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Page-

16-

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 9, 1982

Gas, oil costs push wholesale prices up 0.6

,.

J

SALE PRICES THROUGHOUT THE STORE ON QUALITY CHRISTMAS GIFTS
OPEN 'TIL 8:00P.M. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
TIMEX
WATCH SALE

GOWN AND ROBE SALE
Christmas Gift Sale Prices on
Lorraine, PhiiMaid, Katz and
Wildcrest.

~· '

'\ ·,.

LONG &amp; WALTZ LENGTHS

MEN'S

CORDUROY
JEANS
SALE
28 42.

Special group of men's and
ladies' Timex Watches.
Digitals, Automatic Winding and Self-Winding
Styles.

Waist Sizes
to
Quality Wrangler and
lee Brands. Solid colors in basic and fashion
looks.

. By SALLY JACOBSEN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) ~Skyrocketing natural ga$
and home heating oil costs pushed wholesale prices
up 0.6 percent In November, the government said
today. The gain was up slightly from October's
Increase and meant that, for the year, Inflation at the
wholesale level Is running at an annual rate of 3.7
percent.
U the 11-month figure holds through December, the
nation would have It smallest lull-year wholesale
price rise since 1976. Last year, wholesale prices rose
7 percent.
In November, the beginning of the winter heating
season In many parts of the country, the wholesale
price Index recorded · the sharpest rises In home
hea tlng costs since the summer.
Fuel oil costs rose 6.4 percent at wholesale, up from
a rise of 1 percent in October and a decline of 1.6
percent the previous month.
Natural gas prices were up 5 percent last month, a
dramatic turnaround from a drop of 0.9 percent In

October and a moderate gain of 2.7 percent in
September.
Not since February 198) have natural gas prices
risen so sharply In a single month.
Indeed, the General Accounting Office said in a
report released Thursday that retail natural gas
customers are now paying more than twice what they
did in 1978, when Congress began removing price
controls. The report also said that In the last decade
the producers' share of Industry revenues has more
than doubled, whlle the pipelines' share has fallen.
Gasoline costs also climbed in November, rtsing 1.1
percent after falling 1.3 percent In October and 0.9
percent in September.
For the third straight month, food prices were
down, falling 0.2 percent, the same as in October.
Food prices had fallen 0.5 percent In September.
Those declines reflect the bountiful harvests.
Besides the plentlful crops, economists have
attributed the general slowing of prices this year to
the persistent recession and a world oil surplus.

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

FROM ONLY

SI9.95
S21.95
S24.95
S29.95

................. SALE
................. SALE
................. SALE
................. SALE

SI5.60
SI7.10
SI9.50
s23.40
Voi.31 ,No.l54

The Daily

LADIES' HANDBAGS
New winter styles in leather, vinyl, corduroy
and sweat sacks.

Rei!. s5.00 ................... SALE s3.99
Reg. ss.OO .................... SALE s6.39
Reg. s12.00 .................. SALE s9.59
Reg. s1s.oo ................. SALE s14.39

~~
I .

\' ",..

....... SALE SlJ.59
....... SALE S15.99
....... SALE s20.79
....... SALE s27.19

1\--.

COAT
SALE
JUNIOR-MISSES
&amp; HALF SIZES

'/

Dress Coats and Uned
Jackets. Quilted styles,
Wool blends, Leather, Fur
looks .... Many to choose
from.
SALE PRICED$
FROM ONLY

3 2 00
·

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

$}7900

CHRISTMAS GIFT
SALE PRICES
ON MANY OTHER GIFT IDEAS!
-MEN'S WEAR
-WOMEN'S WEAR
-FURNITURE
-CHILDREN'S WEAR
-HOUSEWARES
-HOME FURNISHINGS

$8.00 .............. SALE 16.39
........... SALE 19.59
......... SALE 114.39
......... SALE 118.39
......... SALE 127.19

112.00
118.00
123.00
134.00

Denim and Corduroy

JEANS
Basic and Fashion Jeans for
boys in regular and slim. Sizas
8 to 16. Student Sizas 26 to
30 and Husky sizas 8 to 20.

Wrangler and Lee Quality in boot flare
or straight leg styles. Pre-washed in
sizes 27 to 38 waists. Lengths 30 to

Boys' 114.95-

JEANS .......... SALE 111.21
Boys' 116.95JEANS .......... SALE'12. 71
Boys' 119.95JEANS .......... SALE 114.96
Boys' 121.95JEANS .......... SALE 116.46

36.

.......... SALE s14.80
.......... SALE '17.90
.......... SALE s18.70
.......... SALE '25.70

MEN'S

SWEATER
SALE

SHIRT SALE

VAN WERT- For the second time this year, authorities say they
have a strong suspect in the abduction and murder of Elgin
postmistress Betty Jane Mot linger but say they can't find the man.
The man, who postal Inspectors won't Identify, Is described as
being In his late 30s and from Jacksonvllle, Fla. Postal inspector
Donald Bonda said authorities went to the man's home on Dec. 3 to
question him, but he was not there and has not been located since.
Inspectors say the man is "one of the strongest" suspects in the
case, but Bonda said the man did not know he was to have been
interviewed on Dec. 3.
Investigators say lhe suspect resembles a composite sketch of a
man seen near the Elgin post office just before the postmistress,
Mrs. Betty Jane Mottinger, 48, of Ohio City, disappeared shortly
after opening the office.
Mrs. Mottinger was abducted on Aug. 9 and her body was found In
a soybean field near Findlay on Sept. 19. She had been stabbed 13
times and was wrapped In a theater curtain that had recently been
used as a painter's drop cloth.

Crash kills 7 5 children
MANAGUA, Nicaragua - An air force helicopter evacuating
children from a rain -flooded area In northern Nicaragua crashed
Thursday, killing 75 of them, the Defense Ministry said.
A statement by the ministry said three more children and the
helicopter's crew of four survived the crash. It said the helicopter
crashed near San Andres de Bocay, 219 miles north of the capital.
Culture Minister Emesto Cardenal, In a statement Issued almost
simultaneously with the Defense Ministry announcement, said the
helicopter clashed in a mountainous area In Jinotega province and
caught fire.

HUNTINGTON - In the second day of Wilbert Mayle's murder
trial, defense lawyers chipped away at the credibility of witnesses
the government hoped would put Mayle at the scene of the death of a
Huntington pollee officer,
The defense maintains that the 32-year-old Mayle was In his
hometown of Columbus, Ohio, the night policeman Paul Harmon
was killed as he answered another officer's call for assistance.

SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

$1596

Lottery wmners

..,

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's daily game, "The Number," was 519.
In the "Pick 4" game, played three times a week, the winning
number was 2823.

Rain~

The Forecast For 7 a.m. EST
Saturday, December 11

Our entire stock of quality
Kroehler and Berkline
chairs is reduced. Wall-AWay. Recliners, Rock-0Loungers. Heater / Vibrators, Standard Recliners.

Flannels - Dress Shirts Knit Shirts - Work Flannels
- Velours - Sport Shirts.
Regular and Extra Large
Sizes.

•
Florida man is suspect

Stacy appears at trial

Christmas Sale Prices
on our entire selection of
men's sweaters and
sweater vests.

HOLIDAY
CHAIR SALE

MEN'S

Reg. 111.95
Reg. 115.95
Reg. 119.95
Reg. 122.95

AS LOW AS

Velvet dresses. corduroy skirts and
blazers. denim and corduroy jumpers,
peasant skirts, poly/ cotton dresses.
Complete range of little girls' sizes

DENIM
JEANS SALE

'

Pine, Oak, Maple or Cheny Finishes. A Cherished
Gift!

DRESSES and
SPORTSWEAR
SALE

MEN'S

SI8.95
s22.95
'23.95
'32.95

LANE CEDAR CHESTS

LITTLE GIRLS'

SALE- BOYS'

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

SALE

Snow

f·::·.;l

•Low

OUR WOOD
ROCKERS ARE ON
SALE, TOO!!

_Sale 19.28
_Sale 112.48
_Sale '15.48
_ Sale 117.99

FREE DELIVERY!

By R. GREGORY NOKES _
Associated Press Writer _
BRUSSELS, Belgium (API The United States and Its NATO
allies reaffirmed thelrcommitment
to deploy U.S. intermediate range
missiles In Europe next year, but
the allies fear European public
opinion could still sabotage the plan.
"Everybody recognizes that we
have got an important public
information-battle ahead of us ... we
need to tell our story better,'' a
senior U .S. official told reporters
Thursday.
French Foreign Minister Claude
Cheysson echoed that concern.
While France endorses the mis~ile
plan, he said, 1983 may be the most
dlfflcult year yet for the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization alliance because of It.
The reafflrrna tlon of support
cam e Thursday, the first day of a
tw&lt;Hlay NATO foreign ministers
meeting attended by Secretary of
State George P. Shultz. The
minister s are expected to issue a
communique at the close of today's
final session.
Flfteen of the 16 NATO countries
endorsed the 1979 decision to deploy
572 U.S. cruise and Pershing 2
nuclear missiles in five European
countries, beginning next year, to
counter Soviet 88-20 missiles already aimed at Europe. Spain
abstained.
The allies also reaffirmed support
for President Reagan's proposal for
eliminating all nuclear missiles
from Europe the so-called
"zero-zero" plan - as the best
negotiating position for the United
States in the year-old arms control
talks with the Soviets currently
underway in Geneva.
"We are hopeful that the moment
wlll come when the Soviet Union
realizes that It can no longer
disregard Western security concerns, and that It Is in the Soviet
Interest to reach a negotiated
solution," the allies said in a
statement.
The votes were seen as a clear
signal to the new Kremlin leadership that there will be no changes In
NATO defense plans unless and
untll the Soviets agree to a concrete
arms control plan In Geneva.
While neither action came as a
surprise, they reflected alliance
resolve not to alter the European
defense strategy despite Monday's
vote in the House of Representatives Tuesday against President
Reagan's MX missile basing plan.

SANTA
LITTLE BOYS'
PANTS and~ TOPS

Will Be In

CHRISTMAS GIFT SALE

JUNIOR
SWEATERS
•
'

Cardigens, Boat Necks, Turtle
Necks, Crew Necks, end Cowt
Necks. Stripes, Printaand Solids
in Junior Sil81 S, M, L. XL. ,

•

Reg. •u.oo
Reg. '17.00
Reg. '23.00
Reg. '31.00

J

•
••
·,•

.

•

_sale •8.79
_Sale '13.59
_Sale '18.39
_ Sale '24.79

Our ·store
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY
.6:00 to
P.

SALE
Dress Sh!rts - Sweaters
Knit Shirts - Flannel
Shirts.
-

FI!OM
ONLY

$J99

Poly/Gab Dre11 Panta ,Denim Jeans. Corduroy

Jeans.

entinel

WEATHER FORECAST - The ' Natlonal Weather Service
forecasts preclpiWion Saturda); .!!t a wide b,and lrom Ulah and
Artzona slreatcblng acroM to Geo~ Telmeasee, Kenluc~ aud
Ohio. Showers are allo predicted for paa1a ollbeSoulbealt coUt,lbe
Norihealt, 1~, Wyoming and Montana: (AP Luerphoto).

Ohio forecasts
Eighty percent chanCE! of occasional

snoW tonlght.

I 5 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

NATO
allies
reaffirm
pact

Suspender Pants, Denims, Cordu·
roys, Wool blends, Poly/ Cotton
blends.

\

WOMEN'S

seasonal varia tions.

I Section , 12 Pages

JUNIOR
SLACKS SALE
Reg. s11.00
Reg. s20.00
Reg. s26.00
Reg. SJ4.00

-Capital equipment costs rose 0.3 percent, slightly
ahead of the 0.2 percent ga in of October. Those costs
are for machinery and lmnsportalion equipment
used by business and induslry.
Wholesale prices fell Iasl month for gold jewelry
and home electronic equipment. Prices soa red for
cosmetics. costume jewelry, book s and detergents.
All the increases. excepl f01 the November-toNovember comparison, are Jdjusled for normal

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 10, 1982

Copyrighted 1982

I i/~~
n\ -~

price changes had been excluded from the overall
report, wholesale prices would have risen only 0.3
percent.
-The overall 0.2 percenl fall in food prices was
paced by sharp declines in prices for pork, eggs and
rice. Wholesale costs also fell for fish and poultry.
Increases were posted for fresh flllit, ca ndy and
bakery products.
-Automobile prices 'rose a small 0.2 percent after a
sharp 4.1 percent rise in October. Light truck prices
stayed the same, after surging 6.7 percent in October.

'

SALE PRICED

SALE

Today's report said that for the 12 months ending in
November, wholesale prices rose a11. unadjusted 3.7
percent.
In November alone, prices overall rose a
seasonally adjusted 0.6 percent, compared with a 0.5
percent lise in October and a 0.1 percent drop in
September.
U prices rose for 12 consecutive months at
November's rate, the yearly rise would be 7.9
percent. In reporting Its Inflation figures, the Labor
Department bases Its compounded annual rate on a
more precise calculation of monthly changes than the
figure the department makes public for the
one-month change.
In all, the unadjusted Producer Price Index for
finished goods, the official name for the wholesale
price calculation, stood at 284.9 in November,
meaning that goods costing $10 at wholesale in 1967
would have cost $28.49 last month.
The department gave this detailed breakdown of
November wholesale price fluctuations:
-Energy prices overall rose 2.9 percent. If energy

Low

1&amp;22.

Winds light and westerly. Sixty percent chance of snow Saturday.
fHgh 28-32,

Extended Ohio forecast
Extended Ohio Forecaat - Sun(Jay ~Tuesday: Chance of
snow nurrles Sunday. Fair Monday \Yit11 nurrtes tn the northeast.
Fair Tuesday. Very cold. Highs :IS-28. Lows 5-tfj.

GI)ING UP - Metal sides of an addition IAl
Middleport Fire Station ·are going IniAl place.
Contractor on the addition Is Van Loveren and Son,
Fairfield, which was awarded the contract over five
other finns In September. Cost of the project Is

approved a two mill, five year tax measure to supply
funds for the addition which will provide space for all
the Middleport Fire Department's equipment along
with the present structure.

•

Chillicothe paper wtns case
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - A
newspaper barred from publishing
the names of jurors ina murder trial
has been given the right to do so by
the Ohio Supreme Court .
The court's unanimous ruling
Thursday affirmed an earlier
decision by the Ross County Court of
Appeals in a case involving the
Chillicothe Gazette.
Affected is the pending case of
Drewey F . Kiser of Wllliamsport.
who was convicted Friday of
aggrava ted murder, aggravated
robbery and abuse of a corpse in the
March 30 shooting dea th of Don
Wrltsel, 19, of New Holland.
Kiser could get the death penalty.
The jury of five men and seven
women Is expected to begin
deliberating his sentence in Ross
County Common Pleas Court on
Monday.
Court records showed that the

'newspaper was prohibiled from
publishing ju~: names by Judge
Nicholas H.•Holines .Jr. ina pre-trial
order Nov. 2.
The Gazette appealed to the
county appeals court, which prohibiled enforcement of lhe judge's
order. The newspaper did not
publish the names.
The Ohio Public Defenders Counsel appealed the appeals coun
ruling to the high court.
" It was never our intent to publish
I he names of the jurors. We felt we
had a right to publish if we wanted
to, " said Marvin Jones, managing
editor of the newspaper. "We felt
circumstances might arise in the
trial where the name of a juror
would be Important to the story."
"We might want to talk to some of
the jurors when the trial is over," he
said.
Five other Ohio newspapers

joined the Gazette in the caS&lt;·.
The Supreme Court held that the
lrial judge did not adhere to
precedent s upheld by the U.S.
Supreme Court .
Cited was a case. Nebraska Press
Association \'C'rsus Stuart , in which
the U.S. courl said there must be
justification for rC'st raint s on prPss
coverage of trials.
In that case•, the court sa id
justification musl be evidenced by
" the nature and exl~ nt of pre-I rial
news coverage, whel hPr 01 her
measures would be likel.v to
mitigate the effects of unres trained,
pre-trial publicit y and how effectively a restraining order would
operate to prev~ nl lhrea lened
danger."
ThP Ohio Supreme Court said, in
the Ross Counly case, thai "none of
these criteria was given adequate
consideration by th~ tri JI court .··

Leon Jaworski, 77, dies of
heart attack on Texas ranch
WIMBERLEY, Texas (API Leon Jaworksi, who began his
career as the youngest lawyer in
Texas and capped it by obtaining
the Watergate tapes that forced
President Richard M. Nixon to
resign, Is dead at age 77.
Jaworski died Thursday of a
heart attack on his 440-acre Circle J
ranch " doing what he liked to do
best" -chopping wood, said ranch
foreman John Clayton, who was
with Jaworski when he collapsed in
a grove of Spanish oak trees in the
rolling Texas hlll country.
Jaworski had not been In a
courtroom since his drama tic
argument before the U.S. Supreme
Court In 1974 when, as Watergate
special prosecutor, he successfully
secured tape recordings linking
Nixon to the Watergate scandal.
"You just don't argue another
caseafteryou'veargued 'the United
States versus Nixon' before the
Supreme Court," he once said.
Jaworski lived and worked in
Houstoon, but came to the ranch
several tlr\1es a month. It was here
that he wrote three books, Including
the Watergate bestseller ''The
Right and the Power."
. · Jaworski was about two miles
from the ranch house when he
collapsed about 3: ill p.m. He was
pronounced dead at 5p.m. by Peace
JIJstice Sonny ;Gold, after Clayton
$pellt about an bour trying to revive

him.

uOON JAWORSKI

$79,500. Middleport residents at the ,June election

When Jaworski accepted the job
as Watergate special prosecutor,
replacing Archibald Cox, who was

fired In November1973, "my friends
thought that my mental hea lth had
failed m e. that my head should be
examined," he once said.
Cox said Jaworski'sdealh "was a
shame. Leon was a great warrior
and leader of the bar and he
pertormed grea t service as special
prosecutor."
Jaworski sa id he voled for Nixon
and "shuddered" when he heard the
White House tapes and realized
Nixon "was right in the middle" of a
coverup of the break-in at Democratic National Committee headquarters at Washington's Watergate apartment complex in 1972.
"For a moment, I wished I'd
never been asked to take the job,'' he
said.
Jaworski called his successful
battle for the Nixon tapes the
pinnacle of his varied legal career.
but said he never considered fully
retiring afterward.
He maintained an office at
Fulbright &amp; Jaworski - a Houston
law firm hewatchedgrowfrom10to
300 lawyers - and accepted many
speaking engagements.
Jaworski served as U.S. Army
prosecutor during the Nuremburg
war crimes trial alter World War II,
and as special prosecutor in the
federal government's contempt
case against Mississippi Gov. Ross
Barnett, who was.trying to bar the
first black student from the University of Mississippi in 1962.
Jaworski was born in Waco,

Texas. in 1905. He became at age20
the youngesllawyer evcr licensed in
the stale. In 1929, he became a full
partner in a Houston law firm .
Jaworski wa s Lyndon B. Johnson's lawyer in 1960 when several
Republicans filed an unsuccessful
lawsuit trying 10 keep the Texas
senator from 11Jnning for n?-f'lection
a t the samf' tim£" h~:was running for
vice presidenl as.John F . Kenned y's

running ma tt'.
After Johnson beca me president
when KPnnrd~· was slain in 1 ~:i.3.
Jaworski ser\'ed as counSPI to I he

Warren Commission invPstiga ting
the assassin aI ion.
He served on the Presidenl's
Commission on l.aw Enforcement
and other nat iona I and international
comissions and pn nr ls. and was
prcsidL•nt of fill' Am0rica n Bar
Association .
ln 1977, he accrpted an offer from
House SiJI?aker 111omas P. O'Neill
to head an investigation into
allegations of Korea n influencebuying in Congress.
Doctors discovered in February
that the "Colonel." as he was known
to family and assoclales. had
cancer of the pancreas. He was
given "a clean bill of health" after
completing a series of radiation
treatments In May, he said. ·
Jaworski's survivors included his
wlfe, Jeannette; two daughters,
Joanle Moncrief and Cl aire
Draper; and a son, Joseph, all of
Houston.
Funeral arrangements were
pending .

�Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
614-99i-2 156

ltE\'tiTt:rl Til TII f.INTF: RI:"'~"'T IIF Tilt-: Mt-:U:S-i\1.\Sil\ \HE,\

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhlis ht·r

BOB HOEFLICH

'' " '' l&lt;tutl'uhlbht•r /('untrullt·r

DALE ROTHGEB. JR .
Nr'AS Editor
r\ ~11-:1\IIIEH of Tht· th~u•·ml!•lt l'rt'S),, Inland Dul l\ l'n · ,~ ~~~~·u-i:tlwn t~nd tho•

,\n~t·rw;w ~. · ~o~~paJ,.:r l'uhiL~ ho • n; As sudatiun.

·

LEIT ERS IW IIPI N IO ~ art' ~o~dt · nmt·d . Tht'\ s hould lw lt·l&gt;~ than :100 ~o~unb luu ~ . All
lt·th·r, an· ~Uh JtTI tu t'dilm)C und must lw ~ i~ti.t'tl with tUinw. ;ultln·~~ and lt·lt'pht~~lt'
numho·r \u unsi~::rwd lt'llt· r~ 'A ill tw JKlhlis hrd. l..t• llrr.. s huuld ht· illlt•Hilll46~tt·. ;t dtlrt'ssi~
·~ ~ Ut's.

nut

JM'f!l!lllltlitw~o .

Reagan directs troops
to continue fighting
Wh"t is Ronald Rea ga n up to thrsrda~'S with unemployment rising,thP
long·anticipated r&lt;'('O\WY still j ust an anticipation. and Congt'!'Ss getting
IC'SI.\'':

8&lt;'ing a world leader. that' s what.
Like man~· a president before him. Reagan has discovered that
domes tic problems arc just unbrlievabl)' difficult to solve.
Rmgan has his('('onomic program prrttv much in place. but it hasn't yet
produced the r('('o,·rr)· hP hoped . About all Reagan can do now isdir('('l his
troops to k('('p fighting in the trenches on Capitol Hillto cut social spending
mon · and to prot('('! defense outla~·s and the tax cuts.
Such in fighting ciO&lt;·sn't excite people much. doesn't have many political
benefit s and doesn't gettht• incumtx•nt on the evening news doing positive.
int&lt;•rcst ing things.
But international re lations: now there is something that can make a
pr·psidrnt luok very. wl'll. \ '( ' IY presidential.
,\nd Reagan has b('('n looking \ 'P I) ' president ia l lately.
Hr• just got back from a trip to Brazil. Colombia and Costa Rica. when•
he was pictu red with thP leaders of other nations. denouncing drug
traffickers. attacking communisl ·inspirl'd guerri lla movements and
handing out a $1.2 billion loan to tide Brazil oVPr some tight limes.
Pakist;llli President Mohammed Zia ui ·Haq met with Reagan this w('('k
as par·t of an right ·dav state visit. Denmark's Prime Minister Paul
Sd1 ulter will be in n.. xt Monda~ · for a White HousP chat.
In thP last two months at the White House. Reagan has hostl'd President
Suharto of lnrlonPsia. King Hassan II of Morocco. President Amin
(;1·mawl of Lebanon . Prime Ministpr Giovanni Spadolini of ltal.v.
President Luis Altx·rto MongP A lvarez of Cos ta Rica and Chancellor
Hl'lmut Kohl of WPsl (;r•rmany.
,\nd the paradl' of foreign lmdcr'S will continuP npxt year . .Japan's new
prim•· minister. Yasuhiro :'\"kasone. will tx· at the White House Jan . 18.
A us! ria ·s Bnmo Krl'i s k~ · will follow Feb. J
Reagan is also likl'ly to do some morP foreign tra,·rl next ymr. incl uding
a swing to .Iapan and lhP Far East.
Pn... siclt&gt;nt ial im·ol\'r mPnt in forC'ign affairs dOC's not. of course. soln• an:v
uf thP nation·... domC'stic probiC'm s.
But the countrc's international relationships an• clearly part of the
presidential duties and. ind('('d, some would say thr• most important duties
in thf' ;.1 ge of nur!Par WPil JX:ms.

Buyers may be pushing
their weight around
The• populal'\'iew is that the consumer is still timid and searching for his
lost confid&lt;'nce. But an Pxamination of thP evidence suggests instead that
at lm st some consumers might be pushing thPir wpight around .
Todm·. am· consumer rr luct"nce to part with a nickel is interpretl'd as
ca uiiuu~nf's.&lt; timidit~·. ins['('urity. ·a \'if'w that could rest on the mistaken
dew that am· American able to make a telephonP call ought to be placing

&lt;J n ordc •r .
Bu t rathN than being listless and frigh!Pned. it seems that many
po tenti;riiJU Vl'rs ha'·" chos&lt;&gt;n not to buy. and with just as much mthusiasm
and \'igor as thf · ~ · oncP &lt;" hOSC' to bu~ · up a storm.
i\n illu stration :

... Du ri ng the 1 ~1711s. 11·hcn pricPs were r ising. many people advanced
their bu\·ing schedules in order to avoid future high prices. Their behavior
wa s dPsni bed as robust. enthusiastic and confident.
. During the 1900s. whm some- albeit not many- prices are falling,
somc people· an• drlaving purchases so as to obta in future lower prices.
Their tx·ha,·ior is ca lled timid . cautious, and indicative of a lack of
confidf'nC! ·.

In truth . thP consumPr is busily rebuilding his finances.
In spil t' of th&lt;' highest jobi('SS rate in four decades. the savings rate rose
to n.9 IX'tT&lt;·nt in the third quarter from 6.7 percent in the second and 6.6
fX'r&lt; 'rnt in thP first thi1'C months of the year.
Throughout the vrar thP total of persona l income has risen steadily if
.s lo wl~· . as ha.s the ll'\'PI of disposable or after-tax income. A nd in October.
,\mrricans paid off morP than they borrowed for the first time in 10
months.
In thP rontPxtthat exists. however, such behavior is seldom viewl'd as
wisP. MorP often it is S('('n as wPak. as in the statement by a bank
('('onomist tha t dPbt figurps "are a little weaker lhan I would have
cxpcrted ...
No doubt about it. th&lt;•re's a lot of weakness out there in the economy. But
therp's reason to doubt that some behavior called weak Is rea lly so. Some
of that behavior is by design . Some of it probably represents strength.
Tha 1 isn't a Milquetoast who walks up to the car dealer and informs him:
" Knock $.W off list a nd I'll considPr buying; otherwise, buddy, it's no
deal. "

Today

•

Ill

Page-2-Til\ _Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, Deceij16er 10, 1982

WASHINGTON (AP) - Union
chief Ed Garvey says he Is hopeful
National Football League officials
will sign the new collective bargain·
lng agreement overwhelmingly
ratlfll'd by the players, perphaps as
early as tonight.
"! sent the Management Council a
message today asking when they
were coming to tovvn so I could call
Gene (Upshaw, union presldenll
andhave himcomelnfortheslgnlng
ceremony, probably Friday night,"
Garvey said Thursday night. UP"
shaw, a guard with the Los Angeles
Raiders, Is working out on the West
Coast.
As of Thursday night. the
Management Council, the league's
bargaining agent, had not responded to Garvey's message.
"I don't know why they haven't
replied,'' Garvey said.
Wednesday night, Garvey announced that the league's 1,500
players had ratlfll'd the new
agreement by a:\-1 margin.
Following the players' vote, Jack
Donlan, the league's chief negotla·
tor, said management would not

I

lill'uurtStrrl'l
l'o•nwru\', llh tn

f'AT WHITEHEAD

May sign new pact tonight

Kirkland to the rescuel.L, ___W_il_lia_m_F_.B_u_ck_ley_J_r.

The Daily Sentinel

history

Today is Frida~. Dec. 10. the .144th day of 1982. There are 21 days leflln
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Dec. 10. 1936, Edward VIII announced his intention to abdicate the
British throne.
On this date:
In 1520, Martin Luther publicly burnl'd the Papal bull excommunicating
him from the Roman Catholic Church.
In 1817, Mississippi became the 20th state.
In 1898, the Treaty of Paris was signed to end the Spanish-American
War.
In 1967, the world's first commercia l thermonuclear explosion took
place In New Mexico with Its goal being to help recover natural gas from
underground deposits.
Ten years ago: Premier Kakuel Tanaka's Liberal-Democratic Party
was returned to pol"er In Japan's national elections.
Five years ago: More than a score of dissidents were placed under house
arrest In the Soviet Union to keep them from a demonstration to observe
the Unitl'd Nations' Human Rights Day.
One year ago: President Reagan urged Americans In Libya to leave that
country because of allegations tllat Libyan leader Moammar ei·Khadafy
was plotting to klll American officials.

,

The rise In the unemployment
rate to 10.8 percent was bad news.
public Ire wa,s dlrectl'd at Ronald
Reagan.
Why ?
In Canada. unemployment is at
13 percent. Everyone is mad at
Trudeau more or less as a mat(erof
principle, and thaI .is understandable. On the other hand, Trudeau Is a
socialist of sorts. so why doesn't he
do something about Canadian
unemploy ment. which Is two points
higher !hart ours? Or, while we are
at it, we have some superheated
socialists In Mexico, where unemployment Is at 50 percent. Is that
the way to go?
So what Is Reagan supposed to
do? Mltterrand, running for pres!·
dent. announced that he would hire
an extra 150,000 bureaucrats. He
proceeded to do so. But by the time
he was inauguratl'd, unemployment had dipped far beyond the
number of bureaucrats he hired. So
what is Reagan supposed to do, hire
a couple of million extra bureaucrats? What are they going to do,
and who will step forward to pay for
them?
Should Reagan place a govern·
ment order for a couple of mUllan
cars? For 50 million tons of steef?
Should he lower the Interest rate?
How does a president lower Interest
rates? By asking Congress for
legislation to take from the Fl'deral
Reserve Board the right to buy and
sell government securities? The
establishment of the Fl'd, dating
back to the administration of
Woodrow Wilson, has for years
been haUI'd as a progressive step,
removing !from government capricious authority over the money
supply which, the gold standard
and gold convertibility having since
then been abolished, would appear
all the more desirable.
But what If Reagan managl'd,
through legislation, to acquire de
facto authority over the money
supply. Should he then flood the
country with paper money to drive
dovvn the Interest rates, so that
more people could borrow to buy
cars? And, by so doing, drive dovvn

the value of the dollar? Should he,
In short, attack the earnings and
the savings of the !)!).plus mllllon
Americans who are working, In
order to stimulate jobs for 11
mlll!on? And how long would they
then have work, If he were to do so,
pursuing an Inflation that everyone
was complaining about whenb
Reagan took office, and which
since then has been halved?
Lane Kirkland, head of the
AFL-CIO, was on television when
the figures came out. What did he
say? He said that If "they" meaning Reagan's White Housewould not "do anything" until there
Is "turmoil In the streets," then
"we'll give them some turmoil In
the streets." Kirkland managed to
sound like Stokely Carmichael . Is
the head of the largest free trade
union or~:anlzalton In the world
proposing street anarchy?

Which reminds us: Now that we
have examlnl'd what Reagan can
and can't do about unemployment,
has anyone asked Lane Kirkland
what he might do about unemployment? Why do foreign cars amount
to so great a shareofthemarket? If
the American worker's wage Is
peggl'd to a scale that keeps him
earning about twice as much as the
Japanese worker, Is this a possible
reason why so many Americans
are buying Japanese cars? If the
steelworkers are earning half
again as much as German steelworkers, could his be why steel Is
being producl'd at 30 percent of
capacity? We all know that
workers can earn more money If
heir tools are so refined as to give
them an advantage over the
competition. Thus one worker with
an electrical loom can be as
production as 10 without such a

loom.
Well, whaf has Lane Kirkland
done to encourage savings and
Investment .and recapitalization?
He has been around longer than
Reagan. Why not ask Mr. Kirkland
to take E llttle time off from
breaking windows In the streets to
answer the question: Where Is the
statemanshlp for which he has
calll'd? The Detroit Chrysler
workers have been courageous and
Intelligent. But what about their
counterparts?
It Is time someone pointed out
that Lane Kirkland Is far more
responsible for unemployment
than Ronald Reagan. Come to think
of It, now someone has pointed this
out.
And by the way: During the
same month the joblessness rose,
4.1 mllllon Americans who had
been unemployl'd got jobs.

FORCED TO PASS- Washlngron Bullets' Don
Coiiins Is forced to pass to teammate Rick Mahom
alter finding the lane to the hasket blocked by Denv'lll)
Nuggets' Glen Gondrezlck ~d Bill Hanzlik, hands

I JUST WANTiD 10 CRY.

Mob avoids milliono....L_______J_a_ck_A_n_de_rs_on
WASHINGTON - The Justice
Department made a big show
recently out of forcing Watergate
conspirator G. Gordon Liddy to pay
off the remaining $23,000 of his
$40,000 criminal fine, imposl'd In
1973.
Unfortunately, the department
hasn 'I been nearly so enthusiastic
about collecting millions of dollars
in fines slapped on convictl'd Mafia
figures and drug dealers. Though
many of these crooks are still
raking In big bucks, they have
successfully thumbed their noses at
the government's collection agents.
In fact, the government's ovvn
ll'dgers show that of nearly $5
million In fines levil'd In more than
800 criminal tax-evasion cases
since 1970, only $1.8 million had
been paid off by September of last
year.
The government has been
equally lenient In Its handling of the

unpaid taxes that ll'd to the
convictions In the first place.
Internal Revenue Service studies
analyzed by Jack Key, former chief
Investigator for Sen. Sam Nunn,
D-Ga. , show the same pattern of
Indifference toward collection of
back taxes.
My associate Tony Capacclo has
studll'd raw government data and
court records and come up with
some shocking examples of the
Justice Department's lassitude In
making criminals pay for their tax
cheating.
-Paul Varlo Sr., a publicly
Identified "conslgllere" of the
Thomas Lucchese organized crime family, was fined $20,000 In a
criminal tax case In 1973. He still
hasn't paid up. Investigators say
Varlo has pleadl'd that his Income
Is meager, supplemented by Social
Security disability payments. Despite this poor - mouthing, law-

enforcement sources say, Varlo
has Interest In at least 30 businesses
In the New York area.
-Anthony J. Giacalone Sr., a
"capo" In the Zerilli crime family
of Detroit, was fined $30,000 In a tax
case In October 1979. Collection
records show that at least $22,000of
the fine has still not been paid.
-Mob figure James "Jimmy the
Nap" Napoli, suspected of having
made 17 false accusations during
the Investigation of Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan, was
convlctl'd on two counts of tax
evasion nearly three years ago and
flnl'd $20,000. He had paid no taxes
on his more than $500,000 Income
from 1968-1976. He sttll hasn't paid a
nickel of his line.
-Joseph Gambino, cousin of the
late Mob boss Carlo Gambino, was
convicted on several tax counts In
July 1977 and fined $50,000. As of
September 1981, he still owl'd

$39,000 of the fine. Court records are
unclear on how much is still due.
-Anthony Scotto, former high
official In the International Longshoreman's Assoclaton and a capo
In the Gambino crime family, was
convlctl'd In January 1!1!0 on
numerous charges, Including acceptance of payoffs without reportIng them on his income tax return.
He was fined $75,000. Though he
had paid nothing as of September
1981, ·hJs lawyer s claim he Is now
paying $3,000 a month on he line.
-Seymour Gopman, an attorney
who handles the benefit plan lor
several unions In Florida, was
convicted of falling to report $1
mUIIon of Income In his 1972 tax
return. He was fine $15,000 In May
1978. The line Is still outstanding.
- Michael D. Pokorney, a heroin
dealer prosecutl'd In Michigan,
pleaded guilty In March 1979 to
several charges, Including cheatIng on his 1974-76 taxes.

Hi-tech cannibalism_______A_r_tB_u_ch_wa_ld
Hf-t('('h Industry, particularly
computers, Is recommendl'd for
people who are looking for a
profession. For the moment the
computer Industry is supposed to
he r('('esslon·proof. Well, up to a
point.
I heard this story about one of the
largest compu ter companies In
America.
"Dr. Frankenstln, . I want to
congratulate you on your new
software program which makes It
possible for a robot to do the work of
100 human beings In one half hte
time.' '
"It was nothing. The key was to
get a computer to Interface with the
robot so they talk the same
language. Once the robot was
programmed to only respond to
SAMPSON It learnl'd to discriminate not only colors, but sizes,
shapes and verbal orders. One
executive sitting In his home In
Greenwich, Conneccut, with our
'Artichoke 536,' ~an now give
orders to every SAMPSON programmed robot In the Western
world."

up, during the first haH of their NBA game at the
Capital Centre Thursday night. The BuUets won 98-90
breaking the Nuggets' streak of srorlng over 100
points In their last 136.games. (AP Laserphoto).

Washington coach must pay
off after halftime promise

·... fiND WU£N WAf UMLY RMREN'O ~AN ~IP,~iiLL 'DEAlW '00 Yoo PART•,

"We're aware of that and we're
very proud of your work. It has
turnl'd out to be better than
anything we dreaml'd of.'
"Have you sold the system
already?"
"No, we've been using It in our
own company first, to make sure
there aren't any bugs In II."
"And?'
"You're fired, Frankenstein."

"I'm fired?"
"Yes, the system you perfected
made It possible for us to lay off
3,1lXJ employees and still Increase
productivity by 40 percent."
"But It was my Idea. How can
you fire the person who thought up
the Idea?"
"The SAMPSON Robot has
made It possible to eliminate our
entire research and development
department, which was a big
financial drain on the company. We
can now Instruct the Robot to do the
same work you were doing at a
hundredth of the cost.
"It has perfected a new merchan·
dlslng program, which will eliminate 90 percent of our sales Ioree,

and It's already figured out how to
cut our taxes and phone bills by 70
percent. Dr. Frankenstein, you
created a work of art, and we plan
to give you full credit In our next
stockholders report."
"That's great, but I stU! need a
job."
"You should have thought of that
when you started developing the
SAMPSON Robot. Surely you knew
that this labor - saving system
would eliminate the need for
people."
"! was thinking of other companIes we could sellli to; not our own."
"We would be crazy not to use It
ourselves. Our first responsibility Is
to cut labor costs as low as we
possibly can. When you put a
human being on the payroll, you not
only have to add In his salary. but
also his Social Security, medical
benefits, pension, vacation and
coffee breaks. A robot can . be
depreciated over three years, and
then It works lor us lor nothing."
"Well, If you feel that way about
It, I'll go to another company and
make a better SAMPSoN than you

have."
"I wouldn't do that If I were you.
According to SAMPSON, which Is
now doing our law work, If you go to
another firm and work on the same
research you will be guilty of giving
away trade secrets and our robot
·advises us to sue you."
"But you're taking my livelihood
away from me."
"We're not taking It away from
you. The robot you Invented Is. If
you were as smart as you think you
are you wouldn't have programml'd It to do research and
development. Once you scientists
take on a problem, you never think
of the consequences of your

successes."
"Well, If I can't work In R&amp;D give
me a job doing something else. I
have only two more years hefore I
get my pension. I'll work In the
mallroom."
"All right. I'll ask SAMPSON, on .
my computer."
"What did It respond?"
"He said he doesn't need some
dopey person to get In the way. He •
can sort the mall alone."

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

LANDOVER, Md. !API - Washington Coach Gene Shue promised his players steak dinners if they
held Denver, the National Basket·
ball Association's highest-scoring
team , to fewer than 100 points.
Shue w!ll have to live up to his
halftime promise as the Bullets
became the first team In nearly two
years to accomplish the feat,
stopping Denver 98-90 Thursday
night.
The only other NBA game saw
Portland defeat Golden State JIY/-97.
The Nuggets had scored at least
100 points In the previous 136 games
- a league record - following a
98-971oss to Houston on Jan.18)981 .
But their problem Thursday night
was hitting only 37 of 87 shots from
the floor.
"Ever since Gene has been here,
the emphasis has been on defense,"
said Washington forward Greg
Ballard, who had 16 points. "Being
the team to break thestreakglves us
a great deal of satisfaction because
we work on our defense so hard.''
Washington's 5941 halftime lead

and chance aI snapping the Denver
streak seeml'd to fade in the third
quarter, when the Nuggets outscorl'd the Bullets, 36-16, to take a
Tf.751ead . Dan Issei 's 14polnts !I'd a
224 spurt at the end of the period to
era se Wa shington's 71-55 1ead.
"When we came out In the third
quarter, we had no intensity," notl'd
Shue. "They (the Nuggets) were
due to explode."
The Bullets, 10·10, then playl'd
solid defense In the final period,
limiting Denver to 13 points while
pulling away. Jeff Ruland's threepoint play with 11:09 remaining
gave Washington the lead for good,
80-79, and consecutive baskets by
Don Collins and Ruland- who had a
team-high of 2.1- gave the Bullets
an 88-83 advantage. Denver, which
dropped to 8·12, could not cut the gap
below three points the rest of the
way.
"We went back to doing the things
we did In the first quarter," said
Ballard. "Aggressive defense and a
lot of hustle."
No one in the Denver locker room

apprearl'd to be too concernl'd over
the ending of the streak. Issei, who
ll'd his team along with Alex English
with 24 points, said, "The streak
doesn't mean anything to me, and I
doubt It means anything to anyone
here."

Nugget Coach Doug Moe, whose
team is leading the NBA in average
points -per -game with 123.5,
claimed, "Village Idiots can score
100 points if they keep the pace up.
Our offense has stunk this year. The
only reason we're scoring so much
Is because our defense has been
terrible, too. We get a lot of
possessions because the other team
scores so quickly."
TraU Blazers Url, Warriors 97
John Paxson hit a go-ahead
jumper from the right baseline 15
seconds after a long jumper by
Purvis Short gave Golden State a
92-91 lead with 5:16 remaining.
Paxson scored four more points
dovvn the stretch and finished with
23. Calvin Natt !I'd the Blazers with
30 points, offsetting Joe Barry
Carroll's 35 points.

Irish whip Fairfield, 92-70
By The Associated Press
Digger Phelps feels he must get In
his digs.
The Notre Dame basketball
coach gave 6-foot-9 freshman Tim
Kempton a pep talk after Tuesday
night's loss to Indiana. Kempton
respondl'd with a career-high 26
points In leading the Irish to a 92-70
victory over Fairfield Thursday
nigf11 at South Bend, Ind.
"I likl'd getting on him," said
Phelps. whose young club raised its
record to 3-3 In dealing Fairfield its
first loss In five starts. "That's what
I like to do. He really takes it well
and responds. He's tough and he's
going to be a good player."
Notre Dame !I'd 37-30 at halftime
when Kempton had 15 of his points.
"We did a good job of getting the
ball inside to Kempton and (Kenl
Barlow," said Phelps. "I think they
were 12 for 141n the f!rst half. That's

the type of team we want to be."
The Irish got16 points from John
Paxson,15 from Barlow and i1 from
Bill Varner, while freshmen Tony
George ll'd Fairfield with 20 points.
In the only college basketball
game Involving I he Top Twenty, No.
19 Nevada-Las Vegas beal NevadaReno &amp;'l-75. Sidney Green scored 23
points and grabbed 18 rebounds for
the winning Rebels, whllefreshman
Eldridge Hudson added 16 points
and 15 rebounds and Eric Booker
scorl'd 15 points and had 11
rebounds.
Northwestern ran its record to 5.0
behind Art Aaron's 29 points -12of
17 from the field - in a 75-58
thumping of Northern Illinois, 1-2,
which was !I'd by Tom Dillon's 19
points.
Baylor, 6-0 and 0ff to its best start
since 1945, defeated TexasArlington 74-65 as David Glover hit

Meigs girls defeat Jackson
Meigs girls postl'd a 42-24 win over
visiting Jackson Thursday.
High scorers for Meigs were
Jenny Meadows with 12 and Cindy
Crooks had 11. For Jackson, Cook
had 12.

The lady Marauders host Waverly Thursday.
J.\CKSON (:U) -Dorsey24-ll; Cook4+12;
Dowler 2-0-4. Totals S..S.24.
MEIGS (42) - Crooks 4-J.IJ; Dean I·J.5;
Meadows 5-2-12; Snowden &lt;H·l; Horton3-2-8;
Stegall I.U.2; f;!eeves I.U.2; Swisher ().J.I.
Tolals Ill-n42.

19 points and Daryl Ba4cham added
18. Danny Johnson:s23pointsll'd the
4-3 Mavericks.
California-Irvine, 4·0, beat Loyola
of Los Angeles 85-73 behind 17 points
apiece from Tod Murphy and Jud
Beardsley. Loyola, which got 20
points from Forresl McKenzie, fell
to 1-3.
Willie Scott scored 15 points In
pacing Bradley (2-2) to a 6747
triumph over St. Louis (24). Scott
also led the Bradley defense which
forcl'd the Blllikens into 21
turnovers .
Tulane scored the game's first 20
points, shot 68 percent from the field
and 16 for 16.from the free throw line
to clobber Nicholls State 104-48. The
Green Wave got 20polntsfrom Paul
Thompson and 17 . from John
Williams In raising Its record to 3-3.
Nicholls State is 1-1.
Connecticut, 3-2, behind Norman
Bailey's 21 points and Karl Hobbs'
20, handed winless Massachusetts
Its third straight setback. 86-74.

sign the five-year, $1.6·billionagree·
ment until the union and its
members agreed to settle oil
pending lawsuits against the league
and agreed not to sue in the future.
Un Thursday, Garvey held phone
conversations with Pittsburgh at·
torney Paul Martha, who had
servl'd as a go-between during I he
final stages of negotiations to end
the 57-day players strike, and
Pittsburgh Steeler President Dan
Rooney.
Rooney, a member of I he owners·
ex('('utive committee. has bcrn
Instrumental in ironing out som('
two dozen issues left unresolved
when negotiators announced the
tentative agreement No\'. Hi.
" I spoke with Paul Martha and
Rooney and worked every! hing
out," Garvey Insisted Thu rsday
night . "The contract is now rcad.v to
besignl'd."
Garvey would not comment on
what accomoda tions had oo•n
reachl'd during Thursday 's convrr·
sations for m anagement to sign the
agreement. Rooney and Mart ha

thl· union ancl its m L'mlx·r s to agree
not to bring suit a,Rain:,tthe league iri
thP futuJl' rf'g; l rcling :'\ FL ru les.
L,;n ion a tt o rn v~ · s h.J,.,. advisect
ag: tin!-. t signin,L: thv nu -.. . uit agree-·
rnt· nt which it s ;1 ~ · s th('uni onshould
tx • prcpart&gt;d to fi ght in court as both
unbwhil i llld unt•nfCJ I'C'I'abh•.
TIH• Ma n; tgt·nw nt ( 'ouncU insists·
C;uYP\ agJt'1.'( \ to tht • pn )\' ision on:

NO\'. lh.

.

"On :\n\· Hi it

, , · .~ s

HOUSTON !API -The weight of
recognition is growing heavy for
Nebraska center Dave Rlmlngton,
and he's glad the load has gotten a
little heavier.
the sweetest 40 pounds Rimington ever liftl'd came Thursday night
when he plckl'd up the Lombardi
Award, symbolic of the nation 's
ou tstanding college football
lineman.
Rimlngton, 6-foot-3 and weighing
290 pounds, pill'd up honors last year
as a first team All-America and
winning the Outland Trophy, given
to the nation's outstanding Interior
lineman.
"This year I tried to repeat what I
did last year because I knew people
would expect more of me," Rimington said. "After last year, if I didn't
blast everyone five yards off the
line, something was wrong."
Rimlngton did repeat as a first
team center and became the first
repeat winner of the Outland. Now
he's added the Lombardi Award to
his already bulging trophy caSP.
"When 1 came to Nebraska as a
freshman, I never dreaml'd of
anything like this,'' he said. "I just
knew that I had to work hard and try
to enjoy what I was doing."

u nd ~r · ·

st;md ing th1·\· h. HI il )..! n'( •d to this as

\\'l'll as 1 '\' t ·tyt hi n1 •. t' l" t ·." ~~ Ma nage-mt•nt Coun('il ... uun · ~ · sa irl . " This:
w as ont • 1hin g Pa u l :\ L1 r t ha publicly ·

said. tha 11 h(·\ lw ei agr'('('CJ todropall ·
c o urt &lt;-~ r l io n a nd N LRB:
compla int:- .··

The Lombandi Award, a 40-pound
block of granite, is naml'd in honor
of Vince Lombardi, former coach of
Green Bay and Washington who
dil'd of cancer In 1970.
Rimington won the honor oyer
three other finalists present at a
$125-per·plate dinner, which benefits the American Cancer Society.

LOMBARDI WINNER - Winner of the l:!tl• Annual Lombardi
Award offensive center Dave Rimin~&gt;1on fron : thr l lmversity of
Nebr~ka hoists the granite tJio ck tro(lhy Thursda)' night aftr-r being
named the outstanding college lineman fur 1111' 19K2 foot hall sra,on. I AP
Laserphoto).

Tonight's games
Meigs a1 Jackson
Waverly at Ironton
Athens at Logan
Washington CH at Greenfield
Minford at Northwest
Trimble at Alexa nder
Wheelersburg at Port smouth
West
Southwestern at Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek at North Ga llia
Southern at Eastern
Saturday's games:
Gallipolis at Washing1on CH
South Point at Portsmouth
Jackson at Wheelersburg
Athens at Mifflin
Meigs at Fl'deral Hocking
Mid-American at Kyger Cr eek

LAi:~
II THE

Plan tournament
The Bend Area Jaycees will be
holding a Men's Independent Basketball
Tournament
theHigh
weekend
of
Dec. 17-19
at Wahama
School
gym and the New Haven Commun·
lty Building.

Anr7

tlii~UI'
~IUJII'fiU/

r-;========================::;
DACO i,.TD.

The double-elimination tourna·
ment will be limited to the flrsl ten
teams to enter and entry fee will be
$60 per team. Rosters will be limitI'd
to ten players per team which must
be submitted along with each teams
entry fee before their first game.
Firs!, second and third place
team trophies will be awardl'd and
first place Individual trophies.
There wUI also be an MVP trophy
awarded.
To enter or for more Information
contact Tim Davis or Steve Hal·
stead at (:Dl) 675-1333 or 882-2334
atter5p.m.

••HORNET'y
150 LB. PULL

CROSS BOW

95

HOLIDAY SAVINGS
1979 FORD F-250 EXPLORER .................. i5295

CVA HAWKEN

1979 FORD F-100 'EXPLORER .................. '3995

50 CALIBER
BLACK POWDER

Auto., PB, PS.

1974 FORD F-100 ................................:... '895

Auto., PS.

1976 FORD LTD ..................................... '1795

RIFLE

2 dr., HT, auto., PB, l'S, air.

1975 DODGE VAN ..................................... '895

Stand., PS, AM-FM.

1978 AMC GREMLIN ............................... '1795 ·

2 dr., auto., PS, 4 cyl.

1974 FORD MAVERICK ................. ~ ..........• '795

4 dr., auto., runs

~ - ~·179

aood.

95

..

Authorized Bear..Archerv_ Servke...Ceo!er
..1.

l n County Spmt Shop
•
,·

'r/'·

our

Nebraska
center
named top
lineman

4 sp., 4 wheel drive, PB, PS, good condition.

DOONESBURY

.. ''

could not be r('('hf'd for comment.: :
Earlier, management officials
romplainl'd thut Ca rv ey had reneged on a promise to sign a
sr para tP doc·umrnt agreeing to
drup unfair l"bor charges aga insl
the leilgu&lt;' and a legal suit
&lt;"hallengi ng the validit y of the
standard playf•r contract. Thfi
stipulatioo agrr•em&lt;'nl also calls fo~

l
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675·2988

~------~------------~
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�Sentinel

friday, December

Eagles seek revenge Sunday
DAVE GOLDitERG
M" Sports WriW
The Philadelphia Eagl~. vlrtual lv out of the Nationa l Football
Confel'l'ftCe ploy.,{! ...e. wiU be
looking for t't'v~e Saturday wheol
t~ey visit the tea m that started thl&gt;lr
downfall - the New Yorlt Giants.
lllP EaP-s. 1-4 ttJis year. wPre 9-2
last sea!lllft whm the Gluts beat
tllPm ~Ill. admlnistering a physical bPatil'lll fn:l'll whirtl the Ellgft
haven't r.&lt;'OVered . They an- 2-t
since. iacludlng iiAOIIIPr lo8l; ID fliP
Giants In ttM&gt; pUyoUs.
In the &lt;lfl)er Saturday garrw. till&gt;
San DteMo Chargers are at San
l"ranclsco.
Tht' ga- betwepn the Chw'Jiers,
:1-2 and t1w 4!lers. 2-3 will inriOO. a
pPt'SOna l dYeI ~een San Francisco's Joe Montana and San [)k&gt;go's

Dan Fouts. Montana . without a
rurming attack, wUI be seeklng his
fifth straight :IDyard passing
game. which would break a rerord
he shares wi th Fouts.
In Sullday galllf'S. Pitt~
tf-11 is at Buffalo iJ-21; Wililllngtt!fl
t4 -li at St. Louis t3-21; Mli&gt;mli4-11
at New England 12-:11 ; tiM&gt; ~
Angeles Rlliders t4-II at KanMs
Cll:\' tl -~1; Tampa Bay 12-31 at the
N""' York Jet s 1~ - 11 ; No!w Orleans
t:l-2 1a1 Atlanta (J-21; CltlcaRO 12-31
al Seattle 12-31; Denver II-II at till'
I.Aii Angeles fW ms 1141 ; £:leo!roll
12-31 al Green Bay 14-IJ ; Cl~alld
12-.11 at ClnciMitti 14-11 , alii!
Eliltunore i 0-51 at Minnesota il-31.
The Dallas Cowboy• 14-11 are at
Houston t1-4 i 011 MO!Iday ni(llt .
The Giants, 2-3. have WOft fllt:&gt;ir
last two galll('S and at'f' tledw!Thflve

Scoreboard ...
Hockey

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"SHOES" - Atlanta Falcons' wide receiver and
punt return person Billy "Whiteshores" Johnson
quips with teammates as he huddles up as the

.Julio Franco. outfielder George
Vu ko,·ich. ca tcher .Jerry Willard
and pitchl'l' Jay Batler lor outfielder
Von Haves.
Ear lier Thursday, Clevela nd
Manager M ike Ferraro said the
Phillies had a 40-p&lt;'rcent chance of
prying Ha)·es loost' from 1he
Indians.
"They'd have to O\ ' l' t w h~ lm us."
st.ud F0rraro.
The PhilliPs obt ained lhe lcft ha nd('(l fXl\\'C'r hlltC'r thC'V feel w ill

balance their a!lack.
Then . the Yankt'es ca me along
wi th another deaL T hey sent
outli&lt;'lder Dave Collins. rig ht handro pitcher M ike Morgan. first
basPman Fred McGriff and an
unannouncro amount of cash to
Toronto lor righl -handed reliever
Dale Murray and outfielderca tr herTom Dodd.

tradition of its own having won 26
games last season to ra nk first in
the state and sixt h in the count ry.
Rio is 6-4 this year.
The Redmen are expected to
start a front line of 6-7 Don Curry,
6-8 Bob Shaw. and 6-3 John Maisch
and a backcour1 of 5-8 Jerry
Mowerv and 6-0 Rick Penrod.
Fairmont will counter with 6-8
Alphonzo Holland, 6-5 Tim Murphy,
and 6-3 E lvin Addison on the front
line and 5-9 Roben Taylor and 6-2
David Bell in the backcourt.
"We've progressed to this point
more than I had expee ted," Falcon
Coach Dave Cooper said . "Of our
top 10 players only two are
returnees and Murphy is the only
veteran that will rea lly see action.
"Our top player is Holland , who
could turn out to be a bue chip
college performer. He's an all-state
from Virginia that was reeruited by
some really quality programs. He
has as good a jump hook both left

WBC cuts title fights to 12 rounds
MF:XICO CITY ti\Pi - Ray
Mancini ca llro it a fare~- Larry·
Holmes sa id it was a good idea .
The World BoXI ng Council announcro Thursda\ thai it was
shortPning its titiP lights from 1.1
rounds to 12- dlPctivP in Januarv
- in hopes or prPVl'nting serious
injuries which occur morP oftrn in
la te rounds of such bouts. The WBC
also implemPntro a standing eightcount for lightPrs in trouhle
Mancini. the World Boxing Association lightweight champion. was
not happy wi th lh&lt;' WBC'sdecision.
Mancini's mo't n•r ent title defense
ended in thP ! ~lh rou nd . when he
knocked out Duk Koo Kim of South
Korea. who subsequently died of
head injuries suffered in the fight.
"It's a farce what the WBC did,"
said Mancini. who was In Washing-

ton " It is a big injustice what the
WBC did by limiting the number of
rounds. What the WBC didindica tes
that vou can only get hurt in the 14th
or l oth round . I do wa nt to unite the
title 1Alexis Arguello holds the WBC
lightweight crown I but I want to
light 15 rounds. I hOJX' theWBAdoes
not give in ."
Mancini understood why the
WBC made the change.
"What happened 110 Kim I was a
tr·ag!'dy," he sa id. "But the WBA
and WBC must stick by their guns
and say, 'We're trying to make
boxing as fair andassafeas we can.'
"Boxing has taken a black eye by
all the potshots It has received from
everybody. The WBC has given In to
the public and critics who have
ca lled boxing barbaric."

Falcons workout lor their Sunday date with the New
Orleans Saints in Atlanta. "Shoes" as he i.s called by
his leUow players i.s one of the l ew NFL players who
work with glasses on. (AP Laserphoto).

Ther'f' Wflrf' two morr

minor

moves as Cleveland gave the
Phillics shortstop Larry Milbourn&lt;'
lor a ploycr to be named later. and
the Seattle Mariners traded young
right -handed pi tcher Rich Bord i to
the Chicago Cubs for ou tfielder
Steve Henderson.
A couple more trades seemed
possible in the final day.
The Los Angeles Dodgers r~port ­
ro ly were ready to part wi th veteran
pi tcher Burl Hooton and a pair of
minor leaguers for Texas catchPr
.Jim Su ndberg.
But both Hooton and Sundberg
haw to approve the move since
they're both 10-yea r major leaguers
\vilh at least five years on their
present teams.
· Philadelphia may not be through,
either. The Phillies still wa nt a
relirvPr. and he could be AI Holland

"Your' Deater on the River"

PHONE: "2-..14
·tu ti E. Main St. Pomeroy, Oh.
OPEN:
Mon. thru Fri. 8 to 9
-; MIIrday 9 to 5

and righthanded as any kid I've
seen."
Cooper also classified Addison as
a player "who can rea lly light it up
and make things happen." He was
one or the premier shooting guards
in Mary land last year.
Aft er SaturdaJ night's game, the
Redmen· ~ill lj&gt; idle until Dec. 5
when the_\1\bstlthomas More 1Ky.)
College at the Paul Lyne Physical
Educa tion Center.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp;SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy. OH .
Phone 992-2975
FALL &amp; WINTER HOURS
CLOSED MONDAY
TUES . thru FRI. 9 to 5
SAT. 9 to 1

~THE

GRAVELY
SVSTEIVI

of the San Francisco Giants. The
deal could be pitcher John Denny
and a minor leaguer for Holland and
seeond basem an Joe Morgan.
And the Ya nkees intimated they
still were wheeling and dealing.
With Kemp in the fold, the main
free agents still unsigned were
pitcher Floyd Bannister, formerly
of Sea ttle; Steve GaiVey, the
ex-Dodgers' first baseman, and
Pi ll sb urg h outfielder Omar
Mnrcno.
Bannister's agent , Tom Reich,
sa id the pitcherwoulddeeldeduring
a meeting with him in Los Angeles
this weekend. Reich also guides
Moreno, ar d said he would resolve
that situation in 24 hours.

t USPS 14~9601

A Dlvhdon of Multlm~bl. lor.
Published t'Vl'r )' aftt•rnunn , Monday lhruu.: h
Fnd&lt;1y, Ill Cuurl Slrt•d, by the Ohw Vallt·y
Pu bhshlllJ.: Company · MullnncU1&lt;1 , )Ol',
Pumcruy, Ohiu 45769, 992·2 156 Scl'Unt.i dass
pnslaJ.!C pauJ at PoJJlt'roy. Oh10.
Mcmbl.·t Thl.· AS.'illt.'l&lt;lll'tJ Prt.•ss, Jnlaod Dal ly Press Assocl&lt;il\un ant.l t~ Amerll'HO
Nt•wspapcr Publishers Assot·Jatum, Nutiona l
Ath'ertiSIIll-! Rt•prcst•ntah vc, Bra nha m
Nt·wspapcr Sales, 733 Thm.l Avcnut•, New
York . New York 10017
POSTMASTE R Sent.! &lt;~ddn-ss lo The Da1ly
Scnt•m·l, ill Court Sl , Pomeroy, Oh1045769

$1 00
$4 40
$52 .80

.

PRtCF.S

15 Ccnl'i
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tu pay tht• t'Hrncr
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Uasts. CrL'tJit

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S.·ntllll'i un ,, :J. 6 ur 12 rnnnth

WTII IJl' l! l \l' ll('(UIIt'll'Cil ' hiiiHIIIh

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MAII.SURSCR IPTIONS
lnsidt'Hhln
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114.04
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Mary Shrine

Friday at Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Ceremonial will be held
followed by a Christmas dinner
for mem bers and theri families.
The shrine will furnish the meat
and rolls. Those attending are to
take a covcf('(l dish and a $.1 gift
for the exchange
SYRACUSE -Third Wednesday Syracuse Homemakers
Club will meet Friday for a
Christmas par ty at Syracuse
Presbvterian Church annex, 6
p.m . Membersaretotakealood
dish and a $2 gilt lor exchange.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Coon Hunters will meet Friday
at 7 p.m. There will be election of
officers and dues will be collected. Refreshments will be
served.

PO M EROY
Willin g
Workers Class of the E nterprise
United Methodist Church will
meet Friday at 7: 30p.m. at the
home of Marjorie Bowen. There
will be a g!It exchange.

SATIJRDAY
POMEROY Middlepor1Pomeroy Area Branch of the
American Associa tion of University Women will have a Christmas luncheon at 11 a.m. Saturday at Meigs Inn.
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY
Area Branch, A&lt;\UW, Christmas luncheon, Meigs Inn, 11
a.m. Saturday.

tuwns

ISCIV&lt;I IIabk

J:!Wt•c•k!&lt;i
2fi Wt •c•k:;

POMEROY -

37, Order of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem. will meet at 8 p.m.

POMEROY - Star Grange,
annual Christmas supper Friday, 7:30 p.m. at the grange haiL
Covered dish dinner with visit
from Santa. $3 gift exchange.

The D ai ly Se ntinel

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MIDDLEPORT Chester
Fin&gt; Department Christmas
party, 5:30 p.m. Sunday . at
sta tion; members and all those
who helped with county fair
stand invited; members to take
covered dish.
RlJ11.ANI) - Skating will be
held at Rutland Civic Center

MIDDLEPORT United
Presbyterian Men of Meigs
County meeting for breakfast,
devotions &lt;:nd discussion at 7
a.m. Sunday at Middleport
Presbyterian Church.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Genealogical Society, Sunday, 2
p .m . at M eigs Museum .
Members to share experiences
of something discovered during
research. Also to take a dozen
cookies. Christmas punch will
be provided.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Annual Christmas dinner, Orange
VolurJeer Firemen, Ladles Auxlllary, and Tuppers Plains EMS,
4:30 Sunday at the fire house.
Santa to be ther e. M embers to
take covered dish and own table
service.
RUTLAND Civic
Skating, 2 to 4 p.m.

I. MEN'S

139

Answer, Hang Up and
From the Handset Willhout(
Trailing , Tangling Cords

BAILEY'S SHOES
MIDDLEPORT. OH.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Genealogical Society will meet
Sunday at 2 p.m. a~fhe museum.
Everyone to share "89 experience or somett$Jg unusual
di scus sed during research.
Bring one dozen cookies lor
social hour. Christmas punch
will be provided. Everyone
welcome.

MONDAY
POMEROY -ImageSeekers
Camera Club, 7: 30 p.m. Monday, Meigs Museum.
ATHENS - M eigs County
VIetnam veterans are Invited to
attend meeting of Athens Area
VIetnam Veterans of America
at 7 p.m. Monday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. buUding, 100 S. May
St. , Athens.

• Vivid Color Graphics
I. Dramatic Sound Effects

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Base rests on fl at sur"
face or fits over standard modular 1ack tor
wall mounting. FCC
registered. 1143"268

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more memory, pnnter or
Joys11cks tor greater fun
w1Ih games 1126-3004
TV and Program Pak no1 1nctuded

Center,

SUNDAY

Reg. 399.95

dial, mute_but"

Never
Misses a
Call!

15995
Remote control lets you call from any
phone to hear messages. Records up
to 120 calls. Built-in mike. 1143-247

Tap Ihe button-a voice tells
I he time followed by "a.m." or
"p.m." Or set it to announce
on the hour. 1163--902

Square root, percent and
stgn-change keys Auto
power-off. Wtth batterres .
btllfold case 1165-683

_......,.__.,

By Tandy"'

Cut
1995 330/o
Reg. 29 .95

Computerized gridiron action! LED
" players" run, pass and kick for four
quarters of fun . Normal and Pro
speeds. Action sound. 1160-2156

TV SCOREBOARD"' by Radro Shack

2995
Off

25°/o

Reg. 39.95

Aim the "45" light beam p1 stol
for Skeet or Target. Play Tenn is,
Squash, Hockey or Praclrce
Attaches easily to any TV.

1160-3061

Novelty Radios Make Unique Gifts!
By Realistic®

Soft, furry "animals" make greal compan1ons tor
youngsters. Auto buffs will really go for the '3 1
~---_... Rolls replica. Exterior controls make 'em easy Io
Batteries extra

399,02995
Low-Priced Gifts tor
Stuffing Stockings!

Raccoon. 1112-971 ... _
White Terrier. 1112-9n
Country Mouse. 1112"975
Rolls Royce Replica. Reg. 19.95.

#12"963 - - - - - - - - - . - - - . - .
Chow Dog. 1112"986 ....... .

12.95
13 .95
13.95
13.95
14.95

__ Sale 14.95

- .. -. 15.95

Holiday Bug. Special Purchase.

#60-2381 . ' .... - ...... ..... 3.99
Space Pistol. 1160-2369 __ . _... 4.95

::::~k. -~~i~l. ~~~chase_. ... 5.95
FM Mlcropho11e. #60-21 09 .... 6.95
Pocket Repeat. Reg. 10.95.

#60-2152 .. ........ . ... Sale 7.95
Monkey See Calculator. Special
Purchase. #60-1013 . ~ .... " . .. 7.95
Save our RC, .
RC-100, Nehi, Up- ·
per 10, Diet Rite,
Dad's Rilot Beer·
and
Decaffeinated RC boHte
,caps for charity.

992-3629

LMnbOrghlnl Racer. 1100-2377 .. 7.99

-

'

..

Rreman'a Helmet. f60.3005 ... 7.99
CosmiC 1000 R,..Awar,. Reg. 39.95.
feG-2165 .. ........... Sale 29.95

SUGAR .RUN.FLOUR MIL~

_,

110 MUI~ AVE.

'

..
;

r

---

Corvette Racer. 11~3082
Mustang. 1160-3078 .. __ _
Combat Tank. #60-3009 ..
Umborghlnl Racer. il6(h'3()43 . _
Corvette Stingray. #60-3079 . ___ 39.95
Toyota Land Cruiser. #60-3081 .. 59.95
Porsche 935 Turbo. ~ ___ 69.95
Banerlea extra
Atl opefltte on 27 MHz, except 160-3076, 49 MHz

-i~

W

$1Q95 i·.

16K Color Computer by Radio Shack

use,

MEIGS INN
St

I

Mrs. Guy (Ruby) Hysell of
Hysell Run Road is a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
Pleasant, W. Va. Cards m a.v b&lt;'
sent to room 211.

W

$995 W

WLADIES'

Cuddly Cat. 1112"983 ...
Pekingese. #12-967 __ . __ __ . . _____

GUITAR· AND VOCAL .

Main

II

WESTERN
SHIRTS

29995

95

. DOG FOOD HEADQUARTERS

FLOYD FANSEE 8-12
126

I

Saves100

Up to so-Foot Range Use It Indoors or Out

CHESTER - Chester Fire
Department will hold a Christmas party Dec. 12, at 5:30 p.. at
the fire house for members and
those who worked at the fair.
Members are to bring a covered
dish.

Choice of
6 oz. Prime Rib
or White Fish
Potato Boat
Vegetable
Frosty Mandarin (I(
Dessert
Salad Bar
Roll
Plus Non-Alcoholic Beverage

~

r•fjljllll!!lolli:lrB:IIIE&lt;::ll&lt;¥-!lllll

AM Radios Built Into
Unusual Packages

THIS SATURDAY NIGHT
AT THE MEIGS INN

_1_./J/}__,.;,

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

Hospitalized

TRS~O"'

from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday. Those
att ending are to take their own
skates.

NOW BOOKING RESERVATIONS FOR
HOLIDAY DINNERS AND PARTIES
APPEARING WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY
THRU THE HOLIDAYS

OLDS.CAD.-CHEVY, Inc.

open rccept ion hour-, or noon to 4
p.m.

Exciting, Educational Color Computer

Only S795 Pius Tax

SIMMONS

Rev. and Mrs. O.G. McKinney
will celebrate their 60th wroding
anniversary Sunday at the Senior
Citizens Center. Friends and rcla lives are Invited to call during the

InC Minor" by Rachmaninotf. Th'ls also the first time any Meigs
resident has placed that high in
National Grange talent events.
Ashley, who was third runner-6p
ln the national talent competition in
1976, Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert D. Ashley, Letart Falls, and
is business education teacher at
Gallia Academy High SchooL He
belongs to Racine Grange and
Silvenon Grange at Ravenswood,
W.V a. The elder Mr. and Mrs.
Ashley are members of the Racine
Grange. Ashley has been an active
grange member for 17 years.

Calendar

5

IAnniversary celebration Sunday~ /

116th annual session of National Grange held at Providence, R.I.

Rio Grande battles Fairmont State quintet
RIO GRAN DE - Two teams
with rich basketball traditions will
compete on the hardwoods Satur&lt;by when national powerhouse
Fairmont State hosts Rio Grande
College In a 7:30 p.m. nonconference contest at the Feaster
Center .
The Fighting Falcons ha''-'
claimed 11 of the past 13 West
VIrginia Intercollegiate Athletic
Cooference · titles and the same
number of NAJA District 28
cbamplonshlps. During the past 19
years they have won 20 or more
19mes 18 times.
"Fairmont will probably be our
~rnes t test to this point," Rio
Grande head coach John Lawhorn
said. "THey are a young team this
~ar. but like every other Fal1111ont
aqulld IR recent years they have a
kit of talent. They have the potential
to be a very good squad ."
The Falcons will come Into the
contest with a ;;.o mark.
Rio Grande has a basketball

Page

WINNER - Keith Ashley, Pomeroy, holds a banner he designed and

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The Phillies pu t together a 5-for-1
deal with the Clevl'land Indians
that. in addition to Trillo. included
highly regarded rook ie shortstop

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HONOLULU tAP! Major
league baseball teams started th~
final day of their annual winter
meetings headed for a re&lt;'Ord low in
tra d~s. despite a flurry of acti vity
that saw Philadelphia trade away
M anny Trillo and the New York
Yankees sign free agent SteV&lt;'
KPmp.
A tot al or II trades were made
during the 1979 meetings in Toronto
This yea r. though, only livr dea ls
had been made through T hursday
The day's acti vity began when t hl'
Yankees announced the signing of
Kemp to a reported $5.5-million.
plus incentivl's. contract. That
mow triggered the few tradl's that

Th e Daily Sentinel

made. The grange banner took first place in the national competition at the

Major League teams end meetings today

I'•

H h t-.M~n

Middleport, Ohio

Keith Ashley, Crew Road, Pomeroy, scored twice with national
wins at the 116th annual session of
the National Grange held at
Providence. R.I.
This marks the first time national awards have come to Meigs
County . Ashley won first place In
the adult banner category having
designed and created a banner
which won state honors In order to
qualify for national competition.
Ashley, who flew to the national
event, was first runner-up In the
talent com petition on the national
level with his plano solo, "Prelude

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Pomeroy

Meigs resfdent scores twice at national grange event

other teams In the rare lor an NFC
playoff spot. The Eagles. in the
Super Bowl twp 'years ago. arc 0-3
Iince the strike ended" After their
23-20 loss to St. Louis last week.
owner Leonard Tose sto1111ed into
tile locker room and suggested the
lieam vote to go back on strike.
The major problem is the Eagle
crfense. last in th&lt;' NFC and last
against the 111sh. " I think all we
rpa lly need is a win," says Vermei L
To exploit that defense, The
Giants will depend on the backfield
landem of rookie Butch Woo!Iolk
and newl)•-signed Rob CaJlX'nter.
who rushro lor 161 yards in the
pla)•o!f game against the Eagles
last year. Woo!Iolk rushed for 62
yards last Sunday and caught six
passes for 102 yards, including a
spinning one-hand~r for the 40-yard
touchdown that beat Houston 17-14.
Bill Ring will replace Ea rl Cooper
at fullback for the 49ers, who have
the odd distinction of leading the
NFC in total offense with a ru shing
attack that's dead last - of their
1.864 total ya rds. only 329 are on th~
ground.
" We're missing the big plays
running the ball," says Coach Bill
Walsh.
San Diego, second in the AFC in
offense, is also pass-oriented. although Chuck Muncie and James
Brooks ma k~ their att ack better
balanced. Fouts has thrown for l.427
yards in live games.

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S.tn

10, 1982

�- · ·--. . . .

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

--~--- -~-

. --·--- -------

-

..

Friday, December 10, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

friday, December 10, 1982

~

Hospitalized kids
receive gifts

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested B~inesses Listed On This Page.

from Veterans

(;IVI:-.1(;, TilE TRl 'E SPIRIT OF ('IIRIS'nli\S - Instead of
t•xdtangin~ gifts, mt•mbers of the Veterans i\1f•rnorial Hospital
Auxiliary t'ac h brought a gill for a h.-pitalizc d &lt;"hild 1o the annual

fhristm&lt;L"' party. Pictured hen· pladng- the toys amund the tree are
Eula .lpfft•rs and .Juanita ~orman. \ oluntt~ers.

with Ethel Grueser and Margaret
Parsons winning the prizes. "We
Care" pins were given as favors to
the m embers.
Attending w ere Kathryn
M etzger, Jessie White, Betty Christopherson, Irene Christy, Nettle
hayes, Mary Rumfleld, Juanita A.
Norman, Bertha parker, Nellis
Borgan, Mildred Withee, Ethel
Grueser, Eva Hartley, Katy Anthony, Carrie Kennedy , Jestie
Molden, Mae Weber, Margaret
Parsons, Clara Burris, Mildred
Fry, Janice Daniel s, L ouise
Bearhs, and Llnnle Crary.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
-~.
We F1ll Doctors'
ru

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO
~
--.

Complele

Automotive
· ..
Service
Locust &amp; Beech Street

Memorial group
Gifts for hospitalized children
were brought by members of
Veterans Memorial Hospital AuxilIary In lieu of the traditional gift
exchange to the annual Christmas
party held Tuesday night at the
hospital.
Special guest at the dinner was
Scot1 Lucas, administrator, who
was presented with a gift. Jessie
White read "New Year Resolutions" and "Footprints, " and the
group enjoyed a carol sing. Bertha
Parker sang "Santa Claus," a song
she learned and sang more than 75
years ago. There was a word game

Uniled MNhodisl Women of
Apple Grove Church recently
hosled a holiday dinner party for
I heir families .
Grace was given by Rev . .James
('lark wi th lhe program following
l he dinner being pt'I'S!'nted by
Bernice Roush and Da llas Hill. Jan
Norris was pianist .
Rev. Clark gave lhe call 10
worship followed by a pot'm. "I Am
Thankful" by Donna Hill. Scriplure
readings on lhc word "Blessings"
were given by .)()(' and Carole
McClure. E il('('n Buck, Herschel
Norris. Herber! Roush. Bess Pa r sons, Mary Roush and Chr isty
Roush.
Tracy Norris. 1\manda RusS!'II.
Michael Russell gave a reading.
and Dolly Wolfe had a pot'm. "Visil
a Nursing Home."
Rev Clark sa ng "We Arc lhe
Church", accom pa nied on lhe
gu ilar bv Tracy Norris. Ama nda
RusS&lt;'II, Angela McClure, Michael
Russell. Jenny and Kim Roush sang
" Happy", and others giving readings were E ileen Buck, "A Thankiul
Heart" , Roger Roush, "Thanksgiving Recipe " The hymn. "Counl
Your Blessings" was sung lo close
the progra m .
All ending were Mr. and Mrs .}()('

10-year-old countian
dances jn (Nutcracker'
Y ()~H

h.1m.

lU vrar-o ld
d,ltlghl cr of ~Jrk and Nancy
Yoacham, Racine, will dance lhc
pari of lhc lead angel in " Th e
1
:'\ utcrac Y.er.," a joint production of
West Virginia Dance Theal r&lt;·.
Kallel Metropolitan ,of Columbus
and Charlestvn, W.Va., Symphony.
Performances V(ill be at Charlcslon Municipal Auditorium at 8 p.m
l hiS Saiurday and al .1 p.m on
Sunday
Mayla, a fourth grader al Ra1 1nr•

i\ Chrislmas workshop for vete·
rans was held Su nd a~· al lhe homeof
Mrs. Harry Davis by lhe juniors of
America n Legion Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39. Pomeroy.
The girls pl'l'pared crossword
puzzle books. Christmas slockings
and folders w ilh new dollar bills for
each oflhe 13velerans allheA thens
Mental Healih Center. along w ilh
lhe 16 velerans a1 lhe Arcad ia
Nursing Home, whel'l' tray favors
with candy canes were also
prepared for each one thel'l'.
The juniors also prepared HXl
Christmas slockings containing
candv canes for the Chillicot he

t·.lcmenlary School, has been dancmg for four years. Her flrsl lhree
~·t·ars were wi lh Shirley Carpenter
here in Meigs Counly and she was a
member of Ca f1Jenler's dance
1roup&lt;· Thi s y ear, Mayla Is a
Sl udcnl w uh 1he Marsha Mci ntyre
School of Dance in Ravenswood.
" I Pnjoy m y dancing and I'm
Jookmg forward lo laking part In
"The Nu1cracker ... It rea lly should
ix' a fun experience," Mayla
commented

m eigs Countians wno would like
to help provide Christmas remembrances for the 25 residents of the
county who are confined to the
Athens M ental Health Center have
until noon Monday to do so.
Those wishing to give may take
their gifts to the Davls-Qulckel
Insurance Agency, 114 Court St.,
Pomeroy, where a box has been
placed for the Items. Gifts are to be
unwrapped although those wishing
to do m ay also leave gift paper and

rown's Fire &amp; Safety

tqilipment

Serv1ce

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
ot Columbus, 0.

804 w. Main
992· 2318 Pomeroy

Mill Work·
Cabinet Making

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

K .C. Arnott entertained his
friends and family recently with a
halloween party held at the home of
John and Darlene Amott.
Gam es were played and r efreshm ents served to Jason Powell, Jeff
Allen, Stacey Shank, Eddie Patterson, Mark Brown, Joey Roush, Leroy Barton, John Chaney, Lesley
Carr, Jamie Patterson, and his sisters, Erica Arnott and Heather
Hussell.

Richard H. Billman 11, 0.0.
113 Court Street

PomerOJ, Ohio 45769
PH. 992·2920
VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD &amp; SOFT CONTACT
LENSES
Insurance and Medial
Cirds Attltlled

CHRI

BRADFORD'S
Fresh Cut Trees Available, or Cut Your Own.
PREPARE FOR SUNDAY PERFORMANCE- Rick
· aeated
at the plano, leads members of the coriummlty choNJ throop practice for
the Sunday production of "The Messiah" ·to be held In the Flne and
Performltlg Arts Center at Rio Grande College and Commwdty CoDe,e.
From left are KeDI Kemper, Beth Bechtel, Mitzi Dean and John Ecker• •

·,

Helping preparP the holiday
rem embrances were Loretta Tlqmeycr. Sherry Fox, Robin Campbell. Erica McClintock, Laney and
Am ber Hankla, Betty Mankins. and
Jpnnifer Mankins.
Monday thPjuniors will m eet with
Mrs. Mary Martin at the hall 6: ll
p.m . to wrapChrislmas gifts fort he
Meigs County residents at the
AI hens Mental Health C.mter contributed by local Individuals and
orga niza tions.
i\t thai time th&lt;'Y will also wrap
thP gifts for the veterans prepared
at the workshop along with gifts for
" adopted" Individuals remembered througt1out lhe year by the
juniors.

'Cinderella Tot' announced
Jill Pickens, four-year-old daughter of Terry and Tammy Pickens,
Zanesville. was crowned Southeastern Ohio Cinderella Tot at Cinderella Girl Pageant held recently In
Zanesville.
She Is the granddaughter of Mr.
and M rs. Thomas Schoonover.
Rutland. and Larry Pickens,
Po m eroy, a nd th e great granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Richard Wilt and Mr. and M rs. S.G.
Pickens, all of Pomeroy, and
Bonnie Miller, Middleport.
Contestants were judged on
personality, party dress, and
sportswear modeling, on stage and
off-stage Interview, talent and
photogenic. She was selected on
scoring the highest number of
points In her age division, and now
advances to the state pageant In
July.
The Cinderella Girl Pageant Is
the largest scholarship pageant of
Its kind In the world. Over $500,!XXl
In scholarships, educational toors,
and prizes have been awarded
since the pageant's Inception In
1976.

J ohn F. Fultz, Mgr .
Ph . 992· 2101

~~I '

l.ocat8d Ql1 Cheny Ridge
(Turn East at Darwin ontoRt. 881,go4mileetoMile
Post ~ 3, turn lOUth on Gravel Road, 1Yz miles to
grove.)

WATCH FOR SIGNS

TRINITY CHURCH, RPV W H . P&lt;'ITin,
pastor: [)(&gt;bble Buck. Sunda~· School supt .
Church School 9: 15 a.m : worship st'rvlcP
10 30 a .m . Choir IT'h('ar-....11, 'fu('sdav 7· 30
p m .. uOOer dlr'f'ctlon of Allt1' Nea.'i('.

POMEROY CHURCA OF THE NAZA

RENE. Corner Union and Mulberrv. RPv
Virgil Byrer. pastor. Glen McClung . ass t pas
tor. Clyde Henck&gt;rson. pas lor emeritus Sunday School, 9: ll a .m. C. len McClung, supt. .
rTVJt'llin~ worship 10: :1) a m ; evenln~ Sl'rvi('('
7 p~ . ; mid ·W('('k wrvkP, Wednesday, 7p m
GRACE EP!SOOPAL CHURCH - 33i E .
Main St .. Pomeroy Sunday services Holy
Commu nlonon 1h£&gt;first Sunda~of C'ach mont h.
and comtinl'd w tlh morning prayer on ttl:•
t hlrd Sunday. Morning prayer and sermon on
allot tv!r Su ndays oft tl:&gt;mont h. Church School
an d nu rsery care provided CoH('(&gt; OOur In 1t1'
Parl-th Ha ll lmmOOla lelv followln~ the'

r.RA HAM UN IT ED MET HOD IST.
Preaching 9: ll a.m .. first and S('('Ond Su n·
daysof ('ach month: rhlrdandrourthSundays
eaCh rmnth. worship S&lt;'rviC£'S at 7. :1) p.m
Wednl'Sday f'VPni~ s at 7 :ll p m . PravC'rand

Bible Study.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. Mu\IX'rrv
Hei~hts Road. PorTK'roy. Michael Plankowskl, pas tor: R ll a Whi!P, Sabbalh School
Supt . Sabbath School is at 2 p m. on Saturda.v
wtth worship Sf'IVic&lt;'S followin~ at 3: I~ p.m .
Rt.riLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH -·
S\st(&gt;r Harriett WamPr. Sup!. Sunday School.
9· :1) a.m.: mom in~ worship, 111: 45 a m
POMEROY FIRST BAPT IST . David
Mann . minlo;ter; Willia m SnouffPr, Sunday
School supt . Sunday School. 9: :1) a.m.: MornIn~ worship 10:.10 m .
FIRST SOUTHE RN BAPTIST, Pomeroy
P ike. David Hunt , pastor: Rog£'rTurner.Sunday School Supt&gt;rlnte ndenl. Sundav school,
9 :il a m .: morning worsh ip, tn :ll. evening
worship, 7:30p m . Mldw{"£'1 prayer m{"('tln~.
7·l&gt; p.m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH. Dexfer Rd., Langsv111f'. Rev. A A. Hught&gt;s, Pastor. Sunday School 10 a m Servicf'S on
TuPSCla,Y. Thursday a nd Sundav 7· .'ll p m
FA int TABERNACLE CHURCH. Ball&lt;'Y
Run Road. R£'\1 . E miTI£'11 Rawson. pastor
Handley Dunn. sup!. Sunday S&lt;'hool. to am
Sunday ('Venin~ servl('{&gt; 7 .10 p m .. BlbiP
reaching. 7. .'Vl p.m Thursdav
SYRACUSE MJS.&lt;;ION. Ch£'rry Sl . Syra C\l.S(&gt;. Services, 10 a.m . Sunday, Ev('ntng st•r·
vices, Sunday a nd Wf'dnesday, 7 p m .

Chriltmao

Holiday Seooon

Poln-.

Largo oeloction of
in Poll
and Hanging B.-a. Chriotmoo
Cactus.
Foliage P1on11 &amp;

v-.

Hanging BooltOII. C..clo arrange-

do« - -· and CUI
Chriottnu TIMI. Now Tllking Orden

11*111,

.... '

for G"""' Blonkata.
Open Daly 9 to 5

Sunday 1 to 5

PH. 992-5776

MIDDLEPRIJf CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

Ideal Ideas
• Acme Western Boots
• Minnetonka Moccasins
lor Men, Women, Children
1 Western Luther Belts &amp; Buckles
• Leather Gloves
• Dynalelt Western Hats &amp; Feathers
• Western Ties
1 Western Jewelry &amp; Gifts lor the Horseman
• Men's &amp; Women's Tooled Leather Billfolds
• Truckers Wallets
• Hand Tooted Purses
• Fringed Leather Coats
• Smooth Leather &amp; Suede Leather Vests
• Denim Lined Coats &amp; Vests
• Hunting Vests •
• Saddles, Saddle Pads, Blankets
• Halters, Bridles, Reins
• Tingley Boots, Lined Wellington Boots
• Work Gloves
• Allls·Chalmers T!IYS
• Aquariums-christmas Specials on all sires
e GUillll Pigs, Ham11tr1, Gerbils, Flsli
·
Fled, Cages, Books &amp; Supplies
'
• Dog &amp; Cat BICis, SwHters &amp; Caps, Toys &amp;
Christmas Stockints for Dog &amp; Cat

dirPCtor of

HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN,

••~ Wonlhlp 5erv1ce, 9 a. m :Church SChool, 10:30

· a.m.

MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN,

~ • Church SChool, 9 a.m .: Morning worship,
• • $.1:1. Bible Sludy Tuesday. 10 a.m.: Bible

MODERN· SUPPLY

.' •study, Thursday, 7: l:lp.m.
:. ' SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
·1'rERJAN Church. Church School, 10: 15a.m.:
mornlna worship, 11: l:l a.m.: Bible ShJdy.

Tuesday,

10 a.m.; JW1klr and S .'lllor HI~

YOUih (llo!ip, Sunday, 6 p.m.
Run.ANI:&gt; CHURCH OF GOD, Pastor,

HOURS: 10:00 TO DARK

Rev. OulUM' Sydemtrlcker
Rev. RlchiU'd Thorn&amp;"
ALFRED -ChurrhSchooi 9&lt;J l a m : Wor
ship. 11 am . UMYF. 6· 30 pm . UMW.
T Hird Tu(&gt;S(Jav. 7 :lOp m . Community fi rst
Sunday.
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m . Church
School lOa .m .. BlblPStudv. Thursdav. 7 p m
UMW. firs t Thursday. 1 p m .; Communion
first Sunday .
.JOPPA - Worship, 9 30 a m .. Church
School. 10: l) a m Bible Studv. W£'dnesday,
7:.1J p.m
LONG BOTl'OM - Church School. 9 .lO
a .m ; Worship, 7 p.m .. BiblE' Study. Wf'dnPS
day, 7· 30 p m . UMYF. wronesday. 6 p m .
Communion F irst Sunday .
REEDSVILLE - Churc h School. 9 :10
a m ; Worship 11 a m
SOtJI'H BETH EL - Churc h School. g
a m .. , Worshlp H) a m . Christia n E ndeavm.
Youth Fellowship. 4 p.m .; Bib!(' St udy, Wf'd·
nrsday, 7: :.1 p.m
TUPPERS PLA INS ST. PAUL -Church
School. 9a.m .. Worship. to a.m.: BiblE' Study,
Tuesday. 7· 30 p.m .. UMW. T hird Tuesdav .
7: :() p m : Communion first Sunday.

CENTRAL CWSTEK
IWv. Stanley W. Men1fleld
Rev. Rk hard Rothemkh
Rev. &amp;hert E. Ro~IWln
Rev. Robert Rider, ,Jr.
K£'V. Robert Mt-Gee
ASBURY ISyracust&gt;)- Worship, lOam ..
Chu rch School. 10 a m. Charge Bible Study.
Thursday, 7&lt;\0 p.m .;. UMW. first Tuesday.
7: :II p.m .. Choir R.£'h£'a rsal, Wedn&lt;'Sday, 6 45
p.m .: UMW. fourth Sunday. 6 .1) p.m .
ENTERPRISE- Worship 9 am: Church
Sc hool. 10 a. m .: Blbl&lt;' Study, Tuesdav. 7&lt;l0
p.m .: UMW. F1rst Mondav. 7· .10 p m .:
UMYF. Sunday, 6 p.m . Choir l'('hearsal. 6 .10
P m . Wednesday.
FLATWOODS- Church School. HI am ..
Wo rs hip, 1 a.m: Bibl&lt;' Study. Thursday. 7
p.m .. UMYF. Sund ay. 6 p.m
F'ORE!:li' RUN- Worship, 9a m ; Church
School. 10 a .m .. Choir Prac!IC'£', Tu('Sdav .
6: )) p.m .. UMW, first Tuesday. 7 lJ p.m .
HEATH 1M iddl£'por0 - Oturch School.
9: l) a m : Worship, 10. :lJ a m .. Bible Study.
TU{'Sdav. 10 a .m . UMW. Sf'('Ond Monday.
7: :1) p.ffi .; UMM , third Monday. 7:30p.m
MINERSV ILL E - Worship S(JV\c£', 10
a .m .; Church School. 11 a m : UMW. thlrrt
W£'dnC'Sdav. 1 p m. Choir pract iC'£'. Monda~·.
7 :1) p.m
PEARl. CHAPEL - Worship Ser.1('(', 10
a .m: Chu r&lt;'h School. 11 am .. UMW. S('('Ond
Tu£'Sday, 7 ?ll p.m .: UMYF last Tuesday,

7: .ll P m

School tO a m .
SOU'111ERN CLU~iTER
Rt'V. Jwn~ M. Clark
Rev. Mark W. Flynn

Rev. Florence Smith
G OVE Ch h Sch I 9
APPLE ,R
urc
oo .. a. m.:

.,

EAST LETART - Chureh &amp;.oool.·9 a.m.:
Worship. 10 a .m . ~second a nd fourth Sun·
days; UMW. first 1\tesday, 7::ll p.m .

LETART FALLS -

the Door' Jesu Sdtd He was'

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH .

Christ founded the Church'

Why not gather tht famtly together and head for your
plll&lt;:e of worship thrs weekl

Inc -Paul St , Ml~leport . R("\! O'Drll Manley, past&lt;r Sunday School. 9: ll a m .. Mon1·
lngwcrship 10:.11 a .m .: {"Vf'nlnJit wcrshlp. 7:.1)
p.m . Tuesday, 12.ll p.m Womm's pr..ayPr
meet lng; P r ayer and pralsf'servl('(', Wt'dncs·

The dec•s10n to seek the Door- that IS the KEY

da.v 7&lt;Jl p.m.
RU1l.ANDAPOSI'OI.ICCHURCHOF JE

P

SUS CHRIST. E lder Jam ~ Mlllfl' Blblf' 1
s tudy, Wcdn£'Sdav. 7:.llp.m. SundaySchrul.r
10 a m Sunda v nl gh l Sf'rviC'f'. 7 .l l p.m
,

C&lt;&gt;P1' "9n1 191!2 ~ " !'" .ld• e~•ll"&lt;&lt; s.,...,,
o llo• 11024 c~.. ...nn••r•e Y"Q"'•• 20'906

KENO CHURCH OF l li RJST. 01\vPr
Swain. Superlntend{'nt Sundav school 9:30
am f'V{'ry wf'e'k
HOBSON CHRI STIAN UN ION. William
Crabtrf'f' . pastor. Su nday School. 9· .10 am.
evPnln~ SPrvicP. 7· :(1 p m . Wed nesdav prayN
m('('l\ng. 7 :Wl p m
BEARWALLOW RIOCE CHURCH OF
CHRIST . Duafl(' WardPn. minis ter Bible
cla.-.s. 9· :¥1 am ; morning worship. 10:30
am .. PVPnlng wors hip, 6 30 p m . Wedn£&gt;Sday
Bible sludy. 6. :10 p.m
NEW ST IVEHSV ILLE COM MUNITY
CHUHC' H. Sundav School S("rvice, 9·45 am.
Worship 5&lt;'1'\'iC{', 10 l1 a .m ; Evang£'1\sllc
&amp;&gt;rvicP. 7· J:l p m . W£'dnesday; Prayer m£'f't ·
In~. 7 .10 p m ., Thursdav
ZION CHURCH OF CHR ISr. Pomeroy
Harrisonv UIP Rd .; Robert Purt£'11. mlnl-.ter.
S!£'V(' Stanl('y, Sunday school sup! Sunday
school. 9 :10 a m : worship sC'rvkf' 10: :l)a. m .
EvPnin~ worship Sunday. 7 p.m a nd WC'dn£'S·
dav . 7 p m.
ST .JOHN l.lJfHERAN CHURCH. P1n£'
Grov£' Th(• H(•v Wllllum Mlddleswarth. Paslor. Church Sf'rvlc{'S 9. :()a m Su nday School
to :ma m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHR IST. Paul
Prall, pastor Sundav school. 9· .'lla m .. Larry
Ha ynPs, S . S Supt ; mornln~ wm-ship. 10:30

a m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
RE'v. Thomas H ColllC'r, pa.o; tor. Martha
Wolff' . Cha irman of lhP Board of Chrlstlan
Lif£'. Sunda y School. 9. :I)a .m . mornln~wo r­
-.hlp. 10 30 · a m , Sunday r•vpmn~ worship.
7· :Jl p m Pravf'r mN'tln~. Wf'dn£'sdav. 7&lt;l0

pm .
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Don L Walker,
Pastor. Rober! Smll h. Sunda.v School sup! :
Sunda' School. !I lJ a .m .: mornln~ worship.
10.40 m.. Sunday ('V('n!ng worshi p, 7 30
p m , WPtlnesdav f'\'f'n ing Bib\£' studv. 7 30

a

pm
DANV ILLE WESLEYAN. R('v R 0
Brown, pastor Su ndav Sc hool. 9. :Jl a m ;
morning worship 10· 4~ a.m . vouth Sf'JVk£',
6· 45 p.m . Pvening worship. 7..10 p.m . prayer
a nd pra\Sf', Wf'dnesday, 7: :lJ p m
S ILV ER RUN FHEE BAPT!Sf. SIPve Llt llf'. Sundav school s upl Sundav school. 10
a.m .; mornlngwor shlp. ll am S unday evenIng worship. 7:.10 p.m . Praye r IT'I('('tlng and
Blbl£' !litudv. Thursday. 7. .llp m. youlhml'f't
lng Wednesday ar 7 p.m

CHRISTIAN

FELLOWSHIP CHURCH.

3R1 N 2nd Ave . Mlddlepot1 Sunday School.
10 a .m . Sunday a nd Wl'dnt•sday Ev('n\n~ &amp;&gt;r
VI('{'S 7 lJ p.m

LIBERTY CHRI STIAN CHURCH. 4 Lib!'rly Ave .. PomProv Sundav Sc hool lOam.
Wors h ip 7· .10 p.m Wf'di'K'sday S£'rvlc£'. 7 30

pm .
CHESI'ER CHURCH OF r.OD. Rev R. E
Robinson. pastor Sunday school. 9: :1) a m .;
worship service. 11 a .m. ; PVPnlng SPIViCP. 7
p.m .: youth S&lt;'l'vlce. Wf'dnesday. 7 p m
LANGSVILLE C HRI ~i1'1AN CHURCH. Ro
Jx&gt;r1 E. MusSPr, pas lor Sunda Y school. 9 30
a .m .: Paul MusSf'r, supt . morning worship,
10:30 a m .: Sunday evpn lnJit S&lt;'rvj('('. 7 p.m.
mld·Wrek SC'tviC'&lt;'. Wednesda ~· .! p m .

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE

~AZA ·

RENE - RPv. JamC'S B K\111£'. pastor ShPrm a n Cundltt. superintend('nt. Su ndav School.
9::11 a. m .: MomlnJit Worship 10 .l J am..
Evarijl:Piistlc servl(.'(', 6 p.m . PrayPr and
pral5e Wednesday. 7 p.m : vourh ffi ('('tlng. 7
p.m .

EDEN

UN IT ED BRETHREN

IN

CHRIST. E lck&gt;n R. Blak£'. pastor Sunday
School 10 a .m : Rotx&gt;rt RN'd. sup t. : Morn\~
S('rmon. 11 a .m : Sunday nig ht servlc£'S.
Cht1stla n Endeavor. 7· 30 p.m .; Son ~ S('rvict&gt;.
8 p.m .; Prtachln~. S::ll p.m . Mld-WN&gt;k
P rayer tnel"Ung, Wednl'Sday, 7 p.m .. Alvin
Reed. lay leader .

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN. Roger
Watson, pa.c;;tor: Crenson P ratt. Sunday
School sup! . Mornln ~worshlp, 9:30a.m.: Sun·
day school, 10:30 a.m.: evening servtce, 7:30
p.m .
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Rev. Tom Dooley:
Joe Sayre. Sunday School Supertntendent.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m .; evening worstup,
7:30 p.m . . Prayer m eeting, 7:.l) p m .
Wednesday.

TUPPERS

PLAINS CHU RCH OF

CHRI ST, Vincent C. WatPr'&gt;. Ill. mlnl'iter :
Herman Black. su perl nt('ndent. Sunday
School 9::ll a m : evening service. 7 p.m.;
Wedn£'Sday Bible School. 7 p.m

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE . Rl'v. Herbf:&gt;rt Grate. pastor Frank
Rifrk&gt;. supt Su nday School. 9 l) a .m Wors hip S('fVi(.'(', 11 a .m a nd 7.:KJ p.m . Prayt&gt;r
ml'f'Ung, Wednesday. 7 l) p.m

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURC H, Rev. Robt&gt;rt MU\Pr. pastor: Lloyd
Wrl~ht. OirPCtorof Christia n Educa tion. Sunday School. 9: :J) a m .; Morning Worship.
10·30 a .m. Choir Practk:&lt;', Sunday. 6:30
p.m . Even ing Worship. 7 .10 p.m Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7: l) p.m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST, Charles
Russe U.. Sr .. minister; Rick Macomber, supt.
Sunday school. 9 lJ a m . worship S&lt;'rvkE'.
10 :m am Bible Study. Tut'Sday, 7::xl p.m .

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LA ITER DAY SA INTS.
Portland-Racine Road. WIUiam Roush, pastor Linda Evans, c hurc h school ditl'Ctor
chu rc h school, 9· ,' l) a m . morning worship.
10 30 a m .. wronesday ('Vf'ning pray£'r S('rvi('('s, 7· ;}) p m
BETHL EHEM BAPTIST. R('v . Earl
Shuler. pastor. Worship servl('{', 9:.10 a .m
Sunday school. 10 .•lJ a .m . Blbl£' Study and
prayer S£'rvice T hursday. 7: :1) p.m

CARLETON CHURCH. Klngsbury Road.
JlmmiP Evans, pastor. Sunday school, 9:30
am. Ralph Carl. supPrintendt&gt;nt: Pve n\ ~
worship. 7:30 p.m . Prayer ml'&lt;'lln~. Wednesday, 7 lJ p.m .
LONG BOTIUM CHR rSTIAN. K£' n Kt&gt;lft&gt;r.
pastor. Walla('(&gt; Damewood. Sunday School
Supt Worship S£'rv1ce at 9 a .m Bibl£' School
10a.m

HYSELL RUN

HOLINESS CHURCH,

Rev. Thereon Du rham. pastor Sunday
School a t 9:30a. m .. Momln~ worship a l 10. .10
a m Thursday servlc£'S a t 7.:10 p m

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al Bald
Knob. located on County Road 31. Rev. Law·
r£'nc£' Glu£'Senca m p. pastor; Rev Rog£&gt; r WU\ford, a.&lt;tSistant pastor. P reaching servi('(&gt;S,
Sunday 7:ll p.m PrayPr mretlnJit Wedl'l£'S
day, 7·:11 p.m .; Garv C:rlffi th. leack&gt;r Ywth
groups Sunday £'Vf'ni n~. 6· 30 p m with
RogPr and Vlok'l Willford as leaders Com munion service fi rst Sunday f'ach month
WHITE'S CHAPEL. Coolvill{' RD. Rf'v .
Roy Deeter , pastor. Sunday school9: :I) a .m .;
wors hip service, 10: JO a m Bible study aOO
prayer S(&gt;rv\ce W£'d llf'sday, 7· :KJ p.m

POMEROY WP.;LEYAN HOUNf.SS Ha rrlsonvUif' Road Earl Fl£'1ds. pasllt
Hemv E bUn . Jr , Sund ay School Supt Sunda\
School 9 :JO a m . Momln~ Worship 11 a m .
Sunday ('VPnl ng Sf'rvi('(' . 7..11 p.m . Pr.lvPr
Mectln~. Thul'!\day. 7·.10p m.

SYRACUSE FIRST CHUHCH OF COD Not Pent('('Qsta\ R.Pv C'.rorw Oiler . pasta
Wor.;hl p S(&gt;rvn Su ndav. 9. .flam.; Su ndav
sc hool . 11 am . wa-shlp scrvl('('. 7 'fl p m
T hu rsday prayt'r fl"'{'f'tln~ . 7 :w p_m
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST CHURCH. R£'v Rotx'r1 sandf'rs.
pastor. Don Will. lay \ead('r. Locatt'd In
Texas Community off CR 82 . Sunda.v school.
9·;n a.m.: Momln~ worship servkt'. 10:45
a.m : ev£&gt;nl~ preachln~ S('rv\('(' st&gt;COnd and
fourt h Sundays, 7· )) p.m ; Chris tian E nck&gt;avor, rtrst and third Sundays, 7· :'ll p.m Wed
nesday prayer m{'('tln~ a nd Blbl&lt;' study. 7 ·~o
p.m .
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS. :n319 Sta tr Routf'
124 ~OnE' mile east of Rutlardl Su nda v Blblf'
lecture 9.30 a. m : Wat chtowl'r study. 10.20
am.: 'I'uE_&gt;sday, Bible study, 7·.'\0p m . Thursday. Throcratlc School. 7: :1) p m .. SC'rv!('('
Mt"f'tln~. 8· :Jl p.m

RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPT IST
CHURCH - Sal£'m St . Rutland Donald
Ka r r. Sr .. pastor: Bud St£&gt;'A.•art, supc'rlntrndrn t. Sunday School. lOa m , f'Vf'nln~ wors hip.
7:00p.m . Wedn&lt;'Sdav even ln~ wrvl('(', 7.:W

pm.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY Lo
ca ted onth£&gt; 0 J Whill'RoadoffhlghwavltiO
Sunday School lOa m. Su(X'rlntC'n&lt;k&gt;nt John
Lovf'day. F\rsl W('dn(&gt;sday night of month.
CPMA S('rvices. S('('()nd W£'dn(&gt;sdav WMB
fllE"('tlng, third through flfth you! h Sf'tV\c£'
George Croyle. pastor .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Grant
St.. Mlddl('port . SJJnday School. 10 am ;
momln~ worhsip, 11 am.: evening wors hip. 7
p.m w ednl'Sday evening Blbl£' study and
praver rrtE.'eting, 7 p m . AUUl a t£'d with Sou thern Baptist Conw ntlon

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRI ST State Route 124 a nd Count y Road .:l Mark
Se£'Vers. mlnlst£'r: Sunday School Supl .
StPve PlckPns. Sunday S&lt;'hool, 9 :'lJ a .m ..
momlnJit worship, 10: .10 a m . evpn\ng wors hip, 7 p m Wedn£'Sday worship, 7 p m

Grocer ies Genera l Merchrtnd tse
Rae m e 949 -7550

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE. Rev Lloyd 0 Grlmm. J r .. pas tor
Sunday School. 9. :vl a .m .; worship S('rviCC',
10:30 a .m ., young peoplp's serviC'f'. 6 p m
EvangellsUc S('rvk'e, 6· 30 p.m. WednPsday
serv\re, 7 p.m .

JUBILEE CHRIST IAN CHUR Cil Crf'('k Road Rt&gt;\' C .I Lt•mlPv. pa&lt;&gt;·
to t , John FPlluiT'. suJ)£'rintf'ndPn1 Church
S&lt;'hooL 9: :1) a m . momin~ worship , J():
a m . PV&lt;'nln~ sf'rvie£'. 7 p m . Bihlf' S !ud~·
Thursday. 7 p m ClasS('S for all ~f'S
NurS('ry provick'('l for worship Sf'I'VIrl's
ST PAUL LtJI'HERA N CHUHCH Corllf'r
of Sycamon' and S£&gt;rond Sis. PomProy . ' ['h{'
Rf'v William Mldd\PSwarlh , P.1stor S unda~·
Sc hool al 9· -G am a nd Chur c h Sl:•n·\cps \1
('.eo~£' s

:w

p.m

SACRED HEART. Ms~r Ant hom Clann,,
more. P h 992-51:68 Sa turdav f'V(•ning Ma ss,
7· )) p m, Sundav Mass , R a .m and lfl ,J m
Confe ssions om'-half hour bf'forf' Pal'h Ma s&lt;;
CCO Classes, 11 a m Sundav
Vl CTORY BAPT1~1' - 5'!) N 2nd S1 . Mid
dl£'port Ja !TleS F. K('('Sl'f' , ptt &lt;;tor Sunda\
momin~ worship, 10 .1 m . 1'\'l•ntng '&gt;4'1 '\ it'f', 7
p m . Wl"dnPsdav f'VI'nlng wors hip. i p m .
Vlsltatlon . Thursdav, ll :~1 p m
TRJNin' CHRISTIA N ASSF.M IU .Y. Cool
vtUe - G1lbet1 S p~• l)('f'L pa.., lor Sunda v
school. 9 :10 a .m . m o rmn~ ~·1'\' l&lt;'f'. II .1 m
Su ndav &lt;•wnlng st•t-viC'I', 7 'II p rn . m idwf'f'k
pravPi- S£'rvlre WPdn&lt;'sday. 7 ]() p m
MouNT ot.IVE COMMUNrrr r! ti 1IH 'Il ,
LaWf'{'OCC' Bus h. pastot. M.IX Fo\mf't . Sr Su
IX'rlntendf'nt Sunda~· School t~nd mornmJ.;
worship. 9 lJ am Sundav P \f• nln ~ "''1'\'kf'. 7
pm. Youth mf'PtlnJ.; and Bihl•• stud \ Wf'd
nrsdav. 7 p.m
UN ITED FA I'n1 CHURfl l - Routt&gt; 7 on
PomProv hvpass RPV Hohf'rt Smllh Sr . P·'"
tor; R£'v .Jamf'S Cundiff . ,,s.,ist,tn1 pas tOJ
&lt;;undav School. 9· JO am . morning worsh!IJ.
HI :m am. PVf'ni n~ worship 7 :10 IJ.m
Wompn 's Fellow'&gt;hlp,l'uf'Sda v&lt;;, Ula m \\'['(!
IX'sday nlgh1 prav£'1 Sf'rv\CC'. 7 'ICI p m
FAITH BAPfiST CHURC H. M.~ ~on mN•1
at Vniled SU"£'1 \'lorkcrs Umon Hall , Hailro.ld
Sttwl. Mason Morning wor-.hip 11 ·m .1m
Su nda v School 10 :JO a m i-:w•nmg Sf'n'if'f'. 7
p m Pray£'r m('f'flng Wf'dnt•sda \. 7 :10p m
Mldw('('k Blbll' S!udv . Thursd:l\ . 7 p m
F'OREST RU N BA I:YJ'IST - Hi •\ ;-.l\ II'
Bordf'n . pastor Corllf'hus nunch. "uPf•nn
tf'ndE'nt Sundav ...chool ~- :11..1 m . ....:'( ·nnd ..11KI
fourth Sundavs. wor'lh lp Sf'l'\ ll't' ill :l 'Ill p.m
MT MORIAH BAPTI ST - Founh .md
Main St&lt;&gt;. Middleport RPv Cal\ in Minnis
paslm Mrs Elv m Bum~ ; udm •r. '&gt; upt Su n·
day school 9 'll am . wors hip st'l'\1 t't•. 10 :1 ~)
am
BURLINGHAM SOUTHF. Rt-.; \~1\.PTI ST
CHURCH. Routf' 1. Shadt • P&lt;.~ s hH . Don
Black Affihat1'&lt;1 with Soulhf't n B.•ptl sl &lt;'On
wnt1on Sunda\ &lt;;Choo\. I .10 p m , Sund.tv
worship. 2· .10 p m ThUJ sda\ f'\'Pnmg Blblt•
study, 7 p m
PENTElOSTAL ASSF.MRI.Y R.t c lnl' .
Roulf' 124 Wilham lloback. pa&lt;&gt; tor Sunda\
school. 10 a m . Sundav f'Vf'mng '&gt;l ' l ,·kr• i
p m W£'dnesdav f'Vf'nm~ ~· tvlcP 7 p rn
CA RPF.NTER BAPTIST. Do n Cht•.tdli ·.
Supt Sundav School 9 .10 a m Murnmg \\'or
ship. 111· :Jl am Pravf&gt;r St•r·:lo·. ,Jltl '!'rtal t·
Sundav&lt;&gt;
MIDDLE?ORT PF:NTF:COSTAI.. Tlurd
Av(' . th£' R&lt;'\' Clark Bakf'l . pas tor C.trl No t
tln~ham . Sunda v School Supt. Sunda \ Sehhol
10 am - dasst's fm all agf's l·:vl'lllng ...,., ,.i
('(&gt;S. 6 p m
WPdnPSda v. Slmh. 7 ., , p m
Youth S(•rvi('('s, 7 10 p m Ftld , 1 ~
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. l:!X Mill St
Mlddl£&gt;port Pastor Is Bm th£&gt;1 dlW 'k Me P hi' !
son Sundav School at 10 a m Sl•rvwr-s Sundav Pvf'nmg at 7 p m and Wf'dm&gt;&lt;&gt;da \ a 1 i

pm
ANTIQU ITY BAPTIST, lh'\' J:,ul Shulf'r.
paslor Sunda~ sc hool (I :Ill a m . Churc- h Sf' I
viC'C', 7 p m. voulh mf'f't\ng . h p m Tuf•sc\:.~\
Blblf' Slud v. 7 p m
FUL L GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE:. l\!W) Ill
la nd Road . Pomf'ro.v Sf'nic1..., Tuf'scla v. Frl
dav a nd Su ndayf'Vf'nlnJ.;sal7 Upm Sundav
morning at 1() Ill am P.1s1m 11o ug \·a !Ill'!'

Sermonette

RU11..AND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Eu ·
gpi'K' Underwood. pastor. HPrb Elliott. Su nday school s upt. Su nday school. 9: 30 a m :
momlnJit worship and communion, 10 :lJ a.m .
RUTI...AND BIBLE METHODIST- Amos
IIIIIs. pastor: Fred Davis. sup!. Sunday
school. 9: :lla. m Morn !~ worship, 10· .10a.m .
Young people's S('rvice. Sunday, 6· 45 p m :
Sunday evening S('rv1ce, 7: .ll Wednesday Pvmlng prayer m ('('t\ng, 7: :1) p m WMPO Progra m , 7: 30 a.m each Sunday morning.

It's not coincidence that lhe solstice falls just tx&gt;fore Chrislmas.
It's a dark time. There Is somedayllghllo be sure, builesso! il. and il
darkens sooner ... and the air chills very quickly when lhe sun goes
down.
At this time of humanity's darkness ... all around us clouds of
perplexity, of fear. The occasions of inslghl and illumin a11on SP&lt;'m
brief . The light and warmth we need eludes us. How we long for and
grasp for whatever appears to promise them!

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Miller St..
Mason. W. Va . EugPllC' L Co~er . mlnlstt'r.
Sunday Blbk' Study. 10 a .m .: Worship 11 a m .
and 7 p.m . WedrK'Sday Bible Study, vocal
m usic. 7 p.m

MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding
Lane, Mason. W. Va. Rev. Ronnie B. Rose,
Pastor. Sunday School 9:45 a.m .; MorninJit
Worship 11 a.m. EvPnln~ Service 7·lJ p.m
Wednesday Wome n's Ministries 9 a. m .
(m('('tln~ a nd prayer!. Prayer and Bible

Sludy 7 p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF. CHRIST IN
CHRISTI N UNION, The Rev. William
Campbell ,.~astor. Sunday School. 9; J) a .m .;
J ames Hughes, supt .: evening service. 7::ll
p.m . Wednesday P\/e'nlng prayer meelln~.
7: 30 p.m . Youth prayer serviCP (&gt;ach

Tuesday.
FAIRVIEW BUlLE CHURCH, Lelan. W.

Worship, 9 a.m.;

Church School, 10 a .m

MORNING STAR- Worship, 9:l:l a.m .:
Church School. 10: l:l a.m .: Bible Sludy,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m .

It Is a season of dormancy ... of lhe dcparlurc of life's
;ustenance. It Is a time of sheltering, of wailing, of wondering whal is
really going to happen. It Is a season colored by umtx&gt;r and ocher and
earth's own grayness.
But there's a reason for waiting. There's a promise of l ife in lhe
dormancy. There Is an assurance of llghl and warmlh. even in lhr
midst of the cold darkness.
The messenger said ... Wait ... and see! Light is coming . ~· ou
are about to know real warmth.
The m essenger said .. . Don't be afraid. Don't be afraid! A liml'
of understanding Is about to dawn upon us ... a time of illumlnalion
for our shadows. A time of promise and rotor upon our grayness!
The promise Is God's own! God says " I am genuinely In charge
.. . I will never relinquish my oversight, my direction , or m y
resphslblllty .. . and the promises I have m ade are sl it! operabiP .. I
am still the leader, and you don't have to be."

MORSE CHAPEL - Church School, 9:30
a.m ,; Worship, 11 a. m .

PORTLAND - Church School. 7 p.m.;
Worship. 8 p.n\ .: UMYF, Wedneoday, 7:30

God Is God! the messenger announces. Amen! we answer. for
the darkness has been great. And tinsel doesn't give off light or heal.

p.m .

.... JN PRAISE OF OUR
L.ORD...JN CHURO-i lHJS YEAR

RACINE WESLEY AN - Church Sohool,
!oa.m. : Worship, II a.m.; UMW,IoorthMon·
day 7:00p.m.: Handmaidens oil he Lord, first
Wednes&lt;jay, 7 p.m.: Mm's Prayer 'lreaklasl,

Rev John EVans. Sunday school. 10 a. m .;

SUnday wonhlp, II a.m.: Children's church,
II a. m.; SWida)levenlngaervtce, 7 p.m .: Wed-

niOrnina worship, 10:45 a .m. (lirll and third

nesday evening young ladles auxiliary, 6p.m.
W~etday fatnlly worhslp. 7 p.m .

I

Rev. Seldon ,Johnson

Wednesday, 7 a. m.

1

·,

Rev. Rohert M cf'~ t·
A..ot.•"K!Iate Director

NOI!TliEAST CLUSTER

STIVERSVlLLE COMMUNITY BAP'l'lST

But useless •s the door wtthout a key

MEIGS
I :OOPEKATIVE PAK!SII
UNITED METilODIST CHUIICII

second Weodn£'Sday, 7:30p.m : UMW. SPCOOO
Thursdav. 1 p.m.
SALEM CENTER - Church School. 10
a .m ; WOI'Ship. 7 p.m
SNOWVILLE - Wors hip, 9 a m .; Church

: UNITEO PRESBYTERIAN MlNIS'ffiY .
•• OF MEIGS OOUNTY. Rov. Wanda J ohnson.

No contradKIIOil

FAITH FELLOWSHI P CRUSADE FOR
CHRI ST- St Rt 338. Anllqully Pastor. Rf'V
Frank.Jin Dickens Sunday momln~. 10 a m
Sunday ev('n\ng, 7· 30 p.m Thursda y £'V£'ning.
7l)p m
CHURCH. Pastor Rotx&gt;rt Bvers Sunday
School lO a m .: Worship S&lt;&gt;rvice 11 a m . Su n
day (&gt;Veni n~ S('I'V\C(', 7 :1) p.m . WOOnC'Sdav
&lt;'Vening S('rv\('(', 7: .ll p m.

hunger'l

Men say the Church •s

ContC'r As h and Plum. Leslie Hayman. pas
tor Sunday schooi!O a .m .: Morning Worship.
II am . Wt'dn&lt;'Sda\' and Salurday Evenln~
S('IV\('('S, 7 .ll p.m

fuy Suucr, Director

the •d~als 10 wh•ch

Can we fulf•ll them l Is there a IXX)R IO our ~1ntuot

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST .

:tic

399 w. Main"'"'
tH·21M
PomHry, o.
The Store With"All Kinds Cll Stull"
ftor Pets-Stabi-Lartt and Small Animall
Lawns- ~anltnl

and The Key

HAZF.L COMMUN ITY CHURCH. N&lt;'ar
Lon ~ BotTom. Edsel Han. pas tor Sunday
s&lt;"hool. 9: .1 ) a m ; Worship 10:30 a m .
Pra yer m('('linJit 7&lt;JO p m. Thursday .

Worship. 10 a. m . tnrst a nd third Sundays):
UMW. second TlK'Sday, 7:30 p.m. : Prayt&gt;r
·rwmtn~ worship. \U:.'\0 a.m: evening worfll('('tin~. Wedlll'Sday. 7 p.m .
shtp 7 p.m. Weodnf'Sda_yAibi£'Studyand youth
BETHANY -Worship, 9 a .m .: Church
1
School . 10 a.m.: Bible Study, Wednesday, 10
7
11
~o~Tb~~)~Tt::'lmcH OF THE NAZA ·
a.m .: Dorca'i Women's FeUowstup, Wednes·
RENE Rev JlmBroomf' pastor· Bill While\(" day, 11 a.m.
· ~•ndaYsc~l suptSund~vscr.ooi.9::tla. m.;
CA RMEL - Chun.'h School. 9:Jl a. m .;
r - min
lU ' lO::l)a ffi . Sunday£'VertgP.
Worship, 10: 45 a. m .; second a nd fourth Sun·
~f~. f'p.~. P~aY~r meeting Wed·
days); FeU~shlp dinner with Sutton, third
7
Thursday, 6. 30 p.m .
, nesd ay p .m .

'·

OUR SAVIOUR Ll!l'HERAN CHURCH Walnut a nd Henry Sts .. Ravenswood. W. Va
The Rev Gro~ C. Weiric k. pasto r Sunday
School, 9· :1) a.m .: Sunday worhslp. 11 a .m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH. n()Y.IIocatN:l
on Pomeroy Pik£'. County Road 25 Tl('ar Flat woods Rev. Blackwood. pastor Serv\c£'S on
Sunday a t tO· .ll a.m and 7· .ll p m w\Jh Sunday school. 9· lJ a m . bible s tudy, WE'dnesdaY.
7:llpm.

The hopes and v1sions of mankind
we asp•re

YIJIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPI1ST. Corner
'Slxlh a nd Palm£'r. ttK' R£'v Mark McClun~.
'S unday school 9: 15 a .m .; Dan White. Sunday
~
t
School s upt • John Rt't....., . r · ass1. sup
Morning Worship 10:15 am. Youth m {"('ting
7::Jl p.m . WPdfK'Sday, Including w('(' lo ts.
ce~er beavflrs. junk:Jr as troa nuts. and junior
and senior hiJith BYF; choir prac ticeS: .10p.m .
Bibl tOO
.Wednesday: prayer m('('t\n~ an d
t'S y.

'Wednesday. 7:l:lp. m.
CHURCHOFCHRIST. Mlddlepon.51hand
Main, Bob Me llon. mlnls iN. Srolt Saltsman,
associate mini~w·· BlhlP SchOOl. 9:30 a.r:n.:

•

SnlurJo}'

• N!!henuoh

212 E. Mam Street
992-3785 , Pomeroy

POMEROY - Church School. 9: 15 a. m :
Worship servi(.'(', m :tO a.m.; Choir re hea rsal.
W(i(fnesday, 7·:lJ p.m: UMW. second 1\tesdav. 7: 30p.m.: UMW. last Sunday. 7 a .m ..
UMYF. Sundav. ti p.m .
ROCK SPRINGS - Churc h School. 9: 15
a .m : Worship. 10 a .m .; BiblE' Study. W£'dnes·
day. 7 30 p.m .. UMYF (Seniors). Sunday. 6
p m .; (.lunior.J l. £'V£'f1' other Sunday, 6 p.m .
RUTI.AND- Church School, 9:45a.m.;
Worship, 11 a .m .; UMW lEven ilijt: Circle I,

s

•

Cf'S.

2 II 20

CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawr£'11('(' Manley. pastor: Mrs. RUSS('Il Young:. Sunday SChool Su p! .
Sunday School 9::v:t a. m Evt&gt;nlng worship
7::1) p.m. Wedn£'Sday prayer m('{'l\ng 1-:W
p.m .
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD. Raclnf'
·- R (&gt;V. JamE'S Sa!l£'rfl t'ld . pastor . Morning
worshlp9:45a.m .; SundaySchool1 0:45a. m :
evenina worship 7 p.m . TUPsday. 7· 30 p.m .
"'
PSd
7 :ll
ladies pra_vpr mf'f'tl ng. Wf'dh
ay. :. P m

"' : -director; Harold Johnsyn.
"',, l'ducadm.

Va, Rl 1. Mark Irwin . pastor WorshlpS£'rvl
9:30 a m .: Sunday School. 11 a .m : evf'n
ing worship. 7: )) p.m . Tuesday cottagt&gt;
prayer J'l"l{'(&gt;tinJit a nd Bible study. 9. ]) a m
Worship S£'rvlce. Wednesday. 7 :ll p.m

:14 29-JJ

1

Alll i. E CHRI STI AN

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

Mtddl e port·
Pomeroy, 0 .

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

CHURCH - Clifton Lucas. pastor. Sunday
School 9: ll a .m . Mrs . Wor!Pv Francis. sup!
Preaching servi('('S fh :-.• &lt;~nd third Sundays
following Sunday School Youth m('('tlng PV·
cry Sunday, 7: ,l) p m .

Now Open For The

Thursduy
• rr Cl•romdt!s
J2 1-tl

~ K&amp;C=RS

Main St . Nf'll Proudfoot. pastor Bible school.
9· :1) a .m .. mom!~ worship. 10 :!0 a m .
Youth ITI('('fln~s. 6· .ll p m . PVPnin~ w01 ship.
7 :l) p.m WC'dn£'sdav nl~ hr praVf'l m('(' tln~
a nd Bible s tudy. 7: lJ p.m
THE SALVATION ARMY. 115 Bu11crnut
Ave .. PomProv. Envoy and Mrs Roy Wlnln~.
offlcC'rs in rh lir~£' Sunda v holiness m('('tln~.
· 10 a.m .. Sunday School, 10 3fl a .m Sunday
School ll•ad£'r. YPSM. EloiS£' Adams 7· 30
p.m .. sa lva tion m('('l\ng, various SJ)£'akt'rs
and music sJX'('Ials Thursday - 10 a m . to 2
p.m .. Ladles Hom£' I.Ragu£'. all wom£'n In
vl ted: 7 J) p.m . P raver ml'f'li ng and Rlbl£'
studv. R&lt;'v N•
1a
·adlt ·.
BUHLI NGTI
,.JLJntER~
CHURC H. Rout.
.;hadt&gt; Bibi&lt;' Scht
T hursday: won;
.f'fVIC'£' R p.m
POMEROY
.. ~·; ] ~.; roE CHUI:l II OF
CHRIST. 200 \\ Main St . 992-52:~ Vocal
music. Sunday " , rs hlp Ill a m ; Blbl£' studv
11 a. m . worshi p •; p.m . Wf'dnesday Bible
study. 7 p m .

DEXTER

II :J0-40

Middleport, Ohto

U

,~!~~.c,j

Fmluy

l

servlc£&gt;.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST. 212 W

GREENHOUSE
Syrocuoe, OH.

at 2::.! p.m .

.,

.•.

MARK V STORE if .

lHE DAILY
SENTINEL

WJ•dnusdny
• H1•hn•ws

• II Chronicles

BEN
fF'RANKLIN"

'.

Syracuse

OLD

98S·3944

Pomeroy

-~

W ahama High School graduate
completes basic at Fort Jackson

Announcement

The performance Is scheduled to begin

VelNans Hospilal parly on Df;'&lt;'. 16,
and fiv&lt;' door prizes conl aining one
dollar btlls. along wilh 20 denturx•
cups.
Boih of th&lt;' parties al Alhens
Menial Hea llh Centcr and thP
Arca dia Nursing Hom&lt;' will bP held
on fu'. 14 Cards W!'rc signed for
B ill Rovnak. Arcadia, Dorol hy
L!'ifhcil al Oriml, Laura Watson a1
th!' London Nurs ing Home. Gladys
MowPry of th!' Pleasa nl Valley
Nursing Home, Hclf'ne Sayre and
LouiS!' Hawkins. Pomeroy Hea lth
CarP Ccnter. and E llen Couch. lh&lt;'
girls' adoplcd grandmolhcr A card
was also signed for Debbie Lehcw
who is a pa tienl al lhe Gra n!
Hospilal in Columbus.

1. 0 . " Mac" McCoy
,Rt. 1, Reedsvill e, Oh.

• Hebrews
II 20· 29

PlANING MILL RALL'S

A GIFT TO CHEER - Here Sheryl Johnson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Johmon, Racine, receives a gift !rom Juanita Nonnan,
Veterans Memorial Hospital AuxWary vice president. Providing gUts for
hospitalized children Is a part of the AuxWary's "We Care" program.

"For A Real Auction
'Ita lithe Real McCoy "

TuusdiJY

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

(f

·

I J H-19

Ma m
992 -5130 Pomeroy

Phone (614) 742·2777

Pickens

Pvt. Robert D. Carson, son of
Patricia J. Clark and stepson of
Ralph L . Clark of 159 Mayo Drive,
New Haven, W. Va., has completed
basic training at Fort Jackson, S.C.
During the training, students
received Instruction In drill and

992 · 3325

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

• tlt!lm•ws

214 E.

J . Wm . "Bill" Brown, Owner

1·7 t

MunJo}•

INSURANCE
SERVICES

Sa le s and

Nationwide Ins . Co .

II

Brogan-Warner

Rutland, Ohio 45775

ribbon for the item s to be wrapped
later by the junior auxtllary of
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion.
Meigs County has 25 residents 15 m en and 10 women -confined to
the center. Mary M artin Is again
heading the project for rem emberIng the local patients. The Insurance agency Is closed on Saturdays. Item s will be picked up there
In preparation for Christmas about
noon on Monday.

ceremonies, weapons, map readIng, tactics, military courtesy,
military justice, first aid, and
Army history and traditions.
He Is a 1981 graduate of Wahama
High School, Mason, W. Va.

The

Sunduy
' / lel/{t!WS

Provisions being made for those
confied to mental health center

y, &gt;.1ch.1 m

Mc~\ · ld

Junior Legion
Auxiliary

P omeroy

992 ·2955

Regional groups gather for parties and workshops
McClure. Angela. Bobbi and Ryan.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush. Dolly
Wolff'. Mr. and Mrs Darrell Norris,
Ryan and Tracy. Mr. and Mrs
DorS!'y Parsons. Mr. and Mrs
Dallas Hill , Mr. and Mrs. Hesrsch&lt;'l
Norris and Clarence, Mr. and Mrs.
Herber! Roush. Mr. and M rs. Roger
Roush. Jenny and Kim. Mrs. Eil('{'n
Buck, Early Roush. Mrs. Lori Hill.
Dea nie. Harmony and i\ulumn.
Amanda and Michael Russell. Rev.
Clark. Mr. and Mrs. .James
Johnson.

Kingsbury Home Sales VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
&amp; Setvice : :
216 SSecond
m
Pomeroy
~

Prescr iptions

992·9921 Middleport

992·3978

Apple Grove UMW

.The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SUTTON -

- The Reverend Wanda Johnson, First Presbylerian Church.
Middleport, Ohio, Adapted from an article by Edwin C. Sa nfo"d

1

Church School. 9:30' a.m.;.

Sundays); fellowship dinner wtth Carmel,
lhird Thursday, 6: l:l p.m .

••

.•

\

,

�Friday, December 10, 1982 • ~

---------------------~I

Business Senices
By DAVID L.IANGFORD

Associated Press Writer

WHAT NEXT- A weary and exasperated Sherry Mitchell listens
to an official tell flood victims staying at Sacred Heart Church, Valley

Park, Mo., that they must make plans to stay elsewhere. Church
officials said their resources were running out. (AP Laserphoto).

The mighty Mississippi River
started dropping Thursday in St.
Louis and o!flclals hoped the worst
was over in floods that sent 15ofthe
nation's waterways to levels ex·
peeted only once In a hundred years.
But frigid temperatures and Ice
and snow coated much of the nation
and heavy downpours In Callfornla
caused flooding that forced the
evacuation of most of the 400
residents of the desert community
of Ocotillo In the Imperial Valley.
About 35,mJ people were uprooted by the flooding that began
with rainstorms In the Mississippi
Valley late last week. Many found
little to salvage as they started
returning to their homes In llllnOis,
Missouri and Arkansas.
At least 20 people were killed and
four were missing In the three
states.
In Arkansas, where o!flcla!s
estima ted damage at more than
$371 million, Gov. Frank White
declared the whole state a disaster
area and said, "This disaster, In
magnitude and Impact on human
lives, far exceeds any previous
experience of the people of
Arkansas. "
In Missouri, where 25,(XXJ people
were evacuated earlier, damage
was estimated at $150 rnllllon and
Gov. Christopher Bond declared 22

The Daily Sentinel

INS
EXCAVATING

G&amp;W

counties disaster areas.
Six counties In Illinois were
declared disaster areas, but olfl·
clals declined to estimate the
damage until the floodwaters retire.
1be llllnois River was expected to
peak at about 10.5 feet above flood
stage Saturday InPeorta,ID., where
1,500 people remained out of their
homes.
Gary Talley of the Arkansas
Office of Emergency Services said
about 1m to !ro residents had been
moved from .the communities of
East Lake, Maddox Bay, Green
Lake and Indian Bay along the
White Rover south of Clarendon. In
northeast Arkansas, Jacksonport, a • ·
town of 288, remained flooded.
The Missouri communities of
Valley Park, Times Beach, Pac111c,
Eureka and Arnold just south of St.
Louis were particular hard hit in the
worst flood In the state since 1973. '' ·
But many residents were returning ' ·, :
as the Mississippi, Missouri and ; ·
Meramec rivers started falling : .

-l.o-Boy

.ORANGE GAS PIP£
o!ILACK GAS PIP£
•REGULATORS

-Trencher
- Water

DELIVERY
PH. 985-3892
or 985-3837

-Septic Systems
lARGE or SMALL JOBS

PH. 992·2478

C. R. MASH
SEPTIC
TANKS
INSTALLED
CALLAL
Ph. 742-2328

'

11 ·3-1 mo.

21 - Bu si n ess Opportunity

22· Mone y to Loan
2 3 - Professional S e rvic es

Real Estate

5 -Happy Ads
6 - lostand Found

3 1-Hom esforSal e
32~ Mobil e Homes for Sale

7 - Yard Sale (paid in advance)

8 · Pubic Sale

33 -Farms for Sale
34 -Bu si n ess Buildings

&amp; Auction

9 -Want ed to Buy

51 -Household Goods
52-CB , TV &amp; Radio Equipment
53-Antiques
54- Misc . Merchandis e

55-Building Supplies
56· Pets for Sale
57- Musical Instruments

58-Fruits &amp; Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

nests.
More than 100famllles lived In the
trailer park. Most of the others also
lost their homes.

l!;um Supolle&amp;

Rentals

•

5t'F\IIG86

41 - H o u ses for Rent
42 -Mobile Homes for R ent
43 -Farms for Rent
44- Apartm ent for Rent
45 -Furnished Rooms
4 6 - Spa ce for R ent
4 7 -W an te d t o R ent
48 - Equipment for Rent
49 - For lease

11 · Help Wanted
12-Situated Wanted
1 3 -ln surance
14- Bu sin ess Tr ainin g

15-Schools
16-Radio. TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Mi sce llaneou s

1 8 -WantedTo Do
Public Notice

Pu.Jiic Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
So H V~"Y

( ,, , rlo• r,JI
f.iP~,oi&gt;flt P' • ' • I • ' 1: lit! I'• fl ;r ~;,,
r·r, I •'-'
· ·' M· ·u rs ( ·,n t\
Q h l&lt;
Iori. I!\, 1 y(&gt;i)r 1 r ! f"i 1 ·';
1
rl \, 1 IT J&lt; I •
·' ! n Jt lh(" pr, pr•. ! nJf\
.:tl tnr&gt; hrJ' ' •· d trw r l pr~ B•·lh J
,I

l• •t l• 'id•

B~ ~ hr J D
I ] }1 1 (I

II

I·' &lt;•[

J', II " '

1! n rda 1nPrl t"JV Th· · V il lctrJP
n f Pomr•r n y (nu r11 ·I ''II''~"'
to,.r ths mr•rn!H•J 'i
;nrrP fo r 10
!&lt;Pii'iu•Pr
!nat thr• (1 .-r~
·,, , rn
nl
1 r ,I ns f P r
1 11 •'
S 11J(l 0() 01J I!IJ II tr ,, 1 )!l il ly
~ 'Jn d
'0
( ..- n r·r ,JI f .,rlrl IIJ
( prnPrerv Fund
Oa tPCI th1s dav
Nvvem hf-( I 5 1~ B7

PRf SIOEN1 0 1 COUI'/C ll
l WE HR UNG
MAYOR
CLAREN CE ANDRIW S
CLI RK TREA SUR[H

FLLFN J ROU GHI
t 12 ! 10l!c

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE

ll

and readauthor1zed
publ1 dy B1ds
lor theBonds.
by tegtsta
I IOn enacted on N ovember 22 .

endorsed ··9,d lor S90 OOOF"e
House ConsJrucJ,on Noles..
an d each b1d shall be made

only lor 'all or rone oiJhe Noles·..
Tne Notes are 1ssuoo lor the.
purpose of consJoucJ,ng an /
f•rdlouse

and

I

the necessary appurt1&gt;1ances
and eou,pmenJ thereto The ·
Not"' w'll be daloo Decembe•
28. 1982. w•ll be of the
denom,natron of S5.000each.
and Wlll bear •nteresl payable
semr·an nually on June I and
1

of

each

,,

r·1d

J! II •

~&lt;i•·"l

1 ••'

"Ill•

r,
r ·· t · ~· 1 LJ
,,t ' " '' .. , r 11 &lt;1 1

' P •

11

ol&lt;··, "lilT ..~,'
TO tt&gt;P latr-

year . I

IIJ I~I

'' ,. ,,

l lf•r) r1nq

a

l1fl··rr·• 1 '•''" l • '.tl f• r ! ,n!f·rest
fr rrn 1t dl S IJh d1 P(f h•·r1:!1n huT
nr,r 111 '"' f ,..r,-, u i \(f 1 percen t
P•·r
Hln• . rr.
I! r1 fr ac t,onat
~nrr · l(• &lt;, r
r.J tr· 1'; h1d
suc h
tr ,l( IIIJII s roall l.r' o nf' P.lghth of
nnn fF•r r Pill •lr a mulTIPle
thPrPn f Su 11 1 ri! IP t)1ds wilt not
hf&gt; rnns• li ... rr'\1
IT ·~ , r,n tr•rrl()l atOO that the

Public Notice
StJ( U''i'i lu l htdrler will rece1vP.
r~nd pav tm th f' N o tr s 1n
acco rnnnc. e w1 th th e t('r m s ,ln(l
nrov1'i10n'&gt; o f Th1 s not11 f' No
11ank t)l(1rl tn(j !01 thP N o tf·~;s halt
flfp 1!S o wn cas h1er s or o lf,c 1at s
c hf't k nr a c hec::k ('en1l •f.J:i by11
Su ch o;p r u11 ty shall bf! held by
Thf' ISS liPt unusNj pend1nq
dP. I1vNy of the No ll"'&lt;&gt; and
lo rl P1 Toi
as liJII l,qu d ated
cfamaqPs u1 thP PVPnt o f default
hy thf' succ es sful h•r.lr!Pr No
1ntf'rPs t Wilt be pa1rt o f the
sec ur 1t v subm1 tt r.'!'" f hy any
b 1rldf; r
In th r f'ven t tha t 1)(1 0 1 to th e1 1
rl eiiVf'fV thP ' ntPI OS t on the
No tes should bP ac: t of Con
qrt&gt;Ss 01 o therw,&lt;.P become
subtP.CII O Ieder al rn comp ta11es
or nny ac t o f Conqress should
pr rlVIde tha t thP. InterP.St 1n come
on t11e N o tes shalt b e ta)(ab lea t
a future dat e l o r tederal1ncome
ta)( ourposes . whether ducc tly
o r 1nd,rectly. th e su ccess fu l
b1ddE'r may refuse 10 accept
Clelivcrv and 1n su ch event rts
b1d secur 1ty shall be retlHned
With ou t 'nt e1est
Bef o rP mak1nq TP.ndf'l o f the
No tes at the placf! o f del1very .
the Issuer shall q1ve wrmen
not 1Cf' 10 the successful b1dder.
not l;ner than th P l dth bus1ness

( r •unr d n l Tho ·ISSi tf'l Woll lnPP I
7(1()
n"rloJ( ~
n Il l on
[)o .. ,.,,lh r&lt;~ ?7 l'1 A/ to con
&lt;;•rh·• !I" tw ts dniJ o~Wdi CI thf&gt;
NrJI •" ·
lhr • I· ,,,r V'~ o ll J)f ()vl(\f' thf'
Nrll• ""· '' I ll ' r·c! form W1Thout
ll l• •rr&gt;·,t '· •t•norr s A r o rnpiPTP
11.1r &gt;•,, 11p1 o t prn cPPr!1nqs w1lf
l 1•· I ,~,~~·~ hr·rt tJv ThP Issue r
tr, q,., l ,,r W•lh J r&lt;·!T IIilill f' that
trr It •• ~n r JVv l f'd r jf' () lthP S iqncr s
l•r; '"!IliOn or dcl r"nlnls tratlve
,1\t •Jorr o r nrorr&gt;prj,nq 1&lt;; penc!
-n• ; r thrr&gt;d t ~"'nN1 dllhf' 11mP.ol
· l •·l1 v•·rv to r;.o&lt;;tra1r1 r) r Pn 10 1n o r
·,r.,. ~ , r r• rt fl rl' &lt;; tr a,n n r f'n ln' n thP
·&lt;:.', utlll•,. ilr ld d f'i lvf'rv o f th e
"ln t•&gt;&lt;; n r thP i r'I.'V.l nrl r:I)II PC. II()n
o l '" ' "'" lc11 thPu nayrnPnt or to
onT;!".t o r (! 1 J~''&gt; T 1nn thP nro·
l•t·&lt;lill(!'i ,lflcf du l h Or iTY tJndf' r
·.11oh1dl l ~w NOi f'S hJvf' hcP.n
,lliHl {J I I/ I'd ISStH' (I SOld e:&lt;.€
r IJ!(lrl o r dr&gt;l 1verPd Or P1Pval1d1!y
ot Tlw No tes
I h;• b 1d •; Wilt pr omptly bP.
r ons •rlPr Prf and u nlf'SS all b 1ds
.rr P r "tf'rloi the No tes w1ll be
.IW&lt;t r(l erl t o the h1qhest b1d der
n tl •· r 1r rq ThP lowest 1ntf'rest ra t A
rtr·tr•rmlnfd tJv ca tculc1tlnq the
tot.r ' ,n tf ·(f'S! to s tatOO m atur1ty
at The rJ tP b•d and dr.duc t1nq
ttlcr{' l rom any prcm1um b1d
Ohc b est b1d 1 at not less than
nar and accrued 1nteres1 tl
cac t1 o f two o r m o re b 1ds 1S th e
br&gt;s t b1d the No tes will be
award ed o n suc h best b•d as IS
c hosen by lot All b•ds must be
acrompan 1ed by cash bank
c as h'e, ·s or o fh oars check or
certli1 ed c heck payable to the
Issuer. or any comb1nat1on .
th ereof . aqgrega t1ng the per cent ot the oa( amount o f the
No tes upon thecond•!IOn that 1!
the · brd JS accep ted . the
.II

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

FOR SALE

•Downspouts
•New or Repair
•Painting

C

,•

81 -Home Improvements

82-Piumbing &amp; Heating
83-Excavating
84-Eiectrical &amp; Refrigeration
85-General Hauling
86-M .H. Repair
87-Upholstery

Public Notice

446367388245256 643379-

Gallipolis
Cheshire
Vinton
Rio Grande
Guyan Dist.
Arabia Dist.
Walnut

•

;
6 75458 576773 882895937 -

Pt. Plusao&gt;t
Leon
Apple Grove
Mason
New Haven
Letart
Buffalo

.

·J
.. :

Male Oalmation about 1 yr.

old . Call 446-2B06 altar
2:00PM .
6 pupploo, part bla&lt;;ls Irish
Sauer. Call 614·667-6494
or 814 - 266·1~22 .
1 omall dog . black curly hair.
Coll446-4129 .

3.

truck-

I.

4.

oflacine and Syracuoe

-hookup
WOJI&lt; lnoured and

G.,..,-

PH . JIM CUFFORO
992·7201
!0-7-tlc

7-lHc

''CUT OUT
FOR FUnJRE USE"

Brit1 This Ad
Good For
15% OFF
ON PERMANENTS

·KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

Mon.·Tues.·Wed.
Now tlru Dec. 31
KAYS BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.

All Makes

PH. 992-2n5

•Washers •Dishwashers •Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezet'S

We Honor Golden Buckeye
cards Except on Perm.

Spoclafo.

11-8-1

PARTS.end SERVICE

1110.•

5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

12 .

13 .
14.

__,.:,__ __ __

15. - - -- - - - 16.

11-19·1 mo

Up to 15 words ... One day insertion ....... ... $3.00
Up to 15words ... Three day insertion ........ $4.00
Up to 15 Words .. . Six day insertion .... ....... $7.00
(Average 4 words per line)

8

Rl. 3, Box S4
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2S91

10·6·JIC

New Homes -

Hrs.: 9-S
Closed Sun. &amp; lion.
BHChlrOVe Rd.
Rutland. Ohio

extensive

12·8·1 mo pd

remodeling
o£1ectric woll
oCustOOt Pole Bltlas.
&amp; GIJIIOS

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

ollooliniWork
"'luminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
IS Yars Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·7SB3
or 992·2282

&amp; 8ccmie Smith
Alllllll• and modolo

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

-·1-ation
Hou11 colla and ohop

ll · JJ ·dC

12·3· 1 mo pd

'' '

''

RUSTIC HILLS- Ranch with 3 bedrooms, lami~ room,chain link
fence, lront and rear porch, and nice Itt $34,900.00.

'.
'' '

IIIDDLEPORT - Business buildil!l - has 2 businesses
downstairs and 4 apartments upstairs. New rool, separate util~ies.
$710.00 month~ rerrtal polenlial. As~ng $45,000.00.

' ''.

NEAR RACINE- Three acres ol nice la~ng land, a i4x70deluxe
mobile home with sidewalks, front and rear porches, and a big
yard. $26,700.00.

''

'.

POMEROY- Two story, thee bedroom, slorms, electric baseboard
hea~ bath. $i3,!ro.OO.

''

''

SKATE-A-WAY

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, Oi

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR .

.

'Also Transmissiot.
PH. 992·5682
,
or 992-7121
3·2Hfc

''

i

r
t

Quality .

Excellent Service
Fish-Game Head·
Life Size llounts
Plus Hide Tanning

PH. 742-2225
ll -18-1 mo.

COMPLETE

m.

I '
• ' I

.
:I

•'
~'

.

I

'

12·2·1 mo.

I '

.
From the Smllllst Hiller
Con to thi!Jrpst Rldiltor.
Rldiltor Specillist
NATHAN BIGGS
.
35 Yrs. Explrlent:e

IChed

I

ioCitld -

im!llldiltt occup~ncy. A

month to month t.M can be
- - witll IICUrity deposit ltld llltnnee.
Call•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

RCS REAiJORS

POIIIIt'liy, 011. .
Ph. 992·2174
2·26-lfc

1-614-593-5571 or 992-6312

.
'

'.

plllll ·

Pomny is 1¥11111111 for

'

l

'·

EXECUTIVE' HOllE
(Rental)·
This cootlmponry 4 bedroom, 2 bill!, home wit11
finlsltad family JOOm, Itt·

. RADIATOR
SERVICE

DOZER
BACKHOE
LOWBOY
SEPTIC SYSrEMS
CALL 992-2903
AFTER 5 P.M •

kitten,

litter box

8 black m ixad breed pupptes. Need good homes. Call

Black Chihuahua. very
small , house broken . Will

spay. 614-992 ·6644 after 5
p .m .

firing. 614-992·3630.

9B6-4114.
TWO Christmas puppies to

give away, 304-676· 1OBO.
6

Lost and Found

FOUND large white short
haired. Bob tailed dog wear·

,-----------------word
. Coll446·
FOUND
male 1791
Collie. with

rabies tags . Found on Bob
McCormick Rd . Call 446-

lost-Keys in brown zipper
case . Near or in Elberfelds.
Return to Sentinet Office or

coli

614 - 992 · 7804.

Reward.
lost - Female Samoyed (white Husky) in the Flatwoods Rd . area . Answers to
Shane. Black collar -With

rabie tag . 614-992-6720 or
614-992·2622 .

L---------':"'-.. .

-~------'1

Real Estate-General

Lost-32 Scottish Masonic
ring . Downtown Pomerov
near Courthouse on Parking
lot. Reward $60. Notify
leonard 0 . Ma11an, 111

Elm St .. Belpre, Oh. 45714.
Call 614-423-B1 B4.

LOST black. brown &amp; white
Walker Coon dog. long ears.
lost near Hysetl Rd . Bailey
Run or Rt . 143. Sam,

EAFORD(H
VIRGIL B. SR. REALTOII'
216 E. 2nd St.

YOU CAN HAVE - Tlis
beautilullarge older home with
a swimming pool. New 2 car
garage, nice kilchen, formal
dining, gas furn~ce and lois of
carpeting, 4 bedrooms, and I~
bat In Middledport near

742-26BB.
In Memoriam
IN MEMORY of Edna E.

Lost small white Brittany
Spaniel with orange and
brown spots, Ambrosia or
Greer Road ar881, 304 -676-

WJQgino who dopel1ed this
1118 4 years ago Dee.9.

6208. Reward. 304· 46B·
1727.

son,

LOST or stolen-female Bea gle in Madison Ave . aree .

197B. Sadly miiiOd by

Kenny; daughter,

Moly Bentz and fomily,
Gladys Robson and family.
3 Announcements

YOU CAN AFFORD '- To buy
this brick duplex. Has 2
modem kilchens, hot waler
heat 2 Ids, view of river, on
corner 1m. On~ $28,500.
YOU CAN UVE - In the
woods on th~ 3 acres with all
utilities, haiti road in Racine
area. Just $4,500. Owner
financng,
. SUE. BRUCE. AND HELEN REAlTORS. CAll 992·3176.

Housiny
Headquarters

SWEEPER al\d oowing ma·
chine repair, pens. and
IU ppltes.
Pick up and
delivery. Davie Vacuum

Cleaner. one h'lf mile up
GOdrgoo Crook Rd. Call
446-0294..
•
Dl'o Croft Shop, Spring
Valley Plozo. Golllpollo ..
448·2134. Entire llock ro·
ducod 26% (oxcapyandyl.
Doc. 8· 11 .
~
Gun

shoot,

R.cine

Auction

hold

every Sunday at 2 :00 p.m .
at Hartford Community
Building. On December

12th. there will be o lot of
old antique dishes &amp; other
merchandise. Auctioneer
Bill Ohlinger.

9

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old lumi·
ture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain ,

446·3169 or 266· 1967 in
the evenings.
Buying Gold, Silver, Plati·
num, old coins. scrap rings
&amp; silverware. Daily quotes
available. Also coins &amp; coin
suppltes for sale . Spring
Valley Trading Co .• Spring

Valley Plaza, 446· B026 or
446·8026 .
We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson

446-0069
Wanted to buy Square Dane·
ing outfits. All sizes, men's
and women's. Call 446 -

Fur . Coli 614-6B2· 7448 .
Scrap gold jewerly at
Frank's Pawn Shop, 406
2nd. Ave ., Gallipolis.
late modltl bass boat. Call

446·429B.
Wanted

to

buy

tobacco

poundage. Call 614 -379·
2340.
Four LR-78 - 16 radial tires .

Call446·0212 .

Gun

Club.' Every Sunday llertlng
' p.m. Foctory chokod guno
only.
DEER HEADS mounted.
Brow'• Toxidarmy, Terry
Brown. 814-9B6·3833 or
814·986·3384.
Roclno Gun Club duoo ore
duo. *26.00. Mull be pold
boforo Jon. 1, 1883.

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
wranc:e Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Galli&amp; County
for almost a century . Farm,·
home and pertonal p10perty~
coverages are available to
meet indlvkfual needs . Contact Eugene Holley, agent .

Phone 3BB·B690 .
Are you paying too much for
your hospital-health insu·
ranee . Call Carroll

Snowden, 446·4290.

15

Schools
Instruction

Karate the ultimate in self
defence all private lessons,
Men, women. &amp; children .
Instruction thru black batt.
Also available Karate uniforms puching and kicking
bags, and protect ive equipment. Jerry Lowery &amp; Associates Karate Studto. 143
Burlington Rd ., Jackson,

Reward. 304-676 -3133 .
7

Yard Sale

rier. Clothing, miscellane·
ous items. 1 mi. -from

Gallipolio. Rt. 160. Watch
for signs. Dec. 11 .

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WVe State Champion Auctioneer Rick Pearson . Estates.
antiques, farm, hou•holds.

Ucan•d Ohio-WVa. 304·
773·6786 or 304· 773·
9186.
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hertford Community
Center. Truckloede of new
mercMndlse every week.
Conslgments of new end
ulld mwchanclee always

General Hauling and Trash
remove! Service. Reliable
and dependable. Call 446-

3169 after 6PM 266· 1967.
Nursing in private home .
Daytime only in Gallipoli s or
Pt. Pleasant . Will give ref . if
required . Call 468 - 1818.
Will babysit your tiny infant
with tender loving care in my

home . Call 615·367-0462 .

BEDS·IRON, BRASS. old
furniture. gold. silver ... oi lers, wood ice boxes. stone
jars. antiques. etc ., Com plete households . Write:
M .D . Miller. Rt. 4. Pomeroy,

Fhllnglal
22 Money to Loan

Oh. Or 992· 7760.
Gold, silver. starting. je·
welry , rings. old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Barber

Shop, Middleport. 992 ·
3476.
No Item to large or to Small .
Will buy one piece or com plete household . New. used ,
or antique furniture . 614992 -6370.

I- - - - - - - -- -

liiiiiiiiii
ImplY 1111111.

I vwlvvc

4B02.

TERMS OF SALE : Cf,SH OR CHECk
WtTH POSITIVE l.D .

DO YOU NEED - A nice 2
bedroom country home near
Racine. I\\ baths, central heat
and a woodburner, sundeck
and lull basement $23,000.

MURRAYS

6396 , Muon.

WANTED PTO driven
LOST string of pearls, senti - hammer mill 304 - 676 mental value. $10 .00 re- 2373.

SHERMAN TILLIS: OWNER
DON HART JR. : AUCTIONEER
RODNEY HOWERY: APPRENTICE

SChoo~.

Real Estate-General

•.
•
••' •'•
' ~:

nice

Garage Sale 1B6 Greenb·

SCHEDULE
llon.·Weds.·Sal. Niahts
7:30 lo 10:00
Sunday 2:00 to 4:30
Open Christmas Eve
Closed Christmas
Open New Yea(s Eve
7:30·12:30
Open New Veer's
Airoilable for Prlvolo PortiiS
Ph . 98S·3929 or 985·9996
12-1-1 mo.

6921 .

I~=========:1 - - - - - - - - - Public Sale
WILL do babysitting in my
8
home. any ages . 304-773&amp; Auction

11

Help Wanted

Insurance adjuster wanted .
Staff position with well
established company . Gallipolis 8t . Proctorville area .
Experience desirable but not
necessary . Company car furnished. Hospitalization &amp;
other benefits. sa lary open .
Send resume to : Insurance
Claims, P. 0. box 69, Ports-

HOME LOANS 12 % fixed
rate. l eader Mortgage, Ohio

only 1 -B00 - 341 -6564 ,
WVa. 614·592·3061
23

Professional
Services

C&amp;L Bookkeepin g
Bookkeeping &amp; tax servtce
for all types of businesses.

Carol Neal 446·3862
PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appoint ment , Ward 's Keyboard.
446 -4372 .

PIANO TUNING-lane Daniels. assoc . of Brunicardi
Music Co.-Cunninghan 's of

Athens . 614-742-2951 or
614-992-20B2.
PERMANENT

HAIR

REMOVAL - Professional
Electrolysis Center. Inc ..
A .M .A. Approved , Or. Referrals. Gift Certificates, new
hours . By appointment,

304·675·6234.

mouth, Oh 46662 .
Bookkeeper w / payroll &amp;
sales tax experience. Send
resume to : Box 6000, c -o
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 826
3rd Ave, Gallipolis 46631 .
HAVE FUN paying your
Holiday bills. Sell Avon and
earn good $$$, meet nice

people . Call 614 -B43 ·
29B2, 614·38B-9046 , 614·
992·3690.
NEED EXTRA MONEY or
help with college expenses?
The West Virginia Natiooal
Guard can help. If you are a
Junior Of Senior in High
School or a Graduate, you
may qualify for a $1,600
bonus or up to $4,000
college tuition assistance.
plus you will have a sec ure
part time job after training .
learn skills in Maintenance.
Supply. Clericap. Electronics . Good Pay - Good
Training -Good Benefits. The
West Virginia National
Guard is no ordinhv part
time jobl Call Sergeant
Lutton 304-676-3960 or

"''' letacv
31 Homes for Sale
3 bdr. home in town , basement. large I ot. many trees.
woodburn er. qutet neigh -

borhood, $32 ,500. Call
446-4999 .
House for sale on land
contract . Cheshire. Oh . 7
rms .. basement. garage ,
workshop. gas furnance .

614·3B8·B276.
Rome , Oh . New home, 6
rms . with 1% baths. large
family room &amp; enclosed
patio, double garage, well
landscaped. Beautiful de cor .. $69,900 firm . Call

614-B86-6B17.
1971 MOBILE HOME excel lent condition. owner will
finan ce . Call 614 -

245 .5B30.
Pric e

r e duced,

over

toll tree in WV 1· B00·642·

$10,000 . Now offered by

3619 .

own er. benefits thats must

RECEPTIONIST WANTED
IMMEDIATELY. full time ,
long hours, good pay. Sertous applicants only . Apply
at 1244 4th Ave ., Hunting-

from town , large stone
firepla ce. 3 bdr .• nice qu iet
neighborhood . beautiful
backyard. Will consider rent ·
ing. Now in low 40 's. Call

..,._____;____ I be seen to appreciate, 1/ 4 mi.

ton, WV or coli 304-622· 446-204B after 5PM .
7722 .
PART time telephone sales
people needed. morning or

6 room house. vacant . separate two car garage. 1.3
acre lot. Rose Hill. Pomeroy.

evening ohiltl, 86 .00 per $46,000. Call 614-67B·
hour possible. Minimum 2613.

wage guaranteed . Call Dave 1-::-- - -- -- - Hawkins at Saddlebrook Inn For sal e or trade -2 acres
304-676-7600 Fri~y . De- good home and rental in

comber 10th. 3:00 to 7:00 Mason . Call 367-0611 . 4
p.m . Saturday, December

bd . room mobile home.

wolcomo. Richord Reynold•
Auclionoer. 276·3089.

11th. 10:00 a.m. to 1:001-- - - - - - - - p.m. Mondoy. December HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
13th. 3:00 to 7:00 p.m. dillon, 3 bedrooms, family

Profenionel Auctioneer

E q u 1 I 0 p p o r t u n i t y room with firepalce, central

S.rvt... Over 30yooroexpe·

Employor.

auction ANI Eet.te, autoe.

COVER GIRL MOOEL
TYPES lover 18). No expo· THREE room cottage with

fllrm equip .• hou11hold, buo·
na11, eottla, llqu Illations &amp;
antlquao of oil typao. Ooby
A.Mortln 8s RodneyHo-ry .
814-982-8370.

Cover Glrlo. l\loked City, Box $12,000 phone 304-676·
2000. Roulown. IN 411372. 7771 .

rlence in new, ueed and
ontlqua furlt .. a. Ucenoed to

1

Charlie• Roof repairs. trailer ·'
porches and decks . 773- :

18 Wanted to Do

One kiln suitable for gold

S&amp;K AUCTION

NEW LISTING - Nice little I
bedroom modern home wrth
balh, on a leve lot in Racine.
For Just $14,500.

·· vou ·rt' look rng for a f•ght.
aren·t ~ou . ne1ghbor '

RAW FUR . Highest prices
paid. lake Jackson Fin 8t

1

2

e14 · 949 ·2 129 or 614 ..
992-6040.

Will give firewood to someone for cutting me some.

2 puppies 2 wko. old. wil
make good pete. 86 Pine St.
Galllpolie, 446-4066 .

Corner of Depot &amp; Main
Rutland, Ohio

DO YOU WANT - To own 3
acres of almost levelland and a
2 bedrom Aeetwood 12x10
mobile- home with LP. gas
lumace lor only $23,000.

MIDDLEPORT- 1\\ story lrame home wi1tt 3-4 bedrooms, level
lm, part basement, hardwood lloors, and new lumace. $18,900.00
RUTlAND - Just off Happy HoQow Road - We have 3lols, each
appro~mately I acre lot Asking $3,500.00.

34. - -- - - - - - 35 .

..'.

Oh . Coli 614-286-3074 or
614·384·6160 .

1

33.

Tree trimming &amp; removal.:

4637.

trained . Coli 614 -246·
9492 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Phone
H 614 )·992-3325

Situations
Wanted

mon. Call 614-379-2436 .

Coli 614-3BB·B626 .

sories &amp; much more.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

o-yn. Wllilml

''

NEW &amp; USED .
HARLEY DAVIDSON PARTS
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
CHROIIE PRIIIARYS
Re1. 1 107.SO
NOW 187.50
Complele Kicker Assembly
Rea. 1 189.9S
NOW 1147.50
Leather Vesls
Rea. 1 149.9S
NOW 179.95· 189.95
Harley Jewelry-Harley Pins
Re1. 13.9S· 16.9S
NOW 21 15.00
Lealher Hals, f.Shirls, Acces·

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Chest•. Ohio
Ph. 915-4269 or 9854382
'.

4 wk old puppies mother
Basset hound, father Dober-

SATURDAY, DEC. 11, 1982
7:00P.M.

TRUCK &amp; AUTO

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'.
lnsulaled Dol Houses

S&amp;WTV
.AND
. APPLIANCE
SERVICE

POMEROY, OHIO
PH.99Z-2259

3 shepherd Collie pups . To

good home. Call 614-246·
6671 '

ing collar. Call446· 2692.

FRYE'S

UTILITY BUILDINGS

'RIOIIOtlolinl
'Storm Windows &amp; Doors
FREE ESTIMATES
20 y- ExperilrJco
TOM HOSKINS , ,
Pit 742·2834 . ..,.
Or 94!Hl60 Hii257ttc

'' :

elec1ricol wolk

Sizes start from 12'xl6'

~~~~

608 E. MAIN

22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31 .
32.

TOOLS- FURNITURE
COOKWARE
MISCELLANEOUS

- Concrete wolk

ALL STEEL &amp;
POL~ BUILDINGS

AND HOllE MAINTENANCE
'loofinl olllllypls
llosltlontill ' ~

Real Estate· General

446·4634.

AUCTh,')N

- Plumbing and

992·6216 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
11·26·tfc

grown hampster &amp; babies.
Call betwaon 6 &amp; 8PM.

21.

2 piece living room suite.
Free for the hauling. 614-

- Addona end remodeting
- Roofing and gutter woril

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1 male &amp; tamale full full

I
~
~----------------------~

CARPENTER
SERVICE

IFree Estimates)

446·3732.

AT

OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING

Public Notice

rlav br&gt;l n rP
th P pr op o~1 · 0
huSIIIP.S S hQu(S Su c h b1dde1
tencl(lt o t th P L1 c1 th at th e
shall ther eupon be ent1 1l ed to
NOTP.S tran sc r1pt n o liT1Qa l10n
th e return o f the depOS it wh1 c h
r P!II f,c,lte ann app u~Mnq opm
accompan1ed 1ts brd and su c h
•on will bP ava,tabl e to r delivery
d epOSi t s haH b e re tur ned
dnO q•v1n(l thf' rfatP and h our
1rnmcd1atP.Iy
tor the tP.n dP.r ill the plaCf~ o f
The r1qht 1S r ese1 ~d to r etec t
or ovded
hOW"evm .
ci PI Ivl'ry
h1dS
that nothmq h f! H?1n co n ta,ned
Vdlaf"]e o f M1ddt epo rt. Oh10
sha ll p revent the rnak1ng o t a
·
Bv Jon Buck.
mu tuillfy aqrPeablf' wrl!ten or
Cle( k· Treasu(er
vf'rhal a(r(IOC)f'mf!nl lor the
Nov 26 Dec 3. 10
cfel1 verv o f the No l es P.1ther al a
p lac f' o thPr than the place fr)( e d
l o r del1vrry o r at a da te and
ha tH Oth er than thr da te an d
h o ur h)(ed for del1very
54 Misc. Merchandise
II su ch no11ce h as not b een ' - - - - -- - - - (jlvf'fl by the l ssuf'r Of waNed by I
thP success ful brdder and the
NOI I'"!S transc r1pt no-htrga to n
cei1111Cil te and aprroved o p1n·
10n a(e not avadabiP fo r cfehvery
th e su ccesstu l bidder shall not
he 1n default o l any o f 1ts
o bl1qat,o n s It shall have the
r1l)hl thereaft er and so long as
n o su ch tender by the Issuer
shall ye t havf' been made. to
c nncet th e con trac t ol pur ·
ch ase Any such r1 ght shalt be
f!)(r.f CISed by dehver1ng w(men
not 1Ce o f such canceltat1on 10
the under SKJned or to the o ffice
of thP unders1gned durrng

WE SPECIALIZE
IN DEER HEADS
SMALL ANmALS
BIRDS-FISH

Hampster to giveaway. Call

18.
19,
20.

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

YOUNG'S

Rl. 1. Box 2n
RAVENSWOOD. WV
304·273-3660
"We Are Now Open"
Kn·s llltlo Of Wood
w. Con lllke n
•Toys •Furnllure
•Bu~dinl Produols
•Custom 01 Specialized
Orders Welcome
Come &amp; Set What We Have To
Olfer. Crass lhl IIMnMIJld
Brqe to St Rl 56. (I Btoct
From Crty Umit•- Across From
Double Ni~
11/29/ 1 1110.

17 .

446-8t96.

4-5-ttc

MOUNTAINEER
MJODV«&lt;RKS

LOCATED ON
STATE ROUTE 124 EAST
OF RUTLAND
614-742· 2178

IUIIII
'
.
'

./

ANY PERSON who hao

~.
odump

Giveaway

anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for sale
may place an ad in this
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

2. _ __ _ __

992-2791
or 949-2263

BIRCHFIELD
TAXIDERMY

.'

Mason Co .. WV
Area Code 304

992- Middleport
Pomeroy
9 85 - Chester
343- Portland
247- Letart Falls
949 - Racine
742 - Rutland
667- Coolville

I

92 2692

.,

SBJ!l\Jiljtli

followinf{ telephone exchanf{es ...

REALTORS

' begrnnong June I. 19 83. all he' tL.=.raw:.::.:,;...:~~·..:;_;_;__·___________;..-.A

4

Classified paf{e.~ Cot'er 1 he

E. Cllilnd, Jr. GRI ................................. 992-619.
Dottll T1111111 ;.............................................. .. 992·5692
.INn Tlllltll ..................................................94!1-2810
Offlct "" "'"""' ............................... ' ............ 992·2259

y,Ohio,andwufounerlythepraperty ,
late Zuelellll Smith. TreHerbllrgllinetthil
_._ _ __,
__,_,
~ ' Trailer can be pun&gt;~- ....... _, or
with ·1and.''· Fo~ information call Lula Belle
Ha
, telephone 992-2021 or Fred W.

Phone--~--------

_.,..,

Ph.

U.S. Rt. so East
Guysville, Ohio

Henry

p
of

oorvod .

) For Rent

.-;ng and niCioiming

FREE ESTIMATES

SALES &amp; SERVICE

RIITlAIID - 7 year old ranch with 3 bedrooms, full basement,
fam~ room, utility room, wood butnef, back porch, two Sl:ila!J!
builchfl&amp;!l M 2.29 aces. Now $35,000.00.

1968 NEW' MOON TRAILER
Price reduced drastically from '$8,000.00 to
.3.600.00. Trailer can aiiiO be pun:hiiRd with
'-ftd _.an edditionlll cOst of $6,000.00. Trailer
"'•r: "'
I~ on two Iota on W..t Main Street.

-

. 'OGutters

·BOGGS

IIIDDI.EPORT - I\\ story frame home has insulation, storms and
some remodelng, level lot. new addition, great neighborhood.
Does need some WOflt $19,900.00.

l.-----_:==========----~

1982 shall be sealed and

Oece m !:&gt;er

1"1

tlldn lr·r rl •y •, 0 1 ; I
\lH l1 rl !i •f) lV I' •'!"
ih•· [ ll I ' i • I • ol I" ·I rlli"l•" I
1)!1
It , . ' ~&lt; ol• "
II &lt;
i 1,1y .t! &gt;l !
1•;r
l •·r l,,. I , I
i ll &lt;·
Wlti HH ,I
r,pf• u · ·
o1 t' • I
,, ·•
1 1\ •11• i
)f)Pfll
II I.,.. ( •• !&gt; ) 1 tl ]•,. &lt;,I
Cnrr'l ' Jn\
hJ A
SO Jl!l ,. rr
0'"'''·" "' ~~ t·l ··:t,llt (Jh " I•.
t~l; f lljC, II ' I" l 11 I ll •l ,I· 1 &gt;0 ;,.l•,r 1
·1
lhP Nfli P&lt;; I'• lro&lt;.U &lt;11 . 1 r• : f'·;~.
Dcllf l tr r,,.,
ll ' •·r ',f,loll 1•', dnd
~u t t l ' ' ( r •
·t ... PII&gt;VI',I(tn•; ol
fPI I• 'r, t t,u,kr· o! l l l v 1.1...,. i'lfl ( l
IJ!hP r d.'\ ', d l .-¥ I •'H j ( 1~1 1 1()1 ':r
r •11-)f &lt;.
I" ' 1• tH · P &lt;~ ' r1 tmm rhr·
nr•" •·.,I s !I f tt,, . i•' VV o f ,J rl
V'll.rr• ·rt • ttl)&lt;· '&gt; •1n .ill prrtpr•rt v
hlfl l,r P V· ! I(H Ji i d.!T ol ''• &lt;1 f th r·
h•,w·&lt;
.! JtH 1 ''' del vr ,LrrHT
l .t • f·' "· r..:l 11', Tt o t•l&lt;; ~u ~'&lt;r Wllhtn
th ·· l•·r rn.tl 1- rn, T ti •On unJ)(J'iPrl
t)y l.tVI
t\1r1 , I•·· ', ,,,. r.. l l' ' 11 1, rto &lt;.o mav
nl• ·" ,l •ll r d ! Ill\ 1111 ''" ' NOTP.r.
ll&lt;~ 'J (I

Se aled b1dS tor thP p!_JICha'iP
o f 590.000 f ,rp Hou&lt;;l'! Con
struc 110n No tes (l h •· N u t...,s I rtl
the Ville~J e o l M lrlr !lr •[ M•IT lthP
··Issuer ·· ) 1n thf! Count·, rl ! M P1q&lt;.
af)d Sta t A o l Oh1 0 w 111 he
re ce1ved by th e un d•' r S~gne d
o ff ,cer at thi Viltag P. Hall 237
Race Stree t Midd lepo rt Oh1 0
45760 untd4 00ocloc kp m
Ea·stern Standard T1me on
Dece mber 27 1982 at wh 1c h
t1me the b1dS wrtl be opened

!he

:

r, !

B•·

v

'

: ro~ ,

r···vt•·• ·... , "
0 UI(

add1tron

Jl

•I

•· • • ·I , •··d 111 l
" • nr, • 1 .I
. t· : r. ·r ,. 1., n1• .. ,,
lfl JI·,olt" l 1r. ! •I•· p •·r&lt;•fll thr,rnl 10dll II J li• • P' •'IJ.!" I , n ul Hl o

---::-~::--:-;-:c:--- 1 P. •v•· •l

ORDINANCE 532

,I ! I· 1 I ,
•

&lt;J il , r· ·· ·l •·'.l

'••Ill &lt;•

Public Notice

.". , , .

61 -Farm Equipment
62-Wantedto Buy
6 3· Livestock
64-Hay &amp; Grain
6 5- Seed &amp; Fertiliz er

Public Notice

1 ll•· ,, j •
1 !·t 1•1•,., n
, .,, . - ~ .. . .
II" '., ., D·
,.Ti l" r . · I •· ·
:,1
,. I ·

L:luili(96k

Address-.....:.---:------

J F

CONTRACTING

H. l WRITESEL

For all your wiring ·
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742·3195
3-7-lfc

Tran&amp;poriHtlun

Meigs County
Area Code 614

Mt. Atto Auction
House. Rt . 2. Last auction
until 1983. Join uo for tho
leat big Mil of the Veer.

Chrlatmea
..
Including giftaforeveryo
toyo. Iampo,
wotcho tool• e. jowolory of
all kinds . Refreshments

Only.

ROOFING

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·1fc

G'allia County
Area Code 61 4

noon.

)Wanted
) For Sale

PHONE 992-2156

71 -AutosforSale
72· Trucks to. Sale
73-Vans&amp;4WD
74-Motorcycles
7 5· Boats 8o Motors
76-Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
77-Auto Repair
78-Camping Equipment

CHRISTMAS Auction Sot·
urdoy December 11, 12:00

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

)Announcement

12

1 9B3. Hoppy Holldoyo.

11-26-1 mo.

In Pacific, Lonnie Green, 38, was
able to find only the porch of his
mobile home and a trail of debris.
"What am I to do?" asked Green
as he trudged through frigid water
among snakes forced out of their

,

Sell AVON . Call 446 ·· ·'
3366B .

Re-open .March.

winter .

results . Money not refundable .

back.

Help Wanted

Make money for Chrlstm11 ... '

Wetherill Concreto, Hand·

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you gel

11 .

3 5-Lots &amp; Ac reage
26-Rea l Estate Wanted

~rttBIQ\ IIIIRt

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

11

eraon. h811hut down for tt.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns

Custom kitchens and ·.
bath1ooms. Remodeling,
add·ons, new homes, \
plumbing, eleclric, siding.

_______
.'

LAFF· A· DAY

I experienced taxidermiat.
Bob Cline. Rt. 2, Point
I .P11111nt.
304·8711· 1448.

GUN SHOOT

CONSTRUCTION

Dealer

1 -Card o f Thank s (paid in adv a n ce)
2 -ln M emory
(paid in adv ance)
3 -Ann o unce m e nt s
4 -Giveaway

3·11 -lfc

I ·10·1 mo. d.

New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment

Mvruhandlsv

Built Garages"
Call tor tree sidinr 1
estimates, 949·2801 o :
949·2860.
.'
No Sunday Calls
·

-Gas lines

12·10-1 mo. jXI.

I

.I

"Beautiful, Custom

-Sewer

Authorized John Deere,

Flnanslal

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks

3 Announcements
II- - - - - - 1 011r Hoodo moun•d by on

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for .
Classlfleds and
Savell I

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

-Dozers

PlASTICS
&amp; SUPPLY

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

1\Jut 9 Q A G8 JIIH Jl ($

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Pomeroy- Middle ort, Ohio

air, baoomont, phone '304676·1642.

rlence necesury, free train· bath. fu I basement, extra
ing. Cell Diana Han•n at large lot, out buildings.
219·346·2000 or write: located in Pt. Pleasant.

~

��- -·-.........
'"·:~

•"".

~

Deadline Dec. 17
Individuals have until Dec. 17, to
place an order for homemade
Christmas cookies that will be made
on the Dec. 18, by Job's Daughters.
Three-dozen assorted cookies wlli
sell for $3.50. Persons may place
orders by calling 742-2639 or
992-3374.

Meigs County Chapter 53, Disabled American Wtcrans, will meet
M onday, Dec.13, at 6:30p.m . ai the chapter home on Butternut Ave.

,
I!! !II
I

Marriage license issued

11111

A marriage license wa s issued in M eigs County Proba te Court to
David Lewis Chase. 39. Middleport . and A l ic~ .J a n~ Johnson. 29.
Middleport .

Today's
Times-Sentinel

Up

613

Canlpaign costs Celeste $5.8 million

State-National .. ................. D-1
Sports .......... ... .. .... .... ..... C-1-8
TV Guide ..................... Insert

976

E-section

Story on Page A-4

unbaJl

Vol. 16 No. 42

EXPANDING - Building Contractor Leonard
Erwin, near Chester, is expanding Ids custom
building services into the field of modular homes.
This model home is placed near the Erwin property

Meigs pupils on Rio honor roll

1\vo persons were injured in a
single-ca r accident on Ohio 12• in
M eigs County Thursda y . theGalliaMeigs post of th~ Stat e Highway
Patrol report s.
Deborah L. Michael. 17. Pom eroy, was listed in sa tisfact ory
condition this m orning at Veter ans
Memorial Hospital suffering from
facial injuries. Ann L. Adam s. 16.
Syracuse. was trea ted and released
for injuries shC' recif'v('(l in thE"
accident.
Michea l wa s driving when the
accident occurred. according to the
patrol.
Troopers said she was westbound
on Ohio 124 at 9 p.m . when she lost

Commissioners meet Dec. 17
ThP Mf'igs CountY Comm issioners will m('('l on Frida_
, .. Dec. 17. at
1: :«l p.m . instea d of Dec. 1•.

Emergency runs
Tht'l'C' ca lls wt•re answered by local units Thur·sday. the Meigs
i':m&lt;'rgenc)' Med ica l St&gt;rvicc report s. A t 1: 5.1 p.m .. th~ Rutland U nit
look Cltarh •s Romine from Romine Hall Road to Veterans M emorial;
Hurland at R: ()i p.m. provided treatment for Eugene Laudermilt at
his homo •onTownship Road 127; Racineat9: 51p.m . took An n Adams
from tho • scene of an au to accident on Maplewood Lake to Veterans
M t•mor·ial.

Jl,rsh;rn ihl' daughter of the late
1\'illiam &lt;~ncl S;.rrah Decker E\'non.
H&lt;•r husha ncl. Throdore Croy precedr&lt;l h&lt;•r in dea th in 1972. She wa s
also pr('('('(ied in death by a
daughll ·r and ninr brothrrs and

sistf' r:-..
Mrs. ( 'ro_,. w ;l'.. a rt'lirt'd prar l ira!

nurSl' and atlmrd C'h~ster United
Method ist Church .
Sh~ is' surYivcd b\' 011 " granddaughl&lt;'r. Mrs. RogN r. lune r Eppi ~. MelbournP. Fla : " " "gra ndson.
KPilh R.i d('nour. Long Bo~Jllom: six
gn·a l gr andcllildrr•n. ShPrTy Epple.
i'lantalinn. 1-'la: l'wk' r-:pplr•.
M elbounw : JJian&lt;~ .' \o·lson. Mino·rs\'I liP: Flo\'f l Hidrn• •ur. Mailllrden
our &lt;~n!I J-;, . Jlir·llidr·nour ;til of l .ong
Boltom: onr· gn·a l. gn•al grand daughtN . \icolf' r-:c lsnn and se,·.
Na l ni~es and nephews.
Funl'r;ll . , ,.n·in-s wi ll bt• hPid

to show a sampling of the Continental Home, made in
Virginia, to be featured . The line has a higher roof
pitch than some other modular homes. It comes
unfurnished.

Two injured in Rt. 124 wreck

Ten M eigs Count\· student s have been named to the fall quarter
honor roll at Rio Gra nde College and Community College.
Ea rning at .1.7o gra d~ point average or ~tt ~r for the quarter to be
nam ed to the roll were Vicki R. Blankenship. Caroly n S. French .
Chery l A. Roush. Middleport; Sandy L . Garn~s . Dexter; Janice L .
Groggel. F: laine J. Smith. Portland; James B. Patterson. K ent D.
Wolfe. Racine; Robin M. Snowden and Rebecca K. Windon,
Pom ero,-.

Area deaths

I
I

She married Ray A . L emley. who
survives. in April1962.
Also surviving are twodaught ers.
Dale Ward of Portland. Ore .. and
Mrs. William (Carol! Colley of
Rockland , Maine; thrC'&lt;' sons.
Wendell Ward of Columbus. and
Malcolm Ward and Frederick
Ward. both of Ht. 1. Bidwell; a
stepson . Robert I&lt; . Lemley of Rt. 1.
Cheshire; three stepdaughters, Dorothy Greene of Rt. 1, Cheshire.
Mary Fortner ofNewark. and Linda
Su~ Vogel of Fostoria ; three sisters.
Ma rtha Haggy of Pomeroy. and
I&lt;ai hli'Cn Jum's and Ruth Walt ers.
both of Columbus; a brother.
Durward of Hawt horn&lt;'. Cal if. : and
II gr andchildn ' n and four grea tgrandchildr·en.
She wa s also p n -eeded in dmth by
a daughlf'r. o son. a sistC'rand thr('('
brothers.

control of the vehic le. went off the
right side of the rpad and struck a
fence.
The vehic le sustained moderate
damage.
At 9:07 p.m., the patrol invest igated a one-car accident on Chester
Twp. Rd . 152 at the intersection of
Ohic 7.
Roger A. Ba lser, 16, Tuppers
Plains. was turning left onto TR 152
from Ohio 7 w hen troopers say he
lost control of his vehicle and went
off th~ right side of the road.
overturning.
The amount of damage to his
ve hicle was not ava ilable Frida)•
morning.

Hospital News

HOLZER MEill('i\_
L ('EN'I'ER
DISCIIARG ES DEC. !J
Benjamin Adam s .Jr .. Michael
Ba iley, Rit a Bar~ r. Frank B l a k~.
Angela DoolP\', Mrs. M ark Eblin
and daughter. Edith Ga rden~ r.
G~rtie Hall . Pamela Hart. Bever!)'
Hess. Laura J ohnson. Ru th
Kennedy, Mary King, Cla.\'ton
Mill~r . Patricia Miller . Mrs. Terry
Oiler and daughter. Anthon)· R~.
Stephanie Roush. Barba ra Snedegar, Edith Strong. T on)' Ta y lor .
F ra ncis Whit e!_
, .. L eslie Wilfong.
BUtTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. James Lambl'rl,

VETERANS MEMORIAlAdmitted Stella Thomas.
Middleport ; Marvin Edwards.
Re va Vaugha n .
Pomero~' ;
Middleport .
Discharged- Ruth Lewis. Marie
Domigan. Naomi Brinker. Wesley
Allen. Dais\' Schuler . Goldie
Matney.

A suit in the amount of $2~.111i . ~3
was filed in Meigs County Common
Plms Court by The Farmers Bank
and Sa\·irigs Co .. PomC'l'O~' · aga inst
JesSf• LI'C Buchanan and Edna
LouiS&lt;' Buchanan. R l . 3. Pomc' roy.
and Ccorge Collins as M eigs Count)'
TreasurC'r .
In othrr court acti on Viv iJn
F:lizabrih .Iones. Ra cine ancl Ayw&lt;.~rcl Cunis .JDil('S, Ra Cin(' , filC'd for

dissolu tion of man·iagc•.
Grantf'd divorrC's wC're Brenda
Ka y Hal~" fromn M ark Allen Haley
and TerTi L. Da v is from Gene A.
Da vis botll on c harges of gross
neglect of duty and cxtrem ccnwlty.

M~~&gt;ts

7~!

Supplies
last

8-ln-1 Ratchet

Screwdrlnr

Built-in ratchet operates
forward, reverse or
locked. 6 diHerent tips,
oversized handle for ex tra power.
58401

Quantities limited

BAUM TRUE VALUE
CHESTER
'

-~-

CHRISTMAS CANDLES

Bring The Kids To

See Santa

bucket seats, am/fm
stereo, V-6 Turbo

RENAULT

1600 miles

$av.$ave
"12" RABBIT DEMO

4 dr., am/fm, was 17409
NOW '6698

Mildred Frances Lemley, 75, Rt.

1, Cheshire, died Thursday in Holzer

79 CHEROKEE..: ...... !4495
77 BRONCO ...•..••.•:•12995
78 DODGE TRUCK. ....!3995
80 CHEVY TRUCK..... !5495

12,000 MILE
USED CAR WARRANTY!
CALL JOHN SANG, JIM WALKER, WENDELL VAUGHAN OR BILL HAAS

Gallipolis, 0.
.,

'~- •

By CUFF HAAS
\\'ritr-,.
.'ill.'iHl N(;'fON (APt -Ignoring
threatr of a presidential veto, the
1
.\ pprupriations Comm ittC'f'
r ts endorsing a spending bill that
includes $5.4 billion to help the
unemployed and a cha nee for
members of Congress to ra isc their
salaries.
The full House is expectt'CI to vote
early next week on the package.
which was approved by thec·ommit tee Friday on a 2.';- 18 party-l ine vote.
The legislation is neccssar-, to ke&lt;•p
money flowing to m ost ofthl'federal
government a fter Dec. 17.
"This is just a gr ab bag of .
goodies," said Rep. SilvioO. Conte.
R-Mass., the top R epublican on th&lt;'
panel.
"We're going to get a \Cto." he
sa id.
Meanwhile. a jobs-crea ting gasoline tax hike bill is bogged down in
the Senate, wherP ronsflrvativC'
Repubiicans want to : ostponc
debate until next year.
But Senate aides sa id Ma jority
· f'~

•

.l\~;s~J• Ji.dC'.d ·p,~

.r.,. ,,

Phone 446-9800

L eader Howard H. Baker Jr ..
R T fln'l '":"' "'~ ..,11W' mnrr th pn t ~,..
60 votes need&lt;~ln ex t week when he
m oves to choke off debate.
Wrangling over the stopgap bill
and the nickel-a-gallon increase in
the federal gasoline tax is expected ·
to force the lame-duck session of
Congress to meet pa st its Dec. 17
target for adjournment.
The Democratic jobs plan included in the stopgap bill would
provide money for a variety of
emergency public works jobs.
There was no overall total of how
many jobs the measure would
crea te. but Democratic aides have
sa id they hoped to provide employment for about :JOO.CXXl people.
The president has said he would
w to I h~ stopgap bill if the
Dem ocratic jobs plan wen• al l ached when it reached his desk .
During consider ation of the
meas ur~ . Rep. Vic Fazio. D-Ca lif..
offer('(! an amendment to rem o,·e
the ca p that holds the salaries of
mem~rs of Congress to ~60.fi62.50
(.l nnua lly.

Bidwell man dies
following acci~ent
GALLIPOLIS - A32-yeDr-old Rt.
1, Bidwell man died early Sa turday
morning from injuries he received
In a two-vehicle collision on Ohio 160
Friday night.
Rickey J . Denney was pronounced dead at 12: 10 a.ri1. Saturday , at Holzer Medical Center,
according to a nursing supervisor.
The driver of the second car,
Glenna
Williams. 09, Rt. 1,
Bidwell was treated and released at

s.

According to the Gallla-M eigs
post of the State Highway Patrol,
.. the two vehicles collided at about
9:25 p.m .. three-tenths of a mile
5outh ofOhio 554 in Springfield Twp.

Troopers say Denney was northbound when his van went left of
center , striking Williams' car
head-on.
The force of the impact forced
Denney's vehicle off the right side of
the roadway, down an embankment
and through a fence, according to
patrolmen.
Troopers say the Denney vehicle
cam e to rest by the side of a pond .
Both vehicles reportedly sustained heavy damage.
Denney was the sixth traffic
fatality ln Gallia County this year.
Five were investigated by the
highway patrol and one by Gallipolis City Pollee.

or another unable to preside.
Traveling to other counties to
preside over court sessions will, of
course, be nothing new for Judge
Bacon. Over the years of serving as
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge, he has taken on judicial
assignments in Belmont, Cuyahoga , Washington, Hocking,
Athens, Gallla, Lawrence, Scioto,
Athens, Highland, Hamilton, Ross
and Pike Counties. And - even
though he will not be the Meigs
Common Pleas Judge after Dec. 31,
he can still be named to fulfiU
assignments in other counties.
Thursday night the Ohio Associ a·
tlon of Common Pleas Judges,
honored Judge Bacon at Its state
session held in Columbus. The
association presented Judge Bacon

with one of its Golden Gavel
Awards . given for long and faithful
service to the common plea s court.
Judge Bacon began his pri va te
practice of law in M eigs County In
1946. He served as solicitor in both
Pomeroy and Middleport Villages
and served as Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney from 1949
through 1952. He was elected Meigs
County Probate Court Judge and
began serving in that position in
1955.
From 1957 through 1959. he
served as judge of both the probate
and common pleas courts. Two
years passed before F . H. O'Bri en
was elec ted to the probate and
juvenile judgeship.
Judge Bacon and his wile. Ora.
reside in the Bowman's Run area.

Panel to try
again for SS
reform plan

House plans
vote on public
works package

HMC.

'71' BUICK REGAL
SPT. COUPE

Deciding to retire was not an
easy dP.Cislon, the judge reports;
but, on the other hand, although he
definitely will rot take on private
law practice, he may be kept busy
traveling to other counties in Ohio
to fill in on hearings. The Chief
Justice of Ohio can request Judge
Bacon to accept judicial assignments in other counties, to help
clear dockets which are overcrowded or in Instances when the
judge in a county is for one reason

Judge John C. Bacon has been awarded the Ohio
Common . Pleas Judges Association "Golden
Gavel" for long and faithful sen-ice to th~&gt; common
pleas court. Judge Bacon wraps up 25 years as
Meih'S County Common Pl~&gt;as Judge on De&lt;'. 31.

-Tapers and 2inch Candles in Assorted
Lengths.
.:...Scents include: Christmas Punch,
Hollyberry, Bayberry, Pine, Vanilla
and Nutmeg.
-All Your Favorite Christmas Colors.
-Holiday Candle Rings and Holders

Mildred F. Lemley

By BOB HOEFIJCH
Tbnes-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY -When Judge John
C. Baco'l lays down the gavel on
Dec. 31 for the final time he will
wrap up 25 years as Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge.
Judge Bacon, who was appointed
common pleas court judge in 1957 to
replace the late Cedric W. Clark
who had resigned , did not run for
nomination and reelection to the
post he has held for so many years.

FURNITURE
B54SECONo
GAlliPOliS
446-9523

Light Up Your Home With
A Seasonal Glow!!

W altc•r Vos~

'I

RICE 'S

Sumlay

Mrs. Lill y Hauck, ~0. Pomeroy.
who died Wednesday night. wa s
preceded in death b)· her husband .
Harry Hauck. rn 19.19.

'

10 Sections , 74 Pages 35 Cents
A Mulltim edia Inc . Newspaper

·.

'

Suit fil ed in common pleas court

Lilly 1-lau,·k

years.
Born Feb. 4, 1907, in Meigs
County, daughter of the late Claude
and Melba Jones, she attended
Poplar Ridge Church and wa s a
member of the Eno Ladies Aid and
the Eno Grange.

The Gerald Powell country and
western dance class will m('('t from
2 to 4 p.m . Sunday at the Royal Oak
Park r('('rm tional building for its
third session.

son, Ga llipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Lunsford. son. Waterloo; Mr. and
Mrs. John Ta ylor. son and daughter . Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Wills. daughter, Jackson.

RIVERSIDE V.W.-AMC-JEEP

Medical Center, having been in
falling health for the past several

entinel

tnttS

Meigs Judge John Bacon lays down his gavel

Clasl" mt--ets Sunday

I

Th~ Meigs County Genealogical
Funer;tl "·n·ices will be held at 2
p.m. Sunda\ in th~ Willis Funeral
SocietywillmC'&lt;'t Sunday,Dec.l2.at
Hom~. with the Rev. C'. J. Lemlc)'
2 p.m. at the Museum .
offrcialing. Burial wi ll~ in Gravel
Chri~trnas party
F: veryonc is to share an expeHill Ccmetcrv. near Cheshire.
riencc or something unusual discoFrit•nds rn a\ ca ll at the funeral
Tops OH570 will hold a Chr·istmas
vered during research. Persons are
h
f
partv
. on Dec. H . at the Meigs
to bring one dozen cookies for social
orne rom 2-4 and 7-9 p.m .
h
Ch · t
h
'II ""'
c·~
d
Counl.v Fairgrounds at 7 p.m .
our.
n s mas punc WI a.A.:
.-,.,tur a)·.
'ded E
I
Sundm al 2 p.rn . at l-: ll'ing F'un~ral r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - p : . _ r o _ v _ r_._v_e_ry:._o_n_e_w_e_c_o_m_e_._ _J
Homt· with th1· Rf'\' . ( 'a rl Hirks
offici a Iin g . 11urid I \\'ill bt , in C'hf's tpr
CPn lPIP I:O . FriPnd ~ m.1.\ call at th£'
func ·ral hum1 •on Satun!&lt;J,· from 2 to
-Iand i to~ .

Walter Voss. 77. SR 124. Racine.
died Thursda,- &lt;'\'f'ning at Holz~r
Medica l Center.
Mr. Voss wa s bornApril22.1905at
Pom cm,·. the son oft he l at~Mr. and
Mrs. Theodore Voss. He was a coal
miner and fo und~') employe. He
attended M or se Chapel Methodist
Chu rc h and Gn•at Bend flethleh~m
Baptist Church
He is surYI\H IIJy his wife. Sara E.
Voss; two sun,. J·:dward Voss.
Minersvill&lt;• and Waltr•r l'oss ..Jr..
Point Pleasant ; three grandchild ren and two great grandchildren .
.F'unrpl arrangements will be,
announced by Ewing Funeral '
Home.

•

Copyrighted 1982

A m ~ tin g of th~ Meigs Count)• Fox Chasers scheduled for thi s
&lt;'vening 1Frida)· I has ~n ca nce lled.

Mr:-.. {'nJ\' w;.~ s born Oct. l 189f1 at

"'~"·

Story on Page B-1

Fann .............................. E-2

Down

M

Toni!{ht's meetinK cancelled

Claci, ·s Maril' Cro,·. HO. former!) '
uf Ch• •st l'r Communi!) . died Thr· ·sda~ · P\'f'ninJ..( at \'c!Pra n ~ Mrmorial
Hospita l.

.........

Silver Bridge collapse --15 years later

Along the River ............... B7-8
Business ................. E-Sectlon
Classlfleds ............... D-8ectlon
Deaths .... ......................... D-8

The R iggs Rang~ rett PS wi ll perform at halftime of the
Eastern -Southern \'arsity game tonight at Eastern High School.

Croy

...... ..._

Stories on Page D-1

Will present halftime show

Glady~

~,.,..

•
review
Rhodes years (past, future) In

.

DA V chapter meets Monday

I

~

F!iday, December 10, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

..-.......,·Local briefs:----r
'

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

___..

.....
Pomeroy

'

,

. By CHRISI'OPHER CONNELL
~iatPd p.~,..

WMh&gt;ir

WASHINGTON (API - T he
Social Security reform commission
is refusing to ca ll
t quit s . but
b e r s say
hat Pres id ent

the keys to an_
,.
Greenspan.romise.
..
The 15-mem
il! ared
near a stalema · '
supposed to be its final m eeting
Frida y. But c hairm an A lan
Greenspan announced it would
meet again next Friday because
private talks indica ted thPre wa s
still "some momentum in the
decision-making process. "
But he sa id, " I don't wa nt to
~est that there's a major set of
conclusions which we could all
subscribe to."
Greenspan sa id. "w~·re going to
keep the door open" for further
-~

· -~was

NEW AI'PROACH TO AN OLD METIIOD- Clad in the traditional,
funert'al hand-me-downs worn by chimney sweeps of old, Roy Bickle
prepares to clean another chimney. As Gallla County's only sweep,
Bickle employs more advanced procedures and dispenses up-to-date
advice to homeowners.
·

Making a clean
(chimney) sweep
By KEVIN KELLY
Tbnes-Sentinel Stall
GALLIPOLIS- You've bought a
house containing a fireplace and
chimney, or you already own or rent
one, or perhaps you've installed a
wood -burning stove for the winter
months.
Only one question remains : how
do you keep the thing clean?
That 's where Roy Bickle com es
ln.
The only professional chimney
sweep In Gallia County, the33-yearold Bickle, a Rt. 2, Gallipolis
resident, views the traditional role

negotiations.
OthPr m PmbPt·s. s~ \d thPrP \ 1. ,1':1&lt;;;.
sti ll a chancp k \·agJ n a mi U Nt' ili . ..t
Massachusett s Democr at . ca n be
convinced to back a rompromiSf'
packa g~ of tax hikes and cuts in the
gro\\·th of Social Sc&lt;-uril)' ~n efit s.
" We'rf' going on for anothPr
week . It's not that we like attending
th~mee tings ," said Sen. Daniel
Patrtck Moynihan . D-N. Y .
ThP flt!i sions on the panel we re
rv idf'nt as thC' mC'mbcrs r&lt;.~ iiC'd to
agrr&lt;' on 1h~ SJX'('ifics of a
" fail safe" plan 10 pr·otccl Social
Security ag:J insl .1n PCOnomir
ca lamity . ,\ staff memo suggested
automatic Trf'i.l SU I)' loa ns, pay~
tax hikes or tX'nl-'fir cu ts a!'.._ thr~
allcrnativl' mf'lhods.
--~J
Social Sc&lt;-urit .\·\ C•ld age fwlll
borrowed $.'-.R1 mi ll ion Ja.s' month
and S3.4 billion on TuPsda.\ 1~ 1 r·o\'t:·•·
the c hecks that went out in
November and Dcccm~r. It wi ll
have to borrow at least $7 billion
m ore fr(?m the disabilit y and -or
Medica r~ reserves 10 keep pa_v in~
benefits on l ime through .June.

Ohioans to see
mercury plunge

COLUMBUS (API - Ohioans
will
endure icebox temperatures
of the sweep In a more modern light.
Sunday,
as a cold front trailing a
However, he's been wearing the
wint er storm will send the mercury
familiar black, swallow-tailed coat
into a nosedive.
and stovepipe hat, cleaning out
The National Weather Service
chimneys and dispensing advice to
said
temperatures would be in th~
homrowmers since June.
single digits or low teens statewide.
" I like being self-employed, and
The cold weather follows a winter
it's a public service," he explained
storm
that left five Ohioans dead in
recently. "Nojobiseverthesame."
weather-related
!)'affic accidents.
Bickle said the popularity of
The
storm
had
dumped
2 to5 inches
fireplaces in homes - particularly
during the holiday season - and • of snow through north central and
northeast Ohio by Saturday , makinterest ln.wood-burning stoves as a
ing roadways treacherous.
cheaper method of heating In winter ·
Four people were kllied Friday
months has led to an Increased
afternoon when a car and a pickup
(Continued on page A3)
truck collided west of Salem ln

Columbiana Count y. according 10
the Ohio Highway Pa t ro l.
Troopers sa id the ca r went left of
center and slid into the path of a
wPstbound pickup driven by Lcsii(•
Bardo. 24, of Sa lem .
Sgt. J ames Garr ison sa id the
accident was wcat h&lt;'r -rc latrcl .
" The road was snow C'O\'C'JHi.
slippery." sale' Garrison.
In Chardon . Helen C. Potter. li7.of
Burton. died wh&lt;' n tile car in which
she was riding slid on a snov.:y road
into thP path of a tractor-trailer
truck on Ohio Rout&lt;' 4-1 Friday
altem oon. It was Chardon's first
fatal traffic accident sir.ct• 197R.
pollee said.

President urges 'clear, positive vote' on MX
.

.

Friday and Saturday Nights
6:00 to 7:00 .. ·

By TERENCE HUNT
Associated PteSs Writer
WAS"'INGTON (APl - President Reagan urg€Q the senate
Saturday · to deliver a "clear,
positive vote" in favor of going
forward with production of the MX
missile.
' Facing a crucial Senate vote next
week on the MX, after a •teclslve
defeat .last week In the Ho~s~ • .the.
president ~sserted in his weekly
radio addreSs to the natldn tbafthe
MX is necessary "to help restore
our strategic deterrent and llteraily

keep-the peace."
Speaking from his Camp David,
Md., retreat, Reagan-said he was
prepared to cooperate with Congress next year in a review of the
basing system for the missile.
Skepticism in Congress over the
wisdom of Reagan's so-called .
"dense pack" basing system is
widely credited with contributing to
the House vote last Tuesday to deny
production funds for Jhe MX,
alt\lough the House retainfld nearly
$2.5 million In research and develop- · ·
ment money lor the missile'.· .
I '

.

" The basing mode Is not an
issue,'~ Reagan said
today.
"There's plenty of time to decide on
that., What we need now is a clear,
positive vote on the missile itselfto go fmward on production of the
missile.
"Why? Bl!caUBe We're negotiat-ing with the Soviet Union at Geneva
to reduce substantially nuclear
arsenals on both sides. _. .. However,
It we j115t cancel the Peacekeeper,
the MX, lfwesaywewon'tdeploy·lt,
wererhoveamajorinCentiveforthe
Soviets to stay at lhetableandagree

to reductions," Reagan said.
Without the missile, Reagan
argued, "we weaken our ablllty to
deter war and we may lose a
valuable opportunity to achieve a
treaty to rectucenuc!earweaponson
both sides."
Reagan made the same appeal
Friday, in a session with reporters
in the White House Oval Office, for
Congres5toappro\reMXproductlon
funds now and debate UK! best
basing·system next year.
Hi! portrayed the dense-pack
bas~ plan. as "probably offering

.-

'

Reagan hopes tocom·inccthe HouSl'
the best opportunity" but said "If the
to reverse its vote after the Sena te
Congress wants to debate and
discuss and see if there are pusslble
acts.
other options that could conceivably
The dense-pack plan. calling for
missiles to be deployed in silos
be improvements over this, we're
willing for that."
spaced closely together in Wyom "I! is a conciliatory statement,"
Ing, was initially opposed by most of
said Sen. Ernest Hollings, 0 -S.C.
the members of the Joint Chiefs of
"He Is not looking for confrontation · Staff and is the target of widespread
skepticism in Congress.
and we are not looking for
confrontation."
"I agree that more time is needed
By a surprisingly large 69-vote before we achieve a· consensus In
margin Tuesday, the House deleted
Congress on the basing mode, but
money from a defense spending blli
the need for the missile itself has
to build the first five missiles.
long been apparent." Reagan said.

.r

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