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HOLIDAY SALE

W aha rna opens
('age season
this t•vening

....

Four FBI

Bucks fa(•e BYU
in Holiday Bowl

killc ·d in
/ ' , .. 1

al!•·nl~
na~h

/:

SPECIAL VALUES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
ON EVERY FLOOR- GOOD SELECTIONS ON QUALITY MERCHANDISEWE'll GLADLY HELP YOU WITH YOUR SHOPPING.
~

~

OPEN NIGHTS 'TIL 8:00
LADIES'

MEN'S

SWEATER
SALE

WEMBLEY
TIES

Sweater Vests. Velours. Turtle
Necks. Cardigans. Sweater Capes

Four~ ln~ Hand and Ready Tied
Styles - Christmas Sale Prices
now on Entire Selection.

Mrsses and Extra Slzes

SAlE PRICED
FROM ONlY

CHILDREN'S

Men's $9.00 Ties . $6.99
Men's $10.00 Ties $7.79
Men's $11.50 Ties $9.89

$1Q39

\

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Highest quality London Fog brand.
100% Nylon Shell, 100% Polyester
Polyfill. Pants are zipper front wrth
adjustable suspenders. Jackets are
zipper front witll detachable hood£
Little Boys Sizes 2 to 4 in Navy.
Little Girls Sizes 2 to 4 in Lt. Blue.
REG. $62.00

SLIPPER SALE

•
Voi. J l .No .160
Copyrighted 1982

Reg $5.50 and $6.50 scuffs and
ballerina styles. Blue, Beige and
Pink. Sizes S~MHL

GIFT
SPECIAl

CHRISTMAS
SPECIAl!

I

The Daily

SNOWSUITS

WASHINGTON 1AP 1 - A weary Republican~
controlled Senate worked as the sun rose over the
Capitol early today to complete work on a stopgap
spending bill that includes a $1.2 billion jobs package
President Reagan doesn't want.
Unless the ca tchall appropriations measure clears
both the House and Senate and is signed by the
president by midnight tonight, most federal agencies
would legally run out of money and might have to
shut down.
Winding slowly Ioward the end of a lame-duck
session, the Senate, in an a ll ~night session, voted on a
mixed bag of Issues ranging from the MX missile to
abortion, foreign aid and the Clinch Ri ver breeder
reactor. The votes followed the apparent defeat of the
proposed $5.5 billion gas tax increase--highway repair
program .

f

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PANTS AND
TOPS

Exce llent selectiOn rn srze s 29 to
42 wa rs! plu s ex tr a SIZes 44 to 50 Solid colors and patterns. We wrll gladly
help you lrnd your corr ec t war st srze
and length

Men's $15.95
Men's $19~95
Men's $21.95
Men's $29.95

CHRISTMAS SALE!

LITTLE GIRLS'

Christmas Sale prices on our entire
stock of little girls' jeans. corduroys,
slacks. blouses. sweaters and knit tops

Slacks .. $11.16
Slacks .. $13.96
Slacks .. $15.36
Slacks .~$20.96

Reg. $5.00 .......... Sale $3.99
Reg. $7.00 .......... Sale $5.59
Reg. $12.00 ........ Sale $9.59
Reg. $19.00 ...... Sale $15.19

MEN'S

WINTER
JACKETS

MEN'S
PAJAMAS

Srzes 36 to 50 rn a fine selectron ol
styles for everyone on your rst
Included rn thrs sale are our men's
dress coats, all weather coats and
wrnter vests.

Srze Small. Medrum, Large and Extra
Large - Flannels or Poly~Cotton Blend
fabrics - Coat style top, adjustable
gripper bottoms - Van Heusen and
Ely quality

Men's
Men's
Men's
Men's

$29.95 Jackets .$23.36
$39.95 Jackets $31.10
$49.95 Jackets $38.90
$69.95 Jackets $54.50

MEN'S $39.95

INSULATED
COVERALLS
Sizes S. M. Land XL- Olivewood.
Navy Blue and Brown Duck.
Pre~shrunk - Red nylon quilted
lining

$12.95 Pajamas .. Sale $10.35
$15.00 Pajamas .. Sale $11.95
$16.00 Pajamas .. Sale $12.95
-

$3488--

~-

BOYS' SHIRTS
Our entire stock including Flannel
Shrrts - Westerns -Velours - Kmt
Shirts and Sweat Shirt looks- Sizes 8

to 20.

Boys'
Boys'
Boys'
Boys'

$8.95 Shirts ..... $7.20
$10.95 Shirts .... $8.80
$12.95 Shirts ... $10.50
$14.95 Shirts ... $12.10

CHRISTMAS
SALE PRICES!

MEN'S and BOYS'
DEPT. 1st FLOOR
•Men's Western Shirts
•Men's Flannel Shirts
•Men's Denim Jeans
•Men's Velour Shirts
•Boys' Denim Jeans
•Boys' Corduroy Jeans
•Men's Sport Shirts
•Men :s Corduroy Jeans

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December

2 Sectiom, 12 Pagel
1 S C.nh
A Multimedia Inc . Newlpoper

17, 1982

Weary Senate works hard on spending bill

$349

MEN'S

DRESS
SLACKS

entinel

Sen ~ Mark Hatfield, R~Ore .. chairman of the Senate
Appropriations Committee, said he hoped for a final
vote on the spending measure by noon today.
By shortly after dawn, however , there were more
than :JJ amendments still awaiting disposition, and no
end was In sight.
When the Senate does pass the appropriations bitl.
It will ~ to a conference committee, where
dllferences between the House and Senate versions
will be worked out.
Both chambers would then have to approve the
resulting measure before sending It to the president,
who has Indicated he will reject the legislation If a
jobs provision Is kept In the bUl.
On the MX question, the Senate agreed early this
morning to Reagan's proposal to start buying 100
missiles, but only If Congress approves a basing plan

within 45 days after he submits it.
By a vote of 56-42, the Sena te approved $988 million
in production funds for the nuclear weapon Reagan
wants to deploy in a controversial "dense pack"
formation In Wyoming . The House last week rejected
money for producing the missile.
On Clinch River, the Senate voted 49-48 to keep the
controversial fast breeder nuclear program alive by
approving $194 million for continued development.
The House voted earlier this week to kltl the
program in which uranium would be turned into
plutonium in the power plant to be built in Tennessee.
Critics say fast breeder plants cost too much. don't
necessa rily work and are a potential source of raw
material for terrorists planning to build small
nuclear bombs.
Reagan called the Congress back into the post

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

election lame-duck session to handle appropriations
measures. but most of the time has been spent on jobs
bills the president either doesn't want or has
reluctantly accepted.
The version of the spending bit! approved by the
Democraticalty ~cont rolled House includes a jobs
program totaling $.'\.4 bittion. five times thP total in the
Senate measure.
The Senate's $1.2 btllion jobs propocal includes
mittion for the pay of workers at water and waste
treatment plants. Indian housing and school
construction. weatheriza tion of schools and hospitals,
job training and mass transit employees.
There Is also$250 mittion for construction of famitv
housing on military bases. and another $26 million for
construction work on the Alaskan railroad .

m

Fuel funds
go unused.,
says Miller

CHRISTMAS
BLANKET
SALE

Final UAW results due tonight

All of our bed blankets and
electric blankets in a fine
assortment of solid colors and
patterns - Twin - Full Queen and King Bed Sizes.

SAVE 20°/o
;
;

DETROIT - United Aut o Workers in 17 states should know
tonight whether they 'll be gett ing a $2.270~a ~yea r raise from Chrysler
Corp.
Union officials predicted that U.S. Chtyslerworkers would ratify a
tentative contract with the No. .1 automaker when they go to the polls
today.
Results from the day long voting were expected aft er 8 p.m. EST,
UAW spokPsman Bnb Barbee said Thursday. Workers at about 50
lacilltes in 17 states were participating.
The vote comes at !Out five days after IO,IXXJ Chrysler Canada Ltd.
autoworkers voted overwhelmingly to approve their tentative
contract with Chrys ler. ending a .17~day strike at six plants.

Liver receipient returns home

,\

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BOSTON -As her family applauded and Santa Claus delivered a
gift, a smiling l ~year ·old Jamie Fiske returned home Thursday
evening from a life~savi ng liver transplant.
Jamie was the youngest person ever to receive a liver transplant.
She had been expected to die by Thanksgiving without it.
" If Jamie could talk, she woutd probably say, 'Thank you' to
everyone for their prayers and love," said Fiske. "She really has
been adopted by the while world."
Jamie, Fiske and his wife, Marilyn, landed In Boston at 6p.m.and
were greeted by family and friends at Logan International Airport.

Sheriff's son among indictees
FREMONT. Ohio - A Sandusky County grand jury has indlctecl17
people for drug trafficking, including a son of the county sheriff.
.Joseph Kindred Ill . 28. son of Sheriff Joseph Kindred Jr.. pleaded
innocent to a charge of aggravated trafficking in cocaine and was
released on his own rrcogn i7Alnce.
Prosecutor Ronald Mayle said 14 of the 17 arecharged with multiple
counts.
The indictments Thursday are the result of an investigation by
Fremont police that lasted severa l months.
Drugs involved include marijuana, cocaine. LSD and quaaludes.

Jenkins released from prison
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Rev. Leroy Jenkins, an evangelist
formerly of Delaware. Ohio. was release&lt;! from a South Carolina
prison Dec~ 1 and says he feels itwasGod'splanforhim to be in prison.
Jenkins now lives near Columbia, S. C., and saki in a telephone
Interview that he hopes to return to his church In Delaware and may
resume his television minist ry.
Jenkins founded his ministry at Delaware 17 years ago~nd nurtured
It into a multlmillion~dollar operation before being convicted ln197!1in
South Carolina on charges of conspiracy traelng to efforts to bum the
homes of a South Carolina highway patrolman and a businessman.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game. " The Number," was 3&amp;1
In the "Pick 4" game. played three times a week, the winning
number was 2076.
Lottery officials reported earnings of $543,ffi1 from wagering on the
daily game. The earnings came on sales of$1,008,115, while holders of
winning tickets were entitled to share $525,0.'14.

fiVeatherforecast
Cleartng and cold Ionight. Lows between 20 and 25. Sunny and
warmer in the morning and increasing cloudiness and warmer
during the afternoon Saturday. Highs between 43 and 48. The chance
of precipitation Is near zero tonight and
Extended Ohio Forecast ·
Sunday through Tueslay:
A chance o1 rai!1 SUnday. Flurries Monday. Fall Tuellday. 1111111

•to

lbe rnld 4011Sunday, IIICliiQ Iaiiie 311M ' r
andfromlbemld3011olbemldtesTuellday. LowafNm lbe I I . .
lo lbe mid • SUnday and M,onday and JIIOI!tly bllbe . . ......,..
from lbe upper

,

Millions of dollars generated by
barge traffic and placed In a
waterways trust fund for major
river construction projects re-mains idle and ·unused, according
to U.S. Representative Clarence
MUler. Miller contends that the
funds ooUected from the barge
industry could "go a tong way In
helping projects like Gallipolis."
According to the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, nearly $55
million has been collected from a
barge fuel tax since October, 1980.
The fuel tax, which began at four
cents a gallon, has jumped to six
cents currently and will go to eight
cents beginning October I, 1983.
After October, 1985, the tax will be
10 cents a gallon.

\'

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QUEEN- A Christmas queen of Southern High
· School w1ll bemmed Saturday night at the school's
annual Christmas dance. Candidates, selected by
senior class members, are I tor, Cindy Evans, Angle

'

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'·

wiD be selected by popular vote of all classes at the
hlgh school. Attendants wiD be Mandy IHU,
freshman; Julie Houdashelt, sophomore, and Debbie
Michael, junior. The dance wiD be from 8 to II p.m.

GleM, Becky Lee and MlcheUe Johnson. The queen

•

Early retirements offered·
in order to avoid layoffs
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company has announced
It Is offering eligible employees an
early retirement program In an
effort to avoid possible layoffs. The
company said It is also taking steps
to further reduce costs.
The early retirement option Is
being offered to those employees
who will reach the age of 59 on or
before November 1, 1983. The
effective retirement date under the
one~tlme program will be February
1, 1983.
In another major move, the
company announced in late November it was discontinuing the
employee Christmas gift. The gift
amountecl to one percent of an
employee's annual base wage or
salary.
Ben T.' Ray, president of
C&amp;SOE, said these steps are a
continuation of the cost-reduction
measures announced In October by
C&amp;SOE and other American Elect~
r1c Power System . companies
because of rapidly dE:Cllning earn~
lngs due to the depressed economy.

Cost-cutting measures already
announced Include a five percent
salary reduction for top manage-ment; a wage and salary freeze In
1983 for all employees, a freeze on
hiring; a reduction In employment
through attrition and a study of
power ptant needs.
The company has told affected
employees that manpower studies
are underway at the Picway
generation station south of Colum~
bus and the Poston generating
station near Athens for possible
employee reduction. .Employee
reductions are also being studied In
the transmission and distribution
areas across the company. C&amp;SOE
would not release the number of
reductions being considered.
Ray said the company Is
hopeful that the various cost~
cutting steps will preclude the need
for layoffs. He added that If
employee reductions are neces~
sary, they will not occur until early
in 1983 after the results of the early
retirement option and transfer
possibilities are determined.

Expressing concern that some
of the cutbacks may eventually
affect customer service, Ray said
the cost reductions are necessary
for the company to survive finan~
clally during these depressed
times. He pointed out that a
reduction In personnel may place
the company In a position where It
will be operating below standard
and desirable levels to provide
proper service.
Ray said the company's future
financial condition was worsened
recently when the PUCO granted a
rate Increase amounting to a seven
percent Increas e In annual
revenues.
"We just feel that a seven
percent Increase over the three
years since our last rate case is
totaUy inadequate to cover the
Increased costs of doing business
since then," he said.
C&amp;SOE had requested a $100
million Increase and received $41
million ~ Of that amount, $14 million
involves finance charges for the
Zimmer nuclear plant.

Jury returns guilty verdict
deliberated a little more than 2'h
hours Thursday night before finding
Mayle, 32, guilty of first-degree
murder. With the jwy'srecommen~
dation of mercy in the case, Mayle
will be eligible for parole In 10years.
Last summer, Bobby Dean Stacy
was convicted of first -degree
murder without mercy in the

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Wilbert Mayle has become the
second man convicted of murder ing
Huntington pollee officer Paul
Hai'molt, wbo was beaten and shot
live times with his own pistol last
December.
A Cabell County Circuit Court
jwy Imported from Fayette County

y

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slaying. He is serving his sentence
at the state Penitentiary In Mounds~ :
ville and Is ineligible for parole.
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Prosecutors had claimed Stacy
and Mayle, both of Columbus, had
just robbed a Chesapeake fast food
restaurant when the slaying
occurred.

The fuel tax funds are to be used
for construction and waterways
rehabilitation projects whlch have
been authorized by Congress .
Under the tax formula, about $35
million will be added to the trust
fund annually. Gallipolis remains
unauthorized, but engineering and
design work for the massive
replacement project Is underway.
"We have made the case for
Gallipolis time and time again,"
MUler remarked. "The money
being sent to the trust lund could be
used for Gallipolis. I can't thlnk of a
better first investment. "
Miller said that the lund Is
intended to rebultd and construct
navigation projects without expect ~
ing the taxpayer to foot the tot al
bilL
"It's a barge fuel tax to benefit
the barge industry, " he said . "But
until Congress authorizes actual
construction of a new Galilpolls
complex, and permits the fuel tax
to be Invested In the prjoect, the
trust fund will go untapped while
this costly and inefficient bottle-neck slows commerce on 1he Ohio
River. I find thi s situ ation
unacceptable."

Racine re!-wue
equipment found
The Ra cinP Fir&lt;' Dfopar1mPnt
rescue boat. traiiPr and equipment
used in rescur ('ndeavors insidr the
boat werp found floating down the
Ohio River Frida;· morning.
A resident spoiled the boat and
equipment moving downri vPr and
notified PomNoy Polic£' Depart ~
ment which rctrievro the boa t and
equipment and tied it up along the
river bank nea r West Main St.. until
It could be moved to the lev('(' where
It can be taken out of the water and
returned to Ra cine.
It was reported that vandals
appare91iy brok&lt;' into the room
which the boat and trailer are kept
at the Racine Fit'C' Sta tion overnight
and took the boat to the river whel'('
they set it afloat. The water
department building was atso
broken into and several rolls of
copper wire were stolen.

�.. . .. .
17, 1982

Commentary

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Frida , December 17, 1982

IJave a
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slrt' rl
l'nmrru\1 , Ohin

6J4-99i·21S6
IIF\'11TEOTOTIIt: I NTEHF$ TOF THt: ME IGS-MASt•,\ ,\Itt-:,\

ROBERT L. WINGETT
l' ubli ~ h•· r

I'AT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

,\ ,~ • ~ lllntl'uhl• ~ h r r / ( ' nntrnllt ·r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR .
Nr "l'·s Editur
•\ 1\-l E MHER uf Th.. A !&gt;~ o H ' tah."tt P rt's.~ . lnl H'nd D&lt;1 ih f'ro· ~, 1h ~ • wm hnn and tht•
,\nwrw lw 'll n~ s pu !Jt't J•ubli ~ ht · rs A s~ ndatiun .
·
I. ETI F.HS OF OPINION IH"t' 141'11-nml'"d . Th t')' s hould lw lt·~ l&gt; lh&lt;~n :MlO v.nrth lnn j! . All
k Hrr1- a n · ~ ubjn t In t'dihn~ and mus t bt- l&gt; i.:nl'd "''ilh IUinlt', addr r.-.~ and ~t-lrphun t&gt;
numtM·r . Su unsi l( nt'd lt'ltr r~ I' Ill bt- puhlis ht"d . l ..rllt'rs ~ hnuld lw III J( nnd La ... It·. a ddrt's s in,:
ISS Ut'S, IIIII pt' t !ftJnalili l'~ .

More than enough
during a recession
Nothing m akes member s of Congress m ore skittish than the prospect of
voting on a pay ra ise for themselves.
Ther~ is a continuing deep vein of cyn icism abroad about politicians and
a belief in m any parts of the country that the current Wl,662.50 annual
congressional sa larv is more than enough in a time of deep recession.
Priva tely . mos t members of Congress will say they are underpaid
compared with those in other prof~ssion s with similar responsibilities.
But voting for increased pa;· is a far different matter .
So. how in the world . w ith the unemploy m ent rat e hovering at 10.8 per
cent. could a l o per cent pa_
1· incr ease get through the House of
Representat ivE's this week?
F ir st. some resista ncE' is melting to the idea of pay hike. especially
am ong institu tions with poli tica l clout who say that Congress is rapidly
dividing into the ,-~ry tich and the just barely gelling along.
Among those mdorsing the pa;· increase thi s week were the Washinglon
Post . the New York 11mes. the AFL·CIO. the National Assoc iation of
Ma nufac tu ff' rS a nd Common Caus(' .
8~ ' onf' PStimatf'. sala riPs of business executives with similar
t·eponsibil ities 10 congr essmen rose bv over 116 per cent betwwn 1969 and

1900.
Those kinds of numtx·rs helped som e HouS!' m ember s to suppor t the

incrf'aSC'.
In the pa st fi l "&lt;' yea r s. th e sa laties of 43.'i House member s and senator s
· rose onll" o.O perc~nl . far less than the ra te of inflation .
This ;·~a t ·. the pa v ca p was 10 expire today. m eaning unless Congress
acted there would be an au tomatic 27 per cent cost-of-living hik~.
LN bv Rep Vir Fazio. D-Ca lif. . pay r aise supporter s devised a cl~ver
two-step approac h on the House floor which trapped opponents into
unwi tting II · helping gf't the increase through.
On one \ "Of f'. House members had a ch o i c~ between the l.'i per cent
increaS!'. or allowing the cap to fl; · off thus allowing th ~ 27 per cent hike to
t ak~ effec t.
M any opponent s like Rep. Stephen L. Nea l. D·N C .. said , " We were
forced to choose between the lesser of two ~ vii s . "
Neal and !M oth ~r House mem bers votf'd for the l o per cent . believing a
second vote would kill the pay hike.
Bu t the;· were surprised. A proposa l to r~ n ew the pa; cap failed on a
drama tic 200.20l ti e vote, mea ning the l o per cent . i nc r~ase proposa l was
sent to thP Sc&gt;nat e.
But the Senate was poised late thi s week to vote down the incr ease
approved bl" the House. As a result . it appea red almost certain th at for all
t h ~ excitement engendered by the House vo t ~. congressional sa laries wi ll
rem ain al $fll .lili2.:i0 through nex t March at least.

Disaster in oil
rich Persian Gulf
Ku wait"s stock ma rket crash under the weight of $90 billion worth of
post·datf'd. bu t worthless checks has created the biggest financial disaster
ever to hit the oil -ri ch Persian Gulf region .
Senior g01·ernmen1 officials who are close to th~ problem say the
Kuwaiti econom.v is going to be affected for at least two years, and that is
the optim istic \'iC'w.
" It will deteriorate the monetary, trading and credit worthiness of
Kuwait ." says one high-ra nking adviser.
And the gov~ rnment expects to have to spend billions of dollars to
stabilize thf' economy .
On th~ face of it. the problem looks small . for only 6,500 people are
ln vo lved in I hP mrss.
Yet investors and dea lers were left holding 2l!,(XXl post-dated, but
unfunded checks that were used to buy an estimated $90 billion worth of
stock before the market collasped in the fall . lnvestors had used profits in a
soaring m arket ra lly to pa y their checks as they became due, but when
share prices on Kuwait" s unofficial. and unregulated stock exchange
began to fall . somP of the checks started to bounce and the system
collapsed .
Government officials sa y that If thf' country's bankruptcy laws are
strictly applied. there could be 200 to 300 bankruptcies.
Tha·t would place an enormou s strain on the legal, financial and political
framework of Kuwa it. The sm all nation does not have enough judges to
oversee that m any cases. let alone thf' army of lawyers and accountants
that usually accompany such cases . The government is thinking of
bringing in outside legal help and may r ecruit additional judges from
Egypt.
The crisis is likely to cost the government dearly, too. So far. the
government has set aside $1 .7 billion to compensate the smaller dealers,
but most officials expect the government's cost to go much higher before
everyttllng is sorted out.

Today

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Ill

history

Today Is Friday. Dec. 17, the 3.';1st day of 1982. There are 14 days left in
the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 17. 1003, Orville and Wilbur Wright made the first successful
airplane flight. at Kitty Hawk, N.C.
'
On ttils date:
In
Pope Paul ill excommunicated King Henry ,VIII of England.
In 1&amp;ll SQuth American patriot Simon Bolivar died In Colombia.
In 1843.' the Charles Dickens story " A Christmas Carol" was published in

IJart----------~~-------1-am_e_s_J_K_il_pa_tr_k_k

WASHINGTON - Back In the
16th century tbere lived a young
Italian architect named Andrea
Palladio. He built a building In
Venice, and we may well imagine
that the editor of the Venice
Morning Tantrum jumped all over
him. " Andy," asked the editor.
"why all those damned arches?
Don't you know they cost money? "
But Andrea stuck by his convlc·
tions, and after a while the
grumbling stopped .
I tell the tale by way of putting In
a kind word for tbe Senate's new
Hart Office Building. The carping
about this " posh" and " palatial"
structure Is getting a little hard to
stomach. People magazine, to cit e
only one example of the yapping,
r ecently desclibed the senators'
new officers as " bigger and
conspicuously more luxurious than
any thing they have known before."
Well, balderdash. L et me tell
you. fl at out, that the Hart building
is not a "Taj Mahal on the
Potomac, " as Sen. John Chafee of
Rhode Island has termed it. By the
standards of other contemporary
office buildings, It Is not a " gold·
plated showcase." If It is not an
architectural gem to rank forever
with the works of Signroe Palladlo,
It is still a reasonably handsome
and functional structure.
In one sense, the squabble over
the Hart building Is a snippy little
local matter. Here In the capital we
have to have somettling to fuss
about , and the squawking over
Hart provides a convenient diver·
sion. After all, the MX rnissUe, the
gas tax and the defen se approprla·
lion act get to be a bore. Boys will
be boys. There may be some
political advantage In virtuous
pronouncements of penny-pinching
prudence.
In a larger sense, the controversy
Is everybody's business- not only
because everybody Is paying for
Hart, but also because some
timeless and u!llver sal precepts
are involved .
First, for the record: The
nine-story building, adjoining the
Dirksen Office Building, was au tho-

rized 10 years ago. The Idea was to
relieve gross overcrowding In
Senate offices, to bring together
widely scattered committee staffs,
and to make a serious contribution
toward greater efficiency on the
Hill. The new buUding will house 50
of the 100 senators.
One complaint has to do with
cost. The first hard estimate of cost
In 1974 put the figure at $85 million.
The building came In last month at
$137 million. that Is an Increase of 62
percent. In this same eight-year
period, the national Index of
construction costs Increased by 76
percent. A captious objection, to
quite People magazine, is that the
bulldlng has "16-foot ceUings." In
point of fact, only the senators'
private offices have such ceilings,
and these match cellings in the old
Russell building. A further com·
plaint Is that the elevators have
"bronze doors." The response Is, so

Ies went beyond "nice touches" and
toyed with extravagant touches
Instead. There never was a need for
another gymnasium. But the gym
was ellmlnated along theay, and no
intolerable extravagance remains.
My own cliticlsm would go In the
other direction. The movable intelior partitions may be functional,
and they will give each senator
greater flexlbllity in housing his
own staff, but they lack any sense of
solidity. As for the two-deck suites,
they are nothing to get wrought up
about.
In times past I have bellyached
about extravagance In govern·
m ent. When real extravagance
comes along - and there is plenty
of this in every administration- I
will be hollering again. But all this
yammering about Hart tells us
more about the narrow mentalities
of the critics than it tells us about
the spacious dimensions of the

what ?
Since Palladia's day, the same
kind of hollering doubtless has been
heard. When the magnificent old
State Department bullding was
erected at 17th and Pennsylvania
Avenue back In the 1800s, we may
well Imagine the caterwauling:
Why the pediments? Why the
ornamental columns? Why the
marble mantels? Why the niches
and corbels? Surely these added to
the costs.
My thought Is that when it comes
to permanent public buildings in
our state and national capitals, we
ought not to cavtl about nice
architectural touches here and
there. We can well afford to Invest
In structures that reflect a sense of
national pride. Would the econom·
izers truly prefer cinder blocks and

stucco?
True enough, at one point In the
planning for Hart, a few functionar·

~UlUI~&gt;__!itself.

Already in the locker room were
Mookle Wilson and Brian Giles, a
couple of the Mets young player s.
guys who weren't around when
Seaver was winning threeCy Young

awards with the M ets.
" 111ookie was In theclubhouseand
sa id )lello, " said Seaver . "and then
Giles walked in . I thought he was a
ba t boy.
" How quickly we get to the other
end of the spec trum ." said Seaver .
remembering a midsummer day in
1967. when. as a rookie, he became
the fi rst M ets pitcher named to the
All-Star team .
" i got to the ballpark In Anaheim.
I'm just 22year sold .and . first, I look
so young they won 't let me In the
ballpark . When I get in, I'm in a stall
next to Henry Aaron. one of m y
boyhood idols. Then Lou Brock
comes over and says to me. 'Get me
a 7-Up.'
" What a role rever sal. "
When the M ets dealt Seaver to
Cincinnati in June 1977. they traded
a man regarded as one of the finest
pitcher s in the game. He had set a
major lea gue record by striking out
200 or more batters for nine straight
years. leading the league five times.
He had won Cy Youngs in 1969. '73
and 75 and had led the Mets to two
Nati onal L eague pennants and onP
World Series title.
As he r eturned to the M ets in a
deal that sent pitcher Charlie Puleo
/
and two minor leaguers to Cincin·
nati, the question was: Can Tom
Seaver. at age 38, recover from the
I
wor st season of his career. or would
the M ets have been better off going
after a younger player .
'
" It's possible. " Seaver sa id when
posed the question at a news
conference Thursday to announce
Ihe trade. "it's also possible that six
months down the road. they could
look like geniuses. too. it 's specula·
'i
~
lion - it 's down the road.
"But i think I ca n pitch. or I
wouldn 't be here. I haveother things
...........w
· I could just as well do if i didn 't think
I cou ld contribute to this team ."
CHECKING THE FIT - New York Mets' General Manager
For signing, Seaver recei1·ed a
Frank Cashen, left, holds the cap he helped to put hack on the head of
four-year contra\)! . The first year is
veteran pitcher Tom Seaver, right, alter announcing the acquisition of
guara nteed , while the nex t three
Seaver in a trade Thursday with the Cincinnati Reds. Sitting in the New
sPasons depend on his petior·
York Mets' locker room at New York's Shea Stadium, Seaver holds the
mance. Seaver had one year left on
No. 41 Mets' jersey that has awaited him since he left the team 5 y, years
his contract with Cincinnati at
ago. Going to the Reds in the trade is 27-year-old right hander Charlie
$450,000. and M ets General Ma n·
Puleo, as weU as two Mets' minor leaguers. (AP Laserphoto).
ager Frank Cashen said that had
been renegoti ated upward.
" With incentives, it will perhaps
make him a million-dollarpit cherin
years to com e." Ca shen sa id. " This
cert ainly makes him the highest
pa id pitcher in Mets history. which
he certainly clescrves to be."
Also shipped off by the Mets wer e
Angeles Raider s. 5· 1.
By The Associated Press
The Dolphins have the ad vantage outfielder ·ca tcheJ,; Lloyd McCien·
Miami Dolphins quart erback
don, who spent last yPar at
of being healthy , while the Jets still
David Woodley may be grateful for
L.vnchburg in the Ca rolina Lcagu~.
arE' recovering from SC'veral injurone thing. Stock in t h~ New York
and
outfielder Jason Felice. who
ies. Wide rece iver Lam J ones m ay
Jets " Sack E xchange" has taken a
pla.
v
ed
at Little Falls in the New
not
be
able
to
start
with
a
sore
ankle.
slight dip. ·
York -Penn League.
and he would be replaced by Bobby
The Jets, who led tho National
Aft er a severe bout with the flu in
Jones.
.Football League with 1i6 quarter ·
training last year. Seaver
spring
In addition. .Jets defensive end
back sacks last season. had only 14
t
15
pounds
and his first three
los
going into Saturday 's game in the
Joe Klccko remains on the sidelines.
decisions,
posted
a 5-13 record with a
from
where
he
has
watched
since
he
Orange Bowl at Miami.
5.50 ERA and did not pitch the final
injured his left knee on the second
"We may not be getting as many
six weeks of the season. During
weekend of the sea son. Klecka's
. sacks as weusuallyget." J ets safety
those final six weeks, Seaver went
absence has been one of the reasons
K en Schroy says, "but we sure are
back
to t)is own, personal spr ing
for the Jets' inabili ty to gN to the
getting the pressures. That's just as
training.
and now, he says he's fit .
quarterback
this
season.
He
led
the
good as a sack as far as we' re
team with 20'/, sacks last season.
concerned."
He has been replarf'd by K enny
The Jets, 5-l . take the third·
Neil.
ranked defense in the NFL into the
1982-83 WAHAMA WHITE FALCON
"People get excited when they sec
_game against Miami's ninth·
CAGE ROSTER
the quarterback go down for a
r anked offense in the American
Ht. .Pos
SENIORS
sack, " Neil says. "but our coaches
Conference. The Jets. led by
6'0 F
Mark Roush+
preach about getting the guy in t h ~
quarterback Richard Todd and
5'10 G
Darren Gilland+
well ... but som e people never notice
running back Freeman McNeil,
6'6 F
Scott Kimes
that kind of pressure."
also hav~ the No. 2 offense in the
6'3 F
Jerry Spradli ng
The Jets have not lost in the
AFC. McNeil is the top rusher in the
5'10 G
JeffRussell
Orange Bowl since 1977.
NFL with 5.12 yard s on lOO carries.
5'10 G
Tim Johnson
The Raiders. led by Jim Plunkett .
The Dolphins. 4·2, m eanwhile,
6'0 F
Todd Troy
rank sixth in the A FC in total
counter with lwoodley and the
JUNIORS
offensP. but many of the Ram s'
league's No. 2 rusher. fullback
6'1 F
Ron Bradley
problem s this year have resulted
Andra Franklin, who has 518 yards
6'0 G
Donnie VanMeter
from defense. The Ram s r ank 13th
on 120 yards.
6'0 F
Bill Clendenin
in the National Conference in total
5'10 G
Phillip Hof .•1an
defense, having allowed ! 59 points
"This is a game we have to have, "
6'2 c
Eric Embelton+
this season to 125 for the Raiders.
Miami Coach Don Shula sa id of the
SOPHOMORES
Sunday's schedule has Buffalo at
contest between two AFC contend·
6'3 F
Boyd Northrop
Tampa Bay, Houston at Philadel·
ers. "Especially, since we're going
5'6 G
Matt Danson
phia, Minnesota at Det roit. the New
against a team we're . in direct
5'10 G
Jason Hysell
York Giants at Washinglon. Pitts·
competition with. It would be very
FRESHMAN
burgn at Cleveland. St. Louis at
m eaningful to beat a good team like
6'3 F
Darrell Mitchell
Chicago,
Green Bay at Baltimore,
the Jets. "
+Returning Lettermen
Kansas City at Denver, New
In Saturday's only other game.
Orleans at Dallas. New England at
the Los Angeles Rams. 1·5, travel
Seattle and Atlanta at San
crosstown to their old home park.
Francisco.
the Coliseum, to play the Los

.....

,t·,

' I~ 1-\tARl) Of 1HE ~Of CH~tSrtMS l), W, I.
1
-AN'D WHAT ARE. W£ 'DONG HERE .?
I

the number of angels that can fit on
a pinhead, the inter-agency group's
members have been debating
whether slave Ia bor Is being used
on the pipeline directly or lndl·
rectly, a lot or a little. The squabble.
unfortunately, may become more
Important than the Issue at hand.
A conclusive finding that slave
labor is being used on the pipeline
would presumably embarrass the
Kremlin. So the White House
representatives in the inter-agency
group were not pleased when some
State Department officials and the
OA argued that the evidence of
slave labor on the pipeline was not
convincing. The State Department
officials and the OA also suggested
that the issue was "an old story"
and didn't deserve a big media
push.
The squabble came to a head
with the drafting of a letter to
Congress a few weeks ago wtlich

accompanied a preliminary report
on the group's findings. The White
House didn' t like Foggy Bottom's
draft, which It thought was too
weak. An administration source
told my associate Lucette Lagnado
there was " some dissatisfaction"
with the first draft.
So the White House people
rewrote the letter .
As finally delivered, the letter
stated: "There Is clear evidence
that the Soviet Union is using forced
labor on a massive scale. This
Includes the use of political

prisoners.''
As for the specific Issue of the
pipeline, the beefed-up letter said:
"A number of reports suggest that
forced labor has been used in some
of the site preparation and other
preliminary work on the export
pipeline ... clearing the forests,
leveling the light-of-way, building
roads and construction living

quarters.''
The State Department and OA
were light about one thing. It was
indeed an old story. I repdrted last
September that the Russians were
using slave labor on the pipeline,
and Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger reported similar find·
ings a short time later.
Whether the story "deserved" a
big media push or not, it didn't get
one. So the Inter-agency group is
now working on Its final report to
Congress, due to be delivered next
month.
In addition to some dramatic new
evidence - reportedly Including
photographs - the task force is
addressing some points not touched
on In the preliminary report,
including the question of whether
Vietnamese workers are being
pressed Into slavery in Siberia.
Such subjects are potential sources
of embarrassments for the
Kremlin.

Certifying human rig'-'-h_ts_____
Ar_tB_uc_hwa_ld
According to the law, the Pres!·
dent of the Unlted States has to
certify to Congress that a country
accused of violating human lights
has made significant progress in
ending abuses, before the U .S.
government can give It aid. This
has presented some problems for
Mr. Reagan, particularly where it
concerns countries In Latin and
Central America such as Chlle,
Argentina, El Salvador and Gua·
temala, to name just a few.
One cannot be sure how Mr.
Reagan knows if there has been
progress made in the human lights
area, because the President only
has the word of the leaders of these
countlies that atrocities against the
citizens are being kept to a
minimum. My guess is that before
White House certification is sent up
to the HUJ, this is what happens.
The State Department puts In a
telephone call to the U .S. Ambassador to the country Mr. Reagan has
promised mUitary aid.
The man in Washtngron says,
"Mr. Ambassador, how's the hu·

NEW YORK (APi - Tom Seaver
walked Into the New York M ets
clubhouse to hang jersey No. 41 In
his locker for the first time in ;;y,
years.

f •

Soviet slave labo.&amp;"'-r________J_ac_k_An_d_er_so_n
WASHINGTON- More than 120
yea rs after the Emancipation
Proc lamation, slavery is once
again a subject of controversy In
the Inner circles of a presidential
administration . This time, though,
the slaves under discussion are
Russian, not American.
For months, an Inter-agency
group - including r epresentatives
of the White House, the State
Department, the CIA, the National
Security Council and the Labor
Department - has been hotly
debating the extent of slave labor In
the Soviet Union.
No one questions the fact that
forced labor Is widespread in the
Soviet Unlon. What the government
experts have been arguing about is
whether slaves are being used on a
specific Soviet construction job the natural gas pipeline being built
from Siberia to Western Europe.
Like medieval monks disputing

Reds, Mets complete
3-l Seaver transaction

man rights situation in yuor
country?"
"Much Improved. Last year the
junta was holding 100,000 political
plisoners, but they've emptied out
the prisons and as far as our
intelligence people can find out,
there are only 95,000 hard-core
climlnals left."
" The President will be pleased to
hear that. Do you see any signs of
torture down there?"
"Walt a minute, I'll look out my
window .. . No, it seems all quiet on
the streets. No one Is torturing
anybody, at least not from my
view. Do you want metolookon the
other side of the Embassy?"
"That isn't necessary. As long as
you can't see anything from your
window, that's goodenoughforus."
"Of.course they could be tortur·
ing at the local pollee stations, but I
don't have the staff to go around
checking every precinct in the

country.''
"The President wouldn't want
you to. What does the opposition

party say about the human lights
situation in the country?"
"Come to ttlink of It, I haven't
seen any leaders of the opposi lion in
three months. they ail seem to have
disappeared."
"Have you inquired about their
whereabouts?"
"I did ask one of the colonels the
other nlght at a reception about
them, and he said they were
balding a party caucus on an island
off the shark-Infested seashore."
So to your knowledge the opposl·
tion In the country is alive and

well?''
"The colonel assured me they
were in the best of health, and they
all wanted to be remembered to the
President."
"Good. What about the man In
the street? Does he seem happier
then he was a year ago?"
"I can't speak for everybody, but
the ones guarding my Embassy
seem to be very happy. I spoke to
one the other day and he said the
army never had it s0 good."
"Could you give me a progress

report on land reform?"
"It seems to he moving along.
There was a photograph In the
newspaper yesterday on the front
page showing a peasant receiving a
land grant from the President
tlimself."
"Send us a copy of the paper.
Now what about free speech? Can
the people criticize the government
without fear of being arrested?"
"Of course. We had a fellow In
here the other day who ripped the
regime to libbons."
"What was he doing in the
embassy?"
"He was asking for political
asylum."
"All light, let's move along. As
you are aware, the President has to
send Congress a certification that
the human rights In your country
have progress to the point where he
can resume military aid to the
government in power. In your
·opinion can he truthfully do so?"
"Wait a minute, I'll take another
look out the window."

DOONESBURY

:ts:i8.

&lt;.r·

"Sack exchange"
not as effective

\

•

~1""

(
~

(

·1l

White Falcons open season tonight
By GARY CLARK
High school basketball action
r eturns to the bend area tonight
when Coach L ewi s Hall unveils his
1982·83 edition of the Wahama
Whit e Falcon cage squad with the
Buffalo Bisons of Putnam County
providing the opposition for the
White Falcons' season opener .
As was the case during the
r ecently completed football cam·
palgn Wahama will be competing
on a Class A level after being a
Class AA team for a number of
years. With the drop In classes the
Whit e Fa lcons' 1982-rJ r egular
season schedule and the sec tional
tournament reflect the change in
the White Falcons' opposition.
The White Falcons' head coach
L ewis Hall will be entering his
fourth season after posting a
combined 3530 record in his !irst
three campaigns at the bend area
school. Hall's teams have recorded
8-15. ll·11 and 164 slates while

ca pturing two successive sectional
titles. As in the past two seasons
Tom Cullen will be handling the
junior va rsity squad with Cullens'

::~ngy2~a~5

junior varsity r ecord

After losing eight senior s from
las t yer 8-15 tea m Hall's biggest
concern is experience with only one
starter returning in junior guard
D onnie VanMeter . Although Van·
M eter will be the most experienced
returnee three other prospects
ea rned lett ermen status in senior
forward Mark Roush, junior center
Eric Embelton and senior guard
Darren ago
Gilland
lettered
years
but who
elected
not two
to
participate during the 1981 -82

season .
This year seven seniors, five
juniors, three sophomores and a
freshman compri se the 1982-&amp;3
Wahama White Falcon cage roster.
Among the 16 candidates are an
abundance of height to which most
local team s are unaccustomed.
Senior Scott Kimes, 6-6, heads the
list of Falcon team m embers who
m easure in at six feet or better .
Following Kimes are senior
N orthrop, and freshman Darrell
Jerry Spradling, sophomore Boyd
Mitchell at 6·3 each. junior Ron
Bradley at 6-1 and senior Mark
Roush, senior Todd Troy , junior
Donnie VanMeter and junior Bill
Clendenin at an even six feet.
The remaining squad m embers
are seniors Jeff Russell, 5-10, and
Tim Johnson, 5-10; junior Phillip

Hoffman. 5·10, and sophomor es
Matt Dawson. 5·8. and Jason
Hysell, 5-10.
VanMeter was the team 's second
leading scorer a year ago with a 9.4
scoring average. As a sophom ore
starter VanMeter connec ted on 59
percent of his free throws Wi th his
Schf'duk•
Dec . 17. Buffal o Puttnam. Hom r .
Dec . 22, Southem , Awa y .
Dec . 28, Vinson Hollday Tournanwm .
Awa y .
[}(:&gt;(&gt; . 30, Vinson Holiday T ournamPnt.
Aw ay
Ja n. 7, Point Pleasan!. Homf' .
Ja n. II , K ygf&gt;r Cr('(&gt;k . Homl' .
Ja n. 15, Nort h GaU\a , Awav .
Ja n. 18. Southern , HomP. ·
Jan. 22, Meigs, Away .
Jan. 25 , South western . HomC'
.Jan. 26, Walton, Awa y .
J an. 29. Hamlin , Homr
F'eb. 1, Kyger Cl'f'ek , Away
F'eb. 4, Point Plf'asant. Awa v .
F'eb. 8, North GaU ia. Homf'.·
F'eb. 12. Meigs, HomP.
F'eb. 1.1. SouthwPstern , A way.
F'l:'b. 18, Buffalo Putnam , Awav
F eb. 22, Walton, Home .
·
F'eb. 25, Duva l, Awa y .
M arch I , Hannan. Home.

high scoring game being 17 points
against Spencer .
Mark Roush wa s the surprise of
the 1981-82 season for Coach Hall
after spending the first half of the
year on the Falcon j unior var sity .
Roush c~ me on fast to average 4.6
points per ga m e while connecting
on 46 per cent at the free throw line.
His high scor ing game was 15
point s against Wir t County in the
opening r ound of the Region One

tour nament .

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Ohio cage scores
Ohio C'otll•~tt · 8 !L,ktih.:LII

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1983 FORD LTD 4 DR.

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killing 31 people.
Ten years ago: Apollo 17 astronaut Ronald Evans floated In space for 47
minutes to retrieve !Ibn from tile earth-bound space craft.
Five years ago: An Israeli peace delegation attending Sabbath servl~
was cheered In by thousands of Egyptians In Cairo.
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One year ago: Polish officials reported that seven people had been killed
when police opened fire at a strike-bound coal mine near Katowice.

'\

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f'•
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1982-83 WAHAMA WHITE FALCONS-Shown above are the members of the 1982-83 Wahama White Falcon
basketball team. The White Falcons open their season on Friday, Dec. 17, as they host Buffalo-Putnam . Team
memhers include, first row left to right, Matt Dawson, Jell Russell, Mark Roush. Todd Tro y, Darrln Gilland and
Donnie VanMeter; back row, Coach Lewis Hall, Darrell Mitchell, Ron Bradley, Scott Kim es, Eric Emdelton,
Jerry Spradling and Assistant Coach Tom Cullen.(Photo by Tim Da vis. l

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4

Page

Th e Daily Sen tin e l

Pom eroy

Friday, December

Middleport, Ohio

17, 1982

December

Buckeyes defeat Youngstown state
lly .&lt;\.-.,odatcd Pn.•ss
I1 \\'as o big night for a couple of
big gtl.' s from the Big Ten.
Hand)' Breuer. Minnesota 's 7-foot
:1 ren ter. had 22 points and eight
rdmunds in leadi ng the Gophers
p&lt;~ s t Davton T/.f{J Thursday night.
Ohio Stall's Tony Campbell, a 6-7
fcuward. put in 20 point s to p~ce the
HuckC'.VPS OW' I

Hl '&gt;:\
Thl'

onl~ ·

Youngs town Sta te

1ankrd !Pa m in ac tion

No I Virgin "'· which played in
TokYo Thu rsdav morning without
li s ·big man. -7-~ center Ralph
Sampson. who was sidelined with
till' flu Still , the Cava liers downed
'lo. I~ Houston 72-fiJ as Sa mpson's
rcplaccmrlll, Jm1 Miller. scored 14
points.
Virgmw \\'aS 1dle today before
taking on Utah on Saturday, also in
Tokyo
The Gophers handed Dayton its
first defeat or the season after four
\\ ". IS

\l fo.l&lt; ,, !-:It; II 'I'll f;f(,\JIERS - Memhel'' of th••
l~lH:!-X:!

\ l: u·.~ utiPr

\k tg-...

Haggy. Standing left to right are wad1 Rust)
Bookman, Brian Tanrwltill, J. R. Kitchen, Huey
Eason, ,J&lt;'Sse Howard, Ste"c Musser, Chip \\'t•IT\'·
&amp;ott Powell, Paul Dailey, Marty Cline, and managc•r
Mike Kloes.

f'ighth gr adP has kt•thall

wam an · ... li m\ 11 ahon·. · n~t• ir c· urn•nt r(•t·o rd is 5-0.
Kut&gt;t'hn~ It It to rig-ht art· IA·~tprStewart, TimCasst•ll,
llon II&lt;Tkt·r. Todd 11,.,..11, .Jay llt"kirk, 'l'im Darst ,
Phil King, Uon ."\tt•m, ,Jl'ff Jlood , J e ff ~l'L~n and 1«:-x

that we got into it quickly in the
s~o nd half." sa id Minnesota Coach
.lim Dutcher " Dayton hurt us in the
first half with their rebound ing, not

Collegf'

Ohio
Sportlight

game.~

bowl

:nks new contract
II••" I

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n H 't ·ts Rr igil,ml Youn.e 1111 ht' g;t mr 's fift h rd rti on Marf'k i~ an A ll -1\mrriran
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11c topped the 100-s trikeout plateau
m a s£'~so n .
"Wp arc obviously rleiighted to
haH' Gay lord bark for another
\Par.·· Man nr rs' Prcsident Dan
(l' l lm•n sc~1rl Thursday. "As he
.rppruacllP'- morT• milestones in his
rll u -. rrrouq·;lrc'C'r. Wl'&lt;Jre happ~ that

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Sent mel. 111 Court St . P u rnt•t\ 1)'. Ohw 45769
SUBSCRIPTION RATE.'t
Hy Currier ur Mulur Ruutr
Otll ' Wt't'k

$1 00

One Munth

$4 40

On" v.·.tt

$52 80

SINC.I.ECOPY
PRICES
J5 Ct nL~

Sub......, tl&gt;t·rs nul dt•s u tng tu r&gt;ay llw t &lt;~rnt· r
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnsidt• Ohlu
13 Wt•t•k,

$ H G-1
$2i .:10
$51 -'8

26 Wt•o·k"
52 W•·1·k,

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•II• ' 'II IHI"IIt ,nl

The Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ started
its 15th year Tuesday, with a party
for 75 patients at the Athens Mental
Health Center.
Games with prizes were played,
and group singing was led by C!ydta
Allensworth. Dee Hartinger accompanied on the piano.
Prayer was given by Ed Evans,
followed by refreshments of ice
cream, cup cakes, potato chips,
banana candy, and kool-aid. Santa
Claus made an appearance and
distributed wrapped gifts to all.

$7 95 Pius Tax

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

MEIGS INN
Main

St

992-3629

IH

0-50 in 7.2 seconds.

r To urn('~

~

w

BAUM TRUE VALUE

1

~

CHESTER, OH . ~

~~-----~-----~------=--J

ATTENTION DOG OWNERS
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1983 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 20th. TWO DOLLAR
($2.00) PENALTY IF LICENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE USE THIS HANDY APPLICATION BlANK AND MAIL TO THE COUNTY
AUDITOR AT THE COURTHOUSE NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS ($2.00) FOR EACH
DOG, MALE OR FEMALE.
To Obtain license by mail send this form to: Howard E. Frank, County Auditor, Meigs
County, Pomeroy, Ohin 45769. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope and price
of license.
Male Dog $2.00 Female Dog $2.00 Kennel license $10.00

NEW CHRISTMAS HOURS
Open 9 a.m. Till 8 p.m.

,.

Tag No.
Assigned

If

773-5592

Mason, W. Va:

SO SEE US SOON!!!

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
OH.

PH.

Each

Each

Give a pair and save $80. Long--throw 8" woofer and
tuned port deliver deep, well-defined bass. 2" tweeter is
ferrofluid-cooled for increased power har)dling capactty.
Decorator lattice-work molded griiie. 19 x 1()3/. x 7'/2".

#40-4030

Top speed is

~~~9 5 • Removable Dust Cover
2
Records directly from radto, 3-speed changer or " live" w1th

optional mikes . Auto-Stop, Auto-Level, pause and tape
counter. Tuner has AFC on FM, FM-stereo 1nd1cator. Tone
control and headphone jack. Walnut vinyl veneer f1n1sh .
1199

ss 2195
Reg.

107 MPH.

Great Sound
They Can
Carry Around!
~

'W'

95
24
Reg.

29.95

Adds FM to any AM car rad10
Small enough to fit under any
dash, uses ex1sting antenna Easy
hook-up w1th no rew1nng #12-1350

24.95

W1! h mounllng hardware

CB With Channel
9 &amp; 19 Priority
TRC-422A by Realistic

Priced to please budget·
minded Santas. "High 'n
wide" tuning dial, tone
switch, built-in AFC on FM,
AM and telescopic FM antennas. AC/battery operat1on .

# 12-711 Bauenes extra

Saves4295

s77

Reg .
119.95

6-Band Portable Radio
Patrolman® CB-60 by Realistic

.

Save
s40

.

'

•

.

'

• VHF Hi and Lo
• UHF • FM • AM
• All-Band Fine-Tuning
• CB Squelch Control

$8000.

you insist on a test driv• call. lut don't say w• didn't wam you.

"
~
•

•

59~

Receives all 40 CB channels, all
three police bands, aircraft, VHF
weather stations, more_ Dual antennas, dial light button, headphone jack. AC/baltery operation.
#12·766 Batteries exira

4-Key Memory

.. J

. ..... ' .....

EC-273 by Radio Shack

Cut

~~~4-~~~~-+~--~~,_--~--~--~
~
. '•
•. "' t

·''

25°/o
Off

30°/o
$7990. Mfr's sugg. retail pr~• eacluding to•..
license, .. .
dealer prep and destination charges, tf any.
~

Meigs County Auditor
992-269~
' ~~';::r·
~ ~uat be obtained no later than Jan. 20, 1883 to avoid payif19
penalty. After this date penalty will be $2.00forlingletagand $6.00
for kennel license.

NOthirig else is a VOicswagan. .1/p

••,

•

'

•••
•

RIVERSIDE V.W.,It4C•

••'

•

'4469-

••
~· ~
J.,

Upper Rlnr Road

..

,

Gallipolis,

~

Save Saves3

..

....

992-2174

Tuning Dia•l
• Two 18"-High SpeakH~

Calculator With

'"1'

HERMAN GRATE, OWNER''

TO QUAURED BUYER

95
:9~~5 179~
95. ~
.Edge-Lit
39

your friends.

It's less than

ONLY 3

By Realistic

5. Your son will.
6. The P.rtce won't impress

.,.

POMEROY, OH.

Car FM
Converter

todriveit. .

Now Thru Christmas Eve.

MASON FURNITURE CO.

Drew Webster Untt 39 held a
Chrtstmas party at Athens Mental
Health Center Tuesday for the
eight male and one female veterans
there.
Each gentleman received a
packa~ containing soap, toothpaste, brush, shaving cream, rose,

4. bJrwifewon'twant

~ArGE~S=EX~-,C~O~W~R-r-r-r-r~H,~AI~R-t-----.-----,-----.~~-.----~ ~

-Ohio

and favors provided by the juniors.
The gift boxes were filled and
tagged Monday night at the home
of Mrs. Harry Davis, with Kim
Patterson, Robln Campbell, Junlors, attending. Mary Martin, Jane
Snauffer, Loretta Tiemeyer. Dorothy Wells, and Veda Davis were
the others assisting.
Going to Athens for the party
were Eileen Martin, Ruby Marshall, Rhoda Hackett, Julla Monk,
Kate Welsch, Iva Powell, and Mary
Martin. The group wUI assist later
in wrapping gifts for the 242
residents of the Athens Hospital.
The group also prepared fruit
at Arcadia_

~

Drew Webster

was designed by German
engineers-so what do you expect?

~~~~T===~~========~~~====~~~~~~~======~====~~ ~

Known

Members of Drew Webster Untt
39 Auxlllary and Juniors met
Monday evening at the home of
Veda Davis to prepare gifts for the
Meigs County residents of the
Athens Mental Health Center_
Eight women and 15 men
received boxes worth a total of $7
each, fU!ed with toiletries, treats,
and notions.
Preparing the gifts were Jane
Snouffer, Veda Davis, Mary Martin, Kim Patterson, and Robln
Campbell.
The group thanks those who
donated goods to the cause, so that
Meigs County people would be
remembered during the holidays.
Members of tbe auxiliary went to
Chillicothe's Veterans Administration Hospital for a Christmas and
btrihday party. Gifts, fruit bags,
and a large sheet cake were taken
to the facUlty by Jane Snouffer,
Ellen Rought, Kate Welsch, and
Mary Martln.

/•

..'·

MASON FURNITURE CO.

deodorant, crossword puzzle and
pencil, date book and calendar, and
afoldercontalnlnganewdollarbiU
from the Juniors, and a large jar of
Instant coffee from Mary Martin,
State Hospital Representative.
From Unit 39, they received bags
contalnlng apples, oranges, and
candy bars.
The lady was given jewelry, a
knit hat, powder, cologne, rose,
soap, toothpaste, a brush and
comb, and a new dollar bU!In a
folder, in addition to the coffee and
the bag of treats.
Refreshments were served on
Chrlstmas-themed plates, napkins,

N~~~,_,'"'

SMITH

Drew Webster
Auxiliary

There's a totally new suspension
package with added stabilizer
bars ond tighter coi l springs . It

•.

Date
Purchased
"Outside

The women's and men's Bible
Sunday School class of l"orest Run
United Methodist Church recently
entertained with a carry-in Christmas dinner.
The church was beautifully
decorated with Christmas ornaments by Kathleen Scott.
Opening blessing was asked by
Rev. Carl Hicks.
Attending were Rev. and Mrs.
Merrifield and Marcia, Kathleen
Scott, Mary K. Roush, Erma M.
Roush, Hllda Yeauger, Alfred
Yeauger, Naomi Wyatt, Maxine
Hicks, Rev. Carl E. Hicks, Vernon
Nease, Helen Nease, Stanley
Nease, Ray, RoseAnn, Kimberly,
and Rochelle Jenkins.

'

·,

Penalty
'

Forest Run

COII aenng IS taut.

'-

ADDRBS __________________________________

Fees
Paid

Thooe going from the class were
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Swift, Clydla
Ailensworth, Dee Hartinger, Ed
Evans, Co!een Van Meter, Brenda
Shuler and daughter Stacey, and
Nora RJce_

3. The rid~ is fliff-'
'"

OWNER OF DOG _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

If

~

If it goes fast it better be oble to stop fast .

1983 Llog licenses Are Now On Sale·

Breed

. - ..

••

reasons not to
a VW Rabbit GTI.
l.lt goes too fast.
2.1t stops too fast.

'•

GUITAR AND VOCAL

126

&gt;

..,. ,.,YOI.~NOf-IIOCA'

FLOYD FANSEE 8-12

I

J

Homebuilders Class

8 oz. New York
or White Fish
Potato Boat
Vegetable
Pastel Dessert
Salad Bar
Roll
Plus Non-Alcoholic Beverage

1'2 ll'f'Or d last _vearwas

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

17 1982

Pomeroy Women's Christian
Temperance Union met recently for
a combined Thanksgiving and
Christmas dinner at the home of
Mrs. Ma Warner.
Grace was said by Carol Cook.
President of the group, Lula
Hampton presided over the meeting, and also gave devotions.
Opening songs were "Count Your
Blessings,'' and "We Gather Together," followed by the reading of
the Christmas story from the
second chapter of the Book of Luke_
Guest' speaker for the evening
was Maj . Glenna Rummel of the
Salvation Army, who spoke on her
recent trip to the Salvation Army
Centennial Congress held in India.
She told of her former missionary
experience in India, and showed a
sari, a sandalwood garland, a
crafted purse, photographs, and
other materials from the country.
Maj. Rummel concluded her program with a reading from the Book
of Chronicles.
The house was decorated for
Christmas, including table trimmings and a miniature Christmas
tree.

Dt~tly

lu The

.

...

Temperence union

Choice of

llnn-.....t.,, • ~ ~ ~u1• l'r.uo~.u hmt '
111 111, \ ....... M••tt1 ·•t t •ro....,..,
11\."ii-.Ki\IJ .
,,rtitMt.ll lA.l t.,'l ll
\\ \1111 1-. \\! "1' - 'J r. othd 1 lt u lio

''""

POWER TOOLS, HAND TOOLS ~
AND OTHER HARDWARE
~
NEEDS
~

V985 -3 301

\ •l( 'IJ...: "

)ll;lrrf'!L t .1 1 l. og,l n

Ironton .11 I{U \S(IJl

' '

·~ 1

'"

r·····=·----~-------~--,
~ ... ·
SEE US FOR
~
~ ~~
CHRISTMAS GIFTS ~
~
FOR THE HANDYMAN ~

\\ l!J•I'it 't-.. IJII I ~ • . I I \ Jtt1 f111'd

I-: :1 ~. , •,

, ,.

Jy Press ASSOt.·ta lwn and the Amcnl'a n
Nt·wsJ)Hpcr Pubhshcrs AssiJl·tatwn , Naltonlll .
Advcr lts 1ng Rt·prcst·nta\I VC, Bntnhlllll ,
Nt•wspapt•r Sttlcs, 733 Th1rtl Avenue, ~
York , Nt•w York 10017

; lll·'\\ 11'!1 1!11·-.,t hntJ],

Tonil-(h t·~ 1-(allw,.,,..
Iront 1m .11 \ 'l f•tg"

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to

Tran~aC'I inn"

1 ~·"1

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l11ghhghtf'd bv h1.s :lOOth career
,·ictorY . a i :1drcrsion ovPr the New
York Yank1'f&gt;s on Ma~' 6 at thC'
h: rngdomf'

I ,

II Il l

\t r , " 'I~

Press, Inland DHt . .

THIS SATURDAY NIGHT
AT THE MEIGS INN

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( ·~ mft•)"( ' IH' I '

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S.Jlnnl.o1 I N·o !"o

holding t h('nl to lf'ss 1h.t n 10 porn Is ThaI 's how WPII ,,·p\·f'
pl. 1\ 111g rldt•nsr ' t ·I\ l;.t 11 ·I\ '· . _, .rei 1hP I)-foot -2. 2:..}()-pound sf'mor, ninr lark If's
1\ \,1\ f rum IJt ·rng OJrrr1 Sta 11 ··..., d II I rmP c..tn'f'r 1cJ ckling l r&lt;.~ck&gt;r .
C';l n

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lln f'hdt kt·J fur tht • Hul'kP\ t' s

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Pub11.shl'li l'\'t•ry Hfll ·rnnon. Muntluy thrnu ~ h
Fntla} , 111 ("uurl Stn ·d. by lht• Ohtu Valli'}'
Pu b h :s h111~ Ct~mpcul)
Mullunclila, l n1·.
Pmnl'ruy, Ohw 45769, 992-2 156 Senmd d&lt;tss
rusUtge puul at Punwru}. Ohtu

POSTMASTER St•nd

• -

Lewis Manley Untt 26.'!Amerlcan
Legion Auxiliary held its annual
Christmas pa':'Y and dinner recently at Duff s Smorgasbord in
Gallipolis
·
The table was decorated for the
occasion, while games were played
and gifts were exchanged.
Membersbroughtarticlestobesent
to Mrs. Thora Gatwood, district
president, for use in grab bags to be
sold at the midwinter conference.

I USPS 145-9601
A Uh lsiun uf Mulltmt&gt;diu. Inc.

As.\Vt"liil t'll

·~·

an ey
Auxiliary
WIS

SEATTLE ii\PI - Veteran
1.l Wo ·1k"
$15 21
right -hander Gaylord Perry has
2fi WI't·b
$29 6-'
s1gned wi th theSea ltle Marinets for
52 W• ·•·k...
$::iii 21
lilP 1'l&amp;1 season. his26th professional
ba sPball Sl'ason.
PelT)', at 44 the oldest active f'j:Q;~~;;.o;~~;;Q;;,:;Q~-;::;;:~;;:;::~-~;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;.::;;
pla.vPr in the major leagues. is a
two·liln(' Cy Young winner who
CUITc·ntly leads all active pitchers in
,·iciOriPs. with :107. and ranks third
on thr ail ·time st rikeout list with

Frul.n lit·• 1:
ll nhd.n I ~''' I

Jilt '

\ '!Clon es. m c·rcoming a fivC'-point
hal fl i me dofiril.
"I\ big part of the turnaround was

Le ' M

T he Doily Senlinei

Mcmbt·r Tht·

...

Meigs groups hold part!es, prepare for the holidays

Guard Dane Suttle hit II ofl7fieid
goal attempts and scored 29 :x&gt;ints
to lead Pepperdine over NevadaReno86-&amp;3.

their outside shots. "
Dayton outrebounded Minnesota
26-15 in the half. But Minnesota
dominated the boards in the second
half and shot 51.5 percent. led by
Breuer.
"Randy's presence occupied a
minimum of two guys defensively.
He's not a great shot blocker but he
poses a big threat." Dutcher sa id.
" They made us look bad in the
second half at both ends of thecourt.
In the second half we got tired and
went solo too much," sa id Dayton
Coach Don Donoher .
Ohio State gave Youngstown
State Coach Mike Rice "a head·
ache-" The Buckeyes also gave the
Penguins a beating, led by Campbell and Joe Concheck, who had 14.
"We expect good play out of Tony
every time he steps on the court, "
sa id Buckeyes Coach Eldon Miller.
Miller credited his team'sdefense
for the victory.
"Defense should tell the tale," he
noted. "It didn't in the first half but it
did in the second. We did a good job
defensively in the first 10 minutes of
the second half and that made the
difference."
Kenny Austin scored all of his 13
points in the second half to lead Rice
over St. Mary's, Texas 64-54 . Greg
Grant led five Aggies in double
figures with 15 points as Utah State
downed Weber State 74-62. Shelton
Gibbs scored 30 points to lead SL
Peter's to its sixth straight victory.
61 -51 over Brooklyn College.

• • •. • •

o:-

2~!
3.~

like our ENERCELL® bat·

W, uC", 11 0" and "AA"

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Check Your Phone Book for thela·llle l'llllek Store or Dealer Nearest You
"'ICIS MAY YAAY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

AN6~0EAlER~

A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

�Friday, December 17, 1982

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Me igs Coun ty
Fox Chasers Association will
meet Friday at 7::10 p.m. a t their
cabin on Eagle Ridge Road .
There will be e lection of officers
and a ll members are urged to
a tt end.
POMEROY - A Chris tmas
progra m will be presented by
Wesleyan Holiness Academy
Sc hool. SR 143. Pomeroy. on
Frida)" at 7: :lO p.m. Rev . Earl
Fields irwites the public to
&lt;l tt end .

MIDDI.l:POI!T - Middle·
port l ndL' pe denl Holiness
Church will presrnt a Christmas
prog-ram Frida)· a l 7: 30 p.m.
Pa stor Odell ManlPy invi tes the
public to attend .

Sr\lTRDAY
J{,\:\A UGA - A Christ mas
pia,·. ·· who Stole Baby Jesus?"
will IX' presented at Sil ver
Memorial Baptist Church. l&lt;a ·
nauga. Saturda!' at 7 p.m .

Sl iND i\ Y
POMEHOY - A Christmas
progra m will be held Sunday at
Ca rleton Church on Kings bury
Road. Th e program will be
presented b\· the church youth

Calendar

a nd Is ent itled "'The Gift of
Chrlstmastlme."' All are wei·
come to attend .
POMEROY- Christmas pro·
gram will be presented at Hysell
Run Holiness Church Sunday at
7:30 p.m. The public is invited.

SYRACUSE Church of the
Nazarene will conduct an Ad·
vent service Sunday at 6 p.m.,
followed by Holy Communion.
The program ls entitled, "Light·
ing Our Way to Christmas," and
the public Is Invited.

POME ROY- Christmas pro·
gram at the Unled Pentecostal
Churc h at 6 p.m. Sunday. A
musical, "'Super Gift from
Heaven,"' will be presented .

RACINE - Sant a Claus will
be a t Racine Fire Department to
distribute treats to the children
from I to 2:30p.m. Sunday. The
Ladles Auxiliary of the depart ·
ment Is sponsoring the visit.

fellowship hour will be held
following the program.

MIDDLEPORT Church of
Christ Christmas cantata, "'My
Chrtstmas Gift ," presented by
Chancel Choir Sunday at 7 p.m.
Public is Invited .

....

St. Rt.

"For Fine Seein Hair" - Reg. $22.50

NEW YORK ,,.
CLOTHING HOUSE

AUNE WEAVER'S BEAUTY &amp; DRESS SHOP
Racine, OH.
PH. 949-2666

KERMIT'S KORNER
Pomeroy, Oh10

MROA.W MAToWEES SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS 12.00
ADMISSION EVE'JilY TUE~Y Jl.DO

DECEMBER 17 thru

Your Bird Feed
Headquarters

Mr. and Mr&gt; I(:. I ph Ballard were
'iUrpriscd upon n ·1urning from a
wff'k in F'lorida r('('t· n t l.\ · \\ 'i 1h a 40th
\\edding a n ni \'C' rs ar~ · parl y hrld at

thPir home bv lhl'ir child ren.
Brenda and Dcl\·id.
Icr bluf' strcamrrs and wC'dding

hell s decorated the dining room
and tabiP. A two- tiered ca ke. baked
and dPcor;:~ t rd b\ Son ia Circle, was
arra ~ · rd

topped by a porcelain bridal couple.
Ca ke. ice crea m. coffee, and tea
wPrc sen·ed to the guests.
Allending were Mr. a nd Mrs.

Office Hours By Appt.
Telephone 675-6008

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST. 212 W. ·

OH .

S~M.PD

BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPllST
CHURCH, Rou1e l.Shadr. BlblrSchool7p.m .
Thursday: worship serv\('(' 8 p.m.

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 200 W. Main St.. 992·5215. Vocal
music. Sunday worship 10 a .m .: BlbiC' study
11 a.m .; worship, 6 p.m . Wednr sday Bible'
s tudy. 7 p.m.

19" COLOR TV

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRI STIA N
CHU RCH - CIU1on Lucas, paslor. Sunday
Sc hool 9:]) a. m . Mrs. Worley F'rancis. sup!.
PI'E'achlnR services fir st and lhl rd Sundays
foUowlng Sunday School. Yout h m('('t!ng rv·
rry Sunda.v. 7: :ll p.m.

629 Main Street

I~~~~~~~~~~~~~Q~Q~~~~~~~~~~~rl

Gro\"Cr
. Synthia
a nd ~
Serena; White,
Mr. a ndJr.
Mrs.
Tom Wolfe
and Patty, Mr . and Mrs. Jeffrey
Circle and Ni kki. Mr. a nd Mrs. Dan
Spence r. l&lt;irt , and Danie lle;
Brenda and Da vid Ballard.

..,-- --

GRAHAM UN IT E D METHODI ST.

- - . ---

Pl'f&gt;achlng 9: :J) a .m .. fl rsl and S('('()nd Sun·
days of each monlh; lhird and four1h Sundays
each month. worship servlt'f'S at 7: ll p.m .'
Wednf'Sday &lt;'V('nlng s at7: :10 p.m .. Prayrr and
Bible Slud~·.
SEVENTH ·DA \' ADVENTIST, Mullx&gt;rrv
Heights Road. Pomrroy . Mi&lt;'haC'I Pla rl·
kowskl, paslor; Rl1a While, Sabbath School
Supt . Sabbath School is at'l p.m . on Sa turda ~·
wlth worship srrvic&lt;'s following a1 3: 1~ p.m .

wilh blur rosebuds a nd
• 19" diagonal black matrix In-line color
picture tube

I, 1000~ IIOI!cl-state c - .

SYLVANIA
COLOR

• 70-jlolltlon Ctlck-Siop\JHF Tuning

• Stand-avallabte 11 en optional extra

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ~
Sistf'r Harrl('tl Waml'r. Supt. Sunday School.
9::1) a.m.; momlng worship, 10:4i a .m .
POMEROY FIRST BAPTI ST . Da vid
Mann, mlnlst€'r; William Snouffer. Sunday
School sup!. Sunday School. 9:]) a .m. ; Morn ·
!fiji; worship 10:30 .m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Pomerov
Plitt&gt;. David Hunt. pastor; Roii:erTurner. Sur\.
day School Supertntenden1. Sunday school .
9:ll a.m.; morning worship , 10:.'1}; even ing
worship, 7:30 p.m. Midw('('l prayf'r meeling,

w
\2

I

(unauembled)
W
• Teteacoplng VHF, bowtle UHF antenna':l
• C.btnet of black colored high-Impact II!

~

plastic

w

RIDENOUR'S

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

7&lt;JJ p.m.
MIDWAY COMMUN ITY CHURCH. O..x·

w
w

ter Rd .. Langsville. Rev . A. A. Hughes, Pas·
lor. Sundav School 10 a.m. Servlcf'S on
TuE'Sday, Thursday and Sunday 7: :ll p.m

w

Run Road, Rt&gt;V. EmiTK'II Rawson. paslor.
Handley Dunn. supt. Sunday school, 10 a .m .
Sunday t&gt;Venlng service 7:30 p.m.: Biblr
f('achlng, 7:.lJ p.m . Thursday .
SYRACUSE MIS."JON. Cherry St. . Syra·
ruse. Se1vi('{&gt;S, 10 a.m. Sunday, Evening srr·
vlt'f'S. Sunday and WE'dnesday. 7 p.m .

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Ballry

w

i 985-3307
CHESTER, OH. i
Lww~~~~~•w•••~•-~••••••~

MIODLEPRaf CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UN ION, Lawre~e Manlry, paslor; Mrs. Russell Young, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School 9:30 a .m . Evening worship
7:]) P.m. Wednesday prayer m(&gt;('11ng 7::10
p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF' GOD. Racine
- RE"' . James Satterfield. pastor. Morning
worshlp9:45 a.m .: Sunday School10: 4S a.m.;
P\IE'Illn~ worship 7 p.m. Tursday, 7:30 p.m ..
ladlE's prayer meeting. Wednesday, 7: :1&gt; p.m .

Mod. 403

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• Acme Westerrt Boots
• Minnetonka Moccasins
for Men, Women, Children
• Western Leather Belts &amp; Buckles
• Leather Gloves
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e Western Ties
• Western.Jewelry &amp; Gifts for the Horseman
• Men's &amp; Women's Tooled Leather Billfolds
• Truckers Wallets
• Hand Tooted Purses
· • Fringed Leather Coats
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eSaddles, Saddle Pads, Blankets
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• Allls·Chalmers Toys
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eGulnea Pigs, Hamsters, ~trllils, Fish,
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Christmas Stocklnp for Dog &amp; Cat
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Dad's Root Beer
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13" Color TV

PILOT

Pomeory, 0.
The Store With" All Kinds of Stuff"
Pets-Stabtes-Lirgeancl SmllllAnil. .~
Lawns- GafdiM ,
H2-2164

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System TI23/ 32-22
4-Way System with
Integrated Amplifier,
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Cassette Tape
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Tape Player, Automatic
· Record Changer and
Matched 32" Speakers.

ONLY

Sixth arxl Palmer, the Rrv. Mark McOung.
Sunday school9: 1i a.m. ; Dan Whllr. Sunday
School supt .. John RellJ&lt;' l, Sr .. asst. supt.
Momin~ Worship 10: 15 a .m . Youth m('('fing
7:.Jl p.m. WednPsda.v, including w('{' rots.
eager bt•avers, junior astroanu t~. and junior
and senior high BYF: choir practlct" 8: :lOp.m .
WMI'Iesday; prayer m('('l!ng and Olblrstud.v.
Wednesday, 7: JJ p.m.
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mlddle!Xlrt , ~th and
Main, Bob MPiton. mlnisiC'r , Scot1 Sa lt sman,
assoclatt- minlsler. Blbft- School, 9:30a. m.;
morning worship, 10:30 a .m. ; evening wor·
ship 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study and youlh
group JTIE.'('tlngs, 7 p.m .

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZA ·
RENE, RE'V. Jim Broome. pastor; Bill WhJte,
Sunday school sup!. Sunday school, 9: lla.m.;
morning worship, 10: :J) a.m .: Sunday evengellstlc Jll('etlna, 7 p.m . P rayer rnl"etlng Wed·
nesday 7 p.m .

l!NlTED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY

OF MEIGS COUNTY, Rev, Wanda Johnson,
director; Harold Johnson. dlrf'&lt;'lor of
education .

HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN,
Wonl11p Servtce, 9 a.m.: Church Schooi,IO: 30

a.m.
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN.

MODERN SUPPLY

3H w. Maln StrHt

YPE.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST. Comer

FREE
DEUVERY
Otv . ol Morse Electro Product's Corp .

Save

Church School, 9 a.m.: Morning worship,
10:15. Bible Study Tuesday, 10 u.m .; Bible
study, Thursday, 7: ll p.m .

sao

SYRACUSE f1RST UNITED PRESBY·

INGELS
&amp; JEWBRY, INC.
106 N. Second Ave.

PH. 992·2635

"!S

216

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Serv•ce
LOCUS! &amp; Beech St••••;-•
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.

Nud To Co To ChuRch

RlJ11.AND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST. El&lt;k'r .JarrK'S Mill('r. Bib!('
studv. Wrdnesda.v, i :llp.m .: Sunday Srhool,
10 a :m. Sunday nighl S&lt;'I\'IC&lt;'. 7: :ll p.m .

Yes . I m one or those sevent y·hve m+lhon Amencans who are
not members o t a chu rch

GroceriesGeneral Merchand 1se
Racine 949-2SSO

1--------------....J

Saturday and Sunday are tne two days ol the wtoek I like 10
de vole enluelylo relaxation ano+ ecr ea110n Why should I spend an
hour or so 1n chu tch "
lltyto l•ve stra1ght- to pu1" ' a tu ltoay s work lor m y ooss to get
along WIU'I m~ nerghbor. to Orong up my Ch •ldren •n the proper w ay
As long as I m trymg to hve respectably why do I neeCI to go 10
chu rch ?

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Near
Long Bottom, Edsel Han. pastor. Sunday
school. 9: .l J a.m.; Worship 10: .10 a .m .;
Prayer l'll('('l\ng 7:30p.m. Thursday.

There •S an answer my l r1eno S1nce the oeg1nn1ng ot hiStory
you ana m,lloens l1ke you have oeen lty1ng 10 run you • hve s and tho s
world ot ours by your o wn knowleage and sl rength You ve 5a•d
~ou Cl•dn t n eea help Bul human expeuence Clec la1es that you
have lart eCI The pas1 has tett us an ugly PIC tu re o f cruettv ana
OIOO&lt;lshed o t hate ano cnme The present hn Os us on the eoge ot
hesh d1sa ster - ol de~asla t rng war on tne outs1de and mora l aecay
11om w1lh• n Th1 s 15 the tragedy ol man s proud anemot to 11~e
w1th out Goo

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST.
Comrr As h and Plum. Leslie Hayman , pastor. Sunday school lOa .m.: Morning Worship.
11 a.m .; Wednesday and Saturday Evenlrlf{
srl\'tces. 7: :ll p.m .
MEIGS

COOPERATIVE

PARl~H

UNITED ME1110DIST CJRJRCH

Smpl"'" -"' 1&gt;1' Tile ....... ., a~ llorw Sot. &lt;'1,
~ 11181 ~ ~ ... """.,,,"'!! s."'""

Fay Sauer, Director
Rev. Robert McGee

P 0

Bl'lo 110:!• c,......,..,,.,,.

v ~11•n • • 119(:11,

You n eed nelp-help beyond the pate o t human 19SOU1 t es
You neea tne lO ve ot Goo lhat emoowe1 s a man to hve a g00C1111e
You can hn&lt;llhiS love on ly +n your place o t worsh+p-rn tenowsn1p
ana commun+on w11h H1m He IS 1n H1s Church-torgl\t rng tov1ng
s t re~gmenrng g1vrng men· me courage ana power 1or ng111 hv1ng

i\.&lt;iHOCiate Director
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Seklon Johnson
Rev. Duane Sydemtrlcker
Rev, 1Uchl&amp;nl1bomas

ALFRED- Church School 9: .'J)a .m .: Woc·
ship, U a.m .; UMYF. 6:30 p.m .; UMW,
THird Tuf'Sday, 7: .'Jl p.m. Community ttrst
Sunduy .
CHESTER - Worship 9 a .m.; Church
School 10 a .m .; Biblr Study, Thursday, 7 p.m .
UMW. flrsl Thursday. 1 p.m.; Communion
rtrst Sunday .
JOPPA - Worship. 9:30 a .m .: Church
School. 10: :J) a .m . Blbk&gt; Study. Wednesday,
7: l) p.m .
LONG BOTJ'OM - Church School. 9: 30
a .m .: Wors hip, 7 p.m .: Blbl£' Study, Wednes·
da.v, 7:30p.m.; UMYF'. Wednesday, 6 p.m.:
Communlon First Sundav.
REEDSVILLE - Chun:h School. 9: 30
a .m .; Worship 11 a.m .

SOUTH BETIIEL -

Church School. 9

a .m .; Worship 10 a. m.: Christian Endeavor,
Youth Fellows hip, 4 p.m.: Bible Study, Wedll£'sday. 7: 30p.m .
'nJPPERS PLAINS ~'T. PAUL- Chui"'Ctt
School, 9a .m .; Wors hlp. !Oa.m .; BlbleStiiKty,
Tu&lt;'Sday. 7: .10 p.m .: UMW, Thlrd 1\Jcsday.
7:.'ll p.m .: Communkln first Sunday.

R~v .

Rohert McGee

ASBURY !Syracuse!- Worship, fOa .m. ;
C'hurC'h School. 10 a .m.; Charg€' Blbkt Sfudy,
Thu rsday. 7: JO p.m .: UMW, first TUI'8day,
7: :11 p.m .: Choir RL&gt;hrarsal. Wednf5da)', &amp;:C
p.m .: UMW , fourth Sunday, 6: ll p.m .

ENTERPRISE -Worship 9 a.m.: O!urt'!l
School. 10 a.m.; Blblr Study, Tuf&gt;sday, 7::wl
p.m .: UMW. F'trst Monday, 7:38 p,,,;.,
UMYF. Sunda~,:. 6 p.m . Choir retwars61, 6: 3lt
p.m . Wt&gt;dnesdav .

FLA"IWOODS - Church School.•lflll,_,
Worship, 1 a .m .; Bible Study, Thunday"Pa
p.m .: UMYF. Sunday , 6 p.m .
F'ORESf RUN - Wors hip. 9 a .m .; CtM.IITb
School. 10 a .m .; Choir PracUce, TUesday.
6: :Jl p.m .; UMW. ftnl Tllf:"Sday, 7:ll p.m.
HEATH (M iddleporll - Church Scftool.
9: .ll a. m .: Worship, 10: ,lJ a.m.; Bible Study,
Tul'Sday, 10 a.m.; UMW. second Manday;
7:lJ p.m .; UMM, third Monday, 7:30p.m.
MINERSVILLE - Worship Sw\'ice-, 10
a .m .; Church &amp;hool. 11 a .m. : UMW, 1hlrd
Wednesday, 1 p .m. : Cholr pract!C't', Mondey,
7:.ll p.m .
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship S.rvlfl&gt;. 10
a .m .: Church School. 11 a .m.; UMW, !tK'ORd
Tuesday, 7:.10 p .m.; UMYF last Tuf!sday,
7:]) p.m .
POMEROY - Church School. 9: U a.m.:
Worship SCt"Yict". 10: :lla.m.: Oullr 11'h(&gt;arsal.
Wf'dnesday. 7:.YI p.m.; UMW. second 1\teosday, 7:30p.m.; UMW. last Sunday, 7 a.m. ;
UMYF'. Sunday. l:i p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS - Church School, 9: !5
a .m .; Worship.lOa.m .; BibiPStudy, Wednf;os.
day, 7::ll p.m .: UMYF 1Seniors 1, Suaday, 6
p.m .: rJuniorst. ~?Very othPr Sunday, 6 p.m.
RUTI.AND - Chun.-h School: 9:4.') 1..11'\.;
Worship, 11 a.m.: UMW (Event~ Qrcle),
second Wednf'Sday, i : 30 p.m. : UMW,IJ(I('(lfld
Thursday, 1 p .m .
SALEM CENTER - Church School. lil
a .m .; Worship, 7 p.m.
SNOWVILLE - Wors hip. 9 a.m .: Church
School 10 a.m.
SOU111ERN CLUSTER
Rev. ,June~~ M. Clark
Rev. Mark W. FlyM
Rev. Floreocr Smith
APPLE GROVE- Churrh Srhool. 9a.m .;
Worship, 10 a.m. tftrst and thJrd SundaysJ:
UMW, second Tursday, 7:30 p.m. ; Prayer
rneE'IInj&lt;l:, Wednesday, 7 p.m .
BETHANY - Wcrshlp, 9 a.m .; Church
School. 10 a .m .: BlbiP Study. Wednrsday, 10
a.m .: Dorcas Women's Frllowshlp. Wf'&lt;tRfsday, 11 a.m.
.

Chunoh School. 9::11 a.m.:
Worship, 10:45 a .m .: second and fourth SunCARMEL -

days~: FellowshJp dinner wtth
Thursday, 6:30p.m.

Sunon, lhtrd

EAST LETART- Church School, 9a.m .;
Worship, 10 a.m. tSf('()fld and founh Sundays; UMW, flrst'I'UE'sday, 7::JJ p.m.
LETART FALLS - Worship, ! a.m.;
Church ScOOOI. 10 a.m.

MORNING STAR - Wor.;hlp, 9: Jl a.m.:
O!urch School. 10: :II a.m.; llblf Sludy,
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m.

MORSE CHAPEL - Church

Scl1ooL 9:30 ·

a.m.; Worship, 11 a .m .

PORTUND - Church School, 7 p.m.;
Worship. S ·p.m.: UMYF. Wednesday, 7:30

Youth Group, Sunday, 6 p.m .

day7:30 p.m .: HandmaldensoltheLonl,llnl
Wednesday. 7 p.m .; M"''' Prayer - u 4

RACINE WESLEY AN - O!unoh Scllool,

Wednesday, 7 a.m.

KENO CHURCH OF 0-IR IST, 0 1\V&lt;'r
Swain, Superintendent. Sunda.v school 9::10
a.m. ewry w{'('k .
HOBSON CHRISTIA N UN ION. WIH!am
Cra btf{'(', paslor. Sunday Sc hool. 9: 30 a .m ..
eve nln~ Slervlce. 7: :II p.m. Wednesday pra.vC'r
rT'IE'E'tlf1R, 7:.10 p.m .

BEARWALLOW RIDG E CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duafl(&gt; Warden, minlst('r. Blbl&lt;'
class. 9-:l) a.m : morning worship, 10:30

a.m.; f'V(&gt;nifltl worship, 6: :1} p.m . Wednl'sda~'
Biblr study. 6: 30p.m.

NEW STIVERSVILL F. COMMUNITY
CHURCH. Sunda y School serv kC', 9: 4i a .m .:
Worship S('r\'ICf', 10: )) a .m .: Evangelistic
SeiVi('(', 7: .ll p.m. \Vedll(&gt;S(Jay: Prayt&gt;r m('(&gt;t·
ing, 7: .10 p.m., Thursday .
ZJON CHURCH OF CHRI ST. Pomero~··
Harrisonville Rd .: Robert Pur1(' 11. mlnis tl'r :
StevE' Stanley, Sunday school supt. Sunda.v
schooJ, 9: lla.m.; worship scrvlcP 10: ]) a .m .;
Eveontmz worship Sunday, 7 p.m . and Wednf'S·
day-, 1 p.m.

ST. JOHN LlJfHERAN CHURCH. Pine
Grow. Th&lt;' Rrv. William MlddiC'swarth, Pas·
ror . Church services 9: ;f) a.m. Sunday School

10:30 a:m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF' CHRIST. Paul
Pratt, pastor. Sunday school. 9: :l) a.m .. Larry:
HayOPs, S. S. Supt.; morning worshJp. 10:30
a.m .

CENTRI\L CLUSTER
Rev. Stanley W. Merrtneld
Rev. Richard Rothemlth
Rev. Rohert E. RobiMOn
Rf'v. Robert Rldfi', Jr.

10 a .m.: Worship, 11 a.m.; UMW, fourth Mon-

OHday evening young ladles auxiliary, 6 p.m .
Wednesday famUy worhslp, 7 p.m .

~-

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

Tuesday . 10 a.m.; Junior and Senior High

S\lllday wonhlp. 11 a.m.; Children's church.
lla.m.: SUndayevmlng ..rvtce, ?p.m.: Wed-

OH.

this Sunday

214 E. Main
992 -5130 Pomeroy

p.m .

RIJ'I1.AND CHURCH OF GOO, Pastor,

m

ElliS &amp; SONS SOHIO

TERIAN Church. Church School , 10: 15a. m.;
morning worship, 11:30 a .m .: Bible Study.

RoY. John Evw. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;

s. Second

Pomeroy
992 ·3325

.
\//

Main St .. Nell P roudfoot, pas tor. Bible school,
9:J) a.m.: m orning worship. 10: :10 a .m.;
Youth rnf'('t\ngs. 6: lJ p.m .: even ln j;l' worship.
7:]) p.m. Wednesday night prayrr meet in!':
and Biblr study, 7:30p.m.
111E SALV.ATION ARMY, II'", Bu11ernu1
Ave., Pomeroy. E nvoy and Mrs. Hoy Win ing.
officers In chargC'. Sunday holln('sS lll('('ting,
10 a. m .; Sunday School. 10: 30 a.m . Sunday
School lf?ader. YPSM, Eloise Adams. 7:30
p.m ., salva tion m{'('ting, various s pPakers
and muslc specials. Thursday - 10 a.m. to 2
p.m .. · Ladk.&gt;s Homf? Leagu&lt;'. all womrn In·
vlted: 7: J) p.m . Pray('r mN&gt;Iing and BiblP
study, Rev. Noel Herman, leactK'r.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Announces that he has assCimed
The General Dentistry Practice
of the late Nelson A. Park, D.D.S.
and that all records will continue
to be available in this office.

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

:l'~·,)7

RENE, Corner Union and Mulberry, Rev.
Vlrgtl Byn?r, paslor. Glen McClung, asst. pas·
tor. Clyde Hender.iOn . pas tor emeritus. Sun·
day School, 9: ]) a.m., Glen McOung, supt. ;
morning wors hip 10: :ll a .m .; evenlnii: service
7 p.m .; mld·week service, Wednesday. 7 p.m .
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E.
Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday services Holy
Communion on thP rirs t Sunday of each
month, a nd romblned with morning prayer
on the third Sunday. Morning prayer and ser·
mon on all other Sundays of lhe month.
Church School and nurse ry cart&gt; provided.
CoffeE' hour In the Parish Hall Immediately
foUowlng 1he servlcP.

PH. 992-2115
Ave.

Pomeroy

~

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

*SCRATCH

WILLIAM E. PARK, D.D.S.

John F . Fultz, Mgr .
Ph . 992·2101

Prescriptions
Pomeroy
992 · 2955

TRINITY CHURCH . Rev. W. H. Perrin,
pastor; Debbie Buck. Sunday School supt .
Church School 9:15 a.m.; wors hip service
10:30 a. m. Choir rehea rsal, '1\iesdav 7:30
p.m .. under dirE'ctlon or Allee Nease. ·

Grey Stripe &amp; Black

Richard H. Billman ll, 0.0.
113 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PH. 992-2920
VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD &amp; SOFT CONTACT
LENSES
Insurance and Medical
Cards Accepted

(

~

~

,~~.~.c~3

CENTER, INt.

~~~~~!

Homehte Saw s

*WILD BIRD SEED
*CRACKED CORN
*SUNFLOWER SEED

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

MARK VSTORE

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

FURNI~~~~ROWARl

FEED THE
BIRDS

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY

u~~~_,\

The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

.RIDENOUR

When The Weather
Is Stormy .....

531lACKSON PIKE·RT.J5 WEST
Phone 448-4524

Chester

Church &amp; Office Supplies
GIFTS
99 Mill St.
Middl e port

ALINE WEAVER-Owner/ Operator
· Sth &amp; Vine St.

Ray Riggs
pt\. 91$· 4100

MIDDI.IPORT
BOOK STORE

SHORT CURLY PERMANENTs ................Sl6·QOAnd Up
CURLING IRONS &amp; HAIR DRYERS ON SPECIAL

r-;-::"=Tex:as=D:a:n:c:ln:':,":wlll::::be:::s:h:own:::~ji

POMEROY - The annual
Christmas program at Mount
Hermo n United Brethren
Church will be held Sunday at
7:30 p.m. The program will
include recitations and a play,
"'Come, Ye Faithful Wise Me n."
The public Is Invited to the

SYRACUSE
Chrtstmas
program at Syracuse Presbyterian Church at 7 p.m. Sunday.

', \

DRESSES &amp; PANT SUITS ......................... 1/2 PRICE
BLOUSES AND SKIRTS ...........................
'7.00
lOTOS and FANTASIA PERMANENTS ........~~~. s20.00

POMEROY - A video film.

SYRACUSE - Children of the
Syracuse Church of the Naza·
rene will pertorm a Christmas
program Sunday at 9:45 a.m.
Special singing will be Included,
and the pu bile Is invi ted .

SYRACUSE Ca rleton Church
Chris tmas program , "'The Gift
of Christmastlme," Sunday 7:30
p.m .. by youth of the church. All
are welcome.

This Message and Church
RIGGS USED CARS, INC. " MEIGS nRE

CHRISTMAS SPECIALS

Preceptor
POMEROY
Beta Beta chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi wtil hold a holiday
brunch Sunday at 12: 30 p.m. at
the Meigs Inn. Members may
bring a guest.

~

7 fXrERIENCE THE JOY Of RELIGION

RACINE - Racine Voblnteer
Fire Department Auxiliary will
be distributing treats SUnday
from 1 to 2: ll p.m. at the Racine
firehouse. Santa and Mrs. Claus
will be present at the eveal

¥

POMEROY -Christmas program wUI be presented by youth
grups of Trinity Congregational
and United Methodist churches,
Pomeroy, at 7:30p.m. Sunday at
the Methodist Church, under the
direction of Mrs. Robert Buck. A

POMEROY - Asbury United
Methodist Churc h Christmas
ca ntata. "'Firs t Christmas,"'
presented by the choir at 11 a.m.
worsh ip service Sunday, dl·
reeled by Mary Lisle. The public
is Invited .

following the country and west·
em dance class of Royal Oak
Ballroom Dance Club from 2 to 4
p.m. Sunday. The film to be
shown at the close will begin at 4
p.m. The publlc ls Invited.

service, which wffi.be held at the
church, located on Co. Road 82.

POMEROY - Christmas
party will be held for the
children of members of the
Pomeroy Eagles Lodge a t 1 p.m.
Sunday.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 17, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

.

....

SI.JI'I'ON - O!urch School. 9:10 Lm.;
rooming worship, 10: ~ a.m. tllrot andi!H'
Sundayst: re-ship dinner with Cai'mol.
lhtrd Thursday, &amp;30 p.m.

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Re-v . Thomas H. Colllf'r, pas ror. Martha
Wolff'. Chairman of the Board of Chris tian
Llf('. Sundav School. 9: :lla.m.; morning wor·
ship, 10:30 ·a.m.; Sunday ~t&gt;ning worship,
7::1) p.m. Prayer mf'f'ting, Wf'dOPSda.v, 7:311
p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Don L. Walkf'r,
Pas._, R.abPrt Smith, Sunda~· School supt. ;
Sunlilay Sr:hoot 9:30 a.m.; mornJng worship,
10:40 ll.m.: Sunday ('V(&gt;nlng worship. 7:.10
p.m.: .Wedn€'Sda~· evml.nii: Bibl(' stud ~· . 7:.10

p.m.
DANVIlLE WESLEYA N. Rev. R. D.
Brown. pastor. Sunday Sc hool, 9::Jl a .m .;
mo~ . worshlp 10:45 a .m .: youth serv ice.
6:45 p.m.: e~nlngworwhip,7 : 30p.m .: prayer
and praise. Wednesday, 7::JJ p.m .
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST',S1£'V£' Ll1 ·
tie, Sunday school supt. Sunday school. 10
a .m .: rnomh~ worship, 11 a .m . Sunda~· even·
I~ worship, 7: 30 p.m . PrayPr ITI('('fing and
Blbk&gt; study. Thursday, 7: :11p.m. : youth mrel·
lng- WOOill"Sday at 7 p.m .

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH.
383 N, 2nd Ave .. Mlddk&gt;port. Sunday School,
10 a.m. Sundav and Wednesdav Evening Sl'r·
via's ~l&gt; p.ni.
·
LIDERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. &lt; Lib·
&lt;&gt;rty Avf .. Pmleroy. Sunday School tO a.m .;
Worship 7:30 p.m . Wednesday Set;Vice. 7: 30
p.m.
CH~RCHURCH OF GOD. f«ov. R. E.
Robii'WIOtl, Jlllslor. Sunday school. 9: :J) a .m. ;
worship S('I'VIC'e. 11 a.I'R.: rveninR SPrVIcf', 7
p.m .: )'OUth 9t'rvict&gt;, Wednesda y, 7 p.m .
UNGSV!LLE CHR!snAN CHURCH . Ro ·
tw!rt E. Musser, pastor. Sunday SC"hool. 9:30
a .m .; Paul Musser, supt.; morninli: wors hip.
10:30 a.m.; Sunday ~nlftl{ serviCE', 7 p.m. :
mkl-wt't'k SE"rvlce, Wednesday. 7 p.m.
, SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZA ·
RENE- Rev. James B. Kl1tk.&gt;, pastor. Sher·
man Cundiff, superintendent. Sunday School.
9:l) a.m .; Morning Worship 10:.11 a. m .:
Evangellsdc service, 6 p.m . Prn~'er and
J)tatse Wf'dnesday, 7 p.m .; youlh m('('ting, 7

p.m.
I'DEN UNITED BRETHREN JN
CHRist. Elden· R Blake, pastor. Sunday
School10 a.m.; Robert Reed. supt. ; Morning
sermon, 11 a.m .; Sunday niRhl seiVices,
Christian Endeavor. 7:30p.m. : Song service.
8 p.m.; Preachln.R. 8: :1) p.m . Mid·week
Prayer mel"tlng, Wednesday, 7 p.m., A !vln
Reed, Jay k&gt;ader.

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, RQRrr
Watson, ·pastor; Crenson Pratt. Sunday
Schoalsupt Morning worship, 9:30a .m .; Sun·
day achool, 10: :1) a .m .: e-vening service, 7:30
p.m .
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Rev. Tom Dooley;
Joe Sayl'f', Sunday School Superintendent .
SUnday school, 9:45 a.m .: evenlnR worship,
7:l0 p.m. Prayer meelinR. • 7::(1 p .m .

W-ay.
TUPPERS •PLAINS CHUR CH OF
CHRIST, VIncent C. Waters, III, minister;
Herrnaa Black, superintendent . Sunday
st1lxJI 9::1) a.m.: evening service, 7 p.m .;

Btble School, 7 p.m.
CHESI'ER CHURCH OF TilE NAZA -

w~

DEXTER CHURCH OF' CHRIST. Charl('s
Russell. Sr.. minister; Rick Macomllf'r , supt.
Sunda y school. 9::10 a .m.; worship S('I\'IC(',
HJ::\0 a.m . Bib!(' St udy, Tu&lt;'Sdny, 7::10 p.m .
~EORGAN I ZED

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
Hf'v. Thrrron Durham. paslor. Su nda ~·
&amp; hool ar 9: .10a.m .. Morning worship at 10::10
a .m . Thursda y Sl'rvlf'f'S at 7: .10 p.m .

FREEDOM (",()SPEL MISSIO N

a1

Bald

Knob. localed on County Road 31. Rf'v. Law .
rl'nceGiul'Sf'ncamp, pas tor: Rf'V . Roii:er WII·
!ford. a.&lt;;.sisran l pa stor . Pr£'aching Sf'rvici'S,
Sunday 7::10 p.m. Pra y&lt;'~' mf'f'tlng Wedm;&gt;s·
day, 7:.10 p.m .. Ga ry G1ifflth, l&lt;'ad€'r Yruth
groups. SWlday C'Vf'nlng. 6: .lO p.m . wllh
Roger and VloiC'l Willford as l&lt;'adC'rs . Com·
muoion sen'i('(' flrsl Sundav each monlh.
WHITE'S CHAPEL . C00lvillf' RD. Rev .
Ro.v [){'{'t£'r, pas tor. Sunday school9: :I() a .m.:
worship Si'IVI&lt;'&lt;'. IO: .lO a .m. Riblj• srudy and
pray&lt;'r serv\('(' Wednesday, 7:.10 p.m .

RUTLAND CHURCH OF

C HRI ~"T.

Eu

gttne Undrrwood. pastor; Herb Elllon . Sun·
day school supt. Sund a~' school. 9: a .m.:
morning worship and communion. 10: :VI a.m .
RUTI.AND BffiLE METHODI ST- Amos
llllls, pas ror: F'rf'd Davis. s upt. Sunday
school. 9: lJ a .m . Mom in~ wors hip, 111: :10a.m.
Young propl€''s S€'rvkr. Sunday. fi: 4:1 p.m.;
Sunday evening S£&gt;rvicC', 7: .'10. WPdn('S(Ia.v f'V ·
enlng prayer m('('ting. 7: :IJ p.m. WMPO Pro.
gram, 7:.10 a.m. t-ach Sunday morning.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE. Rl&gt;\', Lloyd D. Grimm . .Jr .. paslor.
Sunda.v School. 9:lJ a .m .; worshJp Sf'rvlcP.
10::10 a .m .; you ng peopl&lt;''s srrvl('(', 6 p.m .
Evangelistic srrv!C&lt;'. 6::m p.m. WrdnPsday
S&lt;'rvtce, 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF' CHRIST. MUlrr St ..
Mason . W. Va . Eugpfl{l L. Co~ C'r , m lnl&lt;&gt;trr.
Sunday Blbk' Sludy, !Oa.m .: Worship II a.m.
and 7 p.m . W&lt;'dn&lt;'sda~· BibiP Sludy, vocal
music. 7 p.m .

MASON ASSEMBLY OF GO D. Dudd ing
Lane, Mason, W. Va . Rrv . Ronnl£&gt; B. Ro..&lt;;(',
Pastor. Sunda y School 9: 4.'l a.m .: MornI~
Worship 11 a.m . Evf&gt;nin~ Se1-vlcr 7:.l l p.m.
Wednesday Women's M!nlsii1C's 9 a.m.
( m('(&gt;!\n,.-: 'anti prayf'rl . Prayrr and Blbl('
Srudy 7 p.m .

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UN ION. The Rf'V. William
Campbell , pastor. Sunday School. 9: .l J a.m.:
James Hughes, supt. ; evening servlcr. 7:.10
p.m . Wednesday rVE'ning prayer me£'t1ng,
7:30 p.m . Youth pra yer st-rvlc(' ('ach
Tuesday.
F'AIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Lf'tart. W.
Va .. Rt.l. Mark Irwin, pastor. Wors hlpSC'rvlces, 9: 30a.m.; Sunday School . 11 a .m.; ('Vt"n·
lng worship, 7: :1} p.m. Tursday cottage
prayer meellng and Bible s tudy, 9: .l l a.m .
Worship service, Wednesday, 7:.10 p.m.

OUR SAVIOUR LliTHERAN CHURCHWalnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W. Va .
The RE'V . George C. Weirick, pa stor. Sunday
School, 9: :.&gt;a.m .; Surxlay worhslp, 11 a.m.

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now locatl'd

oo Pomeroy Pike-, County Road 25 near f1at ·

woods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. SeiVICf'S on
Sunday at 10: :1) a.m. and 7::11 p.m . with Sun·
day school, 9: ll a.m. blbliestudy, WednPSday,
7: .Jl p.m.
•

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST -St. Rt.318,Anllqulty. Pastor, Rev .
Franklin Dickens. Sunday morning, 10 a.m .
Sunday evening, 7:30p.m. Thursday eveninli:.

7:30p.m.
STIVERSV!LLE COMMUNITY BAPTIST

RENE, Rev. Her~rt Grate, pastor. Frank
Rltfte, 1upt. Sunday School , 9: :1} a.m . Worship servk.'e&gt;. U a.m. and 7: XI p.m . Prayer
meeUng, WE&lt;lnesday, 7::11 p.m .

CHURCH , Pastor Robert Byers. Sunday
SchoollOa.m. : Worship Servk'e 11 a.m .; Sun·
day E."Venlng service, 7: :1) p.m .; Wednesday
evening sef"'llcrt, 7::11 p.m .

.lAUREL CLIFF FREE METIIQOIST

INI)EPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH.
Inc. - r ol Sl .. Middleport. Rev. 0'0..11 Man·

CHURCH. Rev. Robort MU!er, pastor: I.Joyd
Wnpt.lllroctorol ~dan Eaucatlon. Sun·
day lldlool. 9: Jl a.m.: Momirv Worship,
J.t:JO a.m.; O!olr l'ractlce, Suilday, 6:JQ
p.m.: Evening Worship, 7:30p.m. Wednes·
day Prayer and Blblo Study, 7:30p.m .

HarrtsonvUIC' Road. Earl F'i&lt;'lds, pa-.1or.
Hr nr..r Eblin. Jr .. SundavSchool Supl . Sunday
SchoOl 9::1) a .m .; Mom.Jng Worship 11 a .m .;
Sunday evrning SC"I"Yict'. 7: .ll p.m .; Pra\'Pr
Mf'('l\ng, Wf'dn!'Sda.v, 7:.lJ p.m

SYRACUSE FIRST CH URCH OF COD Not Pf'nf{'('()Stal. R£'v . Crorgt• Oil&lt;'r. pas tor
Wors hip Sf'l"\ict' Sundt!,\', 9: 4~ a.m .. Su nday
sc hool. 11 a .m .; worship S&lt;'rviC'f', 7:.1) p.m.
Thur~a v prayf'r fl)('('1\ng , 7: .'JJ p.m.

MT. HERMON UN ITED BRETHREr&lt; I!'
CHRIST CHURCH. Rrv Rotx&gt;rl Sa nt:l&lt;'rs,
pastor; Don Will. la.v l&lt;'ack•r Local('(! In
T£'xas Communltv off CR R.l . Sundav SC'hool.
9: :lJ a .m. ; Morning wors hip .'&gt;('rvlcf'. to: 4:1
a.m : t'VI'nlng prt&gt;at'hlng srrviC'&lt;' S('('Qnd arxl
fourth Sundays. 7: .'Jl p.m .: C'hri~tian End&lt;'a
\'O r. firs r and third Sunrlays. 7: .TI p.m .
Wrdnf'Sday pra.v('r mwling and Biblf' s tud,\ ·,
7:.1'1 p.m .
JF.I-IOVA H'S WITt-:ESS. J?:ll\l Stal P Routf'
1:!4 10nt• m\IC' C'a st of Rutland! . Sunci:J.\ . Bihlt·
h'l·t urf' 9:.10 a .m. : Wa1f'h1owt •r s tud~ ·. 10: '. .11'1
.t m ; Tuf'Sda\. Blbl&lt;" ~ rud~·. 7: .l l p m.
Thursdav. Ttlf.o.:-ralk School. ~: :Ill p m .
S. ••v ict• M('('ting, R: :¥1 p.m.
Hl'TI.A ND FREEWILL B,\PT IST
CHURCH . - Sal£'m St . Hutlanrl . Donald
Karr. Sr ., paslor; Bud S!C'wart. supt•r intl'nd
Pnt S und:.~v School. 10 a m .; C'Vf'ning wo r~ hlp.
j : (I) p m . ·w.:&gt;dnt•sdav t'\'t•ning sf'r"vil'f'. 7: ll
p.m

CHl:HCH OF COD OF PROPHECY .
on thf' 0. .1 . White· R11ild off highw;l\
lfl\ Sunclav School 111 a.m . SuiX'rinl&lt;'ndr&gt;n!
.luhn Lo\·Niav. First \\'rdnf'S(ktv night or
monlh . CPMA Sf'l'\'in·s. ~'('o nd Wt'Cinf'sclav
WMB mf'f'ling. third through fifth ~~o uth
'-f'1Yk1' f~'Orgf' \nw lr. 1&gt;astor.
!lOPE BAM'IST CHAPF:l . - :170 C1ant
SL . MlrldiPJX)rt; Sunda ~· S.:·hool, 111 am :
morning worh.-.ip, 11 a m.: 1'\'Pning wor&lt;&gt;hip. 7
p m Wf'dn1'SCla_\ c·wning Rlbl1· sfuch anti
pra wr mf'('1\ng. i p.m Affllia1t'&lt;i wllh
Southf'rn Hap1ist C!Jn\'l 'nfion
I311ADF'ORD CH UHCH OF CHHI :-."1· Stale' 11ou11 · 124 and Count \' Ru.'Jd ~~ . Mark
~·\·Prs . ministf'r: Sunda\' St:' hool Sup1 .
Sli'VI' Pif ' kl'n~ . Sundav sd10oL !1: .l:l a .m :
morning wor&lt;;hi p. 10: 'W) a m . P\'t•ninr.:
worship. i p.m . \\'r'&lt;il'lf':-,(1&lt;1,\ ' wor~ hip. j p.m
.IUBII.EF. CHRI STIAN f'HURCH (;r'lli'J'.: I ' · ~ C'n&gt;t'k Rom!. HI '\' c· . . / l.i·ml&lt;'V.
p;.l stor: .lohn F'PilurP. ~ upl ·rintPndi•nt. Chur!'h
&lt;;e:'hool. !1: :11 ;1 m : murnim: wors hip. I!~ :111
a.m ; f'n•ninr.: S('l'\'ll'f' . 7 p.m. l3iblP Sludy
Thursday. 7 p.m. Class.-s ror all a).!f'S
:'\UI'Sf' l) ' pnwidN:l for wor~hip s.·n.' il't ~ .
ST. PA UL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corm•r
or S.vramorC' and Sf&gt;&lt;&gt;ond Sts .. Pomproy . 1'hl'
RPv. William M!ddlC&gt;Swarth , Pastor. Sunday
School al 9: 4.') a.m . and Churf'h Sc&gt;rv!Cf'S II
p.m .
S.\ CRED HEART. Mo;gr. AnthonyGianna ·
mOll'. Ph. !l9'Yl~. Salurday t•vc&gt;ning Mass,
7::ll p.m .: Sunday Ma s~ . Ra .m . and 10 a .m .
Conrrsslons onf'.ha lf hour tx&gt;rorf' each Ma ss .
ClaSS('S. 11 a .m. Su nday
j.()('a!Nl

ceo

" For A Real Auction •
11 the Real McCoy "
I. 0 . " Mac " McCoy
'H. 1. Reedsville, Oh.
985· 3944

,,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbu s. 0 .
804 w. Mam
992 · 2318 Pomeroy

Equipment

Sate s and
Servtce

Rutland , Oh10 45775
J . Wm . " Bdr ' Brown , Own e r
Phone (6141 747 ?177

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
M• ddl r p od
r' runrr oy 0

:- ~ , ..

·'

~

t•i

VICTORY BAIYfiST r ~l'l N. 2nd St. , Mid·
dlPJXWI. JaiTIE'S E. K('('SE'e. pastor. Sunday
morning worship. 10 a.m. : evl'nlng st&gt;rvl('(', 7
p.m .; Wt'dni'Sday ('Venlng wors hip, 7 p.m.;
VlsHaHon, Thursda.v, 6:.10 p.m .
TIHNITY CHRl()TIA N ASSE MBLY . Coolv\Ur - Gilbert SprOC"£'r, pastor Sunday
school, 9: 30a.m.: momi ~ S('IV\cf'. 11 a.m .
Sunday f"\'(' ning Sf'lv\{'(', 7: :J) p.m .; mldw('(&gt;k
pray('r SC'rvi('(' Wed!lf'sda.v. i: :10 p.m.
MOUNT OLIVE illMMVNrrY CHURCH.
Lawn&gt;nc(' Bush. paslor: Max Folml'r. Sr. Su·
J)f'rlnl('nd('n\. Sunday School and mornl nii:
worship. 9: :ll a.m. Sunday f'\'t•nlnii: Sl'rv!('(l, 7
p.m .; YCMJt h m('('li nJ:: and Bibl£' s tudy. Wt'd
fl('sday. 7 p.m.
UN ITED FA ITH CHIJRC'H - Houl e ion
Pomeroy b~· pa ss . Jkv. Robf&gt;t1 Smlth. Sr ., pas·
lor: Rev. Jami'S Cundiff. ass\s tanl pas tor.
sunday School. 9:30a.m .: mornlnJ:: worship,
IO::to a .m .: PVPning wo~hip , 7: :k) p.m .
Womf'n 's F'£'11owshlp. TlK'Sdays. IOa .m . \\'('().
tl('sday ni ~ht prayf'r Sf'rvk'f'. 7: 30p.m .
F'AITii BAPrl ST CHURCH. Mason. mE'E't
at United Sl('('l Y./orkrrs Union Hall . Railroad
Strrf•t. Mason . Mornin.[: wors hip 9: ] l a.m .
Sunday Scho:xll 10::10 a.m. EvPnl n~ SA-vice. 7
p.m . Prayrr m('('tlng Wf'dnPsda.v, 7:10p.m .
Mldw('('k Blbl£' Srudy. Thursday, 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - RN·. Nvle
BouJen. paslor. CornC'Ih.Ls Bunch, superin·
!£&gt;nd£'nl. Sunday school9: :ll a .m. : S('('O nd and
rourlh Sundays, wof'!;hlp Sf'rv\f'f' at 2: .l ) p.m .
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main Sls.. Middleport . Rev . Calvin Minnl&lt;i,
pa sror. Mrs. Elvin BumgardnN , s up!. Sun·
day sc hool. 9: .l l a .m .: worship Sf'r.1('('. 10:45
a .m
BUR\.I NQ--IAM SOLITHER N BAPTI ST
CHURCii. Rour£&gt; I. Shad£' . Pas tor. Don
Black. Arrllla!Pd with &amp;luth£&gt;rn Bapti st ron·
w n1lon . Sunday school. 1: :10 p.m .; Su ndav
wors hip. 2: :wl p.m. Thmsda~· I'Vf'nlng Blbl'r
S1Ud\', 7 p m
P ENTECOSTAL ASSE MBLY . Racine.
Routf' 124. WilHam Uoback. pastor. Sunday
school. 10 a.m.: Sunda~· &lt;'Vf'nlng serv l('(', 7
p.m. Wrdnrsday rvrn ing st:&gt;rvlce 7 p.m .
C'ARPENTF.H BAPriST , Don Chf'adiP.
Supt. Sunday S&lt;·hool 9: :w1 a .m . Morning Wor·
ship. 10: ll a.m. Pra~·rr Sf'rv\('(', al1 prna!P
Sundays
MIDOLEPOHT PFNTECOS'l 'AI.. Third
Avr., lhf' Hrv. Cla rk RakN , pas tor. Carl Not·
tingham . Sunday School Supt. Sunda.v School
10 a.m.- clas:o;e-•s for all ag('s. F.wn\ ng se•-vl·
('{'~. fi p.m. Wf'd!K'Sday , Study. 7: :ll p.m .
Youlh Sf'n•lcrs. 7::111 p.m . F'rtda v.
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP . l:»l Mill Sr..
Middleport. Paslor Is BrottK'r chuck McPher·
son. Sunda~· School ar 10 a .m . Srn•if'f'S Sun·
da~' Pvt•ning at 7 p.m . and Wf'dni'Sda~· at 7
p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAITIST, H('V . Earl Shuler.
pa slor. Sunday school !t: :Yl a .m . Church SE'r·
vi('('. 7 p.m .. vouth mPPiing , li p.m. Tuesday
Biblf' Srudy, 7 p.m.
FULL GOSPEL l.I(;f-ITHOUSE: . .11045 HI
land Road, Pomf'roy . Ser.i('{'S Thl'sday. F'rl
day and Sunda y r vf' nlngs al 7: XI p.m. Sunday
morning atlO:OO a.m. Pastor Dou)! Va rner.

:w

ley, pas .... r. Sunday School, 9:lla.m.; Mom·
lng worship 10: aoa.m .: evening worship, 7:30

p.m . Tuesday, 12: JO' p.m . Women's prayer
meeting; Prayer and pralse service, Wednes-

day, 7:30p.m.

- ------------- - - - -'--·----------' t

CHURCH OF .JESUS

CHRIST OF' LATTER DAY ~A I N T S.
Por1 1and·Raclne Road. William Roush. pas·
lor. L!nda E\'ans, chu rrh school dlrt'Clor
t'hurch school, 9: :.10 a.m .: morning worship.
JO: .10 a .m .; Wl'dnrsday rvpnJng pra yrr srl\'1·
crs, 7: .1 ) p.m
BETI-ILEHEM BAPT IST. Ht&gt;v. Earl
Shuler. pastor. Worship sf'rYICP. 9..10 a.m .
Sundav school. 10::1) a .m . Bibk Stud \' and
prayef srrv!CP Thu rsday , 7: :.10 p.m . ·
CA RLETON CHURCH. Ki m~ ~burv Hoad.
.J imm!(' Evans. pastor . Su nday schOol. 9:30
a .m . Ralph Ca rl . suprrint endPnt : rv£'nlng
worship, 7: 30 p.m. PrayPr mff1ing , Wrdn('S·
day. 7:.10 p.m .
LONG BCYr'TOM CHRISJ'IAN. KPn KC'!I&lt;'r .
paslor. Walia('(' Damewood , Sunda.v School
Supt. Worship sc&gt;rvlcr a l 9 a .m . Bibk' School
10 a.m .

POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS -

.McCOY'S AUCTION SERVI~E

Sermonette
Text: "But whom say ye that I am?" Matthew 16: 15b.
" ... What shall I do then with Jesus which Is called Christ ?
Matthew 27:22.
Our present happiness and our eternal destiny depends upon our
a nswer and response to these questions. Here are questions we dare
not trlfle with, for we pass this way but once. Once we have left this
life, we can not come back and do It over. The Bible says, .. ... and If
the tree fall toward the south, or toward thenorth,ln the place where
the tree falleth, there It shall be." Ecclesiastes 11: 3b.
1. "'But whom say ye that I am?"' Matthew 16: 15b.
Jesus had just asked His disciples in verse 13, "Whom do men say
that 1 the Son of man am?"' They answered in verse 14, "'Some say
that thou art John the Baptist; some, Elias; and others, Jeremias, or
one of the prophets." But in the final analysis it is not what people
think about Christ, but what the Word of God declares Jesus Christ to
be. In Romans 3: 3-la we read, "For what If some did not believe?
Shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect ? God forbid:
yea. let God be true, but every man a liar."
Satan and his allles fight and oppose two great doctrines which
are basic to our salvation. The one is the virgin birth of Jesus Christ,
and the other ls the atonement our Saviour made by shedding Hls
blood on Calvary along with Hls resurrection that followed. If Jesus
Christ were not more than man He could not be our Saviour. Paul in
writing to the Romans says, ''And ff Christ be not raised your faith is
vain; ye are yet In your slns. Then they also which are fallen as leep
in Christ are perished." Romans 15:17-18. Then God's Word says,
·'But now ls Christ risen from the dead, and become the firstfruit s of
them that slept." Romans 15:20.
In answer to the question of our Lord, "But whom say ye that I
am?", " ... Peter answered and sald, Thou art the Christ, the Son of
the living God. And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art
thou, Simon Barjona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed It unto
thee, but my Father which Is In heaven." Matthew 16: 16b. Historical
. evidence must be sorted, and the heart ls still left cold, but when one
accepts Christ as hls personal Saviour, then he Is.filled with the Holy
Spirit, there comes a certainty and assurance untU each of us can
say with Peter, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God." Rev.
A. M. HU!s ln hls book, "Holiness and Power"' quotes Dr. Daniel
Steele who made the statement, "The fullness of the Holy Ghost is
the sunrise of splrltual illumination and the source of absolute
assurance, and the blessing Is attainable by all."
This leads us to the second question, "What shall I do then with
Jesus which ls called Christ?" The Jog\cal conclusion Is you should
here and now accept Jesus Christ as yout personal Lord and Saviour
tt you do not know Him. Then wtth Thomas you can say, " ... My Lord
lind my God." St. John 20: 28b. - !Joyd D. Grlmm, Jr., Pastor,
Rutland Church of the Nazarene.

�'
December
Page

8

Friday, December

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

17, 1982

, Ohio

particularly when we consider the
time of the year we're talking
about."
All six men in the airplane when it
crashed into a bookstore were
killed . Four people in the bookstore

werf' injured.
The four agents, all based in
Chicago, were trying to recover
$50,!XXl embezzled from a Chicago
bank in 1975.
All four agents were m arried .
Among them they had 13 children.
The FBI identified the dead
agents as: T erry B. Hereford. :!4.
Wheaton, Ill.; Michael J. Lynch.35,
Woodridge, Ill.; RobertW. Conners,
36. and Charles L. Ellington. 36, both
of Napetville, Iii.
Smith sa id Connet~ and Hereford
were FBI pilot s and were flying the

twin -engine Cessna 411.
Also killed were Carl H . Johnson,
48, who was leading the FBI to the
money, and Patrick Daly, 68, a
retired Chicago policeman from
E vergn&gt;en Park, Ill. Daly worked
for a Chicago law firm representing
Johnson.
The FBI sa id Johnson was
indicted in 1975 for bank fraud and
embezzlement in the disappear·
ance of $615,!XXl from the National
Bank of Albany Park. where he was
assistant comptroller.
Johnson dropped out of ~ight and
lived underground lor seven years,
using at least three assumed names
until he surrendered Dec. 2, two
weeks after his ex-wife, Lois,
obtained a court order declaring
him legaliy dead.

She divorced him in 1975 when the
bank threa tenened to sue her fort he
embezzled money.
Johnson, after resuliacing, ied
the FBI to $50,!XXl he burled in a
forest presetve near Chicago.
He was leading the FBI to dig up
another $50,!XXl In Cinclnna ti when
the plane crashed 10 miles short of
Lunken Airport, Smith said.
Smith declined to say what effect
the crash would have on the search
lor the stolen money, or if he knew
where it was burled.
The Sheppard Book Store burned
when the plane hit it . The lour people
who were injured were in the store.
Officials said Ruth Harding, 26,
was treated lor a bruised hlp;
Joseph Sheppard, 80, was In lalr
condition with second -degree

burns; Helen Schwarz, 60, was in
serious rondltlon with burns; and
Phyllis Neyer, 51, was in serious
rondltion with burns and a broken
leg.
Sheppard, an invalid, made it to
the third floor and was rescued by
fi relighters.
The National Transportation
Safety Board was investiga ting the
crash. No cause had been
determined.
Witnesses said there was a
whining sound before the plane
crashed.
"It was making a real Iunny noise
and then a part fell off. He made a
real hard bank, and we thought it
was going to try to land here in the
iot, or the Blue Ash airport which is

SKATE-A-WAY

nearby," said Tom Jones, employee of a nearby auto dealer.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

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Wed.-Fri.-Sat. Niahts
7:30 to 10:00
Sunday 2:00 to 4:30
Open ~hristmas Eve
Closed Chtistmas
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"But he lost ali power and went
down, hitting some cars, and slid
into the bookstore. The whole place
immediately went up in flames,"
Jones said.
A !Ire station isnearthecrashslte.
"Two of our firemen, who were on
duty, actually saw the plane hit
thebullding and they said there was
an immediate explosion and big ball
of lire," said Montgomery Fire
Chief Don Hoerleln. "It could have
been much more serious. If it had
com e down 400 feet away, it would
have hit right in the middle of
Montgomery Road, right In the
heart of the business district."

Xi Gamma Mu
Xi ·Gamma Mu chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi sorority m et recently at
the horne of Donna Byer, with
president of the group, Carolyn
Grueser. in charge of the
proceedings.
Setvice co-chairman Maurisha
Nelson discussed plans to help the
needy during the holidays, and
social eo-chairman Carol McCui·
Iough announced plans for the
group's New Year's Eve party.
McCullough also reminded
members of the Christmas party
scheduled for Tuesday, Dec . 21 at
the home of Tunie Redovian. Gifts
for the gift exchange are to be
wrapped in white paper with red
ribbon.
The cultural report was given by
Char lotte Haning and Maurisha
Nelson. on "Lively Arts: Television,
Something for E veryone." The
group also sang Christmas carols
during the evening.
Hostesses for the m eeting were
Libby Sayre and Carolyn Coiilns.

Missionary Fellowship
Laurel Cliff Free M ethodist
Church Women 's Missionary F el·
iowship met recently at the home of
Wanda Eblin. with Donna Gilmore
and Tina Jacobs assisting.
Mrs. Eblin had devotions. and
readings were given by Jean
Wright, Shirley Friend , and Brenda
Haggy. Among the readings were
" He is Coming A gain, " "The
Story," and "Home for Christmas"

TOPS
Clara Phillips was the weekly
best loser with Joann Eads and
Marcia Elliott as runners up in the
recent meeting of TOPS OH 1456
Rutland.
The group's Christmas party will
be held nex t Tuesday at 5:30p.m ..
with members bring $5 gifts lor
exchange and small items for Bingo
prizes.
ThoSf' attending are asked to
bring a covered dish and a place
setting of silverware. Miss Christmastime will be announced at the

party.
Anyone interested in TOPS may
call742-22'13.

Laurel Cliff
Laurel Cliff Health Club held
Christmas dinner at the home of
Marge Fetty recently, with a
turkey dinner prepared by the
hostess and the ladles attending.
The home was decorated with a
tree and other ornaments. A
program was given, with the
following readings: Polly Eichinger, Luke 1: 1·20, and "Tidings of
Great Joy"; Marge Fetty, "Christmas"; Jean Wright, " This Christ mas Day"; Ruby Frick, "Country
Christmas"; and Bertha Parker,
"Dear Santa."
A gift exchange was held, and the
group planned to make a donation
to the Salvation Army.
Attending besides those previously mentioned were Genevieve
Ward, Ca therine Weaver, Robin
Campbell, Beulah Oehler, and
Debbie Cadle.

Star Garcj,en
Star Garden Club held its
Christmas meeting recentiy at the
home of Mrs. Neva Nicholson, with
Allegra Will, president, in charge of
the event.
Devotions, Psalms 122 and
"Seeds of Promise" were given by
the hostess. Roll call of Christmas
tree decora lions made from plant
material was answered by eight
members and two guests.
Secretary and treasurer's report
was given by Mrs. VIrginia Nelson.

Students present music pragram
A musical presentation entitled
"Christmas Around the World"
was presented Monday evening at 7
p.m. by students of the Pomeroy
Elementary, under the direction of
Kim Jones, elementary vocal
music instructor. Assisting with the
program were Mary Carolyn Wiley, Jeanette Thomas, Carol Ohlinger, Karen Lloyd, Ida Diehl, Paula
Whitt, Mae Young, Grace Chaney
and Judy Carter. Vera Holliday
was the accompanist, and Anne
Chapman was in charge of decorating the stage. Sandy Henderson
decorated the Christmas tree.
Songs included in the presenta tion were "0 Christmas Tree,"
"Ring, Little Bells," "0 Christ mas," "Hasten Now, 0 Shepherds," "Angels We Have Heard
on High, " and "Sleep, 0, Sleep, My
Lovely Child," with a group
· sing -along following a short
intermission.
Taking speaking parts In . the
program were:
Joey McElron, narrator; John
Harrison, First Elf; Serena Davis,
Second Elf; Barbie Anderson, Mrs.
Claus; Lee Henderson, Thlrd Elf;
Stephanie Price, Fourth Elf; Jody
Smith, Gretel; Vicky Warner, Fifth
Ell; Kelly Satterfield, Sixth Elf;
Jonny Sargent, Karl ; Anna Chapman, Seventh Elf; Juli Buck,
Juanita; Susie Manley, Eighth Elf;
Jeremy Dean, Pierre; Jeanie
Anns, Ninth Elf; Rhonda Anderson, Marta; Micah Bunch, John;
Josh Bartels, Santa Claus.

Members of the presentation's
choir were:
Walt Williams, Heidi Huffman,
Dorena Horn. Greg Ramey,
Amanda Well, Heather Stewart,
Shilo Moore. Melissa Clifford,
Jaciyn Swartz, Jennifer Daily, Eric
Paxton, Erica Robie, Travis Cain,
Bert Mash, Stacy Blankenship,
Rebecca Diles, Benny Ewing,
M elissa Pierce, Reggie Pratt, Amy
Yates, Crystal Pridemore, Sarah
Anderson, Jered Hill, Serena Norris, C. J . Stone, Brian Heldreth,
Tammy Buffington, Allison Lee,
Heather Blanks, Jenny Carpenter,
Sandy Morris, Stephen See, Stephanie See, Donald Shaller, Jell
Tracy, Christi Waugh, Danny
Butcher, Ronnie Casto, Trento
Cleland, Bradley Dlnguss.
David Fetty, Jerod Cook, Andrea
Jesse, Patrick Young, Kelley
Grueser, John Jeffers, Tracy
Sha!ler, Billy Smith, Jeff Darnell,
Todd Mitch, Ira Van Cooney,
Heather Knight, Jason Taylor,
Opal Whitlatch, Julie Young,
Steven Darst, Alan Durst, Amy
Durst , Aaron Davis, Denise Hayes,
Katie Sanders, Lisa Tatterson,
Tony Brown, George Reitmire,
Joelyn Eklich, Sally Watson, Brad
Anderson, Joey Casto, Danlelle
Crow, Jason Carpenter, Emanuel
Cunfldd, J . P. Davis, Ronald Diles,
Tracy Fife, Cassie Nease, Eric
Qualls, Stephen Taylor, Nathan
Brown, Angela Searles, Shannon
Spaun, Jeanie Taylor, Megan
Bartels, Donnie May, Kelly

Sa tterfieid.
Mlcele Dorsey, Christie Mash,
Cynthia Keiln, Stacy Friend,
Amber Blackwell, Annette Pierce,
Charles King, Chuckle, Lisa
Yeauger, Rachel Bush, Bravls
Drenner, Tara Erwin, Joe Roberts,
Andy Stallard, David Swanson,
Shawn Hawley, Aridrea Dillard,
Jeremy Grimm, Clint Mohler,
Joshua Heck, Bobby Mitchell,
Richard Smith, Susan Goode, Todd
Kennedy, Tracy Collins, Amy
Wright, Vicki Warner, Denise
Hysell, Katrina Turner, Jamie
Biggs.
Beth Roush, Missy Neutzllng,
Leann Cundiff, Penny Klein, Anna
Chapman, Rachel Roush, Angela
Abbott, April Tannehill, Debbie
Alkire, Scott Icenhower; Kandi
Bachtel , Tammy Klein, Jennifer
Barnhart, Terri Wh!te, Dennis
Boyd, Lula Neece, Karem Bums,
Jeremy Heck, Rodney Cornell,
Melinda Dally, David Darst, Kim
Burton, Amber David,' Jason Ratliff; Kelly Doidge, Mindy Foulkrod, Kevin Klein, Kevin Howard,
Myrtle Mae Klein, Joe Boyd, Kevin
Lambert, Keith Smith, Melissa
Maynard, Jeanie Arms, Garry
Neece, Wendy Carsey, Tammy
Queen, Ryan Hayman, Buddy
Roush, Bronson Laudermilt, Shanron Scholderer, Susie Manley,
Candy Anderson, Jimmy Reynolds, Bryan Molden, Toni Rutter,
John Haggy, Christopher Gilkey,
Mickey Goode, Mary Games,
Autumn Griffith, Precious Moore.

....--People----------,
Walk of fame
HOU.YWOOD (API -The
Hollywood Walk of Fame has a
shiny new brass star honoring
singer 'Lou Rawls, the winner of
four Grammy awards.
The star, unveiled Wednesday
at a dedication ceremony at ·
tended by the singer and his
mother, bears Rawls' nam .nd
an emblem of a record.
Rawls' Is the 1,757th star .to
adorn the well-known section of
Hollywood Boulevard. The Walk
of Fame Committee, sponsored
by the Hollywood Chamber of
Commerce. selects 12 artists to
honor each vear. saki chamber

spokeswoman Monique Moss.
Rawls, 46, sings jazz, blues and
pop music. Millions of copies of
his records have been sold,
earning him one platinum and
six gold albums.

Vis it patients
CLEVELAND (API - Rock
musicians Roger Daitrey and
Kenny Jones signed casts and
chatted with sick teen-agers at a
local hospital before leaving
Ohio on The Who's last roncert
tour.
"It was probably one of the
neatest days In the history of this
hospital," said Linda Nicholl,

a

(

spokeswoman for Rainbow Babies &amp; Children's Hospital, who
had written to the group requesting a visit.
"I explained that it wasn't just
a hospital lor babies," she said.
"We have a lot of teen-agers and
adolescents here who are big
fans.''

May leave Monday
LOS ANGELES (API Actress Eileen Brennan may go
home on Monday after deciding
to spend another weekend In the
hospital where she Is recovering
from an automobile accident.

are female.
Gallla-Jackson-M elgs Mental
Health Board suggests some alternatives to drug abuse lor women.
The following are ways to deal with
the types of stresses to which
women are susceptible: Relieve
tension through exercise; work In
the community to change sltuatlons allecting women; organize a
babysitting cooperative; take
courses at the community college
in parent education or communication skills; learn new job skills;
take time to rest, or be private or

VICA officers attend leadership training
Meigs High School VICA officers
recently attended the Southeast
Regional Leadership Training Conference in Nelsonville.
Guest speaker Tom Snyder gave
a seminar on public speaking, and
issues discussed aI the conference
were purposes of VICA, the
sell-&lt;:oncept, the pledge, the creed,
courtesy, history of VICA, member
and officer responslbllity, and

public relations.
A nendlng the conference were
Barb Chappelear, Lori Maynard,
Drendr Cunningham, Tina Leark,
Tina Allen, Lisa Allen, Tim Evans.
Additionally, the Meigs High
VICA will hold a dance Saturday
night at the high scbool !rom 9: 30
p.m. to midnight. Music will be by
Atomic Sound.

for

free

949-2860 .

No Su-nday Calls

cards

12·10·1 mo. pd

CARPENTER
SERVICE

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I ~ u b i &lt; lolo
9

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11

l~oonuo O~ponu '"'•

Jl ·S. l mo..

Pometoy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174

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TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2834
Ot 949-2160 10/25/ rtc

Sizes start ftom 12'xl6'

UTILITY BUILDINGS

19 l o t S ole no To o"*

·- ·-··- -

41 Hw . . ol o o Aont

1 1 111\p Wonlod
11 s..... ,.~~ won••"

4 J f otmo lot Aon t
44 •~&gt;~""' ""'

''" Aont

as'"'""""" Aoom o

14 . .. ....... , . ..... "11

41 Spu~ tor "'"'
4 7 Wontoiii&lt;&gt; AMI
41 (qvopmont l ~ o llonl
19 f ~• Louo

15 Sc"""''

11 Aodo o TY I Cll Aopo"
1 7 Moocotlllnoowo
liWonto dT o Oo

an:u
11111

~
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Spruce Ever&amp;reen
Trees around tile lake on
the Baum property on
Route 7 near Chester are
privately owned. They are
not for public use for
Christmas Trees. We
would aPJnCiate it if the
remaininc trees are left in

Mure years.
Tltart You.

II '""" f1uopmon1
11Wonoodt n lu•
l l loYo ll oc•
1 4 +lo• I O•o•n
II Sed &amp;' "''''' '~'

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Gladys Ctoy
wishes to express lhtir
heartfelt thanks and appreciation to out friends, neilh·
bors. and relatives for their
kindness and sympathy
shown in out lime of sorrow.
Thanks for all the buutiful
flowers. food, cards and acts
of kindness. Special thtnks
to Rev. Cat! Hicks, Rev.
Richard Thomas, Ewin&amp; Funeral Home, Mary Bentz,
oraanist. to Pomeroy Health
Care Center, to Doctors,
Nurses, and Aides and everyone who helped. Your kind·
ness is dHply appreciated.
The flmily of
Gladp I . Ctoy.

AUCTION
MONDAY, DEC. 20th
6:30 P.M.
AT THE MASON FIRE STATION
"Good Quality New Merchandise"
Tools and Other Christmas Gifts
. AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
DEALER: R.ON DAVIS

II Hnm n lmpto.kmon"
U Plumbon11&amp; Hu10n11

:~ :~~~::':7: Aol"""'""on
a-.... ........."

l !t
I I M H Aopou

~1

VP'"''""'•

,.,,.... c.. _wv

Aooo Cod • 114

"'"" Coolo ]04

4U

(iolloj&gt;&lt;&gt;l"

tU

ll7
lll
24&amp;

V011on
... .. o.......

tl&amp;
lU

2n

o~¥•"0'"

IU

.luobooOoOI

2 U Loton folio
In Aot,,...

l19

Wol n~ t

C!Wo~""

Muldi~OII

'"m••&lt;l'
l'
c ........
Porllantl

to 24'x36'.
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

New Homes remodeling

H 2 "Cool.~l~
" ''"""
117

Mooon
............ ...

IH

L1Uf1

U7

lullolo

GREG ROUSH

Curb Inflation
! Pay Cash for
II Classlfieds and
:
Savelll
I

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

4

Giveaway

may place en ad in this
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

•Gutters
•Downspouts
•New or Repair
•Painting

Custom
kitchens and
balhrooms. Remodeling,
add -ons,
new homes,
. plumbing, elec!Jic, siding.

H. L WRITESEL

Upholstered wing back
chair, good solid co nd . Cell
446-4044.

pherd . Cell

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

1· 14-rt c

54

Appl~ G•o-

Print one word in each

614-388·9777. J :III~~~i~~~

marltings, other black with
medium

length

fur .

Call

t400

t700

·I

---+--t--'-t--+---i

in

the

4

---'--.1...--'---'--:-·1

I
I1

( )Wanted
( 1For Sale
( JAnnouncemenl
C 1For Rent

17

t.

18.
19, 20.
21.
22.

2 3.

Box of Better Homes &amp;
Gardens magazines to gi veaway . Call 614 · 245 ·

_

Setter. Cell 614 -256-1322.
- - - - - - - - -lc 7 cute puppies. 614 · 985 4120 .
3 year old Be egle and pups .

614 -965-3870 .

4.

23.
24 .

1

6.

25.

7.
8.

26 .

I:
t

VIRGIL B. SR . ·
21_! E . £nd ~· 1
· Phone

1· ( 614) ·992·3325
TRUCK FARM - 30 acres of
woods. Small stream. good 3
bedroom restored farm home.
Bathand frreplace Total 80
acres. $60,000
RUTLAND - 2 1evellotsd and
good 7 room home Nal. gas.
fiteplace and i 'h bath&gt; Askrng
$26,000

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

COUNTRY HOME - and 2
acres near Mergs High Good
barn and an 8 room house wrlh
bath and 2 porches. De•re
$14.000.

REALTOR

SUE, BRUCE AND HflEN.
REALTORS 992-3876.

Housing
Headquarters
OOVQJIUIItllflll

3

Announcements

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

446 -0294 ..
Di's Craft Shop, Spring
Valley Plaza. Gallipolis -446 -2134 . Entire stock re ·
duced 26% (except candy).

Lost and Found

lOST orange colored Pome·
ranian male dog . Has exe·
mya on back legs . Must be
treated once a week . lost in
vincinity of City Building .
Reward . Call 446 · 1 B95 .

li

33.

1:

II
I

1
I
I

L-----~~~~~~~~~~------~»

REWARD OF 100.00 to
anyOne who knows who

ahot 2 gooto -on tho Jim
Luce1

f1rm

Suurd1y

Dec .11 . 614 -742 -2763.

NEED EXTRA MONEY or
help with co ll age expenses?
The We st Virginia National
Guard can help. If you are 1
Junior or Senior in High
School or a Graduate, you
may qualify for a $1,600
bonus or up to $4,000
co llege tuition assistance,
plus you will have a secure
part time job after training .
learn skills in Maintenance,
Supply, Clericap, Electroni cs . Good Pay - Good
Training -Good Benefits. The
West Virginia National
Guard is no ordinhy part
time job! Call Sergeant

or

l619 .
-ul
TEXAS

OIL

COMPANY

needs mature person for
short trips surro unding Pt.
Pleasant. Contact customers . We train . Write K. X.
Dickerson. Pr es .. Southw·
estern Petroleum . BoJ~ 789,

bartenders
The Enter1 -5 ThursNo Phone

614-742 -2269 after 5 p.m

$100 REWARDJ!I For the
rotum of ladie s white gold
dinner ring with small dia ·
monds. Lo st Dec .14th at
City limits or The Blu e
Tartan. Call Barbara Abels at

446 -4249 .

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WVa State Champion Aucti oneer Rick Pearson . Estates,
antiques. farm . households .
licensed Ohio -WVa . 304 -

773-5765 or 304 -773 _9165 .
Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 275·3069 .
Professional Auctioneer
Service. Over 30 years expo·
rience in new , used ahd
antique furiture . Licensed to
a~,tction Real Estate, autos.
farm equip .. household, busness. cattte. liquidations &amp;
a'ntiques of all types . Oaby
A . Martin &amp; Rodney Howery .

614 -992 -6370 .
AUCTION . Murrays Auc tion. Hartford Community
Building, Sunday December
19th. Will be cancelled
December 26th .. January
2nd. We will have auction
January 9th.

9

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Oldfurni-

Final Clearance. final two

people . Call ·614-843 2982 . 614 ·368 -9045, 614·
992 -3690 .

Ft . Worth . TX 76101 .

Dec . 6-11 .

days, Friday Dec. 16 and
Sotuntoy Doc. 17. Final
morkdowno. Kiddie Shoppo,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

HAVE FUN paying your
Holiday bills. Sell Avon and
earn good $$$, meet nice

lost-2 dogs Rutland area .
McCumber Hill area . Me· EXPE RlEN CE D
dium size dogs. 1 part on ly. Apply at
German Shepard . Other tainer between
white with long hair . day &amp; Frtday.
Answers to Max and Sugar. Calls .

tunt and Antiques of all
kindl, call Kenneth Swain ,

We pay cash for lat e model
clean used cars .
Fren cht own Car Co
Bill Gene John son

32.

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.

POMEROY - 2 bedroom
home with sundeck. bath, gas
heating. new krt and dring
atea. Aoove all floods. Just
$17,000.

6

RENT A SANTA.614-9926829 or 614 -949-2633 .

13 .
14. -

-·

RACINE - One floor 6 room
frame home neat schools and
store. Nal. gas heat. bath an
large level lot Only $18.500.

NEW LISTING- Counlry senrng and a ranch type home rn good
condrtion. l 'h acres of ground , full basemen!, central arr. carpeted
and cozy Bargarn pnced at $34,900.00.

(]

shrft . If interested send
resume to Ohio Residential
Services Inc., Rt . 1 Box 7
Mill Creek Rd . Gallipolis, Oh

free in WV 1 ·B00-642-

Volley Plazo, 446-8026 or
446-8026.

I'

3S. • - -

SYRACUSE - 14x65 Krrk·
wood, 2 bedroom furnrshed
mobrle home. 21evellots and a
2 cat bock garage
shop.
Reduced to $28. 500

NEW LISTING -So you wan! to be a landlotd' Here rs a 3 unrl
rental wrth monthly gross rncome of $485 00 Ownet may help
finance. let us figure your rncome on thrs property Wan!
$23,500.00.

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr. GRI ...... ........................... 992-6191
Dottie Turner ................................................. 992-5692
Jean Trussell .................................................. 949-2660
Office ...... .. ...
.. .......... ...... ...
.. 992-2259

shrtt, $3 .50 for midnight

lutron 304 -675-3950

Racine Gun Club dues are

30.

t·

1

304 -675 -5304 .

duo. e26.00 . Mull be paid
boforoJon . 1, 1983.

31.

16.

RCA Victor TV. tor parts.
304 -773-5846 .

Buying Gold, Silver, Plati num, old coins, scrap rings
• ·. silverware. Daily quotes
a.vailable. Also coins &amp; coin
supplies for sate . Spring
Valley Trading Co .. Spring

12.

34.

Real Estate-General

Gun shoot, Racine Gun
Cl,ub. Every Sunday starting
1 p.m. Factory choked guns
only.

II

J 15.

Six puppies. 4 mal u, 2
female. 5 weeks old . Give
away to good home. 304 -

II
I.
1
I

29.

adorable . 6 week old fuzzy .
Christmas puppies. All co ·
Iars. please call 304 -675 311B before 4 :00 p.m .
daily .

I
II'

I'

21 .
28.

11 18 1 mo

675 -3 665 .
- - - - -- - - -JcGOOD homes needed for 5

Inner county passenger
bu•• and outer counttes
bu•• will bring store prices
down I

9.
tO.
II .

·I

l

Misc. Merchandise

DIRECT

CARE STAFF to work on an
as needed basis with men tally retarded adults with
behavorial disorders. Interested applicants must be
energetic. patient. and be
able to work flexible hours.
Future permanent employment a possibility . $4.06 an
hour for day and afternoon

45631 .

L:~::~::::::::~j -4_5_
8 -_1_7_4_3._______

I I 191 mo

II
-----------'+---------+----------1
I 1
I
1
I

.

5.

I
I

_+-+-,--!

proper To 35

:1

:1
;I
l

PH. 742-2225

We have fanns . lots. rentals. and ovet 100 p10perties. Call
today.

I

II

LOCATED ON
STATE ROUTE 124 EAST
OF RUTlAND
. 614 -742-2178

cou nts as a word . Count
name and address or
phone number if used.

II

SATURDAY, DEC. 18, 1982

Finest Quality
Excellent Service
Fish -Game Head life Size Mounts
Plus Hide Tanning

NEW liSTING - Minr farm ovet 12 acres. barn, minerals and a 3
yeat old log home all rn greal condrtion. Thrs one you must see.
$33,500.00.

Help Wanted

SUBSTITUTE

FOUR female puppies .
3100 Parrish Ave . 304 ·

WE SPECIALIZE
IN DEER HEADS
SMALL ANIMALS
BIRDS-FISH

This one should be sold' H.rndyman·s specral plus an old mobile
home on approxrmately 4'-7 acres. Steal at $5,400.00.

You'll get better results

.
1
·I

12-iJ. I mo

11

614-245-5464 .

614-992 -5255 altar 6 p.m.

BIRCHFIELD
TAXIDERMY

filial or group of figures

space below. Each in-

tJ OO

PH. 949-2182
or 949-3055

hauling .

304-6 75 -16 24 .

Puppies to give away . Call

H LU Tl

NEW LISTING - Thrs spacrous lot contarns a remodeled 2 story
home, 2-3 bedrooms, basement. all s!OJms, fireplace. many other
features. needs some teparrs but a batgarn. $21.000.00.

Phone------------------

Leon

•BLOWN
INSULATION
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•NEW
CONSTRUCTION

TOBACCO poundage . Will

2 male kinen s B wks . old , 1
has long gray fur with white

2 puppies part black Irish

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

2810 .

Puppies part German She·

~::;::;::;::;::;:;':;":':·:":;"~ ~5_2_8_5_._ __ _ __

l1

Old Po stca rds wanted . Pos·
sibly $50. and up . Shoebox
fult. Also 825 . and up for
large albums of old post ca rd s. Phone 614 - 992 ·

do general truck

Hrs .: 9-5
Closed Sun . &amp; Mon.
Beechgrove Rd .
Rutland . Ohio

NoltemtolargeortoSmall .
Will buy one piece or com plete household . New, used .
or antique furniture . 614·

992 -6370 .

Leather Hats. T·Shirts. Acces ·
sories &amp; much more .

NEW LISTING - Small lown home. 2·3 bedrooms, 6 rooms rn all
with full bath. level lot. several slorage burldrngs many features.
Pnced to sell at $18,000.00.

Address-----------------

tOOLS - FURNITURE
COOKWARE
MISCELLANEOUS

SHERMAN TILLIS: OWNER
DON HART JR.: AUCTIONEER
RODNEY HOWERY: APPRENTICE
TERMS OF SALE: CASH OR CHECK
WITH POSITIVE I.D.

ROOFING

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

3 ·24 ·tf ,

Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you ge t
results . Money not refundable .

AUCTION

S&amp;K AUCTION

Rei. '3.95·'6.95

Real Estate-General

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

II

classification if you'll
check the proper box
below.

AT
Corner of Depot &amp; Main
Rutland, Ohio

4-5-Hc

ll II rtc

10·6 lie

put

7:00 P.M.

NOW '79.95-'89.95
Harley Jewelry-Harley Pins

or 992·2282

Ph. 614-843 -2591

if vou describe fully,
give price. The Sentine~ To 1S
reser'v es the right· to ---+--t-~t--+--'1
classify, edit or reject _..:,_
any ad. Your ad will be

1

•Dtyers •Fr..,ze,.
PARTS .and SERVICE

eKtensive

PH . 992-7583

Racine, Oh.

1---- - -- -- -- - ---j
Uptol!&gt;w"'d' Ono d•¥ •" ' "' " ""
Upt ol!&gt; ... ood o Tho o o olo y o n..,, ~M
Upll&gt; l!&gt;Wmdo
!&gt;"d'~'"'"""""
IA • ••O&lt;t• " wo•do pet hno t

service available
12-3-t mo pd

985-3561
All Makes

•Electric work

Rt. 3. Box 54

ln. .., , .........
4N
I 71
773
112

Oh

.Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garage s
-Roofing Work
-Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidin~
15 Yesrs Experience

Sizes from 6'x6' Up

,.J,.,,,,.,,,. ,.'drmt,.:•··• ..

,. ..... c~......

Che

SERVICE

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

.,-------.:.....-------·------~

Goto.. Coh&lt;ftl'\1
Aooo Co&lt;lo ll4

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

CAT &amp; 2 longhaired kittens ,
litter trained. 7 weeks old .

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Mrs. Dwight Logan of near
Pomeroy Is a patlent at University
Hospital. Cards may be sent to her
at Rhodes Hall, Room 820, Columbus, Ohto.

M o o ooc yc l ~•

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

Reg . 1 149.95

Pomeroy, Ohio

CONTRACTING

DOZER
BACKHOE
LOWBOY

Hospitalized

'" "' "''"''"'~
11 vo~•~•wo

AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•Refrigerators

Bashan Building

11 -J. I mo

The children's Sunday school
dPpartment of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church had a Christmas
party in the fellowship room of the
church recently.
Children of the church went
caroling in the community and
returned to the church afterwards
lor cocoa and cookies.
They also participated in games
and stories, and a gift exchange was
held.
TwE'nty·live children were present, along with Karen Stanley,
Janice Haggy, Bonnie Friend,
Brenda Haggy, Belinda Soulsby,
and Jean Wright, who were
assisting adults.

/&lt;~II• '" o"J:. 1

, . M•o&lt; MOt ch oowhoo
ll l u~ d•"'l S u i&gt;Pin&lt;l
II Pon to o Solo

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3· tf c

6 weeks ol d.

Children's party

n

l l Ani&gt;QI'IO

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

-Trencher
- Water
-Sewer
Ga 5 Li
nes
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992·2478

Antenna Installation

•

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

2·26-Hc

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write D1iMy Sentinel

1] Mo ... , to loo n
1] p , .. . . ... ono l s..-.ocoo

U.S . Rt. so East
Guysville, Ohio

V C YOUNG Ill

GUN SHOOT

SEPTIC
TANKS
INSTALLED
CALLAL
Ph. 742-2328

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

enjoy yourself; and seek professional counseling before problems
get too big to handle.

, ,,,.,, .. .,,. /"'J:. ' '' , ..,, .,., ,,,, .

Oh. Or 992 -7760 .

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•Washers •Dishwashers •Ranges

•

Specials.

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
flom the Smallest HeateJ
Core to tht l.aJgest Radiator.
Radiator Spe&lt;:ialist
NATHAN. BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

Light and Life Men's Fellowship
of Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church m et recently at the church
In regular December session.
Jack Stanley, president, opened
the meeting with prayer, followed
by devotions given by Steve Eblin.'
The men voted to send a
Christmas and birthday gift to the
boy they are sponsoring In the
mission's Chiidcare program.
A potluck luncheon was setved to
Bob Barton, Jim Gllmore, George
Nlckinsky, Mark Friend and Lloyd
Wright.

11 "'""'lot Solo

BOGGS

zers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
- Lo-Boy

ster,
io
Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382
Deweyne Wiliams
&amp; Scottie Smith
All makes and models

Addons and n~modeting
Rooting end gutter worlt
Concrete wort&lt;
Plumbing end
electrical wort&lt;
(Fr.., Estimates)

Name ___________
i~"'d

IS
EXCAVATING
Do

NOW 21'5 .00

Clnsified Dtpl.
Ill Court St.. PoMeroy, ot.io 4576!

1 C o•d n t lhonOo

Orders Welcome

Come &amp; See What We Have To
Offer. Cr«s tire Raven.,ood
Bri"" to st Rt. 56. 11 Block
Ftom City Limits- Across Ftom

BEDS -IRON, BRASS, old

NEW &amp; USED
HARLEY DAVIDSON PARTS
CHRISTMAS SPEC IALS
CHROME PRIMARYS
Re1. '107.50
NOW '87.50
Complete Xicker Assembly
Reg 1 189.95
NOW '147.50
leather Vests

-

Except on PMm.

3· I I tf c

Light and Life

The Dailv Sentinel

PH. 985-3892
or 985.3837

Middleport, OH.
PH . 992-2725
We Honor Golden Buckeye

siding

es timates , 949-280 1 or!

Women most vulnerable to prescription drug abuse
Women are the group most
vulnerable to prescription drug
abuse, according to GalllaJackson-Meigs Mental Health
Board.
NIDA information shows how
women are particularly affected:
one to two mlilion women have
prescription drug problems; almost twice as many women as men
have been prescribed tranquillzers
by their physicians; 60 percent of
all drug-related emergency room
visits involve women; and 43
percent of all drug-related deaths

DELIVERY

Mon.-Tues.-Wed.
Now thru Dec. 31
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd

" Beautiful, Custom

brance, in lieu of a book review.
The hostess setved candy, cookies, cheese, crackers, nut bread,
and coffee as refreshments.

Middleport Literary Club met
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Jim Clatwor!hy, with Mrs. Richard
Owen, president, In charge of the
meeting.
The club rollect was repeated in
unison, and names were submitted
for prospective members. A dona·
lion was given to the Salva If on
Army as thE' Christmas charity
project.
The Jan. 5, 1983 meeting of the
club was cancelled.
Program chairman was Juanita
Bachtel began with a quotation and
the secretary's roll call was
answered by each member with a
live-minute Christmas remem -

•ORANGE GAS PIPE
•BLACK GAS PIPE
•REGULATORS

15% OFF
ON PERMANENTS

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Call

Middleport
Literary Club

PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLY

Wanted To Buy

furniture. gold, silver dol·
Iars, wood ice boxe1, 1tone
jars. antique•. etc.. Complete households. Write:
M .D . Miller. Rt . 4 , Pomeroy,

anything to give away and

•

Members taking pari in the recent
Christmas flower show held at
Rutland Civic Center spoke on that.
The program was given by
Wanetta Radekln, with Emma
Ogden speaking on legends and
customs of the poinsettia, · Christmas rose, and Star of Bethlehem.
Binda Diehl added the legends
associated with mistletoe to the
presentation.
F1ower arrangements exhibited
In the Christmas show were shown
by Ruby Diehl, Stella Adkins and
Mrs. Nicholson.
Lula Lewis and Ruby Halliday
were absent from the meeting due
to illness.
Following a Christmas gift exchange, refreshments were setved
to those above, plus guests Fern
Stansbury and Emma E. Turner.

G&amp;W

IWODWORKS
Rt. I. Box 2n
RAVENSWOOD, WV
304-273-3660
" WaAra Now Open"
nIt's Made Of Wood
We Can Make It
•Toys •Furnitute
•Buildin1 Products
•Custom or Specialized

Sentinei-Pa
9

/ ~i~~~~========~l2~·~10~·1~m~o~.~d~.~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ANY PERSON who has
f~::::::::::::::~~====~~~~~~~~==========~~~==~~~~ub~le~N~i~~~el~~ll~/~~~
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Bring This Ad
YOUNG'S
S&amp;W TV
''CUT OUT
fRYE'S
does not offa• or attempt to
51 Dl NG
Good For
FOR FUTURE USE"
TRUCK &amp; AUTO
offer any other thing for sate

Meigs County and area organization members gather for meetings
Amber Lohn ied in prayer.
Brenda Haggy had the program.
entitled "Love Finds A Way to Use
HerGlft. "
The business meeting was opened
by Jean Wright, president, with the
officer report given by Donna
Gilmore. treasurer. A thank you lor
a special Thanksgiving offering
from the Olive Branch mission was
read.
The group also heard from the
missionary family in Africa to
whom they had sent a box. Plans
were made to send gifts to the Meigs
County lnflrmary for Christmas.
Emma Fox read "A Recipe lor a
Happy Life." and Iva Powell led the
closing prayer.
Refreshments were setved to
those mentioned above, along with
Evely n Young, Shirley Meadows,
Bonnie Friend . Eva Robson. Mary
Miller, Beilnda Soulsby, Janice
Haggy, Linda Friend, and guests,
Billy Soulsby and Beula Oehler.

MOUNTAINEER

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call

Built Garages"

•

LAFF-A-DAY

Business Services

Crash deaths record loss to nation's FBI
MONTGOMERY, Ohio (API The deaths of four FBI agents in a
plane crash while on the trail of
$50,!XXl in embezzled money was a
record loss to the FBI. costing more
lives in a single stroke than ail the
shootouts in its history .
A suspected embezzler from
Chicago who suliaced after being
declared dead had $.'iO,&lt;XXJ stashed
near Cincinnati, but petished in the
crash Thursday along with the four
agents and a private investiga tor
before the money was recovered,
the FBf sa id .
''There's never bef'n a situation
wher£&gt; the lives of four agents wf'I'€'
lost," said Alfred E . Smith, special
agent in charge of the FBI office in
Cincinnati. "We'rean FBI family . ft
hits us as it would hi I any family-

The Dui

17,

446-3169 or 266-1967 in

S155 .00 WEEKLEY, 2 sales men &amp; 1 installer, 10 to
12 hours per week . Must be
married &amp; presently employed in the area. 2 Mana.
gemnt positions available .

304 -273-5675 .

12

Situations
Wanted

~ecretarial or clerical po•i·
lion, 15 years eJ~perienca

typing speed 85 WPM . Coli
446-9758 .

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co . has offet~
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallta County
for almost a century . Farm ,
home and personal p.operty
coverages are available to
meet individual needs. Contact Eugene Holley, agent.

Phone 388 -8690 .
Are you paying too much for
your hospital-health insu·
ranee . Call Carroll
Snowden, 446 -4290 .

15

Schools
Instruction

Karate the ultimat e in self
defence all private l essons.
M en, women . &amp; children .
In struction thru black belt .
Also available Karate uniforms pu ching and kicking
bags , and protective equipment . Jerry lowery &amp; Associates Karate Studio. 143
Burlington Rd .. Jackson,

Oh . Call 614-266-3074 or
614-384 -6160 .

the evenings.

446 -0069

18 Wanted to Do
General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable

and dependable. Cell 4463159 after 6PM 256-1967.
Nurs~ng in private home .
Dayt.nl8 only in Gallipolis or
Pt . ~lea sa nt. Will give ref . if
roqwred . Call 458· 1818 .

w.ill babysit vour tiny inf8nt
Wtth tender loving care in my
Wanted to buy Square Danc- homa. Cell 615· 367-0462 .
ing outfits. All sizes. men's
1nd women's. Call 446- Special ~indow Tinting .
4637.
~uto, festdential , commerCial. &amp; R.V . windows . frf'l
RAW FUR. Hlghoot pricoo llttmates. 446-3100 or
paid. Loko Jockoon Fin &amp; 446 - 7122 , Kotalic
· Fur. Call 614-682-7448 .
landscaping.

�10

e

Oail

The

Pom eroy

Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

FIBi!!!GI!!I

22 Money to Loan

&amp;.IT WEAR 'ff)(IR CHEAP,
8EA7VP, OlO STRANGLERS

1D HOP {X)WN 70 7HE.
STORE ··· HI, EVt:I?VBOOV!

HOM E LOAN S 1 2 % ft xed
rate . l eader Mortg aye, Ohto

Pro fe ssional

Services
C&amp; L Ao ok koeptng
B oo kk ecp ul ~ &amp; tax scrv tce
f or nil ty pe s o f bus1nosses
Coral N c&lt;il 446 3862

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- washers . dryers. refrigera tors , rang es. Skaggs Ap·
pliances , Upper River Rd .,
beside Sto ne Crest M otel.

Call Bill &gt;Nard fo r ap po int ·
ment . Ward 's Koyboard ,

446 43 72

446 -7398 .

PIANO TUNING lane 0[1
ntels fl &lt;;soc o l Brunt c ar{li
M usiL Cu CtJ•IIltnghan ' s o f
Athe n s 614 742 295 1 o r

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

G1 4 992 2082

r

EAMAN

f~EMOVAL

r

H A I R I ~::::::::::::::!~==~=~;::=:::;:::;:;;;;,;::;;;:;~~~~
P r ofess ional~

NT

f lec troly sts Ce nt er . In c·
A M A A pp , nvnd. Dr Ret
~ rr als G1l t Cl'rt1ficrr t es . new
hour s By t~ppo tntm e nt .
30 4 675 -6234

Real Estate

36

44

for

sa le

on

41

Houses for R e nt

contrac t , C hes lme, Oh

7

22 15.
Houses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr .
apartm ent s fo r rent . HUD
program ava il ab le. A -One
Rea l Esta te s, Carol Yeager.
Rea ltor . Call 304-675 Furnished apt ., $185. water

pd., 3 bdr .. 131 4th Ava ,
Ga llipoli s. 446 -4416 afte r 7
p .m .

land

rms ., ba se m ent. g a ntge ,
works h o p . gas furnan ce

Furnish ed 3 r. privat e bath,
845 2nd . Ave . . Ga llipo li s.
Ref . preferred . Call 446 -

5104 or 675 -53B6.

A8nt!!ll

House

Apartment
for Rent

Wanted
Wan ted : Fa rm of 100 to 150
A cres . ro lling l and . Rep ly t o
Bo x 6000, in c -o Gallipolis
Daily Tribune , 826 3rd Ave ..
Ga ll ipoli s 45631 .

31 Homes for Sale

Sma ll furnished house . 1 o r
2 adults only . Ca ll 446 -

0338 .

2 bdr . u nfurni shed apt. in
Crow n Cit)' . Call 6 14-256 -

6520 .

614 -388 -8276

2 bdr . &amp; ba th . 1 mile below - - - -- - - -- - Pri ce r edu ce d . o ver
S10 ,000 . Now off ered by
o wner . benefit s that s must

EurekoonSt R17 ,S 150per JACKSON ESTATES
mo . plus Dep. Co li 1 -614 - APARTMENTS IEquo l
2916 .

be seen to apprectate . 11• m1.
from town. large stone
firep lace . 3 bdr ., nice quiet
neighbo r hood . b eau tiful
backyard . Wi l l co nsider rent ·
ing . N ow in low 40 ' s. Ca ll
446 -2048 after 5PM .

1981 Governor 14 ~t60. 2
bedroom with rool -out . In clu des ai r cond . unde rpin ning and 2 buildings .

S14 .000 Call 446 -2 062
For sal r Rnp oso;r. s -; r ~ d
house. 3 bd rf'On\ &lt;;, all rcfm
rs he d
new c t~rpctr n g
t hr ou11h o ut Srtson 3 ac r es
i..oca tell o n Bash&lt;~n Rd
Exce lle n t terms to n g ht
party
Prrcf: reducfJd to
530.000 30 Vt.'&lt;H fma nc mg
&lt;tvadable Con ta ct Bdnk One
a t Po meroy
6 14 -99 2-

2133

M odern 2 bdr house with
l arge utility roo m that could
be used as a 3rd . bedroom .
3 Y2 mi . past hospital o ff

160. Co li 614 -245 -9170 .
9 rm . farm house . Oil or
wood · coal heat . Cistern wa ter . Outbuildings . Se . dep .
req . Rental price neg. 1 mi.
south of Vint on o n At 160 .
Open Sat . on ly . Ca ll 614 ·
388 -9098 or ca ll Akron

216 -724 -6185 .
3 bdr house el ec tn c heat . 6
m1 fr o m Gallipoli s. S150
mo .. water bill pat d. Ca ll

44 6-097 4.
Po meroy - 2 bd . rovm unfur·
nr shed h ouse . S195 . mo .
Security deposit. S1 00. plus
utilities . Afte r 6 -ca ll 614 ·

992 -228B .
:, roo m s. 1 acres In Pome roy N eeds r epa ~r 54 .500

Ho using Opportunity) ha s 1
bedroom apartment s, rent
starting at 5152 per m onth .
Ca ll 446 -2745 or leave
message .
1st. floor unfurnished apt .,
downtown Gallipolis . Utili ·
ties paid . Call at 631 4th .
Ave .. Gallipolis .
Fu rnish ed effiency apt . in
Rio Grande all utilities Pd .

Co li 446 -0157 .
l arge unfurnished down sta irs apartment , $150 per.
mo . Ca ll 446 -4471
1st floo r furni shed eff iency
apt . Apt. no . 6. co mfort abl e
for 1 per so n . Rent , deposit.
ut ilties paid . 729 2nd . Ave .

Co li 446 -0957 .
POME R OY - 2 b edr oom un furn is hed apt. , $ 160 . 2
bedroom house $185 . D ep osit $100 . Ca ll 614 -992 -

6 14 -593 -3269

4 room house Preferab ly
adults . no pet s. 614 -992 -

22B8 .

HOUS E M eadowb r oo k Ad
rlit10 n . 3 her1rnu n1s . l arnrly
r oom wdl 1 fll o: !•:tl v· cr•ntral

398 1.

5 room Apt. wi th 3
bd .r ooms in Midd l eport
$1 50 . month , plu s depo si t

all . ba~• 1- • ~ rr

104

l,'l· '

67 5 1f ~Gallrpoh s Fr:rry
W t&gt;!ilf!trY
Subd rvrsron , 'I 0 00 sq ft .
brick 3 beduwms. 2 full
bath &lt;&gt;
,dl d 1:rtnr
larqe
fam r!y "
bu r.!&lt;
IJ r .,
rnq. w ,r

lot

-11

t "!

1• r: w11 h

5 rooms an bath nc ar
Raci ne 614-992 -5858
ln Mrddleport -2 bd ro om
hom e wrth laund ry r oo m .
newly r emo dled , parttally
furn ished
Call 6 14 -992 675 4 aller 7 p m or 614·
992 7258 anylmw

'''·lm
-~

r. r ,,.

20 0..::

1.~&gt;

out h lrrldH l{j.

$55 .000. 30 4 675 -3378

32 M obil e Homes

·or11n', and htrl h

un fu r-

rhshP. d. dnpustt r.·q ~ 1111 : d
New pcllnt and c ctrpet1ng

TRI - STA TE MOBILE
HO MES
USE D CARS .
TRU C K S GAL LIPOLIS
C HE CK OUR PR I CES
CALL 44G 7572
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOM ES KESSEL ·s OUAL
ITY M OBILE HOM E SALES.
4 Ml WEST GALLIPO LIS .
AT 35
F pr

rt-'Qf~r ·14G

s;.t

r 1r

7274

2 nd floor furnt sh ed Apt 2
brl .roo m Adult s only . no
tm l s Pay own elec tri c. d t~ p
os tt req uned 2 mil es ou 1 on

At 143 614992 -3647

near sc ho ols an d ho sp1tal.

992 -5880

N ew

1 bd .room f urnished Apt .

614 -992 -5434
B82 -2566 .

o• 304 -

bedroom furnished . I - -- - - - - - - - H av en , 304 - 8B2 - Apartments . 304 - 675 -

24€6

5548 .

1306 Vtand St Pt . Pl easant.
ca ll 30 4 -675 -322 4 .

APAR TMENTS . mobrl o
homes. ho u ses Pt Pleasant
and Ga ll ipol is
6 14 -446 ·

8221
42 Mobile Home s
for R e nt

UNFU RNI SHED 2 bedr oo m
garage apa rtm ent . adult s
on ly_ no pet s 30 4 -675 -

1,2 ~~, (i(J

rP'll

mobd e t'-Jr,·•; (jd~ her'. •u riJ/
water . !' l c.sr~ tuto w n ilVa da
bl e J;u 1 1st Call4 46 124 0

In Middleport . 4 room fu r·
n1 shed up stairs apt. Utilities
1ncluded. N o children . no
pets . 614 -992 -267 6

1 bd .ro o m Apt . G round
floo r . Very nice Call 6 1 4 ·

TWO

1055.

Eureka 2 bd r . furn1 Sh f!d , 1 -----~--~------­
rrve rfront lot. ref &amp; d ep . Ca ll

614 6 4 3 2644 .

~·-----

12x60~ Ouarl C reek Many
nice e~t tra s . p layground.
poot low down payment ,
assume lo an Ca ll 614 -245 937B
TWO bedroom apartmen t in
Henderso n. 304· 675 - 1972 .

1 953 2 bd .room 10•50
furnish ed . $2950 Browns
Trailer Park . 614 -992 -

UNFURNISHED apartment

3324.
USED MOBI LE
57 6 -2711 .

HOME .

2 bd .r oom furni shed . Adults
preferred . No pet s. Deposit
req uired. 614 · 992 -2749 .

33 Farms for Sa le

Opportun-t y k nock m g w 1th
this 149 acre Rut land f~n n .
Anxiou s sell ha s pr1 ced
according ly l nc lu dAs ~uro l
home, barn . ga rage::. mrner al s, &amp; Mu ch m_ore If you
have interest 1n a good
co untry farm or minerals.
don ' t pa ss u p your oppor ·
tunityl Call R.C .S . Realtors,

1 . 614 -693-6671
63t2 .

or 992-

ADJACENT POMEROY . 27
acres with old road to former
home site with excellent
view of Pomeroy , dug well ,
crop land. pasture &amp; w oods.
Pollible not down payment .
38 acre farm with good 2

otorv

Dutch

atyla

bam ,

house woods . pedtura. Ex·
c ellent hor se farm .
5 39 ,000. Possible no ~o:--vn
paym e nt . 3 acre bulldmg
site $3 ,500 . The l m a Mont·
gomery Aealt v . In c . 614 ·

3B5 -7419 .

36

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

Two ocre lots- 160 ft . ~·d
frontage, city water, behmd

94 Lumber. Co li 304 -6766873 or 675 -3618 . ·

for rent . 1 bedroom.
$180.00 Call Automotive
Supply , 8 -6 . 304 -675 2 2 18 . 675· 6753 .

~=========;==

2 bd .room

fumi shed M obile 45
Furnished Rooms
home. We pay your utili ties . 1 ~---------­
Adults o nly or famil y with to no child . N o pets. deposit Weekly rates, one per so n
required . 2 miles out on S60 , 2 people $70 . Circle's

Motel. Coli 446 -2601.

Rt .14 3. 614 -992 -3647 .

3 bd .rooms . 2 baths . unfur - l= = = == = = : ; = ==
nished. 1 mile from Harri - 46 Space for Rent
sonv tll e. S235 . per month !- - - - - - - - - - including heat . Two child·
ron . no pets . deposit re· M obile home space Crossquired . 614 -742 ·3033.
roads Pard on Sob McCor·

mlck Rd . Cell 446 -3617.
1

14 x 70 total electric, 1, 12
baths . centre! air, large COUNTRY MOBILE Home
country lot behind New Park. Route 33, North of
Haven . S226 . per month Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
plus deposit and references . ! ~
9~9_2_-7_4_7_9_.- - - - - -

13041BB2 -2B96 avenin go.

TWO mobile homes for rent
on At . 2 about 6 minutes
from town . Cell after 8 .

304-B75 -6277.

Mobile home spaces in
Mason 6 Hartford . W .Va .
Inquire at Hogg &amp; Zuapan .

Phone 304-773-6654 dally
or for evening appointment

Pho na 304-77 3-6440 after
TWO bedroom mobile 6 p. m .
home , furnished or unfur- ! ~__:__
nished in camp co nl ey . Ca ll TRAILER space, in Mason ,
30 4 - 67 5 - 1371 or 675 - located Harten St. Ca ll

_________

3812 .

43

r'ar ms for Rent

Secluded. mini farm. ell
fenced , remodel farm hdme,

with 4 bedr .• 8300 par mo.
Clillend Realty 992 -2269.

S99 .. to $435 . 7 pc .. 8189 .
and up . W ood table with six
chairs S425 . to $745 . D esk
$ 110 up to $225 . Hutches.
S550 . and up, maple o r pine
fin is h . Bunk bed co mpl ete
with mattresses. $250 . and
up t o $395 .
Baby beds,
$11 0. M attresses or box
sp rings, full or twin . $58 .,
firm , $68 . and $78 . Quee n
set s. $ 196 . 4 dr. chests,
S42 . 5 dr . chest s. &amp;54 . Bed
frames , 520 .and $25 ., 10
gun · Gun cab in ets . 5350 .,
dinette c hairs $20. and $25 .
Gas o r elect ric ranges , S325
up to $375 . Baby me tresses, $25 &amp; S3 5 , bed
framos $20. S25. &amp; S30,
king frame $50 . Good selec tion of bedroom suites,
ceda r chests , rockers. m etal
cabinets. swive l rockers .
U sed Furni t ure -· bookcase .
ran ges, chairs. · end tables .
washers, dryers. refri ge ra tors and TV's . 3 miles o ut
Bulaville Rd . Open 9a m t o
6pm . Mon . th ru Fri. , 9a m to
5pm, Sat.

446 -0322
USED

FURNITUR E

Like

new ca nn on ball bed . queen
maHress a nd box springs .
co mpl et e twin size out f it.
sof a bed . living rm . tab les
and refrig erato r . Co rbin and
Snyder Furnit ure , 446 -

1 17 1 .
G E harv es t gold si de by sido
refri . 1 9 c u ft S225. Ken more auto was her $ 11 0.
White 22 c u .ft . sid e by side
refrig . S250 A ll 3 li ke new .
A · 1 shape . Ca ll 446 -81H1 .
Whirlpool washer 1 w hit e &amp;
1 cop pert one S90 ea . Hot point dryer S75, apartme nt
dryer $90 . 30 day s gua ran ·

ZEN ITH 25" co lor co nsole.

$2 00 . 304 -675 -3628

Call 614 -992 -5692 .

3 bed room . f am1ly r oo m .

304 -675 -433B .

Sofa . c hair , rocke r. o"o·
m an, 3 tabl es. (extra heavy
by Front ier) . $685 . Sofa.
chair and loveseat . $275 .
So fas and cha irs priced from
S2B5 . t o S895. Tables. $45
and up to $ 1 25 . Hid e· a·
beds . &amp;440 . and up to
$525 . . Recliners, $ 175 . to
S350 ., l amps fro m $28 . to
S75 . 5 pc . dinettes fro m

toe . Co ll 614 -256 -1207.

614 -992 -30 90

deposit and refe rence required . $300 month . Ca ll

for Sa le

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURN ITURE
STORE 62 Olive St ., Galli polis . King coal &amp; wood

446 -3159 .

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR

304 -773-5150 .

49

For Lease
I

2 bdr. unfurnia_hed apt., for
INse overlookiog the city

park. 8175 par mo. Call
446-1819 .

December

72

51 Hou sehold Goods

hea ters with fan $ 459 . set
box spring &amp; amattress
$100 . firm $ 120 . sofa loveseat &amp; c hair $199 , love
seats $70 . new coa l &amp; wood
heaters as low as $399 with
blowers, u sed coa l &amp; wood
heate rs. new dinet sets !f 75
&amp; up, refrigerators, ranges,
bunk beds co mpl ete $170.
bunkies mattresses S4 0 ,
chests. dress ers . TV 's . Ca ll

only 1 - BQ ,) 341 - 6554
WVo . 6 14 -592 -30 5 1

23

Middleport, Ohio

54

Mi sc. Mercha ndi se

7ft . locust post and custom
cut firewood . Call 446 ·

Ca ll

1 - 614 - 256 -

Fo r sa le lu m p r:oa 1 &amp; fir e-

wood . Z1nn Coal Co. Inc .

Call 446-1408 .
M ota X bi cycle s. mfg . by
Id eal
S125 . Be tz H o nda
Sales . 446 - 22 40 .
WOOD AND · COAl stoves
by Blue Rid ge and Lilly . Free
standing st oves and firepl ace in se rts . Swishe r Im pleme nt . Upper River Rd .,
Gall ipoli s.

TROYBILT TILLERS . now a

load. Coll446-7432 .
Christmas Trees for sale .
Richard Fischer. Rodney·

Bidwell Rd . Coli 614 -246 6246 .
Wi cker House ope n now
lOAM to 4PM . Everythin g
below cost . Close doors
Dec . 23 for good .
Firewood , dry wood. split,
stac ked and delivered for
$3 0 .00 a large load. Call
anytime 446 · 7993 .

1982

Dodge
6

cyl .-,

PU

rt, Ohio

with

1975

245 -6B 04.

Datsun

pick

The Daily Sentinel -

Page-

11

CHIEF= PATTON'S
ReCOMMENDATION

standard,

THAT :t BE
HIS SUCCESSOR
AS Cf.fiEF OF
POL-ICE HAS
BEEN IGNOR&amp;O.

good cond. Call 614-3870467.

Slabs cut -up S16 full length
5 1 0 PU load , round wood.
large truck load. Call 614 -

up

62,000 mileo. good cond .•
61.760. Call 446-2062.

Pistols S &amp; W model 10 38
cal. and a m ode l27 367 cal.

1971 Ford '4 ton. 67.000
actuel miles. $400. 614992-6316.

Coli 614 -367 -0482 altar 6 .
WOODBURNING STOVES
Free sta nding fireplaces inserts , mobile home and
furna nce ad · ons . Jividen's
Fa rm Eq uipment . Call 446 -

73

1675.

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

1 976 Ford 12 pauangar

CAPTAIN EASY

van , air . auto,. good tires,
1 pair of boys black shoe
skates size 6. ex . cond ..

82,660. Call 446-4664.

S25 . Co li 446 -3204
614 -367 -7106 .

1981 Eagle 4 wheel drive, 2

or

TO BE WITH 'fOU
TH IS E VE N I ~ G­
THI5 HYSTERI C-

WAY •••

614 -986 -3324.

H I?TOIVCEVENIN G ...

CHURCH buo. 62 paooangar, 6300. Phone 304676 -3220.

Clol 614-245 -5363 .
Firewood , S35. t ruck load .

THANK 'YOU VERY.
VERY, VER'!' M UCH .. .
IT 'S A PLEA SURE

lHIR'TV MINUTE?
L.ATER, TH6 RE HEARSAL 17
FINALLY UNDE-It·

door hatchback. Auto ., sun
roof, uc . cond . Evenings

GE gold dishwasher, chop ping block top , free stan ding
o r ca n be built -in, $2 00 f irm .
O•M2ttr~EA""'

I~~~::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ bod.
1979 FORDF1604x4.1ong
with t_oppar. 16.000

S65 . o cord . Split ond
delivered. 61 4-B43 -3603. ~

54

Misc . Merchandise

Firewood delivered $ 60. a ' - - - - - - - - - - co rd . Coal delivered $46. ,.
ton . Call Tom Hoskins 614 · FREEZER. 9 cu. ft . upright,

949-2 160
2 B34 _

or 614 -742-

F o r S ole - C H R I S T M A S
TREES . On e milo off Rt . 7 by

excellent condition . $176 .
896 -3633.

I~===:::::=:::::=:::::=
65
Building Supplies

pass on St.Rt . 143. Pome- 1 ~---------­
roy . Reasonably priced .
Building materials block .
Oak furniture, lots of misc . brick, sewer pipes, winitems, ideal for Christmas, dows, lintels, etc . Claude
reasonably priced. open Winters. Rio Grande, 0 . Call
Sundays . Co nkels Furniture. 614 -246-5121 .
Tuppersplain s.
Build your own garage or

TRADING POST. Usa the

barn ,

barter syste m . Trade un wanted items for something
you ca n use . Brouse through
hun d reds of item s from a
hair pin to a steam boat. tv's,
ste reos. what-nots, dolls.
too ls. 500 fin e guns. Trad·
i ng day s· Fri. and Sat . every

lumber furnished . Can de·
liver. Other sizes. Call 1·
614 -886· 7311 .

weak . FIFE 'S o1 S. 3rd . St .

24x24 .

$6.960 .

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

NEW SHIPMENT Metal
sheets for all building pur·
poses . Flat porceHen enamel
coated . 4x8 thru 4 k 12.

Prices.

$7.00

to

$9.60.

61

,farm ' Equipment

mileo, t6.500 . Call 304676 -2409 .

New Holland 488 Heybine.
268 rake, both like new.

614 -949-2069.

63

Registered Quarter Horse .
Also grade. Saddles, bridles.
winter horse blankets . West·

ern boots. 614-698 -3290.
each . Fresh brown eggs .
Deliver every tuesday . larry

R. Sayre. 304-896 -3319 .

64

Hay

&amp;

3,600 bales of mixed hay .
Good price for large lots.
Stored at Lasher Farm in
Rutland. Ohio . Call Cool·

66

Fescue clover hay . $1 .00

Coli 614 -992 -5606.
Bas s boat 2 y rs . o ld . Must
see to appreciate . Clipper
M asonry saw . Over 2,000
good c lean us ed antique

bri ck. 614 -992 -2805 . Eldon Walburn .
30 in . gas harvest gold
range. Sears best . lik e new.
$ 200 . Used lennex
125 ,000 BTU gas furnace,
S200 . Antique wa lnu t war·
dro bo, poor cond ition. $50 .

614 -992 -2704.
M aytag au t omati c washer
$85 .; General Electric automati c washer $85 .; Ken·
more nat ural gas dryer $85.;
natural gas 30 in. gold range
585 .; 30 in wh ite e lectric

•ang o SB5 . 614 -742-2352 .
Com plete A tari w ith com bat. space invaders, &amp; box
S11 0 . Art ca rved wedding
band . 6 diamond c hip s. $75 .

SAM

SOM MERVILLE

ARMY war su rplu s. East
Ravosnwood . (New Era) .
Open 1 :00 -7 :00 p .m . Fri ·
day, Saturday &amp; Sunday .
(Other days unti l C hristmas
4 :30 p .m .) All sizes U .S.A .
made denim jackets, jeans,
army field jacket. co mabet
gove rnment specification
boot s, rubb e r boots ·
in s ulat e d - pl ai n . (Added
Service-Auto minor repair .
Special discount prices, by
Paul McKinn ey .)
LOOKING for so m e unusual
Christmas Gifts? Try shop ping at the Far m Mu seum 's

304 -675 -1482
FISHER "S 2 DAY WARE HOUSE SALE . Sale mens
samples, discontinued items
from Fall lines. Many gift
items at big savings . Houra·
Saturday 8 to 3 . Sunday 1 to
5 . location Fisher Warehouse on Mossman Ave .. in
Bell emead , Pt . Pleasant .
NEW sk i boots &amp; tree,
women size 5 . 550 . or best

offe r. 304 -675 -5693 .

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

Call 446 -7796 .
POODLE GROOMING . Call
Judy Taylor a1 614-367-

7220 .
DRAGONWYND CATIERY
- KENNEL. AKC Chow pup pies, CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kittens .

Coli 44$-3844
after 4PM .
' •'/
Englisl\'- Saner. $60 . Call
446 -46?2 evenings.
AKC

Reg .

Chow

Chow

pupptes for sale, S260. Call

256-1271:
Pitbull puppies. 3 females .
Reduced price . UKC Regis·
tered. wormed &amp; shots. Call

614 -367-'7409 .
AKC Registered German
Shephe rd puppies . 7 weeks
old . Ready to go . More
informa1ion ca ll 614 · 367-

771 2.
For sale black &amp; tan Coon
hound . $ 100 or trade . Call

614-245 -957B .
UKC American Eskimo Sprts
puppies, fury white coats,

shots. Call 614 -446 -7230.
Cockaieal bird with cage .

Call446 -4192 .
Great Christmas gift. AKC
Miniature Schnauzer puppies . Only 2 males taft. 7
weeks old . Priced reduced to
$125, excellent childs pet .

Coli

446-4680 .

Deposit

holds.
Reg . Brittany Spaniel pup·

pies. Call614 -246-6449. or
614 -245-9396.
Cocker Spaniel puppies .
Registered blacks and buffs .
Ready the week of Christmas. $150 . No checks .

614 -992 -7 102.

57

Fitzpatrick Orchards . Plenty
of nice applea for your
Christmas baskets, several
varieties for ell your uses.
Visit our orchards on S.R .

689 . 614-689 -3786 .

r .SEE!

STUCCO

PLASTERING

-

76 Granada Chia ex . ni ce,
mid size car, $2,600 . Call

446 -9380.
1974 Corvette T -top. V -8 ,
automatic. AC . PS. PB,
AM -FM stero . leather interior. new tires and exhaust,
immaculate condition. Call

446 -86B7 after 6PM .
76 Corvette cream colored
(off white) with brown inte·
rior. auto. with air, (make
nice Christmas gift . )

86.600. Call 446 -2491 .
82 Mercury LN -7 . sharp car.
exc. gas mileage. $6,700.

Coli 446 -0604.
1977 Camara ralley sport,
new paint. pioneer stero.
exc. cond .. will take pickup
on trade , books $3,500 sell
for $2,500. Must sell. Call

614 -3BB -B4B6 .
1978 Pinto 4 cyl. , 4 spd ..

low miles, $1 .650 . Call
614-367-0482 alter 5 .
wagon .

Call

446 -0749.
Ford Granada 75 4 dr., 6

cyl., AT, PS. AC . 80.000
miles. good cond .. e900.

Cell 446 -4668 .

I'm qood for Arnuntt

Rodney Howery. 6t4-992 6370 .
United Craft. Complete Car·
pantry Service. No job to
large or too small. Osby A.
Martin, Rodney Howery.

WINNIE TI/RNS HER ATTENTION

614-992 -6370 .

Ford SN troctor . Double
plan. byohhog ocroporo, new
tireo end bottory. Cooh only,
U,200 or boot offer. 1 mi.
oouth on Vinton on Rt 180.
Sat. ~nly. Call &amp;14-3889098 or cell Akron 218 724-8185 .

THOUGHT I'D DROP BY
AND SEE. JUST WHAT
IT 15 YOU DO.

RON'S Television SeNice.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar . and

house coils. Coli 576 -2398
or 446 -2454 .
F &amp; K Tree Trimmin g. stump
removal. Catlli7ti -1331 .

RINGLE"S SERVICE experienced roofing, including
hot tar applicat{on. carpen ·
ter. electrician, mason. Call

304 - 676 - 20BB
4660.

or 676 -

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

Evening television l i s t i n g s - - - - - - - _ . ; _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FRIDAY
12/17/82

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

8:00

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine

Phone 446-3BBB or 446 4477
United Craft Plumbing and
heating seNice . No job to
large or to small. Osby
A .Martin, Rodney Howery.

Phone 614-992 -6370.

Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop .
Pom eroy . 992 -2 2B4 .
1979 VW Rabbit. 304 -773· 1- - - - - - -- - 6296 .

8:30

WITCH

T R E NC H E RS .
. Recondltloned-Uoed. M.4
"9hp", J20"18hp", V30
2300 "30hp", R 40 "40
hp", R 86 "66hp": Sackhoeo Dovlo. 20 + 4, 18 + 4,
· and mlni-sn'eakers. Oays614-443-9752. Nlghto
-kdayo-5 14·582·11881.

e.

e.

e.

Whole illloll corn for 0.0.
til.' per 1 00 lbe. with Hakl
te .. pre uckld. M-n'o
WoodloWn Form, Pliny Rt.
35. 304-875-2271.

4X4,

liD av.. E..y
7:00 I I (I) P.M. Magazine
(I) Inside the NFL Len
Dawson and Nick Buoni·
conti analyze this week ' s
NFL action and look ahead
to ne11.t week's games.
(I)
NCAA
Saokotball

Report
(()Winners
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Cl) Chartle's Angel•
Ia (I) Tic Tee Dough
(I) &lt;lD MecNoli-Lehrer

Report

7:30

auto ., short bed, roU bar,
AM - FM · atereo
tape .
bucket Mats, white spoke

whaelo: 197.9 2 whoel drive'.
318, outo,, P.8., P.B •• crulae
control, b - • oiW.r. ounroot, rodlol tlr11, chrome
wh11l1 , AM - FM · radio,
bucket oeato. Call 266·
1484.

(]I Eyewitness News
D (jJ P-le'o Court
I I (I) (JD You Aokad For

I]) Andy Griffith
Cll Ia Cll Family Feud
(() Bualnesa Aepon

General Hauling

(iD Inside Business

e

We"ll dolt. Call448-3169or
614-266-1987 after 6 .
Now Hauling house coal,
lump or stokfr up to 8 ton .

Entertatnment

D (I) (!) Powaro of
M.tthew Star Matthew
performs a daring rescue
to save his guardian. (60
min.)
(f) MOVIE: "Don't Cry.
It' s Onty Thunder'
(I) MOVIE: 'Sariol"
CIJ Supet' Book

(I)

limeotone, top ooll, fill dirt.
Call6t4 -367-7101 .

NFL Clemo of the

w-

Ill MOVIE: ' Batman'
(I) Benson Benson faces
the problem of a cook who
ha1 her children taken
away from her. (Closed
Captionedj
•
Cll &lt;ID DukH of

JIM$ Water Service. Call
Jim leniar. 304 -676-7397.
Upholstery

H.,...-d
Cll &lt;lD W11hlngtan WHI&lt;/
Review Paul ,Duke is jomed

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Soc. Avo., Golllpolla.
448-7833 or 448-1833.
MOWREYS Upholotery Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleuont,
304-675-4164.

CIJ

Tonight

8:00

Need something hauled
away or son,ethlng moved?

87

louis Rukeyser analyzes
the '80s with 41 weekly review of economic ·and in·
vestment matters.

by top W11hlngton journaliltl enalyzlng the week ' s
.
news.
D &lt;It JUIKIIar of -

o.m.

.....

: 8:30 (I) Swill F1111lly Robin·
(I) E8PN llpacilll An
NCAA Footblll Preview of
the
Hotidly, California.
Tangerine, Akml end Libeny B0wt1.

"(

9:00

D

(I) NCAA Suketball:
Kentud{y
Invitational
Tournament

CIJ 700 Club

(I) NCAA Football: Holiday Bowl from Son

Diogo, CA

(I) •

It
(I) ESPN SportoCanter

85

360,

MOVIE: "Holl'o Flva

(I) Dr. Who

lent cond . 387-7182 .
1979 ···Dodge

D
CIJ

Eyewitne11 News
(I) (!) NBC Nowo

Ia (I) (JD CBS News

6300.

all aluminum body. Excel·

CII

car falls in love with a
woman who makes a pass
at Felix.

Cll liD Well Stroot Week

Newacenter

ClJ Bob Nowhlrt Show
(I) g (jJ ABC Newo

Sharp. 304 -BB2 -2806 .

1879 Chevrolet Step Van.
360, auto .. PS -PB, with 16"

Cil

Houra'

a-c and weather proofed .

anytime .

e

MOVIE: "Blackboard
Ju119lo"
CIJ Tic Tee Dough
I])Corol Suman
Cll Ia Cll g (jJ Nowo
(!) Newo/Sports/WW~thor
Cll &lt;lD Poworhouoe

SEWING Machine repairs,

1978 Dodge power wagon,
4-WD, rough body, mechanlcolly oound, 318 with 2
blrrell. outo trano, $2,000
or belt offer. Call448-7897

~

(I)

1976 Dodge Aspen. factory service. Authorized Singer

Trucks for Sale

()) New Odd Couple Os-

EVENING

CARS. TRUCKS
under *100 available at I - - - -E,-1---.-~-local gov't oalaoln your area . 84
ectr1ca
Call frafundable) 1-7 t 4 &amp; Refrigeration
669-0241 ext. 1866 for 1- - - - - - - - - -

72

ORVILLE, I WANT TO
DON'T EMBARRASS
THAN K YOU FOR
ME. IF THIS 15
RENEW ING OUR LfASE. WHAT YOU EN.!OY
IT WAS VERY DECENT
DOING, l GUESS
OF YOU .
NEED A PLACE
T0001T/

HER FASHION SHOW••. .

JEEPS.

61

th i rt~ for the wrappinqs'

United Crafts . Roofing.
spouting. siding and storm
windows . No job too large or
1oo small. Oaby A . Martin,

•

For sale- 1976 Olds . Cutlass
Supreme. High mileage .
Runs good, body fair to

Ten for the presents and

spent a fortune'

Call446 -2107 .

1976 Yamaha RD 200
4.302 mi. Will sell both
$1.200. Call446 -42t3. ¥k
for Rick .

You must have

here is sittinq
kids r 1ma4 ·_:___.,
as we II sit
'!-&lt;i"-h.tl. Jtheir

77 Honda CBCC 61 .200.
Caii614-3BB -8557.
1976 Mustang 6 cyl. and a

ALLF:Y

Carpet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brosthers Custom
Carpets . Free estimates.

JONES BOYS WATER SER VICE . Call 614-367 -7471
or 814 -367-0691 .

DITCH

GASO L! ~F.

304-896 •3802 .

wllh Major Hoople

RUSH!:$ TO THESE~~
1 SIMPLY TELL

Home
Improvements

Co li 614 -388 -9B67.

73 CHEVROLET.
304-882 -2766 .

675 -3112

WIND KNOW

81

directory on how to pur·
chase . 24 hrs.

SAFETY shield car: seat,
excell ent condition . 304 -

fROM WHEN&lt;:E COMES IT~
~IREN&lt;ST~? C:~N THE
~IVER REMEM~EFl THE
GLOUD IT WAS A~ IT

AL LEY OOP

1974 VW bug, $1.600. Call
446 -1062.

Haven Welt Vir ginia.· Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock.

Fruit
Vegetables

Extras.

real sharp, 81 ,000. firm .
614-992 -6163 anytime.

axp. Caii614 -38B -9652 .

HARTS Uoad Cars. New

Upright piano, $200. Call
446 -4999 .

&amp;

Autos for Sale

Pinto

OIUIO.' - - - ·

Honda. 400 CME .

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. 30 years experience,
specializing in built up roof .

1974

IF HE..

PAINTING · interior and
exterior, plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling . 20 yrs.

good . 614 -9 92 -5B17 after
6 p.m .

Musical
Instruments

58

'

71

MOVES T'GO OUT A6AIN.1 'F==:~
HOW CN 1 SNEAK OUT

1182.

.......... ·····.
.......................
~

.• BUT HE'S HOT MAKIN' ANY

textured ceilings commercial and residential . free
estimates . Call 614· 266·

bale. 843-331 1 _

Boarding all breeds . AKC
Reg . Dobermans pupa and
Doberman Stud Service.

1981

863 actual miles.

lvrduve

-

N/6/IT ...

11 horsepower riding
mower, utility trailer. air &amp;
electric power tools . 77
Chevrolet Blazer 4 -WD . Call

Grain

villa , Ohio . 1 -614 -667 3B38.

KENNEL

... HE'~ &lt;lOIN' OVEK TO TH' $1JffCASE.1 1
HOPE HE DOESN'T OPEN IT! 1 STlFFEO .
TH' MONEY SACK ANY WI/ICII
l'fiiY.' HE'S 80UNO TNOTICE!

446-282t .

TWO butchering hogo. 8160

Odds sizes for trailer under-

HILLCREST

OH.GOLLY! THAT S ~T
T'8E OAN LYON COMIN'
HOME! ,. AH' HE'S
PR06'LY IN FOR TH'

260 CC Yamaha dirt bike.

pinning. 614 -667 -3086 .
Pets for Sale

I
Motorcyc es

Livestock

Middleport . Call 614 · 992 17 cubic ft . fro st free
Frigidaire r e frig e rator .
Green . Now cond . $350 .
Zenith console stereo with
am · fm 8 track , record
player . New cond . $350 .

1- - - - - - --,---74

7494 .

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

WHAT

1978
topper,

spe cial p ri ce o n 1962 mod CO UNTRY STORE . Open
els. Whi le th ey last . Swishe r
Saturday 10:00 a .m . to
Imp lement. Upper River 5 :00p.m . Sunday 1 :00 p .m .
Rd ., Gallipolis. OH .
.to 4 :00p.m . Other times by
appointment .
1983 N ecc hi sew ing rna chin o. Free · arm dial -a · Bedroom suite , co mpl ete .
ma ti c . u se d rn sew ing $200 . 304 -675 -5509 .
classes . Co st new over
$40 0 for qui ck sal e w ill GI RL S bicycle, training
sac rif1c e for S1 00 , on ly 3 wheel s. good condition .
m ac hine avai labl e. Ca ll 614 - nice gift. $30 . 304 · 773 385 -8918 . Out of town call 5860.
collec t also free delivery 1- - - - - - - - - - with in 90 mil es of ou r Log an Refrigerator , like
new.
door .
$176 . Stove S125. Phone
Good seasoned hickorey &amp;
oak firewood. S20 pickup

Trucks for Sale

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

120 3 or 446 -38 16 .

Wood burnmg add o n tur - 614 -992 -6965 .
n an ce . S t i ll in fa c t ory crate. - - - - - - - - - lc-

$450
12 16

17, 1982

()) Burns 8e Allen
(]) ESPN SportsCenter
(I) Nlghtline
® MOVIE: 'The lnvaskm
of the Bee Girts'
I I (jJ Last Word
12:30 I I (I) (!) SOTV Netwo.-k
()) Jeck Benny Show
(]) Top Rank Boxing from

Atlantic City. NJ
Cll Loot Word

()) My Linle Margie
(]) Best of Midnight
~clals

Ill Cll Sign Off
(JD MOVIE: 'Laserblast'
I I (jJ News
2:00 I I
(I)
NBC
Naws
Overnight
(]) Bechelor Father
(]) MOVIE: 'Curse of the

.._.
(I)

1'88 Lito Night

&lt;1D All In tho F-lly

t1:411;"~

-·PI c~h

ne'

·-

Cll MOVIE: 'The A-·
12:00 Cll MOVIE: 'lit Sad

Fly"
(!) News/Sign Off
I I (jJ CNN Headline
News

2:30 Cll Ute of Riley
Cll Sign Off
3:00 D (I) Sign 011
(I) MOVIE: "The Border'
CIJ 700 Club

MOVIE: . "Roca

for

ClJ H1n111'1 A.-k
&lt;lD Mltlnoe at tho Sljou

8:00

(jJ T.J . Hooke• Sgt
Hooker tries to nail the
seller of PCP m the local
'!!gh school . (60 min.l
U (I) (!) Sliver Spoona
Ox provokes Ricky into a
fight and then sues him for
it.

Ia Cll ® Night Before

Your Ufe. Ct.rlle Brown'

CIJ I Married Joan
Cll Sign Off
1:30 (l) MOVIE: "Zorro. 1he

&lt;lD

c-

• &lt;It Solid Gold

Gold'

B:30

.

()I 9'ewltness News

1 :00

No'

Body In Quaotlon 'Balancing Act .' Dr . Jonathan
Miller shows how the hu·
man body restores all
things to their most favor&amp;·
ble state . (R) (60 min.)
(Closed Captioned!
9:30 (lJ MOVIE: 'Tho Legend
of the Lone R•nger'
• (I) lnalde Buafneu
10:00 (I) MOVIE: 'The Border'
CD Remington StHie
D ()) (JD Folcon Croat
Jacqueline Perrault returns
to the valley with enough
evidence to put Angela in
prison. (60 min.)
(]) Profiles In Americ•n
Art
(H) Newswatch
10: 15 Cll TSS Evonl119 Nawo
10:30 (I) Slit Time
CIIModiiProbn
(H) Muterpfece Thetltre
'To Serve Them All My
Days.' P.J .' s fued with the
headmaster comes to a
crisis st a Board of Gover ~
nors meetin'l. (60 min.}
{Ciooad Caplionedl
11 :00 D (lJ Nowocentlr
Cll D ()) D (jJ Nawo
(!) No-/llporta/Waather
(I) Dove Allan It IMgo
®Ey-.Nawo
t t :15 Cll Allin tho Fomlly
t 1 :30 D (I)(!) ToniGht 8how
Cll Bo-119 jl_,
(I)-Life
(I) 8aftny HNI D
(I)
MOYIE:
'A
Without

lll1d Smell
7:30 (lJ

Gay Blade'
(I) MOVIE: 'Cleopatra
Jones and the Casino of

II

Lawrence Welk
()) All Creatures Great

(]) Captioned ABC News

(jJ MOVIE: 'Dr.

(!) Knight Rider Michear
Knight meets an amnesia
victim that can help him
foil an assassination at·
tempt . (60 min.)
D ()) (JD Dalla• J.R. pulls
his diniest trick yet in his
fight with Bobby for Ewing
Oil. (60 min.)
Cll Next Queotlon

7:00 •
Cil Dance Fever
Chri1tm111 Spoclol
()) ESPN SportsCentor
()) D Cll HH How
(!)
Mamorioo
With

'Ntbon_aa.·
(l)
(!)
Dill" rent
Strokes Arnold invites the
street corner Santa for
Christmas at the Drum·
monds. (Cioted Captioned!

D

Chrfstm.. A clockmaker.
a family of mice end a sensitive Santa Claus join to
celebrate the Yuletide 18&amp;·
son . (A)
9:00 D (I) NCAA Saoketball:
Kentucky
lnvltadonal
Tournament
Cil
Seventh
Annual

You119 Comedian• Show
Alan King hosts this look
at up and coming comics .
(!) Glmmo A B Ill (I) (JD MOVIE: "Daodly
Encounter'

(lJ MOVIE: "The GatherIng • Perl II"
I]) MOVIE: "Julluo Cao Hr'
()) NCAA Football: Tan-

&lt;lD Hitch Hlkaro Guide/

gerine Buwt
l•ndo, FL

g

CIJ

from

NCAA

Or·

Saokatball:

lndiiN at K•n... State

()) NCAA
Saokotball:
Arizono at Ohio Sllto
D Cll (JD Grinch Stole
Christmu Dr. Seuss 's tale
of the spirit of Chrietmas is
presented . (R)

())
MOVIE:
"lt'o
Wonderful Ufo'

Cllloxy

(jJ NCAA Sultatball:
Merquene va. Menthtlll
9:30 (!) Love. Sidney Pani persuade• her mother to Jet
her take benet lenons.
&lt;lD Dr. Who McMe
10:00 (I) MOVIE: 'ChNcl! end

Chong 'o Nlc&lt;t o.-no·
Cll TBS E-.lng No-

1

NCAA Football Preview of
the
Holiday,
California.
Tangerine, Aloha and lib·
eny Bowls .

4 :30 Cll Rooo Bagley
(I) NCAA Football: HoliSan

Diogo, CA
4 :45 (I) MOVIE: "All The Fine
You119 Cannlbalo"

12/18/82
MNINI

,....

1 :00 •

(I)

1:10

.

(I) - - · " "
MOVtl: · -

In

=~~

,MO'III: 'A ,._ to&lt;

the SuT111'11ght"_o pro11'1"' loolto It the need to&lt;
1 hlgli-opood trlln line In
Clllfomll. {10 mln.l
{Ciolad CIIPtlonadl
partriiiUI."

r

I I

8 Posh bash

9 Colla r or

12 Lariat
13 Obey
15 Wrath
16 - about town
17 Bug
18 Australian
city
20 Mulberry
cloth
23 Wobble
27 Amphitheater
211 Erect
30 Trust. w1th
" on·'

jacket
10 Foolish

14 Verruca
18 Instrwnent
board
19 " You're Break· 26
ing My - "
28
20 Little one
31
21 Exist
22 Vitality
24 Hombre's aw&gt;t 34
25 Sigmoid
35
letter
36

Fabric

37 Malevolent

Actinia

39 Romulus
to Remus

TV film
·· The
- Curse"
Napped
Peck role
Bw&gt;dle

&lt;W Allay
41 Colored
43 Slippery
one
44 - Canals

.,.-.,--,,-,,--=-,

~T&amp;Mtprol&gt;lerrl~~~~~33 Minunal
35 - Vigoda

38 Wire measure

DOWN

'l~-;::::---

I I

r

BOPHIS

(I) NIC N -

I ~=119

11 Mennonite
sect

argument

Frtend'

from

" lette rs"
7 Feel unwell

45 Strange
46 Equllibriwn
47 - of the ball
48 - down
I quieted I

3:45 I]) MOVIE: 'Seracono'
4:00 (I) ESPN Special An

Bowl

6 Man of

42 Win an

(]I CNN Headline Newa
(I) MOVIE' "Dertgerous

day

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Gem weight
6 Sununoned

39 Spread
for drymg

(]) ESPN SportsCenter

3:15

611Ut1,."D., r

I r;

Answer.

A

I Muslim
magistrate

I)

2 Cupid
3 Cer emony

4 Tree

J

5 Motif
I&lt;INPOF

()

A

~ENTENCE

\\OLJI.t:'

YOU &lt;&amp;ET IF' YOU
e~OKE THE LAW

I

work it:

AXYDLHAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for anot her . In thi s sample A is
used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and format!on of t he words are all
hints . Eac::h day th e code l etters are dJffL•rent

Now arrange the cirCled leners to
form the surprise answer. as sug gested by the above cartoon.

CRVPTOQUOTES

KI 1 I I I I I I ) ONE
t

Jumbloo: FAMED TWILL GAMBOL
Answer :

Ia

~ Her e's h o" lo

OF &lt;&amp;lttAVITY?'

(Answers tomorrow)
Yesterday's

·I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE

FALTER

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Yesterday's Cryptoquote: TRUTHS TURN INTO IJOGMAS
THE MINUTE THEY ARE DISPUTED.- GILBERT K.
CHESTERTON

�/-

12-

Th e Dai

Sentinel

• •
OPEC ministers
seek agreement
VlENN,\. i\ustt·ia !APt - OPEC
oil minist0rs gathen'&lt;l today to
prC'pal'l' for &lt;1 .\ .t't11'·C'nd ro nff're nce
that mrml)(·r~ hO!X' will s moot h
diffprf'lll'('S in thP s trifP-riddrn
cartPl and pll'\'t' nt a [lf'tro\C'um
pricP war o n the• \\'O riel ma r kpt.
M in istt·rs from :\lgcrb . l ndonf'sia . \'Pn(•zuf'ia. a nell hi' United Arab
Emirates ('()nsul!('() pri,·a tcl;• befur£' OJ)( ' lling a dii.\'·long session of

thP Or);!aniz&lt;Jtion of Pct ro iPum
Exportin,l! C'uun trif's M&lt;Jrkf't Moni toring ( 'nrnrnittt\' .
Till' S t '~:-. t o n is ai mt""d Jl st udying
propo~.:tl."

fur stupping fX't'Sistcnt
0\'t'rpnx\u('tion and unclrrpricing
which Itt-. wc·akpnf'CI thP ra rtcl' s
unit_\ in n '&lt;.'l' lltmonths.

\\'ltilt • !ill' glut on the II'Or ld oil
m; n·kl'l h.L... pn·~ s urrd O PF:C to
n'dut T' its priers. int Prna I bic-kering
is st''( ' /1 b_\ · man_, · \\"p ~tp rnanal~ ·s t sas
1he

main !11n•a 1to OPEC's abilitY to

sun:i\·(· .

n

Hut ~o mc• ObSC'ITC'rs sa y lhf'
me.~~ · bf• ablr to n•soln•
thf'i r diif(l n ' nC'C':-. Jl ltlP UIX'omi ng
SC'Ssio n . which OpPns at a Vif'nna

courllrit.'S

howl on Suncla,·.
OPEC sourcps sa_
, . rldegation
lt'actf'rs ar c m('('tin g in in fonnal
behincl ·thc-sccncs sessions today
a nd ~ 1 turcla.\' to hrlp insure a
"'mooth ministerial session .

"Wl' llOJJC to be able to ca se the

market pmblem s." United Arab
EmiratPs Oil M inister Mana Saeed
Otaiba, chairman of the m arketing
commill ee. sa id shortly aft er arriving herP. "There is no magical
solution. II clrjX'ncls on the va rious

ministers.

how

far

cl&lt;'l&lt;'nd ant s wr rC'
fi nr'(l .md Sf'\"l' n othe r s fOtieit C'd
OOnds in Mt'igs Count y Court
\\'r'(lnt•sda.\ ·.

Fint&gt;d b\' .Judge Patrick O'Brien
\\'t 'lf' cil'rsht•l Wt' lls, Ash,·ille.
JX)SSt's~ and kn ow ing !~· tra sn ~rtC'd
a ](JJclf'rl fin· ~~ nn in a mot or W'h iclC'.

$.10 ;uld l'U~ t s: Bernard Munc~ · .
\\'''" Ch&lt;•s!&lt;•r. Ohio. after killing a
df't ' l" failt'&lt; l tu cJ(·t~H' h !(•mpo raJ~ · ta g
from dN ·r pc tm it and ollach it to
dead dt 't ·r. S!l ;~nd cos ts. a tl c mptf&gt;d
to takl ' mon · tha n onl' d(?(•r. $1:-i l and
cos ts: Barhara :vlillrr. Pom f'ro.\ ·,
spr'&lt;'d . ~~ ~ and cos ts: Lcro.\ · H a\·C'ns.

Hantiltun. failllll' to detach tcmpor

an cl&lt; '(•r tag and attach it to dE't'r
in;mr&gt;diall•t\· \\'hen' it fell. $25 and
co~ I.". a l!f'mpt 10 takC' a Sf'f'Ond df'€'r,
snl ,mti co,ts: 11rUC(' Blackston.
Pom t ·n )\ . t ;.~ kr J cJpf•r fro m along a
pulllit' tt i g ~l\\ " d\ · . ~-)o and cos ts:
Harold H: ~wk s t n n. Ponwro.\ ·. aiel
LJncl a:-.si."t dllut llt·r in till' posS(•ssion
of ~tn ill!•)...!Jll.\ " l.tk t•n df't•r. S:il and
('OSb; Carl Murdock, Chesa pe3kC',
assun'fl cl t '&lt;lt dblanC(•, $10 and
costs: , lohn O;wi s . .Jr ., Syr acusE'.

hunt df'f•r on th&lt;' lands of another
\dthout tx·rmis..,ion. ~'2~ and cost s,
, hoot a deer from a public road . $25
a nd co..., h .
Also

Kcllr

(·

WindJrcnner.

Svracus£'. hunt ci('f' r on land of
a~othrr without pt·rmission. $2;-,and

costs, sl1001ciN·r from a public road .
~25

and costs.

William Tutman. Athens. speed.
$20 and costs: Richard Kobl~ ntz.
Pom ~rov. sj)f'ed. $23 and cos ts:
Doroth ~' Jv nPs. Ra\·rnswocxl. stop

'

Area deaths

Nona M. Winl'lm·nnf•r
1'\on &lt;J ~1 . \\"inl'lm ·nnPt. 71. ~IHi

Locu st St.. M id&lt;ll&lt;·porl. dll&lt;l T hurs·
day (.'\'('!li ng a l llolzPr Medical
Centc t·.
Funerc.~l &lt;.trTa ngemrnh

will br•

announce'() b1· Rowlings ·Coats·
Blower Funr ·ra I I lome. Middl~port .

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•

••

17 1982

Governor-elect seeks economic help

they

can

sarrifirr ...

lndustrv anal;·sts say the OPEC
commii!PP may propose increasing
the group's overall production
ceiling. currenll;· se t at 17.5 million
barrPis a da y.

But some members have ignored
that by culling prices and boosting
output in an effort to increase sales
in the glulled m arke t.
i\ muin dispute is betWeen Saudi
Arubia and the more radical OPEC
members. led by Iran and Libya.
The Saudis say wh ile they have cut
production unci remained loya l to
OPEC's $3-l ·per-batwl benchmark
prier. Iran and other countries ha ve

cu t pric0S and increased sa les.
Ira n and Iraq , both in need of cash
to finance their border war, aN"
expected to seek an increase in their
production quotas at the ministerial
session.

V1•tcrans Mt&gt;morial
i\dmilled--Christopher Ebersbach. Syracu S&lt;·.
Discharged ·-LE'Ona Hensley, Robert Young.

Judge completes
28 court cases
TwPrll ~· on('

December

Ohio

..

IUSTORIANS - Area hlstorl·
ans are showing Interest In this
plate which features a sketch of
the bandstand In the GaiUpoUs
City Park. Joe Clark. who made
the sketch lor transfer to plates,
trivets and other ll~ms, holds
one of the 10 Inch plates which
are banded In circles of a gold
design. Clark was reared In
Galllolls and found the band·
stand, buill In 1876, a source of
fascination . Clark Is planning on
creating a slmllar sketch of
Meigs County Courthouse lor
use on plates and other Items.

Accidents
investigated

A two-vehicle accident at the
inter section of Ohio 7 and Union
Avenue in Pomeroy was investisign, $10ancl cos ts: Gloria D. Roush.
gated by theGa llla-M eigspost of the
Ohio Highway Patrol Thursday
Rutla nd, speed. $20 and costs;
Duane R. Wa lsh II. Grove City, Pa..
afternoon.
speed. $21 and cos ts: Albert F .
No citat ion was Issued In the
accident. the pa trol indica ted.
Ward, Cheshire. operating unsafe
vehicle, $10 and cost s: E lizabeth C.
Benjamin H. Ewing, 39. PomeBow. Athens. unable to stop within
roy, was southbound on 7 at 4:20
assured clear distance. $2o and
p.m . and slowed to m ake a left turn
cos ts; Grover I&lt; loin , Rt. 2, Pomeonto Union. At that point, a vehicle
following him driven by Janet F .
roy. sper:'(), $20 and costs: .Joseph
Beech, Be-lpre. insufficient funds,
Boggs, 30, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, att emprestitution and cos ts: Bil lie Stou t.
ted to pass an!f struck Ewing's
Alba ny, DW I. $150 and costs. three
vehicle in the left side.
days confinemen t. license susModerate damage was reported
pended 30 days: Theoclo r~ Coppick.
to both vehicles.
Port land, no drivers license. $250
Two deer accidents were also
and costs. one days confinemen1; •· looked into by the patrol Thursday.
one years probation: Bobby MitModerate damage was done to a
chell , Pom~roy. assault , six months
vehicle drivenvy Lewis W. Pulver,
confinement and cos ts: Glassco
28, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, at 5:35p.m .
when it struck and killed a deer on
Fairro\\', Po mero~·. DWI. $150 and
cos ts. three days confinement.
Ohio 124, six- tenths of a mile east of
license suspended 30 days.
L ebanon Township Rd. 132.
Fo ticiting bonds were Larry
Dennis W. Durst, 20, Reedsville,
Dougla s. Jr .. Rochester. Mich.,
was southbound on Olive Township
criminal tresspass. $l18.05: Ronda
Rd. 319. one-tenth of a mile north of
L. Wright. Leon, W. Va .. illegal
Ohio 681, at 7:20 p.m . when his auto
posS0ssion of gun shells. $42.35;
struck and killed a deer which had
Galen L Miller, Arcanum. Ohio.
run into the path of hts vehicle.
a!lempt to take second deer. $160;
Durst's vehicle was also moderDouglas L Daniel. Cincinnati,
ately damaged.
illega l hunting of deer. ~2 .35 : Jerry
Brvan, Raceland. Ky.. Steve
Brva n. Wurt land . K y., and Chester
Brya n, Raceland . K y .. hunting deer
after:; p.m. wi th loaded gun, $42.3.1
each.

Emergency runs
Four calls were answered by local
units Thursda;•. the Meigs County
Emergcnr;· M edical Se rvic ~
repon s.
At l : 14 a.m.. Pomeroy took
Amanda i\uthorson from her residence on E . S.:'&lt;'ond St. , to Holzer
Medical Center . At 5:45 p.m., the
Rutland Unit took Willia m Ledlie
from Langsville to Vetera ns Mem orial Hospital. T uppers Plains at
10: ffi p.m . too Gene Wilson of
Reed sville to Camden-Clark Hospita l in Parkersburg and at l1 :45
Charles Boyles was taken from his
home at 297 Mill St .. to Holzer
Medical Center.

Check break·t·n
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating a breaking and entering that occurred at the
home of Cecil Frye, Salem Street.
Rutland .
The breaking and entering is
believed to have occurred after 10
p.m. Wednesday and 5 a.m.
Thursday. Entrywasmade through
a kitchen window. N o other details

GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, OH.
Now Open For The

Christmas
Holiday Seuon
large selection of Poinlettiaa in Pota
and Hanging BUketa. Christmas
Cactus. Violets. Foliage Plants &amp;

Hanging Baskets. Cande arrangementa, door wreathes, and cut
Christmas Trees . Now Taking Orders
for Grave Blankets.
Doily 9 to 6
1106

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl Richard Celeste's gubernatorial
administration w111 seek advice
from a broad coalj!lon of business
experts and civic leaders In trying to
solve Ohio's PCOnt&gt;mlc problems,
lieutenant governor-elect M yrl H.
Shoemaker says.
" We're going to get everybody
into the sam e room," Shoemaker
sa id Thursday.
He said the Democratic administration, which takes office in
January, will call on representati ves of m anufacturers, cham bers
of commerce, labor organizations,
civic groups and other segments of
the stat e's economy.
" There's not going to be any
choosingo!fofsldes. Everybody's in
the same boa 1. " Shoemaker said .
Shoemaker is a longtime state
representative and was chairman
of the House FinanceCommitteefor
the past 10 years. Shoemaker said
many of Ohio's business. welfare,
unemployment and other problems
aN" a result of the current na tionaI
recession.
But he said theN' aN" steps the
state can take to start to turn Its own
econom y around.
" We ar e going to tell these people
that this isnofalrytale.This isreal,"
he said.
Celes te said he wants to seek ways
to aid business, especially sma ll
businesses that now provide the
bulk of Ohio's jobs.
Shoem aker said a coa lition m eeting is expected to take place before
the new administration Is sworn into
office Jan. 10.

Paul Costello, Celeste's press
secN"tary, said It likely will be
scheduled for the first week In
January.

" He m et with a lot of business
groups and trade associations. He
m ade a lot of friends," Shoemaker
said.

Today's
Times-Sentinel
Along the River .............. B-1-8
Business .......... ... ....... ...... E-1
Classlfleds .. ... ................. D-+7
Deaths ............................. A~
Fann .............................. E-2
StatAl-National .. ..... ... ....... 0.1·

SIMMONS USED TRUCKS
At Unbelievable Low Prices!
1981 GMC lf2 TON

Sports .......... .................. C+

TV guide ...................... Insert

Automatic, PS, PB, AM Radio, Camper Mirrors, Diesel Economy. Newdiesel trade.
Only 26,000 miles.

$5995 ·

FBI continues hunt for embezzled funds
Story on Page D·l

Qh!~ State triumphs at Holiday Bowl

The origins of Christmas traditions
Story on,Page B·l

2-1979 FORD COURIERS
Both one owners, both shortbeds. I 4-speed,
I 5-speed. Your choice.

•

$2995

V-8, auto., atr, AM-FM. One owner.

ONLY

entintl

tmts

1979 FORD BRONCO

$6295

1982 CHEVROLET
V-8, 3speed standard. PS, PB, AM Radio and more. Only 8,000 miles. Baiallce of
factory warranty New '82 truck trade.

SIMMONS

OLDS.-CAD.-CHEVY, INC.
308 E. MAIN ST.

PH. 992-6614

POMEROY, OH.
MON.-RI.

8:00

Phase I of U.S. 35 bypass begins

$6995

Below Wholesale At

SATURDAY

By KEVIN KEL.LV
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - It 's only a bare beginning, but
proposed grading of the first phase of the U.S. 3.''i
bypass represents the first m ovem ent toward getting
the much-talked about project underway in nearly 10
years.
"It's important just to get som ething started,"
commented Walter G. Smith , deputy director of the
Ohio Department of Tra nsportation' s District 10
office in Marietta.
opened 14 bids on the proposed bypass
project earlier this week in Columbus. The apparen t
low bidder was Holloway Construction, Wixom,
Mich .. with a bid of approximately $4 .3 million.
The bid was termed "N'ally good" by Sm lt~ . who

said it was roughly $1.9 million below the state's
estimate of $6.26 million. The project calls for
clearing, grubbing, building removal, excava ting,
embankment construction, drainage work, seeding
and mulching and right-of-way fence erection for a
five-mile aN"a extending from near Holzer Medical
Center to Bidwell-Rodney Road.
This represents the first phase of the bypass. The
second phase would extend the bypass from Rodney
to Rio Grande, where It would join with Ohio 325 and
554 and with Gallla County Rd. 57B. The third would
run from there to the pN"sent four-lane at Thurman.
" It's pretty much up to the contractor when he
wants to ' tart ," Smith said. " We do plan to have a
pre-construction confeN"nce with him, where he will

ooor

pN"sent his plans."
Estimated completion date is July 31, 1984. What
happens afterward rem ains unknown, as the sta te
still faces the same econ9mic uncertainty that sta lled
the project and other highway plans for southern Ohio
In the early 1970s.
District 10 intends to proceed with planning for the
other two phases, Including right-of-way purcha se,
Smith said . But when can Gallla countians expect to
see the whole bypass complete?
"Tim e-wise, I just couldn't venture a guess ," h~
said.
awarded a bid for dem olition of three vaca nt
structures on land It had already bought for
right-of-way in November. Smith said that If the

ooor

Ball outspent
Boster in 94th
district race
GALLIPOLIS - Claire "Buzz "
Ball Jr., unsuccessful candidate for
the new ~t h House legislative
district. outspent opponent Jolynn
Boster of Gallipolis by mor e than
$2,001 in the November elec tion.
Ball's total expenditures ca me to
$11,949.1o, according to an expense
report filed with the Athens County
Board of E lect ions shortly before
the s t a t ~w id e 4 p.m . F riday
dt'adlinc.
An Plections board official said
Ball's report requiN"s an addendum
to cover checks w hich have not bc&lt;'n
returned . It also li~ ted nearly $7.00!
in outstanding loa ns and debts.
Contributions listed in Bal l's
report show he received $7,700 for
the general election. L ocal cont ribu·
!Ions were m ade by William Eachus
of Gallipolis, and Rexa nd Ca therinc
Shffiefleld of Langsville.
Mrs. Bosler's total expenditures
cam e to $9,0.33.64, with $6,0.15.!17
brought forward from her primm-v
campaign, $4.o24.831isted in con11·i·
butlons and a rem aining balance of
$1,527.16.
Ball, an Athens R~ publica n . and
Mrs. Boster. a Democrat, filed their
reports iri Athens beca use it's the
largPsl county in the ~ lh .
population-wise. Gallia and M eigs
aN" theothertwocountics that make
up the district.
Combined contribut ions for the

primary and the general election
show Mrs. Boster's campaign
received $17,967.88. with $16,440.72
spent.
The report showed there were 24
contributors. Local contributors
were M r. and Mrs. Lowell Ca ll.
Ga llipolis: Virginia Kay Betz, Rt. 1,
Ga llipolis: thP Meigs County Dem ocratic Executive Committee: Mr.
and Mrs . Maurice Tol~r. Rt. 1.
Bidwell : Mr. and Mrs. Larry Becbe,
Gallipolis: and Meigs Coun ty Sheriff.James J . Proffitt .
Cont r ibutions totaling $2,001 were
made to the campaign by the Ohio
House Democratic Committee.
In Gallia races. the single la rgest
spender in the general election wa s
Roger 1.. Fetterly, an independent
ca ndidate for Gallia County com missioner. Fetterly's report tot aled
$1,21i0.22. spent on campaign mater ials. advertLsing and gasoline.
Fel!crl y listed six contributors on
his r~port. totaling $14o. They were
l.arrv's . Sohio. Holley Brothers,
W.R. "Dick " Brown Insurance
Agency. David M cCo.v Insurance
Age ncy, Rio GrandP Veterinary
Cl inic and Christine Napier.
v~rlin L. Swa in. the successful
Republica n commission ca ndida!&lt;".
n'ported he spent $.'&gt;11.66 befoN'
Nov. 2. pr imarily on advertising and
printing.
1Continued on Page A4t

houses arc still standing, or have not l)('('n mo,·ed.
th~y wi ll be under provisions of ODOT's agreemen t
with the contractor.
One of the rem aining details of the bypa ss' first
phase was the closing of Springfield T own ship Rd. 38
!Pugh-Waugh Road\, where an overpass is planned
to be constructed.
A public hearing on the road closing wa s held in
December 1972- and s~veral residPnls who opposed
the closing then wen• still aga inst it in another
heari ng held in September bv th e count y
commiss ioner s.

The roa d was closed. and lh&lt;' count; · also agreed to
the relocation of 57B and Pl&lt;'&lt;lSan t Va ll&lt;•,· Road
which branches off o7B. for Onf' in leN'&lt;'Iio~ joini n~
the' road and thP two statC' routf'S with thf' b_\-pass.

Meigs man
pays (deer-ly)
for poaching
COLUMBUS, Ohio ti\Pt - Paul
Steinmetz never thought he would
get sent to prison for hu nting. but
now hr hopPs to get out bv
·
Christmas. '
· Steinmetz. 22. of Pomeroy. has
bPen told to get f'('Ud.v to lea~e thr
Sou th cas tcl'll Ohio Training CPnt ~r
near Lanca ster. Hr hopes to spPnd
Chris tma s

with

rrlali vrs

in

Columbus.
Dale Roach. Nlucat ion and &lt;'n
forcemen l o ffi c~r for the Ohio
Di vision of Wildlife, said Steinmet z
and his fa I hf'r acknowlf'dgf'd taking
4R7 deer in lhf' pas t fi ve seasons. H&lt;•
sa id another tlO&lt;Jchcr caught in
MC'igs County. whoSf' n&lt;.~mPwa s no t
immediately available, told nf
taking 7~&gt; df'f•r betW&lt;'!'n October 1~I
and July 191H when he wa s caug ht.
" In 1'!M-R1. in d&lt;w poaching
alone. spotlighting and shootin g
from the highwav only, we ca ught
:12o people, " Hoa"h s.11d. Figun·s
ar~ incompleh' for 1 ~H'2 but
Roach said "it is wa .\" up and still

CHRISTMAS TREE SESSION- With the Senate still In session, a
light bums just below the statue of Freedom on the U.S. Capitol Friday
night as the Capital Christmas Tree shines brightly In the night. The
Senate mel late Into Friday night In an attempt to pass a Continuing
Resolution to keep the government In business past midnight Friday.
(AP Laserpholo).

climbing."
Wednesd av ronclud0S the eighth
month of a 16-month sentence
passed b.v .Judge Patri ck O'Brien in
Meigs Coun r,• Court on April '!!..
" [think thf'ywr n ' u s i ng m Pa ~ &lt;Jn
exam pi£',·· St(linmt•tz said . · ' 11 's just
as plain and simple as thai. "
O'Brien said Stcinmt•lz had " a lot
of prior first -df'gr('(' misdr ml ·a nor

DEER POACHER - Paul
Steinmetz stands in a barred
hallway of the Southeastern
Ohio Training Center, Laneas·
U,r, where he ls serving 16
months lor spotlighting deer.
Steinmetz, who admits killing
several hundred deer in the past
live seasons, with the aid of his
lather, hopes to he relea"'ll lor
Chrishnas. ( AP L.aserphoto) .
com·iclions :md
t'\"l 'JYt hin):.: d Sl' ...

\\'t '

h&lt;.t cl

trif'fl

(( 'nnt inu&lt; '(I on PagP i\ -·1)

Reagan vows veto of emergency spending bill
Thl" president 's rem arks and Baker's forecast
heightened the prospects of a part ial shutdown of
government oper ations on Monday , involvingo70.00l
federa l workers. Legally, the government ra n ou t of
money at one minute past midnight Sa turdav.
Baker told reporters It would be Sunday before a
House-Senate negotiating committee could even
begin reconciling differences between the two
chambers on the stopgap spending measure needed
to keep the government running.
Reagan seemed to suggest that the conferees m ay
be able to draft a compromise plan that m ay sat isfy
him. but he did not e labo rat ~. Th(' House and Senate
versions of the stopgap bill each contain a jobs

By CLIFF HAAS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON !APt - Although much of the
government is on. the verge of a shutdown, President
Reagan said Saturdav that still he would veto an
emergency spending bill if it contains plan for public
works jobs he opposes.
"I cannot sign that bill," thP president sa id in a
nationally boradcast rad io inlet-view. " I will have to
veto It if it contains these various amounts."
. Reagan spoke as the Senate returned to work
Saturday on the stopgap m easure with M ajority
Ll"ader Howard H. Baker Jr .. R-Tenn .. predicting the
·bill m ay not win final passage unlll early next week.

packa ge.
Baker also predict('() that the threatened veto
would be easily sustained in the Republican -led
Senate.
Baker told his collcagu0S that President Reaga n
would not approve such a packag'' "even on
Chr istmas eve."
But Sen. Mark Hatfield , R-Or e. , insisted the vote
was the Senate's only chance to " indicate its concern
for jobl~ssness . ... .Jobs are needed now."
The House measure. meanwhile. includes a $.'i.·l
billion jobs plan, w hich the pN'sident has denounced
as "pork barrel in the old fashioned sense."
Reagan has sa id he won't sign any bill thai reaches

his desk with either job' p;wkagl'.
Howrvrr . H ousf' Spt'akt'r Thoma s P ( )':--.,:('il l .Jr ..

D-Mass .. urged Rea ga n Fri&lt;la1· '" takr• til&lt;· path ol
"compromi sf'. not obstruC'tionism ...
Baker insisted f'ar liPr Frida.\ · hl · ..., till hopt ·~ to w in
approva l for a nickel a ga llon hikt · in I hf' gasulim•ta x.
despit e a d £'C' is ion Thursda.\· nigh t lo "'l 'l t hP mPasun'
asidC' to makf' wc.t_v for thP ~ln pg ap lnl\ISUI'f'.
The gas tax wa sstallf'd h_
\ .1 fitihLh ll'r mounh'&lt; l h_
\ · ;1
small group or consrr'\"J ti\·p I {l '[)U bl ic; t n ~ . ,\id0~ sa i&lt;i
4R GOP ~cna t ors wrotP Hakt ·t 1-'ricb.\' a ~ king for
a no th~ r

opportuni ty to pa ss II.

The SenatP tx•gan it s m ;tralh(ltl nwt •ling Tllur:-od.J .\'
morning.

Hopeful searchers discover downed aircraft
By KURT J. REPANSHEK
Associated Press Writer
BEVERLY, W.Va . (API- Less
·than an hour after they resumed
'th~lr search Saturday, rescuers
spotted a downed aircraft they
believed was the Medlvac helicopter !hat disappeared two·days ago,
pollee said.
Five helicopters took off shortly
after 8 a.m. to search the area
known as Cheat Ridge, and shortly
after 9 a.m. the craft was SIIO!ted,
Lt. Col. J .R. Buckalew said.
"It's laying on Its side. One door Is
but the .back door Is still 011,"

cit.

puckalew said.
.
''They dldn•t get close enough to

see" whether any oft he craft's three
passengers was still alive, he said,
but added everyone appeared to be
inside the Bell Jet Ranger helicopter. He said the craft did not appear
to have burned.
Lt. Col. W.F . Donohoe, coordlnat·
lng state police efforts in South
Charleston, said It would not be
known for certain whether the craft
was the Medlvac copter that
disappeared Thursday until the
remote area was reached by crews
ontheground. .
.
' "We are very hopeful it's ours,"
he said, "But we've spotted wreck·
ageoncebefore."
·
On Friday, searchers found

•I

wreckage they initially hoped was
the helicopter , but were disappointed to find It was pieces of an old

winged aircra ft that had crashed.
Volunteers swelled Sa turday's
ground search crews to som e 2."i0
COPTER MISSING -

OHIO

Map

located area being se~hed for

..

VA.

a Medlvac helicopter, which
canied a critlcaUy Ill heart
patient and disappeared Thursday evening In rugged hills.
Rescue crews searched Friday
In log, snow and freezing
tempe~ lor the craft that
had heeD enroute from . an
Elkins, W.Va. holpllal to ·the

Charletllon Area Medical Cen-

ter.

(AP Laaerphoto ).

peopl~, said U .S. Army Sgt. J oe
Bezjack, a Civil Air Pa trol m ember
who was coordinating the search.
Bezjack said paramedics from all
over the state arrived Friday night
ariel this morning to help in the
search.
About 100 people searched :a
five-square mile area on foot Friday
while helicopters and a C·1:ll
military cargo plane circled the
area looking for signs of the craft
and Its three passengers.
The emergency medical helicopter was ferrying the patient from an
Elkins hospital to the Charleston
Area Medical Center when the pilot
reported a problem with Ice,

Donohoe &lt;;;] irl.
Donohoe idt•tllifi&lt;YI the pilut as
Cpl. Bill StonP of the sta tp policp
aviation detachment. Also on hoard
was Carlos Dillon . a param~dir
with the Kanall'ha Count; · F:mPrgenry Sflrv i('PS, Donohor sa id .
j

Carl Baker. staff assistant at the
state Emergcnc;• MNiica l Serv ic~
office in Charleston. ll'as cautious
but optimistic about the passcng~rs'
chanCE:" for su1v iva I.
Baker, however , held out llttlp
hope for I he pa lien t. " If hp was In
that bad of shape. the prognosl~ Is
not good for him , but that depends
on the status of the aircra ft ."

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