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stories on Pages 3, 4

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'

e.

Vo! .34. No .167
Copyrighted 1984

•

at y

'

24 court cases
Story on Page 10

•

enttne

2 S~ctions. 14 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Thanksgiving 1984

Parades, feasts
celebrate event
By MARY 1\lacVEAN

32.97~
Bailroa4fzeigbtyar41sch1ld-powered,portable.

days 'til
Christmas

story on Page 10

e ;

stop for big values
on kids' favorites!

Story on Page U

our Soeial Security

It's Murphy's Mart Policy Not 'lbBe
Undersold On Any Item We Advertise.
If it occurs, we'll honor the lower sale ~rice on
the sa.me item with a copy of any curren IOC8J ad.

is Santa's smartest

Gun deer season

'

A&amp;&lt;i&lt;lCiated Press Wliter
Millions of Americans kept a Uvea
tradition that started with a harvest
feast more than 350 years ago by
sharlng dinner with loved ones and
reaching out to the hungry in
Thanksgiving celebrations that
kicked off the winter holiday season.
From the nation's first family to
its despera te poor, it. was a day to
belly up to turkey and ali the
trimmings. Tens of thousands of
homeless, hungry or lonely people
feasted· on free meals and warmth
offered in soup kitchens, restau·
rants and shelters.
Miles of parades wound through!

the streets of several of the nation's another spectator. Police said
biggest cities on Thursday; a day Dwight Fenison was treated at the
before those same streets would scene but died a short time later in a
taken over by the kickoff of the
hospital. A 16-year-oid boy was
Christmas shopping madness. To arrested on a murder warrant .
Pollee said more than 500,00J
herald the season, more than 100,00J
people turned out, despite temperapeople watched the lighting of a
tures dipping as low asl2degrres, to
!().foot Christmas tree in Atlanta.
In New York City, at least lOO,OOJ watch Detroit's 58th annual parade.
And more than &lt;IOO,OOJ people I!tied
people bundled up against the cold to
Phliadeiphla's .streets for the Gimwatch Raggedy Ann, Garfield the
mischievous cat and the other . bels Thanksgiving Parade. · An
estimated 8! million people watched
heliwn·fiUed stars of the 58th annual
the parades on television.
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.
Thanksgiving marks the five·da y
The Thanksgiving Day parade in
feast held in 1621, when Massachu·
Montgomery, Ala., was marred by
setts Bay colonists shared their
the stabbing death of a 20-year-old
l)arvest with the Wampanoag
man du1ing an argument with
Indians.

OPEN AJR DINNER - Volunteers fJ,:Om
Washington's Community for Creative Non-Violem'r
serve a Thanksgiving dinner for the homeles.• in

Lafayette Park, opposite the White House, Thursday.
The group serves the open air meal each
Thanksgiving. ( AP Laserphoto ).

•

Outgoing lawmaker seeks appotntlllent
COLUMBUS, Ohio !AP I -The
search for a successor to the late
Michael Del Bane, ·chairman of the
Public Utilities Commission, is
drawing attention from a pair of
well-known poiilicians who lost at
the polls Nov. 6.
State Supreme Court Associate .
Justice James Ceiebrezze submitied his a pplication for the post on·

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BUI'PLEIIENT TO THE Pr. PLEASANT REOIITER /lUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL, WETZEL-TYLER
~~ COUNTY QRI!EN TAe, BRYAN T-., THE PROGRESS, COURIER-EXPRESS, -LAI;HIAN
IIIW8-EXPIIE88, ~ V-1011. RECORD COUAER, WHEEUNQ NEW&amp;MGIITER lNTELLIGENCIR, RALEICIIt REGISTER I POST HERALD, DOMINION POST, CAE&amp;-

have voted to raise salaries.
Schwarzwalder, who sponsored
prp·consumer utlilty legislation, is
considered by some politicians a nd
Statehouse observers as thefavorlte
for the PUCO job if he receives the
legal clearance.
Schwarzwalder voted to set
PUCO salaries between $47 ,em and

$63.0.:0 a year . in 198.1. when the
commission was expande d from
three to live members.
However, Ohio At tornPy General
Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr . issued an
opinion in January l!lR1clea r ing the
way for Gov. Richard CP!este to
appoint three former legislators to
stat"
]obs u u d er s imilar

circ umstances .
Cele brezze ruled that theconstitu ·
tiona \ requirement did not apply to
the legisla tors who had voted on a
salary range a nd not a s(X'Cific
salmy incrcaSI' .

applies in this instanee."
He sa id he a lso has ask"\ for an
opinion to determine \l.:hC'th('r tt

would hc legal for him to accept thr
com mission job at a sa Ia!\· hclow
the range SPI in 19!!:1
·

Schw&lt;u-&lt;waider said. "I have
asked the Ohio attorney general for
a n optnton to see whethPr that

That increase ratS('(! thr cha ir·
m a n's $36.(0) annual

~aldn

$S8.00J.

to

.

U.S.-Soviets end stalemate on nuclear talks

8.97

tl

Monday. State Sen. Michael
Schwarzwalder now has jumped
into scene, asking for an anorney
general's opinion aimed at removing a potential roadblock for the
Columbus Democrat.
The Ohio · Constitution requires
state legislators to wait one year
afler k&gt;aving office before serving
on any state board for which they

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Cheok Your Store For
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NEWS, WED., NOV. 2!, 1114, IRONTON TRIBUHE I AlltLAIIl .DAILY 1-PENDENl IWLY
PRESS, THURS., NOV. 22, 1114, HIL liDAl • DALY N!WI, TUES./WED,, NOV. III/2!,
NINO JOURNAL I SAL£11 NEWS, THUIII.IFRI., NOV. 111/D, 11M lEDFORD COUNTY PilUS
SHOPPERS QUIIE, IIRAOENBURG PKiNEER I EIITIIIPfiu.
RUN 13
CINT NEWS, wP.RREN r-.NE CIIRONlCI E, CHARLESTON ClAZETTE I DALY MAIL, PIITRIOf
Some Item&amp; In thla ctn:uter ..... not be ...tlable at Hinton, WV.

..4,110R-

SAI'ITA BARBARA, Calif. !API - Ending a
yearlong stalemate, the United States and the Soviet
Union are opening new negotiations In Geneva on Jan .
7·8 in an effort to c urb nuclear weapans and space
weapons.
"We are ready for genuine glve-and·take with the
Soviet Union with the purpose of reaching concrete
agreements," Robert C. McFarlane, President
Reaga n's national security adviser, declared.
A joint announcement by the superpowers on
Thanksgiving Day said that Secretary of State
George P. Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
A. Gromyko were des igna ted to begin the new talks.
Although the session wili formally end a yearlong
deadlock. McFarlane cautioned that thP quest for an

arms agreement was likely to be difficult.
"I would not say that this is a milestone of
conclusion but, rather, an o(X'nlng of a process that
will be difficult and sustained over time," he said.
The meeting represents the first face-to-face
negotiations on strategic and medium range nuclea r
weapons in a year, and the first U.S.·Soviet talks on
space weapons since 1979. "We enter the talks in
January In the spirit of honest compromise and
getting results," McFarlane declared.
Without mentlqning the extreme U.S.-Soviet
hostility that marked most of Reagan's first term,
McFarlane said:
"We are at a moment where each side has decided

to make a d"lermined effort to reduce tensions."
Shultz a nd 'Gromyko wlll use the fi rst session to
discuss the objectives. form a t and agenda lot the new
ta lks. McFarlane said .
His a nnouncement was made at the White House.
In a move that symbolizt'd the tense state or
superpower rela tions, the Sovlels stalked out of
nuclea r a rms ta lks a year ago to protest NATO
deployment of new U.S. Pershing 2 and c ruise
miss iles in Euro(X'. Effort s to rev ive those ta lks have
so fa r failed.
While McF arlane·said the new ta lks wi ll focus on
strategic nuclea r weapons . medlum ·range nuclea r
weapons a nd spare weapons , he added it was not yet
known whether the s~pa ra te sus(X'nded nucl&lt;&gt;ar ta lks

Holiday death toll reaches 100
According to the National Safety
CouncU as of 11 a.m. Friday 100
people had died In holiday accidents.

The count Is taken from 6 p.m.
Wednesday through midnight

Sunday.

their "established in stitution!" and channels and
delegations a nd scJ forth make (XJSSible immedia te
progress ... \\it haUl further dPiay. ·
~

Nevertheless. h€' sa id the L'nitcd States was willin g
to " liste n about a lternat ivE' ide as on thf' othcr sidPand
we look fonvard to doing t h ~ll in JJ nuary. ··

.Additional businesses
planning open houses

Judge dismisses
civil rights action
A civil r ights action flied in U.S.
connection with his trial which
District Court, Columbus, against
violated his civil rights. Among
several Meigs County officials. has
other things, Park said in his claim.
been dismissed by Judg" Joseph H.
that the defendants Ignored reKinneary.
peated requests by Cindy Park to
Named as defendants in the suit
drop the child-stealing case.
were Rick Crow, prosecuting attorThe defendants retained counsel
ney: Paul Gerard, pro8eculing
and filed motions for dismissal or
investigator: Charles Knight, comsummary judgment on various
grounds.
mon pleas judge, and David
Koblentz, p resident of the boa rd of
In respo nse to these motions,
commissioners.
Park also filed a motion to dismiss.
Th€' s uit was filed in District Court
Park attempted to condltion ·his
on Sept. 4 by .John Park. Park is
motion, stating: If this Court would
presently incarcerated In the Qr.
dlsmiss this cause pending, and
tent , Ohio Pre·Release Center after
order these county officials to refain
being convicted ea r lier this year in
from contacting the adull parole
Meigs County for alleged child·
authority, the plainti!fs would be
pleased. (Letters were written once
stealing.
Park was asking for$250,00Jeach
before from Meigs County, which
from Craw. Gerard.• and Knight !or
caused this plaintiff to serve
embarrassment, ·m ental anguish
additional time).
and unnecessarjl tension caused his
In answer, the court noted Park
family in regard tothechild·stealing
had advanced no reason why Meigs
case. Park was also seeking$250,00)
County officials should be prohibited
from the county for a llowing his
from coummunicat!ng wllh parole
six ·year·old ' son to- witness the
authorities, and that Park made no .
.child·stealing conviction. Allhough
showing that any such communica·
her signature did not appear on the
tlon would threaten his clvli rights.
complaint, Clnily Park, Pomeroy,
In determining theoutcomeofthe
wife of John Park, was also named case, Judge Klnneary Court obas a plaintiff in the action. An served that 'In the light of the
additional $250,00l in compensatory frivolous nature of the plaintiff's
and punitive damages was re- · claim,' plj&gt;intlff's motion to dismiss
quested on her behalf.
has been granted.
Park alleged that the defendants
The case was dismissed with
engaged in a variety of acts in
prejudice on Nov. 19.

wi ll ever be revived .
But there was the possihilit:· I he ne\\' talks would. in
pffect , replace the s ta lemated talks. Tha t wa:·. the
Soviets would not have to back down on the
p reconditions they had sPt for rPsuming l hosr
negotiations.
However , M cF arL:lni? indicat0d thr admi nistra tion
still hoped the ea rli er ta lks cou ld be reYiH'd. "')'ing

traditonill welcoming in vf the
Chri!'l nl::!S Sf_"lason in both romcro\'

Pomeroy's two flower shops.
which for ~·cars have tra ditiona lly
observf'd open houses on the Sunday
following Thanksgi,·ing. will b&lt;&gt;
joined by a number ofotherbusiness
housc•s in lh&lt;' '·enture this yea r.
For the most part . theo(X'n housPs
will sta rt at 11 a .m. Sunda:·
concluding at ~ p .m . The florist
shops will as us ua l Sf'rve refreshments and will awa rd door prizrs.
Other me rchants joining thP open
houSf' act h·ity this year pla n S(X'Cia i
ac tidti t?S.

NEW TALKS- Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, left, and
U.S. Sec!n1ary of State George P. Shultz will meet in Geneva,
Switzerland In January to open new negotiations on a range of issues
Including dlsannant~nt, the Soviet Union IIIUIOUnced Thursday. (AP
Laserphoto )-

a nd Middlcpon on &amp;lturdn:· \lith
th f' annual paradr. a join t W"n1ure
b~·

thf' two com munltiC'5.. starti ng in

Mi cld lepon at llla .m. Sau• ·d.1 \'.
Santa will be• on hand tn PomeroY
on both Sa turd a:· and Sunda:· i~
Pomero: a nd in M iddiPpon on
SCJtul'da v.
In conjunct ion wit h the open hous('
ob~f'n· a nrC' in Pomrro~· Suncla~ · lht•
M C'ig~ Count~· MuSC'um on BullC'rnut
,\ vc .. will b&lt;&gt; op&lt;&gt;n lm m 1 to ,I p .m .
and the !ral uJHI r'hibit will ra•n
out thr thromr . "An Old F&lt;~s hiom-d
Ch ristma~ ·· u: hich b. th(• 1h{ •mr a lso

J oining the Pomeroy F lowe r
Shop. Butternut Ave., and F ra ncis
Florist. E. Ma in St .. in the o(X'n
house ac tivity this yPa r are Top of
the Stairs. Dollar ·General Ston: .
Nelso n's Drugs. Hartley Shoes. K. &amp;
C. J !'welry. NI'W York Clothing
Store, MargueritP Shors. The F abr ic Shop , Chapman Shoes. Simon's
Pic-a-Pair, Clark's J('&lt;velry Stm·c,
El hcrfeld's Department Store a nd
Ihe Ehcrsbach Hardware Store.
The Sunday activity will follow the

~in gcatTi('(l ou t

thisholicJ;t \ sf'ason

by

and

P omc1m·

Mirkllcpon

mf't'Chant~ .

On Saturcb1. lht• Trin ill· l'lturch
in Pomf'ro~ · \.\'ill sponsor .rl &lt;'hrist m as paradr lundtr'O n in the church
social tOOill!-1 from HI a .n1 . until:?: :~0
p.m . \ 'cget a bl r 'uup. c h ili. 'l upp~·
] Of'S. hot dogs. desserts ami i1('1·cr.
Og€'s will lX' aqilabl€' . Carn ··out
ordC'rs will also br fii lecl.
·

Two Meigs resi.d ents injured in accident
Two Meigs County residents were
treated and released at Veterans
·Memorial Hospital following a
on~ar accident on Meigs County30
Wednesday night. ·
Hospital officials said Kathryn
Klein, 17, 204 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, and a passenger in her
car, Lori Frye, 16,ln'l BrowneU St.,
Middleport, were treated for multi·
pie bruises. A second passenger,
Brian Gheen, 21, Middleport, was
taken to Veterans, but was not
treated , of'flctals said.

The Ga liia ·Melgs post oftheSta te
Highway Patrol said Klein was
westbound on ~. when she a ppar·
ently lost control of her vehicle, went
off the right side of the highway.
struck a ma ilbox and ovet1urned
into a ditch, causing heavy damage
to her car.
·
Klein was cited by troo(X'rs for no
driver's Ucense and failure Ia
control following the 9: 30 p.m .
accident .
i\ Pomeroy man was c ited by
troopers foUowing an acciden t on

Cherry Ridge Road .
Robert L. Nelson. :l.'l. Chen)·
Ridl(e Road. Pomeroy , was wpst·
bound and Billy M. McLa ughlin Jr ..
16, Skinner Road. Pomeroy. was
easti:Jound on Cherry Ridge, whm
their vehicles apparently collided on
a hillcrest. ,troopers said.
No injuries were reported and
McLaughlin was cited for fallw·e to
yield one-half of the roadwa y
foilowlng.the 12:24 p.m. accident .
A Racine man escaped lnjuty
when the car he was drivihg struck

an em bankm('nt on PinP c;rove .

•

Road Thursd a Y mornin g.
T roo(X'rs said Charles M . Mill er
27. Racine. was northbound on Pin~
Grove . when the left front tir rod of
his car a pparently bmke, co using
him to lose control of his ve hicle
Miller repo r tedly went off th~
highway, struc k a n em bankment
a nd a gas r€'guiator.
The 7: 19 a .m. incid€'nt caused
moderat e d a m age to Miller's car,
troopers sa id. No citations w&lt;:&gt;rc
issued, accordin,g to the patrol .

�.'

Friday, November 23, 1984

Commentary
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Supposethatyoucameacrossthe Again.
following statement, summarlzlng
The words are those or a highly
foreign policy recommendations in
respected French philosopher, pola book dealing with the struggle for
Itical scientist and journalist. Jeanthe world. "Detente was not a
Francais Revel is the author or
dream, but. a trap. (The West's)
several books, two preceding titles
politics should consist of practicing having arrested the attention or an
and demanding a · real detente of Europe and, though to a lesser
which goes both ways and does not extent , the United States. They are
only benefit the Soviets. Our means · "Without Marx or Jesus" and "The
are many. We must systematically Totalitarian Temptation." The currefuse everything the communists rent book is called "How Demorequest, Including supposed disar- cra ts Perish," and its thesis Is that
mament conferences, as long as the the West cannot light back effecSoviet Union pur s ued Its tively. Why? Because It Is In the
expansion."
nature or democratic practice to
• You would conclude on your own, Incapacitate Itself by two means.
or else the lnteiiigentsia would
First there Is the grand delusion,
conclude on your behalf, that you Inspired by the rational superstition
were deailng with a mad war- that a community power simply
monger. Dr. Strangeiove Rides can't credibly be thought to be up to

DEVOTED TO THE li'OTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
1'1~
fli!m~ ...,.,__..._-ror-T"E30 =loo=o
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ol The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and tht• American Newspaper Publishers Association.
. LETTERS OF OPINION ue weleome. They s hould be less than SOO words
long. All letters aresuhjecl to editing and musl De sirned with name, address and
telephone num~r . No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letter~ ~hould be In
good taste, addrt~ s ln g issues, n~ personalities.

Bill will protect
·Ohio livestock

Some tips for
the ~ew legislator
"Avoid hiring the mayor's idiot son"- that's rule No. 3l.n a handy new
guidebook prepared for freshman members of Congress.
The book is being sent to more than 40 new members of the House of
Representatives who, come Jan . 3, will find the mselves on the bottom rung
of the seniority ladder, with officPs at the longest distance from the House
floor.
With major issues such as the deficit and the fate of the MX missile
scheduled for early votes. the new member has little chance for on-the-job
training. But there is much to be done getting started.
From overcrowded offices, America's new House meml)ers wiU find
them selves running miiilon-doilar-a-year operations with a Washington
office, a branch office back hOme. and an avalanche of mail from people
who will have an opportunity to vote against him or her in less than two
years.
"One of the basic, omnipresent , sometim es oppressive, facts of
congressional life is the mail," the management guide ·warns the
newcomers. The mail is deilvered four times a day, five days a week, every
week. And in bold-faced type, the new member is warned to come to grips
with mali handilng right away.
The book, titled. "Setting Course: A Congressional Management Guide"
was published by the American University Congressional Management
Project in cooperation with the Congressional Management Foundation.
·In addition to receiving the handbook, each new member of Congress has
also beeri invited to bring an aide and come to a free seminar next week to
learn more from the experiences of the Class of1982,last tenn 's freshmen .
The project was funded by a woman whO thought she knew how to run a
congressional office better than the incumbent. She failed In a bid to be
eit&gt;Cted to Congress in 1!1!2, but forged ahead anyway with her
'determination to create a better-managed Congress.
; Deborah Szekely, who made her money with the Golden Door fitness spa
iri California, set up a foundation t.o fund the effort.
The authors say: "ChOices made in the first hec'llc days can haunt a
member throughout his or her career. Indeed, these Initial chOices have
some impact of whether that career Is long or short."
: Hiring the mayor's idiot son, or any other person who might prove.
Jl!)llti,::aily difficult to fi re, wastes a valuable staff slot.

.Today Is Friday, Nov. 23, the 328th day or 1984. There are 38 days left in
tt$! year.
-Today's highlight In history:
On Nov. 23, 1943, U.S. forces seized control or 'l'arawa and Makin from
the Japanese during the Central Pacltlc offensive In the GObert Islands
·dljrtng World War II.
On this date:
In 1765, Frederick Coonty, Md., repudiated the British Stamp Act.
In 1914, the 14th President of the United States, Fl'ankUn Pierce, .w as
barn In Hillsboro, N.H.
ln 1887, actor Boris Karloff was born.
.
In 1903, Enrico Caruso made his American debut at the Metropolitan
Opera HOWle tn New York, appearing In "Rigoleito."

such dangerous mischief as
charged. Second, to say the modem
equivalent of, "What about the
Negroes In the South?" You will
perhaps have forgotten that old
chestnut, which went the rounds :.l
years ago. Scene, the Moscow
subWay. Soviet Foreign Minister
Molotov Is s howing Secretary of
State Acheson the beautiful mosaic,
crystal-dean s ubways that Acheson noisily admires, but tlnaiiy
asks, "Where are the trains?"
Molotov huffily retorts, "What
about the Negroes in the South?"
Revel gives many examples of
the working of the Western mind .
Louis Mermaz, president of the
National Assembly in France and a
doctrinaire socialist, replied to a
reporter's question about the Soviet

. "S:.~'

Like a s heriff's posse riding:in at the last minute to save the ranch, the
Ohio Department of Agriculture is making an eleventh hour pitch for a bill
that - at first glanc!' - brings to mind visions of Old West rustlers.
But there's much more than that involved in the legislation for which the
department is trying to corral legisiai ive support in the las t weeks before
the Genera l Assembly adjourns.
At stake is a proposal to create a livestock brand registration program in
which the department would maintain a central registry of livestock
brands or identification numbers.
Livestock owners would be entitled to exclusive use of a particular
brand, once registered with the sta te. for five years . The registrations
would be renewable.
James Thompson, chief criminal investigator for the department, .says
the measure is aimed in part at helping law enforcement agencies deal
with rural c rime.
Thompson said the bill provides for voluntary participation of farmers
who would list a brand design, or numerical identification system for those
who ta ttoo livestock, with a central registry in the department .
Another sect ion authorizes a cent ra l registry of identification numbers
for farm equipment and grain as well as livestock.
Registration lists would be made ava ila ble to law enforcement agencies
tor usc in quickly det&lt;'rrrining ownership of livestock or machinery they
might intercept.
Thompson said a registered brand would become the personal property
of the owner. No one else could legally use it, unlike the presen1 case.
"There is no protection. A farmer can develop his herd and business
reputation and usc that brand design as his, as a business symbol of
quality, (for years I. I can move in two counties away and use the same
brand," he said. "Tha t's why we wanted to develop this program so It
would be illegal."
·
Although the Ohio Farm Bureau Fedf'ration supports the anti-crime
concept, it has expressed some reservations about the bill and duplication
with exisling identification progra ms.
La rry Kandel, the federation's director of public affairs, asked the
Senate Agriculture. Smail Business and Economic Development
Committee to spend more time discussing the measure. He called for
testimony from the National Rural Crime Prevention Center, based at
Ohio State University.
"We're for the basic concept of attacking rural crime problems. We're
just raising concerns that some portions of tha t proposa l haven't been
adequately addressed," Kandel said.
·
He's skeptical, for example, of department claims that it could operate
the program with existing staff and budget , using revenue from a bfand
regis! ration fee of $15 or $20.
"I guess that 's hard to believe. Everything costs something," Kandel
said. "The depanment is dramatica lly underfunded now. We hope that's
improved in this next budget."

rooay in history

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
. F~y. November 23, 1""

French reveille ,. ._._. ;:.. ,_____:____ _.:.___w_u_lia_m_F_.-8~uc_k_ley_J_r.

The Daily Sentinel

J~ HEI.MS''DILEfNM; lo STAY~ASOOIRMAN OF~ AGRICU~~ ~

AAD PRo1Ki t&amp;«ol OR~ B~ CIJtAI~ CJ ~t ~6N 'RELAlTCNS C"clMMtmi.

gulagS: "I am as horrified as you
are by the gulags, which are a
perversion or commuunlst But I
ask that yQu also condemn that
monstrosity or the capltaUst sys~
tern: hunger throughout the world .
that kills 50 million prople every ·
year, 30 mi.Uion of them children."
Revel notes that gulags . are a
"perversion" of communism, whUe
hunger Is postulated as an attribUte
of capitalism. (The reverse is true:
Where there Is communism, there
are gulags. Where there Is capitalIsm, hunger diminishes, year by
year). He notes matter of factly
that it can hardly be the case that
the child population is increaslq
year by year, which makes It
impossible, given comprehensivf'
figures, that 3() million should be
dying. But above ail he observes
that the net psychological impact of
reaction ("What about the Negroes
in the South?") is exculpatory,
having the effect of diluting, If not
absoiutEily castrating, indignation.
These are two of the several
reasons why we · cannot negotiate
with the Soviet Union. Revel points
out that there. is not one historical
occasion in which negotiations have
net improved the Western situation
n would except those negotiations
that led Ia a treaty for Austria In
19561. Mr. Revel, who writes with
analytical passion, doubts that
democratic countries, given as they
are to the assumption of universal
rationalism, can contend · with
single-minded demonic powers.
"Democracy may, after all, turn
out to have been a historical
accident. a brief parenthesis that ill
closing before our very eyes."
Mind, he is obviously In favor of
making th~ effol1. A principle of
Western foreign policy should be
"to reply to any Soviet encroachments with immediate reprisal.

CIA thwarted coup_-,--________Ja_ck_A_n_d_er_.~o_n
WASHINGTON - No matter Qaddafi has never forgiven MobuDetails on . last month's plot
what you read , the CIA doesn't
tu's decision to resume diplomatic against Mobutu are sketchy. One
always fumble the bail. Last
source said that Zairean military
relations w!th Israel in 1982.
month, President Mobutu Seso
zaire, whlci) has a negligible officers from Mobutu's home proSeko of .zaire was able to crush a . Moslem population, was the first vince or J;:quateur were behind it ,
coup attempt after he was given a
black ·country ta do so; it gave and that tl)ey had Libyan backing.
timely tip by the CIA.
Israel an enormously Important The plotters were reportedly un·
What makes ' the successful
listening post In the heart of Africa. happy over Mobutu's Intervention
SQ4eichlng of the attempted coup
Qaddafi was also ticked off at in Chad and je alous of a civil police
particularly satis(ying to the CIA is
Mobutu for proposing last July to guard that had won the president's
that it was Libya's Soviet-leaning replace the Organization of African favor.
dictator, Muammar Qaddafi, who
Whoever the Zairean conspiraUnity -which the Libyan dictator
was behind the plot. So the CIA
hoped to use as a means to tors were, and whatever their
helped protect the 19'yea r rule of a
backing was, the plan was to seize
dominate the whole continent pro-Western Afrlpn leader against
with a league of black African Mobuto at the Kinshasa airport on
the most virulent anti -American
his arrival from a visit to Westem
states. which would have cut
leader in ail of Africa and the Arab Qaddafi off at the Sahara.
Europe early last month. though
world.
The thwarted coup wasn't the one factiun reportedly favored
CIA sources told my associate first attempt Qaddafl had made on
Mobutu's s ummary execution,
Dale Van Atta that the Libyan
most of the plotters wanted to send
Mobutu . Last January, when a
egomaniac 's Ir e was arouses
bomb exploded In luggage taken off him into exile on the plane, that
against Mobutu for several
brought him home.
a Soviet airliner at the airport
reasons:
But Mobutu was tipped off by the
outside the zatrean capital of
Qaddafi was furious at Mobutu
CIA and had his plane land at
Kinshasa, Mobutu suggested that
for sending 2,cro troops into Chad
the Libyans had engineered the , another ·airport. The conspirators
last yea r to block a Libyan.invasion. unsuccessful attack through their learned about the tipoff to Mobutu
He also resented Mobutu's prowhen they stole a suitcase contain·
embassy in neighboring Congo.
Western stance In general. And

ing the secret plans for the plot from
a hotel room In Brussels. The
suitcase belonged to Mukundjl
Kasongo, pres ident of Mobutu's
parllam41nt.
The CIA has had a long and
highly supportive relationship with
Mobutu since he first gained pdWer
in the early years of the former
Belgian Congo's Independence. It ls
probably no coincidence that Lany ·
Devlin, the CIA staion chief who
helped Mobutu ·seize power in a
bloodless . coup 19 years ago, .
became the zalrean representative
of the top American diamond
broker when he retired from t~
OA in 1974.
ASide from the documented
human rights abuses of Mobutu 's
one-man rule, the most noteworthy
feature of fils regime has been Its
Incredible level of corruption. A
former prime minister, Nguza
Karl·I-Bond, believes that Mobutu
has stashed away a private fortune
of close to $4 biiilon.

Shifting sands_·___________R_o_b_er_t_w;_a_lte_rs

RALEIGH, N.C. (NEA) -To the
surprise of almost nobody- except
the federal and state officials who
persist in believing that they can
alterthecourseofnature-Oregon
Inlet again is a lmost impossible to
navigate.
Although the inlet was readily
navigable only a few months ago, It
now Is clogged with sand because It
is part of a coastal network of
Inherently unstable barrier islands.
Their very existence is the product
of a ceaseless cycle of ocean-borne
depletion and replenishment.
Oregon Inlet has achieved considerably more permanen~e than
many features of the nation's
barrier islands. Since the mid-1800s,
it. has provided generaiiy reliable
access through North Carolina's
Outer Banks for bts passing
between the Atlantic Ocean and the
mainland.
That's Important to mariners
because Oregon Inlet Is the only
·break in the barrier Islands between Cape Henry, Va ., 85 miles
north, and Cape Hatteras, N.C., 50
miles south.
Unable to accept that gift on
nature's terms, assorted government agerici@s have attempted tor
decades to construct permanent
improvements on a fragUe beach
which perpetually wanders, shifts
and migrates.
Because the Inlet has consistently
moved south at a rate of 75 feet per
year, the first lighthouse erected on
the south sldeofthechannei toppled
into the ocean, a victim of erosion. A ·
second lighthouse met the same
late.
A third lighthouse was built on the
north side of the channel, but It now
stailds more than a tnlle !rom tlie
·· channel it is supposed to mark.
Ignoring the advice of the Ariny

Pomeroy:_Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-The Daly s.rtinl,

Corps oi Engineers, which warned
As a result, the Corps of
that the inle t was too unstable · to Engineers was forced to protect
support the structure, the state In Ediz Hook with a stone revetment
1962 constructed a bridge across the 18 feet high and two miles' long. In
inlet. The bridge now spans more addition, the corps must constantly
sand than water and requires pump new sand In front of the
embarrassingly expensive care to revetment to prot ec t the
maintain.
protection.
The Corps of Engineers must
Indeed, the corps has deluded
continually dredge the inlet to keep itself and much of the nation into
the channel open, but that's a
bell~ving that constantly evolving
constant struggle against the forf't's coastlines somPhow can be engi·
of nature. The channel, open only neered into stability with groins.
about one-quaner of the time, now
Is less than half of Its aqthorized
14-foot depth. In recent weeks, two
(ishing boats have run aground and
capsized.
-----.
The Corps of Engineers argues
that it can permanently stabilize
the Inlet If Congress wlll approprlate more than $100 million to ·
construct an elaborate network of
mile-long jetties ...: but similar
solution·s have not worked
elsewhere.
Jetties constructed at New Jersey-'s Barnegat Inlet in the 1940s
were supposed to stabilize the
channel and drastically reduce the ·
need for constant dredging - but
the channel continues to shift and
extensive dredging remains
necessary.
In Ocean City, Md., jetties have ~~~~~~
retarded - but not halted - beach ;
erosion while creating a new ~
problem: They have seriously ...reduced the flow of sand to
Assateague Island National Sea· shore, which lies south of the resort 1~::.::=
community.
Near Port Angeles, Wash., a
massive bulkhead .has halted eraston ol shoreline bluffs- but It also
has intercepted the sand that. had
bee nourishing Ediz Hook, a slender
spit .of land that protects the port
from ocean-spawned storms.

jeltif's, bulkheads, seawalls and
breakwaters financed throu~:h
multi-million-dollar appropriations
from the federal treasury.
That approach hasn't worked
elsewhere and It won't work here.
Nature has created dozens or
different inlets along the Outer
Banks since the region was first
explored but only five currently
exist. Those who seek stability in
the shifting sands are doomed to
failure.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Cowboys, Lions win Thanksgiving game.s
- JRVING, Texas (AP) - The
Dallas Cowboys went from a joke to
a juggernaut in just four days.
"We came back from one of the
worst losses ih franchise history,"
said ruruiing back Tony Dorsett
after the 20-17 Thanksgiving Day
victory over the New England
. Pall1ots. "People had lost respect
for the Cowboys."
)
Dallas, whipped 14-3 by the
winless Buffalo BIUs on Sunday,
extracted some respect from Patriot quarterback Tony Eason.
The Cowboys sacked l)im 10
times; ll'lO!jt ever against a New
England
and safety Michael
Down.• returned an Interception 'l:l
yards for a touchdown.
Still, It took a 23-yard field goal by
Rafael Septien with four seconds to
play to subdue the Patriots.
The Cowboys moved a half game
ahead of Washington and the New
York Giants in the National Confer·
ence Eastern Diyision with a n 8-5
record. New England is aiso8-5 and
alive for a wild card berth in the
American Conference East.
Dallas quarterback Danny White,
COWBOYS WIN - Dallas Cowboys' kicker Rafael Seplien, left, Is
coming
back after a two-we&lt;•k
congratulated hy holder Gary Hogeboom ( 14) after kicking a 23-yard
absence,
threw a 9-yard touchdown
field goal with seven seconds left to heal the New England Patriots 20-17
to
Tony
Hill and directed the
pass
Thursday afternoon allrving, Texas. (i\1' Laserpholo).
game-winning drive. His 16-yard
pass to Doug Cosbieset upSeptien 's
kick.
Dallas led 10-3 at halftimP and
stretched !he advantage tol7-3in the
third period on the Whiie to Hili
connection .
Gailia Academy High School's
"They are a typical Carl Wolfe
Eason refused to be ra ttlro and
team ," said Osborne earlier this
Blue Devils basketball team will
threw a 1-ya rd touchdown pa ss to
host Southern Saturday night.
week after watching the Tornadoes
Derrick . Ramsey and sneaked
l t will be the 1984-85 season opener pile up 54 poirts In Saturday night's
across for a touchdown from a yard
for both teams.
·
two-quarterSVAC preview game at
out to tie the score 17-a ll with I: !iR
Reserve game star'ts at6: 30. The Kyger Creek.
left .
varsity tilt is set for8o'~lock . Few, if
"They will swarm all over you on
Whit~. replacing young Gar.v
defense. They wlil hustle. They will
a ny ticket s, w lii be sold at the door.
Hogeboom whd was bf'nched lx'Coach Jim Osborne, beginning
shoot the bail immediately if you
cause of Dallas' punchiess offense.
his 16th yearatGAHS,willprobabiy give them an open shot. They can
directed a flawless drive to the
stati Brett Bostic, 6·2 senior, Todd run ," Osborne continued.
Patriot 6.
Las t year, Wolfe's crew surprised
Bergdoll, 6-0 senior, Kev Carty, 6-3
After Dors!'tt ran 16 yards. White
senior. Dan Dressel. 5-9 senior and
theDeviiswi tha "siowdown "game,
hit Doug Donley for 13 yards, Hili for
Gaty Han·ison, 5·8 SO('lhomore.
ta king only 34 shots aU evening
11 and Cosbie for 16.
Wolfe wiii probably go with Darin (GAHS attempted 50). The Devils
Septien's kick was perfect ~nd
Roush, 6-0 sen ior, Matt Harris, 5-10 outscored SHS from the field, 21-15,
New England's wild series or
sophomore. KevTcaford. 6-1 senior. but were outscored 20·5 at. the foul
laterals after the kickoff failed .
Todd Adams, 6.0 junior and .Jay line .
The victory, Dallas' Bth agai nst :1
Bostit·k, ;,.)l junior.
GAHS cant roiled the boards,
losses and a tic on Thanksgiving,
Both coaches will probably test 33-20. with Carty and Bergdoll
aSSUJ'f'd a 20th consf'Culiv&lt;' non ·
their benc hes early in the non· picking off nine each.
Coach Jack Payton's Blue Imps
league contest. In last year's :i0-47
Southern win a t Racine, Wolfe used lineup will probably consist of Andy
Howard and Kirk Jackson. forseven pi,a yers, Osborne eight.
Andreui honored
Roush is the only stal1er back wards; Chris Howard , center; Tom
from last year's SHS varsity which Meadows and Todd Miller. guards._
NEW YORK !APl - Matio
posted a 20-3 season mark and
Varsity lineups :
Andretti,
the champion of tne 1984 •
cia imrd a nother SVAC champion·
SOUTIIERN TORNAOOES
PM. -Piayf'r
HI. Yr.
CART-PPG
ind'' Car series. has
shi p. The other four starters are up
P-D&lt;onin Rou• h ................. .. ........ n~O &lt;
b!'en
named
the
Elj£&gt;r Dri\·er of'! he
from last year's championship
F-Matt HtuTL"- .··
... ...... ............ .:do 2
4
Year
thP
first unanimous
Southern reserve team (19-1 1 which
C-SI!•vo To:olorol ..... ·
.... n-n
r.- Todd Ad;.~ms .......
. ......... ... ti-11 3
seiC'Ction
in
the
18-year
history ot the
lx'at the SEOAL champion GAHS
r:- .Ja)· &amp;~ll ek ............ ... ............ o·ll .1
award.
rese n ·cs, 41 -:17, up there.
Q,UIS BWE DEVIl.,
The 44-.veilr-old Andretti won rhc
Mark Jarreii had 16 points in last
p,,._ 1, 1ayer
111. \ 'r.
fourth
national championship of his
year' s 'B' game. Adams had 10 a nd
F - A•T'Ii Bo,lic ..
. . .. M 4
4
car&lt;'Cr this season, but hi s first since
F - Todd ll&lt;•rgdnll ...................... h-Jl
Bo,., lt'ck st·x. Harris ta llied four.
C-: Kl'\' C arl ~·. .
...... ...... .. ." ... tl-.:l ~
1969, when he also won the
Roush went SCOJ~eless in the v~rsi~y
(;-Da n orrssel ....... . .. .. .
.. .. ~~9 ~
I ndianapoiis 000.
till as did TC'aford.
c:-r.a r:r Hanto;on .............. .. ........ .. .:18 Andretti has won .six of 16 r acPs
a nd eight pole posit ions in 1!'184. a s
well as setting a singlc·smso n
Parnings
record of $!l:rl.96.1.
CtNC il'\NAT I tAP I - Miami of
have bcf'n sLx ti!'s.

•

warn.

Southern-Blue Devils
open season Saturday

,0

Redskins stop Bearcats, 31-26

Ohio has cx tcnd&lt;'&lt;i its advan tagp
m·••r Cincinnati in what ha s bc!'n
billed '" the oldes t college football
ri\'ally WPSI
Mounta ins .

of thp

Allrghf'n~·

In the fl.('(bkins' :n -26 victory
Thu rsday. quarterback AI Marlow
ran tor onf' touchdown and passe-d
lor a not 11f'r. Running back George
Swarn ga in l'Cl l~ ~~ardson:~ocarriC's
and sror&lt;'d the touchdown that put
Miami ahl'"d lor good a t 21 -1 7.
S\\'il l'n. who camf' into th&lt;' gamc
with a l tf!-ya rd rushing average.
and e nd&lt;~i his sophomore season
with 1,.1:l:l .l 'ards.
t;;liY Gussman kicked four extra
points:· Hi s :~·.va r'l! fi!'ld goal was his
]~th

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Miarni nx·ord. .
' Miami. 4-7, cla imed it s 4~(h
\&gt;ictorv in college football' s fifth ·
oldes t r·i, ·;tl r.·. The Bearcats. 2·9,
han• \\'On :14 or th&lt;' games. There

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more when we had the chance."
Greenbay quarterback Lynn
Dickey, held to eight of 17 for ll5
yards, had to leave the game after

being poked In the eye and rookie
Randy Wright finished up by :
flipping a 4-yard touchdown to Phil
Epps with 55 seconds rf'maini

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Detroit quarterback Gary Danielson, who completed 24 of 33 pass
a t1 empt s for 3tli yards and three
touchdowns. sa id his club went into
tlt game with aspira tionsofi tsown.
'Today, we were read,, to play. l
don't think it would have mattered
who we wef(' playing, it just
happened . to be Green Bay,"
Danielson sa id . "Winning on national television shows evei}'bodY

we're not a joke franchise. We just
haven 't done what it takPs to win
some of the close gamE'S this
season,"
Of Detroit's 13 games. I0 hav&lt;'
been decided by six points or Jess.
However. the victory over !he
Packer ~ only improved thr Lions'
record to4 -8-1. Not exactly what was
expected of Jhe defending NFC
Centra l division champs .
"We're not embarrassed by the
wav wp've played this year. just thr
outcome. " Danielson sa id . "This
team has pia~'rd hard ali year a nd
we're not going to gh·e up now ...
There were two key factors in the
ga me. [lptroit's reCf' iYf'ro made
clutch ca tches to k('('P dl'ivrs aliYe.
As a n•suit. the• Lions had possession
of 1he ball44: 47 rom pa red with onlv
Jo: 13 for the Packrrs.
The Lion~ fin ished with a l1-14
edge in first downs a nd outgained
t h!' Packcrs o18 to 306 in tolD Iya rds.
"They wanted to show thr U.S.
they' re not a bad tram ." said Gro:-en
Bay tight end Paul Coffman, whQS('
only catch went for a ~~ -.1 · arcl
touchdown . "ThP Lions' offense did
u sujX'r .iob of holding on to thr bali .
Ma\·lx' \\'f' should ha\ ·e scor£'d a lot

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losing season.
Eason said he'd Uke to play Dallas
again.
· Uons shock Packers
MeanwHile, at Pontiac. Mich.,
defeat was devastating and heart breaking for the Packers who saw
their winning streak snapped at four
games and their slim chance for a
National Football· League playoff
berth aU but disappear.
It embarrassed Green Bay Coach
FOITest Gregg .
"That was probably the worst iiO
minules of defensivefootball I'v~
seen. It was horrible," Gregg said
after the 31-28 Thanksgiving Day
loss to the Detroit Lions. "This put us
out of any hopes for this year. It was
embarrassing in front of a national
television a udience.
"We'll have to struggle like the
devil to break even, now."
Green Bay, which has not won five
s uccessive games sincP 1966,
s lipped to 5-8. a nd has to win its
remaining three gaml'S to finish at

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�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page~4- The Daily Sentinel

Fridlly. November 23, 1984

Friday, November 23, 1984

~y--Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Meigs opens season tonight

1984-83 RIO GRANDE REDWOMEN Members of the 1984-85 Rio Gr1111de CoUege women's
basketball team are: front row, from left: Head
Coach Dixie J effers, Renee Halley , Taml Hazen, Lisa
Jones, Sue Camp, Robbin Luck, Suwy Dyer, Elaine

Smith and Tiffany Parks Second row: Manager
MlcbeUe Kremblas, Trlllner Kevba Marr, P eggy
Morbltzer, Joslyn Ames, Lori Bodnar, Beth
Sammons, Robyn RanneUs, As!listant Colll!h Mike
~'lett and AS'!lstant Coach MoUy Feesler.

Rio Redwomen open cage season
Tuesday night against Pikeville five
With etght r etu rnees, the Rio
Gtande College Wom en's Basket
ba ll team Wi ll be pl avmg wtth more
e xpen enct:' than m thf&gt; past few
sea sons
The R towomen a 1e scheduled Io
open the tr season at Ptkev lile on
No' 'll T he " omen 'sgamm wll l be
followed bv the va rstty men's

cont est
Le admg the wav for Rto Gr ande
this yea t w tll be o10 sophomore
forww d, Joslyn Ames The Hills
bora pmdu ct &lt;A as tabbed All GOAC
and honor able mentton All Dts tttc t
last sE-a son a s a h Pshma n
".Josh n has unlimtled posstbtb
ttes as a l:&gt;askel ba ll plaver, · sa id
R to women Head Coach Dvoe
.JcffctS "She ts deftmte ly the best
fol\1 a rd tn the GOAC a nd could be
the best overa ll m the eonfe tence.'
.Jotnlng Am es on the front ImP
"111 be 6 2J umor cente r Lon Bodna r
a nd o10 fa•shma n fm ward Peggy
Mm bitzer Accot ding to J effe rs,
Bodnat ts the most tmproved
plavet on the squad "hile Mot
bt tzet wtll supply added sit e ngth
BackcoUtt du liPs wtil be ha ndled by
sophomut es Ltsa J ones a nd Robbm
I ur k Captam Sut:' Ca mp will come
m qutck ly lot the Rto " om en
'We " ill be VCIY Sll ong a t the
guat d postliOn ' a ffn m ect J e ffers

McEnroe injured
SYDNEY, Australia tA P \
.John McEnroe wtll mtss two weeks
of tenms but wtll be ready to play for
the United Sta tes m thP Da \ ts Cup
!ma l next month m Sweden
Mc Em oe, ra nked No 1 m the
world was m derro to take a
two-week bt eak from tenms a ftet
lnJunng his left w n st dunng
practice m Cahforma two days ago
He wtll m tss the Austr a lia n Open ,
whtch opens Mo nday
"He c allro me and told m e about
hts wrtst , Dr Om ar Fa teed a
membet of the US Te nmsAssoc ta
lion's Sports Medic inp Commtllee,
sa td!rom Los Angeies " lexammect
htm a nd pt &lt;'SCt tbed two medtca
I tons I advtS&lt;&lt;d htm not to piav fot
two wee ks Hr s nor r eady to play
n ght now
The dect&lt;ton has cost Me Emde
I he chance of JOtntng Don BudgPand
Rod Laver a s the on tv m alf' pla1ers
to captu re four consecuttve Gra nd
Slam titles He ha s won the last "' o
a nd could have pockt?led a $1 mt lhon
bonus b y wmning boih 1he Auso a l
tan Open a nd the Ft e nch Open next
.funr
But he should be tead1 lot lh&lt;•
Elavts Cup fmals n0x1 m onth
Wtth McE nt oe out. l\a n Lcndl ol
\ zcc hos lovak ta
th e 1 e tgn mg
Ftcnch Open cha mpton wtll bet he
No I sccdfottheAustra ban Oppn a s
ofl tctals a ttempt to enttce Jtmmv
Connm s 10 l,rke McE nr oe's place

'Ca mp

IS

a semm ca pt am and will

be 1cited uponlwavt ly Luck wtll be
out shootmg gud td while Jones
shou ld be a vrt&gt; sit ong a sset for us
because of her one year of
C' Xpt?ltr ncf' and coUII awa wnPss '

Newcom e rs Ren('(' Ha iley and
Ta mt Hazen a t c e xpected to see
plavmg lime m the backcoUtl as

well
" Overa ll I feel we wtll be s tronger
tha n last year," stated J effer.;
" The players had good work habtt s
over the s ummer a nd we have
added three talented fre shmen
Defense a nd controlling the boards
WJII be the key to our success "
The wome n wtll m a ke the tr home
court debut on Dec 7, as they host
the Bevo F ra ncis Classtc
The followmg ts the 1984 85 Rto
G rande College Women's Basket
ba ll Schedule :
19!U-ti.'J Redwomen Ba."ikl'tha.U
&amp;:hedult•

Dah· - Opponent

n-

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Location

Pi kf'Villf'

~-Urban a

Nm

IK-&lt; 7M- Ek&gt;\o F rancis Classic
j Rio [h. kP Wilmi nglon
a nd I homas MOOI P I
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l.t n 1.! - !\11 \ ('JOlin Naz;.J if' hP

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Jun 1'1 - Wl lmlng:fon
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.OAC' r.&lt;tmr'S

Meigs
opens
its Bull.
season
aga
inst the
Athe ns
d ogs,tonight
one of
the tougbest opponents it will face
this season.
Meigs is expected to have a
legitima te s hot at breaking the
a ll-time school 1 ecord in wins (12)
this yea r Coach Greg Drummer's
crew m a tc hed the second highest a
year ago a t 1111.
But facing a team hke Athens
nght out of the barrel will not be a n
easy task, although the Bulldogs
dropped the ir season opener Tuesday at home against Groveport ,
67-56
Coach Fred Gibson's Bulldogs
won the SEOAL title in l~J.ll2 and
1982·83, but !ell to a tie for second
wtlh Logan behind champton ,
Ga llipolis, la st year
Key to Mara uder s uccess wUI
undoubtedly com e a t the ba ttle of
thP boards Athe ns wUI put some
good height on the floor in 6-7 senior
center Chrts Gertg and 6-3 semor
forward Dav~ McAllister
Both are r eturning lettermen
while C..erig wa a starter. Gerig
was held to nine pomts m the
Groveport loss
Two-year rf'turning letterma n
Btll Fmneatty is probably the most
!Pared by the Drummermen. The
5 11 semor guard scored 17 points
aga inst G r oveport " a nd a ls o
grabbed five rebounds
Athens was outrebounde d 55 23
by Groveport a nd m ay be ha rd
pressed to outrebound the Ma raud
e t s , who boast probably thetrlall est
tPa m m htstory
Wtth 6-5 JUnior center Lee Powell,
6 4 JUntO! forwa t d Mtke Cha ncey,
a nd 6 2tunior forward Jay Cat penfer around the boards , Me tgs s hould
m a tch up very well agamst Athens
Othet two probablf' sta rlets for
the Mata ude rs will be a patr of
JUntO! guatds in 5 7 Brad Robmson
a nd &gt;-9 Rtck Wtse.
J umor gua rd Rodd Ha fll son a nd
Chns Ke nnedy a long wtlh seruor
cem er Dave Fts her wtil also see
plenty or action
A lew new aspec ts of sealmg a t
the La rry Man lson gymnasmm
w ill be on ta p lot the upcommg
season The Meigs fan support
sea ling wtll cha nge fro m c ross
COUl l and behmd the tea m 's bench
to the entu e n ght s1de e nte nng the
gy m The Athe ns s1de will be on the
le ft The Marauders wtll also switch
theit bench from the ru;ht stde of
I he scorer 's tabi&lt;' to the left
Ga me li me wtil be 6 30 p m for

ri'ihe~~;;~~w~i~th~t~h~e~~;;~~~;;~• • • • • • •. ,
~

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MILUNG DIVISION

INSTANT SUCKLE

I

'

'
••
''

MEDICATED
MILK REPLACER

,

•&lt;'

.••'•

. ·--•

POMEROY, OH.

108 MULBERRY

~l,.llh IT. uN u
J.UHIII \II
'\&gt; It &gt;11 tl I • I ~ oil l I t!.:UI

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1984 FORD TEMBO GL.. •• S679S

PS., P.B., A1r, AM/FM stereo, low m1leage, perfect
cond1!1on .

11&lt; 11 1 IIIl i:

I

.

\ \'\( fll \ I I
I ol ••~.:• II• d
til l! II I I &lt;t l II It

1977 MERCURY COUGAR XR-7 ••• S189·S

2 Dr., auto., P.B., PS

1977 THUNDERBIRD ................... S189S

Auto., P.B., PS., air, red .

1976 GMC SCOUT ••••••••••••••••.•••• SJ3f/S

Auto., PB , P.S., good cond1t1on.

SChool

1976 MAVERICK ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S89S

4 Dr, auto,, P.S., runs good.

RlliliS USED CARS
9 85 -4100

CHESTER

Surxla)
GRAHAM
U NITE D M E fH O nJ ~1
Pr&lt;&gt;aching 9 ~lam fit o:.t and sr co nd Sun
days of Pac h month third und fo u t t h Sun
davs rach m onth v. o r~ h1p SC't' ICf' S :.~ t 7 :lll
p m Wf:&gt;dn p~rl &lt;l \ PH •nin gs &lt;J I i :lO p m
P r a\ E' r and Rlhl l" St ud\
SF:VF. NTH D AY A DVE NTI S1 Mulh
C' tl\ H r l ght s Road P om cJO\ Mic h.l('l PI
o nkQ~\ ~ k l pa st m MariP Spllf''i S&lt;1 hh 1th
SC' hool Supt S&lt;.t hh,l t h S&lt; hool a t 2 p m on
Sa1ut da' "i th \\ Orshlp !o;f:'l \ rcc- s fo li o" lnJ.:
at \ 15 p m
RU rLA N O FJ RST B A Prt ST l H URCH
- Sio.: tror Hmr ll'l! \\ a1nr1 Su p t S~ nd :n
Sc hool ll :10 a m Mm m n~ Wm shrp H I~~
.1 n1
POMF:R O \ F' IHS'J RAPTIS f
]) n 1d
Ma nn mlnl sl t'r \\ II II 1m Snou ffPI Su ntl l\
S&lt;' hool Supt Sunda\ School 4 Ul d m
Mm nlng \\ m " hll&gt; 10 Ul .1 m
FIRST SOlfrHFRN li \ I.)'IIS' I PomPl n \
Pikf' 1&gt;1\ld Hu nt p:Jo.;l nl
l.l(k i\ rn:l"
Sund,l\ Srhuol DtH'C tot SurKla\ S&lt; hoolll 91
t m Mnrnln ).! Wr1rsh1p Ill "'·I m I \ rnm g
Wor:&lt;ttllp i p m I ul'!'d t\ Vl&lt;.:ltltlnn i p m
W1'1:'Jnt "id,1\ pi .J\('1 ~n lo i l l p m M t s~ lon
F'l1f'ncl"' j VI p m ( •II)' Ill A\ 11011 7 Yt p 111

('IV

' 5 25

FRIED CHICKEN

Homemade Noodles I, Homemade Rolls ............................. 53.99
WITH SOUP &amp; SALAD BAR '4.99
OPEN SUNDAY 8 A.M.-3 P.M.-MON.-FROM 5:30 A.M.-8 P.M.

l 'l • 1 ~l

F AITH rAHF.R N AC'I F CH U R CH Bul
IP' Run Roud Rn F mmPll RiJ '&gt;\ son p .1~
hH H and lev Ounn ~; u p t Sund a\ Sc hool
1fl a m Sund .I VI\Pnlng"iPJVII P i !O jlll
Rib\ (' t('JC'hlng 7 :Wpm Thu1sdm
S\'RA C'Uq 1 M I SS ION ('H('lt \ S! S\
r .ICUSC' S&lt;'-1\i iC'f'" 10 ,1 m Sund.J v f:\('nln !:!
Sf' I \ I CC'II Sund 1' ami \Vf'dn!',.d.t v .11 i l lO p

ISunday and Monday 4:00 PM to 10:00 PM I

t 1'1 t hi..; - Jtt •11 I hi I
uh '•md ll un :'l. t II

m

Side-by-Side Refrigerator ........mhiJu...... S19995
Gold Refrigerator Freezer ..................... S19995
Green Refrigerator Freezer .................. $2 49 95
Coppertone Rerfrigerator Freezer ......... $1 Sooo
30" Frigidaire Ele(. Range .......1-'hiJIJ...... S19995
30" Frigidaire Ele(. Range ...... mhiJu...... $29995
30" Frigidaire Ele(. Range ...... .I-'JiiJu...... S19995
36" Hardwick Gas Range ..................... $16995
36" White Magi' Chef Gas Range ....... 512995
Maytag Auto. Washer ••• JI.\va.~ruvr.rMill. ..... $2 4995
30" Electric Range ....... JAtPIJUiv.liiAMl ....... $2 3995
Wards Auto. Washer ................................. S880D
May tag Eledroni( Dryer ..........lQrulll....... $1 4995
' Dryer ....... ,..lQrt~lll..... .. $24995
Maytag Ele,troni(
Maytag Gas Dryer ...................l~iW. ...... $19995
Electronic Cord Organ ............................... $6995
Sofa &amp; Love Seat w /2 ottornans ............ $6995
Good Used Recliner ................................... S9995

tu rn

The Da1ly Sentinel
( l i ~ P s 115 960)
\ l)r v ls lon nl \lultimtdia lm
Pu bl ls hf'd 1' \ ( n aft er noo n Mond.n
thr ough F r ld:J\ Ill Cou rt S t v the

Ohio Va ll r' Publi s hin g Co mpa ny / Mul
tlmrd ia Inc Po m r ro\ Oh io 4576~ h
&lt;l&lt;l2 l l'i!l Sr runt! lia s" posr age pa id a t
Ohi o

MC'mi)(' r

Thr t\ ~soc latPd Press In
l mrl rla 1h P u •ss Assn&lt;- Ia li on a nd thP
Amr r lra n Nrv. s p a ~ r P ub ll sh(lrs As

sou .rtr on Na tlnnal Ad H'rf rs ing Rrprt'
sr nt.rtJ \&lt;' Br,rn ha m N ('v. spa(X'r Sa lrs

NC'u. Yqrk

Ne v.

POSTM/\S1 F R Srnd addr f"Ss changes
m Th£' ()a ll\ St nll m I 111 l oun St P o
m(l 0\ Ohio -l'ii fiq

SUBSCRIPTIO N R \TES
By ( anlt•r or Mrrtnr Rout~
OnP Wf'C'k
$1 10
Onr Month
$4 80
One Y&lt;'ar
$57 20
SI:-.IGI.E COP\
PRICES
25 Cent s
Dati\
Subsc rl bf'l s nOI d f's irin ~ l o pay l hf' c ar
t i!'l m av remit in advanre dlrE'C t to
Tllr Dall y SPntlnf'l on a :l, ti or 12 month
bas ts Crf'd lt will bp gi ven r Hrrler each
mo nlh

Hi Back Chair ·······················~~~·······"·"•••••• $7 495
Used Mohagany Dining Room Suite

No subscripti ons by m all permitt ed In
towns w her r home c arri er service Is
availa ble

Duncen Phyfe Table &amp; Chairs, China &amp; luffet ...... $49995

!\lull Suh8crtpllon8
ln ~t ld e Ohio

1:\ WPE~ k ~
:lf) WN'kS

114 56

!l.! Wt'l' kS

1511 24

L

$]5 60
$.11 20
$59 BO

I

12!1 12

Oublde Ohio
1:\ Wt'(' ks
26 Ww ks
52 Wwks

tr vou ha vr ser VIce p roblems call our
sen I('(' dE'sk at 992 2156 bE'for e 6 00 P
M M ond ay thru F rid ay

MIDDLE POR r Cll URCH

or

C HR tS1
IN CHRI STIA N UN ION I .tw rf'nCI M m

I IU!o-41 'I t.h .., !oil ~,, I t •'lft r tllt!fl
t h tl ttl.
n tlll&gt;tl I

71:1 T hll d A.\rnuf'
Yor k 10017

m

J l u m Sunday School, YPSM
E lolse Adam s leack&gt;r 7 l1 p m Sa l\ arlnn
rlle£'ting ' anum• sJHl)&lt;ers a nd musJC Specl als
Thursday ll ll a m to 2 p m Ladles Hom&lt;
U&gt;ague membrrs In char£(' all " omr n
Invi ted, 6 4!1 p m Thursda\ Corps C.ul(&gt;t
C ia.~..._~~ !Young PropJl'· B tbleJ 7 l1 p m Blbl&lt;'
Study and Pravet meeting !JiX'f\ IO th£' public
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHU RCH OF
CHRIST l ll26 Children s Home Rood 1Countv
Rood 761 992 ~2'\5 Voca l music Sunday Wor
slhp 10 am Blbi!.'Stl.Kiy lJ a m, Worship 6 p
m WC'dnescl av l31ble Studv 7 p m
OI.D DEXTER BI BI E CHRISTIAN
CHURCH Charles Hatfield pastor: Linda
Swan, Sup! Sund&lt;Jy School 9: :JJ a m preach
lng servic'£'s first and third Sunda, follov.'in~
~ nd av ScOOol Youth meeting 7 :YJ p m f'\

Mashed Potato, Choice of Vegetables (Green B.ewu or

I S." l - \ nn&lt; tuunl

P n rn f' t O\

mld week serv:tce Wedllf'Sdav 7 p m

Ten tender tasty shrimp in a special breading,
fried to a golden brown.
• French Fries
• Toasted Grecian Bread
• All you care to eat Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar
• Cocktail sauce and lemon wedge

With Cole Slaw (instead of ft
Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar) .P

3•99

, ~------------------------~

lf' \ pa!i!OI Mr&lt;: Ru,.s&lt;' ll ' oun u sun d n
Sr hhol Supt Sund.'l\ S( huul !f «I 1 m
EH nln.i' wo r shi p 7 :10 p m WN in ('sd.n
prawr m N&gt;!Ing 7 10 p m
MT M OR I A H CH UIKH O F COD
RaC'Inf' RC'\ l amPs Satt('r fle ld p .1 ~ t or
F'rf'f' m,m Williams Supt Sun d;n Srhool
9 -1~ am • Sundav and Wf'lln N~ d,l\ ('\f'n
I n~ s(lt ,. i cC'" 7 p m
MIDDL E PORT
F IRST
HAP li SI
Corn&lt;'r Six th and P.l l m('l The RC'\ M a1 k
M cllun g R.w F'lr&gt;lds s s Supt
n In
R igg s, Ass t Sup! Sund u~ Schoo l 9 l r, 1
m M ornln~ Wm shlp 11) 1:1a m SlJ niiH
E\ r nlnR M-1' IC(' 7 p m Youth m('(' tln,t;:
7 :10 p m Wl'dnrosda \ f' \ l'nl n ~ sf&gt; I \ IC'I' 1 p
m Choi r practi ce 8 p m
CH U RC H OF CHRIST Mlddlt vo11 'it h
and M ain , Bob M&lt;'llo n m lmsl('l A I f.l ,nl
._son i.l&lt;tiSOC i atr ml nist('l Mtk&lt;' ( ,(' t] ,IC'h
Sund,IV Sc- hool Supf'l mt f'nd('n t Orh] P
School q :1"1 ,1 m Mo r ni ng Wm shl~ 10 Ul
a m, EvC'nrn g WoJshlp i (Xlpm P 1 :J~ £'t
mN'I In.e Wt"dnesd on 7 00 p m

MIDDL F. PDRT CHURCH OF T II F

.'

N~

7.ARF'NE ('o p J&lt;.: IOr s Rt\ C' har l f'!&gt;i (o\ h
and R r \ . Na nr v ( O\ If' Rill Whi lE' Su nd.n
School Supt Sundin School 9 W ::a m
Morning Wm ship 10 :lO .1 m
SlJ nd.n
Evan~ ('IIStlc m ee1ln ~ 7 IMl p m P la~&lt;'l
m &lt;'t'tlng W Pdnf' s d r;~~ 7 oo p m

UNITED PKESB\ T E RIAN
MINISTRY OF
MEIGS CIWNTY

:m

MIDDL EP ORT

P RES RYT!"RI ,\ N
W01

SYRAC USE FIRST UNIT ED P RESm

America's
Dinner Thble™
328 VIAND ST.
Pl. PLEASANT, W. VA.

T ERIAN CHURCH Worship Slot vi cE&gt; 9 00
a m Church Schoo l 10 15 a m

RUTLAND C HURC H OF GOD Paslot
Rev John E ' ans Sund a\ Sc hool 111 (Ml u
m Sunda\ Mornln jl Worship n 00 am
ChlldrPn's Church 11 a m Sundu v ('H' n
In~ service 7 00 p m
Wrdn£&gt;s da ' &lt;'VC'n
I!'J!: Youn~ Ladles ' Aux lll al y, 6 IKl P m
Wednpsday, Famil y Wor sh i p 7 00 p m

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH """'
Lonf{ Bottom Edsel ija rt, pa st or Sunda\
School 9 30 a m , Worship 10 :lO a m •
Pray er m~tlng. 7 30 p m Thursda\

MIDDLEPORT FRE EWILL SAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum Ralph
Cundiff, pastor. Sunday School tO OO a m

Monlnr Worship, II 00 a m • Wednesday
and Saturday Evenlna Services at 7 l l P

m

\~

1

John F Fultz

H

J Marcus fultJ

SUPERMARKET

·-!ir'!Jl •

,p~

992 -3840
Mtddleport

RALL'S

7 !Klp m \\ ( dn! -5d a\ p td\fl n l uflng , 111 1

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Com muni!\ off (! HI ~! Rl\ ll o l)fJI
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da ' Sehoul ~ :lO 1 m
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10 -1 ~, 1 m F \ f'nl n~ prna c hlng ~~ r' !t f ~ ~
('O nd ~tnd fou rth sund;n , ; t - m p m
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!\ I a ~' !'{ I 01 t nd 111 ,1 m (IJIII • ~'-100'- 1n(
h 1lt hou 1 I)( tr111 ~ .rtr M •• ._~ l &lt; n c J, ... .. ...
11 .1 m Sun d,n
\ I f l t)R\ 11\P l l ~l '1l;1 ~ 2ritl &lt;.;r
Ml&lt;l dl f'pOt T l &lt;ttn f''- 1
1&lt;\1 t "' (
p 1 ·-ln r
Sunrl n m&lt;o t n111C! 10 1chlp Ill 111
!- 1 1 11
lng ~f l \ icC' 7 p nt
\\ t !lnP'itJ&lt;J\ E \ (' OJn C
IUH~ h rp 7 p m \ "tltd!J rtn I hu 1v l n • \II

"' \ 11

~FRANKLIN'
Mtddteport, Ohio

x&amp;c=~RS

U

dl diK hol m tht! puo l&gt;o Ill Bo,;iun N~w Yu •k 1'1 •1&lt;11.1~ IJI &lt;1 un&lt;l
letldlh:$\()rl 1'0'&lt;: e p&lt;oudvt~' c:~ t 10 t&lt;1ko: you dn)Whele S..l!'l bollow
mq d.! ~) lht.'Y "'"b~ •Kc d ((lr Furo1&gt;&lt;- Ah or; ~ ..nd ' '"' Oroenl
Ridinq

212 E Matn Street
992-3785, Pomeroy

But vou

'l'ou lt 11nr:1 ITMny ~ Mt'l@~l ho~nds .tnd neogll i'J[ll~ wnriiluppona when
you f.Oi llt' IOCl uri h hl~ wt:l'k fh('y h ~e,gO&lt;ll JdC&gt;I!IV u ~ull nl~kc ~
~~~~c

Rev llun Archer
Rev Roy Dee ter
l(.(&gt;v Srldon Johnson
AI FR E D - ChlJrc h Sc hool 9 30 a m .
W orshi p 11 a m UM Y F 6 30 p m UW
Thi rd T ues d a\ 7 10 p m Communion
f1 1st Su ndav IAt cher l
CH ESTER - Wor shrp 9 a m Ch urch
Sc hool 10a m Biblr Stud y Thursda} 7p
m U M W first Thu r sda v 1 p m Com
m unlon fi rst Sunda v ! A r chen
JO PP A - W ors hi p 9 30 a m Church
Sc hoo l 10 Wl a rn Brbh• StmJy Wed n!'s
d av 7 10 p m t Johnson 1
LONG BO 110M - C hu rch School 9 10
d m , W01 sh ip i p m
B rb lf' Stud y WC'd
n es d .t~ 7 :\11 p m
U M YF' Wf'd nesda'
f. 00 p m
Comm uni on F \r &lt;i t Sunda v
I AI C' h(l l l
RE F DSV ILLE -C hurc h Schoo l 9 m·•
m Worsh ipSI't\ lcC' l l uoa m i De(' tl'll
T UPPERS P L AI NS S f P AU l Ch urch Sc hool 9 a m Wo r ship 10 am
Blbl l' Stud' 'fu&lt;'s d a ~ 7 :10 p m U M W
Thud Tuesda:'! 7 W p m
Com m unron
F h st Sund::a v t A rchert

CENTRAL CL USTER

Rev lames E . Corhitt
Re\' Ste\' en Nel!ion
Re" Rlrhard Rotheml ch

Re" Rohert E: Robinson
Kl'' A ndrew Rubenking

s,

A SBU RY t
racuse 1 - Wors hi p 11 a m
ChuH h Sc hool 'J ':1 '"1 a m C ha q~:f' Blbll'
Stud\ \\ed n &lt;&gt;.,.d a~ i 10 p m U MW fi rst
Tu£'sdav 7 10 p m
C hot r Reh £'arsal
W cdn(' sday 6 :«J p m UM W fourth Sun
da\ 6 ~0 p m I NE&gt;Iso n 1
ENT FRP R ISE Worshi p 9 am
Church School 111 a m B ible Stud y l uf's
den i til p m U MW Fir st M ond av 7 ~0
p m U MY F Sunda v 6 p m Cholt R('
hP£T I S&lt;II 6 ~0 p m W l'Ci n P ~ d ,rv ( Rolht•
ffi iChl
F l A f WO ODS- Churc h School 10 a m
\\ 01shi p I I &lt;t m ArblC' Stud \ T hu rsd
d .n
7 p m
UMYF Sundav fi p m
1Ro th C' mlc h t
,
FOR n .; T R UN - Wor shtp 9 a m
C'hlll ch Schoo l 10 am
Chon pJ aCt iC('
Tuf's d a~ 6 m p m
U M\\' fll &lt;til Tut&gt;sd&lt;! \
7 !!Jp m I Nf'IS on l
HE1\ 1 H ( M JddlPpOT 11 - ( hur ch School
9 lO ,t m
Y.. m sh1p 10 {() am
Rl blc
St ud\ r uPsd .l ~ HI ,I m
u MW " f'&lt;'On&lt;l
M o nd ~ \
7 JO p m UMW Sec ond Mon
do\ 7 lOp m U MM T h u d M ond a\ 7 KJ
pm 1Hobl nson 1
MI NF.RSVIl LE - \Vot &lt;ti hlp St: \Ill' 10
,1m C' hU l t: hSc hOi'l 11a m UMW lh ltd
W1•dnr sd.l\ 1 p m Choo pr acti ce Mon
d,l\ 7 Ill p m 1 ~ ('hon 1
PfA RI C' H t\P F.l - ~\ ms h l p St•t , l ll ' 1 l
,I m
( hur ch S&lt; honl II ~ m L: MW "!'
&lt;one\ 1 ut' sdu ,l 7 1/l p m U MY F" last Tu ('s
d.n 1 Ill p m 1ub&lt;·nklng l
POME RO Y - Chun h St !tool q 1 ~ -1 rn
\' ors hl p ~(' t \IC (' Ill \0 am C hol 1 I f'
h i',J I ~d l " f'd nt'S&lt;I av 7 «J p m
UMW st
t ond T uf'sd&lt;.n 7 l(l p m UM\ F Sund&lt;n
6p m 1C'ot b l 11 1
R()( K SP R I NGS- Chu rch S47hOO I, 9 J;j
a m Wor sh i p l Ou m B tbl(' Stud v Wrd
JH&gt;sda' ; 10 p m t iM \ F fS (' nJo l s t SlJ n
da\ !'i p m
1 lun li!I SI l'VP t V ut hPt SlJ n
da' ti p m tRo t hl'nll&lt; h J
RUT L AND - ChlJ rc h Sc. hool 9 45 u m ,
Wor ship 10:10 ,1 m U MW r Ev&lt;'nlm,eC\r
c lel st•cond WC'dm&gt;sd &lt;:~ ) 7 :lO p m U MW
1Afl l?l noo n Circl(' t St'con d Thu r sda), I p
m tH ubcnkm ,z 1

SAl E M CEN TE R - C hut c h Sc hoo l lU
am Wots h l v 9 4 ~ 1m t R ube nkw ~ l
SNOWV I L LE - Worshrp 8 10 a m
ChuJ&lt; h School 10 .1 m 1Rubr.nklng 1

SO UTHERN CLtlSTER

Rn

Ro~~; e r

~:oo.lldn 1 book 1a&lt;;'V:I{IP for ll"kol~ tllniOfY ~ J11~1 s

CO\IPICiJ Wcl!jOilS for the tlek WeM ll_ dlwiJV~ lll~kl'' ~·~~ WI t!ll
YOU ~now whe1e you re gona 10 go !hi' be$1 .., rt
Son\t' ttot.11C l tl OVo &gt;tC I g !hi' Ci&gt;rW i.l~ opp! I &lt;]In lh~ W"ld I 1ll &lt;od
tC.o~ wagon~ llf&lt;&gt;lf lt' ~~ h(J(l n~·~
l~d

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Fay S11.uer, Director
R1•v James F. Corbitt, Assistant
NORTIIEAsT CL USTER

G rau

""'II:' you krMJWwhen: you l l flO'"'l

c.,.,..,.o \ \01&lt; • ~' "'""'"''"' "''"'''"" ~- -

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I 26

R e\1 Keith Rader
APPtF G R OVE- Chur ch Sch0o l 9 1m
Worst'llp tn am tFirst and t hi r d Su n
d n\ sl U MW Second Tu csd&lt;~ v 7 :\0 p m
P ra H•r ml"P II n~ Wt-'llnesdav 7 p m
(G r aceJ
BET HANY - Wor ship 9 a m Church
School 10 a m B ible Stud \ Wrdnesdm
10 a m
D or cas Women s Fl' IIO" &lt;tihl p
\·VC'dn£'sd l V 11 a m ( M CGUir Cl
CARME L - Church School 9 30 a m
WmshiP 10 45 a m St&gt;cond and Fourth
Su nd ays F el lov. shlp dinner " llh Sutton
t hird T hur s d a~ 6 JO p m t M cGuireJ
E AST L E T ART - Chu1 c h SchOOI9 a m
WorShip 10 a m st&gt;co nd and fou rth Sun
days U MW fir sl Tuf'sda y 7
p m
1 G l aC('l
LETAR T F'AL LS - Wmshlp 9 a m
Chu rch Sch ool ]0 a m tG ra ce)
M ORN TNG STAR- Wm ship 9 45a m
C hu rch Sc hool 10 30 a m
Blbi P. Study
Thu rsda)' 7 :10 p m t Rad Pr)

MORSE C HAPEL- Chu r&lt; h School 9 :tO
a m Wor shlp 1la m f R adert
P ORTLAN D - ChUI Ch Sc hool6 30 p m
Wors hip 7 ."JJ p m UMYF Wl'dnesda y
7 30 p m ( M cGuire )
RA.CI NE
WESL E Y AN - Churc h
Sc hool 10 a m Worship 11 ·• m , U MW
fmuth M onday 7 ,10 p m , M en s Pra~er
Breakfast , Wednes da y. 7 a m (Grace)
SUTTON - Churc h School 9 30 a m
Morntn~ w or ship 10 !I ~ a m ftrst and thlrd
Sundays, Fellowship dinner wllh C armel,

third Thursda y 6 30 p m !McGui re I

KENO CHURCH OF CH RIST, Oliver
Swain Supt Sunday SChool 9 30 a m ev
ery week

HOBSON C HRISTIAN UNION, Rev

Tom Staten pastor Sunday school9 30"a
m Evening serv ice 7 30 p m Wed nesday
prayer meeting 7 30 p m

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duane Warden minister Bible
class 9 30 a m , Morning Worship 10 30 a

m . Evenllll' Wonbtp 6 30 p m Wedne•
day Bible Study 6 30 p m

NEW STIVEKSVILL E COMMUNITY

serylce,

9

!15 a

~~

Wt'&lt;.lrt''&gt;lll~

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':&gt; p t:&gt;

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fnd&lt;Jy

l

1 11101 11)

l 12 20

m
V.. or shlp sen tee
111 3U a m
E va ngeli stic SenlcP 7 :ill p m Wednes
day P r ayl't m t'et l ng 7 30 p m Thu rsda\
Z ION CH URCH O f CHRI S I, Pomero\
Ha 11isom !II&lt;' Rd Robert P urtel l m i nt s
ter Ron Riffle Sund a ~ Sc hoo i Superlnten
dPnl Sund ay Sc hool 9 ;w a m Wor,.hl p
serv i ce lO JO a m, E1&lt;&gt; nlng wor ship Sun
day 7 p m and \\ &lt;' dnrsdav 7 p m
ST JOHN L UTH E RA N C H U RCH P1nf'
C.rO\'f' T he Re' Wil liam M ldd i('SWar!h
pa !;t Or Churc h SPn ICC' 9 :m a m S u nd a ~
Sc hoo l W ro a m

BRADBURY CHURCH O F tllRI ST
~ J o h n W!l ght passto1 Sundav Sc h ool~ 30
a m La 1r~ H avnes S S Sup1
w o t shlp 10 W a m

M orn l n~

RACINE CHURCH OF TH E NAZA
RENE Re\ Th omas H C ollte r pa s101
Mct ll ha W olfe Cha irma n of lh£' Boa rd or
Chr.l st la n LHP Sunda\ Sc h ool 9 lO a m ,
M o r nlng worship 10 30 a m
Sundav
&lt;'Vf'nlnf 'A 01ship7 30 p m Praye r mt'C'I Ing
7 :\0 p m \\t•dnf ~da v
I I BERTY CH RISTI AN C H U R CH Df'x
tC"r Wood~ Ca ll pa stor Se r v1c£'S Sunda \10 1l m and 7 p m Wt"d nes d a Y 7 p m
RA( I ~ F. Fl RST BAPTTST Do n I
Wa lkN Pos t OJ RObel I Smit h S un d ~ \
School Supl Suncl,n School 'l lO a m
M orning 1wr sh1p 10 41l .t m
SundJ'
f' \ Pnl ng U OISh lp - 10 p m
\ \ C'dnP&lt;id q
('\ (' nlng Albl f' s! ud\ 7 ID p m
BU R l INf,HA M COM MUN11 \
C Ht n CH B u1 l w ~ h 1111 R f' \ Ok('\ Ra '
1 ,tllndr l mll t p a&lt;titol Ph 4'l1 7t14 Suml&lt;l'
Sc hool Ill OOa m Sund 1\ C'\C ntn g s&lt;'n 1C!'
i 00 p m \\ £'dn&lt; sda' l'\C'mn g sC J\ ICt'
7 00pm
DA NV I I l E
HOI I :-. ESS l H UR CH
loca te-d on Ht U~ br i\H'f'n \ l nton and
L.m g .., ,t ll f' He' Rr n \\ at h pa stot Sun
d ,n Sr huo l R m .1 m Bob tn I a mbN t S
S Sup t M o1mng\\ OJShlpl fi 10d m ( htl
d iE n s HopJH Hout li 1 ~ p m P~tH&lt;'I and
B 1blr Stud\ 7 :ltl p m Mb ~ 1 o n :.u ' m&lt;'r l!n_g
f1 1st \\PdnPsd av
r ac h m o n th 7 ~0 p m
f. or tnfoJml t lon r JII,!(R 84 67
S II.VF. R RUN BAPll ST , B ill Ltll lf'
pa sl nt Steve t1ttlr S S Sup! Sunda\
S(' hool l fl 1 m Mm mng Y. OI SIP 11 &lt;1 m
s und a\ P\ C'ntnJ';: u or &lt;.: hl p 7 :ltl p m Pr .a\ PI
mrf't mg and B rbl l's tud\ Th u r sda\ 7 31lp
m '1 ourh mc&lt;'li n.e Wf'd nC'sda \ at 7 p m
Cfi R IS1 1 A~ F P. I LOW SHIP CHUHCII '
UH !'; ! nd A\P M ld dl epoll S u n d .t ~
S(hoo l HI .1 m sund.l \ :.~ n d WC'dnec.cl.n
f: \ C'n\ ng &lt;i('l\ICf'" rl l 7 {ll j ) m

or

CHE SrF.H CHURCH OF GO D Re\ R

p e~s t o r Sunda\ Sc h ool 9 ~Oa
m
Wors hi p sC' t \ IC&lt;' 11 am
F.'"nmg
:-i C'l \ I CC' i p m M id Wt•('k s&lt;'r \ ICf' \\'('dn£'s
da' i p 111
1 A:\ I.S\ II 1 E CH R I ~TI AN C' HU RC H
Hober t F M ussf'J p 1&lt;i101 Sundn Schoo l
9 \H d m Pa ul Mu ss£"r sup! ~l or mn ~
UlJ I &lt;ti h I' In 10 c1 m Sun dJ. \ C'\( nmg srr
\ ]C(' 7 p m mi d v. e£' k st•r' ice Wf'dn!'s
do\ 7 p m
SYRACSE CHURCH
1 H&gt; NA
7..A RF:N f_ B.l'\ J .1mc" B K lltlf' pastor
ShC' t m.1n Cund1ff sup! Su nd&lt;n Schoo l
9 tO ,1 m M or ning "01 ship to
am
E\ an ,:wl lst i&lt;' ~ £"1\ l r&lt;' b p m
P r a\ Pr and
P t .l iS(' W('dn£&gt; sda } 7 p m
\ outh mN'I
lng 7 p m
EDE.N
UN I1 F:t) BRET H RE N I '\J
CHHI S1 E lden R Bl akf' pa stor Sunrta\'
Sc hool Ill a m Robf'r t Rr ed Supt Morn
lng '"£'1mon I I 1 m
Sun d av nlghl st.' I
, l f'f'S Ch t lstlan E ndea\'01 7 W p m Son.'!
sC"nic£&gt; R pm PtPac h l n ~ 8 30 p m Mid
wf'f'k pt a\£'1 mt~r tl n~ Wed nesd a\ 7 p m
Alvi n R {'('rl \,1 vl!'ader

1:: Robrnson

:m

HEMI OC K
GROVE
C HRI ~TI AN
RO.(:&lt;'I ¥. ats on, pas tor C r e-nso n P 1att
Sund av Sc hoo l Supt M ormn,e: " orshtp 9 3fl
,1 m Sund a} Sc hool 10 30 a m E\ C' nin~
St.'! \ I CC' 7 30 p m
MT UNION BAPTI ST D onald ShlJ f'
1m st or ,Joe Sa :vre Sund ay School Sup t
Sund ay School 9 ~5 am
Eve ni ng v. ot
ship 6 JO p m Pral'l'r M E:'f_Jt ln g 6 10 p m
Wc dnC' sd(t y

TU P PERS

PLA INS

CHURCH

OF

CH R I ST Jod y Holla nd m l m sf('r Dr n I
\' ells Supt M o nl n~ ~' nr shi p 8 00 a m
Churc h SChool&lt; UO a m

CHE STER C ~URC H O F T HE NAZA

R F. N E
Re\
HC'r brr t Grate pa stor
Fra nk Ri ffl e slJ pt Sund&lt;IV Sc hoo l 9 30 a
m , Worshi p ser vi cl' 11 a m and 7 p m
Sun dav WednE-s day i p m Pra \iC'r meet

lng
LAUREL Cl IFF FREE METHODIST
CH U RCH Rev Robert Mt ll er pastor Ro
bert E Bart on Dlr&lt;'ctor or Christian Edu
&lt;'atl on Llo yd Wr i llht, ass l!'it an t Sunda}
School ~ {(I a m • M01 nlng w o uhip 10 30
a m Choir pr acticE" Sunday 6 30 p m
Ev£'n \nJ1: worship 7 00 p m Wed nesday
P rayer and B l bl&lt;' Studv 7 30 p m

DE XT ER

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST

Charles Ru sse ll Sr m i nister R tck Ma
combe-r supt Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m
Wm ship servi ce 10 30 a m B i ble stud y
Tuesday 7 30 p m

R EO RGANIZE D CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATIE R DAY SA I NTS Port
l and R ac ine Road William R ou sh past or
Linda Evans, church school di rector

"iPl \ U( S- !Opm
Rf I I II EHE l\1 llA PT I ~l RC'\ E e~1 1
Shultt pns tm \\ OI " htpSI'I\I C'C' 9 1\la m
S 1md t \ Sc hool HI \II 1 m Bibl (' S t ud ~ md
jll d\ 11 Sll \i i Cf'TlllJr &lt;ti d,l\ j 30 p m
( \H I F' l ON INTEHDE NOM I NA
I lONA! C HU RCH K 1ngxbun Ho.t d Rf v
D.n td ( ut fm,tn P&lt;lst m Sun cl ,l\ Schoo l
~ \II it m
R.ll ph ( Ill Supt r \ Pili ng \\ OJ
o; hi p i Ill p m Pt l\t'l ffi(!f' ti o ~ \\&lt; d n P~
11,n 7 \1) p m
LON G BOT'TOYI CH RI S 11 \'\
l nd\
H ol l c~ n d
past OJ W ~llan• D &lt;~ n tt \\OOd
Sund.t \ Sc hool Sup! Wo 1shl p &lt;til T\ l(t' CJ ,,
m B i ble Schoo l Hl a m

HYS ELL RUN HOLI NESS CH URCH
Rev Th er eon D ur ham pa st or Su nda}
School a t 9 30 a m
M or nmg " or shlp at
10 lOa m Sundav PvPnlngsct\rcea t 7 30
p m T hursda v SN vi ces at 7 lO p m
FR EEDOM GOSP E L MJSSIOJ\ &lt;II Ba ld
Knob loca ted on CoU nt\ Roa d 31 RC'I
1 awrence GllJesr ncamp pastor
Rf'\
ROJ!Pr Willford as-. r pa s1o1 Pr f:'ath i ng
st'! \ IcC'S Sund ay 7 JO p m Pra)'e r m('('ll ng
Wedn esd av 7 30 p m
Can G r iffith
IPo!IPr Youth group s Su nd a' C\('nln g at
6 Ul p m "- ll h Ro~N and Violf't Wll lror dd
]{'a dC'rs CommlJnt on SN \ Ice fh st Sund av
each month
WH ITE'S
C' HAP EL
WESLEYA N
CHU RCH - Cool\ 1ll t• R D Re\ Ph1lllp Rl
dC'nou r p&lt;~ s to r SlJ nd.H Sc h oo l ~ W a m
v.o r shlp set vltf' 10 l,(J am B 1hu• stud y
and y, or .,.hlp Sf'n irc Wl'dnC'sd a\ 7 p m

RUTI AN D C HUR CH

or

CHR IST

M ar k Jo nt:'s pasl or Bil l Nlr h o J ~;on Sun
d t\ Sc hool Sapt Sund ' ' Sc hool 9 :lO a m
\&lt;l o r m n~ Wm ~ ht p ,1 nd Co mm union 10 30 a
m
RU I LA:-.I D BlRl E METHOD l" f Am os
1tlli "' p.1s tor J&lt;~ ~ Sl l lc-s supt Su nd a\
School 9 30 am M(n nw g v. or.,. hlp 10 Ul
1 m Suml av 1'\ !' nl ng Sf'nicf' 7 00 p m
Wed n&lt;' Sd:..t\ R('l\ Ire 7 p m \\ M PO pro
gt atn 'I a m ('iH' h Sumia\
RUTLAND C HU I! CH OF I HE NA7.A
RENE Rf' v Llo vd 0 &lt;11lmm J1 P•l "10 t
Su nd a' Sd'wol 9 30 a m Wors hip "Pr' !{'('
10 l[) ,t m Y oun J':: p('Qp l(' s se1' ICC' b p m
E \ ang('l tstl c se-n kf' fl l(J p m WPd n&lt;'s da\
sC'I\ICe 7 p m
M A SO N CHL RU I OF CHR I Sl Miller
St M aso n " V t~ Eu,::en!' L Co n ~!'! ml
nl stPt Sunda' Bi bl e Stud' 10 a m \\' or
ship 11 &lt;J m .md 7 p m Wedn!'sda\ Blbl£'
Stud v ' ocal m usic 7 p m
L IBERTY ASSE MBLY OF ! .OD Dud
di ng L&lt;~ne M ason ~\ \'a I N T hacker
pas 1or F~ \f'ntn~ s£"1\ iCf' i ~ p m \\ o
men s M i nl s t r~ Thu1sdav Cl 30 am
Wcd nesda ' Pra ~cr and Bib l&lt;' Stu d\, 7 15

pm
HARTI' Oito ( HU HC H OF ( IIR I''I

](1 1 l

1' 1 "\l~ t ! JSI d -\"&lt;"- ! \ 1H J ~ RaC in &lt;'
P1 l .! l \\ lllil!l T /! o lut ~ p.t~lr'I J Sund a \
Sr h•rllt ](1 1 m Sund t\ , \1 nl ll~ -.rot' JC"f' i
pm \\ t d nt "d.l l lt l l l l)..;~tnlrl -Jlm
( \ H I ~~ l f.lt B\1 1 11 '-. 1 IJr nfhNt di P
~upl ~u n d 1 '-(lJo .I ~ \11 1m \ l o1 mn.t:
H .,.., lu p l!l \II ) IT\ PJII ~ t'- l l\1( 1 n ll c rn
'\ lilJil l i J1(!H I P l"\ lf-if.l'-. 1\L rhll cl
\\
Hf'\ 11 ~~ ll k •l p 1c1•a I J JIN o!
t 111,..h1 m Stn l d\ S1 h t1l ~ \Jpl Sunda'
s~ 11 1l HI 1 n 11 11 h 1 1 '"' ' " f••l ill &lt;.~g ~" "
I ' ' !IIlli! ~ • 11 El ~ t hp rn \\ N' nr~ d&lt;J \ F:h
tJI• "t 111\ t - trl]' n1 '\nut h \ { 1\ 1u" r n
II

I ~

CH H ISl I AN UN IO!\: Th1 R1' \ \ llh un
Cmn plx II p,t&lt;:10t Sun d,l\ SctlO(ll q lfl n
m Jamt•s Hu~ h ('s sup t E' t• nm ~ sr1\ Ir E
7 Ill p m W••dnsd.n C' 't ntng pi :JH I m N t
\ng 7 :\l) p TTl \ IJUih ]ll I' ll 'if'l \ ll I' I 1\ h

1 UC' ~ d &lt;l\
I FAIH\ II W 8 1131 1 ( HLHt H I (•t all
W V a H t 1 JamC'S \ t \~ IS P•l " l 01 \\ 01
shi p Sf' I\ ICC'S Cl 30 1 m Su m) I\ ~chool 11
,1 m E' l'tHng ,\ Oio;hlp7 tOp m l uC'"d' \
ro t tag!' p ra \ C'I m( C' llllg and B lh lt• Sl ud \
9 l() ,, m
\' OI&lt;tihlp SN ' l&lt;t \\ ('d ll f''&gt; d il\

i lO p m
OUR SAVI OU R I U f H F R \N CHL R( H
Wal nut and HPn n Si s , HaH• n,.uood \\
V &lt;~ 1hf'Rf'\ Grot £1'C \\ ('lll( k pastm
Sund ay Sl hool 9 111" m Su ncla' v. msh1p
llam
CALVARY BI BI b CHU RCH l oc.n f'rlon
Pumt' fO., P ike Coun t \ Roo d .l'i nc .Lt V!.t t
R(' B lilc k" ood p,1sto1 Spf\ tC{'"
on Sund,l \ at lO ll a m il ncl i :\0 p m 1\ tt h
Sundd} School !.l :UI a m Bibl &lt;' Stud' Wed
nf'sda v 7 \(J p m
F AIIH FT L LO\\ SHIP CR USADE F OH
CHRI ST St R t HK AntiQUit\ R1 \
Fra nkli n D l c k " n ~ p a.,.I OI Sund av mot n
lng 10 ,1 m Su nda \ f'H' nr n ~ i :UJ p m
Thursd.J\ f'\f' ni ng 7 :\!.} p m
STTV E RS\itl l~E lOMM L:t\ lrY BAP
T lST CH U HCH Pas10r Rolx' rt B' £'1s.
Sunda} School l Oa m , Wor shtp st•n \('(• 11
a m Sund ay f'\f' n i n~ s&lt;'n IC'P 7 JO p m
WC'Ci m•!&lt;da\ ('\f'nlng set ' i cC' 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLI NE&gt;S CHU RCH
Inc Prar 1 S! , Mlddlepm t R n 0 De-l l
M an le\ pa stor Sunda\ School 9 ~a m
M o1nln ~ w or shi p 10 30 .- nl
E H'nln~
wors hl p 7 30 p m Tuesda' 12 :\O p m \\ n
m f'n s P r ayer m ('(' tl n ~ Wf:'d nC'sda\ 7 10
p m P r avC'r and Pz a lsc Sf'r\1('('
RUTLAND APOSTOLI C CII URCH OF
JESUS CH R IST E \d('f Ja m L"" MIIIC&gt;r B1
ble St udy Wf'd n('Sda' 7 :«J p m Sunda\
Schoo\10 a m , Sund a.' ni ght SC'n IC'E' 7 311
pm
POMEROY 'A ESLE\ AN II OII NESS
H arri sonv ill e Road O,IV\d F C'r ' (']I p.l s
tm Clint on Faulk Sund a) Sclwol Supi
Sunda\ School 9 30 a m m01 ni ng: ~ ot
sntp 1l n m S u nd a~ "'"l? n ln ~ se1 v iN · 7 lll
p m Pntu r MC'C'Ilng Wed n esda;,, 7 30 p

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or

Re\'. Paul McGuire

CHURCH, Sunday School

••

CK

·~,

Mtddleport·
Pomeroy, Oh .

Ph 992 2t01
Pomeroy

:m

Kt•v. W~nda .rottnson, Dlrt•t:tor
Jbrold Johnson
Dlret tor of Ed lit atlon
HARRI SO~ Vll I E PRESBY TER IAN
CHURCH Wor Rhi p S('r Vi('£' HI 1 ~ a m
CHurr h School 9 t 'i a m Brb] (' Stud'
Sunda' 7
p m Pl aHr r. 10up W&lt;'d n l ~
day 9 00 a m
CHURCH Church Sc hool l!l 1:1 a m
ship Sf' r~IC C' 11 :Kl a m

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

"
MEIGS TIRE
\ \ CENTER, INC.

l

992-3978

Main Sl , Pomeroy Sunday Sf:'rvices Holy
oorrunurJon on the first Sundav of each month
and mmblned with momtng pra_)('r on ltK&gt;
thirdd Sunday M otnlng prayPr and sermon on
all cthE'r Sundavs of the month Church Sclnol
and Nur.tt"ry care prmided Olrree hour !n thl:&gt;
Parish Ha lllmlllf.'dla tely follOWing the&gt; Sf:'!'\ Ice
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Main Si NC'Il Proudfoot pastor Bible School
9:l)a m, M ornln,eworshlp 10: ll a m Youth
meetin gs fi fll p m Evening \l orship 7 00 p
m Wednesdav night prayer m t?Ptlng and Blbl&lt;'
stUdy 7 ID p m
TilE SALVATION ARMY 115 B ut!Pmut
Ave Pomer ov MT'!'i Dora Wining tn charg&lt;&gt;
Sunday holiness rrte(&gt;f ing 111 a m
Sunda\

Homemade Noodlesl, Homemade Rolls .............................. 54.25

og o nl

-

Syracuse

G\(ACE !: PISCOPAL CHURCH, !26 E

lnt•• • ~ l

1 IH~

Cabinet Making ... ..

pm

Mashed Potatoes, Chotce of Vegetables (Green Beans or

HI

w~.!;,.~,~ ,

POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NA7.A
R ENE Corner Un!on and MulbE'n)' RN
Thomas Glftl McClung, pastor Oyde Hendcr
soo, S S. Supt Sunday School. 9 :Jl a m
morniJig worship 10: l) a rn {'Vt&gt;f11ng servk-e 6

BAKED STEAK

II I \

'

TRINTrY CHURCH Rev W H Perrin

llltlltl llo ~t-k t \ l .1 &amp;Kll &lt;

l

II
'.

pastor: Oebbte Buck Sunday School Su pl
Church SchEXJI 9 L'i a m . Worship Servle 10: l)
a m Oloir rehearsal , TUE'Sday, 7 lJ p m
undt"f dln&gt;clion of Allee Nease

IIUit\1-\

I I I I I ' II I
I I ' I 1':-i-!'iu t&lt; l

Mtll Work-

''
'·

llult ~

li.t~ukt t

ncl t t ru l

.&lt;

RACINE PLANING MILL

'

STATE ROU IE 7

Ractne 949 2550

)

9!2-2318

.'

&gt;ndllm i i [A' "'- 'J.:ht t nd
!&gt;un•m

of. Columbus, Oh
804 W Main

'·

t l l\ ~1 \'\ltHI'nl\ '\'-: -1.\tL.'Tll ~ll ~ • t g •

I ll 1 11 ld
1\ 1 ~~In

Nationwide Ins. Co.

•

VALUE PRICED
USED CARS

Grocene sGenera l Merchandtse

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

•
•

SUGARPH.RUN
MILLS
992-2115

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

Rutland, Ohto 45775
J. Wm. "Btll" Brown, owner
Phone (614) 742-2777

.-,.

Transa1·tion!&lt;i
llnlttt.n

Brown's Fire
Equipment s~~~~~~d

•'

SIJNDAY SPECIAL$
WITH SOUP &amp; SALAD BAR

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

.,.

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t..:Ni l l J)

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S\ RACU SE F IRST CHURC H Or GOD
non Pentecosl a l Joy Clar k pastor Wor
:;hlp servi ('(' Sundoy 10 a m
Sunda'
Sc hool 11 a m E\f'nl ng \\Dr sh\p se i VICC'

•

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1-,

�Ohio

Hubbard's Greemouse

Evangeline OES meeting held

CY
l64 JACJ(SON PUC(
OAL LIPOLI$, 0Ht04513 1

FRUTH PHARMACY
185NOP 1'"H 2ndS~UT
MIODLEI'ORT. 0MJ041760

•

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c:ompar1men1s.

The convention of the Public
Relations Society of America
( PRSA) East -Cenlral Dlstrtct was
attended by three Rio Grande
College seniors, Jane Dalley, Rich
Ross and Tammie Slarcher, and
lhelr academic advisor, Ms. Nita
Dailey. The convention was titled
"An Election of Ideas" and was
held in Indianapolis, Ind .. at the

BANK

organizer lets you ~p
memos, letters and bills
In one alltactlve unit.
Flied neatly In separate

Cute enough to decc:irate your
child'~ room. Assorted colors.

Choice of

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COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP ) - Ohio
c lencyofOSUappllcantshas shown
State University officials say prosa 50 pert-en I immprovemenl.
pective students apparently have
"The impact has been just
responded to the school's tighter · starililig," Baumer said. "I lhink a
requirements for unconditional
real message has come across and
admission.
'
you hear It all over the slale: 'You
For unconditional entry, OSU
tolduswhatwould·berequired.'The
freslunen this year needed four
parents and students said, 'OK.' Of
years of English . three years of
mathematics , two years of science,
with,
this has I've
been
m ost
aU
the programs
beenthe
Involved
two years of social science, two
successful."
years of a foreign language, one
WiUiam H. Eells, chairman of the
yearofartandonemoreyear ofany
Advisory Council for College Preof lhe above.
paratory Education, said last week
Associate Provost Elmer Bauthat an early mathematics testing
mer said more than half the students
program has been expanded in the
entering OSU lhis fall met those
past year from 233 to 605 Ohio high
requirements, moslly due to pre· • schools, involving some 62.1XXl
testing in high schools. Two years
.
students.
ago, only one-third of the entering
In addition. eleven colleges and ·
freshmen would have met the new
unlversllles In Ohio are trying to
requirement s , he said.
trtm the number of expensive
Baumer said the math profi ·

cornbs

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every hair care essential!

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oick s and ha rr sp ra y iUSt wt"19r e
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and all those smo li rl e :-r·s o t v ~u r
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You'll get compliments on these rich,

999

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WITH

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D i splay this in your home with pride!
The rich looking marble top contrasted with the dark wood finish makes a
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Auxiliary
meet.r

BLOCK

No. 21306

·

~--------------------------~--~--------------------~~--------------~------~
~ 5 PIECE DEEP DISH PIZZA SET
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QUARTZ
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S19''
A IEAUDFUl Gin THAI Will
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AT FRUTH PHARMACY
WE DISCOUNT OUR
AMERI.CAN GREETINGS
CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAP
25% A~D All BOXED
CARDS, GIFT TRIM AND
ORNAMENTS 20%

$1499
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THIS YEAR'S GIFT
SENSATION! COMES
IN 2 HEIGHTS

To

ssooo
.

'

Columbia Club on Nov. 2 and 3.
- PRSA members met to hea r
speakers ' views on public relatlons
in society. The convention centered
on a keynote presentation by the
renowned practitioner Edward L.
Bernays APR, who Is considered
the ':Father of Public Relations. "
The 92-year-old Bernays spoke
about the trends In public relations

smce 1912, and encouraged the
continuous development of public
relations In lhe academic world to
bring the same professional recognltion enjoyed by the legal and
medical practices.
.
Other speakers Included Pat
Jackson APR. a former PRSA
president, Dr. Melvin L. Sharpe,
professor of public relations at Ball
State Unlverslty, and the nationally

means chl'irman, for lhP accomplis hments of her ' a nd her
committees.
Linda Mayer acccompa nied by
Emma KayClatworihy a t the organ
sang "How Great Thou Arl."
,
Potluck refreshmcts were served
in the social room .

By Clarice i\llen
The Ladies Auxiliary of the fire
deparlmE'nt met Wednesday evening at the fire hous&lt;&gt;. Ma o·ga ret
Christy. acting president. opened
the m&lt;?eting with "The Lord·s
Prayer .. and the pledge lo the flag.
F'rances Hunt gave the secretary's·
report and Cleo Smilil gave I he
treasurer·s report.
Report s of committees were
glven. MonPy for cards and dues
were collected. P lans for the
Christmas dinner for lhe auxiliary
and the firemen and their fa milies
were discussed. The Good of the
Order committee will be in charge ·
of the anrangemenls. Meat and
beverages \\111 be furnished with
eveoy one to boing a covered dish.
A new member, Bonnie Landers .
was welcomed. The December
meeting will be a Christmas party
at the home of Clara Conroy, with
Cleo Smith and Frances Hunt to
a ssist. Refreshments were served
by Opal Wickham and Margarel
Christy to those named and lnzy
Newell , Dixie Beair, Betty Newell,
Opal Eichinger. Clarice Allen,
Charlotte Smith. Betty Hawk ~nd
P a ula Wood .

Ill-- - - ··· -..

required wbrk but
in uncredited
remeconditionally,
must take
the
dial courses.
Akron University and Kent Stale
Unlversty imposed minimum requtrementslast year .
TheartsrequirementbyOSUhas
proved to be a stumbling block for
many applicants. Of those admitted
conditionally this year, 31 percent
were held baek by a deficiency in the
arts.
"The three Rs are still basic, even
to the understanding ofthe aris and

Athletic booster meeting held
Several projects were proposed
by James Lawrence , eighth grade
basketball coach. at lhe Monday
night meetingoflhe SouthemJunior
HighAthleticBoostersmeelingheld
a t the school.
Sue Ann &amp;-egle presided at the
meeting. Hilda Wea ver noted that
she still has Tornado gym bags to
sell at $8each. They can he obtained
by telephoning her at99'2-7891. Gym
shoris are also availablE' at $5.50 in
limited sizes.
It was decided that the organizatlon would purchase two new
basketba lls for Coach Lany Wolfe's ·
girls team. Lawrence will have ,
charge of the purchase.

Lawrence proposed several projects for the organization including
the purchase of mals for lhc stage.
He will bring informalion on the
m a ts to the 'nexl meeting. He also
reported lhal new basket ball unlforms should he purchased within
the nexl year since the present ones
are at leasl seven years old.
Portable bleachers for the stage
would also be a worthwhile project.
he said.
The first home basekt ball game
will he on Dec. 6 and the group is
asking for donalions of candy or
gum to he sold at lhegame.
Calendar sales wer e exlcnded
until the end of November.

r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w1

ALL CHRISTMAS WRAP 20°/o OFF

PICTURE
BIBLE

READ-N-GROW
REGULAR

SALE

'14.95

$990

LIVING BIBLES

FAMILY BIBLES

RED LETTER EDITION

REG. $39.95

REG. '16.95

Sale 51995

Sale

0 1VILLAGE

1

14" Pl•htr
REG. •u.oo

Sale

S1QOO

STONEWARE ~ Q J

SELECTED
PIECES

ALSO 1 YEAR

$11 95

Oval Vegetable
Bowl
REG. '12.00

Sale
DIARIES 5

S8°0

YEARS

Middleport Book Store

MILL ST.

.

MIDDlEPORT

992·2641

,,

Home....,..

ORT DEPARTMENT STORE

AII 1\UfCUOfF
IIPEC/A[II
1\
I)

I)

I)

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

CHRISTMAS CANDY

CHRISTMAS
·
WRAPPING PAPER

,Jo &amp; 12 OZ . CANI

S I $188
ae

PKG. Of 8 SHEETS

28 10.

n.

CHRISTMAS CARDS

88&lt;

$p3

MEN'S

BOX OF 12

TUBE SOCKS

LADlE$'
HOLIDAY FANCY

White / Colored Stripes

$188

WHITE BLOUSES
IIZEI 8-26

Tbit Weekend Onlg

LEG WARMERS

25°/o

REDUCED

REG. IJ2 .9'P3 .99

$233

ASST. SOLID CARl

(

recog nized a uthor . Dr. J err y
Tarv e r of th e Uni vers ity of
Richmond.
Dailey. Professor of ComunJca lions at Rio Grande College, is
currenlly a member of the Central
Ohio Chapter of PRSA. Students
Dailey, Ross and Starcher are
currently Involved in establishing a
studenl chapter of PRSA at the
collef!e .

MICHAEL JA(KSON

MEIGS
MARAUDERS

PURSES, KEY CHAINS
BANDANAS, BILFOLDS

TOBOGGANS

WEEI&lt;ENO
SPECIALS
1/2 PRICE

REG. 15.49

This Weekend

$4 33

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 8:00 P.M.

"Ow 48 Yem In The Same Place
Undet Ths S1ms MmRernent"

ceriainly should come firs ," Eell s
said in a recent speech at the Aspen
lnsitule inMaryland. " However ... I
recognize that cultura l illiteracy is a
real na tional problem. A college or
universitycim send out a s ignal as to
what is imporlant and whal is
needed by its requirements for

~~ad~m~i~ss~io~n~.';';;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~=====================~

·NATIONAL WHOLESALE
255 WASHINGTON ST.

· PH. 273-2518

RAVENSWOOD, W. VA.

ACROSS FROM SUPER AMERICA

Pre-CHRISTMAS SALE
FRI., SAT. &amp; SUN. ONLY -

WE WILL
NOT

BE

NOV. 23, 24 &amp; 25

SPECIAL!

TOYS

CABBAGE PATCH
REPLICAS

UP TO

UNDERSOLD

"LIMITED NUMBER"

CHILDREN'S

TOY

GHOSTBUSTER_
S

TRAIN
SET
REG. 515.99

FIGHTING
ROBOTS

$499

Sale $1299

$759

GIANT

MUSICAL

WATCHES
G.l. JOE
MICKEY MOUSE
E.T.

$799

CHRISTMAS CHRISTMAS
STOCKING
CARDS
FULL OF TOYS

WIC coupon
distribution
•
ts set
Those who are to pick up
December WlC Coupons a re to do
so ·as follows:
A·D, Dec. 3 (Monday ), 9-11 a .m .
and 1-3 p.m .
'
E -M, Dec. 4 (Tuesday), 9-11 am .
and 1-3 p.m.
Mc-S, Dec. 6 (Thursday), 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m.
T·Z, Dec. 7 (Friday ), 9-11 a .m.
and 1-.1 p.m .'
You musl pick up according to
days assigned only and bring your
10 card._If you cannot make your
, appointed day; come Dec. 10 or 17
from 9-11 a .m . and 1-3 p.m.

remedial English courses by help·
ing evaluate writing skills of high
school juniors.
In ttie fall ofl~. Cleveland State
University will require certain
courses similar to OSU's r&lt;Xjuire meniS for unconditiunal admis slons. Sludents. can be admitted

Poin~etlias • Potted &amp; Hanging llasbt,
foliage Plants • Polled &amp; Hanging los·
ktt' ClvistlrMis CIKt¥1. Afri&lt;on Violet,
Cllf~tmas Tr..., Wreaths, Gran •an·
ktt' Candle Arrongemonh,
Applt Buttor &amp; othor nanltits.
Open Daily !) to 5
Sun. 1 to 5 PHONE 992-5776

rljiiiiiiii!!i!i!!i! i!~~~~~~~

Ohio State stiffens entrance requirements
"PRElTV HAiR" keep$ ever ymrng
rn its plac er Sp ecra l co mport ·

SET OF 3 STACKING
TABLES

McComas.
Fifty-yea r mem bers present and
recognized were Adria Wilcox and
Lee McComas.
Pro- tem officers for the evening
were Bill King, associa te patron;
Naomi King, conductress; Beulah
McComas, treasurer ; and Bob
King, sentinel.
Mrs. Buchanan. worthy matron
elecl. announced practice for instal·
lalion on Nov.25at4' :Jl p.rn.Shealso
presented Mrs. Childs with a gift
from the officers along with one
from lier!;elf. She complimented
both the worthy matron and worthy
pa tron on this year 's work and
accomplishments, and extended
appreciation to Bill King for
pro-leming the office of associate
pa tron since the dea th of her
husband, J ames Buchanan.
Bea Kuhn gave a brief report on
Grand Chapter stating that the new
grand sentinel is Roy Turk from
Ashland . Emma Kay Clatworthy
has been named on next year 's
committee for out-of-sta t&lt;' registration, and the dales for the 1985
seSsion ha ve been set for Oct. 14. 15
and 16 in Cleveland .
The worthy m a tron and worthy
patron thanked their officPrs and
commit lees for cooperation duri ng
the year, and gave special recogni tion to E)izaheth Milam, ways and

Rio Grande students attend PR convention

LlnLE DRUMMER

Practical. yet decoratlw

FAIL FE'!11VAL - Hugh Roush and~ Mace were crowned
king and queen at the recent fall festival of the Meigs Assoclallo!l for
Retarded Children and Adults held. at the Carleton School. .Prince and
'p rlncesswerePavldEstepandMaryJaneCurrywllhSarahHannona.s
the runnel'up. Garnes and food were enjoyed by the large crowd which
attended the observance. Several door prizes were award.,.). Pictured
from the left are Marsha Mace, Hugh Roosh, Mary Jane Curry, and
Sarah Hannon.

The charter was draped In
m emory of Cora Pullen and Evelyn
Lewis at the recent_ meeting of
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern Star, held at Middleport
Masonic Temple.
Both Mrs. PuUen and Mrs . Lewis
were past matrons of Evangeline
Chapler. Since there were no
funeral services for Mrs. Lewis, a
memortal was held In her behalf
with Bessie King, secretary, giving
a brief history of her members in the
order. She noted lhat Mrs. Lewis
was a 21 year member of the order '
was worthy matron In 1929, served
many sta lions and on many
commlltees throughout the years.
Worthy Matron Twlla Childs read
the 23rd Psalm and Chaplain Robert
Kuhn had prayer. The sunshine
collection ·and donations received a t
the registration !able were designated for the Eastern Star Home in
memory of Mrs. Lewis .
Pasl matrons and past palrons
were honored by Mrs. Childs and
James Clatworthy, worthy patron .
Those present were Beth Cowan ,
Jenevee Chesher, Kathryn Knight,
Kalherlne Mitchell, Bea Kuhn ,
Linda Mayer, Naomi King, Virginia
Buchanan, Farle Kennedy, Bet ty
Van Matre, Emma Kay Clat worthy, Bill King, Bob King, James
Clatworthy, Bob Kuhn, and Lee

NDW Optll ,,
Ch,itl/1111 Smon

$995

35°/o

Off

PIERCED

EARRINGS

$159
LARGE
SELECTION
OF

Jewelry
&amp;

Electronics

Register for FREE
'

GIANT
STOCKING
TO BE GIVEN AWAY
DEC. 1st
AT

5:30

•

�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

From Consumer Reports
By the Editors
ol Consumer Repons
If you wimt to equip your
single-lens-reflex camera with an
electronic flash unit that's powerful
and has lots of features, you'll have
to choose an expensive model. You
should buy one that supports all of
the flash-related functions that your
camera provides.
Consumer Reports· photo experts
tested 31 electronic nash units.
They're all dedicated - that Is,
each unit Is deSigned for one or
. several particular brands of 35mm
single-lens-reflex camera. (Most
flash units made by independent
manufacturers have a removable
adapter "foot" that makes them
compatible with several brands.)

Take flashy

The reason for all this complication Is because each camera .
manufacturer uses a different
configuration of electrical contacts
In the camera's " hot shoe" - the
receptale that secures and triggers
the flash units.
However, the photo Pxperts say
that until those contacts are
standardized, It's up to the salespeople to tell you which flash d9es what
with which cameras.
The units tested -when mounted
on compatible cameras - offer
various conveniences. For In-'
stance, all set the camera's shutter
speed automatically so you don't
use a shutter speed that's too fast
for flash. They all provide autom atic exposure control using either

35~

F~.N~bw23,1984

Frldey, November 23, 1184 .:_

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

pictures with unit right for you than other highly rated models, 'but erty Insurance, serid $1 for each •
which was top-rated beca)lse of Its
It pertonned well In the tests.
copy to a&gt;NSUMERS. P.O. Box '
unl!ormlty and consistency of
The photo experts found the 461, Radio City Station, New York,
exposure and for the convenience of
Nlkon flash units less powerful and NY 10019. Be sure to ask for the
Its.controls.
their exposure consistency not quite reprint on "Protecting your .:.:
For full-featured Olympus , Penas good as the highly rated models. valuables." l
tax, or Canon cameras, the Metz
Seod your questions to: Qlnsu·
If you own a Nlkon camera, the
32CI'2, $120 to $lffi (depending on
metz
or
Vlvltar
500
would
also
he
mers
Union, Box DCB, 25&amp; Wathe adapter), or the Sunpak \122D,
shington
St., Mt. Vernon, NY liM'!. ,.,
good
choices.
$166, would he the models from
(For a special reprint of Consu- Volume of maD prohlblfs penona1 '
which to choose. These lndepend·
mers Union's evaluation of prop- · replies.
ently manufactured models· offer
many dedicated features for those . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - brands of cameras.
For those brands. you might aiso
consider the Olympus T32, $175; the
PentaxAr.llm', $173; and the Canon
199A, $167. Another Independent
.nash unit - the Vlvltar 5600,$165offers fewer dedicated fea tures

Pauline Atklna waa·holteu tor a
recent meeting or tlie Star Garden
Club. She gave devotions entitled
"Don't Walt" from "The ~ce~s
Gift" by Helen Stetner Rice. The
club·prayer, creed and collect were
glveri In unison.
·.
For roll call members gave a
Thanksgiving memory. Anna Ogdln
talked on "Sensational Scented
Geranlums" from Better Homes
and Gardens. Jeannine Horn discussed fall ·plantings, and VIrginia
Nelson gave, some timely tips for
fall. Refreshments were served ·by
the hostess.

'

John Balog, director of the Lifestyle
Dynamics counseling center in
Pasadena.
Fortunately, he adds; a little
advance planning can a lleviate
m ost of the anxiety, like sched ullng
s hopping trips for early In the
morning or during the dinner hour,
when department stores are likely
to be less crowded.
"Plan in advance which departm ents you'll nE'\'(1 to visit," Balog
advises. "And don't deviate from
your intended route.
"Take an hour or so well before

your list wtth you whenever you
travel.

making any Christmas purchases to
list all the friends and family
members for whom you'd like to buy
gifts. Think carefully about their
lifestyles, work ha bits and leisure
activities.
"Next, jot down appropriate gifts
1a lways Include several back-up
possibilities) and the amount you'd
like to spend. If your memory Isn't
great, it helps to keep a running list
of the gifts you gave during the past
Another good practice is to shop
throughout the year, says Balog,
who suggests carrying a copy of

19" DIAGONAL

100% MODULAR
CHASIS

Let the children decorate Santa's cake/
0

CHICAGO lAP) - You might
wtnd up with a Santa Cla us with one
blue eye a nd one green, but letting
the kids decora te a cake as the
Christmas centerpiece could become one of the highlights of the
holiday season.
The cake is easy, according to
cooking experts.
A cake mL' is baked in two
heart-shaped pans by Ruthanne
Field. bakingconsultantforChicago
Metallic Products Inc.', manufac-

turer of bakeware under Village
Baker a nd Bakalon labels.
· Once the layers are baked, Miss
F ield cuts one heart in half to m ake
Santa's hat, a nd places the pieces
together. After preparing the decorations - icing and trimmings she lets the kids do th&lt;'ir part.
It never quite comes out the same
way twice, she says, but the Santa
cake Is bright, charming and
different -and no one quite knows
how the kids did it.

Ewok Adventure Sunday
By FRED U.OTHENBERG
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK tAP) - Although
"The Ewok Adventure" - George
Lucas' first TV movie - is more
stepson than &gt;&lt;&gt;que! to "Star Wars,"
It Is a n enchanting fanta syadventure for young children and all
parents who wish they could be
young again.
The Ewoks, those plnt-slze, fuzzy
creatures who helped save the day
in Lucas' " Returnofthe .ledi," have
, been rewarded with their own movie
on ABC Sunday nig ht .
"If peopl£' come to this thinking
It's tho fou rth 'Star Wars,' they'll be
~lsappoint ed," said producer Tom
Smith. " It's rrally sort of a side
irtp ...
"The Ewok Advmture " is based
on a story by Lucas, mastermind of
the "Star Wars" trilogy and
executive producer of the Indiana
Jones epic adventures. Lucas is
listed as execu live producer of "The
.£ wok AdvenI ure."
· Smith said lhP film's budget was
about twice that of a typical
television movie, which would make
It about $4 million.
· The Thanksgiving week end
broadcast should provide a ni'edf'd
hoost for ABC, which hassunktoNo.
Sin the ra lings and, uncharacteristicallv, has very fPw miniseries and
speCial events as bailouts .
"The Ewok Adventun'," shot In
the sple ndid redwoods of Northern

.

Missonary
•
meetmg
conducted
The November meeting of the
Missionary Society of the Syracuse
Nazarene Church was held recently
at the church. Reports were given
by the various officerS. It was noted
that inform a lion on sending mission
boxes will be given at the next
meeting.
A candlelight skit was given
enilUed "The Light of the World"
~th readings and special music by
· Jan Lavender. Next meeting will be
on Dec. 12 with emphasis on the
memorial roll of mlsslo~rles.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.

~THE

GRAVELY
•vaTEM

VR2000

re-

,,

$44900

Plans for a community Thanksgiving dinner -on Sunday evening
were completed when the Apple
Grove United Methodist Women
met Tuesday at the home of M!'S.
Dean Hill. The UMW annualy
sponsors the holiday dinner party.

WEST HOMESTEAD. Pa . tAP I
- Mayor John Dlndak says that
with allttle bltofluck this depressed
tnlll town might he able to turn
around Its sagging fortune. In fact.
he wants to bet on II.
Dindak wants borough em ployecs
to gamble on !hell' futures by
contributing to a fund to play the
lottery.
"Hey. It's worth a shot ," said
Dlndak, who originally had suggested th at the town budget $416
next year so it could put $4 twice a
week on the state Lotto game.
"I asked the solicitor about il and
hE&gt; said that 's probably il l&lt;&gt;gal ,"

A baZaar was planned for Dec. 15
at Krogers In Pomeroy at a recent
meeting of Brownie Troop 1116.
The girls worked on a turkey craft

EASTVALE, TexaJ IAP I - It North, Thlswaypeoplecanownland
you're lnteretted In ownlna " tiny
In Tex11.''
plot otland tn Tex11. Eallvalecould
The aale could brin(l' S9 million 11
be the plact' for you. The yard sale the entire !m,lm square-Inch parcel
has taken on an entirely different across from City Hall aellll, Mrs.
meaning In this Nor1h Texas town .
Eubanks said.
The financially strapped town ls
"I'm sure there's no way we wUI
selling Its last lot of land for $10 a get $9 million , but ('Ven If we just get
square Inch. hoping to bring In half of that II 's $4 .5 mllllon and a
enough money to repair roads and quarter of It Is $2.2'i million and we
Install water and sew&lt;'r system s,
ca n do all kinds of things with that, "
said Mayor Ben Eubanks.
she said.
"We're advertising this sale
What can you do with a square
nationally," Mrs . F:ubank' said . " I inch ol T&lt;'xas r&lt;•al estate? Maybe
also think It would make great
build a tiny oil wPll.
Christmas gifts for t1'1atives in th&lt;'
, - - - - _ : : : - - - - -- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - -

*NOV.*
SPECIAL
10" U.P. Superior Mesh Dish

Dindaksaid . 'So nowl'msuggesting
that borough employees - including the mayor, council and policem ake a small monthly donation , say
S.'i, to a Lotto fund ."
At first , som e town council
members thought Dindak was
jesting.
" Oh. if' s more or less a joke,'' said
council President Ruth Thomas.
"HP brought it up at a council
m(&gt;('tlng but he was just kidding.
They're even kidding him dow n at
Buffington' s (tavern!."
Despite the lhuckles, the mayor
say!S he's serious.

with Uniden Receiver
COMPLETELY INSTALLED

* Excellent Picture! *

$1850°0

Sytems From ' 1695 Installed

'

SA'fEW'Rl
!t'YSTEMs ·

378-61 58

Sat. I 0-6

FORD
MERCURY

THAT'S RIGHT! STOP IN TODAY AND PICK
OUT YOUR NEW FORD - LINCOLN - MERCURY V.W. - JEEP OR RENAULT AND MAKE YOUR
FIRST PAYMENT IN FEBRUARY 1985!!!

LI NCOLN

"

1

. ,

1

BUY NOW PAY LATER!!
60 Month Financing
vallable To Qualified OFFER APPLIES TO ANY NEW CAR
Appliacantsll
OR TRUCK .IN STOCK!!

$ 649CIO

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELRY INC.

1910 DATSUN ·200 SX ·hardtop, coup~. 4 cyl. e~glne , fact . air

cond. , s-sp. trans .• p~isc brakes, bod'y'side mldgs,·, tinted
glass, am·fm radio, wh-covcrs, remote p-control mirrors,
consolc, bumper guards, bucket seats, rea r window
d etogger.
WAS H69S .OD
NOWS4995.00
19111 CH,VROLET CHEVETTE · 2 dr, 4 c yt . eng., 4-sp .
tr.1n s., bodyside mid g., tinte d glass, am, wsw radials , wh ee l

~

covers, remote control mirrors, bucket sea t s .
WAS U695 .00
NOWS2995.00
1980M F R CURY CArR 1 · 6 c yl. l' ng .. ta ct . air cond ., s un roof ,
hcC'It er. 4-s p. ~ans., ~stecrim1 , p·disc brat. cs. bodysidr
mldg ., dig itfl t clock, tint. glas s, C'lm· fm . ste rro t,1pe, remote
con t. mirr ors, console, buck et seats, r('ar w·defogger, ro.1d
whor ls .
S tuck No.4087t
WAS 54995 .00
NOW$4695 .00

·s11

THE POW&amp; BAnERY

FRANCIS FLORIST .,
MEIGS COUNTY'S OlDEST FLORIST
. AND RECIPIENT OF THE
F.T.D. DIS1iNGUISHED SERVICE AWARD
WISHES TO INVITE VOU TO THEIR ANNUAL

will 61

•
. j4.J

Th r:t'~
Gt),trn::-F~vt:'tl&lt;:JHV·~~'-(:'":.' ·'';f"~O!"~'·H.J 1 '

dll•lg of !iw

'

1976 LINCOLN

MAR~

,.

(•

(l!ld honT

o.~,, It

P&lt;JY lo pay

@ :::~ :~o~k~~agen.
-·~ _ ___.::__

J (':

~~.1,

•

"'II•·•·

il..rrH&gt;&lt;o·a

IV · V·8 e ng,. fact , ,,;r cond .• viny I

ronf. moon roof. heater. auto. tr c1 ns., p·s tecring, p-disc brake.
p·windows. p ·sei'lt. p-door lod:s, body si dc mldg., tint. gl.1ss,
tilt s f·wh C'£'1, c ·cont. a m-fm , stt&gt;rl'n tape, ws w r .1di.1ls, remott'
cor1t-mirrors, reil r window defogger.
t98'1 V(H ~ SWAC.EN SC II&gt;' DC CO · 4 cyt . eng . , to c t. o ir cond .,
hL'•l fer , s -sp trans .• p-disc bratccs , p-windows. p"Ct oor loch,
bndy s i~ mldg .. tint. qlilss. ilm·fm, stereo casst"tt~. radial
fir('S, remolr coil f. mirrllrs, bucket scilts, re.1r windowdeg.,
tC'C'If wiper ~.
S tnd No . 50081
WASS8995 .00
NOW$8295 .00
1978 VOL

f(

NOW IN STOCK!
*

Price Quoted Is Manufactures Base Excluding
Freight, Options, Taxes And Fees.

SW /I.G F. N RA A A IT · 4 dr, 4 cyt, c·ng. , hcntcr, 4 sp.

WA~ $1 995.00.

5 tor~ No. 56481

$289.00
RETAIL VALUE
"FREE"

NOWSI 295.00

1978 VOLJ( 5W.t\C', F N TRANSPORTF.:,.. · 7 p;ass(lng('r, 4 cy l.
('ng ., llcoa tcr, 4-.s p. trOJ ns., il m, ws w radial s, wh -covl'rS .
t981

VOL~

SWACEN

5 lock No . 47751
~A

NOW$3895.00

B BIT · 4 dr . dios ot , 4 cy I. eng., 4 SJl·

bodyside mldg., tint. glass, am, radial tir l'S, Wh·
CO\oers,hud'ctseats .
Sto clc No.41 011
WAS S4995.00
NOW$3995.00
t913 J EEP C J7 · H•rdlop L•redo, 4 cy l. eng. , 4 s p ·tans ., p·

steering, a m·f m radio, bucketseats. •
W{l.5 58575.00

S toe~ No. 56271

NOWS7995.00

1914 FOR 0 F-250 X4 Pick._.) · ' '' ton pic~ up , V-B eng ., •uto.
trans.; p~stcering, p·brakes, long wide bed, gauges, sliding
rt'ar qlass, rear stqa bumpl"r, auJIIIIiary fuel tank
WAS $10950.
Stock No , SUit
NOWS9"5 -

With the Purch ase of any
new 1984 or 1985 Rang er
Pickup .
Over 50 More Trucks to
Choose From .

.(

992-2111

•u/eea-ae&gt;44 6J;.
;
Scncl your a~eetlftp widupedel W.care.~

GoH

bra~ es,

tr~ns .,

157 Walnut St.
Middleport, OH.

POMIIIOY. OHIO AIS711

Voi~·;v,t&gt;:y':'

so liHh,:i,~~~~~~~~. '$)t~~x

THE MOTOR PARTS CO.

FL.ORI$T

Oh'J

mldg ,. fl m ·fm r.l di O, WSW tC'IdioliS, Wh·COV('fS,
rl'mnt (' cont. mirrors. ~ l11d: NCl . 40871
WAS S5495 .00
NOWS4795.00

WAS $4295 .00

Availiible at this area NAPA store.

Moifp c.M.aty'• Oldal n.tilt
112 IAIT MAIN

,_ ~lr~o·,

nnd

trans .• tint. gla ss, ., m-tm . .

®

,,,d tnd d.o, '''z" will 6s ''"" 1w1g.

·:?with ~'lC &lt;wbkfevt
nH you poy fo\- til~~ · ~· v -~ otdity

body si~

..

4NAPA~

u ••,,, will 6s th"' lot '"' Child,,, Rsltuh"''"''

corry S pf~Oi:Jie =o~

19110 0 LD SMOBILF CUTlASS SUPP E MF · 2 dr, 6 cy I. e ng .,

t.1ct. air cood., tlPil fer, a uto. tr .1n s., p- s tt-ering, p-d isc

I

SUNDAY, NOV. 25th-12:00 TO 5:00

,,~1

tt:~

t980 Pl YMOU TH HOP IZON TCJ · 4 cyt. eng ., f,ut . , ir cond.,

.,

CHRISTMAS ·
OPEN HOUSE

s6,990.

hrater. 4·sp trans .• p-stecrlng, p·disc br.1kcs , 11 m-fm, remote
co ntr nl mirrors, bud ('f seats .
WAS $4195.00
5 tuc~ No . 49382
NOW S3495.DO

s

"the Power" battery with its
six year warranty is just
$49.9:1 with trade-in.
Stop by any participating NAPA store.
service station or
garage toda y.

Incredibly low
carrying charge.

•

··,

SII,VER~IRD

NEW SHOWROOM OPEN
ON RT. 7
TUPPER PlAINS, OHIO
BY THE POST OFFICE
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 2-7

BUY NOW PAY LATER!!!

SANTA'S
FAVORITE

-~~~~' f ~~. C.A~t

Alao planned at the meet1n1 wa•
lht' annual Chrl1tmaa party at lite
UMWtobeheldonDec.lat6p.mat
tht' homl' of Mrs. Donna Hill.
Mrs. Eileen Bu~k told of her
recent trip to Holland, West
Germany. Austria, · Yu~&lt;Qslavia.
It aly, SwltZPrland . France, and
London . Devotions were given by
Donna Hill and the group sang
"Count Your Blessings" with Dolly
Wolfe giving prayer. Scripture was
read from the 10th chapter of
Psalms by Julia Norris.
At!endlng were Sue Grace, Dolly
Wolf!''. Mary Roush, Julia Norris,
,Mrs. Buck, Florence Smith, Bess
Parsons. Donna Hill, Lor(fflll , and a
guest, Autumn Hill. Refrl'shments
were se1ved following the meeting.

9

A different kind ofyard sale

Gambling on the town future?

Troop 1116

(

FULL SIZE CONSOLE

Apple Grove UMW

A pre-holiday party was _held
recently at the home of Mary Morris
by the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Son&gt;rlty. Cohostesses for thE' party were Velma
Rue, Lillian Moore, and Norma
·
Custer.
'
The group played Triva Pursuit
and bridge during the evening.
Attending were Ann Rupe, Clarice
Krautter, Robe!1a O'f'lrlen •. Nellie
Brown, Pearl Weiker, Betty Ohlinger. Rva Vaughan, Maidie Mora,
Carol Tannehlli, Donna Jones,
Mary Pickens and,Tersa Swatzel.

REMOTE CONTROL
19" DIAGONAL 25" DIAGONAL

ELECTRONIC TUNING

and Darla Norrll, leaden, Gene and
Harold Norrll, Barbara Cottt&gt;rlll,
Judy Calhunl, ud Brenda .E rwin.
The Brownie pledge opened the
meeting and dues ~re collt&gt;Cted
from th011e attendlns. Dawn Erwin,
Charlotte Cremeans, Cherrle Calhun!, Ronda Raymond , and Susan
Cotterill.

.Preceptor Beta Beta

only 8 49995

157CHAN NEL

tor TllankiiiVInl allllted by Chl11

Sentinei-P~ge

$449 95

Phone 992-2975

Clo11d Monday

"It's the perfect project on which
-Outline features with chocolate
children can work together," says frosting .
Miss Field. a forrrier teacher. "It's
-Apply frosting with tips or from
not like decoratlng Easter eggs. It's frosting tubes,
a big project, the kind tha t requires ' . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
teamwork. That's what makes it
part.lcularly appropriate for the
days leading up to Christmas."
Mil' INIAIW IR
Some decora tlng suggestions
Cinema(?)
from Miss Field:
1 Hf[li~ '~Qp~,~~ \[,',;'
-If you're making your gwn
NEW -.of 11!8 OH PRICE POUCV
frosting, make sure it spreads
ADULTS $2.00 - CHILDREN $1 .00
ALL SEATS Sl.ao FOR MATINEES I
easily; If you're using canned
frosllng.thlnwlth twotablespoonsof
milk.
-Mixing red food coloring with
white frosting makes pink, not red.
You'll need to buy ready-made
frosting for the red cap.
-Jelly bea ns, ca ndy a nd raisins
can be used for eyes, noses, hat rims
and lassies.

$32900
only .

California, wtll be released to movie
•
theaters after the ABC broadcast.
1S7 CHANNEL
The story resembles a space-age
ELECTIONK TUNING
version of the "Wizard ofOl. "In this.
1 CHillY
case, a family 's spacecraft has r-----.....:.--------1
crashed, separatJng two c hildren
from their parents. With the help of
the brave Ewoks, the kids eventuZENITH 25" Dii SOMI CUI~ ·
Series Cofor TV • Z2500W
a lly rescue their captive parents.
Along the way, the band of little
warriors - the pastoral Ewoks
don't believe in first strike but they
are pesky self-defenders- run 'Into
the kind of larger-than-life creatures, benign and otherwise, who
inhabited Lucas •zany, intergalactic
992-2635
Mitldltpert
barroom scene in the original "Star
Wars."
1There's really nothing in " The
'-------------L-------------------------~-. ,
Ewok Adventure" to alarm or scare
the young. But, at the same time,
'
t here·~ probably not enough actionadventure to wow the older. more
cynical kids who have seen il all on
cable TV.
The special effects. which Smith
defines as the optical Images thai
are created after the actors leave
the set, are outsta nding for
television.
The movie's human acting is
unexceptional. The rea l stars are the
Ewoks. A cross between Teddy
Bears and Alvin the Chipmunk, they
can emote their furry little heads off.
Burl Ives lends adventure and
allure as the movie's narra tor. He
has the kind of campfire voice that
Get NAPA's best battery at the
would soothe any balky kid at night ,
and that's what " The EWok Advenlowest price of the year. Now dur- ·
ture" essentially Is - a nice,
ing NAPA Fall Car Care Days
with trade-in
non-t hreatening bedtime story.

Pamery, OH

FAll &amp; WINTER HOURS
Tue1.-FrL 9 to S; Sot. 9 to l

Gilts to the Veterans Hospital at
Chillicothe a nd the Xenia Children's
Home were made a t the recent
meeting of the Racine Amelcan
Legion Auxiliary of Racine Post 602
held all he haiL
It was noted that the party for the
veterans at Chillicothe wUI be held
on ·Dec. ~and the unit will send $10
for that. It was voted to send $25 (or
the Christmas paty at Xenia.
The mid-winter conference will be
he ld In Columbus Dec. 15 and 16, It
was announCE&gt;d. Julia Norris
ported that there are four veterans
from Meigs County in the PomE&gt;roy
Health Care Center. Libby Willford

QUALITY
AT BUDGET
PRICES

"There's no rule that says you
must shop for Christmas gills when
everyoneelse!loes." he says, ad ding
that by shopping during vacation
trips, especially abroad, "chances
are you'll he saving m oney, not, to
mention loads of time, and be feeling
a lot more relaxed ."
Mall -order shop'pin g offe rs
another easy, relaxed method of
buying gifts. Last year. Americans
bought more than $44 billion In
merchandise tha i way.

years."

'

Legion Auxiliary

.

11ft for each one to be
preRnted from the unit. Carda were
alped for Betty Van Meter and Eula
Wolfe. A buket offruit wUI be1entto
Mn. Van Meter who 11 an otflcer or
the unit:
It was reported that the unit has
reached goal In membership. Dues
for the eight past presidents were
submitted. The annual Christmas
party will he held at the Meigs Inn on
Dec. al. There will be a $5 gift
exchange.
Will Ill a

Star Garden Club

Find shopping stressless for holiday season
PASADENA, Calif. lAP) -The
holiday season is known as a time of
good will, happy family reunions
and joy to the world, but it also can
kindle a ngry outbursts, sweaty
palms. queasy stomach and tension
headaches.
Described as "shopping a nxiety"
the symptoms stem from the chaos
of last -minute Christmas gift shopping, according to a California
psychiatrist .
"Even though many of us today
lead very busy lives, we often feel
compelll-'d to find the perfect present
for everyone on out list," says Dr.

The Deily

Area groups conduct meetings._·- - - - - -

'

a built -In sensor or the light meter
sensor In the camera to measure
the light reflected from the subject.
All but two of the flash units
tested also have a manual exposure
setting so you can take pictures the
old-fashioned way by dividing the
guide numbers by the distance to
the subject to determine the proper
lens aperture.
Among the 31 models tP&lt;tF&lt;l.
those that rated the highest were all
quite powerful, relatively bulky and quite expensive. However, they
scored ImpressivelY In both uniformity and consistency o.f exposure.
For a Mlnolta camera with all the
available dedicated features, · consider the Mlnolta 360PX flash, $176,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

•

�:Pagr

. 1~The

November 23, 1984

Iii

Business ServiceS

Area deaths
INA

Paul E. Casto
Paul Edgar Casto, 76, d iE'd Ftiday
morning at his home at 5:IJ N.
Second Ave .. Middleport . Arrangements are being made by the EWing
Funeral Home.

Charles Russell, Jr.
Former Meigs Count y Sheriff
Charles T. Russell, Jr. , 66, died
Wednesday night at Vl'terans
Memorial Hospital where he was
taken after becoming Ill at his home;
35341 Texas Road, Pomeroy.
.
Mr. Russell retired from serving
• several terms as Meigs County
Sheriff and before his retirement
worked with the Ohio Department of
Highways in Meigs County. He was
born at Pomeroy on Jul y 10, 1918, a
son of the late Charles T . Russell,
Sr., and Agnes Kober.
He ·was a member of the
Minersville United Methodist
Church. the Disabled American
Veterans. Drew Webste r Post 39,
. American Legion, the Republican
Natjonal Committee and the Ohio
State Sheriff's Association.
Surviving are his wtfe, Mat'~aret
Hartenbach Russell ; a sister. MaxIne Russell Ray of Ml'terie, Louisi·
ana, and several nieces and
nephews. Besides his .parents, hi'
· was preceded in death by a sister,
Mildred Mankin.
Sl'rvices will be held at 1 p.m .
Sunday at the Ewing Fune ral Home
with the Rev. James Corbitt

Q. DoE's ME'dica re help to pa,v for
· prescription lenses?
A. Ordinarilv the only time
Medicare pays prescription lenses
is for the first pair of if'ns&lt;•s aft0r
cataract rpmoval.

Roy Lee Amburgey. 59, 67.
Burdette Addition, Pt. Pleasant .
died Wednesday morning at University Hospita l in Columbus, followlng
a long Illness.
Born June 15. 1925, at Millstone,
Ky., Amburgey was thesonofSusan
Crase Amburgey, Pt. Pleasant. She
survivE's. He was precedro in death
·by his fathE'r. Ira Amburgey, Pt.
Pleasant . who died Oct. 17, 1978.
Surviving are his wifE', Margaret
Miller Amburgey; a son. Kenneth L.
Amburgey: and a brother, Ralph E.
Amburgey, all of Pt. Pleasant .
Amburgey se1v ed during World
War II Club of.Pt. Pleasant.
Sl'rvtces will he held Saturday at
11 a.m. at Wilcoxen Funeral Home.
Burial will follow at Kirkland

Nomination for next year's officers was made when the Rutland
Bowhunters met. The election will
bE' held at the December meeting or
·.through absentE'€' ballot for thosC'
unable to attend that mE'C'ting.
. Members of the club who have
been successful in killing dE'f'r this
season are R. T. Stewart. Pight point
. buck; Rick Bolin, five point buck; J.
R. Wamsley, a dOE'; Sam McKinney,
: eight point buck; Charles Neutziing.
eight point buck: Frank Broderick.
a doe; MikeJohnson. ll point burk.a
· dn Carmen Vii·gilotti, a 10 point
buck.

Foundation funds
received by schools
Meigs County's thrE'E' local school
ilistrtcts have received $476,4()j.89 .
as their portion of the November
. State School Foundation Statp
Subsidy payment of $138,253,296.
Amounts rE'CCived by each distrtct after deductions for r·etirement
include Eastern Local, $110,826.56;
ME'igs Local. $258,510.16, and South·
ern Local, $107,068.17. In addition,
thE' Meigs County Board of Educa·
•lion rcct'ived a direct allotment of
_~$27,074.16.

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admisslons-..Zelda
Davis, Pomeroy; Mary Wippel,
: Pomeroy; Raymond Miller,
Reedsville.
· Wednesday Dlscharges-..Okey
Kaiser, Sharon Bailey, Martha
Taylor, Donald Riffle, Donald
Roush.
Thursday Admissions---Wilbur
Whaley, . Shade; John Myers,
· Portland.
Thursday Diseharges···Juanita
,Bowles, William Fink, Nadine
Futch, Shirley Guinther.

,

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

Aox, 326
· Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Faster Service

Q. DOE's Medicare pay for hearing

aids?
· 1
A. M('(licarc's mE'dical insuranc&lt;'
part dOE's not pay for or reimburse
for thE' purchasE' of hearing aids.
Q. Do I have to hav·c a Iawver to .
get disability benefits?
A. You have the right to choose
anyonE' you like to represent you
hE'fore Social SE'curity. There is no
rrquirement. however. that you
have a reprPSf'ntative or attornry .

The JlPOple at any Social S.&gt;curity
office will always be glad to help
you complete any forms you n('('d
for benefits , whether or not you
have' a representative.
Q. I receive• Social SE'cutity

checks for m y 13 year old son. Do I
have to kE'E'p records of what I do
with the ch('Cks?
A. Every representative pay&lt;'&lt;' is
obligated to kE'E'p track of ho~ they ,
sp('nd the mom•y thev rl'&lt;'eive for
somE'One &lt;'ise. Remember, al though vour name appPars on the
chcck. yo u son's Social SPcurity
check is still for hi s usf' on his food,
clothing, sh&lt;'ltcr. medical care. and
spPnding.

Plan luncheon
AChristmas parade lunchron will
be held in the social rooms a !Trinity
Church. Pomeroy. from HI a.m. to
2:.10 p.m. Saturda)' with soup. chili,
sloppy joes, hot dogs, desserts and
beverages to be available.

To end marriages
Two dissolut ions of marriage
have been grantc&gt;d in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Judge
Charl!'s Knight. Obtaining dissolu·
lions were Callie A. Richmond and
Richard L. 'Richmond , beth of
MiddiPport. and Dannie W.•Jacks,
Chester, and Carlo H. Jacks,
SpringfiPld.

Treat distribution
lmmE'diately . following Saturday's Christmas Parade in Middle·
p:&gt;rt, Santa .will be at Middleport
Village Hall, corner of Third and
Race Streets, passing out children's
treats. Treats are being provided by
the Middleport Chamber of
CommE'l'CE'.

Dinners offered .
at Long Bottom

.THAtJKS

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

:-:r:~
... Sd!ool yICI'boolc.

992-3410
or
843·5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND

Any business

or

·. Roger Hysell

GARAGE
Rl. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

~lO·IOYS

·-GAS liliES
~SEPTIC SYSTEMS

lARIE , !MAU. JOBS

contact Donnie Dud·
ding at 949·2600. .

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201
l ·U ·I

. PH. 992·2478

11/23/l mo. P&lt;j ,

U·U·I •.

SIDIN8

"z

a

SIDING CO.

"Beautiful, Custam
Built Garages"

:c
!

Mon.-Fri. 9-9 .

Call for free sidin1 es·
timates~ 949·2801 or
. 949·28o0
. .

Sat. 9-S; Sun. 1·5
Kim Ntlson

992-2903

No Sunday Calle

Ruth Ann T

lor

SANTA TRMN1NG - Anna Tlnnen, who dresses

for varl011~ Jobs trains a~ut a dozen Santa.~ each Christmas season
work in depart~ent stores and •l.,pping centers in the Memphis area.
(AP '-•photo).

lo

a.:. Mrs. Santa

Cla11• In herworkwi(h \\'estern Temporary Services Inc., helps a novice
Santa·with his suit. The company, which supplies temporary workers

6th St., Syracuse
Moitdaf·Satunlay
IOAM-5 PM

CLOSED 1'IIIIISDAY
OpM Sun, Dec. 9, 16. 23

Racine council receives petitions about odor
Mrs. Henry Moore, Broadway St.,
presentro a pPtition· ot RacinE'
Village Council concerning alleged
odor coming from the lift station on
Cross St. at Monday's regular

District Board .
Counciml s!'nt a letter to to Bill
Wickline. countv auditol'. requesting . an a~ended certificate of

regular session.

appropriations at the next mE'E'ting
and put ali villagt&gt; accounts In the
black.
Council passed a resolution aut horizing the use of village strrets and
alley for laying of water lines. This
authorization was requirf'd by
Farmers Home Administration in
anticipation of the loan fort he water
system improvement. It was
pointed out that although this was
one of th&lt;' requin&gt;d document s for
the loan, new wa terlines will not be
laid.
The village marshall and the

owners to' Mayor's Court.
Council voted to send out addi·
tiona! letters to residents that need
to clean trash and litter from their
propPrty.
.
Fire Chief Robert Johnson and
Doug RE'E's a ppParE'd before council
with SpPCifications for a new
pump('r truck. Frank Cleland is to
chf'Ck with the village solicitot· on
certain legal questions on the

l'evenu e so that council can amPnd

Council informE'dMrs. MoorE' that
the matter should be dirE'CtE'd to the
Syracus('-Racine Regional Sewer

O'Brien
ends 24
cases

si)f'C'ificafiotiS.

.

A special m('('ting- of village
council will b&lt;• hPld at 7 p.m. Monday
evening to discuss t h&lt;' spPCiflcations
and to authorize thf' bidding for tho
nPw pumper. Funds for the fire
truck and opPration will come from
contracts with the townships funded
by Ihe rccr nt one-mill lit'!' levy.
The necessity of arranging a
public mE'E'ting to explain what the
council and board of public affairs

street commissionf'r were givf'n

12-6PM
. Open

are considering for the water
system improvement -project was
discussed. However, it was pointed
out that council has been meeting
twicP a month with notice of those
mE'E'ting prlhtro tn the nE&gt;WspapPr,
but no citizens have appPared at
council mretings · to voice any
concerns or quE'Stions about the
projecl. Council will still consider a
public meeting at a later date.
In attendance at Monday's meeting were Mayor Charles Pyles,
CouncilmemhE'rs RobE'rt Beegle,
Frank ClE'land. Dan SayrP, Carroll
Teaford, Lan·y Wolfe and Scott
Wolfe, Glenn Rizer, strret commis!:
sioner. Hank Cleland and Ben Petrel
of the board of public affairs, Robert
.Johnson. fire chief, Doug RE'E's, !Ire
department secretary. and Alfred
Lyons, village marshall. Clerk
Margie Wolfe was unable to attend.

App,intment .

CAROlYN McCOY
ll·21-t mo.

CALU
· II TIE

.

Ar&amp;J

BUCKWOOD
HOME SPAS

Windows

1111111 mo.

FOR FUTURE USE"

Po meroy -M.1 son Bridg(•

MOTEL
S/ NGLE $24 .95

Announcemenls
3 Announcerpents

Why Wait Till Winter To Remember
You Were Going To (all Us?

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

UTILITY BUILDINGS

•• r•• ~.lelll

.. o••,

- Worted• ~ • "~

9~1

ll:i l QII,Ae•e o g~

)57
J I)B

Vo·110•

1 4~

~ ll•ll ' "" d •

l&gt;ll•oa lop Drt

1i4l

4l ·H&lt;111111 1Gt !l""1

4 2 MoboOI H&lt;Ime• t ot ltont
44 Ap"'"' "" '

A o"t

4 5·Fu mOi hP.d

&amp; I W •",."' ~&gt; ~ u
f; )
Ro
&amp;~

!&gt;· Sc '&lt;KII~

S O&lt; d

81

A• • M 0111

949 - ~l tiNI

M &lt;&gt;n•~ \m (lt o•~ """" "

9) 7

• .,~. ...

r ~,

Onod•!l ftiO il•o n
!IIO OO J IOt~n

11

won.
(Free Estimates) ·

SHOP LOCALLY

TEAFORD

COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!

I

I

Wealher forecast

I

The Long Bottom Community

'I REAL ESI'AlE I

Association will stage a deer hunters
special dinner Monday through . Ohio lottery winner
Friday from 4 to8 p.m. each evening
CLEVELAND (APJ
The
at the Long Bottom Community
·winning nt.irnbE'r drawn Thursday
Building. .
·
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally
Features each evening during the
game, "The Number," was 512. In
money-making project of the associ·
the "Pick 4" game, the winning
ation will be Monday, 'chill; Tues·
number Was 4906.
day, soup heans and cornbread;
The Lottery reponed earnings of
Wednesday, chicken and noodles;
$89,455 from wagering on "The
Thursday, potato soup, and Friday,
vegetable soup. Hot sandwlchE'S, Number." The earnings came on
soups and desserts will also be sales of ~5,816.50, while holders of
available each evening In addition to· winning tlckets are rotitled to sh,are
$826,361.5(1.
.
· the specials,

•

PW61NTO
CLR551FIEDS
992-2156
Public Notice

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF LORENZO D .
DAVIS. SR .. DEcEASED
Caoe No. 24,5B2, Docturt 12,
Page 447
·
NOnCE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 14; ·1984. 1n
the Meigs County Proba te
Court Case No. 24582. Roger

Cl ,-.rk

OhiO 45769 .

ti ll

Ro hAn E Buc:k .
Proba te J,,rJor:
By Lefl &lt;J K N ess ~lrotld
Clerk

16 .

PROBATE COURT OF ·
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTAT£ OF ALLEN E. JEN·
KINSON. DECEASED
Case No. 24613, Docket 12,
Page 446
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Novemhe r 14. 198 4. n1
\hf) MP.t {ls Coun ty Probate
Cutrrt. Case No. 246 13 . Cu rtr s
L Jr: r1krnson. 1037 V tnc S trP.nl
Mtdrl lt=tf1n rt . Ohtn 45760
nppcm11 f:d Executor ol thP.
~s t al n ol Allen E. Jonk rnson.
rli~O! CI S 0&lt;l. lotP. of ll05 South
Four th Slroet M ~t ld l e porl Ohtn

wnS

457AO

2;1 30. 3rc

11 I I

.

' Ro b8r! F. Buck.
Proba te Judge
By Lena K Nesselroad
Clerk

1G. 23, 30, 3tc

Real Estate General
...

W Davrs arid Lorenzo E. Davr s.

Jr. 39 305 McGralh Road.
Pomeroy. Oh1o 45769 and
237 4 Roth Dnve. Cuyahoga
Falls. Oh1o 44244. respectively,
w3S appointed Co· Exectrtors of
the estate of Lorenza D. Davis,
Sr., dec eased. late ol 434 36
KrnRsburv Roa ~ . Pomeroy.

w·

NEW LISTING - Letart Grand large l'ltme plus a rental
house. Pnced to sell quickly.
$27.000.00.
NEW LISTING - Kyger Gallia County- Mobile home
and lot with garage. Priced io
sell at $6,500 00

l1y L••n;J K N n~;snl ru.-l d

Public Notice

Tonight: clear: low 2.'i to 30.
Saturday: sunny again; high 5o to
60. Outlook for Sunday: fair; high_
near 55. The chance of prl'Cipitation
is near zero pPrcent tonight and
Saturday.
Ohio Extended Forec,ast
Surxlay tlu'ough Tuesday: lair
Sunday; a chance ol rain Monday
wrd Tuesday. Highs in the 50s
Sunday and Monday, in the .fOs
Tuesday; lows 32 to 42.

NEW LISTING - Great
neighborhood and a nicely
remodeled home to go on this
level lot in Middleport Nr
conditioned and carpeted and
looks real nice. Call lor an
appointment $31,900.00.

I

CARS

Meigs

Associate

Phone 742·3171
Now

HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL - -IN
' the country - level lot &amp; a 2
story frame house !hal needs
repair.; but ~ bargam pnced at
$11,900.00.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Exce~
lent 6 room ranch with ~ove
and relrigerator for $32,900.
.RURAL POMEROY- Agoods·
room home with 2-car garage
on 1.3 acres.

COUNTRY . HOME, country
location. country price. roost
remodeling completed. ~ce
one aCie lot All for only
$25,00000

SYRACUSE - Nice 3bedroom
home with attached garage,
· only $30.000.
:
RURAL HOME ~ 4 bedroom
home. recenfly remodeled,
new cabinets, carpeting, vinyl
siding and garage.
,
RUTlAND- Your choice ol a
small 2 bedroom home or a
large two apartment honie.
Offer i.nv~ed .
•
LINCOlN HEIGHTS ~ LoW
heat bills on this small home:
basement, remodeled and ni~
at $26,000,
...

..

THREE FARMS - 96 :.:res ~
Rutland Twp., ilice home wilD .
free gas,.other buildings. 110
acres Scipio Twp., IJQd ho"'l!
with free ga~ several other
btdgs 45·acre~ RIJ!Iand Twp.1
land only.
. .:.

V. C. YOUNG II I

PAT HILL FORD

992·6215., 9'12·nt4

Middleport, Ohio

992-2196

, ••.,.,, o.hle

f1l

'

'

Gun shoot at Racine Gun

Club every Sunday. 1;00
p .m . FactorY chocked guns
only .
·

HAVE YOUR LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES RE ·
VIEWED AND UPDATED.
Some life insurance po'icies

alloW the insurance com ·
panies to keep your savings.
upon death . We offer a wide

446-2062

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

Curb Inflation
Pay ·Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savel I I

.

1· 13-ttc

I
I
I
I

I

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST

For all your Wiring
needs; furnaces · repair
. service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742·3195
Or 992-5875

GUYSVILLE,

house plants and poinsettias

ATTENTION HUNTERS .
Deer heads mounted. qual ·
ity and satisfactiori guaran ·
teed. Call Stewart 's Taxi -

dermv at 614 -742 -3006 .
No hunting or trespassing .
daY or night. on Charles E.
Yost Farms.
·

Will paint car or truck and do
mmor body work , 5210.00 .
All work guaranteed. Call

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

614-992 -6846 .
Postively no trespassing on
the Pantasote Property. vio ·
lators will be prosicuted .

Far111 E•ulp1111111
Part• &amp; Ser•lee
,.,.,,,

No Hunting on the Raymond
Smith property .
No Huntil"lg No Trespassing
on Howard Hickle Farm .

VACANT GROUND to b~ild or
for hunting. We havl' several
parcels..Call for information on
these.

PH. 667-6715 .

Hartford , WV .

A.M.

WANTED
RAW
PINE POSTS

CONSlRUCOON

t I For Sate
( )Announcement

.•Backhoe
•Dump Truck

8:00 to 5:30
Monday thru Friday

r7. - - - - - -

( I For Ren1

•coal &amp; limestone

2. _ _ _~--

•Bonded &amp; licensed
Phone: 742·222S
or 742-2167

3.
4.
5.

11112/1

.li .J. J mo.

20. - - - - - -

'-~-----

21.
22.

,.___
23.

Available for Birthdays

··Ill~·"···~·

I

7~30·10:00

.I

Ph- 915-9966

I

'I

or 985-3929

10· 11. I liD.
I

'.

Ducks

to

give

446 -3672
Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni ·
ture, 446· 31 59 , 3rd
&amp;
Olive St .. Gallipolis, Oh.

7760 .

Road 82 . Cat'! 6t4-992·
7165 .

~----------~-----------·

5004.

Ftn anw l
21

Found white cat . Red collar.
3 Parrish Ave . Point Ple,a -

Buying daily gold , silver
coins , rings. jewelry, sterling
ware. old coins , large cur rency . Top prices. Ed . Bur kett Barber Shop . 2nd . Ave .

Middleport. Oh. 614-992 3476 .
BUYING RAW FURS Beef
and Deer Hides ,Ginseng and
yellow root . Selling ·
trapping supplies . Wheat
tiQhts . night lights . George

Bucklev. phone 614 -664 ·
4761 ,hours 12-9PM dailey
Old books. dairy 's. ' letters ,
and other old documents, no
paperbacks or textbooks,
also buy old oil paintings.
P .O. Box 114 , Athens. Oh

45701 ' 614-593-8915 .

! NOTICE!
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB · '
LISHING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investi·
gated th'e offering .

5 -N -1 WOODWORKING
MULTI -TOOL : Now Iran ·
chi sed dealer ·pre-opening
sale . Accessories for Shopsmith available . Christmas
orders due. November 28.
Call Bob. collect at the
Woodworkers Shed even ings and Sundays 614 -886 -

8429 .
Tavern m , Middleport for
sale. 0 · 1,0 - 2 , 0 -3 license.

Call 614-992 -9975 or 9922873 .

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS -Refinance
to low fixed rate . Use equity
for any purpose . Leader'

Mortgoge
3051 '

Co ..

614-592 -

5,

·Lost Brittany Spaniel in
vicinity of Rts . 2-62 . Last

Professional
Services

Sewing machine repain .
Authorized .Singer, New
Home and Bernina dealer.
Repairs on any make rna ·
chine . In home tune-up
special $15 . 95 . The Sewing

Bee 446 -4172 or 446 -7742
after SPM .
Unwanted fac•al or body
hair ? Permanent. painl•ss
removal by European Elec tronic Oepilator . Mary is
certified in this new compu ·
terized digital system. Call

today 614-992 -6720 . 'fop
of the Stairs, full service
salon.
Deer heads mounted . Qual ity mounts. Over 25 years
experience . East of Ru11and

on Rt . 124 . Colt 614 -7422178.

Emplovmenl
Service s

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR , Reduced rates limited
time only . Ward 's Keyboard ,

304 -675 -5500
3824.

11

or · 675 -

Help Wanted

Real Eslate
FA EE Chri stmas t oys &amp; gifts
by booking~ Merri -Mac Toy
Show. Now accepting book ings during Dec . 10. Call for
more information . Judy .

446 -3043 .
Government jobs. Sl 6 , 559 $50 ,553 -year , Now hiring .
Your area Call 805 -687-

6000. ext. R-4562 .

31

Homes for Sale

Three bedrooms. central air .
vinyl wall paper. carpet
throughout , well insulated,
new paint, attached garage.
gas outdoor grill. awnings,
many extras. Call446 -2583

Sales Manager needed f or

t il 5 :00PM . after 6:00PM
call 614 -245-5859 .

Me r g s Co . Memory
Gardens . Salary plus commission . We train &amp; furn rsh
leads. Send resume t o P.O.
box 729 . Athens . Oh45701

3 bdr. large livingroom.
pool . 1 ac .. storage build ings. assume 9 % % loan . Will
help finance balance . Call

or call 634 -592 -6151 .

446-7535 .

Timber cutter wanted, must
be experien ced . Ca ll 614 -

M iddleport Home . Priced t o
sell! And we mean priced to

949 -2967 .

Sell!! Call614 -992-6941 .

Appli cations are bei ng take n
for part time grocery clerks.
Must be able to work days or
evenings. We are lookrng f or
experienced people only.
Appli ca1ions will be taken at
Vaughan ' s Cardinal in M iddleport on Nov . 26, 27 . and
28 or call Mr. Dennis
Hockman at ·992 -3471 for
an appointment .

Close to mines . 3 bedroom.
1'12 bath. large kitchen.
family room , basement, carport . 10 1h acres . Call 614 ·

Principal -Teacher. Bachelor
and higher degree in educa tion or related field . Certified
in MSPR, Supervision and
Physical Education . Contact
Superintendent , Carleton

;chool 16t4 J992 -66B3 .
Join , the West Virginia Na ·
tiona! Guard. Receive a
monthly paycheck , $35.000
life insurance . educational
opportunities. retirement
pay. other outstanding be ·

698-8501 alter 6 00 pm .
Owner moving . Must sell
modfied A frame . 5 acres,
fu lly carpeted with fire·p lace
and Wood burner. Corning
top oven and side by side ref.

S38 ,000 Call 614-843 5384 even ings fof Sunday
appt .
Four bedroom.s. kitchen fam ily room with fireplace ,
finished basement Point
Pll:!asant
Shown by ap-

pointment , JD4-675 -3079 .
Pr•ced reduced total alec .

central air .

new wood

burner , small etec. bill , wall
to wall carpet, 3 br. briCk.
h:rrge garage. wood shed,
Gallipolis Ferry . 304 -675 -

6851 '
Two bedroom . recently remodeled , forced air heat , 102

High Street . Phbne 304·
675-2515 after 500 P.M .

Two openings 55 years of
gen . office work. Position
governed by pOverty income
guidelines . Apply in person
at Pt. Pl . Job Service, 225

61h St . Pt . Pl.

sant: Phone 304 -675-7120 .

seen 1t-1D-84 .

Business
Opportunity

niels. 614-742- 2951 .

age or Qlder, light typing ,

l

Giving Beginner Guitar Let·
sons and doing minor repair
on musical ~ cords · miket ·
speakers·Guitar•-and Gui~ar
Harmonic ' s . 304·675 ·

Piano Tuning and Repair .
Brunicardi Music Co., 4460687 Twentieth year of
quality service . lane Da -

Beagle dog lost. B months
old. Last seen on CountY

1
1

18 Wanted to Do

23

TRUCK DRIVERS needed
Minimum experience . Call
513-563 ·9647 .

i

a.

Call614 -256- 1770.

FURNITUR.E. Bed s, iron,
wood. c upboards . chairs,
chests . baskets . dishes,
stone jars. antiques . gold
and silver Write · M . D .
Miller , At 2, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 or call 614 · 992 -

Lost and Found

l

Will do babysitting , have
references
axper!ence .

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

6

Yard sale items . 304 -675 -

~- -----

.

We pay cash f or late model
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chev .. Qids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

nalits Call 304-675 -3950
or 1-800 -642-3619 .

c

•

Wanted To Buy

3767.

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
1T1 Court St. •
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
.

304·458 -1572 .

27. - - - - - - ,
28.

35.' - - - - - - -

t6. - ' - - - - - -

leon Flea Market op en dai ley 9 : 00 to 6 :00 except
Thursday. We buy used
furniture and appliances;
also se ll large items on
consignment ..Stop in or call

away. Call 992 -5344 .

33. _ _ _ __

15. - - - - - - ' -

Skat• &amp; Acaa.ill
Public Skating
WED., Fll. &amp; SAT.

3069

26. - - - - - -

31.------

13. - - - - ' - - 1•• - - - - - -

&amp; Private Parties

7111 /lln

MusCovy

30.----32.------

11. - - - - - ' - - - - ,
12. - - - - - - - -

CHESTER, OHIO

'

anytime .

2'1. - - - - - - - -

SKATE-A-WAY

. A"""'i] .,9,f.lA!.
'. t:;;:t1

___

2 female k i ttens, litter
trained . (fall 446 ~ 0770

7. _ _ _ _ __

10• ..;..._ _ _ __

. u~A'"r
.
AUT6'.

446· 4361 or 446 ·4305 .

6------- 25.------

mo.

8.~----9. _ _~-~-

RENT A CAR
CALL
446-4522

_;..

Giveaway

Female Calico house cat,
spayed &amp; declawed. Twp
putside cats 1 male , 1
female spayed . Moving Call

18.

t9, - - - - - -

•Septic Systems

Tuppers Plaim~ OH.

4

( 1Wan1ed

i,

Wanted : nice lady to liv•
and help ahare axpenM8 .

now ready . HUBBARDS
-GREEN HOUSE. Syracuse .

erty, Pine Tree ·Drive , Reeds ·
ville. Ohio .

Phone·--------:----

OHIO

2 large kettles fresh apple
butter. Quarts. $3 .50 and
·pints. S2.00 . Also many

Robert G . Edwards prop ·

Addreu•-----------------

'

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auct ion ev~HY Friday night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truc.Cioada. of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new &amp; used
merchandise alWays wel comed. Richard Reynolds .
Auc~ioneer . Call 304· 275 -

Martin -61 4 -992-7022 .

No hunting or trespassing on

Nan1&amp;------~------------

BOGGS

8

variety of insurance, IRA 's
and tax sheltered annuity
products . Contact Osby

Call 614 -992 -5776 .

results. Monev not refundable.

C. V. POSTS

IEAllUI

Singing Gorrilla Call Bal loons &amp; Co.-446 -431 3 .

Write vour own ad and Oraer by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get

MOBILE HOME ONLY
Really nice 2 bljdroom home
for your lot $5,000.0\).

CONVENIENCE - is one of
· the reasons th~ 6 room, 1\l
bath home l&gt;ith a pretty
kitchen, french door.;, and
~her nice features tS JUst the
ho!)le for you. Now Reduced lD
$39,000.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner .992-5692

versarvs. Birthdays. parties .

11 -8-tfc

·We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks,

- Addons •nd remodeling
-Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical

"'" "'~"' ~ a.

It,

RADIATOR
SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

l~•

99~

~56

Balloons for Get Well , Anni -

Certified Chimney SwEep

YOUNG;S

51~ - l'l

r.~

614 -446 -0294 .

•complete Chimney Cleaning
~Certified Chimney Relining &amp; Repair
*Experienced and Insured
Phone
Roy Bickle

IIJ·61tc

Pick up and
Davis Vacuum

delivery ,
Cleaner, one h11lf mile up
Georges Creek Rd .
Call

446-2062

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843-5191

CHESTER-985-3307

supplies .

Chimney
Care

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

SWEEPER and sewing machine repair , parts, and

.

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

"' Hut A F•ll Tillie

.Situation•
Wanted

Call 446 -3449 .

ll-5·1 mo .

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

12

Will do babysitting in my
home. 304-675-4219 .

Collector paying cash for
guns, knives. coins, Nazi
items or any related items.

A.A.A.
304-675-6276

10/4/lfc

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

Road in Bidwell.

Top for CJ-5 Jeap . Call
614-388-9331 '

14 Htw r &lt;,wl lr lli'HI. Ir rl

ALL STEEL &amp;
·POLE BUILDINGS

Rodney
Ohio.

Hill . Oh . 6t4 -682 -7448 .

l • v c- r ntpr!,) onmr·nt
F r C'(' H . A .O .

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
IIEAOQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

5 . low;re't,. Teenle Genie
organ with bench. books,
light. Singer sewing machine , electric typewriter.
dryer. oak kitchen cabinet
with bin . dolls, end and
coff~e tables. chairs, toys,
stove pip~;~. hand tools , nuts.
bolts. lots of misc. collecti bles and nice Christmas
gifts. Paul Denney' s. c orner

Raw Fur. Top prices paid .
Lake Jackson Fin &amp; Fur. Oak

304 675 6276

.6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge shotguns
Only

I

Yard And Garage Sale -Fri .,

8 m• l cs fr om

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

4

[8 -l rTl O

PT . 62 NORTH
POt NT Pl EliSA NT
WEST VIRGINIA

lashan l•ildins

SER~ICE
98S·JS6t

Vicinity

Sat, Nov. 23rd . 241h. 9 1il

9

FIRE DEPT.

•Refrigerators

c~~"i&gt;

iO

RACINE

KEN'S
APPLIANCE .

•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

At P . I C0 ~ ~ &amp;1 4

Saturday 10 a.m.-11 :30 a.mc
lARGE ANIMAL AND
SURGERY BY APPOINTMENT

AUTO PARTS

..

O •n,ti;;OdO I!ol l

Monday 3 p.m.- 5p.m.
Tuedsay 6:30 p,m.- 8 p.m.
Wednesday 3 p.m.- 5 p.m
Thursday 3 p.m.· 5 p.m.
Friday 1 p.m.· 2 p.m

GUN SHOOT

"CUT OUT

~~

SMALL ANIMAL HOURS

949-2969-949-2263
10-19-1 mo.

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges

PHONE 992-2156 .

3305 JACKSON AVE.

.60
Car~.'"'~"&gt; .........
79-80 Mustang
Fenders ............. .......... 80
Car Fenders .................. 60
73-79 Ford Jr.
81 -84 Escort-Cynx
Fenders ................ ..... 59
, Fenders ........... :............ 49
80-84 Ford Jr.
Omni-Horizon 2 dr . or
Fenders ,.................... 110
4 dr. Fenders .............. 75
. Ford Ranger
Chevy &amp; Ford
·
!1. Fenders ................... 98
PU Bumpm .......... 69.95
72-80 Oodce Tr.
79-82 Chevette G!itts.. .. .. 38
Fendus ..................... . 15 . Ford Ranger Grills
.... 75
Ford
CheyY Tail Gates

Free Estimates

. Poriltroy, OH.
Call 985·3105

THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT.PLEASANT OFFICE

S-10·515 Che\'1' Tr1 .

New ·Repair
Guttes • Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
Storm l)oors

''SpP('ial. lntroductur.\'

PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.
OPEN EACH

..... 62 .

Chevy Tr:
Fenders .................... liD

Howard L Writesil
Roofing Co.

Sentinei-Page-11

Call 446 ·4922.

IN MIDDLEPORT

8-13 tin

81 -84

Perfect f!lmily Gift
*Affordable • .
·
*Portable
*Thora,..udk .
...all,.
. *lrodoor-Outdoor U11
· *Yoor Round Ploosuro

All M1k11

authorization to continue picking up
Twenty-four cases W!'re wrappE'd
all stray dogs and citE' the dog
up WE'dnesday m Meigs County
.Courl by Judge Patrick O'Brien ..
SevE'n bonds werE' forfeitro and
sevent('en fines were levied.
Forfeiting bcQds for spPeding
were PE&gt;ggy Doon, Gallipolis. $45; •
John Berenyi, Doylestown, Ohio,
Or Wrilt Otiltr Stnti~et Ctnsifltcf Dt,t .
·
Ill Court St .. Po1111roy, Oltio 45769
$47: and Elizabeth Earl. Hunting·
ton; John Barnett, Union Furnace;
Allison Chang, Vienna. W.Va.;
Timothv Wall. GrE'E'nsbor6, N.C.;
and Jack Withrow, Huntingon; $50
M§@iffifi!(JM
Mi4@"1 ii@IIIUM
r- ~·~M!,"'h@ii.!!F&amp;M
;;;;;;;-----;;;;;;;;;--;;wm;~;;---.~em;mm;;;-;-----~~~~~~~----_.
E:at h.
1 C01dol I nank li P•I~ '" '""'""~ '
2 1•9 u t&lt; n•n U1111o n urw 1~
51 H&lt;&gt; ol..,ol' G"• d•
1 1 •;too Too S olo
t lr1 ••r l i• •i/fifiJl l"'! I ll , ,,. 1/1 •'
Finro werE' Ronald Patrick.
~:~==-- :~•id in •~••nc•) ~~.~~~";:,:~~a";";.,.. ., .,
: ~ ~~~:.! RHoolo"•l""••"' ;; ~~~';k~ '; •.;;I!'
/•./ ' '' I&lt;i &lt;IJ: Io•fl'l'/, •fil l' I•\1 .'/i lilt I!''' ..
Pomeroy. $250 and costs. 10days in
:.~~~-:::~
M!@IIJII!
~~ :~·~~~ :·~~~~:::-:~'"
;; ~:;,~·~v~~·1 ,,
6· 1 rn iO•d ro11nG
.1 1 Ho., .. t 01 S• •e
S &amp;. fo"'"' Sol&lt;• •
l i .~, ,, , ,~ •• .,I. """"'"''"''
.., ,.,,,
&lt;&gt;•Y•• C• "' "
""''""Co . •'til
jail, lic-ense suspPndro 120 days for
7. Yood S ol" ln •d'" nrl"' « '
J7· N ot;o&lt;e t&lt; ""'~' "" S nit
S7· M ~•· c"' '"' " '"'" " ' '
1 7 A 11 1 ~ Rnpau
" '"'"Ca d ~ JOO
II f'~bioS o l•
JJ F01 n11l &lt;&gt;&lt; S&gt;i•
~ 8 Ft uo lo&amp; ~""" ' ' ~ I• •
18 Co!IO!I ~Iq fo•"P '"""'
J t H~ " " " " ~ 'nl dmD•
~~· T o• ~• I• oo!,,.,
loAu"'ion
••6 o ........
,,,,,,
DWI, costs only for driving a
,.,......,
9
.
o,u
'""'"'""
16·Aoo l i,..,• ""• " ,. ~
c ...., •••
weaving course; Dale F . Riffle,
n e · A~~t~~"' G•o""
) 4 ) - Po&lt;tl ond
/7J · Mnn•
:MD
c .... o ...
H I I &lt;IOit hll o
112 ..... u.....
Pomeroy. $2'j() and costs, 3' days in
•n
- t~' "'
&amp;\ Foo m Eq"•Pm•nt
I 1 -Holp w,.n-.&lt;1
l ]Y W•'"" '
H I ~"' '"""
jail, license suspendE'd 60 days,
1
91
Hu '"'ll
1 2 s''""'"'' w~.,, Ml
4 3·f"'"' •o•"•~•
en
'""'"'''
8
liV' " "'·'
13 -ln"" '"u
too
&amp; . .... ,
r;, ,,,,
~! ~~,;~:~.·:~ ,._,,,,.,,,,," 1 --~
DWl; Waiter Scitzs, ApplP Cree~ ,
Roo•m ·
14 B"""eto l •••""''
&amp;
,.,.,,..
1
B~G"''"' " 'H""' ""I
Upto '~ * O''"
t lOD
46 Soooolor Atn t
47 W••tod to fl ent
M6 M H l'l ep&gt;"
u~ " ' 1~ wo • ~•
I ~ ••• ""' '"'"'"""
t O 00
Ohio, $10 anc costs, impropPr
16 ""'"' TV CO" '"'"
91Uphol"• ' •
ll l&gt; lo i!JW o•n•
.. o
•100
48 h "'P "''''" lOr RMI
"'
''"'
"
~"'
Q
"'
18 l'lo""'" ro no
passing; Edna Harmon: TuppPrs
u r ~' '' "'
l A· ... ·~ · · ... .,, " "' ''""'
Plains. $10 and costs, failure to
yield: and Dewayne Dill, Racine.
Public Notice
$10 and costs , following too closely.
Real Estate General
FinC'd for speeding WE're Larry
PROBATE COURT OF
Keijnedy , Middlepon, $25 and costs;
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Robert A. Jankas.•Jr .. Wicliffe.
ESTATE OF CHARLES RO·
BERT SPRAGUE,
Ohio, $~4 and costs; .John S.
DECEASED
Cunningham. Gallipolis, $2.1 and
case No. 24,537 Docket 12 Real Estate
Page 446
costs; Anna Slater, Albany, $2.1 and
. NOTICE OF
21 6 E. 2nd St.
costs; Juanita Humphreys, Pom&lt;'By shopplna in your homtl1'811 you save~
APPOINTMENT
Phone
roy,$22andcosts; .John C. Marshall,
ps, the wear and tear on your car and avotd
OF FIDUCIARY
1-(6141-992-332&amp; ,.
Cross Lanes. W.Va .. $22 and costs:
Ot 1Novr)m !Jer 5. 19811 , m l hn
the hazards of hiahway and freeway
M"Hf'&gt; (ntm ty IJro b,l lf; Onru l .
Mary E. Suski. Gallipolis. $21 and
NEW LISTING - Busi~ess
travellill. It pays ta shop ·where you live!
C " :·r~ Nn
2 4 :·&gt;37 . Anna
.
Building
in Middleport, 5
costs; Ruth Long, Canton, ~20 and
Snr .u p,p 3!:1505 Shr•pf:; StrrrP.I
rented
apts.
plus additional
costs; Melvin DE'Iong, Little HockD· )Xll' l Ohr() 45 726 Wd'; .JD .
space,
a
good
nvestment at ,
fiiJ
rtth•r
l
oxr~c
u
t
r
r
x
o
f
t
ill'
r·
!'ltul
r
~
ing, $20 and costs; Stante&gt;' ValenJOBS
$54,900.
'r l Ch,Jr 11 )!"; HOI1er t S p r t~q 1 tf". rlf·' ·
tine. Findley, $Wand costs: Grov~t·
t • n:;o·d h l1~ n l :1550~) 511111" !15
Klrin, Pomeroy, $19 and costs; and
S tr• •~'l , DRxtor Ohro 4 5726
MIDDLEPORT - Pnce
Michael Bareswilt. Middleport, $19
Hnhl'rl E Aw:k
duced on this quality 7
Pr oh;Jtn J r rdq~
home and almost new
and rosls.
garage.
API\RIMENTS

The Daily Sentinel

~

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY ·
·CLINIC

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Jr.

&amp;

ol St . Rt. 554 and Bidwell·

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

70

C.mry Gift·Arc:ISfoties

ll · l ·11c

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

.. ....... ........ .. .... 1

BERRY BASKET

New Homes-Extensive
Remodelin1
Insurance Work
Cust~m Pole Bid&amp;• ·
5 GlriiiS
Roofin&amp; Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
16 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282

Computerized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds · Interpreting Services

992·356

3·1l·IIC

Y.ard Sale

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

VinYl &amp; Aluminum

l ·24·t!e

''DOZER • BACKHOE
'REClAMATION WORK
"OIL FIELD SERVICES
* DUMP T"UCK SERVICE
*CONCRET~ WORK
"CUSTOM BUll T HOMES
"WATER . GAS &amp; .
Oil LINES

-TREIICHEI
-WATJR
-SlWU

BISSELL

AUTO &amp; fRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trllltllllltlo•
. PH. 992-5682
·or 992-7121

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

-DUIP TIUCKS

pa·

Daily

......Giiiiiiioiis·-· ......

~IACKHOfS

trons who would
like to plact an ad,
.

7

PUlLINS
J!fsAVATING

to the buslonm who

TOP SOIL-FILL

Call 614·992-6737

Memoria l Gardens Rev. Herma n
L. Hayes will officiate.

Meigs County happenings
: Officers nominated

We'd like to introduce roo to
EI1&amp;111-A'Ctr, the modorn w1y
to drive tho vehicle of your
choice.
No. Down Payment .
Lower Monthly Pllflirent

Roy Lee Amburgey

Your Social Security
Q. If I take early re tirement.
when do I apply for ME'di,care 7
A. If you are already entitlf'd to
· Social SE'curity benefits when you
become 65, you will automatically
receive information about ME'di care in the mail during the thrw
months beforE' your fl.'ith birthday.
If you are not entitiE'd to Social
SE'curity before you arE' 65. contact
Social SE'curity thrf't' months beforE'
your 65th birthday to a ppiv for
Medicare protection.
Q. I just found a doct or' s bill from
last yE&gt;ar. Can 1 still send it to
Medicare'?
A. Yes. You aiwavs have at least
i5 months from the date of the
: doctor's SE'rvices to file a Medicare
claim. DE'pPnding on when the
services were pcrformE'd. you can
have as much as 27 months to
·submit your claim, but it is wise not
: to walt that long. For example,
doctor's services provided in October 1984 could he submittro to
·. Medicare as late asDecemher1!llii.

NEW VEHICLE

officiating. Burial will be In Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home anytime after?
tills evening.

Calling hours at the funeral home
are today from 3 until5.p.m .: and ,
this evenin g from 7 unti19 p.m.
In lieu offlowers. donations should
be made to the St. Paul's United
Methodist Church building fund .
Active pallbearers will be LE'W
Nazarewycz, James Metz, Keith
Shinn. Tony Thompson, Harry
Barton and Bill Strickland. Honoraiy pall bearers are Dr. .Jim Martin,
Dr. Dan Trent , John Turnbull.
Grorge Johnson, Dewitt Browning,
Everett Graham, Robbie Beymer.
Mike Legg and Bill Buck.

The

Ohio

Baby sitter wanted in my
home · wi~h well ·behaved 4

vear old . 304-675-5063 or
773-5892.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1- - - - - - - - - - 'NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS .
RT 35 . PHONE 614 -44&amp;7274 .

�12-lhe
32 Mobile Home•
for l1le
·

ICIT 'N' CAll.YLiettr IMrJ Wrtpt

11 HouMhold Good•

1 tl4 Aoedemy 1 2xao extrt
ol...,, tppllenoeo, -trol
elr, 7x1 2 poroh • eklrtlng,
Alkl~1 , e4.1oo, c.11 et4·
371·:1141 '
.

County A"lienoe, Ina.
GaOII ulod eppll•- end
TV lite. Open tAM tO I I'M,
Mon lhru Itt. Ul·111t.
117 3rd. Avo. · Oolllpalie,
OH.
·

1171 Torch 12•11 2 bdr.,
unfurnlohod. Coli 441 ·
7132.

Trtde CtnUr K1n1u1e.
Ohio, Purniture outlet, Why
Pay Morel

1972 12X80 Vintage. good

Kelvlnator no froet Nfrtg.,
•1211 . Call 448·•1 17 or
4·8-2983.

cond., 2 bdr .• H'2 b1th. new
furnece , fireplace with

blower. good carpet. atove.
Storm door for hou11 like
now peld •1 28 .00 ...w. toll
for 140,00. Phone814· 7422801 .
.

refrig .. .. wa•her, dryer; window eir cond., drapee. sOme

fu ri,liture, outside building,
lot· 97 Quail C_.k. Coli
448·8592 or 245-9592 . ·

Pickeno ueed furniture. 304871-8483 or 87&amp;-1450.

1 973 Gronvilie 1 2•80 2 bdr.
mobile home , Includes
wahHr It dryer and large
window air conditioner. •~­

RICK'S NEW AND USEI)
FUIINITURE. Utod otovlo
and refri.g eretors. Compere
our pricea, aeve today .
Phone 304-773-&amp;430.

cellent condition. Call 448-

4381 or 446-4306 or 446·

1171 .

Used mobile home, 2 br• .all

new carpet, new dra.,ea.
furnace, hot water tank.
304-676-3334 ..

33

Farms for Sale

U-Build it or we will! Beautiful , spacious 5 BR home

16996/ up. Sao now modoil
Call614-886-7311 .
200 acre farm for Ale. Will
subdivide. Rutland Town-

ship. Call 614·373-0456 .
Reduced. 260 Acre farm 80
level, Mason County. 3

bedroom house. 2 car garage, barn, equipment shed,
$90,000.00 . Partiality fi·
nanced ten percent interest.
304-937-2297.

34

Business
Buildings

42 Mobile Homes

Apartment for rent in Syra·
cuao . Phone 614 -992 7689 .

for Rent
Two bdr ., new wall to wan
carpet, gas tumance. air
cond.. in GallipoliS. Call
446 -1409.
Furnis hsd 2 bdr., clean,
quiet, cable, beautiful river
view , Kanauga . Foster Mobile Home Park . Call 4461602.
Furnished 2 bdr. trailer on
paved road. near Poner .
Extra nice. water paid . mar·
rled no pets or children .
$100 dep .. 8200 mo. Coli
614-388-9060.

3 bdr. adu~s. ref. l!o dep . Coli
614- 367-7743 .
Furnished 2 bdr. mobile
home onRt . 7. no inside
pets. Coli 614-245 ·5818.
n

Nice 2 bdr. mobile home
with washer-dryer hookup
partially furnished. water
paid , $ 100 deposit, $175
mo. Bob McCormick Rd.
Call 446 -4491 or 446 3888.

For rent: business building
located at 220 E. Main.
Pomeroy . Building has over
1300 square feet of floor
space. Tenant has exclusive
use .of 33x85 ft. parking lot
behinf:l building. Rent is
8210 .00 par month. Call 12x60 mobile home with
614-992-6232.
large added-on living room
and bedroom. Nice front
porch and 1 car garaga . Ca!l
35 Lots &amp; Acreag11
614-949-2734.
lot for sale in Mercerville. 3
trailer hookups, electric, ru·
raf water . septic tank .
88,000 . Call 614 - 256·
6618.

Three bedroom, furnished or
unfurnished. total electric .
Good,clean condition. One
child . no pets . At New
Haven. Call 304-882 -2466 .
2. bedroom. 34 mile out Sand
Hill Road . 304 -675 ·3834.

lot in Clearview Estates. 6
mi . below Gallipolis, under·
ground utilities. restricted. Two bedroom trailer. vou
for sale or trade, owner pay utilities , deposit re quired . Phone 304 -675 financing . Call 446·3485.
2535 .
1 aero of land 1972 12x60, 1 -:=~=:::;=======2 bdr. mobile home. newly 1·
c arpeted. has boon well 44
Apartment
cared for . front 8t back
for Rent
porch. out building, King
wood burner, AC. rural
water. close to Rio Grande &amp;
Vinton. Caii614-38B-9327, JACKSON ESTATES
Robert Mullins.
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity! has
Bldg, lOt with frontage on one and two bedrooms, rent
Rt . 588. in Rodney. 614- starting at $163 for one
245·9448 .
bedroom and $198 per
month tor two bedroom,
with S200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
Rentals
Valley Plaia , pool and TV
ant . Call 446 -2745 or leave
message .
41 Houses for ·Rent
513 Third Ave . two· 1 bdr.
opts. Starting $1 36 to s 165
mo . Watsrincluded, depreq .
House for rent. Call 304- Call 446-4222 between 91!o
676 · 7263 675 -5104 or 5 .
.
675-6386 .
Downstairs. 2 rooms &amp;
House for rent in Mercerville bath, furnished, clean , no
area . Call Kenneth Swain pets. adults only. pep&amp; Ref.
614· 256 -1562 evenings.
required . Call446-1519 .
Cheshire, 3 bdr., 2 baths,
FR , stove , ref .. OW. EH . CA.
Cop . l!o ref. req . Call 803781 -7896 or 614 - 367·
7567 .
3 bdr. house in town with
carport, private location.
$276 mo . Call 446-8293
after 5PM .
3 bdr. home elltra clean,
many extras provided. inc luding new curtains, $300
tno., dep . &amp;: ref . required.
Call 614-286 -5447 collect.

2 bedroom house, full-y
carpeted . $200 per mo . plus
utilities. Depoait &amp; references. Nonh of Cheshire o~
old Rt . 7 , 446 - 9786
8 :30AM to 4 :00PM .

Nicely furnished modern
mobile home in city .. 1 or 2
adults only . Call 446·0338 .

1 bdr apt.. 2 bdr apt ..
$150-$250 . Call 304-6757263 675-5104 or 6755386 .
Mercerville, 1 &amp; 2 bdr. apts ..
from 8175 &amp; up. Call
446 -1157 or 367 -7218 .
Furnished apt ., next door to
library, one professional
edult only . Call 446 -0338 .
Furnished efficiency, 607
Second Ave, Gallipolis,
S160 mo., utilities pd . Call
446 -4416 after 7pm .
4 rooms &amp; bath , carpet,
stove , refrigerator , furnance, adults only, no pets,
ref . &amp; dop . Call446 · 1163.

Newly remodeled house. 2
bdr. 1 full bath, lg. furn .
kitchen. located in Middleport . Send resume to Daily Very nice 2 .bdr. duplex apt.,
Sentinel. P .O. Box 729-V, furnished , Main St., ChePomeroy, Oh 46769 .
shire . No inside pets. Call
614-245-5818.
2 bedroom duplex house,
downtown Pomeroy . Furn 1 bdr . completely furnished,
or unlurn. 8225, 00 plus carpeted, all electric, 468
utilitiu Cei1614-992 ..2381 2nd. Ave .. adults, ref. S. sec .
dey or 614-992-6723 night. dep., 8195 mo. Call 446·
2236 or 446 -2581 .
Six rooms end bath.Furnished or unfur - 2 bdr. dup~x ex. location in
niohod,. 160.00 plua utili· town e250 mo. with a
tiel. Loc•ted in Clifton. West fenced backyard. Call 446 8293 ahor 6PM .
Vo . Coil 814· 992-7404
Four room1 and bath. unfurnish.cl houM Point Lane.
lincoln Heiahto, Pomeroy.
Coli 814-992-3874.
Four bedroom, 2215 Jeffer·
oon . t260 . ront , plua
.,00.00 depoail and roftr·
enceo. Phono 303 -8755848.

2 bedroom houae In aver.•&amp;•
neighborhood. Rnponoible
edulto end no peto, depoo~
required. Phone 304-875•100 dayo.

1 bdr..• lerge apt., inaide city
limits. Call 446-8178 or
after 6 :00PM 448-0104.
DeluJC.e 1 bedroom •pt .•
large LR and BR all new
kitchen. new carpet, redecorated throughout. U76 mo .
including hell. Coli 4484.8 07 or 446-2602.

Riveroldo Apto. Middlepo".
Specill rates for Senior
Citizeno. •130. Equal Houoing Opportunitleo . 8149!!'!· 7721 .

52

Furnished 2 bedroom apart·
ment in Racine tor rent,
$125 .00 per month plus
$50.00 deposit. You pay
own utilitiea . No more than
2 children . Cell 614 -949·
2887 .

Demeo . Satellite, 3-pc. base
staion extra channels, . 0104. now tubes. $200.00
firm. Call 446-3340.

In Middleport . 2 bedroom
furnished apartment . 1
child . Call 1 - 304· 882·
2566 .

54 Misc . Merchandise

One bedroom, unfurnished.
total electric apt .- Call 614992 -2094.
Furnished 2 bedroom ·a pt . in
Middleport. Adults, no pets,
security d8posit . Cell 614·
992-3874.
One and two bedrooms,
furnished apartments,. Call
614 -992 -5434 ,614-992 5914 or 304-882-2566.
Nice effi"c iancy apartment.
suitable for one or two
people. Ca11304· 773·5B82,
Betty Mercer.

Limestone. Sand. Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call448-7786 . .

Two Poovey Column Speak·
era and Peavey 8 channel
mixing boo rd. •1 ,000. or
boot offer. Coli Debbie,
304-876-1518.

Plastic cisterns state approved. plastic septic tanks.
plastic culvert. metal cui ·
verts, RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISES, Jackson, Oh 814288-6930 .

Storoo conoole w~h AM-FM
stereo radio end 8 track
pleyll',like new. Phone304875-139&amp;.

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel .
Call 614-446-0756.

Size 9-10 weddinbg dress,
Victorian style, low scope
neckline. long train, excellent condition, $1 00. Also
wedding bouquet and 2
bouteneers, $15. C!ill 4464361 or 446-4306 or 4461171.

Furnished room, 8126. Utilities, range, ref. Share bath.
Men onl-y . 919 Sec .. Gallipo·
lis . 446-4416 after 8 p.m.

Coleman gas furnance,
84,000 BTU; 1966 Olds
metal office desk . Call4460181 or 446-3243 eves;

46 Space for Rent

Gae cook stove, 20 gallon
fish aquarium. Call 4463732.

Trailer lot for
367-7438.

8 ft. slaJe lined pool tibia &amp;
accessories, · $200 . Call
614-388-9081.

45

Furnished Rooms

rent . Call

Mobile home lot, 875 water
paid. 4th &amp; Neil , Gallipolis.
Call 446·3844 alter 7PM .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park . Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
614-992 -7479 .
2nd . floor Office space tor
rent . Court s ·t ., Pomeroy .
Call 614-373-0456 .

Merchandise
51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION l!o FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood-coal stoves. 6
pc wood LR ouite $399,
bunk beds $199. entron
recliners $99, used bedroom
suites, ranges. wringer
washers, &amp; shoes . Cell614 ·
446-3159.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rock8r. ottoman. ,3 tables, (e111tra heavy),
$686 . Sofa, chair and lovossat, $276. Sofa1andchairs
priced from f286 . to $896.
Tables, S50endupto$125.
Hide-a -bods, S390. ond up
to $650 ., sofa bodo $145,
Recliners, $285 . to t376 .,
lampe from f28. to 8125 .
pc. dinettes from S109 .. to
.4 35. 7 pc. S1 89 and up.
Wood table with sh~: chairs
$286 to $745 . DOik S1 10
up to S225. Hutcheo, t660.
Bun k b e d complete with
mattreos01, $276. and up to
$395. Baby beds, $110 .
Manreases or box sprin'ge,
full or twin; $58 .. firm . 868 .
and $78. Queen sell, 8196 .
4 dr. chooto, $42 . 5 dr .
.chests, $.54. Bed tramea.
t20.and $26 .. 10gun-Gun
cabinets, 1360. Gil or
electric ranges •376. Baby
mattres101, US &amp; 136, bod
lrameo •20. 125. l!o 130,
king fro me S50. Goodtolec lion of bedroom ouiteo,
rockert, metal cablneu.
hoadboardo 138 &amp; up to
$85 .
Used Furniture -- heed
bolrds, end 2 bedroom
suite1. 3 miles out Bullville
Rd. Opon 9om to 5pm, Mon.
thru Set.
614-448 ,0322

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Weshere. drye,., refrigera ~
tore. rongoo. Sktgga Applionceo, Upper River Rd.
bookie 8tono C,.lt Motel.
814-448-7398 .

For oale 197&amp; Mercury
Marquette UOO. 20 gal.
fiah aquarium with atend &amp;
acceasoriea. aandatone
enough for e ft . fireplace.
304·882-3195 .
Sev•n evening d1a11, aome
new aize 12·14, 3 pr.
evening ahoes 7Y:, 3 evening bogolr 2 long olipo I 1 00
for all . 304-876·3986.

Top Soil and fill dirt · and
landscaping. Coli 614-266·
1427 .

Warm Morning wood burn·
ing stove, $225 . Call 614266·6261 after 5:30PM .
Tavern voted out Equipment for sale. 4 ft . by
Btt. electric sign, booths,
table, chairs, ban, bar
stools, hot dog machine.
steam tabla. a~ctric grill
with hood vent, electric cash
register. 50 caa cooler. Call
614-266 -6413 .

Rom. model 31 20 ga.
pump , 7MM deer riffle with
ammo, 22 pump. ·some
knives. Call 446-3449.
- - - - - - - - ·ICOak furniture , tables.chairs,
cupboards. pie sate, telephones. desk. also antiques
and glasaware. Open Sundays. Conkel's Tuppersplains. Rt .7 .
21 ft . x 15ft. insulated ateef
building. Muat sell . Call
614-742-2226 .
Firewood for aale, a:ll hard·
wood. $100 .00 per one ton
truckload. Delivery available. Cell 6t4-843-6129.
Grain . fed freezer beef
supply. et .24 per pound
total coot. Call 61 4-742·
3114.

1100.

'71 Herlty ijl:&gt;roter 1 000
CC, eleetriq jlllrt. 7,000
octuel mille U .IOO.OO or
bolt offer. 304-878-5424.
1112 'Kaw•..ld KD eo mo·
torcycle. like new. t450.
304-182·3288.

76

The original Martha Thomes
soft-sculptured doll baby,
304-876· 6B84.

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Block, brick, eewer pipes.
windows . lintels , etc.
Claude Winters. Rid Granda.
0 . Call814-245-5121 .
Rough Cut Lumbar. oak,
poplar, end pine. 2x4'a.
2x8's, 1 x6's. 1•8's. AI·
sorted lengths. Cell Hogg
and Zuapan Materials
Co ., lnc . 773 - 6564,
daytima .
Now open for business,
Mountain State Block, Rt .
33. New Haven: Complete
mesonry oupplitl, 4'", 8",
12" block . Delivery oervice.
Phono dey 304-882-2222,
evening 882·3239.

56

57

Musical
Instruments

eJCtn ahirp, neW tires. bit·

Rep oa aeaaion · Kimball
Swinger Organ. like new.
can 304-463-11 &amp;3, Dan
Fergueon Muaic, Ceredo, W.
Va.

68

a.

Fruit
Vegetebles

Appleo , buahel, e&amp;.OO;
fruit•. vegetebiea. produce.
candy and nu,a. Jeck'l Fruit
Market. Route 36,
Hendereon.

I .IIIII

SI•IJIJill':;

15. LIVI:S!ii,;k

61

Farm Equipment

1978-1 36-Meuie Ferguoon
dieael farm tractor, extra
good ohopa, new dltk, buoh
hog lr plow. Priced •6800.
Call 245-9108.
5 ft. brush hog, heavy duty.
'296 . Call 614-286-8522 .
1984 long 380 4 -WD tractor, with fron't end loader.
Priced to toll. Coll614·286·
6522 .
Gravely tractor with mower.
Call448-8135.

71 foot John,Deore 3&amp;0 goa
dozer with winch in e•cel·
lant condition. nooo.ao.
72 foot M.F. 13&amp; dieoel
tract~ in 8111celfent condition
t4800.00. Call 814-8927401 .
Ford tractor 641 ; John
Deere corn planter; B·row
sprayer; hog feeder; International cultiv1tors; livestock
troilet'. Ca11114-742-2877 .

New Ideo 323 com picker
$2,260 .00. Sidoro E1uip·
ment, 304-67&amp;-7421.
Livestock

Quarter horae, 3 yrs. old.
nttck trained with show
oaddle .8400. Call 246·
9463.

59" dappkt grey mere, vary

Gravely tractor with 1utky
mower. tiHer. turning plow.
duel whHia, duel chalna.
Cell 446· 8136.

64

Hay

8t Grain

urge round boleo of hay.
t20 oech. Call •48-1 062
aher !ipm.

71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for '80
model and newer uaed cars .
Smith Buick-Pontile, 1911
Eeotem Ave .. Golllpolio. Coli
81•-448-2282 .
77 ,Pontiac Orand Prl• 301"
condition. Ctll aher
5PM, 448-0137.

I::::::::::::::::::::,.J..;;~~::::::::~:::::~ good

r

1988 Buick Grand Spo"
California 350 auto, 4 new
tirea. rally wheels. new
muffler, teif pipe, new battery. runa great, looks good,
1400 firm . Coli 448-4462.
1980 VW Rabbit, auto,
t2,696 . Call 8,.· 388·
9896 or 814-388' 8842 .
1917 VW Doohor lltltion,
auto, ., .695. Call 614·
388· 9688 or 814- 388·
8842.
1963 Ford Goltxy 500, very
good running cond .. new
tire• I. bettery, body needs
oomo work, 1400. Call
448 -2297.
1974 Monte Carlo, good
cond .. •1.100. Cell 614·
388 -9370.
1977 Mercury Cougar XA7.
good cond. Call 446-1642 .
1978 Plymouth Fury auto.,
air. PS. PB, radio, spare tire.
$999. John 's Auto Soles,
Bulevillo Rd. 448 -4782 ,
Gallipoh. Oh.
1977Cheliy Nova . e.cellant
running condition . New
paint job . 81800.00. Call
614-378-6349,
1973 Lincoln Continental
Mark , IV. Two new tires,
good shape, runs good. neW
front end, new paint job.
1800.00. Coli 814-667·
3828,
1978 Ford pickup . New
paint, duel tanks. A-1 Condilion . $2200 .00 . 1974
Dodge window Van .
$700 .00. Call 614-9923194.
1 974 Chevelle Malibu, hao a
1977 360 Chevy engine in
it, runs great, body in good
condition. CRAGAR MAG
wheela with new radial tires.
et300.00 Cell 61·4 -992·
3914.
1976 Camero.tor sale. Good
condition. Coil 614-9926705.

1976 V.W . Beetle. Good
body, no rust. Good tires.
Runs good. 11200.00 or
boot offer. Call 614-9927312.
1 988 Chivy Super Sport.
1610.00. 1989 GTO Convertible. 1950.00. 1970
Chevy truck. $375.00. Call
614 - 992-8848 or ooe
acro11 from Burger Chef
under bridge.
1970 Cheveile SS 327. PB,
PS. good cond. $1.600.00.
Call aher 6 :00 PM 304876-2099 .
1 982 Chevy Camero, PS,

t-----------

Two AKC female German
Shepherd pupploo, 16 wko,
boot. offer, both feod watch
d ogo. 304•67&amp; · 81 3 .
·

tery l!o peint. 44.000 actual
mileo t1 ,600. Coli 446·
4482.

1970 Chivy Nove good
body, runo groat. •1100. Call
614-689-7722 .
1974 . Triumph TR 8 oxc.
cond. throughout. New Ml·
Chelln"a top• . never raced.
Sacrifice 13,800. Cell 614·
889-8311 .
---------18n Chevrolet Impale 4
dr., verygoodoond ., noR.at,
1111 or trodo e1. 100. Coil
114-245·9111.
Ply. Relltnt 1113 2 dr., PS,

PS, llir. crulto, AM·FM, reor

win. ,dlf., muot toil 18,900.

coa 4411·11104.
84 VW Rebblt GTI ••c.
cond. Ttkt o - ptyment.
Col 441-4810 tfter 6,
448-4810.
1974 Muotong• cyl .• 4opd.,
running cond.. meke offer.
CIA 814-387-0108.

81

Marcum Roofing • Spouting . Now inatalling rubber
roofs. 30 years 1111perience,
specializing in. built up roof.
Call614-388-9867 .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references
furniahed . Free estimetea.
Coli collect 1-614-2370488. 9 t.m. to 6 p.m .
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .
Plastering &amp; Plaster repair.
tree eatimatel . Calf 614·
2.56-1182 .

.RON'S Tolovioion Service,
Specializing In Zenith ond
Motorola. Quazar. and
houoe cello. Coli 304-6782398 or 614·448 ,2464.

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 304-6761331 .
RINGLES'S SERVICE. ex·
perienced carpenter. electrl·
Cien, meaon. painter. roof·
ing (including hot tar
epplicatlon) 304-876-2088
or 878-7388 .
R.otery or cable tool drlfing.
Moat weNs completed aame ·
dey. Pump ule• llf'd urvf·
ceo. 304-895 · 3802.

Building-Remodeling. Concrete. drywall. electrical,
kitchen-bathroom inatalle·
tion. door-window framing.
304-676-2440.

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-446·3888 or
614-446-44.77
JIM'S PLUMBING l!o HEAT·
lNG . R!. 1, 8o• 366, Galli·
polio. CIA 614-367-0578 .

83

Excavating

J .A.R.Conetructlon Co .Ru tlend, Oh ,81 4 · 742-2903 ·
Blsements. Footers, Con :
crete work. Backhoe 's.
Doter a. Oitcher, Dump
trucks, a. water-gas· aewer•
electrical lines.

1 970 Ford truck mull oee to
opprecltte. '78 Honda 400
motorcycle fBOO.OO. Phone
304-578-2372.

73

Van1

a. 4 W.O.

1977 J11p, CJ-1, block,
V-8. 65.000 mlleo. good
cond.. U,800. Cell 441·
1300.
1 878 Ford F250 4•4
pickup. PS. PI, AM-FM,
V-8. btroo. Rune good.
•:Zaoo.oo Phone 114-742·
2877.

,,. 11'1 111E MEANTIME,

YOU'RE ALL VE RY
~IND... ARE YOU
Rf!U!Tf!O TO MG.
APPLETON, MR.
PLUMM ?

MY PAJAMAS AND
ROBE 5HCVLO FIT
YOU WELL ENOUGH.
I'LL HELP YOU

'ttlU CAN'T OHIVE,
THE MOTEL DOe;N'T
SERVE Fl:)(l()•••

UN ORE% ...

ALLEY OOP
~LISTEN ,

THESE 80"'fS WILL"MOVE
YOUR SUPPLIES IN SO

'WE FIXED UP A
WAGON JUST TO
HA.U L THAI STUFF!

V'C .. t-1 GET RIGHT TO

YJORK, MR , HOYJDEN!

GASOLINE ALLEY

kids need

We can't five in this

dinl&lt;.y little apartment

·

forever,

Slim, we have to find a
biqqer place to live!

rooms of their

Slim~

own!

..and Clretchen is
too old to steep
in o~r bedroom ~

D.end M. Contractors. Re·
modeling, vinyl oiding, pelnting(lndoor and outdoor).
replacemant windq;ws . Clll
304·773· 6 1 31.

'81 Oldo Cutlau Suprem,e,
exJ:. cond. Must sell . 304676-248&amp;.
•

F3&amp;0 1 tan Ford Truck . 4
•peed tranamillion,PS,PB .
Excellent co 'ndition .
$2100.00. Call 114-9921344.

YOU HAVE NO CHOICE!••

"6\JT' WHAT? YOU
HAVE: A FEVI!R,

H I. S Home Improvement•
winyl &amp; aluminum aiding,
roofing, seemlesa gutters,
storm Windows. overhang.
Coli &amp;14-367-0409 or 614367·7244.

Dorer Wo-,k by TeQ Hanna .
Ditches, ponda. roada, land
clearing. etc . Calf Motor Car
Bro~an, 448-8692 .

1 975 Chevy Luv Pickup
truck. S1500.00 or boot
offer. Coli 61 •-992-2807 .

N0\'1, LISTEN FIR5T- YOU
YIE:AE INJURE~ DEFENPING
MY PROPERTY...5ECO I'IO-.

Home

1979 Fairmont S1 .BOO .
T "!r78 Chevy iruck 4X4. '-' ·
1973·Dodge Monaco tBOO .
. Phone 304-875-7690.

1976 GMC dump 386 engine. 5 apeed cheater aa:fe
PS. 22 ft. 3 a•le equip,
trailor, unit truck crane e.&amp;.
1 2 ton CHR &amp; Ford engineo,
Call 982-5488 .

•• THERE'G A c;¥JYSEO
IN Ttt: ~EN- TA~E
MR . DEAL IN THEFrE••

Improvements

saats, Power antena, all
gauges, rear defros,er. 4
new radial tireo, '117.300.00.
304-773-5944.

Trucks for Sale

ANNIE

Se rv1c es

Good-1 Excavating, baaementa. footers. driveways,
septic tanka. fandaceping .
Coli anytime 614-•484637, Jameol. Oovloon, Jr.
owner.

72

\

13 foot Shaata Traitor with
rofrlgarotor. Light weight.
Good condition . Can 614·
742-2480.

1973 Volkowagon Beetle

PB, AC. tilt Wheel. reclining

Shepherd pupo. $76 .00 .
Strow. •1 .76 bolo, 304·
Ctlll14-98&amp;· 3849 .
675-&amp;086.
Pordeoto and· cages, 30467&amp;-8030 aher 5:00 PM
l r c~ns po r l a ll ll ll
end week ends.

(Coal Delivered) good lump
houoe coei 1 to 1 ton. call
Jim Lanier 676-7397 or
304-876-1247.

Autos for Sele

Klmbllll. upright piono, like
new, 1800 firm. Coli 448·
4209 .

4 yr. old Quarter hors mare
sorrell pony. Shown in 4-H.
3 yeere. Call '81 4-2888522 .

Firewood, 820 .00 pick up
load. $30 .00 deliverod.
304-876-2 991 or 676 6762.

71

1

New Kimbel orgen ~ular
11 ,59&amp; . for •900, never
been pleyed. Call 441·
9818 .

Briarpatch Kennels Profeasional All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boardin.g facilitieo. Englloh Cocker Spa·
niol puppieo . Call814-388·
9790.
.

1 0 gellono 111 up, $24 .00;
10 gellono tank, t7 .99;
medium angel fioh, 13.89;
20 gallon long tank , 117.00.
Fiah Tonk, 2413 Jackoon
Avenue. Point Pleaaant .
304-875-2063.

NIW wlridohield for lite
model Ford Ven S78.00.
Phone 81•·742-2801.

1984 Jette GL. turbo. die·
oat. 6 opd .. aim-roof. AM·
FM otereo. factory air. Coli
814-387-0108.

gontle, ohown in 4 -H. Call
614-286-8522 .

AKC regietered German

Apto Parts

8t Campers
~~~=~~~~:::::::~~=~=~~~~~ 79 Motor~
Homes

Judy Taylor Grooming. Cali
814-387-7220 .

Regiatered Engflah Pointer
Birddogs . Good grouae
dogo. Call 814-888-5863.

17 PLOWING .

I

..•,

63

Drogonwynd Cittti'y Ken·
nel. CFA HimalaYan, Persian
and Siamese kittens. New
litter AK C Chow puppies .
Cell 614-441-3844 alter 7 .

RI!ALI'XE: iHE OIL.

I

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breada. Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppieo:
Stud Service. Coli 614-4467795 .

MAYSE HIC QOE&lt;&gt;W'T

&amp; Acce1sories

Card-pool tlble (bumpar
pooll UOO. 304·876-1380.

Weight loa breakthrough!
Tho Grapefruit Diet Pion
with Oie~ax . . Medically
proven resultl IVIilabla at
Hoc~enberry Pharmacy.

"'

--:

~ -·~
.

large ceramic Chriltl'nll
tree UII .OO . Pinecone.
grepovlnt, r i - - t h o.
AH llizn. pric11. On dloplty.
Ceii304-875-U18 or 875·
1318.

Knauff Firewood Split· 96%
hardwoods. · Seasoned or
green , You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 614·
266-6246 .

Firewood cut up slabs. f15
PU load. larger loodo delivered . Call for prices, 61"4 245-5804.

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes, houses . Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipolis. 614-446·
8221 .
One bedroom unfurnished
garage apartment. Phone
304-675-3752.

CB,TV. Radio
Equipment

13

1 17t Hon• • yotoy. good
aond.. •47
Cell Ul·

IUIIfiLUI·DINIM JtGklll
U1 .00. atmoufllge ermy
C hlldrtnl I Ultl• heevy
jacklto, ineultlod covertllo
127.50. Stm lom-·o·
EAST ,Rtvenowood -DNLY
Fri. Sot, Sun 1:00-7:00 PM.
(other dayo efler 1:30 pm).

White froot-froo rofrlpretor
1240.00. Quod nerorecord -tep.eo f t IO.QO.
Wood couch block pltotic
cuahioni 125.00. Two
afumn storm doors32x80Y2.
Wood bod freme. 304-876·
8848 .

'

Sentinel-Page

New Yll:ll" MOfiiDI
tlllet lela l!nde lllel.
Cell441·11
•

1111 HoMe 110 t~oo.oo.
Queen elat wtte; bed
1111.00. 104-111·1111.

304-875-2914.
128 Engltoh Rood. Phone
8 Ft. Pool Table, good
condition. Call oher a P.M.
304-87&amp;-3088.

The Daily

74

Win aut • • HN- fiN·
- -· Cellllt-1111 .
.

Ledi11 coat, Mana 8hoea.
oteirwtiY cai'Pfl end peddlng; other odd' I and tnd.a.

Friday. November 23, 1984

1884

Friday, Norwember

Sentinel

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SE~ING

Machine repairs,
serv•ca . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scinors. Fabric Shop.
Pomoro\'. 614-992-2284.

85

Evening Television
Listings----------------------------------------.
11/23/84
EVENING
6 :00

u mrnm o CIJ(JOJ OJ

eft) News
(I)
George Burns
in
Concert Th is Osca r· winn1ng

actor/comedian pcrtorms
his nightclub comedy ac t.
00 MOVIE : "Warlock'
(]) Hot Potato
C!J ESPN 's Horse Racing
Weekly

ffi Lucy Show
Cil Dr. Who
(IfJ 3 ·2· 1 , Contact ICC)
fl) Diff' rent Strokes

6:30 U CD CD NBC News
(I) Rifleman
(!) Mazda Sportslook
ffi Down to Earth
(J) Gl (H) ABC News
tJ (J) ~ CBS News
(])
Nightly
Business
Report
CID Working Women
fl) One Day at a Time
7:00 I ) CD PM Magazine
(I) lnsic:;le the NFL l e n
Dawson and Nick Buoni conti
review this wee k· s NFL action .
(I) Here Come the Brides
(]) SportsCenter
(I] Gomer Pyle
CIJ • (j2) Entertainment
Tonigh1
Cil Wheel of Fortune
.
D ()) Wheel of f:ortune
(I) 1 (ll) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
(JO News
fl) Jeffersons
7 :30 I ) ffi Tic Tac Dough
00 Jrd Annual Legendary
Pocket Billiards Stars Rob·
ert Woods · 11s . Cowboy
Jimmy Moore. (60 min .l
ffi Andy Griffith
CIJ 0 (J) Family Feud
CD Jeopardy
(!Q) Wheel of Fortune
(12) New Name That
Tune
g WKRP in ~incinnati
8 :00

e

D (]) Aliens vs humans : The
General Hauling

James Boys Water Service.
AIIO poolo filled . Call 81·2&amp;1-1141 or 814 -448 1176 or 814 ·4U-7911 .
Ken ' a Water Service. Well•.
cisterns, poola filled . Phone
814-317 -0823 or 814-3677741 night or day .

87

IT W/'6 ROUGH
aEING ALONE FOR
THANKSGIVING,
5UT THAT'5 THE
' WAY IT HA5 TO
FOR A WHILE .

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 lee. Avo .. GoHipollo.
81•-4•1· 7833 or81•·4481833.

• battle rages on
'V· THE SERIES'

W SAZ

u mm v

ffi MOVIE : 'Orca'

00 MOVIE: 'The Bugs
Bunny/ Road
Runner
Movie'
CIJ Lone Ranger
ffi High Chaparral
GU 11 az Benson Ben~on
fi~~:es CIBvton up on a bl!nd
date. but his ov~rbeanng
personality drives the poor
Qirl away . (CCI
g (I) ® Dukes of Hazzard
Cale Yarborough s ho ws up
in town to visit a sick otphan
in the hospital and finds himself arrested , along with Bo
and Luke . for a robbery . (60
min.)
[I) (IfJ Waohington Week/
Review Paul Duke is joine d
bv top WaShington journalists analyzing the week ' s
news.
~.

Ill MOVIE: 'Rollover'
8 :30 CIJ Fisherman's Son
(! } NFL Game of the We8k
CIJ
I]Z Webster (CC)
CIJ @ Wall Street Week
louis Rukeyser analyzes t he
'80s with a weekly review
of economic and investment
ma tters.

OJ

9 :00 U ffi Cil MOVIE: 'Conan
the Barbarian·
@ 700 Club
(!) NFL's Greatest Moments 1968 World Champion N~w York J ets and
1969 W orld Champion Kansas City Chiefs Highlights .
(60 min. )
III
NBA
Basketball:
Philadelphia at Phoenix
(]) GJ CW Hawaiian Heat
0 I]) @ Dallas M&gt; ss Ellie
tries to make Clayton feel at
home o n Southfork . and
Janna· s ell·hus band comes
back to Dallas. (60 min.l
(CCI
(ti) Great Performances : Alice in Wonderland Richard Burton , h1s
daughter . Kate Burton and
James Coco star in this televisio n adaptation of Eva le
Ga llie nne ·s Broadway musi·
cal. (R) (90 min.)
9 :30 ffi MOVIE: 'Jaws Ill"
ffi SCTV : Second Coming
Tho laughs continu e wi th
specially-e dited
encores
featuring the best sketches
of, the satirical series.
10:00 CD MOVIE: 'Amityville:
The Demon'
(]) Super Bouts of the 70 's
Ken Nonon vs. Muh ammad
Ali (San Diego , March,
1973) . (60 min I
(I) II) Gil Matt Houston An
tnterna lional assassin IS o ut
of jail a nd is after th e man
who put him there 1n th e fir st
place-- Matt Hous ton. (60
min .l (CCI
D ()) ® Falcon Crest Angela tricks Fran cese~ into
signing o\ler her inhe ritance.
an act tt)at leaves Chase
powerl ess ; and Cole an·
nounces that he 's movin g in
-_yith Melissa. (60 min. I
• Independent New&amp;
1 0 :30 (]) Jack Benny Show
(J) Titanic in a Tub 'Tho
GOlden Age of Toy Boats."
® Sneak Prewiews
fll Soap
11 :oo u m m m o m I1QI m
Gll Newa
I]) Bill Cosby Show
(!) NFL Game of the Week
[I) MOVIE: ' Swiao Miss '
Ill Benny Hill Show
1 1 :16 Cll
Up
Claae
With
Emmylou Harris
11 :30 0
Cil Tonight Show
Tonight's guests' are J oan
Embery and Harv ey Kor man.
(60 min. I
CIJ Greater Tune The cir·
cumstances are a bit unusual when a Texas judge is
found dead . Joe Sears, Jaston Witiiama .
ffi MOVIE : 'Teo for Throe"
(I) Beet of Groucho
(I)

m

----- - - - - - -

CD News/ Sign Off
2 :15 {101 CNN Headline Ne ws
2:30 ffi Blondie .
(!) SportsCenter
(j)
MOVIE : ' Carnation
Killer'
2:45 ffi Inside the NFL Len
Dawson and Nick Buomcontt
review t hts week · s NFL ac-

(!) SportsCenter

(]) WKRP in Cincinnati

0

00 MOVIE: 'Trial of
Billy Jack"
(jQ) Barney Miller
Cf2l Nightline
fl.) Twilight Zone
12:00 (]) Burns &amp; Allen
(!) Mazda SportsLook
(J) Nightline
liQI MOVIE: ' Night Fright'
ID r~ ABC Rocks
fl) Gunsmoke
12:15 III Night Tracks
12:30 0 OO.CD David letterman
Special
.
(]) The Hitchhiker: Love sounds
(I) Love That Bob
00 PKA Full Contact
Karate : World Bantam ·
weight
Championship
Coverage of this ka ra te
championship is presented
from Denver. CO . (90 min.)
Cil Soap
(1) MOVIE: ' Pardon Us'
ID (1.21 News
1:00 (]) MOVIE: 'Independence
Day·
ffi MOVIE: ' lenny '
(]) I Married Joan
(I) ABC Rocks
' OJ W CNN Headline News
Ill MOVIE: 'The Terry Fox
Story'
1 :15 (iQ) MOVIE: 'The Man with
X-Ray Eyes'
1 :30 ffi Dobie Gillis
({) Sta r Search
2 :00 I ) 00 News
Cl) Bachelor Father
(!) NBA Slom Dunk
Champ . Coverage of th1s
1984 cha mp1ons h1p is presented from Oenv~r . CO

OJ

1}f}'jl~

m'fl

ffi MOVIE : 'My Tutor'
ffi 700 Club
(!) Top Rank Boxing from

St . Paul, MN Be rn ard Taylo r liS . Pe dro Monte ro tn a
10-round
Feath erwetght
bo ut.

3:45 ffi MOVIE : 'Orca '
4 :30 ffi Ross Bagley
4 :45 (J) Henry Fonda: The Man
an~ His Movies

11/24/84
EVENING
6:00 U CD News
(I) The Monroes
(!) SportsCenter
(J) World Championship
Wrestling
CD TV ·Honor Society
CJ) Agronsky and Company
C1il Fiddle a Linle
f.ll Greatest American
Hero
,
6:30 I ) 00 CD NBC News
(]) World of 'Dark Crystal'
@ NFL Game of the Week
Cl) Statewide
(.11) Newton' s Apple
7 :00 0
(]) Too Close for
Comfort
(I) Laramie
C!J Football Scoreboard
Colle(:le Football
~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
byHanriArnoldandBobL.e e

Unscramble these lour Jumbles.
one tenet' touch square. to IOfm
lour ordinary words.

[j
(1
I
I
........... -·-····

II [

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

I Do in
5 Child care
expert
10 Sundered
11 Leash
13 Diabolical
14 Dress
15 Reprieve
17 Publication (sL)
18 Before
19 Falstaff 's
title
20 Sununer
(F r .)
21 Oklahoma
Indian
22 Hibernia
23 Allude
26 E nglish
river
27 Arab
official
Z8 ·· - Rosen·
ka valier··
29 Wall (Fr . )
30 Father
and son
31 Weake n
J4 Eyot
J5 Set in

43 Scoundrel
DOWN
1 Cubic
meter
2 Inamorata
3 Rebel
4 Shrill bark
5 Donnan!
6 Benchley
Yesterda y's Answer
or Sellers
30 Persian
7 Baseball 21 Indian
weight
prophet
grea t
8 Bis hop's 22 Do wrong Jl European
rive r ·
gannent 23 Neglectful
24 Follow suit 32 E xpiate
9 Horny
25 Furnace
33 Corolla
tissue
cha mbe r
seg ment
12 LondO!\
26 Pavilion. 36 Wes tern
streel
e.g.
s"'te
16 Ba va r ian
28 Adequa te 38 NiiHn n ver
,.-,.,-,.,...-,.,.--

AXYDLBAAXR
~&amp;LONGFELLOW

W HAI AN

A~l !!ll

U~UALLY 1 ~.
Now arrange the circled lene rs t()
form the aUfl)riH anSQr,
s~ -

as
) ()
U
"-""'---"""""-~;;:::...:g:•;"::ed b~ the above cartoon.

Answerhere:A

61 "ItA! VHr6

40 Uke some
bases
U Mangano
film
42 Live
II
DAILY CRVPTOQUOTES - Here's how lo worl&lt; il :

....

t ARPITE

•

motion
37 Texas r iver b +-+39 Binge

RISUV

kNOOTa

fl) Star Trek
7:30 0 (J) In side look
m Video Jukebox
MOVIE : ' The Dart&lt;
Crystal'
(!) College Football '84 :
Teams to be Announced
8 :00 D (l) (7) Oiff' rent Strokes

(I) Pr. Who
(10] Merv Griffin
(t t) NOva 'Front te rs of Pta su e
Surgery. ' The cosmet tc as ·
pects of the rap1d ly advancIng world of plas tic surge ry
are exammed (60 m1n ) (CC)

t ton .

3:00

~ ~ ~~ ~

. . M . . OO ... _

18 112.1 Solid Gold

Cil 0 I]) Hee Haw
CD Star Search

"(X XI)"[ X XI X)

'·' I

One leiter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X fo r the two O's, etc. Singl• letters,
apostrophes. the length and fonnatio~ of the words are all .
hints. Each day the code letters are differe nt.
CRYPTOQUOTE
11 ·23

VKT OTFV BMN

VY

FTLJT

WT C V -

(Answers tomorrow)
Yeste rdav's

- --- - - - -

I Jumb18s
Answer·

ANKLE CAKED ENTIRE RADIUS
What a very repetitive t ype ol dance m 1ght
be called - A ·· ~EOUN - OANCE '"

y J T LF

HF VY

F YST D YPN

T W FT. -

VKT ALYMEHEA CMSH W N
Yesterday 's Cryptoquote : LEFTOVERS ARE FOODS
THAT ARE HERE TODAY - AND HERE TOMORROW .
- TitE GROANING REFRIGERATOR

'··

-

."

�..

.'

'

Friday. November 23, 1984

Page 14- The Daily Sentinel

r····---~IIJnlr--·····

iGun deer season
~begins on Monday
'•

By TheA~mredP~

;

About 250,00l hunters are ex~ pected to kill morp than 50,00Jdeer
~ Whf'n the Ohio gun season opens
~ Monday for a s ix-day run, DJ,·islon
: olWlldlifP officials predict.
• Pat Ruble, hea&lt;l of game manage: m ent for th~ wildlife division.
: forecasts more than 60,00l deer will
~ b{' taken by a ll weap&lt;&gt;ns in 1984, with
:· the vast majority of that total
~ coming from the gun hu nters.
~ In 19B'l. gun huntl'rs killed nea r ly
• 52,&lt;Xll deer, helping account for a
: total harVest of 59,812 a nimals by
: row, gun a nd crossbow. That
i aver aged out to one in evety five
~ hunters taking home venison.
: All 88 of the state's counties are
· open to gun hunting , but the most
: prcduc tivc a rea is Zone 4 in
; southeaste rn Ohio.
; Zone 4 has the largest public
: hunting areas wit h 92,!;00 ac res open
i III Gul'msey, Noble a ndMuskingum
~ counties.

: Law rence Cou nt y offers 76.00J
: acres of p ublic hunting. The r&lt;' a r&lt;'
, about 50,(XX) acres in Vim on County ,
; Including txJrtions of th&lt;' Wa yn&lt;'
: N.tlona l Forest and the Za leski
; State Forest, a combincXJ ?OJUI
~ acres in Alhf'ns and Hocking
; counties and anot hC'r RO/OJ vt·n •s in

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Jackson and Washington counties.
Most of the metropolitan centers
of Ohio ha d deer killed .last year.
There were 102 whitetails taken in
Ha milton Count y around Cincln·
nati , 92 deer killl'd in Fr ariklln
County near Columbus. ?.lin Lucas
County arou nd Toledo a nd eight in
Cuya hoga County surroundi ng
Cleveland.
State wildlife officials are predict ·
lng a record kill with the state's dee r
herd estimaiE'd a t 140,00J to 175,00J
anima ls: They wam €&lt;1, however,
that duri ng gun season only shot ·
guns fir ing l'ifiE'd slugs or muzzle ·
loaders firing a single proj('(tlle are
lega l.
The re a re some changes in deer
hunting regulations in 1984. T he
hours will IJ&lt;' a half-hour before
sunris&lt;' to a half-hour a ft e r sunset, a
change fr om the previous 7 a .m .-5
p.m . rule.
In the 24 counties in the n&lt;'W Zone
4, dt'('l' of either sex ma y be killed
without a special permit for
a nle rless whitetail. The drer must
be taken to a check sta tion in the
sam e county or ad-jacent county by
Itw I&gt;CI'SOn who .shot it .
Wild!iff' offi cials cm phaslzl'd tha t
hunters again must weLJr some
b iJZt · ot·a ng(• appa rf'l .

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wooly

ADOPTION - 'I'IWi black,
four m'*ll old puppy lshelngollered
for adoption by the Meigs Coomty Humane Society. The puppy has been
wormeol and has had lnnoculatloas. The adoption fee Is only $5 for a
person wllo will provide a IIOOd heme lor the playful pup. The 1100lety wiD
require the anbnal he neutered a&amp; the proper RIJI!.Interestedpersons may
caU 99Z-542'l or 992-41586.

Fire kills mother,'two childre
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP)- A n
~arly m orni ng fire in an east side
hom&lt;' here killed a 33-year-old
wom a n a nd two children .
The Columbus police departme nt
Identified the dead as Linde ll
Revels. 33, son Me lchizeck , 7. a nd
daughter Artista, 6. a nd F ire Capt.
J im Wagenbr enner said
Ms. Revels 's ne phew, J edidia h
Sla ughter , 7, was Injured in the fire
and was listl'd in cril lcla l condition
a t Child ren 's Hospit a l this morning.
Police said his m othe r , Lind a
Sla ug hter. who is Ms. Revels' twin
siste r , a nd fou r othe r children
escaped the blazt' unha rm ed .
F in:- Cap tain .lim Wagenbrcnner
said Ms. Revels a ppears to have
escaped the fire, but went back ln to
attempt to r esr· ue the c hildre n.
The fire broke ou t a bout 2:30a. m.
in th&lt;' s ing le -fam ily frame dwe lling
and was m ost Intense in the loW('r
story, wher&lt;' the three were found
dead , Wagenbrcnncr said . The .
inju red bo~· was found b)' firefi ghte rs in a n upsta irs room .
The cause of the fi t'P has not be&lt;'n
det&lt;'rmin€&lt;1.

: Emergency squads answer six calls
: Medical Setvicf' n •por ts tha t s ix
: calls W('(lncsda\' and six calls

; thursday W(' l'(' iJ ~S\Vf'rt'£i b~' I'PSCUf '
' uriits througour thf' cou nt ~· .

Pom eroy wa s ca lled to Long
· Hollow Road at 9: 11 a. m Wcdn&lt;·s·
, dav for RuiPIIil Hnb .. rts to Hol7r•r
' M€Jic&lt;~ l C~rllt•r. Ai 7:1'J p.m ..
: Tuwrs Plai ns took Carl Ma tla ck
from the Tup)X'rs Pia ins fire s tat ion
to St .. Jos&lt;'ph's Hospi ta l in ParkNs·
bUrg. At 9: : ~:; p.m .. S_vracusC' wa s
called ro the scmc• of a n a uto
accident in Ihe Nease Settlcm&lt;•nt
a t'l'a. Kath~· 1\lr in a nd Br i;m Chccn
wf'n•

tran spo rt('(]

\"etera ns

to

Mem orial.
Raci ne was ca ll c~l to lhC' sam e
accident at !l: iH p.m. fo r !.aura F'ry·&lt;'
who wa s ~tl so tr&lt;.~nspor! Pd tu
W tcra ns Mc•morial. i\t 111 &gt;1 p. m ..
Pom c ro.-· t'l'SfXJndcd loa call a t tdl' ,
Ma in St. and took fXobra Hosf' to
Holz('r M('&lt;. i ict.!l CPnter. S \T'-ll'USL'
was ca lhxl to Tc·xas Roml ·a t 11 : 14
p.m . for Cha rlrs RusS!' II to Vetera ns

1\1('mo ri a l .

On Tlm rsda y, Middle jXJrt rcsjXJncl&lt;'d to a ca U on Brad buty Raod
and tra ns ported Lillian Ki ng to
\ '&lt;•t•·r ·a ns Memoria l. At 12 ::19p.rn ..
S.\-racusc• W&lt;'nl to Church St. for
Trina Ma.\S to V01t' t'a m; Mf'm oria l.
Ha cinewcnt to Por t land a t 1: !Xi p .m .
for .John M~·C'r ~ to VPit&gt;ra ns MPm oricil. AI ti: 29 p.m .. Ru tla nd wen t to
Whil e Hill Road for Teny HoUS&lt;'r to
V&lt;·tNa ns M&lt;"moria l. Syracuse was
callr'CI to the SyracuSf' Nazarene
Church at 6: iR p.m . for Regi na LPC
10 \ 'rt&lt;'ra ns Memoria l. And a t 7: 18
p.m .. Midd lejXJrt was ca lll'd to thf'
Brownell i\parl m&lt;'ni S for Mildred
MllbornC' tu V('ll"rans Memorial.

Ca~t· cli ~ missed
A suit fil c'CI b)' She ila i\ nn Follrod,
At hr•ns, aga inst Jack Eugene Follrod, Hacine. has been d is missed in
Ml'igs Count ~' Com mon Pleas Court
bv .J udge Charles Knig ht .

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- - - - ·- - -

Ch1i1tms1 Gilt Ssle
Sle~we~AYS o~o!~i!ING
Ladies' Dresses

Ladies'
1 little Boys' Pants &amp; Jeans
1 Little Boys' Shirts
Coats
I Children's
Boys' Sweat Shirts &amp; Pants
I Misses Coats .
I · Girls' Slacks &amp; Jeans
I Girls' Winter Tops
1 Angel Treads Cozy Boots
Cords
I Junior
Men's Sweaters
I Girls' Dresses
1 Men's Sport Shirts
1I Devon Sportwear

•

The M&lt;'igs Count,\ · E rnt&gt;rgpnc; '

Gel a lo t lor you r truck dollars Jus! $5993 • buys you a tough '84 Ford
Ranger wrth plenty of cargo roo m and the wrdest cab rn rts class . $5993
buys yo u a Ford quahly truck wtlh a Iou gh double-wall bed, sleel-belted
radral ttres . 5-speed Irans mtss ron. and electronrc fuel injection . But
$5993 doesn 't tust buy Ford Ranger. i[ buys America's best-selling s mall·
prckup - based on truck registralions through June for the 1984 mode l
•
year Come see what $5993 will buy you-at your Ford Dealer no w.

RANGER S

1

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993
' lil l&lt;lYitCiw•~t •

~r&lt;&lt; lru

"''Qr!IN rrW

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..nwonq 1"' ''" ' .r&gt;V ""'''"" """

MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

Win! PIJACHAIE OF '85 FORD IWIGflr•

r

,(,,ncnmo

~lt har n red

ab~ s co

At!er a har~ work oay

~~~hn~

caroo rne o11:•uo co~ w&lt;lt oe

I he Foro bed toner

,J'IIar;r._e non

11 U~k(IOI

QesrQIIt:(l
W kDIU\el;!
ave1age wo1
day jt \he
helps ke~ 'fll\11
~ ord bed hne1 t:omptemen t; ill6 well

~t vte ot the true ~
S IOewa ~ ·o~nHn~

lea~es yOul lll;hllryQt. ll'llh ;in

IO1~\1 Madt 01a
h~• vv · tluiY vrnt•c lh1Utl lien&gt; IIV colyetiJYieoe wourvmer t It
"c.4, 1A(I il 0 1101A """" ' n..
IIW'&lt; ..... .., &amp;o II',

n•o t~CI $

I C&lt; ~ ~ . , .,. ,

F or~ llf:tl l l n~ll&gt; OUII!

the tr~tk bed ail II ~·de ...alls I rom llcnl5. ~cr arches 1nrt

111n~ ""'' "i lo • ~ Oo!H
-"'rrufiiiWI••~~'Ilt• .llm '~'

o

• Can be remo~ell and re-mmlled '" a~tllher 11ucJ
The f ord llfd lmer '~ coverf!d b~ the s· 11\d;ll~ ,;;,

•«mo•vl

.........-..

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All THOM M£AN
AND RAND

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Escort L defines solid value . Standard features include
the efficient 1.6L 2V CVH engine wrth 4-speed manual
overdrive transaxle. halogen headlamps. steel-belted radial
tires, highback redioiog seats witll full-width clolh sealing
surtaces , removable package tray ... and more . The
Escort lis availabl_e with the 2. 0l Diesel engine.

J:N ss,876.*~.:;::-

AS

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~~~~ G~Ju!MPIC . BAGS~ •••••••••• $4° 0
ATHLETIC sHOES•••••••••••••• 1/2 PRICE

* * snvE * * snvE * * snvE * * snvE * * snvE * * snvE * *

1
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WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'$

II

S·OX

II

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#SELECT A P'l11

IA~~~=:v:u

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SHOE PURCHASE!

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!While Supply Lasts)

-v
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1.:
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· triia_gt OU$t

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~~~

•• ALLJOX
GROUP T-SHIRTS ••••••••••••• 12 PRICE
I• REG.
ATHLETIC
FOOTWEAR •••••• Sl 0 PR.
•7 .99

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2 PRICE

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PURSES

1f2 :e~

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GROUP OF

MEN'S DRESS &amp;
CASUAL SHOES

~

'85 FORD ESCORT L, ·

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BOOTS

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World's Best-Selling Car**
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W

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.. e ltM~ n~o

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REG .. PRICE

INCLUDES DINGO

A S)l f fl\llh ol J7(10 OSI
Aten srle 1rl1JIICIIO12!1 11 5 lbs ps1
Re ~1 st a nt to cooo~10n ~no t hem•cal oan'aqe
o Wilh 51ands urgo 1mpacr ~~ -6(1 f ~M wtll not cr;~e k e~!lfl
o

•mu~d wwam~

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STOREWIDE BOTH STORES

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TDUiifl ""'TICTIOI. l h@

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All mounung n~rttwar e ·~ •n~ ruoftt
Orner teature~ Ol •nltrest to vu1u ruugn t·unm cu sromc1

Value of '245.
~~ • 1
0 ~11

OPEN UNTIL 8 P.M. FdR OUR TRADITIONAL SALE!

W
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BEDUNER
U}~~~~~~~~;~~~·

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SATURDAY
NOVEMBER 24th
O,.LY

Iw

•"•'Qr'l

WASffi NGTON tAP) -The Reagan a dministration Is on the verge of un veiling a projXJsal for what
would be the biggest overhaul of t he U.S. tax syste m
since the Income tax cam e into existe nce 71 year s ago.
Individual taxpayers would see their tax rates
shru nk, but In ret urn they would lose some of their
favorite d eductions.
The adm inistra tion's goal Is to make t he c urrent
jumble of tax regulations simpler and fairer.
President Reagan Insisted dur ing his re-e lection
campaign that the enterpr ise would not be used as a
vehicle to raiSe taxes.
13ut as with any tinkering with the tax code, some
Individu als and businesses will benefit by having the ir
total tax bill lowered while others will pay higher
taxes. And some fear that Congress - faced with
soaring budget deficits - will tu rn the slm pllflcatllon
plan Into a tax Increase for everybody. ·
The president 's order for a complete review of the

.,·,

WILLIAM R. WICKLINE

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cJIW

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!(

SHOE PLACE

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Along lhe River ... ............ IH-8
Business ........... .... ..... ....... A-3
Deaths ............................. A· 7
Editorial~ ......................... A-2
Sports ... ........ .. ... .. ... ....... C·l -8
Tak&lt;H&gt;ne .. ............ ....... Insert

Ohio weather :
winter gives
way to autumn
--Page A-4--

tntittt
12 Sections, 98 Pages, 50 Cents

Sunday, November 25, 1984

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Tax overhaul plan set for unveiling

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Middleport- Pomeroy Gallipoli5-Point Pleasant

t98-4

Inside:

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ln. compliance with provisions of Section 5712.03 of the
Ohio Revised Code, there will be published in this newspaper
during the next few weeks a list of those persons who are delinquent in payment of real estate taxes in Meigs County.
If delinquent taxes are paid in full or ·arrangements made
with the County Treasurer to pay not later than 48 hours before said pubication, the parcel will be removed from the delinquent list before advertising.
All delinquent lands will be certified for foreclosure by the
County Auditor unless the taxes, assessments, interest, and
penalties due are paid. ·
·
The said list will be ready for publication on December 7 and 14.

fi

1'111' Rdl1&lt;1!'1 &gt;

Vol. t9 No. 42
c.pyrightod

Delinquent Taxpayers
Notice
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tmts

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America's Best-BuiH Trucks**---

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William F. Buckley d iscusses continuing
problem s with Social Security - Page A-2
Ch arle ne Hoeflich gives advice to those who fear
computers ••
B-7

'-•-•w-•••!l:ll!ll!lllllllrAta•••••••••J

w
w

Ill
•••

Holiday
wreaths
-Page B-l

Brown Duck Work &amp;
Huntina Clothes
1
Junior Slacks
1
Playtex Bras
1
Van Heusen Dress Shirts
Tube Socks
I
Junior Coats
I
Boys' Casual Pants
I
Men's Sport Shirts
·I .
Men's Sweat Shirts
1·
Revlon &amp; Coty Fragrances· 1
Boys' Sweaters

You 're Invited
To Our
Christmas Open House
Sunday, Nov. 25
11:00 To s:oo·

~~ e~tl\l\~'

are

Artificial heart implant--Page D-1

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1
"'~cr, KICKOFF ONE DAV
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tax system was made In his State of the Union address
last Janaury.
..
Treasury Secretary Dona ld T . Regan told a group
ol business leaders on Wednesday that he expected to
meet the deadline of forwarding the review plan to the
president on Dec. 1. According to participants at the
private m eeting, Regan also indicated that he hoped
the entire plan would t he n be made public.
While t he administration has refu sed to publicly
disclose si&gt;eclflcs of the pla n, Treasury Department
officials ha ve discussed the tax iSsue with various
Interest grou ps,
Interviews with lobbyists, who spoke 'Only on
condition they no! be na med, provided the followin g
. detaUs on e le me nts expected to he In the depat1ment
recomme ndations.
. The p roposal will be a modified flat tax. Under a
pure flat tax, there Is a sing le tax rate for everyone
a nd all Inc om e is taxed at that rate. There are no

exemptions or deductions.
Under a modifil'd approach , t.he current 16 separa tc
tax bra ckets for Individuals, ranging from 11 percent
to a m aximum tax of 50 percent , would be pa rl'd
down.
·
The Treasury Department plan would apparently
pare the top rate from 50 perce nt down to 3.1 percent
for the wealthies t taxpayers with perhaps two or
three other rates.
To allow for ra tes to be lowered. the base of income
subject to tax will have to be widened. For
Individua ls, lhe exemptions a nd deduct ions appar·
e ntl y being eyed for repeal include :
-Certain employer -pa id fringe benefit s. These
fringe benefits are not now counted as income a nd are
thus not subject to taxation . The two biggest a re
employer contributions for health-insura nce pre miums. which total $19 billion. , a nd employer

contribut ions to pens ions, which tmal $50 billion.
However, s ince the adm ini stration has repeatedly
emphasized the need to increase savings, the pens ion

exempt ion may be spared .
-[)(&gt;ductions lor s tat e and local taxes. These
deductions \\111 save ta xpaye r s who itemize $21 .6
billion next year.
' '
-Deductions for mortgage interPst paym ents on
vacation home's. President Reagan him self ruled the
tax break for interest on home mortgages
untouchable, but apparently the Treasury [)(&gt;part rn ent plan would limit this exf'mpt ion to a taxpayers '
principal residence.
The top corjXJrate rat e would bc lowe red from the
c urrent 46 percent down to about 40 percPnt.
The key busi ness ta x breaks Q&lt;'lng eyl'd for e ither
ellmlnation or modification are invest ment tax
credits a nd a cce lerated de preciation , the main
feature of the administra tion's 1981 bus iness tax cuts.

Homes near
completion at
Hartinger Park

Merchants optimistic
as traditional holiday
shopping season opens
GALLIPOLIS Many re tail
mercha nts say their two busiest
days of the year are t he Friday a nd
Satu rday after Than ksgiving, the
traditiona l start of th e Christmas
shopping season.
Five downtown Gallipoli s m er chants say while the two post
Thanksgiving days thi s year have
been busier than last year, they are
usually bus ter the weekend befor e
Christmas.
" Business has been very good,
better tha n last year, " Keit h
Thom as of Thom as Clot hiers said.
"But our busiest weeke nd Is almost
always the weekend before Chris tmas." Thomas said w hile he has no
'
crystal ball. he believes the Im proved economy will h elp business
duri ng the most important part of
the r!'ta ller's year.
The owner of t hP Bast ille, Mike
Allen agreed.
"The weekend before Christmas
Is always our best time," Allen said .
'"The day after Thanksgiving has
never been out· best d ay .lt'salways
good, bu t not our best. "
Allen said he was optimistic about
reta iler s' fortunes du r ing the holiday season . "You have to be
optim istic," he said . "Thewarmfall
slowed our bus iness down a little.
Today (Sa turday ) has been a little
slow but I was piC'ased wit h
yesterday 1Friday I.
Allen said while traffic was down ,
therewern 't many lookers. " Most of
the people tha t have been In have

'

bought somet hing," he said.
"The Christmas rush has hit,"
according to !)oil ar Genera l Store
Ma nager Ka y Ferrell.
Business the two days after
Thanksgiving "has been real good,"
&amp;be said . "We expect to definitely
keep the pace upand remain busy all
month ," Ferrell said.
Expa ndl'd business hours for the
Christmas sea son a r e a plus as well ,
she said. "With'the longer hours, we
can get more done ," she added .·
·
Friday was "on e of the biggest
days we've ha d in m a ny of:a d ay,"
Max Tawney of T awney Studio a nd
Photo Cente r a nd T awney's J ewel·
ers said. "Our dia m ond business Is
better than it has been in the last two
years. Our layaway business is the
biggest we've ever had. It's un be·
li!'va ble ," ·Tawney said .
"We expect to do as well this year
as we did last year ," A lcove
Ma nager Pat Bell said.
Friday was on par with a ny other
year, Bell a dded. She thinks t he key
to additional sales this year will be
the Sund ay hours m any stores will
be keeping. Bell said she hoped the
additional hours will keep traffic In
Gallipolis that in I he past has headed
to either Charleston or Huntington.
/\cross the s ta te, the the m e at
many Ohio stores F riday mig ht well
have been "They came, they saw,
they bought"
as determinl'd
shoppers arrived e n masse to begin
their Christmas s hopping on w ha t Is
traditionally the b usiest shopping
day of the year.

MIDDLEPORT -

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new

homf's being built in a new housing

area on Ha rtinger P ark wa y in
Middleport are nearing completion.
Individ ua ls who a rc to be owners
or thC' new houses have arranged
their own financing. However,
they're getting a good deal from the
s ta ndpoint of cos ts a nd taxes.
For exa mple. subsidy money has
IJecon used for labor on the homes and
as a result, the purc haser who
selects a two hedroom mode l
cost ing abo ut :t:fl.IXXJ actua lly will
purchase th&lt;' hous€' for a ppro_,;.
m ately $10,000 i('ss, paying onl y

$22.1XXJ.
Middleport Vil lage officia ls some
months ago esta bli shed MiddiPfXJrt
as a tax a batement district. That .
step provides that' the new home
owner is exempt from paying real
estate ta xPS on thr property for );j
years. That's quit e a fina nc ial boost.
The five houses now under
construction -with garages - are
being built by GN"g Roush. genera l
contractor. and are sc heduled 10 be
comple ted by Dec. 1.
There is room for about 1:1other
new houses in the new d evelopment

FOR GOODNESS SAKE-Santa·Is noted for givin g
good advice to little friends. Suc h was the case
Saturda y morning In Middle port as Santa passed out
·treats to the children. Santa later visited with his little
friends In Pome roy.

The Christmas s hopping season In Meigs County
was ushered In Saturday with the pa rade in
Middleport a nd Pom eroy co-spoll'lOred by the
Pomeroy a nd Middleport Ch:Lmhers of Commerce.

which was C'stablishl'd in 1981
th r ough Hous ing a nd Urba n Devel·
opment grant s. Middl eport Villa gP
purchasl'd the approx im ate fi ve
acres along Han lnger Parkway .
Most lots ar&lt;' :;o by HO feet .
Since the n the acreagP. once a
gra vd pit . was filled b,· Holley
Brothers ons t ruction Co .. and later
Hemlock Pipeline. Hacinc. put in
!Continued on A41

Coal official says 'no chance' for acid rain legislation
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP l - Legislation to control
ac id rain Is dead In Congress because there IS no
coalition between Northeastern a nd Weste rn states
on wha t should · be d one, says a Na tiona l Coa l
Association Official.
"It Is h ard to get .things done In Was hington , D.C.
When something hap pens, It means It has a lot of
consensus behind It," said A. Da nny E llerm an, vice
preside nt of the coal associa tion based In Washlngt~n,

D.C.
"A coalition of the West a nd Northeast IS not there,"
he said,
Ellerman recently told Ohio utilty executives that
the Clean Air Ac t of 1970 Is "alive, well and working."
He 'said the law has led to a 25 percenrdecrease in
sulfur dioxide e~TIIsslons In the past decade despite a
50 percent increase In coal usage .
Those r eductions will have cost consumers $11

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favors measures that would give
wome n and men the opportunity to
aclrleve parity In the workforce."
Battle lines a re being drawn over
the question of comparable worth ,
which seeks to attack disparities In
pay given to men and wome n when .
they do simila r but not Identica l
jobs. This concept goes beyond the
theory of equal pay for equal work,
which 'fr9wbr!dge said ~ NAM
"has long' endorsed."

'lbe Galla·Melgs Community
Action Agency Is now accepting

By JOHN F RIEDMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
c 'HESffiRE -The Gallia -Melgs
Community Action Agency Is now
accepting applications for $10,00:1
grants to rehabilitate 23 Gallia
County homes according to CAA
Housing Director Ron Cra.,.1ord.
The CAA received a rehabilit a tlon
grant of approximately $590,(XX)
over a two-year period in Sep·
tember. Crawford said the CAA
would spend $296,00l of the grant In

appUcatlons for Its housing

1985.

TAKING APPUCATIONS There has been little momen tum
In Congress for federal legisla tion to
Implement comparable worth pay
systems, although Rl'p. Mary Rose
Oakar, D-Ohlo, has submitted a bill
seeking a study of wb{'ther such a .
concept could b{'tested lnthe federat·
workforce.

Those sta tcs ba ck legislat ion calling for a 5() percent
reduction In su lfur dioxide &lt;'missions by 1990. The
Cle an Air Act would give ut iliti es until 2010 to reac h '
that level.
Ellerman said the Norlh&lt;'ast stal'cs need thp
supfXJI'I of the Western stall's to get thl' bill passed.
But the West docs not w;J nt to ,::rt involved ih creating
a hu gP mf'aSurf' for n mln or ailmPn t that affN'ts a

s m a ll part of the count ry. hr s&lt;tld.

CAA seeks applications for
home rehabilitation grants

Manufacturers group resists
Fed involvement in pay issue
WASHINGTb N (AP ) - The
National Association of Manufa cturers h as come out aga inst
legislation which would require that
me n and women b{' pa id equa lly on
the basis 'of the com par able worth of
their jobs.
This business group , the umbrella
lobbying organization fOI) private
cortxJratlons In the m a nufacturing
sector, thus joined t he burgeoning
national debate over the controver ·
sial concept , which a lso Is opfXJsed
by the Reaga n administ ration.
NAM President Alexander B.
Trowbridge, In a policy stateme nt
released this week, said the organ!·
zatlon's board of directors " Is
unanimously opposed to the c rea tion . of a government entity that
would decide the worth of jobs, but

bill ion by 1990, he said. or about $200 for a fa mi ly of
four.
Proposals to control a cid ra in now before Congress
would add between $2 billion and $6 bllllon to tha I,
E llerman sa id.
Northea;~ern states say s ulfu r dioxide emiss ions
from Midwest jXJwer plants mix wllh water in the
at mosphe re to form acid rain which is killing
Adirondack lakes and forests.

rellabiUtatlon progrlllit . CAA
HoUBinr Director Ron Crawford
said the program will gel
Ullllerway In earnest by t he
middle of January .

As of Friday, Crawford said the
agency had t·ecelved 14 applications
for the grants .
·
The applications will be reviewl'd
by an Independe nt committe&lt;'

est ablished byy the Gallia County
Commission. The board will if the
a pplica nt has complied with estab ·
lis hed guideli nes and 11 there Is a
need .
Applicants will need to show
verification of gross income fo r the
past 12 months, according to
Crawlord . Also needed are and deed
or mortgage agt·eements a nd if they
are In two na mes, both parties musl
sign the application . Cr awford a lso
said property tax receipts, social
secul'ity numbers anrl Insura nce
receipts are required.
The program Is aimed at those
homes whose owners are making no
mm:~ than 75 percent of fXJVe rty
guideline levels. F or exarnpte,

Crawforcl s a id if the guide lines set
the povPt1y IC'vcl a t $10,(XX), then
houses with gross incom es of $7.500
or less wou ld be considered for
funding.
Money will a lso be available for
fiw homes a yea r to be repalrl'd on
an emc;gency basis.
"For ins tan ce." Crawford said
" If a fm·nace Is out completely, a nd
is· not repairable, we &lt;;an spend the
m oney to replace It. "
The progra m has m et wit h some
resistance fmm senior clllzens,
Crawford sa id, because of a
five-year lien on the home.
The lien was established to
prevent owners selling rehab ilitated
1Continued on A-4)

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