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                  <text>auxiliary meets

OSU upsets Maryland
Story on Page 3

See story on Page s

.

County court action

BluePageCross fraud

See stQry on

See Page 10

'1

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enttne

at

e
Voi.32,No. 164

'1

2 Section•, 14 Pages
20 Cents
A Multim.dio In '- Newtpap• r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 2, 1983

C..pyrightod 1983

·

Unemployment

------,

of
11 .o- Percent
Work Force

Seasonally

88

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WASHJNGI'ON (AP) - The of Americans wlth jobs last month
nation's civilian unemployment reached 102,67L!XXJ, beating the
rate fell to 8.4 perc;ent In November , previous hlgh of 101,945,!XXJ regis· .
the lowest In two years, as a record tered last September.
Many private economists were
n\llllber of AIIM!rlcans held jobs, the
surprised
by the second substantial
government reported today.
The seasonally adjusted jobless decline bt unemployment In' as
·
rate fell 0.4 of a percentage point many months.
In advance of today's report,
from October's 8.8 percent level,
three
analysts said they felt the:-e
and the government'ssurveyofU.S.
would
'
be little change from Octob- ·
households showed tl)at approxl·
er'
s
8.8
percent rate. October's rate
mately 743,!XXJ people found work.
was
an
Improvement over SepThe number of those Americans ·
!ember's
9.3 percent unemp!oy,
officially categorized · as unem·
ment
~WJre:
played shrank by 5aJ,!XXJ last month,
Janet L. Norwood, conunlsSioner
to 9.4 mUUon.
of
labor statistics, saki: "The
Since U.S. clvlllan unemployment
economic
recovery, In tenns of
rate hit a post-Depression peak of
employment
and unemployment
10.8 percent last December, with
comPares quite fa·
developments,
more than 12 mWlon out of work,
past
recoveries.
vorably
to
some 2.7 mUllon people have found
"Tbe November statistics rejobs, the Bureau of Labor Statistics
ported
today continue to show
said. ·
The November rate was the strongandwidespreademployment
gains and further decUnes In
lowestslncethe8.3percentrecorded
unemployment," sl!e saklln testim·
In November 1981. Tbe total number

ony prepared for delivery to a Joint
Economic Commitiee of Congress.
· An alternate unemployment rate,
which btcludes the 1.7 mllllon
members of the anned forces
stationed In the United States,
dropped from 8.7 percent lo 8.2
percent last month, the report said.
The report said that the jobless
rate for teen-agers, which had
shown little recovery from reces·
slonary high levels untO recent
months,fellby1.7percentagepolnts
to19.9percentlnNovember.
There was comparable Improvemen! In the unemployment figures
for black ·workers, whose jobless
rate fell to 17.3 percent and has
decUned by 2.7 percentage points
since last August.
The number ofnewly unemployed
Americans - those who have been
on the jobless roll for five or' fewer
wee~ -fell sharply for the second
straight month.
Among the various population

Adjusted

groups, the October-to-November
changes In unemployment rates
were:
-Adult men, 7.8 percent, down
from 8.2 percent.
-Adult women, 7.1, down from
7.4.
-Teen-agers, 19.9, down from
21.6.
- ·Whites, 7.3, down from 7.7.
-Blac~,17.3, down from 18.1.
-Hlspanics, l2.3, unchanged,
Initial claims for jobless bene!lts
In the week ended Nov. 19 totaled
434,CXXJ, when adjusted for seasonal
variations, the highest level since
last August.
The first-time claims were 55,!XX)
higher than In the preceding week: A
Labor Department spokeswoman
sakl the Increasing ctaJms.ftllng
activitY In the week ended Nov. 19
was likely due to the fact that
observance of Veterans Day during
the previous week left people only
fow- days to !lie their applications.

UNEMPLOYMENT - Chart
shows lhe nation's clvlllan unemployment r ate during lhe
period from December, 1982 to
November, 1983. The nation's ·
clvillan unemployment rate feU
to 8.4 percent In November, tbe
lowest rate in two years, the
guvenunent reported Friday .
(AP Laserphoto.). ·

Man dies
•
m
us 35
accident

,chaf'IOCII .

171!!
. ........
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ellmlnllte com11lon .,..me. llugged
high·imp8CI ~-With convenient ...!
bracket &amp; chllrger. 46·9315-8

FgiNT PLEASANT- A26-year·
old Southside man was kWed after
his truck colllded head.an with a
liltP,'·traller t1g early this mom·
lng
us 35 near Beech Hlll, a
spokesman for the Point Pleasant
Detachment of the West VIrginia
State Pollee reports.
State pollee sakl Nicholas Grogan
Beard was dead on anival at
Pleasant Valley Hospital following
the 12: aJ a.m. InCident.
According to the report, Johnny
Lawrence Coleman, 43, StarsVUie,
N.C., was traveling north on Route
35, and Beard was traveUngsouthon
Route 35 In his 1979 Chevrolet truck.
Beard's vehicle was apparently
•· left of center and collided with
Coleman's rig head.an, state pollee
said.
Point Pleasant EMS transported
Beard to the hospital. Three true~
and 16 men from the Point Pleasant
Fire Department were also on the
scene. Firemen used the "Jaws of
Life" to free Beard from his vehicle,
according to a department

Council reviews
amended mobile
home ordinance
By KATIE CROW

an

spokesman.

....,....
Anti-Free
&amp; Su111111e Anti· Freeze
Coolant &amp;Summer
Coolant ·
k~~~lnw.~1
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Western Auto

salary under
staff review

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I"'" l'llJ

If your We1tem Auto de•l•r i1 temporarily out of an advertiaed ilem, he can
ordt~ from h~ nearby Diatribution C.nt.r. He will gladly i11ue a raincheck and
provide the Item at the Nle price when it become• l¥1ilable . Because we do
not want ta ••elude anyone, we mual reaen~e the right to limit quentitiH.

.I

\

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I

.,

CElLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Less
than a week after Gov. Richard
Celeste disclosed an agreement
paying Lt. Gov. Myrl Shoemaker
S&amp;l,lmln campaign funds, the Ohio
Ethics Commission has ordered a
sta1f review of laws dealing with
supplemental salary payments to
·
public offictals.
The six-member, nonpartisan
commission made no reference to
the Celeste-Shoemaker agreement
when lt Issued a statement Thll.l'!l·
day outlining the study.
Celeste had no conunent on the
panel's actloll. But Republicans and
Democrats alike In thl' General
A !lllblyvoicedposltlvereactlons.
Tbepanel'sactJonfolloweddisclolllll'e of an agreement between
Celeste and Shoemaker channeling
$&amp;l,lro In campaign funds to the
llelltenant pemor rJfler a four.
)'ear periQd.
The agreement, written 'In ))e.
cernber lBII2, provldel for Sl!oernake!' 10 be paid $15,(DI annually
for II!I'YICel to tbe campaign as a
ca18111tant.

I

J,

Syracuse councU Thursday night
with some 30residents In attendance
reviewed an ordinance on mobUe
homes.
The ordinanceonmoblle homes to
which proposed amendments were
suggested was passed by council In
1973.
At last month 's meeting, a second
ordinance on mobile homes was
drawn up and a first reading of the
ordinance was approved.
The second ordinance says no
mobile home, traDer or similar
portable residential structures shall
be permitted to locate in the
municipality except In a mobile
home park. The ordinance does not,

resldenls. The museum wW have an open house from
, I to 5 p.m. Sunday tAl show the el&lt;hlbll carrying out tbe

theme '"''radldons of Chrlsimas,"

Tape recordings unintelli.aihle •::~~ t:~~:~ers

.
star Witness gtves
•·

· tal .
SuppIemen

...

Protect.sAIMt!els

CHRISTMAS KITCHEN - This replica of an
okHasldoned kitchen Is a leatw:e.of the Meigs Coumy
Museum for lhe holday season. Clothing and utellllllll
U8ed In the display are from the coUectlons of local

.
State pollee sakl Coleman's rig,
owned by J .D.V. Frelghtllnes,
Winston Salem, N.C., sustained
~.lm worth of damage. Beard's
truck was totaled.
BULIEl'IN
Cpl. K.R. Beckett sakl the fatality
Tape recordlnp ol coovel'!lllttons
brqught the number of persons between Shirley Funt and Charles
ldlled In traffic accidents In the . Lee n were detennlaed unlaleWgl·
county In 1$83 to 11. In 1982, Beckett ble and wW not be heard by the Jury,
sakl tra!flc. accidents also claimed Judge Richard Roderick told the
the lives of 11 persons.
coort II* momlnc• •
'lbe decllilon came alter an
blluf'oloal meeting with altomeys
for p~ and defense, who
ned
the &amp;apes. Prolieculor
·
JO!IIeph Cain requeMed a 3IHnlnute

...

Protects MMetall

Sentinel slaff

....

w

recessbeforeresumlngquel!tlonlng
ofFunt.

By 'lbe OVP Staff
After Charles Lee II attempted,to
choke ,h er when she saki she would
appear against him In an upcolnlng
trial, Shirley Furst testified Thurs·
day she was convinced Lee had
killed 17-year ·old Barbara
Twyman.
"From that point, I knew he'd
ldiJed Barbara Twyman, and that he
was ~apable of lt," Furst sakl In
GaUla County Common Pleas
Court, where Lee, 17, Point Plea·
sant, Is being tried In connection
withTwyman'sshootingdeathonor
about last March n
Furst lOOk the stand at 2: fO p.m.
and testlfled for two hours and five
minutes before Judie Richard
Roderick called a recess. Her
testimony for the prosecution was to
continue this morning.
In the cwrse of her ltatements to
the eight-woman, lour-man jury,
Furst said Lee admitted tAl ldlllng
Twyman and gave debll1s
the
· Incident aad the location of the body
on the atternoon of April 5, the day

or

J

~-

•

testimony

before Twyman's body w~ removed from a weD near Ewlngton.
An 'ups Ulng' coovenatlon
According to Furst's testimony,
Lee called her at her residence
around 2: :Jl p.m. that day and
engaged 11) "general talk" with
Furst when be "brought it up" about
Twyman.
.
"He said he killed her, shot her
once bt the head and once In the
chest, put bet In the well and put
cement blocks on her," shesakl.
Lee at first didn't reveal the
location. Furst said the conversa·
lion was upsetting her and she had to
go to the bathroom. Lee said be
would call back, which he did a few
minutes later.
At that time, she sakl Lee
revealed thi!bodywasinaweUihree
mUes fnm the Twyman residence
In the direction of the home of
Tammy Hwll: Hunt Is the fiancee of
Furst's 18-year.ald son, John.

.. 1 told him, 'you're not serious,' n
Furst continued. "He told me,
'That's been our problem. You
never take me serloosly.'
"I asked him If he realized he'd
taken a hurium life. He sakl he
thought he didn't have a con·
science,'' she lidded.
Alter the cell, Furst saki she told
her friend, KaiiiY Bias, aboUt the
converaation with Lee. Mrs. Bias
urged her to call the pollee. Furst
saldattlrst she didn't think ltwoold
ma1r.e lillY difference, but lilter
dlaoovered Mra. Bias bad made an
anonymous phone caD to the
sheriff's depertmellt.

Ponce seek lnfonnatlon
Tbe next day, Furst said she went
to Lee's residence to collect money
on home Interior decoratbtg Items
she sold to Marsha Lee, the
defendant's mother. While at the
Lees', she talked to Lee and learned
that Point Pleasant pollee were
asklngforLeeandanythlngheknew
about Twyman. Police later called
and talked to Lee, she sald.
At 3: ll p .m . the same day - an
hour before 1'Wyrnan' s body was
found - Furst said Lee called her
residence and told her that "me and
Johnny were as good as dead.''
She said John Furst then took the
phone and asked Lee, " What did I
ever do to you to talk llkethat?" He
told John tliat he"didn 'tmean it that
way," Furst added .
Later that day, Mrs. Bias called
Furst to tell her the sheriff's
department wanted them to come
Into GaJIJpolis to make a statement
about the Information Lee gave.
Hands over lUll
The statement was made, and
Furst testified she gave lnvestlga·
tors the handgun and a box of shells
she said sbe loaned to Lee In
mld·March for "target practice."
Furst testified that Lee had
earlier admitted over the
telephone -that he ldiJed Twyman.
Tbe admission occurred on March
24, sbe added.
At the time, Furst said she
believed Lee was kidding her
because her son and ber friends
were dlscuBslng an article In the
("-al!lpnlla Daily Tribune about
(Continued on page 10)

'

presently
As a result of the first reading of
the second ordinance a public
meeting was held and a citizens
committee was named to m eet with
council concerning the proposed
ordinance.
At the meeting, amendments to
the ordinance passed in 1973 were
proposed.
Following the reading of the
proposed amendments objections
weremadetosome ofthe proposais .
!twas suggested thatcouncUobtaln,
In Wiiting, a legal opinion on the
ordinance passed in 1973. Council
has had legal advice on both
ordinances.
CouncU agreed to obtain a w rttten
legal opinion and take action later .
Marina discussion
Council, In other business, agreed
to hOld a special meeting with

Vernon Bartles, attorney Bill La·
velle and village solicitor Frank W.
Porter regarding a land purchase
for the proposed marina . The
meeting was tenta tlve!y set .for Dec.
12, at 6: ~ p.m .
Council agreed to draw up a
resolution to change the nam e of the
flood road to the Roy J ones Road .
An ordinance to protect sidewalks
and prevent obstruction was given
the necessary readings for passage.
Gene Imboden, fire chief, presented a list of officers for the fire
department !or 1984. Council ap·
proved the appointments.
Jomboden said fire department
members have placed Christmas
lights In the village and Santa will
make his appearance on Dec. l 8,at2
p.m. at tbe Municipal Building at
which time candy treats will be
distributed to the children.
Imboden stressed that the deparment is need of donations to help
with the cost ofthecandy. Donations
m ay be sent to the Syracuse Fire
Department , Syracuse, Ohio, 45779.
Council outlined duties for the G
R workers and submit1ed them t~
Oris Hubbard, who is presently
acting as supervisorofthe prograni.
Hubbard suggested, since all
sidewalks in the village have been
cleaned, that they be used" by the
residents rather than walking on the
roadway.
Council approved the purchase of
a new light for the lop of the new
cru iser which is expected to arrive
next week.
Council discussed. painting of the
city building and approved a
transfer of $!OJ from the emergency
fund· to tlle fire fund and $100 from
general to cun--ent expense .

Additional jobs pushed
by development people
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
Development Department officials
say they want to get Ohio working
again, but don't plan to do It at the
expense of workers In other states.
WhUe saying the days oflndustrlal
piracy are over, ofllclals In the
administration of Gov. R ichard
Celeste are nevertheless holding to
the goal of creating 1 million new
jobs bt Ohio by 1900. If they suCC€&lt;'11 ,
Ohio's unemployment rate will drop
from ltsCUITe!lt11percent toabout4
percent, according to the
department.
But development officials acjmit
that effecting the cure will be more
difficult thai! wrtUng the prescription - particularly considering that

Ohio m anaged to create an average
of only 50,001 new jobs a year from
1950 to 1900, when the state's
m anufacturfng econom y was
bealthler than it is today.
To reach It s goal, the s tate would
have to create 125,00) new jobs each
year from 1982, when Gov. Richard
Celeste took office, untO1990.
"Obviously , the disparity !Je.
tween 50,CXXJ and 125,l00 is rather
great," said David A. Berger,
assistant deputy director of energy ·
for the department. " It wasn't put
ouf as saying that's what we wl!!
achieve. If you will, it' s a goaL"
Berger and other Development
Department officials have been
promoting the department line tn
speeches around ihe state.

'

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•

'Comment

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pon ..rov Mddleport, Ohio
Friday, Du cnsbet' 2, 1983

So they walk out ______W_il_liam_F_._Buc_k_ley_;;__Jr.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO mE INTEREST OF THE

~IEIGs-~u~o:-;

ARE,\

1'1~

~m~ r"T"'--'~...--r.~d·~

'qjv

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Publlsh~r/Controller

Assls&amp;an&amp;

General Manager

D!I.LE ROTHGEB. JR.
News Editor
A l\IEMBER of The Assocla.ted Press, Inland Daily Pre!is Association and the A~erican Newspa per Publisher Association.
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION an welcomf'd. Tht&gt;y shoukt he let;s Ihan 300 word!i
lon,. All letter~ are sulljed to editing ttlld mu111t he !ill{ned with nllmif, addrl'!!!ls and
tel ephone number. No unslgnMI l~tters will he puhllshed. Letters should he 111
10~ Caste, addressing lsiiiues; not personaiUies.

·Average recovery
NEW YORK (AP) -You've heard the economic recovery described as
.many things, as powerful or encouraging or sustainable, for example, but
. ·:seldom have you heard it described ,for what it really is.
·
And what Is that? "Average," says Robert Christian, the economist at
· · Philadelphia's Provident National Bank. "What we have experienced in
: the last 12 months Is the most average economic recovery ever."
While that may not please the Reagan administration or some
economists who !Ike to use more exciting terms, It Is the truth, says
'.Christian. "The numbers speak for themselves," he says.
To demonstrate his contention, Christian averaged out the penonnance
·mier the first 11 months of six economic recoveries since World War 11, as
'measuied by five . categori~.
·
.
He came up with these increases: Personal income 8.3 percent, retail
• sales 10.9. employment 2.4, industrial production 14.9 and housing starts

': 24.5.

.

'

'

Then he compared them with gains for the first 11 months of the current
• :recovery: Personal income 7.1, retail sales 8.3, employment 4.5, industrlal
· production 14.8 and housing starts 18.1.
. U that Isn't average, says Christian, then try to find another recovery
closer ,to it. Using the same categories you aren't likely to do so, of course,
•. because Christian has carefully reviewed his numbers.
He suggests also that you may search just as hard, and unsuccessfully, to
find any large numbers of forecasters who stood up last year on their
soapboxes and proclaimed loudly that the recovery in 1983 would be just

"average."
Instead. forecasters herded themselves into two broad camps.
One camp, Christian recalls, cited high real interest rates and low
. capacity utilization, among other measures, and concluded that the
recovery would be weak.
The strong recovery camp, made up mainly of supply-siders, saw tax
cuts as evidence of ~ strong future growth. And they were joined by
monetary purists whO thought strong money growth would do the trlck.
But who was in the in-between camp? Relatively few, It seems. Or,
perhaps they were there, but who was listening? It is much easier to
capture attention at the extremes. Much more exciting.
But that was last year. Now that the recovery Is gradually becoming the
expansion there seems to be a much more receptive audience for some of
those dull descriptions , such as steady or normal or even average.

Berry's World

Hrre. I think. is where the
dit!erence between the Old World
and the New Wot'ld comes up on the
side of the old. I speak of the
reactions · to the decision of the
Soviet Union to leave the negoliat·
·ing table. In the United States, the
pre&gt;ldent expressed disappoint·
ment verging on shock. The
moaners and groaner,; were a little
exhausted after spending an entire
week on "The Day After," but the
episode pumped a little estrogen
Into their breasts, which resumed
heaving In dismay over the collapse
of American diplomacy and the
heavy stride toward world war.
Meanwhlle, In Europe, Francois
Mltterand and Helmut Kolil merely
noted the Russians' deparlurefrom
Geneva, Swlt2erland, and said they
hoped In · due course the Russians
would return, eh bien, and what else
Is going on 7
The tactics of the Kremlin have
been so obvious that great efforts
are being made to find in them a
strain of subtlety that tends to pass
by cursory Inspection. Ah - says
one school - what It all signifies is
that Andropov is very, very sick.
And under the circumstances there
Is paralysis In government. Nobody
around to" take decisive action. U
the Soviet representatives stayed in
Geneva, that would slgnity that the
deployment ot the American Persh·
logs was not an abortlflcleitt, and to
make any such admission would
call the Soviet bluff. Too risky.
On the other hand, in withdraw·
ing from · Geneva without. an
emphasis statement about the
future would represent still another

risk, and there being nollodY
around to authorize the Soviets to.
leave with some apocalyptic ges·
ture, why they'll just leave without
saying anything very much at all.
Get It? Goodness, but these Soviets
are sly people. Really inscrutable. ·
But it is as simple as this. The
Soviet Union spent the last baU ot
the '71);; de,·eloplng and deploying a
new missile system, the SS.20, so
outr&amp;geously powedul and accu·
rate as to take hostage every
medium-sized city in EW'Ope, and
all the capitals. It was intended to
be the final word in theater
blackmall. The Social Democratic
government of West Germany
appealed to NATO for a counter·

the early summer. Their final
valling force and lt.was aireed that
&gt;Vnerlcan technology should come defeat came with tbe failure at the
mass demonstrations during the
up with missiles roughly compara·
past few weeks.
ble. Not as large, but very, ·very
So what then would they ·do?
accurate.
Some
gesture was necessary; and
The Soviet Union deterrntned to
,
this
gesture
was done.! It was lett
abort this "deployment by intlmlda·
only
to
conjecture
oil what will
tlon. The whole of Its considerable
happen
now.
resources were devoted to that end.
It
Is
a
pity
that
President
Reagan,
The short version of this ts that the
and to some extent Messrs. Shultz
Soviets failed. Or - since deploy·
and Nlt2e have given the tmpres·
ment of the NATO mlssUes will not
slon that the Soviet withdrawal Is
be compl!!ted for several years fateful In its implications. It · Is
that they failed to abort the ftrst
nothing of the sort. The Soviet
round of deployment, which Is now
delegation had not come to Geneva
going on. The decisive defeats of
to do the West a favor. On the day
their dlplomacy happened in the
the Soviet Union realizes that it Is
general elections in West Germany
needlessly expensive
in the spring, and in Great Britain in

Near cooperation ________~Ja_ck_A_nd_er_so_n
WASHINGTON - The grim
deception of a nuclear holocaust in
the television movie, "The Day
After," caused consternation at the
White House because it · may
undercut admui!stratlon eflorts at
deterrence-through-strength In·
stead of a nuclear freeze.
The White House reaction to the
film was not surpnsing. What is
astonishing Is that ABC came close
to getting the Pentagon's fuH
cooperation in shooting the film.
Defense Department documents
reviewed by my associate Troy
Capacclo indicate that offJclal,
coo!&gt;eration may haire depended on
a few seconds of dialogue that many ·
viewers could easlly have missed in
the tw&lt;rhour, 15-mlnute show.
ABC first approached the Pen·
lagon's audl&lt;rvisual dlvlslon in May
1982 with a .draft script. The .
network wanted the military to
provide National Guardsmen, helicopters, troop carriers, jeeps and
pickup trucks- plus permission to
film on military bases.

"The story takes no political
position on the nuclear controv·
ersy," an ABC representative
assured the Pentagon.
The first draft of the scrtjlt was
turned over to a veteran analyst.
"In general, T like it," he wrote.
"The ewosttton .ts fairly well
balanced, with very little overstatement or misstatement. What errors
are there are largely subliminal
and easy to correct."
The analyst listed 21 scenes that
should be modified for reasons of
either accuracy or policy.
The Pentagon analyst noted the
most serious "technical" problem
was "mldleading portrayal of
Important policy positions." Specif·
lcally, he cited the remark of one
character on the deteriorating
situation in Europe early In the
film. "What worries melfltgetsout
of hand at all Is our damned
'launch-on-warning' policy."
"Launch-on-warning/' the ana·

lyst wrote, "Is definitelY not a U.S.
policy."

ABC modified this sequence to
the Pentagon's satisfaction.
Another problem in the first draft
was a scene in the closing minutes
showing a mllltary !Iring squad
executing a man by the side of the
road. "The milltary firing ·squad
scene is a gross error," the analyst
wrote to the fUm's producer,
"particularly -since it appears at a
place in the scenario where civil
authority has been re-&lt;!Stablished."
The scene -only a few seconds'
long - was changed to make the
firing squad civil mllltia, a dlstinc·
tlon that was :probably lost on most
viewers.
The eventual stumbling block to
Pentagon cooperation was a se.
quence involving a radio report that
NATO armored units had invaded
East Germany, followed by Soviet
retaliation. A memo dated June 7,
1982, expressed the opinion that the
ABC script was "edging more
toward an accurate portrayal of the
anti-NATO / unilateral disarmament freeze pnsltlon current in

Soviet propaganda than toward an
accurate portrayal of U.S.
positions."
!'entagon officials suggested that
the sequence of events described in
the radio broadcast be reversed - ·
Soviet planes violating West Ger·
man air space before the NATO
armored strike against East
Germany.
ABC inserted a new introductory
sentence in the fictional radio
broadcast. But the thrust of the
radio broadcast - that NATO
forces had made the !lrst move remained Intact.
A letter drafted to inform ABC
that It would not get Pentagon
cooperation said: "Despite the
&lt;.ddltlon of a new introductory
sentence, scenes still convey the
impression of a NATO offensive
against East Germany followed by
a defensive Warsaw Pact

response."
The letter was never sent.
IJIStead, ABC was notUled by
telepHone.

When .nobody blinked _____

A_rtB.,--uc__;;h=wa=-ld

-.,.;.-_

~:c

Cl I'MlDytEA. IIE , ~ ...,............

''
.'

"Mommy, may 1 have some SEXIST toys this

year?"

I have to apologize for being so
late with my think piece about the
TV fltm "The Day After," but I've
been thinking so much about It T
haven't had time to do anything
else.
ABC, which produced the picture,
went out of its way not to take sides
as to who was responsible for
trashing Lawrence, Kansas. They
spent $7 m!Uion showing us what
could happen after an area was
mushroomed, but not one buck on
what caused the holocaust In the
first place.
I think they owed us just one
scene between ·a few survivors
discussing the way of It all.
The scene could have taken place
between Jason Robards, who

played the role of a doctor, and the
last political science professor alive
at the University of Kansas.
The men, covered from head to
foot in atomic ash, are sitting on a
pile of rubble that was once a
nursery school.
"Wh~t the hell do you think
happened?" Jason Robards asks
the political science professor.
"Nobody blinked," the professor
replies.
"What does that mean?''
"Well, It all goes· back to the
Cuban missile crisis. Remember
when Dean Rusk said the Soviets
and the U.S. came eyeball to
ey,eball, and the Russians blinked
first? Ever since then our foreign .
policy was based on the premise

that the Soviets would always blink
before we dl~."
Robards says, "I guess we
miscalculated."
The professor, looking over the
desolation, says, "That would be a
fair statement. What the people in
Washington refused to take into
account was lite Soviets conSidered
the mlsslle crisis the biggest defeat
they suffered since World War ll.
They booted out Khrushchev and
vowed they would never blink
again.~·

"Do 'you want an orange?" ·
"No, for some reason I feel
nauseated. In OI'der not to blink, the
Soviets started an unprecedented
nuclear arms buildup. Soon, the
mllltary on both sides Insisted the

other side had nuclear. superlorlty,
so the arms race was on. The
thinking in Washington and Mos·
cow was the more deterrents they
had, the less chance there was at
someone starting a war."
"Why didn't it work?" Jason
says.
"It worked for a while. But then
the arms talks cru;ne, and both skies ·
engaged in play!ilg the numbers
game. We. promised not to put any
cruise and Pershing missiles in
Europe if the Soviets reduced the
: SS.20s . .The Soviets said We had to
lnclooe Britain and French missiles
in the talks, and· we refused. When
neither sldewould.bllnk, we started
deploying our new missiles, and the
Russians walked out of Geneva."
.. Why the hurry?"'

.-

·"Because our credlblllty was at
stake. Had we not going ahead with
the threat, we would have said
Andropov blinked."
"And that's when the mlsslle race
began in earnest?"
"You could say that. · They
~urrounded us with all their nuclear
warheads and we surrounded
them. We got ourselves in a spot
where any spark could eali all
Armageddon.''
.
"Didn't txftw sides realize this?"
"The leaders were assured by
their experts that the otber side
dldn't have the guts to use !hell:
nukes because they knew they
would· also be wiped out in the
process. The only way to keep the
peace was to bulld more horrifYing
weapons untO the other side came
to Its senses."
"So why are we sitting on the
rubble In Lawrence, Kallsas, full ef
.
gamma r...,s ..
.
· "l.guell! we'll never know," the
professor says sadly. "It rolibt not
even have been a human tSeclllon.
With a l'l!8pOIIlie time of only ·six
minutes to react, the whole thing
' could have been started by a faulty
computer that wouldn't ·stop
bllnkiniJ.''

(Today in history
•

Today is Friday, Dec. 2, the 336th day ofl!ll.'l. Thereare29 days left

·.
;
Five years ago: Thousands of Iranians demonstrated in the sll1!ets of
~ Tehran against the government of the shah, defying a cudew and a ban on
: marches.
·
·
; . One year ago: For the first time in history, surgeons in Salt Lake Qty
: : ImPlanted a permanent artificial heart in a human, 61-year-old retired .
:·ctentlst Barney Clark.
; -:. 'fodaY's birthdays: LyriciSt Adolph Green Is 68. Fonner Secrelary of
; .St4te Alexander Halg Is ~. ActreSs Jull.e Harris ts 58.
: • :Jbollihl for today: "There Is many a good man to be found under a .
•:·: •~bby ha1. " - Chinese proverb .
,
'
&lt; •

.

Pomen~y-Micldlepott,

Friday, Dacember 2, 1983

... ...

The

ByGEORGESTRODE
the G4, 235-pound Uhlenhake is
AP Sports Writer
being sought by the nation's major
CDLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - His colleges.OhioStatecheckedhtmout
· ColumbusReadycoachcantellyou this week and he's flying to North
' why Jewell Jackson has. been Carolina State for an official visit
named as The Associated Press this weekend.
"Miami has offered himafullride
· ClassABackoftheYearinOhiohlgh
schol football this fall .
and KentStatewants him for a visit.
"He's not blazing fast, but hlsftrst He's on Ohio State's list of 40
. three steps are extraordlnartly recruits," Nestor said . •
Uhletthake has performed both
quick," Coach Paul Nestor said of
the 5-foot -9, 17().pound senior who led ways for Newark Catholic in leading
· Readytothe Dlvlsk.n Nplayofftltle the Green Wave to the Division V
with ,nine touchdowns in three championship game the last two
· post-season games.
seasons. "He Is a great offensive
"He has fine balance, once he sees lineman,'" Coach J .D. Graham said.
· daylight he accelerates and, maybe "He has the best technique of
the best thing of all, he's hard to anybody we've had here."
bring down because his legs never
Joining Uhlenhake on the first·
stop moving," said Nestor, theClass team all-state Class A offensive line
were ends Johnny l{arrtson of Oak
A Ohio Coach of the Year.
The Ready pair was joined by lllll and Darrln Rogers of Carding·
Newark catholic's twO-way tackle, ton, tackle Dennis Loushin of
Jeff Uhlenhake, as the Ohio Line- RJchmond Heights, guards Tony
manoftheYearinCiassA. Itwasthe Brauscho!CllntonMassleandErlc
first such hoitorfor'the Green Wave, Switzer of Arcadia and center Joe
long a dominant force among the Lawless of TUscarawas Valley •
state's smallest schools.
Steve Poth of top.r;mked Moga·
Jackson ran for 1,205 yards in dorewas theNo.1quarterback with
Ready's S.2 regular season, but Andy Peterson of Archbold, the
accelerated in the playoffs. lie regular-season state scoring cham·
scored a playoff record four •plonwlth222points; Jerry Mapes of
touchdowns 1rt one post-season McCoiJlb, Eric Penick of VInton
conteSt and collected :nl yards and North Galla and Jackson joining
three scores In the 4.'J.15 champion· -· him in the backfield.
ship rout of Orrville last weekend,
other SVAC players recognized
Against mostly Class AAA and wereKygerCreek'sJ.D.Bradbury,
Class AA competition, Jackson third team ollense; Malt Kemper,
accounted for 24 touchdowns and North Galla, tldrtl learn defenee;
had nine more called back because Srott Pickens, Nonb Gallla. special
of penalties. "And five of those menllon while Rtmdy Layton,
called back were 70yards or more,'' Soutltwe!llem; Rwty Flagg, Sou&amp;hNestor said.
em; Sieve Waugh, Kyger Creek;
Nestor, who retired as a publlc Jell Barnes, Hannan Trace and
teacher two years ago, turned to the Wade 0Juno14o, Southern, realived
parochial coaching ranks at Ready honorable meutloo.
1n 191l2. He was 5-5 last year before
Selected to theflrst-teamall·state ·
going ll·2 this fall. Among Ready's defense were down linemen Jeff
triumphs was their first in 23 years Aldridge of Springfield Catholic
overColumbusWatterson,aformer Central, Rich Bonkers of McDoblg·school state poll champion.
. nald, Mike Candela of Ashtabula St.,
Nestor calls the Ready team his JohnandPauiBrickeyofLucasville
best in a career of 149 victories ; 90 Valley, linebackers Jon Yackey of
defeats and 10 ties spread among Strasburg, Jell Happ of Ready,
stops at Paulding, Bowling Green, Dean Nance of Franklin Furnace
Columbus Wehrle, Saginaw, Mich., Green and Ed Hennigan of South
NewLondonandReady. "This is the Charleston Southeastern and deep
closest knit team I've ever backs Rob Krupp of Fostoria St
coached,''hesald.
Wendelln, Steve Davis of McComb
Despite playtngfor a small school,
and
Dan Mentel of Ready.
.
'

ErlcPenlck
FlrstTeam .
AD Ohio

·Fairmont
Rio's next
opponent

Bench awaits Bengal veterans
The Steelers, 94, lead the Amerl·
can Conference's Central Division.
They are corning off a 45-3
Thanksgiving Day drubbing at the
hands
at has
Detroit.
There
been a flurry at interest
in whether Terry Bradshaw, the
onetime regular as Pittsburgh's
quarterback, might return to play
Sunday after missing all of this

=~ln:o:a::;~d~=
played since, with
Stoudt

Cliff
.directing the offense in his absence.
ReporterstromP!ttsburghasked
Gregg, during a long.qlstance
telephone callWednesday, whether
he thinks Bradshaw will play
sunday.

RIO GRANDE - RJo Grande
College's Redmen will battle peren·
nlal small college powerhouse
Fairmont (W.Va.) State College
Saturday at the Paul R. Lyne
Physical Education Center.
Game time Is set for 7:30 p.m.
The Falcons will enter the game
with a 1-1 record' having upended
Ohio Dominican College in their
operier and losing to Heidelberg
College. Fairmont has won 13 of the
last 17 West Virginia Conference
championships.
Coach Dave Cooper's Falcons
will be led by 6-6 junior forward Tim
Murphy, who averaged 17.4 points
and 7.2 rebounds per game last
season. He will be joined on the
front line by 6-3 Elvin Addison (ll.9
ppg., 9.1 rbds.), and Dave Hlginbot·
nam, a 64 transfer from the
University
ofbackcourt
Pittsburgh·
Johnstown.
In the
will be
5-9 Curtis Johnson (7.9 ppg.) and
Kevin Beaford, a 5-1 guard who
averaged 22.2 points per game in .
1981-82 but did not compete last
year. Beaford was e&lt;rMVP in the
West Virginia Conference two
years ago.

EAST RU'IHERFORD, N.J..
(AP) -TonyCarnphellenjoyed a
happy homecoming in leading Ohio
State past Maryland, the nation's
sixth-ranked college basketball .
team.
His only disappointment was in
not getting enough tree tickets for
his famUy and friends.
Campbell poured in 23 points for
the Buckeyes in their nG8 VIctory
Thursday night at the Brendan
Byrne Anena, about five miles from
where he greW up in'Teaneck.
"I had to come up with 30 tickets
lor famUy and friends," the6-foot·7
senior said . ."But I got only 25. The
rest had to pay."
Only 6,438 paid to see the
doubleheader in which St. Peter's
also posted an upset, downing
Michigan State, ranked No. 11 and
expected to he the Big Ten power
this season, 73-66.
Among the crow.d were pro scouts
including Dick McGuire of the New
York Knlcks, who was tmpressed
with Campbell's ability.
"He's strong, tough and can play
the game," said McGuire, who
admitted that Campbell was the
reason he was here.
· Ohio State led at haifitme 31·27
and led by as much as 13 with less
than eight minutes left.
Poor foul shooting plagued the
Buckeyes down the stretch as
Maryland's Adrian Branch, score·
less in the first half, got hot.
Branch's jumper with 34 seconds
left reduced the Ohio State lead to
67-66.
Then Buckeye freshman Curtis
Wilson hit four of five free throws
within the last23 seconds. Maryland
had tralled 70-68 with three seconds
remaining when the Terrapins
called a timeout even though they
dldn't have any left, gtv!ngWIIson a
chance to make the technical foul
shots.

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

Penrod.
The front line will consist of 6-7

~:~ i::~h~ Bob Shaw, and 6-3

~THE

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"I don'tparticles
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"Stanley gave us a tailback
threat," the coach said. "He could
make t)ltngs happen and do things
on his' own. Some plays, quite
· frankly, he didn't have good
, blocking but he made It work. That
booSts the confidence of your
offensive line."

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Phone 992·2975
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113 Court Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Rio Grande will be led by
All-American guard Jerry Mowery
who Is averaging 17.2 points and
eight assists per game. He will be
joined in the bacl\court by ~Rick

T es

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injurtng a knee four weeks ago ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•1
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against Houston and 84 against
Green Bay.
He began jogglngfortheftrsttlme
Wednesday after recently undergoing arthroscopic surgery to remove

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

OSU upsets Maryland

Penick receives
first.team, All
Ohio recognition

CINCINNATI (AP) - Veterans
of the Cincinnati Bengais' roster
should beware. Coach Forrest
Gregghadlywantstowinhisteam's
last three games of the season, and
says he will substitute with younger
players If necessary.
The Bengals, now 5-8 in a •
disappointing up.and.Qown season,
play at Pittsburgh this Sunday
before a Dec. ll meeting with
Detroit - Cincinnati's final home
game - and the Dec. 17 finale at
Minnesota.
"We're going to 11-y to win every
game," Gregg said. "We wantto he
S.S. But somewhere along the line, If
a veteran Isn't playing the way we
think he's capable of, we won't
hesitate to put ina younger player."
The Bengals have younger Pi&lt;IY·
ers waiting in the wings at various
spots, notably quarterback. Waiting
behind Ken Anderson, a 1J.year
veteran and All·Pro quarterback,
are backup Turk Schonert, who
showed he could put points on the
scoreboard during Anderson's
three-game injury absence earlier
. this season, and rookie Jeff
Christensen.
The coaches·have already found
talent in running back Stanley
Wilson, a roOkie from Oklahoma,
but Wilson )las been sidellnetl since

Ohio

'

{'

('

1978

CHEVY BLAZER

$4,495

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4

The Daily Sentinel

Plmerof

l

Rozier leads list
in Heisman race
NEW YORK (AP) - Mike
Rozier, the record-setting running
back from the University of
Nebraska, tops a list of blue chip
candidates; one of whom w1l1 be
named the nation's top football
· player for 1983 at Saturday's
Reisman Trophy announcement.
Rozier, who became only the
· second 1Jlayer in NCAA history to
rush for more than 2,000 yards In a
season, and quarterbacks Steve
Young of Bligham Young and Doug
Flutte of Boston College reportedly
were the three players asked to
attend Saturday's reception and
news conference at the Downtown
Athletic Club.
The Nebraska senior rushed 'for
2,148 yards this season, giving him
4,780 for his career. Only Southern
Cal' s Marcus Allen previously had
topped the 2,!XXJ-yard mark In a
season, rushing for 2,342 In 1981.
Announcement of the Reisman
winner was scheduled for 7:50p.m.
EST. The Helsman has been
awarded annually sice 1935.·
Rozier's career total broke the Big
Eight Conference mark of 4,582 by
Oklahoma State's Terry Miller
from 1974-77, and his 29 rushing
touchdowns set an NCAA mark
previously held byLydell Mitchell of
Penn State, whorushedfor261nl971.
Rozier led the Cornlluskers to a
12-0 record this year, a No. 1 ranking

In The Associated Press poll and a
berth in the Orange Bowl Jan. 2
against Miami, Fla.
The othe top two candidates for
this year's Heisrnan apparently are
Young and Flutle. Pat Sullivan of
Auburn, In 1971, was the last
quarterback to wtn the award.
Young, a direct descendant of his
school's founder, Brigham Young,
was the top passer In the NCAA this
year, completing 300 of 429 passes
for a percentage of. 713. He threw for
33 touchdowns and 3,!m yards,
giving him ~ oassing yards for
his career. . ~
"I haven't tried to aspire to it (the
Reisman ) or even try to lobby for it.
It's just something that's a great
honor, and, if you get it, an evep
greaterhonor,"saldYoung.
.
Young, a senior, guided BrighiDn
Young to a 10-1 season, a No. 9·
national ranking and a berth in the
Holiday Bowl Dec. 23 against ·
Missouri.
Flutie, meanwhile, brought Boston College from obscurity to
na tional recognition In his junior
season. The multipurpose quarterback passed for 2,724 yards and 17
touch&lt;;lowns as the 13th-ranked
Eagles compiled a record of 9-2,
including a stunning victory over
Alabama, and earned a berth In the
Liberty Bowl Dec. 29 against Notre
Dame.

Friday, December 2, 19Q .

Middleport, Ohio

I

Diles gets sportcaster's job
numbei- of games to be televiSed. A
Cincinnati station was supposed to
be inCluded this year, but the deal
fell throUgh because,as ~maker
putlt, ''we were a Utile late."
He added that the station would
probably be a part o1 the network
next year and a Qeveland station
w111llkely be Included then as well.
Dave DUes, Racine, an OU

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
University wlll have Its own
baskl'tball network, OU Athletic
Director Harold McElhaney said
Thursday.
McElhaney said agreement baS
been reachedwithSportsConununica tlon Inc .,a television Jll'OthJtctlon
· company based in Huntlrlkton,
W.Va., that will produce the games.
SportCom President Dan Sho-

~akt!"v:"!!es=:~!nl~ Tyrrell captures
channel 3 in Huntlnglon, WCMH J J.rf
· hy
channel4lnColumbusandastation
e Jersons T rop
tn Toledo.

Dave Diles
OU sportscaster

College scores
By Tht 1\Modakd PreM

EMT
l.of'OI'MP. Waslllngtoo ll7. CatOOIIc 7'J
HO'&gt;I·ard 76 , Morgan S1. Iii
St f'ct('r's 13, Ml\1llgan Sl. 66
A.mzy SM. Holy e ros... 62 .

00, St. Frauds. N.Y. 58
Oh io St. 7'l. Maryland Ql
l&gt;r\'-JWI 72, Delaware 00
SW MisSt1lrt St . 'l!l, GreerJVtlle !l4
SOl!111
Old Dominion Ill. Falrle!gh-DIC'ktnsoo 62
Utica

\' a . CornrmrtWl'alth 94, Jotll&amp; Hopkins

'.

Louisiana St. SJ.. Washington ti
A.J.abama !IJ. 'McNeese St. n
Vanderbl.lf"«&lt;. Tl'lln.·Martln 6.'1
MIDWEET ------Indiana st. 81. C(!'l1. Arkansas !i6

ToiOOo 12. U.S. lnternatkK1ai 6l
Kansas 67, St. Louts 63
5\\o' Mlsscw1 75, Greem'Wl', Ill.

~ .

N. kM·a 8), WISconsin 59

Man.juette n . NE Loolslana St . 5'7
\'oungst&lt;:M'n St. 104. Ohio Domlnk:'an :rl
SOlJ'DIWE§T
Arkansas 911. SE MISSO.Jrt St. fll
Murray St. ffi. Eastt'rn Sl

S. Arkansas 7U, Stepto'o F . Austin 56
Te-xas ChrtsiiM J..'i, E . Texas St. 2E
TeXas Tech 64, San Diego 5.1
1'\l.lsa 87, Oral Roberts 8l
N. Texas St, 79 , Mldw'PS!ern, Tex. 61
Te.~llS-San Antonio Tl, Rice 56

FARWEBT
New MeKiro

WebPr St

7~.

7~.

Long Beach St. 54

E. Washlngtoo 63

Cal SI ·F'I.Illl'rtoo 67. Arlzma 00

Northern Arizona

~.

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)- Norlhem
DllnoisqujllierbackT!mTyrrellbas
won the 1983 Jefferson trophy as the
most outstanding football player in
the Mid-American Conference.
Th
The trophy, presented
ursday
night, is awarded annually by the
Downtown Athletic Qub of Toledo.
The 10 schools in th,e conference ·

games at BowUng Green (Jan. 21)
and Toledo (Jan. 28), a home game

~~~eMI:!:T~~~!t~=~ nomtnateoneplayereach.Ballo~~

Is by 2D media members and the
coaches In the conference.
(Feb. 25) ·
Tyrrell, a senior from Hoffman
Pizza Hut, Plco Wholesale and Estates, Ill., led his team to a 9-2
Bank One have agreed to sponsor · record overall and the MAC
the network, he said. Although at championship wlth an S-1 league
least one addltlonalsponsor is
·
needed, McElhaney said the net- mark.
work wlllget off the ground this year
He completed 91 of 189 passes for
"even 11. (the Ohio University 1,260 yards and eight touchdowns
athletic department) has to pick up andrushed166ttmesforanetgainof

wllng Green (Feb. 18) or Toledo

Conrn::tlrut 76. Yak· 54
RhOOI:' \stood 7R. Slonf'hiU 73

..

The network will televise four of
Ohio's Mid-American Conference
contests this season - two away
g ames and two home games.
Shoemaker said this year'spackage
tentatlvelywllllncludeBobcatroad

Mankato State 73

Portland 59, Bolsc&gt; St. 56. OT
Colorado St. 78. r-&gt; C(JloraOO fi2

F'resoo S1. 92. Cai·Davls 49
CioJ'&amp;ulga &amp;5, Idaho St. 6.1, CYI"
F\tllerton St. trr, Artzon.a 66

Washington St. 86, Sealtk' Pacific 76

........
....-...
,........,
rotJIU'rriAMEN'n)

the rest of the tab."
No other MAC school presently
has a basketball network, although
several Toledo games are televised
yearly on wrYG, the NBC affiliate

r~539~y;ards;;;and:;;seven;;;;t;ou;c;h;do;wns;;;',-1

in
Toledo. stmUarly, ohio u. bas
never had Its own basketball
network.
"People want to see a winner,"
McElhaneysald."Nowthatwehave
won (Ohio was 23-9 last year and
appearro in the NCAA toumament) , It opens afew doors. This Is
great for recruiting, for alumni and
for overall exposure. It's great for
the university Itself."
McElhaney and Shoemaker said
they are optlinlstlc· about the
network eXpanding in coming years
- in both number of stations and

Bethunl'"Cookman fB. Ectv.·ard Wat('rs 47
aarun 79, TenOO&gt;SEe St .~.
Dl.llard 77, Jackson St. 59
Florida A&amp;M T1. Morris Brown 57

TOURNAMEN'nl
NAIA~K

ldallo

12GAUGI

Coli . 7!1, NW Nv.armf' 70

REMINGTON IIFELED SLUGS

LAFF-A-DAY

'2,28 PIR 5 PK.

EJGIIT POINTER - Bobby Jeffers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
J,eHers, Pomeroy, brought down an eight point buck deer on the second
day of deer season. The deer wasldlled on private property owned by
Jeffers Excavating.

20·16-410GAUGI

Drl·vers Educatl·on
Classes

1 M'ddl rt 011.
n I epo • 10
Beginning Monday, Dec. 5
Phone 446-0699

For Pre-Registration

'2,15 PIUPK.

winter meetings," said Davis, who
w111 receive an extra $:axl,lm from
the Twtns if he is traded. "By
waiting, at least I'll know where
everybody ends up."

graduate and former sportsca•ter,
for WXYZ in Detroit, who alsq
worked tor ABC-TV, w1l1 supply the
ptay-by-play, Shoemaker said. ir.
second announcer hasn't yet been
Bobcat Coach Danny Nee, wh~·
team was defeated Wednesday9
night by DePaul, said he wa1
"really, really happy" about th ,
network.
,

CUSPS 141-180)
A DlvliiOII of Multimedia, Inc.

"Mill St.

land Dally Press A.ssoclaton and the
American Newspape,· Publishers Association, National Advertising Representative. Branham Newspaper Sales,
733 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10017.

SUPPLY

SUBSCRIMION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
J
One Week . .. .... .. ........... .. .... .. ...... $1.00
One Month ..... : ..................... ..... $4.40
One Year ...... ......... .... ........ ..... $52.110
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dall y ..... ..... .... ......... . .... .. ... . 20 Cents

Homel_ite Saws

ball
Association
Coach
the season,
Month.
Motta,
52, in his
16th of
NBA
has his team in first place In the
Midwest Division with an 114
record. It isthebeststartever!orthe
Mavericks, who entered the league
inl!®-81.

e

LUMBER

II l l l

Chester, 0.

985·3301

Irjp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~;;;;;;;;;d~~~~~~~~~~~~rl
APPEARING AT THE MEIGS INN
THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY-10-2
'..

...

,,

Modular

1

tburch SChool 9: 1.5 a.m.; worship service
' 10:30 a.m. Cholr rehearsal, TUesday 7:XI
p.m., under ~Jon of Allee Nease.
, POMEROY CIIUR&lt;ll OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Corner Union and Mu!berl)', Rev.
Thomas GlEn Mc;C!ung, pastor. Oyde Hend·
er80D, S. S. SupL Sunday Scb:lol, 9: ~ a.m.;

.
'

1

towns where borne carrier service ts
available.
,.

.

1

POMEROY CHUR&lt;ll OF CHRIST, 212 W.
Maln st., Nell Proudfoot, pastor. Bible schOOl.,
9:·:u a.m.;
worship, 10: :IJ a.m.;
Youth meetings, 6: :J&gt; p.m.; evening worship,
7:aJ p.m. Wednesday nlaht prayer meeting
1111d Bible study, 7o:JJ p.m.
THE SALVATION ARMY, Il5 Butternut
A.w., Pomeroy. Mn. Dora Wlnlftg In charge.
SUnday bol1neu meeting, 10 a.m.; Sunday
Sj&gt;llool, !Oo;IJ a .m. Sunday School, YPSM
E;lolse Adams, leader. 7::Jl p.m ., salvation
meeting, various speakers and music speqals. Thunday ·..... 11: :IJ a.m. to 2 p.m., LadleS
Home taeue. mernbe~ In charge, all
~ Invited; 6o !5 p.m. Thursday, Corps
Cadet Class (Young People--Bible). 7::l&gt;p.m.
Bible Study and Prayer meeting, open to the

BEFORE YOU BUY TIRES •..

CHECK
OUR
PRICES .

~MEROY

WESTSIDE -CHURCH OF

CHR131'. 3.1'Ul Chllclren's Home Road
(County Road 76) 992-5235. Vocal music.
~ worship 10 a.m.; Bible study lla.m.;
'ttcrshlp, 6 p.m. Wednesday Bible study, 7

p.m.

GENERAL TIRE SALES
•

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH - Qlttoo Lucas, pastor. Sunday
Sthool 9: J) a.m. Mrs. Worley Francis, supt.
Preaching services ftnt and third Sundays
lollowlng Sunday School. Youth mEeting
f!W!rJ Sunday, 7o30 p.m .
I GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
Preaching 9: :J) a.m., first and second
Sundays of each rnc11th; tblrd and fourth
SUndays each mooth, woi'shtpservtces at7: :1&gt;
p.m. Wednes&lt;lay evenings at 7: :JJ p.m ..
Prayer and Bible Study.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, MulbenY
11et11&gt;ts Rood. Pomeroy. Mlellael Pionpastor; Marie Spil&lt;s, Sabbath Scllool
Supt. Sabboth Sctloolls at 2 p.m. .., Saturday
wtth worship terV1ces tollawtng at 3:1.5 p.m .
. RU'IUND FIRST BAPI'!ST CHURCH StstA!r 11arr1ett WlU'lle£, Supt. Sund~y School,
9:~ a.m.; morning worship, 10:45 a .m .
POMEROY nRST BAPTIST, DaVId
Mann, minister; Wffilam Snouffer, Sunday
School au~. Sunday &amp;hoot, 9: ~ a.m.;
Morning worship 10::11 .m.

PH. 992-7161

.,

TheWorf&amp;:,

FIRST SOUTI-IERN BAPTIST', Pomeroy

Pike. David Hunt. pastor; Jack Needs,
Sunday Scllool Director. Surtday school, 9o 30
a.m.; 11llll'bllng worship, 10:30; ""'nlng
wcnhlp, 7::l&gt;p.m. Tuesday VIsitation, 7p.m.;
WednEeday, Prayer service, 7: :Jl p.m .;
Mission Friends, 7: J) p.m.; Girls In Artlons,
7: ~p.m.; Acteens, 7: J) p.m.; Choir Practice,
8o;IJ p.m.
.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH, Old
Dexter Rd ., Dexter. Paster Woody can. Jr.
Putcr. Sunday &amp;hool 10 a.m. Sunday
evening service, 7 p.m: Thursday evening
oervlco,7p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Baltey
Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastor.
Handley Dunn. SUpt. Sunday school, 10 a .m .
Sunday ....mg oervtce 7: :JJ p.m.; Bible
teacltltti, 7:;1) p.m. Tht1111day.
SYRACUSE IIIISSION, Cherry St., Syracuae. Services, lD a.m. Surday, Evening
IIOIVIcal, Sunday and W..t.-ay, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTlAN UNION, La.wrence Manley,
po~lor; Mn. R....,U Young, Sunday.School
Supt. SUnday School 9o:JJ a.m. Evening
wcrshlp 7: :II p.m. Wednesday prayer meetJng
7o30 p.m.
torr. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, Racine
- Rev. J"""" Satterlleld. pastoc. Morning
warsltlp 11:45 a .m.; Sunday SclloollOol'la.m .;
wcnhlp 7 p.m. ,.._.y, 7o ill p.m .,
10dla prayl!l' meetln&amp;. l'(edpeoday, 7o ill p.m.

Buffet~M

'

'
~

..

'!"!"''t8

YPE.

..

THE
LONE WOL
l-R: Chuck Petry, Drums: Kim Browning,

o(

•'

lead Singer: Van Johnson
Back Row: lead Guitar: Kenny Koehler
NEW DINNER HOURS

MAGNAVOX 25" COLOR CONSOLE

Tuesday-Thursday
6 p.m.-9 p .m .
Friday-Saturday

Electronic Tuning

JIM PAYNE

'',."·
,,

6 p.m.-1 0 p.m.

ENJOY THE GREAT FOOD AND FINE ATMOSPHER.E

.......,uatlc

r-----------------------,
Open
Every
Night

Till
8:00 P.M.

Master
Charge
~

Visa

I

MIDDlEPORT FIIISI' BAPTIST, Comer
Sixth and Palmer, the Rn. Mark McClung.
9wlday tctmol t: 15 a.m.: Dan Whlte. Sunday
SChool oupt., Jolin Reibel, Sr.. asst. supt.
J11Gm1na Wonlllp.IO:l5 a.m. Youth .-!1111
7o;IJ p.m. W - Y . lllcludlng woo tau,
• - lteo_., ftllllOr astroaau!B, and Junior
and ...,IOrltllllBYF; choirpracUce8::Jlp.m .
w~ priiYl!l' meeting and Btbleotucly,
7:;1! p.m.
'
CHURal OF CHRIST, Mkldleport, 5th arxl
Main, Bob l\lleltoo. mlnllfer. AI Hartsoo,
anodate mlnlofer. Mike Gerlaeh. SUnday
ljchool Supi!rtlrtendeot. Bible .Scltoo1. 9: :Jl
a.m.; rnm&gt;biiW&lt;niLIP.I0:30~.m.; eveninK
-...rp 7 p.m. W - Y Bltile Stully and
)'OUtb araap meetlllp. 7 p.m. . ·
MIDDLEPORT aruRCH OF no;: NAZA·
RENE, Q&gt;putcn, Rev. Chari,. Coyle and
Rev. Nanoy COyle. BID Wbl.,, Sunday ochool
npt, Sundo,y ochool, 9: ill a.m.; lllllrlllni
- - . 10:10 a.m.: !lunda)'
. . - , ., 7 p.m. Preye- meetln&amp; WedneldaY7
p.m.

w--.v.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
THURSDAY NIGHT

NOW BOOKING BANQUETS AND PARTIES
1
FOR THE HOllO A Y SEASON
·
1 CALL NOW TO ASSURE A RESERVATION
BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE
1

•

I
I
I
I

UNITED Pim!BYTERIAN MINISTHY
OF MEIGS IDUNI'Y, Rev. Wanda

-.

lWold Johnlm,

fu~NVILLE

I
992-3629
I
·-----------------------J
NOW-UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

.Iototfbn,

dln!ctor or

PRESBYTERIAN.

Wanltlp-. 9 a.m.; Olurch SChool, IO; 30
a.m.

MIDDLEPORT

(

/ PRESBYTERIAN,

Cltun&gt;lt llchool, 9 a.m.; Mornlnl woraltlp,
10:111. 1111t1e 8ludy 'llloaclay, 10 a.m.; Bible

tdullY, '1')111nday...J.:..l!!,p.m.
•
IIY1IACUSE r11&lt;1n UNITED PRESBY·

'l'EIUAN ONrciL Clltlnll !IeiDol.lllo 15 a.m.;
tiLOIIIItl wm'lltlp, U:ll Lm.; Bltile !lhdy.

PHONE 446-7886

Ill

a.m.; .Junior and
~.I p.m.

.'
'l

Senior

IIlah

atiJRCR OF GOO, Putor,
Jllw• . - - · Suntley oehool, Ill a.m.;
~-- n a.m.; Cldlohll'l cfturch.
a .m.: Sunday .......... - · 7 p.m .;

n

Mtddl e port
P()merov . 0

CROSS

General Merchandise

If you ' lt 111~d of being uuttd tlkt a n~m ber YIJIJ It aPf!ftCIGte this
Jlory .. , They 1~ed rht comput~r a 1lmplt question lt .couklrft aM'l'll!rl

Racine 949,- lSSO

. "r"'IOT PROORN"'MEO FOR THIS F,t,CTOR. E~eryor"V! wu astounded. Thtn
thy dismvered lhal ~ l)'plsl (~ng the word tole had spello:d it S·O·I.fl.
Than~ thl! L01d tMr ~IIIJI I ll~ &lt;:llnro:M be fll&lt;&gt;grllmmd I~. 11 corrputer. There

11rt Yllluesand 1e•IKiu-pr~lous OM~o-..,r.icll d-efy m~~thtma!lc~l opres510n

·wednesday evening Young ladles auxiUary, 6

We

·
p.m. Wednesday family wochsip, 7 p.m.
HAZEL COMMUNITY" CHURCH, Ne-ar
Long Bottom, Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday
scllOCtl, 9:30a.m.; Worship 10: ~a.m.; Prayer
meeting 7; .]) p.m. Thursday.
MfDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST.
Corner A.sh ud Plum. Leslie Hayman,
pastor. Sunday school 10 a.m.; Morning
Worsh1p. 11 a.m .: Wednesday and Saturdi:ty
Evening services, 7: :Jl p .m.

...,It M- looking for You In Church nell! "'~k. We

n~ghtxn ..,ho ~re

~rt the ml~ions of your
Jtckilg 1nr;j Bndlng 3Ptrl:u~l an1Wl:t1 to l1fe s problems,

Saturoav

Tnurslt.ly

Fndl~

P~1lm

Jeremaah

tuiah

100 1·5

115 ·13

55 11·25

f'htllppians

1 JcM
2 1·17

l"eDrews
4 1·13

AM

PM

4-t0-20

••

PM

••

K~'•!Y ~~S

PM

I•

I~ E •M~• OC"~ ~

!II.E SOCtt"'

~..:.:-u·.-.··· ~~oe.:.. ~ •. • v.C:

. MEIGS

COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Fat IMler, Director
Rev. J - E. Corbitt, Asol&gt;!tant
NOR'l1IEAST CLUSI'ER
8ft. Don .vcihcr
ftey, Roy Deder
Rev. Seldon Johll8on
AL!i'RED - Chw-ch School 9o30 a.m-J
Worshlp,ll a.m.; UMYF, 6:ll p.m.; UM ,
Thlrd 1\lesday, 7: l) p.m. Community first ·
SUnday. !Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m. : Church
Schoo\10 a.m.; Bible Study. Thursday. 7 p.m.
UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m. ; Communion
flrst Sunday. (Archer)
JOPPA - Worship, 9: 30 a.m.; Church
School, 10: :J&gt; a .m . Bible Study, Wednesday.
7:l1 p.m . (Johnsont
LONG BOTI'OM - Chuoch School, 9::Kl
a .m.; Worship, 7 p.m .; Bible study, Wednesday, 7:J) p.m .; UMYF, Wednesday, 6 p.m.: 1
Communlan Ftnt Sunday. (Archer)
REEDSVILLE - Church SchOOl. 9: ;J)
a.m.; Worship 11 a.m. (Deeter )
TUPPERS PLAINS Sf. PAUL - Chureh
Scllool, 9a.m.: Worship, 10 a .m.; Bible Study,
Tuesday, 7:lJ p.m.; UMW, Third Tul!eday,
7:l) p.m.: Communion first SIJnday'.
· tArchef)
. ·

CENTRAL CLUSTI!JI.
Rev. Junt!l!i E. Corbitt
Rn.

~en

~. Hlclaard

NeMon

Ko&amp;bemlch

n... Robe11 E. Rotnoo
Rev. ADdrew Rubenklng

A..'i.BURY !Syracuse)- Worship. 11 a.m. :
Church School, 9:45 a.m.; ChafF Bible
Study, Wednelday, 7::l1 p.m.; UMW, first
Tuesday, 7::JJ p.m. ; Choir Rehearsal. Wednesday, 6:30 p.m .; UMW. fourth Sunday. 6: lJ
p.m. (Nelson)
ENTERPRISE -Worship 9 a.m.; Church
School. 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Tuesday, 7::JJ
p.m.; UMW. First Monday, 7:ll p.m. :
UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir rehearsal, i :ll
p.m. Wedneldiy. (Rothemtclll
FLA1WOODS - Church School, 10 a .m.;
worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study. Thunday. 7
p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. (Roth~mlch )
FOREST RUN- Worship. 9 a.m.: Churc h
SChool, 10 B..m.; Choir Practice, TUesday, 6: lJ
p.m.; UMW. flrst 1'ueMay, 7: lJ p.m.
(Nelson)
HEATH (Middleport) - Church Scllool,
9:30a.m.; Worship. 10:.)) a.m.; Bible Study,
Tuesday, 10 a.m.: UMW, secoOO MORday .
7:lJ p.m .: UMM. ttltrd Monday, 7::1&gt; p.m .
(Robinson)

MlNERSVlU..E - Worship Service-, 10
a.m. ; Church School, 11 a .m .; UMW. third
Wednesday, 1 p.m .; Choir practice, Monday,
7:.Jl p.m. tNI?Ison)
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Servlef'. 9
a .m. ; Church School; ll a .m. ; UMW. serond
Tuesday, 7::1lp.m.: UMYFiastTUesday. 7::Jl
p.m. (Rubellklogl
POMEROY - Church School. 9: 15 a .m.;
Worship servtcr. lO:;l) a.m.: Choir rehearsal,
Wednesday, 7::xt p.m.: UMW, second Tues "
day, . 7:30 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6
. p.m. ICOrbin!
ROCK SPRINGS - Church School. 9: 15
a.m.: Worship, 10 a.m.; BiblE&gt; Study,
Wednesday, 7:XI p.m.; UMYF (SenlorsL
Sunday, 6 p.m. ; (Juniors), every othet
Sunday, 6 p.m . (Rothl?mich)
R\!11..AND - Church School. 9:45 a.m.;
Worship, lO: :Oa.m.; UMW !Evening Circle ),
second Wednesday . 7:;l) p.m .: UMW, second
Thursday, 1 p.m. IRubenldrt~l
SALEM CENTER - ChW'Ch School, 10
a.m.; Worship, 9: '15 a .m. tRubenldng)
SNOWVn.u: - . Worship, 8: l'l a.m.;
Church SChool to a.m. (Ruhenklng\
IIOUIRERN CLU!IfEII
ae. . .Jame1 M. (lark

.'

- · Paul McGUire
On1lle WhMe
IU'PLE GROVE- Chw-ch School, 9 a .m .;
Worship, 10 a .m. mrst and third Sundays);
UMW. second TUesday, 7:Jl p.m.; Prayer
meeting, We*lllday, 7 p.m . tOark)
BETHANY - Worship, 9 a.m; Church
SChOOl, 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday, 10
a.m.: Dorcas Women's Fellowship, Wednes day, 11 a.m. (McGuire)
CARMEL - Church Scllool, 9::Jl a.m.;
Worship, 10:45 a.m.: {5econd and Fourth
Sundays); Fellowship dlMer with Sulton,
thlrd Thursday, 6:~ p.m. (McGuire)

ae..

EAST LETART- Church School. 9 a.m.; .
Worslllp, 10 a.m. (second and fourth Sundays;
UMW, lint Tuooday. 7o30 p.m . (Clark)
LETART FALLS - Worship, 9 a.m.;
Churcll School, lD a.m. ((]ark)
MORNING STAR -Worship. 9ol5 a .m .;
C)wr&lt;h sc-. IOo ;I) a.m.; B!bte 81udy,
'l'1IW'Iday, 7: ill p.m. (Wblte)
lllORSJ: CHAPEL - Church Scllool, 9o :Jl
a.m.: Wo~, 11 a.m. (White)
PORTLAND - Church SchOOl, 6o30 p.m .;
Worship, 7o30p.m.; UMYF, WEdneoday, 7o:Jl
p.m. (McGUire)
I
RACINE WESLEY AN - Chw-ch School, 10
a.m.; Wonhlp, 11 a.m.: UMW. fourth
Monday 1:!) p.m.; Men's Prayer Brea»da.st,
7 a.m. tCiarkl
Sl11"00N - at=h School, 9:30 a.m.; .
mGI'bblltl wanltlp, 10:45 a.m. tllnt and thlnl
Sllndl)ol: -..,p with Connel,
1ltl'd 'llllndl1, to ;II p.m.(McGulre)
.
KENO CHUR&lt;ll OF CHR131', Oliver
sWain, !koporin-1- Sulll)ay ocllool 9oill
a.m. every week.

·w-.

-'t.

-·

~ · \J:.··

i'H

Attend Church
this Sunday

L.---....---------l

the aervtce.

.

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. Rev, Tom
State-n, pastor. Sunday School. 9'. J) a.m .;
evening S(&gt;rvtce. 7: JJ p.m . Wednesday praye1·
meeting, 7::JJ p.m .
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duane Wai'den, minister. Bible
class, 9::.&gt; a.m .; morning worship, 10:30
a.m.; evenin~ worship, 6: JJ p.m. Wedl).~ay
Sible study, 6: .J) p.m.
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
CHURCH. Sunday School service, 9:45a.m.:
Worship ·service. 10:.11 a.m.: EvangeliStic
Se-rvice, 7:3) p.m. Wednesday: Prayer
meeting, 7::JJ p.m .. Thursday.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
Harr!sonvtllc Rd .; Robt?rt Pur1ell, minister;
Steve Stanley, Sunday !':·"hool supt . Sunday
school, 9: XI a. m .; worshipservil't' 10:30 a .m.:
Evenlnst: worship Sunday, 7 p.m. a n~
WPdnesday, 7 p.m.
ST. JOliJ'II LUTHERAN CHURCH , Pin e
Grove. The Rev. William Mlddleswarth:
Pastor. Church services 9: JJ a.m. Sunday
, . .
School 10:30 a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHR1Sf\ Paul
Pratt . pastor. SUnday school, 9:XIa.m., Larry
Haynes, S. S. Supt,; morning worship, 10:30
a.m.
RACINE (]lURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Rev. Thomas H. Collier. pastor. Martha
Wolfe, Chairman of the Board of Christian
Lite. Sunday School, 9::ll a.m. : mornin~
worship, l0:30a.m.; Sundayf've-nlng worship.
7:.'JJ p.m . Prayer meeting. Wednesday, 7:l.l
p.m.
RACINE F1R....'IT BAPTtsr, Don L. Walker,
Paslor. Robert Smit h. Sunday School supt.:
Sunday Scllool, 9: lJ a.m.: mornlnF: worship,
lO:rW a.m .; Sunday evening WOJ~hlp, 7:))
p.m.; Wednesday evenlnJ~: Bible- study, 7:])
p.m.
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH.
Burllngllam. Ohio. Rev . Okey Ray Laudermllt. pastor. Pll. 992-7324. Sunday &amp;hool10:00
a .m.; Sunday (."Venlng serviCE', 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday evening scrvtCE', 7:00 p.m.
DANVD..LE WESLEY AN, Sunday School,
9:]) a.m.; momJng worshlp10:45a.m .; youth
service, 6:45 p.m .; evening worshlp, 7;D
p.m.; Wednesday, 7: D p.m. Prayer and

REORGANIZED CHU RCH OF JESUS
CHRIS'I' OF LATIER DAY SAINTS.
Portla nd-Racine Road . William Roush, pas.
tor . Linda Evans , church school director.
church school, 9:30a.m.: morning worship,
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening pra y~r
servl1..-es. 7:30p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAP'I'JST. Rev. Earl
S ~uler , paslor. Worship servtCP. 9:.10 a.m.
Sunday school. 10: :IJ a.m. Bible Study a nd
prayer service Thursday. 7: .lJ p.m.
~LETON INTERDENOMINATIONAL
CHURCH, Kingsbury RoaO. RC'v. David
Curfman, pastor. Sunday school, 9::ll a.m.
Ralph Carl, su!)(&gt;rlntendent ; Pl,l('nlngworshlp,
7 : ~ p.m. Prayer m(l('tlng, Wednesday, 7:ll
p.m .
LONG BOTI'OM CHRISTIAN, Ken Keifer,
pastor. Wallace Daml'Wood, Sunday School
Supt . Worship ~rvlce at 9 a .m . Bible SchoollO

a.m.
HYSE LL llUN HOLINE:SSCHURCH , Rf'v.
Thereon Durllam. paslor. Sunday School at
9:J.) a.m.; Morn\~ worship at 10:30 a.m.
Sunday evC'nlng · service at 7: l) p.m.;
Thursday serv ices a1 7: .JJ p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob. located on County Road .11. Rl'V.
Lawre nct&gt; Gluesencamp, paslor: Rev , ROJ;Pr
Wjllford, asslstanl pastor. Preaching serVices. Sunday 7:.10 p.m. Prayer mf'ellng
Wednesday, 7::ll p.m.; Gary Griffith. leader
Youth woups. Sunday evenina:. 6: XJ p.m. with
Ro~er and Violet Willford as leaders.
Communion service first Sunday each m onlh.
WHITE'S CHAPEL, CooMile RD. Rev.
Roy Deeter, pastor. Sunday school9: :ll a.m.;
worship serviC£&gt;, 10: l1 a.m. Bibko sludy ant.!
prayer service Wed!K'Sday, 7:]) p.m.
RLm.AND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Dan
Monlux. pastor: Bill Nlchol!iOn, Sunday
school s upt . Sunday school. 9: :ll a .m.:
morning worship a nd oommunlon, 10: :II a.m.

RUTLAND B[BLE MITHODISf - Amos
Tillis, paslor; Son ny Hudson, supl. Sunday
school, 9:30a.m. Morning worstllp. 10: :r:~ a. m.
Sunday ev('nlng service, 7:00. Wednesday
eve nln~ servt(.'(' 7:00p.m.; WMPO Prowam,
9:00 a.m. each Sunday morning.

Praise.
DANVILL.E HOUNESS CHURCH, located
on Route 3:;5 between Vinton and Langsville.
Rev. Ben Watts, pastor. Sunday SChoo!, 9:30
a.m., Bobby L.amben S.
Supt.; Morning
Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Otlldren's Happy Hour
6:45p.m: Prayer &amp; Bible Study, 7:00p.m.
Missionary meeting tlrst Wednesday ot each
month, 7:l&gt; p.m. For Information call

s.·

:188-&amp;167.
SD.VER RUN BAMIST, BW Little,
_pastcr. Steve Uttle, S. S. Supt. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; morning worship, ll a.m. Sunday
evening wcnhip, 7: lJ p.m. Prayer meeting
and Bibl e study, Thursday, 7:lJ p.m.: youth
meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m.
CHRISTIAN FEU.OWSHIP CHURCH, 383
N. 2nd Ave., Mlcldlepo11. Sunday School, 10
a .m . Sunday and Wednesday Evening
Senrlcea 7: ll p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF·GOD, Rev. R E.
Roblnsoo, putor. Sunday school, 9::11 a .m.;
wcnhlp SE"''VVce, 11 a.m.; evening service, 7
p.m. ; youth servtce, Wedn~ay, 7 p.m.
LANGS~ CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
Robert E. Museer, pastor.Sunday school, 9:])
a .m.: Paul Mus9l'!', supt.: mornlng worship,
10 :~ a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7 p.m.;
mld-weelt service, Wednes&lt;lay, 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TilE NAZARENE - Rev. Jama: B. Kittle, pastor.
Shts"man Cundiff, superintendent. Sunday
School. 9o:ll a.m.; Mcrnlag Worship lOo:Jl
a.m.; Evangelistic service, 6 p.m . Prayer and
praise Wednesday, 7 p.m.; youth meeting, 7
p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST.
Elden R. Blake, pastoc. SUnday School 10
a.m.; Robert Reed, supt.; Morning sermon •
11 a .m .: Sunday night services, Christian
Endeavcr, 7: XI p.m.; Song service, 8 p.m.:
Preaching, 8: lJ p.rn. Mld-WI!ek PraYer
meeting, Wedreday, 7 p.m., Alvin Rood, lay

Jes.der.
HEMWCK GROVE CHR!lmAN, Roger
Watsm, pastor; Crenson Pratt, Sunday
School supt. Morning worshl.p, 9::11 a.m.;
sunday 9Cblol. 10:30 a.m.; evenlne serv1se:
7:30p.m.
lilT. UNlON BAPTIST, Rev. Tom Dooley;
Joe Sayn~, SUnday School Superlntendellt.

Sunday IChool, 9:45 a.m.; ewn1ng wonhJp,
7:3:1 p.m. Prayer meetl.ng, 7:~ p.m.

wemeodo)'.

w-

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Vlnoent C. Wa.,.., ill, mlnl.!ter;
Hennaa Black, supertntl!lldeot. Sunday
S&lt;llool 11:;1) a.m.; ....,1118 sen1ce. 7 p.m.;
Bible SCltool, 7 p.m.
OIES'I'!:R a«JR&lt;ll OF THE NAZARENEl, Rev. llerblrt Grall!, pastel'. Frank
. Rl!lle, IUpt. Sunday School, II: ill a .m. Wonhip
M'Vtce, U a.m. and '1:~ p.m. Prayer
mootJnc, .Wedn&lt;odey, 7o :ll p.m.
lAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH, Rev. Robert M1!ler, pastor; Lloyd
Wright, Director of Christian Education.
SUnday Sclloo1.11:30 a.m.; Momma Worohlp,
10o30 a . m.; Choir Practlc-., Surday, 6o:Jl
p.m.; Evenlllil Worship, 7o]) p.m. W...rne.day
Prayer and Bible Study. 7o:Jl p.m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST, Chari,.
RuueU, St.. mJniSt«; fUCk ~mber. SUpt.
SUnday ochool. 9:30 a.m.;. \IU'shlp semce,
10: ~ a.m . Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:JO p.m.

RLJTI..AND CHCRCH OF TH~ NAZA·
RENE. Rev. Lloyd D. Grlmm. J r .. pastcr.
Sunday School. 9:.'1) a.m.: worship service,
10:30 a .m. ; young: people's sen1ce, 6 p.m.
Evang:cllsllc servtCC', 6::1l p.m. Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRISJ', Miller St.,
Mason, W. Va. Eugl'flt' L. Conger, mlnLster.
Sunday Bible Study, 10 a .m.; Worship 11 a .m.
and 7 p.m . Wednesday Bible Study, voca l
music, 7 p.m.
MASON ASSEM OLY OF GOD. Dudding
Lane. Mason, W. Va . Rev . Ron:tlt' 0 . Rose.
Pastor . Sunday &amp;hool 9:45 a. m .~ Morning
Worship 11 a.m . Evening Servlrf' 7::ll p.m.
Wednesday Women' s Ministries 9 a.m.
(meeting and prayer). Prayer a nd Bible
Study 7
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR!Sf IN
CHR ISTIAN UNJON, The Rev. William
Campbell, pastor. Sunday ScOOol, 9:30a.m.:
Jam('S Hughes, supt.; evt111 ng service. 7:.'11
p.m . Wednesd&lt;~y ('Venlng . prayer meeting,
7: ~ p.m . Youth pray('r servlcef'acll'I\Je.sday.
F AIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart, W.
Va .• Rl. 1. Mark Irwin. pastor. Worship
Sf'nllces. 9: :1! a.m.: Sunday Sc:llool. 11 a.m.;
evening worship. 7: ,l J p.m . Tuesday cotlage
prayer meeting and Bible study, 9:30 a.m.
Worstup serviCOr, Wednl"5day, 7::.1 p,m.
OUR SAVIOUR Ltm!ERAN CHURCH Walnut and Henry Sts .. Ravenswood, W. Va .
The Rev. George C. Weirick, pastor. Sunday
Scllool, 9: XI a.m.; Sunday worhslp, 1J a .m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now located
on Pomeroy Pike. County Road '!i near
Flatwoods. Rev. Blackwood . pastor. Services
on Sunday at 10::11 a.m. and 7:30 p. m . wtth
Sunday schOOl. 9;ll a.m. bible study,
Wednesday, 7: :IJ p.m.
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST- St. Rt.l38, Anllqulty. Pastor, Rev.
Franklin Dickens . Sunday morning, 10 a.m.
Sunday evening, 7:30p.m . Thursday e:venlng,
7o30 p.m.
S'TIVERSVD..L~ ffi MMIJNITY BAPTIST
ClillRCH, Pastor Robert Byers. Sunday
SChool 10 a .tllfl Worship Service 11 a. m.;
Sunday evenlr\g servtce, 7: lJ p.m .; Wedncs·
day evening scrvl('(', 7: :J&gt; p.m .
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH,
Inc. - Paul St.. Middleport. Rev. O'Dell
Manll')', pastOI'. Sunday Scllool, 9:30 a.m.;
Mornlng worship 10:~ a.m.; evening worship, 7: l) p.m. 'I\Iesday, 12:l1 p.m . Womm's
prayer meeting; Prayer and praise ~l'\1re,
Wedne'lday , 7: :lJ p.m.

ing, 7:30p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHR~N IN
CHRIST CHURCH. Rev . Robe11 sanders.
pastor: Don WUI, lay leadC'r. Located in Te-xa s
Communlly on CR 82. Sunday school, 9::JO
a.m.; Morning worstllp se!Vice, 10:-15 a. m.:
eve ning preaching service second and fourth
Sundays, 7: X) p.m .; Christia n Endeavor, first
and third Sundays, 7::ll p.m: Wednesday
prayer meeting and Bible study, 7: lJ p.m .
.JEHOVAH'S WITNESS. 37319 State Route
124 lOne mile.e-ast of Rutlandl. Sunday, Bible
lecture 9:30 a.m.: Watclllowt&gt;r study, 10::..00
a.m.: Tuesday. "Blble study. 7:lJ p.m.:
Thursday, Theocratic School. 7:XI p.m.;
Service ME!I?t!n~ ~8:20 p.m .
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY,
Localed on the 0. J . 'White Road off highway
160. Pat Henson. pas tor. Sunday School 10
a .m. Classes for all ages. Junior Church
11:00: Mo rnl n ~ Worship, 11 :00; Adult Cholr
prac:tk:'e 6:00p.m. Sunday. Young Peopl e's.
Children's Church a nd Adult Bible Sludy.
Wednesday at 7:ll p.m.
HOPE BAPTISI' CHAPEL- 570 Grant Sl.,
Middleport ; Sunday Scllool . 10 a .m .: mornlnl!:
worhslp', 11 a.m.; ewnln~:: worship. 7 p.m.
Wednesday evening Bible study and prayer
meetlnR. 7 p.m. Affilia ted with Soulhern
Baptist Convention.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHR IST State Route 124 and County Road 5. Mark
Seevers. mlnlsler; Sunday SchOOl Supt ., Steve
Pickms. Sunday school. 9:30 a. m .: morning
worship, 10:30 a. m.: evening worship. 7 .p.m.
Wedn esd ay worship, 7 p.m.
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENT~R Grorgl;''s Cr('lE'k Roa d . Rev. C. J . Leml('ll,
pastor; Paul Poar, Church School Superlnlenck&gt;nt. Church school, 9:30 a.m.: morning
worship, 10:30 a .m; t&gt;wnlng scorvice, 7 p.m.
Blblf" Study. Wf'dnesday, 7:00p.m. Clas."RS ror
all ag:cs .
ST. PAUL LliTHERAN CHURCH. Corner
of Sycamore and Second Sts., Polll£'1'oy. The
Rev. William Mlddleswarth, Pastor. Sunday
School at 9: tl5 a.m. and Chw-ch Services. 11

p.m.
SACRED HEART, Msgr. Anthony Gte.Ma·
more, Ph . !192·5898. Saturday l:!vcnlng Mass,
7:lJ p.m .: Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a .m.
Conless!ons one-half hOW' beton&gt; each Mass.
CCD Classes, 11 a.m. Sunday . .
V1Cl'ORY BAPTIST - 525 N. 2nd St.,
Middleport . James E. Keesee, pa~tor . Sunday
morning worship, 10 a.m.; evening serviCf', 7
p.m.; Wednesday evening worship. 7 p.m.;
VIsitation. Thursday, 6:.'J} p.m.
TRINITY CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY. Cool·
ville - Gllber1 Spencer. pastor. Sunday
scllool. 9:.JJ a.m.: morning service. 11 a.m.
Sunday evening service, 7:.D p.m.; mld"•eek
prayer service Wednesday, 7: :l) p.m.
MOUNT OLIVE ffiMMUNITY CHURCH.
Lawrence Bush, pastor; Max Folmer. Sr.
Superintendent. Sunday Sclrlo! and morning
worship, 9: .'J) a. m. Sunday evening ser.1ce. 7
p.m .; Youth meeting and Bible study,
Wedn~da~·. 7 p.m.
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass. Rev. Robert Smith, Sr.,
pastor: Rev. J ames Cundiff, assistant paslor.
sunday School, 9: .Jl a.m.; morning worship,
10:30 a.m.; evening worship, 7:ll p.m
Women's Fellows hip. Tuesdays, 10 a.m.
Wednesday night prayer servtce, 7::vl p.m.
FAITH BAPTiST CffiJRCH. Mason, meet
at United Steel Workers Union Hall. Railroad
Street, Mason. Sunday SchoOl 10:00 a.m.:
Morning Worship, U:OO A.M.; Evening
Service. 6 p.m. Pray~r meeting and Blbl~
Study Wednesday, 7:00p.m.

.. '

985·3944

Nationwide Ins . Co .

&amp;

Groceries-

6 p.m.; mid-week ser"\rlce, Wednesday. 7 p.m .
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 3:16 E.
Main St.. Pomeroy .' Sunday services Holy
Commu.nlon on the ftrst Sunday of each
month, aM combined w1tbmorn1ngprayeron
tliothlniS\mllay. Momlngprayorandsermon
on aU other Surdays ol the month. Church
~hool and aunery care provided. Cottee
OOur 1n the Parish Hall Immediately following

.'

1. 0 . " Mac" McCoy
Rt . 1, Reedsy~ille, Oh.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

THE DAILY
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ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

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TRINITY CHURCH, Rev. W. H. Perrin,
p
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'It's a wonderful world
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Jrzc/uded WII eve 50 of your favorite fixm s. U s.A.
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RIMIIIGTOIIIIFILED SlUGS

Twins sign Davis
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Relief
pitcher Ron Davis has signed a
four-year, $2.7 million contract wlth
· the Minnesota Twtns, making him
the highest -paid player In the
American League club's history .
Davis, a former New York ·
Yankee traded to Minnesota In April
1982, recorded 30 saves as a Twin
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DavLs' contract contains an
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Twins from trading him before Jan.
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lf Davis is traded after that date, he
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"U I gave them (the Twins) my
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HUNTER'S SPECIAL

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ol Columbus, 0.
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SUPERMARr:_:_E~_:,~
MIDDLEPORT

-~ "

FOREST RUN BAPTISf - Rev. Ny!e .
Borden. pastor. COrnelius Bu nch, superintendent. Sunday school9: ll a .m .: second and
fow1h Su ndays. worship service at 2: :JJ p.m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourtll and
'Main SIS., Middleport. Rev . Calvin Minnis,
pastor. Mrs . Elvin Bumgardner. supt.
Sunday school, 9:20 a.m .; worship servl('E!.

10:45 a.m
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIS'f'

-CHURCH, Route 1, Shade. Pastor. [):m Blaclt.
AffUiated with Southern Baptist convention. ·.
Sunday school, 1: 30 p.m.: Sunday worship.
2: :II p.m. Thursday evening B!ble study ,
p.m.
PEJ'IiiECOSfAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
Route 124. WilHa m Hobttck, pastor. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; Sunday evenJ ng service, :I,
p.m. Wednesday P\lening service 7 p.m. CARPENTER BAPTIST, Don Cheadlt.
Supt. Sunday Scllool !1: :II a.m. Morning
Worship, 10:30 a .m. Prayer Service, alternate
Sundays .

1:

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third '"
Ave., lhe Rev. Cla rk Baker, pastor. Carl
Not!lngham, Sunday Sct¥xll Supt. Sunday
School lO a.lfl. - classes fo r a ll ages. Evening
servlrrs, ~p. m . \\'ednesday, Study , 7; :¥) p.m ,
Youth ser.rlres. 7: 30p.m. Friday.
~CCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. I:l8 Mill St.,
Mlddlep.:&gt;rt. Pastor l&lt;&gt; Brother chuck McPher·
son. Sunda y School at 10 :l.m. Se-rvices
Sunday eve!ltng at 7 p.m. and Wednesday at 7
p.m .
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev . Earl Shul er,
paslor. Su nd ay school 9: :J) a.m.; Church
seiVIC€, 7 p.m .; youth maollng, 6 p.m.
Tuesday Bible Study, 7 p.m .
F1JLL GOSPEL LIGI-ITHOUSE , 3.1)45
HUand Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pastor.
Danny Lambert . Sunday School Superintend·
e nt. Sunday Morning service, 10:00 a.m.;
Sunday evening seiV1ce 7:lJ p.m. Se-rv1ces
Tuesday and Thursday evenings al 7: :J) p.m .
WORD OF' FAITii. 93 Mlll St., Mlddlepon;
Richard . Sl~art, pastor. Sunday morning ,
10:00; Sunday eve-ning. 7: ::rl. Tuesday mornIng Blhle- Study, 10:00; Wedn~ay eve-ning,
7: :ll: Thursday morning vldeo "1th Kenneth
Copeland. 10:00. Friday f'Venlng v1deo with
Kenneth Copeland, 7: :Kl.
N~W HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev . C lcn&lt;i:ln Stroud , pastor. Sunday
Sc hool, 9:JO a .m.; Wors hip Serv1re, 10::1)
a.m.; Youtll Service, Sunday, 6:15 p.m .;
Sunday E'Venlng sentk&gt;t&gt;, 7:00 p.m . Wednes day Piayer Meetlrig and BiblE&gt; Study 7:OOp.m
NEAS~ SE'ITLEMENT CHURC H, Donald R. Karr. Sr .. pastor. Sunday afternoon
SCf'\l iCCS. 2:30; Thursday evening service,
7:.}).

FffiSJ' BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason. W. Va .
Paslor, Bill Murphy. Su nday School, 10 a . m.;
Sunday ("\\E'nlng servil't', 7:30 p.m.; Prayl?r
meelln~ and Bible Study Wednesda y, 7:.})
p.m. Everyone- welrome
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST Sall"m Sl. Rev. Paul Taylor. pastor. Sunday
School. 10:00 a. m.: Sunday evening service,
7::1.1 p.m.: Wednt'Sday eveni ng prayf!r
meetl n ~.

7:30.
SOUTif BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH - Sliver Ridge. Dtmne ,Syden·
s ni Cker, pastor. Sunday School 9 a .m .:
cllurrh sPrv1ct.&gt; 10 a .m. Bible st udy, Wednesday, 7:30p.m . June lhruSeptcmber , 7:00p.m,
October lhtu May. Sunday evening fellowship. 7:00 p.m . JunE&gt; lhru September, 6:00
p.m. October thru Ma.v .

P.m. ,

RUTLAND APOSTOLIC ~HURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST , Elder J a mes' Mlller. Bible
study, Wednelday, 7:30p.m.: SuOOay School,
10 a.m. Sunday night service, 7:ll p.m.
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS Hanisonvtlle Road . Earl Fields, pastor,
Henry Eblin, Jr., SUnday School SUpt. Sunday
School9::1) a.m.;· Mornlng WorshJp_1l a.m.;
Sunday ~oentnr ll'I'Vtce. 7::.:1 p.m.: Prayer
Meellng. Wednes&lt;tay, 7o ill p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GODJoy Clark, pastor. Wonhlp S&lt;Mce Sunday,
10:00 a.m.; Sunday !COOol, 11 a .m.; Wm"Ship
service, 7: ~ p.m . Wednesday prayer meet· .

Sermonette
The question Is certainly now new: II mig ht even be considered
by some people to be a bit trite and overworked. But growing up ~s I
did, In the 40s and 50s. and having such he roes as Roy Rogers,
Hopalong Cassidy, Tom Mix and Lash LaRue, I simply had to ask the
question. After all, JllY guest was Lash La~ue .
He concluded the heroes are here but we no longer see them.
"I think It's time we should look for the best ineachother instead
of trying to weigh each other out and test each other, " Lash quickly
responded. " If we would have more confidence in the fact that God is
creator and master of all things, I think thai we would be able to
understand better that love Is our Father's name ... "
Lash mentioned that he, too, had his heroes - Hoot Gibson.
Buck Jones among others. Some of his heroes had become his frlend'L_
and the same principle was in force, "An acquaintance- we got lot s
of em," Lash mused, "but frlel)dshlp Is something that Is really
Important to me. Yoll can count your friends on one hand. generally
"
· The point Is well made. Not one of us Is without our
tmperfectlpns. Too often, definltiortsof both heroes and friends seem
to Imply a person without fault. Under those conditions either would
exist only because we don't really know them.
Let's start looking for the best In each other. And let us never
forget that love is our Father's name! -Lee Miller, Rector, Grace
Church.

�Ohio

-.u...ders
SAN · DIEGO (AP) -

Thlnga

win
Western
Division
crown
-

flY!!- touchdown symphOny of olfen. ·from Plunkett.
slve and defensive dominance by ·
FrankHawklnsran21andlyarcls
the Raiders.
lor touchdowns early In the thtrd
With the victory, the 11th in 14 period before defensive back Rod
games for Los Angeles, went the Martin made It 35-10 with a 29-yard
AFCWestcrown, theRalders'nlnth pass lnle!'C&lt;'ption return at the 8:33
In 12 years. San Diego, meanwhile,
mark .
sank to 5-9.
Christensen got his third touch·
The Raiders didn't appear poised down of tbe night on a 14-yard toss
toscore-lndeed,didn'tseerntobe from Plunkett with 3:2lleft in the
doing much of anything - when quarter. It was the elghih catch ot
Allen took a handotf from Plunkett
thenlghtforChrlstensenandhis'T7th
and headed tor the left s!:leUne.
of the season, breaking by one a
Suddenly, Allen screeched to a
Raider team mark set in 1964 by Art
halt and threw hack to his right to a
Powell.
' sprinting Christensen, whO was
"Sometimes quarters like that
just happen," said Charger lfne.
running tree at the Charger 10.
"I felt pretty confident throwing backer Billy Ray Smith. "It was
rniBtake after mistake."
the ball, " said Allen, a former prep
quarterback, "but he was so' wide
Sunday It will he Buffalo at
open that I was a little concerned
Kansas City, ChlcagoatGreen Bay,
Miami at Houston, New Orleans at
about overthrowing it."
Brought to lite by the Allen·
New England, Cincinnati at Pitts·
Christensen strike, the Raiders
burgh, Atlanta at Washington, the
needed only five plays and 2t\ Los Angeles R8rns at Phlladelphla,
seconds to move 65· yards for. the St. Louis at the New York Giants,
go-ahead touchdown. It carne 32
Dallas at Seattle, Tampa Bay at San
seconds before the half when
Francisco, Cleveland at Denver and
the New York Jets at Baltimore.
Christensen made a one-handed
grab of a feather·soft 25-yard pass
Minnesota Is at Detroit Monday

: weren't going well lor Jim Plunkett
: and the rest of the Los Angeles
• Raiders In lllelr Qllti!SI for another
: divisional crown.
·
· After .28 minutes of football
. Thursday nlght, the Raiders had
gained I&gt;Jt72olfenslveyard. Only14
' o1 the Raiders' 26 plays had gained
yardage. Quarterback Plunkett
· was chugging for his U1e In the face
: of an inspired San Diego pass rush.
·. The Charger offense, meanwhlle,
had scored on Dan Fouts' 5-yard
swing pass to Chuck Muncie and on
)'l.olf Benlrschke's 24-yard field goal.
At moments like these, all eyes
tum to the sldeUnes for guidance.
And when they did, Coach Torn
·Flores carne up ·with the play that
turned the game around and led tD a
42·10 National Football League root
by the Raiders.
"It was·an ideal call on his part,"
running back Marcus Allen said of
the 43-yard option pass he threw to
Todd Christensen with 1: 50 left in the
: first half. "It was the right time for a
; play like that. "
That score signalled the begin·
!ling of a stunning eight minute,

oliht In a battle 1111' the lop In

•

Friday, December 2, 1983

Reduce cost, report lraud, company .says

the

NFC Central. Botllleams are 7-'.
Mlaml and Plttsburah can ciiDch
playolf berths In their games. U the
Dolpblns beat the 1-12 Oilers, they'll
win the AFC Ealt, reprdJess at
what the rest of the clvls!on does.
PlttsburghcanclllachanAFCwlld
card spot by wtnalllg 4ny of Its
remaining three pmes, while ~
Clncl!matl Is on the verge Of being
eliminated from tile playoft race.
But the stee1ers have lost their Jut
two games after a lii!III!D·pme

Blue Cross and Blue Shield has
established a statewide. toll-free
anti-fraud telephone "hotllno."
The hotline.J·800·&amp;l8·9276. can be
used by any Blue Cross ahd Blue
Shield subscriber or b&gt;•an~· medica l
care professional ·to repor1 su~­
pected fraudulent health care
claims activity . Callers' idmtit i&lt;"s '
will he kept anonymous.
The plans will Investigate ali
situations brought to their anent ion
by subscrlbers·or provlderc. Expe-·

wlnnJng streak.

In the wild NFC Wtllt, wMr'e all

tour te~~~m remain Illcontention, fie

s.n

By NEWE PARKER
Sunday School attendance Nov.
13 was 39; church attendance, 29.
· On Nov. 20 'Sunday School attend·
ance was 28: church altendance, 31.
. Nov. 27 Sunday School attendance
was 31; church attendance, 27.

Laurel Cliff

Vikings.

news notes

......,m .......

METS-Signed RustY
SIB.ub. flr5t basemanillltncider. to a ont--

year contract

Ught md: Mike Blnatun, Bob KankJeol

Nadonal~ape

YORK

PIRATES-Named Tom•
R1Y Sandt manager ot' their Hawaii farm
club tn tbl&gt; Pactnc Coast League.
MSJ&lt;E'I1IAIL
GOLDEN STA&lt;tt WARRIORS-Signed

SVAC standings
ADGamfti

Team
Hanna n Trace ....
Southern ... .. ..... ....

W. L. P. OP
..... . 1 0 64 18
. . 1 0 50 47

Kyger Creek ... ... ...... ............ 0 1 58 64
Nort h Gall!a ...... . .. ... ............. 0 1 54 62

Eastern .... ., ...... .... .. .............. 0 1 48 56
SouthwPSiern ... . ...... ... ......... , . 0 1 54 62

Tonight's ~;ames
Southern al Southwestern: Eastern at
Ky~er Creek: and Hannan Trace · North

ar

Gallia.

UIIMMIS&amp;au. Fldball Le-cue

WEEKEND SPECIALS FOR ~ARADE
WEEKEND
LADIES
MEN'S WRANGLER

WESTERN FLANNEL

RUSS PANTS. BlAZERS.

SKIRTS AND BLOUSES

30% OFF

SALE

GREY IN

COLOR

DENVER COLD-Named l..auUt&gt; W1:1r·
wick u llneblldter roach. Bill Duuoo as

12:00 TO 5:00

786 N. 2ND AVE.

Large selection of Poinsettis &amp; Poinsettia.s Hanging Basket~ •
live &amp; cut Christmas Trees, Holly Trees, Chnstmas Cactus, Afn·
can Violets &amp; Foliage Plants .
Also: Candle Arrangements, Candle Rings &amp; Door Wreaths. For
the Loved Ones: Grave Blankets, Cemetery Vases &amp; Wreths.
"Free Relreshments"
A Free live plant for everyone 16 years and older. Also a Free live
holly tree with each . $10.00 or more purchase. Door prizes
.
awarded . Need not be present to win .

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE. OH .
992-677.11

OF OHIO, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

MON SA'T 9 00 TO 9 00
HOURS :SUNDAY
·· 11:00
·: TO 1:00
:
'

THE SEASON
.....,., BE
BURNED OUT

PH. 992-6491 OR 992-31 06

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MOCCASINS

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ANY AOUAIIUII

2.0% OFF

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With Coupon
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Supply

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With Cou,.n
Expiraa 12·1·83

Modern

Supply

BUILD a spice rack. a window box, a gerbil cage.
PLANT spring bulbs or a terrarium or 11 windowsi ll herb garJcn.
Tf.ACH a language, 11 skill, or a musical instru ment .
PHOTOGRAPH f;smily or friends for a collage.
WRITE a poem, leueu to .friends, a famil)l histury .
RECORD on cassette iape a story fur a child too young liJ read
or a frie nd with impaired vision.
' WARNING: Past experience has determined that 1
l_!~e _qi)ts_you give may be beneficial to vour health . 1.

~
1

1

I

Stop In And Look
Over our
Many Tanks ...
lay-A-Way
For Christmas

Th~ hotline w ill be promoted by
an exwnsin" campaign designed to

·make subscribers and providers

Attendance at all services Nov. 27
was 113. The Dayton Crusaders
quartet was present for the music'
and singing. All was received with a
good welcome.
Mrs. · Tina Jacobs visited In
Columbus recently with her child·
ren, Mr. and Mrs. Btl! Davis and
Mr. and Mrs. William Jacobs.
Mrs. Della Stahl and John Stahl
were dinner guests Thanksgiving
DayofMr.andMrs.
Fifteen neighbors PearlG!Ikey.
of this corn·
munity enjoyed a dinner Monday

~~e~~~gaa~:~;:r,: Gallipolis and

SPECIAL Of THE WE.EK

~•

~

MODERN SUPPLY
8:00

r .. .l&lt;·m.l ~
b.·~u 11lul ly llr s &gt;~nN
j u~rJ I '"'~",ll~lll&lt;'m .

ru~r '~II "' • , .. ,

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"T"-o• ""'
P~ .

.J101 .. &lt;0U ' " ' " ' '

992-ZOJ9 ot

/ .ln' o• ~

9~ · 5721

Most Stores Open Late
Nights 'Til Christmas

-

!!Ji

~

~

~

FISHTAIL

~·
,

~·

99¢

~

with Fries .... $1.49

ADOLPH'S

.DAIRY VAUEv

~

rry In! Complete G
Stereo System Now Cut 21%~~

,

~

'"'

t1
'

"At The End of the Pomen&gt;y·Moson B&lt;idge"
POMEROY OH.
PH. 9'1:1·2556

$379 se~:~~te
By flealistic®

Save
$10080

Items
ll79.80

.

WE DON'T HAVE

"Cabbage Patch Dolls"

• -"'-4

• Realistic STA·115 AM/FM Stereo Receiver• With
Ex'cluslve Auto·Maglc"' FM Fine-Tuning. System
• Two Nova"'-4 Walnut Veneer Speaker Systems
Wi1h 8" Wooler, 'Tuned Port and 2 1 /•" Tweeter
• LAB-290 Belt·Drlve Automatic Turntable With
Reallstlc/Shure Moving-Magnet Cart,ridge

BUT WE DO HAVE
.ONE OWNER

USED CARS

•24 watts per channel,
minimum rms Into 8 ohms
from 20-20,000 Hz, with
no more than 0.03% THO

·FOR CHRISTMAS

AM/FM Travel Alarm Clock
Radio With LCD Display
Chronomatic'"·22B
·by Realistic

2

SQ.I.70

Off

~~::::::..:::..J 2995
Reg. 39.95
Snooze Control • Backlit Display
The gift that will go places! Snooze control
gives weary travelers a few extra minutes
rest. Selectable radio or "beep" wake-up .

1979 CHEVROLET CAIIARO Z·28 - 2 dr. coupe. tilt wheel,
air cond .. qual ity sound system.

#12-1535 Batteries elllra

Kids' AM/FM Radio With
Stereo Phono Cut 22%
Clarinene"'·14 by Realistic

..

Save
520

1980 PONTIAC FIREBIRD- Cpe., V-6 motor, auto. trans,
power steering, power brakes, air cond. , AMIFM/Stereo,
Extra Clean.

6995

Nova-4 by Realistic

Half ·
Price

39!~
Reg. 79 .95 Each
Genuine Walnut Veneer
A treat tor the eyes and the ears! 8"
woofer and luned port combine for clean,
tight bass, 2•/2" tweeter provides soaring
highS. 19 X 1()3!. X 7'/2~ #40-4031

'n Hers" Solar-Powered
Calculators
(

Speakers Separate Up to 18 Feet

8MClAW MAF'INRS SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEArs 12.00
AOMISSKJN EnRY ruEQy $~. 00

Easy to use-the ideal first system! Pedestal base holds 2-speed manual phono and
tuner plus speakers or stacks of 45s. Removable dust ~ver, buih-in 45-RPM
adapter. 1113-1161

»

EC-4071404 by Radio Shack

Reg. 89.95

031 J.OCKSON PIKE ·RT.Jo WEST
Phone 446· 4524 ~

Your Choice

1995'T
For

He~r~~~tl

Ideal stocking stuflers! No batteries~ they
even run on indoor light. His is wallet-style .
Her 's iooks like a compact. EC-407,
#65-905. EC-404, #65-902

II: !!!!!!!!I!~

1979 CHRYSLER TOWN &amp; COUNTRY WAGON- 318 molor,
auto. trans., air cond., power windows, power door locks, tilt
wheel, cruise, AM/FM/Stereo, rear defoRRer. Save BIG.

Cu11ings from your favuriCe. plomiS .
Fabric S~.;raps fur a quiher.
As r'uuny hu~s :1s you com. They're wurmcr tharr sweaters.
The benefit of the doubt tu your kids, spouse. co-wdrkcrs.

Exclutlvel

Cut

23%
Off

25o/o

A t:om plimcnl m perso n or by note.

A visit to a nursing home to chall enge so meone tu a gaiirc 11 f ..:hess.
An uninterrUpted period of listening to .a child, friend, family member.

995

A tithe of Christmas haking to a local foud cupboard .
An rnv it:ulon to a forcrgn student living in the curn munhy .
The gift uf mush.:. Piltn now to go ·~.:aroling.
A c~tll to" neighbor who's moved raway.

A smile to everyone

)IOU

From the latest Disney
movie starring Mickey,
Donald Duck, Goofy and
friends. Includes song
book. LP, #51-3004.
Csssette, #51-3005

mec1 .

Give in. Waste a moment lo watch the soow full;
I he geese ny, the sun go down, lhe ~tarHume OUI.

1982 DATSUN B·21D- 4 dr. wagon, like new, auto. trans.,
power sleering, power brakes.

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Pom.,.y

321&gt; E. Main 51 .

Services At

GIFT CERJlACAlES
NOWA1MI 4 WF/
STAI!TS FRIDAY Ofcoe£R 9.

Dleney chnctera' ©1983 Walt Disney

P-o

Adds fun and safety to
\oung cyclers' travels . AM
radio mounts on handlebars, removes quickly from
bracket. 3" reftector.
1112·197 Bol10flos '"''

Colorful gift! Projects a kaleidoscope of spinning col·
ors on walls, ceiling, floor.
Great for rec room, parties.
1142·3018
•

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
992-2174

1

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

til

!.ND FOR YOURSELF '

399 W. ll1in St.
992·2164
l'etntroy, OH.
. Store with "ALL KINDS Of STUFF" - Pets, St1blts. Llrp &amp; SMIII
, Lawns &amp; G1rdens.

:-;:::::::::::::::::::::::;1
I

••••••••••••••••••••~,

'Summertree' , .
presented by ~ ,
· G d '
Rto ran e .~

The award-winning production
"Summertree" by Ron Cowen will
, he presented on Dec. 8, 9, 10 at Rio
. Grande College and Community
. College.
The show will be presented at 8
p.m. each night in the Fine and
Performing Arts Center. Tickets
. will be available at a cost of $2 lhe
. night of the show.
The tender-hearted drama was
: first presented by the Repertory
Theatre Company of Lincoln Cen·
ter (New York City) In 1968, a
· spokesman said. Featured In the
·original case were David Birney
and Blythe Danner. The play
Investigates the seemingly Innocent
sequence of events which lead a
young college student with aspira·
lions of becoming a concert pianist
to his death in Vietnam, thereby
: Illustrating the significance of the
\ dally occurrences .,... some pro' found, others not - which define
:every human life.
: Featured In the Rio . Grande
•Theatre production of "Summer·
. tree" are Jim Brown (young man)
, of Wellston: Kent Crider (father) of
Oak Hill; Jean Ann Vance
(mother) of Bidwell; Rebecca
Hoafat (girl) and Richard Ross
: 1soldier I. both of Gallipolis; and a
· guest appearance by Nell Sloane
: (boy), a student of Gallla Academy
: and a resident of Gallipolis.
• Understudies for the producatlon
; are Margaret Evans and Ralph
: Gueltlg.
: Stage Manager lor the production
' Will be Susan Bennett of Vinton,
: Ohio. The play wUI be directed and
designed by Edward Roark, Direc·
' tor of Theatre at the college.

Injury, is recovering.

'VERBS FOR A.W.NT!

1

lI

DOG SWEATERS
&amp; TOYS

,.,..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!12,'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~

RENEW an old pL&gt;sscssion for a new gift.

L----- ---------41
r-------------;

1

Caught between the sacred and the secular
at this time of year, Christlons . the 28 days of Advent . Usa theta tour-·
wisely and they will move you
from insanity to serenity with enough enertw
left to celebrate
the One for whom ""'wait.

PLAN your gift-giving b&lt;i~Cd on the pcnun, your own skills, ti me, and money .
BUYwith conscience su your gifts rcOecl tile v;~lues you wam 10 share .
SEW a simple pauern and pcrson.ali:tc it with initials.
TUNE a f ricnd 's car or piano.

&amp; ACCESSORIES

den\i.ll C'O\'erage.

Osie Henderson came home from
had an eye check·up a t University
Veterans Memorial Hospital Nov.
Hospital and visited S.E.D: O'Brlen
12.
a1 Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yost visited
Clara Follrod returned from the
Genevieve Guthrte and Mr. a nd hospital after surgery and Is
making a good recovery.
Mrs. Richard. Yost.
Sibyl Dorst accompanied Mr. and
Sibyl Dorst and Nellie Parker
attended grqveslde services for Mrs. Fred Smith and James,
Lena V. Pooler Nt;&gt;v. 20. Afterwa. ·d. · Racine Rt., to the home of her son,
they called on Mr. and Mrs. Gary Mr. and Mrs . Tom Dorst, Oak Hill ,
Smith. Crystal and Amy.
on Nov. 26. There they enjoyed a
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker, Mr. Thanksgiving dln·ner with
and Mrs. Joe Poole, and Will s!&gt;ent members of Mrs. Tom Darst's
Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. family.
Lloyd Brooks is In Camden-Clark
Gary Michael, Matthew, Kim and
Todd. Other guests were Louise Hospital, Parkersburg. He Is recov·
· Michael and Willie Frecker.
erlng slowly from extensive
Genevieve Guthrie spent Thanks· surgery. His daughter, Debbie, Is
glvillg holiday with Mr. and Mrs. on crutches following a foot injury.
Delbert Yost, Lancaster Rt. She His son, Jim, who had a bad finger

REME\lBER whose birthday it is and that Jesus Christ
would have us gift Him in the hungry, the lonely, the sh: k.

L------------r-------------,
Coupon

I

TheldeallqUirium lor evetyOne!l A11ini 1q·
u1rium that is etsy to like me of lor 111
qn. Put th111 in mom's kitchen, d1d's of·
lice, or tile kids' room.

$ 00

SAT., DEC. 3 &amp; SUN. DEC. 4

FRUTH PHARMACY

L-------------.1·

·WARMERS

"OPEN HOUSE"

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

1

LEG

'

ru;y Jolmon, defensl't'e back; Herbert
Harris; ~ N'C'f'lver, dd Earnest Butler
and Roo CO!Pr, ~Nards.

oontracts.

I·

LADIES'

CHRISTMAS

Jim
WIWilms,

""'"·
PHilADElPtDA ST.utS-Signed Scott
Ntzok* and Jack Hlrn, dgttt f'lldl; Sam-

ARIZON A WFiANcLEJlS.-....Signed Clc\leland Crosby, defensive tackk, and Frank
Gktdet'IJ, otleftStve t.ackJe, to rnJitl-year

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

"OVER
YEARS IN THE SAME PLACE
UNDER THE SAME MANAGEMENT"

Wll1lamS,

and

NEW

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

.-------------l

I

WELCOME TO OUR ANNUAL

CliredOI'-

JERSEY GEI'fi:~
Clarena&gt; Harmon, t\.laldt, Rod ActKer,
~ rect'!Vrr, Russ Carpalter, JOI'In MD·
lei'. llroebBcker, and Bl!rj Yt-premiBn,

0011 Collins, guard. Placf.id Ron Bl't'Wt'r,
guard. on the- in)um:l Ust.

had four and Cape·

Syracuse, OH. 992·5776
Now Open For The
Christmas Season
Large selection of potted Poin·
settias, hanging Pomsettia bas·
kets, Christmas Cactus, Holly
Trees, live &amp; Cut Christmas Treu,
African Violets and Foliage Plants.
ALSO: Candle arrangements, candle
rings, door wreaths, g~ave blankets,
and cemeterx vases and wreaths.
OPEN: 9 to 5 Daily; I to 5 Sun.

and

and Darl NlederiJJter, ltnebrlers: O.w
Cors~&lt;MII, nose tackle; Cbuck Ganmn. of·
fEmive tackle, and Derry\ Hf'mpbl.ll and
John H!gglns, safeties, m fte .,nt con·
tracts

P~URGH

~

1'ofl

Brown as deff'l15tve bacU cov.h
Marlm a.o; player penonnel
Signed Elmer Bailey and Aaml
wldr recetvers: Marti Halda
BrtttaiD, qua.rterbacka; James

NEW

TOUCHDOWN CATCH - Los Angeles Raiders' tlghtend Todd
· Christensen makes an over-lhe-..houlder catch 10. touchdown during
the Raiders' 42-10 victory over the San Diego Chargers1'Jtul'!iday In San
Diego. The Raiders cHnched the AFC West title with the victory. (AP
Laserpholo).

det'l'fl!itve llne coadl, Plitl Candk as specllll teams and streB~fh coach, Cree

MINNESOTA TY."INS-Signf.'d Ron
Davis, pitcher, to a muhl·yf!M contract

keeper Is Rose Ann Bailey and
statisticlanNlck:YBunch.
Werry led Eastern with eight

In action
next week,
the boys'
teams
go to Albany
on Monday
with
the seventh grade game at 5 p.m.
The girls host Albany the same
night at 5 p.m.

Sulalman said If Holmes does not
fight Page within 90 days of the Las
Vegas convention he will bestrtpped
of his title.

MSEBAIJ.

son, and Denise Gibeau!. Score-

~:~eu:;:hle

Interview.

Transactions

Young Meigs gals even seruon record
Behind Tammy Wright's 10
points, the Meigs Junior High girl
cagers evened their record at H
with a 23-15 win over Eastern.
Other Meigs scorers for Coach
Rick Ash's team were Jody Taylor,
tour. Teresa Johnson, three, Audra
Houdashelt and Stephenle English,
two each. and Missy Woods and
Dee Henderson, one each.
Other members of the Meigs
team are Shelly Stobart, Julie
Batey, Beth Ewing , Shannon
Slavin. Leslie Carr, Sue Fry, Shelly
Wolfe, Krista Roush. Lois David·

WBC cannot and Will not allow any
other world title &lt;Meilses" except
with Page, Sulalman told the The
Associated Press In a telepllone

htm fight me for tree," Holmes said.
WBC President Jose Sulalman .
said Thursday In TokYo he would
ask Holmes to attend a WBC
convention In Las Vegas next week
to discuss the WBC's wish that the
undefeated champion fight Page.
"I am asking him to he there and
discuss with us his intentions. The

situation reported by a subscriber.
As a result of the Investigation, a
pSychologlsl pleaded guilty to five
counts of mall lraud and returned
almost $93,000 to the Plan.
The toll·free line will be 'tor
anti-fraud activities only. No general information will be provided to
subscribers or providers calling
this number.

aware ot the toll ·free number.
" Report fraud, reduce costs" will
be the theme of the campaigc.
Aggressive antJ.fraud activity is
another way In which health care
cosls can be kept as low as possible,
according to the Plans. Although
the cost of claims lraud Is lmpossl·
ble to ca lculate accurately, ,recent ·
events point to significant savings
for subscribers.
The Worthington-based Blue
Shield Plan recently Investigated a

rienced investigators \.vilJ ronduct
the investigat ions. When approp·
riatc. a li evidence will be provided
tn tht' proJX'r authorities .
It is the Plans' stated position that
1he~· will rncourage aut horities to
proseeut c dli pe&lt;Jple committing
fraud involving Blue Cr0$5 and
Blu&lt;' Shield hospital. medical and

Alfred community happening notes

Rams bold a orw-pme lead over
New Orleans and
Francllco.
Atlanta Is two games back.
And the NFC Celltral Is just as
wild. Aside from the Mlnnesola·
Detroit rnatchup, the Bears and
Packers play a lrA!y game. Both
Chi~. which has won tllree
straight, and slumping Green Bay,
whleit lost Its MCald strallbt
overtime game last week In Atlanta,
are6-7, a game hehlndthe Uonsand

·'Holmes' retirement may follow one more fight
NEW YORK (AP) - Larry
On Wednesday, aides to Holmes
Holmes, the unbeaten World Boxing said the news ~nference had been
Council heavyweight champion, canceled, and trted to back off from
said Thursday he Is considering the talk of lmmlnent retirement.
retirement - or at least one more Then, on Thursday, they said news
fight.
conference was reschedf.\led, as
In any event, Holmes said, he has orlglnally set, for Dec. 7.
no plans to announce his retirement .
Holmes again Thursday talked
about a possible fight with Gerry
at a news conference Dec. 7.
" I'm gcing to talk about every· Coetzee, the World Boxing Assocta·
thing," Holmes said In a telephone tlon champ from South Africa. He
interview from his hotel in Philips· also said he had received· offers to
burg, N.J., which will he the site of fight unbeaten Plnklon Thomas and
the news conference at noon EST John Tate, the former WBA
next Wednesday. ''I'm gonna talk champion. ·
. about business."
But a fight by Holmes against
Holmes has often said In the last anyone before he makes a manda·
year that money is his only reason tory defense against top-ranked
Greg Page next February or March
for remaining In the ring.
"I'm gcing to quit If I don't get the would also certainly cause theWBC
light kind .. of money," he said · to withdraw championship recognl·
Thursday. But as for being pinned tfon. Holmes maintains that the
'down on a definite retirement date, $2.55 mlillon purse he would get for
the champion said: " I need
fighting Page for promoter Don
King Is not enough.
leeway."
Page has called Holmes "yellow"
Tuesday night, Holmes said that
and accused the 34-year-old champ
he was thinking about retirement
and that it was possible that the
Holmes said he was not afraid to
announcement would be made next ofduckinghtm.
fight Page, but thai he wanted more
at the news conference Dec. 7. He
than was being offerd.
added: "It's not definite it will come
"Take all the money away from
next Wednesday but it will come in
Greg Page and give It to me and let
the near future".

Ohio

,.

OH.

A DMS0H Of TAHDY C()AP()AATION

'I

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEfilERS

',,

.

.

�Friday, December 2, 1983

.

Pomeroy

'op 1 8 1he Daily S...tinel

FndOy, !)Kember 2,

Middleport, Ohio

1983

American Legion Auxiliary hears district officer
JJelen Hampson, Eighth Dlstrlct
president, was guest speaker at the
Tllesday night meeting of Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion
AQxWazy •
.
Mrs. lfamp&amp;ll'stalkonmember·
sblp and programs followed a
turkey dinner for AuiclllarY'
membersandguests. Shedescrlbed
the AuxiQary as the greatest
pBlrlottc wtmen's organization In
.....
u"' world with aver three and
rnWion members and over
u;rollocal units.
!ihe reported that over 16,001
members were lost In 1982 and
talked on ways of retaining mem·
bershlp noting that without a broad
membership base the many worth·
while programs of the American
LeglonAuxWacy.cannot be carried

one-half

out Shesald'thattheEighthDistrlct
has O'lOVed !rom 14th place In the
state In membership to sixth place.
Revlewtngperrnanentprograrns,
Mrs. Hampson complimented the
unit on the Amertcanism·program.
She alSo mentioned the junior
actlvltles,cormnunltyservlce,veteran affairs and rehabUitatlon,
children and youth, and education
andscholarshipprograms.Shesald
that most of the report forms had
been revised.
Mrs. Hampson reported on this
year's program of getting Involved
In the campaign to find missing
children. She alSo noted the lnfiu·
ence of American Legion baseball ·
program on professional players
with 56 percent of today's players
reporting they had at one time

Calendar
FRIDAY
POMEROY -

The Happy

: ~~azvestors Class wlll meet for a
dinner and party at the Trinity

•Chun:h at 2 p.m Friday.
SALISBURY TWP - The
•Salisbury Township Trustees

.wlll meet Friday at 7 p.m. at the
•

.

home of Clerk Wanda Eblin,
Laurel Cliff Road. All meetings
are open to the public.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Mid·
dleport Garden Club will have its
annual Christmas dinner party
Monday at 6 p.m. at the Holiday
1nn In Gallipolis.

Happenings

Museum tree trim
Musical postponed
:set Saturday morning POMEROY _ The presents·
• POMEROY - The Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society Invites children to meet
at the Meigs County Museum
~turday morning at 11 a.m. to
help make Cbrtstrnas ornaments
to trim the museum Cbrtstmas
free. Personnel suggests partlcl·
:patlon as a part of a scout or4·H
serviCe project.
. The musewn will hold open
!louse on Dec. 4 from 1 to 5 p.m.
Exhibit wlll be "Traditions of
Cbtistrnas" and a co4ntry store
Mth baked goods, crafts and
decorations will be featured.

:Special meeting
: POMEROY: A special
)neettng of the Eastern Local
Board of Education has been set
for 6 p.m., Tuesday at the high
School to discuss personnel.

.

...

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-

(

lion of the musical, "Scrooge"
by the Vocal Music Department
of Meigs High School scheduled
for Friday evening has been
postponed due to the death of
Roger Turner, father of Clinton
Turner who has the lead In the
show.

Parades set
MEIGS CO - Sarita Claus Will
arrive In Pomeroy Saturday and
wlll take part In the PomeroyMiddleport Christmas parade
which wlll be held Saturday
morning at 10 a.m. The parade
wlll form at 9: lJ a.m.
Following the parade Santa
wlll be on the stage on the upper
parking lot in Pomeroy and will
dlstrlbute candy treats to those
attending.

played legion baseball, that the
AuxWacy provides support for the
Children's Home In Xenia, helps
veterans In hospitalS and nursing
homes, gives $5B4,001 a year tn
college scholarships, and promotes
theChildren'sHeartF\tnd.
Accmpanytng Mrs. Hampson to

:gh~~~7:;!1d~~~~~~·

Assisting with the ceremony were
Rhoda Hackett, Mrs. Hamllton, Iva
Powell, Loretta Tiemeyer, Mildred
Hudson and Erica McClintock.
Ellen Rought presided at the
meeting. She read a poem, "ln
F1andersF'Ield." PearlKnappread
'I'm So Thank!uJ" and Laney
Hankla had a prayet for peace
O¥lected by Americanism chair·
man, Erma Smith. Mrs. Powell
read thank you cards from Tom
McElroy at Arcadia, and from Mrs.
Thorne at the Zenia Children's
Home. It was reported that there
are 12 children tn the Harding
Cottage and the chUdren are

remembered with gifts on their
birthdays and Cbrtstmas. The unit
wlllsellcandytoralsernoneytohelp
with ihe.cost of new carpet for the
cottage.
Veda Davis reported that junior
membersareprepartngChrlstrnas
cardswlthgumandcandycanesfor
the Chllllcothe Veterans Hospital
party !)D Dec. l5. Mrs. Loretta
Tiemeyer reported on cormnulty
.
servlceandthankedthosewhowent
to the Pomeroy Health Care Center
to hold a party f0l' the patients.
.Catherine Welsh and Iva Powell,
veteransaffalrsooehalrmenwlllbe
contacting members for help with

theChJJllcotheparty.
It was noted that the Carleton
Sch6ol In Syracuse wu visited
durtng American Education Week
and both stall and studen~ were
given apples. Going were anoes
Hunnel,educatlonandscholarbship
chairman; Mrs. Tiemeyer, and
PeariKnappwlthhergranddaugh·
ter who are junior auxiliary
members.
Do--'k
....,
,...,..,y Jenkins was~
"'&gt;""'~w '
Next meeting wlll be Dec. 'n with a
gift exchange. Enna Smith and
Linda Powell wlll be hostesses.
Members sang "God Bless Amer·
lea" to close the meeting. ·

THAT'S RIGHT! STOP IN
"TODAY AND PICK OUT
Clwi&amp;lmRS
YOUR NEW
FORD-V.W.-AMC-JEEP OR
~======RENAULT AND MAKEYOUR
FIRSf PAYMENT IN FEBRUARY 1984
OFFER APPLY~ TO ANY NEW CAR IN STOCK!

Sllle

w

man. Other district o!flcers and
chairmen recognized were Anita
Smith, Eighth District Junior presl·
dent, Loretta Tiemeyer, communlty seiVIce chairman; and Mary
Martin, hospital representative.
Geni Hamllton, unit members
chairman, had charge of the dinner r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
and program.
A candlelight Initiation service
was conducted by Mary Martin for
Linda Powell and Ashley Hamilton.

11.9 %APR.

FABULOUS DEALS

TOPS meets ·
NancyVancewas theweeklybest
loser with Beulah Collier as runner·
up at this week's meeting of the
TOPS OH 1456 of Rutland. Sandy
Walker presided at the meeting
during which tbne plans were made
for a Christmas party to be beld on
Dec. 13. The meeting will begin at
5: llp.m. with thepartytofollowat6
p.m.
Best losers for the past two weeks .
have been Frances Hysell .and
Beulah Collier. Runners-up have
been VIckie Ferrell and Ollie H111.
Rand! HW was welcomed as a new
member. Winners In the bathroom
contest wlll be announced next
week.

Holiday flower

:Z~r., V-8 engine, fact. air
cond, vinyl roof, heater,
disc brakes, hn•lvdrl•l auto . .trans., p. steering &amp;
mldgs. tinted
p. disc brakes , tinted
fm radio, wsw
glass,am -fm radio, wheel
tires , wheel
covers.
WAS
NOW

Red, &amp; white, Silverado equipment, 25,000 actual miles. One of the best in the valley.

1977 CHEVROLET C-30

!Big Dually), 454 cu. in eng., automatic transmission , air conditioning, tilt steering wheel,
cruise control, Silverado equip., 53,000 act'ual miles. Look and drives like new·.

'795

DANCERS PERFORM - These students of
Shirley Carpenter entertained recently at the VInton
County J unlor Miss pageanl They are, froni the left,
Amy WeU, Amber Cumings, Leah Doidge and Tracy

THESE VALUES AND MORE ONLY AT:
"YOUR DEALER ON THE RIVER"

HOURS:

OLDSMOBILE.
CADILLAC-CHEVROLET

By Clarice Allen
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert Allen,
Katherine and Robert, Westerv!lle,
were Thanksgiving weekend guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal,
Pomeroy R.D., spent Thanksgiving
Day with Mr. and Mrs. Kirk
Chevalier and daughters.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gaul, Davis
and Mark, were Mr. and Mrs. John
Wickham, Mrs. and Mrs. Warden
Ours, Mrs. Evelyn Gaul, Mr. and
· Mrs. Rick Gaul andAudra, and Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Clay, Todd a nd
Suzanne.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eichinger
and Susie, Miss Laura Eichinger,
Columbus, Mr. and M,rs. Don
Eichinger and Tiffany, Tuppers
Plains, and Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Eichinger, Kr!s and Michelle Wll·
son were Thanksgiving dinner
· guests of Mrs. Opal Eichinger.
Call1ng in the evening were Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Hartung and Jed,
Cleveland, and Kenneth Hartung,

POMEROY, OH.

s:oo ro 1:oo

You don't have
to run all over
town· to find the
best deals!
Finding the Best Deal isn't
as hard as it seert:~s. See Wayside Furniture
for the Best Deals in Waterbeds, Furf!iture &amp; Carpet.

-. ·

Proudly

•

French
Quarter

Heather and Andrea, Louisville ,
Ky.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Weber,
Doylestown, were overnight guests
of Mrs. Marcia Keller. They called
on Mr. and Mrs. Clayton AUen
Thanksgiving Day guests of Mrs.
Opal Ho11on were Mr.' and Mrs.
Rick Ho11on and family, Davisville,
W.Va., Mr. and Mrs. James Hollon,
Sherry and Shannon, Parkersburg,
and Mrs. Janice Parker and Ke11i,
Marietta. '
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Rose and
family, North Carol!na , · were
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr.

NOW

'10,995

__

SPECIAL

'995

returned Tuesday from Victoria,
Texas where they visited for two
weeks with their son and daugnterlaw, Mr . and Mrs. Roger Dixon; and
son, Jeff. They alSo visited with Mr.
and Mr. Buddy Herald of Corpus
Chr~tl, Texas.

1977 FORD MUSTANG
Low Mileage, 2-door, 4 cyl. eng.,

vinyl roof, heater, 4 sp. trans., p.
steering &amp; p. disc brakes, tinted
glass, am -fm radio, wsw radial
tires, wheel covers. A-1 condition.
WAS
NOW

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dixon

1

'2195

26.95

••

2-dr, , V-8 eng., fact. air
cond ., heater, auto .
t·rans ., p. steering, p. disc
brakes. tinted glass, am
radio, wsw radial tires,
wheel covers.
WAS
14995
·~:R.Cirill

evening.

•
'

•
•

~

•
''

,'

DODGE MIRADA

-1978 BUICK SKYLARK
•

•
•

v.a eng.,

One Owner. 22 ,000 miles. 4-dr ., b
cyl. eng., fact . air cond ., heater.
auto. trans., p. steering, p. disc:
brakes, tinted glass, am radio,
wsw radiai tires , wheel covers.
WAS
NOW
14995

'4295

fact. air cond., vinyl
roof, heater ,' auto . trans., p.
steering, p. disc brakes, bodyside
mldgs ., t intect glass, am -fm
radio, wsw radial tires, wheel
covers .
WAS
NOW

.

..'

'5295 ',•.

5995

1

.

~--------------~----------------~--------------~
~
STOP IN TODAY AND

5-Board Water Bed

CHOOSE FROM OUR LARGE
INVENTORY OF FORD TRUCKS!
·WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF
RANGERS, VAN'S, 4X4'S,

King-Queen-Super Single-Single

$19 995

NO~YI

1978 FORD BRONCO
1977 FORD f·150

Meigs County personal notes
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ of
Cleveland spent the Thanksgiving
ho!Jday here with Miss Erina Smith
and Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart. All
visited with Jack Smith at Lancas·
ter on Frlday. ........

4-dr., 4 cyl. eng., fa~t .
cond.. "heater, ·a
trans., p, steering
disc brakes, tinted o::~=il
am radio, wsw rc
wheel covers.

and Mrs. Roger Kel!er and sons.
Weekend guests of Mrs. Marcia
Keller were Mr. and Mrs . Don
Williams, David and Deanna, Mr.
and Mrs. LarryEbertandsons,and
Miss Hilda Weber, Columbus .
Joining them for dinner on Satur·
day were Mr. · and Mrs. Roger
Ke11er and sons.
Mrs. Opal Hollon, Janice and
Ke111 Parker, spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hollon
and family, Columbus.
Erma Cleland and Opal Hollon
called on Marcia Keller Sunday

Open Monday thru Saturday 9 A.M. TIL 8 P.M. Sunday 12 TO 5

Presents
The

The

eng., fact.
cond., 5 sp. trans., p.
steering &amp; p. disc brakeS,
bodyslde mldgs., tinted
glass, cruise ·control, am1m radio, Lo~l owner.

Chester community happenings

S~~~~~=~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~S~A~T~.~9:~0~0~T0~4~:0~0~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!_

anD\Ull Christmas flower show to be
staged Saturday and Sunday at the
Senior Citizens Center are 1 to5p.m.
on Saturday and 1 to 4 p.m. on
Sunday.
"On Christmas Day In the
Morning'' Is the theme of the show
whicb wlll be judged by Mrs.
Dorothy Bender beginning at 1 p.m.
Saturday. All exhibits are to be In
place by noon on Saturday. The
show will feature artistic designs, .
specbnens, home decorations,
wreaths, swags, corsages, and gift
wrappings. Craft Items wlll be for
sale by the Senior Citizens Center.

, Beegle. Judges lor the pageant were Ms. Carpenter,
Julie Gibbs, and Kathy Cumings of Meigs County,
Carolyn Pittinger, Wellston, IUid Mike Terry of
Athens.
'

.,

MON.-FRI.

Applicants.

· CORDOBA

2 door, V-8 eng., fact.
cond.,vinyl roof,
sp. trans .. p. ~~.~~~;,~

1980 CHEVROLET BLAZER, 4X4

PH. 992-6614

Financing To Qualified

1975 CHRYSLER

1979 FORD
MUSTANG

308 E. MAIN

With On The Spot

.'

ON LOCAL, ONE OWNER TRADES .. ;~.

·s
SIMMON

,·

Delivered &amp; Set Up

Includes: P9destal, Deck, Heater, Liner, Full
Wave Mattress, Patch Kit, Fill Kit. Delivered
and Set Up.

•

•
•

•

•'

•

••

F-150 &amp; F-250.

•
•

•

STD#E_

NO PAYMENT TILL MARCH- 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH

•

1984 Ford F-150 Pickup 8 Ft. Bed
~-

Bookcase Water ·Bed

•

i

I

''

•
•

•
•

.'',

.,''

King-Queen-Super Single

•
•

$269 95
Delivered &amp; Set Up

•••

Includes; Pedestal, Deck, Heater, liner, Full
Wave Mattless, Patch Kit, Fill Kit. Delivered
and Set Up.

•
•
•

•HEAVY DUTY HALF TON
•TUTONE PAINT
REGULAR
•6460 LB. 2472

90 DAYS SAME AS CASH WITH APPROVED CREDIT

KG GVWR PKG.
•6 CYL . ENGINE
•POWER STEERING
AND BRAKES

King or Queen
Light .or Dark Oak

•GAUGES AMMETER &amp;
OIL PRESSURE
•4 SPEED OVERDRIVE
TRANSMISSION
•BRIGHT LOW
MOUNT MIRRORS
•AM / FM / STEREO
RADIO
•CIGARETIE LIGHTER

•HEAVY OUTY BATTERY
•TINTED GLASS
ALL AROUND
•5 P 215/75Rx15 G B.
WHITESIDE WALL
TIRES

-'

•REAR STEP BUMP ER

..•

Includes: Pedestal, Deck, Heater,
liner, Full Wave Mattress, Patch
Kit, Fill Kit. Delivered and S.tUp.

••

..
•

.,
·

Price includes
Freight &amp; Prep.

..

Delivered

$7765

PLUS ANY APPLICABLE TAXES

•
•

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"'
•

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..
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li
....,.
..
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Featuring Cajun/Creola Cuisine, Fresh Oysters on the half-shell, and a
complete assortment of beef, chicken and aeafood selections (whan in
season). "Our chef dalighta in plaasing'youllf it is not on our menu- ask
your waitress - if it is poaaibla to prepare it, we will I"

•

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MIRRORED BOOKCASE WATER BED

~

4

I•
••
••
', .
' ..

LUNCH AND DINNER ENTREES SERVED 11:00 A.M.-10:00 P.M.
DINNER SPECIALTIES SERVED
AFTER 5:00 P.M.

BOOK A PARTY WITH US

~

PHONE 446-91 74.

•

~

Located on State Rt. 7 In The French Quarter

1

OPEN 'TIL 8:00 P.M. EVERY EVENING

__ __ .......
:_.

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�Page

Friday, Dllcember 2, 1983

10-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio's jobless rate still high

Property
transfers
Paul E., Haptonstal), Lennie
Haptonstall to Larry E. Hoffman,
Teresa Hoffman, Lot 3, Middleport
Vlllage.
· Janet A. Smith to Gertrude Cis to,
Part Lot, Pomeroy.
Trustees of Salisbury Townsh!p
to Frank Herald Jr. dba Herald on
&amp; Gas, Right of ·Way Ease., .
Salisbury.
Trustees of Salisbury Towll$hip
to Frank Heraid Jr. dba llerald on
&amp; Gas, Right of Way Ease.,
Sal!Sb\}ry.
Eula L. Price; deceased, to Leslie
M. Plice, Cert. of Trans., Pomeroy
. VIllage.

Boston
Dallas

WASHINGTON (AP)- Here are
the November unemployment rates
for the 10 largest Industrial states, as
compared to October's rates, as
reported on a seasonally adjusted
basis IO!iay by the 13\u-eau of Labor
Statistics:
·
-California, 8.3 percent, down
!rom SA percent.

'ADC funds received
According to a report frorti the
office of State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson, the December dlstrlbu·
tlon to Aid to Dependent Chlldren
totaled $55,645,697 for 649,206 recipIents In Ohio's 88 counties.
Meigs County's 2,349 recipients
received $193,928.
'

AL TROMM 'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

Filing deadline near

SEPTIC

•

1 Co toi of r~ •n•o l p••d ! n odvue•t
~ I ~ ,.,.,....,
IPO!d ·~ fdvo~&lt;•l

~

"'"""''"""m'"''

21

.,

campatgnelipensestatementbythe
45th day following election the Meigs
County Board of Elections an·
nounced today.

7 "1•r~ SA~ II&gt;~'~ on U•on co l
8 l'"bo( Soli!
llo llutll&lt;&gt;n
9 ,.. , ,,,..'"a~,

-·

'' ......,w.......

12 ~I .... IOd I'U~If!d
1 J , ............

11
15
16
11
18

Ap .

The latest sutvey showed that the
By LOUISE COOK
marketbasket bill went up duling
As!ocialed Press Writer
Boosted by eggs, grocery bills November at the checklist store in
took their biggest jump in almost a nine cities and down in four cities for
year and a-hall duling November, an over-all average increase of
an Associated Press marketbasket eight-tenths of 1 percent.
Almost three out of every 10 items
survey shows.
priced
by the AP were more
The increase followed two
expensive
a! the·sta(t of December'
monthly declines in a row and more
·
!han
they
were
a month earlier; only
than a year of generally modest
lnfi.ation at the supermarket, due to two in 10 cost less.
The November lise was the .
abudanl food supplies and restrained demand from consumers steepest found by the AP since June
1982 when prices went up 1.0
battered by the recession.
Meat prices, a major factor in percent. The price picture · last
grocecy budgets, were mixed last mon!h was almost the exact reverse
month. Some items - like pork of the one duling October, when the
chops - went down over a marketbasket bill wentt up at !he
widespread area, continuing to checklist store in four cities, was
reflect the increased meat supplies down in eight and unchanged in one
that have resulted as farmers sell for an overall decrease of 1.0
their livestock rather than pay . percent.
Eggs led the list of plice rises
drought-swollen feed costs. Frank.furters, by contrast, showed no clear during November, increasing at the
pattern, with rises in six cities and checklist store in every city sur·
veyed. Pork chops declined in more
drops in five.
The AP survey includes 14 food 1, 1973. The list has been repliced on
and non-food items, chosen at oraboutthestarlofeachsucceeding
random and priced at one super- month. Prices are not weighted for
market in ~ach o!13 cities on March seasonal variations.

cities than any other Item, dropping
at the checklist store in eight cities.
The day of the week on which the
check was made varied depending
on the month.' Standard brands and
sizes or comparable substitutes
were used.
The AP did not try to compare
actual plices from city to city. The
only comparisons were made · in
terms of percentages of Increase or
. decrease.
The items on the AP checklist
were: chopped chuck, center cut
pork chops, frozen orange juice
concentrate, coffee, paper towels,
butter, Grade-A medium white
eggs, creamy .peanut butter,
laundry detergent, fabric softener,
tomato sauce, milk, frankfurters
and granulated sugar. A 15th Item,
chocolate chip cookies, was dropped
from the list after the manufacturer
discontinued the package size used
in the survey.
The cities checked were: Albuquerque, N.M.,. Atlanta, Boston,
Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Philadelphia, Providence, R.I., Salt Lake
City and Seattle.

••

'

.

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ll · Lovnloc~

83

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PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
OF DANA H. BAI·
LEY. DECEASED
Case No. 24293 Dockot 12
Page 393
NOTICE Of
APPOINTMENT
-'OF FIDUCIARY
On November ·e . 1983.1nlhe
County Probate Court.
No. 24293. La1s G Ba•ley.
Box 2 11 , A 0 3. Albany, Oh!O
45710 was appo1nted Adm1 ·

n1stratrtx of the es1ate of Dana
H. Bailey. deceased. late ol Box
211 . R D. 3. Albany. Oh'o
4571 0
Robert ' E. Buck
Proba1e JurlgP. /
Clerk

111 1 25[ 1212. 9.3tc

(C_ont_inued_fr_om_p_age_1)_ _

•

Public Notice

COAL

u ,oo

uoo

$JQOO .

•1 00

Upt oi !loW ... dl

SIO ...,ifiMII!dfl
!-'vii- 4 ~~- ~n•t

1rator of the Bltate, to such of

the following as are residen1S
of the State of Ohio, viz: - the
surviving spouse. the next of
kin. the beneficiaries under the
will; and to the attomey . or
ancimeya repraaenting any of
the afOrementioned persons:
Edda J Thompson. Case No
24130. 3 t 5 15 SR t 24. Langs ville. Oh10
.
You are here by notif1ed that
th e Inventory and Appraise·
ment of the estate of the
aforement1oned . deceased, l.;ne
of sa1d County, were filed 1n th1S
Court. Sa1d Inventory and
Appraisement
WillCourt
be loronhear
1nr.1 betore th1s
the-"
l 2th day at December. 1 983.
at l O·OO o'clock AM .

John Furst Jr. lakes stand

POMEROY LOT - Near
Sears. View of River. Asking
$1,500.

In other testimony, John Furst
Jr., Shirley Furst's son, testU!ed his
mother owned several guns, includ·
trig a derringer and two handguns.
Furst said under questioning
from Cain he bellewed Lee "looked
at mom (lJi:rs. Furst) more as a

RACINE AREA - 2 bed·
' room home with I~ baths
and full basement. $23,000.
MIDDLEPORT- Large bus·
iness bldg., or for storage.
$20,000. .
.

mother."

Under cross-examination, Furst
testified he had no knowledge of Lee
and his mother traveling to Cincinnati earlier this year, and that the
defendent "might have" gotlen
Mrs. Furst pregnant. He did not
respond King's question "does one
get one's mother pregnant," refer·
ring to the previous statement of
.Furst's view. of the relationship
between his mother and Lee.
Mrs. Furst testlfted later she
accompanied Lee to Cincinnati In
January of this year to get an
abortion. She said Lee had !Ql'Ce!l
her to have sex with him earlier.
John Furst also said he may not
necessarily have approved of the
relationship, but remained out of lt.
Valentine's Day card
A Valentlhe's Day card was
entered ' Into evldnece by King,
allegedly given to Lee by Mrs.
Furst. Her son could not Identify the
handwrttlng on tlie envelope as his
mother's but that on the card was.
The handwritten Inscription In·
eluded "lloveyoutoday,I'llloveyru ·

LINCOLN HTS. - 2 homes
with, vinyl siding and lots of
remodeltng. $20's.
SHOPPING CENTER SITE
-4 level acres near Pom·
ero~.

RACINE - 3 bedroom
frame home on State Rt.
Bath and all utilities.

5 RIVER LOTS - Miners·
ville. With all utilities availa·
ble, Only $7,000.
POIIEROY·- 2 houses. Real
cheap. level lois and gar·
ages. $21,000, or good oHer.
POII'EROY - Edge of town.
2 bedroom rame for
$12,000.
RACINE - Modem looking
one floor, one bedroom
home. Only $12,500. .
MIDDLEPORT - lovely
Swiu type 3 bedroom horne
in A· I shape. Nice carpet·
ing, full basement and hot
water hut. Askin&amp; $45,000.

tomoiTOW •.• ''

Lee did not "regularly Hve" at'
Furst said, but on
occasion would be there three days.
at a tltne, and wool&lt;! ca'l1e over
the~hoore,

Hou'.l'!rf
I

Ht.&gt;dc!C[IIdf fl.' I!&gt;

2·23-tlc

GIV€m under my hand and
deal of sa1d Court. th1s 2 2nd
day of November·J983
Robert P. Buck
Judge

Tri.County

54 Misc. Merchandise
HOTPOINT

Refrigerator
17.2 cu. ft.
Model CTF17·AC
REG. 1 624.~5
ONLY

$525° 0
Pomeroy
Landmark
614-992·2181

FOR SALE
BEAUTIFUL
GRAVE BLANKETS
FOR CHRISTMAS
Different Sizes
and .Prices
For More Information
CALL

985-3843

r~~~~~~~~~

E'.Mai1n. .
POMEROY, 0.
992-2259
NI.W liSTING - Free Gas!
Country lr11ng ~ easy with no
gas bil~ in thi&amp; 3 bedroom
home, 2 beautiful baths, family
room, dining 'room, buitt·in
kitchen, huge living room.
Covered patio and carport
Garage, other outbuildings,
approxima~ey I .acre lot
$41,!KXl.OO.
NEW usnNG- Rutland- 6
room,' 3 bedroom remodeled
house with 2 baths, utility,
rnsulated, garae and storage.
$29,!KXl.OO.
HARRISONVILLE - Trai~ or
buildin' lot! Nice level lot 1\ith
all utilities. On~ $4,000.(!0.

room.

basement wiifl summer kit·
chen, fami~ roiJm with fireplaCe, patio. Large metal bam.$47,500.00.

fLATWOODS - Ranch home
1\ith 4 bedrooni, 2 baths,
fami~ room with fireplace,
utility, garage. Nice level I acie
kt $53,500.00.
12165 IIOBILE HOME - !
bedrooms, bl1h, luly fur·
tlished. All undertlinnina and
steps. Only $6,500.00.

lilTED RATES All£ COIIIIG
DOWN1 START LOOICING IIOWI
REAltOas
lltnry E. Cllllnd. Jr.
Glttt!IH111
.1t1n Tnllllll 949-2650
Dotlll TIIIW 912·!1192
Jo Hill !115 1466

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:

Route 4, Pomeroy

BUYING

GOOD SELECTION .

DEER HIDES, BEEF
HIDES, RAW FUR,
GINSENG &amp; OTHER
ROOTS
1 mile below 2nd Kaiser
Entrance at 102 Carney
Dr., Corner of St. Rt. 2
and Carney

SHOTGUNS &amp;
HANDGUNS
We buy, sell or trade.
Good prices.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

Frank's

Ph. 985-4269
II No Answer, Call '915-438Z
Dewoyne Wlllloms
&amp; Scottie Smith
All Makos and Models
Anltnna lnstollstion
Hoon Calls and Shop
Service Avoilable .

!1·4·1 mo. ptl.

FOR SKINNING

Ptt 949-2734M~plewood

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

No Sunday ,Calis

3-ll ·tiC

H. L.

Expires

Dec. 30th
Monday thru Friday

Writesel

ROOFING ·

PlAQUES
ENGRAVING

'

KAY'S BEAUTY .SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, QH.
PH. 992·2725

Alltyp~s of roof work,
new ir repatr, gutters
and owl)spoilf$, gut'
tar c eamng and . ·
paintipg, storm -doors
and wmdows.
All Wort Guaranteed
"Free ES1ima!es"
'

Call 949-2263
or 949-3091

3·10-tfc

Kitchen Cabinets -" Roof·
in&amp; - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - At·
modelln&amp; - Custom Pole
Barns.
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route 1
long Bottom, OH.'45743
985·4193 or 992-3067
· 12·20·tfc

'

TROMM

kitten

and

COUNTRY CRAFT
COTTAGE
317 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
Cross 'Stitch and
·Candlewick Supplies
. Givine lessons
Take Crafts on Consign·
ments, also have craft
gifts.
,
HOURS: 9·3 Mon. thru Sat.
9-6 Friday

~~~~~4 6 ~ .'::~; 5 ~~gp~

111

LOST· White Germon She·

phard in Addison area.
Answers to Prince. Cell

Roger Hysell

GARAGE
Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio
&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

. AUTO

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-lfc

Medium female dog. Brown
with white cheat and stock·
ing feat. 6 year old house

pet. Reword. Coll742·2254
or 992·2B10: ·
7

Yard Sale

·.--·-·-p:ffileaiia-nt --·-·

a.. Vicinity
Garage Sale - New, used
and antique furniture, small
woodcraft Christmas gift
items and misc. 9 a .m. to 4
Street, Point Pleasant.

Jtvl NOW IN SAVE
Pomeroy, Oh.

&amp; Auction ·

PARCEL SERVICE
Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleasant, WVa.
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg., Camden St.

DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
814·367·7101.
QY
of' U.P.S. PUROLATOR·.iPearson Auctioneer
I'S·ervice.
Estate. Farm, An·
"'~DOOR TO DOOR
liquidatiOn
I .
-t..~ DE LIVERY o1~
i

i

PARCEL PRtORtlY SHIPMEIIIS
FOR LESS THAN U. S. MAIL , "
SAVE 10% TO 50% AND MORE

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:
POMEROY

279 Main

St

Pomeroy, Oh.
.

ol'

·

~1'-~~ Located in H&amp;R 1-0"?,
Block Building "'-

..,o

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchlndise every waek.
Consigments of new and
used merchandise ll[llways
welcome. Richard Reynolds

Mt.Aito auction every Sat.
night, 6 p.m . Starting
Christmas season. No more
-;:onsign"m ents will be taken
until after Chris1mas. Emma
Bell ·Auctioneer. • 304· 428·
8177. WVa. lic. No. 429-84.

9

•w·•·•·• • •·•-• ••4&amp;
'"' 4'·••
Uo&gt;

,..,.,._ . . . . . . &amp;ao •

SWEEPER and sewing machint repair, parts. arid
s1,1pplies.
Pick up 8nd
delivery, Davis Vac.uu'm
Clean•r. one half mile up

Call

loons &amp; Co .. 446-4313.

Guided Tours-Europe,
Egypt, Jordon, lafael, Hawaii. Contact Tour host 8t
holtau Ira &amp; Irena Wallman.

413 4thAve..'KMR, Gottlpo·
lis, Oh 45631. Coli 446·
4313.
.
Gun shoOt Racine Gun Clu"b .
Every Sunday starting 1
p.m. Factory choked guns
only.

V•cancy: Julia's Personal
Care Home. Formerly
Mercer Canvaleaence
Home. 18 years experience.

Clifton. W.V . 304-7735873.

SALEI20·30·40 percent off
cake decorating supplies.
Anna Cake Decorating 8.
Supplies in Tuppers Plains.

No hunting or trespassing
day .or night on Cherles Yoat

Ferrna. ·

Come party with us at Jones
Bar West Columbia, WV.
Under the Expreas Band Sat.
Dec. 3, 9 to 1AM. Francis
Jonee.

448-3672

Wanted to buy us8d coal 8..
wood heaters. Swain Furni ~
ture. 448-3169, 3rd. &amp;

Oliva St.. Gallipolis, Oh.

Used mobile homea
truck campers. Call

end
446~

0175.

Cane
Buying only
those that need cane fill·

placed. Call614·245-9326.

Wanted to buy. New, used&amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete . house·

hotda. Also comptese Aucti·

Buying daily gold, silver
coins. rings. jewelry, sterling
ware. old coins. large cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop. 2nd. Ave.
Middleport, oh. 614 ~ 992·
Raw Fut Buyer. Beef &amp; Deer
Hide1~Ginseng. Trapping
Supplies. George Buckley.
Rt. 2. Athens, Oh. Phone

814·684-4761 . 1·9 Daily.

45769 or 614·992-7760.

Repairable TV'S up to ' 1 0

yearo old. Colt 614-949·
2994.

Wanted to buy left over yard

Residential-New and rilwlrinc: Commercial ana In·
dustrlal,.
oONDED .
All
Gu•rantud
Call , ....742·2214
After 5 P.M . .
11 11·1 mo. pd

wm

MILLS'
ELECTRIC
RESIDEIInAL-Nsw

llld 11-Wirlq
COMMERCIAL &amp;
IIDUSliiAL
All Work Gulranttld

Call 614-742·2214
After 5 P.M.
11·15·1

SANDING
and REFINISHING

985-3561

•Waahere •Diehw.. heu

Keep That Natural
Look In Your Home.

•Rang•

·cALL

All Makes

·,

4-S-tft:

J&amp;.F

CONTRACT-I

•DOZER

•lACK HOE
•SEPTIC IYITEMS
•UMUTONE
•WAfER. 0 .... IIWIIIUNU

,.._, IIICLAMATtON
)1'101111:

.

tj.ANO CU!AittNO
~WOII~

•

. . . . 1111111-..rt~D
PHilliE Jll CUFFOID

lft-7201

't
'

•

'-------J::l:!IJ '

.

·cHRISTMAS
TREES
FOR SALE
1 Mile·Off Rt. 7
On St. Rt: 143 ,
12/1/1 mo. pd.

Call441-3376.

THE

TAXIDERMY
SHOP
ID.
IUTWID,
PH. 742-22218

GLASS • GLASS • GLASS

.
' Point • Mason
•"

.

.

\

7 Auto Glau
/~

"AUTO GLASS
OURSPICIALTYI"

II

Responsible family man, 38,
seeks employment. Preci~
sion metal working back~
ground, supervisory capabil·

itieo, Call 614-245·9157.

Tree trlmminQ and removal.
Free estlmet~s. 614-992-

6040 or 614-949 - 212~.

Wanted someone · to . tear.
down barn for the lumber.
No responsible for acci~

dento. 614·9B5·3928 .

Will care for the elderly in my
home . lots of references.
Men or women. Call 667·

3402.

614-992-7314.
1 - - -- - - - - - Will do housecleaning.
Reasonable rates . Call 304-

675-3908.

13

insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co . has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual nee~s. Con·
tact Harry PitChford; agent .

Phone 448-1427.

1-=;:;::::;:::::::;:::====
I·
17 Miscellaneous ·

Deer heads mounted. Stewart'a Taxidermy, Rutland ,

Ohio. Call 614-742-3006.

2 puppies to good' home.
Coll448-8257.
Lov1bl1 8 month old calico

-..

~~ Yw Need Glua Yw Need Us ... We Can Handle
Every Glua NMCII

Local Company looking for

now distributors. Colt 304·
8711·6889,
Enter·
prioos
after T
5~
p.m.G Oppor·

General Hauling and Trash
remove! Service . Reliable
and dependable. Call 446 ~
3169 between 9 and 5.

Will cut and deliver

fire ~

Previou1 Day Care Director
home Mon. · Fri. Call 448·

7124.

Experienced mechanic de ·
aires any kind of mechanical
work on autos. Has own
tools and building, wortc
guaranteed. Call tor esti·

motes 446-8252 or 446·
2491 .

Mature babysitter available
days, -nights, over . weekends, your home. Has own
traneportatlon. Call 448·

cl.etv. 814·992·21192.

elderly lodiu, $1,000
month . Phono 304·875·
1293..

eingle lady

Ubrary

tp live in with

Aalst1nt.

Mason

County Public Library. Crea·

Brown· collie, Nice dog.
814-742·2819or&amp;14·742·
2182.

••pamd children's Pfogram·

Twe ...... breed puppies.
.......,, 8 wkl. old. ·wormed.

oorvlao: ,oupport g-.ol II·
brorv pollcloo. W'!lk tulltlme

Shepherd dog, . 2
2 puppioo, 304·

tlve

per.on

mln'g;

to continue·

provide

ree~er

ing 611urdoys. Und8flltlduotl dog,_ preforoble. Experience

with

children

Nqulled. Artlotlc olllllty ro·
qulred. Solory n..otioble.
Send letter of application to:

Meoon County PubHc Ll·

end Vloncl 8troota, Point
Pleeaont, WV 2&amp;660. Appll·
cation deadline: Dacambar

Mason.

21a4.

1972 trailer, 2 bdr., unfur·
ni1hed. Qood ·c ond . Call

614 ·446-7171 or 448 ·
82B8 •fter 5.

ration centers throughout
the U.S. and Europe. WQ
furnished equipment, ch&amp;micala. supplies. and an exten sive training course at one of
our successful canters near-·
eat You. Total" 'coat:

1976 Freedom mobile
home. 14x70, 1ituated on
approximately 4 acres. Total
electric, with King ~oOd· ·
burner . 3 bedrooms, beth
and half, fully furnished,
rural water. Call 614 ~ 2&amp;6 ·

Stripping,· 1775 The ·Exchange, Suite 600, Atlanta·,

acres and outbuilding. Call

GA 30339 .

l ]iiiii~iii
21

B ·

USIR8SS

Opportunity
I NOTICE t
THE . OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LlSHtNG CO. rec 0 mmonds

th•t you do busine" with
people you know, end NOT
to •nd money through the
mall untl you heve investi·

ptod tho offorlng.

30, 1883. '

Cigarltte Diltributorship.
lnetent oelh flow! We are a

Bonded netlonol firm e•·

pandinglnto the eree. If you
ere Meklng a eacure busi~
nese opportuinty. We pro·
vide all retail locations end
ell neceuary training. Full or
Pert time. Investment from

12,000.00. Winston·
Salem-Kools. 1·800·241·
2268.

446-0063.

22 Money to Loan

$6800. Colt 614 ' 992 ·

.HOME LOANS FIXED

ATTENTIONIIs tt\eresuc~ a
thing as a Classici In mobile
home7' When you view this
Holly Park we think you Wll
agree there is. - ·A- -1969
12x66 Holly Perk with with
2 bdr., 6k10 tip out in living
room, completaly set up In
nice parte It includes 40 ft .
patio cover, 2 sets of staps
with railings, central air. nice
furnishings, even a washer
and dryer , compleJely
skirted and ready to occUpy .
There isn't a cleaner or well
kept home in the area . Just
like brand new. You must
see to appreciate all of this
S 12,900. Financing available , low down payment. and
low monthly payments. For
information call 614-992·

2810." No Sunday calls.

RATES· 12Y:a% purcha$&amp; or
refh1ance, 11 1/.t% adjustable
rate . Leader Mortgage ,

Athens, 1-800-341 -6554
23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING lower
prices -regular tunings discounts to Senior Citi-=ens.
Churches &amp; schools. Ward ' s

Keyboard, 304-675·3824.

31

'

1974 3 bedroom total elect·
ric 14x67 Concord trailer .

Homes for Sale

7034 or 614-992-6284.

4 bdr. ranch home, large LR,
full basement. with garage.
wood burner included. citv
schools. 2 mileSfrom town.

Call446-0276.

Completely remodele.;l. 3
bdr ., 6 rooms. Bath. Eat- in
kitchen . Diningroom ,
Carpet. large lot. 3 porches.

basement, carport.

1976 14x;70 trailer. 3 bedroom, 2 baths, large kitchen,

$10,000. 304· 773·6023.

1981 14x70, Shultz limited
mobile home. microwave, ·
dishw·asher, central air. underpenning , three· bed·
rooms. 1 V2 baths. excellent
condition, 615,500 : Call

304-675-6049 after 5 p.m.

Mobile Home Moving. u.
censed and Insured, Free
Estimates $100 . per hook·
up mininlum . Phone 304- .

$25'00downtakeover$316 576-2711 or576-2866.
mo. payment !taxes and USED MOBILE HOME.

insurance included .} 3BR, Phone 304 _576 _271 1 .
ranch style. full basement. ! - - - - - - - -carport. Wood burner. insulated vinyl siding. city 1979 Sterling mobile home.
schools and subdivision. · 14 ' x70', central air, under·
penned, axe. condition. on
Celt 614-446·8002.
rented lot . Cell 304~ 676~

owher Must Siell Home! 5539 .
Unbelievable price ! low util·
· Tri· le.vel. excellent condi~
itiesl buy it now! Middlep~nt .
tion, $66.000, B% assume~
Catl614·992-6941.
ble loan, 611,000 down.
3 badrooms, one floor plan, Phone 304-675 · 1529 after
eat in kitchen and dining
room. 1 car garage, gas
heat. central air, fenced in
backyard , storage buildi ng .
located on George Creek

6 p .m.

1973 Holly · Park. 12x65,
304-675-6653 or 304-675·
5783 .

Rd. Catl446·0109 a"er 5.

The formaT Wesley Chapel
United Methodist Church
building loc~ted on County
Road 10 in Cheshire Town·
ship, Gallia CountY is for
sale. This is a frame building
in sound condition with
approximately one third of
an acre of land; contents
included . Please submitt
bids by January 1, 1984 to
Athens District United
Methodist Union, P.0. Box

67. Tho Plains, Ohio 45780.

The Athens District United
Methodist Union reserves
the right to reject any and all
· bids.
The late Reuben Aleshire
home built 18"64. 15 rooms,
5 bedr., 9 fireplaces, full
basement, sandStone faun·
dation . 228 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis . · Appointment

only. Call 446·2481.

LeGrande blvd . 3 bdr .• carpeted, Insulated steel siding,
TV or dining room, AC, 2
located in Syracuse-Near
·school &amp;. swim.m ing pool. 3
bedroom situated on one·
third acre lot. $24,500 . or
will rent for $275 mO.

33

Farms for Sala

68 acres on Bulavllle·Porter
Co. Rd . 3. Old farm house
for sale by owner, aakif'g

$66,000. Interested party

please

call

446 -7247

34

Business
Buildings

613-293-7270.

or

For Sal~ or Lease· Country
Store with 3BR Apt. $250

mo. Call 614-245 -9315.

The forrner Wesley Chapel
United Methodist Church
building locate~ on CR.101n
Cheshire TWP. Gallia Co. is
for sale. This is a frame
building in sound condition
with tlpproNimataly one
third acre of land : contents
included. Please submit bids
by January 1, 1984 to
Athens District United
Methodist Union , P.O. Box
67. The Plain a. Ohio 46780.
The Athens District United
Methodist Union reserves
the right to reject any and ell
bids .

304-855-3934.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

3 bedroom ranch style

36 acres at Rodney on W.T.

home, carpeted, full size
basement, 1 car garage. in
ground pool 16K32 .

ing available. Calt 446-8221
after 6 weekdays .

Baum addition: 3 bedrooms.
2 112 baths, A.C".• famity room
with fireplace . 2 acres.

Recreational lot for sale, 12
mites south Ravenswood,
100h. water frontage on
Millcreek $2,500.00 . 304-

Watson Rd . Owner financ-

$46,000. 614-992-5858 . 1 - - - - - - - - -

867,500, No down pay- 273-9901.

ment, owner will carry at no
interest for no ·interest for 6
years. loan assumption pas·

sibte. 614-985-4387 .

43 acres. barn, {&amp; minutea
from town, rural water,
blacktop road, beautiful
house site . 304-676· 6768.

Two bedroom house, basement, clean Condition, park·
lng off street, big yard.

304 -675·1301, good
neighborhood.
41
3 bedroom. lar~ lot, 2606
lincoln Avenue, 7 years old,

855,000, _304-675-6047 '

Houses for Rent

Two story house, 4 bdr.,
S 250 per mo, S 250 dap.

req. Call 446 -4222, 9:305:00.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Equipped kitchen, newly
remodeled, "bentralair, $300 •

446 -

wtth one wenlng •nd rotat·

brary. &amp;heron M. Stone. 6th

(304) 773-5710 ° 773-5111

experienced. Call

tunltin are unlimited.

Trustworthy middle, ogod

304-8711·2120.

in this area. Our expert staff
has many· years Of experience ~nd haa set up resto-

my home. Day or night,

cot. Hao oil ohoto,' litter
2 rocQnor cholro. Folr ohope.
814·992-n13.

Stripping Furniture &amp;~Metal.

bath. Call 446-7834 .

1 B Wanted to Do

Wanted to do babysitting in

6' puppl6s YJ Border 1h: Collie.

trained. Melge Humene So-

378-6349
11-17 1 mo.

•Dryer• •FrMIMI
PARTS and. SERVICE

.

00 TODAY FOR CtiiAENI' PRICES
1MD OTHER GM1E

•Relrlgerotors
'

~~~rr~~

LASTFORYEMSAND'IORB.

Situations
Wanted

rienced. Call 446·2787.

IS ...... THE P£R.

EACH -

12

2439.

SPEQAL D&amp;R, lllWARD YOUR Ef.

FLOOR

32 Mobile Homei
for Sale

Must sell. Immediate possession. Only $14,900 . lest
house away from River 00
Henderson St., Henderson,
WV. Phone number in .vard.

Carpentry work remodeling,
painting &amp;. roofing. Can
furnished references. expe -

r~~!!![

Business
Opportunity

Instant cash flowi ··First time

large

will do baby sitting in my

lNG NMl.l.Y PAY OFF WITH TH,AT

FOfiiS wmtIIOUNT
A QUAUTI',
!IHIIUUlEit
ATOIIlLIFE.IJI&lt;E
sruotO.

local School
currently seeking
applications from certified
applicarita for a Freshman
Basketball Coach at Meigs
High School for the 1983·
84 school year. Applicants
must hold 1!1 valid Ohio
teaching certificate and
must meet certification re·
quirements of Ohio for
sports medicine and CPR .
Persona interested should
contact Dan E. Morris, Su ·
perintentent" of Meigs Local
Schools, ~t 821 South Third
Avenue in Middleport, in
Ohio .

Furniture. gold. silver dol·
Iars. wood ice boxes. 1tone
jars. antiques, etc. Complete
households. Write M.D.
Millar, At. 4. Pomeroy, Oh

WHD1 ... MANY HOlMS OF tti.IO"·

PROFESSIONAL·

near Pomeroy area to repres·
ant ' established life and
Health Insurance Co . Excellent potential for increased,
e1rnings and advancement.
Applicant mu-' have initiative mature judgement in
sales ability, however no
experience necessary . We
offer complete training pro·
gram. Guaranteed · aalary.
.Bonus and commission.
fringe benefits include group
life and hospitalization and
excellent retirement benefits. We are an E.O.P. For
more information contact
Darrell Vorhees , DistriCt
manager. 614 ~ 687·0065 .
Between 8:30 and 4:30
p.m . weekdays.

wood. Call 614-256·1528.

3574.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

'

BEDS-IRON, ofiRASS old

Giveaway

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

446·3358.

3476.

Boy's 16 inch bicycle with
trai.ning wheels. 304 · 882-

BISSELL FLOORS

for information . Call

A. Merlin 814·992·6370.

304-875-4280.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

(:all

onaering service. Call Oaby

Sale Items. Mostly clothing.

10/20/t.f.n.'

lady wants' ride from Eureka
to end of bridge in Pt.
~leasant avery Friday morn·

Will care for elderly person in
our home. lPN · care given.
16 years axperience.Call

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late modal
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

3 Announcements

Georges Creek Rd.
448·0294.

304-773-9185.

tloneer . 304·275 ·
3069.

PARCEL SERVICE

21

Small black spayed tefnate, Blue grast or rock band for
mixed. ·Good with children. Christmas
Dance at GDC .
Will keep tit Christmas. Coil Doc. 14. e100. Call 446·
614. 245 . 9326 ·
·
$32.500.00 'Bonded' Call 1573 alter 6PM.
1642, ext. 279, 8-5.
Toll Free: (8001 241-2269
6 Lost and Found
Mature individual Jiving in Or or write for more info: U .S. 1972 mobile home with 1 Yz

p.m.. Sat, Doc. 3, 511 29th .

DEPOSITORY

Help Wanted

Coli 446-8176 attar &amp;PM. ong, Call 614·258·1198.
Needs homo deopertly.
AVON There are 2 ways to
Angora kitten orange color, · make money wi1h AVON .

R1. 555 on Nov. 26th.

742-2328

Lake

month

Lost In the vicinity of Eno,

BoHoons for Blrthdeya, Get

. Trophy
· ftllanufacturers

GRAVEL
·HAUlED .
AL

949-28Q0

Well. Annlver11ry1. Sweethearts. parties. Call · Bal-

THE
TROPHY
KING

For 10% Off
Any Se£Vice

MILLER

273-3407

mo.

· ~ring This Coupon In

$5.00 EXTRA

1·3-llc

GUNS

Business Services

CUT &amp; WRAPPED

Authorized John Deere,
New ·Holland, Bush Hoc
farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

742-2362

AND

949-2210

$2500

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

SERVICE CALLS

S&amp;W TV

Home National Bank

DEER
PROCESSED.

BOGGS

10/12/2 mo pd.

APPROXIMATELY 21/2 ACRES and house
needs extensive repairs. Racine Village.

SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
1y, M. East of Paceville
On Township Rd. 141
We Specialize
in Aluminum Only
PH. 992-3466
1011912 mo. pd

a J.ttc

SKATE-A-WAY
tiiester, o'il.
Open Wed .. Fri .. Sat. Nites
7:30 to 10:00
Available for private parties Mon., Tues .. Thurs.
Niles, Sat. or Sun. Afternoon.
THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI .. NOV. 18
CHRISTMAS PARTY
FRI., DEC. 16
PH. 985·3929
or 985·9996
11·14·1 mo.

WE ALSO DO

udders for
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip Tanks
"Your Place or Mine"

LOT in Racine Village, 75x150, M.H. facili·
ties, Yellow Bush. .Road.

co.

Sl

10·31·1 m·o.·c.

Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners

PH. 742-2456

furnace

Racine, OH. ·

Washers,

Salam Twp. Rd. 180
Dexter. Oh .. 45726
Bill Eskew

Three acres with a nicely constructed concrete block home 26x60, 3 bedrooms, one
bath. 12xl5 living room and 24x24 family
Partially carpeted, .fuel oil
with facilities for woodbumer. 12xl5
block storage building, 20x30 block garage. Right off Rt. 248, country setting,
1/2 mile east of Chester, Ohio.

ELBOW ROOM - Approximalley 33 acres with nice 3
bedroom ranch. 2 baths, full

General Welding

REAL .ESTATE

111 25[121 2. 2tc

949-2293

USED
APPLIANCES

'·'

Real E•tate General

'Excavating
'Ponds
'Septic Tanks
'Hauling •

PAT HILL 1FORD .
' 992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

PH. 992-2280

them at least f1ve days pr1or to
the date set for heanng

County, Court of Common
PI~. Probate Divilion

To the E&gt;&lt;ecUtor or Admlnll·

RUN

STRIP

Public Notice

NOTICE ON FlUNG
INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs

"two distinct gun shots" in the
vlciJ:Uty, and the same vehicle
Any person des1rmg to fil e
passiilg him theopposltedlrectlonat excAptiOns
thereto must f1 le
a high rate of speed.
At the end of Holcomb's testlm·
Real Estate General
any, King asked how could the jury
have a guideline as to whe'n I . - - - - - - - - Holcomb was telling the truth.
PrOsecutor Joseph Cain objected to
King's question, but was overruled
by Judge Richard Rodelick.
VIRGIL B. SR. - ~~~~
216 r.. 2nd St.
"When I have to," Holcomb
replied.
Phone
1-(614)·992·3325

frequently.

-·-

SJ "'~'"~"''

II" (1.,4.. nt Sup~IIH

M.L.
CONJRACTI NG
RECAMATION

PUWNS
EXCAVATI.NG
-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
-Gas lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMAll JOBS
PH. 992-2478

f:fn ...,•iJio•ll ''"If''·• '"'""''' tlu•
(,./l,.u·utJil••f• •r•ltou•• ,, n ·lutllJl''' .. .

71 ....., •• ~,hilt
71 r. ..... to&lt; Solo
7l.,.,.o.,4WD
74 •M01.....,,CIB

2

11

614-446 -8 095.

CONSTRUCTION
- New Homes-Extensi~i
- Remodeline .
lnsuran~e Work
Cu&amp;ttllti Pole Bides.
li Garaees
Roofi,nr Work
Alumsnum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
1 5 Yeo to Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-75B3
or 992-2282

PHONE 992-2156;

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING
BISSELL ·
·
DING
"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages" .
Call for .free sidinges·
timates" 949·2801 or

24 1 mo

1[}

ROUSH

. I

Tape recordings ... __
Twyman's disappearance.
Frank Wake, visited his home on
"He said, 'I killed her: I said to Allee Ridge Road and said. he
him, 'Will you quit that?' He just (Wake) wanted to speak toHolmmb
laughed and said it again. Then we "off the record, so he could get the
went on talking," she said.
fact s straight."
Under questioning by Prosecutor
Taped Interview
·Joseph Cain, Furst said she saw Lee
The entire session was taped by
on several occasions after June 22, Wake, and is in the possession of the
when they spent two nights together defense attorney, who produced a
in a Hunt4ngtol'!, W.Va. motel. transcript of !he conversation,
·During that time, Lee said he didn't quoting from it extensively. Hoikill Twyman.
comb claimed he did not know he
· Afterward, Leecontinua!Jycalled was being taped at the tltne.
her, beggtng her not to testify
To Wake, Holcomb made a
against him. Furst said he sug· number of statements concerning
gested "many times" thqt she go to the alleged murder, including the
Flolida to see her sister.
fact Twyman's body was discoAlleges choking Incident
vered "over the hill" from ·his home.
Late on.the night of Aug. 12, she
He added that the vehicle in which
agreed to pick up Lee in Point he saw the girl was traveling very
Pleasant and talk to ·him. He · !as!. If Lee were acquitted, he felt
directed hertodrivedown W.Va. 2 to police may try to arrest him for the
a secluded spot, where he asked her incident, since the victim was found
several tltnes again not to testify so close to his property. Holcomb is
against him.
similar to Lee in coloring and build.
At one point, Furst said Lee pulled
Holcomb related with great detail
a string with a knot tied into' it and
the
events of March 20, down to a
placeo the stling around her neck.
descliption
of the other occupant of
'"He asked me again not to
thecal'.
testify," she said. "I said no.· He
He claims the first time that day
began choking me. I told him,
he
noticed the vehicle, .a red 1979
'You're trying to kill me.' He said,
'You're going to send me to prison U Monte Carlo with West VIrginia
Ucense plates, was between 11 a.m.
Holcomb testHies
Earlier Thursday, Gregory Hoi· 31ld noon the' day of the alleged
comb, 23, of Allee Ridge Road in murder, passing by on Ewlngtim
Ew!ngton, told the court of seeing a Road, near his cousin's home,
vehicle passing his home several headed toward the Twyman
'times March 20, and Identified residence.
Twyman as one of the occupants.
Defense questions testimony
Holcomb's evidence came to the
.King pointed out that earlier in his
atJentlon of the Gallla County Investigation, Holcomb described
Sherl!fs Department several weeks the car to Wake as a tan Grand Prix.
ago. Holcomb said under cross· · Later In the day, after going to
examination ·by de(ense attorney VInton, be was returning home and
Hamlin King he hail the ·known , saw the same vehicle, with two
about It since Match,butonly gave It people around It on the.property of
Lauchey McCoy.
to law enfOrcement recently.
His testimony appeared to be In
He also testified the same car
conflict with whatHolcombrecently passed his residence while he was
told a private Investigator hired by · working on the mulfler of his car, at
King. .
which time he claims recognizing
Thewltnessadmltled on the.s tand Ms. Twyman in the' vehicle.
With Ms. Twyman, Holcomb said
that the facts gtven the Investigator ·
and what he was testifying to were . he saw a "clean cut young man,
possibly 18 (years old) or younger." ·
different.
.
.
A.llttle later that day, he heard
Holcomb said the Investigator, ·

51 M........Did Goodo
S2 Cl. 1V &amp; Pl ... oo Eq"'P""'"'

f.,,..,

Notice

November grocery . bills up

e......... o-"~"'''

l l Homu i.,.SMo
31 Mobole Ho"""l"' $ole
JJ
lor Sol o
34 lluoo""" llwldongo
J!il&lt;lh llo •r.rooao
26 I'IUIEOI ..I "II'on&lt; od

"" ts .

·74 2· 232 8 ~ - 21 ·tft

ll·l·tfc

2 2 ..,.,.,., t&lt;&gt; l o""
23 Pooteuoooal So ... o&lt;tt

4 G•••ow.oo

!&gt; '"'"""" ....
f&gt; ( &lt;&gt;&lt;t&gt;t~~F&lt;&gt;~n~

-

TANKS

A SPECIALTY

All candidates who ran tor olftce
In the November electlon are
reminded that they must tlle a .

CALL NOW ·
Have . l Carpet
In Your Home
Shampooed "FREE"
And See A
Kirby Demonstration
Completely "FREE"
limited Offer
Calf 985·4225
. for Guy Shea
. Ask
Independent Kirby Dealer

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start from i2'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
s
· izes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843-5191
10·6-tfc

'Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

Or Write D1llly Sentinel Classified Dtpt
Ill COurt St.. Pomeroy, Oflio 4S769·

--:a

4·

Giveaway

mother &amp;
catwhite
. One. all
black,
·3
F-=:::::::::::::;::=il"r=+=====:::;lr;:=======::::;1j.::::::::::=:::===~ vaUow
Real
cute,

-Illinois, ~.5, down from 9.7.
..:...Massach\JSetts, 6.6, down from
6.9.
-Michigan, 11.9, doWn from 13.6.
-New Jersey, 6.9, up trom 6.8.
', -New York, 7.6, down from 8.0:·
-Ohio, 10.8, down from 11.0.
.
-Pennsylvania, 10.3, uptrom9.9.
-Texas, 6.7, down from 7.4.

0

Salt

4

IJusbness Services

-Florida, 7.8, down from 8.2.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, O!'tio

1983

per mo . Call 446 -2168 .

TRI-STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED· CARS.
TRUCKS : GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
448-7572 .

$276 plus Utilities. Avail.
now. 2 bdr .• LR , new kit., &amp;
bath . large fenced yard,
new carpet. 566 or 66B 3rd.

and trailer on 1 acre lot

3 bdr. 1 Y2 baths, CIOII to

Ava.. Gallipolis. Colt 448NEW AND USED MOBILE 2457.or 446·0332.
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES, 3 bedroom house fo.r rent,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS, Middleport with kitchen ap.
RT 36 . PHONE 44e-7274. pliances. Deposit required.
Colt 992-2606 otter &amp;PM.
Troller o~ 2 ocre tot $19.000

t11.000 on Korr-Beshet Rd . hosphat &amp; ehopping ptou:
No pats, dep. &amp; ref. reColi 614·388-9380.
quired . Call614· 245·5138.
Nice

2

bdr.

trallar.

614·211~·6251,

-

Cilll

otter 5:30.

1978, 12x7o. total otoctrlc,

Modern 3 bdr. home sec.
dlip. req . References. no
pets, prefer mittdleaged.

3 BR. 2 baths, ax . cond .

Coll614-379·2198.

1977 Trailer with 3 lot• for

2 bdr. farm houn. Located 1
mi. north of CrOwn City on

16900. Call 448-0176 . ·
sole. Call614·268·6818 .
1881 14xli2

more yeare of warranty.

'

Creek Rd . Coli 448·

21--"--------

· 6 room house· on tann near

hooting bill. 2 bdr .. t8,900. Crown C,ity, Rt. 7. Coli
Call 614-246-9283.
814·258·84B4.

�•

...
41

12

71fEV
A~WAV$

breeteway, v•• forced air
c~ntral

SITN/!AR
Afe ...

air condition·

lng. Coil 614-949-2734.
3 bedroom haute-large
yard. Double car garage.
Alternative heat source .
Small deposit and raferen Cea. Pomeroy area. 614-

992·8539.
For tale or rent 3 bdr. ranch,

I._,..

a4

New 1983 Dressmakers
Sewing Mechinae. FrH'arm.
6 stretch stitches. 10 design
stitches, blind ham, mend·
ing stitch. monograms. dlala· matic button haler. Sews
on denim material!. Regular
p(ice 6636 .96. Now Only
'8229. Over stocked . Must
sail by Jan . 31, 2f year
factory warranty. Call 814·
385-4535 . Froo Dolivory.

Cabbage Patch type dolls
drnood. 135.00. 304·875·
3155.

full basement. 1 car garage.
in ground pool 16x32. tale
price 846,000, rent 8300 .
Coli 992-5858 .

Twin· slze white provential
bed with mettre .. and boJil
springs. Also full aize bed.
446·9867 altar 1 p, m.

Small furnished 3 room
house with bath in Middle-

Firewood slab1 for aale . 816
pickup lood . Coli 6,4· 246·
5804.

port. Adu~o only. 614·992·
2598.

~1r

3 bdr. 2 baths, heat pump, 2
car garage, nice location.
Coli 304·676· 5545 or 875·
2371 '

Barbie&amp;. Ken clothes, home·
modo. Coll614-246·9326.

\11/ 1

'""-'~
CII4S.c&gt;.~OWN,

~
~===~====:=~~~===I!&gt;Rii=·:NT::~::::·:N:.'f.:·~~
•

Exc.

78

r--------------------,

Mlac. Merchandiae

KIT 'N: CARLYLE••

byLarryWrlght

\(;lfet,t~

Firewood. t3&amp; .00 pickup
lood. Phono 304-1175· 7883
or 11711-3888.

~

;H lt\Y f'cQ&lt;t.T

f'...,·

tliM .

II

:'

/:

79

1-:---------One motel dnk ond choir,

f~
I!J .

~ STtXI&lt;lON ST.,

-':TOY,

1---------Franklin flr.lcl stove. 24

I~
. 81

55 Building Supplies

.

qtlt

t-

range,TV.
cedar
wardrobe,
RCA
color
Corbin
&amp; Snyder
Furniture. 966 2nd. Avo.
Coll446-1171 . ,

THAT'S&gt; WHAT I
THINK. . OF COUR.5 E,
THE NAT!VE5- WOULD

.·

W

Daily Sen1inei-Page

1..

0

,,. WILL VOU PROMI,E ME, AFTER.
THI!' ADVeNTUit.E, YOU'LL. MAl&lt; &amp;
S.Uit.E; t GfT THAT FAMILY AND
HOU~E AND D06 IIJ
THE SUBURB$~

THAT NIGHT.

TE:U. YOU TH I5 HAP·

AFTER MILES

WHO

TR.IE? TO

FI~D

£L PORADO.

TH'-OUGH THf
DEN;EANPES.

OFGI.IMSIN6

PI!N~ TO ANYONE

JUNBLE ...

Home
Improvements

----------------~--. '

STUCCO ceilings
PLASTERING
. .: .
windows,
lintels,
etc . I ~::;==::::=::==::;:;::::o:-::":""::'"::••:""::":':·~:·:•:~:~:·~ textured
commerClaude Winters,
Rio Grande,
cial end re1idential, f,.. ;
0. Coll814-2411·&amp;121 .
ootlmotoo. Call 614·2118' .
1---,-.,-.,-.,----- 1-:::-:--::---=-:---I 182.
••
Houae for rent or lease
Autos for Sale
LUMBER - Rough cut. oolt. 81 Farm Equipment . 71
located in New Haven, with 44
51 Household Goods Firewood $36 PU load, 6 poplar. 2x4~ 2x8, 2x8, 1x4,
Apartment
Marcum Roofing &amp;. Spoutoption to buy. large lot. 3
loado $150. 1 0 loodo $260. 1x6. tx8,1ongth ovolloblo. 8 AD 1974 Ford troctor 3000
for Rent .
bedrooms, built-in ki1chen,
1978 Oldo Dalto 88 Royolo, ing. 30 years experience,
Hardwood,
delivered.
Call
foot
through
14
foot.
How
power
at"ring,
looke
like
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
family room, 2 car garage.
a. Zuopon, 304-773-5654 now, plicod t5,800. W~h excellent cond.. new tires. specializing in built up roof. '
Sofa. chair, rocke~. otto- 614· 266-6636 oftor 5PM.
References and deposit redaytime.
dlolt plowo a. buoh hog In A-C. pluah interior, all ex~ Coli 8, 4-388-9867.
quired. 304-882-2688 or Completely furnished . man. 3 tables. (extra heavy
working
condition. For mort troo. e2soo. 814-.742·
Produce scale. balanced.
Frontier). S685 . Sofa, $76
304·424·6108 otter 6:00 .
Appliance Service All make•
. Call6,4-367·0314 or
newly decorated, all electric, 'by
Information call 814·246· 2681.
chair and loveseat, S276 .
&amp; models refrigerators.
centrally located, at $200
614-367·01n.
,
58
_.eta for Sale
91011.
1
:
1978 Mercury Cougar, good washers, dryers, ranges.
mo . plus deposit. Call 614· Sofas and chain price~ from
42 Mobile Homes
446 -2236 or 614·446 · $285 . to $895. Tabloo, $45 PA system . Vamoho EM 160
1980 John Deere tractor. cOndition, loaded with ex· compactors, dishwashers.
and
up
to
8125
.
Hide-a·
mixer. 2·EV 12' speakera. 3·
2581 .
traa, 13,1500. call after 6PM. mlcrowavn. Heating •
·
for Rent
304-882-3307.
beds.S440 . and up to sure professional mica. HILLCREST KENNELS
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work.
304-675-4560.
$526 .. Recliners. $176. to 81000. Coll614·367·0314 lording all brnds. Selling
Gallla Refrigeration Co. Call
Furn. efficienc t apt . Private 8375 ., lamps from S28 . to
Happy Jock Dog Food.
'81 Mercury (ynx, 4 speed, 814·446-4066.
Nice 2 bdr. trailer, Hannan entrance and bath . Suitable $75 .5 pc. dinettes from e14-367·0137.
Doberman pupploo: Stud 82 Wanted to Buy
good g11 mileage, uc.
Trace School area. Rt. 218. for one person . Call 446· $99 .. to 435·. 7 pc . $189
Sarvlco. Call 448-7796.
RON'S Television Service.
Beaultful wood baby bed
81 00 dep .. $174. mo. Coil U32 .
Will poy top price for 10• l·c_o_n_d_.._3_I0_4_·_6_7_6_
· 2..,6_2_3_._ _
and up. Wood table with six with canopy and mattreas
256·625, after 5 o30.
1- - - - -- - - - - chairo $425 to $746 . Dook
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call bacco poundage. Call 6 14· 1970 Plymouth, fair condi· Specializing In Zenith ond
Motorola, Qu1z1r. and.
1 bed room Apt. S 196. mo. $110 up to $225. Hutches. also youth bed. Call 814· 8,4·367·7220.
379-2166.
houoo
collo. Coli 676-2398
388-9767.
tion.
reaaonable
price
.
12x60 2 bdr . modern fur· including utilities. Equal $560 . and up. maple or pine
or 448-2454.
3 bdr. oil brick ranch. Full Phone 304·773·5800.
niahed trailer, convenient housing opportunity. Con· finish . Bunk bad complete
.
Bri1rpatch
Kennels
Profls·
location, Upper River Rd. tact Village Manor Apts. with mattresses, 8260. and Grainfed freezer beef. Cho- sion111 All·breed grooming. basement attached 2 car 1 - - - - - - - - - - ice of black Angus c:Jr Here· lndol'or·outdoor boarding fa· garage, .8 •crea, close to '77 Monte Carlo. one F S. K Tree Trimming, atUrrip
deposit req . Call 614-446· 614-992 ·7787.
up to $396. Baby beds,
Weight opprox. 800 cilitle.s. Englilh Cocker sPa- hoopltot Coli 448·7838 al· owner, 52,000 miloo, good romoval. Coll67&amp;-1331.
B658.
1- - - - -- - - - - 8110. Mattresses or box ford.
cond., new engine, 304•
Etficieny apt . Call 992· springs. full or twin. $58 .. lb1; 68 cents a pound. Call niel pupplao. Coli 614·388· tar &amp;PM.
. 446·0212 ,
RINGLE'S SERVICE .. P~~"
676-2668.
2 bdr . trailers. Aputments 1 5434 or 304·882·2566. ·
9790.
firm, S68 . and $78. Quean
rienced roofing, Including
bdr. Beautiful river view jn 1------ - - - - - seta, 8195 . 4 dr. chests,
·
hot tlir application, carpen~
1989
Ford
Torino,
good
Kanauga. Fosters Trailer Furnished apt. 5 rooms and S42 . 5 dr. chests, $64 . Bed lntellivision video game with Dragonwynd Cattery· 83
Livestock
voice
moduli,
storage
sv•·
ter,
electrician, mason. Call
work
car,
new
tirea.
good
bath, no peu, dep. required . frames, S20.and $25 .. 10
Pork. 446· 1602.
Kennell. AKC Chow pup·
tam and 13 cartridges. Call
motor and transmisaion. 304·676·2088 or 8711·
992· 2937.
gun · Gun cabinets, $350 . bolora 2:30PM. 614-446· pill. CFA Himalayan, Par· Reg. 2 yr. old Quarter horN 1260. Phone 304-67-15· 46110.
.
Nicly furnished modern mo·
sian and Slama" kittens. gelding, excellent dlopool· 8874.
Gas or electric ranges $376 .
-~---- .
bile home, in city. 1 or 2 Furnished ~ apt . Middleport, Baby mattresses. $26 &amp;. 9472.
Coli 448·3844 oftor B.
adults only . Call 446.0338 . adults, no pets, month rent $36, bed frames S20, $25,
tlon. very reaaonable price. 1:::::::=~====::::== Water Wells. Commercial
i:nd Domestic. Teat holes. _
plus S100 security 992- &amp; S30, king frame S50 . limestone delivered. $10 a AKC Rogiotared Poodle pup· Coli 448-74911allor &amp;PM . I·
ton. Call614·268-1427.
Pumpa Sales and Servlc• . •
72 Trucks for Sale
2 bdr. mobile home. Call 3874 .
- pie1. Oep. will hold for
Good selection of bedroom
Fat lambs for butchering It l - - - - - - - - - - - - 304-896·3802. '
446 ·0508 .
suites, cBdar chests , Firewood delivered. •as Christmas. Call 448-0867.
rom Iembo. Coll448-11&amp;8. 1974 Chovy. cleon and In - - - - - - - - ·
New one and two bedroom rockers, metal cabinets ,
pickup load, 1 0 IOadl $300.
greot ohopo. Call 814-245- SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
14x70 total electric 3 bdr .. apartments, furnished or swivel rockers .
1
2
weak1
Beagle
puppies,
EXLINE SADDLE. SHOP 2
piece custom fit your home.
fufflished, trailer on private unfurnished in Middleport . Used Furniture · · bookcase, Coli 614-258-1427.
old, $35. Call. 614·388· mi. Nonh of Jackaon on St. 6243.
Guaranteed.
Advanctp(j Gut·
lot . 10 min . from town. Call 992· 5304 .
9364.
rangea. chairs, dryers, re· Christmas Special New 4
Rt93 bolide 93 Au1o Soloo. I-19_8_1_T_o_y_o-to-lo_n_g_b_o_d_,-6 tor, (Day 614-592·40116,)
$200 mo. plus dep. &amp; ref.
frigerators and TV's . 3 miles
Apartments, 1'1ouse and of- out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am ft .xBft. electric arrow flesh· One Oauschund. Call 448· Christm.. Slile. Youth show &amp;pd.. factory air, AM·FM (night 614·698·8206.1
Coli 614· 256 · 1393.
Nddle aave ••
fice space. .Call Cleland to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri ., 9am ing aigns. 2 colors. tent 0522.
ha•dstalli uve ••
tape, aliding rear window, GET your carpet SHIP
8100 mo . for 4 mo. Than
1 mobile home for rent. 2 Realty at 614·992·225,9 .
to 6pm. Sat.
lelther show hllter with delu'xe mirror, step bumper, SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
buy
sign
for
146.
Call
mobile homes for sale. Call
1Yz yr. old male Cocker silver •47.60
eJilcellent condlt~n. Mult
446·0322
614-446·4782.
STEAMER . Weter removal,
Apartments . 304 -675·
446·1052 .
Spaniol. Coli 446· 7300 bo· aU grooming item uve I I
selll Call 441·0844.
furniture
cleaning, free eatl· '
5548 .
lore 4. or 614·379-2216
TV &amp; Appliances. 827 Third
lawn mower, stero. after &amp;.
614·286·662 2 .
1977 Ford Club Cab pickup mateo. 304·675-2296.
2 bdr. mobile home. adults.
Ave .. Gallipolis, 446 ~ 169 '9 . Washer,
APARTMENTS. mobile Spin washers, gas &amp; electric refrigerator &amp;. train lay·out.
no pats. Call 446· 1158.
For oolo aog . Chootnut with camper top, $1.600. 1 - - - - - - - - - - "
Caii814·3BB·8201 or814· HousH moved or raised, .
homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant dryers, auto washers. gas&amp;. Coli 614-245-5267 alter 6 . AKC Chow puppie1. Call
Quarter horse mare. Big 388 8349
basements dug beneth
2 bdr. trailer, partially fur· ,and GalliPolis . 614· 446· electric ranges. refrigera·
814·387-0581.
Antiques, oak furniture reSorrelgeldlng4whlteltock·l---·-...,..·------- houus. free estimates,
nished, water furnished, 8221 .
tors, TV sets.
production, misc. Items. Use toy Fox Terrier puppie1 tor lnga, white bl111 face. 1973 Chevroletpickup, V-8, ~House Movers. Inc. 304·
8120 mo . dep . required . Cal
Simco ohow ooddlo with otondord. runo good. l660. 576·2711.
TWIN RIVERS TOWER . GOODUSED APPLIANCES our Christmas layaway plan. oolo. Coll814-446-2111.
446 · 4002.
brooot otrop. 614·288· Coll446·7739.
Apartments now availabla1o Washers, dryers, refrigera· Conkals. Tuppers Plains.
111122.
2 bdr. mobile hOme. Call elderly &amp; disabled with an tors, ranges. Skaggs Ap·
Registered English Setter
For
sale
grave
blankets.
Call
Plumbing
i.ncome of less than pliances. Upper River Rd .
446· 0390
1981 Ton a. Burgundy Ford 82
pupo, 2 maloo, 10 wlu. old.
$12 .300 . Renting for 30 beside Stone Crest Motel. 614-949·3037.
F·150.
Afr·conditioning,
&amp;
Heating
1160 eo. Call 446-9634.
84 Hey &amp; Grain
2 bdr. mobile home at . percent of adjusted income· 446· 7398 .
AM·FM Radio, and camper
Sony projector type t.v. 42
.Phono 304-675·6679 .
E~o~ergreen . Call446 ·7032 .
top. Excellent condition.
AKC Miniature Daachund .
screen. solid oak cabinet. Black
HOOO. Coli 992·2219.
and Ru1t, ready for
2 small refrigerators, 2 gas in.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
$450.
Call614
·992·6127.
1 4x70 Penthou!la high rise. I Duplex 6 rooms. bath. base·
ranges, 1 Maytag wringer - - - - - - - -·lc- Christmas. Born November Large round bal11 of hay, l - - - - - - - - - - AND HEATING
ment,
water
fumished.
lock
f1&amp;
ooch.
Coll441·1062.
1981
Ford
F700flotbodtwo
for rent in Pomeroy·Athens
washer, automatic washers AM·FM Stereo with 8 track 9 .. 883-8378. 1160.
Cor. Fourth and Pine
1
area . Full furnished, 25 Road, Point Pleasant, &amp; dryer. All guaranteed .
ton truck. Will ull or trade Phone 446·3888 or 446·
player and turntable, 2
.
equipped kitchen, washer- 1 1· 6 1 4·446·0239 .
for pickup of equal value. 4477.
Glassware &amp; what nota for speakers and cabinet. $86.
.
dryer. woodburner, $226
814-986·4174.
Christmas . Hupp's Ap· Call 304-882-3692.
Rogloterod
puppies. Fawn
AKC and rust·
1
-plus utilities. Or will sell for Two bedroom apt. in Mason, pliance &amp; Glaasware, Corner
---~---$160 each . Blue•-8176,
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT· ·
6,5 ,000. Call 992·6034 adults only, no pats. 304- Rt . 7 &amp; Rt. 141 , 446·8033 . - -- - -- - - ·IC- Block and rod· 175. Wormod 71
'76 Jeep excellent condi- lNG. Fomorly Dewitt~
Autoa
for
Sele
Good
ul8d
Fuel
Chief
Fuel
675·
1452
alter
5pm
.
after 4 :30 .
tion. "78 luv truck. VB con· Plumbing. Coli 614·367·
oil furnace and 276 gallon and ohoto. 883-8378.
vereion, blazer wheels, roll 0678.
Sale . 26% to 60% off tank. $300.00. Coli 614
12x60 ft . 2 bedroom mobile Furnished apartment in washers . ' dryers . ret. ,
bar, auto. transmluion.
Registered
Pit
Bull
Pups.
home . Approx . 6 miles from Point Pleaaant, utilities paid, ranges, desks and chest of 992-7589.
$60. Bob Roach of New TOP CASH .pold for loto 304-876·338S.
Pomeroy or Middleport. Can · 304·895 ·3450 .
drawers. Skaggs ApplianHoven-304·882·3262. Coli model u•d cars. Smith
83 Excavating
L-ovable 6 month old cllico after IS p.m.
Bulck·Pontioc. 1911 Eoot· 1964 Dodge pick-up V8
992· 5858 .
ces, Upper River Rd . Call cat.
Has all shotl. Litter
Apt . for rent. front apt .. · 614· 446 ,7398 . Open 9· 5.
ern Ave .• . Gallipolis, 448· motor, 4 epeed tranemis· 1 ----~------trained. Meigs Humane So·
14x70 mobile home. large ground floor . 304 · 675 oion, e&amp;OO.OO. Phone 304·
AKC Roglotorod Daochund 2282.
cioty. 614-992· 2592.
DOZER WORK By Tod
377,
lot . Co11986·4367 .
882-3307.
puppies and adultl. 304·
Sofa bed 875 , swivel rocker
Hanna, ponds, dltchei,
1979
Pontiac
fkoblrd
V,8,
$125 , stero $40. excellent
895-3958.
New 16 horse power Briggs .
2 bedrooms . furnished . Furnished Apartments, 304- shape. Call 446·3467 _
AT. PS; PB. AC, 82.000 mi. 1978 Ford F·150 4x4, baHments, etc. Call 446·
and
Stratton
log
splitter.
S165 per month plus utili ~ 676-2050 or 304 · 675 ·
Call 446· I 195 altar &amp;PM.
93,000 mlloo. ono owner, 4907, Caner It Evan•
81600.
Coll614·992·3233
ties and deposit. No pets. 3491 .
12,800, nogotioblo, 304- Tranaportation.
Couch brown, beige &amp; light or 614-992·6548 .
57
Muaical
Country Mobile Home Park .
1911'12
DR
ChovyChovotto,
895·3987
or 304·895·
yellow, good cond.. $35 ,
Instruments
Cat 21&amp; hoe. dozera. crane.
Call 992· 7479.
4 opd. t31911. Roal Buy. 3472 oltor 8:00.
Coli 446 ·969.6 .
86 BTU fuel furnace with
45 Furnished Rooms
John'o Auto 8oln. Bulovlllo 1 - - - - - - - - - - loaders, dump truck. Call
In Middleport· trailer with
Rd.. Oalllpollo, Ohio. Coli 1979 Toyota 4 whool Hri110. 814·448·1 ,42 between
Used dryers &amp; washer all tank. Coal wood burning
expando livingroom. Very For rent Sleeping Rooms serviced &amp; guaranteed :30 stove. 1969 International Peavy bass ult1r. hard can. 446·4782.
long bod truck, 304-468· 7:00AM a. 5:00PM.
clean. corner lot. 12x60. and light house keeping days. Some matched pairs. truck for pans or will aen Pnvy b111 amp, 16 "
1552.
opoakor. Both $600. Coli
outright. Call 742·241 B.
Good· 1 Excavating, base- ·.
Adults only. 614·992-2101
rooms. Park Central Hotel. Delivery available. Call 6141978 Mercury Colony Park ;;:=;=~;:::;,:;::;= mente, footers, driYitVIBYS,
614·387·0314
614·367·
or 6,4·992-2319.
Wagon. loaded with extras. 1·
256 · U07.
Call 446 ·0766 .
Craftaman 10 in. radial-arm 0137.
oepllc tonko. londocopin(tnow tiroo, ·no ruot. •1295. 73
Vena &amp; 4 W . O .
Call anytime 446-4537.
Glbaon 17 cu . upright nhw with stand .•d o do blade.
Two bedroom furnished
Coli,
814·388·8885
oftor
6
.
1~=-c-:::-----James l. Daviton, Jr.
freerer, like new, $285. Call I op vaccum. 3 0 0. 114· Bran trumpet with c1se.
trailer on Crab Creek Road. 46 Space for R enc
Good condition. f260. Call 198, Z· , 8 Comoro, 44 •000 197B Chevrolet Scotdole owner.
$160 . month, depoait re·
614-367-0314 or 614·36 7· _9_ 9_2_·_2 _60
_2_._ _ _ _ __
~
4x4.
Call
446-8132.
,
992·5844.
1
quired . 304-676· 1 206 .
mlleo. T·top, AC. PS, PB, ' - : - - - : - - - - - - 0137 ·
1 6 cubic ft . Seara ColdS pot,
1 1966 Ch
J.I:.R. Conatruction Co.
AM-FM·Caaaette.
4
Furnished office for rent .
upright freezer.
Brand New Armatrong flute, tlroo, ex. cond. te4900new
or
vrolot 91 angina, Wlter Lines, Foote.re,
2 bedroom mobile home, Close to city building and W11shar &amp; gas dryer. Mathe· frostless
614·247·3896.
UOO.OO or boot offer, 304· boll offor. Call 114-379· 30 paooongor buo. 4 apood, Draine. All kinds of Ditching.
completely furnished, $186. · court house. Call 446-0866 ing Kenmore . $126 pair. I-::-:---:----------new brakea, good body &amp;:
937·2380.
plus utilities. $60 .00 dap· 1 days, $125 . mo.
2728 or 814-742-2461.
tlrea. Runo good, t1,600. RuUond. Oh . 614-742·
Coll 446·1232.
Dried firewood dalivorod.
2903.
osit. Call 304·676·8512 .
01_1_30
4 _·6_7_5_·7_7_7_1· - - - Dixon Acouotlc guitar, ·e ao 1 B82 Dotoun 200 SX, ox. ,_c_ol.,.l_4_41-:-·2_8_3_1_._ _ __
Beautiful
maple
woter
fell
I·C:_
large trailer space on on
or beat offer. Phone 304·
d 1 0 000
,Furnished mobile home,
Bulaville· Addiaon Rd. Call bedroom auite $376. Alto New wood burning stove
675· 7711 .
con ..
•
mi .. n.ooo. 1979 Chevrolet 4x4 black 84
Electrical
$200. per month, utilities 446 · 4265 or 446·4736 .
misc . items. Call446·2481 . with firebrick $32&amp; . each. - - - - - - - - - - · Coll4411·10118 otter &amp;PM.
wlih ohon bod, V-8. 4 opd ..
partly paid . 304·675· 2049 .
&amp;
Refrigeration
Whh lock out hubbo a. roll
675·
1971 ford Elite IIX.C •. cond., bor. Coli Ron 8h-o, 814·
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Beby bod 1 yr. old, with ~~:66~5·1678 or
2 bedroom mobile home,
loodod.
Coll614·387·7224.
69 For Sale or Trade
Park, Route 33, North of mattress. Paid $140 willa ell 1-----.,-------'211,8-1484.
304-675-4046.
Pomeroy . large lots. Call for •n. Coli 446·3369.
Pasquale Electric Co. all
Hand mado ~oil houooowhh
1972 Dodge o.. mon, 8 1 972 Ford van outometlp for phaNs of electric work, 111
992-7479.
fumhure, 186. Phone 114·
tires. runa good, ule or will trade tor botlt or work guaranteed. Aerial
Like new matching swivel 448-46~0 .
18112 Ford F1 Pickup. Call cvt.. new
can aftor 4, 44&amp;rockers, brown velveteen,
44 Apartment
rental. Coli 814·448·
742-3158.
vw - · eon 448·2429. · truck
8021.
304·675-7453.
27111.
for Rent
48
Equipment
Surpluo Denim 10.000 gor·
atock.Army clothing. 1982 Buddy two bedroom ,1 1173' Plymouth Satollho. 1871 4x4 11-. 111:000
for Rent
Walnut cabinet style Sylva · ments
Boota·leather·lneulated. In· 14x18 furnlahed,w.a- . runo good, noo. Coli 114· mAta, good oond .. t4.2811. SEWING Mochlno ropalro.
nia
stereo
with
AM
end
FM
Hrvlce. Authorized Singer
Call 814-2411-9498. ·
Small furn. house 1 or 2
radio. 8 track tape player and sulated coveralls *27.50. all sMradryer,Uke new. Fl- .258·11S2.
Solaa a. Service Sharpon
adults only, no pats. Call 20 ft. flat bed trailer. Can BSR racor·d changer, slree . Sam Som4irvlllt'a, nonclng ovolloblo. 814-982
Sclaaon.
Fabric Shop.
·lc7479.
Eaet
Ravenswood.
open
446·0338.
pull with own pick or car. 8200.00. coli 304-87511180 Dotoun 310 GX, AM· 1173 Joop CJ 5. 304 Pomoroy. 992-2284.
1 :00· 7:00pm. Fri.. Sot,,
Haul anything on it . t26 per 5856.
FM rodlo, tach, quartz clock, •glne. no top. muet tell.
Sun.. other days after 1878 Harley Davldaon cloth Interior, rustproaflna,
Furnished aptl., 1 ·2 rm . &amp;
doy. Call614· 446 ·0175 .
6 :00pm, FREE delivery Sport1ter, lots e~ttraa, ooklng U.19&amp;. Cell 441- f1380. Call 148·211011.
bath down &amp; 1 up. Also 1-4
'
85 General Heyling
rm. &amp; bath · up. Clean, no
13,000. or trade for cer of
54 Misc. Merchandise _or_d_"_"_ott_or_8_p_m_._3_o_4_·•_7_11_·
1888 Joop-. mochanl·
oquol voluo. 304·882· 1121.
pets. adulta only. Ref. req. :~~~~~~~~~~~·
l!!lllfiiiHIII!
6480
or
676·3334.
1
celly oxcellont, _,nd body.
3220.
•
Coli 446· 1519.
1
1978 2 dr" Chovy Novo. $2250. lf4-812·110511.
JONES 80VSWATER SER·
51
Household Goods Knouff Firewood Pickup or I ___..,;._ _ _ _ _ _
euto, AM~FM iradlo, rnl
2 bdr. apt ., utilities partially
VICE. Call 814-387-7471
Delivered. 12''·22''stocked
nice, t2,4111. John'o Auto
paid. 3 room apts. utilties
or 614·387·01181.
in yard . HEAP vender. OUR_
S.loo. BulaviNo Rd. Call 74 Motorcycle•
HOU~E
Wlm Major
poid. Call304·675·5104 or
SWAIN
~zo nt 'delivery. 614-268·
448-4782.
' - - - - - - - - - Need something hauled
304-675-7386.
4
-------·lc- 1
away or eomething moved?
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 1- - - -- - - - - w,..kod 19711 Chovy Novo.
3 or 4 room unfurnished apt.
We'll do it. Call 448-31511 ·
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New Limeston·e. Sand, Gravel.
1983
Hondo
XRIO.
t676
.
WIN otlloll or porto of. Good
utilities paid, adults only, no
·
&amp; uaed wood &amp; coalstovea, Delivered in Meton, Meigs,
..mo ~ now. 304-6711· between 9 end &amp;.
11-.
I
·
cyllndor
online.
pots. Coli 446-3437.
6 piece wood living room Gallia or pick up at Alchards
Rune good. Coil 304· 12· 3031.
Wotor hauling. Foot Servico.
suite with 8 inch flat arma &amp; Son. Call441· 77815 ,
3182.
Nice 2 bdr. apt. for rent . 16
low rotoo. C•ll 1114·2H·
$399, bunk beds complete 1-:::--:--~~----­
1743.
min. from Gallipolis on At. 7.
with bunklea $199, 2 pilice Fireplace lnsert~still in fac~
B011t1 end
11171 Horley Oavldoon 715'
Coli 814· 256·1198 .
antron li.vingroom suites tory carton.automatlc
lpal1otor. 11100. Excellent
Motora for Sale
$199, antr.on recliners $99, controls-2 blower•· alan
JIMS WATER BERVICE.
oondhlon. Prloo nllfiOIIoblo.
Equlppod .kltchon, newly other 'eclinere *80. maple door·ash pan..:fits 30 ln. to
Coli Jim Lanier. 304-8711·
Col 304-882-2114 or 3047397.
remodeled, central air, $2110 dinette tets •1 79, box 48 in. fireplace· burna wood
882·34111. '
lua boot, 40HP
per mo. Call 448· 2158 .
springe • mattress twin or or coal. •&amp;90. Call 814·
- - - - ' - - -·· lc- Aluminum
More.
- r d . thruotor,
full •100 oot regular-firm 211·12U.
FoNrnono··for Mplll·
1 Big furniehed room, aH.
•120. maple dinette chairs
IInder, - · -dyto
Upholatery
Mve Oll'l end truob. l.enll- depth
go. 12,100. Cell 448·1401 87
apt. with bath in Rio Grande. . •3&amp;, wath stands $34, Oak tabiea &amp; chain, corner
vlllo. Coli 114-742-2734.
altar
1:00.
All utilities paid. 448·0157. maple rockers •59; 7 piece cupboards, buffets a. etc.
chrome dinette set •149. 6 Wood World, 21108 Grorid ·
198l..Oido Dolto II. GTRISTATE
JAcKs 0 N EsTATe ' plocli dlnotto ool e99. uood . Central Ave., Vienna. WV.
""ndhlon,
pl,.o. now 7&amp; . Auto ·Perta
. UPHOLSTERY SHOP
A PA RTM E NT S I Eq uol bedroom suitoo. rofrigora·
~.new - • ovatem
1183 8oc. An., Q . .lpollo.&amp;
Housing Oppol'tunityl haa tors. ranges. chest, dre11era.
•Aoo-rlea
•
·
...
_,.blo.
114448-7133
or 448·1833. . . . .
two bedroom. rent starting . wringer w.. hera, TV' a, dry·
· 742-21111.
at •193 per month wfth era. &amp;. shoes. Call 448·
•
Wa do quality 'Nupholotor·
UOO dopoolt locatod noor 31 59.
lno,moke_c_mocla
1877
Malibu
Foodland and &amp;piing Vollov . 1 - - - - - - - - - - Firewood. Pickup or deli·
gootl rnoohtnloally, now
NIIM phol-od furnltun. R •
Piua. Coli 446·2745 011 I . omoll block ond while vared dump truCk. Call 814·
Plllnt. •1BOO. 114·111·
Manulocturllla. Cr-n
IHWI mooollfle.
I talovlolon, 304-1176-114111.
258·8111.
4174.
City, 814·211•1.4'10.
dry
.,
goodbasement.
neighborhood. cond
304·
675-1962.

lhe
(X

Motors Home•
&amp; Campers

· 1974 Kountry Air camper,_
27 ft. and In ex. cond., very
. cloan. Call 814·246-6243.· _

one kitchen cobinot. Coli
304·171·1438 ..

Baby bassanette. Call 446·. 1 - - - - - - - - - - 6688 .
Building motarlalo
Used hid·l· bed, 30 in. gat block, brick, sewer pipes,

•

2 studded snow tlrea. 1 ·
whool and 1 jock lor Volko•
wagon Bootie. 304· 8711·
1481 .

_./
'I

New Profecdon fuel oil
he1ting aton like new and a
275 gol. fuel oil tonk.
Firewood. Registered Red
Tic;k Coon dog. Call 304·
876· 6458 between 8 :30pm
to 11 :OOpm.

•

Auto Parte
&amp; Acceaaoriea

4 white opoko whoolo, 15x8,
&amp; lug, fit Joop. Ford or
Scou1. lBO . 304-468·
1817.

'MeRe.'5 'fooR
\
I HAVe A~Tti;P ,tloi)Se-

Inch, coli 304·875-4873.

~

Six room house with fullaize

Friday, o.ciKnber 2, 1983

Middleport, Ohio

54 Miac. Merchandiae

Houses for Rent

6 rooms, bath, full basement. garage, gla11ed In
heat,

Pol

The Daily Sentinel

I HOPE IT DIDN'T
015TUAB YOU, 'OADDY~r
I DON'T REALLY NEED

.BUT 1\FTER ALL -IT IS

NOT ~ IF WE WERE
LEAVIN&lt;:i f.IR. IIUNE IN
TOTIIL C/fllflGE OF Tl'8:
LITTLE: MIG6Y. WE I'IILL
BE HEfiE ,.. 1\'!lTC/f/N~.

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

Tti' CLOCH'T' 1'/Al\E UP
'C'"';j~, EAfiL'{. 'CEVf I'IHEN I
HAVE SCI(()()(. ••

'-.E=o;~~ MMTRUE-

=

ALLEY OOP
IT'S A GOOD THING THIS
TRUNK J.li&gt;J&gt; E'-IOUGH ROOM
IN IT FOR M£ T't..'\0\/E
AROUND!

Rover! What
are lj(lu doinq?

nqanew
mother

and

father.
Rover?

WINNIE

I

--------------------- '

AH, I 5EE ... BILL
WOULDN'T THINK

GET \lOUR WORK:

MEN TO GIVE ME
A HAND.

OF LOOKING UNDER
THE PAINTER'S

Doberman~:~~~~~~!~~~

1

noo.

r

I

.1=::::::::::=::=::J

L

--n.

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

I •

1---------

~en~te~~~nl~ti~-~-----------~--------~----------FRIDAY

12/2/83
EVENING

6oOO. Q Cil ())III D ()) (]D Ill
(jJ New•
(l) Men's Gvmnaatlcs: '83
Caesar's Palace lnvita·
tlonal USA National Team
members Ban Conner , Jim
Hartu119 and Phil Canoy
compete.
(!) MOVIE: 'Nine Hours to
Raina'
·
(l) New Treasure Hunt
([) Uttle House on the
Prairie
()) (jj) 3·2·1. Contact
• Battlestar Galectlca
6:30 U CIJIIl NBC Nowo
m Rtfleman
(I) Ill il2J ABC Newo
0 CI1 (JD CBS Now•
(I) Business· Report
&lt;ID Over Easy
7 :00 D (I) PM Magazine
CD Inside The NFL
(l) Alias Smith and Jonas
(!) SportsCenter
()) Carat Burnett
(I) Entertainment Tonight
CD Charlie's Angela
G ([} Wheel of Fortune
Cl) G:D MacNell/t.ehrer
Newt hour
CiD News
GJ People'• Court
• Jefferson•
U CIJ Tic Tac Dough
(I) ESPN'a Inside FootbaH
CIJ
NBA
Baokotboll:
Atlanta at Detroit
• - • (I) 0 ()) Family Feud
(iJ Mlc;:hlgan Football
•
(}21
Entertainment
Tonight
one Day at a Time
8o09 U CI1 III Mr. Smith M•
· Smith ponra.vs Cyrano de
Bergerac.
(])MOVIE: 'T•ble for Five'
CIJ MOVIE: 'Six Pock'
(I) Super Book
(])NFL Game of the WHk
tlJ Ben.an Benson
inadvertently plays cupid
when the governor meets a
high school theerleeder he
once hed a cruah on.
(]D Oukeo of Houortl
()) (jj) W•hlngtOn Weoltl
Revlew Paul Duke is joined
by top Washington journal·
iata analyzing the week's

III
. MOVIE: 'Looker'
9 ,00 11....,
1.4.1
7
(I)[J) 0::f~b Boskotboll :
Auburn
at
Alabama·
~rm.l~alomttoryl
uu
lUI
Iii (J) ()) Dallas
(I) 1]1) Dinner at Julia's
"Chicken. Winged Victory.'
Julia's guests are chef Wolf·
gang Puck and wine expert
Richard Graff. [C~osed Cap·
tioned]
C
9 :30 (() Sneak PrevIewa O·
hosts Neal Gabklr end Jef·
frey Lyons spotlight films in
limited release that you
shOuldn't min including
'Danton· and 'Kitty and the
Bagman..
(fi) International Edition
Journalist Ford Rowan hosts
this took at important trends
and events In the U.S. as
they are reported by foreign
journalists.
9 :46 ([) '188 Evening News
, 0:00 (IJ MOVIE: 'AI&gt;Hnco of
Mellce'
.
(f) MOVIE: 'Poltergeilt'
(I) •
(jJ Matt Houaton

Mat1 enllats the aid of
psychic Peter Horkos when
8 c· 1 irvoyant leadll police to
8 kidnapped teenager for a
$3 mWiion reward.
III TBA
D ()) ilJ Falcon Croat
CiilorMII Dilry

e

e

~ ~N~owo

10:30CIJOzzloonciHorrlot
CIJinoldo Buolnoaa Today
(jj) Moototploco Thootro
'The Citadel." Or'. Manaon
aubmerges hlmaetf into hia
new medical practice and
Andrew meets a former
clpamate. (60 mln.I(Ciosed
Caption?&amp;;

e
1 , :00 0

Dr. Who
eC[l Benny
Hill Show

11 ,, 5 ())

Top Rank

A-

Booing !tom
City, NJ ·

11:30 e CI1 III Tonight -

Guest holt Joan Rivert Ia ·
lolnod by Andy Glbb, lauren
Hutton and Dick C•vett. (60
mln.j
~
America'o Key
CIJ Colina
(JJ 8oeP '
(I) MOVIE: 'Embryo'
(J) t...tenklht An erlca

:=.

e
e

e

Ill M•A-s•H

e

"

II CI1 (]D e

(])Another ut.
(]) SporteC.nter
(J) Allin the Family

news.

MOVIE: 'Sophie loron '
Har Own Story'
(I) CIJ Jonnlftr Slept
Here Joey' a father hires an
exorcist.
(IJ&amp;wils Family Roblnoon
&gt;' ~ EBPN'o SportoWnk
(ll W•bater
® W o l - WHit
Louis fl.lkeyaer analyzes the
'801 with 1 wHkly review
of economic and investment
mattlfs.

Cil CII

Timo

(JZ News

(() a

e ())

Corn

12:00

I

~:elM

T

ZOne

H

·
·

1

: Momlntl

Cornoo A woman changoo :

thO wnkond plono ofo ploy·

boY producor.

•

(IJ Eros Amorico
I]) Night Tracka

()) Nlghdino
- MOVIE: 'Godzilla va.
lN'
the Cosmic Monster'
• Thlcke of the Night

,
12:3O D (]) (l) Friday Night
Videos
{])MOVIE: 'The Boat'
CD Jack Benny Show
IJ) (l2J To Be Announced '
12:4&amp; Cll MOVIE: 'The God·
father. Part II'
1 :00 CIJ I Married Joan
(I) Entenainment Tonight
~ N
. U6l ews
1 :30 (II love That Bob
(I) Star Search
tD MOVIE: 'Godzllla va.
Megalan'
,
• (jJ CNN Headline Newa
1 :4 5 Cil ESPN'a SportaWeek
2:00 8
(I)
NBC. News
Overnight
CII Bachelor t;ather:
CI:l News/Sign Off
2 :16 C!J SportaCenter
(]D CNN Headline News
2 :30 CI:l Ufll of Riley
. C!l NCAA Basketball:
· Auburn
at
Alabama·
Birmingham
3:00 D (]) News
CD lniiCieC The NFL
Cil 700 lub
4:00 Cl.) MOVIE: 'Tabla for Five'
4 :,8 ~!YIOVIE: 'Tho Soduc·
4 ,30 (I) Rooo llogloy
(!) Prolaoolonol Rod.O
!rom Mooqulto, TX
SATURDAY

a

1213/83

CIJ NCAA Baskotball:
Connecticut vs. Ohio 'St.

(I) MOVIE: 'Made for

Each
Other'
[J) World Sporhman This
show feat ures an observe·
tion of the killer Orca Whale,
Norwegian Sea Trout Fishlng and the Whooping
Cranes rescue project with
60
~~~jt Chel"fl Tiegs. (
~NCAA F
b 11 T
faA
oot a ; eama
0 (() ® Rudolph. the
Red·Nosed Reindeer
(ffi All Creatures Great and
Smoll
11 (jJ T. J . Hooker An un·
named murder victim's
beauty makes Hooker determ ined that hor ki ller be
caught .
@it MOVIE: 'The Killers'
8:30 0 (JJ crJ Silver Spoons
Rick tells a girt that her favorite mus ic group, Menudo ,
will perform at his upcoming
pany.
•
(I) Barbershop Jamboree
9:00 Q CIJIII Manlmal
(!)
NCAA
Basketball:
Minnesota at Marquene
()) 11 (]2) Love Boat

00 0

liiii ~rHS ooHrc hw
YLJ

CIJ GREAT GOSPEL MUSIC
• 'I'll FLY AWAY'
wPBY

Aov

(f)l'll Fly Away~ · A Gospel
Celebration
® Salute!
® ' Survival
Special
'Sharks: The Perfect Prada·
tors.· Peter Benchley. author
of 'J8ws. ' narrates this loo
·k
at the diversity of the shark
species. (60 min.) !Closed
Captioned)
II) GJ Solid Gold
fiJ How the West Wea
Won
7:30 1J (l) Dance Fever
8:00 II (l) t1) Dlff'rent Strokes
Mr. Drummond has second
thoughts when he presents
a trust fund to Kimberly for
her blnhday. {Closed Cap·
tionadl
(l) Barbara Mandrell · ·
The Lady Ia a Champ
Country/Pop singer SarbBrll
Mandrell performs at the
Tennessee Performing Ans
Center in Nashville .
Cl)
MOVIE: 'On the
Waterfront'

0

(]J

®

MOVIE:

'Quarterback Princess'
(]) Together in Concert:
Tex Beneke and His
Orchestra

ftft~f.\.ft fi;)'i} ~ TIIAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAllE

~\!;I)~~·

byHenriArnoldandBoblH

MOVIE: 'Right of Way'
()) MOVIE: 'Gray lady
Down'
(]) The Monroe•

(I)

())

tour ordlnllry wordl.

'Ct,icken, Winged V.ictory.·
Julie's guests are chef Wolf~
gang Puck arid wine expen
Richard Graff. (Closed Cap.
tlonod)
D (JZ Muppot 8._

e

~ ~ft;;!':

(jj) 8notk P,.vlows Co·
hoats Neal Gabler end Jef·

frey lyons spotUght films in
limited release • that v.ou
shouldn't miss including
'Danton' and 'Kitty and the
Bagm1n."

·~..="""- -

8 Maple genus
9 Cervine

peninsula

11 Marinara. e.g. creatu re
12 Granunar . 11 Trap
school
13 Give - whirl
event
16 [nterpret
14 Luzon native 17 European
Yesterday's Answer
15 Do wrong
river
16 Small
18 Lummox
singing
19 Third Reich 29 Send ba ck 38 Syllable
before chief
bird
chronicler
30 Have a
or plunk
21 Save
20 Not live
stinging
wedding
23 Rational
sensation 39 Before Tues.
24 English
32 Sa int (Sp. 1 40 And IGer. 1
costs
41 C.S.A.
22 Cubist's need
school
33 Agitate
sta lwart
26 Empowered 25 Quadra·
34 Comfort
42 Shrewmouse
27 Head
gesima
35 - breve
28 Inhibit
r:-v-r.-,;;-;~
30 Mortise
fitting
.31 L€ase
holder
33 Vast area
36 Game piece
37 Film's

Francis

with

DOWN
I Donkey
2 Cheering
word
3 Chemistry
word
4 Indian
mulberry

I I ()
I TREENI

KX]

tJ

IANGAMEt·

[] I

J

Prlntonswer/let8: THE(

COULD 8E

I

Yesterday's

Now .rrange the drded letters to
fonn the IUrprtM antwer, U aug·
go-by 1hO oboYooonoon.

Jumbles: SILKY PEONY MENACE SMUDGE
Answer: What 11hould a award swallower eat when he's
on a diet? - PINS &amp; NEEDLES

FOJ,..... ......._ ..... -.:,....... Lc.rs ,., Club. o1o ttW ~pw. flu. 52&lt;11 ,
Ol'lncl CeMI'ItSU.Iol\ .... Yocl, " ·' . 10113. lnc!udt 'fOUI'NIM, ...... 1ndllpoodL

l

AXVDLB ,\AXR

lo

LONGFELLOW

One Je tt er simply s t~nd s for another. In th is sam ple A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, ctr. Sin gle leHers,
apOsirophes l the length and for ma tio n of th e wo rQ.s arc all
hints. Each day the code let ters nrc diiTcrcn l.

I I 11111 )

,.._.luntil....,..,anCiubMII,.-..ablllahloWM~"-'......__,rnanth..

, · ,.,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - H..-e 's how to work iL :

I N'ST~UME~AL.. INA
MA~IA\SE.

(AnsworaJomo.-1

ltBN....

To 1o Announced
7:00
Cll Nowo
.
Cll Alloo Smith ond Jonoo
&lt;Jl lporteCentar

5 Widen
61n the7 Yokel

friends

J

tJ I

Amorlca'o Top Ton

6:15 (J) Wortcl Championship
W'""'intl
·
6:30 ())NFL Game of the Week
CD T.V. Honor Soclotv

ACROSS
I Onward
6 Nail
10 Egyptian

45 - admira l
46 All O\•er

Scortboor~

III God Hos tho Answer
D ()) (]D Nowo
ClD Dinner at Julie's

by THOMAS JOSEPH

43 Holm
44 One without

Unscramble theae four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to fofm

EVENING
8:00

~DIW'Hf:i'

CRYPTOQUOTES

GDQKQ
LKIZ

H U
'GDQ

JY G
UVJXH ZQ

1\Q
G l

U G QE
GDQ

KHSHNYXIYU . - RFEIXQIR JIRFEFKGQ
Yeoterday'o Cryploquole: CONQUERING, HOLDING, DAR·
lNG, VENTURING AS WE GO THE UNKNOWN WAYS.
PIONEERS! 0 PIONEERS! - WALT WHITMAN

•

�Friday, o.c.mber 2, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Cihio

Judge ends 35 _c ourt cases
Twenty-lf"en defendants were drivers license, $150 and costs, 40 overload, $228 and costs, failed to
display commercial vehicle reglsfined and eight others fortelted days confinement, speeding,S:IJ&gt;and
trat!on cerilflcate, costs only; Terry
bonds in Meigs County Couri costs, disorderly conduct, $.'il and
Walker, RuUand, crlmlnaldamage,
Wednesday.
costs; Laura Davis, Middleport,
Fined by Judge Patrlck O'Brien speed, $22 and costs; RickY Tate, - $25 and costs, restitution; Adam
Brown, Lucasville, failed to yield,
were Becky Eichinger, Pomeroy, Newark,leftofcenter,$10andcosts;
$10 and costs; Gladys Huddleston,
le!t of center, $10 and costs; Debra Floyd Porter lll, Athens, speed, $21
Minersville, speed. $23 and costs;
Dalley, Middleport, speed, S!aJ and and costs.
EDen ·Stewart, Pomeroy, flctlclous
' eosts; Timothy Moles, Cbeshire,
registration, $10 and costs, nq
speed, $22 and costs; Daniel Talbott, · James Nibert, Gallipolls, speed.
drivers license, $75 and costs, three
Jr., Portland, DWI,lldayscontlne- $aJ and costs; Clifford Roseberry,
daysconflncmcnt,jallsentenceand .
ment, $350 and costs, license Racine, speed, $:1J&gt; and costs; Carl
Hunt,
Gallipolis,
speed,
$25
and
$50
of fl!le suspended If obtall!
suspended one year, fleeing a pollee
operators license; Brian Oeland,
officer, .SlU) and costs, ll days costs; 'Donald Keffer, Albany,
~!pre, · speed, $23 and costs;
confinement, one year probation, no speed, $23 and "costs; Bruce
Murphy, Portsmouth, speed, $22
Kenneth Hughes, · Chesapeake;
and costs; Ralph Parker, Reedsspeed,$25andcosts.
ville, insecure load, $15 and costs;
Forfeiting bonds were Ronald .
Weather forecast
John Mart!n, Galllpolls, speed, $aJ
Masters, Columbus, speed, $50;
and costs; Tammy Johnson, Shade,
Dennis Butcher, Pomeroy. and
Cloudy tonight with s.:attered speed, $27 and costs; KKaU Knapp,
Tammy Johnson, Middleport, exptred operators license, $70 each;
showers. Low32-37. 0ccasionalraln Langsville, speed, $25 and costs;
Saturday. High 38-43.· Chance of John Watkins, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
DannyPritt,SisSOQvllle,andShtrley
snow 50 percent tonight and 9l Va .. speed, $22 and costs; Harry
Wiles, Parkersburg, speed, $42
percent Sab.imay.
Lodwick, Chester, speed, $21 and
each; Michael Harrison, MlddM!Extended Ohio Forecast
costs; Pamela Marshall, Pt. Plea- port, and Guy Schuler, Rutland, no
Sunday through 'l'uesday:
sant, speed, $22 and roo;ts; David
operators license, $70 each;. Earl
Fair oo Sunday. Chance of rain Mann, Pomeroy, speed, $10 and
Kautf, Jr., I.J(ng Bottom, no valld
MondayandTuesdl\v.Hlghsmostly
·
costs;
Richard
Darst,
Cheshire,
operatorsilcense,$70.
_ _ _ _:__ _.:___:___________ .
inthe40s.Lows21&gt;-35.
~_:_

pr.:~-~-r.:~-----~-~~----~
W
~
-LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMASBl·~·fi

Suspects sought

BANKS - This Is part of the coUectlon of antique
coin banks, owned by Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
Pomeroy, being displayed at the Meigs County
Museum as a part of the holiday "Traditlons of
Christmas" exhibit. A variety of doUs, wooden toys

and other antique Items signlllcant to the holiday
season are being featured. The exhibit will be open to
pubUc viewing from 1 IAl 5 p.m. Sunday. Other tlmes
for pubUc viewing will be announced later.

Emergency runs

Five calls for assistance were
· answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical SerCorbett J. Roberts, 81. Rt. 4,
Charline Sisler, 78, Ironton, died
vice Thursday.
GaUipoiis, died Thursday night in Thursday morning at the residence
At 10:47 a.m. the Syracuse unit
Holzer Medical Cente r.
of Jean Kelly, Syracuse.
was
called to the Third Street
Born Aug. 18. 1902. in Mason
Mrs. Sisler has resided in Meigs
residenceofCharllneSislerwhowas
County, son of the late Edward R . County since leaving lronton in1982.
dead on arrival; at 5: 31 p.m. the
and Cordelia Roberts, he was a
She was born Oct. 18, 1905 at
. TuppersPiainsunltwascalledtothe
retired carpenter am) painter and a
Ironton the daughter of the late
residence of Grace Meeks who was
member of Mina Chapel Church.
Josiah and Nettle Lambert. ln
treated
but not transported; at 7:03
He married Virgie DeWitt. who addition to her parents she was
p.m.
the
Rutland unit went to
survives, onDec. 10,1934, atEureka.
preceded in death by four brothers.
Danville
for
Harry Knotts who was
Also sunrlving are a son, Robet1 She was a homemaker and a
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial HospiL of Racine; two daughters, Mary member of Central Christian
tal;
a\10:
48
p.m.
the
Middleport unit
Corbetta Robet1s of Gallipolis. and Church, Ironton.
went
to
North
Second
for Robin
Mrs. Dan (Brenda Lou) Morgan of
She Is survived by one son and
Ohlinger
who
was
taken
to VeteRio Grande; five grandchildren and daughter-in- law. Bobby Joe and
rans,
and
at
11:
54
p.m.
the
three grea !-grandchildren; and four Debbie Mlller, Pomeroy; two
to
the
MlddM!Middleport
unit
went
brothers, Russell of Texas , Boyce sisters, MariP Dodgion, Ironton;
port Lunch Room where Dwayne
and Myrl, both of Gallipolis, and Nancy O'Barr, Ashiand, Ky.; two
QuaUs
was treated but not
Darren of Bidwell.
brothers. Joe Lambert, Ashland;
transpot1ed
Hew as aisopreceded in death by a Elliott Lambert , Orlando, Fla.; one
brother and sister.
grandson, Robert C. Miller, San Veterans Memorial
Funeral services will be held at 2 Diego, Calif.
p.m. Sunday in Willis Funeral
Funeral senrices will be held
Admitted: F loyd Reynolds, MldHome, with the Rev.JosephGodwin Saturday at 2p.m. at Ewing Funeral dlepot1; Elsie Cross, Racine; Wtlotflciating. Burial will be on Ohio Home with the Rev. William H. liam N. Pickens, Racine.
VaUey Memory Gardens. Friends Middleswarth officiating. Burial
Discharged: Warren Black, Jimmay call at the funeral home from wUl be in Meigs Memory Gardens. mie Dyer, and Kimberlee Mayle.
7-9 p.m. Saturday.
the7funeral
Friendsfrom
may 2call
Friday
to 4atand
to 9. hme

~

~

CONVERSE

71

~
~

PONY

w

JOX

w
7l

by Thorn MeAn

AI~ Jox JOo/o Off ~
Men•Women•Children

w

W
fi
fi

Vehicle license
'reminder issued

w

2"50170 OFF ALL

'FOOT -JOY .

(Our New~st Brand)
Off

- ~ 'KANGAROO'S
W

w

20%

Women • Children

- ~ · 20% OFF ALL

-~

ENDICOTI JOtiNSON

!" GOLF SHOES

~

Including Aerobic Shoe!

SJ Off all Gym Bags
$2 Off All Apparel
T-Shirts/Sweat Pants
Zip Hoods/Gym shorts

I

I

7l
71

~•
~
~

:
:

r-:=======:;:::;;;=:;==========::1

~---------------------------------r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.

.Imboden heads Syracuse department
Gene Imboden was elected Syracuse Fire Chief, Eber Pickens,
president and- Wanda Imboden,
squad chief at a .recent meeting of
the Syracuse Fire Deparlme!Jt.
Other officers elected for 1984
were Clyde Triplett, assistant fire
chief, Karen Guinther. capta in, a nd
David Smith and Danny Riffle ,
lieutenants.
Chris Jacks, assistant squad
chief, Donna Alshire, captain, and
Jeff hubbard, lieutenant.
David Smith, vice president,

Donna Aleshire, secreU!ry, and
Wanda !(Tlboden, treasure.
EMS trustees elected were
Wanda lmboden, David Smith and
Chris Jacks . Named to the depen·
dency board were Donna Aleshire,
Karen Guinther and William
Guinther, council metnber.

ISee Our
PARADE
i
VA LuEs' !

RESTAURANT

Itf

•Restaurant
Has At
Moved
fromRestaurant
the Dome to the Main Building
*Elegant
Dining
A Famity

1t. 62

Ph . 304-676-6278
•Only 8 Miles from Pomeroy Bridge

HOURS : Mon .-Sat. Ooen at 5. Sun II' m tn? n m
·
SPECIAl THIS SUNDAY: a.oice of Baked Sleak or Veal Cutlet, Mashed htat..,
and G..,vy, Com, Hot Rail &amp; Bo....,P ....................................... Only '3.95

l-ift
.::.::::....-9

Wi.r\ners of the grand opening

prizes at Gallery Hair Arts were
Denise Williams, Langsville, a
televison set, and Martie Ferguson,
Middleport, the tape player. Ron
Ash drew the winning tickets. No
purchase was necessary to
participate.

SECOND ONLY TO

f

We Have A Large
Selection Of
'Wearing Apparel
tt:re~f'fA~:~~~~~~
For
~·
MAKE ELBERFELDS
~~
Christmas
'\j~Your Christmas Shopping CenterJ·~
Darrell Dugan Is a surgica I
patient at University Hospilfll,
Columbus, Oh. His room number is
983for those who wish to send cards.

r.

{}~~ *Quality Merchandise

··bf.t.

~0

*friendly Salespeople
*Plenty of Free Parking
*Convenient lay-Away &amp;
Credit Plans

Gift Giving

•Layaway Now
r!r_•Y"f..
For Christmas
~.0
••&lt;,.(
•Free Gift
~~
~~ ,
Wrapping
{}•,Chri~mas Sale Prices on Man~ Quality&amp;~ .•We Will Do
~~ G1fts from Now through Chnstmas!
Alterations

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BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT

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71

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SATURDAY ONLY!

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Name winners

Surgical patient

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DECEMBER 3RD
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ON ALL WOMEN'S

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DRESS-SHOES
~ 200/o D~:~~ 20% AL~~~~~
1--------~B~OO~TS~-----------71

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U70 EX~RF soi.'E's

SML
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Girls &amp; Women's
LEATHER

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II 50o/o Sport
wo~!!·~~~~! 200/o.
Shoes·
I1 h.er1tage
• . house

.OFF Children's

and Women's

FASHION
BOOTS

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OF SHOES
MIDOI.IPORT

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1-aga--in_s_td_a_ng_ero_u_s_g._'fts-_P_!l_g_e_A_-4
_ _ _ _•_ _~
James j. Kilpatrick calls the breakup of AT&amp;T a.
'disaster'-Page A-2 .

Along the River ............. B-1
Bnslness ....................... E-1
ctassllleds ....... --- ........ D-2-7
Fartn ...•••....•. ............. E-2,3
Deaths ......................... D-l!
Editorials ..................... A-2
Sports ........................ C-1-8
State-Natlonai ............... D-1

Ohio weather:
warming trend
through Sunday
-PageA-3-

.-

tntint
II Sections. 11£ PIPS ,
A Multimedia Inc. N~

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, December 4, 1983

Jobless rate: down in Gallia,
steady
in
Meigs
.
Unemployment--------.

11.0•

Seasonally Adjusted
Percent of Work Force

By lARRY EWING
TIJnes.Sentlnel staff
GALLIPOLJS - Unemployment in Gallla County
registered a healthy decHne of more than one full
percent from September through October. Whlle, in
Meigs County, the jobless rate - whlle decilnlng
slightly - held nearly steady ·during that same
period.

The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services posted
· an October jobless rateof11.9percent!orGallia- the
fourth straight rnonthiy decline for the county.
October's
represents a reduction of 1.2 percent,
down from the September rate of 13.1 percent.
Since May, when the county posted a jobless rate of

flliiire

UNEMPLOYMENT - Cluut shows the nation's
clvWan unemploymEnt joblei8 rate dW'Ing the period .
from November, 1981 to Nov., 1983. Recent OBE;
ftguft'8 allow GaiDa County's jobless rate declining,
while Melp County's rate appears to be lioldlng

Iw

NIKE

~ 200
w
Yo Off Leathers
~ 30% Off All Others

The Meigs High School girls'
basketball team which Is currently
2-0 under head coach Ron Logan,
will play Miller Saturday night at
Meigs. The resenre game will start
at 6 p.m . with the varsity to come.

·~.

I

10% Off Leathers 20% Off All Leathers ~
20% Off All Others . 30% Off Select Group ~

fi
w

Faces Miller Saturday

Vol. 18 Nil. 40

C.prtiVhltd 1983

w
7l
7l

ONLvl.

jsATURDAY

Inside:
Bob . Hoeflich, playing Santa's helper, advises

tmts·

If

"Your Headquarters /or Athletic Footwear''

won't weaken law--Pae-e D-l

DWI:

+

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I

-PageB-1

If

fi

Letart TownShip ·T rustees will
meet Monday, Dec. 5, at the Letart
Falls Community Building at 7 p.m.

Persons whose last name begins
with the letters U,V,W,X, Y and Z
may now purchase lhetr auto·
license Sue Maison, deputy _reg'istrar announced today.
The license bureau Is located at
186Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, and is
open Monday, Wednesday and
Friday from 9 a.m. untll4 p.m., on
Tuesday from 10 a.m. untll 8 p.m.,
and Thursday and Saturday from 9
a.m. untll1 p.m

w

W

W
w

Meet Monday

Charline Sisler

"!..~o,;;

~~~IV

71

Meigs County happenings..

Area deaths
Corbett J, Roberts

W- ~~~

CRESTLINE, Ohio (AP) -Two
suspects are being sought in the
sbootingdeathofMarvinCarroll.25,
who was shot and killed In his trailer
home Wednestiay night while his
wife and child slept.
Crestline PoUcc Chief Gerald
Dowell said Carroll was shot twice in
the chest and once in the head with a
.2$-callber handgun. Dowen said
Caroll's wife and child reportedly
were sleeping in the trailer when the
killing took place.

s"4V!Nt;s
G

~~ ~

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It's beginning
to look a lot
like Christmas

Ap

Sou&lt;ce Deol ol l.abo&lt;

~~~~--------~

steady near 12.7 pel"CEEIt.

16.9 percent, Gallla unemployment has declined by 5
percent
Meigs County, with a reported October rate of 12.7
percent, registered modest one-tenth of one percent
reduction over the September figure of 12.8 percent.
Unemployment In Meigs County registered a
steady decline from May through August. ln August ,
the county posted its .lowest jobless rate of the year,
coming in at 12.2 percent. ln September, that figure
rose to 12.8 percent.
According to OBESreports,1,758 of Gallla'scivilian
labor ' force of 14,779 were without work during
October. OBES figures show nearly :&lt;ro Gallla
Countlans found work during the month.
In Meigs, 1,5JJ of that county's labor force of 12,00
were jobless during the October.
Both GaUia and Meigs counties had jobless rates
above Ohio's October figure of 11 percent.
Unemployment percentages for surrounding counties during October were reported by the OBES as
follows: Lawrence, 16.4; Jackson, 12.6; Vinton, 11.5;

a

and, Athens, 9.3.
While declining, unemployment in Ohio continues
to hover above the national average. Nationwide, the
seasonally adjusted jobless rate feU to 8.4 percent In
November, the lowest in two years, according to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The federal Bureau of Labor SU!t!stics on Friday
released monthly statistics showing that Ohio's
seasonally adjusted jobless rate feUfrom 11 percent in
October to 10.8 percent In November - the lowest
level since July's 10.9 percent.
However, Ohio's jobless rate continues to rank
among the highest of the 10 largest industrial states,
second only to Michigan's 11.9 percent . Massachusetts' rate of 6.6 percent Is lowest among the large
states.
· Dixie Sommers, director of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services' Division of Marketing, said
the seasonally adjusted rates do not reflect actual
unemployment but calculate it by taking into account
seasonal fluctuations.

Proposal will
raise Gallia,
Meigs funds
-GALLIPOLJSarea legisla·

Furst tells of
her 'rotnantic
relationship~

with accused
asked.
By The 1bnes-Senllnel Staff
"No," she replied, "he said he
GALLIPOLJS - Dislike of the
cteceased Barbara Twyman and didn't want to go anymore... that he
dldn 't !Ike anybody there."
love for 41-year-old Shirley Furst"Why did he leave (her home)?"
a key prosecution witness - were
King
asked during crossalleged by Furst as motives behind
examination.
the slaying of the 17-year-old victim
"To go back to scliool," Furst
as the trial of Charles Lee II,17, Pt.
answered, "he said he was going
Pleasant continued Friday.
back forme .. .! had convinced him It
"He said he had killed her because
was best to finish his education. ·• ,
of me," Furst testified durtng
Furst testified they had lalked
prosecution questioning. "Because ·
after he returned home. Shesaldshe
he loved me .. . and then one time he
couldn't remember I! she had said
said that she was nothing, that she
during those talks she "loved" him.
was a nobody and that he didn't !Ike
her.··
She den led ; under crossexamination, to ever pleading,
During a full day ol testimony and
" ... please don't leave me ...don't
cross-examination, Furst swore to a
break-upwith me.".
range of Incidents regarding h!"r
'Card from Twyman?'
relationship with Lee.
She
further denied ever finding
Toward the end of November,
and
destroying
a Christmas card,
1982, Let!. Furst and another person,
allegedly
sent
by
Twyman to Lee.
Identified as Dale Cook, went to the
Furst
testl!led
she had seen
Entertainer in Point Pleasant. At
Barbara Twyman only once. She
that time, she said, she gave Lee
said that on one of their outings Lee
perrnlssion to call her. Furst said
haq pointed the Twyman girl out.
she could not remember when he
"All I seen was brown hair and a
first came to her home. She did
· reeall introducing him to her son, green jacket...! didn't see her up
close...
John Furst Jr.
She further denied ever speaking
'&amp;mantle Relationship?'
"Did you have a romantic to Twyman oil the telephone.
Aller March ~. the date of
relationship · with Charles Lee?"
Twyman's disappearance, Furst
Hamlin King, defense attorney
saJ,d Lee had related to her - on at
asked during cross-examination.
least
two occasions- that he killed
"Later on, but not right at first,"
Twyman. "I kept 8sking him (If he
Furst replied.
murdered the teen-ager) from time
"Hewouldn'tleavemealone ... he
to
time.". She said Lee remarked
kept calftng and calling and coming
once,
"What.do I have to do, write it
and coming," she said. "He would
500
times
on a blackboard."
'
get very UiJS!'t and lear up things,"
·On
March
24,
four
days
after
the
she added, I! he could not accomsuspected date of the allegtld
pany her If she went out.
homlclde, Furst tesUfled Lee told
FurstchargedLeehadonceraped
tier tn the basement of his home. She herdur11i"g a telephone conversation
that he had ldlled the girl.
she was -J}i!lg on the floor
On cross-examination, defense
watching TV. Lee, standing above
attorney Hamlin King asked Furst If
her said; "I think I'll rape you."
"I thought he was just teasing," she had gone to the "Black Knight
she told the court. King asked her If Revue" with i.ee on March 25.Furst
he &amp;!finitely did rape her and she responded that she had attended a
"play" with the IICCIIIed at Pt. ·
an$WI!red aftlrmatlvely.
Pleasant
High School, but said she
After that, Furst said she attempwas
uncertJI!n
d. the exact date.
1 ted to break olf her relationship with
Alleep
wllh
IDU'dererT
Lee, although he apologized to her.
.
AboiUGa
Furst further testified that on
On or around Dec. ll, 1982, Furst April 5Lee had again told her he had
Silk! she told Lee she was pregnant. . committed the mUrder. She also
On Jan. 14, ihe test111ed during saU;l that on that same day she had
CI'OS8Gilllllnatlon, Lee came to her. gone to the lee home to collect
home and spent the nlebt- The next paymem for ''bl:lne Interior decora· C\8-Y. Jan.15, she and Lee traveled to tions" the boy's mother had
Cincinnati, wherP an abw tloo was . orclered.
Furst said when ... entleied the
Petbtiwd, according to Furst's
house, Lee had said be WBIIt8l to
teltlmllly.
· On Jan. 19, Funt said, lee quit talk to her, t.oot ber bytbeann,llld
aCbool. He therelfter came to pulled her tnto bla bedlcu11.
Funt feiiHied abe had laid down
Funt'a ~· whl're he spent tbree
011
the bed llld l'fllle tollelp.
days and two nflhts, she feiiHied
"So,
)'OU're II.YIII dowll with th1s ·
"Did heqult lleca- heWIIltedto
on PIP A3) .
spend aU day with you?" KID&amp;
~

.aw

1

(Cm!tnuttd

AS THE PARADE GOI!J'I BY- A young spectator
at Saturda,y's Chrlllmas parade through dowmown
GaDipolls waves to nne of lhe parade's parilclpants.

Santa tmnself were all Included In the annual event,
which helps kick olf the Christmas season. For
additional photos, see page -A-6 of today's edition.

· Service ualiB, IIW'Chlag bands, baton groups and

An
tor said GaUia and M eigs counties
will receive "at least" as much
rnoney inlocalgovernmentfundlng
from the state as they did this year,
thanks to changes in 'the fund's
distrtbutlon formula.
Problems In the fund resulted fron
an oversight in the state budget bill
passed this year which repealed the
state deposits tax that had fed the
local government fund .
In a late-night session Wednesday, the Senate passed a bill
designed to change the formula by
which the state's local government
fund is dlstrlbuted.
Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R-Ironton, ·
said he suppot1ed legislation that
revised that formula. ·
Both GaUl and Meigs - and two
other counties represented by
Collins - stood to lose thousands of
doUars in fundingund erthe exist!ng
means of determining distribution,
be added.
" It was lmpot1ant that thecurrent
distribution formula be changed
because as its stands, 50ofthestate" s
88 counties would lose money from
the local government fund next
year," he said.
•
"The revised formula is fair and
gu¥antees that no county will lose
local government funds next year, ••
he added.
To illustrate his point, Collins
pointed out that while Gallia County
got S5ffi,OOO in 1983, that amount
would be reduced to $351,1XXlln 1984.
Meigs County would get $250,000 in
1984 - down $141,000 from the
$39&lt;1,000 It had this year .
Jackson County would have lost
$60,000 and Vinton County $74,000,
the senator said.
But wtth the new legislation,
Collins said that in 1984 Gallla will
get $5W,OOO; Meigs, $405,1XXJ; .Jack(Conttnued on page A3)

County, schools win 'major' tax victory
By KEVIN KElLY

'J.bnes-8entmel Stall
GALLIPOLJS - A finding bythe
Ohio Board of Tax Appeals for
Gauta Coonty Is being seen as "a ·
major victory" for the county andlts
tocaJ scbool system.
The board Issued a ruling Friday
that revenies a 1981. Ohio Department of Taxation decision dlstrtbutlng 70 percent of property tax
l'E'IImue fran the Kyger Creek and
James M. Gavinelectrtc generatlllg
plants at Cheshire out nf the county.
The i-evmue was dlstrlbuted to 65
other countieS where there was
"sltused" (fixed pbyslcallocatlon)
property owned by uUUtles operatIng Kyaer Creek llld Gavin. It
meant the loss of S'76 miDlon In
8Sfteed evaluation for GaUla
Coonty.
That decision was appealed by the
.cowity llld the Gallla Coonty Local
Scbool Dlltrlct In October 1981. A
heu'lngwlth a boanhepr
ttat!V1!
wea ~a year later In ~bus.

The board decided that the state's
decision to approprtatethatrevenue
from Gallla County seems " unreasonable and arbitrary" and said the
county's "speclflcatlonsof error are
meritorious to the extent heretofore
determined, II
The board sllld the tax commlssloner'sdeclslonrelat!ngtodlstrlbuttonofrevenuefromOhioPowerCo.
and Ohio Valley Electrlc Corp.
property Is "reversed and the cause
remanded to the tax commfssloner
to give effect to this decision and
order and to Issue new certificates of

value."
Gallla County Local Schools
Superintendent Gary Toothaker,
who was Informed of the decision
Frlday momf)tg In a meeting with ·
the district's attorneys, said this
decision, which. he said contains
"ramifications far and wide," could
possibly result in abatement tootiWr
counties that have received Kyger
Creek and Gavin tax revenue.

Toothaker was visibly pleased
with the decision, which may mean
end-year shortfalls the district has
predicted won't happen. Thedlstrlct
has lost in excess of $1 million In
revenue in the past two years.
"Our attorneys are to begin in
earnest exploring the question of
how the state will comply with the
board's order," he said. "The state
may have to adjust revenues not
given to us up, and adjust revenues
given to other counties down."
Both Toothaker .and Prosecutor
Joseph Cain noted that the decision
could be appealed within !Kklay
period after It was issued. Until that
period passes, nothing Is expected to
happen.
Toothaker said the dlstrlct will
continue preparing what he called a
"bare bones" budget for 19M to
present to the board of education.
"Untilweareassuredwehavethe
money available, we can't adjust
any of our appropriation decisions,"

a

he said.
But if the money is available, the
superintendent noted that the payoff
period for the recently-approved
4-mlll bond issue to build new
elementary schools could be' de- ·
creased because of regained
valuat;ion.
Toothaker said there was no
Indication given as to why the appeal
took two years to be decided.
The superintendent noted that he
hoped the decision would serve as an
"example" for southeastern Ohlo to
fight "unfair" decisions and "give
them cause to think that there Is
something that they can do abrlut it.
"We have demonstrated that an
Intuitive analysis of the problem
Involved here was accurate when
bolstered with appropriate legal
research and argument The power
plants are located In Ga!Ua County '
and there Is no reasonable justl!lcalion tor taking the tax base from us "
•
be added.

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