~alcer . IO:Jl a.m.
Sunday Scmol. YPSM Elotse Adams Ieoda'.
7:ll p.m. Salvation meeting, varioUS speakers andm.usic specials. 'Iblr.iday, ll::IJ a .m .

FAMILY PlANNING - K1MD 11ue1 aad El_leell Mania, ....,. ol tile Oluple te c..ple leape,
-..... a rack of Jl"'i' 1l!lua lllllide t1ae1r anso. r.
a. hw•a wee~ ..tay
Tile Couple to

·

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

Long Bottom, Ed5el Hart, pastor. Sunday

nJE SALVATION ARMY. 115 Butternut

'

~

p .m . Wednesday family worhstp, 7 p.m.

Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wlnlng ln char~.

method of birth control.
Ironically, the same system used
to avoid pregnancy could be used by
couple that wants tohaveachlld and
needs to determine a woman's
optimum chance for getting
pregnant.
.
The Couple to Couple League has
members in47statesand isactlve\J1
six foreign countries, Banet said.
•·
"We're strong in the breadbasket
of the country, for some reao;on ...
proportionately stronger ir. rural ·
areas, " Banet said. "Maybe It's
because people are more conserva- ·
tive In rural areas."
the league is · not formally_
affiliated with any church, although
many members are Roman Catbol-' ·.
lcs because of that church's opposition to artificial birth control,
Banet said. The .league also has
received active support of several
Protestant ministers.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

r

Maln St .. Pomeroy. Sunday serv!C'E'S Holy
Canmunlon on the first SUndayoteach month.
and ruml::ined with morning prayer on ttr
third Sunday. Morning prayer andsennonon
au otlv&gt;r Sun::laysor the month. Chw-ch Sc-hool
a,td RU11iefYc-areprovldfd. Cotree OOur 1n ttF
Parish HaU lmmecUately following thf&gt;
sevlce.

·~r

"When the temperature goes up.
it's a rather sudden shift · - four
tenths of a degree Faren.heit- then
It s~rts sloping off. It goes up upon
ovulation, the releasing or the egg,
because !' hormone Is released that
raises body temperature."
. Banet said the Couple to Couple
League has trained 50,000couples In
this technique. which it contends Is
accurate but not foolproof.
"Various studies have found a 99
percent effectiveness for folks who
are well-motivated and well instructed," Banet said. "Being
well-motivated and well-instructed
Is important . If not, they either do
the wrong things or do not a~tain
when they should.'·
In short. abstaining from sex nine
to 12 days a month Is the key to
naturjl - fariilly planijliig ~ Banet
said. If a couple doesn't want to do
that, the syl&gt;(em cannot be a reliable

Rev. Geon!e Oiler, oasttr. Worshll&gt; service

GRACE EPISOOPAL rnURCII - mE.

.,
'

SYRAaJSE FIRST CHURCII OF GODSUnday, 9:45a.m.; llunday ScOO&lt;ill a.m.;
Worship servlre. 7::Jl p.m. Tttursclay prayer
meeting, 7: :Jl p.m.

Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
212 E. Main Street
RENE, Corner Union and Mulberry, RPv.''
·992 3715
Virgil Byll!'r. pa•.tor. Glen McCiu~. asst. pas-·..,~---,,....----_ _ _·_P_o_m_er_•.,v-...S

Couples., group says birth control could -cost $5,000
YC1p'S - the Couple to Couple
Le~gue arrived at these estimates:
- $1.875 to $4,755 for bil't.h control
pills. based on whether the cost is
subsidized by a welfare or social
agency.
- $5.100 for combination use of
dia phragms and foam . based on
ex~mina tion and replacement every two years.
- $750 to~l ,OOl for an intrauterine
device. based on . physical and
reinsertion eve ry three years.
- $1,426 to $4,3~ for condoms,
d e pe nd ing on qua iUy and
preference.

1\!eetin•. Wednesday, 7:;11 p.m.

I

i

SEVENTH-DAY .WVENTIST. Mulberry

CINCINNATI (AP I - Couples
considering having children often
wonder about the cost of child
rj2aring- medical care. education ,
food and clothing. Few consider the
eost of not having children.
; The Couple to Couple League, an
qrganization that promotes natural
family planning, says a couple
might spend more than $5,001 in
tiirth cont rol devices over the life of

Sc~ 9::1:1 a .m.; Morning Worshlp 11 a .m .;

Church School 9: 15 a .m .; worshJp servtce il
10:30 a.m. Choir rehea1"'1l , Tuesday
p.m., u111!er dlrectton of Al1L-t' Nease.

S2 per shot ; nu

1982 WeU-Chlld Olnlc lees:

Pomerov, o.

Sut'lday evenlnR serviCe. 7:.1l p.m.; Prayer

\I

m.cro 4/ cc, 50 cents per shot ): pe--

stnts (general publh:;. $3); (senior citizens.
S2); blood pressure screening free.

back, I tor, John Jacobs, administrator; Carol Tannehill, R.N., A!mle Moon, Norma Ton-es, R.N.

992-}978

Groceries.General Merchandise
Racine 949· 2550

Middteport-

BEN
AANKUN"

. Syracuse

SONS SlORE

SENTINEL

John F. Full&lt;, Mgr.
Ph. 992-2101
PomeroY
'

"/

WAID CROSS

lHE DAILY

-HAll'S

sugar and acetone, 50 cents: measlesmumps-rubella IMMRI , 12.50: dlphtberta•ertussls -tetanus (OPT) . 5() cents; penktllln
20.~ ampule,

.

Mill WorkCabinet Making

Well ChUd Olnic Exam - range $1 to $5
depending on Income. (Immunization and
ur lne cultures and hematocrit and urine testIng is extra ); p-Jlio, ~ . ce nts ; tetanus. $2:
mumps vaccine , 12.50: measles. rubella.
S2. ~ : hematocrit trst . 50 cents; urine cultures . $2: multiple urine test. Sl: test for

nlclllln G -

a)"{
r
0

MEIGS TIRE

\ ~- CENTER, INC.

('

of Columbus, 0.

The department conducted family life educational classes' with 502
Individuals and provided information for an additional 210 people
through association with five sororltles, ope Lions club, one Children's
Conversation League and 18 PI'A's
and P'I'O's.
The health department fees are
as follows :

I Procaine

,~ .

Nationwide Ins. Co.

tmmun!.zatlons; 471 '1.! OPT (DiphtherlaPertussls-Tetanus) ; 38 adult tetanus: 40llh
nivalen.t ora l pol\o; U4 MMR (MeaslesMumps-Rubella) : 82 Visits were made to and
from Senior atizt'ns at home. 5enior CUlzens
Cen1er; 12 vtstts to schools for nurslng related
classed and two visits to Head Start nursing
related classe5.

STAFF - This is the Meigs County Health Department staff. It Includes front, Ito r, Debbie LaValley, Gloria Palkovic, Pearl Scott, Nancy Ackennan;

OR

l

Harrtsonvllle Road. Earl Fleltk. past&lt;r.

Henry Eblin. Jr .. Sunday School~ - SUnday
•'

Text - "And we know that all things work together for good to
them that love God, to them who are the called according to His
purpose." Romans 8;28,
In this text we find a promise from God which enables a Christian to llve In this world with the certainty that aU things are working
together for his good. We may be tempted to wonder how some
things that enter our lives could ever work for our good, but when all
these experiences are put together We wW eventually see that Gocj
has used.aU that crosses our pathway for our good. I once heard a
minister Ulustrate this truth by a cake which Is made of various
lngredi~ts. If we would taste some of the Ingredients separately
that make up the cake, they would not be palatable, but when all are
· put together and baked we have a delicious cake. So It Is with some of
the Isolated experiences of suffering we experience. When taken
separately, we may see nothing good corning from them, but God is
using all the events of our !Jves and working them together for our ·

good.

.

_ St. Paul gives an Incident where God used things that happened
to him for good In the furtherance of the gospel. In Philippians 1: 12
we read, "But 1 would ye should understand, brethren, that the
things which happened unto me have fallen out rather unto the
furtherance of the gospel." According to God's promise.lt wUI work
the same for you If you are serving Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour,
and In the center of God's will for your !Jfe. So whlle the promise Is
conditioned on being a Christian In the center Qf God's wUI, yet, It is
within range of all, for ilil may come to Jesus Cluist and accept Him
as Lord and Saviour. Hear the Invitation In Revelation 22:17. "And
the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say.
Come. And let him that Is athirst come. And whosoever \\1ll.let him
take the water of !Jfe freely.'' then you can claim th1• promise. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., Pastor, Rutland Church of thf' Nazarene.

'.

�Friday, Marth 4' 1983

By~e • Bend

.
•

.The · Daily Sentinel
..

CORRECTION

8-

Kw READ
SUNDAY.'S AD SHOULD HA"E

Meigs ·County organization members hold meetings

Drew Junior
·
.1.
AUXltary

NEW

.

Diehl, Ruby Diehl, and Mrs.
bathtub 24 hours. The container
Friend, Janice Haggy, Emma Fox.
Denison.
.
shc:Nid gradually be moved to full
and Beulah OchlPr.
Mrs.EugeneAtklnsreportedtbat sunlight. Forcing she said, tsdone
valentlneplatesoffrult,cooklesand
oneortwomontbsprtortobloomlng
Ptlppy royalty to reign through
candy were delivered to residents of
time, and should bloom lnabou tthre
Participation In a civic beautlficathe Meigs County Inflnnary by her
weeks after the procedure begins.
tlon project.lor the Carleton School
Memorial Day was selected when
· the Junior Awdllary of Drew Webs·
and Miss Dleh). Mrs. Ralph Turner
Mrs. Williamson alsogaveilpsfor at Syracuse was approved at the
ter Post 39, Pomeroy, met at the
and Mrs. Diehl took plates to Mrs.
Marchnotlngthatnowlsthetlmeto recent meeting of the Shade Valley
Russell Uttle and Mrs. C.E. Bishop,
prepare mowers and tractors, plan
Councll of Floral Arts held at the
home of Mrs. Harry Davis, advisor.
Selected as royalty· for the unit
both 111 members of the club.
garden crop rotating, and prune . home of Carol Erwin, Chester. ,
were I..anle Hankie, Junior Miss
It was reported that· Charles trees.
.
A fruit tree wUI be purchased )jy
Poppy, Jennifer Cross, Uttle MJSs
Williamson has thA flag placed at
Mrs. Robert Canaday gave a
the club to be planted this spring
Miles Cemetery an will be belp the review of the book, "A Walk Across Several Meigs County garden clu~
Poppy, and Megan Clark, Poppy
Princess.
club's civic committee with plant- America" by Peter and Barbara
along with other organizations are
A;nll!l Smith presided at the meet- lng flowers belqre Memorial Day· Jenkins. It was an account of Peter participating In the project
1ng with Laney Hankla giving the
Geraniums wnt be bought from the leaving New York lll1973, going to
Members brought pa~kets· of
prayer. The pledge and preamble
Alumni Association following the
New Orleans where he met and
seeds for an exchange during tl)e
were repeated tn unison. Read at
banquet on May 28 to plant In the married Barbai'a. .He saw himself
meeting conducted by Marty
the meeting was a thank you note
parkareaofRutland.
asaploneerbutdldspentsometbne
Baurn. ItwasnotedthatBettyDean
from the boys at Harden College of
Mrs. James Ntcholson,presldent, . employed In Dallas. The book Is the
and Pat Holter have IJeen Invited to
the Xenia Orphanage for valen·
read the t:equlrements for .an storyofthelrwtitlngandpalntlngas
display at the flower show of the
tines. It was noied that a donation
outstanding amateur gardener and
they traveled across the Continental
Garden Clubs of Ohio state convenhad been made to the March of
garden club member, and then
Divide, went Into Oregon and on to
t!on to be held In April.
Dimes and the Heart Fund, ~d
asked the group to consider the Pacific to end their trip In 1979.
Shella Curtis announced that the
thatllvejuntorshadhelpedw!ththe · nominations. The spring regional
Mrs. Denison gave devotions Ohio Assoelat!on of Garden Clubs
heart fund drive. .
meetlngwasannouncedforMay7ln _ from the book,. '~Because I Love
will be starting a new series of
A doDar for each member was
Gallla County·
. You." Mrs. Dayton Parsons was exhibitors and judges schools on
Mrs. VIrgil Atkins aod Mrs. co-hostess. Refreshments were Aprlll9 at the Imperial House North
pledged for the Elilwa School for
Erlewlne · made arrangements of served following the meeting.
In Columbus. ThJs Is not restricted
the Deal and Bllnd at Narnllbla,
Southwest Africa. The junior.presl·
flowers for other meetings, It was
to judges and student judges only.
noted.
Janet Koblentz and Diana Karr
dent will submit a narrative on how
each girl earned her dollar.
The travellng prize furnished by
Letters from Keith and Gall reported on a garden therapy
The foreign relations scrapbook
Mrs. C. 0 . Chapman was won by
LohnesandADenandHelenNelson, session with the special education
wasflnlshedandRDblnCampbellls
Mrs. Jack Robson. Mrs. Everett mlsslonarleslnAfrlca, werereadat classes at Chester Elementary
completing the history for the junColwell will furnish the one for the
the Tuesday night meeting of the Materials were provided and
tor conference. AD of the girls are
March meeting to be held . at the
Women's Missionary Fellowship . children made bird feeders from
making Conference covers to be
home of Mrs. Chris Diehl. Mrs.
International of the I..aurei Cliff lard . .peanut butter, corn and bird
submitted for competition at the
ErnestWardwonthehostessglft.
FreeMetbodlstChurchhneldatthe seed.
Department of Ohio junior
An exhibit of new seed catalogs
homeofDonnaGibnore.
JackleFrostpresentedanOAGC
confel'!!nce.
was arranged by Mrs. Roy
Shirley Meadows had devotions slide presentation entitled "FiowTheE!ghthDistrlctjuniorconfel"
Snowden. Mrs. Turner and Mrs.
rreadlng from Luke.
A tape, ersfortheChurch." Theslldesdealt
ence will be held April 16 at the
Denison.
"Women Reaching ()Uiers" was primarily with altar arrangements.
WINNERS -Trenton Cleland, a firs&amp; grader Ill Mrs. Carol Ohlinger's
Pomeroy Ptlst. The Department of
For roll call members responded
played. Brenda Haggy presented
It was pointed out that altar
class at Pomeroy Elementary School, was the school slogan winner for
Ohio conference will be held 1n Cowith a favorite branch to force.
the program "Love Finds a Way to
arrangements should be identical In
Ohio IUght to Read Week which Is helng Ollsel'Yed state-wide March 7-U,
lurnbus May 14. Delegates elected
Mrs. Marvin Wilson Introduced Touch Someone."
Friendship size, material and composition , or
Pamela Crow, Chapter I teacher announced. Trenton's slogan was
were Robin Campbell, Anita Smith,
by the program which Included a
calendars were made.
nearly so. an In proper proportion to
"Crayons are colorful, but words are more beautiful." Room winners
Laney Hankla, Amber Hankla,
review by Mrs. Williamson of an
Refreshments were served by the background as well a.S to the
·selected were Brad Anderson, Mrs. Thomas' first grade· KeDy Satterfield,
Jennifer Cross, JennUer Couch, Er- article from flower and Garden
Mrs. GUmore, Brenda Haggy, and cross If It Is used as a central figure.
Mrs. Diehl's second grade; Rllonda Anderson, Mrs. Yo;..,g's tblrd grade;
Wanda Eblin.
·
Arrangements should , never be
lea McCllntock, with alternatives,
concerning forcing branches to
Barbie ·Anderson, Mrs. Whitt's third grade; Stacey Shank, Mrs. Fisher's
Kim Patterson, Robin Le)lew,
flower.
OtherspresentwereBeckyEblln, taller than the cross or of an
: fourth grade, and Shane PhliDps, Mrs. Gibbs' fourth grade. Pictured are,
Laura Smith, Pam Haggy, Kim
She said that branches should be
Jean Wright, Linda and Jennifer overpowering nature
front row, left to right, Shane PhliDps, Trenton ·Cleland, Stacey Shank; .
Haggy, Palma Wiles, and Jennifer .cut about three feet long In the
Frlend,KarenStanley,Bellndaand
Mrs . Koblentz showed slides
back, Barbie Anderson, Rhonda Anderson, KeUy Satterfield and Brad
Mankins . Sherry Fox, Eighth Dis·
warmesttbneofthedayandplaced
Billy Soulsby, Amber Lohn, Gene- which she took at the OAGC
Anderson.
·
"
trict junior president, Is a delegate
In warm water after soaking In the
vleve Ward, Eva Robson, Shirley convention flower show last year.
at large.
It was announced that theAmerican Legion btrihday party will take
place on March 15 at 7 p.m. at the
Or Write Dlilly Stntintl Cllssifitd DtJI .
post home with the juniors to help
Ill Court St., Pomeroy. Dtlio (57&amp;g
serve the dinner.
A birthday card was signed for
Frau Gertud Wentzel of GerA church building fund kick-off
Dorothy
LeHhelt and another card
many will speak at 7: :ll p .m . Tues·
campaign with a banquet at Carel·
for Ruth Massar who wt11 be leavday at St. Paul United Methodist
ton School was. held Monday night
Ing Pomeroy. Mrs. Massar joined
,,u ..,,_,..,
.
...... .,......_.,
Church In Tuppers Plains.
by Syracuse Church of the
l1 ·1•-u ~u~r
,,U ·CI. T\1'1111'""'
l . lll.• '~)i• · • lt "'lf ''' ''" o·r '!"'
....
.... 1,. _ _
U,.,....tolthe
auxiliary
In
1926
and
Is
the
old,,
.....
2-111...._,
·~"'---· UI"te ..._.....,,c.,
FI;au Wentzel and her late husNazarene.
n -v .. oi4WO
•-a--... ..,
,,
,..,...
. . . . . . . . . c .........
band were pioneer Germany Meth·
-.
The gymnasium was decorated est member with conilnuous mem1·--l
al_f_
~,,_
.
_
1 1 . . _ . . .....
....,... c .. wv
bership In the ~uxlllary.
,,_,._ .......
T·V • I - I .... M - 1
.,...
., , ,.. . ..
....,.. c..... )04
odlst missionaries In New Guinea
..... c ...... , ••
In the theme, "With Joy We Give."
Jl., .. _ , .. ....
· - ~s..
The
program
was
on
the
flag
with
,
.,
...
....
lll-lu......o .........,.
before the end of World War I. U&gt;
Guests were Dr. J. WOmer Lam·
~·
c....... .
ti-Lonl .e.e.....
Amber Hankla reading "Our Flag
,,..,
.., ......
111!1 -·~
c .......
16 """''-&amp;,.,_
cal arrangements are being coordl·
bert, guest speaker, the superin·
:J&lt;U ......, .. ,..,
1/J . ....
~- .... a. .....
.
ts
Made
of
Priceless
Things."
It
l•
a...,.,.o..,
Ill
...... H• •M
nated through the courtesy of the
tendent of the Central Ohio
.u .. _Dt\1
41 H.,........ .,,
was
pointed
out
that
a
star
lor
each
,.
,
·~
·~· ....
9H
1\ullaln
Rev. ArthUf Duhl of Athens who be4JM.W. ........ I • I I District; Mrs. Marjorie Durst, CoJ'l'!ll """""'
IJ.w ........ .., ·
4J.f_.._._,
state
of
the
Union
dates
back
to
....,_
came acquainted with Frau Wentlumbus, from whom the church
14-Hoy.G&lt;.,n
,. ,........_.._,
,.........
Jwu~ 14, 1m, making tt the oldest
1l 00
~,~, ••• r.-41.
-·
.zel during a tour of duty as a U. S.
u,
••• r.- .. o...•
,.,...., ..
,.,..,
__
purchased the land where the new
&amp;·~--·
~~,
u.,o.
or.
"'
....
5&gt;,,..,..,_,,....
flag
In
existence.
The
national
,
..
,
_
...
....
l l·f - M r f t Army Chaplain In Germany.
buDding will be constructed; Sam
....,
Rev. Richard Thomas, pastor,ln· Van Hom, ·Grove City, who pro- members reviewed how to display
the flag and how to show a ppropvltes the public to attend. Anyone
vided special. music, and Eber
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Pu!Jiic Notice
riate respect for it.
wishing . further Information may
Pickens, Syracuse mayor, and his
Refreshments were served to the
call the Rev. Mr. Thomas at 667wife, Mary, members of the United
LEGAL
niah!les to accept or '~1ect any
Roof repat r/resaturat1on coat·
by Mrs. Davis and to Mrs.
juniors
and all 01 parts of any and all
ADVERTISEMENT
mg of Eastern H1gh School ·
3960 or 667 ·6386.
Finance Campaign; the Rev. HowR1ve rv1f!'N Elementary, Tuppe rs
FOR
BIDS
bidS
Loretta
Tiemeyer,
Eighth
District
ard Lane, Rev. Joseph Trueax and
Separate. sealed proposals Ptam s Elem e. ntar y -Ches t er
Th e success ful bidder w1ll be
actiVIty
chairman.
~
junior
James Rupert, and the Rev. and
for each of the requt re mems set
required to turn1sh a sa 11SfacElementary
John Hankla and Mrs. Sue
tory performan c e bond for one
forth beiOIN wi ll be rece1ved . at
Mrs. James B. Kittle.
Cop1es of the specd1cat10n s,
hundred percent of the co n·
McCurren and ¥ e were guests.
the off1ce of the Clerk of the 111struct•ons to bidder s. and
Rev. James Trueax will be guest
tract
pnce
Board
of
Educat1on
of
Eastern
prop
tsal
forms
mav
be
obspeaker at the Sunday 9:30 a.m.
Loc al School Oistr1ct. Me1gs
No b1ds may be WithdraWn
tained at the olf1ce of Eastern
Mark
Mitch,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
worship service of Syracuse
County. Oh10 unttf t 2:00 a·c· Local Schools
far at least th 1rty 1301days after
lock noon. E.S.T Marc h 10.
the scheduled clos1ng t1me for
p!urch of the Nazarene. Results Gene Mitch, Pomeroy, has ac·
A therapy sessional theGalllpolls
A cert1f1ed check payable to
rece1pt of b 1ds
1983 . and wtll be publtclv
the Clerk-Tre asurer of the
wtll be given concerning the week· cepted employment at Donald C.
State Institute on March 24 was
opened and read by the Clerk above Board of EducatiOn or a
Board of Educa t1on
long campaign drive. Debbie Po- Cook Nuclear Plant in Bridgeman,
planned during a recent meeting of
1mmed1ately thereafter at the
Eastern Local
sattslactory b1d bond e:..:ecuted
well will be soloist at the morning Mich.
the Rutland Garden Club held at the
usual place of meettng of sa•d
by the b1dder and a secul'1ty
School D•str•ct
Wtlltam Buck ley
Board of Educat1on. tabulated
company. tn an amount equal
A graduate of Meigs High School,
home of Mrs. Carl DeniSon.
service with Mary Janice LaPres1dent
and a report thereof made by
to f1ve percent of the b•d shall
vender to sing at the6 p.m. service. class of 1978, and Ohio University
Members will donate sandwiches
Elotse Boston.
the Clerk tv satd Board at tis be subm1tted With each b1d
Each Sunday evening following with a bachelor's degree in engiand cupcakes and provide money
ne)(f: meet1 ng.
Sa1d Board of Educat1on re - Treasure•
Oescnpt•on of Improvement
serves the nght to wa1ve mfbr·
the worship service, Snak-'n-Yak neering Mitch began his employfor fruit and needed Items for the
located at Reedsville, Oh1o·
ment March 1.
fellowship, for those age 11 to 29,
therapy work. Instructors will be
He resides at 3606 Lake Shore
Mrs.. Eugene Atkins, Mrs. Bernard
will meet. March hostesses are
Charley and Judy Lee and Jeff and Drive. Apt. A-6, St. Joseph, Mich.
Ledlle, Mrs. Harry WUllarnson,
121 27. 131 2. 4. 3tc
490l5.
Brenda Davis.
Mrs. Harvey Erlewtne, Mrs. ChriS

RJRNITURE

Sh d
·.
a e Valley Council

'

I

The Daily Sentinel

:Meigs County happenings
Missionary pioneer

2 Drawer Broyhill

White .
Canopy Bed ...... 199.95
.Complete
Bunk Beds ..... :.1219.95

_.
.... ......
.............

l-- --·
,..._
.............

,,

.

. -

.
............. ...•............
..........
.
.
..
.•..............,.-,_.

:ra.•-·--···~

.. ........
........
_. .
...................

n-c.~~-

. .................

....

.

.,.., ~,

USED
FURNITURE

3 Pc. Bedroom

Suit&amp;............. 199.95
Boxspring
&amp; Mattress, .... 199.95

2 Dr. Almond

Refrigerator .. 1299.95
Matching
Elec. Range .. 1119.95

40 ln. frigidaire
Elec. Range .. 1250.00
20,000 BTU

Wann Morning
Heaters ....... '149.95

GARAGE

CONSTRUCTION

St· Rt·' 124, Pomeroy, OH ·

Roo f mg, Spouting

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tra namiuion
PH. 992·5682
or ·992.·712 1,.,.

couples.

FRJDAY
POMEROY - Plans for annual banquet to be made at 8
p.m . Friday when Meigs County
Pomona Grange meets at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall with ,
Columbia Grange as host unit.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Fox · Chasers Associa lion will
meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. at Ea·
gle Ridge.
--- '

chase of heart monitor lor
squad.

t

SYRACUSE - Revival services will be held at Asbury United
Methodist Church, Syracuse,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
with Mark Morrow, evangelist.
Special musiC Friday will be,

"Harmony"; Saturday, .. The
Harvest Trio," ; and Sunday, the
Asbury choir and other local tal·.
ent Public Is Invited.
. RUTLAND -There wiJI be a
dance at Rutland Civic Center, 8
to 11 p.m. Friday with Music Un·
limited, $2 for singles, $3 for

PAGEVILLE -Scipio Township trustees meeting wtll be
March 4 at 7 p.m . at town hall In
Pagevllle.
·
POMJ;:ROY" - Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet at
7 p.m . Friday at home of Clerk
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff,
Road; meetings open to public.
'

-HARTFORD- Hymn sing at
' Father's House Church, Hartford , Friday at 7: 30 p.m. Featured will be Journey's End and
Voices of Love. Rev. Clyde
Fields, pastor, Invites the public
to attend.

SATURJ)AY
RACINE - Soup dlrlner by
Racine Volunteer Emergency
Squad wtil be !rom 11:30a.m . to
G p.m. Saturday atflre station·
homemade vegetable soup',
bean soup, corn bread, cake, pop
and coffee; proceeds go to pur-

RACINE -Square dance will
be held at Racine American Leglon Hall, 8: .ll p.m. to midnight
Saturday. Guy Thome band will
play. Caller wtl1 be Red Carr.
Public Is Invited.

Quality
_ Outlot
.tl•htng:
•Jeans

Comp Iete Home

'Blouses
'Swim Suits
•E · G
vanmc owns
Etc.
Open Tues.-Sat.
10 ·00 to 5·00
·
· St.
204 Washincton
Ravenswood, W. Va .
3

Remodeling

15 Years Experience
A

II Work Guaranteed
• 7 42-2324

773-5684

HARRISONVILLE Lodge
411, F&amp;AM meeting wtl1 be 7: .ll
p.m . Saturday at temple with
work In master mason degree;
· all master masons welcome;
past masters of Harrisonville
asked to be present.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Youth League stngup will
be held Saturday, March 5 and
12 at Middleport VUiage Hall
from 9 a.m. 110t11 noon. Entry fee

Is $7.

.

~

- ·

POMEROY
lANDMARK

.614-992·2181

fe~~!1~U~!!~i~

Remodeline.
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bldgs:
&amp; Garages
•Roofing Work
&lt;Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidi•~
.....
15 Yearo Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282

MISNTERRIPUN

EXCAVATING

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Duinp Trucks
-Lo·Boy
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
-Gas Lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

COAL

$3()00
.

A TON

PH. 992-2280

Set Cllaifild Ad lllder
Clllsificllllll C In Wlllt
Ms.

'Rootine
'Gutter] &amp; Down Spouts
'Remo'aeling
20 Years Experience
In Home Area

9 pert German Shep . puppies . 1· mo. old. Ready to go .

FREE ESTIMATES

Call 843-5425

614·992-3949.
3 month old puppy . Part
Cocker Spaniel, part Terrier.
White whh blaclc opoto. Call
614-992-6866.

34

to good ho~ In 1he country.

2~~~1SSION co.

Pomorny, 011.

OPEN 9 1D 5 MON. thru SAT.
All Types of Aulo Rtpair,
Brahs, Tune-Ups . etc.
SPECIAL

TRANSMISSION FILTER
AND FLUID CHANGE

ONLY 131.95

114.,,

·out•. Call 446 ·0175 .

Good L!IBd pickup truck .

Call 446 -4053 .
40 or 50 HP outboard
motor. Call 614·258·8840.
BEDS · IRON. BRASS . old

furniture. goid . allver
dollars. wood ice1 boxea .
atone jan. antiques, etc . •
Complete household t':'
Write : M.D. Miller, At , 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or B92·
7760.

Gold. silver, aterllng,
jewelry, ring,, old coins Sa
currency . Ed Burkett Barber

TWO mala dogs. 1 mixed

Trophy•. good uoed old. Will
pey 82 .60 &amp; up . Any kind .
Call 614 -742 - 30011 or
614-992-8138.

breed - 1 part Labrador

Retriever. Seven part

6 Lost and Found

Wanted Dead or Alive. Old

TV's . 814-949· 2994.

LOST Air Force ring in

WANTED to laaoe. Tobacco
quota, will give .16 lb.

Holzer Hospital parking l ot

Morgana Woodlawn farm ,

Saturday Feb. 26th. Re· · Pliny 304-676·2276, 304·
word. Cell collect 614-532· 623-6843.
-6~_ 19.

Town-Clay Chapel Rd. Call
FOU-ND pony on Yellow

j.

\
I

NEW Ltmlll - RUTLAND - Nice 6 room ranch home with 3
boorooms on 4 len Hardwood ftOO&lt;S and carpeting. gas foced air
heat Equal hOusing opportooity. $32,000.00.

$8,000.00.

Acre lots in R11e Pants area $5,000 Ill

PRICE REDUCED- MIDDLEPORT- Duplex rental inveslmenl
2 rental units with $300 monthly income. House in good condition,
ins~ated. some furniture. Just $19,000.00.
·
PRICE REDUCED- EASTERN DISTRICT- 4 betlrootll tllodern
home wth full baserm:nt I\! baths, insulated; FA gas heat
carport above ground pool, on 2 acre~· Reduced to $35,000.00.
L9NG BOTTOM ..:.. Approxim&lt;~tely 71 acres wooded ~net with
mcely remodeled farm house, 3 bedrooms, fon;ed air heal plus
wood oomer, ins~ated . New 2 car gara". $55,000.00 for all or
owner wil sell house, garage, small acreage for $35,000.00.

..'

All Makes

0 pen 900
;
to 600
:

•Woshero •Dtahwaohers
~~"
•Rofrlgeraton
•Drven •Froezaro
PARTS and SERVICE

Mon.-Sat.
Cloaed thurs.
2·10-1

NEW LISTING - Rt 33 - I floor block house, 2·3 bedrooms,
aP!lfOlim&lt;~ll!ly I acre Itt Equal hou~ng opportuniy. $14,600.00.

NEW LISTING -

104-.;;u.;;.; st.

mo.

~~r~~l.ing

-Custom Pole

;:~d:;.,!,~~~·;~~ ~~:

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SQN

stalletion.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3196

Route I
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992·3067

For all your wiring

9 85 35 6 1

Pomeroy. OH.

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

'{

SERVICE

APPLIANCE
SER_V 1CE

Real Estate General

4-S·Ifc

Roofing &amp;Siding Co.

H ·llc

LOST-ladiea billfold . Brown
clutch . Please return . Area
of Jones Boys in Pomeroy.

614-742-2028.
Bull miaaing . 614 -992·
6239 .

7

Yard Sale·

tHO-tic

9Garage
till 5.S.ale
Glanware.
books.
Mer. 6th&amp;
6th,
recordi, temps, razors.
f~=~~~;;::~r,~~~~~~==~~t~:;~;;;;;;~~j~~~~~~~~~~
3rd ANNUAL
COMPLETE
THE
ANGIE'S
Seuiona mantel
RADIATOR .SERVICE
SPAGHEnl
clock , typewriter. adding
From he Smallest Heater
KOUNTRY KLUB
PIZZA
machine , flower
balls. kitchen
DINNER
gadgota,
vuaa ,

chime

Core to the Llrcest Radle·
tor.
Radiator Speciaist
NAIHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

•New Grips
•Refinishing
oRe-weighting

.
SMITH NELSON
Pomeroy, Oh.

JOHN TEAFORD
Chesler, OH .

Ph. 992-2174

V 1M .
ocaSAT UMSICARCOOHS5ters
"
GAt~t~:1~
S:OOraP
oo PmM
. . . 1o 800
:
..
IJ.OO AduR- 12.00 Children
Dinner includes: SPIIhetti
Salad, Roll, Drink and omeri
Enlertllinmetll by
The Chtiraliers •

.-~

•Balancing
•Golf Trips
ForYouncPaoplo ·_i
•Pre-Season Sale '
20% &amp;30% OFF.

MOTORS, Inc.

Sponsored, Mails

1
..g,.

~.!..;.

'··

11
Immediate employment day

&amp; night shift on weekends
working with mentally
retarded adult• wh:h behavorial disordart. lfin*er11ted
contact Mike Rife , Oh'l o .

Reward : Black female Pit

wicker. furniture. picture
framu, dotls, hand&amp;gardon
tools . wheelbarrow, Iown
mowers. washtubs, vaaes
Middleport, OH.
by Hull , old German beer
Mon .-Thurs. 4:00-11:30
stein. bogs of assorted
F'S 40,., 1200
clothing,Mesh' purse .
n.- at. : u- :
Deprenion glan, like new
CLOSED SUNDAY
, couch &amp; chair , motel bed
Pizzas-· Pizza Bread
with bran trimming, Clark's
O.N.T. thread cabinet, lots
Italian Bread-Subs
ot ltemo to numerous to
PH. 992-6851
349 N. 2nd St.

Retidentlal Services. Call

446-4768.

Registered Pharm~t tor &amp;8
bed hospital. Located in Oak
HiiJ , 0111o. Full time, 40 hn.
. per week, day 1h~ft. weekends off ..Excellent 1alary &amp;
fringe · benefits. Contac:t

Administrator

6~4-8B2-

771 7 or Hnd reaume to O.k
Hill Community Medlcol

Center. 360 Chorlatto Ave.,
Oak Hill, Oh 468511.

ladie to live in • ahare living
expenses, VInton area . Call

e14·388 · B4U
388-9831.
You

can

or 6'14·

make

money

AVON . Call 446-3368.

INFLATION GOT YOU IN A
PINCH?. Ease the equeeze·
soli Avon. Call 61 4-B43-

29B2, 614·3BB·9045, or
Bidwell, Ohio. 1·614·388· . 614 -992·3890,
Paul Denney·,,
9630 .
8200 . to $400 . weekly
Wed. Thurs. &amp; Friel. 9:00 to working part and full·time at
3:00. Shelts. curtains, ruga, home, no experience, all

~~======~'·'~··~''j~=~===~'·~ts·~l~"'~·j~=====·~2§·9-~l~m~o~.~~~~~~~~'~ ~·~t·~·=·~mention.

jeans. and cloths. 2 miles
east of Porter on At. 664.
Yard Sale Friday 8t Satur-

REALTORS
Henly l Cleland. Jr .. GRI ................. ;........ .......99HI91
J.., Trussell .......................................... ...... .. 949-2660
Dottie Turtllf ............................................... .. 992-5692
Ofllce .......................... ......... ........:..........
,..,. _... 992-2259

day . Buck Ridge Apt 97 ,

ages, national company.
Free inlormatlon . Send
self-addreasad ataml)ed

envelope to l .R.G, 606 4th
St., New Haven. WV.

·

behind Spring Valley . P,eby
itema, curtains, bedspreads,

dre11ea.

IB

Situations
Wanted

IIALIOI

TREE TRIMMING &amp; REMO·
VAL . CALL614·949·2129
OR 614·992·6040.

~

Will plow or disc ~ardena in
Racine area. Call949-22n.

.. ..
~

_~

Cash for used mobile hom••
or travel tniler1 . Will
consider dam•ged or bum

Shop. Middleport. 992 3476.

~

__

WantGd To Buy

304 675
·
•

carr

labrador puppies. 304-6763628 .

H2-3 mo. pd.

2·2J.Ut

SdPublic Sale
&amp; Auction

MEAT cuttM or manager, 20
years BKperlence, wlnta to
return to Pt . Pleasant or

Gallipolis, DH . Write: 701
North Maple, Eaton,

..............
..........
..............................

_,
ID·&amp;tlc

2

In Memoriam

oH

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Canter . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .

46320 .

Consigments of new and
used merchandiaa always
welcome. Richerd Reynolds

---------

Auct'oneer. 275-3069 .

Ina urance Co. haa oflered
Services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almoat a century . Fa....n.

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER

home and peraonal property
coverages are available to
meet individual neadt
Contact Eugene Hollev :

egent. Phone 38B·8690.

15 • Schools
Instruction
Karate the ultimata in aelf
defence all private lessons
Men , woman, &amp; children:
Instruction thru black belt .
AJso available Kenteuniforms puching and
kicking bags, and protective
equipment. Jerry Lowery 8t
A11ociates Karate Studio
143 Burlington Rd ., Jack :

son, Oh . Cell 614·286 ·
3074 or 614 -384·6160 .

WHITE FISH
POTATO
VEGETABLE

r'

6 OZ. KANSAS CITY

18 Wanted to Do

POTATO
VEGETABLE

ROLLS

ROLLS
SALAD BAR
DESSERT
NON-ALCHOLHOLIC
BEVERAGE

SALAD BAR
DESSERT
NON-ALCHOLIC
BEVERAGE

PLUS

TAX

lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small. Reliable and

$79'5

.

dependable . For estimate

call446-3169 or 266·1987
efter IIPM.

PLUS TAX

DINNER SERVED 5-9 E'ACH EVENING

ON FRIDAY FROM 4-6
IT'S T.G.I.F.

Jack's Lockamith Service
Com mercia! - Domestic ~

Automotive. Colt 304·8822079. .
.
•

''
'

•,

WANTED Work o·n dairy'
farm . ENperienced, depen-'
dable , non· drinker . Write ,
Box P 26 , Point Pleasant

SUNDAY
RUTLAND - Skating at Rutland Civic Center Sunday, 2 to 4
p.m. Take your own skates, S1
for chUdren, Jl for adults.

half Hulky·Shopherd
. Cell
446·4997
.

~

I:J.~oodo

$795
Want to buy or Ieise
firm land and finn
. equipment.

'Sidine

12
YEAR
old Border
Good
companion
tor Collie
older

Wanted

WANTED!!!

Adorabtepupplosnoedgood
homes . Born 1·18-83. Half
Reglatered Engfiah Setter .

···~t·~·~~=:;:::===~···~t ~m~o.~~====~~·~·-~·~·pd~.j
~~=~~~~~=~fr======~J~
ROUSH
PU Lll NS
AUTOMATIC
~m~e.

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; IIOTPOINT
W£ ALSO WOIIII 011
ALL OTHER APPUANCES

O
SUPERI R VINYL
SIDING

Now Has Fashion

Rutland Garden Club

Calendar

9

1 femol• 4 mo. old yellow

RAVENSWOOD FABRICS

Sunday speaker

Accepts position

Giveaway

"CUT OUT
266-1427 to identify.
r;:=:;:;:=;=;~t==;;;;;:=::;lr========:;i-;==:::==~==~~
Kitchen Cabinets- Roof·
MILLER
FOR FUTURE USE"
ing- Siding- Concrete
Found 14' aluminum boat in
'S.
ELECTRIC
Patios _ Sidewalks _
1979 in the Ohio River .
New Construction _ ReContact 614-992· 7264.
KEN

Cnvnly

~

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

.......

4

tr~~=====+ni==========~;::=======:::;r;:=:==:::::;;:::=:=:=:=;-1 tiger striped kitten . titter box
II Roger Hysell..
PRICE
~f;r· catlafter 6. u6"Somethinc New"
EUGENE LONG

1l l l-tt~

Campaign kick off

1 - C-MT~I

Matchirc l!ejl ...1149.95

Night Stand ...... 165.00

PHONE 992-2156

_.....

.

Pine Dresser W/

3 Pc. Bedroom
Suite .............. 1179.95

I

WMFJ

the

'

The Daily Sentinel-Page--9

Business services ·

:r~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Friday, ~rch 4, 1983

--::=================---------~------~------~------~~----------~--~~--------------~P~a~ge.

rt, Ohio

Regiater, Pl. Pleannt.

..
,,

WILL do sewing, aheratio na ·
&amp;. mending, reasonable '

Holl.''rnq

304-876-7624.

Hcatlqti.Jrtm.\

,.,

,

,.

.

�! .

Page ' 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pometa•p

They'll Do It Every Time

151 Houaehold Goods

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS 12% fiKOd
rote. Loodor Mortg~ge , 77 E.
State, Atheno, Ohio . 1 ·1114·
118 2- 30111 .

23

Professional
Services

CIH Booictoeplng

To~ Roturnollbootteoping

for lndlvlduolo. buoln••-·
Short formoiii .OO
Lone formo no.oo and up
· Corol Nool
448-3882
PIANO TUNING. REPAIR
Coli Bill Word lor oppolnt·
mont. Word ' o Koyboord.
441-4372 .

,..... . .-..•COL.IC~
., _ .

MID -TOWN Prolooolonil
f'ROVIP&amp;Nee,
-lSL,ANt:&gt;
Eloctrolyoio Clinic, Permanent hair removal . A.M . A.
approved , Doctor referrela. I~=======:::::::;::::::::=::::;:;;,;:::;~
ly oppolntmont. Telephone ,.
3 04 -117 6 ·II 6118 . 8 o n n •
Hondloy, Eloctlologiot.
41 . Houses for Rent 44 Apartment
for Rant

·-

. ·- .....
...
..... .

31

-

4 bedroi&gt;m remodelod home Furnished opt., 2 bdr., 11711
In Cheohlro . Not. goo H·W mo., wotor pold, 2nd. t1oor.
heet, g'nge. beeement. 13'1 4th Ave .. Golllpolio.
$226 mo. Coli Wlumon Coli 448-441 e oltor 7PM.
Reol Eo18to. 448-3843.
1 - - -- - -- - - -

Homes for Sale

1-- - - - -- - - -

Apt: for ,.nt. HoH doublo-2
bd .room Apt. Adulto protoned . No peto. 1114-982·
2749 .
. '

THREE bedroom houae .

1200 .00 month , UO .OO
dopooit. Relo,.nco required.
304-1176"-4433. 11711-21311.'

NEW 3 bdr. hou•. fomlly
roam. 2 bltha. centrll heet
• air, 2 car g.~raga, 2 mi. W.
of HMC In Suntlst. Coli
448-31117.

2 bedroom fumiahed Apt.·

42

Coli 1114- 982 - 5434 or
1 ·882·251111.

Mobile .Homes
for Rent

6 rm apt. shower. Pomeroy
shopping area. adulte, no
pota. nowly .. rpeted. 11110
mo. pluo utlitloo. 814-9923201 .

Eureka riverfront 12JI80,
fumlohed, 1180mo .. 1 bdr ..
1100 lno. Ref. • dop .
Aduko. Coll814-843-2844.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE 'MoBILE
HOMES . USED- CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OU .R PRICES .
CALL 4ol&amp;· 71172.

Aportmenu . 3 04-8766648 .

2 bdr. mobile homo fully
fu mlohed. odulbl only. Coil
448-4110.
12xl0 Trailer, turnlthed, 2
bedroom• . gee heat.

1250.00 month , 1 ,1 00.00
dopooit. a .. ond wotor pold.
1-614-448-81183.

thr~

Fri .• lam to

6pm. Sat.
441-0322
OE euto weeher In perfect
condition 111 0. Coil 4488191 .

Whirlpool ovocodo woohor
ex. oond. 1125 and Whllt·
pool horvoot gold dryer 1911.
30 doy worronty .. Coli
814-2511-1207.
Sale Item•. 30 in. electric
renee t811, 40 ln. electric
rongo 1!16. 30 ln. 901 range
1811. II ploco bedroom oet
11110 , color TV ceblnet
model t1110, 8 piece dinette
oet 115, Whirlpool wuhor
191, GE ,.lrlgwotor horvoot
goldfrootr... 1125.2 piece
llvlngroom aulte 185,
Stoggo Uud Applionco.
Open 9 to 5. 4411-7398.

'

ONE bedroom oportmonto Cut up 1l1b1 for firewoOd
lor the elderly . All util~loo 115 pick up load . Coli
paid. Tenento poy 30 por· 814-246-5804 .
cent of their edjuated
Income in thia HUD aubt:idlzed apartment building .
Twin Aivert Towe,, phone
304 - 876-8679 . Equol
opportunity houolns.

Mobile Home lor rent. 2
boclroom. 12x80. Anotmctive country aetting near

Coolville. City wottr . Free
901. Woohw-dryor hookupo.
C..ll evenlnga or weekend•
814-817-3838 .
.

1--------

ONLY ONE N-12ft. wide.
2 bedroom .. oil electric ,
mobllo homo. only t7,996,
bo'* llnonclns ovaloblo. All
ltoto Modulor Homoo, hoH
woy botwoon Pt. Plouont •
Huntlngtbn on ST. RT. 2 .
304-11711-2711 .

8pm, Mon.

1----------

2 bedroom 12•80 odge of
town on Rt. 1188. 11115 per
mo. plua dapoalt, no peta.
Coli 4411-0822. Port lll'n.

Freedom total electric
1 2•110 2 bdr. mobile homo
for ulo. Coil 814-3877438 .

ton end TV'a. 3 mllea out
Bulovlllo Rd. Open 8om to

APARTMENTS. mobile
homM, houin. Pt. Plea.. nt
•nd Qofllpollo. 1114·4411· '::-:-::-:::--=::--:--:::8221 '
,-64 Misc. Marchandiae
UNFURNISHED oportmant
for rent, 1 bedroo'tl ,
•180.00 Call Automotive For oolo lump cool • fire·
Supply ,! 8 -11 . 304-875· wood . Zinn Cool Co .. Inc .
2218. 1175-8753.
CoR 446-1408.

1---------

1978 Schult 14x70 very
nl ... conmlolr. 2 tu• bothl.
113 , 000 will ·c onoider
owrwr financing with down
peyment. Coll4411· 1842
I :30 to 2 : 30 or oft or 6
304-743·3333.

USED MOBILE HOME.
578-271·1.

3 room • bothtumlohodopt.
Utlfltlto pold. 368 N. 4th
St.. Middleport.

Nice 3 bdr. mobile home
fumlohed, Upper Rt. 7. Coil
814-246· 5818.

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 3&amp;. PHONE 4411·7274.

2 bedroom In Mobile home

ONE bedroom unfumil .. d.
1176. month, off utllltloo
paid , except electric,
304-875-1371 or 1176·
3812.

In Syrocuoo . Furnlohed .
t180 . month . You poy
utilltln. Employodcou;iiloor
om oil fomlly . II 14-982 ·
89811 or 814-992-82311.

Ten horee power Western

Auto Wizord riding mo-r.
eKe. cond. Coil 4411-3981 .

Furnished Rooms

jieoro Coldopot rofrlgorotor.
froltfree , coppertone .
S100. Coll448-4641.

Sloping room t126. utili·
1875 TWO bedrooM mobile
tlto pd, olngle mole. ohore
homo ond 411 ocroa located 1---~~----- both. 919 2nd Avo .. Ool~po­
on Thom• Ridge Rood. Coli THREE bedroom furnlohed flo . Call 448 -4418 otter
304-175·3280 ond ook for oil-electric troller. built on 7PM .
Ron Hiclcmen.
family room . coel-wood 1-::;:;:;==;::::;::::~=

New Hoover ept . a he
wo.ahor • dryer. Coil 814·
387·72118. Mrs Edwordo, H
not home leave number.

12xii5Skylinowithtlpout. 3
bedroom , Roclnt , coli
814-849-2182 oftor &amp;:30
p.m.

burning atove , on acre,

45

I·

gordon plot •. outbuilding,

33 Farms for Sale

Jerrya Run Road, referen-

coo . 12 76 month, pluo
dopoolt. 304-875-23118.
'

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Solo. choir. rocker, ottomon, 3 toblu, )utra ....vy
by Frontlorl, 11185. 8ofo ,
chair end IDveuat, 82711 .
Soloo end cholre priced from
12811. to 1885. Tobloo, t45
oncl up . to 1125. Hldt·l ·
bodo , 1440 . ond up to
15211 .• RocM-•. 1175. to
1350., Lompe from 128. to
t75 . II pc . dlnottoo from
I!J8., to 14)11. 7 pc ., 1119.
end up. Wood toblo with olx
cholro 1425. to 1745. Dook
1110 up.to 1225. Hutchoo.
tlliO. ond up. mople or pine
flnloh. Bunk bed· complete
with mot~.--. ueo. oriel
up to Ulii . Boby beda,
111 0 . Mottrooooo Dr box
opringo, lull or twin, tliB ..
firm, tea .. ond 178. Ouoen
oeta, 1196 . 4 dr. chooto,
142.·5 dr. chooto, 1114. Bod
lromoo, SZO .ond Uli .. 10
gun • Gun .. blnoto, ·1380.,
dinette cholro 120. ond Uli.
Goo oroloctricronsos, U211
up to U711 ; Beby motreeaee, *21 • *31, bed
framea *20, *21, • *30.
king fro me 110 . Good
ooloctlon of bod room oulteo.
codor cheoto, rocltoro, motel
coblnoto. owivol rockero.
UMd Fumlture .. bookc. .e.
rengei. chalra. end tablee.
waahere. dryera, refrl&amp;el'll·

3 .17 oeroo. houoo, born lo
tobacco allotment . 2 acral
wooda, 'Liwrence County,
noor Wotorloo. Coli 1114·
1143-2422 .

~.

Middleport, Ohio

Ferm for eala 21 acres
mootly level. good hoy
lloldo. Uli.OOO. Muollell.
roooonoble otter . 3 bdr.
llama. new turnance.
county ~ater

ra•w

beth

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo

SMALL 2 bedroom fur·
niohod troller, Burdette
Addition . t125 per month
plue utilltlee , depoeit
required. Cell Rosalie,
304 - 1175· 4800 Monday ·
Fridoy, 9 -4.

Pomeroy. Large lou. C1ll
992-7479.

47 Wanted to Rant

36

Real Eltate

Yitntl~

.
Wanted to rent flay field or
'

peatura1 for cowe . Cell
814-388 ·8234 .

WANT TO BUY OR LEASE·
Form of ony olze . Tilloblo
lond within 2 5 mil eo of
Ravenswood. WV . Aloo
neod to buy lwm :equip·
mont. Send inqulrloo ond oil
information to:FAAM · Bo•
741. Rovenowood, W.VA .
281114.

PASTURE lor rant. phone
304-1175-5110.

Apartment
1.17 ocroo Curtlo Hollow. 44
Noor Forlcod Run loke Dock
for Rent
• Gun Club. U.&amp;OO. 1114- 1 - - - - - - - - 378·8301 .
2 bdr. Regency Inc. Aport·
1 acre in Porterfleldurea. menu UOO por mo. or If
Noor Rt . 338. 1114-378· tnccfmo 1o 11 0.000 or Ieos
1301 .
HUD ovolloble. A-Ono R•l
Carol Yeager .
For ..... Acreege rin George EtUtea,
Rooltor. Coli 304·8 76·
freeland ' '• property . Call 6104 or 1176-6381 or
II 14-992-211411 .
175-77811. .

Space for Rent

Park. Route 33, North of

corpotod, no¥1(. oljm. oiclng
cool • wood bumfns otovo:
Good bern • other out 1 ~:;:::;;:==;::=;===
bldgo. gorogti. located on 1F rma for Rent
old 1 &amp;0 near Porter. Call 43 8
814-388-9080.
1 - - - - -- - --

36 Lots S. Acreage

46

48

Equipment
for Rent

1--------Bock hoe endloodor dlgo 8
ft .. large bod pick up
houloble. operote youroelf ,
190 · per doy. 304-B9&amp;·

Furnlohod opt. 1 bdr .. 920
4th Avo.Gofllpollo. Adulto.

38 1

..l~~l~~.~::::·~-:-:· ;=:'~==

·__WAIIILL•I.ocJrJ.c
pd • otter
- -- - - -- - mo . Coli 4411-4418
7PM.
8 uyins hDu•• end opert· l-3-rm-.-.nd-4-rm-.u_ n_fu_m-io-..
-d
menta. NMd prop..tl• wtth
flvoreble prl~» and terma. apartmenta. Utilitl11 pakl, ·
Bo• 1109 Qolllpollo, Oh . no polo, no children . c.n
461131 .
448-3437.

49

Housn for Rent

1 rm. houoo • both. lnqul,.
ot 818 2nd . Avo .. Oollpollo,
Oh.

1 rooml • bath.

Modern

kitchen . 1111 Third Avo .
o.poolt required. Coli mer
IPM 4411-23811.

Nleo 2 bdr. houH 2\io mi.
from HMC 1185 mo:. 1100
dop. Col 441-3117.
1 rm. houM 2'h mllu out Rt.
181, corpet thru out. 1200
mo : Coli 441 · 3041 dey,
+M-2102 -lnso. ·

Furnl1hed

3 ~ rma,

~

· ~ 74
mooOiflo.
441

&amp;

or

I

••vo

Unlumlohod oportmont no
children or plito, 11110 per
mo. ;· p lu o utllltloo. ooj:.
dopwlt req . Coll448.2121.

Fumlahod opt. 807 2nd..
211c1r: In olty, lulllrolomont. Gelllpolio, •23 5. utilltloo
o•rpeted, gu furnonco. . pd., 1 bdr. , odulto . Coli
odult8. no poto. Cell 441· 441·44111eltor 7PM.
1---------:-h~d

otA.

J· bedroom houoo on 3rd.

A!Io., Oollpolo. 121 II mo:
IIIUI util. On• bedroom

tunltrllod oHency irl ·
1110 -·inc. wotor. Con

"'••man Reel
.........

lotota ~

-04

.'

2 bdr. opt . unfurnlo •
ucopt rtrlrlg. &amp;•avo. 1.1 31
mo. Moln lt. Vinton. Coil
1114-2411-11818.

clean. electric cook etove.
130' 11no then 1 yr. old . pold
•&amp;oo. ooking 1260 . Coli
814-21111-87&amp;2 .
2 Concord 1 2 opted long
di1tance touring bikes ,
olmolt new, t17&amp;eoch . Coli
114-388-8808 .
P'a rtlally .new bunk 'beda .
Qrglnolly f400 will ooll lor
tzBO. Call olter 8, 448·
4737.

by Larry Wright

~===~=::::::::~

Floor model color TV. 211" . .
Lito n - 1150. 1114-848·
2884.

74

Motorcyc'" · :

76

...

......

.,'

Auto Pa... .., .
lit Acceaaoriaa :~

C'.\PTAIN E ASY

Good Wlnoor auto. tren~ a
porto for Wlnoor motor. 1 .
Hove block oloo for • :6.
114· 742· 22U.
·

.4:

LOOK IN' JOR.

..····---...
--···.. ··
COKE mochlno, 304· 773·
5842, 8 ·6 .
·SIN'OER Golden Touch ond
Sow doluKOioohlon dloc oiHI Loader-Ma11ey Ferguaon 1
llul otltch dloc oowlng wk .. 358 with forko . Coli
mochlno In bokerwflold dook 814-245-5804.
with choir. Uoed very little. -::---:--:-::-:--:-:--::·lcButton haler end ell other ·For eolo-10 ft. John Deoro
ottochmonto Included. Coot tronoport dloc - 1 .7 00 . 4
ovor 11100. now. Aaking bonom Oliver plow-11100.
1300. Coli 304-f711 -2845 . Hoy-round bolos . 843·
52111.
Chuck Lenior.

79
1980 Monzo ox . cond .
13,881. Coli 441-3548.

IN

HE R~

EVEI!.Y

W H ERE '~ TV99 S ~

HIM

I TOLO

I TOLD HIM .I'D
9 E HERE- FOit THE
PLAT FORM MEETINGS.
AND THAT 'HE-

TO MEH ME .H eRE AT

;eV&amp;N O'CJ.. QCK

~MAR 'P!

DAV~

Motors Homea
lit Campers

YOU I*:T!,. AN' IF
NECESSARY WE
O f flltOI(/TOR HER
WHEREAWUTS

nHYI'IAY· WHENEVER
F1DO ISN'T GOING
TliROUGH HIG TES75
HE'I7 BE APERFECT
I FOR

BUY Foctory Direct. Liuht·
weight, flborglou Bcoinp
1 3' • 1 II' trovol trolloro •
now 18' lith whool. Coli now
toll froo1-800-341-4912
for free brochu-. and NYII

TliROOEiH FID05
EYES!

Htl H~!

HOW 'BCiJT THAt
FJOO! YOU'RE
EiOIN' f 1*0
HELPIN' ANNIE

cmv• ~

LOOI\ FER TH '

"LIJGT MAhi!Till.!'

ME,
MRS. SAXON,
~UTI WAG

'liEU.-I GUEG~
~ ·011! IF'N Y'
TIME 1 MET
DON'T Ml~ I'LL
1IIE MINERS 00 1 ••m HERE! ~EHINI7
COMMintE tlOOR5 .'

JUST DON'T
EXPECT .TO
RHO IT!

WONOERIN '
IF ...

l

TWIN bod and eprlngo,l75 .
Eoorcloe cycle, tliO. Boby
otroll•r• 120. Coli 304-8761572.
SEASONED firewood ,
•10.00 your pickup, 304·
578-2010. .
.

STUCCO PLASTERING •

N-ldn 217 PTO Monuro
IP'""dor. 114-985·4159.
Form tractor. Forl!loll M.
Now pelnt. good tlru.
1. 1.200. 1114-985 • 38118

d · 1
BU NK b1 d L 1 h
t.
lncludeo 2 bodl ope
with un
mot·
tree•••· wordr-.
4 drewer quordroll
cheat. 2 -";";"'::;';p:
. m=.::;::=:;==
ohoivN.
~
ond loddor. Excollont 82 Wanted to Buy
contltlon. 1250.00. 304&amp;75-2495 .

LAWNMOWERS, reconditi- Wonted: Tobacco Poundogo
oned . new parte . priced for 1883. Wll poy 20 ..nto
146 . to teo. Coli 304-1711- lb. 1114-258-11411.
2334 .
'

lelltu.-d coilinlll commercial end realdentlal . free ·

1174 Auotln Morino. 4 ep ..
good cond. 30 m .p.g. 11150.
ll14-247-2t92.

i 874 Novo . S.S . Hotch
bocll. p.o.. p.b., good cond.
114-378-11349 . 350 outo.
1795.
1880

Olda Cutlooo
Brougham. low mileage .
Eoc .condltion . Coil 814992-11121 .

TROYBILT ROTOTILLERS 63
Llveltock
Dlocounto. Avoid April prlco
lncreeH. Free Hiller In ~
1974 Novo SS 350 outo ..
eluded. lmmodlote ahlp- An guo Bull Coli . Coli good cond .. p.o .. p . l! ..
ment . Peru, engln... Trede 448-2598.
bucket oooto . 11.000 .
lno occoptod . 703 -8421114-885-3818 oftor II p.m.
Polmlno
gelding.
Coli
before
3871 Hickory Hill Nuroory,
Rt. 1 Box 390 A, lloHoroviUe, 8, 441-1219.
1818 Codllloc 2 door, lolr
-----~ - lcVA 22939 .
Regloterod Quortor Horoo. cond .. new ex.hauat. rNiel
Ruth Rooveo . Aloo grodo . tlroil. 1400. 1114-982·
Soddloo
, brldloo, wlntor 7177.
66 ~uildlng Supplies horea blanlr.ate
. Weatarn
1870 Pontloc. 4 dr. lOden .
baoto. 1114-1188·328D.
p .o.. p.b. 1400. 814-892 ·
,
Building moteri81o
AT otud : A. Q. H.A. Popor ·_3:-2:-7::-o::.-::---:--::---block, brick, aewe, pipe1, Lion r1nd1011 of both Joe 1
w l ndowo. llntolo, otc . R...i!..ttt.... Boro,provon HARTS Uood Coro, Now
CleudeWintera. Rio Grande, producer, limtted booldnga. ijaven Weat Virglnle. Over
o:.;C:o:li:ll:1:4:·:24=6=·~&amp;:1:2:1:.= : I 304-414-4228, 304-474- 20 leu ••ponolve .... In
3403.
otock.

=

66 Pets for Sale

LAROE duckl, 30 4 -11751138
. ·
TURKEY hono • tomo,
304-171 -22111.

HILLCREST KENNEL. ·
Boordlng oil brooda. AKC
R.o g. Dobermono pupo o.ld
Doberman Stud Service .
Coli 4411-77911.
64

Hay

&amp; Gra·in

DRAQONWYND CAnERY
· KENNEL . AKC Chow Mixed hoy. 11 .10 bole. Coil
puppiee. CFA Himalayan. 814-379-21117 .
Perlian and SilmeM kltteno. Coli 441 -3844 otter Conditioned hay. ear corn.
4PM.
Coli 814-849-2870 .

t , :l , lf ... HI K E I

ootlmotoa. Call 814-2511182.
PAINTING · interior ond
oKierior. plumbing, r - g.
aome remodeling. 20 yn .
oxp, Coil 114-381-8112.
Mo~~:um Roofing lo Spout.
ing. 30 yHrnexperience ,
opeclollzlng in built up roof.

Calll14·388-18117.

HOWARD L. WRITESIEL
ROOFING COMPANY .
Qu tter•· Downapoutl- NewRopolr-Guttor Pointing Storm Doore • Wlndowe.
Free Eetime't ea. Pho,-e
114-949-2213 or 11 , 4.
992-2781 .
~

\

RON'S Tolovlolon Sorvlco.
Spoclollzlng In Zenith ~nd
Motorola , Ouezar, alnd
houeo cello. con 6711-2398
or 4411-24114.
F 1o K r ... Trlmmlns. otump
rornovol. Coll875-1 331 . ,
RINGLE'S SERVICE ••Po·
rlenced roofing, lnclud"g
hot tor oppilcotlon.......... .
tor, llioctriclon, m-.. Coli
304-875-2011 or 171 4580.

1877 FORD Movorlct .
power otoering, outomotlc 1----------,tronomllllon. olr condition- · Wotor Wollo . Commorot.l
lng 40.000 octuol miloo. ond Domootlc . Toot ho"'.
304-773-11170.
Pumpo Solei ,ond Sorvlfr .
304 -895-3802.,
..
1877 Muotong Cobrell, 1 -------~--''302 on gino, 4 spood, Got your torptt In ollip
oxcollont cond . 304-1178· ohopo . Wotor,.movoi,FRlE
2089 .
ESTIMATES, FURNrTURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN
72 OLOS Dolto 81, good lo STEAMER 1114-448-2107.
cl . . n condtllon, 1140 .
304-171-2291 ovenlngo.
STARKS T,.o Trimming ·•
78 FORO Grond Torino .
n-o body worlc. 304-8822881 .

Removal . Munl -beckhoa

11&amp; . hour, lnourod, froo
ootlmotoo, 304-171·2010.

AKC Registered Cocker E•cohni quollty hoy. About
Spenlol obi pupplu, 8 wto. 700 boloo with oooy occooo
old reody to go. 1100 ooeh. et laahar farm in Rutland.
E • R Troo Sorvlco. fully
Coil 448·1824.
1871BUiCKotationw1f1Dn, lnourod,lroeootlmouo .
About 400 boloo ot Goobol good
running condition. Phone 814-3117-01'31 . coil
Anguo Form In Coolville.
• oftor 5 .
Podlgroo ·ROK robblto . Plueh Coil ovonlngo or woetondo 1200. 304-175·1 117.
whho liko fur. Bluoo, lilaco. I t 1-814-117-3838:
39 CHEVY ..don.
chocoloteo, block . 1114Plumbing
9811-4134.
Good quolity Hoy. Novor firm. 304·1178·2102 . .Coli 82
only
If
intorootod.
lit
Haatlnli!
wet. Contoct Opel Fltzpo."trict. St. Rt. 189 . Phone
67
Musical
Wllkeovllle 814·11118· 3786 .. 72
Trucks for S•le
I nstrumanta
CARTER 'S PLUMIIINQ
'
300 boloo hoy . 11 .00 por
AND HEATING
77 Ford T Bird ••c. cond ..
bolo. 1114-117-3531 .
Cor . Fourth ond Plno
75
Dotoun
8·
210
runogood,
Epiphone R ivlert aemi ·
Phone 4411:3888 or 4411·
Muotong wrecked . Coil 4477
hollow body gultor. o•cel· HAY for aale, aquare • 88
lont cond .. 1100 with round boloa, coli 304-882· 448-1111111 ovonlngo .
hardahell 0111 . Electra 3110.
1974 Kirkwood mobile
Electrical
'Flying v· model suitor like ~;::;:=~;::;~;;;: homo 12xl0 oncl OCCOOOO· 84
new. UOO with herdoholl lit
Refrigeration
rioo. Coli 448-4782.
cue. Coli 814-388-9808.
. 65 Seed lit Fertilizer

..~Evening television listi"ngs----------------~--------------...., .

1~00. ~ ~~==;==~===

l/4/83

l.

Wanted to leaae tobecco
poundoso lor 1983. 11142118·11134.

. . .. .
-·- ..... . ......
'

71

1871 lntornotlonol 11100
Serlu 345. Runo good .
11 .000. 114·892-11111 .
1975 Dodge P . U . with
topper. Iii ton 225 I cyl .
Standord . 114-848·21117.

'

Autos for S•l•

1878 CHEVY pickup, now
engine , e cyl. atandard,
S2,1100. Coli otter II p .m .
304..711-3470.

matters.
9:00 U (I) ffi Knight Ridar Mi-

8:00 • (I) IIl • ()) ® • I])
Nowo
(I) Vlcloo Jukobo•
IIJ' Tic Toe Dough
([) cairo~ Burnett
CD Nowo/Sports/Weother
IIl ® 3-2·1, Comoct
Wonder Women
6:30
Cil CD NBC Nowo
CIJ Boy M- Girl Bmy
Crystal ho&amp;tl this look at the
singles scene.
(I) MOVIE! 'Tho Gilded

-

·c~go '

CD McOon. Toen Sporto·

•·.,

rePeir. Guarenteed work .
Coil 814-2111-111120 or
1114-2&amp;1-1207.

Ill Dr.

Who

(fi)Ovor Eooy
7:00 allJ P.M. M~gazlne
~ 1])NCAA- · Boakotboll
" •'

Report

1IJ Wlnnoro
•IIJ Entortainmont Tonight
CD
CltorUe'o Angelo
Tic Toe Dough
()) illJ Mocllloii-Lohror

a e())

, 1:30

General Hauling

Report
(]I Nowo
(jJ Pooplo'•

a
e

Vena lit 4 W.O.

Court

(I) Uo Dotoctor

HBO M-Ine
CD ESPN SportaContor
1IJ N8A
Bool&lt;etboll:
Waahlngton M Atlanta
IIl
IIl Fomlly Feud

a

()) Bueineas Report

®
®

Vou illkod FOI" It
American lntereatl
ff2l Entertainment
Tonight

- ~.·

•w•y or eomething movH? ·
We'll do ft . CoN448-31&amp;9 or
1114-256·19117 oftor 8. ,

e

-rr, •

Now hauling limeetone for
drlvewaya, top toil for yard a

8:00 •
(]) 'Cl) , Power~ of
M.nttew St. Matthew e ~e ­
plores 1 computer dating
aervtce for geniuses . (60

'

• 1111 dirt. Coli 1114-31177101 . .
,• .

- - - --'-- --lc-

min.,

.

I]JMOVIE: 'QueatforFiro'
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho Tender

·,

Cil I Spy
(J) Tonnlo: 1883 Delrio
. Cup Opening Round · USA
vs. Argontlna • Boot
Slngln -ch 'A' or ' B'
. IIl • (jJ llonoon
eiiJ ® Oukoo of Houord
· Bo end Luke become big

Orovol or fill dirt. Dollvered.
Coil 814-992-3858.

" '

JIMS WATER SER.VICE .
Coil Jim Lenior. 304-•111 ·
7387 . ·,

,

,

ypholstary

T.-p'

brothers to an underprilltl- ·
~lid tHTl· lgllr. ~80 min.)

IIl ® Woohlnston Wooi&lt;/
Paul Duke ia joined

,_evlew
by top Washington ;ournal-

..

--·

iata analyzing ·the week 'l

,.WI.

e

..

.

MOVIE: 'Tho Moon·

e

~

ere hired to pr01ect a tehwi:sion news team : j60 min.)
(f) Rich Linle'a Robin
Hood The master impressklnist brings the Sherwood
Forest characters to life.

- I]J MOVIE: ' OiothWioh II '
IIJ D en.Toloo of tho Gold

Monkey Pri ncess Koji helps
Jake find a kidnapped bride .
(60 min.)

a

IIl ® Folcon Croat

(fil NeW'Iwetch

.INN Nowo

10:30 (I) Star Time

(I)

'
Need . aomethlng haule'd

CIJ legislative Weekly
CID Cllalic Country
t :IO IIl MOVIE: 'Goolight'
9:45 IIl TBS Evening News
10:00 D (I) CD Remington

IIJBob N - . . Show

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAiR
SERVICE coil City Furniture
304-1175-21108.

MOWRhl Upholotory Itt.
1 lox f24. l't. Ploooar1t .
304-871-41114.

covers evidence proving
that J .R. is illegally shipping
oi l to an embargoed coun . try . (60 m.n .)

Steele Remington and Laura

. . '7t ()) a I]) ABC Newo
a IIlllD CBB Newo

SEWING Moclil.,o ropolro.
oorvlce. Authorized llngor
Soloo • Service lhor,oro
Scloooro. Fobrlc lho, ,
Pomoroy. 992-2284 .

·TRISTATE
UPHOLI:rERY llfOP
111J. leo.-A.... Olllpolio
441-7133 of 441-1133 .

()) 700 Club
IIl Cll CiZ Renegades
!PREMIERE}
.
D IIl ® Dollao Bobby dis·

e
a

Dependable w11her-dryer

87

chael returns to his homelawn only to get caught up
in
a
money-laundering
scheme. (60 min.)

fVENINQ

·'

Lowrey Mogle Genie 88
organ with bench . Hee
double key boord, podolo,
rythm, upper • lower
keyboard preaeta, plua other
feeturea . Some booke
Included. 614-992-711117.

' 80s with a w eekly re view
of economic and investment

FRIDAY

1:30 Cll
()I At e..
iJRIMIEREI Sat. Volon1lno
end PFC. Tony llotor lry to
CDOil up a got-rich ochomo .
()) ® Woli Woot
L - Rukoy~o. . · 'vzeo tho

..

..

SE ~IO U!SLY. M I ~TER ~ I
. R:E.AU.Y H AVE N' T $ EGN
ANYONE LIKE THAT Al-L
PAY

00 'iO U KNOW
HOW MANY ¥U ~~
J..IK! THAT COM ~

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Coflo814-387 ·
7471 or 814-3117·0691 .

• -horo, c~ryo,., relrlgon.
to.., r -. lkasgo Ap.
Efllon.., opt . In Rio Orondo, pllonoN, Upper l'llver Rd. ,
fum . oil utJitiM pold . Coil booide ltono Creot Motel.
448..01117.
448-7381.

~ME&amp;ODY,

5TRAN ~ I:'R~

It

73

1:-:-::-::--------- - 'oooo UBED APPLIANCE&amp;

11

Tool box for 8 ·10· PU. iLl
4411-2581.
,.
•

86

SWAIN
AUCTION 1o FURNITURE
12 OAvo St .. OoHipoilo. King
cool• wood hootoro, wlth
' len t458, - box IPrins •
motmoo 1100, firm 1120,
oolo-lov-ot • oholr 1198,
lovo HOta 170, now -1 •
wood heotoro u low 11
1388 with blowora, uoed
cool • wood. hootoro, now
dlnot ooto 1100 a up,
rolrlsorotora, rongoo, bunk
bodo comploto •199, bunkloo mott-•o •40, cheoto;
d - o . TV'o. Coli 441131119.

Tt... Daily Sentinel- Page

79 HARLEY Low Rldilr~
·. w
I·
lion. extroo. 14~00 . o .
304· 372-2910. .
.

3308.

MUST Mil now living room
aulto, 304·171· 11182 oltor
5:30p.m.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

11..1. 80 cu. in'.. A-1

1980 KX 125, rod. ...
motaly 1110 mllu, 3114-

1982 CHEVY truck, hoovyd·
uty '.4ton, 4 _.t, V· l, only
4,000 mlloa . 17 , 500 .
304-11711-1875 ovenlngo.

prlv- both, 1... flo..-. 845
2nd. Ave. , Golllpollo. Coli
441 -2215 .
.

:';";~;!~ r= ·~ohrtl'(!0~:

Seers, deluxe continoue

NW. cor ..dio for Citotlon or
Chovotto . 1114-882-3442 . .

69 For Sale or Trade

with

JACKSON ESTATES ' Equol
Houolng Opportun~y· hu
one bedroom apanmenta
r•t otortlng ot 1157 per
month end two bedroom.

Top qi:.olity hotching white
ollky eggo n .oo • dozen .
Off 218. 2 'h mi. on Little
Bull Skin Rd at J.M. Teylor.

RCA otoroo phono. f!Onoolo .

For Laase

Nlcioy tumlohed mob. homo
In city. Adults only. Coli
448-0338.

41

1 coffee table
47'h•1B'h•15'h ln . ond 1
end toblo 2&amp;.18\iodO\io
with light w.. nutllnloh f30.
oloo light wolnut 7 drower
dreeeer with lerge mirror
•&amp;&amp; . 32•63· 174 ploceo
brown underpinning for 1 .
mobile homo Ulld jUit 1
yoor come off a 1 4•70
mobile home. long piecea
meeaure 32 ", ahort piecea
21 •• end 10 inchee acro11,
enterlock in 1 metal frame,
wood grain tiniah. Cell after
liPM, 446-30116 .

154 MIIC. Merchendlae KIT 'N' CARL Yl!= ••
Maple cabinet. Exc. cond.

...

Friday, Mardi 4, I 983

(jj) Masterpiece Theatre
'Winston Churchill: The

Wilderness Years.· Churchill
s pells ou[ [he danger of Hi tler . (60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
• In Search of.. ..

country music get-.together.

1:00

Joan
® MOVIE: 'Scream and
Scream Again'
Ill (jJ lllewo
1:15 (I) MOVIE: 'Only Whari I
.
Laugh'
1:30 (]) My Uttle Margie
(II I Married

CD

- ee

ee
e

Tllml"fty Wynette, Weylon
Jtnntnga lnd other country
stars join George for this
I

Midnight

II (11 CNN Headline News

e

Laugh Trax
1:45 1IJ MOVIE: ' Happy Birth·
day, Wanda June'
(I)
NBC l\lewo
2:00 D
Overnight

. CIJ MOVIE : 'The Shootisl'
(]) Bachelor Father

2:15
2:30

(l) Newi/Sign Off
(iJ CNN Headline News
(I) Ulo of Riley

(]) ESPN SponaCenter

IIJ.Sign OH
3:00· D I]J News
(I) 700 Club
3:15 Cil MOVIE: ' Death Wish II'
3:30 D Cfl ~gnJHI.
(I) MOVIE; 'Ouest for Fire·
({) Future Sport

3:46 (]) MOVIE: ' Biondie's Big
Moment'
4:00 CD NCAA
Boaketball
Report
4 :30 CD R~• Bagley
({) Tennis: 1983 Dawis
Cup Openihg Round - USA
vs. Argentina - 2nd Best
Singles Match 'A ' or

IIl

U.

NCAA

Singer'

® Hanna's Ark

MOVIE:

0

'Jazz

Basketball:

lllino's at Indiana

9 :30 U Ill CD Teacheo's Only
(j) Together in Concert:
Pete Seeger and Arlo
(;uthrie
•
(]]) Or. Who Movie
1 0:00 a llJ m Labor in tho

Mr . Drummond becomes
Arnold 'S roommate _(Closed
Captioned }

()) MOVIE : 'Chariots of
Fire·
Ill MOVIE: 'The Greet
Train Robbery'

CIJ College Basketball
Cll NCAA 8ooketball:
Houston at Baylor

IIl G CiZ T.J. Hooke•
Ill ()) 00 Wizards and
Warriors Prince Erik is
fo rced to postpone his wedding to fight off an assau lt
by evil Prince Dirk Black·
poo l. (60 min.)

!lll Wasn't That A Time:

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8:30 D (I) (!) Silver Spoons
9:00 D Cil CD Mama's Family

M am a gets a job as a recep·
ti o nist .
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makes a decisioh about a
pill-using
t eenager. Gopher ' s uncle fall s for a ship
employee and a sportsman
meeu an athletic womart.
(60 min.) rCiosed Cap[ioned ]

ESPN

IIl Tuohl

SponsCenter

(jj) Once Upon a Time
fl) Best of Madame ' s
Place

· 11 :30 U CII CD Satu•day Night
Uve

SATURDAY

'

(1) God Haa the Anawer
Memories
With

Lawrence Welk .
8:30 II Ill CD NBC Newo
(I) MOVIE: 'Rod Badge Of
Courage'

IIJD en News
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(I) To Be Announced

1111 OOrciod lotloll IO
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Mac In Coocen Captured
live at the LA Forum, this

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34 Actress,

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33 Bard 's

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ACROSS
10 European
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41 Nuisance
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Promised Land Mik e Jentheaters
I Fonns
sen repo rts on the labor
2 Nitwit
movement in Amerit:j. 160 12 Shy of
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fishy
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15 Portuguese
4 Healthy look
CD MOVIE: ' Ticket to
title
5 -mache
Yesterday' I ADo,.er
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!6 Mohammedan 6 Open
19 Printing
25 South African ·
Southern California at ·
saint
7 His (Fr. l
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27 Grahatp
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17 Alder
8 Valuable
22 Amphibian. or Lome
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tree ·
discovery
genus •
29 Risible
IIl Ill en Fantasy Island
An author wants to f il'!d the
18 caspian
9 On horseback 23 Designating 30 Desert spots
perfect child and the fiancee
sturgeon
10 Hero's
24 "Lion in
31 Respond •
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love
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30
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21 Entrance
16 Stralagem __queen__ 3U.e..t bit
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23 Irascible

8:00 D I]J CD Oiff'rent Strol&lt;eo

4:45 Ill MOVIE: 'The Tender

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" dlat urbld" by the dln- "NOISE

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Here's how to work It : '.

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia
One letter aimply atandt for •nother. In th is sample A·ll '
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, rtc:. Single lehera . ..
apoetrophes, the leneth and lormati9n of th1 words are all •

hint&amp;. Eaeh day the code leUen are different
ORYPTOQUOTES
CL

ACXI

ABQQBKX
KXP

C
BWP

UKK
Y C I.

OCXXKU QPCWX

'

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Yeolenllly'o Cryploquote: NEVER DO A nD NG YOU FINIJ
DIFFICULT, BECAUSE ANOTIIER PERSON WHO F!NOS IT
EASY WILLBEATYOU AT THE GAME.- WILLIAM MOIUUS
'

�Page - 12-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 4,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Californians
return home
By KIM MILLS
AssociatL'II Pre&gt;s Writer
Thousands of Californians re-

turned to their flooded homes to
begin bailing water or shOveling
mud as skies cleared after a storm
that caused $100 million in damage
and lef1 . eight counties disaster
areas_
But in Alviso, a low·lyingSan Jose
neighborhood transfol'!ned into a
6-foot.&lt;Jeep lake, 1,700 people may
not be able to return home for up to
10 days, officials sa id Thursday.·
And as the season's most power·
lui storm moved east, the National
Weather Service warn{'!! "there's
another just around tlle corner."
The new storm shoulctmove into
northern California late Saturday or
early Sunday, then travel south,
said forecaster Dan Cooper.
"It shouldn' t be nearly as strong"
as the previous storms, he said. "If!
am wrong. we're in trouble because ·
the ground Is still very saturated.''
Seventeen people died .and more
than 4() were injured in the vicious
onslaught that began last Friday.
More than 10,700people were forced
from their homes. 60 houses and .
businesses were destroyed and1.685
damaged. the sta te Office of
Emergency Services reported late
Thursday.
As Thursday's stonn drifted east,
heavv snow fell over parts of ·
Arizooa, southern Nevada and
western Utah. Nine inches of snow
covered Utah 12 at Bryce Canyon
and highways east of Monticello
were closed. Flagstaff, Ariz., got
half a foot of snow.

---Local briefsE,F.c motorists
'

to get feed to cattle stranded on . ~
flOOIIed field south of Chlco, and
pack mules carried supplies to 2ll
people ilia Monterey County canyon
hlt by mudslide!i and floodlng.
·
Elsewhere In the country, Kansas
City, Mo., enjoyed record 'l'Megree
weather Thursday, and Milwaukee
saw its earliest 7·2 degree-day on
record.
Tornado watches were Issued
Thursday In the Texas Panhandle
as at least two twisters touched
down. but caused only minor
damage.
President Reagan Inspected
some of the storm-damaged areas
of California on Thursday as lle flew
by helicopter to Los Angeles fJ:'OOl
his ranch riear Santa Barbara. A
spokesman said he would expedite
Gov. George Deukmejlan'sreques!
to make federal aid available.
'Tm:gi-ateful for the president's
promise for swift action," Deukmejian said. Earlier, the governor
declared states of emergency In
eight counties.
Sheriff's deputies called off a
search Thursday night for Angel
Garcia Sr., missing after his
rowboat overturned in the rainswollen San Gabriel River near the
City of Industry, 18 miles east of
downtown Los Angeles.
Authorities were able to rescue
Garcia's 11-year-old Son Angel Jr.,
and a nephew, 13-year-old Fran·
· cisco Reyes, said Deputy Kevin
Carney.
In Ventura County, engineers

!rom the Office of Emergency
Services and the Army Corps of
Up to 9 feet of fresh snow In the . Engineers worked to shore up Slml
past week in tlle Sierra Nevada left . Valley's . earthen Sinaloa Dam,
about 30 feet on the ground near which began to erode late Wednesday as water poured over the-top.
Squaw VaUey. Calif.
, ,
Northern Californians adopted Residents were evacuated from
resourceful stmtegies for roping as more Ulan 1,400 homes below the
rains let up: a rancher rented boats dam.

oon secure plates

Residents with last names starting with the Initials E, F and G
will be securing their new auto license plate stickers d\lling the
month of March at the Deputy Motor Vehicle Reg1strar'~.ll!6
Mulberry Ave. 1be office Is open !rom 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. anb 2 to 4: :II
p.m., Monday through Fl1day. closing at noon on Thun;day; Frlday
evenings the additional hours of 5: :II to 7 p.m. and on Saturday
mornings from 8 a.m, to 12 noon.

ment In such areas of the economy
as· construction, a seasonal variation that exaggerated the true
employment picture.
There was little over-the-month
chimge in unemployment among
the major population groups, although joblessness among adult
males rose 0.3 percentage point to
9.9 percent in February, stU! well
below the December peak of 10.1
percent.

(Continuedfrornpage1)

Unemploymen·1t--.

Letart Township Trustees will meet 'I'I!esday at 7 p.m. at Letart

Falls.

.to&amp; In the sooth Tuesday.

22.7.

For the next three months, res.ldents are requested to use caution
when burning. High winds, high temperatures and low humidity are
predicted for the next three days. Residents are asked to refrain
from any burning at a:ll during this three day pertod. At other times,
the Shade River Forestry Division asks residents never to leave fire
unattended and to burn only after 4 p.m.

SYLVANIA COLOR SETS

The decline in civilian unemploy·
ment In January, private economists noted, masked thedlsappearanceofsome600,000peoplefromthe
labor force.

_$298

AND UP
.,

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

RIDENOUR'S . GAS SERVICE
985-3307

.

CHESTER. OH._

•'

.

Jobs bill: . good or bad for Ohio?
story on Page IH

,

.

·

••

.

•

•

tntmt

subsidies, we!Iare or unemployment benefits.
effect April 1, following the end of a winter
moratorium on service shutoffs for lack of payment.
-Eligible customers m11st apply for the time
payment plan no. later than Aprlll:l, and their bills
He said he was pleased that the .utilities ''have
must be brought up' to date no later than Nov. 30.
responded. to my request for a reasonable payment
plan.'' But he said thatevenwlth it, therewlllbesome · .. · ·· --Cu$tomers ·applying for the program may not be
who will not be abje to pay their back bills.
denied P¥"!1clpation because they have defaulted In
'"This Is not the ultlml!te answer but It is a step .
the past. However, the (!ne-eighth payments wUl be
forward, " he said.
on the total owed and not just that accrued during the
moratorium.
. The program, which the .governor said will be
.
Celeste said each utilitY company will Inform
approv~ shOrtly by the public utilities commission,
provides that:
delinquent customers who are subje&lt;:t to termination
-Residential customers who are .unable to pay
.of service on Aprll1 of the availability of ihe special
plan.
·
·
their bills on April 1 wUI be allowed to pay one-eighth
He
said
the
utilities
also
w1ll
infonn
the
energy
of their debt, in addition to the current bill, each
month. ·
assistance, welfare and unemplOYment offices within
their services areas of those. households which may
.:...These customers must establish their inability to
qualify.
pay by having qualified for government energy

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohlq's mild winter
eased tlle problem of utility disconnections among
the non-paying, but the bad economy apparently
moved In to reinforce the statewide dilemma.
With the weather outside "looking more like Palm
Beach" - it was almost 80 degr~ In Columbus on
Friday - Gov. Richard Celeste noied .that many
thousands of Ohioans are in financial straits and are ·
Ul)&lt;lble to keep up with their ever-increasing utility
bills.
He announced a new plan to allow unemployed and
other money-strapped Ohioans, delinquent in their
bills, an opportunity to catch up with Installment .
payments.
Celeste told a news conference that the state's
utilities all have agreed to the plan which w1ll take

SHOP .ELBERFELDS
THIS WEEKEND
SPECIAL SALE PRICES ON
.

'

SPRING DRESSES'
HA~F

SIZES, MISSES SIZES .
JUNIOR SIZES &amp; GIRLS' SIZES
LAY AWAYFOR EASTER!
OPEN
TONIGHT

. USE OUR
2ND ST.

FREE PARKING··

TIL 8:00

Celeste said the program is in addition to and does
not affect existing installment payment plans used by
individual utilities to prevent disconnections.
Ohlo Consumers' Counsel William Spratley, who
also appeared at the news ronterence, said he was
pleased with the lnterlm plan
Spratley Said he also was gratified that the utilities
commission "has recognized ·tl)e need for long-term
solutions (to utility disconnection problems) and has
scheduled, In fact, a public hearing to begin June 14 to
explore the issue further."
The ronsumers ' . ro~nsel said that he. like Celeste, is
aware that some Ohioans still will be uhable to pay
their bills Iinder the new plan .
He said he Is hopeful that consumer groups and
ot)1ers who see the installment plan as inadequate
cooperate to seek permanent answers.
'

$5.4 million Racine, Syracuse ~OAL _ seespossihle pr~c.edent ·
sewer system now Opera~ional ·m .,~~ . longwall deciSion . ·
Porter hired an engineering firm
11mes-Senllnel staff
and later when EPA became areal·
SYRACUSE -Development of a tty a grant for the system totaling 75
sewage system for the communi· pereent of the cost was acquired
ties of Racine and Syracuse'25 ye- , through the EPA.
ars ago was considered by some an
Porter states that a combination
"Impossible dream." Today, how- loan aud grani was secured
ever.' the system Is a reall\Y.
through the EPA and Federal
Aftei: 12 years c( planning and Home Adrnlnlsttatlon. A 25 percent
two years of construction a loail was securad from the FHA at
$5,400,000 seWage system Is In full trve percent Interest. Money was
\operation In the villages of Syra· also secured from the Slate Revolvcuse and )laclne. Plans for the sys· Ing fund which has since been paid.
tern t:iegan In 1968 and were In the beglnQ1ng the two villages
completed in November, 1!112.
planned ,separate systems but this
In the early 1961Bordersweredls- plan was considered 1oo costly. The
patched by the Ohio River Sanlta· Syracuse-Racine Regional
tion CommiSsion tor villages along District ~as fonned, thus reducing
the Ohio River to begin planning for the cost to each village and maklilg
eventual construction of sewage the project more feasible.
treatment plants. Frank W.· (Bill)
The sewage system was a proPorter, Pomeroy attorney. who duct of the two village counclls, and
serves as solicitor for the villages of each share equal the responsibility
· Syracuse arid Racine - and the for the system.
sewage district - was lnstrumenInstrumental in Securing the sew. tal in the development of the sys· age system -In addition to Porter,
tern. The Environmental mayors of both villages and council
1Protection Agency (EPA) was not
members - was the late Freeland ·
even In existence at the time vii· NoiTis. Norris served on the sew·
.lages were notified on the matter.
ap board and obtained the neces·
By KATIE CROW

sewer

sary easements.

Originally the plan was·to charge
each customer a connection fee.
Rather than charge the CDIIIJI!Ctlon
fee, which would have been a sizeable amount for each cwitomer to
pay lrl a lump sum, the sewage dis·
tr1ct chose to go t9 a user cliarge.
The cost for each potential custer
mer was OJie..half of the estimated
mnthly blll, $8.40 for a pertod of 22
months, according to Gary Norris,
secretary -treasurer of the
. Syra_cuse-Racine Regional Sewage
rMstrlct.
·
The mo~ey collected over the 22
months was ~ to pay the Interest
on the money borrowed !rom the
FHA. The amount due the FHA is
$1,200,000 at five pe'rcent. The user
charge collected, in lieu of a tap fee,
was also used for operations until ·
the. system was completed. On
Wednesday, Nov. 12, 19Sl bjds for
!lie sewage project were opened.
Onlarlo Pipeline, Inc., PittSford, N.
Y., was awarded the bid for distribution of lines and the Conti CoJll.,
Lowellville, Ohio, was awarded the
(Continued on page A3)

Graveside military

UNEMPLoYMENT - ctvWan IDIIlmploymen' held a&amp; 16.4
percent In February .as large
numbers of JobleM Americans
awaited fwtber signals of bnproved hiring prospec&amp;s before
re11111111nt1: their seiii'Ch for work,
the govenunent reported Friday. (AP IMerpboto).

story oil Page A-4

'

1982
. of Labor

SPQrts .........., ................. C. J.!!
TV guide ........... , .......... lnser1

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press W~r ,

8
Source :

Wilson: 'not gUilty' of conspiracy

Middleport-Pomeroy...:...Galllpolis-Point Pleasant

by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.

9.0-

.

tmts·

The forest fire season has begun accorotng to a reminder Issued

- '

-Whites. 9.2, up from 9.1.
-Blacks. 19.7, down from 20.8.
-Hispanics, 15.8, up from 15.5.
The number of people forced to
accept · reduced hours or only
part-time work fell from 6.8milllon
to 6.4 million. The number of people
out of work for six months or more,
which had risen steadily in the
second hal! of 19S2, was unchanged
in February at 2.7 million.

,

.

Celeste announces installment utility bill plan
STARTING AT

Forest fire ,·season ·unJ;(...e rway

.

I

Bunt Burkhan and the Junkyard Dogs will provide square dance
and country rock music tor weekend dances to be held at the Robert
Plckettfarrn.Saturday'sdancew1llbe9-1andSunday'sdancew111lle
from 6 to 10 p.m. The public Is Invited. The Pickett farm Is located on
Slate Route 681 at East Darwtn.

9.5-

·

LoCal ............. ~ .................. $.11

State-Natloiu!I ........... ........ D-1

.

· Ten Meigs emergency runs

.

story on Page A-3

SPRING SAVINGS

Asuit totaling $63,50125 was filed In Meigs County Common Pleas ·
Court by N;ltiDnwide Insurance and Dorothy Parsons, New Haven,
against Steven Jenkins. Racine.
The suit Is theresultofanautomoblleaccldentthatoccurredMarch
5, 1981 In Point Pleasant. According to the entry Nationwide P&lt;lid
· $60,000 at the death of April Louise Parsons and the balance for
.
damages to the Par!i!&gt;ns car.
· A suit for support was filed by Laurte Cardillo, Gallipolis, against
Antony Earl Cardillo, Langsville.

•Seasona!ly
Adjusted

h !II. • , ........................ D.f

Oa.,..neds ....-................... D-5-8
:FAIItorlal ........................... A..z

.

Accident results in money suit

10.5-

Along the River ...... ~ ......8-HO
Area l)ea(;Jis, •••• ~ •••••• •••• ~ .....A--6 ·

8¥

·'

Louise Eshelman resigned her post as president of the
Harrisonville Senior Citizens due to ill health. Her resignation wa.S
effective as of Feb. 22.

..

Within tlle various groups of
workers, tlle jobless rates were:
-Adult women. 8.9 percent •.down
from9.0.
-Teenagers, 22.2, down from

_

Health forces resignation

}unkyard Dogs will perform

.

Ohio housing program under way

.. '

Don Wilson, Middleport, recently Shot a holl}ln-one at Riverside
Golf Course, Ma5on. Bob Bowen, f'omeroy, witnessed the shot.
wi!soD made the hole-In-one onnumberl2. a160yarddrlve, with a
seven Iron.

Percent of
. Work Force

Times-Sentinel

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thul'$(lay nlght ln. :
the Ohio Lottery's daily gim)e, "The Number," was 487. . . . ; '
In the "Pick 4'' game, played five times a: week, the winning ~·, :
number was 1098.
· ·
· ·
' ' ·

. .

.Admitted--John Hquck, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Merle Davis, Clarence McNeal, Gregory Winebrenner, Harry Wyatt, Elizabeth Yost, Eltzabetll Guess, Betty
Carpenter, Naomi Floyd.

· Today's

Sunday ihrough Tuesday:
.
'' ••
A chance of showers eaeh day. 1Qgh$"1rom the mid 60s to near 'l9 · :
Sunday., from the J1lid 5os In the north to the mid 60s In the !1011111.' :,
Monday and mostly In the 50s'fuesda.v. Lows near 50 Sunday, In the . ;.
low.to mid~ Monday and from the mid :Mls.lnthenorthtothe·mld ,.

Middleport
golfer gets hole in orw
'
.

Meigs County emergency squads made 10 runs on Thursday.
They included: 8:24 a.rq., Pomeroy to Wo!I Pen Road for Bertha
Russell, taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 10:44 a.m. Racine
Unit treated Jessica Kimes at her residence; 11:32 a.m., TupperS
Plains took Leona Custer from Joppa Road to Camden-Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg; 1:03 p.m., Racine firemen extinquished a
brush fire on Sugar Run Road; 2 p.m. Racine extinguished a bruSh
fire near the Herman Carson residence; 2: 15 p.m., the Racine Fire
."l)epartment extinguished a minor fire at the Dan Shain residence,
Main St. ; Pomeroy at6: 35p.m. went to Landmark for JlmForeman.
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 6: 42 p.m. the Racine Fire
Department extinguished a bruSh fire at John Ours; 7: 19 p.m. the
Middleport Unit transpo!Wd Mike Mariley from the flrehol)se to
Veterans Memorial Hosplial; 8: 10 p.m. the Middleport Fire
Department extinguished a car fire on the Flood Road, owner not ·
Identified,

.._

Cloudy tonight. Lows between :p and 60. Breezy with showers and ·
!l(lSslble thunderstorms likely Saturday. Highs bet)lfeen 70 and 75.' ~
The 1chance of rain Is ID pei1CE!Ilt tonight and 60 percent Saturday. ~
Extended Ohio Forecast · · ' .t""'
"~
.

.Winninl( Ohio lottery number

Letart trustees to meet

11.0-

10,0·

.'•

r;peat her forecast

Veterans Memorial information

Nation's jobless

•

19~ ~

.

servrces set
Graveside military services Will
be held for Homer Powell Saturday,
· March 5, at 1: l:l p.m. at Chester
Cemetery by Drew Webster Post39,
American Legion.
·

WATER BED SALE

Tlmes-Sentlllel staff
~VILLE

..:... A possible
pJ'l'Ce!]ent may arllle from a
decision by the Ohlo Depart- ,·
. -ment of Natural Resou~ to 1
modify SouthernOhio CoalCo.'s
application to continue !ongwall
mining at Meigs ·MJne No. 2.
That's what Citizens Otganized Aga)nst ' Longwalllng, the
gra..p protesting damage reportedly caused by longwalling,
is hoping Will be the reSult of an
informal conference at 1 p.m.
. today.
More than 300 people, IncludIng coal company representatives and miners. are expected
to pack the WUton Elementary
School auditorium here, accordIng to Betty Wells, COAL
president.
Mrs. Wells said the organization has spent the past several
weeks researching mining tech·
niques and preparing testimony
of approximately 35 residents of
northwestern Meigs and eastern
Vinton counties whose inlnetal
rights are owned. by the
company. •
COAL was organized in late
1982 to address damage and loss
of local water supplies allegedly
caused by the longwall device, a
shearing machine praised as the
Industry's safest means of min·
lng coal.
The longwall has been slic·
cessful in Europe and has ·only
recently been Introduced in the
THE MINE - A buDdoze~ ~ves coal past a mine building at a
United States. COAL insists
coal mine nearWDite8vllle, Ohio. Some of the coal gathered at tile mine
through its research longwalllng
comes from longwaDing and has been crUtctzed by owners of the land.
worked well overseas because It
was used thousands of feet
reading on It," she said. "It
longwall has gone through - is
below the surface, whlle locally,
helped
me
un&lt;!.ersland
how
it
repaired:
COAL says longwal!lng has
works. But you're not going to
The offer did not sit well with
been used 300 to 400 feet down.
see anytl:llilgjbe)LdQn'J~ty~rlliln.. _gnd___.MarL
In a move to reduce some .Q1
to
Spezza, two property owners In ·
the friction that hae developed
~tween the company and
No discussion was held. on
Columbia Township whose property have shown . the most ·
COAL in the past few months, . . alterl)atives to longwalllng,
Mrs. Wells explained, and the
dramatic examples of damage
Southern Ohio Coal company
company said It would continue
allegedly caused by longwalling..
officials allowed . six COAL
members, their attorneys and
to buy properly that has been
Both have reportedly negodamaged by the longwall.
tiated unsuccessfully with the
iiledia to tnur the. mine last
Wednesday and see how a
If the company buys the
coal company over a monetary
property, the former owner is
settlement. Both are expected to
longwall works,
Mrs. Wells said the expeallowed to stay and after 18
testify at today's hearing.
In advertisements published
months, has the option of buying
rience was Interesting, but she
the land back wheri damage
In Friday's editions of the
wasn't entirely satiSfied.
Pomeroy-Middleport Dally Sen·
caused by subsidence - the
"It's helped .me considerably,
.
s!nkii\g
of
the
earth
after
a
· (Continued o~ page A3) ·
because I've been doing a lot o.f

see."

1980

1978 IMPALA
4 door1 Small VI, auto., air cond.

'3685
1978 REGENCY .98
4 door, fully equipped.

'5875

$249 9 5

IN lABORATORY - llob Moen, froal, plaat
operatGrof the S~RIIctae Bqloul ~er-

Neatest, Cleannt little car in
town, auto. trans., air torN~ . , rear

COMPLETE AND SET. UP

•

defogger.

'4888

· , BOOKCASE HEADBOARD AND FRAME
COMPLETE WITH .PEDESTAL - DECK - HEATER - LINER ·
FULL WAVE MATTRESS - FILL KIT - WATER TREATMENT - PATCH KIT
COMPLETE AND SET UP

NO PAYMENT JILL MAY

WAYSIDE FURNITURE

GA~LIPOLIS'

1980 \Rabbit
1977 DODGE
1-....:F~I•:.:.t.=btcl:::.. .:. :to;:;..n_ _
'4:..:5:..:9:..:5=---11979 Pinto
1979 Rabbit ·
1975 CHEVY C-10
1980 Chentte
St•nct.rd, to-r- '1995
1979 Horizon
1978 DATSUN
. KIIIIJ Cl;b
'387 5

ABOUT OUR
WAIRANnl CALL JOHN

111111 equlpmeat for the

• trtct Anatment plut and Dale Bart are pletured In
the Jallor!Uory poRion of the cootrol bulkllnl . 'lbe
oonh'ol bidldlar; al8o hoU8el an olllce, .torage rocm ·

t---;;;iiiiE~~-f"iiCONoi\'l~AU~iSs:::-1t--o...CCHlHEAPIES"

LIMITED SUPPLY

~41 THIRD AVE.

0240MNI

'3995 1970 Buick
•200§11974 Pinto
1973 Maverick
'3995 1975 Granada ·
'3995 1976 Monza
'1595 1976 Ford S/W
NATIONWIDE
JIM WALKER, WENDELL VAUGHAN OR BILL HAAS
'

..-r• opiii'1I&amp;D In the ' - "

meiL Cbemlcall are ued lor the bnakdowa of raw
leWap, . pytAeHoo ~hell, lllgeaten! IIIII cJdorlae
ooatrol.

Gallia courthouse coDstrUction siarts Monday
a:ll goes well, according to Brunner, who w1ll
superviSe construction for the contractor.

· ByJEFFG~

,.._ seatlnelS&amp;all

GAI.J:.IPOLIS - Preliminary work for construction of the new Gallla County courthou8e w1ll begin
Monda}', just over two years after Its predecessor
was .deStroyed in a fire. ·
Mike Brwmer of Custom Facilltles Inc.,- general
contractor for till! project, told County cornrnlsslo!!ers
Frlday that workers w1ll spend the llrlt' seoreraJ
· weeks .demolishing the foundation left from the
former courthouse.
·
·
Brunner and rep~tattves of~ of fool' other
. contractors Involved with the project met with the
CDI1IIIIiBslone and tJie architect to maJre arrangl!· ~ts-~m.
The structu~ will be con\pletl!d

,,

,

IIi nine months If

Custom Facilities has hired only one subcontractor - a Marietta excavating fliT(! - for the
project so far, he said.
· Brunner said his firm ''will try to hire as many local
people as possible" to work on the courthouse. But he
added that budget considerations wiU Influence
employment dEcisions. . .
,
"We're going to .give everyone an equal chance,"
. he said. '
Brunner estlmaies !bat at most, 150 people w111 he
working on thecoul1110!JII!at pnetlme. Usually, there
' wiU w1ll be 2!1 \0 31 people, he said. .
/ 'Molt ot the rna~ .used for the project w111 be
plrchased tlu'oo8ll Custom FacUlties' headquarters

sometime after Aprlll, according to the courthouse
In Indianapolis, according _to Brunner. Some items
architect, Stephen Cassaday.
which will be needed dally, such as.concrete, will be
The sprinkler and plumbing contracts will be
.
purchased locally.
negotiated with the present contractors, Cassaday
Plans call for construction of a $2.4 mllllon
_
_said.
four•story courthouiie.
Although some workers will move onto the
Because the romlssloners were unsure of funding,
construction site Monday, the commissioners have
they awarded contracts .in December to complete
not yet chosen it date for a formal groundbreaking
only two of the bulldiJtg's four floors.
The conunlssloners decided to complete the · ceremony.
They have dlsscussed holding the ceremony in
~lldlng when they recently borrowed $1.3 mUIIon
.
about
a week.·
'
from area banks to lieiP finance construction. The
They have also not decided Whether to witlldraw
county w111 also use a!laut $1.1 million In ll)surance
their resolution to raiSe the county sales tax .5.
funds received as a result Of the January 1981 fire .
·(one-half) percent tO help pay for ihe courthouse.
The aeneraJ, electrical and beating and ventilating
If they don't withdraw the resolution, Gall!a County
contracts for the remaining two floors w1ll be bid
residents will vote on the tax hike i)1 November.
I.

~

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