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                  <text>Poge-12- The Doily Se ntinel

Thursday, Oct. 14,1982

Pomeroy"-Middleport, Ohio

Leaf pickup slated in Middleport

Area death s - - - - - - - - - - Clara C. Am hm~w
Mrs. Clara Compton AmbrOSl',
R1, of :,03 Parrish Av&lt;· .. Poi nt Plm ·

sanl , died Wedn&lt;&gt;Sday morning in
the Holzer Medica l Cent er a lkr a
short illness.
She was born Aug. 211. 1~11. at Sit·
Jotms R un . W. \'a . to lhl' i&lt; ll l ' ( ~t ·n rgr•

and Ida Clark Compton
Her husba nd. J ohn 1\'i lliam ,\rn
brose. preceded her in dca 1h in 1'!:Xi.
She is SUI'V i\'('&lt;1 iJ.'· 0 11&lt;' d;tughlt'l'.
Mrs. Norm an L. 1Ek'IIY l.uc 1Snodgr ass. Point Plf'asant, with \\.'hom

s he lived; one son . .John tJark 1 Am·
brosc J r., Pomcro,·. a daug hlf•t· in ·
law , Corrinnf' AmbrusP. Poml'rO_\·:
and son-in-law.

~ornw n SnodgTass.

Point Pleasanl; 1\\'0 gra nddaughters. Janel a nd Rl'iJ&lt;'&lt;'Ca Ambrose.
Pomeroy; one great gra ndson .John
Warren Ambrosr. Pornr1·o)·.
Funeral serv iC'f's will bl.' held un

Friday at 11 a .m. dl thr CtO\\'
Hussell Funeral Hom&lt;' \\'ilh 1111 •
Rev. Ra lph Sagrr .Jr .. officiating .
Burial will lx' u1 lhr Su ncn&gt;SI
Cemetery.
Friends rna\" call al lhc funf'ral
home lodav from :, p rn . unl i1 9 p.m.

Willard Fn•e
..
Wi llard 1 Bill! F1-yc, 79, of Ches hire, died Wednesday a t the Holzer
Medica l Center a ft er a lingering
illnt'SS.
Born on Sept. 25. 1902 a t Ra nger,
W. Va .. he was the son of the late
.John H. a nd Ida Ca usby Frye. He
II'JS prcceded in dea th by his wife,
Ma ry, Ju ne 3. 19H2, SC\'en brothers
and lhrcc sisters. A coal miner. he
ll'as a member of the United Mine
Wo rkers.
Hr is surv ived

b~'

two da ug ht e rs

a nd sons-in-law, Margie a nd Ra ndall Peck. Ches hire. a nd Jea n and
.Jack Corns. Da vin . W. Va.; three
sons and daugh ters-in -law, Otis and
I'al mas FJYP. Toledo; William a nd
Donna Frye. Jr .. a nd James Ed" ard and Linda F1yc, both of Cievel;uJd; one brot her, Ca leb Frye,
llunt ington. W. Va.,a nd two sis ters,
:vlargarPI N('('('ea nd Pearl Mullens,
IJO!h of Cha uncey. W. Va . Also sur,.i,·ing arc 2:1 grandr hldren a nd 21
gTPat grandchildren, a nd sever al

nieces a nd nephews.
FUnera l serv ices will be held a t 2
p.m . Saturday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower FUneral Home with
buria l in the Cheshire Gravel Hill
Cem etery. The Rev. Keith Atkins
will officia te.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Thursday. 7 to 9 p.m . and on
Friday, 2 to4 p.m. and 7 to9p.m .

Cora P. Soulier
Cora P. Soulier. 83, 546Anna Mae
Dr, Mogadore, formerly of Meigs
Coun ty, died Oct. 6 afte r a brief
illness.
Mrs. Soulier was bom and reared
in Long Bottom. She was a da ughter of the la te B. A. and Bell Zora
Whiteside. She was also preceded
in death by a sister, Wilma Buckley, on May 22, 1982.
Surviving are a brother, Hobart
Whiteside, Parkersburg, W. Va ..
and a sis ter, Esta Qullla um, Ka nsas City. Mo.
Services were held Oct. 11 a t the

, - - - - - - - - -- - - " ' - - - - - - - - - - ----1

Ht&gt;len M. Haqwr
Mrs. Helen M. Ha rper. 79, died
Wednesda)· at her hom&lt;' a t 110-l F. .
Main St.. PomerO)'.
Mrs. Haq::&gt;c\r was an activP
member of the Mt . Moriah Baptist
Chureh in Middlcp011 . She was serving as chu rch pianist and pres ident
of the chur,·h Missionaf)· Society .
Shew as a ch;u·tcr member a ndpasl
pres ident of the LPII'ts Manlev Pos t
Amer ican L&lt;'gion Auxil iary and a
past president of lhr Hocking Dis-

J

tric t Miss io n ar~~ Co tl\'C'nt ion.

Mrs. Harper "'"' a daughter of
the lair Fred and l'k&gt;rl ha Hudson
Jackson. ShP was born Aug . 11. 1903
in Middlepol1 . Ek&gt;Siclcs h('r parent s,
shP was prPCedrd in deal h b\· hrr
husba nd. Campl~·ll Hat·pet·. and a
brot her
Su r;;i\·in g a rr

Eckard - Baldwin Funeral Home
with the Rev . Larry T . West officiating. Burial was In Hillside
Memorial Park.

Final reading set
The fina l reading of the by-laws
of Meigs Aerie 2171, Fra ternal
Order of Eagles. will be held at 8
p.m. Monday . There has been a
change also In age membership requirements, Increased from 1R tn
21.

Anything goes with

~

Fivecans were answered by units
Wednesday evening and Thursday
morning, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 1: 49 a.m. Thursday, the Middleport Unit took Emma Wayland
from her Middleport home to Veterans Memorial Hospital and at 4: :ll
a .m., the Rutland Unlt took Ida
White from the New Uma Road to
Veterans Memorial.

The Precetor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
meet a t 7:45 tonight in the Riverboat
Room of the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co. The program theme will
be Octoberfest.

gra ndchild .
Scn·ic&lt;&gt;S \\'ill tx• ll(·ld a! :1 p.m.
Friday at thr Middleport !VII. Moriah Baptist Churl'h with lhr Rrv .

Omnl comes in a
range ol autumn tones

Navy / Grey / Wine
Brown / Ombre

Ht'nr: · K&lt;)y. thf' Hr\·. Ca h·in Menn is

and lh&lt;• Re,· . F.rtdiP Bufli n);lon officiating. 8Utial \\'til ix• tn !VIirl('rsvillr
Hill CPmetrn·. Fri!'ncl.s rna\' rail a!
the Ewing Fun£'ra l Ht ,r m· from 2to4
and 7 lu 9 p.m. Joda \ .

Pay Your Columbia Gas Bills At:

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OH .

BENSON &amp;HEDGES

$1 59

Tube
Socks
7 14.
9 15.

Boys' sizes to
men's to
White
with color tops - made by Springfoot

Big selections in all sizes - solids and
patterns Electric blankets included - Save
Now.

STEREO
8-TRACK-TapeSYSTEM
- AM / FM Slereo Receiver
Counter
95
$224
With
m&lt;~1rrhil~a

$119 SKEIN

and Big Talis.

Sl5.95 Flannels
Sl8.95 Flannels
Sl9.95 Flannels
S21.95 Flannels

............... Sl2.45
............... s14.75
............... sl5.55
............... s17.15

118th Anniversary Sale

LITTLE BOYS'

Jeans &amp; Corduroys
Quality Lee's, Wrangler and Buster Brown
denim jeans, corduroy slacks, dress pants
and knit pants
·
Sizes: 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4 and 4 to 7.
REG. 17.00 ....................... SALE 15.59
REG. 112.00 ........ ........ ..... SALE 19.59
REG. 116.00 ................... SALE 112.79
REG. 122.00 .... . .. ........ .

1

Anniversary

STORE- WIDE

COAT SAlE

All winter

coat~

and jackets for men,
boys, children, ladies and juniors.

ANNIVERSARY
SALE PRICES
LADIES'

Open a box today.

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR

Our entire stock of Misses and extra size
coordinate sportswear is reduced for the
final two days of our Anniversary Sale. .
Don't miss this chance to buy quality
sportswear at Anniversary Sale Prices!

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8

Warning: The StJ'rgeon General Has De1ermined
~hat Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

KETI'LES - Meigs County senior cltizeM are
pictured stirring four kettles of apple butter as the
annual apple butter project progressed. The senior
- · ml!ll..blllli:I'J9£ Ie¥ $1.~ fr.om the annual sale of the

118t.h Anniversary Sale

Quadriga and Heirloom

$2.49 to $2.79 Valli

3112 ounce

36 and 45 inches wide - solids and pall·
erns - good selection

$ 99

YARD

the people of Ohio from electing
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Suptheir own utility commissioners,"
porters of a ballot Issue to require
he said.
election of state utility regulators
Kent B. McGough, campaign
say a group opposins the Issue Is
coordinator
for the coalition opposdodging questions about how much
Ing Issue 3, said Thursday that conmoney utilities are contributing to
tributions would be spelled out In a
defeat the proposal.
campaign expense report filed with
Henry W. Eckhart, a Columbus
the secretary of state next week.
attorney and former member ofthe
"I think It probably will put a lot of
Public Utilities Commission of
things, at least from our point of
Ohio, made the allegation after he
said questions asked the opposition
view, to rest," he said.
The former Ohio Republican
group, Coni;wners for Responsible
Party chairman dismissed claims
Utility Reform, went unanswered.
from Eckhart's group that utility
Eckhart Is co-chairman of the
Committee for Dlreci Election, the , companies are projected to spend
group backing Issue 3 on the Nov. 2 $2.5 million on the anti-Issue 3
campaign.
ballot.
"These figures that are being ban"The voters are entitled to know
about are absolUtely ridicudled
how many utilities have contributed
lous," McGough said. " I know that
toCRUR's budget," Eckhart saldln
our total contributions are going to
a news release Thursday.
be way less than a million."
· "Apparently CRUR doesn't want
He said It would reflect the particithe voters to know just how deeply
pation of utilities as well as other
Involved the utilities are In this enorgroups "that will be substantially
mously costly campaign to prevent

Anniversary

PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR
Corduroy blazers, blouses, skirts. dress slacks. denim
skirts and 1eans, knit tops andiumpers.
Pre-Teen Sizes.

REG. $16.00
................ SALE $12.79
REG. $22.00 ........................ SALE $17.59
REG.
.. ...................... SALE $23 19
REG.
.. ...................... SALE $29.59

Anniversary Sale!

Boys Shirts

Sizes 8 to 20. Velours - knits - westerns .flannels. Entire stock included.

Boys S6.95 Shirts ............... S5.60
Boys s9.95 Shirts .............. ss.oo
Boys Sl2.95 Shirts ........... s10.so
Sl6.95 Shirts ........... SlJJO
/18th Anniversary Sale

more than the utilities, I think."
McGough said he was not surprised by results of a Colwnbus Dispatch statewide mall poll which
showed the proposal approved by a
72 pereent to 28 percent margin.
The survey of 1,531 people was
conducted Sept. 27-ll.
"We've found out conclusively ...
that when people understand the
Issue they come down on our side, "
McGough said.
"We're trying to make the people
understand what the Issues are
through the use of personal contact,
mall and media," he said.
Eckhart said the opposition committee has bought hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of television
commercial time "to twist the truth
and confuse the voters."
Issue 3 ts a proposed constitutional amendment which would require members of the PUCO to be
elected In statewide, nonpartisan,
publicly financed elections.

Legislative panel considering
repeal of special tax breaks
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A legislative panel seeking ways to revamp the state's tax structure is
conslde riing taking away some industria l and business tax breaks approved in the J970s.
A joint tax study committee decided Thursday they should be reviewed because the state Is pressed
for money.
Rep. William E. Hinig, D-New
Philadelphia, co-chairman. and others on the committee stressed that
repea l would not represent a departure in indus trial development
policy.
Most members of both political ·
parties s till believe government
should provide tax and other incen·
tives for business and Industria l development which creates jobs.
Hlnig, along with Rep. Robert L.
Corbin, R-Dayton, and others said
the Reagan Administration's 1981
tax package provided incentives
which surpassed any extended by
the state.
The Tuscarawas County lawmaker mentioned accelerated depreciation which allows businesses
to claim greater tax credits over a
shorter number of years for wear
and tear on their equipment and
machinery.
Richard Levin, who heads the
Tax Department's research div-

lsion, gave thecommll teeestlmates
of wha t one state tax break bill has
cost ln lost revenue since Its enactmenl in 1978.
Tha t enactment provided lax
credits for businesses for their lnveslments in new m achinery and
equipment. The first yea r, the revenue loss was $17 million. It
swelled to$30 million by 1981and the
estima te for this year is $55 mll1ion,
Levin said .
Levin and other officials estima ted the loss will continue to Increase until after the first 10 years,
when II should level off.
Corbin said that at the current
ra te of increase, the price tag could
balloon into hundreds of millions of
dollars a nd be devastating to state
finances.
The committee is reviewing
Ohio's tax structure and Is to submit
suggestions to the 115th General Assembly, which convenes in
January.
On a nother matter, the committee reviewed a proposal calling for a
uniform statewide utility tax to help
equallze per pupil subsidies to
Ohio's 615 local school districts.
Sen. Richard H. Finan. RCinclnnati, the panel's other cochairman. said the plan " is fraught
with administrative difficulties"
which will take much tinne and
study to resolve.
For ma ny years, lawmakers and

officials have been trying to solve
the problem of having both rich and
poor school districts in which state
and local per pupil a id combined
can vary from as much as $1,300 to
$4,500 a year.
One factor is the local lax base. A
district with a major industry or
utili ty, for insta nce. will collect a
large amount of property taxes to
fund its schools, while those with
only argicullural ;md residential
properties collect less on a comparatively small tax base.
The committee is lqoking not only
a t a statewide persona Iproperty tax
on utilities. but a lso state collection
of the same tax from other industries for distribution to school
districts.

Weather forecast
Considerable cloudiness tonight.
Low 40-45. Winds mostly westerly
1().15 mph . Saturday. partly sunny.
High around 50.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
Fair Sunday and Monday.
Chance of showers Tuesday. Wghs
In the upper 50s to low 60s Sunday
and mld-OOs to low 70s Monday and
Tuesday. Lows In the 30s early Sunday, warming to the mid to upper
4lls early Monday and Tuesday.

Meigs' jobless figures show
demand for additional nurses

Junior Dresses

Beautiful Fall colors and fabrics in jumpers, pant
dresses and fancy dreses. Poly/ cotton blends, denims. knits and wool blends.
Jr. sizes 3 lo 15.

REG. $20.00 ................... SALE $15.99
REG. $28.00 ................... SALE $22.39
REG. $36.00 ................... SALE $28.79
REG. $47.00 ................ .
· Anniversary

trades classification, and another
one-tenth had clerical, sales or ser.vlce experience.
Of the women, two-fifths were In
the cJerlcal-sales category, onetlilrd were In the service area, and
one-tenth had held bench work jobs.
A nwnber of applicants had been
office clerks, nurses aides, carpenters, welders, assemblers, material
handlers, l!iind packagers, sales·
workers, walters' and waitress&amp;,
truck drivers, and construction, fac·
tory, foondry and store laborers.
Manulacturtng employers 1n the
county ~ally of!er'l:d beginning
workers hourly wage rates wljlch
According to OBES figures,
varied as follows: unsldlled, $3.35 to
three-tenths of those people who
$4.50; ~ldlled. $4 . to $5.25;
were actively seeking work through
tile Pomeroy~ of the Ohlo Bu- skilled, $5 to $7. For the past several
years, average-weekly_earnings ot
fi!IIU ot Employment Services were
county factory emploYees covered .
women:AmongthemaJeapPIICants
during the r'ererence month, ap- • by the Ohlo Unemployment Com·
pensatlon Law have lieeil approxt.
proximately two-ftfths had blick·
one-third below the average
mateJY
groun!Js 1n stnlcturJ) work,
for.the state.
me-tenth were In the machine

Although Meigs County's jobless
rate stood at 10.7 perce11t during Au·
gusi there was a demand for registered and licensed practical nurses
during that period which could not
bernet.
That disclosure came Wednesday
In a release tram the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Servtces.
In August, the Meigs County civIlian labor force ,was estlmaied at
ll,!KXJ people based on the place of
residence. Appi'Olllmately 10,550
peoplewereemployedwhllethejobless total carne to 1,250.

MEN'S OR BOYS JEANS

Denims
&amp; Corduroys
All sizes - basic jeans ·. fashion looks - fuller cut
jeans. Entire stock men's and boys.

S16.95 JEANS ................. '12.71.
S19.95 JEANS .......•.......... S14.96
.'21.95 'JEANS .. ;.............. S16.46
................. '18.71

SATURDAY TIL 5

6mg ·'tar;· 0.6 mg nicotine av. per cigarette. by FTC method.

1. •

}

apple butter and this will he used for programs at the
county senior citizens center. Thirty-two b11'ihels of
apples were used to make the toO quarts· of apple
butter thi• yea~ .

Issue 3 opponents won't say
how much $$ utilities donated

Cotton Prints
1

the prices paid by retail customers - had surged 7
percent in 1981 and 11.8 percent in 1980.
Economists have a ttributed the better results on
inflation to the stifling recession and the worldwideoll
glut as well as bumper crops.
In September alone, producer prices dipped a seasonally adjusted 0.1 percent . compared with 0.6 percent increases in July and August. the report sa id.
They also fell by 0.2 percent in February and by 0.1
percent in Mareh and May.
[( prices fell for 12 straight months at September's
0.1 percent, the yearly decline would be 1.7 percent.
The a nnual ra te reported by the Labor Department is
based on a more precise calculation of monthly
changes than the figure the depa rtment makes public.
The new report said tha t for the 12 months ending in
September, producer prices rose 3.6 percent .
The department provided these details on producer
prices last month:
-Food prices fell 0.5 percent after rising a small 0.1
percent in August and twnbllng 1.5 percent in July.
Prices declined for pork. poult ry, soft drinks, beef,
veal, a nd processed fruits a nd vegeta bles. Prices were
up for fish, fresh fruit. sugar. dairy products and
coffee.

- Many Olher Quality Features.

SAVE $100.00

Wintuk Yarn

New shipment of colors skeins. Stock up now.

WASHINGTON lAP)- Fueled by sharply falling
automobile costs, prices a t the wholesale level fe ll in
September a t a n a nnual rateofl.7percent, the government said today.
The monthly decline, the fourth this year, a lso was
driven by lower food and energy costs, the Labor
Department said in its new report on the Producer
Price Index for finished goods.
Prices for new cars tumbled 6.3 percent from August a nd costs for light trucks were off 3.5 pereent as
dealers cut prices to make room for 1983 mode ls, the
report said .
Food prices, partially reflecting a bunda nt c rop
harvests, fell 0.5 percent In September. the second
sizable drop in the past three months.
Gasoline prices dropped 0.9 percent in Septemher
after rising in each of the previous three months. T he
cost of home heating oil fell1.6 pereent after a sma ller
decline in August.
The new figu res meant tha i for the first nine months
of the year infla tion a t the wholesale level was running
at a n annual rate of 3.1 percent. If that ra te held steady
for the rest of the yea r. II would be the sma llest Increase s ince the 2.2 percent rise recorded for a ll of1970.
Produce r prices - one merchandis ing step before

REG. $324.95 CRAIG

RED HEART $1.49

1 Sec! ion , 14 Pag es
15 Cents
A Multim edia lnc. Newspaper

Wholesale prices
continue decline

Blouses. knit tops, sweaters. sweat shirts. capes and
velour tops.
Lee's, Wrangler. Calvin Klein and Buster Brown
1eans. knit rJ~nls, corduroy slacks, jogging panls.
Sizes: 6 to 24mos.. 2 lo 4, 4 to 6x. 7 to 14.
REG. $5.00 .. .............................. SALE $3.99
REG. $7.00 .................. .............. SALE $5.59
REG. $12.00 ..... .................. .... .... SALE $9.59
REG. $16.00 ...................... ........ SALE $12.79

- 8-Track Player/ Recorder

entinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Oct. 15 1982

Tops &amp; Jeans Sale

118th Anniversary Sale

WORK SHIRTS
Regular sizes - extra large sizes - Tall -

Only 6 mg yet rich enough to be called deluxe.
Regular and Menthol.

Voi .31 ,No .115
Copyrighted 1982

Ll TlE GIRLS

MEN'S FLANNEL

tOO'S

The Daily

Anniversary Sale .

Reduced 20°/o

I 18th Anniversary Sale!

BENSON &amp; HEDGE

Page 14

On Wednesday evening at 6:01
p.m., the Racine Unlt took Elmer
Pickens from Letart Falls to Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at 7: 10
p.m . took Fanny Hale from Pomeroy Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial and at 8: 28 p.m. the
Tuppers Plains Unit took Josephine
Meyers from Chester Township to ·
Veterans Memorial.

/18th Anniversary Sale!

All Bed Blankets

')('\·f'n gra ndchildrf'n anrl on&lt;• gl'Pa I -

Page 14

JUST TWO DAYS OF OUR 118TH ANNIVERSARY SALE
IT'll PAY YOU TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL SALE
PRICES All OVER THE STORE -THE VERY IUMS YOU'll BE
NEEDING FOR FALL AND WINTER USE- PLUS EXCELLENT
CHRISTMAS GIFTS AND USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN.
MEN'S AND BOYS'

Livestock reports

Liberace faces
palimony action

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

118th A nniversary Sale

:vl rs. Ma ry Ellen Smith and Mrs.
Phoebe Coal s. both of L'olumbus:

Cards-Brewers
•
resume series
...
Page3

ELBERFELDS·IN POMEROY

Hush Puppies ii_

two daught1 ·rs.

Residents are asked to rake their
leaves Into the street along the
curbs and they will be picked up by
the village street department as
soon as possible.
Pickups will be continued dally
until the ma jority of leaves are dls·
posed of.

Ernergencyruns---------------------------

Meets tonight

Casual sandals love your feet
They take you through the day with
comfort and style. This tall . show
off and save on the pleasures
o t Hus h Puppies' Shoes.

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman said today that pickup of
leaves In the village will begin on
Monday, Oct. 18.
Pickup will begin In the northern
portion of the community and will
move southward as time permits.

I' .

~.l

According to 1970 U.S. Census Information, close to two-fifths the
county's resident jobholders commuted to work In neighboring counties. In August, about three-tenths of
all workers living In the county held
mining jobs and about one-eighth
worked for various government
agencies. Annual average employ·
ment data for 1981 lndlcates the
leading factory Industries In the
county ~re fabricated metals,
el!lftrtc equipment, lwnber and
wood products, food, chemicals,
and transportation equipment.
Items turned out locally Included
bakery products, non-alcoholic bev·
erages, processed salt, wooden
pallets, electric motors and relays,

and cono:ete blocks.
In the 191ilcensus,MelgsCounty's
population was llted as 23,600. Middleporl was the Jariest cOJ;nmunlty
with3,1mresldentswhllePomeroy,
the county seat, had 2, 700
Inhabitants.

SEWER HOOKUPS - Rellld;,.. of Syracuse Syracuse. There are approximately 700 homes In the
and Racine are hooklnl! Into the new sewer sy~~tem. . vlllqes of Racine and Syracuse that wW be hooked
Shown It! Jim Cllflord of J 6 F Cootracton running a
lnlo the new system. Six contracton are available 1o
line Into the residence of Sadie Tluener, 'l1drd &amp;reet,
do the hookups.

�Friday, Oct. 15,1982

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel .

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Page-2- The Daily Sentiner
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio ;·
Friday, Oct. 15,1982

UC wins lawsuit
CINCINNATI (AP)- U niversity
of Cincinnati athletic officials who
successfully challenged the NCAA
In court are confident that they can
r em ain a division 1-A school for
football.
The university won a court fight
with the National Collegiate Athletic Association w hen Hamilton
County Common Pleas Judge Fred
Cartolano issued a preliminary injunction Thursday keeping UC in
division 1-A for the rest of the 1982
- football season.
The NCAA at1emped to downgrade UC's football program to I ·
AA. The preliminary injunction
blocks that move until the univer·
sity has its appeal heard at the
NCAA's convention next January.

Who's to blame ?.____ _ _ _ _ _ _J_am_e_sJ_. _K_ilp_at_ri_ck

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Reagan bullish-for the moment
President Reagan is bullish on Wall Street - for the J)'loment.
That' s the same Wall Street he once said was out of touch with Am erica,
and a poor sou rce of economic advice.
The market was down then. interest ra tes were rising , and tbe financial
community was a center of skepticism about Reaganomics. Stock prices
have gone up lately, and the president now describes the stock m arket as a
leading economic indicator . He did say that hestoppedcounting when stock
prices slumped a bit the other day.
With the unemployment rat e at 10.1 percent and congressional elections
three weeks away, Republicans are looking for every positive economic
signal they ca n find.
He listed them in his nationally broadcast address Wednesday night :
inflation rat e down. interest rate down, the va lue of the dollar up on world
markets. stock and bond markets surging.
Reagan and Secretary of the Treasury Donald T . Rega n have sometimes
blamed. som etimes challenged, and only lately praised the financial com·
m unity for the way m arkets and interest rates have reacted toadministra·

tion economic programs.
The bu siness and financial es tablishment was overwhelmingly Reagan's
in the elect ion that installed the Republica n adrninistra lion. Regan came to
Washington from Wa ll St reet. where he was chairman of Merrill Lynch &amp;
Co .. giant of the investment business.
But skepticism set in, and before long, the presidept and the secretary
were suggesting that their old friends were timid or worse.
By the end of Reagan's first summer in office, Secretary Regan was
l ect~ring in ves tors and bu sinessmen to show a little confidence. and backbone. for the sake of economic progress- and to j ustify the tax breaks
business got under the administration ta x bilL
When it was suggested th;lf tht ddministra tion was try ing to brainwash
Wall Street. Reagan answered with a quip:
··That asswnes Wa ll Stree t has brains."
Thirtecn months ago, the president said he was upset at the way Wall
St rect was responding. or failing to respond, to his program.
A few days Ia ter, Reagan proposed a new round of federa l spending cuts,
and the stock market dropped again . " I don't know what the reason is, but
I'm sure not going to take the blame" Reagan said .
At a newsconferenceon Oct. I , 1981, Reaga n was asked why the administration kept banging away at Wall Street. He said he said he wasn't doing
that . then r ead a iet1 er from the Securities Industry Association, declaring
confidence in his programs.
He got most of them through Congress. but the markets stili didn't
respond the way the administrat ion thought they should. Not until l ately.

Letters to editor
Bunch of bull!
I am so m ad l could spit fire.
Here we are all sitt ing while the
part tim e cowboy sends our Mar ines to L ebanon. He first said no
more than 30 days now he says for
as long as needed . That 's a bunch of
bull . He knew when he ordered
them over ther e what was going on.

Why ca n' t he tell the public the
truth ? Watergate wasn't anything
compared to the ~ooi Reagan is
pulling over the public's eyes. Before the 1984 elections, I think a lot
of people are going to wise up. Mrs. Anna Leamond, Racine, Ohio.

Free education
Perhaps many of your readers
are presently out of work and ha ve
nothing constructi ve to do with
tbeir time.
For those who did not finish high
school, thi s wou ld be the perfect
time for them to continue their
basic education.
Adult Basic Educa tion IARE. 1
is free. Even the paper. pencils and
study m aterials are free.
We have."IWO A.B.E. Learning
Centers here in Meigs County. The
center tha t Is located in the Middleport Public Library is open on Wednesday and Thursday from IO a.m.
to 2 p.m . and the center located in
the Pomeroy Public Library Is
open Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday from 6:30 p.m .·9 p.m.
We don't have formal classes in
A.B.E. Each student \NOrks at his
own pace In the materials best suited to his own personal needs.
There is no required amount that

a student must spend in the center
to be enrolled as a student. Students
com e in at a time convenient for
them and leave wben they wish.
We are planning an open house at
the Middleport Center on October
19 from 10 a.m. tlll2 p.m. just to talk
with interested per sons and explain
how the program works.
Whether they are begi nning
reader s, ca m e close to getting their
high school diploma or even if they
have a diploma but would like to
brush up on their basic skills, we
welcome them at tbe A.B.E . Learning Centers.
For more information interested
ones may attend our open house or
ca ll 992-5713 or 992-5813.
This could be a just the boost that
som e of your readers have been
needing and all it costs them Is a
little of their time. - Pat Neece, 87 '
South Third Ave., Middleport, Ohio
45760.

WASHiNGTON - For those who
feed on a diet of politics, two ana·
tomica l necessities are indispensa·
ble this month. The first is a
cast-Iron stomach, the bet1 er to digest the dem agoguery that is thrust
upon us. The second Is a pair of
leather lungs, the better to resist
the hot air that flows across the
hustings everwhere.
The question before the voters Is,
Who's to blame? Who' s to blame
for the economic mess we are in?
The president would have us believe It is all the fault of the irresponsible Dem ocrats who controlled
Congress for , lo, those many years
before the elections of 1~. The
president is talking nonsense.
The Dem ocra ts have a different
view. In a m aj or statem ent on Oct.
5 from the Democra tic Policy Com mittee, we find this straight - faced
explanation: " The blame for our
current economic collapse lies
squarely on Reagan administra tion." The Democrats are talking
·hogwash.
The truth of tbe m atter is that
both parties share in the bl am e for
the m ess we ar e in. Both Republica n and Democratic presidents
share in the blame. Both m anagement and labor share In the blame.
We, the glutenous, myopic, selfseeking people share in the blame.
There Is plenty of blame to go
around.
Up to a point, the president has
the better of the argument. The governmen t' s fiscal mess is largely a
consequence of certain i rresponsible measures enacted by the Congress in the years since Lyndon
Johnson. Th e m easures were lrrespondible In this sense: The Treasury never had the money to pay for
them . Successive Congresses sweetened Social Security benefits , decreed Medicare and Medicaid,
provided food stamps and guaranteed student loans, fattened the
dairy farmers, and larded the
budget with subsidies for a dozen
special interests. It is undeniable

that the initiative for most of these
costly programs - ail of them fl.
nanced by deficit spending- came
from tree-wheeling Democrats.
But where were the Republicans
while all this was going on? On Cap! to! Hill the Republicans, by and
large, were voting for these goodies
as cheerfuiiy and as the Democrats. Two Republicans, Nixon and
Ford, were in the White House.
The flood of printing - press money fed the interest rates, and the
In terest rates, among other things,
fed the r ate of inflation. In January
of 1981, when Reagan took office,
the prime rate of inter est stood at a
dlsastTous 21.5 percent. The calendar year 1~ had seen a 12.4 perce nt rate of inflation .
Unemploy m ent was at 7.4 percent.
On Jan. 30, 1981, the Commerce Department announced the economic
indicators for December; they
showed an ominous decline for the
month of 0.8 percent.

That was where Ronald Reagan
came ln. He pushed swiftly for
enactment of key measures in his
program of economic recovery .
The idea was simultaneously to cut
both taxes and spending. In M ay of
1981 the president got his basic
budget resolution; in early August
he got hl:; tax bill. U you believe the
Democrats, these were the measures that produced the recession.
Wher e were the Dem ocr ats while
all this was going on? Why sir, the
Democra ts helping the president
every step of the way. The key
budget vote in the House had the
support of 77 Democrats; the key
tax vote in the House saw 113 Democrats voting eye.
Put parti san politics to one side.
Among the major contrlbutlng factors are economic forces quite
beyond the control of Congress or
the White House - for one exam pie, the surging price of oil. Who is
to blame for the desperate pllght of

I 1j.~"~==:=-~
1

the automobile industry? Not Democrats, not Republicans. Bette~
answers can be found In highpriced labor, in shortsighted man·
agement, and In the punitive
interest rates that not only have
paralyzed automobile sales but
also have crushed far mers, construction workers and smalibusiness m en.
On the reeord, the Reagan poU:
cies have produced no economic
recovery stnce the first part of his
program becam e operative in Oc,
tober a year ago. The dismaying
figures on unemployment, bank·
ruptcies, farm income and Indus:
trial capacity tell a meianchoiy
story. We're an impatient people,
grown flabby by our yen for instant
gratification, and we had expected
som ething better by this time.
But the m ess persists, and the fin·
ger - pointtng goes on. It's an an·
cient exercise, this finger · pointing.
It is best performed in front of a
mirror.

==-- -=
~~~~~===~~ii~-~-=-=-=-

--

The entire sta tewide Democratic

slate of candidates wlli appear at
another round of "bean dinners" designed to stir inter est in the party
and coliect canned food for Ohio's
poor.
Sponsored by the Ohio AFL-CIO,
the dinners began last spring as
events commemorating the lOOth
birthday anniversary of tbe late
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The price of getting in is canned
food, which wlli be distributed this
winter to welfare cllents and other
impoverished Ohioans.
Dinners are on tap from Oct. 17
through the 31st In Hamilton, Mont-

go m ery , A th ens, Franklin,
Mahontng-Trumbull, Stark, Cuyahoga and Lucas counties.

An organization called MOVE M otorists ofOhio for Vehicle Equity
- is conttnuing its drive for higher
truck taxes and heavier fines for
overweight trucks.
I

Thomas Cashman, coordinator of
the Columbus-based organization,
says the big trucks and their owners
don't pay their fairshareofhighway
and bridge maintenance costs.

Election only days away"'-_____Low_ell_W_in...:::....ge_tt
There is noendofsubjects towrite
on these last daysbefore theeiection
Nov. 2. There are the baseball
playoffs, the 10.1 percent unemploym ent and President Ronald Reagan
coming on like John Wayne on national television as he tells a Republican Congressional ca ndidate to
shut up.
It was the unenthusiastic weicom e that President Reagan received in Columbus Oct. 4 that
impressed m e most. Columbus,
with a web of state institutions to
support it, is the least damaged by
Reaganomics of any of Ohio major
cities. Y et'the welcome thatReagan
received was lukewarm, to say the
least. Of the state Republican candidates, four were so r eluctant to take
part In the festivities they had to be
virtually biackacked by the GOP
brass before they would agree to
attend. The Reagan visit was to
push the candidacyofgubernatorial
hopeful Cl arence J . Brown.
Whether his Intervention on behalf
ofBrown Is helpful or proves the kiss
of death to the Brown campaign r emains to be seen.
With the Congressional elections
nowonlydaysaway, ltlsamustngto
hear GOP candidates trying to
place as much distance as possible
between themselves and the candidatewhosecoattanS they so eagerly

clutched two years ago. Just today I
·by you r national leaders for what is
heard a Republican candidate on a
undeniably their fault.
talk show earnestly explaining that
Today I heard one of the presithe Nov. 2 election wlli not be a refer ·
dent's right hand men, James
endum on supply-side economics
Baker, on television expiatning why
but stmpiy 435Iocai eiections with no
a program to rebuild America's
national Importance whatever.
highways and bridges would not
Bushwah' On the Nov. 2 election
work. The work must be done by
will depend tbe fate ofthe nation for
private employer s, not the governthe next two years and maybe more.
ment, he said. !nan explanation that
U the present administration sucleft m e far behind, I gathered that
ceeds in retalntng the Republicans
labor done under government suand BolL Weevil Democrats of the
pervision was not nearly as satisfaclast two years, then wewUI have two
tory as labor done under the eagle
more years like the last. If the Deeye of a private contractor. The
m ocrats succeed in capturing 25 or
state of Florida is now suing a group
30 seats in the House of Representaof road contractors who are accused
tives, we wlli have the checks and
of stealing the state blind foryears. I
balances in our government and
fail to see why a pubiicworksjobon
founding fathers envisioned two
roads cannot be done as cheaply and
centuries ago.
efficiently as any other government
Ther e is an tncreaslng awareness
projects under the eagle eye of the
among voters that the Reagan adPentagon. But then, Baker seemed
ministration is cold and unfeeling to ·to think the 10.1 percent unemploythe plight of the unemployed. That is
m ent would make no difference at
so. While he rants about welfare re- the polls either.
cipients buytng vodka and food
But back. to Columbus. With the
stamps, he fails to recognize that the
P.epublican bureaucracy that has
vast majority are decent, law abidbeen built up tn Ohio's Capital City
Ing folks who are anxious to get off
under eight years of Gov. James
welfare, get jobs and go on with the
Rhodes, I had supposed that the
buslnessotlivlng. NoonecanbuUda . president would be welcomed with
future on welfare. It Is hard enough
open arms. Instead, Columbus papto simply exist day after day. But it
ers report that the Republican canIs bad enough to have to exist on the didates for attorney general, state
publicdolewlthoutbelngcastiga~ . treasurer, secretary of state and

state auditor had to be · strongly
urged by theGOPofflcialstoattend
the president's speech extohtng tbe.
vlrtuesofBrownandPaulE. Peifer, .,
Republican candidate for U .S. Senate. The president made his usual ,
"blame the Democrats" speech at
1
two gatherings at the Hyatt Re- ·
gency, one for war veterans and the
otber at a fund raiser where the
Republican party faithful coughed
up big bucks to shake the presidential hand.
With Ohio's unemployment rate
officially 14 percent and another
half mU\ion workers either too discouraged to seek work or are under employed tn part -time work, it Is
hard for m e to understand why •
either Democrat Richard F . Celeste
or Republican Clarence J . Brown
would want the job as governor. In
additon to the giant debt the Rhodes ..
administration hung about the publlc's neck with bond issues, tbe state ·
Is constantly going Into debt to tbe
federal government to meet the cost
of unemployment benefits. Now the ··
federal government wants to
charge the stale percent Interest •
on the billion or 'so indebtedness.
According to the article by Tim Gra- ·
hain of the Ohio Scripps-Bureau, · '
neither candidate has any 'plan to .'
meet the state'~ needs. Justaroupie
of opttmlsts! ·
•

io

.------....--.., DOONESBURY .~;

" I needed a pitcher," he said. " We
had three doubleheader s on the
West Coast. They needed a centd
fielder when Cesar Cedeno got hurt.
Tony Scott was play ing out his option. They couldn't sign Anduj ar
either."
One and one makes two, and the
trade was made. Almost immediately, Andjuar began paying dividends for the Cardinals .
"He likes to pitch," Herzog said.
" He's a tough guy, a com petitor.
The guy wants the baseball. Houston had signed (Nolan) Ryan and
(Don) Sutton. He had becom e a
nwnber there."
At St. Louis, Andujar got work

from Herzog. He won six of seven
decisions for the Cardinals and fin.
is bed theseason atB-4. This year, he
was the Cardinals' m ost dependable pitcher with a 15-10 record and
2.47 earned run aver age. He was the
National League's Pitcher of the
Month tn September when he won
five games and posted an 0.62 ERA.
"What turned it around for him
was the opportunity to pitch," Herzog said. "He throws 90-some mlles
per hour, has good control, keeps it
down, throws a hard slider and he's
not afraid to com e tnside with it. "
In Houston, Andujar had som e
problems w ith management. B ut
he's been fine with the Cardtnals.
"I guess when you pitch good, it's
,easy for the front office to get along
w ith you," cracked Herz011.
Seven of Anduj ar's 10 losses came
tn gam es in which the Cardinals
scored two or less runs. " That's
pretty good," said Herzog. " He was
8-10 at one potnt and he could have
been 15-3 if we scored more runs.
That's how well he pitched."
Andujar's last loss was A ug. 6
against Montreal, the first time he
had lost to the Expos after beating
them 11 times. Herzog thin ks that
could m ean good things for theCardinais tonight.
" Their lineup is as good as Milwaukee's if not better," Herzog
said.
Concerned with his own lineup,
Herzog said he would start the sam e
unit that delivered a 5-4 victory in
Game Two, to tie the Series. " That's
if I can rem em ber it," he said.
Herzog said that considering the

fact that .he has not had a hit from
three of St. Louis' most Important
bats - Keith- Hernandez, Lonnie
Smith and George Hendrick - he

the Cardinals and LaPoint, a ninegame winner in the regu lar season,
wUl be Herzog's starting pitcher in
Saturday's fourth game.

was satisfied with a split of the first
two Series games.
Herzog held a voluntary workout
when the team arrived in Milwaukee Thursday afternoon. Hernandez, Lonnie
Ozzie Smith, Mike
Ramsey and Willie McGee ail
showed up to get som e extra swings.
Brewer Manager Harvey K uenn
gave his club the day off.
Now the St. Louis hitters get togo
against one of their ex-teammates.
Vuckovich has a .762 winning percentage, best in baseball for the l ast
two seasons with 32 victories, 18 of
them this year.
From the All-Star Game until
mid-September, he won eigh t
straight games and was 13-1 at night
and 22-2 under the lights in his two
vears with the Brewers.

r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j~

and

He never won fewer than 12
games in three years with the Cardi·
nais and it was the Brewers' interest
tn the strong-armed right-hander
that planted the seed for the big
trade.
Ca tcher Ted Simmons and r eliever Roiiie Fingers also went to
MUwaukee in thetradewiththeCar·
dinals getting pitchers Lary Sorensen and David LaPoint and
outfielders Sixto Lezcano and David
Green.
Sorensen and Lezcano were
passed on to Cleveland and San
Diego in twoofHerzog'ssubsequent
trades. But the others rem ain with

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
Coach Tom Reed likes to say his
Miami team Is 5-6 even though the
Redskins lead the Mid-American
Conference football race going tnto
Saturday's game .with Western
Michigan.
"We havefivewlns, but six games
left to play,' ' said the leader of the
only unbeaten team left tn the Mid·
America n this season,
Reed knows the Redsklns, the nation's second-ranked Division 1-AA
squad, face a difficult task against
the Broncos, especially if Injuries

keep Miami's top two tailbacks and
No. 2 fullback on the sidelines.
" We don't know who we're gotng
to have In the backfield," Reed said.
Jay Peterson, the No. 2 rusher In
the conference, and his tailback replacem ent, Phil Pacic, will m ake
the trlp, but may not play . Peterson
has tendinitis In his right ankle.
Pacic has . a pulled hamstrtng
muscle.
Bailie Morlidge, the secondstring Miami fullback, suffered a
knee injury during a regionally teie-

vised 17-12 decision over Bowling
Green last week.
The game could boil down to a
duel of kickers. Mike Prindle has
made all nine of his field goal a ttempts for Western Michigan this
year while Miami's Mike Kiebach is
5-for-6. It was Kiebach's 27-yard effort that beat the Broncos 20-19 last
season.
The Redskins, 5-0 overall and 3-0
in the league, will be tested by a
freshman quarterback for the second successive week .

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Quar·
terback Don Whitney of Ohio North-.
em, wbo figured In both touchdowns
In a 14-lOfootball victory over Otterbein, Is the Ohio Conference Offensive Player of the Week.
The 6-foot, 185-pound Whitney, a
senior from Detroit, passed for 184
yards and rushed for 49 yards. He
r1111 for one touchdown and passed ;
for another score.
Linebacker Eric DiMartino of
.Ohio Wesleyan, a 5-ll, 185-pound
junior from Medford, Mass., earned
the league's defensive laurels, helP"
tng the BishopS beat Denison 16-10:
DIMartino was In on 19 tackles and
had one pass

204 Condor St.

Pomeroy, OH.
Phone 992-2976
··
FAll&amp; WINTER HOURS ·
CLOS!;D MONDAY
TUES. thN FRI. 9 to.6
SAT. 9 to 1

Today 1s Friday, Oct.-15, the 288th day of 1982. There are 77 days left In the .
&gt;-ear.
,
.
. Today'shlghllght In history:
On Oct. 15, 1964, the Soviet Union announced the ouster of Premier Nlklta ·

OCT. 30, 1982
AT THE MEIGS CO .
FAIRGROU.NDS
10 A.M .- 4 P.M .

COME AND SEE US
AND OUR FUll LiNE
OF WHEEL HORSE
lRACTORS

BAUM

over

START SURE-FOOTEOLY and

DRIVE SAFELY

keep movi ng through deep snow

at all speeds on a rugged four-

wi th dee p·bitin g traction cleats.
STOP QUICKLY in dee p snow

ply polyester cord body.

and on sli ppery roads with 1,440

from a massive dee p tread that 's
made of slow-wea rin g Zero-F lex
rubber that stays fl exible in
sub-zero temperatu res.

roa d-g rippi ng edges.

all roads,

GET EXTRA SEAS ONS OF USE

GENERAL TIRE SALES

LUMBER CO.

PH . 992-7161

985-3301

N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, OH .

THE 1983 FORDS ARE HERE WITH A GRAND SHOWING AT:

PAT.HILL FORD
IT'S A VERY SPECIAL PREVIEW OF THE NEW RESHAPED
TOTALLY REDESIGNED LTD AND FORD'S MOST LUXURIOUS CROWN VICTORIA.
PLUS THE NEW SPORTY MUSTANG GT. WE WILL BE OPEN EXTENDED HOURS:

Player of week

8:00A.M to 8:00 P.M. THURS. &amp; FRI .. OCT. 14TH &amp; 15TH AND SAT ., OCT. 16TH
UNTIL 5:00 P.M. SO EVERYBODY CAN JOIN US FOR THIS SPECIAL GRAND SHOWING.

,1979 MONZA SP!QER ................................. $2695
I'S, Slant lC
1979 FORD COURIER ................................. $3295

· Auto ,
LOng

Bed. Aiiiomaiic: ··

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i

4 Or., Auto., PB, PS, Air.

1978 PINTO ...................................... .': ..... $1895

1 Or., 4 s¢. looks and runs good.

1975 AMC PACER ..................................... $1195
• Automatic,

PS.

1976 CHRYSLER ........................................ '1695
4 Or., PB, PS, Air, Runs Good.

Today .in history

WMPO's

Miami faces tough opponent

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Khru~~.

:Dire;c tor~Mik~
e ~~~~

;Athle;ti
c

Mll.WAUKEE (AP)-Itwasone
of Whitey H erzog's less-heralded
trades, occurring on the eve of last
summer's baseball strike and more
or less shrouded tn secr ecy.
But the acquisition of pitcher Joaquin Andujar has been a major factor tn the construction of tbe St.
LQuls Cardinals' National League
Championship.
And so tonight, Herzog wUI hand
the baseball to Andujar tor Gam e 3
of the World Series against
Milwaukee.
The Brewers wUl counter with
Pete Vuckovich, an ex-Cardtnal
traded by Herzog in a seven-player
deal with Milwaukee at the I ~ winter baseball m eetings.
It was six m onths later, a week
before the strike in June 1981, that
Herzog went after Andujar, who
had been buried on the Houston
pitching staff.

with cyanide.
Fisher's bill es tablishes standards for container seals for drugs
taken oraliy. It says the seals shaii
be designed " so that any break tn
them would be obvious to the
purchaser."
Any establishment seiling tbe
drugs without such a seal could be
prosecuted for a second-degree misdemeanor, punishable by up to 90
days in j ail and a fine of up to $750.
However, an organizational ftne of
up to $4,(XXl could be Imposed.

World Series tonight. Tbe game marks the first time In 24 years thai the
city has hosted a World Series game. An estlmaood 25,000 fans turned
oullor the rally. (AP Laserphoto).

" I felt all aiongwe wou id receive a
positive response (from Cartoiano) ,"said UC football Coach Mike
Gottfried. "We were righ t ... We
should never have been reciassi·
lied. I never doubted the outcome."
The dispute arose because the
NCAA and UC had different interpretations of the criteria necessary
to r etain 1-A classificalion. The association asserted UC should be downgraded because it didn 't m eet a
20,(XXl attendance average for its
games.

Andujar important Redbird. acquisition~u~c

Fisher's bill establishes container standards
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API- Sta te
Rep. Lee I. Fisher of Cleveland has
become the first Ohio lawm aker to
react officiaiiy to the national Ty·
!enol scare.
He introduced in the House a measure that would require seals on aU
containers of non-prescription
drugs - legislation that also is being
cons idered at the federal leveL
The 31-year-oid Dem ocra t acted
after seven deaths in the Chicago
area of people who had taken capsules of Extra Strength Tylenol- a
pain r eliever used as an alternative
to aspirin - which had been laced

WORLD SERIES WARMUP - Milwaukee Brewers' fans gathered In the MUwaukee County Stadium parking lot at a Thursday
night IH)p rally, wannlng up lo cheer the Brewers on In Game 3 of the

McGee said the university is meeting the attendance requirement.

1976 CUTlASS STATION WAOON ..... :............ '1695
PS, PB; Pir.

1969 FORO 3f• TON FlAT BED ........................'695

REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED, PLUS REGISTER FOR SOME SUPER DOOR PRIZES.
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ALL DOOR PRIZES WILL BE DRAWN FOR AT 5:00 P.M . SAT.

COME ON IN TO FORD COUNTRY AND LET
BILL WALTERS OR PAT HILL SHOW YOU
THE FORDS OF 1983.
OUR REGULAR HOURS ARE MON-WED. 8:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
TIL 5:00 P.M. THURS., 6:00 P.M. FRI., 3:00 P.M. SAT.

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461 S. THIRD AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

PH. 992-2196

~~~~~~
j

l

1..

'I

�Page--4- The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Oct. 15,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Crimson Tide~ still _fears Volunteers
By Associated Press
The Alapam a Crimson Tide.
fresh from a rousing victory last
week over highly ranked Penn
State, believes It has plenty of rea sons to fear Tennessee Sa turday although th e Volunt eer s arc
two- touchdown underdogs.
"Tennessee Week has always
been and always will be something
special for Alabama." Tide Coach
Bear Bryant says. " It was when I
was playing and it is now while I'm
coaching. There's a lot going on in
Knoxville, w1th the World 's Fair
and aU, and we're looking forward
to going up thNe."
Bryant said second-ranked A labama has had to fa ce a "good or
great passer every week. and this
one L~ no exception."

Tennessee's quarterback aga inst
the Tide 1\111 be Alan C'ockrell , who
has hit 84 of 137 passes for 96R vards
and eight touchdowns in leading the
Vols to a 2-2-1 record. including a tic
aga inst unbeaten LSU. Cockrell 's
favorite receiver is speedster Willie
Gault. who has 25 r·cccptions this
year .
"Gault can kill you wi th his
speed, " Bryant says.
Alabama assistant coach Louis
Campbell says he fears a letdown
against Tennessee one week after
the Tide's 42-21 triumph o,·er Penn
State.
"We have to be concernf'd with
how we play and how we react
against the hostilesituation in Knoxville before 98.CXXl folks," Campbell
'sa id .
"It will be a big challenge for us
because weare com ing off a big w in
against Penn State. Uwego upthere
and are not physically and mentally
ready to play, then it will be a long,
long aftemoon."
Alabama hopes quarterback Wal ter Lewis can perform as well as he
did against Penn State. The elusive
j unior is the leading IlJSher for Alabama this season and he has hit 68

percent of his passes, although he
has thrown only 57 times.
In other games Involving Top 20
teams, No. 1 Washington Is at
Oregon State, Temple at No.3 Pitt,
Vanderbilt at No. 4 Georgia, Kansas
State at No. 6Nebraska,Syracuseat
No. 8 Penn State, Arizona at No. 9
Non·e Dam e, Texas-E I Paso at No.
10 Arizona State. North Carolina
State at No. 11 North Carolina, Wa shington State at No. 12 UCLA, No.
13 Wes t Virginia at Virginia Tech,
No. 14 Scuthern Cal at Stanford,
Ohio Stat e at No. 15 Illinois, Mississippi Stale at No. 17 Miami, Fla .,
East Carolina at No. 19 Florida
Sta te and Duke at No. 20 Clem son.
At nigh!, Houston isa t No.5Scuthem Methodist and No. 16 LS.U is at
Kentucky.
With most of the ranked teams
favored by JO or more points, the
Scuthcm Califomia -Stanford game
on national television stacks up as
one of the best of the weekend.

Meet the Meigs Marauders

The Sculhern Cal defense ranks

Meigs M arauder eighth
grade tea m lost their second
s tra l~t.t contest. 20-0 Thursday evening against Logan.
Pacing the Little Marauders wa s
Jessie Howard. Bria n Tannehill,
Paul Dailey and Robbie Cundiff.
Huey Eason's Meigs' leading

Beulah results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )-Peace
.Queen. ridden by Clifton Schwing,
covered the six furlongs in J: 13
Thursday to win the eighth fea ture
race at Beulah Park and pay $22.80,
$7.60 and $3.40.
Second was Been Rode Hard for
$4.60and $3, followed by !Jwin's Airn
for $3. 40
The ninth racP trifecta. 6-10-8,
payed $288.60.
A crowd of 2,892 bet $327.170.

NFLPA all star tilt Sunday

here.''

"They've got a new wrinkle with
the quarterback passing in any situation," Wiggtn said. "They'll also
run in any situation."

KEVIN MEADOWS
208 pound
Freshman lac kle

JACKIE WELKER
139 pound
Sophomore wingback

BOBBY HOOD
185 pound
Sophomore tackle

Brown doesn't see lingering effects

rusher and scorer did not play due
to a hamspring pull. M eigs, 3-2,
plays at Vinton County next Thursday at 5:30p.m.
Meanwhile, the Meigs seventh
grade postponed Monday will be
played Sa turday morning begtnnlng at 11 a.m. at Jackson. Monday
night. the Marauder reserve team
1\111 battle Logan at Pomeroy.

CINCINNATI (AP) Mike
Brown, the Cincinnati Bengals' assistant general manager, doesn't
foresee any lingering discontent
when the National Football League
players' strike is settled .
" I think It'll ali be forgotten rather
quickly," Brown said.
One reason Is that the strike is less
emotional than the 1974 players'
walkout, Brown said.
" There was a much greater shock
when football players were on strike
the first time than there is now,"
Brown said. " There is really nothing new and shocking anymore. "
Brown said It's Important to settle
the strike soon, or both sides will
suffer painful losses.
"Logically, if It goes on much
longer, It could be disastrous,"
Brown said. "On the union side,
there's the chance the clubs could
shut down for the year. There's the
possibility that owners could vote to
open up the training facilities and
play without union help.
"From m anagement's side, if we
don' t have an agreement, we'll get
hit by lawsuits attacking the (col-

Thistledown results
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP)
- April Fool Dude, at 18-1 odds,
rallied to victory in the featured
eighth race Thursday at Thistledown, covering the one-mile race in
1; 431-5 seconds over a slow track .
With Juan Picon at the reins,
April Fool· Dude paid $38.20, $11.!ll
and $4.40. Second, Just Plain
George, paid$10 and$5.20. The third
horse, Honorarium, paid $2.80.
The bes t retum fora$2wagerwas
$1,472.70 and came on the seventh
race 10-2 perfecta combination of HI
Steverino and Hasty Flame.
The crowd of 3,445 wagered
$451,752on thli races.

CLEVELAND (AP) - A publishf'd report that Billy Martin has
agreed to leave the Oakland A's to
manage the Cleveland Indians has
been denied by both clubs.
The Chicago Sun-Times reported
Thursday an announcem ent was expectf'd soon that Martin was joining
the Indians.
"The rumors of Billy going to the
Indians are completely and totally
false," said Martin's agent, Judge
Eddi Sapir. "It is a bad rumor. Bllly
still has a contract with Oakland.
"I have been talking to (Indians
President ) Gabe Paul and (Yankee
m ajority owner) . George Steinbrenner as a courtesy to BUiy. No
deal has been cut with Cleveland or
anyone else.
"Right now, Billy is very, very
happy with the Oakland A's. He
loves the fans out there, loves his
ball club, and is very happy with the
m anagement."
Indians General Manager Phll
Seghi said from Milwaukee, where
he was attending the World Series,
Thursday night, "The story is false.
"He is one of the leading candidates, but he has not signed
any thing."
Paul said he favors Martin to
m anage the Indians in 1983, but that
New York Yankees first base coach

Mike Ferraro also is under
consideration.
"We have talked to only two m en
about the job," Paul said Wednesday. "They are Billy and Ferraro.
Obviously, we have a strong interest
in both of them ."
Paul would not rule out the possibility that others might be considered to replace Manager Dave
Garcia, who has resigned.
Asked when a decision would be
m-ade, Paul said, "As soon as
possible."
Martin, 54, has managed five
teams In the American League and
twice took the New York Yankees to
the World Series.
He has been with theA's since 1~
and has three years remaining on
his contract, but Oakland owner
Roy Eisenhardt has said he would
not keep M artin from going
elsewhere.
Oakland finished fifth In the
American League West this season
w1th a 68-94 record. Last year, Martin's A's won the first half of the
strike-shortened season and then
beat the Kansas City Royals to win
the AL West flag.
When this season ended, the Indl·
ans and the Yankees received permission from Oakland owners to
talk to Martin.

clded to discontinue team workouts
at the University of Cincinnati, although about a dozen players have
continued working three days a
weekatUC.
Fuller agreed that time is running
short for a settlement.
"I think we're down to two weeKs
from causing some real problems
for both sides," Fuller sald.

lege) draft and the players' compensa tion system. Without an
agreement we won't have an antitrust exemption for the draft or the
compensation system.
"Sc the clubs stand to lose a lot,
too, and it stands to reason It's In
everyone's Interest to make a deal
now before It's too late. "
If there's a settlem ent soon,
Brown said the clubs would start
practicing again. However, he said
there won't be time to conduct a
mini-training camp to get players
back in shape.
·
"We'll be playing a regularseason game In a week's time or
less," he said.
Brown noted that all teams will
share the unusual problem of having to prepare for a game after a
long layoff.
"There will be new problems the
clubs w1ll try to correct, and just try
to do the things they do best," Brown
said.
Bengals player representative
Mike Fuller said the team might
m eet as a group in the next coupie of
days. The Bengals players have de-

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Now at Ponderosa!

Two Steak Dinners
Aibeye

Steak
Dinner

WILL LEAD AILSTARS - Fonner Chicago

at the Coliseum in Los Angeles. The two men have
been selected to lead tbe teams; Pyle deslgaated for
the American West team, whUe Roland has heen
· tabbed for the Natlonal West team. ( AP Laserphoto ).

Bears' center Mike Pyle, left, and former St. Louis
Cardinals' running back Joimny Roland discuss their
game plans for Monday's Natlonal FootbaU League
Players Association all star game that will be played

Money issues now on table
COCKEYSVILLE, Md. (AP)· Money, the hardest nut to crack in
the National Football League players' strike, is on thebargainlngtable
today. And Sam Kagel just may be
the nutcracker.
The feisty 7~year-old San Francisco lawyer had negotiators for the
owners and players meeting far into
the night. And one source monitorlngthe talks said Kagel was "knocking heads, twisting anns, pUshing
them together" in hiS effort to end
the strike which today entered its
25th day and has knocked out four of
the 16 regular-season weekends.
Kagel denied Thursday a rumor
that a settlement is near, and appeared as fresh as he did when he
arrived In this Baltimore suburb
Tuesday night, vowing to " tire them
out before they tire me out."
As Thursday became Friday, he
called a halt to negotiations on peripheral issues, more than 15 hours
after !he day's bargaining had
begun.
He commanded both sides - union chief Ed Garvey, owners' top
neglitlator Jack Donlan and their
aides - to address the union's demand for a wage scale and a central
salary fund, the two issues which
have kept the owners' hackles
raised ever since they were first proposed. The owners have insisted all
along on maintaining the exisllng
system - individually negotiated
contracts.
Upon his arrival Tuesday night,
Kagel brought the sides together for
2~ hours. Then he began his war of
attrltion w1th 19 hours of bargaining
on Wednesday. And on Thursday he
got them started again at 9 a.m.
They were still going into the predawn hours.
'
"Tilat's what's amazing about
Kagel," said Jim Miller, the Management Council's public relat\ons
director. "He just keeps going and
going with the same kind of enthusiasm. If he keeps this up for a couple
of days he's really exceptionaL"
Kagel maintained his virtually
alrtlght news blackout Thursday,
appearing only once for a news
briefing that lasted less than a
minute.
He repeated - verbatim - his
single-sentence statement of Wed-.
nesctay thatbothsideswereexarnin-

to have a baby. It'll take a few more
days to work out a thing like this."
But there apparently was significant progress toward resolving the
non-economic issues during Thursday's morning and afternoon sessions. "There has been a good deal
of give-and-take by both sides," a
source at the talks told The Associated Press. "There has definitely
been some movem ent.·'

In g
pro p, o sa Is
and
counter-proposals and continuing
their negotiating.
Then, with one more sentence, he
emphatically knocked down a cable
television network report that a setUement was Imminent.
And, finally, as he strolled down
the corridor toward the sealed-off
negotiating room , he commented
off-handedly: "It takes nine months

Scoreboard...
W!nnlpq: ~~- St.Loul~ '1.
Calgary 6. DMrolt 4

NUL results

Adam.o• OlvWon
1
I
2

0
I
1

-;n

lti

N
24

'l 'l

O'J.

2

L11~

Mon1rrol

~

""'"'"

.1
2

Qu&lt;-lx'c
Hartbrd
Buffalo

I~

Edmon10n at Boslt.,
Philade-lphia at Qlwt)l'("
Vanrou\'l'r at H;u1ford

I

.1

I

13

Oakland A's Manager Billy Martin

'4

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o er
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Save our RC, ,
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Mulberry Ave.

Series at a glance

INI-FURNAC

Th~'sGam f'

Mllwaukw 10. Sl .

Sl.

Lou l~ fl
Wt'ilnt'Sday's GlUnt'
\..oul~ ~. Mllwaukrt' ~ . s.'!'lfos tiC'd

al

Frkt-.Y'M GIU11t'l'l

St. Lool~ tt\ndujar l!l·!Ol a1 Milwaukf'f'
1VlK'ko\'lch !Mi l, !Cll p.m . E[Yf
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S1. Loulc; at Mllwauiu'('

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Edmon1on 4. Han lord~ - tk'
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M onm'OI ~. Nf'W JN-s~· 3
I.a. An~J('S 4, Quebrc' 4, 1leNt'\lo' York tslanlk'rs 9, Pl11 sbur¢l U
MIMf'\liO!a 6. Toron1o 2

Tht'l'ldi\Y, Octohl·r 19
M!lwaukf'l•at St. Loulo;, &lt;nJ .If Jl('('('S·
W~y. Ot1oht•r2ll

MllwaukPf' at St. I .out&lt;;, tn l. If 11PCf'S·
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f\OSTON IT.L TIC'S-4 'u1 Ton\ ( ;u, .
l'l"&gt;n;. MIJ's and Panoj..&gt;tJ11 (;[,tnnaki~.

[)(&gt;trot! at St. Loul'i

potato,

managed Dve American League teams in his career_ He has he en in
Oakland since the 1980 season and has three years remaining on his
contract. ( AP Laserphoto).

Plans are being m ade by the
M eigs Athletic Boosters for a Meigs
Alumni football gam e in late
November.
An organization of all alumni interested In pla ying will be held 5
p.m . Sunday at the Middleport stadium. Coaches will be George Nesselroad. Bub Sti vers, L a rry
Lemley, and Bobby Stewart. For
those unable to attend Sunday's
m ~ tlng, any of coaches can be contacted about participation .
The Boosters are also interested
in having an alumni band to participate during the game. Scmeone to
head up the group is needed and
anyone interested is asked to att end
the Booster meeting at the high
school on Tuesday.

Thur..day'" StiOI'l'i 'l'r:U'I.'oW 1k10"

Buffalo at Wa'lh!ngtoo
Nrw Jcrs('y at Pinsburgh
Chlc~o at Toronto

0 :1
1 14 2!1
fiUllPhl'U ( 'onlt•n.-.rt'
Norris lllvl!don
1 :.Jl 1:.!
1 n
Mtnn(&gt;S()ta
2 1
[ :!) 19
Ch lca~o
2.l
01420
St. l,I)Jl~
n
.1
2
1~
t1.
Toronto
n .1
1
R 19
OP!ro\1
Sm)1hP lllvlo&gt;kln
W\n nlpcR
]
1
0 '!l 1 ~
I...a; Angl'lrs 2 0
2 1~ II
Edmonton
2 :.!
1 '!l Z7
Calg-.ary
2 3
u 2'i 21

VanCOUVf'r

Formulate plans
for alumni game

Transactions

Satunby's Gamt"'

NatkuW Hodwy Le&amp;«Ut'

e,·'lbe A-.-tated PrTNt
· \\'akA Conft'l'(fk1'
Patrk.il Dlvkodon
WI,.TGFGA
NY Js\(os
4 1
o ?in
P
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I
d
r
jilla 4 1 U ' l ' i \ R
R
New Jl'f'SI"'Y 1 I
.1
16 17
W &lt;ts hln~on 2 2
o 16 16
NY Ran ~ 2
:1
0 19 IR
Pln sbu rgh
1 1
1 14 :!'1

Teammates Beasley Reece, a
safety, and Mark Haynes, a cornerback, said they agreed totally with
Carson.
The trio made their comments after the second day of workouts by
the NFL Players Association NFC
East all-star team, which will play
Sunday against a team of AFC East
ay-stars.
The contest, originally schedulf'd
for4 p.m .EDTinRFKStadlum,has
been changed to 1 p.m . to avoid con·flict with the World Series on
television.
Still, there hasn't been much fan
response to both the gam e in Wa -

shington and the one in Los Angeles
they will play 100 percent. Realistithe follow1ng night, both of which
cally, though, they would prefer not
are union-sponsored. Promoters of
to play."
the Washington game say they' ve
Despite the lack of players, quaronly sold 4,CXXl to 5,001 tickets for the
terback Gary Danielson of the De55,001-seat RFK Stadium - about
troll Lions said the- practice went
10,!XXl below the financial brea k- very well. "It wouid take us three
even point. In Los Angeles, a spokes- weeks in a regular camp to do what
man at the Memorial Coliseum box
we have done in three days. Of
office said 40 tickets had been sold
course, we don't have a lot of rookies
for the Monday night gam e In the
and the vetei·ans can grasp what
100,001-sea t stadium .
·we're doing r ight away ."
Hanburger also praised the pla y NFC East Coach Chris Haners
for the workout they had .
burger , a former Washington Reds"We've had very few errors," he
kins linebacker, said he was not
sa id. "Andyou'vegot to remember.
worried by the light turnout for the
Carson is fitting in as an outside
practice. Only'!:/ players showed up
linebacker and after seven years in
for the workout, although 39 were
the middle, you've got to expect a
present for the afternoon session by
misplay every once in a while."
the AFC East.
Quarterback Bob Avellini of the
Chicago Bears. running back Joim r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Riggins and punter Mark M oseley
BEND AREA
of the washington Redskins atOPTOMETRIC
tended Wednesday's NFC session
but were not there Thursda y.
CENTER
" I'm not worrif'd about It," said
Hanburger. "Too many people are
Richatd H. Billman II, 0.0.
concerned about people not being
113 Court Slteel
here. w e 1\111 have enough people
Pometoy, Ohio 45769
PH. 992-2920
for the game. I don't forsee any
VISION EXAMINATIONS
problem s.
HARD &amp; SOFT CONTACT
" U they get the strike settlf'd , one
LENSES
of the concessions will probably be
Insurance and Medical
to drop the all-star game," he conCatds Accepted
tinued. "But if they have to play,

Frkh"''" n~tmeo~
No gam~ schf'dulftd

All dinners
include
unlimited
salad bar,

has agreed to leave the team to become manager of the Cleveland
lndl~. the Chicago Sun-Times reported Thursday. Martin,. 54, has

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WASHINGTON (API - Linebacker Harry Carson of the New
York Giants says he would prefer to
be in New York this week rather
than In the nation's capital.
"Bease and Mark and I would
rather be back at Giants Stadium
w1th a new agreed-to contract getting ready for the Super Bowl
track," Carson said Thursday.
"Since we can't be there, we are

Oakland-Indians deny
Mart in hiring rumors

CLEVELAND-BOUND?? -

'

14th in the nation in fewest yards
allowed (239.8 per game) and has
given up only one touchdown In the
last 14 quarters. The Trojans also
are 12th in pass defense with a 137.5yard average.
But they w1ll be facing riflearmed John Elway of Stanford, who
is the third-ranked passer in the nation with 129 completions in 197 at·
tempts for 1, 712 yards and 14
touchdowns. E lway also is second In
total offense w ith 333.8 yards per
game.
Scuthern Cal, 3-1, still runs the ball
65 percent of the time, but Stanford
Coach Paul Wlggtn says he fears the
Trojans unpredictable offense,
which will run on thlrd-and-long and
pass on second-and-short .

Young Marauders beaten by Logan
The

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middle~, Ohio

NEW tieroCoddy ··

HELPS PAY WINTER HEATING BILLS
FOR LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS.
The federally-funded Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP) is now receiving applications for home

he.ating ass istance.
You may qualify for HEAP benefits this winter if your total household income falls within these limits se t
by ihe federal government.

S 7.020 for
S 9.330 , for
$11,640 for

I Person
2 Persons
3 Persons

$13,950
S I 6,260
$ 18,570

for
for
for

4 Persons
5 Persons
6 Persons

(Add $2.3 10 for each additi onal member in families greater lhan six.)
HOUSEHOLD INCOME-means all income received by all persons in your household for the last I 2
months. Income is all money received including social security benefits, v~teran benefits, interest, state

unemployment benefits. workers compensation, strike benefits, cash public assistance and relief payments.
HEAP benefits are calculated based on heating bills for the months of December, 1982, and January and
February, 1983.
APPLICATIONS are available at many local welfare offices, community action agencies and senior

'

citizens centers.
APPLY EARLY I ApplicatiQ,n filing deadline is January 31, 1983.

For more informalion call' the Ohio HEAP office between the"hours 8 a.m. ' 5 p.m. Monday through
·
•
·
·
' Friday toll-free..

1-800-282-0880
'

,_,

'I,

·I.

Wicks 'and
Igniters
5ga l . ca n~

.Av ~fl:-~-~~;~o:.::=
!1

Battery-operated Siphon Pump

OHIO

J'aiiip

'0 1

Move you r Kero -Sun heater
easily on a Kero Caddyl
Installs tn just minules F1t s all
Kero-Sun Mode ls

::a

See a demonstration today

Galllopolls
Empire Furniture
842 2nd Ave.

Middleport
Valley Lumber
555 Park Street

Pt. Pleasant
Hardman Home Center
At. 2 Bypass

448-1405

992-6611

675-4692

Jackson
Energy Center, Inc.
At. 93, North
286-2715

WEST VIRGINIA

Craddock's Country Garden
111 Viand St.

'

Mason
Pickens Hardware
103 S. 2nd Street

CHS-TV &amp; Home Supply n3-5583
188 Main Street
286-6880

375-2702

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Friday.~. 1S,i 982

The Daily Sentinel Pag• 7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Friday.~. 15,1982

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County meeting notes
RacinePTO
Final plans lor he fall carnival of
Racine PfO were made at a recent
meeting at the school. The carnival
wUI be held Oct. 30 at the Southern
Junior High School, Racine, trom 4
to 8 p.m.
Games, food, a country store, a
king and queen contest have been
scheduled and also being consi·
dered for the event is an auction.
The PfO Is asking for handmade
items to be donated. Those with donations should contact 949-2744.
Maxine Rose presided at the
meeting with Donna Ihle giving devotions and leading in the pledge
and the Lord's Prayer. Ruth Shain
and Barbara Dugan gave officers'
repo11s, and Principal Robert Beegle reported a total of 169 students
enrolled at the elementary school.
He also announced that school pic·
lUres will be taken Oct. 29. and the
halloween par1y will be held the afternoon of that same day. Room
count was taken and the third grade
room won the $5 prize.
Committee appointments with
the chairman being listed first were
as follows:
Ways and m eans: Jo Ann Wilford , Donna Wolfe. Donna Ihle,
Donna Johnson, Mickey Hoback,
and Edna Price.
M embership : Cindy Win ebrenner , Judy Harrison , Maxine
Rose and Karen Davidson.
Soliciting: Patty Circle, Ruth
Shain, co-chairmen, Linda Holter ,
Helen Holter. Edna Hunnell , Donna
Sayre and Jan Norris.
Devotions: Donna Ihle.
Art Fair: Nancy Joachum,
Nancy Circle, co-chairmen, Robe11
Beegle and Maxine Rose.
Playground: Peach Mugrage,
Donna Norris, Jean Cleek. Robert
Beegle, and M ary Hill .
Basketball :
Alice Williams,
chairman.
Mrs. Mugrage was appointed
head homeroom mot her and Cindy
Winebrenner, membership chairman. announced a contest.
Homeroom mothers announced
by 1he teachers are:
Grade lA. M ary Hill, teacher :
Jean Cleek. Patty Hensler, Becky
Mallory. Dixie M cDaniel, Sharon
Johnson, Lura Counts. Linda Holter
and Edith Manuel.
Grade lB. Jan Norris teacher:
Ruth Shain, Robin Reiber, Karen
Turley, JoAnn Wilford, Donna Matson. Ter esa Van M eter, Rita Matthews. Mrs. Shasteen and Mrs.
Rowe.
Grade 2, K aren Davidson,
teacher:
Ressie Sawyers, Bev
Cummins, Jane Ann Hill, Diana
Ihie, Peach Mugrage, Pam Dill, Joy
Morarlty, Sherry Hensler, Sharon
Spaun, Gayle Rowe.
Grade 3, Edna Price, teacher:
Patty Circle, Ruth Shain, Jean
Cleek, Faith Varney, Ann Wiles,
Helen Holter, Ca thy Gradel,, Edna
Hunnell , and Mona Ervin. ,
Grade 4, Donna Norris, teacher:
Maxine Rose, Cindy Winebrenner,
Nancy Circle, Nancy Joachum,
Mildred Williams. Vicki Damron,
Donna Johnson, and Barbara
Dugan.
Grade 5, Mickey Hoback,
teacher : Donna !hie, Donna Wolfe,
Bev Cummins, Kathy Beegle, Jane
Ann Hill, JoAnn Wilford, Dorothy

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SALUTE

Johnson, Allee Williams, Edith Manuel, and Ann Zerkle.
Grade 6, Robert Beegle, teacher :
Mary Porter, Sharon Spaun.
Next meeting wUI be held Monday
at 7:30 In Mrs. Norris' fourth grade
room. Speaker w UI be Bobby Ord,
Southern Local superintendent,
who will talk on the proposed three
mlll levy to be voted on in the November election.

OUR C-ARRIERS

International
Newspaper Carrier
Day October 16

Missionary Society
Work sessions In preparation for
the annual Christmas bazaar were
planned during a meeting of the Willing Workers Missionary Society of
·the Syracuse First Church of God.
The meeting was opened with every one singing "He is All I Need."
Devol ions from Psalms 23 were
given by Ethel Hasler with prayer
by Jan Jenkins. Virginia Oiler gave
the secrtary-treasurer's report. A
white elephant sale was held. Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Oiler and Mrs. Jenkins with Mrs.
Oiler giving the closing prayer.

Every day of the year, we put our
business in their hands, and today we
say thanks for a job well done. Today is
International Newspaper Carrier Day. A
day set aside to honor the carrier who
delivers your newspaper. It's a tough
job being the important link. be tween
this newspaper and you, the reader.

Hemlock Grange
Hemlock Grove 'Grange recently
visited with Star Grange of near Salem Center. Forty-four persons attended the meeting with the literary
program being presented by Hemlock Grove.
Bill Dyer, youth chairman, announced a county youth meeting to
be held at the home of Keith and
Emma Ashley. The group is open to
grange and non-grange members
between 14 and 35. Next meeling
will take place at Duff's in Gallipolis, 6:30 p.m. on Nov. 19. After the
dinner, thegroupwUI go tot he home
of Rick and VIcki Macomber for the
meeting.
Women's activities chairman
sponsored a skin care class recently
with several members attending.

PordandPTO
An explanation on the three mill

levy to be voted on In the Southern
Local School District was given at
the Monday night meeting of the
Portland PfO.
Meeting with the PTO members
were Bobby Ord, superintendent,
and board members, Don Smith,
Charles Pyles. and Denny Evans.
Ord explained that the levy must
go on the ballot as an additional millage when, in fact, it Is not and will
not raisethetaxesnowbeingpaldby
res idents of the district.
He said It is a shift of tax mills
from debt service to gener al fund.
The PTO voted to support the levy.
It was noted that the school roo! is
deteriora tingcrea ling interior problem s and that passage of the levy
seems the only way of getting funds

Circle reunion
Members of Otha Circle family
gathered for a family reunion recently at the Berwick Party House
in Columbus.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
David Circle and daughters, Melissa and Laura, Columbus; Evelyn
Circle, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bohner, sons, Matthew and MIchael and daught er, Am y ,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Cleland, Columbus; Mr.and Mrs.
Kenneth Krider, Columbus; Gary
Krider, VIrgin Islands and Dr. and
Mrs. K. Wayne Ratts, St. Louis,
Missouri.

OPENING NIGHT - Actor Rex llarrlwJ joinS playwright Beth
Henley,center,backstageatNewYork'sEugeneO'Neill'lbeaterfollowing the opening of Henley's new play, ''1be Wake of Jamey Foster."

Western night slated for Point Pleasant _
Put on your duds and let' s head
west.
Country and western dancing,
food and fashion will be the evening
of entertainment at Brian's Sieak
House "TheOid West " on Saturday,
Oct. 23, from 7 p.m . to I a.m.
Starting at 7 p.m., a Chuckwagon
Buffet will be served w ith Bar-B-Q
Rihs. baked steak and other food

available.
A door prize will be given away
and a contest wUI be held for children in western wear and Little Miss
West and Little Mr. West will be
crowned.
At 8 p.m., a Western Fashion
Show will be held showing clothing
for boys, men, girls and women

from local stores. The Dalton Gang
will play a19 p.m . and again from 11
p.m. to midnight. At 10:30 p.m ., a
Clog and Western Dance Show will
kick off with Mlkkl Casto and other
dancers. The midnight hour will
bring a costume contest for the best
dressed western couple and those
who look like Marshall Matt Dillon
or Miss Kitty. More boot kick 'n

dance music wUI follow.
Cost for the dlnner and entire evening Is $10, ages 13 to adult and $5,
ages 6 to 12. Children under the age
of five wlll be admitted free. Dinner
reservations should be made by
Oct. 19. Call 6~. 675-2693 and
675-6276 for tickets. A $2 cover
charge will be required by those not
attending the dinner.

Food Co-op discussed by Meigs Council on · Ministries
Jane Ann Karr led the devotional
men and women of the county are
program at 8: 15 on Sunday mornperiod using Ecclesiastes 3 as her
Invited to attend .
Ings. Rev. Clark Is host during Octopic when the Meigs County CounSyracuse Parish United Methotober with Revs. Smith and
cil on Ministries oft he United Methdist Men are planning a program
Merrifield hosting the program In
o:list Church met at the Chester
for Oct .24 . The men will hold the
Novem ber .
United Methodist Church.
worship service In each church on
We have a goal to have a second
Kermit Walton, chairperson prethe charge, and at 7:30 In the even- pulpit exchange In the spring.
sided. Lloyd Dillinger sta ted there . lng there will be a program of IOfal
There will also be a district-wide
will be a communication s worktalent at the Forest Run church.
pulpit exchange on April 24.
shop at the Syracuse Asbury United
The Food Co-op truck deliveries
The evaluation reports are
Methodist Church Nov. 20 from 9
are now coming directly to Pomeneeded before the November m re ta. m . to 3 p.m. with Rev. Robert Storoy from Cinctnnatl Vernoo said
ing and also the Morse Chapel
rey. Ther e will be a registration fee
the food on delivery day will be
church is becoming more involved
of $3. A lightlu och will be provided.
ready for ptk-up by 3 p.m. and
In the p~rish with one Sunday a
As a suggestbn each church shoukl
asked that anyone ordering shoukl
month a 1ninlster of the cooperative
send one person, paying their regi spick up their order before 4p.m. An
parish sharing with them.
tration, who is or woukl like to be
article was read that he is submi !Mrs. Sauer also reported In the
the news reporter from their
ling to· the newspaper about the
absence of Rev. Robin oon the Wachurch. This workshop wlll cover
Food Co-op.
terford church Is becoming a satelnews articles and news releases.
Fay Sauer, director, stated she lite r:t the food co-op program. Rev.
Rev . Rothemich noted Rev. Ray
had been In m ost of the churches of
Robinson will meet with Mike
Price will be at Hea th Middleport
the county sioce becoming direcSwisher and through this meeting
Nov. 14; Racine Wesleyan Nov. 15;
tor, and intends to visit all churches make the people who receive food
and St. Paul Tupper s Plains Nov.
by Christmas.
stamps awar e of the Food Co-op
16. These meetings will be 7:30each
A slate of officers Is needed by the and let them know they can take
evening. Rev. Prire will show
November mreting which will be
advantage of this program . Fay
slides and tell of his stay In Africa.
held at Letart F alls and Is the
commended Rev. Robinson on his
A free will offering will be received
charge oonfereocefor the Coopera- ·-work.
at each church.
tive Parish. There will be parking
Programs of Interest: HomeShut -in v i s it a tion Is bein g
space at the community hall.
coming at Morning Star Oct. 17;
planned by the Missions commitOver ~ are enrolled for t'he
Apple Butter for sale at Racine
tee. There will be more on this
School of Religion. On tbe last night
Wesleyan Church. Revival at Ralater.
of the School of Religion on Oct. 21
cine
Wesleyan Oct. 24-29 with Rev.
Vernon Nease r eporting for the
there will be a social hour following
Kaley,
Illinois Conference evangeUnited Methodist Men said the
the class.
list,
speaker
. Services at 7 each evCounty Men's nex t m re tlng will be
Mrs. Sauer noted we have a radio
ening.
Monday, Nov. 22. Place, time and
'
program will be decided later . All
Lynn Slater gave the youth r eport, Hayride and wiener roast wUI

be held Oct. 23 at Morning Star.
Nov. 6 and 7 youth retreat at Camp
Frances Asbury. Youth will mee t
at RockSprings Dec. 19to go Christmas caroling, and the next Bible
quiz wUI be at Portland Nov. 28.
Meeting was adjourned wtth
· prayer, by t~ chairman, and a social hour followed wtth decorations
in a fall motif.

Every day the total effort of our adver tising, news, and production departments
goes into their hands. Theyare the
bearers of the news ~ good or bad, and
as a wltole, we think they do a good job!

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

We salute our carriers on their special day and ask you to join
us in honoring them J&lt;»r a job well done. Please re·m ember
International Newspaper !Carrier Day!

Rutland revival
speaker named

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Joining them Is the play's star SuSan Klnglsey. The play by the Pulitzer
Prize-winning Henley is set In Mississippi. (AP Laserphoto)

•

Rev. Gene Grate, pastor of Harvester Church of the Nazarene, St.
Charles, Mo., formerly of Rutland,
will be guest speaker at revival ser vices at Rutland Church of the Nazarene beginning Tuesday, Oct. 19
through Sunday, Oct. 24.
Grate was reared In the Rutland
church.
Mark and Mary Hollingsworth,
ministers of music at Wesleyan
Church, Nelsonville, will be the special singers.
The public is Invited to attend .
Lloyd D. Grim Jr., is pastor. Servl- r
ces will be held at 7 p.m. nightly and
on Sunday at10: :ll a.m. and 7 p.m.

MANNING
K..ROUSH
.
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Jason· Smith
David Smith
Bernice Darst
PamHaggy
Charles Hampton Joe Manley
Bill Weaver, Jr. Kim Stewart
Kelly Stewart
'Trey Cassell
Danya Gheen
'Dm Cassell
Don Becker

Jack Justis
Jim Bentz.

Maurisa Nelson
Jeff Nelson

Jeff IHlleary
Bryant Ymmg
Monica Tomer
Clinton Tomer
Channele Tomer
Rod Roush
Ch.eryl.Roush
·Holly Miller
Joe Roush

Grate

SYRACUSE

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

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CANDIDATE FOR

MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
SEMINAR -

The Continuing Educallon Com-

mlltee o1 11ober

Mecijcal Center Volllllteer Cha-

plalnl' i\MOc,.;tc•n wiD sponsor a fuD day's seminar
011 ''111e

LOlli Tenn Pa&amp;lent and His Famlly," to be

held In the Freecb_JI'Ive .,undred Room of the hollpl&amp;al
011 Od. 11 from t , a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Space wiD be
limited 10 luunedllk raervail- are 111guted.
'l1le 011111 ollhe ......... m,lncludlng m~ and

and

afternoon coffee, lUnch
a certlftcate of ailencl- .
ance. Deadline f~r registration Is Monday, According
to Rev. Richard Rothemlch, left, pastor of Rock

:r:':==~~!'::::a.andc!':me::

of liP Bikers wiD hJibllgla the day. Memben of the

clelv from !be eatlre area are w!!leome to repter.
Rev. ArCIInr Lliad, rlgbt, Is director oiiiMC'~ Cbao-

plalncy ll!rvlces.

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·vote For and Elect the Man who cines

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about Meigs County and It's People.''

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"Your Vote and Support Appreciated ~
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�Calendar
FR IDAY
TU PPERS PLAINS - A corn
brC'ad and be.m supper w tll be
hr ld Fnday ntght at the Tupper s
Plams firehouse by the TuppC'r s
Pla ms Ball F teld Improvement
Lc•&lt;~guc
Servmg will be from
~ «l to ti .lOp m

SATIJR DAY
POME R OY - E mplO\ es of
t he PomNO\' Hea lth Care Cen
If' I \\ 11l s ra gf' a yat d sa le lx'gm
nlng dl 9 a m Satun:l d\ at l hr
p.u km g lo t al ong 1he Oh iORIVCI
tn I &gt;orne r ov All prorePds from
the s ~llc• w tll gn towards pu rchao;;
mg Chtt "t m.t" g tf ts for rPs tdent s
of ttw ('f'ntt ·r Anvone h.Jv tn g
!l t •rns t hf'\ H OUle\ hkP IO COil lrib

POM EROY - A hymn smg
wtll be held at Nease Settlem ent
Chw·ch at 2 p m Sunday. The
sing w tll fea ture Dan Hayman
and th~ Country Hymntuners
Th~ publtc IS mvttrd
RAONE sC' r va n c P,

Good Old Days obRac in e Ba pt is t

Church, Sunday wtth school at
9 :MI a m , morn mg wor ship at
10 4ll a m , j unior church, ages
2, .\and 4 Potl uck dinner at noon
wttil aft ernoon smging by Har
monv Rev Don Wal ker , pastor

MONDAY

lt:-6-4142

POMEROY - Fmal readmg
of by -laws, Meigs Aen~2 171 ,
Fra tcrna I of Eagles, 8 p m . Monday M em ber ship age requtre·
mcnt increased fro m 18 to 21
POMEROY - M en's F ellow shtp . M etgs County Churches of
Chnst. M onday evening, to load
trucks for Gru ndy Mountain
M ISSIOn

Friday, Oct. 15,1982

P~eroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs Local School District
lunch menu announced for week

Astrograph

ren, and jumor church for those
ages two throu!(h four Ther e w ill
be a potluck dmnet at noon with
arternon sin!(ing by Hatmony
Rev. Don Walker IS pastor

u tP 1o ttw .... llt· 1s ,ts kro to con tac t
IU.\011 ~1 S pf'Jl(' (' ! Li t ~~ 601)1 0!

M IDOLF'PORT - Th~ Peac.:c
lui VallP\ c;ospC'l Smgers Wi ll
smg Saturdct\ evenmg at 7 30
p m .11 Ash Sll'(~t Freewtll Bapllst C'il ut ch 111 Middleport The
pu bltt IS \0\'llf'd

Friday, Oct. 15, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-S- The Doily Sentinel

October 16, 1982
This co mmg yea r you wil l have more dir ect cont rol over conditions
which affect your life You w ill be able to recognize opportu nities and
know how to use them wisely .
L ffiRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A:tt end to Import ant m atters per sonally
today , Instead of t ry ing to delegate them to ot her s. You, not they , will be
abl e to pull off what you desir e.
SCORPI O (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) There ar e things stirring behind the
scenes which w UI have a long-range, favora ble effect on your e~rnlngs
or mco m e. Two Indicators may become vis ible today.
S~GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) It behooves you at this time to
become more deeply involved with clubs and social organizations. You
ca n m ake va luable cont acts helpful In other ar eas .
CAPRICORN ( Dec. 22-JM. 19) Don't hes itate to settle a number of
goals for your self now If they ar e wort hy ones, you'll figure out ways to
achteve them .
AQU ARIUS (Jun. 20-F eb. 19) Try to associate with per sons today
who stim ulate your thinking and Im aginat ion. Severa l valuable Ideas of
mu tual benefit m ay be exchanged
PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20) Y ou are now in a cycle wher e you can
begm to reap div idends fro m joint ventu res , provided you associate
w tlh per sons w ho know how to m ake the cash register r ing.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Much can be learned today from
watching how associates or companions deal w ith difficult issues. lm·
tt ate the w ise ones Recognize, and rej ect, the actions of the foolish.
TAUR US (April 2&amp;M ay 20 ) Take stock of yourself today and If you
feel you ar e in need of an exer cise or health program , Initiate It now. It
can be m ade to work .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You w ill have severa l opportunities
today to str engt hen re lationships w tthin your circle of Intimate friends.
Take adva nt age of these condit ions
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Thts Is a good day to fmlsh, to y ou r
sa tisfaction, sever al tasks thu s far left "• nging. Upon completion you
can then tackle t he new
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) You have the ability today to blend the old
Wlth the new m ways which wil l work to your advantage. Be progres·
stve, yet respectful of tradition
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Shiftmg co nditions w ith an effect upon
vour fin ancial well-being will be working in your favor today However.
the results m ay not be immediate

The m enu to be served at all
schools of tbe M eigs Local School
District for the week of Oct. 18 is
announced today . It Includes:
Monday - Char broiled beef pa t.
tie, buttered corn , fruit . eookie
(chocolate chip). milk.

Change of meeting
date announced

Tuesday - Hoagy beef steak on
bun, cheese slice, fruit cup, cake
(white). mllk.
Wednesday - Spaghetti In m eat
sauce, tossed salad, applesauce,
hot rolls and butter, mllk.
Thursday - Chill-crackers. bu tter or peanut butter sandwich,
cheese slice. hot apple crisp, mllk.
Friday - Cook's choice.

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

ElliS &amp;SONS SOHIO

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE
Presc npf1on s

992-9921

99 2-2955

Se rv1c e

Every Saturday,

6:30-8:30.

through Nov.

,
.
a

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

(I

of Columbus , 0
804W.Mam

992·2318 Pom e roy

g

)'(

'

-

P o m e roy

M1ll Work ·
Ca bm e t M a kmg

TOPICS:
Oct. 16-"Christian Fathering"
OCt. 23-Preparing For
Adolescense

Syra cu s e

~'-~ '

&amp;EN
! FRANKLIN"

".

l'

992·3978

MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

Qyde Henderson, past()' emeritus. Sunday
School, 9:.l&gt;a m , Glen McClung, supl , morn·
lng wcrship IO.ll a m., evening serv icr' 7
p m .. mid·week service, Wednesday 7 p m

lOIII

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURcli :_ :a; E
Main St • Pomeroy Sunday services Holy
Communion on I he first Sundayofeac h month.
and romtMed wit h morning prayer on the
third Sunday. Mor ning prayer and sermon on
au other SuOOays oft he mont h. Church School
and nursery care provided Coffee oour in ttl.&gt;
Parish Ha U immedlat£'1y fO IICM'Ing the
!)eVlce

OUR SAVIOU R LUTH ERAN CHUI1CII -

ThE MosT IMpoRT4NT 04y Of YouR LifE

Keeosake
....,_
~
212 E . Mam Str ee t
992·3785, P o m e r oy

Your yest.erdays arc 1mport.unt, for 1t IS
through the past th at you h av ~.: btnlt th e
present
lf we arc happy wt tlt our prese nt ~ lat ~
of affairs, we know that we h a\'e le arned
some of the lessons o f vc s tc rve ar lh11111s
unfortunate th at \'Cry fc\\ pc~ 1plt.: arc hap py with th crr today's. tltc prc~c n l
We can c ha n ~c ull tl!Ut \\'L· cun kam
that ills today th at h uli d~ o u r to m orru\\ ,
and the day after !..hal. and tltL dm afte r
that ll1 s m worsh1p tltut \\ c sl.ill1-·" here
we can learn lO bu 1lrl tn lr II UPJ 'Y 11 IIIHIITU\\

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4-H news notes

Thursday; wcrsh!p serv!(.'(l 8 p m

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
C!ffiiST, Dl W. Main Si.. 992-52.15 Vocal
~usl c. Sunday wcrshlplOa . m . ,

Blb&amp;estudyll
a m.; worshlp, 6p.m. Wednll3day Bibl:estudy,

7p.m.
OLD

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Preaching9·30a m., first and second Sunday~
of each month; third andfourt hSundayseach
monlh. W(J'Sh!p servlces al7 ll p m Wednesd&lt;ey ('Venings al 7· .1) p m , Pray('r and Bible

Responae

Study.

Wide-Dispersion Tweeter

Hetghts Road, Pomeroy. Michael P lan
kowskl, pasta: Rita Whit(', Sabbath School
$fpt Sabbath School is at 2 p m on Saturday
with wocship services follow!~ at 3 15 p m

Save $60 on a pair! Perfect size for placementon bookshelt- 18 x 11'/• x 7 1 /•".
Use 'em for wide-range stereo sound in
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Removable grille. #40-1988

RtJ!l.AND FIP.ST BAPI'IST CHURCH -

Sister Harriett Warner. Sup! SuOOay Sc~l
9'::JJ a .m , morrUng W(J'Ship. 10 45 a .m
'

POMEROY

Tlw Jov.n and fountn -l H C!uh met on
&lt;.;r&gt;pt \11,11 thf' Or:JngP f lrf' hOuS(• Therf' wPtl:'
··tght mf'm bf&gt;rs ,md t"o advisors In attf'nd
,meI ' n w mpm bf&gt;r s f'l('('tro offtC'f'rs a nd dts
r u..,Sl'(l pr oj('('fs a nd the Sf' llln ~ of Christmas
"r ap Off lcPr s PI('( tf'd " f'fl' presld('nt Krist I
11 ...... k dcf' prrsldf'nt , Amv Hagpr, st'&lt;'rf'
wrv John Hawk trf'a surer. Lf'a h Sa nders
and"""" report&lt;'r .lason H a~£' 1
Thf' nPxt m('('t ! n~ of ttk&gt; clu b will bf' on Oct
ill a t thP hom(' of .Joan C 1laway At tha t tim••
th&lt;' mPmher s will havf' a Ba llowf'('n p,1rty
HohtJ\ C'a \,1wa\ will bf' m charge of w&lt;'f('a
non - lason U a ~f'r rPpor1N

FAITII TABERNACLE CHURCH . BaUcy

By Micronta®

Save s2o1

n w MPI!ZS 4 II PIPasul f' Riders m(&gt;! on
Sept 19 at the Elbf'rff' ld Farm wtth thr('(' ad
visors. 10 mPmhrt s ;md 15 vls ttors In e11 end
ann• Cf'r tlfica tPS and premium mon('V wf'rr
pa s...ed ou t It was d('('lded 10 hav(' a m['{'fi~
on Ort 1R to work on sadd](' crafls
A potl uc k lunch was hE&gt;Id at the farm The
group will be going to tht&gt; C('nter of Science
and Industry In Columbus on Oct 9 -.Jeff
Arnold. rt&gt;pc&gt;rtl'r

•••

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Check Your Phone Book for the ltadtelllaek Store or Dealer Nearest You ' =:,o;;,.-;

=:oOf!ES AN00£ALEAS

L.--------------------------------------------------~------------------------------~--------------------------------'-------------------------~~...
l,

SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry Sl . Syra-

cuse. Servi({'S, lOa.m

Sunday, Evm ingsNvl

cas, Sunday and Wednesday. 7 p.m
·MIDDLEPROT CHURCH OF C!ffi iST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Ma nl f!i , pashr. Mrs Russell Young, Surxlay School Supt
SundaySchool9 lJa m. Evenlngwcrshlp 7 :l)
p.lfl. WE;'dnesday prayer meet ing 7·l) p m

1ofl'. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, P.acln•

wsn hi~ 9 : 45 a.m

; SuOO.y School lO 45 a.m ..
ev',enlng w&lt;rShip 7 p.m Thcsday, 7.:1! p m ,
ladles prayer meeting. Wednesday, 7 l) p m

YPE.
MIDDLEPORT FIRSr BAP115T, Corner

MIDDLEPORT FREEWll.L BAPTIST,
Corner Ash and Plum Lesli£&gt; Hayman, pastor
Sunday sclnol 10 a m . Mornln ~ Wors hip. lJ
a m , Wedru:'Sdav and Saturday Evening scrvl('{'s, 7 l) p m

MEIGS
COOP ERATIVE PARISI!
UNITED 1\!E1110DIST CHURCII
Fa.y Sauer. Dlraior

~1M2

i\!tiodl\te Dlredor

Rev. ScldonJolulson
Rev. DuaneSyderS'rk:ker
ALFRED - Church School 9 l1 a m . Wor
ship, lla m , UMYF. 6 .l) p m, UMW .Tiflrd
Tuesday, 7 ll p m Community fi rst Sunday
CH ESTER - Worship 9 a m , Church
School lO a m . Bible Study, Thu rsdav. 7 p m
UMW . first Thursday, 1 p m , Communion
first Su nday
JOPPA - Wors hlp. 9 :D a m . Church
School. 10 .)) am Bible&gt; Study, wrohesdav.
7 l1pm
LONG BOTIOM - Church School. 9 :ll
a m . Worship. 7 p m , Bible' Study, Wednffi·
day, 7 .l ) p m , UMYF. Wednesday, 6 p m ;
Communion First Sundav

·

~~-lldlelawdllar)l, 6p.m.
nem~llmlly-!Wtp, 7 p.m

BEARWALLOW RIDG E CHURCH OF
CHn iST. Duane Ward£&gt;n m iniSter Bible
class. 9.l&gt; a m . morrungwll"S hip, lO :lla m
C'Ven lng wcrs hlp, li :rJ p m Wf'dn csday Blbl£'
study, 6 30pm

NEW STIVEilSVll.LF.

COMMUN r rY

am
RACIN E CII URCH OF Til E NAZA RENF.

TIJPPERS PLAJNS ST PAUL -Church

Rev. Stanley W. MerTifleld
Rev. Rldull'd Rothemld•
Rev. Roht&gt;rt E. Rotmson
Rev. Rohert Rider, Jr.
Rev. Rohert-M,!Gee
ASBURY ISyracuse I - Wors hip. to am ,
Church Sctool, 10 a m . Charge Bible Study,
Thursday. 7· 30 p m , UMW, Cl.rst Tuesday.
7 lJ P m , Choir Ri!hearsa\, Wedn esday, 6·45
pm, UMW, founh SuOOa\ , 6 Xl pm
ENTERPRISE - Worstup 9 a m , Chu rch
ScOOot, 10 a m., Bible Sludy, Thesda v, 7 .ll
P m , UMW, Fh-sl Monday, 1 lJ p m ,
UMYF. every other Sunday, 6 p m Cholr rehearsa l, 6 lJp m Wedn &lt;sda y
FLA'IWOOOO - Churt'h School. 10 .1m.
Worship. 1 am . Bible Study, Thursday, 7
p m, UMYF, Su nday, 6pm
F'OREST RUN - Worship 9 a .m , Chu rch
School. lO a m . Choir Practlce, Thesday. 6 .) )

p m.. UMW, flrstThesday, 7 30p.m
HEATH IMiddleporll - Chu rch School,
9 lJ a m , Worship, 10 XI a m.: Bible Study,
Thesday , lOa m., UMW. second Monday. 7 :n
p m. UMM, third Monday, 7.l)p m
MINERSVll.LE - Wors hip Serv l('(' 10
a m • Cllurch ScOOol, 11 a m , UMW . 1iurd
Wednesday, 1 p m., Cholr practice, Monday,
7 :llp m
PEARL CHAPEL - Wors hip Sctvl('(', 10
a m . Church ScOOol. 11 a m , UMW . second
1\tesday. 7 .l l p m . UMYF last Tuesday, 7 :tJ

pm
POMEROY - Church School. 9 1!'1 a m ,
Worship service. 10 :JJ a .m , Choir rehearsal.
Wednesday, 7l) p m.: UMW, S€C'Ond Thes
day, 7 :JJ p m ; UMW, last Sundav, 7 a m.
UMYF,Sunday,6 pm
~oa&lt;

SPRINGS - Church School , 9 10

a m , WorshJp, lOa m., BlbleStudy, Wt&gt;dnes

day, 7·:1J p m , UMYF !Seniors) , Sunday, 6
p.m ; IJu niors) , ('Very other Sunday, 6 p m
Rlfll,.AND - Church School, 9 45 a m ,
Worship. 11 a.m., UMW !Evening Circle),
sa'Ond Wednesday, 7 XI p.m . UMW , second

Thu rsday, I p.m.
SALEM CENTER - Church School 10

Rev. Mark W. flym
Rev. Flo&lt;ence Smllh

Schobl, 10 a m.; Blbl• Study, Wednesday, 10

MIDDL E PORT ' PRE SBYTER IAN ,
ChW'dl Scmoi, 9 a.m.: Morning wcrship,
ID:P.. Billie Study 'l'lll!ldlll', 10 a.m.; Bible
stUdy, 1l'atroday~Jl_p.m.
SYRACUSE Fl(jST UNITED PR!SBY·
' ~ Church. Church School. lO: IS a.m.;
-~ W&lt;nltlp. ll:Jl a.m.: Bible Study.
~· 10 a.m.; Jumor and Senior Ht~h
Y~ lluftdoly, 6p.m.
Rev
CHURCH OF GOD, Past'":,
&amp;I . . - Evlllo. SWidoy - · 10 a .m. ,
'!dAY~ 11 a.m.: Chlldra1's chUrch,
11 un.: ~..,..,~qoervtce, 7p.m.: Wed-

Crabtree. pastor Sundav School 9 30 a m
('Vefling serv let:', 7 30 p m W£'dnesd.:1.y prayPr
m reting, 7 30 p m

CENnlALCWSTER

Church School . 9 :1J

assodate mlnJiter. Bible School, 9·lJ a.m .
morning wcnhlp, IO: l) a .m : evening wcr·

a.m.

15 I 10
•

~ l o n du \

John
17 q 2:l
• T11 cstlu\
I&lt; oma n-.
1 ~ 4-H

• Fncia\
I Con n1.h tu 11s

12 12 27
• Suwrdu'

INDEPENDENT HOLIM :SS CHUI!CII

[ p h LS IU TI \'&lt;

Inc - P,luiSI . Mtddlcport Rf•v 0Df'l lM,111
]('1.· past ex Sunda\ Sc: hool 9 .VJ a m Morn
lng wor ship 10 ll &lt;I m f'Vf'nlng 1\ orship, ~ lfl
P m l'uf'S dav 12 l(J p m Wonlf'n s p1.tWI
m f('tmg: P r avf't an d praL~ f' Sf'l'\ IC'C' Wf'dn f'S
dav 7 30pm

4 I 6

. \\I I' onntl1
""" d'"
iu ns :l I I t

Hlll1.ANDAPOSTO IJ CC1 1 U IK~OF Jl;
SUS CHRIST Elder .J.tml&gt;S M1ll cr B1blf'
studv. WC'dru:~da ')-. 7 VJ p m Sundav Sc hool
lO a m Sundav nlght sf'niC'f' 7 .lllpm
POMEROY WE:5LEYAN HOLINF.SS HaiTl'iom tllf' R.oad F..t rl Fi('lds p.1s101
\i('nf'\• Eblln . It Sundav School Supt Sund&lt;t\
School 9 10 a m , Mor nlng W01 ship II .1 m
Su nday f'\enl ng Sf'l'\'J('(', 7 I() pm Pl a\ f'l
'
M('('llng, Thursd.t y 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE F I R ~"T n i Uit(l l OF &lt;;())) Not Prntcwsta l RC'\. !.rot gc&gt; Ollf't p.ISiot
Wor~ hi p Sf'l'\'1('(' Sund&lt;n 9 -l ~• a m Sund,l\
~rhool 11 a m . wo: ship Sfll'\'lrt ' 7 I() p m
rhursd.tv pt ayf't tn('('t mg, i Vl p m
MT HERMON UNr r ED BH I THHFl\i 1'\J
CH R I ~"TC H URCI I Rev Ro lx•1 1 S,t n dn ~ p.1s
101, Don W1ll 1,\\ lf'adf'l Lol\ llf'&lt;l m TPxa s
Com murut v off CJ~ K'2 Sund.t\ sc hool 11 10
,, m Mmnlng ~~ or ship S('IVif'f' 10 ·l·l ,t m
f'\'rnmg p1 f'achmg ~ f'n t('(' sf'C'O nd .md fowt h
Sund.IVS i ll p m Chrt&lt;;ll.m Fncle.11 0r rust
and third SuJ")(Ia\ .., 7 .'VJ p m Wf'dnf'sd ,1\
pr a\cr mf'('tmg.mdnt tlif' .., tucl\ 7 .'l tlpm
Jr'HOVAJ I'S Wrl'Nl SS 17 !\ 11Sta ff' R.outf'
124 10 nt· mrlef'rlsl of Hul l.tlll ll Sundd\ B1bl4 •
lf'(' tUfe 9 10 .1m W,lfcht rMC'I &lt;; fu d\ 10 .!II
.tm , 1\iesc.b\ 1Jt h14 ·sluch 7 Vl pm 111UI ..,
da,\ , Throaat ic School 7 'Il l p m . Sr&gt;n li t'
Mf'f'tmg R Xl p m
HlJ f'l AND I ~ I U:: J \\II I [1 ,\I''II S'I
ClllJ HCH - Sa ltm St HurJ,md l &gt;onaldK.ut
St , p.t..,tm Bud Stl '\\ ,u1 sUj.ll r lnt4•m1Pnt Sun
da\ Sc.:hool 10 .1m . P\ f' lltnl.: 1\ op;h1p 7 Il l
pm V.. C'dnt&gt;sda\f'\ f' nt ng sf'J"'rt' ' 7 ll lp m
l.u
CII URctl OF f ,O]) Oi Pf toi' HI.n
('tllr'CI on thf'O r Whirf' Homl nil htgh\\ .t\ IW
Su nd.IV Sc hool 11J .t rn Su p(' 111lf f nd••nl John
I.O\ &lt;'da\ F u-st \V{'(Irwsd,l\ m_gh1 ••f month
CPMA S N'\ IC'f'S. ~f'rond \\'pd nr~&lt;Ln \\ MJ3
mf'f'tmg !hit cJ Tlu ough fifth ' rmh ~rrY r n ·
Grorgf' Cro\ le p,Jslot
HOPE RAI7 ! JST CH,\ P E: I - ~,7!1 ( ,, ant St
MlddiC'pOi t Sund.:n School, IO .t m mwm.ng
1\ o: ll&lt;;lp 1I i.l m . I'Vf'nmg ~~ 01 -; \up i p m
\\'('(in&lt;'Sd&lt;.t\ f'Vf'nl ng B1 blf' .., rud\ .md p1,1\'l't
m&lt;, •lmg ~ p m Affl hatro\\rthSou thf'rnB..tp
1L&lt;;l &lt;. on\ Pnt lon
BRAOFOH D CII UHCII o r ('IIHI ST Sta lf' Routt' 11·1 .md Count \ 11u.ul rl M,u k
St'(l\ f'I"S, m1mslf't , Sund.w Sl: hc 1ol Supl Stf'\ ('
i'1r krns Su~d.1\ ~hool 11 !II" m . m~1 mng
WOT ~ hip , \0 Vlam , ('\ l'ntl\gi\ OIShl p i p m
W!'(lJ\ C'S d.t\ \\ ( V ~ lll p 7 p Ill

S.,.....;,

School. qa .m .. Wors hip, lO a m , Blbi('Study,
Tuesday. 7 il p m , UMW , Third Tuesday
'
7 :ll p m . Communion first Sunday

REEilSVILLE -

a .m , Worshlp 11 a m
SOUTHBETHEL -Church ScOOol . 9 a m ,
Worship lO a m , Christian EndC'avCI' Youth
Fellowship, 4 p m . Bible Study, W~esday,
7:lJpm

APPLE GROVE - Church Scmoi. 9 a.m ,
Worship, 10 a.m. tflrsl and third Sundays!.
UMW, sea&gt;nd Thesday, 7:30 p.m.: Prayer
meet ing. Wednesday, 7 p.m.

PRESBYTERIAN,
Wonhip 5ervlce. 9 a.m.: Church Sclxx&gt;l, 10: :IJ

~e&lt;l•t"'')

CHURCH Surdav School ~ rrv i ('(' , 9 45.1 m .
Wors hip set'VI« '. lO .l Ja m. E vangeiL.,.IICSrt
VIC(', 7 30 p m W£'dn esdav. Pr,1yer m('('t\ng,
7 30 p m . Thursdav
ZION CI IURCl J OF Cl fR. IS'J Pom c&gt;rov
HarrlsonvWe Hd . Rotr11 Pun ell . pa&lt;;tor. Bt ll
McElroy, Su rKiav school sup! Sundav school
9·30a m , worshlpscn'i('(' )Q :Jia m, Sundav
W(J'Ship scrv l('(', 7 30 p m Monday and 'l\ies
day £&gt;Vl'ning S&lt;'l'\'1('{'5, 7 )) ('ach C'Venlng
ST J OHN LlJfHERAN CHUP.CH, Pin('
Grove Th(' Rf'\ Wilh am Mlddl ~wanh. Pas
tcr Church sc.n.ri({'S 9 .l l a m Sundav School
to·30a m
BRADBURY CHURO I OF GIRISI' P.IUI
Pralt , pastol Sund&lt;~yschool, 9 :Ji a m LMr\
Haynes S S Sup! . morni ng wors hip, !() 10

nior high BYF; choir practice 8· :IJ p.m Wl'd:
y: prayer meeting and Bible study,
e&amp;day. 7::1Jp.m. '
CHURCH OF C!ffiiST, Mlddl"'l"'f, 51hand
Main. .Bob Mellm, rnlnlsler, Scoll SaiiSman.

~'ffioNVU.LE

K.,.1.,

HOBSON C!ffiiSTIAN UNION, Willi am

Rev. Rh:h ardThomatt

SOIJI1IERN CLUSTER
Rev. Jamet M. Clark

•

John

• Thu rsd u'
I Connthitu\s
12 3-1 t

P 0 &amp;oo fl024 C,..,_,... V"9'n•• 22110&amp;

lng Worship 10·15 a .m Youth m eet ing 7::11
p.m. Wednesday, indudlng wee tots. eager
beavers, junior astroanuts, and junior and se-

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
Olj MEIGS COUI&gt;ITY. Rev Wanda Johmon,
dl!'a:tcr: Harold Johnson. dlrectcr of

~ unda\

NORTHE~~CLUSTE R

a m., Worship. 7 p m
'
SNOWVU..LE - Worship, 9 a m .. Church
SchoollO a m.

ship 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study and yoolh
gn)up meetlnp, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
R~E, Rev. Jim Broome, pastcr: BIU While.
&amp;ljlday sc11oo1 supt Sunday school, 9::IJ a.m :
111«nlngwcrstdp, lO::IJa.m.; Sunday evengells~cmeetlng, 7 p.m. Prll)lermeetlngWednesdll)l 7p.m.

•

!.!.

Rev . Robert M&lt;..&lt;lec

Sixth and Pa lmer, the Rev. Mark M cCiu ~
~ nday scho91 9:15 am , Dan White, Sunday

SChool supt ,John Relbei, Sr ,asstsupt .Morn

FlowtfSIIIp

''Tilt • ., . . . . ,.

Run Road, Rev Em mell Rawson, pastc:r
Hamil~ Dunn, supt SuOOay school. 10 a m
Sl.indayevming servlre7 ll p m . Blble teoch
lng, 7 :IJ p m Thursday

- Rev. Jame5 Satterllcld, pac;tor Morning
Great value! Has soft-touch tape controls for eas¥
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Has 2" meter and mirrored
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test leads. 1122.027

FII!ST BAPTIST. David

Mann, minister, William Snouffer, Sunday
School supl Sunday School, 9 )) a m . Morn
lng wcrs hlp 10 :JJ m
FIRSr SOt.rrHERN BAP115T, Pomeroy
Pike. David Huilt, pasi(J', Roger 'l'ur ne-,Su n·
do,y Sclxx&gt;l Superbllendcnt Sunday school.
9: ]) am, mor ning wcrship, 10.:.1, evening
wcrship, 7 l) p m. Midweel prayer m('('tln g,
7!l&gt; pm
MlDW AY COMMUNITY CHURCH , O..X
ter Rd . Langsville Rev A A Hughes, Pasta
Sunday School tO a m Services oh Tuesday,
~u rsday a nd Surday 7 l1 p m

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C!ffiiSTIAN

"''SuOO.y, 7. :IJ p.m.
GRA HAM UNITE D METHOD IST

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as you record off radto, Auto-Level for perfect tapes without adjustments,
audtble Cue/Revtew, tape counter, pause, battery/record LED " Sleep"
swttch works wtth Auto-Stop to turn off radto. Includes earphone. Don 't
mtss tt! #14-1 000

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DEXTER

CHURQI - Clifton Lucas, pastcc Sunday
ScOOol 9: 30a.m. Mrs Worley F rancis. supt
Preaching services nrsr and third Sundays
following Sunday SchooJ Youth m retlng f'V

• 8" Woofer and Tuned Port

Reg . 89.95

J"

M IDDL E PORT - A county
w td&lt;' prayer meetmg wil l be held
Sunday at 2 p m at Mtddleport
:::hu rc h of Chr iSt m Christian
Umon
RACINE - "Good Old Days"
will be celebrated at RacmeBapILst Church Sunday w ith t he pub·
ltc bemg mv tted to come and
enJOY the old at ttcil:s w htch will
be on dtsplay. Sunday school w ill
be at 9 30a m , mornmg wor shlp
at 10 .JO wtth a nurserv for child·

Main St . Nell Prrudfoot , pastoc Bible school.
a m , mor ning wcrsh!p. 10 30 a m ,
Yout h meelin ~ . 6·l) p m , ('Venlng worsh!p,
1· 30 p m Wedn esday night prayer m eeHng
and BiblE' study, 7l) pm
~ THE SALVATION ARMY , ll"i Butternut
~ve. , Pomeroy E nvoy and Mrs. Roy Wining,
~leer.; in charge Sunday hoUness m eeling, 10
a.m , Sunday School, 10 .'l ! a m Sunday
School leader, YPSM, Eloise Adame; 7 30
p.m , sal. vation meet: lng, various speakers a nd
music specials Thursday - 10 a m to 2 p m .
Ladles Hom e league, all women lnv lled. 7 ,'1 )
p.m Prayer meeting and Bltxe study, Rev
Noel Hennan, teacher.

BURLINGTON SOlJlllERN BAPriST
CHURCH, Route 1, Shade Blble Sclxx&gt;l7 p m

Cut 43°/o
for Solid

POM EROY - Morn ing Star
Umted M et hod" t Churc h w tll obscrve homecommg on Sunday
Th~ wor ship serv tces will be at
9· 4o a m . Sunday sehool at
10·4o, a ca r r; -m dmner at 12 30,
w tt h t h~ aft ernoon program to
begm at I :10 p m T he Claxton
Familv of South Webster. E arl
Shuler and daughter, Ellen,
Swart wout , North Dakota w tll be
fea tu red P.cv Florence Sm ith,
pa stor . mv ttes the pubh c.

m eellng7·.llp m 'Jllursday.

9:l)

SUN DAY
pOM E ROY - A dtnnN par ty
wil l be held for memberso!D1ew
Webster Post .\9, Pomeroy . who
1101 ked at parkmg cars at the
Metgs Countv fatr thts year The
d mn~t w tl l be held Sunday and
1 h~ hall ''"ll opC'n at noon w tth
chnnN to be served at 1 p m .
accord mg to Pa ul L CasCl.
chmrman

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHtmCH , Near
Long Bottom. Edsel Han , pastor Sunday
school, 9 lJa m , Worship 10 lJa m . Pray~r

•

Walnut and Henrv St s . Ravmsu ood W \ d
The Rev Grorgr C \V('ir lck pa&lt;;tor Sunda\
Sc00ol.9l)a m . Su ndav wochs lp 11,1 m
CALVAH.Y BIBLE CHURCH nCM' locat ed
on Pomeroy Pl kf', Counly Road l'i near Fl&lt;ll
woods Rev Blackwood pastor Services on
Sunday altO l"l ,, m and 7 :ll p m w1th Sun
day school . 9 l l a m blblPsludv w ron""dal
7l&gt; p m
··
'""
·
FAITH F I~ LLOWSHlP CRUSAilE FOR
~UR lS.I -S t HI :t ~ .A ntlq ull y Pastor,'lt•\
Fran kim Dickens Su nd.t~ mm ning 10 .t m
Su ndav Pvcnmg, 7 :1) p m Thursdav evm lng
7l) p m
STTVERSV D..J .E &lt;'OMMU NIIT n AJYI'IST
CH URCH. P.1sta J{oJx&gt;n Bvc&gt;rs Su nda\
School tOa m Wor ship Sen l£'(' II ,, m Sun
day C'Venlng S(•n •lo '. 7 lfl p m \h'&lt;lllc&gt;Sd.t\
(&gt;Ven\ngsel'\'ll'(', i lfl p m

K&amp;C JEWELERS

------------------J

POMEROY cH'uRCH OF CHR IST, 212 W

~ . «Jto630pm

"tllx•$.l 'JO and chtldren under 12.
Si Oi l

I

Phon e 992 · 3480

985· 3944

mgwa ship, 7 flp m '1\if'Sd.t) rottagf' pl avf' r
mret\ng .md Blblf' sludv, ~ lO &lt;I m W01 ~ ht p
SC!'"V\('(' Wedn esday, 7 :rJ p m

Mtddl e port, Ohto

0

TRINITY CHURCH. Rev w H Plerrln,
pasta; Debbie Buck. Surr:lay School supt

&amp;II Bym, pastcr. Glm McClung, assl pastcr

s('rv mg from 1 to 8 p m Adults

3

MARK VSTORE -f. .
Middleport ,..
o!'

- "' '

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE
Gr oc f'r le \ Ge nc r .l l M (' r c tl .ltHII'&gt;('
1-? ,1( 111(' 9-19 15 50

M iddl e po rt ·
Pom e r o y, 0

urder dlrectkmof AUceNease
POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA •
RENE, CornerUnlonandMullE-11)', Rev. Vir

1\' U.KESVILLE Pythta n SIS·
tet s w tll hold a public smorgas
bo1d at the hall Sa tu rda v w tth

997 3325

MILL HALL'S

4

Church School 9 15 a m .. W&lt;J'Ship sev lce
10 l&gt;a m. Choirrehearsal, Tuesday7:l&gt;p m.,

T UP PE RS PLAINS - A corn
h1 ea d and bean supper w ill be
held Sa turday mght at Tupper s
Plams firehouse by the Tupper s
Plams Ball Field Improvement
L&lt;•agu&lt;' Servmg w ill be from

216 5 Seco nd
P ome roy

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

J ohn F. Fultz, Mgr .
Ph. 992· 2101

~

"F or A R e a l Auct• on
,ca tt the Rea l McCo y"
I. 0 . " M ac" M c Coy
Rt . 1, Reed s v ill e , Oh

· -·

'"':; \ MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

Nationwide 1ns . Co.

:' . ~

Fm e s t
Se c ti o na l
Modul a r Ho m e s
1100 E . Ma tn

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

214 E . Mam
992· 5130 P o m ero y

Phone 16141742· 2777

To See and Hear America's Leading
Christian Authority on the Family in a
Challenging Film Series

Po m e r oy

INSURANCE
SERVICES

Rutland , Oh io 45775

YOU ARE INVITED

T he

Brogan-Warner

Sal es and

J . Wm . "Bill" Brown, Own er

FOCUS ON THE FAMILY

&amp; Service
Po rn

Brown's Fire &amp;

Equipment

KingsbufY Home Sales VIRGILB. TEAFORDSR.

·ru

~~~~~!

~
-

Compl ete

Automotive
·
serv1ce
Locust &amp;
street

Past M atrons of E vangeline
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star,
wlll meet Oct. 22 Instead of Friday
night at the homeof E mma K. Clat·
worthy. Past matrons of Pomeroy
Chapter w ill be guests.

The DailY. Sentinei- Page-9 ·

BE1liANY -

Worstup, 9 a .m .; Church

a.m ; Dorcas Women's Fellowship, Wednes·
day, Ua m

CARMEL- Church ScMol, 9: :I! a.m.; Worship. 10·45a m ; secondandfourth Sundays);
Fellowship dinner with Suttoo, third Thurs·

day, 6· :IJ p m.
EAST LETART- Church Scixx&gt;l, 9 a m..
Worship, l,O a .m (SCCOnd andfourth Sundays;

uMW, llrsi Thesday, 7::1J p.m.
LETART FALl-S -

Rc_.v Tiloma&lt;; U Collle1, pa... tor. Ma 11 h~
Wolfe, Cha lJman of thl:' Board of Chrlo;llan
Lif(' Sunday School. 9 .l l a m . mornlng w01
ship. tO :II a m . Sundayf'vt'nl ngworship, 7 !(1
p m Prayf'r ffi('('ftn g, Wl'dnC'S daY. 7 30 p m
RACIN E FIRST BAPTIST , Don L Wa lkf' t .
~a s t or . Rotx•rt Sm ith, Sundav School supl .
Su nday School. 9 :tJ a m . morning wo1shtp
10 40 a m . Sunc.bv f'\'('n\ng worship 7 1ll
p m , W£'dnesdav rvrnlng Blblr stud\ 7 lfl

pm
DANVll..L E Vo/ESLEYAN, Rf'v R D
8 1"'0\\i' n. pa&lt;;TOI Sund.tv School 9 10 , 1 rn .
morr\Jn g: wor s hip 10 -l'i a m \OU!h SI:' I"V It'('
6 45 p m , evf'nlng wors hip. 7 .111p m pr ayf'l
and pra tse. WC'dn esday. 7 Jl p rn
SILVER RUN F"REF.BAF''TIS'T r{(•v Ma t
tin Ma rkin , pa&lt;;tor. Steve Ltlt i(',Su nda\ srhool
supt Sunday school. 10 .1 m . morni ng "or
ship. 11 a m Sunday f'Vf'nln g wor·s hlp, 7 ))
p m Prayer meeting and Bl blr studv. Thurs
day. 7 30 p m, ywthm({'fln g WC'dncsdava t 7

pm
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHl PCHVRCH,.II\1
N 2nd Ave . MlddleJXJrt Sundav School. 10
a m Sunday a nd W&lt;.'dne;day EVC'nlng &amp;•tv\
('{'5 7 Xlp.m

LIBERTY C1!1USTIAN CHURCH , 4 1.11&gt;
e1y A VC' , PomC'I'ov SurKiav School 10 a m .

Worship 7 .l l p m WNncsdav Serv iC'f' 7 Vl

pm
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD. R&lt;' R t:
Roblnsoo, past()' Sunday school , 9 30 a m
W(J'Ship S€1VI('{', 11 am , evening sef'\'1("(', 7
p m , yout h SC'f'VIcc, Wf'dncsdav. 7 p m

LANGSVILLECHRISTIAN CHU RG I, Ro
bert E Musset , pasloc Sunday school. 9 lfl
a m., Paul Musser, supf , morning wors hip
10 XI am., Sunday ('Vetllng service, 7 p m .
mld-'Nf.'ek serv icr', W£'dnesday, 7 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE- Rev J ames B Kllt le, pastor She r
man Cundlf'f. su pcrlnten ~nl Sunday School.
9 lJa.m.; It1ornlngWorshJp 10 :ll a m; E va n
gellstlcservk.'e. 6p m Prayerandpra lseWed
nesday, 7 p m : yoot hmeeting, 7 p m
EDEN UNITEDBRETIIREN IN CHR IST.
Elden R. Blake, pastoc. Sunday School 10
a m • Robert Reed, supt , Mornlngserm on, 11
a .m, SuOOay ni gh t servlces ,Chr istlan E n ~a
va , 7l&gt; p.m.; Songstn"lce, 8 p m. Preach
lng, 8. 1&gt; p.m . Mld·week Prayer m eeting,
Wedneo;day, 7 p m , Alvin Reed, lay leader
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Roger
Watson, pastcr, Crenson P r att, Sunday
School su}l Morning worship, 9.lJa m , Sun·
day sci'Klol., IO::JJ a .m : evening serv i('(', 7·l&gt;
pm
MT UNION BAPTIST, Rev Tom Dooley
J"" Sayre. Su OO.y School Supertntenren1.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; evening worship,
7:1&gt; p.m . Prayer meeting, 7· XI p m
wemesday.
TUPP ERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
OIRIST. Vlnrenl C Waters, In, minister.
Herman £Pack, superint mdent. Sunday
School 9: ll a m :' evening service, 7 p m.,
Wednesday Blbl•School. 7 p m

CH ESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZI\
RENE. Rf'\' He1ix'rt Grate, past()' Frank
Riffl e, supl Sunday School. 9 .'l la m Worship
savke. ll am and 7 30p m Prave1 mretlng,
Wednffida y. 7 :II p m

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. Rev Rolx:&lt;rt Mtller. pastor. Lloyd
Wright. Dir(('lor of Christian Education Su n
daySchool,9 Xla m , Morning Worshlp . lll :rl
am, Choir Practice. Su ndav. 6 llp m . Ev
en\ng WorshJp. 7 lJ p m W('()nesda y Prayer
andBlbi('Sfudy, 7 .l lp m

DEXTER CHURCH OF C!ffi iST Charl es
Russell, Sr , mmistet Rick Macomlx&gt;r , supl
Sunday school. 9 l'l .1 m . w cr~ hip sf'rv!Cl',
10 30a m Bible Study, Thesday , 7 30p m

REORGANIZED G IURCH OF .J E:SUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SA INTS
Portland Racme Road Willi am Roush, pas
tor Linda Evans. chu1 ch school du ('('!Or
church school.' 11 :rJ ,1 m , morrung wors hip.
10 30 a m Wedn esdm t'\ emng pt avc&gt;t servt
C('S, 7 .l lp m
BF.Tf-U.. EHE M f1APT I ~"T R.f'v F.,trl
Shuler p,t&lt;;IOI Worshlj&gt; Sf'J V\('(' 9 'll a m Sun
dav school. 10 () a m Bible Studv and p1 avf'l
sf'rv !C'f' Tl1ursdav 7 K) p m
,
CARI. F:TON Cli UROI Kmgshun Hoad
.J tmm l(' Evans pastor· Sunda\ school 9 30
am Ra lph Carl , SUJ&gt;et lut enck:'nt , 1'\('nlng
"' ors hip, 7 l1 p m Pr. 1ve1 m('('tln g \Vrdnf'S
da\ ,7 l lp m
J.ONG 801TOM ( 11RISTIAN Kf'n Kf' lff'l
pa st&lt;J W.11lacf' D.tm('\\ rod Su nda\ Sc. hool
Su pl Wors hip ser'\ tf1'a t9a m Blbi(•Schoo!Hl
.rm

HYSE LL HUN IIOLI NESSCHURCH R"
Thf'l ron Dw ham . pa&lt;;tOl Sundav Sc hool "'
9 ll a m . M01 ning '' '01 ship at 10 :JI a m
Thursdav sen lCf'S ,11 1 '10 p m
ffi EF.OOM GOS PJ: L MISS ION a t Bald
Knob. lot ,11{'() on Count\ Road 11 P.f'v l.&lt;t\\
rm a' Gluesm camp [Mstor Rev Hogc&gt;l WJI
lford, .L'iSL&lt;;tan1 pastor Prmchm g st'I'V\«'S
Sunda\ 7 Jl p m Prt~ vc&gt;r mC'&lt;'Img Wf'dn es
dav. 7 ,'I J p m (,,uv Griffit h. leader You th
groups Su ndav Pvf'mn g. 6 30 p m "lth Roger
and Vlolf'l Willford .ts lt'adf'r-s Communion
serv iee first Sundav f' .JCh month
WHITE'S CHAPEL, Coolvtllf' RD R£'\
Rov [)(&gt;eter . pastor Su nday schoo\9 :10 a m .
W&lt;J"Ship serv \C(&gt;, 10 .1 1 .1 m Bible&gt; studv and
prayt•r scrvr('(' W£'dnesdav. 7 3fl p m
R t.rn~AN D CHU RCH OF Cl-I P !ST. Eug('nc
Und&lt;'twood, pastor. H('r b E lliott , Sunda\
school supt Su nc.bv school, 9 l'l a m. morn
mg wors hlpand rommunlon. 10 :ll a m
Rl!I1..AN D BIBL E ME'1110DlST - Am.,.;
111l1s, pao;lcx . Fred DavLo;, supl Sunday !£hool
9 l'l a m Mm ningwors hip. IO 30a m Youn!i
~)pi e' ~ SC!'VI('(', Sunday. 6 4~ p m Sundav
C'\. mlng Sf'IVIIX', 7 :JI Wf'dnesdav c&gt;vf'nln g
pravf'l mC'etmg. 7 .l l pm WMPO P rogr am
7 :n ,, m ('UCh Sunday mo r nin ~
RENE Rt'\ Llovd D Grimm. Jr . pastor
Su nday ~hool , 9 ~am . W(J'shlp sf'rv\('(',
10 30 a m . yoo ng peopl e's S('!V iC('. 6 p m
Eva ngello;tJc service, 6 30 p m Wednesday
servl('(', 7 p m

MA&lt;;ON CHURl11 OF ClffiiST, Miller Sl .
Mason. W Va Eugene L Conger. m inister
Su ndayBi blc&gt;Studv. IOa m , Worsh!p ll a m
and 7 p m Wednesday Bible Study vocal
music, 7 p m

MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding

pm
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev William
Campbell , pastor Sunday School 9 .1) am

Jam es Hughes. sap( evening s~lce, 7 .i
P m. Wednesday evening prayer mee!lng,
7 Jl p.m Youth prayerservlceeach'l'uesday

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart. W.
Va, Rt. l, Ma rk Itwin, pastor. Wors hip services, 9· 30 a m ; Sunday School., 11 a m , even

Worship, 9 a m.;

Church School, 10 a m

MORNING STAR - Worship, 9::1! a.m.:
Church School, 10: Jla.m.: BlbleStudy, Thursdll)l, 7: :IJ p.m.
MORSE CHAPEL - Church Scmoi, 9·Jl
a .m.; Worshtp,ll a .m.

12 North

ThlJ d St , Cheshire In&lt;k'pendenl , fu ndamen
tal Sf'rvlces Sunday evrnl n ~7 . 30 p m Pasta
Rev. Dr Ro~n Persons
Lane, Mason. W Va Rev. Ronnie B Rose
Pastor Sunday School 9 45 a m , Morning
WorshJp U a m Evening Service 7 30 p m
Wedn esday Womm 's Mlnlstrteo;9 a m ( m('('l
ing and prayer ) Pray('r a nd Bible Sludy 7

ST PAUl l l)'J llll tA!'\ ( li LHU l t tll tlfl
uf S\ c.tmOJr &lt;~ nd SI:•(1 JOd St .., Punm n\ l'ht'
H!'\ \\ll h,tm Mrddlto.;\\ ,lt1h Pt~ s l tll Sunrl.t\
S.. hool .11 ' I -l:l .1111 .md ( hw ch S..•n '""' 11

pm

S.l\.CI11 D ill ARI M "h'l ,\nt h ,mf ,l.rnn, ,
l' h 1P:I!rMI&gt;I Sa lurd.t\ f' \ f'ntll i,! \\.t ..,..,
Su nd.11 M.r ... .., ~ . 1 n 1 .JtH.l 11 1 ,1 111
( onh&gt;s..,I!Jtt.., onP. h,tll hmu h• f1111 t'.J1 h \1 , 1 ~ ,
&lt;. CD CI. t..,..,4.., ll .t m Su ndo~ \
\ ' IC"IOin ll \I'TI S I -r1!'1\. ~ mi&lt;.;l \ lui
diC,JOI1 l.unt -... J- f\1 4...,., . p .~ ..,,, ~ &lt;.;u nd.r
~Oi t ,

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mmnm g \IOI ~ ht piO, t m

1 \1' n rn 1 ·~ t n 1 , ,

1

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d.t\

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l ' '\ I ll I) I \II H ( 11 1 JH H - 1!11tll• ~ n•t
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d,t\ s-. !t t~ll 'I IJI .J rn t llfll ll l!\~ 1\ •r ~ lup l ll ~ ~
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lf •ll1111 -. hlp l \ r 1 -.. d t \~ HI 1111 \\ 1tlr t1o.,d 11
mgh! p1 1\ o 1 " 1'1"1 rn -; \fl p nt
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rl , l \ Si' h• ~ 1l ]II ~I 1 rn 1 1 1 11 rrw s. 1 1 1
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1'1 J\t r lll l , 'i l!l g \\, •t !rh -..d.t l - ~J Jl llt :\ IHi
'~ I'd, l!rhlt Stud\ l 'hu r.., do~ l 7 p 111
ll li' I'S I l ~ l '\ H,\I ~ I I S'I - H1\ \. \ lo ·
Hot (~ · n p.tqnl ( or ru·IIU'- 1\u nt h .., 11 p1.1111
lt 'tHk nl Su111l,r \ ~dt 1 !1tl' t ~ l .t rn ~ ~ ~ ~ 1 n 1 Jtn d
h1Uith Su nttr l ' 11111 .., h l p ~ t t\11' I! ~ ~J p 11 1
~ ! I W lHI\ 11 11\J .. Il S'I- l •lut th .~nd
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BlH I J'\ L il \\1 SrH -I IIli '\ H\ I'IJ &lt;.;J
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\fl!h ,ttnl 111th S',ullt1 r n Ho~pl l~l '"11\' IIIII iii
'-'ll nd.tl ..,11 11~'1 I Ill p m &lt;.;U IM I t\ 1\ or ~ hll
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&gt;

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PI \. l f tl)o..;" J \1
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1! 1 \\ tilt till 11, h, ro k fi 1.._ 1., 1 \u nd.t\
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prn \\ t , h ~t..., d. t \ &lt; \ t tlllll-:"• nr o , ·7 p m
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o,; hJp J() ~I ,I 01 I ' I 1\ 1 I ..._I\ In dto I 11 tl 1
Sund.th
l !ou r ~ ·

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tmgh, tOl t;und. l\ S. 11 ....1" upl 'iuml 11 . . _ h•~ 'l
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:'vl tddiC,)II I l '.~~r·~ J..,Ji r..l/llr• llwk\ hl 'lhl
sun Sund,l\ S.: ht~ r l II l ito~ 11 1 ~ n u, ~ "&gt; u n d I\
f'\ f ' lll!l go~ t 7 p 1 Tl tlld\\, ~ h l i ~ dt ' 11 7 p tn
A.'\ I IQI I' I Y H \1 ~ 1 1 '-." 1 Jl , \ I ttl ' hu iPt
p,t-;t r~ Sund.rl ~ ~h,~·l' ' ~l .tnr
•'!uu1 h -..1•1
\ lf1' 1 ]Jill _ \nulh rn , l u r ~· ' •Pill r 1,...,d,n
lllhlt' Sltul\ , p rn
\ \ P

AUTH ORITY I N RELIGIOI'i
We m ust have standards and authorilics m .1 \J th!' .1 fLn rs n! lt! P
other.vtse chaos ~auld fill the ear th, and 1 chg ton 1s 110 ~~x l'C'pl 1(, 11
Shall the reltg ton of our fathers be accept ed as l h&lt;' sl,md. u d •
NO. Ou: parents were not agreed E ach person 11 aced b.ICk "'" '"
generatiOns h~s 128 par ents, and they sut elv dtfl l'l ed 111 ~t • ilgH r n
Paul had te gtve up the religion of his ancestors (;,II 1 1 ~
Shall ~&lt; e accept the consc tence as the gutde 11 ""·t hen 11 e h, 11 , .
as many standards as w e have individuals Mos r u f rill · I Pi tg w u . .
people are conscientious but are wrong. Paul \\ u. s l 'n n c; uf' n ttou ..,
when persecuting the Christians. Acts 23 1. Ac ts 2h q
Shall we follow the dectsions of the m aJOIIt \ ., 'Thou shalt 11 111
follow a m ultltude to do evil. " E x. 23. 2 The m.JJOIIII 11 ill I)(• 10 , 1
M alt 7: 13-14
·
Shall
we
accep
t
church
councils and
, &lt;.0
. !1 \J. I
d' f
h h
, lea ders" 'r-; cJ ·1·1lt\
1c eac ot er , and often times different cou nr tl s \\ ll hm l lw .:;. 11111'
body contradict and embarrass them selves Man 15 not dblc 10 din'&lt; 1
his steps. Jer m . 10: 23
Shall we accept the B ible as the standard of aut hOI II \ ., Y ES' It
Is the word of God . 2 Pet. 1: 21; Furnishes us unloevcn good 1101 k 2
Tim . 3. 16-17 We will be judged by it! Rev. 20 1:?
WHAT M UST I DO T O BE SAVED?
.
If an unbeliever - believe after hearing thr word., r pent and be
baptized . Acts 16:30-34
1f a believer - repent and be baptiZed . Ac ts 2 :~-:!8
1f a penitent believer - be baptized. Acts 22 Hi
1f a chlld of God- m ake your callmg and elec tion sure 2 Pet
~: ~11 E ndure unto the end. M att. 24: 13. Be faithful unto dea th Rev.

,

PORTLAND - CIIIrchScMol, 7p.m.: Worship,8p.m.: UMYF, Wednesday. 7:30 p.m
RACINE WESLEYAN - Church Schtiol, 10
a.m.: Wcnhlp,U a.m.: UMW,lourthMonday
7: :IJ p.m.: Han&lt;tnaldens of the Lord. llrst
Wemesday, 7 p.m.: Men's Prayer Breoklast,
Wemeoday, 7 a.m.
SUlTON - Church ScMol, 9:Jl a.m.:
mcrnlng wcrshlp, 10:45 a.m. (llrst and third
&amp;lndayll: fellowship dinner wtlh CAnnel.
tiU'dTilunday, tl: :n p.m.
~ CHURCH 011 CHRIST, Oliver :
~aln, Stiperlnt-t. SUnday aclx&gt;ol 9: :IJ
a.m. eveey Wl':f!k. 1

Becoming angry with the one who has told you the tntt h ts hke
breaking thejmlrror becuse of what you see. ·
. ·

....!N PRAISE OF OUR
. LORD....IN CHURCH lHIS YEAR

­

PIll \\ 1•dt11 ...,d1 1 1'\o 11111 )..! ll•lt.., lil p - p Ill
\ 1.,11 t!l1!!1 llnu-.. d.l\ 1, ~ I p rn
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\ lll l' - ( ,lltl 'tt Slh'llh •t jhl..,IJo1 ' und l
~~ honJ 'I ~ ~ dIll 11 HH 111 11 h ~ 1'1'\ 11 1 11 ,1 ;II
Su m l t \ l'l t •n m g ~t l"\ 1 1, - ~ lp t n tt ttdll •• k
pt .t\ tl ..,tl"\rt ,\\ f'dll1 .., d tl ~ ~ l p rn
W ll "\'1 0 1.1 \ l ( 0\ l ~ll '\ II'\ t Ill 11( H
I ,l\\lJ1\l1' lltt"h J.l. l ~ l~~ \ l.t\ I ulmo•r S1 "u
j){ 'l lnl t11t lt•nt \umJ,t\ Si ]\l JO II ,11111 tl ll•JTUJ\ •
1\ 0I'&gt; htp 'l lll ,tm Sutld. r \ 1 '\t fl lll J..:~• n ll • ~
P rn _'\ 1tUI Iirnn •fln g. mdllthl• .., luoil \\o ~ l11 1 -..

Sermonette

PlJil. AND CHURCH OF THE NAZI\

LI FE SCIENCE CHURCH -

n 11111 1 t ll tnsn '" ( lll l! t 11 _
l.t'flt g' '" l ln ·k Ho.td HP\ ( I I , •mJ ,., p. 1 ~
lui fulm l 1tlU Jt ~U lH 't rrtl ti H~nl ( lna 1 h
schtiOJ q ~I ,ttl) !1 \•1111\llg \IOr.., l\lfJ [II ~I
.t m t'\4 ,1111 1.! "t'l"\ lt , 7 I'm llthlr Stuch
l'hlll , d.t\ i p m f' l. t"'i" "'fln tlldJ.!1"' '\ lll ...,l'l\
pl O\ tdf'l l lm \~ or.., hiJl .... 'I'\ ~~ ~ ...,

By Jan Ptckell . pa stor of
Pom eroy Wes•side Church of Chn st

�Friday, Oct. 15,1.982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1982

55 pints of blood collected Wednesday
Fifty-eight residents reported to
an American Red Cross bloodmobile at the Meigs Senior Citizens
Center Wednesday to contribute 51i
pints of blood to the county blood
program .
Sixteen persons gave replacement blood and three persons were
first time donors. Becoming three
gallon donors durtng the visit were
Debra J . Carder and Judith K.
Hunter.
Nurses for the unit were Fern·
dora Story, Jackie Frost and Beula h Ward with Dr. Wilma
Mansfield and Dr. james Witherell
serving as medical supervisors.
Clerical workers Included Mary
Nease. Juanita Sayre, Mace! Bar·
ton. Joyce Hoback, Karolyn Black.
Peggy Harris. Beulah McComas.
~ernon Nease and Maida Mora.
The Child Conservation League
had the ca nteen and R.S.V.P. program workers helping with various
1spects of the visit were Jesse Curtis. Myrtle Sisson. Thelma DIU.

NEW - John .Jacobs, new administrator of the Meigs County
Department of Health. was among the donors giving blood when an
American Red Cross bloodmohile visited Pomeroy Wednesday. Jacobs
has one of the morr ran• types of blood, 0 negative.

Bernadine Meier, Gladys Brothers.
Marlon Ebersbach. Philomena
Follrod and Pete Shields.
Donors by community were:
Pomeroy - Mary L. Starcher.
Donna Hatfield, Clarence A. King.
Mlaxine Hetzer. Leo Vaughan. Joseph C. Hale, Mary K. Spencer,
Billy J . Spencer, William Radford,
Kelli L. Clelland, Shelley D. Clark.
Louis Vaughan, Helen E. Blackston, Kenneth E . Hartis, Mildred
Alldre, Carolyn Jeffers, Robert
Couch. Freddie J. Neace, J effrey J.

_._

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possession. Later ihdl month. the
aGlorsaid the "diary" was merely a
book of love poems he and the late
actress once shared and thai it was
stolen from the trunk of his
automobile.
Thursday. J ordan produced the
scarred and faded lea1her jewelry
box. The box contained a pair of
gloves that supposPdl \· bclongrrl to
Miss M onroe as wrll

; t&lt;., &lt;~

lmit

swea ter. a br&lt;.~ Cf'let . an ~J sso rlml'l11

of costume jcwe~·y and a lock&lt;'i
holding their photographs.
Friends of Miss Monroc· who l:x:&gt;~
lieve the di ary exi sts sa~· shC' was
murdered l:&gt;ceauSC' shC' wa s about to

revea l its contents - purported government secrets she learned
through a n alleged romance with

CHICAGO lAP)- A nationwide
appeal was issued for information
about a man wan led for questioning
in seven cyanide deaths after it was
learned he was charged for a lime in
a Kansas City killing four years ago.
Kansas City pollee identified
James Lewis, 36. who also uses the
name P.obert Richardson. as a
former suspect in the murder of
Raymond West, 72. of Kansas City.
West's dismembered body was
found in his attic in 1978 In a "semimurrunlfled condition.'' lllinoLs At·
tomey General Tyrone Fahner told
a news conference Thursday night.
A federal extortion warrant for
Lewis, using the name Richardson,
was issUed Wednesday in a matter
related to the cyanide poisoning of
Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules.
The warrant srud Lewis wrote a
letter to McNeU Consumer Products Co., maker of Tylenol. demanding $1 ril1lllon "1! you want to
stop the ldlling." The letter was dell·
vered Oct. 6, a week after the first
cyanide victim died.
ChargeS against Lewis were·
dropped In the Kansas City murder
when a judge ruled that Lewis had
beenan-ested Wegally and evidence
had been taken ti-om his apartment
~- In addition, the medical
examiner in Kansas City could not

MIAMI (AP)- A special pollee
"trash patrol" has swept hundreds
of vagrants off the streets this week
to Impress a convention of travel
agents, but the move has upsetclvU
libertarians who say Miami is putting on a "phony face."

Steak Dinner
Admission $2.60
Children $1.00
Entertainment
Ewryone Welcome

Call 992-2181

·- ....

- ·- ··- .. .... . . -· .
~

9 -20- 1 mo. Pd .

'"· ttl-7111
01 t4t-2112

I

OO·IIt

mo

9 20 1 mo pd .

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

.51. Rl. 124 Pomeroy, OH
AUTO

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

MASH
CONSTRUCTION

TERMS OF SALE: Cf-SH OR CHECk
WITH POSITIVE l.D.

kitchens and
bathrooms. Remodeling,
add-ons. new homes.
plumbing, electric, siding.

NOTICE rs hP.r eby q rvP.n th,'l!

men ts of U S Publ1c law 92 ·
500. as amended by PtJ bll c
Law 95·217. Sect1on 201.w1!1
hold a Publ tc HP. JrtOfl at 7 00
P M on Tuesday. November
30. 1982 at the gymn ilsrum o f
th e Tup pers Pla•ns Elementary
Sc hool on S R 681 1usr east of
S A 7 rn Tupper s Platns Th e
purpose o f th rs Hear1nq wdl bo
tn presen t the Tupper s Platns

WastP.vVater Fa r.d 1ttP.S Plan to
the publ1c and to gtve tndtvtdu ·
als and orq,:mtza l•ons of th e
communtty ·the opponuntly to

P.xp rcss th f~lr opmton s and
make comment s Th e HAa rtn q
ts th e lh1rd of a se nes of three
publ1 c C]ather1nqs to be conducted as a part of the Facilltt es
Plannmg Pro cess
The !upper s Plams Factll ttes
Plann1ng Area cons1s ts of the
un tnco rpo rated V11la qe o f
Tu ppers Pla•ns and 1mmf'!·
d1alely ad1acent ar Aas
The Tuppers Pla1 ns Fa c•h t1es
Plan •n cludes the follow•nQ •n lorma!lon about th e plan01ng
area water Qual 1ty prohl ems

FREE
ESTIMATES

608 E.

GOOD STARTER HOME
Nice price. 2 bedroom lrame
home with one bath. New wir·
ing and full basement. Dnlled
well. 1 car garage, nice backyard. Located in Anliquity.
Price REDUCED lo $11.00000
ST. ROUTE 143 - Lei us'show
you this lovely Barrington
home. Add on family room. 3
bedrooms. 2 lull baths. extra
nrce kitchen wilh double oven
and 1sland range. Low utilities.
Silualed on 1.88 acres with 3
buildings Asking $36,90000
Owner will consider offer or
some financing available.
POMEROY - Lovely 3 or 4
bedroom home with detached
carport. Extra nice backyard
with lruit tres. This home is
really rn good shape and rt has
aluminum siding and storm
windows. Natural gas lurnace.
Some lurnishings are included
in lhe sale pnce ol only
$27.000.00.
lARGE CORNER LOT - New
winng. new ceilings and dry
wall, low utilities and low taxes
are .only a lew amenities of this
lovely 2 bedroom. one balh
home. II has aluminum ~ding
and a nice ~tchen with stove.
refrigerator. washer and dryer
included. Look today at only
$30,000.00.

the Boarrl of Me1qs County
Comrn tSSJOners. MP.tf1S Coun ty .
Oh1o. pursuant JO th e requi re-

' REG.'15"

MOVING SALE
CANCELLED

John Wells property, 61962 St.

CALL 843-3322

9- 17-2mo Pd

9-5-1 mo

SHOP

. J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

KEN 'S
APPLI ANCE

~like~ Coon Hound pup, in

NOW'16'1 so.

6 Rolls of SOl Nylon
'17"

YD . INSTALLED

VIRGIL B. SR. REAlTOR .
216 E. 2nd Sf.
Phone
1-( 614 )-992-3325

'

NEW liSTING ...:. 4 yr. old 3
bedroom bnck home in !he
woods. Family room with fireplace, 2 bath~ ~rge hoot
porch and large rear sundeck.
One acre level lot $62.900.

oboc""oo

taxcavlting
-clump truck service
-seeding and reclaiming
•Racine and Syracuse
sewer hookup
Work Insured and
Guaranteed

All

• Dish ·

washers
• Ranges • Refrigerat-

ors
eDryers eFreezers
PARTS and SERVICE

PH. JIM CUFFORD
992-7201
10/7/tlc

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Dozers

Kitchen
Cabinets
Rooting · Siding - Concrete Patios - Sidewalks - New Construeton
Remodeling
Custom Pole Barns.

- Backhoes
- Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
·
-Trencher

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

-Water
- Sewer
-Gas Lines

-Septic Systems
llrge or Small Jobs
PH. 992-2478
10·3·1 mo. pd

Route 1
Long Bottom, Oh . 45743

985·4193

9-15-1mo.

CARPENTER

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Buill Garages"
Call for tree siding
estimates, 949·2801 or ;
949-2a6o.
No Sunday Calls
3_11-lfc

•

• POMEROY - 6 room home
· with 3 bedroom~ bath, base~ment nat. gas heal, on level lot
; near ,stores for $17.500.

.

:

"2.8 ACRES - 6 room home
· :near stores. out of all floods.
' Basement with garage, bath
::and· all utilities. $25,000.
~
;

' .sYRACUSE - 2 level lois and
lakier 7 · room 'home: Needs
;some repairs but will sell
-reasonable.

•
' TUPPERS PLAINS - Modem
;s room residence on 2.leYlil
Bath. ·gas ·furnace and

~POMEROY - ·4 large room~

far...,

l{ousinu

!'

7
Yard Sale
LESSONS STARTING o
CALLorSTOPIN
E.
TO SIGN UP .
Yotd Sale Fri . &amp; Sot .. 9AM
SALE ON
"' to 6PM. Groen Acres Sub.
ORNAMENTS
o\
Oiv. (Rt. 141). Clothing.

2

POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes start from 12'x16'

Yard Solo Oct. 16 &amp; 16,
10Am-4PM . 101 Chilli ·

In Memoriam

cothe Rd. Gallipolis. Tools.
clothing, furniture &amp; house hold rtems .

In loving memory of Clyde

Oct. 16 . 1976 . Sadly

missed by the Clyde Wines
family .

3 . Announcements

by
name of Stimel . Please
Anyonewhoiskintoanyone
contact me. Mrs. Everett
Hamilton, At . 1 Box 269,
-lcGolf lesaons. John Teaford.
Chester, Ohio.

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Gun shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sunday starting
1 p.m. Factory choked guns
only .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3. Box 54

Racine Fire Dept. is sponsoring a gun shoot every Sat.
night starting Oct. 9at 6:30
p.m . in Bashan. Factory
choke 12 gauge shotguns
only .

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'.
Insulated Doa Houses

Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614·843·2591

10·6-llc

Ht •, Jtlr!udrturs

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest Heater
Core to the !Jrpst Radiator.
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

---------lcOpen Oct. 11 from 12-6.
Monday-Friday . Rt . 124,
No Hunting of any kind expecially with dogs, Esta Ro berts property, long Hollow

Rd. Rock Springs.

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

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy. Oh.
Ph. 992-2174
2-26-tlc

Taking up orders for Rawleigh Products. Have some

on dioptey, 949·2010 in Racine. Oh .

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
Professional Electrolysis
Center. A .M.A . approved,
Doctor referals, by appoint -

mont only. 304-676-6234.

1------------+----------------14
any

new

plano

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

H. L WRITESEL
• GuttC'r~
e Oownspouts
• Nev,r or JC'['p.lir
• r.linting

Port Rodbono fomola. 4
moo. otd. Call after 9AM,

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992-2791
or949-2263

I"N

BetwHn Cheshire &amp;
Middleport. Ohio
PRESENTS
Marshall T111nant Band
Wed:, Fri. &amp; Sat.
in October
Wed.-Oraft Nite
(all draft betr \\ price)
Thurs.· Pool Toum. Nlte
Daily Spacials ·
Nol·ltntiontd
Optn 7 days I WHk
Carryout Bttr &amp;
Wlnt Avelllblo
Extra Spacial
Fri. &amp; $tt. 10 to 2
Drink lilY tlri~k
foi 1 low price
Phone 992-9913
10-3-l ""'··

FOR

MOBILE HOMES
"FURNISHED"
10' &amp;12' WIDE

'3.000 to '4,500
BROWN'S

'

..

J

Dttoun frame • cob for juck.
Coll814-379-2489.
Redbo.no pupplto. Call 446·
38411.
Oe,..,.n Sheph8t'd .&amp; \ol
Doberii)On. fomolo to g~d
home Cell 446-4176 or of·
tar II C8ll 448·8847.
~

10 USED

'"· 19%,3324 .
9-29-i mo.

day Oct. 16, 9:00-6:00.
Garage Sale Friday and Saturday Oct. 16 &amp; Oct. 16.
Good winter clothing , coats.
jackets , pants suits.
sweater, household rtems .
Down At . 7 , Clipper Mills
tum right 3rdhouseon right .
Baird's 4 Family Gigantic

Yard Solo. Oct . 14,1 6.16 . 3
miles out Georges Creek &amp;
Mill Creek. ht houte on
Bunce Rd . X-large to small
clothes, knick knacks, child ren clothes. etc.
Garage Sale Sat. Oct. 16th.
Household items and antiques. 3 mile South of Cad mus, At . 141 . Watch for
signs.
GArage Sale Fri. &amp; Sat Oct .
16 &amp; 16. Clothes many
sizes. men's white shirts.
mens .g,ood su.its , roller
skates. books, tdys, miscellaneous, low prices. Approx .
1% mile out Bulaville Rd .
leh onto Kerr-Bethel Rd.
8th house on right . Watch
for signs at 160 &amp; BuLaville

or colt 446 -2826.

o.j

226 E. 2nd. St. Cloth eo.

Will cere for p8tients in their
homes. live in or 8 hr . shifts.
Have references . Call 614 -

alec. stove, dish washer.
misc. Next to lutheran
church. Oct.f6 &amp; 16. 9 to 6.
Rain or shine. ·.

Yard · sale-180 S. Second
Middleport-Friday and Sat urday. Oct. 16 &amp; 16. 9 a.m .
Several Family Yard Sale
Saturday Oct. 16th as the
Syracuse Ball Park. Some thing for everybody. Rain

dolo Oct. 23.

123 Park Dr. 3-family, children• clothes large adult
clothes, lots of what nota ..
B-3. Tues. Wed. Thurs . ·
3-family garage sale. Rain or
shine. Oct. 14&amp; 16 , 8 :30to
4 :30 . Fairview Rd . Camp
Conley . Pt . Pl. Elec. stove,
GE dishwasher. swag lights.
curtains, glassware. old mirrors , pressure canner , brand
name toys , Sears toy riding
tractor and wagon, picnic ta ble, patio table, lounger.
porch swing, childrens
b?oks. tricycle. bicycle , littkl
g1~ls and womens clothing.
m1sc .
GARAGE sale. 1st. house
on right on Greer Rd . Friday
&amp; Saturday, 9 -7 Misc .

8

Yard Sale Wed ., Thurs., Fri.,
4 Fmaily. New items everyday. 4 miles out 776 on
right.
Yard Sale Fri. . 1 0 to 7 Bula ville Townhouse. Dishes, 2
elect. saws, treadle sewing
machine, children clothes,
misc.
Porch Sale Friday. Saturday.
Approx midway Georges
Creek Rd . ladies jeans sizes
6 - 8, maternity clothes.
sweaters, small and medium
tops, baby walker, camera,
tables, and misc .
Moving. Things must go,
Centenary Meeting Hall.
Nice toys, clothes. misc.

Sot. 10-16-B2 . 9-7
Yard Sale Two Family, Sat.
Oct. 16, 9 till 5 at John sons
Mobile Home Court, Upper
At. 7 . One fur coat, fur stole,
one fake fur coat . Good
clean womens, mens &amp;
childrens winter clothing,
dilhes. tools, jewerly, many
nice items.

'Auction, Sat . Oct . 16 ,
10 :AM , Buckeye Wood Pro ducts. Rt. 217 &amp; 218, Scot·
town, Oh . Sawmill
equipment, conveyors, mo tors, stsel building for remo-

val. J D 360B dozer, Cat 91 0
lifts. Chipvan , flatbed
trailer, Int. &amp; Transtar tan dems, Ford dump, Chev .
flatbed. other misc. {land
for sale thru owners) . Star
Ind. Auctions. V. Trageser
Auctioneer , 716 - 467 -

367-0394.

Bob McConnlck Rd behind

American legion . Clothing
for girls, boys, womens.
mens, mens axe. 3 pc. suits
$10. Glassware, books. records, work surts. binoculars &amp; much more.

In Southern Football buildIng I~ Racine Sot .. Oct. 16.
10:0Q to 4 • Sun .. Oct. 1712
to 6. Pro...duoword foot ·
bu~dlng .

Kltteno, long llolr • ohort . Moving Solo otorti Oct. 14.Thuro .. hi .. Stt., Sun .
Ctll 814-2411·11888.
Gl~llware ,

pots,

pans.

Two ldtteno, one blue grey. 1 clothoo, ttblto, chtlrt.
tolld black. Coli 44&amp;-4729. lompo, bodo. Ledleo bring
your men. Hemlock Grove.
Oh. 33 wott turn rlaht onto
18 then left on old 33, ot the
Yturn right on 38 oorile ptll
~mlock Grove pott offtce.
tum right on grovel rd. one
mile. Watch for olgno.

11

Help Wanted

Wanted To Buy

16, Ewington, Oh 46627

Earn extra money for Christ mas. Sell Avon . Earn good
$$$. set your own hours .

Call 446 -336B or 446 2156 .
Man to work in Service Sta tion . Must have mechanical
ability , be agressive. honest .
and trustworthy. Call in person, Winters Sohio, 4 miles
west of Gallipolis on At . 36 .
Someone to stay the nights
with elderly lady . Call 446 -

2168 .

446-3159 or 256-1967 in
the evenings.
Buying Gold. Silver. Plati num. old coins, scrap rings
&amp; silverware. Daily quotes
available. Also coins &amp; coin
supplies for sale. Spring Val ley Trading Co., Spring Val ley Plaza , 446-8025 or

446-B026.
We pay cash for late model
clean used cars .
Frenchtown Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnson
Wanted old toy trains . any
pieces, parts, or accesso ries. No HO or N. Call 446 1822 after dark.

BEOS-IRON. BRASS. old
furniture, gold. silver dol lars, wood ice boxes , stone
jars, antiques, etc .. Complete households. Write :
M .D . Miller, At . 4, Pomeroy ,

Oh. Or 992-7760.
Gold. silver, sterling, je welry . rings, old coins &amp; cur rency . Ed Burkett Barber

AVON . Give yourself a
Christmas Bonus . Sell
Avon . Earn good money, set
your own hours. Call 614 -

698· 711 1 collect .

ladies, need extra money for
Christmas? Jobs available,
full or part time . For interview call 614 -949 -2360 or
write P.O.Box 25, Pomeroy ,
Ohio.
Work at home jobs ava ilabl e.
Substantial earnings possi -

992-6370.
Wanted to buy good used pi -

ano. 992-2834.

11

Bo• 2265. Columbus. Oh
43216.
POSITION AVAtLBLE Superintendent. Gallia County
Board of Mental Retardation

tles. Qualifications: meet
certification standards for

Superintendent Ohio De-

Hlite a Basket Party . Earn
for gifts. 304-

AVON . Earning extra money
in Point Pleasant &amp; New
Haven area , 304-675 -1429

or 304 -8B2-2645.

12

Situations
Wanted

Tree trimming &amp; removal.

614 -94 9-2129 or 614 ·
992 -6040.
- - - - - - - - -lc Have vacancy for elderly
man or woman in my private
home at Tuppers Plains.
Good experience . 667 -

6329 or 667-3402.

Wanted to Do. Exp. mother
will babysrt in her home. Ma -

son. 304- 773-575B .
Vacancy in boarding home
for elderly . Room &amp; board
reasonable . 614 -992 -6022

or 614-992-674B.
Woman needs work . will do
all kinds of cleaning, small
paint jobs also . 304-675 -

9100 .

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS 14% fixed
Mortga,g ~

Ohio

only 1-800 -341 -6564.
WVa . 614-592 -3051

23

Professional
Services

C&amp;l Bookk eeping
Bookkeeping &amp; tax service
for all types of businesses.
Carol Neal 446 -3862

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appoi nt ment , Ward 's Keyboard ,

In ground concrete po ol on 2
acre lot . Also has a 3 bdr. air
conditioned house with full
basement. 2 WB fireplaces.
new ca rpet. Would consider
lower valued property in
trade or will finan ce with
low down payment and 10%
interest, reduced $5.000.
located 123 Garfield Ave .

Coli 446 -1546.

For sale by owner . 3 bed room home. large family
room , $5,000 down assume
9 %%. 44, 000 mortgage .
Monthly payments only
S424 . Send tetter expressing interest to Mr. Gemmell
7231 North Ridge Road:
Madison. Ohio 44057 or call

216-42B-5320 after 5PM .

Offered by Board of Trus te.es. Rio Grande College,
R1o Grande, Ohio, removal
of two (2) houses lo ca t ed on
the former Beman property ,
518 East College Ave .. Rio
Grande. Ohio. Sealed bids
will be accepted in the office
of Busines s Manager. Allen
Hall. Rio Grande College
until 2:00 PM. October 22 :
19B2. at which time bids
will be opened, read and
evaluated for removal of
both hou ses . Remova l of
houses must be made on or
before November 15 , 1982.
Dir ect bids to Rio Grande
College, Rio Grande. Ohio
45674 . ATTN : Business
Manager. Hou ses may be
viewed by appointment
only - con ta c t 614 - 245 6353. ext . 217 . The co llege
reserves th e right to reject
any and all bids.
3 bedroom house for sale .
1 % acre level lot, has barn ,
and 2 out buildings . Call

614-379-2550 .
614 -7083 .

SANDY AND BEAVER In ·

Phon a 379-2204.
Are you paying to much for
your hosprtal -health insu rance . Call Carroll
Snowden. 446 -4290.

Schools
Instruction

Karate the ultimate in self
defence all private leSsons,
Men, women, &amp; children. In struction thru black belt.
Also available Karate uniforms puching and kicking
bags, and protective equipment. Jerry lowery &amp; Associates Karate Studio, 143
Burlington Rd ., Jackson,
0~ .

31 Homes for Sale

Insurance

surance Co . has offered ser vices for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needs. Con tact Foster Lewis, agent.

15

Rsal I!6Hits

Rental prop erty for sale .
Sound investment . Call

Call 614-286·3074.

Finishing charm, skin care·&amp;
modeling ch1sses. Also lolli-pop ages 7 thru 14. For
more tnfo . call Gail McHugh

ot 614-992-7440.

partment of Mental Retard•·
tlon and Developmental

Dloobltltleo. (Moiler dogroe
oooentlot). Reoponolbilltlto;
Adm1no1ter doyio day operation of oervlces provided by
tho Boord. Sotory nogotlt·
blo. Avoltoblo lmmodlottly.
Conlilct Mr. Jomeo Holley.
Vice Chtlrmon : Gortlo
Counl'f Botrd of Mental Rt·
tilrdlltlon tnd Dovelopmtnt
Dloob111tlto, P.O. Box 14.
Choohlre, Oh. 81 4·3670102.

446-198B.

Hair stylist wanted . 992 6702 for more information .

Help Wanted

Need 6 local persons to help
teach &amp; sell craft classes . No
experience necessary, good
earnings for those who qualIfy. Interviewing next 3
weeks . WriteTri Chern, P.O.

Earn 6700 -81,200 monthly
operating your own part time . in-hom e business .
Qualify for company car .
travel. retirement program .
Repeat profits on consuma ble products. Doesn 't inter· ,
fare with pr esent
employment . Not door to
door . We train you . Ca ll

ble . Call 504-641 -8003 . 446-4372 .

IFttplvvmvec
leelqva

Business
Opportunity

ext.1828 for information .

Shop, Middlapon . 992 13
3476.

Old fumiture , glass &amp; china .
Clocks, phones. fans, quilts,
paintings. baskets. banks.
coin machines. oil &amp; electric
lamps, railroad items, war
items, weather vanes, tools,
knives &amp; swords, marbles,
base-ball cards, indian arti facts, comic books, post
cards. pocket watches. gold
&amp; silver. Osby Martin . 614 -

21

rate . leader

baskets
WANTEO TO BUY Oldfurni - free
675-2069.

tu re and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain ,

446-1778.

Plnanslal
Qualified teacher to come to
my home to teach 9 yr. old
girl full time . Wages dis cussed at time of interview.
good 2nd income: Contact
Steven Jackson. At. 1 Box

273-2130.

9

and Devetopmontol Dloabitl-

4 family Gtrogit Solo. Thuro.
• Fri., Oct. 14 • 111. 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Wilma H. Ctoto.
S.R. 124, Portland.

Former teacher would like to
do ba bysrtting in my home.
Upper River Ad area . Call

JUST graduated &amp; unsure
about your future? The West
Virginia Army National
3006.
Guard can help you decide .
Auction every Fri . night at We are looking for high
the Hartford Community school seniors &amp; graduates
Center. Truckloads of new to train in communications,
merchandise every week . administration, supply, me Consigments of new and chanics, &amp; many other
used merchandise always fields . If you qualify you may
welcome. Richard Reynolds be eligible for an enlistment
bonus and college or Vo Auctioneer. 276 -3069.
Tech assistance. Be one of
MT. Alto Auction Sale, ev - West Virginias best. For
ery Saturday night, 6 p.m . • more information. ca ll 304 Open Saturdays noon till 675 -3960 or toll free 1 Sale time for consignments . B00-642-3619.
Emma Bell. Auctioneer . Will
buy your estate or sell for WANTED : female vocalist .
bass guitarist. for pop ro ck
you. 304-42B-B177.
band. Call weekends, 304 -

Garage ·Sale Mon S. TuM .

bolt

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

446-0069

3 Family Carport Sale Satur day, Oct. 16th. 10 to 6, on
road to Cheshire - Kyger
School.

3 Family Qoroge Solo. Sot.
7 wk old pupo, mi•od brood. Oct. 16. North 3rd. St .. Che·call 446·2962.
·
ohlre. Oh.

~::========~

TrailerltMfWIIIt,
Park

Two Family Garage Sale
Charolais Lake, OJ White
Rd . Friday Oc.t 16 and Satur-

814-246 · 66~6.

7·14 tic

lt. 124

Giveaway

ANY PER SON who hoe any-

ROOFING

or

stroller, car
seat, pans,
macrame
and bed
Xspreads,
mas crafts.

llf1YQAGIA1illil

Wines, Jr . who passed away

Professional land surveying.

Colt 446-2626 .

white

cemetery . 304 -675-4097.

Shooting ~\'latch &amp;very Friday, 7 :30 PM. Robert Burns
home. on HarrisburgAdamsville Rd .

ALL STEEL &amp;

&amp;

tions, Come In and
Take A look At Our
Package Deals. Discounts Available .

Oct. 16. 11AM. Call 614246-6668.

-PiumbinJ and
electricllwooto
(frH blim1lesl
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

FOUND -Black

puppy, Sandhill Rd.. near

Dance Class. Ballet. Tap,
Jazz, Jazzerci·se. Registera tioo Oak Hill Teen Center,

~rttwofl

"Beautiful, Custom

lost -long haired female celico cat in vicinity of v, mile

Leaders and Organiza·

Creek Rd. Colt 446-0294 ..

SERVICE
'Addoos and -inJ
-Roolin11nd JUHif won

.;, ACRES -of trees. waler tap,.
~ and gas avai~ble. Will
~sacrifice at $4,500.

•!11th. sundtlck, ba!emenllnd
Jlirat IDl
$17,1XXl.

the death of John

Scout

SWEEPER and sewmg ma chine repair , parts, and
suppltes . Pick up and deliv ery, Davis Vacuum Cleaner,
one half mile up Georges

YOUNG'S

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

orga'liRUNICARDI
MUSIC CO.
61 court st. Gallipolis
. Ph. 446·0687
9·16·1 o.

,.

cancelled due to

FOUND : Doberman, long
Bottom area . 614 - 986 -

to Robert Watson or call
304-676-6146 or 6766604
'·

Teachers,

Makes

• washers
-

we will MEE
or
BEAT any legitimate
price you receive on

i l!lluipped kitchen. Asking
, $31.500.
.

Grove, has been

Found -Collie typo dog .
~'92~6:o9.hito mole. 614-

POMEROY, OHIO

PlasterCraftand
Ceramic Bisque

-tic oyotoms

DOUBLE. - Both rented. 6
rooms and bath in each. Good
for writHff. All utilities in Mid·
dleport for just $27.000.

~Iru.

Rt. 338, -:Apple

area. Coll446-4999.
LOST: In Hemlock Grove
area on Sot .. Oct. 9. Famola
Walker Hound. block &amp;
white. Collar with noma.
614-992-764B .

finding this cat please return

Julies Attic Book Exchange.

EAFORD

REAlTOR

Weu Warranty.

Small block puppy, mole. 3

moa. old. Portamouth Rd .

out Sandhill Rd. Anyone

outside of Racine.

m

$1~

446-9741

9""·2&amp;6]
;,,

f-----------jf-----------1

OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE - Is part of the charm of this 75 acre
farm and owner desperately needs to sell. This is a deal you can't
resist Home has three bedrooms. new bath and septic system.
Nice big barn. and approximately five primitive campsrtes. Near
the new bridge. $52.000.
REALTORS!
. 992-6191
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI ... .
... 949·2660
Jean Trussell ........ . ....... .
..... 992·5692
Dottie S. Turner
.... 992·2259
Office .. . ........ . ....... •• ..

NOW

9 12 4 1 \ mo

"Cl•T
fOR fUTURE USE "

'••

PRICE REDUCED - On this two story home with almost new
siding and roof. klur bedrooms. 2!? baths, nice front porch. back
patio. and in good neighborhood. Now $29.900.

PLUS INSTAWTIDII

Rec-'19"

FREE ESTIMATES

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·tfc

...

SQ. YD. WITH
PAD, INSTML£0

CAll:L Al
742-2328

yellS.

Guysville, Ohio

PRICE REDUCED -On !his beautiful brick and frame ranch with
a full basement three bedrooms. I!? baths. lamily room. and a
~rge nice laying lot in Fairview. Blended rate loan available. Now
$47,500.

.

BUILT AND
REWORKED

Roofilll of all .._
WO!Ud in home ar;;"ro

SALES &amp;SERVICE
u.s. Rt. so East

MIDDlEPORT- Athree or four bedroom home with a fir~p~ce in
the dining room. large master bedroom, almost new lurnace. new .•
water tank. new carpel throughout Asking $31.900.

6 Rolls ol Anso IV Exlro Good Nylon

The sale ·•pf the

Complete Rtmodelina.

BOGGS

NEW LISTING - Racine- Approximately one acre ol nice laying
land which is set up for a trailer with septic tank, drilled well. public
water. and eleclric. Also, a new two car block garage with storage
room and a concrete patio. $8,000.

CARPET SALE
NOW $1295

P~esldentlal

Complete Gutter Wort

Flomingoburg. Ky 41491 .

NEW LISTING - Racine - Building site or trailer lot Approxi·
mately 2 1/3 acres. ol which most is wooded. wrth a septic tank
Water and electric are available. $5,000.

AVAILABLE IN GEM BLUE. AMBER, RUST AND
WOODLAND BROWN.

s Year

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

'Electric work
'Custom Pole Bides.
&amp;Gar111es
'Roofin&amp; Work
'Aluminum _&amp; Vinyl
Sidinp
15 Yws Elljltrience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282

PH.992-2259

Cheryl Lemley. Assoc.
Phone 742-371
Velma Nicinsky. Assoc.
PhoOI! 742-3092

&amp;
CHIMNEYS

Co.

~::::::::::::::::::~t.;::::::::::::=:=:::~~=============9=·=30:·:1f:c~

POMEROY, OHIO

'499
2 Rolls of Brown and Blue
3 Rolls ,;:.:.:.:.=:.:.t..:.::::;:::;::..:;;:::.!::.:,_________

1101 15. Ire

PH. 992-6011

MAIN

I==========~~==========~==========

venlory.
lan denvironmental
use. population.
and
goals.
•n- ~
and wastewat er flow prolec110ns: evalu a!IOn of th e curr ent
wastevvater lreatment and diS·
pos al methods. eva tuat1on of atternattve solutiOns to th e area's
was tevvater needs. and a recommended plan based on
cos t s and f!nv1ronmental
cons1derauons
·
The public 1S en co urag ed to
act 1vely pan1c1pate 1n th1s Important maner

Superior Siding

S&amp;K AUCTION

Broker

LEGAL NOTICE

&amp; TRUCK

REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
J·24·11c

Corner of Depot &amp; Main
Rutland, Ohio

PHONE 7411003

Public Notice

H~!!RUCT~2~sive

New

remodeling.

Garage Sale Rain or Shine

18 Wanted to Do

Rodney Village 11 . Oct. t 6,
16. 9 to 6.

LOST B mo. old, brown and
white opotted. Tree and till 7771. •

EUGENE LONG

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

AT

'J

· ~

servk:e available

George S. Hobstetter II.

1101 1 8 15 22 . 4o c

Wells.

Hoose coils a]ld shop

7:00P.M.

CARPET

FARM BUREAU
Annual Meeting
Thurs., Oct. 21
·7:16p.m.

Dewayne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith
·AM mokM and models
Antenna Installation

HOBSTETTER R£ALTY

So uth Bethel Un 11 ed
MethOdi ST Church btrdclmq
contP.nTs ilnd land locatf'!d on
the Stiver Atdqe Road :To wn
shtp Road 2931 •s o fteu~d tor
sale by the Athens DtSiftCI Unt
ted Met hodtst Unton. 4 7 Jo hn
son Ad
The PI;:Hns OhtO
4 5780 Btds tor the properly
must be submrned hy Oc to hPr
30t h 1982 ThP Unton 1e
~.erves the rlf]ht to accPpt or re

wet any b1d

Phony face charged

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Real Estate · General

PUBUC NOTICE

money. Officials declined to speculate whether the extortion attempt
was genuine or designed to embarrass the businessman.
He had said earlier that whUe Rl·
chardson was wanted on the extortion charge. he has " never been a
suspect" in the killings.

Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382

Real Estate - General

Public Notice

determine the cause of West's death
because his body was so decomposed. according to Fahner, who
heads a multi-agency task force
handling the case.
Fahner said Lewis also was in·
dieted in December 1981 in Missouri
on theft and forgery charges in an
alleged land fraud scheme. Illinois
officials became aware of charges
agairist Lewis after a Kansas City
detecllve recognized him from a
photo circulated across the country
by the task force.
The attorney general said Lewis
was known lo frequent the Ama·
rillo, Texas. area, and a Chicago
detective was sent to Oklahoma and
Texas to look for him.
Lewis' wife, identlfled as Leann
Lewis. 35,is named in a federal war·
rant charging her with using a fictitious Social Security number to try
to obtain work in the Chicago area.
Known as Nancy Richardson, Mrs.
Lewis worked as a bookkeeper for a
now-defunct Chicago travel agency
opera ted by a businessman whose
inJct lve bank account number was
!Lied in file $1 million extortion
letter.
Authorities said that in her work
she had access to the account
number where McNeil was ordered ·
to deposit the $1 million extortion

, , .,

,,_ , _

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1982

The Daily Sentinel

Federal warrant issued for
suspect in poisoning deaths

... .,

1.....,

MISCELLANEOUS

Th.1t's riqhl! When yuu usc ~ coo .
mch or mor e in ncws pilper cldverti~i~.~
be ot rl"pl.ty or ci.1SSifr c d you rc.1ch
thous~nd s ol potcnlii11 buyer s th~t Me
c,tqcr to r cc e ov c your mon cy · s~ ving
mcssnqc .

J'dusr"tl to comment on

UO"'ll-cn ln• .. d• • -''""'

COOKWARE

THE INCH!

./(Jrd;Hl

lJIIU

TOOLS - FURNITURE

IF YOU USE

whcthc·r the dia1y contained such
allega tions. "I don't want lodiscuss
those things," he said.
.Jordan sa icl he fea rs for his safety
hc&lt;'ausc of 1hr publicity involving
the diary. " Maybe they think 1
might know too much," hesaid ,declining to identify " they."

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

AUCTION

IS ACINCH

"I wish they would drop the whole
damn thing and let her lie in peace
and forget the thing and let her alone
. and quit tryin' lo make any money
on it ,.. he said.
"''m not trying to make any money on it. I'm trying to end this diary
thing. I hope it does when I get
back. "

O"'"dh

S&amp;W TV
AND
APPLIANCE SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

s~~~f~U~L

Jordan said he intends to contact
the Los Angeles district attorney to
discuss the diary.

,_,

&lt;1( .....

8

then-U.S. Attorney Genera l Robert
F . Kennedy. Those secrets all&lt;·&lt;~r&lt;.ll .v incluriPcl a CIA pial to kill
l'tdl:i n lra&lt;lrr Ficici \ast i'O.

...... l .....
t1l ~ lhllt ..

• -•&lt;ooA•••
............

"*'"''"" '"""

MARil. \ 'N'S SWEATER- Actor Ted Jordan removes a sweater
and other articles from a leather-covered jewelry box he unearthed
Wt&gt;dnesday ncar Lancaster. Ohio. Jordan, in an interview in Columbus
Thursday. said the box also contained the missing red diary written by
Marilyn Monroe. (AP Laserphoto).

TOM HOSKINS

6 Lost and Found

~==============~::::::::::::::::~l,:--~~;;;;::::~t:.~~~~;;;;;::;l-3_6_24_._____________

..,.._

~~
"1 - l.o.&lt;i~ ....

vo'•""'"'""

"u"""'"'"

*\Po&lt;f iOO " ' M
•I '"' "" '"''• • •• •

t i t - ( _ ...

\IO I O I \ w O&lt;~ I

10/711 mo.

wv
..... c_.,
.,,...,..
llt- ...... G.....
,,__

..,_M_t

'"-'"'"""''

" [ ....... nq
... f ...... ........ ..... ... ....

t\l"'""''
......
, c; ••.•

&lt;J I o&lt;m\100 NoM

.. Bu ....... ' '"'"'nq

"·- · .. c..1-Goo·••O..•

f1 Pouml&gt;•nq ' Huh,..

"'""''""
,," ...............
.

~

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 614-992-2681
or 614-992-3752
ANYTlME

tlte

.... , . . . . \&lt;

............ o ...

...................."""'"

.......

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

~OipWonl '""

ll l• luohan *•"''""

The

\ ~· • ·nl puh!il \\ 11h
news that hl' had thP di ar\ in llis

••••&lt;••"

~

[

Syracuse- Racine
Area

telephone exclu"lff'_., ..

.,.._cu""'"""
Ml - (...-.,

""'""'"""' "''~~·

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

:t·

diary.
In August. ht '

HOOK-UPS

c...... ,_.,

~

f '~'"'"""~'

tt l..- \ ... .,. .. _

.. .•. .........
•••••or .....

'' -""'' """

ll llo..t \ 1 1 . - •

h ;t" Jrt.tdr·

inCOnSiStt 'lll "LIIi•J! ·

Eber and Bill
Backhoe Service

LAFF-A·DAY

Yard Sale

11

TWO block tong haired kit·
tono. 304-B82-2664 .

~~~~~~~~~~~fr~~~~~~~~~~fr~~~~~~~~~~~=========~
co
FIREPLACES !~;.; 6~';.e"'d•.
H&amp;G·SEWER

_(_.. --c.,...._,
.
-·-............
-"
-·- -·................
folloa~i~

n ,, ... ,ooo \•••
" ..............o
""uto P•• •• I. ~••"'""''"'

\o P•" '&lt;If~ ...
\1 .......... OMI&lt; u"""'h

J)

l:l~ui{ied fMIJel rouer

IIAu- 1..-\&lt;o,.

Jordan. in an interview Thurs·

Jordan

fU£ OTIMAT£5

Ptt 742-2134 01 Mt-2110

9-22

clety . 614-992-6606.
4 port Boogie puppyo. 6
wooko old . 9B6-3667.

IIISI.IIfD

And Homo Molnlenonco
• Roofing of ott types
eSidlng
• Remodeling
• Free uflmtltl
e20 Yn. tKperlonco

•Insulation •Stann Doors
•Storm Windows •Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

Free Estimates
James Keesee
Ph. 992-277'2

IIEWKWU
HOOfiU'I

ROOfl NG

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM SIDING

PHONE 992-2156

=--- -:

..
" -'"'""""

'' "~·- ~-· ··

..c.......
_, ...,.
.....
. ... u .. ....... . ......... . ,
... . . ...._
............. ""'

COLUMBUS. Ohio tAP!- The
contents of Marilyn Monroe's socalled "red diary," recently the object of intense publicity. will remain
secret as far as actor Ted Jordan is
concerned.

firmed . Asked 10 show il to an Associated Press report e r and
photogra pher Thursday. he said he
had mailed the book to Los Angeles.
He refused to s&lt;Jy 10 whom ile had
sent it.

INSULATION

Or Wrote D•oly Stnh&lt;l tl (ln.,hed Dept
111 Cour t ~ ~ -- Pom.orr . OlhO(SIU

"~

diary. however. remained uncon-

-=====:;~:;:::;~~~~;;::::::::~rr========:;t::::::::::::::::::~ plto. colt 446-7943.
J&amp;L s··OWN
NHd home for IO't'ing pets.
a,;
.
OHIO VALLEY
IYIIACIIK-•.CIIIIf
Puppleo &amp; kltteno. For Info .
USIDfiiTS
coli Melgo Co. Humane So-

Fairfi~d - Vanco Rd ., Satur-

The Daily Sentinel

11 '"" '

sa id they became IO\ws in 1941.
The existence of the mysterious

•;, O.rm1n Shepherd pup -

r

R USH

Diary contents remain secret

when OOth wC' rr undPr con tract at
20th Century Fox in 1110 l ~l'llls . HP

7

Giveaway

nightof
. Reward
day
v1nclmty
Mudsoc. Call
and

c, ..
~ .. ,•~......
... " ''""'""
~"' ' '
. ....
. p.o •••'~""'
~ ........ . .

day. said he returned lo Ohio from
Los Angeles this week to dig up a
jewelry box which h0 saidcontained
the dia1y and other personal items
belonging to the actress. whose Aug.
5. 1962. death was ruled a suicide.
"I brought it back to Ohio in Oc·
Iober 1962... said Jordan. who
claimed he buried it at that lime
atop Mount Pleasant in his native
Lancaster. Ohio. He dug up his 20yea r o ld buried tre as ur e
Wednesday.
"!put it thrre for sentimcntalpurposes - just fcrr memories." sa id
the o7-yea r old actor. who played
freight office operator Na tha n
Burke on the "Gunsmoke" television series between 1%1 and 197:i.
.Jordan worked with Mi" Monroe

4

Business Services

MlnersvUle - Mary Voss.
Middleport - John A. Elias.
Joyce W. Bartrum. Jean Whobrey,
Faye Wallace. Sarah Fowler, Ed·
ward W. Durst, Leafy Chasteen,
Stephanie Houchins. Debra J.
Carder. Gloria J . Peavley, John
Hood, Judith E. Hunter. Betty
Pooler. Eric Diddle.
Syracuse - Teresa Drummer.
Mllton Roush. David M. Smith.
Rutland- John Jacobs. Karolyn
Black. Shorty Wright. Mary E. Davidson. Donna M. Davidson.

Warner. Paul A. Rice, Debra Buck.
Dennis J. Gilmore.
Racine - WUIIam H. Hoback,
Dorothy Sayre. David Aaron Wolfe.
Long Bottom - Harlan Ballard.
Dexter- Naree Hale.
LangsvUle - Karen S. Clark, El·
lis E. Myers.
Chester - Clarence Wolfe.
ReedsvUle - Deborah L. Sanders . Richard Barton. Mace!
Barton.
Cheshire - Rodney E. Spires.
Charles W. Searles.

The

Ohio

18 Wanted to Do

For sale by owner . Pri ce re dl,lced. 2 bdr . home. 10 yrs .
old, 1h ac re of land. only

S17,500 . Coil 61 4-3BB B153
% acre, three bedr . home.

t)asement, city sc hool
county water . Call 216:
734 -3734. evening s.
House for sale or rental pur chase . Fairview Sub divisior 614 -992 -5348 or

614 -992 -2064.

~iddleport : Sale, lease op tiOn . 3 bedroom. dining.
b asemen t . garage . Nic e
neighborhood . Owner fi nancing . S40 's. 614 -992 -

2517 .

9 yr . old bi -level, 4 bd .room
2 bath . Approx . 1&amp; % ac re . 1;~
is woods ., Fully equip . kit ·
chen with dish -washer . Air cond ., carpet . full patio .
Moving - priced tow .

$49,000 . 614-992-7414.
HOUSE M eadowbrook Ad dition . 3 bedrooms, family
room with firepalce. central
air. basement . phone 304 -

676-1542.

NEED to sell 6 room house
with air conditioning. gas
heat. stove with refrigera tor, 21arge lots, large garden
space . 200 yards off of main
road in Clifton . Will sell

cheap . $15000. 304-7739192 .
J3 bedroom all electric, 1 06

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable

and dopondo blo. Call 448·
3169 after 6PM 266-1967.
Btbyoltter wontad. 2nd
ahfft, Keneugaaraa. Must be
reliable, references needed.

Cotl

446-~626 .

1st St . Mason, WV. 304773-5392.
POUR bedroom home, assu mabl~ mortgage, 7 ¥. percent Interest, 'I• mile on left
Rt~ 62 South off Rt. 2, Pt.

Pleooont, phone 304-676:
6266.

�12-The Daily Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

31 Homes for Sale
Fo,r rent or sale, 3 bedroom
house with basement. For

54 Misc . Merchandise 54 Misc. Merchandise
Firewood. Cut to length .
Delivered in dump truck
loads or may be ptcked up in
yard . Crown City, Oh Junction 553 &amp; 218 . Call 614-

infor. call 304 -895 -3516 .

32 Mobile Homes

256-6246.

for Sale

For sale Restaurant Carryout equipment, used.
lowost prices . RAOCO.

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446 -7572 .

304-523-1378.
275 gallon tank, $160. Call
614-245-5329.

Zenrth BW portable televi sion, Martha Washington
sewing table , other items.

.-------------------~

7 -8.00x14 .5 tires on Dayton wheels , 10 ply nylon,
like new . Call 614 - 245 ·

6091 .

78

ducts. Just call 1-304-676 1090.

f2!t90. Located Main and
Second. Middleport, Ohio.
614-992-282B.

Building materials blpck,
brick, sewer pipes, win dows. lintels, ate . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande. 0 . Call

CORSAIR camping trailer,

$3,600 . 00.
1370.

Build your own garage
24x24 all lumber furnished,
$696. Can deliver. Barn
pattern also. Call 614-886-

enamel
coated
. 4x8
4X
12. Prices,
$7.00
tothru
$9.60.

Ca ll 1-304-882 -2566.

a

Hou se for rent -att new paint
So me ca rp eting , no in side

Call 446 -0548 .

45

Furni shed Rooms

pets. 614 -992 -3090 .
3 bd .room hom e ava il. Oct .

1973 - 12x60 Baron Trail er.
with wood burner . 8 K 16
porc h . Must sell. M oving .

614 -742 -2897 .
1974

New M oon trailer
Range &amp; refrigerator . Tota l
el ec tri c, 2 bedr oom s, utility

room . 614 -992 -7406 .
1971

liberty

1 2x52.

25 . 614 -992 -3846 after 5
6 room s and bath , full base m ent, in Middleport. 992 -

PM .

5885 .
2 bdr ., unfurnished , ca rpet ed. $100 deposit, aduhs
preferred , nea r Pom eroy

Bridge . 773 -5962 or 773 5775

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . larg e lots . Call

992 -7479 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Msrshandlss
Ni ce 1 4x70 M obil e Hom e.

$4.000. 614 -992 -732 4 .

446 -2 19 2.

1976 Wind so r 1 4x70 . Ce n tr al air &amp; hea t , underpinning ,

Trail er on Mill Creek Ad and
trailer space on bulavill e Rd .

co n c re te ste ps.

Ca ll 446 1052 attar 5.

storm -

w indow s, se t up for propane

gas . 614 -992 -3401.

3 bdr trail er on Kerr -Bethel
Rd . no pets . Ca ll 446 - 3371

R ed u ce d beautiful 64ll:24
do ubl e wide. exc . cond .. 3
bdr .. 2 baths. lar ge kitch en,

2 bdr complet ely furnished
tr ailer at Kerr . Ca ll 446 -

$16,5 00 Ca11992 -2638 .

9669

USED MOBIL E. HOME .
576 -27 11 .

2 be dr oom trailer . Rea l ni ce,
aduh s onl y . Brown 's Trail er
Park , Min ersv ill e. 614 -992 -

197 3 14x70 mobi le home.
3 bedroom . 304 -882 -2820

3324

14x70 CAMERON . all elect ric. 3 bedr oo m, bath and 1h,
ce ntral air. $9,000. 30 4 -

27 49 .

773 -5 14 3
33 Farms for Sale

Furnished 2 bedroom on 1
ac re. Co uple with 1 child
only . $200 . month plus depos it . 6 14-742 · 2753.

25 acre f arm f enced. 1260
lb t ab . base, 198 0 Wind sor
mobile hom e. barn . co rn
crib. mu st se ll. Call 446 -

Two bdr . trailer utilities paid,
ad ul ts only, deposit re quired, no pets . 2 mile s out
14 3 in Pomeroy . 992 -3647 .

084 4 .
24 ac res . Sm all 4 room
house . 3 112 miles from upper
~ nd of Forked Run l ake. 24
ac res approximately 40"
river fr o ntage. 4 room house
wi th bath . Very nice 9 roo m
house with 7 fir epla ces .
Beautiful oak woodwork .
drape s. in Racin e. Call Star -

key Rea lty , 614 -949 -2286
or 614 -592 -2419

14x70 M obil e Home, Apple
G ro ve, 2 bed roo m , partially
fum . S230 . month plus utili ti es . $100 Sec . depo sit . Call

after 4, 304 -576 -2009 .
Pt
Pl easa nt area, tr ail er
S175 .00 month plu s utili ties and deposit . Greer Rd .
Pt. Pl easan t . 3 04 - 675 -

17 24.

44
35 Lots &amp; Acreage ,

Apartment
for Rent

For sa le one and half acres
more or l ess. approximately
600 ft road frontag e on
Cora -Centerp oint Rd . ne ar
Centerpoint . $3, 000 . 00

Furni shed 3 r. private bath,
845 2nd . Ave .. Gallipolis.
Re f . preferred . Call 446 -

Phone 682 -6944

Small furni shed effiency. 1
prof ess io nal type male only.
Ce nter air &amp; heat. Call 446 -

Two ac re lots -150 ft . road
frontage. city wa t er. behind
84 lumber . Call 304 -675 -

6B73 or 675 -3618 .
THREE acres. f e n ce d .
1 2 x60 trailer. well. septic
system. letart. 9,000 .00.

Call304 -895 -3605 or 614 367 -0612 .

Rtntals
Houses for Rent

Small furnished hou se. 1 or
2 adults only . Call 446 -

0338 .
Three bed.. Spring Valley
area. two baths. family room
with firep lace. double gar age , nice neighborhood .
S325 per mo . Deposit and
ref er ence required Call

614 -38B -9680 .
Home for rent Hwy 160 . 4
mi. from ho spt.. $250 per
mo .. prefer aduhs. ref . Call

446 -7322 .

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
STORE 62 Olive St., Galli polis . Couch. loveseat and
chair, $1 99 .; wallhuggers
S125. ; bunk beds with bun ki es, $170 .; box spring and
m attress. S100.
Firm ,
$120 .; recliners. $ 80.; 9 x
1 2 1inoleum rugs, $22 .; ma ple rock ers, $49 ., wringer
washers, refrigerators . dinett e sets. chest,
dressers, bunki e mattress.

S40. Call 446 -3159 .

2 bedro o m furnished .
Adults preferred . No pets .
Dep os it required . 614 -992 -

22 15.

0338 .
2nd floor furnished effi cien cy apt. Apt . 4, 729 2nd
Ave
Adults only . 446 -

0957 .
Houses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr . apart m ent s for rent . HUD pro gram available. A -One Rea l
Estates, Carol Yeager, Rea ltor . Call 30 4 -675 -5104 or

675 -5386.
Ni ce ly furni shed mobi l e
home. central air , 1 mi le
below city overlooking river ,
ad uh s only . Call 446 -0338 .
Fir st floor unfurni shed apart ment . Inquire at 6 3 1 4th
Ave .. Gallipolis.
Furnished &amp; part furnished
apt ., adults. Ca ll 446 - 3733

or 446 -0171 .

614 -245 -5334.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Naomi Beman.
Treasurer

and up to $125 . Hide-ab eds, $440 . and up to
$525 .. queen size, $380.
Recliners. $175. to S325.,
lamp s from $ 18 . to $65 . 5
pc. dinettes from $79., to
$385 . 7 pc .. $ 189 . and up .
Wood table with six chairs

$39 5. to S650. Desk $110.
Hutches. S300. and $550.,
maple or pine finish . Bed room suites
Ba sse tt
Cherry, S795 . Bunk bed
complete with mattresses,
S250 . and up to $395. Baby
bed s, S99. Manresses or
bo x springs, full or twin,
$58 ., firm , $68 . and $78.
Queen sets, $195. 4 dr .
chests. $42. 5 dr. chests,
S54. Bed frame s. S20.and
S25., 10 gun - Gun cabinets.
$350 ., dinette chairs S20.
and S25. Gas or electric
ranges . $325. Baby rna tresses, $25 &amp; S 35 , bed
frames S20. $25, &amp; $30 .
Used Furniture -- bookcase,
ranges, chairs, end tables ,
recliners and TV 's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open Sam
to 7pm, Mon . thru Fri .. 9am
to 5pm, Sat.

446 -0322
Furniture for sa le. Selling
cheap . Couches. end table,

etc. Call 446-3937 .
Bed and dresser, ex. condi tion , comp lete w arm morn ing heating stove . Call

446 -4497.
52

CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

23 Channel Royce C B. $60.
New cassett car stereo,

$60. 304-675-3626 .

Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg . Doberman&amp; pups and
Doberman Stud Service.

Call 446 -7795.
POODLE GROOMING . Call
Judy Taylor at 614-3677220 .
Border Collie pups'for sale, 8

grass. 614 -992 -2111.
AKC registered Doberman
pup, 9 weeks old, has shots.
has been wormed, tail

clipped .
2052 .

S100. 304· 882 -

Oliver two row corn picker,

Modal

73 .

S500.

Stock

chopper 4 -row S500. 985 -

3581 .
Automatic washer and dryer
$100 . Frigidaire refrig.

1110. Call742 -2352 .

FEMALE Doberman, 12
weeks old, 304-675 -7934
or B82 - 2827.
·
57

Starting to lay. Call 4464656.
3 goats 1 male. 2 females.

$135. Call 614-245-9233.
Super Chix colt for sale 18
mo. old, blaze face. 1 white
sock, beautiful conformation and temperment. 8800.

992-72 05 bojo_re noon,
446-9510 afternoon. Ask
for Paul.

- -- - - - - - - l cHOLSTEIN HEIFER
CALVES. 614-992-5198.
Registered Nubian male
goat. 6 years old. Papers in cluded . $90. 2 year old female goat, reb red, now

milking. 860. Shade-614696· 1234.
CLUB calf show &amp; sale. Fri-

day, October 15th. 7:00 .
Qual ity steers for 4-H &amp; FFA
projects. Unrted livestock
project, Mineral Wells. WV.
Information: call 304-489-

Musical
Instruments

2255.
64

Fl REWOOD, cut, split &amp; delivered, $25 . a load. 1972
Chevy Impala. 2 door, hard -

BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO ..
61 Court St., Gallipolis. Call

Hay round bales . Will load .

top, 304 -675 -1478.
BUYING and selling used
heavy equipment (agricultu ra l, construction. mining,
chemical industry , etc .)
through consignment for a
national company. Starting
at $15.000. value. Call Ro bert l Harper. 304-675-

1293.

446-0687.
Piano for sale u preight, completey rebuilt and refinished.
excellent shape, $350. Call

992-7205 mornings, 4469510
Paul.

afternoon.

58

Ask for

700

Call 446-1 B7B.
Harvest special

shelled corn $6.00 per 100
Farm, Rt. 35. Pliny, WV.
304-675-2275.

Army clothing, boots,
packs, (surplus rental ) Sam
Somerville's Warehouse, 7
miles east Ravenswood. old
route 21 (New Era ), open
this week only evenings 5
p.m . regu larly open 1:007:30 p.m . Friday, Saturday,
Sunday, (Monday evening).
Coal and wood stove. 304 -

Cider $2 .00 gal. , German
Ridge apples. Red and
Golden Delicious. Rome
Beauty and Wine Sap, $7.00

bushel . 84.00

v,

bushel .

Corner of LeGrande Blvd.
and Portsmouth Rd. Call

446-8598.
APPLES -Fitzpatricks Or·
chards has plenty of picked
apples for app le butter or for
winter storing. Visit our orchard on St .Rt . 689 or call

B95 -3821 .

669-3785.
- - -- - - - - ·lc-

Sears electric range $25 . an ·
tique rocker $15 . 304-675 -

Potatoes. Humphrey Farms
have a good supply of Kennebec potatoes on hand.

7436.

$9.00 per 100 lbs. Your
THREE 30 gal. used gas hot
water tanks. 1,25 KW used
electric furnace . 1 Used 2
ton add on air conditioner. 1
Free standing gas heater,

75,000 BTU's. 1 Freestanding gas heater 70,000
BTU's. 4 Natural gas floor
fumaces. 1 up flow basement furnace. natural gas,

Autos for Sale

containers. Reedsville, Oh .

614-37B-6295.

No Sun.

Sales.
Mango's. Hot and banana
peppers. You pick-84.00

bu. Call 843 -21 B3 after 9
p.m.

1978 Fairmont Ford, extra
clean, good cond., $1,995.

Call 446-47B2, Gallipolis.
1960 Chevy for sale fair
cond .• partly restored . Call

614-446-1617.
74 Chevy Malibu Classic, rebui lt engine, new tires,
muffler. shocks, brakes.
Craig stereo, Pioneer speak·
ers. $1600 or best offer.

Call 446-B3B2.
1979 Ford Pinto, axe . cond .•
4 cyl .• 4 spd .. low miles, ra dials. AM-FM. rustproof,
one owner. Call 446-8676.
74

Datsun

260Z,

good

cond. Call 614-256-1768,
$1,800.
77 Dodga Charger SE. PS,
AT, AC, crusio. AM·FM
stero, rally wheel s, new ra dials, one owner. must sell.
will sacrifice. Call 446-

1325.

135.500 BTU's, 304· 675 3099 .

@arm lppp!lea
li Ll eatvpll

TWO white twin beds. complete, like new, $300.00,

f100.

available at local

tory on how to purchase. 24
hrs.

74 Chevalle.
4824.

304 -675-

complete

$176.

low mi-

leage, 304· 773-5889.
1975

CoNot T-top.

a-c.

auto. trans. ps, pb, maroon
with silver interior $7,000.

304-675-3015.
1968 Camaro 283, 3speed, &amp;1000. 304-6757436 after 5 p.m.
1974 Plymouth Valiant, 6
cyl. f700. 304-882· 2638.
1976 PLUMOUTH Volare
Roadrunner. 318 engine,
Power steering, power
brakes. good gas mileage.

$1300. 304-895-3557.
1976 FORD Torino. 4 door,
automatic transmission,
power steering. new sticker.

Trucks for Sale

1974 GMC PU 350 engine.
auto .• tA ton, Call614-388-

~

1975 Ford Granda 2 door, 6
cy l., auto. gray with red interior, good cond . ." 6900. Call

446-3759.

304-676-3445.

61

Farm Equipment

BABY bed , excellent condi -

tion, 846. 304-675 -2295

1963 Minneapolis Moline
tractor , 8700 or best offer.

evenings.

Call 675-7726.

19B2 Ford Escort loaded
with extra. l ike new, good

deal. Call 614· 256-6753.
79 Trano AN $6,400. 1980
Flrebird $6,300. Call 614388-9961 or 446-1324.

KING size bed. good condi-

tion. 870.00, call 304-4581506.

AMC Spir~ hatchback. good
gao mileage, &amp;2.800. Call
larry Field 992-2906.

54 Misc. Merchandise

2 bedroom furnished apt .
614 -992 -720 6 or 304 882 -2566 .

STUCCO
estimates.
11B2.

Call

THAT MENo.IS WE'LL
HAVE TO 00 SOME ·

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

THING ABOUT A.
WAT~ SUPPLY!

. Call 614-256-1413.
For rent two bdr . house in
city. ful basement. carpeted. adults. no pets . Call

446-0958 .

5 room unfurnished house.
10 Edgemont Or., Galipolis.

Adulu only. Call446 •1370
after 6PM .
Pomeroy -2 bd .room unfurnished house. $195. mo.
Securrtydeposit. $100. plus

utilities. After 6-call 614 992· 2288.

Apartm e nts . 304 - 67 5 -

5548 .
APARTMENTS. mobile

$450 . Call ,1 -614-256·
1216.

homes, houses . Pt. Pleasant

and Gallipolis. · 614-446·
B221 or 614 -245-9484.

Oh. Call 614· 256-6245.

Pleasant.
2453.

Firewood . Slabs 810
pickup , cut up slabs 816,
round wood 820 . Ria

304 -675 -

Unfurnished apartments for
rent. Call Automotive

Supply, 8 till 6. 304· 675 2218. 304 -676 -6763.
Furnished

apts.

Adults .

304· 675-225 7.
Middleport: Rent, lease option . 3 bedroom, dining. fireplace. basement, garage,

Firewood $26.00 pick up.
96% hard wood. Jet. Rt .
21B &amp; Rt. 6,5 3, Crown City,

Three room furnished apart ment, adults. no pets, Point

Call

Furnished one bedroom apt.
Extra nic• in Pt. Pleasant.

nice neighborhood. &amp;350 . . Adulto Only. No Pots. 304676 -1388.
614-992-2517.

1978 Z·28 Camero red.
39.000 miles, exc. cond.
Call 614·388· 87119, Eurell
Auto Solos.

extras.

614-949-

1976 Ford Bronco, lock in
lock out hubs, 4-whee l

drive, 3,900 ·miles. $2700.
304-675-1035.
1976 Ford Y2 ton pickup

&amp;1200. 304-675-3354.
matic, with topper. $3996.

74 Monta Carlo, &amp;1895.
phone 304·675· 5281 .
FOR ule or trade for bigger
pickup. 1961 Ford Y2 ton
pickup with new rebuilt 302
engine. automatic transmis·
sion. in good condition,

304-675-5864.

&amp; 4 W.O.

1978 F-260 Ford PU. 4

Call614-388-9622 or 614388-9867.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet
Cleaning featured by Haffelt
Brosthers Custom Carpets.
Free estimates. Call 446 -

2107.

GASOLINE ALLEY

Masonary work. Logue Con tracting. Rt. 1, Ewington .

Call 614-388-9939 .
CHRISTIAN'S CON STRUCTION. Constr .. roofing, siding, &amp;pouting,
fencing. painting, repairs &amp;

claanlng. 446-2000, callbafore 8 and after 6 :30.
Gene' s Steam Carpet CleanScotch Gaurd - Free
estimates-spring specials-

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola.

Quazar,

and

drive,

4

Large Family? 12 pauagor
one owner. Call 446.'0238.
79 Ford Bronco XLT 400,

304-675-2088 or 676·
4560.
Water WeUs . Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

304-896-3B02.
ADVANCED Seamlau

&amp;eni~~~~~~nl~ti~-------------------------------plex . (60 mm.)

Gutter· Doors. Offering contlnuee guttering. seemle11
siding, roofing, garage
doors, free eatimates. 614-

698·8205.
PAINTING interior &amp; exte·
675-1128.
CARPENTRY &amp; remodel-

Grande area ' Call 614· 2455804.
Blue Ridge Mountain fireplace inserts now in stock at
Swisher Implement Co ., St.

Rt. 7 North, Gallipolis, Oh,
446-0476.

~,.,.._~ ,

House coal for ul~ 824 ton .

Call814-266-6816 or 614256-6747.

~:.!.!!!~~!!!.!:!:~~...-----~~'

1981 Cutllu Supreme Dlo·
eel with ovory.,lng. Will
con ski• older. cor ·11 irode
ln. 1114·742·24111.

electrlcal &amp; plumbing. 304576-2989.

CIJ (jj) 3-2-1, Contact

82

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7:00 D CII P.M . Magazine
(}) Inside · the NFL l en
Dawson and Nick Buoniconti analyze .this week 's
NFL action and look ahead
to next week's 9ames.

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phona 446-3888 or 4464477

84
&amp;

(!) 0/C NCAA Foot ball

Electrical
Refrigeration

Preview Jim Simpson and
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(!) Charlie's Angels
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(}) Super Book .
(!) NFL Game of the

Auto Parts
&amp; Accea10riaa

300 6·cyl. onglno U60.
troriomlulon , e1110. Rear
end e100. Utility bumper
e110. • &amp; odd on 11r
F(ome for F1 _
0 0 Ford, 'h ton
pickup 1988 Ford Glloxie
600 t2&amp;0. 304-11711-211156,

no.

77

Auto Repair

87

Week If the NFL Players
strjke continues, this pro·
· gram will be pre-empted
and 'NFL Films ' will be
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(I) MOVIE: 'All Babe and
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(I)
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Upholatery

a

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTER-Y SHOP
1183 Soc .. Aw .. Golllpollo.
4411· 7833 or 448-18 33.

Feud

g

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(I)

Cit

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Dukeo

of

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(I) (jj) Wuhlngton Weak/

MOWREY&amp; Upholslllr'y Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pieuont
304·8711·41114.
•

-RevieW -P.aul Duke Is jOined
· · bf top Washingu;m journ~l­
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8:30 (!) NFL Thaatro: · 'Boot

SPECIAL Compltte onomol
point jobt from UOO. Sun·1 974 Pontiac Cotlllno. 4 dr. roofs lnotollod from 't2211.
sidon. good oond. •7110. Auto · Trim · Cantor, 441111188.
.
614-949-2834 •.

Ever T...-n•·-

1

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10:00 CI1 MOVIE: 'Candy'

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their careers at this famous
New York club .
CII Ufe of Riley
(!) ESPN Sports Center
(1) 700 Club

®CNN2
3:30 (!) 0/C NCAA Foot ball
Preview Jim Simpson and
Bud Wilkinson hosts .
(1) MOVIE: 'Biondie Hits
the Jackpot'

3:45 CII MOVIE: 'The Great

Cll '• High School Football:

4:00

Charleston at Stonewall
Jackson
(jj) Newswatch
10:30 (1) Star Time
(fi) Masterpiece Theatre
'To Serve Them All My
Days .·
David
PowlettJones comes _to 8arnfylde
School to join the teaching
staff and confront the barriers of class prejudice . (60
min.) !Closed Captionedj
1 1 :00 II (]) Newscenter

(!) ESPN Sporto Canter
(I) Allin the Family
CllD Cll ®II~ News
(!) Newo/Spons/Waathar
11 :30 D CII (!)Tonight Show
CII
MOVIE:
'Private
lessons'
(1) Another Ute
(I) MOVIE: · 'The Storlie
Cuckoo'

Cll Benny Hill Show
D (I) MOVIE: 'Tho U.at

Train Robbery'
(])
MOVIE:
'Private
lessons'
I]) BMX Bicycle Motocross from St. Paul. MN
4 :30 (]) Ross Bagley

10/16/82
EVENING
6 :00

(1) World Championship
Wrestling
CD God Has the Answer
(]) Nature of Things

® MOVIE: 'The Houoa ,
That Dripped BlOod'
Ill Fndayo
12:30 D CII (I)SCTV Network
(1) ~lck Benny Show
(I) Fri~
. ' .
Cll To&gt;iiltnnounced
.
, 1:00 (})~~~~Cello'

a

~

Mv Uttio M1&lt;11l•
® MQVIE: I 'They Porn•
•fnlmWithln

e!liNowo

1:4&amp; (}),MOVIE: 'The Offence'
(I) · MOVIE: '·Tho Ounolln-'
,I

••

A mother and daughter e• change bodies . (60 min)
(() MOVIE: 'Santa Fe
Trail'
8:30 0 (]) ffi Silver Spoons
· R1cky tries to test hi s father's love by breaking a lot
of rules.
(!) ESPN Presents Saturday Night at the Fights
Saturday Night at the
Fights
features
Robbie
Simms vs . Clint Jackson in
a 10-round Middleweight
bout and Howard Davis. Jr.
vs . Cocoa Sanchez m a 10round Lightweight bout both from Atlantic j' City ,
NJ . (2 hrs., 30 min.) '
9:00 0 (]) ffi Gimme a Break
(() Ill (1}1 Love Boat The
Ca pt. reveals h1s true 'self'
to a school chum, a couple
di sagree over their future
plans and Julie tricks her
friend . (60 min _)
Iii (I) ®
MOVIE:
' Hotline'
ill) Media Probes

9:30 D

CI1 ffi Love, Sidney

laurie recommend s that
Sidney drink whiskey to
deaden the pain of a tooth ache .
ill) Dr. Who Movie

10:00 D

CI1

ffi

Devlin

Connection A murderer
stalks a condominium com-

'Endless
(J)
MOVIE:
love'
(]) Ill G} Fantasy Island
(]) Mystery! 'Sweeney
Tod d.' A young girl masquerades as a boy to find
out why a barber's clients
mystenously
disappear
(90 min.)
10:15 (]) MOVIE: 'The Great
Bank Hoax'
10:30 (]) To Be Announced
1 1 :00 0 (I) Newscenter
(]) Rock Church
(!) ESPN Sports Center
(]) TBS Evening News

m
mo
News

11 :30 D

ffi

Cll -®

ffi

m~
Twilight

Theater II Leslie N1etsen
hosts a series of satincal
sketches Gues t starring
Steve Martin . Martin Mull
and Bob DeMer. (90 m1n .)
([) MOVIE : 'Five Deadly
Venoms'
Iii (I) MOVIE: To Be
Announced
()) Avengers
® Earle Bruce Show
01 ~ MdVIE: 'Hands
the Ripper'
11 :45 Cl) MOVIE: 'Confessions
of a Window Cleaner'
12 :00 Cl) HBO Theatre : Came ·

of

lot

0 (})(!)NBC News

a

Ill Solid Ool.d
7:30 D (}) lnskla'- Look
CD ESPN Sporto Canter
® Hanna'o Ark
(fi)

8:00

8

G~bematorial

(})

(!)

Debate

Dlff'rent

Strokes Dudley uses Arnold~ &amp; poems to win a
g_j_rl's affection.
(I) MOVIE: 'Blue Lagoo11·
(}) MO~IE: , 'Ordinary '
People'
(}) MOVI.E: 'Aroh of
Triumph'
,
(I)
NCAA
Football:

Waet,lngton

at

Oregon

St. ltontatlval
Ill T.J. Hooker
Q (I) Cit Walt Dlonay

(I)

a

' "Fr~eal(y

Friday: · Conclusion.

,

in England
15 Junkyard,
e.g.
16 Bound to

come
17 Vase
18 Holbrook
t9 Optimistic
21 Ethereal
22 Garment
23 Albee

Yesterday 's Answer'

customer
lsi. I
9 Sea inlet
10 - Dan
(rock
group I
II Sprinkle
19 Effulgence
20 Unclose
(poet .)

27 Terrify

21 The former
Clay
22 Goatlike

30 Map
31 Woma n's

23 Italian
cit y
24 Kitchen

name

32 Exude
33 Phoenician
port
35 Ward-heeler

gadget
25 Languished

offering
24 Proffered
25 Domestic
26 Spire

31 Alter
leen
38 Whirled
:rn Cheat (sl.)

ball
.
Cll D (I) Hoe Haw

Cit At the Movlos

insect
8 Non-paying

haunt
36 "More! "

In
Concert The Commodores
perform their biggest hits.
(!) International Racquet-

(jj) Writers' Workshop

commons,

!behave)
34 Tunesmiths'

(fi) Personal Finance
D (I) Dance Fever
(I)
Commodores

C1)
Memories
With
Lawrence Welk
()) All Creatures Great
and Small

mountain
12 So help me!
13 The

nent (Fr.l
I War deity
5 Wine
6 Polish city
7 Colony

composer
28Macaw
29 - oneself

(}) MOVIE: 'Tha Fighter'
Cll II Ill News
®CBS Naws
7:00

3 A conti-

ACROSS
1 ''Howdy, - ''
5 Suit
11 Greek

ornament

(fi) Personal Finance

6:30

~tAA.W"M"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

21 Spanish

®News

® All In tho Family.
II ~Nightllno
12:00 CII MOVIE: 'Take This
Job and Shove It'
(1) B~mo. &amp; Allen
(!)Top R'nk Boxing ,from
Indianapolis, IN Top Rank
Boxing features
Alvino
Manson and Marvin Johrison in a 12-round HeaVyweight bout. (2 hrs., 30
min.)
·
(I) Nlghtllno
(I) Oovo Allen at U.rgo

D Cil Newscenter
(}) MOVIE: ' Road Games'
(1) Oeath Valley Days

Hard Men'

1 :30

CI1

(() TBS Evening News

Iii CllllD Falcon Crest

Series

(}) MOVIE: 'Tho Great

'

.

Wo~d

Game.#3
(}) On Location: Catc;h a
Rlaing Star's 10th Anniv·
ersary This celabration features the stars who began
their careers at this famous
New York club.

.;
'I

lovers Only'
llJ (J) ® Dallas J .R. tnes
to push his mother and
Bobby into a decision that
would open Jock· s will
(60 min.)
(]) Next Question
CID Body in Question
'Naming th.e Parts.' Dr
Jonathan
Miller
shows
what happens to ·our insides' when we fall ill. (A)
(60 min·.) · [Closed Captioned !
9 :30 (I) MOVIE: 'First Monday
In October'
(]) PKA Full Contact
Karate
([) Inside Business

Cll Iii Cll ® 01 ~ News

63000 mllu. WMtlng to 85
Hauling
trade for 4 -whool d r i v e l - - - - - - - - - truck. 304-n3-8192.
JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE. Coli 614-367- 7471'
74 Motorcycles
or 614·367· 0691 .

1970 GTX. excellent condl·
tlon, Coli 992·15880.
78 Cutllu Supreme. 81 Ce·
rnero, 78 GrMd Prix, 78
More . .Capri R8, 77
Chevetto, 711 Buick Cent ..
79 Dodge PU 4x~. Att priced
to Mil. B &amp; D Motors, Hwy
160. Coli 4411· 7322.

EVENING

ing. aiding, painting, aome

SEWING Machine repairs:
NEED to oall or trade Dodge saNice. Authorized Singer
van. customized paint It in- Saleo &amp; Service Sharlien
terior, with captlan awivel Scluors. Fabric ShOp.
chairs, Ice box, sink, cabi- Pomeroy. 992-2284.

wheeler,

9:00 (1) 700 Club
(I) 01 ~ MOVIE: ' For

(I) Newscenter
Cl)· MOVIE: 'Any Number
Can Play'
(1) Bull's Eye
CD Carol Burn en-'

1967 Jeep 4-Whoel drive
pick up 500. 992-7789.

nent
spece, couch
bed, air
conditioned,
cruloetocontrol,

10!15!82

0

6:00

rlor. free estimates, 304·

automatic. loaded with ex-

trao. Call 614-367-0659 or
614-367-7379.

HE #EEP$ SOME·
ONE, BIRDIE, AND
BILL RE'FUSED
TO COME TO HIS
AID. THINK5 11'5
ANOTHER OF
ORVILLE'S ·~·--·--.-&gt;; ·'•"-~

HELLO, BIRDIE.
SORRY TO WAKEN
YOU, E!&gt;UT I /o\AY
NOT 8E IN FOR
A FEW DAYS .

F It K Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call675- 1331.

speed,

78 Van. Chevy Beauville,

WI NNIE

houoo calls. Call 676-239B
or 448-24&amp;4.

83,600. Call 614-3888769, Eurall Auto Salas.

78

WE'RE GOING 10 DIG O URSELVES
A WELL , R IG I-n H ERE!

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting, 30 years experience,
specializl'lg in built up roof.

e450. Call 446-4426.

Wood burning add on furnance. Still in factory crate,

BREAK OUT THE SHOVELS, MEN!

H~t

6 room house in Eureka, un fumished . deposit requ ire d.

STI!tJBOfl./1 •.

ALLEY OOP

8:00

Cheshire. Oh . 304 -773 5882 .

MILLION BUC!t5.

614- 256·

rienced mason, roofing, carpenter, electrician. general
repairs and remodeling. Call

Three

---UNL£:65
I'IARBUCKS PRO'S

PLA$TERING

1975 Ford. F 150. Loaded

wheel

~H-I'IHAT HAPPENS
THEil. MISS HAN'?

YOU MAY
MER.ELY HAVE
5HOW '10UR5ELF

!textured ceilin•• commercial and residential, free

RINGLE'S SERVICE expe -

Vans

WAITIN' FOR
SOME KIND 0' SIGNAL ?

Home
Improvements

8543.

73

5HOULD I 6-q()
OVERT' HIM,
Ml55 HAN'? .•

Gene Smith, 992-6309.

76 BUICK LTD. 2 door.
6,000 miles, 304-8 82 3116.

72

YOU DI5611ND THE P.C.A . .' ...
AND- SINCE I'M FEELIN6
GEHEROU5. IT 1'/ILL ONLY
COST Y0tJ I/O OR 50

~- ~ E'RE

NlffURALLY I
-- AHD I'VE
THE OPPOSITE
POSITION!

IT..fl 15 'IHIOOY~1

I CAll 5AVE YOU'...

oxp. Call 614-3BB-9652.

1977 Chevy 350 engine

1977 CHEVY pickup. auto-

2 bdr . house, fuel oil fur nance. has chimney for . Efficiency Apt. Suitable for
wood stove, in Vinton . Call 1 or 2 people . Roush lane,

614 -367-0646.

JEEPS, cars, trucks under

2544.

71

81

stock.

with

30 .06, New Redfield scope,

CAMOUFLAGE new U.S.

Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less eXpensive cars in

whole

lb. your sacks. 86 .76 per
sacked. Morgan Woodlawn

Fruit

BDL.

304-675-5214 .

oust. $650. 614-992-7177.

9 a.m. - 6 p.m.

&amp; Grain

JranapvAadon

&amp; Vegetables

REMINGTON

Hay

- UHLE55 YOU'VE DECIDED
OH'? l THOUGHT
TO JOIN MY.. 'PIIN·
YOtJ M1511T BE
CONTINEHTAL ALLIANCE.'
lt!TE~ESTED IN
~E HAVE NOTHIN6 TO ( lqi/()IIDIII'16 AH/lHC/AL
DI&amp;CU55, ~ARBUC~&amp;! RUIN AND PER50NAL
RIPICULE, 'CIWE5tK

69 Cadilac. 2 door. new ex-

$1200.00, 304-882-3300,

We will MEET or BEAT any
legitimate price your receive
on any new piano or organ.

304 -675-1293.

2 large apartments for rent
in Rio Grande . Call after

7 :00, 614 -682 -7083.

trailer, self contained, sleeps

(refundable) 1 -714 - 569·
0241 ext. 1855 for direc·

or 614 -9B5-

1979 22 ft. Holidey
Rambler, Free Spirit travel
6. $6800. 304-895-3636
ft 5
a er p.m .

For sale New Hamp. pullets .

985 -432B
3555.

negotiable. Call446-2655.

low mileage, axe. cond .,

ORAGONWYND CATTERY
- KENNEL. AKC Chow pup-

8 registered Blue Tick coon
puppies . 4 hen turkeys. 614-

1974 VW campmobile.ldeal
for hunting, fishing or weekend camping trips. Price

newtiroo. 614-992-7657 or
992-2902.

HARTS Uood Cars, Now

T1J GIVE ANARCH'/ SAP NAMe.

Motor Home
&amp; Campers

FARM will hold their annual
sai &amp;\October 23.12 noon. at
the Athens County Fairgrounds, Athens. Ohio. 80
head of nationally competi tive cows. calves. heifers
and youl')g herd bulls will
sell. National Champions as
reference sires I For your catalog, write or call Jeffers
Hereford Farm. Rt . 1

LUGARIG ONCE' PAR IS OF
MIDDLE- EAST. NOW,,fi NOU6 H

304-675 -

AND JEfFER HEREFORD

gov't sales in your area. Call

985 -3B91 .

614 -9B5 -4124.

1980 Chryolor Cordoba .

Athens. Ohio 46701, Phone
:(6141 593-B535.

$30. 614-992-6218.

Firewood for sale -All hard wood . S35 . pickup load.

Autos for Sale

wks old . Call 614-379 2350.

Firewood. Cut &amp; delivered.

446 -7398 .

S2 85 . to S895 . Tables, S3B

-

Call 614-256 -1521 .

Call Robert Harper for Gin seng and Yellowroot prices.

Sofa. chair, rocker. otto man , 3 tables , (extra heavy
by Frontier) , $685 . Sofa.
chair and love se at, S275 .
So las and chairs priced from

KENNEL

Reg . male Walker pup. Reg.
Arabian mare. Reg. Quarter
horse stallion . Also metal
bed. manress free . 614 -

For sale-Shaw-Walker office
equipment . 4 desks, fire
fi les . COntact James Snod -

71

Livestock

POLLED HEREFORD CATTLE SALE. ARROW FARMS

Call 446-3B44 after 4PM.

- washers. dryers, refrigera tors. ranges . Skaggs Ap pliances , Upper River Rd ..
beside Stone Crest Motel.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

63

pies , CFA Himalayan. Persian and Siamese kitt3ns.

Pump gun, 16 gauge Reve lation. new cond., $125.

2

bd .room , gas. parti ally fur ni s hed , underpinning .

41

Furnished room . $115 . utili ti es pd . single male, share
bath . 919 2nd . Ave ., Galli polis . Call446 -4416 after 7

The Ga ll ia-Jackson -Vinton
Joint Vocational Board of
Education has instructed the
treasurer to advertise 8
Adler Electric Typewriters
for sale. These typewriters
have been used in the B.O.E .
Department and will be sold
on an as is basis. the price for
each typewriter will $100. If
interested. plef _Se contact,
Mrs. Bonnie Crabtree.
B .O.E. Supervisor. Phone

0 ,...,~U.n=.

r~::::::~::~:::::::r~~~~~~~~~~~

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST

79

/6·1{

7311 .
Flat porcelian

5AY IT, PLSA?e . YOU CAN.
THINGS VERY BAD HSRE.
TOO MUCH WAR . TOO MANY
8AD 5 iGHTi!&gt;.

23% foot self contained
rleeps 8. refrigerator ~
freezer. excellent condition.

61"4-245-5121 .

614 667 3085
"
"
·

3 White's metal detectors, 3
Smith &amp; Wesson 357 mag.
rev ., Wickliffe rifle. all new.

Camping
Equipment

'"lc 1Starcraft fold-out , used
twice . excellent cond.

55 Building Supplies

56

Auto Repair

446-6639.

Metal sheets for all building

FOR rent in Middlep o rt ,
room effici ency apartment.

The Daily Sentinei-Page--13

Middleport, Ohio

Transml11ion. Rebuilt or axchanged . All work guaranteed, reason~e pricea. Call

W .T . Rawleigh ProductsDistributor's. All kinds flavorings, seasonings &amp;
spices . Mr. Groom animal
care products. laundry &amp;
household cleaning pro -

purposes.

Pomeroy

DICK TRACY

Byerly and Felto Automatic

ONE washer &amp; dryer, $60.
each 304-675 -2373.

Call 446 -8398 .

o r

614-949 -2446. Call even·
ings after 8 . Charles Rit chie.

77

16ft. goose neck trailer . Call

614 -256 -6230 .

1981 14 f1 x 65 Ventura, 2
bdr., exc .cond ., set -up. Fi nancing available . Call 614 -

79 Bayvtew trail er 12 x 65 .
Take over paym ents. Pho ne

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N',CARLYLEr•

Good Siegler fuel oil stove &amp;

C LEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"S QUAL ITY MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS .
RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274 .

256 - 1785
614 -256-6265.

Fridcrf, Oct. IS, 1982

Ohio

DOWN

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it

A 5PIN$TEA:
MI&lt;:;HT 170 t:&gt;lJ~ I N6
L..EAF" YEAA:.
Now ~~range the ctrded ~If'S to
form lho ourprioo - · u ......
~by lho above C01100n.

Anawerhere: ,...tI""'""""'I.....,I"'"""J (

l I ) [.....I&lt;;V""&lt;Pl""&lt;;()
(Anlwerl tomorrow)

Vosterdoy'o/ Jumbl~o: BILGE SKUNK CROUCH B
. ISECT
Answer: For a mother, the son always does thisSHINES

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
AXYDL BAAXR
11

LON. GFI!LLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the ttiree L's, X for tbc two O's, et c. Sin gl e l etters,
apoatrophes, the length and formati on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lett ers are different.

CRYPTOQUOTI!S
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Yeslerday'sCryptoquole: TELL ME WHOM YOU LOVE AND I
WILL TELL YOU WHAT YOU AHE .- AHSENE HOUSSAYE

�- ··--~--.---~- .. --··~.-- . -:.-:----"''"" ....... Page

14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday,

By KEVIN KELLY
Ohio vote rs will be asked in the
Nov. 2 elec tion to accept or reject
-Issue3, a change in state la w calling
for the direct e lection of members of
the Public Utilities Commiss ion of
Ohio.
' Its supporters claim passag~ of
Issue 3 wUI be the fi rst st&lt;•p toward
reforming the P UCO and lowering
utlllty rates.
However , Sena te Bill :m. a bill
passed by the legis la tu re last
summer and Hous.o• Bill 247. now
under conside ra tion in the &amp;&gt;na te.
both propose to bring abou t those
reforms.
And both are supported b.v the two
candidates for the redis llicted 94th
House dis tric t cons isting of Ga llia.
Meigs and Athens coun ties . The two
- Rep. Claire "" Buzz ·· Ball Jr .. P.·
Athens, a nd his Democ t·a tic cha l·
Ienge r , Gallipolis allorney Jolynn
Boster, do not fav·or Issue J.
S.B. 378 cove rs sevPra l a reas of
the P UCO's fu nction. t he mos t im·
portant of wh ich is the nomina tionof
Its commiss ioners from lists provided by a broad -based nominat ing
counc il.
In addition. it also places PUCO
staff under c ivil service protection.
manda te s m anage ment reviews of
public utlllties by the PUCO, and
prohibits ··pancaking."" the utility
practice of filing ra te a pplicat ion
increases with the P UCO before a
decision has been m ade on pending
applications .
The 12-me m ber nominating cou n·
ell would include represe"nta tiv·es
from consumer . labor. bus iness. legislative a nd other groups. includ·
ing senior c it izens. Whenever a
commiss ioner's pos t is vaca nt . it"s
proposed the counc il recommend a
list of four ca ndida tes to the gove r·
nor to take over tha t position .
The council"s recommend a tions
can be re jec ted by the governor
once, but he would be required to
make a c hoice from the eithe r that

sciences. na tural resources or environmenta l studies.
""Most of th is won't ta ke effect un·
til J an. I. so it"s absolutely impor·
ta nt to le t it work until we can get
something e lse underway ," Ball
sa id .
""We have to let it work while we
can sec the holes in It. " added Boster. " I persona lly think 378 is a much
bet1er a ttempt a t reform, because
Issue J was a good idea and had
some s incere people behind It, but
someone misdra fted it. and it got off
track."
Issue 3"s opponents cla im its pas·
sage will create political opportunism if opened to public e lection.
Ba ll a nd Boster both agreed the
likely ca ndida tes in s uch e lections
would be from urban area s, a nd represent a tion of southeas te rn Ohio
would be nil.
""F rom a rura l coun ty standpoint,
with no ru ra l area candidates, Issue
3 is a bad idea." Boster sa id .
H.B. 247 is a broader a t1 empt a t
reforming the PUCO a nd its regul ation over utilties. Its most a ttractive
fea ture is that it restricts utilities
from passing the cost of buying outof-Ohio natura l gas onto consumers
when Ohio gas can be boug ht - an
issue "every one is screaming
a bout. "" Boster sa id.
Additiona lly. the bill proposes utility construction must be 90 percent
complete befo re the cost of that con·
struction is passed by the utility to
the consumer. Presently, construction ca n be 70 percent comple te
when the ms t adjustment is made.
"" It jus t passed the House in Septem ber . but it won't come up for a
vo te in the Sena te until after the
election ... Boster comme nted. ""No
one wa nts to hurt the utiltles before
an election.··

..........

49-55.
Ff'f'dror HrlfN·s· C ond ami ( "hoif'f ' "!iltro !I l l
lbfi. 44 - ~ l ; :110 IO Ifill ll:J.; . .J:! 'lll. -lUI ro '.1 10 ll:r-.
4&gt; ~2: ~ t o om IIJ!.. .J :!.;)I J: tilu t n 101 lbo-. 1 ~
42.75: 700 10 KIJ) lt_r.... ·~-~1; ri l: H'tl and 11\"1'1"
· 40-47.
FP&lt;'df'f Bulls (;t lfX.I .tml l"h'JIC"f ' :.!"i l 111 "IIN J
JbB . .fl- 51: .lX) l o -.4111 I I~ -~- :JK .ril . IUII o rlii J ll.:r-.
~ 49 . 50-00 : ~) to tiiNI lll!'-o ~~ "1~1: HMl I() 71 11 ll_r...
4R-56: 700 !O ~Ol Ill'&lt; _..i-:"t:l '"Il l: Hi l l a nd O\"P I"

47-.'&gt;.l
•

Hols trln Stf'f't"'- an d 1\u ll!-. ?Hl lo i'U l llr.

38-%.
Bull&lt;; t.Om IllS. ,tnd up u

c~ I . ";' 'J

Slau~trr Cows u rill l lt~ :O' ..Jri. ru ll t · r~~ &lt;~ tH l
ca.nno-s .17 down.
Veal C alvrs : Chcdf"r a nd Pri mP :1:- j"IJ
Babv Cal VI'S 411 r{l
Spdn.R('r Cows '..Yl'l· "IIi! I
Cow s and Ca lvrs Com bi nancm J.Jn..m r

•

Top Ho~ Zl O lo :.!:IJ IIJ!.. ')l( . ~ ·+i l
Bom 400 lbs. a nd up H -H.
Sows 400 lbs. a nc1 up 51 :15
Pl,cv; tJ;.' ltv' HP;lcl :l().lfl.
Ff'f'dcr Calf Salf' DatPS . Sall· v 'hl'&lt;lu h·d t r,
()(:!. U . ('&lt;llf. C harnl ,,i:-. .md

• start at 7 p .m .

"!: ··all. " " " ' ' ""'"

.\11 \· 111. to,tll a nd \"l':trli ng. all hr('('ds. Ca !!lr
11"111 IH · n '&lt;·r h ·J·d at th£• \"anll rom i a.m . to :\
p m . o n I hi' d : t~ l)j t hi' "ill!' All c·orto; l ~rnmf'n ! "
,1n · o,n •l11 1mf'

..\lht'IL" Uw~I I.H.'k SaJt'!'&gt;
Saturda)'. (k1 . 9, I~

f X ITI. E PH ICES
F~&gt;r1 l• · • S l i'~ ' r' •C•"od and Choicf' • :ut-:JI'M
t
ltY.-. .J.J 'li~'JI, :. u: ~n mt ~~~ - ·ltl- ~'i
Ft'f'lk r ~IP iff' rs : r( rl)()(l a nd Chnk PI :n ~ :tll(l
1t)', -111--17 c~ r . ~-,n ~ 71X I lhs. -II -17
Ft •t'f l ~&gt; r Jlu]k •&lt;rixx! a n&lt;l ChoiCf'l .U I-.'fWI
lb~ t ! .,.V i1 r~ t: r-.1n i Ofl iiJS . .tfi- :~ . 7~
Sl .i UI.; hiPr flu !!.•&gt; r0vf'r J.(JWI ) ~ . 1 -10--IK.'lll.
Sl. •uJ.!h lf ·r f '!J w &lt;. · t l: l l lll if'!-. :\h5 11--t:\. .'ill
C";tnno•r" ;ulCI ( 'ul!f•r.., :..'ti . :lli- .' 1~1.
.

Meigs County happenings .•.
Court a&lt;"tions filed

Soup supper Saturday

Two suits for foreclosure a nd a
sui! for divorce have ~n filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court .
The Fa rmers Bank a nd Savings
Co.. filed two foreclosure suits, one
aga inst Milton Bartram a nd Donna
J . Bartram, Frame town, W. Va .,
a nd the other aga ins t Michael G.
Caton and Marjorie Caton. Pomeroy and Bank One, Rutla nd Branch,
Rutla nd .
Darra Pec k, Pomeroy . filed suit
for divorce against James R. Pec k.
Cheshire.

The Long Bottom Community Association will hold a soup supper
Sa turday with serving to begin at 5
p.m . There will be vegetable soup,
chili. hot dogs, pie a nd cake . The
supper will be he ld a t the Long Bottom Community building and there
will be enterta inment during the
evening.

Trick or trea t wi ll be he ld in the
vi llage of Syracuse. Friday. Oct. 29,
from 6 p.m . to 7 p. m . The s ire n will
sound to beg in and end theevening 's
activities.

following the accident.
Ricky Wem s ing, 12. Point Plea·
sa nt , a nother passenger in the vehicle dri ven by Miss Casto's brother.
Ha1m on. was released from ICU
yesterda y. He rema ins hospita lized
at Pleasa nt Va lley and is lis ted in
stable condition recovering from a
fra ctured pelvis. Harmon Casto.l7,
also injured in the crash, was relea&amp;'CI from PVH ea rlier this week.
The accident is still under investi·
ga t ion by the Point Pleasant detachment of the West Virginia State
Police.
Lisa Casto was born Oct. 18. 1967.
the da ughter of Roy and J a net Bonecutter Casto. 1109 Hogg St.
Funeral a rra ngements will be announced later by the Stevens Funera l Home of Point Pleasant .

·~-~ivestock(", ,~.~~~n~ "'

PrlcP!'. arrta k(YJ fro m I he · aur l ion of SaluJ
day. Oc t . ~~ . 19)'( 2. Tr('Tlds: Vf',ll r alw...; ~ lra£h .
cow s stra dv : fr«lf'r c Jillr $.l .l highPr
f'c&gt;«&lt;f1· Su'f'r" ( ;ood and ('OOicr :511 to :1m
11:1;. ~ 1- :..h: :l (lt o -Wfllbs . ;jJ.H I. ~iO : -Ill ! ln 'lt l l !l:r-.
5 }.~6:! : .'iXl 10 010 ltl-.. ~ -hi: UMit u 7/JI II_r.. .
~ ~ : 700 I n Pill lbs ·lX- ~:1 ~ : l4ll and m ·rr

FU..ES SUIT - Scott Thorson, light, with entertainer Uberace,
left, smile for a photographer at a Boston area restaurant In 1981.
Thorson has filed a $113-mU!Ion lawsuit against the entertainer claimIng breach of contract, and saying that he had an "Intimate sexual,
emotional and business relationship" with the 63-year-old entertainer
for six years. ( AP Laserphoto).

Tri&lt;'k or trt&gt;at night

Route 62 accident
claims third victim
The acc ident on Rt. 62 north of
Point Pleasa nt a wee k ago. in which
two teenagers were killed, has
cla imed the life of a third v·ict im .
Lisa Cas to. l:i. Point Pleasan t.
died a t Cha rleston Genera l Hospital
a t approxima tel.v 11 p.m . Thu rsday
from injuries sus ta ined in the acci·
dent , according to a hospital
spokesperson.
Casto. who underwent surgery for
head injuries a t Pleasa nt Va lley
Hospita l immedia tely followi ng the
accide nt . which occurred a t 12: 18
p.m . on Oct. 8. was transported that
evening to Cha rleston Genera l.
where she rem a ined in the intensive
care unit until the time of her death.
Kriss Thomas. l6.andH aroldMa·
theny , 14 , both of LeoQ. were pronounced dead on a rri va l a t PVH

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A 23year-old chauffeur-bodyguard fUed
a $113 million "palimony" suit
against Llberace on Thursday,
claiming he had an "Intimate sexual, emotional and business relationship'" with the flamboyant
entertainer for six years.
Scott Thorson told reporters at the
county clerk's office that the liaison
ended last April when Llberace had
him thrown out of the house they
shared.
Thorson refused to discuss the
case In any de taU, but told a reporter
he had tried to settle his disputes
with Llberace out of court but the
famed pianist "would not
cooperate."
The &amp;-foot-2 blond appeared surprised by the crowd of reporters and
photographers that showed up for
his pre-announced appearance at
the courthouse. "I didn 't expect
this," he said.
Thorson's lawyer, Michael B.
Rosenthal, issued a written press
release In which he said Thorson
and Llberace met when the aspiring
dancer and composerwas17 and the
entertainment superstar was 57 and
that they lnnrnedlately began "a datIng relationship." He later became
Llberace's chauffeur-bodyguard, It
said.
"Their agreement ... required
Thorson to cohabltate and share In
Llberace's life style," according to
the statement. "Provisions set by
Llberace called for Thorson to terminate his sehoollng and future pro-

lis t or a second lis t.
The bill now requires commls·
stoners have experience In econom·
lcs, law, finance, accounting,
engineering. physical or natural

1

Area death

Boosters to meet

Fren&lt;'h City guests

Eastern Athletic Boosters will
meet Monday, Oct. 18, at 7:30p.m.
a t the high sehool.

The Twin City Shrinettes will en·
tertain Lady Louise Watte rs. high
priestess of the Ladies Oriental
Shrine of North Am e rica, Thea
Court 5, and membersofher court at
a 6: 30 dinner meeting a t the Middleport Masonic Temple. French City
Shrinettes of Ga llipolis will also be
guests for the evening . Reservations are to be made with Mrs. J ean
Moore, presiden t.

Deceased was 80
W!Uard (Bill) Frye of Cheshire
who died Wednesday at the Holzer
Medical Center is 80, not 79 as was
earlier reported .

Veterans Memorial

John Melvin We lls, .Jr. . 68, Rt. 2.
Racine. died Tuesday m orning at
Veterans Memoria l Hospita l.
Mr. Wells was born July 9, 1914 in
Meigs County the son of the la te
John Melvin, Sr ., a nd Laura White
Wells.
He was a member of Scottish
Rite, Shrine, and Chester Lodge
F&amp;AM. He was a retired U. S. Navy
Lt . having served in World Wa r II.
He is survived by th ree children,
Gary M. Wells, Cleveland; J ohn S.
Wells,. Nelsonville a nd She lley
Proffitt, Portland; four sis te rs, Gal·
die Clendenin, F annie Durst, a nd
Ilah Roush. a ll of Portland; Midge
Garthwohy, Parkersburg; and
Margaret Holter, Pome roy; one
brother , Larry Wells , Tuscan , Ariz.,
and two grandchlldr{,n.
.•
Graveside services will be held
Monday at 1 p.m . a t Bald Knobs
Cemetery. Masonic services w!U be
held a t Ewing Fune ra I Home Sunday at 8 p.m . by Chester lodge
F&amp;AM. Friends will be received at
the funera l home Sunday from 7
p.m . to 9 p.m .

The Reedsville United Methodist
Church will begin revival services
Sunday at 7:30 p.m . a nd continue
through the week. The Rev. Bud
Hatfield will be the evangelist.

ONLY

$JJ9

RECEIVE 2 FREE
DISCS FROM RCA
s70.00 VALUE

Emergency calls
Four calls were answered by unIts of the Melg County Emergency
Medical Service Thursday afternoon and Frtday morning.
At 3 p.m. Thursday afternoon, the
Pomeroy unit answered a call to493
Grant St., Middleport, for Fielding
Hawkins, who was transported to
the Holzer Medical Center. At 4: 45
p.m . the Rutland unit went to the
Route 124 residence of WUllam
Curnette to take him to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; and at ll: 34
p.m. the Tuppers Plains unit transported Addle Baker from her residence to St. Joseph Hospital.
Frtday morning at 2: a.m. Roy
Sorrell was taken from Meigs Mine
No. 2 to the Holzer Medical Center, ·
and at 9: 18 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
took Charles Mash from his Laurel
CUff home to Veterans Memorial.

en

a .m . until noon It was reported.
The election board office will be
open daily from 8: 30a.m. untll4: 30
p.m. and on Saturday, Oct. 23 and
Oct. 30 from 9 a .m. until noon. The
deadline for absentee voting Is at
noon on Oct. 30.
The election board is located In
the Masonic Building on Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy.
r~~~~~~~,

t
t

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY

t
t

JEFF

:

t
t

t
t

t
WE LOVE
YOU!!!

t
t

L~~~~~--J.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
FINAL TWO DAYS
OF OUR

118TH ANNIVERSARY SALE
WOMEN'S WEAR

EVEN THOUGH WE'RE REMODELING
WATCH FOR SATURDAY NIGHT ·

SPE

1\utc·h&lt;•r Si"Jw.., .J ~l ..'ll~ .'"~lKl.
BUII"hc•r Bn.u·.., ·I ~ -lti.:l.l
1-"f'f 'fil'r P i ~~ d lv thr Hf'a d 1 :! I·.J7.

SUF: I-:1' PH ICF:S·
Sl aughlrr l ..tmh!-. .J K-~ 1.
Ff'f'd1 ·r l.amhs -1:!.:!-l-47 Zl.

SYRACUSE-RACINE RESIDENTS
'.

EVERY S~TU

WE NOW HAVE IN STOCK, THE SPECIFIED
PLASTIC SEWER PIPE FOR YOUR HOUSE
CONNECTIONS.

to 9:00

THIS SATURDAY ENJOY
A CHOICE OF PAN FRIED
CHICKEN OR HAM STEAK

(i/IM-uz~

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
MEN'S &amp; BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS ,
MEN'S &amp; BOYS' DENIM and CORDUROY JEANS
MEN'S &amp; BOYS' TUBE SOCKS
MEN'S FLANNEL WORK SHIRTS
MEN'S &amp; BOYS' COATS and JACKETS
MEN'S WESTERN SHIRTS

PI! . 992-6611

n St.

Arizona............ l6
Notre Dame ......... 13

Tennessee .......... 35
Alabama............ 28

•

992-3629

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

-

By JEFF GRABMEIER

'fimes.Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Two members of the panel investigating regional mental health services said after Its
first meeting Frtday they are convir)ced the committee w1U be effective.
John Brunton, Jackson County representative on
the COmmunity Services Review Group, said he feels
the committee is "dedicated to getting to the bottom of
this controversy."
Brunton and Gallla County representative Paul NIday complained before the meeting that the state was
trying to control the committee and was not serious
about Investigating problems In the delivery and fundIng of area menial health services.

However, both ag'ree their complaints were resolved at the meeting.
"AU of my concerns have been satisfied," Brunton
said.
Niday said he was "very impressed" with the four ,
committee members chosen by Myers Kurtz, former
director of the Ohio Department of Mental Health.
"They seemed to be very Interested In seeing that
tax dollars are wisely spent," he said.
Members spent the first meeting, held In Athens,
organizing the cornmltiee and deciding how It will
operate, according to Niday.
He said the quality of patient care and the costeffectiveness of programs will be among the areas the
review group will investigate.

8 S.ctions. 56 Pa&amp;os 35 Cents

Sunday, October 17, 1982

Mental health panel called

A Mu~imedia Inc. Nowst&gt;aper

'effective~

The committee wUl attempt to determine If area
agencies are following the comprehensive plan, a
document which lists the regton 'smental health needs
and how they w!U be met, Niday said.
He said members w!U work both Individually and as
a group.
The conunlttee plans to meet In GaUlpolls this Wedne~ay, Thursday and Frtday, Niday said.
Department of Mental Health officials formed the
review group Oct. 5 to review the "organization, management and operation" of both the Gallla-JacksonMelgs Community Mental Health Center and
tri-county 648 board.
The decision was the result of a long and bitter
conflict between the two agencies which Kurtz termed

an "all-out war."
The Gallia County commissioners have requested
they be a llowed to withdraw from the tri-county 648
board. They said the current investiga tion wUl not
change their decision to seek withdrawal from the
district.
State mental health officia ls, who must approve
Gallla County's request for It to become effective,
have said the commissioners must submit a comprehensive plan detailing how they would provide mental
health services if they pulled out of the &amp;18 board.
Mental health center officia ls, who support Gallla
County's request , said they could develop a comprehensive plan for the county In about a week.

Stable or stagnant?
--city awaits growth
By KEVIN KELLY
1bnes-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis' financial picture, compared to other southeastern Ohio cities, is a relatively
stable situation, but city officials are
· concerned about the "holding pattern" the city is experiencing In
terms of growth.
For the next year, nothing is expected to change In the amount and
quality of services the city offers
residents In and out of the corporation limits, Including layoffs.
Uke many, City Manager Chris
MoiTis said· the city Is awaiting a
hoped-for improvement In the economy, annexation and a ttractlng
more people Into the community to
help Increase the tax base.
MoiTis' concern arises out of the
year-to-date revenue Intake recorded to the end of September, In
which money corning Into the city's
coffers via various taxes and other
means are running below or just at
what was anticipated for the 1982
general fund.
Earmarked as the largest revenue gain for the city is the 1 percent iJlcome tax, which was
estimated tobrtngtnfloo,CXXJforthe ·
$1,656,540.76 total fund revenue In-

The city Is aggressively pursuing
payment of the Income tax by taking
residents and businesses to small
clalnns court for nonpayment of the
tax since Instituting It In 1978.
"We haverecelvedfalrlygoodresults," Morris said. "A good portion
of the people have resolved their
problem with the city. It's no~ our
Intent to put people In jail, just collect the tax."
Additional nonpayment cases are
yet to be filed with thecltysollcltor's
office.
Morris also cited a decision by the
Gallla County Budget Commission
to reapportion a large part of local
government funds to the county instead of the city as another reason
for decline.
The city formerly received
roughly $115,00! In funds, but that
was cut to $75,00! In 1982, largely
because the economy and a state
decision on revenue from the James
M. Gavin power plant dealt the
county's Income a beating.
Morris said that while economies
have been put Into effect, the
amount of service to residents
basn't been decreased.
"Services probably won't be af(Continued on A-4)

take for this year. As of Sept. 30,
$493,955.58 had been collected. It's
estlnnated the total amount for the
year will be approximately 10 percent below what's expected.
The main reason for the decrease
Is attributable to the economy and
layoffs In area Industries. While a
2'h percent Increase In Income tax
collection was noted In 1981, It's beIng lost this year, putting the city at
Its 1!8! standing.
Has Inflation then caught up with
the Income tax?
"If a 1 percent tax would have
continued to grow as projected, It
would be adequate to provide for
general government needs," Morris said. "Over the past three years,
Including 1981-82; It has stagnated,
not grown ...so It means you have to
exercise economies and make do
with what you've got until you see
what happens with the economy."
An Increase In the tax can only be
approved by voters, and the city is
already proposing a one-quarter
. percent rtse to finance a truncated
version of Its recreation complex
project on the Nov. 2 ballot.
''The Income tax was designed to
be a hedge, but with Inflation, we've
gone Into a decline,'' Morris said.

Employees who met with the committee presented
a number of concerns connected to the decision to
transfer 130 clients out of the center and abolish 250
jobs, he said.
Bumping rights, client transfers and complaints
with the admlnistratlon were major topics employees
discussed, Flewellen said.
Since the ODMR hlis no authority with regard to
bumping rights, he said persons with questions and
problems cOncerning bumping procedures were referred to other state agencies.
Bumping lights are privleges employees have to
move to other classifications If thetr job is abolished.
According to the procedure set up by Magnone, the
review committee will present Its findings to an "Independent review board'' consisting of three persons not
associated with ODMR. •

.

.

.

....,._",...~-"· '""

Itwaal82yeantoclay"l!udtbe'~-·llllllledoatbellhoralof
tbe Ohio IUver In lhe place we -cd~ 'lbeleflnileUiera
were awed b)'tbeOido~lllddeeedbe.iG~•IIIenew

'G.,..UofF.Aien:··B-2 \

·..

A political advertlicmeat for OhiO gubernltGrllll clllllldate ClareGCe Brown II 10 cordroVenlal tlul&amp; llx televlllaD etpt!mp ·bave
refllletllo air

tt. Howewr, a

.,._.._.lor Brown laltllbe ad II

"~ a OIII'Ve" IIIII there are 110 plaM lo-drop 1&amp;. 'Die a d a-D'•Ujlp•oent,~Cnl rte,af~tbe.,_&lt;'AIIll

ELBERFELOS IN POMEROY .
•.

~ .·

entinel

tnttS

With cold weather approachlog, now Is the tbne for homeowners to take action to keep
winter fuel bills down. Various
melhods to save money and get
~In paying beating bills
,discussed by Charlene Hoefllcll In today's Times,
Sentinei...B-1

are

wllle lie- dlndoi ...1).1

..
-

Penn State .........28
~l"a(;~e ............ I'

GIRLS' TOPS and SWEATERS
LITTLE BOYS' JEANS and CORDS
CHILDREN'S COATS, JACKETS and SNOWSUITS
GIRLS' JEANS, CORDS and SLACKS

\

---·

Ohio University .... l4
Eastern Michigan ... l3

~

SHOP FRIDAY TILL 8, SATURDAY TILL 5

126

West Virginia ...... 16
Virginia Tech ....... 6

r.::=Today in the Times-Sentinel

ALL BlANKETS
RED HEART KNITTING YARN
CARPET MILL ENDS
• KROEHLER FURNITURE
DISH TOWELS
FABRIC

Hours : Mop.-Fri. 7 : 00toS : OO
Saturday 7:00 to 3: 00

.... . . .

Michigan ...........29
I awa................ 7

HOME .FURNISHINGS.

HOMEMADE NOODLES
MASHED POTATOES
VEGETABLE,.SAIAD BAR,
APPLE CRISP WITH ICE CREAM
. PLUS NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY
sss Park St ., Middleport, Oh.

NIGHT 5:

'";'~""':'·

Pittsburgh.........38
Temple ............. 17

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Developmental
Center Review Committee should have a report of Its
findings complete by the elK! of October, according to
committee chairman James Flewellen.
The four-person committee Interviewed about 50
former and present GDC employees In Its two trips to
Gallipolis In September, said Flewellen, an Ohio Department of Mental Retardation official.
He said said the committee will send Individual
responses to each of the employees who presented
complaints. COpies of these responses will also be sent
to ODMR director Rudy Magnone.
The committee "might have certain recommendations" to make to Magnone concerning operations at
(&gt;DC, but Flewellen said It is too early too tell.
"Our work is still in the early developmental stage,"
hesald.
'

CHILDREN'S WEAR

ATTENTION

.... ...

A CITY'S FINANCIAL STANDING -The figures
above show how much revenue Gallipolis has estlmatedtotakelnfortheyearl982andtheamountthat's
been collected as of Sept. 30. Most projections are

presently

expectations, but officials

see no problems In continulng present services to
residents.

Preliminary results expected in GDC revieW

JR., MISSES and HALF SIZE COATS and JACK~S
JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR
ALL MISSES~ EXTRA SIZE SPORTSWEAR
PRE-TEEN SPORTSWEAR
JUNIOR DRESSES
FLANNEL SLEEPWEAR
JEWELRY

MEN'S and BOYS' WEAR

Spri n).!f'l C n\\'_~ - 1B v rh1• HP&lt;-~d 1 '!~ l-.' \1:1
{'ow .md ( 'alf /'a irs: 1B.v thl' Unit I :t.W-HO
\ " f' ~tl ~ l( "httlc ·p ;tnd Prlml' l .J K-:1~i
1\;tb\ C il \'t''' d h thr Urad t :!fl. ~~
llah\ C t k t ·~ U\ . !hi' Pnundt :!K-ti2.:.,u
HCJ&lt; ; PHi n :s
ll o~.., : 1:\0 I. Harrow s ancl C llts t 3 0.2:\0
IIY.. ,\.I 'Jol ~· '• l

' -~

Ohio State .........26
lllinois ...........21

Vol. 16 No. 35
Copyrighted 1982

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

r------.,---- ------1

VIDEO DISC
PLAYER

fesslonal endeavors as a dancer and
composer to provide exclusive service as a chauffeur and
companion."
"There's absolutely no truth In
It," Llberace's lawyer, Joel Strole,
said when told of the suit. "It's absolutely absurd."
Strate said Llberace was perfanning In New York but he had no
Idea where he was staying.
In a 1973 Interview Llberace denied being homosexual and said he
was against such conduct "because
It offends convention and society."

t

Admitted: Emma Wayland, Middleport; Ida White, Rutland; Mary
Ann Myers, Langsville; Iqa Young,
Rutland.
Diseharged: Linda Eblin, Charles Estep, Margaret Bowles, and
Gary Hysell.

Announ&lt;'e revival

John M. Wells, Jr.

'

Absentee balloting begins Saturday
Persons may vote absentee beginning Saturday, Oct. 16, from 9

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

Oct. 15,1982

·Chauffeur-bodygu~d
files $113 million suit

Rep. Ball, Boster
oppose Issue 3

"':

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

.

. • .

The Mllwaukee Brewers, in an
exclUng comeback victory, defeated tbe st. Louis Cardinals In
1be tDIIIih i1ame o1 111e World SerIes 9aturda¥. 'Die Brewers' win
evened lhe 11erlell at two games
each. Detallll are In lhe 'flmes.
SeftiiDel aport~! sectlon...C-1

Area deatbll ................... :.. A-ll
AJaq the river .......... :.... B-1-8
B llelli ...... :................... C-7

Claullledi '....... '...'......... D-3-7
Edllorlal ,., ..................... A·2-3

LOc.i ............................. A-ll-8
lltllte-Nii&amp;lonal ................. D-1,2
s,a,t~ ............................ C-1-8
~

.,

...........:......... ~"

This review board has not been formed yet, Magnone said Friday .
He said Rep. Claire " Buzz" Ball, R-Athe ns. a nd Sen.
Oakley Collins, Rlronton, will be consulted before
members are chosen.
The review board will present a final set of recom·
mendatlons to Magnone, who will decide what actions
may be necessary.
Magnone said Friday he is unsure when the review
procedure will be complete, although "it looks like
sometime In November."
When the review committee was formed in August,
tie said the probe should be completed by Sept. 23.
Magnone decided to conduct an lnvestiga lion at
GDC after he met with center employees in August .
Several employees charged then that clients were
being "dumped" out of the center and that the CDC

administra tion was harras ing employees it did not
like.
Ball, Collins and Rep. Harry Malott, D-Mt. Ora b,
asked Ohio Senate and House leaders in September to
conduct a legislative probe of CDC employee
complaints.
Ball said the leaders have not yet acted on the
request, but he expects them to do so this week.
Magnone also diselosed Friday that two Independent mental retardation watchdog groups will tour
CDC In the near future.
The state Citizen's Advisory Board and the State
Advisory Council both plan trips to Gallipolis, he said.
One watchdog group, the Ohio Assocltatlon for Retarded Citizens, toured GDC Sept. 21 and said they
were " very favorably impressed" with conditions.

U.S. threatens to withdraw
from U.N. General Assembly
By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
Assoclaled Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States today threatened to withilraw from the United Nations
General Assembly and withhold all
payments to the U.N. If the General
Assembly votes to exclude Israel.
Secretary of State George P .
Shultz also said the United States
will withdraw Its delegation from
the U.N.-afflllated International
Telecommunications Conference In
Nairobi, Kenya, and suspend
further pa~nts to It If an Arab
plan to exclude Israel succeeds.
The Ul)lted States three weeks
ago withdrew from a U.N.-affutated
- International Atomic Energy
Agehcy conference following the
conference's vote to deny I,srael
· credentials.
Shultz said Saturday that the UniI'

ted States Is withholding all further
payments to the IAEA, a U.N.
agency that pollees the use of nuclear technology around the world,
pending a reassessment of U.S.
particlpa lion.
"The United States views these
threats with grave concern," Shultz
said of recent proposals to exclude
Israel from U.N. bodies. " We will
take such action In other United Nations otganlzatlons If there are similar moves."
Shultz said the efforts to exclude
Israel from U.N. bodies and agencies "defeats the very purpose of the
united Nations - to resolve disputes a mong nations- by creating
further conflict and division.' '
"In the case of the General Assembly,lt would be a clear cut violation of the United Nations Charter,''
he said. "If Israel were excluded ...

the United States would withdraw
from participa tion in the Assembly
and would withhold payments to the
United Nations until Israel's right to
participate is restored ."
Shultz said the the recent antiIsrael moves also threaten the progress being made toward bringing
peace to the Middle East, a goal to
which he said the United States and
virtually all U.N. members are
committed.
"It would be a tragic Irony, if such
moves against Israel in-the United
Nations system weretosucceectjust
at the time where there is renewed
hope for progress in the Middle
East," Shultz said.
Warning that further attacks on
Israel in U.N. agenlces pose "grave
dangers," Shultz called on the"majority of U .N. members to "work to
turn aside such lnltlti\.es."

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