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12- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 20, 1983

Middleport, Ohio ·

Pomeroy

81 units ·of blo~d given Wednesday

'

~

Eighty-one llnlts of blood were Kennedy, Noreen Ondrusko, Mary
received at Wednesday's visit of the K. Spencer, Billy J . Spencer,
Meigs County BlOOdmobile.
Clarence A. King, Robert IV ,
Of the 81 units received 56 units Vaughan, Frances Hunnel, Richard
were replacements. A total of 85 E . Swanson, Deborah L. Grueser;
persons attended.
James Carter, Debra D. ~ora,
There were two five gallon
donors, Dorothy Sayre and Billy J. Bearhs, Mary
Y. L.
Hanis,
M.
Starcher, Howard
Spencer and 10 first time donors.
P. Logan, David M. King, William
' Doctors were Dr. Wilma Mans- W. Radford, David Koblentz. Anna
field and Dr. James . Witherell. Baxter, Homer Baxter, Ronald W.
Nu~ were .Femdora Story, Le- -Hanning, Franklin H. Casto, Gerald
nora Lellheit and Beulah Ward.,
. Rought, Horner B. Smith, William
In charge · of the &lt;&gt;an teen was Quickel, Marvin E. Taylor, Janealle
Arnertcan Legion Post 39, Pomeroy. R. Johnson, Jeff Warr.er. Faye
ln charge of tables and chairs were Clifford, Virgil K Windon. Geoffrey
RSVP employes.
A. Wilson, Russell E . Nitz. Leo
Clerical workers were Mary Vaughan, Dennis J. Gilmore, CaNease, Jean Nease, Virginia Bucha- rclyn A. Jeffers, Dennis C. Clark,
nan, Erma Roush, -Peggy Harrts, Paul A. Rice, Gloria Riggs; Racine, ·
Richard Sellers, Opa!Diddle, Cathe· Judy, Spencer, David A. Wolle,
rtne Welsh, Linda Powell, Joyce Dorothy Sayre, Patrlc!a Circle,
Hoback, Mace!Barton,Malda Mora Helen Holter, Wlliiarn H. Hoback,
and Vernon Nease.
Jeanette M. Radford, Paul Marr;
Also assisting were RSVP Senior Middleport, Richard _ Rathburn.
Citizens, Herbert Shields, Bema- Linda L. Haley, Charles F. Johnson,
dine Meier, Thelma Dill and Leafy Chasteen, Brenda Weber,
PhilomlneFollrod.
Joyce V. Bartrurn, Floyd McClelDonations were made by Quality lan, Kathryn D. Johnson, Elizabeth
Prtnt . Shop, The Daily Sentinel, Milton, Sarah J. Fowler, Judy K.
Athens Messenger, WMPO Radio, Hunter, Giorta J. Peavley, William
Senior Citizens, Veterans Memorial T. Fink, Rose Thornton.
and Valley Shopper.
From Syracuse, Charles Lee;
Donors from , Pomeroy were Long Bottom, Harlan A. Ballard:
Russell W. Moore, Jane V. Abbott,
Langsville, Ellis E . Myers; RuSuzanna Heck, _\'vlargaret L.
tland, Fred H. George, Frank

Ma~aret

Phyli~

By JOHN CHALFANT

\

Extended Ohio Forecast

Nearly 100 percent chance of rain
tonight. Low 45-50. Winds easterly
l().ro mph. Frtday, mostly cloudy
with 70percent chanceofraln. High
around 58.

I

Saturday through Monday:
Mostly lAir t.bmugh lhe period,
mps 1n the Ms. Lows In the • ·

story, photo qn p' 5

·

e

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21ST AND SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22ND
LITTLE GIRLS'

Gl RLS'

SLEEPWEARSALE

FALL

DRESS SALE

Pajamas, gowns and robes in
brushed tricot, knit, cotton
and nylon.
Sizes Newborn to 24 mos., 2
to 4, 4 to Sx, 7 to 14

Beautiful new jumpers, ·
skirts, dresses and 2 pc.
sets in a complete range of
·
for little girls.
Poly/cottons and velvets.

Reg. 18.00 .......Sale '6.39
Reg. 112.00 ..... Sale 19.59
Reg. 117.00 ... Sale 113.59
Reg. 122.00 ... Sale '17.59

Reg. 17.00 .......Sale '5.25
Reg. 111.00 ..... Sale '8.25
Reg. 115.00 ... Sale '11.25

Yol .32,pjo, 135
CApyrightod 1983

SALE

Junior Coats

Weekly sertnonette
See page
.
7

Reg. s11.00,, ,,,,Sale ss.79
Reg. s26.00 ... :.... Sale S20.79
Reg. sso.oo ........ Sale S39.99
Reg. SS9.00 ........ Sale s55.19

117.00

LADIES'

Ski_rt Sale
This sale includes all skirts in
our coordinate sportswear lines

Van Heusen

and our open stock skirts.

SHIRTS .............. ; 113.25

famous makes like Devon. Bos-

120.00

Trissi and Dotty Mann.
'
Ladies' Sizes 8 to 20 aQd 30 to 38.

ton Traveler. Queen Casual

Van Heusen .

SHIRTS ............... 115.65

1

Reg. 19.00 to 140.00

$21.00 Van Heusen

~~ed

SHIRTS ............... S16.35
22.50 Van Heusen

1

$719 TO $J199

SHIRTS ............... S17.55
HEUSEN ~

UTILE BOYS'

.Pajamas &amp; Robes
Keep 'em warm with our new Fall
weight pajamas and robes.
Brushed polyester and knit styles
in sizes 2 to 4 and 4 to 7.

REG. 110.00 TO 120.00

Sale

Priced

$799 to $}599

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BE!~ Men s Insulated
-~~ COVERALlS
1

Sizes small-(34·36). medium (38-40). large (40-44),
extra large (46-48). Solid colors olivewood navy
blue and brown duck. Zips from top and botton
concealed metal snaps, fiberfil insulation , concealed
kmt cuffs, adJUStable leg snaps.

The qut;llity yarn
RED HEART $1.69

Regulars - Shorts - Longs

'49.95 Olivewood or Navy Blue ... '39.90

s54.95 Brown Duck ......... $43.90

Wintuk Yarn

4 ply hand knitting yarn. _Non-allergenic, mothproof :- 3 '~ oz. sk~ns. So~d color.; and ·variegated.
Two Day Sale.

$139
SKEIN

DWra~.r

peace offers

false

Sizes small (6-81. medium (10_- 12),
large (14·16), extra large (18).
Fine selection of solid colors - warm
fleece !ling.

'

Pre-washed 14 3A ounce, 100%
cotton blue denim. Waist sizes
27to 42 -lengths 30 to 36 inch .

On all Super Look. Super
Look Plus and Super Look
Soft Panties.

Straight

Leg

or Boot Style.

Beige or White in sizes Sthru XXL.

'

'

Boys' Sweat Shirts

SALE!
MEN'S WRANGLER
S2295 Basic Jeans

2 Sections, 12 Pages
20 C:.nts
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

u.s. -receives

rumors

the proposed treaties provide for
Despite rampant rumors to the
on-site verl!lcation and investigacontrarY, there have been no rape
tions by the Contadora nations when
cases this week in Meigs County.
violations are suspected.
Sherllf James J . Proffitt rworted
"They are solemn and binding
today
his office !fus not received any
International commitments with
repOrts
of any rape cases.
guarantees for compliance," he
His
statement
carne as the result
said. "Nicaragua is ready ~and
of
numerous
rumors
that have been
willing to be .bound ' by these
circula
ling
concerning
rape cases.
treaties."
Sherllf
Proffitt
said
to
his knowlD'Escoto said it was the !lrst
edge
and
the
knowledge
of his
proposal of Its kind since Central
deputies
no
such
cases
have
been
American peace negotiations began
reported.
nine months ago.
Meanwhile, Jerry Ray Moore was
A State Department o1!1clalsaldlt
In
the county jail this morning after
was too early to assess the
being
found inside Modem Supply
significance of the documents left by
on
W.
Main
St. by Pomeroy police.
d'Escoto. The o1!icial, who Insisted
Officers
received a call about
on anonymity, S!lld the meeting
12:
ro
a.m.
from Marvin Glasco,
lasted an hour and was held at
owner
of
the
business.
saytTig he had
d'Escoto's request.
received a telephone atarrn call at
Meanwhile, a bitterly divided
his residence indicating tha,t someHouse voted Thursday tor the
one
was inside the establishment.
second time In three months to cut
Captain
George Hicks of the
off C1A support for Nicaraguan
Pomeroy
Department went to the
counter-revolutionarles. The 22'7-194
scene.
Assisting
were Middleport
vote was nearly identical to the
Pollee
and
the
sherllf'
s department.
earlier tally.
·
Moore
was
found
inside
the business
Like tbe 11rst cut-off proposal, the
butldlng.
new one Is seen as unlikely ID win
approval · In the Republicancontrolled Senate.
go around to the back of the blilldlng and provide
The House vote carne after a
AaE!IS FOR 'l1IE HANDICAPPED-Two ramps
entrance into the main Ooor of the Dbra&amp;'y. Work Is
are being built at the Middleport Puhllc Ubrary to
heated debate In which each side
helngdonebyMlddleportVUlagewithiWDfunds,and
a(!cused the other of rl!!lking deeper
make the facUlty more ...-lble to the handicapped.
is
In compliance with a law to make pubDc buildings
U.S. Involvement In Central ArnertOne wiD go to the ballement "here some books are
• •
accessible to the pubUc.
ca'swars.slo~ and clasles and craft actlvllles are held. It wiD
Edward P. Botalid, D-Mass,
enter at the side of the buDding. The second ramp wiD
chairman of the House Intelligence
Conunittee, said the Reagan aclrnln·
lstration musj stop "waging war In
Nicaragua. And make no mistake
WASHINGTON- Funding !or a
about It, this Is exactly what the ·
bypass canal at the Gallipolis Locks
United States Is doing."
andDarnwasapprovedthls weekby
But Republicans said the covert
Approprtations
action had succeeded In pressurtng
Nicaragua's Sandlnlsta governAccordingtoSen.ftobert C. Byrd,
ment to curtan Its support for leftist
theflowofgasbecauseitwasburted D-W.Va. , Gallipolis funding was
guerrillas in El Salvador and to
SOUTH CHARLESTON, W.Va. playing pinochle," he said.
Included In the 1984 Water ResourWillarnan said Columbia officials several feet under construction ces Appropriations Bill, which will
accept new peace proposals from
(AP) - Columbia Gas employees
working on a ruptured gas Une had were at the scene at ll: 30 a.m.,
debrts.
now t&gt;econsldered bythefulJSenate.
the Contadora nations.
Fotlowing the btast, W!llarnan
The amount of money for the
no Idea an adjacent supermarket shortly after a gas lioenear the store
was filling with gas and was i'eadyto was ruptu,red by construction crews said, efforts to shut off the gas were project was not listed In the bill
working on a nearby highway. He hindered further because debrts accordingtoanaidetoSen. Byrd . '
explode, a company official says.
the explosion burled a ColumUtility crews arrtved on the scene . said gas company workers were from
bia truck, and because the supervi-·
The supplemental appropriation
two hours before Monday's exph unable to s,hut the valve controlling sorwas unabletocontinueworking. for the canal was approved by the
slon but were unable to keep the gas
U.S. House of Representatives on
Willarnan refused to identlly the Oct. 7, according to an aide to Rep.
from seeping into the ground
supervisor or say whether he was Clarence Miller, R-Ohio. The $260
beneath tbe Davis Creek Fnodland,
badly Injured.
illl
said Gene Willarnan, Charleston
"Theequtprnenttosbutthegasoff m on appropriation is contingent
well your Imminent lllvotvment In districtrnanagerofColurnblaGasof
OUt S Urt
was in the back of the truck next to upon Congressional authorization ot
the handling of the strike, convinces West Virginia Inc.
the pro)· ect.
us that you areawareQftheldentlty
the building," he said. "It was
"We had a superviSor, and his car
covered with concrete block."
According to the U.S. Army Corps
of those people who are engaglng'in wasparkedupagainstthewallofthe
....
of Engineers, the total project cost
this criminal conduct. Y911 have a
Meanwhile, Holloway Construe- estimate ls'$313 million. ConStrucFoodland,"Willarnansald. "He was
moral and legal responsibility to sitting in his car, calling the office at
tion Co. of Wixom, Mic(l., issued a tlon on the project could begin in late
Two youths were injured early statement Thursday maintaining 1986 lth
exercise conttol In this strtke aver the time of the explosion.
' w completion possible in
Friday morning when they car In , ihat its workers did. nothing wrong
the entire bargaining unit. Fanure
"I don't think he would have been which they were rtd!ng crashed Into
1990.
on your part to do •so will result In sitting there had he any Idea there
when they ruptured the gas line·
The canal would cont ain two locks
a utUity pole on Powell St. in
serious personal Injury and prop- was gas in that butldlng."
"In every Instance, Holloway the same size as modern Ohio River
Middleport.
.
erty damage. Be advised that we
performed correctly and used darns. One lock would be 1,200 feet
The National Transportation
Middleport Police said the car
fully Intend to discipline and
Safety Board Is Investigating the driven by Steve Groggel, Portland, extremecautlon!nregardtonatural long and the other 600 f I Bo h
prosecute tixlse responsible for acclden,t, which leveled tbe supergas lines," the statement said.
would be no feet wide. ee · t ·
was totaled when It went went out of
these blatant acts of violence," .
The
company
alsolssuedacopyof
The.present locks at Gallipolis are
market and injured 17 people.
control and struck the utility pole.
a
pipeline
map
lt
received
from
the
600
and 300 feet long. Because
NTSB Vice tha!nnan Patricia .
Groggel, 19, and a passenger, state Highways Department, which modern tows are long th d
Goldman says a Columbia map Allen King, Jr., 19, Middleport, were
aslssuedthernapbyColumbiaGas. create congested rive~~affe ~s
obtained from the state Department
taken to Veterans Memortal HospiThe map indicates that the Une locks also sit in a be d IC.h e
of Highways erroneously Indicated tal by the Middleport Emergency
that was ruptured Monday was currents· and maneuv n ' w erb-e
school to Letart Falls Elementary;
that the ruptured Une no longer was Squad. King was later taken to "d d " in ti H0 ll
ea • or ac ve,
oway sa!d · !ems contribute to a h'ermg
h pro (
agreed to repair the high school carrying gas.
Willarnan
has
refused
ID
discuss
Ig
rate o
Holzer Medical Center with neck
accidents, accordi ng to the Corps
heathlngsystem; approved chapter
Ms. Goldman also has questioned · and back pains and was released what was conta!ned in the maps.
·
two for the 1983-84 school year and why Columbia crews faned to following examination. Groggel
The commission and the NTSB Weather forecast
gaveapprovaltoateamofstudenls evacuate the store and why they was later taken to ~t. ._Joseph have
combined their investtgatjons
to participate 1n. an Ohio Future were unable to turn off the gas untU f)ospltal in Parkersblll'fj:, W. Va. He but will Issue separate reports. The
One hundred (l"rcent chance of
Problems contest, students to be nearly an hour after the blast.
suffered internal !njunes, police federal Occupatinnal Safety and rain tonight and Saturday. Low
selected by the teachers.
But Willarnan on Thursday desaid, and underwent surgery Frtday Health A.drninistra tion says it also Is tonight 50-55. Winds southeasterly
The board l'!!)ected all bus bids fended his company's actions.
l().ro mph. HighonSaturday near65.
morning.
joining thP Investigation.
~ved from SEOVEC.
"It wasn't ijke our people were .

Workers ·dt.dn't know
ell•
gas was fI tng store

Union leader~s letter
details strike-actions

SALE I

A member of Local Union 5171,
United Steelworkers of America, .
charges that the president of the
union, Gary Freeman, Pomeroy,
has received a threatening letter
from C R. Northrop, ptalitmanager
of the strtke-bound Foote Mineral
. Co., New Haven.
The union , member released a
. copy of the letter, aliegedly signed
by Northrop. It reads:
"As you are aware,' we have
experienced numerousactsofstrike
related rnlsconduct at the Graham
facility. The nuinber of Incidents, as

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\

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en tine

a1 y

Pom"roy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 21, 1983

WASHIN(iTON (AP)- Nicaragua's foreign rnlirlster has presented the United States with a
fonnal set of proposals for Central
American peace whlle denouncing
President Reagan for saying the
United States has a right to engage
In covert activities In his country.
Tile House, meanwhile, voted
Thursday to cut of! support for CIA
activity In Nicaragua against the
Sandlnista government.
The proposals, presented by
Nicaraguan Foreign Minister MIguel d'E!ICOto to the Staie Department on Thursday, caught U.S.
omdals by surprtse since t])ey said
sucll documents usually emerge
only after complicated negotiations.
The proposaJs include three draft
treaties !nvolvlng the United States,
Nicaragua and other Centra! AmerIcan countries that would ban
support by one nation for guerrllla
movements In another.
It wasn't clear whether the
proposalswouldbeacceptabletothe
Reagan · administration, which
wants Nicaragua to cease its
support for leftist Insurgents in
neighboring El Salvador.
.
"These treaties will stop and
prevent war In Central America and
guarantee the securlty of . every
statelilfhelelilon, ,; Said astatement
Issued by the Nicaraguan Embassy.
An embjlssy spokeswoman said
d'Escoto would go to Panama this
weekeild 't o discuss ·the proposals
with theContadoragroup-Mexlco,
Venezuela, Colombia and Panama
- which is trying to resolve the
tunnon !n' Central America.
. A U.S. otflclal, who insisted on
anonymlty, said the State Department hadn't decided how II would
respond to the proposals which
d'Escoto delivered to Assistant
Secretary of State Langham Motley
at the State Department.
D'Escoto said In a statement that

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8xl0

y

Senate panel
okays project
appropnallon
at Gallipolis

~o~i~~Senate

h h

in accideni
~

'Soutl:z,ern board aga~nst issue

IN
LIVING
COLOR

WOMEN'S

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BOYS WRANGLER

Fall Dress Sale

Blue Denim Jeans

''FREE"

•NO AG_
E LIMIT
•LIMIT 1 PER PERSON
•ONE SPECIAL PER FAMILY
•SINGLE OR GROUPS TAKEN

DA T.E:

Story on Page 3

· See Fainlly Medicine on P, 5

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN

.PHOTO
SPECIAL

Making apple butter

Drug usage

m easure.

The group said Issue 2 would
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -Gov. change a basic concept in the way
Richard Celeste Is taking a second democracy works in which the rule
look at plans for a hall-hour TV of the majortty Is the basts upon
program opposing two anti-tax · which decisions are made.
ballot measures, after some encou-Trustees of -the Rio Grande
raging new poll results.
Community College have gone on
The confidential survey appar- record in opposition to both anti-tax
. ently shows Issues 2 and 3 are still measures. They said repeal would
favored but indlciltes Improvement mean a $350,!XXlloss In state subsidy
In the campaign by opponents to for the college. A spokesman said
defeat them.
that if the loss was offset through a
"We're down but we'reinovingin tuition increase It would amount to
the light direction, " Celeste said. about 50 percent.
" Things seem to be going pretty
good with the campaign right now."
Celeste, in a bid to personally take .-------------------his message against the Issues to the
LEGAL NOTICE
voters, had been ronsidertng the
The Public Utilities Commission of
possibility of recording a half-hour
Ohio ha s scheduled local public
dialog with a small group of selected
hearings in Case No. 83·98-EL·AIR ,
Ohioans for telecast later onstations
In the Matter of the Application of
aroond the state.
Ohio Power Company to Increase
Among the factors figurtng In the
Certain of its Filed Schedules Fixing .
decision about how to proceed are
Rates and Charges for Electric Serthe high cost of buying a half-hour
vice . The hearings wil l be held on
during prtme viewing hours and
Tuesday . November 1. t 983 at
questions about how big an audience
6 30 p.m.. 1n City Hafl Council
Chambers , 401 Market Street.
would tune in to a political program
Za nesvil le , Ohio ; on Wednesday,
of that length.
November 2, 1983 at 1:30 p.m.,
What would influence Celeste's
and 6:30p .m., in the City Council
decision !lbout airing the half-hour
Chambers. 218 Cleveland Avenue ,
program or choosing a different
S.W
.. Canton. Ohio; and on Thursformat• "Basically when and
day
.
November 3. 1983. at 6:30
where I can exercise my gubernap.m.,
in the Hal! ot Justice. Room
torial leadership best," he said.
202 . 109 North Union Street.
If approved, Issue 3 would repeal
Li ma . Ohio. Interested members
aU tax taws enacted by the General
of the public will be afforded an
Assembly since January, Including
opportunity at these times to prethe 90 percent boost in the state
sen t lestimony relative to the
income tax which Celeste sought.
proposed increase . By its applica Issue 2 would make it harder for
tion . Ohio Power Company seeks a
legislators to raise taxes Iii the
revenue increase of $83 .077.000 .
future by requiring a three-fllths
The major issues . as indicated by
vole Instead of the simple majortty
the parties. are :
needed at present.
a) the appropriate level of work In related deve lopm en ts
ing capital allowance for the lag
Wednesday:
in recovering fuel expense ;
-The Ohio Council of Churches
b) the normalization of plant maintenance expense;
general board - made up of
c) the appropriate rate of return
represenatlves of the 19 member
to be authorized;
.
denominations - said it strongly
d)
the
proper
distribution
of
revenue
opposed Issue 2.
responsibility
among
the
various
It had earlier taken a stand
customer
classes
.
against Issue 3, the tax repeal

Reds courting Rose

r--~~:;~::~~~~~~!i;:;£;;;:~~~~~~~~~~~~;:~~~~iS~~~~~~~~~~

· Celeste encouraged
by latest poll figures
Ast!loclated Prtlss Writer

Chester, Clarence C. Wolf, Jr.,
Robert Ritchie, Fortda A. Rapp;
Bidwell, Patricia Elliot; Portland,
Lawrence Groggel; Oak Hill, Judy
E. Herbert; Cheshire, Charles W.
Searles, Rodney E : Spires.

Gilkey, Mary E. Davidson, Donna
M. Davidson; Hartford, W. Va.,
Madeleine R. Johnson; Reedsville,
Maxine Hetzer, Kevin Hetzer,
Kathy Hetzer, Deborah L. Sanders,
Mace! Barton, John C. Rice;

Weather forecast

FRIDAY, OCT. 21st
SAl'URDAY. OGT. llnd~

PHOTOGRAPHER'S HOURS:
FRIDAY-11:00 A.M. 'TIL 7:00P.M. SATURDAY-10:00 A.M. 'HL 4:30P.M.

ELBERFELD DEPT. STORE

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Misses Sizes 6 to 20, Half Sizes 10~ to

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and regulars 8 to 16 - husky sizes 8 to
18.

'24~.

Reg. '20.00 ...... Sale '15.99
Reg. 136.00 ...... Sale 128.19
Reg. 142.00 ...... Sale '33.59
Reg. •so.oo ...... Sale '39.99

- 1 114.95 Regulars and
Slims .................... 110.38
'16.95 Huskies ........ '11.68
118.95 Students ....... '13.28
,.

r

MEN'S HUBBARD

Dress Slacks

The 'Southern Local Board of
Education adopted a resolution
Thursday night opposing Issue2 and
3. It was stated that If Issue. 3 ts
approved Southern Local School
District will lose $284,,00! e1!ective
next school year.
In other business the board
established an additional special
education bus route from the high

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liEN'S 132.95
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. HUBBARD SLACKS ........... '27.10
MEN'S '34.95
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·Issue 3 may stlll face constitutional challenge
aaa!Mt

'~-

LAYAWAYS WELCOME
C~CAII) •

PQMEROY, OH.
PHOTOS BY HONEY PORTRAITS
''

COUJMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A spokesman for Ohio
Justicell said Cramer's action had not been filed at
~ ofStateSherrodBrownsayaaconstltutlanal _ _least &amp;I~ lllldvBIICe Of the electim as required by
the Ol1lo O:inllltutloD.
Challenge still could IE mounted
a repeal of the
state's ~ Pet cent Income tu lncreue, If the repeal
They a11o tumed clown his argument that the
effort passes (J'I Nov. 8.
'
measure WI:AIId be unconstitutional if approved
The0hloSupremeCourtruled'I1nlrldaythatvoters
becaueeof tbemultlplesubjectacpntainedlnQ1lelssue.
lhould aet to cast ballots Qll llu! 3, a popooed
- Witholltnlllnconlbemerita&lt;tthecase,jusUcessald
constitutional amendment which WI:AIId R!Pilll an tax
Jaws enacted by the Genera!A&amp;semllly llbcle.January,
sucll a ciUn prior ID lbe ele ctkln was premature.
Spokeernan David Shutt said Secretary ot State
cbleOy the 90 percent boost In the lnllome.IU.
· In a IIJIIIIIrnludeclaloll, the blib court tumeddowll
SbaiudBnllmWU&amp;'lr edwiththedeclstm.
•
a reQIIIIltromPblllpCnmer,aCdwnblilatfiii'IIIS', to
. "Buf- haW to point out that the court did not
IIPllt Jliue 311110 lndMdualllluel CJ(' llrlllte It rn.n the
Mlltt- any of tile CGIItlutlollaJ illuel, &lt;lily the
""ededne, Tllllle--could bebMalbtupbyprleOIIe
bdal.

r

following the election which Is Important to
remember," Shutt said.
·
"I'm d!SapP()IJ!tea tlla!thi!'coort IS going to allow the
constitutional crisis to continue ilp tnand perhaps after
election day," Cramer said.
"They did .lot rule on the merits of the Issue and
simply said It's too premature to Utlgate it until after
the people vote," he said.
Gov. Richard Celeste was said by. an aide to be
"gl'l\tlfled" by the court's ruling. Celeste had earlier
goneonrecordin~itlontothecourtcaseseeklngto

remove Issue 3, saying he believed "thecltizensofOhlo
have a right to vote" on it.
·
The pro-repeal Ollloans to stop Excessive Taxation

(SET) on Thursday pointed to a report by a private
non-partisan tax study group as proving Its point that
Ol!lo haS lli!rome a high tax stall'.-• ·
- ~
Ronald Braucher, SET executive director, said the
Ohio Publlc Expenditure Council report showed Ohio
WOUld rank 13th or 14th among the states in terms of
state and local income tax burden.
"When you compare our high income tax ra• king
with the fact that Ohio's per capita personal income
ranks.fl9th in the CQIII1try, it flashes a defll)ltewarnlng
signal that Ohioans are paying a higher proportion of
their tncpme In state and local Income taxes than
res!Qentsol most other states," Braucher said.

�.

'.,

Comment

,.

Almost the right stuff___w:_u_lia_m_F._B_uc_kley_Jr.

The Daily Sentjnel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERE'&gt;T IJF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

A few things should be said·about
the movie "The Right Stutf," which
Is corning in with. the biggest bang
..... ~
"Gone With the Wind. "
since
~m~ r"T"'\.,.,L-~ 1 r"T""E!!!d·~
The first Is that seeing Ills not an
~v .
.
experience comparable to .reading
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Tom Wolfe's book. This Is a point
Publisher
especially relevant given that ¢be
producers lrted very hard, spared
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
no
expense and were wonderfully
Asst."tant Publisher/ Controller
General Managl'r
Ingenious. The best example of
their relative failure Is the
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
lion for the astronauts given at the
News Editor
Houston Astrodome. In the book,
A MEMBER of The Assoclaled Press, Inland Dally Press Associafour or five of the most hilartous
tion a nd the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
pages In modern social commen·
tary
describe an event that is at
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should he lt&gt;Ss than 300 words
lon~ . All letters are subject to e diting and must t&gt;f' s igned with name, address and
once vulgar, boisterous and poigtelephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published . Letters should be In
nant. In the movie ail the humor is
good lash~ . addressing issues, not penmnaiiUes.
gone, and we are exposed merely to
the celebration of VUlgarity, which,
_--· next to the conquest of space, Is
what the movie mostly focuses on.
Tom· Wolfe's genius brings to the
study of almost every ·situation the
leavening humor that makes tolera·
ble well, makes America
tolerable.
And speaking of America, "The
Every few years you may be sure of a new rage and then a flow of abuses Right Stuff" is oddly unaware.of it.
It' Is always possible, if you are
lh real estate investment, that seeming to be the nature of an industry so
willing to put all collective human
affected by taxes, interest rates, inflation and recession.
ventures under a microscope, to see
· It could be bappenlng again. "A lot of people are walking around
bankrupt anq don't know it yet," says a man who has poured millions of only discrete personal acts. The
movie gives us men who are merely
dollars Into the indi,ISiry and is a bit concerned at what he sees.
The latest rage, it seems, is the private partnership, In which the brave, ambitious and competitive.
collective savings of a small number of Individuals ·are invested in The notion that they were In any
way animated by national pride
apartment houses, office buildings, shopping malls, motels and tbe like.
. The meteoric rise of the real estate limited partnership, says Daniel would have struck the director as
·Fru!tblne, source of the bankruptcy statement, "must rank among the qual1lt. Indeed, wherever it !Je.
come~ necessary to bring ln the
major economic developments of the late 20th ceritury."
Fruitblne, who heads D.B.G. Property Corp., a company whose good old U.S.A., there Is a smell of
: partnerships own and manage more than $350 mllllon of property, chauvinism and sleaziness.
· estimates that $12 billion was invested through such devices in 1982, and
even more this year.
The reasons are many, most important of them being that opportunity to
obtain immediate income, eventual capital gains, and big tax benefits
•
. because of the deductibility of depreciation and Interest charges.
WASHINGTON - Can a news·
. Private placements are unlike public offerings.
,~ ·
paper be compelled to publish a
Public deals resemble stock offerings. They are registered and
column written by one of its
examined by the Securities and Exchange Commission, and involve
reporters? To those of us ln the
thousands of investors ln an enterprj,se that might own a large pOrtfolio of
:news business, the question Itself
buildings.
would seem absurd , We could
l!!· private placement Is less strictly regulated, if only becaU!•! there are so answer that as long as a free press
many of them. Many of them are promoted as tax shelters, often to a
Is guaranteed by the Constitution,
greater extent than the Internal Revenue Service will allow when it catches
no newspaper can lawfully be
on.
compelled to publish anything. We
"The bottom line is tbat we can no longer expect real estate partnerships
may be wrong.
to provide the large write-offs many Investors have come to expect," says
The question will be argued in
Fruitblne. There are, he says, "implacable economic and social" reasons
January before the U.S. Court of
why.
Appeals for the District of Colum·
Leverage, for example, isn't what it used to be. In earlier days It paid to bla. No matter.how the court rules,
put as little down as possible, borrowing the rest and deducting the interest
the case almost certainly will wtnd
charges on income taxes. But high interest rates have reduced those
up before the Supreme Court next
benefits.
year.
Moreover, Fruitbine says, investors no longer can count on inflation to
This is the story. In 1967 Michael
'help out by raiSing values, as It did In the 1970s.
Stoddard went to work as reporter
: At the same time, It seems, many new investors have been attracted to for the Passaic (N.J.) Herald·real estate: Foreigners, pension funds pressured to perform, stocll and
News. In addition to his regular
bond buyers seeking to diversify, savings banks with cash from money
reporting, he wrote a Sunday
market accounts.
column that in the course of time
. Demand of that sort tends to push up prices.
became highly opinionated and
controversial. He continued to write
his column during his tenure as
chief of the newspaper's Morris
County bureau, and except for. a
year In which he served as night
editor, Stoddard functioned as both
reporter and columnist.
The selection of Robert McFarlane to head the National Security CouncU
puts a technocrat ilj a job held in the past by celebrated foreign policy
'experts Henry Kissinger and Zbignlew Brzezinski.
It means iJ\ an administration short of specialists, President Reagan wUI
Who says there aren't heroes left
depend on a security adviser with a reputation for efficiency but without
in
America any more? Just the
the academic and Intellectual background Kissinger and Brzezinski
other
day, in a surprise ceremony,
brought to the job.
CIA
awarded CIA Director
the
That doesn't mean McFarlane will recommend the wrong global moves
William
J.
Casey the "Dislln·
to Reagan. Sometimes, despite glittering academic credentials, the best
gulshed
Intentgence
Medal," the
and the brightest can be wrong, as was demonstrated In Vietnam.
agency's
highest
award.
Casey was
But the choice of McFarlane may indicate foreign policy will be put on
cited
for
"outstanding
leadership"
hold in the year leading up to the 1984 presidential election. If events force
!Jfd for restoring the credibility of
moves on Reagan obviouSly he wUI respond. But he may not Initiate much.
t~e CIA and bringing "imagination
McFarlane wtll operate in tandem with another exponent of caution,
to
our operation."
Secretary of State George Shultz, Together, they project competence but
In the past a decoration of this
not Inspiration. They have not been known for bold Ideas.
magnitude was usually reserved
Both are on the conservative side. Neither Is an ldeolqgue. As a result,
until the director retired or resigned
Reagan's practical nature wtll be reinforced over his Instinct to champion
from the job. But apparently the
causes.
;~
.
I
United Nations Ambassador;Jeane Kirkpatrick might have steered the people who work for Mr. Casey
couldn't wait.·I am not privy to how
president In the other direction.
these awards are made, but I know
Her views are strongly held and she is not shy about pushing tbem.
. She was backed by presidential advisers who are concerned with they're not easy to get.
They must have an awards
maintaining what one offlcial called "the purity of Reaganlsm."
committee out at Langley that goes
A Democrat, and the most prominent member of her party In the
over every one of the citation
administration. Mrs. Kirkpatrick has been an outspo!&lt;en ambassador. She
nominations to make sure the
has tempered her views - slightly - to accommodate her sensitive
person is deserving of the hOnor. ·
·
diplomatic assignment.
"Gentlemen, our first nominee is
As the president's security assistant, she probably wbuid bave been
James
Bllcksteln, who, In a clan·
1 inclined to give Peagan strong and unvarnished advice. ~he is one of the
destine
operation, dropped behind
\ nation'S leading neo-conservatives and has a rich academic background.
enemy
lines In Afghanistan and
.. But Reagan chose McFarlane, and he may lose Mrs. Kirkpatrtck In the
delivered
needed radio equipment
process.
.
to
the
rebels.
He then walked
· She has Intimated to friends for months that she Is tired of butting her
barefoot
500
mlles
across Russian·
:tJead against bloc voting the United Nations,
held
territory
back
to Paldstan:
·· Her resignation could cost Reagan votes in 1~ when he will need both
Does
he
get
a
medal?"
Democrats and women to win re-election.
"He's paid to do that. Why sbould
he get an al!'ard? If we give out the
'Distinguished Intelligence Medal''
to every Tom, Dick and Han-y
involved in a clandestine operation,
i! will deDate its value."
"Qkay, let's forget Blickstelnc1 am writing to urge a NO vote on . majority vote.
The second nominee Is Hiram Cope,
Issues 2 and 3. These issues are like
Look beneath the cover; !he real who managed to go over the wall at
poisOnous fruit, both tempting and
the Soviet's submarfne ·baBe at
winners on these issues are the
11estructive. The lure ofiower taxes
wealthy, who. don't need the public Murmansk and steal all the
ls an attractive cover for the schools or the other public setvlces U.S.S.R.'s naval codes. He .then
problems Inside:
that wUl be cut Issue 2 Is swam in· a trag 8Uit 10 NoJWay."
Poorer · programs for public unconstihrtlonal, and Issue 3 Is
"Bid deal. I'll admit It wasn't a
&amp;choOI.s; ellmlnatlon of tax breaks undlg8tible. Together they wUl bad operation, but II It worth- a
mec1al?" ..
'f or senior citizens, farmers, and
cholle our recovering economy and
small businesseS; and frustration shatter the stability of our .s tate .
"All in fawr say aye - all
:for lesJslators who won't be able to government. Vote NO on Issues 2 · against nay. The nays have lt.
conect the problems, even with a and 3. -JohnS. Foster, Pomeroy.
Scratch Cope.''

recep·

There can't have been a more
· Mind you, it Is a wonderful
obnoxious hwnan being than "The spectacular, with superb acllitg and
Right Stuffs" Lyndon Johnson direction, and memorable charac·
since, well, the real Lyndon John· terlzations. You begin with the
son. Jack Kennedy makes boiler· impact of the loneliness of a remote
plate tallls about the challenge to air base (Edwards, in California)
America, various senators are where, out of eyesight, gre~t feats
depicted worrying about the pollti· . are accomplished. Chuck Yeager,
cal implications of it all- America, . the legendary test plio!, Is wonder·
in the movie, !sa sideshow. In the fully depleted by actor-author Sam
book, however lightly done, Amer· Shepard. It Is routine, at Edwards,
lea Is, really, the main event. fbe to rlde horses wildly (nice juxtapoastronauts were up to something sltlon, the lrontlersmen, old and
different from Evil Knlevel's flam·
new) , drink up a vat of beer, pursue
your woman (all of them marveboyan! assaults on gravity.

a1ifl?"--

J

,
,/ /.

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. Debunking the
:· ~atest rage

Jously ·drawn), recklessness. And
then - the next day - you get Into
the cockpit, chew your gum, get
dropped from the mother ship, and
break the sound barrier.
A couple of weeks later, the other
man at the bar has gone Mach 1.3,
so you know that, maybe tomorrow,
maybe In a week or two, you will
have to go for Mach 1.4. Let's drlnk
to ~ And an important point to
stress: In those days there were no
parades, no publicity, no big
contracts with Wfe magazine,
becaus~·all this was, you see, secret
stuff. ·

/
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MIM'l\l£ ~ISER- ~Wist us HC'NI WE GET' JEANE I&lt;IRI&lt;'I~III'J(

Big Brother and us, ______J_am_e_sJ_._K,_.!..·lp_at_ric_k

a

·P utting foreign
:policy on hold

Early In 1979, 6ne of Stoddard's
Toward the end of his opinion,
Herman
ruled that the Passaic
colleagues took the lead in efforts to
establish a local of the International newspaper cannot deprive Stod·
Printing and Graphlc Communica- · dard of his right "to submit" his
tions Union. S\oddard himself took column, "subject to management's
no very active role, though he lent appNval." But that language went
his •name to about a dozen letters thtough an abrupt sea change on its
sent out by the organizing way to a recommended remedy.
committee.
Herman recommended - and
The union organizers lost two the NLRB, without a murmur of
elections, but in August 1900 they dissent, accepted his recommenda·
won. Immediately following the lion - that the newspaper "be
announcement of the results on required to restore Stoddard to his
Aug. 15, the paper's executive former position as weekly coium·
editor, Coil Hendley, ordered Slod· nlst, and to resume publication of
dard's column killed. Stoddard Stoddard's weekly column, subject
thereafter complained to the Na· to the same lawful standards artd
tiona! Labor Relations Board that requirements that respondent, as
Hendley's action constituted an an employe( imposes or may
unlawful ~prisal: He was being . impose upon Its employees."
demoted and punished because of
If the board's order ultimately Is
his pro-union activity.
affirmed, the newspaper must post
In February 1982 Administrative a notice promising to "resume
Law Judge Arthur A. Herman publication of Stoddard's weekly
found in Stoddard's favor. He column."
concluded that the newspaper, "by
No such order ever has been
ceasing tlie publication of Slod· entered before by the NLRB.
dard's weekly column, .committed Eleven years ago, in a case coming
an unfair labor practice, in that it out of Wichita, Kan., the board
discouraged membership in the ordered an editorial writer who had
union."
been transferred to the Sunday

Last of the heroes

magazine restored to 'her position,
but there was no requirement that
the paper "publish" her pieces. It Is
'a novel proposition, and an ominous
one, that the federal courts may
enforce a bureaucratic order com·
pelllng a free press to publish any
particular offering.
It Is Impossible to deduce wbal Is
meant by the NLRB's qualifying
phrase, that Stoddard's columns
must run "subject io the same
lawful standards and requirements
that respondent, as an employer,
Imposes or may Impose upon Its
employees." Under such cit-cum·
stances, suppose a columnist
comes up with a column tbat 'is
libelous, or obscene, or in rotten
·taste, or factually wrong? If the
editor kills such a column, is his
decision to be reviewed by the
NLRB for possible recriffiinatory
bias?
Newspapers are not exempt from ·
laW!i that define unfair labor
practices. No one contends that
they are. But if 1984 brings
affirmation of the NLRB's order In
the Passaic case, George Orwell's
Big Brother will have materialized
right on the dot.

Art Buchwald

--------------~------~~==

" We now come to Nicaragua and
Honduras. Our man down there,
T .L., managed to get around a·u the
restrictions the Congressional Com·
'mittee on Intelligence laid down for
covert operations, and got his
people to bomb Nicaraguan soU.''
"He should get a medal."
"But do we want to give him the
highest one?"
"I don't think we do, because we
have to make him the fall guy ln
case Congress starts . raising a
ruckus. Let's give him ibe CIA's
Good Conduct Award. We can
always give him the blggie just
before we fire him."
"We're all agreed then on · T.L.
Now I have a CIA person tbat I am

proud to nominate. I propose that
we give the 'Distinguished Intelll·
gence Medal' to .none other than our
revered director, William J .

Casey."
"I have no quarrel with truit. The
man certainly.,bas gone beyond the
call of duty."
"You won't hear a nay from me.
He's the bravest of the brave."
"The smartest of the smart."
"His outstanding leadership has
made this organization wbat it is
today." '

"If It wasn't for his Imagination I
don't know where we'd all be
today."
"I take it then there Is no
opposition to awarding the director

our-highest decorations."
"I've stU! got five years to go
before retirement. You won't hear
any objection from me."
. "Good, Then I'll write up the
citation and we'll . get Deputy
Director John McMahon to present
It to him In a full-Oedged formtil
ceremony, with the CIA Under·

cover Band."
"It's ihe least we can do for the ·
old man."

"No one in the CIA deserves it
rmore."
"How did you ever think of It,
WU!oughby?"
"When you're In the intelligence
business you HAVE to think of
everything."
•

at

.•

I~tter

to the Editor

By BRUCE LOWrrr
AP Sports Writer
The good news for Detroit Is that
John Riggins may not play Sunday.
The bad news for the Lions Is that
Alvin Garrett may be in the lineup
for the WaShington Redskins.
-Riggins, one of the National
Football league's most punishing
runners, has been taking quite a
heating lately. The Redskins' ful.
!back, last year's Most Valuable
Player in the Super Bowl, has
gained 6ro yards and scored 10
touchdowns this season.
· But he also has · a painfully
lnflamed sciatic nerve in his right
hip and was hospitalized for
treaiment at midweek.
TheUonsrememberhimwel\.He
rushedforll9yardswhentheteams
met last Jan. 8 in the teams'
first-round National Conference
playoff game - but the Uons no
doubt have more vivid memories of
Garrett.
He replaced the injured ArtMonl&lt;
ln that game and caught six passes,
three of them covering 21, 21 and 'r1
yards for touchdowns in the
Redskins' 31-7 romp. Monk Is
healthy now, · but fellow wide
receiver Charlie Brown Isn't, sidelined with a bruised ankle. So
Garrett's back in the lineup.
Sunday's other games are New
England at Buffalo, Atlanta at' the
New York Jets, Kansas City at
Houston, New Orleans at Tampa
Bay, Minnesota at . Green Bay,
Chicago at Philadelphia, Cleveland
at Cincinnati, Miami at Baltimore,
Pittsburgh at Seattle, San Diego at
Denver, San Francisco ·at the Los
Angeles Rams and, at night, the Los
Angeles Raiders at Dallas. On
. Monday night It's the New Yorll
Giants at St. Louis.
"For the first time this year we
are coming into a game at less than
100 percent physically," Redskins
Coach Joe Gibbs said. "This is
probably going to be one of our
biggest challenges because we
might have a lot of players missing
and Detroit Is really hot "'&lt; We are
going to need some big efforts from
people coming off the bench."
TheRedsktnsarecomlngoffthelr
second loss in seven games, the48-47
shootout in Green Bay last Monday
night, while the Lions, 34, are
shooting for their third consecutive

aJLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Preseason title fawrlte Ohio State,
relegated toaspoUer'srolewithtwo
early defeats, faces invad!ngMichigan State, another Big Ten team
with quarterbacking problems
Saturday.
The Buckeyes, 17th·ranked na·
tionally, are four-touchdown favor·
l~tol!eeptheSparlanswinlessln

the conference before another Ohio
StadlurnseUoutofmorethan88,00J
fans.
Ohio State quarterback Mll&lt;e
Tomczak, ranked first nationally
earlier in the 9!"ason In passing
efficiency, managed only two of
seven completions lor 22 yards and
threw two Interceptions betore
suffering a concussion atllllnols last
week .
Earle Bruce, the Buckeyes•·
coach, eventually settled on a

Friday's Schedule
SEOAL
Jackson at Gallipolis
Tri·Valley
Federal Hocking at Alexander
1- --"'''cll:• at Belpre
Vinton County at Mtller
Nelsonville-York at Warren
Trimble at Wellston
'::::1 SVAC
Eastern at Kyger Creek
l,lannan Trace at Southern
Southwestern at North Gallia
Others
Portsmouth at Athens
Ironton at Waverly
Ripley at Point Pleasant
Guyan Valley at Wabama
Morgan at Boyd
Symmes Valley at Coal GrQve
Rock HUI at Oak Hlll
Greenup at Wheelersburg
Saturday

204 Conder St.
p_,.y,Otl.

Phena "2·2975

FALL. WINTER HOURS:' '·
ElfMtlve Oat. 1·M•rah 1

...

i
·- ~

,_ __ _

••

freshman quarterback, Jim Karsa·

tos, In the Dllni's 17·13 victory that
dropped Ohio State to 2·2 In the
conference.
.
It was UnClear whether Tomczak
would play Saturday.
"It's a disaster In the Big Ten for
us," Bruee said. "We need a lot of
help from somebody. Everybody
hasgottobeupsettwlceforustoget
back in it."
Ohio State, 4-2 overall, has fallen
two games from the lead with five
conference games. remaining. IIII·
nols and Michigan )ead with 4.()
starts while Iowa Is right behind at

J.l.

.It has been an even more difficult
season for George Perles, Michigan
State's rookie coach.

co-captain; BeniUa Deeter, captain; Usa Lanoe,
Delaol Baker and Lee Ann &amp;blnson. Their advisor Is
Lyneite Van Reelh, faculty member.

"If I had position open I'd take
him," said Dallas Green, 011cago
Cubs general manager, but noted he
already bad three first basemen.
"We don't bave any place to play
him," said Ted Turner, Atlanta
Braves owner who had actively
sought Rose when hewasln thel978
re-entry draft.
"It's pretty hard to promise
anybody they'd play ev~ry day,"
said White Sox general manager
Roland Hemond.
''We're going with our young
people," said AI Campanls, Los
Angeles general manager, a senti·
men! echoed by the Minnesota

CLEVELAND (AP) -Cleveland
Indians President Gabe Paul denies
a · published report that Denver
millionatreMarvlnDavtsmightbuy
the Cleveland Indians and move the
American League team to Denver.
The report appeared Thursday in
the Al&lt;ron Beacon Journal.
" Talking is one thing, doing Is
something else," Paul said. "People
from all over the world have made
offers. No, I take that back. We
baven't had one from Tokyo- yet.
"Marvin DaviS has been after a
major league club for a long time.
There bave been no negotiations
with anybody from Denver."
Paul also noted tbat the O'Neui
family prefers tbat the team be l&lt;ept
In Cleveland.
The majority of Indians stocllls
controlled by a charitable trust
created after the death last summer
of owner F.J. "Steve" O'NeUI.
The Beacon Journal quot'ed
Denver Mayor .Federico Pena as
saying, "I know that Marvin Davis
has made a substantial offer for the .
CleVeland Indians, and from my
information it Is possible that the
team can be moved to Denver."

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Tivins.

Howsam said he had tallied with
Phlllles President Bill Giles about
Rose. Howsam also said that the
Reds hlld tried without success to
contact Rose's agent, Cmclnnati
lawyer Reuven J. Katz.
Rose, who started 30 games l!;l

PH. 992-2115
108 MIH'BERRY

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1978 CHEV. MALIBU CLASSIC .................. '3895

V·6, air, auto:, P.B., P.S., A· I condition.

1976 DODGE CHARGER ....... :........... .-........ '1395
Auto., air, good condition.

1976 AMC PACER ............... s ................... '1095.
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1969 PLYMOUTH ROAD RUNNER 'CONVERT.. ,.... s1295
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--

I

Reds show~·· interest in Rose

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

\

&lt;

..

CINCINNATI (AP)- The Cincin- right field for the Phlllles last season
nati Reds are interested ln talkingto but was primarily a first baseman,
Pete Rose about finishing his major batted .245, hit no home runs and
league career where It began and stole seven bases.
Howsam declined to discuss
reached Its heights, but not on his
whether
the Reds would be wllllng to
conditions.
"Certainly the Reds WOUII\ be meet Rose's salary demands.
The Phlllles signed Rose on Dec. 5,
Interested In talkil1gwithPete Rose.
But, it seems to be the conditions he 1978, to a four·:vear -eontract
has laid down would not fit our estimated at $3.3 million for the four
situation that we bave here In years.
Wben the contract ran out Ia,st
Cincinnati," said Bob Howsam, ·
season, Rose was signee! to a
Reds president.
Rose, with the Philadelphia one-year deal with a $300,00Jbuyout
Phll1les slnce1979, becamea42-year clause, which the Phlllles bad the
old without a job this week when he right to Invoke If the club decided not
took his release from the Philadel· to renew the contract by Nov. 15,
phia
Phlllles rather than accept the 1983. Rose collected the $300,00J
control.''
Wednesday.
role
of
a part·tlme player.
Kansas City hasn't won In the
During Rose's 16 seasons In
Rose,
a
key
member
of
the
The
Astrodome ~thee 1974 - but the
Cincinnati,
he batted .301, collected
Big
Red
Machine
during
the
Reds'
Chiefs are going against the AFC's
3,164
hits,
hit
150 home runs and
glory
days,
became
a
free
agent
in
only winless team. TheOI!ers' losing
drove
In
954
runs.
1978
after
playing
out
his
option
and
streaklsat14games.lt'salsoCbuck
.--------------1
Studley's tlrst home game as signed with Philadelphia.
Rose, now free to negotiate with
Houston's Interim coacb. His debut
any
team, said he wants to play
ended with a 34-14 pounding in
and said he would consider
full-time
Minnesota.
!rom the National league
switching
The NFL's other winless team
to
the
American
League as a
also trudges home this w~kend,_
hitter,
"I'm
sure there
designated
TampaBayhoplngltcanendltssldd
are
some
teams
out
there
w~o want
against the Saints the way It did in
me,"
he
told
reporters.
'
1'!77. Back then, in the Buccaneers'
Kansas
City
Royals
General
second season, their losing streak hit
26 before they upended the saints Manager John Schuerhoiz said
Rose's name "certainly will come
33-14.
up if\anevaluationofallplayerswho
~CTOBER
20 thru ~
I"RI(M'( rtvu THURSDAY I
areavaUable."
Several teams, ·however, were
less than enthusiastic.

GRAVELY

.,

•

Paul denies
latest rumor

RESERVE-TheseEasfemiDghSchoolglrlsmake
up the reserve cbeerleadlng squad lor the ongoing
football season. 'lbey were from the left, Lori Rltdde,

1974 MAVERICK ...... :....................;............ '695

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVI'CE

''

victory, a !eatlheybaven'tachleved
since November 1~. In their past
two games they've beaten Green
Bay J8.14 and Chicago 31-17.
Buffalo Is alone atop the Ameri·
can Conference East at 5-2 and New
England shares last place with the
Jets at 34, but Bills Coach Kay
Stephenson notes: ''There's always
been a special rtvalry between the
Patrtots and the Bills, and ·It's
always going to be a dogfight, no
matter wbat the records."
Both teams are coming off big
games, the Bills ripping Baltimore
3().7 and thePatsshocklngSanD!ego
3'1·21. New England's Steve Grogan
was the bot quarterback earlier this
year but Joe Ferguson of the Bills Is
now. He has throwneightTDpasses
~ ~~
in the past two games.
In New York, there'sthedramaof
two teams in trouble, the2·5 Falcons
and the34Jets.
"At this point in time, we need
something good to bappen to get us
rolling," said Jets Coach Joe
Walton. "I guess 34 Is better than
2·5, but everyihlng Is relative In this
world. My mother calls ine and
complainS that she's 70.years-old. I
leU her, 'Mom, begratefulyou'renot
71.'"
The)·-Faicons biggest asset has
been quarterback Steve Bart·
kowskl, who shares the NFL passillg
lead with.Green Bay's Lynn Dickey.
"Steve has put us into position to win
every game," said Col¥:h Dan
Henning. "He hasn't turned the ball
over Indiscreetly (only one interception, 12 fewer than the Jets' Richard
Todd) and he's made the big plays.
Butsomethlngsbappenedouto!our

Tonight's
area games

lAlgan at

I

-J

.

Bucks must now
play spoiler's role

Non-Leatue

No vote urged

r- ·- ------.,..,.. - -.

Redskins' Riggins
doubtful starter

•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, October 21, 1983

.

I

399

w.

MODERN SUPPLY

.

Main St.
. 992·2164
"
Pomeroy, OhiO
. The Store With "All Kinds of Stuff
·
For - Pets. Stables, Large &amp; Small Animals . Lawns &amp; Gardens .

•

�..
Page

4

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 21, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I Meet the Tornadoes

l iHuskies will risk share of MAC lead Saturday
By GEORGE SmODE

SEAN GRUESER

MITCHBABLE

5-8, 137 JMiund
Sophom•ore end

6i, 200 pound

APSporlsWrller '
BUl Mallory, Norther n Illinois'
veteran coach , realizes the Huskies
can, only slow Bowling Green's
Brtan McClure, whom he ranks with
the best -&lt;?ver pssers in MidAmerican Confer ~n ee football
history._
"There haw bc&lt;cn some good
quarterbacks in the MAC, " Mallory
said. "Ernie Kellermann. Chuck
Ealey, Cleve Bryam. Doyt Perry
(former Bowling Green coach)
made the comment ... that McClure
is the best pure passer ln hls years of
watching the league. I'd second
that."
Northern IU!nois finds out firsthand Saturday. The Huskies wUl
risk a share of the Mid-American
league lead against Invading Bowling Green, only one game from
the lead In a bld for a second straight
title.

Senior tackle

l':f,jllllltl.

Central l\1lchlgan, Toledo and
Northern Illinois all have 4-0
conference records to a 3-1 start for
Bowling Green. Flvewooksremain
in the Mid-American race to
determine the league's representative to the Callfornla Bowl.
In other league games Saturday,
Mlaml (1-3) plays at Central
Mlchlgan, Toledo at Eastern Mlchlgan (0-4), Ball State (2-2) at Western
Mlchlgan (1-3) and Ohlo University
(1-3) at Kent State (0-4) .
McClure, thlrd in the nallen with •
almost 283 total yards per game this
season, needs only 13 completions
against tbe Huskies to break the
league's single-season record of 1!Kl,
set by Gene Swick of Toledo In 1975.
The 6-foot-6 Sophomore needs
seven atiempts and 211 passing
yards Saturday to crack two more
Bowling Green season record$.
McClure has thrown !or 1,893 yards
in 1983.

Mallory sald of McCI1:re: "He's
very poised, very accurate. We'll try
to come up with a good rush and not
give him all day. It's a team thing.
You've got to cover the rwtes, too.
You're not going to stqJ him. Just
don't allow him to make the blg

yards and six touchdowns rushing.

Huskies,this
the scoringest
in the
league
fall with team
172 points.
Northern DllnOls, with seven victories, has thelongestCUITelltwinnlng
streak In the conferenCe.
"This Is thebes! MAC team to date
that we have seen," Bowllng Green
coach Denny Stolz said. "They have
been building this team !or four
years and they thlnk they have a
championship c!ub.'1
For Northern Illinois, quarterback Tim Tyrrell has rushed form
yardsandpassedfor694yardswhlle

BOB GREENE
5-11, 134 JMIUDd

J unlor guard

GREG DUVALL
6-2, 20:1 pound
Senior tackle

Phils hire Owens
~s field manager
:)&gt;HilADELPHlA tAP) - Paul
Qlilens, who relinquished his generlll manager's duties to manage
ttie Phlladelphla Phillies In midseason, has signed a one-year
cqntract to continue as field boss in
1984, the team said Thursday.
:awens ' decision was a complete
turnaround from his earlier statement that he "definitely" would not
rerum to the dugout next season.
!·r decided I wanted to come back
blicause we have a chance to repeat
wllat we dld this year. I'm confident
wUl put on as good a show as we
dld In 1983," Owens said at a press
cqnference.
,.,I like the job and I'm confident
we' can win next year. It 's a

we

challenge and I like that," sajd
Owens, adding that he changed his.
mind about staying oil as manager
within the last couple of days.
Blll Giles, the PhUlles' president,
and the rest of the front office
hlerarchy prevaUed on Owens to
continue In the field job.
Owens returned tothedugoutJuly
1B to replace the fired Pat Corrales
as manager. The Phlllies at the time
were tied for first place, one game
over .500.
Under Owens, the Phlllies were
47-30, a .610 cUp; won the National
League pennant, beat the Los
Angeles Dodgers In the NL playoff,
and then lost to the Baltimore
Orioles in the World Series, 4-1.

.

CINCINNATI (AP) -Offensive
powerhouse Miami, Fla., brings its
No.8 ranking and its qUest for a
school record seven straight football
victories to town Saturday to face
Cincinnati, which will be relying on a
new quarterback.
Cincinnati Coach Watson Brown
plans to start little-used sophomore
Mike Willglng at quarterback to
replace junior Troy Bodine, who
broke his arm in last week's 43-17
loss to Florida State andisoutforthe
season. WU!ginghascompletednine
of 16 passes for 84 yards - all last
week.
Cincinnati, 3-3, lost to Mlaml19-13
In the final gameofthe1982seasonln
Miami.
Miami's Hurricanes, 6-1, who are
closing !non several school offensive
records, counter at quarterback
with freslunan sensation Bemle
Kosar. He has completed 126 of.200
passes for 1,5ffi yards and 11
touchdowns, with 11 Interceptions.
Kosar needs 896 yards In Miami's
last four games to break Jim Kelly's
1981 single-season mark of 2,403
yards.
Miami Coach Howard Schnellenberger said Cincinnati's loss of
Bodine from a pass-oriented team
isn't necessarily a disaster. ·
"Unless the team is ready to win,
lt doesn't matter who the quarterback is. Cincinnati wouldn't have
won games with Bodine If the team
didn't want to win," Schnellenberger said.

I

.

"When that happens, your kids
and your staff just bull their necks a
llttle harder and keep gi:&gt;lng," he
said. "Everybody has to take It up a
Uttle."
Cincinnati's Brown said, "It's too
late in the season to change the
oHenseforthequarterback. we lost
a great player in Troy and that's a
loss thatwillnotbeeasytomakeup.
We're ~olng to have to keep doing
the things we have been doing,
however. "
Miami's roster Includes five
Ohloans- Kosar, from)3oardman;
senior linebacker Jay Brophy of
Akron; senior halfback Keith Gflffin of Columbus; freshman running
back Todd Stanish of Alliance, and

senlorwlde
of
Northfield.receiver John Snoatana
The Hurricanes throttled Mississippi State 31-7 last week In
Starkville, Miss.. to roll up their
sixth straight victory - tying a
school mark for the !lftb time.
Mlaml ranks No. 7 In National
Collegiate Athletic As&lt;lOCiatlon
team defensive statistics and No.lB
in team offense, while Kosar ts the
nation's No.J,2 passer.
Miami is averaging 159.3 yards
per game rushing and 249.1 passing,
while Cincinnati's averages are 100
yards rushing and 287.8 passing.
Miami tight end Glenn Dennison
needs nine catches to tie the school's
single-season mark of45catches, set
by David Kalina In 1969. And
Hurricane kicker Jeff Davis will set

mean ·. the Instructions on the bleeding ulcers or ahy bleeding
By Edward Sehi'eck, D.O.
frequency and amount of medica - disorders, has suffered liver damAII!Ist4nt Professor
· tlon to be taken- two adult aspirin age.,.is scheduled lor surgery or is
of Family Medicine
tabl~ts every four hours , for
pregnant.
· hlo University College
· The association of the chlldhood
example.
of o.teopalhlc Medicine
For the best therapeutic effect disease Reye's sy ndrome is imporQUESTION: Even though the
asplrln bottle label says to take two !rom a 'drug, the rate and route of tant tndecidingwhentoglveasplrln
tablets for a lieat;lache, lt always administration must be individual· to chUdren. As you can 'ief, even
takes three !or me to get relief. How !zed to each patient. This Is true with "simple" drugs such as
even In the case of common aspirin, many vartables must be
are drug dosages determined?
ANSWER: What seems to be a over-the-counter drugs such as evaluated before a dosage Is
simple question has a rather aspirin. Manufacturers write dos- determined.
The Interaction of the drug being
compllcated answer. To suggest a .ages that are appllcable to general
conditions
ln
a
mass
of
people.
They
prescribed
with other drugs that!he
drug dQ5age, one must know the
are
concerned
that
dosages
be
at
patient
may
be taking also ls
way the medication is absorbed by
populace.
Important
In
arriving
at a proper
safe
levels
for
a
general
the body and .its effect on tissues.
But
they
cannot
address
all
the
dosage.
In
the
case
of
asplrln,
lf the
Dosage describes both the route
on
oral
anticoagulant
circumstances
under
whlch
aspirin
person
ls
and rate of administration of a
may be used..
(blood thlnner). use of asplrln Is
drug.
Is
prescribed
for
treatcautioned
or Inappropriate all
Aspirin
By route, we mean the way the
ment
of
minor
aches
and
pains,
for
together.
Asplrtn
damage also has
drug enters the body: by mouth,
arthritis
and
rheumatic
fever
and
in
be
monitored
ln
people who are
through the veins, by an injection
Into the muscle .or just underneath for juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. tiny steroids, diuretics (water
the skin, or by breathing the AU of these dllferent condlUons pills), and some antacids.
People who decide to determine
medicine In through an .aerosol. require a different dosage of
their own drug dosages run a great
How the drug is absorbed Into the · aspirin.
Before asplfln Is used, the risk. Taking less than the presblood stream and how fast It Is
physician
also wants to know If the crlbed dose sometimes means that
excreted or degra~ In the body Is
patient
is
hypersensitive to the the medicine has no therapeutic
different by each route.
we
chemicals
In the aspirin, has effect at au, whlle taking more than
By rate of administration

(USPS lt5·H41)
A DMtlon of Multimedia, Inc.
Published every afternoon , MOnday
through Friday, 111 COurt Street, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company- Multimedia , Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 9922156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The Associated Press, In land Dally Press As.soclaton and the
American Newspaper Publishers As socl~tlon, National Advertising Representative, Branham Newspaper Sales,
733 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10017 .

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I1-~===========~~===========

WE INVITE YOU
TO SEE OUR ...
WOOD &amp; COAL
BURNING STOVES
GAS STOVES
AND
WINTERIZING DISPLAY

'

STIR, STIR, 'l1IEN STIR SOME MORE - Six
keftlesofapple.bulterwerecookedoveropeollresby

Meigs

senior

It happens every fall.
Meigs County senior citizens get
together to make apple butter as a
tundraislngprojectfortheSenlor
Citizens Center.
Tl)ls year's profit from the
venture is expected to exceed $750.
Tuesday about 50 senior citizens

Ebersbach
Hardware
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-2811

Meigs SEnior citizens Wedne!ld~ lo raise !tmds for the
operatlonoftheSenlorCltlzensCenter.

c i t i z e-n s -'m a k e a p p l e b u t t e r
bushels of apples whlchwerecooked
with 110 pounds of sugar and a
quanity of oU of cinnamon.
Early Wednesday morning the
!Ires were started and theslxcopper
kettlesweremledlnpreparatlonlor
the hours of slow cooking.
By evening 275 quarts of apple

The apple butierlsonsaletuday at
$3.50 a quart or you can save a
,q uarter by bringing a replacement
' Jar.
The Center reports that the apple
butierprojectisoneofthebestfund
raising projects of the year.
And that's why lt happens every

gOut M=~~hi~gbutB~~di~clud:;

,.

F.all Expo, .
END OF THE YEAR

riew car show
set
.. Saturday
-

W Ml'O Radio will host Its second
annual Fall Expo New Car and
~reational Show Saturrlay at the
Roek .. Springs Fairgrounds near
Ptimeroy.
The event is free and open to the
pupllc from ±o a.m. to 4 p.m.
This year's show will feature 1984
neW carmodeis by Dodge, Chrysler,
PI0nouth, Ford, PonUac, Buick,
OJI1smobUe, Chevrolet, CadUiac and
Datsun. New Ford tractors and
H(ind motorcycles wm also be
featured.
Loan officers from area financial ~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj~
institutions wUI be on the grounds to I
~er questions .
.
flome, energy and recreational
displays wlll be set up · including
home and businesS computers,
mOdular homes, vlnylslding, storm
doors and windows, roofing, wood
bulnJng stoves and kerosene heats.
.·
Columbus and Southern Ohio ElectriC: Co. will show heat pumps. The
Department of Natural Resources
will feature a hunting and safety
eXhibit.
Area high school marching bands
representing Meigs, Southern Local
EUtem Local and Kyger Creek
High Schools will perform at 11
a.m.; 12 noon; 1 p.m. and 3 p.m,
~ty.
.
WMPO personallty, ''Blg Red'' ts
~ emcee and WMPO staff
members will be on hand for
asalstance. Cash prizl&gt;s will beglven
a~ each hour. The Meigs Athletic
251 WEST MAIN
...... , will provide lUDCh and
PH. 992-6441
()"" •·•· WMPO Invites lamiUeil to attml the FaD Expo. Raln
ds;l»ls Saturday, Oct. 29.

STOP IN AND

SEE US AT THE
FALL EXPO _,83

This coupon good

'' . for $1,000 cash
. '
;' ,j with the purchase

...

'~

'

;j of any new mobile
home in stock.

r;
7r ;1

$

~.

!One

mu~n per purchase)

Coupon exp. 10 -2~-8;

~ : ~~3l~i!j

suggested can cause severe reac- do$8ges be determined correctly
Uons. E;ven mild levels of aspirin
and that patients follow their
overdosage can make a person
experience rapid or deep breathing,
nausea, upset stomach, dtzzlness
and ringing in the ears (tinnitus).
Once your physician has determined the proper blood level for a
drugwhlchyou maybetaklngfora
long term, h~ or she will periodtrally check to see lf the therapeutic
level of the drug is being malntalned. For this, you wUI give a
blood sample, most likely just .
before you take a dose o! the drug.
H you are having any problems ·
with a medication, even over-thecounter preparations, bY all means,
ask your physician or pharmacist
!or proper Information. Many of the
drugs we use today have a narrow
margin of safety. It Is critical that

..

-

Close-out Sale

AT MILLER HOMES
RECEIVE $1,000 IN CASH
OR USE IT TOWARD
YOUR DOWN PAYMENT.

and physically demanding dance
routines.
Though the primary function of
\fie marching band is to provide
entertainment during halftime at ·
Ohlo University ln!ercollegtatelootball games, the band has received
national exposure and acclaim as
t'1e featured performers at professional football games around tbe
country, Including the Cleveland
Browns, Washlnglon Redskins, cincinnati Bengals and Pittsburgh

Brian Colllns, son of Larry and
Teresa Colllns, has recently earned
selection Into the Ohlo University
Marchlng Band ui Athens. Collins
earned a position In the percussion
section following highly competitive marchlng and playing
auditions.
The band, known as The Marching 110 Is recognized as "The Most
Exciting Band In the Land.'' The
Marching no Is best known for tts
high powered playing and Intricate

FEATURING: Knollwood, Hampshi-re,
Jay, All by Styline ,
Schult
Clayton

local

man

Steelers. The Marchlng no was
also the first marching band to
appear In New York's Carnegie
Hall.
This year, the llO's season wUl be
highlighted by performances at a
nationaliy tele\rlsed Washlngton
Redsklns' football game, a performance at the Toledo Glass Bowl,
and several performances !n Columbus, Including the Columbus
Day Parad~ and a concert at the
hlstorlcal Ohio Theatre.

·Chester Brownie
group forms

I

POMER-OY
LANDMARK
614-992-2181

HONDA

BIG RED"

· Zachary

Cole WUllams celebratedhli!lrstbirthdayrecently

STOP IN AND SEE THE
ALL N EW
HQ NDA AT c
19 84

:'en~s:kya:n~~e:~~~!~~~
Hysell Run. Cake and tee cream
were served. Cards and gHts were
received from hls parents and
sister, Roxane, his grandparents,
EddleandMarthaAsh,andRayand
Iris Williams, Richard, Pennee and
Courtnee Knapp, Mark, Trudy and
Kasey Wllltams, Skip, &lt;;9nnnee and
Clay Enslen, Roger, Ronda and

HAWK'S eve LE SALE Inc
-

600 E, STATE ST,

··-

,

.
593 7323

,

ATHENS

~K;evln~Ke;tch;um;.;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~-~~;;;;;;~~~
For Everyday and for Everyone.

_

·

If you're one of the occasional readers who treat themselves to The Dally Sen- ·
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THE DAILY SENTINEL

Please start my home delivery to The Daily Srntinel
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SEE OUR LINE OF NEW
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CARS &amp; TRUCKS,

COME TO THE
NEW CAR &amp; TRUCK SHOW·

AT THE

MEIGS CO. FAIRG

DALE HILL FORD TRACTOR

POMEROY

'

.

J

SMITH ·NELSON
MOTORS
PH. 992-2174
500 E. MAIN ST,

(
\

FALL EXPO '83

Reorganization of the Chester
Brownie Troop 1067 under the
leadershlp of Carolyn Smith took
place at the Chester Elementary
School last week.
Mothers who wUI assist with the
troop are Cindy Aeiker, Karla
Chevaller, Beinda Connally, Jackie
Frost, Jane Harrts, Janet Hoffman,
Donna ojacks, Charlotte Smith, and
Texanna Well.
New members welcomed Into the
troop were Jessica Chevalier,
Shannon Clark, Amle Friend,
Tracey Grate, DanteUe Kibble,
Carrie Knapp, Rebecca Mcintyre,
Shelly Melzger, Klm Michael, Mary
Nally, Nancy . Nally, Michelle
Pooler, Srystdarsmtth, and Crystal
Taylor.
Returning for another year in the
troop are Penny Aeiker, Carrte
Connally, Heather Farley, Debra
Frost, Rhonda Gibbs, Sarah Harris,
Usa Hoffman, Stephanie Hoffman,
Melissa Jacks, Luciana Scott,
Sherry Smith, Amber Well, and
Tanya Woodard.

NAME

WELCOME TO ...

physician's and pharmacist's InstrucUons carefully.

STOP IN AND SEE
OUR
HOTPOINT AND
GENERAL ELECTRIC
APPLIANCES
AND KERO-SUN HEATERS
AT WMPO'S -

Williams birthday

AT THE FALL EXPO
SAT., OCT. 22nd
MEIGS ·co. FAIRGROUNDS

Local bowling

,

Many factors included in deciding drug dosages

The Daily Sentinel

PH.992-2920

cards Accepted

Family Medicine

.POSTMASTER: Send address to The
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St., PomeroY.
Ohio 45769.

r;:;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::;1

Richard H. Billman 11. 0.0.
113 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oh'oo 45769

perlormances. "As a unit, they've
developed a lot of pride. I can
honestly say that this Is the best line
we've hail since I've been here," he
said.

r-;::==========

a school record when he kicks
another ·point-after-touchdown, .to
break the 25-PAT record Gordon
Watson set In 1900.

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

Page 5

Mallory says his offensive llne ls

Bearcats face. powerhouse Miami·
.

Friday, Ottob.r 21, 1913

the reason for ·such offensive

one."
Bowling Green has defensive
problems of Its own against the

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

5-8, 168-pound sophomore quarter back Darryl Richardson owns 722

SEE YOU THERE

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CADILLAC-CHEVROLET

S·IMMONS:
308 E. MAIN ST.

PH. 992-6614

POMEROY ,OM.

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•

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6 The

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SUNDAY

and the general public.

POMEROY - . The annual
meeting of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical SQclety
will be held at the Meigs County
Museum, But\efnut Avenue,
Sunday, with a potluck dinner at
1 p.m., followed by a business
meeting and program. Speaker
will be Dr. Hubert Wilhelm,
professor of geography at Ohio
University.
He will speak on migration
patlerns effecting early Meigs
County and will show slides of
historic structures tn the area.
The meeting Is open to members

Friday, 'Oc~r

MIDDLEPORT - Celebra·
lion of the 145th aMiversary of
the Middleport Church of Christ
will be Sunday with a large
anniversary cake to be served
durlngthe9:30a m Bible School
hour. A special H5th anniver·
sary gift will be presented to
• every person attending the 10:30
morning worship service; a
potluck dinner following D:IOrDing worship. At 1 p.m. a musical
concert by Purpose, a gospel
group trom Greenwood, Ind.

Mrs. Lydia Hysell, long time
Pomeroy resident, will obServe her
OOth birthday on Sunday. Mrs.
Hysell was moved to the Pomeroy

Health Care CenterTtlesday. Cards
may be sent to Room l2J A at the
center.

.

.

RESTAURANT
. Ph . 304-676-6276

HOIIR~

~PECIAL

•Only 8 Mile• from Pomeroy Bridge

Mnn -Sat. Ocen at 5 Sun 11 ,. m '"' n m

THIS SUNDAY&gt;O.oke of Baked Steak"' Veal Cutlet, Mashed PolatOes
and Gravy, Corn, Hot Roll &amp; Beverage ........ ... . ....... ................... Only "3.95 :
Chlldren 's- PortiOn·,-~... , 1 / 2 Price

'

service.
A committee has been meeting
weekly to plan for the contents of the
corner stone box. Mrs. Maxine
Wingett Is chairman of the commit-

"WHERE THE RUBBER MEETS THE ROAD"

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

PH. 992-7161

992-3325

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POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W
Main St., Nell Prou.dfoot, pastor. Bible school.
9 lJ a.m.; morning worship, 10::.&gt; a.m.:
Youth meetings, 6: ;J) p.m.; evening worship,
7·Jl p.m. Wednesday night prayer meetlng
and Bible Study, 7:30p.m
TifE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wining In charge.
Sunday hollness meeting, 10 a.m.; Sunday
School, 10:Xt a.m. SUnday School, YPSM
Elolw- Adams, leader 7: l) p m , salvaUon
meeting, various speakers and music specials. Thursday -ll·.'lla m to2 p.m ., LadJes
Home League, members In charge, aD
women invited; 6:45p.m. Thursday, Corp$
Cadet Class (Young People-Bible). 7: l) p .m.
Bible StUdy and Prayer meeting, open to the

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SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST, Mulberry
Road, Po,merqy. Michael Pion·
kow•kl, past~&gt;', Marle Splreo, Sabbath School
SUpt. Sabbatb School is at 2 p.m. on Saturday
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with worship services foDowlng at J: 15 p.m.
Rtm.AND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Sister Harriett Warner. Supt. Sunday School,
9:l:l a.m.; morning worship. 10:4.5 a.m.

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POMEROY FlR.S"I' BAPTIST, David
Mann, rninlltP.r; Wlillam Snoutte!', Sunday
School supl. Sunday School, 9: ill a .m.;
Morning wor~hlp :10: .'11 .m.
FIRST SOU't'IIFJtN IIAPI'IST, Pomeroy
Pike. David HlDil. pastor; Jack Needs,
Sunday ScOOol Dlrectcr Sunday school, 9: :JJ
a.m.; · morning wonhlp, 10: Xl; evenJng
wocshlp, 7::.) p.m. Tuesday VlsltaUon, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, Prayer service, 7:.» p.m.;
Mission Friends, 7:30 p.m.: Girls 1.n Actlons,
7:l&gt;p.m.: Acteens, 7:.lJp.m.: CholrPracttce.

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MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH, Old
Dexter Rd., Dexter. Paster Woody C8ll. Jr.
Pastor Sunday School 10 a m . Sunday

s•w:

SEE OUR NEW

Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastor.
Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday school, 10 a.m.
. Sunday evening M'VIce 7. JJ p.m.; Bible
teaching, 7:30p.m. Thunday.

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MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Comer
Sixth and Palmer, the Rev. Mark McClung.
Sunday acbool9:15 a.m.: Dan WhJte, Sunday
School supt.. John Retbel, Sr , asst. supt.

By SAFE nu•u;;,t:~

MornJna Wonhlp 10:15 a.m. Youth tneeUna

7·.:11 p.m. Wednesday, lnciUding wee tots,
l'qn' bea.Vf!n, JunSor utroanuts, and Junior
and ~e~~tor hiJh BYF; cboir practice 8:31p.m.
Wednesday; pra)'f!r meeting and Bible study,

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OF CIIRISr, Mlddlepon, Mh and
Main, Bob Melton, mlnlster, AI Hartson,
usoctate minister; MUte Gerlach, Sunday
School Superintendent. Bible School, 9: :Ml
a.m.; mcrnlng wcnblp, 10:!) a.m.; evening
w""hlp 1 p.m. W - y Bible Slll:ly and
yWth IP"'IP meetlnp. 7 p.m.

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MJDilLEPORT CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE. Ct&gt;1101ton. Rev. Charles Coyle and
Rev. Nancy Coyle. BUI While, Sllllday ochool
oupt. 5unda)' ochool. 9::1l a.m.: lll&lt;ll'11lnc

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60

W.tby Pic-Pac Market, Athens
100 East Main St •• Pomeroy
HOURS: Mon .• Tue •• Thur •• Fri. - 12-7
Closed Wednesday; Open Sat. &amp; Sun. - 12-4
NOTE: New State FmHm Director says money allocated
for housinl' lh Ohio must be used. Call now for details.

••

R~corder

•

AII-A_merican Homes

STOP IN AND SEE OUR DISPLAY
AT THE EXPO 83.

Switchable Tone or Pulse Dialing

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MODEL PHONE 592·1418
992-7034 KINGSBURY HOMES

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SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St., Syra·,
t\lse. Services, 10 a.m. SUnday, Evening
servloes, Sunday and W - y . 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Manley,
past&lt;X'; Mrs. Russell Young, Sunday School
SUpt. Sunday School 9::1) a.m. Evening
wcrshlp 7:JJ p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting
t:rJ p.m.
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD. Racine
- 'R»v. Jame~ Satterlle!d, pastor. Morning
wcnhlp 9:45a .m, Sunday SchoollO i'!i a .m.,
et.'ening wcnhlp 7 p.m. Tuesday, 7. :ll p.m.,
ladies pra~ meetl.n,g. Wednesday, 7::ltp.m.

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PRICES APPLY AT PARTICiPATING STORES AND DEALERS

,.

•'

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Near
LOng Bottom, Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday
school,9·.:1la.m.. WorshlplO::lla m. : Prayer
meeting 7 :JJ p.m. Thursday
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST,
Corner Ash and Plum. Leslie Hayman,
pastor Sunday school 10 a m : Morning
Worship, U am., Wednesday and Satw"day
Evening services, 7 :II p m.

')

I
-.---

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Sun~~Y

~onaay

1 Conrf'ttlllni f&gt;hllipp,ans
1512·34
11 1·30

TIJtSd;ay
Romans
831 ·19

Wednesd~v

JDhll
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116 1· 19

__

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~

Vo

~

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED MI!'IHODIST CHU1ICH
FaySauer.Rev. James E. Corblti, Assistant
NORT.'IIEAST CWSI'ER

Rev. Doll Archer
Re\'. Roy Deeter

Rev. Seklon Jotnon
ALFRED - Church School 9: ,'ll a.m.;
Worship, ll a.m ; UMYF , 6: :JJ p m.: l).MW,
Third 'l'\te5day, 7 ll p.m. CommunitY\ (lrst

Sunday. (Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m ; Ch\u-ch
SchoollO am., BtbleStudy, Thursday, 7 p.m
UMW, first ThurSday, 1 p.m; Communion
llrsl Sun&amp;ly. (Archer)

Hev. Hicbard Hothemlcb
Rev. Hobert E. Roblnlon
Rev. Andrew Rubenklng
ASBURY (Syracuse) - Worship. 11 a.m.;
Omrch School, 9 i5 a .m .; Charge Bible

Study, Wednesday, 7· .'J) p m , UMW. first
Tuesday, 7: ll p m., Choir Rehearsal, Wed·
nesday, 6::ll p m.; UMW, fourth Sunday, 6 :II
p m. (Nelsoo)

ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m , Church
School, 10 a.m ; Bible Study, Tuesday, 7 :ll
p.m.; UMW, First Monday. 7:Xl p.m.;
UMYF, SlUlday, 6 p.m. Ololr rehearsal, 6 ll
p.m. Wednesday. (Rothemlchl
FLATWOODS - Olurch School, 10 a,m.;
Worship, 11 a.m .; Bible Study, Thursday, 7
p.m.; UMYF. Sunday, 6 p.m. tRothemlchl
FUREST RUN- Worship, 9 a.m.; Church
SchOOl, 10 a.m.; Choir Practtce.Tuesday, 6: :ll
p.m.; UMW, first Tuesday, 7:.lJ p.m

INeL&lt;on)
HEATH iMiddleprt) - Church School,
9 ]} am; Worship, JO· :ll a m.; Bible Study,
Tuesday, 10 am.; UMW, second Monday,

7.ll p.m.; UMM. lhlrd Monday, 1::Ml pm.
!Roblnsoo )

MINERSVILLE - Worship Service, 10
a.m.; Cl'l~h. School, U a.m., UMW, thlnl
Wednesday; 1 p.m.; Choir practice, Monday,
7: :Jl p.m. fNelsonl

PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service. 9

a.m.: Church SChool, 11 a.m.: UMW. second
Tuesday, 7::J)p.m.: UMYFiastTuesday, 7::ll

p.m (Rubenldng)
POt.JER.OY -Church School, 9:15a.m.:
Worship !JeJ"VVce, 10 .'11 am., Choir rehearsal,
Wednesday, 7::1J p m ., UMW, second 1\J&amp;
day, 7:30 p m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6
p.m.(Corbltt)

,

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION , Rev. Tom
Staten, pastor. Sunday School, 9:l) a.m.:
evening service, 7: .J'.I p.m . Wednesday prayer
meeUng, 7: )J p.m.

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Duane Warden. minister . Bible
class, 9: :JJ a.m.; morning worship, lQ· :11
a .m.: evening worshJp, 6: :n p m. Wednesday

Bible study, 6:;{) p.m
·
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Sunday School service, 9:45 Jl.m.,
Worship service, 10::JI am .; Evangellstl c '
Service, 7::11 p m. Wednesday; Prayer
meeting, 7 ll p m., Thursday.
• ZION CHURCH OF CHR.LS'f, Pomeroy·
Hanisonville Rd : Robert Purtell, minister;
Steve Stanley, Sunday school sup! Sunday
school, 9:3:1 am.; worship service 10 :l&gt;a.m.;
Evening worship Sunday, 7 p.m. and
Wednesday, 7 p.m

ST JOHN Lt!I'HERAN CHURCH. Pine
Grow. The Rev. WOllam Mlddlcswarth,
Pastor. Church services 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School10: 30 a.m.

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST. Paul
Pratt. pastor. Sunday scOOoi, 9::JJa.m, Larry
Haynes. S. S. Supt.: morning worship, lO::JJ
a .m.

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
Rev. Thomas H Collier, pastor, Martha
Wolfe, Chairman of the Board of Chrlstlan
,Life. Sunday School, 9:)J am.: morning
worship, 10: 30 a m .; Sunday evening worship,
7::JJ p.m Prayer meet1ng, Wednesday, 7::ll
pm.
.
RACINE F1R.ST BAP'I'lST, Don L. Walker.
Paster, Robert Smith, Sunday School supt.:
Sunday School, 9: XI a.m.; morning worship,
W: 40 a.m., Sunday evening worshlp, 7: .1)
p.m., Wednesday evening Bible study, 7::J:I
p.m.

DANVILLE WESLEYAN. Sunday School,
9: :J:I a.m.: momtng worship 10:45 a.m .; youth
service, 6:45 p.m.: evening worship. 7::JJ
p.m.: Wednesday, 7:ll p.m . Prayer and

Praise.
' DANVll..LE HOLINESS CHURCH, located
nn Route ~ between Vinton and Lanpvllle.
Rev Ben Watts , lJllSior. Sunday School, 9:l'.l
a .m., Bobby Lambert S~ S. Supt., Momlng
Worship, 10·30 a.m., Children's Happy Hour
6·45 p.m Prayer &amp; Bible Study, 7:l) p.m.
Missionary meeting first Wednesday ol each
month, 7: J) p.m. For information call

J88.&amp;167.
SILVER RUN BAPilSJ', Bill Little,
pruner. Steve Uttle, s. s. Supt. Sunday school.
10 a.m.; mcrntng worship, 11 a.m. Sunday
evening W(I"Shlp, 7: :Jl p.m. Prayer meeting
and Bible study, Thursday , 7::1) pm ; youth
meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m.
CHRISTIAN FElLOWSHIP CHURCH, 383
N 2nd Ave., Middleport Sunday School, 10
a .m . Sundlly and Wednesday Evening
Servtcel7: :D p.m

CHESI'ER CHURCH OF GOD, Rev R E.
Roti.nsc:n, pastor. SWlday school, 9::ll a.m. ;
w&lt;nhtp service, U a.m.; evening servJce, 1

• ROCK SPRINGS - Church School, 9: 15 , p.m.; youth service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
a."m .; Worship, 10 a.m.: Bible Study,
Robert E. Musser, pastor. Sunday school, 9:.))
Wednesday, 7:ll p.m.; UMYF (Seniors!,
a .m.; Paul Musser, supt.; morning worship,
Sunday, 6 p.m.; !Juniors), every other
Sunday, 6 p.'m. {Rothemlch)

Rtm.AND - Church School, 9: ;s a.m.;

Worship, 10::1) a.m.; UMW &lt;EvenlneCtrcle),
second Wednesday, 7:ll p.m.; UMW. 8CCOJ'Id
Thursday, 1 p.m. (Rubenklng) .
SALEM «;ENTER - Church SchooL, 10

10: ~ a.m.; Sunday evening servke, 7 p.m .;
mlcl-week service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TilE NAZARENE - Rev James B Kittle, pastor.
Sherman CUndlft', superintendent Sunday

School, 9::Ml a.m.; Morning Worship IO::Ml

.

am.; EvangellsUc9@1Vlce,6p m.Prayerand
praise Wednesday, 7 p.m; youth meeUng, 7
p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN dmiST.
Elden R. Blake, past..,. s.-y School 10
a.m.; Roben Reed, SUpt.; Morning sermon,
1l a.m.; Sunday night services, ctu;stlan
EndeaYCI', 7: X. p.m.: Song service, 8 p.m.:

Worship, 10 a.m. (nrst and third Sundays);
UMW, second Tuesday, .7: :11 p.m.; Prayer

Preechlng. 8: :Ml p.m. Mid-week Prayer
tneeUJta, Wednesday, 7 p.m., Alvlt! Ra!d. lay

a.m.; Worsh'lp, 9:45a.m. (Rubenldng).
SNOWVU.LE Worship, S::tl a.m;

Church ScOOollO a m. (Ru~nking)
SOtmii!RN CLUift'Dl
.
ftn, J..n• M. Oark
Rev. P""' McGuire
Rev. Dnllle White
APPLE GROVE - Chw-ch School, 9 a.m.;
mee&lt;tng.

w~.

BE'I11ANY -

7 p.m. !Clark)

Worship, 9 a.m.; Olw-ch

School. 10 a.m.: Bible Study. Wednelday, 10
a.m.: Dorcas Women's FeUowship, Wednes·
day, J1 a.m. (McGuire)
CARMEL - CINreh SchOOl, 9: :Ml a.m.:
Worship, 10·45 a.m: (Semnd and Fourth
SundayB): Fellowship dlnner wtlh Suttcm,
third Thursday, 6:31p.m (McGuire)

EAST LETART - Church Scbcol, 9 a.m.;
Wontjp,IO a.m. ("""'nd andlourthSunclay~ ..
p.m.
UMW, lint Tuooday, 7::Ml p.m. (Clark)
,
LETART FAllS - Wonhlp. 9 Lm.;
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINiln'RY Church School, 10 a.m. (Clark)
OF MEIGS COUNI'Y. Rev. Wanda Johnson,
MORNING STAR - Wonlllp, &amp;:4!1 a.m.:
dlra:tor, Harold Johnlon, dlrectoc of Chureh School, IO;:Il a.m.: Bible Slll:ly,
lb_,.y, T' :Mll!.!lld'll'!!llel
_
HARRISONVILLE
PRESBYTERIAN, , MORSE CHAPEL- Church ~hool. 9:ll
WonhlpServtce,9a.m.; C'hurchSchool,10:~ a.m.; Wunldp, U a.m. rWhlte)
·
a1m.
·
·
PORI'l.ANb- Church SrbooL 6:a:l p.m.:
MIDDLEPORT
PRESBYTERIAN, Wcnhlp, 7::111 p.m.: UMYF. WedDolday, 7::1l •
Churdl SChool, 9 a.m.; Morning Wllnlhlp, p.m (M&lt;Gulro)
10:15. Bible Study 'l'tlelday, 10 a.m.; Bible
RACINEWESLEYAN-ChurcbScllool,10
IIIU!Iy. ~. 7::1) p.m.
a.m.; Wonhlp, 11 a.m.; UMW, fourth
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY- ~ 1::111 p.Jn.; Mon'1 Prayor ~.
TERIAN a.ur.tt. Churdl SCIItol. 10:15 a.m.: "W"t -.y, 1 a.m. (Clark)
monllOC wanhlp, ll::Ml a.m.: B11tte Study.
SUTI'ON - Cllun:h School, 9: :ll a.m.;
ll a.m.: Junior and 5enlor Hl8b IIICI'IIIIOC *'t'.~~:4.'1a. m. (lint and third
~~~ · Bp.~ GOD, Pulctr, ~p.m.(Wcoulro)
dlnnor with Cannot,
CHUAat
. .
Rev. Jobn Evaaa. ~ ICIIOOI, 10 a.m.;
OF Cllllm, 01tw&lt;
Sunday lm'llllp, ll a.m.: Cltlldrell'o cllllrdl. . IIWoln, !lupa hi.,Kiem. 911nt1ay 9: ill
n a.m.: ·SW\diy l'ftllinl lfi"VIce. 7 p.m.: a.m. tM!l')' WNIL
•

tiii!OtlJii, 7p.m.PrayermoellngWedllsday7

_Cut

Wednesday evening young ladies auxUiary, 6
p.m. Wednesday family worhslp, 7 p.m .

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN · COmmuNon First Sunday. {Archer)
REEDSVILLE - Church School, 9: :Ml
CHURCH - Qltton Lucas, pastor. Sunday
a.m.; Worship U a.m. /Deeter)
School 9: 30 a.m. Mrs. Worley Francts, supt.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL - Church
Preaching 9ei'VIces first and third Sundays
SChoOl, 9 a.m.: Worship, lOam.: B1bleStudy,
foUowlng Sunday School. Youth meeting
Tuesday, 7::JJ p.m.; UMW. Third TUesday,
every Sunday, 7:l:l p.m.
7::JJ p.m.; Communion first Sunday.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
{Arc her\
Preachlng 9: lJ a.m , nr~~t and second
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Sundays of each month; third and fourth
Rev. I1Un8!1 E. CorbMt
Sundays each month, wonh.lp services at 7· :II
RevSieYeftN.p m Wednesday evenings at 7: l) p.m.,
Prayer and Bible Study.

PR0-48 by Realistic

HOME~

WAID CROSS
SONS SIORE

leader.

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN. Roger
Watsm, pastor; Crenaon Pratt, Sunday
School supl. Morning WOI"Shtp, 9: J) a.m.;
&amp;l.nday tchool, lO:JJ am.; evening serv1re,
7::1l p.m.
MT. UNION BAP1'1ST, ReV. Tom Dcoley;
Joe Sa)m!, Sunday School Superintendent
Sunday ochool, 9:45 a.m : I!VI&gt;Illng wonhlp.
7: :ll p.m. Prayer meeting, 1: :Ml p.m.

Pon.land-Raclne Road wuuam Roush, pas
tor Linda Evans, church school director.
&lt;'hurch school 9:30am.: morning worshlp,
t!l·30 am.: Wednesday evening prayer
serv tces, 7:30p.m.
BET HLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev Earl
Shuler. pastor. Worship service, 9:31 am
Sunday school, 10· :II a.m Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7· 3) p.m
CARl..EmN INTERDENOMINATIONAL
CHURCH, . Kingsbury ,Road. Rev David
Curfman, pastor. Sunday school, 9· l) am.
Ralph Carl, superintendent, evening wocshlp,
7 l) p m Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7.30

pm
LONC BOTJ'OM CHRISTIAN , Ken Keifer,
pastor Wallace DamewoOO, S1.inday School
Supt. Worship service at 9 a .m. Bible SchoollO
a.m.
.

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH. Rev
Thereon Durham, pastor. Sunday Sehool at
9:.'11 am.; Momlng worship at JO•.JJ a.m.
Sunday evening service at 7: ;JJ p.m.: ·
Thursday services at 7 .:ll p.m.
,
F1tEEOOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob. located on County Road :n Rev
Lawrence Gluesencamp, pastor; Rev Roger
Willford , assistant pastor Preaching services, Sunday 7 30 p m . Prayer meeting
Wednesday, 1 .)) p.m , Gary Grifllth, leader
Youth groups Sunday evening, 6· 30 p m. with
Roger and Violet WIIUord as leaders.
Communion servk'e first Sunday each month.
WHITE'S CHAPEL, Coolville RD. Rev.
Roy Deeter, pastor. Sunday school9:XI a.m.:
worship serviee, 10:~ a.m. Bible study and
prayer service WednesdaY. 7:Xl p.m.

RtiTIAND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Dan
Monlux, pastor; But Nicholson. Sunday
school supt Sunday school, 9:.)) a m ;
morning worship and commurtlon. 10: :II a.m
RtiTIAND BIBLE METHODIST- Amoo
TUlls, pastor: Sonny Hudson. sup!. Sunday
school. 9:30a.m MornJngworshtp, 10· :ll a.m
Sunday evening service, 7· 00 Wednesday
evening service 7:00pm; WMPO Program.
9:00 a.m e-ach Sunday morning
RIJ'Il.AND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D Grimm, .fr., pastor
Sunday School, 9. 30 a .m.; worship service,
10 .30 a.m, young people 's service, 6 p.m. 1
'Evangelistic service, 6:30 p m. Wednesday
service. 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF OlRIST. MUier St ..
Mason. W Va. Eugene L Conger miniSter .
Sunday BJble Stud&gt;'· lOa m : Worship 11 am
and 7 p m. Wednesday Blb!C' Study voca l
music, 7 p.m
MASON ASSEMBLY OF COD. Du&amp;:lin!a'
Lane, Mason. W Va Rev. Ronnie B Rose,
Pastor. Sunday Sc hool 9 45 am , Morning
Worship 11 am Evening Service 7.30 p.m.
Wednesday Women 's Ministries 9 a.m
lmeetln!l and prayer) . Pra)'l!r and Bible
Study 7 p m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UN107'/, The Rev. William
Campbell, pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.:
James Hughes, supt.: evenln,g service. 7· Jl
p.m. Wednesday evening prayer meeting.
7:l:l p.m. Youth prayerservtceeachThe5day.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , i..A'tart, W.
Va.. Rt. 1. Mark hwln , pastor Wors hi p
services. 9:30 a m .: Sunday School. ll a m,
evening wcrshlp, 7 :II p m Thesday collage
prayer meeting and Bit,le study, 9 J) am
Worship service, Wednesday. 7: :l1 p m.
OUR SA VIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W. Va.
The Rev George C. Welrick, pastor Sunday
School, 9:30a. m.; Sunday worhslp, 11 a.m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, new 1oca1ed
on Pomeroy Pike, Cou nty Road :5 near
FJatwoods. Rev. BlackwOOd, pastor Services
on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 7::ll p m. with
Sunday school. 9·:JJ a .m . bibl e study.
Wednesday, 7::1l p.m.
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST- St. Rt. 338, Antiquity P astor, Rev
Fra.nklln Dickens. Sunday mornJng. 10 a.m
Suriday evening, 7· JO p m. Thur5day evening.
7:JJ p.m
STlVERSVll..LE COMMUNITY BAPTIST
CHURCH. Pastor Robert Byers. Su~day
School 10 a.m .; Worship Service ll a .m.,
Sunday evening service, 7:30p.m, Wedn es·
day evening service, 7. 30 p.m.
INDEPENDENT HOUNESS CHURCH,
Inc. - Paul St., Middleport. Rev. O'DeU
Manley, pastor, Sunday School, 9:30a.m ..
Morning W01'5hlp 10· :KJ a.m.. evening worst:dp, 7:l) p.m. 'I'Ue5day, 12::JJ p.m. Wpmen's
prayer meeting: Prayer and praise Service,
Wednesday, 7: :Ml p.m.

Wednaday.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Vincent C. Wat.:!l'l, m, rnlnlater;
11ermaa Black. ••oerlnfl!-t. s.-y
Scboctl 9:31! a.m.: eveoiDg service. 7 p.m.:
w~ Bible Scllool1 p.m.
CliESTER CHURCH QF TilE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Herbert Grate. puttr. Frank
Ra,. oupt.SIIIIdaySch&lt;lll, 9•llla.m-Worshlp
lei'Vice, 11 a.m. and 7: :ll p.m. Prayer
Rtm.AND APOSTOUC CHURCH OF
..-tna, WI!Cillooclay, 7: :ll p.m.
JESUS CHRIST, Elder James Miller Bible
LAUREL CLIFF FREE .METHODIST study, Wednesday, 7::J:I p.m.; Sunday School,
CHURCH, RoY. &amp;bert Miller, pastOC; Lloyd 10 a.m Sunday night !M?1VIce, 7::MJ p.m .
POMEROY WESLEY AN HOLINE~ Wfllll~ Dlrect&lt;r ~ Chrlatlan EducatiOn.
Sllndoy School, 9: 3Q a.m.; Momlna Worship, • HarrtsonVIUe Road. Earl Ftel&amp;, pastor
IO&gt;:Il a.m.; Cllolr Practice, Sunday. 6::Ml Henry Eblin, Jr , Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 9: .J) am.: Morning WorshJp ll am .:
m; ~'N&lt;Jnblp,7::1lp.m. W~
Sunday evening 5ei"VVce, 7 JO p.m.; Prayer
e Study, 1!30 p.m.
CHURCH OF CIIRISJ', Charles Meetl~g. Wednesday , 7· JO p rn .
~ Sr., rnlllloter; Rick ~mber, Supt.
SYRACUSE F'IRST CHtiRCH OF GOD!lll'*lr orhool, t:ll Lm.: - P Joy Clark, p.utor; Worship servtce Sunday,
!0:30a.m. -llllloiY..... ~ ... NO p m. '
10:00 a.m.; Sunday school, 11 a.m.: worship
REORGANIZED
.
CHRIST OF ' LATI'ER DAY SAIN'J1i," servtce..,-·.~ p.m . Wednesday prayer meet-

ing. 7:30p.m.
MT. HERMON UNI TED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST CHURCH. Rev Robert Sa nders,
pastor: Don Will lay leader Located In Texas
Communi ty off CR 82 Sunday school . 9. 30
am , Morning worship service, 10 45 a m ,
evening preaching service seco nd and fourth
Sundays, 7 lJ p m , Christia n Endeavor, first
and third Sundays, 7·30 p.m. Wednesday
prayer meellng and Bible study, 7:30pm.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS, 37319 State Route
124 (OnE' mliP east of Rulland) Sunda~· . Bible
le&lt;:t W'e 9 30 a.m.; Watcht ower study, 10:20
am., Tuesday, Bible study, 7:3J p.m ,
Thursday, Theocratic School, 7:30 p.m ,
Servlre ME.'etlng 8 · 20 p.m

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Located on the 0 J. While Road off highway
160 Pat Henson. pastor Sunday Sc hool 10
a.m Classes for all ages Junior Church
11:00: Morning WoNihlp, lHXJ, Adult Choir
practiCe 6: 00pm Sunday Young People's,
ChJldren's Church and Adul t Bible Study,
Wednesday at 7·:11 p.m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL -570Crant St ..
Middleport, Sunday School, 10 a m ., morning
worhsip, 11 am; evenln!l worship, 7 p.m.
Wednesday evening Bible study and prayer
meeting, 7 p.m. Atflllated wlth Southern
B&lt;tpllst Convention.
BRADFpRD CHURCH OF CHRIST State Route 124 and Coumy Road 5. Mark
Seevers, miniSter, Sunday School Supt .. Steve
Pickens. Sunday school. 9:30 a m : morning
worship, 10:30 a.m: evening worship. 7 p.m
Wednesday worship. 7 p m.
.nJBILEE CHRISTLAN CENTER George's CTeek Road I1f'v C J Lemley,
pastor. Paul Pear, Church School Superintendent . Church school 9 .' ll a m ; morning
worship, lO&lt;Il a m. evening servlre, 7 p m.
Bl~f'Study, Wednesda y. 7 00 p.m Classes for
a ll ages
Sf PAUL LUTHERAN CHUROI, Corner
of Sycamore and Second Sts., Pomeroy. The
Rev. Willia m Mlddleswartll. Pastor. Sunday
School at 9:45a.m. and Church Services 11
p.m.

SACRED HEART, Msgr AnthOny Gianna·
more, Ph. 992·5898 Saturday evening Mass,
7· :.) p.m , Sunday Mass, 8 am. and 10 am
Confessions one-half OOur before each Mass.
CCD Classes,ll a.m. Sunday.

VJCI'ORY BAPTIST - 525 N. 2nd St ,

Middleport. James E. Keesee, pastor. Sunday
morning worship, 10 a.m.; evening servil"e, 7
p.m : Wednesday evening worship, 7 p.m .,
Vls!tatlon. Thursday, 6·.)) p m.
TRINITY CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY. Cool·
ville Gilbert Spencer. pastor. Sunday
school . 9:30a.m.: morning servlce, 11 a.m.
Sunday evening service. 7:JJ p.m .: midweek
prayer service Wednesday, 7::1l p.m .
MOUNT OUVE COMMUNITY CHURCH.

LawrenCf&gt; Bush, pastor, Max Folmer, Sr
Superintendent Sunday School and morning
worship, 9 :II am Sunday evening service, 7
p m.. Youth meeting and Bible study,
Wednesday, 7 p m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass Rev. Robert Smith, Sr.,
pastor; Rev James Cundlft, asslstanl pastor
sunday School, 9. :ll a.m.; mornlnR won; hlp ,
10·.)) a.m.; evening worship, 7::ll p.m
Wom en's Fellowship, Tuesdays, 10 a.m.
Wednesday night prayer service, 7: JJ p .m.
Fl\nl{ BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, meet
at United Steel Workers Union Hall. Railroad
Street. Mason Sunday School 10: 00 am.:
Morning Worship, U:OO A.M: Evening
Servtce. 6 p.m Prayer met'tlng and Bible
Study Wednesday, 7:00p.m.

,,

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Nationwide Ins. Co.
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Phone 1614 1 747 ~ ~77
.

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

this Sunday

99:'-5130 Pomeroy

day, 7::Jl p.m.; UMYF, Wednesday, 6 p.m,

p.m.

Attend Church

E. Matn

2!~

JOPPA - Worship, 9.l) a.m.; ChW'ch
POMEROY WESTSIDE ··cHURCH OF
CHRIST, 33226 Children's Home Road . School, 10: l) a.m. Blbl.e Study, Wednesday,
7: Jl p m. (Johnson)
(County Road 76) 992·5235. Vocal music.
LONG BO'ITOM - Church School, 9· :Jl
Sunday worship 10 a.m; Bible study Ua.m.;
a.m.: Worship, 7 p.m.; Bible Study, Wednes·
wcrshlp, 6 p.m. Wednesday Bible study. 7

sso

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FAl'l'll TABERNACLE CHURCH, BaUey

3 BEDROOM RANCH

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evening service, 7 p.m .; Thursday evening
9B'VIce, 7 p.m.

1°/o I.NTERESt'

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GeneraJ Merchand~e
Racme 9~9 ~ 2sso

~

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q92 ·99'l1 Middleport

Pomeroy, 1100 E. Mam

10.30 a.m. Choir rehearsal, Tuesday 7::Ml
p.m., under dlrectlon of Allee N'ease.
POMERoY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE, Corner Union and Mulbeny, Rev.

Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday ~ Holy
Communion on the ftrst Sunday of each
mtlnth, and oombln@d with mornlngprayeron
the lhlrd Sunday Morning prayer and sermon
on all other Sundays of the month Church
School and nursery care provkJed . Coffee
how- In the Parish Halllmmedlatelyfollowlng

Aulomoti~Je

&amp;

Church Scb:Jol 9:15 a.m.; worship service

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

Reg.

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1bomas Glen McClung, pastor. Qyde Hend·
erson, S. S. Supt .. Sunday &amp;chool, 9:3l a.m:
morning worshJp lO::.J a.m.: evening service
6p.m.; mid-week service, Wednesday, 7p m.

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24 Hour Admission Available
Starting Monday, October 24

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TIUNITV CHURCH, Rev. W. H Perrin,
postoc; Debbie Buck, Sunday School supt.

235 RACE ST.
MIDDLEPORT
ALLEN &amp; KAY KING--OWNERS

VA.

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POMEROY - Eastern At·
hletic Boosters will meet Mon·
day at 8 p.m. at the high school.

tee and others working with her are
Mrs. Betty Roush, Mrs. Ruth Smith,
and Mrs. Louise Stewart, and Clark.
Carroll Teaford and Bill Stewart
have been asked by the committee
to do specific jobs for the corner
stone. The choir wil) have special
music. A carry·m dinner will be
served at noon In the social room of
th!' church with this being planned
by the United Methodist Women.
Former pastors and members
and friends of the church have been
Invited to attend. The public is
Invited to jotn the congregation in
the celebration.

"-ily Sentt'nel

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MONDAY

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&lt;t 62

21, 1983

----~~~~~~;_--------------------------.--------------~P:om~e~ro~y~M~id~d~le~po:rt~,~Oh~i~o~----------------------------------~~::~

CHECK
OUR
PRICES

• Restaurant Has Moved from the Dome to the Main Building

·Corner stone ceremony
set at Racine Methodist
A comer stone ceremony will be
held Sunday at the Racine United
Methodist Church. The morning
worship service will be a chargewide service at lla.m. and the Rev.
James Clarke has announced that
the Rev. Wesley Clarke, a former
district superintendent, will be the
guest speaker. The comer stone
ceremony will follow the worship

Friday, October

21, 1983

9Dth birthday scheduled

Calendar
POMEROY - A meettrig -to .
organlze traU ·rtdes will be held
Sunday at noon at the home of
Sherm Basham, SR 143.

Ohio

Pomerov--M!dd~port;

Daily Sentinel

I

~
~-

-·

V·.··

. r;.,

t·· ~

M id dleport
P nmero y 0

FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev Nyle
Borden, pastor Cornei.J,us Bunch, superln·
tendent Sunday school9 lJ a m, second and
!our1h Sundays, worship service a! 2: lJ p.m
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST - F ourth and
Main Sts., Middleport Rev . Calvin Mlnnls,
pastor. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardner, supt.
Sunday school, 9::.&gt; am.; wor~ttiP 5eJ'\.1ce.
10:45 a .m.
BURLINGHAM SOUTHER N BAPTIST
CHURCH. Route 1, Shad€. Pastor. Don Black.
Affiliated wtth Southe'rn BaptlSI convention.
Sund ay school, 1. 30 p.m.: Sunday worship,
2-:ll p m. Thursday evening Bible study, 7

pm
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Racme,
Route 12A \'l.'llllam Hoback, pastor Sunday
school, 10 a.m, Sunday evening service, 7
p.m Wednesday evenlng service 7 p m
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Don Cheadle,
Supt. Sunday School 9.30 a.m. Morning
Worship, 10.30a m , Prayer Servi~ , !litt"rnate
Sundays.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third
Ave., the Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Cart
Nottingham, Sunday School Supt. Sullday
School lOa .m. -classes for all ages. Evening
scrv\C€5, 6 p.m Wednesday, Study. 7•.J) p m .
Youth services, 7: .)') p m Frlday.
ECCLESlA FELLOWSHIP. 128 Mil l Sl ,
Mlddlep:&gt;rt. Pastor IS Brother chuck McPher·
son SUnday School at lO a.m &amp;'rvi~
Sunday evening at 7 p m. and Wf'dnrsday at 7

pm
ANTIQUITY BAPTlST, Rev Earl Shuler,
pastor Sunday schoo l 9 lJ a m ; Church

service, 7 p m.; youth meetmg, 6 p.m.
1\Jesday Bible Study, 7 p m

·

F'ULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOL-'S E. J:kl.15
Hiland Road, Pomeroy Tom Kelly , pa stor
Danny Lambert. Sunday S&lt;.'hool Superintend·
ent Sunday Mornin10: sero Icc. 10:00 am ..
Sunday evening sen~ ce i l) p m . Services
Tuesday and Thursday evenln,tts a t 7. lJ p m
\~ORD OF FAITH , 93 Mill St ., Middleport;
Richard Stewan. pastor Sunday mormng ,
10 00: Sunday evcntng 7. .ll. Tuesdav morn .
lng Bible Study. 10 00: Wednesday evemng
7· .JJ: 1bursday morning video wlth Kenneth
Copeland , 10:00· Friday evemng video with .
Kenneth Copt"land, 7·30
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE , RPv Glendon Stroud. pa st01 Sunda y
School, 9·:Jl am .. Worship ServiN:' , 10 30
am , Youth Service, Sunday, 6:15 p m.;
Sunday evening service, 7. 00 p m Wedn es
day Prayer Meetln ~ and Bible Study 7 OOp m

NEASE SE'ITLEME:&lt;r CHURCH, Do
nald R. Karr, Sr., pastor Sunday aft ernoon
services, 2. 30; Thursday evening scrv1Ct:',

7•:Ml

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Mason. W Va.
Pastor, 8 111 Murphy Sunday School. 10 a m .
Sunday evening service. 7 :J:J p m , Prayer

mreti!Jg and Bible Study WedneSday 7 l')
p.m. Everyone welcome.
Rl.JlLAND FREE WILL BAPTISf Salem Sl Rev Paul Taylor pasto1 Sund ew
School, lO•IX! a m : SundAy evening servil-e,
7 .ll p m.: Wednesday evening pra yer
mff'tlng, 7 lJ
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMEt\~
CHURCH - Silver Ridge Duane Syden
stncker, pastor'. Sunday &amp;hool 9 a.m ,
church service 10 a .m . Bible study Wednesday, 7.30p.m J une thruSeptember. 7:00pm
October thru May. Sunday evening fell ow·
ship, 7:00 p.m . June thru September. 6: 00
p.m Octolx&gt;r thru Mav .

Sermoriette
There Is so much hunger, poverty, fear, and misery In our world.
Justice- the Justice of God -Is certainly very needed in ou r times.
The Bible Is a source of guidance as well as a fountainhead for
meaning and lnspira lion for those of us who claim to follow Jesus and

God.
We cannot understand the Bible's view of justice without
beginning at the very beginning. The opening lines reveal a God who
Is a Creator, and that He made all things GOOD. God made man and
woman to be masters of His creation and to draw nourishment from
lt. The human race was to "flll the earth and subdue lt ." This good
gift was to enable man and woman to live in harmony with each
other and With the world around them. Nowhere do we find in the
account of creation that God Intended there to be fiJ9d shortages or
oppression or war. In truth these came from the greed, envy.
jealousy, and resentment that come forth ft1lm man and womanthe dark side of our humanity. In our OWl\ day the insatiable desire
for profit, pleasure, material goods, the llfe of ease; I he throw-away
society whether It be fast foods , disposable paper material, or even
unfortunately, human life; the lack of faithfulness, long time
commitment, and so on ·- all the evils we ~ve brought on ourselves.
The first commandment remains the most Important for we
, continue to make false gods who consume our time, energy, and
talents.
All .this Imperfection, Injustice, and suffering we experience
today Is nPt part of God's orlglnal plan. God did nol create an evil
world to tempt us or be a trail lor us. He intended the world lobe
GOOD, and He still Intends the world to be GOOD. The Old
Testament agd the New Testament are records of His attem11t tg
redeem the world, to recreate a people living in harmony wlth Him
and with one another. It is a record of his attempt to restore the reign
of justice on earth.
Some reflective questions: Do we view the world as hostile or
friendly to me? Do I belleve In the promises of God In the Scriptures
as applying to me? Do I seek1o bring about the reign of God In the
world - a reign of kingdom, of Justice, peace and love?
Submitted by: .Msgr. Anthony G!annamore, Pastor, Sacred
Heart Churcb, POmeroy, Ohio.

crMiCii''of- JEsus

•

�,
Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Chester PTO makes donations
A donation of $50 to each of the
teachers in the Chester Elementary
School tor classroom suppll~.- ~as
been made by the Chester PTO.
Meeting Monday nlght at the
school, the unit was reminded of the
parent-teacher conference to be
· heldFrtday,Oct.27.Memberswere
asked to save Post fun and fitness
coupons and Campbell and Swanson labels which can be turned In
for school equipment.
Ula Van Meter presided at the

.

Frick,rv.

The Daily Sentinel

Philathea women meet at church
A cake decorating de monstration
was given by Sharon Stewart at the
recent meeting of the PhUathea
Women of the Middleport Church of
Christ.
Plans were completed for serving
the Homebuilders banquet to be
held on Thursday.
The Philathea song and the Lord's
Prayer opened the meeting \\1th
Clarice Erwin reading a poem and
Martha Childs, giving "Ghosts at
the Door" and having prayer.
For roll call members answered

Genealogy society meets
New officers were elected when
the Meigs County Genealogy .Society met Sunday at the Meigs
Museum In Pomeroy.
E lected were Karen Werry,
president; June Ashley, vice pres!·
dent; Frances Roberts, recording
secretary; Keith Ashley, corresponding secretary; Ma rgaret
Parker, treasurer; SueHager,news
reporter. The vice president will
serve as program chainrian.
Gayle Price presented a talk on
interesting early events in the

Clinic changes
pediatric date

Beta Sigma Phi
annual sorority
rush party held

i~

Anderson layette shower
A layette shower honoring James
Tyler Anderson, infant son of Carol
and Jim Anderson of Middlepon.
was held recently at the Bradford
Church of Christ .
Games were conducted by Becky
Amberger ;md Diane B!ng 1\1 th
prizes being awarded to Helene
Goegle!n, Bonnie Warner , and
Norma Russell .
A baby decor was used and
refreshments of cake, punch, chips
and mints were served to the guests.
A special cake for the occasion was
created by Madeline Painter.
Others attending were Helen
Rlghthouse, Louise Bearhs, Phyllis
,.

Middleport

Morris, Frances Hysell, Kate Mulford, Jessamine Lyons, FranParker, Ann Colburn, Helen Black- ces af!d Joy Anderson, Danny
stan, Beuna Grueser, Sylvia Blake, Morris, Angle and Betty Triplett,
Gerry and Susie Lightfoot, Cherie Barbara Triplett, Fern and MatWilliamson, Jackie McDonald, thew Morris, Mary Showalter,
Madeline Painter, Diane Bing, Becky and Jamie .Broderick, Kay
Jason Warner, Becky Amberger, Morris, Ruth Ann Plants, Nora
Jackie Michael, Paula and Vera Cambron, Helen Miller, Gladys
Luckett, Evelyn Wood, Ruth Durst, Frye, LUllan Bert, Peggy Harris,
Jackie Reed, Cheri Seevers, Linda JudyHun1phrey,Sharon8JldGinny
Broderick, Sharon Hall, Mildred Burdette, Bertha Evans, Barbara
Meadows, Nancy Morris.
Fry, Betty Lowe, Mary Dorst, Lottie
Also presenting gifts were Christl Leonard, Frances Goegleln, Leand fAmber Blackston, Betty nora, WUmetta, Dorothy and Ml· 1
Weyersmliler, TUlle Rowley, Brad- · ' chael Leifheit, Clara Gilkey, Tressle
ford Missionary Cirele, Vicki and ·-· Hendricks, Bonnie Lightfoot,
·Bonnee Joyce Smith, Dreama and
Wilma Pack, Judy Free, Vincent
Stefani Pickens, Helen and Santly Broderick, and Edith Forrest.

•

Pomeroy United Methooist Women
Assistance to the Henderson
Settlement, a shelter for ycung
homeless persons at Frankes, Ky.,
was planned during a meeting of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Women at the church Tuesday
evening.
Members were asked to save
Campbell's soup labels to be sent to
tlie Settlement where they will be
used to purchase needed items for
(he facility. It was noted that the
young people live in cottages, eight
to each one.
New oUlcers elected were Evelyn
Lucke, president; Martha Hoover,
vlce pre,sldent;, Ruth Moore, secretary; Myrtis Parker, treasurer;
Gertrude Mitchel!, secretary of
programs; Dorothy Downie, Christian personhood; Kathy Corbitt,
supportive community; Bernice
Carpenter, Christian school invol·
vement; Ada Warner, Chrlsltna
globOI concern; Martha Hoover,
chairman of music; Grace Campbell, chairman of legislation; Pauline Roush and Virginia Edwards,
~chairmen of membership; and
Thelma Dill, Polly Eichinger and
Maxine Goegleln, nominating
commlttee.
During the meeting it was
reported that four members had
attended the New Lexington dlsb1ct session of United Methodist
Women, A thank you note was read
from the Dwight Parker family,
and 61 sick calls were reported.
Mrs. Goegleln noted that Church
Women United wW observe World

You",
I'll meet you on that

He.venly Shore,
To be together again to
Annual rush party oftheOhloEta
part no more.
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Life IMre on earth witltout
Sorority was held recently at the
you is lonely and sad,
Pomeroy United Methodist Church. But won't it be wonder·
Theme was "Keep the Dream
lui someday to be
glad, ·
Big." The costume was to ~s
your phanlasy. Judged winners . To see you again and to
hold your hand
were Darla Staats, funniest;
In God's Beautiful Happy
Brenda Hlll, prettiest, and Belinda
Land.
·
Johnson, most original.
Games were played and the menu
Loved and sadly missed
of "fantasy" foods was enjoyed.
Debbie Hauber and JeneUe Hapton- but not forgotten, Wife
Ann.
staU were awarded door prizes.

11IE WINNERS - Costume winners lor the rush party of Ohio Eta
l'hi chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,. were Darla Kelly Slaals,
lwudest; Brenda HDI, prettiest and BeHnda Jolmson, most original.

Community Day In November. It
was voted to pay dues and other
Incidentals of participation In that
organization.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Downie with prayer and group
singing opening the service. She
read scripture from Matthew ·19
and used as her topic, "Nature's
Secret, Give So We can Get."
She referred to the forest noting
.that where trees are only cut and
not replaced, the forest Is soon
depleted, and where pastures are
over-grazing, the soU is left bare
and eroded. She made the same
reference to people, "give and it
shaD be given unto you."
Officers' repof!s were given, and
pledges and least coins were
collected.
'

Writ•
Stntilltl Qluitit41
111 Court St .. '011111roy, Ollto •sn9

~~--~
-- - ~
- Public
~~~~~~
Notice
Public Notice
· Public: Notice·

Ruth Moore used "Getting Involved " as the theme of the
program. She stressed the Importance of getting out the vote,
knowing the candidates, reviewing
their voting records, and consider
moral Issues such as prayer in the
schools, abortion, and
bomosexuanty.
She also stressed the lniportance
of contactlng representatives and
noted that it is estimated that 84
percent of the persons In the United
State! are in favor of prayer In the
• schools. It was also noted that less
than one-half of the el!glble voters
use their voting privilege.
A dessert course was served by
the hostesses, Maxine Goeglein and
Nellle Wright.

YOU ARE INVITED

CO. FARM BUREAU
ANNUAL MEETING
TUESDAY, OCT. 25

MEIGS

STEAK DINNER-7:14P.M.
At Chester Grade School ,
,lDULTS 12.50 - CHILDREN $1.00
Call992-2181 Far Reservation•

you

have been

puratNe lather ol

Oef.lct.rta.
C... No. 83-CV-93

named as
Ay Wong-

chang. Th1s act1on has been
ass1gned bse No 2423i m
the Common Pleas Court.
Juvenile DIVISIOn, Me igs
County. Pomeroy. Oh1o 45769
The ObJ f!Ct of the PetlliOM•s to
adopt sa1d Ay Wong chang by
the Pet1t10ner and divesting vou
of all paremal nght
You are reQ ui red to answer
the Petrt•on w1thm t\Nenty-e•gtu

dayso' obJect to rheg•ant•ng to
the adoption w1th1n twenrv·
e1ght days after the last publ1ca 110n of. thiS notice. wh1ch Wi ll be
published once each week for
s1x: consecut111e weeks . The last
pubhcahOn w1ll be made on the
28th day of October. 1983. and
the I'Nentv·e1ght days will commence on that dat!'! In case of
fa1lure to Mswer or oth ervv1se
respond as reqUired by th e
Oh10 Rules of C1v1t Procedure.
judgment by delault w111 be
rendered aga.nst you and the
Pet1t1 0n granted for the relief
d~mandW :m the Pet itiOn dated
Septfamber 19. 1983. ·.
Robert E Buck.
Judge and
Ex-Ofl1c1o Clerk
(9) 23. 30. ( 10) 7. 14. 21 . 28.
6tc

TO:

LEUA

CLARK.

living, ordered sold tf it can not be

If

vmo., tlddreM is unknown;
the unknown ipOUM, if any.

part tiiOned. and for allowance
of anorney fees and costs

whoM name and addreu Ire

herem
You are reQutred to answer

unknown; if =te rad, the
unknown heirs, dewiMN,IegataM, administrators, ueartora
and/ or Ulign1 of lAMe Clartc.

dec.
HAROLD E. MCGREGOR.
if living. whoM eddrMO ia

the unknown
apou-. If any. whose name
and addreu ere unknown; if
ct.:'a
1, 1he unknown heirs.
devisee~. teglteel, Mlminiltratori, axecuton and/ or aaigM
of Harold E. McGregor. dec;
You are hereby not1f1ed that
vou have been named defendants 1n a legal act10n entitl ed
James W. Suttl e. et al .. P.taint1Hs. vs M ann1ng D. Webster. et
al.. Defendants. Th 1s act1on has
been asstgned Case No 83CV-93 and IS pendmg 1n the
Common Pleas Coun of Me1gs
County. Oh10.
The Object ot the Compta1nt
1s a partltlortactiOn concern1ng
o•l and gas nghts and 10 quiet
Iitie to 011 and gas r1ghts
underly1ng the tot1ow1ng des·
cnbed rea l estate
Public Notice
S1tua ted tn ttie TownshiP at
- - - - - - - - -- .1 Lebanon. County of Me1gs and
State· of Oh10. bounded and
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT descnbP.d as follows:
PARCEL NO_I· Be1ng SectiOn
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
Number Twerity-s1x (26). Town
OHIO
Number Three (3). 1n Range
JAMES W. SUTTLE. et al ..
Number Eleven !1 1) al the Oh10
P'laintiks,
Company's Purchase and desvs.
MANNING D. WEBSTER, et crtbed. as lollows. to·Stt Bemg
the northeast f Quarte' of the
al.,
southwest quarter at sa1d
sec11on number tw-enly-SI&gt;c !261.
2 ·tn Memoriam
contam1ng forty (4 0) acres. be
the same more or less

-=======:::::;
r
IN LOVING MEMORY of
Charles R. Mash, Jr., who
passed away a year ago today, Oct. 21. 1982.
Dad, you left me broken
hearted,
On that day when you
parted.
The Bible says we have
to_go,
But, boy, I wished it
wasn't so.
The day will come when.
I'll see you apin,
I'll be good and try notto

sin.

unknown;

PARCEL NO

II Also

the 1compla tnt Wlthtn twenty·
etg.h t days after the l,ast publica- .
t10n of th ts nottce wh tch wi ll be

oubltshed once eacb. week for
stx consecu trve weeks. The last
publication wtll . be made on
November 1B. 1963 and the
twenty-e1ght. days for answer
w1ll commence on thal f;!·ate.
In case of yaur - t&lt;fil·ure to
answer or otherwise response
as 19Qu1red by the Oh10 Rules of
CIVIl ProcedUJe, judgment by
default 'Mil be rendered aga1nst
y6u for the rel1ef demanded 1n
the Compla1nt
Larry E. Spencer.
Clerk of Courts
Me1gs County
•
Common Pleas Court
Dated October 14. 1983

28 (t 114. 11 , 18.
6tc
i-,-,-,.,---,---1101 14, 2t.

followmg descnbed property.
to-'Mt' Bemg 1n sect1on number
t\Nenty (20). town numbAr three
(3L range number eleven j11),
of the Oh10 Company's Purchase. and bounded as follows.
tO·Wit Begmn1ng e1ghty rods
north ol the southwest corner
of sa•d Sect1on. thenc e North
f1fty (50) rods. .thence eas t
e1gh1v !801 rods. thence sooth
f1fty (50) rods: !hence west
e1ghty (801 rods to the place of
beg.nnmg. conta1n1ng twentyf1ve ~25) acres. more or less
Refer ence Deed Vo lume

Pomeroy
La ndrna rk

&amp;l

61' 992 2181

1'----.;.;;.;.~·.;.;;,;;,..;;.,;·;;;;,,

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Ldl ljl:sl SPII t:!ton 1:1 ~lllllllt·tsl,~rn Ultltl

CARPET

.

Starting At
'

Installed With Pail
KITCHEN CARPET
Regular $15.95
Yard
NOW
Installed

$12

Regular

$}295

$15.95

ANSO IV NYLON
Rag. $18.95
NOW

Ru bberback Candy Stripe
TWEED
Reg. $7.95

992-2259

NEW LISTING - RUTlAND
- large yard area and a newly
painted home. many go&lt;XI
features witn easy financing
availabla $32.000.

NEW LISTING- lbedroom
bungalow w\th bat~ and gas
furn•ce. Should heat very
easily and b~ a nice place to
live and walk to the stores in
Middleport for $21,000.

NEW LISTING- HYSEll RUN
RD. - 20 acres plus a ranch
style home. large k~chen, 3
bedrooms, fireplace and woodbutner. 24xl4 lam~ room
needs refinishing touch. Utility
room, garage and . large
yard.$45,000.

NEW LISTING- You'lllove
th1s 12 acres near langsville. Modern 2 bedroom
home, 15 yrs. old. 4nice size
rooms, bath, 2 porches and
barn, etc. Also a .2 bedroom
trailer. All lor only $35,000.
NEW LISTING - On Rt 7
by-pass. Small 5 rm . frame
home with furnace, water
and full basement. Asking

$8,000.

$17,000.00 - 8 rm. reasonable home in Pomeroy
with bath, furnace, nice
kitchen, dining, and l4 of an
acre with trees and shrub·
bery.
IIINERSVILE -4.77 acres,
7 rms., bath, woodburner. 3
bedrooms, carport and T.P.
water, f01 $28,000. A~o 6
rm. oilier homne with bath,
utilities .and large lot for
$6,500.
.
COUNTRY HOllE -Almost
3 acres, 8 rm. house, 7 yrs.
old. All elec. with range, re:
frigerator, d~posal and dis·
hwasher. As~ng $69,000.
RIVER FRONT :... Want to
boo~ fish and picnic? Then
these 2 places are for you.
One has a 3 bedroom ~ome.
IIIODLEPORT - N. Fourth
St 3 bedrooms, bath, carpeting. nice k~chen, forced
air furnace and lot 58d25.
Askin' $27,000. What will
you gtve? Also 2 houses on
Grant r. $60,000.
NEW LlmNG EVERT WEEK.
WHAT IS IT THAT YOU

IIEEI!I 9t2·3ffl,
Hnusifly

Headquarters

..

1

NEW liSTING - IIIOOLE·
PORT - Beautiful home lor
children. wood- burning fireplace ar1d furnace tor cheaper
heating bil~. garage, basement,
fami~ room all in great
condiOOn, must be seen. Call
Today! $49.000.
NEW ListiNG- SALEM TWP.
- Beautiful 2 bedroom trailer
with huge living room and
turniihed nicely. Has a 20x40
picnic shelter, t11at has an
eqtipped k~chen in it A2-car
garage wrth storage buildin&amp;
and an extra set up for another
trailer. $30,000.
NEW LISTING - LINCOLN .
HEIGHTS - Anice and neat
one ftoor plan home with 2-3
bedrooms, tun basemerc, and
alum. siding, $22.500.
NEW LlmNG - Trailer ~
city sewer, water and ~ectrit
Approx. 80' of road frontage.
$2.500.
"
NEW LISTING- Mobile home
12x65, 3 bedrooms. Nothing
else to buy, completet; fur·
nished! Very $OOd condition,
has underpmning. Only
$6,500.

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
6RI 992-6191 ·
Jean Tr11111ll 949-26&amp;0
Dottie Tomer 892·56t2

Olllct 992·2259

New Holland, Bush

-Piumb;,g and

oloc!rkalwod&lt;

Hot!

Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipm!tnl
Parts &amp; Service

(Free Estimates)

V.

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

l ·l ·lfc

t 1·26-tfe

949-2293

Only

Racine, OH.

SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plaot
1¥o II. East of Pacaville
On Township .Rd. lU
We Specialize
in Aluminum Only .
PH. 992-3466.
10/19/2 mo. pd

EiRAVEL ·
HAULED
AL TROMM
742-2328 .
10/20/t.f.n.

PH.

SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

PARTS

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for frH siding estimates, 949-2801 . or
949-2860.

AND

REPAIR
CHESTER, OH.
10·13·1 mo.

No Sunday Calls

·

USED
APPLIANCES

· ALL STEEL

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sites from 6'x6' Up
· to 24'x36'
lnsulatd Do&amp; Houses

P&amp;S BUI

~·~ine,

Route 4, Pomeroy

10-6-rtc.

9-12-ff

CONTRACTING

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•liMESTONE
•WATER. GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION

742:2328

a.

Heaters

$99 TO $189

Also AntiJ Supplies,
Radios, latclles &amp;
· Gen1111 Variety
2nd lt. • ,_from
Poot Dtflco
Muon, W. V1.

773-11040

JIU-lmo. Jld,

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

Gun 1hoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday 11arting 1
p.m. Factory choked guns
only.

'Water Pipe
"Gas Pipe
•Regulators
•fittings
'Drips
PHONE:

No hunting or ""passing on

Violet Smith property ot
Reodovllle, Oh.
Trail ride Sunday at 12 noon
at the Sherme'n 881ham

roaldonce on SR 143. All

horselovera who likea to ride
should be there.

Warohouae: 985-3509

10·11·1 mo. pd

Recine Area EJ~ercise &amp;
Aerobic• Clau. Morning
class 10-11, evening class
7 -B Mondays. Patty Hensler

949-2722. Homo of Joy
Morarity.
weeks.

St. Rt. L24, Pomeroy, OH.
AUTO &amp; T~UCK
REPAIR

atelletlon.
RHid1ntl1l

Cell 742-31 Ill
Httc

per

6

Giveaway

Queen 1i1e mattress 8i box

tO.l-lmo. pd

VALLEY

NATIONALINE
Plumbing &amp; Heating Suppli"

8 dwarf rabbit• for pets.

After 3 p.m. call 614-992·
3717.

Plumber Bod

You Wanl Him Ooq&lt;J'' ·
l!l!CTRIC Ell SEWER CLE.ut!R
,..--DIAl:.-----.

Trophy
Manufactuoo I
PlAQUES . ~

ENGRAVING :
'

AIR CONDtTIONERS
RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL
HEATING • PLUMBING

.I 992-2036
A Phon• Call brtnp

Pro11pt Courteous Service
232 E. 2nd
Pom•oy. 0.
Now's the Iiiio to 111 your furnaco ready lor cold ftl!ll. 10'11
Di1count on any now furnace purchatd btfon Oct. 15. 9_15

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Makes

".......

•Relllaor8taro
•Drylll8 • F . -

PAIITI ond IEIIVICE
~

-·

.

-

, Point - Mason
7 · Auto Glau

--=
. .-

l _ ..

"AUTQOLASS
OUR SPEtiALTYI"

Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or ,mall . Reliable and depen ·
dable. For estimate call
To take
or need•· home care .
only, Point Plea11nt or
polia area . Good reference•.

Telephone
age Sale, Second &amp;

I

Call 304-458·1B18.

T-rash Service, Coal hauling.
Dependable. Will pick up
Junk televlaiona free . Call

Management person to
manege local photography
club tor international film
Corp. Part time to 1984 mo .

Coil today l7141821·B900 .
Foster Grandparent tor
Buckeye Community Servi·
cas to work with children
with mental retardation . Re·
quirementl Include: .
-at leat 60 years of age.
-income guidelinea: aingle,

85,390; morriod, 87,1 16;
family of thrH, f8,840.
For further Information.
contact Sylvia Day~~ 446-

7109 between 7-9:00PM .

lrioh Setter. 304-675-2309.

ring . 8t4-99:t-2984.

The 0.0. Mcintyre Park
District Is taki_ng applica·
tions for 1 dance aerobic
lnetructor. preferably certified. for the Hannan Trace
area. Call448·4612ext. 66.

U40-f330 per month. For

45631. 614 - 992 ·2192.
448 -6600.
We are expanding in Gallia
and Meiga Counties and
need reliable people to SBr·
vice our growing busine11

To earn extra cash for
Chri1tm11. Excellent eern·
inga. Reatabllahlng aervicea
in this area. 304-676-2618.

IN-SERVICE-STAFF DE·
VELOPMENT COORDINATOR. Prefer B.S.N. or R.N.

&amp; Vicinity
---···----···-----·····-····--

tar &amp;PM, 446-8069.

Thursday and FridayCameras , clothes, toys,
tools, tires. chest and antiques. Five Points area-

Brush hogging $16 per hr.

Call 614-256-1427.

614-992-5344.

31

Public Sale
lo Auction

: WVo. 304·773·5785 or
'8(14-773-9188.

Homes for Sale

Located in Syracuse- Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on one·
third acre lot. $24,500 . or
will rent for $275 mo.

Business
Opportunity

fied buyer. 614-992 -7034 .

Excellent Opponunity for day •, 61 4-9 9 2 · 7 6 71
right individual to become evenings.
distributor for leading snack _:_:__:__::_::.__ _ _ __
Company-in immediate House and 3 lots on West
area . Must have reliable Point Rd. i n Hartford, WVfor
truck &amp; minimum invest- $11 ,000. 304· 882· 2831.
ment. Send resume to Box
808 in care of The Gallipolis MASON County. house &amp;
Daily Tribuna, 826 3rd. one acre, $14.000 or will
AVe .. Gallipolis, Oh 46631. trade for land, house or

financing
. 304-743
mobile home.
Or ·3817
owner
and 304-662-5840.

For information about Synthetic Lubricants an &amp;Jlcellent busi~;~ess opportunity.
Contact Rodney Stapleton.

Will do bebyaltting lri my
home. I live on Bradbury

304-4&amp;8-1071.

13

23

Newly remodeled house, 4
room. bath. laundry room,
gar'age and extra lot. Phone
10 Pet. interest, owner
financing, new 2 V: story.
mod · A-hame, 1% bath, 1~
acre . 850,000 . 1 - 895 ·

Profes"s ional
Services

3071 .

PIANO TUNING lower
prices-regular tuningsdiscounts to Sen.i or Citizens,
Churchaa &amp; schools. Ward's

SANDV AND lEAVER In·
aurenca Co. hal offered
MNices fOt' fire Insurance
coverage In Oellle County

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

12 x60. three bedroom . all
electric. Phone 304· 675-

4204.

...

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
•
'

35 acres at Rodney on W .T.
Watson Rd . Owner financ ·
ing available. Caii446·B221
after 6 weekdays.
·
21ots for sale in New Haven .
(Twin Cedar Addition) City
sewer ahd water. Phone

(304)882-3196.

MASON County: 6 acres
with a house. both for
$24,000 or will trade for a
house or land . Or owner
financing . 304·743-3817 .
304- 662 -5840 .

~ ~~~~~~~~~

4 bdr. house 6 acres of land
on Rt. 160 in Vinton. Central
air, $360 mo ., sec . dep . &amp;

ref. Co11446-3176.

1- - - - -- - - - -

2 bdr. house upper Second
Ave., Gallipolis . Basement,
1 car garage, gas furnence,
no pets ., 1 child, deposit.

Cell 614 -388 -8295 alter 4.
2 bedroom home . gas ,
adults, no pets. deposit,
references . 1935 Chatham

Ave. Call 448 -1680.

$236 . month . 3 bedroom .

Keyboard. 304-675-3824.
PIANO TUNING ANO RE·
PAIR. Service with skill and
intagrlty. Lane Oeniela-614742 - 2961. !Retiree .

Teacher Discounts).

HOMES KESSEL ' S QUAL-

lTV MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS ,
RT 35. PHONE 448-7274.
1972 12x60 mobile home.
shape. furn ., wa~her .
4 bdr. ranch home. large LR, dryer, dishwasher, fully &lt;ear·
full basement. with gar3ge, peted. Call614-367-7175.
wood burner included, city
schools, 2 miles from town. 1974 Shultt 12x66, 2 large
bdr ., with built-i n cabinets,
Call 446-0278 .
2 baths, air cond., underpinOr will trade for anything of ning. intercom, new rugs.
value. 3 bedroom house drapes, furniture. outside
with fireplace, central air, 2 entrance box, 2 sets of extra
full baths, in city limits. steps, fire alarm . gas alarm.
lmmedllte possession . Call first aid kit, fire extinguisher,

- - - - - - -- - - 1great

614-246-6281 '

$6.900. 1·304-882-2237.

Middleport, remodeled , five
room• and bath."' gal furnance. cozy fireplace, good
neighborhood . Price re·

1972 14x70 Kirkwood, 3
BR , 1 Y2 beth. new carpet.
linoleum. 30 h . awning,
back deck .. exc. cond . Call

ducod . Coii614-99Z-6941 . 448·8382.
By owner house with 2 acres
more or leas, been remo ·
deled. orchard, 87 h . wall,

1-----:-::--:-Nice 2 bdr . mobile home
1970 set up in city limits.
Ready to move into, aaking

822,000 . Call 614-388 - $4,200 . Coli 446-2491 .
9053.
Must sell, make offer . 3 bdr.
in Henderson, new carpets,
city water &amp; sewer. Natural
gas furnanca. la11: houaa on
Henderson St. Toward Red-

mond Ridge. $23,000. Box
533 Gallipollo, Oh 45631 .

2 or 3 bdr. 2 ltory older
home with private entrance
apt . 617 Fourth Ave., Galli-

3 bdr.. 14Jl70, with ex·
pendo, wall to wall carp&amp;t.
central air &amp; heat. Call

446-1687.
1970 Vindaie with expando,
1 2x63, 2 bdr .. total electric.
unfurnished, awning, underpinning, deck, central air.

614-245 -9222.
4 mobile homes. 1 0' and 12'
2 bedroom low priced .
Brown's Trailer Park. 614·

polia. Call 446-7277 or ft. wide .
446-4346.
fu rnlshed .

3 bedroom" house with 3
acrea ground, near Porter,

old At. 160. Call 446-4202
or 446-2857. ':t
log home 4 Vr~ old, 4

large garden spot, rivervlaw.
in Crown City. Call 614-

1976 H.orizon 12x65, 3
bedroom': 1 Y2 bath, natural
gas cookstove, furnace. and
hot water heater; Maytag
washer &amp; dryer, central air.
underpinning, $9,000. 614-

742 -3069.
1979 mobile home 1 4x60
unfurn. 'h acre lot. chain link
fence in Ohio. $13,500.

256· 1208 or 614-266 - 304-675-1297.
1958 .
For aale three bedroom
home In Mercerville.

baths. 2 fireplaces. heat
pump , large kitchen , garage
&amp; pati o. $325 . " per
mont~. 882 - 24Q5 ,

2447 or 675-5540 .

882 -

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr . mobile home in city
limits, garbage &amp; water
furnished . aduhs only, t)O
pets. Rat. 8. sec . deposit

required. Call 446-2491 .

2 bdr mobile home . Close to
hospital. Call 614- 388 -

9760.

Nov. 1st. for rent 2 bdr.
trailer on private lot, with
was~er &amp; dryer, 5 mi. from
hosprtel &amp; town, no childen ,
fef. required . Call 446-

4063.

3 bdr. house trailer for rent .

Coll446 -1052.

2 bedroom Mobile Home in ·
Racine. 614-367-7148 .

2 bedroom trailer close .to
school. park . stores. Deposit
required . 614-992-5914.
1969 mobile home for rent
or sale. Excellent condition .
Available furnished or unfurnished with price negotia -

ble. 614-992-7479.

2 bedroom furnished Mobile

Home. 614-992-6443 .

992 -3324.

1976 1 4x70 trailer, 3 bed·
room, 2 baths. large kitchen.

3A

m ile out Sandhill Rd.

304-675 -3834.

Two bedroom trailer,~
S 150 .00, plus deposit. Crab
Creek Road . Phone 304-

675 -1206 .

Two bedroom mobile home,
references, deposit r.e -

quired . 304-675-4046 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

$10,000 . 304-773-5023 .

1981 1 4x70, Shultz limited
16 room houH, 3 baths, mobile home. microwave,
baaernent, large lot, 9 fire-• diahwe1her, central air, unpiiCel. Hiii:OriCIIIandmark. derpenning, three badSerloua inquires only. Call rooms. 1 Y2 baths. excellent
448-2481.
condition, $15,500 . . Call

Furnished apt. $185 . Water
paid, 2 bdr., 131 % 4th
Gallipolis. 446-4416 after j
p.m.

3 · bedroom ranch

448 - 492~ .

atyle

home. carpeted. full sire
beaement, 1 car gar1ge, in
ground - pool 18x32 .

U5 ,00Q. 614-992·!888.
3 bedroom, 2 story home. 2
car garage. Former Baptist
Parsonege, 5th St., Recine.

304-875-6049 alter 5 p.m.
Mobile Home Moving, Li·
cenHd and Insured, Free
Estimates 8100 . par hook-

up minimum. Phona 304576-2711

Smell turn . house 1- or 2
adults only. no pets. Call

446-033B .

Jaekson Estate Apartments
536 Jackson Pika (Equal
Housing Opponunity) hat.
one bedroom apartment•
1973 Vondolo 14x65 with rent starting 1t $167 and
11b:8 eJCpando, beth and , two bedroom rent starting at
half, 2 badr"'Om ell electric. •193. UOD dopooit. Cal
applloncoo
air condition 448 -2745 or IHve me111ge
Incl. 304-273-4610.
on enawering nrvlce.

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-676-2711 .

1----------

..ct !Carll IU..Iooon, ogont. building. 3.8 acrao. 3'11
Phon• 4411-2921.
mileo S. Albany.

a

4 room, bath. basement.
double garage, storage

2bdr., 2 bath. 11 Coun St.
Ref. &amp; dap. f326 mo: CaU

1- - - - - - - - - -

for olmoot 1 century. Form, 614 -948-2122.
homoand pe110nal property 1----- - - - - - '
cover•a•• 1re IVIIIable to
meet Individual nHda. Con·

for Sale

T R 1 • STATE M 0 B ll E Fully carpeted . gardener fur·
HOMES . USED - CARS, nished, Stove and refrlg .
614·992 -2815 from 9 to 5
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS. or 614-992 -2362 from 5 to
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL 7 p.m .
_4_4_:6_-7_5_7_2_._ _ _ _~
NEW AND USED MOBILE Nice 3 bedioom home, 2

"1---------

lnaurance

32 Mobilo Homes

4 1 Houses for Rant
Clifton. W. Ve . 304-773- 1- - - -- - - - - 6860.

Rd .. Middleport. 6t4-992· f12,000. Cal448-7428.
1349.
Wanted to do . HOU18 CIMn·
ing, Point Pl....ntand leon
area . References. Phone

ul

52 Burdette Addn . Pt. Pl.
Sat . Only . StuHed ani mals,
appliances, misc.

Three bedroom, new septic.
city water, and gas heat .

446-7414.

e rooms &amp; bath, own water,

8040 or 814-949-2129.

Yard Sale-221 B Jefferson
Ave. Friday only , Dolls,
several collectable toys, an tique bed, clothing .

304-855 -3934.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB- Sale by owner. 3 bedroom
USHING CO. recommends sectional home. L.ike new.
that you do business with lot at end of Street. Ar·
people you know. and NQT baugh Sub division , Tuppers
to send money through the Plains . $36,900. Will accept
mail until you hawe investi- Mobile Home on trade.
gated the offering_.
Financing awailable to quali-

Mill Rd., $52,000. Call
614-388-9068 .

Tree trimming and remowal.
Free eltimatea. 814·992·

&amp; Vicinity

f----------+----------

1128 .

21

·---- --F&gt;t" Pieasint ____ _

-----·Pomera;,;·----··-Micidleport

bedroom•. 2 acres. Wood•

Situations
Wanted

Brown goat and black dog

on Bud Chatten Rd ..
Laon,WV. 304-45B-1833.

ware. clothes, misc .

dence. Center St .• Mason.
Children &amp; adults winter
cl othing, household items.
mise,
. _:.r --

- - - - - - -- 1

Babysitting in my home at
Centenary. Call anytime af·

Equal Opportunity
Employer.

12

2 black female pupplea, 7
week• old. pen hound. pert

St. Sat. Oct. 22nd.

614-388-8813.

Home improvements. Painting interior and !tXterior, free
estimates. Phone 304· 675-

Fall Yard Sala. Sat., Oct. 22.

Gar - 10 a.m . Carl Cline resi-

Yard Sale Jumbo at Centenary on St. At. 141 . Fri. &amp;
Sat., 9 -4 . Assort. clothing .
jeana, tools, toys, misc .
Cancelled if rain .

State, Athena. Ohio . 1-614-

Loat: M1n 'a dl1mond cluster

Mixed bread . 614-992
2038.
.

1..----------.l----------,J Service.
Rick Peenon Auctioneer
Eotarto, Form, An• liquidation 10toa.
GLASS • GLASS • GLASS tiquo
UcenHd • bonded In Ohio •
.

Yard Sale 9 to 6 . Thurs. Fri.
&amp; Sat . 1837 Chestnut St.

HOME LOANS low fixed
rate. Leeder Mortgage. 77 E. 304-675-4208 .

6 Lost and Found

Pup1. Black, 8 weeks old.

8

3t59 b8twean 9 and 6.

[c;t;~;;;;;:~;;;.;;;;;;-;;;;;

Octobe r 22 , 10 to 6 . Child· i'ens and adu lt clothing,
coats, sweaters, misc. Carroll Tea1ords at 606 Main St.
Racine , Oh .

&amp;Vicinity

22 M onev to Loan

with educational or leeching
background who will be
ratponalbla for organizing·
con d uctl ng-coordlnating
training programs for hospital per10nnel. Salary negoti·
able, extenaive benefit peck·
age . Send reaume to
Personnel Office. lakin Hoa·
pltal, lakin, WV 25260.

"If You Want o

THE
TROPHY
KING

875-8069.

oprlngo. Call 614-367· pen time . Call 304-675. 1090.
0482 .

ln. widO. 814-9e5-3916 .

~~·l-Imo.

fender, driver side, '77 or
'78 Pinto or Bobcat. 304-

more information. call or
write, Becky Canter, Woodlend Centert, inc., 412
VInton Pike, Gallipoli1, OH.

446·3237 after 5PM.

j&amp;.---------'1"'"--------...11

Minersville, OH.

in.

houoe. Call collect 614698·7111.

We have to give away a
double drain board sink, 46

C. L. KITCHEN

. 992-6030

~.

WANTED·People in Gellia,
Jackson or Meigs County
willing to panicipate in a
foster home type program
for adults with emotional
problems. Reimbursement

2 grey kittens, approximately 6 weeki old . Call

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION-

JOB-BIG OR 'SMALL

1 hp. electric motor,

ohaft, 346 R.P.M . left

Avon Gallery Originals Ia
Avon Chrl.. maa product•
wHI be lhown at Metga nn
from 11:00 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Oct. 26 . Anyone interetted
in buying or selling Avon be
sure to aHend our open

4

MASON, W.VA.

oWooh- •DIIh-ohon

It Commercl•l

$9 . 00

-----·"GiiiifiioHs---···--

592-3051.

ENEGUE

PH. 1-304-773-5634

FOR F.UTURE USE"

pair aervlce •nd ln-

V·W engine 1971 -1974.
good condition. Call 304.
675·2790 anytime or 304·

Blondie R : hope the Skooks
have gbt you, becauae you
lost your chance. SETAB

.'PERSONALIZED POOLS"

"CUT OUT .

nMda; fum.cn ,.. ·

Coll614-992-5418.

· · -- ·· ··--- - - - - --

and

Middleport, Ohio

· For ell your wiring

o o.'

loons Ia Co .. 448·4313.

l-2Hc

JEWELL'S

992-2196

SERVIC~

.....

thoarta. parties. Call Bal-

.. u .ttc

Alsp Transmi1sion
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

'

SAVEMORE-MART
Coal
Kerosene

Want to buy kitchen table
and chairs, coffee table, full
size bed and 2 end tables.

Balloon• for Binhdaya, Get
Well, Annlversarys, Swee·

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

J&amp;F

I o oI

1

446-0294.

'

MILLER
ELECTRIC

p.m .

SWEEPER and eewing ma·
chine repair. pans. and
auppliea.
Pick up and
delivery. Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mila up
George• Creek Rd.
Cell

Residence: 985-3837

Ph. 614~3-mr

1·13-tfc

D&amp;J

&amp;

POLE rBULDINGS
Sizes start from 12"x16'

Washers, 'Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners

PAT HILL FORD

WANTED: Ginalng S. Yellow
Root. Alto new ...ipment of
trapping auppllea. Hip boots
&amp; waders. George Buckley
664-4871. Mond,ay:-Friday
1·9 p.m . Sat. &amp; Sun . 1 -9

675-3753 altror 5:00.

•Dump Truck
Service
SEPTIC TANI&lt;S
A SPECIALTY

9-l!)-1 1110.

We can repair and recora radiators and hN·
ta- cores. We --. 1110
acid boil and rod out radletora. We 1110 repair
GasTaNca.

Middleport, oh. 614-992·
3476.

3 Announcements

Around

PH. 992.1fl79.2

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Buying daily gold, silver
coins. rings. jewelry, sterling
ware. old coina. large currency . Top prices. Ed. Bur·
kett Berber Shop, 2nd . Ave.

12·21Htc

···~

Wanted to Do

A. Martin 614-992-8370 .

Route 1
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 892-3067

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Lowest Rates

Pomeroy ,..Ohio

Ladders for
100 BarreiJanks
And Drip Tanks, Also
10/12/2 mo. d.

Wanted to buy, New, uaad &amp;
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete houHholds. Also complete Auctl·
oneering aarvice. Call Oaby

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

l-ll·tfC

R. E. HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

742-2456

. Oh. Or 992· 7760.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON .

PH. 992-2280

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

AUTO

•Exparlanced
•Reasonable
•Work Guaranteed

i

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofing - Siding - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeling - Custom Pole
Barns.

TON

BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old

, furniture, gold, silver dol·
; len. wood ice boxea. stone
jan. antiques, etc., Com plete houaeholdl . Write:
M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,

8·1-tle

CHESTER

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

1

992-7583 or 992-2282

o 0 , I , I o I 0 f of .o

PLUMBING
HE·A TING

Call 446-9307.

GREG ROUSI:I

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

TRI-COUNTY
GENERAL WELDING

Four wheel drive farm tree·
tor, about 60 H'P and John
Deere model 420 bulldozer.

15 YEARS EXPERIENCE

COAL

$3()0° A

.

614-446-0175.

•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
and Garages
•Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
•Aluminum &amp; Vinyl
Sidings

Residential-New and
re-w11tng; Commercial
and Industrial.
BON DED-AII Work
Guaranteed
Call 614-742-2214
After 5 P.ll.
9·22· I mo. pd.

,a

446-31119, 9 to 5.

Wanted to buy Used mobile
homes &amp; truck campar. Call

•Roofing

STRIP

Wanted To Buy

Wanted to buy used coal Ia
wood heaters. Swain Furnl ·
lure, 446-3169, 3rd. &amp;
Olive St., Gallipolis; Oh .

9·29·1 mo

Allill lie WAKTAIJS

General Hauling and Trash
removel Service. Reliable
and dependable. Call 446-

446-3672

· ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes
Extensive Remodeling

CONTRACT! NG _

Gauge Shotguns

.. FrH Eatlmatea"
"1 2 Yeara Experience"
..Work GuarentMd"

Business
•
senrtces

every Tuesday

We pay cash for late model
clean uaed c.ra.
Jim Mink Chev.- Oids .Jnc .
Bill Gene Johnson

SHOP
Now Lime Road
Rutland. Ohio
PH . 742 -2225

J·IO·IIt

MINE RUN

'Excavating
'Ponds
'Septic Tanks
'Hauling ·

9

TAXIDERMY

All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"
1Call: 949~226~
or 949-3091

M.l.

RECLAMATION

Vinyl Siding &amp;
Roofing
SALE
DEAL DIRECT &amp;
SAVE 30% OR IIORE
On Sidincand Roofinc.
Gutter 1nd Downspouts

POMEROY,O.

1-( 6 14) -992 · 3325

Authorized John Deer,

742-2352

E . •os
Main I..C~~J.J

. Phone

w""'

All types of roof work. new
or repair, gutters and
downspouts, gutter cleaning and painting, storm
doors and windows.

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

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

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

$1595

R9e loah'Af-/1!

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction

Have Your
Trophies
Professionally
Mounted by
THE

L

BOGGS

CARPENTEN
SERVICE
-Addono and ........Wing
-Roofl"' and gutto.
~:w:iwNworlt

ROOFING

FALL CARPE f SALE

GOLD SEAL

ltUUOR

YOUNG'S

10-10-1 mo.

CONGOLEUM

216f . 1ndSf.

9-15·1 mo. pd

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke 12

-

Good Selection Of

EAFORD

EXCAVATING .
- oozers
'
B kh
= o:c;,P o;r~cks
- Lo-Bov
- Trencher
- Water
- Sewer
- Gas lines
- Saptic Svstams
·LARGE •• SMALL JOBS
PH . 992-2478
9-22·1 mo. pd

Bashan Building

Installed

Real Estate General

AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester. Ohio
Ph. 98&amp;-4269
II No Answar, Call 985·4382
DawayneWiltiama
&amp; Scottie Smith
All Makes and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Available

RACINE
ARE DEPT.

to I and I
5
Saturday
8;30 a.m. to 12 Noon
Also complete service on
all Hotpoint and General
Electric Appliances.
Other makes also serviced
and we also service Kerosene Heaters.

8

Pt. Pleasant,
WVa.
r-===:~::::::::::~;::::::::::::::::::~;::=::======--r;::::::::::::::==;i night,
Auct . lonnie
Neal. Youth
S&amp;W TV
PULLINS
H. L. Writesel
SPORTSMEN
~;4t;'6~-r~fo1~amden St.

GUN SHOOT

286. Page 809 Mergs Cou nty

The pr ayer ol sard complarnr

;·

54 Misc. Merchandise

lhe

Deed Records

I'll see you in the rapture
or when I pass away,
And I hope you will meat
me on that glorious day.
Our talks I'll always remember,
Your song I'll always
sing.
Because, memories of
you isn'ta dying or passing
thing.
And, by the way, "HAPPY
BIRTHDAY".
Sadly missed, but vary
much appreciated. that
God loved me enough to
give me you .
Daughter, Susie

•s that the above descn bed otl
and gas nghts be partittoned.
that the tnterests be set off or

Ohio

Business Services

PHONE
992-215'6
Or
Dam,
o.,t.

t

both duE' to a possible loss of sonle
funds to the schools.
A report was given on the school
carnival Saturday nlght. The costumes were judged by Flossie and
Public Notice
Gary Dill. Winners In the categories
of most original, funniest , scariest,
PURCHASE
prettiest, ugliest and fanciest , listed
REOUISmON
Req . No. 126414
.respectively, In the grade levels
F.T.I. No. 31 ·4384817
were as follows:
Saw af atria
Kindergarten, pre-school and
[)eper'ln'tent or
first grade: BWena Buchanan,
Uquor Control
Coklmbua, Ohio
Christopher Buchanan and Jen·
Purc:hating Okmion
niter Mora, tie for most or!glnal;
Legal advert1s1ng for svnop·
Chris Benedum, Ryan Buckley, tie SIS of proposed lea~e for .State ·
fo[. funniest; Travis Brewer, Ryan L•auor Store No. 22. m PomeHollon, tie for scariest; , Hope rov. Oh10. as follows.
SYNOPSIS
\\1th a favorite halloween remem- Decker, Roxane WUUams, tie for
The Department of l•quo r
brance. A thank you note was read prettiest; Bryan Frederick, Travis Control proposed to lease the
from Mildred Hawley, and It was Friend, tie for ugliest; Sara Mar· storeroom at 112 Mulberry Av .
Pomeroy Oh10 from Ernest A
noted that the food auction held in chir, fanciest.
W1nget1 . RD 3. Rac•ne, Oh1o ior
and
third
graders:
Lisa
Second
September was such a success that
a penod of 5 years at a mon thly
Hoffman, Carrie Morrissey, Jerry rental of s 510.00. Prem•ses
another Wlll be held In January.
. Pam Ash will give a program on Lightfoot, Debra Frost, Mike are 10 be occupied by Stale
Liquor Store No 22 _ Lease to
the Girls Scouts and her trip west Roush, imd Penny Aeiker.
co ntain standard covenants
Fourth and fifth graders, Su- and cancellable by the Departlast summer at the November
zanne
Clay, Lorre Osborne, Rod ment on n1nety days notice.
meeting.
Department of
Newsome,
Nichola Pickens, Jay
Refreshments were served by
LIQuor Control
Nottingham, Leigh Anne Rodovlan.
Mrs. Erwin, Martha Childs, Mrs.
R•chard E Carey
Sixth through adults: Kim Mcln·
01rector
Stewart, Margaret Butcher, and tyre, D.A. Harris, Keith Karsclmlk,
Evelyn Murray.
Tom Morrissey, Terry Newsome, 1101 21 . 1tc
Mike Frost.
Public Notice
Child care is provided at each
meeting. Serving refreshments at
IN THE
Monday night's meeting were the
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
Portland area enhancing his presen · sixth grade room mothers.
PROBATE DMSION.
tatlon with old photographs.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Work progress reports on neigh·
tN THE MATTER OF ADOP·
liON OF Ay Hotilot Mora
boring county chapters was given
NO. 24237
and~eTTribrldgegaveap~s
-NOTICE BY
report on Gallla County.
PUBUCAT10N TO: Supote ~moe, 1aat
It was announced that a potluck
Norma Torres, nursing supervl· known llddreos: District of
picnic and tour will be held on Oct. 30
sorofthe Meigs County Department Chokchli, Province of Nlkhon
at 1 p.m. on Blennerhassett Island
RM~a
.
ofHealth,annouhcesachangelnthe
You are hereby notrlred that
by the Historical Park Commission.
This will be the last tour on the island
date of the departments pedlatrlc 2
otological disease cUnlc.
In Memoriam
for the public until April.
The
free
clinic
has
been
changed
A door prize was won by Ethel
Grueser. Refreshments were to 9 a.m. on Friday, Nov. 4 at the
In Loving Memory of
served to members and two guests. health department offices on Mul·
berry Heights In Pomeroy.
My Beloved Husband,
Anyone havingachildorknowtng Charles R. Mash Jr.,
of a child, infant to 21 years of age,
who passed away 1
\\1than ear, nose,orthroatproblem,
year ago today, Dct.
Is asked to call the health depart·
21, 1982.
ment at 992-B616 to make an
appointment for the Nov. 4 cUnlc.
Our 34 years together
was such a joy,
That in this life, only
death could destroy.
But "I Firmly Promise
meeting with Par Wolfe and
Virginia Lee giving the officers'
reports. Terry Hottman and Blll
Buckley agreerfto be In charge of
the- committee for the sidewalk
repair. The slxth grade won the
attendance award.
Speaking at the meeting were
three school board members, ·
David Chadwell, Susie Heines, and
Keith Weber, and Mary Hun1er
spoke about Issues 2 and 3
encouraging members to vote no on

October 21, 1983

ol

.#,

�i

Page-l G-The Daily Sentinel
44

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Apartment
for Rent

64 Misc . Merchandise

Furnished upt1air1 apt. , 3
rooma &amp; bath, clean, adutta
no

pats,

ref.

raq.

Utilitiea paid . Call 446 ·
1619 .
Unfurnished 2 bdr. In Crown

City. Ohio. Call 614-2S6 ·
66j!O.
Furnlahed apt. 2 bdr., 1136

2nd .., Ave., Gallipolis. •196
- • r pold . Call 446-4416
•f!!•t 7 p.m.
!Mjllrcervllle)

new

1

bdr.

8 t .7&amp; per mo , Call 448·
1 ~41, Mon.-Fri., 8-5.

tic.,.

2
}kitchen, fumithed . 1
b('r., kitchen, furnished . A0Ae.. Real Eatatea. Carol
Yeager, Realtor. Call 304-

weter paid, 1138 Second

AVe .. Gomoolis. 446-4418
aher 7 p.m.
Unfurnished 1 BR Apt .,
nearly new, no pets. Call
448 -3617 .
4 room apt . utilitiet paid, all
car:petad. Aduha only, no

pota. Call 446-3437 .
New 2 bdr. apt for rent 1 5

minutea from Gallipolia. Call

614-256-1198 .
NMd

1omeona to

ex~sea

share

In apartment . Call

4411 -2892 alter 6PM .
One bedroom apt. for rant,
furnished and utilities paid.
Downtown location. 8260

mo. Cell 446-.9 283 .
1 bed room Apt. $196. mo.
including

utilities.

EqUal

hol!•ing opportunity. Contact

Village

Manor Apts.

6111· 992 -7787.
3 &amp; 4 room· furnish84 apts.
61 ,4 : 992-6434. 61 4-992·
59.14 or 304-882·2566.
Ap~s -

for rent . 614-992·

5908 .
1 -bedroom Apt . in Point

Pleasant. W.VA . 514-992·
68118 .
Unfurnishe~

Apt ' s. with
ttove and refrig. Middleport,
Pomeroy &amp; New Haven .
Deposit and references re-

qu ired . 614-992-7511 .
2 bedroom furnished apt.

614-992-6434, 614-992 ·
5914 or 304·882·2566.

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt. . 3
bedroom home for rent .
Cl81and Realty . 614-992-

2259 .
Apartments . 304 - 675 5548 .

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and

Gallipolis. 614.-446 -

8221 .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
income of less than
$1 2,300 .. Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income·
.Phone 304-675 -6679 .
bedroom apt. at Gall.
Forrv. 304-675·2548.

2

Furnished efficiency apartment. all utilities paid. deposit. required. $200. 304896-3460 .
45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
Coli 448-0756 .
Sleeping room $116. utili·
tie• paid, range &amp; refrig .
Share beth. Man only. 446·
4416 after 7 p.m.
Vac•ncies for ladies or men
in private penial care home.
Room S. board. handicap,
24 hr. oursing care. Reasonliible In Crown City. Call
614-268·6509.
46 Space for Rent
Furnished office for rent.
CloSe to city building and
court houw. Call 446·0856
days. $126. mo.
Trailer tpacea and house on
Buiavllle Rd, in Kyger Creek
Sch. dill. Call 61 4-256·
1433 . •
COIINTAY MOBILE Homo
Parte. Route 33, Nor1h of
Ponieroy:. Large lots. Call
992·7479.
PUTNAM cOunty: ,2 acres of
lan'd with all hookup for
mobile home. t 100. per
month. 304-562 · 6840 or
304-743-3817.
49

For Lease

51 Household Goods

51 Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, otto·
'man, 3 tables, (extra heavy
by Frontier). $686 . Sofa,
chair and lowesaat, 8275 .
Sofas and chairs priced from
1285. to $896. Tables. 146
and" up to 8126·. Hide-abeds , 1440 . and up to
$525 .. Recliners, $176 . to
$350 .. Lamps from $28. to
$76 .6 pc . dinenas from
199., to 435 . 7 pc. 9189
and up. Wood table with sik
chairt $426 to 1$746. Desk
811 0 up to $226. Hutcl1aa,
8650 . and up, maple or pine
finish. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, 8260. and
up to 8395 . Baby bods.
S 1 10. Mattresses or bok
spr'ings, full or twin, 858,.
firm , sea. and $78 . Queen
seta. t196. 4 dr. chests,
842 . 6 dr . chests. 864. Bed
frames, $20.and $26 ., 10
gun · Gun cabinets, $360.
Gas or electric ranges 1375.
Baby mattresses , 826 &amp;
835 . bed frames 820. 825,
6. $30, king frame 860.
Good selection of bedroom
suites, cedar chests,
rockers , metal cabinets,
swivel rockers.
Used Furniture -- bookcase,
ranges, chairs. dryers. re·
frigerators and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 6pm. Mon. thru Fri ., 9sm
to 6pm, Set. ·
446-0322

Avocado green refrigerator,
white gas range, other furni ·
ture . Coli 614·268·8307 .

e400.00 ....,, One good
u••d eleotrla
e100.00. 104-178·1117 .

r•ns•·

54 Misc . Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 12''-22' ' stocked
in yard . HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 614· 256·
6245.
Umestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son. Call 446-7786.
Walnut lumber 8 and 10 ft.
long. Call 304·458·1997.
Firepl•ce inaen-still In factory carton - automatic
controls-2 blowara·glan
door-ash pan -fits 30 in. to
48 in. fireplace-burna wood
~~i;~~~~ •590 . Call 6146

Hand made log cabin style For sale or trade Coondog.
doll house with furniture. Call 614·256· 1415.
866. 446-4630.
Four P1 65 · 80D13 tires
118.00 oach . 304-6'75 ·
3084.
Household sale. 1919 N.
Main, Sat. 9·3:00 p .m.
Complete bedroom suite,
maple table w-four chairs.
desk. couch. coffee table,
recliner &amp; 36" gas range.
Mens clothes. shir1s L 8t XL,
pants 345, winter co&amp;ta,
sports coats. 304-876·
4072.

56 Building Supplies

large wood burning add -on Buck stove largest made
furnace -brand new -heats with glats door inserts. Sand
hot water-automatic 8t pipe, exc. shape. Call
controls -firebrick lined . 614-379· 2115.
.
$590 . Call 614-256· 1216.
Buckeye coal&amp;. wood stove,
Harvest gold ref . $96, $150. Coli 446-7126 .
Coldspot white ref. $96,
coppertone ref. $95. Whirl- JVC Compact portable stepool washer $125, Kenmore reo, fm -am-ca11ette. Price
dryer $65 , Kenmore dryer nego1iable. Ektra parts in·
876, 40' alec. range $95, eluded . 675· 7980.
30' alec. white range $95.
40' avacado green Kelwina· Multi-atitch sewing machine
tor range 896, 5 dr . chest of with c.binet, like new.
drawers unfinished $46, 3 $199. Coli 446-7658.
dr. chest of drawers unfin·
ished 831 .92, 5 dr . finished Sears refrig. brown, white
oak chest. 866, sm . desk metal cabinet, Hotpoint
unfiniahed $38 .22. lg . desk dryer, end table. Kerosene
unfinsihed $60 . Skaggs Ap· heater . Call 446·1687.
pliances Upper River Rd , 1-------~--­
Gallipolis , 446·7398.
Wood spliner hYraullc A
horae power, gas motor,
$75 each used washers &amp; axe . cond. Cell446·3171 .
dryers. Nice &amp; clean . guaranteed 30 da~s . Several to Firewood for sale $36 a
choose fro.m . Call 614-266- pickup ioad delivered, 10
1207 .
loads for 8300., Call 614266· 1427.
Solid pine 84 in . sofa, with
matching loveseat, ax. cond. Coleman 75 ,000 BTU fuel
$650 . Call 446 -3939.
oil stove &amp; tank, ex . cond.,
reduced to e100 firm . Call
Antique Hoosier cupboard, 304-675-7967.
exc . cond. Call 446-3946,
after 6PM.
House coal eao tor 2 ton,
·deliwered in or near GallipoUsed furniture : hide·&amp;· bed, lis. For orden-infromltlon
rocking lovesest and rocker- cell 446-8348 after &amp;PM .
recliner. Corbin &amp; Sn~der
Furniture , 955 Second Ave. Video disc player •nd 2 disc,
Coli 446· 1 171 .
ex. cpnd.. Call 61 4 · 2455161 .
Couch &amp; chair. 2 lamps for
sale . Call 614-256· 1 462.
Used J20 Ditch Witch
trencher. Call 1-614-694Couch. Good cond :, 634 7842.
Hilda Or. Call 446-4385.
Started African violets to
Gas cook stove for sale. Call sale, paperbeck books to
446 -2317 .
trade. Call 446· 7807.
Whirlpool washer, uc .
cond, guaranteed, 896. Call
614-387-0660.
Drop leaf kitchen table, ahd
4 chairs. good for small area.
$60 .00. Call 446·3776 .
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St'., Gallipolis. 6
piece wood living room suite
whh 6 Inch flat armo f399.
bunk beds complete with
bunkie• $199, 2 piece . entron living room suites t199,
antron reclinera t99. other
recliners 880, maple dinette
sets 8179, Iowa aeata t70,
hide·O·bed 1260, ' box
1prings &amp; manrea1 twin or
full ' f100 set regular·firm
t120, mapte dinette chairs
t36, wash ltands $34,
maple rockers t69, 7 piece
chrome dinette set 8149, 5
piece dinette aet t89, used
bedroom tulles, raflrgerators, ranges, challt, drasae,.,
wringer washers, TV's ,
dryerea, It shoea. Call 448·
3169.

Antiques. oak furniture reproduction. misc. items. Use
our Christmaslayawe~ pl•n.
Conkels, Tuppers Plain1.
Firewood for nlel$30.00 a
pick-up. Plua deliVery. 8987189.

100 HP MF 1 100tractor. 30
HP 71 1 BMF atHr sike
load••· 10 T 300 buohol J II
M gravity wagon. 1 2 ft. MF
wheel -disc. 14 ft . Dunham
Harragotr, John Deere 80
bu. spreader. Call 614·682·
3931.

John Deere 420 Widehont,
82,000 .00. Formoll H.
8860.00 . 8N Ford,
t1 ,260.00. Other farm machinery. 304·576-2328.

Building mat,riala
block, brick, sewer pipes.
windows, lintels, etc .'
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
63
0. Call 614-246·5121.
56

Pets for Sale

Livestock

Registered Quarter horu
real gentle . Call 446·1393.

HILLCREST KENNELS Quarter horse filly, 16
Call 614· 388Barding all breeds. Selling . months.
8270.
Happy Jock Dog Food.
Doberman puppies: Stud
Cow fOr sale. Will frathen in
Service. Coli 448· 7795.
Moy. Call 614·246-6896.
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
12 week old pigt for
by
614-367-7220.
tho head. 61 4· 742·2635.
8riarpatch Kennels Professional All-breed grooming. Registered Hereford bull &amp;.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa- hay for oalo. 304·&amp;76 cilities. Engliah Cocker Spa- 2991.
niel puppie1. Call 614· 388·
Purebred Polled Hereford
9790.
cattle auCtion. Selling cowl,
DragonWynd Cattery- cows and calves. heifers 1nd
Kennels. AKC Chow pup.. bulla. Saturday. October 22,
pies, CFA Himalayan. Per· 1 P.M. at the Athent County
sian and Siamese kittens. Fairgrounds, Athent. Ohio.
Eighty heed from Arrow
Call 446·3844 alter 4 .
farms and R. 8. Hereford
AKC Regil1ered Poodle pup- farms, Rd. 4, Athena, Ohio,
pies. Ready to go. Call whh the top bloadllneoln the
world for size and maternal
446 -0867.
traits . All cattle tasted end
AKC Lhaspa Apso female, guaranteed. 614-69310 mo . old. Muat 1ell, *76 . 6034.
Coli 446-8234 .
Registered Appeloou stalBird dog for sale. 1 yr. old lion, "Go-Man-Go" blood ·
Garman short haired, line, excellent conformadaughter of PJ Wildfire, tion . Call after 6:00 .
8360. Call 446-2107 or w._&amp;7~028!" ·•
614-245-5027.

•I•

Beagle AKC male, 3 mos.
ol~. 866 . Call 446-0311 .
Full Blooded Siamese, fa.
male, 6 montha, declawed,
1hots. beautiful, good
around children. pets, $60.
Coli 446· 4472.
ADBA Regis'tered American
Pit Bull Tarrier pupa. Cham.
pion blood line. 1200. 61 4·
949-2791 .
AKC regiltered f·emala
Cocker Spaniel _2 yeara old
t&amp;O. 2 mala AKC regilltered
Cocker Spaniel pups t60.
AKC registered female pup
t75. or make offer on any.
814-742-2801 .

by Larry Wright

Two registered Hereford
cows, three yrs. old, whh
calwes. Breed to Registered
Hereford bull.
304·882·
3105.
64 ' Hay

II

Grein

Baled hay for 11le and
dlnene Mt for sale, good
cond. Coli 446·2724.
Hoy for salo.
3416.
66 Seed

8t

81

al

Soars 1 26.000 BTU down·
flow oil turnece, heat &amp;lit•
changlf, 2 yeera old. 271
galen fuel oil 18nk on
odluotoblo logo. with filter
and gauge. GE ·4 burner
electric range, 38 ln. wkle.
RhMm 62 filion lllctrlc
w•ter heater. 614· 9927620.

Oil:K TRACY

Daily

Sentinoti-Pagw-11

BACK THiN WE'D H.IWE
USED Jo.J&lt; EL.ECTRIC
CHAIR TO THAW

OUT-

Home
•
Improvements

~lii.TeO

To

/1\Y Nctoe.

STUCCO PLASTERING textured ceilings commercial end residen.t lei, free
eatlmot., Call II 1 4-256·
1182.

•

CAPTAIN EASY
I DO""'T SEE THEM

PAINTING • inllrlor and
ekterlor, plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling . 20 yra.
OKp. Call 614-388·9662 .

I#·J.f

A
·

..~-~-"'~-~N~...
~· "~·~·-~·~·~N~~~·~
~::::::::::~~~·~-~
II
66 Seed

Fertilizer

Wheet for cover crop.
cleaned 6 bligged . .. Call
614-246-5193,

71

Autos for Sale

72

Trucks for Sale ·

1980 GMC 4·WD. PS. PB.
auto. trens.,loekout huba, lA
ton. tong bed. good cond.,
*4,900 firm. Call 446·
2403
·
79 Ford PU 4x4, ehon bed,
high miles, $2,860. Cell
446·7322.

1
-------1 974 Ford 1 ton dump

TOP CAS" paid tar lata truck. axe. cond .. new tiret.
model used cau.
Smith Belt offer over e3.200. Call
Buick-Pontiac, 1 91 1 E11t· _44_ 6_._9_4_2_8_·- - - - - ern Ave., Gallipolis, 448· 1 1982 Y.z ton Dodge pickup
2282.
with topper. Standard ahift.
Poy off. 814-992-6434 or
1 974 Cadillac. Call 61 4· 111 4·992-591 4.
379·2314.
1 979 Ford Explorer pickup
1 979 4 dr. VW RobbiU. truck . A.C .• p.s., tilt, r1dial
auto.. PB, AM·FM, air tlr11. am-fm stereo. 814cond .• aun roof, real nice. 843-6186.
$3,196. John'• Auto Sales
on Bulaville Rd. CaM 446·
4782, Gollipolla. Oh.
1872 Dotoun truck with
topper, t850.00. Phone
1980 Dodge Aepen auto., 304·876-2665
PS. PB, 8 cyl., aunroof, real
nice. t2,895. John'• Auto
Sal•• on 8ulavlllo Ad. 448· 73
Vans II 4 W.O.
4782.
1 979 Oldomoblle Storflre
V-6. auto .. PS, PB, AM·FM
tapa, reol oporty. 13.195.
John's Auto Sal" on Bule·
villa Rd. 448-4782,

Jeep Honcho 4x4. topper,
white tpoke wheels, blue
jean package, price~
13, 495 . Coli 814· 266·
6463.

1976 Buick Electra air,
many extras, 81,900. Call
446·8234.

1 979 Jeep CJ-6, 6 cyl .• 3
apd., exc. cond., 13,300 or
trade lor pickup. Call 446·
0616.

VW Scrlroco '78. Air, 4·

epeed, no rust. well . main·
tained, high mileage. Road
• truck One of 1 0 beat uaod
car buya. Call 448·4998,
wookdayo. 12.295 or beat
offer.
1978 Fairmont Ford Future
2 dr .. 4 opd., 4 cyl .. radio,
PS, PB, air cond .. reel nice.
t2.296. John'a Auto S1le1,
BuloYille Rd. \1411·4782 .
1981 Cutlasa Supreme
Brougham, 20,000 mllae.
V-6, eir, tilt wheel, rear
defog, AM-FM, •a.ooo.
Call 448·8040.
1984 Ford Fairlene &amp;00. all
orginal, good cond .• black 4
dr. Hdan, V-8, 111ndard
lhllt. Coli 814-367-0397.
1978 ~lymouth . Horizon
front wheel drive. PS. PB,
good gai mileage. good
cond., AM·FM radio. Cell
614·266-1163.
1978 Honda Accord ex.
MPO, good cond .. single
owner, price below blue
book. Coli 446-2066
evaninga.

1978 Blazer new tires &amp;
rims good cond. Call 614246-9498.
1978 Dodge 4x4 318 auto.,
83,100. Coli 614·266·
1427.
1975 GMC van . Call oltor
7:00PM, 446· 78&amp;9.
1986 Superior bus, 30
passenger, good cond., new
brake1, runs good. Call
446·2836 or 875-2432 .
46 Willys Joap, good cond.
f800. 304-675· 7376.
74

Motorcycles

1 978 Harley Davidson Su·
par Glide, ekc . cond., low
mi. Call 446-8039 .
1 974 Hondi Chopper 30 ln.
over front end. CB 760 F.
Call 1114-949·2737.

1979 Ford Fiallte, aun roof,
good condition . e1,800.
814·949-2082. After 4
p.m.
1968 l)odga Dan GT. Slont
8. Automatic on coneole.
Aunogood.goodtW.S. 814·
986-4348.
1976 Jeep CJ7: flberolou
top. white spoke wheela.
55.000 mileo, t2900.00.
304-882-2819 oltor 5.

1980 Plymouth
304-878-11481.

Horizon.

1978 Dodge Monoco, po.
pb, air, 1utom1tJc, exc.
co'ndltlon, e1 800. 304·
1175-14211.
1172 Chevy Rolley Novo.
good cond. 304-171·t872
or &amp;711-2113.
72

TNCkl for Sale

One kitchen displly, odds
and ends kitchen cabinets.
Dale'1 Kitchen Canter.

1 9711 F01d Col 1M Plaltup,
nol aperty, 12111. Jolln'o
Auto • - an 8ui!IVIIe lid.
441-4712.

Carpet •lmolt new 115x11.
blue. 1150.00. Phone 304876·1349.

For Nle-Uoecl J . 20 Ditch
Witch Trencher. 1-814·
184-7B42.

lallel - . . . •· aond. &lt;;~~~

Far -

18711 - . . 4_!1~1

171·7111 .,..IPM.

1974 361 CI1Yol1nd engine
.• tranemlulon. 1210. pair
or will 1811 11parete. 814742-2801.
Three Generel Tires, &amp;ply.
800x1 6.5. Priced cheep .
· Phone 304-8711-37811.
77

Auto Repair

Equipment
Fao aole or trodl. Shllll
camper, olelpo light. Stow
..d tWII:rrator.Phano 304·
871i-12S or 1711·4478.

79

Motors Hamea
•camp...

1177 Yollo-ono C.mper
28'. Col 814·1112.·11118
lft•li p.m.

----

WA~H . 5-I. OW DOW~ . VOI.J
DO~J'T HAVC TO D~IV'S L,IK!!'
A ~I'JIA C ANVMOR~ .

ANNIE

.. YOU EXPECT
ME TO STAY

RON'S Television Service.
Spoclali•ing in Zenith ond
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calla. Call 676-2398
or 448-2464.

HERE

MAN, IT AIN'T EAsY

~EIN'

BRANDER KING SPEMIN&lt;'l!
- OH-COYOTE!.. YEAH,
COME OVER ABOUT
NINE T'NIGHT . I 'LL
BE F~ EE THEN !

NICE T' 'l'IJU,

~~~!E[~ ~&gt;--,
Y' HNOWioiARIA
THAT,'?

IN

~

YOUfl fiOU5E?!
WITH YOIJ?!

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, atump
removal. Call 876-1331.

.&amp;.IEl

RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rianced roofing. including
hot tar application, carpenter. electrician, mason. Call
304-676·2088 or 675 ·
4660.
.
Water Wells. Commercial
and Domeetic. Teat holes.
Pumps Sale• and Service.
304·896·3802 .
E &amp;. R T,ree Service, fully
insured , ' free uti mates .
Phone 614-367·0636, call
after 6.
SEAMLESS GUTTERS. Ono
place custom fit ~our home.
Gu•renteed . Advanced Out·
tor, IDoy 61 4-892-4066,)
(night 614 · 898-8206.)

ALLEYOOP

82

CURSES ! THA.T FCX)L FISHERMAN FOUND mE BOPY.'

"n-IlS DIR.T1S AWFUl.. SOFT...
ALMOST LIKE SOMEBODY
EL.SE HII.D DUG IT UP! I ....

HOLY

~l&lt;llllal.lf

•

'

''

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER. Water removal,
fumiture cleaning, free eati·
mataa; 814·44.8 -2107.

And we could

never qet the

Plumbing
8t Heating

thinq into the

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh and Pine
Phone 448-3888 or 446·
4477
JIM'S PLUMBING. HEAT·
lNG. Fomarly Dewitt's
Plumbing. Call 614-3670678 .
83

~

..

..., ............................. ""'
. ,. . . . M . . . . _

..

EJ&lt;cavating

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna , ponds, ditches,
basements, etc. Call 446·
4907. Carter &amp; Evens
Traneponation.

"

Lonnie Boggs Excavating.
Dozer. backhoe. dumptruck .
Work by hour or job. Call
446·7903.
Cat 215 hoe, dozers. crane.
loadert. duMp- tJuck. C811
614-448-1142 between
7 :00AM • II:OOPM.

8t

Electrical
Refrigeration

Peaquale Electric CO. all
phaeea of electric work. all
work guaranteed·. Aerial
truck rentol. Call 614-448·
2718.
SEWING Machine repairs.
service. AuthOrized Singer
Salas • Service Sharpen
Scltlon. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2284 .

, ..

Evening television listings-"""""":'--------------------------------FRIDAv
10/21/83
EVENING
6:00 0[l)CIJCIJIJCIJCIDIII
(j) New&amp;
C1J Flathback:
Great
Plague of 1918 The epi·
demic that claimed 20 mil·
lion people Is examined .
[I) MOVIE: 'The Flg~ting
Sullivans'
([) New Treasure Hunt
W Utt:.. Houae on the
Prairie
(I) (jj) 3·2·1. Contact
• Buctt Rogers
6:30 0 [I) CIJ NBC Newo
(I) Rifleman
(I) D (jJ ABC NoW11
8 (I) (JD CBS News
(J) Bueineas Report
CID OVer Eaey
.
7:00
PM Magazine
(f) Inside The NFL
(]) 'Alias Smtth and Jones
()) SportsCenter
()) Cerol Burnett
(J) Entertainment Tonight
(!) Charlie's Angels
• (J) Wheel of Fortuna
([) \(j)) MacNeil/lehrer
Newahour

e (])

lliiNewo

D ()J P-Ia's Cou"

B6

General Hauling

· Water houllng. Foot Sorvico.
low r.a tee. Clll 814-266·
1743 .
Now Hauling Goad Lump or
Stoker Coal. 'Minimum 4
ton. 814·387·7101 .
JIMS WATER 6ERVICE.
Coli Jim llnlor. 304·676·
7397.

87

Upholatery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
. 1183 Seo. Ave., Oolllpolio .
1170 F_,.lln II toot lilt· 448·7833 or 441·1 833.
oontalllld ttuak "mparwlth
Woodlond HMI• Uphootory •
Antiqwo. 187 Woodlend
-ny · .171.IXOipt
"'"'"" Dr., Oollipollo, Oh. Coli
814•742·2480
Iunday.
448-2010.

.....

MORE , WA7H.

Appliance Service All makes
mooelt refrigerators.
washert, dryers, range1. ·
compactora, dishwuhers,
microwaves. He•tlng &amp;
Cooling, Shoot Metal Worll.
Gallla Refrigeration Co. Cf!lll
814·446·4066.

Attention Auto Painting JONES BOYS WATER SEA·
nao end up. Body work. VICE. Call 614 ·367-7471
eJttl'll pen atrlplng, cuatom or
614-387-0691 .
otrlpeo. Coli 448·0381.
Need aomething hauled
away or eomethlng moved?
'77 ChiVY Nova, phoM We'll do it. Coli 448-3169
304-175·2487.
between 9 end &amp;.

~7;B;:=_;C:a:m:p~i:l1:g===

1.1$- ANY-

a.

84
8ft. aluminum truck topper
1100. 8 ft. plc~up truck
dloc. e?ll. Call 614·387·
0832.

FOI.l.OWI~G-

Mercu·m Roofing S. Spout·
lng. 30 years experience.
specializing in built up roof.
Coli 614-388-9857.

1 982 Hondo C B 750 Cus· Good-1 Excavating, base·
tom. Extru. 614-949·· menta, footers, driveways,
2734.
teptlc tanka, landscaping .
Coli anytime 446-4637 .
1976 PlymQuth Sonallte
James L. D•vison, Jr .
Seebring. 2 door, 380 auto., 75
Boats and
owner.
am-fm 8 track, air ahockl on
Motors for Sale
reor. Aoking e850. Good
J.A.R . Construction Co .
work cor. 814·192-7811 .
Water Linea , Footers,
Chris Craft 1967 constella· Drain a. All kinds of Ditching.
1974 Cougar XR7. lota of tion cobln ciuiMr, 36 ft., Rutland. Oh. 614 •742 ·
new parts. Auna good.
29 0 3
Looks good . Excellent run- wl1h troller. •12.800. Cell 1 ____·---~-'-814-367-0378
between
I~
ning condition. 614-742- 10·3. 614·446·1343 after MetgsExcevating. Bulldozer
2801 .
&amp;. backhoe service. Basel.
manta, footers: landecaping,
1974 Chovy Impala llation .
driveways, farm ponde.
wegon, auto .. e.c., p.s .• p.b.,
111 4-742· 2407 or814 ·742·
Auto Parts
8296. 814-742-2480 ex· 76
2068.
8t Accatsories
· cept Sunday.

Afghana. ona 1ize ,.,. Queen
aized bed. •eo. One 83x66.
*30. ThrH boby oneo-e10.
eoch. Phone 814-986391&amp;.

\

II.V IN Alln

~i&lt;~

Baby bed. car bed, car .eat,
fireplace screen, gtate,
waaher , dryer, ten IPMd,
For your recording needs try. '77 Comoro 3011. Auto.
camper top. 814-843 - Reglatered Botton Terrier us, for original mastering PS·PB. Air, AM·FM Clloett,
puppiea. Black 6 white, 8 c..sene copying from onty Rolly wheelo, 811,000 mlleo.
6119,
waekt old. 1100. Shots &amp; one to 500. Cell for pricing 304-6711-4181.
General Electric wa1her and wormed. 304-863·8378.
304-4&amp;8-1663. Leon Re·
dryer, 2 years old. Alto a
cording Service.
'73 VolkeWIIgon f111blick.
auto-tune .• I 1 .000 .00 .
Meigs Marauder jacket, like
new. mono omall . 614-992- 1----------..L----------j_::Ph::o~ne~30~4-~7~7~3:·&amp;~8~8~0~--3236.
I
1982 Pontloa Grond' Prix,
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
t-top, AM-FM ca11ette.
18 in . color Sylvania TV.
mony oxtroo. 1,000 mllq.
e200. FlpQr exerciser vibar·
f9.400.00. 304·878· t841
ator &amp; 2 bolto. 1100.
bolore 3pm.
81 4·992-2671 .
For •ala-Beige carpeting.
Boot offer. 614-992·3249.

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

... ~ TI\Cfl ~ .AIM~ Uf'

304· 882-

Fertilizer

79 Motor• Homes
II Campara
1973 Dodge motor home .
Coli 814·2411·9183 .

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

Sears dishwllheir $40. 304675-6212 or 304- 676- Corn cribs wire tight, new
1484.
900 bu. • 1200 bu. size.
Call614-245-5193.

a••

...........
--· .
.............

I'll~ wood· burninG tiOVOI,

Ward-'s wood-burning stove.
Flat top, two lids. 1Bin.
wood. 18ft . .pipe, used
twice. 896 .00. 304·676·
1316.

Troybil, Tillers Sales &amp; Service. Swishera Implement,
TV &amp; ·Appliances, 627 Tl1ird St. Rt. 7, North, Gallipolis.
Ave., Gallipolis, 446-1699. 6 1 4-446-04 75.
Spin wuhers,
&amp; electric
dryers, auto washers. gas &amp; Firewood· cut up, slabs, 816
electric ranges, refrigera- pickup load . Call 614·246·
tors, TV sets.
6804.

Foj Joaoo 1 Mq""rp 1 • 'q!~P"
sutle especially 1§tod fOr
inaurance, real estate or
accounting. 1300 sq .ft .
Four room1 plus lge. clerical
office, kitchenette and ator•g• room. Net. g ... central
•lr. carpet. Rent vary rHIO· One ~11 of bookcaae head·
nabla fOr thlo quollty office. board bunk beda and mat·
cor- Third • Olive. Golll· tre11H. *180.00. Phone
polio, Oh. Ph. 814-448· 304·876-1886.
3984. Enn1 Enterpri••·
l·li; Mon. thru Fri.
Llrge Microwave oven with
lland, alao cheat frHzer.
304-675-7363 ..
'
61 Household Goods

Seven piece TV room furni·
ture. $126 .00. 30in. electric
stove, $25 .00 . Phone 304676-1802 or 675· 6108.

Kimball Artist Console PIana, vary good condhiOn,
$950.00, firm . Couch and
love aeat. blue floral.
Bear Mini-Magnum com · $160.00. Can be IHn ot
5
pound bow with quiver, five ~V~a~ll~ey~A:P:':'~·:N:o=:·:·M=a:oo:h:,
"""-·•Jigl"•fi'&lt;I01181lt.CO(Iro W.Va.
dltion . 30 -882-2066 . Nice
Christmas gift.
58
Fruit
8t Vegetables
C ommadore Vic 2 0 S uper
Expander with 3KRAM car·
trldga, Adventure Land car· German Ridge Apples tree·
tridge. programmer manual . ripened, cider drape. Cell
304-676·2290.
446 · 8598 or 814-379·
2303.
Av1cado gas range and
Sears gal heater. 304-676- Potatoes at Flatrock, 9 miles
1307.
from Pt. Pleasant on Rt. 2,
North.
Coal M..ter 1tove. New pine
shunars. bo~s 1 8·18 Steel era winter jacket. 304·676· 69 For Sale or Trade
5428.

21, 1983
Friday, Otlobwr 21, 1983

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

i&gt;ets for Sale

SEASONED oak firewood.
304-675-2757 . after 4:00
p.m.

6715'-61,04 or 304-675 73_88. ·'
ftt;niahed apt .. 12 bdr., 196,

Friday, 'October

40,000 BTU, Worm Morn · Aobblto, I 1 .00 eoch. Phone
ing heater, with blower. 304-e?&amp;-3081 .
614·992-3079 .
RegltteP.ed INgle pupa. ·
105,000 BTU Colemon goo Phona 304·8911-3938.
furnace includes duct work o - : - - - - - - - - - - for 8 room1 . e 1 fiO . SH at Only One Sale. ona Mini lop
761 A~h St. Middleport. rabbit. 18.50, one Dwarf
614-992 ·3359 .
robblt, 18.60, one Foncy
hamlter, •2.10, One OerAir comprnaer-$186. 2 -8 bel, 79 cents. one Moote,
fn. teble sawa-S176 . &amp; 79 cents, one mala Cock•·
$126 . Alum . siding, 8x16 . tiel, 845.99 . Flohtank ond
$160 . 8 walnut wall Pot Shop. Point Plolllnt, ·
cabinets- $80 . each . See El- w .v • . 304-876-2063.
don Walburn at 380 S . 3rd.
Middleport . 614 - 992 · AKC regiatered Weimaraner
2605 .
puppi11, 9 weeki old. 304·
489·1719 .
Portable diahwasher. 614·
949· 2317 .
Registered Baaglie puppies.
304-468-3938.
Dry firewood. deliverd , t -;:;;::==~======
phone 304-676-7771 .
I·
157
Musical
Seasoned oak firewood,
Instruments
· 304·675-2757 oltor 4 p .m.

Furnfah•d 3 rooma. wjth
prlv•te bath . Reference prelerjed. Call448-2216 .

onlv.

156

Ohio

Jeffenonl
7:30 : Ill Tic Toe Dough
(]) ESPN'o Inside Footboll
([) Good New•
CIJ II Cll Family Feud
C.1D You Atked For It
g
Cfl Entertainment
Tonight
• One Day at a Time
8:00 • Cil CD Mr. Smith A for·
aign government tries to
kidnap .Mr. Smith but mls·
takenly snatchu his brother
Bo-Bo instead.
Cil MOVIE: 'Tapa'
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho God·
lethor'

Cll Super Book
(])NFL Game of the Week
(()MOVIE: 'How to Frame
• Flgg'
{]) • 1111 Benson
([l (j) Ouk•• of Hauerd
C1J IHl W•hlngton WHk/
Review Paul Duke it joined
by top Washington }oumal·
lsts analyzing the week's

a

news.

•

MOVIE: 'Omundatar
1
8 :30
1i{Jonnller siOpt
Hor.tpREMIERE) Tho ghoot
of • movie star con1inuas to
habit a mension after e fa·
mily moves ln.
-~lwlu F~~mlly Aoblnoon
E8PN.'1 llportaljll-

ii"cii

• (JI Wobo..,. Kothar·
lne and George are shocked
to ttam that Webster beltevet his parentl are still

-·

(I) IHl Well -.WHit

loUIS Rukeyser analvzes the
'80s with a weekly review
of economk: and investment
matters
9:00 D (]) (!) Manimal
(l) 700 Club Today 's pro·
gram features a discussion
with Or.' lendon Smith on ef·
fective Child rearing .
(J) Women's Volleyball:
Untted States vs. Japan
()) CD CD Lonaryl Flahenv
and Rush became embroiled
with a mayoral candidate
who sees her campaign
budget sw~l and a psychic
who predicts . Rush 's' in·
volvement with a lottery
winn~tr . (60 min .)
II (I) ® Dalla• Bobby and
Pam end their marriage as
J .A. and Katherine cheer
frOm the sidelines . (60 min .)
(I) (1IJ Dinner at Julia's
'The Sweetbread Show .·

Julia Child talks with chef
Bradley Ogden and wine ex·
pen Jack Dawies . (Closed
Captioned]
9:30 {jJ Sneak Prewlews Co·
hosts Neal Sabler and Jef·
frey Lyons take a look at
whet 's happening at the
movies .
em lntemational Edition
Ford Rowan hosts this look
at trends and news events
as they are reported by foreign ~urnalis~s .
'
10:00 • (]) (l) For love and
Honor
[I) On Location: Eddie
Murphy Delirious Eddie
performs his solo concert
for the first time on TV .
CIJ II !lZ Mm Houatan
g (() Falcon Creat Angela 's legal partition to take
control of Falcon Crest is
denied when Chase appears
in coun. (60 min .)
([) flrHII Diary
CID·News
.INN News
10:16 ()) TBS Evening News
10:30 Cl) OnIa and Herrlet
()) lnaide 8ueh1•11 Today
CID M••ter~Mece Theatre
'Pictures .' BiH reahes he has
fallen for Ruby even though
he is looking at her solely as
the inapiration for his new
film script. (80 min.! (Cioaed

Coptl='10d

•

.

Time

11 :00. (I) (I)
• (I) ClD.
()JN.w.
[I) MCilVIE: 'IAIYe Child'
(I) MOVIE: 'SP With tho

·-·

(I) Another Lif1l

(I) High -

J

·

1().. round

,.

Among Us'
Cl!l M•A•S"H ·
G (DI Nightllno
• Twilight Zone
12:00 Cll Bumo lk Allen
Cl) Night Trackt
(I) Nlghtllno
GD MOVIE: 'Man an a
Swing'
fJ) Thicka of the Night
12:30 0 [I) CD Friday Night
Videos ·
,
r.JJ MOVIE : 'Eating Raoul'
C1J Jack Benny Show
II (H) Musk: Magazine
12:45 (I) MOVIE : 'Halloween Ill :
Season of the Witch'
1 :00 ()) I Married Joan
(I) Entertainment Tonlght
• GJ News
1 :30 (I) Love That Sob
.
· ()) Star Search
ClD MOVIE: 'Look What's
· Happened to Roaamary's
Baby'
G()ZCNN HaadllnoNowo
1:45 (]) ESPN 's lnaide Football
2 :00 0
[I) 'NBC
News
Overnight
CD MOVIE: 'The Fighting
Sullivans '
{]) Bachelor Father
(!) Newt(Sign Off
2:16 Cl) Inside The NFL
CD SportsCenter
® CNN Headline Newa
2:30 (I) Ule of Riley
(J) ESPN's Spo,.oWoek
(I) Beat of Midnight
Speciels
3 :00 • (]) New a
(I) 700 Club Today 's pro·
gram features a discussion
with Or .lendon Smith on of·
fectiwe child rearing.
(]) RoughfTumbla World
of
Australian
Rules
.
Footboll
3:15 [I) MOVIE: 'Taps'
4:00 [I) MOVIE: ' Phof'
(I) HorswhOw Jumping:
American Qold Cup from
Devon, PA
4:30 Cll Ro.. Boglay

Won

7:30 D (I) Inside Look
(j) Focua on Society
8:00 U (]) CD Diff' rent Strokes
Mr. Drummond, Willis and
Arnold subdue a burglar bu t
wh~n the officer arrives he is
gi11en different stories on
who did what in this heroic
act. (Closed Captioned)
[I) H80 Rock: Donna · A
Hot Summar Night
(l) MOVIE: 'The Stunt
Man'

ooa lett..- to tech square, to form
tour ordinary words

PNJiewa Coholtl Neal Gabler and
Jaffrey lyons taka a look at
whet' 1 heppaning at ttl&amp;
movies.
.BIIrTrok.
()I) lneak

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
6 Undergo
1 llatian ci1y
1 High spot
6 Small dnun

111979 sci-fi
film
12 Unatd..\

8 Wild pig

9 Fonner

!l Old TV sci·

10 Oliver or Rex
11 No (sL I
18 Trattoria

fi series
IS Annabel

19 German

treat

- (Poe)
river
If Bon ·ZO Ninny
!11nflamed
21 Cent. Am .
18 Documenl
tree
20 Placid
22 Proper
23 COOk
%4 Aim
21 Censure
25 Had dinner
28 Horse ; bean %6 Craggy
29 Words worker
spot
30 One who
·28 Atonemcnt ·

30 !!allan
river

32 Southpaw
33 AI a

dislance

31 SUITOWld
38 Being (Sp,) .
39 Czech river

41 Spread
new hay

34 Rabbit
42 Swedish
river
35 Israeli port
• ..,-,.,-"T&lt;"..,.,...,..,~
7-r;--r,;;-r:;-r:~

helps out

31 Straigh1en

33 Surprise!
36 Memorabl~
time
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40 What some
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43 Old French
45 Frail
46 Presby1er
DOWN
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wearisome
1

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.

61.,.,." •='

decree
UAia-

REBBI

.1

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2 Medicinal
plant
3 Price boost

I

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EVENING
8:00 • (I) NIWII
Cll MOVIE: 'Fat Chlnoo'
CllTheMont'OII

MOVIE : ' Dayton's
Devils'
(!) ESPN's Saturday Night
at the Fights
(()NCAA Football: WasH ington at Arizona (leota ·
tive)
C1J Gl Wl T.J . Hooke•
Hooker and Roman o se1 out
10 bust a teenage pornogra·
phy ra cket . (60 min .)
[Closed Capt1oned]
0 (() ® Cuner to
Houston
(I) live from the Met: The
Metropolitan Opera Cen·
tennial Gala Part 2
® Clanic CountJ"(
g) MOVIE: 'Psycho'
8:30 0 Cl) (!) Silver Spoons
Real problems ari se for
Ricky when Freddy over·
hears him di sclaimi ng the1r
friendst)ip .
9:00 0 (I) m Rousters
(I) MOVIE: 'My Favorite
Year'
(j) Ill ()J Love Boat The
Captain is ~hoc ked whe n he
learns some fun -loving men
are real bigots , a couple
takes one las1 cruise and a
men tries 10 help his friend
by inlroducing him to a
woman. (60 min.) [Closed
Captio(ledj
Ill Cll
@
MOVIE :
'Caribbean Mystery'
(I)

fi'fl~f.\hliD'ft ~THATSCRAIIIL!OWOROGAME
~ ~ ~~·
byHenriAmokla_nd Bob Lee
Untcramble these four Jumblat,

SATURDAY

CIJ An cl 8llntl Human

• !lenny Hill IIMw
11 :15 (1) Top Renlt Booing ftom
Atlontlc City. NJ Top Rank

Boxlng pre1ents ~

0 ([)MOVIE: 'The Terror

en-God H• lhl Anawer

Footbol:

I on at Ironton

(I) Soap

(1)-rd

'(]) lporqCent•r
(I) All In tho. F-lly

6 :15 (l) World Champio~hip
Wrestling.
·
6 :30 0 [I) NBC Newe
(I) Time of Our Uvea This
documentary
celebrates
.Time magazine's 60th an·
n1versary.
(1) NFL Game of the Week
CIJ Gl Wl News
(I) T.V . Honor Society
([I Art of Being Human
CID Matinee at the Bijou 'I'd
Give My Lif9 .'
7:00 . II (]) Dance Fever
([) Alias Smith and Jones
ill SponaCenter
(I) d (]) Hee Haw
CI) Star Search
CIJ Focus on Society
llJJ Selutal
G (jl) Solid Gold
e How the West Was

Middleweight bout faa1uring
Carlos Tite ys . Kenny Whet·
stone from Atlantic City, NJ .
11 :30 D CIJ CD Tonight Show
.CI) Doble Gillis
mcatlina

Prlnr-werllate: THE

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THIS JU5T AI!IOUT

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Yesterday'• I Answer : Frankenstein w11 lone\)' until he discovered
how to do this -MAKE FRIENDS

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AXYDLBAAXR
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One letter simply stands for another. ln th is sample A lJ
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sincle letters
apostrophes, the length and fonnation or the worda are 11i
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
FKNSC'U
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lNG TIIROUGH A STORM. ONCE YOU'RE ABOARD
TIIERE'SNOTIUNG YOU CAN 00.- GOLDA MEIR
'

�Page--12-lhe Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, October 21'

Emergency equads kept busy ·

Area deaths
Nick Runyon

Ann Lenhart,

Dayton,

and a

grandchlld.
Services . will be held at 9 a.m . .
Saturday at the Hunter Funeral
Home In Rutland with the Rev.
Amos TlllJs officiating. Burial will
be In the New Carlisle Cemetery,
New Carlisle. Friends may call at
the funeral home from i to 9 this
evening.

' Nick Runyon, 79, Rt. 3, Glouster,
died at this home Thursday .
Born In Pike County, Ky., he was a
son of the . late Harrison M. and
Louise Harden Runyon.
He was preceded In death by his
wife, Della Adkins Runyon. He Is
survived by six sons and three
daughters, Albert, Radcliffe; Hani.son, Nelsonville; Daniel, WUksville;
David, Albany; Jerry, Rutland;
Don, Millfield; Juanita Runyon,
Glouchester; Gamet Colvin, ComIng; Julie Smith, Kenntt, W.Va .
Also survlvlng are 38 grandchild·
renand 19great-grandchlldren; two
brothers, M. W. Runyon, Shade;
Ben Runyon, Kermit; one sister,
MlnnJe Marcum, Kermit.
He was also preceded In death by
three children, three grandchildren,
two brothers and four sisters.
He was a retlred lumberman .
Fwieral services wlll be held
Sunday, 10 a.m., at the Maggie
Home Church of Dundas, Ohio, with
brothers Ivory Sowers, Sam Franks
and Paris Tackett officiating. Burial
will be In VInton memorial park.
Friends may call at his Route 3,
Glouster residence. after 1 p.m .
Sauturday. Services wlll beat6p.m.
Amlngements are by McCoyMoore Funeral Home of VInton.

•

•

Andrew J. Manning

""'

.

J

'

.

Andrew J . Manning, 85, Cherry
St., Syracuse died Thursdayntgjttat
his residence.
·
Mr. Manning was bomJan.3, 1898
in' Athens County. He was preceded
in death by his parents, hisflrstwlle,
Vada Chapman Manning and one
son, Andrew Manning, Jr.
Mr. Manning was a retlred coal
miner and a member of the
Pentecostal Church at Dorcas.
He Is survived by his wife, Mayme
Custer Manning; six daughters,
Doris Deeley, Morgantown, W.Va.;
Evelyn Gearhart, Ridge Manor,
Florida; Gay Murphy, Michigan;
Maxine White, New Jersey; Allee
Tampkln, Callfomla; Barbara
Price, Phoeniz, Ar!z.; three sons,
•
Carl'9ll Manning, Lake Shore,
NURSING HOME EVACUATION - ~rd rainfall In Lubbock, .
Michigan; Jim Manning, campTexas caused the evacuation of the Lakeside Care Center after more
bellsvllle, Ky.; Dale Manning,
than six Inches of .-. .tn feU here in less than twenty-four hpurs. Jack
Austin, Texas; onestep.son'andstep
Robison, a resident of the nursing home, Is carried out by emergency
daughter-In-law, Jerry and Marilyn
personnel at approximately · 8:30 p.m. Wednesday night. (AP
Powell. Racine; two sisters, La vade
Laserphoto ).
Fourty, and Susie Staillngs, Nelson·
vllle; one granddaughter reared In
the Manning home, Vickie Frye,
Yuma, Arizona; two step·
granddaughters, Mrs. Austin
(Dona) Wolfe and Mrs. Roger (Jane
Ann) HW, Racine; four step-great
granddaughters.
GUTHRIE, Okla. (AP)
Mazatlan with 150 mph winds that
Fwieral and burial wlll take place Stranded motorists clung to car ripped off roofs andlefteightshrtmp
a t a laterdateln Dade City, Flor!dil.
roofs, residents clambered Into ·boat crewmembers missing.
A memorial service wlll be con·
trees and rescuers tied ropes around
Five Oklahomans have died In
dueled this evening at 7:30 p.m. at
their waists to keep .from being weather· related accidents since the
Ewing Funeral Home with the Rev.
swept away In the torrents that heavy rains started Wednesday.
Wllllam Hoback officiating. Friends
flowed through the streets In this Kansas officials report that one
may call at .the funeral home this · rain-battered town-today.
pedestilan death has been attribevening from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
State and local officials waded uted to rain and fog.
into waters up to 7 feet high to speed
Flash flood watches were posted
the evacuation of the town's 1,800 in parts of Kansas and Missouri
families as nearby CottonwOOd today.
Creek overflowed.
speed, $ill and costs; Gerald
The flooding was part of the Veterans Memorial
Carpenter, Mineral WeDs, speed,
devasta
lion that has spun Into
$30 . and costs; Elson Spencer,
Admltfed ..Mary Sheets, Pomeand the rest ot the
Oklahoma
Racine, defective exhaust, $5 and
roy; Hazel Wickline, Racine; Ricky
Plains
by
the
remnants
of
southern
costs; MarvlnAltbouse,Albany,len
Johnson, Rutland.
Hurricane Tico, which slammed
ofcenter,$10andcosts; MarkPr!ce,
Dlscharged ..Rqssell Cline, Flora
Into
the
Mexican
resort
•
town
of
Gallipolis, speed, $25 and costs;
Friley, Charles Bissell.
Dareld Putnam, Coolvllle, speed,
Extended Ohio Forecast
SW and costs; Armlntha Norris,
Event postponed
Sunday through Tuesday:
Racine, flctltlous registration, $25
Chance of rain SW&gt;day and
and costs; Guy Shea, Long Bottom,
WMPO's FaU Expo '&amp;3 that ws to
Monday. Fair on Tuesday. Highs
speed, $23 and costs; Donald
be held Saturday at the Meigs
~. Lows In the 40s Sunday and In
Deskins, Pomeroy, DWI, $250 and
the Jllld.:.ls to the mid-lOs Monday County Fairgrounds has been
costs, three days confinement,
postponed until Saturday, Oct. 29
and Tuesday.
license suspended 60 days; Anne
due to weather conditions.
Goss, Pomeroy, DWI, $250 and
costs, three days confinement,
license suspended 60 days, $150 of
fine and jaU sentence wlll be
A meeting will be held at 1 p.m. Airport to discuss problems caused
suspended If attend drtvlng school;
Sunday at Gallla·Melgs Regional by the termination of Foothills
Rodney Neigler, Racine, DWI, $300
Aviation's lease to operate the
airport.
and costs, three days confinement,
pori, dlsorderiy conduct, $W and
license suspended one year; Danny
costs.
The group organizing the meeting
has
lnvlted county commissioners,
Cremeans, Reedsvllle, poses deer
Folrfelting bonds were Ronald
fromadeertaken"1thagundurlng
Haggy, p omeroy, over1oad , $295
representative of the Community
. ;
c losed deer gun season, $250 and
Elden Blak e, J r., Reedsvlll
Improvement Corporation, the air·
· e, D WI,
costs, rifle forfeited and no deer $370, failed to display proof of . port authority and the public to
hunting prlvlleges for one year;· pperators license, $30; Wayne
attend.
County commissioners voted last
Darrel Lantrip, Belpre, speed, $23 Cleand, Rutland, speed, $50; Tony
week not to continue the county's
a nd costs; Delmas Richards, Bel· VanMeter, Pomeroy, stop sign, $45,
contract with Foothills, a move that
pre, speed, $25 and costs; SharUyn permitting an unlicensed d!iver to
has been protested by the firm's
Miller, Oak Hill, speed, $21 and operate a vehicle, $45; Shirley
management.
·
costs; Tina Owens, Middleport, Perowtka, Athens, speed, $42;
assault, $25 and costs, six months Davld Rice, Parken;burg, speed,
probation; VIncent Stone, Middle- $40.

I

Harrison A. Wilson

End 46 court cases

year probation,
restitution
and
coots;
Elmo Pierce,
Mingo June·
tion, non-support, five years proba·
tion, pay current support and costs.

taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Friday morning at 1:59 a.m., the
Pomeroy Unit went to the county
lnflrrnarjl for Joseplllne Mallory
wbo was taken to VeteranS
Memorial.

Ohio UniversitY, ..... 21
Kent ...................... 20

Winning lottery numbers
a.EVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Thursday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "TheNumber,"was570.
In the "P1ck4" game, played five
times a week, the winning number
was3664.

Vol. II No. 34
~rightod 1983

LITTLE GIRLS DRESSES
MEN'S COVERALLS
SLEEPWEAR SALE
WINTUK'YARN
JUNIOR COATS
PLAYTEX PANTY SALE
DRESS SHIRTS
WRANGLER JEANS
SKIRT SALE
BOYS' SWEAT SHIRTS
LITTLE BOYS'
BOYS' JEANS
PAJAMAS &amp; ROBES
DRESS SLACKS
FALL DRESSES,__0111
··----.......

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Citing a slowdown In
contrlbutlcms, the group seeking to repeal Ohio's 1!183
lalC hikes has temporarily halted Its advertising.
· Curt Stetner, spokesman for the Ohioans to Stop
· Excessive Taxation (SET), said Friday, "We're not
broke. But we don't want to be witOOut media In the

._C&amp;SOE drops
part of rate
hike request

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ORDER NOW &amp; UNTIL NOV. 15TH
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Price lnclues Freight, Tax &amp; Title Extra

•

Your Waterbad
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SIZZLIN' SAVI

•

Inside today:

BUT IT~ U&lt;.E MJiCX...

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tires in seconds. without tools. 12 oz.
aerOSOl can. 100.420

lnclwdts Heodboerll •nd
Frame, ,....., Dedi, ........

Cia811Uleds .................. ,:&gt;-2-7
[)eatlll ......................... 1\~7

IA&gt;oal ............ ............ . A-3-8
Sports ......
C.l-8
State-National ............... 1).}

'l1lougbls are turning to HeDo-

Edltorlel&amp; ..................... A-2

Tak&amp;-One ., ...... , ...... ,. ~rt

ween and of aD the symbols of

Protectant
Renews.
protects
..,

DAY SAME
AS
CASH

rev1tal1zes.
v1ny1.
rubber. leather. plashc. 8 oz. bOIIIe. 5~2 -

STAR SUPPLY
:; 3rcl STREET
•

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Up.

90

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S3995

241 Third Ave.

H

. . . . . . . . . . . . . , ••

By KEVIN KEU..Y
lions of the creek can be reclaimed
next year.
Thnes&amp;ntbtel Staff
RlJfLAND- A federalapproprl ·
"Current deslgo plans are being
atlon of $W.5 mllllon to Ohio to help
readied byODNR'schiefenglneer,''
reclaim strip mine sites w1)l affect
he said. "Assoonastheenglneerlng
two major projects in Meigs and
Is complete, and we get the right of
entry, construction may begin as
Gallla counties.
Butstatereclamationofficlalsare l early as next summer."
quick to point out that overall
Farley said one of the larger jobs
lri the area ODNR will seek funding
reclamation of the Leading and
Kyger Creek water haslns a nd
for Is a section of strip-mined area
nearby strip mines wlll go on for the near Pagevllle.
next several years, funding
Meigs Soli Conserva llottist Bob
permitting.
First confirmed that ODNR and his
On the local level, soli and water office might work jointly on reclaimconservation services In both cotill' "' lng an 85-acre section. First added ·
ties are seeking a part of the state's that under the RAMP program, the
pie to continue smaller reclamallon Meigs SCS is finishing a 40-acre
jobs.
reclamation project in Scipio
Mitch Farley, an environmental Township.
scientist for the Ohio Department of
A significant amount of money Natural Resources, said efforis for estimated at $8 to $10 million - Is
the past several years have been also expected to be spent not only on
directed to clearing mine sediment the Kyger Creek -basin, but the
from Leading Creek at points White Oak basin in Gallia County In
between Harrisonville and Rutland. the next few years, said Dave
The area was extensively strip- Buchanan, the reclamation dlv·
mined in the post World War II era ision ' s federal programs
and later abandoned. Sediment supervisor .
caused several sections of the creek
The money released by OSM last
to become bottlellecks and have week wlll allow the department to
been responsible for some "terri· complete design work and start
ble" flooding In Rutland over the construction, as early as next
years, Farley said.
summer, on its Llttle Kyger II
ODNR 's reclamation division project.
completed a major cleanup around
· That project Is slrnllar to Leading
Harrlsonvllle In 198l, affecting ~ Creek In that ODNR Is trying to
acres. But from there, officials have clear up sedimentation affecting
been planning one step at a time.
local farm land. Progress was made
With money made available last in that direction in1981 when the first
week by the U.S. Department of Little Kygerprojectwascompleted ..
Interior's Office of Surface Mining,
Cun-ently, ODNR Is working on
Farley sald some additional sec·
(Continued on page A3)

LAYAWAY
FOR
CHRISTMAS

lore Ill to be found In the Our
Hoole IDUIIe'IIIJI, where the spirit

old " ' - dJiNI&amp;!Pe8l'lln nc&lt;Nb#M Ill tile TV .-18
"Alliin," IIIIo delma lie ldJJed 31

. of lleary .Cushing reportedly

to • Gtller peopie wldle wllllder-

_., porirellfollow lhe UIIWIII'Y

llla will •

walks tbe COIIrlyard and the
eyea In Gen. Aug&amp;llldne Mun-

can'19111.,. 1 -

vidor'• petb through the place.
-Feeiured ....p . 8-1.

llllll'lllrw, paloe

31' &gt;•r.pD-L

Gallipolis, Ohio

r

gbosl!l, goblins and sJtoulles the
lime of the year COIIjures up. A
literal lreMiJre trove of ...,.

. An lnnulle wllo admllled •
• I
ldlllq Adani Wellb. llle fl.year-

Open Friday·&amp; Monday Till 8:00 P.M.
RACINE

-state Auditor Thomas Ferguson said Friday that
the pro-repeal group, SEr, had distorted the facts In
' contending that the state Wh .ddlng a budget surplus
by Increasing welfare payments.

Reclamation grant
impacts on Meigs,
Gallia mine sites

to more offensive sex-related crimes. By the same
token, he reports, some who are convicted of serious
sexual assaults regress to committing l~ser sex
offenses.
.,.
Evans has had his experiences with offenders who
are freed.
. "It's always disappointing to see a person not
. prosecuted when you lmow he doesn't belong on the
street. I lmow I'll be seeing him again through. He's
going to vlctlmlze someone else Hhe gets off, sol work
harder to be effective," he states.
"Ohe of the things that has helped me over the years
Is that I've . retained my faith In people. I become
cynical at times, bull believe In the basic goodness of
people."
.
A veteran of three years In the U. S. Navy Air
Force, mostly spent at Rota, Spain, Evans lives with
his wife, Marianne, and S\)n, Bllly, In Simi Valley. He
has three other daughters by a former marriage,
Regina, Toni and Kall.
Off duty he tries to forget the vicious crimes of the
Los Angeles area with fishing, boating, camplng..and
even organic gardening.

"The victims need a lot of tender loving care. I Just
use the words 'crtmlnal offense' when I talk to them. I
don't say 'tape' !Jr 'j;exual assault '. The Innuendos, the
blunt words and the Insinuations are made In court,"
he comments.
A factor to conskler In why Evans was singled out
for tl!e hooor this year Is that he has a 78 percent
clearance rate on the rape cases he Investigates. He
has fear of putting away an Innocent man, Evans
says, so he does a thorough lnvestlgatlolrof each case.
One of his most unusual cases began when women
In a California State University dance class reported
being subjected to lewd conduct and Indecent
exposure. A slmllar lncldeht was reported by several
women attenWng a sewing class.
"We lnltla,lly filed 35 misdemeanor counts against
him before other cases came to light. We found out
that he was a federal fugitive and was wanted In
several other lrtates lor slmllilr offenses. He ended up
with 21 feloJty counts against him," Evans reports.
Commenting on his expertence In sex related
btV\'Stlgatlons, ', Evans says that he has learned that
people who commlt lpdecent exposure often progress

Along the River .......... .8-HI
IT'SSCINCE

'249

'

Sales tax vote
decides issue
of courthouse
paym~nt plan

MIDDLEPORT - A tormer Middleport man,
Edward C. Evans, Jr., has been selected as the best
detective In the Los Angeles Pollee Department's
Devonshire Division.
A W year veteran of the Los Angeles Police
Department and a detective tor the past fouryears;
Evans is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Evans,
Sr.' of Middleport.
.
For the past two years, the Iarmer Middleport
resident has been nominated lor the special
t~tlon as best detective and this year copped the
hooor. He wDl be guest of honor at an Oct. 26luncheon
at the Porter Valley Country Oub.
Evans, 44. a 1957 graduate of Middleport High
School, 15 one of slx sex crime Investigators In the
Devonshlte Division's 28 member detective bureau.
Sex crimes In the Los Angeles area run the gamut
tram !Ddecent exposure to rape, trom sexual assault
to child molesting. Evans Investigates the more
serious se.xual,8S$8ults.
•
"Some of !hem are really devastating. It'shard not
to get personally btvolved but I've learned through the .
years to leave work at work,'' the detective states.

PH. 992-6491 OR 992-3.106

99C

.

In other developments:

Middleport native named 'best' LA detective

MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
HOURS •• SUNDAY
11:00 TO 8:00

PROTECT ANT

I0 Sedicm 60 Pages, 35 Cents
A Multimedta Inc. Newspaper

He said that he and Rl!p. Robert L. Corbin,
R·Daytbn, have prepared a budget bill for the second
year of the biennium which would contain spending
cuts along with a more modest 50 percent Increase In
the Income tax. Issue 3 would not repeal the taxes
wttll the end of the current tlscal year oq June 00, 1984.

linal week of the campaign."
Elsewhere Friday, Rep .. Waldo Bennett Rale,
. R·Lima, the assistant minority leader of the Ohio
House, said In a speech In Lima that contrary to the
assertions of those against repeal"thesky Is not going
to fall" If voters OK Issue 3.

courthouse annex

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

~Ul¥i100D)

•

Sunday, October 23, 1983

By 'Die AeeocletM l'l'I'IIR
Columbus and Southern Electric
Co. has withdrawn part of a
rate-Increase request related to
COllis of the Zimmer Nuclear Power
Plant, while Dayton Power and
Light Co. says lt Is continuing to
By LARRY EWING
review Its comml1ment to the
Tln-.sentlnel Staff
troubled project.
GALLIPOLIS"You can pay now, or pay later."
Tbe two utllltles are C!HlWDers of
That
expression
describes
the choice Gall1a Cowtty
the unflnlshed plant near Moscow,
residents
will
make
on
Nov.
8, when they decide the
Ohio, with the operating partner,
fate
of
the
proposed
addltonal
one-half (.5) percent
Cincinnati Gas and Eletrlc.
county-wide
sales
tax.
Of Its recent$99.6 mllllonrate-hlke
November's vote ~ bring to a conclusion nearly
request, C&amp;soE withdrew. $1).7
three
years of debate and controversy over how to
mllllon, saying the amount repres·
best
fund
construction of the
ented Zimmer construction costs.
CIIIT!'Iltly
being
built to replace the 101-year old
Safety. related work on the project
struct\lre
destroyed
by fire on January 8, 1981.
has been halted for nearly a year by
While
most
building-tax
votes decide the future
order of the Nuclear Regulatory
existence
of
a
public
building,
next montlts balloting
C«nrnlssson.
centers
not
on
the
1ss11e
of
whether
to bulld or oot .
Tbe Public Utllltles Coinml.sslon
buUd,
but
rather
on
the
,
q
uestlon
of
how
to best pay for
of Ohio has decided to Investigate
the lacillty.
.
Zimmer to det.ennlne If misrrulp: , .
The structure the new tax Is designed to fund has
~Eillent has contnbuted to cost
been
under construction since March of this year. A
overruns.
.
tentative
completion date has been set !Or Aprtl NW.
Cost proJections for completing
On
Feb.
22, 1983, the Gailla cOmmission borrowed
the ·Z immer project recently were
$13
million
at an Interest rate of 6.9 percent trom
Increased from $1.7 bllllon to
three
county
banks to fund courthouse construction.
between $2.8 bllllon and $3.5 blillon.
·The
remainder
of the $2.~ mllllon project Is to be paid
'"The main reason for the reviBed
by
the
estimated
$1.1 million Insurance settlement the
. request, really, Is one of expecounty received as a result of the fire.
diency," said C&amp;SOE spokesman
Through a comblnatlon of metmds - Including
Marshall JuUen. "We direly need
cutbacks
In county departmental budgets, savlngs In
the revenue (to pay for the cost of
rent
and
utllltes
and the use of the exlstlng0.5county
construction work at Zimmer) , but
sales
tax
~
the
commission
hopei; to pay off the debt
we decided that now 15 oot the time to
In
W
years.
address the Issue.''
Unless, the addltlonal 0.5 sales tax Is approved. In
Associate Ohio Consumers' Coun·
that
case, the county planS to retire the debt In three
sel Gretchen Hummel said
COUR'JHOIBE OONSTRUCTION- Workers this
years.
And, In the process, cornmlssloners say, save
C&amp;SOE's decision showed that the
week
were laying brick along the west wall oftlle new
nearly $1 mllllon In Interest the county would pay
utillty has finally faced reality,
section
of the GalllaCountyCourihouse.lnNovember
during the Intervening 17 years.
"To me, It's just an llth·hour
whm voters cast bllllots on the proposed
Since the 1981 fire, the county has explored admission that the world 15 round,"
COUISy-wlde sale&amp; tax - the means of fundbtg the
numerous
means
to
fund
replacement
of
the
she said.
project wDI be decided.
(Continued on page A3)

A LIMITED TIME OFFER
FROM PAT HILL FORD

WATERBED SALE

(~EAL

entine

SET suspends tax repeal media ads

AND SAVE ON:

FRUTH PHARMACY·

C'oLOER

"o

THIS WEEKEND

Wayside Furniture

.786 N. 2ND AVE.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

....... ~

Notre Dame .......... 27
usc .......·..................
0
·'

·Illinois .................. 35
•
Purdue ....... ~ ..... ,.... 21

lnttS

SHOP ELBERFELDS

f'p::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;-1
OF OHIO, INC.

lau;a. ....... :.............. l3

•

Airport problems on Sunday agenda

Also Anna M. Boyer, Parkersburg, speed, $23 and costs; Franklin
Boyd, Wllkesvllle. speed, SW and
costs; Tina Nance, Racine. failed to
display a vaUd registration, $10 and·
coots; Gary Adkins, Gall1pol1s,
speed, $21 and costs; Charles
Justice, Catlettsburg, Ky., speed,
$19 and costs; Gary Jordan, Long
Bottom, speed, $26 and costs;
Jeffery Marr. Brentwood, Tenn.,

Penn State ............ 41
West Virginia ........ 23

.

'

. . t"' ••••••••••••••• 7
ClllClllllll

.-··-

Raging waters force
•
•
community
evacuation

Harrison Augustus Wilson, 77,
Prtce Hollow Road, Rutland, died
Thursday at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Mr. Wilson was bomJune30,1906
In Greenvllle, 0., a son of the late
Osborn and Lllllan Harrison Wilson.
He formerly lived In Springfield,
moving to Meigs County 10 years
ago. He was a member of the First
Christian Church in Greenvllle.
Survlvilng are his wife, Blanche
I
L . Wilson, whom he married .on
Sept. 16, 1943; a daughter, Mrs. S\le

Thirty-eight defendants were
fined and eight others forfeited
bonds in Meigs County Court
Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were James Brown, Parkersburg,
speed, $22 and costs; Dale Birch·
field, Pt. Pleasant, traffic light
violation, $15 and costs; Charlene
White, Marietta, speed, $23 f"'d
costs; Lance Ritchie, RaVI!nswOod,
speed. $W and costs; Stephen
Hysell, Pomeroy, speed, $21 and
costs; Carnell Vance, Jr., Cheshire,
overload, $lX) and costs, unsafe
vehicle, SID and costs; John
Antenucci, Athens, speed, $22 and
costs; James Curtis, Langsville,
speed, $W and costs; William
Stanley, Shade, speed, SW and
costs; Charles Yeager, Mason,
passing on double yellow line, $10
and costs; Mike Custer, Pomeroy
DWI, $250 and cos!s, three days
confinement. license suspended 60
days, If attend driving school jail
sentence and $150 of fine will be
suspended; Allen Chevalier. Reedsville, DWI,$250andcosts, threedays
confinement, license suspended 60
days; Johnny Chevalier, Shrew·
burg, W. Va., DWI, $150 and costs,
three days confinement, license
suspended 60 days; James Nihiser.
Logan, passing bad checks, · one

Five calls were answered by local
units on Thursday, tiJe Meigs
County Emergency Medical Servl·
ces reports.
At 6:52p.m., the Middleport Unit
took Chad Ward from the Meigs
Junior High School to' Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 4: 16
p.m. went to Tanners Run Road for
Hazel Wickline, taken to Veterans
Memorial; Syracuse at 11:48 p.m.
went to Cherry and Third Sts. tor
Andrew Manning, dead upon ar·
rivet; Rutlandat9:34p.m.lookRick
Jolmson tram Main St., to Veterans
Memorial, and Tuppers Plains at
6: 53 p.m. went to the Eastern High
School football field for Bob Gordon,

Georgia ... ....... •. .... . 4 7
Kentucky .. ~ ........... 21

Michigan ............... 16

Miami, Fla. ........... 17

Ohio State ............. 21
MSU ...................... 11

j

···---

•

,.

-,

I .

j

ri
\

HONORED-Edward C. Evans, Jr., a native of
Middleport, has been named Detective of the Year In
the Los Anget... Police Department's Devonshlnl
Dlvlson. Hls parents are Mr. and Mrs. Edward C.
Evaus, Sr., who still reside In Middleport.

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