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ThurSCby, October 6, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport; 0!110

·Tourism·pushed in ._fall~dveriising ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohloanswhoafewmonthsagowere
- urged to spend a "Summer Slzzle"
vacation In their )lome ~tate now are
being urged to attend fall and winter
activities bere,as well.
'
It'spartofaSlMJ.COOpromotlonal .
effort unvelled by the Department of
Development today.
Most of the money, $132,COO, will
be used for a ~rtes of radio
commercials over two 10-day periods this month and next. The
commercial hlghllghts fall festivals
and other events around the state:
In addition, the promotion will
Include:
-Cooperating with the Ohio
to
Rose, WendeD Clark, Jolm Wllibarger, Randy Arms ·
with Instructor Aaron "a'"""·

URBAN SOIL JUDGING TEAM - M0111bers of

the Southem Urbl\0 team were, left

to righj, Andy

stories for special travel sections In
newspapers .tbe week of Nov. G-12;
-A 'Buy an Ohio · Holldliy'
promotion In cooperation with the

Ohio Hotel-Motel Association;
FundS for the campaign come
from tbe $10 mllllon which wa,s set
aside In the tWo-year state budget
lor travel and tourtsm.

Weatherforecasl ·

SeePage7

Clear and chliJy tonight. Low
42-46. Wtncts becoming llght and

Sponsors dinner

variable. Mostly sunny Ft1day.
High arOund 70.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Saturday through .&amp;tooday:
Fair on Satunlay. Scattered
showers S!lndll)'. Fair on Mood!~)'.
HJahs from the mld.OOS to low 70s
Saturday and SWiday, !lOOllDg to tiM,
80s on Monday. Lows at night In the

The Mlddl~port United Pentecostal Church wtU sponsor a chlcken
and noodle dinner Friday from 11
a.m. until 3 p.m . The dinner will
consist of ., chicken and ii001i'les1
green beans, coleslaw, rolls, and pie
and will sellfor $3. Deliveries will be
made In Middleport and . Pomeroy
area. Persons may call 992-5981 or

40s.

992-3824.

·ELBERFELDS . I~. POMEROY

FA-LL SPECTACULAR.

County. court roundup

Rookie evens playoff
See

·'

4
•

•
'

e
Voi.32,No.125
Copy•;ghted 1983

.

.)

Weekly sennonette

·Tornadoettes top rival

-

members were, left to righ~ Andy Roo;e, Todd
Hubbard; Randy Arms, Mike Henry and Instructor
Aaron Sayre.

AGRICULTURAL SOIL JUDGING TEAM Southern High School agricultural soU judging team

Meig~ ,County
happenings
.....

•

School carnival set

Four emergency runs were made
' by local units Wednesday the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reported .
At 5: 35 p.m . Pomeroy was called
for Darra Warth, Peoples Terrace,
who was taken to Veterans MemorIal Hospital; at 1:07 a.m. Pome~
to East Main for Christine Peck,
taken to Veterans Memorial; at2: 08 ·
p.m. Middleport to South Fourth for
George Anderson, taken to Holzer
Medical Center; at 8:51 p.!Jl.
TuppersPlainstoSR681forRonnie
Barber Involved in a motorcycle
accldenuaken to Veterans Memortal and later transfe!'J'l'(l to St.
Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg.
.. .

A carnival will he held at
RJvervtew School Saturday Oct. 8.
Chicken and ham ,dJnners will he
served beglnnillg at 5 p.m. and
outs ide games as well as a country
store will begin at 5: 30 p.m. Inside
booths will he open to the public at 7
p.m.

Judgment sought
A judgment was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Floyd 0. Griffith and Glenna M.
Griffith, Galloway against M~bel
Goff, Keith Oiler, Gloria Oiler,
Delmas Goff, all of Rt..l, Langsville,
.and M~lin Goff, Wyandotte, Mi.

Marriage license

Veterans Memorial

. Brannon,

Admitted--H arold
Reedsvllle; Rita HilJ, Racine;
Gerald Eblin, Pomeroy; Darra
Warth, Pomeroy; Holly Green,
Pomeroy.
Discharged--J ohn Edwards, Charles Mugrage, Debora Mu71lins,
Homer Graham, Tommy Boso.

Plan chicken dinner
Achicken and 'noddle dinner will
be held at the SeniorCitizensCenter,
Pomeroy, Friday, Oct. 7, '"from 4
p.m. to 7 p.m.
The dinners wtU consist of
chickens and noodles, coleslaw, roll,
and beverage and will cost $1.50.
There will be an extra charge for
dessert. A square dance will follow
from 7 pm. to 10 p.m. with music by
the Strtng Dusters. Admission to the
dance is $1. The event is sponsored
by the Pomeroy Senior Citizens.

A marrtage license was issued in
Meigs County Probate Court to
Lawrence Dale Shaulis, 22, Athens,
and Alesia Marlene Multlns,l9, Rt. 3,
Albany.

Revival announced
A revival will be held at the
Pomeroy ,Church of the Nazarene
beginning Sunday, Oct. 9 through 16
at 7 p.m. each evening.
The Rev. Clyde B. Rodgers,
evangelist, singer, 'and chaiR artist
wUI be the guest speaker. Glen
McCiung,pastortnvitesthepubllcto
attend.

SUS judging
teams take
top honors

.

H 8
•/

o8
.

*200A&gt;,- OFF All CLOTHING
*200A&gt; OFF ALL FURNITURE

•
Southern High School's Future Farmers of America
(FFA) Soil Judging team took
top honors in both the agticultural and urban contests at the
recent county soil judging contes•.. The contest Is sponsored
annually by the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District
(SWCD). It was held at the
Rodney Chevalier farm in Ches·
ter Township.
High tndtvldua ls were Todd
Hubbard, Randy Arms, and
Mike Henry, first, second, and
third place, respectlvelv in the
agricultural contest. ··In the
urban judging, first place went
to Jolm Wlllbarger with Wendell
Clark and Andy Rose taking
second an d third places,
respectively.
Easiern FFA placed second
and Meigs third .in the urban
contest. In the agticultural
judging, Meigs placed second
with Eastern coming In a close
third.

*20o/o OFF ALL HOUSEWARES
~200fo OFF ·ALL HOME FURNISHINGS
*20% OFF ALL NOTIONS
*200/o OFF ALL ACCESSORIES
. .FREE PARKING

LAYAWAYS WB.COME

SAlE ENDS
SATURQAY, OCT.

8 ~~:"::;,~~~~;;;:;,~~~~

r~==========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Not guilty plea

(Continued from page 1)
Medical Center.
The sisters, in their testimony,
said Pamela, was given her rtghts
on several occasions, and at no lime,
were theyawarethatchargeswould
Sp~ial session
he filed. They also stated that Gary
Wolfe
acted as a friend and they
The M~igs County Budget Comwere
told the questioning was
mission wlil m eet In Sjleclal session
routine.
Ft1day, Oct. 7 at 10a.m. In theofftce
The defendant testified that the
of the county auditor.
baby did not cry when horn nor
move and she felt something had
gone wrong. She also testified that
Trustees meel Friday
she was read her tights by Wolfe and
' Salisbury Township Trustees will
Gerard. She also said at the time of
meet Friday, Oct. 7, at 7 p.m. at
the Incident, after hetng admitted to
Rock Sprtngs Township Hall. The
Holzer Hospital, she was scared,
meeting is open to the public.
confused, depressed and not really
caring what was going on. She also
testified, as did her sisters, tbat she
Plans ear wash
was not aware that crtmlnal
charges woold be Wed;
Junior Modern VVoodmen of
At Wednesday's heai'lng, FrederBurlingham Camp 7230 wtU hold a ick Croiv III, proseclitlng attnmey,
car wash Saturday, Oct. 8, at the presented the state's case. A trial
Pomeroy Fire Station from 9 a .m ., was set for Oct. 31, at 9:15a.m. by
untll4 p.m. Priceis$2 per car.
Judge Knight.

w·r r

SAVE ON EVERY ITEM IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
'

.

Emergency runs

STOREWIDE SALE

HEAR IT
.MRY
FRIDAY
MORNING
____,.,_·FROM
9 A.M..-12
NOON
K 1 N G s L EYON 92 FM
'f

ONLY

$}3 9f

Makes A Great Gift
For
Occasion//

ALL.
NDW

14K GOLD BIRTHSTONE

AND DIAMONDS
NOW

$12995

REG. 1169.95

· SAVE 140.00

20010

OFF

•BULOVA
•SEIKO
•PULSAR
•CARAVELLE

.DIGITAL WATCH .
95 EA.
ONLY

$7

While

lasts

ALL

DIAMONDS

200JO TO 300/0
OFF REGUW PRICE
OUR DIAMONDS ARE PRIC£0

MEN'S OR LADIES'

COMING SOON
SEIKO

TELEVISION
WATCHES

2 Sections, 12 Jbges
20 Cents
A M.ult imedil In c. Ni!WIF!Jper

WASHINGTON (AP) - A bill financing federal
dams and waterways, including projects In Cleveland
and Gautpolis, Ohio, is sa!llng toward the Senate after
clearing the House by voice vote.
"We're flnally getting something done that's
constructive," said Rep. Clarence Miller, R-Ohlo,
after the bill passed the House on Thursday. "I'm real
happy about it becau·se we have worked on this for
many years."
.
Miller predicted that tbe Senate would pass the bill,
saying there were rrumy high-priority items In the
measure.
An amendment in the llquse by Rep. Bob Edgar,
D-Pa. , that would have dropped 20ofthe43projectsin
the bill-Including those for Gallipo~ and Cleveland

- was defeated 211-133 alter more than three hours of
debate.
The appropriations bill that passed Thursday is
dependent upon ail accompanying authorization
measure because the House Appropriations Committee short-circuited usual congressional procedure and
funded projects that Congress hasn't' yet formally
approved.
·
In remarks for the House floor, Miller said the bill ,
combined with the authortzlng legislation, would
provide for a complete overhaul of the Gallipolis dam
and construction of a new 1,200-foot channeL ·
"The total ~timated cost of a new Gallipolis locking
chamber and an updated dam is set at $325 mUllan,"
Mlller saki. "We expect the Hoose to soon consider a

'

,

bill authorizing $2W million for Gallipolis, with a major
portion of funding for the project to be taken from the
user fees collected from the barge industry and set
aside In the Inland waterway trust fund. "
The water resources bill also provides funds to
dredge the east and west entrances to Cleveland's
harbor and extend the breakwater. It would a llow the
harbor to accommOdate a new generation of bulk
freighters, which measure 1,COO feet by _105 feet and
hold up to 60,00J tons.
"Alter seven years of working on this project ... !feel
terrtflc about it," said Rep. Mary RoseOakar, D-Ohlo.
''Certainly, if we get our harbor competitive and able
to accommodate larger vessels, which Is the number
one goal of tbe project, we will t;&gt;e truly the north coast

Football field site
for village·.party
The Meigs Junior Htgh football
field has been selected as the site for
a Middleport Community Halloween Party which will be held on
Monday, Oct 31, with several
organizations -cooperating on the
venture.
Organizations Involved In planning the party Include Mlddleport
VIllage Council, which originally
suggested the party in lleuoftrt~kor
treat night, the Middleport and
Bradbury parent-teacher organlza. Jjons. the Middleport Chamber Of
~ CornrnEtte which is the coordinatIng group and Feeney-Bennett Post
128 American Legion has sent along
SllO to help with the expenses ·
Involved In staging the event.
Representatives from the vartous
groups have sat ill on the ptannlng
sessions and another such session
wtU be held at 7: :ll p.m. Tuesday In
the meeting room ot the LaSalle. All
interested persons are invited to be
present for that meeting.
According to plans to date, the
party will begin at 6 p.m. and there
wtU be judging of costumes. Prizes
wtU be awarded to tbe prettiest,
ugliest, funniest and most original
costumes In several age groups and

candy treats will be presented to all
those In costumes.
In addition, free cider and donuts
wlll be given to all people attending
the party, whether or not they are·tn .
costume. In case of rain the party
will move from tbe field ·to the
nearby Middleport Elementary
School. Since the party is being held
In lieu of trtck or treat. night, those
planning the event are hoping that
townspeople will purchase candy
which can be dlstrtbuted at the
party, A definite plan on how
residents may belp bl this manner is
being worked out and will be
announced.
Still being considered as a part of
the Halloween activities In the towp
are a pictures on windows contest
and a pumpkin carving event. If
held, these activities will also be
judged. Businesses are expected to
stage special sales and peroonnelin
stores will be asked to wear
costumes at least on Monday, the
day of the party. ·
The party is expected to conclude
about 8 p.m. The village~ expected
to make some financial contrtbution
to the event on Monday.

Ohio chosen as
Honda Plant site

'

in our country. And it will save an awful lot of jobs and
create an awful lot of new ones.''
She said the cost of the project is S36 million The
approxtmately year-long project could start by early
next year, she said.
Rep. Louis Stokes;·D-Ohlo, said the Oeveland port is
a major transportation link to the steel industry, the
largest iron ore receiving port on the Great Lakes . .
The Gallipolis locks and dam were constructed on
the Ohip River in 1937, nearly ~ river miles from
Pittsburgh, and the locks'.limited capacity has backed
up river traffic .
" It 's a blg problem; there's no doubtahoutit ,"Miller .
said. ''We've had so many aGcidents at that lock and
dam . (And) holding up the traffic is the big thing."

.Routine matters
occupy October
council session
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel stall

PRESENTED PlAQUE-George Holman, left, was presented a
plaque by Syracuse VIllage omcial.s In 'appreciation of his 23 years of
dedicated service as treasurer of the vlllage of Syracuse from 1961).1983.
Making the presentation was Mayor Pickens.

Patrol checks four accidents
Atwo-vehicleaccidenton0hlo124
The first occurred at 7:05a.m .
In Salem Township Thursday night when a vehiCle driven by Jellrey L.
was Investigated by the Gallia- ' Fotmer, 33, Pomeroy, struck a deer
Meigs post of tbe state highway and the deer continued on whlle
Folmer was northbound on County
patrol.
The patrol said the vehicles, one Road 1, tbree mUes north of 124.
driven by Brian D. Hicks, 17, Vlntqn, Fotmer's vehicle , was slightly
.
and the ()!her by Delmar G. Davis damaged.
Jr., 20, Langsville, were both
A vehicle drtven by Connie K. Hill,
eastbound at 6:20p.m. when Hicks 34, Portland, was moderately damreportedly made a U-turn tn the aged after it collided with a deer on
d
Ohio338at 8: 10p.m .
roaDavis
·
was pulling off to the left
Moderatedamagewasalsolisted
stdeoftheroadandcollidedhead-on to a vehicle driven by Judith A.
with Hicks' auto, causing moderate Johnson, 22, Racine, when It struck a
damage to both vehicles, the patrol ditch along 124, one mile east of
said.
Syracuse corporation limits, at
Two deer accidents were also n· 55 p m
reported by the patrol during
John·~ was eastbound and
Thursday.
Swerved to the right to avoid
collision with a deer, the patrol said.

OAPSE c hapter accepts pact
Members of the Eastern Local
School Distrtct Chapter of the Ohio
Association of Public School Employes met at the high school
Thursday night to give 100 percent
approval of a tentatlvenewtwoyear
contract. New president, Benny

Benedum, prestded over the m eetlng. Members of the Eastern Local
Board of ·Education wtU meet In
special session at 7 p.m . Monday for
discussion and ratification of the
contract.
·

Syracuse residents are reminded
that parking cars on village
sidewalks is not allowed nor is the
placing of cement blocks next to
village streets. · Both items were
discussed at Thursday's monthly
council session.
Oris Hubbard, who is presently
employed bythevlllage ta supervise
workers, reperted all sidewalks in
the vlllage havebeencleaned expect
tbose wherecars were parked.
The ordinance prohibiting park·
lng on the Sidewalks will be
rewritten and the fine for violators
increased from $5 and costs to $25
and costs for the first offense and $50
and costs for the second offense.
Residents who are placing cement blocks next to villagestreetsto
keep people from their property are
advised that the blocks are on
vlllage property artd pose a safety
hazaard. It was indicated, should
the bl~ks cause an accident, the
property owner could possibly be
held responsible.
Council also announced that an
ordiilance wlll be drawn Up requiring a $10 deposit· for posters and
signs placed within the vlllage. The
depoSit will be refunded when the
signs or posters are removed.
Since the ball season is over, Jim'
Teaford asked council if a chain

Road and Bridgeman to Rustic
' Hills.
Bids reeeived
Two bids were received for a new
crulser,onefromSimmonsOlctsarid
Pat Hill Ford. SimmonsOlds'sbidol
$8,300 with trade was accepted. The
bid from Pat Hill Ford was $10,395
with trade.
Council approved a resolution to
accept amounts and rates _ as
determined by the budget
commission.
·
Mayor Eller Pickens reported
that the stone culvert on theeastend
of town, (abOve the Barbara
Chapman residence) which is ·
beginning to co llapse. leaving a hole
at the edge of the pavem ent wlll be
repaired.
Council a lso issued a reminder
thatunlicenseddriversofminibikes
are not allowed on village streets.
Council set Monday. Oct. 31, from
6 p.m . to-7:30p.m. as trtck or treat
nlght wlth thesirentosound tobegln
and end the evening's activities. ·
Mayor Pickens was granted
permission to invoke a curfew in the
village if needed.
.
Council also agreed to use the
Farmers Banks and Savings 'Company as ·a depository for village
funds.
Willie_Guinther reported that he
attended a meeting of the Regional
Sewer District concerning manhole
covers. He· said manhole covers in

could he placed across the road to thefloodplainareacouldhecovered
the small ball · park prohibiting however, the manholes where
travel in the area. Councllagreed to paving will be done will ha'(e to he
place a,chain over the road.
raised with the village and the sewer
Gene Imboden, lire chief, re- district to share lhe cost.
potiedthat75footofwaterhoseand
Milton Varian , police chief, was
three shovels had been takeri' froni · given Ji)ermission toorderdecalsfor
the fire station.
the new cruiser.
George Holrnan,manager
Councll agreed that no 6ile , unless
. of Lonauthorized, shouidbelnthebulldlng. don Pool was presented with 1L
Imboden was given permission to plaque for 23 years of dedicated
help council in restricting people service as treasurer of the village .
from going In the building 'without Holman resigned his post in May to
supervision.
take over the duties as m anager of
Council, In other action, accepted the pool. Jan ice Lawson now serves
theonlybldrecelvedforpaving.The as clerk-treasurer.
bid was submitted by the Shelly Co.,
for 250 tons of asphaltic concrete at
$34.,16 per tO!): Council hcpes to pave
Fourth Streej. a portion of College

Holman informed council that a
filter tank was needed at the pool.
Council approved the purchase.
Holman also reported that the pool
has been wint erized .

Nation's unemployment rate hits 17 ~onth low

WATCHES
1

'

House ~pproves Gallipolis Locks bill

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
It employs 400 workers In assemDevelopment Director Alfred S. hllngthreemodelsofltsGLsertesof
Dietzel will meet with Honda motorcyles. Ii. has a combined
officials soon to offer state help In production ofabout 50,(00 per year
locating a site for a $:ll mllllon of the GUlOO Standard, the Intermotorcycle engine plant, Gov. · state and the Aspencade cycles.
1e g1ne f t
Richard Celeste says.
The
to
mo
rcyc
en
acory
Honda of America Manufacturwill
Include
die
castin~,
machining
Ing Inc. plans tocreateabout150jobs
and
final engine
assembly·
Honda
said it expects
production
by bulldlng the plant In Ohio, but
hasn't decided where In the state,
to~in~~~~the
plant will have a capacity on one
Honda said Thursday.
The firm satd it wtU expand U.S. shift of 250 engines per day or
motorcycle operations in the state to approxmately60,00layear.
The engine production is Intended
Include production oflargedisplace- ·
to
coordinate with a future inCre!ISE!
ment, multi-cylinder motorcycle
f
H d '
US
t
1
engines. Production Is to begin In 0
on
as
·
·
mo
orcyc
e
early 191fi. _ ·
production:
·
Honda began assembling motor• Honda has $310 mllllon Invested 1IJ
cyles
1n September 1979 at Its plant
motorcycle and automobile assemto the Ohio Transportation
adjacent
•. b1y plants six mlles northwest of
Research
Center.
·
Marysville.
.
.

CRYSTAL&amp;. SILVER
3 PC; SALAD SET

• ' .• -·it

Ohio, Fricby, October 7, 1983

I

OFF

enttne

aty
Pome~oy-Middleport,.

•

,•

LESS THAN OTHER JEWELERS

AND OUR QUAUTY IS THE
SAME. .

Why Pay More!
..

7 DIAMOND CLUSTERS
YELLOW OR WHITE GOLD

1/4 CARAT TOTAL
NOW $29500.
REG. 13!15.00

SAVE •100.00

FOSTORIA GLASS
NOW

20°/o

4 PC. SET

OFF

WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation's unemploy·
ment rate deClined to 9.3 pefC!!nt In September, the
lowest level in 17 months, as close to 400,(00 jobless Americans found work In the contlnulng economic
recovecy, the Labor Department reported today.
HoiNever,10.4m!lllonAJnerlcanswerestlllreported
·to be looking for jobs butunabletoftndtherll, the labor
Department reported.
September's decrease In theoveralljoblessratewas ·
just 0.2 percentage point from the August level of 9.5
percent. But It restored the downwarcj trend that had
been mter'rupted when August's rate held steady at-the
same rate I!S mJuiy.
.
·
.
Unemployment had declined in most mOI\ths since
last December's 10.8 percent, the highest ltlvel In 42
'
years.
.
Both government and private ~siB haVe said
IIIey expect the rate to cooUnue declining, with
CClQ'lplllles calling back laid-otl wo!11era or hiring

people fornewlycreated jobs as the economy expands
In its recovery from the 1981-82 recession. But those
analysts have also said the improvement is lll&lt;ely to be

slow.
Today's report satd total U.S. civilian employment
cllmbecl to a recoro:1 101.9 mUllan in September, up
382,(00 from August. At the same time, the labor force
of people holding or wanting jobs Increased by 1U7,COO
to 112.4 mDUon.
•
An alternate unemployment rate, which includes
the . more than 1.6 mllllon armed forces personnel
statlorled In the Unltell States, dipped to 9.1 percent
b]Jm August's 9.4 percent.
In further encouraging news, the (]epartment said
the number of "discouraged workers" - those not
even counted as unemployed becaU&amp;ethey have given
up )()oldng for jobs- ~a led 1.6mWlon biSept.ember,
down 100,COO
slilce June, when the statistic was
last.
'
''

/

calculated, and off 240,COO from the recession high of
more than 1.8 mllllon at the end of 1982.
"Whites accounted for most Of this improvement as
blacks continued to account for a disproportionate
share of the discouraged lola! (31percent)," therqx&gt;rt
-said.
In addition, the number of people who have been
looking for work for six months or longer rose sllghtiy
- to2.506mllllon from August's total of2.447 mllllon.
The report said about 2.9 mllllon jobs have been
crea~ this year. Economists have said those
increases should continue, even U the recovery is
slowing down as many believe. If business can keep
opening jobs faster than Americans stream into the
labor force, the unemployment rate will decline even
further. ·
_
'"Ibis gain was about evenly divided between adult
men and wa:nen, with no appreciable r1se for
teellagers," the report said .

Commenting on t\)()ay's report. Janet L. Norwood,
the commissioner of labor statistics, told a meeting of
the congressional Joint Economic Committee. "In a
longer-term perspective, the improvements in the
labor market that have occurred duting the current
recovery compare reasonably well with prior

recoveries."

·

Sbe added, "Unemployment is still very high,

however."
This other development:
Analysts say consumers are m aintaining a' brisk
spending pace which could · genera.te a profitable
Christmas shopping season for' the nation's major
retailers.
The retailers reportc&lt;l ThursdAy tl&gt;at sales
continued a steady climb in September despite a heat
wave early in the month that temporally wilted
dermind for fall and Winter fashions .

�,-'
(

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,C omment

lbge 2- The Dlily Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
~Y·. Otl b1r 7, 1983

~~ed

The Daily Sentinel
lJ 1 Coul1 Street
Pomeroy , Ohio
DEV~Jl..DI

.

THE ll\'TEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASOJ\' AREA

{J~

Bm~

.-· ~v

'

,..,.,_, ..._-r-• r'T"""Eed·~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsb~r

PAT WHJTEHE;AD

WASHINGTON - It was said
aoour the gods on Mount Olympus
that Zeus kept two jars beside his
throne. One jar was filled with
blessing»: the other was filled with
evils. The gods of organized labor
now have serv€d Walter Mondale
with generous helpings from .ooth

different constituencies are In·
valved In the presidential prooess.
Winning a party's nomination Is cae
thing; wtnnlng the subsequent
general election is quite aoother.
When the Democrats convened In
Madison Square Garden In l!Rl,
roughly 'Z1 percent ot the 3,331
delegates were union memhers.
About 500 delegates were teachers
and professorS. ThoUgh the party's
-~rules have been changed for.l964,1n
.
orqer to recoi!nlze the role- of
Democratic officeholders, there Is
no reason to belleve that the unions'
clout will be greatly ~- .In'

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ne"'S Editor
A MEMBER of The Assodatt"d Prt&gt;S~ . I nla.nd Dail)' Press Assucia·
tion and the American Newspapt&gt;r PubliSher Association .

1984.
·'

. LETTERS OF OPISION art&gt; • ·ek'Omed. Thto)' should be less than 300 M'ords
lone. A.llletten are subjecl to editin&amp; and mul'it bt&lt;iiltn~ • ·ith ntlm'-', addret~s 11Dd
telepboae number. No unst1ned lettt:l'fi " ·UI bt&gt; publifihed. Letters V.ould be in
tood tute. acldressin&amp; bi!iiueti , not persoollHUes .

.

.'

.A little restraint
'

The persistent problem of prematl.ll1' disclosure of election trends and
results by the nation's broadcasting networks bas swiaced again · ~ but
this time there are improved prospects for finally resolving the issue.
There is no doubt that the fiercely competitive television networks
'
. have created an untenable situation by straining to be first In proclaiming
.·J:he winners of ~lectoral contests for seats in the House and Senate
· :,governorships and the presidency.
'
The nadir of their pertormance was reached on election night 198J,
when all 1.IJree major networks projected Republican candidate Ronald
Reagan as the winner of the presidential election before the polls closed the
West.
.
·
·
Those premature proclamations almost certainly discouraged many
Westerners who normally would have voted In the Ia t~ afternoon or early
evening from going to the polls, thus probably distorting the results of not
·only the presidential contest but of other races as well.
·
Numerous bills, embracing no fewer than two do.;.,n drne~~t
.remedies, have been introduced In Congress but no serious action has been
·taken on any of them, perhaps because the wiser members of the House
·and Sel)ate recognize that any federal law restricting the networks' right to .
report the news would he very vulnerable to a court challenge and could
·well be struck down as unconstitutional on the grounds that It violated
:freedom of speecb and freedom of . the press guaranteed in the First
Amendment.
The most durable remedy undoubtedly lies · in convincing (and
perhaps even pressuring ) the networks to adopt voluntary restrainl5 - a
reform agreed to bY all three of the major broadcast news organizations
for elecilon night 1!l82.
The extent to which the networks' pertormance matched their
· promtse was exammed in a survey completed earlier this year bY the
League of Women Voters and the Committee for the Study of the Amertean
Electorate, both critjcs .of earlier network election night practices.
The survey found a number of violations of the networks' pledge, bill
most of tbose transgressions were minor if not trivial.. In lopsided contests
· for Senate seats in Hawali and Washington, for Instance, two networks
named the obvious winners three or four minutes before the polls were
scheduled to close.
,
The crttics' survey suggests that ·the networks' performance in 1982
was generally satisfactory- but next year's presldentlalelectlon ,.om pose
a far greater challenge to the networks' abUity to restrain themselves from ·
succljmblng to their worst Instincts under competitive pressure.
Indeed. they already are promoting an assortment of radical
alternatives - Sunday voting, holiday voting, tw&lt;XIay voting', later poll
closings in the East and earlier poll closings in the West ...: which would
,require voters to bend themselves 'OUt of shape because the networks
cannot or will not exercise a modicum of self-control.
A deceptively simple yet thoroughly effective solution emerged here
recenUy , however, at a twCKiay symposium on "Voting for Democracy"
he)d in Washington undet the sponsorship of Harvard University and ABC.
In a paper prepared for that meeting, Percy H. Tannenbaum of the
University of California at Berkeley noted that Canada has an almost
Identical set of time wnes, but has resolved the problem because local
stations do not join the networks for election night TE'S\IIts until the polls
have closed In tile stations' respective time wnes.
That approach offers real promise because It matches precisely what
the networks and their a!Jiliated stations throughout the country already
do on virtually every ntght of the year.:.. except election night. P rograms
atred on the East Coast at 9 p.m., for example, are not broadcast· ·
simultaneously 0n the West Coast at 6 p.m . Instead, they are delayed for
three hours on the West Coast untU It is 9 p.m. there.
Under that system , television newscasters would engage In unlimited
prediction , projection or speculation on the outcome of any or all contests
- but only voters In states where the polls had closed would be in the
audience.

Over the next nine . months,
leading up to the Democratic
convention In San Franclsco In
•July, Mondale surely will benefit
from the unJons' endorsements.
The value of such Institutional
backing is vartO\lSiy es!lmated at
$15 tnllllon to $25 million for the
whole of a presidential campaign.
The AFL-CIO's Commlttee for
Political Education (COPE) can
marshal perhaps 100,00) volunteers
to man telephone banks, to prepare
mass maUings In Mondale's sup.
port, to place faithful supporters In
party caucuses and to get them to
the polls in Democratic primaries.
This Is emphatically not to . ·
suggest that with !he unions' formal
endorsements, Mondale bas the
Democratic nomination locked Up.

Under .attack __________________J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n
WASHINGTON -Interior Secre- bly: · At a cost of n.2 bUllon,
tary James Wan has been keeping Garrison will irrigate 1,200fanns &lt;~I
in his bunker, his head one Inch most. That's
average cOst of n
below the purge line, to avoid the
million per fann.
political backfire from his latest
Its boondoggle aspect aside,
ga!Je.
Garrison bas created a storm of
But he has lost none of his protest from Canada. Manitoba 's
enthusiasm for assaulting nature.
multimillion-dollar ftshlng Industry
He is occupied \\1th the conquest of faces Irreversible damage from the
the wilderness. not Its preservation. Introduction of alien ~uri RJver
Watt's bulldozers are not only . fish species and parasites Into
threatening lrreplaca ble wildlife
Canadian waterways.
refuges In this country, but they're
To assuage the Canadians'
on a collision course with Canadian
wrath, the' Interior Department has
lnterestB as welL Egged on by
decided to pare down the 250,®
North Dakota politicians out to
acre project that was originally
please their rural constituency,
planned. But Canadian officials
Wan has quietly awarded the first
suspect that polltlcal pressure will
contract for an Irrigation project
force construction and use of the
known as the Garrison Diversion
whole Irrigation maze, with Its
Unit. Phase I involves construction
harmful Impact on Canadian
of most of the components .
rivers.
What is planned Is a massive
Internal documents seen by my
network oi dams, reservoirs and
associates Corky Johnson and
canals that will move Missouri
Donald Goldberg Indicate that the
Rlver water from western North · Garrison boondoggle will have a
Dakota to the north central part of
drastic impact on the environment.
the state. This would Irrigate
In Its entirety, It would destroy
farmland near the Canadian
JJO,tro acres of wetlands all\l
border. '
grasslands that provide food and
The project is a questionable
shelter to perhaps a baU-mlllion
economic value, to put it charita·

an

waterfowl and marsh birds each
year.
Interior officials maintain they
will ':mitigate" any loss of acreage,
In part by a cockamamie scheme to
create new wetlands by pumping
water onto prairie grasslands. In
fact, In their iatest environmental
Impact statement, officials claim
that the Garrison project will " add
qualitY and quantity to the habitat

base.··
But Internal department memos,
intended for official eyes only, show
-that Watt'~ ditch-diggers have
blatantly manipulated or Ignored
scientific data supplied by the team
of biologists assigned to the Garrl·
son project.
One Garrison scientist com·
•plalned that the model used to
obtain environmental Impact data
contained "bogus" Information.
While the numllers In the resulting
evaluation added up, he wrote, "the
biology behind them is extremely

suspect."
Another memo said the Garrison
biological assessment was "two
steps removed from reality." Still
another biologist wrote that offl·

What's ' next with Watt? .

I am sure by this time you have year were quick to lead the chorus
all heard of James Watt. He Is the demanding his dismissal. With one
present Secretary of the Intertor sentence Watt !lad managed to
who can pertorm the feat of putting oHend four rnlnorttles Reagan has
hisfootinhismouthandatthesame been trYing so hard to .placate,
time dig his political grave with his Blacks, Women, Jews and Hand!·
tongue. He ts the conservative capped. These are the people who
wizard who would preserve our represent well over haU the voters
forests bY cutting the lre!!s, eh- In the United States. Even the
hance the beauty at our federal land president 's daughter, Maureen,
by strip mining coal for a few cents
who was brought Into the . White
a ton and protect our sea coasts by House to try and erase the gender
leasmg our off-shore lands to the oil gap, demanded that Watt resign.
companies. Qulte.a guy, this James Through It all the president reWatt!
malned adamant. Watt would stay
In spite of his questionable and tbe subject was closed.
accomplishments, Democrats and
·Naturally, the, Democrats are in
Republicans are both after his bald
no huny to see Walt saddle up and
scalp. They ¥"' urging President . rtde into the sunset. They figure
Reagan to fire him from the . that In three years he has probably
Recently we circulated a petition
Although we faUed this time we
Cabinet. Watt Is refusing to resign;
done all the environmental damage
to place on the November Election · haven't given up. Next Spring will
the
president
has
refused
to
fire
he can do. After the latest volley
\he ISsue of whether Orange bring the May elections. We intend
him.
Last
week
President
Reagan
from
his Infamous mouth he will he
Township should be wet or dry. to circulate another petition in
from
the
lofty
pinnacle
of
the.Oval
closely
checked not only by the
Thanks to many residents we January. We'll see you then.
Office
Passed,
down
word
through
Democrats
but by his own party
. Collected 143 signatures. The elec- Thanks again for yow- support of
his
press
secretary
that
the
subject
members
as
well: I heard one
, tion board said 28 of those signa- this petition.
was
closed.
I
doubt
U
it
Is
but
as
a
commentator
say
that If an untures were valid, but we needed two
Charles Calaway
Democrat,
I
hope
they
both
stick
to
miiZ2Jed
James
Watt
remained In
vaJid signatures to get It put on the
41926 S.R. 7
thetr
guns.
I
think
James
Watt
ls
the
office
It
could
mean
as
much
as four
November Election Ballot.
Reedsville, Ohio 45m
greatest thing to happen to the or flve percentage points In favor of
Democrats since Earl Butts! Just
the Democrals next year. We
.
In case you missed the recent Watt
gaffe here Is what happened In a
nutshell. Congress had ordered
Watt to establish a commission to
.
Today is Friday, Oct. 7, the 28:JthdayofJ.91!3. Thereare&amp;'idaysleft in the . investigate chargH that he was
Yfar.
virtually giving away coal leaSes by
: Today's highlight in history: On October 7, 1963, President John F.
oHerlng them for sale at a time of
Kennedy signed a nuclear test ban .treaty with Brttaln and the Soviet
slack demand. The Issue sparked a
Unlon.
confrontation between Congress
. On this date:
and the executive branch. A federal
· In 1849, author Edgar Allen Poe died.
judge issued a
order
• In 1913, the flrst air passenger 'filght was made !rom Albany, N.Y., to
against Watt banning his most
New York City.
·
,
recent coal sale and the Senate,
; In 1919, the flrst commercial airline, KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, was
although Republican controlled,
founded.
voted overwhelmingly to halt
:. In 1951, Marian Anderson became the first black hired by the · further sales unW 90 days after the ·
Metropolitan Opera Company.
Coal Commission malces Its report.
·· Ten years ago: Israeli forces struck heavlly In counterattacks at
Watt was describing t .h e
. Egyptian and Syrian positions In the Sinal peninsula and the Golan • members of the Coal CornmlJston
hetghts; ooth sides clillmed victories.
to a group of 200 U. &amp; Chamber of
: Five years ago: On a quasl-olnclal visit tO the United States, Prime
Comm~ lobbyists. 'We have
~ter Ian Smith challenged American otftctals to support his
for a
!!Very kind Of mix you can have," he
l(ansltlon to majortty rule In Rhodesia.
said, "a black. a woman, two Jews
. One year ago: Flnanc1al markets soared on hopes that Interest rates and a cripple." The lntempennt
WOUld continue !alllng. The Dow Jones bWstt1al Average climbed nearly
remark callled a stink from Maine
:12 points, and a reconl147 mliilon shareS changed hands oo the New Yorli to Calltomia and Republican Sena·
iltOck EJrChangl!.
tors who an! up for l'lll!lectlon next
•

Letter to the editor
Petitioners will try again

.

clals' ·claims of a net gain for
Wildlife were " ludicrous." All three
biologists signed a report complainIng that the department's "mitigation" plan was based on data that
they hadn 't even seen nor ap.
proved. Interior Department sour·
ces said It Is commonplace for
scientific Information to be "laun·
dered" or manipulated to political
needs.
,
A memo wrttt'eh, by "!! aide to
North Dakota Gov. Allen Olson
Indirectly alluded to the political
reality of the Garrison project,
saying: "! had a very skeptical
feeling that we were still going to be
sandbagg_ed unless we somehow
methodically controlled the technl·
cally exercise associated with
developing the final mitigation plan
... and am convinced that we have
to dominate this process."
The North Dakota governor bas a
powerful ally In Washington. Watt
sent " letter to Olson contlnnlng the
go-ahead on Gar'rlson even before
the mitigation plan was completed.
.At the end, Watt scrtbbled a
· personal note: "A staff-prepared
letier - if not OK, call me. Jim."

.

Puny

Democrats are thankful for all the •
help we can get!
UntO James Watt became Secretary of the Interior he had been an
attorney for the "Sagebrush Rebel·
lion," a group in several western
states who were trying to wrest
control of federal lands and return
them to the states where they would
he more vulnerable to grazing,
lumber and mining Interests. He
had no experience In forestry, land
management, coal stripping or gas
leasing but he had a barbed tongue
and was a leading fundralser for the
Reagan Campaign Committee.
Like WWiarn Casey, bead of the
CIA. who may yet come to grief
over the Carter briefing ·paperS,
Watt was named to the cahlnet not
for his adrnlnlstratlve ability but as
a political reward. Watt has topped
even Earl Butts, Secretary of
Agriculture In the Ford cabinet, as
a member of a president's cabinet
mosi likely to shoot hlm5elf in the
foot. Butts was forced to resign in
1967 after making a slurring joke
about blacks. By one unscientific
estimate Watt has slurred at least

&amp;'i percent of the population during
the tlme he ~.s· bei:'n In offlce.
President Re!igan Is a pParently not
as sensitive to public opinion as was
President Ford.
I hope that President Reagan and
Secretary Watt never recognize
that not all women, all blacks and
all environmentalists are Democrats to he Insulted at will. In these
groups there Is probably the same
ratio of Democrats to Republicans
that exists all over' the country.
Wh!!n Watt picks a segment of the
population for his Insults, with the
tacit approval of the president, he Is
o!!endfug many of the people the
admlnlstration Is counting on fol'
SUP,POrt next year. Personally, I
bope they are not enlightened unW
November I984 when the president
wW finally realize how big a favor
he did for the Democrats by retaining James Watt In off!ce.
If this was Watt's first offense it
•
•
might he excused but he has gone
from one public ga!Je to another,
from the "American and liberals"
to the Beach Boys.
What's next, Watt?

HIT THAT TIUNG- Three Eaglelles, (20) Dee Daney, Lea Ann
Gaul (14) and Tara Guthrie (15) prepare for action as Southem'sLaren
WoUe returns a serve during Thursday's SVAC encounter won by
·
Southem.

GREG NEASE
IH, 170 powad
JwtlorBack

ATlANTA (AP) -Phil Nlekro, ·
whose knuckleball has fluttered
past National League hitters for 20
years, Is leavingtheAtiantaBraves.
' At44theoldestplayerintlieniajor
leagues, Niekro had hoped to return
for a 21st season with the only club he
has ever known, but that Is not to be.
"We decided at our staff meeting
near the end of the season that
Nlekro would not return as a
startlngpltcher,''BravesExecutive
VIce President AI Thornwell told the
Atlanta Constitution.
"U PhU does not pitch for some
other team, he could be back with
the Braves in some capacity,"
Thornwell said. "There will always
'· be ' a position for Nlekro In our
organization as long as. Ted Turner
owns the team.
"He Is, of course, the greatest
pitcher the Atlanf!! Braves ever had,
a gentleman and a tribute to
baseball."
Nlekro Said only: "I'm cleaning
out my locker at the stadium Friday
morning. That should tell you
something. I'll answer all the
qu~tlonsasked meat tha,ttime, 'and
I have no further comment now."
Tltls past season was not one of
Nlekro's best. Hls usual early- ·
season troubles continued later than
In the past and at one point Manager

SPIKI'B BALL- Southem'a Amy utt!e&amp;lld (U) IIPIJiel a retum
during action from Southern's SVAC vldory over rival Eaate!"'
lbui'!Jday n!pt. Other TonladoeUea shown In lhlll Scott W..fe action
shot are Karen HerNley (5) andJennyllenOey (8).GdUngready lora
retum Is the Eaglettes' Lea Ann ,Gaul (14).

Tonight's area·games
Pt. Pleasant at Mllton

SEOAL NON·LEAGUE

Marietta at Athens
.
Portsmouth at Jackson
Beechcraft at Logan

•.

omovALIEY CONFERENCE
Coal Grove at South Point

RJpley at Parkersburg South
Boyd County at Russell
Rock Hill at Ironton St. Joe '

They averaged .:lnG to .190 for the
Pblllles.
Mike Marshall, who contributed a
nice running catch of a liner by Joe
Morgan to save a couple of runs in
the sixth Inning Wednesday night,
has left 10 on base.
Marshall said he expected to get a
lot of chances to get some hits in
Philadelphia.
The Phillles are going with rookie
pltchen Charles Hudson In game
three.
'
Owens_Isn't concerned that Hud·
son lost twice to the Dodgers in the
regular season. He worked 12 2·3
Innings, allowed 11 hits and six runs
fora4.26earnedrunaverage.Ailthe
runs were earned. He allowed one
home run, struck out 10 and walked
three.
Hudsonlsn'tflyingtofoolanyone.
He aQmlts he's nervous. The
24-year-old right-hander said he's
trying to treat this as just another
game.
He was 15-12 during the season,
beat the PhUlies..on~. pitching a
one-hitter. VonHayes'fourthlnnlng
single was the only hit In that 1.0
game. Welch also haS league

Daytonnre
•

TRI·VALLEY CONFERENCE

·tJIHERii
Wheelers~?Urg at Minford

(

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•

Phillies

ing In four playoffs. He won game
one from the Phillles In 1978. He was
0.() In three relief stints against
Montreal in 1981.
Los Angeles Manager Tom La·
sordasaidknowlngthattheDodgers
beat the Phillies five of six In
Philadelphia gives him a good
feeling, but he can't co~ider the
past.
.•
Defense against the Dodgers has
fru strated the Phlllles, who made 15
errors to but seven for. L.A. during
the regular season. The trend has
continued In the playoff.The Phillies
have made three to but one for the
Dodgers. And two of them led to
three unearned runs in the 4-1
second game defeat.
Ironically, the J&gt;hillies are supposed to be the team with the tight
defense, while the Dodgers are
considered one of the • poorest
defensive teams In the league. But
they make the plays against
Philadelphia.
Third basemanMlkeSChinidt and
center fielder Garry Maddox have
15 gold gloves between them and
each has made an error in this
series. Maddox ' cost two unearned

1

531 JACKSON P1KE • 8_T. 35 WEST
PhOne 446-4524
BARGAIN MAriNEES SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS $2 .00
ADMISSION EVER Y TUESDAY $2.00

@CTOBER 7 thriJ ~
FRIDAY thru THURSDAYT

Now

h~•

frn~nd ft

.•

-

;

'J-

nrw iftm•
to play
1

Pt;

J

r~.!:a~~O:p!~s:'1 ~·

\

.,.,',":~::':.:,:; .,,. ~ ~'\

.-

:::L' r• ':

•:;;::::;:;

~~.::::~:,,!
~- ·-Uil&lt;l"llllll
2od wm: 7,00 &amp; g,oo P. M.

.

LOOKING FOR A

USED CAR
OR TRUCK?

JoeTorresenthim to the bullpen.
But after the All·Star game,
Nlekro rounded into form, winning
nine of his last I3 decisions to finish
11-10 with an earned run average of

3.97.
His record would have been better
had It not been for !allures by
Atlanta 's once-strong bullpen.
More than once during AUanta's
unsuccessful drive for the Western
Division championship, Torre
would pull Nlekro from the game In
the ·late Innings with the Braves
leading only to see Steve Bedrosian
orGeneGarbercomeln and lose the
game.
His career record stands at

1982 FORD MUSTANG 3 Dr. Hatchback, Was. $6695 .. NOW $5995
4 cyl., auto. trans., AM-FM radio. One owner, PS, PB.
1981 FORD THUNDERBIRD. Was $6895 .................. NOW $6495

302 eng., auto. trans. wrth overdrive, air cond . Electronic
AM-FM-Cassette, search and scan, luxury interior, 5peed cont. P.
Windows. One owner.
1981 FORD LTD 2 Dr. Sedan, Was $6195 ................ NOW $5795
302 Engine. Auto. Trans. with overdrive, AM·FM radio, vinyl roof. One
local owner.

268-230.

FERTILIZER
BAGGED

6-24·24 .............. '180 Ton
15·15·15 ............. '170 Ton
PRICE STARTS OCT. 7

CHESTER
AGRI SERVICE

985-3831

CHICKEN BARBECUE

1981 '0LOS DELTA 88 ROYALE 2 Dr. Sed., Was $5994 NOW $5695
Air, Ti~ wheel, speed control, power windows, AM-FM-Cassette. Local one
owner.
1981 DODGE MIRADA 2 Dr. Sed .. Was $5295 .......... NOW $4595
V·S, auto. trans., PS, air cond .. AM-FM. Local Owner.
1979 TOYOTA COROLLIA 2 Dr .. .............................. NOW $3595
Auto. Trans. Air cond. SHARP.
1979 OLD OMEGA 4 Dr. Sedan, Was $2895 ............. NOW $2495
V·6 Auto trans .• Air Cond., PS, PB.
1978 BUICK REGAL 2 Dr. Sedan . .................... .......... ... $4295
V-8. Air cond., b~ wheel. One owner.

SPONSORED BY:

The Pomeroy Vol. Fire Dept.
S,VNP.AY, OCTOBER 9th
Beginning at 11:00 A.M.
At The Fire Station

19n MERCURY COUGAR, 4 Dr. Sed.: Was $2295 ..... NOW $1695
V-8, Auto. Trans. Air.

19n JEEP CHEROKEE. Was $1695 ........................ NOW $1095

I•

.

SVAC
Southwestern at Kyger Creek
Eastern at Hannan Trace .
Southern at North Gallla

)

BRIAN ALLEN
&amp;-1, It:~ pound
Senior Ba.cl&lt;

1978 FORD F·100 PICKUP. Was $2895 .........·.......... NOW $2395
302. Auto. Trans.
·

NelsonvtJie.York at Alexander
Belpre at MWer
Wellston at Federai·Hoclting
Meigs at Warren Local
Trimble at Vinton County

'*

DENNIS TEAFORD
6-6, 2&amp;1 pound
Senior TII(JJde

~ttack ~oncems

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

SEOAL
Gallipolis at Ironton

II

-"

depart company

I

I

._,~-7~·

Br;;~7Ni ;;.;-= .,_ ~~~:~.~~-~~~n~e~sd~a~y~w~h;e~n~th~e~sco:re;w~asdJ~s~AT~&amp;~su~N~MA~T~tN~E~ES~l~,a~o~A~J,~oo!~

Lawell Wingett
--

restra.lnlni'

•,

By SCOTT WOLFE
Wolfe added two more for the oosts,
RACINE
SOuthern's Torna· then Terre Wood dlaleil!n a good
doettes moved one step closer to serve for a 9-5 score. From that
another SVAC crown, while re- polnt on the momentum shifted in
~alning undefeated in ove(all play favor of the Tornadoes as Becky
WJth league wins over visiting Michael added three and Amy
Eastern 15-5 and 15.0.
Littlefield dumped in the winning
Coach Suzanne WoHe's Toma- points.
does cracked the top 20 in stateThe second game wa&amp; " no
:an kings thj.s 'w"'!'k besides pushing contest" as Southern rolled to a 15-0
tts overall record to l!HJ. Southern shu t out win behind ·the 14 pointS
was 16th ~the coaches poll.befor-e ..,-scoring- ot-Amy -I:nttle!ield:- Little-. this week s play and owns lindls· field led the Southern Belles with 17
puted possession of first place in the serving points, Becky Michael
league with an 8.() mark. Eastern Is added seven.
3-5 Inside the league.
In the reserve contest Southern
Hints of a typical Eastern· claimed identlcai15-B and 15·8 wins
Southern rivalry prevailed In the to claim the match. R&lt;!chel Reiber
opening moments of Thursday's led the way with eight points. For
first game, but a confident Southern Eastern Michelle WUson paced the
RICKBABI$
squad rose to the occasion before a attack with eight points.
il-9, 160 pound
large hometown crowd. Eastern led
At Gallipolis Wednesday, South·
Senior Back .
1·0 on a Lea Ann Gaul serve, then ern won the reserve match 15-2
Becky Michael notched lour n-15, and 15·11 as Tammy Adkln~
straight scores for a 4·1 Tornadoette
paced the Tornadoettes with 10.
lead.
.
R&lt;lchel Reiber added eight, Mandy
As tenSion built at both camps,
Hlll seven, Becky Adkins four, and
three scoreless volleys by both Tammy Theiss three. For GAHS
PHilADELPHIA (AP) - The
clubs produced some exciting Kelll Bro\vnell had eight Dee
action. Finapy, Tara Guthrie broke Johnson six and Teresa Combs Philadelphia Phillies must find their
five. Southe~'s reserves are now bats if they hope to beat the Los
the lcean dplacedthfeegoodserves
on the ha rdwood, knotting the score 11·3.
Angeles Dodgers In the National ·1
at 4-4.
League
Championship Series.
Southern plays a trl·match wit!\
Debbie Michael gave Southern a · Athens and Eastern· Pike Saturday
The Pblllies have scored just 15
74 lead, but EHS held on. Laren. at 10 a .m. at Athens Hlg:h· ~ichcJOI.
runs In 14 games against the
Dodgers this season, including one
in each of the first two games of the
best-of-five playoff, which Is tied 1·1.
. Phlllles' Manager Paul Owens
was asked If he Could pinpoint the
Phlllles' failure to score against Los
Angeles.
The Phillles' left-handed hitters
took hitting practice Thursday In a
voluntacy workout for today's third
gamelntheSertes,settostartat3:05
p.m. EDT.
·
The Dodgers are scheduled to go
with right-hander Bob Welch, and
Owens will use left-banded hitters
Joe Lefebvre and Greg Gross In the
oulfleld In place of rlght-handers
Slxto Lezcano and Garry Maddox.
Owens is (!ptlmlstic that the
hitting whlch ·carrted the club In Its
September stretch drive to the NL
EasttiUewmrea)JIX'ar.
Although the Phillles haven't hit
much In the ·first two games, the

--~------------------~-·

Today
in history
.
.

Pian

IMeet the 1983 Southern Tornadoes.... I

=

jars. He bas their endorsement. On . the AFL-00 and the National
balance, is It more 11 a bless!ng or
Education Association will be an
more of an e-.11?
asse1 to Mondale In wtnnlng the
To fall back on Calvin Trtllln's
Democratic nomination next year.
Universal Answer to Dlt!lcult QuesThe endorsements could "ie.ll pro\le
tions, Ws too soon to tell My own
a llablllty In seeking the presidency
guess, for whatever It may be
ltseU.
worth, is that the endorsement of·
We tend . to forget that quite

-..-. -I'Len.er:al Manager

The lhily Sentinel-lb~3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Southern .moves
closer to ~rown

blessEngs __· ____________J_a~__sJ_._Ku~·~_t_~_k

BOB HOEFUCH

Assistant Publisher/ ControUt&gt;r .- ...._ _

...

Fricby, October 7, 1983

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
"WHIRl THI ltUIBII MilTS THf lOAD"

PH. 992·7161

MIDDLEPORT. OH.

PAT HILL FORD
461 S. Third Ave.

Middleport.

PHONE 992-2196

.

'

oH·.

-

�•
lbge

4

The Daily Sentinel

•

P9111t!roy--Middleport, Ohio

~y,Ck~r7, 198~

•

Rookie .ties·series with 4-0 win

~ BALTIMORE

(AP) - Mike age 28, hit a two-run homer a nd No. 2.
Since the leaglie championship
Boddicker spent part of his day scored two other .runs ThurSday
installing a CB radio in his pickup . . nightastheOrlolesbeattheChicago series began in 19ffi, no team has
Gary Roenlcke used the time to play
White Sox 4·0 to tie the series at one ever dropped tbe first two at home
with his children. Then they·went to _ game apiece.
_
and come back to win the pennant, a
work, and helped the Baltimore
Thebest-of.flvechamplonshlpset point not lost on either manager.
" 1feelanawfullotbetterthanldid
Ortoles escape a dangerous sltua· resumes tonight In Chicago. with
tlon in the American League Rich Dotson, 22·7, pitching for the ' last night," Bal.lrnore's Joe AltoWhite Sox against Baltimore's Mike belli said.
Championship Series.
"Am I harp · 1 ;· n a spilt? Not
Boddicker, a 26-year-old rookie, Flanagan, 124, and the situaTion
registered a record-tying 14 stri· facing 'them Is drastically different particularly." "cld Chicago'sTonny
keouts and· Roenicke, a veteran at than lftheWhiteSoxhadwonGame LaRussa.
Boddicker became the first rookie
tp hurl a shutout ln .AL champion:
ship play. limiting the White Sox to
llve
hits. Hls .M strtkeouts were.a .
.............
career high a nd the most by an
American Leagu,e pitcher this year,
but his chief thought after the game
was more of of pain than elation.
'By WW Grlauley
"All I have in mind rtght now Is
Ice," he said as he waited for
AP Corretpoadell1
reporters' questions to end so he
could soak hls tired right armm.
•
Told he had struck out 14 batters,
the Norway, Iowa, resident grimaced and said: "No wonder my
arm
hurts."
·
BALTIMORE (AP) - The first time Cal Rlpken, Jr.. came to bat for the
Boddicker
inflicted
some
pain
Orioles on'openlng day, 1982, he slanuned a homerun over the leftfleld wall
In Baltimore's Me111orial Stadiurn.
·
As he rounded the bases, the tall , good-looking infielder got a pat on the
posterior from the grey-haired coach at third base.
"Good going kid," the old man said.
"Thanks, Pop, " replied the young rookie.
.
This set the scene for one of the most unique situations in baseball- a rare
By ~UCE LOWrl'l'
father-son combination.
APSports Writer
.
To the Baltimore Colts, the New
Larry Haney, a coach for the Milwaukee Brewers, put II in proper
England Patriots have been more
perspective earlier this year when he poignantly remarked:
"l'vealwayswanledtoplaycatch withmyson-lthinkeverymandoes- · like the New England Patsies olla te.
In 1981, when the Colts won only
but! never gal ttiechance. Now here Cal, Sr., and his kldcandolteveryday,
their first and last games in a
and in a major league uniform ."
16-game National Football League
Young Rlpken, 6-4 and 200 pounds, a rnember of the Orioles' powerful
engine room, Is making a bid to become the first to add a Most Valuable
season, the Pats were the victims
• Player award to Rookie of the Year honors won in 1982.
each time. And when the Colts
foUowed up a winless 1~ season by
His perfonnance in !he current playoffs wlfh the Chicago White Sox in the
American League Championship series could be the determining factor.
winning their season opener this
His dad, 47, a member of the Ortole organization for 26 years, can only
year, theydidltagainst-yep-the
stand at the third base line and try to coax Cal, Jr., hOme as well as other · Pats.
Now, five games into this season
Orioles.
Cal, Sr., never played a game in !he major leagues.As acatcherwith the
the Colts, heading into Sunday's
game against the visiting Pats, are
triple-A Rochester, N. Y .. farm club, he had his throwing hand battered foul
3·2 and pari of a four-team logjam
ba)ls and could never throw properly after that.
He played briefly - at Appleton, Wis., and Aberdeen, Md. - but had to
atop the American Conference's
tum to managing in 1961. He managed various minor league clubs before
Eastern Division while New England Is 2·3.
.
being summoned to the Ortoles as a coach In 1976.
Father and son were united when Cal,.J r ., was brought up !rorrt ColUinbus,
Sunday's other games are New
Ohio, in 1982, discounting a brief appearance at the end of 1981.
Orleans at Atlanta, Tampa Bay at
Both insist !hat once they put on their orange and black Ortole colors the
family relationship vanishes and they are just another coach and shortstop.
"When Cal is at bat, he is no different than any other player tome," says
the father, a lean, sharp-featured man much more gaunt than his offsprtng.
"! managed 14 years in the minors, and now this Is my eighth year here.
They're all my sons. "
"When we gel out on the fi eld, it's notfather and son," adds Cal, Jr. "It's
strictly baseball."
CINCINNATI (AP) - Chicago
The senlor Ripken said he never pushed his son into baseballandscoffedat
the suggestion that he may be realizing his broken dre_ams in his successful Cubs pitcher Dickie Ray Noles has
dropped an appeal of his conviction
son.
"!always told my children to do what they pleased," he said."! have a for slugging a policeman and will
daughter. Ellen, 25, and two boys younger than Cal- Fred,21, andBilly,18. return to jail this evening to finish a
"Billy, like Cal, loves baseball. He is now a shortstop at Bluefield, West 15--day sentence.
Va. , in the Oriole organization. Fred was a good athlete but he preferred to
Lawyers for the 26-yearr-old
became a motorcvcle mechanic."
.
Noles told Hamtlton County Municl•
.pal Judge David Albanese, who
Prior to World War I, ConnieMackmanagedandson,Earle, played with
the Philadelphia A's. Jim Hegan was coach and son Mlkeaplayerwith the convicted Noles Ina July8trtal, that
Yankees in the19ffis. .
he wanted to drop the appeal.
Noles had pleaded no contest to a
Yog!Berra, nowaYankeecoach, has ason,Dale, playingwiththeP!rates
charge
thathehitpollceofficerKim
but their communication comes through Ma Bell.
19
"Cal and I don't talk to each other all .that much, " said Cal, Sr. ,''No more
Cohen
onaApril
as Cohen
tried of
to
·
break up
fight involving
a friend
than ather players. Calls a bachelor and we have different h!Jmes and Nolesoutsldeadowntownbar.
different lives. "
"Mr. Noles wants to settle his
Cal, Jr .. saidthatwhenhewasstruggling inthe minors,heoftencalledhis
account
with this charge and get It
father·for advice.
' " Nowiflhavea problem, l'll go toDad, " hesald, " Hwe'reseentalklngto behind him," attorney Robert
Hasting said Thursday. "He wants
eachother,wearetalkingbaseball ."
toputthlsoutofhislife."
Junior learned his lessons well.
Noles had served one day of his
After his spectacular home run debut, he ~em into an abysmal hitting
slump , getting two hits in 40 a t bats, but he rallied to finish the 1982 year
batting .264 with 28 home runs and 95 runs batted in to gain rookie honors.
This year, besides playing superb shortstop, he batted .31B with 27 hOmers
and 102 rbi.
Pop still refuses to lab him as a future superstar likeJoeDIMagglo, whom
Cal, Sr., considers the best he's ever seen.
"He's got to keep puttingsta ts on tlle board," the father said. "Work like
the dickens, don't ever get too cocky and try to stay healthy- that's my
786 N. 2ND AVE.
advice to a Uthe kids."

Today's

Sports·-w orld

Unique·combination

himself Thursday night, bothphySl·
cally and psychologically_
He tied a championship series·
record by hitting two batters, Tom
Paciorek and Greg Luzinsld. And
the White Sox concEded that they
were constantly out of tempo with
his curves and sllders.

-

The · Ohio University Opera
Theater has announced the 1983-84
opera season will open on Satu~day,
Sunday and Monday, Oct. 22-24,
with an Opera Gala Benefit
performance.
This event, Intended to raise
funds for the Opera Theater's
sea~n. wlll feature a concert

STAR PLAYER ...,. Baltimore Orl~les' Cal Rlpken watches one of .
his hits during Thul'!lday,night's game In Baltimore agl!lnst the Chicago
wiiue Sox. Rlpken Is one of the leading can.dldatel! for' this year's
American League Most Valuable Player Award. (AP Laserpholo).

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 cond or sI.
Pomeroy,
· OH ·
Phone 992-2975
FALL a.·WINTER HOURS:
Effective Oct. 1 ·Morch 1
Closed Monday
Tuoa.-Frl. 9 to 15. Sat. 9 to 1

~THE .
G A -."'-• E •- -- .
BVBTENI
·

The 90th birthday anniversary of
Mrs. Ernest (Edith) Burton was
observedrecentlywithapartyatthe
Holiday Inn, Galllpol!S.
Mrs. Burton, who , resld€!1 on
Broadway Street in Middleport
before going to the Pom11roy Health
Care Center, Is the mOther of six
chldren (two deceased). 20 grand·
children (two deceased), 36 great·
grandchildren, and seven great·
great-grandchildren.

r::::::==========.
The· Daily Sentinel
(USPS

U~ -~60)

A Division or Multimedia, Inc.
Pub lished every &lt;~fternoon, Monday
through Friday. 111 Court Street, by the
Ohio Valley P ublishing Compa ny · Mul·
llmedla. Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 992·
2156. Second class pos tage pa id at Po·
mercy, Ohio.

Membfor: The Associated

Press. ~

Mrs. Burton, preceded In death by
!Jer.flrsthusband,JohnGrover, was
presented a red rose corsage along
wit)! other gifts. A decorated cake
was served with tbe dinner.

In ·

l and Dally Press As soclat on an d the
American Newspaper Publishers As ·

soclation, National Ad\•ertising Repre·
senlallve, Branham New spaper Sa les. ·
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York 10017
POSTMASTER: Se nd address to The
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•
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52 Weeks ........ ..... .. ........... .. ... S5IA8
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PH.992-2920
VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD &amp; SOFT
CONTACT LENSES
Insurance and Medical
Cards Accepted

38% Off! Compact Portable
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For further ticket or donation
information, phone tbe opera office
at (614) 594-5235.

.,

•

IIISTmUNG

evenings In the Recltai Hall of the
School of Music on Ohio Universl·
ty's main campus. A minimum
donation of $10 Is requ!!Sted for
admission. Tbe Opera Theater has
also drawn up "arying levels of
donation for those who wish to
contribute to the ongoing success of
this organization.

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dances, histortcal artifacts, lnstru·
ments. (Brtng table service. Bever·
age pf&lt;Mded.)
·
For additional information, con·
tact Rlo Grande College a nd
Community College at (614) 245-

will take place at Bp.m. on all three

No subs('rlptlons by mall permitted In
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*Restaurant Has Moved from the Dome to the Main Building
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nooga, Tenn.

"Baskets To Banjos," Traditions
Made By Hand , will be Wednesday,
Oct. 12, 7:30 p.m.
Enjoy a varied prese.iltatlon .of
traditional handmade objects wl1lle
discussing history , craft and
maers. The artists re ott en overShadowed by their created objects.
Here Is a chance to talk about both
the artists and their crafted works .
"Simple Gifts: Potluck, " AShar·
ing of Your Own Traditions, will be
Thursday, Oct 13, 6 p.m. at the
James A. Rhodes Communfty
Center at Rio Grande Cqllege and
Community College.
Share your family's favorite
traditional foods at a potluck
supper, along with any other ofyour
own local or jl\'rsonal tradition~
songs, diaries, letters, art and

~bo~r·~s~,o~r~a~frt~e~n~d'~s·~---~-~cr~af~t~s~,o~ld~or~n~e~w~j~o~u~rn~a~ls~,~g~am~es~,l~===========

•

~

gSTERLING

Attending were her chlldren, Mr.
and Mrs. Boivin (Narcla)' Minor,
Millersport; Mr. and ·Mrs. Fred
(Kathryn) Rowalt, Bucyrus; Mr.
and Mrs. John Grover, Chatta·
nooga, Tenn; and James Grover,
Flint, Mich.·
Grandchildren attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Jack (Shirley) Light
and son, Kevin, Nevada; Mrs.
Ronald (Anna Marie) Koch, Clyde;
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Scott and sons,
Ronald and Steven, Bucyrus; Mr.
and Mrs. Edward (Judy) Wheeler
and children, Rhonda, Tammy and
Scott, Bucyrus; and Mr. and Mrs.
·Joseph (Ruth) Harris, Chatta·

Money ratsed !tom these perfor·
mances will be used to belp mount a
production of Mozart's classic
o!iera The "Marriage of Fif;aro" on
Jan. 2Q-221n Memorial Auditorium,
as well as develop a new outreach
program called "O.U. Opera On
Wheels," In which · the Opera
Theater will take opera scenes
!tom The Marriage of Figaro and
ed~tcational matertals into area
school systems, culminating in the
students' attendance at the January production of The Marriage of
Figaro.

combined strengThs a nd respect
haste cu)tural differences. This
project Is designed tO' buUd ·an
family and · local traditions to
enhance a seose of self, ol
community, and of their place in
the world."
"Alike or Different," My Tradl·
Uons, Your Tradltlons' will be
Sunday, Oct. 9, 2 p.m .. at French Art
Colony, Galllpolls.
"Remember When Grandma
Recorded Family Traditions," wtll
be Monday, Oct. 10,7: 30p.m. at the
Welsh Heritage Museum, Oak Hill.
Each famUy and community
- tradition Is Important. Together
!hey afford us a unique sense of
place and belonging. Discover
some interesti!Ig ways to record a
family history - }:Ours, a neigh-

WATERBED SALE

One Year .......... .... ...... .. ....... ... $52.80

PH. 992-6491 OR 992-31 06

Pomero~

Rhodes Student-Community Center
at Rio Grande College and Com·
munity College In_Rio Grande.
"Folklore is one of . the most
effectiVe modes avallable .for help·
ing Individuals gain better under· .
standing of themselves and, conse·
quently, of others," Joyce said. "By
learning of the similarities be(ween
and among ·cultures, an area's
residents can begin to buUd on

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One·Week ....... .... ... .......... ...... ... $1 .00
One Month ... ... ...... ................ .... $4.40

HOURS •MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00.

•Only 8 Miles from

performance of arias end en~i'm·
ble~ from great' standard operas
such as Romeo and Juliet, Lucia dl
Lammermoor, Manon Lescaut,
Porgy and Bess, and many other
operatic masterpieces. The artists
performing will he members of the
Opera Theater with Nancy Zlpay
accompanying at the Bosendorfer.
,

Burton birthday anruversary noted

going with seven-year veteran Steve
DeBerg at quarterback in place of
roughed-up rookie John E lway.

OF OHIO, INC.

RESTAURANT

will be geared toward the richness
of local traditions.
.Joyee said the first presentation
will be at the French Art Colony in
Galliolls on Oct. ,a , -Other preserita·
!Ions will Include Oct. 10 at the
Welsh Hetitage Museum In Oak
Hlll ; Oct. 11 at the Jackson City
Library; Oci. · 12 at tbe Sylvester
Memortal Public Llbrary In Well·
stan; and. Oct. 13 at the James A.

l-============1===========~

.---------------.....:.-----------1

f

"

Opera season beginning ~t OU

Noles drops appeal;
hegins 15-day tenn

.

lbge-5

..

Rio. Grande College . and Com·
munlty College in conjunction with
the Ohio Arts Council and the Ohio
Humanities Council will co-sJionsor
a unique Folklorist In Residence
Project Oct. 9-13.
According to a college sp¢kesper·son, Dr. Rosemary Joyce · of
Columbus, will conduct a five-day
series of programs 3!i part of
Heritage Week. Joyce's programs

DaUas, Denver at Houston, Buffalo
The Patrtots, conversely, have
at Miami, the Los Angeles Rams at had proWems with their place·
San Franclsco, Washington at St. • kicking. Earlier this week they
Louis, Minnesota at Chicago, the released 1Q.year veteran John
New York Jets at Cleveland, Green Smith and signed Fred Steinforl,
BayatDetrolt,.SeattleatSanDlego, whohadbeencutbytheBuffaloB\)Is
Kansas City at the Los Angeles · earlier this year.
Raiders and Philadelphia at tlle
But the Pats come into the game
. New York Giants. Plttsburgb visits ' with the AFC's leading passer,
Cincinnati Monday night.
Steve G~an, who has thrown eight
The kicking game has been a key touchdown passes and only four
to the Colts' newfound success. InterceptiOns.
The Saints, who have never
Their rookie place-kicker, Raul
Allegre, has connected on 12 of 13 finished above .500 in their 17-year
field-goal attempts and leads the history, are shooting for their first
AFC with 46 points, just two behind 4-2 start ever and are hoping to
l~gue-leader Mark Moseley of
repeat thelrperformanceagalnstln
Washington.
Atlanta In the final game of 1982,
And Rohn Stark, the NFL's when they pounded the Falcons3.'H;.
second· ranked punter in 1982 with a Running back George Rogers of the
44.4-yard average, Is first in the Saints returns after recovertng
league this year with a 48-yard from a knee injury.
average.
The NFC's only winless and
unbeaten teams meet with the Bucs
trying for the sixth time In their
· history to defeat the Cowboys. And
Houston, the AFC's only winless
learn, hosts the BronCos, who are

FRUTH PHARMACY

... _

Fricby; Odober 7, 1983

Folklore prOgrams set/or Rio Grande College

Colts look forward to playing Patriots

16-day term and was ordered to pay
$1 ·000 to the G reater Cincinnatl
Knothole Baseball League.
Whe n Albanese agreed to release
No1es on $1 •000 bond • he s tlPu1a led
that.theCubscould not trade or send
Noles to a minor league team or the
club would forfeit the bond.
· Th Cubs nnou ced that Noles
e
a
n
·h ~d ente red a programtodealwltha
drinking program.
"Apparen t1 Y this
. had an affect on
his awareness of his problem and
that's
Th
rsd good, " ' I)Je judge said
u ay.
Albanese ordered Noles to report
to th e Commu nlty CorrectionaI
Institute at 5 p .m . today .
Nolesstlllfacestwoclvllsults,one
filed bY tbe po Uce aff1cer and a
second rued bY a doorman, Ni ck
T
ff
arpo ·

By The Bend
'

"He kept his breaking ball low,
and there's nothingyoucandowitha
low breaking ball," said Chicago's
slugging left-fielder, Ron Kittle, who
had a single and a walk. "Hhesees
he can get you on It, he'll throw it all
~nig_ht.
.~ _ ~
"'He changes speed so well, we·
were sivlnging at bad pitches," said
third baseman Vance Law. "They
look good, but by the lime you start
to swing you know they're not. We
weren't patient enough."
Boddlcker's 14 strtkeouts tied . a
playoff recoi'Q set hy Detroit's Joe
Coleman In 1972 and matcbed by
Pittsburgh's .JQIJn Candelaria In
1975. Butthe hlstoricdaystartedllke
any other, he said.-

The Daily Sentinel ·

'

•3995

LAYAWAY
FOR
CHRISTMAS

Save
'50

11995 ~~ 12~5.

Reg, 169.95
In-Dash AMIFM Stereo
ca.sette. 24 watts total
power.lf12·1899 ,.
Whit mountW1g hanlwato

Open Friday &amp; Monday Till &amp;.00 P. M.
241 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Reg, 21.95

2'1•" speaker, high/low
tone switch. With ear·
phone, wnst strap.
lf12·71 4 Batie&lt;\&gt; extra

'

Check Ycu Phone Book forthelldlllll 11lStore orDealar Nearest You

;:1

..'
'

'

..

'

·,

�-·
..,··-

lbge 6

The lbily Sentinel

Frichy, October 7, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Calendar .
fRIDAY

midnight at Racine American
Legion Hall; music wUi ~ by
Guy Thoma band and calling
wlll ~ by Red Carr.

WAHAMA - The Waharna
Athletic and Band Boosters will
sponsor a hol)'leCOmlng spagh·
ettl dinner Friday !rom 4: :l1
p.m. untlj 7 p.m. The event will
he held· In the high school
cafe~rla. Dinners are $2.50 for
adults and $175 for chlldren.
There wlll be an additional
charge for desserts.

.-

POMEROY- A carnival will
be held at the Riverview School
Saturday beginning with
cpicken and ham dinners at 5
p.m. Games and country store
will be featured at 5:lJ p.m. and
InSide booths at 7 p.m .

MIDDLEPORT
United
Pentecostal Ch!lrcll, Middleport, will sponsor a•chlcken and
noodle dinner Friday !rom 11
· a:m. to J p.m . Deliveries will be
made in P omeroy and Middleport. Persons may call 992-5981
or 992-3824. Dinners with desseri
ljl'e $3.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - A revival will
be held a t the Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene beginning Sl!n·
day, Oct. 9 through 16 at 7 p.m.
each evening. The Rev. Clyde B.
Rodgers, evangelist, singer, and
chalk artist will be the guest
speaker. Glen McOung, pastor
Invites the public to attend.

SALISBURY 1WP - Salis·
bury Township Trustees will
meet Friday, Oct. 7. at 7 p.m. at
Rock Springs Township Ha iL
TI)e meeting IS open to the
public.

POMEROY - Speaking at
Sa lvation Army, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, at 7: 30 p.m. Sunday
will be Rev . Persons . There will
be spec ial music and public Ls
invited.

SATURDAY
RACINE -Square Dance " 111
~ Saturday. 8:30 p.m. to

Happenings
Chicken noodle
dinner scheduled

Heritage Sunday
SYRACUSE - Heritage Sun·
day will be observed thiS week at
the Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene. The roots of the
Church of the. Nazarene will be
traced and its beginnings in 1900
commemorated.
Charter members will be
recognized, those living in the
community who were born In
1900 wlll be honored , and the
Sunday school wlll recognize all
babies born in 1983.
Rev. David Fulks of the
Central Ohio District office In
Columbus , will be the · guest
speaker af the 10: 30 a.m .
service.

MIDDLEPORT - The Mid·
dleport United Pentecostal
Church will spollS()r a chicken
and noodle dinner Oct. 7 from 11
a.m. until J p .m . The dinner will
consiSt of chicken and noodles ,
green beans, cole slaw, rolts, and
pie and will sell for $3. Deliveries
will be made In Middleport and
Pomeroy area. Persons may
call 992-5981 or 992-3824.

Carnival scheduled
POMEROY - A carnival will
be held at Riverview School
Saturday Oct 8. Chicken and
ham dinners will be served
beginning at 5 p.m . and outside
games as well as a country store
will begin at 5:30 p.m. Inside
booths will be epen to the public
at 7 p.m .

Car wash set
POMEROY- Junior Modern
Woodmen of Burlingham Camp
72:l1 will hold a car wash
Saturday, Oct. 8, at the Pomeroy
Fire Station from 9 a.m. untll 4
p.m. Price is $2 per car.

Awards for the St. Jude's Math·A· Kaylor, Randy BurKe, ·Beth ArThan were passed out at a recent baugh, Wesley Arbaugh, · Mike
assembly at Tuppers Plains E le· Weber, Carrie Fortney.
mentary. Students who collected
Students collretlng at least $25
from ·si to S24 were Benny Dalley, and receiving a St. Jude's T·shlrt
Amanda Cozart, Ctystal Kaylor, were Mary Jo Reed, Chris Spencer,
Elizabeth Bryant, Amy Murphy, Tina Connolly, Susie Francis, Terry
Janeene WUson. Jay Blackwood, Jackson, V. J. Van Meter, and
David Rice, Mary Ann Kii;Jble, Christine Schultz.
Michael !'rash. Shane James,
Terry Jackson received a St.
Denny Deem, Scott Burke, Chris Jude's T-shlrt and a St. Jude's tote
Car leton, Michelle Donovan , Cha· bag, ber prizes for collecting $150• .
rlas Bryant , Lisa Snyder, Tracy
Money for the St. Jude's ReMurphy. Chris Miyashiro, Christy search Hospital helps further reCaspers, Teresa Putnam. Marilyn . search Into catastrophic childhood
Kibble. Dawayne .WUson, Anita diseases.
·calaway, Jason Carleton . Randy

TerryJacbon

Program for elderly byCHEAO
and the elderly, and medical
augmentory devices/ aids and the
elderly. This educational program
will serve as a model or prototype
.for other organizations providing
health promotion programs tor the
elderly.
CHEAO was selected as the
contractor for his program based
on past experience In health
education programs and the con ·
centratton of elderly persons in the
area to be served.
Anyone wishing Information regarding t)lls program should con·

tact Mary Schaar at CHEAO
(593-5526) .

Employes of the post office and
friends and relatives were present
for the oocasion. The group pres·
ented Ms. Walker with a digital
.Jighted alarm clock.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs; J 1m
Hobbs, postmaster at Dexter, ' Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Morris and son,
Larry, Janet German, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Gorby, Mr. and Mrs . Jtggs
Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Walker

~1eve

Meigs school menus

Pickens was elected preslde.tt of the Young Adult Class of the
Bradford · Church of Christ at a
recent meeting there.
Other officers named were Greg
Smith, vice president; -. Danny
Harrison, secretary; Nancy Mar·
rLs, treasurer; Sherri Williamson,
reporter; a_nd Susie Lightfoot, card·
sender.
Steve Pickens presided at the
meeting with Smith giving ttle
opening prayer. As a special class
project Greg a,nd Vicki Smith wilj
serve as chairman for funds to
repair the church basement. A
discussion was held on a 'p arty for
October using a Bible character
theme. A shower for Mrs. Williamson was planned for Nov. J.
The class members discussed the
upcoming trip to the Grundy

Next meeting was set for Nov. 7 at 7
p.m. with Danny Harrison to have
devotions.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
.~.....SYRACUSE, OH.
~~

fall Hardy Mums - Assorted ColtliS

8"-$ 2.50

S"-$1.50

Also Foliage Plants and Cactus

OPEN MON.-SAT. g to 5
Closed Sundays

PHONE 992-5n6

riM;;ou~n.t;a~ln~M~is~s~lo~n~in~G~ru~·~nd~y~,;V~a~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Monday
- Pizza,
week,
Oct. iD-14,
Is announced.
tossed salad,
peaches, milk.
Tuesday- Macaroni and cheese,
spinach, applesauce, hot rolls,
butter, 'milk.
Wednesday • - Swedish ,Jlleat·
balls, mashed potatoes, green ·
beans, pears, bread;butter, milk.
Thursday- Oven baked chicken,
mixed vegetables, pineapple,
bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Cook's choice.

SEED AND MILLING
HEADOU"ARTERS

ta ll th e Real Mccoy

J.

FIRST ANNUAL

· 9BS· l944

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MIDDLEPORr

~~~~~!

BOOK SlORE
C.hurch &amp; Otfice Supplies
GIFTS
99 Mill St. ·
Middleport

Prescriptions

992·2955 .

NATIONAL
FURNITURE

SALE
and SWEEPSTAKES

Thompson
David L. Thompson, husband of
Pamela G. Thompson, and son of
Mr. and Mrs. Char les Thompson of
Hi8 Mayo Dr., New Haven, W. Va.,
enlLsted In the U.S. Air Force's
Delayed E nlisted Program, according to S.Sgt. John McGuire, Air
Force recruiter In Gallipolis.
Thompson . a 1979 graduate of
Wahama High Schooj, is scheduled
for enlistment In ·t he Regular Air
Force In Octo~r. Upon graduation
from the Air Force's six-week basic
training course, he is scheduled to
receive technical training In the
Mechanical Career Field.
Thompson will be earning credits
toward an associate degree through
the Community College of the Air
, Force while attending. basic and
other Air Force technical training
schools.

'~Ill DIA~lR

NOW!

@nation @mpany

J

RIDENOUR
·· SUPPLY

S&lt;'eds - Bird s·('('ds - Oyster ShCU!i. and Grit - Fertli•ters - Lime · Ce·
mcnt and Mortar · Stock Salt · Watcr ~ Soft~n('r · Remedies • Salt ·
l 1tlers · Vaccine ·. Roofing · Pamts · Red BrClnci Fencing· B~ler and
Binder Twine · Spr;ty!. - Gates · H,:ty · Straw

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992-2119

Pllmerov .

SEPT. 30 ·OCT. 9. 1983

WE WELCOME YOU TO TRY
OUR NEW SPECIALTIES FROM
OUR NEW NIGHT MENU

You Still Have Time To
Save Like Ne·v er Before
During Rutland
Furnitures Storewide
Furniture Salellll ·•

Roush
Sta!f Sgt.. Chester A. Roush, son
of Curtis C. and Thelma F. Roush of
320 Mechanic St., Pomeroy, has
arrived for duty a t Ramsteln Air
·Base. West Germany.
Roush. an aircraft armament
specialist with the 86th Aircraft
Generation Squadron, ' was pre·
vlously assigned at George Air
Force Base, Calif.

Scroplu•e•

DAVE DUNN

NO ITEMS WILL BE HELD BACK
,
DURING THIS EVENT

J/

Miller

"'SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS
DURING THIS SALE

Staff Sgt. Jerry D. M!Uer, son of
Harry Miller oi Rural Route I,
f&gt;1iddleport, and Hazel Miller of 240
Delray Rd., Columbus, has been
named outstanding n o n ·
c6mmtssloned officer of the wa r
lor Fort Devens, Mass.
·
The non-commissioned officer
was chosen !rom a select group of
peers who were judged on military
bearing and knowledge, profes·
$lanai skill and exemplary
behavior.
•
Miller, an electronic warfare
specialist, Is a -1969 graduate of
Marlon-Franklln High School,
Columbus.

SPECIAL SAVINGS FOR YOU ON TOP QUALITY FURNITURE
.
AND APPLIANCES FOR YOUR ti)ME.

Valuable Coupon
When you buy one meat at the regular price, receive another meal
of the same value or less. at

1/2 PRICE

When you present this cou.pon.
Note: If Jtlll chose• _, of Ill• value Hwill bt 11 \\ '
prict. not thl apni¥1 IIIII.
~
.
(Ofl_. oppllll only lo -in1 dl11111 manu.)

-· l·

bl.ouraDoeServioeo
F.. Main
9Y;• SlJO Porn eroy

,.,4

·

\

'

HI.-;~

or.. ~ .O.meo•caM Bolllt Socotly'

ffi!NITI' CHURCH, Rev. W. H. Perrin,
pastor; Debbie Buck, Sunday School supt .
Church School 9:15 a.m .; worship service
10:30 a.m. Choir rehearsal, 1\Jesday 7::11
t
p.m ., under direction of Allee Nease.
POMEROY CHURCH OF tHE NAZA ·
RENE, Corner Union and Mulbeny, Rev.
Thomas Glen McClung, pastor. Qyde Hend·
erll:ln, S. S. Supt;, S~nday SCOOol, 9:30 a ._m.; •
· 1~ morning wocshJp 10:30 a.m.; evening service
6 p.m.; rrrld·'hftk Service, Wednesday, ?p.m.
GRI\CE E:P!SffiPAL CHURCH _ 326 E.
l Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday services Holy
Communion on the first sunday of each
month, and combined with mornlngpra·yeron
thethlrd Sunday. Mornlngprayerandsermon
,- on all other SuOOays of the month. Church
School and nursery care provided. Coffee
hour in the ?artsh Hall ,immedla.tely following
the servtce.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRisT, 212 W.
Maln St., Nell Proudfoot, pastor. Bible school,
9::11 a.m .; morning worship, 10:30 a .m .;
Youth meetings, 6: :Jl p.m .; evening worship,
7::Jl p.m. Wednesday night praye r .-ling
and Bible study, 7::Jl p.m.
·
TifE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy. 'Mrs. Dora Wining In charge.
Sunday holiness meeting, )O a .m.: Sunday
School, 10:lJ a.m. Sunday School, YPSM
Eloise Adams, leader. 7::11 p.m ., salvation
meeting, various speakers and music spectals. Thursday - 11: .))a.m. to 2 p.m., Ladles
Home Leaguf, members In charge, all
wcmen invt!ed; 6:45 p.m . Thursday. Corps
Cadet Qass (Young People-BibleL 7: JJ p.m.
Bible Study and Prayer meeUng, open to the
oubllc.
,
POMEROY WESI'SIDE .CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 3322fi ChUdren's Home Road
(County Road 76) 992-S~. •vocal music.
Sunday worship 10 a.m.; Bible study 11 a.m.;
wocship, 6 p.m. Wednesday Bible study, 7

TUesday
I Corinthians
1:1-9

Preaching services ftrst and third Sundays
followlng Sunday School. Youth meetlng
every Sunday, 7:30p.m.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
Preaching 9:l) a.m.. first and second
Sundays ot each month: third and fourth
Sundays each month, worship services at7: :11
p.m . Wednesday evenings at 7:3:1 p.m..
Pra
nd Bl
yer a
ble Study.

1 Cptinthittns

1(U· r L1

Study, Wednesday, 7:l.1 p.rn.; UMW, first

1

Automotive

Sf!'rvice
Locu&lt;st &amp; Beecl"l
992 · 99~1 Mtddleporl

p.m. Wednesday., (Rothelilichl
.
FLATWOODS - Church School, 10 a.m .:
Worship. 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7
p.m.; UMYF, Sunday. 6 p.m. !Rothemlchl
FOREST RUN- Worship, 9 a .m .: Church
SchOOl, 10 a.m.: ChOtr Practice, Tuesday, 6: ,'JJ
p.m .: UMW, first TUesday, 7:30 p.m.
fNelsonl
HEATH fMiddleportl - Church School,
9:J:l a.m.: Worship, 10:l) a.m .; BibiP Study,
Thesday, 10 a.m.; UMW, second Monday,
7::.1 p.m.: UMM, third Monday, 7:]) p.m .

(Robinson)
MINERSVILLE - Worship Service, 10
a.m.: ChW'Ch School, 11 a.m.; uMw. thlrd
Wednesday, 1 p.m.; Choir practice, Monday,

P. J. PAULEY, .AGENT

Nationwide Ins. Co .

J ;j

ot Columbu s, 0 .
804

w. Ma1n

992 - 731~

Pom e r oy

Brown's Fire &amp; Safety
Equipment Sales
and (
Serv1ce
Rutl a nd , Oh iO 4577~
J . Wm . "B il l" Brow n , O wne r
Phone (.614) 74'1 .., .. 17

~--------~' --1-----------~~

Attend Church
this Sunday

j

lng, 7:30p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITE D BRETHREN IN
CHRIST CHURCH. Rev. Robert Sanders,
pastor; Don Will, lay leader. Located In Texas
Community off CR 82. Sunday schooL 9: 30
a .rp.; Morning worship service. 10:45 a .m .:

PVenlng

Copy oogn1 1QI!J Kto .. l f ,MYMi"''Q Sorw:t IM Wol .. ml N...l p ii'JO I I'U fo.O' tf Sy"'!!.,:•lt, I'll:
'
I" 0 8o• 8021 C~trloot,.lie, lit 2290&amp;

Re•. Jomes E. Corbltl, Assistant

Tuesday, 7:l) p.m .:· Choir Reheanoal, Wed·
nesda.y, 6:.'1} p.m.; UMW. fourth Sunday, 6:.D
p.m. (Nelson )
ENTERPRISE -Worship -9 a.m.; Church
School. 10 a.m .: Bible Study, Thesday, 7::1)
p.m.; UMW, First Monday, 7:ll p.m .:
UMYF , Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir rehearsal. 6::ll

l

131: 1-3

VNITED METHODISI' CHURCH
Fay Sauer, Dlredor

ASBURY (Syrcicuse) - Worship. ll a .m .;

ElliS &amp; SOh3 SOHIO

Monday
PsiJ!m
103: 1·22

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST.

Church School. 9:45 a .m. :· Charge Bible

992-3325

Complete

Corner Ash and Plum. Leslie Ha yman,
pastor. Sunday school 10 a.m.; Morning
Worsltl.p. 11 a .m. ; Wednesday a nd Saturday
Evening services, 7:30p.m.
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE Pt\RISH

CENTRAL CLUSTEB
Rev. James E. Corbitt
Re'Y. SCe"Yen Ne~
He\'. IUchanl Kuthemlch
Re\'. Roberi E. Robinson
Re"Y. Andrew Rubenldng

Pomeroy

4: 1-13

Wednesday evening young ladles auxiliary, 6
p.m. Wednesday family worhslp, 7 p:m .
...
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHU RCH, Near
Long Bottom , Edsel l:lart, pastor. Sunday
school, 9:30a.m.; Worshlp10:30a.m .; Prayer
meeting 7:30 p.m. Thursday .

/Archer~

m
...

216 S. Serohd

Saturday
Hetxews

GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949 · 2.550

NOK111EAST "Lu~u
"' ., .. ..,..
Rev. Don Archer
Re\'. Roy Deeter ··Rev. Seldon Johnson
ALFRED - Church School 9::ll a.m.:
Worship, 11 a .m .: UMYF. 6:~ p.m.; UMW,
Third TUesda y, 7: :J) p.m . Communlty ftrst
Sunday. IArchcrl
CHESI'ER - Worship 9 a .m .; Church
School10 a .m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.m .
UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.; Communion
first Sunday. (Archer)
JOPPA - Worship, 9: ll a.m.; Chw-ch
SChool, 10::1} a.m. Bible Study, Wednesday,
7::D p.m. ~Johnson)
LONG BO'ITOM -.. OmJ'C'h School. 9::1)
a.m.; Worship, 7 p.m.; Bible Study, Wednes·
day, 7:D p.m .; UMYF, Wednesday, 6 p.m.:
Communion First Sunday. (Archer)
REEDSVILLE - Church School. 9: :J)
a .m .: Worship ll a.m. l~ter~
TUPPERS PLAINS Sf. PAUL - ChW'Ch
School, 9 a .m .: Worship, 10 a.m .: Bible Study,
Thesday. 7:30p.m.: VMW. Third Tuesday,
7: ll p.m.: Communion first Sunday.

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

5: 11-8:12

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

re-,

•

Thursday
Hebrews

~ER~

7:J:l p.m . (Nelson )
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Servire, 9
a.m.; Church School, 11 a.m.; UMW, second
TUesday, 7:]) p.m .; UMYF last Tuesday, 7:30
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St., Syra- ' p.m. (Rubenklng)
cuse. Services, 10 a.m. Sunday, Evening
POMEROY -Church School, 9:15 a.m .;
services, Sunday and Wednesday, 7 p .m .
Worship service, 10: D a.m.; Choir rehearsal.
MIDDLEPORT a-ruRCH OF CHRIST IN
Wednesday, 7: 30p.m .; UMW, second Tues·
Cfffi:ISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Manley,
day, 7:30 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6
pastoc; Mrs. Russell Young, Suhda)" School
p.m. (Corbitt)
·
Supt. Sunday School 9:.JJ a .m. Evening
ROCK SPRINGS- Church Sc'hool, 9:15
WOI'Shlp7:Dp.m. Wednesday prayer meeting
a.m. ; Worship, 10 a .m.; Bible Study,
7::11 p.m. ,
Wednesday, 7:.1J p.m.; UMYF (Senlorsl .
MT. MORIAH CI-IDRCH OF GOD. Racine
Sunday, 6 p.m .; (Jun1ors), f'very othf&gt;r
- Rev. James Satterfield. pastor. Morning
Sunday, 6 p.m . (Rolhf&gt;lllich)
wcnhlp 9:45a.m.; Sunday School10:4S a.m .:
Rlm..AND - Church School, 9:45 a .m .:
evening Wm'Shlp 7 p.m. TUesday, 7: :Jl p.m..
Worship, 10: :J) a .m.; UMW (Evening Circle),
ladlts prayer meetlng. Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
second Wednesday, 7::11 p.m .: UMW, second
YPE.
Thursday, 1 p.m. (Rubenk:ing)
MIDDLEPORT FIRST IIAP'I1ST, Corner
SALEM CENTER - Church SchOol, 10
Sbrth and Palmer, the Rev. Mark McCJung,
a .m.: Worship, 9:45 a.m. (Rubenklng)
SUnday scb0ol9: 15 a .m.; Dan White, Sunday
SNOWVU.LE - Worship, 8::11 fi.m. :
SChool supt., John Reibel, Sr., asst. supt.
Church SctnollO a.m. mubenklngl
Mornlni: Worship lD:l5 a.m. Youth meeting
'
SOlJTIIERN CLU&amp;rER
7::D! p.m. Wednesday, inCluding wee tots,
Re"Y• .Jamm M. Oark
eager beavers, Junior asttoanuts, and Junklr
Re'Y. Paul McGuire
and seniOr hlghBYF: chotrpractlce8:30p.m .
Rev. Or'YWe Wld&amp;e
W..,esday: prayer r..-lnl! and Btblesludy,
APPLE GROVE- Chureh Scltool, 9 a .m.:
W~y. 7:l) p.m.
Worship, 10 a .m . !first and third Sundays );
CHURCHOFCHRIST,Middleport,5thand
UMW. second TUesday, 7:l:t p.m .: ·Prayer
Main. Bob Mellon, ""nlsler; AI Hartson,
meeting. Wednesday, 7 p.m. (Clarkr
asaoclate minister; Mike Gerlach, Sunday
BETHANY - Worship, 9 a.m.: ChW'Ch
School Superlniendent. Bible School. 9: :Jl
School, lll a.m.: Btbte Siudy, Wednesday, 10
a.m.; l1'KX11ll!g worship, 10::11 a .m. ; evening
a.m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowship, Wednes·
wtrahlp 1 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study and
day, U a.m . (McGulre) youth group meetings, 7 p.m.
CARMEL - Churoh Scltool. 9::.1 a.m.;
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Worship, W:4S a.m.; (Second and Fourth
RENE, Co-puton, Rev. Charles Coyle and
Sundays ); FeUowshlp dinner with Sutton,
Rev. Nancy Coyle.t BW WhJ'te, Sunday scnool
thlrd Thursday, 6: ~ p .m, (McGuire)
supt. Sunday school, 9::1t a .m.; momlng
EAST LETART - Church School, 9 a.m .·
wcnhlp, lO:Jl a .m .; Sunday eveqellstlc
Worshlp, lOa .m , (seoondandfourthSunday~ .
7
meetlna:, 7 p.m. Prayer meettng WednesdaY
UMW, lint Tuesday; 7:l) p.m.· (Clark)
P.IJl·
LETART FALLS - Worship, 9 a.m .:
UNITE:D PRESBYTERIAN MINI,STRY
Church School, 10 a .m . (Clark)
OF MEIGS COUNTY, !Wv. Wanda Johnson,
MORNING STAR -Worship, 9:4S a.m.;
director, Harold JohMM, dlrectcr or
Church School, 10: XI a.m.; Bible Study,
~-- tlo
·
Thursday, 7: 30 pm. (While)
~• n.
MORSE CHAPD. - Cl11m:h School, 9: :xi
HARRJSONVIT.LE
PRESBYTERIAN. a.m.; Worship, 11 a .m . (While)
WcnhlpServlce, 9a.m.; ChurehSch001,10:',J)
POR'n..ANO _Church School, i :J) p.m.;
a.~DLEPORT
PRESBYTERIAN. Wonhlp, 7::.1 pm.; UMYF, Wodnooday, 7::.!
......,
pm. (M&lt;G.Wi
Church Scltoot, 9 a.m.: Morning wtll'llhlp,
RACINE: WESLEYAN -ChurehSchoot,IO
10:15. Bible Study TUesday, 10 a.m.: Bible Lm.: Wonhlp, 11 a.m.; UMW, fourth
ttutly, 'l'tturltlay, l:IJ p.m.
·
MoatiAy l::Jl p.m.; Men's Prayer Brealdut,
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY· , W - y . 7 Lm.. (Ciar~l
~ ..
.
TERIAI'IOtllt'dLChurdtScltool,tO:l5a.m.;
St.rri'ON - Clliln:h Sclx&gt;ol, 9::.! a .m .;
.....,.. wtl'lltlp. 11::.! a.m.; Bible Study. ~ wonltlp. 10:45 a.m. (111'11 and lltlrd
~. ll) Lm.; .lutlto&lt; and Senior Hl8h \ &amp;u!t~Qo);
dlnttor wtlh carm.l,
Youtll Gniutl, !UatloyCH,
t PgtF· GOD p - tltlnl 'lllll'lllay, 6:30p.m. I~
RU'It.AND ~
'
'
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIS'I', Oltwt Rev. John !Yttta. Swtdi\Y JChoot, !0 a.m.; Swaln, Suporlnlelldent. Sund•u IChool 9:30
Sunday wonlrlp. 11 a.m.; Cttllolren'• churdt,
~
U a.m.; 8undly evatlnl lei'Vfcj, 7 p.m.; .a .m. every 'week.

UVE ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY AND 1SATURDAY EVENING

Piea~e come intci burs!

Suno'ay
Psalm

~' 7

Heights Road, Pomeroy. Michael Plankowsld, pastor; Rita White', Sabbath School
SUpt. Sabbath SchOol is at 2 p.m.&gt;OO Saturday
with worsl11p services following at 3:15p.m.
RUTLAND f1RST BAPI'IST CHURCH Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday School,
9: :1) a .m.; morning worship, 10:45 a.m:
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. David
Mann, mlnister; WWiam Snouffer, Sunt:lay
School supt. SUnday SChool, 9:30 a.m .;
Mornl.rtiWOI'S111.pl0:30 .m.
FIRST SOliTHERN BAPTIST, Pomeroy
Pike. Davkl Hunt, pastor; Jack Needs,
SUnday School Director. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; morning worship, 10: Jl; evening
wcrship, 7: l) p.m. TuesdayVIsltatlon, 7p.m.;
Wednesday, Prayer servk!e, 7: 30 p.m.;
Mission Friends, 7: ~ p.m.; Girls In Actlons,
7:l:lp.m.; Acteens, 7:~p.m . ; CholrPracUQe,
8:l:l p.m .
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH, Old
Dexter Rd. , Dexter. Pastor Woody Call, J r.
Past(l". Sunday School 10 a .m. Sunday
evening service, 7 p.m. ; Thursday evening
1
service, 7 p.m.
FAI'I1f TABERNACLE CHURCH, Salley
Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastor.
Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Sunday evening service 7: l) p.m .; Bible
teaching, 7: 3(1 p.m. Thursday.

May we come Into your life ?

Pomeroy

'/

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWAR,E
·
Hamelite Saws

Our spirllua' haritage is yours also. In worsh1p each
week we share ns reverent expression.

.

~-------------------+-!~~~--~---------~

We worship Him and seek Inspiration in His truths. We
tmng our ctulelren to HIS house for rel1g10us educatiQn.
we encourage their grow1h 1n the laith of our fatliers. In
our every day pursu1ts we try to live up to our conVIctions .
Failing . . we seek God's he lp as we try aga1n.

Wednesday

SEVENTii-DAY ADVENTlli"T, Mulberry

MilliNG DIVISION

ID

NEW YORK ~~~· .4
CLOTHING HOUSE ;l~·~

1

Ill

0 . " Mac" McCoy

Rt. L, R eedsville, Oh .

p.m.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH - Olfton Lucas, pastor. Sunday
SChool 9:.JJ a.m . Mrs . Worley Francis , supt.

Sgt. J eremy D. Mayan, son of
Pauline Kinniard of Apple Grove,
W.Va. ; has completed the Auto·matic Digital Network (AUTO·
DIN ) switching center tralfic operation course at the U.S. Army
Signal School, Fort Gordon, Ga.
The course is designed to provide
enlLsted personnel with a working
knowledge of data communications
op&lt;;!rations a nd the use of the
communication prOcessor unit in
on· line and off-line operations.
He Is a 1979 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, W.Va.

" For A Real Auctio~

·

Others attending were Bonne
Joyce Smith, Paula Luckett, Larry
Pickens, Jim, Carol and Jimmy
Anderson.

Mayan

'

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

Pomeroy.• O .h ia

In service

,,

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

Church class elects officers

and daughter, Stephanie.
Mr. and Mrs. Walker will make
their home at Fort Myers, F1a.

In accordance with the uniform
school lunch program In the Meigs
Local District, the menu for next

A swlmming party WIIS held
recently honoring Ronnie Lee Casto
on his seventh btithday. ·
The deCoratiOns carried out a
circus theme. Balloons filled with
helium were used and a clown cake
was Served wl'tb tee cream, chips,
fruit drink and party ~avors.
Eric Qualls, Karen Smith, and
Andrea Dillard won the door prizes.
Attending besides tliem were
Ronnie's parents, Ronnle.and Susie
Casto, Keith Mattox, Audrey AInold, Connle, Timmy and Bobby
Johnson, Patsy Oller, Paul Price,
Angle and Teddy Swartz, Scottie,
Lori and Shelby Casto, Amy Roush,
Christie and Tl!fan Russell, Eric
Dillard, Karla Smith and Eddie
Casto.
Others presenting· gifts to the
)lonored guest were Phyllis and Jim
Bearhes, Oatho and F1ordla Casto,
Susllt and Leslle McGraft, George
Anderson, Leolla Miller, Bill
Jeffers, and JoAnn Weyersmlller.

. KERMIT'S KORNER

Retirement party . in Langsville
Faye Walker, retiring postmaster
· at Langsvnle, was honored recently
with. a fareweU dinner in the
fellowship hall at the Langsville
Churcti.
Mrs. WalkerwasattheLangsvllle
post office for 17- years. Following
the potluck dinner. a cake.lnscrlbed
with ''Good Luck to You In the
Future" was served.

l ·EXrERIENCE THE JOY ·Of RELIGI6r~r ~

Casto birthday ·

Students receive prizes
for benefit particip~tion

The Consortium for Health Edu·
ca tion In Appalachia Ohio
(CHEAO) announces the receipt or
a contract from the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration to develop a
prototype progra m of health p~·
motion for the elderly.
ThiS program, which will serve a
17-county area, wlll be In effect
September. 1983 through Sep·
tember, 1984.
As the sole contractor nation·
wide, CHEAO will develop an
educational program to mclude the
topics of nutrition and the elderly,
pharmaceuticals and medications

Frichy, October 7, 1983
---.....,.,,;....,;;,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,!P~o:!:m:!!e~ro~y~!:!,M~id~d~le;Jpo:!;rt!;_.~Oh~io~------~-----------~T~he~lllily Seniinel-lbge:...-7

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, William
Crabtree. pastor. Sunday Sc hool, 9:30 a .m.:
evening service, 7: l1 p.m . Wednesday prayer
m~tlng, 7:30 p.m.
.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duane Warden. minister . Bible
class, 9: :ll a .m.: morning worship, 10:30
a.m.; evening worship. 6: l:l p .m . Wednesday
Bible study, 6:ll p.m .
NEW STIVERSV!LLE COMMUNlTY
CHURCH. Sunday School service, 9:45 a.m .;
Worship service, 10: .)) a.m.; Evangelistic
Sef\1ce, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday; Prayer
meeting, 7:30p.m., Thursday .
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, PomeroyHarrisonville Rd.; Robert Pur tell, minister:
Steve Stan[ey . Sunday school supt . Sunday
school. 9: .1) a.m .; worship service 10:30 a .m .:
Evening w or ship Sunday , 7 p.m. and
Wednesday. 7 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Plne
Grove: Thf' Rev. William Mlddleswarth,
Pastor. Church Sf&gt;I'VICPS 9::Jl a.m. Sunday
Schooi 10:30 a .m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHR!Sf. Pau l
Pratt, pastor. Sunday school, 9:30a .m .. Larry
Haynes, ·s. s. Sup!.: morning worship. lO:ll

P orlland -Racln C' Road . William Roush, pastor. Linda Evans , church school dir('('tor.
church school, 9:30a. m .; ·morning wors h.lp,
10:30 a.m.; Wednesd ay even in ~ prayer
services, 7:30p.m.
8-~THL EHE!M BAPTIST,
Rev. Earl
Shuler, pastor. Worship service, 9:30 a .m.
Sunday school, 10 ::11 a .m. Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7: .l) p.m.
CARLE:TON INTERD ENOMINATIONAL
CHURCH, Kingsbury Road. Rev . David
Curfman, pastor. Sunday school, 9: lJ a .m.
Ralph Ca rl, super lnt endent; evening worship,
7: ll p.m . Prayer meeting. Wednesday, 7: :Il
p.m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Ken K eifer,
pastor. Wallace Damev.rood. Sunday School
Supt. Wors)ljp service at 9a. m . Bi ble School to
a.m .
HYSELL RUN HOLI NE58 D-fURCH , Rev.
Thereon Durham. pastor. Sunday School at
9:,')) a.m. : Morning worship at 10::1} a .m .
Sunday evening sen.·tce at 7: :JJ p.m.:
Thursd ay services at 7:30p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION a! Bald
Knob , located 01:1 County Road :n . Rev.
a.m.
,
La"Tence Gluesencamp, pastor; Rev. Roger
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
Willford, assistant pastor. Preaching serviRev. Thomas H. Collier , pastor, Martha
ces, Sunday 7:30 p.m . Prayer m eeting
Wolfe, Chairman of the Board of Chris tian
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; Gary Grt!flth , leader
Llfe. Sunday School, 9:30 a .m .; morning
Youth groups . Sunday eve ning, 6: .J1 p. m . with
worship, 10:30 a.m .; Sunday even in.Q worship,
Roger and Viol('t WUUord as leaders.
7:.)) p.m. Prayer meet lnp:. Wednesday , 7:30
Communion se,.•lce first Sunday each m onth.
p.m.
WHITE'S CHAPEL, Cooh. ille RD. Rev.
. RACrNE FlRSTBAPTIS£, Don L. Walker,
Roy Deeter, pastor. $unday school9: lJ a.m. ;
Pastor, Robert Smith, Sunda y School supt.:
worship serviCE', lO:l.l a.m. Bible study and
Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; mor nln~ worship,
prayer service Wednesday , 7::JJ p.m.
10:40 a:m.. Su nilfS' evf'ril ng w'o rshlp, 7:l)
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Dan
p.m.; Wednesda}' t.&gt;Venlng Bible stud y, 7:ll
Mon1ux, pastor; Bill Nicholson , Sunday
o.m.
,
school supt . Sunday school, 9::ll a.m.;
DA.NVD~LE WESLEY AN , Sunday School,
morning worship and rommunion, 10: .lJ a.m .
9::0a.m .; m orning worshlp10 : 45 a.m .; youth
RI.m..AND BffiL E METHODIST- Amos
service, 6:45 p.m.; evening worship, 7:30
Tillis. pastor; Sonny Hudson , sup!. Sunday
p.m. : Wednesday, 7: JJ p .m. Prayer and
school, 9:30a.m. Morning worship, 10: .lJ a.m .
Praise.
Sunday evening servi ce, 7:00. Wedn~day
DANVILLE HOLINESS CI-IDRCH, located
evening service 7:00 p.m .; W]WlO Program,
on Route 3~ betwt&gt;en Vinton and Langsville.
9':00 a.m . each sunday morning.
Rev. Ben Watts, pastor. Sunday School, 9::1)
a .m .. Bobby Lambert S. S. Supl.i· Morning
RUTLAND CHURCH OF TilE NA2k
Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Otlldren's Happy Hour
RENE. R('V. Lloyd D. Grimm. .Jr ~. pastor.
6:45 p.m. Prayer &amp; Bible Study, 7::1l p.m.
Sunday SchooL 9::(1 a. m .: worship serv ice.
Missionary meeting first W~esday of each
10:30 a. m .: young peopl e's service. 6 p.m .
month. 7: :JJ p.m. For information can
EvangclLo;t lc scrv1cc. 6::JJ p.m. Wednesday
38SM61.
service. 7 p.m .
SD..VER RUN BI\PT!Sf. Bill Little, . MASON CHURCH OF' CHR IST, Mi ller St.,
pastor: Steve Uttle, S. Supt. Sunday school.
Mason, W. Va . EugC'nC' L. Conger. minister.
10 a.m.: morning worship, 11 a .m . Sunday
Sunday Bible Study.lO a.m.: Worship II a.m .
and 7 p .m . Wednesday Bible Study , vocal
evening worship, 7::J) p.m . Prayer meeting
music, 7 p.m . ~
and Bible study, Thursday, 7: JO p.m.: youth
meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD! Duddlnil:
CHRISI1AN FELLOWSIDP CHURCH. 383
Lane, Mason. W. Va. R(&gt;V . Ronnie B. Rose.
N. 2nd Ave., MlddlepoM. Sunday School, 10
Pastor. Sunday School 9: ~5 a. m .; Morn In~
Worship 11 a .m. Evening Servic&lt;' 7:~ p.m.
a .m . Sunday and Wednesday Evening
Setv:lces 7: :JJ p.m.
_
Wednesday Women's Mini stries 9 a. m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD, Rev. R . E .
(meeting a nd prayer) . Praver and Bible
Study 7 p.m.
·
Robinson, pastor. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m .;
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
. worship service, 11 a.m.; evening service, 7
p.m.; youth service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
CHR1STIAN U~ON, The Rev. William
Campbell, pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.;
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
James Hughes, supt. : evening scrvlct&gt;, 7:30
Robert E. Musser, pastor. Sunday school, 9:30
a.ln.; Paul Musser, supt.; mornihg worship,
. ~.in. Wednesday t'Vl'nlng prayer met&gt;lln!i,
7: .1) p.m . Youth prayer servlceeachTuesday.
10:)) a .m .; Sunday evening service, 7 p.m.;
mJd-week service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
· FAJRVIE\V BIBLE CHURCH, Letart, W.
SYRACUSE: CHURCH OF TiiE NAZA· · Va. , Rt. 1. Mark hw\n , pastor. Worshi p
RENE - Rev. .Tames B. Kittle, pa,stor.
st'l'Vlces. 9::.Kl a. m .; Sunday Sctool, 11 ii. m.:
evening worship, 7:.10 p .m. Tuesday L'OIIa~e
Sherman Cundiff, superintendent. Sunday
prayer meeting and Bible study. 9:30a.m.
School. 9: lJ a.m.; Morning Worship 10; :II
Wors trlp .c;crvlce, Wednesday. 7:.lJ p.m.
a.m,; Evangelistic service, 6 p.m. Prayer and
p r . Wednesday, 7 p.m .; youth meeting, 7
OUR SA VlOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH Walnut and Henry Sts ., Ravenswood, W. Va.
p.m.
Thf' Rev. George C. Weirick, pastor. Sunda y
EDEN UNITED BREI'HREN IN CHRIST,
Elden R. Blake, past'or. Sunday School 10
School. 9:.'l&gt; a.m.: Sunda y worhs ip, 11 a.m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now loca ted
a.m .; Robert Reed, supt.; Morning sermon ,
on Pomeroy Pike, County Road ~ near
U a.m. ; Sunday night services, Christian
Flatwoods. Rev. Blackwood , pa_.c;tor. Sf:rvtces
Endeavcr, 7; :1J~_e.m .; Song service, 1J p.m.;
Preaching, B:;o, p.m. Mld·week Prayer
on Sunday at lO::Jl a.m . and 7::11 p.m . with
mtettng, Wednesday, 1 p.m., Alvin Reed, lay
Sunday sc0001 1 9:30 a.m . bible stud y,
Wednesday. 7::11 p.m.
leader.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Roger
Fi\ITH FELLOWSf!IP CRUSADE FOR
Watsm., pastor: Crenson Pran. Sunday
OIRIST - St. Rt. 338, An tiquity. P astor. Rev.
ScOOOI supt Morning worship. 9: l) a.m.:
Franklin Dickens. Su nday moming, 10 a.rn.
SUnday evening, 7: :Ml p.m . Thursday evening.
Sunday scooot.. 10: XI a. m.;~ evening service,
7:3&gt; p.m .
7::Jl p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST. !Wv. Tom Dagley;
STIVERSVIL LE COMMUNITY BAPT!Sf
Joe Sayre, SUnday ScOOOl Superintendent.
CHURCH, Pas1or RobE'rt Byers. Sunday
Sunday school, 9:45a .m .; evening worship,
School 10 a.m .; Worship Service ll a. m .:
7::t:l p.m. Prayer meeting, 7:ll p.m.
Sunday evening ser;vice, 7: ~ p.m .: Wedncs·
day evening service, 7:30 p.m.
Wedneoclay.
INOEPENDE:NT HOLINESS CHURCH,
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
Inc. - Paul St., Middleport . Rev-. O'Dell
CHRIST, VIncent C. Waters, m, minister;
Manley, pastor. Sunday School, 9:ll a.m. :
Herman Black, superintendent Sunday
Morning worship 10:30 a .m .; evening wor·
School 9:J) a.m.; evening service, 7 p.m.;
ship, 7:.l'l p.m . Tuesday , 12 :30 p.m. Women's
WQieoday Bible Scltool, 7 p.m.
prayer meeting: PrayE&gt;r a nd praise service,
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Wedne!id~y. 7:l'l p.m .
RENE, R'ev. Herbert Grate, pastoc. Frank
Rlllle, tupl. Sunday School, 9:30a.m. Won hlp
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
lei'Vice, 11 a .m. aDd 7: :II p.m . Prayer
JESUS CHRIST'. Elder James Miller. Bible
meetJnc, Wedneldo,y, 7: :II p.m.
study, Wednesday. 7::JJ p.m.; Sunday School.,
lAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
10 a.m. Sunday night service, 7::Kl p.m.
CHURCH, Rei&lt;. Rollort MWer, pas!oi; Lloyd
POMEROY WESLEY AN HOLINESS Wrt;bt. Dlrectcr of Chrtstlan Education,
Harr!SonvtUc Road. Earl FieldS, pastor.
SUDcSay SChool, 9::JJ a .m. ; Morning Worship,
Henry Eblin, Jr .. Sunday School Supt. Sunday
lli::Jl a .m .; Choir Practlct&gt;, Sunday, 6::.!
SChOOl
9:.l&gt; a .m .; Morning Worship 11 a.m.:
~~ Ewnlna Won hlp, 7: .:1) p.m . Wednesday
Sunday evenllli service. 7: :JJ p.m .; Prayer
yer and Bible St\lcly, 7: :Jl p.m.
Meeting, WedllEOday, 7::» p. m .
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST, Otar!es
R....U, Sr., rntnlttter: ftlck Macomber, !111 ...
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GODSunday tcltool, 9::.! a.m.; \Wlnhlp '""""'
Joy Clark. pastor; Wotshlp service Sunday,
IO::wla.m. Bible~. Tuelday, 7::11 p.m. '
10:00 a.m ; Sunday !ICOOol, 11 a.m.; worship
REORGANIZED . CHURCH OF JESUS
service, 7:_ ~- p.m. Wednesday prayer meet·
CHRIST OF LA1TER DI\Y SAINTS,

preachln~

service second a nd fourth

Sundays, 7:30 p.m .; Christian Endeav or, flrsl
and third Sundays, 7:.30 p.m. Wednesday
praye r meeting a nd Bible study, 7: 30p.m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS, .J7319 Sta tP Rout e
124 (One milE' eaSt of Rutlandl . Sundav, BlbiC'
lecture 9::10 a.m .; Wat chtower studY. 10:20
a.m .; Tuesday, Blbl(' study, 7:30 p .m .;
Thursday, Theocratic Sehoul, 7:30 p .m .:
~rvice Meeting-, 8:20p. m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Located on thE' 0 . J. 'rVIl ite Road off highway
160_ Pa t Henson, pastor. Sunday School 10
a.m . Classes for all ages. J un ior Church
11 :00; Morning Worship. 11:00; Adult Choir
· pract~e 6:00p .m . Sunday . Young Peo pl e'~.
Children's Church and Adult Bible Stud y,
WCdnesda y at 7:30p.m.
HOPE BAPl' IST CHAPJ;: L -570Grant St ..
MlddleJX!rt: Sun day Sc hool. 10 a.m. : morning
worhstp, 11 a.m.: evenin g worshi p. 7 p .m ..
Wednesday evening Bib le study and prayer
meetin~ . 7 p.m . Mfllla ted with Southern
Baplls t Convcn llon.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST State Rout~ 124 a nd County Road 5. Mark
SE:&gt;evers, minister: Sunday School Supt .. Ste ve
P ickens . Sunda y school. 9:30a .m.: · morning
'!"Orship, 10 :.30 a. m. : evening worship, 7 p .m .
Wedn('Sday wors hip, 7 p.m .
·
JUBILEE CHRISTL\N CE NTER .George's Creek Roaa. Rev. C. J . LcmiC'y,
pastor; Pa ul Poar. Church School Superintendent. Church sd-ool, 9:30a.m.: mol'nlng
worship, 10: ll a. m ; ewnlng service, i p .m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. Classes for
all ages.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH. Corrl('r
of Sycamor·c a nd Serond Sts .. Pom('I"Oy. The
Rev . William Mlddleswarlh, Pastor. Su nd ay
Sc hool a t 9:45 a.m . a nd Church ServiCf'S 11
p.m .
SACRED HEART, Msgr. Anthony Glanna·
. morE&gt;, Ph. 992-5898. Satw'day evening M ass,
7::l! p.m. ;--sunday Mass , 8 a.m. and 10 a. m .
Confessions one-hair hour tx•fon• l'ach M ass.
ceo €!asst.'S, ll a .m. Sunday.
.
VI.CTORY BAPTIST - 525 N. 2nd St ..
Middlep:Jrt. James_E. 1\(&gt;es('(\ P&lt;!,slur. Su nday
mornin g wors hip, 10 a. m .; l'v('nln~ service, 7
p.m.; Wednesday evening ":on;hip. 7 p .m .;
VIsitation, Thw·sda:v. 6:30p.m.
TiliNTTY CHRISTIAN A..'-c;F:MBLY , Cool·
vU le - GllbPrt S[X' n ~ r . pastor. Sunday
school. 9:30 a. m .: morning servk'r. 11 a.m .
Sunday evening service, 7::11 p.m. : midwf'f'k
prayer service ~ednC'Sday, 7: :J.J p.m.

MOUNTOLJVE COMMU NITY CI-f.URCH.
La"''l'cn('(' Bush. pastor: Ma x Folmrr. Sr.
Supcrlnt cn&lt;k'n1. Sunday School and m or ning
wors hip, !t:.lO a. m . Su nday C'VC'ning service. 7
p.m. ; Youth m ('('ting and Bible study,
Wednesday, 7 p.m .
·
·
UNITED FAlTH CH URCH - Routf' 7 on
P om eroy bypa ss. Rev. Robert Smi th, Sr ..
pastor: Rov. James Cund iff, assistant pastor.
sunday School, 9:30a.m.; mornln,e: wors hip,
10:30 a .m .; evening worship, 7: .lJ p.m .
\'Vom en·s Fellows hip, Tuesda ys, 10 a .m.
Wedn&lt;'Sda y night prayPr servicc. 7:30 p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHORCH, MasOfl, meet
a t Uniled Stl!('] Workf'rs Union Hall , Ra ilroad
Street. Mason. Mornln ~ worshi p 9:30 a.m.
Sunda y SeOOollO:JO a.m. Evl'ninR &amp;&gt;rvice, 7
p.m . Prayer ffi(~tlng WOOrwsday, 7:30 p.m.
Midweek Bi ble St ud y, Thursda v. 7 p.m .

--.
,....,

lHE DAILY
SENTINEL

'.

r;,

t~ ~

Mt &lt;1di C'po rl
P 1m C'rOw' 0

Rev ~yle
Bunch, su peri n·

FOREST RUN BAP'I'lST Borden, pastor.

Corn~ll ~ s

tendent. Sunday school 9: .'JJ a.m.: SPCOnd t!Jid
fourth Surrlay!l, worship service at 2: :ll p.m
MT. MORIM-1 BAPTIST - Fourl h and
Ma in Sts .. Mlddlf1)0rt. Rev . Calvin Minnls.
pastor. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardner, supt.
Sunday sc hool. 9: 30a .m .: worship Sf&gt;rvice,
10:45 a.m.
BURLI NGHAM SOUTHERN BI\PTISI'
CHURCH. Route .I , Shadr. Pastor. Don Black.
Mf!UatE?d wl!h Sou thern Baptist co nvention .
Sunday school, 1:30 p.m.; Sunda y worstitp,
2:.lJ p.m . Thursda y evening Bible study. 7
p.m .
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine, .
Rout(&gt; 124. William Hoback. pastor. Sunday
school, 10 a.m .: Sunday evcninR service , 7
p.m . Wednesday even ing service i p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTI$1', Don Cheadle,
Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a. m . Mor ning
WorShip, 10 :.10 a.m. PrayE'r S&lt;&gt;rvke. alternate
Sundays

MIDDLEPORT PEI\'TECOSTAL, Third
Ave., th e Rev . Clark Baker, pastor. Carl
Nottingham, Sunda y School Su pt. Sunday
SchoollO a.m. - classes for all ages. Evening
servtre:;, 6 p.m. Wednesd ay, St ud y, 7: :J) p.m .
YolJit! services. 7:30p. m . Friday.
F.CCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St.,
Mlddll'pOrt. Pas tor Lo:; Brothe r chuck M cPher·
son. Sunda y School at 10 a. rn , Services
Sunday evening a t 7 p.m . a nd Wf:'dnesdav at 7

p. m.

.

ANTIQUITY BAPTl~J. RPv. Ear l Shuler,
pastor. Sund ay schooJ 9:30 a.m.; Chu rch
service. 7 p.m.; yout h meet ing, 6 p.m.
Tuesday BiiJic Study , 7 p. m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHT HOUSE . 3.ll45
Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Tom Kelly , pas tor.
Danny Lam ben , Sunday School Superint endent. Sunday Morning service, 10:00 a.m.:
Sunday evenlnt::: servtce 7: J) p.m . Sef\1ces
Tuesday and TiluJ'Sdov f'venings a1 7:,)) p.m .
WORD OF FAITH, '93 Mill St., Middl eport:
Richard St('\l.•art . pastor . Su nday m orning,
10:00; Sunday evening, 7:30. Tuesday morn·
lng Bi ble Study, 10: ~: Wednesday evening,
7:l); Thursday m orning vldt.'O with Kennf'th
CopE'Iand, 10:00; Fliday evening vtdro wl!h
KPnneth Copelancl, 7: XI.

NEW HAVEN C?lfURCH OF' THE NAZi\
RENE, RP\'. Glendon Stroud , pastor . Sundav
School, 9:.1ll a .m.; Worship Serv ice, 10:30
a.m.; Youth Servke, Sunday, 6: 15 p.m. :
Sunday E'lrenlng servi('(', 7:00 p,m . Wednesday Prayer MN'ttng and 13ibl e Study 7:00p.m
NEASE SETI'LE MENT CHURCH. [)o.
naid R. Karr. Sr.. pastor. Sunday afternoon
serv!('('S, 2:30; Thursday rvening service,
7: ll.
F'TRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Mason, W.Va.
Pa stor. Bill Murphy. Su nday School. 10 a . m. ;
Sunday t"Venlng St'r vi('(', 7: 30 p.m .; Praver
m eet\n~ and Bible Study Wednesday, i::xl
p.m. ~veryo n £&gt; welrome.
RliTLAND F'R E:E WILL BAPTIST Salem S1. Rev . Paul TaylOr , pastor. Su ndav
School, 10:00 a .m.: Su nday evening sE&gt;rvicP.
7: ll p.m.: Wed nesday evening prayPr
meeting. 7:30.
·
SOl!T'H BETHEL NEW T ESTAMENT
CHURCH - Silve r FUdge. Duane Syden·
shicker. pastor. Sunduy School 9 a.m. :
churc h sen.~ce tn a. m. Bible stuc;ty, Wed nes·
day. 7: :vJ p.m . J unethruSeptl'mber , 7:OOp.m,
Oc.tobf'r thru May. Sunday evening fl'IIOW·
ship. 7: 00 p.m. ;June thru September: 6:00
p.m . OC'tobf&gt;r thru ~1ay.

s.

,,,

••
'·

Sermonette
Jesu~ had quite a knack for tran sf~r mlng j}('rsonali ty. Look at the men .lesus chose
to be His dLo;;ctples- many were Impetuous a nd h('adstrong with abras ive 'per!i.Onalilles
-but Jesus saw their potentia l. He did not oblilt'rate thetrrtlstlnctlveness: hPgathf'red
their several gUts lnto an orchE10tra or praise. They became the ''li!l:hl of the world'' and
the "salt of the earth." Even a dirty little fis herman deVf'laJX'(I a warm personality.
A warm PffSOnall ty can't create genius, Out genius \-'o'1thout It Isn't very appeal ing.
Remember the song by J ohnny Burke and Ji mmy Van Heusen In w hich they
suggest, tongue In cheek, that many great people have lx'&lt;'ome so t.x&gt;eausc of a fault less
personali ty? Th e«&gt; Is really a lot to that maxim. Actually, I S('(' I! more than a m a.."&lt;lm _
rather a law , a law that controls the attainment of my goal. I would call i! a law because
Its workings al'f&gt; Inevitable. unalterabl e, inescapabl('.
,
Let's face 11, one's suocess or faUure In any ventw-e will lik C'IYlx' d etermined bv the
degree of harmon y he can develop In hls working relations. While' a bility , specla'uzro
knowledge and hard work m.ay bf' important factor s in the accompl ishment of a goa l,
they beromf' of little Importance when not combined wtth a plensl nQ !)('rsonalitV.
Regard Ia'~ or genius , no outward signs of achievement ever become C'\'ldrn t unt il one 'Is
able to Interject part d. his personality Into others who will act In his lll?hJif.
·
What a rontrast was the h~aC' hlng J esus offered of a PD"''Prful JX'rsonalitY to thC'
pettinE5s, smallness and lndltference of so many people .
·
J~us said. ''But I say to you that hear, Love your enemies. do ~ood tot ho.w who hat e
you, bless those whocurse;rou , pray for those who abuse you. To hi m who strik('S you on
the one cheek. offei: thf' other also; and ·from h.lm who t ak ~ &lt;twa.v your cloak d o not
withhold your coat as well ... lend, expecting nothing in return .. "What a m cssagPtO the
cold and angry of that day and thl"iio!
'
Much of the teaching of Jesus was directed toward t11e huma n pcr!iionall ty. See how
much of It you can recognize from what I Uke to.call th&lt;' PLEASING PERSONALITY
PRINCIPLE.
A pJc·a stng personality embraces a poo!tlve menta l allltudf'. Both positive and
negative m ental attltuclcs are co ntagious. and both transmit exactly the way you "·oulcl
suppose they would.
,
A pleasing personality mus t Include conduct ~ded by tru l h. 1-nason. justlC'P and
fairness. This Is often the most dltfiC\111of ourdcallngs to hold In chff'k. tx-cau~ It re l!l'S
so hea\•Uy on control ot the tongue. Not alltdcasoropinlonsshould be &lt;'xpressed, evl'n 11
they are based upon verified, Indisputable foc t.
A pleasing personality never resorts to Vitr1ollc crllk'ism bul insists on a
constructive Judgment, Cl' none a\ an.
~
A pleasing personality flnds Its essential nature In pu re, unadultE't'ated co u11('S \
Polltf', respectful, considerate behavior becorT.es of greatest value wh('n It is a generoU~
ootreach of our Inner feelings- Not a tap otsacchartne acquiescence turned on and oH
at wt\1.
And a pleasing personaUty Js "going the extra mUe, " doing that extra li ll ie bit that
wasn 't 11!Qulred, and doing It ls Jn exceUent fashion!
I have seen men and women of apparently little talent- Put with pcn;onalltyplu st1Se to dlzeytng heights; 1 have Seen genius never quite makC' It beyond the frin ges
because of a lack of the samf' dlstlngulshlng characteristic.
Now, the pleasing personality prlndpl~ doesn't say yOu ha ve to piNI Sr everybodv·
you can 't of course. But the more successful you a rein w:lnnln~ the fa vorablt&gt;npproval'of
others, th~ more sUCc.mM._you wtll be In anything else you desire,
Jesus summation Is presented so simply, Wf' often overlook It: ''As you Wish that
others would do to you, do so to them ... " - Lee Miller , Rector, Grac(' Church ,

•

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�•
lbge-8- The l:bily

Sentinel

Fricby, October 7, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Economic report: Sales up, stocks reach record
By The Associated Press
The stock market leaped to
another record Thursday on expec.
lations of lower mterest rates, and
the nation's retailers reported brisk
sales for September
· In a less encouraging report, the
Labor Department said the number
of flrst·tlme claims for unemployment benefits rose by 2Q.~ In the
week ended Sept. 24, to 407,1XXJ.
Economists said that meant 1m
provement In job markets may be
slowing.
On Wall Street, the stock-pnce
rally pushed the Dow Jones average
of JJ lndustri;lls to a record 1,268 81
That was an lll.fiO.pomt gam from
Wednesday, lifting the Dow average
past the preVIous record of 1,260.77
on Sept. 26
Analysts cited new enthusiasm
about a decline m mterest rates,
although rates were little changed
Thursday President Reagan said
Wednesday that he expected rates

'

. to d!;"op soon.
In their reports on September
sales, the major retailerssa1d-gams

stay, we expect to see a return to
double-digit sales increases."
Retail industry analysts said the
·gams were in line with expectations
and continued a pattern of steady
growth.
Stanley Iverson. retail analyst for
Duff &amp; Ph~lps Inc. ln Chicago, said
reta ilers can expect a good Christ·
mas season ·'There is a strong pace
of spending out there, " he said
In other economiC developments
·
Thursday:
- Willard C. Butcher , chairman
of Chase Manhattan Bank, told the
Los Angeles World Affairs Council
there was little chanCE' that coun·
tries owing huge sums to mterna·
tiona! banks would form a debtors'
-cartel to bargain with lenders as a
unit. Latin American nattons alone
have $.lXl billion ln foreign debt,
Including $6.5 billion owed to Chase.
-The Investment Company lnstl·
tute, a Washington-based trade
organization, said assets of the

were encouraging despite a heat
wave early In the month that put a
briefdamperondemand forfalland
winter fashions.
Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co. reported a
27.5 percent nse from ayearearlier.
Edward Telling, the chairman, said
the company had "strong gains" in
every section of the country. He
attributed the unprovement to the
economic recovery, saying sa les of
major appliances we1e up subs ta n·
tlaliy for the 12th consecutive
month.
Among the other big retailers, K
ma rt was up 8.8 percent and J C
Perl!ley Co. Inc. posted a 5.1 percent
mcrease.
"Particularly in theapparellmes,
sales were strong when tempera·
tures were seasona bly cool," sa1d
Bernard M. Fauber, chairman of K
mart. "Once fall weather Is here to

~~r7, 1983

KITCHEN &amp; SON

141,358,700

Issues Jraded
2,014
1,149
Unchanged

336

.,

COLUMBUS, Oh.lo (AP) -U.S
Sen John Glenn edged President
Reagan, but Reagan trounced
Walter F. Mondale In the statewide
Columbus Dispatch MaD Poll.
The poD, taken Sept. 26-29 of 1,610
registered Ohio voters, asked, "If
you have these choices for president
in 1984, for whom would you vote?"

The results: Glenn 52 percent,
Reagan 48 percent, Reagan 58
percent, Mondale 42 percent.
The Dispatch said It calculates the
possillle margin of error In the poll at
plus or minus 3 percentage points,
and that Glenn could be ahead 5545
or behind 5149.

OHIO VAlLEY

•S.&amp;P Comp.
170.28 + 2.54

•Dow Jones Ind

POMEROY , 0 .

992 · 2259
EAGLE RIDGE -

Spirt entry,

fam1~ room. deck large ubllly,

still like new, $4{) 000
MIDDLEPORT- Pearl St Wmker balhroom corner lot
garage, 4 bedrooms, $45,000
BRADBURY - 2 year old
, ranch home woOdburner. ~
acre lot $43,000
MIDDLEPORT ~ Grant St 3 car garage beaut~u l klchen,
formal d1n1ng'room $48 000
MIDDLEPORT - l'ilth St Coloma! wl h modern features,
pool fireplace central air

$49 500
POMEROY - Mulbeny Avo
Extensive remod~1ng
equ1pped klch en $49 900
APPlE GROVE - f arm app'
75 acres, 1 story house, barn,
nvertront acreage $47,500
SYRACUSE- RustiC Hills3 bedroom ranch. fam1~ room,
f~rep~ce

$48,000

CHESTER AREA - 3 bedroom
bnck veneer ran ch rec roolll,
woodburner, equ1pped kl·
chen $53.000
POMEROY - Lmcoln Hill B1g and beautdul, trash
compactor $55.000
RUTlAND - Bncl&lt; St. - A
home w1th everythmg out·
stand1ng fam11)' room With bar

$49,900

1

REEDSVILLE - 681 - Fam11)'
comfort wllh plenty of room,
garage
and
wo-kshop

$46000
MIDDLEPORT Bu•ness
buldmg 4 apartment and 2
commerCial rental\ $45.000
RUTlAND - New L1ma Rd
- 47 acre farm, wlh a dream
of a house $57,900
RACINE - Rt. 124- Shade
trees, 11 acres of campmg
srtes, home has 3 bedrooms

$68,500
RUTlAND - 05 acres of good
laymg land, 6,000 sq ft. barn,
free gas to house $85,000
"PORTlAND - 182 acre tarm,
barn s"e of Noah's Ar~ nver
v1ew,
g1gan~c
house

$290,000
NEW LISTINGS
POMEROY - Mam St N1ce ~ont porch will great
r~er view, lwo story frame
. home wlh 4 bedrooms and 2
ball-., part basement $29,900
DANVILLE- Twostorfnome,
has a big barn m a qua~nt lillie
town HI ball-., 1 acre coal
shed, and frul trees. $26,500
POMEROY Fwe Po1nts
Arll - Ranch home will
1,800 sq ft. Family room,
garag~ flrepfa c~ 4 bedrooms
and 2 ball-.. You wtlllove th~

one $53,500
'

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr
GRI 992·6191
Trussell 949·2660
Dottie T1111er 992·5692
Office 992·2259
·

u

A
~

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
OONALO F JOHNSON
PlAINTIFF
VS
GEORGE MILLER. ET AL
DEFENDANTS
NO. 83 CV 242
NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION

TO

GEORGE MILLER whose ad
dress 15 unknow n 1f deceased
the un known hfl1rs dev1sees
lega tees admrnrs trators execu
tors and/or assrgns o f George
Mi ller dec

305 Mergs County Deed
Records
The prayer of sa1d compl aint
rs that the above descrrbed orl
and gas nghl s be partrt10ned
that the 1n1erests be set off or
ordered sold rl 11 cannot be
part1tr oned tmd lor allowance
of an orney fees and costs
her ern
You are requrrea to answer
the co mplaint w1 th 1n twenty
e•ght days after the last publrca
tron of thrs no\lce wh1ch w1ll be
publrshed once each week fo r
s1x consecut1ve weeks The last
publrcat1on writ be made Of.l
Oct 14 1983 and the twenty
ergh t days lor answer • wrll
co mmen ce on that da te
In case of your larlure to
an swer or otherwrse respond
as reQu ired by the Ohro Rul es ol
C1v1l Procedure judgment by
default OM II be rendered agarnst
you for the relref demanded 1n
th e compl arnt ~
larry E Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Me1gs County Common
Pleas Court
Dated September 7 1983

FLO REN CE MILLER whose
address rs unknown If de
ceased the unknown hcr rs
devrsees legatees adm1n1stra
tors execu10rs an d/or assrgns
of Florence M1ller dec
H W ROUSH whose ad
dress 1S un kn own 1f deceased
the. unknown herrs dev1sees
15228
legatees adm1nrstrators execu
WILLIAM ROUSH
whose
tors and/or ass1gns of H W address 1s unknown 1f de
Roush dec
ceased the unknown he1rs
CLARA ROUSH whose last dev1sees legatees admlnrs tra'
lmowl) address rs c/ o llf!ne tors executors and /or ass1gns
Stump 674 Tallkro11 Drrve ol W•llr am Roush dec
1919 16 23 3011017 14 6&lt;c
Ak ron Ohro 44300
ALMA ROUSH wh ose ad ·
ILENE STUMP whose last dress 1s unknown 11 deceased
knov.n addres s rs 67 4 Ta llkron the unknown he,rs dev•sees
Dnve Akr on Oho 44300
legatees admonrstrators eJ.:eCu
ELIZABETH SMITH whose tors and /or ass1gns of Alma
address rs unknown 1f de
Roush dec
ceased the unknown herrs
EDNA ROUSH who se ad
devrsees legatees adm1nrstr a
tor s execu tors and/or assrgns the unknown he1rs dev•sees
dress 1s unknown rf deceased
of El rzabeth Sm1th dec
legatees admrn1strators execuBLANCHE FEHRELL whos e tors and /or ass•gns of Clyde
address rs unknown rf de
Roush dec
ceased the unknown herrs
You are hereby notrfred that
devrsees legatees executors
you have been named defendadmrnrstra tors and/or assrgns ants rn a legal act•on F&gt;ntltled
of Blanche Ferrell dec
R B FERR ELL whose ad
Donald
GeOige Mrller
F Johnson
et al defendants
pl arntlll vs 1
Th1s act1on has been as s1gned
Case No 83-VC 242 and rs
Real Estate General
pend1ng m the Common Pleas
cou n of Mergs County Ohro
Pomeroy Oh10 457 69
The ObJec t of the Cornplarnt
All types of root wort, new
IS a partition actron concernr11g
or rapair, gutters and
orl and gas nghts and 'to QUieT
trt le to orl apd gas nghts
21• r 2nd Sl
R£AllOi
downspouts, gutter clean·
underly1ng 1he follow1ng des~
Ill&amp; and painting, stonn
cr1bed real esla te
Phone
doors and wtndows.
Srtua ted •n Lebanon Town
H 614 )· 992 · 3325
ShiP Me1gs County Oh1o
All Work Guaranteed
be1ng the sou th half of 100
"Free Estimates"
NEW LISTING- 95 acre farm
acre tot 167 beg 1nn1ng at th~
wlh Broom house, has 2 new
south east corne r of sa1d 100
I Call; 949-226~
stone fireplaces, furnace wrth
acre lot No 16 7 Town 2 Range
or 949-3091
free gas. bank barn, &amp; good
1lrn l eban on TownshiP 1n the
j lO lie
Oh10 Company s Purc hase
fences 1n Rut~nd Tow nship
$\encc north 5 73 cha1n s to a
Want $60000
post the southeast co rner of 54 Misc. Merchandise
PM and N A A1chey s one half
NEW LISTING- Good reason
of sa1d 1DO ac re l ot thence
a~e buy on Unroln Hts 6 rms,
north 1 7 5 charns by a lrne
AUTHORIZED SERVICE
balh, carpetmg furnace, basepassrng over the m•ddle of the
ment and vmyl sK11ng. As~ng
All
run to a post then ce nort h 40
lrm:s to a post thence west 79
$21,500
charns to a post 1n the west Ime
of sa1d lot thence soul\,. 6
NEW LISTING - One wooded
cha1ns and 25'h lrnks to th e
acre house site lUst off Rt. 7
sou thwe31 corner of sa•d lot
Near Rock Sprmgs for $2,500
thence east 80 ch arns to the
place of beomn1ng contar n1ng
WE ALSO SERVICE
3 ACRES - Wrth septiC tan~
50 acres more or less
ALL OTHER MAKES
TP water,. and electriC for
Reference rs made to deed
$6,000
recorded rn Volume 209 page

PHONE 992-2156

AIR CONDITIONERS
RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIII.
HEATING • PLUMBING

S&amp;W TV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Oh1o

Public Notice

Juven1 l e DI VIS IOn
M e1gs
County Pomeroy Oh10 45769
The objeCt of the Pet1t1on rs to
adopt sa d Ay Wongchang by
th e Pet1t1oner and d1vest rng you
of all parental nght
• You are requ1red to answer
th e PetitiOn w11h1n twentv e1ght
davs or ObjeCt to the grant1ng to
the adoptron wrth1n twenty Big ht days aft er the last publrca!lon a t th1s notrce whrch will be
''Go ahead and sue It's JUSt pu blrshed once each week for
your computer's word agamst SrJ.: consecut•ve weeks The last
publrcaMn wrll be mad e on the
our computer's word "
28th day of October 1983 and
the twenty-e1ght days Will com
mence on that date In case of
Public Notice
farlure to answer or oth erw1se
respond as requ1red, ,b.y the
Oh 1Q Rules of Crvrl Procedure
IN THE
Judgment by defaul f w1ll be
COMMON PLEAS
rendered agarnst you and the
COURT,
Petrl!on granted for th e relief
PROBATE DIVISION,
demanded 1n the Petrt1 on dated
MEIGS COUIIITY, OHIO
September 1.,9 1993
IN THE MATTER OF ADOP·
Robert E Buck
TION OF Ay Hoolol Mono
Judge and

1/'1

.... ____ -

NO. 24237
-NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION TO, Supote Laamee, lui

(91 23 30 (l O)E~-~f~cr21CI~ft
61C

known address: District of
Chokchai, Province of Nakhon

Rattima
You are hereby not1fred that
you have been named as
pu tat1ve father of Ay Wong
ch an g Thr s actron has been
ass•gned Ca se No 2423 7 1n
the Common Pleas Court

•

Public Notice

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed b1ds w1 ll be rece1ved

Certrlred Check or 81d Bond rn
th e amount of 5 percent of th e
total b1d and be drawn 1n favor
of the Vrl lage of Syracuse Oh1o
All b1d envelopes shall be
pla1nly marked B1d lor Ch aS SIS
or B1d l or F1re Apparatus
To qer specrfrcatrons contact
the Syracuse V1llage Hall at

by the .V1IIage of Syracuse at
the otf1ce of the Clerk unt1 l 7 00
PM Oct 18 1983 tor furn 1sh
1ng one f1 re truck and equipment accordrng to the spec1l1·
ca tr ons on l rle rn sa1d off1ce
Separate b1ds are sohcrted as
follows
· 81d for Chass1s only
· 8 1d for F1re Apparatus only
Brd lor Optronal equrpment
B1 d lor complete Chass rs
and Frre Apparatu s
81d lor 1984 Chass1s only
Each Did shall conta1 n the full
name of each person fr rm or
corporatron Interest ed 1n same
and shall be accompan1ed by a

11

992-7777
The Vrllage of Syracuse
hereby reserves the rrghr to
reJect any or all b1d s and to
select th e best brd for the
purpose
By Order of t he VIllage
Councrl
Janrce Lawson
Clerk

191 23 30 1101 7 31c

EAFORD(H

"oN
HOTPOINT &amp;
GENERAL ELECTRIC
APPLIANCES

OWNER FINANCING - N1ce
home 1n Racme Has 8 rms 2
ball-., 2 furnaces, carpelln&amp;
pane1ngs, ga&lt;age wrth shop for
$7,000 00 down and balance
l1ke rent

POMERY
LANDMARK

INSTALLED.
WITH PAD

carpetm&amp; modern kit., d1mng

3 bedrooms, and lg bu1ldmg
for auto repair on Slate Rt. 143

As~ng

'

$45,900

$23,500,

$99 TO $189
Also Army Supplies,
Radios, Watches &amp;
. General Variety
2nd St. ecr011 from
Poat OH1ce
Mason. W Va.

773-5040
10.3 I mo pd

SPORTSMEN

Have Your
Trophies
Professionally
Mounted by

. THE

TAXIDERMY
SHOP
New Lim• Ro•d
Rutlend, Ohio

PH. 742-2226

513.95

Good Selection Of

Sq . Yd. lnoloffod '

GOLD SEAL

ANSO IV NYLON
'15.95

CONGOLEUM

R£ALIOR

Headq11ar ters

Ho11sing

USED
APPLIANCES
Washers, OJY11rs
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

Yd. lnolaffod

RUBBER-BACK
$399 iA~:RRY

1 white rabbit
2849 .

PART-TIME HELP IN POMEROY
NEEDED AT ONCE.
RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY.
GOOD PAY.

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, REClAMATION
WORK
•lAND! CLEARING,

Route

4,

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
ins - S1dinc - Contrete
l'at1os - Sidewalks '
New Construction - Re·
modeling - Custom Pole
Barns

CHARLES SAYRE
AND. SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

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

9 12 Tf

New "'iomes - Extensive
Remodellnc
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bldgs
&amp; Garages
•Roofina Work
oAktrrunum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7513
or 992-2282

11 11

,,

Certa i nteed

Vinyl Replacement
Windows

Vinyl

Authorized John Deer,

New Holltlnd, Bush

Hoi

Farm Equipment
Deel11
Parts

&amp; Service
I 311&lt;

Roger Hyse!l
GARAGE

St. Rt. 124,

Pomtroy, OH.

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

Also

&amp;

Aluminum

SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Glraaes"
C. It for free siding estimates, 949-2801 or
949-2860.
No Sunday Calls

As Low As

We

can repair and ""

$250 Each

tar COflll. We can ale6
add boll and rod out 1'11diaton~. We also rapair

"Free fsfimates"
Also Blown Insulation

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation
PH.

SERVICE
core radiatols and hM·

992·2772
9 9 I mo

GBSTanks.

PAT Hill FORD .
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

MINE RUN

S3(JK)

ATON

. PH. 992-2280

LOST Female Cocker Spa·
ntal buff colored, answers to
Maggie Owner It heartsick.

992-6215 or

CONTRACT! NG
RECIAMATJON.
•Excavating
•Ponds
•septic Tanks
•Hauling
949-2293
Racine, OH.

•water Pipe
"Gas Pipe
•Regulators
•fittings
"Drips

CHESTER

THE
TROPHY
KING '

$60.00 money order lost In

vicinity of Pt. Pl. lffound call
304-676·4333.

SERVICE

Navy blue jacket. matches
pants 1uit, lost in front of
K&amp;: K Mob1le Homes 304·

•Weahen •Dithweshera
Range• _
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

676·2436

Trophy

Manuflcturers
PlAQUES
ENGRAVING

REPAIR
CHESTER, OH.
9 12 1 mo

Auct1on every Tue•day
night, Pt Pleasant. WVa,
Auct lonnie Neal Youth
Center Bldg • Camden St

S1zes stan from

' 614-367-7101

12'xl6'

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Sarv1ce E1tate. Farm. An tique &amp; liq_,uidetlon aele1.
Ucanaad &amp; bonded In Ohto &amp;

Sizes from,6'x6' Up

to 24'136'

WVa. 304·773·6786 or
304· 773-9186

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
'
· Oh
·
· &amp;l(.ul._S• l. U
~•~me,

Auction ovary Fri. night at
1

I OMit
.,.,______________
"'J=.!

~,

- Water
- Sewer
- Gaa Unea
-Septic Syotema

PH.

the

Hartford

center.

Community

True kl oa d1 c f now

merchandise every weak.
Conaigmanta of new and
uaed merchandise alway•
welcome. Richard Reynold•

AUCTION every Soturdoy
n1ght. 6 p.m. Mt. Alto
Auction Bern. Consign menta t•kan avery S•turday
1 00 till sale time . Emma
Bell Auctioneer, 304·428·

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

8177.
Auction, t furniture &amp; mlac
mercheridlse. Set. Oct. 8,

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing
·

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
9 9 1 mo

1983. 10 00 a.m. 3 mllee

SWEEPER and 81wing machine repair. pane. and

ouppllea.

Pick

up

JEWELL'S
PLUMBING and
HEATING
•ExparlenCIId
•Reaeonable
•Work Guaranteed

JOB--BIG OR SMALL
J0.31mopd

ond

25560
4340.

Balloons for: Birthdaya, Get
Well, Anniverurya, SwHtheertl, parties. Cell Bel-

loonallo Co .. 448·4313.

Resldentlai-Ntw and
re·wlrin&amp;: Commercial
•
and Industrial.
BONDED-All Work
Guaranteed
Call 614-742-2214 Afttr 5 P.M.
9-22· I mo pd

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay ceah for leta model
cleen used cera.

44t-3872
Wonted to buy ueod coal •

building in Beahan

wood heatere. Swain Furni-

Modern Woodsmen of
America. At the Pomeroy

Fire Stotlon . Oct.8. From 9
tMI 4. 814·992·7802.
Racine Oun Club duea ere

Gun shoot Rooclno Gun Club.
Evory Sunday starting 1
p. m Factory chokocl gune
only.
Sllncleralla Diet cleuoo.
Monday • TIHioclay night
7:30p.m. Wednoaclaymornlng 10 ·30 o.m. Ja Anna
N-aomo. 814·112·3312.

1304) 676·

Situations
Wanted

Tree trimming and removal.
Free estimates. 614-992·

6040 or 814·949·2129

NO hunting or tno..,._g
on my property. Gerald
HodgiO, S.ncllllll Rd.

clothes. 1hoe1. coats. sewIng machine. atorm doors.
aguarlum. bed frame De·
tober 7 &amp; 8, 9AM-5PM
Rains cancels

dryer, odds &amp; ends.
Garage Sale Sat. Oct. 8,
9-4. Lake Dr., Rio Grande
large men clothes, win·
dowa. typewriter, lighll,
good clothe•. &amp; lot• mora
Avon Sale 2 AvOn collections of over 600 bottles.
Many mint cond1t1on.
Acro11 from linn's Landing,
Upper Rt 7 Sat. &amp; Sun

9 : 30 · 6 00

Mioc

Rain

inside
Garage Sale 1089 Second
Ave . Thurs. Frt .-S at .

9:00AM to 6:00PM. Good
clean clothing 11111zea, other
m1sc 1tems.

3 Fam1ly Furniture. children•
clothing. Thrus • Fri , &amp; Sat.
Raccoon Rd 314 m1. off At.
Yard Sale 4 Famtlya Thur1.
6th &amp; Fri. 7th. Sat. 8th. Just
off Rt. 141 at centenary on
L1ncoln Pike, 2nd trailer on
left &amp; white house on right
Ciothmg men &amp; womens all
sizes, boys &amp; bab1e1, 2 TVs.
chain saw, rotot1ller tools.
lawn mowera. dishes. pans.
jewelery, llnen1 &amp; m1sc.
9 :30 -7
Yard Sale 431 Jackson Pike
Rt 36 across from Highway
Patrol, Oct 7-8. 9· 6

Opportunity
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHtNG CO. recommend&amp;
that you do buameas wtth
people you know, and NOT
to send monev through the
meil until you have tnvest•gatad the offering
Water truck and route in
Ma1on and Gallia County.
Sarioul lnquiriel only. 304-

22 Money to Loan

board. 614-992·6022.

_1J_ _
In_su_r_a_nc_e_ _

1urance Co. has offered
18rvtcea for fire in1urance
coverage In Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm.
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needs Con·
tact KaH Burleson, agent

Phone 448-2921 .

18

HOME LOANS Low fi•od
rate Leeder Mortgage, 77 E

State, Athena, Ohio . 1 ·6 t 4·
592-3051 .

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING

Lower

prtces-regular tunlngs diiCounta to SeniorCtttzena,
Church&amp;~ It schools Ward ' s

Keyboard, 304-676-3824

' cash for Spnet or Grand
plano' {Even damaged con·
dltton).

Call

304·468·1818

ture, 4411-31 "'· 3rd. &amp;
Olivo St., Gaiii'JM!!Ia, Oh.

shift If poaolble. Will work
evenings &amp; waekendt . Ref·
erencea available . 388 -

9364.

I NHcl Work. Oo all jobo big
Wanted to buy Used mqblle or amall, any kind. Call Rob.
homn • truck camper !Call 448-1138.
814-441·0171.
Want to do bruah hogging

Wonted to buy. N-. uoed• *16 on hour. Call 814-258antlquo fumHuro. Will buy·1 11_4_2_7_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
ptoco or complete hou... ,.
holdo. Also camplate Auctl· Oump truck far hlro, wHI
o.,..rlng Mnrlco. Call Oeby hout coal. nnd. grovel, etc.

A. Mortln 114·112-1370. l-304~~
- 1~7~5~-3~1~1~0~.;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;~
Buvtng dolly gold, alfver I:
colna. rio!o•.l-•fry.ll8rllng
ware. atcl colne, Iarsa cur· l·
rancy. Top polctoa. Edl Bur· 21
Bu1lna11
ket1 S.rbor Shop, 2nd. A...
0
1
Middleport, oh. 114-112· 1 _ _ _P_pa_rt_u_n_tv
_ __
3478.
,-

1';;:=:;:=::=:==::=

WANTED: Glnalnga Yallow
R-. Aloo new ahllfmant of
tr8pplne IUDD!fel. Hlp boola
• we...,., ·ca.oroe lu~
114-4171 , MCII'day-Folday
1·1 p m. Bat.
Sun. 1·1
p.m

a

Ladl•• Apparal store. 300
lraad

nan1ea.

Levi, Klein, z-.

Jordache.

n,goo to

111,100 lnclucloa training,
Inventory, fl•turoaandmuch
mora. Mr. tate, 17041 713·

4'7311.

Garage Sale Frl &amp;: Sat Nice
jeans, coats, antique Victrola &amp; misc. 2 m1. West of

hoopHal Rt 36 .
2 Famdv Mov1ng Sale on At
160 y, m1 S. 36 Sat. 10-5
Sun 1·5 Everythmg must
go, pnced to sell Furniture,
picture•. curtains, beds·
preads, baby walker. toy1,
kitchen misc. , new range
hood, rad10 , clothes, etc .

Garage Sale 9 t&lt;ll6, Oct Blh
and 9th
Ant1ques to
Modern· -Metal bed with
brass knobs. 8 day clock,
wicker baby buggy-dated,
child• toy dishes. depreSSIOn
glaaa, pictures, hull vases,
old sewing machme. typewmer, miscellaneous glassware, over 3 ,000 books,
k1tchem utensils , lamps,
dolls. miscellaneous tools
toys, chord organ, end tabias, other items to numerous to list Paul Denney' s,
corner of St. Rt. 564 and
Bidwell-Rodney Rd . in Bid
well, Oh.

for

Sale

Middleport. remodeled, fiue
rooms and bath, gas fur
nance, cozy fireplace , good
neighborhood Pr1ce re ·

duced. Call 614-992- 6941
Nice 2 bedroom fenced
yard. utility room. new furnance Call 446-1686 or

Yard Sale Oct 7 ,8 Electric
typewritter, btke , baby
clothes, coffee teble, etc
332 Th1rd Ave.

Baby c lothes. furniture ,
washer &amp;: dryer. t.,n speed,
dressers, c hildren. adult

clothes Oct 7 -8
Bald Knob Rd

4 fam1ly yard sale Sat.~ Oct
8 .• 9 -1. Ch1ldrens &amp; all 11zes

Yard Sale Fri. llo Sat . Qct 7
&amp; 8th 109 K1neon Dr Fr1
10- 5'. Sat 10- 2 Clothtng all
11zes tncludmg JBans, ex
large pants. blouses. baby
clothes. B-track tapes. reco rds. some Avon bottles
glas1ware, m1sc

52335

1- - - - - - - - - - of clothing, coat s, collectibl e dolls &amp; lots of mtsc Rt
33 at Oarwm

1- - - - - - -- - -

Time Yard Sale Adults
clothmg, chtldrens clothing ,
toys. etc Approximately 2
m1les south on Neighbor
hood Rd Just at Clicker Ad
Startmg Saturday at

Saturday 10 am -4 p m
Lots of nice items, very
reasonable at 442 S 6th
Ave
Middleport. Rain
cancel s.
'

.. -·· -·P·i ·Piiiasilnt" ·-·
&amp; Vicinity

9 OOAM
Yard Sale Thurs , Fri , Sat
103 Court St 9 -5 Beh ind
Gene Plants.

Po.miirov
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Waterloo Rd Larry Me •
the nys . Saturday 9 .00 3 00 Children and adult
cloth 1ng, glass ftre screel'\.
mi SC
Thurs &amp; Fr1 . Tools,h1gh
cha1r. clothes. baby bed,
kitchen sto ol 1 08 Yz locust,
Hen derson

Oct 6, 7, 8th t96 N Park
Garage Sale Harr1sonv1lle
Oct 8 &amp; 9 10-4 Men's,
women ' s. c hildr en's
clothes Much more
Hugh basement sale, many
familres Cleanmg out base
ment. Will bargam on prices
Roger Coates resrdence
Thurs Fr1day, and Saturday
3 m1les north of
Chester

Dr Pt Pleasant
Fn Sat 9 7. W1nter coats.
Jackets. Jeans. etc. mexpen stve Upper end Marquette
2 -1amtly sale, ;2:2nd St Pt
PI Lincoln In alley Appl1an •
ces, mrsc Wed · Stt.

1 38 Park Dr Pt Pl. Oct 6th
&amp; 7th, 9 to 4 Mtsc 1tems

2 1 1 Butternut Aue., Pomeroy ,Oh Oct 6 &amp; 7 Clean
clothes, chair, bowhng ball

2436 Lmcoln Ave Chrldrens
and large clothrng also
kn 1c k knacks Thus Frr Sat

Furmture. household Items,
all s1zes cloth1ng Lady
Devon
400 lesley St
Pomeroy Oct 6· 8

1 13 WALNUT st, Henderson Friday, October 7th,
9 -6 Men &amp; women 's clo thing , household .
miscellaneous.

Oct 6· 7-8 3 family Pageville 1 0-dark

4 family . Oct. Silo 9 9 -dark
Rocksprmgs Ad , between
Pallet &amp; Clipper Summer &amp;
wmter cloth.ng. matermty
clothes
bed frame &amp;
springs. new games

REMNANTS of estate
Chairs. electronics, photo
suppl1es. china. linens Saturday 10-3 'Corner Maxwell
&amp; Marietta Rds.
Sat Oct 8. 2414 Jefferson
Ave. Clothes. books, dtshes

Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Residence of Cecil Brinegar
in Racine, 1 mile out From
10 till 5

Saturday only Mllc ' houaehold items, d1st,es, oven,
baby things, 3320 Howard
Ave Belle mead Addn Pt Pl.

32 Mobile Homes

35 lots &amp; Acreage

for Sale
992 -2671 Paul Simon

$1 t.ooo. Call 514·256·
6035 , after 7PM 614-256·
1572.

36

For saleorrent· Mobtla home
with 12x24 add1t1on on own

Sale by owner . 3 bedroom
secttonal home like new
1 00x200 lot, end of street
Arbaugh Subdivision .
Tupper• Plains $35.900
Will accept mob1le home on
trade F1nancing available to

lot No children 614-985
4290

Coli 446·4222
between 9 &amp; 6
4 bdr ranch home. lergelR ,
full basement, whh garage.
wood burner Included, city
schools. 2 miles from town .
By owner House with 2
acre• more or la11. been
remodeled, orcherd, 87 ft .

woll, $22,000
388-9063.

Coil 114·

Dr will trade for anything of

2 house• close to Metgs
Must sell
High School
Make us an offer. Call

614-992-7724

three bedroom 2 story house
on ParK Dr New furnance 8t
air conditioning, dream ktt·
chan with all applianceS
Owner wilt carry 10cond or
all. Small down payment

304·676·2 1 92.
3 bedroom. new aept1c
1ystem, city water, gaa heat.

Clifton, WV. $13,600 773·
6880

6 roomund bath in Hen dar·
son. City w•ter S. a ewer,
natural gas furnace , mu1t
sell Pnced reduced to low

t20'a. Bob Koeshng. 1 · 6t4·
446-2601.

32

Mobile Homos
for Sale

TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES USED · CARS,
GALLIPOLIS
TRUCKS
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
¥1·7572.

814-245-6281

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
1TY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35 PHONE 446· 7274

Located in SyracuH·NHr

1974 ShuHz 1 2x85, 2 large

value 3 bedroom hou•
with fireplace. cantril llr. 2

full botho, In city llmHr .
Immediate pos•aaion. Cat1

1981 14ft x70 It Schu ltz
Tratler. 12ftx65ft porch 3
bedrooms. 1 Y2 baths 6 14 ·
247-3725

school • swimming pool. 3
third acre lot. '124.100. or
will rent for f271 mo.
304-858·3934.
Flanch typo IBrlck). 3 bed·
rooms. fireplace. attached
V!lrage, full basement.

newly shingled roof, welklng
dlatancto to PomorGy Elor·
montary School. 140,000.
Coli 814-192·8143.
3

be_droom-- rench

atyla

homo, oarpatod, full olio
buement, 1 car prege, In

ground pool 11h32 .
1411,000. 814-992·118118.

Wanted to bur 1 5 reasona bly pnced acres 1n GalhpohsChesh•re area for home site

61 4 ·992· 61 77

piQnad . $11 ,700. 6t4 -992·
7360 altar 6 p m
USED MOBILE HOME . IN
GOOD SHAPE, 304· 576·
2711
1968 Shutt trader, $2 ,700
or best offer 304 - 675 -

1678

bdr • wtth buitt·in cebinets,
2 tMiths, lir cond • underpin·
nlng, intercom. new ruga,
drepea. furnltur1, outtlde
entrance box, 2 seta of ,,.1ra
11tpl. fire elarm,
al•rm,

a••

flrllold kit. flro a.,lngulahor,
18,900. 1·304·,882· 2237
1 4xl0 Skyline, It 5.000. 2

1n Ohto

513 .500

tO , Gallipolis. Oh 4563t
For rent or sale 5 rm1 &amp;
bath , large garage, garden,
JUSt ou ts1de c1ty ., city
school&amp; Call 446-4798
3 bdr. house 1n country. ref
&amp;. dep raqutred Call 614 1 or 2 adults 15 mmutes
from Gallipolis Call 614 -

304-675· 1 297

266· 1 198

1978 14x70 trailer, 3 bed·
room, 2 baths. large kttchen,

3 bedroom, Syracu~;e. Ref erences required 614 -992 -

$ 10,000. 304· 773-5023

2728

1981 Schultz, bath &amp; '4.

2 bedroom cottage, new
c&amp;rpet , good location. m

304-676-5375

town, 304-675-7834 after
5

For ••Ia by owner tn Hillview
Sub Div, Greer Rd. V• mile
off Rt 2 Mobile home with
add rooms . 3 br, lh11ng room

Ferry 304·675-2648

12x24. kitchen 1 2x1 2, d.r.
1 2x1 1, utility r. 12x 12,
24x12 outbuilding 1 -24•10
outbuilding . fruit house
1 Ox1 0 on three large Iota
Good water. elec stove,
trig., air cond .. dryer. 304·

2

bedroom apt. at Gall

N1ce 3 bedroom home. 2
baths. 2 fireplaces, heat
pump, large kitchen, garage
&amp; pat1o
$325
per

month 882 · 2405, 882
2447 or 676-6640.

773-6282.

FIVE bedroom house, 1 1fJ
baths. new furnace. $175 a

1981 1 4x70, Shultz limited

month . 304-676 ·6640

mob1le home. microwave,
dishwasher. central atr, un·
derpenning , three bed rooms . 1 "h bath1, excellent
condition, $16,600
Call
304-675-8049 attar 5 p m.

For sale by owner m Hillview
sub d1v Greer Rd.
m1. off
Rt 2 , Mobile homewrth add
rooms 3 b r., llvmg room

1- - - - - - - - - 36 acraa at Rodney on W. T
Watton Rd. Owner flnancing av1ilable. Cell448·8221
attar 8 weekday•.

1------:____

One acre lot with platform
for house and in·ground
pool, for information. 81 3·

v.

12x24,

kltc~en

12x12, d r

12x11. utility r 12•12 '
24x1 2 outbuilding. 1 ·
24x10 outbuilding, fruit
house 10x10 on three large
Iota Good water. Elec atove.
fng . air cond. dryer 304-

773· 5282 .

'

3 or 4 br, new carpet and
paint, garden apace. 2618
Madison Ave Pt PI
security . deposit and ref

le•••·

888-1232.

304-883-6487.

2 -appro)C . 1 Vz acre loti for
aale,levellots. 83,900 each

2 ' bedroom , unfurniaheO
hou se, $200 a month. dep
req Jemcho Ad 304· 676

bedroom luxury model, cir·
euler kitchen. dining room
with bow window. bath with
garden tub , taparate
shower. carpet, washer,
dryer. stove. frige. covered
patio. Cllntr•l eir. under·
pinned utility building. Nice

Coil 61 4·388-8801

lot. 814·992- 3083

claM. Call 814·388· 9"718 .

------·-

Small modern country
home References. depos1t
Reasonable. Wrtte P 0 Box

388 -8463 days

1979 mobile home 14x60
unfurn. "h acre Jot, chain hnk
fence

4 bdr house 6 acres of lend
on At 160 in V1nton Central
arr , $350 mo , sec dep &amp;.

ref Call 446-3175 .

Beyv1ew Deluxe 14x70 Excellent condition Central
air. 2 bedroom, den, under-

35 lots &amp; Acreage

bedroom attueted on one·

Real Estate
Wa"ted

qualified buyar. 614 · 992·
7034 days. 614·992- 767t

extra n1ce, w1th central Blr
Newly remodeled 2 story
frame, 1 V2 bath. 3Yz acre1.
city 1chool1, rtvervllw.

For sale· 1 acre lots $6,000.
F1ve Po1nts on Rt.7 614-

14x79 2 bdr unfrun . mo·
bile home, carpeting, ap ·
pliances, central a1r &amp; heat,

446-1431 .

Cell614-367· 7t76 .

Call 448-0276.
Want to care for elderty
people in their home. Day

Yard Sale 9 to 8 , Fr1 &amp; Sat
1819 Chestnut St . Mens
leisure suits. towels . beds
preeda, hum1d1fters, Cole
man stove , lantern much
more

3 bedroom house, Roush
Road. Cheshire, Ohio. full
basement, large lot. garage.

and dependable. Cell 4411·
3169 between 9 and 5.

To take care of someone sick
or needs home cna. Days
only, PointPinaantorGalllpolll area. Good references.

Yard Sale Sat . Onlv 9 -3 2%
miles out Rt. 588 make a left
turn onto Crouse Beck Rd
turn onto 1st road on right
4th house on left ·

5778

General Hauling and Traah
remove! Service Reliable

Lawn Mow1ng no yard to big
or small. Relilbla •d depan·
dtbla. For eatlmata call

Rd

6 room house on acre lot.
Pomeroy . First 84,760. or
best offertakea 11. 614 -692 -

PIANO TUNING -LANE DA·
NIELS . 742·2961.-Aloo

Wanted to Do

2 Family Yard Sale Fri. &amp;
Sat. Smith Rd . off Bulav111e

avomngll .

1

SANDY AND BEAVER' In·

Movmg Sale Sat . Oct. 8 . 9to
6. Dinette. chest end tables;

31 Homes

7314
Best of care for Invalids or
elderly who need room and

at 11 :00.

Yard Sale 9 -1 Sat. lots o1
childrens clothef . 1 28
Portsmouth Rd

T
t=========4~~~=======+==========f~=========

676-1619, 6 to 9 p.m .

Own your own J•n or

Chorrlle Ully 11 Jlma Cafe,
Thura. Oct. I, 1-12. 211
Maln It, Pt. PloaNnt.

chaus, shelves, green house.
radial snow tires 19t;-75 R
14, atero tape deck 606
Oak Dr, Spring Valley.

Wtll care for elderly woman.
men or couple 1n our home
LPN care given 614-992-

Jim Mink Chov.·Oldo Inc.

Oct 8 at 8.30 p.m . ot their
CARWASH·Sponurod by

4 Family Yard Sale 1 68
Portsmouth lid. Chlldrens

$32,000

BUI Gene Johneon
Reclne·VoluntHr Fire Dept.
gun 1hoot aea1on will ttert

Ph.

448-3159, 9 to 6

Coli

duo 125.00. Molt be poid
before Jan. 1, 1884.

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

from Ashton, At. 1 ,in front
of Mt. Ohve school, antique
buffet, clock. large writing
deak, recliner chair and Iota
of other fumlture. At the
home of Junior Young.

delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up

Georges Cr- Rd.
448·0294.
'

915imPI!

· -Trencher

ing R.N. supervisor. Acute
Immediate Opening. Even·
care nursing, management
e,.perlance required. Con tact Director of Per1onnel,
Pleasant Valley Hoap1tal,
Valley Dnve, pt PI WV

12

ALL STEEl &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

lnsulatd Dog Houses

992-6030

-Dozen

now being

1.1BI&lt;on at Tate for waitresses

PARTS and

AND

Minersville, ,OH.

-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo·Boy

E•perlenced telephone so-

loat 1n or around Union end waiters . Apply in
District. one year old. red- 1 ,p:_e::r.:.so::n~------diah brown Heifer ealf,aome 1·
white on face If seen pleaae NEED baby11tter to come to
call 304·882 ·2033. Ken· home
If interested cell
neth Reitmire
304· 676·6806

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Phone:

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Volunteer activity aide•
needed at Arcadia Nursing
Canter. Coolville. Contact
Melodae et 614-667-3166.

3 Famtly Yard Sale F11 &amp;
Sat. Rodney Village II Firat
hou•e Baby clothes, adult
clothing. dishes, mise
Yard Sale Sat &amp; Sun . S
Matn St , tn Vinton Starting

218

licitor. 304·736·7418

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

..!,!;~::....1.

AUTO
PARTS

Rooldenco: 985-3837
Wo•ehouoo' 985-3509
8 I tic

Ohio 4663t . E.O.P

9301m~

I 13 1ft

and Supply

utive 01rector. Duttas will
1ncluda planning, coordinating, monitoring, financ·
ing, and contracting for the
development~ and 8Jilpenaion
of mental health services in
the aervice area . E,.parlence
1n MIS w1th mental health
organ1z1t1ona required . ,The
Board Is looking for an
experienced Mentel Health
Admini1trator and lor) cllnl·
cian with a minimum of e
Maater'alevel degree. Competitive compenut1on pack·
age. Deadline for aubmitting
application Is December 1 &amp;,
1983 Send resume to:
S81rrch Comm1Hee, GaiiJaJackaon· Meigs Community
Mental Health Board.
P O. Box 614. Gallipolis,

FOUND . Siamese cat. 614992-2631.

Pomeroy,

985-3561
All Makos

PH 992-6792

ward oHared

14

"Free Estimates"
"12 Veara Experience "
''Work Guaranteed''

Pomeroy. Oh1o

Call 61 4-38B-8870 . Re·

,V. C. YOUNG Ill

Vinyl Siding &amp;
Roofing
SALE
DEAL DIRECT &amp;
SAVE 30% OR MORE
On Sidinaand Roofme.
Gutter and Downspouts

·

G&amp;W Plastics

M.L

3- lllfc

STRIP
COAL

llo pay for ad Call 81 4·246·
6386, 61 4-246·9203

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

R. E. "HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

lost and Found

FOUND Dog hunting in Rio
Grande area . Call to identify

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

&amp; Lal!,or

Material

old . 614 - 992·

Garage Sale Sat Oct. 8,
9 · 6. Loti girl a clothing, aize1
6· 14, toddler boys aome
women• 1izea 12 &amp; 14,
several coats. Green -Acres
Sub., LeGrande Blvd . m
c1rcle

out Georges Creak Ad , turn
on McCully A~ follow 11gna
All size clothing, rungs.
curtains. more
Ra'in or
1hlne.

$3,000,000 seeks on Exec·

6

(Free Estimatet)

There has never been •
better time to sell AVON

6 Family Oct. 6,7 . 9·1 1 mile

1 male blue doberman. 6

3 adorable kittens to good
home, 2 striped. 1 solid .

- Aclclano and Nmodoting
-Roofing" and gutter woolc

Call Ohio Job Services in
Gallipolis for application &amp;
lnterv1ew by Oct. 1Oth.

dishes, ate. All week 226
3rd AVe Galllpolio. 9 -6.

brood 61 4-992· 2038.

676-3834.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

t16,000· $17,000 a year

Wh1te uniform• clothing, nic
nec1 , tool1, furniture ,

Drape1, 9,.12 carpet. toys,
babv furniture. ch,hes

1 blue gray kitten. 1 black
kitten, litter tr•ined . 304·

YOUNG'S

M 8dtcel (:oordrnator, RNfor
group home Project for
Sentor Citizens Coordinat·
ing all medical aervice•
within conteKt of an intermediate cere facility meat·
1ng medicade standerda .
Knowledge &amp; skills of nursing prof&amp;ISIOR ,
adminlstrative·aupervisory
training Knowledge of pa·
ttent ••••••ment system
preferred . Salary . range

Tri-countv mental health
board w1th en annual budget
of epproKimataly

304·895·3802 or 304·896·
3641

J 1 tic

Carport Sale 9· 6, Fri ·Set
Oct. 7 8t 8. 1 67 Woodland
Drive lots of Goodie•

Puppies 6 weeks old. Mi,.ed

AuctionMr. 276-3089 .

RADIATOR

.. _. -GiiiiiP"oiiii ... ____ _

Garage Sola Oct 7 &amp; 8 . 10
till 4PM. 331 Cabbie Dr.

6 kitten a &amp; litter trained cat

12 21J.IIc

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Oh . Or 992· 7760

Call 448·336B

months
7468.

-Concnrte .,..,tt
-Plumbing and
olectoicol woolc

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

-

BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold. 1ilver dollars, wood ice bo•••· stone
Jars, antiquea. ate . Complate households. Wr1ta
M D . Miller. At. 4 . Pomeroy.

986·4382

304· 675·2474

Route 1
Lon1 Bottom, OH. 45743
985·4193 or 992·3067

Pomeroy

614· 992·

8 kittens 3 calllco. 1 black
female, 3 femakt black &amp;
white, 1· gray &amp; white. 1
black. Houae broken 614-

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

4-Zl ttc

CARRIER WANTED

742-2352

9-2!111110

1 ROI.L ONLY IN IIIOWN

(H

&amp; Kerosene
Heaters

Farm Equipment

·

3 APT$. - Rent two and live
In the other. Pomeroy loca·
t1on near stores Want only

Coal

• U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

10% DOWN - I\\ ball-., mce

lARGE HOME .:.... ln Middleport With sw1mmmg pool, natural gas furnace, lui basement and I~ of carpeting near
schools. 3 or 4 bedrooms.

D&amp;J
SAVE MORE-MART

SALES &amp; SERVICE '
STARTING AT

6t4-992-7613

A Phone Cell bnnp
Prompt Courteous Servtce
131 E 2nd
Pomeroy, 0

9 15imopeJ

6 t 4-949·

Admiral 21 rn colored TV
Has sound, but no picture

I

992-2036

All Makes and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calls and S~op
Service Ava~lable

Business Services

BOGGS

LIKE NEW - Country home
on 2 acres near Rut~nd 3 bedrooms, 2 full ball-., full basement and carport wrth storage
Really mce for $45,000

4 baby kottena
2779.

Dewayne Wilhams
&amp; Scottie Smith

614-992-2181

54 Misc. Merchandise

614-985-4488 .

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces ra- '
pair service and in·
stallation.

742-2328

Help Wanted

1...----------r-----------r----------r-------...J:..--,---------H. L. Writesel
ROOFING

Adult mate Cockapoo to
good home After 3 p .m . call

915

CONTACT 992-2156
~--~~~~~~--1---~-~---J_...::::::::..._J:::::::::::::L::::::::::~

TRY US FOR A CHANCE,
sg~IE ARE SELU.G:

.

dress 1S unknqwn 11 deceased
the unknown herrs dev1sees
legatees executors admrn1stra
tors and /or assrgns of A B
Ferrell dec
EllA M ROUSH whose
address 1S unknown 1f de
ceased !he unii:Aown he•rs
dev1sees lega!ees eJ.:e cutors
adm1nrstrators and/or as,s1 gns
of Ella M Roush dec
\,'
WALTER ROUSH whose ad
dress 1s unknown 1f deceased
the unknown he1rs devrsees
leg t~tee s executors admrnr stra
tors and / or assrgns of Wa lte r
Roush dec
EARL WELLS Oetrort Mrchr gan whose add ress rs un
knowh rf deceased ~the un
~nown
herrs dev•sees
legarees e)(ecurors adm1n1 stra
tors and/Or ass1gns of Earl
We lls dec
DALLAS LISLE whose last
known addess 15 632 Rock·
wood .-Avenue Prtt sburgh Pa

NATIONALINE
Plumb1ng &amp; Heatmg Supph es

Now s the ttme to get your furnace ready for cold weater, 10%
Dtscount on any new furnace purchased before Oct. 15.

LAFF·A·DAY

Public Notice

1 yr old part Cockapoo
fnendly with kids Call 446-

.---DIA~,.-__,

1.268.80 +18.60

'!t( ard Sa\es

8r. Vicinity

" U You Want a
Plumber Bod
You Want H1m Good"
IEl!Cl!lC Ell SEWER CLEANER

98.44 + 1-.41

If No Answer. Call 985·4381
Public Notice

614-387-0680.

6632

•N Y.S E. Index

AP

Hospital bed good cond .•
need• electrical repa.r . Call

.. PH. 1-304:773-S6l4
MASON, W. VA.
C. L. KITCHEN

Down
529

Wanted To Buy

Wanted w11hars &amp; dryers
ft8ost any condition Call

Maple . firewood free for
hauling
164 ht AVe
Gallipolis

10 3 1 ma

Glenn edges Reagan in recent poll

9

e klttono . Coli 446· 7100 .

5 -'I• Beagle pups, good eera
Coli 6t4·266· 1141

'PERSONALIZED POOLS"

Up

Giveaway

614·246·6695 .

CONSTRUCTION

Ph. 986·4269

Public Notice

4

'

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Real Estate General

Ohio

Business Services

N.Y.S.E. Issues
' Consolidatedl:rrading '
Thursdav, Oct 6
Volume Shares

Kingdom. ·

The Daily Sentinel

.

Market In Bnef---.

Index of future ~qnomlc growth for
seven leading ln~ustrlal nations Is
on the rise, signaling a broad
economic recovery. The United
States Is leading the pack, following
by Canada, the buslness-SJionsored
research group said Indexes also
were up In France, Italy, West
Germany, Japan and the United

natlon's money market mutual
funds rose $39 million in the week
ended Wednesday to $1~.48 bUllon.
The seven-&lt;iay average yield on the
money market mutual tunds rose to
8.'19 percent from 8.66 percent,
accOJ;ding to Donoghue's Money
Fund Report, a trade journal based
in Holliston, Mass.
- Tbe Conference Board said Its

~

14'Ia acres Roush Hollow Rd

off Rt.

6114, nlcto road,

building IPIC8, rural water

7308
Four room houH in countrv
furn. VJ beth. drilled well. err

port 304· 11711-4123

'

�•
•
...

·

10-The l:bily

Sentinel

..

:

42 Mobile Homea
for Rent

64

2 bdr. trailer, furnithed ~ Clll
448·0758 .

New alack &amp; blouae shop
oolo. Size 1 0·20 6. 32-44.

2 bdr. trailer wi1h large

Pomeroy .

66

Misc. Merchandl111

Trailer for rent. Call 446·
1052.

home in Cheshire. Oep.
required. call 446·4~69 .
1 bedroom 12x60 furnished . Wa11har 8t Dryer;
$160. plu1 utilities &amp; dSp·o'sit. No pets. 614-9927479 .

7

~

'i1

~;(;

J bedroom furnished or
unfurnished. Camp Conley.
304- 675 - 1371 o r 675 ·
3812 .
Apartment'
for Rent

2 bdr. Regency Inc . Apa•t·
ments ·HUO Available Util·
I f
rt
t
ttesparJy urn .,apa men I
' ·1 bl
$200 permo
eve•
a e now.
·
4 room
' lly
'l't'tes pa rt 11
ept . u t ''
paid $150. A-One Real
Estates,
Yeager,
Real~
tor.
Call Carol
304· 576
-5Hl4
or
304-676-7386 .
Furnished apt. 5186 . Water
paid. 2 bdr., 131% 4th,
Gallipolis. 446-4416 after 7
p.m .
2bdr., 2 bath, 11 Court St.
Ref. &amp; dep. $326 mo . Call
446 ·4926 .
Small furn . hou$8 1 or 2
adults only , no Pets.. . _ Call
446-033B .

CHAS.r:&gt;:BF&lt;OWN,

.

46

...,..
for Rent

Unfurnished 1 bedr. apt.,
nearlymew. no pets. $169
water furnished, S 50 deposit. Call 446-361 7 .
Completely furnished upstain, one bedr., newly
decorated, adults, refere~­
ces. Centrally located, $200
mo. plus dep. Call 446·
2236 or 446 · 2581.
Apt . . 1 bedroom trailers 2
bedroom. overlooking Ohio
River. Kenauge , Fosters
Trail•• Park, 446-1 602 .
Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
Ci1y. Ohio . Call 614- 2666520 .
1 bed room Apt. s196 . mo .
including utilities. Equal.
housing opportunity . Contact Village Manor Apts.
614 · 992-7787.

Furnished efficiency and 2
bedroom Ap1 .ln Middleport,
Oh . No pets. Months rent
plus $100. security. 614992- 3874 .
Apta. for rent . 614-9925906 .
2 bedroom Apt. furnished
$180 . month plus utilities
and depoait, ov8rlo"'6king the
Ohio River in Minersville,
Oh. 61 4 -992 ·3324.
Apar,tments . 304 - 675 5548 .
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614·4'46·
11221 .
TWIN

RIVERS TOWER .
now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
tnconia or less than
,12,300. Renting for 30
percen1 of adjusted income·
:Phone 304-676·6679 .
~tpartmenta

two

bedroom apartmentJn
Mason. aduha only, no pets,
304-876 -1462.

Unfurnished, 1 bedroom, all
Utilities paid except electric.
Ooll. Forry. 304-676-1371
or 876-3812.

2" bedroom

apt. In Henderoon. 304-676-1972.

46

.

F.urnlshed Rooms

51

a9

STa;~CVN,

......

~EI'rtTWCJOP,

Household Goods

Trailer apace for rent . Call Maytag Wringer washer,
good cond. Call after 6 ·30.
446 -4266 or 446 · 47 3 6 ·
614-266 · 1666.
·
1----------Lorge trailer lot . approxiUsed bed, walnut color,
motel" Yl mile from Rt. 7 on
'
man•eaa &amp; rai111. Price $172 .
Addison Bulaville Rd . Call Asking
'- $76, good cond. Call
446-377&amp; .
446 -7869 .

1
- - - - -MOBILE
- - - -Home
-COUIIITRY
Park, Route 3 3 , North of
Pomeroy . Large lots . Call
992-7479 .

1===::::::::::=:::::====
52

CB,TV, Radio
E
.

qutpment

I - - - - - - - - - - 1- - - - - - - - Mobile home Iota for rent,
water and sewer furnished .
1 small child accepted .
304-875· 1078 .

I ~~~~!!~~~~~
51

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION 6. FURNITURE
62 Olive St.. Gallipolis. 6
piece wood living room suite
with 6 inch flat arms •399. ·
Furnished 3 rooms, with bunk beds complete with
private bath . Reference pre - bunkies 8199, 2 piece antron livingroom suites 8199.
ferred . Call 446-2216 .
ant ron recliners $99, other
Jackson Estate Apartment• recliners sao. maple dinette
536 Jackson Pike {Equal sets 8179. love seats 870,
Housing Opportunity) hat hide·a-bed S260, box
one bedroom apartmen1s springa Sa mattress twin or
rent starting at $1 6 7 and full $100 set regular-firm
two bedroom rent starting at $120. maple dinette chairs
$193 . $200 deposit . Cal $36. wash stands 834,
446-2745 or leave message maple rockers 869, 7 piece
chroma dinette set 8149 •. 5
on answerin~ , ervice .
piece dinette set 889, used
2 bedr'o om apt., furnished , bedroom suites. refirgera·
utilities paid. S 276. $1 00 tors, ranges, chest, dressers,
dep., adults only, no pets. wringer waahert, TV's,
dryeres, &amp; shoes . Call 446Call 446 -0952.
3169 .
Furnished upstairs apt .. 3
rooms &amp; beth. clean. adults
only, no pets, ref. req .
Utilities paid . Call 446 ·
1519 .

:~

' '/Ill

For Ieise modern, unfurn ., 2
bdr. apt . Owerlooking city
park . tncludes range &amp; refrig . $176 mo. Call 446·
1819 or even ings 446 4425 .

.

October 7, 1983

7, 1983

The

Ohio ·

Sentinel-lbge

11

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

11 ft . Mountaineer slide in
truck camper, completely ·
nlf contained, double holding tanko. 12 volt &amp; 11 0 vo"
&amp; gas lights. Gas Sa electric
ralrig ., forced air fumance.
lik&amp; new inside, lots of
extras. 82,000. Call 4464219.

.
•
Kenwood cauette deck
model no. KX606, San Sui
amplifier A-9, pair of Pio·
near speakers model no.
CS922A . 81.000 . 304 882 -2782 .

54

Misc. Merchandise

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12"-22" 11ocked
in yard . HEAP vender .
prompt delivery . 614-2666245 .
---------:-limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Galli a o( pick up at Richardt
&amp; Son . Call 446-7786.

~ llfHI

Registered Pointer pupa. 8
wko. old. Coli 614- 2469439 .

81

Australian Shepherd • Blue
Heeler puppies. Excellent
pot, $26 each . 614· 3792143 .
Dragonwynd

Cattery-

63

Shaap 1 mule, colt. Morris
Martin. Coll61 4·388-9078.
Pigs for
8618.

Washer&amp;, dryer, axe. cond.
Colt 614-367-7141 .

e.

446-1203 ofter 4:00PM.
76,000 BTU Colomon fuel
oil stove &amp; tahk, exc. con d.
Allting 1160 or boot offer.
Coli 304· 67&amp;·79117.

176 each used Wilthers A
Dryers. Nice &amp; o.. an, guaranteed 30 day1. Several to 21. cu. ft. Hotpolnt upright
choose from . Call 814-218- freezer. uMd only 6 moa.
1207.
• 1475. Coll614-211-1868.

For rent Sleeping Rooms Couch cheap. upright pleyar
and light houM keeping I· pion•&gt;. Hondo 6 otring banjo.
rooma . Perle Central Hotel. Coli i1 4·266·1289 .
Cell 446·0768.
Werm morning coal atove,
Sleeping room •116, utili· good cond., 1160. Coil
tioo poid, range 6. rofrig. 114·216·17110.
Shoro both. Moit only. 4411· · 1 - - - - - . . , . - - - : - 4418 after 7 p.m.
Walnut mlble top dresser,
walnut spindle bed, coal &amp;
wood cook stove. welt clock,
46 Space for Rent
atone jugs, brass kettle.
mlec. Old crocks, bottles •
dishes, much more. Prtoed
Privoto trailer lot locotod 11-1 to oell. Bidwell Country
miloo from City Llmlto on Rt. Furniture, Rt. 1164 In Bid·
well. 614·388-8463 ...,.,.
1118. Coli 441-3870 .

Bobybed. Coli 448-7108.
New Oak Furniture, tables,
chalra, cupboarde. pie Mfe,
drv sinks. Paul Conkels
Antlquea, Tuppera Plelna ..
Wfii-Burt atoker fumance
24', good cond. Cell 4481872.
1----------Meyteg weaMr end dryer,
Uko now. Olboon mrlg.,
Olb1o.n range with 11lf
cl11nlng oven.~llke new.
Se•r• 1t1reo. ,114-9923238.

sale.

Call

446 ~

Nice 3 yr, old Arebian
gelding. Would conalder
trade. Coil 614-384·2296.
3 Shotas &amp; 2 aowt. 1 boar. 1
rubber tired farm wagon.
614-949·2237.
Bred hereford cows. Reg .
polled hereford bull. Contact
Harley Rico. 614-667·
3369.

2 young JerseycOwa. Would
be good family cows. 614949·2502.
Registered Hereford bull &amp;.
hoy for oalo. 304 , 6752991.

64

AKC Registered Doberman
puppies. colors are black.
red, blue, fawn, 304-676·
1622.

Hay

8o

Grain

•

Large round bales of hay,
$20.00 each . Will deliver.
Call 446-1062.

Autos for Sale

1973 Camara, good cond.
very clean, $2,000. 304·
67&amp;-1839 after &amp; p.m.

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump
removal . Call 675-1331 .

1967 Chevrol81. all original.
2nd owner. Exc .. cond. 304676·5827.
71 VW Super Beetle, aut .
good cond. 73 rebuilt eng.
8996.00. 72 VW Bootie for
porto $376. 304-468- 1926.
76 Monte Carlo. tilt, crulae.
air, ex c. cond. rally11, new
top, brakes, 82800 . . ;JQ.~:
676-6438 .

1966 Chevy Impale, rally
wheels. lettered rediela, new
paint, $1 :Zoo. 304-6761724.

Whites metal detector.
6.000 w-head phones. c;er·
rying case and 1 Arge 1 OOp
$390. 304-676-2906 .

Rabbits 81 . each. Phone
304-676-3081 after 4:30
p.m.

Bobby Mac car seat, glass
fireplace enclosure with
acreen &amp; andirons. 4 slice
toaster. 304-675-1504.

57

870 REMINGTON 12guago
pump, 30" full choke with
vent rib, like new, $226 .
Extra 26" Imp . cyl. vent rib
barrel. $285. 304-8953410
aher 6 p.m.

TOP CASH paid for late
model uaed cera.
Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 191.1 Eut·
ern Ave.. Gallipolis, 4462282.

Musical
Instruments

.

'

Bundy Trumpet
614-742-2656.

58

CAMOUFLAGED new army
clothing. Denim pants 14
oz. $10 . surptua rental clothing. Sam Somerville'•· 7
miles east Ravenswood.
Open Friday. Saturday. Sunday. 1:00-7:00 p.m. Phone
304-675-3334.
-

for sale.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

59 For .Sale or Trade

1979 Mnda GLC wogon.
auto, AC. AM·FM radio, top
rack. $3.000. Coll614-2469467.

1977 Honda, 6 utility trailers, trade for air compressor
sprayer. log splitter. Call
61 4·388-8246.

1978 Chryaler eordoba exc.
cond low miles, $2,800 .
Call 448·4369.

•

Desk &amp; chair, brown living
room chair. dinettte set. 2
chest of drawera. kitchen
acceasories, bedspreads &amp;
curtains. 1 table lamp, 1
floor lamp, blanketa. odd
table, radio with 2 speakers.
304-676-1438 after 4 :30.

Wanted to trade Bx36 2 bdr.
Concord travel trailer for
bigger trailer. Call 614-379·
2636.
Console Motorola atereo
with AM·FM rodio. Liko
new. Will aell or 1rada for
recliner rocker. Call 614·
992· 3430 .

Building Supplies

1966 Shasta Camper for
8900. or trade for a pickup
truck of equal valu'e, Call
.304·675·6297 evoningo.

61

______. .:·,___

-.OUR BOARDING HOUSE
, NIC.: .ITTLE

~

""I "'""'

69 Nova
8887.

SS.

Call

446·

1966 buick 2 dr. Sodan
mechanically good. needs
oomo body work. $600. Call
446· 1813 do yo ukfor
Danny, 446-0067 eve.
1980 Dodge Aopen auto;
PS, PB. 6 cyl., aunroof.
John• Auto Salaa. 4464782. Bulavi!la Rd . Real
nico. f2,996.

0~

)o

~~;~~iY'~~~-~yd"ll!l~N-P..A~~~f
WITH
T•\O$E
~~~
~':". ~E'W
YORK

.11

-f'"

,&lt;oi,O.JaR HOOPI..£
TIU~: ONLY T..IINC)
/'.NY THIN&lt;! Le!.!&gt;!&gt; T~!I.N 50~
STORIE!&gt; 1'\ PU£.HC."'RTliE EVER &amp;UILT
HE.H·KEH!
[\,
W"S· ,.,_
1
':..,
~
1
,
NOWMAN)
.n.
_. ..&gt; 5
.-'
1
I 'll I

IJ;:;::::::r -~-'1.

1

"'~"'~KNill
-"' c;''
~1
-''"\:r,
I ...,
~
I"

,...,-=._,;}-

1'A-'7-,.1 ·,\

~·

It,

1'

door,
21,000
mlleo.
fully
oquippod,
lloth•
lntorior,
exc. cond. Contact Marvin
K11bough 11 614·B67·
11241.
'

,...,

.io.

~~~. ! ~ST!l.;:
_-;-::-::

IN

1174 AMC Oromlln X.
18,000 octuol mlloo. Auto.
trono .. p.o ..
little
471 114
Alltlng '
'
'
14 1350
'
'
Forom,n'o For Lo• bpen·
lli¥1 core • trucloo. Longo·
villi. 114·742·2734.

"'1.:·

bo~y

1.871 Ford Oren Torino.
P.B., p.b., lootly •••· . - .
1710. Wll conlldlr t - .
304·ni-I0131fter 1 p.m.

~

I

1978 Thunderbird. 13400.
1114·949·2890.

11----------

~

.~ 1,~

,-

1979 chevy Luv 4•4 AC.
AM·FM, new tires. Call
446-4292.
1976 Chevy 1 ton 4 wheel
drive. Good cond. 614-9853949.
74

Motorcycles

1974 Honda Chopper 30 in.
over front end. CB 760 F.
Call 614·949-2737.
1982 Suzuki motorcycle,
RM 125", Excellent condition. $776. 614-986-3682 .

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Chris Craft 1967 constella·
tion cabin cruiser, 36 f1 .•
with trailer. I 12,800. Call
61 4·367·0378 between
10-3. 614·446-1343 sitar

76

., .

·?

~~dlr.~Ooily
742·217~..

aa,1.

ti4~ .

A6L.E TO HElP.

SNU FF OUT T HE: WHOL:.E" CiTY,
THAT!

PEN~ ISS..

THEM ... l' &lt;;_AN

n u: sE RO BOts-

TA Ll&lt; TO TH6M
... ALONE ...

TICK ~

&amp;OVNC.INEI OFF
OF il-l EM~

GOT TO

l. E:T M~ C:,O lll.Y
TO !':.E-ASO N WITH

BUT \'iiTH THAT MUCH
LIFE IN 'Ill\ tiE CAN'T
BE HURT TOO e+W!

.. A~D-

IT HUMBLH ME T'H EAR
'IOU SAY lli~l: .. AND 1
FLATTERE!), HOPE YOU C'M FiNO IT
IN ';OUR HEAfiT T'
BRANDER!
HONOif ME I!&gt;Y &amp;AYI N'
"YES:'

J'M VERY

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic . Test ,holes.
Pumps Sales and Service. 1
304 ·896
'
, -3602.

GASOLINE ALLEY

.

What did Doc
say?

Roofing and Carpentry
work. general repairs, celt
Anthony Williamson, 614367-0194.

We
ld shoot down
Florida. then
across to ...

He said
we should
take a trip!

Get Your Carpet IN SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTAIN
STEAMER. water removal.
furniture cleaning . Free Esti·
mates: 614-446·21 07 .

79
&amp;

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

- - - - - :.:----,;.:_
CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446- ,
4477

,,
83

Excavating

"

DOZER WORK · By Ted. ~
Hanna, ponds, ditches ,
basements, etc. Call 446.4907 . Carter &amp; Evans
Transportatiori .

!

lonnie Boggs Excavating.
Dozer, backhoe. dumptruck.
Work by . hour or job. Call
446-7903 .
Cat 216 hoe, dozers. crane.
loaders. dump truck. Call
6"14-446 - 1142 between
7 :00AM 6. 5:00PM .
Gopd-1 'E xcavating, basements, footers, driveways,
septic tanka, landscaping .
Call anytime 446-4537 ,
James L. Davison . Jr .
owner.

.

J.A .R. Construction Co .
Water Lines, Footers.
Drains. All kinds of Ditching,
Rutland, Oh . 514 -7422903.
Maigs Excawating. Bulldozer
&amp; backhoe service.
menta, footers, landscaping, \
driveways. farm ponds .
814-742-2407 or614 -7422068.

a•••..

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

4 white spoke wheels and 4
10•1 &amp; recap rough tread
tiroo, 1-new 1210. 304-4681B17.
'
•

~

IF- YOU TRY TO ATTACK , iHEY'LL.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG. Fomerly Dewitt's
Plumbing. Call 614 - 3670676..

4 W.O.

1979 OldomobMe Storflre
V-11. outo, PS, PB, AM·FM
tope, reol oporty, U,195.
Johns Auto Sales, 4484782. Bulovlllo Rd.

WE C,.,LLED

I•

Vans&amp;

Topper for 8' truck bed.
Sliding front window. Tinted
tidtl gla11. Used 3 month•.
Call 446-3485.

19B1 Oldo 98 Regency.

~I .
, KOOC.I"
MO~ OFTEM r ~-----,
1~~'\ IE,v_·,•w. DEA!&gt; ON ENTIRE ~ ~IM~ , ''-.
l~ll' tii-,, '""
/ . OK, THI&gt;-TS

,· .

73

Camping
1973 · VW Super Bottle.
Equipment
Am-Fm ltlt'80, new atHI ·
boh rodiolo. low ·milugo,
t=========~ oherp
.,691. 1972 Supor
Boello. Good con d. I 1 496.
22 ft. camper, good condi114-441·73119 or after 6 tion, Phono 304·678·2886.
•
wllh Major Hoople 614·982·3617.

i!UT

PO WITH TliE:

I L IE?.i.ET'5- TftY TO
UWDER5TAN O HOW

THAT'S WHY
'iO U 'V ~

RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpe·
rienced roofing, including
ho1 tar application, carpen·
tar, electrician. mason . Call
304,675-2088 or 676 4660 .

82 1969 Chovy C· 10 pickup, 3
spd .• 6 cyl., short bed, new
tiroo, 0649. Call 614-379·
2732.

1979 Plymouth A"ow auto
PS, PB. AM·FM topo, oun·
roof, •2.&amp;915. Johns Auto
Soioo, 441-4782. Buloville
Rd.

ALLIS Cholmero tractor, a
HP lawn tractor, $360.00.
304· 676-3424.

AND FAM·

, I M6A).J, 'IO IJ DO toJ 'T UNDERSTAND
THE POYVER TH E5-E we.oT5o HAVE.

Wfi: !&lt;.NeW WHY
THE lii:O&amp;OT!!O WAN T
THEM , WE MIG HT f!IE-

Trucks for Sale

78

: .'-'·

I1J!l~ 1:-o:-~~ ,
W'~'I"' i~ ~

72

6.
1980 Ronoull LoCar 4 opd.
AM·FM topo, full ounroof.
roal lhlrp. f2,29~. John'o
·Auto Soleo, 446-47B2. Bu·
loville Rd.

Farm Equipment

BN Ford hont end loader.
double action. hydraulic
bucket, $200. 6 fl. drog dlok
no. Call 614-388-8896.

1969 Dodge Dart, standard,
6 new • tires. good cond.
$400. 304-676-6730.

1977 Hondo Accord, A.T ..
AM-FM-coas.. a.c.. good
cond. •1600. 379-2249.
1976 Hondo CVCC. Cell
446·81 88, oftor 6.

73 INTERNATIONAL. Wanted to trade Frigadaire
Scout, sllde in truck camper, heavy duty avacado electric
king woodburner uaed very dryer for gas dryer. Call
little. 304-773-6397.
61 4·367-0377.

~

1970 Lincoln Cqntinental
Mark Ill, good condition,
black, f2,200 . Call 4480212.

1978 block Cougor, XR oxc.
German Ridge Apples tree cond .• loaded. Call 614ripened. Cider Saturday. 268-1217.
Call 448·8598 and 614- 1 - - - - - - - - - 379-2303,
1976 Chevrolet lmpole, 4
dr .• aedan auto. PS, PB, air
Apples. Fit1patrick Or· cond .• ax. running cond ..
chards. S.R. 689. 614·669· 66,000 actual miles, 8600.
3786 or 614-669-4378. Call 446·0760.
Hours 10. a.m .·6 p.m.

FOR SALE. 2'•6' Portable
stainless steel salad bar .
FoUr-four inch swivl wheels.
sneeze guards. ice pack tray.
dish &amp; utensil storage. pie &amp;
cake shelves, 27-quart aalad
bar crocks &amp; lids, 7 -two
quart, 1alad bar crocks &amp;
lids, 6 dressing markers. 6
drosolng ladles. $426.00.
10:00 o.m. to 6:00 p.m .
'Phone 304-676-1742 .

66

Autos for Sale

TO '!:oAYt

FR I E'ND~

l &amp;EE IT, rr HAS'
SOME'fHIN6 TO

1985 Ford Galaxie 600
convertible, sharp! $1200 .
1976 Datton 620 pickup
8960. 304-675· 4048 after
6 p.m.

AKC reg. Shetland sheepdog (miniature collie) pups,
6 weeka old S 160. each.
304-576-2762 .

71

n f A\ Il.IJ tfA~ ,

ST&amp;EL.~ 'IOU 'YE
~6Hl BULt.6T.S

... $0 THE WAY

BEFORE: 'IO U WIN D UP.
WI PINE! OI)T AL.L OUR

1976 PlYmouth · Sutlon
wagon,'" 1 owner, WV in·
spected, best offer, 304676-1987, 676· 2662.

Cat seat, wooden high chair
and snow suit, 18 months.
Ail good cor\d. 304-676·
7679 .

.~

DO N' T "iOLJ
1-i&amp;.AR WH AT

-RON'S
-:-::-:-:-:--::--:'
Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
houoe cells. Call 676-2398 .
or 446-2464.

Dochshund pups. 304-8963968.

Vito clarinet:, good
81 00. Call 446-01 60.

!.!OW WHY

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. 30 years experience, -4
specializing in built up roof.
Ca11614-388· 9867.
,

1976 Chevrolet · Nova,
65,432 milea. Call 3f04675-4646 after 6 :30p.m.

Navy blue jacket: matches
panta suit, lost in front of
K&amp;K Mobile Home. 304676-2436.

1-

Brand new Suburban coal &amp;.
wood burner with thormootete control
blower. Call

71

Livestock

Drapes. orange gold jacquard 120"x84" &amp;
60"x45", new 820 . 304882-2204.

Building materials
TV 8t Appliancaa, 6l&lt;7 Third Mustang skid loadarfor aale,
block,
brick. sewer pipes,
Avo., Galllpollo, 446-1699. leu than 600 hours. Call
windows. lintels, etc.
Spin washert, gat &amp; electric 614-388· 8287 .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
dryers. auto washers. gas &amp; 1- -- - - - - - - - electric ranges. refrigera. Firewood 136 pickup . load 0. Cai1614-248-5121.
dalivered . 126 if picked up at
tara. TV seta.
•
tho form . Coli 614·268- 56
Pets for Sale
REBUILT APPLIANCES 1427.
Washers, dryer1. ranges.
refrigerators. Shop repalr;- Grocery store meat cua.
brlng it in It Save. Call *200. Call 614-643-2497. · HILLCREST' KENNELS
Barding all breeds. Selling
446-8181 .
•
ledies jeans. 1i1e 3 $4 each, Happy Jack Dog Food.
Large wood burning add-on 1 dishwasher e1&amp;0, Victor Doberman puppies: Stud
furnace-brand new-heats adding machine e&amp;o. queen Service. Coli 446· 7796.
hot water - automatic tin hidabed . Call 446.--..""""
controls-firebrick lin8d . 3204.
8690. Coil 614·268·1218:
Whirlpool wa1her eJtceltent
condition . Guranteed, •7&amp;.
Calll14-367-0660.

STUCCO PLASTERING •
textured ceilings commer·
cial end residential. free
es1ima1es. Call 614-256- ,
1182.

•

~z".'"""·

$26.

YOU''ti£; -5-EEN
TH06e "R:Ot!OT~··
THROU E:IH
INCHE~ OF &amp;OLIO

~.~~::: fl::h~~~~rr:'v.?;i~~~

Firewood for sale .
304-675-1736.

Home
Improvements

e.MA-5f4

4 suits. wa ist 38. Coat 46 . 3 Kennell. AKC Chow puppiece. si ze 7 wardrobe - pies, CFA Himalayan, Perslacks &amp; blouses . See after 6 sian and Siemeae kittens.
p.m . priced reasonable. 315 _c_a_ll_4_4_6_·_3_8_4_4_o_fl_•_r_4_._ _
1
Condor St. Pomeroy . •
Engtis Setter pups Ghost
EXTRA good top soil. deli- Train, Pleasant Valley Clyde,
vered . phone - 304·675· Fatica's Nicky. bloodline$100.oo eoch. Call 61 4·
7771 .
532-3346 .
For Sale: lumber 1" and 2"
dimension, poplar, . oak or AKC Registered Collia Pupa.
pine . For pricas end aveila· Tri-colored. 6 weeks old.
bility . Contact Millwood Cali 614-986-3667.
Inc ., 304-273- 2622, Rt. 2
at Evergreen Hills Ro,d.
AKC rag . male Beegle pup
MonCfay - Fridl'/ . 8 · 4 : 30; for sale. Also older trained
Saturday. 8- 3 :00 .
dog . 614-843-6164.
1 ...:....~-~------:Seasoned oak firewood , Registered mala red buff
304-675·2757 after 4 p.m . Cocker Spaniel pup. Also
Siamaar cats for sale. 614Dry firewood, doliverd, 992 ·2607.
phone 304-675-7771 .
AKC Registerad female
REPOSSESSED SIGNI No- cocker spaniel. 2 yean old.
th'
do nl Take over pay
•ng
w
- 166. Alto AKC regiatared
cocker spaniel puppiea. 1
male, 1 female. $65. each.
New bulbt, letters, Hale 814-742-2801.
.
Call FRE.E 1 ~ 800 .
AKC Registered Weima·
I
enyttmo.
raner puppies t Chanpion2 colorTVs, 304·676-2816. ahlp bloodline in field and
ahow. 'Own both parents and
Frost free refrigerator in are on premi11es. Mother
excellent condition . Phone from Ch . Ran!h's Rajah and
Ch . Kamsou London Fog.
304-676-1 386.
Serious inquiries only .
Full size bed, box aprings, Phone 304-489-1719 aflr 6
book shelf. headboard, p.m. weekdsvs ind anytime
on weekends.
$76 .00, 304·882-221 6.

Walnut lumber'S and 1() h .
long . Coli 304-458-1997.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
• washers, dryers. refrigera- Pizza oven. 8400 . Joes
tors, rang••· Skaggs Ap- Piu.a in Cheshire. Call 814pliances. Upper River Rd .• 367-0671 .
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446· 7398.
·Woodburnirig Stoves. freestanding. fireplace insert.,
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
mobile home approved. &amp;
Sofa, chair, rocker. otto- furnance ad-ona. Jividans
man . 3 tables. (extra heavy Farm Equipment , 446by •Frontier) , 8686. Sofa, 1676.
chair and lovsseat. 8276.
Sofas and chairs priced from Firewood pickup or deli·
S2B5 . to $896. Tables, $45 vored . Call 614-266-6689.
and up to $125. Hide-a·
beds,S440 . and up to Used Ditch witch trencher
$526 ., Recliners, $175 . to model 2300. 1-614-694$350 ., Lamps from $28 . to 7842.
$76 .6 pc . dinettes from
$99., IO 435 . 7 pc. $169 Sherwin-Williams Nova airand up. Wood table with six lass electric paint sprayer.
chairs S426 t9 S746 . Dask Like new . 8160. Call 614S 110 l4P to 8225 . Hutches, 388-9790.
$550 . and up, maple or pine
.
finish . Bunk bed complete 2 commercial pop coolers &amp;
with mattresses , $260. and 1 ice cream cooler. 18
up to S396.
Baby beds. drawer neil bin . Call 814$110 . Manresses or box 388-8453 days.
. springa, full or twin, 868.,
firm. $88. and 878 . Queen Uility trailer cargo area 4ft. 2
sets. 8 195 .. 4 dr chests, in. wid8' by 8ft. long, 20 in.
842 . 6 dr. chests, $64. Bed deep. All metal except floor,
frames. $20 .and 826., 10 running light, fender' &amp; saf·
gun • Gun cabinets, $360. tev chain •.. new tires. •zoo.
Gas or electric ranges. $326 Cell 446-4219 .
up to $375 . Baby mattresses. $26 &amp; $36. bed 276 gal. fuel oil tank, good
frames $20. $26, &amp; S30, shape &amp; clean , 840. Call
king frame S50 . Good.ae!ec·. 446·4219 .
tion of bedroom suites,
cedar chests. rockers, metal Troybilt Tillers Salea &amp; Sercabineu. swivel rockera .
vN:e. Swishars- lmplement.
Used Furniture ·· bookcase. St. Rt. 7. North, Gallipolis.
ranges, chairs. dinnatt set. 614-446-0476 .
wood table and chairs. dryers. refrigerators and TV's. 3 1 Ox12 ft. aluminum bldg .
miles out Bulawilla Rd . Open wired inauleted, paneled,
Sam to Bpm. Mon . thru Fri.. $760 . Good cond., 614·
9am to 6pm , Sat .
379-2880, 7 - 11AM, 8 ·
446-0,322
10PM.

.

266-1416.

Wood burner. 5 s~ring banJO.
I'J'Iayt:ag wringer w~sher . 18
ti.p. garden 11nd lawn traci.
t.o r 306W .. Main . Pomeroy .

Firewood· cu1 up. , slabs.
S15 pickup load . Coli 614246 · 5804.

Fireplace insert-still in factory carton-automatic
controls-2 blowers· glus
door-ash pan -fita 30 in . to
48 ln . fireplace-burns wood
or coal. $690. Cell 614·
256·1 216 .

6. ton, 1 walker. Call 614-

1· Akai X-2000 custom deck
real to real tape recorder . 1
Kenwood amplifier, 2· 1 0 "
professional sound caddy
speakers . 1 Hammond or 1.9an_, double keyboard . 6141949-2477.

Vl

3 br furnished. ac, clean
cOndition, 1 child . no peta.
above New Hiven . 304 882 -2466.

~

79

October

2 young Coon dogs, 1 black

2 bdr. uqfurnished mobile

44

by Larry Wright

Brlarpatch K'ennela Professional All -breed grooming,
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·
cilitiat. English Cocker Spaniol puppioo. Call614·388·
9790 .
.

Antique Oak Buffet. t350.
614-992-2219 .

on Rt. 688. Coil 614· 2469170.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE r•

Peta for 81111

Judy Toylor Oro.o mlnp. Co)l
,
• !4-387-7220.'

6· 10. Simon' s Pick-a-Pelr.

·room, 1 mile out of Gallipolia

Fridly,

Ohio

•• Homes
Campers

1977 Nomod oleepo II, oolf
contain.t, air cond., awnIng. e~~~:c:. cond. Cell after
4:30, 114-241-9153.
Buy Foctory Direct. light·
weight, llborgiOio &amp;co'":

84 •
&amp;

Electrical
Refrigeration

t----- - - - - - SEWING Machine repairs.
service. Authorized SingerSales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scinora. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

85

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SER· "
VICE . Call 614·367-7471
or 614-367-0691 .
Need something hauled
awey or something moved?
Wo'll do it. Call 446-3159
batwean 9 and 5.
Water hauling, Fast Service ,
low rates . Call 614-2681743.

~::•1n:.~:~:::t'c~~~~~w

for-

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lenior. 304-6767387.

brochure end BAVEI

11 II. Torry comper. Fully
oolf-conlolnod, oloopo
awning • wooden camping
picnlo gblo Included. I••·
cond.
flrm. 114·
892.. 1 13.
Eight foot comper ,
.
471

e.

ez,ooo.

~2 ':'=.·:=.ror;,~

te-'-7_&amp;_·4_1_2:a_._ _ _ __

~

FRIDAY
1017/83

•

EVENING
6:00

87 '

Upholstery

' "
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Bee. Aw., Golllpolio.
448· 7833 or 441-1833.

•

=

a11 Streat W •• k
LOUIS
· Rukeyser ana 1yzes
h8 ·ao1 · h
kl
t
Wit a wee Y re·
vtaw .of economic end in·
vestment
9:00 CD
700 matters.
Club .Today' s
program features 0 r. G uv
Greenfield.
([) 11J ()) Lonaryl
C1 C1J (]It Dalles
t]) (J]) Emigrant S.ga 'A
New Beginning.' Af1ar a
terrifying voyege, Karl end
Christina aet off for the
f-erm land of Minne~ota . (2
hrs.) [Cioaed Captioned)
10:00 (]) MOVIE: 'The World
According to Garp'
(])MOVIE: 'Blue Collar'
Cl) •
!Dl Matt Houaton
Matt's probe of 11n illegal
alien 'pipeline' lellds him
on a search for a boy who
need• medical attention to
survive. (80 min.) [Cioaed
Captioned)
..~ F 1
A
1
ULI a con
reat nge a
blackmails Chase's doc:tor
into declaring him incom·
petent and Joseph nearly
dial from an overdo1e. (80
min.)
• INN Newa
10:15 II) TBS Evening Newa
10:30 C1J To Be AnnounCICI
• Comect'l_ Time
11:00 II C%l ()) m CJ CiliiD al
(JJ News
CJ) Another Life
(I) SportaCenter
(I) All In the Family
(JJ Dr. Who
()]) Muterpfec. Theatre
'Pictures.' Ruby Sear11 en·
tars into Bill Trench's life,
. giving him an lde11 for a
new kind of 'modern" film.
(60 mlil.) (Cioaed Captioned]
• Bonny Hill Show
11:11 (I) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City, NJ
1 1:30 II CIJ ffi Tonight Show
Cl) Star Time
Cl) Cotllno
()) Soap
•
()) MOVIE: 'Bermuda
Oeplho'
,
(J) Latenlght Amlrloa
()J M•A•&amp;•H
•ID Nlgh~lno
• Twilight Zono
12:00 ([) MOVII!: 'My FIYoriW
YMr'
.
_()) Night Trooko
ill Nlgh~lne
I..LI I.J.JJ

II CIJ ()) CD CJ ()) ® Ill

(]11 News
Cil Coming Attractions
(]] New Treasure Hunt
(]J Little Houae on the
...
Prairie
(I) (j]) Y.E.S. Inc.
• Buck Rogera
8:30 0 C1J ffi NBC_Nowo
Cil Sugar Ray'a AII.Stara
Su( ar Rav Leonard hosts
this •how where kids get a
chance to work out with
~ons superstar~ .

()) Rifleman
()) Ill Cl2i ABC News
· CJ IJ) liD CBS News
([) au·a ln"a Report
(J]) Over Easy
7:00 II C1J PM Magezlno
CIJ lnoido Tho NFL
())Bonanza
(jJ SportaCanter
()) Carol Burnett
()) Entertainment Tonight
CI) Cherlle's Angels
D CIJ Wheel of Fortune
()) (j]) MaoNoll/lohror
Nawahour
liD Nowo
• (D Peot:~le's Court
JeffefiOna
7:30 II CIJ Tic Toe Dough
{]) Album Fl..h: Ronatedt
(!) ESPN't lnalde Football
rn Good Nowo
()) IJ Cil Family Feud
()D You Aakltd For It
(J2)
Entartelnmant
ToniQhl
One Day at 1 Time
8c00 II CIJ ffi Major Looguo
Ba•tNIII: American League
Champlon1hlp Serial
C2) MOVIE: 'Jin•od'
C1J MOVIEc 'Trto Toy'
(]) High Chaparral
(I) NFL Oeme of the Week
()) MOVIE' 'Tho LOvo
(J) • !Ill 8an10n B1n1on
linda himself In the rote of
Krau1' husbend when she
'csn·t bear to tell her
m_pthar thlt the wedding is
off. [Closed Captioned]
CJ ())liD Dukoo ol Honord
A thief. who is efter a mil·
lion doll1ra, t;taclde• to
heve surgery to look like
Rasco. (fSO·mln.)
()) (j]) Woohlntton Wookl
Review Paul Duke II joined
bv top Weehlngton "jour·
ftlllltt
analyzing
the
week's newt.
• MOVI!c WO... Wero
You When the Llghtl Weftt
••
Outr
8:30 Cll Auto RIOina •.,, UIAC
from
R-rg.
OH
()) •O
_,.,
Kothor·

a

e

a

Now Hauling Good Lump or
Stoker Coal. Minimum 4
ton . 614·387-7101.

toll froo 1·100·348·4982

·~~~td~~~nl~ti~------------------rn-N_C_A_A-~-.-~-al-b-~-U~ot----,-ir_e_s-an_d_o_w-id_o_w_a_n~d-he-,--------------------

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lM end GMrae diiiOOVef'
thlt Webster. la hiding a
run 1 way In hll rOO~ ·

·w

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liD MOVIE: 'Tho llgond or
loHv CNJik'
·

.-n16Gke of the Night
12:11 (I) MOVII!: 'Amityville 11:
The P~ 11111Aon' .
12:30
CIJ CD Frldoy Night
Vldloa
•

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I

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1:00
1::10

\IAI

-

··-.-

I Mlnlocl Joon
1.-lnmont Tonight
IDNMOVIE: 'Tho Swinging
I

1:48
2·.00

2:16
2:30

Cheerleaderl'
(]) Love That Bob
(I) Star SHrch
®MOVIE: 'Blue Sunshine'
(I)(J}J CNN Heedllne News
ld F belt
(!) ESPN'slns 11 oat
D
~
NBC
News
'..LI
Overnight
(I) Coming Attractions
(]) Bachalor Father
(!)News/Sign Off
(1) SportsCanter
(ll CNN HHdline News
(]) lnlldl The NFL
(])Life offtlley
(1) To Be Announced
(J) Best of Midnight
~lals

3:00 U CD News
(l) 100 Club Today' a pro.
gram features Or, Guy
Greenfield .
3:16 '([)MOVIE: 'Loet Horizon' .
3:30 (])Auto Racing '83: USAC
Stocks from Rossburg, OH
3:46 Cil MOVIE: 'Jinxed'
4 :30 ~
~.LJ Roll Begtev•

SATURDAY
EVENING

II(}) Newt
(]) MOVIE: 'Thomaalne
and Bushrod'
(I) Tho Monroe•
(J) 'S&lt;:oraboard
CD Ood Hat the An.•wer
([) Undersea World of
Jecquaa Couateau
(fD Sneak Prevtewl
'Ountmoke
8:16 (J) World Championship
Wrestli!!J
8:30 8 (]) aJ NBC News
•
([)
()J Nawa
(f)) Matinee at the Bijou •
7:00 G ()) .Oence Fever
(I) 1 Spy
(I) NFL Gem• of the Week
(() World Championship
W.-llng
(() • ()) HM Hew
ffi Btor Booroh
()) OI'Ht Railway Journey•

8:00

e

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0
liD

Tennessee
•
tT'I Ill tAl T.J . Hooker
l.ll.l
UAJ
Hooker tries to save Stacy
~tfter she infilitrates a white
slavery ring . (60 min .)
[CiosedCaptioned]
IIJ([)
(]]I Cutter to Houston

([) Unknown War
Cl]) She Great lde.es
fit MOVIE: 'The Best Man'
B:30 ())MOVIE: 'The Sander'
(!) ESPN'a Saturday Night
at the Fights
B:OO (I) d) &lt;I2J Love Boet Doc is
confronted by 8 boy claim·
ing to be his son, an adver·
tising whiz can 't get his
work done bec 8 use of his
bon's da'ughter and a male
escort falls in love . {SO
min.) [Closed Captioned]
III CJJ (fGl
MOVIE:
~~~~~rg~~~· Sega 'The
\.LI I.LLI

New Land." Karl and Christlna carve out their new
homestead in Minnesota.
(OO min .) [Closed Cap·
tioned]
10:00 Cl) MOVIE: 'Paternity'
Cl1 MOVIE: 'Yanks'
CI) Sing OUt America
CIJ Cll CIJ Fantasy Island
Mr. Roarke finds himself
thu.objectof aWoman ·s de-

daug hte r f a11 ror t 1HI same
· .1 [CI ose d
ma n. [60 mm
c
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10:30 (llJ
\1.1 OrorWho ar 1
11·. ooo 1.6..1
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.,. lSV
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~ -~
uu
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.a
G:2l News
ffi To Be Announced
@ SportsCanter
(I) NCAA Football : East
Tennaasee e1 Marshall
f!) Twilight Zone
1 1:15 (]) TBS Evening News
11 :30 0 CD CD Saturday Night
Live
(2J MOVIE : ' Venom·
C3J John Anker berg
(!] CFL Football : Ottewa at
Calgary
(]) Earle Bruce Show
0 ()) MOVIE: 'The Othe(
(fOJ M•A•S•H
(!) (]}) MOVIE: ' Puppet on a
Chain'
fl) Twilight Zone
rr. Nl h T
k
11 :45 &lt;..i!.i S t rae s
. 12:00 (I) Beyond the Hori zon
CID
MOVIE:
To
Be
Announced
® MOVIE: 'Islands in the
Streem'
@) Twilight Zone
12:15 {.2) MOVIE: 'Sa.~e With the
Starsl
12:30 f:8 Twilight Zone

l}l}~Nl fi;)'i} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD OAME

\.!:')

~

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byHenriAmoldaodBobLee

e

~hom~onohlp S.~oo/or
A~..
Programming

Should thll game not be ,....
nec••••rv. altarnltl pro.
Q!_emmlng will btl shown. '
Cil Not N-uo~ly Tho
N.w. Thll shoW prom11es,
to btl averything tl'tt currtnt news Is no1.
IJ) MOYlE: 'Luoky l.od'(
IJ) MOVIE: 'Tho Etomel
Boo'

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH
42 Approach

ACROSS
1 Hindu
holy ma n

DOWN
I Costly fur

5 Less cooked

2 "- in Paris"
3 Bout with
the bottle ·
4 Harness
collar
piece
5 Drizzling
6 Canine cry

10 - Harbor,
Guam

11 Spectacle
12 Part or a cup
13 Elevate
14 Telephone
repairer
16 Medieval
shield
17 Deer

Yesterday 's Answer

7 Bar ; tavern

8 Instruct
9 Said to be
11 Level

23 Musical

29 Foamy

program
18 "21 Descendant
Wednesday" 15 Father or son
of Esau
19 Hairdo
21 Understand
25 Grim
gadget·
22 Chinese
27 Bequest
20 Holm
river
_recipient
22 Tiny bit ·
23 - Adoree
. 25 Ate by

31 Earth

· 32 Snake
:ui·Gennan

lancer
37 Swiss

river

candle~

light
26 Brink
27 Ringing

sound
28 Kind of

Untcrambkt thel8 four Jumbles, ·
one litter lo each square, to 1Qrm
rour ordinary wordS. ..,.

lelluce
29 - markee
30 School
group
33 Devilkin
31 Lacking
super·

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vision

POSOT

36 Screed

38'Fat
311 Comfortable
40 Israeli port

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lolkl Gold
How '" the West Wet
Won
7,30 II C%l·jnoklo Look
IJ) HIO Comocly: 8-m
The typloel aii·Amerlcln
femlly is parodied.
Cllhortoeon•r
8:00
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BeHblll: N1t1onal "Lngue

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Pr1ntenawerllere:

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Yaslerda 's
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EVER'(THIN5 Y"OLI
S~OLIL.I:' KNOWA50UT
ENT~ANCE5 ANI"
• EXIT~.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the turprtH answer. 11 tug·
Q8Sled by the above ca11oon.

THE[

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(Anl'tYif'l tomorrow)
Jumbles· LOVER FLAM.E POLITE MISL.AY
·
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Answer: He worka out tne P,rOblems at mixed-up
ldvers-"SOLVER '

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE II·

Here's how to work It:
A X V D L 8 A A' X R
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands £or another. In lh1s sample A Ia
used for the three L's, · x for the t~Q O's. etc . Single letters,
apostrophe!!, the length and formation or the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are ditrerent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
NIU

K T I

B 0 K Q·

FIVYIRI
M

u. G

I T D

NED Q

Q

K U G .

KWQ

QOIS
-

N E U

Q E .

VI K D

Q

K V

Q

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LADY OR GENTI.EMAN
REMAINS AT HOME WITH A GROUCH, SAME AS IF THEY

Yeslenla~'o Cryploquole: A TRUE

HAD PNEUMONIA.-KIN HUBBARD

'

�•
-

lbge-12-The lhily Sentinel

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

O'Brien ends 43 court cases
' Thirty-four defendants were fined
and nine other forfelte&lt;l bonds in
Mel""
County Court Wednesday.
b"
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were James Drake, Huntington,
insecure load, $15 and costs,· Elmer
Bailey, Shade, Denise White, Porn~
&lt;roy, and Gerry Reagan, Washington, W. Va., John Minichan,
Barboursville, speed, $:a! arid costs
eac h.: E velyn Hupp, Chantilly , Va.,
speed, $24 and costs; Charles F .
Sayre, Long Bottom, Martha Dudding, Racine, Andrew Iannarelll,
:Middleport, Kenneth Winsted, Hamilton, James Bishoff, Huntington,
J~~l!!)!lJ(!B.-I&gt;elpre, speed, $22.
and cost each; Charlene Yonker,
New Haven, speed. $.ll and costs; Th
omas Stone, Long Bottom, DWI.
$250and Costs, !Odaysconfinement,
license suspended sLx months;
Luther Mowery, Middleport, eludffl
l'
d
fin
ing a
n o cer, 1ve ays con ement, and cost.s,sd resisting arrest,
five days confinement, $50 - and
costs, no operators license, S25 and
ts fi e d s confinement· Mary
cos • v ay
·
Fowler, CoolvUle, . OWl, license
suspended 60 days, $100 and costs,

attend res
' ident1a 1 driving school; $15 and costs, ·no motorcycle
Ronald Golden, Stew;~rt, unsafe • endorsement , $50 and costs, three·
''ehlcie • $5 a n d cos ts ; Kenneth. days confinement, six months
Klein · Pomeroy, ta 11 ure to d'ISplay probation; Kent ( Varney, Long
valid registration sticker, SJO a nd Bottom, failed toobeytrafflccontrol
costs·, David R • Mccann, ca d iz. J;aht , $:a! and costs, no · !rivers
~ •25 d
"'
Sv=u, • an costs.
license,
~ and costs, 10 days
,
· confinement, confinement susAlsoJamesR.Stewart,Pomeroy ,.
d"" if
left of center, $10 and costs, DWI, pen ""
license obtained in 30
days; Cleatus Arnett, Pomeroy,
$250 and costs, three days confm&lt;&gt;- DWl. $250 and costs. three days
ment, license suspended 60 days·,
confinement. license suspended 60
Benny Branham, Pomeroy, Ro""'rt
""
days, if attend driving school$150 of
Layne, Cheshire. and Gregory Cole, fine and jail sentence will be
'fuppers Plalns. $21 and Gostseach, susiJendcd ; Michael Marcum, Long
speed; Robert A. Caldwell, Ken. Bottom, speed. $:a! and costs.
Oh, overload. $45 and costs; Robert
Forfeiting . bonds were Willis
G. Caldwell, Bidwell failu re to
display valid license pl~tes, $10and Yarnell , Somerton, speed, S41:.
E llen Stewart, Pomeroy, no qpera·
costs; · H. W. Hamrick. Jr., Little tors license, $70; ~olllfi Foffilne;
Hocking, speed, $23andcosts; Jerry
Runyon, Middleport, failed to dJS' - Racine, failed to stop at stop sign,
$.ll; James Ware, West Hamblin,
play valid registraUon, $10 and
St
C ffm
W.Va., speed, $41; Bober! McClascosts;
eve
o
an, Racine. key, Vinton, permit violation, $45;
failed to control vehicle, $W and
costs; Paul Clay, Rutland, loUIO\\•- Lyle Jackson, Jr .. Lancaster, Riing too close, $25 and costs; Willard chard Baillie, Belpre, and Ann
n----&gt; Reed il
Gaspard, Aurora. Ind., speed, $50.
"'''''•
sv· le, speed, $Z3 and each; Jerome Howard, Pomeroy,
costs; Robert Johnson. Jr., Racine,
passing over solid yellow line,.$45. ,
failed to display valid license plates,

Happenings around Meigs County...
Meigs homecoming
observance planned

At 12: 55 a.m. Friday, the Middleport Unit took Christine Peck from a
Middleport business establishment
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. On
Thursday, at8 ;33p.m. the Pomeroy
Unit took Connie Mash from the
sheriff's office to Holzer Medical
Center and at 12:02 p .m., the
Middleport Unit took Mark Proffi tt
from Stonewood Apartments to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. .

In observance of Meigs High
School homecoming a pep rally and
parade will be held Wednesday, Oct.
12 begtnnlng at 7 p.m.
The parade will line up in Rutland
at Bank One's parking lot. The
parade will travel from Rutland to
Middleport, · through Middleport
and Pomeroy stopping in front of
Marauder Stadium where a bonfire
will be held.
Meeting day changed
Taking part in the parade wtll be
the Marauder band. football team,
Because of an important Athens
cheerleaders and homecoming District United Methodist meeting
queen candidates.
.scheduled for Monday, Oct 10, the
Any groups or individuals wis hing Meigs County Council on Ministries
to take part in the parade are asked will hold Its regular meeting on Oct.
to contact· Sandy lannarelli at 17, rather than on Oct. 10 at the
' 992-7039 or Cinda Harris at 992-2451. · Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
All representa lives and commit:
tee
members are requested to be
Emergency runs.
present for the postponed session
Three calls have been answered during which time plans will be
made for !be 1984 year.
by local units, the Meigs County
The postponed meeting will start
'E m ergency Medical Serv ice
at
7:00p.m.
reports.

Area deaths

Veterans Memorial

less than 10 billionths of a second.
When the Global Positioning
System satellites were launched
their main purpose was !Jl set up a
worldwide navigation system.

Pitt ....................... 17
Florida State ......... 16

Florida .......... ........ 29
Vanderbilt ............. 10

Miami, Ohio. ~ ........
Kent State .............. . -7

•

---

ZIMMER BEING RECONSIDERED ~ Offt.
clal!i ior Cincinnati Gas&amp; Electric said Tbulsday that
they were considering altel'llallve uses for the

-

tmes .~

uncompleted Zlnuner·· nucleal' plant located on the
Ohio River at Moscow, Ohio. (AP Laserpbolo).

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND

(AP )

-

The

winning number drawn Thursday
night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number,'' was4W.
In the "Pick 4" game, played five
times a week, the winning number
was 700'2.
·
The lottery reported earnings of
$681,357 from the wagering on its
daily game. Earningscameonsales
of $1.005.036, while holders of
entitled to
winning tickets' .
share $383,679, officials said.

really not in a position !Jl make a
final determination as towhatwe're
going to do," he said.
Dlckhoner said that if It is decided
to abandon the nuclear plant, he
wants to meet with the state Pupllc
Utnitles Commission, Gov. Richard
Celeste and the Legislature to· 'work

out some kind of an agreement
whereby the costs would be shared"
by stockholders and customers.
" You have to realize that when we
decided to build this plant, the
customers were going to get the full
benefit of whatever advantages
there were to nuclear power,"
Dlckhoner said.

r-;::=;:==============::======:.
Capture Today's Events For Tomorrow In

.

By LARRY EWING
Times-Sentinel !!taD
GALLIPOLIS - Ohlo:s new 'Financial Responsi·
blllty Law' takes effect in less than three months. The
law will Impact on every driver and vehlcle owner In
the Gallta·Meigs area.
State Highway Safety Director Kenneth R. Cox said
Thursday the new law is deSigned to do only one thing ·
- " ... keep the uninsured, financlalty irresponsible
driver oft the road."
The taw, which takes effect January 1, ·1004,
requires all drivers and mo!Jlr vehicle owners !Jl
maintain proof they can pay for damages caused in a
traffic accident.
"Each year nearly 72,001 drivers are involved in
accidents and can't pay for the damage," Cox said.
"This puts hardship on everyone, especially the
victims.'' .
Under current law, proof Is only required after an
accident but the new law will require that every
motorist have In force an active insurance policy with
minimum liability; or, a bond equal to the minlmum
·amount. ·
.
If a motorist is involved in an accident and is not '
covered by an insurance policy or bond, his drtver's
llcense wtll be suspended and the license plates from
the vehicle involved in the offense will be confiscated
until be &lt;:!an show proof of compliance. In addition, he
wlli have to pay a reinstatement fee.
Cox pointed out that most Ohio motorists will
"automatlcaily" compty with the new taw by having
llablllty coverage with a car Insurance policy.
Motorists wlll, at the time of license plate registra lion,
be requite!! to sign a sworn statement indicating
coverage is currentlY · in effect and will continue
through tbe year.
Highway safety officials estimate the typical cost of
a collision Is almost $5,000. They point outthat a drtver
who is not financtally responsible would be hard

-

Bob &amp; Charlene Hoeflich

·10.~.:.1
[
·
PHoicf~LACE
---=
JJ

109 High St.

Pomeroy, OH.

1t"j~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
:

FALL SPECTACULAR
SHOP TONIGHT 'TIL
. 8
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR

20% Off

70 Pagoo 35 CAnis

Feldstein, also a speaker at the meeting, in caliing on
Congress !Jl slow the flow of government red ink.
"The economy is expanding in a very comfortable ,
positive way," Feldstein said, predicting it would
continue to do so,in 1984. ''The question is whether we
can get a hal anced recovery, whether we can sustain
the recovery, and that's what worries 'rrie about not
making a commitment (to reduce deficits ) now."
In Its employment report, the Labor Department
said 382,001 people found jobs in September as the
unemployment rate fell . That left 10.4 miJlion·people
classified as unemployed, compared with 1.2.5 million
last December.
The report said mQre than 2.8 million jobs have
been created as the economy has recovered from
recession \his year.

New Rio president stresses
economic, cultural growth

New law requires drivers
sho.w financial responsiblity

We aha carry a complete line of gradUation invitation.&lt; and
accessories and a complete line of wedding and anniversary
tmJttattons and accersories at DISCOUNT PRICES. Come atid
browse without obligation.
Call11s f01' Tf'Ore informati011 or to make-your appointment;
evening.r a&gt;UI weekends.
.

~

Sed~m .

A Multimedia tnc. Nawtpbrpar

Frl,day.

Portrait.&lt;
Weddings
Anniversaries
Parsport.r
· Special OICaSiom

]

--------------------

infiation Performance wtll be next year and the
... ·
following year."
His remarks came after the Labor Department
reported Friday that the jobless rate fell in September
to 9.3 percent of the clvlllan labor force from 9.5
percent in August. That is well below the42-year peak
of 10.8 percent recorded in December.
Also Friday, the Dow Jones average ol30 Industrial
stocks rose 3.35 points to 1,272.15, surpassing a record
set Thursday. For the week, the average was up 39.02
points.
At the Business Council meetng, Volcker refe!Ted
· to concern among some economists that the recovery
could raise prices if companies and unions try to ·
mak,e up (or ground lost during the recession.
He joined Whlte House chief economist Martin

UNEMPWYMENT RATE - Bureau of labor
Statistics CAlmmlssloner Janet Norwood testifies
before the Joint Economic C6nun!ttee on Capiliit HDI

Beauttifi~-m,.I Fm~
•• . 11
'
h~
Colo r Photograp

~--=

8

Sunday, October 9, 1983

-------·------~-

By The As..'!OCialed Press
Although the unemployment rate hlta17-monthlow
and the stock market broke records for the second
straight day, Federal Reserve Chairman Paul
Volcker cautioned the nation is entering a "testing
period" in Its fledgling economic recovery. :
"Looking back, the news is good," Volcker told
rePorters after his Friday address to the Business
Council, a business executives' group meeting in Hot
Springs, Va.
'
Still, he said there is a "considerable amount of
concern and uncerta!f!tr=stili about hJw good the

.

.

STOREWIDE .SAlE

20% OFF EVERY ITEM IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
·WAREHOUSE NOT INCLUDED IN THIS SALE

lf)

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmes-Sentmel Sta1f
RIO GRANDE - The new
presi\Jent of Rio Grande College and
Community College wants to see
both institutiOns become integral to
the economic and cultural develop- \
ment of southeastern Ohio.
Dr . .C!odus R. Smith added
academic excellence, resource
identification and a majbr fund·
raising project to his list of goals.
Smith, 55, took over the presidency of RGC-CC on Oct. 1,
succeeding Dr. Paul C. Hayes, who
announced his resignation in January. Smith revealed hts sentiments
about the future of both colleges
during his administration at a ·
Friday on-campus press
conference.
Smith said the facilities ·the
college now offers, and is capable of
offering, can be of use to tile area's
economy, particutar!y through utillzation of the year-old Emerson E.
Evans School of Business
Management.
"I will call upon .'councils,

FINANCIAL RESPONSmiLITY - Highway
safety olllcials estimate the cost of a typical collision

at approximately $11,000. A new state law, which takes
effed January 1, )98.1, requires all drivers and molor
vehicle owners to maintain proof they can pay for
damages caused In a traffic accident.
pressed to pay for the damage.
Requirements of the new law include;
' -No driver's license or vehicle registration wUl be
issued unless the applicant signs a sworn statement
indicating he is covered by Insurance or bond.
-Regardiess of what month a vehicle Is registered,
the required coverage must be in force iiO later that
January 1, 1984.
-If a driver falls to surrender his vehiCle
registration, any law enforcement officials is
authorized to confiscate his ilcense plates.

presentation. Smith said,
chambers of corru'nerce, P!Cs
"Irj order to put a package
(Private Industry CouncUs), busi·'
together, It will require r esources of
ness and Industry to help in
a s'!_stain\ng OJder," he said. "I'm
releasing this college, to allow it to
looking . for cooperative relation·
extend itself into the area," he said.
ships
with people interested in the
''No institution can survive without
humanities."
glving of itself and without being
·Asked if student and colleg&lt;&gt;useful to the community.
~ productions would be in"In a more populated area, this
volved, he said he'll look for a
might be easier done,'' he continued.
mixture of student and c0rrutmnity
"But institutions there will not serve
theater.
·
·
a need greater than there is here.''
Smith said he's interested in the
The former vice president of
Current concern over academic
university relations at Cleveland
excellence, a situation he said he
State University said he'sdedicated
plans to answer with a search for the
!Jl making the campus a cultural
best faculty and programs.
center for students and residents of
The colleges are alsO considering
GaUJa, Meigs, Jackson and Vinton
a pian to offer incentives to
counties, the four primary areas the
high-achieving students. In the
colleges serve.
same area, Smith said the colleges
Focusing on extensive use of the
will also concentrate on !den tlfying
Fine and Performing Arts Center,
what programs it offers and does
opened in February 1981, Smith said
best.
he wUl seek support from the Ohlo
Other programs will be geared to
and Southern Hills arts councils and
meeting
t)Je needs of the area , he ·
other funding outlets to create an
-said, adding that he also plans to
endowed program.
The responsibility for a successful work with local school district
(Continued on page A3)
program lies with the college in its

Newspaper fights Logan·gag order
LOGAN, Ohio (AP) -A Hocking
County judge says he wtll hold a
bearing next week on a request qy a·
Columbusnewspaperthathelifthls
gag order in theaggravatedmurder
ca5eagainstDaleJohnston. .
Johns!Jln w~ indicted Sept. 29for
the dismemberment slayings of his

stepdaughter, Annette Cooper, and
her boyfriend, Todd Schultz, in
October 1982.
Common Pleas · Judge James
Stnwell issued an order at John'~ton's arraignment Sept. 30 which
prohibits anyone involved in the
case from "passing on any informa-

lion whichcouldinterfere with (the)
defendant's right to a free and fair
trial."
J'he Columbus Cit~en-Joumal
says the order Is unconstitutional
because it unfairly limits the ·
particlpants'l'reedom of speech a nd
the media's ability to "gather news.

Meigs property· owners get secorid tax break
Department and returned it to the.board of bealth for
revision. On Sept.13, the Metg&gt;; Board of Health met
and decided to resubmit the same budgetlor approval
by tbe county budget commission. However, on Sept.
20, !hi! Meigs Board of Health in a special session not
only revised the 1984 budget, reducing the amount of
money requested for next year but also took action for
keeping the health department offices open 35 hours
each week.
The original budget request which was turned dow!)
by the budget commission asked for $153,960.20 in
local funds for 1~ operations. The revlsed biiaget for
1984 presented to the budget commission on Friday
asked for $146,192.22 in local'tunds for next year. The
budget commission 'did approve the 1984 revised '
budget asking for that amount in local funds but
reduced !be tax millage levy by one half--down to .5o!
a mill. Based on new evaluations, the one mill levy
would have brougttt in approximately $175;000 with

By BOB HOEFUCH
Board effective on the 1983 tax duplicate, payable In
'l'lme8-sentlnel Staff
1984. At that time it was pointed out that Meigs Is the
POMEROY - Meigs County real estate owners
only county currently supporting through a levy !be
were given their second tax break within a week
work of the board. Both Jackson and Galila Counties·
Frtday when U!!r MelgS County Budget Comrnisslon,
defeated renewal levies for the board in .1981 and
meeting in special session, cut in half the mlllage on a
Gallla County did not collect for 1981 even through a
levy being·collected for the Meigs County Department • levy was in effect for that year.
At Friday's meeting the Meigs Budget Comrnlssion
. of Health.
approved the discontinuance of the _collection the 648
Last November, voters of ~ty approved a
Board Mental Health Levy as well as reducing the
one mill, five year tax levy to provlde operating funds
health department levy thereby giving real estate
for the county health department. During Friday's
owners a total of .7 of a mlll reduction in taxes for 1983,
meeting the budget commission, composed of County
payable in 1984.
Treasurer George Collins; County Auditor Willtarn
Wickline and Prosecuting Attorney Rick Crow, . , Meeting with tlie budget comrnlsslon on Frtday
were John Jacobs, health department administrator,
reduced the mll)age to be added !Jl the tax duplicate of
and Dr. James Witherell, president of the county
· Meigs County .property owners !Jl .5 ot one mill.
board of health.
A week ago the Meigs County Commissioners took
On Sept 9, the budget conunlsslon had turned down
action to discontinue the collection of a .2 of a mill tax
the 1984 budget submitted by the Meigs County Health
levy for the Gallla-Jackson-Meigs ~Mental Health

.

'

the one-half rnlll !Jl bring in approximately $87,500.
While tbe $87,500 Is less than the board of health has
requested in local funds , $146,192.22, it was reported
by the budget commission that the board of health
should have a balance in the budget at the end of this
year and this will glve tbe board the approximate
amount of local· money needed to meet the local fund
budget along with receipts collected for some
services.
The projected tax evaluation for 1984 by the budget
comrnfssion for the county Is $175,001,000, up some 28
million from 1982 with the 1983 evaluation was up·
some,$18 million over the 1982 figure.
The ·total health department budget for 19&amp;1 as
approved by the budget ·commission Friday totals
$228,954.:al which includes all moneys receivCct from
state programs. The earlier figure shown on the
budget before It was revised totaled $236,953.38 from

all sources.

•

.·'

Inside today:

WE HAVE THEM

A trim here, a

1984 Oldsm.obiles, Cadi,llacs &amp; ·che

SEE OUR SELECTION TODAY~!!

SIMMON'S,

.

tntittt

J()I,less rate down; stocks-up

"'

Zimmer update: Stockh~lders:
customers would share costs
CINCINNATI (AP) - If the
Zimmer nuclear power plant had
been built as planned, utility
customers would have benefited, so
It's lair they pay for the plant If it is
abandoned and never produces
power, a utlllty president says.
Zimmer's estimated cost has
hallooned from $240miJlion in1969to

·Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

-----

i7

.,

Vol. t I No. 32

c p)rightd 1913

,
•
Why·Not Try-A New .

;,

Nebraska ........... :... 14
Oklahoma State .... 10

unba

t~~~~~-~''"~~''~'~'"~"'~'"•~&gt;~•·~ui•~I;"';'"~~-~Od~Of"~"~·~'/"~ly~I, ~IO~M~J,~R~"h~•~"~H~.~K~•&lt;~•·~~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~

-~·

·~

Michigan ........... ~ ... 42
Michigan State ........ 0

were

~

Northwestern ..... :.. 21 -

Georgia ................. 36
Mississippi :............ ll

..

In lieu of flowers, the family
requests contrtbutions be made to
Partly cloudy and not as tool
Neil Haymaker, 53, Spokane, the Mason County Heart Associa - 'tonight. Low near 50. Winds light
Wash., fonnerly of New Haven , died . tlon, in care of Citizens National
and varlabie. lncreasing cloudiness
'
'fuesday while vacatloning in Point Pleasant.
Saturday with aJOpercentchanceof
Canada .
showers in the afternoon . High
BornMaylO, 193J in Arnoldsburg. John Welch
about 75.
he was the son of the late Franci s
Extended Ohio Forecast
John Welch, 34, ll2 Laird Ave. ,
Sunday throtigh Tuesday:
and Odessa Meadows Haymaker.
Fairwlthseasonaltemperatures.
He was a computer specialist at Parkersburg, W. Va ., iormeriy of
Coolville,
died
Thursday
at
his
mghs
tn the 60s. Lows in the upper
su.re of oH•o . oePARTuENT oF IN the Kaiser Alumlnumand Chemlcal
~idence
S"uAANCE . CERTIFICATt: Of COMPUANCr:
Corp.. Ravenswood, and a veteran , -.
30s to mid-41fi.
•
Th• ""'"''"""· " ""'""'""'""' Of lo He was OOm at Frost, Ohio, a son r=-===========-1 ~unonn.· or Th t' S trth' nr Ot.io. hc ... h,.
of the Armed Forces.
of Margaret Sirnrnons- - Welch,
ct&gt;r t ifiuthat nHNT «;uL.ONV un: INS UR·
He was preceded in death by a son,
ANI · ~: CO., 01' Ly.whhu'lC. ~llllt' or V1rtfiniu
hll f nmplied with th~ lltw N nr th l ~ llliiW
Keith. a brother, Vance,and asister, Marietta, and the late Roy Welch.
He was a veteran of the vietnam
llppliC'IIbletoltRndiiiiiUthoriu:ddutini(Lht'
Edith Lurton.
t' urre m Y~•n w lrlll\11111"1 I" th i11 11 tate it•
War.
He
was
employed
at
~e
llppropriall' hu~ini'U .. r iniiUtll.,... . ....
Sutviving are his wife, Nell; two
LaFayetteHotelinMariettaandthe
n
••• ,;,, "'""'"""
;,, Uecem
'""""'NtKil'II\('JH
lut vil li(' ;,
en ''"""
1111 roll o ''
wN on
sons, Tom. Spokane, and Jeff, Falls
Tu
~t
le
Nursing
Hoffie
j
n
bn
:11. 19~2: Admitted A"""'" SM.~t,li:l7. ,,, ,
Church, Va .; a daughter, Roberta Parkersburg.
T.. wnd ,i
OCI : I . iHhiliti e~ 1817 .:.!H£1,7:.lH. OO ; Surpl~t~~S:\1,
ht· .u u . f ullr•lt"~"'·d
247 ,44 :1. 011 : ln 4l'tl mt• t :t2 I,~:!O ,:l 42.00 :
Ervin, Spokane; two brothers,
Surviving are his ,mother, Mar·
!,mu .•l.lfr.lfl,i:t'IT..·nt.
t: -penditu rcN IUll4,0t17,4lfl.fiU; 'NI'l A•IIE't..
Harry, Dayton, Ohio, a nd Francis, garet;
four brothers, Donnie and
tU'' [ ~ 11 "' ''"'
• t:t 7 .:.1 -n .·Ha .no: C11pl ta t t&gt;~ .ooo.ooo .oo.
Arnoldsburg; two sisters, Amy
POMEROY
IN wn~t-: s!&lt;l WHUUo:m ·. 1 "" "''' hl'n'·
of Coolville; Larry, Beckley,
WER SHOP
un tOIIUb ... riho!d mynKITU'IIOdl'I\UIIo:od rt'I)'Mf!HI
Downs, Arnoldsburg, and Frankie Butch
w. Va ., and RonnJ'e, Mar&lt;atta·, lour
FLO
lu be llffircd II\ Cn lumbu ... Ohoio. I hiM fill)'
Nottingham, Pensacola, Fla.; two
sisters,
Betty
Smith,
Coolville·,
n.
"l-2039 or 9' 1•5711
~u~rlnit'ndPn l "' lnNUrdnC'I' ur Ohi-t~.
grandsons.
IH.: AI.'
Joyce
Cowdery,
Reedsville;
Janie
Funera l services will be Sunday
at 1 p.m . a t the New Haven United Tanner, Marietta, and Barbara
·
Methodist Church with the Rev. Welch, Athens.
John Campbell officiating. Burial . Services will be held at 1 p.m.
will follow in Hayes-Haymaker Sunday at the Whlte Funeral Home
In Coolvlile with the Rev. Robert
Cemetery in Arnoldsburg.
Markley
officiating. Burtal will be in
. Friends may call at Foglesong
the
Ireland
Cemetery. Frtendsmay
Funeral Horne, Mason, on Saturday
the
funeral home anytime
call
at
.. from 7·9 p.m. and one hour prior to
after
2
p.m.
Saturday.
services at the church.

REMEMBER
WITH fLOWERS

I O'Wt!- •.....•....••.•...••• : 61 .0

Ohio State ............. 33
Purdue ....... :... :...... 22

Admitted--Hurley Hutton, Rutland; Carroll Swanson, Middlepert; Harold Tripleit, Pomeroy;
John McDaniel. Clifton; Carla Dill,
Pomeroy; Mary Rinehart, Middleport; Betty F riend, Long Bottom.
than $3 billion.
president
more
, of
Cincinnati
Gas &amp; The
Electric
Co.,
Discharged--Loretta Campbell.
William Dickhoner, said Thursday
that the utility is considering
Spagh~tti dinner set
alternatives to a nuclear generating
facility, including abandoning it.
A spaghetti supper will be held at
The plant is 98 percent complete
the Pomeroy United Methodist and $1.6 billion has been spent on it.
Church, Saturday, from 4 to 7 p.m.
His statement came one week
The meal consists of spaghetti after the Bechtel Power Corp.
with meat sauce, slaw, hot garlic estimated Zimmer's cost upon
bread , beverage and dessert. completion, in 1986, as up to $3.5
Dinners are $3.25 for adultsand$2.25 billion.
for children underl2.It Is sponsored
Dlckhoner said the utUlty and
by the Ohio ETA Phil Sorority.
Bechtel agree that $3.1 bllllon is .
probably more accurate. He said
Satellite bonus
the utlllty is waiting for a further
WASHINGTON (AP)- Govern· breakdown in projected costs by
Bechtel.
,.._
ment scientists are using Defense
"Until
we
really
get
the breakDepartment satellites for an unexdown,
whlch
Bechtel
has
promised
pected bonus function - synchronlater
this
month,
we're
sometime
Izing clocks at remote locations to

Weather forecast

Neil' Haymaker

•

Olds.-Ca .-Chevy, Inc.
PH. 992-6614

308 E. Main

Pomeroy, OH.

'•

,\long the RIVer .......... .B-1-8

Bualoees....•.................. E--1

CI181111Q ......... :........ 0.~7
Deaths ......................... A·7

:FA1tor1a1s .................,... A·2
FAI'I1t..•. •· ...•,; ............... E--2:
lA:Ical ...... .............. ,,,., A..s-8

WUllam Spratley, of the Ohio
Consumers' Counsel, right, tea,
reporters at a Friday Jll'e!iS
conference In Columbus that
cua&amp;omers of the three •rtDH!es

Sporta .. ' " .. ............... ' ' C-1-8

..

job lhere.•.the VariOUS
recreatiOital outlets operated by the Gallipolis

own

D-oubled Zimmer
Nuclear Power Plant can ex·
pect hefty rate boo8Cs If It ls
completed at almost double Its

that

City Parks and Reerea·
don Department have
.
.
been Mftllng a farelift.
B-1 feature

the

orlllnal estimated coostructlon
COlt.
. PapA-3

.,

t

•

I

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