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                  <text>Southern faces GAHS

Flower open houses

SeePageS

See photos on Page 6

Southern cage roundup

Weekly sermonette
Colwm, Page 7

1~~ory on Page 4

at y

e
Voi.32,No.159
Copyrighted 1983

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By ASSOCIATED Press
Denis Jensen, who until three years ago was a senior vice president at
Mllllans af Americans stepped out far parades or just settled back to Arkansas'"First Natianal Bank In Uttle Rock , woke up early to collect
watch football, but Thanksglvbtg meals formed the holiday's centerpiece homeless people from the emptied streets downtown.
as famDies both intimate and impromptu gathered far the oldest of
Now.the director of the Union Rescue Mission, Jensen oversaw dinners
national observances.
for about 235 people and delivery of food baskets to 200 more.
In Massachusetts, where the hardy people of Plymouth Plantation first
"I went out and picked up four carloads qf hoboes," Jensen said. "They
gave thanks for a boWltlful harvest 350years ago, the family of Marble Cpl.
feel unloved.''
The New Life Evangelistic Church in St. Louis served hundreds of
John L'Heureux felt especially blessed Thursday. L'Heureux, a wounded
survivor of October's terrorist bombing in Beirut, was home from Lebanon hungry people and delivered food to an additional 2,350 families.
for his first Thanksgiving outside a barracks In three years.
"This year we're seeing more families, more women with children,"
And inside the walls of the North Dakota Penltentlary,lt was the biggest said the Rev. Lany Rice, pastor to the city's homeless. "Some have their
day of theyearformorethan400 inmates whOse friends and relatives came utilities shut off and can't cook. Others have no food. And some are just
to visit, said Wanlen Winston.iialron.
laneiy."
A half-million people stood In brisk wind$ and temperatores In the low lJs
In Utah, where the Salvation Army fed 1,300 people, r~staurateur Chris
to watch Detroit's big Thanksgiving Day parade, while parents in New · Rltzakis roasted 60 turkeys for free meals for an additional 2,tnl.
"When I came to the United States in 1964, I hoped one day to afford
York,hoisted tots who screamed and cheered as a helium-filled Superman,
Woody Woodpecker and ather favorite characters floated past In Macy's something like this. I know the feeling of being alone on a holiday," said
57th annual parade.
Rltzakis, a Greek immigrant who launched a personal tradition 11 years
"We're not used to this kind of weather," said a shivering Sharon ago with two turkeys. He wouldn't disclose the cost because "that would
Kaddyama, a hula dancer In the MDllanl, Hawaii, high school band before destroy my purpose."
her unit stepped off in New York's chilly drizzle.
While the 92-year-oid Union Rescue Mission on Los Angeles' skid row
Across the nation, those who felt fortunate gave thanks by sharing their was serving 2,500 free meals, a group of Los Angeles doctors offered free
time, money and food, providing instant !amilles for others whose holiday house calls from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. to anyone groaning from overeating or
would otherWise have been gloomy.
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MEAL FOR 'niE HOMELESS - Members ol Washtngton's
Commumty for Creative Non-VIolence serve a 'Duulksglvlng dinner bt
Lafayette Park opposite the White House Thursday for (lomeless people
from the nation's capital. ( AP Lasetp(Joto).

· People appearing in the ~ourt of
Racine Mayor Charles Pyles unable
to pay their fines or unwilling to
work theirflnes will serve time In the
county jan.
This was the decision at a regular
meeting of Racine Village Council
when Mayar Pyles brought up the
matter for. ~--declsiQp. CouncD
decided that even though the costs
will be $10 'a day for each prisoner
that it Is in the best interests of the
village io jaD offenders If they do not

\'- .

payorwork.Itwouldagreedthatthe
mayor will canduct couri every
Monday ;1t 6: :lJ p.m. except on legal
holidays and Mayor Pyles asks that
councD members attend couri
session when possible.
A discussion was held on replacements to serve on the Board of
PubUc Atfalrs slnce.no one ran lor
election to the two seats which will
be vacant the first of the year. No
action was taken, however.

Councn gave a first reading to an
ordinance amending the present
water systesm ordinance. Council
will check on the proper location for
a street light near Pearl and Fifth
Sts. Complaints regarding a blind
intersection at Oak Grove and State
Route 124 were discussed. Limbs
from shrul)!lery are blackll\g the
view of traffic, it was reported. The
street committee will contact the
Ohio Department ofTransportation

regarding the width of the highway
right of way.
The clerk was instructed to
contact the state examiner's. office
for clartfication on the procedures to
follow to balance appropriations at
the end of the year. Council
authorized repair of the dusk to
dawn light on the Third St. side of
village hall.
The meeting was recessed until 7
p.m. on Manday, Dec. 5.

Death toll 01ounts from Northwest snoWstorm
By Assoclaled Press
A "good st;rong cold front" sped toward the Rocky
Mountains today after knocking out power to more
than lOO,(Xl) people, as the death taU rose to27 from an
earlier storm that dumped up to 2 feet of snow .on the
Great Plains before iurnbeting into Canada.
Nearly41nchesofralnsoakedtheSanFranciscoBay
area Thursday, unleasiJlng a mudsllde that blocked
U.S. 50 near PlacervDie for several hours. The
moisture fumed to snow as winds gusted to 70 mph in
the mountains, causing blizzard conditions at Alpine
Meadows ski resoriand dropping half a foot of snow at

Norden, 45 miles norihwest of Lake Tahoe.
AboutlOO,OOOpeoplelnwestemWashington-many
with)lalf-roasted Thanksgiving turkeys stili in the
oven -lost powerThursday morning as the new storm
blew in and drenched the West as far Inland as Idaho,
where visiblllty was down to lOOfeet In mixed rain and
snow.

Electricity was restored within several hours to
63,(Xl) people in the Seattle area, but 57,000others were
still without power early today. A spokesman for the
Snohomish Public Utlllty District, where lO,OOJ

outages were reported, said "it could be a couple of
days before this Is taken care of."
While the new storm "doesn't have quite as big a
windup" as the system that howled out of the Rockies
last Sunday, "It's still a good strong cold front that wUi
bring snow and wind to the Plateau and Rockies
today," said meteorologist Nolan Duke at the National
Weather Service's Severe Stonn Center in Kansas
City, Ma.
Duke said it was expected to spread from Montana to
northern Arizona, covering territory still digging out

Soviet buildup
no big suprise

Andropov warning
receives low key
Reagan response
. SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP)
- President Reagan, dismayed by
Moscow's announcement ofretalla·
t1on against the United States for
deploying new mlssDes In western
Europe, Is keeping his response low
key in an apparent effort to prod the
Soviets back to the bargaining table.
1be Soviet Union has been
threatening since March to respond
to the new U.S. missiles in Europe
with new deployments of its own
to the United States, but the
questions ot where and how remained unanswered.
· On Thursday, Soviet President
Yurl V. Andropov announced that
the Soviet Union will increase tts
nuclearweaponsatsea,athomeand
In Eastern Europe.
Reagan's muted reaction to the
decision was made 1!1 a written
Statement Issued soon atter the
Soviet news agency Tass relayed

close

AndropoY's statement.
"We can
be dismayed at this
Soviet statanent," said Reagan,
who Ia spending a tJve.day vacation
out o1 plbllc view at hls ranch bt the

ooJr

Santa

r- Mountatns.

He said AndrqloV's statement
was "at llharp varianCe with the
stall!ld wllh ol the Soviet Union that
an &amp;iiMiJellt be Jlligotiated" to

Umtt llll!lllum range nuclear weapolill. Europe.
''Willie 11111 11re dlalnaYed. we are
dell!rmiDed to renew our etrorts.to
.

-· ·,
•

entirely do away. with the land·
I ·tiased

intemiedlate range nuclear
missile systems," said the president. "We continue to seek negotiations in good faith."
Reagan was Informed of Andi-opov's statement in a telephOne call ,
from hls national securtty ad~,
Robert C. McFarlane, according to
deputyWhlteHousepresssecretary
Marlin Fitzwater.
Andropov said the ~et Union
considers it Impossible to continue
negotiating with the United States In
Geneva becauseofJIIATO'sdeclslon
to deploy u.s. Pershing 2 and cruise
missiles in western Europe.

MOSCOW (AP)- President Yuri
V. Andropov says the Soviet Union
wUl enlarge its nuclear arsenal at
home, in eastern Europe and at sea
In response to NATO'S deployment
of new U.S. missiles In Western
Europe.
Most Western- leaders said An·
dropov's statement, carried Thursday by the official Soviet news
agency Tass, was little more than a
conflnnatlon of long-standing Soviet plans.
However, It was the first time
Andropov publicly had disclosed
new plans to bolster Soviet marl·
time nuclear forces.
Navy sources In Washington have
said several Soviet submarines
armed with nuclear weapons are
assigned to posltlons several
hundred mDes off the east and west
u.s. coasts.
The Narth Atlantic Treaty OrganIzation plans to deploy 572 new
medium-range u.s, cruise and
Pershing 2 nuclear missiles In five
Western European countries start·

'·

In confining his response to a
two-paragraph written statement,
Reagan seemed detennlned to play
down . Andropov's dramatic
statement.
Nor would aides traveilngwlth the
president speak more !reely about
what they see as the long-term
implications of Andropov's

T1Je guests Included Reqan~s
brotber, NeU, and his wife, Beu; the
prelldeut's dallihten. PatU Dllvls
and Maureen Reaean and Mau· ·
reel!' I IPi""and,l)ennls Revell.

ing next month. Parts of some of the
missiles already IJ.ilve arrived in
Britain and West ~any.
Andropov indicated that, through
an increased sea arsenal, he wanted
to keep the direct threat to
AmeriCan soli at the same level as
that posed by Westem weapons to
Soviet territory.
"Since by deploying Its missiles in
Europe the United States increases
the ·nuclear threat to the Soviet ·
Union. the corresponding Soviet
systems will be dfopioyed with due
account . lor this circumstance In ·
ocean areas and seas," he said.
The Soviet Union on Wednesday
broke off negotiations In Geneva on
limiting medlum·range nuclear
missiles.
In West Gennany ·and )3rltain,
govemmen1 spokesmen saki Andropov's stalmertt was not a
surprise.
" It does not meet our hopes, but
also does not contradicl ourexpecta- .
tlons," said West Gennan spokes- ·
man Peter Boenisch.

Change Christmas parade time

announcement.

However,ltdldnotappeartomar
the president's Thanksglvlng boll·
day. Reagan and his wife, Nancy,
entertained several family
member$ 111 a traditiOnal dinner ot
turkl!y with an the trimrnlnp.

from the earlier storm blamed for the deaths of 15
people on roads, 10 In small planes and two elderly
Minnesota men who died Wednesday and Thursday
shoveUlng snow.
The snow in Minnesota tapered off to flurries early
Thursday, after dumping a.. record 19.7 inches on
Duluth and 11.4 inches on Minn~rul'lii&amp;and S~ Pa~l. ··There were "hundreds of cars in ditches," said a
Minnesota State Patrol lnfonnaiion officer. A
93-year-oid man died after the car he was riding In was
struck by a Uvestock tractor-traller that spun on icy
Minnesota Highway 22.

SMWl~ i'rriRIII TO FROWNS- Prl!llitlelll Reacan. left, waves and
. lll"IM!e at ft. Mup, Naval Air Stadon, on Ills W113' to Ills
ranch nellr Santa Barliara. However, Reacan'a 'lbaallllglvlng Holiday
Wll8 enapted 'lb~ when Soviet leaders cut ollauy lulure weapon

.......,

~..:::~wthato~~IIB~ReaPn~
William P. Clark, Jr., Secretaey of lnleltor. (AP l.aseJ11hoto).

The combined Pomeroy Middleport Chrlsimas Parade has
been changed from 2 p.m. on
Saturday, Dec. 3, tolOa.m. that day,
Brian Conde who is heading the
endeavor along with Dr. Craig
Mathews, JJUlounced today.
I Theparadewillformat9::lla.m.
in the area behind the Pomeroy
First Baptist Church and the fanner
Pomeroy JunlorH!g~ School. Th_e re

will be live categories judged during

the parade which will carry out the
theme. "Home for the Holidays".
These categories wUl include the
best auto entry; the best float; best
reltglous entry; , most outstanding
band, ·and the best marching unit
other than a band.
Individuals and groups wishing to
take part should contact Conde or
Dr. Mathews at once.

�..
..

Friday, NOVember 25, 1983

f

Comment
.
-

.....

,. -

The Daily Sentinel

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVMED TO THE IN'J:EREST OF TilE MEIGS.MAsoN AREA

AJb

~m~ ...,..,_,'-"""'rl f"T"'E! =•F==W

.

~v

r

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB,

JR.

Ne"·s Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publisher ·"-!:isoclatlon.
•

LE.."TT'ERS OF OPINION arl' welcomed . They s hould be less thau1 300 words
long. Allletlf"rs are subjed to t'dltlng and must be sig ned wUh nam t&gt;, addr£~S.!I and
telephone number. No o.~n!!IJ(ned letters wUI he published. LeUPrs sttou ld be In
good taste, addr essing bisuet~, not personalities.

The day after :·The Day After" Is was in part an act of euthanasia, but
Is exactly like the contraction of
m ost welcome. 1\vo things, about no doubt caused turmoil in that the
terminal cancer. What can we do
which up until Sunday night-there viewer was left with characters
about It? What can we do about the
was only informed speculation. are unaccounted for, and characters · Soviet Union's mad race to pile
now absolutely established. The · undeveloped. Viewed as a whole, it · weapon upon nuclear weapon onto
first is that the movie itself was a Is hard to have an !Jiterestlng
an arsenal already groaning with
profound bore, empty of engaging two-hour picture about a stranger's
apocalyptic po":er? The answer Io
narrative and fatally m arred by the death by cancer. You quickly get · that question is we can do nothing at
lack of analytical rigor. The second the idea 'tbat things are getting
all until the Soviet Union decides to
is that wha tever was on the mind of worse, that no rellef Is In sight, and
chang&lt;; Its course. We have no way
the Impresarios over at ABC, the that there Is a general helplessness
of knowing when this will happen.
movie became a !)Jlitical operation. wrttten Into the situation.
even as we have no way of knowing
On the first point, a little
This last point extends the when science wiU come up with a
Indulgence is in order for two metaphor, because "The Day
cure for cancer.
reasons. The first is that the script After" Is a protest against a
Meanwhlle all we can do is play
originally ran for four hours. situation over which the public has
the odds, and these amount to our
Reducing it to a litt le over two hours absolutely no control. In this sense it
resolution to protect and develop

: :Broken pattern
:
A famlllar panern, accepted by management and labor for the past 20
. .. _years, seems to have b€en broken by a hodgepodge of factors that includes
~- ~ fear and the dollar's va lue.
, . Though not certain, it a ppears now that a falling jobless rate isn't likely
:1. to be followed quickly by much higher wages, once con~idered almost
· automati&lt;;. Even some union leaders agree that the pattern, dating to the
early 19mi, may be broken next year.
Perhaps the most often cited reason is an oversupply of workers,
documented by an 8.8 percent civilian jobless rate that one union chief says
:~. leads to a classic, wage-depressing supply-demand problem.
- - William Winpinsinger, Machinists &amp; Aerospace Workers president and
member of a Conference Board panel on the labor outlopk, said the pool of
available workers also condemns the unskilled to "continuing and chronic
joblessness."
Merrill Lynch's Jack Lavery explains that while the jobless rate has
fallen sharply, it remains high by most yardsticks. He believes a 6 percent
to 7 percent rate would be needed before wage pressures are felt, "well
below the 8 percent rate we expect by the end of 1984."
In some industries unemployment remains much hlgher than the overall
rate. In October more than 15 percent of workers in construction were idle
and the rate in manufacturing was 9.5 percent.
Also helping to break the pattern is the attitude of businesses. many who
cut costs in the recession and want to keep them cut.
WASHINGTON - X·ray maAudrey Freedman, chainnan of the Conference Board's panel, says
chines
intended for treating liveshaving survived back-to-back recessions in the 1981&lt;, "corpora tesurvivors
tock
and
pets have b€en used 'on
·· are not going to revert to inefficient operations now ."
elderly
nursing
home patients
Ms. Freedman, an economist with the board. a research organization
under
the
Medicare
program.
supported mainly by business, says "there will be now age explosion in1984
What makes this doubly outrageeven as the recovery continues."
t
ous is that the useof veterinary
Behind the new efficiencies are many reasons. Companies are scared by
X-r~y equipment on elderly invalpast economic volatlllty and fear it might develop again. Others are more
Ids is allowed thro ugh a loophole In
concerned about foreign competition in domestic markets.
the 1974 law that set stringent
Behind the foreign competition is more than the usual complaint -goods
federal safety standards. The loop- ·
produced at low wages. And the dollar is valued so highly that
hole permits X-ray machlnes made
foreign-made goods undersell domestic items in the U.S. market.
before 1974 to he used on Medicare
So additional pressure is added to the U.S. job market and to corporate
patients without federal approval,
managers already ill' the midst of cost-cutting programs.
as long as they meet state
There also is the factor of deregulation . Many transportation firms have
standards.
lnding it necessary to hold down and sometimes cut wages to meet
Of the 262 poriable X-ray macompetition resulting from deregulation.
chines certified for Medicare use, 65
These factors, and the deep recession that just ended, have led to a
are in California, which has safety
leveling In the rate of hourly wage-. increases, with the third-quarter
standards less sllingent than the
.. Increase amounting to only 5A percent, lowest since the mid-19605.
federal guidelines. A recent Food
- Next year, the Conference Board panel says, first-year wage and benefit
and Drug Administration memoraises In major union contracts are likely to be a "modest" 5 percent.
randum warns that other states
Based on a 5 percent inflat ion rate, also projected by the panel, that would
·may also have lower standards.
mean no real increase at all.
In a memo intended for official
eyes only , Richard p _ Kusserow,

our nuclear arsenal In such a way
as 19 guarantee the Soviet Union
that· any massive assault on us
would result In a counterassault on
the Sovle' Unlon. That Is too simple
to Wilie whole movie about.

a

That It was.a polltlcal operation Is
everywhere -plafn. A haH-dozen
national organizations were ready
with advertising copy attempting to
enlist recruits for their junk
thought. (Not sinCe the F1at Earth
Society has there been any movement as sllly as the nuclear freeze
movement.) Every member of
parliament II\ West Gennany wasinvited to view the fflm , and as we
know, the Social Democrats reversed their leader, . Helmut
Schmidt, in protesting the dePloyment of U.S. Pershing and cruise
missiles he had sollclted when
chancellor. Europe Is aflame with
paclflclsm, If "All Quiet on the
Western Front" led to the -preeminence of Hitler In Europe, "The
. Dl!Y After" quallfles to lead to the
pre-eminence of the Soviet Union in
Europe.
···
ABC _Is said to have lost lots of
money on this venture. High
production costs are cited. What
was the budget, one wonders, for
putting brochures in the churc"es
last Sunday? Mine Is elght pages a "viewer's gui~." The brochure,
advertising that the :!11m would be
shown that night, is c-heck full of
text about nuclear war, which
Includes "Before VIewing Exercises." Here you are asked to
complete sentences.

Vet X-rays for elderly _ _ _ _....:._Ja_ck_And_ers...:._:_on

.Letters to editor
Thanks ministers

... · We wish to thank the following
· ministers for having the ir church
bells ring on Veterans' Day during
our service,s held Friday, November 11 , at Pomeroy, In front of
the courtho use.
Rev. Neil Proudfoot. Pomeroy
· Church of Christ, Rev. David Mann,
.·· Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
Msgr. Father Anthony Gia nnamore, Sacred Hea rt Ca tholic
~ Church, Rei' . Wilbur Perrin. Pome-roy, Trinity Church; Rev. William
Middlewar1 h, St. Paul Lutheran
Church; Rev. James Corbitt, Uni·
ted Methodist Church , and Rev.
Father Miller, Grace Episcopal

Chu rch.
They sounded so beautiful ring·
ing in unison during our services.

We would also like to thank
Fa ther Tony Giannamore for his
wonderful talk about veterans and
we all agree 100 percent with him on
the subject and the wonderful
people who were so thoughtful to
attend our services. It was the
largest crowd in recent years.
Thank you again, one and all, for
your cooperation with us. Also The
Daily Sentinel. - Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, Pomeroy, zoe Zwilling, Assil;tant Chairman, Publicity.

Concerned group
..

After attending t he meeting case of neglect or abuse It is your
Wednesday, Nov. 16, of the Meigs res!)Jnslblllty to re!)Jrt It at the
County Alliance for Children, I am welfare department through Chlldconvinced that this group wa~ ren's Services.
formed solely out of concern for
Thl., group was formeQ for the
children and not for !)Jiltical good of Meigs County and · Is
reasons as has b€en Implied.
interested in working with the
The key speakers, Dr. James county commissioners and the
Witherell, Jim Lardle, and Max ' welfare department for the good of
McGee, indicated that they realize the youth of our area. There will be
that the commissioners have a
speakers from Alliance for Child·
great res!)Jnslbility. And that our ren at the Dec. 8 meeting of
commissioners are doing a fine job. Concerned CitiZens for Youth. This
It Is the responsibility or every
will be at 7: 311 p.m. In the Meigs
·human being to do all they can to High Cafeteria. - Roger Stewart.
protect the young. If you know of a

~~-·. _ Today in history

, ;: :: Today is Friday, Nov. 25, the 329th day of1983. There are 36 days left In
: ... -the year.
::~: ::· Today's highlight In history :
;~ -·:· .On Nov. 25, 1963; President John Kennedy was buried In Arlington
-": · Natlonal Cemetery.
;:. ;,. On this date:
: ::: : In 1783. l!DJ years ago, the British evacuated New York, their last
;: mWtary position in the U.S. in the Revlutlonary War.
' ::' • In lB81, Pope John XXIII was born Angelo Roncalll In a village near
; : Bergamo, Italy:
;:. : .In 1884, John Meyenberg of St. Louis patented eva!)Jrated mUk.
;;: :;: .In m, Vice President Thomas Hendricks died, eight months after
, ·taklng ot!loe.
In _19l3, Jessie Wllson, the daughter o! President Woodlw- Wllsoo,
married Francis Sayre in a White House'cexemony.

•

Long home court ·win streak on line at Racine

Page 2-The Dally Sentn
Middlepott,
Friday, Novemb• 25, 1913

,..,.... o,.

'The Day After'______
Wi---:-llia_m_F_.B_uc_kl__;_ey_J

Inspector general of the Health and
Human Services Department, calls
attention to "a potentially explosive
situation now occurring In California nursing homes (concerning the
use of) veterinary equipment on
nursing home residents ."
The memo adds: "This equipment has not b€en certified for use
on humans and presents a definite
health hazard to nursing home
patients."
Federal Inspectors have also
gathered evidence that some Medl·
care providers are using animal
X-ray machines that were made
after 1974 and thus are not
exempted under the "grandfather''
clause. This puts them in direct
violation of federal safety
standards.
The problem with the veterinary
machines and the older models Is
that they may emit exoessive
amounts of radiation and may give
X-ray doses to greater areas of the

body than necessary. they may
even leave radiation burns. Yet
some X-ray service providers use
the unsafe machines because they
are cheaper to buy and operate.
FDA experts told my reporters
Stephanie Holmes and Tony capuc·
clo that the animal X-ray machines
have been used mainly for lowdose, routine procedures. They
!)Jinted out that because the
nursing home patients are elderly,
the posslbUlty of genetic damage is
not slgnlflcant. .
The inspector general noted In his
memo that so far only two
Medicare prOViders have b€en
cauglit IUPgally using veterinary
equipment on nursing home patients. But he added : "Indications
are that at least eight other
C3IIfornia suppliers are Involved In
this callous disregard of the
consequences of unnecessary radiation exposure."
One supplier, Medical Sup!)Jrt

Systems of Woodland Hills, Call!.,
was named In the IG's memo,
which said the company's animal
X-ray machines "lacked controls
for protection of patients and did, in
fact , violate federal safety
standards."
Though the Health Care Finane·
ing Administration, which monltol'!l
Medicare, had been told of the
problem with Medical Support
Systems, the agency apparently
took no action. "It appears ' that
Medical Support Systems did, in
fact, violate a condition of Medicare
reimbursement and at the very
least should have been required to
make a refund," wrote Kusserow ~

I sent the company copies of the
complaining documents and requested comment, but the company
has made no response. I've learned,
however, that company executiVes
told federal Investigators there
were about :;o machines lJt use on
the West Coast that are slmllar to ·
theirs .

Acid rain controi ________L_aw_e_u_w_i~~e_...:.u
The Congress and administrations over the last decade or so have
consistently Ignored a fast gro\vlng
threat to the environment, acid
rain, in the apparent hope that II
Ignored, It willsomehowgoaway. It
won't! The E nvironmental Protec·
tion Agency recently re!)Jrted that
the regions of the United States
vulnerable to acid rain stretch from
Florida to the state of Washington
and from California to Maine. All
we have had so far is talk!
A Democratic representative
from Minnesota, Gerry Sikorski, Is
doing something about It He has
introduced legislation In the House
of Representatives called the National A~d Deposition Control Act
of 1983 calling for national cost
sharing for the control of sulfur
dioxide and 'nitrogen oxide In the
atmosphere with the costs shared
equally by every user of electricity
iri the United States. This is an
approach to the problem similar to
what I suggested in this column
several months ago. It Is a national
problem and must be addressed
nationally. To expect electrlclty
users In one section of the country to
foot the bill because big electrlc
generating pl•nts happen to be
located in their section Is Irnpracll·
cal because It would push electrl~al
bills to Impossible heights. That Is
what would happen If generating
companies were forced by the
E .P .A. to Install scrubbers.
According to supporters of the
Sikorski bill, a fee of one-tenth of a
cent for each kllowatt of electrlclty
used in the United States would
adequately foot the bill to clean upacid rain and would only cost an
average American family 50 to 75
cents a month. The money collected
would pay up to 90 percent of the
one-time cost of Installing expen.
slve scrubbers in the 50 dirtiest
powl!r plants in the nation. This
would cut sulfur clloxtde. emissions
by seven mllllon tons a year, The
bill also calls for removing four
mllllon tons of nitrogen oXIde each
, year through strict controls on new
power plants and trucks. There are

other more complex provisions
which deal with states exceeding a
certain minimum level of pollution.
All In all, the Sikorski plan is the
fairest and most sensible solution to
one .of the nation's most pressing
envlrmpnental problems.
Meigs, Gallla and Mason Counties have a big stake in securing
passage of the National Acid
Deposition Control Act. Much of the
tri·county economy Is directly tied
to the generation of electrlclty.
Gallia and Mason Counties each
have two of the largest generating
plants In the Country. The Meigs
County economy depends on fur.
nlshing coal to these plants. There
are two ways to reduce sulfur
emissions from these plants:
Either Install scrubbers or require
the utilities operttng the plants to
switch from the high sulfur local
coal to low sulfur coal from the
West. A Congressional Research
Service study has found that such a
switch would cost as many as
300,000 jobs in the Eastern coal·
mining states. There Is no question ·
in anyone's mind that ackl rain·
must be stopped now. The only

question is how• In my oplnlon, the
answer lies In the passage of the
Sikorski legislation.
The EPA has pointed an accusing
finger at the power plants in the
Mid-west as being responsible for
the acid rain which Is destroying
forests and lakes In the Northeast
and in Canada. No doubt they are
right but It is not the Mid-west
plants that ~re causing the damage
as far away as Florida and
C3llfornla. Vast areas of the South
- already'
the Southwest and the West
have some damage which will grow
rapidly If emissions are not controlled. Temporary measures are
not effective as was proved a few
years ago when the Sporn Plant at
Graham Station bull! taller stacks
at the Insistence of residents ol
Racine. they merely spread their
pollution OV!'r a more distant area.
There are several suggested ways
to control the emissions and to pay
the bill but the well-documented
destructiveness of acld rain is too
great to allow us the luxury of
experimenting with well Intentioned but untrled Ideas.
Instead, we should seek a solution

we know will work and a methOd of
payment that won't bankrupt
anyone.
Perhaps lt would belp II business
organizations, civic groups and
lal;xlr unions threw their support
behind the Sikorski blll. It Is sureiy a
measure that can be backed by
Democrats and Republicans allkf'.
Make. no mistake about it, the EPA
.Is going to cr~ck down on acid rain!
Whether they do so by using the
authority they already have or by
enforcing a speclf!c directive tram
Congress depends on how much
support is given the pending bill.
One way you risk your electric bin
'doubling or trlpllng and the other
way would raise your electric bill '
by a modest amount well within the
means of everyone. This bill Is
Important enough to attract the
support of national organizations
and to become a national crusade
on which most
and
political leaders can agree. Such
issues are hard to find these days.
This ls one time when no one
should be afraid to stand up and be ,
counted!

business

The Doily -S entinei-Page.,--3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

By SCOTr WOLFE
RACINE - Saturday night in
CharlesW. Haymangymnaslumat
Racine the perennial class "A"
P9wer Southern Tornadoes meet
the hlghly touted Class "AAA"
Galllpolls'Blue DevUs.
According to the charts· and
preseason reports both teams are
quite similar In overall team
characteristics. Both are comparable In size, speed, and abillty, thus
emphaslZlng the need to play
Saturday's game with the least
mistakes possible.
,
Southern will be putting Its
home-wlnnfng streak on the line
.against one of Its toughest foes of
the year.
Likewise, the Blue Devils will be
out to unseat the Tornadoes and the
. streak that started five seasons ago
at Racine.
Besides the usual hoopla assoela-ted with the meeting of two
quality teams. another dimension
pas b€en added to the colorful
encounter.
Two outstanding coaches in
• GaUipolis' Jim Osborne and Southern's Carl Wolfe highlight this
match-up. This game will reunite
that duo for the nrst time stnce
Wolle left Meigs In the SEOAL
leagueoveradecadeago.
These two coaches have had a
taste of rivalry develop between
·them over the years, Including
many close baitles. One such l:lattle
was an exciting four-overtime
game at Gallipolis that Meigs won
at the buzzer, 60-58, on a dramatic
last second shot. Carl Wolfe is the
dean of the SVAC and Coach Jim
Osborne is the dean of the SEOAL.
Coach Wolfe said of Saturday's
game, "We won't have a team any
tougher than _Galli!)Jlis on our
schedule ... we're fortunate to play
a team of that caliber. This Is going
to be a big game for us. Each team
is faced with the Importance of
getting off to a good start."
In addition to being the season
opener Southern 's home streak
provides Incentive for both clubs.
Wolfe added, "We'll find out II we
can play. It'll be a good test for us."
An inside look at the 1983 opener
reveals that the Tornadoes are
Soulbem 1'nma.toes
PM-Playt'l'
Ht. V r.
F- Dartn Roush .... .. ....... .............. ...6-0 3
F- KevCurtman ... .. .... .......... .........6-0 4
C-Dennls Tcatnrd ..........................6-5 4

G-Tony Deem .............. .................s-u •
G-Rod untettekl ................. __________,._,, •

G~BN&lt;~

Pos-Piayer
R Yr.
F-Chrl.s EUcessor .... .... ......... .. ..... ...6--2 4
F-T001 l:kmcan ... .. .........................6-0 4
C-KevCw-ty ...... ..... .. .................. .. .Ohl 3
G-SieveWolfe ... .... ............... .. ..... ...S-8 4

looldng towards good defensive
play and limited turnovers as a
"key to the game." Coach Wolfe
explained, . "Gallipolis has had a
reputation for playing a slowdownpatterned offense. which means the
number of turnovers becomes
more critical. Likewise, our de·
tense must pl ay aggressive
basketball."
Coach Osborne says a key to a
GAHS win will rely on "controlling the tempo of the game. and
rebounding."
When asked If he knew anyuthing
about the Gallipolis team, Coach
Wolfe replied, "I know that they are
very well coached. They have a fine '
· coach in Jim Osborne ... he's a fine
disciplinarian . They always play
good defense ... you can count on
1
that."
"
Continuing he added, "GAHS ·
probably has as small a team as
they've ever had . This season
they're more of a quick team ...
about a carbon copy of us speed·
wise. They don't like to play as fast

a tempo as we do. but they run If
they have the opportunity, and like
to press . Galll!)Jlis ls a disciplined,
patterned offensive team."
Coach Osbome said of his Blue
Devils, " We should get better as the
season goes on. Our scrimmages
have b€en very good learning
experiences." GAHS has scrim·
maged Reynoldsburg, Fairfield
Union and East Carter. Kentucky."
Last year, GaUipolls posted ·a
respectable 14-7 mark against stiff
competition and memhers of the
strong SEOAL league. The GAHS
Blue Imp reserve .squad recorded
an excellent 17·3- ledger. Southern
last year posted a 20-3 record at the
varsity level.
. According to Coach Osborne,
"Good depth, a competitive spllit,
and good quickness, " are strengths
of this year's team. Osborne added,
"Varsity playing experience would
be the team's ·weakness." Only
three lettermen return to the
line-up, including &amp;-2" senior forward Chris Ellcessor, 5-8 senior

guards Steve Wolfe and Revln
Carter.
Addltional seating has been
added to the Southern gyni, how·
ever, Coach Carl Wolle said, " It
looks like It Is goln.&lt; to be a sellout."
Tickets left 01 er !rom advance
ticket sales wi11.,. ;old at the door,

beginning at 5:30p.m. The reserve

contest begins at 6:30 p.m.

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DEER HUNTERS
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OF COFFEE
(Just Show Us Your
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During Deer Season ...

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Mon.-Thurs. 6 to 11_; Fri. &amp; Sat. 6 to 12

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1977 FORD 4X4

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'

1974 FORD
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1978 HONDA
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2 door, 4 cyl., s spE&gt;edllcoo1d., vinyl roof, heater,
trans., body side mo•ulct .. lauto . trans ., PS, PB, body
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radial tires, wheel

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'1895
1979 FORD LTD

G-KevCarter ............ .....................s-8 4

21N STOCK

YOUR CHOICE

Tomcats
TVC pick

2 door ,

Wellston, Federal-Hocking, Vin·
ton County, and Miller were the
final four teams In that order.
TVC Pre S 'soo Poll
1. Tt1mble [10 ) ...... .......... .. ....... .. ....... !100
2. Belpre(Glul89 .

3. Alexander .... ......... ... ........ ................ 77
4.

NelsonviU~York .., ........................... 61

5. Warren Local .. ................................. 60
6. MeigS .. ......... .. ............................... ,57
7. Wellston .......................................... 36
8. Federal-Hocklng ............................... 32
9. VInton County .. .............................. .. 'I7
10. Miller ........... .... ............................... ll
(First place voces ln parenthesiS) .

lt8% T'VC F1nal squ,dlnp
(l.oque_ . . . )

Warren Local ......... .......... ............ ... ll 3

Trimble .......................... :................11 3
Nelsonville- York ...............................11 3

~~~·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::~ ~

VInton County ..................... :...... .. ...... 3 U
Federai·Hocldng ........... .. ................... 3 U
Wellston ... ................... .. ........ ..... ..... 2 12

~m~

::::::: :: : ::: : ::: ::: ::: : : : ::g~~

Moon cops award
1-'

VANCOUVER, Brltish Columbia
· (AP) - Edmonton Esldmos quarterback Wan-en Moon, who threw
for a record 5.648 YardS in 1983, was
named the Canadian FootbaU.
Leaguti's outstanding player.
Moon; whp pJa)&lt;ed wt his option
with the Eskimos liitd has said he
will llBten to
rrom both the
National Football League and the
United Statm Football League,
edged Torontc Argonauts' l'E(.'01"(!.
lreaklltg pti8S recelver'l'enY Greer
III the votlng by selected splrlwri·
te.-s and sportcasten for the
Sche111eY Award.
.

oaen

air

cond.,

'3995

Trimble's Tomcats were the
unanimous pick to win the ·T ri·
Valley Conference basketball race
this season as polled by the league's
10 head coaches.
Trimble, district champs and
owners of a sparkling 19-6 slate,
shared the title with Warren Local
and Nelonsville-York last year with
11·3 marks.
Belpre was a solid second as was
Alexander for third. The closest
positions tabulated were the battle
for fourth with but !our points
separating Nelsonville-York,
Warren Local, and Meigs. ·

VB ,

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'1995

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WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF
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~

F-150 &amp; F-250.

-

�'

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Nooember

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

2~,

1983

SVAC.champ
opens season
against GARS
By SCOTI' D. WOLFE
RACINE -Perennial basketball
pqwer Southern opens the doors to
another cage srason this Satu rday
evening In Racine, when tt meets a
respectable Gallipolis Blue Devil
squad In Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium. The season opener
marks the 11th season for Coach
Carl Wolfe, beglnning the second
decade of intensified, fastbreaklng
Tornado teams -that he has built.
l.ast year, Southern Posted a 2().3
r&lt;'('ord enroute to capturing their
seventh consecutive SVAC and
Si'ctlona l Champtonships.
Graduated from that champion·
ship club ,were league MVP Zane
Beegle, Nick Bostick, Chris Bos·
tick, and Tyrone Brinegar. The
services of these Torn adoes w\11 be
missed. but several equally tough
replacements are on hand to fill
their shoes.
Southern boasts five returning
leJ:tennen that will form a solid
base for this year's team, including
all-league performer Rod Little·
field, who doubled as the team' s
lepdlng rebounder and is noted as
one of the top shooters tn the area .
Other returnees are guard Tony
Deem, Kevin Curfman, Wade
Connolly, and 6·5 postman Dennis
Teaford, all of which are seniors.
· Also returning are seniors Jason
HJ)I and Trevor Cardone, while
Scutt Schultz, Steve Teaford, Dar·
t'ln Roush, Tom Greathouse, and
Kevin Teaford join the squad after
moving up from last season's
ieserve team .·
When asked about this season's
club and the type of season he
expects to have, Coach Carl Wolfe
replied, . "We've had some really
good scrimmages and have had
some bad news. Usually by this
!XJtnt I know what our season will be
like, but right now I don't know how
we stand."

Quickness and defense were
listed as Southern's strengths .
"We' re as quick as we've ever

been," said Coach Wolfe, " and
that's a definite plus. Right now
we're playing good defense too ."
Commenting on weaknesses he
continued, "We are not shooting as
W!lll as l though\ we would, but" I
guess it'll come around. Our
scooting hasn't developed as
quickly as in previous years."
·Overall team size would Indicate
ttiat Southern is hurting, but as
Wolfe says, "We're about like we
have always been in size, not real
big, but we get by on quickness.
Damn Roush and Kevin Teaford
have been surprises. They hit the
boards well and Roush has contribut ed wjt h his shooti ng. Dennis
!Teaford ) has looked good on the
posl and no one can jump· higher
than Rod Lit tlefield. Rebounding·
v.ise we are probably a little better
off than some of the past teams. Not
the best rel;xJUndlng team, but
adequ ate."
Th e Southern scrimmage sche·
dule has been a rugged one, forcing
the young Tornadoes to tow the
mark . Included on the pre-season

By The· Bend

a nice club because of its size,

Hannan Trace is experienced and
shoots well, and Southwestern has
proven they can shoot along with
having four kids that played quite a
bit last year.
Eastern Is a lot tougher. They're
scrappy, play good defense, and
have shown lots of improvement,
although the loss of Jay Carpenter
has to hurt. North Gallla is small,
but determined and shows a lot of
hustle."
" In fact, there Is no clearcut
faVorite. The league should gain
some respectability. It's about time
tt1e SVAC gets some respect. "
Southern opens Its season with
Gallipolis in Racine Saturday, Nov.
26. This game is "one of the
toughest on the schedule" for the
Tornadoes as they try to defend
their home game winning streak
that dates back five seasons. Coach
Wolfe proudly exclaimed, "We are
very fortunate and lucky to be able
to play a team the caliber of
Gallipolis."
Coach Wolle wlll be assisted by
another veteran cage mentor,
Howle Caldwell, who coaches the
reserve squad as well as assisting
with the varsity program. Satur·
day's reserve contest will begln at
6:30 p.m. v.1th the reglonal head·
liner following at 8 p.m. Gates open
at 5:30p.m.
Soulhem 1"081.er
Player - POlS.
Ht. Yr.
1.-Tony Deem, G .. .. ..... ....... ... ......... S.II 12
x·Rod UUJeftdd. G ..... ... ........ ......... 5-11 12
x-Wade Coanolb', G ......... ....... ........ ~11 12
Jt·KII!Wt Curfman, 1" ..... ..... , .... ,. ...... H
U
Jason Hlll, F ...... .......... ........ ......... 6-2 I%

1%
1%
ll
11
11
II
II

Jan. 14, Ravell!lwood. home

Jan . \!l, Southwf!ostern, home
JAn. ~, at Kyger Creek

Jan. 1!8, \\'ahama. home
Feb. 3, at Eastern
Feh. 4, at Ceredo-Kemva
Feb. 10, North Galla, home
Feb. n , Huntiapon St. Joe, bome
Feb. 14, at Rave.wood •
Feb. 1'7, Hannan Trace, home

ffi VING, Texas (AP ) -Thanks·
Sunday's action has the New
giving Day has become the Dallas York Giants at Los Angeles Raid·
Cowboys' fa vorite holiday, serving · ers, Philadelphia at Washington,
once again as a springboard Into the Mbmesota at New Orleans, Buffalo
at the Los Angeles Rams, San
National Football League playoffs.
TI1e Cowboys rolled over the St. Francisco at Chicago, New England
Louis Cardinals :J5.17Thursday and at the New York Jets, Baltimore at
Cleveland, Denver at San Diego,
counted the following blessings.
Mea nwhile a Oetetrolt, the Uons Kansas City at8eattle, Green Bay at
clobbered a stunned Pittsburgh Atlanta and Houston at Tampa Bay.
Steeler club, 45-3 behind the hard
, Cincbmatils at Miami In Monday
night's game.
running of Billy Sims.

9 passenger, PB, PS, Air, showroom clean . New snow tires.

1977 OLDS CUTLASS ................................ '1695

2 dr. V-6, PB, PS, Air.

1980 CHEVY CITATION ............................. s2995

4 d., V-6, 4 spd. Good condition.

1977 PINTO ............................................. '1195

2 dr. Ru nabout. Automatic.

1977 FORD LTD II ................................... S1695

PB, PS, Air.

..

"'
.....")

...
~

-...

11'

~ ;·

- ~

I!!•

'-~
'

'
•-~
~.

~-

.

Wolf Pen area announcements
Warner.
Mrs. Gladys Tuckerman, Mrs.
Eugene Haning, Mrs. Les Frank
and Sarah Beth were Wednesday
visitorS of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Bratton.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Sargent of
Hot Springs, Ark.. were Wednesday

Mr. and Mrs. Rny Smith of Rock
Springs were Saturday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith and
POMEROY
Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith of
Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Kanauga were Sunday Visitors.
Star, Installation of new officers
Alta Atkins of .Columbus is
will be held at 7: ll p.m. Monday I'
spending the week with Mrs. Iva
at the Pomeroy MaSO!liC Temple. Members are to take dessert
Johnson.
Tuesday visitors of Mrs. Iva
and salads.
Johnson and Alta Atkiils were Mrs.
Grace Warner and Mrs. Amber

- ..
~- • ..
r

J•

".ll!

'

MARAUDERETI'E TEAM - Meinbers of lbe 1983-84 Melp Marauderette varsity
inclucles front row, left to right, Rhonda Haddox, Daphne Dillard, mallllger, Zandra Vaughan, ltiAIIajler, Cbannele

team

.··ll;

~

JayMar banquet

•

• v

POMEROY - Rf&gt;servations
for the Jaymar golf awards
banquet to be held Dec. 3 at the
Meigs Inn are to be made with
Nancy Hill, 992-6143 or Bob
. Freed, 992-2044.

Turner, manager, Rhonda Neece and Jodi Harrlson. Blick row, Heidi
C&lt;Jbb, lleUy Ann Loftis, l)enl.se ster;aU, Trlna Reeves, Je~~~~y Meadows,
Caj!cy DeLonc. .Rutll Fry, B. J. Gordon and Cailcy Dean.

Two starters among five return· far I'm very pleased with how Jennifer Swartz, G .............. .. ...........5-5 9
Jennifer Miller, c ....... ...................... $-10 9
lng letter-winners gives Coach Ron
we've played," added Log~n.
JulieMWer, C.. .... .. .. ... .. .. ...... ........... 5"10 9
Logan a bright outlook lor the .
The Marauderettes plaYed Galli· Carla King, F .. ... .. ........... ..... .. ... ......5-S 9
1983-84 Meigs Marauderette basket- polis on even tenns while losing to Darla King, F ... .... .........•.•..... ............ :;.a-9
Lis&lt;! P\JIIInS, G ......., .... .......•..... ........ !i-3 9
ball season.
Athens, a premier power In girls' Sue Panoru, G .................... :........ ... r.-4 9
JeMy Meadows, a 5-10 senior
basketball.
Melp Gino' Schedule .
center, returns for her third year as
Meigs' new reserve coaoh Js 1983 No\1.11, Trimble Pmrtew- .................. Away
N~. d, ~ ..................... ........ Horne
a starter. The talented Meadows
Rio Grande graduate Kim Adkins. Dec. I, F - Hocldii( .............. ......A~
averaged 17.5 points a game and 11 She served as a student assistant Dec. S. Mm«............................ ...... Home
rebOUnds last year, thus giving • coach lor two years with the Dec. 8, N-York .............., ....A~
· DeC. IJ. .............. ,,.,,.,,,,Home
Coach Logan a solid foundation to
Redwom.en.
Dec. II. Trlmllle ,;,,,.,,.,,.,,,,,Home
work around.
Managers for tbe Marauderettes Dec. It, llellft ...........................1.... A~
ze. .•tna"'l!l' ...... .................... Horne
The other returning starter ls 6-8 are Zandra Vaughan, Daphne 1Jec.
Jaa.l, W...-en .................................Away
junior forward Denise Stegall who Dlllard, and Charmele Turner.
Ja I, WeiiiDJD ............... : ............... H01ne
II, Federal Jlocldn&amp;: .................. Home
averaged 6.7 points and nlne
The Meigs ladles open their ,J-.
. . 14,!Wik...... ....... .............. ...... .Away
rebounds a game last year.
season at home Tuesday at 5:30 J-. 11, Ellltern ............ ............ .......Away
JMI. It, NMo.vln~York ............ ...... Home
"Our · Inside game will be the p.m. against Eastern (Meigs) .
J.,_ ill, ............ .....................Away
strength of this year's team. We're
Melp Girls' Vanity
J ... 21,1'1tmble ............. .•••.•..... .......A~
PlayerP01.
Ht.
Yr.
looking for some ball-handlers to
J ... 31, llellft ................................ Home
x-Jenny Meadows, C .. ..................... 5-10 1.2
Feb.%, A..,.n dE!" .............................A.way
get the ball inside. If we find some x.Cathy
Dean, G ............................ 5-5 12
J'eb. f., Wan1!11 ............................... Herne
guards, we could have a very good x-Denise Stegall, C .. ... ., ............ ...... 5-8 11 J'eb. t, Wellton ..... ; ......................... Away
x-Trlna Reeves, F .......................... 5-8 11
team," comments Logan.
x-8. J . GorOOn, G .. ................. .. ........ 5-6-11
The Marauderenes, 9-11 last Rhonda HadOOx, G ...................... :5 3 ll
year, lost a bunch from a year ago Cathy DeLong, F ; .......... .... .. ;,.,., .. . 5-8 11
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Fry, F .. ............... ... ... ,.......... 5--6 11
in Cindy Crooks, Paula Swisher, Ruth
Betty LoftiS. F ............. ...... .... ....... 5-5 II
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Jodi Hamson, G ... .. ....... ................ 5-5 10
Paula Horton, and Kris Snowden.
Rhonda
Neece,
G
...........................
5-6
10
204 Condor Si,
"Inexperience will be one of our Heidi Cobb, G............... ................. 5-3 10
Pomeroy, OH.
weaknesses as we have only two
x - ~notes letterwtnner
Phone
992·2975
Melp Glri!J' Reserve~
seniors and have not yet decided on
Player.- PM.
Ht. Yr.
FALL
&amp;
WINTER
HOURS:
a starting five. But in two scrim- JennHer Couch, G ............... ,......... 5 2 9
' Effective Oct. 1 -Morch 1
mages (Gallipolis and Athens), we Rhonda Zlrk.le, G ................ .............54 9
CloiOd Mondoy
showed a very good attitude and so Marta Musser. F ........ .. ....... ............. ~ 9
Tui8.-Frl. 8 to 8, SM. 8 to 1

Meigs faces Lancers tonight
Tri'Valley Conference roundball
makes its initial appearance In the
17-year history of Meigs High
School tonight .
The Meigs-Federal Hocking season opening basketball game at the
Larry Morrison Gymnasium is
scheduled to start at 6: 30 instead of
the 5:30 as previously written.
The Lancers bring a ].() record
Into Marauderland as they
scratched out a 5648 win over
Eastern's Eagles Tuesday.
The Marauders are expected to
be greatly improved this year
despite three underclassmen in the
starting five.
One of Meigs' two wins last year
came against practically the same
Federal-Hocking bunch that · wlll
stan tonight. The Lancers return
lour starters.

The Marauders lost in overtime
at Federal-Hocking but took a·56-50
win at Meigs. The Lancers were
3·11 In the TVC a year ago while
posting a 6-15 overaU mark. Meigs,
2-181ast year, was ().12Jn their !Ina!
year ol Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League action.

r------------1
Professional Counseling
and
Family Services

Woodland Centers

~

Pomeroy

992·2192

The Daily

Bazaar set

PubUshed every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street, by the
Ohlg Valley Publishing Company· Mul·
tlmedla,lnc., Pomeroy, Ohio45769, 992·
2156. Second class postage paid at Po- .
meroy, Ohio.

GRAVELY
&amp;VBTENI

American Newspaper Publishers Association, Natlonall\dverti~lng Representative, Branham Newspaper Sales,
733 Third Avenue, New York, New

York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send address to The
Dally Sentinel. 111 Court St., Pomeroy,

Ohio 4~769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATEll
,
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week .. .. ....... .................... ... $1 .00
One MOnt h .. .......... .. .......... .. ...... U.40
One Year ............................·.... $52.80
SlN~krc~py

..

Dally ........................... ; ..... 20J ents

Subscribers not desirtn~ to pay the ca r ·
rler may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Selitinel on 3, 6 o r 12 month
basts . Credit wlll be gtven carrier ea ch
month.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
carr ! ~ service Is
available.

towns where home

13

26
13
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52

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnatde Ohio
Weeks ...... ........................... 114.04
Weeks ................................ , S27.30
Weeks ..... ....... .................. ... $51.48
Oulslde Ohio
Wee"ks .
........... .......... $15.21
We~ks .
............ .. ., ....... 129.64
Weeks .
...................... $56.21

LEGAL NOTICE

In the Matter of the Inquiry into the
1983 Long-Term· Forecast Report of
Case No. OPC-83-E
the Ohio ~ower Company.
OhK1 Power Company {OI'CI, in lllmp\iance w~h R...;sed Code Sectiln 1551. 17. has file&lt;! a
Lon~ Term forecast Report with lhe llivision rrt Energj 100~ of the Oho Department of llevek&gt;ptrenl
The report has beeo assillfled Case No. ~J.E
. _Tho r,...r relates to tft ltrec.1sting ol enO"gy demand, peal&lt; klad, reseMS, and a general descn~n ri lhe resource plltlo - demalfd, and olher mattm as set lorth in O.RC. 155l.l7.
A!llmplele lllllY ol the long-Term forecast Report can be reviewed by any member o\ the pulr
IN: at lhe offices rrt the OOE, 34th fllor, State Ofli"' Tower. Jl Ea~ Broad Street ColumllJs,Oh&lt;.Mon·
day ltlrouih friday,9:00a.m. to 400 ~m further, aIll flY ollhe report c.n be reviewed by any mem·
ber rrt lhe pu~i: ~ the i&gt;""'ng !llUnty pu~ic ~bn!l)':
Meigs local School District
Public library
200 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
OhK1 Revised Code Seclion 1551 :1/(C)(J) mandales thai the DOE shall hold a public
hearing relative to OPC long-Term Forecast Report.
DOE fias scheduled the hearinil: in two parts;

(AI Public

Hearin~

This hearing shall begin on Thursday, December 8, 1983, at 7:00p.m. in the Cour-

troom in lhe Cily Hall Buildmg, 40 Public Square, Mount Vetnon, Ohio.
Members of the public wishing to present teslimony relalive to these proceedinl'

~ay do so a~ th~t t1me. Test1mony may be oral or written, sworn or unsworn. If testimony
I~ unswo_
rn, It Will be ma~e a part of the record af these proteedings, but wilt not be con Sidered 1n the preparat1o~ of t~e find ings of the DOE. If testimony is sworn, it will be
made part oft he reC&lt;Ird, IS subJect to cross examination by any of the parties to these
proceedings, ~n.d wilt ~ cons_ider~ in the preparation of the findmgs ot the DOE.
The pre~ldtng heanng off1cer 1s empowered to exclude repetitive, irrelevant, or im·
matenallest1mony.

10-ounce
Sirloin Strip
Steak
$5.69

• A10-ounee U.S.D.A. choice Sirloin Strip Steak,
c:hutlroled to )'OlD' order (with booe In lor emalllle)
• Wum toatted gtedan breed
'
• GoldeD lreDdl fries (or liaRd po11to Iller 5PM)
• All the bot~ lOop and~ fresh
salad )'Ou care to eat
t FeabutngSbooey'i OWII delldoui Cabbage Beef Soup

IB) Eiidentiary Hearing
. This hearing shall begin on Monday, December 12, 1983, ai!O:OO a.m. in the Slate
Offtee Tower, 30 E..Broad Street, Mulh·Purpose Room, first floor, Columbus. Ohio.
.

Wh1le the pubf1c IS mv1ted to attend th1s hearmg, part1c1pation is limited to the par-

ttes of record At presen\ these parties are OPC, DOE, OhiO Power Stlmg Board iDPSBJ
and OfiiCe of Consumers' Counsel (OCC(.
'

1976 FORD F-100 FLATBED ...................... Sl295

4 wheel drive, 4 spd. Good condnion.

328 Viand STreet
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

observation of their blrihdays In early November,
The honorees rec!eived a polled plant. Cake and loe

Plantz and Hazel McllaHie, were honored ai a reoonl
gathering Of members and frierid!; of lbe church in

cream were served.

Evangeline chapter meeting held

Finishes
. .
trammg

lnsta!latlon practices were set for
Initiation for three new members
Nov. 30at7p.m. and Dec. 4at3p.m. was set for Dec. 1 with a potluck
when Evangeline Chapter 172met at lunch and a $3 to $5 gift exchange
the Middleport Masonic Temple.
after the meeting. Twlla Clatworthy
Reported lll were Evelyn Lewis gave a short report on Grand
and Teresa Canterbury.
Chapter and the drill pageant which
Installation invitations were read portrayed the theme "Peace is a
!rom Marietta, Nov . 25; Pomeroy, Way of Life."
James Buchanan, worthy patron,
Nov. 28; Relnersvllle, Nov. 26;
Aurelius of Macksburg, Dec. 2; · thanked the pro tern officers and the
TheaofGlousteron, Dec. 3; Racine, worthy matron, Katherine Mitchell
Dec. 5; Mt. Olive, Chesterhill, Dec. served refreshments of donuts,
6; Athens, Dec. 12: Minear of elder and coffee.
Guysville, Dec. 15.

Alfred area news

Carmel area news

and daughter,
of Lima,
Ohio
caHed
on EunleJudy,
Brinker
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johnson and
daughter, Sheryl Leann caUed on
Mrs. Edison Johnson of Racine
recently.
William Carelton and daughters,
Angela Dawn and Jennifer LyM of
Racine called at the Arthur John·
son home a ·recent Sunday
afternoon.
. "
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Johnson and
daughter of Middleport called on
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Johnson
and famUy and Betty VanMeter a
~.

recent evening.
Sheryl Johnson, Betty VanMeter
Recent callers at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Circle were Mr.
and Mrs. Vincent Varney, Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Ables of Bald Knobs,
Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours of
Chester, Kathleen Bissell and Tod
of Keno Rd.

lished eneriY policies .ol the state has been com~~ely and accurately represented . •
.

(~)The load requtrements are based on substantiality accurate historical in lor ma-

1

r-::====~~~-~~===:::;-r.;::==========;-1
Georgianna T. Burns
BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
M.D.
CENTER

With Offices At
Pleasant Valley Hospital
in Point Pleasant
Is Now Acceptina Patients

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

PH. 992-2920
VISION EXAMINATIONS
liARD &amp; SOFT .
CONTA.CT LINSES

Thul$day MllillJ hours for wortina

mothers. Specialtzina in Jearn in&amp; and
school problems for pediatrics.

Insurance and Medical
Cards Accepted

Phone 675-6797
For Appointments

_..,. .._
MATJII!I3

~r•

AU. ftAJ'$ 11.00

SUN

ADMISSION n!"RY MstMY 11.00

lton arid adequale methodoloiY:

(3) T~e foreca$ting methQds consider the ralationships between price and energy
consumption;
.
(4) T~e report iden.tifies ~nd projects reductions in energy demands due to energy
conservation measures 1n the mdustnal, commercial. residential. transportation and en·
eray Pfoduction sectors in the service area·
'
(51. Utility compa~y forecasts of loads ~nd resources are reasoni'ble in relation to
populat1.on arovrth esltmat~ mlde by state and federal a~ncies. transportation, and
econom1c development plans and forcasts, and make recommendtions where possible
for necessal)' and reaso~able alttrAitives to meet forecasted electric power demand.
161 The report consoders ~ens for exoansion of the regional power grid and the
~Inned

lacilities of other utilijies in the state;

(7) AU assumptions made in the forecast are reasonable and adeQuately docu·

mented."
·
Further information may be obtained by contacting the Oivision of Energy at
30 E. Broad Street 34th Floor, Columbus, Ohio 43215'or by calling (614) 466·

THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF DEVELOPMENT
DIVISION OF EURGY
.
'
by: James L. Kennedy, Administrator
Forecastinf and Information ·
Division o EnerJY
Ohio Department of Development

ATTENTION DEER

JOIN US FOR BREAKFAST. LUNCH AND SUPPER
Enjoy Home111dt Soups,' Slndwichas, Hearty Homemade Meals
and Homemade Pies.

Try Our DailY.

LUNCHEON &amp; DINNER SPECIALS ........... 12.99
BREAKFAST SPECIALS ......................... 11.99
DINING ROOM QOSES AT 7 MOHOAY-SAJURDAY
DINING ROOM QOSES AT 4 ON SUNDAY

NEW FAil HOURS
5:30 am.-7:00 p.m. 'Jieekdays
.. 8:00 a.m.·lOO p.m. Sunday

•

· Maytag No.t over 10y other brancl!" ·

Jetclean '"
Dishwasllers

Hvmbl!r 1: • in long
life • in fewer re·
pairs • in lower
repair costs
• in nationwide
preference
• There's

a Maytag

washer for
your ftelds

&amp; budget.

• Nobcclygets ro='~~
01St1es cleaner!
• Lew Energy
cyde for every·
day loads

·• Enera1 SaVi!r
Oryin&amp; cycle

circulates air
without lle.lll
• bclusive
trA~··

Fitter • 31eve1
Svstem

Spending a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Charles H\lffiphrey were Mr.
and Mrs. Lynn Stone of Cleveland.

JACKSON PIKE.· RT. 35 WEST

~

HURRY!

Coasl ta coast consumers wera asked which washer
they woold like to own - the answer:

Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Blse recently were Mr. and Mrs.
Rawlelgh Hetzer and family of
Akron. They visited with Mrs. Blse
and Mr. Hetzer's mother, Mrs.
Mabel Hetzer at the Pomeroy
Health Care Center.

~

!&gt;31

~AVE

WASHER

Mr. and Mrs. Dave Weber spent a
weekend with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Va~han Taylor at Dayton.

lbl The estimated &gt;nstalled ca.paetty and supplies to meet the projected loa&lt;kequi·

. . Section 1551.171EI provides that: "based upon lhereport furnished pursuant to di ·

NO.

Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Mrs.
Lyle Balderson and Kay Balderson
recently visited with Mrs. Ed
Hensch and Mrs. Walt Hensch and
daughter, Lisa, at Canton. Sarah
Frydman of Hylandpark, ru., was
ilJso a guest at the Hensch home.
MJ.ss Frydman returned to Reeds·
ville with her grandmother, Mrs.
Whitehead, and spent several days.

. Section 1551.1710)121 provides tha: "the hearing shall include. but nol be limited

VISIOn (8) of th1s seat1on and the hearing record, the divison of energy shall, within ninety
days from the close of the record in the hearing, determine if:
(A) All informabon relatina: to current activities facilities agreements and pub-

PREFE~RED

AMERICAIS

Reedsville news

to, a rev1ew of:
(a) The pr.ojected. loads and energy requirements for each year of the period ;
rements."

November means the closing of the football season for most
high schools. It also indicates the coming of the Thanksgiving
season for all schools. These two ideas merge this year in a par·
ticular manner because this is the fiftieth anniversary for those
who played football at Middleport High School in 1933.
Yes, half a century ago this very month. MHS ended un·
defeated, untied football season to win the southeastern Ohio
championship and make claim to the state title for small schools
by winning ten games and scoring 263 poiitls.vhile allowing only
28 points. (MHS won 28 consecutive games during 1933, 1934
and 1935.)
It was my privilege to play center on that 1933 team, and I
want to thank those living or deceased who were on our 1933
football squad and express appreciation to the administration,
faculty and coaching staff at MH5-, especially Coach Clyde R.
Battyn.
Edward "Punk" Lewis
I·

MAYT

Sunday School attendance Oct. 30 Edwards, Racine; pay Ann Burke,
was 41; church attendance, 25. On local.
Alfred neighbors calllng at Ew· Nov. 6 Sunday School attendance
ing
Funeral Home for Tom White,
was 34; church attendance, 24.
Church visitors were Dave Cole- son·ln-law of Mary Carr, included
man, Fostoria, and Debbie Ross, Genevieve Guthrie, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Lee Henderson, Blll Carr,
Parkersburg.
Mildred Story and Grace Ryan , Lee Henderson, Sibyl Dorst, Nellie ·
Columbus, visited Genevieve Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Shennan
Henderson, Sara Caldwell.
Guthrie.
·
Mrs. Wilber Parker went to the
Visitors in the Parker-Poole
Ravenswood Cemetery where her
home were Fred Smith, Racine;
parents are burled. On the way
Tom Dorst, Oak Hlll; Terry Fetty
and Andy Carter, Fairborn; Mrs. _ l)ome she vil&gt;ited Helen Hayes,
Great Bend.
Harold Fetty, Langsvillle; Phyllis

Mrs. Ethel Orr of Chester was at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rnbert
Lee and family on Sunday. Mrs. Orr
and Mrs. Lee called on Blythe
Tlletss of Dorcas.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
visited Mrs. Gladys Deem of
Portland recency.
Mrs. Zelba Ours of Hebron, Ohio

POMEORY - A Christmas
bazaar will be held Dec. 6 at the
Heath United Methodist Church
from 1 to 7 p.m. Dbmers wUl be
servedtrom4:30to7p.m. Baked
goods, candles, pecans, fancy
work, craft items and Christmas
decorations wlll be for sale at the
bazaar.

Navy·Seaman Recruit Dennis M,
Donahue, son of Raymond E. and
Dolores G. Donohue of 40076 Star
Route 684, Pomeroy, has completed
recruit training at the Naval·
Training Center, Great Lakes, m.
During the eight-week training
cycle, trainees studied general
mlllltary .subjects designed to
prepare tilem for further academic
and on-the-job training In one of the
Navy's 85 basic occupational fields.
Included in their studies were
seamanship, close order drlll, and
Naval history and first ald .

. The pre~iding hearing officer may grant a motion to inter11enewhich was not tiled in
a timely lash1on upon a showing ol goDd cause.
·

1805.

.

HONORED - Loogtlme members of the Silver Run
Baptist Church, left to right, Debna HaUey, Nancy

Member: The A.!lsoclated Press, ln·

land Daily Press Msoclaton and the

52

~THE .

S~nrinel

(VSPS 1411-IMIO)
A Dl\'lllon ol Multimedia, Inc.

afternoon visitors of M r. and M rs.

Charley Smith, Kevin, and Charles
Knapp.

Happenings

Marauderettes open season Tuesday r.::::::==========

1977 OLDS CUTLASS ................................ '1695

2 Dr. V6, P9, PS, Air.

Page-S

MONDAY

Cowboys, Lions post hig wins

l878 COUNTY SQUIRE STA. WAG .............. '3895

Friday, November 25, 1983

Calendar

sc hedule were Greenfield McClain,
a Cl6ss "AA" power that was a
reglonal contender last year; Bel·
pre, Alexander. Coach Charlie
Hugglns; Highland team and Pee·
bles, who has the same personnel
from last year's 20-3 club.
"Overall we held our own against
two super class " A" teams, Peebles
and Highland . We have learned a
lot about ourselves and who can do
the job for us . We won some
quarters and lost a few, however,
I'd say we were pretty well even
overall.''
When asked about the SV AC
league, Coach Wolfe sail\. "The
league probably has more balance
than it's ever had. Kyger Creek has

:J'revorCardone, F .. .. .... ... .. .... ... ..... &amp;2
-ll·Denni.!i Teaford, C... .... ..... ........ .. .. H
Scott S4::l'llltz, G ...... ... . .. .... ......... ... .. ~11
Ste\le Teaford, F ......... ... ... ..... ... ..... 6-0
Darin Rou!ih, F ........ .. ...... ... ...... :.... 6-0
TomGreathou&amp;e,G ........ .... ............ ~9
Kevin Teaford, F . .. ..... ... .... ...... ..... . 6-2
X - Denote!! leUennen.
1'omacb Schedule
No~ . 5, at GaD.tpoUa
Dee. 2, at Sou&amp;hwes&amp;ern
Dec. 9, Kyger Creek, home
Dee. 16, Ea81ern, Mme
Dec. 11. at Miller
Dei:. 21. Logan, home
Dec. 30, at Southwestern
Jan. 3, at Waharna
Jan. 6, at North Gallla
Jan. 12, at Hannan Tract&gt;

The Daily Sentinel

The Episcopal Church believes th e important news at Christmas is not
who comes down the chimney, but who came down from heaven. We invite you to come and join
us as we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.
The Grace Episcopal t..:hurch
J28 E. Main Street, Pomeroy, OH.

The Episcopal Church

Sunday Worship

A.t!O: 30

A.M.

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

The Dail

-

Friday, November 25, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.Artistic arrangements, Yuledde d~signs
to feature •annual holiday flower show

for each person attending, , door prizes and
refreshments. The shop is located at 106 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.

READY- Mrs. Vera VanM~~r and her son, Melvin,
arrange poinSettias in preparation for the annual
open house of the Pomeroy Flower Shop to ,be held
from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday. There"ill be a free gift

"On Christmas Day in · the
Morning," theme of the annual
holiday (lower show to be held Dec. 3
and 4 at tbe Meigs Multi-purpose
Building on Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, will feature not only
artistic arrangements in 16classes,
but a variety of specimens, gift
package decoratl\)ns, holiday corsages, wreaths, swags, and other
ou !door decorations.
The show ts open for public
viewing from 1 to 5 · p.m . on
Saturday, Dec. 3, and from 1 to 4
p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 4. There is no
cbarge. Margaret Ella Lewis ls
chailman of the show, assisted by
Eva Robson.
The oral judging by the standard
system of the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs will be done by Mrs.
Dorothy Bender, Marietta, an
accredited judge, with four ribbons
to be placed In each class.
Exhibitors are reminded that wblle
. there ls no. advance registration to
exhibit in the show, everything is to
be in place before noon on the
opening day of the show. Most
classes are open to the public and
exhibitors need not be garden club
members.

'
ROsettes

will be awarded to the '· " We Open the Gifts!" showing
best of show, reseiVe best of shoW, motion.
" And Gather up tbe Clutter,"
and most creative in the artistic
mol:lern
or tree fonn.
arrangementsclasses; ajunlorbest
Now
I Can Rest! " treasured
"So
of show, and horticulture sweepwood
arid
all
dried plant material.
stakes awards In both the junior and
"And
Treasure
the Cards!" an
senior divisions of tbe show.
Interpretive design.
AR'mTICARRANG~
The Invitational classes open for
The artistic arrangement clllses exhibit to the public are "Ghosts of
open for exhibit to Meigs County Christmas Past," an interpretive
garden club members only are as design; and "TheReasonforltAll!"
follows:
•
in two categories, both with Christ·
"I Hear the Patter of Little mas Madonnas, one traditional and
Feet! ," using two containers which
one modem.
may or may not be IdenticaL
The junior classes for artistic
"It's Time to Get Up!" a tall line
arrangements are "What's in My ·
arrangment.
Sock,'' an arrangement in a toy; and
"But It's Still Dark! "to be shown
"Out with the New Sled," as you Uke
under blackllght.
it.
"Breakfast First!" A Christmas
HORII'CULTURE SPECIMENS
breakfast table setting including a
Senior Divlson: tollage houseminiature arrangement to be
plants, blooming houseplants, Afristaged on a card table furnished by
can violets, Christmas cactus, an
the exhibitor.
bl!rrled branches, at ie~t 15 tnclles
"We'll Now Have · MQrnlng
long, but not over 20 inches long.
Prayer," with a religious aura but
Junior Division: dish garden with
no Madonna.
at least three different plants,
"See the Sunrise on the Snow! ,"
terrariums, no animals; and decorlots of glltter.
ative plants such as carrot, parsnip,
"Ooh!, the Tree! " all green, , or turnip tops growing in water.
shades or tints.
EDUCATIONAL
Outside door decorations in the
categories of wreathes, swags, and
other designs; package decora·
uons; and Christmas corsages.
special displays including
Several
I'm gonna caU up Jesus
crafts, books, and evergreen speciCail Him up today
The prayer line ls ~t~ lwa ys open
m ens w111 be included in the show
A\or-6 the heavenly way.
exhibits.

I'm gonna call up J esus
And get Him on the Une
I'm gonna call up Jesus
'Cause He's mine, all mlnc.
I've got thlngs to tell Him
AbOut this world today
I'm gonna call up Jes us
To see what H e's got to.pay.

I'm gonna call up J esus
Call Hlm up today
I'm go nna call up J esus
And here's what I'm going to say.
"Lord, there's trouble down here
Floods and quakes galore
1 know your time draws near
Ifs even at the door."

The seasons they are Changing
You can'l tl'll Fall fro m Spring
And It seems here lately
The birds they rarely sing.

Racine OES
plans holiday parry

OPEN - Bill Francis and his staff at the Francis
F1orlst, 332 E. Maii1 St., Pomeroy, ..m be on hand to
greet visitors at the shop's annual open house from

noon to ~ p.m., Sunday. Door prizes will be awarded
·
and refreshments served.

'·

Laurel Cliff area news......__..;...__---Attendance at all services at the
F ree Methodist Church Oct. 9 ws

13\L Choir members present were
12.

Order of DeMolay officers elected
New officers were elected at the
Monday night meeting of the Meigs
Chapter. Order of DeMolay, held at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.
E lected were John Arnold, master councilor; Melvin Van Meter,
sentor councllor; Bill Carswell,
junior councilor. Inspection was
announced lor Dec. 5 at 7 p.m. with
the install a tlon of the new officers to

be held Dec. 10 at 7 p.m. at the
Temple. Ritual practice was set for
Sunday, Nov. 27 and Dec. 4 at2 p.m.
Adam Martin, master councilor,
presided at the meeting with the
youth preparing several Thanksgiving boxes of food gathered up from
businesses, c h urc hes, and
individuals.

Mr. and Mrs. Cregg E blin has
returned home from a week's
vacation In F lorida.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Eblin and
daughter, Miss BeCky Eblin, has
returned home from a two weeks
vacation in Florida.
Mrs. Sidney Leifheit, Columbus,
called on Mrs . Tina Jacobs recently. They also called on Hugh
Leifheit and Wayne Leifheit.
Mrs. Fern Dora Story, R.N., Mrs.
Edna Schaefer, Mrs. Della Stahl,
Mrs. Bertha Park visited with the
Senior Citizens at Harrisonville

Mrs. Bert Grimm hosted a recent
m eeting of the Past Officers Club of
Racine Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, during which ttme a
post-holiday dinner party · was
planned for Jan. S in Ravenswood.
Mrs. William Stewart presided at
the meeting With devotions being
given by Mrs. Ralph Webb. Using
Thanksgiving as her theme, Mts.
Stewart used scriptures and an
article entitled "Giving Thanks"
and then led a discussion on being
thankful. Readings were given by
G retta Simpson, Mrs. Grimm, Mrs.
Webb, Laura Circle, Creslyn Hill,
and Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Stewart.
Ralph Webb, Greta Simpson, and
Lillian Weese were named to the
nominating committee. Stewart
conducted a quiz which was won by
Mrs. Simpson. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Gr imm assisted by
Mrs. Simpson.

I'm gonna tell Him all
Whet~r

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

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO
Complete

-

service ·

.•

"

Serv1ce

fll~- troubles

they're big or small

His ears are always open
Wby don't you gtve Him a call?

THANKS
POMEROY VOTERS!

I'm gonna call up Jesus
He' s never too busy for me
I can talk all I want to
While bending on m y knee.
Whenever you're all alon e and you want to
m ake a call
.Just dial JESUS and He wUJ talk to you
Every word He tells you

Is holy and true.
He's never too busy
Or has to rush awily
So call Hlm on your prayer line
Call him up today.
Praise Jesus . -Mrs. Barbara Ja mes . 1519
Nye Ave., Pom eroy, O,hlo.

I sincerely appreciate
your support in electing me to serve on Pomeroy Village Council.

HENRY WERRY
Pd. Pol. Ad . by Cand.

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

MID LEPORT, OH.

. OURS· MON.-SAT.
H
• SUNDAY 1

TO 9:00
TO 8:00

PH. 992-6491 OR

NoW We Give

you

. TheWof~t

BiggeSt, f(et~·
sa(iul ~~~onderfu.[world

Included with eversyJ':,~~~ur favorite fixm,.s .V S.A·.
of salad with over
.
In t e •
Onlg«t the

s~~~Y.~~i~s
· 992-5130

Rutland, Ohio 45775
J , Wm . "Bill" Brown, Owner
Phone (6141 742· 2777

Pomero1

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Colpmbus, 0 .
804 W . Main
992· 2318 Pomeroy

.

IN K.J.V. AND N.I.V.

-~
MILL ·RALL'S
l

Syracuse
992· 3978

I~

THE OPEN BIBLE

~en n.l

p.m ., under d irection of Alice Nease .
POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE, ' Corner Union and Mulberry , Rev.
Thomas Glen McClung, pastor. Clyde Hend·
erson, S . S. Supt .. Sunday Scbool, 9:Jl a.m.;
morning worship 10: Jl a.m.; evening service
6 p.m.; mid·weekserv1ce, Wednesday, 7 p .m .
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E.
Main St., Pomeroy . Sunday services Holy
Communion on the ttrst Sunday ot each
month, and combined with morning prayer on
thPthird Sunday. Morning prayer andsermoo
on all other Surdays of the month . Church
School and nursery care provided. Coffee
hour in the Parish Hall immediately following
the serviCf'.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST. 212 W.
MW.n Sl., NeU Proudfoot, pastor. Blbleschod,
9:J:J a.m.: morning worship, 10:J) a.m.:
Youth meet:ings, 6: J) p.m.: evening wors hip,
7: l) p.m. Wednesday night prayer meetlng
and Bible study, 7:30p.m.
TilE SALVATION ARMY , 11.5 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wining In charge.
Sunday holiness mE!(&gt;ting, 10 a.m.; Sunday
School, lO:l:l a .m. Sunday ScOOol. YPSM
Eloise Adams, leader. 7: :Jl p.m., sa.lvatlon
mE:eUng, vartow speakers and music specials. Thursday -11: .1J a .m . to 2p.m .• Ladles
Home League, members 1n charge . aU
women lnYited: 6:45p.m . Thursday, COrps
Cadet Class (Young People-Bible). 7:l&gt; p.m .
Bible Study and Prayer meeting, open to the
public.
POMEROY w'EsrsiDE ·cHURCH oF
CHRIST. 33226 ChUdren's . Home Road
(County Roac.1 76) 992·5235. Vocal music.
Sundaywonhip 10 a.m.; Bible study lla.m.:
wcrship, 6 p.m. Wednesday Bible study, 1
p.m .
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
cmJRCH - Clifton Lucas. pastor. Sunday
Schooi9::J) a.m. Mrs. Worley Francis, supt .
Preaching servtces first and third Sundays
folloWing Sunday School. Youth meeting
every Sunday. 7:lJ p.m. ·
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST ,
Preaching 9: ~ a.m., firs t and ieCOnd
Sundays of · each month; third and fourth
Sundays each month, worship services at 7: .ll
p.m . Wednesday evenings at 7:]) p.m .,
Pr~yer and Bible Study.
SEVENTIJ.OAY ADVENTIST. Mulberry
Helihts Road, Pomeroy. Michael Pion·
kowsld, pastor: Marie Spires. Sabbath School
Supt. Sabbath School Is at 2 p.m. on Saturday

with worship servtces following at 3: 15 p.m.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Sister Harr1ett Warner. Supt. Sunday School,
9::Jt a.m.; morning worship, 10:45 a .m.
POMEROY flRST BAPI1ST. Davlll
. Ma;nn, minister; WUUam Snoutter, Sunday
School supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a .m .;
Momlng won hlp 10::II .m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPI1ST. Pomeroy
Pike. David Hunt, pastor; Jack Needs,
Sunday School DIN!ctor. Sunday school. 9::11
a .m .; mcndng Wt'I'Ship, 10:00: evening
wOI'Shlp, 7:3)p.m. Tuesday VIsitation. 7p.m.;
Wednesday, Prayer service. 7:3) p .m .; ,
Mission Fr1ends, 7:ll p.m.; Girls in Actions,
7::1Jp.m.; Acteens, 7: Jlp.m .; Choir Practice,
8::11 p.m .
·
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH, Old
Dexter Rd .. DelltCr. Pastor Woody Call , Jr.
Past(J'. SUnday School 10 a.m. Sunday
eventng !BVIce, 7 p.m.; Thursday evening
service, 1 p.m.
FAI11l TABERNACLE CHURCH, Batley

Wedne&amp;day, 7:al p.m.
J
CHURCH OF CHRIST; M\tld\epon, 51h and
Main, BOb Mellllll. mlnlBte&lt;: Al llart!&lt;in,

DAKE'S ANNOTATED REFERENCE BIBLE
'***********************************
WE ALSO HAVE IN STOCK

MIDDLEPORT BOOK ~TORE
MILL ST.

eo..-!Gn,

!"' Bible ·on Cassette
* Bible Cases
! Bible Index
~

MIDDLEPORT

992-2641

mlnll""'

Mike Gerlach, Sunday
SchOOl SUpertnte_,t. Bible Scbool, 9: :II
a.m.: mamtna wonhl.p, 10: JJ a.m.; ~
wcnltlp 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study and
youlh t1fGUP . - . 7 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT CIIURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE,
Rev. CbarW Coyle and
Rev. Nancy Ooyle. BD1 White, Sunday ochOOI
supt. SUnday schOOl, 9: :ll a.m. : morniJtg
wcnhlp, 10: :JJ a.m.; Sunday evengeUsdc
moetlntl. 7 p.m. Prayer meeUng W - 7
p.m.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MIN!Sl'RY,
OF MEIGS COUNTY, Rev. WandaJolvtOon. ~
director: Harrld Jotmsllll. dlrector or
auoctate

iN K.J.V.

i Reference
Books
Imprinting While You Wait

·

Wedne!daY" prayol' meetqand Bible study,

'

Living Bible
New International Version
New King James Version
Ryrie Study Bible
Amplified Bible

0

e&lt;b:atton.

Upper River Rd.

(Across from the Airport)

Gallipolis, Ohio

'

HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN,
WonNp SOM&lt;e. 9 a.m.: Clalrch School, 10: :II
a.m.
. MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN,
Ottfth !ldJoOI. 9 o.m.; Morning worship,
10:111. Bltlle Study -n-lo,y, lfl a.m.; Bible
ot1Jtly, 'll!undiiY. 7: :ll p.m.

SYRACUSE FIRSf UNITED PRESBY·
'nliiAN Ottlr&lt;IL a..mtScltOOI, lO:IIIa.m.:
rnorniJia wa'lltlp, 11::1! lUll.: lllltte.Study.
Tuoldoy, 10 a.m.; , . - tllld
Youth
6 p.m.

c"""".Siuld,IY.

Sellltll' Hllh

MEIGS TIRE
GENTER, INC.

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

John F. Fultz, Mgr .
Ph. "2· 2101 .

·Middleport·

992· 3325

.J

\

POMEROY WESLEYAN HOU NESS -

Hanisonvllle Road . Ear! Fields, pastor.

Middleport, Ohio

The Beginning

2t~reet

They met in chu~Ch schOoLRight now ! think you COI.Jid call them childhood
sweethearts. You ean bel mat In a lew years they will be embarrassed that
Aunt J8$S ie snapped this picture. Bul later , who knows? Perhaps they will
d!SCO\Ier each other again .
·
·Whether they do or not, bOth these youngsters are luckier than they
know. Not because lhey mer in church school, but because tl]ey are In church
sct'IOol. They t:1a11e made a beginning thai will sustain them throughout their
en~re

tile.

You can't give a child faith . But vou can open the door so that he has a
chance to find it-lhe door that leads to church school as well as tne dOC?r that
t8adS to a tile ol ussful Christian s~Nice .
If you naver went to church school, that IS all the more reason to enroll your
youngsters naw. If you missed out , don't let them!
Tuesday Wednesday :T hursday Friday Saturday
Matthew Matthew
Manhew Matthew Matthew
Luke
Luke
9 :t·8
16:13·28 22:23·40 25 :14·30
18:9-34 19:11-27 7:15·29
~by llot ........,_Mil Soc«y

Sunday Monday

•

Morning wonhlp, 10:45 a.m. (first and third
Sundays ); fellowship dinner with Carmel.
ttllrd Thursday, 6: :ll p.m .( McGulre)
KENO CHURCH OF CHRiST. Oliver
SWain, Superintendent. Sunday school 9: XI
Fa,- s.er, Dtredor
a .m . every week.
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev. Tom
Rev. Jameo E. C..rbltt, Asslslaal
Staten, pastor. Sunday SchOOl, 9: :ll a.m.;
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
evening service, 7: :Dp.m. Wednesday praypr
Rev. DonArcber
meeting, 7: lJ p.m.
Rev. IIDy Deeler
BEARWAU.OW RIDGE CHURCH OF
Re\'. Seldom Jolmson
ALFRED - Church School 9::11 a.m.; CHRIST, Duane Warden, mJnlstPr. Bible
Worship, 11 a .m .; UMYF, 6:l&gt; p.m.; UMW, class. 9: X. a .m .; morning worship, 10::Jl
Third Tuesday, T:~ p.m . Community tint a .m .: evening worship, 6::ll p.m . Wednesday
Sunday. (Archer I
Bible study, 6:.Jl p.m.
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.; Church
SchoollOa.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.m. CHURCH. Sunday School serviCf', 9:45a.m;;
UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m .; Communion Worship servlce, 10: .lJ a.m.: EvangcUsttc
Service, 7::1l p.m. Wednesday: Prayer'
first Sunday. (Archer-)
meeting , 7::.&gt; p.m .. Thursday.
JOPPA - Worship, 9: .JJ a.m.; Church
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Pomeroy·
SchOOl. 10: :II a.m. Bible Study, Wednesday,
HarriSonville Rd.; Robert Punell, minister;
7::1l p.m . tJObnsonl
LONG BO'ITOM - Church School. 9: :ll Steve Stanley, Sunday school supt . Sunday
schOOl, 9: lJ a.m.; worsh1pserv1ce lO:.'lla.m.;
a.m.; WorshJp, 7 p.m.; Bible Study, Wednes·
Evening worship Sunday, 7 p.m . and
day, 7:Jl p.m. ; UMYF, Wednesday, 6 p.m .;
Communion First ~wday. (Archer)
Wednesday~ 7 p.m .,
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
REEDSVILLE - Church School, 9: :tJ
,Grove. The Rev. William Middleswarth.
a: m .; Worship 11 a.rn. (Deeter)
Pastor. Church services 9: :II a .m . Sunday
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL - Church
School, 9a.m.; Worship, lOa.m.; -Bible Study, School 10: 30 a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCK OF CHRIST, Paul
1'uesday , 7:.l1 p.m. ; u'MW, Third Tuesday,
7: :1) p.m .; Communion ftrst Sunday. Pratt, pastor. Sunday schOOl, 9: .'IJ a.m.,Larry
Haynes , S. S. Supt .; mornlng worship, 10: l&gt;
cArcherl
CENTML CLU8l'I!JI
a.m .
. : Rev. 1...... E. CoriiM&amp;
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
Rev. 1llomas H. Collier, pastor, Martha
Rev.llldwdWolfe, Chairman of th~ Board of Christian
Rev.lloboi1E.LUe. Sunday School, 9:)) a .m .; morning
worship, 10:30 a. m.; SundayeVE"nlngworshlp,
.Rev. -llaboolblr
ASBURY (Syracuse~ -Worship. 11 a.m.;
7::JJ p.m. Prayer meeting, WedneSday. 7: :1}
Church School, 9:45 a.m.: Chargo llbte
p.m .
Study, Wednesday, 7::1l p .m.: UMW. ltrst
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. DonL. Walker,
Tuesday, 7::11 p.m.; Cllolr Rehearsal, We&lt;\·
Pastor, Robert Smith, Sunday School supt.;
nesday, 6: 30p.m. ; UMW, tourtbSunday, 6:Jl
Sunday School, 9: .'IJ a.m.; morning worship,
p.m. cNelsOfl l
10:40 a.m.; Sunday evening won;hlp, 7:30
p.m.; Wednesday evening Blble study, 7:.Jl
ENtERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.; ChW"th
School, 10· a.m.; Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:.JJ
p.m .
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH.
p.m. ; UMW, First Monday, 7:30 p.m.;
S\lrllngham, Ohio. Rev. Okey Ray Lauder.
UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. ChJir rehearsal, 6: Jl
milt, pastor, Ph. 992·7324. Sunday SchoollO:OO
p.m. Wedneoday. (Rothemtch)
a. m .; Sunday evening service, 7: 00 p.m .:
FLATWOODS - Oiurch School. 10 a.m.;
Wednesday evening service, 7:00 p.m.
Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7
p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. (Rothemleh )
FOREST RUN- Worship, 9 a.m.; Church
School, 10 a .m.; Choir Practice, 'I'Uesday, 6:.JJ
DANVU.LE WESLEY AN, Sunilay School,
p.m .; UMW, first Tuesday, 7:.J) p.m. ·
9:l:Jam.; momingwcrshlpl0:45a.m.; youth
rNeiSOOl
S«VIce, 6: 45 p.m.: evening worship, 7::Jl
HEATI! (Middleport\ - Church School,
p.m.; Wednesday, 7:.ll p.m. Prayer and
9: ,'J) a .m.: Worship, lO:Jl a .m .: Btble Study,
Praise.
TUesday, 10 a.m.; UMW, second Monday,
DANVILLE HOLINESS CHURCH. located
7: .:1l p.m.; UMM. th1rd Monday, 7:3) p.m.
on Route 32i between Vinton and LangsvWe.
(Robinson(
Rev. Ben Watts, pastor. Sunday School, 9:))
MINERSVII..LE - Worship ~. 10
a.m., Bobl&gt;y Lamben S. S. Supt.; Morning
a.m.; Church School, ll a.m.; UMW, 'third
Won hlp. 10: ll a .m .; Oilldren's Happy Hour
Wednesday, 1 p.m .; QQ!r practlct&gt;, Monday,
6: ~ p.m. Prayer It Bible Study, 7: :ll p.m. 1
7: :tJ p.m . (Nelson(
Missionary meeUng first Wednesday &lt;i each
PEARL CHAPEL - Wonhlp Service, 9
mcittb, 7::tl p.m. For lnformatk&gt;n call
a.m.; Church School, 11 a.m ; UMW, !leC'Ond
3883167.
Tuesday, 7 ~ .JJ p.m.; UMYF last'l\lesday, 7: :ll
SU.VER RUN IIAPl'IST, Btu Little,
p.m. (Rubenlting)
putor; StrYe !Jitle, S. S . Sapt Sunday school,
POMEROY -Church School, 9:15a.m.:
lO a.m.; mcrn1ng worship, U a.m. Sunday
Worship service, 10: t(l a.m.: Cholr rehearsal,
evening wcnhlp,. 7:J:J p.m. Prayer meettng
Wedne&lt;day. 7: :II p.m.; UMW. SOO&gt;I1d Tues·
and t;!Jble otudy, ThW'!day, 7::11 p.m .: yoolh
day , 7:30 p.m .; UMYF, Sunday, 6
meetln&amp; Wednelday at 7 p.m.
p.m .(Corblttl
CHRISTIAN FEUOWSIIIP CHURCII, 383 ROCK SPRINGS - Church School, 9:15
N. 2nd Ave., Mlddlepon. Sunday School, 10
a.m.; Worship, W a.m .; Bible Study,
a .m . Sunday and Wednesday Evening
Wednesday, 7:JJ p.m .; UMYF (Senion),
Service~ 7: :n p.m .
Sunday, 6 p.m .; (Juniors) , every other
OlESI ER CHURCH OF GOD, Rev. R. E .
Sunday, 6 p.m. (Rl&gt;them\ch)
.
Robtnson, pastor. Sunday School, 9: ll a .m .;
RtrrLAND - ChUI'Ch School, 9 : ~ a .m .;
wcnhlp service. 11 a.m.: evening service, 7
Worship, 10::Jl a .m.: UMW (Evening Circle) ,
p.m.: youth set'\'lce, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
second Wednesday, 7: :IJ p.m.: UMW. second
UNGSvn.LE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
ThW'!day, 1 p.m. tRubenlclnet
RobeJ1 E . MIISiel', pastor. Sunday school. 9::ll
SALEM CENTER - Otureh School. 10
a.m.; Paul Muuer, supt.; mornlng worship,
a.m.: Worship, 9:45a.m. (Rubenldng)
10::11 a.m.: Sunday evening seJVtce, 7 p.m .:
SNOWVU.LE - Worship, 8::ll a.m .:
mJd.~ IE!'rvl.ce, WednEsday, 7 p.m.
Church Schoo\10 a .m . (Rubenldnil
SYRACUSE CIRJRCH OF 111E NAZA·

-.-. -

\. ~

tlOU'DIERN Q.Vlll'DI
Rev. J...,.. M. Oarlt
Rev. PaullllcGulro
Rev. Orville,._

RENE - . Rev. Jarnea B. Kittle, pastor.

APPLE GROVE - Chureh School, 9 a.m .:
Worship, 10 a .m. (tint and third Sundays) ;
UMW. second 'l'Ueoday, 7::1l p.m.: Prayer
meettna. Wednooday, 7 p.m. (Clarki
'BETHANY - Wonl!\p, 9 a.m.; Church .
School, lfl a .m .: Bible Study, Wedlleoday,IO

a.m.: Dorcas Women's FeDowsblp.

m
'

'

.

"

WAID CROSS

SONS STORE
Groce r ieSGeneral M erc handi se
Racine 949-2 550

Pomeroy, 0 .

Pomeroy

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Pastor,
Rev. John Evans. Sunday school, 10 a.m .;
Sunday wocship, 11 a .m.; Oilldren's chW'Ch,
11 a.m.; SuOO&amp;y evening service, 7 p.m .;
Wednesday evening young ladies auxlliary, 6
p.m. Wednesday farn\Jy w(l"hs\p, 7 p.m .
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Near
Long Bottom, Edsel HaJ1, pasta-. Sumay
school, 9:3ta.m. : WorshlplO: lJa.m. ; Prayer
meeting 7::1J p.m. Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST,
Corner Ash anc.1 Plum. Leslle Hayman,
pastcr. Sunday sclx&gt;ol 10 a.m.; Morning
Worship, 11 a .m. ; Wedneiday and SatUrday
Evening servio!s, 7: lJ p.m.
MEIGS .
COOPEM'l1VE PAIIISII
UNITED METIIODJBr CIIURCII

Wed~·

day, Jla.m . (McGuire)

CARMEL - Qlurch ScbJol, 9:3) a.m.;
Worship, 10:45 a.ln.: (Second and Fourth
SundaYJI: Fellowship dinner with Sutton,
third n..nday,.6::1!p.m. (McGuire(

Slunnan Cundlll, ouperintendent. Sunday
SchOOl, 9::1J a.m.: Morning Worship 10: :11
a.m.; EvangeltsU~ !elvlce, 6p.m. Prayerand
praise WeclnfBday, 7 p.m.: youth meeting, 7
p.m.

EDE!il UNITED BRET11REN IN CHRIST.
Elden R. lllalce, pa&amp;tor. SUnday ScOOol 10
a.m.: Robert Reed, .: -.u., sermon,
11 a.m.: Sunday niP! services, Christian
E.-...., 7: :ll p.m.; Soog OI!!VIce, 8 p.m.:
Proocl1lna. 8::11 p.m. Mid-- Prayer
moetinJ, Wednolday, 7 p.m., Alvin Reed, lay

-·
w- .
wa-.__

CliJUSl1AN, IID&amp;er
er..... Pratt, Sunday

HEMLOCK GROVE

-.u,

wonhip. t: ll a.m .:
EAST LETART- Church School, 9 a .m .;. SOitOOI aupt.
Sunday ocll&gt;ol, Ill: :I! a .m.: evening OI!!VIce,
Worship, lOa.m. (second and tourtl!Sundays:
7::1! p.m.
UMW, tint Tueoday. 7::1l p.m. tCiarkl
.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, ftrl, Tom Dooley,
LETART FAllS - Wonlllp, 9 a.m.,
Joe
Sayre, &amp;mdoy School Su(aintendellt.
Otun:h ScMol. lD a.m. tetarkl
_
Sunday
acll&gt;ol, 9:«1 a.m.: evening wtnhlp,
MORNING STAR - ';YJ11'1h!P. 9:4&amp;110111.;
7: ill P.IJL l'rlyer ..-.,., 7: :ll p.m.
Otureh Scbool, lfl:ll a.m.: Bible Study •.
'lbu.-y, 7::1lp.m. (While) ·
.. ..
TUPPERS PLAINS CKURCH OF
1\lORSE CHAPEL - Oturch Scbool, 9::ll
CHR.m,
Vlncleft1 c. waten, .m, rntn1ster:
Lm.: Wonblp, 11 a.m. (Whlte1
llennaD Black, IU(ain- Sunday
POJI'11,AND - Church School, 6: :ll p.m.:
SoltOOI II: i\11 a.m.: ....W.S !lel'\'lce, 7 p.m .:
WOI'IIIIP&gt; 7::11 p.m.; UMYF, Wedlleoday, 7::1l
w-.y Billie School. 7 p,m.
p.m. (ML(;ull1!)
QIE!1I'ER CHUROI OF THE NAZARAONEWESLEYAN -OturehSchool,lO
a.m.; Wonldp, 11 a .m.: UMW. lounh Rlllte,
RENE,IOCJI.
RoY.Sunday
Gnote,
· Frank
School,
9:1la.m.11'cnltlp
M~ 7: 311 p.m.: Men's Prayt!r llreUiut, . IKVIoo, 11 a .m. tllld 7:ll p.m. Prayer
Wednelday, 7 a .m. !Clarki
rnootJDa, w~. 7: I) p.m. •
SUITON - Chureh Scbool, 9:ll a .m.:

...

11

985·3944

"'

. - K&amp;C JEWELERS

eager beavers, JUDior asttoanuts, and junior
and aenlor hlgh BYF; chOlr practtceB:~p . m .

K.J.F. AND NEW AMERICAN STANDARD VERSION

@.)

TRINITY CHURCH, Rev. W. H.
pastor; Del:tlle Buck, Sunt;tay
·
,
992-37115, Pomeroy
Church School 9: 15 a.m.; worship ser:;t~:""---;....--.,,.;,.--...::.:;~..,l
10:30 a.m. Choir · rehearsal. Tuesday

MIDDLEPORT FlR5l' BAPI1ST, Co.,.,.
Slxtlllllld Palmer, lhe Rev. Mark M&lt;Ctung.
SUnday ocllool9: 15 a.m.: Dan White, Sunday
Scbool supt., John Reibel, Sr., IIIII. supt.
Mornlrlg WorsN.p 10:15 a .m . Youth meeting
7:ll p.m. Wednolday, Including wee tru,

SCOFIELD REFERENCE BlBLE

For A Real Auction
Call the Real McCoy"
I. 0 . "Mac" McCoy
Rt. 1, Reedsville, Oh .

,\

&amp;EN
lFRANKLIN"

Mill Work·
Cabinet Making

YPE.

THE 1917 EDITION K.J.V. AND NEW SCOFIELD

•t; \

_~,

Sunday ..,.nina oervtco 7::1l p.m.: Bible
teaching, 7::1l p.m. Thursday.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherty St., Syracuse. Services, lO a.m. Sunday, Evening
servlcea, Sunday and Wednesday, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Man!O)',
pastor; Mrs. Russell Young. ·sunday School
Supt. Sunday Sch001 ~9::1l- a.m. Evening
wcnhip 7: :II p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting
7::1) p.m.
MT. MORIAH ctruRCH OF GOO, Ra&lt;lne
- R&lt;ov. JameJI Sat1A11e!d, pastOr. Morn!JI&amp;
wen hlp 9:45a.m.; Sunday.SclxlollO: ~a . m . :
evening worship Tp.m. Tuesetay: 7::1l p.m.,
tad!,. Jll'8Y"I' meeting. Wednesday. 7::1l p.m.

OUR LARGE SELECTION INCLUDES THE
THOMPSON CHAIN REFERENCE BIBLE

~

r~

Run Road, Re\1. Emmett Rawson, pastor.
Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday school , lO a.m .

Bibles··

SERVICE'

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE

Sates and

216 s. second
Po m eroy ·

Pomeroy

992· 29SS

Brown's Fire &amp; Safety
1

&amp;

PrescriptiOns

Locust &amp; Beech Street

Equirvnent
1"''

'

~~~~~! I~i

A

_,

992· 992t

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

; :
,

Automotive

\

Poetry Corner
Call Up Jesus

nwto hllldi

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH, Rev. Robert Mlller, pastor; Lloyd
Wrtght, Director of Chrtstlan Education.
Sunday School, 9: ll a.m.; Morning Worship,
10:30 'a . m.; 'Choir Practice. ' Sunday, 6: ~
p.m .; Evening \\'orshlp, 7: ~p. m. Wednesday
'Prayer a nd Bible Study, 7: 30 p.m .
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRHIT. Charles
Russell, Sr., minister ; Rick Macomber, s upt.
Sunday school, 9:l&gt; a.m.; worship servlce,
10:30 a .m . Bible Study. Tuesday. 7: lJ p .m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATIER DAY SAINTS.
Portland-Racine Road. WOllam Roush, pas·
tor. Linda Evans. church school director.
church school. 9: .J.) a.m.; mornJng worship,
10:30 a.m.: Wednesday ewnlng prayer
services. 7:Jl p.m .
BETHLEHEM BAPT1ST, Rev . Earl
Shuler, pastor. Worship service, 9:30 a.m.
Sunday school, 10:~ a.m. Bible Sttl~l!' ~.m:!
prayer service Thursday, 7: l) p.m.
CARLETONINTERDENONUNATIONAL
CHURCH, KJngsbury Road . Rev . DaYid
Curfman. pastor. Sunday school, 9: .J.) a.m.
Ralph Carl. superintendent; evening worship,
7:3) p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesda y, 7:30
p.m.
LONG BOTIOM CHRISTIAN, Ken Kl'l1er,
pastor. Wallace Damewood, Sunday School
Supt . Worship service at 9a.m. Blble School 10
a. m.
HYSELL RUN KOLINESS CHURCH, Rev.
Thereon Durham, pastor. Sunday School a t
9: t(l a.m.; Morning worship at 10: ~ a .m.
Sunday evening wrvlre at 7: .Jl p.m .;
Thursday services a t 7:ll p.m .
. FREEDOM GOSPEL MISStON at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev.
L.awrenCf' Gluesef'K'amp, pastor: Rev. Roger
Wllllord, assistant pa stor. Preaching servl·
ces, Sunday 7::l1 p.m . Prayer meeting
WMD.esday, 7: .ll p.m.: Gary Crtfflth. leader
Youth groups . Sunday evening, 6:30p.m . with
Roger and VIolet Willford as leaders.
Communion servic(' first Sunday each month.
WHITE'S CHAPEL, Coolville RD. Rev.
Roy Deeter, pas1or. Sunday schoo19: lJ a .m .;
worship service, 10:30 a.m. Bible study a nd
prayer service Wednesday , 7:l:l p.m .
RJ.Jn.4NO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Dan
Monlux, pastor; Blll NlcOOlson, Sunday
school supt. Sunday .!iehool. 9::xl a.m .:
morning worship and rommunlon. 10: J:l a .m .
RUI'LAND BffiLE METHODIST - Amos
Tillis, pastor: So nny Hudson. supr. Sunday
school, 9: :JJ a.m. Morning worshlp, 10: ll a. m.
Su nday evening service, 7:00. Wednesday
f!Venlng servlce 7:00 p.m.: WMPO Program,
9:00 a .m . each SUnday morning .

Henry Eblin. Jr., Sunday ScOOOl Supt. Sunday
School 9: :J) a .m .: Morning Worshlp 11 a.m.;
Sunday evenlng service, 7:ll p.m .; Prayer
Meeting, Wednesday, 7: XI p.m .
SY RACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GODJoy Clark, pas tor; Worship service Sunday,
10:00 a.m.; Sundaf'school, 11 a.m .; worshlp
service, 7:l) p.m . Wednesday prayer meet·
ing, 7: :II p.m .
M'l'. HERMON UNlTED BRETHREN £N
CHRIST CHURCH. Rev. Robr-rt Sanders,
pastor: Don WUI.lay leader. L.ocated in Texas
Community on CR 82. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; Morning worship service, 10:45 a.m.; .
everlng preaching service second a nd fuuJ1h
Sundays, 7: XI p.m.; Chris tian Endeavor, first
and third SuOOays, 7:]) p.m. Wedn~ay
prayer meeting ahd Bible study, 7: l) p.m
JEHOVAH'S Wrt'NESS, 37319 Sta te Route
124 (One mile east of Rutla.nd l. Sunday, Bible
lecture 9::1l a. m.: Watc htower study. 10:20
a. m .; Tuesday, Bible study. 7::ll p.m.;
Thursday, Theocratic School, 7: :ll p.m.;
~rvlce Meeting, 8:~ p.m .
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY ,
Located on the 0. J . \Vhlt~ Road ot:f highway
160. Pat Henson, pastor. Sunday School 10
a.m. Qasses for a ll ages. J unior Church
11:00; Morning Worship. 11:(Xl; Adult Choir
practice 6:00p.m . Sunday. Young People's.
Children's Church and Adult Bible Study.
Wednesday a t 7:30 p.m .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL -570 Gra nt St ..
Middleport ; Sunday School, 10 a.m.; morning
worhsip. 11 a.m.; evening worship, 7 p.m .
Wednesday evening Bible study a nd prayer
mee!Jng , 7 p.m. AftUiated with Southern
Bapt ist ConvenUon .
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST Sta te Route i24 and County Road 5. Mark
Seevers, minister; Sunda y School Sup!., Steve
Pickens. Sunday school, 9::Jl a.m.; mor ning
worship. 10:30 a.m.; evening worship, 7 p.m.
Wednesday worship, 7 p.m.
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN • CENTER
George's Creek Road . Rev . C. J . Lemley,
pastor; Paul Poar. Church SchOOl Supertn·
tendent. Church school. 9: :JJ a.m.; mornl ng
worship. 10: :ll a .m: evenlng ser.1ce. 7 p.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 7:00 p.m . Classes for
auages .
ST. PAUL LIJl'HERAN CHURCH, Corner
or Sycamore and Second Sts., Pomeroy. The
Rev. WW1am Mtddleswarth, Paster. Sunday
School at 9 : ~5 a.m. and Church Services 11
p.m .
SACRED. HEART, Msgr. Anthony Glarma·
more, Ph. 992.5898. Saturday evening Mass,
7:.Jl p.m .; SJ,~nclay Mas.... 8 a .m. and 10 a ,m,
Confessions one-half hour before eac~ Mass.
CCO Classes, 11 a.m. Sunday.
Vlcr&lt;JRY BAPriST - 525 N. 2nd St..
Midd1eport. James E . Keesee. pastor. Sunday
mornlng worship, 10 a.m .: evening service, 7
p.m .: Wednesday evening worship, 7 p.m.;
VtsltaUon, Thursday, 6:ll p.m .
TRINI1Y CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY , CooJ.
vWe - GUbert Spencer, pastor. SWtday
school, 9:30a.m.; morning service, 11 a.m .
Sunday evening service, 7:00p.m .; midweek
prayer serv1Cf' Wednesday , 7:.Jl p.m .
MOUNT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH .
Lawrence Bush, pastor: Max Fol.mer, Sr.
Supertntf!ftdent. Sunday Scnool and morntng
wa-shlp, 9: :1} a.m. Sunday evening seJVlce, 7
p.m.: Youth meeting anc1 Bible sNdy,
Wednesday , 7 p.m .

UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass. Rev. Robert Smith, Sr.,
pastor; Rev. James CundW, assistant pastor.
s wxlay ScOOol, 9:l) a.m .; morning worship,
10:30 a.m.; evenlng worship, ?:30 p.m.
Women 's Fellowship, Tuesdays, 10 a .m.
Wednesday night prayer service. 7:ll p .m .
FAITII BAPTIS'T CHU~OJ . Mason, meet
at Unlted Steel Wcrkers Union Hall, Railroad
Street. Mason. Sunday School 10:00 a.m.:
Morning Worship, 11:00 A. M.: Evening
Service, 6 p .m. Prayer meeting and Bible
Study Wednesday, 7:00 p.m .
FOREST RUN BAPI1ST - Rev. Nyte
Bol"den, pastor. Cornellu.s Bunch, s uperintendent . SuOO.ay school9: 30 a.m. ; second and
fourth Sundays, worship service at 2: :J) p.m.
MT. MORIAH BAPMST - Fourth and
Main Sts., Mlddlep0f1.. Jlfv. Calvin Minnis,
pastor. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardner. supt.
SUnday school. 9JJl a. m.; wor ship setvice,
10:45 a.m .
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPI'IST
CHUKCH, Route l,Shade. Pastor, Don Black.
A.tfU\ated with Southern Baptist convention.
Sunday school, 1 : ~ p.m .; Sunday w orship,
2: 3) p.m . ThW'Sday evening Bible study, 7
p.m.
PEN'I'E:COSTAL ASSEMBLY, RadDe,
Route 124. Wllllam Hoba ck, pastor. Sua!lay
school. 10 a. m.; Sunday even.lng senrl.ce, 7
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BA.PflSf. Don Cheadle,

Supt. Sunday Scbool 9:30 a.m. Morning
Worship, 10: :Jl a.m. Prayer Service, alternate
Sundays.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Aw., thP Rev. Qark Baker, pastcr. Carl
Non Ingham, SuOOay ScOOol Supt . . Sunday
SchoollOa.m. -cla."ses for all ages. Evening
services. 6 p.m . Wednesday. Study, 7: :JJ p .m .
Youth services, 7: l1 p.m. Flida;,:.
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. !28 Mtu St ,
Middleport . Pasta' t; Brother chuck McPher·
soo. SuOOay School at 10 a.m . Services
Sunday evening at 7 p.m. and Wednesday at 7
p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev. Earl Shuler,
pa.stcr. Sunday school 9::ll a.m. i Chun::h
service, 7 p.m.; youth meeting, 6 p .m ,
Tuesday Bible Study, 7 p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIG1fl110USE . 3:ll45
Hlland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pastcr.
Danny Lamben , Sunday School Superintendent. Sunday Morning seJVtce, 10: 00 a.m.:
Sunday evening service 7:3) p.m . Serv1ces
Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
WORD OF FAITH , 9J Mill Sl., Mlddtepon;
Richard Stew-art. pastor . Sutrlay m orning,
10:00; Su rday evening, 7: ll Tuesday mom·
tng Bible Study, 10:00: Wedni'sday evenlna.
7::ll; Thursday morning vidro with KAlneth .
Copeland, 10:00, Friday evening video wit h
Kenne1h Copeland. 7::1).
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Rev. GienOOn Stroud, pas tor. Sunday
SChool, 9:30 a.m .; Worship Service, 10:ll
a.m.; Youth Service, Sunday, 6:15 p.m.;
Sunday evening service, 7:00 p.m. Wednes·
da,y Prayer Meeting and Bible Study 7:00p.m
NEASE SE'Ml.EMENT CHURCH, IJo.
na!d R. Karr. Sr., p;l.\toc. Sunday afternoon
servlces. 2: ll; Thursday evening serVice,
7::1!.

Fm.STBAPTlSfCHURCH. Mason. W.Va.
Pasttr. Bill Murphy. Sunday School. 10 a . m .;·
Sunday evening servlce, 7:.1J p.m .: Prayer
meeting and Bitie Study Wednesday. 7::1)
p.m . Everyone welcome.

•

RU'TLAND CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D. Grbnm, .Jr., pastor.
Sunday SeW, 9:ll a.m .; wrrshlp service.
10:30 a .m:: yoong people'S service. 6 p .m.
Evangell,tlc seJVlce. 6:lJ p.m. Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Mtuer St.,

Ma.'!ioo.

w.

Va. Eugene L. CongB", minlster.

Sunday Bible Study, 10 a.m.; WocshJp 11 a. m.
and 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study, vocal
music. 7 p.m; ,
~
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
Lane, MasCJl, W. Va. fkov. RonnJP B. Rose,
Past(l". Sunday School 9: 4..'1 a .m .; Moml.ng
Worship ll a.m. Evenlng Service 7: :IJ p.m . ·
We&lt;:blesday Women's Mintstr1es 9 a .m .
(rneetlng and prayer) : Prayer and Bible
Study 7 p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. The R&lt;ov. William
campbell. pastcr. SUnday ScOOol. 9:ll a..m .;
James Hughes, supt .; evening service. 7:ll
p.m. Wednesday evening prayer meeting,
7:~p .m. Youth prayersetVice e ar hTuesday.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Letart, W.
Va., Rt. 1, Mark (fWin, pastor. Worship
servtces, 9:00a.m .; Sunday Scnool. ll a .m. :
evening wtl"Sh1p, 7:JJ p.m. Tuesday cottage '
prayer ml!fting and Bible study, 9:30 a .m .
Worship savtce. Wednesday, 7::11 p.m .

Sermonette

There Is much concern acros s the la nd wi th the outbreak of ~ ugs. CommuniTy and
even govpm m~t programs have been started to try and help t[JN&gt; In thE&gt; bondage of
drugs . All these errorts are definltely worthy of ca use, but 1 woulii llkPtO s han&gt; with you
another source of help, your toc3.1 church thal teaches t he Gospel of Jesu s Christ.
1 would llke to br1efly share with you some of my testim::my of how God set m to fret&gt;
from the llfe or drugs.
"My secirch In tryln~ to find the trut&gt; p.arpose in life led mt' to one of Satan 's
dangerous ptts- DRUGS. This period of my life lasted al mos t fiVE' }'ears. and \Its onJy
through God's grace that I'm alive today. Drugs ru.Jed m y life. causing me to take s ix
overdoses that I can remember, and to become Ill wtth epilepsy, oot kn~·tng when or
where the neKt seizure would strike. I took every type of c.1rug I rould find, fi'om LSD to
heroin. tn m y .search for joy, peace, and love, I took up tofouneen (14~ ''h its" of LSD at
one time, and Innumerable amounts of other c1rugs.
During this time a friend of mine who was also on dru~ lold ue that he had bPen
"born again." He said that he accepted Jesus as his personal Saviou r and ·had been sN
tree-from drugS . I had rellg10n earlier In my ute, but t had to admit r didn't have Jesus as
OUR SA VIOUR Lt.m!ERAN CHURCH Lord of my llfe. 1 agreed to stan going to church w ith m y Crlend, but 1 tol d him .Jes us must
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W. Va .
prove to me that He Is real.
Tile R&lt;-v. Georgo C. Weirick, pastor. Sunday
The first time 1 stepped Into that chw-ch, l had enough dope In me to keep m e high
SChool, 9:l:Ja.m .; SuOOay wochslp,ll a.m.
untU the ne'X1 lDOI,lllng. Then somettp.ng happened ... the minister slartcd preaching
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now located
tram the BiblearKI the next thlnglknewl was no longer htgh. The next servlce I came the
on Pomeroy Pike, County Road %i near
say way- "high" as 1 could possibly get without passing out Then when I heard the
Flatwoocls. Rev. Blackwood, pastcr. Services
~chlngot the Gospel and how much Jesus loved me. God took away lhat '' high'' tha t I
on Sunday at 10: l) a.m. and 7:00 p.m . with
tiad tram the drugs. t kept going back, UstenJng to the Gospel of J esus, and staned ,
Sunday . school, 9::ll a .m . bible study.
set&gt;ldng for Him.
.
Wednl!lday, 7::JJ p.m.
Through the Bible and the move of God's Splrtt. Jesus began to show me how real
F AI11l FELLOWSHIP CJIUSADE FOR
and alive He is . t began to understand that my drug problem was a sin problem andth.al
CHRIST -St. Rl338. Antlqulty.Pastor,RA!v.
Jesus shed His blood to forgive me or all my stns. I madl' a dec ision W accept Jesus into
Franklin Dlckl!ns. Sunday morning, 10 a.m.
my Ufe and repented Of the " mess" I made ot my own il(e. At that vory momenl God no!
Sunday CYenlng, 7: :II p.m . Thur.;day evening, . . only forgave me or my sins, He set me~ trom the clutches of drugs . The miracle of
7:l) ·p.m.
~
• salvatiOn set me tree tram heroin, cocalne, uppers, downers. LSD, angel d ust,
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAPl1ST
nw1juana and it c.11dn't stop there.
CHURCH, Putor Robert Byers. Sunday
A few months later t attended a miracle service and God healed me rt~ht then a nd
Schad 10 a .m .; Worship Service 11 a .m .;
the'e of epllepsy. I have since Undergone medical examination.&lt;~, for a life Insurance:
Sunday evening oervlce, 7: ll p.m.: WednEO·
policy contlrm.ln!il God's miracle power."
day evening oervtce, 7::1l p.m.
_
Jesus ~td. lohn 6:37 " ... and him that cometh to me I \\1JIIn no wif£ cast out. "
INDEPENDENT KOLINESS CHURCH,
' U youo: §OJTlt'OnE'YOU know needs help In this area. I want to encourage you to turn to
lnc. - Paul st., Mlddlepcrt. Rev. O'Dell
the d(ug ~:·JgTa rr. tha t can perform a miracle ln your ute ... JESUS. - Rev. Michael J .
Man!&lt;)', pastor. Sunday Scbooi. 9: :ll a .m.:
Panglo, P J.stor. Chrts tlan FeUowshlp, Mtc.1dleport, Ohlo, Call 992-6249.
Mornl.ni wcnhl.p 10::.) a .m .: evening wor.
JIIIP, 7: ~ p.m.1\le!!day, 12: :ll p.m . Women's
.,
!l'ayel' meet\!ut Prayer and !l'atse service,
Weml!lday, 7:3! p.m.

�Friday, No~ember 25, 'T98;1
~y, No~~r25 ,

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

1983

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE: By vor1ue of

(2 ,82 · 783. UNITED Sl ATES
OF AMERICA .,,. TRUDY G
BRESENM~M . ET AL . I w1l l offPr
fOr Sale to the htghesi brdder on
December 15. 1983 at 1.00
PM at the front door of the
MfHgs Coun ty Counhouse.
Pomeroy. Oh10. the follow1ng
dPscrrbM rea l propertY

Public Notice

Public Notice

cate No 2274. per survev of
Apnl 11 1966

are cash The sale rs subJACt to
the approval of the Probate
Court of Mergs Countv. Ohto
Jack K So1res. Jr .
Adm1 n1strator ol
the Estate of
Jack K Sprres.
DACP.ased

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF DANA H. BAl·
LEY, DECEASED
. C- No. 24293 Dod&lt;ot 12
Pogo 393
·
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

PROPERTY ADDRESS 54525
Reedsvrlle.

Ohro 45772
TP.rm$ of Sqle Cash on day of
sale I reserve the nght to re1ect
any and all brds Robert W
FostPr. Unl!f!d States Marshal .
Southt;trn 01stnct of Ohro,·

1111

STATE SECURITY - A unlfonned oUicer
stands alongside his vehicle, which blocks the
diplomatic entrance of the State Department in
Washlngloti Thw-sday night. Anita Stockman, a State

Department spokeswoman, said security precautions
were taken beginning Wednesday · to counter
"possible bomb threats." (AP Lase'l,'_hoto).

Secret Service tightens
.White' House security
WASHIN{;TOt\ iAPl - In a
move that appeared to be designed
to foil any Beirut sty le bombing, the
Secret Service tJghtened security
around the White House d_uring the
Thanksgiving holida y by parking
seven sand-laden dump trucks at
fi ve metal-gate entrances.
White House press secretary
Larry Speakes sa id the move was .
" not in response to a specific
threat," but security also was
tightened a t the State Department
six blocks away, where spokeswoman Anita Stpckman said authorities were reaetingto ·'possiblebomb
threats."
President Reagan and his fam ily
were at Reagan's ranch in Santa
Barbara , Calif., for a five-&lt;iay
Thanksgiving vacation, ending
Sunday.
At the State Department, five
entrances were blocked by cars or
vans and police cars blocked part of
a street that leads to a sixth . Ms.
Stockman said "extra secw·ity has
been taken and will be in effect until

we can evaluate this possible or
potential threat." The State Department security measures were
implemented Wednesday, while the
trucks were moved around the
White House on Thursday.
The parked trucks at the entrances to the White House grounds were
the latest episode in a selies of
increasingly stlingent securt ty
measures prompted by a late-night
bomb blast at the Capitol on Nov. 7
and the attack on the Marine
headquarters in Beirut. The Oct. 23
Beirut bombing, which killed 239
servicemen, . occurred when a
dynamite-laden truck with a suicide
driver at the wheel rammed the
Marine barracks.
Last week, in reaction to the
Capitol bombing, guards began to
use dogs to sniff all cars and trucks
enteling the White House grounds
for explos ives. Guards also
searched the handbags a_nd briefcases carried by reporters, normally exempt from such measures,

in what was described as a spot
check.
Ori Thursday, three dump trucks
were parked at the southwest gate
across the ent rance to the closed-off
street separating the White House
from the Old Executive Office
building next door. 'Those trucks
were outside the fence· surrounding
the White House.
Another truck was parked on that
same street inside the northwest
gate; two more were inside gates
leading off 17th Street into the Old
Executive Office Building and a
seventh was on East Executive
Avenue, a public walkway on the
other side of the building separating
the White House from the Treasury.
AU the lights on the south lawn of
the White House were lighted, which
is unusual when the mansion is not in
use. A loud buzzer from inside the
compound could be heard Thursday
afternoon, but later was silent.
The guard dogs could be seen
patrolling and sniffing at bushes.

Utilities assail new payment plan
CLEVELAND (AP ) - A new
payment plan to keep low-income
Ohioans fro m having their utilities
shut off this "{inter, and which has
been criticized by some utilities. is
not a giveaway, an attorney tor four
· community action groups says.
· ·Clevela nd attorney Joseph
Meissner said the plan approved
Wednesday by the Public Utilities
Commission offers relief from
utUlty bills, but not forgiveness.
The plan applies to people at or
below 150 percent of the federal
· mcome poverty level. It calls for
. eligible Ohioans to pay only 15
percent of their income for win ter
· 'atlllty bills to avoid service shutoffs .
. " It still means they owe the bill,"
said Meissner, an attorney for the
Legal Aid Society. He said he was
speaking on beha lf of his clients, the
Greater Cleveland Welfare Rights
Organization, Low Income Pecple
· Together, Ohio Action Coalition and
t h e Cl e v elan d T e n a nt s
. Organ!Z8iton.
'
"Under this payment plan, eligi ble people who pay the 15 percent of
·their income ca~ not be shut off of

their gas and electlic services.
However, they still owe the rest of
the bill and the companies can use
any and all legal means to collect
that bill, including tcying to collect
currently.
"This means that somecne' s
savings account could be attached
or liens could be placed against their
house and other property.
"Further. when their income goes
up because of returning to work.
their paychecks can be attached and
the companies can collect the rest of
the money," Meissner said.
Under the PUCO guidelines, a
single-person household with an

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
winning number drawn Thursday
night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game. ''The Number," was 4!ll. In
the "Pick 4" game. played Monday
through Friday, the winning
number was 9012.

The November Sta te Sc hool
Foundation subsidy payment of
$125,981,881.42 to 614 Ohio city,
exempted village and local school
'districts a nd 87 boards of education
was reported by State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson.
Meigs County's three local school
dtstrtcts received $492,374.26 after
dedications lor employe retirement. Amounts received by each
clistrtct Include Eastern Local,
$10 2,344.69 ; Me igs Local,
$275,346.19, and Southern Local,
$114,683.38.
,. In addiUon, the Meigs County
Board of Education received a
direct
allotment of $24,l68.44 .
.

· income of less than $7,290 (150
percent of the federal income
poverty level) could qualify. The 150
percent level for a family of four
would be $14,850.
The payment pian, which takes
effect Dec. 1, provides for qualified
consumers to pay a monthly amount
toward their heating bills eq uivalent
to 15 percent of their monthly
income.

Weather forecast

..

Generally clear tonight. Low
about 32. Saturday, mostly sunny
and warmer. High 60-65. Chance of
prectpltatlon near iero percent
tonight and Saturday.
Extended Ohio Forecast

Demonstration set
A demonstration on the use of
baskets and other wicker decoratiOns will be given Saturday at 1: :Jl
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
Church. Tllectemonstrationisatund
raising project of the Episcopal
Church Women.

wiH; and to the lttOmey or
anomevs r'8pr81811ti,g any of
the afora'mentionad peraons:
Ed da J TMmpson. Case NO

Showers on Sunday and a chance
of showers or snow Ounies and
colder MoocJay and Tuesday. Lows
in Ute 40s Sunday and upper 20S and
30s Monday and Tuesday. IDghs
arouncl 60 Sunday and ~pper 30s ur
mld-40s Monday and Tuesday.

.

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, OH. 992-5776

Now Open For The
Christmas Season

Lara• selection of potted Poin·
settias, hanaina Pomsettia bas·
kets, Christmas Cactus, Holly
Trees, Live &amp; Cut Christmas Treas,
African Violets and Folieae Plants.
ALSO: Candle arrangemlltts, candle
rinp, door wreathqrave blankets,
and cemetery vases and wreaths.
OPEN: 9 to 5
1 to 5 Sun.

9. 3oc

Public Notice

1

Card of Thanks

2

.992-2196

Open 12 to 8 p.m. every day
through deer aun season.

I

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

LM111:sl

Sl~li~cl1un

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325

In

Soollle&lt;ISII~tll

$}295

'·
Installed With Pad
KITCHEN CARPET

Good Selection Of

GOLD SEAL
CONGOLEUM

8

992·2259

MIDGET FARM - Eastern
schools. 9 acres, some woods,
pond and 3 bedroom home.
On~ $32,500.
NICE - Remodeltid 6 rm.
home, 3 bedrooms. modern
k~hen, central heat ·good
carpeting and garage As~ng
$35,000.

011111

Regular

MIDDLEPORT - 7 rm. lamily
home neat schoo~ on quiet
street lots of nice carpetin~
l ~ baths, central heat. swim.
pool &amp; new. gatage. $45,900.
Reduced to $44,500.
3 APTS. - You can buy and
live free by renting the other
two. Just $19,500.

$15.95

ANSO IV NYLON
Re&amp;. $18.95

NowS1595
Yd. ln'stalled
Rubborback Candy Stripe

COUNTRY HOME - Aquality
5 yt. old ranch home near 5
Pts. 3 bedrooms. large family
room withfireplace, sundeck&amp;
2 car finished garage for
$59,900.

TWEED
Reg. $7.95
NOW

S4 99

WALK TO THE STORE ~ Th~
lg home has income with view
of the river, central heat bath,
par~ng and nice lot
A-FRAME - The owners will
sacrmce th~ like new home.
Peaceful countrv lot Comoar.t
and lovely loft Ca11 to see at just
$30,000.

Public Sale
a.·Auction

We adwtrtise all protllrties 4
times a month. Want to sell.
Call 992·3876.

ANT!R~2~ A~pP~M~I ON

Housing
Headquarters

At the Corner of 143 &amp; 50, Albany, Ohio

N£AR POMEORY - I\\ acres
of level ground lor a biggatden
and yaro. Plus a n~e 3
bedroom ranch wnh new
catpet, equipped kitchen,
woodburner, storage buildin&amp;
and a patio. $36,900.

HEIGHTS - Anice
and neat one floor plan home
wrth 2-3 bedrooms, full basement and alum. sidin&amp;
$22,500.
N£AR DEXTER - 30 acres of
lilld wrth approx. 7 acres
tibbie. Gas and oil rights go
with land. Asking $15,000.
R£ALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dottie Tllller 992-5692
Jo Hill 9$5-4466

Pomeroy

I

··

:

1;

any ad . Your ad will be

proper ·ro 35

classification if you'll
check the proper box
below.

I ) For Rent

PLAOUEs"'~

21.

4,

n

5.

24.

6,

25.
26.
. 17.

I 1.
I ~1
I 9.
I ~~1 11.
I n
I n.

TWENTY ACRES, no house, Chester Township, Reibel-Road.
L~T in.Racine,Villaje, 75xl50, M.H. facilitlts, Yellow .Bush Road.

_.
. -

!

APPROXIIIAT.ELY 2Yz ACRES and house
needs extensive repairs. Racine Village.

I

1

Home National Bank

1

1

15.

. ... _ ...-

16.

. ' -

- - . -·

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985·3561

•Washer• •DI&amp;hwaahera
"•Rengea
•Refrlgeretora
•Dryers •Fr. .zert

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tfc

GUNS

30.

GOOD SELECTION
·~

r

SHOTGUNS &amp;
HANDGUNS .

·'10 - -

34.

]5

. . --~ __ _

.

~-

!

- -·

Wt ·buy, sell or trade.
Good prices.

1

I•
lc

Ill Court St.

L'.:_---~~="::':!:.~~4~~- .. -----11

949-2210
'

'!D• I

All Makes

Mail This coupon with Remittance
The Daily sentinel

·

uJ.•.,:,.Rt,.,c:H.O~RjD~-;;~
,

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

I
I'
- - - --- - - I

.

i

Call for free siding es·
timates~ 949·2801 or
949-281&gt;0

All Work Guaranteed
Call 614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.

No Sunday CaUs
3-11-tfc

11 -15-1 mo. pd .

Roger Hysell

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING
All types of roof work ,
new or repair, gutters
and downspoufs, gutter cleaning and
painti~g. sform doors
and wtndows.

GARAGE
At. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

446-3672

Regular sil e pool tabl e with
balls and cue stick, exc
co nd . Call 446-3 968 aft er

loons &amp; Co .. 446-4 31 3 .

5.

No Hunting. Trespassi ng o r
Splotlighting on R oge r s
property, Fairview Rd ., Harrison Twp,

Wan ted to buy . New . used &amp;
antiq ue furn iture . Wi ll buy 1
pie ce or cOm plete households. A!so comp lete Aucti·
o neer in g service. C~tll Osby
A. M ar tin 614· 9 9 2 ·6 370

Vacancy : Jul ia's Pe rsonal
Care Home . Formerly
Merc e r Canv a l e sen ce
Home . 18 years ex peri ence .

Cl ifton,
6873.

W .V . 304 -773 ·

Buying daily go ld, sil ve r
co ins, ri ngs, jewe lry , s1orli ng
ware, o ld co ins. la rge cur·
renc y. Top prices. Ed. Bur·
kett Barber Shop . 2nd. Ave.
Middleport . ah. 6 14· 9 92·

No hunting or trespas sing
day or n ight on Charles Yost
Farm s.
No
, Old
Fa rm Hunting
, C. C . Lewis
.

BEDS.- fRON, BR ASS

ol d

Furniture, gold , silver dol ·
Iars , w oo d ice boxes, st o ne
jars, anti ques, etc. Co mplete
ho u seholds . W ri t e M . D .
Mille r, Rt. 4 , Po m eroy, Oh

45769 or 992-7760.

~

11

School 10:00 AM . Sunday

J he Aree Ag ency of Aging
Distri ct 7 , •Inc .. is noW t aking
acc epting applications to fill
a c on sulting dietitia n posi ·
ti o n in the Senior Nutrition
Program . Sel ected appli ·
cants w lll be responsible fO r
m on itoring fo od service op ·
orations at Older Am er ica ns
Act Senior Nutritio n sites in
ten Southern Ohio Count ies.
th ey also wil l write reports,
plan menu s, and pr ovid ~
techn ical as sistance and
training. Applica nts must be
a ce rtified regist ered dieti·
ti an . W ork hours an d salary
negotiable. Send re sumes
to : Joyc e Shong, Ar ea
Age ncy on Aging Di str ict 7 ,

Giveaway

2 mal e puppie s 1 0 mos . old.
Fath e r G o rd o n S e tt e r.
Moth er En g li sh C ock er .
Go od with k id5. C8 11 44 6·

1944.
A ustr alien Sheph erd · Biu e
Heel er puppiea. 1 male and 1
fe m a l e . Call 614 - 379 -

2143·.

304-676-6726.
Tear down house for lumber.
Rt. 62 . Arbuckle , W. Ve .

6

Lost and Found

LOST Reward for return of
or information leadi ng to
return of 1!1 3 mo. old
Australian Blue Heeler. male
puppy. Vicintiy of St. Rt .

554-Eno . Call 614-388 9357 ave., 446 -9786 days .
LOST Mitchalt 4430 reel
with rod . Los1 in parking tot
of Racin e Locks &amp; Dams
Friday. If found call 985-

4266.
LOST C o cker Spaniel
blonde, in Rocksprings area .
If know whereabou t call

Rio Grande.Oh 45674 , Re ·
sumes must ba rec eived by
4 :30PM on November 25.
1983. An equal opp ortunity
employer.
Lady wants ride f ro m Eure ka
to end of b ridge in Pt.
Pleasant every Fri day m orn·
ing. Call 614 -256 · I 198 .
Boe t c lu b man age r ·
caretaker. live on premise!!.
Housing , t:tilities, hospital
ins. furnished . Paid va ca·
tion, perfect for responsible
coupl e who enjoy working
with people . Mechanic al ap ·
pi tude , river u :per ie nce
helpful . not n ecess ary. Ba se
salary S600 month , extra
incom e aboVe sal ary poS!Ii ·
ble doing boat m aintence.
Write giving w ork expe·
rience , family , health sta t us
and character ref er en ce .
P.O. Box 4221 . Charl esto n ,

wv

25304 .

992 3110.
FOUND Beautiful gray cat
wearing white collar. Owner
plea se call leonard Ba ss.
992 - 6006, Syracuse to
claim . Mu1 be given away if
owner does not cl aim at
once.

Call 949-2263
or 949-3091

...... Gaiifiioifs........·

Dum p Truck Service will
haul anything a nywhere.

Call 304-675-31 90 .

Wil t do house clean ing .
Reasonable rat Os . Call 304·

675 -3908 .

13

Insu ran ce

SA NDY AND BEAVE R In·
sur ance Co. has o ffered
serv tcos for fi re insuran ce
cover age in Gallia County
for al most a century. Farm.
home and perso nal propeny
coverage s are available to
mee t ind iv idua l need !!. Con ·
tact Harry Pitch fo rd. agen t .
Pho11e 446 · 1 427 .

S chools

15

Instruction
Self de fense for wo men,
four week m ini co urse . Class
size limited . Inst ructed by
David A . Whit e. Second Dan
Blk Belt-. Call 30 4· 675·

1-800-4 38-77 14 .

18

Wante d to Do
"

Help Wanted

Inc .. P.O. Box 97e. RGC .

2 black and brown kittens ,
one cat good mouser. Phone

6040 o• 614-94 9 -21 29 .

BIG RIGS . We can train you
t o drive th e " 18 wheelers"
at Charlo t1e Diese l Driving
School. The indu stry today
is lo okin g fo r w e ll · t rained,
pr ofossio na·t dr ive rs. We
ha ve bot ll fu ti and pa rt·time
train ing. After completing
t he trai ni n g you will r&amp;eeiva :
Federal Cert ificat ion , FREE
job placement as sistance. If
yo u are ready to STEP-UP,
ca ll toll free Ch arlotte, N.C.
7 04·597· 95 50 o r toll free

Time of servi ces at the
Church of God in Jesus
Name. 2416 Lincoln Ave .•
Point Pleasant. is Sunday

4

Tr ee t rimm ing and removal.
Free esti mates. 6 1 4 -992·

Raw Fyr Buyer , Beef &amp; De er
Hi d es · Ginseng, Trapp i n g
Suppli es. George Buckley ,
Rt. 2, At hens, Oh . Ph one

Town~ ~~~~~;
~~~~~~

eve. 7 :30 PM . Wedn esday
7 :30 PM . Ira Wallman . Pas·
tor, Dan Wellman, A ss t .
Past or .

S ituations
Wanted

4326.

614 -66 4-476 1. 1-9 D aily .

SALE120-30-40 percent off
cake ,decorating suppl ies.
Anns Cak e Decorating &amp;
Supplies in-Tupp ers Plain s.

12

3476 .

Mature lady to live-i n to ca re
fo r older woman . 30 4 -67 5·
1197 after 6pm .

Cabl e TV sale s R e p s
naededfll Duue to heavy
dema nd. we are expanding
our direct · sales force in
Transmission
Point Pleasant an d sur·
All Work Guaranteed
ro unding ar eas. We have
"Free Estimates"
7
Yard Sale
immed iate o pen ings for B.
p r of e s s i o nal , carre r ·
or
oriented
s ales
. rep r e s en tatives · pr ove n ,
3-24-tfc
3- I 0-tlc
successful , direct · sal es ex·
&amp; Vicinity
perience required . For more
information apply at the
1
Garage Sat. &amp; Sun . Nov. 26, Cablentertainmant Office,
27. 9 till 5 . Dolls, Shirley 1410 Jefferson Blvd , Po int
Temples, c haract er and col- Pleasant,WV .
lectibles , ty'p ewriter, pocke1
kniv es, mantel clo ck, furni· Help wanted -WOmen , m en
ture , silverware, rocking to assist manager w it h cus·
chair, lamps, glassware. tomer service . Earn up . t o
mirrors, hull vases, pot s, S7.00 or more per h our .
pan s. pictures. bo ok s. old Opportuni1y for advance·
wood and metal baby buggy, ment. 304 ·5 7 6· 2518 .
(
GLASS
"-.:7
hand 1oot1, iron skillets, t ea
kettle s and pot and much Cert ificati on f o r th e J obs
·.OUR SPECIALTY!"
more.
Paul Denney 's in Training Part nersh ip Act
I
Programs will be hel d at the
Bidwell.
Oh.
When You Need Gl'llss You Need Us ... We Con Handle
Point Pleasant Job Service
Your Every Glass Need!
Office. Nov. 3.0 from 9am to
3pm . If interested in being
And
• Yopr Business"
certified for the!le programs
fret
Hours: lon.·ffl. 8:00 to 7:00._Rldio
you must be a M ason
Sit. 8:00 to 12:00 noOfl
County residel"!t and bring
Vicinity
the following itm1: pr oof of
Addren. birth ce rti f icates or
Rl. 33
(:1041 773-5710 . nl-5118
Minon, WV
Movin9 Sale Nove mber social securi ty ca rds on each
Nov. 25 &amp; 26th. 1679 member of the 1'-ous ehol d,
Lincoln Hgt s., Pom ero y . pa y stu bs ot statemen t of
Misc . &amp; c lot hing, old bot · in come for last 6 mon t hs on
ties, old rockers, small TV , each m ember of hollsehold :
Proof of an y Welfare assist·
good toys . Rain cancels.
an ce. handicapped status,
unemployment benefits, if a
Public Sale
Veteran bring your 00- 214,
all males born aher 1- 1-60
&amp; Auction
must have a draft registra ·
Auction avery Tuesday tion card. An EEO employer
night, Pt. Ple11ant. WVa.
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth · ~ ~~n Milt1 need p&amp;Opla to tt o
Center Bldg .. Camden St . liQht de livery work, mu st
provide econom ical tran s·
814-387-7101 .
portation . A p p l y to J o
Rick Pearson Au c't ~ oneer Dayle, Lowe Motor Inn.
Service. Estate , Farm , A n · Point Pleasant, WVon Mon ..
N ov . 2 8 th . 9. 0 0om ·
tique &amp; liquidation sales
12 : 00noon or 7 :00pm Ucensed Ia bonded in Ohio
l.a1• LilA 10.
IUTL.AliD. 011.
WVo . 304- 773-6786 or 8 :00pm. Eqllal Opportunity
)•••'
PH. 702 -2225 . !l!l mo. 304-773-9186.
employee. '

GLASS • GLASS • GL-ASS

. :::::::---

7;

!I

32.
33.

I t4.

I

Dl

16.
19.
31.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

Yt(e pliy cash for late model
clean used cars.
J im M .i nk Chev .· Oi ds Inc .
Bill Gene Joh nson

Balloons for Bi rthda ys, Get
Well, Anniversarys, Sw ae'theans, partie s. C all Bal -

Gun shoot Racin e G un Club .
Every Sunday starting 1
p.m . Factory ch o ked guns
only ..

304-676- 27 70 .

675-149 8 .

To Buy

446-0294.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

W~ nted

tlemen Sat. and Sun. Phone

Oeers skinned, c ut and
wrapped. Call Cisco 304·

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
w ood heaters. Swain Furniture. 446-31 59 , Jrd . &amp;
Olive St .. Gallipol is, O h.

. ..

PT. ;,-;;:-.~;,,-:.;:,• W.

2'1.

3.

T~phy

SWEE PER and sewing machin e repair. parts, and
suppli&amp;!l.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Va cuum
Cleaner, o ne half m ile up
Georges Creak Rd.
Call

304-468- 1780.

SIDING

co nsignm ents will be t aken
until aft er Ch ristmas . Emma
Belt A uctioneer. 4 2 8 -.8 177.

9

Help Wanted ·

General Haulin g and Trash
remove! Service. Reliable
and depe_n dable. Call . ~46 59 bet wee n 9 and 5.

3,

Will cut

and deliver fire ·

w ood. Call 614- 256 -162e.
~ cDa !;\ i et C~s t o m Butche ~·

•n g. Ope n s1x days a weak.

7:30 to 6 :00p .m . 304-882 3224.

Filll artGial

21

Business
Opportunity
! NOTI CE I

TH E OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . rec ommends
t hat you do business w ith
people you know, and NOT
to send mon ey through the
ma il unt il you have investigated th e offering ..
Bu si n ess Op p o rtu n i ty ·
looking fo r someo ne ,to .take
over cloth ing busin ess, inclu des tnvento ry, fixtur&amp;s
and supp lies . Phone 304·

676- 1317 o• 676-3217.
Texas Oil Company need s
mature pars on _
f or short trip s
surro undi ng Point Pleasant.
Co nt ac t cu st o m e r s. We
train. Write K.O. D i ckerson,
Pres ., Southwest er n Petro ~
leum, Box 7 89·, Ft . Worth,

TX. 7610 t .

22 Money to Loan
HD ME

LO AN S

FIX ED

RATES 12 %% purchase or
refinanc e, 11 V. % adjustab le
rat e. Le ade r Mortgage ,

Athens, 1-800 -3 41 -6554

23

Profess ional
Service s

PIANO T U N ING Lower
p ri r::es·r e gu l ar tunings discoll n1s to Senior Citizens,
Church es &amp; scho ols. Ward ' s

Keyboa rd. 304-675-3e24 .

ENGRAVING
.
, · • - - - - - - - ---'-- - - - - - ,

20 .

I.
2

Three acres with a nicely constructed concrete block home 26x60. 3 bedrooms one
bath, 12xl~ living room' and 24x24 family
r~om. P_a_
rt!ally carpeted, fuel oil furnace
With fac11tt1es for wood burner.l2x15 block
. storage building, 20x30 block garage. Right
off Rt. 248, _country setting. If! mile 'ast of
Chester, Oh1o.

fl .
18
19,

11-14-tfr.

Also
·PH. 992-5682
992-7121

u . rvr11e M
T hese a~sh rates
i n c lude discount

•

Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

THE
' TROPHY
: KING

i~, "·

I Pr int one word in each
space below. Each in1 fitial or group of figures
1
I counts as a word . Count
,
1 name and address or ~,......... 1 3 6
1 phone number it used. '""' "' doy A.;., days A••• I
I You'll get better results ---~~~·=.;."'+".....:.+".....:.-•_·i
I i~iv~~~ri~:.s~~:ese~~:~"r;t ~T~o~l~5+---tlu~':,·M~~7~.0(}---~j
I reserves the r ight to
classify , edit or re;ect ·rol~
t~' -~
1.0!1

REAL ESTATE

'

III

For all your wiring
needs ; furnaces repair
service and installation .

RESIDENTIAL-New
and re-wiring
COMMERCIAL &amp;
IN-DUSTRIAL

tflester. oll.
Open Wed .. Fri .. Sat. Niles
7:30 to 10:00
Available for private parties Mon ., Tues., Thurs.
Niles, Sat. or Sun. After·
noon.
THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI., NOV. 18
CHRISTMAS PARTY
FRI., DEC . 16
PH . 985·3929
or 985-9996
11-14-1 mo.

~ Phone------·----

t!Ultlll

MIL'LER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

SKATE-A-WAY

J Address---------

( )Wanted
c ) For Sale
( )Announcement

THE AUCTION YOU HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR ......Over 20
wooden bowls, various sizes; old dolls, toys, several hickori
baskets, a lot of pewter, a lot of crocks (brown, blue &amp;white).
Spongewate, Bennington, splatterware, graniteware, colilic·
loon ol spoon holders, kerosene tamps, cheese bo&lt;es woo .den buckets, stone jars &amp; jugs, old books, coffee g tinde~ lace
table cloths and linens; coverlet woven by P. H. Hariman·
several QUilts, quill tops, quilt pieces, blankets, iron kettles:
skillets, pot, bookends, teapot; iron bed s, two cheHy- one
drawer night stands, capper boilers, two brass kettles tea
kettles. two primitive teed boxes, apple butter stirrers 'ian terns, several mi niature oil lamps, brass jewelry bo• . wooden
spoons. wooden decoys, amber mantel clocks, miniature coo
coo cl ocks, toy cow stuffed with straw, weller vases, ladder
back racket, ch ild's rocker, set ol primitive cha irs and others, three sets ot scales, picture frames, trivets tobacco cut·
ter, figurines, picture ot girl on canvas named Summer, wooden churns, hump back trunks, several old butcher knives
boxes of pattern glass not fisted.
'
THIS SALE IS NOT OVER ADVERTISED!!
Collection of Carl Felts.
Inside Sale. Food Available.
This is ala rae salt, l!hlt is not sold on Sunday will be sold
on Monday.
AUCTIONEER: Rodney Howery
Phone: 1198·7231
Auction Sarvlce
NOVEMBER 27, 1983
Terms of Sala: Calli or Chtct with Positive I.D.
DIRECTIONS: 5 milts west of Albany, Ohio. WATCH FOR
SIGNS.

--------·

1

AlB

12-20-tic

KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
PH. 992·2725
11 -9-1 mo,

Racine , Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10-6-Uc

Nam•-----------

t lie

Route 1
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
985·4'193 Ot 992-3067

Expires Dec. 30th
Monday thru Friday

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

results. Mon ~ y not refundable .

in

Roof ing &amp; Siding Co.

For 10% Off
Any Service

Sizes !rolf 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

0

·c urb lnflatlo"
Pay Cash for ,
Classlfleds and
Savel_ll

puJ

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

l-7-tt

UTILITY BUILDINGS

-------- ~ --

10'11,

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

PHONE JIM CliFFORD
992-7201

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

Write 'tour own ad and order by mail w ith this
coupon. Can cel your ad by phone when you ~et

LINCO~N

10·24· 1

Bring This Coupon In

614·992· 2181

BALD KNOB ROAD - Beautilul 12 acte building s~e in the
country - on a paved road
and much potential, reclaimed
sprin&amp;could have gas. $7,000.

Limited Offer
Call 985-4225
As.l! lor Guy Shea
Independent Kirby Oea.l !~

WORK
•LAND C.LEARING
•CONCRETE WORK
BONDED &amp; WORM GUAAAN1££D

POLE BUILDINGS

~

"

·,
-------Compa nion f or edltry atn·

WVa. lie. No. 4 29-84.

Call 446 -26.64 .

Have 1 Carpet
In Your Home
Shampooed "FREE"
And See' A
' Kirby Demonstration
Completely "FREE"

SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION

ALL STEEL &amp;

the

Hi ve resumed sewin g f or a
select number of cli ents .

., CALL NOW

2-23 fi e

~ ~ndmark

I'
1

11 -17 I mo.

•WATER. GAS and

PH. 992-2280

17.2 cu. It,
Model CTF17-AC
REG. 1624.95

\?~ ~

378-6349

•SEPTIC SYSTEM S
•liMESTONE

S3QOO

Refrigerator

S525°

CALL

•DOZER
•BACKHOE

HOTPOINT

ONLY

Keep That Natural
Look In Your Home.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

COAL

54 Misc. Merchandise

MIDDLEPOt!T - 3 bed toom
ranch home on a quiet street,
cute kitchen, large utility room,
outstandong storage. $32,500.
MIDDLEPORT - Spacious 2
st~ home with 3 bedrooms,
large liv1ng room, 1ormal dimng
room. kttchen, and one &amp;
one-lhiro baths. Has a f~!
basement ftont &amp;rear porches
and a nice back yard with
st&lt;Jage building $26,500.

·

STRIP

Racine, OH.

NI.W LISTING - Rutland One floor plan home w~h 5
rooms, 2 bedrooms, dining
room, and a g.,age with 2
bedrooms and a bath also.
$24,900.

PROFESSIONAL
FLOOR SANDING
and REFINISHING

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
- Gas Unes
·-Septic Systems
, LARGE or SMAll JOBS
PH. 992J~?8
111-.&lt;1 -l mo. od.

MINE RUN

'Excavating
'Ponds
'Septic Tanks
'Hauling •
949-2293

POMEROY,O.

leyellot. $14.900.
VIRGIL B. SR .
716 [ . 2nd 51.

Starting At

CARPET

E. M'.;n,LUIIiQlllu..l

BISSELL FLOORS

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

·------------~·~
- !1~-·~·~

RECAMATION

All Work Guaranteed
Call 614-742·2214
After 5 P.M.
11· 1·1 mo. pd

lshorterlheaermonwttl be."

742-2328

Mll.
CONTRACTING-

Residential-New and rewirifll; Commercial and In·
dustrial.

NEW USTING - Middleport

FALL CARPET SALE

r---------------_,-

~~~~~~-- the offering is,

3 Announcements

11-1-tf,

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

· 11-7-2 mo. od.

- II\ st~ home on a llJIXI
street Plus a nice garage on a

RUTLAND FURNITURE

~..--~~ Located in H&amp;R "b~l;.
..,.o Block Building ~

BONDED.

v,

' Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

1is :--:;:':'

~:-::~ keep in mind that the

1112/IM

or 992-2282

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

,.

.

1-13-tfc

:~~ as the

Route 4, Pomeroy "'

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE
279 Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh. .

l

10/20/ t.f.n..

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992 -7583

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

!""' "'
/ .. ,
Mt.A ito auctio n every Set.
,l ·A· ~-~~~~~~~{..,.,.~-~
'
"
!
night, 6 p . m . Starting
: tvoi na Christ mas seso n. No more

742-2328

15 Years Experience

8

A Uct ion every Fri. nig ht at
the Hertford Comm u nity
Center . Truckloads of n ew
merchandise every we ek .
Consigments of new 11nd
used merch111ndise alway s
welcome. Richerd Reynold s
Auctioneer. 2 7 5· 3069 .

(-(._

AL TROMM

New Homes- Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cust~m Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

742 -2352

II:I

PARCEl PRIOIIrY SftiPIENTS
FOR lESS THAN U. S. IAfl
SAVE 10% ro 50% AND lOR£

Middleport, Ohio

Real Estate General

Authorized dealer for Gol·
den Eagle Archery. Stop in
and see the Firebird Cam
Bow. Federal! oz. and 1
oz. slugs. Also Winchester
and Remington slugs.

friends for the prayers,
flowers &amp; food given us
at the time of the death
of lena V. Pooler.
Special thanks to Rev.
Herbert Grate for his
consoling words, Rev.
and Mrs. Robert Sanders
and Debbie for songs,
and Ewing Funeral
Home. .Your kindness
and thoughtfulness will
never be forgotten. God
Bless You All.
. T~e Pooler Family

"".;.DOOR TO DOOR f '
"'o-s:. DELIVEIU' .,...l' , If1:

GRAVEL
HAULED

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Washers, D_ryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners .
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
.
,. U.P.S. - PUROLATOR ~~~;

PAT HILL FORD

Arbaugh's Archery
&amp; Huntin•! Supplies

CARD OF THANKS
We want to thank our relatives, neighbors &amp;

DEPOSITORY

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

'I

USED
APPLIANCES

PARCEL SERVICE

PUBUC NOTICE

DEER HUNTS

In Memoriam

I

SAVE

Pomeroy, Oh ..

I ·3·tfc

'

NOW IN

'Jtj.E

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

Robert E Buck
Pro bate Judge/
Clerk

Not1ce rs hereby gM~ n that o n
Sa turd aY. Dece mber 3r d,
24 130. 31 515 SA 124 Langs- 1983 at 10:00 a.m. a publiC
sale w rit be held at 105 Umon
vil le. Oh•o
You are hereby notrfre d ,that : Avenue. PomP.rOy. Ohio
the.,Jtnven tory and App rarse· 45769. to sell for cash thP.
mtfrn of thP. estate of the fqtlow1ng collateral
4 Wheel Orrve M1tsubrsh1
aforementioned. deceased. late
of sard County. were fried 1n th1s Tractor and Loader. Serrat No
Cour't $a1d Inventory an d B L451~05-0 1 5289
Ap.pra1sement 'NIII be for hear~
The Farmers Bank and Sav·
1ng bP.fore thrs Court on the' rngs Company. Pomeroy. 0~10 .
12th day of DecP.mber. 198:1'. rP.serves thf' r1ght fa brd at thiS
at 10 DO o'clock AM
sale. and to w1thdraw thf! above
An.y person desmng to f1IP. vehrciP. pno1 to ~ a le Furt her.
exceptrons thereto must file The Farmers Bank and Savrngs
them at least frve days pr101 to Company reserves the nght to
the date se t for hearrng
rP.1ect any or al l ~s ubm 1tted
G1vf!n under my hand and
Further, vehtc!es are sold rn
deal of sa1d Court. th 1s 2 2nd thP. condrtron th·ey are rn w1th no
d fll,' of November 19 8 3
flxoressed or rmplrP.d warran ·
RobP.rt P Buck t1es grvP.n ,,
Judge

Sunday through Tuesday:

Local units answered only two
calls over the holiday, the Meigs
County .Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 5:13 p.m. Thursday the
Middleport Unit went to 371 N.
Fourth Ave. , for Debbie Davidson
-who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 10:13 a.m.
Wednesday the Middleport Unit
went to 3!ll Grant St., for Audrey
Longstreth who was treated but not
transported.

The OhKan Coin ClubwWconduct
a regular business meeting Monday
evening in the Rlverboatroomolthe
Diamond Savings ancl Loan Co.,
Pomeroy. A social hour and dealers
trading session wUl precede the 8
p.m. meeting. Large coin auction
wUl follow the meeting and refreshments wW be served.

survMng spou•. tt. next of

kin, the benaltciarieo ..,de; tho

3 Announcements

t i

Wednesday Admissions--Ramon
McQueen, Reedsville; David Park,
Pomeroy.

Coin club,to meet

- NOTICE OF SALEThe real esta te of Ja c~ K
Sprres. Deceased, sri\Jated rn
Salem Townshrp , M ergs
County. Ohro. con ta1nrng 29
acres of ground. more or IPSS
exceptrng the ltmestone and
thP. No 4 4A. Clar1on or
Lrmestone Coal wnh apourte·
nant _mrnrng and removal nghts
vvhrch were heretofore con ·
vP.yed. whrch IS descnbed rn
Vol 225. Page 451 of the
Me1gs ,Coumv Deed Records.
wrll he Dffered lor sale at thf law
offtces at Crow. Crow &amp; Porter.
cornN of SPcond Street and
MtilbP.rry AvenuR. Pome10y.
Ohro. at 10 00 AM on the 2nd
day of OecPrnber , 1983 The
property was appra1sP.d at
S27 .500 00 and cannot be
sold for less than the apprarsed
va lue. it rs to bfl sold sub)f!Ct to
the lren fo rmal f.Jta te taxes for
198 3. and the tfHms of thP. sale

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

Discover Engage-A-Car, the
modem : ans- .to SOiitlng
118 car prices! Drive the vehicle of your choice ... any
make and model. No down
payment. Lower monthly
payments. Read all about it:
Send for Free Booklet L-16.
Bob Blackston, an authorized independent EngageA-Car Broker. Box 326. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Want Faster lntormation ?
Call 614-992-6737

'--- - - - 1 0-31 -1 mo.-c

tOGGS

3. Albany. OhiO

1111 25 1t 21 2.

317 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
Cross Stitch and
Candlewick Supplies
Giving Lessons
Ta ~e Cra fts on Consign·
rilents. also have cratt
gifts.
HOUR S: 9-3 Mon. thru Sat.
9-6 friday

l0/12/ 2 mo. pd .

111251 1212. 2tc

Sl2

Emergency runs

Thursday Admission--Althea
Aelker, Middleport.
Thursday Discharges--Amber
Warner, Ramon McQueen, Oscar
Imboden, Lloyd Jenkins, Shannon
Petrie, Brenda Haley.

the following •• ore reoidenu
of the Stlrte of Ohio, viz: - the

__

10/
19/2 mo pd
:..:....;.:;.;:.;;;,;;,..:;.;.._

l t l123. 25. 2773oc

Regular $15.95
Yard
Npw
Installed

Veterans Memorial

Wednesday Discharges:·Loulse
Eshelman , Clarence Boyer, Ber·
nice Buck, J ames· Meadows, Patrick Snider.

To the Executor or Adminiltrator of the estate. to lOCh of

COUNTRY CRAFT.
COTIAGE

Salem Twp. Rd. 180
Dexter, Oh .. 45726
Bill Eskew
PH. 742-245~
Ladders for . .
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip la.nks
" You r Place or Mine "

PH. 992·3466

.__

On NovP.mbP.r 8, 1983. rn fh A
Mrrgs Countv Probate Court.
CasP. No 24 293. Lars G. Ba•ley.
Box 2 1 1. A. D. 3. Albany. Oh•o
45710 was appo•m ed Ad mr·
n1str-atrrx ot the estate of Dana
H Barley. deceased. la te Of Box

21 1. R.D
45710

Tri-County
General Welding .

Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
Hi ll. East of Papville
On Township Rd . 141
We Specialize ·
in Aluminum Only

I

Pleas, Probate Divilion

Public Notice

54 Misc. Merchandise

Happenings around Meigs County•.
State school
funds arrive

Thf above descrrptlon was
furn rshed by Ho mer E Hysell.
Reg 1$tered Su rv~ vor. CP.rt rfr·

25 . 21c

NOTICE ON FlUNG
INVENTORY AND
APPRAtSt;:MENT
Tho State of Ohio. Moigo
County. Coort of Common

SubJeCt to real estarr. taxes.
penattres and assessments not
vet due and payable

SrtuatP.d rn the State of Ohro. .
Count.,. of Mergs and Townshrp
of Olrve

tB.

Public Notice

111117. 24( t 211 . 8. 41C

Bflrng 1n 30 Acre Lm No . 12.2 .
descrrbed . as t·olloyvs 8egr n·
nrng rn the center of the Fo rked
Run- Road No. T-?72. 1 7
charns east of the northwest
corner at a 3'0 Acre Lot No.
122 also bP.rng the northwest
corner of d 2 4 3 acre lo t of
Harold Massar. th ence P. ast
179.84 feet along the cen1er of
sa•d road , thence south 3 7
de'grees 20' east'208 14 feet
{passmg 6 feet alonp to the left
of a concrete water welt curbl.
thence south 50 degrees 34
west 203 feet to the wes t lrne of
2 43 acre lot of Harold Massar
thMce north 26 d~gref's 45'
west 329 feet along sard lrne to
the plaCf! of begrnnrng, con-tarn·
rng 1 17 acms. more or less

SCIPIO RECYCLING

Public Notice

Curt1~ Hollow Rd

LAFF·A·DAY

r---=---------,1

PHONE
992-2156
Or Writt O.iltrS.. tlntl Cl111ilied Dnt .

an Order for Sale 1ssued on the

26th dav of August. 1983. by
thP. Unlled States D1stnct Court
for thf! Sou thern D1St r1Ct of
Oh10_ EastFrn DIVISIOn. at Columbus Oh1o. rn·· C1vtl No

The Daily

Middleport, Ohio

Business .Services·

Ill Court ~t .. PorMror. Ot.io 4S7&amp;9

Public Notice

Pomeroy

Fr·ank's
Pawn Shoo
430 Second, tlalltpolis
4411-08&amp;0

Hf.26·1 mo.

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

~"AUTO

··--··Pcimiirov ........ ·
Middleport
&amp;

POINT·MASON AUTO GLASS

l

18

SHOP

&amp;

...,

31

Hom es for Sa,le

4 bd r. ran ch home , large LA ,
fu ll basemen t , wit h garage,
w ood b urner incl ud ed, city
schoo ls, 2 mi tes from tow n.

Call 446 -02 7 6 .

- - - -- -

Complet ely re m odel ed: 3
bdr .. 6 ro oms . Bath. Eat-in
k i t che n . D ini ngroom .
Carpet. Larg e lot. 3 porches .
La rge basem ent. carport .
Must sell . Immediate pos·
session . Onl y S16.900. last
house away from RiVer on
Henderson St .. Henderson,
WV . Phone number in yard.

Owner M ust Sell Home !
Unbel ie vable price! Low ut il·
i1ies! buy it no w I M iddlepo'rt ,
CD II 992 - 694 1.
'
HOl.Se for sal e b y o.w ner. In
Pom eroy . M ust see to appreciate. 6 . rrom s and bath;
large atttc and basement,
large entranceway, pantry,
open ltairway , f i nished
floonr. old f ashioned wood work , f ireplaces. lll.rge
porc h, new roof and partially·
insu lated.. Will aa crafice .
Make an offer. Call 982~

5354 or 992-7 8 87 .

-·---:----

Locatl!d m Syracuse· Near
school .&amp; swimmin g pool. 3
bed roo m sit uated on one.
third acre lot. $ 2 4 ,600, or
will rent for 8276 mo.
304· 866 - 3~34 .

,,

�1~The Daily Sentinel
Homes for Sale

Friday, Noll.mber 25, 19113

Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

51 Household Goods

64

!\Iliac. Merchandise

KIT 'N' CARLYLE.o· .
I

I

3 Pedroom ranch style
home, carpe;ted, fuU stze
b11emant, 1 ur garage, in
ground pool 18Jt32 .
$46.000. 814-992· 6B6B .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, otto·
men , 3 tables, (extra heavy
by Frontier), $685 . Sofa.
chair and loveseat, S275 .

3 to 5 bedroom house .
Aluminum siding. storm
· windows. gas furnace ,
warm morning woodbumer,
range, refrigerator, kitchen
aide diahw.. her. Call 992·
72B5 .

Sof11 and chairs priced from

t2B5. to fB95 . Toblu. t45
and up to $126. Hlde· l beds. S440 . and

up to

1526., i .eclinars. $176 . to
S375 .. le nps from $28 . to
$75 .5

'&gt;..-

dinettes from

$99 .. '.J .... 6 . 7 pc. 1189
and up Wood table with aix
chairs &amp;425 to S746 . Desk

Older 5 roam home in
Middlepon. Cleap, level lot
in good condition, good hot
water tank, bath &amp; new
ahnwer. 3 rooms with. new
carpet. panelled. lot size
55 Y.z x132 . Price $9,000.
Cell 992· 7244.

S11 0 up to S226 . Hutches.
$660. and up, maple or pine
finish. Bunk bed complete

mattresses, S250. and
Baby bods.
up to $396
$1 1 0 . Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin. $68.,
firm . 868 . and $78 . Quean
sets . $195. 4 dr. c;:hests.
$42 . 5 dr. chests, 854. Bed

MOBILE HOME FOR SALE·
1978 Two bedroom .1 2x60
all electric mobilu homu. on
approx . one acre of ground,
ready to move in. $2,000.
down. monthlY pavmentson
home and ground. only
$254 .73 per month. 304676 -2711 .
.

frames. $20.and 526 .. 10

gun ~ Gun cabinets, 8350.
G.. or electric ranges 8376.
Baby mattresses, $26 &amp;

by Lany Wright

8t

Auto Parts
Accessories

Po.tNI:f

8 ft . aluminum truck topper.
9811· 43011 .

..

L"''

.•.

Bllly
Tire and Battery
Salea, 1103 Jeffer10n Blvd;,
Point Ploooont. 304-1171·
5405. New-Uoed tireo.

Stero console 'stand
63K29K111. 2 0001111Zo14,
2 crocheted afhane. Call
814-245-5829 oltor 4:00.

..,.

'70 Chevy. 398 engine and
tranlmiasion. 1260. Phone
304·6711·2738.

Froozor boot 750· 800 lb.
Coli 4411-0212 .

•

New 18 hone power Briggs
and Stratton log splitter,
t150. Call 992-3233 or
992-6548.

79 Motors HQmes

'·
''
~----- -·
8t

Small buck stove. Caii614446· 251B oltor 4 PM.

Cempers ·.

CAPTAIN EASY

8 ft. slide in camper with
jocks, $800 . Coll446·2075
aves.

Antiques; oak furniture r~­
production. misc. items. U11
our Christmas layeway plan.
Conkela. Tuppers Plains.

NO PRO&amp;L.SM ... LOOK AT THE:
SEI5M06RAPH. ANY ~ERIOUS.
\IOLCAtJIC ACTIVITY IS $TIL-L

1 MeAN, HERE Wfi: .AfotE,
ATHOU!'ANP MILE5 F~OM
&gt;IOWHERE-, AND I'M 1HINK1N&lt;l&lt;
ABOUi A NIC.E HOU!7E 11..1

- UH· 62..,~ HOUR5 AWAV.

AMERICA, A FAMILy'
AND A DOIS.

81

. . ·-=..,=··~·~'"~'~"'~"':::~
~-===========;::c:-::":.::·::

Home
Improvements

..

..

=

The Daily Sentinel-Par= 11

Ohio

..

$35 , bod frames S20. $25,
STUCCO PLASTERING
··
&amp; $30, king frame t50 .
'Remington 700 A.D.l. Pt.
teJttured ceilings commer· ~~
Good selection of bedroom 243 caliber rifle with lymeo
cial •nd residential, frH
estimate•. Call 614-266· '*
i tea. cedar
cheat a , 1 0 power scope, 6 shot bolt
32 Mobile Homes
I~~=~====~==r~~=~====-:::::j au
rockers.
metal cabinets,
1182 ·
aJ:tion. ••c. cond. e300. 66
Pets for Sale
71
Autos for Sale
: ·
for Sale
41 Houses for Rent 44 Apartment
swivel rockers.
742·2480
.
11
Coli
1
for Rent
Used Furniture- - bookcase.
Mercum Roofing &amp; ' Spoutra.-.ges, chairs, dryers, re lng. 30 years e,periel'ice.
TRI - STATE MO•BILE Z bedr . house, big yerd,
For sale grave blanket•. Call
frigerators
Bnd
TV's.
3
miles
specializing in built up roof.
HOMES . USED · CARS . carport, quiet &amp;treat, $160 1 bdr. apt., no pets. Cal~ · out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am 949·3037.
Fith Tank~ 2413 JeckaOn 1975 Chevrolet 1m polo Coli 614-3B8· 9B57. ·
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS . mo . refer. req . Call 742 - 446-3617 .- · ·- - to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL 2460 .
26 in . 10 speed bike. great Ave., Point Pleaunt, 304· 69,000 miles. good cond.o
to 5pm, Sat.
2
bdr
.
panlally
furnished
446 ·7572 .
condition.
$76, great Christ· 876·2063. Bolly Cockotlelo 8896. 1973 Ford pickup Appliance Ser:vice All makes
Available sOon. 6 room apt .. gas heat, hot water 446-0322
mas gift. 992-2606 after U9.911; 10 gel. oquarlum runs good, e39&amp; . Cell 814- &amp; models refrigerators,
f8.88; 55 gol. tonk ond 367·0184.
washers, dryers, ranges.
NEW AND USED MOBILE house. basement on Rt. 7 . 2 paid. park front view. $176 TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third 8PM .
ftuoroocant hood f148.00:
compactors. diahwaehers.
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· bed . mobine home utilities mo. Coli 446-3919 .
Ave .. Gallipolis, 446-1699.
Guinea Pigs 15.50. Mon. 1969 Chevrolet 6 cyl., good microwaves . Heating 8a .,
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES. paid, new carpet. 1 kid
Spin washers. gas &amp; electric Dryer firewood delivered. thru Sot. 11 ·6 Sun 1-5 .
engine • trans., $100. Cell Cooling. Sheet Metal Work. ~
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS, excepted, no pets drunks or JACKSON ESTATE dryers, auto washers. gas &amp; Call 304-575 -7771.
446·0862 .
Gelli• Refrigeration Co. Call .. ,.
AT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274 . dope . 3 'h mi. South Middle- APARTMENTS (Equal electric ranges. refrigera814-448·4086.
..•
port Rt . 7, John Shuts Housing Opportunity) has
New
wood
burning
stove
1979 Thunderbird Town
Musical
two bedroom, rent starting tors. TV sets.
2 b'dr. 12x50. $3,500. 3 614 -367-0811 .
with firebrick 1326. each. 57
Lindau. 302 v.s, burgandy. RON'S Television Service. \
at $193 per month with
bdr ., 1 2x70 , total electric , 2
Instruments
304·675-167B or 675·
AC. full power. radio, sharp. Specializing In Zenith end
baths S7.500 . Call 614- 3 bdr. 2 baths. heat pump. 2 $200 depoait located near 1-::-:--::-::-:---::-:-- -:-- ..,-:-7896 .
$5,395 . Coli 614-448· Motorola. Quazar, and • ·
car garage. nice location . Foodlond and Spring Valley 54 Misc . Merchandise
446 ·0175 .
houoe calls. Call 578"2398.;"
Call 304-675·5545 or 675· Plaza. Coli 446-2745 or
NeVI( insulated coveralls, Upright plano 1200. Call 0677.
leave message.
or 446·2464.
"'"
Trailer on 2 acre lot$ 19,000 2371 .
t27 .50; Heavy Clenim 675-3615 between 5 &amp;
1974 Gremlin, good contt ..
and trailer on 1 acre lot
jackets, $21; Army field 7PM .
Or
Knauff
Firewood
Pickup
U50. Call 4411·7407.
2 bdr .. unfurn.i shed apts ..
F 81 K Tree Trimming. ttump
• $11 ,000 on Kerr-Bethel Rd .
lockall. f48: Camouflaged
central a!r. dish·washeu . Delivered . 1 2'' -22'' stocked army clothing. orange clo- Wanted old pianos. Paying
42 Mobile Homes
removal. ,.Call675·1331.
Call 614-388 -9360 .
slowe &amp; refrig.. fully car· ji1 yard .. HEAP vender, thing. inaulatad heavy bOQtl $20.00' and 840.00 eoch. 1979 Pontiac lireblrd V·8,
for Rent
peted. Carports &amp; large prompt delivery. 614· 256- $18. Sam Somarville, East Firat floor only. Wrute giving AT, PS. PB. AC. 82.000 mi. RINGLE'S SERVICE upo· .... .
Nice 2 bdr . trailer .. tlialt
yard.
$276 plus utilities. 6245.
rienced roofing, including .·:~·
614-256-6251 . after 5 :":io . Nice 2 bdr. trailer, Hannan
Ravenswood . Open 1:00- dir8ctions. Witten Pianos. Coll446-1 195 alter &amp;PM.
Deposit 8a ref. required. Call
hot tar application, carpen- ·'
7
:00PM . Saturday4 ,Sunday. Bo• 1B8. Sordlo, Ohio.
Trace
School
area,
At . 218 . 448,38B8 or 446·4477. No Limestone. Sand, Gravel.
1973 Chevrolet Impala. Call tar, electrician. meson. Call
1982 14x70 Governor mo· $100 dep., $174 mo . Call
Delivered in Mason. Meigs, other days after 6PM. 304- 43948. Phone 814·483· 614-448-4313.
pets,
304·675-20B8 or 675·
bile home, porch, sliding 256 -6251 alter 5:30.
675·3334.
·
1605.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
glass door. completely un4560.
Son
.
Caii446
-77B5.
&amp;
1980 Pontile Sun bird 4 sp ..
derpinned. Call 614-367· 12x60 2 bdr. modern fur- 1 bed room Apt. 1196. mo .
Black and white TV, cabinet
woo f3696 now $31 9 6 W•ter Wells. Commercial
including utilities. Equal
,7419 .
Fruit
nished trailer. convenient housing opportunity. Con- Fireplace insert-still in fac- style with new picture tube. 58
1 979 Storflro Oldomobilo and Domestic. Test holes. ~
Aquarium
complete.
WalhtoC'IItion.• Mppep..- AWIK- Rd.
tory carton-automatic
&amp;
Vegetables
auto..
was • 319&amp; now Pumps Sale• and Service.
1974 Holley Park mobile depoait req . Call 614-446· tact Village Manor Apts. controla·2
blowers -glass stand reproduction. Small
f2996. 1979 V W Aobbit 304-895-3802.
614· 992 -7787 .
home. 3 bdr . with underpin- B55B .
organ
.
Volkswagen
end
.
door-ash pan-fits 30 in . to Volkswagen body. Phone
•uto.. wae e3196 now
ning. very nice. shown by
"
48 in . fireplace-burns wood
Applea·Mel RoM, Red Deli· 12996. 1978 Ford Futuro 4 SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One "
appointment only . Call446· 2 bdr. trailers . Apartments 1 Efficleny apt .. Call 992- or
304·675·6999.
coal
.
$590.
Call
614·
cious. Golden Delicious. sp., •2296. 1979 Ford piece cuatom fit your home.
5434 or 304·882-2566.
1764 or 446· 314B .
bdr. Beautiful river view in
256 -1218.
Rome•. Grimes. 16.00 per Carrier Pickup wa1 •2996 Guaranteed. Advanced Gut· , •
bed,
mattre11.
rail
a.
Hospital
Kanauga . Fosters Trailer Furnished apt . 6 rooms and
bu. Pototooo $5.00 50 lb. 'n ow $2796 . John'a Auto ter, (Day 614·692-4066,) ....
1972 Castle with 82 Vemco Park . 446 -1602.
New 1983 Nechi Free Arm manual controls. Manuel
.•
bath. no pets, dep. required. Sewing Machine. zig-zagl. Burroughs adding mechi.ne. bag. Lettuce and Celery 2 Saloo. Bulavillo Rd. Gollipo- (night614·698·B206.)
roometts, air cond .. firefor 81.00. Pric11 good thru llo. Call 81 .... 446·4782.
992·2937
.
place. Call446 · 1~17 .
Nicly furnished modern momonograms. sews on but · 13
_ 0_4_-6_7_5_·_4_8_7_1_,- - - - Sat. Nov. 26. Burao11's
GET your carpet SHIP ' ,
bile home. in city. 1 or 2
1972 trailer, 2 bdr ., unfur- adults only. Call446-0338 . Apartments . 304-676· :::~.makes button holes, Odyssey 2 with two car- Morl&lt;ot 12 mlloo North of 19711 Plymouth Vololro 31 B 1 SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
Pomeroy on At. 3.
auto .. PS, PB. rUna ----' ' STEA MEA. Water remowa,1 " !'
554B.
'
nished, good cond . Call
New 1993 Nechi Free Arm· tridgea. 160.00. 304-675•
looks good. •eso.
furniture cleaning, free estl- .
614 -446 · 7171 or 446 - 2 BR all elect., 2Y2 miles At.
APARTMENTS, mobile Sewing Machine. ~ig-~ags, _5_0_1_1_.- - - - - - - 814-247-4292
motes. 614-446·2107.
• '
8288 after 5 .
688. new carpet, ready now, homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant monogra.m s, sews on but- 1
59 For Sale or Trade 2029.
$175 mo . Security deposit and Gallipolis . 614·446· tons, makaa butt'on holes. 1-::--- - - - - - - 4 mobile homes . 10' and 12'
Houses moved or rlised.
and ref. Call Mr. Oot,son
makos design otitchoa, olso 55 Building Supplies
1981 Mustang hatchback. basements dug beneth
ft. wtde . 2 bedroom· (614) 446·4607 doy. (614) 8221 .
heming and overcast, must
furnished . Low priced . 446· 2602 eve.
~ 982 Buddy 2 bd.room 37,000 mi., good cond.,
houses. free estimates. "
TWIN RIVERS TOWER . sell by December. Retails
Brown ' s Trailer F'ark . 61414x60, furnished. waaher 84,200. 992·3233, alter 5 House Movers, Inc. 304· -'
&amp;349.95,
now
$130.
CarApartment• now available to
and dryer, gil, finencing coli 742·2478.
992 -3324 .
578·2711.
Building materials
2 bdr. mobile home. Call elderly &amp;: disabled with an ries a 25 yr. factory warovoiloblo. 814·992-7479.
ranty,
614-385·4536.
block,
brick.
aewer
pipes.
446 -050B .
79
Muotong
Ghlo
loaded,
income of less than
1976 14x70 trailer, ~ 3 bedwindows, lintels, ate .
:;;:::=::;~===
exc. cond.. 14,000. Call 82
room . 2 baths, large kitchen, 2 bdr . trailer on farm , $12,300. Renting for 30 Ditch Witch 2200 trenching Claude Winters. Rio Grande,
Plumbing
992·3233 or alter 5 call
percent of adjusted income·
$1 0 .000 . 304-773-5023 .
8&amp;
Heating
.. -~l
furnished or unfurnished. .Phone 304· 675-6679 .
992-6648 .
machine.
1·614·694-7842.
\=0:
.
:C:a:ll:6:1:4:·2:4:5:·:5:1:2:1:.
··---~"""'
Heat furnished. S250 mo ..
-..a"-•''"""
1981 14x70. Shultoz nmited
367
Firewood· cut up, slabs, $15 56
Pets for Sale
1980 Pontiac Sunbird,
Ouple~t 6 rooms, bath, basemobile home. mfcr.o wave, 5100 dep. Call 614 ·
0377 .
pickup load . Call 614-246·
CARTER'S PLUMBING
phone 304· 773·9143.
dishwasher. central air. un - l - - - -' -- - - - - - ment, water fumi1hed , lock 5B04 .
1-------AND HEATING
derpenning . thre.e · bed · Trailer fDf tent . Call 446- 26 Road. Point Pleasant.
Cor. Fourth and Pine
1978 Mercury Couger, good
1 -614-446·0239.
rooms, 1% baths. excellent 1052.
Firewood for sale $36 a HILLCREST KENNELS J o h n Deere p r t a b Ia condition, loaded with ex- Phone 446·3BBB or 448co ndition , $15 .500 . Call
0
304· pickup load delivered, 10 Barding all breeds. Selling
304-675-6049 after 5 p.m . Nice 2 bdr. ,
hammer mill with Power traa, •3.600. call after 6PM, 4477
lo1d1 for $300. Call 614· Happy Jack Dog Food.
furnished, sac.
Doberman puppies: Stud toke off. uoo. Coli 446- 1 30_4-_6_75_·_4_5_5_0_._ _ __
256·1427.
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
8038.
,.
Mobile Home Mpving, li· inside pets . Call
Service. Call 446-7795.
'73 Chevy Caprice, 85.000 lNG. Fomerly Dewitt'•
bedroom apt. in Mason.
ce..nsad· and Insured. Free 5 1
adults only, no pets, 304- lime stone delivered for 1- -- - -- - -'-- -CONSIGNMENT AUCTION miloo, good work cor, f475. Plumbing. Call 614·367·
Estimates $100. per hook· 1_ _B_ _B_.- - - - - - ' i ' -$1 0 . a ton . Call 61 4-256· Judy Taylor Grooming. Call Nov. 26, 19B3, Sot. firm. 304·675·1B28.
0576.
875·145~ after 5pm .
up minimum . Phoria 304- 14x70 1otal electric
1427.
614·367-7220.
.
576-2711 o• 576-2866 .
10:00AM.
Large
term
m•·
furnished , trailer on ~riva110
lot. 10 min. from town .
Briarpatch Kennels Profes- chinery ule. trucks • stock 1972 Che'ofrolet Rally Nova, 83
Excavating
USED MOBILE HOME . $200 mo . plus dep . &amp; ref. •45 Furnished Rooms House Coat pickup or deli· sional
All-breed grooming. trollero.llyou hove anything rod. t1 ,000. 304·876·
vered . Call before 3:00PM
to
1111
on
conolgnmont
woo1972
or
304·6711·2193.
F'hone 304 -576-2711 .
Call 614-256·1393 .
446-9200, alter 4 call446 · Indoor-outdoor boarding fa· kend efter Thankagivlng c a u l - - - - - - - - - - For rent Sleeping Rooms 7850.
cilitlea. English Cocker SpaDOZER WORK By Tad
1979 Sterling m obile home, 2 bedroom trailer. Real nice. and light house keeping
niol puppleo. Call 614-388· Valley Implement Selea. Call 1966 OeSota. exc. condi- Hanna,
ponds. ditches,
448-7598 or 1·304-576- tion. $100.00 or boot offer.
rooms. Park Central Hotel. Jewelry-new and preowned 9790.
14' Jt70 ', central air. under- Brown'• Trailer Park. 614·
2438orauctionearl.E. Neal Excellent Christmas pres· basements. etc. Call 446penned, eJtc . condition, on 99 2-3324 .
Call 446-0756 .
jewelry. 10K-14K-18K yel4907. Carter S. Evan1
rented lot .
1- - - -- - - - - - low &amp; white gold . Wedding Dragonwyn(i Cattery- 614-367-7101, Golllpolio, en!. Phone 304·895·36B6. Tr•nsponll]tion.
Ohio
ecross
from
Honda
2 bedroom mobile home.
sets starting at $49 .95 . 14K Kennels. AKC Chow pup·
46 Space for Rent
furnished . No pets.
gold diamond per)dant 8t pies, CFA Himalayan. Per· Shop on At. 7.
72 Trucks for Sale
33 Farms for Sale Utilities
Cit 216 hoe. dozers. crane,
Deposit end references reearring sets S56 . Large sian and Siamese kittens.
loaders. dump truck. Call
Farmal
Super
C
with
equipquired. Adults or couple
section of sterling silver Call 446-3844 8fter 6.
1972 White tractor, single 6111-446-1142 between
mont. C~ll 814·258· 1 433.
68 acres on Bulaville-Porter with one child. Located 2
Furnished office for rent.
ula with sleeper. 60,000 7:00AM &amp; 5:00PM.
Co . Rd . 3 . Old farm hoUSJ miles out Rt .43 . Call after 5
Close to city building and charms
trade ins.
FranksWePawn
$100 ea:
$6 each.
take
John Deere grain hammer mi. major. Good tires, new
for sale by owner. asking p.m. 614-992-3647 .
court house. Call 446~0856 Shop. 430 Second Ave ..
mill. V:t ton feed mixer with clutch. new pre11ure plate, Good-1 Excavating, baae$55.000. lnterq_sted party 1----------- days, $126 . mo .
Gallipolis. oh 445-0B40.
please cilll 446 ~ 724 7 or Two bedroom furnished
CFA REg. Siemese kittens. motor. 30 HP Allis Ctlalmers new pilot bearing. Can· be mentt, footers, driveways,
513 -293·7270 .
Large on on Bulawille- Oak tables &amp; chairs. corner 6 to choose from complete 3 phaH electric motor all - n at Kon . Stobloo, Golll- "ptic tanka, landscaping,
trailer for rent, Gallipolis
Addison Ad . Call 446·4265 cupboards . buffets &amp; etc . with pedigree. Cell 814- good condition. Call 614· polio. Int. At. 35 &amp; At.7. Coli • anytime 448-4637,
Ferry, below Hitching Post
16,600. Coli 875·3008 or Jamet L. Daviaon, Jr.
on state Fload 2. convient
or 446 -4736 .
Wood World, 2606 Grand 246.·5036 ~Iter 6PM for 992-7015 altar &amp;PM.
owner.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
61 4·387-0631.
location for school buS,
appointment.
Central Ave., Vienna. WV .
s 150. month. plus $100. Located on Bulaville Rd ..
1982 Dodge Rom 'Ia ton, 4 J.A.R . Con1tructlon Co .
deposit required . Includes
KyQer Creek School District. More than 1 Brush lit's fuller AKC Chow Chow puppies. 63
Livastock
1pd.
on the floor. Pay off. Water linea, Footers,
water
and
garbage
.
Phone
Call
614·256-1433.
35 acre• at Rodney on W.T.
brush. A repreaentatiwe is in Coli 814·256-1271.
Dreins. ~II kinds of Ditching.
Coli 992-6434.
Watson Rd . Owner financ· 304-576· 2132 alto• 5pm.
your area . Call 675 -5825
Autlond, Oh. 614-742· "
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo between 1 •nd 4. Mon . and Be ready for Chriatmls·AKC
ing available. Call446 -8221
4
top
club
c1lv11
for
ule,
2903.
'76
Jeep
excellent
condi·
Park. Route 33, North of Tues.
Furnished two bedroom moafter 6 weekdays.
Registered black llbradore
Butler hereford farm. Lower tion. '76 Luv truck, VB conbile homo. 304·675·6512 .
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
pups. Coli 992· 72B5.
Aivor Rd. CoH 1114·2611· venion. bl•zer whHII. roll
1 1 · 1 acre riverfront . lots,
992-7479 .
Dolomite ski boots size 5,
'1 113 or 1114-2111-8518.
Electrical
bar. euto. transmission. 84
low dow n payments. low
used 46PM
times.
8 mo. old.with
Can8rles
304·675·~388 . ..
monthly p11yments . 614- 44
&amp; Refrigeration
Apartment
after
. Call446-8648 lamb
pair complete
cige.1
Polled Hereford end Angue
378·6278 .
for Rent
John Lambert, New lima croat club calf and bulls.
----------~. •· •
- - - - -- - - - WOODBURNING STOVES, Rd. toward Horrioonville, Bochard. Coli 81 4·446·
73
Va!"l
8&amp;
!4
W.O.
One half acre with old 5
51 Household Goods troostonding, fireplace In- Mol go Co.
Pasquale Electric Co. all
sertl, ·mobile home ap- , __:__ _ _ _ _...:.__ _ 3228.
room house . good well,
phases
of electric work, ell
'
septic tank . In Southsi - Small furn . hovse 1 or 2
4 -WD blozor. 49,000 actual work . guaranteed. Aerial
proved, 8durnance ad-ona. AKC regiatered Weimera·
adults
only,
no
pets.
Call
de. wv. $9,700.00, 304·
milu, 12.49&amp;. Call 446· truck rentel. Call 614·446·
GOODUSED APPLIANCES Jividena Farm Equipment, mer pups. outstanding 64 Hay 8t Grain
448-0338 .
937-26B6 .
.
4872.
.
2716 . .
washers. dryers. refrigera· , _4_4_6_-1_8_7_5_._ _ _ _ _ _ bloodline. $100.·1126
tors.
ranges.
Skaggs
Ap1•
each,
on
remainder
of
litter.
Furnished apts .. 1-2 rm. &amp;
1972 FDrd super van. auto- SEWING Mechine repeirs,
bath down &amp;: 1 up . Also 1 -4 pliances. Upper Rhler Rd. Mobile home for sale. Large 304·489-1719.
Good hoy lor ulo. 12 per matic. Body good, motor service. Authorized Singer
beside
Stone
Crest
Motel.
round
balesoftlayS20each,
rm . &amp; bath up. Clean. no 448-7398.
will deli~er. Call446-1062 . Two AKC registered Beagle ulo. Call 949-2754 or 949- needs repair 1760. Call S8111 a. Service Sharpen
pets, adultl only. Ref. raq.
pupt. 4 months old. males, 2588.
448·2429.'
Sciuora . Fabric Shop.
Call 446·1519 .
Christmas
for
family
.
RCA
shots, 860. each. 304all
Pomeroy. 992-2284.
-··
2 smell refrigeretort, 2 gil
video disc player like new 875·3982.
ranges.
1
Maytag
wringer
2 bdr. apt., utilitin partially
' '···-·
".
automatic weahers with 17 movies, all kid
1 bdr., newly decorated, paid. 3 room epts. utiltiet washer.
74 Motorcycles
watchoblo.
$300
II
oold
by
Pitt
Bull
pupa,
7
Wilko
old.
86 General Hauling
&amp; dryer. All gueranteed .
paid.
Call304-875·5104
or
unfurnished, 142 4th Ave.,
Thurodoy 25th. Call 446- t50. Bob Roach. 304-882·
Gl~tawere
8t.
whit
notl
for
71
Autos
for
Sale
dep. req . $160 per mo. Call 304-675 "7388.
3262 alter 5:00.
Christmas. Hupp's Ap - 0636.
448-3667 after 5 .
1978 Suzuld 750 mDtorcy· JONES BOYSWATEASEA·
3 or 4 room untumi1hed apt. pliance&amp;: Glassware, Corner
VICE . Coli 614·367-7411
Two story house. 4 bdr .. utilities paid. adults only, no At. 7&amp; Rt.141, 446·B033. ~--------....J'----------ITOP CASH . paid tor lote c1o f7911 or boot offor. or
614' 367·0591.
Reeson
for
aalllng
nHd
pots.
Call
446-3437.
modal
u•d
oar11.
Smith
$250 par mo . S260 dop .
tuition
money.
C~ll 742·
Portable
Se•r•
dithwesher,
Bulck-PontiiiC,
1911
Eelt·
roq. · Cell 446-4222. 9 :30Need something hauled
ern Avo .. . Golllpollo, 4411- 24110.
Completely furnished. butcher block top, 304·675·
5 :00.
eway or something moved1
2282.
newly decor•ted, all electric, 11096 or 1175·11168. ·
We'll do lt. Call 448-3159
Equipped kitchen. newly centrally loceted. at •200
SWAIN
_1_9_8_0-cS-u-nbl-rd-._Po_ntlo_c_4 76
between 9 and 5.
Boats and
remodeled. c..entral air, $300 mo . plua deposit. Call 614·
446"2236
or
814·
4411·
Motors
for
Sale
AUCTION
&amp;
FU
RNITUAE
opd
..
AM-FM
tope,
Mlnrool,
per mo. Call 446·2158 .
Water heuling. Fast S·arvica,
25B1 .
62 Olivo St., Golllpollo. 8
reoloporty.-ol3,11911now
low rates. Cell 614-266piece wood living room suite
*3. 185. John's Auto Sales,
FurnietHid one bedroom cot1743.
Bullville Ad. 441·4712.
t•ge. • 150 per mo .. water Nice 2' bedroom apt., 843 with flinch ftot ormo f399.
Aluminum Bo10 boot, 40HP
Second
Ave..
Gallipolis.
bunk beds complete with
Mere. outboard, thrutter,
fumiahed. adults only. no
Ref. end deposit. Call 81~·
bunkloo f199. 2 piece on·
1171 Toyoto IA-5 coupe, dopth llnclor, trollor, roodyto JIMS WATER SERVICE.
peto .. Coli 446-2543.
268·1529.
tron llvlngroomoulteol199.
PI, Pl. olr. 11Dd .. l3.100. go, 12,300. C.ll441·9408 Ciill Jim Llnior, 304-1176·
7397.
ontron rocllnoro 199, otiMor
C.llll1.._317-11147 - ·
t278 plua utilities. A'oflil.
oltor 1:00.
now. 2 bdr., lR. new ~it. ,&amp;: 2 bdr. ept., 1 mi., North of recliners •eo, maple dinena
19711 - · N n e good, felr 10ft. John
both. Lorge fenced yard. Bridge . Coli 448· 9388 or oeto 1179, lovo 10111 170,
whh 3 HP
Upholstery
hido·o-bod I 250, box
aond.l300: 3 ""d 3/10 mi. Sooro - - ond eloottric 87
new corpet. IIIII or 568 3rd. 448· 41114.
aprlngt 1: mattr81a twin or
out 211 on left. C.ll 446- motor • new electric troller,
Avo.. Gollpollo. Clol 448·
Nice 2 bdr. opt. lor rant. 15 lull f 100 oat roguler·llrm
ell23.
othor oXIrao.. 1271. all
24117 or 4411-0332.
mln.lrom Golllpolloon At. 7.
TRISTATE
1120, moplo dlnotto cholro
742·2480.
.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1311. wooh otondo 134,
19711 l'rlumph TA-ll con·
3 bedroom houM for ,.nt, Coli 81:4·218-1198 ."
1 1 113 Soc. Avo., Golllpollo.
mople rockoro 111. 7 pleco
v.rtlblo, 49,1100 ootuol mi ..
Mlcldllport with kitciMon IP·
4411·7833 or 4411-1833.
U,700. C•ll · IU · 24&amp;· 78
Auto Perts
plionCif, Dopoolt roqulred. Equipped kttchan. newly chrome dlnene 101 1149. I
remodeled, central air, 1250 ploco dlnotto 111 189. uoed
52118 oftor II. ·
Coli 992-21011 oltor 6PM.
&amp; Accet10rle1
per mo . Coll448-2118.'
W. · do quolity rouphoii!Or·
bedroom suites. reflrgaratora,
rangH.
chait,
dretaers.
.,
,
,
.
Ford
Multllng
sunlng, make n.w cuetom made
2 bedroom unfurniahld
1 llg lurnlohod roo!1'· off. wringer waeher•. rv•e,
furniture. R •
rovf,
power 11...-ing,
hou" · - to
all Her· opt. whh both In Rio G...,llo.
I 11..
J\\ roupholotorlod
M Mlnulocturifta. Crown
1utometlo trenemiaelon. 2 PU
tlnger plfiiWaY In Mlddlo· All u t i - pold. 441·0117. d,.Y.,.. &amp; shoes. CeU 441·
II
..
t110.
C.l
441•7322.
City, 114-218·14'70.
-.
31111.
can 114·241·1211.
port. c.ll 11 ...... 2·14117.

:;:::::::=======

Middleport,

'

Good bumper pool table, 1
sears snaw plow. like new.
Call oltor 7PM 4411-3680.

One Autumn Haze mink
!1ole, 6 skin1 ot·wild ranch
mink. 2 size 7 ·brand new
wedding rings. Coli 992·
5070 .

76

p

E!l ,, COYOTE WAS JU5T

., IF
ABOUT TO TELL
THAT BFIANDON HING 15 lf()T
ONE OF IIFITI/FIE'5 1'108/..E~EH.

TELL IIi' ME GOME

llWFIJ£. THINGS
ABOUT

_..tliJT-AN(:iELA 15
TO HIM, AND
~ETWEEN

l'VE ALREADY 5UFIM15EI?

/'f0800Y'S

THAT,,

STILL ASI..SEP, EH? WELL, 'YOUR
COLOR IS MUCH BETTER THIS

... SOON "«lU WILL BE WELL ,

MV

MORNING!

At«:t~T

WARRIOR! UNTIL

THEN, PLEASANT DREAMS.'

k'l'lv.~r

WHoO,T I WANT,._
KNOW IS: WHAT'S

I; KNOVv' 1-!ER, SHE~

UP TO NO GOOD!

HERIP

SLEEVE I AN' QUICK.'

I'm b'"yinq

That's

new shoes

Which is bes'?
Born or

riqhtr You'll be
Rover Skinner!

for the

occasion.'

COLirtl

... At.J.D Slt.JO: SHE'S GOT OOC AN '
OSCAR EI1.TIN' RIGHT OUTA HER
HANP, I'D BETTER F IND OUT
WHAT SHE:'S GOt UP HE~

DRACULINA., 1!\N' IF

ALL RIGHT! BUT

SH~ OOIN'

I hope
thinQS qo
well at

DR, GETTERICH IS

SHE'S DRACULINA,

reborn'

....

--·

THIS GUEST ROO.II iSN'T

!lAP. I!IUT I CAN'T IYAIT
TO GET EIACK INTO OUR

ROOM.

1-----L------

Evening television
FRtoAv

I

~~~~~~~~~~~

I

..

...-. . . .... ... .... .

*·

o...

to_.

CIJ SWios Family Aoblnaon
(I)

11/25/83

~ ·~~~~~~~::~~

EVENING .
8:00

amcvmocvllle
(jJ Newa

(I) VIdeo Jukebox
(lJ MOVIE: 'Thonlc You All

Vary Much'
(I) New Treaeure Hunt
(I) iJnlo Houoo on tha

Pl'llrie

(])liD 3· 2·1. Contact
• ht'deltllr Galactlca
6:30 • (lJ (!) NBC Nowo
()) Consumer Reports
(I) Alflomon
(]) • ill ABC News
• (]) &lt;lD CBS Now&gt;
(JJ Buelneq Report
liD OVer Euy
7:00
PM Movozlno
(I) lnllclo The NFL
(() AllM Smtth lind Jonas
Cil EBI'N'o lnoldo Footboll
Cll Good Nowo
()) Entertainment Tonight
CD CNirtie'a Angela
(I) Wheel of For!Uno
(]) liD Moc:Noii(Lehrer

e (])

e

1-

N-

7:30 •

.

Ill Pooplo's Court
Jollorsons
(I) Tic Toe: Dough

CilS~

NBA
8aolcotbell:
AtlontootBooton
(I)
(I) Fomlly Feud
illl Mlohlpn FootboU
9
Entertainment
Tonight
e Ono Day 01 o Tlmo
7:45 (!J NBA Tonight
8:00 • (I) (!) Mr. Smith Mr.
Smith portrays Cyrano de
Bergerac and tries to entice
a young lody .
1D MOVIE: '6!111 of tho
Night'
(]) MOVIE: 'OIIvorl'
(I)

a

e

CIJ l!ll W-.gton Wook/
Poul Ouko II )Oined
by top Wolhlngton )Oumol·
loti 1110iyZ1119 tho - " ' •
nowo.
•

'·'

M.,.

(])
• Ill Matt Matt Investigates the mur-

der of an artl•t involved in
forgery. (80 min.) fCiosed
Captioned I
em Ill~- C..ot Angela d61covera that Chase
and Michi4K'a 'lnvHtfQition
Into Or. lantry's underhsndod
point• to her.

r·'

(80 min.

10:30

1 1:00

-York'

'I

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1

&amp;ill&gt;~~ ilD •

~:c~.1

(t)AnothorUiro

em
·w.J - ...,. Joay'o lathor hlroa o

8:30

11]) 5:;:h

Dzl1o and Harrill
NI'L a.mo of tho Wook
Buolnooo Today
Memcwlle of Hell

MOVI!: ·~. Fnlm

tho'-'".,..-.
~of pliO.

•

hosts Ne•l Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons take a look at
whafa happening at the
movies.
liD lntomotlonol Edition
Journalist Ford Rowen hosts
thit look at Important trends
and news events a1 they are
reported by foreign journalists .
9:45 CIJ TBS Evening Nowo
10:00 1D MOVIE: 'Honlcylonk

(]) e

phony exorcflt to convince
... !hot

•

Nowo

I]) Snook Provlowo Co·

Cil

NSA
llnlcotbell:
Phlledelphla at Houston
Ill lloowoo A young
boy in Benton's care helpa
straighten out negotia1ionl
in a highway wortera'
otriko. [Ciooed Captioned)
• (I) llll Dukos of Hozurd
Identical twins who atibl for
e1ch other In • Hriel of
jewel theftl make dciub•
trOllbte for Luke and Bo. (60
min.)

e GJ Web1ter Webster

triet to help Katharine wh.o
feels she is a failure as a volunteer art teacher.
(I) liD Wall Straet Week
Lquia Rukeyser analyzes the
'BOa with a weekly review
of economic and investment
matters.
9:00 8 1D (!) Hoovywolght
Chlmplonohlp BoKing Tonight's program features a
12-round WBC Heavvwetght title boul between
champion Lany Holmes and
Marvis Frazier, (2 hrs.)
Cl)700 Club
Cll • &lt;It Lono&lt;VI A playful
mutt i1 declared 11 tottery
winner and a parking lot at·
tendant becomes tl'le proper
suitor for a mei'nber of the
country club set. (60 min,)
II (I) ilD Dolloo Tho Oil Bar·
ons' Ball ends with fists and
food flying between J.R .,
Bobby, Cliff, Ray and Mark .
(60 min.)
(J) CJl) Dinner at Julla'1
'Saddle of Veal.' Julia's
1·, ,&lt; •
guests ere cllef Leslee Reis
and wine e11pert Louie Mar·
tlni. (Cioaad CtptionedJ
9:30 (I) Not Nocolllrily tho

1])8--

.-e.

listings---------------~-----,.----------­

11 :11

l

lll.:O:::~,Iy
Dr. Who

hnrtvHII-

T011 1lonk 11ox1ng

11 :30 II

m·mToniGht show

Cll Doblo Ollila
Cll CotUna

Cil Scoreboard

CIJ Soap

8 (]) MOVIE:

'Murdor at
the World Sari•'
(I) MOVIE: 'Artlsta and
Models'
GJM•A•s•H
(fi) Meaterpjece Theatre
'The Citadel.' Andrew Man·
son arrives in the mining
town of Orineffy but his expectations are soon shattered . (60 niin.) (Closed
Captioned]
eil11 Nlghtllno
Twilight Zone
· 11 :45 (I) MOVIE: 'Tho Soc:ret
Policeman'• Othtr &amp;.II'
12:00 (I) Hltchhiker:Shattered
Vows A young fortune hunter falls in love with his
wife's ste~auq,hter .
(l) Burne &amp; Allen
(I) Night Tracks
(I) Nlghtllne
illl MOVIE: 'Phantom of
the Opera•
·• Thiclco of tho Night
12:30 • (I) (!) Fridrt Night
Vldooo
(I) All· Now UnOJqJUrvated
Benny Hill An atl·new collection of comedy sketches,
songs and sex~ dancers are
presented .
1D Je liJ Muolc M-lno
1 :00 1D I Married Joan
(]) Entortolnmont Tonight

e

lonny Show

eliJ Nowo

1:30 (I) MOVIE: 'Enigma'
(I) MOVIE: 'Dollh Wloh II'
(]) Lbvo ThO! Sob
IDBto&lt;Soorch
ill MOVIE: '/loylum'
eiiJ CNN Hoadllne Nowo
1 :411 (I) NFL Gomo of the W2:00
1D
NBC News

eOvernight

l])loaholorF(!) Nowo/Slgn 011

2:11 CillportoC- ,
11!1 CNN H-lno N.2:30 Ill Ulro of Alloy
(])·ESPN'o lnoldo F - 1
3:00 em Nowo
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho son..-.
NU1'10'
(]) 700 Club
(])Boot Kloko of'83 · PKA
Full
Korote
3:16 IJ)Inoldo Tho NFL
4:16 (I) Not N--.y the

c-

Nowo
(I)
MOVIE:

'8womp

Tiling•
4:30 ( ] ) - hgloy
Cil EIPN'o ' - W 4:411 (I) MOVIE: '81111 of the
Night'

SATURDAY
, 1/28/83
EVENING

(l) MOVIE: 'Super Fuzz'
(IJ The Monroea
(!) God Has the Answef
(I) Underae• World of

Jacquet Couateau
tiD DinneretJulia'a'Saddle '
of Veal.' Julia's guests are
chef Leslee Reis and wine
e,;pert Louia Manini. [Closed
Captioned]
• Star Trek
8:15 (I) Wo~d Championohlp
Wrettllng
8:30 D (IJ NBC Nowo
(IJ HBO Coming Anrac·
t1onl
(J) ~rtsCenter
(I) 18 llJ Nowa
(l) T.V. Honor. Society

® Sneak f'r8wlewa Co-

hosts Neal Gabler and
Jeffrey Lyons take a look at
what's happening at the
movies .
7:00
Cl) Dance fe'ofer
(]) Men'• Gymnaltlca: '83
Caeaar't Palace lnvltetlonal USA National Team
members Ban Conner, Jim
Hanung and Phil Canoy
compete.
(I) Alles Smith and Jones
(!J
NCAA Boakotball:
V•nderbilt at Duke
(I)
(I) Hoe Haw

e

a

(!) Star Search
(f) Best of Sullivan

®Salute!
(jj) · Thank
You,
Mr.
President 'The Press Conferences .of JFK .' E.G. Mar•
shall re-creates the experi·
ence of attending a 'live'
Kennedy press conference.
(60 min.l
Olil11 Solid Gold
a How the West Was
Won
7:30 D (]) lnaide Look
8 :00 IJ (1) ClJ Dlffrent Strokes
Arnold discovers that his favorite teacher lied to him
about working as a cocktail
waitress. (Closed Cap·
lionedl
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho Boat'
CD MOVl E: 'The Best
Years of Our Uwes'
Cl) MOVIE: 'Indiscreet'
{I) Pre-Game Show
[{) T. J. Hooker
g CIJ (iJ Here Come1
Garfield Garfield manages
to get Odie involved in a
ca-per that leads Odie right to
the city pound. (R)
Cll Unknown War
®All Creatures Great and
Small
Ill IJ}I NCAA· Baokotball:
Louiavilte at Kentucky

llfli)N}fii)\l ~THATSCRAM8lEDWOAOOAME
Q:!1 ~~~a. .by~r1Amoldancl8oblee

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tJ r
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Prlnranawer~tere:

Yesterday 's Answer
18 United
21 Earthly
22 Give it up

28 Jason 's
ship

30 Court
23 Lapel style
attendant
24 " I.e 33 Contrived
d'Arthur" 34 Woman 's
27 Fabric
nickname

of yore
23
24
25
26
29

Laborer
Bill of fare
Misjudges
Texas ~~ ty

Noachian

craft
30 Prior to

(prefix )

(persevere 1
l4 " Lulu"
composer
as Cause to
see red
36 Therefore
l7 Villa - .
Italy
38 Gynl's
mother

HISFY
TOTID

lay THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
OOWN
I Old card game l Woody vine
4 Ann and May, 2Stenopool
for example
·staff,
9 Donation
for exa mple
IO Conductor,
3 S.seball
- Ormandy
great
Jl Ray Danton
4 Succi nct
film role
5 Moslem
12 Swagger
potentate
JJ Blackbird
· 6 Nickname
14 Add
for 2 Down
15 - out
7 Laudations
(renege ]
8 Oozed
16 One kind
9 Mardi of cow
10 Lyric poem
18 Beloved (Fr. l 14 Sea
19 French river
bird
ZO Skidded
17 Demolishes
21 Paired
22 N. Y.&lt;C.mtery

31 Pronoun
32 - it

Unacrarrtlle the• tour Jumbfn,
one letter lo each square, lo rorm
lour ordif:!ary worda.

(J

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I&lt;IDS' CLOT~E-5 WILL
STA'i'CLEA~ MUCH
LO~~ER IF YOU

I&lt;EE,. THEM THIS.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Heo-e's how lo wo rk it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One lener simply stands for an other. In lh1s sample A is
used for the three l 's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin ~!c letters
apostrophes, the length and formation or the words are ali
hints, Earh day the code lett ers ar£! different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

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(AnlweriiOt I 1()0 I ow I

Yesterdey'•l Ju~a: PANDA BILGE REFUGE G!)SPEL
AnaWif: Tnt little witch had to stand In the corner
because 1h1 was thla - A BAD "SPELLER"

DPBPBMPD
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Yesterdlly's Cryplclquote: SOME PEOPLE ALWAYS SIGH IN
THANKINGGOD.-ELIZABETH BARRETI' BROWNING ·

'

�..
Page

I

12-The Daily Sentinel

Area deaths
Vaughn E . Srott, 80, died Wednes·
day In Riverside MethodiSt Hasp!·
tal, Columbus.
He was a retired employee of New
York Central Railroad, and a
member of Siloam LOdge 456,
F&amp;AM, Cheshire.
SuJVlvlng are his wife, Lavada
Srott; a son, William of Columbus;
four daughters, Mrs. Harry (Ann)
Hopwood, Mrs. Perry (Lois) Willi·
ams and Mrs. Charles (Shirley)
Kern, all of Grove City, and Mrs.
Donald (Mary) Conrad of West
Jefferson; three brothers, Wesley of
Gallipolls, Wltliarn of Cheshire and
Paul of Middleport three sisters,
Marguerite Kail ancj. Dorothy
Roush, both of Cheshire, and
Gertrude Hysell of Addison; 17
grandchildren and 26 · great·
grandchildren.
He was also preceded in death by a
son, James, and by two sisters, Vale
Swisher of Cheshire, and Grace
Potter of Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m. Saturday in Jerry Spears
Funeral Home, 2693 W. Broad St.,
Columbus. Burial will b€ In Green
Lawn Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 24 and 7·9
p.m. today.

i~~~~~~~--~-~~-~-----------------------

David Elias, 88, Mason, died
Thursday at his home.
Born June 14, 1895, in Mason, son
of the late David and Margaret
Harper Elias .
He was a former employee of the
Marietta Manufacturihg Co. and
worked for Stiffler's Stores Inc .. in
Poiht P leasant and Pomeroy. Ohio.
He was a member of the Mason
United Methodist Church.

Mason on Saturday at 1: :xlp.m. With
the Rev. Bennie Stevens officiating.
Burial will follow in lhe Kirkland
Memorial Gardens.
.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6-9 p.m. today.

Shuttle crew
prepares for
Monday launch
-Page D-1

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I ·sWISS MAID· MANDOLIN GIRL
Vl
DRUMMER BOY
I
LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD
Vl
'
'4.50 Value
I

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I
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RUSS BERRIE
DRESSED.
GONG A
DOLLS

SELECTION
MIGHT VARY
SLIGHTLY
IN EACH STORE

PIIOOUCI 01

Friday at Camden-Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va .
She was born in Meigs County, ·
Jan 5, 1892, a daughter of the late
George and Adeline Bum Pickens.
Besides her parents. she was
preceded in de'l,th by two sisters,
Maude Johnson and Frankie
Neigler, and two brothers. L. E .
Pickens and S. W. Pickens. She was
a member of the Plants United
Methodist Church.

L.C.D.
QUARTZ

·r -

ANALOG
STYLES

Survlvlng are a sister, Mary
Sheets, Dayton; a brother, Titus
Pickens, Syracuse, and several
nieces and nephews.
Se .
ill be h ld t 2
rvJCes w · . e a
p.m.
_Sunday at the Ewmg Funeral Home
, where friends .may call .alter l p.m.
Saturday. Bunalw.ill bemtheLetart
Falls Cemtery.

\
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Lawrence Donohue

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SIZE

.53 Ct.
.30 Ct.
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WAS

NOW

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11350.00 1995.00
11195.00 1895.00
1 595.00 139s.oo

i

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992-2054

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FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

~

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Hollyberry
Strawberry
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$}99'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Back
from a trip to the MJddle East, U.S.
Energy Secretary Donald Hodel
says Saudi Arabia will likely stave
off attemptstochangetheprieeofoll
overthenextthreeyears.
That should mean that gasoline
and heating oil In the United States
should not rlse in price, unless there
Is an unforeseen disruption caused
hy a tlai1ng of hostilities In the
Persian GuH or new domestic
energy consumption taxes.
The 13 oil ministers representing
member nations ofthe0rganlz9.tion
of. Petroleum Exporting Countries
are scheduled to meet In Vienna,
'Austria, on Dec. 7 to map their
pricing and supply strategyfor19SI.
While at least two of those
countries- Iran and Venezuelawant a $5 Increase In OPEC prices
and other exporters'!"" oil prices
sUpping because of a current glut In
supplies, Saudi 011 Minister Ahmed
ZaklYarnaniisdeterm!nedtokeep
prices at $29 a barrel for at least
three years, Hodel said.
:'There's clearly considerable
concern ln that part of the world
about a short· term softening In
price," Hodel said on his return to
Washington this week . "But ·Ya·
man!, who may well be In a position
to know., was emphatic that It wn1 ·
not happen."
·
TheOPECcartelcutltsprice$5a
barrel eight months ago to revive
sales that had decllned to their
lowest level In more than a decade.
That has helped reduce gasoline
prices In the United States an
average3centspergallonihthepast
three months.

--- ··
• Large extra-th•ck alumrnum
pan has smooth slanting

srdes ro m-ake sauterng easrer.
• Du rable. easy-to-clean
3UverStone • mtenor surface
• Porcelam

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·-......_.
"'·""

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. - -.:___

-Ll'-

L_

--_

UNVEilED _ Middleport na&amp;lve, fOill'-Star Gen.
James Hartinger, right, watches as Jbn Hudson, 8

Congreialoaal Medal of Honor wbmers, Edward A.
BenneU and Jlnuny G. Stewart, In ceremonies held
Friday afternoon at Middleport VIllage HaD.

member of American Legioll Feeney-J!ennelt Post
128, unveils 8 plaque In niemory of Mlddleport'.s

Gallla·Meigs Regional Airport Author(ly.
"I don't know. what they were trying ·to
accomplish," a spokesperson for Foothltls Avlatlon
said Frlday. "It doesn't hurtusany ... we have our own
office phones ... it's only hurting the pilots and the
public."
Commissioner Verlin Swain said Saturday the
county had not directed the phones be removed; but,
had asked both the pho1,e company and the electric
company to make final rea.dfngs and supply final
billings to the county on those utilities .

BRAND NEW 1982

GRAND AWARD

'

Richard Levih, deputy commissioner for tax policy,
said the solution ihvolves distributing from the
corporate tax •an amount equal to what the counties
are getting this year based on the deposits tax.
Allocations for each county remaih to be
determined. "None of the 88 counties are goihg to get
less in 1984 than in 13&amp;'!. AU the counties get growth,"
Levin said.
The County Commissioners Association of Ohio has
taken no official position on the plan pendihg a review
of the proposed language. " I think we wm be
support.ing it," Larry Long, the grOup's assistant
director, said Friday.
Long agreed that no county woulp lose funds under
the revised plan.
·

Middleport_pays
homage to M~dal
of Honor winners

-~ -~

Staff .
·"&gt;
GALLIPOLIS ~ The firm operating the GalllaMeJP RegtoriaJ Airport says !be removal of two
phones at !be facUlty represents an "annoyanee" and
possible "hazard," but has done nothing to hamper
the operation of the business.
On Wednesday, two pay phones - one located
!nskle the airport terminal, one stationed ouslde the
tactllty - were removed. The phones had been listed
In the names of tbeGallla County Commission and the

BOX OF 32

ByBOBHOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
may well be the only community of
Its size ih the United States to boast
two winners of the Congressional
MedalofHonor.
And, Friday afternoon through
the efforts of Fenney· Bennett Post
128, American Legion , thecommun·
ity paid homage to those two
servicemen.. Edward A. Bennett
andJ!riunyG.Stewartw.henabrass
plaque, located on the lawn of
Middleport Village Hall, was un·
veiled in their honor:
Edward A, Bennett, PFC., Co. B.,
358th Jnf. Regt. 90th Jnf. Div. lj'as
honored for bravery durtng combat
ih Germany ih February, 1945. His
Congressional Medal of Honor was
presented by President Truman In
Octoberofthatyear.Bennettretlred
from service with the rank of major
on Feb. 1, 1965. He was born Feb.ll,
· 19~ and died May 2, 1983 ih
California.
JirnrnyC. Stewart,SSgt., Co. B,'2d
Bn., 12th Cav. Dlv. was killed In
action in Vietnam on May 18, 1966.
He was born December 25, 1942. He
was honored for courage shown
against o\lerw.helrnihg odds in
protecting his wounded comrades.
Stewart Field at Fort Benhing, Ga.,
was dedicated in his memory in
February, 19ffi.
Frlday's dedication service honorfng the two Middleport natives
featur-e&lt;t-anaddressbyMlddleport's
four star general, General James
Hart!ngerw.hois!ncornmandofthe
North American Defense Com·
mand In Colorado and the new

mday afternoon Middleport paid
homage to two native Congressional
· Medal af Honor recipients - Jimmy
G. Stewart and Edward A. Bennett
- when a btass plaque, located on
the lawn of Middleport Village Holl,
was unveiled in their honor. 1&amp;Jyor
Fnrd Hoffman called Stewart and
Bennett "heroes of the highest

caliber."

----

Aerospace Command. Besld&lt;&gt;s be·
ing on the speaking program,
General Hartihger unveiled the
plaque dedicated to the twoseJVlce·
men. Relatives of both Stewart and
Bennett carne from out-of-town to
attend the services.
James Clatworthy, a member of
the Middleport post. was commended by master of ceremonies,
William Gilmore, commander of
Feeney-Bennett Post, forcomingup
with the idea of honorihg the two
Congressional Medal of Honor
winners. .
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
gave an address of welcome to open
theceremoniescommendingorganizations and individuals who con·
tributed to the project. He called
Stewart and Bennett "heroes of the
highest caliber." The mayor extended thanks to Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Morgan of Middleport who
contributed a flagpole and an
American flag for use near the
servicemen'spiaque.lnstallationol
the pole was handled by the
Morgans on Thanksgiving Day so
that it would be in place for the
dedicationservice.TheOagandpole
(Continued on page AJ)

'annoyance~

"It wasn'i meant as a low. blow against anyone," he
said, "It's just a matter of business."
"The contract says they are to pay the utilities,"
Swain added, "s!nee the operation of the airport is tied
up in litlga~on ... and may ,be for months ... we wanted
to remove_the county's fihanclalliahillty."
"As it was, the electric bltl was two months
overdue ... and we got hung with that."
He said theconunission's position was- sfnee the
company has Indicated they plan to remain at the
airport - that Foothills would transfer the utilities

and assume financial responsibility .
.
"I'm sure the phone company gave them that
option," Swaih said.
Foothltls co-owner Gearied Hitchcock Jr. said
Saturday morning they had received no prior notiee
from the electric or phone companies.
He said- as of Saturday- the airport'selectrlclty
had not been discontinued , adding that if it should be
turned off - with the subsequent loss of runway
lights, navigational beacon and ground-to-air radio(Continued on page A;ll

Sand-filled
trucks continue to
.
tighten White House security
.

.. '

Re&amp;. '4.00

Homestea(Jer
eRED

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

more.
Figures showed that Gallia County would have lost
$1.36,522 ih state fundihg next year. Nea11YS'50,oo:J of
that amount would have been lost from the general
fund - a 12.47 percent loss over 1982's allocation.
The move was criticized by smaller counties such
as Gallia and Meigs, particularly when it was
revealed that Cuyahoga, Franklin and Hamilton
counties, where the state's major cities are located,
were to receive $1 milllqn·plus Increases in local
government funds.
"There is no excuse to raise funding and then cuI the
poor, small counties," 'r emarked Rep. Jolynn Boster,
D-Galllpolis, at the tim~. "Why should .38 counties
. prosper at the expense of 50 others?"

r-~----------~~~~

~Unel

CHRISTMAS
CARDS

DECORATIVE ·
BUT USEFUL!

eCRYSTAL

originally had been ih 'line for a fiscal windfall wop' t
get as much of an increase as expected.
Introduction of the legislation was prompted by an
oversight In the state budget, which took effect Julyl.
It scrambled the formula for distributing money
which the state shares through what is known as the
local government fund.
Legislators repealed a bank deposits tax that
provided funds to counties based orr the location of the
deposits. It was replaced as one source of money for
the fund by a percentage oi the corporate franchise
tax.
·
But because of a change In the distribution formula,
50 counties would have received less money ih 1984
than this year while the other 38 WOUld have gotten

By LARRY EWING

lf2 Price

Lamp

tnitttt

Airport firm: phone removal an

EA.

BRAND NEW 1983

SERVING THE POMEROY SHOPPING
AREA SINCE 1864
I

I FRIDAY
I NIGHT
·
. '· .
&amp;1.!;!.# 4'
'OMERO't' OHIO
,
~- ; I
I
L•••••••~••••••~••••••-~

r iH-- -

RED, WHITE OR GREEN

10''(25 em)

I

OPEN

PILLAR ..
CANDLES

HEAVY 8 GAUGE
MIRRO

___.......

$'1·9993"X6" SCENTED

• GOLF
Fli&lt;OI=::•"'

~

•SAVE ON MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR, W
WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S GIFTS; ~
HOUSEWARES, HOME FURNISHINGS, ~
i FURNITURE. AND AT OUR .MECHANIC
STR~ET WAREHOUSE.- USE OUR LAY- w
W A-WAY PLAN.
~
~ •MAKE ELBERFELDS YOUR CHRIST- W
~ MAS SHOPPING CENTER. FINE SELEC- ~
1 liONS OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE - ~
COURTEOUS SALES PEOPLE TO HELP I
1 WITH YOUR SHOPPING - CONVENI-~
I ENT CREDIT TERMS.
1

I
I
I

'
'-..

~

W

I
I
I

DECORATORS
DELIGHT

e FOOTBALL
e BASEBALL
e BASKETBALL
e TENNIS

f~-~~E[ifEFfF~(0~~~--1

~ CHRISTMAS GIFT SALE

/

-

11 Sections, 96 Pages 35 Cents

Oil prices
should stay
constant, says
Sec. Hodell

Mrs. Goldie Mae Clendenih, 77,
Lawrence Donohue, 47, Rt.4.
Route 1, Portland, died Wednesday Pomeroy. died this mornihg in the
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Veterans Hospital .at Chillicothe.
Mrs. Clendenin, a housewife, at Details and arrangements will be
one time, served as a correspondent announced by the Bigony-Jordan
for The Daily Sentinel for a several . Funeral Home at Albany,
years. She was born June 6, 1906 In

I

tmts

••

Ohio weather:
cool and dry
PageA-3

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, November 27, 1983

From Associated Press
'J'bnes.Sentlnel Reports
All counties would get more money next year than
In 1983 tinder a DepartroentofTaxation plan resolvihg
inequities In a funding program for local
governments.
State Tax Commissioner Joanne Limbach is to
outline the proposal before the Senate Finance .
Committee at a hearing Monday ntght.
The House Finance Committee is to begin similar
hearings Tuesday with legislators hoping to wrap up
work on the measure before the expected adjournment for the year at week's end.
Although the pending pla,n eliminates inadvertent
cuts In funding that otherwise would occur next year,
It also will mean some counties and cities which

CRYSTAL

,~

I

~~~~~-~~=~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~.

+

Along the River ............. B-1
Business..................... " E-1
Classlfleds .................. D-~,
Deaths ....... .. ................ A-5
Editorials ..................... A-2
Local ......................... A·il-8
Sports ........................ C-1-8

'

.e SHERIFF
e TENNIS PLAYER
e SAILOR
e ENGINEER
Great for
Storage or
Entertaining

OR

The woods will be abl;ue with orange hats, vests
and coats as deer season opens-Page B-1

Inside:

Counties gain by new local government plan

BRADLEYnME
CHILDREN$
WATCHES

The Ohio General Assembly is returning to work
and facing a busy legislative agenda-Page A-4

unba

vo1: 18 No. 39
C.,.righled 1983

4 CUTE AND FURRY STYLES .

J osie Pickens, 91. Syracuse, died

Goldie Mae Clendenin

.

-

$199EA.

Vl

Josie Pickens

SuJVlvlng are two sisters, Mrs .
Margaret Pickens and Mrs. Clara
Redman, both of Mason; several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral serviCes will be held at
the Foglesong Fuuneral Home 'in

ATT's long-distance network--Page E-1

A~~.~ON ()I HGIN JUIJJIIIlliND INC

David Elias

•

· Friday, November 25, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

West VIrginia, a daughter of the late
John and Laura White Wells.
Surviving_are live children, Anna
Tipton and Fannie (Kay) Carol.
both of Columbus; Juanita Wells,
Long Bottom; Georgia Smith,
Reedsville, and Homer Timmons.
Jr., Houston, Tex.; four siSters. Ilah
Roush, Portland; Margaret Holter
of near Minersville; Fannie Durst,
Portland, and Daisy Grathwohl ,
Parkersburg, W. Va.; a brother,
Larry Brooks Wells. Brownwood,
Tex .. and an uncle, John White,
Marysville. W. Va. 'l\velve grand·
children also survive .
Besides her parents. she was
preceded in death by four brothers.
Joh Wells, Jr., Clark Wells. Joe
Wells and Fred Wells: a sister.
Lennie Belle Wells. and her hus·
band, Armie Clendenin.
Mrs. Clenden'ih was a member of
the Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saihts.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the Racine- Portland
Blanch of the Reorganized Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
with Elder Joe Stobart presiding.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Friday. Burial will be in the
Bald Knob Cemetery.

Vaughn E. Scott

•

,

FRUTH
PHARMACY

RT. 35 &amp; 160

AND

Six dump trucks blocked gates to
the WblteHoulefii'OOIIdS and lite Old ,

GALLIPOLIS
.

'

Sand·

' Ilepartme!lt drM!ways In relljlOIUle
1D ''possible bomb threats.''

MIDDLEPORT, .OH~

ROUTE 7

WASHINGTON '(AP) -

filled duri!p lnldcs block major
ent:rances 1D !be White House and
police C8l'll I!J'e parked In State

(

...

l

1

Execlltlve otrk:eBulldlngonFrlday
and brown pollee cars were placed
at tour driveWaY entrances 1D the
State DepartmeDI.
'l1le llllld-laden !nicks and patrol
cart1 were tile laiBit evidence or
lllbtmed leCUI'Ity followlnC the
Nov. 7bornlllllg ~ aSenatecon1dor

-ID~-~-S.~ptm~~~·~

terrorist attack on the Marine
headquarters In Beirut that killed
239 servtcemen. The Beirut lxmbfng Involved a motorist who drove a
tnlck loaded With explosives past
Marine guards Into the barracks.
Seven dump truck5 were moved
!n1Dposl~noutsldetheWhlteHouse

0111buradi\Y, whenVIUIBandpatrol

cars blocked ftve entrances to the
State Department, Onetruck, which
had been .parlaed at the northeast
gate to tile White Houae groonds,
was I'I!IIIIM!d from Its poalllilll on

Friday.

'

''We have received lnfonnatlon or
possiNe lxmb lbl&gt;eata and we have

.

I.

"

l

'

taken security measures, and they
wUl be In effect until we feel the
threat has been eliminated,'' said
Anita Stockman, a State Depart·
ment spokeswoman .
President Reagan and his wife,
Nancy, were spending the long
Thanksgiving weekend at their
ranch near
Barbara, Callt.,
where II was understood no extra
secui'ity precautions had been

santa

taken.

'

White House spokesman Larry
~ Bald the oew JlliiYel were
"11111 a l'Biidt' 'of speclftc tlu'eat
against the White House" but more
of a rwt!ne secw1ty precaution.

a

SAND 'mUCKS AT MOTE HOUSE- Nallonal
Park Senk1e trucks loaded with ll8lld II&amp; oultllde ihe
Wldle Houe_p&amp;e. ASecrel Service spokesnuut, Mike

Would oaly UJ llle activity WBI "lleCIU'tty·
related.'' (AP Laeerpbolo).
.
.

Tarr,

•

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