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                  <text>Pase-14

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Some village streets
will he blocked off
Due to the block party Saturday

Area deaths
Sheldon E. Stevens

Ave. will be one-way n011h and
North Third wUl be one-way south.
Other street traffic patterns will be
the same. AU side streets going Into
North Seco nd Ave. in !his area will
be blocked to traffic.
There wUl be traffic control
officers at various Intersections to
assist In conforming to this traffic
rattern. The cooperailon of the
public is urged in assisting village

In Middleport , several vi llage
streets will be blocked.
From 10 a.m. untU 10 p.m.
Saturday, No. Second Ave. from
Rutland St. to Mtll St. will be
blocked to vehicular traffic. South·
bound traffic wUI turn right at
Rutland St. and left at No. Third
· Ave. and travel south to Mill St.,
and continue sou th on South Third
Ave. Northbound traffic will travel
north on South Second then continue north on North First Ave.
During the "!'riod, North First

and chamber of rornmerceotficials

In making this first Middleport
block party a success, Mayor Fred
Hoffman said.

Firefighers obtain certificates

Sheldon E. Stevens, 66, formerly
or Middleport, died on Sept. 16 In
Alexandria, Va ., fbl!owlng 'a
lengthy illness.
He was a son of the late John R.
and Charlotte Stevens of Middleport artd was a graduate of
Middleport High School. Mr. Stev,
ens was a retired . employe of
American Airlines having served
with the company for 35 years.
Surviving are his wife, Jean, and
son, Scott, both of Alexandria; two
sisters, Evelyn HUe, Cleveland, and
Bertha Hartman. Clearwater, Fla.,.
and two brothers, Robert, of
Boston, Mass., and John R. (Jun1e)
of Richmond, Va.
Services were held at Alexandria
on Sept. 19.

In cooperation with Tri-County
Vocational School, Nelsonville.
Firefighters who qualified and
who received certificates were:
Alice M. Freeland
Char les D; Bar rett Jr., Jerry Black,
Alice M. Freeland, 76, Syracuse,
J . Wllllam Brown, Bruce P. Davis,
David Davis, Merle Davis, Danny . died early this ·morning at Holzer
Edwards, Larry Edwards, Michael Medical Center.
Mrs. Freeland was born May 16,
Edwards, Herbert Elliott, Dick
Fetty, Dick Foley, B111 Kennedy, 1907, In Syracuse, a daughter ofthe
Lewis Kennedy, Michael MUler, late Frank E . and Anna Turley
Homer Parker, Paul P a tterson, Holmes. She was also preceded In
Mark A. Richmond, Charles E . death by four brothers and one
Rife, Sheridan Russel!, Raymond sister.
Wilcox, B!!! L. Williamson, David
Mrs.Freelandwasahomemaker
L. W!ll!!irrison and Fred L.- and · a·m ember ot'thl&gt; Middleport
Williamson.
· First Baptist Church:
She Is survived by her husband,
George Freeland; one sister, Mrs.
Dorothy Roller, Middleport; five
nieces and two nephews.
costs; Danny Starr, Tuppers Plains,
· Graveside services will be held
no drivel'S license, $30 and costs; Saturday at 10 , 30 a.m. at GreenGlenna Rummel, Syracuse, as·
sured clear distance, $20 and costs;
wood Cemetery, Racine, with the
Sh d dis0 ~ 1
Rev. Mark McClung and the Rev.
M 1n Oil
• uer Y Steve ('lelson officiating. Ewing
arv
er,
a e,
conduct, $25 and costs, six months F\U!eral ·Home Is in charge of
-probatloni CleQ Smith, Chester, .· arrilngements . .There will be no .
speed,~ and costs: .
: · calling hours and tit
of flowers
Forfeiting bonds were David friends may contribute to The
Blake, Pomeroy, R1ck Cassano,
Harm'Iton, Oh , an d Steven Tru sse ll , Salvation
choice Army or a charity of their
Long Bottom, $50 each, speed.
·

Twenty-lour Rutland firefighters
received certlflcates for completing
30 hours of Instruction In advanced
fire service tralnlng at the close of
the last class held recently. Ind!v!d·
ual cards were presented to each
person completing the training. A
department certificate was presented to Chief Jerry Black by
Charles W. Legar Sr. , the
Instructor.
.
Certificates and ca rds as well as
the Instructional material were
authorized and made avaUable by
the Trade and Industrial Service,
Division of Voclltional Education of
the State Departmertt of Education,

33 cases terminated
/

·
Thirty defendants were fined and
threeothersforfe!tedbondsinMe!gs
County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
Were Dan ielle Littlefield, Racine,
speed, $23 and costs; Brenda
.Morrts;-Pomef9Y., failed·todlsplaY.a
valid feglstration, S10 and costs; ·
Robin Wood, Pomeroy, speed, $21
and cosls; Steve Taylor, Pomeroy,
r esisting arrest, $250 and costs, five
days confinement; Jonathan Kirk,
Little Hocking, speed, $:ll and costs;
Edward Sarver, Middleport, speed,
·$21 and costs; Wendy Halar,
Pomeroy, speed, $22 and costs;
Donald Poole, Middleport, speed,
$25 and costs; Ryan Dill, Middle·
port, speed, $21 and costs; Debra
Nelson, Racine, left of center, $10
and costs; Everett Holcomb, AI·
bany, speed, $28 and costs; BW
McDowell, Rittman, speed ,$~ and
costs.
Also Rhett Mllhoan, · Pomeroy,
speed, $25 and costs; Gerald
Sutphin, Huntington, speed, $25 and
costs; Calvin Mayle, Long Bottom,
David Hlndy, Pomeroy Michael
Hlndy, Middleport, hunt squirrel on
and across co-op hunting agreement
posted with hunting with permission
only signs without first procurrlng a
hunting with permission slip from
the land agent, $10 and costs each;
Roger Garterell, Beverly, speed, $21
and costs; Michael Wyatt, Pomeroy, failure to control vehicle, $W
and costs; Glona Wilkes , Rutland,
speed, $21 and cdsts; Raymond
Legue, Groveport, and Jon
Guinther, Vincent, speed, $23 and
costs each; Randy Stewart, Middleport, $24 and costs; Larry Llev!ng,
New Haven, falled to yield right of
way $25 and costs; Charles Frye,
Rutland, no eye protection, $10 and
costs; Michael Brown, Racine,
faUure to control vehicle, $20 and

ueu

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:i_

JUNIOR SIZES

T

REG. 120.00 ~0 '40.00

'

SALE PRICED

l New fall we1ght
'f ftannels Button

•

•

Five caDs were answered by local
units Wednesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service

Misses and Half Sizes
In Solids, Prints and Stripes.
New Fall Colors
Reg. 120.00 to '67.~Q___

.knits ajid

Sizes S, M.l and XL Crew reel&lt; slyles:Warm
n.,.,. lining by' Wrangler and Springfoot
E.celont setectim ot said oolors.

S~es

heritage house
OF SHOES

CHECK OUR SIDEWALK SALE!!
. · . ALSO SAVINGS OF

1Oo/o Storewide

DURING THIS EVENT!

WOMEN'S

Jeans Sale

S. M, L XL and XXL

Save on Misses and Extra Size lee and
Wrangler Jeans. Basic 5 pockets, full cuts and
fashion jeans.

and snap front styles. Cok&gt;1ul
P~ldS.
.

1
...... II.' II'

Profess1onal Counseling
and
Family Serv ices

~·s $19.95 QuiH-lined
Slnrts ............... Sale S15.50
Men's $23.95 Quilt-lined
Shir)s ...........,... Salt $18.60
Mens $24.95 QuiH-Iined
Shirts ............... Sale $19.40
Men's $25.95 QuiH-Iined
Shirts ............... Sale $20.20
:en's $26.95 QuiH-Iined
ills ......................$21.00

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3

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enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, September 23,'1983

--

Reg. 122.00
Reg. 127.00
Reg. 132.00
Reg. 139.00

....... Sale 117.59
....... Sale 121.59
....... Sale 125.59
....... Sale 131.19

2 Sections, 12 Pages
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspa per
-~.

Consumer prices up in August ·
WASHINGI'ON (AP) -Higher
prices for gasoline and fresh
vegetables pushed consumer prlces
upamoderate0.4percentlnAugust,
matching the gain of the previous
month, the government said ioday.
11&amp;-lar lhlll-year.pices.llave.riaen
at an annual rate of just 3.4 percent.
Overthelast12months, thega!nwas
2.6 percent.
As for last month, the Labor
Department said, gasoline prlces
roseasharpl.lpercentafteramore
modest0.4 percent Increase In July.
Those pnces, however, werestill8.4
percent below their peak of March

1981..

'

.

The 5.8 percent rise In fresh
vegetable prices reversed . a 3.6
percent July decline and boosted
food prices overall a small 0.2
percent.
Food prices, which had fallen In
the two preceding months, are likely
to rise at a steeper cUp In the coming
months as the etlects of this
summer's drought and devastating
heat become more apparent.
ln1tially, tOOugh, the bad weather
IS bringing hearty meat price
declines as producers sell off their
herds rather than pay higher
fEedgrain pnces. Beef and veal
prices fell 0.7 percent In August;
pork prices tumbled 0.6 percent.
If last month's 0.4 percent
increase held steady for 12 straight
months, the yearly advance would
be 5.3 percent. The annual rate
reported by the department IS based
on a more precise calculation or
monthly prices than the tlgure~

SALE

Fall
Sleepwear
All new girls sleepwear. Footed PJ~
robes, gowns and nightshirts. Sizes2to
4, 4 to 6X, 7 to 14.

Knit
Shirts
Size$ S, M, l. Xl, ·XXL in crew
neck, v-necks, collared styles
Casual and dressy looks.
indudes all of our velour shirts
for men.

Men's $9.95 .
Knit Shirts .......... $7.96
Men's $15.95
Knit Shirts ........ $12.76
Men's $19.95
Knit Shirts ........ $15.95
Men's $22.95
Knit Shirts ........ $18.36

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - A pbysl·
clan convicted of brutally raping 21
women will undergo a second trial
on other rapes In a seven-year string
of .sexua' attacks if the victims
''want their day In court," a
prosecutor says.
Dr. Edward Franklin Jackson
Jr., 39, pleaded innocent by reason of
insanity to 60cllarges in his ftrsttrial
but a Jury of five women and seven
men returned a gullty verdict
Thursday.
The Columbus internist faces a
maximum sentence of1,3'l0years in
pr1son but WllUld be ellgible for
parole In 9~ years regardless of the
length of the sentence. Sentencing
was set for 11 a.m. ioday.
An innocent man who resembles
Jackson spent five years In prlson
tor two rapes that prosecutOrs now
blame on Jackson.
Edward
Morgan, one of two
•sst•ant Franklin Coonty _prosect~·
tors who tried the case, said the
prteeCUtor'S olrlce WllUld contact
thewanenset to testify In the second
trial befol'e clecldlni whetber to
proceed with the trial, tentatively
set for Dec. l2.

w.

PARK FREE
IN OUR SECOND STREET
PARKING LOT
.

t.;IJJh ;tl? • •

See

Jf

MEN'S

Quin·lined for extra warmth. Button
~ ,

Additional WIC funds ·

public.
All the calculations are adjusted
!or nonnal seasonal variations.
In all, the CPI stood at 300.3 In
August, meaning that goods costing
$10 In 1967 would havecost$00.03iast
month.
•
A companion index, the Consu·
mer Price Index for Urban Wage
Earners and Clerical Workers, rose
0.5 percent In August. This index Is
widely used in calculating cost-ofliving Increases in collective bargaining contracts and government
benefit programs.
In advance of today's new report,
economists said inflation has been
surpnsinglywell·behavedsofarthis
year in the face of astrongecooomic
rebound from the lengthy recession.
Martin Feldstein, President Reagan's chief economic adviser, says,
"The thing that really makes this
recovery so unusual &lt;U~d nice Is the
low rate of inflation that has held
thus far."
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan, speaking Thursday to the
Wh!teHouseConferenceonProduc·
tivity, said he expected good results
for a few more years.
Baning an unforeseen oil pnce
shock, he said, ''We don't see much
In thewayofathreattointlatlonover
the riext several years. All in all,
over the next two or three years, I
think prlces look pretty good."
He said the administration has
been "very encouraged" by the
modest labor contract setllements
With Industry this year. Modest
wage agreements mean there's less

pressure on manufacturers to raise
their prices and, thus, fuel inflation.
Next year, the analysts are
looking !or a piclrup In food costs to
help boost overall prices by 4

Consumer·------.
Price
Index
Base Period
300· 1967=100

295·
290

285
280

275
1982
• 83
Source:Dept. of LabOr AP
CONSUMER PWCE INDEX
-Higher priceo lor gusoUne and
fresh vecetabl• pulled COIISume.- prices up a moderale 0.4
percent In AuCWi, matchlllg the
gain of the previou month, the
pvemmeut said Friday. In all,
the C011811Dler price Index stood
at 300.3 In Aupst, meaning that
goods 00811ng S18 In 11117 would
have cost S38.01 last month. ( AP
Laaerpboto),

percent to5percent,apacemoststill
consider moderate.
These other developments:
The government reported Thursday that new orders to factories for
"big ticket" items such as machln·
ery edged higher In August.
The economy's rapid growth and
stable price outlook Inspired a rally
in the financial markets Thursday.
Bond prices ctlmbed, Interest rates
fell, and the Dow Jonesaverageof30
Industrial stocks surged 14.23polnts
to 1,257.52, setting Its second record
since Tuesday.
In Its report on durable goods items expected to last at least three
years - the Commerce Depart·
ment said new orders to factories
rose 0.3 percent after declining 2.9
percent In July.
.
The Labor Department reported
Thursday that 2.89 million people
were drawing jobless benefits In the
week ended Sept. 3, the lowest
number in two years ,
Auto compan1es said the number
of laid off workers fell 2, !m this
week, to 133,450. Also, the Industry
journal Ward's Automotive Reports
said the car manufacturers plan to
Increase production by 5.4 percent
this week.

Jury convicts Dr. Jackson

Flanne!
Shirts

f'

i;
T

AND

79 9

QUILT~LINED

'
.

Tomadoettes win again

By KEVIN KEU..Y
Another product from the firm Is an abrasive, used primarily by
OVP staff
railroads when pr!rn1ng or coating boxcars and other vehicles, Dietrich
GALLIPOLIS- Authorization to Issue Industrial revenue bonds for the
explained. His firm , along with Mineral· Aggregates Inc., also based in
Indiana, IS in t:urn owned by lAne Star Minerals lnc.
establlslunent of a new local Industry was granted by GaiUa County
'
·
H.B. Reed also operates offices and plants In Kansas, Texas, New
commlssioliers Thursday.
The industry, owned by H.B. Reed &amp; Co., Highland·, Ind., manufactures , Hampshire and New Jersey. The Lone Star organization has a regional
and markets asphalt shingles, abrasives and other products from coal
location at Moundsville, W.Va.
slag.
Dietnch told commissioners he was attracted to the Kyger Creek site
And the plant's location, according to Jack Dietnch, the company's
primarily because of the avaUabllity of raw materials. The plant will be
president, IS where there's enough raw matenal to draw from- the Kyger
located at the southwest corner of the generating station's property.
Clearance for use of the property has already been granted by Ohio
Creek i:eneratlng station near Cheshire.
Dietrich, accompanied by BIU Conard of Peck, Shaffer &amp; Williams, a
Valley Electric Corp., Kyger Creek's owner. Dietrich said he was to meet
Cincinnati bond consulting nrm, presented Commissioners James
with Louis R. Ford Jr., the plant manager, after his session with !he
commissioners.
Saunders and Verlln Swain with the company's plans following a meeting
· with the Galiia County Community .Improvement Corporation.
Construction on the plant can .begin after the firm . receives a final
Commissioner P~;~ul Niday·was a~t. '
.
. , · approval!rQm the. Ohio Environmental ProtectionAgency's main office.
The plant, expected to cost $3.4 mllllon to build, will be financed through Local clearance has been ·gtven by' the Logan EPA outlet. The firm filed
with the agency In July.
the issuance of bonds. Dietrich said the plant will provide 12 jobs and an
annual payroll of $240,001.
"We do not consume natural resources, we do It with byproducts,"
Dietrlch explained. "The only natura l resources we use are electricity and
Dietrich said the plant will take wet bottom boiler slag from Kyger
water.' '
"
Creek, wash out fine particles and then dry, crush, screen and blend slag
Into product tile. The tile, he said, Is used on ·houses containing black
Swain reported that after he, Dietrich and Conard met with the CIC, the
'
organization urged commissioners to Issue bonds.
shingles that reflect sunlight.

17.99

I

Page7

Bonds authorized for new industry

$

ONLY .

Letter on Page 2

At Cheshire

$799
SWEAT SHIRTS

Weekly sennonette

VoU2,No.ll5
Copyrighted I 983

Reg. 18.00 ........ Sale 16.39
Reg. sn.OO ...... Sale ss.79
Reg. 116.00 ..... Sale 112.79
Reg. 121.00 ..... Sale I 16.79

SALE

SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

'

M::.i:..dd_l_epo_rt_v_tlla_g_e_H_a_n_to_v_e_te-ra_n_s_ •
..:.Memorial.
1

'/

TWO DAY SALE PRICES
ON OUR NEW FALL DRESSES

MEN'S

reports.
At 8: H a.m., the Syracuse Unit
answered a call for Esther J oseph,
Minersville, who was dead upon the
un1ts arrival; at 3:19p.m., Rutland
took Lawrence Hysell from the New
Lima Road to Veterans Memorial;
Pomeroy at 4: 35 p.m. took Archie
Lee, Syracuse, from Crew's Steak
House to Pleasant VaUey Hospital;
Racine at 10:32 p.m. ·took Carrie
Roush from HU! Road to Holzer
Medical Center, and at 11: 11 p.m.
Mldleport took Mary Wallace from

~

DRESS SALE

Ex-aide speaks out

e

WOMEN'S

7

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r-----------------------

Just right for cool fall
weathe~ lined and ·unlined jackets. Easy care
machine washable.
Complete range of children's sizes.

front and
pullover styles S1zes 2 to 4, 4 to

.

Two divorces were tiled and one
was granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Filing .for tllvorce were Opal
Miller, Ewlngton, against Wllllam
Miller, Vansandt, Va.; Deborah S.
Coffey,RutlandagalnstJayCortey,
Middleport.
· Granted a divorce was Harry
Ernest Whystell from Debbie
· LouiseWhyisellonchargesofgross
rieglectofc!utyandextremecruelty.

Jacket
Sale

Pajama
Sale

Emergency runs

~~gi!Mcmd/ly:

Generally fair, butcontlnuedcool.
IDghs In the 60s Saturday and 61).75
Suaday aoc1 Monday. Low~ In the
mJd-388 to low 40s Saturday' and In
the4Gs~ and Monday.

Junior

LITTLE BOYS'

A marriage license was Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court ' to
Homer Stephen Hill, Sr., 44,
Pomeroy, and Anna V!rgene Taylor, 21, Pomeroy .

Mostly clear and cold ton1ght with
a chance of light frost. Low 3540.
Winds variable less than 10 mph.
Sunny and continued cool Friday.
High 57-1i2.
Ext.eoded Ohio Forecast

•• CHILDREN'S
•• ·..w atrs •

;tf .. lM.d''JP · - -

• S1599TO $3199

Marriage license

992·2192

Esther Joseph, 65, Minersville
died unexpectedly Wednesday
morn1ng at her residence.
She was born Sept. :ll, 1918 at
Minersville the daughter of David
and Clara Genhe!rner Joseph. She
was also preceded In death by one
sister, Ruth. Rl:lush, two brothers, .
Fltlyd and David Jo5e!&gt;ll. She was a ..
member of the Mlnersvllle Methodist Church.
.
Survivors Include six sisters,
Edith Keggeries, Mary Farley,
Mable Hughes and Martha Hendren, all of Monroe, Mich. ; Florence
Custer, Middleport and Phyllis
Baker, Racine; one brother, WyWs
Joseph, Racine, and several n1eces
and nephews.
Funetal services will be hell!
Saturdayai1p:m.atEwingFimeral
Home with the Rev. Steve Nelson
officiating. Burial will be in GUmore
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home at anytime.

l Isaacs corduroy jeans. Fashion
'f and basic styles. Many colors.

t

Divorces filed

Esther Joseph

1 Ten, Lee, Wrangler and

1

Weather forecast

He Is survived by one daughter,
Margaret Tracy, Columbus; one
son, Edward William Cundiff,
Columbus; one brother, Jack Cun·
d!If, Mason; one sister, Eileen, of
Pennsylvan1a; one half·slster, Min·
n1e Parsons, Columbus, and several
nieces and nephews.
. Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 3p.m.atEwingFuneral
Home. Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home Fridayfrom2to4and
7to9.

t Weeken~Sa~ ~r~es~n

Admitted--Clarence McDaniel,
Jr.. Rutland; Lawrence Hysell,
Rutland.
Discharged--Preston Parsons,
Clifford Rockhold, Randall
Kennedy.

Pomero y

Edward Cundlt!, 64, Columbus,
dRied Wednesday at Riverside
ospital.
Mr.CundlffwasbornJune:ll,19l9
at Mason, W. Va.Hewasamachine
operator. He was preceded In death
by his wife, Margaret Gloeckner
Cundlff.

SALE

\

Veterans Memorial

Woodland Centers

Edward Cundiff

Thursday, September 22, 1983

.M.

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If : .
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"If they want their day In court,
they'll get it," Morgan said.
The jury took nine hours over two
days before finding Jackson guUty
of 21 rapes, three attempted rapes,
four counts of gross sexual Imposition, two counts of kidnapping, 29
aggravated burgiarles and one
count of possession of criminal tools.
"! think the verdict IS going to
mean more to (the victims) than
anyone else. For the first time, some
of them are going to walk tall,"
Morgan said.
Defi!IISe attorney' John W.E .
Bowen said no decision on whether
to appeal WllUld be made unttl
Jackson Js consulted. The issue of a
court-ordered psychiatric evaluation that was leaked to the media
before the trial WllUld be raised in
any appeal, he said.
The trial, which included 17 days
of testlmooy, was heard by an
Akron-area jury before Franklin
County Common Pleas Judge
Frederick T. Wllllams because of
extensive pre-trial publlcity In
Collllllbus.
Jacksm sllowal v!rtualJy nO
ernotlon throughout the five-week

Index cards listing his victims'
names and the dates of the attacks
were found·bypollceinhlsMercedes
Benz auto parked nearby.
· Tile arrest resulted In the release
of Wllllarn Bernard Jackson, who
was Identified In court by the victims
of two rapes now linked to Dr.
Jackson. Wllllam Jackson, who Is
not related, resembles Dr, Jackson
in appearance.
"He got what he had coming,"
Wllllarn Jackson aald. "I hope that
everybody's satisfied now, especially the women.' '

Jackson sentenced
AKRON, Ohio {AP) - The
Colwnbus physlclao ronvlcted of
bnUDy raping 21 women aad
temxlzlng nine others waa aeateuced loda,y to from 191 to IIIII years

IDpdloa.

•

commissioners authorized issuance of lndustlial r evenue bonds to
llnanoe the plant's construction Thursday.

Rep. Miller optimistic
about locks project
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Clarence Miller says he· believes
Congress will approve funding for construction of the Gallipolis locks
and dam on the Ohio River this year.
The House Appropriations Committee on Wednesday night
approved $6.4 mllllon In funds as part of a comprehensive package to
finance construction of waterway navigation Improvement projects
throughout the United States. The measure awaits consideration by
the tun House.
"I think we're going to get 11through this year," Miller said. "Most
of the planning and spec!fica lion work Is completed."
Currenlly, the faciUty consists of a dam and 600-foot-Iong locks.
The proposal calls for refurbishing the dam and constructing a
1,~foot-long lock In Mason County, W.Va., allowing boats to bypass
the Gallipolis facUlty.
Miller said boats are delayed by the existing operation.
"The tugs have to'come down, and they (lock operators) have to
:._~I&gt;,"" ate them and move half of them into tlle lock and lower them
.-dllU take them down, and then move the other half in. And It takes
·
hours to get this done.
"It costs about $:roan hour," MUier said. He said most of the boats
carry coal and the delays are ''reflected in the electric bills because
most of that coal Is used to generate electricity."
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers operates the Gallipolis locks.

.

OONVICTED - Dr. Edward
Jackson lowers his head Thlll'!tday 88 he liatena to Judge
Frederick Wllllama PJ'IIIIOIIIICe
him guilty of 80 ciulrJee lnclud·
lng the rapes of 21 women.
Jadlaon wD1 be sentenced today.
(AP Lllllerphoto).

women.

manufacturing plant near the Kyger Creek generating station are
outlbled by Jack Dietrich, left, president of H.n BAled &amp; Co., and BW
Conard of Peck, Shaffer &amp; Williams, a bonding finn. GaiUa County

Syracuse woman
ruled competent

trlal and remained Impassive as the
verdict was read. He made no
corrunent as he was handcuffed and
led trQm the counroom by sheriff's
deputies.
The doctor had been free on
UXl,OO! bond since his arrest , but
when the case went to the jury, the .
bond was revoked and hewas jailed.
Jackson's arrest just befo;edawn
on Sept. 5, l!ll2, ended a one-man
crlnnespreethatpolicesaybeganon
Sept. 25, 1975. He was caught in the
empty townhouse apartment of two

NEW INDUSTRY DETAILED - Plans for a tile and abrasive

.

Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge Charles Knight ruled this
morn1ng that Pamela Phyllis
Spencer, 23, Syracuse,lscompetent
to stand trial and set thetrialdatefor
Monday, Oct. 31, at 9:15a.m.
Spencer was Indicted by the grand
jury on charges of endangering
c hildren and Involunt a r y
manslaughter.
Spencer made two ple.S , not
guilty and not guUty by reason of
insanity. On Aug 2, Judge Knight
ordered that the defendant submit to
evaluation by the Shawnee Forensic
Center, Portsmouth. ·
A hearing on a motion to supress
statements made earlier by the
defendant during this morning's
court session was set for Wednes·
day, Oct. 5, atlO a.m.
For the. trial on Oct. 31, Judge
Knlgbt stated that he will summon
75 persons !or possible jury duty.

I

A compentency report received
by Judge Knig ht , Frederick Crow,
Ill, prosecuting attorney &amp;.nd Steven
Story, attorney for Spencer remained sealed following a suggestion by Knight and thiswasagreed to
by both attorneys.
The case against Spencer was
taken to the grand jury when a baby
boy, found . May 30 wrapped In a
plastic bag in a car In Meigs County
and wa~ dead on arrival at the
Holzer Medical Center.
According to a preliminary auto.
psy report at that time from GaU!a
County Coroner Dr. Donald R.
Warehime, the baby was not
stiUbom.
It was reportC&lt;l !hat babv was
born in a car In Sy racuse and placed
In a plastic bag before boing taken to
Holzer Medical Center. The body
was then transported to the Franklin County Coroner's Office for the
autopsy.

�'

'

·C omment

September 23, 1983

Page 2-The Dally S.n:tlnel
Pometoy-Middleport, Ohio
September 231 1983

•

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
· DEVOO'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
~~~
~m~· ~1---r• r-T""E!:!di~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Ne wspaper Publisher Association.

alrplane, and we coWd publicly
havepledgednottosboothlmdown.
Or he could · bave flown In by a
non-Soviet commercial alrUner. He
might even have essayed a grand
gesture by flying .In on a South
Korean alrliner from Seoul. His
minions, meanwhile, are coming 1n
via Mexico, from which we conclude that communist subversion in
Mexico needs a Uttle shot 1n !be
arm.
They are saying that the rupture
with the Soviet Union Is not ·
sometbtng likely to be made whole
before the next election. They are

saying that tbe break between the

Reagan administration and !be
Andropov dynasty Is something
that wUl extend for months, causing
a real rupture 1n relations between
the two countrles. All of the above Is
said In a spirit of tnepldatlon.
And thls Is a good moment to ask:
Why? Why do we need !be hectic
diplomatic activity we have been
carrying on with the Soviet Union
roughly since World War II? If Joho
Maynard Keynes were comment·
lng on It he might make the point
!bat thls Is !be diplomatic counter·
part of pyramid-buDding. A way of

II

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They !llhould be less than 300 words
lon1. All letters are subject tu editing and must be sfgned wUh name, addre!lls and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In

good taste, addretislng ,lssues, not personalities.

~:_The

Soviets may ·
:. remain
unmoved
.
·

·. · The Soviets may simply brush off President Reagan's impending
·· embrace of !be "buDd-down" arms control proposal with a shrug. "That's
~your problem," !bey said when the idea was broached earlier thls year at
· : the n~tlattng table in Geneva.
. ·• ·· . · ·.. , ,
· ·.
· ·The Soviets don't like to be told how fu drop down to lower nuclear
:: weapons levels. They want to set a ceDing agreeable to tbe United States
:· With considerable latitude 1n how to get there.
:: · When U.S.negotlator Edward Rowny formally puts tbe proposal on the
· table sometime after !be opening of the next round on Oct. 6, the Soviets
::may remain uilrnoved.
: But Reagan's immlJjent endorsement of the Idea of destroying up to two
::strategic nuclear warheads for each new one !bat Is deployed could have
· an important impact on Capitol Hill.
,
: The cynical shooting down of the South Korean jetliner probably
~ provided all th~ em~!lonal help the p~ldent needed to get the expensive
·and awe501l)e MX nU.ssDe. program through Congress .. In the national
over the ptan·e, Congrei;s is In an anti-Soviet mood. Pleas for
:: moderation in plltng up nuclear weapons are lost 1n the din.
·. Members who otherwise are Inclined to buck the tide, nagged by
: coricerns about the arms race, may now go along wilb the $16 blllion
:·program to develop and deploy 100 MX mlsslles with 10 nuclear warheads
:: each.
·· · Uke tbelr colleagues who switched to support !be White House when
:. Reagan modified his stand In the START (strategic arms reduction) talks
: lilst spring, they are candidates for conversion. "Build-down" could bring
: them over. It has long had the support of a number of key moderates,
·:including Sens. Sam Nwm, D-Ga., and Wllliam Cohen, R-Maine, whose
:-votes !be administration has been seeking.
"BuDd-down" has a sincere ring. But it fits so comfortably Into the U.S.
negotiating position that Its acceptance does not pusb arms control to a new
frontier.
·' To get down to the 5,1X)] warheads Reagan has prescribed for START the
:. United States would have to destroy about 2,200 warheads even without
. :"buDd-down." And !be Soviets would have to decommission about 2,!rn.
: · Besides, !be START proposal and "buDd-down" leave plenty of room for
, • new long-range bombers, submarines and missile programs !Ike the MX.
And yet, considering the poisonous atmosphere, it's a miracle of sorts
~· that the administration is going abead on arms control even while chllling
:.: relations with Moscow on mostolberfronts. "Weare certainly aware of !be
~: Korean alrline incident," Rowny said the other day. "You can't brush it
'·· away. We feel It Is tnourtnterest tocontinueannscontrolandweare going
. to go back to the negotiations and do it."
Moreover, Rowny and Paul Nltze, hls counterpart 1n parallel talks with
: the Soviets on nuclear missiles in Europe, are being authorized by the
;. White House to be flexible In !be pursuit of weapons reductions.
:: Reagan, who campaigned against the arms control policies of hls three
~- presidential p~sors, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy
•: Carter, is seeking deeper cuts than they did - and has made several
: concessions to try to win over the Soviets.
· The outlook Is uncertain. Rowny doesn't expect to get down .to the
: "bottom line" in the START negotiations before the end of the year. And
·: the two sides are probably even farther apart on EuromissDes.
:. But they are talking.

· : uproar

..

:~ Letter to editor

•'

Nepotism is alive
This Is an open letter to all my
:. children at Chester Grade SchooL I
::.wanted you to know why I'm not
:lbere now· It seems !bat tbe hierarchy of the
·school has deemed me an unfit
: librartan tor two reasons:
·: (1) I made a mistake.
· (2) I care abOut people.
:. First, the mistake. I requested
:: special permission at one point to
::work on days other than my
"appointed days for a week so I could
: attend a scbool Junction. The
: powers-that-be granted permission, and !understood him to say to
:&gt;•fJnlsh out the six weeks on those
·~ays." Whoa! Was I wrong. The
:very next week Mr. Roberts made a
·J!peclal trip to the school to flnd out
'why I didn't wish to work on my
appointed days. Actually, It didn't
matter a hoot to me, but now I find
; that I great!~ Inconvenienced Mr.
:Roberts. My most humble
:apologies.
·· Let me tell you something,
:~hildren. The only people who
:never make mistakes are tbe ones
·who sit wltb their hands In their
:pockets. They don't step on any
:toes, but !bey don't accomplish
:much, eltber.
·: Second, caring. Remember !be
;Pinatas? The sixth-grade party?
·:

~Today

The book talr? The play scenery?
The candy on holidays? Remember
how everyone was welcome In our
library at all times when I was
there? I did those things because I
care. Remember ·how when someone got paddled, I cried? Guess I'm
just not cold-blooded enough to
work In !be Eastern dlstrlct.
And now, Eastern not only has a
principal chosen from tbe board of
education, !bey also have a new
library aide who just happens to be
one o! the board member's wife.
Yes, folks, nepotism Is aUve and
well in Meigs County,
Gee, maybe I should run ·for
school board ...
I would !Ike to say thank-you tO all
the kind people who have kept In
toQch witb me this past year. To all
the parents and teachers who
stopped me to ask when I would be
returning to the scbool, and wby did
I ever leave 1n the flrsl place? Why
Indeed!
To ,my children: Please know
that I would be with you it I could.
Not a day passes that! don't tbtnk of
you. I always watch tor news of you
and I'm always happy to see you
when we meet. Take good care o!
yourselves and know !bat I am
expecting great things of you.
M. J. Coleman

in history

:. Today Is Friday, Sept. 23, the 266th day of 1983. There are 99 days len 1n

·ihe year.

:: Today' s hlghltght In history:
On Sept. 23, l!W5, the first U.S. baseball club - the New York
:Knlckerllocker Club - was organized.
: On Ibis date:
· In 192i, boxer Gene Thnney won the heavyweight crown from Jack ·
'pempsey In a bout In Philadelphia.

keeping our diplomats employed,
where otherwise there would be
unemployment. But ot what other
uSe has It been?
We should exploit thls looming
Interval of inactivity. Suppose - to
use an analogy - that during the
past 20 years you had risen early to
water a row of plants, which tben
went on to flower fitlully, causing
you from time to time to redouble
your efforts, confident that !be
morewatertheplanlsgot, tbemore
prodigiously would they fructify.
Then one day you became ill and
were bedridden tor. six months.
When released from confinement,
you drag yourself forlornly to your
garden and there you are astonIshed to see a veritable fairyland of
flowers!
I do not suggest that, In dealtng'
with !be Soviet Union, we.wUI ever
see a falryl8nd .pt anytblng at all,
unless a benevQj~t plague empties
the KFemltn one of these days. But
here Is something we should remind
ourselves of. Everyone fosters his
own superstitions, and one of
America's most conlldent superstitions Is !bat ta!ldng wlt)l tbe Soviet
Union produceS peace arid·quiet: It
doesn't.
And thls Is sometbtng that can be
said to be a "genus Communistus."
Ask U. Alexis Johnson, who met
several hundred times with representatives of !be Chinese commu·
nlsts during !be '50s and '60s trying
to explore the question of missing
Americans 1n Korea. Ask Henry
Kissinger, whO met two dozen times
with North VIetnamese In Paris,
only to receive tbe ~arne lecture at ·.
every meeting ,

-

By SCOTl' WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - Southern's
Tornadoettes ended another perfect week of volleyball play with a
convincing 15-5 and 15·1 victory
over the Eastern Eaglettes. Several
long volleys highlighted the games,
but It seemed that Southern always
connected o,n the scoring end of the
serve. The win boosts SHS to S.O
overall and 5-0 inside the league:Eastern drops to 3-6 and H In loop
play. Southern claimed the reserve
contest In three games, 15-0, 10·15,
and 15-8.
In the varsl.t y tilt. SHS went
ahead 2-1. ~!Ore Eastern hit a
drought of eight scoreless serves.
Southern went on to post a 14-1
score, then coasted on to the 15-5

;

Mission

slowly wrecking Mongovan's fled·
gltng firm. But the d~ated First
Air Cavalry veteran decided to
fight back. He gave tbe FBI
affidavits and secretly-taped conversations witb union officials.
That's when the Justice Department decided Mungovan must go
Into hiding. His business Is now
ruined, and he Is more than $00,!XX)
In debt.
His British-born wife, Cher, came.
to Washington to speak to members
of Congress, and hopes to be able to
make a personal appeal to !be
president for help. She wrote to the
White House: "I am here alone ,..
trying to fight tor what Is right ...
I'm the wife of an Innocent man who
cannot ask, but needs your help. I
am the mother of a son who said to
me on the phOne, 'Mom, why don't
you ask President Reagan? Maybe

he cares."
Footnote: The Drew Pearson
Foundation, P.O. Box 2.nl, Washington, D.C., 20013, wUl accept
contributions to help people like the
Mungovans.

impossible'----~----A_rt_B_uc_hwa_ld

The most important thing to do
before you send men Into combat is
explain to them why you want them
there.
I would hate to be briefing officer
on a Marine amphibious ship
explaining to the ~ps why they
are being sent into Beirut.
"All right, men, let's knock It of!. I
am here to explain your mission for
!be next few months . .You are belJ)g
sent Into Beirut as a peacekeeping
mission. Any questions?"
"Yes, sir. What's a peacekeeping
mission? ''
"It Is a mission by which a
neutral power stations troops In a
volatlle area to keep the various
factions from ldlllng each otber
untD a goverrunent can become
strong enough to defend Itself. Now
you people wUl take up positions
around the Beirut airport down
here on !be low ground. Up here 1n
!be hDis overlooking the airport are
members ot !be Druze sect armed .
witb heavy artillery, mortars and
snipers. Over here are !be Christian
Phalangtst rnllitla, also heavily
armed. Tbe Cluistlans are also In
this part of Beirut next to the
airport, and Moslern forces, not to
be contused witb the Druze, have
control of thls part of Beirut here.
Intelligence also Indicates there are
I,!XXl PLO troops who returned to
!be area since Israel pulled out of
!be city to this pOsition down here. Is
that clear?''
"Sir, are we supposed to keep the •
peace between all of them?''
"That's your miBslon. But you
can only do thls by remalnlng In the
Beirut airport area."
"If they all have the high ground
and we have the low ground, how do
we keep the peace?"
"You wUl not be alone. We have a
large naval !ask force off the
beachel !bat wDl cover you."
"Cover us from what?"
"ArtUiery and mortar fire from

the hllls, as well as snipers 1n the
city. We now have the authority to
use air power when you become a
target of one of tbe dissident
factions."
''You mean we're sitting ducks?"
"It means you will dig In as qeep
as you can untD President Reagan,
your Comrnander-ln.ch!ef, can ar·
range a cease-fire between !be
Druze, the Christian Phalangtsts,
the present Gemayel government
army and the Syrians. Once this
cease-fire Is arranged and holds
and a new government coalltlon ot
the various antagonists can be
formed, you will be pennltted to

leave."
"Why are we called a peacekeepIng force it we can't use our guns to

keep the peace?"
"Because, stnce you are deslg·nated as such, the president has the
authority to keep you there as long
as he deems necessary. If you are
sent In as a combat force, the War
Powers Act has to be put Into effect,
and !ben Congress may dictate
foreign policy. Technically, !be U.S.
Marines have been engaged 1n
'hostllltles,' but the White House
cannot admit that without giving up
!be president's executive powers.ls
that clear?''
''No, sir."
"Good. We wUl conlinue. As a
peacekeeping force your mission is
not to take sides 1n a family dispute.
What Is going on now Is !bat the

•
Druze, Moslems and Christians are
settling old scores that go back
hundreds of years. They have
commltted atrocities against each
other for centuries. It Washington
can get !bern all to sit around a table
and forget the past, we can bring
peace to !be Middle East."
"And it Washington can't, we get
our butts shot off."
"I can assure you Washington
has no lntentlonotyourgettJngyour
butts shot off. It we wanted to we
could waste Lebanon 1n 10 minutes.
Okay, you know all you need to as to
what your misSion Is. Now remember, men, hold your fire. As a
peacekeeping force you can't afford
to get mad at anybody,"

Guthrte and Dee Dalley each had
two for Eastern.
SHS skunked Eastern In the
opening reserve contest, but EHS
awakened for two tough battles In a

. SCOTr PULLINS

ll-9, 1311 pound
Sophomore end .

1

In the second tUt Southern wenl
ahead 8·0 on three successlul serves
by Becky Michael and Amy
Littlefield and two more by Jenny
Bentley, Kelly Whitlatch broke the
Ice for EHS at 8-1, !ben Laren Wolfe
served seven straight for the 15-1
win and an undisputed lead In the
SVAC at the halfway break.
Leading Southern's serving was
Becky Michael with 12 points .
Michael had nine 1n the first game
to pace the Southerners. Laren
Wolfe added nine, Amy Littlefield ·
·four, and Jenny Bentley three. Tara

KEVJN MEADOWS
HO, 220 poond
Sophomore tackle

·· .. ·· . .

I;;"} ,..

.....

\ ·!/

Eastern had led 7-3. Swain and
Ritchie put Eastern ahead 8-7, but
Tammy Adkins erased !bat lead
and sparked a 15-8 trlumph.
Southern plays at Miller Monday.
Meanwhile, the Fort Frye
Cadettes defended Its horne court .
by claiming a come-from-behind
volleyball match !rom the Eastern
Eagles, 9·15, 15-7, and 15-2.
Eastern had a great start,
claiming the first game 15-9 as
Krist! Gaddis netted eight scoring
serves. EHS led in the second game
2-0, but soon faltered despite a good
effort.
Krlstl Gaddis led the locals with
eight points, Dee Dailey had Uve,
Tara Gutlrte three, and Lea Ann
Gaul three. For the winners Connie
LeMasters had !3 and Janet
Subolock eight.

tight finish. Tammy Adkins of
Southern led all Aleshla Holsinger
had six for EHS, whlle Susan Swain
had 12. In !be finale both squads
battled ·to a 7-7 deadlock after

MEIG

ME IDS l!Jt
NICK BUSH

HO, 180 pound

From the Wild•••
ByKeHhWood
Melp Game Proledor
This Saturday Is National Hunt·
lng and Fishing Day and to
acknowledge thls year's events
various outdoor activities wUl be
conducted at the
' Royal Oak Park. ·
Activities presented will be at
Interest for men,
women and chHdren of all ages.
Begtnntng at 9 a.m. registration Is

set.
Presentations of Gun . Safety,
Turkey Calling, Fish FU!etlng, Ice
Fishing, Trapping, Canoeing, Taxi·
dermy, Black Powder, Arc~~try,
Trap Shooting and Reloading. But
ihat Isn't all! Lunch wUl be served
tree, and numerous prizes will be
given away to the youngsters. So•
come on out for a day of relaxation
and tun .

Cai•-

Spoftlman'l
Open SepL I, Now 19113 Ohio RWitlng

Llcense required; cJOSf' August 31, 1984.
()pen Sept. B.Squlm!l!leaJOO, clooellec.l7.
Open Oct, 1. JleEr ~ and cm~sbow
seasm. close Jan. 31, ~
Open Oct. 7, Grouse Season, close Feb.~.
1981.
Open Oct. 21, Duck Season - North Zone,
claoe Nov. 2&amp;.
Open Oct. :n, Duck Seam - South Zo...

close Oct. 29.

Open Oct. :n, Goooe Season (statewide),
close Dec. 23.

"""""""
OotrnU

1M
&amp;I
81

New York

Toronto
Mltwaukl'e

9Yz

!149

10~

74
S1 l.rl
wnrl' DIVIIION

Boslon
CleYcland

:t·Cblcago
Texu

92
74
'T..!

KAnu.s City

m

oakland

Callbrnla
Mll11'1l'S1Jta
Seatlle

67
66
Jl
)[-&lt;'\Inched llvtslon title
~.

.w

69
72
79

.53 13Yi
.tiM ~Yz

clase Jan. 31, :uNM.
Open Nov. 7, Pheosant code, chukar
partridge season statewide, close Dec. 1.
()pea Nov. S. Racc:ooo hunting seasm.,
1Jei1ns 6 p.m .. clooe Jan. 31, 1981.
. Open Nov. 28. Deer Gun Seuon- Zone 4,
close Dec. 7.
Open Dec. 9, Beaver Trapping.....,.., clooe
Dec, 17
Open Dec 26, Goooe Season (statewide! 2nd segment, cl01e Dec. 31.
Open Jau. I. 1981, Beav&lt;!l" Trapping se..OO
reopens, cl~ Feb. 29, 191K.
Open Jon. 3, 191M, S!Atowlde prtmltlve
wei}PO deer IEUOI'l, clole Jan. $. 1984.

une more point of thought before
I close thls week:
A reminder of the hunter safety
course belnB offered for those
Individuals needing the course to
obtain tllelr hunting license. Tbe
course wUl be held Oct. 11, 12, 13 at
6: 3() p.m. each night at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds, (Coon Hun·
ters Building).
Next week, I will discuss the new
Ohio Hunter Orange Law and the
Turn In a Poacher Program.

IB~

.til

Z3

ll'rWIQ&gt;'• GllmM

CUy !WillS (1-1 ), cn1
ScatHe· CNI:'D 0-ll al Tev.s !Stewart

(Do!m JS.-71 at CaliltlnU

(\\'Itt 7·121 . lni

Toronto (Leal 13-10) at OUJand C01n·
ray G-9) , (n)

....

~.a
~d

at New Yc.-k
Boatoo at DetroU
Otlcqo at Ca1Jlnta
Tmno at o.JWr\d
IJaltlrro'eo at M.ltw&amp;l_., (nt
MlnnNO&amp;a at Kanaa City, (n)

-·-

seeme at Texu. rnl

8ls1on at Dt1rolt
C\evelarld at New York

"TaJ&lt;e my advice- forget about growing up to be president and aim
·
for chairman of the Federal Reserve Board."

8alirnlft at MUwaWII!e
MlnnMata at Kaaau Cll)'
SM~

at TI!XII

Otic..... caJ1b'rU
1'tronlo at ODland

01icaR0

.4111

Bostoo cEcken.ley 8-12) at Detrnlt IS.r·
f'RKUl"" 84). (n)
Cltoveland tBehenna 0-2 1 at New Yc.-k
(Raw!toy 14-12), Inl
•
BaltlmorP tMcGn"gOr 17-61 at Mll·
wau\aEie (Glblon 2.Jt, (n)
Mlnnescu (Pettlb:Jne 1·21 at Kan&amp;u
H l. fnl
Ollcaao

St . Louts

?9
!W
86
81
96

'l'tlandaJ'• o-ne.

PH. 992-6491 OR 992-3106

1!1
91
M:ST DI\'JIION

After 110" Bear Rebate

BOB ERRm
"Bear Archery"

"Jenninp Archery"

BEAR POLAR LTD .............. ~99
BEAR GRIZZLY 11 ............

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IS

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1113
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-

7'J

San oqo
'M 76
San Franctsco
73 19
Clnchuwtl
~ 8'J
'nlllnday'aO.,...

s.

Pltttbuflh Chic:qo 2
f'hllMielphia 9-'l', Mmtreal 7·1

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14
17

•

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~109 95

$7995

BEAR BLACK MAG...............

New Forlled Ughting

$}5 995

AM. BOW.•..............

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-·
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BOW

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Ill

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COMPOUND

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TOM KENNEDY

SL-50

Ill

87

TRI·DRAW WHEELS

Darton

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19

Jennings
LIGHTING
HUNTER

'5995

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Cleveland 9, MUwaukel' ~
Minnesota z. Kansas City 1
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TAPS BALL- Karen Hemsley (5) of Soolhern gels ready to tap the
ball to a teammate during Thursday night's SVAC enoounler agalnl!l
Eastern. Jenny Bentley (14) gets ready Uthe ball comes her way. Scott
Wolfe photo:

hunting season at Shawnee Forest, WUdcat
Hollow, and Salt Fork WUdlife Area, close

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Toronto at Calllorria, lnl
Kansas CliY at Seattle, (n)

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BARGAIN MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
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SEOALGame
Logan at Ironton
Tri-Valley Conference
Alexander at Wellston
Vinton County at Belpre
Trimble at Federal Hocking
Meigs at Nelsonville-York
Warren Local at Miller •
SVAC.Noa-League
Wabama at Eastern
Lucasville at Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek at Minford
North Gallla at Parkersburg
Catholic (Saturday)
Hannan at Southern
Buffalo at Southwestern
Others
Wheelersburg at Coal Grove
Boyd County at Gallipolis
Ripley' at Huntington East ·
Athens at Waverly
Columbus Wehrle at Jackson
Hurricane at Pt. Pleasant

Scoreboard ...
Majors

5.31 JACKSON PIKE - RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524

I Tonight's games I

Junior center

After 13 years as a carpenter and
union member; Mungovan went
Into business for himself In 1979.
Wllbln a year, his construction
company had 20 employees and
was still growing.
Then !be Carpenters union decided to organize Mungovan's
employees. Picket lines went up at
!be company's work sites, charging
that Mungovan was paying substandard wages.
But !be employees, who were
actually paid at or above union
scale, voted unanimously not to join
the union. That should have ended
the picketing.
In federal court last year,
Mungovan testified that union
officials lpdicated the pickets would
remain untll he signed up. At one
point, Mungo\lan testified, a union
official told him that another
contractor's work site would be
"torched" it he didn't unionize - a
remark Mungovan Interpreted as a
threat against hls own company as
well.
The months of picketing were

another _SVAC victory

Win.

JAY WHrrl'INGTOI!i
8-0, 1M pound

WASHINGTON - When Walter
what has happened to me when all I
Mungovan telephones, hls wife
did was work bard and try to make
never knows where he Is - and she
ah honest living ... "
never asks. Mungovan Is In hiding,
How did thls happen to Mungtr
not because he's a cr1mlnal, but
van? A memorandum flled in
because !be Justice Department · federal court last July by U.S.
believes his life Is 1n danger.
Attorney Daniel A. Bent lays the
Unlike olbers 1n the federal
blame squarely on officials of the
wituess protection program, Mun·
Carpenters union 1n Hawaii.
govan must be separated from his
"(They) were the driving forces
wlte and their 12-year-old son. She
behind tbe destruction of a man, a
has flled suit against the people the
famlly, a business and an Ideal, "
Mungovans hold responsible for the
tbe prosecutor wrote. "They transfamily's pUght. So she has to be torined Walter Mungovan, a comavatlable for court appearances
bat veteran, a carpenter and a
and fund· raising efforts to finance
successful contractor, Into a man
lbelr Unely fight.
whose bus1ness and farnlly life were
Mungovan has not been permit· virtually destroyed, and Into a man
ted to lalk wilb reporters since he who ieared tor the safety of himself
entered the witness protection and his business. They bullied him,
program, but he relayed a message
they threatened him, !bey shut him
to my associates Dale Van Attaand down and !bey w1llJully and mallIndy Badhwar. My asSOCiates have clously perjured themselves. They
been Investigating the case tor
deserve to be severely punisbed."
three months.
In fact, two union offldals have
"I am In the position of being cut been convicted of perjury and two
off from my family, whom I dearly albers are facing trlal. But It Is the
love, through no fault of my own," Mungovans who bave been punMungovan said. "I can't jusllfy Ished most severely.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

pos~

Tomadoettes

Meet the Meigs
Marauders•••••

So what?___________W_il_lia_m_F_._B_uc_k_ley;..;_.J_r.
It Is a pity, in one way, that Mr.
Gromyko won't be coming to New
York, where he might be made to
feel a little of the public disfavor he
l).ltd his colleagues have cultivated
by their Insouciance in .! be matter of
knocking 269 pasSengers down
seven mDes over the nortbern Sea
of Japan. The contention !bat the
United States has violated Its
pledges, made back 1n 1947, ·to
guarantee access to New York to
U.N. diplomats Is yawn-making
stuff.
It Gromyko had wanted to come
he could have arrived by rnllitary

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LARRY FARLEY &amp;

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ONE DAY ONLY

Suncley, Sept. 25th
12 Noon-Sp.m.

"

�Page

~ber23, 1983

4 The Daily Sentinel

•

September 23, 1983

PametOy--Middleport, Ohio

By BEN WALKER

AP Sports Wrller

WiththeMontreaiExpospolsedto
strike, the stalked Philadelphia
Phlllies quickly changed Into the
stalkers.
Veterans Joe Morgan and Mike
By DALE ROTHGEB Jr.
Sclunldt led a ':rst-game power
AND LEE ANN WELCH
display, anct e- · ook!e Charles
A record 53,790 fan~ turned out last Saturday night to bid farewell to the
Hudson fired a :·our-hitter In the
..greatest catcher in modem day baseball annals, Johnny Bench.
nightcap as the Ph1111es swell! the
: Without a doubt, Bench wlli enter the Hall of Fame rtveyears from now
Expos In a double-header Thursday
·j)n the sportswrite rs' first ballot. If he doesn't, Congress slx&gt;uld declared
night
)he election invalid and authorize a JDajor Investigation.
The 9-7 and 7-1 victories In
· It probably would be easy just to s it back and read all the flowery Montreal put the National League
descriptions by various sports wrtters and commentators across the
EasHeading Ph1111es four games
country regarding his feats, but I personally must add my feelings too.
ahead of the Expos, who dropped
_,Baseball will miss Johnny, the Cincinnati Reds will miss Johnny, and as a
Into third place. Pittsburgh beat
-Bench admirer for the past 16 years, I will miss seeing No. 5 swinging for
Chicago 8-2 to move Into second,
fences at Riverfront Stadium.
three games behind the Ph1111es.
:: My flrstface-to-face meellng with Johnny Bench came In the fall ot1968.
The Expos, who play host to
{\s an active member of the news media, and through the assistance of
Pittsburgh for a three-game set this
Reds' Speakers Bureau director Gordy Coleman, Bench's services were
weekend, realize !hey dealt their
obtained_to serve as the speaker at the Kyger Creek football banquet. At
pennant c!Janees a severe blm.: by
.that time, Bench came to Cheshire for the little token pittance of $37.50, the
losing their last two games of the
rosj of mlleage from Cincinnati to Cheshire. It would have cost an
season against Philadelphia.
:additional $40 for a motel room that night, but Bench had a hunting .
The Phlllles won the opener as
:eqgagement the next do so he chose not to stay In Gallipolis.
Morgan -who has 13 hits In his last
A full house greeted the future hall of farner and later 1968 "Rookie of the
18 at-bats - doubled three times.
year." Bench's speech was filled with humor and, o! course, pushed hls
Scluntdt belted his 38th home run of
employers, the Cincinnati Reds. It was not a talk filled with ttery
the season, while Ivan DeJesus and
adjectives, but those attending were touched by what he had to say along
Ozzie Virg11 also homered.
with his mature way of saying 11.
But the btg blows were a
A few months later, as a chaperon for a high school baseball team
bases-loa1li!d triple by Joe Lefebvre
attending the annual high school day at Crosley Field, I approached Bench
near the Reds' lettfleld buUpen. Bench, who was warming up a Cincinnati
hurler, looked up and spoke with me briefly. He ~ reco~ forme~
Kyger Creek athlete Jon Rothgeb, who was with me.
My last personal contact with the man came during my broadcasting
DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) 'days when I Interviewed h1Iu at a Reds' Caravan In Huntington. After
Ralph
Hanover, the richest harness
Bench reached hls successful plateau, he never made the caravan stops.
horse
ever In a single se(ISOn,
Bench's career has been great We as fans have had not only the pleasure
of watching the greatest catcher or all time, but to see the. breezed to a raceoff Victory In 1
minute, 553-5 seconds Thursday,
accompllslunents he and his teammates were able to make during the
winning the $.138,800 Injury-marred
.
.
decade of the 70s.
Little
Brown Jug by four lengths and
Last Saturday's tear.jerking farewell was one of the most fitting and
becoming
· pacing's seventh Triple
most beautttul programs I have ever heard. Unfortunately, I WIJl! not at
Crown winner.
:Riverfront Stadium. I had to listen to .the event.
,
The Mea&lt;!oW Skipper colt con'
Johilny Bench has DJ~ant a Jot to me. Maybe, some day, he wiD return as
served·
li1s energy In grabbing the
the Reds' manager, but unttl then .•• good luck, John, and thanks lor the
third
division
In a relatively slow
memories. Fans can recapture It again lhls weekend when WJEH replays
1:
582-5
before
overpowering
mtle
of
the ceremony at 12: 25 p.m. Saturday and 6 p.m. Sunday.
eight
challengers45
minutes
later.
Lee Ann Welch, the OVP's lifestyle editor, was there. Here is what she
A crowd of 46,087 jammed onto the .
experienced:
Delaware (Ohio) County Falr'nu-Ullng. Plain and simple. Thrilling.
gTI?Unds In the &lt;;Oolest weather since ,
Standing field level wtth a multitude of other news people I witnessed a
four minute ovation (so they tell me, It seemed much longer) for the man
near and dear to the hearts of Cincinnati Reds fans, Johnny Bench.
Looking up Into the (arthest rafters, seemingly mlles upward, fans were
on their feet, cheering for Johony Bench. The Reds' players were
applauding; and even the Houston Aslros were clapping and cheering -In
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) Third-ranked Ohio State visits No .7
a reserved manner - for the man of the day.
My mother took me to my first Reds game at age six, while they were
Iowa Saturday In a critical early
still at Crosley Field, and I have ventured back time and time again. The
season Big Ten Conference football
game that will showcase two of the
most permanent fixture of the Reds has been Johnny Bench. Many players
have come and gone since 1~. when I began golngtogames, but Number
nation's topratedquarierbacksand
Five stayed, and stayed.
two of the COUllti:)'' s better balanced
offenses.
.
Johnny Bench could have taken the mtWons of dollars other teams would
have given him to play lor them, bui he didn't. He stayed In CinCinnati.
And although coaches are hesltDuring the ceremony honoring him Saturday, he proclalmed "I love
anttoputtoomuchempahsisonan
Cincinnati, ·and these j:!rople."
early game, this one - the league
That loyalty to the Queen City has endeared him to Reds fans, he's their
opener for both - probably will
favortte son.
haveamajorbearingonwhogoesto
Signs decorated Riverfront on all decks, an letting Johony know his
the Rose Bowl.
uniform number may be five, but he was number one In their hearts.
Bothteamsare2-1landbothflgure
to be In the battlewltli Michigan for
"Baseball Excitement Near Cincinnati's Heart (BENCH). " "Win one
for Yom Kippur" - referring to the Jewish hollday the day of the game,
the Big Ten title.
"Bene]), you gotta love the guy, " "Thanks for the memortes, Catch you
_Ohio State Is led by quarierback
Mike Tomczak, !he nation's most
later at Cooperstown" and "God Jove him."
In the beginning of his last game l;lehlnd the plate, Bench felt the
efftctent passer. He has completed
pressure, having a little trouble getting a handle on the ball. Playing before
36 of 50 passes for 507yards and six

Goodbye, Johnny

:the

In the fourth tnntng, which gave
Phlladelphla a 5-1 lead, and Len
Matus2lek's tWo-run single In the
seventh that made It 74.
1n the nightcap, Hudson, 8-7,
ou tpttched Steve Rogers, 17-11.
Singles by Greg Gross, Bo Dlaz
and DeJesus made It 1-0 In the f1!th
Inning and the Ph1111es added four
runs In theseventhonRBistngles by
Matus2lek, Schmidt and Gill)' Matthews and a throwing error by
~ter fielder Andre Dawson. .
Reds 8, Bmves 4
Slumping Atlanta missed another
chance to gain ground In the NL
West as Dan Driessen's tw~run
homer, his 12th, put vlsttlng
Ctnctnnatl ahead 5-41n theslxth. The
Reds stayed _In front and reliever
Tom Hume pitched the ninth for his ·
ninth save.
Second-place Atlanta, which has
won only two.of Its last nine games,
now traUs the Los Angeles Dodgers
by 4'h games. The Braves, who have
11 games remaining, and Los
Angeles, with 10 left, begin a
three-game series tonight In
Atlanta.
Cincinnati's Jeff Russell, 4-3,
allowed six hits over six Innings to
beat Ken Dayley, 4-7.
Paul Householder's three-run

The Daily Sentinel

On
the bitck
of a luxury
car,
c)oslng.
It struck
the fans
as from
they
watched frotn the outer rall. The
8even were taken to area hospitals,
but their Identities and conditions
were not tmmediately annou~-

PTO plans open house

(USPS 1'5-ING)

A Dlvlttou of Multimedia. lac.

fifth_
With one out, Marvell Wynne .
doubled and scored on Ray's triple.
Walks to Dave Parker and Jason
Thompson loaded the bases and
anotherrunscoredoiiMikeEasler's
forceout.
Toey Pena and Riehle Hebner ·
then delivered run-scoring singles .
Ron Cey hit an Inside-the-park
home run In the ninth Inning to
account for the Cubs' other run.
Cey's 23rd homer
when
Parker crashed Into the right field
wall while chasing the wind-blOwn
fly ball.
CardiDals 3, Meta 2 _
Rookie Danny Cox allowed five

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through Friday, 111 Court Street, b}l the
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Amerlc.a n Newspaper Publishers As·
soclatlon, National Advertising Representative, Branham Newspaper Sales,
733 Third Avenue. New York, New .
York 10017.

HUG BRIGADE - Frank Hamm, president of
Firefighters ·Local liil6, wlih oiher Hammond
ftrellghlers, recently opened his anns to a senior
cblzen asmembersoftheNatlonaiHugteamwhovlslt

POSTMASTER: Send a dd ress to The
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St ., Pome roy ,
Ohio 45769.

came

SUBSCRIPTION RATtli
By Carrier or Motor Route
. One Week ..................................$1.00
One Mon th ........................... : .... ~.40

"Our Hands Reach Out" was the
of tlll! program given by Mlss
· · . MyrttsParker.attherecentmeeting
of the Pomeroy United Methodist
Women at the church.
' Mlss Parker reminded members
ID look at their hands and to reflect
on whether they are reaching out to
others In a helpful manner, helping
the sick and naked, feeding the poor
and doing good, or whether they
fight, steal, and cause hatred to
abound.
Dorothy Downie opened the
meellng with devotions using ihe
Apostles Creed, a hymn and a
child's version of the Creed written

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Sub.scrlbei's not dtislrjng to·pa)- the"car- .·
rler may Tel)llt In advance direct to
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bas is. Cred it wlll be given carrier each
month .

The weather was no problem for
Ralph Hanover, a $58,1XX! yeartlng
purchase who 1s being syndicated
lor ~ milllon. He ran li1s Victory
streak to seven races. He has lost
only four times tn 21 starts this year,
helping create unprecedented seasona1earntngsot$L63m1Won.
Ralph Hanover earned more than
$lM,!XX) for .his two Vic\Qrtes over
this liaif-rnne track. · -

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440.5 yards per game. In an unusual
twist, the Buckeyes have Iieen more
productive passing than running,
but their rushing game 1s stm solid
with tailbacks Keith Byars and
Kelvin Lindsey and 250-pound
fullback Vaugbn Broadnax.

Area high school juniors and
seniors wlli have the opportunity to
master test-taking techniques and
reduce tes anxiety In a unique
Act/ SAT lest preparation workshop , "Taming the College
Boards," at Ohio University's
Athens campus.
The two-session workshop Is
designed to bulld confidence and
skllls so that students can take
collejle boards with the maximum
efficiency. The workshop Includes.
simulated timed tests, key terminology and mathematicallnforma-

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SALE!!!
Turfbuilder &amp;
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WILL BE A

Write-In Candidate
fOR EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL BOARD

MODERN SUPPLy
-

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399 W. Main
992-2164
·
Pomeroy, OH.
THE SJORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF SJUFF" - FOR PETS, SJABLES,
lARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS. lAWNS AND GARDENS.

November 8 Election

by children of the St. Paul's United
Methodist Ch1,1rch.of Haradan, La.
Officers' i-eports w.ere gtven·and.a ·
note was read from Margie Grate
who had visited the m eeting last
month. Mrs . Ada Warner gave a
reView of a book wrttten by Grace
Nease Fletcher entitled "The Quest
for the Least Coin." She reported
that the offering ls a help In six
countries and totals over $10,1XX! a
year by just taking a penny from
members of tlledlfferentdenomlnations of Christian churches. _• .
· The, ft9lTllnatlng committee will
report at the next meeting. On the
committee are Nellie Wright,

Test workshop scheduled

HAVING A

Quarterback show set ·

homebound elderly residents with hot meals and
affection. The firemen have given out 5,1XX! hugs since
fonnlng the team a year ago.

~po;s~t~tiv~e~l~;~tec;hnlques
for at-

~

honie sktlls buUdlng.
Dr. WUJ Dewees, Ohio University
Academic Advancement Center,
will be the instructor. The workshop
wlll be Wednesdays, Sept. 28 and
Oct. 5, 7-9 p.m., at 235 Morto!l Hall.
The $25 fee Includes an ACf or SAT
prep guide. Registration deadline is
Ftiday, Sept. 23.
Financial aid is avatlable through
the Continuing Education Office for
those In need. For further lnfonnation or a campus map, contact the
Office of Continuing .Education,
Conference~ and Workshops at
~6- Collect calls will be
accepted.

I

Believes in power
ANAHEIM, Catlt. (AP) - John
Robinson, In Ills first year as coach
of the Los Angeles Rams, came Into
the NFL believing In power as the
principal Ingredient of a winning
team.
"Asswnlng the talent is there,"
Robinson said, "the one thing you
need more • than anything else is
physical

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AyardsaletoralsemoneyforBoy
Scout Troop 239 of Langsvffie was
planned at the recent troop committee meeting at the home of the
scoutmaster, Laurence Scarberry.
It was noted !bat the troop has·
been rechartered. The yard salew111
be held Oct 1 and 2 from 9 a .m . to
dusk at the Intersection of State
Route 124 and County Road 10. All
proceeds will go Into the troop
treasury.
Plans and achievement pi'Oo
grams were discussed with Lanny
Tyree, troop commtssloner, and
Ray Laudermllt, regina!
co!lll'Dissloner.

Mickey Werner, Lincoln Hill, Is a
patient at the Mlssourt Baptist
Hospital, 3100NorlhBaDasRoad, St.
Louis;'Mo_63122.
She recently underwent surgery
there and wm recuperate at the
home of her son, Ricky, and his wife
before returning to Pomeroy_Cards
may be sent to her at the hospital.

Save 5 100

29995 ·=
ASLOWAS

Reg. 399.95

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adjust volume and turn sel on/off from
across a room! #16-230

6" woofers and solid-state tweeters
lor superb sound to go! AutoSearch helps lind selections fast
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Batteries e11tra

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69t~

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Real walnut veneer! 8 " woofer and 10" passive
radiator deliver deep, solid bass. Liquid-cooled
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volts, AC and DC milliamps and ohms.
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Audible "Beep"
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Attend funeral

'1"
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•

2 Dr., good cond.

1976 FORD F-250 ., ..........................:....... S2295

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE

DX-66 by Realistic

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Effective Oct. 1-Morch 1

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In accordance with the unlfonn
lunch poUcy for all schools In the
Meigs Local School District, the
menu for next week, Sept. 26-Sept.
30 11 announced .
Monday - Pizza, green beans
wlth corn, pears, mllk.
Tuesday - Hot bologna on bun,
cheese sllce and plclcles, French

you

ne~d

fries, m1lk.
WedN!Iday -

to hone lrne edges

on vou r knrves

~-fi4J

Spaghetti with
lo!l8ed salad, apple
sauce, bread and butter, m1lk.
Tbuntlay - ClttcJrm and dressIng. 11l81bed potatoes, peas, fruit
salad, llreld and butter, m1lk.
Friday - COok's cbolce.
meat

Closed Monday
Tues.- fri . 9 1o 6, Sat. 9 to 1

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1976 MONZA ............................................ Sl095

Auto., P.S., CB radio, AMIFM tape.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

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Troop239

The Farmers Home Administration Office In the Farmers Bank
Building, Pomeroy, will be closed
Monday and Tuesday due to an
out-of-town meeting lor personnel.

FAlL~&lt; &gt;PENin-G~SALE
S~ltSAWs

We offar the accredited
program of class wor1&lt; you
ara raquired to complete
before taking the Ohio
State Board Examination.
Complete in only 11
weeks. Enroll nowl Classes
will begin October 3. For

lha

Thelma Dill, and Polly Eichinger.
Gertrude Mitchell .PI1!Sented
·order ·bllinks lor the New World
Outlook and Interpretive Magazine.
She also announced a: housewares
pariy being held for the group
treasury.
Plans were completed for the
carry-In dinner planned In conjunction with the dedication of the new
ramp, Simday after the morning
service.
The meeting In New Le&gt;dngton of
the Untied Methodist Women will be
held sept. 29. Dues' were taken and
new pledge cards passed out. It was
voted to keep the district pledge at
the same level. Eighty-flvestck calls
were reported.
A dessert course was served by
Polly Eichinger, Betty Baronick,
and Leona Cleland.

FHA office
dosed Monday

~~=======~P~d~.~Po~I.~A~d~v~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

53,790
people!
all there to see no one but you, can make a player a Utile
touchdowns
and has been InterneiVous
.
cepted
only once.
Sitttlng.in the stands with some members of the Rosie Reds, we agreed . Iowa, comtngoft.a42-34Victory at
that seemg him throw a man out at second would really make the night
Penn State, will counter with Chuck
Long, wholsratedthlrdnatlonallyln
WeD, he didn't quite make the out In the tlrst Inning, but he did hit a
homer later, right next to the banner "God love him.'' Bench's bat, that . passing. Long, like Tomczak a
made the ilight.
,
productoftheChlcagosuburbs, is29
Despite the team' s loss to the Aslros, Johnny Bench was the "Star of the . of47for549yardsand three IDs. He
Game" on Reds' Ra dio. The broadcast session was heard through the
has not been Intercepted.
stadium public address system, and done from behind home ·plate.
Wtth Long at the cOntrols and
Thousands of fans stayed to walch and hear, gathering In the stands for a
220-pound tatlback' Owen Gill doing
better view.
most of the running, Iowa ranks
This man Bench from Binger, Okla., will,Probably go down In history as
second nattotially In total offense
the greatest catcher in baseball. I consider it an honor to have had the . and scoring, averaging 561 yards
opportunity to watch him catch both his tlrst and last season. I may have
and 46.5 points per game.
been mifted at the Reds at times, but I never deseried them.
GUJ is the nation's leading scorer
Thr0ughmanymanagersandtl1ecomlngandgolngsotplayers,Iamnot · with five touclfdowns and ls fifth
alone in sticking by them, whether they were World Serteschamplons, had · . nationally In rushing, averaging
the best record In baseball (despite not making the playoffs) or when they
133.5 yards a game.
were the owners of the worst record in the league.
Ohio State, which recorded an
· There 's been a song popularized In Cincinnati this season, honortng J .B., · Impressive 24-1{ Victory at Oklaas he's fondly called. The Iynes -------------~ho~ma~~last~~Sa~tu~rd~a~y:_,ls~~~~!..j
proudly proclaim, "He only made I"
one stop along the way."
The art of catching has been revolutionized by Johnny Bench, and
he did It aU on the team, wtth one
team's system.
Hey Johnny, I only hope I can he
on hand In Cooperstown five years
'rrom now. That Hall of Fame InductloQ will be another of the hlgh. Itghts of my baseball' memortes.
Thallks. Catch you later.

Plans for an open house at the . A discussion was held on a juice
school, Oct. 10-14 were made when break in the afternoon at the school.
the Pomeroy PTO met recently at Bob Miller, pastor of the Laurel Cliff
the school. The PTO wUi serve Free M"ethodist Church, had devorelreshments on Oct. 12.
tions, and t he pledge was led by the
. The fall carnival will be held Oct sixth grade safety patrol which also
29 with Sandy Henderson, Cindy had a· skil on traffic safety. Becky
Warner, and Ruth Spaun to be Triplett recognized the safety patrol
chalrmen. It was decided that room mem bers and they repeated their
a wards wlil be given for the highest oath.
percentage of new members joining
Refreshment s were servoo oy the
the ·PTO. Room count went to the
fourth grade parents.
sixth grade at the meeting.

It's so BBSV to be a member
of a growing profassion .
Start now, by studying at
GBC. two evenings e •
week.

Pomeroy UMW has meeting

One Year ................................ $52.80
SINGLE COPY
Dally ................ .

meeting with reports being given by
committee chairmen and fall activities being planned.
A basket order has been deltvered
and the spaghetti dinner on Sept. 30
was noted. A card was signed for
Mrs. Paul Werner, who Is In the
Missourt Baptist Hospital at St.
Louis; Mo. 63122.
A silenl auction was held following
the meeting. Refreshments were
served by Miss Elizabeth Flck a nd

· Mrs. Marte Hauck presided at the ' Mrs. MayeMora.

r;:=========~

Hanover breezes ·to Jug·win
1964 for this autumn pacing classic.
At55degree5,ltwasthecoolestslnce
VIcar Hanover won 19 years ago In
40&lt;\egree weather_
Two races prior to the Jug's tlrst
division, seven fans were hurt when
they were struck by a portable
starting gate used for the Grand
Circuit program.
Jug officialS· said an ·electrical
malfunction kept the gate, carried

Aprogramontrustwaspresented
by Miss Erma Smith at the
September meeting or Friendly
Circle, Trinity Church.
Mrs. Carne Kennedy accompanied group singing or "Nearer My
God To Thee" and "Blessed
Assurance." Scripture, a poem by
Helen Steiner Rice, meditation and
prayer by Miss Smith emphasized
!he Importance of trust In one's Ute.

hltstnblank!ngNewYorkoverelght
Innings before running Into trooble
In the ninth.
Cox, 3-5, departed after Darryl
Strawberry led off the ninth with a
single and scored on George
Foster's double. Reliever Bruce
Sutter gave up pinch-hitter Keith
Hernandez's RBI single and then
got his 20th save.

double pulled the Reds Intoa3-3tie In
the fourth before Glenn Hubbard's
10th oomer In theflfthgaveAtlantaa
brief lead.
P1ratee 8, Cub8 2
Johnny Ray tripled, doubled and
added two singles to help Pittsburgh
end Its 10-game losing streak In
Chicago. Eight of those losses came
this season.
· Rookie Lee Tunnell, 10-5, pitched
a slx-littter IX! beat Rick Reuschel,
1-1.
LarryBowa'sRBislnglegavethe
Cubs 1-0 lead In theserondbefore the
Pirates struck for tour runs In the

ATTENTION!!
'
WANT A
REAL ESTATE
LICENSE?

Friendly.Circle meets-at church

Hot Phils win twinbill; Reds top Braves

Sports Desk

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

3RD

949-2525

RACINE

I'

I

llllUCe,

Several out-of-town guests attended the funeral of Mrs. Inez
Stivers. They included Edward
Grindley and son, Ryan, Wanda
Roush and Emma Steker, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Grindley, Westervllle, and Mrs. Wllllam
Watson, GalUpoUs.
After the servle&amp;they visited with
Mrs. Ronald Grindley, Minersville,
sister-In-law of Mrs. Stivers. Also
visiting was the Rev. James B.
Kittle, Syracuse.

Save
520

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FAMILY CLINIC
PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THE ASSOCIATION OF

DR. ·EDWIN TANQUIST, M.D.
BOARD CERTIFIED IN FAMILY PRACTICE

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT, 675-6971
MONDAY·FRIDAY, FROM 9-t:OO
.WE ARE .HERE TO SERVE YOUR MEDICAL NEEDS.

2924 Jacbo1 Alt.,-

Poillt Pl1a11t, W. Ia.

Check Your Phone Book for the lbdlelllaek Store or Dealer Nearest You
A DMSION OF TANDY COAPOFIATK&gt;N

PRICES lt.PPlV AT PARTICIPATING STORES ANO OF.ALE AS

'•

�•

:---..~""""'""""---------------------~P~om::e;::ro~y~M~id~d!!;le:Jpo~rt~,,50h~to~-----------------~T~h:e_:=Daily Sentinei-Page--7
September 23, 1983

The Daily Sentinel

By The Qend

SephKnber23, 1983

7 fXrERIENCE 111E JOY Of RELIGION-·~

Page 6

Comedy duo at Rio Grande
Musical comedian " Willlams and
Ree" will perform Friday, Sept l&gt;,
at 8 p m In the Fine and
Performing Arts Center at Rlo
Grande College and Community
College
Admlsslon Is $2 for the general
public Tickets are available at the
door

Concert to name a few They
materlals
Their main room engagements at rece ntly released their fourth
Las Vegas show rooms were so album
successful that Wllllams and Ree
spend much ofthelrtlme these days . - --.:.....- - - " - - - -as the opening act for the Oak Ridge
Boys, Mel TUI!s, Roy Clark, Mickey
GUJey and other top stars
WUUams and Ree have appeared
on network television - The Dinah
Shore Show, Norm Crosby Comedy
Shop and Don Kirchner Rock

The scene Is 1968 at Black Hills
State College In Spearfish, Olda
The ldd lrom Mountain Home,
Idaho meets the Indian lrom
Pierre, S D This was not just your .--------~----1
Stat a or Ohio Oeparrment ol l ns._ra oce Cerro! cate ol
average Great Moments In Musical
Ccmplan~e- The unde •~ogned Super ntl!flden t ol in
turane&amp;or
he Stare or O h o rlerebycert r es th at AUTO
Comedy. It established a Whole new
OWNEAS LIFE INS CO of Le.ns 1111 State or M•Chlgan

AT RIO GRANDE - Musical comedian Williams

and Ree will perform at Rio Gmade College and
Community College, Sept. 30, 8 p.m., at the Flne and
Perfonnlng Aris Center at the school. nckets are $2

for the general pubUc 'l1le duo has beEn the opeulng
act for a nwnher of couulry groups, such as the Oak
Ridge Boys, Mel 'l111ls, Mickey GIDey and Roy Clark.

Drawing winners
announced
in Middleport

Calendar
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Gilbert
and VIcky and the Singing
Gospels will be featured at the
Ash street FreewUJ Baptist
Church, Middleport, Saturday at
7 30 p m The group wUJ be
featured a t the Rutland F reewUJ
BaptiSt Church on Sunday at 1
pm
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Fire Department wUl spon
sor a chicken barbecue Satur
day at 11 a m The new mini
pumper wUJ be on diSplay
LONG OOITOM - Teen
dance Saturday from 8 p m to 11
p.m at the Loog Bottom Com
munlty Bulldlog

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Annual Homecoming of Vanderhoof Baptist
Church Sunday 9•45 a m with
basket dlnenr at noon, Rev

Ralph Smith speaker for after
noon services at 1 30 p m. and
special music by the Harmony
Singers o( Racine

. .

'

TUPPERS PLAINS
A
chicken barbecue wUJ he held at
the Orange Township Volunteer
Fire Department, Tuppers
Plains, Sunday beginning at 11
a m The price of the dinner Is
$3 50 and includes ~ a chicken,
baked beans, cole slaw, bread
and beverage

MINERALSVILLE -Annual
homecoming at Minersville Unl
ted Methodist Church Sunday.
Sunday School at 9 a m . worship
service at 10 a m ,basket dinner
at noon, fellowship and special
entertainment In the afternoon
RACINE - Special meeting
of VFW Post 5634 at Racine
American Legion Hall Sunday
at 2 pm

Happenings
Eagle R1dge
Homecoming
EAGLE RIDGE -There will
be a homecoming at the Eagle
Ridge Community Church Sun
day Morning services wUl begin
atlOa rn Afterabasketdlnnerat
noon, the afternoon service will
begin at 1 30, featuring the'Orr
Family and local singers The
Rev Carl Hicks, pastor, extends
an Invitation to the public

Special service
HOBSON - The Persons
Family Gospel Singers and the
Hobson Gospel Four wUJ sing at
the Hobson Church of Chns t In
Christian Union at 7 30 p m on
Wednesday, Sept 28 The Rev
Mr Persons wUJ be the speaker
The public IS invited to attend

Homecommg set
POMEROY - The annua l
homecoming of Hemlock Grove

Church will be held Sunday, Oct

2.
Worship service wUJ he held at
9 30 a m with potluck dinner at
12 30 p m. The afternoon sew·
rvlce wUl begin at 1 30 p m Two
slnglng groups will he featured
The public Is invited to attend

Spaghetti supper
POMEROY - Trln!ty Church
spaghetti supper wUJ be held
Sept 30, not Friday, Sept 23 as
was reported

Hair rutting
at block party
MIDDLEPORT
Pratt's
Beauty $hop, under the direction
of Merrl Ault Amsbary, will be
cutting hair at the Middleport
Block Party Saturday, Sept 24.
AU proceeds wlll he donated to
charity Models are needed and
are asked to call 992-3751.

.

Winners of the weekly drawing
held at the Dalcy Isle, Middleport,
were Lorraine Hugle, Don King,
Mildred Riley, Judy Jewell, Dave
Roush, Neal Richmond, Patrick
Mullen, Belinda Rose, Peggy Lewis,
and Thomas Roush
Gilts were presented to the
winners No purchase Is required to
participate

chapter In the annals o! truUan
wars
Bruce Williams Is the Mountain
Home kld and Terry Ree the
lull·blooded Slouxlndlan. Together,
they could crack up Geronimo in
lull war pain!
After college, Willlams and Ree
took to the road wlthabackup band
Between d!lllce sets at night clubs,
Elks clubs, and hotel lounges, the
two began poking lun at each
other's heritage Before long their
whitE' man/ redskin bantet was
packing them In at show rooms
throughout the midwest as well as
Canada and Nevada
1n 1978, Willtams and Ree hlt
Hollywood. "Hollywood hlt back,"
says Bruce By this time, the two
had dispensed with the backup
bank and accompanied themselves
on guitar and bass Their perfor
mances included a college of
popular tunes paced with their own
unique brand o1 humor
In Hollywood, Williams and Ree
performed at the Comedy Store
which showcases comedians
nightly Robin WUUams, Jbnmy
Walker and many others got their
~tart there and established comics
still return to the club to try out new

Hysell family reunion
The second annual reunion ol the
Oscar and Reed Hysell families was
held Aug. 21 at the Forest Acres
Park, Rutland The family enjoyed
a covered dish dinner at noon
Recognlzed were Denver Hysell,
Pomeroy, the oldest, Rose Ann
Schrock, Rutland, the youngest,
and Dana Hysell, Grove Port, the
family member traveling the
farthest
The 19&amp;1 reunion will be held on the
third Sunday in August. Plans were
made for more activities for the
young people with gttts for those
recognized
O!!lcers named were Denver
Hysell, president; Cora Woodard,
treasurer, Madellne Painter •
secretary

Attending were Ruth Johnson,
Blrdle Hysell, Ruth Schlepplk,
Martin and Cora Woodard, Bill and

Anna Carswell,

BUJy Carswell,
Marty and Shirley Woodard and
Tonya, Joan Moore, J W Riper,
Mary Lynd, Jlm and Betty Johnson,
Barbara Vartan, Leena Kay John·
son,RogerandJaneHysell,Dennls,
Janelle, Bill and Dana Hysell
Denver and Frances Hysell, Gary
HysellandGaryJr ,EdnaM. Swlck,
Nathan and Charlotte Hysell, Paul
and Janet Hysell, Steve, Joyce,
Steve Jr and Daniel Hysell, Mike
and Joy Hysell, Shane and Billy Jo
Hysell, Rick and Mary Caruthers,
Randy and Genla Hysell and
daughter, Rachel, Ronald, Linda
and Ronald Jr Hysell, Roger,
Kathy, Rachel, Roger Jr and
TimothY Roush, Karen and Rose
Schrock, Ro1lle Stewart, Ruby
Mossman, Tammy Mossman,
Mark Ruof, Larry and Autumn
Hysell, Ralph and Madeline Hysell,
Mike, Diana and Randy Bing.

OU gets research grant
The American Heart Association
Central Ohlo Heart ChaptE'r h~
made the largest single allocation
in Its history to cardiovascular
research with the award of $583,329
for the fiscal year, 1983-84
Awards were made to The Ohlo
State University and Children's
Hospital, Columbus and Ohlo
University, Athens
Robert L Hamlin, D V M ,
PhD , chapter president, said the
Investment exceeds that o1 last
year's hY 20 5 percent and supports
23 grant in aid projects, six !eUowshlps and three investlgatorshlps
The research, he said, covers a
broad range of investigation lnclud·
lng physiology of heart function
treatment of heart failure, throm'
bolysls for heart attacks, genesis of

Irregular heart beats, natural
history of valvular heart disease
high blood pressure and the etlec:
tlveness of drugs In lowering blood
cholesterol..
Hamlin said the awaros were
made !ollowlng study and rev!~ o1
60 applications by both the chapter' s research and fellowship com
mlttee and the research review
committee of the American Heart
Association. Ohlo Al!Wate
Funds to support the research
were derived solely lrom contrlbu
tlons lrom the public in the
chapter's 47-county service area
The chapter also conducts programs of professional education,
public education and offers free
blood pressure screenings and CPR
training.

DAR plans visit ro
Blennerhasset Island
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the Daughters of the American
Revolution will go to Blennerhassett
Island for a meeting Saturday
The group will meet at the parking
area beside the former P omeroy
Junior High School at 11 30 a m lor
the trlp Those needing r ides ar e
asked to call 992 2433 922 2600,
992 7ti69 or 247-2344

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

OPEN HOUSE

Richard H Bollman 11. 0 D
113 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769

hilS COJmp ed w th the laws o thl5 Stale app licable to I!
and Is author ze d dw r nq the curren t 'fCil to transact in
th 511 a elts11pprap r 11 e b iS neMol lnsu ance lt5flla n
tat oondltlon l1 sn own by ts • nn uat suu emen t to lllliVe

been U lot ows on December J l 1982 Adm tted usels
S I 12 064 845 00 l abrl1 es S97 !Ml2 277 00 Surplus
$13 11!256300 Income $3708806000 E10.pand 1u es
S15 ()80 23900 Net A~sel~ 51 4 182 568 00 C8p tal
S 1000 OC() 00 IN WITNESS WHEREO F 1n a111 ncm!Unlo
suoscr bed my name and caus~ m~ seal to De afl utd a
ColumblJS Oh o th s day and dale ~obart H Kall Supt
cf ns!Jrance ol Onro 1•821
Slate of On o Oep;utmenl of nsu a nee Ca t f .:;a 1:10
Complumce- The undars gned S"~Je 111enaen1 ot In
sura nee otlheS ate of Ohoo neretly cerhl es that AUTO
OWN!RS MUTUAL INS COol Lans ng Stall of M ell
gan his compr eo w th the aW!I ol th s Slale appl cablE!
to land S nulhonzed dur ng the cu&lt;ren )'E'.I ru r ~n58CI
nTh s Sill! II ta appropnate cus ness o1 nsurancc on I I'll!
f'luUJa l oJan liS f nanc al cond I Drl ssho wn by sanr.ual
il~&gt;lemen toha•ebt!1."neloloW$onOecemberJ 1982
Admlneo assets S895 :&gt;02 3JO oo L atl r 1 es $573 NO
753 00 Sup us $322 261 576 00 Income S520 976
3SSJ 00 E~p!l{ldl!ures $488 545 884 00 IN W TNESS
WHEREOF I hove he&lt;eunto 1\.lbSCI bed m~ name and
caused rry seal to btl i~ll !ted at Columbu&amp; Oh o H1 &amp;day
ano da re Ro~er r H Ka lz s rpt or Insurance of OhiO

(,1131

State o t On o Oepanmen ol lnsu anco Ce•t 1Cltle ol
Col'lipll ~ ~ce - Tile unders•gned Super ntendent ol In
suutnce ol t € Srnte o l On o hereby cCJ rt l es ma t
BENEFI T TRUST LIFE INS CO Ql Chicago Sate o!
ltll n Ot~ has compl ed w th he aws ol lh s State appl ~
ab le tO ~ ~ BllCl 15 IIUihO riZed dol fl9 the CUII!!nt rear to
trans&amp;c t In t h s sate ts opp or&gt;• ale bus ness o nsu1
arn;e on he mulurtl pan lis f nanc a con oft on s ShOwl'l
b~ Its annua sratcmenl to h a~!t been n follows on
Decembe 31 1962 Adm tied asse $ $184 577 832 00
lab I t es S 61 923 241 00 Surplus $:?2 654 59000 In
come $145206 17100 E~pendlu &lt; es St3586512100
IN WITNESS WHEREOf I ha~e here.,n osuDSC bed mv
name and C&amp;lSI:d mr seal to be at r Ked a1 Columbus
Oh 0 th s day and da e Roberl H K11 1 Supl ol lnsu1
ance ol on c 1•991
St&amp;te of Oh o Oepa lment ol lr.su&lt;ance Certl Cl!teol
Compl RlllX' - The unders•glled Super !'llllnoe.nt Ollfl
au ance or the State ol 011 o l')eretlr certl es that
BITUMINOUS CASUAl'TV ClOAP o Ftoct lsl!lnd S 11 e
o 1 111 oo s nu "COmpt "" w 1n 1ne laws of tn s StaTe
flppl cable to I anCl $ aut hr .led dur n&lt;;t tile curnml yea
10 1 r11 n~RC n tn s slate ts app opr are ous neu 1)1
rnsu anee Its 1 nancral cond 1on s shown by 1$ HMtJal
5lalement to na•e boon as fol ows on Oecembl!&lt; 31 1982
Aamleaasse ts SJ94J6867100Labl l e; SJ 14241!
9 1 00 Su rplus 572 \ 19 759 00 Income S172 160 8213
00 E•PlmdriUes S162599T7700 NelasseiS $80119
759 00 Cap lal $8 000 000 00 IN WITNESS WHEREOF
I ha~e hereunl o subscr bed my nAmeendcRused my s11~1
to oe a 1 (9!1 111 Columous on a n s Clay and daHl
Rotlert H Kalz S ~.t pl ol lnsur~nce ol on o (~ 1 02\
S ate ol Oh u Dep;ulmenl o nsu&lt;Rnce Ce I c~Te ol
Comp ance - rne vnders qned SLJPII n endtm l of n
su•ance of lhe Stille or OllKl he eby Cfl t t ..a 1n~
BITUMINOUS FIRE I MARINE INS CO 01 Roc~ IBIMd
SIB le ol Ill nc1s has com pied w h the laws ol th 5 Stille
11.ppl cahlf! 1o t and •s au ho le&lt;.l &lt;Ju ng Ihe cuoren1 ~ear
o 1ransac1 n lh s state ts ~PP•opr ate bLJS ness ol
nsuraoce IS I n&amp;nc a( cood I on s sno .. n by Is anooJal
$ ateme ntto ha~e bfiiln as oltows O!'l Oecembe 31 1982
Admllodassats 5~177936900 Labll l es $4616831
00 Surplus S 4 .&amp;6::1 53!! 00 l 11~ome Sl 706 59 00 E~
ponatures 519204300 Net assets St696253800
CoprTal S~ SOO 000 00 IN WITN ESS WHEREOF haw
nereuntq SIJOscrloea my name ~n&lt;l caused my sea 10 be
all ~cd at Columbus Oh o lh ~ d~y and d~te Rob!! r H
K&lt;~IJ s .,pr ol ns\.lra nct! ol On o {• IOJJ
Sta l e 01 Oh o Deoa I men! ol lnsur~nce Certl cate ol
Compl ~nee - The unde s gned s ..pe &lt;ntenoent ol m
s..rance o1 rne Srate ot on o Mereby oort l cs lh&amp;l
CONSOLIDATED INSURANCE CO o l nd ar.Bpol s
Stale ol tnClana has com pi ad w h !Me taws oltn s Sl ate
appl ~able to I and Is aull'lor zed du11ng 1he cu ren t yell
10 I 11nsact 11 th s state ts app rop 11 e btJs !'len ol
nsula!'lc41 Its nanc lll cond I 011 s shown br ts ~tnnulll
Sift emeniiO ha•e ~en as lollowson Oecerr b., 3 1982
Adm llo:nl ~~se l s $3 1 ~7664600 Lnb lltoe' $2 1:1 s
155 00 Su1pt u~ Sll 661 ~91 00 ncomo 525 039 760 00
E•pend "liS S25 959":033 00 N~ 1 ~sse s S10 261 &lt;~~9 1
00 Cap t~ l S 600 000 00 IN WIT NESS WHEREOF I
h a~ e hereunlo ~utlsc• bed mv name nnd co used mv sea
1o tle all • ed ~~ Colun b\.1~ Oh o lh s day and ca e
Rooer t H Kalz SllP ol lnsu ~flee ol 011 o (, 1671
Stale ot Oh o Depa tmenl ol lns ~' ce Cl! rt llc&lt;t eol
Compliance- ll'l(l u noers gneo St pe1 nlenCe!'lt ot 111
sure !'Ice ot the State ol Qh o hereby certltes thAI FIAST
UNITED Ll, f: INS CO o l Gary Sla te ol na ~~na nas
compl ed w l h I he aws ol th s Sa e appl catlle tOllAnd e
nu lho zed du ng the cu er-.1 yeBr to 1ransact n th s
s a e ts app opr IIH! ous ness ol nsurancc t~ 1 nanc 111
cond ton s show !'I by Is i'Onn.,al s a ement to flave been
as lollows 011 December 31 1982 .l.drn n ect asses
S3J11549000 Loti Illes 531370~00 Surplus Sl
244 952 00 l11come SR 393 437 00 E•pend tures $9
291 033 00 Net asset&amp; S2 3'14 9~200 Cep tat Sl 100
000 00 IN WITNESS WHEREOF I hne herm nto s ~.tb
scr bed my nome ~no c111vsed my se111 to be all ~oct at
Columbus Oil o lh sdf!oy ana dote RotlertH K11tz Sup
or Insurance ol Otl o (•2 .&amp; 81
StateD! On o Dope lmtfll ol lnsu 111'\Ce Corl I co te ol
Como! ance - The unders Qrled 5u[ler n1ondcnt o l tr.
sur once ot tne 5 1 ~ 11! 01 011 o hi.'Wb~ cert l c5 that
GUARANTEE TRUST Ll f"E INS CO ol Ch cago Stille ol
Ill no ~ h AS campi ed w h lhl! aws ot In s S 110 appl c
al)!e IO I an~ ~ nu lflor !Cd dunng I he current yo11 10
lr~nsacl n 11 s ~ 1 a1e 1~ appropr ~ ru trus ness ol nsur
e11ce ITS I n~nc at cond I on 6 shown Oy Is annu~l
stlllcmen t lo ha•e been as follows on Decombe r 31 9B2
Adm I ed Rsse 5 $11).&amp; 167 034 00 lsb Ill OS $87 J96
142 00 Su pi!J$ S16 770 1192 00 Income S6B 359 511 00
E~pendl to es S62 650 696 00 IN WITNE SS WHEREOF
I M~e l'lerounlo su bscr ~d m~ nametmd caused my 51!111
t o be AI xed at Col um bus Oh o t ho~ dR~ and dRIO!
Robe t H K~tz Sup! ol lnsutance ot Ofl o t•293)
State ot Oh o Ocp;utment ol l r.~u Illite Cert I eRie or
Compl a11c.e - The ndersogned Sup!! rnlenden oltr.
sur~nce .,
ne Stare ol Oh o nercbv ccrt l e~ nat
HAAlE YSY!LLE LIFE INS CO ol Harle~~v lie Slale ol
Pvnnsylw~n ~ nu complied w Tn ne aws ol th 6 Stare
appl cab e l o I and s aut hOI zed du• ng the currefll year
to I .ansae I n l h s ste e ts ape opr ate blls nen ol
nsurance Its I nanc&lt;.'ll eon&lt;lrl on ssnown by ts annual
stlltemeflt toh~•ebeen as lot o ..son CMcembc 31 962
Adm 11e&lt;1 users ~o 710 780 00 L ab 11es $31 375
I! 13 00 Su plus 57 63&lt;1 967 00 Income $9 759 839 Ol'l
f•pond l un'' $563194200 NelniBii $93J.496700
C~plal 51 SOOOOOOO IN WITNESS WHEREOF I 111•11
hereunto suhsc bed my n~me Hnd caused my setrllo bo
1111 .eo a1 Co umt)us OhiO lh s dav aM date Robert H
K11tz SLJPI ol ln!ull!'lce of Oil o (•3631
St~&gt;lll ol Otno Oepilrtmenl ol l llSIJ ance Cen I cat!! ol
Comploancc
The undersrgncd Super ntendenl ol n
Sl an..;Q Q the Stal e of Oh o 1 a eby cert las hat
HARLEYSVILLE MUTUAL. INS CO of Harl ey sv lie Sine
of Pennay ¥fnla hucomp edw hlhe aw!!O I th sSIRie
IIppi caole 10 t Bnd s au 1'1011l8&lt;1 dur ng 11\Q current yur
lo 1r11nsac n h a stale 11~ approprrate bu5 ness of ns1 r
~nee O&lt; 11 1:1 n ul ual plan 11 ~ I nanc al con d lion s shOwn
tly I$ llnMual stntcrne-nt to hnvo tleen u loltOw3 0!'1
December 3 1982 Admo ted a~S~Is §463 1.&amp;5 180 00
LDbltes $3461310S800 Su!pus SI I7 1JI.&amp;12200
Income S304 745 960 00 EKPCnd tu es S259654 01'17 00
IN WITNESS WHE REOF I h a~e nereufl!O S\.l biC I tied my
neme and caused my seel t o be oftl~e d a! Cotumbus
On o lh s da~ and del e Rob!! 1 H Ks1J Sup! o tntu
Anee o t on o !•3041

~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;

PH 992-2920

AI}MERIC4N HOMES
WATCH FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE
IN ATHENS SEPTEMBER 24 &amp; 25
2 HOMES ON DISPLAY-CAPE COD &amp;RANCH HOME
DOOR PRIZE - ELECTRIC RANGE
HOURS 9 TO 7 ON SAT, NOON-7 ON SUNDAY
NIAR AM-PACK PLAZA NIAR THE PIC PAC
ON 50 WIST TOWARD ALBANY

St Rt

To a mot her and a lather- the future of the nation and the world Is a ll
wrapped up 111 the r ch1!d
As PARENTS we believe 1n tn1s litlleone God gave us Wecomm1t our
love and resources and co mmon sense to the lulfillment of herr 8 l1Ctltng
Cktsl n)'
II she never mailes 11 to a bea uty pageant -that s not what w ere
concerned aboull
I she grows up to be a person loved and loving---close 10 Goa and
those He lOves-we It senle lor thatt
That s why !heres moraltratntng and relrgtous educatron 1n her stars
We ro MR &amp; MAS AM ERICA And we worsh1p God lhanklulthal our
daughter can ha\ e not one fabulous year of l ame but a ltlehme fulltl!lng
her dest1ny

Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

~~!~! ~

Churcn '- Off1ce Supplies

Prescr1phons

GIFTS
Mtddleport

Pomeroy

992 2955

NEW YORK '·· ~ Kingsbury Home Sales
a.ontiNG
HOUSE • • • I &amp; SeiVice i
&amp;
KERMIT ' S KORNER
Homes
V
RIDENOUR

l'"

The

F1nest

H ometoto:, Saws

E

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
216 5 Secon d

Po m e r oy
992 JJ2S

m

For A Real Auctron
Ca ll the Reill McCoy
I 0
Mac McCoy
R 1 1 Ree d svl!le Oh

985 39&lt;&gt;4

Na to onw od e In s Co
at Colu mbu s 0
804 W Ma1n
992 '13 18 Pom erov

ELLIS &amp;SONS SOHIO

Equipment

Main St Pomeroy Sunday services Holy
Communion on the first Sunday of each
month, and combtned with mornlngprayer on
the third Sunday Morntngprayer ani:l !leMnQil
on an other Sa.J_ndays of t~ month Chyrth
School and nursery care provkled Colfee
hour 1n the PariSh HaU Immediately following
the service

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W

R u fland Oh 10 45775

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
M rdd lt p o r I
r',m t: IOV

0

'"
•

lng 7 :K1 p m

MT HERMON lJNlTED BRETliREN IN

~Ofl01 1

CHRIST CHURCH Rev Ro~rt Sanders
pastor Don \\ lll
lead~r Locatedl n Texas
Comm unity off CR 82 Sunday school 9 :l)
a m Morning worship 5€'1"\ Ice 10 45 a m
evening preaching serviCP Sf'C'Ond a nd fo urt h
Sundays 7 :II p m Christian Endeavor first
and Ullrd Sunday~ 7 30 p m ~ ed nesday
prayer meeting and Bibl e studv 7 30 p m
JE HOVAH S WM NE SS J7:n9 Sta te ~ut('
124 (One mile east of Rutland ) Sunday Bible
lecture 9 30 a m Watc htow&lt;&gt;r study 10 20
am
Tuesday Bible studv 7 :Jl p m
'l'hursclay T heocra ti c School 7 :J} p m
Service Meeting 8 20 p m

Joo

1."'

J 1 16

•

r ue~aJy

Joo
3~

I4

•

~tdflUO~y

Joo
~ 0 1 ~34

Wednesday evening young ladles auxiliary 6
p m Wednesday famUy wcrhsip 7 p m

• Sdiy

[~ll

'"" 17

en

•

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Near
Long Bottom. Edsel Hart paslor Sunday
school 9 :Jla m WorshlplO :Jta m Prayer
meetlng 7 .JJ p m Ttnasday

CHURCH OF GOD or PROP HECY
Located on Ihe 0 J 'Whit e Road off h ighway

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

160 Pal Henson pasi!X' Sunday School 10

Ash and Plum Leslie Hayman
pastor Sunday schOOl 10 a m Morning
Worship 11 a m Wednesday and Sat urday
Evening services 7 30 p m

Corner

/

/

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH

_;;

Fay Sauer, IHredor

morning wcnhJp 10 :JJ a m
evening wcrship
7 l&gt; p m Wednesday night prayer meetlng
and Bible study 7 ll p m
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Butternut
Ave Pomeroy Mrs Dora Wining In charge
Sunday hoUness meeting, 10 a m , Sunday
School 10 30 a m Sunday School YPSM
Elotse Adams leader 1 l&gt; p m salvation
meeting, various speakers and music specials Thursday - llllam to2pm !.oodles
Home 12ague, members In charge, an
wcmen Invited 6 45 p m Thursday Corps

Jam• E. Corblll, -~

Rev.

Youth meetings 6 3J p m

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNl ON William
Cra btree pastor Sunday School 9 .'Kl a m
evening service 7 :.J p m Wednesday prayer

NORTHEAST CWSI'ER
Rev Don Archer
Rev Roy De«.er

Rev

Cadeo Class IYOWll&lt; !'Wple-Btble) 7 l) p m

tne

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHR.lST 33226 Chlldren s Horne Road
(County Road 76) 992-5'ZI5 Vocal music
Sunday worship 10 a m Bible study U a m ,
wocshtp 6 p m Wednesday Bible study 7

pm
OLD D E XTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH - CUlton Lucas pastor Sunday
School 9: :tJ a m Mrs Worley Francis sup!
Pree.chlng services first and t hird Sundays
!oll&lt;M'Ing SUnday SciiOOI Yooth meeting
~Nery Sunday 7 l) p m

Communion First Sunday (Archer)
REEDSVILLE - Church SchOOl 9 l)
a m , Worship 11 a m (Deeter )
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL - Church

School 9a m worship lOam Btble Study,
Tuesday 7 30 p m UMW Thlrd TUesday
7 l) p m , Communion firs~ Sunday
(Archer)

CENTRAL CWSTI!I\
Rev James E CGI'Mtt
Rev - N e.....
tcevKlchan1114111emlcb

--E.-

Michael Plan

kowskl, pasl&lt;r, Marie Spires Sabbath School
Supt Sabbath ScOOolls at 2 p m on Saturday
wtth worship 8ei'Vtces foUDWina at 3 15 p m
RIJ'Il.AND FIRST BAPl1ST CHURCH Sister Harriett Warner, Supt Sunday School
9 !l a m • rnornlna wcnhJp. lO 45 a m
POMEROY FtRST BAPTIST David
Mann minister WWlam Snoutfer, Sunday
School supt Sunday School 9 J) a m

MorniDg worship 10 30 m
FIRST SOtrrHERN BAPfJSl' Pomeroy
Pike David Hunt pastor, RoA:er Turner
Sunday School Superintendent Sunday
school 9 30 a m morning worship 10 JJ:
evening Wtt'Ship, 7 :0 p m Midweel pra yer

..-tng7llpm
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH. Old
Dexter Rd , Dexter Paster Woody CaU Jr
Paster Sunday School 10 a m Sunday
evening service 7 p m Thursday evening
sevice 7 p m
FA1111 TABERNACLE CHURCH BaUey
Run Road, Rev Emmett Rawson pastcr
Handlfo,' Durm supt SUnday school 10 a m
Sunday evening service 7 :JJ p m Bible
teachJng, 7 30 p m Thursday
SYRACUSE MISSION Cherry St • Syra
cuse Services, 10 a m Sunday Eventng
services Sunday and Wednesday, 7 p m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRIS11AN UNION Lawrence Manley
pastCI' Mrs Russell Young Sunday School
Supt &amp;mday School 9 ll a m Evening
WU'Shlp7 J&gt;pm Wednesdayprayermeetlng
7 :II p.m

MI' MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, Racine
- Rev James Sattertleld JliiSIOr Morning

YPE

Sunday sc)X)o) 9 15 a m , Da.n White Sunday
~hool aupt John Reibel, Sr ust supt
MorniDg Worship 10 ~ am Youth meeting
7 Jl p m Wednelday Including wee t&lt;U
eagB" beaVI!'I"S, Junior astroanutl and junior
andll!lllorblgh BYF choir practiceS l&gt;p m
Wedneoday; prayer o.-tng and Bible study
Wedneoday, 7 30 p m.
CEURCH OF CHRIST, Mlddleport !lib and
Main, Bob Meltul, rnlnlster AI 11artooo1

IIIIIOdate mJUter. Mike Gerlach. Sunday
Scloool Su~t Bible School, 9 00
a m , mmotng wonhlp 10 00 a m OYenlng
wonhlp 7 p m. Wedaeoday Bible Study and
)'llllth tll'OUP meetiJop 7 p m
MIDDLEPORTCHURCHOFTIIENAZA
RENE, Co-puton Rev Clw1to Coyle and
Rev NIUIC)' Coyle BID Wbtte Sunday • • Sunday oclK&gt;ol, 9:30 a m ITICW1IIng
wonhlp 10 l) • m. Sunday ......,U.Uc
meello!&amp;. 7 p.m """""' meeting Wedaelday 7
pm.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY Rev Wanda Johnson
"

PRESBYTERIAN

Wtnlolp Service 9 a m Clourch Sd1ool 10 oo
am.
MIDDLEPORT
PRESBYTERIAN
Clourdl So:loool, 9 a m Momtne ...motp.
IIJ:lli llble 9lud)l ~ . 10 am Btblo
otudy, Tlourloloy, 7:30p.m
SYRACU!IE FIRS!' IJNITED PRESBY
1'ERL\N C1ourdl. Clnftll SclK&gt;oi,ID: 15 a m.,
lllllnlllw - - U:3l • m. lltblo 9ludy
~:..!. un.. and Iilii&gt;
•'RinWi\) ~p.~ GOO, Jololl EftDI llooDolly octooat, 10 • m.
!lullolay ....., n Lm., Chlldron'• cloo1rc'.
11 ...... llo-.y ....... 7 p m.,

ASBURY {Syracuse ) -Worship 11 am
Church SChool 9 45 a m Charge Bible
Study Wednesday 7 :lJ p m UMW flrst
Tuesday 7 30 p m Cbolr Rehearsal Wed
nesday 6 .J&gt; p m UMW fourth Sunday 6 :II

p m (Nelson )
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m Church
School 10 a m. Bible Study Tuesday 7 30
p m UMW, First Monday 7 Xl p m.,
UMYF Sunday, 6 p m. Cho!.!" rehearsal 6 30
p m Wednesday (RothPmfchl

F l.A1WOODS - Church School 10 a m
Worship 11 am Bible Study, Thursday 7
p m UMYF Sunday 6 p m (Rothem!ch)
FORE)T RUN - Worship. 9 a m Church
School,10 a m Choir Practice Tuesday 6 :1)
pm
UMW t1rst Tuesday 7 Xl p m
(Nelson)
HEATI! (Mlddleporl ) - Church SchOOl
9 :J) a m Worship, 10 l&gt; a m , Bible Study
TUesday 10 a m UMW second Monday
7 30 p m UMM third Monday 7 :1&gt; p m

(Roblnsoot

MINERSVILLE - Worship Service, 10
Church School 11 a m UMW thlni
Wednesday 1 p m Cholr practice Monday
7 ll p m !Nelson I
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service, 9
a m , Church School 11 a m UMW &amp;eCOnd
Tuesday, 7 ~p m, UMYFiastTuesday 7 :J'J
p m (Rubenldngl
POMEROY - Church School 9 1 ~ a m
Wonhip service, 10 :J1 a m Cholr rehearsal
Wednesday 7 30 p m , UMW second 1\res
d ay 7 30 p m
UMYF. Sunday 6
p m IC&lt;rblttl
ROCK SPRINGS - Church School 9 15
a m , Worship 10 a m
Bible Study
Wednesday, 7 :J) p m UMYF (Seniors)
Sunday, 6 p m
(Junkin) every other

am

Sunday 6 p m (Rothemlch )
RUTLAND - Church School 9 t5 a m ,
Wonhlp lO 30am UMW(EveningClrele )
second Wednesday 7 :Jl p m UMW second
Thu-Y 1 p.m (Rubenl&lt;lna l

SALEM CENTER -

Chw-ch School 10

a m Wonhlp, 9 45 a m ( Rubenklng)
SNOWVll.LE Worship 8 30 a m
Church School 10 a m (Rubenldng l

SOIJTIIERN CLU!ft'm
M Oark
Rev
Rev Paul McG.n

'am•

Rev OrYille
- S:ohool 9 a m
APPI.E GROVE
- Chun:h

Worship. JO a m

(flrst and third Sundays),

UMW second Tue!day 7 Jl p m Prayer
meeting Wednesday, 7 p.m (Clark)
BETHANY - Wonhip, 9 a m Church
Sctooat, 10 am Btble Study Wedneoday. 10
a m., Dorcas Women s FeUow.!ihip Wednes-day,

!Ia m

iMcGulre)

Church Sc~9 ll a m
Wonbip, lD 45 a m (Second and Fourth
Sundays) Fellowship dlnne£ lh Sutton
lhlrd Till-y 6 3l p m (McGuire)
EAST LETART - Chun:h S:ohool, 9 a m ,
Worolllp 10 a.m 1"""'1111 and taun1o Sundays
UMW,Itnl Theotlay, 7 Jl p.m (Clark)
LETART FALLS - Wonhlp 9 am ,
Clourch Scloool 10 am (Clark)
MORNING STAR - Worship 9 45 a m
CARMEL -

Chureh SChool, lO ~ a m

Bible Study

TIIW'Oday, 7 30 p m !Whltel
MORSE CIL\PEL - Cllurch Sdlool, ~ 30
am., WonhlD, n am (White)
POR'I'IANIJ - Chun:h School, 6 !I p m ,
Won~ 7 ll p m , UMYF Wecllatlay 7 30
p.m. tMcGtdftI
RACINE WESLEYAN- ChuretoScloool, W
a m Wonhlp, U LID., UMW, fourth
7 I) p.m., - · · """""' -~
w~. 1 ,..m.,(Cla&lt;fll
•
.. ,
Sl1ITON - Clnan!h · 9ctooat, 9 !I am,
. - . Wlll'llolp, 10:6! Lon. (ltnl and third

-y

Souodvll
- -p.m.(~
- cannot,
tlolrd 'I1IInolo)o,lk3l

-·l

KENO CIRJRCII fiT

9oniD, Sui*
• m. every 1IL'ft!IL

r

CIIRIST, OIM!r

!loaooloql -

or

CHRISf Duane Wa rden minister B lb l~
cl ass 9 ll a m morning wors hip 10 30
a m even ing worship 6 ll p m Wednesdav
Bible s tudy 6 .J) p m
NEW S11VERSVILLE COMMUNITY
CHURCH Sunday School ~rvlce 9 45 a m
Wors hip service 10: l) a m
Evangellstlc
Pra~e1
Service 7 30 p m Wednesday
meeting 7 :Jl p m Thursday
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy
Ha.n1sonvtll e Rd Robert Purtell minister
Steve Stanley Sunday school sup ! Sunday
school 9: :Kl a m worship service 10 30 a m
Evening wors tup Sunday 7 p n'r and
Wednesday 7 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Plne
Grove The Rev Wtlllam Mlddleswarth
Pastor Church services 9: :II a m Sunday
Sch00110 30 a m
BRADBUR Y CHURCH OF CHR IST Paul
P ratt pastor Sunday school 9 :ll a m Larry
Haynes S S Supt , morning w orship 10 ll

am
RACINE CH URCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Thom as H Collier pas tor Martha

Rev Andrew Kube""""

SEVENTH DAY ADVENTISI' Mulbero)&gt;

7 30 p m
BEARWAL.L.OW RIDGE CHURCH

meetlnR

LONG OOITOM - Church School 9 J)
a m Worship 7 p m Bible Study Wednm
day 7 00 p m , UMYF, Wednesday 6 p m

Sundays each month worship services at 7 30

p m Wednesday evenings at 7 .:11 p m
Prayer and Blb~ Study

So- Johnooo

ALFRED - Church School 9 :J) a m
Worship, 11 a m UMYF 6 :ll p m UMW
Third Tuesday, 7 JJ p m Community flrsl
Sunday (Archer )
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m ChW"Ch
School10 a m , Bible Study Thursday 7 p m
UMW tlrst ThuMay, 1 p m Communion
ttrst Sunday (Archer )
JOPPA - Worship 9 J) am Church
School 10 3l a m Bible Study Wednesday
7 ll pm (Johnson)

GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
PreaC'hlng 9 .Jl a m
first and second
Sundays of each month third and fourth

dln!ct&lt;r

Jo&gt;

G.-ocenes Genera I Merchandt s e
Rac:1ne 949 25SO

9 ll a m

Jolulsan

Attend Church
this Sunday

UNITED MI\TJIODIBT CHURCII

Main St NeU Proudfoot pastor Bible school

Heights Road, Pomeroy

Sales and
Servtee

B d l Br own Own e r
P hOn e ( 614 ) 74? ""7'1

1---~--------..:.,..;__~

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E

Bible Study and Prayer meeting open to
public

,,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

J Wm

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

6 p m, mid week service Wednesday 7 p m

IIARRillONVILLE

11

s~Mav

POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA
RENE Corner Union and Mulberl)' Rev
'Jlhomas Glen MCCJung pastor Clyde Hend
erson S S Supt Sunday School 9 .:11 a m
morning worship 10:30 a m evening service

educattoa.

Middleport ~
Phone 9~2·34BO '.. .__.'1,'.;1.

Sechonal

7 1J F. Maon
9" 51JO Pomeroy

TRINIT'i CHURCH Rev W H Perrin,
pastor Debbie Buck Sunday School s upt
Church School 9 15 am worship service
10 30 am Choir rehearsal Tuesday 7 l)
P m. under directiOn of Allee Nease

Harold

::.O!B

SERVICE

~.

1100 E Mam

FURNI~!e~~ROWAR:tI

-

tn

rl•-

"""''""" Ml
~ s.r..c.
P 0 Boo I!O:l• Cn.rtln.....,.. Y• 2290&amp;

MARK V STORE

Modular

Pomeroy, Ohto

YOU TO TRY
OUR NEW

ENJOY THE GREAT FOOD
AND FINE ATMOSPHERE
TUESDAY - SATURDAY
5 P.M. - 10 P.M.

' "Mi~~ Ameriea49~

Ph 992 2101

Ches ter

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK SIORE
"Milt St

I II I

John F FUitl Mgr

1

MIDDLEPORT FIRSI' BAPI'IST, Corner
st.lh and Palme&lt;, lloe Rev Mark McClung

MENU.

\\
(1

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

1) \

Ray R1ggs
Ph 985 4100

wonhlp945am Sunday School10: 45am
eveniDg wa-ship 7 p.m Tuesday, 7 JJ p m
Ia- prayer meet1Jo8 Wednesday 7 ll p m

SPECIALTIES

~~~

RIGGS liSFD CARS, INC.

WE WE··CQME
L

FROM OUR
NEW NIGHT

VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD &amp; SOFT
CONTACT LENSES
Insurance and Medtcal
Cards Accepted

The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

11:3)

Wolfe Chairman ot the Board of Christian
Life Sunday School 9 30 a m
momlng
worship 10 30a m Sundave.. enlngwors hJp
7 ll p m P raye r meeting Wednesday 7 lJ

pm
RACIN E FI RST BAPTIST Don L Walker
Pastor Robert Smith Sunday School sup!
Sunday School 9 30 a m mor ning worship
10 40 a m Sunday cvenln~a: w orshi p 7 ~
p m Wednesday evening Bible study 7 ~

om

DANVD..LE WESLEY AN Sunday School,
9 :ll a m morning worship 10 45 a m youth
service 6 45 p m evening worshJp, 7 :ll
p m , Wednesday 7 :f) p m Prayer and

Praise
OANVILI.E HOLINESS CHURCH located
on Route :r.5 between Vinton and Langsville
Rev Ben Watts, pastor Sunday Sctxrol 9 :J)
am Bobby Lambert S S Supt. Morning
Worship lD 30 am , Children s HaW)' Hour
6 45 p m Prayer &amp; Bible Study 7 .lJ p m
Missionary meeting t1rst Wednesday ci each
month, 7 ll p m For Information call

-

SILVER RUN BAPriST Bill U ltle
poster. Steve Ultle. S S Supt Sunday sclooot
10 a m m&lt;rnlng worshJp 11 a m Sunday
evening WCI'shlp 7 .:11 p m Prayer m eeting
and Bible study Thursday, 7 30 p m, youth
meettngWettnestlayat 7 pm

CIIRlSTIAN FEL.L.DWSHIP CHURCH 3113
N 2nd Ave, Mlddleporo Sunday School 10
a m Sunday and Wednesday Evening
Services 7 .Il p m
CHESI'ER CHURCH OF GOD Rev R E
Rotml!oo, pastor Sunday !IChool, 9 XI a m
WCI'Shlp !B'Vtce, 11 a m , evening service 7
p m youth servtce, WeGiesday 7 p m
l.ANGSVILI.E CliRIS'I1AN CHURCH
Roben E Musaer paste.- Sunday school 9 .:11
a m

Paul Muuer supt

morn1ng wcrshlp

lO 00 a m Sunday ~ serVIce 7 p m
mid-- !lei'Vice W - y 7 p m
SYRACUSE CHUHCII OF THE NAZA
RENE -

Rev

Jams B Kittle, pastor

Sherman C\mdlff, tuperintendenl Sunday
School 9 30 a m. Mono1ng Worship 10 ll
a m. Evan~Jisttc len1ce 6 p m Prayer and
praise Wednesday 7 p m :youth meeting 7
p.m
EDEN UNITED BRE:l'IIREN IN CHRIST
Eklen R Blake pastoc Sunday School 10
a m , Robert Reed, supt , Morning sermoo,
11 a m. Sunday nilbt fll!I'VIce5, Cbrtstlan
Endeav&lt;l' 1 lJ p m • Song lei"'Vlce, 8 p m
Preaching,
ll p m Mld--k Prayer
~. Wedneoday, 7 p m, Alvta Reed lay
leadB'
HEMLOCK GROVE CIIRISTIAN, Roger

a

Watsm, putor; C'renlm Pratt, Sunday
School supt Mornlool worship, 9: 30 a m
Sunday scbool 10 XI a m evening service

7 :l) p.m
MI' UNION BAPTIST, Rev Tom Dooley
Joe Sa)'l1' Soontlay School Superboo.ndenl
Sunday IChcd, 9 45 a m eoventng wmhlp
7 ll p m Prayer onoeJ1n&amp; 7 !I p m
Wedneodooy
TUPPERS PLAINS CHU RCH OF
CHRIST Vbooeort C Waoen, m mlnloter
llermall Black oouporttotetodent Sunday
SchOol 9: lJ a m ewnq service, 7 p m
Wecllatlay Btblo Sctooat, 7 p m
Clll1RCH OF THE NAZA
lla'berl GraO!, pout« Fran!&lt;
e, oupt Sunday School 9 30 a m Wo11hlp
IS'Vice, U a m. and 7 :. p m Prayer
meeting, Wedaelday 7 30 p m
l.AUREL CLIFF F!lEE METHODIST

CII1JROI Rev Robert MWer pouoor Lloyd
Wrtglo~ Director ~ Chrtlttan Education
Sunday Scloool 9 3la m., Morltlng Wtnhl p,
10 Jl a m , Choir Pract ice, Sunday 6 l)
p m. EvenlngWtnlolp, 7 llp.m Wedueoday
Prayer and Bible Sludy, 7 30 p.m.
DEXTER CHIJRCII OF CHRIST Ooorleo

R.-.. Sr noJDiotar. Rlclo Maviiobei IUpt
looi!oloY oclxoool. t.ll o.m.: wanltlp aevtoe,
10:*&gt; un. Bible Sludy
7 3l p.m.
REORGANIZED

,_,Y
CII1JROI OF JESUS

CHRIST OF LATfER DAY SAINTS

Po rtland Ra cin e Road Wlllla m Roush pas
tor Linda Evans church schOOl dlreetor
c hurch school 9 30 a m morning worship
Wednesday even ing pr ayer
10 30 a m

servk.-es 7 30 p m
BETHLE HE M BAPTIST

Re\ Earl
Sh uler pasto r Worstllp service 9 .l) a m
Su nday school 10 ll a m Bible Study and
prayer servtce Thursda y 7 Xl p m
CARLETON INTE RDENOMI NATIONAL
CHURCH Kingsbury Road Rev David
Curfman pastor Sunday school 9 ~ a m
Ralph Carl superintendent evenlng wor ship
7 :ll p m Prayer meeting Wednesda y 7 JJ
pm

LONG BOTIOM CHRISTlAN Ken Keifer
pastor Wallace Dame¥-ood Sunday School
Supt Worshi p servlce at 9a m Bi bleSchooll O
am
HY SELLRU N HOLINESSCHURCH Rev
Thereon Durham p as tor Sunday School at
9 :U a m
Momlng wor ship at 111 .'J) a m
Sunday evening service a t 7 ll p m
Thursday servtces a t 7 XI p m
FR EEDOM GOSPEL MISSION a t Bakt
Knob located on Count) Road 31 Rev
Lawren ce G luesencamp pastor Rev Roger
WOlford asslstant pas tor Preaching servt
ces Sunday 7 30 p m Prayer m eeting
Wednesday 7 30 p m Gary G rtfflth leader
Youth groups Sunday evening 6 30 p m with
RogPr and VIolet Willford as leaders
Communion service first Sund ay each month
WHITE'S CHAPEL Coolville RD Rev
Roy Deeter past&lt;r Sunday sc00ol9 ~a m
w or ship serv1re 10 :JJ a m Bible s tudy and
prayer service Wednesday 7 :Kl p m

RlJTI.AND CHURCH OF CHRIST Dan
Monlux pas tor BUI Nicholson Sunday
school. s upt Sunday ~hool 9 :(! a m
morning worship and communktn 10 l:l a m

RlJTI.AND BIDLE METHODIST - Amos
Tillis pastor Sonny Hu dson supt Sunday
school 9 30 a m Morn ing wors hip 10 :Jl a m
Sunday evening service 7 00 Wednesday
evening service 7 00 p m WMPO Program
9 00 a m l'!ach Sunday m orning

RlJTI.AND CHURCH OF TH E NAZA
R ENE Rev Lloyd D Grimm, J r pastor
Sunday School 9 lJ a m wors hip service
10 30 a m young peoples servltf' 6 p m
Evan ~llstlc service 6 Xl p m Wednesday
serv~ 7 p m
MASON CHUR CH OF CHRIST Miller Sl
Mason W Va E ugene L Conger mlnlst('r
Su nday Bible Stud y 10 a m Worship 11 a m
and 7 p m Wednesday Bible Study vocal
music 7 p m
MASON ASSEMBlY OF GOD Dudding
Lane Mason W Va Rev Ronni e B Rose
Pastor Sund ay School 9 45 a m Morning
Worship 11 a m E\enlng Service 7 .JJ p m
Wednesday Wom e n s Minist ri es 9 a. m
(m eeting and pra yer ) Praye r and Bible
Study7 pm
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev WIIIJ&lt;tm
campbell pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m
James Hughes supt even ing service 7 JO
p m Wednesday evening prayer m eeting
7 ~p m Youthprayer serviceeachTuesd ay
F AIRVl E W BffiL E CHURCH Ll'tart W
V a Rt 1 Mark Irwin pastor Worship
services 9 30 a m Sunday Scl'Dol 11 a m
ev ening wtrshJp 7 lJ p m 1\lesday collage
prayer m eeting and Bible study 9 JO a m
Worship service Wednesday 7 30 p m

OUR SAVIOUR LIJI'HERAN CHURCH Walnut and Henry Sts Ravenswood W Va
The Rev Geor ge C Weirick pastor S und ay
School 9 JO a m Sunday worhslp 11 a m
CALVARY BIBLE CHUROI now loca ted
on Pom eroy Pike County ROad z; near
Fl atwoods Re"- Blackwood pastor Services
on Sunday at 10 30 a m and 7 JO p m wi th
Sunday schOol 9 ill am bibl e stud&gt;
Wednesday, 7 30 p m

FAITII F E LLOWSHIP CRUSAD E FOR
CHRIST- St Rt l18 Antiquity P M!or Reo.
F ranklin Dickens Sunday m orning 10 a m
Sunday evening 7 :JO p m Thursday everUng

7 :11p m
SITVERSVJLLE COMMUNITY BAPTlSf
CHURCH P astor Robert Byers Sunday
School 10 a m Worship Service 11 a m
Sunday evening service 7 :lJ p m Wednes
day evening service 7 :1} p m

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH
Inc - Paul St Mldollcport Rev 0 Dell
Manl ey pas tor Sunday School 9 :JJ a m
Morning worship 10 30 a m even ing wor
sh1p 7 .t:l p m Tuesd ay 12 XI p m Women s

prayer meet.lng, Prayer and praise service

Wednesday 'r: :It p m

RU'!LAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST, Elder Ja met~ Miller Bible
study, Wedneoday 7 ll p m Sunday School
10 a m Sunday n!aht service, 7 :KJ p m

POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS Han1smv1lle Road Earl F ields p astor
Helll)l Eblin, Jr Sunday SchOOl Su'" Sunday
School 9: l) a m Morning Worship 11 a m
Sunday evening service 7 .:11 p m , Prayer
Meeting Wedneaday, 7 Jl I'm

SYRACUSE FIRST CII1JROI OF GOD Joy Clark. pouttor: Worship service Sunday,

10 00 a m Sunday ~emol 11 a m worship
IE!I'\1ce, 7 30 ~ m Wednetday prayer meet

am Classes foe all ages .,_ Junlot C hurch
11 00 Morning Worship 11 00 A.dult Ctiolr
practlt'e 6 00 p m Sunrlav Young Peopl(' s
Children s Church a nd Adult Bible Study
Wednesday a! 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL -570Gra nt St
M ldd1 eport Sunday School 10 am m orning
worhslp 11 a m eveni ng worsWp 7 p m
\\ednesday evening Bibl e st ud ~ and pr ayer
m eeting 7 p m AftUla ted wllh Southern
Baptist Convr&gt;JHion

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST S(ate Route 124 and Cou nty Road 5 Mark
Seeve rs minis ter Sun daySchooiSupt Sh~vl"
Pi ckf'ns Sund av schoo l 9 3l a m m orni ng
worship 10 30 a m l'Venlng worship 7 p m
Wednesday worship 7 p m
JU BILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER Gror~(' s Creek Road Rev C J LemJey
pastor Pa ul Poa r Chu rc h School Su perln
tendem Church school 9 30 a m mornt n~a:
worshi p 10 30 a m eve ning service 7 p m
Bible Stu dy r Wednesday 7 00 p m Classes for
a ll ages
ST PA.Ul LUTHERAN CHURCH Cortl('r
ct Sycamore and Second Sts Pomeroy T hE&gt;
Rev Wllllam Middleswarth P astor Sunday
School at 9 45 a m and ChurC'h Services 11
pm
SACR ED HEART M sgr Anthony Gl an na
more Ph !1.!2 flOOR SatW"dny eve ning Mass
7 :xJ p m Sunday Mas!&gt; 8 a m and 10 a m
Conlessloll!l one- half how below each M ass

ceo Classes 11 a m Sunday
~ VIC1TIRY BAPTIST 525 N 2ncl St
Middie{Xlr l J am es E Keesee pastor Sundav
m orninj! wors hip 10 am evon lnR service 7
p m Wednesday cvrntng wors hip 7 p m
Visit ation Thu~day li 30 p m
TRINITY CHRISTIAN ASSEMB LY Cool
vOl e - Gilber t Spencer pastor Sunday
school 9 ~ a m mor ning service 11 a m
Sunday e\ errl ng service 7 l) p m mid w€'ek
pra}'('r service Wednesday 7 l) p m

MOUNT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Bus h pastor Max Folme r Sr

Lawrt&gt;llCf&gt;

SuJX&gt;rlnt endent Sunday School and m orni ng
worship 9 30 a m Sunday evening service 7
Youth mee11n!Z and Blblt' s tudy
pm
Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED FAlTH CHURCH - Rou te 7 on
Pomeroy bypass Rev Robert Smith Sr
pastor Rev J ames Cund lff a ssistant pastor
s unday School 9 30 a m morning wors hip
JO 30 a m
evening worship 7 ~ p m
Women s Fellowshi p Tuesdays 10 am
Wednesday nig ht pr aVE' r service 7 :11 p m
F AITH BAPrrST CHURCH Mason mt&gt;et
at U nited Steel Workers Union Hall R a ilroad
Street Mason Morning worship 9 30 a m
Sun day ScOOol 10 :JI a m Eveni ng Service 7
p m Prayer ma&gt;tlng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Midweek Bible Study Thu rsdav 7 D m

FOREST RUN BAPTIST - ~m. Nvll'
pastor Cornl'hl.ls Bunch s ujX'r\n
tcnpi:'nl Sundav schOOl 9 30 a m ~nd arid
fow1h Sundays worship s('rv1re .. lt 1 30 p m
M'T MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Mai n Sts Middleport Rev Cah tn Mi nn l~
pastor Mrs E:l\ ln Bumg ru dnct supt
Sunday sc hool 9 JO am
worship ~l)'IN'

Bord cn 1

l045a m
•
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIS'l
CHU RCH Raul £' 1 Shade Pas tOI Don Black
Affil ia ted with Southern Bap!L"&gt;I convcn!lon
Sundav school 1 :10 p m Sunda v worship
2 ll p m Thursda~ evening Bible study 7

pm
PENTECOSTA.L ASSEMBLY

Racine
Route 124 Willi am Hoback pa~tOI Sunda.v
school 10 a m Sunda\ eve ning Sf'rvlce "
p m Wednesday e\('nlng ser.rtre 7 p m
CARPEN't'l;R BAPTIST Don CJx&gt;adle
Supt Sunday School 9 ~ a m Mornl n ~
Worship IO 30 am Prave 1 Scr\ teo altern.tte
Sundays
M IDDLE PORT PENTF.COS'I AL Third
Ave th e He\ Clark Baket p&lt;Jstot Carl
Nottingham Sunday School Supt Sunday
Sc hoollOa m -classes for all ages Evening
services 6 p m Wednesda v Stud&gt; 7 JJ p m
You th services 7 30 p m Friday

ECCLESIA FELLO WSHIP 128 Mill SO
Middleport Pastor is Broth er chuck Mc Ph er
son Sunday School at 10 a m Services
Sunday evening at 7 p m and Wednesday at 7

pm
ANTIQUITY BAPTISf R.e\ Earl Shuler
pastor Sunday school 9 30 a m Church
service 7 p m
youth meeting 6 p m
Tuesday Bible Study 7 p m
FULL GOSP EL I IGHTHOUSE 3.1J45
Hil and Road Pomeroy Tom Kelly pastor
Danny Lam bert Sunday School Superintend
ent Sunday Morning service JO 00 a m
Sunday ev~ning S(&gt;rvire 7 :0 p m Services
Tuesday and Thunday evenlnw; at 7 :.') p m
\\ ORD OF FAI11i 93 MUI Sr Midd leport
Ri chard Stewart pastor Sunday mor ni ng
10 00: Sund ay evenlng 7 30 Tuesda~ morn
lng Bible Study 10 00 Wedne;day eveni ng
7 .)) Thursday morning video w1th Kenn eth
Copeland 10 00 Friday evening vid eo w1th
Ke nneth Copeland 7 JJ

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rev Glendon Stroud pas tm Sund ay
School 9 30 a m Worship Servl c~ 10 3f)
a m Youth Service Sundav 6 15 p m
Su nday evening service 7 00 p m Wcdnes
d ay Praver Meeting and Bible Study 7 OOp m

NEASE SE'T.I LEMEN1 CHURCH Do
nald R Kan Sr pastm Sunday a ft ernoon
services 2 30 Thursday evening scrvlt'('
7ll
F IRSTBA PTISTCHU RCH Mason W Va
Pastor Bill Murphy Su nday School 10 a m
Sunday evening serv1ce 7 ,J) p m Prayer
meeting and Bible St udy WedOC'Sday 7 30
p m Everyone welcom e
Rtm.AND FREE WILL BAPTIST Salem Sl Rev Pa ul Tay lor pastot Sun day
School 10 00 a m Sunday evening send~
7 XI p m, 'A edOC"Sday l'\(.&gt;n]ng prayer
meeting 7 30
$()11TH BE I HEL NEW I E:S1 A MEN'J'
CHURCH - Sli ver Rldge Duane Syden
s tricker pastor Sunday School 9 a m
church service 10 am Bible study Wednes
day 7 30 p m June-thru September 7 OOp m
October thru May Sunday evenln,l( fellow
s hip 7 00 p m June thru Septemrer 6 oo
p m October lhru May

An ailment called
By GEORGE W. CORNELL
AP Religion Writer
In classical Christian thought,
the woes of the world and of t he
people in it stern lrom a single
pervasive and underlylng condl
tlon - an aliment called ' sin"
That deep-rooted blight, with
all Its ramlflcatlons, my stery
and counter forees to It, Is tbe
focusforextens!Vedellheratlons,
starting at the Vatican Sept 29, of
representatives o! the world 's
Roman Catholic bishops
"The fundamental cause of all
divisions in men's souls and the ir
societies Is sin, or the evil that
man does freely before God,"
says a 49-page study document
for the sixth general Synod of
Bishops
It has met every three years
since being established in 1965 at
the close of the Second Vatican
Counmcll to advise the pope.
The onset o! sln, as portrayed
In the Book of Genesis, was when
the first man, Adam, sought to
setze!ullcontrol, be God himself,
decide his own rules
That egocentric, domineering
tmpolse - to regard self as the
utmost - Is seen at the core o!
every tyranny, every heedless
oppression, cruelty, conflict,
crime and greed, every selflsh
InjustiCe and deprlvatkln, both In
social systems and personal
strlte.

•
SID

While various explanations psycbologlcal, sociological, economic and political - are given
for the "hostilities, disorders and
unjust structures," the " root
cause Is slnfulness," says Card!
nal Joseph Bernardin of Chicago,
aU S delegate to the synod
E ncouragmg and he lpmg peo
ple to respond to It , he adds ts the
church' s mlssoon
But an obstacle to it cited by
Bernardin a nd by numerous
other church scholar s , as well a s
by some psychia trists, Is tha t
many people have los t any sense
of sin
As psychlatnst Karl Min nin
ger says in hiS book ' Whatever
Happened to Sin? " the term has
virtually dtsappeared, but he
says It rem ains a fact of the
human condition and must be
recognized to cope with It
He says reatflnnat!on of the
concept of "sin • a nd of personal
responsibility for It Is !he only
hopeful view smce It Implies
the posslbllty of repenting and
correcting wrongdoing
Pope John Paul II talking
earlier a bout the s ynod, said
reconclllatlon of humanity wtth
God necessitates r eviving a
greater "sense of God" and hls
commandments and standards
for life

•

�Page 8- The

Daily Sentinel

s

Seplember 23. 1983

Pomeroy -Middleport, Ohio

September 23, 1983

ii

Gas explosions cause 20 fires in Boston
BOSTON (AP) -

GAS EXPLOSION - A Hreftghter slln'eys the damage at Mama
Catlna's ReStaurant In East Boston Friday alter an explosion guUed the
property. The Incident was one of several In the area atenunlng from
gas line problems and leading to the evacuation of neighborhood
residents. (AP Laserphoto) .

Gas lines
ruptured, cau sing up to 20 fires.and
at least one explosion which
threatened homes In East Boston
today , sending pollee, firefigh ters
and ut ility worker s rushing from
location to location answering
emergency calls, officials said.
No Inj uries were reponed, and the
situation was under control by 6
a.m.. Deputy Fire Chief Joe
Houghton sa!d.
Houghton said the explosio n and
fires were apparently sparked whe n
a water m ain broke a nd hit a gas
regu lator, sending a s u rge of gas
through lines and causlngpilot lights
o n stoves to s u rge.
" P!lots llteraUy jum ped off the
s tove," he said.
" I 've never seen this happen
before," said Fire Chief George
Gravelese.
The first blast was reported
around 4 a. m . w he n an explosion
gutted a resta urant and nume rous
s m a ll fires we r e reported.
" It 's vecy serious because there
we re 15 or 20 different small fires
a nd large fires and they can occur
anyplace In East Boston, " Gravelese said.

from residents w ho sm elled gas or
saw small fires on their stoVeS
w here the gas was coming into
contact with pllot lights.
P ollee Isolated the . area, closing
tunnels, b r idges and roads connect·
ing it with Boston and surrounding
communities. East Boston, s ite of
Logan Inte rnatio nal Airpon, Is
separated from Bos to n by the
harbor. Airport operations, w hich
are a t a minimum in the e arly·
morning J:v:lurs, were not hampered.
Pollee cruised the s treets, b road·
casting w 8.rnings over loudspeakers

One d ispatcher said at about 4: 00
a.m . that fire crews were trying to
respond to at least 60 calls for help

Market report

-

Ohk&gt; 'V~ U '\lfJII.OCk Co.

Markel llep;ri

Prices are taken from the sale of Sept. 17.
Trends: Veal Calves S2 to 13.50 higher,
'feeder canle steady; CoWs ll to $1.50 Jow«.
Feeder Steers: Good and Choice 250 to XXI
lbs. 49-54.50; m to 400 lbs. 48-56; 400 to ::00 lhs.
48-55; ~ to 600 lbs 47-55. ~; 600 to 700 lbs
48.50-:'&gt;4.50: 700 to 8X) lbs. 45-51.50; !OJ and over
44-57

Feeder Helfer.;: Good a nd Choice 250 toJll
lbs 4046, D) to 400 lhs . ;Il-45; 400 to~ lbs
38-44: .m to 600 100 38.50-45.50; 1m to 700 lbs
37-46; 700 to 8ll Jbs. :t!-44; aKl and over
40-4!1.M.
Feeder Bulls: Good and Cboiee ~ to :m
lbs 47 53; .JX) to 400 JM 46-52Jil; 400 to 500 lbs
45-50; !00 to 810 lbs . 4347.50; Wl to 700 lbs
42 50-46: 700 to 8XJ Jbs 41-45; EOl and over

..

.

.

.

r~~~:~:::;:=:=:::::==:::::::=:~==i!r:===================~
OHIO VALLEY Plumb'"" II~AII~~~~~~~upplles
PERSONAUZED .
lkrd
POOLS
You Want a
Plumber
YDu Want H;m Good "
IEHCrRtc EEl SIWII Cl!AIIER
r ---IDIAI:,--

AIR CO NDITIONERS
RESIDENTIAl • COMMERCIAl
HEATING • PLUMBING

The Meigs County Health Department announces an Incre ase in
state montes until the end of
Septe mber tor the WIC Program as
well · as changes in some of Its
guide lines. All people who think
they may be eligible are e ncour·
aged to call the health depanment
a t 992-6626 before Friday , Sept. 00.
Yo u may be ellg!ble to receive WIC

39-44.511.
Holstein St~ and Bull53Xl to800 lbs. 36-40.
l;!ulls l ,OCO and up 43 5(}-48. , Canner-s and
Cutters Jl ~n.
Veal Calves choice and prlme l90 l o~ lbs.
511 . ~.

Baby Calves ,'f\-00

.Springer Cattle Dl OOwn

and Calves €ombinatlon 5a&gt; down
Top Hogs 21.0 to 230 lbs.-44.45.25.

Cows

Boars 28 5(1.Jl 50

Sows 400 lbs. a nd up :tl-42.25.
Ptgs by the H ead 11·29
F all Feeder Calt and Yearling Sales All
Breeds - Sept. ro, calf and yearling; Oct. 4,

!f·•,
1) You are a pregnant woman.
2) You arecurrentlynurs!ng y our

cal f: Oct 11, calf: Oct. 25, calf: Nov. 15, calf
and yearling Sale time, 7: !11 p.m . -

•• •. . ..... ...1511

3.. . . . ..... ... . . . ........

2 .•.......•

~ ·:::::: .

...........•.•••.... I,D!J
.1,268

.:: ::::::::::: :: ::::::·:::::::

~F;HH~~~m~

of tl"re OhrQ Ctimpany s Pur ~
Chase an.d berhg des crrbed as
follows Begrnnrn g at a pornt
Nonh 87 deg 13' West 1518
feet and North 2 deg 4 7 East
about 900 feet to a pornt ar th e
Mar retta Ro ad [old State Rout e
161) and North 15 deg 13'
West about 202 teet sard po rnt
of begmnrng berng marked by a
cont rete marker set sard po rnt
of begrnnrng also berng South ·
15 deg 13' East 3 13 4 feet
fr om a Sou 'heasterly Ohro
State Route 7 R/ W market at
437 ... 23 38 (R/W marker
found) th ence North 52 deg
44 East \50 feet to a conoete
marker set thence North 15
deg 13 Wes t 313 4 feet to a
concrete marker set on th e
Southeasterly R/ W line o f Ohro
State Route 7. then ce South 52
deg 44 West 150 feet along
th e Southeasterly R/ W lrne of
Ohro State Rout e 7 to a
hrghway R/ W concrete marker,
then ce South 15 deg 13 ' East
313 4 feet to the pornt of
begrnn rn g contarnr ng 1 0
acres more or less
REFERENCE DEED Vol 26 3
Page 829. Me1gs County Deed
Records
wrll be otlered lor sale October
1 1983. at 10 00 AM The
propP.rty wr ll be sold for the best
prrce obtainabl e at th e MergS.
County Court House Po meroy
Ohro The sale shall be con

OF VIOLA IRENE
CUNDIFF
Case No. 22240
Brd s on th e real property of
Vrola Irene Cund rff lo r.atP.d rn
Syr ac use Village and descr1bed
1n Volume 267 Page 5 of the
Mergs County Deed Records.
wrll be recerved at the oflrce of
Jennrfer L Sheets Anorn ey m
Law 2 11 East Broad Street
· Pomeroy. Ohro 4 5769 6 14 992 -2 151 .•untll 12.00 o ctock
noon on September 30 1983
Sard b1ds w1ll be rece1ved by the
adrnrnrstramx of the estate of
V1o la Irene Cund rff Dr anna
Lawson and sard admrnrstratm
. n'!serves tht! n'lht to re1 ect all
brds
•

Public Notice

duCted by the attorn eys for t he
part1es upon ttle terms se1 fonh
by s.;ud an6rneys
·
Persons w•sh•ng mformat•on
c once rn1ng the sa le of the
above descnbed rea l estate
should con tac t Fred W Crow Ul

(614) 99 2 6059 or Ronald A
Calhoun.l614) 446 -7890

(919 16 23 30. 41c
Public Notice

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS
COURT.
MEIGS COUI\ITY, OHIO
DONALD F. JOHNSON
PLAIIIITIFF
vs
GEI'lRGE MIUER. ET AL
DEFENDANTS
191 6 23 25 31c
NO. 83 CV 242
NOTICE BY
Public Notice
PUBUCATtON
TO
GEORGE MILLER. whose ad NOTICE OF
dress 1S unkn own rl deceased
SALE
the unknown herr s. devrsees
Th e lol low rng des c ribed
legatees admr nrstrato rs execuproperty located at 381 50 S R
tors and/or assrgns of George
No 7 Long Bottom Ohro
Mrller dec ,
belong rng to Joyc&amp; Reynolds
FLORENC E MILLER. whose
~ and Nelson
Rey nold s and
pddress rs unknown rf de·
-furt her descrrbed as follows
ceased !he un known he1rs
tO -Wit
devrsees legatees adminiStra Srtuate rn Chester Townshrp,
tors executors and /or assrg ns
Mergs County Ohro and ber ng
of Florence Mrl ler. dec .
, rn FractJon 19 Sectron 20
H W ROUSH whose ad , Town 40 North Ra nqe 12 West
dress IS unknown 11 decea sed
the unknown he1rs devrsces
1
~
legatees adm rnrst rators execu~
.I
tors and / or assrgns of H W.
Roush, dec
I
CLARA ROUSH whose last
I
known address 15 c/o Ilene
I
Stump 67 4 Tallk ron Dnve
I
Akron Ohm 44 300
I·
ILE NE STUMP whose last
kn ow n address rs 67 4 Tallkron
I
Drrve, Akron Ohro 44 300
~
ELIZABETH SMITH whose
I
addr ess rs unknown rf de
I
ceased the unknown hens.
I
devrsees legatees. adrnrnrst rators. executors anQ / or assrgns
I Wr ite your own ad and order by mall w1 th th rs
of
Elrzabeth Srnrth. dec .
I coupon ca nce l your ad by phone w hen you ijef
BlANCHE FERRELL whose
I resu lts Money not refu nda ble
adOress rs unknown rf deI
ceased th e unknow n he1rs
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
devrsees leg atees e~~.ecu t o r s ,
adm rnr stf alOrs and / or assrgns
.I
of Blanche Ferrell dec.
R B FERRELL whose ad ·
dress IS un kn own rf deceased
th e unknown he rrs devrsees
IP.gatees e)(ecutors admrnJstrators and / or assrgns of A B.
Ferrell. dec .
Pr in1 one word In eac h
ELLA M ROU SH whose
· space be low Each rn·
address rs unknown rt de·
I rr t ra l or grou p of li gur es
ceased the unkn own hcrrs
·I coun ts as a wo rd Coun r
dev1sees legatees execu10rs
1 na me and add ress or
adm!flrStrators and/or assr~ns
1 phon e num ber 1f used w o ,rd~
of Ella M Roush, dec ,
u' ll ge1 be1ter r esul1s
WALTER ROUSH. whose adI 1Yo
f yo u d escnbe tully,
dr ess •S unknown rf deceased
I Q!V£' pr ice The Sen tr ne! ro 15
th e unknown herrs dev1sees.
1' reser ves the rr ght to
legatees. executors admrnrs tr ac lass rf y, ed1 t or re tectr·::.o::.l:.
S
!CH s and / o r aSsrgns of Walter
;m y a d Your ad wi ll be Roush, dec
p ut 1n t he prope r lr~o~l~S.L_.e:~~~~~~j
EARL WELLS Oetrort Mrch!·
classi f1Ca11 on it yo u' ll gan whose address rs un These cash ra tes
check th e proper box
known tf dece'ased the un·
1nclude d iscount
be t ow
kn o wn herrs devr s ee s
legatees. executors. admrnrstra)Wanted
tors. and/or ass,gns of Eart
) For Sale
Wells. dec
)Annou ncemen1
II
DALLAS LISLE whose last
( J For Re nt
known add ess 1s 632 Rock·
IH
wood Avenue Prtt sburgh. Pa

--------·--------------

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash· for
Classifieds and
Savell I

i

·1 A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - -

1Phone---------1

'

i

---1--J.=-:..:..:t-_;_+--i

- -+-t:-7.±:--:-:+--1

+--+--+-_;_+--!

1~.

I

10

l.

11

3

11

4

IJ .

'

/4

6

15

7

'16

H

11 .

10
11
11

19

30 .

13
14

32
JJ .

15

]4

16

JS

•

I
I
I
I
I

· .The ob1ect

J-1:
,

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

15-:
~m

~ l!ll

259

Tanks

949 - 2293
Racine, OH .
8 t tfc

12 21}-nc

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- Doz•

15 a p c!'r"tltr on actron concern,1 ng
o 11 and gas nght s and to quret
trtle to ofl nnd ga s nghts
underlvrng the fo llowrng descnbed real estate
,
Srtuated rn Lebanon Town shrp, M ergs County Ohro
berng the sou th hall of 100
acre lo t 167 begrn nrng at the
southeast co rner of sa rd 100

acre lotN o 167 Town2Aange
11 rn Lebanon Town shrp rn the
Ohro Company s Purcha se
thence north ~ 7 3 cnarns to a

post the southeast corn er of
PM and N A Rrchev s one halt
of sard 100 acre Lot. thence
north 1 7 5 cha rn s by a hn e
passrng over the mrddle of the
run to a post th ence north 40
lmks to a post th ence west 7 9
charns to a post rn th e w es t llne

of sard lot. thence south 6
chams and 25 1h lrn ks to th e
southwest corner of sard lot

th ence east 80 chams to the
place of beg1nmng. conta1nmg
50 acres more or less
Re ference rs made to deed
recorded rn Volume 209 page
305 Me rgs County Dee d
Records.
The prayer of sard complar nt
rs that the above deswbed oil
and gas rr gh ts be partr!IOned
that the rn terests be set off or
ordered sold 1f 11 cannot be
partrtroned, and for allowance
of attorney fees and costs
herern
You are requrrea to answer
th e complarnt wr th.n twentyeight days after the las t put,l!catron of thiS notrce whrch wrll be
published once each week for
srJC consec utrve weeks Th e la~ t
publtcatron wrll be made on
Oct 14 198 3 and the twentyerght days for answer will
commence on that dme
In case of your fail ure to
answer o r ot herwr se rf:!spond
as requrred by the Oh10 Rules of
Crvrl -Procedure judgment by
def au lt wrll be rendered agarnst
you for the relief demand ed rn
the comola rnt
Larry E Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Mergs County Common
Pl eas Court
Dmed September 7 1983

IH

JI

-.-

Marl This Coupon with Remiltance
The Daily sentinel
111 eourt St.
Pomeroy, Oh . 45769

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

Public Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
, COURT.
PROBATE DIVISION.
MEIGS COUI\ITY. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF ADOP·
TION OF Ay Hotitdt Mont
NO 24237
- NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION TO. s_.e L.aumeo, last
known address: Dinrict of
Chokchai, Province of Nlkhon
Ratsime
You are hereby notr fred that
you have been named as
putatrve lather of AV Wongchang Thrs actron has been
ass1gned Case No 24237 rn
the Common Pleas Court
Juv en il e Drv rsron . Me rgs
County Pomeroy. Oh10 45 769
The ob1ect o f th e Petrtron rs to
adop t sard Ay Wongchang' by
the Pet1 t1oner and drvest1ng you
of all parental rrght
You are requrred to answer
11

Petrir~n wrth1n twefnv-~rg"ht

LEGAL NOTICE
days or 6bJCCt to the gran trng to
Sealed b1dS W!ll be rece1ved
the adoptron wrth.n twenty- by the Vrllage of Syracuse at
etght days after the last publrca- the offrce of the Clerk untrl 7 00
tton of th rs notrce wh1 Ch w1ll be PM Oct 18, 1983 lor furn ishpublrshed once each week for ing one frre truck and eQUipsr)( consecutrve weeks The las! ment accordrng to the specrflpubliCation wrll be made on the catlons on f1le rn sa1d offrce
28th day of October 1983 and Separate brds are sol1c•ted as
th e tw'en tv-e1g ht days wtll com- follows
mence on that date In case of
'Brd for Chassrs onty '
'Brd for F1re Apparatus only '
farture ro aMwer or otherwrse
'Brd for Optro nal equipment'
respond as req u1 red bv th e
'Brd lor complete Chassrs
Oh10 Rules of Crvrt Proced ure,
Jud gment by default wrll be and Frre Ap paratus"
'Brd fo r 1984 Chassrs only'
rendered agarnst you and th e
Petrtron granted for the rel1ef 1 Each bid s halt comarn the full
den1'andAd m the Petrtron dated name of each perso n f1 rm or
corporatron rnterested rn same
September 19 1983
Ro bert E. Buck. and shall be accompanred by a
Judge and Certr fr ed Check. or B1d Bond rn
Ex-Offrc•o Clerk the amount of 5 percent of the
19) 23 30 110) 7 14 21 28. total brd and be drawn 1n favor
of the Vr ll age of Syracuse Oil ro
61C
All btd envelopes shall be
plar nly marked Brd lor Cl'lassrs ·
Public Notice
or Brd for Frre Apparatus ..
To qet spec1f1Catrons contact
NOTICE
Notr ce rs he reby g1ven tha t
th e undersrgned rntends to
make applrcatron to the Common Pleas Court Pro bate
D1vrs1on ol Mergs County Oh1o
lor an order to change hts name
to Mark Anthony Hammonds
Sard apphca tron writ be by
petrtron 10 be fried rn sard Court
on or after the 24th day of
October 1983
Dated thrs 19th day of
Septem ber 1983.
Mark Anthony
Hammonds
By Carson Crow
Hrs Attorney
(9) 23. ltc

Help Wanted
Real Estate General

HELP

Drivers Education
Instructor
Experience preferred but
not necessaiY. Call for interview.
Call Gallipolis

Annt\
'&lt;I:P'

Phone
NEW LISTING - ~ 7 rm.
house, central air and heat

PART-TIME HELP IN MIDDLEPORT
NEEDED AT ONCE.
RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY
GOOD PAY
CONTACT 992-2156

NEW LISTING -

Th~

8 rm.

house has the room for yoo . 5

bedroo~ bath, shower in the
full basement and level lot near
Card1nal lor $38,000

NEW LISTING - lincoln Hts ,
6 rm. home w~h bath, stove,

refrigeratiJ, Micro-wave, car-

peting v1nyl sid1ng, fumaoe,
bud~et $58.00, and off street
par~ ng

MINERSVILLE - 414 acres
with a cave. 7 rms., bath, 3
bedrooms, furan ce, wood
burner, full basement and Jg
carport. $28,000.

STARTING AT

$1295
Good

Selection

GOLD

Of

SEAL

CONGOI.EUM

INSTALLED
WITH PAD
ENKOUN
$13 .95
Sq. Yd. Installed
ANSO IV NYLON
S15 .9S
. Vd. Installed

.RUBBER-BACK TWEED .
$399 ~A~RRY
I ROU ONLY IN BROWN

RACINE - ~ 10 rm home
with new bat~ 6 bedrooms,
lots of remodeltn&amp; and a
woodworking shop about
24x42. Will sell very

reasonabl•
RACINE Furnished 3
bedroom one floor horna Nrce
bat~ car~ng I&amp;_ eat-in

kilchen, on level lot Ready to
move

into

$27,500.

immediately.

MIDDLEPORT - 7 rm. brick
with foyer, Jg new kitchen with
stove &amp; re!rieerator, gas
furnace, carpeting and 2
porches Askilg $45,000.

FIIOIITAGE - BeauJi.
full,OOO It ohlmost level lind
RIVER

Ideal lor tam)leiS. drilled well
a 3 bedroom home. All lor

and

only $38.500.

992-2259

area On~ $36,000.00.

1-(6 Hl -992 -3325

carpetiRg bat~ modem k~­
chen, full basement witll
garag~ I~ front )XIth overlook·
1ng the rNer. As~ng $34,000

CARRIER WANTED

POMEROY,O . .
NEW LISTING PRICE
REDUCED - A real ~ neat 3
bedroom ranch house with
new carpellng throoghout
~uminum sidrn&amp; attachoo
garag• BO'xlOO' lot Rutland

WANTED

f9)9 , 16 23.30i10)7 . 14,61C

15228

WI LLIAM ROUSH whose
addresS rs unknown. rf deceased the unk nown he1 rs
devrsees. leg atees. adm tnJstramrs executors and / or assrgns .
of Wdlram Roush, dec .
ALMA ROUSH whose address rs unknown . rf deceased
th e unknown herrs dev1sees
legatP.es. administra tors execu tors and /or assrgns of Alma
Rous h dec.
EDNA ROUSH. whose ad dr ess rs unknown rf deceased
th e unknown he1rs dev1sees.
legatees admm1s1rators execu tors and /or assrgns of Clyde
Rous h. dec.
··
You are hereby notrfred that
you have been named defendan ts 1n a legal actro n entitled
Donald F Johnson. plalntrff vs
George Mrller et al. defendants.
i h1s actron has been ass1gned
Case No 83-VC-242 and rs
pendrng 1n the Com mon Pleas
court of Metgs County Oh1o,
Pomeroy Oh10 45769

remember that one
from the lastshow "

8-29- 1 mo

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS

AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Chester, Ohio
Ph . 985- 4269
If No Answer, Call 985-4382
Oewayne Williams
&amp;: Sconie Smith
All Makes and Models
Antenn1 Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Available

9-15 I mo pel

Certainteed

Vinyl Replacement
·. · Windows ·

- Dump Trucks
- Lo-Boy

$250

As Low As
Each
"Free Estimates"
Also Blown Insulation

- Trencher
- Wita'

- Sewer

NI.W LISTING - 21ami~ unit
2 sill)' house, large lot,
downstairs rented at prese nt.
Want $8:000.00.
NEW LISTING - .7 acre on a
hill houso ;;n.\.t)lded area &amp;
nreds sc. ;,V .,.. ..... Must be

seen $9.~00 00.

NEW LISTING - Beautilul 12
acre bu1ld1ng sde 1n the country
- 011 a paved road and much
~entia), recla11ned spnn&amp;
could have gas. Call aoout th~
at $7,000 00.
NI.W LISTING Newer
modular, n&lt;:e lev~ let in
Middleport. Wood bumiog
fireplace, porch &amp; deck areas,
beautiful place. Owners must
sacrifice. $39,500.00
NEW LISTING - $500.00
down, 13% rnterest up to 3(J
ye...s to pay, $282.08 P &amp;Iper
m011th for thiS 5 room home '"
a good neoghixlrflood rn
Mrddlepolt Gara~ fenced
yard and other features

$26,000.00.
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER 1\ acre lot near llliin with
repmable home Want

$12,900.00.

.

Syracuse· VtllaQ"e· t:J all

&amp; Labor

Malarial

- Backhoes

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice
the

S&amp;W TV

•Excavating
•Ponds
,
•septic
• Hauling

Route 1
long Bottom, 0". 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

PHONE 992-2156

of the ~ompiBtni

Kitchen

•LIME~TONE

•WATER , GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS. RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK
IIOIID£0 &amp; tMJIIK GUARANT!£D
PHONE JIM CLIFFORD

992-7201

3-lrt&lt;

Jess -than one year old baby.

.

Public Notice

C. L.

CONTRACTING
RECLAMATION

Barns.

iFor::: :... :.::::::::::
:::::::: :}: :JJ:7~
additional famUy member
each

- Septic Systems
LARGE OR SMALL JOSS

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

PH . 992·2478

PH . 992-2772
9 ~ I mo

8-18·1 ""pd.

.

$39,900.00.
• R£ALTORS
Henry E. Clellnd. Jr.
Gil 992-6191

.leln TruS1111 94!1-2660
Dottie Tunw 992·5692
Jo Hill 985-4416

Office 992-2259

AlB

RADIATOR

ARROW FLASHING
SIGNS
FOR SALE OR RENT
6" a. 8"
Replacement Letters
JOHN'S AUTO SALES
We sell qualily used cars.

SERVICE ·

We can repair and

re-

core radiators and bee·
tar

corao. We can 11110

acid boll and rod out ra-

dilltonl. We 11110
GIS Tanks.

1-61~7~ .

PUBLIC AUCTION
Fridty 7PM Everv Sunday
1PM. Loceted 3 YI mlln E. of
Jtckaon on Old Rt, 36 tt
1 8791&gt; Clorv Rd. 35 Auc·
tlon Hou11 . Uted furniture,
lott of new &amp; uud mlacalleneous merchandlaa. Consignment• • deelert wei·
Coma . Cath paid
immedlatlay for items IOid.
Auctioneer R.J .(Jiml Herleu, 614· 288· 1608.
Auction avery Fri. night at
the Hartford Comlf\Unlty
Center. Truckload• of new
marchandlte every week .
Consigments of new end
uHd merchandise alwayt
welcome. Richard Reynold a
Auctioneer. 276·3089.
AUCTION every Saturday
night, 6 p .m . Mt. Alto
A.uction Barn . t:ontlgn ments ttken every SatUrday
1 :00 till sa fa time. Emma
Bell Auctioneer, 304· 428·
8177.

Glllipd$

7777

CHESTER

JEWELL'S

AUTO
PARTS

PLUMBING and
HEATING
•Experienced

•Reasonable

AND

(9)23 30 (10 17 31c

•Work Guaranteed
JOB - BIG OR SMALL

REPAIR

54 Misc. Merchandise

992·6030
Minersville, OH.

CHESTER, OH.

8119/1 1110 pd.

9·12-t mo

Special Discount
Prices At
POMEROY
LANDMARK

Pomeroy landmark

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

- Dozers

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE , OHIO

- Backhoes
- Dump Trucks
- Lo- Boy

We. pay cash for late model
d11n uaed oart.
Jim Mink Chev.· Oidt Inc .
Bill Oene Johnton
446-3872

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

3

Ar\nouncert)ents

New Holllnd. Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer

- Septic Systems
LARGE

FOR SALE
Two Bedroom Home

1624 Lincoln Hgts.
Shirley Guinther

At

992-3593

or

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

SMALl JOBS

PH . 992 -2478

9-22·1

I 3-tfc

pd

1110

H. L.

Writesel

ROOFING

CUSTOM PRINT

All types of roof wortt, new

or

repair, cutters and
tlarllnspouts. gutter cleaning and painting, storm

CUSIOII WOIIK - AIR BRUSH

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

es- ·

Call for free siding
timates, 949-2801 or

949-2860.

No Sunday Calls

" CUT OUT
FOR FUTUR! USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes
•W•Ihert •DIIIIw.thert
Reng11

•RefriSJirltort
•Dryen •Ff'MUrt
PARTS ond SERVICE
4 5-ttt

12'116'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'xt)' Up
' to 24'x36'
lnsulatd Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine,

Oh.

' .l . Ph.-614-843·~!9.1
to 6-tlc

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes Remodtlina.

Extensive

•Custom Pole Bldgs .
&amp; Gara1es
•Roofing Work
&lt;Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidincs
' 15 Years Experience

Tree trimmrng and removal
Free lltimatea. 814 ·992·
8040 ar 614-949-2129.
Opening for an elderly mtn
or woman in my private
home. Tuppers Plains. Call
814-867-8329 .
I' ll babysit while you go to
football game or anytime
day or evening. 814 -992·
6630.

£xperienced baby sitting
C:tonein my home . 614·9492779.
Experienced Mother w't'r
babysit in my home Phone
304- 675-~2~8 .
.
• J~ ~ "
btbytit in my Mother
home Phone
Experienced
will
304 675 3288
•
•
·
13

thaerts, pertill . Cell Bal·
loon• e. Ca., 448-4313.
Lett chtnce to m1ke your
re1ervatlon1 fOJ the Holy
Land end Egypt tour. D&amp;·
parting November 1tt. with
tour Hott • Ho1te11. lrt &amp;.
Irene Wellmtn. Save up to
8183 . Celt 448·4313 .
Shan curly perm . 812.00 a.
t1&amp; .00 . Mon .. Tuet ., Wed.
only. 614·949-2666 . Aline
Weaver' I Beauty Shop, 6th
&amp; Vine St ." Rtlcne, Oh.

' Call:

949-22~

J.24 lie

or 949-3091; 10 , ,

THE
TROPHY
KING

STRIP
COAL

$3()00

Trophy

Manufacturers
. PLAQUES
ENGRAVING

ATON

Washers, Dryers

Ra..
Refrigerators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO

DO .
SERVICE CALLS

742-2352

PM. 992-2280
~

USED
APPLIANCES

Route

23-t!c

4, Pomeroy

9. 12Tf

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
' ' I •andren •••
and ....... ~uauclc work

--ng

_........... ....

olochkal-'&lt;
(Fr.. Estlmatn)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992· 6215 or 992· 7314
Pom1roy, Ohio

1

For all your wiring
need a; fumace1 re· '
pair Hrvice and in·
atalletlon.
R•idential
8t Commercial
Call 742·31 91i

Giveaway

tMdtfli~•' 3 melti. 2 female.
CAII614·3B8· 9911 or814·
388·9809 .

GAF 380 copier good apartting condition. roll fed
requlret lerge
Coll448·
0303.floor

tpace.

Kitlant . Cell 814 - 367 0681 .
Puppies to giveaway. Ctll
44~·2194 .

1 mole 10 mo. old dog. To
good home, hea ahota. Cell
448·86BO.
4 white kitten• with blue
eyat, 3 female &amp;. 1 mala.
Coli 448· 9461.
Adult mtla Cockepoo to
good home. After 3 p .m . cell
81 4· 985-4488 .

2Y.! yeer old fem•le cat, long
hlllr Urbby color. to • nice
home. Vary friendly. 614742-2851.
Reglatered Dtlmation 3 yetrt old . Mtle . Good guard
clag . Witt bHo . 614· 985·
4488 .

11 -26-t!c

G&amp;W Plastics
· and Supply
•water Pipe
•Gas Pipe
•Regulators
•fiHings
•orips
Pbone:
looklonco : 915·3137
Wareheuto: 915·3509

9-15·1 me. pd

Very gentle houae cat . Val·
low tiger. To cat lover.
114-981 ·4488 .
Plipp)H. 814·992·7880.
kltWno, 2 block. 2 whlto. 1
otrlpo. 814-988-4120.

R. E. HOME

ALUMINUM SIDING
•luua.tlon
•Storm Dooro

•Dump Trucli

ViNYL &amp;

•ltann

Win-•

•Replacement Windows
Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES

•N-

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

9-9JIM

Att block lomolo kilt.,, 4
months old . 614 · 992·
2389 .
ONE cot, two
304-871·3 1 ae.

phone

ToOood Homo - lpupploo,
'----"""ii;.Jo.lllllo.JIIo..llfour mtlet, two femt~lat.
mothor l.obrodor RotriiiYor,
304· 871 ·8830.

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
oL.oYvwt RIIH

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Around

SeMce
SEPTIC

TANKS
A SPECIALTY

' 742-2328

MOther will babytit in own
hmo. Coli 446-4047.

WELDING, gas, electric,
porttble, experienced de·
pandtbla, low retet, tmall or
Iorge jobs, 304·675·3677.

1 house cat. 3 kitten• to give
owoy. 814·992· 5276 .

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Lllwn Mowing no yard to big
or small , Reliable and dependable . For eatimate call
446-3159. 9 to 5.

Wtntedto buy. New. u•d &amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete house·
holdt . Also complete Auctl·
onaerlng 11rvlce. Call Otby
A. Montn 814-892·8370.

4

PH . 992-5682
or 992 -~121

Wanted to buy a Chevy
engine small bl~ek, 307 or
360. Coli 446-2787 or
448-9264.

Experienced mother of 2 will
do babysitting in my hOme.
Coli 448·0082.

PH. 992-7583
or 992-'2282 ti lt tfc

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Wanted to buy Utad mobile
homaa &amp;: truck camper. Cell
61 4 -448·0176.

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable
and dapendlrble. Call 4483169 between 9 end 6.

BEDS·IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold, silver dol·
lart. wood Ice boxes, atone
antiqutll, ate.. Com·
Recine Volunteer Fire Dept. ·
houteholds. Write:
gun thoot 111son will 1t1rt
Millar, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Oct. 8 It 8 :30p.m . 11 their
Or 992-7760 .
building In Beshtn .

GREG RQUSH

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

18 Wanted to Do
Wathera It dryer. Most any
cond. Cotl 614-387-0660 .

II Lcm

and Found

"""* •

LOST
lf'lill• oot In
vlalnlty of 100 ...,... ot 4th
A... t10 reword. Con 4484810.

Buying dtily gold, tilver
coins, rings, jewelry, sterling
were, old coint, large cur·
rancy. Top pricat. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave.
Mlddlepon. oh , 814-9923476.

Page-9

--- -· ·"Gaiifiloirs·- -·-····

FOUR family garage sale. 1
da y only, S und1y, 8 ·4 . 818
Rafferty Or . Ta re Estates,
Addison, OH . Ant ique gillS·
were, anti que pitc hers, loti
of clothing all sizet. Brtnd
new 12.900 Keros en e
heater, furn itu re . lots of
miscellaneous

Vicinity

4 Family Yard Sale 2nd,
hou u Turkey Ru n Fl d .
Th Urs day - Frid a y, 9 · 6
leather coat, boota , ate.

Garage Sale Set urdty 9 -&amp;.
Rodney Cora Rd. 3 rd . houH
o n right . Baby clothet, avo·
c~do range, w inler coats

4 Family Garage Sale Sept .
22 .23. 2 4 7 :30-7 :00. To kt
Rt. 7 t oward Additon &amp;
follow signs Baby Ite ms,
l .::.~:~:~·;;d~!i'ahes. a little bit of
i
• 2 Brown iog
guns, sweet 16 light
12. Coil 446-008 2.

Yard Sale Sept. 23-25. 1ot
Ever. Fri. &amp; Sal. 10-6, Sun
1 2 · 6 . Approx. 4 miles out
Rt. 14 1. lots ofba byltamt,
clothes , toys, etc .

J----------

Yord Sole Sept . 22.23.&amp; 24 .
9AM to &amp;PM. 8 mr ies North
on Rt . 160 from Ho lzer
Medical Canter, ye llo w
ra nch house o n left. on old

-·--·-Pf Pieiis-aiit ·----

160.

&amp;Vicinity

Yard Sale S &amp;pt.22 to Sept
24. Vinton . Ohio, Bull Ru n
Rd. Baby clothea. yourtg
women• c lothes. Ca ll 614388-8368 .

YA RD Sale, 4 fa mily, 113

Wa lnut St. Pt . Pleasant.
Thur s day , Fr i day &amp;r
Saturday.

Moving Sale Fri. &amp; Sat.
Bes1de Ker:r P:O. 'Rt . 180.
Soma furn .
Yard Sale Sat 24, 9 -5 . Last
housa o n Chatham St.,
Gallipo lis Cloth ing and
other misc. item s

-:-;;~s;l;;Frl::'S';i"f;H;;;;;;;;d

Yard Sale Fri., Sat .
tables, CIF jack, etc. 5 V2 mi.
from Holzer on Rt , 1 60 .

TWO family yard ule, back
of New · Haven. VJ mila
b e yond campground
Women. men, children cloth ing etc. Thursday, Frldty
&amp; Saturday

:j 2Ple'e.
1 o• 'It ES ON BIvd. Pol nt
O,nd7taturda y ~ t' &amp;:

Garage Sale 93 Chillic othe
Rd. Sat. 9 -Ei . Clothes, cur·
tains, beds preads, dishes.

Clothing, dishes , mi te.
2104 Mason Blvd . Paint
Pleasant , Friday 11nd Saturday 9 to 6 Clothing. dlsh11,
misc .

~~~~===~~=~~~~=======
31 Homes for Sale

31 Homes for Sale

Newly re modeled 2 story
frame, 1 Y2 bath , 3 '11 acres,
cit't' s chools ; riverv ie-w.
832, 000. Call · 446-4222
between 9 &amp; 6.

BRI CK ho use,large corner
lot, 2054 Ma yo .Orive, New
Haven , To saBcall 304-882·
2407 .
·..

Insurance

Balloons for Birthd1y1. Get
Well. Annivaruryt, Swee·

Complete Eltttea, bought or
opprlli-. Phone' 614 · 248·
9448.

Also Transmission

MINE RUN

Residential-New and
re-wtnng; Commercial
and Industrial. '
BONDED-All Work
Guaranteed
Call 614-142·2214
After 5 P.M .
9-22 1 mo. pd

_Sizes start from

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.

949-2358

"FrH Estimates"

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

Situations
Wanted

coverage in Gtllia County
for elmott a century. Farm,
home and pertonal property
coverages ere available to
meat Individual needt. Contact Kail Burleson. agent .
Phone 446· 2921 .

Puppy 9 mos. old, good with
kldo. Coli 614-246-6406 .

doors and windows.
All Work Guaranteed

Business
Services

Llltt ch1nce, laat week of
hir ing. ladies fo r House of
Uoyd, e&amp; rlllar hou r, free
•300 ..it, Just work 1111 firat
of December . No lnvett·
ment. Coil 614· 992-8 5 91
or 814-367-7770 or 304·
773-51 t 1 o r 773-5224.

SAlllOY AND BElW~R - In-

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

•Insurance Work

Authorized John Deer,

- Trencher
- Water
- Sewar

- Gas Lines

Full basement, rec. room.
built- in prqe, insulated
alum. sidinc. blown ins.,
storm windows &amp; doors,
Ia. kitchen. carpet &amp;appliances .

Po1itlons av•il•bJ• no w for
Raglllered Nurses and · Ll·
c.nHd Practical Nurses.
Extenalva Employee benefit
progr1m1. Contact Pera on·
nol Office. )304) 675-3230
or write l1kin Hos pital.
lAkin. WV -26260 .

=~~~ ~~· fi~8 ~n~~~:~~:

The y,uage of Syracuse
hereby reserves the rrght ro
retect any or all b1dS and to
select the best b1d for the
purpose
By Order of the Vrllage
Coun crl
Ja nrce Lawso n
Cler k

Alum. Asphall Roof C!llting
Block AsphaH Roof C!llting
R~ ll Roofing
Aluminum Roofing
in All Lengths

Full ti me u lu person
wa nted for laditl apparel
thop, downtown Galllpolll,
experience prefenad . Also.
Florlat wanted fo r t eperta
dept. Call 446-9 3 32 lor
Int erview

12

Daily Sentinei-

Help Wanted

To Buy

repair

Middleport, Ohio
113ttc

11

&amp;

cit

3-11-ttc

NICE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
With rncome &amp; wth a klw
interest assumable loan. Owner
wants to sell &amp; w11 deal. Asking

8

86 4234
.
.
Public Sale
8t Auction

Rick Peer~on Auctlonear
Service. Esttltt. Ftrm. An·
tique a llquldttlon ulet.
Ucansed &amp; bonded In Oftio Ia
WVo. 304- 773 -5786 or
304· 773·91 85.

Mason, W . Va.

M.L

Kitchen Cabinets - RoofIn£.- Sidina - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeling - Custom Pole

.• ....••....•..2,045 ~-:

6 ·······• ·· ····••·

4-8

'
ovtl"f

MOIIIbl¥ Yeul;y

1 ••••·•• •• • •

61

Center Stdg ., C.mdon St.
614-367-7101 .

PH : 1-304-773-5634 ...

Dtscount on any new furnace pur'c h1sed before Oet. 15. '

3) Your infant Is 12 monthS or
younger and on formula,
4) Your chlld !s \e5S than five
years of age. The current financial
guidelines are as follows:
Farnley Sbo

Rt . 7 below Eaatern High
LOST:
School.2 horned
Rewercl her.tordt.
offered.

~:: ·l'.:~n:•;::;,~· y':~:h

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless Steel

\
•

A Phone Call brlnp

- Gas Unes

Public Notice

-,

992-2036

loat and Found

Au_ll.tlon every J.u . . da¥-

Prompt Courteous Service
,
232 £. 2nd
Pomsroy , 0
Now s the tim e to aet your furnace ready tor t old weat« 10%

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

Public Notice

6

Re~eive more WIC monies

The Daily Sentinel
'

Business Services

and urging residents to call tire or
u tJJ!ty o tliciels If they smelled ggas
or had problems and then to " get:rot
of the building and call the lire
department," department spokesm an Ken Brunell said.
Fire and Boston Edison crews
scrambled to turn ott gas Upes in
ho uses and under streets.
Residents were urged to leave
their ho m es.
" Wake up, pay attention and be
ready to take cove r or get out of the
building," Gravelese said residents
w ere being warned.

The

Pomeroy -Middleport, Ohio

Will do btbytltting in my
homo. Celi446· 6277.

4 bdr . ranch home, largB LR, 32 Mobile Homes
full baaement. with garage,
lor Sale
wood burner included, city l- - - - - - - - - scl'loola, 2 miles from town.
Coli 446-0276
TRI - S TATE MOBILE
HOM ES . USED · CARS,
By owner Houoo with 2 TRUCKS·. GALLtPOLtS .
ac res mora or less. been CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
remodele d , orchard, 87 ft 446 · 7672.
well . 522 .000. Cell 6t4·1-- - -- - -- - 388-9053 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL ' S QUAL·
3 bedroom house with fire· lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
place. central air, 2 full 4 Mt. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
baths. in city limits. lmme. RT 36 . PHONE 446· 7274.
dMite poaaassian . Call 614245·6281
1962 Vlndale mobile homa
1 Ox80 with rongo . tl.OOO
In Middleport. newly ramo· or best offer . Cell 448·
deled home with fireplace , 2798 .
pa11ible woodburner. close
to tchoolt and shopping , 1972 1 4x66 Cootie with 82
Cell 614-992-6941 .
Vemco roomette 1 Ox20, air
cand., fireplace . Cllll 814Middleport, remodeled. five 245 ·5308 .
room• and bath, gas furn•nca, cozy fireplace, good 1988 1 OxiiO Pontiac Chief
neighborhood . Price re- trailer good cond .. reatontduced. Coli 6t 4-992·694t . ble price. Ctll446· 7613 .
3 bdr. house 1 % batha.
remodeled kitchen • bed nom, builtin microweve,
redwood porch deck In back,
lots of fruit trees. 1h acre.
Across from Blue Fountain
Motel. city achools. Call
446·3499.
4

acre ranch home4yrs. old,

Bx36 ft .• newly remodeled
11 ,000. Must see to eppracieto. Call 446 -8&amp;95.
1980 Vindale e Kpando
12x63, 2 bdr .• centre! air,
total electric, unfum ., price
$9.000 . Coli 614- 245 9222.

4 bdr., 2 beth. 2 car garage 3 bedroom, with 2 acres
with att1ched barn . Con- ground , all modern conven ·
crete sidewalk•.' porches &amp; iances on Woodt Mill Rd.
drivewtya. Extra w1ter tap, Cell 446-2709.
fenced in p•tture &amp; back1 NOTICE 1
THE OHIO VALLEY
yard. Will accept mobile 1962 Colonial 2 bedroom
Wanted To Buy - OLD
LISHING CO . ,..,o,mn•ondol home •• down payment or 10K60 carpet throughout,
qullta. htndstltchad only. th 1
d b 1
pert of. Aaking t88.000. axcallant condition. partially
1 you 0
ut na..
North Gallia High Schoof
Ph'One 814·24'5 ·9448.
, .~~~j!!~~~~~ to
people
you
know,
end
area
Call&amp; 14•388 •9969 .
furnithed
. Call
aft~r.
send money through
4 :00PM. 614·
268·1228
mall unlll you have invattl· 3 bdr hou•e In chaahlra. 2 L03_._6-::
0-::0- I-::
Irc:m_.-,-- -- gated the offering.
1
car gtrlge . aluminum aid· 1 2x88 Vindala mobile
ing, owner will help finance, h
6'
do Jlvln
Wanted
Gre1t bu1ina11 opportunity. $ 20,000. Call 814 •367 .
ome.
expan
0
For aele eatabliahad butl· 7898
room. all electric with wood
nata, grocery atora, carry
burning ttowa, l~rge con·
There has never bean 1 out, self tarVa gaa, garage
crate patio including 1 room
better time to ba an AVON · with car lift for mechanical Loceted in Syracuse- Near remodeled tchool bulldlng
Repretentative . Call 448- work, 3 bdr. apartment school 6 swimming pool . 3 W1'th wood b urn 1ng 1ta ve,
•- wood atorege
3358.
overhead on St . Rt. 7 In bedroom siluatad on one· carport Ql
Additon . Call 814-367· third acre lot. t24,600 . or building on 2 acrat. Hemwilt rent for •271i mo. lock Grove. 8 14·949-3069
Director for Sheltered Work · 7486.
304-866-3934.
after 6 for more Info.
shop,
Gallie
· Board
of.-1 :~:::;:;=======
MR -DD.
MustCo.
meet
certlfi
Rench lype !Brick). 3 bod· 2 bedroom electric mobile
cetion requirement•
22 Money to Loan
rooma, fireplace , anached l'loma on 'A tcre level lot 1V2
Ohio Oaptrtmant of Ment•l
gerage, full buement, mlto off 33 . •1 0.600. 814·
Retardation end Develop·
mant•l Dillbllltlat. BA de· HOME LOANS Low llxod newly th lngled roof, walking 992-8932 4 p.m . to 8 p.m .
grea 1 mutt, experience tnd rata. Letdet' Mortgage, 77 E. di1t1nce to Pomeroy Ele·
beckground In buaina1, ln- Stoto, Atheno. Ohio. 1 ·614· mentary School . $40.000 . USED MOBILE HOME, IN
Co11614-992-6143
GOOD SHAPE, 304· 678·
dultrlel production end ••- 692-3051 .
2711 .
leamtnthlp Ia ettentitl. Ap2 bedroom house cloae to
plic¥1ont may be obttlned
Middleport pool &amp;: pert on 1916 SCHULTZ moblto
by wrttlng P.O. Box 14. 23 Professional
General Hartinger Ptrkway. home, 1Ox&amp;O with tipout.
Cheohlro. Ohio 41620 or
Services
614-992-3467 .
new carpet. priced •2100.
colt 16141 367·0102.
1962 Jeguor XKE 85 per·
THREE b•droom modular cant rettorad, excellent con·
UOO to '400 • WHk
possible after company PlANO TUNING Bock to home, full tia11ment with dillon . 89.000. Colt 304School Spec:i1l e25 normtl firepltce In b11ement. on 1 676 · 1 678.
training. Manegement pot·
1ible within • few months. tunlngt. September only. ocre of Jond . Coli 304·372- 1- - - - - - - - - Mobile home. 304·676·
Eern while you learn . Full or Wtrd't Keyboard, 304· 676- 9669 or 304·895· 3466 .
3862 or 676-2339 otter I.
part time. For pertontl inter· . 3824 .
2028 LINCOLN Ave .. 6
view Mnd retume to P.O .
Box 729-D, c-o The Dolly PIANO TUNING-UINE DA- roomo &amp; both. 2 glouod lri 74 FREEDOM. 12x85, olr
Sentinel. Pomeroy, Oh. NIELS. 742·2U1 .· Aioo pon:ha1, large out building, co nditioning • underpan'cath for Spinet or Grand g 1 r 1 g e . Corner I o t, nlng, partially furnlthtd ,
46789.
pleno'. lEven damaged con~ 80'x130'. Phono' 304·676· U,SOO. 304-875-8484.
2012 .
Tho Melgo Locol School dHian).
1981, 1 4x70, 8huhzlmltod
Dittrict It teelclng appllctntt
8UB\(EN SERVICE CO . three bedroom 2 story houH mobile home, microweve,
for a part-time clasHoom
Locktmith tervlca, toolthar- on Park Or. Newfurnanca a dishwasher, cantrtl air, uninnructor for Driver Educ1·
tlon . Any porson oortKiod by pentng , ecreen &amp; gl111 in· eir conditioning, dretm kit· derpennlng, three badtho Steto of Ohio lntere- .,.tlod. Coli 034-871-3594. chan with all appllencet. room•. 1 1A: batha, excellent
Owner will c:erry second or condition, •111.100. C11t
in thit poeJtlon thould contln
ell. Small down payment. 304-675 ·6049 alter 1 p .m.
thlt posltltct Mr. Jamtt
304-675· 21 92.
Miller. Melgo High Sohool
Principii. tt the tchool or tt
PRICE REDUCED, greet 34
614· 992·2118 for oddl·
31 Homes for Sale
8usinesa
buy , newly remodeled
tlonallnformttlon.
Buildings
house. nice qulettnd beauti1-----~---Tho Meigs Inn lo now
HouR and 3 lots for nit . ful location. Immediate pot·
saulon. Turn off rt. 31 In
-opting oppllcotlonolor oil
f12.000 . 304-882-2831 .
Henderton, WV. on Hender· Butlnau building down pooltlono. Kltchon • front of
tho houto. Apply Tuoo.
For tele In SyracuH on ton ttreet, go ewey from the town Gellipollt. e150 per
through Thure. 1-7.
100.200 tot. 2 outbulld· river. the lett hOUM on mo . Coli 448-3868 .
•
lngt, room tor ltrge ljllrdan, Hendihothn Street. 8
WANTED: 1 ralltble woman
3 or 4 bedroo'm older home, room• with new wan lo wall
31i Lota
Acreage
who n•d• 1 home to live In,
- · ,.pelr. f10,000. or carpettng.
lull tlmo with oldoriY llldy.
boot ollor. 114-892·1018.
PRICE . REDUCED, groot
Mull\ INr non-drinking •
fumlth reference•. Thil it •
3 bedroom rtnch 1tyle buy , newly remodeled 35 ecra1 11 Rodney on W .T.
nan-poylng job. F-llvlng In
home, cerptted, full tlzt hou11. nice quiet and beautl· Wataon Rd . Owner flnanc·
aountry home looat!ld be·
baaament, 1 car garage, in fullocatlon. Immediate pos- lng IVIiflble. Call448~ 8221
ground pool 14h32 . sestion . Turn off rt. 36 in aft er 6 weekdays .
tween Pt. Pln..nt • MoHenderton. WV. on Hendermeet tbave
f41.000 . 114-992-6818 .
IOn ltreet, go ewty from the One acre 'lot with pl•tform
pteo" wrlto
141 Copltol
HOUlE ond 3 loto for Nl&lt;l. riv•. the leat houte on for houte end ln. ground
, lndltne
• t 2,000. Coli 304· B82· Hendertan &amp;treat, 8 roam• pool , for lnformetlon, 813·
with new well to well 881· 1 232.
2831 .
corpoting.

21

Business
Opportunity

.. ·- .....
--

e.

1---------

·

�I

Septentber 23, 1983

~ge-:. I o- The Daily

Sentinel
KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

by Larry Wright

acrn land with two
rent al tr~ller . For tale
t25.000. Call 44e-e683.

/

level lots 8 mi. touth of
Oelllpollt. All underground

/

I W•NDeR
WH'/ HeR.
FLC(I fbWC&gt;eR
7MeU..&lt;J "'

Monday-Friday .

c0.Rd.18, 8 acres land with
spring wetar and aeptic tank
•&amp;.9 o. 814-992-2603.
lot or lot &amp; trailer for aale in

~;:~.oil•

0

~

54

They'll Do It Every Time

Mile. Merchandlle

16 ACRES land, Greer Road
area, priced
614-448-3703.

Apartment

...

Household Goods

for Rent

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
6 .63 ACRES Pleasant Val- 3 room epertment, furn .• 62 Olive St., Gallipolia. 6
toy Forms, '33 , 000 .00 . edultl only, no pall. Call piece wood living room auita
with I inch ·flat arms $399.
Phone 304-876-4208.
446·0962 .
bunk beds complete with
3.ao ACRES in Loon, drilled Small furn . houta 1 or 2 bunklaa •199, 2 place anwell, 304-468-1666.
adulta only, no peta. Call tron livingroom auitea$199.
antron recliner• $99, other
446 -0338.
racllnera $80, maple dinette
For lease modern, unfurn. , 2 eeta $179. love 1e1t1 •10.
bdr. apt. Overlooking city hide-a - bed *260, bolt
perk. Include• renga &amp; ra· tprlnga 8t mattreaa twin or
trig. $176 mo. Call 448- f~ll •100 e8t reg~ltr·flrm
41 Houses for Rent
1819 ·or . evening• 44.8- $120; maple 'dlnettt ctiaira
- I ·,
$36, waih at8ndl *34;·
4426.
. ·' '
maple rockara •ss. 7 place
4 bdr. houl&amp; 6 acre• of le'nd Furnl1had efficiency apt 1 • chrome dinette aet *149, 1
on Rt. 160 in Vinton . Central Good locetlon in town, no place dinette aet $89, uNCI
air, e350 mo .• tee. dep. a. peta, dep. a. refarencn req, bedroom auttaa, reflrgera·
ref. Cell446-3176 .
Cell Mr. Dobson 448-3045 tora, rangaa. cheat, dreuara,
daya. 448 -2802 evea.
Wringer w .. hera, TV' a,
dryeru, • ahoeo. Colt 448·
Modern 3 bdr. ranch with
ba~ament. North Rt. 160.
Furnlahad 3 room1, with 3169.
Raf. • dep. Coli 448-0686 . private bath. Referenctl pre- 1-::::-:-::-::':-=----fol'fCid. Colt 448·2216.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- weahara. dryan, refrigera2 bdr. houM on Rt. 7 ,
unfurniehed •2150 mo. plua Jeckton Elltete Apartment• tors, range,~. Skagga Apooc. dep. Colt 814·268· 638 Jeckaon Pike !Equal pllancea, Upper River Rd .•
1413.
~outing Opportl.lnlty) hat bealde Stone Crut Motel.
,one · bedroom opilrtmen1o 446-739a.
"
3 bdr. hOUH nair Rio .rant . lttrtlnb at • 1 67 end
Granda. No pete. $236 mo . twobedroomrentotoningat
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Call 814-245-6439.
t193.
depoah. Cal Sofa. chair. rocker, otto446-2746 or leave m81Nga .man, 3 tlblft, leJttra heavy
Full ba11ment 1 "12 atory with on anawerirtg llf'Vice.
by Frontier), *686. Sofll.
chair and lovauat, t275.
city water. dbl . garage.
garden, amall child ac- Furnl1hed upataira apt., 2 Sofae and chalra priced from
cepted . raferancea . 304- rooma &amp;. beth, clean. edutta t285. to $895. Tab._, *46
676-10.7 6.
only, no pata, ref. raq. Cell and up to *12&amp;. Hide-a446-1619.
beda.•440. and up to
$626 .• RacUnen. *176 . to
TWO bedrooin unfurniahed,
Camp Conley, $126. p1r Apt. for rent partially lurn., $350 .• t..mpa from 828. to
month, 304-675-1371 or auitable for ·adulti, no pata. e7&amp;. 6 pc. dlnettll from
*99 .. to *436 . 7 pc .. 11a9.
876·3812.
Cell 448·3733, "'" •· 446· and
up. Wood tebla with ahc
0171.
THREE bedroom houae, 1 - - - - - - - - - - cholro *426. to *746. Deok
Routh Ad .. Cheshire. ' OH . Furn. 1 bdr., bath, kitchen, *110 up to *225. Hirtcheo,
Full baaement, large lot. lerga llvlngroom, large al')- *650. end up, maple or pine
cttrege . Cell 814 - 387 - cloHd porch. aduha. refer- llnloh. Bunk bed complete
and
7168.
encll, e2oo par month, phil with mettre11e1,
deposit. 468 Second Ave., up to 8395. Baby beda,
Gotltpolio. CaR 448-2236 or *110. Monre1101 or box
aprings, full or twin, •sa ..
42 Mobile Homes
446-26a1 .
firm, •ee. and e78. QuHn
for Ren1
6041f.z 2nd. Ava. Uptteira l&amp;te, t196. 4 dr, chettl,
apt. Fumiahed. utRitlea paid. •42. I dr. cheata. •154. Bad
fro·moo, t20.ond '26 ,, 10
3 bdr. doublewide in John- e226, adult• only. Call gun - Gun cablnata, 8360.,
448-0962.
aona Mobile Home Pink.
dinette chair• •20. and $26.
Private yard. 8300 per mo. ,
G11 or electric rangea. •325
bad
room
Apt.
e
1
96.
mo.
1
Include• water, ~age, garup to •376. Bilby matrasaea,
including
utllltlet.
Equal
age pk:kup Ia g11. Ha1 aaa
t26 • *36, bedfromoo *20,
houalng
opportunity.
Conrange, water hatter. Electric
*26, • UO, king frame •eo.
tact
VIllage
Manor
Apta.
not Included .. no polo. Ll·
Good aalactlon of bedroom
mitad to 2 chlklran. city 814-992-77a7.
aultea, cedar chatU ,
achool, cion to K-M1rt • 1-:-------~~ rockers. metal cabinetl,
Silver Bridgey Shopping Furnl1hed efflc~ncy and 2
Center. Call 448·3647 or bedroom Apt. In Middleport, awivel rockert.
448-4028 efter 8PM .
Oh. No pete. Month• rent Uud Furniture -- bookcaaa.
pluo 1100 oecurity. 614· rengea, chain, dinnett aet,
wood table and chelra, dry12•eO 2 bedroom troller 992-3874.
en. refrlgaratort and TV' a, 3
fuinlohod, 8250 mo. Goo • 1-,--------- mllea out Bulavllla Rd. Open
weter paid. 8100 depoalt. 1 a. 2 bedroom furnl1had
Cott448-8583.
opto. 814-992-6434. 814· 8em to 8pm. Mon. thru Fri.,
992·6914 or 304-Ba2- 9am lo 6pm, Sat.
448-0322
2bdr. unfurn. mobile home, 2&amp;6e.
on Rt .. 36. Dap. &amp; ref. req.
. Downtown fumlahed apt. TV • Appllonceo. 827 Third
Colt 448·4229.
Cerpatad, a.c., $226. month Ave .. Gelllpollo. 448·1899.
2 bdr. unf. mobile home In plua utllltlea. Depoalt ra- Spin waahert, gaa &amp;.electric
dryera. auto waahera, gee 11r
ChHhlre. REf. • depoon qulred. 614-448-1788.
ehtctric reno••· refrloar•1-:--:-------req. Coli 448-4369.
2 bedroom fumlahad Apt. tora. TV aeta.
2 bdr. trailer, furnished . Cell $160. month. plua ulllhiea. l-::::-:::--::-::- - - - 44e-0768.
Available Oct. 1. Oopoo~ REBUILT APPLIANCES
requited. Racine. 614-949- Wllh&amp;rl, dryers, rangea,
refrigerator•. Shop repair,
12x50 Mobile Home t140. 2875.
bring ~ In • Save. Coli
month pluo utllltleo. $&amp;0.
Aportmenu . 304-676 · 44&amp;-a181.
depoait. No peta . 614· 992· 554a
.
82!J4 or 814-992-6732 .
Wether&amp;: dryer. A-1 cond .,
APARTMENTS,
mobile
guoronteed
•• 195, will toll
12xl0 Mobile Home. 1160.
month plu• utllltl11. •&amp;o. homae, houaee. Pt. Pleaaent eeparata . Cell 814·367 ·
depoolt. No petl. 814-992- ond Golllpolla. e14-44&amp;· 1_0-:-5_1_0_._ _ _ _ _ __
a221.
,.
e2B4 or 814-992-6732,
4 pc. Saere white French
TWIN
RIVERS
TOWER
.
Provl-lol bedroom oulte.
2 bedroom 12x80 fur nlehed. Waaher-drvar hoo· Aponmonto now ovolloblo to 1_C_•I_I-4~4.:.1·..:9..:8..:2.:.7.:..- - - kup. e 180. month plua elderly • dlooblod with en ,.
utilities &amp; clapoatt. No peta. Income of le11 than Weterheater62gal.electrlc
112.300. Ranting for 30 uoed 2 montho, 1150. Colt
614-992 -7479.
percent of edjutted income- 448-8168.
1~=-~~----Mobile home lots for rant, .Phone 304-e76-e679.
16 cu.ft. upright frHzer,
water aewar furnithad. 1
FURNISHED
_
epartment,
e"cellent
condhlon, 32 ln.
email child accepted . 304adulte, ,o pate, phone 304- wide outalde door. Callefter
876· 1078.
&amp;75·1453.
a. 44&amp;-2388.
bedroom trailer. 304ONE bedroom. unfurniehed,
171·6753.
Goltipotto Ferry, •175. per
TWO bedroom, unfurnlahad, month, oil utll~leo pold
Camp Conley. •150. P8f except electric. 304·876month. 304-876· 1371 or 1371 or 675-3812.
876-3a12.

•zoo

•z&amp;o.

Utility troller otx7•.Jult built,
un. eon 441-9333.

WOOOaURNER ond occll·
Firewood· cut up. • slaba. oorteo. UOO. 304· 773·
S15 pickup load. Call 814· 51&amp;5.
245-5a04.
W•lnut lu.mber 8 end 10ft. COMPLETE beet couch, Cl·
blnet. rugs 9x 12 Indoor·
long. Call 304·468· 1997 .
outdoor. lampa, r•dlo 6 2
Grocery •tore meat .caaa. speekere. a•• dryer. Call
attar 4:30, 304-&amp;76-143a.
Call614·843·2497.
King , •ize bad •7&amp;, twin GREEN couch &amp;: chair,
mettrasa •46, telephone coffee tabla and end tabla•
type CB $26. Can ba aeen 1 like new. Phona 304· 878·
138 Chillicothe Rd, 3446.
Gallipolis.
COUCH. chelr. rocker, ottoSewing machine 6. cabinet man, 2 end tablet, coffH
$196. Brown cerpet 12Jt1.1 table, after 6, 304-675·
$70. Wood meple dinette 4612.
oat $76. Call 814-266·
1668.

Home ·
Improvements
STUCCO

ciel end · r•ldential, free
elllimo-. Colt 814·25e1182.

' .... -....·...

&amp;
$200. Ca11446-7106.

,

"

-·~··-~···

Magnavox console stero
AM·FM radio. *50. Coli
446·,0482 or - · ot . a
Belmont Dr. Gelllpolla.
Split cured hardwood t'40
ton . Delivered a. dumped.
Minimum I tona. Approx. 2
ton o cord. Col 448· 7732
after 6 .

81

55

Building Supplies

Farm Equipment

8N Ford tractor with buah
hog, good condition,
11,900. Colt 446-3486 aftO&lt;aPM.

83

Treadle aewing machine.
leatar couch . Call 446·
7424.

66

Table with 8 chelra, 8 pc.
livingroom, twin mattra11,
desk. end push mower. Call
446·0911 .

HILLCREST KENNELS
Bordlng all braada. Selling
Happy Jack Dog. Food.
Oobermon puppMo: Stud
Service . Colt 448-7795.

Livae1ock

· Pets for Sale

Moving Sale Traah &amp; Treaaurea. You prlcel We 11111 Judy TayiOf Qroomlng . Cell
.
Windowa. acreant, old TV, 1 814-387·7220.
chen freezer, Iota af .goodleo. Coli 448·0929. .
. Brlarpotch Kannel• Prof••oionol ·Att·b'"d grooming·.
Will -Burt atoker furnance !ndoor-outdoor boarding fa·
24', good cond. Call 448· cilnleo. Englloh Cocker Spaniol puppleo. Coll814-3a81672.
9790.
Guna-600 guna, new and
Reg. Siemaae kitten• alto
uaed. Hand gun a, rlfle1,
ahotguna, extra berrela, mother 6 fother cato. Colt
priced far below · current 446-a6D8.
market. 26 percent wHIIey
ewey. Wllltredeforboataor Mineture Schnauzer pupmost anything. Shot ahftlll- piaa. AKC Reglltarad, ex·
high power •e.oo. •lugs coptlonol quality, 8 weeki.
t2.26, other ammo below old . •176. Colt 814·384coat. 9-8 a"cept Sunday. 4509.
614·992-7494 for ovoning
oppolntment. FIFE ' S. 3rd. Slameae kltlena. Arrival
Sept. 24. 1 female 820., 3
St. Mlddlepon. Oh .
1-:-___
..:..__:_.:.::___ male• •30. each, 614-99233mm Petri camera. Flath, 7201 .
clouup lena 1St caM inBlue Doberman, half regia·
eluded. 814·992-8a79.
tared. full blooded' e
1UHd Frigidaire refrigerator, montho old. •60. 814·892·
good cond. 8100 . Ultd 7468.
General Electrlcatove, Good
cond . 1100 . 814-992 - Reglttered 3 male mlnl.ture
poodleo, 150 each, 304·
15818.
8a2-3872.
Empire heating stove for
eele. 114-949-2658.
, AKC regiatarad · Doberman
pupplea. 304-676-3093.
Orogn, doublo keyboard In
rythmna and · different FISH Tonk, 2413 Jockoon
Ava. Point Plaaunt. 304·
aounda. 1861 8N tractor
614-949-3004.
· 876-20113. Foil hours:
Mondoy-Soturdoy, 11-6
Heavy duty Mayteg euto- p.m . ley~e-wey for Chritt·
matlc waaher. coppertone. mea now open. Special on
10 gallon tonka 18.89.
$160.; Self dafroatlng refrigerator, 8100 .; 30 Inch
electric range. double oven,
Musical
ee&amp; .; Hoover portable 67
washer &amp;. dryir, •276.;
ln11rumen1s
Electric dryer •es.; Chell
type frHzer 1150. 814·
742·2362 .

2 yr. Old Jeraey milk cow
coH. Coll448-4423 .

a.

Hoga a ahoatl for tale at
lorm. Colt 814-3Ba-9930
lftor e.

8 yr. old 17handehigh mara.
gentle ond good rldor, 11ddle
lnc:tudod, •eoo. Colt 614·
38!1·9~89 . •
-::-..:........:...,....~----­
Holstein bull .calf. Call 814·
,US..113-11r----------~

Hor.., for aale. Pelamlno
white gelding • o oorret.
e14-992-6102.
-:----:-------1 reglltered Anguo butt
•eoo .• 1 oorrel pony nddto
ond brldlo *200.. 1 mini•·
ture ltelllon horH 3 yeara
old. f260. 814-988-3891 .
Aegitterad Holatein Bull.
Vwy gonlle, lead bc-oko. 1'h
yoero old. e14-a92- 7468.
Pigo, 304· Ba2-344a,

Seven Year old bucklhln
gelding. *425. Phone 614·
2&amp;8-8832 oftclr &amp; P. M.
Seven Year old buckahln
gelding. 1426. Phone 814·
2&amp;8-8832 after &amp; P. M. · •

-

.7 0 Chryoler New Yorker,
*450. Coli 448· 4399.
72 CAMARO, *600 . Tronamillion oil pi, 304· 7739133.
...·- ·· .. ·- ·
1980 TRANS AM. block
with gold Interior. automatic. air. tapa a. T·top.
49,400 miiH, *5500. 30487&amp;-6950.

72

Trucks for Sale

78 Ford Courier 36.000
mil• on overhauled, topper.
CB. AM cenette. good tlret.
*1.500. Coll448-1028 .
1978 GMC 'h ton PU, good
cond.• tint gla11. Call 81 4379·2321 .
1980 GMC 4•4 '.4 ton,
auto .. Pa, PS , 30,000 mi.,
•8.200. con 44&amp;·2403.
19e7 Ford 6 cyl., ltond.,
good ohopo. Coll448· 2194.
1980 Chevy 'h T., 4K4, 360
outo.. 44,000 mi .. wide
tiroo, •5.700. Colt 448·
0231.
1978 Ford F·160 PU outo
trana, PS, PI, Y:a ton. good
con d., U, 700. Colt 4462403.
1973 Ford F260 . HNvy
duty. A.C ., dual 911 tankl.
e14-849·2603 or814·892·
2717.

73

8t

..........
' ' ' ' -.' . ...." ....
~~=~==;:===
11985 GMC School buo 30
71
AU10I for Sale
poooengor, 292 engine. 4
Vena

4 W.O.

~

apd., axe. running cond.,
good body, '2,200. Coli
446-283e otter 5.

TOP CASH peld for Iota
modal Ullc::l cera. Smith
Bulck·Pontloc, 1911 Ellt·
ern Avo.. Oolllpotio, 4462282.
.
1973 Pontloc Orond AM
auto.. PS, PB. air, low
mtteoge. t7&amp;0. Coli 441·
20e2.

7e Ford. Von. Coli 446Bea1.

Unfurnluhed. downltelra. 3
room apt., 1 bdr.• no peta.
Inquire 11 a7 VIne St.,
Golllpotto.
Furnished apt. 2 bclr .. near
HM C, $236 utilitioa paid.
243 Jack1on Pike, Gallipotto. 446-4416 after 7 p.m.

47 Wan1ed to Rent

RENT·Louo. Widow •
doughtor, •1 00.00 monthly
2bdr., 2 beth, 1 1 Court St. , with gordon epoco, not too
Ref. • dop. U26 mo. Coli ; for from town. 304·876·
4411·4928 .
6391.

COULDN' T '-'A.VE DONE BETlER: MYSELF

.A.L..t.EY.•. TI-tEV'RE PBlfECT! A.Ll G t. s5FiJ
UP AND REAI&gt;Y 'n30!

Gat rour carpet In ship ·
shape. Water removal. FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAPTAIN
STEAMER 814-448-2107 .
E •• R Tree SO.VIc:•. futti
Jnlured, free aatlmet,s ,
Phone 814-387-0836, call
after 5.
SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
pittce cullom fit your home.
Ou1r1nteed . Adv1nced Gut·
tor, (Day 814·692·4088,)
(nlghl 614-&amp;9a-8206.)

Roofing and Carpentry
work, general repairs, call
Anthony Willlamaon, 81 4 .
387·0194.
Got Your Corpot IN SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTAIN
STEAMER. water remove!
fumiture cleaning . Free E111:
metoo, 814-448-2107.

82

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

WELL. I 00 ~EED YOU • • .
WE (}OTH NEED YOU ... ~ILL
AND 1. A5 YOU KNOW, ~ILL 'S

A5 SOON A5 I fOUND
·A GOOD HOUSEKEEPER
• FOR WENDX WE TOOK
THE FIRST PLANE OUT,

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATINO ·
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 448·3BB8 or 4484477

TAKING OVER FOR ORVILLE
A~D WE h'AV£ TO MOVE

INTO THE FAMILY
MANSIO N ...

· JIM 'S PLUMBIN.G. HEAT·
lNG . Fomarly Dewitt'•
Plumbing . Colt 814-387·
0676.

83

Excaveting

9 :00 0

EVENING
6o00 DCIIIll C!J O ill® lil
1]11 News
CD Video Jukebox
(f)
MOVIE:
'Golden
RendezVQUI'
(I) Tic Tac Dough
(I) Uttle Houae on t he

Good-1 EKcavating. bile·
11)anta. footera. drlvewaya,
Hptlc tanka. landacaping.
Colt onytime 448· 4537.
Jam11 L. Devlaon , Jr ,
owner.

Prairie
Ill I]]) Ove Willie

• Buck Rogera
6:30 U CI1 (!) NBC News
{I) Stopwatch 'Thiny Se conds of Inve stigative Ticking .' This comedy special
unco vers fraud and e•plores
the irregular.
(I) Love That. Bcb
Cll • (jJ ABC News
D (J) ® CBS News
([) Butinels Report
(jj) Ovor Eloy
7:00 8 (l) PM Magazine
(J) lnotdo The NFL
(I) Bums &amp; Allen
CD SponsCanter
(I) Good New•
Cl) EnttrUiinment Tonight
CD Charlie' 1 Angels
II (]) Wheel of Fortune
()) ® MacNeil/lehrer
Newthour
CiD Nowo
• (]J People's Court
• Jefferson•
7:30 D (J) Tic Tee Dough )

Dozer Work, ground ciNrlng
a '"cevltion, •25 hour. Call
448·983a.
J .A.R . Conttruction ci..
Water
Footera,
Dreina. All kind• of Ditching,
Rutland, Oh . 814·742·
2903.

Lin••·

Melgl Ex:cavating . Bulldozer
6. backhoe III'VIce. Baaema~tl. foot•a.landaclplng,
driveweya, firm pondt .
814-742-2407 or 814·742·
2018.
'·

84

8t
Boa1s and
Motora for Sale

79

Motora Hom••
• Campara

luy Foctory Dtreot. Ugh·
weigllt, II... gl H laamp

Electrical
Refrigeration

(I) Ooblo Gltlio
(!) ESPN' s Inside Football
(I) Major league Bllaeball:
Los An~lea et Atlanta
(J) II (J) Family Foud
GJ You Aakad For It
GJ Entertainment

SEWING Mochlno repotro,
181VIct. Authorized Singer
1Sele1 &amp; SOI'Vico Sharpon
!Scluore. Febrlc Shop
.Pomoroy. 982-2284.
'

86

e
Tonight
e
One Day at a Time
a,oc • (J) (!) Mr. SmHh

General Hauling

(PREMIERE) As a resuh of
an accident, !In orengutan is
turned into a genius and sent
to the home of a fanner perlone! 11si1tant to the President . (80 min .)

JONES aOYSWATER BER·
VICE. Coli 814-367· 7471
ar 814·387-0691 .

CD MOVIE : ' B~e Runner'

(I) MOVIE: 'ReiUITectton'

Need aomathlna hauled
avny or aomethlng moved?
We'll do lt. Coli 448-31118
between 9 end &amp;.

(1)8-(!J NFL Garno oftho Woek

·Water hauling. Feet Service
tow rotu. Coli 114-268:
1743.

Bo and lUke try to help Bosa
Hogg get hi1 kidnapped wife
beck . (80 min'.)
(J) (jj) Wwl.;gton Woek/

rnaCJJBonocn
(J) i)J Oulc01 of Hozz•rd

•

Review Peut Duke il joined
by top W11hington journelistl analyzing the week·,

.liMB WATER SERVICE.
Coli Jim Lenior, 304-871·
7397.

.13''"" 16' -tnllen.
new19'Bth-.Collnow
'tall " " 1-aoo-348-4882
for fne broohUN end SAVII

87

Delnoy Hlf oom.tn ollde In
oe-. be.-· Priced to
oell. Now .1.100. Coil 114·
742·2283.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 1 13 loo. Avo.. Gllllpolla.
44e-7a33 or 448·1833.

........MOVIE:

•

'Tho GrNI

Gotoby'

8:30 (J) lwln Fornlly Roblnoon

liS ;a;:::.:""

Uphola1ery

- •anatyzea
- Woolc
loull®Rukey..,
the
·eo. with a weekty revtew
of economk: andoinveatment

(J)

•

I

I

'

m

matters.

9/23/83

Space for Rent

~;;:;:=:::;=::;==:

AL LE Y OOP

EXTRA good top ooll. delivered, phone 304·6767771.
•

14 ft. V bonom llberglou •
tilt Inlier, t300. Coli e14·
245·5175.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . largo Iota. Coli
892-7479.

1'£,

~OW

QUILTY Of_

FRIDAY

Wontod to buy . Somt v
ehopo 12 or 14ft. llumlnum
boot .. Coii814-218-IIB2.

1----------

:;I.IPP05CD 1V
e&gt;E ~ FOil

·Evening television listings-------------__:___,______:____________

17' Sn &amp;tor old boot, 140
HP, 10, occoiOOrloo, oxoell•nt condition . Tr1iler.
ti,IOO. Coli 448-34a5 If·
ter aPM.

48

rJI!

FOR Me 1D PICK
YOU UP. MAR IA'?

1970 oVolktwagon van,
good cond.. 1860. Colt
814·388·9897.

76

furnlahed apt. e186 . Water
pold, 2 bdr.. 131 'h 4th,
Gallipotto. 446 -4418 after 7
p.m.

-'101! IWILHEP ~ ~5 O~aY;
FFIOM 101'11;? l'ftf"( 1&lt;11&gt;5 ~EL~.
DIOM'T 'iO\! ~~IT EXERCI!&gt;E I!&gt;

l LOGT THE .. ll1E 'FRIEN~HIP '
"'OF SOMEONE I FELT VEFN
1--1.-1 CLOSE TO FOR FALSELY
ACCUGIN&lt;:i HIM OF OOINq
Er:f!CTLY THE SAME THIN&lt;;

Fa K TrM "{rimming, ttump
removal. Colt 676·1331 .

Furnished Room•

Apertmen1
for Rent

3 bclr. opt.. 2nd Aw.,
Golllpollo. 1190 mo. Coli
448-4222 . , . _ 9 • 5.

RON'S Telavltlon Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola . Quuar. and
hou11 colla. Colt 678-239a
or 446-2464.

RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpe·
rienced roofing, including
hot tar application, carpen·
tar, electrician, maaon. Call ·
'1981 . Oldo 9a,ATC 1a6 · 304-876·20a8 or 676·
Honda 3 whHiar. call after 15 4560.
Pm, 304-176·5093.
Water Wella. Commercial
1971 Duetar runs. hal good and Domestic . Teat holaa .
Pumpa SeiH end Service .
1tlc:kor UOO. Phone 304· 304-895-3a02.
j
875·1&amp;9a .

rwo

44

SERVES ME Ai6HT,
. BRANDER. FUNNYIT'S LIKE POETIC
JUSTI CE ••

'

Building materiel•
block, t:»rlck. sewer pipet,
Bark Buater wood eplltter. window•. llntelt , etc .
UMd l111th,n6houre. •235: Claude Wlnt1r1. Rio Grande.
·0 . Cell ·ll14·246·5.121 .
Colt 448-7732 ilfter 6.

1-:::=:--:--:-:...:=::...___

PLASTERING

textured calling• COfJ1:mar-

I=-:-_:______

45

Mo1on Home•
&amp; Camper•

1173 Oodgo Larlc mini ma·
101 home, IIMPI e, Mlf
contained. new 11r condtlan..-. ••cetlent condition .
CoH e14·245-9&amp;13.

~~=~======T~~,~~-~-~-;~~-'~"'"'~"~$~~"~";··~,..~~
r44
61
-::;-~-:--:-----reaaonabla .
Hlda-e -bect couch
chair,

Farry. 304-8715 -

79

11

at 97 Vine; St. Oalllpolia.

M;Ne.

Thr•e acre• of ground, 2
houae trailera aet up, 2 water
tiP• II aaptk: Unka. On St.
At. 143 on mile out Herrl ·
aonvHie toward Pomeroy.
E1tata of Bobby . Molden.
Robert Molden adminiatra ·
tor, Dexter Oh. 614-869 5092.

Mlac. Merchendl1e

Uaed ga. heater with fin.
150, 000 BTU heats 4 roomt.
Automatic off control. Su

Moc.H
B4fe!'
1Ht\f'l

utllltlet, central sewage .
Coli 448 - 1241 . 8 ·6,

54

Slightly lrregulor corpoto,
ramantt end whole houH
lite. Ideal for rental Income.
etc. Price• ittrting at t2.98,
l3.99oq.yd . Colt 814·892·
6173.

i .2

lAnd 1 \hcrnon Rt. 141 . 1
mile from OrMn School.
~all 44e-a197.

September 23, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Paga

Par neo"Oy-Middleport, Ohio

DICK TRACY

([)

Cl) For Love anlit

Honor (PREMIERE) Grace
Pavlik. . the only woman in
tho barracks. fights for equal
treatment and Sgt Alla rd
helps Sgt . · Bell come to
terms with the loss of his hl mily. 12 hrs.)

(]) 700CiubSpeeial : Hope
for the Nations
(]) G) (DJ Lonary ! Flaherty
and Rush bring lottery gifts
that help a married couple
start over and give a down and-out artist a chance fo r
success. (60 min .)

0 ill® MOVIE: 'Blazing

Saddles'

(I) Lawmakers

CID Six Great Ideas

9:30 (J) L.A . '83 Highlights
Highlights of Water Polo,
Swimming, Diving and Synchronized. Swimming are
f eatured. (90 min.)
(I) Enterprise
10:00 (f) World Boxing Allociation: Michael Ooket vs.
Gerrie Coetzee
(]) MOVIE : 'Take Her,
She's Mine '
Cil 18 GJ Matt Houston
(I) Israeli Diary
Cfil News
10:30 C1J Ster Time
(]) TBS Evening News
Cl) Inside Bualneaa Today
® Masterpiece Thulre
'Fl ame Trees of Thika. · lan
leads a safari for the Palmers
and discovers that he has
fallen in love with Lettice
Pal mer. (A) (60 min .) (Closed
Captioned)

.INN News
11 :00 II CIIIll C!l 0 Ill ® II
®1\tows
Cil NFL Game of the Week
Ill Dr. Whc
Bonny Hill Show
11 :30 0 CI1 (!)Tonight Show
CI1 MOVIE: 'The Road

e

Warrior'
(I) Another Ufe

Cll ESPN"a SportaWe.k

(J) Cellini
Ill Solp

II Ill MOVIE: 'G""''';a
Paachea'
()) Latenight America
(it M*A*S'H
• Ill Ntghtllna
Twtllaht Zono
11 :46 (J) MOVIE: 'Uoed Coro'
t2o00 (J)
Alton

a

T- /

11um1•

Ill~

(I) N.lght
(I) Ntghtllno
I)J MOVIE: 'Eocapo fn1m
logon County'
Th~ ol the Night
12:15 (!J ESPN llpKiel : Aul·
tnHM Rulw FoodJell •
Grand Flnll foam - -

a

-

bourne, Aultrllle
12:30
&lt;D CD Frldoy 1\ttght

a

( I) Jade Bonny Show

Games'

MOVIEo 'Uiegua•d'
OJ (W CN N Headline News
CII NBC Nowo
2:00 0
Ovemight

(]) Bachelor Father

6oOC IICIINtws
(]) The Monroe•
CD God Has the Answer
(f) Under-.aa World of
Jacques Couateeu
CiD SnMk Previews
Gunamolr.e
6:15 (I) Motot week llluatn~ted
6:30 • (]) CD NBC News
Cil MOVIEo 'll VIe

e

It

'Bndeshea d Revts1ted · Lord

9 :30 (I)

MOVIE :

returns

11 :00 0 CIIIll Cll Q) ® News
ClJ MOVIE; '1. The Jury'
(]J Rock Church Proclaims
(!) Saturday Night at the

Fights Sa tu rday Night at the
Fights presents a 10 -Round

Liglltwe1ght bo ut featur•ng
Ken Bogner and L•v.ngstone
Bramble from Totowa. NJ.
{2 hrs ., 30 min ,f
fit Twltlght Zone
11 : 1 5 (I) NCAA Football: Mar·
&amp;hail at Furman
11 :30 U CD (!) Saturday N ight

Live
TBS Weekend News
Earle Bruce Show

([l
(I)

CD (i%1
Factor'

'Private

MOVIE:

' Alien

OO'ft

,

to

Bndest)ead and Charles and
Juha face a final cr•s•s tR'
{90 mtn_) [Closed Capt•onedJ

Dame at Miami

IFia.l
(() World War I
I]]) Dr. Who

Great Performances

Marchmam

Ill II ® Love Boot
flJ Ill ® NCAA Footballo

EVENING

\lii Metinea

®

CI1 ClJ MOVIE: 'Wild

Notre

9,

&lt;..1eriM

ft~h\.0
ijll THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD QAME
~ ~ ~~ ~~
byHenriAmoldandBoblee

Unscramble these four J umbleS ,
one letter to eiCh aquare, to form
lour ordlnlty words.

ACROSS

DOWN
1 Russia n

1 Tropical
food plant
5 Uncovered
10 Prize
12 Freen the start
(Latin )
13 Aunt (Fr.l
14 Fine fabrlc

15 Skill
t6 Resl&lt;d
18 Dean Martin
film

) I K
TISSAD

• .I

Yeater

a~

of Romeo in the tchool ptay,
.Jufiet.

IRl

tj
tJ

,,'
WHA'T 'THE AI55ENTMINDEt:&gt; HEN t:'ll:' •
Now lfl'angl the drdld letters to
form tht IUI'J)fill antwer, u sug~

by tho

llboftcortoon .

ww. ( I I I I I I ) AN ( I I )

aWhen Arnold gata the role

he discovers thll arch rival

of song
311 Tippler
40 CUt off

unit

1=+-+-

Was - "

enceWelk

Lioa wit be

30 Gun part ·
31 Tantalize
32 Aquatic
animal
33 Della

character

43 Bret 44 " l.e - ·~
Goriol"

Ken Bogner and livtngstone
Bramble from Totowl , NJ.
(2 hra., 30 min.)
(J) CD Dlff'rwnt 8trolcos
8:00

24 Italian
marble
Z5 Voter
26 Abdul·
Ja bbar
i.s one
Zi Fireplace
!8 Beverage

b-+- 1-+-

(!) Memorin with Lawr·

Fight• prellnts a 1()-f\ound

Yesterday's Answer q -1!&lt;

39 Imbue

llJ D llJ HH' How

lightweight bout featur ing

8 Manifest

9 Contribute
11 Hold off
llliad
dinner

19 Surcease

II
42

former.
(!J 8oturdav 1\tlght II tho
Fighta Seturday Ntght at the

outbursts

4 Scrap
5Sew
6 Arab
garment
1 Muscle

21 Vietnamese
holiday
28 Gridiron
Z% Function
kick
23 Not a bit
24 Hundred (Fr. ) 23 Zola novel
26 Dray
Zi Hold off
28 Hall a score
29 Before
30JFK
was one
34 Part of
a circle
35 Garfield,
e.g.
36 French

()) SportaCentar
(J) Worid Chomptonohlp
Wreotllng

a

3 Bombastic

season

the Bijou

• Ill Solid Ocld
• How the W81t Wa
WO&lt;O
(I) lnotde ~
7:30
(J) Cavitt tho
Scene• · With Kenny RoQtrt .' Dick Cawett interview• thia famous per-

republic
2 Cogniz.ant

37 " Midnight
Cowboy"

'The Fetal Glau of Beer.'
7:00 D Cil o.nco Favor
(I) Alfas Smith and .Jonea

(J) Orut Railway Joumeya
(lJ Salute!

"t,.,

bp THOMAS JOSEPH

News Th1s show promtses

Horse Hank'
(}) MOVIE : ' Young Doctors In lo\le'
.

9/24/83

' China

IQ be everythtng the current
newS is not.

owns . (A)

SATURDAY

MOVI E:

Uberty 37'
(JJ Sing Out America
(1) SportsCenter

min.)
(I) Unknown War
® Classic Country
til MOVIE: "Mirage'
8 :30 U l]) (l) Silver Spoons Ed ward lets Ricky and Derek
run an ice cream shop he
9:00 0

(I)

Cl) G) Ci2l Fantasy I sla nd
fl) Switch
10:30 (]) Not N ecessarily The

'Mickey and Donald.' T onight"s program pre sent s
. several of Mi ckey and Don·
aid' s classic cartoons. 160

(!) Newa/Sign Off

Continue '
ill • (!II Nowo

10:00

Triumph '
CIJ MOVIE: "The Bridge On
the River Kwai '
(I) Gl CiZ T.J . Hooker
IJ (f) ® Walt Disney

@

2 :30 CD uta of Riley
2 :45 (f) Inside The NFL
3:00 D CII News
tl) 700 Club Special : Hope
for the Nation•
3:15 I]) MOVIE: 'If Things
Were Different'
® CNN Headline News
3:30 (!} ESPN'a lnaide Football
3:45 (]) MOVIE: "Blade Runner'
4 :00 (!) Top Rank Boxing from
lafarane, LA
4:30 (I) Rou Bogtey

Buckaroo'

(Closed Captioned)
(]J Standing Room Onlr ~
Kenny Rogan~ in Concert
This Grammy award w1nner
performs his repertOi re of
h1ts songs .
(f) MOVIE: ' An American
Werewolf in london'
ffi MOVIE: 'Arch of

(jJ Music Magazine
1:00 (}) MOVIE : 'Walt! Across
Texas'
(]) Emergency: A Special
Report
(I) Entertainment Tonight
8 Gil Newa
MOVIE!
'Deadly
1:30 (})

...

t

Jumbflt: PRINT FUZZV OUTLET COMEDY
Answer: Could It be a sound from a dog withOut a
p«ilgree?-A " MUTI·ER''

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it: .
AIYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
Ooe letter aimply ~tands for another. 1n this sample A 11
used for the three L's, X !or the two O's, ete. Sl na:le letten;
aposlropbel, lht lencth and form1tion of the word• are all

Mnts. Eteb day the eode letters are different.

'

CRYMOQVOTES

KLSRQKO
LT

VZK'M

QM

VLFZ

MQOKQTQ N HKS '

NRHFHNSZF

SRH K

GRHS

SRZJ
TQKP
E H CORHYEZ . - OLZSRZ
YHienllly's Cryptoquote : THE . SENSE OF SMELL IS
ESPECIALLY
EFFECTIVE
IN
AROUSING
MEMORIES.-scHOPENHAUER

..

�12-The Daily Sentinel

P\imeroy

Middleport,

~o

September 23' 1983

(

Block party will offer variety
•

A wide range of acttvtty will be
olfered to t.'le publtc when the first
Middleport Chamber of Commerce
Block Party Is staged Saturday in
the heart of Middleport's business
section.
The party will get underway at
noon and will run untU 9 p.m.
Saturday night, after an undoubt·
edly hectic Saturday morning when
some 40 exhibitors and concessionaires will be setting up along the
curbing trom Mill Street to Rutland
St. on North Second Ave.
Merchants w1ll stage sidewalk
sales.
A variety of food treats w1ll be
offered throughout the area loc"a·
tlons as well as some excellent craft
work and games.
An example of the novelty II) the
food line will be the open bean pot on
the VU!age Pharmacv lot. The

to take part
Meantime, at the drive-through
area of the Central Trust Co.,
contests will be going on. There will
be a hamburger eating contest at
12: 30 p.m., a Uttle Miss and Mister
Block Party Contest at 2 p.m. and a
pie-baking contest In that location.
"People worldng together Is what
the Middleport Chamber of Com·
merce Block Party Is aU about,"
commented Mrs. Jayce Blake, one
of the active members of the
planning committee.
Mrs. Blake points out that she has
been pleasal)tly surprised by the
numerous groups registering to be
a part of the party and enthusiasm
which has been shown. "All we need
now ts a nice day, weatherwtse,''
Mrs. Blake concluded.

WAKKANAI, Japan (AP) by rough undersea
terrain, u.s. search vessels today .
continued thetr race with Soviet
ships to locate the elusive fllght
recorders from the South Korean
airliner shot down by Soviet
warplanes.
Meanwhlle, Rear Adm. Ma·
sayosld Kato of the Japan Maritime
. Safety Agency said searchers today .
found m&lt;ire nine Items believed tolie
from Korean Air Lines Fltght 007,
which was shot down Sept.1 wtth200
~le aboard as It strayed into
Soviet airspace over Sakhalin
Island north of Japan.
Kato said today's search was
conducted under the "best weather
conditions" since the Boetng747was
shot down.
In Tokyo, the U.S. forces In Japan
i-ei~ a !liatement today 's8ytng "while· ·pOssible .ptnger contacts
havebeenmade, theKALalrllner's
black box remains unlocated.
Efforts are being frustrated by the
uneven, h1Uy undersea terrain."
The tmdersea terrain makes It

FIXING RVI"nJRED_PIPE - Wllh exce111 e1ba1111 pa .......
bumed oft In the backgroliDd. Bob)lllllercltbe BUckeye·PipeU..e Co. al
Helena; Ohio adjuslB an llliger to lap a ntptured pipeline that forced tbe
evacuation of 30 families from the one-mile radlua D8U' tbe break.
Workers expected to llllllall a plug Tlturoday thai would atop tbe flow Ill
gas whle lhe line Is repaired. (AP Laoerpboto).

Tax repeal opponents
offer dire forecasts
. COLUMBUS, Qhio (AP) - AI· which-was that the General ASsem·
·.. ·· •· thoUgh -a vote on a state tax repeal · :i&gt;ly wil!lld en,;_ct' no hew_: taxes. to.
measure Is st111 more than a month replace the 90 percent Income tax
away, a crescendo of predictions boost that mlght be repealed.
from opponents about the effect of
"All of these assumptions, of
passage already Is buDding.
course, can change. Th~ certainly
The latest came from Chancellor could be worse and theY certainly
Edward Moulton of the Ohio Board
could be better," Moulton said.
of Regents, who said Thursday that
State Superintendent of Public
approvaloflssue3wouldcosthlgher Instruction Franklin Walter was to
educatbn $ai0 m11llon during the rejoin thecborusFrklaywlthanews
fiscal year starting July 1, 1984.
confei'E!ICe detailing the effects of
But he acknowledged the figure repeal on the state's big city school
was based on assumptions, one of districts.

dltftcult for sonar operaters to
determine whether an object spot·
ted undersea Is a natural formation
or port of the aircraft.
The fltght recorders, commonly
called "black boxes,'' are In
crashproof containers painted red
or orange and contain flight data
and cockpit conversatbn. If round,
theycOuldshedlightonwhyandhow
tlie .aircraft . strayed tn _Soviet

alrspacli.

· ·
The Asah1 Shlmbun, a major
Japanese dally, quoted a Foreign
MlnlstrysourceassaytngThursday
that
u.s.ofships
had pinpointed
the
posttbn
the fltght
recorders at
a

BRING .
THE SUN
INDOORS!
MaQ any room surfin.,r warm ,
all year round at America'• kerosene l'leater headQuarlttra. Save

on costtv luel bills and llaep
anywhere with the Y\JASA
Mod81 J·20 portable keroaane
heaM!r . . fOr po!tllnlefl a dav. the
:;:ate, moctetn. economical way.
'I'!' arm

u.s.

·

;

··

1-U COURfs ( "

By KEVIN KELLY

Bam destroyed

Motorists traveling through Mid·
dleport Saturday are reminded that
No. Second Ave., will be blocked off
from M111 St. to Rutland St., from 10
a.m. to 10 p.m. for the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce Block
Party.
Pollee officers w111 be on hand to
direct through traffic. Motorists
traveling south are to turn right onto
Rutland St., then onto No. Third,
onto M111 and then continue south on
'Third. Upriver traffic Is to travel
North First St., which will be
one-way traffic only for the hours of
the party. Side streets going onto
No. Second In the blocks where the
party Is being held will also be
blocked to traffic.

A barn contatntng 1,000 bales of
hay was destroyed Thursday night
at the Charles Lawrence home on
County Road 33.
The Racine Fire Department was
called to the scene at 9:50p.m., and
some of the fire personnel remained
on the scene until 2 a.m. Friday due
to threat o!thespreado! the blaze to
nearby wOOds. The barn was
leveled. An electrical short Is
believed to have been the cause of
the !Ire. There was no Insurance
coverage.

New trees vandalized

HEATER!

yuasaE[BE Rf ELOS

· •·

992-2054

Area death

Bertha] S. Miller
Bertha! Sampson (Bob) Miller,
60, of Evans, W. Va. died Thursday
at his home after a long Utness. He
had been In University Hospital for
the past eight weeks, having been
returned home Tuesday.
Miller was employed for 31 years
at Foote Mineral. Meigs County
survivors include a sister, Mrs.
Albert Roush, Pomeroy; a sister-inJaw, Mrs. Iva Campbell, Rutland,
and several cousins.
Funeral services are tentatively
set !or 2 p.m. Sunday at the Casto
Funeral Home at Evans, W. Va.
Burial will be in Creston Cemetery

·near Leon.

,,

Now20%

OFF

The American Legion Awdltary
(junior and senior groups) of Drew
Weooter Post 39 wtll meet Tuesday,
Sept. '1:1, at 7:30 p.m. at the Legion
hall. Dorothy Jenkins, music chairman, w1ll be In charge of the
program.

BLOCK PARTY
SPECIALS
LADIES' DEPARTMENT

Emergency runs
At 3:03 p.m. Thursday, the
Pomeroy Emergency Unit went to
Routes 7 and 33, the scene of an auto
accident, and transported lra and
Myrtle Adkins to Veterans MemorIal Hospital for treatment of
Injuries.

Com1 actions filed
A suit for money In the amount of
$1,055.38 was IDed In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by PennzoU
Co., Pennzou Place, Houston,
Texas, against Randy J. Smith,
Racine.
Rea Roush, Pomeroy flied suttfor
divorce against Hugh H. Roush,'
Pomeroy.
.

MEN'S DEPARTMENT

All SWeaters
Coats

42-62.

No parking allowed
No parldng w1ll be permitted on
Middleport's North Second Ave.,
from Mill St., to Rutland St.,
Saturday. The no-parking situation
Is to allow movement on the stalling
of the first annual Middleport
Chamber of Commerce Block
Party to be held from noon
Saturday to 9 p.m.

Band in Ashland
The Metp Hlah Scbool Band w1ll
be in Ashland, Ky., Saturday to take
port In tile Eastem Kentuclcy
Marcb1ng Band Festival. 'lbllll the
first compelltton for the local band
to enter th1a ICbool year.

, \, \
'

\I
I 1/ /(/
,

. ·.

YOUR PROFESSIONAL
JEWELER

....

Sport Coats
Shirts
Jackets
Suits
Corduroy Pants
Fashion Jeans

Jackets
Levi Bend-Over
Slacks

Blazers

Dresses
Skirts ·

LADIES LEVI DENIMS S2488
1 RACK OF LADIES SP()RTSWEAR

50.0/o OFF

reckless drtvtng.
'Ibl're have been 10 deaths
resulllng from eight accidents In
Meigs County since March, Hender·
son saki, compared to three for the
whole of 1982. There have been two
tra!flc deaths in GaWa County this
year.
An elderly Pumeroy couple, Lelia
and Walter Hellman, were killed In
the most recent fatal last Monday In
a head-on collision with a truck on
Ball Run Road near Pomeroy.
Some factors have been revealed
when the accidents were reviewed
by the patrol, the commander said.
Henderson noted that alcohol was a
factor tn five of the eight fatal
accidents, with driving lefl of center
being counted as a causative factor
In six aecldents.
There were two accidents caused
by vehicles going off the road, five
head-on collisions, a sideswipe

Incident and two vehicles that struck
fixed objects, Henderson said.
Four drivers and eight pas·
sengers were ejected .from their
vehicles, with five killed. None of
those killed were wearing safety
belts, Henderson said, but all had the
restraints available to them.
"There Is a pattern or drtnldng
drivers and those who either drive
too fast for road conditions_or drive
In the middle of the roadway,
thereby being left of center, causing
75 percent of tbe ~tal acciOents."
"Additional troopers are being
assigned to work Iii Meigs County to
attempt to break this intolerable ·
pattern of d1111gerous driving,'' he
added.
The patrol reported Saturday that
a head-on collision on Ohio' 7, just
over the Meigs County line into
Athens County, Injured three people
Friday night, with a driver and a
passenger being sent to the hospital .
for treatment.
TheOhtoDepartmentofHighway
Safety's weekly "box score" report
of traffic fatalltles listed 1,014 deaths
to date in the state, compared to
1,041 at this time last year.
The number of alcohol·related
deaths since March Is set at 296;
whlle the patrol's DWI arrests Is set
at 31,377 for the year.

Walking Australian
travels through area
ByKAnECROW
1\nM!&amp;-SentiDe) Staff

POMEROY - Walking, just a
walktng, that Is what Paul Forbes of
Darwin, AustraUa ha5 been doing
since November, 1981.
Forbes began his walk from
Fairbanks, Alaska and has crossed
45ofthe50states.
Forbes, a scuba diver and
photographer, was at Shoney's
Restaurant Wednesday when he
met Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cremeans,
Cheshire. The couple purchased
breakfast for the young man and
tookhimhomewlththemsohecould
-clean up and get a good nights rest.
Forbes, in a brteflnterviewThurs·
day, when asked hOw he managed to
·have meals on his long journey .
answered "If It creeps, crawls, or
(Continued on page A3)

Inside t 0 day••

an the time."

Beebe, president of the seven-member airport
authority, to review features of HitchcOck's proposal.
After the meeting, Beebe said the session was
informative, but Indicated no decision has been made.
Cain and commissioners are to study the lease
agreement in further detail.
In a meeting with commissioners Sept..6, Hitchcock
and Footh1lls. C&lt;HJWiler Kenneth Whited, a Stauffer
Chemical eo, _eXectitive, requested the . tilcrease
because the airport has been losing money.
Hitchcock said Foothllls wants to lease some
additional ground to buUd another hangar, so that the
firm can pursue Improvements as a prtvare venture.
The improvements, he !eels, are necessary to the
area's economic growth and he said he wants the
community to be more involved.
"It's a number one thing that a company wW took
at, whether an executive can fly In and out,"
Hitchcock said. "They can'taftord to be stuck Ina car

Additional ·troopers ·
assigned to Meigs
POMEROY - Additional high·
way patrol troopers are being
assigned to Meigs County due to the
Increase In traffic fatalities there,
the local patrol commander said
Satunlay.
Lt. Dan Henderson of the patrol's
GaUia-Metgs posi said troopers wlll
bewatcblngforandtaklngactbnon
tra!flc violations to break what he
called ~ "IntOlerable pattern" of

1

Sunday lhroup Tue8day:
Generally lair. lllpls 811-'16. Lows

POMEROY, OH.

·

ALL
WATCHES

Clear and quite cold tonight with a
chance of frost. Low 37-42. Winds
light and variable. Sunny and ·
warmer Satumay. High 65-70.
,
Exlmded Ohio Forecast

q~alily

~

Federal court denies
longwalling injunction

Weather forecast

The pillar ol

.·

Meets Tuesday

Vandalism already has taken
place with the new trees planted In Plan rally
Middleport's business section this
week and the Middleport Police
Meigs Area Holiness Association
Department warns that this will not · will hold a kick· off rally Tuesday,
be tolerated.'
Sept. '1:1, at 7:30 p.m. at the Laurel
This week some 55 locust trees
Clt!l Freewill Methodist Church.
were plan ted in the business section Each church will feature singers.
as a part of a landscaping program The public Is invited to attend.
for which the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources gave the v11lage
a$l5,000grant. Overnight, one of the Saturday dance
trees, on Walnut St., was pulled up
Ateen dancew11lbeheldSaturday
and lett near the planting location.
from
Sto 11 p.m. at the Long Bottom
Pollee warn that any person or
Community
Association BuDding.
persons caught vandaltztng the new
plantings w111 be subject to a fine of
at least $1,000 and a six months jall Veterans Memorial
sentence. Trees will also have to be
replaced by offenders. In cases of
Admitted--Karen Haines, Syrajuvenlles, parents and guardians
cuse; Floyd Reynolds, Middleport.
w1ll be held responsible, pollee
Dlscharged..Lawrence Hysell,
warned.
Eunice Nutter, Eva Barrett, Mar·
tha Roush, James MIUer, Clarence
McDaniel, Jr.

GALLIPOLIS- A decision on the management of
the Gali!a·Metgs Regional Airport, and on proposed
improvements, will be forthcoming from Gallia
. County commlssioners this week.
The commission has untU Sept. 30 to allow Foothills
Aviation to continue operating a business at the
. - Galltpolls;based airport. ·A lease &amp;gree~nent ts . ·
· · currently Is etiect, but Is up for negotiation this year.
Foothills obtained the lease in 1981. A few weeks
ago, half-Interest in the firm was purchased from
Gallipolis City Solicitor Douglas Cowles by Gearetd
Hitchcock ·Jr., who has since submitted a new lease
agreement to· commissioners ca!Ung for some land
· and an additional $10,000 appropriation from the
county to help operate the facllity.
Commissioners met In executive session for an
hour Friday with Prosecutor Joseph Cain and Larry

FREE BATTERIES AND MANUAL
SIPHON PUMP INCLUDED WITH

Meigs County happenings
Traffic reminder

ort management decision due this week
'lbnel..sentlnel Stall

.

POMEROY O.

' I

The airport, buDt tn 1967 with a combination of
grant montes given to Gallia and Meigs counties,
handles prtva re aircraft, moStly !or use by
corporations with plants In the Gallipolis and Mason
County areas.
Hitchcock said recent expansion of the James A.
Rhodes Airport near Jackson was done for one
purpose- to provide for altcraft used by JenQ:s Inc.,
the Italian fOOds manufacturer, when it relocated its
plant from Minnesota to Wellston.
Hitchcock said he's seen an Increase In traffic at the
airport recently, with activity rising by 40 to 50
percent and business up by 20 percent, according to
his figures.
"Indications are It's still climbing. I think a lot of it
has tO do with us being here,'' he said, adding that he
estbnates he and his wife, SaUy, put In approximarely.
168 hours per week at the factllty.
..• -.

'• •

A MAN wrm PlANS - Improvement of the
GaJila.Melg&amp; RePmai Airport Is envisioned by
Gearekl Hitchcock Jr., above, CIHlWIIer ol FoothiJis
Aviation, the business operating out of lbe airport.

WASHlNGTON (APl - A war
powers compromise allowing Prest·
dent Reagan to keep U.S. troops In
Lebanon !or up to 18 months Is
headed for a tough fight on the
~~-------,
Senate floor after winning a 9-7
party·llne vote in the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee.
"If the committee Is representa·
tlve of the Senate, It w1ll be a very
tight vote," said Sen. Charles McC.
Mathias, R·Md., who first voted
with committee Democrats to ltmtt
the troops' stay to six months, but
later changed his mind.
·
. However, Senate Minority Whip
Alan Cranston, D-Callf., an opponent of the compromise, said, "I
imagine that Republican discipline
will pass It" In the Senate debate
scheduled to begin Monday and
wind up Tuesday or Wednesday.
An aide to the Republican
leadership, whicb controls the
. Senate by a 5&amp;45 margin, said, "We
st111 have a majority, and we are

Along the River ........... 8-1-8
llw!lneM ....................... E-1
C' lftedo ..................D-~7
JJeaa. ................... ,..... A-7

DENIM &amp; BOOT JEANS IN COLORS

$1588

BAHR CLOTHIERS

·;, ·

Plan lor such bnprovements hinge on acceptance or a
lease agreement Gallla County commissioners are
ronsldertng.

Baule erupts

near Marines
BEffiUT, Lebanon iAP) Lebanese anny troops and rebel·
llous Moslem militiamen battled
Saturday around U.S. · Marine
positions, further threatening the
entire multinational force as fight ing moved from the mountains to
Moslem strongholds In the south.
The giant battleship USS New
Jersey, equipped with 1&amp;-tnch guns,
was to arrive off Lebanon Saturday
to buttress the U.S. Navy squadron
supporting the Marines. Its guns can
hit Syrtan army positions anywhere
in central and eastern Lebanon.
The renewed flghllng came one
day after four Marines were
wounded when Druse and ShUte
Moslem forces, backed by Syria,
attacked the Marine compound with
mortars, grenades and automatic
weapons as theflghtlngmoved from
the central mountains to areas south
of Beirut.
Two u.s. warships and a shore
battery responded with salvos Into
anti-government positions.
The guided missile cruiser USS
Virginia opened fireat7p.m. (1 p.m.
EIJI') Friday and thedestroyerUSS
Arthur W. Radford unleashed its
five-Inch guns three hours later.
The violence intensified as hopes
for a cease-fire In Lebanon's
21-day-old civil war faded.

going to try to use that majority to
pass the resolution as It came out of
the committee."
The committee vote indicated
strong Democratic support for a
six-month limit, and Mathias sa'ld,
"I think there are some Republican
votes for six months.''
"I think It Is obvious from the vote
today that there will be strong
support for It," he said.
Reagan has said that he will slgo
the compromise if it comes to him In
the form worked out by negotiators,
but has not said what he would do if
the time ltmttwere decreased .
For about15mtnutes, thecommitteewasonrecordasrecommendlng
the six-month Umtt on the basis of a
9-8.vote in which Mathias sided with
the eight committee Democrats.
While Sen. Richard Lugar, R
Ind., remonstrated that the move
"effectively guts the entire bipartisan situatiOn that has been worked
out,'' Majority Leader Howard H.

Baker Jr., R·Tenn., arose from his '
seat and approached Mathias.
"The majority leader turned to
me and said, 'Tills thing Is turning to
ashes,"' Mathias told reporters.
He said he did not recall making
any response to Baker's remark,
but added, "My judgment was that
It (the compromise) was unraveling
fast, and itrequtredveryquick, very
drastic action."
The Maryland senator then
moved to reconsider the vote by
which the six-month amendment
had been adopted. His motion
carrted, smoothing the way for
approva.l of the 18-month version.
He sak! he was not reacting to any
pressure from the administration.
"Admlnlstratlon pressure does
no.t worry me," he said. "I have got
plenty of calluses. What does worry
me Is that I saw the process
unraveling."
The committee did adopt two
amendments proposed by Mathias,

one of them calling for the president
to report to Congress on the situation
in Lebanon every three months and
the other providing for faster
congressional consldera tton of any
resolution to pull the troops out In
less than 18 months.
Baker said these amendments
were agreeable to him. Mathias said
he discussed them before the
meeting with Vice President
George Bush and White House Chief
of Staff James Baker Ill, but \hey
did not make any commitments.
Supporters and opponents of the
resolution said they feared that the
presence of the Marines ·In Beirut
would lead to deepening U.S.
involvement In the Middle East.
"I don't think any of us know
where_this Is leading," said Sen.
Charles Percy, R·Iii. "The possibility exists that the path down which
we are going could lead to not only
direct conflict with Syria but direct
conflict with the Soviet Union."

Edllorlala ..................... A-2
Fann ........................... E-2
A-6-8
SIJOI'Is ••••.••.•••.••••••••.••. C-1--8

Local.: .......................

For a rescuer or firefighter to
be the best heorshecanbe, they
must have tbe opportunity to
work 911 their skills and hone
them to R fine degree, Training
8elllllons and fire schools like the
one held recently In Gallipolis
serve that purpose.

2 RACKS OF LADIES SPORTSWEAR

SMALL FLAIR LEVI PERMA-PRESS

"We're trying to get some people in here, because
the business has to justify full·tlme employment,
which it doesn't now," Hitchcock said. The firm wants
to place a person In the airport office seven or eight
hours peP day .
Hitchcock, 40, has been a GaWa County resident for
the past 12 years. Between himself and Whited, the
firm owns four planes. Hitchcock said his primary .
business activities !)-ave been as a 181ld develqper and·_
consultant, In addition to being a stockholder and
chairman of the board of an on company.
Hitchcock said he's been urging public support and
Involvement In the airport, but said he'd drop the
matter If none materializes.
"It is possible we could drop the whple thing," he
said. "The amount of money I've put into It, I can
recover tt. If we can't get support, let somebody else
worry about it."

Senate panel OKs 18 mont,hs in Lebanon

'

40°/o OFF
MEN'S PRE-WASHED LEVI DENIMS Sl950

entint

Model J·20
1,500 B.T.U.

.

. •

Kentucky .............. 26 Nebraska ............... 42
Tulane .... :............. 14 UCLA .................... 10

tmts

@A

~

West Virginia ......·.. 27
Boston College ...... 17

•

SJ4995

.Foreign Ministry officials were
unavallabie for COIIlll\ent today
because of a national holiday.
Kato said the Items- four pieces
of Insulation, one piece of the jet's
wallandfourfragmentso!spongewere found off Japan's northern
coast.Hesaldl5Japaneseshtpsand
a South Korean vessel continued ·
searchingof!Japan'snorthenunost
Island b! Hoki&lt;atdo. .
-.
Searchers have found hundreds of
Items and several badly mutUated
bodies believed to have come from ·
the plane, but no new bodies have

~

Ohio University ..... 31
Eastern Michigan .. 14

quality healef 11\al: leaturn lux·
ur10u1 wood grain lltyllno ala low
price any famltv can aHord.

r~bee!~l;l'ec;;:o;ve;red;·;ln;;the;;pas;;t;w;eek;;·~~~;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;~

depth or about 2,400 feet. The'
recorders automatically emit a
battery-powered ptngtng stgnal to
help searchers locate them.
. However, Master Gunnery Sgt.
Ed Ev~. ll)edla ltalson chief for
t11e
torces, Said the report was
"absolutely not true." He sale! the
recorders, whicb were located in the
rear of the aircraft, had not been
located as at this morning.

Michigan ............... 38 Illinois .................. 20
Wisconsin .............. 21 Michigan State ...... 10

U'a like seeing and laaNng tl'le
warm glow ol alamllw llreptace. A

Removable tank
Contlnuous .l'leallr'IQ limA
1:3 · 14.5 hours

Rough sea hampers search
Hampered

Furman ................. 31
Marshall .................. 7

I I ••••••••••••••••••

numberolgroupshave~rered

Meigs sentor ClttzeDs will be
conducting that operatbn.
There w111 be p12za, snow cones,
hand-dipped tee cream, hot dogs,
submarines, popcorn, barbecued
chicken by the Middleport Fire
Departinent to name only a few of
the tempting foods to be olfered.
Craft stands should also prove a
point of Interest to party visitors.
There w1ll be doll stands, a stained
glass booth, leather item stands,
stands with homemade qutlts and
plllows, ceramics and other merchandise featured.
A number of games w1l1 be
Included in the party outlay for
youngsters through adult ages.
Adding zest to the party will be
musical entertainment provided
throughout the party hours from an
Improvised stage at the comer of
Coal St. and North Second Ave. A

I O'tf)(J ••
20
Ohio State ............. 14

Michael Dcllles 8llld be got
care1M1 Friday llllht aDd .It
eatled up oo11Un1 him hill World
Boxllli AMocladoa beavywelgbt cJuunplollsNp. Doke8,
· 11, was knocked Dillin the 10th
round by South Afrtcan Gen1e
Coetzee, wbo won the UUe In hill
ll*dtry
-PqeC8

-B-1 feature

MIDDLEPORT
•\

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