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                  <text>Page-1 2- The Daily Sentinel

./

Thunday,

_Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Ppmeroy, stop sign, $10 and .costs:
Albert Tromm, Rutland, improper
passing, $10 and costs.
·
Also Russell Egermayer, Willi ·
amstown, W. Va .. speed, $20 and
costs; Kimberly Jenkins. Racine,
failure to control vehicle, $20 and
costs, no operators license. S75 and
costs, 10 days confinement, eight
days suspended, one year proba·
lion: Fred Kuhn, Hedgeville, w.
Va.. disorderly conduct ,$20 and
costs; Robert K Lute, Pomeroy,
DWI, $300 and costs, three days
confinement. license suspended for
60 days; James F isher, Middleport ,
DWI, $250 and costs, three days
confinement , license suspended 60
•

13, 1983

•

ends 22 court cases
E ighteen defendants were fined
and four others forfeited bonds In
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrtck O'Brien
. were Gregory Baker, Branchland,
W.Va., speed,$20andccsrs; -Larry
Shlffiette, Bidwell, speed, $23 and
costs; Roble Fischl. Belpre, Donna
Aleshire, Syracuse and ·.David
Jetton, Dallas, ga., speed , $22 and
costs each: Fredrick Blaet'tnaf,'
Pomeroy, speed, $26 and costs·
Garnet Roush, Racine, assured
clear distance, $10 and costs ;
Richard Ramsburg, Pomeroy,
speed , $21 and costs; Gregory
Cundiff, Racine, following too
closely, $10 and costs: Eddie Nelso n,

~r

days, left Of center: $15 and costs;
James MU!er, Jr., Cheshire, no
motorcycle ltcense, $100 and ccsts,
three days conllnement, $50 of fine
and confinement suspended If
license Is obtained within :.J days;
Arlie Malone, Racine, DWI, $DJ
i'nd ccsts, 15 days conflnement,
license suspended one year, no
opera tors license, $50 and costs, 10
days confinement, left of center ,$31
and costs.
·
Forfeiting bonds were Clalr C.
Reed, Langsville, William Maynard, Syracuse, and Don. R.
Huffman , J r. lllew P hiladelphia, $50
each, speed; · John F. Harrison,
Middleport, Insecure load, $35 .

Story

I Area death j
William L. Searls

adequate monitoring of water will
be performed Mayor John Miller
announced today .
P ublic water supplies are required by state regu la tion, rule
3745-81·21. Ohio Administrative
Code, to routinely monitor the
microbiological quality of the drink-

Church anniversary

Fire station tour

Story on Page 6

Phoro on Page ~

REG .

system in order to ensure that safe
water is .being supplied to the
consumer. ,
The vlllage of Rutland ts requl&lt;ed
to collect and examine a m!n!rnum
of one microbiological sample each
month. No samples were collected
and analyzed for the mol)lhs of May

WOODY BAYES RECEIVES DEGREE Legendary fonner Oblo state Unlvel'lllty foolball
coaeh Wood;y Hayes, serond from left, recently
rrcelved an henoraey doctor of public service degree
from Rio Grande College and Community College.
Hayes ftcelved the honor at lhe dedication

BuoiDeos Mallap!ment.
on
Hayes are Dr. Paui C. Hayes, left, reUrtng president
of Rio Grande College; James Dalley, - d from
rlcbl. Rio Grande College Board of 'l'nl8tees, and
Manning Wetherholt, Wo Grande Community
College llollrd of Trustees.

25" CONSOLE
TELEVISION
- Pine, maple or pecan finish
-Electronic tuner
-Automatic fine tuning
ONLY

sssgoo
SALE!

Junior Blouses
Ruffles, satins, oxfords. stripes and

1

'

Emergency runs
Seven calls were answered by
local units Wednesday and Thursday m orning, the Meigs County
Emer gency Med ical Services
reports.
At 5: 35 a.m. Thursday, the
Rutla nd Unit went to Meigs Mine I
for flabby Baker, taken to Holzer
Medical Center. Wednesday runs
Included 5: 06 p.m., Pomeroy to
Wolfe Drive for E lizabeth Lohse,
take n to Veterans Memorial Hospl·
tal ; Pomeroy at 6:24 p.m. to Wolf
Pen Road for Kenny Hawk, to
Veterans Memorial; Racine at 8:57
a .m. to Basha n Jor _&lt;;)!aries Bissell,
to Veterans Memorial; Racine at
2:41 p.m. to Vine St. for Carl Shultz,
to Veterans Memorial; Racine,
12:58 a.m. to Fourth and Main for
Lydia Hysell, to Veterans Memortal
and Rutland at 2: 28 p.m. to
Ha rrtsonvUle for Charles Ellis, to
Veterans Memorial.

Veterans Memorial
,

Admitted--Charles Bissell, Long
Bottom ; Charles E llis, Pomeroy;
William Wtlllams, Wellston; Carl
Schultz, Jr., Racine.
Discharged- Harold Brannon.

VVeatherforecasl
Cloudy tonight with a 4Q percent
chance of showers. Low In the
mtd-40s . Winds northwesterly 10-20
mph. Partly cloudy Friday. High

*·

WINTER
COAT
SALE
Warm, easy care snowsuits,

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE SPECIAL PRICES
AN EXCELLENT TIME FOR CHRISTMAS BUYING
USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN

jackets, buntings and coats for lit·
tie boys and girls.
Nylons, quilted, fur lined styles.
Most are machine washable! Com·
--·"f'·~----·-·-~~ L·A-~D.-IE·-S-,----~-·-·----l plete range of chil~ren's sizes.

Men's Sweat Shirts

..
PANTY SALE

An excellent selection of quality Springfoot fleece
lined sweat shirts and matching sweat pants. Sizes
small . medium . large and extra large.
19.95 Crew Neck
SWeat Sh1·rt .;.......................... $]·99

Briefs, Hip Hu11ers and Bikinis
Quality brands include Lorraine, Phil maid, Manon Rohr and Luxuray.
White, black, nude, assorted prints and colors.
Stzes 4 thru 10.

SALE!

16 95
'Zipper
' From
Hooded
Sweat Shirt ......... S13.59
'9.95 Matching

·

12 5

$

sALE
PRICED
fROM ONLY

-~~~cs:::, at these prices
Reg. '16.00 .... Sale '12.79
Reg. 123.00 .... Sale '18.39
Reg. 135.00 .... Sale '27.99
Reg. 145.00 .... Sale 135.99

~~~1ifi brands like Third Generation ""-_SWea_,_t~P,_a~nt,_._.._··-··~·.·~..-··~··-"·"~··-·....._..,_··~$._7••99
•..._-+·-·----·--·---~-·-·-·-·--·--·-·-·..l
Stuffed Shirt and Underground. ' ' ;
Junior Sizes S, M, Land 5 to 15.
Reg. '12 ..00
Blouses ............ Only '9.59
Reg. 116.00
Blouses·........... Only '12.79
Reg. 121.00
Blouses .......... Only $16.79
Reg. 127.00
Blouses ........... Only '21.59

STUFFED SHIRT

JEANS SALE

SOPHIA

Baggies, basics, stripes, trousers, zipper
leg, over dyes and belted styles.
Junior Sies 5 to 13.
REG. 124.00 ..............SALE '14.00
REG. 126.00 .............. SALE '16.00
REG. 130.00 .............. SALE '18.00

COLOGNE CONCENTRATE SPRAY
REG. '8.00
1 OZ.
ONLY

SALE!

Boys' Dress Slacks

Men's Dress Slacks

Twill fabric 35% colton- 65% polyester. Stain
reststa nt. Solid colors navy, brown and tan w1th coordmate belt.
Boys' regular· and slim izes 8 to 14 - husky
StZes Bto 18 and studenl sizes 30 lhrough 36
watst.
S15.95 Regulars and Slims ... '12.99
Sl7.95 Husky Sizes ............ .114.49
S18.95 Student Sizes ... ....... s14.99
SALE! MEN'S

95 Lee Jeans
S22
Straight legstyle - pre-washed

100%cotton blue denim: Waist
sizes 27 to 42 waist, lengths 30
to 36.

Save Friday and Saturday

$1599
LEE 126.95 Comfort Fit
stretch denim, boot cut.
Sizes 30 to 42. s 1 899

S16.00 .... Sale s12.79
S19.00 :... Sale 115.19
123.00 .... Sale '18.39
125.00 .... Sale '19.99
•

..

'SALE! Men's

SAVE 300!0

$}49

SALE EN OS OCT. 22

LADIES

PAIR

SALE! BOYS'

LEE

DENIM JEANS

;::
. +&lt;'~v~~
~

lee Rider straight leg 100% cotton denim • pre·
washed. Regular and Slim
sizes 8 to 14. Studertt sizes
26 to 30 waist. lengths 30 to
36.
•

SPORTSWEAR·
SALE

Stock up during this two·
day sale.

New for Fall! Wool blazers,
jackets, slacks, skirts, corduroy jackets. Sizes 5/6 to
17/18.
Reg. 121.00 to '70.00

'19.95 Slim and
i Regular Sizes ... '14.88
Sale Priced
'21.95
79
99
Student Sizes ... '15.88
·~16 to
'

$55

_ SALE!
MEN'S '13.95

Flannel Shirts
Your-choice of regular or western style in sies S, M, land XL
Colorful plaid patterns • 2
pockets - full shirt tails. For this
sale.

$}()49

$399

INTRODUCTORY SALE

NORWALK LIVING ROOM SUITES
All Fabrics Carry A2 Yr. Warranty-All Frames Carty A Lifetime Warranty
'

REG.

'108.5.00 Nylon, gold/brown

REG.

1

REG.

SU86.00 Nylon, Brown plaid

Sofa and Chair

1150.00 Nylon velvet, beige
Sofa and Chair

or rust plaid.
Sofa and Chait

'2.00

One size fits all sizes 10 to
13. Bulky knit orion in a big
selection of sblid colors.

Huge selection of drapery
fabrics to compliment any
room in your home!

$8.1300
$862° 0
$889°0

SAVE 25% ON ALL SPECIAL ORDERS!
The Norwalk Representative will l?e in our store Friday,
Oct. 14, from ~:30 to 4:00. Come mand let him help you
select the fabnc and frame that will go best in your home.

JEW.ELRY SALE
20°/o OFF
OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF JEWELRY
-EARRINGS
-CHAINS
-BRACELETS
-CHARMS
-RINGS
-PINS
SALE I

Bovs' Flannel Shirts
Sizes I!'to 20. Western and sport styles

-:- platd patterns. An excellent .selectton.

BOYS 18,95 FLANNEL
SHIRTS ........................ '6.49
BOYS '9.95 FLANNEL
SHIRTS .. :..................... '7.49
BOYS '12.95 FLANNEL
SHIRTS ........................ 19.49 ·
BOYS 113.95 FLANNEL
SHIRTS ...................... '10.49

-HAIR JEWELRY
-MEN'S JEWELRY
-BEADS
-CHILDREN'S JEWELRY
-STICK PINS
-HEAD BANDS
Sale!

'18.99 Chatham

Voi.32,No.130
Copyrighted 1983

at y

·'

en tine
'2 Sections, 12 Pog es . 20 Centl
A Multimedia Inc. N•wspaper

•

~eigs

grand jury
will get evidence
couch and covered with a blanket in the trailer home
Monday. It was taken to the F ranklin County Coroner
in Columbus and later removed from Columbus to
Batesvnte.
Although the shertff's department has not officially
Issued Identification graveside servjces were held In
Arkansas 'rhut sday ,.rternoon according tooutofstate
, sources. The victim's mother, Mae Harrts, resides In
that ccrnmuntty.
.
' ·~
A billfold and driver's license were found near the
body, thus relatives apparently cla!rned the body as a
result qf those Items. Wolfe stressed that although.
there is a strong posslbUlty that the victim Is the same
as the name listed on the driver's license and In the
billfold, the sheriff's de partment is still waiting for
fingerprint information on the vtct!rn.

Evidence concerning the death of Danny Melton, 30,
a former Batesville, ·Arkansas resident, will be
presented to the Meigs County Grand Jury Monday.
Meltop's body was found last Monday In a trailer
home a t Forest Rur. According to a preltrntnary
report from a Columbus P!lthOiogtst he died from a
gunshot wound to the head.
Gary Wolfe, Investigator for the shertff's depart·
ment, told the Batesville Guard, that a suspect was
under Investigation but that no one had been taken Ito
custody.
'
Reportedly, Melton arrived In Meigs County from
'Canton on Oct. 1. Melton's wife told officials her
husband was helping friends move Into Meigs County,
but that she had not heard from h!rn since he left
Canton.
Acccrdlng to Wolfe, the body was found seated on a

Environmentalists .•.
upset with selection
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Environmentalists are angry and Western
conservatives delighted. Neither
see policy changing with President
Reagan's surprtsechoiceofWllllam
P . Clark to succeed James Watt as·
Interior secretary.
' Amid howls he Is unqualified for
the job were expressions of hope andfear - thatClarkmtghtsucceed
where the combative Watt failed In
forging a consensus for developing
the nation's public lands.
Almost everyone was stunned by
Reagan 's a nnouncement la te
Thursday that he was moving the
51-year-old Clark from the hot~at of
world affairs as national securtty
adviser to a domestic post where the
greatest heat was generated by his
predecessor's penchant for putting
his foot In his mouth.
"We' re dumbfounded," said Car l
Pope, political director of the Sie rra
Club In San Francisco. "Mr. Clark
has no visible record on environ·

mental issues.''
William Butler, a vice president of
the National Audubon Society, said
he was "thunderstruck" by the
nomination.
'
·" He Is a God-fear!ngWesterner, a
fourth-generation rancher, a person
I trust and I think he will be a great

secretary of the Interior," Reagan
said In maklng the announcement.
Watt, who resigned last Sunday
..rter Iostng the support of several ·

NEWSEi)ii
TERIOR - National Security
Advisor Wllllam P. Clark was
named Thursday by President
Reagan as the new lnlerior
Secretary, Clark will ftl1 the
vaeancy left by James Watt who
resigned last Swlday. ( AP
Laserphoto ).

members of his own ,party In the
Senate, said Reagan coi.lld not have
made a better choice.
Rep . George Hansen, R-1daho,
said Qark's abntty to calm choppy
waters made him an attractive
choice to replace Watt, who had
created sharp divisions within his
own party with his policies.
A similar view was voiced by the
National Wildlife Federation, the
nation's Iargestronservationgroup, ·
and one of the few environmental
organizations to not !rnmedlately
c!enounce the appointment.
"From the little we know, Mr.
Clark has a reputation as a
ccnsensus builder," saldJayHalr,a
vice president of the federation .
"Wllliam Clark's only quallflca·
tion for this posit!Qn Is blind loyalty
to Ronald Reagan," said Geoff
Webb of Friends of the Earth.
" Clark doesn't know any more
about na tional parks or endangered
species than he did about Angola or
ZimbabWe."
Rep. James Weaver, D-Ore.,
chalrman of the House Inter ior
subcommittee on mining and forest
management, sald the nomination
"proves that to be Ronald Reagan 's
secretary of interior, you don't have
to know anything about the steward·
ship of our precious natural

resources."

Low·Priced
Cars

Up
OJ:

"You just have to be wtlllng to
serve as a handmaiden to hig
business, the aU ccmpantes and the
others who want to destroy our
public lands for short-term profit,"
Weaver said.

1982

3,235,700
Mid-Size
Cars
Up

19.6%

1982
3,144,000

1983
3,761,200 '
Total U.~.
Auto Sales:

1982

Bed Blankets

7.68

. North Star 100%·acrylic fiberwo·
ven blanket. Sizes 80x90 inches.
Nylon binding - solid . colors.
Limited quantity.

Up

AVTO SALE!J RECOVER~ .-

1983

8.8

·Million

14.6%

lWei af ~priced clll'll ate
*&amp;Wolve modell,
• et pltolo).

lmpaowllll a&amp; a f.... .-e u- lhDI ·ear I
IICCGI'IIInl to 8lllee flaw'M and .... aaalpiB. lAP I

BEAN POTS- Volunteers lnvolved'ln actlvllles at
the annual Bob EvaDS Farm Festival were busy eariy
this morning preparing food and doing other chores In
anticipation of the hull!' crowd t'Xpected this weekend.

.

-

.

R&lt;&gt;ger WlUlams, of Thunnan, is shown stlrlng a pot of
heans being prepared for the event. Lee Ann Welch
photo.

Annual farm festival
offers variety pack
RIO GRANDE -The Bob Evans
Farm F estival ge ts underway here
today and continues throughout the
weekend . There will be musicians,
cloggers a nd demonstrations In the
field and barnyard. Other features
Include water safety at the pond,
birds of prey and a lumberjack
show,
The festival begins at 9 a.m.
Saturday and Sunday, and continues untll5 p.m. each day.
In the field , demonstrations wtll
be given daily at 1,0: :.J a.m., 12:30
and 2:30p.m.
·
There will be de monstrations by
Bradford' s Border Collies, along
with the chicken scratch, corn
shelling, tobacco splttlng contests
and Spanish Barh Horses.
Barnyard demonstrations held
dally at 9: 30a.m., noon and 4 p.m .
feature cow milking, sheepsheartng
and horseshoelng.

P ond de monstrations are scheduled at 11 a .m ., 1 and 3 p .m. dally.
The Ohio Department of Natural
Resources wUI conduct demonstrations on watercraft safety and birds
of prey. There will also be a
lumberj ack show on the pond,
dem onstrating log rolling, log
chopping, canoe jousting, axe
thr owin g a nd s pr in g bo a rd
chopping.
A horseshoe pttchlng demonstration by the Reno F amily, in the
horseshoe pit near the front of the
Homestead wtll be presented Saturday and Sunday, 10: 30 a .m ., 12: 30
and 2: 30p.m.
P erforming on the stage at the
Homestead wUI be the G,reat
Smokey Mountain Cloggers: bluegrass and ccuntry by the WBT
Briarhoppers; J erry Weaver and
theGoo&lt;ITtmes .JazzBand; andBo's
Blue ~rass Boys.

In the Country Music Center the
Herttage Dancers wtll perform
along with
country-rock performers, Crysta l Canyon; a mix of
'
comedy, yodeling
and down-home
country music by Helen and Bllly
Scott; and Elmer Bird, the Banj o
Man from Turkey Creek.
All a long the !arm, there will be
crafts which Include butter and
cheese making, elder making, flax
scutc hlng and spinning, antique
photography, oU painting, . hand
dipped candles, m ountain folk toys,
hand crafted dulc!rners, leather
branding, crocheting, weavinmg,
dried apple dolls, sheepskin and
leather craft, quilling and corn husk
flowers.
In addition there's lots of food.
Traditional foods like beans, elder
and apple butter , and of course,
sausage with biscuits and gravy.
Admission fee is $2 per car each
day.

September wholesale prices up

3,107,300

4 • 1 70 1983

FULL SIZE

. ctllltE*
--.!

'

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 14, 1983

&gt;

OPEN FRibA Y tiLL 8
SATURDAY TILL 5
.,

'

Drapery Sale Dress Socks

'h-issi•
SPORTSWEAR

Reg.
~ Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

Solid colors and heather tones in grey -lirown navy and tan. 100%polyester and poly rayon
blends.
Waist sizes 30 to 42, extra large 44 through 50.
Choose your correct length.
'
MEN'S 115.95
DRESS SLACKS ................. '12.88
MEN'S '18.95 &amp; '19.95
DRESS SLACKS ................. Sl5.88

CUSTOM-MADE

SALE

Jackets, pants, skirts, sweaters
and blouses.
Misses Sizes 8 to 20

C-4

"

SALE!

near GO.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Saturday through Monday:
Fair SaturdaY and 8uJ1!1ar anci a
llllhl chance of lllowen Monday.
mghll moolly In 111e toL IAW1IIn the

CHILDREN'S

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY SALE

RCA

OSP cites driver
The Gallta-Meigs post of the state
highway patrol Investigated a
two-car accident on County Road 1
in Salem Township Wedne~day.
A vehicle driven by Joan L.
Tanner, 18, Langsvlile, pulled lrom
a private driveway and turned left
into the pa th of a vehic le driven by
Janet L. Nakamoto, 43, R utland, at
7:40a.m. and collided.
There was moderate damage
reported to both vehicles and
Tanner was cited for fa ilure toy!eld.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

649.00

1

••

e

Wllliam Leo Searls, 7 ~. Slxth St. , rllnrg=w;a;te~r;;in;;t:he;;lr; ;;;;d;;;i;;;
strl
;;;;;;;
bu;;;t;;;lo;;;n;;;.,an;;;d;;;J;;;u;;;n;;;
e,;;;1;;;983;;;.;;;;;;;
·. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::cet~e;mom=
· ;es=f; ;or; ; ; lhe; ; ; E; ;me; ; ; no ; ; ; n; ; ; E; .;;;;E;;;v;;;ans;;;;;;;;;Sc;;;hool;;;;;;;;;;;;of;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Mtddlepor(, died Thursday morning
at the Holzer Medical Center
following a lingertng illness . .·
Mr. Searls was born Sept. 18, 19&lt;ll
at Charleston, W. Va. , a son of the
late Harlan and Mary Barnhart
Searls. Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by a daughter,
Maxine Searls, and a brother " Doc"
Searls.
He w~s a member of the
Middleport Church of Christ. He
!ortnerly belonged to the Middleport
F ire Department. He had wor ked at
the Covert Baklng Co., and later at
the Holsum Baking Cd.1He had been
a chef at the TNT Plant near Point
Pleasant and as a chef at a plant
located at Institute, W.Va.
Surviving are his wife, Martha L.
Hartinger Searls: two daughters,
Jean Craig, Middleport, and Carolyn Searls, Columbus:., grandson, Duff Cra ig, Middleport: three
granddaughters, Jenny Craig. Mid·
dleport: Pat Custer, Mlddlcpon,
and Cindy Rothwell, Glouster; two
great-grandchildren, E li Craig,
Midd leport, and Sara Craig, Po me·
roy; a brother, J im Searls, Holland,
Mich.: a sister, Pat Kerin, Mount
Vernon, Oh.; a orother-in-Iaw, L. D.
Hartinger, Middleport, a nd several
cousins. ·
Services w!U be held at 2 p.m .
Saturday at the Rawlings-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home with Mr. Ron
Moyer officiating. Burial wtll be In
the Gravel HUt C~metery at
Cheshire.' Friends may call at the
funeral home from 4 to 9 p.m.
Friday.

SeePage7

on Page 3

Steps taken to monitor Rutland water quality
The Rutland Water Departme nt
has taken steps to ensure that

Weekly sermonette.

Meigs, golf champs

WASHINGTON (AP) - Wboli
year' s 3.7 percent, ltselfthe lowest In
sale prices edged up 0.2 percent last
more than a decade.
month, pushed upward by the
For the first nine months of this
biggest food cost Increase In five
year, the wholesale price calculamonths, the government reported
tion rose at an "annual rate of 0.2
today In a new Indication of the
percent, potentially the best yearly
severity ol this swnmer's drought.
mark since the 0.2 percent decline
In all, load prices rose0.7 percent,
for all of1963.
themosts!ncethe1.1percentgalnof
Detailing food price trends, the
Aprll, with fresh vegetable prices
department said vegetable costs
soaring 16.3 percent. Analysts have
rose 16.3 percent after a 16.5 percent
said crop damage from the drought ' August Increase. In July, before the
will cause further strong price gains
effects of the drought were widely
for months to come.
felt, vegetable prtces had dropped
The overall rtsewas restrained by 11.9 percent.
·
a 2.1 percent dect!ne In new car
Fresh fruit prices rose 3.5 percent
prices, "largely reflecting the · after decl!n!ng 5.6 percent In
lnventocy Uquldatlon allowances August: egg prtces were up 1
granted dealers by domestic manu- percent following a 4.4percent gain;
facturerstoclo5eoutthe1!183model
pork prices declined 4.6 percent
year," the I,.abor Department's after rising 0.6 percent in August,
Producer Price Index said.
and poultry prices rose5.8 percent, a
Energy prices, held down by a bit abead of August's 5.1 percent
small decline In gasoline costs, rose hike .
just0.3percent,match!ngthega!nof
Beef and veal prlces dropped 3.9
August.
percent, n\eanwhile, as ranchers
The ovenall September Increase continued to cut down their herds
was half the ·size of the · previous · rather than pay higher feed prices.
month's 0.4 percent gain. Econo- Th01leprlceshadfallen3.lpercentln
mists are stW expecting the figure August.
for all of l9tl3 to be well under last
When the meat supply falls off

next year, as widely exJ:,ected , beef
prices should reverse themselves,
analysts say.
As for . energy prices, today's
report said that gasoline costs
dipped 0.1 percent after rising 0.4
percent. Natural gas costs, however, rose 0.5 percent after declining
0.2 percent, whlle .fuel oil costs rose
~ .5percent,flve ttrnestheO.~percent

. gain of the precedlng month.
Prrlces for capital equipment the machinery and other items used
by business - declined 0.3 percent
after ris!ng0.7.percent.
All of the figu res wer e adjusted to
discount for nonnal seasonal
variations.
Before such adjustment, the price
lndex for f!nlshed goods stood at'
285.11astmonth, mean!ngthatttems
costing $10 In 1967 woold have cost
$28.51 In September.
If the September Increase were
repeated for-12 straight months, the
yearly advance would be 2.1
percent. That annual rate is based
on a more precise calculation of last
month'srtsethantherounded-ofl0.2
percent tlgure released by· the
government.
-

•

The unadjusted increase for the 12
months ending In September was 1.4
percent.
Commenting in advance of today's report, Donald Ratajczak,
director of the Economic F orecastIng Unit at Georgia Sta te University, said that " the drought \vUI have
dram a tic Influences Upon prices of
food products In the next few years."
But he added that increases in ~ ome
other areas will be much less.
" While the longer-term projections definitely show a moderate •
acceleration of Inflationary pressures, signs of the 7 percent and 8
percent !nOatton rates that some
people ' have predicted are totally
without substance." he said. " Inflation has not been llc~ed but It has
been tamed."
A report from Security Pacific
Na tional Bank In Los Angeles said
Inflation rates In general "wOI likely
move higher next year to the 5
percent to 6 percent range;'' but It
described that prediction as a
mere!y "moderate Inflation
outlook."

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

. .. . ... . .

�.

.

Friday,(hjober

~:comment

Pcip, · 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, ~io
Friday, October 14, 1983

ABC loves peace ----.,-------=---w_ill_iam_F._B_uc_k_ley_J_r.

111 Court Street

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVWED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA
;t~

~m~ r-T""'\....-.1.___--,-.~=·~
~v

..

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant· Publishc.r 1Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
'General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

.'

.,

Listen to this, you will get a kick
out of it.
A month ago the editors of
National Review, the conservative
fortnightly of which I am editor met
at their regular editorial conference. On the agenda was . the
upcoming ABC extravaganza feat·uring the horrors of nuclear war.
One editor made the suggestion
that the film (It Is called "The Day
After") be hailed as a wondertully
creative psychological boost for
increased defense expenditures to

guard against nuclear war. In other
words, pat ABC on the back, as
though, in anticipation of. the return
of bubonic· plague, It had planned a
film theatrtcally showing what
could happen if the plague hit an
unprepared America;
Ha ha. Many of the journal's
readers were unamused. The point
being, of course, that on this·
subject, whatever the mini! tells
you, the emotions tend to prevail.
Any American uninoculated by the
See-Through virus will respond

A MEI\1BER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assos_ia·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION an• " 't'lcomed . They should be leS!O than 300 words
long. AlllettPn are subjel't lo t&gt;dldng and nmst he :olgned with name, add rt&gt;Ss and
telephone numher. So unljlgned letters .,..ill be published. Letters should he In

· good taste, addressing lssut'S, not pcrsonnllttes.

From far-reaching
peace .formulas to
patchwork solutions
The Reagan administration is quietly shifting its approach in the tangled
Middle East, from bold declarations and far-reaching peace formulas to
patchwork solutions for more immediate problems.
As a result, President Reagan's dramatic and controversial proposal
nearly 14 months ago for an Arab-Israeli settlement Is on the shelf, not
formally withdrawn but in abeyance while the administration tries to keep
peace in Lebanon.
American diplomatic activity is concentrated in the hands of special U.S.
emissary Robert C. McFarlane. There has been at least one report that he
Is working on a secret deal to have Syria crush the Palestine Liberation
_Organization while Israel carves out a sphere of influence in southern
Lebanon.
'
Actually, McFarlane's mission is much less· cosmJc in nature, but
important nevertheless. Especially since the Soviets have stepped up their
military buildup in Syria.
The National Security Council official Is trying to bolster the central
government in Beirut by promoting unity talks among the 17 distinct and
often waning Lebanese groups. That may be the only way to maintain the
WASlflNGTON- Mystery of the
19-day (as of Friday) cease-fire and get the Syrians to withdraw. their
Week: MUitary and civlllan emtroops from the country..
·
ployees are stealing millions of
The cost is likely to be at least some residual Syrtan influence in
dollars' worth of precious metals
· Lebanon, but unless the ruling P halganists share authortty with other
from the government each year.
factions it may be impossible for tbe government to remain in power.
This Is acknowledged in official
At the same time, McFarlane is trying to lay the groundwork for the documents; insiders discuss It in
.· eventual withdrawal of both Israeli and Syrian troops by encouraging
whispers. Yet the Peniagon :: Israel to take the first ~ unilateral, step.
which oversees the precious metals
-·
Some Israeli units would retreat to new lines and wait for Syria to carry
recycling L'enters that have become
out a matching pullback in the areas under its control. If all goes well, the
the thieves' happy hunting grounds
two armies would methodically quit Lebanon in stages.
- refuses to acknowledge a
Paradoxically. however, the Reagan administration is. not demanding problem.
an Israeli pullout rtght now. In fact, the Israelis are being encouraged to
The recycling prograrn reclaims
stand nose-to-nose to the Syrians in the Bekaa region until tensions are
gold, sliver and platinum from used
reduced.
·
•
film, X-rays, medical equipment,
The idea is keep the Syrlan-forces in check. while peace efforts proceed.
batteries and other items. Sources
_, u.s. officials were miffed that Israel did not delay its withdrawal to the on the Inside say the program is
,
Awall river early last month to mid-October.
losing as much sa $10 million a
The Soviets have not slowed the pace of t heir arms shipments to Syria,
year, maybe more, from thefts.
despite U.S. diplomatic appeals. The new missiles still may not give Syria
The mystery is not only· who Is ,
.. enough muscle to fight a successful war with Israel without Arab alltes.
stealing the precious metals but
But the new Soviet missiles can hit targets In Israel. This raises the risk · why . the Defense Department
that skirmishes between the two countries could spill over into a
doesn't think anything serious Is
region-wide confii.ct. That is reason enough for the Reagan administration
going on. Here are some examples
to focus its efforts on Lebanon and leave grander plans for .a
of the depredations the Pentagon
comprehensive Middle East settlement to another day.
cialms aren't happening:
"!wouldn't say we've given up the broader objectives," a U.S. official
- The biggest losses at a single
said Tuesday in an interview. "But we've gradually come to realize that's
not so easy to achieve."

..

Berry's World

-.
-·.·

.·
.•

.

...-·-·
..
-·

.•

.·.-

..-·
..

"There 's the eXpression we want. Keep thinking
of Interest rates going up and stocks going
down!"

~{Today

in history _

Today Is Friday, Oct.l4, the287thdayol1983. Thereare7Bdaysleftln the
~ · year.
·
~ · ~ Today' s high!lght in history:
·- · On Oct. 14, 1912, former President Theodore Roosevelt, campalgnlilg for
:: the presidency on the Bull Moose ticket, was shot In the chest by a New
~: York City saJoonkreper in Milwaukee. 'l'h!11ncldent did not keep Roosevelt
-: from going ahead with a scheduled campaign speech.
:: On this date:
.
:: 1n lii!IO, the 34th President of the United States, Dwight D. Eisenhower,
. ; was born In Denison, Texas.
· ' ·
\:
1n ]899, the magazine "Literary Digest" predicted that the hoJSeless
, • carrta&amp;e ~- never catch on.
~
·::

dent of the ABC Broadcast Group,
wlll be bracketed with Andropov's
insistence that the Soviet Union had
shot down a spy plane,' as the two
outstanding flat-ouUies of the tall
season. One reporter called me (the
editor of the conservative journal)
and asked wllether the writer wllo
had denounced the fUm In the
conservative journal had actually
seen it. No. "Well, how do you know
it's anti-nuclear?" He might as well
have asked how would one know,
without first seeing it, that a fl1m on
the Ufe of Martin Luther King
•-·Prcoduced by Jesse Jackson was In
favor of civil rights.
It later got out that some people
had seen the film, and guess what
To quote Sally Bedell Smith of The
New York Times (Oct. -6), "Although the !lim never makes clear
which side Initiated ltostlllties (the
film Is about a few survivors In
post-nuclearlzed America), two
references are made to Soviet
concern over the deployment of
Pershing missiles. One, a fragment
of a radio broadcasi, quotes a Soviet
official as saying that tt was ,-ilie
coordinated movement of Pershing
2 launchers that provoked the
original Soviet action." That's
ABC's Idea of not polltlclzlng afllin.
And, of course, the peaceniks wlll .
run with lt. Demonstrations are
being arranged to frame the ABC
event. All the people who belleve
that the way to get on with the
Soviet Union Is to give In to the '
Soviet Union wlll declare a national
holiday. Something called _ the
Center for Defense Information Is
planning a 60-second commercial
narrated by Paul Newman offering
viewers a " nuclear war prevention

metalc.S-~----· __J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n

facility appear to have been at the
metals recovery ·center at Colts
Neck, N.J., where an -estimated
$750,000 In precious metals was lost
in 1981--82. To hush up the scandal,
the center's civlllan overseers who
might blow the whistle were
transferred to other bases. Sources
told my reporter Bill Bartman that
the problems have not been corrected and the stealing continues.
The former commanding officer
at Colts Neck, Air Foq:e Lt. Col.
Larry J. Goar, wrote an article In
an Air Force journal lamenting the
loss of "millions of dollars annually" through poor contracting
procedures. This merely angered
the program administrators who
considered launching an investigation of Goar In retaliation. They
dropped the Idea, sources said,
because they realized such an
inquiry could cause even more
unfavorable publlcity.
-In the Washington, D.C., area,
some $200,o:xl in precious metals
allegedly disappears every year. At

Fort Belvoir, Va., for example,
about $37,00) worth of silver and
gold disappeared between July 1981
and February 1982, according to
internal Pentagon documents. In
1980-81, $30,00J to $40,o:xl In precious
metals could not be accounted for at
Belvoir, which receives more metal
"flake" than any other depository.
- Civilian and military personnel have allegedly taken 30 to 40
pounds of flake at a time. At the
Navy base in Norfolk, Va., security
source,freport that employees were
lugging off silver-bearing submarine batteries at a costof$40,o:xllast
year.
- In 1981, an Army metals
depository in Molesworth, Eng- •
land, was simply shut down, after
military Investigators - and even
Scotland Yard - failed to solve the
disappearance of up to $60,000
worth of silver, vehicles and other
property.
Defense Department adminlstrators of the metals recycling prom blame the losses on book-

keeping problems and possible
stealing by employees of the
private contractors that reclaim
the precious metals.
Col. Alvin Hamblln, deputy commander at program headquarters,
admitted that "the potential exists
for stealing," but said employees
can't get more than a handful or so
of flake. Such small quantities
wouldn't be worth the risk, he said.
A former Colts Neck administrator, who demanded anonymity,
said workers there were wa.rJl!'d not_
to talk to a congressionai·mvestlgator who showed up two years ago.
Once a dummy shipment was
arranted to trap would-be thieves.
But the warehouse section was · '
tipped off in advance, other sources
said.
The Pentagon turned its crlrniiial
investigators and the FBI. loose at
Fort Belvoir. But no one was
arrested, and the investigation cost
about $100,000 - more than the
precious metals losses.

Crisis center __~__________________A_r_tB_u_ch_~~ld

I have this hot tine to a "crisis could fly from New York to Los
center." Every Monday morning I Angeles with a layover In
Cali up guy and ask him , "What's Newfoundland."
the crisis of the week?'' and for $25
"I guess the free 'market was
he tells me.
really working."
This week I called him and he
"It was lor the little guys, but the
said, "The 'big C" is the airline big guys were going nuts. They
crisis. It could be a Mt. St. Helens." came up with new sales gimmicks.
"What happened?" I asked him. If you flew a certain number of
"The thing that started It ail was mUes on their airline, they would
the big boys in aviation wanted the upgrade you from tourist to first
alrllnes deregulated because they class. If you flew 15,(XX) miles they
claimed they weren't making would let you slt ln the co-pilot's
enough money. So the admlnlstra- seat. U you flew 100,(XX) mlles they
tion deregulated the frtendly skies made you president of the comof America and opened them to the pany. Most of the people now
marketplace."
running a losing airline came up
"Free competition Is what this through the ranks from the 'frecountry thrtves on," I said.
quent flyer plan.' "
''The only problem was tbat after
''To make matters worse, the big
they got deregulated, all the blg boys guessed wrong on what planes
boys wanted to fly the same routes. they would need for their companA company that used to fly to Ies. Some ordered planes that were
Charlotte, North Carolina, decided too big -others ordered pl_anes that
to fly to Lmidon, England, instead.
Every major company put on
flights to Hawaii and cancelled
flights to middle America. lhstead
of going to Missoula, Montana, one
alrllne started ·a dally ser'vlce to
Tokyo. Pretty soon you could fly to
Miami every 15 minutes, but you
could only go to BUffalo once a
week .
"With all the competition for the
major clUes, the airllnes got into a
price war. First they cut their fares
- then they offered YO!! a free seat
for your wife. Then they advertised
you could take all your children
with you. And finally, dwing the
recession, they let you take all the .
people that you had met in a bar,
\.
There wasn't an empty seat on the • · ' plane, but there was only one
paying passenger,
''To makt1 things worse, the little
j -::::=• -~:~· i
guys started taking on the big boys
1
and price-cut the hell out of them. •
~
The llttle guys were nonunion,
~
no-frill companies who offered you
nothing but a _seat. But for $39 you

a

·-

spastically to certain things. If you
show him a picture of a school with
aD-white children, he will come out
tf&gt;r busing. 11 you show him a city
slum, he wtU come out for some
federal program: It you show him
post-nuclear nibble, he will cbme
out against the MX missile. It Is
really that simple.
The producers pf the ABC .tllm
have said defensively that no effort
whatever was made "to polltlcize
the Him.'' That statement, made by
Mr. Anthony Thomopoulos, pres!-

kit. ••

.Millions in

·'

· If

I

The Daily Sentinel

.·

14,1983

were too small. When they had too
many planes in mothballs, tMy had
to sell a lot of them to the ll!tle guys
who were putting them out of
business. Of course it wasn'l their
fault. One of the major alrllne
executives was walking through his
terminal at Kennedy Airport and it
was jammed ~ with people. He
illll)1edlately ordered six new 747s.
What lle dldn 't realize, until later,
was that all the people there were
from Central America, waiting for
their grandmothers to get off the
plane."
"That was an honest mistake," I
said.
"To make matters worse, the blg
boys, to protect themselves from
their stockholders, invested their
cash flow in other businesses, such
as hotels, last-food franchises and
natural gas. Since they were
making money In these businesses

the stockholders started demanding they spin off the airline part of
their business.
"Everyone made mistakes. Eastern Airlines thought It could get
healthy by having Frank Borman
do their TV commercials. He was
very credible but he didn't sell any
tickets."
"Why didn't they scrub the
advertising campaign?"
'.'What advertising executive Is
going to tell the chairman of the
board of Eastern Airlines he can no
longer do the company's
commen;ials?"
"What a mess," I said. "I guess
the big boys are sorry they ever
asked for deregulation for the
airllnes. Are they going to go back
and lobby for airline regulation
again?"
"That's their only chance. Most
of them have decided tree air
competition Is for the birds."

Southern gals
capture third
SVAC crown
By SCOTr WOLFE
Suzanne Wolfe quickly called a
PATIUOT - A solid defensive time out to map out strategies.
effort, strong front llne play, and the
Senior sptker Amy Littlefield
all-round effort that has proved to found the grove for the champs,
be a winning combination all throwing the game into a 4-4 tle.
season long gaye the Southern SWHS Immediately called for time,
Tornadoettes their third consecu- but it was to no avall as Llttle!leld
tive SVAC championslllp here netted three more tall1es as SouthThursday. The Tornadoettes de- em never looked back enroute to
feted Southwestern 15-6 and 15-7'. the 15-6 win.
Southern ended regular season with
Senior Amy Littlefield capped a
a 20-1ledger and periect 10-{1 league fine season with eight points, while
slate. Southwestern ended play a well·f9Unded Southern-contingent
with an 8-&lt;i mark, finishing second .followed. Jenny Bentley, a key
In loop play with an S-2 slate,
setter In the Tornadoette lineup
Although Southern Won both the notched 7. Cllrls Jeffers led SWHS
match and the ieaguetitie, Southw- with 5 markers.
estern played a splrlted game tht
Southern won the reserve contest
gave Southern an early scare. The In two games; 15-7 and 15-0 boolting
Highlanders went up 3-j) In the first Its overall season mark to 15-3.
contest on serves by Jessica Elkins Becky Adkins led the wtnnel'! with
and Chris Jeffers before soutliern's 8, Wendy Wolfe 6, Tammy Adkins 5,
Jenny Bentley pulled her team Alana Lyons 5, Lori Adams 2, and
close at 3-2.
Rachel Reiber 2. Penny Tober! led
By GEORGE STRODE
Tonya Adkins added two more to SWHS witll 7.
AP Sports Writer
the hosts tally and SWHS led 5-2.
Southern's next Contest Is in the
With
one
victory, Toledo has
_Feellng frustrated and a blt uneasy sectional tournament at
the
hunted
instead of .the
become
Southern regrouped to tie the score Nelsonvllle--York High Scltool, SatIn
the
Mid-American
Conferhunter
on two Debbie Michael serves.
urday, Oct. 22 at 1 p.m. The
race.
ence
football
Junior Tonya McNeal put her Tornadoettes will meet Federal
The Rockets, the only undefeated
club back on top for the last time as Hocking then play the winner of the
team left in the league, ·
overall
Laren Wolfe nolched the next three Kyger Creek- North Gallla game at
stunned
defending champion and
serves, S-6, then Becky Michael 3: 30 pending a Tomadoette Victory
preseason
title favorite Bowling
·
added four more and Amy Litter: In the opener.
field 6-3last week .
Green
on
Its
- field the game winner for a 15-6
F1NAL SVAC STANDINGS
Tlie
triumph
kept Toledo !led lor
Southern
10 0 '
finale.
Southwestern
2
the league lead with Central
In the nightcap, Southwestern Kyger Creek
5
Michigan
and Northern Illinois. All
North
GalUa
5
5
capitalized on poor SHS sets in the
2 8
Eastern
are
3-0
In
the scramble for the
front line, taking a 4-0 lead. Coach Hannan Trace
0 10
league's spot in the California Bowl.
"We are the big tlsh In the pond
now and we had betier be ready
everySaturday," ToledocoachDan
Slmrell said. ThE&gt; Rockets start
finding out If thi,y handle the
pressure Saturday against Invading
Miami.

Meigs golf team
wins -championship
LOGAN - Coach Bob Ashley's
Meigs Marauder golf team captured the first-ever Melgli High
School Tri-Valley Conference
sports champlonslllp with a 172-181
win over Nelsonvfile-York earlier
this week.
Meigs flnlshed one win ahead of
second place Trimble with a 13-2
TVC slate. The Marauders, winners

of their sectional, finish the year
with an outstanding 38-9 mark.
Scorers for the Marauders were
Parker Long with a 40, Rodd
Harrison and Lee Powell each with
43's, and Shawn Baker with a 46.
Jay CaJ:l)enter Is the fifth member
of the team whose score was not
·counted.

:if; -

Su.da)', Oct. 16
Miami at New York Jets. -

Houston at Minnesota
San F rancisCO at New Orleans
St. Louis at Tam pa Bay
San DiegO at New England
Chicago at Detrok
CleYeland at Pittsburgh
Buffalo at Baltlmo!"'"
Clndnnatl at Denver
..1...015 Angoeles Raiders a t Seanle

New York Gt1111ts at Kansas Clty
Atlanta at Los Ang5es Rams
Ph.lladelphla at Dallas

In other Mid-American games
Saturday, Central Michigan goes to
Ohio ·University (1-2), Northern
Tilinols to Eastern Michigan (0-3),
Ball State (1-2) to Kent State (0-3)
and Bowling Green (2-1)toWestern
Michigan (1·2).
Kent State's losing streak has
reached 18 games, the longest

current
football.losing spell In major college
Miami has been relegated to the
spoiler's role lit the Mid-American
with losses to Bowllng Green and
Western Michigan in the Redsklns'
first three games.
Slmrell says he Is not fooled by
Miami's 1-4 overall record. "Someone warned us not to take Miami

ranked first in the nation against the
rush and first in scoring. T.he
Rocketsgiveuplessthan51yardson
the ground and 6 points per game.
Opponents have not scored a
touchdown on Toledo In the last 10
quarters. With such defensive
prowess, the Rockets needed only
fleldgoalsof44and49yardsbyTony

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AI') Several indictments and at least one
more guilty plea are expected in a
federal cocaine investlgatlpn in
which two members of the Kansas
City Royals have pleaded guUty,
sources told The Associated Press.
Outfielder Wlllte WUson, the
American League batting champlan in 1982, and first baseman Willie
Aikens each pleaded guilty Thursday to a federal misdemeanor
charge of attempted cocaine
possession.
Sources close to the Investigation
said another guilty plea was
expected today In the case, and as
many as 12 people may be named in
federal indictments when a federal
grand jury meets hext week in
Kansas City, Kan.
·Although the names of Royals
players Jerry Martin and U.L.
Washington and former Royals

mentioned In connection with the
pitcher
VIdafederal
Blue offlctals
have have
been
drug
probe,
declined to say whether they are
Involved.

~THE

GRAVELY

$VSTENI

f~L~ee;;to;;up~se;t;th~e~F~a;lco~n~s;.;:;;;::~~===========;

RE.sJA uRAN J

lightly. There's no chance that we
will. I have to retain our Intensity
and execute like we have been tO

*Restaurant Has Moved from the Dor:ne to the Main Building
*Elegant Dining At A Famity Rertaurant
q 1_62
Ph . 304-675-6276
*"Only 8 Miles from Poml!f oy Bridge

HOURS: Mon .-Sat. Ooen at 5. Sun II • m tn? n m
SPECIAL THIS SUNDAY, O.oice of Baked Steak"' Veal Cutlet, M9ohed

beat them."
coach,
Rockets'
victory
Tim admits
Rose, the
Miami's
first-year
at Bowling Green helped his team's
bid for an upset. "The situation Is
right for us to go against them," he
said.
Miami opened with North CarolIna, South Caronna and Bowllng
Green and now faces Toledo,
Central Michigan and Northern
Tilinols lri the next three weeks.
Toledo Is winning with its defense,

Po':'toeo

•
'
·
.. 1/ 2Prce
1 ~5~·~
}~~a~n~~~r~cr.~v~Com~~~~~o~t~R~ol~l
~&amp;~Bev~e~ru~g~•~--~-~- ~- ~- -~·~~~~~--~-~On~ly~l-~9

Two Royals enter guilty pleas

ANNOUNCING OUR

BREAKFAST HOURS:
MON.-SAT. 6:00 TO 10:30
SUNDAY 7:00 TO 11 :00

FOR A FAST BREAKFAST
TRY A SANDWICH &amp; PLATTER

Wilson and Aikens were released
Thursday on $5,000 personal recognizance bonds. Sentencing was set
forNov.17.
The charges can-y maxtmum
penalties of one year In prison and a
$5,000 fine. However, Assistant U.S .
Attorney Amanda Meers said she
would not rule out theposslbtllty that
both players would be placed on
Immediate probation.
The players also could face
diSclplinary action by the American
League or baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn.
"Plea bargaining doesn't change
the facts. When we have the facts,
we wtU make our decision," Kuhn
tQld the Kansas City Times Thursday night.
John Schuerholz, the Royals'
general manager, said the club
"was saddened by the entire
situation.''

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Page--4-The !laily Sentinel

.

Frlday,"October 14, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Friday' October 14' 1983

THE WHITE 1-J&lt;)liSE

''Amtrak Series' resumes
tonight in Philadelphia
.

PHILADELPJUA (AP) - The 14-strlkeout shutout by Mike Bod1983 World Sertes, a mirror image so dicker, 4-0. The Orioles lost the
far of.l~~\l'l~k' s League Champion- World Series opener against Philaship Seiies, continues tonlght!orthe delphia, 2-1, and again used Bod·
Baltimore Ortoles and Philadelphia dicker's airtight pitching to recover.
., Phlllles with Mike F lanagan and beating the Phillles 4-1 in Game
Steve Carlton, a pair of Cy Young Two.
Award winners, opPQsing each
Philadelphia captured the opener
other..
of the National League playoffs
The team s split the first _two against Los Angeles, 1-0- a one-run
games of this "Amtra k Series" in victory much like the one the
Baltimore before moving 1!)1 miles · Phlllles imposed on Baltimore tn the
or so up the road fqr the next three first game · of the Series. ·The
contests in Veterans Stadium.
" badgers 'won Game Two of the
For both teams, the results of playoffs, 4-1, the same score b)'
Games One and Two of this alth which ' Ihe Ortoles beat the Philltes
Worla Se ries were remarkably Wednesday ntght.
stmUJar to their respective League
The similiaritles end tonight. Both
Championship Series a week' ago.
teams won the t hird games of their
ln the Ametican League pennant pennant playoffs . One of them must
playoff. Baltimore lo" the opener to lose the third game of the World
Chicago 2-1 before coming bac k on a Series.

Pitching has domtnated the Series ,
so far and that could continue
tonight with Flanagan and Carli on,
a pair of left-banders who have both
won baseball's top pitching award, ·
facing each other.
Flanagan won his Cy Young
Award in 1979 wt.cn ·,;,went 23-9 for
the Orioles. H~ i :1' ' · r:rstto admit
that he Is not the .;arne pitcher now
that he was then .
Flanagan got off to the best start of
his eight-year career, winning his
first siX decisions tWsseason. Then

' 'I

ear:ned run a\'erage.
Which pitcher will he be tonight?
In addition to the knee, Flanagan
has been troubled by anarthrtticleft
hip that limits his motion. "It won't
get better until the off-season when l

~oore'ste~m

:Meet the Tornadoes
•
I
-

he t\)reup his left kneeon May 17 and
was sidelined for three months in the
heart of the division race. He was
re-activated Aug. 7 and, wearing a
bulky braee on the knee, lost his first
two starts before recovering. He
finished with a 12-4recordand a3.30

1
'

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Monroe Lemon-Monroe, coached by
Willard (Buddy) Moore, former
Middleport resident and coach at
Gallipolis and Eastern and Coldwater have taken unique paths to
regional leads this week in the Ohio
High· School ·Athletic Association
computerized football ratings.
Both are No.1 becauseofdHferent
•
ty pes of errors.
Lemon-Monroe, in fact. jumped
from the lead in Region 6 to the top
sPQt In Regiqn 8 in Division ll
because theOHSAA had the Hornets
listed as a Huron County school.
School officials at Lemon-Monroe
failed to catch the geographical
error In a questlonnaite. The

WASHINGTON

can rest it.'' he said. "It just means I
have to favor my left leg a llttle and
put extra pressure on the right one.."
Carlton has had some physical
problems, too, and visited a
chiropractor this wefk after coming
up with back spasms In his last start,
the fourth and final game of the
playoffs against the Dodgers.

"It goes up into his neck and
prevents him from turning," Phlla·
delphia Manager Paul Owens said.
"But Lefty said he felt better."

takes Region 81ead

OHSAA caught It this week-and put
Lemon-Monroe, . located on the
border of Butler and Warren
counties, in Region 8.

week because ' ot a computer
malfunction. "The program went
down,"an OHSAA SPQkesperson
said.
After the sixth ol 10 weeks,
Cincinnati Moeller, Mentor Lake
Cathol!c, Alliance and Gahanna
lead the Dlyislon I regions.

In Coldwater's case, theOH-SAA
was not creditlngtheCavaliers !rom
Mercer County forthelrvictory over
Muncie, Ind ., North Side. The
All!ance and Gahantia are new
Indiana school, rated as Division lin
Ohio, has scored four triumphs, · frontrunners this week, the Aviators
taking over the Region 3 lead from
worth 12 points to Coldwater. The
Austintown-Fitch with 72.75 points
points were enough to move ·the
and the Lions displacing Sandusky
Cavaliers from eighth to 'first place
in Region 16in Division lV with 35.50 tn Region 2 with 68.50.
Other Division li leaders were
points.
Brecksville, Toledo Macomber and
The ratings, which the OH-SAA
.Youngstown Ursuline while Steuuses to determine the fields for its
benville Catholic Central, Elyria
playoffs,' were delayed one day this
Catholic, Columbus StCharles and
Urbana headed Division lll.
Additional Division lV frontrunners were Gates Mllls Hawken,
Loudonville and Proctorville Fairland. FUchmond Heights, McComb,
Shadyside and South Charleston
Southeastern topped Division V.

Ohio
SportlightBy George Strode
ERICH PIJ.lli:!ON
6-1, 166 pound
Senior guard

· TOM GREATHOUSE •
&amp;-0, 145 pound
Junior back

MARK SALSER
&amp;-0, 139 pound
Senior End

TREVORC~NE

---.Ft; 1611 pound
Senior center

Buckeyes-lllini ·battle Saturday
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. ( AP) -lllinois
football coach Mike White says his
"eyes are spinning fr om watching
Ohio State fil ms" and he can seethe
lllinl have their work cut out for
them Saturday.
"They have the best personnel in
the conference, ·· sa id White. " There
Is no way you can say about Ohio
State that they have a weak point.
They just don't have a weakness."
But, White wasn't the only coach
talking about respect for his
opponent.
"This Is a team (Tllinois) that is
going to be very ph ysical, both
offensively and defensively," said
Ohio State Coach 'Earle Bruce.
"They're established: they know
whatthey'redoingnow."

Ohio Statecontest
wUJ find a stronger
llllnois-osu
ru nning Illtnois team than they've
faced In years_ 820 yards on the
ground and 1,102 passing.
"Their runntng backs are bigger
and stronger than they've had and
they are running the ball very
confidently," said Bruce. "They're
a better balanced team."

ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- Mike Schmidt, the Ph!ladelphlaPhillies' slugger,
believes a youngster should chose college over the minor leagues for
refining his baseball talents.
Schmidt knows from first-hand experience.
At Dayton Fairview, two of his highschool teammateswerechosen in free
agent draft. Schmidt was Ignored. Instead, he went to Ohio University
without the benefit of a scholarship and never has regretted the move.
He became the regular shortstop for a team that finished fourth na tlonally
in 1970. He earned All-American honors in each of his last twocolfegeseasons
before the Phill1es took Wm the second round of the 1971 free agent draft.
"l belleve that any kid who has a chance. to play baseball tn college
(instead of the minor leagues) ought to do it, " the Phillles' third baseman
said . "I know that I learned more about baseba ll under (Coach) Bob Wten in
college than I would have learned In the low minors.
"And I got a college education besides. The guys who signed out of high
school and went to the low rnlnors got an education In playing cards."
At Ohio, Schmidt established a Mid-American Conference record with 27
career home runs. He a lso set school records with lll runs and 98 RBis.
He returned to the southeastern Ohio campus in 19al after helping the
. Ph lilies win the World Ser!es.·He presented a $5,000 scholarship, pari of his
award for being the Series' Most Valuable P layer, to the school, helping
establish a baseball scholarship fund with Wren.
"It is our hope that through yearly contributions this fund can grow and
provide several young men with the same collegiate baseball opportunity l
had," Schmidt said.
Wren, now an admissions official for the school, called Schmidt an
Inspiration for young players who want to be pro baseball stars.
" He was a student of the game, " Wren said. "No one worked harder or
longer. He always want€!! to become a complete player. Despite being
spurned by the scouts out of high school, he has become one of the world's
best players,"

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This occasion provides a welcom~ opportunity for
me to express my high regard for your role in
keeping Americans informed. Millions of our
citizens depend on you to receive the essential
and timely·- in-depth information that only newspapers bring to our daily lives.

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HOURS •MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
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Edwards playing at
Muskingum Collge
Mike Edwards, son o! Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Edwards, Rutland, Is
playing a guard PQSitlon with the
Musklngum College team,this fall. A
sophomore at thecollege,Edwardls
a graduate of Meigs High School
where he lettered in football four
years and was All-SEOAL his senior .
)'l!llf. He alld lettered In track three
years and played baseball one

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young girts and boys who see 10 It
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•. . . I

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MIDDLEPORT

SUNDAY 11:00 TO 8:00

SIZZLIH' SAYINGS
~OLDER

., .•94

OF OHIO, INC.

OniJIIIfhe

The Big Ten Conference foes meet
Friday s Saturday Nights
Satu rday before a sell-out homellllnois · quarterback Jack Tru·
coming crmvd in Memorial Stadeau
has completed 90 of 151 passes
dium, with the overflow of fans
for
1,050
yards and eight touchwatching for the first time on
dQ.\!:lls.
Running
back Dwight Bevclosed-circuit television across the
erly
has
been
gaining
momentum
street in the Assrmbly.Hall.
and
Is
the
leading
llltnl
rusher with
"This is a very critica l game for
:)41
yards
and
a
TD
tn
85
carries.
both teams." sa id Bruce.
Fur Illinois, a victory means r------------__L-------------------~-----1
staying In first place in the Big Ten
with a n undefeated ~onference
record . For OSU, a victory means
staying in the race with just one Big
Ten loss . The teamsgointothegarne
with 4-1 season records.
"I think It's one we have to win,"
said Bruce. " You ca n't lose too
many games In the Big Ten and be
there."
Representatives of at least five
post-season bowl games - the Sun
, rt'SSCEr&lt;E
BUT IT~ li&lt;E MK£
· Bowl, the Citrus Bowl, the Holiday
Bowl, the Fiesta Bowl and the
()E_At
Liberty Bowl - will be at the

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.. ~

American Newspaper Publishers As•

month.

Richard H. Billman II, 0.0.
113 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I am delighted _to extend my warm congratulations
and appreciation to those who deliver our newspapers as we observe International Newspaper
Carrier .Day.

. The Daily Sentinel

Subscribers not desiri ng 10 pay t he carrier may remit ln advance direct to
The Daily Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 m onth
basis . Credit wlll be given carrier each

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

International Newspaper Carrier Day
October 15, 1983

\

PLAYER OF WEEK- Chris
Buntette, Meigs running back,
has been named Jaycee Player
of Week for his effort agaiDst
Warren Local. BurdeUe Is a
luDback·Unebacker. He scored
two touchdowns and had nine
tackles on defense.

TheWm:ld's
•
st
Best
Bag_~ ' ffi ·t

Spe&lt;ialties From Our New Night

. OSU has a similar ratio with 641
yards rushing this .year and 1,070
passing. Ohio State Quarterback
Mike Tomczak has completed 63 of
116 for 956 yards and eight
touchdowns , but his percentage has
dropped to42In the last three games.
Keith Byars Is OSU's leading
rushe.r with 63 carries for 381 yards
and siX touchdowns. He also caught
a TDpass.

.,.

•

RACINE

.

·•

I
II·

..

•

�Page

6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 14, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

&lt;

Happenings
Revival going on
FLATWOODS - A revival Is
In progress at Flatwoods Methocllst Church with West Fletcher,
Little Hocking as guest eva ngelist. The Harmony group wUi be
featured on Thursday night and
on Friday the Rev . Wendel' and
Madeline Stuller · will be featured. Services will conclude
Sa!)lrda'Y evening. Services are
at 7:30 p.m . each evening.

Dance set RUTLAND - There will be a
dance at the Rutland Civic
,Center Saturday from 8 p.m.
until 11 p.m. Music by Itomic
Sounds. Admission if $3 a couple
and S2 a single.

Car wash set
A car wash will be held by the.
Meigs Hero Club Saturday from
10 a. m. until 3 p.m. at the Burger
Chef in Pomeroy. Prices are $3
!or outsld~ and $5 for inside and
out. The club is offering a free
burger chef sandwich to those
who have their cars washed.

Soup supper
LONG BOTTOM -The Long
Bottom Community Association
will sponsor a soup supper
Saturday at the Long Bottom
Community Building from 4
p.m. to 7 p.m. followed by a
square dance from 8 p.m .. to
11:30 p.m. The menu Includes
vegetable soup, chlll, hot dogs,
·--- -sa uce,

kr au t ,

sla w

Hymn sing set
LONG BOTTOM - A hymn
sing wtll be held at Mt. Olive
Community Church, Long Bot·
tom, Oct. 23. at 1:30 p.m. The
Pleasnt Valley Trio. the BusH
Family, a nd other local talent
will participate.

Shop.
Guests Included MUdred Barton
and Mildred Thomas ot Groveport;
Mrs. MOdred Taylor, Columbus;
Mrs. Judy Burtis, Danny, KeUy,
Shane and Andy of Gahanna; Mrs.
Grace Greer of Syracuse, Mrs .
Frances HyseU, Gladys Tu~ker·
man, Dorothy Reeves, Jeff DarneD
and Carolyn Elam, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Underwood and
daughter, VIrginia, and ,Robert
King, Middleport, Mrs . Debra
McCall and son, Joseph, Shade; and
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Russ' and
daughter, Barbara, Athens.
Mrs. Thelma Weaver, Polnt
Pleasant; Mrs. Diana Halley,
Gall!polis; Mr. and Mrs. Melvln
Kendle, Paden City, W.Va.; Mr.and
Mrs. Roland Eastman, Laura,
Doris, and Myca Haynes, Coolvile;

Folowlng a potluck dinner at
noon, Herbert Elliott gave the
weleome for the afternoon service.
He also read a history of the church
a nd introduced thespeaker.
Music lor the aftenoon lnclud£'!) a
duet by Mr. and Mrs . Eugene
Underwood, a duet by Miranda
Nicholson and Angela Elliott, a
vocal solo by Jane Wise, and a piano
solo by Teresa Houdashelt. "The
Seekers", a quartet from Belpre,
scheduled to sing cancelled their
appearance due to illness in the
fannily .
Floral arrangements for the
church were made by Mrs. Roy
Snowden, Mrs. Robert Canaday,
Mrs.· James Nicholson, and Mrs.
Chris Diehl, and a gift arrangement
coming from the Pomeroy Flower

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Silver Run revival
Sll. VER RUt\ - A revival
will be held at the Silver ·Run
Baptist Church beginning Sept.
17 at 7: 30 p.m. nigh\ly. Bud
Hatfi eld will be the evangelist.

Sunday homecomin

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POMEROY - Exercise,
classes will be held at the home
of Joy Morarlty, Oct.l7, 10 to U
a.m. , and 7 to8 p.m. Classes will
be held for six weeks, and cost

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POMEROY - Morning Star
United Methodist Church wil
hold its annual homecoming
Sund ay. which is the 55th
anniversary of the church.
Services begin at 9:45 a.m.,
and Sunday school will be at
10· 45. A pmgram will follow at
1: 30 p.m., featurtng a ser·
monette by the Rev. Orvlile
White, plus local talent. The
public is Invited to attend .
MIDDLEPORT - The Mid·
diepcrt Business ~nd ?roles·
sional Women wlli meet Monday. 7: :ll p.m., at the Middleport
Library. Guest spea ker will be
Carl Hysell.

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212 E. Mai!l Street
pastor; Debbie Buck, Sunday
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992·3785, Pomerov
Church School 9:15 a.m .; worship
10.30 a.m. Cbolr rehearsal, Tuesday
p m , under direction ot Allee Nease
POMEROY ClRJRCH OF THE NAZA·
RIJILAND ClRJRCH OF GOD, Past&lt;r,
RENE, Comer Union and Mulberry, Rev.
Thomas Glen McClung, pastor. Clyde HendRev. John Evans. SUnday schod. 10 a.m.:
erson, S. S. Supt., Sunday Sctrol, 9:30 a.m.: • SUnday worshlp, ll a.m.; Children's church,
11 a.m.; SUnday evening serv1ce, 7 p.m.:
momln&amp; worship 10;_ ~ a.m ; evening service
Wednesday evening young ladles auxlllary, 6
6p.m.; mid-week service, Wednesday, 7p.m.
p.m. Wednesday family wcrhslp, 1 p.m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E.
HAZEL UlMMUNI'IY CHURCH, Near
Maln St., Pomeroy. Sunday services Holy
Long Bottom, Edsel HBJ1, pasta-. Sunday
Communion on the ftrst Sunday ot each
school, 9 l) a m.; Worship 10 ll a.m ; Prayer
month, and combined wlthmorningprayeron
meeting 7 l) p.m Thursday.
the third Sunday. Morning pra~r and sermon
MIDDLEPORT FREEWU...L BAPTIST,
on all other- Sundays of the month. Church
Corne- Ash and Plum. Leslie Hayman,
School and nursery carf' provided. Cotfet&gt;
pastcr. Sunday school 10 a.m.; Momlng
Mur ln the PaNh Ha111mmedlafely following
Worship, ll a.m.; Wednesday and Saturday
the service.
Evening services. 7: :rt p.m.
POMEROY ClRJRCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
Main St .. NeD Proudfoot. pastor Bible school,
IIIEIGS
9:ll a.m.; morning worship, 10:30 a.m .:
COOPERATIVE PARISH
Youth meetings, 6: ~p.m .: evening worship,
UNITED MEI'IIOD!Sf CRURal
7: ll p.m. Wednesday night prayer meetlng
Fay Saue1', Dlred&lt;ir
and Bible study, 7::.&gt; p.m.
""'·
Jam"'
E. Corbllt, Asolslant
THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Ave , Pomeroy Mrs. Dora Wining in charge.
&amp;v. Don Archer
Sunday holtness meeting, 10 am., Sunday
Rev. Roy Deeter
School, lO::n a.m. Sunday School, YPSM
Re&gt;. Selcloa do"""""
~
Eloise Adams, leader. 7:~ p.m., salvation
ALFRED - Church School 9:ll a.m.:
meeting, various speakers and music spe"'Worship, Ua.m.: UMYF.6:alp.m: UMW,
cials. Thursday- U: :I) a.m. to 2p.m .• Ladles
'Third Tuesday, 7::11 p.m. Community ftrst
Horne League, members In charge, all
SUnday, (Archer)
women tnvtted; 6;45 p.m. Thursday, Cofll)
CHESTER - WorshJp 9 a.m.; Church
Cadet Class (Young People-Bible). 7: .J) p.m.
SchoollOa.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.m.
Bible Study and Prayer meeting, open to the
UMW, first Thursday, l p.m , Communion
public.
first Sunday. {Archer}
POMEROY wESTSIDE 'cHURCH OF
JOPPA - Worship, 9: 3l a.m.: Church
CHRIST, 33221:1 Chtldren's Home Road
School, to::Jl a.m. BJble St;udy. Wednesday,
(County Road 7G) 992.5235 Vocal music.
7: J:l p.m. (Johnson)
Sunday worship lOa.m.: BJbl~studylla . m .:
LONG BOTIOM - Church School, 9: :1J
worship, 6 p.m. Wednesday Bible study, 7
am., WorshJp, 7 p.m., BJble Study, Wednes day, 7:]) p.m ; UMYF, WednessJay, 6 p.m.,
p.m.
- ~·
.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
Communion First Sunday. (Archer)
CHURCH - Olfton Lucas, pastor. Sunc!ay
REEDSVD..LE - Omrch School, 9:))
School 9: ~ a.m. Mrs. Worley Francis, supt.
a.m; Worship 11 a.m. (Deeter)
Preaching services first and third Sundays
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL -Church
tollowl.ng SWJday School. Youth meeting
School, 9a.rn.: Worshlp,JO a.m.: Bible Study,
every Sunday, 7: ll p m.
Tuesday, 7:)) p.m.; UMW, Third Tuesday,
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
7: ll p.m.; Communion flrst Sunday.
Preaching 9 :1) a.m., flrsl and second
(Archer)
Sundays of each month: third and fourth
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Sundays each moath. worshlpsEro'ices at 7: .))
Rev . •Jamet~ E. Corbitt
p.m. Wednesday evenin~ at 7:30 p.m.,
Rev. ~en Nehon
Prayer and Bible Study. ~
Re•. - - c h
SEVENTII·DAY ADVENTISI', Mulbeny
llelo. Ro-E. - llelo. AlidrewRabeftldac
Helgllts Road, Pomeroy Michael Pion·
ASBURY (Syracuse) -Worship, 11 a.m.;
kowskl, paslor. Marte Spires, Sabbalh School
Church School, 9. 45 a.m.; Charge Bible
Supt. Sa-lh Scho!il ~ a! 2 p.m. oo Saturday
Study, Wednesday, 7:)) p.m.; UMW, flrst
wtth worshJp services following at 3: 15 p m
Tuesday, 7·ll p.m.; OJ.otr Reheanal, WedRt.m..AND f'tRS'1' BAPTIST CHURCHnesday,6·.llpm: UMW,towthSunday,6. .ll
Sister Harriett Warner, Supt Sunday SchOOl,
D m. !Netsorn
9:ll a.m .; morning worship, 10:45 a .m.
ENTERPRISE -Worship 9 a.m.; Church
POMEROY FIRS!' BAPTIST. Davt~
School, 10 a.m.; Bible Stud)&gt;, Tuesday, 1::11
MaM, minister: Wtillam Snourter, Sunday
p m.: UMW, First Monday, 7:l&gt; p.m.,
SChool supt, Sunday SChool, 9: 30 a.m.;
UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m Cholr rehearsal, 6 XI
Morning worship 10: :IJ .m
p.m. Wemesday. (Rothemlch)
FIRST SOIJ'I'IIERN llAPI'IST, Pomeroy
FLAtwOODS - Church School, 1ll a.m ,
Pike. Davtd Hunt, pastor; Jack Needs,
Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study. Thursday, 7
Sunday School Dtrectcr. Sunday school, 9 XI
p.m.; UM'(F', Sunday, 6 p.m . (RDthemlch)
am., momlng wocshlp, 10 ll; evening
,FOREST RUN - Worship, 9 a.m.: Church
wu-shlp, 7: 00 p.m 'fuesday Vlsltation, 7 p.m.; •
School, 10,a .m.; Cbolr Practice, Tuesday, 6: l)
Wednf!sday, Prayer sevlce, 7::11 p.m.;
Mlsston Frlends, 7::1t p.m. ; Girls In Actions, , p.m .: UMW, first Tuesday, 7::JJ p.m.
(Nelson)
.
7: :J1 p.m.; Acteens, 7::1lp.m.; Choir Practice,
HEATH (Middlep«1 ) - Church School,
8: :IJ p.m.
.
9::tl a.m.; Worship, IO·:IJ a.m., Bible Study,
MIDWAY roMMUNJTY CHURCH, 01~
Tuesday, 10 am.; UMW, second Monday,
Dexter Rd., Dexter. Pastor Woody Call, Jr.
7: :J1 p.m.; UMM, third Monday, 7.JJ p.m.
Paster. Sunday School W am. Sunday
i!loblnsMJ
evening service, 1 p.m.; Thursday evening
. MINERSVILLE - Worshlp Service, 10
service, 1 p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bailey a.m.: Church School, 11 am.: UMW, third
Wednesday, 1 p.m.: COOlr practice, Monday,
Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawsoo, pastor.
Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday school, 10 a .m. 7:3) p.m. (Nelson)
PEARL CHAPEL - Worshlp Servtce, 9
Sunday evening service 7::lt p m.; mhle
a.m.: Church School, 11 a.m.: UMW, second
teaching, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
1\lesday, 7: :J) p.m.; UM'iF last Tuesday, 7:30
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cher!1' St., Syra·
p,(1l, iRubenklngl
,
cu~~e Services, 10 a.m. Sunday, Evening
POMEROY - Church School, 9:1~ a.m;
services, Sunday and Wedne!lday, 7 p.m.
Worship service, lO::.la.m.; Choir rehearsal,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, second 'l'ue&amp;·
CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Manley,
day, 7:30 p.m .; UMYF, Sunday, 6
pastor: Mrs. RLBseU Young, Sunday School
p.m.(C&lt;rbltt)
Supt. Sunday School 9: :IJ a.m. Evening
ROCK SPRINGS - Church Sclxlol, 9:15
wcnh1p 7: JO p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting
a.m.: Worship, 10 a.m.; Bible Stt.:ty,
7::11 p.m.
Wednesday. 7::1J p.m.; UMYF (Seniors) ,
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, Racine
SUnday, 6 p.m.; (Juntorsl. .,.,., other
- Rev. James Satterflekl, pastor. Moming
Sunday, 6 p.m. (Rothemlch)
worship 9:45a.m.; Sunday School10:45 a.m.;
RUTLAND - Cblll'Ch School, 9:«1 a.m.:
evenlnc wocship 7 p m 'l'uemay, 7::11 p.m.,
ladles pra)"'r meetlng. w - . y . 1: :IJ p.m. Wonhip, IO::IJa.m.; UMW (EvenlniCIJ'CicJ,
secolliJ Wednesday, 1. :II p.m.; UMW, secl&gt;nd
YPE.
MIDDLEPORT FlRSI' BAPTIST, COrner Thunitay, 1 p.m. (Rubenldng)
SALEM CENTER - Church School, 10
Sixth and Palmer, tbe Rev. Mark McClung.
a .m .; WorShip, 9:4.5 a.m. (Rubenklng)
Sunday scbx&gt;J 9: 1S a.m.; Dan White, Sunday
SNOWVD..LE - Worship. 8· :11 a m.;
Sclwl supt., John Reibel, Sr., asst. supt.
ChUl'Ch SctolllO a.m. (Rubenldng)
Morning Wonhip 10: U a.m. Youlh rneeUna
!IOUI1D!RN ILU8TER
1::11 p.m. Wednesday, lnctud1J18 wee tw,
lin. Jam. M. a.n
eager beaven, Junior astfoanuts, and junior
Re\&gt;.1'1111and senior high BYF; choir practice 8:ll p.m.
Re\&gt;.OntlleWIIIIe
Wednaday; prayer ll)eftlngarxi Bible .study,
APPLE GROVE - Church School, 9 a.m.;
Wednesday, 1 :IJ p m
·
CHURCH OF CIDUST, Middleport, 15th and Worship, 10 a.m. (!In! and third Sundays);
Main, Bob Mellon, mlnlster: AI llartscl\, UMW, second Tuelday, 7::1t p.m.; Prayer
woctat..
MIICe Gerlach, Sunday meetlni, Wednelda.Y, 1 p.m. (Clark)
I!E'l1IANY - Worship, 9 a .m.; Church
School SUpertnlendent. Bible School, 9: :II
a.m.; lnCI'ftlllg wonhlp; lO::lt a.m.; ~ School. 10 a.m.; Bible Stlldy, Wed11EOday, IO
wcnlllp 1 p.m. Wednesday Bible Stw!y and a.m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowship, Wednesday, !1 a.m. (McGuire I
youlh IIJ'OUP
1 p.m.
CARMEL - ChW'CI! School, 9::11 a.m.;
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Worsl!lp, 10:45 a.m.; (5econd 11111 Four1h
RENE, C&lt;&gt;puton, Rev. Charles Coyto and
Rev. Nancy Coyle. Bill White, Sunday oc:hool SUndays): Fellowslllp dinner wtlh Sutton,
aupt. Sunday ochool, 9: :IJ a.m.; rnomlnil tlllrd 'lbunclay, 6: :IJ p.m. (McGuire)
wcnhip, 10; !) a m., sunday ~Uitlc
rneotlni. 1 p.m. Pnyer meetlni Wednelda.Y1
EAST L£TART- Church School, 9 a.m.;
p.m.
Wonhip, 10 a.m. ("""'nd and lourlhSunday~
. \INrt'ED PRESBYI'ERIAN MINNI'RY, UMW, !Int 1'1or!eday, 1::1! p.m. (Clark)
OF MEIGS UlUNt'Y, IU!Y. Wanda Johnlon, ,
LETART FALI.'l - WQrsl!lp, 9 a.m;;
dlra'lor. Harol~ Johmon, dlre&lt;ICX' of
Chlll'&lt;h School, 10 a.m (Clark)
education.
MORNING !ITAR - WOI'II!Ip, 9:4~ a.m.;
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN,
Chlll'&lt;h Sohool, 10: :IJ a.m.; Bible Study,
WOrship semce. 9 a.m.; Church &amp;0001, 10::1:1
Tl!uroday, 7:30p.m. (Whit..)
Lin.
MORSE CHAPEL - Church Sclxlol, 9: :IJ
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN,
a.m.; Wonblp, n a.m. (White)
Qnu"h SCI1od, 9 a .m; Morning wcnhlp,
PORnAND -Church SCOOOI, 6::1J p.m.;
IO:U. Bible Study~. lO a.m.; Bible
Wcnhlp, 7::JJ p.m:: UMYF, 'lt'ednelday, 7::JJ
lblly, "lburldo)', 7:30p.m
p. m.(~)
SYRACUSE FIRSt' UNTIED PRESBY·
RACINEWESUiYAN-Churcb-.10
'I'EIUAN O!Ur&lt;h. Cburch Sfllllol, 10: Ill a.m.;
a.m.1 Woi"'NN»t U a.m.; UMW, bu'tb
mcntna wcnblp, n:30 a.m.;
Monday 7:30p.m.: Men'l " ' - ~.
'llletdaY, lO LDL; JuniDr 11111
Jllilh w~.1a .m.1~1
.,,._
0f'C11111, ~. 6 p.m.

m-.

=:.Stud:l'·

•

I .

SUTTON - Church School, 9:ll a.m.:
morrung worship, 10:45 a.m. (first and third
Sundays); fellowship dinner wtlh carmel.
thlrfl_Tit~~ay, 6:30p.m (McGuire)
KENO CHURUI 01'' CHRIST. Oliver
Swain. Superintendent Sunday scOOOI 9: :J)

a.m. every week.
HOBSON CHRIS'I'IAN UNION, Wllllam
Crabtree, pastor. Sunday School, 9::.) a.m.;
evening service, 7: ~p.m. Wednesday p-ayer
meeting, 7:30p.m.
BEARWAU.OW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duane Warden, miniSter. Bible
class, 9: ~ a.m.: morning w&lt;nhlp, 10 :~
a.m.: evenlngwc:rship, 6: :JJ p.m Wednesday
Bible study, 6::11 p.m.
NEW S'l1VERSV1LLE roMMUNI'IY
CHURCH, Sunday School service, 9:4~ am.;
Worship SE!IVire, 10:3) a.m ., EvangellsUc
$ervtce, 7:ll p m . Wednesday; Prayer
tnE!eting, 7:ll p.m., Thursday.
ZION CHURQI OF Clffi.IST, Pomeroy·
HarrlsoovWe Rd. ; Robert Purtell. minister:
Steve Stanley, Sunday school SUpt. Sunday
school, 9: :1&gt; a.m.: wa-shipser\1ce 10:00 a.m.;
Evening wocshlp Sunday, 1 p.m and
Wednesday, 1 p.m.
ST. JOHN Lt..rrnERAN CHURCH, Pine
Grove. The Rev. WOllam Middleswarth,
Pastoc. Church services 9lJ a.m. Sunday
Schad 10: ll a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OFOIRISI', Paul

Pratt, pastcr Sumay scmot, 9: :J) a .m .. Larry
Haynes, S. ~ Su~ .; morning wcrshlp. lD:Xl
a.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
IU!Y. 'lbclmas H. COWB', pastel', Martha
Wolfe, Chatnnan of the Board of Christian
Llfe. Sunday School., 9:ll a.m., morning
wcrshlp, 1D OOa.m.; Sundayevenlngwocshtp,
7 ll p m . Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7 .'ll

p.m.
RACINEFIRSI'BAPI'Nf,DonL Walker,
Paster, Robert Smith. Sunday School supt.;
Sunday SCOOol. 9: l.l a.m.: morntng wmhlp,
"10:40 a.m.i Sunday evening wcrshlp, 7:00
p.m.: Wednesday ...,.nlng Bible study, 1.:1J
p.m.

"
Wright, Dlrector of Christian Education.
Sunday ScOOol, 9·:1) am.: Morning Worship,
10:30 a .m .; Cholr Practice. Sunday, 6:l&gt;
p.m.; Evening Worship, 7:00p.m. Wednmday
Prayer and Bible Study. 7:30p.m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST, Chwles
Russell. Sr., rnin1Ster; Rick Macomber, supt.
Sunday school, 9:ll a.m.; wcrsh!p service,
10: ll a.m. Bible Study, Tuesday, 7·ll p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JE'SUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
Portland-Racine Road. WUHam Roush. pas·
toc Linda Evans, church scbOOI dlrectoc.
church scOOol, 9: l) a.m ; morning WCI'Ship,
l lO::Il a.m.: Wednesday evmlng prayer
serviCEs, 7:30p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAP'I'lST, Rev. Earl
ShuiB', past&lt;J'. Worship service, 9 00 am.
SUnday school, 10:ll am Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7 ll p m
LONG Jio'TToM: ClffiiSTIAN. Ken Kelter,
pastCI". WallaCf! Damewood, Sunday School
Supt. Worship service at 9a.m. BlbleSchoollO

a.m.

HYSELL RUN HOt.INESSC!WRCH,Rev.
ThEreOn Durham, pastor. Sunday School at
9::.1 am., Morning wt:rshtp at 10 l) a.m
Sunday evening servke at 7:l1 p m.,
Thursday .services at 7::1) p.m.
ffiEEOOM GOSPEL M!SliON at Bald
Knob. located on County Road 31. Rev.
LawrenceGiuesencamp, past&lt;J'; Rev. Roger
WOlford, assistant past(J' Preaching services, Sunday 7::ll p.m. Prayer meeting
Wednesday, 7::1J p.m.; Gary Grlfll!h. 'leader
Youth groul)'i. Sundayevenlng,6:ll p.m. with
Rage- and VIolet Willford as leaders.
Communion serv:lce ftrsl Sunday each mcnth
WIIITE'S CHAPEL, COolvtlle RD. Rev.
Roy Deeter, pastcr. Sunday sc00oi9:2Ala.m.:
wcnhip service, 10::Il a.m. Bible study and
prayer _serylce Wednesday, 7:Jl p.m.
Rlrtl..ANb ClRJRCH OF CHRIST, Dan
Monl~. pastcr: Bill NtCOOJson, Sunday
school supt. SUndaY school, 9:YJ a.m.;
morntngwcrshlp and communion, W:30a m.
Rlrtl..AND BIBLE METilODIST - Amos
TW!s, pastcr; Sormy Hudson, supt. Sunday
school, 9 lJ a .m. Morningworshlp, IO:lla m.
Sunday evening service, 1 00. Wedn!May
evening service 7:00p.m.: WMPO Program,
9:00am. each Sunday morning.

DANVlLLE WESLEY AN, Sunday School,
9.Jla.m.; momlngworshtpl0:45a.m.; youth
service, 6;~ p.m.; evening wcnhlp, 7.~
p.m.; Wednesday, 7:.1) pm. PraYer and
Praise.
DANVILLE HOLINESS CHURCH, located ,
Rlrtl..AND GHURCH OF THE NAZA·
on Route m between VInton and Lanpvt.lle.
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm. Jr.. pastor.
Rev. Ben Watts, postrr. Sunday School, 9 :IJ
Su!Kiay Scnool, 9. lJ am.: wcrship service,
a.m., Bobby Lambert S. S. Supt.; Momlng
10:30 a.m.; yoong people's service, 6 p.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.: Otlldren's Hapv.; Hour
Evangelistic
service, 6:l) p.m. Wednesday
6:15p.m. Prayer 6r Bible Study, 1::11 p.m .
service, 7 p.m. Mlsslonaly mretiDg llrsl Wednesday of each '
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, MW..- S!.,
month. 7: XI p.m. For lnformaUOn call
Masm, W. Va. Eugene L. Conger, mJnister.
J88.8467,
Sunday Bible Study, 10 a.m ; Wocshlp 11 a m
Sn.VER RUN BAPTIST, BW Utt!e,
and 7 p m. Wednesday Bible Study, vocal
paat&lt;r; SIAM! Ultle, S. S. Supt. Sundayochool,
music, 7 p.m.
10 a.m.; mcrn1ng worship, 11 a.m. Suaday
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
eveolng wcnhlp, 7: :ll p.m. Prayer pu!eting
Lane, Masoo, W Va. Rev. Romle B. Rose,
and Bible study, Thursday, 1. :IJ p m., youth
Paster. Sunday SchOOl 9:45 a.m.: Morning
rneetlnJ Wednesday at 7 p m.
•
Warship u a.m Evening service 7,l:l p.m.
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH, 383
Wednesday Women's Mlnlstrtes 9 a.m.
N. 2Jid Ave., Middleport, Sunday Scooo~ 10
(meeting Md prayer). Prayer and Bible
a.m. SUnday and ,Wednesday Evening
S1ucly 1 pm.
Services 1: :IJ p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHES1 ER CHURCH OF GOD, Rev. R. E.
CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev. Wllllam
Roblnaon, · Sunday achoo~ 9:30a.m;
Campbell, pasloc. SundAy Sclxlol, 9 :IJ • m.;
w&lt;nhlp IM!I'Vlc., U a.m.; ewnlDa terV\ce, .7
James Hughes, supt., evening service, 7· :JJ
p.m.; youth ..rnce. W - y . 1 pm.
p.m Wednesday evening '})rayer meeting,
LANGSvn.LE CHRlS11AN CIIURCII,
7·]) p.m Youth prayerser.rireeachTUesday.
Robert E. M..-, puto&lt;. Sundayachooi,9.:1J
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart, W.
am; Paul MUSIM", .upt.; mrntng wtnhlp,
Va.,
Rl. 1, Mark Irwin, past(J'. Worship
10:30 a.m .; Sunday evoniJI8 oervtr:e, 1 p.m.;
servtces, 9:3) a.m.: Sunday Sctml, 11 a.m.:
mld-weel&lt; - · WedDooday, 1 p.m.
evening wcrshlp, 7:ll p.m. Tuesday cottage
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF 11IE NAZA·
prayer meeting and Bible study, 9:30 a.m.
RENE - IU!Y. Jameo B. Kittle, poster.
Worship !eiVIce, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Slumlan CUndtll, SUper1111eftdent Sunday
OUR SAVIOUR Lt.rrHERAN CHURCH - '
School, •9::1! a.m; Momlltg Wc:qhlp IO::IJ
Wslriut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood. W Va
a.m.; EvangelloUc oervtce, 6 ~.m. PraY"' and
The Rev. George C. We~lck, pastcr. SundAy
praise Wedneldoy, 1 p.m.; youth meetlng, 1
Schad, 9: :1) a m.; Sunday wcrhslp, 11 a.mf'
p.m.
. CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH; now located
EDEN UNri'ED BRETHREN IN CHRIST,
on Pomeroy Pike. COunty Road 25 near
Elden R. Blalce, pastor. Sunday School 10
Fta1Woods. Rev. Blackwood, pasl(r. servtces
am; Robert IIA!&lt;d, aupt.; Momlnl...,.,,
on
SuRSaY a1 10:3) a.m. and, 7:JJ p.m . with
ll a.m.; SUnday nlcht .....-, Chrtatlan
Sunday sctJJol, 9:1) a.m bible stu4y,
Endeavm-, 7::1) p.m.; Sonc aervtce, 8 p.m.:
Wemaolay, 7: p m
Preecblng, S::IJ p.m. Mid-week Prayer
FAITH FELUJWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
meeting, W - y . 1 p.m .. AlvtlliiA!&lt;d, lay
CHRIST- St. Rl. J:lll, Antiquity Pasloc, Rev.
1-.
FrankUn Dickens. 9Jnday mom1ng. 10 a.m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CIIRIS'11AN, RAltler
Sunday evening. 1:J&gt;p.m. Th'""""yevenlng.
wa-. Cronam Pratt, SUnday · 1::1:1p.m.
' •
School aupt. Momlnl w&lt;nhip. 9::11 a.m;
STIVERSVILLE roMMUNtTY BAPriSI'
&amp;lnday ochool, 10: JJ a.m.; eYOning - ·
CHURCH, Palloc Robert ll)&lt;!rs. Sunday
7::1:1 p.m.
School 10 a.m.; Worship Service u a.m.:
Ilrl". UNION~· IU!Y. Tom Dooley;
~ ......tna IOI'vlce, 1: :IJ p.m,; Wednl!i·
Joo !layle, 9w!diy School Sllpertn-.
7::1J p.m
'
oc:hool, 9:6a.m.; evoniJI8 wonhlp, · da,y
INDEPtNilENT HOLINESS CHURCH,
Prayer rneeUDII. 1:30 p.m.
Inc. - Paul St., Ml.tll&lt;!llrt. Rev. O'Dell
~. pester. Sunday Sclxlol, 9·:1:1 a .m,
MOI'1lllla W&lt;nhlp- IO:JJ a.m.; eveniJI8 wrr·
sblp. 7:~ p.m. 1\lesday, 12:30p.m, Women's
prayer meeting; Prayer and praise service,
Wemlllday, 7::11 p.m.

»

...rung-·

Rt.J'ILAND APai'IQUC CHURCH OF
JESUS rnRIST, ~ James Mill..-. Bible
WodDeoday, 1: ill p.m.; Sunday School,
: p.m.~ ,1tudy,
10 a.m . Sunday ntlht 11!1'Vtco, 1l30 p.m.
POMEROY WESlEYAN HOLINESS Rober1 Mille', poat&lt;r; Lloyd . 'l!an11mVWe Rnod. Earl .f!et~ poster.

~~ODISI"

; I •

I

''

Phone 992-3480

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE
GroceriesGeneral Merch.lndtse

M•ddleport·
Pomeroy, 0.

&amp;EN
~RANKLIN"

y-

----'

'

'

.. ' "

·HALL'S

rnlrllB...,

Genuine Watlntrt

~auuf~ ll y delol"f\t d
l•u&gt;Caf~rr~n):~mtnt .

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

({.
.:; p

Saturdilly

[B

MARK VSTORE
Middleport

lHE DAILY
SENTINEL

A ov ela llo~

6

Save
$200

·-

of Columbus, 0.
804 W . Main
Pomeroy

MASON, W.VA.

.'

RACI NE - A square dance
will be held at the Racine
American Leg1on Saturday, Oct
15 !rom 8:30 p.m.untll midnight
The Guy Thom a band will
provide mustc and caller will be
Red Carr.

~

•

CHESTER - A fall carnival
will be held at the Chester Grade
School Saturday. Soup and
sandwiches will be served fro m
5 p.m. until 8: 30 p.m., costume
judging at 6: 15 p.m . and games
and carnival from 6: 30 p.m. to
8:30 p.m Featured wtli be a
sweet shop, country store and
cake walk The event IS being
sponsored by the Pl'O

Square dance

Nationwide Ins. Co.

·-

S595

1974 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON

773-5352

...

P. J. P~ULEY, AGENT

'1095

1973 LTD

PERMS

985·3~44

•
•

1976 MUSTANG

'

·~'" For

'1095

Automatic. 4 cyl.

Halloween party

i

t~2 · 3325

Fall carnival

RUTLAND - Rutland com·
munity will hold a Halloween
party Oct. 31 at the Rutl and
Civic Center from 6 p m. to 8
p.m There will be something for
· everyone
Those wishing to make a
donation or assist Wlth the party
are asked to call Carolyn
Nicholson at 742·2454. '

•

216 S. Second
Pomeroy

18

and

beverage.

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

4 dr., 5 cyl., auto., PB, PS, Air.

EFFECTIVE SAT., OCT. 15-SAT.. OCT. 22

CAROL'S
COIFFURES

·~

•

FALL PERMANEN,T SPECIAL

MIDDLEPORT - A county·
wide membership roundup for
Me1gs County boy scouts will be
held at 7 p.m. on Oct. 20 at the
American Legion hall in Middlepert. Any boy from 11 to 18
interested in becoming a scout Is
invited to attend, either with or
without a parent. Representa·
lives of all troops in the county
will be present to a nswer
questions. For further informa·
tlon parents may contact Lanny
Tyree, 992·3169

The Daily Sentinei--Page-7

•·

1975 MERCURY MARQUIS

Scour meeting
scheduled _Oa. 22

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Andounce revival

Rutland Church of Christ notes 145th anniversary
The Rutland Church of Christ
celebrated Its 154th anniversary at
the homecoming there Sunday.
Guest speaker for the observance
attended by 74 guests was Roy Bill
Carter, Washington, N C., a former
.minister of the church.
Sunday school was held at 9: :ll
a. m. and morning worship at 10: 30
a.m . Carter delivered the morning_
sermon With three junior classes of
the Sunday school providing music.

Friday, ()ctober 14, 1983

Rae me q49 - ~sso

Pomeroy bypass Rev Hot:ert Smith, Sr.,
Henry Eblin, Jr .. SUnday School Supt Sunday
pastoc, Rev James Cundiff, assistant pastor.
School 9: :1) a.m.; Morning Worship ll am.,
sunday Sctool, 9::Il a.m; morning W(J'Shlp.
~nday evening service, 7:l&gt; p.m.; Prayt:!r
10 30 am., evening washlp. 1:l:l p.m
Meeting. Wednesday, 1::11 p.m.
women's FellCM'Shlp, Tuesdays, 10 a.m
SYRACUSE f'tRS'1' CHURCH OF GOD WednESday night prayer service, 7: :J) p.m
Joy Oark. pastor; Worship service Sunday,
FA.I'Tli BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, mm
10:00 a.m ; Sunday sctDol, 11 am , worship
at United Steel Worlun Union Hall, Railroad
service, 7·:1) pm Wednesday prayer meetStreet, Mason. Morning wcrshlp 9.30 am
IJI8, 7· :IJ p m
Sunday Sctro l O.l) a m . Evening Service, 7
MT HERMON UNri'ED BRITHREN IN
p.m Prayer meeting Wednesday, 7 :JJ p m
CHRIST CHURCH Rev Robert Sanders,
Mlchveek Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m .
pastcr; Don Will, lay leader. Localedin Texas
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev. Nyle
COmmunity o~ CR 62. Sunday school, 9· :IJ
Borden, pastoc. Cornelius Bunch, supeMn
a.m.; Morning worshJp service. 10:45 a.m.;
E:Vening preaching service second and fourth - tendenl. Sunday sehool9 ])a.m.: second and
fourth s uooays, w&lt;rShiP servtre at 2: l&gt; p.m.
Sundays, 7::1Jp.m.; Chr!sttanEndeavoc, fir st
Ml'. MORlAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
and thlrd Survlays. 7 ll p.m. Wednesday
Main SIS., Mlddlepol'l Rev. Calvin Minnis,
prayer meeting and Bible study, 7:~ p rn.
past(J'. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardner, supt.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS, 37319 State Route
Sunday school, 9·l) am , worship servh.-e,
124 (One mile east of Rutland) Sunday, Bible
10:45 am
lecture 9·30 a.m.; Watchtower study, 10 a!
BURLINGHAM SOI.JTIIERN BAPTIST
a m , 'T'uesday, Bible stW y, 7::ll _p.m.;
CHURCH, Route 1. Shade. Pastor, Don Black..
Thursday, Theocratic School, 7::JJ p.m.;
Affiliated with Southern Baptist convention.
Service Meeting, 8::!! p.m.
Sunday school. 1: .JJ p.m .. Sunday wocshlp,
· CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY,
2:.ll p.m Thursday evening Bible study, 7
Loc:'ated on the 0 . J White Road ott highway
p.m.
160. Pal Henson, pastor. Sunday School 10
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, RaCine,
a.m . Classes f&lt;r all ages. Junior Church
Route 1.24 WWiam Hoback, pastor Sunday
11:00; Morning Worship, 11 00; Adult COO!r
school, 10 a.m ; Sunday evening seiV\ce, 7
practice 6 00 p m Sunday. Young People's,
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p m.
Ch.Udren's Chun:-h and Adult Bible Study,
CARPENTER BAPTIS'T, Don Cheadle,
Wednesday at 7::rl p m
Supt Sunday School 9 lJ a m Momlng
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL- 570Grant St .
Worship , 10 ~am Prayer Service, alternate
Middleport; Sunday SchOOl. lOam. , morning
Sundays
wcrhstp, 11 a.m.; evening worship, 7 p.m.
Wednesday eventng Bible study and prayer
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third
m eeting, 7 p.m. Atflllated with SouthEnL
Ave., the Rev. Clark Baker, pastcc. Car!
Baptist Convention.
'
No11tngham, Sunday Sctnol Supt. Sunday
BRADFORD ClRJRCH OF CHRIST SchoollOa.m. - classes tor all age;. Evening
State Route 124 and County Road 5. Mark
services, 6 p.m. Wednesday, Study, 7: :ll p m
Seevers, minister; Sunday School Supl , Steve
Youth servll'eS, 7: ll p.m Friday
Pickens. Sunday 1J:hool,·9 l1 am, morning
ECCLESIA FEll.DWSHIP, 128 Mill S!.,
wrnhip, lD::D am.; evenlngwor.;hlp, 7 p.m.
Mlddlepxt P aster ts Brother chuckMcPherWednesday W&lt;nhip, 7 p m.
soo. Surrlay School al 10 a.m Services
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER Sunday evening at 7 p.m and Wednesday at 7
George's C1'eek Road. IU!Y. C. J . Lemley,
p.m.
pastcr; Paul Poar, Church SchOOl Supertn.
ANTIQUITY BAP'l'IST. Rev. Earl Shuler,
tendent. Church sclool, 9,:1) a .m ., mornJng
pastcr. Sunday school 9-~ a.m.: Church
W&lt;J'shlp, 10 ]') a m; l"'JEnlng service, 7 p m.
service, 7 p.m.; youlh meeting, 6 p.m.
Bible Study , Wednesday, 7 OOp m Classes for
Tuesday Bltie S!udy, 7 p.m.
aU ages.
FVLL GOSPEL LIGIITHOUSE, 3.1»5
Hiland Road. Pomeroy iom Kelly. pastcr.
~ PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner
Daney Lambert, Sunday School Supe~ln tend­
of SycamCI'E' and Second Sis .. Pomeroy. The
ent Sunday ~ornlng service, 10 00 am.,
Rev . WWiam Mlddlewarth, Pa.st~:r . Sunday
Sunday evenln service 7·IJ p m Services
SchOol at 9.45 am. and Church Sef"\!Jces 11
Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 7·l) p.m
p.m .
WORD OF FAITH. 9JMIIlSI .. Middleport:
SACRED HEART, Msgr. AntOOny GlannaRiehard Stewan, pastoc. Sunday morning,
more, Ph. 992-5898 Saturday evening Mass,
10:00; Sunday ('Vening, 7:.]} Tuesday morn'i':.ll p.m ., Sundav Mass, 8 a.m and 10 a.m.
Ing Bible Study , 10'"00: WednesdaY evening,
Confessions one-half hour before each Mass.
7 :rt, Thur.&gt;d ay mornJng o,. idoo with Kenneth
CCD Classes, 11 a.m SUnday.
Copeland, 10 00: Friday evening video Y.1th
VIC't'ORY IIAPI'IST - 525 N. 2nd Sl.,
Kenneth Copeland, 7 :.l
MJddif:port. James E Keesee, pastor. Sunday
NEW HAVEN CHURCH 01' THE NAZA·
morning wcrshlp,10 a.m.; evening service, 7
RENE, Rev. GlenOOn Stroud, pa.~&gt;tor Surxlay
p.m.; Wednesday evening worship. 7 p m ,
SChool. 9·Jl a .m .: Wor.;hlp Service, lO· lJ
VIsitation, Thursday, 6:ll p m
a. m , Youth .5£.-TVIcC, Sunday. 6 15 p m.,
TRINITY CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY, Cool·
Sunday evening servtce, 7 00 p.m Wednesville - Gilbert Spencer, pastcr. Sunday
day Prayer Meel:lng and Bible Study 7:oop.m
school, 9.ll am., morning servke, ll a .m.
NEASE SETI1.EMENT CHURCH. IJo.
Sunday evening service, 7::Jl p.m.: midweek
nald R Karr, Sr. pastoc. Sunday afternoon
Jrayer service Wednesday, 7: l) p.m.
services, 2 li, Thursday evmlng servtce
MOUNTOUVE UlMMUNITY CHURCH,
1 :11
•
LaW'I"'erlce Bush. past&lt;r. Max Folmer, Sr.
FIRSt' BAP't1ST CHURCH, Mason, W.Va.
SUperlntencrrtt. SuMay ScOOol. and morning
Paster, Bill Murphy SundayScOOol. 10 a m.;
wcnhlp, 9::lt a.m. Sunday evening service, 7
Sunday t'Venlng sE!'VIce, 7·.Jl p m, Prdyer
p.m.; Youth meeting and Bible study,
mecttng and Bible Study Wednesday, 7:ll
wemeiday, 7 p.m.
p.m. Everyone welcome
UNITED FATil:l CHU~C)--1 - _!OOu~ 7 on

Sermonette
"Bull tnost bt you, 0 Lord, I say, 'Y011 are my God.' My times
are ln your hand.'' Psalm 31: lt-15.
Right now we are Uvlng in an in· between time Summer is over
but we aren't really into Fall yet. And even though we are past fhe
discomfort of hot, humid days and maybe should be comfortable, we
aren't, because we don't really know what to wear or where to set our
thermostats. And we don't know what lies ahead. U we will have
Indian Summer or 11 the temperature wlll drop for the winter and
stay there. And we don't know which weather prophets to believe.
Some are saying the winter wlll be mUd and others say we should
prepare for a bad one and we don't know what we should do.
This ts all part of life. Along with the endings and the beginnings
are these ln-between times that are not comfortable and sometimes
are painful, but usually somewhat quieter. Times when our lives are
less cluttered and we can stop for awhile to think and reflect. Ttrnes
when we are able to recognize and latch onto a gift God has given us,
the gift of hope.
And, somehow, when we can hope, the hope sootpes our
concerns and fears about the future and we can begin to knowwlthin
ourselves that all our winters and times to come, are controlled by a
God who loves us.
And we can 'lace God at any time of our lives and say, "You are
my Gcd. My times are in YOW: hand," whether the time is a
\!eglnning, an•·endlng or an in-between time.
Submlttro by The Rev. Wand a Johnson, pastor of the ·
Presbyterian churches ln Meigs County.
&gt;

�'

Friday, Octaber 14, 1983

Ohio
Public

PHONE 992-2156
Or Wnle Dlilly Sent1n~ Clnufied Dept.
Il l Court St.. Pome•oy, Ohio •576!1

known addess 1S 632 Rockwood Avenue. Pmsburgh.

15228.
'MLLIAM

ROUSH.

whose

address 1S un known . 1f de·
ceased 'the unknown he1rs.
dev1sees. legatees, admln ls tra'-

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

IN THE
15 unknown d deceased
COMMON PLEAS
unknow n he1rs df'VISPes
COURT,
IPgA te es admt1'1 15 trator;; t')( f'r:U
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
1ors drid /or ass1qns ol H W
DONALD F. JOHNSON
Roush. dec
PLAINTIFF
CLARA ROUS H. whose last
VS
known address IS clo Ilene
GEORGE MlUER, ET Al
'·stump 674 Tal lkron Dnve.
DEFENDANTS
Ak ron Oh1o 44 300
NO. 83 c v .242
ILENE STU MP whose last
NOTICE BY
known addrf&gt;&lt;::s 1" 67 4 Tdllloon
PUBUCATlON
Dr1ve Ale ron. Oh10 44300

Not1 ce IS j"lear Qy gtVen that on
Saturd ay Oc lober 15. 1983. at
lOAM a publ1c sale w 11l be hPid
at I 05 Un1on Ave. Pomrry Oh
45769 to sell for c ash the
folfow1ng co llaler:al 1982 Pty r:nouth
PP21 . Ser 1al
No
1 P3BP51 D9CC11 0440
1982 Plvmoulh 2 dr SPrliln
Srr1a1
No
1P3BP51D8CC1 09795
Farmers Bank &amp; Savmq Co
Porner oy. Oh reserves l h(l._rtgilt
to b1d at th•s sate and to
Wit hdraw the above vPh1cles
onor to sale Furthf'r l"'f!
Farmers Bank &amp; Sdv nq Co
reserves the r1gh1 to rejeCI anv
or all b1ds subm1tted Fwlher
the veh1 c les are so ld 11, the
cond1t1on they are n wth no
ex pressed or rhphed wa' ran ·
!1es g1ven

TO

GEORGE MILLER. wh ose ad
dress IS unknown. 1f deceasea
the unknown he1rs rle\I'ISeeS
legJtces. adnllniStrators. execu·
tors arid/or ass1gns ol George
Mill er. dec
FLORENCE MILLER whOse
adOress IS unknown 11 deceosed th P. un known he1rs.
devrsees legQtees. ac;lmlnlstrators exec·.. tors and /or ass1gns
o! Flore nce Mtller. dec
H W 'ROUSH. whose ad-

Oc1 13 &amp; 14

ELIZABETH SMITH whose
address IS L1nkno""'n 11 dt&gt;cease~ the unknown he1,rs.
dev1sees. leg&lt;;~ t ees ad mtnlstra·
tOrs. Pxecutors and /o r ass1gns
of El 1zabeth Smtth. dec.
BLANCHE FERRELL. whose
address 1S u nknown 1f de·
ceased the unknown he1 rs
dev1secs legatees. execu10rs.
adrntniS trators and / or ass1gns
qt Blanche Ferrell dec
R B FERREL l wh ose ad -

Public Notice
dress 15 uni&lt;:.11own 1! deceased
the lml&lt;..nown heus. dev1sees
legatt"f'S E'Xf'CLJIOI S. admtniStra
tois andtpr asSI(;ms of R B
Ferr~ll

dt"C

ELLA M ROUSH whose
add• ess IS unknown. 1l de ceasro the wnknow11 he1rs.
dtMsees · lcgmees. e&gt;:ecutors.
admtniS\rmors and/or ;:JSSigns
o! (flaM Rn11c;h df'c
WALTER ROUSH whosP. ar1 ·
dress 1s un ~n own. 1f d&amp;eased'
the unknown heus dl."VISet!s.
lequtees execu tors adm1n 1St'a·
tors and/or ass1gns 0 1 Wa ite•
Ro ush dl?c
EA.RL WELLS . DetrOi t, M1ch1·
gan. whose addrf'ss 1s unknown 1f deceased th e un k nown hA• rs . dev 1sees.
lega tees. e)le(utors. adm1n1stra·
1ors and/or ass1gns of Ear~
Wells . dec.
DAL LAS LISLE . whose last

LAFF·A·DAY

Public Notice

tprs. executors and / or ass1gns.
of W1111am Roush. dec.
ALMA ROUSH. whose ad·
dress IS unknown . 11 deceased
the unknown he1rs. dev•sees.

legatees. adm1n 1Strators. executors and/or asstgns of Alma
Roush. dec ..
EDNA ROU SH. whose ad dress 1S unknown. 1! deceased
the unknown he1rs. devtsees.

legatees. adm1n1strators. eXecu tors a!ld/or ass1gns of Clyde

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION.
. MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN lHE MATTEA OF ADOP·
TIO.N OF Ay Hotilot MDnl
NO. 24237
-NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION TO: Supo18 laomeo. 1Mt
known add-: Dlotrict of
Choltahoi. Province of Nakhon
Rltaima
You are hereby not1 f1ed that
you have been named as
putative father of Ay W ong chang. Th1s actton has been
ass1gned Case No. 24 23 7 1n
th e Common Pleas Court
Juvenile DiviSion . Me 1gs
County. Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769 .
Th e ObJBCt of th e Pet itiOn IS tO
adopt sa1d Ay Wongchan g by
t he Petitioner and d1vest1ng ydu
of all parental nght
You are reqUi red to answer
the Petltton wtth tn twenty-e1ght
daYs or o b1ect to th e granting to
the adoption w1th 1n twentyetght days afler the last publicj:l·
liOn of th ts not1 ce. wh1ch wil l be
published once each week for
s1x co nsecut1ve vveelcs . The last
publica!IOn Wil l be made on the
28 th day of October. 1983. and
the twenty-e1ght davs w 111 com ·
mence on that date. In case o f
failure to answer or otherw1se
respond as requ1red. by the
· Ohto Rules of CIVil Proc edure.
1udgment by default w1 ll be
rendered aga1nst you and the
Pet1fl0n granted fo r the rel1el
demanded 10 the Pet 1110n dated
September 19. 198 3 .
Raben E Buc k.
Judge and
Ex-OffiCIO Clerk
191 23. 30. 1101 7. 14. 2 1. 28.

CARRIE~

16. 23 30 110)7. 14. 6tc

ON THE SPOT FINANCI
TO
QUALIFIED APPLICANTS

WANTED

PART-TIME HELP IN POMEROY
. NEEDED AT ONCE.
RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY.
GOOD PAY.
CONTACT 992-2156
64

14,1983

Public Notice

Deed Records .
The prayer of sa1d co mpla1nt
1S that the above descri bed orl
and gas nghts be part1t1oned.
that the Interests be set Off or
ordered sold rf rt cannot be
part l tro~ed . and for allowance
of attorney tees and costs
herem
You are req u1red to answer
1he comp larnt w1th1n Menrv·:(:·.:.:·.:.::~.~-. _ _
e1ght days after the last publi ca·
t1on of th1s notice wh1ch w1ll be
"Hi1 I'm working my,·ellini!l Pl!bhshed on ce each week: tor
through law school :,;•
s1x consecut1ve weeks. The last
swimming pools, but may I
pubhcatron wtll be made ·on
here a moment? I think
November 18. 1983 and the
sprained my ankle tripping
twenty -e1ght days for answer
your steps."
will commence on that date.
In case of your fa1lure to
answer or otherw1se response
as reQuired by the Oh1 0 Rules of
Public Notice
C1vil Procedure. judgment by
default w1!1 be rendered agatnst
apouee, If any, whon name you to r the rehef demanded in
and addrep are unknown; if the Complatnt.
derenod, th! unknown hein.
Larry E. Spencer,
deviMal, legatees, adminiltnlClerk of Couns
tora. executors and / or eAigna
Me1gs County
of Harvld E. McGregor, doc.
Common Pleas Court
You are hereby not1fled that Dated October 14. 198 3
you have been named defendants 10 a lega t ac110n entitled I 1OJ 14 21. 28 I 1 11 4. 11 . 18.
James W Su ttle. et.al., Pla1n· 6tc
tdfs. vs Mannmg D. Webster, et
al .. Defendants. Th 1s act1on has
been ass1gned Case. No. 83 CV-9 3 an d 15 pend1ng rn t he .
Common Ple as Co urt of M e1gs
County, Oh1o.
The obj ect of the Complatnt
1S a pa n1t10n action concernmg
011 and,gas r1ghts and to Qu 1et
t1tle to oil and gas _ nghts
608
u nderlym g the folloW1ng d esE. Ma in. ..:.ll-'lllllo.:..ol
enDed real es tat e.
Snua ted 1n the Tow nsh1p of
POMEROY, 0 .
Le banon. County of Me1g s and
992·2259
Stat e 'ot Qh1o. bounded and
d esc ribed as follows.
NEW LISTING - EASTERN.
PARCE L NO. 1: Bemg Sec11on
Mini farm'
, DISTRICT Number Twentv"srx (26). Town
Approx.
33
acres
w~h new
Number Three (31. · 1n Range
ranch home, 3 bedrooms, 2
Numher Eleven [ 11) of the Oh10
baths. main k~chen and
Companl{'s Purchase and dessummer krtchen in basement.
cnbed as fo llow s. to·Sit: 8e1ng
th e northea st oua ner o f the
large metal barn. All this lor
sOuthwest quarter o f sa1d
only $47,500.
sect1 0n nu mber twenty-s1• (26 ),
' '
conta1n1ng forty (40 ) acres. be
PRICE REDUCE!:' ·POR·
th e same more or less.

Roush. dec.
You are hereby not1 l1 ed that
'(Ou have been n amed defend·
ants m a leg al act1on entitled
Donald ~. Johnson, pla1nt1ff vs
George M1ller et al. defendants.
Thts act1on has been ass1g ned
Case No 83·VC -242 and IS
pendmg Hi the Com mon Pleas
cou rt at Me1gs County, Oh10.
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769
The Obje(:t o f th e Co mpla1nt
IS a part1110n action concern1ng
ad and gas r1g hts and to qu 1et
IItie to o•l and gas ngh ts
underlytng the followmg descn bcd real estat e
S1tuated 1n l ebanon Town Ship,· Me1gs County. Oh10,
be1ng the sout h hall of 100
ac •e lot 167 begmn1ng at the
so utheast corner of sa1d 10 0
acre lot No. 16 7. Town 2 Range
11 1n lebanon Townsh1p. 1n the
Oh1o Company's Purchase:
th ence north 5 73 cha1ns to a
pos t the southeast corne r o f
P.M. an d N.A R;chey's one-Half
of sa1d 100 acre Lot; thence
north I .75 c hams by a l•ne
pass1ng over th e m1ddl e of the
61C
run to a post: thence north 40
, links to a past. thence w est 79
Public Notice
cha1ns to a post 1n the west l.ne
ot sa1d iot. thence south 6
IN THE
cha1ns and 25 1/2 l1nlcs to th e
COMMON PLEAS COURT
southwest corner at sa1d lot;
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
thence east 80 cha1ns to the
OHIO
p lace of beg 1nn1ng , co ntatnlng
50 acres, mor e or less
JAMES W. SUTTL£, at al.,
l'laintllla.
Ref ere n ce IS made to deed
vs.
_recorded m Volu me 209 page
PARCEL NO. 11 · Also lhe
MANNING D. WEBSTER, at follow1ng d cscnbed .p ro p erty.
305 Me1gs CQun ty Deed
al ..
to-w1 t: Bem g 1n sect1on number
Records
Oefendantt.
twentyj20). town nul'nbe• three
The p•ayer of sa1d co mplatnt
C110 No. 83-CV,93 (3), 1ange number eleven [111.
1s that the above descnbed oil
of the Oh10 Company's Pur·
and gas nghts be partitiOned . TO :
LEUA CLARK. H INing, c hase. ~nd bounded as follows.
that the 1nterests be set off or
whole addreu ia unknown; t0- w1t: Begmnmg e1gh ty rods
ordered sol d 1f 11 ca nn ot be
part1110ned. and for allowance the unknown apouM, if any; no rth of the southwest co rner
of attorney fees and cos ts whose name and address are ol sa1d Sect1on; thence North
here1n
unknowni H dec aaaad. the f1hy [50) rods: the nce east
You cue requ1 re a to answer unknown heira. daviHM, lega- e1g hty rBO) rods: 'thence sou th
th e co mplaint w1thm rwenty- tees. adminilrtfatora. oecutors f1 fty 150) rod s: thence west
etgh t d ays after the last publica- and/ or assign• of Lelia Clart, e1ghty (80) rods to the p.lace of
beg1pning. conta1n1hg twen ty tion of lh1s not1ce wh1ch will be dec.
HAROLO E. MCGREGOR. li ve (26) acres. more or less.·
publis hed once each Week fo r
1
Referen ce Deed Vo lu me
SIX co nsecut1ve w eeks . The last if living, whose address ia
unknown;
the
unknown
286. Page 809. Me1gs County
pu bhcat1on w111 be made on
Ocr 14. 1983. and the twentyeight days for answer will
11 Help Wanted
commen ce on that date
In c ase of you r fatlure to
answer 'or otherw1se respond
as requ 1red by th e Oh1 o Rules of
C1v1l Procedure. judgment by
default will be re ndered aga1nst
you for the relref demanded tn
th e com pla1 nt.
Larry E. Spencer
Clerk o f Courts
Me1gs Coun ty Common
Pleas Coun
Dated September 7. 1983

s
.
.
B. usmess ervrees

Frida~Odober

TIANO- Th~ ~ 2 bedroom
home wn~ ty~sement on a I
acre lc" ":{""a real buy at

$29,000.

SERVICE

SAVEMORE-MART

Coal

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dottie Turner 992--s692
Office 992·2259

m

Misc. MBrchandise

REALIOR

and Supply

cen Nlpllir and , .
core llldinon end ' -· .
ter COI'IIII. We can aim
add boll and rod out ra- 1
ditrton. We aim repair
Gas Tanks.

lit

Wa

Kerosene
Heaters

$99 TO $189
Also Army Supplies,
Radios, Watches &amp;
Generil Variety ·

PAT HILL FORD

J

Maaon, W. Va .

992·2196

I

773-6Q40

Middleport, Ohio

2nd St. across from
Po·n Office

HHic

lO·J.I mo J)[l,

12

GiVHW!IY

U.S_ RT_ 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE . OHIO

*Regulators
•fittings

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

•orips

Phone:
Rosldenco: 985-3837
9 · 1~ · 1

1

and yellow. 304·676· 7450
or 675·7310.
Eight black puppieo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

New Homes
Extensive Remodeling

,

Parts

&amp;

2-309.

Sizes start from

- Backhoes
- Dump Trucks
- La-Boy

•Roofing
•lnaurapce Work
•Cuatom Pole Bldga.
and Garages
•Electrical 8t
Plumbing
•Aluminum &amp; Vinyl
Siding•

-

304-895·3641.

6

1·3·\k

PH.

12'x16'

~acine, Oh.

~22-1

448-9816.

•

LOST: Small lomola boogie

dog . Last •een New Hope
Ad . Col~ 614·986- 398B.
Henry Bohr.

hour, G•lllpolll Farry and

Business
Services

$1295

10·&amp;1 1c

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Roger Hysell
I
GARAGE

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
ing - Sidina- Concrete
Patios - Side-alts New Construction - Re modeling - Custom Pole
Barns.

124,

St. Rt.

Pomeroy, OH_

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

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

PH.

~nsurence

Good

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE STATION WAGON

GOLD

v.a

Yd. lnslalled

$399 iA~rRRY

REPAIR

• •

:

..

RUTLAND FURNITURE

CHESTER, OH.
1978 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS

SEAL

•

mo.

IV NYLON
S15.95

ANSO

RUBBER-BACK TWEED

AND

10-13-1

Sq. Yd. Installed

Of

CONGOLEUM

AUTO ·
PARTS

station wagon, 6 cyl. eng ., auto. trans., p .s., p . disc brakes,
bodyslde mouldings. tinted glass.
STOCK NO. 53792

Selection

lllilcl

14£1

1\

'l 1 i1i

:J,VI

A 1111

:m I

RdfLAND

p.s.

HOM ELITE
CHAIN SAW
SERVICE
AT
POMEROY
LANDMARK

wsw . radlal tires, wheel covers.
STOCK NO_ 43061
WAS
1

3295.

1980 OLDSMOBILE STARFIRE, Black
6cyl. eng., fact. air cond., auto. trans ., p.s., p. disc brakes,
bodyslde mldgs., door edge guards tlnfed glass, till
!~~~!:!9 wheel, am-fm rodlo, stereo 'tape.
NO. 30362

I

1980 CHEVROLET MALIBU

or

•. . .

985-3561

eta IIataon.
Residential
D. Commercl'al

'
:

..

SPORTSMEN

•W••Hera •Oiahwaaher•
Rangel
•Refi'lgeratora
•Drvere •Freelera

I

PARTS and SERVICE
.
4-S·tl&lt;

.~

Have Your
Trophies
Professionally
Mounted by

Residential-New

CONTRACTING -

RECLAMATION

and

9-29·! mo

i

' wva.

304-773- 5785 or
304-773· 9186 .

'Ponds

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center, Truckload• of new
merchandiaa avery weak.
Conaigmentl of new and
used merchendlaa alway•
welcome. Richard Reynolda

Announcements

Well, Anniveraarya, Swee·

theano. panleo. Call Bol·
loonallr Co .. 448- 4313.

949-2293
Racine, OH.
8·1·tlt

AUCTION every S~turday
night, 6 p.m. Mt_ Alto

Auction Barn . Conaignmanta taken every Saturday
1 :00 till aala time. Emma
Bell Auctioneer, 304-428-

Coli

Belloono lor Blnhdaya, Get

'Septic Tanks
'Hauling

Auctioneer. 276 -3069.

SWEEPER · and 1ewing ma·
chine repair. pam, and.
aupplies.
-Pick up and
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one haH mile up
Georgeo Creak Ad.
446-0294.

'Excavating

anjllndustrial.
BONDED-All Work
Guaranteed
Cali 614·742-2214
After 5 P.M.
9-22- I mo. pd.

PH . 742-2226

'Pearaon Auctioneer
Service. Eatata, Farm, An·
tlque 8t liquidation aalaa.
Uconaod &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

I-1_7~4..,2,._·~3~1--9-'53"'·'·:!'"':·:,.J.·:1' ~
- ..

M.L

re·wiring; Comniercial

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP
New Uma Road

1 Rick

.,..,, -·· L-C....,•..

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

Public Sale
8t Auction

' Center Bldg .. Comden St.
, _&amp;_1~4·3_8_7·_7_10_1_
. _ __:_

All Makes

3

I==========
8177.

9

RACINE ·We have 5
properti~ o~.~ne, lhree, five
and 61Y
1es, All with
baths a1 •. 0(/) .rtilities. Pick
what you wo •.
lAND Some level near
Racine, some pasture near
Rutland.

aurance Co. haa offered
services for fire insurance
cov•r•ge in Gallia County
for almolt 1 century. Farm,
home and pertonal property
coverage• are available to
meet individual naeda. Con·
tact Kall Burleson, agent.

WOODS Want to have
prNacy ·and live among the
wikt. Just the thing out
SYRACUSE Modern 3
bedroomer on a nice lg: lot One

ALSO COMPLETE SERVICE DN ALL HOTPOINT AND
GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES.
Other Makes Also Serviced .and We Also Service Kerosene Heaters

POMEROY LANDMARK
c.mr.

Jack W.
llf'.
Drlvo 1 llttlt and uvo alot-frH dallnry with mlnim1m order within 75 miln
-~
Tts. Wt Uf"fict 11t1at we 1111. Wa era your local Hotpolnt Dasler.
StOlt Houra:· l:30 to 5:30. 1111 Cloud II 5:00P.M.
,
Strvln&amp; lltip, Gli1111nd Muon Counties
.
PH. 614-992·2181

0

•

floor plan, carpeting, garage,
shrubbery, out of flood. Only
$34,000.

FARMS - 5 aaes in Southern
with house; 76 acres with
house, barn, near lanf!MIIe;
58 acres with bank bam and
house in Nease Setllement:
145 Acres nearHarrisiJ!Mte'on
Rt. 143, and 96 acres near
Rutiaoo.

Middloport, Oct. 18thru 23.

S&amp;W TV

Vinyl

AND

'

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

'

&amp;

Aluminum

JEWELL'S

SIDING

PLUMBING and
HEATING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Chasllr, Ohio
Ph. 986-4269
If No Answer, C.ll 985·4382

•Experienced
aRe11onablo
•Work Guaranteed

"Beautiful, Custom i
Built Garages"
,
Call for free siding es- '
timates, 949-2801 or I
949-2860.
'

Dewlyne Williams
• Scottie Smith
All Makos 1nd Models
Antenna lnslall1tion
House Calls 1nd Shop
Service Available

No Sunday Calla

JOB-BIG OR SMALL

992-6030

1

Minersville,

!

OH.

10.3·1 mo. pd.

J.I l·tiC '

-· -

•DOZER
•BACKH0!1.
•SEPTIC ST'STEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS. RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK

.. BONDED l WORK GUAIIANTEED

992·7201

,.,.•,

GUN SHOOT

RAONE
RRE DEPT.
' Bashan Building
• EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns
Only
10-10-1 mo.

THE
TROPHY
KING

Trophy
Manufacturers
' PLAQUES
ENGRAVING

one in lhe lower pert Nl18111

• "12 v-lbpafla4108"

Housinq
Headquartl!r s

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

' All types of roof wort, new
or repair, gulteJS and

-Adclons and romodollng
-lloolirrg and . . . - -

downspouts, gutter cleaning and painti11t. storm
doon and windows.

~rue11~

--Plumbing and

.....tlotrlworlt

All Work ~uaranteed
"Free Estimates"

(Free htlmolft)

18

Wanted to Do

3 Family Yard Saie Oct . 13,
14, 16 . 9 to 6. At intersec·
lion of Rt. 326 and At. 141 .

·-----Pt.Pieas&amp;·.;t' ....

Garage Sale Thurt . &amp; Fri.
Uncoln Pike to Northup
Patriot Rd .

&amp;. Vicinity
·-··~·-····· · ·····- · ······--·-

·----·-r,-iiiTifirov-··--·--·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
2 famnv. Thursday. Friday,
Saturdav. v. mile off Rt .7 on

·sR.143.

To taka care of 1omeone sick
or need• home cera . Days
only, Point Plaaaant or Galli·
polia area. Good references .
Coll304-468-1818.

Want to do brulh hogging.
$15 an hour . Cal1614-256·
1427.

Will baby att in home morn·
ings or afternoons. For kindergarden children . live
near 1chool and ia experienced. Coli 446-1678 .

Wanted to do babvaitting in
my homo. Coli 446-0390.

Work Wanted. Temporary or
full time. Key punch or
general oHice. 14 yr. axpe·
rlonco. Coll814·388· 8880 .

Dump truck for hire. will
haul coal, send, greval 1 ate .
304-676-3190 .

Will do houae cleaning,
825.00 a house. Phone
304·676 - 2764 or 576 ·
21B4.

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heatere. Swain Furniture, 446· 3169 , .3rd. &amp;
Oliva St .. Gallipolis, Oh.

7 p.m. each evening. C.
William Groves- Evangelist.
Nur1ery provided.

No hunting or treapaaaing on · Wanted to buy Uaad mobile
Violet Smith Property at home• &amp;: truck 011mper. Call
Aoodavllle. Oh.

614·446-0176.

The board of Tru1teea of the

Wanted

Ohio Volley Chrlotlon AI·

poundage. Coll448-1437.

aembly would like to uy that
all unauthorized penons
that are found on the camp
property at Darwin will be
proaecuted.

to

buy tobacco

BEDS-IRON. BRASS. old

21

, V. C. YOUNG Ill

I

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Calf: 949-22€4
or

11·26-Tfc

949-309l!J.. tO·IIc

USED
APPLIANCES

MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL

Washers, Dryers
Raf18$, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners

$3()0° ATON

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

742-2362

PH. 992-2280

Route

2·1l·llt

4,

Pomeroy ·-·
9· l~· ffl :

L-------------~~·

·~ortc

Guaram.d''

LISHING CO . recommends
that you do· buaineu with
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investigated the offering .
22 Money to Loan

HOME LOANS Low fixed
rate. Lelider Mortgage, 77 E.
State, Athens, Ohio . 1-614-

R. !. HOME

IMPROVEMENTS
iro-.Ohlo
PH. 111·8711

WANTED: Glnolng &amp; Yellow

October 1 Bth. 11 Hartford

trapping oupplioo. Hlp boot1

United Methodiat Church.

6. w1der1. George Buckley

7:00, Front Stroot. 304·
882·236451or Information.

864-4871 . Monday-Friday
1·9 p.m. Sat. llr Sun. 1-9

Self aupporting no duea .

p.m.

Giveaway

1

Cigarette packs. Call 814-

IIIICIIIC IILIMI CLwll
.---lOlAI::----.

I

ss2-2o3e

I

AP~ont Colt llrtnp
HEATING • PlUMBING
Pro11111 Cou1110111 Soivlct
232 l. 2nd .
Po•aror. o.
IIIII's tile tlleo to aot rour lumlctllldr lor cold - · · 1011
Dl-1101 .., - ,.,_ pill ..... llelllll Oct. 15. ..15

HO-Iot.

••

11

Thera has never been a
better time to sell AVON .
Coli 448·3368.
Outleo Include typing

&amp;

Galllpolio Dolly Trlbuno. 826
Third Ave.. Galllpollo, Oh
46,831.

Wanted: Someone to cut
down tree for firewood . Alao
buving ~11eball cerd1. Call
446·1 158.

Want baby•ltter to ah in my
home for 2 children. Refer·

lang h1ir ldnen1. 1 male.

oncao requ!rod. 1114-992·
8539 onytlma.

-block. 2 lomalo. 814·99~7582.

WANTED•Peoplo In Gollla,

Pan collie, pon ohophord
pu...,Y. 7 montho old. 814992-5311.

~lij
31

Homes for Sale

J1ck1on or M•lga County
willing to ponlalpote In i
foater home type program
for aduha With emotk»n1l
prolllomo. Aolmbui'IOmonl
•240-U30 por month. For

more lnform1don, e~ll or
write. Becky Canter, Wood·
land C.ntert, Inc., 412

614-245-5281
Mlddiepon, remodolad. five

rooma and bath, gas furnance, cozy fireplace, good
neighborhood . Price ra·
duced. Coll614·992·11941 .

10% interst owner finenc·

lng, new 2'h otory, 1750

eq.ft. llv. 1pace, 1112 baths.
Coli 304-896-3071 ,

By owner houM with 2 acral
mor• or lea1. been remo·
doled. orchord. 87 ft. well.
t22.000.
90113.

Call 814 · 388·

8 rooms • beth, own water.
l•rge g1rchn IPOt, riverview
In Crown City. Coli 614258-120B or 614- 266 ·
19118 .
2 or 3 bclr, 2 otory older
home with prtv1te entrance
opt. 1117 Fourth Ava.. Galli·
polio. Call 448· 7277 or
448-4348.

e

rm hou• 1 'l.t 1cra lot,
good outbulldinga. Will con ~
alder eelllng on lend con·

8 booutllul klttono. Mother lo
holf Hlmoleyon, hall olo"'""· 814·912-5700.

VInton Plko, Oolllpolla. OH.
41831, 814·912-2181 '

3 beby ' k-no. 814-9492779.

NEEO bebyoittar to coma to
homo. If lnt-11ad coli
304-875-8805.

Looatecl In 8yracuoe-Neor
ochool • owlmmlng pool. 3

WANTED: I glrlo to -rk. to
repiiCI a who don't. Call
304·8711-1429. 5·9 houro.

third ocro lot. U4,800. or
will rent lor t276 mo.
304-865-3934.

Lady ta Hilt! In and care for
Invalid. cooking ond houook-lng required. lor lnfor·
motion phono 304•8711·
1138.

3 bedroom ranch etyle

'

1tet . Norvo ralrlgarotor.
F - tom oat. 114·742·
2328.
To good home. thrao

ou•

eeven wHk puppl•. well

boollon In by two omoll
boy a. Phono 304·8711·
3118.

12x11 .
24x12

1-'------ - - -··

Asaumabl~ 8V:z percent loan ·
Six room frame house, to be on this 20 acres. nice barn. -:
moved from property. Reas- (24x32). outbuilding eod:·
onable. Phone 304·676· workshop, cellar houae and ·
4616 .
a 3 bedroom, 2 bath1. ·
woodburner in living room.
For sale by owner in Hillview Drilled well . Cell 304-676·
1ub div. Greer Rd. 114 mi. off 3030 or 676·3431 . Mliy :
Rt. 2. Mobile home with add consider trade.
;
rooma. 3 b.r .. living room
12x24, kitchen 12x12, d.r.
~5 Lots

utility r. 12x12.
outbuilding , 1·

&amp;

Acreage

24x10 outbuilding, fruit
house 1 0}C1 0 on three large 36 acrea at Rodney on W. T:·
Iota. Good water. Elec stove, Watson Rd . Owner financ- ·
trig. air cond . dryer. 304· ing available. Ca\1446-8221 ·
773· 62B2.
attar 6 weekd~ya.

' le Homes
Mobl
for Sale

lloct. Col 814·379·2550.

bedroom sttu1ted on

one~

NEW AND USEO MOBILE
HOMES . KESSEL'S QUALlTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
AT 35. PHONE 446-7274.

grouftd

pOol

18x32.

.....ooo. 1114·992·6B58.

sewer and water. Phone ·

(3041 882-3196.

I'~~i~i~ii~~i:
41
Houses for Rent

1-----------:
4 bdr. hou1e 6 acres of land·
on Rt . 160 In Vinton. Central .
· $360 mo .. sec. dep. &amp;:
11r.
ref. Call 446-3175 .

1----------

1 or 2 adults. 16 minute1
from Gallipolis. Call 614·
14x79 2 bdr . unfrun .. mo- 256-1198 .
bile home, carpeting, ap· 1---------..:....·
pliances. central air &amp; heat, Nice 3 bdr. home $226 mo.;:
$11,000. Call 614-266· preferably adults. Located 4~
mi. North of Holzer on Rt.
160. Coll446-7322 .

1972 12x60· mobile home; Nice 2 bec:lr. cottage, gas
great ahape, furn .. waaher, heating, adulta only, no pett. ·
dryer. dlthwasher, fully car· deposit and reference• ,....
poled. Call 614-367-7176. qu.irad, clty-1936 Chath(Jl'(
Ave. Call 446-1680.

·•

Windaor 14x70 with ex·
pan do, 3 bdr., 2 bath, priced Ho1.1se for rent in Cheahire, 3
at approx. payoff. Rodnev. bdr., 2 car garage. $200 per
Oh . 304 - 675 - 1726 lor mo . $100 dep. Call 614:-.
information .
367-7B98.
•'

1970 Vlndale expando , 3 bedroom in the countr:y ~
12x63. 2 bdr .• central air, Large yard. partially fanctl'd t"
total electric, unfurnished, Deposit and reference&amp;

$9,000 .
9222.

Call

51 4 -2 46 ·

quirod. 614-992-7201 ,

i•.::
•

8235 . month. 3 bedroom.
2 bdr. mobile home. Set up Fullv carpeted. gardener fur·
on lot in mobile home park . nishad. Stove end rafrig..
For mora info. Call 446· 814-992-2816 from 9 to 6
or 614-992·2362 from 6tq
7p .m .
.

1966 Pontiac Chief trailer,
1 Ox 50, good con d., 82,600 . 3 bedroom houee. furnilhacf.
Cal1446-7513 .
or unfurniahed. E11tern•
School Dlatrict. free w1ter.
4 mobile homes. 1 o· and 12' 614 -992-3646 altar 6 ~·"!·
ft . wide . 2 bedroom furnished . Low priced . 2 bedroom home in Lang~­
Brown's Trailer Park. 614· ville area . Deposit and refar·
992·3324 .
once required . 814- 742·
2641 .
14•70 Skyline. •16,000 . 2 1--- - -- - - - - '
bedroom luxury model. cir· Nice 3 bedroom home. :3:
cular kitchen, dining room t:,aths. 2 fireplaces. heat"
with bow window. bath with pump. large kitchen, garagi
garden tub , aepareta &amp; patio . 8325. pe·r
ahower. carpet, waaher, month .882 -2406, 882..·
dryer, 1tove, frlge, covered 2447 or 676-5540.
..
patio. central 1lr. under·
pinned utility building. Nice 3 or 4 br. new carpet and
lot. 614-992·3063.
paint, garden apace, 281 &amp;:.
'
Madison Ave. Pt. Pl. Le11e,.
1981 3 bedroom 14•70 $250 per mo . security dep:
Shu~z Mobile Homo. 1 'h -osit and ref. 304-863-5467.
batha with front porch
, 2•55 . 114,000. 614·247 · Three bedrooma. two batht:
2884.
livlngroom , hmilyrooni,
double garage. 31 00 Parriah
5.6 acrea. Sacrificed price Ava ., $360.00 month';
$12,000. 3 bedroom trailer, Phone 304-468-1078 .
1 ~ b1th, pasture. fenced ,
pond. garden . 814· 742 · 116 PARK drive. 9 room1, 2. .
2384.
bathl. patio. 1 Bx20 build·
ing . excellent condition,
1979 mobile home 14x60 $326. month. Phone 304~
unfurn . 1h acre lot, chain link 676-2053.
!once In Ohio. 813', 600.
304-876 -1297.
TWO year old. 3 bedroom
home, 2 batha. 2 car garage,
1976 1 4x70 trailer, 3 bed· hoot pump, 304-676-66411.
room, 2 blltha, large kitchen ,
.10.000. 304·773-5023.
TWO or three bedroonl
houaa, 2 bedroom apart:
1981 Schu~z. both &amp; 'A, ment . Both excellent condl•''
e:~~~tra nice. with central elf. lion, good neighborhood:
304-875-5375 .
304-675-19112.
:

1----------·

1981 14x70. Shu~rllmlted Two bed,oom furniahact,
mobile home, microwave, new livingroom carpet, nevV
dlahwaaher, central air. un • water heater. underpinned,
d•rpennlng, three b•d· winterized, porch and 1wn L.
room•. 1 'h b1th1. excellent ing . 200 gal . propene~­
condition, •16 ,600. Coil Ready to move in, et Middl.304-67~ · 6049 ,altar

homo, corpotecl, lull olza
beaomont. 1 oar garage. In

(Twin Cedar Addition) City-

TA 1· STATE M 0 B 1 LE
HOMES . USED · CARS ,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CAll
446-7572 .

2491.

4 bdr. ranch home, large LR,
full baHmant, with garage.
wood burner Included, citv
achooll. 2 mllel from town .
Or will trade for anything of
value. 3 bedroom houae
with fireplace. central air. 2
full batha, in city limits .
Immediate poaaession. Call

Help Wanted

riglatration. Sand reaume to
Box· 707 in care of The

Pupplao . 27to choooo from.
814-898-1375 . .ytlmo_

,umber Iori
You Wa11f Him Good''

=

4 ktnena. 2 black and 2 multi
colored. All female. · 3-8

614-992·

'cash for Spinet or Grand
piano'. (Even damaged condition}.

_c:_•_n_4_4_e_._o2_7_8_._ _ __

Wanted Madlc1l Aaaiatant

to good home. . 814·9BII·
3891 .

"If Y'ou Want o

~

3 klttono. Call after 3:30,
448· 1069.

Pupplea. Half blue tick. Free

MASON, W.VA.
C. L. KITCHEN

====

245·9161 .
Couch 9 chair. Call 1114·
246-6819 .

lower

PIANO TUNING· LANE DA·
NIELS. 742·2951 .·Also

Root. Alao new ahipment of

I

Very playful.
3283.

PH. 1-304-773-5634

AIR-CONDITIONERS

kett Berber Shop. 2nd. Avo.
Middleport, oh. 814-992·
3478_

Overeater1 anonymoua.
new chapter n1ning Tuea .•

4

PIANO TUNING

prices-regular tuning•·
dlacounta to Senior Citizens.
Churchaa 8t achoola. Ward's
Keyboard, 304·875-3824 .

Buying dailv gold, silver
coins; rings. jewelry. sterling
ware, old coine, large currencv. Top prices. Ed. Bur-

~~=::;;:======
33
Farms for Sele

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

8035. alter 7PM 614 · 256·
1672 .

Services

A . Manln 614-992·8370.

The Oab· lt Shop h11 moved
to a new location, 1317
Ohio St., Point P!a1unt.
Call or coma in for new

Blond fem1le long h•lred
dog. epprox. 21h yMrs old .

'PERSONALIZED POOLS"

RESIOEIITIAL • COMMERCIAL

NOTICE Revival Mt. Tabor
Church, all thia week by The
Rev. Joe Gwinn.

wooko old. 1·5 - k old.
814-986-4382.

KITCH EN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION

..,,.. Eltlmltel''

, No Hunting and tre1pa11ing
on Edael Hughel Farm. Point
Pleeaant.

House and 3 Iota on West•l

Point Ad. in Hartford. WVfor
$11.000. 304-882·2831.

32

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·

Oh . Dr .9 92·7760.

w'i.nted to buy. New, Ulld.
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete hhoueaholdt. Alao complete Aucti·
oneering aervice. Call Oaby

USED MOBILE HOME . ·
Phone 304-676-2711.

2 Iota for sale in New Ha\!en.·'

Business
Opportuni1y

furniture. gold, allvar dol·
lara, wood ice boxes, stone 692-3061 .
jara, antiquee, etc., Com·
plete household•. Write:
M.D. Miller, Rt. 4. Pomeroy, , 23 Professional

NO hunting In the Delma•
Jaffriaa farm on locud:

576 -2711

mond Ridge. $23.000. Box
533 Gallipolis, Oh 46631 .

5546.

Bill Gene .Johnaon

1----------

~obile Home Moving, J.J· ·
censed and ln1urad, Free .
Eatimatea $100. per hookup minimum. Phone 304-:

Must aell. make offer . 3 bdr. ·
in Henderson, new carpets.
city water 8t sewer. Natural
gas furnance, laat houae on
Henderson St. Toward Rad·

Two year old house. 3 lot for sale 4 mi. from town '
bedrooms, 2 baths. garage. on St . Rt. 141 . Call after :
heat pump . Phone 304-675- 5PM . 446-B1 97.

Jim Mink Chav.·Oldo Inc .

Clllleo. 304·676· 7720.

I

RIVER VIEW - 3 houses wilh
this. One 2 bedroomer on 124
abcwe town. •·nice one illlhe

pi buys.

1:1 . L. Writesel
ROOFING

IO·l ·lii'ICl.

VInyl Siding &amp;
Rooftng
SALE
DEAl DIRECT &amp;
SAVE 30% OIIIORE
On Sidlna 1nd RoollntGuner au Oolnspouta

Ui!!* pert of Purnemy, 100

Swing set, clothea, baae CB,
popsicte 1tick lampa, knick Patio Sale. 404 L.aaley St.,
knacka, just out of Ever- Pomerov. Mon . &amp; Tuea.
Edna Triplett&amp;: Jane Brown.
green . Watch for signa.

Phone 446·2921 .

clean used cara.
446-3672

RUTlAND - 5 to pick from.
Slatting at $19,500to $32,500.

MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 to 12 and I to 5
SATURDAY 8:30a.m. to 12 Noon

· br;;kes . tinted glass. am-tm radio, wsw radial tires, whaol

,

NEW LISTING-I.&amp; 2 tami~
home next to telephone
building and Crow's~Hot water
heating paneled down, nice
woodwork and lg. rooms.
Ask1ng $38;000.

Yard Sole Oct. 13, 14. &amp; 15 . St. Ad. 338 · . Rain cancolo.

SANDY AND BEAVER ln-

Wanted To Buy

-----We pay caah for late model

Gun shoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday etartlng 1
p.m . Factory choked guns
only.
Nazarene church revival at

.PHONE Jill CLIFFORD
NEW LISTING - Nice loo~ng
3 bedroomer wnh view of river.
Cook and bake units, I\\ baths,
hoi waler heat $4()s_

•

SERVICEMAN ON DUTY

'-"'"'"' V-8 eng., fact . air .:dnd:, auto. trans., p.s:. p. diS(

'

NEW LISTING - Business
bldli Business section of
Middleport.

S. 7f

slatlon wagon,
eng., fact. air cQnd., auto _ trans.
p.
disc brakes, bodyslde mldgs, llnled glass, am-fm radio,

.

NEW LISTING - Trailer kt
near Sea~ for $1,500.

.

i

needs; furnaces re-•
pair service
and in•

992-5682
992 7121

8

I,
KEN'S
' APPLIANCE ' Auction avery Tuesday
night. Pt. Pleaoant, WVo.
SERVICE
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth

For ell your wiring

Al•o Transmission

Roule I
Lon&amp; Bo«om, OH . 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

CONTRACTIN~

H 614 )·992·3325

Fri.. Sat .. Sun . Something
for everyone. Antiquea, fur· ·
niture, clothaa. dishe1, mlac.
600ft. above Antiquity aign,

&amp; Vicinity

LOST: Ferrett black, brown,
yellow in color, wtth blue
harneaa. 1813 Jeffer1on

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

J&amp;F

Phone

S13.95

'

CHESTER

INSTALLED
WITH PAD

.. ....'Gaiiipoii·s.........

Reward. 304-876-7172.

4-U-tfc

r----~-·. •

216 [ . 2nd St.

304-675·

' ..._

N~·'-'~~'P'"I ""'~/-"t~"'''""-

-·-----·-··- ------- - ·- ~ -··- -· -

board . 814-992· 6022.

Ridge.

CARPET

,

Avo. 304· 676-7730.

9·15·1 mo. pd.

STARTING AT

I

Bert of care for Invalid• or
elderly who need room and

loat reglatered miniature
Daahund, Corn1tock area.
Southalde. An1wer1 Red.

742-2328

"'·-614'4f3·~! 9.f

I
mo. pd.

8040 or 814· 949·2129 .

13

Lost and Found

LOST Shonholrad male Ger.-

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

992 -2478

Tree trimming •nd removai.
Free estlm•tea. 614 -992·

Point Pleaoont,
8329 .

9

8 :30-6:00.

man Shephard, Doberman.
66lb1. enawerato HO. Black
collar with Callie Co. tag .
'VIcinity Red Fftch Farm
Jacklon Pike. Reward. Call

Around
•Dump Truck
Service

lnsulatd Dog Houses

LARGE or SMALL 'JOBS

GREG ROUSH
992· 7583 or 992·2282

'

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'

- Septic Systems

15 YEARS EXPERIENCE

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Lowest RaUls

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Trencher
Water
Sewer
Gas Lines

Rider nMdlld to commute
with to OU . Cell U8· 3737 .

Will do houoework. 83.00 an

Five cute kittena. liner box
trained. 304-895· 3802 or

Service

-

mo pd

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

- Dozers

8

· weeka old. pert lriah ..ner
: and pert. hound, 4 meJe. 4
female. Phone 304·875·

-P

1 '{ afd SaleS

Farm Equipment

Warehouse: 98S·3S0.9

1

304-1176- 1989.

SALES &amp; SERVICE '

·water Pipe
*Gas Pipe ·

Situation•
Wanted

COCK· A· POO. Irlondlywlth

.----- - -----.,

Rutland, Ohio
IF YQU have been looking tor a
spac~us home with 3 bedrooms, large fami~ room, nice
kilrhen, in lhe country air, this
~ il large 114 acre lo~ 2
garages, woodburner and pool
tabla $53.000.

'

4

'

" ·'"" 1'

NEAT ANO NICE - Descnbe
this one floor plan home. House
has a lull ·basement with utility
room and a 12&lt;20 storage
building a~o. There is plenty of
gardJ!!l space on this 2 acres.

The Daily Senline

Middleport, Ohio

children , female. bleck,
~========:T,;::========::::r.=========:;'lr;:::========::;rl
'
Five kittena calico, black.
RADIATOR
D&amp;J
G&amp;W Plastics
BOGGS

$25,000.
HARRISONVILLE- Approx. 6
acres ot fenced cleared grouoo
and a cute 2 bedroom with an
equipped knchen. Several
building; tor chickens, co~
elc., a pond and a rng garden
area $26,900.

Pomeroy

5 p.m .

1971 14•70 TRAILER. 3
bedroom. 2 betho. Iorge
kltchon, 110,000 . 304·
773-11023 .

pon, 15,000.00. 304-882•
2486 ..
Two yoor old, thrM bedroom
homo, t - baths. gorog~
heat pump . 304·1175·51146:

•

�•

•D.

.

10-The Daily Sentinel

41

...

.

~

"'"""
• 54

They'll Do It Every Time

Houses for Rent

54

Misc. Mercl!andise

Friday, October 14, 1983
n, Ohio
Misc. Merchandise

three bedroom

Troyblll Tllloro Soloo &amp; Sor·

home, electric heit,
$276.00 month pluo dep·
Olit. 304-87!-! .5 4!.

vice . Swlahert Implement,

St. Rl. 7, North. Galllpolio.
814-448-0476.

good engine, transmission.
Marbell1 venlty alnk, fiber·
glass tub 1urround. Phone

Two bedroom unfurnished
houoe. f200 .00 o month.
deposit required. Jerricho
Rood . 304-676· 7308.

Firewood 135 pickup load
delivered . S25ifpickedupat

or

l

14 ft . all electric, 3 bed·
rooms, 11h baths, setting on

42

[.LlD

4 lg. picture windows. with

r;,..,~
~

,

-'/IIJ.

1967 GMC 1 Y2 ton stake
bed truck, 6 ely., 2 spd . 1
Homelite XL 12 chain saw.

-··

0608 .

·'

'

E"tra nice, close to restaurants &amp; shopping, garage &amp;.
water furnished , adults &amp; no
pets. Ref . &amp; sec . deposit.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Coll .446-2491 .

51 Household .Goods
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

Apt . 1 bedroom. Trailers 2
bedrooms. beautiful river·
view in kaneuga . Foster's
Trailer Park, 446-1602 .

TWIN

RIVERS TOWER .

Apartment&amp; now aVail¥151~ to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
inCome of less then
$12,300. Renting for 30.
percent of adjusted income·

2

bdr . mobile home all
electric, furnished , 2 Y2 miles
out Rt. - 688. $176 mo.
Security dep . &amp; ref. Call

. Phon a 304-676· 6679.

446 -2602 .

TWO bedroom apartment in
Mason , adults only. no pets.

6 room mobile home . 614·
949 -2 424 .

304-676·1462 .

Gall. Furry. 304-675-1371
or 676-3812.

•

FURNISHED efflclancy

3 bedroom fur.nished or
unfurnished . Camp ·Conley.

apartment. utilities paid,
deposit required . 304· 896·

or · 675·

3450.
2

TWO bedr«?,om mobile
home , un~u-niished.
S200 .00, pluls utilitieS" and
deposit. No pets . 304· 675·

bedroom apt . at Gall.

Ferry. 304•676-2648 .
Small furnished apartrmant
in Point Pleasant. 304·675-

2464

1365 .
Two bedroom apartment,
yard and basement in Point
Pleasant. Phone 614-446·
3703 anytime.

Apartment
' for Rent

F~rnished apt . SHi6 . Water

paid. 2 bdr.. 131 y, 4th.
Gallipolis. 446-4416 after 7
p.m .

45

Furnished Rooms

1- - - - - - -- - -

2bdr., 2 b8th, 11 Court St.
Aef . &amp; dep . $326 mo. Call

446 -4926 .
Small furn. house 1 or 2
adults only, no pets . Call

446 -0338 .
For lease modern, unturn .• 2
bdr. apt. Overlooking city
park . lncluctes range &amp; re·
trig. S175 mo. Call 4461819 or evenings 446 ·

2326.
Furnished 3 rooms, with
private bath . Reference pre'.

ferred . Call 446·2216 .
Jackson Estate Apartments
636 Jackson Pike (Equill
Housing Opportunity) has
oneil bedroom apartments
rent starting at S15 7 and
two bedroom rent starting at

$193. $200 dBpooit. Cal
446-2746 or leave message
on answering service .
Furnished upstairs apt.. 3
rooms &amp; bath, clean. adults
only. no pets. ref. req .
Uti lities paid . Call 446·

1519.
Comp,etely furnished upstairs, one bedr. apartment,
newly decorated, adults,
references . Centrall-Y located .' $200 mo. plus dep.

446·

Apt. 1 bedroom trailera 2
bedroOm, overlooking Ohio
River . Kanauga , Fosters
Trailer Park , 446 -1 602 .
Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
City, Ohio . Call 614- 256·

6620 .
Furnished apt , 2 bdr, 1136
2nd .. Ave .. Ga.ltipolis . S1~6
wat er paid . Call 446 -4416
after 7 p.m .
(Mercerville) new 1 bdr.
S 175 per mo. Call 4461241 , Mon .- fri .. 8 -5 .
2 bdr . kitchen,· furnished. 1
bdr ,, kitchen . furnished . AOne Real Estates, Carol
Veager, Realtor. Call 304·

or 304- 675·

Furni~hed

apt . $2 bdr .. 196,
water paid . 1136 Second
AVe., Gallipolis . 446 -4416
after 7 p.m .
1 bed room Apt. 8196 . mo,
including utilities . Equal
houslilg opportunity . Con·
tact -Village Manor Apts.

614-892·7787.
3 &amp; 4 room furnished apu.
614-992· 5434. 614-9925914 or 304-882·2566 . •..

Sof8. chair. rocker. otto·
man, 3 tables. (extra heavy
by frontier), $685. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, 8275.
Sofas and chairs priced from

$286 . lo S896 . Tobias. S45
and up to S126. Hide -abeds,$440 . and up to
&amp;625 .• Recliners, $175. to
1350., Lamps from $28. to
$76.6 pc, dinenes from

$99 .. IO 436. 7 pc . $189

Unfurnished, 1 bedroom, all
utilitiu paid except electric .

Trailer on Corner Lot in
Middleport . 12x90 with ex·
panda . 814 -992· 2319 or

675 -,6104
7386.

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.

Coli 446-0766 .

and up. Wood table with six
chairs 1425 to 874-6 . Deak
S110 up to 1226 . Hutches,
. 1550. and up. maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250 . and

up to 8396.

Ave .• Gallipolis, 446- 1699.

46

large wood burning add-on
furnace-brand new- heats
hot water-automatic
controls-firebrick lined.

Space for Rent

Private trailer lot located 1 Y2
miLes from City limits on Rt .

588 . Coli 448-3870.

Office ipace for rant. Call
446-0696, reasonable.
1 acre trailer lot on Bidweii-

Rodpay Rd . $50 month . Call
675 -7746 or 614-246·
6344 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33 , North o1
Pomeroy. Large tots . Call

992-7479 ,
Trailer space in Middleport .
All utilities available. 614-

or

Spin washers. gas &amp; electric
dryars, auto washers, gas &amp;
electric ranges, refrigerators, TV sets.

$590. Coli 614-256-1216.
Washer &amp; drjer. axe . cond.

Furnished office for rent.
Close to city building and
court house, Call 4'46-0866
days, $1 26 . mo . ·

992·2319
2101 ..

614-992 ·

Mobile home Iota for rent,
water and sewer furnished .
1 small child accepted.

304·676· 1076 .

Call614-367-7141 ,
Harvest gold ref . $96.
Coldsp'ot white ref . $96,
coppertone ref. 895, Whirlpool washer $126, Kenmore
dryer $65. Kenmore dryer

875 , 40' elec. rsnga $96.
30' alec. white range $96.
40' avacado green Kelvina tor range 896. 6 dr. chest of
drawen unfinished S46 , 3
dr. chest of drawers unfinished 131 .92, 6 dr. finished
oak chest $65, sm . desk
unfinished $38.22, lg. deak
unfinsihed $60 . Skaggs Appliances Upper River Ad.
Two 30 " solid oak. square
end tables. amber swag
light. 36" three drawer
p8inted solid wood chest.

Call 446-3768 .
WHITE bunk bed bedroom
suite, $150 . Playpen, $10.

$46.

304-676·

For lease

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE
82 Olive St .• Gallipolis. 8

For lease with option to buy.
Nice 3 bdr . brick home, 1 Vz
bath. large family room,
w -flreplace. central air. ell
carpeted. swimming pool, 1
acre lot, overlooking Ohio
River. Call 446-2573 or

446· 1171 .
For lease Modern office
tuite eapeclally good tor
inaurance, real estate or
accounting. 1300 sq . ft .
Four rooms plus lge. clerical
office, kitchenette and stor~
age room. Nat . gas, central
air, carpet. Rent very reasonable for this quality office.
Corner Third &amp; Olive. Galli-

Oh . Ph . 614-448-

3994. Evans Enterprises.
9 -6, Mon. thru Fri.

I~
51

piece wood living room suite
with 6 inch flat arms $399.
bunk beds complete with
bunkies 8199, 2 piece an·
tron livingroom suites $199,
antron recliners $99, other
re.c liners $80. maple dinette
seta 8179. lova saats $70,
hide-a-b.ed 8250 , box
springs &amp; mattress twin or
full $100 set regular-firm
$120, maple dinette chairs
$36, wash stands S34,
maple rockers $59, 7 piece
chrome dlnene set *149. 5
piece dinette set $89. used
bedroom tuit.a t. refirgeraton. ranges. chest. dressers,
wringer washers. TV's.
dryeres, &amp; shOal. Ca114463169 .

GO

OD USED APPLIANCES

·washers. dryers, refrigera-

toro, rangoo. Skoggs Appllancea. Uppar River Rd..
be1ide
Stone Crest Motel.
446-7398.

6908 .

458-1986 .

1 bedroom Apt. in Point

Four black and white adjustable ber stools, $10.00
each . Phone 304- 675-

KnauH Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12"-22" stocked
in yard . ~EAP vender,
prompt deltvary. 614-256-

rent . 614-992-

Pleaaant. W .VA . 614·992·
5868 .
Unfurnished Apt'l, with
stove and refrlg. Middlepon.
Pomeroy
New Haven.
Depotit tnd referencea re-

a.

1996.
New wood burning atovet,

1400.00 each. One good
used

electric

range,

quired . 814-992-761 1 .

.100.00. 304-876-1678.

Furniahed upltalrs apt. car·
peted &amp; modern. t200. P"
month p!ua utllitlee. dep.

One Fronklln wood burning
atove. ·Phone 304-8766029.

requlrod. 814-446-178811·
6 p.m,

.f\partffienu . .{0 ~6_76'·

6648.

'

,.

APARTMENTS. mobllt
hom... houMI. Pt. P._11nt

· ond Golllpollo. 81 4-441. 8221 .
.

•

9638 .
Moving Sale Antique &amp;
modern furniture , clocks.
household, pitcher &amp; bowl.
garden tools, misc . Call

614·.256-1210.
1 King Coal stove, 2 Franklin
stoves. 1 ford pickup truck.

Call 446·2194.
Humid ifier·dahumidifiar,
oak desk and chair, 4 oak dr
chair~. 2 mahogoney end
tables. 1 mahogoney accessional table, 3 tabla lamps, 1
antique Qak round table, 1
mattress and box springs .
and odds &amp; ends. Call

446-3786 .

Lt:l~·~~~~~~"'..'.: _,_,De-humidifier,

1yoes':a'~~ c~a.,, 4 oak dinning
room
·
2 mahogany
ahd·tebles, one occ:aalonal

toblo. 3 ond tobloo, one
antique ooltround llblt, one
full motlrou ond oprlngo.
oddo ond endo. Phono 114·
448-3788.

Misc. Merchandise

~246 .
Ume~tone;

Sand, Gr1vel.
Delivered In M11on. Meigs.

Golllo or pick up ot Rlchorda
llo Son . .C•II 446-7786.
Walnut lumber 8 and 1 0 ft.
long. Call 304-458·1997.

Building materials
block. brick. sewer pipes.
windows . lintels. etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

0 . Call614-246-5121 .

56

446-3768.

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Bording all breeds. Selling

Happy

Chevy Chevelle super sport
wheel covers, 14". Cell

Jack

Dog

Food.

Coli 446· 7001.

Marcu·m Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing. 30 years exper~ce.
-.peciellzlng In buih up roof.

~o- r&lt;f

•

New Oak furniture. tables.
chairs, cupboards. pie safe,
dry sinks. Paul COnkels
Antiques, Tuppers Plains.
large 46 gallon fish aqu•rium, black wrought iron
stand and trim. All accessories . First $80. takes all.

614-992-3789.
Like new electric furnace.
68.000 BTU used only 2

8250 . 614-992·

Call 614· 992-6B79 altar 4
p.m.
For sale-40.000 BTU Warm
Morning heater with blower.
2 solid oak doors with
hardware. 614-992·3079 ; ·
King heater, ne.w firebrick
and grating, wood burner

Hondo Guitar. ExCellent
condition. Sunburet color·
ing.- New steel strings. Includes case and aoceasories.

1976 Plymouth Ouster .

614-986· 3920.

Only ·f395 . 614·742-2176.

58

1973 VW stationwagon,
Model 412. Good cond.

Fruit
Vegetables

&amp;

uoo.

German Ridge Apples treeripened. elder. Call 448-

1966

8698 or 614-3711-2303.

2B9 automatic. Needs res-

'

Registered Appaloosa stallion, "Go-Man-Go" blood·
line. excellent conforma ·
tion . Cell after 5 : 00 ,

304-675-5028.

3 yr. old English Sheep Dog
puppies. Wormed &amp; shots.
$200. Coli 446-7905.
wks. old.
9439 .

676-1390.

i Ll 11ipph

·· ~~

Farm Equipment

,John Deere 4 row c~rn
planter. Call 448-0198.

bu. apreadar. Call614-682·
3931 .

firewood ,

304·676-2757 after 4 p.m .
CAMOUFLAGED now army
clothing. surplus rental clo thing, denim pants. 14· oz.
$10 .. jackets, Sam Somerville's, 7 milesaast Ravenswood, open fridll)y, Satur-

5 :00 ·8:00p.m. Monday

ou ·

Thursday)
Rollawav bed whh mattress.

Coli 304-882-31B8.
14K White gold wedding
set. S250 .00. Homestead
coal and wood burner.
1200.00. Alto Sax and
music stand, $260 .00. Call
304·676-7690.
-

·SEASONED oak firewood ,
304- 676-2757 after 4 :00
p.m .

1------ - - - -

Can be seen 91 Burdette

Record player with AM-FM
radio. eight track player.
exercise b'cycle. 304·8766933 before 2:00 or after

11 :oo:
steering, AM-FM. eight
track, new tires. low miles,
good condition. 304-675-

218-1218.

e

1---------Uoed Ditch wkch tronohor
model 2300. 1·814·8947842.

Motorola. Qua~:ar.

'

1 5A'Il HER RUNNING
GOMEWtEFIE~

...

end

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, Rump

romovol. Call675-1331 .

•
'

RINGLE'S SERVICE expe-

•

rienced roofing, Including
hot tar application. carpenter, electrician, mason. Call

BOV, DO I FEEL LOUSY
MUST BE COMIN' DOWN
WITH SOMETHIN' ...

304-896·3802.

IF IT WASN 'T SUCH A
PSR.FECT DI&gt;.Y FOR
FISHIN' ...

E llo R Troe Service. fully
insured,•' free estimates.

,,
'

after 6.

•

.."
-·.'''

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut·

lor. !Day 614·692·4088.1
lnighl 814-698-8205.1

.

•

''

Roofing and Carpentry
work, general repairs, call
Anthony Williamson. 814-

367-0194.
GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER. Water removal.
furniture cleaning,· free uti-

mateo. 614-446-2107.

82

. ''

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

"

~··
' CAR'fER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

,_

......

'1&gt; •. . ·-- ·lo··~···

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phono 446-3888 or 4484477

..

Registered male blue tick.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-

614-985-3640 .

ING.

.

B:PM, Sun 2 :00·8:00. Now

WD

----

Allis-Cholmen.

A-1

shape with plows and corn

plows . 81,600. 614-742·
3010.
New Idea 306 2 row corn

picker. 316 12 roll huoklng
bin mounted on Forman M

1 - - - - - - - - --

1 979 Chevy Luv 4x;4 air
cond., AM-FM, new tires,

good cond. Call 446·4292.
For sale·1976 International
flet bed dump truck. Series

1700. Clo11od u
304-773-6238.

2 ton.

1--:-::-::--:--------

lboby).

Albino Cockatiels

$69 .95. Cinnamon Cocke·

tiel F9 .95 .
Bird ,for sale (gr&amp;y head}
Senegal parrot. 304·675·

2535 .
FOR SALE or Trade AKC
Registered Doberman pupa.
$75.00 or something of
equal value. 304·8B2-

2230.
AKC registered Dachshund

pups, 304-896-3968.
AKC Regls tered Bassett
hound puppies. five weeks
old. wormed. ready to go
next weak. 304-676-6214.

57

Musical
Instruments

Story &amp; Clark console piano,
exc. cond. Call 448-8271
after 8PM .
Piano for sale, good cond.
Call 446-7636.

63 •

livestock

v.

ton, long bed. 30,000 milea,

1976 F.ord Club wagon. 12
passenger window van.

304-676 ·

1982 Honda CB6&amp;0. Cruis·
ing pegs A adju1table back

Four 10w pigs. all diHet"flnt

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

hay for
2991.

solo.

rest. 614-867·3644.

· sizes. Phone 304-675-6918 1'74
.,.
or 304-896-3059 ofter 7
PM .
1974 Hondo Choppor 30 in.
ovar front end. CB 760 F.
Call 814-949-2737.

1----------

1----

71

Autos for Sale

1976 Kawoookl 260. ow
Nttery, new pointt &amp; plugs.
Excellent condition. 8360.

2282.
1976 Electra 226 loaded,

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1978 block Cougor XR 7.

1871 EVENRUDE boat.
good condition. t • -,;-,;-,;·
304-773-11023.

loaded.

Call

e.

Bau bolt. 193.8 F!&gt;rd . 3048711-7240.
12 FT aluminum 1eml •V

- t . 7'11 HP molor. " troller, elootrlc lroRing motor. •710.00. 304-773!324.

79 M.otora Home•
llo C1mpers

Bur

Footory Dlreot. Ughlwetghl. fUMir.....
mp
13' and 18'· trallero •
-1l'llth-.c.IIMW
tol 1·ti00-MI-4112
---UNandiAVEI

a...

---

Evening television
FRIDAY

614-446-1142 between
7:00AM &amp; 5:00PM.
Good-1 'exc•v8ttng. belamenta. footert. driveweyi.
septic tanks, landscaping.

Call onyllma 448·4637,
Jamas L. Davi1on, Jr.
owner .

J.A .R. Construction Co .
Lines.

Footers.

Dralno. All klndaof Ditching.
Rutland. Oh. 614-7422903.
Meigs E111cavating . Bulldozer
&amp;. backhoe SMYice. Beaements, tooters, l1ndscaplng.
driveways. term pond1.

814-742·2407 or814-7422018.

EVENING ·

'

.

6:00

(l) 'Cil CD 0 CIJ llil II
(jJI Newo
(I) Hoobar·Bioob Highway

8

A baby bundle sent to ear1h
must decide if he wants to
be human or not.
(]) New Treasure Hunt ·
(I) Uttte House on the

Prairie

Cllllll Y .E.S. lpc.

e

Buck Rogers

8:30 I I &lt;II CD NBC News
I]) H80 Comedy: Sllcom
The typical aii·Amarican. family is parodied .
(]) Riflemen

CIJ II (jJI Aile News
II (I] llJ CBS Nowo
!]) Bualn••• Reoort

84
&amp;

Electrlc.a l
Refrigeration

Patquale Electric Co. all
ph•••• of electric work, all
work guaranteed. Aeriel

1ervk:e. Authorized Singer
Selet &amp; Service SharP,ttn
Scl110rs. Fabric Sho),.

Pomeroy. 992-22B4.
General ~iauling

JONES BOYIWATER SERVICE. Coli 814-387-7471
or 814-387·0!81.
Neld aomething hauled
away or aomethlng moved7

We'll do II. Call 448-311111
between 9 and 6.
Water hauling, Feat Service,

low rlleo. Coli 814-2!11·
1743.
Now Houllng 0 - Lump or
Stoller Coal. Minimum 4
ton. 814-387-7101.
JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Coli Jim Lanier. 304-876·
7397.

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
U PHOL.ITERY SHOP
1 1u

soc. "'"·· CleiHpc&gt;H..
4441-7133 or 4441-1113.

7:00 II ()) PM Magazine
(}) lnalde The NFL·

([) Allaa Smith and Jones

rn,spomCenter
(I] Corol Burnett
(() Entertainment Tonight
(f) Chertie'a Angels
g ([l Wheel of Fortune
(I] lllJ MocNaii/Lohrer
Nowahour·
&lt;IJ Newa

11 (It Peoplo'o Court

eJofforoon•
(I] Tic Toe Dough
7:30
(I] MOVIE: 'Becket'
(]) ESPN'a Inside Football
(I) Good News
(I] Ill (I) ~omlly Feud
(ll You Aakad For It
1JJ Entertainment
Tonight
One Day at a Time
I]) (!) Mr. Smith Mr.
8:00
Smith develops a new surgi·
cal procedure that saves a
man's life.
(])MOVIE: 'Five Days One
Sunvner'
..
(f]Supor(JJ NFLo.maoflhl Week
(]) MOVIE: 'Re1cua From
Clllllgon'o holand'
(I] •
(jJI Wortd 6orieo
Clome -3
11 (I] llJ Dukn of Hozurd
Luke'a little brother. be·
lieved dead, shows up at the
Duke farm. (60 min.)"
(I] ilD WNhl- WOikJ
Review Paul Duke is joined
by top washington joum~·
lata analyzing the week •
news.
MOVIE: 'The Gypey

a

e
e
a

-··

9:00 0 Ill m Manimal

([) 700·Ciub .Today·s pro·
gram features a woman who
was an abused child and in
turn an abusive parem.
0 (I]® Oallao
(I) em Dinner at Julia's
'The Salmon Show .' Julia
Chikl's guests are chef
Douglas Grech and wine expert Zelma Long , [Closed
Captioned]
9:30 ()) Charleston: Success

Story

m eono._. Tho
Coneheada. on a mllalon for
ill

the High Maater of Ramullk,
f.ce the poalibtHty of having
to live amant the Eenhllngs

lndeflnitoly.
(1)8Wlu fomlly - . (1] Auto -~~~~ '83: DIRT
Bchoofer
200. flam

.

.

International Edition
Ford Rowan hosts this look
at imponant trends and
news events in the U.S. as
they are repor.ted by foreign
journalists.
10:00 I I Ill (!) FIM' Lovo and
Honor Grace is injured when
she tries to seve a paratrooper'• life and Duke' a inability to read puts the entire
company in jeopardv. (60
min.)
(f) MOVIE' ' My Favorite
Year'
([I Betta Mldler: No Frilll
(I) Falcon Crest Baby
Joseph recovers, while
Chase's condition worsens.
(ID

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160

mm.l

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12:00 (f) MOVIE: 'The E111orclst'
Cil Album Flash: Pat
Banatar
(I) Buma &amp; Allan
(I) Night Trec:ks

Cll Nlghtllno

llD MOVIE: 'Tho Alpha
lncldtnt'
• Thlcke of the Night

(})

I

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MOVIE:

'Rich

Won
7:30 • CIJinaide Look •
Arnold is stunned on his first
day of junior high school
when he is shunned for not
measuring up to be Willis"s
brotherJCiosed Captioned)

(}) MO IE: ' Love Child'
(})MOVIE: 'Don't Cry. It' a
Only Thunder'
I]) MOVIE: 'A Walk In tho
Sun'
(I) NCAA Football: Texas
A&amp;M at Baylor

Cl) Star Search

Cll Ill W T.J. Hooker

®I MOVIE: 'The Compo·

Hookar' s link to an Eurasian
girl - leeds him to a· r~ng of
gun-running criminals in
Ch1natown. (60 min .)
{Closed Captioned]
D (I) CiDl Cutter to
Houston
CD Jacksonville and All

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{]J CNN Headline News

1:46 (JJ ESPN'o lntldo Football
2:00 I I
(})
NBC
News
· Overnight
. (]) Bac:helor Father

2:16

CD Nowo/Sign Off
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ThotJozz

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2:30

3:16
3':30
4:16
4:30
4:41

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chariot
5 Literary
musketeer

goats, etc.
2 Muslim
faith ·
3 Dominate
~ Nigerian
5 One kind

10 Army

reserve
(abbr. l
II Split
12 Muse
of history

13 Gridiron
number

of cat

6 To a 7 Command
8 'roo old

Yesterday's Answer

2311alian

to qualify
14 Jayhawk
9 Legislator
state I abbr. I 11 Gennan city
15 Beverage
15 Salt tree

16 Generation

18 Unconunon

17 The stylish
way
19 Garfield
isone

21 Prong
22 Clam

29 Redolence

30 Hansen's
disease

pastries

ZC Director

Fritz

sufferer

26 French

annuity
28 Gaggle's
members

35 -aller
(the worst)
. 36 Surprise!

,......,,...;-,......,..:...,.....,

l'l'"""'l'l"-rl"""T,.-

20 Salubrious
21 Lunch order
22 Twenty
21 Ship

25 Narrative
Z6 Bluster
27 Remnant

28 The "G"
inG.P.

:n Babylonian
deity
32 Siamese twin
33 Lode'syield
34 Tyke

36 l)rooping
37 Woman's
narpe
38 Habitat .

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ATP~ESE~T

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LONGFELLOW

One letter ·,simply stands for anoth~r. In this sample A ..
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letten,
apostrophes, the Jenath and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letter$ are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES

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1o0ter1 10
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geetod by t h e - -·

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ii.~~~Now.

(1) Alioo 8mllh ond Joneo

ACROSS
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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how t~ work It:

(Anawetl COITIOI I OW)

1:15 Cll Wortd Chlmplonohlp
8:30

by THOMAS JOSEPH

3L '"Nash cycle
CO From a

15UT NOT PI':ESENT.

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IWOAME9
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laorebr.rd

Where' a that walter? One
minute he's here and I he ·
next he's gone!

I I 1· J

(!) Ood HM: ttw ~n.wer
Cll UnderMO Worljl of
Jeoqu" Coutt•u
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preuntl a 1p-Aound Jr.
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Lonpi' from Dellaa, TX.
n :3o • w
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6lt).uw~ral

distance

6:00 I I (I] I I Cll &lt;Ill News
(I] MOVIE: 'Tope'
(I) MOVIE: 'Man on I

Till...._.

~News

I

10/1&amp;/83

Hill Show

10:30 lllJ Or. Who
11 :oo 11 rn rn morn® 111

~THATSCRAIIBLEOWOADQAME

Unacramblt thtH four Jumblae,
one lettlf to MCh square, to torm

(I)AnolhefUfe

fll ':f.;.~

W Love Boot

(I]
iEJ MOVIE:
'Trackdown: Finding the
Goodbar Killer'
1 0:00 II CD CD Yellow Rose Oilman Hollister accuses the
Indian Stronghean of murder and Chance rescues Roy
from a uap set by the real
killar, 160 min .)
(]J On Location: Eddie
Murphy Delirious Edd1e
performs his solo concen
for the first time on TV .
(]J MOVIE: 'The Fighting
Sullivans'
(]) Sing Out America
([)II (]2l Fantasy Island A
wife wants her husband to
learn what it is like to be a
woman and a prostitute
wants to become a 'normal'
woman . {60 min .) !Closed
Captioned]
fJ) Switch

~~~~CO

SATURDAY

&lt;II (J)(D • Cll (jJ •
Nowo

(l) (!) Silver Spoons
Ricky goes along w1th De·
rek 's scheme to find some
older girls and 'have a good
time ."
(JJ ESPN's Saturday Night
at the Fights
9:00 II ill (!) Rousters

• MOVIE: 'The World of
Susie Wong'

CD CNN Headline News
(1) MOVIE: 'Fat Chanco'
(1) Ufo of Alloy
{]) ESPN'a SportsWoman
()) Beat of Midnight
Spe&lt;:lllo
&lt;II Nows
([) 700 Club Today 's pro·
gram features a woman who
was an abused child and in
turn 10 abusive parent.
(!l ESPN'o SportoWeok
(}) MOVIE: 'Bo Fino'
(JJ Auto Racing '83: USAC
Stocks from Roasbure. OH
(I] MOVIE: 'Mioty'
I]) Rooo Bagley
(}) MOVIE: 'II Como from
Hollywood'

II

CIJ Ill

8:00 II CD (l) Dlff' rent Strokes

and

8;30

0

00 S__FO:rtsCenter

1:30 (1) Love Thll Sob

•

.

fl) How the West Was

Famous'
&lt;I&gt; Jack Benny Show
G (]J Muaic Magazine
1:00 (D I Married Joan
(])Entertainment Tonight
• (lJ News

mln.l
I I Comody Tlmo

II :00

Ill W Solid Gold

(!) Friday Night

Videot

IIINNN·
10:15 (I) TBS Evening Newa
10:30 (f) MOVIE: 'Kentucky
Fried Mov•·
(I) Oula end Harriet
(])Inside Busln... Today
(fi) Masterpiece Theatre
'Pictures:' ProduCer Ziggy
Olman likes BiN' I idea for a
film but decidea he wants a
different leading lady. !60

&lt;II

12:30 0

3:00

()) lsrHII Diary
lllJ Nowo

(])NFL Game of the Week
CIJ 0 (]) Hee Haw
(!) Star Search
(I) Grelit Railway Journeys
®Salute\

Ill Cit Nlghtlino

a

e

8:30 •

listing~-------------.;..._---------:---------·syracu84J, NV
CIJ [j) Wall Street Week
Louis Rukevser analyzes the
'805 with a weekly review
of economic and investment
matters.

10/14/83

!1ll Over Eooy .

85
Chrle Craft 19&amp;7 constellation cabin · cruiMr. 38 ft .•

"

Lonnie Boggs Excavetlng.
Dozer. backhoe. dumptruck.

SEWING Machine repalra.

76

."

"''''

Evans

83 Hondo XR80, $800.00.
Call 304·871-3031.

with troller. 112.800. Coli
111 4·387·03711 botwoon
10-3. 814·448·1343 ofter

cond.,

a

814-949-3093.

1989 CheV&lt;( 3&amp;0 ong .. 300
HP. AT. PS, PB, good tlroo.
Coli 448·0677 aflar
5:00PM.

614-2!1-1217.

4907 . Carter
Tran1portation.

truck ronlal. Coli 614-4482716.

$1,900. Coll448-8234.

eac.

DOZER · WORK By Ted
Hanna, ponds, ditch••·
basements. etc. Call "'48-

Water

Registered Hereford bull &amp;

First floor only. Write giving

wllh Major

446-2836 or 676-2432 .

Good cond. 614·949-2881.

Wanted old Pianos. Paying
$20.00 and 840.00 each.

43946. Phone 614-483·
1806.

1966 Superior 30pasaanger
bus. good cond.. low mi·
leaga. new brakes . Call

Also cattle htuling.

TOP CASH paid for lite
model uaed cart.
Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eas,.
ern Ave .• Gallipolia. 446-

directions. Witten Painoa.
80111 188 Sardis Ohio.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

exc. cond.. $6,800. Coli
Registered 1A horse real 446-2403.
gentle. Call446·1393.
1----------

filly colto. Alto breeding oge
stolliono. 814-949-246&amp; .

'

73

8960. Coli 614·246-5816.

For sale-Register.ed and
grade Belgians stallion end

•

Excavating

Cat 216 hoe, dozers. creme,
loadert. dump truck. Call

Reg.
horae mare. 6 vrs.
old-Sorrel for axp. rider,

•60. pair. 614·992-7180.

614-387-

Work by hour or job. Coli
4~6-71103.
•

1980 GMC 4 wheel drive.
PS, PS, lock out hubs, 3A

2 Nubian buck• for sale.

83

Call

1977 Chev pickup, 47,000
miles. 304-676-1280.

87.99. 81k. Gerbils .99. Bob
White quail $3 .00 ea. Vellow golden Pheasant $45 pr.
Pearly Cockatiels $69.96

Fomerly Dewitt's

Plumbing.
0676.

AKC Collie Puppies. Fricolored. 7 weeks old . $65.

Flraplaca lnoort·lllll In foe·
tory 'carton-1utomatlc
control•- 2 blowers-glass
door-ash pan-fltt 30 ln. to
48 in. fireplace-burns wood
or coal. 8690. Call
14.

.•.."

,.

Beetle
rune good,
r~-----------1==========~ VW
•600.
Call 1972
448-8838.

OUR BOAROING HOUSE

304'

and 1976 Kawasaki KZ 400.
Coli 614-379-2309.

day. Sunday, 1:00 - 7 :00

p.m . !This weak extra e~t!~ .

Phone

6761.

shipment freshwater fish wit~ power steering. Good
have arrived . (Lg. variety). 1-conod . 660 Farmafl tractor.
Saltwater fish · ~eahorses. Terry Life 614-687-3644.
Special-baby parakeets

oak

•4.000.00.
675-6489.

80 '78 Cougar XR7. air. power

Inc .. 304-273-2522. Rl. 2

stainless steel salad bar.
Four· four inch sWivl wheels,
sneeze guards, ice pack tray,
dish &amp; utensil storage, pie &amp;
cake shelves, 27-quart salad
bar crocks &amp; lids, 7-two
quart, salad bar crocks &amp;
lids. 6 dressing markers. 6
dressing ladles. $426.00.
10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Phone 304-675-1 742 .

"'"' !

Phone 614-367-0636, call

Plymnuth Horizon,

1----------'70 Ford Cobra, 429 engine.

loader. 10 T 300 buahel J llo
M gravity wagon, 12ft. MF
wheel di1c, 14 ft. Dunham

Jack'• Tropical Fish &amp; Pet
Shop . Rt. 160, Evergreen,
Ph. 446-0198, Hra.10:AM·

phone 304-675-7771 .

"
.'

' .J

houoo collo. Cell 676-2398
or 446 ;2464.

Water We,ls. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holea.
Pu mp1 Sales end Service.

Beetle. Call after 6, 304-

For Sale: lumber 1" and 2"
dimension, poplar, oak or
pine. For prices and avail&amp;·
bility . Contact Millwood

deliverd,

·~

DOWN THAT WilY

1973 Camero, gOod cond.
vary cleen, $2,000. 304876-1839 after 6 p.m.

Saxaphone wood burner
with magic heat. living room
suite, Maytag dishwasher

949-2791 .

fir'ewood.

"f

RON'S Talovlolon Sorvlco.
Specializing In Zenith and

tored. 614·667·3644 .

1--------1974 Volkswagen Super

Harragotr, John Deere

PE~NIE5-

...•

Appllal'lr.t Service All m•kes
S. model• refrigaratore.
washers, dryers. rangea; compacton. dishw11heu.
microwaves . Heating 6
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work.
Gallle Refrigeration Co. Call

304-676·2088 or 8754660.

Call 614-245-

ADBA Registered American
Pit Bull Terrier pups. Champion blood line. 8200. 614-

at Evergreen Hills Road,
Monday-Friday, ~ - 4:30 ;
Saturday. 8 -3:00.

Mullong Fastback.

100 HP MF 1 100tractor. 30
H.P 71 1 BMF steer sike

radio combination. battery
or ac-dc current. 614-992·

2060.

614·992·7398

anytime.

Oragonwynd CatteryKennels. AKC Chow puppies. CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese ki«ens .

614-985-3667.

--------·
'RCA 5 inch B&amp;W TV am-fm

Seasoned

992-7403.

9790.

only. 8200. Call Tom
Spancer at 614-985· 4256 .

Dry

1978 Ford Pinto, 2 ·door.
standard trans.. red and
white. Good condition . 614·

1963 Ford tractor and Addn. or coli 304· 676plowa. $1.600. Coli 614- 6167.
·
246-6239 .
1---------

Call 448·3844 oftur 4.

THE-

•'
•'

614-448-4088.

Instruments

Registered Pointer pups, 8

35 mm Camera Includesclose up lens. case. flash.

.......

r~~=~~~~~==~~~o
~·~..,~~~~~~~~.~~""~"~'~~'~'~"~""l
57
71

61

Briarpatch Kennels Professional All -breed
!'fl~ .
Indoor-outdoor
cilities. English ~~ L:~:f,~£! ·
niel puppies. Call 61

~ U T PENNJ!a~ ••.
WH Y DO ~OU NEED

exterior. plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yr1.

Doberman puppies: Stud
Service. Call 446-7796.

614-367-7220.

•'

olllmoteo. Coli 814-21181182.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

Steel trailer dump can, 8 .76
cu.ft. capacity, 16" tires .

Home
., Improvements

teuured celllngl comm•·
ci1l end retidea&amp;ial..- frM

1 2 gauge double barrel!
ahotgun $150.Phone 304-

55 Building Supplies

......
N

••

STUCCO PLASTERING . •

Autos for Sale

675·6073.

FOR SALE. 2'x6' Portable

2171 after 12:00 noon.

polia,

Phone 304-675·6211 .

Gallipolis. 446-7398 .

Twlnbed.

49

60 lb . compound bow w~h

TV &amp; Appliancas. 627 Third

Sleeping room $1 15, utili·
ties paid , range &amp; refrig.
Share bath . Man only. 446·
4416 after 7 p .m .

81

Approximately 275 T,eatad
fence posts. call 304-676Twin beds, mattresses and
springs. cheat of drawers.

months.
7266 .

446-0322

54

~er

y

Call 814-388-9817.

6281 .
CB radio . Call 614-246·

~

•·••

....

exp. Call 614-388·9852.

_4_1_5_5_a_ft_e_r_6_:_3_0_P_M
_.___

..
•

-

ltrlpeo. Coll448;03811.

5396 .

arrows $100 . 22 rifle with
scope $150. Call 446-

Attention Auto Pelntlng
•110 ond up. lady work.
ex;tra pen striping, culltom

Remington 788- 308 cal ..
with scope. $300.00. 30+
Quilt tops. Phone 304-676-

1

Auto Repair

PAINTir.IG - Interior aod

Huffy riding mower one
warm moring coal stove, 1
Amana ref . Call 614-246-

Boby bedo,

$110. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $68 .•
firm. 86B. and $78 . Queen
sets. $195 . 4 dr. ches.ts.
$42. 5 dr. chests. &amp;54. Bed
frames, $20 .and S25., 10
gun - Gun cabinets, 8360.
Gas or electric ranges: $326
up to $375 . Baby mat·
tresses, $25 &amp; $36, bed
frames 820, $26, &amp; $30,
king frame $50. Good selection of bedroom suites.
cedar chests, rockers. mete\
cabinets. swiVel rockers .
Used Furniture -· bookcase,
ranges, chairs, dryers, refrigerators and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri., 9am
to 5pm, Sat .

One avocado green, heavy
duty washer end dryer.
Excellent condition. 304-

Apts . for

t--

77

676-6843 beiora 7:00.

Call 614-388 ·9367.

Fuel oil tank. used carpet.

614 -388· 9763.

Call 446-2236 or
2681 .:

Do Y~ ~ow
1-1e \ll"'l'f fll'l() Alol eNL1Clll\)e!)ol\
?f-1 1\\i'lt&gt;~ WHtN He · 4~~S up 7

-

676-5167 .

5520.

:"'!

2 bdr. trailer on Rt, 160
S1 50 rent. $50 dep.osit . Call

44

~;1'(e,~~~ 1-\~

Aeour yoa&lt;.

Us4fd 8ft. metal gara~edOor.
tracks included. Heavy duty
walk-in cooler door. 304-

stori'ns, oth-er misc . items.
See at 729 Second AVe .•
Gallipolis .

2 bdr. mobiiQ home water&amp;
aewage furnished. Call 446-

304 -675 - 1371
3812 .

W~f\T

OAK firewood, 830.00 a
Pick-up load . 304 -6?64~16 .;:1 ,. , , .

$476 . &lt;;all 614.- 266- 1668.

I~

Mobile Homes
for Rent

614-992-2101 .

e.ur

Chest of drawers, walnut,
large -five dr1wers. verY' nice
condition. 109 Pleasant

21 . cu.ft . Hot point upright
freezer. used onfy 6 mos.

'TIIAIIA

by Larry Wright

r-:::::===:::::::::::::::-;..___;_~

Stroot. 304·676-3936.

For renfwith option to buy,

nice lot. Ready to move into.
$22&amp;.00 per month . Phone
304-676·2711.

304-875 -14119.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

1- - - - - - - - - - -

the farm . Call 614-2561427.
~

The Daily Sentinel-Page-It

Ohio

DICK TRACY

1971 . CHARGER for l parta.

Two

Pomeroy-Middleport,

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Cryptoquote: WHEN PEOPLE INQUIRE I
ALWAYS JUST STATE, "I HAVE FOUR NICE CHILilREN
AND HOPE TO HAVE EIGHT."- "AMBITION" BY AUNE
MURRAYIGLMER

�--Page

12-The Daily S&lt;intinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

-•

Anti-tax·backers
step up.cam_p aign
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Backers of anti-tax measures on the
Nov. 8 ballot have stepped up their
campaign, llnklng, this year's tax
Increases to poUtlclans' pay Talses
and accus.lng state officials of hiding
tax money.
Ohl.oans to Stop Excessive Taxation began airing a television
commercial on behalf of Issues 2
and 3 that focused on newspaper
. · accounts that the Celeste administration might appoint a panel to
study the possibility of salary
increases. The raises have since
been discounted by Gov. Richard
Celeste and House Speaker Vernal
G. Riffe Jr., D-NewBoston.
The ad says: "Think aboutlt. The
pollticlans ·want you to vote against
. the repeal so they can spend the ~
percent income tax hike on their
salaries."
A committee preview of the
commercial for reporters Thursday
came as the Ohio Supreme Court
agreed to consider a Columbus
attorney's bld to postpone the Nov. 8
election on three proposed constitu tional amendments.
·
Curt Steiner, the repeal group's
spokesman, defended the commercial's use of a Legislative Budget
Office report that showed tax
revenues for September were $25
· million higher than expected.
Administration fiscal analysts
confirm the monthly Increase most of which was in the sales taxbut cautioned against month-tomonth comparisons. They said
revenue yea r-to-date was conformIng to projections.
Steiner said the $25 million figure
demonstrates a trend.
" I have every reason to suspect.

Lewis M. (Tom) Payne, 62.
Sycamore Street.Midqleport, died
Thursday evening at Veterans
Memorial Hospital:
Mr. Payne was born Nov.l8, 1920
at Ronda, W.Va. the son of the late
Lewis andVirginiaSmlth Payne . He
was also preceded In death by one
brother, Arthur Ray Payne .
He was an Army Veteran of World
War II and worked as a mechanic ln
an airplane factory. He was a
member of a Masonic Lodge ln
Calliornla, the York and Scottish
Rite. and Sluine Club at Charleston .
tje Is survived by htS wlfe, Ettie
(Dee) Sparks Payne; one brother,
Homer E. Payne, Langsville: two
sisters, Ruth Foster, Ronda, W.Va ..
a nd Mae Wilson, Merrillsland, Fla.
Funeral services wUJ be held
Sunday at 2 p.m . at the RawlingsCoats· Blower Funeral Home. Burial will be in Middleport Hlll
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home Saturday from 4 to 9.

Artie Posey
Artie Posey, 75, of Clifton, was
dead on arrival Thursday at
Pleasant Valley HospitaL
She was born Oct. 5, 1~. at We.st
Union, to the late Wilbur and Ida
Cottrill CottrilL
She was a member of the
Congregational Missionary Church
at Stonewood, W.Va.
Surviving are her husband. Joseph L. Posey, of Cl!fton; two sons,
Glenn D. Poscy. of Stonewood , and
Don Posey, of Ravenswood; a foster
daughter, Sherry Jefferies, of
Pasadena , Texas; six grandchild·
ren ·and 13 great grandchildren.
Funeral serviCes wUl be held
Congregational Missionary Church
on Monday at 2 p.m. with the Rev.
Rader Ogden officiating. Burial will

•

without llnyevldence,ofcourse, that
they're probably hiding some tax
money over there. It's very easy to
do. You just don't open the checks,"
·Steiner said.
''Ith!n!IJhe main point of this ad ls
that lf there wasn't a SU'l/lus why
would there be a study to raise
salaries. U there was no money
there to do it, then why even taik
about it1 " he said.
"What you have here is a classic
case of people that are totally
lnsensitlve to the people that are on
the productive side of this economy, " Steiner said.
The Supreme Court said it would
consider before the election a
complaint tiled by Phil\p Cramer of
Columbus.

OBSERVE F1RE PREVENTION WEEK-The
klndergarlen classes at Racine toured the fire station
at Syracuse Wednesday In observance of Fire
Prevention Week. Members of the Syracuse Fire

Deparirnent and Emergency Squad were on hand to
explain the operation and how equipment works.
Pictured at the station Wedneoday momlng are
members of the rooming kindergarten class.

Cramer said ne\vspaper ads
placed by Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown . failed to meet a
constitutional requirement for In·
eluding explanations of the three

Happenings around Meigs ·County•..

Issues.

Will celebrate too

He asked the court to delay the
Nov. 8 Vote until Brown complied
with the advertising requirement.

··Wealher forecasl
Clear tonight. Low In the mld-405.
Winds westerly to southwesterly
10-15 mph. Sunny and warmer
Saturday. High 70-75.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
Chance of showers each day. MUd
Sunday and Monday with highs ln
the upper 60s to low 70s, coollng to the
mid-50s and low 60s Tuesday. Lows
generally In the 40s.

Area deaths
Lewis M. Payne

Friday, October 14, 1983

follow ln the Sunset Memorial Park.
Friends may call on Saturday at
the Foglesong Funeral Home from
24 and 7-9 p.m. Friends may also
call at the Greathouse Funeral
Home In Nutter Fork, W.Va., on
Sunday from 2-4and 7-9p.m. and one
ho~r prior to services at the church.

Letha M. Morris
Letha M. Morris, 84, Route 1.
Racine, died Thursday at .lhe
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Mrs. Morris was a retired school
teacher having served in classrooms for 35 years. She was born in
MelgsCounty,adaughterofthelate
Emmert and Margaret Archer
Jewett Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by her
husband , Clifford S. Morris.
Surviving are two sons, Carl
Morns, Long Bottom, and Earl
Morris, Morning Star; three sisters,
Sy lvia Pool, Morning Star; Grace
Wickline and Mary Jewett, both of
West Palm Beach, Fla .. six grandc hildren and one great-grandchild.
She was a member of the Sutton
United Methodist Church, Chapter
124. Order of Eastern Star, Racine,
and Racine Grange.
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Monday at the Ewing Fu'neral
Heme with the Rev. Carl Hicks
officiating. Burial will be in Sutton
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. on Sunday.

'

Emergency runs

The Symcuse Church of the
Nazarene, Syracuse will be among
7,001 churches worldwide celebrating The Diamond anniversary of
this young Protestant denomination
during the month of October.
The Rev. James B. Kittle, pastor
of the Symcuse Nazarene Church
invites everyone to attend thlsdayof.
celebration to be held Oct.l6, at9: ~

The Syracuse Emergency Squad
A revival will be held at the Silver
was called for Courtney Haines at
Run Baptist Church beginning Oct.
6:34a.m. Friday. She was taken to
17 R 7: 30 ·p.m. nightly . .Evangellst
Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·
wlli be Bud Hatfield.
Three calls were answered by
local units on Thursday, the Meigs
A revival wlll be held at the
County Emergency Medical Servi- Shade Church Monday, Oct. 17,
ces reports. At 1:26. p.m., Racine
through Oct. 23 at 7:30p.m.
took Christine Rose from Mile Hlll to
nightly. Evangelist will be the Rev.
Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at 1 Chester Lemley. There will be
a.m.
9: 12 p.m. took Kelly Wilson, special singing each evening.
The "Harvest Trio" will he . ButternutAve., toVeteransMemorfeatured at the 10:30a.m. servlce.A lal, and Pomeroy at 10:00 p.m. too
special fellowship dinner will be Otto Falls from · W. Main St. to Ohio loltery winners
served at the Carleton School at Veterans Memorial.
CLEVELAND (AP) The
noon.
winning number drawn Thursday
Marriage license
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
Saturday dance
game, ''The Number,'' was410.
A marriage llcense was Issued in
In the "Pick 4" game, played five
A square dance will be held at the
Meigs County Probate Court to
times a week, the winning number
Racine
Amertcan
Legion
Saturday,
David F. Welch, Crystal Lake, lli.,
Oct. 15 from 8: 30 p.m.untU mid· was954~.
and Terrte L. Welch, 34.. .Crystal
The lottery reported earnings of
night. The Guy Thoma band will
Lake, Ill.
provide music and caller will be Red $278,304 from the wagering on its
daily game. Earnings came on sales
Carr.
Velerans Memorial
of $1,027,036.50, whUe holders o!
Free burger wash
winning tickets were . entitled to
Admitted-- Thomas Lambert,
share$748,732.50, officials said.
Vinton; Julia Monk, Pomeroy;
Meigs Hero Club Is offering a free
· Oswell Durham, Middleport; Lewis Burger Chef sandwich II they wash
Payee, Middleport; Mary Rose, your car at a car wash they are
Racine; Kelly Wilson, Pomeroy; sponsoring ..
Otto FaDs, Pomeroy.
The car wash will be held
Discharged--Mary Hlnehart, Saturday, Oct.l5, at Burger Chef ln
Yoland Sattertield, Reta Hill, Wil· Pomeroy from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
liam Morris , Thomas Lambert, Price Is $3 for outside only and $5 for
Julia Monk.
Inside and out.

at

Gag order
said justified
LOGAN, Ohio (AP) - Lawye!'l!
foraColumbusnewspapersayagag
order Issued In the Dale Johnston
murder trial is unconstitutional, but
the Hocking County prosecutor says
su~h an order Is justitled lf lt helps to
ensure a fair trial.
Hocking County Common Pleas
Judge James Stilwell was to Issue a
ruling today on l!ttlng the gag order,
which Is being challenged by the
Columbus Citizen-Journal.
Hocking County f'rosecutor Chris
Veldt says tbe judge. has the Tight to
issue the order.
Johnston is charged In the
decapitation slaylngs last yearofhls
stepdaughter, Annette Cooper Jo)mston, 18• and her flan~. Todd
Schultz, 19.
The mutilated torsos of the two
teen-agers were found along the
Hocking River just .outside Logan
last autumn. Other body parts were
found burled ln a nearby cornfield a
few days later.

The fatality was the flftlLSuffered
by the Marines since the latest round
of violence in Lebanon began Aug.
28. Forty more Marines ln the
international peacekeeping force
havi\ been wounded in grenade
attacks and bombardments.
Later In the day, Jordan said, two
Marine positions came under add!·
Uonal fire and the Marilies shot

tmts

In the newly expanded
lacllltlea you'll lind:

*

Fontanini Nativity Sets

* Avantl Stuffed Anlmale
* Steinbach Nutctacke111

r.==========::;
DELICIOUS
APPLE CIDER
SHAKES

POMEROY, PH.992-6292

McCLURE'S
DAIRY ISLE

Oblo LoUery Commission

Execltlve Director
Thomas V. Cllema

By LARRY EWING'
'11mee-Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS -A new program
designed as a first step before -and
' possible ·alternative to ..: involvement with thecrtrnlnalcourtsystem
is being established through the
office of the Gallipolis city sollcitor.
For ·the next s1x months, a 'night
prosecutor's program' will be
operating. on a trial basis. The
progiam Is an attempt to mediate
and resolve problems . between
potential iltlgants before mlsdemeonor criminal charges are flled.
A :nJght prosecutor hearing' Is an

0

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Turn rilllt 11 1111 lntolltclion ot Route
555 ond U.S, Rollll 50 ond 7.
Houri:
Monday • Friday 9 a.m. • 6 p.m.
Sunday 2 p.m. • 5 p.m.

•

•

The teachers association, which has been negotiatIng with the board since February, lost its recognition
status shortly after the board sanctioned the
recognition electiop at its Sept. 'n meeting.
The election was requested by the Vocational
Educators Association group, which had presented a
petition to the JVSD administration requesting an
election to decide teacher leadership.
The group expressed dissatisfaction with the way
the Buckeye Hills Teachers Association conducted
negotiations. It also claimed aU decisions were made
by the association's ellllCUtive ' committee without
Input from membership and other teachers.

The Vari Heusen pin collar shirt combines classic
styling and fine tailoring featuring single-needle
shoulder and placket sleeves. The striped Cotton
Rich'" fabric is Aquality blend of 55% cotton, 45%
polyester for extra comfort and long-lasting good
looks. Because a classic never goes out of style.'

out-of-court pro&lt;;edurelnwhich both
parties appear before a heartng
ofllcer.
· Afier a complaint has been tiled
with one of the area's lp.w enforcement agencies, an officer In the
soHcltor's ortlce examines the facts
of the problem and determines an
appropri!lte course of action.
U lbe case is deemed appropriate
for mediation through the program,
a hearing Is scheduled - the city
solicitor hopes to hold the hearings
within a week of the filing otthe
ortglnal complaint.
At the hearing, each party

.

By BOB HOEFuCH
.
'lbnea-SenUnel staff
POMEROY Meigs C9unty's environment;
slowly but surely, Is taking on a better appearance thanks to a $23,450 Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Utier control grant.
It Is u!lfortunate. that ll!xpayers' money must be

Health renewai
levy means no
added taxes

become the top selling agent lJ) lhe
Buckeye State. Elurlng 1982, Hart's
enjoyed ~nough ·sales to be reim. bursed _$90,000 In commissions.
Another . Southeastern Ohio com·
munlty ranking No.1 In the state In
the Instant Winner game Is St.
ClalrvWe of Region 6. ·
Gallla and Meigs Counties are
also In Reglon6. IDGalllpolls,durlng
the tlrst nJne months of 1983, lotiery
sales totaled $1!*,072. Top selling
agent In Gallla County, Is Fruth
Phannacy, Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. There are seven other lottery
agents In the county.
Durtng that same period - Jan.1 ·
though Sept. 26 - lottery sales In
Meigs County totaled $114,418. Top
selling agents from the 17 agents In
the county was Shammy' sDrive Inn
located between Middleport and
Pomeroy.
(P,ntinued on page A3)

..
•
•

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••

•

ftnd many excenent values aD over the store. Use our
convenient ~-a-way plan to hold your ~chase untO
Cluistmas. "

"

.U.,IIIe-.- ................
a ;· 11: .....................,
D ' ......................... '""
Jr&amp;td
A·I

Inside today..
•

.

I

'

•

•
•

••

I

WEIGHING THE EVI-·
DENCE - Two depullell with
the Galla p,unty Sherlfl's
Depuimellt examlDe ooe 118
blip al · C"•"watecl .m aterial .
believed to be mariJuana earty
8Murclay mondllg.

or

.....•

GALLIPOLIS- Officials seeking
renewal of Gallla County's .3-mlll
levy for the health department say
· the levy's passage will insure a
variety of services that have been
offered for nearly decacle.
The renewal means no additional
taxation will placed on taxpayers.
The levy was first passed by
voters ln 1973 through the efforts of
Dr,,Francls W. Shane, the county's
longtime health commissioner, who
said at the time that funds then
. available were not enough to meet
the county's health needs.
Since then, the health department
has offered TB control, food
Inspections, blood pressure control,
rabies control, maternal and child
care and sewage and water
inspections.
. "It's for the whole county,"
commented Marlln Wedemeyer,
chairman of the health depart.
ment' s advisory board, who Is
co-chalrtng the levy's election effort
_"_with Gary Bane and Heienlu
Ehman.
The committee, in a position
paper answering questions about
the department's actlvitles, pointed
out that a small portion of of
operating expenses come from
revenue generated by the department, particularly through food
llcenses and birth and death
certificates.
Gallla countlans are paying 30
cents per $1,001 of tax valuation. If
property is assessed at $17,001, for
example, the property owner is
paying $5.10 per year for health
service.
The services offered come under
the groupings of nursing, women, ·
Infants and chUdren, environmental
sanitation and vital statistics.
Nursing provides such features as
blood pressure checks and TB
control, while WIC served ·570
. (Continued on page A3)

a

TRADmONAL CRAFT - Shingle splitting Is one of the tradHional
cmlt8 on display at the Bob Evans Fann Festival at IUo Grande this
weekend. Here, Chester Wood demonstrates his craft. Others at the
festival Include basketweav!ng, lye soap making, blacksmithing,
stonecuUingandrnaldngmuzzleloader5.TheBobEvansFarrnFestival
continues through&amp; 5 p.m. Sunday.

-.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .: . . . .

~ .• .-...................... A-N
__.. ......................... Co-1~
P t NM:S ·' ............... D-1
Ts' fllle .................. ......

Meigs County.
Working with the grant funds secured through the
efforts of the Meigs County' Commissioners, the chore
of cleaning up 17 illegal dumps ln the county got
underway and so far 11 have been cleared away.
These are !n Chester, LebAnon. Letart, Olive, Orange
and Sutton .Townships. Hopefully, the grant will

THOUGHT OF KARATE?Do you want to ' have more
confidence, self-control ancJ ,
character-as well as Improved
Jilhy!llcal flate!IS and self-ilefense
capabllldea? According to the
offtcers of tbe Meigs County
Karate Club, ·the . Japanese
discipline of Karate has It all.

-Page B-lleature.

Det••PapA-4.

MIDD~EPORT

presents his or her side of the
dispute. Thehearlnglsanatlemptto
resolve the complaint through
mediation.
U the problem can be settled in the
night p!'OilecUtor hearing, no crtmlnal action will be taken by the
solicitor's office .
If the matter Is not resolved, the
complaining party may pursue the
rnatterfurtoor. Because the hearing
Is an out-of-court procedure, wit·
nesses and attorneys are not
required.
"Basically, the night prosecutor is
(Continued on page A3)

spent to cle1111 up the countryside iltlered by the
carelesS. with.garbage and refuse, Including old cars,
refrigerators, stoves and what-have-you when lt
m!ght be put to better use. However, it Is fortunate
that · a grant program does exist since local
governments would find it an imposslblllty to come up
with funds to provide the needed cleanup across

Take advantage of our Friday &amp; Saturday Sale- y ou'n
•

president of the Buckeye Jfills Teachers Association,
discusses a recognition election at a teachers' rally
Thursday. Below him are Don Dalton, left, and Mitch
Baker, ·two members of the \\Iellston Education
Association.

Resources grant "cle~s up'.Meigs County

'
'

•'.

-...,.,

take."

The association declared Impasse in negot!ations
on Sept. 22, requesting services o! a federal mediator.
Stewart said there Is a chance that the mediator may
not be needed, but indicated that decision hinges on
1
what the board does. ·
The teachers association, .claiming Interference
from the board, was granted an Injunction to stop the
election Oct. 3 ln Jackson County Common Pleas
. Court lly Judge Thomas W. Mitchell. ~hearing was
held the next day at the administration's request,
clearing the way for ground rules to be set.
Stewart· said campaigning at the schools was
low-key, and that bitterness between both teaching
groups was kept out of the election.
.
Stewart reported that he and Diana Llntala,
spokesperson of the Vocational Educators Association group, shook hands when election results were
made final.
Mrs. Lintala wasn't available for comment
Saturday.

Night prosecutor program: a
step befo_re cri~inal court.

WEARING

uttll Hocldnl, Ohio

''at

By DALKROTHGEB
OVP News Editor
PoMEROY - While the state of
Ohio has suffered through hlgh
unemployment, inflationary costs,
budget problems, and . now an
income · tax repeal Issue, one
department which continues to
prosper is the Ohio Lo~ry.
Enacted inl973 by amajorltyvote
·from Ohio citizens, the General
Assembly establlshed a lotlery
funded by a $2 mllllon loan from the
State Treasury. Now, nine years
later, · the lottery Is collecting $1.1
mUllan per day or approximately $9
muuon per w~k.
Perhaps it's the overall economic
situation and a tight money market
that has Increased the poptilartty of
the Ohio Lottery. ·
In Southeastern Ohio, particularly the hard-depressed Lawrence
County area, Hart's Union 76 has

MIDDLEPORT, PH. 9n·5248

&amp;

0

. entitled to continue negetiatlons with the JVSD board
education for a master contract.
''I'm assuming we'D walt until the October25 board
meeting:" Stewart said Saturday. "In aU due respect,
the board should meet and decide what action they'll

Ohio Lottery prospers
•
In Gallia, Meigs Area

McCLURE'S
3-IN-ONE

•

.

tnfint
12 So&lt;tlono 80 Pegoo 36 Cento

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmes,Sentlnel StaU
.
RIO GRANDE - Tbe Buckeye Hills Teachers
· AsSOciation won back Its status as a recognized
bargaining agent In an election . held Friday at
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
'The final tally was 38 for the teachers association.
and 23 for the Vocational Educators Association of the
Gallia-Jackson-VInton Joint Vocational School Dfstrici - the group that originally sought the election.
"We had not doubts about .It all, I've said that all
along," commented Norman Stewart, president of
the Buckeye Hllls teachers group, whlch Is a!f!Uated
with the Ohio Education Association.
T)1e election affected 63 teachers at the Buckeye
Hills campus In Rio Granae and at the JVSD's VInton
County satellite school, Buckeye Valley' Career
Center. Stewart said two teachers dkln't vote.
Stewart said that according to ground rules
establlshed last week, the Buckeye Hills group Is now

~

STAHL'S
. Nursery and Glfta_

Army....................... 0

Association .wins Buckeye.election

.

•

Notre Dame .......... 42

I

0

APPAREL
FOR
MEN AND

Central Mkliigan ... 14
Ohio University ....... 9

A Multimedia Inc. ~~~

back.
Jordan said the dead Marine was
hit by sniper fire 1n the chest and
possibly the head. But Jordan said it
could not be immediately deter·
mined whether the head injury was
a gunshot wound or occurred when
hisjeepovertUrnedasltcameunder
smaU arms fire.
Jordan said be did not know which
of the injuries the man died from.
The Marine, whose name was
withheld until his family was
notified, diedlnahelicopterthatwas
evacuating him from the. Marine
base at the airport to a hospital
aboard the amphibious assault ship
USS lwo Jlma off the beirut coast,
Jordan said.

OFENocr.ts

NEW FALL

---------..1..- .

North. Carolina ......
42
.
NC State ............... 14

Vol. 11 No. 33

A revival will be held at the Sllver
Run Baptist Church beginning Sept.
17 at 7: 30p.m . nightly. Bud Hatfield
wlll be !he evangellst.

· * And Much, Much More

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Penn State ............ 17
Syracuse .·................ ,. 6

•

Announce revival

and Smoke111

N. 2ND AVE.

Jrllill~~

.................. 17
.Ohi o State .. :.......... 13

r---:-----'--------------------1

The Mens' Fellowship of the
Meigs County Churches of Christ
wUI meet at the Zion Church of
Christ Monday, Oct. 17. There wUI
be a short business meeting and
trucks will be loaded for Grundy
Mountain Mission.

DAILY

Arkansas ... ,............. 3

Another Marine dies in Beirut

Meet Monday

WOMEN
IS ARRIVING

Michigan :.............. 35
Northwestern .......... 0

ELBERFELD$

BEffiUT, Le1:1anon (AP) -A u.s.
Marine died after being caught Jn a
hail •of sniper fire today at Beirut's
international airport ~nd another
Marine peacekeeper suffered gunshot wounds in both legs, Marine
spokesman Maj. Robert Jordan
said.

TexaS ................. ~ .... 31

West Virgin.ia ........ 13
Virginia Tech .......... 0

(

provide funds for riddance of the other 6 by the end of
the year.
The county litter control program Is administered
through a · l:Joard composed of Victor Brown, Bob
Bowen, Charles Barrett, Roy MU!er and John Riebel
with Roger Walker currently serving as work
(Continued on A-4}

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