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                  <text>eekly sermonette.

Final Marauder stats
SeePage3

SeePage?

New missile proposals

roup's cause

Story on _Page 12

IPhnln story on Page 5

•

at y

e
' Vol.3l,No.155
,Copydghted 1983

'

WASHINGI'ON (AP) -As Congress abandoned
all hope of major action Ibis year to reverse the tide of
budgetary red Ink, the Senate agreed Thursday night
to Increase the government's line of credit by $101
bUUon to $1.49 trlllion.
By a voice vote, the Senate
the compromise
measure and sent It to the House for final
eongresslonal action. The House was €J&lt;PeCted to vole
on the measure Frlday.
Final a~lon by the House and Senate on the
compromise national debt llmlt blll was the last big ·

Fuel ·system stores, moves, blends· gasoline
The energy that moves your
car comes from two sources -

llaminllhe carburetoo- . ,
The carburetor Is often
gasoline and air. 1be purpose d. blamed for troubles that siart
the fuel system Is to store elsewhere. H the engine doesn't
gasoline, blend It with the start with the first few turns of
correct proportion of air and the starter, prolonged cranking

and pumping the accelerator
may cause the carbureator to
"flood." You'll notice a strona
smell of gasoline. Don't keep
grtndtng away on the starter.
Turn cCf the Ignition and wall a

few minutes. Then try again.
Usually, the Oooded carburetor
can be cleared by boldlng the
accelerator all the way down
whlle the starter turns. If the
engine still won't start, check the

Ignition.
Vapor lock Is a problem that
sometimes occurs In hot
weather when you attempt to
restart an engine that has been
shut down brlefiy,

passed

~ndthlscombustlblemumneto~------~--~~----~~------------------------------------------------------------------­

the engine's cylinders. A Doat
Inside the gas tank measures the
amount of fuel In the tank and·
sends a signal to the fuel gauge
on your car's instrument panel.
The fuel pump moves gasoline
from the gas tank to the
carburetor. A fuel filter In the
connecting-line, usually between
the pump and the carburetor,
screens out dirt a nd rust
particles.
The .carburetor
Hidden beneath the big, round
air cleaner on top of the engine Is
the carburetor, which has the
vital function of mixing just the
right proportions of fuel and air.
Air enters the carburetor
through the.air cleaner, where It
is filtered to remove dust and
other foreign matter. It then
. flows through a narrow throat In
the carburetor. Here's where the
fuel Is added through a nozzle.
The m ixture enters the intake
manifold, which is essentially a
pipe with a branch for each
cylinder in the car 's engine.
Engtne speed is controlled by
the throttle, which is a plate
inside the carburetor ; !t acts just
like a door . When you step on the
accelerator, a system of rods
and levers connected to the
carburetor pushes the door
open. The further· down you push
the accelerator, the wider the
door opens, and a greater
amount of fuel-air mixture
enters the manifold.
GasoUne and air
The carburetor Is set to mix
a bout 15 parts of air with each
part of gasoline. by weight.
Under some conditions, the
engine requlres a "richer"
mixture, that is , a greater
proportion of gasoline. For
example, the choke enriches the
mixture when a cold engtne Is
started. This device is·similar to
the throttle, but It's located near
the top of the carburetor. When
the door is partially closed, it
chokes off part of the air - but
allows fuel to flow freely. On
some cars, the choke can be
controlled by a cable attached to
a knob on the instrument panel,
but most cars are equipped with
automatic chokes , which open
and close by thermostats similar
to the type that regulates the
·temperature ln your home.
Your e ngtne also needs a
richer m ixture when you push
down ·hard on the accelera tor to
pass a not her car, or to pull into
fast- moving fl·eeway traffic. It's
provided by the accelerat ing
pump, a small piston or diaphragm in side the carburetor,

2 Secti ons, 1 2 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 18, 1983

20 Cents

A Multimed ia Inc. New spap.er

Uncle Sam's spending: credit line increased.

PAGE 'l'WJ:LVt: - CAR CAU

'

en tine

obstacle to congressional adjournment for the year on
Frlday.
1be end of the 1983 battle to reduce federal budget
deficits was signaled Wednesday night when the
Senate refused, 65-33, to consider an $88 b!Ulon
deficit-reducing package of tax Increases and
spending cuts proposed by Sens. Pete V. Domenlci,
,
R-N.M., and Lawton .Chlles, D-Fia.
Another chance lor deficit-reduction action was
closed off Thursd~y evening when the House voted
214-W-1 to reject ground rules for consideration of

several proposed anti-deficit plans. One plan,
a pproved by the House Ways and Means Cornmlttee,
would have raiSed a bout $8 billion In taxes over three
years, chiefly from high-Income investors and the life
insurance industry.'
"As we leave Washington, word of our Impotence
w1ll prf;lCede us . ... We have confessed to an already
doubting nation that we are ruled by political fear,
rather than economic courage," said Rep. Dan
Rostenkowski, D-Ill., chairman of the Ways and
Means Committee.

Non-agenda
items highlight
board session

News briefs
Logan murder trial delayed
LOGAN, Ohio- The trial of a 50-year-old Logan man charged with
two counts of aggravated murder In the slaylngs of bis stepdaughter
and her boyfrlend has been delayed for a month.
Hocking County Common Pleas Judge James SWwell has
overruled a defense motion.challenging the va!Wity of the grand jury
that Indicted Dale Johnston In the deaths of Annette Cooper, 18, and .
Todd Schultz, 19, on Oct. 4, 1982.
Two more motions are to be argued Dec. 5, the date the case had
been set for trial. The new trial date Is Jan. 9.
Defense attorney Thomas Tyack Is seeking to keep the state from
using as evidence some Items obtained from Johnston's property .
Tyack also Is trying to have Ohio's death penalty law declared
unconstifutlonal.

Singer,. band escape injury
TUCSON, Arlz. - The nose wheel of a chartered plane carrying

'pop 'smger Uonei Riehle and

his band collapsed upon tanding at
·
None of the 15 passengers and three crewmen aboard the
four-engine VIscount was Injured when the wheel collapsed. upon
touchdown at 7: 24 p.m, airport security pollee said.
After the landing, Riehle and bis seven-piece band traveled from
the airport to the Tucson Community Center and went on stag!! as
scheduled for their sold-out concert.
1be front-end section of the plane sustained extensive damage and
the accident chewed up a portion of tbe runway, forcing closure of
'
both main
runways for about 1~ hours, said David Enz, chief of
airport security. There was no flre.

Tucson International Airport Thursday night.

We understand the kind
of help you need.
And we've got it. From
Accounts

Ohio Marine, alive, well

-Fo

'• .

CUYAHOGA FALLS, Ohio -Tile family of Marine Corp. Scott
Lukosavlch knew he was safe In Lebanon two days after he was
listed as missing as a result of the Beirut barracks bombing, but he
apparently stayed on the official missing list for three weeks.
Jlm Lukosavlch saki his family was told his ~year-old son was
missing three days after the Oct. 23 bombing. 1bi next day, Marine
officials said they thought Scott was safe, bis father said.
Maline Capt. Jay FaJTar, a Marine spokesman In Washington,
said Wednesday that Lukosavich had changed units . In the
peacekeeping force a day or two before the bombing. FaJTar said
Lukosavlch'sname had not yet appeared on therosterofbisnew unit
when a head count was made of the entire Marine force after the
blast.

Drop in today.
Let us spoil you.

Teenager loses license for life

Fartners
Bank

CLEVELAND - A Concord Township teen-ager who was drunk
wben her car slanuned Into another, killing two children, has lost her
drlver's Ucense for Ufe and must perform 1,040 hO!II'S of volunteer
work, a judge has ruled.
Kim Weber, 18, was sentenced by Cuyahoga County Juvenile
Court Judge Kenneth A. Rocco. Miss Weber, who was 17 when the
accident occu7rred Feb. 18, was tried as a juvenile.
Mary Jo D'Abate, also of Concord Township, who had been a .
pilssenger In Miss Weber's car, was convicted Nov. 1 of contributing
to the delinquency of a minor for obtalnlng the wbiskey ·the two ·
women were drinking before the accident.
Miss D' Abate, 18, wW he sentenCed next week.

Meraber FDIC

Your Community Owned Bank

which squirts an 'f.'Xtra few d mps

of fuel as the acce lerator is
depressed.

Winning Ohio lottery number
'

CLEVELAND - The wJnnJng number ch~ Thursday night In
the Ohln.Lottery's game "The Number," played Monday through
Saturday, was 003.
·
.
.
In the '.:Pfck 4" game, played Monday ~!!rough F'rlday, the winning
number eelected Thursday was 223'(..
1be lottery reported earnings d. $436,451 from the wagering on
''The Number.''
·

'

eathe r Jf orecas t

IF/

W

Moltly cloudy tonight. Low 40 to 45. Cooslderable cloudlnells,
bl'eezy and wann with a chance alxJwers or thuntlerstonns
Saturday. High 65 to 70. 1be chance ot rain Is :al percent tonight and
40 pei'Cellt Saturday.
OlllaE•bs !led
.,_ __ ._ - . . - . ..,.._..__ A •
. "'""'RJ-....... ~--· M
~eoll'lllll"'nhylllldM •.,.
. Flllr Tit ntiiQ'. IIJ&amp;bl II to I 111- '•r ... M Ill II ,._.., ...
• .IAwa 1D llle 4111 !leq+:y ud 1D llle Ill MlllldQ lllld ,

l
l

·L-----------.---'"--'"""!"-.....1
''

Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill J r ., D-Mass., lam basted Republicans for contributing to the House vote
that au but ended efforts to trlm deficits this year.
"The ne~1 time I see Republican crocodile tears
about the deficits , I will ask them where their part y
was today," O'Neill said.
Congressional cooferees met on the debt limit
following a 58-40 SP.nate vote ear ly Thw·sday on a bill
restoring federal borrowing authorlty by raising the
national debt limit to $1.45 trillion, allowing the
government to extend its credit b ill until F ebruary.

MAN OF YEAR PRESENTATION- Carl Dahlberg, left, secretary
ollhe Soulheastem Ohio Regiooal Councll, congratulales Bob Hoeflich,
general manager of 1be Dally Sentinel, upon Hoeflich's receipt of the
man of the year award at the SEORC award banquet at Athens
'llnu..ctay. HoefHch received the award for his pasl contributions to
Meigs County, Including f1111d-ralslng elforis for tbe area's schools.

Mason resident faces
bank robbery charges
Earl F. Ingels,~. Mason, W. Va.,

was aJTested Thursday In cmmection with the robbery of the Trl
County Bank at Coolville on
Wednesday.
According to the A !hens County
Sheriff's Department, lng'els was
arrested at the homeofhls mother in
Mason by Sheriff deputies from
Athens, Meigs and Mason Counties.
Ingels was taken to Mason County
Jall at Pt. Pleasantfor arraignment
where he posted a $70,000 property
bond: He was released pending
extradition preceedlngs to be returned to Ohio.
·
Ingels allegedly robbed the Trl
County Bank at gunpoint Wednesday afternoon and fled with an

UJ!determlned amount of monPy.
Leading to his arrest according to
the Athens County Sheriff's Department was the detail Involving the
vehicles Ingels aUegedly used
durlng the alleged crime during the
Investigation oy the department. It
was reported that Ingels had gone to
the Riggs Used Car Lot In Chester to
try out a 1971 Ford pickup truck and
when he returned the truck, he ke pt
an lgnltlon key. Later the vehicle
was stolen from Riggs Used Car Lot
and used in the robbery.
Following the robbery Ingels
allegedly drove the truck to SR 144
where bis car was parked. The truck
was found abandoned on SR 144
about one-half mile from SR 50 and

'

Board will buy two new buses
Mee!lng 1n regular session Thursday night, the Eastern Local School
District Board of Education approved adve;tJslng for two new

=

~

bOJses w111 he received
In the otnce of the treasurer untll12
noon on Jan. 5;

A board accepted a health
handbook for the district and
· dlsculled a JII'OII'&amp;m through which

co11et1e courses wW be given In the
6

agenda and it was agreed to Asst.
Supt. James Carpen(er w ill conduct
a survey on the routing system being
used securing parent input and
recommendations. The director of
transportation will assist Carpenter
with the survey and it is hoped tpat it
wi ll bring out theproblem sthat need
to be corrected . An executive
session was requested in one of the
addition withal! principals and Supt.
Morris will set that up for tlle
December or J a nu ary meeting.
Another agenda addition sug·
gestcd that the central offlce
secretarial staff be grcu ped separate for payroll purposes , but no
action was taken when it was
r eported that the central office staff
Is already in a separate category.
Raises for administrative personnel
were discussed with the idea that
ralses will be gra nted only when
contracts with other employes are
r enewed a nd then based on merit.
This will be discussed at another
date. Another addition brought out a
need lor scheduling bus trips as
early as possible.
Supt. Morris will present a four
year plan on the educa tiona! goals of
the district at the J anuary meeting
as proposed in an addition to the
agenda and board m embers have
been requested also to presen i a fou r
-year goal program at tha t time.
(Continued on page 81

100 people arrested in striking protest~
By CYNTHIA GREEN
Al6oclated Press Writer

Pollee arrested more than 100
people In protests from Boston to
San Francisco as strlklng GreyhoWld WOfkE:rS hurled rocks, eggs
7.
and curses at buses making their
first trltl$ In two weeks, but
company officials said they were
encouraged by passenger turnout.
At least half a dozen lnjurles were
president.
reported Thursday as chanting,
" He goes 'Well, I'll show you. He
sign-waving strikers tried to block
had me go over and sit in his chair
buses from leaving depots for the
and said 'On this desk alotolworrles
first ttme since the Amalgamatect
pile and you have to get rid ofthem. '"
Transit Union walkout began Nov. 2.
Her father , Dan Ross, said he and
Most buses carrled few pasbis wife, Kristine, and sons Nasengers, and tlckethoiders wllling to
than,6, Joey, 4, and John, 1, waited
board the big cruisers faced delays
outside the office for a few minutes
and abuse as protesters smashE:d
whlle Heather and Reagan chatted.
windshields, flattened ·tireS and
"She had to lalock on the door and
·
lipped off mirrors In attempts to
he told her to&lt;;ameon In," said Ross,
keep non-unlo11 replacement drivwho Is. superlntendent of Patrick
ers off the roads '
Henry Schools.
Meanwhlle, 1111lon leaders meetHeather said she enjoyed her
. 5-mlnute VIsit and suggested that · ing · In · Scottsdale, · Arlz., with
company officials unanimously reber brother did also.
jected a new Greyhound C!lntract
proposal late Thursday, but said the
12,700 rank-and-flle members could
evenings at Eastern High School by
vote on it.
However, a Union source who
Rio Grande College. The sessions
are ~ to senior students of the ·asked not to be Identified said one
condition for the vote was .that the
high school and adults.
companytakethebuses'backo!fthe
The board also agreed to begin
action on employing elementary
road.
Therompany tsseeklngwageand
prlncipals In the district as manbenefit
cuts, saying It must reduce
dated by thestateforthe next school
to stay competitive with
labor
costs
year. 1be district Is now using head
other
buses
and cut-rate airlines.
teachers In the elementary schools.
In
response
to the violence
Activity budgels were approved for
Thursday,
judges
and pollee In
the senior class and the Future
Atlanta, Phlladelphla and San
Fanners ol America ..

Ohio student meets President
WASHINGTON (AP) -A9-yearold Hamler, Ohio, gtri dropped by
the Oval Office Thursday for a chat
with President Reagan.
Heather Ross' brlel visit was
triggered by a letter she wrote to
Reagan last November.
In bis reply, Reagan Jnvit.€d her
for a visit If she ever was in
Washington.
So Thursday, she did.
She said she thanked Reagan for
hiS letter and deUveredacard toh!m
made by her class. ·
She said she had asked Reagan In
her letter wbat It was like to be_

Numerous add! \Ions to ihe agenda
were considered when the Meigs
Local School District Board of
Education met Thursday night in
Middleport.
Most o( the additions were
included upon the suggestion of
board member, Robert Snowden.
The board discussed bus transfer
points, particularly at Rutland , in
relation to reports that the Rutland
bulldlng Is sometimes not open for
students transferring and tha t some
are getting into privately owned
vehicles at that point without proper
permission . The board also dis·
cussed alleged misusage of passes
to school events in that entire
families are entering school events
on one pass . According to action
taken by the board a couple of
months ago, passes are to be issued
only to working personnel.
It was agreed tn hold an executive
session with the high school prlnci·
pal and band director as one of the
additions. Supt. Dan Morris reports
he will have that set up for the
December or J a nuary meetings.
Snowden suggested that a m erit
plan for teachers and non-certified
employes be adopted with r aises
granted to people named by the end
of the year by their peers. No action
was taken.
A bus route report on costs was
requested In another addition to the

F rancisco acted quickly to limit the
number of pickets a llowed at
terminals.
" I was expec ting something , but I
didn 't imagine anything quite like
this, " said passenger Sandra Morefield, 7boarding in E ffingham , Ill.,
where 30 jeering pickets tempOrarily blocked one bus and threw eggs
at two others.
In Boston , 51 protesters were
taken into custody after they
blocked buses from lea \1ng and
entering the terrn inal, police spokesman P eter Woloschuk said. One
o!flcer suffer ed a broken leg,
a nother had his thumb bro~en and
three or four m ore were injured in
m aking the arrests, he said.
In one of the most violen.t
outbursts , 300 strikers in San
Francisco hurled rocks, bottles and
chunks of pavement at buses
·leaving the terminal, police said ,
The first bus . carryi ng five passengers, was .forced to turn , back ·
· after a tire was fl attened and its
windows broken a few b locks away.
The windshield· of the second bus
· was shattered , and police had to stop
· protesters from tipping off its
wipers.
.
Greyhound spokeswoman Leslie
White said '17 buses with an average
of 10 passenge(s departed in the first
five hours of service Thui-sday.
Tjl~ company, which operated 60
percent of the U.S. Intercity bus
service before the strike, has hired
1,300 replacement workers and an
additional 1.400 union members
have returned to work, she said ,

�•

Commentary

2-The Dally S.ntiMI ·'
Pameroy ' Middleport, a.
Fag•

'

One hell of.a story !._____w_i_llu._m_F_._Buc_k_ler_Jr.

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVIJI'ED TO THE INTERI!NT OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

11~

.

~m~
~v

...,..,_,._""T", ............ d.=
.

ROBERT L. WINGETI' .
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Assistant Publh;her/ Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
'

News l!:dltor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LIETI'ERS OF oPINION are Wel co med. They should be less than 300 words
loag. A.llleUers are subjecl to ediUn« and mus t be s igned with aame, address and
telephone number. No .anel1ned letters wUI be published. IA!tters 11hould bl! In
10od taste , addressiDJ ISSUe!!ll , not Prf80111:1lltles.

•

'

The great h elst
.

Avast transfer of wealth has been occurring during the past year or so,
and Is likely to continue weliinto next year.
Even so, it has only begun the process ol returning money to victims ol
what Is sometimes called the great heist oY the 1970s, when the transfer of
wealth went In the opposite direction .
Back then It was the transfer ol assets !rom savers to borrowers, !rom
the haves to' the have-nots. Today, the haves are getting their money back
and they intend to keep things going that way.
The process Is simple: The haves are lending their savings- directly or
through the institutions In which they keep their money- at Interest rates
that far exceed the rate of Inflation.
Consider the contrast:
In the late 1960s and mid·l970s It paid to borrow. Interest rates hadn't
rtsen into double digits, but rates of Inflation were already there. You could
get a home mortgage lor 8 percent or 9 percent while Inflation was 11
percent.
Thus people made money borrowing by paying back in cheaper dollars,
and boiTOwers further reduced costs by deducting interest payments !rom
taxable income, while lenders had to pay taxes on non-existent Interest
·~income."

· U the boiTOwer bought a hou se his money grew faster. Between 19ffi and
1979 the consumer price index rose from 109.8 to 217.4, a hefty jump, but
home prtces rose ev~n laster: from 109.5 to 223.1.
. : The price of some h~mes grew much quicker. In some Instances, houses
l)ought for $31,000 rose within a few years to $90,000.
. But such Investment sometimes paid off In current Income too: In many
~stances buyers declined to live in the houses but rented them out for
income Instead. And that rental income rose swiftly, too.
Meanwhile, the inflation that helped the borrower hurt the saver. Most
savers keep their money In institutions, and institutions lend out their
.
money. and that makes the saver a lender.
· The saver-lender earned little or nothing at all on his money. It took time
fqr lenders to adjust their rates to the new reality. and In some Instances
they were hampered from doing so by usury laws, or limits on Interest
charged.
.
Never again, said the saver-lenders, and they could be right. They not
only stopped lending, they cornered legislators and won changes ln
borrowing-lending practices.
,.The variable-rate home mortgage Is one such change. Rather than
offering money at a fixed rate for 30years,Ienders now offer rates that tend
tD float with Interest rates generally. - .
And If no such devices exist with which to protect themselves the lenders
simply charge more to be safe. The roughly 10 percent gap between rates ln
·
general Is about triple the norm.
Rates should come down, say many critics, and they may be right . But
you may be certain that If ra tesd do come down, they will do so slowly.'
Savers and lenders are cautious and jumpy.

Berry's World
•

The people at ABC are on to one
hell of a story. It Is that nuclear war
results In quite awful thlltgs . You
know, like death, pestilence,
hunger, pain, desolation and skin
blisters. That Is the whole of the
story In the document coming up
next Sunday, and If you doubted
that nuclear war is awful, be sure to
tune ln. There is also a surprise
ending: It tells you on the screen
that probably nuclear war wlll be
worse than as depicted by ABC. It
remains only to be added that If
nuclear war happens, Its sponsors
will be the kind of people responsl·
ble for this documentary.
The producers at ABC have gone to great pains to Insist that It Is not a
"political" document. They are
saying what the situation theatrically demands, but the sheer
humhuggery of It Is really too
much. ltlsas!fNancyReaganwent
Into the polling booth a year !rom
now and announced tllatshe had not
made up her mind whom to vote
for . .Why do they go through such
motions ol alleged Impartiality?
But such motions they have
fastidiously gone through. In the
version of the docudrama generally
released for preview. one heard a

.

sentence over the radio news. It
said something like, "The ctisls In
· U.S.-Sovlet relations grew out of the
U.S. insistence on deploying the
cruise and Pershing !'nlsslles .. " I
say It "said" that because the llnes
have been eliminated. Look how we
can be non-political, Ma? No
hands!
Such wasted motion. At the very
end of a long story on the
controversy, published last Sunday
In The New York Times, the whole
show Is simply given away by the
writer of the script of "The Day
After," Mr. Edward Hume. I quote:
"Although Mr. Stoddard (the ·prln·
clpal producer of the drama) was
deterrnlned to avoid any explicit
political statements, Mr. HUJ)'le
acknowledges that the film cannot
entirely avoid a political Interpretation: 'I would like to see people
starting to question the value of
defending this country with a
nuclear arsenal. What troubles me
Is that there's no dialogue on the
subject. I hope this film wlll wrench
the dialogue back to the surface. To
that extent, It Is a political fllm."
It's all rlght there. The Idea Is to
question "~he value of defending

.

.

I

this CO\Inlry with a nuclear arsenal. "'That Is a call to unllaterallsm
in one syllable, assuming the word
were as compressible as the
analytical powers of the producers
of "The Day After." What It says Is
quite simply: It Is' wrong to own
nuclear bombs. Because If we own
them, the Soviets might want to
blow them up, and to do so, they
would aim nuclear bombs at us:It is
not !rue that there has been no
dialogue over unllateral surrender.
But It has been, up until now,
largely the property of Jane Fonda
and others who reside ln the fever
swamps where junk thought grows .
Here Is an Idea for a follow·UP on
"The Day After." ABC mlghtcalllt,
"The Day After, Il." It should
describe the life of citizens of
Lawrence, Kan ., the day after we
surrendered to the Soviet Union,
which Is exactly what we would do If
It alone had atom bombs, which Is
exactly what Japan did when we
alone had atom bombs. It might
make Instructive reading to have a
look at James Michener's description of what the Nazis did the day
after they took over Poland. The
first thing would be the execution of

anybody who was ever active in
defense of free speech or, actually,
active ln behalf of any public policy.
This would Include .thl! Jane
Fonda·ABC set, and that Is too bad,
because death ts much more
pleasant than life In greater Gulag.
Do you want to see a movie as
gruesome as ".The Day After?" Go
see "A Day In the Life of IvaR
Denlsovltch." That is what happens
to the tens of millions who did not
have a nuclear arsenal with which
to say no to the Soviet beast.
U only th~ people would sif up
and realize that It Is precisely the
existence of our ' nuclear arsenal
that prevents such a situation as Is
depleted In the ABC drama. And
remember this: A full-scale nuclear war would mean about 100
mliUon Ameticans dead. Those
hundred lnllllon are going to die one
of these days without nuclear
anesthetic. and they will In almost
every case die more painfully. They
should, then, live more joyously;
which means they must have the
courage to do two things: Preserve
their Uberty, and keep the nuclear
peace. Providentially. these two
tlllngs happen simultaneously,
Inseparably.

An appeal for life ________J_ac_k-::-,A_nd_e_rso_n
WASIDNGTON - In Thursday's
column, I told the tragic but
poignant love story of Elizabeth and
Richard bouvla, two outcasts who
tlied to face the world together.
Now Elizabeth, tormented by
painful paralysis, has given up the
struggle. She has sued for the tight
to die In peace from starvation; she
doesn't have the strength left in her
atrophied muscles to commit sui·
cldoony other way. All she asks for,
as she wastes away, are palnklllers
to ease-the ageHy-&lt;&gt;lller arthritis.
She won't speak to her husband,
who keeps coming back to the
hospital and getting turned away.
Each time, he leaves a rose for her
at the reception desk. In despera tion, he has appealed to me to
publish a message he would have
preferred to deliver In private.
"Liz has to know !love her, I need
her and I want to spend the rest of
my life with her, " Richard writes,
"Mr. Anderson, I have to make her
realize that she is a very bright and
lovely lady ... I want her to know
how much I love her and want her to
live...
To avoid any false pretenses.
Richard also wanted me to know
that he grew up on thewrongsldeof
town and wound up ln prison.
Unskilled and unemployed, he had
tried to steal the money no one
would lei him earn.
The romance between while
Richard was still ln prison. Eliza·
beth first wrote to him, then visited
him. After his release, they were
married - the ex-convict and the
nearly helpless cripple, two lonely
people rejected by others. In a

moment of frustration, he walked
out on Elizabeth. But he telephoned
that he was sorry, and she pleaded,
"Come and get me."

Flat broke, he tried to hitchhike
across the country to Rl¥erslde,
Calif., where she had checked Into a
hospital. He became stranded in
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and the
hospital refused to accept his collect
telephone calls. When at last he
reached Riverside, Elizabeth had
given up and wanted only to die.
Now Richard has entrusted me
with a handwritten letter, which he
fears will never reach her except
througll the public prints. It's
scrawled on yellow stationery, with
a bouquet of flowers at the bottom.
The spelllng Is poor and the
phraslng sometimes awkward. But
the message Is eloquent.
"Dearest Liz," the letter begins.
"Sweetheart I want to say I am
very sorry that I left you all by
yourself In Oregon. And I want you
to know the reason I left had nothing
to do with your handicap. It was a
lot of pressure !felt ... and not being
able to see any chance of obtaining
employment In such a small town.
"!want you to know how happy I
was when you contacted me and
wanted me to come and get you out
of the hospital ... I know you have
mentioned you wanted to die at
times when you have your arthrltls
pain, and when you get depressed.
Because of all the problems with
attendants and ... all the red tape
and hassle you get from all the
government agencies.
"But I want you to know I love
you and care very much for you.

kMH need and want you as my wife
for many years In the future. And I
am seeking emP.loyment dally and I
am very confident I wlll be
employed In the near future.
"My next goal wUI be to get an
apaliment or house that will be
accessible to you. Well I wlll start
close by saying this, Liz, If you Insist
upon given the tight to die and
succeed part of me will die with
you. I hope you realize I love you
deerly and from the bottom of my
heart, and I am praying for you
dally ...
"Liz you don't realize how much
you are llurtlng the only person who
has ever cared or loved yoil. I am
pleading with you, not tD conllnue
this. We can work it out, life Isn't
really that bad .. . I wlll send you
another~ tomoiTOw."
The letter Is signed "Your loving
husband, Richard."
Footnote: Elizabeth Bouvla refused to take calls from my office
and her Amerlcan Civil Liberties
Union attorney refused to lntercede
to arrange an lntervlew. ·
BOONDOGGLE OF THE
WEEK: While the U.S. Postal
Service wants to boost the price of a
first-class stampfrom20 to23 cents,
Its top officials wlll also be getting a
lift - In a $1!. 7 mlllion luxury jet.
The service claims the rate hike
Is needed to cover an expected $lm
mllllon deficit this year, but
apparently wouldn't consider cut·
tlng perquisites for the big brass.
The board of directors has leased,
with an option to buy, a Cessna
Citation II that will be used to ferry
the directors and other postal
o!!lctals around the country. The

service claims the jet Is needed to
save time.
Cost to postal users: $47,&lt;XXJ a
month.
HEADLINES AND FOOT·
NOTES: U you think economists
are hard to understand, you are not
alone. At a recent brleflng lor
members of Congress, Federal
Reserve · Board Chairman Paul
Volcker was tossing around such ·
abbreviations as GNP (for Gross
National Product) and M·l (for the
total amount of currency and
checks in circulation). He was
Interrupted by a congressman who
said: "In my district, people think
GNP is a drug teenagers are using,
and they think M ·lis a rl!le used by
the Army."
-Federal Investigators estimate
that dupllcate and excess facntttes
at 13 aircraft maintenance depots
around the country cost the taxpayers at least $100 mtlllon a year. In
April 1981, a Pentagon task force
was appointed to study the matler.
In six months the group met nlne
times, agreed on a number of
maintenance Improvements and
!dentl!led problems that needed
further study. The Items needing
study were Identical to those the
iask force had been appointed to
study.
- Two funerals ln one day
reinforced the opinion of Rep. Tom
Downey, D·N. Y ., that the United
States should have pulled out of
Lebanon long ago and shouldn't
II ave Invaded Grenada. One funeral
was for a Marine killed in Beirut, '
the other for a Navy man killed In
Grenada.

Bad endorsement ______-,---_A_rt_B_uc,--hwa_ld

" Well, gosh - doggone it! I've got to go - and
just when it was beginning to get interesting.... "

Today-in .-h istory
Today ts Friday, Nov. 18, the :)22nd day ofl!ID. There ;rre4.'idays left in
the year.
·
Today's highllght In history: .
On Nov. 18,1003, the UJ\ited states and Panama signed a treaty granting
U.S. rights tD build lbe Panama canal. '
• 0n1111s' date:
In 1883, the United States adopted Standard Time to end the haphazard
local times that were in use around the country.
In 1886, the 21st president of the United States, Chester Arthur, died at
age 56, a· little over a year after leaving office.
In 1966, Roman Catholic bishops In the United States dld away with the
prohibition against eating meat on Friday.
In 1949, Jackie RDblnson of the Brooklyn Dodgers was named the
Natlmal League's Most Valuable Player.
And also In 1949, VIce President Alben Barkley married Ellzabeth Jane
Rucke' In a ceremony telecast from St. Louis.
Tell years ago: Greek demonstratorS defied martial law and clashed
.with pollee In scattered tights througl)out the Athens area. '
·
~

M
First Downs
By rushing
By passing
By penalties
.
Plays from scrimmage
Total net yards
Net yards rushing

151
107
35

89
56
. 2'1
7
472
1619
915

9
597
2770
1009

Net yards pa.sslri.g
Passes (comp.-an.l

861

tHad Intercepted)
5Punts
'35-lc.lS
(Average) •
31.0
Fumbles
23
(Number lost)
13
Penalties (no.·yds.)
57-500
Scoring by Quarien
Meigs
44 51 4i
Opp.
26 :rl 12
Rushing
Cl)rls Burdene

Jon Perrin ·
Nick Riggs

Dave Follrod
Brad Robinson

No. l:'d8 . Td '

Jackie Welker .............................. 2 24 0
13 0

Scott Ghccn ................................. 2
Dave FollrOd .,. ......... ......... : .......... ~
Nick Bush .. : ................................ 1
Tolals
!2
Opp. Tutala
~~~~
Sco~
'

4&amp;407

The Newspaper ·Guild has enpresident do for the press, anyway? ported a presidential candidate was
dorsed Fritz Mondale as Its presiThe worst candidates have given us in 1972 when they came out for
dential candidate. Actually, the
our best stories, and the best ones McGovern. Look what happened to
leaders of the Newspaper Guild
haven't given us any storles at all. him."
· endorsed him - .the membership
Why do you think the guild officers
"I forgot McGovern. Funny
was not consulted. Many members
stuck their necks out?"
enough after they endorsed him,
of the guild are very angry that
The MOndale · man said, "We McGovern complalned he never got
their leaders took a position ln the
suspect someone from the other a decent story In the papers again, ''
presidential campaign.
side was behind lt."
. "It Isn't funny. The same thing
I thought there would be jubila·
"When you say the other side are could happen to Mondale."
lion ln the Mondale camp when the
you talking about Mondale's Demo"!guess your best bet would be to
Newspaper Guild gave the nod to
cratic rivals or the Republicans•"
repudiate the guild endorsement.
their man. But It was just the
"In a presidential prtmary eve- After all, you don't have to take
opposite.
rybody Is on the other side."
every political blessing that comes
"This Is an absolute disaster,"
"Perhaps you're overreacting."
along."
said one of Mondale's people.
The Mondale aide said, "The last
"It may be too late. We should
"We've been bllndslded."
time the Newspaper Guild sup- have turned It down when It was
"How can l(OU say that? The
Newspaper Guild Is a powerful
union and Its members control
much of the .news fit to plint. You
should be thrlUed they came out for
your boy so early."
." The members didn't come out
for our boy - the guild officers
caine out for l]im, and the rank and
. file are mad as hell . .no you know
what Is golng to happen? The
members will clobber Mondale just
to prove they haven't gone ln the
tank."
"I didn't think of that. You don',t
believe they would purposely slant
their stoties against him, just to
assert their Independence?"
"They could do something worse
- Ignore him. A.nd if they do write
about him they'H be harder on '
Mondale than anybody else. If they
are not, ·their editors will think
they're following the Newspaper
GuUd party line."
..1 think you're right,'' I saki. '"I
frankly don't believe a NeW,paper
· Gulld should support any preslden·
tial candidate. After all, what can a

12 0
12 0
:119 0
4117 \

Td Pat FK
Chris Burdc&gt;tte ...... .. ...... .....~
0 0
Jon PE-n1n .........................7
2 0
Shawn Eads ......................7
0 0

10-Zll

34-1119
A.~c.

I()!;
100
108
56
24
7

5.8
4.2
3.7
5.2
4.9
3.0

Tp
48
44
42

Dave BarT ...........................0 18-24.. 2-4 · :U
Nick Rlggs ........................ 3
Mike Chancey .................... 2
James Acree .....................1

2
~

0
0

20
14

0

0

6

Dave Follrod ....... ... ..... , ... .-.1
0 0 6
Tutala
29 18-24 2-1 2ll4

t·l 1111

19

5 3.8

Opp. Tolak

J"'mes Acree

15
7
I

6 2.5
~ · 1.4
I 1.0

Solo Tackles
Chris Burdett.;- ............ , ....................... 72

0
·1

)' 0.0
I ·1.0

Nick Bush

Bret1 Kom
Toialo

11011

Jay Evans ........ .. ............................ .... .. 26

u

tl5 ill!!

Opp.Totals

Andy Iannarel\1 ......... , .............. ...... ....... 62
Mark Hammonds .................................. 40
Tony Welch ............... .................... .. .. ... 32

u

t2l)

16

~12

Mark Hammonds

Mike Chancey ·
Rod Sandy

Dave Barr ........ ..... ......................... ...... 26

P11881ng

Mike Willford .... ...... ........................ ..... 24

.\U Comp Int Yds Td
Nick RiggS .................. ..101 f7 &lt; ~ 2
Mike Chancey ............ ..... 14 6 1 2fiO 2
Shawn Eads .... , .............. 1 0 0
0 0
ToUIIB
118 53 ' 'Ill() 3
Opp. Totals
lot 411 12 104 i
Puntlns
No. Vd8. A.v1.
Chris Burdette ..................... . 35 l(H) 31.0
Totals
l!l 101111 31.0
Opp. To!alo
4t 141D 113.1

DanThomas ....... ........ ...... :.................. 8
Jay Whittington .. , ............... ................... 8
Nlrk Bush ................... ............ .... .. ... .. . 6

Scott Gheen ....................... .............. ..... 23
Shawn Eads ....................... ,..... ............ 23
Jon Perrln .. ........... .... .. ... .. . . ..
. .. 19
Jackie Welker...................
.. ...... 18

Brad Robinson ............ , ........ . , .... ,........... 6
Brian Zirkle ........................................... 5

Butch SlUes ........................................... 4

Dan Davis ........................................... .. 3

Re&lt;Jelvln(

John Longstreth .................... .. ............. .. 3

No. Ydl. Td
Mike Chancey .......................... ... 25 JJO 2
ShaiN!\ Eads ..... . ...................... ... 1'; :M 1

Nick R!Jtgs .... :.;..................... \. .............. 3
Kevt.n Meado\Ys .... ........................ ...... ... 3

Dan Thomas................ ... ........ : ..... 8 119 0

Soon Glleen ........................,. ..... ,.. I 19 o
To!alo

:13861 3

lnlen!epllooo
Relums

James Acree ....... ,................. ................ 2

George Hobson ......... : ........... ................. 2
Dave Follrod .................... .
.. ........ 1
Matt Rittle ..... .. .............. ... ..... ........ ....... 1
Brett Kom ............................ ................ 1
Larry Rtder .... ....................................... 1
GameScomo
Metg, 3 Marlet1a 9

No.. Yds. Td

• 55 0

Mike WOlford

Meigs 35 MUier 0
Meigs 27 Wellston 'l1
Meigs 7 Nelsonville- York 6
Meigs 28 VInton County 13
Meigs 13 Warren Local 14
Meigs 33 Alexander 13
M&lt;llgs 7 Belp"' 14
Meigs 23 Trimble 7
Meigs ~ Federai·Hock.tng 6

2 34 I

Chris Burdette
Jay Evans
Scott Pullins
Nick Bu~ h
Scan Gheen
Nick Riggs

Jackl.e Welker

1

4 0

1

3 0

I

0 0

I

0 0

1
I

0 0
0 0

12 86
!I 1!11

To!alo

flno.Toiolo

CINCINNATI (AP) - Crls Col·
Ilnsworth says that slnce he doesn't
have to worry about money any·
more he Is having more fun playing
football, and Is enjoying his best
year as a wide receiver with the
Cincinnati Bengals.
A playe( playing out his pptlon
might worry about lnjuri€Sandsave
himself in the National Football
League so he will be safe to make a
better deal on his next contract. But
Cdlinsworth, who has signed a
lucrative rontract with the Tampa
Bay Bandits of the rival United
States Football League, has a
dtlferentapproach.
The Ben gals, 4·7, face the Houston
Oilers here Sunday.
Collinsworth has caught 52 passes
in the first 11 games. He leads the
American Conference with 888

Shawn Eads .............. ... ...... ... ... ... 9 158 0
Brad Roblnson ............................. J 56 0
James Acree ............................... 3 54 0

12
45-1439
33.5
Xl
12

Ydl AU

617
424
396
292
118
21

No. Yds. Td

Shawn Eads ............................... 19 243 0
Tolals
19 M3 0
Opp. T.....
U g, 0
KJcbff Retum~~

704
45-100

~116

Shawn Eads

.

Opp

Dave Follrod .................. , ............ 4 73 0

.

Collinsworth has fun
•
not
worrying
playing,

Final 1\leigs stats

Friday, NoYetnber 18, 1983 .
,.

The Daily Sentinel

1The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Friday, November 18, 1983

1

I

GRAVElY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Co~dor St.
Pomeroy, OH .

Phone 992-2975
FALL &amp; WINTER HOURS:'
Effective Oct. 1-March 1
Clo1ed Monday

Tues .-Fri. 9 to 6, Sat. 9 to 1

~THE

GRAVELY
!SVSTEIVI

THANKS
PLAYING FOR THE FUN OF IT- Cinclnatl Bengals' wide
receiv~r Crls Collinsworth puBs In a pass during a recent practice at
Spinney Field In Cincinnati. Collinsworth has signed to play with the
USFL Tampa Bay Bandits In 1985 and says he is now playing the game
for the fun of II. ( AP Laserphoto).

To the Voters of Sutton Township for
their support in my recent election to
The Clerk of Sutton Township.

Paul S. Moore

OSU-Michigan tilt;
quarterback battle

Pd . Pol. Ad . by Cand.

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Tomczak. Smith, a 6-0, 194·pound
Some years It's a battle of tailbacks, senior, Is just an average passer but
other times it's two big, brulslng runs the option so well that he Is the
fullbacks or head -knockin g Wolverines' second-leang groundlinebackers.
gainer with 609 yards on~ carries,
This time around, the annual Big Including eight . touchdown s.
Ten football shootout between Ohio Through the air , Smith has completed 86 o!160forl,l8lyardsandll
State and Michigan looks like a
battle of quarterbacks - the touchdowns with seven
Buckeye's Mike Tomczak versus Interceptions.
,
Michlgan'sS\f'veSmith. .
It should be·noted, however, that
For a change, the Rnse Bowl and Smith played with his shoulder In a
cnference championship are not at cumbersome harness until two
Bill McGee, Garfield's coach, said
stake. However, the winner of weeks ago. Heseennstohavethrown ·
It will be like looking In a mirror
•KLM SKY EYE V RECEIVER
SatufC!ay's game, to be played the ball with more freedom of
w))en the Rams play Lake Catl!ollc.
•CHAPPARAL POLAROID I
before a crowd of at least 104,CXXJ in movement in the past two games.
"They appear to be strong defen"But, tD his credit , he didn't alibi
Michigan Stadium, Is expected to
•s.R.S. QUAD POD FEED SYSTEM
sively. I have alotofrespectforthelr
receiveabidtooppcseAuburnlnthe -not once! I think we underesti·
•S.R.S. COMPLETE POLAR
t:Wo backs (Steve Prelock and Greg
SugarBowlonJ&amp;n.2,whlletheloser mate how much that harness
Special
MOUNT
Moroz). And we both like to control
likely wtngo to the Fiesta Bowl.
affected him. One thlngSteveSmith
Introductory Price
100• l.N.A.
the ball," he said.
Both learns are 8-2 on the season. always had, though, was a powerful
125.
FT.
COMPLETE
• For the New G Ft.
In the other Division I semiflnal
The eighth-ranked Wolverines are rum. I! you asked him to put It up 50
CABEL
SET
game Saturday night, No. 3 Fre7-lln the Big Ten while No. 10 Ohio or 60 yards, he could still do It,"
DANEX SYSTEM
mont Ross (lQ.O.l) plays No. 5
This system is complete. InstalState Is 6-2In conference play.
Schembechler said,
0
Cincinnati Princeton (9-2), con·
"You· know, Steve Smlih has not
The Idea·of Smith running clearly
lation &amp; tax is extra.
queror of Cincinnati Moeller last
had a good game In either ofhlslast bothered Bruce more than the idea
Regular Retail Price $1.795
week, In Dayton's Welcome
two starts agajnst Ohio State and of Smith passlng, however.
Stadlwn.
we've lost both games. Right now,
"They have an excellent football
The semifinals in divisions Il, Ill
however, Steve is at the top of his team,"Bruce said. "Steve Smith is
~
"and IV- are scheduled tonight with game," Michigan Coach Bo Schem· an excellent quarterback and he has
the Division v semifinals also
145 N. Columbus Road- Athens, Ohio
bechler said.
'
a flne line In front of him. He is a
scheduled Saturday night. The
Tomczak, a 6-foot-1, 190-pound dangerous runner and has really
IN ATHENS 594-2524 • IN OHIO 1·100·!92· 1951
championship games all will be
junior, Is the second·leadlng passer come on throwing the ball In recent
played In Ohio Stadium nexl ,lJ1 Ohio State history with 3,093 ~w::;ee~ks:::_."_ _ _ _ _ ____:_..L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
weekend.
yards. He has completed 95 of 165
passes this year for 1,418 yards and
11 touchdowns whlle tossing 10
lnterceptlons. Tomezak runs only as
a last resort, although his 217 yards
boys varsity plays at 7: 45 p.m. in on the ground lnclude three ms.
the Athens Preview against tall a nd
tough Logan.
"We are a good football team, a nd
Saturday night, Coach Rnn Lo· Mike Is certainly partofthereason,''
gan's girls take the court against Ohio State Coach Earle Bruce said .
Warren Local at 5 p.m. at Trimble "We are getting more and more
High School ln the TVC preview.
physical all the 'time. I think we are .
Last Wednesday, the boys scrim· rounding into the form that I would
maged at Jackson and won four of like to see us reach."
Smith Is just the opposite of
the seven quarters played.

High school play~ffs
resume this weekend
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
Coach Tom Bane of Mentor Lake
Catholic hopes to use the ratings
game to his advantage aga!J!st
· Alcron Garfield Saturday night in
the Division I semifinals In the state
prep football playoffs.
Garfield, unbeaten in 11 games
this season, ranked second statewide to Cincinnati Moeller during
the regular season. Lake Catholic,
8-ldurlng the season, was only 13th.
Bane, In fact, likes the chances of
his team, saying a schedule that
included Lakewood St.Edward,
Cleveland St.Joseph twice, Cleveland St.Ignatlus and· Cleve1an9
Benedictine p~gdfs
well for the semiflnals.
He worries about. the Rams'
Quickness. however.

yardS . Collinsworth could finish the
season with 76 catches for 1,292
yards at his present pace. That
would break tight end Dan Rnss'
club record of 71- receptions and
Collinsworth's record of 1,009 yards
receiving.

6 FT. DANEX POWDER PAINTED
SPUN ALUMINUM DISH

**

$1,395°

9\TELLITE

S'vSfEM5

Meigs varsity in cage preview
Basketball tune-ups before the
regular season starts next week~
scheduled tonight and Saturday
night for the Meigs cagers.
Tonight, the prornlsing Meigs

LOWER
PRIC·ES
ARE
COMING

• JUDIOr
•
Meigs
HI"gh schedu }es
EJsl&lt;l&gt; Grade Boys
Nov.~. WeUston, Home
Nov. lJ. Eastern, Horne
Dec. 5, Albany, Away
Dec. 12, Belpre, Aw'y
Dec. 14, Federal HoCking, Home
Dec. 19, Southern, Homf'

first offered 10 us. Now It's golng to
be hard to get the rank'and·f!le
Ud members to stop leaning over
l:ckwards to show they don't
support Fritz."
"I notice wliere many guild
memberS have already notl!led
their leaders that they don't support
Mondale. isn't this a good sign?" I
asked.
"Yeh, but those reporters will go
even further out of their way to
sllow they mean 11. No matter
which way they go now, It's a no-win
situation for us."

Jan. 5, Nelsonvlll~York, Away
Jan. 9, Belpre, Homf!
Jan. 11, Eash~rn, Away
Jan. 18, Federal Hocking, Away
Jan. Z3. Albany, Home
Jan. 26, Wellston, Away
Jan. 00. SOUthern Away

r;=:::============::::::;-1
I Would Like to Thank the Voters
of Salem Township for Supporting Me as Township Clerk.

BONN Ir G-.--SCOTT
•

Feb. 2. NetsonvUle-York, Home
Sevetllh Grade Boys
Nov. 28, Wellston, Home
Nov. 30, Eastern, Home
Dec. 5, Alba'ny, Away

•

Paid for by Bonnie G. Scott

Dec. 12, Belpre. Away
Dec. 14, FecJloral HOC'klng, Home
Doc. 19, Southom, Home
Jan. 5, Nelsonville--York, Away
Jan. 10. Belpre, Home ·
Jan. 11, Eastern, Away
Jan. 18, Federal Hocking, Away
Jan. 23, Albany, Home •
Jan. 26, Wellston, Away
Jan. :1), SOUthern, Away
Feb. 2. NelsoJlvliJe.York, Home
J..-JUp.Girlo
Nov. 28., Watedoo, Away

~uMlLLING DIVISION

INSTANT SUCKLE

Dec. 5, Albany, Home '
~
Dec. 12, Nelsonville- York. Home
14, Federal Hocking. Away

Dec. 19, $oUthern. Home
Jan. 5, Wa.tnloo. Home
jan. 9, SbadP. Away

Jao. 11, Ea8te(n. Away .
Jan. 18. Federal Hocking,· Home
Jan. 23. Albany, Away
Jaa. ~. Shade, Home
JaD. 311, Southern, Away
Feb. 2, Nelsonville-York, Away

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER
Richard H. llllman II, O.D.
113 Caurt Court 5.,..1
..........,. Ohle 45769

PH. 992-2920 .
VISION EXAMINATIONS
HAID&amp; SOPT
CONTACf IINSIS

lnsUYIIICI •• llldlcll
ClnlsAc~

TO MEIGS COUNTY
SOON!!!

- C'-ation

Jan. :1), Eastern. Home
!)@c.

I

.

MEDICATED
MILl( REPlACER
f IH PFRt FCT

•

!i I I J TIfHJ

I IJ! t:A! \/f S!

SUGAR .RUN MILLS..
PH. 992-2115

POIOOY. OH .

•

�'CIJ!•

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

4 The Daily Sentinel ·

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httle U9, Chicago llD
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New Jersey 113

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Kansas Ctl:y 121. San Alltonlo 128
San D1e1o IU, MUwauJwe l22
Los Angeles 127. CIIM&gt;Iand 11&lt;1
Denver W, GoiQm State llJ
Frldq'• 0amt'll
New Yorlr. at Baltm, 7::11 p.m
Ut&amp;/1 at Detroit. 7: :fi p.m.

HouSDI at Denver , 9:40p.m
Mll'f811Ja!Eo at PhOenlx. 9: J5 p.m.

Sa&amp;urdlaT• Gante~~

Detroit ai NE&gt;Y.r York, "/::fl p.m.
Bo6ton at PhiiMelphia, 7: :!i p.m.
Utah at Washington, 7: ~ p.m.
seettk&gt; at Auan.ta. 7: 40p.m. ·
New Jersey at San Antmlo, &amp;:XI p.m.
Indi.Bna ·at C'hlcagQ, 8:35 I'-m.
Phoenix at DaUaJ; S: :ri p.m
~ Stale at Howton. 8:40 p.m.
MUwauket at Dmver, 8: 40 p. rn.
u. Ange&amp; at Portlanc:l., 10: l5 p.m.

.......

LaBrat U.{l vs. Elyria

.........

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Tl'llll8llctions
- - - BASilEI'IWJ.,

~~Aeodn!b

WASHINGTON BULLETS- Waived
Mike WLIKD, guard RHWnt'd Bryan
Warrtck, auan1
FOO'I'IWL

._,..

CINCINNATI BENGALS- ACI!\' IIed

G\1)' Frazier, 11nebackH,
SAN DIEGO t'HARGERS-Ami:J.Irll"ed
the rt11rement rJ 1...cull! ~lcher. rl()8l!!
lacklo.
TAMPA

BAY

BUCCANEERS-fte.-.-ned 1\&gt;rt:lell Mid·
dleton, Nmlng bact.
Ullled . . _
l.t!ap!

,aocw

ARIZONA WRANCI..ERS-Sig Anthony Edgar, NMini back. to a me-year
ronin0"1.

JACKSONVILLE BULLS-Slrned
Mike
Kniczek. ~lack .
IIOCIIEY

._....._._

-Three Royals receive
Playoff pairings
OMo B.S. Fooa:d

NEW HAVEN NIGH'nlAWMS--Signed
A1atl Han,a:deb!n. detMtleman.

r. "

a

the Callfomla Bowl and at least
ro&lt;:hamplooshlp In ·the .MidAmerican Cooference.
'The Husldes have beaten the
Bobc;~ts six sUccessive· times, but
Northern IUJnots Coach Bill Mallory
warned, "That means nothing.
Every year Is a new year. You don't
win on your past We have a lot of
respect lor Ohio. 'They've lost some

close ones."
U Northern Illinois wins, It will
flnlsh the leagUe race with an Bel
record and carry a 9-2 overall mark
Into the Callforrua Bowl Dec. 17
against Nevada-Las Vegas or
Fullerton State from the Pacific
Coast Athletic Association.
If the HUS)des are upset by Ohio

ToleOO.

u the Huskies lceeand Ollppewas
Saturday, Celtral Mlchlgan (6-2.
7-3) plays at co-leading Tolello (7-1, win. J!Bl cbamploo BQwUDg Green
9-1), Kent State (1-7.1-9) atBowllna · can make It tour champlals by
Green (6-2, 7..'!) and Eastern
Kent State. All Wllllld be
Mlci!Jgan ((1.8, 1-9) at Western
Mlchlgan (3-5, 5-5) .
Mlaml (3-5, 3-7) closes out Its
campalgn ln,an ll a.m. EST home
game with non.conference rival
Clnd,nnatl. Ball State (4-4, &amp;.5)
finished Its season last Wed~.
U ·Northern Dllnols loses and
Toledo wins, lbe Rockets will go to
lbe Calllomla Bowl for lbe second
time In three )'I!8I'S as lbe undl5puted confererice champloo.
If Northern Dllnols loses and
Central
wins, the Chippewas would share lbe Mki-Amerlean

wanted. He didn't sentence like a
judge. He abided by the media.
There's no justification for what he
dld."
Before imJXlSing Wilson's serttence, Sullivant told the 1982 AL ,
hatting champion that he was "a
national hero" who occupied "a
special place in our society." The
judge also told Aikens and Martin
that as professional athletes they
carried the responsibility of setting
a good example lor young p€Qple.

Mlc.

TRUCKS

lARDIE-IJ1111!!8Lardle, sealed left, dlredoro!the

~~=~===~

1s nonsense,"

~1s~':~~~ce~:~

ChDd Advocate Institute In Cle\'eland, was In Pomeroy
w~ rilgbt and 'lbur!oday to meet with ciUzens

District Circulation Manager
Wanted. for Area Newspaper
R

RACINE - The Veterans of
Foreign War, Post 5634, will be
held at 7 p.m. Saturday at the

{USPS U5-960)
A Divis ion of MuJUmedla, lac.

Racine Amelcan Legion hall.
New members are being sought
by the group. .

Publlshed every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street. by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company . MUI·
tlmedla, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,992-

BINGO THURSDAY AND SUNDAY EVENINGS
'
DOORS 0 EN AT 4:30 P.M.

POMEROY - Ernest Thode,
Gennan interpreter, will be
speaker at a meeting of the
Meigs County Genealogical Society to be held at 2 p.m. Sunday
at Meigs Museum in Pomeroy;
public invited and anyone having papers in German that they
want to have interpreted Is

Mem ber :

POSTMASTER: Send address tq., The
Dally Sen tinel, 111 Court St., Pom~&gt;roy,
Ohio 45769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATI'll
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week .......... ... ..................... $1 .00
One Mon th ................................ ~.40

One Year .. ................. .............. $52.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES

SAVE

Plus

A free cat calendar
with the purcna&amp;e of

$200

EE

10 Its. or Punn.a• Cat
brand cat food'

Chowa

Off

A. fr ee dog calendar
"o'l'l!h !he puu;hase o1

50 lbs ol Pur~na•
brand H1·Pro oog
meal 1n SJl9Cia11\l
marked packagesl

The second grade class won the

PrO membership drive with 153
percent participation. They will be
given a pizza party thls week. Plans
were announced for the Christmas
pro!SJ:am to be presented on Dec. Sat
the Civic Center.
Donna French announced that
Tomasina, a Walt Disney movie,
will be shown at the school Friday
with the cost to be 25 cents per
student. Margaret Johnson, president, noted that Jane Eblin and
Jimmy Hysell won the door prizes at
the fall festivaL The Rev . Paul
Taylor of the Rutland Free Will
Baptist Church had devotions. Mrs.
Marjorie Fetty's fourth -grade
presented " The Case of the Gon
Gobbler." NextmeetlngwlllbeDec.
12 with the kindergarten and first
grade to have the program.

I•O&lt;lCI
111

ROCK SPRINGS - Annual
Meigs County Pomona Grange
Conference, 7: :JI p.m. Monday
at Rock Springs Grange Hall;
_pi!'Jls for year to be made. '

50 lb. Purin a brand
H_i-Prq dog meal
spec1ally marked bags

Subsc r ibers not desiring to pay thecarrler may remit In advance direct to
The Daily Sentlnei on 3, 6 or 12..month
basis. Credit will be given carrier each
m onth.

Rally set Tuesday at Middleport church
\

''

•'•

No ~ubsrrtptlons by mall permitted In
town s where home carrier service Is

available.·

_MODERN
(UPPLYPomeroy . OH
399 W. Ma!n St.
~~2·ll6l

The Stor~ With "ALL KINDS OF STUFF" For- Pets, Stables, La'rge
Small Ammals, Lawns &amp; Gardens.

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
County Holiness Assoclatlon.wlll
be having a rally at tbe
Middleport Church of the Nazarene Tuesday at 7: ll p.m. The

•'

0 ES installs officers

&amp;

Plans lor the Installation of the
lll84 officers were made at the
Tuesday night meeting &lt;if the
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, held at the Pomeroy
MasonJc Temple.
Debra Chevalier noted that her
installatioo will be held on Nov. 28
with members to take either a
lettuce or a dessert dish. Practice
was set tor Nov. 22 at 4 p.m. at the.

•'

temple.

SAVE.

.
....,_
·-.,...,........
---,...,...

.

HURRY! .
'

wldo

i

-lor

gave her reth1ng remarks thanking
the officers and committees, and
especially her mother and her

. R.et~~stratlon lor the winter quarter. at Rio ·Grande Co)lege and
Community College will be held o~ ..
Nov. 28, a school spokesman said.
Registration sessions will run 1-3 ·

."'
"

•jlltllr

Pam Massie, worthy matron,

worthy patron, James Soulsby .
Ziba Midkiff was the pro tern
'
th
tin A
worthy patron .or e mee g.
report was given on Grand Chapter
held in Columbus. Past matrons and
patrons recognized w~ Ella
Smlth,RobyVaughan,ThellnaDIII,
Marge Crow, Mabel Goegleln, Joan
Kautz and Sylvla Midkiff, and Dale
Smith and Denztl Goegleln. It was
announced thatthenewlyappolnted
deputy grand matron ofDistrlct251s
Genevieve
Kincaid,
RelnersviUe.
A 25 year
pin was
presented to

~~~o~~~~~fo~~·y:
pin.

Holiday activities were planned
· during the Tuesday meeting of

Rev. Don Bock

..1 Rev-ival
Rut/.-41a·A
'fi,U
"
Revival services from Tuesday to
Sunday, Nov. '!J at the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene will feature
Rev. Don Bock as evangelist from
Washington Court House.
Rev. and Mrs. David Myers.
Logan, will be song evangelists.
Rev. Bock Is a commissioned
evangelist in thP Church of the
Nazarene. He spent 17 years with
the Church of Christ In Olrlstian
Union.
Rev. Myers Is an evangelist in the
Church of Nazarene as well. Hewlll
lead the slnglnj: and his wifewllljoin
in on special songs.
Services will be at 7 p.m. and also
lO: ll a .m . on Sunday.

.l

ViJ:iting Columbus

'

Mrs. VIrginia Hartley, Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs. W. Carson,
Pomeroy, were recent visitors In
Columbus. Mrs. Hartley visited her
brother, John E. Overturf who Is Ill.

Church.
Frendiy Circle held at Trinity
Several members volunteered to
deliver remembrances to the elderly and Ill members of the church .
The remembrances will be prepared by Mrs. Marie Houck,
presldimt. Mary VIrginia Reibel will
send cards to several out of town
members. It was requested that the
addresess of church servicemen be
turned In to Peggy Harris who is In
charge of that project
Members' were reminded to
contlnue to take items forthechurch

'

;

.

I
''

!' .

,'
I

'

p.m: and 6-9 p.m.in the E. E·. Davl&lt;l
Technical Careers Center. For
addltlonal •lnformatlon, contact Rio
Grande College at .(614) 245'5353. · ·

I want to thank everyone that voted and ev~
eryone that supported me for a seat on the
Meigs Local Board of Education. My Phone
Number Is 742-3051.

ROBERT F. SNOWDEN
Pd. Pol. Ad. by Cand ..

..

. \ ll

BARGAjN MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN

AU SEATS SZ.OO
AD MISSION EVERY rtJESDAY $2.00

NOVEMBER 18 thru 24

include a holiday dinner at Mrs.
Perry's Bounty Table. Attending
were Mrs. Kittle a nd Mrs. Watson,
Debbie Powell, Artie Grindley,
·Thelma Miller, Mary Jan ice Lavender, Hazel Hayes, Louise Frank,
Marilyn D '€mer, Jenny Lou Davis,
Mrs. Johnson and Nada Kittle.

with Peggy Harris and Nmma
Louise Jewell serving a dessert

r~c~ou~rse~f~ro~m~a~ta~b~le~d~ec~o;r~at;ed~i~nth~el~~~~~~~~~~~
Thanksgivingmotif.

FRUTH PHARMACY
OF OHib, INC.
786 N. 2ND AVE.

p.m .

ho~day

dinner at the church,

follow.
·
As fundralsingprojects, the circle
Is selling Jelly Maid in several
flavors and It was noted that a
basket order has been sent Reports
were given on the sick and several
thankyouswereacknowledged. The
annual thank offering In-gathering
wiU be observed by the church at the
morning worship service, Nov.
Mary E. Chapman's program
opened with a prayer of Thanksglving and Included poems, readings
imd special thoughts on Amerlca;s
first Thanksgiving. A friendship
circle and prayer closed the meeting

w.

r-;;~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~;~~~;;~~

Ohio's Largest
Distributor
brings you

Ohio's First Satellite ··Shew

''Gren ukes/Ohlo Valley
s.telllte Shcrt':"

NOVEMBER SPECIALS

University Hilton. Columbus. Ohio
November 19 &amp; 20

e

H1rit1ge

'·

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scented in Peppennint and
Bayberry. [696-815) Peppe&lt;·
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...
·.,

~

·~

*

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Dec. W, with programandpartyto

Lamp Oil

THANK YOU ·A,.LOT

531 JACKSON PIKE·RT.35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524

MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
HOURS •• SUNDAY
11:00 TO 8:00
~~~~ch~i~~~~
~~;;;;;P;H;;.;9;9;2;·;6;4;9;1;;0;R;;9;9;2;·;3;1;0;6;;;;;;~
a

Rio Grande wiq.ter regisfration

fillt•lo- ..

poln•l•·-

Rev. Herb Grate of the Chester
Church of the Nazarene will be
speaking and there will be
special music.

project of cleaning around Washington's monument at Long Bottom.
Safety tips were given by Mrs .
Randy Smith. A dessert course was
SPrved by the hostesses. Mrs .
Reynolds , Mrs. Clyde ingels, Mrs.
lrvingKarr Jr ., Mrs. PauJEich,and
Mrs. Dale Dutton.

Friendly circle making plans

WEDNESDAY

CAlO OOD

Mrs. Reynolds stressed sound
education with emphasis on patriotIsm and moral values. She said that
Kate Duncan Smith School in Grant,
Ala., Is just one of the schools which
the DAR supports and noted the
needs of that schooL Plans were
made for having a white elephant
sale or other money making
projects so thatacontributioncan be
sent there.
Other schools supported by the
DAR are. Tamassee in South
Carolina, Berry College in Hindman; Hillside in Tennessee; Crossnor a nd the two Indian Schools,
Bacone College and St. Mary's
Episcopal.

Thanksgiving and Christmas projects for shutins were planned at a
recent meeting of the Syracuse
Nazarene Church's Women' sMinlstries held at the church.
Mrs. Nada Kittle had devotions
with Elladene Watson giving the
prayer ..The December meeting will

MONDAY

ROCK SPRINGS- Twin City
Shrlnettes will meet Wednesday, 7: :JI p.m., at the home ,of
Mrs. Thomas Bowen, Rock
Springs Road. Meeting date was
chnaged due to Thanksgiving.

Complimentary towards the
Meigs County Alliance for Children
and Its dedication to the cause of '
children, Lardie stated that public
officials have a responsibility to
provide the resources to carry out
tl)e program. Laws have been
passed giving public officials t he
responsibility to delegate authority
to agencies and other groups lo
carry out a program of advocacy for
children, Lar!lie commented.
He called upon Meigs County to
respond to the needs of children and
to attain an accountability to
children who cannot fend for
themselves.

Syraruse Nazarene women meet

asked to take them to the
m eeting.

Happenings

. A 1984 Pet Calendar

w1th each purchase of 10 lb. Purina* Cat Chow,., and / or

Dally ........ ........... ..... ... , ...... 20 Cents'

MAIL SU RSCR1PTTONS
Inside Ohio
13 Weeks ................................. $14.()4
26 Weeks .................. ............... $27.30
52 Weeks ....... ... ... ............. ....... $51.'18
Outsid e Ohio
13 Weeks ................................. $15.21
26Weeks ..·.... ... .... ..... ............... $29.64
52 Weeks ........... ... .... ............... $56.21

malL

Mrs. Rober! Ashley, regent,
presided at the meetlng and was
assisted in the ritualistic opening by
Mrs. Clarence Struble, chaplain.
The President General's message
was given by Mrs. Reynolds, vice
regent, who noted t he observance of
November's two holidays, Veterans
Day and Thanksgiving.
Mrs. Gene Yost. had the national
defense report, reading articles by
James Kilpatrick. A thank you note
was read from the area libraries for
books which the local chapter
donated . The chapter purchased the
book ,"Ohio Society History of
DAR", up to date infonnatlon on all
Ohio chapters.
A get-well card was sent to Mrs .
Roger Luckeydoo. Mrs. Roscoe
Wise and Mrs. Reynolds, chairmen
of conservation, are conducting a
newspaper drive for a special
project. Miss Lucille Smith and the
auditing conunittee reported that
the treasurer's books have been
audited and approved. Mrs. Ashley
and her famUy are working on the

Responsibility of chapters of the
Daughters of the American Revolution to the support of DAR schools
was stressed by Mrs. Ron Reynolds
in her program, "FuHIIJing Our
Duty to DAR Schools" at the Friday
Junchron meetlng of the Return
Joathan"Melgs Chapter held at the
Meigs Inn.

SUNDAY

215 Second class postage paid at Pomero ,
o.
e Associated Press, In1
land Dally Press A s~ocla t on and the
American NeYo~spaper Publishers Association, National Advertising Representa ti ve, Branham Newspaper Sales,
733 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10017.

shop to be held Dec. 5-9 at the schooL
The shop will be operated under
adult supervision and It will offer
chUdren an opportunity to choose
Christmas gifts for their families.
Connie Bales and Judy McDaniel
will serve as co-chairmen.
It was voted to give each teacher
$25 for room use Thanksgiving
vacation was announced for Nov. 24
to '1:1, by the principal who also noted
that grade cards will come out on
Nov. 28, and the parents of second,
fourth and sixth grade students who
have completed the Iowa Basic
SkUls Achievement Tests will receive test score results through the

Calendar

.

'

SATURDAY

-h•illaol

. AT THE END OF THE 20TH GAME
TOP AND BOTTOM LINES PAY sso.OO EA.
P.F. PAYS S100°°
C/A S20000
2 LUCKY NUMBERS START AT s2oooo

The treasury of the Rutland
Elementary School was boosted by
$1 ,ffi7.~ as a result of the recent!all
festival sponsored by the Rutland
Elementary PrO.
Certl1lcates were presented to
Diane Hendricks and Brenda
Jeffers, co-chairmen of the successful festival and Principal John Lisle
commended those who worked on
the project.
·
Carolyn Nicholson reported on the
community halloween party and
thanked those who assisted. Mrs.
Nlcholsoo reported also that the
.school has nearly 2500 Campbell
soup labels which can be redeemed
for school equipment.
Plans were made for Santa's gift

SEND RESUME TO:
PAUL A. BARKER
CIRCULATION MANAGER
% THE DAILY SENTINEL
P.O. BOX 729
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

~=====================~

bad&lt;, Ito

· r, James Diehl,. a member of the Alliance steering
· committee; Dr. James Witherell, Alliance treasurer,
and Max McGee, Alliance chalnnan,

Rutland PTO bolsters treasucy by fest

ESPONSIBILITIES WILL INCLUDE SALES,
CARRIER RECRUITMENT, COLLECTIONS AND
IMPROVEMENT OF SERVICE TO SUBSCRIBERS.
EXPERIENCE IN SALES OR WITH YOUTH ORGANIZATIONS HELPFUL BUT NOT NECESSARY.
Only Persons of Good Character Need Apply.

....;. ~~~~~~~~

PRICE AT THE DOOR INCLUDES THE COVER-ALL

the membersofthe MeigsCounty ADianceforChUdren

.

IIAYTACI

20 GAME SERIES $50.00 EA~

011 aciiOd advocacy proiiJ'IIItl. With Lardle are 8omeof

which sponsored Lardle's vl&lt;llt here. Seated right, Is
SWerJanet~ald. AIHancesecretary;

children in the county and have¢harged that state funds which
would have provided such a
program have, in the past, been
returned to the state because they
were not used.
Lardle' s visit here was to get more
people involved in the work of
advocating for chUdren and he
desCribed. the local Alliance group's
role asoneof attemptingtoadvocate
for chUdren whom, he described . as
among the most vulnerable people
in society. He streSsed the importance of having the conununity
Interested in improving the quality
of life for children.

Responsibility of chapters DAR topic

PH. 992·7161

POMEROY EAGLES CLUB
EARLY-BIRD ·6 :30 P.·M.

"! have found a legitimate
concern for kids here on the part of
the advocacy group, the availability
of funds and the under use of these
funds," James Lardle, director of
the Child Advocacy Institute, Cl.eveJand, said during hts vlslt to
Pom eroy.
Wednesday night, Lardle was
speaker at a public meeting at
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
attended by some 40 residents. On
Thursday, he met with the Meigs
County Alllance for Children which
sponsored his visit here.
'Members of the Alliance have
been seeking a ·more active program for peglected and abused

"WHERE THE RU8BER MEETS THE ROAD"

.B EREA, Ohio (API - The and Shazam up the middle."
Grogan undeJWent three knee
Cleveland Browns have' nearly
reached lbe critical stage of the
National Football League season In
their pilsh for a playoff slot, says the NFL players' strike last year • .
Coach Sam Rutigliano.
"The thing they've finally &amp;Otten
On Sunday, the Browns will face GrogantobeUevelsthathecloesn't
the New England Patriots In have to rDake the big plays by
Foxboro, Mass. Both teams are 1\.5. himself anymore. All that talk about
"'Ibis game Is of great conse- mobue quarterbacks
quence to us and the Patriots. It Is
pivotal, becauseltwlllglvebotho!us . R~~tayotttatellkelywlll
some direction for the rest of the be detertnlned in the next tbr1!e
year.
Sundays, beginning with the New
''ltowever, a loss won't mean the Englandgame.AvletOrynotonly
.!nd, because a 11).6 record, or even
9-7, might be enough to make It to the
playoffs," Rutigliano said. "It won't
be fatal if we lose, but It can be of ra~ Browns trail the 9-2 PittsImmense Importance to us. In the
next three and four weeks, teams
will either stay In the race or drop overtake Pittsburgh tor the Amenout."
can Conference Central Division
Rutlgllano noted thecontributions title. The remaining hope Is for a
of Patriots' quarterback Steve wild-card spot, and the competltioo
Grogan, roN one of the best passers is stiff.
In the NFL. He has completed 159
IntheAmerlcanCon!erenceEast,
passes, oc56 percent of his attempts,
for 2,337 yards and 15 touchdowns .Buffalo
lead withand
74Miami
marks.are
Baltimore
tied forand
the J1
with Just nine Interceptions.
New England both are 6-5.
"He's not scrambling, running
around Uke he used to do," ~--'----------1
RuttgUano said. "At one point of his
career, Grogan was Captain Marvel
Jhe Daily Sentinel .
to the left. Supennan to the right,

.Poge-5

Group has genuine concern'

GENERAL TIRE SALES
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Friday, November 18, 1983

I

CHECK
OUR
PRICES

Browns' season
at c~itical stage

Sullivant in a courtroom overflow- fi~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J
ing with reporters and SPectators.
The three pleaded guilty last
month before Sullivant to a misdemeanor charge of attempting to
possess cocaine.
Sullivant recommended that the
players be sent to the federal prison
in Fort Worth, Texas, to spend three
months participating in its drug
19d80v CH EVY CITATION ............................. 12995
rehabllltatlon program. But the
4 r., ·6, 4 spd. Good condition.
·
judge said"the sentences would be
setved a t another prison or federal
1978 COUNTRY SOU IRE STA. WAG ............ 13395
corrections facility with a drug
9 pasenger, PB, PS, Atr, sliowroom clean. Newsnow tires.
treatment program titheoneatForl
................................ 11695
Worth is JiUed.
s1d97v7
r.· -60PL
, 8DSP
, S,CUTLASS
Air.
Baseball Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn's office said It was the first
J;~~ !rONTIAC GRAND PRIX ..................... 11395
time an active player was given a
prison sentence for drug violations.
19t75 Md.AROUIS ........................................ 11095
Pitcher Vida Blue. 34. who has
Mtn con rtron,l"B, PS. Air.
pleaded guilty to possession of three
grams of cocaine and faces the same
1976 COdMET .............................................. 1995
6 cy 1., sta n ard.
penalties, has been granted a
request for the delay of his
19d77R PlbNTOA............ .................................. 11195
sentertcinguntil Dec. 5.
2 r. una out utom
atrc.
· Blue, a Cy Young Award winner
1967 FORD..................
1595
and American League Most Valua% ton, 4 spd Runsgood. W
ithlo pj;;~. " ........ " ...... " .... ..
ble P layer, was released by the
Royals Aug. 5 after falling to win a
J977 FORD LTD II ................................... '1695
game during the 1983 season.
8, PS, Atr.
Wilson, 28, the first player ·to be
1977 OLDS CUTLASS ................................ 11695
sentenced, did not speak In his own
s dr., V-6 , PB. PS, Arr.
·
behalf in court. But he and his
lawyer, David W. Russell. criticiZed
the.judge aftgrward.
,
197h6 FdORD F-100 FLATBED ...................... 11295
"They m ade an ... example out of
4 wee 1 nve, 4 spd Good condition.
me," Wllson said after leaving the
courtroom with his weeping wife.
1971 FdORD PICKUP ................................... 1595
R
Russell said "the judge did not
uns goo ,...- - - sentence him because he needed a
reason to sentence him but because
the courtroom was full of media.
·
"You guy~ win," he [old a cluster
of reporters. "He gave you what you

7-21n the league.
However, the Falcons would not
be the conference's boWl team. Jn a
lour·way tle, the Callfornl;l representative would be Central Michigan. ~ Chippewas and Huskies
would be 2-1 against the other
champiCIIS and Central Michigan
won their head-to-head meetlng.

BEFORE YOU BUY TIRES ...

:~~~~~~~=.:~~=

3-month prison terms
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) - ('..
federal judge, noting a professional
-athlete's "special place in society, "
sentenced All-Star center fielder
Willie Wilson and two other 1983
Kansas City Royals .to three months
in prison and fined them up to $5,1XXJ
Thursday for trying to buy cocaine.
First baseman Willie Aikens and
outfielder Jerry Martin- ne ither of
whom will be with the Royals nex1
season - and Wilson were sent.
encedby U.S. Magistrate J. Milton

title wtth lbe Husldel and Rockefa
8111 ao to Fremo. Central Michigan
would earn · the trip because It
defeated Northel:D IlllnDls and

,

McComb U.O w . Middletown Ft'r~Wtck

__

(3-5, 4-6), two other U!lllll can
quallty for the CallfOI'IIIII trip ancl
Northern IlllnDls takes on an old four schools can eam a piece oftbe
patsle, vlsltlngOI)Io University, Ina . cllamplooshlp.
bid Saturday to wrap up a berth In
In other Mid-American games

ByGEOBGE8l'RODE
AP Spona Writer

--·~·-

NMDIIIIIMket... "'-dt"m
ly The ,&amp;roc:ftCed p,_
EAS11!HN OONPEIIENCE

By The Bend

Bobcats face lough assignment.Saturday

Scoreboard ...

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, NOvember 18, 1983

1-800-592-1957 in Ohio
· 1-BD0-592-1956 National
.
j

Proooces quiCk s1arts from
diesel or gasoline engines.

!013·1 ..)

.

STAR SUPPlY

RACINE

3RD ST.

949-2525

WIN A FREE SYSTEM!
REGISTER AT THE DOOR'
$3.50 Admission to Show
..

,.

~
If\
•

'•

�- -

Friday, November 18, 1983
Paga

~The

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

Whaley birthdays

Racine community happenings _ _ __

Mr. and Mrs. Donald (Eddle)
Whaley, Route1, Shade , entertained
with a holiday party for their
daughters, Melissa Coleen, four,
and Heather Nicole, who also
observed her first birthday. Games
were played a nd refreshments
served to Mr. and Mrs. Anthony
Corsi, Mack and Randy, Elaine
Corsi, Margaret Corsi, Mrs. Terry
Neece and Christy, Mrs. ·Nellie
Grover and Karen, Mr. and Mrs ..
Randy Hysell and Rachel, Mrs.
Carla Harder and Tiffany, Pam and
Brent Whaley. Patricia Corsi of
Cincinnati called io wish Heather a
happy birthday. Paternal grandparents a,re Herbert Whaley, Middleport, and the Late Mrs. Evelyn
Whaley. ,

business session.

Nondus Hen·

drtcks. vice pr!'sldent of Missions.
reported on , White Cross with a
dedication service. "When Did We

' .
Melissa Whaley

Ernie Newlun had gasoline stolen
By MELODY ROBERTS
from
Logging equipment setting at
The Long Bottom Senior Citizens
the
old
Cozart building Last Friday
meet the second and -!0urth Tue•""
evening.
days of every ·month. at the Long
Ernestine Hayman has been
Bottom Methodist Church In the
feeling
bad until now. She Is doing .
bsaement. There Is a free blood
somewhat
better; she has a sciatic
pressure and weight cLinic held the
nerve
in
her
Leg. Her children, Lila,
fourth Tuesday from 10 a.m. until
and Sharon have been
Tom,
Connie
around noon. AIL are invited to
checking
on
her.
attend and join In the fun.
Exercises classes are held ,at the
Election lor Long Bottom people
Communit
y Building Monday,
this year will be held In the new
Tuesday,
Thursday,
7 to 8fl.m.
building from 6: 30a.m. to 7:30p.m.
Calling
on
Mr.
and
Mrs. Dorsel
Remember. do your civic duty.
Larkins
have
been
Mr.
a nd Mrs.
Ron and Beth Murphy are now
Steve
Salisbury
and
Adam,
Aaron,
residing in Tuppers Plains.
Anna, Mr: and Mrs. Mike Larkins
'Dorothy Wells is doing fine now
and Wesley , all of Gai!Jpolis, Mr.
after a bad fall in Racine Injuring
her 1r-i_bs.

See You Sick?" Scripture was from
Matthew 25:31 -40. Several
members were participants:
Leader I - Christ is the a nswer to
the world 's chaos. Leader 2- It is
only Christ who can bind up the
hurts of the World . Leader 3 -

Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl
spent a few days with Mrs. Myrta
Wilson, Columbus, and attended
the State Fair while there.
Mr. and Mrs. Dye Ball, Phoenix,
Ariz., and Mr. a nd Mrs. Harold
Ball, Columbus, spent a few days
with their sister, Frances Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Sleple,
WILmington, spent Tuesday visiting
with them.
Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl met ·
· their cousins In Lancaster at Bob
Evans lor dinner on Monday.
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
Robert Siverling of Kent, Wash.,
Mr. a nd Mrs. WUUam Krammer of
Florida, Mrs. Cecil Conley, Lancaster, Mrs. George Young, Columbus,
and Dale Batley, Marengo.

received special training in human

relations.
In addition, airmen who complete

Thl:' following poem entiUrd " My Year"
was written by Anna Hart, 94, who resides In
the Darwtn area of Meigs County. A native of

Metgs County, sh e has ditflcu\ry seeing and
dictated her lines of poetry to a trlend, Mrs.
Ruth Francis oC Pomeroy.

My \ 'ear
8~ Anna Hart, age 94, l!Mil
Sprtng is Just around tht&gt; cOrn er.
Is an old famillar ptlrase
But It lS just as apt tcxiay as It was
In bygone days.
When the golden yPllow dande lion

Peeps through the velvet grass
1t ·c reates a lovely picture
That no other can surpass.
The peach trees are a bloomin'
MaJiy varloos ldnds
The honey bees are humming
Wlth honey on their minds.
lbe cherry trees are In blossom
A sight to pl ease the eye
With many pleasant visions
Of dellciou!5 cherry pie.

The wtld Cowers and the tulips
Are !5tlrring In their bed,_01;
But soon they'll llft the covt&gt;rlet
And show their sturdy heads.
The many birds are on the wing
And fill the air with song
But we were not intended
To be cont£'nt ror long.
For soon there' ll be a longing
For good old summer time
For big delldous ripe tomatoes
And melons on the vlne.
And then there is nCJ&gt;talgl a
For the old swimming hol(-'
And fishing In the nearby creek
With hook and line and pole.

There's nothing Uke the great big thrtll
Of a fish 's sturdy bite
And see your lin(&gt; a nd bobber
Pass swtftly out of sight.

But wh(&gt;n you pull the dam thing out
You gtve yourself a pinch
To let you know the great big fish
Measures but a n Inch.

Oh. well, I'm not a loser
SubJect to defeat
I hope that I may sometime catch
A fish that's big enough to eat.

.

'

basic training earn credits toward·
an associate degree in applied
science through the Community
College of the Air Force.
specialized

instruction

in

the

communications-electronics systems field.
His wlfe, Sue, is the daughter of
Raymond C. L!ev!ng of West
Columbia. W. Va.
The airman is a 1977 graduate of
Harrisville High School, W. Va .

The summer now 1s passing by
And ha.rvf'SI tlme is near
With many vegetables and fruits

I

,To last the whole next year.
The bunches of the sweet blu e grapes
Hang heavy on the vine

Walting only to be pkked and made

Into a most dellctous wtne.
It's almost time to say goodbye
To good old summer time
Th e frost lS on the pumpkln
And the atr Is just sublime.
autwnn leaves are painted
With lhe fairy's dainty brush
The colors of the rainbow
- 1\od an artist's gentle touch.
~

Yes. the autumn days are lovely .
There Is bea,uty eveJ11Where
But life 1s not all sunshine
There

are sorrows we

must bear.

The trees are all so lovely
A tourist's great delight
But remember they can shed their leaves
AI moot over night.
The nights have now grCM'n colder.
The leaves are falling fast
We must buck1e up our boot straps
And face the wintry blast.
The cold west wind 1s biOW"tng
Snowflakes are falling fast
Old fol ks siT by the fireplace
And ponder on the past.
The chlldren are out coasting
And fUll of chUdlsh glee
They pull their sleds right up the hill
Down to go again .. by gee.''

i remember many years ago
When It gave me such a thrtl!
To climb upon m y Jtttle sled
And go 0)1ng down the hill.
Daddy made my sturdy sled

Big enough for two
Worldng In his spare time
Just for me and you .
Daddy WEU! a wise guy

He knew that in a year or two
Th~e would be a little grandchild
And he could use U too.

The sun has now grown warmer
The snow Is melting fast
Spring Is Just around the corn~r
Another year Ls (:llSt.

B.J.'s
SERVICE CENTER
PH. 992·6.152
We will be receiving a fresh shipment of assorted
chocolate, old fashioned hard mix, filled hard mix;
and jellies candies.
sfRACUSE, OH.

For more information on how to order, call992 -6152
9:00 a.m. to · 5:00 p.m . .Monday · thru Friday. .
.
.
.

'

.

•

Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire attended
square .dance camp out at Sailsbury, N.C. over t)1e holiday
weekend.
Mrs. Ester Brandau of Jackson
spent a few days with Mrs. Lola
Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop visited
her sister and family In Kentucky a
recent weeken .
Ruby. Dieh) and Stella Atkins attended the Gard'e n Club Convention
at Westerville Ihat was held Tuesday through Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkfre.vislted
Ray Alkire and Mr. and Mrs. Babe
Whaley Sunday in Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Sleple,
Lima, visited a few days with Fran·

ces Young. Also calling over weekend was Barbara SlepleofiDinols.
Miss Josephine Strother, who Is a
senior at Georgia State University,
spent a week with her aunt and
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Blackwood recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire visited
Mr. and Mrs. Dan· Sydenstrtcker
Tuesday evening at Mason, W. Va.
Rev. Wand a Johnson and Mrs.
Frances Young visited Mrs. Ad·
· rienne French, Athens, recently. ·
Mrs. Ellen Berges of Dayton
visited a week with ber niece, Mrs.
Clotlne Blackwood recently.
Dinner guests of Stella Atkins and
Ruby Diehl Sunday were Mrs.
Gloria Riggs anct'lamlly.

Laura! Cliff .community events_ _ __

COMPLETES BASIC- Pfc.
Anthony S. Kennedy (Tony), son
of Mr. and !\Irs. Jwtlor Kennedy,
Tuppers Plains, has completed
hi• basic training In the U.S.
Marine Corps, at Pa!Tis Island,
S.C. He was meritoriously pr&lt;&gt;moted to Private First Class. He
is a 1981 graduate of Eastern
High School and now stationed
at the Naval Air Statton, Memphis, Millington, Tenn. He is
enrolled In Avionlcs Computer
Ele&lt;Jtronlcs School.

By BERTHA PARKER
Atendance at all services at the
Free Methodist Church Oct. 2 was
135. Choir members present were
12. There were special songs by Mr.
aml Mrs. Bob Barton.
Dr. Richard Strickland was the
guest mi;,lster for the morning and
evening service.
Mr. •nd Mrs. Pearl Gilkey visited
Sunday evening with ·Mrs. Della
Stahl.
John Hysell, Indiana , and David

Napper visited recently with Mrs.
Della Stahl and Mrs. Margaret .
Hysell.
Attendance at all services Sun day, Aug. 28 at tbe Free Methodist
Church was 120. Sunday, Sept 18
there will be a moligage 'burning
service. Everyone is welcome at
J0:30a.m.
Mrs. Emma Fox and Mrs. Roy
Howell attended a family reunion a
recent Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Hines, Amesville.

Mrs. Nellie Cox has beenrelea~
from the University Hospital and Is
staying with her son, Gene Dox,
Groveport: near Columbus. Mrs.
Katy Pullms visited her mother,
Mrs. Nellie Cox In Groveport. Mrs.
Cox Is getting along good.
Gary Pullins Is stationed In
Guantanamo Eay, Cuba and he ·
takes the Sentinel so his friends
would !Ike to wish him the best of
luck.
.
There will be a hymn Sll1g at the
local church Sept. 17 at 7 p.m.

Clergymen assail pornography
concerned with the move of the sex
industry into cable television," Hill
said. · " We're also very concerned
about the video cassette Industry that ismovlngintothehome. Both of
these things Involve degradation of
women on a very large scale.
"The situation is such that we
believe it is only the president of the
United States Ihat can order the
enforcement of the federal laws that
can flU! end to this traffic, and do it ,

By JOE KAY
Associated Press Writer
SHARONVILLE, Ohio (AP)
Religious leaders attending a three·
day conference on pomogra phy
singled out the cable television
industry and video cassettes Thursday as prime targets in battling "the
sex industry."
The Rev. Morton A. Hill, a founder
of Morality in Media, Inc., told a
news conference that sexual cable
programs and cassettes could be
eilmlnated with stronger efforts by
federal law officials.
Hill called on President Reagan to
flllblicly oppose what he considers
pornographic cable television programs and cassettes.
"We (Morality In Media ) are

Georgianna T. Burns

M.D.

States. They are attending a
With Offices At
suburban Cincinnati conference on
Pleasant Valley Hospital
pornography and obscenity, sponsored by a local groufl.
in Point Pleasant
Hill suggested the federal governIs Now Accepting Patients
ment could halt theflowofsexshows
Thursday evening hours for wortina
on cable television and cassettes by
mothers. Specializing in learning and
enforcing already-existing regulaschool problems for pediatrics.
tions on Interstate transportation,
Phone 675-6797
mall, Importation · and
For Appointments
broadcasting.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;.._..J.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

quickly. And if this is done, this
whole sex Industry could die out
within a year. We're hoping as a
result of this conference, that is what
v.ili take place."
Hill and other clergy spoke out
against what they described as the
growth of pornography In the United

The first sbc weeks grading period honor
roll of the MPl f,.rs Junior High School has been
announced. Ma kJng a grade or "B .. or abo\'e
In all their subjects to be named to the roll
werE':
SevE&gt;mh grade - Michelle Adam'i. Chris1\na . Bass, Chris Becker, Charl('n(' Cadle.
Melodl Carl, Lesley Carr. Chad Carson. Ktrri
Chadwell, Tara Clark , Sha nnon C(la f&lt;'S, Marc
Cars!. Stacy Dalfon. Panicia Davis, Leah
Doidge, Elizabeth E\\1ng, T('rri' Fields.
Steven Fou1krod , J oe Hall, Ta mmy Hawley,
Wesley Howard, Rabble Jacks. Penni Jeffers .
Loretta Lauctermllt. Amy Luckeydoo. Cindy
Maynard, Elfsc Meier. J enny Miller, Teresa

Neville, Stephanie Peck. Todd Powell, Mindy
Rlgg¥, Tina ·R omine, Jared Sh~ts , Sonja
Dcbbl£&gt; WPSt.
John
Wheeler,
Mary Wayland,
Wheeler,
Steele,
Monica
Turner,
Law·ic
John Wolfson, Renee Younl':, Melissa Wuocls.
Eighth grade - Ma~gle Baker, Alina
Barrett, Michael Bartrum, David Beegle,
Dreama BE-ntz. Klm Calvert, Sherry Cooper,
ErC'k Daniels, Lisa Frymyer, Kim Hamm,
Sco tt Hanning, Charlotte Hart, Deanna
Henderson, ReU Herman, Audra Houdashelt,
Charles Hudson, Teresa Johnson, Kevin D.
KJng, Brad U ttle, Dena Manley, Paul Melton ,
Lisa Miller, Chuck Pu!llns, Shannon Slavln,
Angle Sloan, Davtd Srfilth, Carlos Stepp,
James Warner.

WE
E YOU
TO TRY OUR NEW
SPECIALTIES
ENJOY THE GREAT
FOOD AND FINE
ATMOSPHERE

----------·

~tOnly

8 Mllea from Pomeroy Bridge

HOURS: Mon .-Sat. Ool!n at 5. Sun 11 ::a m tt~ 1 n m
Sl'fOAL THIS SUNDAY: a.o&lt;ce of laked Sloak or v-1 Cutlet, Mashed Po,.,._
1
__
Onlv
and ,.
..,..
... .,, CGm ' Hot Rot! &amp; a.v... __ .......................................
... 112 3.95
Price

tl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~iiiiiiiiiiii

DoWn To Shoneys

All Coupons Must Be Turned
In By De~ . 1st

JIM PAYNE
r---------------~-------,
NOW BOOKING BANQUETS AND PARTIES
FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON
CALL NOW TO ASSURE A RESERVATION
BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE

I
I
I
I

~ .Y&lt;!W' holiday with W.. And have a great,
. old-fashioned meal with aU the trimrninsa.
• Tender Sliced Tom T11rkey
• Crisp Celery
• Giblet Gravy
• Warm TQ!IS!ed
• ught Cornbread Dressiflg ·
· Greeian Hread
ill Fluffy Mashed Potatoes
• All the
and salad
• Buttered Peas
you
to eal
• Cranberry Sauce

yow..._

SPECIAL THANKSCIVING OFFER: With
you1 ... roc:eive. alice ol pumpkin
pie with m&gt;1111J ICI!IIli&gt;tl 11 no tklrl cos!.

c.... ..........

992-3629
I
·-----------------------J
I

7 fXrERIENCE l11E JOY Of RELIGION · ~ .
This Message and Church

II used to be !hor a picture llkc thls could only mean harvest
lima..-bij:( Or.lnAc pumpkins, shiny red applos, colorful stalks of
lndinn com, And , o£ course, a turkey in tho p:tntry.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

s

~~~!~!

Church &amp; Office Supptie$
GIFTS

Prescriptions

Middleport

992· 29$5

aDIHING
HOUSE -1
·. •·• I
KERMtT'S KORNER
Pomeroy, Ohio
V
RIDENOUR .

can buy 111 frozen lur.kcy a$ easily !11 July a.~ In Novcmhcr.
We Americans take for p;rantcd what was a real treat in ou r
parent's time . But in the m!Jst of this matcrillll plenty, there is danjCCr
of spiritual famint. To keep the proper pcrspoctlvc, to ~pprcciatc the
gifts ofliiC totbc full est we need the Church anJ the story it has to tell

Pomeroy

PT. PLIASANT, W. VA.

216 S. Secrmd
Pomeroy
992 ·3325

~1M3__.,......

S....r.IMIInot ~ 1=1«\rMS,Idr::tiW• P. O.a.ICI24,

121101

E

Groceries-

Gener-a I Merchandise
Racine 949·2550

p.m., under dlrectbn of Allee Nease.

the&gt; aervtce.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CIIRI5f, 212 W..
Matn St., NeU Proud!oot. pastor. Btble school.
9:ll a.m.: morning worship, lO:ll a.m.:
Youth rnee&lt;lllgs, 6:ll p.m.: evening w&lt;rshlp,
7:~ p .m. Wednesday night prayer meeting

aDd Btble study, 7:ll p.m.
.,"_
mE SALVATION ARMY, ill&gt; Bulternut
.Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wln1ng In charge.
SUnday hotlness meetlnl. 10 a.m.: SuOO.y
. School, 10: ll a.m. Sunday School. YPSM
EloiSe Adams, leader. 7: 3l p.m., salvation
meettng, various speakers and music spe.
clals. Thursday -11: ~a.m. to 2 p.m., Ladies

Home -League, members ln charge; an
w&lt;men Invited: 6:45 p.m. Thursday, Corps
Code&lt; Class (Y~ !Wple-Bible). 7: ill p.m.
Bible Study and Prayer meeting, open.to the
•

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST. 33226 Children's Home Road
!COunty Road 16) 992-52.15. Vocal music.
sunday worship 10 a.m.: Bible study 11 a.m.;
w«shlp, 6 p.m. Wednesday Bible. study, 7
p.m. .
•

OLjl DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN

CHURCH - Clifton Lucas. pastor. Sunday
School 9: .Jl a.m. Mrs. Worley Francis, supt.
Preochlnjr services llrsl and lblrd Sundays
lo!lowtng Sunday School. Youtll meeUng
every Sunday, 7:30p.m.

GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
Preaching 9:3) a.m .• flnlt and serond
Sundays ot each month ~ third and fourth
Sundays each month, worship services at 7: :n
p.m. Wednesday evenings at 7: .Jl p.m. ,

Prayer and

-e

Study.

SEVENTII·DAY ADVENTIST, Mulbeny

Heigtlts Road, Pomeroy. Michael Ptonltowstd, put&lt;r; MarJe Spires, Sabbath School
Supl Sabbath School Is at 2 p.m. on SahD'day
with wonhlp services following at J: 15 p.m.
RU'IUND FIRST BAPI'lST CHURCH -

wocshlp,·7:Xlp.m. Tuesday VIsitation, ?p.m.;
Wech!lday, Prayer service, 7:30 p.m.;
F'lleads, 7:30p.m.: Girts In Actions,

7:~p.m.;

Acteenl,7:30p.m; CIKVPractlce,

8:30p.m.
MIDWAY OOMMUN!I'Y CHURCH, Old
Dexler Rd., llexier. Puler Woody Call, Jr.
Pasta'. Sunday School lO a.m. Sunday

evenlDi - ·

7 p.m.; Tbunday eY1!DlDg

FAITII TABERNACLE CHURCH, Halley
Run Road. Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastcr.
llaDdley Dunn. supt. SUndoy school. 10 a.m.
Sunday evenJJig service 7:ll p.m.: Btble
l&lt;iiChlnjr, 7:30 p.m. Tbunday.
SYHACUSE MISSION, Che&lt;ry Sl., Syracute. 5ervk:es. 10 a.m. Sunday, Evening \
II!I'YII:I!I, Sunday and Wednesday. 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CIIRI5f IN
CHRIS'tiAN UNION, Lawrmce Mallley,
putcr, ~. RIISieU Young, Sunday SChool
SUpl. SUnday Sc- 9:30 a.m. Evenllli
W&lt;fthlp 7: ill p.m. Wedneodayprayer meellDi
7::Jl p.m.

MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, Racine
- Rev. J..,.. S.lU!rlleld, putcr. Mort\IDg
wtnldp9:45a.m.; SundaySchoollO:t5a.m.;

eoeniDi wunblp 7 p.m. 'I'IIeoday, 7:30 p.m.,
lodlel pro)'tl' mt&lt;I!Jii. Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
YPE.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner
Slxtll and Pabl'ior, liN! Rev. Mark McOung.
Sunday tcboo19: 15 a.m.; Dan White, SUnday

School oupt, John Rl!tbe!, Sr., aut aupl.
MotnJq Worsl&gt;lp lll:I5 a.m. Yooth meellDi
7:30 p.m. Wednelday, Including ,.... 1&lt;0,
8'188' beaWI'I, junior astrouuts, and lunlor
llld-hlti!IIIYF; c-pracllce8:30p.m.

mee11nc and Bible Sludy,

w~ pra1&lt;f
w~.7:30p.m.

CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mldd1epol1. 5th and

MaJn. Bob Mellen. mlnlller; 1U lW1Ion.

wemesday evening yoong ladles auxiliary, 6
p.m. Wednesday famtly worhslp, 7 p.m.
HAZEL OOMMUNITY CHURCH, Near
Long Bottom, Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday
school,9:~a . m.; Worshlp 10:30a,m.; Prayer
meetlng7:ll p.m. Thursday.
pastoc. Sunday school 10 a.m.; Morning
Worship. 11 a.m.; Wednesday and Saturday
Evening services, 7: l) p.m.

MEIGs

COOPERAm'E PARISH
UNrrED ME'1110DIST CHURCII

HOBSON CHRISTIAl'l UNION, Rev. Tom
Staten, pastor. Sunday Sc hool, 9;.)) a.m.;

' &amp;ant

E"Vening service, 7: :11 p.m. Wednesday prayer
meeting, 7::lt p.m.

NORTIIEAST CLIJSl'ER
Rev. Don Areber
Rev. Roy Dee&amp;er
Rev. Seldon Jot.on

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

ALFRED- Church School 9::11 a.m.;

Worship, 11 a.m.; UMYF, 6: .JJ p.'m .; UMW,
1llird Tuesday, 7:3&gt; p.m. Community tlrst
SUnday. (Archer}
CHESTER - Womtlp 9 a.m.; Church
SChoo110 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.m.
UMW, ftrst Thursday, 1 p.m .; CommwUon
first Sunday. (Archer)
JOPPA - Worship, 9:3) a.m.; Church
SChool, 10:J) a.m. Bible Study, Wednesd&amp;y,
7::«1 p.m. iJohnson)
LONG BOTI'OM - Church School, 9:l')
a.m.; Worship, 7 p.m.; Bible Study, Wednes·
r;tay, 7::J) p.m.; UMYF, Wednt,'lday, 6 p.m.;
Communton F1rst Sunday. (Archer)

REEDSVILLE - O.urch School, 9:30
a.m: Worship ll a.m. (Deeter)
1UPPERS PlAINS Sf. PAUL- Church

School,9a.m.; Wo~hlp,lOa.m.; Bible Study,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.: UMW, Third Tuesday,
7: .JJ p.m.: Communion tlrst Sunday.

- (Archer)
CENTRAL CLUSTER

k

Hew • . J . - E. CoriJICt
Rev. S&amp;evea Nellon ~

~:~E..~
- " ,._,..,.
Aadrew R..ibenldDI
ASBURY (Syracuse) -Worship, 11 a.m.;
Church School, 9:e a.m.; Charge Bible
Study, Wednesday, 7:ll p.m.; UMW, ftrst
TUesday, 7:X) p.m .; OW Rehearsal, Wed·
• nesday, 6:J) p.m.; UMW, fourth Sunday, 6: :t)
p.m. (Nelsm)
ENTERPRISE- Worship 9 a.m.; Church
School, 10 a.m.; Bible Study, 'Tuesday, 7;:1)
p.m.; UMW, Ftrst Monday, 7:Jl p.m.;
UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. COOir rehearsa1,6:l')

Rev:

p.m. Wodneoday. (Rothemlch)
FLAtwOODS
- Blbl
Cbureh
School,
10 a.m.;
til
Study
Thut9d
7
Wono UMp,11
YFa.mSunda.; e6
&lt;'Ro"-'ayh.)
p.m.:
•
y, p.m.
u~•uC
FOREST RUN - Worship, 9 a .m.; Church
Schocl.10 a.m.: Choir Practlre, Tuesday, 6:30
UMW, t1rst Tuesday, 7:J) p.m.
(Middlepcrt) _ Cb~ School,
~
Bible Slud
9:3J a.m.; Wors bl p, 10 =-a.m.;
y,
TuesdaY. 10 a.m.: hlrdUMWMo,"""'ndand ~Y.
7::11 p.m.; UMM. t
y, :.:JU p.m.
(Rob!.DSCil)
MINERSVILLE - Worship servtce, 10
a .m.; Cburch SchoOl. 11 a.m.: UMW. third
W«&lt;nf!lday. 1 p.m .; COOIt practice, Monday,
7: l1 p.m. (Nelson)
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service, 9
a.m.; Oturc! SchooiUMYF,
U a.mlas.: U'J'uMWesd. """'nd
1
'I'uesdfty, 7:~p.m.;
ay, 7: 30
p.m.:

(N:i::.f.tt

7

p.m. (Rubenklng)
POMEROY - Ch~h SciiOOChoirl,9:~,.!'!!·,:
Worship terVice, 10:...., a.m.:
re.&amp;CILI.._ ·
Wodneoda730y, ?::It p.m .U
: MUMWYF, !IOCOndS
d Tues-6

day ,

:

p.m.;

•

un ay,

p.m.(CnrbtH)
.
RO(.'K SPRINGS - Chut"Ch School, 9:15
w hi 10
Blbl Stud
a.~_.. _en P~
a.mUMYF.; e("-' Y•
7
w~"'"""l'
~ p.m.:
~.ors1·
~y,
p.m~~) · ewry other
Su ,J.; 6~I:· m. I Ch h School 9 ...
0
Rvu.o~u..
• =~Circl
a.m.;)
10 3) - . urc
UMW Event
Wonndblp.W_;-~-.?':7 ~ ( UMWng
end,
""""
~~y. : ~p.m .:
• oeco
Thunday, I p.m. (Ruberudngi
SALEM CENTER -· Chti['Ch School, 10

:

··~~E9:45 ··w~~)

;m. { R u . )
SOU'DIIIRN (]..l18'1'ER

Church SctoollO

.

a.m .;

~-~

Rev. ,..,. M. ~
Rev. Pool_..
Rev. Ontle- '
~
GROVE
h ~~ 9
APP ~
~·= ~·~. a.m.:
Wonhlp. 10 a.m. (ftrtt and third Sundays);
UMW oecond 'I'IIeoda 7 J)
Pr
•
~--•-.. 7Y· : k~•:
ayer
m - . w..........,, p.m. &lt;~•I
BETI!ANY - Wonblp, 9 a.m.; Chun:h
School. 10 a.m.; Bible study, Wedneoday, 10
•. m.; Dorcu WO(J)@fl'l Fellowship, Wednet-

-

CHRIST, Duane Warden, minister . Bible
class, 9:)) a.m.; morning worship, 10:30
a.m.; evening worship, 6: :11 p.m. Wednesday
Bible study, 6:30p.m.
NEW STIVERSVJLLE COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Sunday School service, 9:45a .m.;
Worship service, 10: l1 a .m .; Evangelistic
Service, 7:30 p.m . Wednesday; Prayer
meeting. 7:30p. m ., Thursday .
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
HarrtsonviUe Rd.; Robe!'t Punell, minister; .
Steve Stanley, Sunday school supt. Sunday
school, 9:lla.m.; worshlpservtce10:30a .m.;
Evening worship Sunday, 7 p.m. and
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Sf. JOHN LtiTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Grove .. The Rev. Wllliam Middl~wanh,
Pastor. Church services 9: a.m. Sunday

.»

School IO:JO a.m.

. .L .

,.

BRADBURY CHURCH Of' CrtKIST, Paul
Pratt, pastor. Sunday school, 9: 30a.m., Larry
Haynes,. S. S . Supt.; morning worship, 10:Xl
a.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
Rev. Thomas H. Collier, pastor, Martha
Wolfe, Chairman of the Board of Christian
Life. Sunday School. 9: :JJ a.m.; morning
wcrshlp, 10: 3IJ a.m.: Sunday evening worship,
7::11 p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday. 7:ll
p.m.
RACINE F1RSf BAPTIST, Don L. Walker,
Pa.&lt;~tor, Robert Smith. Sunday School supt.:
Sunday School, 9::JJ a.m.: morning worshiP.
10:40 a.m.; Sunday evening worship. 7:.lJ
p.m .; Wednesday f'Vening Bible study, 7:.'ll
p.m.
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Burlingham, Ohio. Rev. Okey Ray Laudermill, pastor. Ph. 992-7324. Sunday SchoollO:OO
a.m.; Sunday ~rung service, 7:00 p.m .:
Wednesday evening serv!Cf', 7:00 p.m.

DANVILLE WESLEY AN. Sur.day School,
9:..,a.m.;
~
•• a.m.; you lh
mo mln gwors hip 10: ....
service, 6:(5 p.m.; evening worship, 7::lt
p m · Wednesday 7' 30 p m Praa d
7
, Pr~.
....
n
DANVILLE HOLINESS CHURCH, located
on Route 3ZI between Vinton and Lar\g!Jv1lle.
Rev. Ben Watts. pastor. Sunday Sctxx&gt;l, 9::l1
a.m.. Bobby Lambert S. S. Supt.: Morning
Worship, 10:30 am.: Olildren's Happy Hour
6:411 p.m. Prayer &amp; Bible Study, 7::1l p.m.

'

· ·

MJsstonarymeetlng11rstWednesdayofeach
month, 7:3) p.m. For lnformatbn call

JI!S8467.

SILVER RUN

BAPI'IST,

Bill

Uttle,

pastEr; Steve Uttle, s. s . Supt. Sunday school,
10 am.: mcrn1ng worship, 11 a .m . Sunday

evenlng wcrshlp, 7:JJ p.m. Prayer meeting·
and Bible study, Thursday, 7::Il p.m.; youth
meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m .
OIRISTIAN FElLOWSHlP CHURCH, 383

N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday Sc!Do!, 10

a.m. Sunday and Wednesday Evening
Servicei 7::D p.m.
CHESTERCHURCHOFGOD,Rev. R.E.
. Ro~--M
Sund
hoot 9 30
u•n.,m, t-".or.
ay SC
• : a.m.;
wcnhip service, U a.m.; evening service, 7
p.m.; youth service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.

LANGSVILLE

CHIUSTIAN CHURCH,

Robert E. MUSM', pastor. SuOOayschool, 9:l.l
am.; Paul Muuer, supt.; morning worship,
10:30
·-" 7 p •m .;
- am·
. 'I Sunday --·•·~
..-~--''"''A :x'l VIet!,
mld-- aervlce, Wedneiday, 7 p.m.

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE
Rev J
B Klttl ·
-.
· ames ·
e, pastor.
Sherman Cundltf, superintendent SWJCiay
Sc-. 9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30

a.m.; EvangeUstic service, 6 p.m. Prayer and
praloe Weclnooday, 7 p.m.; youth meellng, 7
p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRE'l11REN IN CHRIS'I',

~ R a•-•
El~· . ~·.......... Sunday Sc- 10
a.m.; Robert Reed, oupt.: MOI'IIIng sermon,
11 a.m.; Sunday Dli!ll oervtces, Chrtst!an
E~- 7 30
·· 8
•-vu ' : p.m.: .....
~.. service, p.m.:
Preachbtg, 8: ll . p.m. Mid-week Prayer
- - - Wedllesday 7p m Alvin Reed lay
"~~·
· · "
•
~ GROVE CIIRISTlAN, Rogor
watsm, pastcr, CrelJS911 Pratt, Sunday

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF .JESUS
CHRIST OF LAITER DAY SAINTS,
Portland·Raclne Road . William Roush, pastor. Linda Evans , church school director.
church school, 9:30 a .m.; morning worship,
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday even ing prayer
SEn"ices. 7: 3IJ p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev. Ear l
Shuler, pastor. Wor s hip serl.1c&lt;', 9:30 a .m .
Sunday school, 10: .Jl a.m. Bible Stud~· and
prayer service Thursday, 7: :Jl p.m.

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONAL
CHURCH, Kingsbury Road. Rev . David
Curfman, pastor. Sun day sc hool. 9: .J) a .m .

Ralph Carl, super intendent: evening worship,

7: J) p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7: ll
p.m.
LONG BO'ITOM CHRISTIAN. Ken Keifer.
pastor. Wallace Dame-wood. Sunday School
Supt. Worshipsen1ce at 9a.m. 8 \bleSchoollO

a.m.

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH. 'Rev.
Thereon burham. pastor. Sunday School at
9:J) a.m .; Morning worship at 10:.l0 a.m.
Sunday evening service at 7:JJ p.m .;
Thursday services at 7: :J.:l p.m .
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at , Bald
Knob. located on County Road 31. Rev.
Lawrence Gluesencamp, pastor: Rev . Roger
Willford. assistant pastor . Preaching Sl'rvi·
ces, Sunday 7::ll p .m. Prayer m£&gt;etlng
Wednesda y, 7:.)} p.m.; Gary Griffith, leader
Youth groops_ Sunday evening. 6: .})p.m . with
Roger and Violet Willford as .leaders.
Communion service first Sunday each month.
WHITE'S CHAPEL . Coolvllle RD. Rev.
Roy Deeter, pastor. Sunday sc hool9 : ~a.m . ;
worship service, 10: 30 a .m . Bible study a nd
prayer service Wednesda y. 7: .l) p.m.
•

RV'ILAND CHURCH OF CHR!Sf, Dan
Monlux, pastor: BUI Nicholson, Sunday
school supt_ Sunday sc-hool. 9:~ a.m.;
m orning worship and communion, 10: ~a.m.
RU11.ANO BffiLE METHODIST '- Amos
Tillis, pastor; Sonny Hudson, supt. Sunday
school, 9: :II a.m. Morning worship, 10:30 a.m .
Su nday evening servil-e, 7:00. Wednesday
evening service 7:00p.m .; WMPO Program,
9:00 a. m . each Sunday morning.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAzA·
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., pastor.
SUnday School, q: 30 a .m .; worship service,
10:30 a.m .; you ng people's service, 6 p.m.
Evangellstlc service, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CliRlST. Miller St.,
Mason, W. Va . Eugene L . Conger, minister.
Sunday Bible Study, 10 a.m .; Worship 11 a .m .
and 7 p.til. Wednesday Bible Study, vocal
music. 1 p.m.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
Lane, Mason, W. Va. Rev. Ronnie B. Rose,
Pastor. Sunday School 9:45 a.m.: Morning
Worship lJ a.m. Evening Service 7: l:l p.m .
Wednesday Women·s Ministries 9 a .m .
(meeting and prayer! . ?royer and Bible
Study 1 p.m.

IC-

Mt ddtep or l
Pomero~· .

dW~hi~IO· ~~a.:~~~~~-!:_30F~~i

meea.c.

=

':'~~~a~~:ll~.

160. Pat Henson , pastor. Sunday Sc hool 10
a.m . Classes for all ages. Junior Church
ll :OO; Morning Worship, 11 : 00; Adult Choir
practice 6:00 p.m. Sunday. Young People's,
Children's Church and Adult Bible Sl:udy,
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL -S70Grant ST.,
Middleport; Sunday SchooL 10 a.m.; morning
worhslp, 11 a.m.; evening worship, 7 p.m.
Wedneiday evening Bible study and prayer
meeting, 7 p.m . Affiliated with Southern
Baptist Convention.

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST State Route 124 and County Road 5. Mark
Seevers, minister: Sunday School Supt ., Steve
Pickens. Sunday school, 9:30a.m .; mor ning
worship, 10:30 a .m.; eveh.lrig worship, 1 p.m .
Wednesday worship, 7 p.m .

JUBILEE

CHRISTIAN

CE~-rER

-

George's Creek Road . Rev. C. J . Lemley.
pastor; Paul Poar, Church School Superintendent. Churc h scOOol, 9:30 a.m ,: morning
worship, 10:30 a ,m: evening service. 7 p.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 7: 00p.m. Classes for

an ages.
Sf. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH. O&gt;n...of Sycamore and Second Sts., Pomeroy. The
Rev. William Mlddleswarth, Pastor. Sunday
School at 9:45a.m. and Church Sen.1ces 11
p.m.
SACRED HEART, Msgr . AnlOOny Giannamore, Ph. 992-5898. Saturday evening Mass,
7:l&gt; p.m.; Sunday Mass, 8 a .m. and 10 a .m.
Confessions one-hall hour before each Mass .
CCD Classes , 11 a.m . Sunday.
VICTORY BAPT!Sf - 525 N. 2nd St.
Middleport . James E. Keesee, pastor. Sunday
morning worship, 10 a.m .; evening service, 7
p.m.; Wednesday evening worship, 7 p.m.;
VLsttatlon, Thursday, 6:30p.m .

TRINITY CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY , Cool·
ville - Gllben Spencer, pastor. Sundity
school. 9: lJ a.m.: morning service, 11 a.m .
Sunday evening service. 7:30p.m .; midweek
prayer servtce Wednesday, 7: l&gt; p.m .
MOUNT OLIVE alMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Lawrence Bush. pastor; Max Folmer, Sr.
Superintendent. Sunday School and morning
worship, 9: .l) a.m. Sunday evening service, 7
p.m.: Youth meet!Jtg and Bible study,
Wednesday. 7 p.m.
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass. Rev. Raben Smith, Sr.,
pastor, Rev. James Cundiff. assistant pastor.
sunday Sc)XX)l, 9: .II a.m.: morning worship,
lO::Jl a.m.: evening worship, 7:.IJ p.m .
Women's FeUowshlp. Tuesdays, 10 a.m .
Wec1Jtesday night prayer ser:tce. 7:30 p.m.

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, meet
at United Steel Workers Union Hall, Railroad

Street, Mason. Sunday School 10:00 a .m.;
Morning .Worship. U:OO A.M.: Evening
Service, 6 p.m. Prayer meeting and Bible
Study Wednesday, 7:00p.m.

0

'''h

-

-·

~· ~/':. · •

.- ~1

t•t

FOREST R UN BAPTIST - Rev. Nyle
Borden , pastor . Cornell\LS Bunch, s uperintendent. Sunday scbool 9: 30 a .m.; second and
tourth Sundays, worship sen,.ice a t 2::J) p.m.
, MT. MORIAH BAPTtsr - Fourth and
Maln Sts., Middleport. Rev. Ca lv1 n Minnis,
pastor. Mrs. Elv1n Bu mgard ner, supt.
Sunday sc hool, 9: XI a.m. ; worship service,
10:45 a.m.

BURLINGHMI SOUTHERN BAPTISf

CHURCH. Route 1, Shade. Pastor, Do:n Black.
AffUiatecl with Southt'rn BapList convention.
Sunday school, l:l:l p.m .; Sun day worship,
2:)) p.m. Thursday evening Bible study , 7
p .m.
PEt'ITE COSTAL ASSEMBLY , Racine.
Route 121. Wllllam Hoback, pastor. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; Su nda~· evenJng service. 7
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m .
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Don Cheadle.
Supl. Su nday School 9:30 a.m . Morning
Worship, 10:30 a .m. Prayer Service. alternate
Sundays.

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave., the Rev . Qark Baker, pas tor. Carl
Nott ingham , Sunday· School Supt. Sunday
School10a .m. -classes for all ages. Evening
ser.1ces, 6 p.m. Wednesday, Study. 7: lJ p.m.
Youth seMces, 7:l1 p.m Friday .
ECCLESl' FELLOWSHIP. 128 'UU St .
Mlddlepon . P astor Is Brother chuck McPherson. Sunday School at 10 a .m . Services
Su nday even ing a t 7 p.m . and Wed nesday at 7
p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTlSf, Rev. Earl Shuler.
pastor. Sund~y school 9:30 a .m.: Church
service, 1 p.m.; youth m eet ing, £ p.m .
Tuesday Bible Study, 7 p.m .
f1JLL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE , 3.'l)45
Hila nd Road. Pomeroy. Tom Kel1y, pastor _
Danny Lambert. Sunday School Superi ntendent. SUnday Morning service. 10:00 a .m.:
Su nday evening service 7: :II p.m. Ser.ices
Tuesday and Thu rsday evenings at 7: .ll p.'rn.
WORD OF FAITH. 9:1 MUI St.. Middleport;
Richard Stewart. pastor. Sunday morning,
10:00: Sunday evening, 7 : ~. Tuesday mornIng Bible Study. 10:00: Wednesda y evening,
7:ll: Thursday m orning v ideo with Kenneth
Copeland. 10:00; F'rklay evening video wtth
Kenneth Copeland. 7:30_
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Rev _Glendon Stroud , pastor. Sunday
School , 9::11 a.m.: Wors hip Serv1ce, 10:30
a .m .: Youth Service, Sunday, 6: 15 p.m .;
Sunday evening serviCE', 7:00p.m . Wednes.
day Prayer Meeting and Bible Study 7:00p.m
NEASE SETTLEME'I'f CHURCH. Donald R Karr. Sr., pastor. Sund av a ftern oon
~ces. 2: XI; Thurs~ay eventilg service,

7cll

FffiSTBAPriSI'CHURCH. Mason , W. Va.
Pastor, Bill Murph y. Sunday School, 10 a . m .;
Sunday evening service , 7:l) p.m .; Prayer
meeting and Bible Study Wednesday, 7:30
p.m . Everyone welrome.

RUTI.AND FREE WILL BAPT!Sf ~lem

St. Rev _ Paul Taylor, pastor . Su nday
Sc hool, 10:00 a .m.: Sunday eve ning service.
7: ll p.m.; Wednesday (&gt;vening prayer .
meeting, 7:30

SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTt.MENT
CHURCH - Silver Ridge. Duane Syden·
strlcke-, pastor. Sunday School 9 a.m .:
church service 10 a.m . Bible study, \Vednesday, 7:30p. m. Jun('thru September. 7:00p .m.
October thru May. Sunday evening fellow .
ship, 7:00 p.m . June thru September. 6:00
p.m. October tlu'u May .

HARTFORD CHURQi OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. The Rev . William
Campbell, pastor. Sunday SchOOl. 9:30a.m.:
James Hughes , supt.; even In~ service, 7:.})
p.m . Wednesday evening prayer meeting,
7: :1) p.m . Youth prayerservtceeach Tuesday.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , Letart, W.
Va.. Rt. 1, Mark Irwin. pastor. Worship
services, 9:30 a.m .: Sunday ScMol, 11 a.m.;
evening worship, 7:30p.m . Tuesday cottage
praye~ meeting and Bible study. 9:30a.m.
Worshlp servt~ Wedn~ay , 7: ,'JJ p.m .
OlJR SAVIOUR LllTHERAN CHURCHWalnut and He nry Sts ., Ravenswood, W. Va .
The Rev. George C. Weirick. pastor. Su nday
School, 9:30a.m .; Sunday worhslp, 11 a.m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURQ-1 . nCM' located
on Pomeroy Pike, County Road ~ near
Flatwoods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Services
on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 7:lJ p, m. with
Sunday ~hool. 9:30 a.m. bible study,
Wedn~day , 7:lJ p,m .

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
- a t e mtnlsler; Mike Gertach, !Iunday
CHRIST- St. Rt . 338, Antiquity . Pastor,Rev.
School SaperlntendenL Bible 'Scboc&gt;l, 9:30
Franklin Dickens. Sunday mornJng, 10 a.m.
a.m.; 1111l1'111nt1......tllP. 10:30 a.m.: eY1!DlDg
Sunday evening, 7: l) p.m. Thw'S;day evening,
wonlllp 7 p.m. Wednesday Btble Study and
7:ll p.m .
.
)lOUth
7 p.m.
·
..
~VILLE COMMUNITY BAPTIST
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF 1liE NAZA· ·
on p, :~ a.m.; ~v- u~ ~u• 7.30pm
·
·
RENE, eo._...., Rev. Charles Coyle and
CHURCH, Pastor Robe_rt Byers. Sunday .
Sunda~J: FellowohiP dinner with Suttco,
·
· ·
School 10 a.m.; Wo,r~;hlp Service 11 a.m.; ,
•••~
-·-•·
6
30
·
t"~--~1
MT.
UNION
BI).PJ'JST,
.Rev.
Tom
Doot&lt;y:
, fteY, NUll!)' Coyle. Blll Wblte, Sundoy
· uwu uw•-Y• :
p.m.
...,~.
·
Joe
Sayre, SUnday SchoOl Su[ierlntendellt ·. Sunday evening servlce, 7:lJ p.m. ; WednesIilpl. liwldly oc:hool, 9:Jl a.m.; . IDOI'IIlDI
SUnday achool, 9:45 a:m.: eventng worship,
day evening service. 7: Xl p.m .
·
...rslllp, 10:30 Lm.: SUnday .._uottc
EAST LETART- Church sehoo~ 9 a.m.; • 7: :1) p.m. Praya" . meellni. ·7: 30 p.m.
INDEPENDENT HOUNESS CHURCH,
7 p.ril. Prayer meellDi Wedladoy 7
Wonhlp, 10a.m. (-andlourth~;
w~.
p.m. .
.
Inc. - Pa\.d• St.. Middleport . Rev. O'Dell
UMW, ftnl ~y. 7:Jl p.m. (Clarki ·
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
Ma~ey. pastor. Sunday Sctx:M&gt;l, 9::)) a.m. ;
LETART FAU.S - Wunblp, 9 ·a.m.:
CHRIST, Vlncent c. Waters. m , mh111teli
Morning worship 10:30 a.m.; evening worUNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY Church School, 10 a.m. iCiarltJ
Berman Black, supertntendi!llt Sunday
ship, 7:)'.) p.m . Tuesday, 12:30 p.m. Women's
OF MEIGS OOUNI'Y, Rev. Wanda Jolln8on.
MORNING STAR - Wonl&gt;lp, 11:45 a.m.:
SCboal 9:3.) a.m.; evmJnr service, 7 p.m.;
prayer meeting; Prayer and praise service,
- . Hanlld Jo!1nson. dlrectcr It Church Scllool, 10:30 Lm.; Bible Sludy,
w~ Bible School, 1 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
.c.a11on.
'!1lunclay, 7:30p.m. tWI&gt;lteJ
t1IEin'ER CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
IIARRillONVILLE
PRESIIYTERIAN,
MORSE CHAPEL -Church School, 9:ll
RENE, Rev. 11ert1or1 Grate, palter. Frallk
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
Wonlllp!lonlco,9a.m.; CburehScboc&gt;l,10:30 a.m.: Wanlllp,lla.m. tWbtteJ
JUflle..upt. SUDdlySchool, 9:31a.m. Wonhlp
JESUS CHRIST. Elder Jam~ Miller. Bible
L~
PORl1AND - Chun:h Sc-. 6:ill p.m.:
aervloe, 11 a.m. and 7: :II p.m. Prayer
!51\kly, Wedneiday, 7: XI p.m.; SuOOay ~hool..
PRESBY'I'EIIlAN, W&lt;nblp, 7:3) p.m.; UMYF, Wedneoday, 7:30
IIII!Biblf,.W~. 7:Jl p.m ..
10 a.m. Sunday night service, 7:30p.m.
Clurdl School, 9 a.m.: MornlnC ....-.hlp, J&gt;m. iMoGulrel
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS lAUREL CLIFF FREE METHOD!Sf
II: Ill. lllbto 9tud)' ~. 10 a.m.; Bible • RACINE \IIESLE\'AN -CJNrcbSchool,lO
Harrisonville Road. Earl Fields, past&lt;r.
CHURCH, Rev. Rollert MWer. pastOr: Lloyd
14~, 7:30p.m.
a.m.: WWIIIJp, 11 a.m.: UMW, 1ou1111
Henry Eblin, Jr., Sunday School Supt Sunday
Wrtatn. Direct« of Chr1.!1tlan Education.
FIRST UN!TED PRESBY- ~7:00p.m.; -·oJ&gt;royerllrNitlul,
School 9: ll a .m.; Morning Worship 11 a .m.;
Suaday
School,
9:30
a.m.;
Morning
Worship,
'I'I:RIAN atum~. Cburdt Sc-. 10: Ill a.m.: .w~. 7 a.m. (Clark)
Sunday evening service, 7: ~ p.m .; Prayer
10:ill a.m.: Cbolr Praetlce, Sunday, 6: ll
lllll'llllll ..-.blp, U:aJ a.m.: .Bible Study.
stJTroN - Cburdl S.boc&gt;l, t.ill a.m.:
Meet~g. Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
J&gt;m.;
EvmngWonblp,
7:30p.m.,Wedllesday
Lm.; . I . - 111111 ill&amp;ll lllll'llllll wa'llllp. JO:• Lril. tflrtt aad tl*d
Pra)e ud -Study, 7: ill p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GODJltladay, I p.m.
ClrM.
DEXI1:R aruRCII OF CHRISJ', Olarlell , JOy
allll\al OF GOD, I'Utor, lltlrd
,l:lllp.m.IMI:Cltlftl
Clark, pastor; Wonhlp service Sunday,
-.Sr.,
mlnlll!l!; IUctt Moco~.supt.
10:00 a .m. ; Sunday .w:hool, U a .m.; worship
- · Jotlll JEvaa Slmlla)' - . 10 a.m.;
KENO
Of' CHRISJ', atvw
Suaday- f!J) LITL: wtnltlp III!I'VIce,
~Ice,_?: ~. p.m._ Wednesday prayer meet· ..
Slmlla)'
u ....-aldp,
•: weeiL
Slmlla)' t.ll . IO:iiJ LITL Bible Sludy, ~. 7:l) p.m.
~i
su.da)iu~..:.,
..._..~-·
• r"'""'p.m.·• . . -a.m. fVII'Y

111""'1'-·

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

C.tiURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY .
U...:ated on the 0 . J. White Road off highway

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST,
Corner Ash and Plum. Leslie Hayman,

Far Sauer, DlrectcJr
Rev, James E. Corbitt, ."

Phone (614) 747

pastor: l)on Will, lay koader _Loca ted lnTexas
Community ort CR 82. Sunday school, 9.:30
a .m.; Morning wOrship service, 10:45 a .m,;
evening preaching service second and fout1h
Sundays, 7: .lJ p.m.; Christian Endeavor, first
and third Sunda)'!i. 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday
prayer meeting and Bible study, 7:30p.m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS, 37319 State Route
124 (One mile east of Rutland\ . Sunday, Bible
lectW"e 9:30 a.m.; Watchtower s tud y, 10:20
a.m.; Tuesday, Bible study, 7:30 p.m. .
Th\U'Sday, Theocratic School, 7:30 p.m..
Service Meeting, 8:20p.m.

POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA· 1-,.-----......,------~
RENE, Corner Union and Mulbeny, Rev.
Thomas Glen McClung, pastor. Oyde Hender!On, S. S. Supt .. Sunday ScbJo1, 9:30a.m.;

Communion on tlE flnlt Sunday of each
month, and combined wtth motnlngprayeron
the third Sunday. Momlngprayer and sermon
on all other Sundays of the month. Church
School and n~ care provided. Coffee
hour tn lhe Parish HaU lrnmod!atelyloUowtng

R utland, Oh10 457

J . Wm. " Bill " Brow n, _,...vner

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST CHURCH. Rev. Robert Sanders.

Church School 9:15 a .m .; worship service

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E.
Main St., Pomeroy. SuOO.y services Holy

Automotive

lng, 7:D p.m .

10: :II a.m. Choir rehearsal, Tuesday 7: :lt

,,

Fire &amp;
Equipment ~·ser.~"an
d
r tce

Attend Church
this Sunday

WAID CROSS
·SONS SlORE

TIUNITY CHURCH, Rev. W. H. Perrin,
pastcr: Debbli! Buck, Sunday School supt.

morning worship 10:30 a.m.; evening service
6 p.m.; mid-week service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.

tB
..

Locust &amp; Beech
992-9921 Middleport

214 E. Main
.992·5130 Pomeroy

985·3944

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

S~n· tce

The

Rt . 1, Reedsville, Oh.

of Columbu s, 0 .
804 w. Ma.m
992-2 318 Pom e ro\1

complete
~VIA.

" ForARea1Auc1ion ,
Call the Real McCoy "
I. 0 " Mac " McCoy

Nationwide Ins . Co .

ElLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

Maybe you can·l be a pioneer-a P!lgrim. But you can follow your
IOrcfathcn' cxarftplc at Plymouth tbat first Novcmhcr.You cEln utt er
gcnulnU than~~ In the church of your choice.

FURNI~~~~RDWAR:tI
Homelole Saws

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

Out what aOOut toxlay? You c~n huy apple~ almo§t a n y lime .
Pumpkins""' a\lullabi&lt;· ln a .::an twcl\lc month s nft hc yea r . And you

,,: -~

NEW YORK

it

Phone 992-3480 ·-...::. '§ '

Chester

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STO.RE

99 Milt St.

SERVICE

MMK V SlORE ,~
Middleport ~'~",

R~y Riggs
Ph. 915-4100

51. Rl.

The Interested Businesses Listed On ,This

•'""l:.:il£!' _. -

328 VIAND STilET

~- · - ·

=

-

~.7p.m.

Thanksgiving Day, HAM -8PM

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT

1
I
I
I

Ph. 304-675-8278

Thanksgiving.Feast!
$3.89,!1~,

..... J!i\;hl··~··

NEW DINNER HOURS
TUESDAY· THURSDAY .·
5-9
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
5-10

62

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

1

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Davtd
Mann, minister; WUUam Snoufl'er, Sunday
School IUJt- Sunday School, 9: :JJ a.m.;
lllornlJia worship 10: 30 .m.
FIRST SOUTIIERN BAPTIST, Po...,.oy .
PU:e. David Hunl, pallOr, Jack Need!,
SundaY Sc- Director. Sunday oc!Dol, 9:30
a.m.; mOI'Ding worship, 10: :J&gt;; evening

RESTAURANT

~t.

•

0

Sisler Harrielt Warne", Supl. Sunday School,
9:00a.m .; morning worship, 10:45 a .m .,

*Elegant Dining At A Family Restaurant

School HDnor Roll

w

DUI&gt;JIC.

•Restaurant Has Moved from the Dome to the Main Building

10' Off Every lb. over 5 lbs. Ordered
ORANGE SLICES ......... :......................... SJ.08 lb.
FROSTED PRETZELS ............................. s2.SO lb.
'SOLID PEANUT CLUSTERS .................... s2.75 lb.
.CREAM CHOCOLATE DROPS .................. s2.18 lb.
DELUXE BRIDGE MIX ................... :....... s2.45 lb . .
CHOCOLATE STARS .............................. suo lb.
ORANGE CREAM CLUSTERS ............... ;.. s2.50 lb.
MAPLE CREAM CLUSTERS .................... '2.50 lb.
CHERRY CREAM CLUSTERS ................... '2.45 lb.
BUTTERSCOTCH LOGS ........................... '2.00 lb.
COCONUT. LADY Fl NGERS ..................... '2.49 lb.

Mrs. Clara Rousll of Akron visited
Miss Vera Beegle and Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Beegle several days.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace.
Edison Johnson and Pearl Adams
visited Donna Brace at Davisville,
W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch spent a
recent weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Birch and daughters at
Bellevue.
Mrs. Harry Walker of Llzemore,
W .Va. spent a week With her son,
Rev. and Mrs. Don Walker.
Mrs. Gretta Simpson was hostess
In her home lor the regular meeting
of the Esther Circle Thursday
afternoon. There were 18 present to
enjoy the talk by Mrs. Erma Norris.
During a fellowship hour Mrs.
Simpson served refreshments.

Harrisonville· happenings-----

Gwrun assigned to Keesler AFB
The airman will now receive

readlngs, meditations and prayers.
A solo, "Ere You Left Your Rrom
this Morning" was sung by Mrs.
Gheen, accompanied on fllano by
LUllan Hayman. Ooslng hymn was
"0 Lord, May Churcll and Home
Combine'' and benediction was
given. The Esther Circle, hostesses,
served refreshments In the fellowship hall.
Mrs. Gretta SlmflSon returned
home from Seymour, Ind. after
visiting her son, Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Simpson. She was accompanied by
her brother and sister-In-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Howell of
Flushing who went there to visit
and bring her home. They spent a
week with her before returning to
their home.
Mrs. Eileen Stuml' and mother,

Christ in the hearts of our women
who love to provide White Cross
materials. Hymn, "Does Jesus
Care" was s ung and prayer of
dedication by tbe leaders was
given. Martha Lou Beegle, vice
president of Christian Service, was
in charge of the Love gilts of the
Circles. The offerings were $220.40
presented by Naomi Stobart for the
Ruth Circle and Gretta SlmflSon lor
the Esther Circle. The meeting
c losed with dedication prayer. It
was decided to make Christmas
tray favors for Holzer Medical
Center and Thanksgiving favors to
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
·The Baptist Women's Day of
Prayer was observed with the
program, "We Are Family -We
Are One." There were scliflture

By Mrs. Fr.wcls Morris
The November meeting of th•
Bertha M. Sayr~ Missionary SOciety of First Baptist Church met
with 18 members of t he Circles
present. Mrs. Barb•r• Gheen ,
president . presided and opened the
meeting with responsive reading 1
"Thanksgiving to God" and prayer
by Mrs. Florence Adams. In the

Long Bottom news notes

Airman James H. Gumm, son of
Barbara L. and James R. Gumm of
23 Homestead Drive, Williamstown, W.Va ., has been assigned to
Keesler Air Force Base, Miss ..
after completing Air Force basic
training.
Duling the six weeks a t Lackland
Air Force Base, Texas. the airman
studied the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and

Friday, November 18, 1983

Sermonette
In 1681, the pilgrims at Plymoulh. Massachusetl s set aparJ a day
lor thanksgiving. They Invited Indians to dinner. cooked a big m eal
and thanked God for their survival and lor a harvest large e nough to
assure them of food lor the winter ahead. Since then. Thanksgiving
Day has developed Into the · holiday· it is. A day set .aside by
government decree to thank God and a time for us to count our
blessings.
Remember the old song that goes: "Count .your blessings name
them one by 9ne?" Well, that is really moreofwhal Thanksgi.vlng·ls
ahout th.a n the gatherings that occur or a table full bl food. In spite of .
all the bad things that may have happened this year. tbe good
outweighs the bad.
One of the most enjoyable things our family has done together is
camping. Several years ago, when my daughter was three years old,
we went camping and were sleeping out under the stars. Beca use
Carole was restless and I wanted ber not to hother meso 1 could star
gaze, I told her to count the stars . I had gotten engrossed and had
completely forgotten about her counting when she gently punched
me on the arm and said, "Mama, I'm going to go to sleep, I've
counted as many as I can and I've run out of numbers ."
The same thing happens wben we attempt to count all the
benefits we have received from God. We always run out of numbers
But since It IS Thanksgiving ... let's try anyway ... OK?
·
Submitted by Th~ Rev. Wanda G. Johnson, pastor of the three
Presbyterian churches In Meigs County.

-•t

_,..

,,.

.

,~ )

'

' .

~ '

'1'

.

•

�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, No,.,uber II, 1913

Housing activity stabilizing ·
By 'l1le Aa!oclated Preis

August and then dropped sharply In
Therateofconsttuctlonstutson September In a decline largely
new housing In October was 3.8 3ttrlbuted to a rise In Interest rates.
percent lower than the month
Mark J. Riedy, executive vice
before, and one banker predicts the president of the Mortgage Bankers
homebulldlng Industry Is settling Association of America, said Thursdown for "a long winter's nap."
·day he expected Interest rates over
The Commerce Department re- the next few months to be stable.
ported the latest decll!je on ThursRiedy said the housing Industry
day, and Commerce Secretary "Is setttlng down for a long winter's
Malcolm Baldrige said he believed
nap. They will walt to see what rates
housing stuts were settling Into a · are going to be In the spring."
period of stability at approximately
The October re{Xlrt said starts on
October's 1.61 million rate.
single-family homesfell 7.2percent,
Although the October rate was . while those for buildings with five or
lower than September's, It was 41 more units rose 3.3 percent.
percent above the October 1982
In a sign of some Increases ahead,
leveL
the Cormnerce Department o;aid
New construction hit its highest permits taken out for future
level In nearly five years during construction rose 3.9 percent after

The Daily Sentinel

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Judge ends 22 court cases

N o n- a g e n d a

permission on land which is under costs each; Stanton Jones, Clumwritten co-op agreement, S2'i and bus, speed, $22 and costs; Joyce
costs.
Baker, Long &amp;mom, speed, $21 and
Also James Leary, Marietta, and costs; Roy Eblin, Mtddle{Xlrt.
Cath~Iine Dean, Middleport, speed, • disorderly conduct, $35 and costs;
$20 and costs each; Gregory Franklin Laudermllt, Mtddle{Xlrt,
Huffman, Racine, DWI, nXJ and expired operators Ucense, SZi' and
costs, three days confinement, costs; Okey Tribble •. Jr., Racine,
licenSe suspended 60 days, If attend speed, $22 and costs; Roberta G.
driving school jail sentence will be Kelly, Parkersburg, failed to stop
suspended and$150offlne; Garland for stop sign, $10 and costs.
K. Nalstetler, Portland, trapping
FOJ:feitlng bonds were Bryan
without properly tagging traps, S2'i Gheen, Pomeroy, left of center,
and costs; John Warner, Pomeroy, $L'i0; Jon Guinther, Vincent, and
speed, $23 and costs; Jerry Burk- Daniel S. McDermott, Belpre,
hart, Belpre and Robert Mitchem, speed, $50 each; Dale Browning,
Robinette. W. Va., speed, $25 and Pomeroy, speed, $35.

itemS___:_(C_o_nttn_u_ed_fr_o_m_;_p_;_ag~e

1_;_)' - - - - - - - - -

Another proJ:Xlsal suggested that grade basketball coach. Mike Barr
full time salary benefits be extended was named reserve football coach
to substitute non-certified employes as well as an assistantvars!tycoach.
working for 60 days In the same
Named to the substitute
assignment. Asst. Supt. Carpenter secretary-aide list were Kelly
will Investigate any lega t.problems
Brown. Coty Curtis, Frances Runwith that action and report at the nel, Janice Lisle, Sandy Napper,
next meefing.
Karen J . Stanley, Marlene Swartz
The board changed the December and Yvonne Young. Richard Colemeeting from [)ec. 13 to Dec.l5 and
man was named a substitute
Increased the rates of pay for teacher In auto mechanics. Carolyn
non-certified substitutes effecti ve Snowden was granted maternity
Nov.l8. Aides-secretarlesgoto$3 75 leave; extended sick leave to -April
and hour from $2.77; cooks from $3 Smith, and professional leaves were
to$3.75; custcdians from S3 to$3.75 granted for Tim Flesher, John
and bus drivers from $16 a day to Redovian, Jack Slavin, Martha
$4.75 an hour.
Vennarl, Carolyn Smith, Pat Rose ,
Accept resignations
and Karen Walker.
Resignations accepted Included
' Ed Harkless was given permisthose of Danny Jacks, substitute
sion for the Meigs High Collegium
custodian; Betty Wynn. substitute Musicum to tour Philadelphia, April
custcdlan; Larry Grimes from 26-29 and for the high school band of
reserve football coach to freslunan · Marilyn Goodnite to take part In the
football coach; Wilovene Bailey, Six Flags Music Festival, Atlanta,
substitute cook; BobAshleyasnlnth

Ga., Aprlll2-l5.
A trans{Xlrtation agreement for
one handicapped · student · at the
Rutland Elementary School was
approveil. A change order requested by the Mullins Consttuctlon
Co. of renovation of the Meigs Junior
High deleting the sprinkler was
tabled until alternatives. can be
studied.
An agreement was
approved for the transportation of
two student to theOhloSchoolforthe
Deaf was approved. Supt. Morris
was authorized to purchase chairs,
desks, and other furniture Items for
the Middle{Xlrt Elementary School
not to exceed $5700 from the Mary
Watkins Furtd. The board agreed to
blea'cher repair In the high school
gymnasium by the Ohio Gymnasium and Equipment Co. for $4738.
Rebecca Tate Zurcher was
granted a continuing teaching
contract.

H a p p e n i n g s a r o u n d M e i g s C o u n t y •••

YfO meets Monday
Racine Elementary PI'O will
meet Monday, Nov. 21, at7 p.m. at
Southern Junior High School. The
high school drama class under the
direction of David Salmons will
present a :Jl minute play at 8 p.m.

Leaf pickup set
There will be a leaf pickup in
Pomeroy , Mayor Clarence An·
drews has announced.
Leaves are to be In plastic bags
and placed near the curbing. The
pickup schedule is Monday, first
ward; Tuesday, second ward;
. Wednesday, third ward. and Friday, fourth ward.

Meet Monday
Southern High School Athletic
BOOsters will meetMonday'at 7:30
p.m. at the high school.

Seeks divorce
Arlene Rowe, Racine, tued suit for
divorce In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court againSt Paul Rowe.
A suit for support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Act was
filed by Regina Vance against Glenn
Llnnan,Jr.

Veterans Memorial

Admitted: Oswell Durham, Middleport; John Mitch, Pomeroy;
Freeland Enoch, Syracuse; Graee
Welker. Racine, and Orpha James,
Pomeroy.
Funds received
Discharged: Bernice King,
George Molden, Dennis Hart,
State Registrar Michael J. McCul- Beatrice Rairden , Tammy Rettllon announced that the Bureau of
mlre, Betty Friend, Kevin Bush,
Motor Vehicles has the lOth advance · Robert Sisson, Daisy Glassburn.
distribution of 1983 license tax
revenues totaling $13,174,822.12
ready for disbursement to local
governments.
Meigs County's
share is $42,299.78 and the money Is
expected just after Nov. 30.

I

Marriage licenses-

In

•

Lt. Gayle Krider and Lt. Bonnie

Judd of the Alheru; Salvation Army
will conduct, speak, and sing In the
salvation meeting Sunday night at7
p.m. at the Salvation Army on
Butternut Ave. The public is Invited.

Boosters to meet
The Southern High School Athletic Boosters will meet Monday
night at 7:30p.m. at the high school.

Emergency runs
Only call of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service Thursday was to the home of Wllll~m
Grueser of Reedsville who W..s
trans{Xlrted to the Holzer Medical
Center by the Tuppers Plains squad.
At 3:06a.m. Friday the Pomeroy
unit went to Minersville for Charles
Buckley, who was trans{Xlrted to the
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Area deaths

Ivan W. Diehl

Ivan W. Diehl, 67, former Meigs
County resident, Guy Texas, died
Thursday following an e.xtended
Illness,
Mr. 15tehl was born September 7,
l916at Laurel Cliff the son of the late
Louis and Georgia Russell Diehl. He
wa5 also preceded In death by one
brother, Charles Henry DiehL
Seeks judgment
He attended Laurel Cliff grade
Jaines· P . Conde and Rhonda L. scHool and Chester High School and
Conde, Pomer&lt;iy, have filed suit tn · was a veteran of World War II
Meigs County Common Pleas Court having served with lheU. S. Navy.
Survivors Include his wife, the
lor $40,00! againSt Darrell Mitchell,
Pt. Pleasant for breach of contract former Bessie Miclosh, whom he
marrledon0cl.2,1945; onebrother,
In butldlng a house.
Paul Archer, Columbus; three
nephews, Roger Archer, Mason,
Arizona; Charles Diehl, MlddlehoJpital
port; The Rev. Louis Diehl of
Wadsworth, Ohio; one niece, Mrs.
Ruby Hysell, HyseU Run, Is a William (Cherie) Thompson, Copatient at Good Samarttan Medical lumbus; one uncle, Guy R. Russell
Center, rocm 400, !OJ Forest Ave., ofMlnersvllle.
1
Zanesville, Oh 43701.
. Funeral services will be held
She exteDds thanks to those who Monday at the Garmany Funeral
rEmembered her with cards and Home In Rosenberg, Texas. Burial
flowers. She will be a patient at the Will be In Greenlaw Cemetery Ill .
·hospital for two weeks or more.
Texas.
A marriage license was issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
James Soulsby, 23, Pomeroy and
Connie Kay Stout, 20, Tuppers
Plains.

Sunday service

Lena V. Pooler
Lena V. Pooler, 92, Chester, died
Thursday at Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs, Pooler was born March 30,
l8911n West Virginia lhedaughternf
the late Roy and Louella Osborne
King. She was also preceded In
death by her husband, John Pooler,
five sons; Roy, Bill, Albert, Bradley
and Lawrence Pooler, one daughter, Sally Pooler.
She was a housewife, a member of
New Hope Lutheran Church and a
charter memher of the Chester
Nazarene Church.
She Is survived by one daughter,
VIola Teegarden, Portsmouth; 15
grandchildren, 36 grandchildren
and 10 great great grandchildren
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wUl be held
SUnday at 2 p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Herbert Gra!S
otrlclatlng. Burial will be In Mound
c.metery. F·~ may call at the .
funeral home after 3 p.m. Saturday.

CONTRACTING

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

( ,,__1/to·fl IMJl•'• ..... ,,, '"''

71 Alll. . fo•lt•

12 loudn b lol.

TV I~_.,..(o.,.,...no

!i i · M..C Mot&lt;llalldooo

~~

) I H&lt;&gt;m.. IGtl~o
JlMM.itH_ .... IN

" '18

,:~,.· ·

SALES

The real estate of Jack K
Sp•res. Deceased. Si tuated 1n
Salem Townsh1p Me•gs
County. Oh10 conta•mng 29
acres of ground. more or less ,
excepting the l1 mestone and
the No 4. 4A. Clanon or
L•mestone Coal w1th appurtenant m1nrng and removal nghts
wh1ch wAre heretofore COr,·
vey!'!d. wh•ch 1s descr1bed •n
Vol 225 Page 451 of the
Me1gs County Deed Records
w•ll bA offered for sale at the law
off1ces of Crow Crow &amp; Porter.
cornflr of Second Street and
MulbArry Avenue. Pomeroy.
Oh1o at 10 00 AM on the 2nd
day of December. 1983 The
propArty was appra•sf!d at
$27.50000 and cannot be
sold for less than the appra1sed
value It 1S to be sold ~ub,ect to
the hen formal esta te taxes for
1983 and the terms of the sale
an'! cash The sale •s subJP.Ct to
the approval of the Probate
Court of Me•gs Coumy Oh10
Jack K Sp1res Jr ..
Adm•mstrator of
the Estate of
Jack K Sp1res.
Deceased
111118. 25. 2tc

--::--:-::---c:-:--,---

Public Notice

pArcent ot O•d · tor the fa1th ful
NOTICE TO
perform ctnce of thiS con tra ct
ROOFING
Bond referred to •s a B•dder's
Bond. accompanyr ng · 1d.
CONTRACTORS
Not•ce •S hereby g •ver:~ that wh1ch becomes a 100 percent
sealed D•oposals will be re- performance Bond to contracce•ved at the off•ce of the Board tor rece 1v.ng award AU b•dders
at Me•gs County CommiSS!Qn· to furn•sh evrdence of a
ers m the Courthouse. Po me- m1mmum of S300 000 00 con··
rov. Oh10 45769. unt1l noon on tractors liab111ty 1nsurance cov·
Novemb!'!r 22. 1983 Wtth brds Arage All employees shall be
to be opened at2 o'clock PM on cove red by Oh10 Workmen s
that datP. for the follow1ng Comoensa!IOn R1sk number to
descnbAd work to be done at be turn 1shed 1n b 1d
the MP.•gs County Home. MulM e1gs County Federal Pre berry He1gh ts. Pomerov. Oh10 .
va1hng Wage rates are applica.
Furnrsh aU matenals. labor ble to th 1s b1d 1nv•tatron
and appliances necessary to
Me•gs County 1s on Equal
co mplete 1n a satisfactory Employment Qpportumty emmanner the repa1r and replace- player Cond 1t 1ons apply 1ng 10
ment of all three sectiOns of the th1s cont ra ct. ExecutiVe order
roof of the bulldmg kno\Nn as 11246. Sect•on 3 Segregated
the Me1gs County Home (aka FaCilities Sectron 109 Federal
lnf•rmarvl B•d to •nclude cost of Regulatrons
all new metal fl ash1ngs around
fnformat10n tor co ntractors
the oenmcter walls Mater~als and b1dders pac ket W111 be
shall be TROCAL S &amp; SMA. ava1lable 1n the CommiSSI0ners
Roofing System 01 app10ved off•ce Monday thru Fr1day
equal only NOBEL OF AMEA - between lhfl hot1rs of 8 30 AM
ICA for Matenals lnstallatton and 4 30 PM
and Warranty B•dde• to g1ve a
The Me.gs County Comm 1s10-vear water -ughtness gua - s•oners reserve the nght to
rantAP. w1thout dollar hm1tat•on 1accep'l'm fP.JfKt any and all brds
1ncludmg labnr. mater1als and
Me 1gs County
CommiSSIOners
metalwork
The con tra ctor shall tnspect
Mary Hobstetter.
thP. s•te of the war~ before
Clerk
subm•ttmg h•s proposal and 1111 4. 18. 2tc
shall fam•lr arrze h•mself w1th the
cond• t•ons of thP roof and areas
to be repa~red or r8placed as
Public Notice
SPRC1f1 ed here•n Subm1SS10n of 1 - - - - - -- - - a propos al shall be accepted
PUBUC SALE
Pvtdence that such a VISit and
Monday, Nov 21st. 10 am.
•twRs!lgauon has been made
HOmf! Nat10nal Bank. Ra c.nA
No allowance shall be made on Oh w• ll off P. r lor sale at a Public
bPhall ol the contracto• be- Sale the follow1ng .
cause of el&lt;ISt•ng conditions
1978 ChP.vrolet. 2 door R
The contrac tor shall comply 1T27M8D442703
w1th all f•re safety and secunty
1980 Ford F•esta II
regufahons
GCFBAK916590
The contractor shall be re1976 Pontiac Grand Pnx #
spons•ble lor rP.SIIIutiOnto th P. 2J57Z6P264776
Meu;:~s Countv CommiSSIOners
Home Nat•onal Bank reserves
lor any damaqP to structures or the r~gh t to b1d a1 the saiP. and
eqwpiT)ent owned bV-~-s.a1d the nght to re1ect any 01 all b•ds
M e•gs Countv CommiSSIOners 11 1) 16 17 .18
resu!t1ng fr om the act1ons o! the 3tc
contractor or h1s / her em·
ployP.es The contraclOr shall
save the Me•gs County Com- 54 Misc. Merchandise
m•ss •oners harmless 1n any
actron resul11 ng from h•s / her
operatiOns
Al l dP.bns shall be removed
HOM ELITE
from thP. prem•ses at oenod•c
1ntervafs dunng the progress of
CHAIN SAW
thP. work an d I mal clean up shall
SERVICE
AT
be •mmedrately toltow1ng
complet•on
Work shall bP.gm not more
than 10 days after award1ng of
contract and be co mpleted
w•th1 n 30 caiP.ndar days.
weather ~rm•tllng . All b•ds
must be accompanied by a
Bond •n the amoun t o f 10

Landmark

2

In Memoriam

In Loving Memory of our
dear father, Steve Eblin, .
who passed . away ei&amp;ht
years ago today.
Daddy is gone. but not forgotton
Never . will his memory
fade.
Sweetest thouahts wi II
ever lincer,
Round the grave wbere he
is laid.
Lovinaly remembered by
his fomily.

54 Misc.

Serviceman On Duty
Monday-Friday
8:30 to 12 and 1 to 5
Saturday
8:30 a.m. to 12 Noon
Also complete service on
oil Hotpoint and General
Electric Appliances.
Other makes also Slfviced and we also service
Kerosene Heaters.

Public Notice

PUBUC SAlE
Fr1dav. Nov 25th: 10 am .
Home Na11onal Bank. Rac•ne.
Oh w1ll offP.r for sale at Publ•c
A~JCIIOn the lollow•ng
1982 Nashua Mob1le Home

•

NZOHCNX270143TS01 1820
197 6 CMvrolet Srat1on
Wagon # IN45U611 79094
1978 Mercu rv 2 door ft
8H93F6 70204 .
Home NatiOnal Bank resP.rves
the r•g ht to b1d at the sale and to
re JeCt any or all brds
l1 11 16 17 18 3tc

992-2259

NEW LISTING - A little
country church - comes
wtth pta no, pews. songbooks
and etc. Has a full basement. 2 classrooms upstairs
and a large sanctary.
$15,000
NEW LISTING - Rutland
- Newer ranch with 3 bed·
rooms. fam1ly room.
carpeted throughout, and
has mce cabmets. Neat and
cute. One acre of level
ground. $39.900.
NEW LISTING - One acre
of mostly level ground and a
1974 New Moon m.obile
home with equipped kitchen
and front porch. 'Just
$12,000
NEW LISTING -RacineLarge 2 story home w1th
alum. siding, large lot, en closed front porch, family
room. 1tv1ng room. dtning.
room, I\\ baths. 3 bed -·
rooms, and 2 car garage.
$35.000.
NEW LISTING - Farm Sale111 Township -Approx·
imately 64 acres w1th 2
older houses. Several out·
buildings Approxtmately 25
acres tillable. $39,900.

' - Near PoNEW LISTING
meroy- 3 bedroom house.
bath, refrig. and range.
House needs repair. Small
lot. $9,800.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jo Htll 985-4466

Pomeroy

&amp;!,..614-992·2181
Landmark

BISSELL FLOORS !
PROFESSIONAL

Keep That Netural
Look In Your Home.

378-6349

11-17 1 mo.

MILLS'
ELECTRIC
RESIDENTIAL-New
and re-wiring
COMMERCIAL &amp;
INDUSTRIAL
All Work Guaranteed

NEW LISTING - Lg level
lot in Middleport wtth 3
rented tra~lers and rented
apt. All four for only
$20.000.
MINERSVIUE - 2 homes,
one 3 bedrooms. bath, fur·
nace and %acres, the other
has 3 bedrooms, bath, cas
heat and 2 lots for $6.500.

GUN SHOOT

POMEROY - Offer wanted
on thiS 3 bed roomer wilh FA
furnace, bath and 'A acre.
$17,000.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

MIDDLEPORT - Some remodeling on this 3 bedroom
home. Nice lot out of high
water. Offer welcomed. All&lt;l
5 bedroom frame with vinyl
siding near Cardinal.

Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns
Only

POMEROY- Lovely looking
frame home in the lower end
of toWQ. Plenty of room for a
family and view of the river.
3 bedrooms.

10·10·1 mo

Bring This Coupon In

For 10% Off ·
Any Service

MIDDLEPORT - One floor
2 bedroom frame home
above all floods. Bath, gas
heat and fg. yard.

Expires Dec. 30th
Monday thru Friday
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH,
PH. 992-2725
11-9-1 mo.

..

SYRACUSE - Modern 3
bedroom one floor home
looks like new, in A-I condilton wrth large lot Only
$38,500.
.

Hou&lt;;inq
Headquarters
Reai Estate General

·

Startin1 At

, Installed With Pad
KITCHEN
" Recutar $15.95

$12

NoW1

GOLD SEAL
CONGOLEUM

$15.95

ANSO IV NYLON
RIJ. $18.95

Yerd
Installed

Good Selection

$}295

Regular

Of

NOW

S1595

C.dy Stripe
TWEED
lit•. $7.95
NOW S499

Three acres with a nicely constructed concrete block home 26x60, ~ bedrooms, one ·
bath, 12x15 livin&amp; rooin and 24x24 ,family
room. Partially carpeted, fuel oil furnace
with facilities for wood burner. 12xl5 block
storage building, 20x30 block garage. Right
.o ff Rt. 248, country setting. Yz mile east of
Chester. Ohio.
·

•

TWENTY ACRES, no house, Chester Town, ship, Reibel Road.

,.

LOT in Racine Villqe, 75xl50, M.H. facili;
ties, Yellow Bush Road, .

.

I

APPROXIMATELY 2Yz ACRES and house
needs extensive repairs. Racine Vlllep.
'

Home National Bank
949-2210

~

'

Discover Enpp-A-Car, the
modem aliSWif to SOiriltl
new car prices! Drive the vehicle of your choice .,; any
lftlb and model. No doMI
peyment. •lllwlr monthly
JIIYIIIenls. RIICI all about If.
Seild for fret Booklet L-16.
Bob Blatkston, an authorized independtnt [IIJIIIIA-Car Broklr. BOx 326, PollllfOY, Ottio 45769.
Wont Faster lnlonnation7
• Call 614-992-6737
11/2/ttn

mn

985-3561
All Makes

lNG PARTY

!~1 :.,~-~~-o~_v;,~BITY
.·~
•i

or

Residence: 985-3837
Warehou5e: 985·3509 .

[_I mo

II No Answer, Call

. 10·11-1 mo po .

';7

•Washers •Dishwashers

Oewayne vv11fiama
&amp; Scottie Smith

•Rangea
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezen

All

Makes

and

Moclels

Antenna Installation

House Calls ond Shop

PARTS and SERVICE

1141mopd.

MINE RUN .

CHESTER

STRIP
COAL
S3QOO

AUTO
PARTS
REPAIR

PH. 992-2280

CHESTER, OH.
10-13-1 mo.

2-23-flc

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
• Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328

M.L.
CONTRACTING'Excavating
•Ponds
·septic Tanks
'Hauling

949-2293
Racine, OH.
B·J.tlc

SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
· Type Aluminum
Dtlivtrld to Plant
1'lo M. Eest of Papvllle
On Township Rd. 141
We Specialize
in Aluminum Only
PH. 992-3466 .
10/19/2 mo. pd
NOW IN

-------PT Pieiis·ii-r.f --·&amp;Vicinity
lns1de yard sale, no clothes.
Mon . Nov. 21st . 8 :30 t1ll

2:00. 706 Viand St. Pt . Pl.

· PARCEL S~RVICE

DEPOSITORY

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custqm Pole Bldgs.
5

, Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt . Pleasant. WVa .
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg ., Ca(Tlden St .

UilptttiiO (I

SWEEPER and sewing ma chine repair , parts, and
supplies .
Pick up and
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd .
Call

446-0294.

Balloons for Birthdays, Get
WaU. Anniversarys. Sweethearts, parties. Cell Bal·

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282
11-r-ttc

FORTS WITH
UFEUt.E
.U:W...
DHR,A QUALITY.
REWARD VEMA
Ef·

SHOUI..D(R MOUNT ATOURSTUDIO.

!ACH MOliHT tS GIVfN THE

LASTFORYEAIISANOYfNIS.

..

I

Julia' s Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvalesence
Home. 18 years eKperience.
Clifton , W .V'. 304-773 -

5873.

Shooting Match : Come one
- come all. Sat .. 10 :00 p.m .•
Nov. 19 and 20. Sunday,
1 :00 p.m . The Men's Au~til­
lary are holding a shooting
inatch at Bill Stanley' s farm .
BY! miles above Henderson .
Rifle match. Please bring
own arms, shoe guns, . 12
gauge. 1 6 gauge, 20 gauge,
also Black Powder Match.
Shoe gun shells are furnished, at small price. Prizes
are to be given away .
Concession stan·d. No alcoholic beverage allowed .
Bring all your family to this
outing . If raining. will be
held Nov. 26 and 27.
Absolutley no hunting or
trespassing on A.L. Philps
Jr. Tin Can Hollow. Wast
Columbia, Wv. Tre1passer
will be prosecuted.

No Huntlng. Old Town
Farm, C . C. lewis . .

TtiE

fi(R.

TAXIDERMY
SHOP.

CAll TODAY FOR CtRifNT PRIC£5 !;eiW LIMA 10

I

~

:'
•

TO A
· •. • ~
r-TIIOPIIY~;;ON~L~Y
;~1.:;..:
r. IRING
.. :

~~ =~ ~
11

·j
I

No hunting or trespassing on
Martin Wilcoxen property.
124 East of Racine .

2804.

15 Years Experience

A£M£MIIEA.

IUflAftD. OH.

No Hunting or Trea•paulng
on Raymond D Smith property. GaHipolis Ferry. WV.

I L""IIIIIIIO&lt;IIL.ER...;,ANO_;.o.;."'_•_•_.....
_..J~...__•_"·.·;.~_•;.c'-·'.,''-',.ll"'~
- ··tt::::J
'"·

DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
4
Giveaway ·
•
BY
U.PJ. - PUROLATOR j . l.--...:· -------'~------~--'11 2. yr . old timid mota Boogie
juol hod all shots. Playful and
DOOR TO DOOR..f :
good whh klds. Call 814'\ DELIVERY ~•
•
367-0667 after 4PM .

...,

PMCEL

•

sonto,ITo,..:iiD liiii. ·
BRIIIG YOUI PACKAGES
FOR SHIPIEIIT TO:
POMEROY

. Pomeroy,

Oh;·~~ .

Y:~LoAtldiiHII
r

llocl 11-7-7
hildlllmo

7;· Point • Ma~on-~
Auto Gla••

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

~ "AUTO GLASS

I
1-lv.lh,_..

,

WVo. 304-773-5785 or
304-773-91 B5 .
Auction, Sunday Nov. 20,
1983 . Beginning at
1 2 :30PM At Village Trad ·
ing Post, FrontS. Cedar St.,
Oak Hill Ohio . Guns ,
archery, fishing. camping,
electronics, black powder:,
office. equipment, tools,
appliances. scopes , toys and
much much more. Dis·

counto of $60, $35. &amp; $15

witl be awarded to top 3
buyers. 20% deposit will
hold any merchandise for 1
waek . We will sell items for
you. Stop in or call by
Saturday Nov. 19th for
more information . Food Drink-Seating. Terms : Cash
or approved check, all sales
will be final. No staning
bids. All items put up for bid
will be sold. Phone: local

682-7767 or 7768. Out of
State

toll

free

800 -848-

4195. Ohio toll free 1-800282-21 68!
•
Auction every Fri night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments
of new
.and
used
merchandise
always
welcome. Richard Revnolds

Auctioneer. 275-3089.
Mt.Aito auction every Sat.
night, 6 p . m . Starting
Christmas seson. No more
consignments will be taken
until after Christmas. Emma
Bell Auctioneer . 428-8177.
WVa. lie . No . 429· 84.
Special Christmas Auction .
Mt. Alto Auction Barn .
Thanksgiving Day. Starts
1 :00 o ' clock and throughout
evening . Free coHee, ham:~
turkey sandwiches while
they Int. Pop and other
conceaeions will be sold. Do
your Christmas shopping
early. Free drawing . Terms
of sale CAS H .. Emma Bell.
auctioneer. lie. No. 429 -84.

1

,,.

"WoWoniAncl
Yo~rBuslntss"
"'"":loa.·Fri.I:OOiol:OO_I!Itlio
1 1

POINT-MAstJi:f
Rt. 3:1

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay caah for late model
clean used cars.
J1m Mink Chev · Oids Inc
Bill Gene Johnson

446-3872

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heatera . Swain Furni ture. 446-3169, 3rd. &amp;
Olive St., Gallipolis. Oh .

BEOS-IRON. BRASS. old
furniture, gold, silver dollara, wood ice boJilas , stone
jars, antiques. etc.. Com·
plete households . Write:
M .D . Miller, At 4, Pomeroy,

Oh. Or 992-7780.

Wanted to buy . New. used&amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete households. Also complete Auctioneering service. Call Otby

'WY

3095 or 675-5180.

surance Co . has offered
services for fire insurance
co verage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Fa rm,
home and personal property
coverages are ava•lable to
meet individual needs . Contact Harry Pitchford. agent.

RT 36. PHONE 446-7274.

2 bdr 12x50, 83,500. 3
bdr , 12x70. total electric, 2

15

Schools
Instruction

School Instruction . Learn
how to earn photography
and its applications. Sat .
1 · 4 . at Brick building next to
old Marietta Plant gate .
2221 N. Main St. or call
304 · 675 -2g31 ;, 6 :30 to
8:30 .

1- - - - - - - - 1 8 Wanted to Do

New 1984 Skyline 14lll70, 3
BR. 1 V2 bath , completely
furn ., delivered and set. '
regular, 916,500, Special
bile Homes. Call 446-93 40.
New 1984 sectional 1306
sq . ft ., 3 BR .. 2 full baths,
family room, delivered and
set regular$ 24,500, Special
$21 .995 . French City Mob•le Homes. Ca ll446 ·9340.
Trailer on 2 ac re lot $19,000
and tra iler o n 1 acre lot
S 11,000 on Kerr-Bethel Rd.

Call6t4-388-9360.

14.:70 2 bdr .• family room.
total alec., central air, underPinning, on rented lot . Cal

614-245&gt;9225 .

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable
and dependable can 446 ·
3159 between 9 and 5 .

By owner 1972 trailer. 2
bdr ., unfurnished. good
cond . Call 446- 7171 , after

Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small. Reliable and de pen ·
dable . For estimate call

Nice

5 446-8288 .
2

bdr . trailer

Call

614-256-6251 . after 5:30.

446-3159. 9to 5.

1982 14x70 Governor mo.

Will do sewing , mending and

bile home, porch , sliding
glass door, co mpletely under pinned Calf 614 -367-

alterations by the piece. Call

6, 4-446-2070.

McDaniel Custom Butcher ing. Open six davs a wee~ .
7:30 to 6:00p.m. 304-B82·

3224.

7419.
4mobilehomes 10'and1 2'
ft . wide . 2 bedro omfurnished . Low price d .
Brown's Trailer Park . 614·

992-3324 .

ATIENTIONI Is t here such&amp;.
thing as a Classi ci In mobile
home? When you view this
21
Business ·
Hotly Perk we think you will
Opportunity
agree there is. A 1969
12x66 Holly Park with 2
bdr ., 5x 10 tip out in livingroom. completely set up in
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB· nice park . h includes 40 ft.
LISHING CO recommends patio cover , 2 sets of steps ·
that you do business with with railings, central air, nice .
people you know , and NOT furnishing .- even a washer &amp;
to send moneY through the dryer, completely skirted
mail until you have investi· and ready to occupy. Ther
isn't a cleaner or well kept
gated the offering.
home in the area . Just like ·
brand new . Located in Galli- :
1polis area . You must see to
22 Money to Lrian
appr.eciate. all of this
S1 2,900. Financing available, low down payment, and
low monthly payments . For
informet1on call 992-70J4

1-==========

1- - - - - - - -- -

or 992-6284.

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING Lower
prices-regular tunings ·
discounts to Sen1or Citizens,
Churches &amp; schools. Ward's

Keyboard. 304-675-3824.
,.,,, l l l l l l

Homes for Sale

4 bdr. ranch home, large LA,
full basement , with garage.
wood burner included. cJtV
JChools, 2 miles from town .

Cell 446-0278.

Completely remodeled. 3
bdr., 6 rooms. Bath . Eat-in
kitchen . Diningroom .
Carpet. Large lot. 3 porches .
large basement , carport.
Must sell. Immediate possession . Only 817, 600. last
house awav from River on
Henderson St .. Henderson.
WV. Phone number in yard.

3 BR , 3 acres ground . Near
Porter Old 160. Take mobile
home trade in. Call 446-

4202 01 446-2857.

By owner brick &amp; frame, 3

bdro .. 1Yo botho, LR. OR.

l-c:..:a_ll_&amp;
_1_4_-3_7_9_-2_t_4_1_.- - Owner Must Sell Hamel
Unbelievable price I low util·
itieal buy It now I Middleport,

Nice clean 2 bedroom utility
room. new fumance . fenced
In yard. thubbery . Call 446-

Help Wanted

expendo 1 2x63 , 2 SR. total
electric, c;entral eir. awning.
underp inning, deok. Call
614 -245-9222

$14.500. French City Mo-

pacad enviornment. in a 100
bed skilled faciNty. If thie
aounde like you apply at
Scenic Hilla Nurafng Center,

304.871-1788 .

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . · USEO- CARS.
TRUC KS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
446-7572.

4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,

utitity room. large kitchen
with lots of cabinets. loA. Martin 614-992-6370. cated in very nice neighbor·
hood. little over Vt acre,
Buying daily gold. silver approx. 3 mi. from hospital.
coins. rings, jewelry, sterling Call &amp;14-245- 5233. Priced
wara, old coins, large cur· In 40 's.
rency . Top prlcea. Ed. Bur·l - - - - - - - - - : ken Batber Shop , 2nd . Ave, One of the finer homes in
Middlepor1, oh . 614-992- Gallipolis . For sale by owner.
3478.
Modern ' design, _ tri level.
Cu'storil dasign ·kitchen . AU
·
Raw Fur Buyer. Beef &amp; Deer
go with home,
Hi~es :Ginseng. Trapping .;..;_ 01 h•. two fireplaces,
Suppllea . George Buckley, · ~'!' ..... -·
room,
Rt. 2 , Athans, bh . P~one WS- DR garage .
will
814 - 664~ 4761 .. 1· 9 Datly. finance · with pr~'•r down
payment . For appointment

coli 992-694t .

1 2x60 New Moon trailer.
very clean w ith expando
living room in Middleport.
Priced to selL 614-992-

2101 or 614-992-2319

1976 14x70 trailer. 3 bedroom , 2 baths , large kttchen.

$10.000. 304-773-5023.

1981 14x70, Shultz limited
mobile home, microwave.
dishwasher, cantral air, un·
derpenn~ng , three bedrooms, 1 1/~ ba t hs, excellent
condition, $15,500. Call

304-675-6049 after 5 p.m.

'Mobile Home Moving, Licensed and Insured. Free
Estimates S100 . par hookup minimum . Phone 304-

576-271,

01

576-2866 .

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phono 304-676-27t 1.
Wanted older three bedroom
mobile home sound condition, reasonable . 304· 744-

6644.

CLE .. RtNG LOT SALE
SAVE $4.000 OR MORE
PER HOME. t 0•50 2BDR .
$2 ,995. 1978 12•65
2BDR . ALL ELECTRIC
$7,995. 1984 14•60 ALL
ELECTRIC ONLY $1.050
DOWN 8141 .04 PER MO.
ENERGY EFFICIENT
HOMES NEW 14FT WIOE 3
BDR 1Yo BATH ._LL ELECT·
RIC WITH 6 IN OUTSIDE
WALLS $1.500 DOWN
MONTHlY PAYMENTS ·
$195.19 P.ER MO . PLUS
MANY MORE TO CHOOSE
FROM. IF YOU DO NOT
HAVE OOWN PAYMENT.
WILL TAKE ANYTHING OF
EQUAL VALUE AS YOUR
DOWN PAYMENT . ALL STATE MOOULAR HOMES
Y2 WAY BETWEEN , HUN -

I !INGTOJII &amp;·PT PLEAS .. NT
ON ST RT 2. 304-576·
2711 .

33

Farms lor Sale

6.8 acres on Bulaville- Porter
Co. Rd. 3 . Old farm house
for sale by owner, asking
$66,000 . Interested party
pleate call 448 ~7247 or

513-293-7270 .

groduote. Chollonging. lost t37,500. Coli 446-2206.

Buckrldga Rd., Golllpo• t431 or 446-1685.
flo. Oh. Call Mon.- Fri .. 8- 1- - - - - - - - - 5311

Rt .325 off SR .124. Langs· 4 : 30 .
vlllo. 814-742-2234.
E.O .E.

AUiO GLASS
MIIIOII;-:: .••

13041 m-5710 -m-5111

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Housework or will care for
elderly person. 304-675-

House In Eureka recently
remodeled, 32 acres.

Two German Shepherd
' watch dogs,· good home.

15 Acre, A-frame houte in

Letart. W.Va . 895-3935 .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL- ·
tTY MOBilE HOME SALES.

Coll304-675-3190.

AN Par1·tlme, exp . or new

Old refrigerator. Works
good . 11t houae on right.

3 bedroom ranch style
home, carpeted. full · aize
basement. 1 ca r garage, In
ground pool 16x32 .

Dump Truck Service will
haul anything anywhere .

0482.

whito.ll14-949-2931.

You Need GT•II You Need Us ... We Cen Hendlt

Situations
Wanted

11

Ooa- Toy poodle and Shitzu .
8 montha old. T•n and

OUR SPECIALTY!''

12

31

-

~

Someone with truck to load
&amp; move 120 bates of hay.
From Cheshire to GattipoUs.
Call 446·4267 eve .

~:~~12~~~do

crotlng. Call
6-k-lrt-.-n.-.-c-.u-s-,-4--38-7-

1Tour E-y Gl811 Need!

.
nd

licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

GLASS GLASS GLASS

STHAIU

PARCEL SERVICE
. St
279 Mlin
•

614-387-7101.

Mu ·s Root . Inc. 614-992- 1- - - - - - - - - -

Gar~ges

TRUSTy~

Gun shoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday starting 1
p .m . Factory choked . guns
only. ·

Taking orders for Thanksgiving pies . Call 6d14-9927364-Virginia Wyatt or

Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

WHEN THE 11AHY ttOUR5 OF HUNT·
INQ FIMUY PAY OIFF wmt THAT

Public Sale
8o Auction

B

HILL FORD

Vacancy:

Homes for Sale

Call 814-268-8669 after
6PM.
f45 .000. 614-992-6B58 .

Phone 446 -1427 . .

PAT
992 -2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

MANY THANKS FOR THE
SUPPORT OF THE VOTERS
TO GUY ROSE. THANK
YOU, GUY ROSE.

••

~;

LEGAL NOnCE
NonCE OF
ELECTION

HI ttc

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sires Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
lo 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10-6-tfc

RECAMATION

IJ~E

GARAGE

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tran1mission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

Yard Sale

7

3 Announcements

Roger Hysell

Need 4 people to cut fire·
wood $200-$260 a week.

31

black and brown spoto. Lost 13
Insurance
baths $7.500. Call 614Barto~ !~r~ _i~ ~'t1 , - - - - - -- - - 446-0175.
Thuroday. 61
o.i 4. SANDY AND BEAVER In- I-1-97-0-V-in_d_a_
tl•e-.-~~-v-ln_g_r_o-o­m

loono &amp; Co .. 446-431 3.

COUNTRY CRAFT
COTTAGE
317 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
Cross Stitch and
Candlewick Supplies
Givinc Lessons
Take Crafts on Consicnments. also have craft
cifts.
HOURS: 9-3 Mon. thru Sat.
9-6 Friday
IO·.&lt;.J.I mo.·c

Help Wanted

l'age-9

near

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores . We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

. 1111

Residential-New and rewiring; Commercial and IndustriaL
BONDED
Ali Work Guaranteed
Call 614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.
11-1-1 mo. pd

AND

Lost.-Coon type dog.
Female-spayed . White with

RADIATOR
SERVICE

THE
TROPHY
KING

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

Lost and Found

7598.

742-2352

·P~. ~~!~:l_~'- ~j-~;·~

Service Available

4·5-tfc

chlldr•n, well behaved,304·

Route 4 Pomeroy
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
'
' TFN.
Service. Eotato. Farm, AnL---------'""-''1tique &amp;. liquidation sales .·

Trophy
Manufacturers
PLAQUES
4
~ ENGRAVING
320 JERICHO RD.

.; :.82

~" 5

Washers, Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Cor.ditioners
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

with

LOST Gray &amp;: white kitten
around Pic-Pac area. Re·
ward. Call after 5:00 , 448 -

USED
APPLIANCES

•water Pipe ·
•cas Pipe
*Regulators
•.fittings
•Drips
PHONE:

good

876-6318.
Give owoy. ptolform rocker.
double manro.., 304-6755689.
Two yellow mole klrtonl,
good home. 304-6756t74. .

6

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofing - Siding - Concrete
Palios - Sidewalks New Construction - A~·
modeling - Custom Pole
Barns.
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co. ·
Route I
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
12-20-tfc

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

Ph. 985-4269

Pomeroy, Oh.

The annual elect1on of dtrettors o f !he Albany Independent 1
,
Agncu!tural Society Will be held !
December 3. 1 983 at Ihe ·
Albany Grange Hall located m 1
Albany. Ohio Voting hours wilt !
be from 3 00 to 7·00 PM
can d1dates for d ~rectors must 1
be a member of the soc1etv.
Pet1tions mUst be s• gned by 10
1
or more members of the soc1ety ,
an d ftted With the secretafV of 1
the society at least seven days
before the election
Pet1t1ons may be obtarned
from Secretary Dons H. Mace
At. 1 Bo' 298. Albany. OH
45 71 0. Residents of Alexander
Local School D1strrct 18 years
of age and over wno purchased
membership tickets for the
1983 larr are ehgtble to vote for
drrectors.
Dorrs H. Mace.
Secretary
Albany Independent
.,
Agrrcu ltural
Soc1etv
(_1 t) t 1. 18. 2tc

Ul·26·1 Ill(] .

~====::::;
S&amp;W TV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester. Ohio

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Public Notice

.

goas~o~d,
~a~i?o~
446-0840

Dog,

11

8040 or 614-949-2129 .

\

Frank's

Hound

.

Trae trimm ing and re moval.
Free estimates . 614-992-

3-tO-tfc

nrl ,

Ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip ·ranks
Your Place or Mine"

J

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

Call 614-742-2214
After 5 ltM. ·
11-15-1 mo. pd.

REAL. ESTATE
CARPET

Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 992-~?,~~

·-~ lD~i-i mn

Giveaway

Black fomato kitten. IIIIer
trainad. 304-676-3B34.

Call 949-2263
or 949-3091

PH. 742-2456

n:~~·

j

CALL

NEW LISTING- Good 6 rm.
franie Witt1 bath. gas fur·
nace. prtvate water, carpet·
ing and lg level lot at Rutland. Ask1ng S2l,500.

RACINE - We have 4
homes to sell. One floor and
2 stories. Woodburner, 3
bedrooms. 3 w~h gas fur·
naces.levellots. $12,500 up
on t1me.

"Work Guaranteed"

0'

?47R

GUNS

SKATE-A-WAY
citester. oR
Open Wed., Fri., Sat Niles
7:30 to 10:00
Available lor private parties Mon., Tues., Thurs.
Niles, Sat or Sun. Afler-

"12 Year• Experience"

nrl

PH.

1011212 mo. pd

.81

FLOOR SANDING
and REFINISHING

NEW usntNG- 1.8 acres
and a 2 bedroom carpeted
home. Natural gas, FA furnace and front porch for
$2,500 down. ONLY
$18,000

11

Vinyl Siding &amp;
RoOfi
· SAVE 30%
MORE
On Sidinc and Roofina.
Gutter an~ Downspouts
"Free Ellimolel"

10/20/ tf.n.

tAiiiiLor

511
su1t:eL•.nj 85
51,. A

GOOD SELECTION
SHOTGUNS &amp;
HANDGUNS
We buy, sell or trade.
Good pnces.

R. E. HOME ,
IMPROVEMENTS

742-2328

1-( 6141 -992-3325

POMEROY,O.

No Sunday Calls
3·11-tfc

1

-·:-~.~:· ·;"

Salem Twp. Rd . 180
Dexter, Oh .. U726
Bill Eskew

1

ROOfiNG
All types o .roofwork.
neW Or repatr, gutterS
and dowQspours, gutter clean!nl and
painti~g. sform doors
and Wtndows .
d
All Work Guarantee
"Free Estimates"

-•!·~-, 1,.,

Tri-County
General Welding

co. I

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding e,.
timates. 949-2801 or

AL TROMM

Real Estate General

s

949-28o0

GRAVEL
HAULED

Phone

E . Main

' SIDING
:

EXCAVATING
- Dozers
- Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
- Lo -Boy
-Trencher
- Water

Have 1 Carpet
In Your Home
Shampooed "FREE"
A d
A
n ee
Kirby Demonstration
Completely " FREE"
Limited Offer
can 98~-4"~~5
Ask for •uv ma
lndependant:"-t(''r'rti"v";·'i"i"ealer

i

BISSELL

I -3-tlc :

,~~~~~·DOl
601

&amp;SERVICE

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

'ao..oczK&lt;R
••SEPTICHOE
SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•W..TER, G&gt;.s ond
sEwER LINEs
•PONDS. RECl .. M..TION .
WORK
•lANO ClEARING
•CONCRETE woRK
aoNoEo &amp; wou GummED
PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201 l-7-tl
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

U. S. RT. 50 EASl
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

..L_--'1

IL-,-,_,_,-~-,:,,..-,.,_ _

Public Notice

4

-===;;;;:;~;::==;r;::========;r;========::;-Tr========::;Tr========:;j
r
MILLER
J&amp;F
PULLINS
o
CALL NOW
H. l . Writesel

-

11

The Daily Sentinel

Business Services

lll C.oO St:. P'o-r. llllio 4SlU

=

Ohio

·r

l.,t..

declining 8.8 percent In September.
Separately, the oil Industry's
main trade group said U.S. oil
demand continued to Increase In
October, led by a 3.5 percent rise In
gasoline consumption.
The American Petroleum Institute said overall oU consumption
rose 1.5 percent In October from a
year earlier, following a 0.5 percent
gain in September. Consumption for
the flrst 10 months of the year
remained 2.1 percent below the 1982
·l
. level.
Oil im{Xlrtswere up 2.3 percent in
October , mainly because of a 10.6
percent rise In shipments of refined
products. Oll im{Xlrts for the first io
months of the year were 3. 7 percent
below the 19821evel.

- NOnCE OF SALE-

Eighteen defendants were fined
and four others forfeited honds In
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Darrell Johnson, Racine, and
Roger Stiles, Athens, unsafe vehicle, $5 and costs each; Eugene
Guignet ill, Marietta, assured clear
distance, $.ll and costs; Eli Ebersbach ill, Mlddle{Xlrt, DWI, $250 and
costs, three days confinement.
license suspended six months, left gt
center, SZi and costs, no operators
license, five days confinement, one
year probation, costs; Ernest Taylor, Somerset, Ky., hunttng on land
without first obtaining written

November 18, 1983

Call

448-7180 ,

Sol~l11
A.vn.. Vou can make
1Co to .•• -~c!•rChristmo •.
0 11

,~_,....

·located In Syracuse-Near
school 8t awlmming pool. 3
bedroom aitueted on one-

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 acres at' Rodney on W .T.
Watson Rd. Owner financing avattable. Call446 -8221
after 6 weekdays.
11 - 1 acre riverfront lots,

third aero tot. U4,100 .•• low doWn payments. low
will rent for 1276 mo. a. mon\~ly payments. 814·
304-811-3934.
t• 378-8278.

�'
Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

KIT 'N' CARL YLE'•

54 Misc . Merchandis_e 54 Misc . Merchandise
3 rooms and bath, 142 4th

Firewood ~

Ave., 1160 mo., 1100 dep ..
8 mos . lease required. Call
446-3667 alter 6.
balh, LR, FR. wall to wall
. carpet, dishwasher. gas
heat. tir cond .• in Gallipolis.
Ref. req . Call 446-1409
after 5 .
Two story house. 4 bdr,,

•260 per mo . 8260 dep.
req. Call 446-4222, 9 :30·
6 :00 .

breezeway. gas forced air

446-7776 .

heat Central air-cond. 614949-2734 .

Cedar · and walnut lumber.

carpett;~d,

Now Haven. B82-2466.

8472 .

j~~::r1~:~.=~~=·~·~,.-=
-""'·~~~=~~[~~:7~~

~

44

5 rms., bath, carpeted, gas
heat. $180 mo plus dep.
Neighborhood Rd . 446-

4757 alter 5:30.
Newty redecorated home,

nice neighborhood, Gallipolis. 3 bdF .. 2 baths. wall -wall

carpet, stove. refrigerator.
washer-dryer. $360 mo ..
deposit &amp; ref. requird . Call

446-0186 after 5 .
Middleport. S295 . 3 bedroom, dining room , full
basement. garage , nice
neighborhood . Security
deposit required . Also references . 614 -992 -2517 .
For rent· 2 lovely Riveriront
houses. 3 bedroom and 2
bedroom . Each hat 1%
baths. fireplace and garage.
References exchanged .

304-882-2836 .
3 bedroom house tor rent .
Garage and pool. $300.

614-992-585B .
Full basement, 1 % story
with city water. double
garage, garden, 1 small child

accepted . 304-675-101.11 .
3 bdr. 2 baths, heat pump, 2
car garage. nice location .
. Call 304-675-5545 or 675·

2371.

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. apt .. utilities panially
paid . 3 room apts , utilties

poi d. Coli 304-675-5104 or
304-676-73B8 .
Furnished apt . 2 bdr., 8160,
water paid. 1 1 36 Second
AVe .. Gallipoli~ . 446-4416
after 7 p.m .
3 or 4 room i.mfurnish8d apt.
utilities paid! adults only, no
pets . Call 446-3437 .
Corilpletely fUrnished,
newly decorated, all electric,
centrally located, at $200
mo. plus deposit. Call 614·
446 · 2236 . or 614·446·

304-BB2·2836.
Attractive 3 bedroom home
for refit , Park Drive, $300.
monthly . Call 304-675 . 6270 weedkays before

4 :30.

for Rent
Syracuse -;:- 3 bedroom
mobile home , total electric,
central air, acro ss from
london Pool. 99 2 -2659 .
Nice 2 bdr. trailer. Hannan
Trace School area, Rt. 218 .

12"60 2 bdr. modern furnished trailer, convenient
location, Upper River Rd ,
deposit req . Call 614-446-

B558 .
2 bdr. trailers . Apartments 1
bdr. Beautiful river view in
Kanauga . Fosters Trailer
Park. 446 -1602 .
Nicly furnished modern mobile home, in city. 1 or 2
adults only. Call 446-0338 .

2 bdr. fUrnished , good clean
condition. $150 per mo ..
$60 deposit. 1 child , no
pets. New Haven, 882·

2466 .
1 4x70 3 bdr., 1% bath,
close to hospitaL Call 614-

388 -9760 .
2 bdr. trailer for rent in
Cheshire, Furn ., $ 160 mo .,
s 100 deposit . Call 614-

367-7B9B .

2 bedroom trailer. Real nice.
Brown's Trailer Park . 61 4 ·

fumished. $176 plus deposit &amp; utilities . No pets, lot
No. 20. Country Mobile
home in Darwin . 992-6836

or 992-7479 .
2 bedroom mobile home.
Utilities furnished . No pets.
Deposit and references required . ~dulls or couple
with one child . located 2
miles out Rt.43. Call after 6

p.m. 614-992 -3647.
In Middleport-trailer with
expando livingroom . Very
clean. corner lot. 12 • 60.

Adults onlv. 614-992-2101
or 614-99.2-2319 .
Mobile home for rent, two
bedroom, deposit and reference· reqi,Jired . . ,3,04- 876-

4045 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished efficiency. 920
4th Ave., Gallipolis, adults,

1176. utilities poid . . 4464416 after 7 p.m.
Small turn. houH 1 or 2
adutts only. no pats. Call

448-0338 .
Furnished 3 rooms. ,with
private bath. Refe'rence pre·

forrod. Call 446-2216.
Furnlahad aptl .. 1 -2 rm. S.

both down &amp; 1 up. Allo 1 -4

rm.

&amp; bilth up. Clten, no

pell, odullo qnlv. Ref. req.
Coll448-1519 .
&lt;

For sal&amp; good used livingroom furniture and dinette

266-1529.

614-266-1207,

2 bdr. apt., 1 mi.. North of

Westinghouse electric dryer.
older modal, works fine.

446-4164 .

$40 .00 . 675-4439 .

1 bed room Apt. &amp;196. mo.
including utilities. Equal
housing opportunity. Contact Village Manor Apts-.

.
SWAIN
AUCTION l!o FURNITURE

Upholstered chair, 4x7
carpet. tamp. car radio. Call

614' 992-7787 .
Apartments . 304-675 ·

APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houses. Pl. Pleasant
and GallipoliS . 614-446-

B221 .
TWIN

RII:IERS TOWER .

Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
income of lets than

$12.300. Renting lor 30
percent ot adjusted income~04-675-6679 .

Duple~t 6 rooms, bath, base·
ment, water fumished, Look
25 Rood. Point Pleasant.

5.?.

675-5968 . -

Nice 1 bedrom apt. 304-

675 -7112 .

Odysse9 2 with two car·
tridges, seldom used .

Furnished Rooms

For rent S'l eeping Rooms
and, light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel .

Call 446-0756 .

46

53

Antiques

Antique Hoosier cupboard
all orginal mint cond . Call
446-3946 evenings.

$250. 614-992-3617.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Furnished oHice tor rent.
Close to city building and
court house. Call446-0866
days. 8125. mo.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call

992-7479.
In Middleport-nice trailer
space, any size . All utilities
available. 614-992-2101 or

.742.2126 .
Harvest gold Kelvinator 130in . Electric Range, 4
young hogs, hay mi~ed with

.

greu. 614-949 -2237.

limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gallie or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446· 7785.

51 Household Goods
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, otto·
man, 3 tables, {extra 'heavy
by Frontier). 8685. Sofa,
chair and lovesaat, 8275 .
Soias and chairs priced from

$285. to fB96. Tables. e46
and up to 8125 . Hide-a·
beds,$440 . and up to
$625 .• Recliners, $176. to
$376., lamps hom $28 . to
$75.6 pc. dinettea from

$99 .. to 435 . 7 pc. 1189
and up. Wood table with six
chairs •425 to •746. Desk
8110 up tp •.2.26. Hutches,
8660. and Lip, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattreaaes, 8260. and
Baby beds,
up to $396.
$110. Mattrene• or box
sPrings, full or twin, 568 ., .
firm, •ea. ·and *78. Queen
sets, •196. 4 · dr. ·chetts.
$42 . 5 dr. chests, $64. Bed
'framea, $2Q.and $26., 10
gun ~ Gun cabineu, &amp;360 .
Gas or electric ranges 8376.
Baby mattresses, t26 Ia

7362.
2-cabbage patch doll look-alikes. $22 . a piece . Regular

S26 . Call 614-992-3792.

· or coal. $690. Call 614256-1216 .

Firewood. 304-BB2-2537.

Firewood for sale $36 e
pickup load delivered, 10

for

110. a ton. Call 614-2661427.
New dozer, very reasonable .

Call 446-803B.

1:00-7:00 p.m.

New 1 983 Nechi Free Arm
Sewing Machine, zig-zags,
monogrems, sews on buttons, makes buHon holes,
makes
New 1983 Nechi Free Arm
Sewing Mac.hine, zig-zags;
monograms, ,sews on but·

:~":tv~ l164_v.;S6l,"f~~'J. war-

Ditch Witch ·22oo·tronching
machine. 1· 614-694-7842.
Meat equipment digital

$35, bed lromao 120, 126,

acale. cash regitter. cuber,

&amp;. 830, king frame t60.

moot cooe, moot table. Rao•

Good aelectlon of bedroom oonably prle&lt;~d. Call 614suitaa, cedar chests ,
rockera, metal cablnet1, :::;:ab::. stroller. bobv
swivel rockers.
motornlty clothing, inlont
Used Furniture •· bookcase,
rangaa, chairs, dryers, re· - t . &amp; tub, etc. Call 114frlgeretor• and TV's. 3 mllea . 388-9767.
out BulaVilla Rd. Open 9an:'l
to lpm, Mon. thru Fri .. 9am Control Hunger and 1oM
weight with New Shape Diet
to &amp;pm, Sat.
Plan and Hydrex water pi111
448-0322

at Frutha Pharmacv. 264

Avo., Gollipollo, 440·1899.
.Spin wuhert, gas &amp; electric

58

Jackson Pike.

Brlorwood pool toblo. olote

dryen, euto wa1hera, gie • · top •.regulatlon llaa. with cue
aJectrlc reng11. refriger• otlcko • belli •210. Coli
; o t ,.3117-0838.
ton, TV 1eta.
•

2160.

56

HILLCREST KENNELS
Bording all breeds. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman puppies: Stud
Service. Call446-7796.

', :;.~~ui';iii-1

304-676-4560.

1 9B2 Buddy 2 bd.room

'76 Chevon. 2 · door. automatic, 81,295. RCA floor

14•60, furnished, washer
end dryer. gaa, financing

model TV, $200. Call 304676-29B9 or 576-2372.

62

AKC Registered Poodle puppies, ready to go. 446-0867.

Farm Equipment

.

Wanted to Buy

Will bur tobacco poundage.

Pleooo call 446-9777 or
44,6 -3692 .

Buy Christmas pups now,
Airedales. AKC from private
home with lots of TLC. exc .
family oriented pet. Ready
ior new loving homes. 8
wk.! . old. Call after 6,

63

Registered Polled Hereford
breeding stock, one bull,
two cows, two Herfords.
Moving must sacrifice. Call

614-266-1523.
Four sow pig•· one boar. Call

304-896-3 69 otter 8pm.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Straw, Edison Mayea, 304-

676-1B6B.

Jjiiii~iiiii
Traneppr cwtlpe
71

Autos for Sale

with children . Wetzel Bailey.
1 CFA registered mete sea l·
point Himalayan kitten, 6
months old. Good pedigree.
Hold tor C_hrlatmas. 614Flah Tank and Pet Shop,
2413 Jackson Ave., Point
Pleasant, Phone 304-676._
2063 . Hours Mon-Sat. 1 1·
6, Sun. 1-5. Ten per cent off
Dog and Cat flea eolian. 10
gallon tank set up, 826 .99.
Get $5 .00 free fish with a
tank. any tank. Green
Swords. 2 for 81 .25. Gold
fish. 4for81.00. Many more
iish specials in shop.

81ua Tick 1 1

.'

.r

1

"' M~.,~~~~a
"x~·,·.s~="

~'::)_1_~ "'~ ~out
;[I~

II

l ..

~,

~~ --· . ~ft)~: ~~ .)--!·~;:t~--

CAPTAIN EASY
WHOEVER IT 15 I&lt;NOW5 MY
I&lt;EAL &gt;lAM~ 151MY. ALL THIS
ATTENTION ~OLJL.D BE !leVYING

L)P'A 61RL.'S tEART. HUH~ BUT
I'Y~ '&amp;&amp;N 8UI&lt;NEP TOO IMNY

TI-'ES... l PI.IT OIJT THE FLAM~
LO'I6 A60.

good body rough $1 30. Call
446-7776 .
1979 Chevrolet Scottsdale
4x4 PU, Chevy Sport pack·
age. PS. PB. air, tilt wheel,

AM-FM tapa, 30,000 mi.
Must eael to appreciate,
many other extraa. $6,600.

Call 446-0649 .
1977 Ford 1 ton truck,
43,000 mi., 1·2 h. flatbed, 1
owner, exc. cond., $3,960.

~·

Cooling,
Sheet M,tal
Work.
Gallia Refrigeration
Co.
Call .. ..,

~6_:1_:4_-4:_4:.::6:...·4:_0:.:6:.:6.:,.- - - B 1 s 5 ELL F i o oR s --

ProfeSsional floor sanding
a'n d reiinlshing. Keep that
natural look in your home.

. Call 378-6349 .
RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Z8nith and
· Motorola. Quazar, and
house calls. Call 576-2398

or 446-2464.
F &amp; k Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call675-1331 .

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing, including
hot tar epplication, carpen t_er, electrician, ma,son . Call

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

ter, (Dav 614-692 -4066.1
(night 61 4·698-B205.1
GET

your carpel

doe;,

Houses Raised or Moved.
Floors leveled. joist's sill'1
replaced, basements dug
beneath houJe, excavation,
ponds or roads made. All
work guaranteed . Free Esti·
mates. "In business for over
a quaner of a century".

HOUSE MOVERS -

she plan
;;._...:.;,!~.'-to pl.ft it?

676-

2711..
Hous8 raising, leveling, resilling. concrete work. basement water proofing, foundation work, free estimates.

304-675•3908 .

WINNIE
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cdr. Fourth end Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446·

4477

1972 Ford truck. 1600.00.

0576.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

GASOLINE ALLEY

mates. 614-446-2107 .

good sticker,

73

•

··

furniture cleaning, free eati·

ING. Fomerly Dewitt's
Plumbing. Call 61 4·367·

miloo, 11.300. Phona 304937-26B6.

TOP CASH paid for late
modal upd car~.
Smith
Buick·Pontiac, 1911 Eaatern Ave., Gallipolis, · 446·

2282.

good tires. good cond. Call

83

AND IT JW~~ E&gt;E ...
IF YOU R.EHANG THAT
PORTRAIT OF E&gt;ILL'S

MOTHER IN IT.

.....
.~

•••
'

..,'
I

DOZER

WORK

Evening television li.stings-------------....;...------------------

By Ted

Hanna , ponds. ditches.
basements, etc. Call 4464907. Carter &amp;: Evans
Transportation.
·

440-4292.
1978 GMC van. runs good.

614-446-1142 betwoan
7:00AM llo 5 :00PM .

some

body

work,

1600. Call 446-7322.

1 979 Pontiac Flrebird, V-8,
AT. PS. PB, AC. excellent
condition. Contact 446·

1 196 altar 6 p.m . .
1 971 Volkswagen 41 1 Ita·
tionwagon. not running. Call

81 4·-379-2424.

1970 4 wheel drive jeepster.
62.000 actual miles. Mechanically excellent: Body

oound.
6056.

$2260. 014-992-

1979 CJ 6 Joop maroon

1981 Z-28 Camero T-top.
air cond., PS, PB, auto., 4
new tires. 43.000 mi .. e,.;c.
cond., 87,900 or bast offer.

with black top, white with
gqld stripes, many extras.

304-B82-3684.

FRIDAY

74

Coli 61 4-379·2726.

Motorcycles

1976 LTD 2 dr., 1660. See.
at Ouoll CrMk, Lot 71,
1970 BSA e&amp;O all chrome.
Rodnov. Oh.
Call 992-6956.
1 971 Dodge now tlrn. 0
cyl .• good work car, e300. 1880 Hondo XR 80 motor
Coli after 4, 304-071-8384. bike, varygoodcond., 8400.
Coll446-1618.
1 983 vw llobbll GT -I lou
thin 2.000 mi.. $8,000 1 970 4x4 JNpOior 62,000
firm. O.ry Hood, 114-441- actual miles. mac::hanically
axe., body 10und, 82.260.
7781afttr 8PM.
Call 9~2-60116.
1983 Oldamoblle firenll!
Coupe, under 7,000 mi., 5
apd.. air. PS. PB. Call
448·1110 br 446~9245.

lion. 304-67&amp;-4140.
'

1978

76

EVENING
8:00 D(f)CJJ(!)DCJJ®GI
(l21Newo

(f) HBO Rock: Pot Senator

in Concan The Grammy
Awerd·winning leading lady
performs in New Haven 's
Vecerans Memorial Coli·
seum'.

(f) MOVIE: ·A Dog of
Fl-'
(I) New Treasure Hurit
Cll Uttle Houee on the

J .A.A. Construction Co .
Water Lines, Footers,
Drains. All kinds of Ditching.

Prairie

()) !lll 3-2-1, Contlct

e

lllmlolllr Galactlca
6:30 • (I) (!) NBC News
(f)RIIIernon
!DI ABC News
® CB8 Nowa

Rutlond, Oh. 614-7422903.

()) e
a ())

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

(J).....,_oR-rt

!lll ov.r wv

7:00 • ()) PM M-Ine
(I) 1 - Tho NFL

(I) AU.. Smith and Jones.

Pasquale Electric Co. all
phases of electric work, all
work guaranteed. Aerial

CD SpomCentar

()) Carol ........
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Cl) Chertte'a Angela
• (J) Wheel of Fortune

truck ronal. Call 614-446 2716. .
·I

())

!lll MacNoii/Lohror

Newahour

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Salas &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,

®Nowo _
!DI P-lit'o Court

e
•

Jafteraons

7:15 (]) NBA Tonight
7:30 8 liJ nc Toe Dough
()) NBA -Oiboll: Now

Pomeroy. 992-22B4.

Honda CR 80. Good condi·

86

Yorlt_,

General Hauli!lg

axe.

cand..

loadod. Collll1 4-3117-7224.

Auto Parts ·

&amp; Accessories

1878 Trona-AM, ·T-top,
1uto.• PS. tilt, PW, atr, new
·tlroo, good cond,. U,900. 2 PU topporo 811 .. 886, 8V.
. 11.. • 1 1 o.- Col 448· 7322.
Citl 4411· 7322.
1978 Novo hatchback, PS. Billy LH's Thea &amp; S.llory
PB. AC, outo., UOO or·bea S.le.o. 1803 J-non Ava ..
offer, body rough. Coli 448- Pl. Ploonnt. 304-8756401. New end uoocl llros.
8011.
1873 vw Suporbulle. New Four P1ei-80D13 tires,
dre1. Good condition, runs

gfMI. f1100. 882-2401.

e11. each~ ' Two tnow tires

on rima, f20. Nch. 304,871-3084.

Motor~ Homea

a. Campera

1183 VW Robbll. 014-tt21117 lp.m. or 114- 8 ft. allele In camper with
441-7381 onytlme.
· )ocko, fiOO. Coli 4411-207&amp;

-· tr-

e

~ · and

l·

8:00

Entartolnmanl

I

·

One Day at a Time
()) (!) Mr. Smltli Mr.

Smith Is faced with explain·
tng10 1 friend's widow lhal
hat hulbend'1 belt frie.nd
was an ortngutan.

5.

(f) With o Touch of
lu,..... SkJ CaeHr ind ·

Water hauling, Fast Service,
low ratea. Call 814·266-

lmoQene COCI &amp;tar in thil
slapedck comedy apeclaL
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho Kld--

1743.

~.~···,.,._nt'

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Coli Jim Lenior, 304-6757387.

~MOViE~ Reluctant
AwtaUi-..·

(I)

87

!DI

Tonight

Wa'l.f do H. Coli 446-3119
between

()) F"'"lly Feud

liD Michigan F-11

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Coli 814-387-747.t
or 814-367-0691.
Need something, hauled
aw.y or something-moved?

llooton

()) Good Nawo
()) •

Ford Elite

8:30

11/18/83

Good·1 Excavating, bate·
mants. footers, driveways,
septic tanks, landscaping.
Call anytime 446·4637,
James l . Davison, Jr .
owner.

84

.

Excavating

Cat 216 hoe, dozers, crane,
loaders, dump truck. Call

neada

au EST:

SHIP

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-

1 960 Chevy pickup truck.
SAton, ell original, 30,000

HAllE ANOn-IER

CHI'\T Willi OUR

..

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water removal.

304-675-33BB.
304-895·

LATER, MII!CEJI.!
FIRST, WE ·MUST

304-B95c3B02.

cond. Must see &amp; drive to
appreciate. 93,000. 614'75 Jeep e;~~;cellent condi·
tion. 76 Luv truck,VS conversion, blazer wheels. roll
bar. auto. transry1ission.

TH~QUrTE A.

CHILl. IN tHE AIR:
MY PEARl I'LL
HAVE ZAAA. FIX
US A POT OF TEA!

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

82

949-2644.

ALLEYOOP

304 -676 -208B or 6764660.

1979 Chovv Luv 4x4, AC,

441-7318 onytlme.

~

1970 Ford pickup ~ ton 6
cyl .• 1t1ndard. new bed. ex.
cond .• 8400. 1972 Mercury
Comet. 8 c~'l., auto. runs

vw .._ ·-1•. 1871. 1
vw bue-1874. 114-892· 79
3117 otter lp.m. or 014·

"-

Trucks for Sale

3611.

742-2705.

~§.

.1.

Appliance Service All makes
&amp; models refrigerators,
..·
washers. dryers, ranges. ".,
compactors, dishwashers, ~....
microwaves . Heating &amp;

1976 Truck Ford F1 00. Exc.

Dog, 7 weeks old., good

.

267B.

Call446-7322.

Livestock

614-245-9254.

"'"

'69 Volkswagon, for parts,
will run, cheap. 304-676·
"76 Buick Le1abre, 4 door
hard top, southern car, exc.

614-379-2424.'

4230.

''

1976 Pinto Station Wagon,
good condition, 304-676·

6930.

John Deere mo,el 70 tree·
tor. Oliver model 80 row
crop &amp; cultivators. All new
rubber. Ma11ie Ferguaon 6
ft. 3 point side mower. Call

3 -7 week old Siamese kittens. S5Q each . Call 446-

••

"'

Wino Saps and Cider. Call
446-8598 or 614-3792303.

61

Dragonwynd Catte'ryKennels .. AKC Chqw puppies, CFA Him81ayan, Per·
sian and Siamese kittens.
Call 446-3844 after 6 .

.;. ~~ :; 1~
~
,.:·: .~ ~/e!/ .s£:r.:. ~r i&lt;T,;:IRVj~. --·
-__"- .
.-·~ liC..K .T 1r '~~--, "' v ,,.,
~- -.

1978 MercuryC'ougar.gooct
condition. loaded with ex·
tras, 13,600. callaftar6PM,

72

9790.

~E:·!?tl.~! · G0-S
~~ \. ov
~--.......

Handpicked and drops .
Golden Delicious, Red Dati·
cious. Crown Beautys. and

cond .. 304-676-1769.

Brlarpatch Kennels Profes·
sional All~breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·
cilities. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Cell 61 4 ~ 388 -

wllh t.!a]or Hoople

As is.614-

1980 Pontiac Sunb _
i rd,

304-773-5018.

614-367-7220.

montht old PCA-UKC regittared. Started 8260. 1 female weUcer'PCA· UKC reg..
istered, Sire Hickory Hill
Jack $150. Aed Bona Bench
champion 14 months old.
Started •300. 304·8823690 · 9·6. ·
··

$125.00.

992-6249.

8ft. camper partly self·
contained, ..ide in to fit
small or large truck, $376.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

~~~~~: u~' :·~g~~~~J.~~,· J ~~~] ~~

""
,

Fruit

ovollsblo. 614-992-7479.

•

~~ 'J:PA~

1

1--------1972 Chavy Impala worlt

·59 For Sale or Trade

Pets fo.r Sale

AKC 614~
Chow
Call
256Chow
- 1271 puppies.
.

Auto$ for Sale

phone
304-773-9143. _
Appleolrom German Ridga . I.:_
________

D. Call614-246-6121 .

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

16

m

1 974 Torino. $400. 8 14·
843·631 1.
car

I~==========.t=======~==J
'

a.

TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third

2290.

1 female

1967 Dodge 314 ton truck. 1
Allis Chamber 816 lawn &amp;
gardentractor,16 HP4Bin .
mower scraper blade &amp;
canopy top. 2 rolla concrete
reinforcement. 3 walnut
logs. Call304-676-1248.

~~

Instruments

Wurljtzer Organ. excellent
condition. Phone 3()4-676·

tons,
makesmakes
design bunon
stitches,holes,
alao ~

. heming and overcoat: mua
sell by December. Rotoilo
e349.96, now $130. Cor-

71

Musical

Computer Commadort
Vic20 Super Expander with
3KRAM cartridge. Adven·
ture land cartridge, pro·
gremmer manual. 304-676-

Denim New Jackets Heavy,
&amp;21 , insulated coveralls, AKC re9istered Dachshund
527.60, heavy jeans $10, puppies, alao an adult Dach·
Army field jackets. $46, shund. 304·896-395.8 . camouflaged ('.rmy clothing,·
(Combat leather boots, $31. AKC registered Doberman
higher after this month), pups, black &amp; rust, 2 malea.
Sam Somerville's, east Ra· 1 fei'nale. 8&amp;0. each. 304~
van1wood, Open only Fri- 45B-1 613 .
day, Saturday, Sunday,

loads lor $300 . Call 614256-1427.
Lima 1tone delivered

57

tank.

992-713B.

large oil field electric radiator heater . Permanently
sealed With thermostat con·
trot . Evenings-614-992 ~

Fireplace insert-still in fac_:6_:1_4_-9_9_2_-_2_3_1_9_._ _ _ _ ~~or y cart on . automatic
controls-2 blowers-glass
door-ash pan-iits 30 in. to
48 in . fireplace-burns wood

Mtt'iii11RCIIII

oil

Full blooded English Bull
1000 gallon Skldd tank with
electric meter and pul),p.
.Kept inside garage. 614-

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Deliv&amp;red . 12"-22" stocked
in yard. HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 614-256 ~

6245 .

fuel

t--------- - -

1 5 ft . Hot point refrig. Very
clean. 3 years old . Asking

Space for Rent

:e

~!:=========::;;::o:-="~-:K:~-'"~""~"~'~"'~'~'"~"~~

Jack's Tropical Fish Thank·
giving Specials. Baby parakeet $5.99, pearl cockatiels
Snowblade for International $42 .95. blk. gerbils .99,
Cub Cadet. Like new, used ' fancy hampsters .99. button
twice last winter. $100. Call quail $2.60, female canarys
614-992-7031 and ask for $8 ,99, .1-9 mo. old Chihua·
Dan .
hue puppy $40. 66 gal.
combo aquarium $166.42,
% ton m'ixer with motor .
10 gal. blk ag. (tank only)
John Duerr Hammer mill. 30 $8.99 . 10% disc. on other
h.p. Allis Chalmers electric Ag. · 6% disc. off fish. Rt.
motor. Call 614· 992-7015 160, Evergreen . Call 446after 5p.m .
0198 Hro. 10:00-B :OO.

$90.00. 304-675-5011.

45

~J

Building materials
block, brick, sewer pipa1,
windows, lintels, etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

New 1 983 Nechi Free Arm
Sewing Machine, zi"·ngs,
monogram'S', · •sews · on buttons. makes button holes,
makes design stitches, also
heming and overcast. must
sell by December. Retails
9349 .96, now $130. Car·
ries a 25 yr. factory warranty, 614-385-4535 .

Equipment

.

M

•

614-992-7617.

CB.TV, Radio

Apt . for ,_rent, phone 304-

gal.

'·

~

Call 614-388-9867.

55 Building Supplies

3-heavy truck larpaulins·
$25 . e8ch . 3-15 ft. tow
chains. $16 . ea . 10 speed
blke- $30 . 2-air compressor
hoses, 25ft . with hardware$12. ea. Truck battery- $26 .
Yankee screwdriver-$1 0 .

1-614-446-0239 .

.

&amp; Vegetables

Antiques, oak furniture re·
production, misc. items. Use
our Christmas layaway plan.
Conkels, Tuppers Plains. ~

3169 .

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting .. 30 years e~perience,
specializing in built up roof.

304-676-3443.

614-446-0429.

62 Olive St ., Gallipolis. 6
piece wood living room suite
with 6 inch ilal arms &amp;399,
bunk beds complete with
bunkies $1 99. 2 piece antron livingroom suites S1 99,
antron recliners $99. other
recliners $80, maple dinette
sets S179, love seats $70,
hide · a-bed $250, box
springs &amp; mattress twin or
full 8100 set regular-firm
$120, maple dinette chairs
$36 , wa,h stands SJ4,
fTlapie rockers $59, 7 piece
chrome dinette set e:f49, !;i
piece dinette set S89, used
bedroom suites, refirgera·
tors, ranges. chest, dressers,
wringer washers, TV's,
dryeres, &amp; shoes. Call 446 ·

Misc . merchandise . 4hp
generator 1500 watt. $360.

276

Sofa $100, chair $40 ,
Whirlpool washer $100, full
size maple bed S90, dinette
set $25, large book shelf
$20, lamp $15, drapes S7
ea., black &amp; white TV $20,
atero 820, rocking chair
$20. Cash &amp; carry . NoV. 26,

10:30 AM . Cell 614-2561487.

Bridge. Call 446-9386 or

11B2.

7B96 .

alter 6.

More than a Brush! It's fuller
brush. A representative is in
your area . Call 676-5825
between 1 and 4, Mon . and
Tues.

$175 . Call446-2206 .

Washers &amp; dryers rebuilt &amp;
guarant&amp;ed 30 days . Clean
late models . Call anytime

992-3324.
2 bdr. mobile home 1 2x60

614- 245 · 609~

Couch excellent condition .
Blue &amp; beige pin striped,

3668.

with
firebrick
$326.
304- 675
- 1578
or each.
675·

Warm Mornif\g heating
stove with fan $300. 12 ga.
pump sh.o tgun 8100. 2
hone trailer 8400. Call

446-739B .

Nice 2 bedroom &amp;pt .. 843
Second Ave ., Gallipolis.
Ret. and deposit. Call 614:.

$100 dep .. S174 mo. Call
266 -6251 after 5 :30 .

GOODUSED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigera tors. ranges . Skaggs Appliances. Upper River Ad.
beside Stone Crest Motel.

Radio Shack stero catsette
tape deck; . Call 304-675·

New wood burning stove

Oak tables &amp; chairs, corner
cupboards. buffets &amp; etc .
Wood World, 2506 Grand
Central Ave., Vienna, WV.

446-9301 .

25B1 .

. Phone

42 Mobile Homes

Singer sewing nachine
makes designs, etc. Cost
$500 new, exc. cond . S89
cash or $6 per week . Call

set. Call 614-256-6691 or
614-256-1196.

554B .

Two lovely riverfront
houses, three bedroom and
two bedroom, each has 11f2
bath, fireplace and garage .
References e~tchanged .

51 Household Goods

STUCCO PLASTERING -

.11:

Jewelry · new and preowned
jewelry . 10K-14K-1BK yel low 8t white gold. Wedding
sets starting at $49 .95 . 1 4K
gold diamond pendant &amp;
earring sets $65 . Larg'e
section of sterling silver
charms S6 each . We take
trade ina. Franks Pawn
Shop. 430 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, oh 446-0840 .

tx&gt;NE IS PONE-

Home
Improvements

textured ceiling• commer·
cial and residential . free
estimates. Call 614~ 266·

5604.

7650 .

~

81
I

2 twin beds. complete. ·g ood
cond. Upholstered head·
board $76 ~ each. 304· 676-

House Coal pickup Of delivered. Call beiore 3:00PM
446-9200, after 4 call446 ~

NOT Ai ~L.L. , MR.TRACY, WHJl:l"'S

6 :00.

7770.

304-6.7 5 -6429.

Coll614-379-21 15.

Nearly new ~ bdr., 21h mi.
from HMC . $196 mo .. $100
dep. Call 446-3617 .

4 rooms &amp; bath in Vinton .
Refrigertor furnishec;L $1 00
mo ., deposit. Caii614-38B·

Just in 1ime for Chrlatmas,
beginners banjo with ca.
se.two antique guns,baby
furnishings . 304 - 876-

'~F - 9696 .

79 Motors lj omes
&amp; Campers

firewood delivereid .

Yellow ph'lid couch $46, dog
houte s 1 0 Mw queen sized
bedspre-"d mint green $8 .
New vi deo comPuter system
Atari, 16 canridges. new
solid state 12 in . b &amp; w Tv
with utras. $200. Call

I l-IB

ment, garage, glassed in .

Dryet

The Daily Sentinel-Page- II

P111nerof Middleport, Ohio

22h. Starcraft. new air.
cond., very good condition .
Phone 304-676· 2126 after

675-2343 after 5. 07fi3682 doyo,
Call304-676-7771 .

- -·--

by Larry Wright

Stero component• JVC Hitachi great aounds. axe.
cond. Muat sell. Call 304·

614 ·246-

tapL Call 446-2906 . You
dig .

Call 61

6 rooms , bath, full base-

~~~dmc~~.•1 c~hi1~~ionn~ ~~~~

C~ll

300 l'arge evergreen Japaneae yeulls, 200 small Japanese yaulles cuspidat capi-

Hou11 beautiful 3 bdr., 2

2 bdr. furnished.

cut up, slabs, 81 6

pickup load.
5B04.

18, 1983.

Friday, November 18, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

e dl-lonson's
to testify against

lgf'Hment

hoodlume backfires' when
a goon for a
cookie compathor. (Closed
Copllot!Odl
.
CIHII DulcHof Huzanl
A staten diamond necklece
mai.ea Dat-v lnd Lultl the

Upholstery

he 'mistakes

t-e

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 103 Soc. Ava .. Gallipolis
440-7833 or 448-1833. '

1 tao Rreblrd Eoprfl, VI,
WI do qu•llty rouphol.,.rA.T., A.C., P.B.. OJtOOIIent
lng.
make """' cuatom made
aon-. MUll ... l'hoM 1177 Nomod
t,.ilor,
114-t4t·20B2. 11 .. ·14t· . 1 I fl. Mlf _ . . , With 1reuM Pilallllred furniture. II&amp;
· ManufMturtng. Crown
2228-lngo.
·r"nlng. 1114-. .2-1114.
•City, 014-210·1'470.
1

(I)

-

of-·· 1110 mln.l

!lll W-'*- W.w/
l'lul Duke Ia joined

bv lOP W40hington joumel-

lsto onolyzing tho

ff'
'

MOVIE:

-·s

'2001 : A

Odyuey'
eSpace
(]J (!) Jennifer Slept

Hera To help Joey get mo·
ney for his class trip, Jennifer gives him a calendar
containing a nude photo of
her to sell at an auction .
CD Swiss Family Robinson
(J) D Gt Webatar Webster
learns he is to sing and
dance with star Ben Vereen
on television.
()) &lt;ID Wall Street Week
louis Rukevser analyzes the
·eos with a weekly review
of economic and Investment .
matters.

9:00 8 liJ (!) MOVIE: 'Blow
Out'

III World Championship

Boxing: Hector Camacho

va. Rafael &amp;oils
III 700 Club
I]) • (IJ Lottery! Fiaheny
_. and Rush are greeted by
muggers in Naw York and
are invited to a wadding
where 1he groom has to decide betwftn a new Dnde
and his ex. {60 min .)

D ()) (jl Dallas

(J) Gil Dinner at Julla'a
'The Turkey Show.' Julia
·chlld-- falk8 with chef Jim
Cohen and wine expen Dr.
Richard G. Paterson. {Ciosed
Captioned]
9:30 ()) Sneak Prevltwa Co· ·
hosts Neal Gabler and Jeffrey lyoru1 take a tqok at
'Star 80' and 'Going Bar·
serk.'
&lt;ID lntetnlltional Edition
Ford Rowan hosts this look
at trends and news events
as they ere reported by for·
eign journalists.
10:00 (l) MOVIE: 'Orav lady
Down'
(I) NFL Game of the Week
(I) . . (]J Matt HOUlton -..
Matt' inveatigetos tho mur
der of a teenage proatilute .
(60 min., (Closed Captioned)
• ()) _(]) Falcon Creet A
tormented Julia breeka
down to beg Angela for pro·
te&lt;:don againat tht prison in·
mates who are out to kill
her. (60 min .)
(]) 1-11 Diary

!lll N.-

10:1 5~ TBS EY,IOIIIng Nows
1 0:30
ODie ..a Horrlot
E8PN'o 1no1c1o F-bell
lnoklo Buol-• Todiry
!lll M - of Hall
1 1 :oo • ()J CJJ rn • CJJ &lt;11 •
ill Nowo
(J)Anolherllle
(I) lportaCenter

I ._.,HII_
All In tho FMnlly

·

Dr. Who

.11:1&amp; ())Top- ....11111 tram
A - Clly. NJ Jsmoo
Broad vs. larry Alexander Ia
featured In a 12..-ounc:l bout
for the ESPN Heavywtighl

.

'

Championship.

6:1 5

Cil MOVIE: 'Megaforca'

6'30 (f) MOVIE: 'It Came from
Hollywood'
(!)T.V. Honor Society

11 :30 U liJ crJ Tonight Show
III Doble GUllo

([) C111tlns

())Soap
Ill (I) MOVIE: 'Alligator·
()) MOVIE: 'The Ghost
Catchers'
®I M•A•S•H
® Masterpiece Theatre
'Pictures .· Ruby is finallv
going to star in Bill's film,
'The Movie Nut,' based on
Ruby 's life. (60 min.) {Closed
Captioned)

m ®I Nlghtllne

• Twilight Zona
12:00 (1) MOVIE: 'Used
Cil Burna Bt Allen
(I) Night Tracks

e

fridov Night

VIdeos
()) .Jack Benny Show
Music Magazine
1 :00 · CIJ I Married Joen
(I) Entertainment Tonight

• ·(IJ

1 : 15

·e

~

songs and se)(y dancers are
presented.
CIJ MOVIE: 'The Seduction· .
iil MOVIE: 'The Banle of
Nerttva'
([J NCAA Football: Teams

())) Dinner M Julia's 'The
Turkey Show .· Julia Child
ta lks with chef Jim Cohen
and wine e~tpert Or . Richard
G. Peterson. (Closed Captioned]
Gl (l2l Nawo
.7:00 (l) Alias Smith and JoneS
(!)NFL G.me of the Week ·

TBA

(I) Gl llJ T. J. H-er
Hooker alienates Romano
Dy dafendinQ a femele officer accused- of cowardice .
(60 mjn .) [Closed Captioned)
D !Il (JI Great Day The
seemingly routine projects
of. the Simpson family always manage to snowball
into major catastrophies .
(I) Unknown War
CID Ail Creatures Great and
Small
•
MOVIE : 'JOurney to
Adventure'

()) Ill ()) HH Haw

Cl) Star Search
I]) Beet of Sullivan

{fi) Don't Eat the Pictures

Thlcke of the Night

rn rn

World Charnpionship
Wrestling

® Salulll

ears·

()) NlghtNno
® MOVIE: 'Kiu Ol Evil'

1 2:3o e

ciJ

!DI Nawo

MOVIE: '.Firat Love'
1 :30 liJ Love Tho! Bob
(I) ·s tar Se.-ctf ·
(jJ MOVIE: 'lllloht Croe·
tUrtl' .

'Sesame Street at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.'
Big Bird and his friends visit
the famous JTlUSeum in New
York City. 160 min .) {Closed
Captioned]

•
•

8:30 D liJ (!) Silver S-ns
Aicky's •dream of being President of the United States
helps him solve a problem at
school.
(]) ESPN's Saturday Night
111 the Fightt; Saturday
Night at the Fights presents
e 12-round Featherweight
bout featuring Jackie Beard
vs. Paul DeVorce for the
NABF Championship from
las Vegas, NV .

!DI Solid Gold
How the West Was

Woo

7:30 CD Sponsc-or
8:00 8 (f)(!) Dlff'rent Strokes

Mr. Drummond's Dutch
cousin and her aon COIT!fl tor
a visit. rc1osed Captioned}
{1) All- New Unexpurg..ed
Benny Hill An aU·new col·
lection of comedy sketches.

Gl !DICNN Headline Nawo·
1 :46 (f) MOVIE: '81ackout'
2:00

()I CNN Headline Newa

"

(]) ESPN's Inside Football
2:48 (I) lnaldo Tho NFL

I

e

(f) Nawa
C1J 700 Club
())Auto Roclng '83: BCCA
Super

v...

from laguna ·

Soco.CA.
3:16 III MOVtE: 'Tho KUPng of .
Sleter George' ·.
3:48 ())MOVIE: 'Tho Chwon'

·4:30 ( ) ) - 8oaley
.
()) ESPN'allponoWOflllrl

SATURDAY

11/19183
EVE NINO
8:00 D ()) Amorloo Remombera: John F. Kennedy
(J)VI_J_
(JJ MOVIE: 'The Gambler'

III The Monrooa

(J)Bcoro-.!

Ana-·

rn
0oc1 Hoolho
()) Undoroeo World
J.cqun

!lll -

eou ...au

of

Pnrilwo Co-

21 Extremity
28 Vin's

compound

4\Germ

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I FELDE ()
I K
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Prfnranswerhere:
.
Velterday •
-

DOWN '

[]
AFTEi.ltt AI&gt;IOTHE~ ""'M·I
AI.! HAD 'TUP:I.I!.P'HI~
HeAl:', HI:. O!SVIOU51.-'(

__ ... __

COULC&gt;II/'i c:I:HHIS
AN'Y'MOP:S.

.,

DAILY CRYP'I'OQUOTE- Here's how
.

JHIS(

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(-tomonow1
QAUDY INVERT BODILY

Anawer : wnal cUd tnt bored cow say'when she got up,
In the mornlnq?- "JUST AN UOOER"OAY •

to

work it :

AXYDLBAA. XR
LONGi'ELLOW

Is
One letter simply stands for another . In lhis sample A is
used for the three L's 1 X for the two O's, e~r - Sin gle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formati o n of the words are all
hint&amp;. Each day the code letters are difTerep t

fcrm
... ....,... - · u SUQ·
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holts Neal Gabler and Jtf·
· frey lyons take a look 11
'Star 80' and , 'Going -Ber-

Hrk .'
estorTrel&lt;

25 Like winter
coats
26 Grandparental
descriptive

III khe.lvr Flflhor
(!) Newo/Sign Off
2:16 (1) SportoC-or

3:00

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Ram sign
I Role
3 Spanned
5 Mold
4 Cap
10 Region
5 Furtive
11 Claws
6 Ran
13 "King and[" 7 Menu words
setting
8 Seabees
: 14 Tropical fruit con1$ Gwnshoe
struction
16 "Cakes and 9 Overfill
I
"
12 Be angry
Yesterday's Answer ..
17 - the line
16 Barren
18 Braced,
19 Russian city 25 Roman author 30 Golf score
34 Compulsion
with "up"
22 " The Third %7 Paces etter
36 A Nixon
20 Ex hockey
Man"
star
23 Most abject Z9 Part of
31 Dawn
an opera
deity
21 Ireland
Z4 Extend upon
22 Theater box
23 Presaged
ACROSS

29 Harsh
31 Do wrong
32Islet
33 A Fleming
35Incllned
31 Advantage
311 Herb drink ·
39 G8%e
in away
40 Chemical

(])NFL Game of the Week
8
(l)
NBC News
Overnight

2:30 (I) Ufo of Riley

6£HM111td'

Yeolerday'o Ct')'ptoquote: IT IS BY LOGIC THAT WE PROVE,
BUT BY·lN11liTION TiiAT WE DISCOVER r HENRI POlN·

'•

. cARE

�12-The

Sentinel

•

19.5 million participate
Bylbe Assoc•a•ed Press

An estimated 19.5 m!Uion smokers nervously snapped rubber
bando;, dined on. cold turkey or
listened to telepHone pep talks from
psychiatrists Thursday as they
struggled to stub out their cigarette

habits during the seventh annual
Great American Smokeout.
The American Cancer Society,
which sponsors the anti-smoking
day on the Thursday before each
Thanksglvlng, estimated that 19.5
miiJion of the nation's 55 ml!Uon

_.. ,, (1•&gt;;. ...

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Smokeout

In

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------- -

XL-100
19"
.._,.

Special

$34900

MECHANIC ST., 992-3671

WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress Is gon~ for a .
two-month recess, unable to heed its own pledge to
raise taxes and cut spending to help pare away at a
· $:D:l bUllon deficit.
"Look fOJward to seeing you In January,"
President Reagan told congressional leaders Friday
evening when they called him to announce the
adjournment. "I think we've all lost some and all won

Soviets float new proposals
for accord on missile issue

POINT PLEASANT - A25-yearoid Piketon mail was killed Friday
at a Mason County pallet manufacturing firm, West VIrginia State
Pollee said.
Cpl. K.R. Beckett of the Point
PleasantdetachmentsaldAibertM.
Moorediedat3:15p.m. when he and
a l!artner were attempting to unload
logs from a truck, .
. The Incident occurred at Lannes
Wtlllamson Pallet Co. In Southside,
Beckett said.
Beckett said Moore and the
partner, Ricky Lee Scowden, had
driven their log-laden truck onto the
company's property and parked It
across from the company office,
where it was to have been unloaded
with a end loader.
Moore got out of the truck and
went to its driver side. Scowden
went to the other end of the truck.
Both men were going to remove the
binder holding logs tn place on the
truck.
When Moore moved the binder,
Beckett said he attempted to_move
the chain when one of tbe top logs
fell.,s\flking Moore in the chest and
stomacharea.Mooredledlnstantly,
the trooper added.
Beckett said the falality is being
treated as an accldentaideath at this
time.

TRS-80® Color Computer 2
By Radio Shack
16K Standard BASIC USE YOUR

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TRUSTEE

Underwriters .will
. h~ld ladies' night .
Ladles night will be

wben the Melgs-Gallla-Mason
Underwriters Association
Nov. 22 at . the Down
Restaurant, Gallipolis.
A cocktail hour will be held at
p.m . and dinner will be served at 7
p.m. Members and their wives and
ute insurance agents are lllvited.
Resevatlons may be made by
calllng Bill Quickel at 9!1U6'71.
RepreSentative Jolynn Boster will
be the featured speaker.

NOVEMBER
SAVINGS

Reg. 29.95
Hangs Up on Any
Flat Surface
Ideal stocking stuffer!
Auto-Redial. White,
1143-501 . Brown,
#43-502 FCC regislered.

CONTINUE FOR
MEN &amp; WOMENI
LADIES LEVI BENDOVERS

SLACKS-BLAZERS-SKIRTS

20%
30(//
DRESSES...................
/0

Alarm Clock With Dual
LED Display Cut '1 0

REDUCED
LADIES MISSY &amp;
HALf SIZES REDUCED

REDUCED
SWEATER$.. ~---·······
LADIES

LADIES MISSY
&amp; JR. SIZES

By Micronta"

DRESS COATS.~~~~~~-~--

Reg. 34.95

30&lt;!t

A doubly pleasing gift! Shows present
and alarm time simultaneously. Battery
Backup if AC fails. 1163-m

0

Backup baitery extra

·

·.

· Ri:DUCED

TOP &amp; CAR COATS·-- · ··~···········•:·

QDI

10

l}B88

Values to,130.00
CORDUROY'S.... :.......• ~~.Q&gt;Y...... .

MEN'S

LEVI

2·

·

Reg. 179.95

AM/FM Clock Radio

Cut 270fo

.·

1 LOT OF ~EN'S ·

lL PRICE

SUITS &amp; .,PORT COATS-~ .............. .12 ··' ·

3495 ~~5

Thts eye-&lt;&gt;penlng gift will wake them up on time
every. day. Battery Backup runs Clock/alarm if
AC falls. 1112·1537 Backup bane&lt;y extra
.

8995

7ge&amp;
Reg.13U5

~

'- ... -·'' ..
'

.....

.·

DEA'l11sCENE- Lames Williamson Pallet Co., Soulh'llde, W.Va.,
was the scene of an IU'ddent Friday that ldDed Albert M. Moore, 25,
Piketon. State pollee said a log rolled ocr the top of a truck and crushed
him.

Majority Democrats felt vindicated after voters
decided to keep the taxes which they passed without
GOP help earller this year. But they were restrained,
for the most pan, from saying much about it.
Republicans who had fought for repeal were mostly
silent and subdued. An exception was Rep. Waldo
Bennett Rose, R-Lima, who WIIS ruled out of order on
the House f!Qor by Speaker Vernal C. RiffeJr:, 0 -New
Boston, after the Republican suggested a pending
tobacco Industry bill was a payoff for a $10,000
contribution to the anti-repeal campaign.
Referring to the bill which offers a potential tax
break to the cigarette Industry, Rose - with tongue
planted squarely in cheek - mentioned the

Styles felt obligated to return ·to
Columbus after the war to care for
POMEROY - Should old ac- her family.
qualntance be forgot?
While realizing their relationship
· WeU, not as far as 91-year-oid would never lead to matrimony, the
former Meigs County resident two maintained contact throughout
Hattie Styles Is concerned.
the years with hundreds of letters.
This year she and a 90-year-old"Someday our paths will cross
man - with wbom sbe had Shared again and I hope you'll be as happy
the experience of pain and tecovery to see me as I wiD to see you," he
in World War I - found a kind of wrote. That was In 19l8.
jJeaceofheartas theywerereunlted
This year, after separation of 65
years and thOusands of ·miles, the
after a SS,year separation.
As a ywitg woman, Styles twowerereunlted.. ·
attended school tn Meigs County.
The long-time nurse ~ latown
She then enlen!d nurses training In tllJ'ooghout her career as "A\Illt
Columbus. At the age of :ll, she left Hattie" - moved to Kingwood,
Columbus to serve as a nune In the Texas,ln 1982tobewtth the family of
her great-grand niece, Beverly
anned l'orces during ww !.
' While stationed In France at the Mitchell.
Hospital ADaers - a Catholic
The Mitchell family and their
friends tracked down the tanner
btstltutlon of the '75th Barracks the youna nune met a young lieutenant, who was llvtng In
American lieutenant who feU In love
Houston, and brought the two
with lier.
to&amp;ether''He was always bylng to get my ·
"They both just Sparided,'• re- ·
ilttentlon," she recalls, tetllne her merited an onlooker who viewed the
that he wanted to get slclc a leCOIId i'ellllklll.
lime In onler to- her qaln.
The lieutenant - recalling that
The two dated. became very good the youna nune had never let him ·
frlendll but married becaWte ldss her when they dated In 1918 By BOB HOEFUCH
11rnea Se dbiel Stall

·-'30 Save
'60
Reg.11U5

The Senate Finance Committee on Friday put aside
work on a $150 billion, ·four-year package of tax
increases and spending cuts, voting 16-1 Instead to
direct Its staff to draft a new bill by Feb. 15. It came a
day after the House rejected a move to even consider
a far more modest tax bill.
Also facing Congress upon Its return Is a
long-debated natural gas decontrol bill. Senate

By KEVIN KEIJ..Y
· 11rnes-Sentlnel Staff
RIO GRANDE - Charges of
unfair labor practices and possible
contempt of a court order tn
negotiations for a master contract IIi
the Gallia-Jackson-VInton Jotnt
Vocational School District are being
looked into by the Buckeye Hills
Teachers Association.
AtthPsametlme, theJVSDboard
of education claims it's trying to
"accurately reflect" progress in
bargaining and said BID A' s negotiating team is interpreting the court
order in a different way.
BIDA President Norman Stewart said continuing failure to reach
agreement have led BIDA to
consult with Its legal counsel on the
validity of its charges.
Superintendent Jerome Brockway said the board isstlllwaltingfor
BHTA to present an Initial package
for Qlscusslon purposes . .
Stewart said the last bargaining
session between both sides Thursday high t was brief. He said the
board's negotiators wouldn't agree
to set ground rules to conduct
negototlatlons.
''I'm getting tired." Stewart said.
" We've been at this since
February."
"We feel that the agreement was
to develop Initial packages," Brockway noted. "Wehaveours ...we want

sponsors gave up their effort to develop a last-minute
co~promlse, saying the energy measure would have
to walt until the 1984 session.
The Senate also put off until early next year a
House-passed bill that would block a scheduled
$2-a-month "access charge" from appearing on
consumer phone bills for long distance service.

to get this thing over with."
BIDA, which won a controversial, court-overseen recognition
election among JVSD teachers Oct.
14, has been negotiating for the first
time for a mastercontractsirnllar to
those tn school districts feeding Into
the JVSD's two career centers,
Buckeye Hills and Buckeye Valley.
Stewart said his ·negotiating
team's request for ground rules are
drawnfromstatelaw.Someofthose
rules includeanewsblackout during
negotiations, appointment of a
board negotiating team chairman
by the board, selection of alternate
teammembersbybothsidesandthe
m!ed for mediation if no agreement
is reached tn 90 days.
"We have quoted the Ohio
Revised Code aU the way down,"
Stewart noted. "Thi&gt;Se are fair
ground rules, in-our interpretation."
BIDA is lookinginto thecontempt
possibility because the board is not
complying with the Oct. 4 court
order set by Judge Thomas W.
Mitchell.
The last paragraph of the order,
Sr.ewart said, ruled that after the
recognition election was held , the
board was to negotiate in good faith
with the duly-recognized representatives of the JVSD's 63 teachers.
Stewart accused Brockway of
"intimidation and coercion" in
negotiations.

contribution from R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and
said,"! certainly don't quarrel with the the timing of
this bill."
Riffe gaveled down the half-smiling Rose after Rep.
WUUarn L. Mallory, D-Cinctnnatl, objected to the
Allen County lawmaker's remarks and said
Republicans were mad "because you didn't wtn the
election."
Riffe let Rose continue, but told him to confine his
corrunents to the contenls of the blll, saying, "You
almost went too far."
But generally ihe airnosphere around the Statehouse was quiet before the Senate and House
departed for their Thanksgiving weekend. If current

BHTA President
-Nonnan Stewart
After each ' bargaining session,
Stewart alleged, a statem~nt from
Brockway expressing the superintendent' s opinion on the session
would be tn teachers' mail boxes the
following morning.
"I'm calling it Intimidation. "
Stewart charged. "There is nothing
In fair labor practices that allows the
management to write letters stating
his own opinion."
" I did put them tn their mailboxes.
(Continued on page A3)

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I

announcedU had taken hlm65years
to collect a kiss.
Recalling her days of nursing
during WW I, Styles conunents:
"I gave my whole Ufe to my
patients and my famlly. In the
service, you didn't have time for
yourself - I was busy and I loved
every minute of lt.
''No words under the shining sun
could describe what Itwas Hkeon the
battlefield," she says as she
l'ffi\embers retrieving the injured
from the war zone.
"And, at the hospital, we ~¥ere
only 75 miles from the big guns. ''
A private nurse for 63 yearS,
Styles still does not Hke to sit IdlE&gt;.
Before moving to Texas, she did
everything around her Columbus
!tome - including cutting the grass
and all of her own canning.
Last year she $11ffered a stroke
and was left completely paralyzed
on her right side. Shesays·a "strong
will". helped her ove~e the
effects ol the stroke.
·
She IS now a member of an
exerclae claaa at the Kingil Crossing
Apartmentl.

Collectlaa

history .books and

plans hold , the lawmakers will meet for only one or
two days at the end of the month and then qult until
after Christmas and New Year's.
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste, who has been
modest in thewakeofthetax victory-hesaid "It was
not any kind of a mandate"- added to the cooling-off
process by lnlrlting minority leaders to sit in with
Democrats on a meeting to discuss legislative goals.
He called It "a commjtment to bipartisan cooperation

..

Political maneuvering will resume for sure come
Jan. 2 when the 1984 session gets under way, in effect
opening unofficial campaigns for the 99 House seats
and 17 Senate seats which will be at stake next year.

Huntingtonian, two
Ohioans found dead

A farewell to anns: lovers who met
~d were separated by WWI, reunite

Save

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The 98th Congress will re-convene on Jan. 23, with a
full platter of unfinished legislation before It Including major bills to deregulate natural gas, lower
long-distance telephone bills and come to grips with
ever-higher goverliment spending.
.
The adjournment was the earUest Congress has
managed in a non-election year since 196?.

JVSD board,.teachers .d ispute
court ordered 'ground rules'

By ROBERT E. MillER
A8soc!JWotl Pl'I'S8 Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -There are slgiJs of a lull
in political back-bltlngnowthat the bltterNov.8ballot
Issues light Is r:rver and the Legislature is about to call
It quits for the year.
During a two-day session last week, their first
meeting in four months, lawmakers of both parties
took a potshot or two across their opponents' bow, but
It seemed their hearts really weren't in it.
. It could be the approach of a hollday truce, a
breather after the long summer-autumn fight over
two ballot Issues which would have repealed Ohio's
1983 tax hikes and restricted Increases In the future.

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Ohio political back-biting: lull for the holiday

200110

$1988
LEVI DENIMS ................. .
LADIES

some."

Logging
accident
kills man

JOHN F. COLWELL

Representing the Meigs Local
School District at the 28th annual
Ohio School Boards Association's
Capital Conference held in Columbus Monday through Wednesday
were Arland King, board of education member; Dan Morris, superintendent; James Carpenter, assistant superintendent, and Jane
Wagner, treasurer.
The conference was designed to
give those attending an opportunity
to exchange ideas and gatn tnsit;ht
on the major issues that will be
facing education in thecomlngyear.
The meeting opened with the
association's delegate assembly
discussing and voting on key
legislative Issues and resolutions
aff~ting school boards and education around tbe state.
Featured speaker&gt; at the conference were Jay Sommer, 1981
national teacher of the year, New
York; Charlene Shea, a motivational education consultant; John L
Goodlad, nationally renowned education expert; Dr. LeRoy Hay,
Connecticut,1983natlonalteacherof
the year, and Dr. Jim Tunney,
president of the Institute for the
Study of Motivation an d
Achievement.

tmts•. tntint

U.S. Congress ealls it quits for '83.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

CONSEQUENCES ON SMOKING - C. Everett . General's report on The Health Consequences of
Smoking: CardlovHSCular Disease, Thursday In
\\'ashlngton. ( AP Laserphoto }"

Meigs board
represented

Ohio weather:
•
warm, damp
-PageA-3

•

Middleport- Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Paint Pleasant Sunday, November 20, 1983

Koop, M.D., Surgeon General, talks to reporters
during a press conference on the 1983 Surgeon

To the Voters of Salem Township For
Your Support in the Recent Election.

Teenage runaways: a national problem with a
local impact-Page B-1

unba

Features: Automatic color control, automatic,
fleshtone correction, soid state VHF /UHF tuners,
simulated walnut fil'lish.

I li \

THANK YOU

Along the RJver .. ........ ... lH
&amp;lslne6s .•
E-1
Clas8111edo ...... ........... .D-2-7
J)e'fheun. 'l..' !'"' "'"" " .. "'" A-7
F.dl&amp;orlals ........ ... .......... A-2
Locai ....... ...... ............ A-s-8
Sports ................. " ..... C.l-8
State-National .... ....... .... D-1
0 . ...... . ............

I

I

By The Associaled Press
Thursday and agreed to meet again Germany's Parllamentvotes on the
A top Kremlin spokesman says
deployment of the 1!ll Pershing 2
next Wednesday.
the Soviets will pull out of Geneva
He said the Soviets have indicated and 96 cruise missiles in West
arms talks UPershing 2 missiles are
a willingness to drop their key Germany.
deployed in Europe, but West
Meantime, in Britain. a group of
demand that British and French
German Chancellor Helmut Kohl
nuclear arsenals be Included in the women kept up their protests at the
says Moscow "evidently has floated
Greenham Common air base,
U.S.-Soviet talks . .
new proposals" for an accord.
"The Soviet Union evidently has where the first missile shipment
"With the deployment of the new floated new proposals at one minute arrived. Five of the protesters were
Pershings in Europe, the negotia- to twelve,".Kohlsaid lnantnterv!ew arrested Thursday, raising the
tionsmakenomoresenseandwilibe on West German television.
arrest tntal In Britain this week to
broken off," said LeonidM . ZamyaZamyattn is on a European tour 616.
~ •
ttn, a chief foreign affairs spokes- aimed atdrumm!ngupoppositlon to
Under the NATO plan, Britain
man for the Soviet Communist
eventually is to get a total of 160
the NATO deployment.
Party's Central Commltlee. He
The next Geneva meeting, Nov. cruise mlssiles,ltaly112, Belgium48
spoke at a news conference Thurs- 23, comes a day after West and the Netherlands 48.
day at the Soviet Embassy tn the
Netherlands.
r--------------------------1
The North Atlantic Treaty AI·
liance plans to deploy 464 U.S. cruise
and 108 Pershing 2 missiles over the
next five years to counter Soviet
SS-20 missiles already aimed at
western Europe.
The first shipment of cruise
missiles arrived in Britain Monday.
All lOS Pershing 2s are destined for
West Germany , with the first to
arrive next month.
In Bonn, Kohl sa id Thursday the
Soviet Union has Indicated a
Pd . p·o. Ad . by Can d.
willingness to make new conces- 1 ~======::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::~
slons at Geneva, where U.S. a nd J·
Soviet delegates met for 2 ~ hours

Inside:

An extremist has vowed retaliation against the
peacekeeping force in Lebanon-Page D-1

~----~-----------------L----------------------~----- -~----~--------~·~

Dance. Every Sat. Nile
THANKSGIVING DANCE
Wed., Nov. 23
8:00 to 12:00

I

harleston Mall: boom or .doom--Page E-1

"The Day After'
Gov. Celeste urges
Ohioans to watch
-PageD-1

RCA

UNClE BOB'S
CHICKEN PA~ACE

..

-

RCA
COLOR TV SPECIAL

smokers had tried to quit _for a day.
The society offered the advice of
The estimate was based . on a eight psychiatrists on how to quit on
random telephone survey of 2,132 a toll-free national hotllne. The
households.
, service was avallableonly through
Last year, the society estimated . mldnlghtThursday.
This year's smokeout coincided
that 19 mtlllon took part in the
with thereleaseofthegovernment's
smokeout.
latest surgeon general report on the
health effects of smoking, which
warned that cigarettes may prematurely kill 10 percent of the
American population. But It also
said that 32.6 percent of the
population smoked, sharply fewer
than the 41:7 percent In 1965.
The society declared this year's
theme "adopt-a-smoker," hoping
that non-smokers would buddy up
with smokers and help them
through the pangs of a puff-less day
- and perhaps beyond to permanent quitting.

';!fM·\T FD CIG A.Rure REL,\T EO C.ORCJ NARY
Hf &lt;\fH DISE,\SE ,\NO C:• NCER DEATHS

/

Friday, Nowmber 18, 1983

Ohio

'

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio (AP) Six hours later, he said , Clark
Two Chesapeake children who Thomas, 16, and his sister, 10-yearreturne(j from school and found lhe old Angie, carne home and found all
bodies of their mother, father ·and three bodies.
another man in their southern Ohio
Meyers said the boy was treated
home have been sent to stay with for emotional trauma at Lawrene&lt;&gt;
relatives.
County General Hospital in Ironton
Lawrence Cotlnty authorities and was released : Both children
ldentUied the dead as Linda · ·were sent to stay With relatives, he
Thomas, 40, of Chesapeake; her said.
former husband, Wheeler Thomas,· · The prosecutor also said that the
45, of nearby Huntington, W.Va., shootings climaxed a long-running
and Mrs. Thomas' fiance, James quarrel between Mrs. Thomas and
'Aunt Hatae' Styles
Cunningham, 42, of Petry, Ohio. · her former husband. He said that
antiques are -among her hobbies.
Lawrence . County · Pi-osecutor the couple had been divorced for six
Included In her collection Is a water Richard Meyers -said ThOmas years but that Mrs. Thomas had
pitcher from the White House of · apparently shot his former wife and recently ·won a court J.udgrnent
President Rutherford B. Hayes.
her fiance and then shot himself in against her former husband.
She bas saved countless treasures the bead.
·
Meyers reported that Mrs. ThoThe two victims had been shot mas' relatives said she and Cunof her past - Including all of her
young lieutenant's \ove letters, with a .3lkallber pistol found at the ntngharn had planned to marry
photographs of the war, clothes and scene, he said. He said Thomas within the next few days.
other Items of importance to her.
apparently then shot himself with a
Meyers said two other people
Revlewtng the lady's lite, a
.44-eallber pistol, also found at the were in the house at the time of the
nephew comments, "Aunt Hattie house. Meyers said the shootings shootings but apparentlll were not
not only loves history, she Is OCCUlTed Thursday morning, In a Involved and did not acutaUy see the
history."
brlckhomeowned by Mrs. Thomas. slaylngs. Theprosecutordectined to
StyleS has several relatives living He said Th&lt;mas apparently waited identity the two, who he said had
In Meigs Camty, Including Mr. and until the children left for sehool gone to the house with Thomas to
Mrs. Charles G. Sheets whom she J;lelore entering the house 1 and help him remove his belongings.
shooting both vtctlmsatciose range.
visited 1as1

spruw.
.

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