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                  <text>Page--.12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

,..---Local briefs:---.
Wise pleads guilty,·sentenced
Lester Wise, Jr. 20, Middleport, entered a voluntary plea ofguUtyto
charge of receiving stolen property, a felony of the fourth degr~.
md was sentenced to a definite term of not less than six months in the
Columbus Correctional Facility when he appeared Wednesday
morning in Meigs County Common Pleas Court before Judge Charles
H. Knight.
Wise was indicted by the grandjuryonJune17ofthisyear as a result
of an incident which occu\I'E!d June 1, at the residence of his father.
Lester Wise,Sr., at which time a large quantity of money was taken.
Karen Wise, sister of Lester Jr., andCharlesGearyearliereniered
voluntary pleas of gull ty to breaking and entering in connection with
the incident
Lester Wise, Jr .. was on probation for a prior felony theft offense at
the time of the most recent Incident. Wise was remanded to the
custody of the sheriff to beglon serving his time. Fredertck Crow,
prosecuting attorney, represented the state and Wise was
represented by Pomeroy Attorney Karen Story.
1

Jury finds Hubbard guilty
A jury del!berated less than an hour before returning a verdict of
guilty against Carol Hubbard, 25, Middleport, of assultingand making
menacing threats against Meigs Local Superintendent Danny Morris
Tuesday in Meigs County Court.
Judge Patrtck H. O'Brien on assault sentenced Hubbard to a term of
30daysin the county jail and afineof$.'fi0wlth 15days tobesuspendl'd.
On the charge of making threatsJudgeO'Brien sentenced Hubbard to
serve 30 days in the county jail and a fine of $100 with 20 days
suspended. The judge further ordered that the sentences would be
servl'd concurrently.
Hubbard was chargl'd as result of an incident which occurred
June 21 of this year just as a meeting of the Meigs Local School Board
was concluding.
At Tuesday's trial the State presentl'd witnesses, including Morris,
who .said that Hubbard, without warning or pl'Qvocatlon, had struck
.the.superiniertdenl!ii,ttie race and threatened-to "get" hlm. · ·
Hubbard testlfll'd in her own behalf and admlttl'd that she had, in
fact, struck Morris and made threats.
Hubbard was found not guilty of a lesser charge of obstructing
officiat business.
Assistant prosecuting attorney, I. Carson Crow represented the
State and Hubbard was represented by Athens Attorney James
Wallace.

Hospital news

Charges ...

Meigs OAPSE ratifies contract
Members of the Meigs Local
School District Chapter of the Ohio
Association of PubUc School Employes met Wedrtesday night and
ratlfled a new two year contract,
according to word receivl'd following the meeting by Meigs Local
Supt. Dan E. Morris.
Morris said that heunderstood the
vote was 54 to 8 in favor of the new
contract which w!U run from Sept.1,
1983 to Aug. 31, 1985. The district's
board of education Is expected to

ratify the contract as well as the new
contract of teachers In the district at
a regular meeting to be held
Tuesday night.
Contract negotiations between
non-certified personnel and the
board of educaflon were at Impasse
until Monday when Lee Skillman, a
fl'deral mediator, met with representatives of both groups and
apparently recommended solutions
to the Impasse pi1Jblems.

LUNCHEON HOURS
MONDAY -SATURDA" 11-2

Four calls were answered by local
units Wednesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Ml'dical Service reporls. At 6: ll a.m., Pomeroy went
to Sand Ridge for Vonida Landers,
taken to Holzer Medical Center;
Middleport at 5: 19 p.m. went to an
auto accident and treated an
unidentified injured person: Syracuse at 11: 17 a.m. went to Snowball
Hill for Eura Largent, taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
Rutland at 4:01p.m. went to College
St. for Allee Kennedy, taken to
Veterans Memorial.

FOR YOUR DINING AND DANCING ENTERTAINMENT
"MAYFAIR" WEDNESDAY-SATURDAY 8-12

MEIGS INN
992•3629

WEEK-END VALUES
, Warm~Up . Outfits --

...

tion all sale priced. Ideal styles for
school and dress wear.

Boys 17.95 Shirts .......... '6.30
Boys S9.95 Shirts .......... 17.80
Boys S}2.95 Shirts .......S10.20
Boys 116.95 Shirts .......113.40

$479

N. 2ND AVE.

PH. 992·6669
MIDDLEPORT. OH.

Boys s-ters. lncluded-:-Sate Prices.
"

.

. .

BRING THE
SUN INDOORS!

Sportswear Sale

Maka any room summer warm ,
all yeAr round at Am&amp;rita's kero·
sene 1'11811!1 helldqututers sa . . tt
on costly luet !Juts al'ld ke8p
warm anyl'llh&amp;re with IM' YUIISA
Model J-20 porlable •ero11nv
heater . . 101 pennies il day . the
sale . modern . economical ·way.
lt'a like seeing and r.. ling 1ne
warmglo"' ota tamily l.reptace. A
quality heater tl'lal teatures lu• ·
urioua wood grarn sty~ng at a tow
price any family can aflord

For Two Days Only, save on our en·
tire stock of Ladie.s' Coordinate
Sportswear.
Devon, Trissi, Queen Casual, Dotty
Mann, Lady Queen Casual, Boston
Traveler.

Model J-20

1,500 B.T.U.

for Fall. Misses and Extra Sizes.

Continuous heating time
13 - 14.5 hours

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

ONLY

$}4995
ATOUR

FREE BATTERIES
AND MANUAL
SIPHON PUMP
INClUDED WITH
HEATER!
'

MECHANIC ST.
WAREHOUSE

Pajama Sale
Nylon~ poly/cottons and

'9.00 ..........Sale ~7.20
'16.00 ....... Sale '12.1M&gt;
127.00 ....... Sale S21.60
139.00 ....... Sale 131.20

Junior Blouse
Sale

NEW FOR FALL
LADIES'

New Fall blouses by Stuffed Shirt,
Third Generation, Wrangler and Underground Shirt Factory.
Sporty, Casual and Dressy styles. Ju·
nior sizes S, M, L and 5 to 15.

plessee.

Sizes S to XXL and 32,to 48.
Solids and assorted prints.

!

,i

Reg. sg,oo .......Sale 17.19
Reg. S12.00 ..... Sale S9.59
Reg. Si6.00 ... Sale Si2.79
Reg, 123.00 ... Sale s18.39

Reg. '12~00 .........Sale 19.59
Reg. 118.00 ....... Sale 114.39
-Reg. '27.00 ....... Sale '21.59
Reg. 135.00 ....... Sale '27.99

~

Weekly sermonette

Page4

Page7

•

SPORT ·sHIRTS
Well known brands in sizes small {14·
14111. medium {15-15 1.1), large {16·16\1),
extra large {17 - 17~1. XX large 1!8·18\1).
Solids - stripes- plaids - full cut and tap·
ered siyles.
Savings are great for Friday and Sa·
turday.

Men's '11.95 Sport Shirts ...... '9.50
Men's 114.95 Sport Shirts ... '11.90
Men's '16.95 Sport Shirts .... .113.50
Men's 118.95 Sport Shirts ... )15.10

\
/

c.

monitoring the Soviet ships.~ U.S.
military o!ficlals in Japan said they
had no infonnatlon on the search
operation.
Kala said Japanese patrol boats
saw 12 Soviet .ships in the area,
including the 15,!XXJ.ton all drUIIng
vessel Mikhail Mlrchlnsk and the

~,®ton reteue a!liP Georvl Kozumin, The Soviets hive not said if .
they have found the airliner.

Masayoshl Kato _or

Japan's Maritime Safety Agency
said the 3,0ll·ton u.s. frigate
Bat1ger and the 8,200-ton Soviet
guided mlsslle cruiser Petropav· ·
lovsk maneuvered within 550 yards
of each other about 20 miles north of
Moneran, a tiny Soviet Island in the
Sea of Japan.
"I hope no shooting incident will _
occur between the two vessels," the
admiral said at a briefing in
Wakkanai, Japan.
In Montreal, the ·u.N: s aviation
agency was to resume an emer-gency meeting today on the airliner,
with Western delegates pushing for
pal! sage of a resolution condemning
the Soviet Union. A resolution
rebuking Moscow for a "criminal"
act was on the way to President
Reagan after being pal!sed unanimously by both houses of Congress.
Soviet and American task forces
are hunting off JapanfortheKorean
Air Lines jumbo jet shot down by
Soviet !lghtersSept.1 with the loss of
all269 aboard.
A helicopter from the Badger was
seen over
area, apparently

In Montreal, Western nations
werepushlngtodayforacondemna·
!ion of the Soviet Union and an
independent investigation as the
governing council of the Intema·
tiona! Civil Aviation Organization
continued an emergency session.
Members of the American and
other Western delegations were
working on a resolution condemning
Moscow. A member of the U.S.
delegation, who askl'd not to be
named, said as many as 25 of the 33
nations on thecounc!l would vote for
the resolution.
Federal Aviation Adminlstrator
J. Lynn Helms, head of the u.s.
delegation, said he expected !lie
council in pal!S the resolution today.
"The other nations of the world have
the same feeling we do," he said.
But Soviet delegate Ivan v.
Orlovets said Thursday Moscow
was conducting its own investiga·
tionand the world should walt for the
release of its findings before
reaching any conclusions.

JEANS
Straight leg style - 100% cotton
prewashed. Waist sizes 27 to 38,
lengths 30 to 36. Sale price two
days only

GIRLS' DENIM
AND CORDUROY

Jeans Sale
Straight legs, boot flairs, London
Riders, Wrangler, Lee and Buster
Brown.
Sizes 12to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6x,
7to 14.

Reg. '5. 75 to 121.00

~~~ED $459 to $}679

BANKRUPTCY BOOM

Men's Sweaters

1mi'!Pr increased

Sizes small, medium, large, extra large,
extra extra large.
Our entire stock including pullover in
crew and V neck styles-coat sweaters
and vests. Solid colors and patterns.
You'll really like !11e selection.

with '79 change

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

•5.75 ....... Sale '4.59
'7.00 .......Sale '5.59

*10.00 ...... Sale '7.99
115.00 .... Sale •11.99

Travel
Bags
Stylish and useful travel bas. Great lor ev-

ery day use, too!
Cosmetic orpnizer, mokeup purse, T-

bottom purse, snap mirror purse and

sltchels.

SALE PRICED

FROM ONLY

The firing of Maxine Plummer Thursday night may be the
conclusion of a long controversy involving her, the Gallia-Jackson·
Meigs 648 board and one of Its major contract agencies, Woodland
Centers Inc. (formerlytheGallia-Jackson-MelgsCommunltyMental
Health Center).
Some Important dates in the controversy:
Aug. 26, 1982: Gallia County commissioners say they want to
withdraw from the trt-county 648 board because it ts' "wasting
numerous tax dollars."
Sept 22, 1982: Plummer says she will withhold a $137,500 grant
earmarked for the center because the 648 board and center failed to
reach a contract. Bernard Niehm, director of the center, threatens to
' layulf-IOtolQl_~.

Furniture Sale

25o/o OFF
Any Uving Room Suite or Chair.
Many new sofas and chairs in new
styles and fabrics. also comfortble
recliners and rockers.

1979

' 1980

1911

Source: Admlnlllratlve Office/U.S. Cour11

FREE
PARKING
'

the Initial or

•

emer~ncy

phase of

the program in March, 1976 by
passing a local ordinanCe incorpo·
rating construction safeguards for
new development in the federally
identified flood plain areas.
In return for local attempts ·to
reduce future flood losses to new
construction, the federal govern·
men! provided property owners the
opportunity to purchase a ilmltl'd
amount of low-cost flood Insurance.
The insurance Is subsidized by the
federal government and offered at

center."
, __
Sept. 28, 1!!il2: Nlehm tells the Gallla County commlssloners he Is
seeking a special audit"of the 648 board.
Oct. 5, 1982: ·Myers Kurtz. director of the Ohio Department of
Mental Health, announces formation of Community Services Review
Group to investigate the mental healthcenterandthe648board. Kurtz
said he was prompted by the "all-{)ut war" between the agencies.
Jan. 3, 1983: The 648 board sues Gallla County for not collecting the
board's0.2 rnllllevy for 1981.
Jan. 7, 1983: Review group releases final report which calls for
resignations of Plummer and Niehm and other "sweeping changes"
at the 648 board and mental health center.
Jan. 21, 1983: Seven of nine commlsstoners in Gallia, Jackson and
Meigs counties say they want both Niehm and Plummer to resign.
Jan. 24, 1983: By a 6 to 5 vote, the 648 board asks for Plummer's
resignation. She Immediately refuses to step down.
Jan. 26, 1983: Mental health centerboard votes8 to4 not to ask for
Niehm's resignation.
Feb. 1, 1983: Jackson County commissioners vote to request It be
allowed to withdraw from the trl-county 648 board.
Feb. 14, 1983: Plwnmer files $12 million suit in U.S. Dlstrtct Court
against state and county officials.
March 3, 1983: State auditor's office releases special audit of 648
board. It calls for the board to strengthen its internal accounting
controls.
April 18, 1983: 648 board votes tD cut staff and reduce budget as
recommendl'd by the state review group.
Julyll, 1983: Spurred by six new members, the648boarddecldesto
reconsider Plwnmer's employment status.
Aug.1, 1983: The648board votes topreparewtittenchargesagainst
Plummer•.
Aug. 22. 1983: The 648 board approves a list of 14 charges against
Plummer.
Sept 13, 1983: Testimony begins in Plummer's employment
hearing.
Sept 15, 1983: The 648 board votes 10 to 2 to fire Plummer.

exchange markets has helped limit
u.s. exports, while the u.s. economic recovery has produced a
bul&amp;e In llnportt.
The pn!Yious record tor a quar·
terl,y trade deflclt was "-6 bllUoJn,
aei 1n the nM1 quarter of 1982. the

..

•

Mayor Charles Pyles reports
Racine has been acceptl'd into the
regular phase of the National Flood
Insurance Program effective Aug.
15. Property owners can now
purchase higher Umits of flood
insurance to cover losses to structures and contents.
The village became el!glble for

Sept. 24, 1982: Plwnmer announces she wtll release the grant
because she does not want to "jeporadlzeservlces or employees of the

By 'Die Aal!loclaled ~
The U.S. international trade
account, whlchshowedarecord$9.7
b!IUon deficit in the Aprti-June
quarter, Is expected to continue
deteriorating this year, the govern·
mentsays.
Conunerce Secretary Malcolm
Baldrige said Thursday he expects
the deficit in the U.S. current
account - measuring tmde and
financial transactions with the rest
of the world- tohlt$:1lbilllonlorthe
fuU year. That Wllllld nearly double
the record $15.45 billion of 1978.
Last year's total current account
deficit was $112 bllllon.
The nation's trade position has
deteriorated even as many sectors
of the domest1c eConomy are
snapping back !rom the 1981.&amp;
recession. The rfse this year In the
value of the dollar on foreign

'

SALE

Village OK'd for
higher insurance
flat rates throughout

the

communlty.

By partlcipatlng in the regular
phase of the program, Racine
property owners can purchase
additional amounts of Insurance
coverage but at actuarial risk rates
rather than the subsld!zro· rates.
The regular phase limits are
$185,ml for a single family residential structure and $60,ml for
contents c verage. Smail businesses can be Insured up to $250,&lt;XXJ
for the structure and $300,&lt;XXJ for the
contents. Other structull'S and their
contents can also be Insured.
Flood insurance can be purchased from any licensed insu·
ranee agent . Such coverage must

be purchased as a separate policy
and is not ava!lable through a
standard homeowners pol!cy.

Food stamp usage up in Meigs
Meigs County has reportl'd the
largest percentage increase in the
number of food stamp recipients,
the Ohio Department of PubUc
Welfare revealed today.
Latest statistics provided by the
department show an inereaseof54.4
percent, or 2.011 more than there
were In 1982. There are currently
5, 700 recipients listed in Meigs.
The breakdown shows 263,736
coupons have been Issued in Meigs.
with ·the average Issuance set at

$46.21.
The department said 1.6 mllllon
Ohioans are now receiving food
stamps, showing a 19 percent
Increase over fiscal 1982 In the
amount spent by the state on the
program this year, which has been
set at $632 million.
In Gallia County, there are 5,409
food stamp recipient!\, whoreceivl'd
a total of 174,014 coupons at an
·
average Issuance of $45.53.

List new fire numbers for Racine

.

Residents of Meigs Countyservl'd
by the Racine Fire Department are
to call 992-6663 when they need the
services of the department.
Previously, resldentscouldalsocall
Mrs. Mae Cleland at 992-2121.

However, the phoneserviceforMrs.
Cleland and the number for the fire
calls at her residence have been
discontinul'd and the new number
992-6ffi'lls to be used.

U.S.industrial production rose in August

LITTLE BOYS'

• Quality Lee, Buster Brown and
Wrangler denim jeans and corduroy
jeans. Stniight leg or boot flair styles.
Sizes 12 to 24 mos., 2 to 7.

Of all the charges, only one - involving a 90 cent

beer which was chargl'd to the board - resultl'd in
actual loss to the board, he said.
"U you fire Mrs. Plummer you won·t be known as
the 648 board, you'll be known as the 90-cent beer
board, and rightly so," he said.
'Sc~ cha!'ge'
Plummer haS developed a nationally proniinent
During the three-&lt;iay hearing which concluded
mental health program here, her attorney said, and If
Thursday night, Plummer attempted to defend
the board removes her it will be "the laughingstock of
herself against the charges and the board's attorney,
the state of Ohio, H not the whole nation:·
W. Joseph Strapp, presented evidence supporting the
Strapp, In his closing argument, reiterated
accusations.
evidence which he said proved the charges against
In his closing argument, McDermott said "they are
Plwnmer. He noted that Plummer admlttl'd to
not valld charges, they are only excuses."
several
of the charges.
The board has made Plummer "a scapegoat" for
"Admittedly,
Mrs. Plummer has accompl!shl'd
previous actions of the board which current members
.
thlogs
In
this
community,"
Strapp said. "But how .
do not support, McDermott charged.
·does
one
get
away
with
the
charges
brought against
McDermott · accused· so'me unnaml?d board'
her?
Just
because
on
one
day
Mrs.
Plummer di&gt;es
members of ."mallceand-bad faith" for fllingcharges
something good does not erase the bad things she does
against Plummer for actions they originally
the other day."
(Continued on page 12)
approvl'd.

.

Men's s16.95 SWeaters ... s13.20
Men's '19.95 Sv.taaters ......Sl5.60
Men's S22.95 SWeaters ....S17.90
Men's '29.95 SWeaters ....s23.30

JEANS &amp;
CORDS SALE

misled the board about her education, spent board
money to buy an airline ticket for her husband,
allowed other staff to sign her nanne to vouchers and
hired her son as a janitor with no proof he did the
work.

Plummer controversy

SALE!

MEN'S LEE
$229 5 BLUE DENIM

2 Sections, 12 Pdges
20 C.ntt
A Multimedia Inc Newspape'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 16, 1983

and had no comment after the hearing. But her
OVP slafl
attorney promised further action on her behalf.
"This Is not the last step in the process/'
Maxine Plummer has been executive director of
McDermott sald, but would not elaborate.
the Gallia.Jackson·Melgs 648 board since Its
Voting for firing Plwnmer were: Roberta Holzer,
fonnatlon in 1971, with much of the pal!! several years .
Edwar(! Berk!ch, ~vid Ev;m$, Warren ·Sheets; ·
spent in conflict and.contrywersy. It will all end 5 p.m.
Frank Hayes, Victoria Wfuiam5, Herbert Tucker,
today.
Martha Deck, Ralph McCormick and James J .
After hearing final testimony and closing at'gu·
Cremeens.
ments at her employment hearing Thursday night,
Jim Mourning and Jean Scurlock votl'd again$!
the 648 board voted 10 to 2 to fire Plwnmer effective
firing her. Paul Barnett abstained.
today.
The decision ends more than a year of controversy
The board filed in a closed jury room at the Gallla
which has seen bitter publ!c confl!ct between
County courthouse about 11 p.m., after Plummer's
Plummer and a contra~! agency, release of a state
attorney Kevin McDermott warnl'd members they
report attacking Plununer~ loss of official support in
would be the "laug~tock of the state otohlo, ifnot
Gallia and Jackson &lt;l\'l!lllties and a failed attempt to
· -· . ·the'woole nation" If they !!red Plwnmer.
.
. seek the director's resignation.
- Twenty_minutes later board members emergl'd, '· · At an August meeting, the board prepared 14
and by a roll call vote, announced their decision. ·
wrttten charges against Plummer to begin the
Plummer showed no emotlor as the vote was read
removal process. Includl'd were accusations she

.Be~r_Adm.

MEN'S

•

at y enttne
e
Public hearing ends: Plummer fired

By BARRY RENFREW
Afli!Odated Preu Writer
U.S. and Soviet warships search·
ing for the wreckage of a South
Korean airllner closed to within 550
yards of each other today and a
Japanese admlral expressed con·
cern about a possible "shooting
incident."

All new colors, styles and fabrics

Retmovabt. tank

Browns dump Bengals -

Warship passing
:causes concern

NEW FALL

$1699

VILLAGE PHARMACY

Boys Knit Shirts
.&amp; Velours . .
Sizes 8 thi~ugh '20. Our new falfselec-

Quality easy-care 100% acrylic
sweat shirts and coordinating
pants, shorts and skirts. Complete
range of children's sizes.

SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

Page&amp;

By JEFF GRABMEIER

SALE!

.

Page2

Vol.32,No.110
Copyrithtod 1983

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NOW IS THE TIME TO VISIT

TO SEE FOR YOURSELF WHAT OUR
CUSTOMERS HAVE BEEN ENJOYING
FOR YEARS:
1) FAST, FRIENDLY SERVICE
2) COMPUTERIZED PRESCRIPTION SERVICE
3) LOW PRICES
4) FREE DELIVERY
5) FREE PARKING

POMEROY

126 MAIN ST.

UTILE BOYS' AND GIRLS'

St~amy
soups•••.
'

Issue 3 ramifications

'

Squad runs ·

plummer.. .___(c_a_nt_in-;:ued-;;-tr-om~p:-a:-ge71_)----:---:-::-:~

dOne," she said.
·
·
Another ·charge accuses iheboard.
King
revealed
she
Is
the
wife
of
Plummer of "causing the board" to
Hamlin
King,
a
Gallipolis
attorney
carry two life insurance pollees
which gave her cash benefits, but who represents Plummer in one of
King said the board had ''no her suits against Gallla County
objections" to this and considered it officials. However, King said she
oneoftheexecutivedirector'sfringe was not familiar with the case or her
husband'srole in it.
benefits.
McDermott introduced as eviDuring cross-examination by
dence
an affidavit from a third
Strapp, Levine saidshesawnothing
fanner
board member which supwrongwlthotheremployeess!gnlng
portl'd
testimony· of King and
Plummer's name to vouchers and
Levine.
thought rental of tuxl'dos was "a
Mona Martin, a former mental
perfectly legal expense" to charge
health
technician for the 648 board,
to the board.
was
also
called to the witness stand
On the witness stand, Levine said
by
McDermott.
she was a personal fr!end of
Martin testlfll'd she often saw Jeff
Plummer appear for work at the
board's Jackson office. She said she
(Continued from page 1)
was not'there while he workl'd but
the floor.
"saw evidtence" of his cleaning the
They went to various rooms next day.
looking in the desks. They did find 50
Another janitor alsoworkl'd at the
cents in a cupboard and a watch Jackson office, she said.
from a child's desk which they took.
Before cal\ing witnesses Thurs·
One of the minors then rang the day, McDermott askl'd the board to
outside school bell which· alerted dismiss the charges against
Marshal Alfred Lyons and other Plummer because he claimed
residents. Lyons discovered the Strapp did not adequately state a
breaking and entering. The four case against Plummer. The board
were apprehended and returnl'd to refused.
the school, along with their parents.
The board also turned down
Damages were estimated at McDermott's request to call board '
$:nl.ThecasesarependinginMelgs members to testify. ·
County Juvenile Court. Maximum
In another procedural matter,
penalty, according to the Ohio Strapp was a!lowl'd to introduce
Revised Code on charges of contrt· payroll records into evidence al·
buting to the neglect of children, is though McDermott argued their
six months and orfineofupto$1,000 significance to the case was not
orhoth.
·
established.

COME IN AND ENJOY THE FINE
FOOD AND ATMOSPHERE AT
THE MEIGS INN
NEW DINING ROOM EVENING·HOURS
TUESDAY-SATURDAY 5-10

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - -Ronald Dalley,
Pomeroy; Rebecca Davidson.
!Pomeroy: Eura Largent,
Syracuse.
Dlscharged - Betty Friend,
William Mitchell, Bridgett Johnson,
Ralph Rose, Jr .. Daniel Knotts.

a

Piumme~·s before she was l)ired by .

. Thursda_y, September 15, 1983

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Commerce Department said.
In a more encouraging report, the
Federal Reserve Board said U.S.
lnt:lustrtal proouctlon rose 0.9 per·
cent Increase in August. Output had
risen 2 peicent in July.
Production rose In every Industry.
August's to~outputwasS. 7percent
higher than in August 1982 and 11.6
percent higher than in November
1982, when the recession boltoml'd
out.
The Federal Reserve said industrial production has recovered
four-fifths of the output lost during

the recession, which began in July

1981 and lasted 16 months.
In other economic developments
Thursday:
-The Labor Department said
409,ml people filed first-time claims
for unemployment benefits In the
week ended Sept. 3. That was down
5,00l from the previous week.
-U.S. automakers said their
layoffs fe!l1,100 this week to 136,350,
mostly because workers lost cal·
Iback tights and were dropped from
the rolls. Another 7,765 are on
temporary furlough this week

Sheriffs deputies puU more marijuana
Meigs County Deputies have
seized more marijuana according to
Sheriff James J. Pl'ottltt.
Thursday alternoon, deputies
pulled 40 plants from a field in
Rutland Township and 34 plants in
Scipio Township.
In the lmlestiptlon of the wound·
IDa of Lowen Smith, M, Rt. 4,
Panet oy, deputies recovered a
spent caaiJii tram a wooded area
-

- - - - - - - . -p

near the Smith · trailer in the
direction where the soots came.
Thursday afternoon, the depart·
ment received a comptalnt from
Richard caruthers, Bunker HW,
that four Monster Mudder truck
tires were taken fnm his front yard
also, a brand new l11lllorcYc!e
battery. ThetheftlabeUevedtohave
occurred Wednesday night

- - - - --~- - ·

compared with 500 last week.
Meanwhile, Ward's Automotive
Reports said U.S. car production
this week will be 28.5 percent higher
than last week, when production
was Umlted by Labor Day
shutdowns.
-The Conference Board said its
Consumer Confidence Index edged
lower in August, to 84.2 from 84.7 in
July, but added that the index had
held virtually steady over the past
four months. The boai'd said its
survey indicat.l'd people were con!!dent about current economic condi·
!ions but less certain about the
future.
-A c&lt;immlttee of four OPEC
members meeting in VIenna, Austria, decidl'd the recovery this
sununer In demand for OPEC all
was not great enough to support an
increase in OPEC prtces or producUon. The panel said !t would review
the situation again next month.
-Assets of money market mutual
funds leU $lll6 million, to $164.1
bllllon, In the week ended Wednesday, the Investment Company
Institute said.

�Friday, September 16, 1983

Comment
Pomeroy , Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE l''TERESI' OF THE !\IEJGS.M.&gt;\SOS AREA

ROBE RT L WINGETI'
Publis her
BOB HOEFLICH

Publis~ r/ Con ~ r ol l e r

G"'eral

Ma.n a~er

DALE ROTHG EB, JR.
News ~tar

A :IIE.IfBE R of The Associated P moo, lalaad Dally Press AsoocJaC
tlon u d the Am ericaa Newspaper Publishe r AssoclaU011.
LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcolnlled. They &amp;hHid tw! leu t•an D words
leq:. Allletten u e subj tct toedltiDI IUld muM lw! s lpoed wW:• u.me, adlllr ~s aad
&amp;etrphne aum~ . No IIMII__. let ~ wUI be publlshf"d. r...tten llho.lld be In

I write edgily on any matter other The Bureau Ot the Census Is rather
. than the behavior of Soviet fig hter reassurtng on the matter of tile
planes. but Jimmy the Greek tails survival of Amerlcan blacks. In
me that the chances ar e reasonable • i!lii:J, there wen! 26 million blacks In
that between the time these words America , whereas In 1970 there
are written and they a ppear in wen! only 22 million.
prtnt, the Soviet Union wlll not have
Well then, It numerically Amerl·
knOCked down another airliner. can blacks are oot In danger of
Accordingly I wrtte about some- extinction , what Is It that they do
thing called the Emergency Black face, concerning wblcb It Is a ppropSurvlval Fund.
rlate to worry about their "survl·
Would you sign up wilh an out1lt val?" PestDence? No, there Is no
with that name? The committee, sign of that. Starvation? Ditto.
you would reflect, Is concerned Educational asphyxiation? The
about black survival - not, say, percenta g!' of blacks anendlng
. about the SUIV!val Of I he IOUSI&gt;WOrt , college Is roughly equal to tile
or the snail darter, species ge- percentage of wbltes anmdlng
nulnely endangered, we are In· college. So then what IS this
formed In recent months and yean;. commlnee?

A phony? What would you do If
you received an Invitation to
su~Rrtbe to tile Emergency White
Survival Fund? I latow w hat I
would do "- throw It In tile
wastebasket, sigh and reflect that
wblte supremacists USilally make
their way by talking apocalyptl·
cally about tile disappearance of
the white race. At this moment, I
think the only committee con·
CB11ed with emergency survival
that would engage m y sympathetlc
attention would he a commlnee for
the MeSquite Indians In Nicaragua,
and maybe a committee concerned
with the swvlval of Afghans.
Well anyway, the preposterous
committee, you will have guessed,

fi)Od tuce, addrs.,.c il111es, not pen•ali.tl ~.

·Issue 3 would do
more. than repeal
rstate's·tax hike
: · Passage of Issue 3 on the N&lt;N. 8 ballot would do more than repeal Ohio's
!!0 percent Income tax InCrease, although that wrukl be chief among Its
effects.
An Olllo Departrnmt of Taxation report shows that tile measure would
: affect parts of sevm other recently~ted laws, Including an array of tax
· Items coo tallied In the massive state budget.
. In addition, tile
said Issue 3 mlgbt affect leg1slatlon exempting
l'toril taxation revenue bonds sold by the Ohio Housing Finance Ageilcy to
onan~ a' tow:interest mortgage loan program. But !hilt, apParently, has
yet to be determln€0.
.
Under the proposed constitutional amendment, all state tax laws
• enacted after Jan . 1 and before the effective date of~ amendment would
· ·e xpire June :xl, 1984.
: The thrust of the Issue would he to cancel higher personal Income tax
;. rates enacted by the General Assembly at Gov. RlchaniCeleste"s request
::and return to tower ~ent rates that had been ID eff€Ct.
·; Tax relief sections of the budget would also be n!pellled, Including
:;tnc1 eased personal exemptions, higher Setllorcttllrn IIC'tilernett credit aDd
;-a new joint Iller credit.
· · Repeal backers would no doubt argue that canceUng the 00 peitce1t
: Increase would give far more money back to taxpayers than retaining the
: tax relief In the budg!'t.
. Issu" 3 would also repeal Increases In the COfllOnlle frandllse and pubHc
·:UIIIIIy taxes, change the taxes paid by finallclallllstllutlons and cancel
::nlductlcllls In the periOllal property tax paid by bll8lnellll 00 equlprnellt and
:· I!MIItory.
WASHINGTON - The recent
;: ·A law that raised the amounts paid by emp)gyers In an attempt to help
boom In the housing Industry has
··stabilize the &gt;tate's bankrupt unemployment compensatloo fund could also been a point of pride for the Reagan
; be af!ectlrl by repeal .
administration. It's supposed to be
: "Unemployment compensation C011trl~llons may t.n Within the tile biggest single sign that the
: . meaning of a " tax" for Jllll'II06"S of these amendments, which would American economy Is recovering.
;:reduCe contributions and Increase federal loan Interest payments In fiscal
But unfortunately, the housing
·:~ar l!Hl," said Joanne Limbach, Tax Commlosloner.
boom Is flzzllng out
;. Approval cit Issue 3 would also:
The vDlaln Is the same one that
··· - Autlloti21! all school dlmicts to levy Income taxes wUh the approval of
caused tile houstne depression In
~ VIllErs of the district;
the first place: high Interest rates.
:: -Repeal a law pennlntng taxpayers to designate part of their Income Statistics show that many home
::. tax refund for wlldllfe and natural arew; programs;
ln!yers simply won't pay mort·
:. -El!rnlnate the sales tax on data processing and computer services used gages that demand more than 12.5
·: by business;
percent Interest
:. -Reinstate the autllority of cities to levy an I!XCise tax011 boxing events;
' But In the strict privacy of Its
:· -Repeal autl!ority granted to Island taxing cllstricts to teovy excise taxes august chambers. the Federal
·. ea water trnnsportation companies and saieJ; transactlans within the
ReseiVe Board anticipates that
a.trlct.
mortgage Interest rates wUI hover
around 13 percent tl!rough the end
of next year.
The difference between · 12.5
percent and 13 pereent may not

on Its board of sponsors. People llke
An~ Young, Bishop WOllam
Moore, GE!orge Wald, Bella Abrzui,
Ed Asner, Harry I;lelafonte. Jult•n
Bond, Richard Falk and WUJ!am
Wlnplstnger. These are folk halt of
whom you could get to sign a
statement calling for the emergency swvtval of the First Amend·
ment or of tile Grand Canyon, or
anything else absolutely secure.
But look wbO they've lined up as
co-sponsors. Mark Hatfield. Leon·
tyne Price. Burke MarshaU. Carl
AI bert. Arthur Ashe. Edward
Brooks. Shirley Chisholm. Kenneth
Clark. Angler Biddle Duke. Bryant
Gumbel. Averell Harriman. The
Rev. Theodore Harrtman. The RA!V.
Theodore Hesburgh. N!cbolas Kat·
zenhach. Robert McNamara. Sargent Shriver. Peter Rodino. Adlai
Stevmson. My God, John Updike.
And others.

The head of the Anti· Defamation
League has commented, In dismay
over the " kneejerkus llheralls" of
his friends, "You would think the
president had nominated the tmpe.
rta1 wizard of the Ku Klux Klan."
Albert Shanker, president of the
· American .Federation of Teachers,
has been dismayed at the crltlctsm
· leveled against tile three nominees.

Economic jeopardy_______J_a_ck_A_ml_e_rso_n

Berry's Wo~ld

seem Important, but It's ef!llllllh to
discourage many home buyers. A
18),000 mortgage at 13 pereent, for
example, cOsts $47 more a month
than a 12.5·percent mortgage . When
you get up to 14 .percent, the
dlt!erence Is S'lll a month, and that
can be the difference between
acceptable and unacceptable.
"The higher Interest rates now
prevaUtng are putting the cost of
mortpge credit beyond the llmlts ·
of affordabllity for a great many
famllles," says Jack Carlson, chief
economist for the National Assocla·
tton of Realtors.
The Unk between Interest rates
and bOrne bulldlng was dramatically illustrated In the past 12
months. Alarmed at tile length and
severity of the recession, Fed
Chairman Paul Volcker decided to
loosen up the nation's money supply

to encourag!' lower Interest rates.
Result: New bOuslng starts. which
had hit a post-Depression low in
19il2, jumped 70 percent in the first
six months of this year. .
Then the Fed, won1ed about
renewed Inflation, tightened up. oo
the money supply this summer.
Mortgage rates ·went from 12
percent to near 14 percent In short
order - and bOustng sales plum·
meted. 11 mortgag!' rates don't go
back down, tile slump Cii!l only
continue.
But my associate Michael Bin·
stein bas obtained a "strlctly
confidential" Federal Reserve
Board repori, which predicts no
relief In sight for borne buyers until
the end of next year.
The Fed's forecast Is for mortgage rates to average 13.37 percent
from October through December,

13.25 percent in the first quarter It
1984, 13 percent In the second
quarter and 12.75 percent In the last
half of the year.
What makes the situation crltlcal
Is the drastic ripple effect a boustng
recession has on related lndustrles,
like lumber, concrete, steel and
home appliances. For example, In
May 1982 housing starts were 54
percent below tile previous four·
year average - and there were
decreases of 23 percent In lumber
production , 'n percent \n cement , :rl
percent In construction steel and 28
percent In bousebO!d appllances.
On the other hand, of course, It
mortgage rates go down and the
bOuslng Industry starts booming
again, It wUI lead Its allied
Industries to ·\he prosperity that's
stiD ·w aiting around the comer.

·No word from DownY-_____A_r_tB_uc_hwa_ld
IS 11"

G-1\·'P-l&gt; ·A- F-1,
0..
K-H-A-1&gt;· A- F-V ~

•

Today in history
Today Is Friday, Sept16, the 259th day of 1983. There are 106 days ten In
the year.
Today' s highlight In hlltory:
On Sept 16, 1850, the slave trade was forbidden In the Dtstrtct of
Columbia.
On this date:
In 1ill, tile vlllap ot !lbawmut, Mas., ch
I Ita to Bosaon.
1n 1862, the &lt;&gt;111 war baWl! ot AnUetam 111 M~~ry~~M began.
In 1919, tile ARwlcall I ..... wu lllcorporatad by an act at Cqress.
Alld, In ~. Presldellt Fnulldln Rooaawlt lllped tba Selective Service
Act, which Ill up the llrsl peaQ!Ume ndtaly draft In !be lllltlan's hlstoly.
·Tell years ago: the rnlUtary Junta that took OYer CJdle said anned
dv1llaDI were sUI! resiltlDc •utlattles.
·
PM ya~n IIIII= N~'1 uuaa.l IJII&amp;I'CI 111111 It bad rNken tile
nation's second )jqe8t city, Leoa, front KUm11Ju.

The Republicans are using Presl·
dent Reagan's reluctance to an·
nounce he wUI run again to their
advantage. A friend, BID Downey
from Santa Barbara, Just got a
letter trom Senator Richard Lugar,
chalnnan of the National Republl·
can Sena!Drtal Commlltee.
It sal(! In part " .. . I just returned
from t)M, White House a,fter meeting
with the president ... He told me
how very worried he was about the
outcome of the 33 Senate races that
wUI he g!'artng up soon.
"He wondered aloud whetller
that Congressional support would
be there It he ran for a second term
... It was tllen I realized that the
president might decide not to run If
he thought we were going to lose the
only sure support he can count on our Republican Senate Majority."
Lugar wrote he desperately
needed Bill's help to make the
president decide to run. "Send
President Reagan tile special ballot
I've enclosed personally urging him
to run - before the press, Tip
O'Nell and tile rest of bls enemies
convince him not to ... Back your
confidence, with your contrlbutlon
of $33. Why $33? Because that's Sl
for each Senate seat up for election

from you. Tomorrow may he too
late."
Well, I wish I could report my
friend BID responded to Senator
Lugar's passionate appeal affirmatively. But he feels It the president
needs Downey's blessing, plus $33,
before he makes up his mind to run
tor re-election, maybe Reagan
shouldn't go for It
BID felt very bad about it. But as
he wrote me whet1 he enclosed the
Lugar letter, "Thirty- ~ dollars
Is exactly !he amount of the tax cut
the president gave me last year,
and I don't see why I have to give It
back to him."
Meanwhile back at the White
ijouse, Senator Lugar walked Into
the president's office wltll a grtni
look on his face.
"Any word from Downey In

Santa Barbara?" the president
In making your decision."
asked.
The president 1ooked · out the
Lugar shook his head. "It's been window at the Rose Garden. "It's a
two weeks and not a peep."
waste of time. When Downey
" Well," saJd the President, "that makes up bls mind, nobody can
does It I'm notgolngtonintn1984."
change it. You've done all you can,
"Please reconsider, sir. The Dick. I'm not going to announce for
letter could have gone astray' or another tenn It tile people don'i
maybe It went. to the wrong want me."
Downey. Why don't you call him?"
The president shook his llead.
"Please, Mr. President, you have
" It's no use, Dick. I've been talking to think of the country first There
to Tip O'Neill, tile press and the rest are mWtons ol people out there who
of my enemies, and tlley've con- are praying you will run again. We
vinced me not to run lor a second could stiU win ~ Senate witbout
tenn. 11 true patrlots like Downey . . Downey's $33."
"How?"
won't smd In a lousy $33 so I can
have a Republican Senate, I might
" I'll wrlte a letter to another
as well go back to the ranch."
dedicated American."
"I'll go out and talk to Downey
" Do what you want, Dick. But
myself. Maybe I wasn't clear In my I'm going to ten Nancy 1.0 start
tener how Important his check was packing the china."

·;'~~
"' I

ROYCE BISSELL
5-9, 1411 pound .
Soph. Quarierback

JEFF BISSEU.
fi.O, UIO pound
Junior Jlllard

By SCOTI' WOLFE
Against North GaJJia defending changing hands 10 times. Debbie
lone marker was all the flesty
RACINE - The Southern
Meigs gals could muster and SVAC champion Southern kept Its Michael broke tile tee as Southern
Tomadoenes wrapped up another
Southern coasted to an easy 15-1 perfect mark Intact wlth 5-9 and rode It out for a 15-10 win.
week ol play with a league
15-10 victories over a well.coached
win.
Amy Littlefield led the winners
volleyball win over North Gallla
In the second con!est SHS ~led . Pirate club. Southern played near with nine serving poll)ts , Debbie
J'lrorsday evening pushing their '
off a ~ lead, then v olleyed to a 13-1 . flawlessly Wednesday . .but suffered . Michael: ·seven, and Laren Wolfe
overaU·record to 5-0. Souihern '
. ··SCilre befori! Meigs cut the gap to a letdown Thursday as almost six·. Allgela Aleksic, Diane White
also claimed big wins over Melg11
13-5. The Tornadoenes sailed on to everything went wrong with SHS a nd Cindy Higley had seven, six a nd
and Hannan Trace. Southern Is
vlcioiy with Amy Littlefield leading got untracked. SHS did shoot to a four respectively for North Gallla.
now 3.0 In the SVAC.
the way with 11 serving points. 10-1 lead on nine seiVIng points by E arlier Southern picked up a road
Ih an intense game in front of tile Becky Michael had 10 and Jenny Amy Littlefield. North Gallla closed victory at Hannan Trace 15-3 and
student body at Meigs High Scbool, Bentley five.
the gap to 4-9 before Jenny Bentley 15-2. Becky Michael led SHS with 12
Southern won the batle of the
For Meigs Ruth Fry had two scored the game-winning points a t points, Debbie Michael six, Karen
Hemsley and Wolfe each five
unbeaten, claiming Impressive 15-1 points and B. Cunningham had two. 15-9.
and 15-5 wins to claim the match.
The second game was the best ol points.
Meigs easily won the reseJVe
In the first game Meigs seiVed contest 15-6 . jllld 15-12. Jennifer the eventn_g and had severaUong ... In the reserve contest Soutllern
first, but lost Its chance to score on Couch led Meigs with 13 and G. . and oompetlttve volleys . North won 15'3 .and 15-2 led by Alana
· an errant hit, thus giving SHS Its Kennedy had six. Tammy Adkins, Gallla took a 2.0 lead before SHS Lyons with eight, Tr~cy ·Hubbard
first chance. Southern took advan- Tract Hubbard, and Wendy Wolfe tied It 2-2. The score slowly moved
tage and blitzed to a t&gt;O lead before had seven, four and three points to !Hi when both teams lost their five,
RachelTammy
Reiber Theiss
four. Southern's
four , and
Meigs got on the board at 6-1. That respectively for SHS.
seiVlng touch wlth tile seiVe reseiVes are now 3·L

I

From the Wild
By KEITH WOOD
Meigs Game ~r
. (Editor's Note: FromtheWUd
Is the first ol a series of columns
which wUI be preselded by Kellb
. Wood, Meigs Game Protedor,
to advl!le sporismen and pro.,.
eriy owners of CWTellt eveMs
with the Ohio DeparimeM ol
WUdllfe).

Land owner anUerless deer
pennlt applications are now avaUa·
b\e for those land owners who own
10 or more continuous acres In an
antlerless deer
hunting county.
Only one per·
mit will be Issued,
regardless of the
number or • .,... ....,

owners

or

number of properties owned but

Tonight's games
SOAL NON.CONFERENCE
Gallipolis at Pt. Pleasant
Centennial at Logan
Athens at ClrclevUie
Jackson at Portsmouth West
Portsmouth at Ironton
SVAC NON·LEAGUE
Southeastern at Norih Gallla
Hannan Trace at Green
Kyger Creek at Waterford (Sat·
unfay, 1::xl p.m.)
Southern a t Huntington Ross
Symmes Valley at'Southwestem
Ft. Frye at Eastern
. TRI-VALLEY LEAGUE
Trimble at Alexander .
Belpre at Nelsonville-York
Miller at Federal-Hocking
Meigs at Wellston
Vinton County at Warren Loca l

starting this year a land owner
eligible for such a permit can, If so
requested on tile permit, receive a
second antlerless deer permit.
This second permit allows two
antlerless deer to be taken on his
prQperty but that llmlt Is stiD one
deer -per hunter. The Idea of tile
second permit anows· tile spouse of
. the land owner or his or her children
to also take an antlerless deer.
The deadline for this permit Is
Oct 31, this year. The permits can
he obtained at any of the deer check
stations, at tile Meigs County Soil
and Water Conservation office, on
the second Door of tile Fanners
Bank Building or by contacting me.
Slated for Oct 11, 12, and 13 Is a
hunter safety course for those first
time hunters wbO need tile course to
obtain their hunting license.
· Ohio law requires those under 21
years of age to either present a
previously held hunting license or
evidence of having completed a
hunter ' safety and conservation
course to obtain their license.
The local course will include such
activities as safe gun handling, bow
hunting, hunter responslblllty, and
personal safety.
It wW he conducted. by wUdltfe
officer, Pete Thompson and me.
Classes will begin eaeh of the three
nights at 6: 30 p.m. and wlll be held
at tile Rock Sprtngs Fairgrounds In
the coon hunters' buDding.
No pre-registration Is required to
attend the class but anendance Is
required for all three nights. If you
have any questions give me a call at

985-4400.

E astern and Federal Hocking
battled tooth-and-claw for most of
the evening, but EHS emerged the
winner In thret! sets, 5-15 , 15·7, and
17-15. Overall, both teams scored 37
points for the evening making
things Interesting fot the grand
finale which Eastern fin ally won
after a see·saw ba ttle.
Eastern was cr edited with a fine
comeback which was comple·
mented by a fine offensive attack.
Fine teamwork and the utilization
of three hits contrlbu ted to the win.
Lea Ann Gaul led the winners witH
18 serving points, Ta ra Guthrte had
eight, Terre Wood six, Kelly
Whitlatch four, . and Krtstl Ga ddis
one. Leading F'€deral Hocking was
J o Russell and Cheryl Whited with
m each, Penny Lyons eig ht, Cindy
Randolph six, and Lori Sinnett
. three.

By GEORGE S'IRODE
AP Sporill Writer
Even with a combined 3-1
non.conference record, tile coaches
of Ball State and Ohio University
know their teams have work to do to
avoid anticipated second-division
finishes In the Mld·Arnerican Con·
terence football race.
Ball State, a winner over Rbnde
Island and Wichita State In non·
league tuneups, plays at Ohio (1·1)
Saturday In the first game of the
Mid·American campaign.
Four other conference schools
continue playing non-conference
oppoDellts Saturday while tile other
three teams are Idle.
Bowling Green, the 1982 Mid·
American champion, faces Its
biggest assignment outside the
league this fall. The Falcons play at
Brigham Youilg, the defending
Western Athletic Conferenc e
champ.
In other non-conference games

Leading the winners were Cindy
Higley with eight, Diana White
seven, Diane Shllot five, Michele
Geo!lie tour .. Lisa LeMaster and
AlVIna Donahue each three. For
Eastern Krist! Gaddis had nine,
Dee Dailey five, Tara Guthrle
three, Lea Ann Gaul one, Terre
Wood one, and Kelly Whitlatch one.
Eastern's reseJVes dropped two
close gam es with Federal Hocking
despite playing much better and
gaining early leads. The Lancers
took the match 16-14 and 15-9.
Leading the winners were Deanna
Bennett w lth nine, Abbey Reels
eight, and Becky Aulvllle six. For
Eastern Aleshla Holsinger had
eight, Arlene Ritchie live, Erica
Kessinger five, Tonya Savoy three,
Beverly Wigal one, and Kim Dent
one.
Eastern plays in a tr l·match with
Kyger Creek and Coal Grove this
Satu rday a t Kyger Creek. The fi rst
game wUl begin at noon.
·

r----- - - - -- - GRAVELY. TRACTOR.
SALES &amp; SERVICE .
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

Phone 992-2975

NEW SPRING HOURS

Against North Gallla a bad
seiVing night allowed the Ptra tes to
notch their second league win with
15-13 and 15·7 victories. Continually
Eastern put Itself ln bad position by
setting up Pirate splkers near the

Mon.-Fri. 9:00 to 5:110
Saturday 9:00 to 1:00
~THE

GAAV.ELV
&amp;VSTEIVI ·

~~n;et~-~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;j
IJ.nation

Bobcats entertain Ball State

~

MILLING DIVISION

INSTANT SUCKLE

Toledo at Richmond in the afternoon
and Western Michigan at Illinois
State at night.

MEDICATED
MILK REPLACER

Eastern Michigan , Nortbern llJI.
nols and Kent State are not
scheduled this week .
Ohio, forecast to finish seventh In
the standings, bas been mistakeprone in losing to West VIrginia 55-3
and heating Richmond 17-10. The
Bobcats have lost three tumbles and

THE PERFECT
~fH

thrown an tntercepUon.

''The turnovers are hurting, and
there Is no excuse tor them," Ohio
Coach Brian Burke said. "If we
don't correct them, we will get heat
by mediocre MAC teams ."
• Ball State, expected to finish
eighth In the race, Is making Its first
road trlpoftheseason. "Westilllack
the consistency In some areas that
wUI he required to compete success·
tuny In the MAC," said Dwight
Wallace, the Cardinals' coach.

IITION

FOR CALVES!

SUGAR RUN MILLS
PH. 992-2115
POMEROY, OH.

108 ~lll.iiERRY

Saturday, (\1lamt plays at lOth· , - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ranked North Carolina, Northern
Michigan at Central Michigan and

MODERN SUPPLY

Tountament set

399 W. MAIN ST.

Mlchelob and Rlepenhoff Dtstri·
butlng will hold a men's B&amp;C
softball tournament In Wellston on
Sept 24 and 25. Entry fee Is $75
(bans will be furnished) . The
drawing will be held Thursday,
Sept 21, at 7 p.m . In the Wellston
City Park. Individual trophies will
be given to the first and second
place teams. There will also be four
team trophies along with a M.V.P .
and most hits trophy. For further
Information contact Ron Hudson at
614-384-3058 or Rlepenhoff Dlstribut·
lng at 614-286-5049.

POMEROY,OH .

PH. 992-2164

O'rHERs
caldwell at Coal .Grove
Greenup at Rock Hill
Brian ·station at Boyd County
Huntington at Ripley
Waverly at Wheelersburg
Wahama at Spencer
Oak HID at Ironton St. Joe
(Saturday)
Hannan at LeNore

--- -- - --- -- --- - ----

STARTING SEPT. 20
THRU OCT. 1

Excelsior SaH
Works, Inc.

181Purin•

SAVE
1979 THUNDERBIRD ................................ '3495

DIAMOND
CRYSTAL
SALT NUGGETS

The senator from Indiana said he
was only sending the ballot to truly
dedicated Americans like BUI.
"Patriots wbO'll back up their
commitment with their hard·
earned dollars.
"Imagine our president's sip ol
~'~!!let when I penonally deliver
your ballot to him at the White
House. Your personal rnesaage and
rontrlbutlon wUI de!Jnltely give him
the s~Mnflth and cletermbultlon that
he'D need to decide to ND qaln."
Luaar ends the letter by NYJal,
"It's In yoor hands now, WUIIam L.
Downey. I urgently need to hear

BOB MAISON
6-3, 200 pound
Senior ~kle

ALLEN JACKS
fi.O, l'lO pound
Senior IIIIard

Tomadoettes enjoy' third straight victory

TRUCKLOAD
SALE

next year."

By SCO'lT WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagle girls' volleyban team split
two games this week to push their
record to 2·3 overall . Eastern
claimed a non-league win over
Federal Hocking and dropped a
loop encounter to North Gallla.
In a prenmtnary contest East·
em' s reseJVes dropped a match to
Federal Hocking , lowering the EllS
record to 1·3 overall.

1n tact exists. And, as ·you would
expect, It has preposterous people

And what Is the red hot Issue?
"The attempt to destroy the ( ClvU
Rights ) Commission's long·
standing nob-partisan commitment
·w civil rights.',' And how Is Ronald
· Reagan engaged In this venture to
extinguish blacks? By nominating
three convntsstoners. It Is hard to
know how It Is that tile commission
would cease to be non-partisan,
given that all thret! are Democrats.
It Is hard to know how thetM!
distinguished sponsors understand
their dlt!erences on the matter of
ctvn rights with Morris Abram, tor
Instance, one of the nominees.

agency

a

Eaglettes split
two matches

Black survival _ _______.:.;._W.:.:.;ill_;_w_m_F._.B_uc_k_ley..__Jr.

Ill Court Strefl:

Autstaat

The Daily Sentinel- Page 3

Meet the 1983 Eastern Eagles

l'agt 2-The Daily S.nlia.!
Pomero f Mlrtdl1p aIf, Ohio
~~ ~1t1r 16, 1913

The Daily Sentinel

P AT WHITEHEAD

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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1978 MERCURY XR-7 COUGAR .................. '2695
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4 dr., auto. 6 cyl., air.

1978 AMC CONCORD STATION WAGON ........... '1995
Auto., air, 6 cyl.

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Weight circles '(or feed tags) attached for
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638 E. Main St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

614-992-3891
'

•

.,

�Page

4

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohia

'-

Punchless Bengals suffer another loss
CLEVElAND (AP ) - Aside
from the drug suspensions and aside
from their punchless offense, the
wtnless Cincinnati Benga!s now
claim to be leading the National
Football League in bad calls by
referees.
The BengalS lost 17-7 to the
Cleveland Browns In a nationally
televised game Thursday night, and
Cincinnatians argued thatpoorcaUs
were critical In the loss.
First came a diving catc;h by
Cleveland tight end Ozzie Newsome
in the end zone midway through the
first quarter. The effort was
outstanding, the 7.0 Browns' lead
was recorded, but a televtsedreplay
left some doubt about whether
Newsome had possession of the ball
before it hit the ground.
"The last week, I was apologized
ID by league officials for four caDs,"

said Bengals' Coach Forrest Gregg. '
" I wonder how many I'll get this
week."

Newsome, who was Credited With
a 19-yard !Duchdown reception from
Brian Sipe on the play, naturally
found good reason to support the
officialS' call.
"I dove for it," he said. " If you
have possession of the ball foreven a
second, it's a , touchdown. But
whatever, it goes Into the record
books as six points."
The next crltlcal call came In the
third quarter, With Cleveland cllng·
lng to a 10-7 lead. Sipe hurled a
second·and-9 pass from the Clncln·
nati29-yard line toward Dave Logan
near the - goal line. Logan was
tripped up by Ken Riley, who was
called for lnterlerence.
That put the ball at the Cincinnati
4, and two plays later, Mike Pruitt

bowled over from 1 yard out for the
cllnchlng touchdown.
"He (Logan) pushed m e, and he
got away With it,' ' Riley said. "He
smiled alter the call. I thlnk It was a
bad call."
The game was the third straight ln
which Cincinnati'&lt; once-explosive
offense was n~· •he re in evidence.
Quarterback R~n .1.11derson, who
played desplt;:, a neck· lnjury
aggravated last Sunday in a loss to
Buffalo, seldom tested the Browns'
defensive backs.
His longest pass was a 26-yarder
ID Crls Collinsworth on a d'espera·
tlon drtve in the fourth quarter that
ended when Clarence Scott lntercepted Anderson ln the end zone
With 1: 33left.
The Bengals have recorded just23
polnts In their first three games.
" You look at the people playlngfor

By The Bend

us- Kenny Anderson, Isaac Curtis
- and you really can't understand
what It Is that keeps us from moving
the football," Collinsworth said.
"We get lnsldethe~andsomethlng
happens to us."
Among the problems Is the
absence of big fullback Pete
Johnson, suspended along With
defensive lineman Ross Browner
for four games because of alleged
drug lnvo!Vement. Another possible
problem- Anderson's neck lnjury
- caused no apparent trouble,
Gregg said.
"Hesald he was feeling good," the
coach said.
Anderson finished with 26completlons In 40 attempts for 2m yards,
With two Interceptions. Slpe, who
also was lnterceptedtwlce, was2lof
31 for~1yards, whllereg!steringhis
eighth scoring pass of the season.

lot of the things planned for him In
advance," said Jbn Ferguson, the
Reds' publicity director. "We're
just not telllng any more about lt."
The downtown area was expected
to be jammed by revelers for the
city's annual Oktoberfest
Ferguson said ceremonies will
start at 5:45p.m. A stage wlll be
·~rected at second base. :.
.
Bench'sparentsandbrothersand
sister are expected to attend. Ted
Bench, his father, wll1 thrOw out the
first ball.

Roger Ruhl, vice president of
marketing for the Reds, has been
planning the event since Bench said
In June that he would retire at the
end of the season. Meanwhlle, the
other National League clubs have
been honoring Bench when he has
played In their towns.
"Our guidelines have been to do
thlngs that are most meaningful to
Johnny and entertalnlng to the
fans," said Ruhl.
"We had to throw some plans out.
We wanted, for example, to give

Grandparents
Day noted

John a golf cart, but Pittsburgh beat
us to that. John's ownHnewas'What
do you give John Bench?"'
The Reds have already an·
nounced a scholarship fund In his
hooor.
"This Is going to be a permanent
retirement fund, With the Interest
used to fund scholarships, so that ~
or 30 or 50 years from now, Bench's
name w!ll still be connected With it,''
Ruhlsald.
The Reds were idle Thursday.

CAUGJfl' IN THE MIDDLE- Clevelallclllnwue' .U
Pndlt (4.'1) is laclded by Clndltnatl Beapla' Hoben Jw+ a
(37) wllb a IIWe help fnm
BI'OWII8' wide receiver Jtacq
Belk (88) who &amp;ppl!6l'll to have
mistaken biB blocllas U!llpmeiH. (AP Laserpbojo).

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-9410)
A DivbJioo of Multimedia, Inc.

'

.

'

Published every afternoon ,' Monday "'
through Friday, lll Court Street, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company . Mul-

timedia, lnc., Pomeroy, Ohlo45769. 9922156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Associaton and the
American Newspaper Publishers Association, National Advertising Repre-

- M ancini retains title with ninth round knockout
. ' , Nl!:W' YORK .(AP)

,.;. ,This was

Chacon.
: suppoSed tobe.afuneupflghtlorRay . · The Mancllii-Chacon bout Will be
Manclnl, a bit of busy work for announced officially Monday but
. "Boom Boom" against undefeated Romero, whO weighing 134'!4 to 135
and unknown Orlando Romero of lor Boom Boom, seemed Intent on
;. Peru.
spoiling the party by refusing to fold
The only problem was that up against the champ.
. Romero had other ideas.
"Where do they get these guys?"
Mancini, of Youngstown, Ohio, Mancini wondered, after Romero
defended his World Boxlng Assocla· had tagged him With some solld
tlon lightweight championship at shots and lnfllcted a superficial cut
:. Madison Square Garden Thursday under his right eye In the seventh
·:night, knocking out Romero at 1: 56 round and a deep cut over his tight
·of the nlnth round, In a close fight eye In the eighth.
, that ended with the suddeness of a
The second cut was serious
, devastating left book.
That was the PJIICh that Manclnl enough that Referee Tony Perez
: usedtodropRomeroonhisbackand was studying it carefully when
: Win the fight that preserved Manclnl went to his comer.
You can bet, though, that Chacon,
:. upcoming big money bouts against
; betler known opponents like Bobby the former World Boxing Council

featherweight champloti, and Bob ···Grjffith was shouting · at the
Andreoli, .who wlll promote his fight champion.
against Mancini In either November
Mancini had a slender lead on the
or December, were worrying.
cards of two of the three judges after
BoomBoomputthelrcarestorest eight rounds With the ihJrd judge
In the ninth, exploding out of his calllng the fight even at that point.
corner and tearing alter Romero.
Manclnl had been successful
The challenger from Peru, who was
hooking off his jab early In the fight.
3().j).1 coming in, fought back
"I completed them a few times,'' he
gamely. But Manclnl, 27-1, tagged
said. "But I didn't catch him that
him With two crushing lefts and,
much. I just kept throwing it. I said
after missing With a wtld right, sent
to myseH, 'I've got to go back to the
him to the deck with an explosive left
well.'''
book. The time was 1: 56.
When he did, he caught Romero
Romero did not go quietly and
With a short left hook and the fight
Manclnl knew II. He had only to look
wasover. The fight held special
In a mirror for proof.
signlflcance because, Manclnl said,
Romero's left-handed stance
It was in the same Madison Square
caused Boom Boom plenty of
Garden rlng that his father fought In
trouble.
as a middleweight 40 years ago. The
In his corner, tralner Murpllif elder Manclnl's last fight was in the
Garden Sept. 19, 1947 - four days
short of 36 years ago.

..

fi~~Wh~He;;~le~tt;.;,~;;;:;~
fo plcku
r

..._1

P.osTMASTER: Seild address to The
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St., Porrieroy,

Ohio 45769.

Pl. VGnl, ,. ..-.:

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sentative, Branham Newspaper Sales,
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York 10017.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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Daytona

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One Year .............................. $52 .80

tao:;IIO!l !Y1 oil

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le ii'Oii"

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GENERAL
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No subscriPtions by man permitted In

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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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13 Weeks ... .. .... ...... ........ ........ $14.04

PH. 992-7161

52 Weeks ... .. .......•... . .. ........ $51A8
Outside Ohio
13 Weeks .... .. ............. .... ...... $15.21

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26 Weeks ... .. ..... ....... .. . .. .... ..... .. $29.64

OH.

52 Weeks ... .

. .. .. ...... .. . .. ......... $56.21

COME IN AND ENJOY THE FINE
FOOD AND ATMOSPHERE AT
THE MEIGS INN
NEW DINING ROOM EVENING HOURS
TUESDAY-SATURDAY
5-10
\
.
LUNCHEON HOURS
MONDAY-SATURDAY 11-2
FOR YOUR DINING AND DANCNG ENTERTAINMENT
"MAYFAIR" WEDNESDAY-SATURDAY 8-12
New York's Madlaon Square Gardea. Mancini
knocked out Romero wllb a fllngle 11111ashlng left book
to the Jaw In the ninth round to retain the title. ( AP
Laserphoto).

NA.TION.U.l&amp;GVE

EASTDIVBION
WLP~GII

~

PftM
AMmiG\N LEAGUE

By'Jbe

EAST DIVtiiON
W L

f\!t. GB
6U -

Halt'""'"'

Ill

5G

""""'
Toronto

84
82
81
79

62
63
67
67

.515

70

i7

.476 1 9 ~

Nt'W York

Mlwaulwe

""'""'

Oeveland

auc...,

64 82
WI!ST DIVlSION

"' .,

Kansas City

Te&gt;&lt;as
O&amp;kJand
caJJi&gt;rnJa
Ml"""""

Seattle

ill
ill

"'
'"

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.,

"

81

"' "

s

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547 9
Ml 10
438 z,

70

70
12
82

St. Louis
Chicago

6f
Nl"'W York
61 85
\\oiBT DIVI!IION
Los Angeles
!ri £1
Atianta
Ill 65
Houston
7G tll

_..,_
.~7!1

C1nc!MBll

67

79

16

4m 17 ~

.e!t 19

.&lt;Ul 1l y,

·"'
.119

23~
.,~

-·-

Mltwau~ (Candlotd 4-1) at &amp;ltlmon:!
(BM:tk:kel" 13-7), (n)
Nf'W York (Rawley 14·12) at Oevel~md
(Heaton 10-5), (n)
Se&amp;ttle (Ciarle 6-6) at OtW:ago tBaDnlS--

ter lf-10), tn)

TtJ:OntO (Got! ~lJJ at Mlnnc&amp;Oia (f'll·
son 21), tnl
Dakla.nd !CodlroU 12-ll} at KaJuaa Cll)·
{f'BT)' 714), (nl
TeJta5 (DaJWID 7·12) at Calllornla (Zilltn
8-lll , ( n)
&amp;tunla,y'a Game~~

Stoattle at Chicii'O, (nJ
o.Jdand II l&lt;aMu CitY. lnl
Texas at CaUrornta. tn )

76

75
73

73
78

Detroit (Petry 17-8) at IJaoltM tOjeda 971. (Jl)

MihquJuE at Baltlrrlcft, (n)
New fCI'k at Cll'w!land, (n )

Plttm.Jrgh
Montreal

73
Ell

OnlY aames scneduled

~

'10

Sao Diego
San Frandsoo

56 "'
~1Gune1
Tex.u 6, Oakland 5
lbton 7, &amp;ltllJJonl l
O!Jcagv U, Seattle 0, 6\S lnn.Jngs, rain
MJnnesoca &amp;, Toronto 2

Toronto at Mirln('S(l(a
Detroit at Boston

76

Philade-lphia

POMEROY
992-3629

Our gift to you.•.

Scoreboard ...
Majors

126 MAIN ST.

.521 -

m. -

~17

.9)3

*

2~

.01 12·
411 ~

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12 BEAIITIFIJI4
CHRISTMAS
CARDS

!JJOI:l·~
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2-BxlO's, 3-Sx7's, 15 wallets

'111.nclq• GIU11Ell
Los Mgeks 6, HOUIIton 0
Montreal 4, Pllkletphla 1
Plttsb.lrgh 8, Chlcago 4
New York 6. SC. l.wls fo

95~

~

games scheduJed
f'ridqs G-.e.
Momreru !Lea l»l at Pittsburgh (DI!oLeon 6-21. In)
Heuman /Heathrodt 1.0) at Clncllmatl
1Bem\.YI7-lt), (n)
San ~ (Lollar 7-10) at

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st. I.mls (Sluper lMO) at Philadelphia
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when )'Ou rclurn to purcht\Sc
your portrait packaJ~e.

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Chicago at New Ycrle
San Diego at Atlanta
Ia An&amp;clcs at San Frandaro
Houatoo at Clndnnatt, (n)

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Chicago (Reuschel 0.0) at New Ycrle
('J'orrez 9-15), (n)
Lei AnpJes (VaJE!nZ\iela 13-91 at San
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SEPT. 14-SEPT. 18
DATES•
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PHOTO(;~APHER"S HOURs,

Wed.-. s.t. 10-1: 2~6 -

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'lllura. I Fri. 10-l; 2-5:30; 6-8
. Sul'llllt; 1-11
~nah 1-2

WED.- SUN, ·
"'

The crowning of a queen and king
highlighted a successful Grandpar·
ents Day observance held Sunday
at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center.
Over 200 persons attended the
observ.ance with Richard Winebrenner being crowned king for the
. day and ll'rs. Maye Cumings,
queen for 11.2 day. An afghan was
awarded to Mrs. Alberta Hubbard
and Larry Houston of Northwood,
N, H., received a planter for
traveling the most distance to
spend the day with his grand·
mother, Mrs. Rose ·Brown. Mrs.
Brown was presented a rose.
Mrs. Katherine Raynes not only
celebrted Grandparents Day but
also her birthday on Sunday. She
was presented a rose for having the
most family members present and
her family was presented a planter.
Victor Braley received a rose for
having four generations In attendance and his family received a
Ianter;.
Refreshments of cake. punch, tea
and coffee were served to all
attending.

Lewis Manley
Auxiliary
honored

Certificates of achievement
awarded to the Lewis Manley Unit
263, American Legion, by the
Department of Ohio were displayed
at a recent meeting of the members
held at the home of Tomlko Lewis,
Gaillpolls .
The certlflcates represented first
plilce awards in Group lin children
and youth, Americanism, and
musiCal pole. Unit chairmen were
Florence Richards, chlldren and
youth, and Margaret Bowles, Americanism and music chalrman.
A bulletln was read from Helen
Hampson, Eighth District pres!·
dent, anltOilllcingthe fall conference
In Junction City to be held on Oct. 6.
Several members plan to attend.
Mrs. Lola Hampton reported on
legislation concernlng the new
emergency job tralnlng program
for veterans and changes In the GI
bill benefits.
It was noted that the nine dlget
IRS number has been received and
that t1ie kit ofblankreportfortnl;has
been ordered from Department
headquarters.
Mrs. Bowles presided at the
meeting which opened with prayer
from the Buckeye Messeo~r by
chaplain, Annette Jolmson. Mrs.
Richards talked on patriotism using
material from the Firing Line.
At the next meeting to be held at
the bomeofMrs. Rlcbards therewlll
be Installation of new officers by
Mrs. Hampton, and the lnltlatioJI of
new members by Mrs. Richards.
For the closing, Mrs. Bowles used
the byron of the month, "What a
FI1end We Have ln Jesus."
Refreshments were served.

Bunyan lumberjack tradition lives
The lumberjack tradition comes
alive Oct. 7, 8 and 9 when the Paul
Bunyan Show opens on tbe campus
of Hocking TechniCal College.
Like the legends that .grow each
time they're told , the Paul Bunyan
show grows with each passing year.
Held at Hocking Tech slnce 1974,
and sponsored jolntly by the college
and the Ohio Forestry Association,
/ between 20,&lt;m and 30,&lt;m visi!Drs
are ~xpected during the three day
event.
The largest live timber show in
theeast,approxlmatelylOOlogglng
equipment exhibitors Will be on
hand to show visitors what their
machinery can do. The mndern
equipment and new sawmill will
contrast the antique logging equip·
and the Ohio Hocking Forestry Museum.
Hocking Tech students will open
the activities with their own
lumberjack contests beglnnlng at 1
p.m. after the opening ceremony at
10 a.m.
. _Saturday wliJ begin with the State
· F.F.A. contest, timber cruising In
· ' ROYALTY - Richard Winebrenner and Maye Cwnlup were
the woods and lumber grading on
named king and queen for the !lay when Grandparents Day was
the grounds, at 10 a.m. Intercolleobserved Sunday at the Pomeroy ]feallh Care Center.wfth over 200
glate lumberjack contests wfll also
persons attending. With the royalty, center, Is Jeffrey McDaniels,
be held starting at 9 a.m.
center admlnlstrator.
Miss Paul Bunyan wtll be
crowned at 12:30 p.m., followed by

the Ohio Stale Lumberjack contests
at 1 p.m. Chain saw sculptures wlll
be auctioned between contest
events durtng the afternoon. ·
At 6 p.m. the Ohio Guitar Picking
championship wlll begin and before
the evening ends a new state champ
will be named.
Emcee for Friday and· Saturday's events will be Russ Tippett ,
H.T.C. lnstructor In the Natural
Resources department.
Sunday's activities will bring

competitors from all over the world
when the Paul Bunyan Invitational
championship. Home lite Tourna·
ment of Kings-Quali fying Champlonshlp, Is held beginning a t 1 p.m .
Bill Gillespie, tourna me nt of
kings announcer, will e mcee the
events from the grandstand.
Admission to the show Is $2 for
adults and $1 fo r st udents, "1th
special group rates availa ble on
Friday for students at $10 per bus
load.

communzon
• 0bServance

planned durtng
• mee·t tng
"
'

'
The observance of World Wide
educational event to be held at the
ConununiOn on Oct. 2 was planned
Middleport church on Oct. 30 were
at the MondaymeetlngoftheBoard
discussed. The meal will begln at
of Deacons of the Middleport First
6:30p.m.
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).
Arrangements were also made
Dorothy Manis and Judy Arnold
for the Board of Deacons to start a
w111 prepare the elements for the
pick-up and delivery service for
observance. Jack Sorden, maderashutlns through the Middleport
tor, presided at the meeting With
P\jbllc Library . Mrs. Manis will
reporls being given by Carroll Ann · havecharge o!the service. ·
Harper, secretary; Judy Crooks,
Next meetlng of the Board of
. treasurer, and Joan Sorden, cards.
Deacons was announced for Oct. 10
He had a readlng, "Yearbook of
at 7:30p.m. Sorden had the closlng
Prayer,'' followed by prayer.
prayer and others a !lending besides
those named were the Rev. Wanda
Ptans for the potluck reformation
Johnson pastor, and Russell Lyons.

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MEIGS INN
PUTS UP A FIGHT -Orlando Romero reaches
with a right to Ray "Boom Boom" M1111clnl durlbr;
first round acllon of the World Boxing Asooclallon's
lightweight championship bout Thursday night at

friday, September 16, 1983

Page-S

Fans told to arrive early for Bench ceremony
CINCINNATI (AP) - All the
Cincinnati Reds' management wlll
tell fans about Johnny Bench Night
on Saturday is to come early. The
ceremonies are a secret.
The Reds and Cincinnati wlll
honor the longtbne All Star catcher
before the night game with the
Hous!Dn Astros.
Bench, who has·IJeen'pla;ylngfirst ·
base or thltd base lor the past two
seasons, w111 catch rookie pitcher
Jeff Russell.
"We hope Johnny won't find out a

The Daily Sentinel

•

'

UMWmeets
Election of officers highlighted
the recent meetlng of the Apple
Grove United Methodist Church.
Elected were Donna Hill, presl·
dent; Julla Norris, vice president;
Bess Parsons, secretary and treas·
urer; Dolly WoHe, nomlnatlons
commltlee; Eileen Buck, miSsion
coordinator, Christian personhood,
and supportative community; Ber·
tha RobinsOn, Christian social
lnvoJverneot; Allee Balser, Chris·
tlanglobalconcerns; EdlthManuel ,
secretary of program resources;
Shirley Ables, committee member·
ship; Vlclde Ables, public relations
and historian.
Theme of the meeting was
"Loaves and Fishes" With Mrs. Hill
In charge. Mrs. Buck read scripture
from John 6, and the group sang
''Take the Name of Jesus With
You."

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Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush and
their grandchildren, Cbrlstl and
Kevin Smith, have returned from
Colwnbus where they welll called
by the death of Steven Smith,
brolherafCbrlstlandKevln. Hewas
killed bt an autooloblle accident
near Zanesville.
Whlle In Columbus the famliy
visited With ¥n· Roush's brother.
Bob Mille!', a patient at University
Hospital when! Is UllderaoJng themotherapy and radiation.
A
resident ~ Evans. W. Va., he was
employed at Faole Mineral for 31
years. His room number is 10."11 In
Rllocles Hall and cards may be ll!llt
to blm there.

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 16, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Se"tinei-Page--7

-

What's Cookin'?

Steaming soups good for the · cool days ahead
By Dale M. Stoll
Meigs County Extension
Home Economisl
A steaming bowl ol soup Is a
_perfect fOOd lor cool, late summer
·days. Make the soup with fish and
:you have a rt~ally unique
. ;experience.
There are m a ny who may
hecome a lltUe green at the thought
.ol a soup built a round !Ish. I must
.confess that I numbered among
;those who regarded !Ish soups with
~usplcion. However. alter reluc'tantly sampling fish chowder In
.New England, I became a true fan .
It's delicious! I ate !Ish chowder
every place I went and would have
had It for breakfast, too, but that
;night have been doing a little too
far.
The secret to excellent !Ish

c howder Is to use a lull-flavored. but
not !!shy-tasting, !Ish. This Is a
perfect tltpe to make fish chowder
because you can m ake the soup
using fish that you catch during
these last beautllul d ays · of
summer. A demand lor fish offers
an eJ!:cuse, too, to pack up the ole
fishing pole and spend a blissful
afternoon watching bobbers.
New England Fish Chowder
1 cups bolllng water
1 pound !Ish !Diets or steaks, fresh
or frozen
2 tablespoons cbopped bacon or
sail pork
~ cup chopped onion ·
cups diced potatoes
1 teaspoon salt
Pepper, as desired
2 cups milk
1 tablespoon butter

*

2*

Chopped parsley
Thaw frozen fish . Remove skin
and bones. Cut fish Into one-inch
pieces.
Fry bacon or salt pork In a
three-quart saucepan until crisp.
Add on!on and cook unt!l tender .
Add potatoes, water, salt, pepper,
and fish. Cover; simmer 15 to 20
minutes, or until potatoes are
tender .
Add milk and butter. Heat.
Garnish with parsley. Makes s!x
servings.
Most people associate fish with
d!etlng or with !ow cholesterol
regimes, but fish can he delicious
and Interesting. Not all fish ·Is
ground up, pressed Into a party,
breaded and deep-fried !Ike at fast
food restaurants. Salmon and
swordfish, for exi\mple, can be cut .

thick and broiled. These steaks
rival any main dish and are qu!ck to
f!x, too.
Last year at. the Farm Science
Review, I assisted the Extension
Sea Grant people as they gave a
·presentation on fresh water drum.
Fresh water drum !s the more
appealing name for sheephead.
Sheephead, In case you aren't a
Lake Erie fisherman , Is the fish
that you might like discarding !fyou
somehow catch It Instead of perch.
The prejudices against drum are
vanishing, though, as people realize
what reaDy deUc!ous fish they are.
It you are Interested In recipes
using fresh water drum, contact
me, Dale Stoll, at 992-6696 or wrtte
Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Fish !s low In calories and h!gh In
proteins. Because _fish protein

Calendar
SATURDAY
!.AURAL CLIFF -The Inspirations wUl present a program at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodlst Church
Satunlay at 7: 00 p.m. The public Is
invited to attend.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired TeacherS Association
wlll hold their Sept. luncheon
meeting Satunlay at 12:00 p.m.
at the Meigs Inn. CaD 992-5:J.'ie for
reservations.

POMEROY - Homecoming
services wUl be held Sunday at
the MI. Hermon United Brethren
In Christ Church, Texas Com·
mulnlty. PhD Thomas of CoolvUJe wlll be speaking .a nd singing
durtng aiternoon ·serviceS at 1: :.&gt;
p.m . Sunday School at 9: 00 a.m.
worshlpservlceatlO:OOa.m.and
potluck dinner at noon. Public
Invited.

Church
homecoming
POMEROY - Annual Homecoming lor Morse Chapter
Church will he held Sunday with
basket dinner at noon. Speaker
wUl be Rev. Orvlle White, Point
Pleasant, W. Va., and special
singers will be The Harmony
Quartet of Racine. Dinner from
noon to 1: 00 p.m . and afternoon
service, 1:30 to 4 p.m.

Mortgage burning
!.AURAL CLIFF- Mortgage
burning services wm he held at
the Lalirel Clltf Freew!ll Methodist Church Sunday, Sept 18 at
lO:OOa.m.

Rutland dance
RUTLAND- Adance wUI be
held at the Rutland CiviC Center
F'l'!daY from 8 p.m. to llp.m.
Music by ".Itomlc Sounds.''

Gilmore reunion
POMEROY
Walter
(Squibb) Gllmorereun!onwlllbe
held Saturday atthestateparkon
U.S. 33. Lunch wlll be at 1 p.m.
The 86th birthday of Squibb
Gilmore wUl be observed. Everyone to bring covered dish.

Bible course

Roush reunion

HARRISONVILLE- A Bible
suryey course wW he taught by'
the Rev. Wanda Johnson each
Sunday, 7:00 p.m. , at the First
Presbyterian Churclj at HarrlsonvWe. The pubUc Is Invited to
attend.

PORTLAND' - The Gideon
Roush famUy reunion wlll be held
Sunday ·at 1 p.m. at Portland
Park. Bring p!cnlc basket.

Barbeque scheduled
NEW HAVEN -Therewlllbe
a chicken barbecue at New
Haven Fire Station by department auxU!ary Saturday starting at 11 a.m.

Flea market
ROCK SPRINGS - A Oea
market wh!ch wlll have
hundreds of dealers will he held
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds, Rock Springs, (on top
of the hill) on Friday, Saturday
and Sunday, Sept. 23, 24 and 25
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. dally.
There wm be dealers of
antiques, collectables, paper
backs, baseball cards, plants,
produce, and tools. There wUl
also he quUts and bedspreads for
sale.
'
There wm be a Peps! truck,
load sale and a local merchant
wUl have a USDA freezer beef
sale. There Is no admission and
there wm be free parking as weD
as restroom fac11ltles, electric
and security. For space, Inside
and out, call David Mann or
•Mike Martin at 992-6.DJ or
~-

Milk
Saltine cracker crumbs
Thaw fish fillets, pat dry. RoD In
flour. Combine egg and milk using
the proportion of one egg to one-half
cup mUk. D!p the floured !Ulets In
the egg/milk mixture and then roll
!n cracker crumbs. Cover with
refrigerate for
waxed paper
f!ve-10 minutes. Fry, then · drain
well and keep warm In tbe oven
until all fish !s fried. Serve with
lemon or fresh tartar sauce.

Barbara Sargent, Chester; Doris
Koenig, Tuppers Pla!ns, and. Betty
Farrar, Pomeroy, spent the weekend In Akron wtthMrs. Sargent and
Mrs. Koenig's sister 'and her
husband, Mr. and Mrs. SUmmer
Haught. . They went especially to
vis!t their uncle, AI Myers of
Florida, who has been visiting his
daughter In Medina. He entered
the Cleveland Clinic Sunday for
opeo heart surgery on Tuesday.
Wonl has since been received that
he Is In satisfactory condition.
Myers Is a brother to Stella Frank,
·,.Pomeroy.

Moore reunion
POMEROY - The annual
'reunion of the James C. Moore
farnUy wlll he held Sunday at the
Senior C!t!zens Center, Mulheny Heights, Pomeroy. The
potluck dinner wm be held at 1
p.m .

Party planned
POMEROY -

The annual

party for members of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, who wor)&lt;ed on the car
parking project at the Meigs
County Fa!r, wlll he held Sunday
beginning at noon at the post
home In Pomeroy with dinner to
be served at 1 p.m.

Movie planned
POMEROY - The movie,
" Thief In the Night" wU1 be
shown at 7 p.m. Sunday at the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church; public Is invited.

. Benefit car wash
POMEROY - A car wa5h to
benefit the Carleton School and
the Meigs Industries wUI be held
at the Automatic Transrnlssklt
Co., 278 W. Main St., Pm!eroy,
Saturday fnm 9 a.m. to 4 p .m .

~

MATIPtE'E'S s..tT &amp; SUI,

ALL SfAT5' IZ.OO

AOIIIS$/ON EVE"RY TU£SQIIIY fUJp

Halar birthday

Brad Young

Marjorie Anka Ha!ar celebrated
her first birthday recently at the
home of her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. GeorgeS. Carper of Pomeroy.
Her parents, Michael and Wendy
Halar, aunt, Dawn Carper, and
great-grandmother, Helen Carper,
were also In attendance.
The StrawherryShortcaketheme
was carried out with a cake
decorated by her aunt, Dawn
Carper.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
George R. Carper, Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla.; Mrs. Anka Halar, Generalskl
Stol, Yugoslavia; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Hughes, Athens, Oh!o.

m!ck, Kimberly, Timothy and
Mindy Harris, Chuckle, Julie,
Brian and Melissa Young, and L!za
Jean Zahran. Adults at the party
were VIctor and Kathy Young,
V!ckle and Bill Harris, Janice and
Wal!d Zahran and the bosts, VIctor
and Mary Young. Bob and Elva
Thomas and Audrey Young sent

VIckie, Kim, Tim and Mindy
Harris, VIctor and Kathy Young
and Chuckle, Jul!e, Brian, and
Mel!ssa , Charl!e and Diana
Brewer, Travis, Charlle and Justin,
and Flossie and John Nelson.

r;:=========::;i

gifts.

Zahran

Pomeroy
992·3321

."'~ \ MEIGS TIRE

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0.
804 W.·Main

11

',

p

Pomeroy

Omitted
In the birth announcement of
Iler!k Thomas, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gregory Winebrenner, ReedsvWe
thenameofMargaretWinebrenner, ·
paternal great grandmother was
unlntent!onaUy omitted.

RESTAURANT

*Restaurant Has MCJY'IId from the Dome to the Main Building
*Elegant Dining At A Famity Ren.urant
~1 .

62

Ph . 304-676-6278
•Only 8 Miles from Pomeroy Brtdge

HOURS: Mon.-Sat. Ooen It 5. Sun II • m tn 7 n m
SPEOAL THIS SUNDAY: O..;c. ol Baked Stoak., Veal Cutlet, Mathod Pototand Gravy, c:..m, Hot Roll &amp; a. ...........................
'3.95 ·
• ·

PriCI

· Cheryl Fobner was honored on
her 17th birthday with a surprise
party Thursday night at the
Skate-a-way Rink near Chester
hosted by her parents, Elst.eandJirn
Folmer.
Cookies and punch were served.
Guests were Todd and Eddie DUI,
Gwen Folmer, Carol Richmond,
D!ck, Sharon Michele and Danny
Folmer, JoAnn,DarleneandSusan
Baum, Bobby, Linda, Bobby Lee.
Missy and Ryan Faster, Heidi and
Jam!e Ewing, Charlotte and Ron
Hanning, Joe and Rob Fields, Pam
Reibel, Darrell Krautter, Cora and
Geroge Folmer, Pomeroy; Jean,
Angle, and Chris Spencer, Tuppers
. Pla!ns.
Cheri Thomas, Helen and Sandy
Mulfonl, Stephanie, Edc and Jesse
Mulfonl of Cheshire; Diane, Lois
and Sabra Davidson, Middleport;
Misty Powell, Rutland; Pearl,
Linda, John, Davis and Mary
Edwanls, Sandy Wamsley, Mar!Jyn
Trussell, ~Bottom.

Young birthqay
BrillZ the kids to Ponderola ilr free
''Kid's burgen and &amp;ies."
You can pick .., illY meal on the
menu. y OlD' kids 12 and under wiB eat
"Kid's lxiJiers and fries" abroiWlly
&amp;ee. AOO &lt;bi't b1et to brq! ~

bee•..,
can stiR
take advantl!lle ci ~ ~
)WI'~

)'01.1

&lt;U

on any cdult meal.
But hurry. Our &amp;ee meal deal is
only~ tmqSJ September 22,
1983.

.StJJTt IDidng advanlilge of this money-saring offer today
at any of these area lowtions:

•

lHE DAILY
SENTINEL

CEN1£R, INC.

Q\~

~· j

John F . 'Fultz, Mgr .

Ph. 992·2101

Middleport·

Pom~roy

Pomeroy, O.

RAli'S

m
.' '

Cabinet Making

l"

Syro1cuse
992·]978

· .
TRINITY CHURCH, RJ!v.
pastor: Debbie Book, Sunday
Church School 9:15 a.m.; worship
10:30 a.m. Cholr rehearsal. Tuesday
p.m .. under directiOn of Allee Nease.
POMEROY OIURCH OF THE NAZARENE, Corner UnJon and Mulberry, Rev.
Thomas Glen McClung, pastor. Clyde Henderson, S. S. ~ upL Sunday SchooJ, 9:JJ a.m.;
morning wonhJp 10: XI a.m.: evening servtce
.i p.m.; m ld-!Nf.'ek service, Wednesday. 7 p.m .
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - :r&gt;; E.
Main Sf., Pomeroy . Sunday services Holy
Communion on the finlt Sunday ol each
monih. and combined with morning prayer on
the third Sund ay. Morning prayer and sermon
on a ll oUter Sundays of the month. Church
School and nurwry care provided . CoHee
hour In the- Paris h Ha lllmmedlarely following
the service.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
Main St., NeU Proudtoot. pastor. Bible school.
! : :11 a.m.; morning worship, 10:30 a.m.:
Youth meetings, 6: :JJ p.m. ; evening worship,
7: l) p .m. Wednesday night prayer meeting
and Bible study. 7:30 p.m .
THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs . Dora Wining in charge.
Sunday hollness meeting, 10 a.m.: Sunday
) School, 10::Jl a.m. Sunday School, YPSM
Elolslo Adams, leader. 7: :II p.m., salvaUon
meeting, various speakers and music specials. Thursday- U: :'D a.m. to 2 p.m .. Ladies
Home ~ague, members In charge, all
women Invited; 6:45 p.rit Thursday, Corps
Cadet Class (Young People-Bible\. 7::J) p.m.
Bible Study and Prayer m eeting. open t o the

0
·

Middleport, Ohio

K&amp;C JEWELERS .

..

Keepa~&lt;e
"-""&lt;11~.- .....

· 212-E.MainStreet
992·3785, Pomeroy

(illi np 111 w llc,J!&lt;.:' lm~ hCL'Il pa11 uf t heir plan .. und
thL·i t famili c~· for &lt;1 Inn).! timl' . Sn th1\ 1~ :tti mc ol
TL'II ll/atiun . . the fu lfillment of a \.' hc ri ~ h ~ d hupc .

RU11.AND OIURCH OF GOD. Pasur.
Rev. John Evans. Sunday school, 10 a.m .;
Surv:l,a y wcrshtp, 11 a.m.; Childr_e n's church\ .
11 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7 p.m.;
Wechlesday evenlhg young ladles auxUiary. 6
p.m. Wedn~ay famlly W!rhslp, 7 p.m.
HAZEL COMMUNfiY CHUROI, Near
Long Bottom, Edsel H&lt;lf'1, pastoc. Sunday
schooJ, 9:lJa.m.; WorshJplO:l&gt;a.m .; Prayer
mEeting 7::.J p.m . Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWn.L BAPTIST,
Cornw Ash and Plum. LesUe Hayman.
pastcr. Sunday school 10 a.m.; Morning
Worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday and Saturday
Evenlng: services, 7:-l) p.m.

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METIIODIST CHURCH

Pr~rar.ttii•O !i1t• "'~t· ul: 1rC1iur: •ti on 'hou ld lx-pm w1t h
re l1p1ou' cthiL'ill ttlll . It ,huitltl lk!p tn earl y. It ' htm iU
continue failhlull y eve ry wn·l.. .

Our L·hurrh~o:' ;mJ !o.YII&lt;~j.!O!! UC~ provtUr
the ' Jlt nlu:tl amim1mtl trainm)! tiUT )'tl\l th
ncctl : t~ th ~y j!Ct rc:nly !'or thl'i r uppurlu nitic' and TL'~fX '" 'ihi lilic., 111 tumor ~o .,.··~ wmld.

SISITON - Church School, 9::l) a.m .;
mornln.Q worship, 1Q:45 a.m. (first and third
Sundays); fellows hip dinner with Carmel.
third :I)lursday. 6: :It p.m.(McGulre)

Fa.v Sauer, Dtreetor
Rev. Jam"' E. Corbitt, Assistant
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Don i\rclter
Rev. Roy Deeter
Rev. Seldo• Joluwon
ALFRED - Chw-ch School 9:.Jl a.m .:
WorshJp, U a.m .: UMYF, 6: :KI p.m.; UMW,
Third Tuesday, 7:11 p.m . CommunJty flrst
Sunday. /Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.: Church
School10 a .m .: Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m .
UMW. firs t Thursday , 1 p.m.; Communion
flr!it Sunday. (Archer)
JOPPA - WorshJp, 9: l) a.m .: Church
· School. 10:3J a.m. Bible Study. Wednesday,
7:00p.m. (Johmon l
LONG BO'ITOM - Church School, 9: .J)
a.m.; Worship, i p.m.; Bible Study, Weodnes·
day, 7:.J) p.m .; UMYF, Wednesday, 6p.m .;
Communion First Sunday. (Archer)
REEDSVILLE - Church School, 9:l)
a.m. ; Worship 11 a.m. (Deeter)
TIJPPERS PLAINS 57. PAUL -Church
School, 9a.m .; Worslrlp, 10 a.m.; Bible Study,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.: UMW, Third Tuesday,
7: .J) p.m .: Co mmunion nrst Sunday .
[Archer)

CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. James E. Corbitt
Rev. Sleven Nellon
Rev. Richard Rothemlch

Vet thl'TC :tr•· mot\\L" nl " ol wonJcr in p wtmt the lu tu n:
Arc they r&lt;.:"c.Jy lur the immcd1;llc L' hilllcnj.!&lt;.:'~
. . . anJ fnr·thu:-.c further duwn thc !uturc .

l n ,l d ~.

KENO CHURCH m · CHRIST, Oliver
Swain. Superintendent. Sunday school 9: lJ
a.m. every week.
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. WIUlam
Crabtree, pastor. Sunday School, 9::11 a.m .;
E'Vening service, 7; 3J p.m . Wednesday prayer
meetlng, 7:~ p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDCE CHURCH OF
CJ-ffiiST, Duane Warden, mirUster. Bible
class, 9::11 a.m .; morning w&lt;rshlp, 1D:ll
a.m .: evenlngwcrship, ~: .Jl p.m . Wednesday .
Bible study, 6::1&gt; p.m.
NEW ST!VERSVn.LE COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Sunday School service, 9: 45a.m.;
Worship service. 10::11 a.m.; Evan~?elistlc '
Servke, 7: JJ, p .m . Wednesday: Prayer
rneetlng, 7::11 p.m ., Thursday.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
Harrisonville Rd.: R.obt"rt Purtell. minister:
Steve StanlfY; Sunday school supt. Sunday
school, 9: :II a.m.; w&lt;rShipservlce 10: l&gt;a .rn.;
Evening WCI'Ship Sunday, 7 p.m. a nd
Wednt'!iday, 7 p.m.
ST. JOHN LU11-IERAN OJURCH , Pine
Grov(&gt;. The Rev. WUUam Middle;warth,
Paster. Church services 9: :II a.m. Sunday
SC'hool lO::ll a.m .
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST, P aul '
Pratt. pastel'. Sunday sctnol, 9:~a.m., Larry
Haynes. S. S. Supt.; morning wa-shlp, lO:.lJ
a. m .
RACINE CHURCH OFTHE NAZARENE,
Rev. Thomas H . Collh:r, pastor. Martha
Wolfe, ChaiJTnan of the Board of ChriStian
Life. Sunday School. 9:J) a. m .; morning
worship,lO:JOa.m .; Sunday evenlngwcrshlp,
7:~ p.m . Prayer meeting, WeO'll'Sday. 7:l'J
p.m .
RACINE FIRSI' BA.P1'1S'T, Don L. Walker,
Paster. Robert SmJth, Sunda'y School supt .;
Sunday SchOd. 9:31a.m.: morning wcrshtp.
10:40 a. m.; Sunday evenlng wcntup. 7::1)
p.m.; Wednesday evening Bible s tudy, 7:30
p.m.

Rev. Robert E. Robtn&amp;on
Rev. Andntw Rubenklnl
ASBURY (Syracuse) - Worship , 11 a.m.:
Church School, 9:45 a. m .; Charge Bible
Study, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; UMW, first
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; 0\otr Rehearsal, Wed·
nesday, 6:30p.m.: UMW, fourth Sunday, 6:lJ
o.m. /Nelson I
ENTERPRISE- Worship 9 a .m .; Church
School, 10 a.m .; Bible Study, '1\K&gt;sday, 7::KI
p.m.; UMW, First Monday, 7::11 p.m .:
UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir rehearsal. 6:11
p.m. Wednesday. (RothenUch )
FLATWOODS - Olurch School, 10 a.m.;
Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study. Thursday. 7
p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m . (Rothemich)
FOREST R UN- Worship, 9 a.m.; ChW"Ch
DANVn..LE WESLEYAN, Surxlay School,
School, lO a .m.; Choir Practice, Tuesday,6: JO
9:.'J)a.m.: mornlngw&lt;nhlp 10:45 a.m.; youth
p.m .; UMW, firs t Tuesday, 7:lJ p. m .
serviCe, 6:45 p.m .: cvenln~ w«Shlp. 7::1)
(Nelson)
p.m .; WedneSday. 7::Jt p.m. Prayer a nd
HEATH CMiddleportJ - Olurch School ,
Praise.
9::1) a. m.; WorshJp, lO:l) a. m .: Bible Study.
DANVIlLE HOLINESS CHURCH .' located
Tuesday, 10 a .m .: UMW, serond Monday,
on Route 3'.5 between Vin tm a nd LangsvHl e.
7:lJ p.m .: UMM. third Monday, 7::1) p.m .
Rev . Ben Watts. pastcr. Sunday School, 9::Jl
{Robinson)
a.m., Bobby Lambert S. S. Supt.; Morning
MINERSVU.LE - Worship Service, 10
Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Children's Happy Hour
a.m.; Church School, 11 a.m.; UMW. thlrd
6:45 p.m . Prayer &amp; Bible Study, 7:Jl p.m .
Wednesday, 1 p.m .; Olotr practice, Monday,
Missionary m eet:lng first Wednesday of each
7: ll p.m. (Nelson )
month, 7:]) p.m. For Information caU
PEARL C HAPEL - Worship Service, 9
388-8467.
a. m.i Church School, ll a.m.; UMW, second
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; UMYFiastTuesday, 7: XI
p. m . ! Rubmklng)
CHRisriAN F'EU.OWSmPCHURCH , :1!3
POMEROY -Church School, 9: 15a.m.;
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. SuOOay Sctool, 10
Worship service, 10: lla.m. ; Cbolr rehearsal,
a .m . Sunday and Wednesday EvenJng
Wednesday, 7: :ll p,m.; UMW. second TuesServices 7: :Jl p.m .
. day. 7:30 p.m.; UMYF , Sunda y, 6
CHES'fER ClflJRCH OF GOD. Rev. R. E.
p.m .(Corbltt)
Roblnsoo, pasta-. Sun.iay school, 9:lJ a.m.;
7::1! p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS - Cllun:h School, 9: ~ . wcrshlp service. 11 a. m. ; evening service, 7
Mr. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD. Racine
a.m
.: Worship, 10 a.m.: Bible Study,
p.m.: youth servtce. Wf'dnesday. 7 p.m.
- Rev. James Sallerfteld, pastor. Morning
Wedn~ay, 7: :II p.m.; UMYF (Seniors).
!ANGSVll.LE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
wcrshJp 9:45a.m.; Sunday ScOOo110:45 a. m.:
Sunday, 6 p .in.; (Juniors) , every ot.her
ROOen E. Musser. pastoc. SundaysctJJOI. 9::1!
evening wcrstup 7 p.m. Tuesday, 7: Jl p.m.,
Sunday, 6 p.m. IRothemichl
a .m .: Paul Musser, supt.: morning wcrsl'tlp,
ladles prayer met&gt;tlng. Wednesday, 7::'D p.m.
Rlll1AND - Church School, 9:4.') a ..m .;
10:30 a .m .; Sunday ew-nlng service. 7 p.m.;
YPE .
Worship, 10::11 a.m .; UMW !Evenlng ClrcleJ.
mid-~ St&gt;rvlce, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FffiST BAPTIST, Correr
second We-dnesday, 7:ll p.m.; UMW, second
. SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Slxth and Palmer, the- Rev. Mark MCClung.
RENE - Rev . James B. Kittle. pastor.
Sunday sc00ol9: 15 a .m .; Dan While, Sunday . Thurw,ay, 1 p.m. !Rubenklngl
SALEM CENTER - Chw-ch School, 10
Shennan Cundiff, s uperintendent. Sunday
School supt .. John Reibel, Sr., asst. supt.
a. m .; WorshJp, 9:45a.m. (Rubenldng)
SChool. 9::.:1 a .m .; Morning Worship lO:l'J
Morning Worship 10:15 a .m . Youth meeting
SNOWVll..LE - Worship, 8::1) a.m.;
a .m .: Eva.ngpHstic serviCP. 6 p.m . PrfJ.yerand
7::11 p.m. WedneJday, Including WE'e tots.
Church School 10 a.m. (Rubenldng)
praise Wednesday, 7 p.m .; youth meeting, 7
eager beavers, Junior astroa nuts, a nd junior
p.m.
SOU'I1IERN CLUSl'ER
and senior hlghBYF; cholrpractlceB::Jl p.m.
R.n • .lamM M. (]ark
EDEN UNITED BRE1lffiEN IN CHRIST.
Wednesday; prayfr meeting and Btblestudy1
Rev. Poul 111c0u1re
Elden R Blak e, pastoc. Sunday Sctool 10
Wednesday, 7:Jl p.m.
Rev. OrvtDe While
a.m.; Robert Reed, s upt.; Morning sennoo,
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Middleport, 5t h and
APPLE GROVE- Cllurch School. 9 a.m .;
11 a.m .; Surday night SC!Vkes, ChrlstiM
Maln, Bob Melton. mJnlster. A1 Hartson,
Worship, 10 a . m . (first and third SundaysJ;
Endeav(J', 7::lJ p.m.; Song service, 8 p.m .;
associate minister: Mike Gerla£'h, Sunday
Preaching, 8: XI p.m . Mid-week Prayer
School Superintendent Bible School, 9::1) UMW1 second Tuesday, 7:XI p.m .; Prayer
meetln&amp;, Wednesday, 7 p.m. (Clark)
ml'l'llng, W -y. 7 p.m., Alvin Reed. lay
a.m. : mocnlng worship, lO:l) a.m.; evening
BE'IltANY - Wonhlp, 9 a.m.; ChW'Ch
1 -.
wcnhlp 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study and
School 1 10 a.m .: Bible Study, Wednesday, 10
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, R&lt;&gt;ger
youth group meetlhgs , 7 p.m .
Watsoo, pasta-; Crer5oo Prall, Sunday
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH or THE NAZA· a .m .; Dorcas Women'• FeUowshlp, Wednes day, ll a.m . !McGuire)
'
Scho&lt;i SUpt. Morning Wti'Shlp, 9::1! a.m.:
RENE, Co-paston, Rev. Charles Coyle and
CARMEL - Church School, 9:ll a.m.;
Sunday JCOOQl, 10:30 a.m.; evening servtce,
Rev. Nancy Coyle. BUI White, Sunday school
Worship., 10:45 a.m.; (Seco..:l and Fourth
7::1! p.m.
au~ . Sunday school, 9:Xl a.m .; morning
MT. UNION BAPI'IST, RJ!v. Tom Dooley;
worship, 10:)) a.m.; Sunday evengelistk: Sundays); Fellowship dlnner with Sutton,
Joe Sayre, Sunday Schoti Superlnlendent.
third TJJ.irsday, 6:]} p.m. (McGuire)
meeting, 7 p.m. Praye r meeting Wednesday?
Sunday school, 9:45 a..m.: evening wcntup,
p.m .
7:00 p.m Prayer meeting, 7::1t p.m.
EAST LETART- Olurch School, 9 a.m.;
Wedneaday.
Woratup, 10 a.m. (~emrxland tounhSUndays;
UNITED PRESII\'TERIAN MINISTRY
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
UMW,
lltst
Tueoday,
7::1!
p.m.
(Clarki
OF MEIGS COUNI'Y, Rev. Wanda Johnson,
CHRIST, Vlnren1 C. Waters , Ill, minister;
LETART
FALLS
Worship,
9
a.m.;
dltt!ct&lt;r. Har&lt;id Johnsoo, dlrectCI' of
Hennan Black, s uperlnlenclent. Sunday
Chureh School. 10 a.m. (Clarki
~!duration .
SctJJOI 9:00 a .m .; l"\'1!f!lng tQV!re, 7 p.m.:
MORNING STAR - Worship, 9:f5 a.m. ;
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN,
Wednooday Bible School, 7 p.m.
Cllureh Scb:&gt;ol. m :ll . a .m .: Bible Study,
'NcntjpServke, 9a.m .: Chureh SctJJOI. ID::Il
CHESTER OIURCll OF' THE NAZA·
Thunday,
T
:
~
p.m.
tWhl1el
o.m.
RENE. Rev. Herbe&lt;t Grate, ~Uitr. F'nU1k
CHAPEL
a.&amp;rch
Sc-.
9::1!
MORSE
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN ,
RttOe, supt SundaySCOOd. 9::1&gt;a.m. Worship
a.m.; Wonldp, U a.m. (White)
Owreh SctJJOI. 9 a.m.: Morn1n1J wcnhlp,
service, U a .m . and 7:ll p.m . Prayer'
POR'I'LAND - Clwrdl ~. 6:00 p.m.:
I0:15. Bible Sl1ltly Tueldl,y, 10 a .m .: Bible
mtO!IIng, WednelclloY. 7::1! p.m.
WonHp, T:~ p.m.; UMYF, W - y . 7::1!
- lMIACUSE
' 'lbunllolo'F'IRSI'
7::11 p.m.
p.m.
(M&lt;Guln!)
UNll'Eil PRESBY·
LAUREL CLIFF fliEE ME'rl!omsr
RACJNEWESLEYAN-Oalr&lt;:h!l!hool, ID
1ERIAN Chureb. Chur&lt;h lkil&gt;ol, 10:15 a.m.:
CHURCH. Rev. Rot&gt;ort MID«, putor; Lloyd
a.m.; Worlldp, U a.m.; UMW, lourttt' Wrltlbt. lltrectll' of CJntfll1
......., wll'llip, U tili a.m.: Blblo, SNtly.
, _ , 10 a.m.; Junior llld Sollllit Htp
!llnday SciiDol, 9:~ a.m.: Momlntl 'Nonh!D.
Mol!daY 1:~Tp.m.:
· · Pl'ajoer
-··
W~,
a.m. illar~
J
Youth OI'Otlp, ~. 6 pm.
JO::JJ a.m.: ~ .Pnl!'~· ~· I; ~

SEVEN'I'H·DAY ADVENTIST, Mulberry
Heights Road, Pomeroy. Michael Plan·
kowskl. pastor: MarleSplres. 5abbath School
Supt. Sabbath School is at 2 p.m . on Saturday
with worship sei'\1ces following at 3:15p.m.
Rt.m.AND FIRST I!Af'TIST CHURCH Sistl'l' Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday School ,
9::1) a. m.; morning worship, 10 :45 a.m.
POMEROY FIRST · BAPTIST, David
Mann, minister; William Snoutrer. Sunday
School supt . Sunday School. 9::l&gt; a.m.:
Morning worshlp 10: :KJ .m.
FIRST SOliTHERN BAPTIST, Pomeroy
Pike. David Hunt, pastor; Roger T\lrner.
Sunday School Superintende nt . Sunday
school. 9:30a.m .; morning worship, 10:-l);
eveninli!: worstup. 7: ~ p.m. Mtdweel prayC'r
rl'IE'eting, 7: JJ p.m.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH, Old
[)(o1Cier Rd .. Dexter. Pastor Woody Call, Jr.
Past(l". Sunday School 10 a .m . Sunday
evening service, 7 p.m.; Thursday evening
servk'e. 7 p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. BaUey
Run Road. Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastor.
Handley Dunn, supl. Sund aY school, 10 a.m.
Sunday evening service 7: XI p.m .; Bible
teaching, 7:30p.m. Thursday.
SYRACUSE MISSION . Cherry St., Syr,a ·
l'USC. 5ervices, 10 a.m . Sunday, Evening
Sf&gt;t"VIces, SuOOay and Wednesday, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Manley,
pastor: Mrs. Russell Young, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday SchOOl 9:;1} a.m. Evening
wonhtp 7: ;1} p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting

Ecb:-

Upper River Road
(Across from the Airport)

. _____ _

'

•

p.m.: Evening worsrup, ·r: ;t.~ p.m. Weanesday
Prayer and Bible Study, 7:.?£1 p.m.
DE XTER CHURCH OF CHRIST, Charles
RusseU, Sr., mlnlster; Rltk Macomber, supt.
Sunday schOO. 9:31a.m. : worship service.
10:lJ a.m . Bible Study, Tuesday, 7::1l p.m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF IATI'ER DAY SAINTS,
Portland-Racine Road. wuuam Roush. pastoc. Linda Evans, church schOol d lrectoc.
church school, 9::'D a.m.; morning wa:shlp,
10:30 a .m .: Wemesday evening )rayer
serviCE's, 7:.ll p.m.
BE1'HLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
ShuiB", pastoc. Worship servke, 9:l&gt; a.m.
Sunday srhool. lO:ll a.m. Bible Study a nd
prayer service Thursday, 7: :II p.m .

.

ln~-~~N ~DB~~EN'tN .
CHRffil ClflJRCH . Rev. Rolx&gt;rt Sanders.
pastcr; Don Will, lay leader, Locateodl n'I'exas
Communl1Y oU CR !12. Sunday school, 9: :ll
a .m .; Morning worship sen dee, 10:45 a. m .:
evening preaching service second and fourth
Sundays, 7:ll p.m.; ChriStian Endeavor, tlrst
and thlrd SurKiays, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
)rayer meeting and Bible study, 7:.'1t p. m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS, :r7:n9 Sta te Rout£&gt;
124 (One mile east of Rutland ). Sunday, Bible
lectw-e 9:30a.m .; Wat~htow er stlxJy, 10:Xl
a .m .: tuesday, Bible study, 7::Jl p .m.;
Thursday, Theocratic "School, 7::Jl ·p .m.;
Service Meetlng1 8: 'X} p.m .
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY .
Located on the 0. J . White Road oft' highway
160. Pat Henson, pastor. Sunday School 10
a. m . Classes for aU ages. JunJor Chureh
11:00; Morning Worship, 11:00: Adult Choir
practk:e 6: 00 p.m . Sunday. Young People's,
Children's Chureh and Adult Bible St udy,
Wedne;day at 7:lJ p.m .
HOPE BAP'I'IST Cl:IAPEL- 570Crant St .•
Mh:kll~rt; Sunday SChool, 10a .m .; mornin ~
wcrhslp, 11- a.m.; evening worship, 7 p. m .
Wednesday evening Bible study a nd prayer
meeting, 7 p.m . Afflltated w1th Southern
Baptist Convention.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST Stare Route 124 and County Road 5. Mark
Seevers, m inister; Sunday SchOol Supl .. Steve
Pickens. Sunday scOOol. 9:lJ a.m.; morning
w(J'Shlp. 10:)) a.m.; evening wors hip, 7 p.m.
Wednesday worship. 1 p.m .
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER George's Creek Road. Rev. C. J . Lemley.
pastcr. Paul Poar. ChUJ'{'h School Superlntendenl. Church sctm, 9::11 a.m .: morning
w&lt;rshJp, 10:.'1) a. m ; evening service, 7 p.m.
Bible Study , Wednesday, 7:00p.m . Classes for
all ages.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN OIURCH. Corner
of Sycamore and SE!cond Sts .. Pomemy. The
Reo.•. William Mtddleowa rth, Paster. Sunday
School al ,: 45 a.m . and ChW'Ch Sen.1ces ll
p.m .

LONG Iio'IToM CHRISTIAN, Ken Kolle.-.
past!r. Wallq.ce Damewood, SUnday SchOOl
Supt . Worshlpservlceat9a.m . BlbleSchOol10
a.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH. ~v .
Thereon Durham, pastor. Sunday School a t
9 ::11 a.m.: Morning wocshlp at 10:ll a .m .
Sunday evening service at 7: l1 p.m .;
Thursday servk:es at 7:30p.m .
ffiEEOOM GOSPEL MlSSlON at Bald
Knob, localed on County Road 31 . Rev.
Lawrence Glu(&gt;S('ncamp, past(J'; Rev. Ro~er
Wlllford , as.'&gt;istant past!r. Prt'achtng se!Vi·
ces, Sunday 7: :JJ p.m. Prayer meeting
Wedne;day, 7:l&gt; p.m. ; Gary Griffith, leader
Youth groops. Sunday evening, 6:.'J) p.m . wlth
Roger and VIolet W!Uford as Jead~s.
Communion service first Sunday each moot h.
WHITE'S CHAPEL, Coolville RD. ~v .
Roy Deeter. pastor. SUnday sch0019::11 a. m.:
wa-ship service, lO::JJ a .m. Bible s tudy and
prayer service Wednesday. 7:lJ p.m.
RIJ'ILAND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Dan
Monlux . pasta: Btu Nlcholsoo. Sunday
school sup! . Sunday school , 9::11 a. m.:
mornl ngwa'Shlp and &lt;.'Ommunlon, 10:]) a.m.
RIJ'ILAND BIBLE ME:I'HODIST - Amos
TUIL'&gt;, past!T, Sonny Hudsoo, supt . Sunday
school, 9:XI a.m . Morning worship. 10: lla.m .
Sunday E"Vl'nlng servlre, 7:00. Wednesday
PVentng service 7:00p.m. : WJ\otPO Program.
9:00a.m. eac h Sunday morning.

.

SACRED HEART, Msgr. Antb:lnyGtannamore. Ph. 992-5898. Sahmlay evening Mass,

7:]) p .m.: Sunday Mass. 8 a .m. and 10 a.m .
ConCessions one-half hoW' before each Mass.
Clas!e&gt;, 11 a .m. Sunday.
VICiORY BAPTIST - 52"1 N. 2nd St.
Mlddleport . James E. Keesee. pastcr.Sunday
m orn!nR w&lt;rshlp. 10 a.m.: evenlng service. 7
p.m.: Wednesday evening wors hip. 7 p.m .;
VIsitation, Thursday. 6::11 p.m .
TRINITY CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY. Cool·
vWe - Gilbert Spenrer. pac;;tor. Sunday
school. 9:lJ a.m.; m orning sei'\ IC(!, 11 a.m.
Sunclay evening ~n~lre. 7::l'l p.m .: midweek
prayer service Wednesday. 7::1l p.m .
MOUNT OLIVE COMMUNITY OIURCH.
Lawrence Bush. pastor; Max Folmer. Sr.
Superintendent Sunday SchoOl and morning
WCI'Ship, 9:l&gt; a. m . Sunday evt&gt;nlng service. 7
p.m.: Youth rJIE'{'flng and Bible stOOy.
wemf!iday, 7 p.m .
UNITED FA..I'T'H CHU~qi - !WUie 7 on

ceo

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

"' ...

Henry Eblin, Jr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School9:.'J) a .m .; Morning Worship U a.m .;
SUnday evening service. 7::11 p.m .; Prayer
Meetin.Q , Wednesday, 7:.'J) p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRSl' CHURCH OF GODJoy Clark, pastor; Worship service Sunday.
10:00 a.m.; Sunday sclnol. U a .m. ; wors hip
service, 7:ll p. m , W~esday prayer meet· •

BEN
;lFAANKLIN"

Mill Work -

POMEROY wESTSIDE 'CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 33226 Children's Home Road
!County Road 761 992-5?35. Vocal music.
Sunday worship 10 8:.9'.; Bible s tudy lla.m.;
worship, 6 p.m. Wfdnesd ay Bible study, 7
p.m .
OLD DEXTER Bl BL E CHR ISTIAN
OIURCH - Olfton Lucas, pastor. Sunda y
School 9: .'J) a.m . Mrs. Worley Francts, supt.
PreachlnR SC'rvices first a nd third Sundays
toliowlng Sunday School. Youth meeting
every Sunday, 7:XI p.m.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST.
PreachlnR 9::Jl a. m ., first and second
Sundays of each month ; third and four1h
Sundays Nch mooth, worsl'tlpservtces at 7:30
p.m . Wednesday evenings at 7: :ll p.m.,
Prayer a nd Bible Study.

Folmer birthday

A surprise party was held In
observance of the 16th birthday of
Brad Young at the summer home of
his parents at Lowell.
Blue and wh!te streamers and
balloons decorated the patio for the
party. The evening was spent with
scavenger hunts, games and dane·
lng. The b!rthday cake featured
replicas of fishing equipment,
Brad's favorite sport. The cake was
served with hotdogs, pot.atn chips
and punch.
Attending were Sherry Cummins, Dawn .Witteldlld, Lisa, Aa·
ron, Carrie and Krtsty Manuel,
Ronnie Cummins, Jason McCor-

216 S. Second

public.

Gilkey birth
Earl and Nancy Gilkey are
announcing the birth of a daughter,
Sandra Jean, born·Sept. 7 at Holzer
Medical Center. The Infant weighed
six pounds, s!x ounces. They also
have a son, Blliy, 12.
Mr. and Mrs. GUkey'sdaught.er Is
the first girl born Into the GOkey
fam!ly In 25 years.
Paternal grandfather Is the !ate
Clarence Gilkey, Middleport, and
the maternal grandfather Is WUIlam B. Capehart, Middleport.

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

Akron visitors

531 JACKSON PIKE·RT.36 WEST
PhOne 446·4524

Marjorie Halar'

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

and

!.AURAL CLIFF- Mortgage
burning services wUl be held
Sunday at 10: :.&gt; a.m. at the
Laurel CJif[ Freewill Methodist
ChurcJL 'Public Invited.

Happenings
· POMEROY - The deadline
tor Meigs County's senior high
school girls to enter the Junior
Miss Scholarship program is
Sunday. Contestants are to meet
at the Trlnlty Church in Pomeroy at 2 p.m. Those planning to
enter the competition but unable
to attend are asked to call
992-54M, 949-2695, or 992-7569.

announced

SUNDAY

!.AURAL CLIFF- The Tem·
plealnis · In · cont:ert wW be'
featured Saturday at 7: :.&gt;p.m. at
the Laurel Clltf Freewill Metho!.AURAL CLIFF - A mortgage
dist Chuch. Pastor Robert Mllier burning ceremony to mark the final
Invites the public to attend.
payment on the church structure
wlll be held at the Laurel C1lf[ Free
LANGSVILLE -Arecharter- . Methodist Church during the lO::Jl
ingofScoutTroop239, Langsville a .m. worship service Sunday.
wnibeheldSaturdayat7p.m. at
MONDAY
the home of Lawrence Scar·
POMEROY - The Meigs
berry, scout master. There wlll
County Churches of Christ
also be electk&gt;n of commUte
Men's Fellowship wm meet at
members. Parents and boys age
the Bradfonl Church of Christ
U or older are Invited. Guest
Mondayat7p.m. Therewlllbea
speaker wlll be Lanny TYree.
short business meeting follOWing
troop commissioner.
the revival service.
.

Junior Miss
deadline nears

contains UtUe or no connective
tissue !t Is very digestible and easUy
used by the body. Because of these
qual!ties, !t Is especially gOOd for
children, convalescents, and older
people. The low fat and calorie
content makes It appealing to
dieters. Don't shy away from fish
just because you were fed !t when
you were s!ck or because you ate !t
day after day on your last d!et. Try
again - you m ay he surprised.
My famUy eagerly awaits our
annual perch fry. The method for
breading the fish yields crusty,
tender fish that are unparalleled.
You can try this breading with
other fish fillets, too:
Bob's Fish Fry
Fish fillets
Flour
Egg

Grocene s - .
Ge.nera l MerciMndJ '&gt;l'
Rae me 9&lt;1 9· 2550

Pomeroy bypas!). Hev. Kobert ~muh, Sr.,
pasroc: Rt-v. Ja mes Cundiff. assL'&gt;Iant pas tor .
suOOay Sclx&gt;ol., 9:.1) a.m.: morning worship,
10:30 a.m.: evening worship. 7: j) p .m.
Women's FellCM•shlp, ~ay s, 10 a .m .
Wednesday night prayer serviC&lt;'. 7::l) p.m .
FAITII BAPTIST CHU A( 'H. Mason. mf'f.'t
at Unlled Steel Workers Union Hall. Railroad
Street. Mason. Morning worshi-p 9:30 a.m ,
SUnday Schooi 10:.}) a.m . E\•cning ScJ'\1CC', 7
p.m. Prayer met:&gt;llng Wednf'SI:Iay, 7::JJ p.m.
Midweek Bible Study, 1l1ursday, 7 p.m .
FOREST RUN BAPTlSf - Rev. Nylf'
Bol"den. pastcr. Cornelius Bunch. s uperintendt&gt;nt. Surday schoql9::Jla_m .: ~('('()!Jd and
row-lh SundaYs. wocship serviCe at 2:00p.m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTISf - Founh a nd
Main Sis .. Middleport . RPv. Calyln Minnis.
pastor. Mrs. E lvin Bumgardner, su pt.
Sunday school., 9:~ a. m .; worsl'tlp stnriCl'.
10:45 a .m.
BURL ING HAM SOUTI~ E.'RN BAPTIS"r
·CHURCH, Route 1, Shade: Pastor, Don Black.
AtrUialed with Souihern Baptist (.1JnvenUcin.
Sund a.V sc_hool. l ::ll p.m .: Sunday worsl'tlp,
2:lJ p.m. Thursday evening [hble s tudy, 7
p. m .
PENTECOSTAL AS SEMEL Y. Racine-,
Route 124. William Hoback. past or. Sunday
S&lt;'hool. 10 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7
p.m. Wedn(Slay evenln,t;: servtcc 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Chead le,
Su pt . Sunday SchOol 9::tl a .m. Momlng
WOJ's hlp, IO:JO a.m. Prayer Service, a ltcrna!('
SundaY!).
MIDDLEPOHT PE!\'TECOSTAL. 'Th ird
Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl
Notllnp:ham , SuOOay ScOOol Supt. Sunday
SchoollOa.m.- r lasses for all ages. EvenJ ng
services, 6 p.m . Wednesday, Study, 7::u p.m .
Youth service;, 7:]) p.m . Friday.
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St,
Middleport. Pa'itor is Brot hf'rchuck McPhl'r·
son. Sunday School a! 111 a.m . Services
Sunday E."Venlng at 7 p. m . and Weclnt-'sday al 7
p.m .
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Rev . Earl Shuler,
pastCI". Sunday school 9::11 a.m.; Chureh
setvk'e, 7 p.m,; youth met&gt;tlng. 6 p.m.
Tuesday Bible Study. 7 p. m .
F1JLL GOSPE L LIGHTHOUSE. JJJt'i
Hlhmd Road, Pomeroy. Tom K£&gt;lly, pastor.
Da nny Lambert, Sunday School Superintend•
en!. Sund ay Morning sctvlre. 10:00 a.m.:
Sunday rovl"'ning sf'rviCf" 7:.11 p. m . Services
1'ut:&gt;Sdtly an d Thu rsday eveni,ngs at 7: l) p.m.
WORD OF FAlTH , 9~ MillSI., Mlddl&lt;POrt:
RJchard St('Y.•art. paslor. Sunday morning,
10:00, Sund&lt;~y evening, 7: :ll. 'i\tesday mom
lnR B ible Study, 10:00; Wednesday evening,
7~l&gt;: Thursday morning video wit h KennCi h
CoJl('land, IO: fKl: Friday t&gt;venl n ~ video with
Kennelh Copt:&gt;land, 7::Yl
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF Til E NAZA
RENE. Rev. GlenOOn Stroud. pastor. Sunday
Sc hOOl, 9 ::J&gt; a.m.: Worship Sf::orvi('(', 10 : ~
a.m .; You th SPrvice, Sunday, fi: 15 p.m .;
Sunday 1.,..en!ng service. 7:00 p.m. WednCS·
d ay Pra.w•r MOOing and BlblrStudy 7: 00p.m
NEASE SE.'TI"LEMENT CHURCH, 1Jo.
n&lt;t ld R. Kar r, Sr., pas1or. Su nday aftl'fOOOn
servlcrs, 2::ll; Thu rsday ('vening scrvi('('.
AVt'., the

7::1!.
F1RSTBAPTISTCHURnl, Mason, W. Va ,
Pastor, Bill M1,1rphy . Su nday S('hool , lO a. m.:
Sunday f'\l£'n ln g serviCe, i:OO p.m.; Prayer
mE'f'llnJ! a nd Blbl~ Study Wl'dnesd&lt;ty, 7:J')
p.m . Everyonf' welcome

RIJ'ILAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA· •
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D. Grtmrn, Jr.. pastor.
Sunday Sctnol, 9: ll a.m.: w(J'Shlp service,
10:30 a.m.; ywng peoplp's service, 6 p.m .
Evangelistic servi('('. 6:l) p.m. Wednesday

service. 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH Or CHRIS'!', MUier 51.,
Mastn W. Va. Eugene L. Conger, minister.
Sunclay Bible Study, lOa.m.: Wocshlp ll a.m .
and 7 p. m. Wednesday Bible St\XIy, vocal
music, 7 p.m.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding
Lane, Masm, W. Va . RPv. Ronrue B. Rose,
Pastc:r. Sund ay School 9: 45 a.m .; Morning
Worship 11 a .m. Evening Servk'e 7::'D p.m .
Wednesday WomP.D's Mlnlstr1m 9 a.m .
(meet ing and prayer!. Prayer and Bible
Stilly 7 p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST tN
CHRISfiAN UNJON, The Rev. William
Campbell, pasta'. SuOOay SchoeN, 9;l) a.m. ;
J ames Hughes, su~ , ; evening servtre. 7::ll
p.m. Wednesday E'Vt'ning prayer meeting,
7:ll p.m . 'iouth prayerserviceeachTuesda.y.
FAJRVIEW BffiLE CHURCH, Letar1, W .
Va. , Rt. 1, Mark JJ"Y..ln, pastor. Worship
services, 9:JJ a.m .; Sunday School, 11 a.m.;
evening waship, 7:lJ p.m. Tuesday cottage
prayer meeting and Blbl~ study. 9:0CI a.m.
Worship service, WednESday, 7:30p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LlTI'HERAN CHURCH Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W. Va.
The Rev. George C. We~lck , pastoc. Sunday
School, 9: :JJ a.m.: Sunday wcrhstp, 11 a.m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now located
on Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near
Flatwoods. flat. Blackwood, pastcr. Services
on Sunday at 10::JJ a .m . and 7:lJ p.m. with
Sunday scOOol, 9:lJ a .m. bible study,
W&lt;Glesclay. 7::1! p.m.
FAITH FEU.OWSIIIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST- St. Rl. 3:1!, Antiquity. Pastoc, Rev.
Franklin Dickens. Sunday moming, 10 a.m.
Sunday evening, 7: :llp.m. ThUI'S&amp;y ewnlng,
7:.1) p.m .
STIVERSVILLE COMMuNITY BAP'I'IS1'
CHURCH. Pas1tr ~ i!J&lt;!rs, Sunday
S::hool 10 a .m .; Worship 5ervice 11 a .m .:
Sunday evening service, 7::1! p .m .: Wednesday evenlnjiji servk:e, 7: :l'l p.m .
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH.
Inc. - Paul St., MlcldJeptrl. Rev. O'DeU
Manley, pastcr. Surday SctOO, 9:3J a .m .;
Morrdni wmhlp 10::rJ a.m.; evenlag wor·
ship, 7:ll p.m. 'fUellday, 12: ~ p.m . Women'•
(l"ayer meeting; Prayer and p-aise service,
Wectlooday, 7:ll p .m.
Rt.m.AND APOS'roUC CHURCH OF

JmJS CHRIS'!', Elder Jam.,. Mille'. Bible
o1111y, w~. ~30p.m.: SundaySehool.

Sermonette
I firmly believe that Jesus knew when he sa!d, "Love your
neighbor as yourself," that self must get !I together before any real
love toward another can begin. Understanding one's self, trusting
that self and sharing the self- that Is the supreme task of life. This is
also why our love for God Is so very Important; that relationship
.g!ves d!gn!ty to an Individual- It leads credibility to self.
Only when a person realizes his own ldent!ty can a true sense of
respons!bllity begin to mold. It Is much too easy to blame
environment for our own Jack of experience when we should know
the fault Ues w!th ourselves. And the gOOd that we might do in ou r
Uves .- It Is ln!portant we credit self with that, too, for II is our
personal gUt to God.
At a visit recently with news commentator Paul Harvey, ! asked
him why h1s son, Paul Jr., had, Instead of taking the famous name
Harvey, gone back to the old Pennsylvania Dutch family name
Aurand!. Paul Harvey, himself, found !n the ea rly days of radio that
ethnic names were not at all popular and h!s most difficult to
pronounce. But his son, a concert p!an!st and author, chose to keep
the farnlly name.
"It's bittersweet," Paul Harvey told me. "After you work so
hard to make a name mean something, to have your son choose
another, and yet I have to he proud of them , too ... "
Often a person.ls strtviog so hard to win the approval of another,
)1e or she !s wllllng to accept another's standards as a persona! rule of
life. This IB true oflamlly, but perhaps even more true of friends. We
are constantly trying to win trlends and Influence people.
Never try to dUute the person you are with shades of anyone else.
With you, alone, lies the respons!bil!ty of be!ng the person you are
and are becoming. -Lee Miller, Rector, Grace Church.

Ill a.m . amda)' nllhl -

· T:;IJ p.m.
POMEROY wEsLEYAN IIOUNESS lla~anllllo Road. .,Earl .f'!~, eut~~"•

.

- ·------ - -------

_ _. . . ,_ _ _ _ _ _ M

- ·

·--~--"--" -

.,...., -•·

I

• •••·•-.. ..

·~

• - - _.._

�Panterof Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

Friday, Septemtier 16, 1983

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Business Senices

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

We

•t' w anci...,..W~

'*' nopttlr end , .

tar ....-. We Clll alto
ec:ld boll end rod outredlatora. We aleo repair

Gil Tenkt.

oloctricolworl&lt;
IFroo hHmotos)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PAT HILL FORD
1·!3-Ho

11·2&amp; ·t!c

]-Announcements
4-Givooway
5 -HoppyAds
11- Loetand Found
7 - Yard Sale lpaid in advance)
8 - Pubic Sale
&amp; Auction
9 , Wantad to Buy

41 - Houoesfor Rent
42- Mobae Homes for Rent
43- Farms for Rent
44-Apartment for Rent
45- Furnilhad Rooms
46-Space for Rent
4 7-Wonted to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
49- ForLeue

propenv located at 38 150 s_A
No 7. Long Bottom. Oh10.
belongtng to Joyce Reynolds
end Nelson Reyno ldS and
fuf't M!' descnbed as follows.
10-Wit'

S11ui:He tn Che-ster
1 •
-Metgs County, Oh t&lt;f. and bl!! tng
tn F'ractton 19. Sectron' 20.
Town 40 North. Range 12West

of the Ohto Company·s Purc hase and betng descnbed as
foJ1ow5: Begmntng at a pornt
North 87 _deg. 13' West 1518
-feet and North 2 deg 47' East
about 900 feet to a potnt at the

Public: Notlc:e
Records
w11l be offered for sale October
1. 1983. at 1000 AM The
property Wtll be sold for the best
pnce obtamable at the Me•gs
Countv Court House. Pomeroy.
Oh10. The sale shall be conducted bv the attorneys -for the
oart1es upon~tt)e ternis set forth
by saJd illfomevs.
.
,
Persons w1Sh1hg 1nformat10n
concern1ng the sale of the
above descnbed real estate
should conta ct Fred W . Crow, Ill
(6"14 ) 992 -6059. or Ronald A
Calhoun (614) 446 · 7890.

Public Notice

81 -Home Improvements
82' Piumbing &amp; Meeting
83-Excavating
84-Eieclrical &amp; Refrigeration
85-General Hauling
86-M .H. Repair
87-Upholsterv

Public Notice

---::--:-:c:--:-:--.---1

3 Announcements

CARRIER WANTED

Special' Discount
Prices At

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

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Alum. Asphllllool Collin&amp;
lllck Asphllt loot Coating
loll Roofin1
Aluminum Roofin1
in All Ltncths

~LIIDlwt!

ATTENTION
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2155

WOODBURNER SALE

address IS unknown, 1f deceased the unknown hetrs.
dev1sees. legatees. e)(ecutors
adm1n1strators and/or ass1gns
of Ella M Roush. dec :
. WALTER ROUSH. whose ad·dress IS unknown. If deceased
the unknown he•rs. dev1s.ees.
l~atees . executor s. administrators and/ or ass•gns of Walter
Roush, dec.,
EARL WE LLS. Oetro11. Michigan. wh ose address 1S un·
known. 1f deceased· the unknow n hetrs . dev1see s.
legatees. execu tors. adminis trators. and / or asstgns of Earl
Wells, dec ..
DALLAS LIS LE. whose last
known addes s IS 632 Rock wood Avenue. P1ttsburgh. Pa.
152 28
IMLLIAM ROUSH. ' whose
address IS unknown. 1f deceased the unknown he1rs,
dev1sees. legat e~s. adminis tra tors. e)(ecutors anQ/or ass1gns.
of William Roush . dec ·.
ALMA ROUSH. whose ad dress 15 unknown, 1f deceased
the unknown he1rs. dev,sees.
legatees. adrn1ntstrators. execu tors and /or ass1gns of Alma
Ro ush. dec.:
EDNA ROUSH. whose ad dress 1S u nknown. 1f deceased
1he unknown he1rs. dav1sees.
legatees. admtn,strators. execu tors . and / or ass•gns Ql Clyde
Roush. dec.
You are hereby not1f1ed that
you have been named defend·
ants m a legal act1on enti tled
Donald F Johnson. pla1nt1ff vs
George M1tter et at defendants.
Th1s act1on has been ass1gned
Case No 83 -VC -2 42 and IS
pend1ng 1n the CofTlmon Pleas
co urt of Me1gs County. Oh10.
Pomeroy, Oh10 4 5 769.

Public Sale
&amp;. Auction

Meigs County
Area Code 614

446- Gallipolis
367 - Cheshire
388 - Vintori
245 - Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dist.
643- Arabia Disl .
379-Walnut

992- Middleport
Pomeroy
985 - Chester
343-Portland
247- Lotart Falls
949 - Racine
742-Rutland
6j17 - Coolville

675- Pt. Pleasant :
458-Leon
5 76- Apple Grove
773-Mason ·
· 882 - New Haven
895-Letart ·
9 37 - Buffalo

PERSONAL PROPERTY
SEPTEMBER 17, 1983 AT 10:00 A.M.

NEW UmNG - Nice reasonable 3 bedroom home just
inside Rulland on 124. Bath, all
utjities and I&amp; lot with cellar in

At 391 N. Fourth, Middleport, Ohio
Real Estate At 12:00 Noon

back for only $19,500.

Auction Conductod By Tho
McGee Au(lien Co.
of Gallipolis, OH.
AucttenMr and Real Estate 8rolc.er
lrywn L McGee, Phone 614-446-0552
Tli!IS: Oil Rill hlllt S1,000.00 cuh or certified check
on da, of salt. Closi•&amp; on or btlore October 22, 1983. Sold
with confin•tlon of ownor.
1111 Estate for sale Vi11il B. Teaord; Sr .. Realtor,

NEW

$588

FIREPLACE INSERT
11tHuvy Duty double wall construction
*Urlt airtight ash pan
*Automatic draft control
. 11tlar&amp;t Cornine &amp;lass door
11tfire brick lined
•Dual Variable srtd blowers REG.
*BURNS COAL 0 WOOD

l11

CARPET
$1295

OONGOliUM

HER£S ABUY - 5rm. house
with bath, 3 bedrooms, 5acres.
more or less, in Southern
schools lor only $18,500. Now

ooly $16,500.

REIIODEIID Neat and
nice. Good carpeti1a, modem
both. las of wood ~nets in

klchen, basement with gas
furnace and garage.

S ,,IIIW.i~Hn llf·,'l_l_

Sl7.000 - Good 3 bedroom
liome with bath, nat gas
furnace, and all utilities oo l4
aae kJl

STARTING AT
INSTALLED
WITH PAD

RUTLAND - OR NEAR. are
these properties. One lor
$13,500; one for $25,900 with
a 1niler; a nice 3 bedroomer lor
$32,500; and a one story with
small house lor

Sq. Yd. lnstaUod

mr:noo •

fll NYLON
'15.95

ANSO
.

Y~.

Installed

OPIN 1111. OAIIK. t50 DIPOSIT _ltQI.DS 101 30 DAYS
5 YIAR WAIIANlY
flAME BRANDS WITHHELD DUE TO PRICE
DlrtOCtione ... South on Rt. 7 ... II mlltl IHllow
Oalllpolle to Roccoon Creek bridl' •nd follow

1

Appror. 10
story, 3 bedroom
horne,Jireplace, front and rear
porch, part basement. 2 car
garage. prden . spece, ather
MIDDI.EPOIIT -

acres,

I~

buiidin~r&gt; Only

$26,900.00

POMEROY -

Uncoln HiU -

Super buy oo hi~ with a
&amp;OOd lot A f!I10d s!Jrter home.

one lloor plan, 18xllloot living

room with 2 bedrooms, carpeting and some panelin' Storm
doon snd windows, llllural
gas heal ll!den Slllce.
equipped kitchen, outside entrance ID basemert $16,000.00

Ohio River...t..3 riverfront All For
Only $7,IAAI.

Ho11siny
Headquarters

•

Business Services
G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

·water Pipe
•Gas Pipe
•Re1ulators
•Fittin1s
•Drips

Phone:
Rosidonco: 915·3137
wa.. housa: ft5o3509

THE
\TROPHY
· KING
Trophy

Manufacturers
i PLAQUES
ENGRAVING

~

I£Al1011 .

M.L
C6NTRACTING _
RECLAMATION
"Ex~avating

10411~

Rt. 124.

PH. 992-2478
8-18·1 100. pd.

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
illl - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
Patios - Sidowalks New.. Construction - Ra·
111odelina - Custom Poll
Barns.

•Hauling

Al~o

•septic Tanks

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp;Siding Co.

j

Routt 1
Lona Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

'

lUO.tfc

i :

·- --

•

w.

CUSTOM WORK -AIR BRUSH
CAPS
JACKETS
UNIFORMS
T-SHIRTS
TIIOPHIES
QUANTITY SP.ECIALS
TIIANSFI!RS-LETTERINQ

Transmiulpn

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

949-2293
Racine, OH.

H4-tlt

8·1-tfc

8-22·1

. - - - - - - - - ,, l .r----~~ .. ,
H. L. Writesel i

JEWELL'S

ROOFING

PLUMBING and
HEATING

All types of roof wort. new
or 111pair, autte11 and
downspouts; llfller clean·
ina l!ld painti~Wo storm

•Expatietlced

•R......-

JOB - BIG OR SMALL
992·6030
Minersville, OH.
8119/1 mo. pd.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lniUiation
•Storm Door• .
•Storm Window• ,
•Replecement Window•
•New Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH . 992-2772

g.g.) 1110.

1110. pd.

MINE RUN

I

i

STRIP
COAL

doors and windows.

•Worl&lt; Guar11ntead

Pn~ Anr!hinc
On
Aftr!hina

CUSTOM PRINT
949-2358

Pomtro,, OH. '

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

$3()00 A TON

All Work G111rantetd
"Free Estimates"

' Call: 949·22~
or 949-309\ 10 . ,

PH. 992-2280

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

MILLER

New Homes - htensivt
Rtmodollna.
•Insurance Work
.Custom Polo Bldgs .
&amp; G1r11eS
· •Roofinl Work
oAk1ni1un &amp; Vinyl Sidilp
15 Yean IKperlence
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282
•
ll ·l 1-uc

Vinyl Replacement
Windows
Material &amp; I.Jbor
As low As $250 heh
''Free Estimates"

Also Blown Insulation

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Chestor, Ohio
Ph. 885-42119
II No An._, Call 915-4312
D-ayna Wllllamo
&amp; 8conle Smith
All lakas ond lodtls
Anl•n• Instillation
Houst Calls and Shop

Service

Avallobl~

9-t5- l mo. pd.

g.g.t mo .

"CUT OUT
FOil FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes

•Walhws •Dilhwuhera
Ra,..o
•Refrigerator•

•Dryen •F,_n

PARTS and SERVICE

VALLEY
1

R=~=~
HEAnNG o PlUMBING

AL TROMM'S

2·23·11C

ELECTRIC
SERVICE
1

For all your wiring
needs; furnec:as rt· ·
pair aervica and instelletlon.
Resldentiel
&amp;. Commercial
Call 742·3196
3-7-tlc

BACKHOE
SERVICE

~R1181

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainlen Steel

.PH: 1-304-773-5634
Mason, W. Va.
C. L. Kitchen 8-29-1 mo.

l

Gutter and DownspoUts.

Around

"F_E_"

Truck
Setvic:e
SEPTIC TANKS

'"12 v... E.l:pBieiiCI''
'Wert Om •• 11..

oOump

R. E. HOME
IMPROVEIENlS

A Sfl£C1ALTY
742-2328

•:n.tft

N~TIONAUNE

Plumbing &amp; Heatin1 Supplies
"I' You Want o
,vm'-Yow Wont Him ~"'"
'lliCIIIC Ul aMI ~IJ..
r---IDIAI:

PERSONAUZED
POOLS

Roofi.
SALE
DEAL DIRECT &amp;
SAVE 30% OR lOR£
On Sidi. lll1d Roofin&amp;

I

992-2031
A , _ Call llrilp
Pro.,. eo.n- s.mco

232 I. }lid
' -· 0. '
11011'1 tllo tilt to Ill ,..r funooct ...., for coN - · · 111!1
DllcDillt 01 111J - lornact PIIRhllld lxlf111t Oct. 11.
'

POMEROY. OHIO
PH. 882·1792

"FREE ESTIMAYES"

Installed And
Warranted by Sears
For 5 Yurs.

Yard Sale Ewington 19th 15
20th. Clothing, old bonlea.;
&amp; Vic'lnity
old letern. etc. Ernettlnt
··--·-··-··----···-···-···-··· Pol1ley ,
Sale 424 Hedge~ood Or,
446-0952 . Monday thru
Saturdey. Retrigeratora, TV.
11oves, table•. ch,irs, bell,
weaher, misc. Items.
Middleport
R!ght To Life Rummage
8r. Vicinity
Sale. St. l ouis Catholic
Church basement. Saturday
Sept. 17, 9 to 3.
8 family carport tale. Oni
Ga~age Sale Friday &amp; Sat~r­ day only. Sat., Sept. 17. 10
day 16 &amp; 17 at Mercerville, a. m. until dark. Ridgway·a,
7, acrost from Forelt
9-1 Baby bed, bicycle, win- Route
Run
Rd
.
ter clothes, misc.

...... P.iimiirov ---------

OWN your · own Jean or
Lldia1 Apparel· store. 300
Brand nemea. Jordecha ,
Levi, Klein. Zena. *7,900 to
*15,600 lncludet treinlng ,
Inventor-', flxtures end rT~Uch
more. Mr. Tate, 704·753·
4738.

Garage Sale Sat." 17-lh, 8 to
6 . 1163 Second Ave .,
Gelllpolia.

22 Money to Loan

Moving Salelivingroomset,
lamps. tables, clot hing,
Sept. 14, 15,16, &amp; 17 .7 mi.
out Rt. 218 from At. 7.

HOME LOANS low fixed
rate. Leader Mortgage, 77 E,
State. Alhe"'· Ohio. 1·81 4·
692-3081 .

Yard 1ale on College Rtt
above 4th St . in Syracus&amp;~
Saturday and Sunday 17th
and 18th.
-

··...--F&gt;-t ·Piiiiisa·r.f·.. ·
&amp; Vicinity

Yard Sale Sat . Sept. 17,
1 0:00•5: 00. Wood, elec . · -· ·· -·······-···-········· ·-~
stove. diahweahar, dinette,
baby furniture, clothee. 4 6 FAMILY garage sale, Sap~
mi. paat Holzer At. 1 80, turn tember 16, 16 &amp; 17, 9
left, !Evergreen) Yz miles, ~.m. - ? At letart on Sandhill .
right. Coli 446-8037.
Rd near Rt. 33 interaaction.

Professional
Services

----, ~-=~~~~----­

PIANO TUNING Bock to

*26 normal
School .Special
tuning•
September
only . ~~~~~~~;:==:+;;~;:~~~===::32 Mobile Homes
Klnen black It white, fe- Program Coordinator for Word'o Keyboard, 304-675· 31 Homes for Sale
for Sale
m•lt. 8 wkt. old. Call two Intermediate Cere Fecll· 3824.
448-2494.
itie1 for the Mentaly Re·
·
tarded in Oellit County. PIANO TUNING-LANE DA· Hobstetter home on Rosa
Registered Aultrlallan She- Po1ltlon require• the dirac· NIELS. 742 - 2951 .- Aioo Hill-2 bedrooms. largo living 1974 14•70 3 bedroom.
phard. Call 81.~·256-1 ,688. tion of dey to day operations 'cash for ~ploet _or Grand .roorri, a!ltlf!O rqom, larg~ - 'Total .. alactric ;· .'~14-99~­
Qf -· thl facl01:1~•· A · ..aocl41 .·pleno'. (.EYar:t ·dal1\ag8d c;on- kitchen, bath, ·oil furnace, 6 6 87 -•fter"S:lO p~ m. ' ·
barn and 1 acre. Call George
Mala 6 mo. old German iorvlao related degree Ia ditio.n) .
Hobatottor-614·992·2579 1979 12x65 Uberty mobf1o
Shepherd. Female 1 yr. 'h required; appllcantl must be
German Shephard &amp; '12 (luallfied Menttl Retarda- SUBKEN SERVICE CO. or Edteon Hobstetter-614- homepartlytum ., verygood
cOnd. Must sell. Call 614Doberman, shots, good tion Profta•lonal {QMRP, or Locksmlthservica.toohher· 992-2464.
homo. Coli 446-3839.
QMRP eligiblei experience pening , ecreen &amp;. gla11 in· 1-::---:----:--:--:- 246 -9294 or ' 614-246·
In working whh per10n1 otollod. Coli 034-878-3694. 8 room house with both . 5175.
To givaawey to a good
central air, city weter,1 3 1-:::-::-::-· -::K:-:I_n_g_o:-le_y_m_o_b-il-o
home, female German She- with
qulredmental
and Nttrdatkm
experience in
acres on Ueving Road , Wait 1 9 8 1
Columbia. 304-875-1922 home. All electric, central
phard. 2 yro. old. Coli worf&lt;lng In relldantial foolll air , 2 bdr. fireplace, utility
814·268-1919.
tilts preferred. 8-.d reeum11
1 It " 4 p.m .
room, 1"
.,, bath1 . awn Ing, ••
to John Lehew, P.O. Box 31 Homes for Sale
HOUSE end 3 Iota for. uta.· underpinning,. rellon for
Iengie tjpe meledog. hou1e 804, J.aok..,n. Oh 48840 ,
broken. Call after 4, 614· Salery r~ng6 •1"4,000· ' Newly remodeled ' 2 .atory _.,.2,000 . Call 304-882· selling muu · relocate.
a1 8,000 . Call 814-245 - ·
. 248 •9132.
1 15,500.1f hlreil, muatreaide · frame, 1 1iJ beth, 3'/a. •cret, 2831'.
5672 or 614-245-51100.
·within 30 minutll travel citY achool"a , . riverview·.
8 kltt1n1. Give away. 8 14· time of program location . 132,000. Coli 446-4222 BRICK house,lerge comer
988-4120.
lot, 2054 Mayo Drive, New 1 2x88 Vindale mobile
Buckeye Community Servl- between 9 &amp; 6 .
ce1 11 an equal opportunity
Haven. To'" cell304·8~2- hom I!'. 6' expendo living
room. all electric with wood
Cat &amp; 2 klttena. Nice pets. employer.
4 bdr. ranch home. large LR, 2407.
burning stove, large con111 houoe At. 3a&amp; off 124. 1---'--.L.------ full boaoment, whh gorego,
Blue, black • white. 814· Wtnted immediately! I wood burner included. city .THREE bedroom, 2 1tory crete patio including 1 room
742-2234.
Someone to clean !lut end schools. 2 miles from town . houn on Park Dr. New remodeled 1chool bulldtng
repair cloterns , 81.4 -986- Caii446-D276 .
fumece • air conditionir)g. with wood buming 1tove,
Adult male Cockapoo to 3511 or 614· 986·38'77.
dream kitchen, with all carport &amp; wood atorage
good home. Aflar 3 p.m. calli-:--:-:------~ By owner HouM with 2 appliance•. Owner will carry building on 2 acrea. Hem 114-986· 4488.
Lldie1-Eam eKtre money for acres more or leas, been 2nd or all . Small down lock Grove . 814-949 · 3059
after 5 tor more info.
the holidays. Become an remodeled, orchard, 87 ft. payment. 304·675-2192.
3 month old kitten. White, undercover wear agent with wall, $22,000. Coli 614long_hair. blue eyea. 814· unlimited •rnlng potential. 388 -9083.
House. 3 acre• of lend. ~ 1 34
Business
992-2839.
Sell Lingerie ill home permile from town. 304-675·
Buildings
dee. No delivery, free train- 3 bedroom house with fire - 1714.
KITTENS, 1 gray &amp; white lng. Coli 304-286-9787 or place. central air. 2 full
male, 1 calico female, 1 614-985-4134. We need bathl, in city limits. lmme· THREE bedroom modular
yellow female. 304-875- deahtra In vour area.
dlate posaeaalon . Call 614 - home, full buament wtth Building 24x24, 4 room1,
fireplace In ba1ement, on 1 furnance. bath, paneled &amp;.
246 -6281
5177.
Women- Men need a part
acre of land. Call 304-372· carpeted. Excellent buMding
for office. Can be moved 11a
Collie end Shepherd pupa. I time job doae to home1 Can In Middleport, newly remo - 9859 or 304-898 -3486.
doub!o wid a. Coll448 -3417
weeks old: 304·875·2254. eam up to •1 or more per deled home with fireplace,
or 446-4166.
hou.r, Phone 304-678- pouible woodburnar, close
1 female pup. part Boogie. 2818, 9-5.
to schools and ahopping. 32 Mobile Homes
Grocery buaina11 plusttock,
304·8'76· 7430.
Coll8t4-992-6941.
for Sale
plus furnilhed attached 2
WA~TED: a reliable woman
bedroom house . Rural
who nHdl a home to live ln. Extra nice houae on At. 654,
lull tlmo with elderly lady. epprox. 3 mi. East of Porter. TRI-STATE M081LE Meigs Co . h.c. neighbors.
6 Lott and Found
Must be non·drlnking &amp; price reduced. Shown by HOMES . USED - CARS. good school. 818.500.614·
fuml1h
referencea. Thia Ia 1 appointment only. Call448- TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS . 742·2260.
LOST: Farratt, blook. wh1to
job. Fr.. living 1n 9340, 448-7901 or 614·
a. brown with masked face, non-plying
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
In vldnlty of 1 B1 3 Joffor- country home located be- 266-6413.
448-7672.
35 Lots &amp;. Acreage
tween
Pt.
Pl
....
nt
•
Ma·
oon, Pt. Plouant, 304-176·
son. If you mMt above Schultt ..fhe all new Schultz CLEAN USED MOB1LE
7730 .
qualification• pleaae wrhe modular home. quattflad for HOMES KESSEL'S QUALacres at Rodney on W.T.
FOUND: In Lotott area, small for Interview. &amp;41 Capitol W.VA. housing money. s.. 'ITY MOBILE HOME SALES. 36
Watson Rd. Owner flnanc·
Poodle. To claim, Identify &amp; Building, Ellchert, Indiana at French City Mobile 4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS , log
ovolloblo. Coll4411-8221
Homes. Inc., 446-9340.
poy lor ad, 304-898-3382 48818 .
RT 36. PHONE 446-7274
after
6 weekday•.
or 886·3684.
BABYSITTER. needed Mon- 3 bdr . house. llvlngroom.
day. Wedneadey, Friday . -kitchen, a. bath. 9 acret on 1974 Champion 1 4x88 fur- One acre lot with platforrft
nished. with manyextre1, on for house and in· ground
Agtl three and kinder· Johnaona Ridge Rd. For large
at Quail Creek M H pool. for information , 8138
Public Sale
gorton. 810.00 day. Refer- more information. •48 · Park. lot
French
City Brokarlng 685·1232.
.
&amp;. Auction
ences 1nd tflnlportatlon . 7530.
Servicoo , 448-9340 .
304·675·4027.
3 bdr. home 1 Y.z bath, Free central air, 1983 Red- Nice lot O"n Raccoon Creek
with 19 ft . travel trailer
1 AuCtion every Tueadey HAVE o Merri-Moc Porty or remodeled kitchen with ml1·
man 1 4x70, 3 bdr., 2 lull awning Sr. deck. priced tO
pen
1
catalog
end
earn
crowave.
Redwood
porch
night, Pt. Pluoant. WVa.
baths, cathedral ceiling, delAuct. Lonnie Nell. Farm, Chrillmlt preNntl FREE . deck acro11 back, 1 Yt acre ivered in aet. French City ooll. Coli 448-9340, 4487901 or 614-266-8413 . :
household. eal.te, etc. Call Guerenteed glftl, toys. many fruit treea. gas atova •
Mobile Hom11, Inc .. 446·
home
decor.
Cell
304-875·
dryer
in
baaement.
Acroaa
814-387-7101 .
8 acre• with lol cleared
6768 for Information. ,
from Blue Fountain Motet . 9340.
Call448·3499. Meke reaao· Cuh discountl, 24x40 overlooking river. 15 mi.
Rick. Peeraon Auctioneer
be1dW town . $6500. 61(nabla offer.
Service. Eatate, Farm, An·
Clayton sectional, 3 bdr., 266-1210.
Situations
tlquo &amp; llquldotlon oa1ea. 12
In Cheahire 3 bdr., gea. 1 'h bath a, fireplace. patio 1-::-:---:-;-----~
Ucensod &amp; bon dod In Ohio &amp;
Wanted
forced air heat. 2 cer garage, door. Ctthedral ceiling . Pel· 2.2 acres lahd with 2 rentlil
WVo. 304·773· 6786 or
alum . siding. e20.000. lvered ln set. French City trailer. Cell 448-8683.
304-773-9185.
Mobile Homos. Inc .. 448- 1-:-----~----,-:
Tree trimming end removal. Owner wi,ll finance with 20%
1 acre or more lots for 11llli.
AUTUMN AUCTION Sun· Free ootimatn. 814-992- down. Call 614-367-7898 . 9340 .
on old Rt. 180 near Porte ~
doy Sept. 1 Bth, beginning ot 8040 or 614·948 ·2129.
Two bedroom home. utility t979 Sterling 14x70. 2 Coii614-3B8-8801.
12:30 PM, at VIllage Trading
bdr.. total electric, central 1-::--::-----:-------7
Post, Front • Cedar Streett, Have vacancy tor 2 ladlea. room; eneched garage, new alr, exc.cond . Canbelefton 2 large totaln New Haveia
Oak Hill, Oh. Guns, archery, care. room and board. 814· fumance. fenced In beck· rentod lot. French City Brok- (Twin City Addition) , City
yard. In dty. Call446· 1431
fishing, oamplng. elaotron- 992·6022 .
ering Service. 446·9340 .
sewer and water. Phon8;
lea. black powder, otflc•l - - - - - - - - - - or 448-1686 .
304-882-3196.
.
equlpment, toola, appllan- Babysitting in my home. 1 - - - - - - - - - - 1971 12x65 Rlchordso'\ 1 -=:-~---~-.,-­
ces. ecopea. and many more Racine tree. have referen- Beautiful brick home no with 8 ft. expando with Three acres of ground, i
unmentioned tteme arrNing cee. 81 4 _949 . 2779 for charge to buyer. Cloae to
hou1e type lnatalletion, new house traHeraset up, 2 water
dally on trucka. *100 dis- information.
hoiPittl. Take over pey- carpet
and dreperie1, per· taps &amp; Hplic tanka. On St.
oount wHI be owardod to I--------:---:--:- manto. Coli 446·0519 .
ti1lly furnished, new 1Ox20 .R t. 143 on mite out Harribidder with largest amount Experienced cart tor elderty 1 - - - - - - - - -alumlnum awning end three aonville toward Pomeroy~
of purahieea M the and of in my home. Good mealt. Modern 3 bdr. home. full Mta of ltepe. 1 Ox1 0 metal Etttte of Bobby Molden-,
the day. Door priJea will be Price bits eel on cere givan. blisement central hut&amp;. air. building whh underpinning Robert Molden administra"
awarded to lucky blddera. 114_992 _1022 .
nrral water, 2 acre1. Cell
and tie down . See to eppre- tor. Dexter Oh. 614 - 889~
Food-Drink -Booting. Tormo:
814-379-2613 .
elate. f9,000. Sol up In 11092.
Cuh or approvod chock, all WILL do babysitting ond
oalal will be final . No houatkeeping. hiYW own Located In Syracu•-Neer L 74
ot__._
___
_ _Park
_
OrHn
Terrae&amp;
Treller
otortlng bldo. All Items put transportation . Cell 304· achool &amp; awimmlng pool. 3 1__
up for bid will be oold. Cell 875-4 I 68 after 3 p.m.
bedroom 11tuated on one· Windsor 14x70 with exLocal e14-e82 -77e7 or
third ecre lot. *24.1500. or pando. many extraa, quality
7788. Out of ototo, toH froo
will rent lor 1275 mo . homo. Rodnoy-Cora Rd. 41 Houses for Rent
800·848·4188. Ohio toll 13
304·8118-3934.
Coii304-171J-17281or' lnfo.
Insurance
1-800·2.62·2188.
Ranch typo (Brick) . 3 bed· 1---------rooma, fireplace, attached For Seta: Smell trailer. Make 4 bdr_. house 6 ecru ot la.id
Auction every Fri. night at SANOY AND BEAVER In· garage, full baaemenl, ma an ofter. Cell446-8696 1 on Rt. 160 in Vinton . Central
the Hartford Community
air, S360 mo., sec. dep. &amp;
center. Trucldoada of new aurance Co. haa offeNd newly thlngled roof, welklng
ref. Call 446-3 176.
met"chandl• every wMk. Ht'Vice1 for flre lnlurance distance 10 Pomeroy Ele- 1 982 Vlndale mobile home
Conllgmenta of new and cover• In Oellla County mentary School. •40.000. 10•80 with range. ' 3 •000 l-4-bo_d_ro_o_m_ l_o_rm_h_o_u_se_ o_n
614•
or btot offor. Coli 446uaed mercl'lendl• always for elmoat a century. Farm, C• 1181 .892
~
•
...
Rt. 218 . Iorge yard, t2Z6
welcome. Richard Re,noldl home and per.anal property
2 7 98.
plus deposit. Call 614-268•
30.
cover....
•
•
enllable
to
3
bedroom.
2
bath.
ronga,
1
-9348.
uct 1on-. 27v· v ·
m- lndlvidull naado. Con·
refrlgorotor.waoher&amp;dryar, 11178 Holly Porlt Ooluxe 1 -:----~--~-;­
"
AUCTION ewry Saturdoy tact Koil Iurie-. ogont. frMztr,gasorwoodburning 14x65 with 7x24 E~~tpando. Hou 1e, 3 bdr., unfurniahed,
Phone 441-2821.
M
Ah
furnao1. •32,000. 114~ 2 bedroom, total electrk:. Rodney Village II . t276 mo.
Auallon
night, 8 Bern.
p.m. Conalgn·
t.
o
949·2839.
froot-1roe refrig .. and atovs. Call 446 -4416 alter 7 p.m .
Garbage diiPOMI, w11her 8a
nMnto taken ...ry Saturdoy
1 :00 111 oole time. Emmo 18 Wanted to 0 o
15 rooma. 2 bedrooma, car· dryer hook-up . Carpeting. Modern 3 bdr. ranch with
A - n -. 304-428- l - - - - - - - - - potad, natural po, city New ltorm door. Centralalr, baHmenl . North At. ttO. ·
water and aewage, with ' under pinning . Excellent Rot. &amp; dep . Coli 44e·O&amp;tl.
8177,
1
Glltl•al Hauling and Traoh extre lot-100&amp;102. Locatod condition on rented lot.
remove! Sarvlca. Alliable In Mason It the comer of lth $11,800 . Coli 114-992 - 3 bdr. houoo neor R..
9 Wentecl To Buy
and dependable. Col 448· • Brown. For more Into, cell 7424.
Granda a236. Adulto """''
814-148-2111.
no poll, HC. dap. 1:111
l~3~t~ll~bo~~~w~•~•~n~8~an~d~I~.-For Balo-Houoe troller by e I 4·245-5439.
·
We pey oeeh .tar t.te model 1cjoon oia8d caro.
Lawn Mowing no yord to big Opan house Bopt . 17, 18 -lod blda. 1819 modal, 3
Jim Mink Chav.-Oidslnc. oromofl. Rotlableanddapan- from Ito 8 Saturday end 12 bedroomt. For information Smell1 bdr. conegeloo•t«&lt;
on Neighborhood Rd . IW!.
111 -Johnson
•ble. For ootlmota call to 4 Sunday. 300 W. Moin calle14-281-8011t .
St. Pomeroy. 1 to 4 bed·
aec. dep . required. CaNitvH.
448·3872
44e·31H. a to e.
raomo, 2 bathe, completely USED MOBILE HOME, IN "\46-0264.
rernodolad older home.
WMtod to buy uaad ooal &amp; l'cCj;hli;;m;;ney;;lSj;,;;;,..
GOOD SHAPE, 304 -676 - 1 -::::--:---::----:'-:-~
2711 .
Chorming 2 story, I bta·
-.1
lwoln Furnl· coo. Con U11 at 448·2318.
HOUN and 3 loti for ule.
room house. Fireplace,. rtvir
ture, 446-3188, 3rd. &amp;
Altoratlona, 24 hours oar- U2.000. 304· 112-2831 .
1918 SCHULTZ mobitn view, garage . $200, rfttJnth,
Dllvll lt .. G11Hpollo. Dh,
home, 10x60 with tipout, 304-882·2 836 .
vloa. Coil 4411·8024 9 to 1.
I roomo and both. Fur- now COrpot, priced 12700. r-::---;--:----:~Mloroocopa . Call 448·
~-~ 1a
nlahad. Enaloaed :.orch. 1982 Joguor XKE BB per- Chormlng 2 story, I llad•
4137•.
WELDING
portable• • .,..,..,_ ,...
tt4·882· 40 .
cent l'lltorecf. IJI:cell•t con- room houM, flrepli... ffvllf
ratoo. omlll ar blookl from T In Middleport. dhlon, . .. 000. Call 304· ivlow, gorago, 1200. illonth;
Walhoro • dry•. M- ""Y -dabla, 304-882· 2838.
-d. CaiiS14-387-0180. largo )obt. 304-171·3177. ,N
_ o_su_,n_d_av_•_•_ll_•· - - - 878-1878.

r

re-~~~~~~~~~~~

1---------

~~~~~~~~~j~

;;p;i;ln~g;&amp;Sa;,..;:~

hM*•·

AND

rc::=J- CATALOG

-~MERCHANT

REPAIR

-1111•·-·· a.-.

GNU • Patty Glbbi-Ownert .

CHESTER, OH.

,

-.....'Giiiifi&gt;oil&amp;__ ,.. ----

a

AUTO
PARTS
f.lJ.I

Sales

~-...'lii\I'NT~

For teaM, Auto Service
Center. M11on. WV, 3 baye,
2 hoiltl, excellent location.
aucceeaful bualne11 tor over
30 ye1ra, available after
Aug. 9 , 1983. Co11 ·alter 6
p.m .. 1-304-676-2982.

23

Old solo good cond .. noodo 11 Help Wanted
llttio upholotery. Call 814·
388-8713.
1- - - - - - - - -

'( 8 rd

Daily Sentinei-Page-9

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

*CHAIN LINK
FENCING

CHESTER

Giveaway

Butlnesa
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE QHIO VALLEY PUB ·
LIBHING CO. reoommando
that you do blialnen with
people' you know. and NOT
to Mnd money through the
mall until you hive invettigeted the offering.

LARGE OR SMAU J08S

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
St.

C1oonor. one holt mHo up 9909.
Goorgoo Creek Rd. Cell Set of good quilting fremea.
448·0294.
Call 304-458-1818 eltor
Bolloono for 81rthdoya. Got 8PM.
wlol1. Annivoruryo, SwMthoorto, portleo. Coli Bel- BEDS-IRON. BRASS, old
furniture, gold, 1ilver dol·
loona &amp; co .. 446-4313.
lara. wood Ice boua. atone
entlquea, etc., ComBIGBINGochO.Ok.. North iera.
plete
households. Write:
CoroUno, 1&amp;0,000.00 covor
oiL October Bth &amp; 9th. M.D. Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
.
1983. $60.00 round trip Oh . Or 992-77eO.
tronoportotion and motel.
Coil LUCAS TOURS 304- Wanted to buy. New. uaed a.
antique furniture. Will buy 1
346-7452.
piece or complete houMBINGO $7,800.00 glvaa· holdl . Alao complete A\olctl·
way·. Charleston, WV Civic oneering aervlct. Cell Osby
Center . oc·t ober 12th . A. Mortln 814-992-6370.
1983. Wodneadoy, Early
birds stan at 15 :30 p.m. Buying dally , gold, allvor
Doon open 15:00. Round trip coln1, ringa. Jewelry. at•llng
trantportation to the g1me were, old colnt, large cur·
t16.00 per per10n. Adg1me rency. Top pricat. Ed. Bur·
tminion to the game kett Berber Shop. 2nd. Ave.
136 .00. Coil LUCAS Middleport. oh. 614·992·
3476.
TOURS, 304-341-7482.
4

-Gal Linoo
- Septic Systamo

. --.,..;------..J,

'Porid.s

S&amp;W TV

C8~inteed

PH . 992- 2772

..

A (B

--or

9-l5-l mo.

"

$2.500 up.
NEW USTIIIG- 5 kllsoothe

IOU ONLY IN BROWN

or Telephone 614-992-6644 .
POSSESSION: Possess1on at
t1m e of settlement.
TE AM S OF SALE Sealed
b1ds. on the forms prov1Qed by
Farmers Home Adm1n1snat,on
w1ll be rece1ved until 2:00 p.m .
on Oc tober 13. 1983 at whic h
t1me they will be pubhcly
·opened .
All b•ds must be mailed or
delivered to Farmers Home
AdministratiOn. Room 507.
200 North H1gh Street. Federal
Bulld 1ng. Columbus. Ohto
432 1 5. before the t1me of bid
open1ng. All b1ds must be
acco mpan1 ed by a b1d deposit
1n the ainount of five percent (5
percent) of the bid .
In order of preferen ce to the
Government. the property wi ll
be sol d:
1. For CASH
2. On terms of 10 percent
down and balance of the
purchase pnce paid m 20
annua l or 240 monthly amortiZed payments.
The government reserves the
11ght to reject anv or all btds or
to wawe any 1nformal1ty or
1rregulanty tn any b1ds.
The property w 1U be sold
Without regard to rac e. color,
religion _ sex. age. natiOnal
onq1n, or mamal status.
19)16 , 19. 20 3tc

NoW $8,000..00

44-58-145 and 300 ICIIS.
Some with Wiler and some
with minerals. loclll!d in
several palls of the county.

$3 99 iAJrRRY

..

wanls a new owner. K~chen
has a range and d~hwasher.

STARTER HOlE- Hardwood
floors, k!Ndy pine paneling,
and a nice kilchen makes this 2
bedroom home ·nice: The one
floor plan home sits on aP!lfOK,
I acre and ~ not far from the
Ritchie Bridge. $28,!XXI.OO

-Trencllor

Sizes sllrt fro111 12'd6'

Racine, Oh.
· Pb.-614-Jtl-n~r

, ,. L..-;-- - - : -·-·-.!~;~~'"-~·1tl!r..J

REAL ESTATE SALE
UNITED STAlES
OF AMERICA
ATHENS COUNTY

Good u..d or rebuilt motor.

- Wat•

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

742-2352

WHV PAY lENT?- This three
bedroom home has had a new
paint job, new ca!J)el and

NEW UmiiG - D£XTtR I 10 story frame that was recently ~emodeled everywhere
- island klchen, carpel in al
7 rooms 3-4 bedrooms and 110
tots. $29,100.00.

- Dump Trudtl
-Lo-Boy

Authorized John Deer,
New Holllnd, Bush Hoc r
Farm Equipment
Dealer

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Route 4, Pomero

story stooe home w~h 3 tots
and 3 car garage. Beautiful
cabiMis 01 kitchen, also range

ACREAGE - 1·2-&amp; 10.21J.40.

RUBBER-BACK TWEED
1995

Above

remodeled 2 bedroom home.

CARPET
$13.95

Good Selection. Of
GOLD SEAL

-

Has modem both. carpeting
view of rM!r and I&amp; ki Asl&lt;ing
$25.!XXI

All Tl AND FURNITURE CO S
CARPET SHOP
I :"L'~LIItlll

LISTING

Pomeroy on 124 is this nice

-0-

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

.tWE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

,.,.,.:.111

$19,000.00

---

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Washers, Dryers I UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'16' Up
Ranges, Refrigenrtors j
' to 24'136'
A.ir Conditioners
Insulatd Doc Houses

Scott Allen Hill and Rochelle
PROPERTY: 140 acres. moi-e
Hill. each of whom restde at 13
West Cave Street Po~eroy , or less. cons1stmg of two
Oh1o 45769. hereby g1ve no- parcels.
PARCEL NUMBER ONE tiCe that they w111 file the~r
Pet1t10n m the Proba te Court of Compr1s1ng appro)(imatelv 14
Me1gs County. Oh10. praytng acres IS mostly roll1ng w1th
for an order of sa1d court constderabte road frontage
authonzmg a change of the.r Th1s parcel prevmusly was used
name from Scan All en Hill to for mob1le home si tes and •s
Scott Allen E1ch1nger and from located JUSt beh,nd Dow Lake.
PARCEL NUMBER lWORochelle Hdlto Rochelle E•chlnger. That sa1d PetiliOn will be Compnsmg apprm&lt;lmately 90
heard on the 19th day of acres w1th 30 acres cropland
and balance pasture and woodOc tober. 1~83 . at 10:00 A.M
or as soon thereafter as the sa1d land. A creek and gravel r oad
separate the cropland from
court may hear 1t.
Scott Allen H1U balance of fa rm Improvements
Rochelle Hill 1nclude three bedroom. 1112
story frame dwelling and a
(91 16. ltc
good livestock barn. Buy one or
both to be offered separately
and toget her
LOCATION: One mile west off
SR 690 on Counrv Road 34
1NSPECTtON ANO IN FORMA·
TION: The property w11J be
availabl e for 1nspect•on on
September 21, · 1983 fro m
E. Ma
2:00 p.m. to 4 :00 p.m. For
POMEROY.O .
add •tlanal mlormauon contact
Farmers Home Adm1n1strat1on
992- 2259
(FmHA). 221 West Second
Street . . Pomerov. Oh10 45769
Ml DDUPORT - Small 4

IIDDlfPORT- large
kill:hen, big living room, dining
room and 3 bedrooms. Neat
and clean with some new carpeting Part basement Now

949-~·60.

_ USED
,. APPLIANCES .

C1v1l ·Procedure. tudgment by
default Will be rendered aga1nst
you for the relief demanded 1n
the compla1nt
Larry E. Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Me1gs County Common
_.
PJeas Court
Dated September 7. 1983
.
' '
191916, 23. 30·(10) 7, 14.6tc

rooms and bath for home or
~ - 2 bedrooms, bath and
garage. Only $10.900.00

"Beautiful, Custom
Bui It Garages"
Call for free sidin&amp;8S·
.timates, 949· 2801 or

Ht1o

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

1-11-ltc
l-3-ttc
-..""-'-~---:..::.;;'-! I'-,.-~-~·--:.:~

Public: Notice

- NOTlCE OF
CHANGE OF NAME -

BISSELL
Sl Dl NG co.

· N'o Sundoy Calls

Up to 15 words ... One day insertion .... .. .... $3.00
Up to 15words ... Three day insertion . ....... $4.00
Up to 15 Words ... Six day insertion ........... $7.00
IAverage 4 words per linel

Public Notice

BOGGS

&amp; Aluminum

SIDING

Mason Co., WV
Area Code 304

and d~hwasher. Huge formal
dining room. large foyer; 3bedrooms, full basemen! and several big closets. One full bath
and two ~ baths. $48,000.00

carpetin&amp; oak Hoorin11. garage,
and large kJl Just $38,5011

AUCTION

cd11i·

Real Estate General

NEW LISTING - Exrelent 3
bedroom home in Rustic Hil~.
Modern kitchen, las of nice

64 Mite. Merchandise

I ,

I

Gallia County
Area Code 614

MIDDUPORT - Gorgeous 2

1-(614) -992-3325

ADD-ON FURNACE
*Holds 300 lb. at one loadinl
. *Heats all your hot water
11tHeats up to 3,000 sq. ft. House
*Installs easily to your present
Gas·Oil or electric system

thence north 5.73 chams to a
post the sou thea st corner of
PM . and N.A . R1chey"s one-half
of sa1d 100 acre Lot. thence
nqrth 1 75 chams by a line
pass1ng over the m1ddle of the
rUn to a post; then ce north 40
links to a post thence west 79
ch a1ns to a post 1n the wes t line
of sa1o;l lot: thence south 6
chams and 25'h links to the
southwest corner of sa1d lot:
thence east 80 chams to th e
place of begtnntng. conta1n1ng
50 acres . more or ltlss.
Reference 1s made to deed
recorded 1n. Volum e 209 page
305 Me•gs County Deed
Records
The prayer of sa1d compl aint
1s that the above descnbed o1l
and gas nghts be part1110ned.
that the mterests be set off or
order.ed sold tf 11 cannot be
part1t1oned. and for allowance
of attorney fees and cos ts
here1n.
You are requ1reo to answer
the compla1n t w1thm twentyeigh t days after the last publicaliOn of th1s not1ce w h1ch will be
published once each week for
s1x consecutivelAieeits The last
publicatiOn Will be made on
Oct. 14. 1983. and the twenty·
eight days for answer ·will
"commence on that date.
ln case of your fa•lure to
answer or otherw1se respo nd
as requ1red by the Ohm Rules of

Phone .

514·992-2181

8

-We Are Now Accepting Applications for Motor Route Drivers.

Public: Notice

IN THE
The ObjeCt of the Compla1nt
of Elizabeth Sm1 th. dec.:
COMMON PLEAS
BLANCHE FERRELL. whose 1s a pan111on act1on concern1ng
COURT.
address IS unknown. 1f de- oil and gas rtghts and to Qu•et
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ceased the unknown he1rs . t1 tle to 011 and gss nghts
DONALD F. JOHNSON
dev1sees. legat ees. executors. underlymg the fo llowmg desI"UUNTIFF
adm1n1strators and/or ass1gns cnbed real estate.
VI
S1tuated 1n ~Lebanon Town of Blanche Ferrell. dec ..
OEOIIGE MILUA. ET Al
A. B. FERRELL whose ad- ship. Me1gs COunt,y. Oh•o:
.OEFI!N!)ANTS ··
bemg the · south half of 100
dress. •s unknoWn, 1f deceased
·NO. 83 CV 242 ·the unknown he,,s,' dev1sees, acre 101 167 beg·mn1n~ ::lt the
NOTICE BY
' legatees. eXecutors. administra - so~.:~theast cOrner "of sa1d 100
POBUCATION
acre lot No 167, Town 2 Range
tors and / or ass1gns of R. B
TO
Ferrell. dec :
11 1n Lebanon Townsh1p, 1n the
GEORGE MILLER. whose ad·
EllA M. ROUSH. whose Oh10 Company·s Purchase:

dress IS unknown, 1f deceased
the unknown Me1rs. dev1sees.
legatees. administrators. e)(ecutors and / or ass1gns of George
(9) 9. 16. 23 . 30. 41C
M1ller. dec :
Manena Road (old State Route
FLORENCE MILLER. whose
161) and Nor1h 15 deg . 13'
address 1s unknown. !I de West about 202 feet. sa td potnt
Public Netice
ceased the unknown he 1rs.
01 begtnnmg betng marked by a
dev1sees. legat!es, admlnrslraconcrete marker set satd potnt
tors. ex ecutor~ and/ or ass•gns
NOT1C'E 0,
of begtnn1ng also bem g Sovth
of Florence M1ller. dec .:
APPOINTMENT
OF
15 deg . 13' East 313.4 feet
H W ROUSH: whose ad FIOUCIAftY
from a So u thet~sterlv Oh10
dre:&gt;s IS unknown. 1f deceased
On August 25 . 1983.1 n the
State Route 7 R/ W market at
the unknown heirs. dev1 ~ees,
437 + 23 .38 !R/W marker Me1 gs Cou nty Probate Court, legate6s. edm1n1stritors . e:.:ecuCase
No.
24210_
Robe
rt
E.
found); then ce North 52 deg
tors. and/Or ass1gns of H. W .
4-4· East 150 feet to a co ncrete Ru ssel/, 35200 Wolfe Pen Roush, dec ,
Road, Pomeroy. Oh1o 4 5769
m~rker set: thence North I 5
CLARA ROUSH. whose last
Was appo1nted Admu., ,str ator
deg 13" West 313 4 feet to a
knd.vn
address IS c/o Ilene
of the est ilte ot Earl E Rusco ncr~e marker set on the
Stump, 674 Tallkron DriVe.
sell.
deceased
.
late
of
A
D.
4
.
Southeasterly R/ W Ime of Oh10
Akron . Oh10 44300;
Pomeroy. Oh10 45789 .
State Aol.lte 7, thence South 52
ILENE STUMP. whose last
Robert E. Buc k
deg, 44' West 150 leet along
known address IS 674 Tall kron
Probate
Judge
/C
lerk
the Southea5terly A/ W line of
Onve. Akron. OhiO 44300.
(9)2 . 9 . 16 3!C
Oh10 State Route 7 to a
ELIZABETH SMITH. whose
h1ghway A /W concrete marker :
address IS unknown. 1f dethence South 15 deg 13" East
cea!ed th e ,,mknown helfs.
31 3 .4 feel lo the po1nt of
dev1sees. legatees. adm1n1stra·
beg1nnmg, con ta1n1ng 1.0
, execu tors and / or as s1gns
a&lt;:res. more or less.
REFERENCE DEED: Vol. 263.
Page 829. Me1gs County Deed

YOUR
CHOICE

Vinyl

-

SAIJ[

The followtng descnb&amp;d

61-Farm Equipment
52-Wanted to Buy
53-Livestock
64-Hay &amp; Grain
65-Seed &amp; Fertilizer

992·7201

Classified pages cover the u
following telephone exchange.~ ...

35- Lots &amp; Acreage
26- Real Estate Wanted

15-Schools
1 &amp;-Radio. TV &amp; CB Repair
1 7-Miscelleneous
18-WifttedToDo

NOTICE Of

54-Misc. Merchandise
55- Building Supplies
56-Pets lor Sale
5 7 -Musicallns'lrumenrs
58-Fruits &amp; Vegetables
59- For Sale or Trade

34-Businesa Buildin95

1 3-lnsurance
14-Buainess Training

Public: Notlc:e

53-Antiques

'3 1 - Hornesfor Sola
32-Mobile Homes for Sale
33-Farms for Sale

1 1 - Help Wanted
1 2 -Situatad Wanted

'

23-Profvssional SeNices

...,OED·-

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

992-6215 ar .992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

71 -Autos for Sale
72-Trucks lor Sale
73-Vans &amp; 4 WD
74-Motorcycleo
75-Boats &amp; Motors
76-Auto Parts &amp; Accesooriea
77-Auto Repair
78-Camping Equipment

•DDZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSHIS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER , GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS. REClAMATION
WORK
.
•lAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK
GUAIWI1UD
PHONE Jll CLIFFORD

core 111dilton end ' -·

-Piumbint ....

51 - Hou sehold Goods
52-CB, TV &amp; Radio Equipment

3 Announcements

21

Wanted To Buy

1;! ln. turning plow for Ford

-........... wo~~
-c:a.wclll WOI4c

21 - Bu•iness Opponunity
22- Moneyto Loan

~

79 Plymouth Hori•on .
r-==~~~;~~=::nrr=========;J;:========j ===::-~:--:--SWEEPER and oewing mo- !tor
Call448-1807.
RADIATOR
J"F
ch1no repolr. ports, ond
YOUNG 'S
"'
IUppllea.
Pick up lnd
SERVICE
CONTRACTING
dollvery. oovls vacuum troctor . Coli 814 -3 88 -

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

1 -Card of Thanks Ipaid in advance)
2-ln Memory
lpaid in advance)

'.'.'.. . . ' " .
-.................
:;=~======
!9

The

Ill.

PH. 992-2178

1·5-oto

,

3

3

1

•

�•

Sentinel

10-The
41

Ohio

Hou 181 for R01nt

Two dltcontlnued dltplay
kltchens. OaleJ Kltchert
Contor. 304-676-2318 .

cepred. referenc.. . 304676-1076 ,

PIPill&lt;.
c~
'10(1.

lor Rant

Camping

78

Instruments

Friday. September 16, 1983

l'omeroy-Middlepott,

The Daily Sentinel- Page-

Ohio

II

DICK TRACY

Equipment

1----------Bundy trumpet u1ed 1 wk1
tlka new, o226 . Coli 44
7317.

e:

Sean white metal detector
uMd very little $12&amp; .oo: Spinet-Conaole Plano Bar-

WOW!
HOWMUCH

42 Mobile Homes

by Larry Wright

(IT 'N' CARLYLE '"

64 Misc. Merchandise

Full basement 1 V. ltory with
clty water. dbl . garege,
garden , email child IC·

1983

Trailer for rent. Call 4461062.

Now COlt 0410. 304·676·
1943 .

gain. Wanted: Responsible

Fell hunting clinic Sunday
Sept. 26th. 12· 6 p.m . Feetory rap. from seven com panles, door priz8t. archery
ahoot1. speclel1 day picnic,
let u1 help you get into
archery or hunting . Trl
County · Sport Shop, next
Muon Co. Fairground, Pt.
Pieatant. Watch thia newtpaper tor Hunting Specials.

monthly payment• on tpinet
pie!'o. Ce~ be aeen locally.
Wnte Credjte Manager, P.O. i
Box . 637, Shelbyville, IN '
46178.

party

to take

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

over low

24 ft.

Royal

. @

Hight.ndei

1- : - - : - - -- - - - - -

taR

9

11
~5

good cond. Coli 814·3792363 .

IMI

CClUHS

I.
Trombone, exc. cond. Call
614-388-8468 .

I-;-;--:-;--:----:---::--:-Nlartin Acouatic Guitar.
Heavy duty CBIIe, superior
cond. After 7 p .m. call
614 -446-7221 '

STUCCO PLASTERING textured ceiling• commercial and residential, f...e
elllmatN. Call 114-2681182.

RON•s Televialon Service.
Specializing in Zenith end
Motorola, Quazar, and
houaa calla. Coli 676 -2398
or 4411· 2464.

Mobile home for rent . 304676-4046.

44

. UGED T' 5\'j lfo\ HEllE M'I5ELF
\'IHEN I ~A~ A M 7. 'CEPT
~E HAD A ROPE SW/I'Iq
TIED T'THAT ~RANC~! ...

HECH. I DON'T WANT
ANY C~ E DIT FOR SUCH

GOULD YOU GIVE ME
A LI FT 'i' THERE
ARE '" ER.• 50ME
THINGS I HAVE TO
GET". ~ , ,---c:

A LI TTLE T~IN&lt;; ...
EVEN IF Y'OO
HAPPEN T' MENTION IT
TO HER .

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. Regency Inc . Apt~rt·
mant1 UtlltiBe panty· turn .•
apartment• available now.
*200. per mo , A-One Real
Eaat,s. Carol Yaag8r. Real tor. Coli 304-675-6104
304·676· 7386.
Water Wells. Commercial
and Domeslic. Teat holes.
Pumpa S.las and Service.
304·896·3802.
.. ;

&gt;

Oet your carpet in ship ~.,'
ehape. Water removal, FR E~ •;
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE ·..
&lt;;LEAN INCl. ,. CAPTAIN . ,
STEAMER 814; 441·2l07. '

Furni1hed apt . 2 bdr., near
HMC • .U36 utllltlos paid.
243 Jockaon Plko, Qolllpolis. 448·4418 after 7 p.m .

•

Apartment 1 bdr.. furn
Trailers 2 bdrs., turn .• beau~
tlful Rlvarviaw, KanaUga
Fosten Trailer Park. 448:
1802.

Grociry store meat case.
Cal1814-64'-2497.
Antique metal trunk, 3x4
mirror, pole lamps. Cell
814-268-1788.

2bdr .. 2 bath. 1 1 .C ourt St.
Ref. lk dop. 1326 mo. Coli
446-4928.

Antique coffee tabla made
out of a wagon wheel, with
bra11 knobad horH. hamas
•• lags. 8260. Call 4480822.

3 room apartment. furn .,
aduha only, no pets. Cell
446-0952.
Smell turn. houM 1 or 2
adult• only, no pets. Call
448-0338 .

12 ft. dump bed with 2·3
stage cylinden, lower frame
ho1e1 •

Apt, for lease overlooking
city park, unfurnished. $176
mo. Call 448· 1 8 1 9 or even·
ings 446-,4426.

truck
2&amp;83.

Furnished apt. 1 bdr .. adults.
807 2nd. Ave., Gallipolis.,
8200 mo . utilitiea paid .
448-4418 otter 7 p.m.

New Oak Furniture. tablee.
,chairs, cupboards, pie safe.
dry slnka. Paul Conkel•
Antlquea, Tuppen Plalna.

Furnished efficiency apts.
Oood location In town. no
peta. dep. references req .
Call Mr. Dobson 446· 2046
dayt, 446· 2602 evea .

Wiii·Burt stoker furnance
24', good cond . Coil 4481572.

a.

Unfurnithed garage apt., 4
room• lit beth . 332 Third
Ave., Gallipolis. Adults, no
pots. Coli 448-3748 or
81 4·258· 1903.
1 bed room Apt. I 1 98. mo.
lncludinp utllitiea. Equal
housing opportunity. Con·
tac;;t VIllage Manor Aptl.
814-992-7787.

2 bedroon furniahed A.pu.
814-992-6434. 814-9926914, or 304-882·2566 .
1 room &amp; beth. furnished
efficiency Apt. in Ulngsville,
Oh . f100 . month. 614·9925692.
Furniahld efficiency and 2
bedroom Apt. in Middleport,
Oh. No pats. Months rent
plua $100 10curitv. 814992-3874.
Apartmonu . 304-876 8548.
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant
ond Golllpolls. 61 4·446·
8221 '
TWIN RIVERS TOWER.
Apartment• now available to
alderiV lk diNbled w~h on
Income of less than
e12.300. Rontlng for 30
percent of adjuated income.Phone 304-876 -8878.
FURNISHED aportment,
aduha. no pets, phone 304·
175·1463.
In' Mtddloport, 2 bedroom
furniahed apartmenl, 1
child, 1 ·304-882 -2568.

Wanted-Good uled sleeper
aofa end coppertone gat
range. 614·985·3988 .

TV &amp;. Appliancet, 827 Third
Ava .. Qoltipolla, 446· 1699
Spin washers, gaa &amp;. eleclriC
dryers. auto washera, g11 &amp;
electric ranges, refrigera·
tora. TV sets.
REBUILT APPLIANCES
Waahers, dryera ranges
refrigerators. Sh~p repair'
bring it in Bt Save. Cali
446"8181 .

Doop well pump, boat
trailer. clarinet. 247·31 26 .
REPOSSESSED algnl No"
thing Down I Take over peyments t58 . monlhly. 4'K8'
flashing arrow algn. New
bul.bs, lette,., Hale Slgn1.
Call FREE 1 · 800·6287448.

Kenmore wuher t76, Ken·
more dryer 866, alec. range
$86. gas renge 866, Hoover
portable washer t7&amp;. M•v·
tag wringer wether t96, GE
coppartone washlflike new
$176. side by aide retrig.
8176, Coldspot rafrig .
$160, Uving room suite •4&amp;
swivel rocker eas. Sigler oli
heater t7&amp;. chett of drawers
$85, 1 1.000 BTU olr oond.
$96, S~aggs Appliance•.
Upper R1ver Rd. Oalllpolla
'
Oh, 448·7398 .

HILLCREST KENNELS Masaie Harrit 30 good cond
Bording all breeds. Selling Coli 614-245-5675.
·
Happy Jack Dog Food .
Doberman puppies: Stud 197 9 Massie Ferguton end
Service. Call 448· 7795.
loader. 20-C brush ho
grader . blade, cultivat:~
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call tine1, plow, disc. ice chain
814· 367· 7220.
110.000. Call446-2971 , '
~riarpelch Kennell Profes- BN Ford tractor with buth
SIOnal AU-breed grooming. hog , good condition
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa· f1,900 . Call 446·3486 of:
cl.lltlal. Engllah Cocker Spa· ter 8PM.
nrel pupploo. Call 814-3889790.
460
.
Farman djesel tractor
AKC Reg . Old English With . 3· 14 in. plows. 7 ft.
Sheopdo• pupa. Wormed. mowtng mechina. Call 814·
•
245-6096 after 5.
ahou, 8200 . Call446· 7906 1- - - - - - - - - - ofter 6:30PM.
I NEW Oautz tractor•. at or
below wholesale invoice.
Beautiful AKC Reg. Poodle Felt chain saw repair. Siders
puppies. Good quality &amp; Equipment. 304-875-7421.
breed, low price1. Ph . 4480867.
•

AKC Re9 . female
Schnauzer, 10 mo'. old.
Beautiful' markings. Call
441-9883.
AKC Registered Cocker
Spaniel Pups. 2 mala, 1
female. Blond &amp; white.
1100. ••. 814·742-2801 .
Treeing Walk~r Coon Dog.
Guaranteed not to run trash.
61 4-247-2484.
Garman Shephard pups .
176. 614-986·3849 .
THREE AKC Shih Tzu puppies. reedy next Tuesday.
deposit holds, cell304·67&amp;3638 oftor 5 .
POODLES, Pomeraniens &amp;.
Dachahundt. All AKC regia·
tered, 304-896-3958.

HAY •
1866.

1traw.phone 4158-

71

Autos for Sale

72

Truclui for Sale

BO modol rord·plckup good
cond., t3,800. Will taka car
on trade ·in. Call before 2
PM, 1114-387·01132.

TOP CASH paid for . tate
modal .uMd cart. · Smlth
Buick- Pontiac. 18 1 1 Eoat·
ern Ava. , Oallipolle, 448·
2282.
1978 Dodge Aopen llotlonwagon. Call 614 · 388·
9755.
1979 Monle Carlo PS, PB,
air cond .• 287 engine, auto
trant. 49.000 mi. new tlrH.
Call 614-379·2728.

__ '

1973 QMC 14 ton pickup
60,000 mlloa, e1500. 1974
Ford LTD, 60,000. e1.000.
304"876"6461'

73

1968 Rambler cta .. ic,
47,000 ectuel miles. Cell
446-8808.

axe . running cond., good
body. Coli 446-2838 aftor

1970 Volklw~gon atation·
wagon. with lots. of eJCtra
porto. Will tall cheop. Coli
814-388-8634.

19711 Chevy '30', box van
360, Y·8, ...w AT, duol roar
whHie. rollup rear door.
new battery, PS, .PB
*2,7110. Call448-0940. •

1972 Ford Maverick for
aala. $400. Call448·7481

Vena &amp; 4 W.O.

1886 School bua 30 paaoenger, 212 anglno, 4 opd ..

6.

1948 JMp rltbuUt engine •
driVII. New brekea. winch •
battery. Mud tlraa, price
nagotlobltl. Coli 441· 1769.
1971 Ch- 4 w ... --1 drt..-

1976 Butck R-1 air,· AMFM ca11atte, vary good
cond. Call 446·1 184.
1980 Corvette under
10,000 mi. f.lop loothor
interior loaded. Call 44&amp;·
4983 doytlma or 448-2800
eve. &amp; weekends.
1978 Honda Accord
$2,960 . Coli 448 - 20&amp;5
evenings.
'

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
place custom fitt you rhome.
Guaranteed . Advanced Guttor, (Doy 1114-592-4068.)
!night 814·698·8205.1

1979 Ford F-160 Ranger, t ·-----~-_;_
auto, AC, PS. •3.000. Call Roofing and Carpentry ;
448·4053.
work. general repairs. call
Anthony Williamson, 614·
1968 Chevy ~ ton, teoo. 387-0194 .
Call 114-3117·0641 .
Get Your Carpet IN SHIP
19117 Chevy 21-1 t9n truck. SHAPE WITH CAPTAIN
combination dump, grain STEAMER. watel' removal.
bed. wtth oente racks, 304· fumiture cleaning. Free Estl·
mates. e14·446 · 2107.
1176-21 II&amp;.

1978 Pontiac Sunbird, 4
cvl., OUIO. Coli 716-3792728 .

82 Mazda RX 7, QSL, fuiiV
loaded. M ult ull lmmedlatalv. Belt offer. Coil
446·3045 or 448·4604.

E &amp;. R TrH Service. tully l: ·
insured . tree ettlmatas. 1-t
Phone 614· 367·0636, call "
after 5.

-..-,

....

•v.r

pickup. Clood cond. Sharp.
114· 182·7810.
19153 CJ 31 4 wheel drive
joop. e6110. 814-98"·3"88.
o

o

82 . Plumbing

-'

· lit Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 4464477

-~;

JIM'S PLUMBIN!J lk !\eAT•
lNG. Fomerly Dewitt's • :
Plumbing. Call 614-3670678.

83

Excavating

1-::-:-:------_:___ -!,
DOZER WORK Bv Ted
Hanna, ponds, ditchu .
batementa, etc. Call 4464907. Caner •
Evens
Transportation.

•'
.- 1
.. '
;;
,'

Evening televisiOn listings-------------..;._____ ~~~~a===;-liiiilim~il.

Lonnie Boggs Excavating.
Dozer, backhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour or job. Call
446-7903.
t--~-----Cat 216 h:oe. dozers, crane,
loodaro, dump truck . Coli
814-448-1142 between

FRIDAY
9/16/83
EVENING

8:oo

1975 RMichero. P.S, P.B .. J-::7.·_o_o_A_M_Ik_6_:o_o_P_M_._ __
tuto. New brakes, wiring,
pelnl, undercoating. very
good condition. e1500.
378·130 .
7
1110 Cu .. omlzed Ford van.
F160, 302 onglno. 4 a-d
overdrlve. P.B., P.S ., em-fm
8 lraclt
syatem. Cell
114-742-3011.

••reo

74 Motorcycle•

46

Furnished Rooms

For rent St..ping Rooms
and light hou• keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Coli 441-0756.
SIHplna room e116, utilities paid, range • refrig .
Share bath. Man only. 448·
4416 oftor7 p.m.

46 Space for Rent
Large trailer lot on Bulavilla
Addison Rd. Call 446· 4265
or 814- 387-0232.
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork, Routa 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Cell
992-7479.

CD CIJ

rna CIJ tiD 11

.(}) HBO Rock: Neil Young
In Concert Taped in West
Berlin. Neil performs his past
and present hitl.
())Tic Tee Dough
(() Uttle House on the

Good·1 Excavetlng, batemt t
f
· d
n. • · ootera. rlvewaya,
septiC !anks, landscaping.
Call anytime 448·4637
James L. Davison, Jr :
owner.

Pnrlrio

1-:--:---------

CIJ (jj) HIGh Foolhor
ehckRovera
8:30 It()) Cil NBC Nowa
()) Love Thot 8ob
C1J II ilJ ABC Newa
It()) tiD CBS ()) lulinea Report

J.A .R . Coneuuction Co .
Water Lln81, Footar1
Drains. All kindoofDitching:
Rutland , Oh . 81 4 · 742 ·
2903.

Meigs EJCuvating . Bulldozer
Ia backhoe .-vice. Basements. footars,landacaping ,
drlvewaya, farm ponds.
614·742-2407 or 614· 742·
2068.

7:00

I

~PM~Ine

(I) IMido Tho NFL
(I) luma • Alf•n
l]llportiContar
CIJ Good Nowa
()) Entwtainmant Tonight
(l) Chlrllo's Angola
• (I) Wheel of Fortune
.CD liD MecNoH/Lehrer
Newshour
ill Nowa

Amana gaa range .126,
sofe·love seat-chair $150.
Sao ot 448 Third Ave .•
Gallipolia, Oh.

1 sofa, 2 end tablet 3
double bedt, 1 rollaway. Can
814-387-0403 .

7:30

•1=:·u::
.,_at

Ooblo Clltlto
ESPN'1 lneide Football
CIJ MoJor "-uo Beaebell:
Ben
ACIJ
Fornlly Feud
()II You A8kad For It
It &lt;12 Emartolnmont
Tonight
One 1)-v .-: a Time
8:00
()) C[l 111 Annu.l ·
Yummy Aw.rds Ricky
Schroder
and
Dwight
S&lt;;huhz host this tab-off oo
tahtvilld ewardl ahows
thlt Involves NBC's new Sa·
twdly morning line-up. 160
min .}
C1J MOVIE : 'Time Rider'
(I) MOVIE: 'lloclw Ill '

•.t:J6 .00 • up good used
washers &amp; dryera. 30 daya
warranty, good number to
chooaa from, Call814-268·
1207.

a ())

e

715

54 Misc. Merchandise

Motors for Sele

Knaufl Coal&amp; Firewood Buy
now for eaesoned wood thia
wlnt•. Call8t4· 2B8-824li .

JONES BOYS WATER SER VICE. Coli 114-387· 7471
or 614·387·0691.

1 4 ft. flbergloaa V bottom •

tilt trotlor. Coil 814·241·
15178.

Umeatone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered In Maaon, Melgt
Galli• or pJck up at Richard~
lk Son. Coli 448-7786 ..
Slightly irregular ctr~l.
ramanta and whola houM
300 Romence Books. 304·
size. ldHI for rental income.
885-3877.
IIC . Prices ltlrtlng It t2.99.
f3 .99 aq.vd. Cell614·982·
Building for children waiting
6173 .
for bua. 304-896-3821 .
~ ~---------­
Hoover portable waaher •
1 979 Malroe Bobcot "Loaa
dryer like now. 4-18' 7 .60
thon 100 hn", troltor, 8ft.
tlroa, 2enlth portoblo TV oxc.
Yorl&lt; roko, bucktt. olao 18ft.
cond. 1978 LTD 114,000
flot bed troller wnh ncka.
octual miles. Coli 448· 7273
aftw I and S11urday and , 304·1176-2702 or 876·
4128.
Sundoy onytlmo.

Boatl and

17' See Stor akl boot, 1 40
HP, 10, accunrlet, excel•
lent condition. Trailer .
•6.600. Coli 448-34111 ofter IPM .
12' JOHN - · 304·8781

===

4!;~";':'::;=~;::·

19119 GTO, 400 cu. ln ..
_.t, now battery, 2 oxtro
rima. runo good, •eoo.
304-816-3824.

1978 Plymouth Volore
Ranah Waean. run• good.
good condition, •110, negotltoblo, 304·171· 1 117 .,.
876-2112.

76

Auto Parte
lit Accanorlea

Clls--

Nud aomothlng houlod
away or aomethlng moved?
We'll do it. Call 446- 3169
between 9 ond 5.

l]lNFlllomeoflhoWeek

Cll&amp;!Ba• (I) liD Dultee of H..-d

To IIVI the Duke f.rm from
rozed, Bo and Luko
hive to prov• that the town
tteetf tl being 'hOgwaahed.'

1 - - - - - - - - -- Will do water hluling for

olaterno ond owlmmlng
pools. 614-992-6868.
JIM&amp;

WATER

IRI 110 min .I

CIJ(jj)~W­

SERVICE.

R..._ Paul Duko II joined
by top Welhington ;oumel-

Cell Jim Lonlor, 304-675·
7387.

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

I·

- a.

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 113 Bee. Ave., Clolllpolla.
4411-7833 or 441· 1833 .

r.....
It

. .r

Motor Md euto tran1mls·
alon for 1171 C " - e
371·1341.
'

.,.,.,zi!IU

1111

·=30

lho woalc ' I

MOVIE: 'The Sondpl·

Femll¥" •• 1801'

..:a~··=.:!:: 't=

Covoraga of the Columblo
Cup II priMnted from Tri Q..

tloi.

WA . (10 min .)

w-

CIJ It
Ill
IPIIEMIEIIEI An ••·foolboll
.'

.

Atlantic City, NJ

11 ilJ Muoio Magazine

12 :45 (l) MOVIE: ' Blood Rela tlvea'
([)Album flash: Ronstadt
1:00 (])I Married Joan
(() Entertainment Tonight
ID GJ News.
'I :15 Cll MOVIE: ' Monty Python
Uve at the Hollywood
Bowl'
Cil MOVIE: 'Purvis: G
Man'
1 :30 (])
Cll My Uttle Margie
Beet of Midnight
Specialt
OJ !D CNN Headline Newa
2 :00 II
(J)
NBC
News
Overnigl:n
(l) Bachelor Father
(!)News/Sign Ott
2 :30 (1} Not NecesNrlly The
News This show promises
to be everything the current
news is not .
(IJ Ufe of Riley
2:45 · (f) MOVIE : ' Yanks'
3:00 II (lJ News
([)Inside The NFL
· (I) 700 Club Special :
. Seven Days Ablaze
ill ESPN'e Inside Football
3:16 ® CNN Helldllne New•
3 :30 IJ) CFL Football: Winnipeg
at Calgary
4 :00 (I)
MaeArthurtDefiant'
Gen. Hal Holbrook narrates
th1s look at the life of the famou1 91neral.
4 :30 CD
MOVIE : 'Firat Monday
in October

10:30 ())Star Time
(]) lnelde Business Today
(ff) Masterpiece Thutre
'The Flame Trees of Thika.·

I

TWO bedroom apartment In
Henderson, phone 304·
675- 1972.

•

llJ Nawa

player tumed sportscaster
and his new bride find lhemselves instant paren 1s of lhe
orphaned son of a forme r
teammate.
Wall Street Week
CIJ llllRukeyser
Louis
analyzes lho
'80s with a weekly review
of economic and investment
matters.
9:00 8 (J) ffi MOVIE: ' Young
Frankenstein'
Cl) 700 Club Special:
Seven Da....
,_ Ablaze
(I) 8 ()) Lottery! Flaherty
and Rush 's lottery winnings
help a small store compete
against a glam supermarket.
(60 min .)
II (() GD MOVIE: ' My
Bodyguard'
(])Lawmakers
GJ) Six Great Ideas
9 :30 · ()) Nol Necessarily The
News This show promises
to be everything the current
news is not .
(]) CFL Football : Winnipeg
It Calgary
(I) Enterprise
10:00 CD MOVIE : 'Green lee'
(]) MOVIE
,a, : 'The Boat'
CIJ . . \.161 Matt Houston
When a policemen is jailed
for a ·murder he says he
didn't commit. Matt sets out
to find the real murderer. (60
min.){Ciosed Captioned]
(J) IareaU Diary
® INN
NewoNawa

The Palmers' lateSI effort e1
conforming their area to English slandords arrives bul it
doesn't help \he couple's
troubles. (R) (60 min.I
!Closed Captioned!
• In Search of...
11 :00

CIJ Or. Who
Bonnv Hill Show
1 1 :30 It ()) Cil Tonight Show
()) Another Ute
ID Cetllno
CIJ . _
ltCIJMOVIE: 'Sky Aldora'
C1J ~ght America
(]I Allin the Famlty
(lt Nltlhlllno
Twilight
Zone
1 1 :48
HIO R-: Nail Young
In Conoert; Taped In West
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end present hitl.
1 2:00 CIJ Bumo lk Allon
ID Night Trocks

I

.

6 :00

8

Cile (I) (1J Newe

CD MOVIE; 'Sooner or
Later'

())The Monrooa

(!) God Hae the Answer

Cll Undoroea Worid of

Jacquoo CouatNU
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Gunamoke
8: 15 Cll Worid ChlmplonOhlp
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11:30 It()) Cil NBC Nowa
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(I) N.W.

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tiD CBS
Nowa

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tho Bljou

'The Montier Maker:

7 :00 ~ Cl) O.OC. Fever
ABu Smith Md Jonn
NFL Clime of tho Woalc

CIJ II CIJ Hoo How
([) Momoriaa with Uwr·
.,_Walk
CIJ GrMt Rlllwav
At T h e It
Waa

I

~

7:30

Joumev•

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;(1

and William
joinsome
host
Oiek
Clerk toConrad
presen1
of the
· funniest flubs and
goofs that were never Ind d f
viewing.
()) • (iJI Love Boat Love.
lldventure and crazy hijinks
abound as the "Love Boat'
sails to the cities of Rome
and Venice. (R) (2 hrs .J
[Closed Captioned)
1!1 ())()OJ MOVIE : 'Senior
Trip'
(()World War I
till Dr. Who
9:30 (I) MOVIE : 'Somewhere
I'll Find Yau'
10:0011 (I) ffi Miss America
Pageant Gar-/ Coll1na hqst
th1;; year 's ceremonies from
A11antic City, NJ . (2 hrs .)
(I) SAO: Dollv in Concert
(l) MOVIE: 'Purault of
D.B. Cooper'
(I) Changed Uves
Switch
10:30 (I) John Ankerbero
= Groat Performoneoo
WI
"Brideshead . Revisited .'
Charles lind Julia make plana
for thei r wedding and Corda·
lia returns from the war
brinRinR news of Sebastian .

~~r c:O m~~-tubfic

welcorn~:~s

(60min .J(Cios~dCaptloned]

t11 ()) C1DJ Walt Disney
'Baseball Fever.· Donald
Duck and Goofy saluce the
sport of baseball. (AI (60
min.l
(I) Unknown war
GD Cle11lc; Country
t1J MOVIE: ·An American
In Perla'
8 :30 e CD ffi Silver Spoon•
When Ricky can 't get 0 erek
8 date for the big dance, he
decide&amp; to pose as the girt of
Derek's dreams. lRl
(!) s.turday Night At The

e

JJlJJJMID~
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mak~up

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8 Keep out
of mischief

c.

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17 Famous

9 EMoble

MG M
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18Stripof

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11 Four, in
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contalner

21 BasebaU

23 East Indian

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21 Scottish
seaport

r;--r;-n"..,;,-,

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30
Fagin

foUower
34 WestPoint

vessel
241 Ordinary

eleven

38 New Guinea ·

2Z Slave away 29 Devoutness

team
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31 "BaH - "

13 Sununoned
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27 Kill
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31 Nig~rtafl

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33 Shinto

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~

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Anta'
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12:30
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The houaehotd is turned up·
side down when Mr . Drum·
mond becomes Arnold 's
roommate for a week. (A)
[Closed Captioned)
Cl:l MOVIE: 'The S.t Unla
Whorahouta In Texee'
(f) MOVIE : 'Und Csrs '
Cil MOVIE : 'Men In W•'
([! NCAA Football ; Wast
VIrginiaIDio
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Cll
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aboard
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the upcoming fall season.

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Page

12-The Daily Sentinel

~roy-Middleport,

Ohio

Also Victor Palnler, Mlcldleport,
· speed, $21 and costs; Robert
FQreman, Pomeroy, speed, $43 and
costs; .William Hayes,Dexter, falled
to display valid registration, $15 and
costs, unsafe vehicle, $10 and costs,
suspended; David Wolf, Chester, no
motorcycle endorsement, $75 and
·costs, three days cOnfinement, If
ilcense Is obtained In 30 days jail
sentence and $25 of fine wUI be
suspended, failed to display valid
· ucense, $W and costs; Charles D.
Wllson, Middleport, hunt squirrel on
· posted CIHlp hunting agreement
land without permission, $25 and
costs; Michael Smlth, CoolvUle,
speed, $16 and costs; Ronald

Pu.bli"C

Lemon, Clear Fork, W. Wa., sjJEed,

... ___ ____
(Continued from...:,...::._.
page 1)

Plummer was the only witness
called Thursday as McDermott
concluded the defense.
Plununer lestlfles
Under questioning about the
charges Plummer testified:
-Jeffrey Plummer was an employee of the 648 board and, as such,
would not be under Blll Cantrell's
supervision. Cantrell, former maintenance supervisor for the IIicounty mental health center (now
the Woodland Centers) testified
earlier he never saw Plummer
working at the Jackson bulldlng.
-Her husband Elnon did not pay
for his airline ticket Immediately
because of a slip-up. However, both
ber and her husband's tickets were
later paid at no cost to the board.
-More than $22 mlillon have
passed through the 648 board In 12
years and one90 cent beer Is the only
Wl8Uthorlzed expense she knows the
board paid.
· -Whlleonecharge accuses her of
damaging relations with the mental
health center In connection with
contract negotiations, Plummer
said she received no reprimands

Cincy councilman
wants pit bulldog
ownership banned.

$W and costs; Richard Herman,
Middleport, no mumer, SIO and
costs; Michael Schloss, Pomeroy,
falled to display a valid registration,
$15 and costs; Russell Nltz, Pomeroy, no dlivers license, $40 and
costs; Ern~t Rollins, Albany, DWl,
$WO and costs, three days confinement, license suspended six
months, left of center, SW and costs.
no drivers license, $50 and costs,
three days confinement; Otis
Drawdy, Jr., Rutland, DWI, $150
and costs, three days conftnement,
license suspended 60 days; Freda
Swan, Rutland, littering, $25 and
costs, fine will be suspended on
condition that litter Is cleaned up In
seven days; Terry May, Gallipolis,
non·support, pay $WO per month
regular support, $00 per month on
arrearage, two years probation;
Rodney Spurlock, Tuppers Plains,
criminal damaglng,15daysconflne.
ment, restitution, one year probation and costs; Robert DeMoss,
Covington, Ky., trespass, threedays
conftnement, one year probation,
refrain from visiting a partlcuk'U'
n.~ldence, costs; Ron Prldemo:-e,
Rmland, flst.lng without a license,
$15 and costs; Tim Herdman, no
addrf'S.• rerorded, pet~· theft, :lt
days co!1f1Mment; restitution and.
costs; Beth Gloeckner, no address
recorded, disorderly conduct, $25
and costs, six months probation;
Danny Buffington, Pomeroy, hitskip, $00 and costs, 30 days
conftnement, 18 days suspended,
assault, $50 and costs, :ll days
conftnement, 18 days suspended,
nine months probation, criminal
.mischief, $25 and costs, restitution; •.
Ste-ven Nease: Mjnersvllle, left of .
center, $40 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Melody
Bowyer, Mllton, W.Va., Melissa
Oesterling, Butler, Pa., Richard
Egnot, Cambridge, and John He!·
muth, Massillon, speed, $50 each;
Jeffrey L. Gerenclr, Charleston,
Speed; $41; Jeffrey Webb, W.
Portsmouth, overlood, $.llO; Peter .
F1uhr, Underwood, Ind., falled to
display valid registration, $45;
Louts Furmanskt, Blacksburg, Va.,
speed, $42; John Mackie, Gahana,
speed, $43; Kenneth Hagy, Taron!a,
Clh.,speed,$44.

from board members during the
process.
-Health Insurance was not
cancelled for Mark Johnson after he
left the board because It was part of
his compensation as a consultant.
-The . board approved actions
which led to the following charges:
spending of $445 for two paintings;
spendlngo!$15,(XX)for publication of
a book; h1rlng of excessive numbers
of employees and consultants;
engaging In too much travel.

.CINCINNATI (AP) - A city readY by then.
councllmanwantstobanownershlp
"I'mlnfavorofsomehowbanntng
of pit bulldogs In Oncltmatl to pit bulls from this community or ...
protect people from the danger of making.a presumption In law that If
belngmauledbyunrestralneddogs. a dog attacks a person, that dog can
Falling that, counclln)an Charlie be ~ed to be a vicious dog and
Luken said Thursday, be wants to the owner can be subject to criminal
give the city authority to criminally prosecution," he said.
Hesaldltwtllbedlfflculttolegally
prosecute ownG·s whose pit bul·
!dogs attack other people.
define a canine breed for tbe
He said, however, that he Is stlll purpose of banning It, particularly
willing to bear and consider the because breeding alters a dog's
rebuttals of owners who protest the ancestry and characteristics.
The city already has an ordinance
restrtcttons on their bulldogs.
Last week, one of the dogs designed to protect the public
attacked and killed 11-year-old against attacks by "vicious dogs,"
Marcellus Hampton In Cincinnati, butLukensaldltlsn'tstrongenougb.
mauling his head and severing a The ordinance prescribes a tine for
neck artery. Police later shot the allowing vicious dogs to run loose.
He wants to make It a first -degree
year-old bulldog, which had ~
·purchased about three weeks ear· misdemeanor for an owner whose
Iter as a watchdog for the victim's pit bulldog attacks someone, and to
mother, Nguyen Hampton.
provide the stiffest penalties the
,.
Luken said he Is concerned CltyCouncO can assess - a $1,0XJ
because of that attack and other fine and six months In )all.
COUNCILMAN WANTS BAN - Cincinnati City oouncUman
CharUe Luken has asked lor a ball on owoenhlp ol pll bulldog!lln the
recent maullngs In· which the
TwoyearsagolnCinclnnatl,aglrl
victims survived, but were Injured. was bitten by another pit bulldog,
city following a fatal ~k on an 11-yeaJ'o&lt;l!d boy last week. (AP
Laserphoto ).
He has asked City Solicitor which pollee later shot. A month ·
Richard Castelllnl to recommend later, another man was bitten by his
an ordinance to accomplish what pet pit bulldog.
. . · . . Tuesday In Tol!'do, .a pit bulldog
the coW1Cilman wants to do. .
:. (''
"Tm sort bf reluctant to pass which had · broken tree from Its
anything that cannot be enforced," owner's leash bit a 6-year-old boy In
Veterans Memorial
Emergency runs
Luken said Ina telephone interview. the groin. The victim, Identified as
The councllman said he has Robert Gresham, was visiting
Admitted--Ste-ven · Lush, PorTwo calls were ansWered by the
received
complaints from people relatives In the northern Ohio city
!land; WUbur Whaley, Shade;
RaclneErnergencyUnltThursday,
by neighbors' pit bul- with his farrllly from Fort RUey,
frightened
Joyce Smith, Rutland; John Cay· the Meigs County Emergency
!dogs and from ownets of tbe Kan. He suffered a deep cut on his
oor, Jr., Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Medical Service reports. At 8: 32
animals who oppose the proposed groin and was reported In fair
Dlsclulrged··Raymond Lambert, a.m., Steven Lush, Stlversvllle, was
restrlctlons. He has scheduled a condl~n Thursday at Toledo's
Wllllam Morris, Tamara Ervin, 1aken to Veterans Memorial Hasp!·
Sept. 'n meeting to bear citizens on Riverside Hospital.
Rebecca Davidson.
, tal and at 7:"29 p.m.,-Don Hill was '
Admltted·-VeJya"l\mburgey,Syr:- · taken to the Holzer Medical Center. · ))oth sides present tbelr·case. but he
doesn'tknowWhetherbewtllhavea
acuse; Tamara Erviil, Raclrie; ·
draft of his proposed ordinance
Dortha Handley, Langsville; WOStill h08pitalized
11am Morris, Racine.
Monday picnic
Dlscharged··Rohert Preast:
Don Folmer,who was Involved In
Gladys Moore, Carl Ralrden and
T""''"l.J
a motorcycle accident two weeks
lx•.ouoo(ully ,lf,,igno.~l
Racine American Legion AuxllOra Rice.
ago, remains a patient at Holzer
f urw: r~l JrrJn~•·n~t·m .
lary, unit 602 wtll have a picnic
IU" ullnr •b or
Medical Center. Hlsrpomnumberls
\
Monday, Sept.l9, at 6 p.m. at Lewis
POMEROY
Mortgage burning set
.322.
Park.
FLOWER SHOP
Mei..,.
yearbooks
here
Persons to brtngcovereddlshand
.. n. ""' '""'"'"'''"''' .........
Nine years ahead of schedule, the
mortgage on tbe Laurel Cliff Free
Meigs
Methodist Church wt11 be burned
.. High School 19&amp;'1 of
yearbooks
are now available. Books
during morning worship services at
may
be
picked
up at tbe school any
10: 30 a.m. Sunday. Speaker on tbe
week
day
from
8
a.m. to 8:40a.m. or
occasion with be tbe Rev. Eugene
Buckley, a former pastor of tbe fromll::lla.m. to1p.m.
church. The pastor, theRev.Robert
1!18ued license
Miller, Invites tbe public to attend
the ceremonies.

...

Meigs County happenings

r-;::===·

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REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

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boys' and girls' wann-up outfits - men's sweaters - boys' shirts - women's sportswear - ladies'
PJ's - men's sport shirts -girls' jeans -travel bags
- junior blouses - furniture specials - boys'shirts.

To end marriages

, Weather forecast
Mostly cloudy tonight with a 40
percent chance of showers. Low
5J.58. Winds southwesterly 1~15
mph. Partly cloudY Saturday. High

70.75.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday throulll Tue8day:
Fair. Highs In the '70s Sunday and
In the a&amp; Monday and Tuesday.
Lows~Sunday, wannlnglo55-415
by Tuesday,

Gospel sing set

$39

99

Gilbert and Vicky and the Singing
Gospels, Columbus, wtll be featured
Saturday, Sept. 24,at7::llp.m. at the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church,
Middleport. The group will appear
at the Rutland Freewill Baptist
ChurchonSunday,Sept.25,atlp.m.

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Kentucky .............. 24

Auburn ................-... 7

North Carolina ...... 48
Miami, OhiO .......... 17

Wi.scort.$in .............. 21
Missouri··············~· 20

I O'tf)(J •••••••••••••••••••• ·•• 42
Penn State ............ 34

Michigan State ...... 28
Notre Dame .......... 23

Texas ..................... 20

Indiana ..·. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . 13

+

unba

tmes

Gallia·school bus·accident injures· 13
MERCERVILLE -A collision between two Gallla
County Local schoolbuses south of here Friday
afternoon sent 13 people, most of them elementary
and secondary students, to the hospital.
No one was seriously Injured In the accident, and all
~ later treated and released from Holzer Medical
Center, a hospital spokesperSOil said Saturday.
The Gallla-Melgs post o! tbe slate highway patrol
said the accident occurred at 3: W p.m., about two
.mlles south of this soulbernGallla &lt;;ounty cooununtty
on Ohio 218.
·
·

Trooper Kelly Worstall said the buses, both 1981
Fords, were southbound at the time of tbe colUston.
One bus driven by MerrlJl S. Waugh, 63, Rt 2, Crown
City, attempted to stop and was struck from behind by
tfte other oos, driven by Franklin L. Brumfield, 45, Rt.
1, Crown City.
Brumfield's bus was reported severely damaged In
the accident, whlle Waugh's bus was moderately
. damaged. The patrol responded to a call for
assistance, and tbe.. GaUia Cauniy Emergency
Medical Service ·sent four ambulances to tbe sCene tO

tend to Injuries. Parents of chlldren riding the buses
were also present at the scene.
Brumfield suffered minor Injury In the collision,
and was cited by tbepatrolforassuredcleardlstance.
Twelve other people, all students In the Hannan
Trace attendance area, were taken to HMC by the
EMS and laler treated and released for bruises and
strain, an HMC spokesperson said.
lbey were Identified as Christina M. Caldwell, 11,
Rt. 2; Crown City; RobertM;. Harr~$0~1, 5, Rt.2, Crown
City; Paulil Van Hob!ie, 14, Crown City; Angela C.

Caldwell, 14, Rt. 2, Crown City; Joyce J. Garlinger ,16,
Crown City; Mary Al)n Barcus,10, Rt. 2, Crown City;
Beth Mills, 11, Rt. 2, Crown City; Cynthia J. CaldwPll,
11, Rt. 2, Crown City; Amy Mills, 9, Rt. 2, Crown City;
Mtcbelle Harrison, 12, Rt. 2, Crown City; Chris line L.
Unroe, 16, Crown City; and Tracy L. Brannen, 8,
Crown City.
Gaiita County Local Schools Superintendent Gary
Toothaker said Saturday .an ~t~mai · inv~tlgation
Into the accident Is underway."
·

State tax repeal
could lead to hike
in college tuition ·
By KEVIN KELLY
Trlbuae Sial! Writer
RIO GRANDE - The boards of
trustees of Rio Grande College and
Community College are expected to
discuss the possibility of Increasing
tuition and fees If the move to repeal
the state Income tax Increase Is
successful fcln the November
election.
·
TheboardsmetthlSweekend,and
faced with a possible 30 percent
decrease In tundlngfrom the state If
~ Is approved, one college
otllqal feels the boards of both tbe
private and community colleges
wtll have to .look at cutbacks as an
alternative.
...We're under pressure here,
because tuition has never paid for It
all," said Dr. E. Wade UndeJWood,
college provost, who said an
lncrease In tuitional the107-year-old
private college has gone Into effect.
Underwood said tuition for the
year In tbe pr1vate college has gone
up from $7,900 to $8,250. A corresponding Increase In room and board
fees of $lJl has been approved,
meanlngastudentalsopays$650per
quarter to reside on campus.
But no Increase has been Implemented for the community college,
Underwood added. The cost lor
attending that Institution's course
offerings remains at $19 per hour.
Ally projected Increases In the
community college - which has
experienced enrollment growth In
tbe past few years- wtll depend on
repeal, Underwood said.
·

Underwood ooted that some oftbe
college staff have taken a stand
supporting the retention of the
Income tax Increase, but trusteesnf
both schools wtll consider tbe Issue,
In his opinion.
Enrollment at both colleges has
topped the 1,500 figure, tbe maxi·
mum the boardS have said Is Ideal
for the school.
Tultlon and fee Increases at
RGC.CCappeartobelnllnewiththe
Ohlo Board of Regents' report th8t
showed the state's public college
and university fees have gone up 9
percent this fall.
That flgure Is slightly less than the
national average of 10 peJcent,
regents learned IJ1 a special report.
Chancellor Edward Q. Moulton
noted that the modest Increase was
attributable to the first stable higher
education budget In tbe state since
1979. Moulton said the 191!3-l!5 state
appropriation to colleges and uni·
vers!tles Is $125 rnllllon less than the
regents' recommendation, but was
enough to halt "rapidly escalating''
fees that were caused by state
budget cuts.
"At the present budget level,"
Moulton said, "Institutions are able
to maintain services and assure
access for nearly 400,000 students.''
Moulton took a sland two weeks
ago supporting tbe Income tax
Increase to maintain the relatively
stable ftnanclal picture for colleges
and local school dlstrlcls he said has
been created by ~ddltional
revenues.

Block grants
awarded for
. area
jobs
,
programs
.

ACCIDENT VlcnM - GaDia County Emerpncy
Medical Service paramedic Tom Saanderll pnplll'fl8
1o"""""" 8-ye81'0ld Tracy Braanen of Crown City Into

By JEFFGRABMEIER
'l'lmM
SWf
POMEROY- Dave Isn't his real
riiune, he won't reveal his age and
he'll only say he lives In Meigs
Cpunty.
·· He'd rather be employed, oot
while looking for a permanent job he
h8s found a way to make ends meet
- growing marljuana.
. Dave agreed to talk to tbe
'limes-sentinel about being a martjualla growerlnMelgsCountyunder
the condition his real name and
other personal data not be used.

a stretcher following a collision betWeen two
!!Citoolbuaw oo Ohio 2lll near Mercerville Friday.
Twelve ot11ers were lrealed for minor Injuries.

GALLIPOLIS - Grant awards
totalling $700,(XX)wtll help create job
programs In Gallla, Meigs and
Athens counties, Rep. JolynnBoster
announced Friday.
The funds are part of an $11.7
91lllion dlstlibuted through the
state's Community Block Development Program.
Mrs. Boster, D-Gaillpolls, said the
money wtll be dlstrlbuted In this
fashion- $2.ll,100 to Athens County
for home health and education;
$143,750to the city of Athens for alley
Improvement; $229,800 to Mlcldleport for housing construction and
training; and $100,000 to Gallla
County for bridge and guardraJJ
improvements.
· TheOhloDepartmentofDevelopment received the funds earner this
year from the Emergency Jobs Bill
legislation, enacted by Congress.
Funding ts used to create jobs and
stimulate business development In
rural and non-metropolltan
communities.
"Our objective was to create as
many jobs as quickly as possible
with the Jobs Bill funds," Mrs.
Boster said, adding that she !eli
state government has targeted
money to areas In thestatewlth the
greatest employment needs.
Across Ohio, 2,WO jobs wtll be
created In 58 communities as a
result of tbe $11.7 rnllllon 1n grants
awarded through the state.

Woman alleges discrimination in hiring

By BOB HOEFLICH
gerty said be was disappointed at
not having been asked to return to
'lbnell-lle!l&amp;lnel Sial!
the position when the salal'y was
POMEROY - A Middleport
Increased.
woman Is considering charging the
Meigs County Board of Health with
Young was one of two appllcants
discrimination as a result of Its . Interviewed by the board. In a letter
recent employment of an assistant
to several public officials, the
sanitarian.
second applicant, Evelyn Bauer,
That position- tbefllllngofwhlch now charges she Is more qualified
had alreadY causedcontroversydue tor tbe Job than Young.
The following excerpts from that
"I'm not Into It really big-time," to the resignation of a fanner
employee
and
the
hiring
of
a
letter
contain Bauer's allegations
Dave says of his Involvement. He .
became
avallable
replacement
concerning the board's action to
makes between $3,000 and $10,&lt;XXI a
.
year - enough, he adds, to pay bllls when David Haggerty, Rock employ Young:
Springs, resigned.
and ooy Christmas gifts.
"This Is In concern of the position
. Haggerty was hired -at a salary of tbe new assistant sanitarian. I
For the past seven In eight years
am very perturbed by this whole
be has grown three or tour small of $7,(XX) per year - as assistant
situation. I also applied for the
patches each season, each with 15 to sanllarlan this summer, but resigned from the post on July 22 to ,position and was one. of two
:1Dplants.
applicants called In for an Interview
Although It may look like easy accept a better paying job with the
for tbe position.
money In some, Dave says there Is 0.0. Mcintyre Park Dlstrlct In
"The Interview and notification of
work Involved. Marijuana growers Gallla County.
Recently, JoeYoung was hired to who got the job was very poorly
have all the problems of a
conventional farmer and, of course, fUl tbeposltlonata salaryof$12,(XX) managed by Mr. Jacobs (Ed. Jilote:
per year. Last Wednesday, HagJacobs Is deputy health commls·
(Continued on page A3)

stoner). ·The Interview with the
board was okay, but the following
nollflcatlon was very tacky and of
poor taste In my viewpoint. Mr.
Jacobs had Mr. Young and me both
sitting In the lounge at the health
department together. Then he
came In and announced the winner
and loser. I have spoken of this with
many people and most were
appalled at tbe way It was handled.
"Mr. Jacobs came out and satd,
'I'm sorry, Evelyn, but the board
!eels Mr. Younghasmorequallfica·
!Ions for the job than you.' - right
there In front o! Joe Young. It was
quite humlllatlng. It was bad
enough I didn't get the job, but he
didn't need to degrade me also.
"What Mr. Jacobs did not know
was that whUe Mr. Young and I
were sitting In tbe lounge, we were
talking. And In our conversation I
learned: I have two years of college
In the health field, part nursing and

part medical records with classes
In community health whtch covered
environmental aspects. Mr. Young
has only one year of college In
ooslness and accounting which has
nothing to do with being an
asslslant sanitarian. After having
studied In classes of community
health and pathology, the study of
disease, and 1 dld many medical
records reports, I am very much
aware o! the tmwrtant role a
sanitarian plays In a community. I
have also worked In health care
facilities and once as a waitress. I
know what Is expected concerning
food service faclllties In the san!·
tary field. Mr. Young has only
worked In loan companjes and ,
banks and mostly as a deputy
(sheriff's deputy). And as far as
being certified, Mr. Young wtlJ
probably be paid or reimbursed to
take classes I've already had, or I,
(Continued on page A3)

'•· to · .. ma -750

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Ball State .............. 31
Ohio University ..... 14

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Ohio State ............. 24
Oklahoma ............. 14

'Meigs County .
Green': farming
with a difference

60, 75or

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Friday, September 16, 1983

O'Brien finishes
50 court cases
Forty defendants were fined and
10 others forfeited bonds In Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Kevin Enos, Ocean Springs,
Miss., speed, $24 and costs; Dixie
Dldlsse, BeallsvUle, Ohio, speed, $W
· and costs; Joseph Newman, Les·
age, W. Va., speed, $22 and costs;
Allred Rusche!, Sr., Pomeroy,
speed, $17 and costs; Jay Mitchell,
BeallsvUle, failed to display valid
registration, $10 and costs, no
drivers license, $00 and costs, three
days confinement, jaU sentence and
$Wofftnewtll be suspended If license
Is obtained In 30 days; Steven
Trussell,' Long Bottom, speed, $22
and costs; Paul Mllllron, Racine,
!allure to control vehicle, SW and
costs; Gregory Thomas, Pomeroy,
left of center, $10 and costs; David
Blake, Indianapolis, Ind., speed, $21
'and costs; Rodney Carl, Belpre,
speed, $22 and costs; James Wyatt,
Pomeroy, speed, $26 and costs;
· Michael O'NeU, Pomeroy, faUure to
• controi,$W and costs; Carol Baker,
· Racine, passlngbadchecks,15days
· confinement, eosts, restitution; R&lt;r
· !Jert E. Johnson, Columbus,
speed,$W and costs; Edwin Ash,
. Racine, speed, $21 and costs;
. · :Thomas Smith, Pomeroy, and
: David Mlinn, Pomeroy speed, $22
· and costs each; Guy Sargent,
:. Pomeroy, falled to display valid
· license plates $10 and costs; ~lnda
· Goodin, Pt. Pleasant, speed, $22 and
. costs; Raymond Hawk, Gallipolis,
. Speed, $24 and costs.

'

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...... lllllleplb' lnlaae ..._
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WWIM dullc

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t)mlce .................... 1.-.t:

a_,.._

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E:JII ' h ........ ~o ........... A.~

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JIIIP. Dr.ll:clnnl F. .,......, Jr.,

FMII........................... 8-8
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rfiN, II* • • RW lor8Dcrhu&amp;,

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Be , . ....,. .... tatallor u
0!1111118 of npe -llotllercbarpl.
!liar; • l'llpJH
-

Sport~ ........................ C..l..S

STAR SUPPLY
3RD

AloDa tbe mv. ........... B-1~
•

I'

A lut of bani wort., and patience,
lltlderiiDM lhe elfor&amp; undertaken to
IJ'Illn Alldrew IUc!Uu-d Lambert 1A1
bec:Grue lelf·•dflclent. 'l1le braindamaged Melp County youth Ill
being trained by . . famlbo and by
wlunleen, allundertheiiUpervlllion
ol bill ~. with oped•l
lnlllrudlon from a 1 1 - potential
center balled In PhDadelpld• 'l1le
tralnlngwiDtakeyeanandrequlres
12 boors with volunteers working In
ohlft&amp;, but aD Involved wanllo aee II
llll'oulb 111110 Andrew can move on

biiiOWD.

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