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                  <text>Monday, Novem ...r30, 1981

•

Meigs County happenings ·
Meets Wednesday

Given divorce

l'llmeroy Maaonlc Lodge IM, Free
and Accepted Maaona, will meet .t
7:30 p.m. Wednuday at the temple.
Retrealunenls wjll be llerved.

In Melp County Ccmmon Pleas
Court Penny WIUiama wasaranled a
divorce fnm Dana WIWama.

Refreahmenls

Board meets tonight
. Pomeil,y Chapter 188, Order of
A special meellnll of the Meigs Easten! Star, will meet at 7:45p.m.
Local Scbool DIBtrlct Board of
School.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday
Admlsslon-Alhert
Jesse, Pomeroy.
Saturday
Discharge-Judith
LOOKING FOR THE METER- Two workmen for
llollon Gaalook for !be gas meier In an attempllo sbut
off lbe burning gaa In the rubble of a lire wblcb
destroyed 17 buildings In Lyu, MaBI. Salllnlay. The

workmen and firemen were on band Slllllhoy mornlq
In an effortlo lolally extlngulBh lbe blaze. The fire left
750 homeless and caused an estimated $$-mlDloa· lD
damages. (APLaserpbolol.

Decline indicates further
weakness in economy
WASffiNGTON (AP) -' A broad gauge offulureeconomicstrengthdecUnedinOct~ber, the fifth
drop in SIX months, the government sa1d Monday. The decline points toward a UkeUhood of furlher
weakness in the recession-struck economy.
·
The Conunerce Department's Index of t.:ading Indicators dropped 1.8 percent during October,
a UtUe better than the 2.2 percent decline mSeptember, which was the sharpest fall since May
1980,in the beart of last year's recession. Preliminary data had placed the September drop at 2.7
percent.
Of 10 economic indicators designed to forecast future trends only four showed improvement
last month, said the report.
'
Figures wo~ned from.September to October for Americans' labor layoff rate, delivery per·
formance, building penruts, contracts and orders lor plant and equipment factory orders for
manufacturerd goods and total liquid assets of U.S. companies.
' ·
The ' 'layoff rate contributed the greatest decline," said the report.
.
Figures unproved for average workweek, change in sensitive crude materials prices stock
prices and the money supply, it said. ·
'
The index fell in May,June, August and September, It was unchanged in July. ·
The national economy has shown litHe overall strength since·February leading econ.omists inside and outside of government to say the economy Is in a recession.
'
The governm~nt'sbroadest measure of economic activity ~ inllatiOII·adjusted gross national
produc;t- declined m the second quarter of this year. But revised figures showed It rose in the
thi~ ~uarter. The increase -at an annual rate of 0.6 percent- was almost entirely due to 8 buildup m mventones, a clearly recess10nary trend that indieates producers and manufacturers were
having trouble seiUng their goods.
In October, the Index of Leading Indicators fell to 128.1 percent of the 1!167 base which is used
only lor purposes of comparing gains or losses in individual categories.
'

14.die on Ohio highways
By The Associated Press ·...
The dead:
The long Thanksgiving holiday
SUNDAY
weekend started and ended RAVENNA - Larry T. Williams,
relatively safely on Ohio's roads, but 30, of Atwater, in a on...:ar accident
seven deaths on Saturdsy boosted on a Portage County road.
the state's weekend traffic toll to 14
SATURDAY
the Highway Patrol said.
' CANTON - Michael A. Cockril, 21,
4lcluded were two double-fatality of Canton, and John E. Maurich, 28,
accidents.
of Massillon, in a tw&lt;&gt;&lt;:ar accident
The patrol counted traffic deaths on Ohio 172 in Stark County.
from 6 p.m. Wednesdsy until mid~Q:Y - Edna L. Ganger, 18, of
night Sundsy.
Tfoy, in a two-&lt;:ar accident on Ohio
50 in Miami County.

Slsson.

Sunday Admisslons .. Terry
Barrett, Dexter; Harry Wyatt,
Minersville; Raymond Douglas,
Middleport.
Sunday Dischsrges-Barbara Hen·
drix, James Couch, Jeffrey Couch,
Thomas Hayman, Patricia Lauder·
milt.

Approximately 650 area residents
attended the BMual open house of
Francia Florist held Sunday af.
temoon at the shop on East Main St.
Display windows were done in an
effective white color scheme accented by clear twinkle llt!hts'. Santa
appeared during the event visiting
with children attendiilg and door
prizes were awarded to Goldie
Pif'kens, Mrs. Karl Grueser, Bert
Hickman, Edith McDade and Lorna
Johnson.

Accidents keep patrol busy
A serid' of minor accidents kept
the GaiUa·Meigs Post of the state
. highway patrol on the.go during the
remainder of the weekend.
The patrol said Franklin E.

Harvesters aa.u ol Trinity Church.

Voi. JO,No. 141
Copyrighted 1981

-

Suspects.••

28, ru. 2, Vinton, was soulhhound 011
Rl. 325 at 7:10a.m. today when her
cat coiUded with &amp;·deer, which continued on. Her vehicle was
moderately damaged.

J ;

•

(Cultinuecl from page I)
When It was dlllcovered that
Tuesday at 1be temple. Obligation Wilaon had been injured during the
night will be observed and officers ucbange of gunfire, he was laken to
are to wear their cbapler drelles.
Veterans Memorial H!llpltal where
he remains under J'OIIIId.the.dock
!' pollee guard. Chief Stitt said that
· Wilson was In stable coodltlon this

650 attend event

'

momlng
Mrs. Wilaon remains ln custody.
She was allegedly driving the getaway vehicle. It was reported that

those huddled together on Fountain
Square while tbe president attended
a Republican fund-raiser across the
street in the Westin Hotel.

SALE I

CHRISTMAS
SPORTSWEAR

PROTEST REAGONOMICS - Proleslors gsther on ClnciDDBII's
FOUDtala Square Monday evealug 1o protest lbe .Cooomic policies of
President Ronald Reagan while Reagaa attended a Republican lundramer across the street atlbe Westin Hotel, leH. The protestors set up a
soupl Une as a eounter-demoll81ratioa lo lbe cocktail party hosted by the
state Republican organlu!tion. ( AP Luserphoto).

littlir1RJJ

Reg. s13~.~ ••••••••••••••• SALE s10
Reg. s11~..........•...... SALE
Reg. s2~................... SALE
Reg. 26~.................. SALE s20

•••

.

LD

'

Death ruled acciden,tal

•
•
LOS ANGELEs- Tipsy and evidently wanting to get away from the
ya~ht where ber husb!md and another actor were arguing, Natalie
Wood tried to step into a rubber dinghy but feU into the water and
drowned, officials say.
·
The 43-year-old actress had been drinking champagne and wine, and
"this was one of the factors involved in her not being able to respond in
case of emergency," County Coroner Thomas Noguchi said Monday
after certifying the death as accidental drowning.

Departments provide protection
\

Receptive. audience

Jn!el'lllllllon.

AJACCIO, Corsica - A chartered DC-9 airliner carrying 168
tourists and six crew membel'li slwnmed into fog-shrouded
mountains 30 miles from the airport here today and Ajaccio police said
all aboard were killed.
They said the wreckage of tbe Yugoslavian Inex·Adria Airways
craft WB.!I found. by search parties oil the slopes above Casa
Casalabriva, about30 miles south of Ajaccio airport, nearly four hours
alter radio and radar contsct with the plane was lost.
High winds and fog had hampered efforts to locate lbe downed
plane, pollee said.
Yugtr~lav

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELANJ&gt; - The winning nwnber drawn Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Nwnber" was 229.
The Ohio Lottery reported earnings of $533,522.5(1•rom the wug•ring
on Its dally game. The earnings came on sales ut f956,947.50. while·
holderi 01' Wihnlilg tickets are entitled to shsre $423,425, lottery of.
flcialnald:

Dllltlt""UUILY
ROOM ONLY .

.

A recepllve audience · of approsimalely 800 penons attended
the final musical presentation of the
Big Bend Minstrel Alaocl.ation held
at lbe Meip High Sdlool Auditorium
Sltardly nigiK. 8palllortng lbe show
called the "FaD Follla" wu the
.,... AtbleCie a-tm. On bebalf
of lbe C..C. Jim SoalabJ Jll' lllnlld I '
gilt tD clreclor Bob Hoelllcb during

COVIN(;TON, Ky.- More than a dozen noribern Kentucky safety
departmenl!! protected President Reagsn to and from Greater Cincinnati International Airport at Hebron and a Republican lund raiser
In Cincinnati.
·
Pollee blocked all interchanges along Interstates 75 and 275, ,at underpasses and bridges. •
·
Two Ufesquads trailed the motorcade and police in nearby Campbell
County were in place in case the Secret Service decided at the last
·minute to use Interstste 471, according to Newport Police Sgt. Ed
Freudenberg.

174 die in air disaster

Make 49 payments
get the 50th FREE.
Sorry, No Sullllllutos ncopt
Bevtr•gH which Mve •n •ddlllonol prlco ..

Crow's Family Restaurant
24W.Maln

Fartners

Served with Whipped
Potatoes, Chicken Grevy,
Cole Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter
·and Coffee ..

Ph. 992·5432

Pomeroy, OH.

.'

Bank.

nveatherforecast
Scaltend ahowera lllnlght. Lows 4:Hi41. Mostly cloudy with a chance

.Mtmbor FD.IC

of llhowers Weclneadlly. Highs around 50 but temperatures falling lnlo

the 4011ln the afternoon. Olance of rain 30 percent tonight and 40 per·
cent Wednelday. Wlnda IOII!hwaterly J.$.25 mph tllnlght.
'
,
8• 1 Wo.JoForecaal
Thursday through Saturday:
Chance of lhowera Cll" illow Ourries Thursday. Fillr Friday and a
chance of ma and warmer Saturday. Highs rnoat1y 1n the 40111'hurlday and Friday and In the upper 401 to mid-1011 Saturday. OVernighl
Iowa In the 2011 early Thanday IUid Friday and mosUy In the 3011 early
Salurday.

The Community · Owned B•nk
'.

11

SU¥JeCt

'
COLUMBUS,
Ohio - While the U.S. Department of Agriculture
reported a continued slide in prices paid to fanners for their raw
producl!! in November, Ohio !ann leaders called for higher prices ss
one answer to the nation's economic woos.
The agriculture department said the November slide was the fourlh
straight month when prices averaged below year-earlier levels: The
department's index for corn and other feed grains dropped 2.5 percent
from October and averaged 22 percent below a year ago.
While that report came from Washington, the president of the Ohio
Fann Bureau Federaiion, David 0 . Miller, said the best gilt Ohio far·
tners could give the world would be corn that sells for $4 per bushel.

RAPEVINE, Texas (AP) Moments alter two brothers, one of
them dying of cancer, embraced and
ended a bitter 27·year separation,
the )'OilDI! son of one of the men
Clllla~ from an apparent heart at·
tack.
Sleven Tobias, 12, was pronounced
deed just aJ minutes after he saw his
dying uncle, John Tobias, for the fil'sttlroe lna Thanksgiving reun1011.

pastthe rally, which was held across were in sharp contrast to the cheery
the street from the front of the hotel. Christmas lights decorating the
But some in the crowd that slipped square.
Mayor David Mann, a Democrat,
across the street toward a side en·
trance of .the hotel booed loudly told the crowd that he wa.!l COli· •
when the motorcade approached.
cerned about the fate of cities under
Labor leaders lashed out at the the Reagan administration's cutpresident for attending the Ohio backs. Cincinnati plans to start
GOP lund·raiser, wbere those who laying off employees in 11112 to
wished to meet the president in a balance its budget.
"Trickle-down (economics) is not
semi·private reception paid $15,000
working," Mann said. The citizens
apiece or $25,000 per couple.
Protesters lined up to receive I know have not figured out which
plastic foam cups filled with broth. side is the supply side. But they
(Continued on page 12 l
The anti·Reagan posters and signs

robbery

McGuire, 38,onRt.
Crown
southbound
Rl.I,7in
Clay City,
Twp. was
at il r;;;;;~·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
p.m. Sunday when an unknown nilr·
thbound vehicle came left of center
and forced McGuire's car off the
road.
LlnLE BOYS'
Tbe accident caused sllgbt
damage to his car, the report said.
The patrol went to Rt. 143 in Meigs
County at 6:30 p.m. Sunday when
another unknown vehicle went off
the right ide of the road while norSuits, Dress Slacks and Sport
thbo
In Scipio Twp. and plowed
·Coats to !'lake your
m two mailboxes.
The vehicle came back onlo the
look his Chratmas Best!
road and continued on, troopers
said.
Month Sizes thru Size 6X.
In other matters over the
weekend, the patrol said Alvin
39
Taylor, 40, Pomeroy, escaped injury
when his car struck a deer on Rt. 7 in
Meigs County, one mile south of Rt.
248, at 6:55 p.m. Salurday. His
vehicle was slightly damaged.
According to the report, a vehicle
driven by Jeffrey W. Ohlinger, 24;
Pomeroy, was attempting a left tllm
while northbound on Rt. 7 in Meigs
5
79
County at I :40 a.m. Sunday when
another vehicle driven by Robert V.
Haggerty, 77, Middleport, attempted ·
to pass Oblinger and collided.
2nd Floor - Children's Dept.
There was aUght damage to both
vehicles and no citation was issued.
The patrol said Shirley A. Fitch,

Area deaths

Heart attack claims
man''I) young nephew

Reagan's opponents agreed on one
thing as they formed symbolic "soup
lines" - the administration's
economics policies were failing and
hurting the needy.
HThe atmosphere is repressive,
The atmosphere is ominous. We are
in a recession already/' Marian
Spencer, president of the local
NAACP branch, told the estimated
I ,500 to 2,000 people on the square.
The president and Nancy Reagan
were whisked through an underground parking entrance to the
hotel. The motorcade did not drive

Another

Leaders call for higher prices

AU THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT.

u Cenb
A Multimedia Inc. New·• p:per

Unusual group forms
presidential protest
air traffic controllers were among

.

fvery. Tuesday Night At Crow'•

2 sections, 12 Pages

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 1. 1981

CINCINNATI CAP)- An unusual
coalition of polillbal, labor and
religious groups sipped cups of
steamy broth together Monday nigh~
in a show of solidarity against
President Reagan's budget policies.
Groups opposed to social spending
cutbacks, nuclear weapons, U.S. in·
volvement in Central America, the
Ku Klux Klan and the firing of the

several shots ·were filed at the
vehicle during the chase.
Chief Stitt 8111d a nwnber of
charg'" will be filed against Wllaon.
Pbarmaclst Ron Hanning was 011
duly wben the robbery took place at
the Pomeroy drug &amp;lOre Sunday
night. There was only one cu.stomer
1n the establishment at the lime of
the (Obbery and she was 1n lbe front
of ~ ~ and wa.!l not aware whst
was taking place.
MeanUme, residents breathed a
sigh of re1lef and commended pollee
Officers for the successful operation
8unday·night. Robberies bave taken
place over the past several weeks
and have been a matter of public
concern in the amaU local cornmunlties where such occurances
have been rare.

·O pen a .
.. Christmas .Club Account
·at ·the Farmers Bank~

enttne

at

aerved

.' Unughout lbe bourl of the open
house by ~ of the Happy

Meets Tuesday

Education will be held at 8 this
evenlng at the Meigs Junior High

were

•

•
•. t

•

arrested
A third arrest has been made in
connection with the robbery of tbe
Swisher·Lohse Drug Store Sunday
night.
According to sheriff James J.
Proffitt, Glen A. Thompson, 24,
Columbus, was arrested Monday af- ·
ternoon when he came to the Meigs
C!)Wlty jail to visit his siSter, Anita
L. Wilson.
· Mrs. Wilson was arrested Sunday
night following the robbery and is
presently In custody as is Thompson.
AJ§o arrested in connection with
the robbery was Michael Amos
Wilson, 28, Reynoldsburg .
Wilson received chest and arm iJlo
juries in an exchange of gunfire Sun·
day night and is confined at
Veterans Memorial Hospital where
he remains under round-the-clock
police guard.
Just before 8 p.m. Sunday, Wilson
allegedly entered the Swisber·Lohse
Droge Store on E. Main anned with
a chrome plate automatic and
proceeded to rob the store of drugs.
However, he was unaware that the
Pomeroy Police Department had installed a special alann system in the
drawer that would have to be opened
to get the drugs. The alarm sounded
at tbe Pomeroy Police Department
slation.
Pomeroy Patrolman Steve Har·
tenbach, who was on the stakeout
near the store, was alerted by radio
that the robbery was taking place as
was Patrolman Tom Werry. Hartenh&amp;ch watched the suspect leave
the drug store and followed him on
foot to Syrcamore and Main Sts.
about the time Patrolman Werry
arrived in tbe cruiser.
The suspect was ordered to hal~
but he turned and fired two shots at
the officers who returned fire,
Wilson was apprehended just after
10:30 p.m. at the Gary Smith
residence on Osborn St.
Wilson allegedly forced his way in·
(Continued on page 12)

VEHICLE USED IN ROBBERY - The vdllcle
used in the robbery of the Swisbei'-Lollse Dnlg Store,
E. MaiD St., Pomeroy, Sunday nlghl was checked Monday aflernoon by pollee officers. Several buUels struck
the vehicle. There was evidence !bat three bullels
struck the side of the Chevrolel Blazer and two hit the

wtndahield. AI lbe scene Monday were, ~r, Pomeroy
Police Cbief George SUit and Sheriff James J. Proffitt.
The glass panel on the side of the vehicle was broken as
the resull of a shot fired from IDslde the vehicle, Sheriff
Proffitt staled.

Board, OAPSE reach accord
Meeting in special session Monday
night, the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education approved a new one year contract with
non..:ertified employes providing for
pay increases and several fringe
benefits.
Negotiatol'li for the board, Dan
Morris, assistant superintendent,

and Robert Snowden, board mem·
ber, met with the negotiating te~m
of tire )QCal Ohio Association of
Public School Employes Chapter for
a final session at 5 p.m. At about

8:40 .)'l'.m., the session ended and the
agreement was presented to tbe
board of education.
All four members of the board
present for the special session,.
Snowden, Bob Barton, Dick
Vaughan and Larry Powell, vot~ in .
favor of ratification of the new contract.
Non·certified employes are
scheduled to meet Thursday evening
to consider ratification of the
package which is retroactive to
Sept. 1, this .year, the date when the

last contract with the non-certified
employes expired.

Under tenns of the agreemenl the
board of education will pa~ fall
premiwns for families for a dentsl
plan which will include relll!Onable
and customary coverage. The board ·
will pay the lull premium for a
family visual plan. Vacations were
increased with one through seven
year employes to receive two
weeks; eight through 16 year employes to receive three weeks and 17
(Continued on page 12)

Patrol cites
driver Monday
A driver was cited in a tw&lt;&gt;&lt;:ar ac·
cident in Rio Grande Monday af·
ternoon, the Gallia·Meigs Post of the
state highway patrol.
According to the report, John W.
Barcus, 22, Rt. 1, GaiUpolis, was
w~bound on Ridge Avenue at 5:02
p.m. when he reportedly failed to
stop for a slop sign and travelled OJlo
to West College Street (Rt. 3251.
Barcus' car was then struck by a
southbound vehicle driven by Allred
A. Scarberry, 53, Rt. I, Th..nnan,
whicb severely damaged Sca!'berry's car.

Barcus' vehicle was moderately
damaged and be was cited for
failure to obey a traffic control
device.
The patrol reported a Rt~ h. Crown
City man escaped injury when his
car craShed into a guardrail on Rt.
218Monday~

Charles R. Sts~·IO,-was nor..
thbound, ~tentha of a mile north
of Rl. 790, at 7:25 a.m. when his car
went off the right side of the road on
a curve and struck the rail,
demollshlng Stapleton's vehicle .

MOST roPULAR - Sanlll agsiD preved bll
popularity Ia Middleport Monday evenblg wben the aa111181 puade was bold lo welcome lbe Clorlotmas
-soa Sllown on the Buta Ooat are the belpers, I to r,
Aqle Case, DeeDee Cue, Am)' Blake ud Darcie
Hysell. Mils Candy lnge1a wu apln cbalrman of the
parade through the ballneSI 1eclioa wblcb wu Uned

&gt;

Wtlb old and YOWll nltiaC lor their~ of....._
S,..Ot'ed by. the Mlddleparl Cbambe of &lt;'&gt;*"' c:e,
lbe ..rade lealnred tloe Melp Hlp Band, •
w
IDIU'Chilll 1111118, qaMBS, cbeerleaden, pkbp lnldll
carryiDfl varl~ IJ"I!U.. IDII Sanlll. Sanll dlltriiMW
treats to cblldmllollnU!g lbe parade and mere. . .
staged a moonlllbl ale.

.'

�•

•

Tuesday, December 1, 1981
Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, December I, 1981

Comntentary

Topsy-turvy tre~d
hits basketball too

James J. Kilpatrick

How not to run a governmen..______________
WASffiNGTON- In the midst of
the hullabaloo on Capitol HilllO days
ago, \he House took one vote that
was worse than all the rest, Once
again, the House killed a pay raise
for senior executives in the federal
civil service.
It was an act of pure,
unadulterated folly. The vote
provided a textbook example of how
not to run a government.
Since March of 1977, almost five
years ago, the top career people in
federal service have received one

raise of 5.5 percent. Because of the
"cap'' fixed by Congress on
executive salaries, 46,000 key administrators at eight levels of
responsibility find themselves
frD'ten at $50,112. The freeze has had
, a devastating effect upon morale
·::~nd upon the hiring of executives to
replace those who retire.
One of the most maddening aspects of \his wretched situation is that

the congressional penny-pinching
hasn't saved the taxpayers a dime.
On the contrary, the cap has cost us
millions in early retirement annuities. There is no good way to
estimate what it has cost us in
executive talent.
Consider a few examples. The Of·

lice of Naval Research is losing a
senior electrical engineer, now
frozen at $50,112, solely because of
the cap. He is charged with running
the Navy's multimiljion-dollar
program of basic research in elec·
Ironic warfare. He enjoys his work
and has been selected for promotion
to the Senior Executive Service
(SES). But he has been offered a
salary of more than $60,000 in
private employment, and off he goes
- taking his experience with him.
The Naval Research Laboratory
in October lost an SES superinten&lt;jent who left to take a university
position at a 50 percent increase in

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
6Jt-99Z-215f
DEVOTED TO mE rNTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

~m~ ~L-.,...I~d·~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
PubliaheT

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
GeRral MaiUiger

Asslslant Publisher/Controller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor

A MEMBER of The Assoclilkd Press, Inland Dally Press A&amp;!lGCiatlon and the
Amerl"an Newspaper Publlshen Auociatlon.
·
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION au • ·el('omed. They should be less than 300 words long. All
leUers are subjed tu edlling and mu1l be slgued with name, address and telcpbone number. No uulg:n~ lelkl'll will be publlsh.ed. Letten should be In good tute, addreulng
Issues, oot penonalllln.

pay. He had concluded that govern- raise for the executions be linked to
ment employmeht held no future for a pay raise for members of
Congress. Otherwise, a btlreaucrat
him.
.
Jerome A. Smith, technical direc- might be paid more than a senator
tor of the Office of Naval Research, or a representative, and that would
says his agency has lost a fourth of never do. With congressional
its top executives in the past two primaries only a few months away,
years. Hall of them, in his view, . members of the House were un"represent major losses to the willing to vote themselves a raise.
Navy.n
On a voice vote, they shouted down
In any rational scheme of things,
Congress would provide incentives
to keep these top executives in the
federal service. But when Congress
gets around to executive pay scales,
rational thinking disappears: The
I
I
.
present situation positively en- If~ T WOT(I(. tr IVoNt IIO!tk.'
courages early retirement. The
executive who stays on the job gets
- '~
no raise, but the executive who
retires gets annual cost-of-living adjustments in his annuity. A;; a consequence, 3,137 career people
retired in 1980, compared to 508 in
1977.
Alaska's Sen. Ted Stevens attempted valiantly to relieve the
lunacy. On Nov. 19, by a vote of 5441, the Senate agreed to modest increases for members.of the SES and
for other executives in civil service
Grades 15 through 18. If the House
had agreed, tliese career servants
would have received increases
ranging from $4,600 to $7,900 a year.
But the House wo\,lld not agree.
House conferees insisted that a pay

It is not easy to take one plus one and still come out with just one, but Big
Labor has done it. ·
At its recent national convention, the American Federation of labor and
Congress of Industrial Organizations doubled the representation of both
women and blacks on its Executive Council.
It did it the easie;i way - by selecting Barhara V. Hutchinson, vice
president of the American Federation of Government Employees and black,
to join the one woman and one black already on the 35-member body that
calls the policy shots for the multimillion-member organization.
That may sound like playing a numbers game in response to longstanding pressure from minorities within the memberhsip for greater
representation at the top, but it is nevertheless thoroughly appropriate. For
numbers tell much about the AFI.rCIO today, 26 years after its two feuding
houses became one.

In !955, unions represented 25 percent of the total national labor force of
close to 70 million. Of the total union membership of some 18 million, AFI.r
CIO affiliates accounted for 15 million.
· Today, union membership is up to more than 22 million. But the labor
force is up even more steeply- to 107 million - and organized labor's share
is down. To 21 percent, AFL-CIO membership continues to hover around 15
million.
Instead of doubling its memberhsip in short order, as ambitiously
pledged by the late Walter Reuther of the United Auto Workers, the
amalgamated federation has lost organizational ground m an expanding,
rapidly changing economy and labor market.
That market shows a massive .shift toward service, technical and
professional occupations. It also has been characterized by the rapid growth
of minority group employment and by the appearance of millions of women
in jobs that were either male preserves or did not previously exist.
But for most of the past quarter of a century, the AFI.rCIO has seemed to
be only distantly aware of that shift, cootinuing"to focus its organizing efforts
on the old-line, blue-collar heavy industries and crafts that had been the
origin of the union movement. Industries apd crafts, however, that were of
declining importance to the economy and where the work. force was
shrinking.
·
And among blue-collar workers, a minority - 39 percent- is currently
unionized by Bureau of Labor Statistics' count.
Some organizational ground has been gained in two of the most important governing employment areas, education and government service.
And it is noteworthy that new council member Hutchinson's government em. ployees are right up there with the old-line auto workers and steelworkers
amoog the AFI.rCIO's largest affiliates today.
But Big labor has done poorly in other vital areas such as the burgeoning
high-technology industries that are already shaping the economy's future.
It is now two years since Lane Kirkland took over the leadership of the
labor confederation from the legendary and overpowering George Meany,
who had made of the AFL-CIO "the custodian of the status quo,'.' in
Reuther's words.'
It may be too much to expect sweeping changes in such a short time and
with so much organizational inertia to contend with. Kirkland, who came up
within the confederatioo structure, is probably better positioned to make
them than.the old-line leadership with its craft and industrial union ties and
mentality.

Letter to the editor
Owner wants answers
1 have a question for all people of
Meigs County.
What do you think of people who go
oo someone else's property and tear
down "No Hunting and
Trespassing" sig111 on lhll property
- and keep on doing It? I have been
· a taxpayer here for llmoll50 years
- a widow now and In bad health.
Would any of you Just.go put up

more signs for them to have tom
down? Or would you put them off the
place with most anything you could
get in your hands?
Perhaps I would be put in jail and
they would be out poaching on some
one else's place. I would appreciate
as many answers DB I can gel. Goldie Clenderun, Portland.

remain on the job, thus avoiding

outlays for retb:ement and for
replacerDent personnel.
Such argumenta did not prevail.
We remain locked Into the kind of
absurdity by which a senior research psychologist at the Pentagon gets
the same salary paid to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. This
isn't penny-wise. It's pemy-etupid_

WASffiNGTON (AP) - Vice
President George Bush wasn't sent
home when much of his government
shut down for a few hours last week.
But he wasn't sent anywhere else,
either. And he was left without most
of his staff.
President Reagan, in a veto confrontation with Congress over goverrunent spending authority, ordered
thousands of federal workers
for the day on Nov. 23.
That included most of the employees in Bush's office. A planned
Bush trip to New York for a speech
also was scrubbed.

What'did Bush do? He came to hiS.
office in the Capitol. Since he is
presiding officer of the Senate under
the Constitution and Congress had
approved a money bill for its own
operatioos, Bush has a small staff on
Capitol Hill that was not affected by
the shutdown.
"He really wasn't needed up here,
but he had nowhere else to go," said
one top Senate GOP official, who
asked not lobe identified. "I guess it
just shows that the administration
views the vice president as a nooessential employee."
In the House, ijep. Gerald B.H.

By Tbe Alaociated Prell
The topoy-turvy trend that has
taken buld of college football seems
to have spread to the basketball

cOurt.

Upsets have seemed the nonn
rather than the exception on college
gridirons lhll year and, if the first
weekend of college basketball iB a
fair indication, The Associated
Press poD will see plenty ol
movement among the Top 20 basketball teams . .

TAUUNG BUCKS- F......,.. Now Vorl Yukee

ReUle hcboa lllareo a lallJb wllb Ted Timler,-

of lbe Atluta Brave&amp; M.....,y Ia A••, 11n

befa

taiidDI oerloally about [lllllble aegotlaUou ill eoatnd. Buller Ia ~ dlly, Jaeb011, aow a free ageat,
• wltll CalllorDla ADcela Geaeral Muager "lllllzle"
....._ f AP Luerpbeto).

Three SVAC teams tune-up
for league openers Friday
Solomon, R-N. Y., caused a ruckus
when he interrupted Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. to 'claim that
the Democratic-led Appropriatioos
Committee wanted io ddestep the
budget fight for a two-"'eek ex;
cursion in Italy.
''I do not want to get off into who is
going to Italy.! know I am not go;og
to Italy," protested O'Neill, h
Massachusetts Democrat.
Rep. Silvio Conte, R-Mass., then
rose to defend the Italian trip, which
he helped set up. At the State Department's requf!!t, a bipartisan
delegation would visit earthquake-

ravaged areas and sign various
relief contracts, so' 'it is not junket,':
Conte insisted.
"If you want to fault anybody, Mr.
Solomon, fault me," Coote said, turning on his GOP. colleague.
At that point, Rep. Millicent Fenwick, R-N.J.,' joined lhe fray, offering to address colleagues "in
pure Italian if anybody wants to
hear it."

She defended the trip as "an excellent expression of the concern
thai this country feels for our Italian
friends."

Three SV AC schools, Hannan while Eastern claimed a 54-47 triwnTrace, Southwestern and North ph over Federal Hocking last
Gallia, will be involved in non- Tuesday evening.
Big Tim DIU's 11 points paced
league basketball action tonight.
Hannan Trace opens its season at Coach Denni.l Eichinger's Eagles. In
Symmes Valley; Southwestern Saturday's Tornado victory at
opens at Chesapea[le and North Miller, Kent Wolfe took charge of a
Gama plays its second game at second .hall comeback to lead the
way with 28 pointa.
Trimble.
Coach Bruce Wilson's North
Unlike football season when all
schools played non-league opponents Gallia Pirates with perhaps the best
the first five weeks, action begins in overall height in the league this
the Southern Valley Athletic Con- season, were beaten, 78-50 in their
ference early Friday riight with opener last Saiurday night at Oak
Hill.
three league games.
Right off the hat, arcb.rivats . Bnice Shriver, a senior, led the
Eastern and Southern meet in a big Pirates with 10 points. Bobby Black·
battle at Racine. In years past, it has burn and Matt Kemper scored eight
been hard to find a seat after the . points apiece.
It wiD be the fil"llt outing this year
opening tip of the reserve contest.
for
veteran coach Keith Carter's
Southern is fresh off a com~from­
Kyger
Creek Bobcats.
behind, 61-49 victory over Miller

Solomon took his seat and dropped
the issue.

White House has terrible' .tablecloth crisis
.I

WASmNGTON (AP) - With her
new state china about to be
delivered, Nancy Reagan has
another problem: not enough
tablecloths.
"We have a terrible tablecloth
crisis," White House social
secretary Muffie Brandon said.
And there is no money to purchase
new ones.

To make matters worse, Mrs.
Brandon said, "One set of
tablecloths, to my complete and utter horror, went out to the dry
cleaner and shrunk."
On another occasion, she added,
''I saw a little rip in a beautiful linen
overlay" and she personally sewed
the cloth together just before Mrs.
Reagan's luncheon guests arrived.
"There is not a limitless supply of
decorator linens" at the . White

.

• Reagan's living quarters on the
House, Mrs_ Brandon said.
Though Mrs. Reagan recently second and third floors.
The White House Historical
raised more than $822,000 in taxdeductible contributions to refurbish Association revealed recently that
the White House, most of it has been the money was used for a variety of
spent and the rest already is planned things, including restoring 150 piece
for other things.
of furniture; replacing 72 lamp
In addition, there was a separate shades and 18 carpets and pads; purdonation of more than $209,000 from chasing new curtains and drapes for
the non-profit Knapp Foundation 26
windows;
replacing
wallcoverings in 10 rooms, seven
used to purchase new china.
Sheila Tate, Mrs. Reagan's press closets and eight baths, and
secretary, said the first lady has no replacing obsolete plwnplng fittings
plans to purchase new silver in eight baths.
The remaining $100,000 is earbecause the existing flatwear will go
nicely with the china. The first ship- marked for refinishing mahogany
ment of the specially made Lenox doors oo the state floor, refinishing
china is expected in mid-December.
the wood floors and buying a new
"We don't have any money" for carpet for the ground floor.
Mrs. Brandon said she tries to
11\blecMhs, Mrs. Brandon sighed.
make the best of the tablecloth
Most of the redecoration fund $730,000 - was spent on President situation by varying the look I!S

much .as possible with candles, centerpieces and overlays in contrasting-colors.
For example, she said, she found
"old lace overlays up in the attic"
that can be used on top of the
tablecloths.
Most of the lablecloths, used on
round tables at formal banquets
hoooring visiting heads of state as
well as at less formal occasions are
either linen or heavy eotton, Mrs_
Brandon said.
Red, Mrs. Reagan's favorite color,
is represented in the inventory as
are several pastels for the spring

was declared 'essential.' "
He pulled .out a pair of storm boots
and a cable from one of his drawers.
''I was wondering where this was?''
"What is it?"
"It's a coded cable from Nikita
Krushchev saying he wanted to
defect when he came to the United
Nations. He said when he took his
shoe off and started banging the
podlwn, it was his signal for us to
surround him and spirit him away."
"That cable's been in your drawer

TEAM

aU this time?" .

"I knew I put it somewhere. No
one in the department would take
my word I got it so they let Khrushchev go back home."
McKinney opened another drawer
and took out a large bottle of Alka
Seltzer and a yellow piece of paper.
He studied it for a moment and then
said, "I'D be darned_"
"What'·
... it'-'' I ---•ed.
"It's a $500 milllon check to save
the New York Central Railroad. I
guess I forgot to mail it. Now I
remember! The Treasury sent It

~~~

SVAC Standings
W L

Southern
Eastern
Hannan Trice

But Mrs. Brandon said that being
limited to six different changes of
tablecloths presents a woblem for a
presidential family that enjoys entertaining.

P

9 I

667

s s

592

8 2 596
6 ~ 620

Southwestern
North Gallia
Kyger CrHk

and swruner.

over at five o'clock and I stuck it in
"I'm getting to it now." He took
my drawer, and thert the next day I .out three golf. halls, a pair of ear
had the flu, and when I got back to muffs, 'II' electric razor, a bow tie, a
work it slipped my mind."
bus transfer and a set of blueprints."
"That could happen to anybody."
"What do you know? I've been
McKinney kept digging · in the looking for this for years," he said.
1
drawer. He pulled out an old copy of
' What is it?"
"Look" Jlll!gazine, a paperback
copy of "Gone With the Wind," and a
"I can't remember any more. It's
sheaf of papers which he studied either an urban renewal plan for the
carefully_
South Bronx, or a diagram of the
"Hnunmnn/' he said, 11 1 wonder Berlin Wall which we stole fnim an
hO'w lhll got in here_"
East German engineer.''
''Whatisit?"
"It's lucky President Reagan
"It's an application for building caused this crisis or you would have
the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Plant on never cleaned out your. drawers.
an earthquake fault. I was supposed Reach back, there might be
to pass it on to the Atomic Energy something stuck in the cracks."
Commissions, recommending they
McKinney did and came out with a
turn it down."
letter. He whistled.
"Listen. This Is a letter from
President
Nixon ordering me to im"Maybe it's not too late," 1
mediately
destroy all the tapes in
suggested.
the
W,hite
House
ba!lelllent closet."
"It's dated July 17, 1970. If 1 send
In my recommendatioo now, it wiD · "And you stuffed it in your
ooly give Teapot ammunitloo that drawer?"
He said angrily. "If I had done it
I'mnotesaentlal."
"Have you gone through the top right at that moment I would have
missed my car pool."
draweryet?"

.. Kyger Creek Is expected -to be
muelllmprwed behind a squad composed of seniors and underclas$men.
Senior returnees Include forward
"David Sands, .:1 center Tim Price,
and~ forward-center, Tim Barr.
Upderclassmen include 6-4
sophomore J. D. Bradbury; 6-2
sophomore, Brent Love; 6-2 junior,
Jeff Moles; ~ junior Ron Martin
and W junior Rnger Stroud. The offense will be guided by Keith Clark,
a quilt junior guard.
A cast of seniors lead second year
coach Mike Jenkins' Hannan Trace
Wildcasta.
Returnees include Kelly Petrie,
Keith Campbell, Greg Webb, Mike
Waugh, Toby Sheets and Randy
James.
Others vying for starting berths
are Mike Rossiter, Rick Barnes,
Daniel Bays, aU junionr, and
sophomores, Rob Bnunfield and
JeffBarnes_
·
.
Coach Uoyd L. Myers enters the
campaign with just one returnee
from last year, 5-10 senior Scott
Lewis,
others working hard for starting
assigmnents are seniors, Charles
Stewart, Rob · Price, and Kent
Walbr, juniors, Gary Baker, Paul
McNeal and sophomores, Randy
Layton and Roger Wella.
' the Highlander coach will rely
heavily on last season's reserve
.team which compiled the SVAC best
loop record, !).J.
Final1911

2 a 522

o 10 472

RESERVES

Soutnwesttrn
Soulhern

ped Northern fltlnois Moe8, jwnped
to No.6 with 1211 polnta. The

Hawkeyes pounded Nebraska·
Omaha 71-58 Monday_ DePaul,
which hasn't played yet, Inched up to
No.7 with 748, while UCLA, a winner
over Pepperdine Saturday after
falling to Brigham Young, · was
eighth with 644.
Tulsa, an easy ~ winner over
U.S. international, went from No. II
to No.9 with 634 points, while Minnesota, H after an I1H9 vict01
Monday night over San FrancisC•·
State, remained No.IO with 5114 points_
Alabama-Birmingham headed the
Second 10 followed by defending
national champion Indiana, Arkansas, which received one first-place
vote, San Francisco, Brigham
Young, Missouri, Alabama, NevadaLas Vegas, Notre Dame and
Georgetown.
Arkansas, 2-{), mauled Teua-San
Antonio 71-42 Mooday night.
·
Last week, the Second 10 was
Tulsa, Indiana, Wake Forest,
Alabama-Birmingham, Mluouri,
Georgia, Louisiana State, Arkansas,
Notre Dame and Alabama.

7 3

6 4

Hannan Trace

0 10

6 4

2 8

Tonigllt's Gamts

Hannan Trace at Symmes Vallev
Southwestern at Chesapeake

BAGS EIGHT POINT BUCK - lArry Ball, IZ, RaUaad, '-ned bla
oecond buck 1o as maay yean wllb a bow IUid arrow. Tbe eight polat buck
weighed ZZ5 poundliiUid was takea ~r Ball' a n:ofdeKe.

Norlh Galli a or Trimble
Friday

North Galli a at Kyger Creek
Eastern at Southern
Hannan Trace at Southwestern

__ _

Righetti wins rookie award
NEW YORK (AP) -Dave Righetti, the flame-throwing left-bander of
the New York Yankees, earned the
American League Rookie of the
Year Award with an impressive
season_ He had an 8-4 record and
was the winning pitcher in the
Yankees' pennant-clincher against
Oakland.
But the game he remembers best
was the one he liked least- the third
game of the World Series when he
was knocked out early by the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
"It's the last game you pitched
and you think about that,'' Righetti
said. "I lost my last game."
Well, nqt really. Righetti was not
the loser but the five hits, two walks
and three runs he surrendered in
two-plus Innings was hardly characteristic of his season.
"I hope the other nwnbers were

impressive enough that people don't
harp on that game," he said. "But
I've heard a lot of 'What happened
against the Dodgers?"'
Righetti isn't sure how to answer
the que;iion.
Hit WaS Welrdt he said, uwe
didn't play good basebull. We gave
up leads in all three games and they
were all one-run games. That was
hard to take."
The Series loss was the only valley
in a season of peaks for Righetti,
who beat out Rick Gedman and Bob
Ojeda, both of the Boston Red Sox,
for the rookie award in balloting by
the Baseball Writers ASsociation of
America Monday.
Righetti received 23 of the 28 first
place votes from· a BBW AA panel
consisting of two writers in each of
the 14 American League cities. He
fi!!ished with 127 points, easily

Coaches get early present
'

heating Gedman, who received the
other five first place votes and had
64 points. Ojeda was third with 38
points.
Seven other rookies received votes
but no player was named on all 28
ballots.
•
Righetti, called up in May from ·~
Colwnbus of the International
League, had a 2.06 earned run
aversge in 15 games and struck out
89 batters in 105 irmings. He credited
Columbus pitching coach Sammy ·
Ellis with helping him make It to the
majors.
Rigbett,i, 23, thinks he can get better.
"This was just my fourth year pitching." he said. "There's stiU room
for me to learn."

The Yankees acquired Righetti
from Texas in a ID-player trade
follOWing the 1978 season and he had
struggled with contfol problems in
· the minors before blossorr.ing in

'

. PASADENA, Calif. (AP) Hayden Fry and Don James each
got an early Christmas present Monday, a tie. It was just what they wanted.
Not long ago, neither Iowa Coach
Fry nor Washington's James could
have imagined they'd be sitting in
OP
the Tournament of Roses house,
519 receiving a tie with roses oo it. Each
~80
620 of their footbaU teams appeared at
568 times this fall to have little hope of
667 making it to the Rose Bowl. And
535
each saw things finally fall into
9 1 place oo the final day of the regular

Ky-CrHk
North Gollll

Eastern

Turn out the light......_s_---~
' _Art_Buc_h_wa_ld
November 23 will go down in
Washington bureaucratic history as
Black Monday. It was the day that
President Reagan ordered · the
government establishment to close
down because there was no money to
pay them. The President decreed
that only those people essential to
running the government be kept in
place.
"Essential" was the key word that
hit this IOW!llike a thunderbolt. With
the p' esidential edict every government employee's essentiality was
put in doubt.
.
'
The ·order of the day was for aD
non-essential employees to clean out
their desks and go home.! ~topped in
to see Norman McKinney, a first·
class bureaucrat, who obviously was
very angry that he wasn't important
enough to be kept on. "Teapot has
always had it in for me," he said, as
he kept opening and clOsing drawers
in his desk. "He got in at six o'clock
this morning and volunteered to serve oo the 'Ad Hoc Non-Essential
Employees Commission,' the only
committee in the department that

Victimized oo the first weekend of
play were No.2 UCLA, No.5
Geol1!etiiWD, No.13 Wake Forest,
No_l6 Georgia and No.l7 Louisiana
State. Tbe Bruins, who lOIII to
Brigham Young 7&amp;-75 In Larry Farmer's debut as coach, fell to No.8.
The Hoyas were beaten by Southweslfrn Louisiana and Ohio State in
the Alaska Shootout - though they
did beat Alaska-Anchorege - and
dropped to 20111.
San Francisco knocked off
Georgia 9U4 and moved into 14th
place in the poD. Nevada-Las Vegas
topped Louisiana State 83-79 in overtime and wound up rated lath this
week. Wake Forest, was surprised
by unheralded Richmond GHI.

Iowa, No.9 last week when It whiP'

Geol1!ia, U!U and Wake Forest
dropped out of the Top 20.
North Carolina, which heat Kan' 888 7447 in its opener last Saturday,
remained atop the ranllinp_ The
Tar Heels, who tooll Southern Cal '73, 62 Monday night, after the rankings
were anilounced, collected 45 of a
pooalble Ill first-place votes and I, 17 4
points. North Carolina was named
on every ballot cast by a nationwide
panel of sports writers and broadcasters In strengthening its hold oo
first place from 19 points last week
to 91 this week.
. Kentucky replaced UCLA as No.2,
.up one slot. The Wildcats downed
Akron~ in their opener and grabbed eight first-place votes and 1,083
points. Louisville, which wUl open its
season this week, was tabbed No.I
oo five ballots and collected 1,059
P.,ints to place third.
· Wichita Slate, H, and Virginia, 30, advanced two spots each to Nos.4
and 5, respectively. The Shockers,
wbo belted Abilene Christian 113-55
last week, earned 919 points - 10
more than the Cavaliers, who ran
their record to ~ by winning the
Virginia Tipoff tournament over
Fairfield and George Masoo.

"I ~ .

Bush worked bt;~t his staff went home

deemed ''non-essential'' sent home

.Losing a
·· numbers game

the Stevens amendment. There went
the old ball game.
It iB ridicuiQUB. The General Accounting Office estimated that the 11
percent raises prllp06ed by Senator
Stevens actually would reduce the
government's expenses for the neJt
three years. The higher salaries
would provide a sufficient incentjve
for many senior executives to

The Daily sentinei-Pag-3

Pomeroy-Middlepart, Ohio

season.

Iowa wound up the regular season

.a, the school's first winning season
in 20 years, and Big Ten cochaippioo with a 6-2 mark. The
Hawkeyes lost two straight in midseason, to Minnesota and fllinois,
before roaring back to whip Purdue,
Wisconsin and Michigan State. Iowa
went down to the final ·Saturday

before winning the Rose Bowl berth,
as they whipped Michigan State and
got the help of an Ohio State victory
over Michigan.

1981.

Bobcats post win
WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) - Two
free throws by John Devereaux and
a breakaway layup by Nate Cole in
the final 18 seconds gave Ohio
University a ~2 win over UNCWilmington in college basketball actioo here Monday night.
Devereaux's conversion on a oneand-one opportunity gave the Bo~
cats, now 1-1, a 64-60 lead, but UNC·
W's Shawn Wllllams cut it to two
points with a pair of charity losses.

Washington finished 9-2 and was
the Pac-10 champioo with a &amp;-2
record. A 3Hl loss to UCLA in the
ninth game of the season dampened
the Huskies' Rose Bowl hopes, but
they came back to beat Southern Cal
and Washington State- and got the
aid of a Southern Cal victory over
UCLA in the regular-season finale.
Under Jam"'!, the Huskies have
represented the Pac-10 in the R o s e , - - - - - - - - - - - Bowl three times in the past five
years, including a loss to Michigan
YARD SALE
last New Year's Day. The Hawkeyes
Men's wear, women's
will be making their first Rose Bowl
clothes, household linens,
appearance since beating Cal in
antique dishes, cookery,
Pasadena in 1959. Iowa's only other
jugs, kitchen ware,
bowl appearance was also in the '
jewelry.
Rose Bowl, a victory over Oregon
Dec. 3, Corner Page &amp;
State in 1957.

College's top 20

.,.

ow'

co~~eoo_,_

The T.. ..... In The "-&gt;
ated Prell cotJeae bubUiaU poll. with
finl-pllel votel in PIU'tnthelu. IUIIIO'A
record and total polnta. Polnlll bued on
20-lt-1~17-11-16-14·1 J.l2-11-lo-9-l· 7-6-&amp;-t-3·2·

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2. l&lt;ellllldly (I)
3. Loullvtlle~5)

4. Wlcllltasa.
5. ViriJinil (I J
I. Iowa
7. Dol'lul
~UCLA

9. 'rulu
iO. Minneoota
II. AII.-Binnlngham
12,._.,. .
13. ArUnsu (1)

1t. San rranciJc(l

11. Brlahan&gt; Y 11.ll.AIUomo

11. N1V1da-la11 Vf8U

11. Jtiatn Dame
II. o-ptown, DC

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&amp;Iva Yaur Child A Brighter
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Transactions ··

o HeiDI wHMINdlng,

0

Mllih, klence, •nil
Other lullj1ct1
=-~brlry Of

o 'nalud11 lntro To

·Pna:,.-.

0 ,..,

·Before you go out to get yourself a Christmas tree, get yourself
aStihl. ® Because whether you need a chain saw to cut firewood or to do
some ser.ious timber lelJing. ~s simply not abetter chain saw made.
And this ChristrnJJs you deserve the best.

...

01m11, Too
A Mod II m II llleldMIWIIJ to lntroclla rour 1011 or
dHIMIIr to .......... 11'1111 ...41 0111. I*IIOI•Ioompulllr IIIII txp 1ni11 ulllllllftd nlldllfOI!. The pr1ot It
~ wlltn rou aaa1ld1r llllilmiN potenllll•

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OR

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Fill CO,II
-

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686 E. Main
PH. 992-2094
Pomeroy
Front End Alignment- Most Cars
Brake Service

�.,

.•

•
Page-4-The Dailv Sentinel

•

.·

.

Tuesday, December 1, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, December I, 1981

Miami edges Eagles, 13-10

r-;::=========:::;

--u...

GETI'ING HIM GOOD- Philadelphia Eagles cornerback Richard Blaekmore (27) tackles Miami
Dolphins tight end Joe Rose (80) from the air duriJIK

the second quarter of Monday nlghl's game In Miami's
Orange Bowl stadium. (AP Laserphoto).

Tar Heels defeat Tr(Jjans

•

From AP Wires
Smith was unhappy with the
way Southern California beat up his
'North Carolina basketball team
physically. As it turned out,
Southern Cal woo the battle, but lost
the war.
Though holding a 33-31 advantage
in rebounds and generally outmuscling the Tar Heels under the
boards Monday night, the Trojans
,finished on the short end of a 73-62
score to the nation's top-ranked
team.
"I'm disappointed they got so
inany rebounds," said Smilh. "They
outmuscled us on the boards.''
Smith was also bothered by in. consistent play that prevented the
Tar Heels frOin routing the Pac·IO
team. Several times, North Carolina
was was unable to open big leads
becaUse Southern Cal's tall front line
prevented the Tar Heels from get·
ling the ball into James Worthy and
Sam Perkins.
'!We've played some excellent
basketball at times, but we haven't
been consistently good," said Smith.
Southern Cal Coach Stan Morrison
said he was "disappointed but not
discouraged" by the loss at Green·
sboro, N.C. "I'm really anxious to

Dean

&gt;

grow from this."

Breuer and Gary Holmes combined
In other games involving the for 22 points in the secood half to
natioo's ranked teams, No. 6 Iowa rally Minnesota past San Francisco
beat Nebraska-Omaha 71-58; No. 10 State. Darrell Walker and Carey
Minnesota trimmed San Francisco Kelly scored 14 points each as
State ~ and No. 13 Arkansas Arkansas thumped Texas-San Anrouted Texas-San Antonio 71-12.
tonio in that school's debut.
Worthy and Perkins wound up
Elsewhe,re, All-American Kevin
with 18 points apiece to lead the Tar Magee scored 39 points to lead Cal·
Heel offense. Michael Jordan's jum- · Irvine to a 118-79 victory over Chico
per with 8:32lef! gave the Tar Heels State; Charles Jon~s scored 15 poina 62-li2 lead, their biggest up to that ts to lead Oklahoma over Southwest
point. The Trojans continued to peck Texas State 84-58; Jeff Zatkoff
away, however, and whittled the poured in 23 and Eastern Michigan
lead to six on a tap-In by Ken John- held off a late rally to post a 67-65
son.
victory over Michigan; Thurl Bailey
But North Carolina, aided by Jim- scored 22 points and pulled down
my Black's four free throws in the nine rebounds to lead North Carolina
final two minutes, stretched the State past Davidson 76-liS; Tyke
margin hack to 11 at 69-58 with 1:46 Peacock tipped In an errant shot by
left, ending the Trojan threat for Kelly Knight at the buzzer to lift
good. USC got 14 points each from Kansas over Arizona State 63-62;
Johnson, Dwight Anderson and Michael Young's 25 points paced
Maurice Williams.
Houston over West Texas State 84-73
Bob Hansen scored 17 points and and Syracuse stopped Colgate 98-71
Kevin Boyle conlrib 1ted 16 as Iowa as Erich Santifer and Leo Rautins
defeated Nebraska~ha. Randy teamed for 45 points. ,

practice tonight. I think we'll really

Bengal tackle
booked following
fight with police
CINCINNATI (API -

Mike

CURIO CABINEJS

·100 RECLINERS ON SALE
801H
AJIID

C:'.ltr"'"·

ALL WOMEN'S CONNIE AND
FOOTWORK$ DRESS SHOES
AND
ALL
PURSES

Hannan Tracewins

two from Eastern

"

20% OFF

ts.

10:30 a.m. - Sew A Super Easy,
Super Quick Vest - Patty. Asbeck
will present a short program on
making vests to complement your
holiday wardrobe.
11 a.m. - Sweet Treats - Sheila

Curtis of Carousel Confectionery in
Middleport will demonstrate candy
treats lor the holidays.
11;30 a.m. -Wheal Weaving- Lil
Thomas from Gallta County will
demonstrate traditional wheat
weaving techniques used in boliday
decorations.
12.noon
1 p.m. _boliday
Potluck
lunch.
Bring
yourtofavorite
dish
and

right,
Porter ( Do1vy1C;;:~it:J~
nes (Heidi), Lee Spaun (Squanto); back rpw, SteveJ! Grady (Neil Armstrong), Carla Aelker (Red Riding Hood), Mn. Mickey Hoback (Betsy

Roo•).

·

Plans have been completed for the
open church wedding of Cheryl D.
Barnhart, daughter of Mrs. Ruth
Barnhart, Middleport, and the late
Ernest Barnhart, and Rodney K.
Bailoy, son of Mr. and Mrs. William
Bailey, Middleport.
The wedding will be held at the
Middleport Church of Christ oo Dec.
5 at 3:30p.m. with Bob Mellon per·
Ianning the double-ring ceremony.
A half-hour of music will be presen·
ted by Kathy Johnson, organist,
preceding the ceremony.
Darlene Gilliam, Columbus, will
serve as matron of honOI'. Cathi

BAKE SALE

AND
BAZAAR

-

Friday &amp; Saturday
Oec. 4 &amp; 5

'

Grade Six- Loll to right, Heather Shuler (The Iuvisible Mao), An•
nett Cardone (Mary Had a Little Lamb), Chris Diddle (Andrew from
Freckle Juice) ; back row, Shannon Riffle (AI Capone l, Angle Bostick
(Babe Ruth).
' '
'

Middleport Thrift
Shop
Meigs Humane Society

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: ALso

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2 LITER BOrn.£
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PORK CHOPS

8 PACK

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144 w. SteonciStreet
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone: 992·21at

DONUTS ......................~~::~ •• $} 79

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LARGE GLAZED

3 LB. BOX

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FROM '155

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FRENCH BREAD or
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RC COLA

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ALL HUGGER

OPINING WfDNESDA Y
DEC. 2nd AT 6:00 A.M.

Located on St. Rt. SS4 11
between Cheshire and 11
Porter.
W
Open Tues.-Wed. · Thurs. 1
' 10:00 til S:OO
w

QIIOUI'I-- . . ... •aw.T.
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ACROS ACROSS FROM VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL

I
II

Rainbow .
Gift Shop

QROUP . . . . ....... . . . . . . . . W.T.

.

Vaughan's Cardinal
BAKERY, Etc.

END CUT

Royal Crest Vlt. D Milk •• .-.................
•••· ·9~
Royal Crest 2% Milk. •••••••••••••••••••••••• .,.
• '1.7
Royal Crest Cottage Cheese ..................~~~•• 'J,19
Vall.e y Bell. 2% Milk ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~~~~~..'1.89
· - ·
1h Gal. •1 39
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FROM THE ALL NEW

r-·-M:oio'IM:Ml'lil~-,

busting rood.

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

.

.

Regan and Leatf Barnhart, Lancaster, cousins of the bride, will be
bridesmaids, and Lee'a Johnson,
Pomeroy, cousin of the bride, will be
the flower girl.
Desi Jeffers, Athens, will serve as
best man. Kenny Barnhart, Lancaster, cousin of the bride, and
David Cole, Pomeroy, cousin of the
groom, will be the ushers. Guests
will be registered by Rita Hill, sister
of the groom, Rutland.
Following the 7:30 rehearsal
Friday evening, dinner will be
hosted by Mr. and Mrs. William
Bailey in the church social room.

HOUSE SUPPERS 20% OFF

----~~

BAHER¥

BACON
ENDS &amp;
PIECES

FREE GIFT WRAPPING

nutritloo!
Registratioo is $1. Displ~y•
provided by the Athens and Me1gs
Cowlty Cooperative Extension Se!'
vices; The Fabric Shop; Ruth Francis and Meigs County Homemakers
Clubs. For more information centact
the Meigs County Extenaion Office

r~stra~te~a;.;cas~-~~ro~J~e~tha~t·~s~hi~·g~h~in~~at~992-6498~!!·~!ii!!ii!~!iiiiiiiiiiilii

Wedding plans complete

SELECT GROUP OF DANIEL
GREEN

"Nextto Elberfelds in Pomeroy"

3 p.m. - Holiday Cheese Ball Patty Asbeck will demonlltrate how
to whip up a cheese ball using your
food processor.
3:15 p.m. - Nutritionally
Speaking - A Super Holiday
Casserole - Annie Moon, WIC Counselor and Dale Stoll will demon-

table service. Browse among the
displays!
I p.m. - Fabric ld•· s at Christmas Time - Betty Reese, Athens
County Extension Home Economist;
Ann Lambert from The Fabric
Shop; Shirley Huston, Syracuse;
and Dale Stoll, will collaborate oo a
program featuring holiJlay ideas
using fabrics.
.
2 p.m. - Grapevine Wreaths Shirley ijuston, Syracuse, will sho"'
participants hQw to create unique
grapevine wreaths.
2:30 p,m. -Give A Gift of Spring
for Cluistmas - Rutland's Janet
Bolin will show bow to pot spring
bulbs for Christmas gift-giving (the
bulbs bloom indoors during winter! )

ALSO

.C'OI Data.mr

G~

Christmas b just around the corner! Residents looking for Ideas for
holidsy gifts, decorating, or foods,
are invited to the &amp;MWII Christmas
workshop, Thursday, Dec. 3, from!O
a.m. tO 3:30 p.m. at St. Paul's
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy.
Tl)e event i8 sponsored by the
Meigs County Coqperalive Ex·
tensioo Service .
Following is a schedule of
programs. Participants are
welcome to come aod stay all day 01'\
come just fOI' a specific program.
10 a.m. - Gifts from the Kitchen
- Dale Stoll, Meigs County Extension Home Econombl, will
present a program . oo ideas for
holiday food gifts. Recipes will be
available for nutritious, interesting
and easy food gifts. Included will be
suggestions for packaging these gif-

-

CHAPMAN'S

Obrovac, an "injured" Cincinnati

Bengals tackle, was freed on $235
bond Monday after heing charged in
cionnectlon with a brawl with police
early Monday morning.
The 6-foot~. 27!;-pound native of
Canton will face a team fine for
missing Monday's review of the
films of the Bengals' 41·21 defeat of
ihe Cleveland Browns, said Coach
Forrest Gregg.
·
Gregg said no action would be
LANDS SEVEN POINT BUCK :.... James Riffle landed a I!"Ven polnl
taken against Obrovac, on the inbuck the first day of gun IIOIIIOJJ on deer on Snowball Hillin Syracuse.
jured reserve list, befDI'e the out- ..------------------'-----'---1
come of the case in Municipal Court.
Obrovac, who was· charged with
THE . lAKER
FURNITURE
AD IN
intoxication, resisting arrest and
..
.
disorderly conduct, was brought in
SUNDAY'S lENTlNE.. SHOULD HAVE
in leg irons oo both his legs and arms because his wrists were too big
for'handcuffs, pollee said.
READI
· Police said they offered to drive
AU Wood
Obrovac home after they spotted
'
him in a heated argwtlellt with two
wo.nen outside a restaurant.
However, pollee said Obrovac
fought the officers who subdued him
three times with liquid mace.

Chllcke'n•s Book Week. The children dressed as the character in a book
that they read during the week. ·Mn. Donna Sayre, Remedial Reading
Teacher, was coordinator of the Book Week Activities.
Grade Four- Leltto right, Brenda Zirkle (All Babba), Melanie
(Mary Poppillli), Joey Rice (Squanto), Kl!thy Ihle (Johnny Ap(II.!"~Li. secoM
· Mrs. Deborah Harris, teacher (Gretel) .

WOMEN'S
,···WEEK

Hannan Trace defeated Eastern,
47-18 in a junior high contest Monday
at Mercerville.
Derrick Barnes led Hannan Trace
with 15 points while Robert Unroe
and Eric Darst had eight points
each.
Bissell Jed Eastern with eight
points while Rice canned seven.
Hannan Trace's eighth grade now
183-0.
In the seventh grade contest, Hannan Trace turned back Eastern, 2820. Leading the Wildcats was Rocky
Bennett with eight potnta. Ed Collins
had 11 for Eastern.
,
HT traveb to Vinton Thursday.'

practice Wednesday , " said
Morrison, ''and I'd give anything to

held Book Character Day Wednesday Nov. Z5, as the final activity of the school's obaervance of

.,_tid

:lol::

work~hop

Extension Service sponsors holiday

MIAMI (AP)- Alllhe star of the · probeblywantedhlmtollant~ went their way, but earlier they lost
hour, Durie! Harris ehould have lhemiddle.
lhe fumble tn lhe end zone, and
been baatlng in the llmellght. InHania, wbo tn lhe attermatli of a lhlnp like that b8lance out...
stead, he lay sprawled oo the Orange 16-15 lou to the Jets lut week
A~ penalty
Bowl turf, "embarrassed" before a criticized Coach Don Shula'a play aca1no1 Elate defllllive end Carl
natlooal leleviaion audience.
selectloo, applauded lhe "gutsy" Halnton and an ctfaide call fueled
The Miami wide receiver had just decilloo to go for a flnl down In- lhe DolphinB'IAludldOwll drive.
plucked a Don Strock pass at the . stead It a field goal that would have
Tile Eq1ea llopped Mlami runPhiladelphia 7-yard-llne and pran- cut the Philadelplda lead to lo-6.
ning back Tony Nathan for no gatn
ced Into the end zone to draw the
"A Jot of 11mea we bave settled for . on fourth-and-one at the
Dolphins to within ooe point of the three (pOinlal and come up short," PhJJadelphla 24, four plays before
Eagles with 5:21 left in a National llllid Harria. "This time we went for lhe game-winning field goal.
Football League game eventually six, ~ up with the big play and

won
by Miami 13-10 Mooday
night.up went
oo to win."
Uncharacteristically
"caught
JaWOI'Iti,
who completed 12 of 24
in lhe emotion of the moment," the JIUiel for 91 yards, directed a 13The Uuily Sentinel
normally calm Harrta leaped In the play, a.yard """"""" drive that con!1J81'111-I
air and spiked the ball. When he swned lhe lint 7:28 of lhe pme u
•· - t f l h l " •. be.
touched ground, he twisted his left Philadelphia took a 7-0 lead on
Publlobod.....,. ..,_Monolay lbnou(lh
knee.
WUhert Montgomery's !·yard dive
Ji'ridoy, 111 o.rt Simi, ~the Ohio VaUey
Shaken, Harris had to be helped andTllnyFranklln'sconvenlon.
~~-~~~~.. ~
from the field as the television
Tile Dolphins fumbled away their
~ pofd at "-'W. ONo. .
cameras zoomed in.
flnl IC&lt;IIing opportwdty. Woodley
_
, Tile -loled Preu, tnla,.. Dot"I've seen it happen before, but e•mn......O a march that reached
l,y p,.. o\uodadm .... the """"'..
•oau~•~
N-PubUiiben-.,uon,NaUonot
hough I 'tI wouJd happen 10 the
never I
Eagle 2 before Andre Franllltn,
o\dvortUintl Ropre...tatlve, Branhom
me. My first thought when I went to slanti•• toward lhe end zone, was
~J&gt;Ot - · '131 Thin! Avenue, Now
..., Phiiadelphil noee Jackie ,
Y&lt;llt,NowYori&lt;ID017.
the ground was 'Ma n, I sure don 'I met by
want to be embarrassed like this on Charlie Johnson. The rookie fuiiback
POSTMASTER, Send · - to T1&gt;e DaUy
natiooal television;'' said a smiling . IQSI the footbaU and ltnebacker
SeoiiDel,meowt&amp;., Pomeroy,OIIIo4S?OO.
Harrta. "The leg feels pretty good JerryRoblnsonrecoveredintheend
~=
right now. I just hope I can line up zone.
One .............. .... ..... ......... 11.00
Sunday and I promise I won't do it
The next time Miami got the ball,
One...,.. .... .. ... ........ ........ 1uo
&amp; . oin."
Woodley moved lhe Dolphtna to the
One Yoor · .. •iriNGUiooP.Y .. .. .. · 102·"'
Uwe von Schamann's conversion Philadelphia 25. But the drive
PIIICEII
kick lilted the Dolphins into a 10-10 sJaUed and von Scbamann came on
llllll,y .. .... ..... ....... : .. .... . u~
tie and three minutes later, his to boot a 42-yard field goal to cut the
Sullacribe,. not dellrinc to PlY the coni&lt;r
m~y renUt in 1dvance direct to 'nle Dally
second field goaI of the game- a 27• Eagle lead to 7-3.
Sentinel on a'· a or 12 month baall. Credit
yarder set up by Lyle Blackwood's
Tony Franklin's 42-yard field goal
will be liven carrier •~&lt;h month.
interception of a f(on Jaworski pass midway through the third quarter
No aubocriptl..., by mau
1n town.
- gave Miami the victory.
boosted' Philadelphia's lead to!()..'!,
wherehomeeanier ....k:ebavallable.
The triumph boosted the 8-4-1 butcostlypenaltlesandapairoflnrMA0.8lJIIIICRIPTIONS
Dolphins back into a virtual tie tn lhe novers in the fourth quarter Jed to
Olllo ud w.., Ylrllatl
American Conference East with the the Eagles demise.
.
~=IIi·::: : ::: :: :: : : : :: : :: :: ::
New York Jets, who still technically
"It was the kind of game that
1y,. .. .. .. .......... .. .. . .. .. ...... oo
Rllta OUIIWM:Obie
load the division because of their 1-0- could have gone either way at any
..., ""' Vhllala
I record in head-to-head competition time," said Phiiadelphla Coach Dick
• Month ..... .. . .. .. ............ . . 113.01
with Miami.
ve-··'1.
IlYear
Month ..... ..
· ....• ....
·~
= ~.2:0
·~· 40
,-uiCI "The breaks at the end
. •..
.. . . ...
... . .......
The Eagles, meanwhile, dropped _ _ _ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ _r;:::========~
to 9-4 with their second straight loss
and !ell one game behind Dallas in
lhe National Cooference East. The
two teams will meet in Dallas in two
weeks.
Strock, who replaced starter
David Woodley with 12: 13 remaining
in the game and Miami trailing !()..'!,
said the touchdown pass to Harris
AT
was an audible designed to counter a
Philadelphia blitz.
Harris said he could hardly hear
Strock's conunands above the noise
GREAT CHRISTMAS
from the Orange Bowl crowd of
GIFTS THIS
67,7ffl, but guessed that Strock
WEEK

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

GIJ 1110 PAllS

Hlld

Route II

Malla,W. ya.

PlttM: *"773-5511

Lb.
6 LBS. ., 00

7-UP
2 UTEI &amp;n.

�I

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Family Medicine
By EDWARD SCHRECK, D.O.
Assistant Professor of
Family Medicine

very real - especially since approximately one-third of all
children's hospital admissions are
for genetically determined iUoesses.
of Osteopathic
QUESTION: What are some•
Medicine
preventstive measures for genetic
QUESTION: In
diseases?
your last article
ANSWER: One Is the examination
you said there
of the parents' chromosomes. From
was no cure for
this infonnation a genetic specialist
.genetic diseases.
can advise a couple on the chances
Does this mean
of having an infant with a genetic
we are helpless in
dlaease that may already afnict one .
of the parents or another child ofthis
preventing and •
treating these diseases? SHRECK , couple or a relative.
. ANSWER: By cures of genetic
Due to several new techniques,
disease, I mean the genetic disorder treatment of the serious effects of
is d~tected and treated as early as certain genetic diseases carr begin
J)OSSible. This usually means while even before the child is born. The
the patient is a fetus in the mother's use of amniocentesis, fetoscopy and
uterus (womb). Unfortunately, ex- ultrasound are some of the
cept for certain inborn errors of B12 techniques which allow medical
metabolism i~ the fetus, no other therapy in early pregnancy.
genebc cures m the fetus have been
Amniocentesis, as I described in a
. effected.
previous article, allows for some of·.
This should not, however, give rise the- fluid around the fetus . to be
· to a pessimistic outlook concerning removed and examined. This fluid
genetic disease. As ! mentioned in a contsins cells from the fetus. These
previous column, there are effective cells have chromosomes that can In·
means for prevention and treatment dicate genetic disorders of the uno£ genetic diseases. In fact, the con- born child.
cept of prevention and treatment of
Fetoscopy is a new technique .
genetic disease is important and which allows a doctor to directly

The · Community Singers will
present the cantata, "There'D
Always Be a Christmas" on Sunday,
Dec. 6, at 2:30 p.m. at the Chester
United Methodist Church. The
public Is invited to attend.

The armual Christmas dinner of

the Chester United Methodist
Women will be held at noon on Dec.
10 at the Chester church. The
potluck will be followed by a
program and gift exchange.
Open house will be held at the
Meigs County Office of Planned
Parenthood of Southeast Ohio on
Friday, Dec. II, from 11 :30 a.m .. to
I :30 p.m. The office is located in the
Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy.
The staff and board members will be
on hand to welcome the conununity
and tell about the programs of PP·
SEO.

visualize the fetus while it is in the
mother's womb. Its use allows the
physician to view the fetus and also
to draw blood samples from the
fetus for detection of dlaeases. Both
amniocentesis and feiOI!COpy are In·
vasive and carry some risk.
· Ultrasound, on the other hand,
does not cary the risks of the above
two procedures but stiU aUows a
visualization of the fetus. It gives a
two-dimensional picture fonned by
hannless sound waves bouncing off
the fetus and the uterus, but does not
allow for analysis or the fetus'
chromosomes or blood.
QUESTION: What are some
specific treatments for genetic
diseases.
ANSWER: Hwnan growth hor·
mon·e is given to certain types of
dwarfs. Supplying in~r'eased amounts of phosphorous to patients who
lose ' excessive amounts of the
element from a genetic defect in the
kidneys is also possible. Other treatTf!Onts include the use of a drug pen.
cillamine to remove the excess copper in the genetic disorder known as
Wilson's disease,

and

simple

surgery is used to remove extra
fingers due to a genetic air
nonnality.

Tuesday ,
RACINE - SUTI'ON Township
Trustees will meet at 8 p.m.

Tuesday at the
Municipal Building.

Syracuse

. CHESTER - Chester COuncil
323, Daughters of America, wiU
meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
hall lor irUtiation, nomination of
officers and observance of quar·
terly birthdays. Potluck refreshments will be served.
POMEROY Chapter 186, Order
of the Eastern Star, will meet at
7:45p.m. Tuesday at the temple.
oti1gation night will be observed
and all officers and pr~&gt;-tems are
asked to wear their chapter
dresses.

of the Easton Star, will meet at
7:45 p.m. Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Maaonlc Temple.
Obligation night will be oblerlled.
Officers are ulo:ed to wear their'
Chapter dresses.

All organizations, businesses and

•

WNG BOTl'OM - The Long

table service and a covered dish.

SUTI'ON TOWNSHIP Trustees
meeting 8 p.m. Tuesday,
Syracuse Municipal Building.

MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363, F .
· and A. M. wiU meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
All members are asked to attend.
Refreshments will be served
following the meeting.

POMEROY LODGE 164,
FlrAM, regular meeting, 7:30
p.m. W!!dJiesday, relrelbnlents.
THE MIDDlEPORT Literary
Club will meet at 2 p.m. Wed- '
neaday · at the home of Mrs.
Charles Gukill who will also
have the book review.

to Be Your

Relief!

POMEROY Chapter 186, Order

A Speedy
Financial Recovery!
Our Major Medical Policy
will help
you
to
recuperate from those
many medical bills!

Major Glenna Rummel, retired, Thanksgiving table and Jackie
Shirley Landers, and Jackie Justis Justis played a trumpet solo,
attended a Salvation Army function "America the Beautiful." Returning
in Cincinnati recently. They wor· to Athens they attended · the
shipped at Brow'n Road Conununity · Salvation Army meeting where Lt.
Church with Major Rununel's Donald lance was the speaker and
brother, Roland Rummel and Major Rummel played the piano.
family. She was the speaker at the

214 w. Main
992-6617

Pomeroy, OH.

.•

Church," ua1ng modem madonna:
S 1'1 111181f
Betty ne.n, Sheila Taylor, RuthEr·
For vllltors at the Meiga County win, and Carol Erwin.
GardenClubs'annualholldayflower .• "Nativity Scenes Are Being
show, there wu no doubt_fboul the Displlyed," design to include the
truth of the theme- "lt'a Begitoning Holy FamUy: Betty Dean, Sheila
toLookwLotLikeChriatmas."
Curtis,,Roo!emary Young, and Allee
Elegant flower arrangements with TholllJliiOn.
aU thelr.baubles f"d bows, beautiful
"Stores are FiUed with the Newest
gift wrappillgs aild wreaths, as wen Toys," abstract design: Sally luias wirrter and holiday scenes in pain- drews, Sheila Curtis, Barbara
lings and photographs were Knight,andBernlceCarpenter.
displayed lor the weekend in the
"Chestnuts Roasting on an Open
recreation building at Royal Oak Fire," in a fireside basket: Virginia
Park.
ChadweU, Peggy Crane, 'l'anetta
Melanie stethem was general Radekin, and Crystal Rayburn.
chairman for the flower show, with
Rhojean McClure serving as chair·
''Last Minute Shoppers Rushing
man of the Bend 0' the River Artists
Everywhere," modern showing
displayof73artpbjects.
motloo: Janet Bolin, Shelia Curtis,
The show was judged by Brooks ' Bernice Carpenter, and Ruth Erwlh.
"Sexton of Minford who awarded the
"Friends and Family Gathering
"best of show" in flower
Together," mass design: Ida Murarrangements to Betty Dean,
phy; Sheila Taylor, Mrs. D. Thom"...,-ve best of show" to !'at pson, and louise Thontpson.
Holter, the creativity award to
"Santa's Making His List and
Shelia Curtis, and the JIOniOr horChecking It Twice," llling two con·
ticulture award to Daisy Blakeslee.
tainers: Joan Stewart, Pat Holter,
The special awards for juniors
Melanie Stethem, and Ruth Erwin.
went to Donia Crane, "best of
"The Woods Are a Winter Wonshow," Jo EUen Crane, the "reserve
derland," including treasured wood:
best of show," and the junior hor·
Peggy Crane, Crystal Rayburn,
tlcultureaward to Donia Crane.
Sheila Taylor, and Diana Karr.
First, second, third ·and fourth
"Trimming the TaUeat Tree," for
place winners in each class, Usted
exhibitors who had never won a blue
respectively, in the artistic division
ribbon; . Debbie Ollbofne, Debbie
were:
Grueser, Ruth Moore, and Peggy
';Tiny Elves are Busy at Work,"
Crane.
miniature arrangements: Peggy , "Searching for the True Meaning
Crane, Sheila Taylor, Sheila Curtis,
of Christmas," an interpretive
design : Melanie Stethem, Pat·
andMelanleStethem,'
"Christmas Servict!s at Every
Holter, SheUa Curtis, and Kathryn
Church," traditional madonna used:
Johnson.
Befl)ice Carpenter, Betty Dean,
"The Magical Flight of Santa," a
Ruth Erwin, and Crystal Rayburn.
blacklight design: Pat Holter, Betty
"Christmas Services at Every
Dean, Bernice Carpenter, and Ada
By CHARLENE IIOBPLICH

Bottom Cummunity Alaociation
will hoi( a potluck dinner at 7
p.m. Wednesday. 1boee at·
· tending are to take their own

-L-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Garden clubs hold flower show

•

Wednesday

CHESTER
COUNCIL,
Daughters of America, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday; initiation and
nomination of officers; quarterly
birthdays observed and potluck
refreshments.

1· Residents attend function

Announcements

The annual Christmas bazaar and
bake sale of the Meigs County
Humane Society will be held Friday
and Saturday at the Middleport
Thrift Shop.

Social 'Calendar

I

· Tuesday, Detember 1. 1981

Tuesday, December 1, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OPEN SAT.
TI\..L NOON

.-ormer:_ty Reuter·Brogali And Dlle C. Warner

individuals are invited to participate
in the annual parade to be held at 6 r-----------------------..L--~----________..:_______..:._
p.m. Friday in Pomeroy to welcome
in the holiday season. Those wishing
to take part may mail complete in·
fonnation on their entries to the
Pomeroy Chamber of commerce,
Box 526, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, or
IIJ'!Y phone 992-7214.

Holter.
"Filling· the Stocking with
Goodies," including fruits and
IJlegelables: Anna Turner, Juanila
Lambert, Evelyn Hollon, and Joyce
Manuel.
"Remembering Christmas Long
Ago," a stiU life: Sheila Tayh!or,
Suzanne Trainer, Sheila Curtis, and
Rosemary Young.
."Making a Snowman," a junior

artistic design: Donia Crane, Donita
Manuel, Jo EUen Crane, and Donna
Curtis .
"Wishing for a Special Toy," .a
junior class, Jo Ellen Crane, Donia
Crane, Donita Manuel, and Billy
Crane.
In the outside door wreath Class,
the wiMers were Pat Holter, Bar·
bara Knight, second and third, and
Janet Koblentz, fourth, while in the
class for outside door swags, the ril&gt;bon winners were Joanne Fetty,
Juanita Lambert, Janet Koblentz,
and Sheila Taylor:
Melanie Stethem took the blue ribbon for the inside wall hanging class,
with the other ribbon wiMers being
Joanne Fetty, Jo Ellen Crane, and
Betty Dean. For window hangings,
the wiMers were Betty Dean,
Melanie Stethem, Janet Koblentz,
and An;;!e C'l'.apman.
In the adult giftwrap class, Betty
Dean, Evelyn HoUon, and Juanila
Lambert won ribbons, while in the
class for a child's package, the win·
ners \ftre Janet Koblentz, and
Evelyn HoUon, both second and
third.
In the class for tree ornaments
from nature, Jeff Stcthem, Jamie
Erwin, Janet Koblentz, and Melanie
Stethem wOn the ribbons.

Betty ~ . Janet Koblentz,
Melanie Stethem, and Evelyn Holloo
were the ribbon winners, listed firlll
through fourth respectively, in the
Christmas corsage classes. In
stabiles, the winners were SheUa
Taylor, Pat Holter, Sheila Curtis,
and Sally Andrews.
HQrtieultare Division
In the horticulture division, the
winners, listed first through fourth
respectively, were as follows:
Foliage houseplant: Daisy
Blakeslee, Juanita Lodwick, Daisy
Blakeslee, and Joyce Manuel.
. Blooming houseptsnt: Ada Holter,
Juanita Locwick, Joyce ~noel, and
Daisy Blakeslee;
African violets: Joyce Manuel,
Alice Thompson, and Marge Fetty.
Berried branches: C. E.
Blakeslee, first and second; Daisy
makeslee, third and fourth.
Preserved plant material: Evelyn
Hollon, all four places.
Dish garden: Robin Manuel, first
and second; and teiTariwns, Donita

Manuel, first, and Robin Manuel,

second.
Naturally dried roadside plant
material: Donia Crane, first, second
and third; and Jo EUen Crane, four·
th.
The Bend 0' the River Artists
showed 35 paintings, 76 pieces of
sculpture, and 12 photographs, by 12
artists. Also on display were
terrariums made by children at the
Chester Elementary School in
therapy programs conducted by one
of the garden clubs, along with a
craft exhibit by Torn Reuter, and
books on crafts and Christmas from
the public libraries. Poinsettias
were for sale by the Green Thumb
Junior Garden Club.

, BEST OF SHOW -This creation by Mrs. Betty Dean In the modem
madonna ela.. won lbe "best of show" award for her. Tbe stone IICU!ptured madonna was made by Mrs. Dean who used It wilb driltwoed,
mabonla and nlses ..

The ninth annual Christmas
ba•aar of the Meigs County Humane
Soci~ty will be held Friday and
Saturday at the Thrift Shoppe, North
Second Ave., in Middleport.

Astrograph
•

December 2, 1981
Two old friends who have ' drifted out of your life over the past
year s will re -enter the scene i n
the year ahead. The three of youwi II cement new bonds which wi II
make you inseparable.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23·Dec .
21 J You're a bit of a dreamer
today and this is good . What your
imagination can envision, you
should be able to find practical
ways to attain .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jan. 19)
This CC'J id be just a so· so day for
yo•.·, unless you are materially
motivated. Once you spot a prize
in the offing, you ' re a real go·
getter.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb. 19)
You could run into a situation
today similar to one that caused
problems in the past . Your experience will guide you to avoid
the pitfalls ttli s time.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
situation you ' ve been worrying
about will
not work out
negatively as you anticipated.
Stop fretting about something
before the results are in .
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
This is a good day to get together
with an old pal you've been
neg lect ing a bit lately. He or she
needs assurances that you still
care.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 Sue ·
cess in your endeavors is likely
today, but be prepared to put for ·
th a concerted effort. Coasting
won't fulfill your ambitions .
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)
Treat life as a game today, but
don't take things so lightly that
you' II fall to play to win . Be asser·
tive in a spirit of good sports·
manship.
CANCER (June 21·JUIV 22)
There are some changes you can
make at this time which will be
beneficial for your family . They
could be a bit painful to im·
plement, yet' all will approve
eventually.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You may
be called upon today to make a
difficult decision affecting
another. No ill will should result
If you strive to be fair and lm ·
partial.
VIRGO !Aug. 23· Sept. 221
Rewards for your work today will

be in exact proportion to your ef·
forts. If you are look ing for a
large return, then be prepared to
really put out.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Ct. 23) Don't
be hesitant about stepping in and
managing situations today which
you see
are beyond
the
capabilities of associates. Your
firm hand is needed .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22)
There are several duties you
failed to atte.n d to lately because
they are not on your fun list of
things to do. You'd be wise to
finish them today.

,

&amp;ETA
While every other

:II-MIIIH •••

Return from trip

Each deposit recorded in the
spreading the good news about the ' account will be paid at the then
cwrent 30-Month Money_Market
Individual Retirement Account's
Certificate rate. No minimum
upcoming eligibility changes,
Central1hlst is spreading the best deposit or limit to the frequency
bf deposits on this pJan.
·
news. Options. When you invest
in an IRA at Central·nust. you may
OPIII
select from four high-iriterest
This option requires a $10,000
options'to best suit your needs.
minimum deposit and the account
That means, while you're working
will be paid at the then cwrent
your way to retirement. you could
6-Month Money Market Certificate
be depositing savings in a Central
rate. No additional deposits are
1hlst IRA and, earning premium
pennitted to this option.
rates of interest
bank in town is

Yiiiii.E Rill ....

•

With this option, the interest rate
on the entire account balance will
be subject to change on a monthly
basis. The initial interest rate of ·
14.50% is effective December 1, ·
1981 and is guaranteed until
January 4, 1982. There is no deposit minimwn and no limit to the

frequency of deposit on this plan.

._.... HIBi RilE lila

Are you at the end
of your rope?

...

With this option, an interest rate
is detennined on the date the
original deposit is made. All deposits made in the subsequent 18
months will 6e paid at the ntte
initially determined. The account
will renew for like 18-month periods
and the account will be paid at the ,
current prevalllng interest rate.
There is no deposit minimum and
no limit to the frequency of deposit
on tl)is'pJan. The initial interest
Jatiuary~l

•

"RESERVE BEST OF SHOW" award went lo Pat Heller, left, for ber
blacklight lllTIIlllltmeat, model'll slabBe, wbile Sbeila l;urlis WOD lbe

a

"Creativity Award" lor ber wood and metal cmatruettoa, shown here.

Bradbury holds dinner
The annual Thanksgiving diMer
of the Bradbury Church Sunday was
highlighted with a surprise
celebration honoring Dale and Elsie
Bafnhart on their 56th wedding anniversary.
Paul Daniell presented the couple
with a gift from the Martha Bible
Class and a decorated cake made by
Miss Cathy Heas. FamUy members
attending were Ronald and zoe Ann
Barnhart and daughter, Leah and
her boyfriend, Peter Limph, Kathy
and Don Regan, and the Barnharts'
daughter-in-law, Christy and

Ill&amp; year, TO
until the funds are
Every

may declare a tax
deduction of up to $2,000 from the
gross income on your tax return.
If you're manied and your spouse
is employed, that amount doubles.
Meanwhile, Central1hlst's high- ·
interest options will be helping
your deposits grow .into a valuable
retirement nest~
withdrawn~ you

Pomeroy Cflapter 80, Royal Arch

Masons, ws host for the religious

If

without a pension plan, IRA's can
be a valuable asset to a more secure
retirement Central '1h1st IRA's
provide you tax benefits andgtutter
security, plus four high-interest
options to make your money grow.

If you'd like to open an IRA, or,

'

''

MfMBER : FDIC

•

•

Heather Barnhart, and Ruth Bar·
nhart and daughter, Sherrie.
Church members attending were
Ernie and Fred Van lnwagen, Brad
and Pauline Hudson, Paul and lla
Darnell, Larry, Paula, Kristl and
Matt Haynes, Dan, Karen, Jennie
and Alisha Meadows, Missy M&lt;&gt;MiUion, Randy and Tammy Haynes
and Ryan, Bob and Bessie King,
Oliva Cotterill, BlU, Naomi King and
Kevin, cathy Heas, Debbie, Heather
and Matthew Finlaw, Hank, Kathy,
and Jessica Johnson.

PAUL snJRGEEN .

NEW! NEW! NEW!

opening and fonned the cross.
Introduced at the service were
Jesse Brinker, grand sentinel of the
Grand Council of Royal and Select
Masters; the Rev. Wanda Johnaon,
pastor of the Methodist Church,
Ponnweory; the Rev. Wanda Johnson, pastor of the Meigs County
ART SHOW- Helea Rader aDd ber daugbter, Brenna, Vienna, were
United Presbyterian Churches; Zanamoaa
the muy viewers of tbe art exblblta at the show over the weekend.
dra Vaughan, honored queen, Bethel
Mrs.
Rader's
sister, Mrs. JWIIIita Lodwlek, bad sev,eral exhibits in the
62; Mark Cline, master councilor,
sbow
which
Included
paintings, photograpbs, and sculptures.
OrderofDeMolay; Joan Kautz, worthy matron, Pomeroy Chapter 186,
O.E.S.; Robert S. McCully, high .
priest, GaWpolla Chapter Royal Ar·
ch Masons 79; Robert Kuhn, wor·
shlpful master, Middleport Lodge
363; Dan Arnold, illwltrlous master,
POMEROY-Awards were presen· Racine, Columbia, and Barbara Fry
lloawolth Council 46, and Com- ted at the Meigs County Grange Of. of Rock Springs. Pii)S were presenmander of Ohio VaUey 24, Knights
fleer's Conference held recently at ted to aU CWA chainnen who fiUed
out a report.
Templar.
the Rock Springs Grange haU.
Tbe grange exchange programs
Mendal Jordan, deputy, ani Mrs.
Wl.gginJ .had . ~ ~~ and
members enjoyed refreshments.
Jordan, conducted the meeting with for the year were scheduled with
distinctive secretary awards going Star to visit Racine, Harrisonville to
to first year secretaries, Sylvia visit Rock Springs; Hemlock tp visit
Midkiff, Hemlock; Jean Alldre, Star, Racine to visit Hemlock,
Racine; and Alberta Mootgomery, Columbia to visit Laurel, Rock
.,__ . ~ Laurel Grange. Seals were presen- Springs to visit HarriaonviUe, and
ted to other secretaries, Frances ·Laurel to visit Columbia.
A degree day and the annual
and
for the dlliner with each ~ein, Rock Springs Grange;
grange
banquet were disc:wosed.
Nina
McCwnber,
Star
Grange;
and
farni4o to take a covered dish.
Dates
will
be set lor these activities
·
Mrs.
Arthur
Crabtree,
Colwnbia
A report wu given on the recent
Grange.
at
the
Jan.
I Pomona Grange
Olrlltmu bazaar and plana made
meeting.
Arthur
Crabtree, Pomona
County
Women's
Activities
for IIIOtber sale in December. Jan ·
lecturer,
reported
on the lecturers'
notebooks
were
returned
to
Helen
Jeiddna gave the lreilurer'a report.
and
activities
for the year.
contests
Qulve)'
with
a
blue
ribbon
from
the
Norma Willian had the opening'
State
Grange
111181111;
and
red
ribMrs.
Jordan
went
over
the CWA and
prafer.
bons to Ani! Halliday, star Grangei
youth contests.
·

Officer's conference held

Fellowship dinner planned
,'

Call 992-2136

.

i'eafllrmation service Sunday.
James Buch.anan gave the
welcome and introductions with the
flag being presented by the Ohio
VaUey Commandery :14, with Dan
Arnold giving flag lecture. Paul Darnell had the opening prayer. The sermoo was given by the Rev. Robert
Kuhn, captain of the hosts of
Pomeroy Chapter 80. Spectsl music
was presented by Mary Bentz and
Kenny Wlgglnl.
,
DeMolay members attending the
meetlllfl were introduced by Jeff
EWott, rnarshan. Buchanan gave a
short talk on the purpose of
DeMolay. Linda Mayer was presented as guardian of Bethel62 of the International Order of Job's
Daughten and she explained the
meaning and PW1l0"" of the orde.r.
girls perfonned pelt'"« their

T!'&lt;

WlthUS.

The Daily Sentinel

JUNIOR WINNERS- Melanie Stethem, cbairman for the Christmas
flower &amp;bow of the Meigs County Ganlen Clubs Association, awards a ribbon to JQ Ellea Craoe who won tbe "reserve best of show" for her artistic
al'l'811gement. Donia Crane displayed ber "best of show" arniogement.
She was also the horticulture sweOp.takes award wlaner.
·

Masons host reaffirmation

&amp;ETA
•
you're a world,ngperson With or

:receive more infonnation, visit our .
main office. ~h interest .
options on IRA s are g~ rea~ons
mte~l4.(X1%~rilier w~y you ought to open one
·
1,1 ·~
un

All tied up in knots because your attic and bas&lt;ment are overflowing with all kinds of junk r
Remember... one person's junk is another person's
treasure. Don't despair! Check It all out, make a list
of what you have, then sell it fast with a person-to·
person Cla,ified ad in...
.

•

Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris and Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Adams have returned
from a trip to Florida where they
visited Mr. and Mr.s AI Alto at Lantana and Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hall
and children at West palm Beach.
Enroute home they visited Mr. and
Mrs. Nonnan Norris, Orlando, and
took in many places of interest including Disney World and Sea
World.

NO TRESPASSING
OR HUNTING
DAY OR NIGHT
ON MY PROPERTY
IN RU11AND TOWNSHIP

Plana for 1 feUowahlp supper lor
the entire cburdllll Dec. 5 at 5:30

p.m. were made dlll'lnll a recent
meeting o1 the WWJns Workers
Mlllilllllr)' 8odely Ill the First
dU'cb of God, s,ncu.e.

Mr"DI ~ 11 the dRirch, It
noted IIIII the cburcb will
jirwlde ham, turkey, rolla. eoffee

pop

The n..- l(ltc:htnAid Energy S...,.r v mthwuhttt art
h.,. I And lhty'rt tilt bell dtthw•lwrt KltchenAid hu t¥tr
bultt. They UH 1... tntrgy, utt ' " ' tlmt and u" 1111 wtttr
thtn prt'tiOUI mod..l . And, they IUIOITitliCIIIy hiM lhtlr

t(W!re
5~

1o111Nlll'

-

=:m..

'499••

fl'llt .....

l.cry One Away for

comoltl• -.~_,.., ·

r~~eom­

PORTABLE DISHWASHER
FRONT LOAD

1 VMr 'ult Wlffi"'Y

011

water httltr 2crF lower than any other dlthwtthtr
ri1endt. So don't Httlt tor tnsthan KitchtnAid .

"."'r

1 0,.., ~lfllll . . . .
on ~• 11111 lnMf tloor .
I 'tiiU llrNI .. ,.,II'I!Y

"" .... hotMIJIOwr

own wtter in every complttt crclt lor tuptrlor cl•nlng
eYtry time. You can aavt even mort &amp;nergy by titling yoUr

INGELS"TheFURN.
&amp; JEWELRY.
Two In One Store"
.'

'

. ,,

�.·
Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 1, 1911

Tuesday, December 1;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

.Busi.n ess Services
-

• Grocery bills go up again

-

found the marketbasket bill was ac· 1980 cut the peanut crop, but supFrom AP Wires
Grocery bills rose during Novem- tually lower than it was in January, plies have increased again and
ber for the third mooth in a row, an down an average of almost 5 per- prices have dropped.
cent The decline, however, was due
~ociated Press marketbasket surThe AP did not try to weight the
vey says.
to a sharp drop in the price of sugar. survey results according to
. The rate of increase was the When sugar was removed from the PQpulation density or in tenns of
. ;;econd steepest this year. Both food · marketbasket totals, the AP found what percentage of a: family's actual
and non-food items were affected by the average bill at the start of grocery outlay each item "'presenthe price boosts.
December was virtually unchanged ts. The AP also did not lry to cornfrom the Jan. I level.
pare actual prices from city to city.
The AP survey covers 14 comSugar prices soared late last year The only comparisons were made in
monly purchased food and non·food following rePQrts of crop damage in terms of percentages of increase or
. products selected at random. The several producing countries. The decrease.
items were priced at one super- high prices dampened the world's
. market in each of 13 cities on March appetite for sugar, and the gap betThe items on the AP checklist
· 1, 1973, and have been rechecked on ween production and conswnption were : chopped chuck, center cut .
or about the start of each succeeding was smaller than anticipated. The PQrk chops, frozen orange juice conmonth.
early ouUook for the current crop is centrate, coffee; paper towels, but·
· The latest survey showed that the good and prices for sugar have been ter, Grade-A mediwn white eggs,
·creamy peanut butter, laundry
marketbasket bill went up at the faDing steadily.
.
. checklist store in seven cities last
· Eggs went up in more cities than detergent, fabric aoftener, tomato
· month and dropped at the checklist any other item. The AP survey sauce, milk , frankfurters and
store in six cities.
showed the price of eggs rose last granulated sugar. A !5th item,
chocolate chip cookies, was dropped
. Overall, the marketbasket bill mopth at the checklist store in eigllt
rose during November by an citil!s. The increases are due to from the list after the manufacturer
discontinued the package size Wied
average of half a percent. The seasonal production declines.
in the survey. The cities checked
marketbasket bill measured by the
There was good news for peanut
were : Albuquerque, N.M ., Attsnta,
. .~ has risen in six of the first 11 butter lovers. The price of a jar of
Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit,
· months of 1981; the biggest monthly peanut butter went down last month
Los Angeles, Miami, New York,
increase, in June, was 1.3 percent.
at the checklist store in eight cities.
Philadelphia, Providence, R.I., Salt
Comparing prices today with Peanut butter prices jumped sharLake City and Seattle.
those at the start of the year. the AP ply after drought in the summer of

•

.•·

TO BUY
SCRAP

of

For all
your wiring needs.
Let Geortt Miller
check vour prestnt tlec·

tricalsystem.

Rllidtnllli
&amp; Commtrcill

Call742·3195

Salt

cu..-ncy.

1 304 675 6276.

Nilze told rePQrters the meeting
was "cordial and businesslike."
He said he and KvitsinskY agreed
to keep the discussions secret
because "it is only by mutual
respect lor the confidentiality of
these proceedings tbat we can hope
to look a! the hard issues which
divide us and to search for solutions
that will assure security and
reduced tensions."
He said the

Call Ken Young
For Fall Service
985·
1
PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES

'
Press marketbaskellllli'Vey shows. Cbai:tsbows prices
oil three foods in U clUes arrDII the country. (AP
Laserpboto ).

Small investment, large
return~ Sentinel Want Ads

-- - Public
- --Notice
- - --·
point of beVinnlng tor the

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE

am offering for sale a land · here1n

described;
1967
Dodge
Coronet thence north 87 degrees 52'
automobile owned by the 01" west along a line and
lat~
Hobart J. Raub passing an Iron pin at 200.(¥)
Deceased . Said motor feet a total distance df
vehicle Will be sold at the 4ot0.00 feet to an Iron pin;
office of Crow, Crow and thence north 9 d~rees 43'
Porter, Attorneys at Law, 29" east along a lin •. ~ ooPomeroy, Ohio, on Wed· feet to an.JtiR pill, T nee
nesday, December 9, 1981, south 87 degrees 52' 01"
at 9:30 a.-m. to the highest east along a fine and
sing an 1roh pin ai24D.OO
bidder. To inspect this
eet a total distance of
automobile
contact:
Stephen Tatterson, 84.4 E . 440.00 feet to an Iron pin In
Ma10 Streel ; Pomeroy • the existing westerly right·
I

OAT

3

l

II

OATS

DAIS

DAIS

'3

4

1

7 . 110

1

begin today

'11

'7

16

1

'9

16

1

19

1

r--- :.:::.::-:!:::::1:::::!::::~-==-:-::!_--.
I

to reject any and all bids .
Joanne T atterson,
Executr ix of the
Estale of
Hobart J . Raub,
De&lt; eased

Curb Inflation
.::~ .l~.!iCNoE~~===
·
Pay Cash for
II•
Claislfleds and I~
S~vei_IJ ·
I Of
I
1
I
I

1
I
I
1

(II)

22.

(12)

1, 8, 3tc

. NOTICE OF '
DRAWING JURORS

gage to
Savings

I

Write your own ad and order by ·mall with this
results. Money not refundable.

I
I
I

Nom•----------11
Addreu

Phon•-----------------

COMPLETE
UDIATOI!
SERVICE
From tho Smoliest
Hto.ftr Core to tho
Largess Rodlotor.
Rodlllor Spoclolill
NATHANIIGGS
35 Yrs. Exporltnca

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

( )Announcement

.'

1. _ _ _ _ __
2. _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ _ __
5·----~-

6. _ _ _ __

7. - - - -,,.-8.
_ _ _ __

.

9.
10.
11.
12.
13.

I u.

I
I

You' II

tract It dawn
II th ~

WANT AD

I
I

15.
16.

21.
22. _ _ _ _ __
23. - - , - - - - - - 24. _ _ _ _ __
25. - - - - - 26. - - - - - -

27. - - - - - 28.
29.
30.
31.
~

33.

:u.
35.

Mill This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
•
1 . .
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

1

I

0

I

of

the

above ·

29" east along the existing

of State Route 7, 62.30 feet
to the real point of begin·
ning for the easement
herein described; thence
north 85 degrees -46' 00"

NEAR MINE ONE - 3

there to terminate. Subject
to all legal highways and
easements of record.
Deed Reference: Volume

bedroom ranch home
with part basement.
Forced air heat. Ap·
·prox .. ,2.5 acres with
storage building . Fruit

trees. $29,900.00.

Said premises located at
the entrance of Hickory
Lane camping area In Tup pers Plains on Route 7.
There Is an apartment
building or duplex right on
Route 7 beside the entrance. As you face the
apartment tomple)(, the

UPPER LEE CIRCLE
- RUSTIC HILLS Modern 3 bedroom fully
insulated home with ref .
and range. Electric B. B.
heat on approx. .23

ny
Aluminum Siding
elnsulotlon
aStormDoors
· • Storm Wlndowo
a Replocement
Win-s
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
• 11 . 12 .1

BOGGS

. GUNSMITHING

SALE$ &amp; SERVICE

Sizes from 4to6 and an
wood buildings 24xl6.
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. J, Box 54

James Proffin,
Sheriff

:c11 l 24,(12l1.6.3tc

acres. $39,900100.
bedroom

ttouse

·

6'h
~

-

2

bathS on 2 lots with a

small

hOuse

$27,000.00.

trailer.

CHESTER AREA - 2
Qodroom ranch hOme
with onached single car

Phone
H 614 l-992·3325
$39,000, New

geraoe,

ll/2

baths,
workshop, utility, wood :
burner to auorrient elec·

trlc rlldlont ceiling heal .
Nice home. $.43,500.00.
..

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNH,
OHIO
EStATE OF ALICE M .
OSBORN;OECEASEO
case No.

23m

AP,~I~CfM0lNT

~M

RENTAL
IN·
VESTMENT - Thr" 2
bedroom units with

separate

utilities.

Glaztd block buildingllnle molnlenanct. Full
blsemoni.I24.5GD.OO.
RIAl,. TORS
Honrv 1. Cleland, Jr.

OF FIDUCIARY
Oft'November 11. 1981. in
the Meigs County Probate
Court. Case NQ. 2341G9. Nan·
cv L. Cole, 2262 Colefox
Avtnue. Columbus. Ohio
43224 was alli'Oinled Ad·
mlnistratrlx Of the estal• of
Alice M. Osborn, deceased.
dote of Route 1. Reedsville.

'""'"'

R-lllotlll Turner
tn-Mn
JunTmMIIMf-OFFICEfft-225'1

the 325 acre larm, old
home and some out·
buildings.
·
sn,ooo - What • buy
this cozy 2 bedroom

~':,l' 11i~:~:~.~ c't:~:;

familY room, bar, bath
· and 3 lois.

plies. Traps. dye, wax, and
plete rrne Spring
of trapping
&amp;uplures.
Valley

Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plozo,,j.j6·8025.

trespassing on the Ralph

Lewis Finley properties.
.Jeffers,
Calvin Waugh
and
NO EXCEPTIONS
.

HOSKINS

No hunting or trespassing
day or night on the Charles
E . Yost and Ivan Well far·

ms.

Fish - Game Hud lite Size Mounts · Plus
Hide Tanning

Birchfield ' s Taxidermy.
Deer heads mounted. East

VInyl &amp; Aluminum
Si Dl NG

BISSELL'
SIDING co.

General Store. 992·6370.

Cl aSSI'f'le d Ads
b r I n1 rou

In the country.
$69,900- Whet Will YOU
give for this excellent

or

3-11·Hc

IJ.

A

.•

~

..

.__

CltnltrOh.
Order Now for
J Chrlllmes:
"Gilts tor Gotten
• Sllortr.m• practice
• Prop- olf tenons lor
tHa...
a Rlflllr: CINnllft,
Nflols~l ... -grips
cllt....

=

...._..._
HtYIC.

$10.50

243,

Ravenswood,

.

Insurance agont with top
company . Male

training

or

Mmalt.

program,

vacation,

peld

retirement,

hospitallzallon, guoran!Md
salary while In training.
Potential of $20,000 In first
vear . Advancement. Call
614-592-2073 or write D·.L.
Athens.

Ohio

THREE month old, female,
wire haired terrier , to good
home 304·675·6145.

CHRISTIAN lady needed to
work

In

personal

care

NEW YORK, NEW YORK .
Wanted : Ambitious hair
stylist to work In In·
novafive salon. Apply in
person to Julie McGinley,
401 Viand St. Pt. Pleasant.
CLERK -General
office
aide, 20 hours per week,
some typing, must be 55
years of age or old'r, meet
Dept. of Labor guidelines,

Rock
Springs
Pomeroy. 992·26"9.

resident.

Coli

Pt.

Pleasant Job Service, 304·

675-2770.

ton.

1C!2_..;5'"ifu""'-at._,io~n._,s~W'!.•~n!!'l'!ed:!!...._

Rd .•

Elim ~esthome. Care for
handicapped, aged, or bied
patient . Temporary "or
limited care. Or continuous
home with us. Equlpp&amp;d tor
wheel chair. 7~2 · 2266 . ,

per

Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,

Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Bar·

ber Shop, Middleport. 992·

3~76.

-

Have vacancy for elderly
man or woman in my
home. Shirley Jones 614·

NEED MONEY? I need 667·3402.

furniture. New, used or an·
tlque. Also buying glass,
china. gold. silver, coins.
watches, cha ins, etc. Mar·
tin's General Store, Mid·

Have room and board for
elderly or disabled persons
reasonable. 992·6022 .

dleport, Ohio. 992-6370.

Insurance

13
Raw furs. hides, Scrap
meta Is.
batteries.
radiators. ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brok~rlng. Harper·Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 675·5868.
Also Flea Market open
dally . Open Monday Friday 1·5 pm.

SANDY AND BEAVER

I~

surance Co. has Offered
services for fire Insurance
coverage In Galli&amp; County
for almost a century.
Farm. home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet In·
dividual needs. Contact
Nell Ins. Agency, agent.
Phone 4.66·1694. .

LOCUST posls, 8 fl . long. ~------~--- ~
4" small tip -chip poles. 304· AUTOMOBiLE
1N·
675-6325 after 6 p.m.
SURANCE
been
can celled?
Lost
your
Pool table With slate top. operator's License? Phone
992-2143 '

WANT to buy house in Pt. l..a~_..!W!'o!!n'-'l.!'ed~to~Do~-­
Pieasant on land contract or lease basis. Write Box A· Butcher's Shoppe Custom
27 in care of Pt. Pleasant butchering &amp; processing,
Call 416·2851 , GoiliPOIIs.
Register.

Oh.

beef &amp;

RAW furs,
deer
hides. Best prices guaran- Wanted to do light hauling,
carpenter work . Call 446-teed. 304·4.18·1656.

7532 .

WANTED: to rent buy or
borrow, plano In good condition, older person, no

children, 304-675·5•54.

-... ....

3 grey striped k ittens. Call
«6·0728.

11

""

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

I will babysit In my home
for $25 a week . Cali 416·
2615.
Babysitting

wanted,

In

North Gall Ia Dec. 5, 12, 19,
21. 22. 11 .00 per hour . Con·
tact 367-7402.
TV service calls. Call 992-

Help Wanted

6 PUPPIES, 3 male, 3 Why settle for less. Sell the
female, Blu-e Tick &amp; best. Sell Avon . For more
Information call 44.6·3358 or
Walker, 30,.·458·1760.
7~2 - 2354.

203 ... Also used color TV for
sale.
Will do electrical work. 992·
5726.

6

c.__.....:===---

track, leans, toys, speed
bike, lots of misc . 1 mile
past Layne's Furniture on

Buioviii~- Porter Rd. Mon ·
day, Tuesday, &amp; WedSale·Homemacle

clottles.

dishes. bazaar
Items. Dec. J &amp; ~ . 2 .miles
West of Gallipolis on Route

141. McGuire's.

Jt=========w-;:;N;;o-;h:u~n;,ll;;ng;;-;o;r~t;r~;,,~~;.;,.,~ln;.g;f
Big Christmas Bazaar
on the following farms. given by Judy Fellure and

Substttue bus driver.
Qualifications are must
pass physical e)(amination
and hold current bus
drivers license for school
bus operator. Respon·
slbllltles are In driver' s absence being responsible to
drive assigned bus route.
Salary is 53.35 per hour.
Available August 24, 1981.
Contact
David Ratliff,

Mr.

Principal. PO. Box 14.
Cheshire. Ohio &lt;5620, (614)
367-0102.

Direct care &amp; night relief
Alma Peterson. Bill Cion- Dot MadiSon al409 Second people
neecled by a residench, Louise Eden, Rutland Ave .. GaJflpolts, Ohio. Afl t a\ care
facility servicing

A. . .

),J, I..'Nfli''&gt;

Township.

There will be no deer hun·
t lng

on

E Idon

Morris

pJoperty on Boilev Run.

1"'"0 11 Anyone

caught

on

my

kinds of crafts, WOOd Items,
and baked goods. Dec. 3, 4
&amp; 5· Starting 9AM 10 ?

MR adults ' wiH1 various
behavioral dlsorclers. Ap·
pllcanfs must be creative,

Yard sale.
women's

able to work flt)(lble hours,

Mens wear,
'lothes.

household linens. Antique
properly will bl prosecuted dishes,
crockery Jugs, kit·
except with my constnt.
chen ward. 1·- lry. Dec. 3
and 4. corner of Page St.
No hunting with or without end Railroad St., Midwritten perm Isalon on the dleport.
Kenneth Hartley Form,
8unker Hill, Pomeroy.
'I
Public Sole
&amp; Auction
CHRISTMAS AUCTION
Friday Dec . .cth at 7:00PM.

'}if IDfi

&gt;

THE
Scout

1 kitten and .1 mother cat.
Call evenings .446·4987 .

BARBIE and KEN doll

for
shopp I n1 sprus

frame home. Has cen·
tral air and hot . water

heal, I'."J bitlis. and 2
additional rentals.
WANT TO KNDW
WHAT YDUR PRDPIRTY IS WORTHt
'TWD CERTIFIID AP.
PRAISERS AT YOUR
SERVICE.
CAI.L

Almost lull grown . Call388·
8510.

Inside

ertra cuh '

No Sunday Calls

'

diameter 10" on largest

end. S12.SO per ton . Bundled

coil 895·3572.

Giveaway

nesdav. 10 to ?

"BNUIIIIII, CUllom
lullt Oerlttl"
Coli tor lrH lldiOI

' ... '

Box

W.Va. 2616-1.

Lost and Found
S40,000·$SO,ooo Per Year.
National Company looking BABYSITTING in my
FOUND: female Blue Tick for
·
Distributors in 16 Ohio nome. 304-662-2301 .
nound, phone 304-695-3404. Counties
F1
M
k
N
. Part time or Full
I will do babysitting In my
time . Call1·800·238-5329.
OpeninQ. 7 days a week. 7
YaniSale
home. Rosa Greene, Hart·
The Heart of Middleport. 20
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin Garage Sale Clothes, 8· POSITION AVAILABLE ford, 30.-882·2912 .

ln-

gas furnace, T.P. water,

POSITIVI LV no hunting on
the old H. C. Brown Farm
opposite Racine · rocks
Letart, wv . Signed B ill Me·
Dan iel.

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors

REESE
of Rutland on 124. 614-742·
TRENCHING
2178.
PH. 742·2225
SERVICE
f!?;;;;;;;;;;::;;;:;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;:_j e a ~ r e t. e w
water·S-r·Eiectrlc

REPA
IR WORK
•Gas &amp; Electric
•CuHtng
•Brazing
• 20 Yrs. Exp.
Reasonable Rates
166 South Third
Mldclloporf, Ohio

Stolen Property. Antique
kitchen safe. Antique
dil"iing room cabinet. Two
rocking chairs. Other
items. Anyone knowing or
seeing thi~ furniture being
hauled In the vicinity of
Flatrock, WV on October 10
or later, a liberal reward is
offered . 67S· 1302.

Two female calico kittens.

6:30p.m .• Bashan . Factory
choke 12 guage shotgun.

FInest Qua llty
Excellent Service

"''·2101

Bru_, R-asen-

304-273--1559 or write Rt.1,

WV

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
·slab .

NO hunt ing &amp; trespassing
on Bright McCausland
Farm operated by Wool han
Farms.

supplies. Gene Hines.
Amesville. Ohio. 614·448·
6747 . Daily after 1 p.m.

a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights

11 -25-1 mo. pd.,

nllmotes,

Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992·7760.
NO hunting &amp;
no
trespassing without written
permission on Woolhan
Farms at Apple Grove.

ANY PERSON who has

evenings.

.........

furniture, gold, silver
dollars, woocl l'e boxes.
stone iars, antiques. etc .•
Complete
householcls.

Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,

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

Buckley, Rt . 2, Athens, Oh.
614 ·664 -4761. · Open

D&amp;D
.
WElDING SHOP

742-2927.

4

or 915·3364

~rowing

"''

TRAPPER We have a com-

Deer heads mounted with
experience and tare. Contact Perry Kennedy. 61.4·

DEER ·skinneq , cut, wrapped. Call Cisco, 304·675·
1498.

Mounts,
Wildlife
Novelties, Custom Tan·
ning . Fast Delivery.

CIIIOif

l!obert E. Buck
Probate Judge/.
. Cieri
C11l 2•. m1 1, 8, 31c

Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call

RAW FUR buyer. Beef &amp;
deer hlde -glnshang. Trapping supplies . George

Ph.I6H560

4&lt;46·0069.

304-458·1552 . .

Game~;,ii:'-(1ile,size

Gil Lln•DIIChtl
Wlltr Lint Hoolt·UPI
StpliC Ttnks
county Ctrtlfltd
Roush Lo~e
Chtlhi,.., Oh.

FUIItr

tative In your area . Call

Pt. Pleasant Register.
We pay cash lor late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson ,

BEDS·IRON, BRASS, bid

CHILD care ·Opening soon .
Small group, nursery like
environment . Uptown Pt .
Pleasant. very reasonable
rates. Have good referen·
ces . For information call

TAXIDERMY
SHOP

1* 01

t 0hlo~5772.

machine repair, ports, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum

7·5-IIC

dependtnco? Well, htre
PH. "2·5663
you can have 11 wltn
11-6·1 mo.
your
own business and I~========::=~
live In a nice home. Net. II

9t2-3176.

669-3785.

sewing

Ph. 949-2160 or 949-2412

perty. School bus and

Want

and

Absolutely no hunting or

614·915·3833

RGIL B. SR.
216 E. Second Strttt

-

SWEEPER

•Remoctellnt
•Free estimates
e2D Yrs. experience

*1/

531,000

Announcements

.J

•Roollng of all IYP&lt;tl

MOD·JU I Row New lde1 corn
Plcl••r

.

1976 Honda Civic. Call 256- home. Live·ln necessary .
6652.
Write Bo)( C·27 In care of

chard, SR689. Phone 614·

•SI~Inl

'FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT
1-No. UIO Dfestl Ford
TrKIDr WI Clb
MOD-44110 Din~ J .D. Tr1c11r '

Racine, Oh.

PORTLAND

deed .

..

F•rm lliauipment

Ph. 614-143-2591
6·15·Hc

for less than two·lhlrds of
tttat amount.
TERMS OF SALE: 10

Approx .

- - - -- We still have pienly Ol ap·
pies at Fitzpatrick Or-

And Home Me,ntenance

NtW Ho!.. nd, Bush Hog

Gun

gunsonly.

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

Utility Buildinp

mall routes.
$9,600 - You can reallv
live reasonably here.
Trailer with 2 rooms ad·
ded, woodburner and
flue for you.
S4GO PER ACRE -for

percen.t cash or certified
check on day of sale balance upon receipt of

PH. 742-2753

Racine

pathy during our time of

Diet Plan · and Hydres
Water Pills. Fruth Phar·
macy, Gallipolis.

JIM LUCAS.

Shoaf.

tttelr expressions of sym-

Control hunger and lose
weight with New Shape

DIE

remodeled home Is in
excellent condition with
modern built-in kitchen.
3 bedrOoms, beautiful
stone wall In dining
room. Fully carpeted.
Forced air gas heat.
Front porch and r;ear

Said premises appraised
at $2,000 and cannot be sold

Troller IIIII &amp;
Orlvowtrs. Smoli(obs a
SP&lt;tclolty. Dltcher or
Trtnch Service.
Gos &amp; Water Lines

Gun

r•&lt;;;llub . Every Sun. starting
Developmental Center for
p.m. Factory choke

TRAPS and TRAPPING

ALL SHEA IFF SALES
OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR.
THE MEIGS COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO
GUARANTEE AS TO
STATUS QF TITLE
PRIOR TO DATE OF
SAlE.

patio.

Price would like to extend a
The Family
special
tha'nks of
to Kermit
friends
and staff at Glllllpolls

ty . Trespassers will be
proculed. Springfield Twp.

U.S. Rt. H EUI
Ouyn·illt, Ohio'·
A.uthOriJtcl Jolin Detre,

.,..,

Wanted to buy motor for

No .hunting or trespassing
on R:uttl Matthew's proper-

11 · 15·1 mo.

S&amp;W

Ml ODLE PORT - This

acres. $~7,500. 00 .

property Is directly ad·

'

1&amp;

bedroom ranch on
acres with place
maw and paw, or
children. GOOd
road on·each end
pro-

1~cent and lies to the right
of the apartment building .

• •
614·691-6791
11 ·16-tfn

CERTIFIED GAS
OUrSpeciallles
Clgs:
63c Dk.: cartons
SU5 reg.Lf6.D51ongs.
We sell me following:
8 Pk. RC Diet RC orllc
100 Sl.H plusdep. &amp;tax
6 pk. RC proctucts$1.59
8ptc.Pepsipr0du.cts
' 1· 39 plus dop ..&amp; tax
6 pk. Pepsi pr~~.~~ '••
8 pic . 16oz. Cokes
·
51.39 plus dep. &amp; tax
Hours: Mon.· Sat.
6 A.M.·9 P.M.
Sunday 8 A.M. ·9 P.M.

p•rt · tlmt

4109 for an eppolntment,

Box 220,
··45701.

card of Thinks

1

416·029~..

Rl 2 Alblny1 Ohio

135.000.00.

west along said centerline,

262, Page 187, Meigs Coun·
1'/Dee.d -ds.

&amp; COOLING

SMALL

10 room house wtth 3·4
bedrooms, stm room
with wall of stained
gl91ss windows, large
rooms with 6 fireplaces,
marble and lovely wood
facings . 2Vz baths,
remodeled
kitchen.

westerly rlgtit-of·way 1ine

75.85 feet to a point and

SUNRISE HEATING

Sizes start from 30x24"

'
NEW LISTING- MIDDLEPORT - REGAL
OUAUTY - Historical

described tract and In the
existing westerly right-of·
way line of State Route 7:
thence north 9 degrees 43'

folows:

Section 5: thence south
along tho •ast line of said
Section 5, Orange ·Town·
ship, and the west line of
Section 34. Olive Township,
2459 feet, more or less, to a
point In the Grantor's
southeast prqpertv corner;
thence wast along the
P"-riY
Grantor's
I line 792 fee.!,south
more or lass.
fn the Grantor's
I to=nt
pr
ty corner; thence
I sou
5d~rees52' 51" wast
1 along tho59grantor's proper·
I ~~II~ a~a~~t:' a =r~
properlY line; thence west
I along tfte grantor's south
propertY line, 89.18 teat to
1 on
1n111 pin In the existing
1 westerlY
rlght·of·war line
Stall Route 1: thence
I of
11 dlgrHS q W'
I north al~
tho existing
. 1 east
westerly r ht·of·way lil!t
1 of Slall R te No. 7, 603
-to an·exlsllna conc..te
I monumenlfth~t north t
degrees &lt;13 29' continuing
along uld line. 94.00 teet to
an Iron. pin and the rtal

storm

an Iron pin In the southeast

4, Range 12. Orange Town· ·
ship, Village of Tuppers
Plains, Meigs County,
OHio, more fully described
as
Commencing at a point In
the northeast corner of said

E.MIII.W
POMEROY,O.
992-2259

centerline: Commencinq at
corner

Tappan Rocuperotivt ·
Condlliolng, Arklo-Ser..
vel GOI Air Condition..
lng, Sheet Metal work.

11 .12 . 1 mo.

need

675-6130.

need.

.furnace, Coleman Air

Ph • 992•2772
.

Also

delivery person . Call -

Vorhees, Dirstlct Mana~r,

992·2156

•

COOLING

\Alii

,....,.., , out IIOino per·
:sonollty Is a must. Must
provide transportation.

Have better health with
natural food supplerMnts
plus great business opportunity. Ca II Wanda
Bush, Shaklee Distributor

Hr•'illNG
&amp;
Ul

ALL mn
BUILDINGS

LOan

lh, five feet on either side of
the following described

•
December 1, 1981
To All Whom It M.1y Concern:
On Friday , the lith day
December 1981, at 10 :00
o clock, A.M ., at the office
of the Commissioners of
Jurors of Meigs County
Ohio, Jurors will b€
publicly drawn for the
January 1982 Term of the
Co_m mon Pleas Court of
sa1d county.
Wallace Bradford
Lauren Hoffman
Commissioners
of Jurors
(12 ! 1. ltc

VI

STUART WAYNE
PULLINS
Call Aller4 P.M.
' 9fZ·7656
11-12·1 mo.

Federal

1

J&amp;L Ulo\llln
Dl nlllll
INSIJIJii'ION

AND CUSTOMIZING
R•Biue and R•Finlsh
Rtttock, perts, etc.
Order Guns ,.,.
AbDYt WhOIHalt

IIIUCh f IS tH

sewer being ten feet In wid·

described real estate:
Situate In Section 5, Town

20.

11nd

an easement for

COUNTY COURTHOUSE,
East 2nd Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio; on the 29th day of
December 1961, at 10:30
o'clock A.M., the following
17,
16.
19,

First

Jackson. OH.
11 _13 . 1 mo.

Junk c:ars w ith or without
motors, and batteries. Call
388-9303 .

In Mason Caunly

~=========1~==~=~~~~j~========~t=====l~l~-1~9~·1~~

amt. Sl7,300.00. Excepting

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE

~---------------------~'

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. nz.2174
5.7.Jtc

Page 4t, Meigs Mortgages,

The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
Commercial
&amp;Inking and Trust Com-

( )For Rent

Wiftpllolo).

9-5-tfc

•..

BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
peylng cosh for anything
stamped lOK, UK, 18K end
dental 11010. Closs rings,
wedding rings, sllvor coins
or anything stamped
sterling. Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 416·2691 or
992-20541n Pomeroy!

In Meigs County

l

446-2342

Ph 992 1201·

·

&amp; 107U U.S. 35

Association, Parkersburg,

Ohio

coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get

.

In Galtia County

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~j~===~~~~~~~~;;;~~~~~

West Virginia, In Vol. 139,

Office of CommiSioners
of Jurors, Meigs County

( )Wanted
( )For Sale

ud Kvillmlky mellor tbe _ . , . ua. Ill .u.e-111e
llml1lllcll af lllldoar 111'11111 lllaU. Ia l!m;pe. (AP

Middleport

of-way line of Stale Roule
Said motor vehicle iS ap· No. 7; thence south 9
praised at $300.00 but will degrees 0' 29" . west along
be sold to the highest bid· the existing westerly right~
der . Said sale is subject to. ot·woy· line of Slate Route
the arproval of the Probate 7. 100.00 feet to the point of
Cour of Meigs County, beginnil'l91 containing 1.001
Ohio. The right is reserved acres. Suuiect to a mort·

Defendants.
case No. 17877
In pursuance of an Order
Of Sale In the above entitled
action, I will offer for sale
at public auction, 'at ttte
front door of the MEIGS

. --.11., ey, I pari af die U.S. m!eelp lillie. Nllle

•Ranges

Ohio, telephone: 992-6398.

vs.
Clyde J. Morton, et at.

_,,-

322 N. Sec. Ave.

•Oitpoaols
' eDishwathers
-Hot Woter Tanks

r...

lf$S

•Dryen

fM _

949-Raclne

Llcenled &amp; Bondtd

U..._. ,.....;_1 .

•

2 Locations

•Washen

AP

GROCERY COSTS UP- Grocery bills rooe in
November lor the !bird month in a row 8D Associated

Boots &amp; Shoes for
the whole family,

J4)-Portlond
247-Ltllrt FillS

195-Lolort
937-BulfiiO
\fo PLACE AN ~DCALL

• Backlloo
a Excavating
• Septic Systems
• W1ter, Sower &amp;
GtsLJnes
eoumpTruck

rnniiE
UM WIUR
GRA~R

SHOES

Pomtroy

112-New Haven

CONTRACTING

•~nnl

SERVICE

I

- ·"""'

county area. No experience

CASH PAID for elton, lOft
...-1 ultd cors. Smitn
Buick-Pontiac, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call-146-2282.

576-• .Jple Grove
773--Mason

~21~-t~fc::t===~1~1·~19~·l~~t====~~~
~=·:;=·~~-~;:~;:===~9DRIUEIIIAV
SUNRISE
BAILY'S

pan'PI•intifl,

'

Middleport, OhiO

Futureleference

IIIAN

"242Uortft-7JIA

Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. "2·7583

276 Sycamore St.'

HJ-CIIester

V. C. YOUNG Ill

New Homes - extenstve remodellng.
e Electrical work
eRoolingwork
14 Years

992-6259

:1M-VInton
245-A lo Gronde
256-Guyon Dill.
643-Aroblo Dill.

742-RUIIInd
667-Coolvllle
Muon Co., W. Vi. ·
ArMC-304
675-Pt. Pleasont
tSI-Loon

JIF

Used Color TV Sets IGr
Sai~.EWPRONE NO.

ftt-Midcl~

367-CIIes~l,..

olectrlalwork
(FrM EsHmot")

8·20·Ifc

t$4

~I Illpolls

Jl.,..,.,ll!ll and

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH."2-6011

11
HllpWao...
Fast gr-lng bullness
needs sal.........., to call on
new and oxlstlng bull&amp; Industrial occounfll In 1 5

Mtlfl Ca. Are• Code

614

_ c-,.twork

"2-7656

OPEN

APPLIANCE

WOliDS

.

~ .... ll"ftor

heotlne.

•

..... -- .

Gollla Co. Are• Code

--:::.r.:.
_..

battwoams, remadtllng, ·
plumbln, electric, and

KHplhlsAdfor .

•

the negotiations and that will enbe told the date and . place of
courage them now to take a serious
meetings "and litUe else."
PQSition," Haig said.
"We want these talks to succeed,"
The United States in the
he added. "This arrangement will
negotiations will be pressing the
help us work toward this goal."
Soviets to dismantle the estimated
A U.S. official who asked not to be
named said adherence to the 250 multi-wa~head SS2Q. missiles
deployed in Western Russia, and the
blackout might mean the
negotiations were going well, while Soviets will be trying to head oft
NATO's plans to deploy the 572
leaks might be a sign that the talks
cruise and Pershing 2 missiles .
had hit a snag and the leaking side
President Reagan offered to
was trying to put the blame on the
forego the American deployment if
other.
In Washington , Secretary of State the Soviets agreed to dismantle their
Alexander M. Haig Jr. said the SS20s and older SS4s and SS5s in
United States would negotiate "with • Western Russia . Soviet President
care and patience. " But he said the Leonid Brezhnev rejected this "zeto
Soviets would agree to reduce their option" proPQSBl last week but ofdeployment Ill middle-range nuclear fered to withdraw some of the Soviet
missiles trained on Western Europe missiles in exchange for a
only if the North Atlantic Treaty moratorium on the NATO
Organization went ahead with its deployment during the negotiations.
preparations to deploy U.S. cruise The West rejected that one.
The Soviets also want British,
and Pershing 2 missiles beginning in
French
and U.S. delivery systems in
1983.
Europe and the waters around it in''These
cluded in
reduction

&amp;Metal)
Now plcklnt up tunll
outo ltocllln. "Top prlcn
peld for IUfo - ...
1crap Iron alld metals.
I mile wnt of l'llrtll'oundl on Dill At. U .
Mon.·Frl. 1::11 to4 :DO

.. .

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

Cus- kite-•- oppUanc••· custom

1D-12·Hc

oc

'----------,---------.,..--------"T"--------

GENEVA, Switzerland (AP)·U.S.
and Soviet anns negotiators get
down to their first bargaining today
after 'agreeing to a news blackout on
i.heir talks to limit the deployment of
nuclear missiles in Europe.
The two delegations were to meet
at the offices of the U.S. Arms Control Agency, where the ill·fated
SALT II trea.ty was negotiated,
following a preliminary session
Monday of delegatioo chiefs Paul H.
Nitze of the United States and Yuli
A. Kvitsinsky ofthe Soviet Union.

Iron

RotH blslcl on double

r----------------------------..;.._______

nego.tiatio~~ts

Scrap

R..,..
CONSIIOOIION
c.

The Daily Sentinel-Peg_,

l:lmuified Page~ cover the
fullolf'illll telephmae ezchanges ...

-

Ph.m-4164

OFF SEASON RATES
f120WEEKLY
S400MONTHLY

asked not to be identil.led, said Pier- with few strings attached. Cities use
ce plans an appeal to President the money for such diverse activities
Reagan, who has made no final as upgrading sewer facilities,
determination on the next round of building playgrounds or teMis courspending reductions.
ts, rehabilitating neighborhood
A spokesman for the U.S. Con- shopping strips, reburbishing
ference of Mayors said a phase-out dilapidated housing, building comof the two grant programs would munity centers and financing
·Knowledgeable. sources, both in cause ~~very, very serious problems . economic development efforts.
and oqt of government, said Monday for cities already affected by budget
cutbacks and fiscal distress."
that Stockman bopes to eliminate aU
UDAG is specifically targeted to
new spending for Community
The contemplated urban cuts are aid distressed Cities and towqs. Such
Development Block Grant.s and Ur- part of a new package of sharp cities as New York, Detroit and
ban Development Action Grant.s, or reductions in non-defense programs Orlando, Fla. have won UDAG granthat Reagan plans to unveil in late
UDAG, after 1983.
ts for downtown
and neighborhood
The programs - successors to ur- January, when he sends Congress development
projects
; 350 grants r
ban renewal efforts of the past his budget plan for 1983.
were to be made in !981.
have been the government's main ·
Other areas targeted by StockUDAG money was Wied in the
tool for helping to build or reRirbish
man's Office of Management and redevelopment project that burned
communities. One of the best-known
Budget for large cuts are the En- to the ground last weekend in LyM,
project.s has been the redevelopment vironmental Protection Agency, job Ma.S. Community development funof the Baltimore Harbor.
training and employment programs ds were used to help build sidewalks
· The programs are administered
for the poor, subsidized housing for in the redevelopiltent area.
by the Department of Housing and low-income families and a variety of
The community development and
Urban Deve lopment, whose other individual assistance UDAG programs had been slated to
secrelary, Samuel R. Pierce Jr. , is
receive up to $4.2 billion in aid
programs.
said to be angry about the prop&lt;)Sed
Community Development money · during fiscal 1982, which began Oct.
budget cut.s. Several_sources, who goes to most sizable communities 1.

Arms

I Pomeroy

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
NOW

Stockman prop~ses phaseout
for ·urhan development plans
WASHINGTON .(AP) - Budget
director David A. Stockman is
proPQsing to phase out the government's chief urban development
programs - $4.2 billion allotted to
about 2,800 communities in every
state across the nation, sources say.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Toys,dollt, lamps&amp; atl kin·
ds al Christmas Items.
Swain's Auction Barn,

614·"2-2111
For Fum and
Home Delivery of
Gal
DieHl
. HHtint 011.

PRICED RIGHT.

11-25·1 mo.

''Tile U.S.IIInl, wily!"

'

patient. &amp; entergellc. Be

$3 .50 hr . for night relief. 30·
35 hours per - k. SlO,ooo
year selarv for direct care

positions. Requiring a 45
hr. work - k. 11 in·

terested send resume to

Ohio Rosldenllof Services,
Inc. Rl. 1 Box 7, Mill Creek
Dr., Gallipolis, Oh. ~5631.
Attn. Oave or Lealie .

.

Maney to· Loan

Columbus First Mortgage
Compariy FHA· VA Finan·
cing Loan Rep. Cookie

Kroutter

23

(304)675·3~73.

Professional
Services

Piano tuning and repair,
Love your neighbor tune
your P·ano. Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboard . 4~- ~372,
Gallipolis.

- ----- --

C&amp;

L

Bookkeeping. Com-

plete bOOkkeeping and tax
servic~ lor business and in·
dividuais .
Carol Neal 446·3862
$5 discount for pianos tuned
before Cttristmas. Call Bob

Grubb, 4-16-4.125.

- -·-TUNING·
- -Lant

PIANO

Daniel s . Associate :
Brunicardi Music, Phone

61N42·2951 or 61H92-2082.
GET VALUABLE training
as 1 voung business per$011

ond earn gOOd money plus
some g,..at gifts as a sen·
tlnol route carrier. Phone
Gallipolis.
us rtght away a~d get on
the
eligibility list ot 992·
Auction Every Wild . night
et Hartford Community 2156 or 992·2157.
8uiidlng. Sale time 7 p.m.
Loll of , _ and ultd mer· Wanltd RN pert·llme day
chondlst every - · Con· shill only. IV nursing team
slgnmenll from dtaltrl oxplerence prtlerrtd but
end Individual• welcomtd . not neconary . Call
R Ichord Reynolds Auc· Voltrans Memorial Phlr·
macy. 614-992-6297 E.O.E.
lloneor. 3CJ4.27H069.

,

22

Discount to Meigs reslden-

'1;.

'

HARPER Adult Core Con·
tor-providing the personal
care your elderly need In a
home like atmosphere.
Vacanc ies now avalllble.

COli 304-675·1293.

Roofing, Insulation, plum•
bing, and general homt
maintenance. For estlrne~

call 675-5490, If no anscaii675-3U7.

�..
Page-10-The Daily Sentinel ,
4t

31

Homtslor Solo

BY OWNER : 4 bdr., split·
level, living room &amp; dining
room combination, eat-I n
kitchen, lg. family rm :, 2
1/2. baths, located In Tara

Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, $75,000
tlrm. Kyger Creek School
District. Shown by appt .

ooly cal1446·9,j()3,
By owner, like new house,
priced In mid S20's. 6 miles

from Holzer Hospital. Con·
tact L.oren Nolan, Porter,
Ohio.

12x60 Indy Mobile Home,
S6,000 .
Financing
available. Ph. 388·8747 .

3 bedroom house, 2 acres, 2
baths, family room. Full
basement, garage. 949·

2079.

Joy

Houses for Rtnt

7 rm. house In town.
Inquire at 918 2nd. Ave .•

Gallipolis. Cal14-lol-3874.

614-742·2502 .
Or rent -3 bedroom fur·
nlshed home on Bud Chat·
tin Road on big level lol .

3810.
mo. Reference and deposit

3
Bedrooms
with
basement, deposit, on
r:lver, references requ ired.
Caii24H453 after 5.
House on Friendly Ridge
Rd . Ret. &amp; dep. required.

1910 vw Rabbit. Gasoline
fuel lnlocted. 18,000 miles.
SS:ZOO. 61H15-3909.

Call256-6260.
2 bedroqm all electric ran·
ch style home. 1 mile from
Racine. References and
deposit required. Available

'·

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALHY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLI POLIS. R T
35. PHONE 446·3868.
1972 12x60 Indy mobile
home, 18K36 garage, 3
acres of land in Vinton
area, $10,000 . Call388·8747 .
Or rent 12X65, 2 bdr,
mobile home in Centenary .
Call4~ · ~292.

No pets . 614'949·2875.

HOUSE for rent, 304·675-

2 unfurnished apts. , rec·
tory of Episcopal Church.

3431 or 675·3D3D.

992-3589.

HOUSE tor
rent
at
Gallipolis Ferry, $125. a
month, 304-675·3216.

2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile

homes. Call446·0175. ·
I bdr. trailer, 2 miles from

Holzer Hospital off 35 . Call
4~ · 7525.

. 388-9354.

Hallmark, 3 bctr., furniture, underpined, patio·
porch included. Call 388·
8469 after 5PM .

3 bdr., 2 bath, 1979, 14x70,
$15,000. Call388-9957.
Schultz 2 bdr. tra i ler. Call

Trailer for rent in Rio
Grande, $150 dep, rent S150
per mo. plus utilities, part

Windsor 14"70, ex·
cellent cond., 2 bdr., LR ,
bath, deluxe kitchen, 17,500
w/o heatpump-19,300 with
heatpump . Call ~79-23 10 af·
ter 3:30PM.
1971 Oarian 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms . 1972 . Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nasha-u, 14
x 60. 2 bedrooms. B 1/ "' s
Sales. Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt. Pleasant, WV .

Phone 675-4424.
USED MOBILE
576·2711.

HOME .

·1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, underpinned. 675-4064.
1977 Victorian 1.4 x 70, 2
bedroom , family . room, all
electric . Ca11675·'l987 .
1974 12 x 60 cameron,
stove. air conditioner, un. furnished. SSSOO. 675·2560.
12x65 TWO bedroom, new
furniture, underpenned,
new furnace anp carpel,
304·675·4568 or 675-1035.

304-675·2907 '

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

.Would you like to own a
'"home of your own. We
·d idn't have SlO,OOO for a
down payment nor ss.ooo
. norevenSl,OOO. Do what we

2 bedrooms. Mobile home,
all electric, no pets, adults

on ly. Call367-7438.
1 bedroom mobile home.
Reference required . Call
4~ · 3358 .

Furn. mobile home near
Cententary, washer, dryer,
air, big yard, adults only,
no pets. Call 446-3918.
House trailer for rent. 322
Jrd . Ave ., · Gallipolis.
Adults only, no pets. Call

«6·3748 or 256-1903.
2 bedroom mobile home
furnished (clean). 2 miles
out, city utlities. $175. Call

446·0939.

City water, 778 lb. tobacco

bise,

tobacco barn . Priced

$10,000. See Andy Lee at
farm or Ralph 5. Felly,
1328 Grosscup Ave., Dun·
bar, WVA 2506•. Phone304·
768·1898.

2 bdr . mobile home in Por ·
ter area in country. Dep.
and ref. Call367-7101.

Call 24H17D.
3-bedroom double wide,
Green Local School. 2·
Mobile home K &amp; . K,

Gallipolis. Call 675·3000 or
446·0682.

Trailer. 2 bdr., center of
town, adults only, no pets.

Call ~· 0931.
12)(60 completely furn ., air
cond ., adults only . Call-4462 bedroom trailer. Phone

675·4088.

Furnished apts. $210 .,
utilities pd., 1 bdr ., near
HMC, adults. Call .4.t6·4416.
after 7PM.
Mobile home in city central
air and heat, adults only.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES - washers,

57

dryers.
ranges.
pllances,

Upright

refrigerators,
Skaggs Ap ·
1918 Eastern

furnished

house,

2 bdi., apt., large living
room &amp; kitchen, no pets.

lst.lloor unturnlahod apar·
tmont. depoall &amp; referen·
cos required. Call 11 631
Fourth Ave.. Gllllpolla,
OH.
BAS Second Ave.

Phone~-

2213.
Furnished Apt. 1st floor,
utilities furnished. Rot .
requl red. No pets. Adults
preferred. Call 11 631 4th ,
Ave.

In City, 4 rooms, 2 batha,
1200.00 mo. Reference end
deposit required. Cell
Coneday Raolty 446-3636.

com·

In Middleport. 2 room effiency apartment. 1-304·

882-2566.
In Middleport. 2 bedroom
unfurnished apartment. 1

small child. 1·30..082-2566.
THREE room furnished
apartment, adUlts, no pets,
Fl VE rooms &amp; bath, $90. a
month, garbage &amp; water

paid , 30H75·10M.

light housikeeping
Park Central Hotel.

apt .•

Furnished room, $115,
utilities pd ., stove, refrig.,
slngle male. Call 446-4416
after 7FJM.
Room and board for senior
citizens in the country, 61.4·
46

Space for Rent

Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

992-7479,

MOBILE home spaces
available,
Henderson
Trailer Court. 304·675-2946.

at oldY, 304-675·3248.

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

,

~.

51

Household Goods

For sale ex.tra nice 2 piece
living room
See at 1163

set.

Musical
Instruments
pla~o.

cheap. Call

~· 0026 .

1973 Camaro, 350 engine,
new · shocks, good con-

dltloo. $1100. Call 614·742·
3063.

Ave., MP398 .
New Plano for sale, Wurllt·
zer Spinet. Call ""'"·8392.

Living room suite, good
cond. Call446·3874 .
325 Locust fence posts. 7ft.
long . S1.2Sea. 992·6057.
Electric 2 oven range in excellent condition. Celli 446'·
1525.

20 cubic foot chest freezer.
Only been used 3 months.
Too big, must sell. 992-7467

p.m.

BARREL Saddle· New. Call
992 ·5782 anytime Sunday,
after 7 p.m. on weekdays,

CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

30~·895-3843.

FOR sate or trade -steam
Ginny, 2 go-carts with 5
horse power motor, excellent condition. 500 amp
Hobart welder with leada
on factory trailer. 20·w
Bucyrus Brie -.yafer W@ll
drilling - machine. 1 pump
puller, gas operated With 2
winch lines. 11 Dogge
pickup with utility bed, 6
cyl. motor, new tires, excellent running condition.

Motorola stereo console. Discontinued cabinets. top.
stove, hood. sink. $1200.
Phone61H92·34JD.
Dale's Kitchen Center. 675·

2318.
~S4!_..!M!'!!iS.&lt;:;C·..!M!!.!:'erC!c:!'h.'!.a~nd'!!i~ceo;__
New woodburnlng fur nance S450, Davis 700 tren·
cher &amp; hoe $5,500, ,j() fl .
Fruehauf box trailer$3,500,
26 ft. goose·neck flat bed
trailer $2,500. Phone 61.4-

LUMP coal $45. ton
delivered. Firewood SJO.
ton delivered . 304-675-711)1?.

256·1216.

Juke box am·fm 8 track 1973 DODGE pickup truck,
with record player $180. automatic, small V-8, ex.·
New couch $900. New 6 cellent condition, will trade
,piece dlnelle set $200. 1939 for (ar of equal value,

Patriot Home Builders will
now build a 3 bedroom fully
carpeted and finished
home on your lot. Only

$24,500. Phone 379·2617.

'

used tires. Hanshaw's,
Lucas Lane Road. 675· 7360.

Antique foreign coin. Sofa
Lump Coal-linn Coal Co., $5. Recllnder SID. ROII·a·
Inc . Call 446-1408 between 9 · way bed SIO. Phone 882and5.
2562.
15% discount on wood &amp;
coal stoves while supply
last. Gallipolis Block co.,

1231/2 Pine St., 446-2783.
Firewood. 1 load S3S, 4

loads $100, 10 loads $200.
Call 256· 1471 or 614-886·
6624.

3 beautiful 8ft. show cases
with lights,
1 large
bedroom · suite~ double
dressor and chest, 2 an·
tique clocks, 1 meat slicer,
and misc. grocery store
equipment. Call 256·6413

12PM IO~PM .

Candy Making Supplies.
Nestle chocolates starting
at $1.35 lb. Nestle real
chocolate morsels $2.00 lb.
Nestle caramel , candy
bOxes, molds, sticks. bags,
etc. Llt11e Bits. St. Rt. 233,
Oak Hill, Ohio. Phone 614·
682·7562 for more in·
formation.
For sale 1 old Poster
bedroom suite $150 with
box: springs and matterss, 2
writing desks and chairs
$100 each, 1 black head
Singer sewing machine
$100 in cabinel, 2 mattresses $10 each, 1 electric
football game $5, 1 bar and
2 stools $75. 3, 9x12 carpet &amp;
pad S50 each, 1 blue, 1
green, &amp; 1 off white. Call

256·1393.
2 playpens and l high chair

...........
'
-... __
..........
.,, .
,, .. .
--. ...... ..

OPPORTUNITY to gain a
good car, Assume pay men·

Is, 1976 Maverick. Call 304·
675-1636.
Trucks for Sale

72

1975 Ford F·lOO. auto 360.
new red paint. tltes. spoke

wheels, AM· FM lk, $1.900.
Caii67H505 .

I ORGUP

Ford truck 250 camper
special, with new stake bed
and dual wheels. Call 256·
6.11312PM lo9PM.

Insurance work
welcome. Sunroofs In·

"Heacll•' For aroeclwar"'

atollod from 1200-1230. Auto
Trlln Center, -146-1968.

111110 1111• &amp;mhh, Toni T•ou

CAPTAIN EASY

Pour young perfOIIJIWt: coma to
Yorl&lt; C:lly to makelhtl bill

l!f!!oon.,_y. (IOmlna.)

lliJ MDVII ·ICOM!DYl"'
"Hio Girl , _ ,.. 11140 Cory
Oranl, Roaallnd Ru11111 . 'A
conntvktg edltortrlel to prevent
hla ax·wlla ace-raponar from

marrytoaondqultllngthep.oper.

(iO mtno.)
7:30 (II) MOYII-(COMIDY)"'I'o

·

aaot.veAger hunt and hire him
u. a butlaf. (10 mlno.l
8:00 ltJ MOVII·(DRAMA) " "
"Kramer n. Kremar" 107t
Duatln HoHman, Meryl8treep.
Storyotachlldcuatodyatruggle
between a divorced couple.

61

2 short bed truck toppers. 1lnsulaled $65, SSO. Very
good cond. w~th crank out
windows. Phone efter 5PM,

Farm ,Equipment

ana

craoer wheel&amp;, roll bar,
auxiliary gas tank, very

complete service. uSED:
Hydro 70 IH tractor (like sharp, .$4,500. Call 446·~29
new), 2-..f.45ilong tractors, 2 betoreJPM.
rakes, hay bind, round
SEARS Captain beds, 1 bater. bus·hog disk, plows,
6&gt;&lt;6 truck crane S$,000.
year old, $500.00. Clock, cultivators. CHECK OUR
wall
sconzes,
$15 .00 . PRICES &amp; COMPARE!, 1976 GMC WI. dump truck,
3 a)(el, 366 gas, PS, radio,
Womens clothes, size 9, 304· 446·1675.
good condition . $7,000. 614·
773-9130 .

cabinet, 304-675-5882.

m -5468.

For sale Massey Ferguson
135 tractor, tobacco sitter,
plows, &amp; bush hog. Call379·

REGULATION size pOOl
table. S150 .. good shape,
304-675·1295.
55

2435.

Building materials, block,
brick, . sewer pipes, windows, -lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.

Call245-5121 .

Livestock

Young

Tom

Turkey's

selling atS12 each. Call446·
9807 after 4PM.
Registered Quarter Horse

Sheer metal. Flat 20 to 24
gauge .

63

Porc~llan

enamel

coated. Sizes 4 II by 8 II.
thru 4 II by 12 II. Many
building uses. Prices $5.60
to -$8 .00. Tuppers Plains,

lilly, Registered Apaloosa·
both 4 yrs. old and Good
blood line. Call 256-6413
12PMto9PM.
1 . Registered

Landrace

Ohio614·667·3D85 .

boar . Call256·1353.

56

Work horse. Contact Loren
Nolan, Porter, Ohio.

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

Holstein Hollers.

fresh·9

~

others close up.

Health

papers furnllhed. IBR and
leploed. Caii61H574.

HILLCREST KENNEL ·

Electric Tapan range used
6 mos. gold. Maytag ringer
washer, white, pactically

mans. Call-446·7795,

Also

AKC

Reg.

Dober·
·

BRIARPATCH KENNEL.S
Boarding and grooming.
AKC

Gordon

setters,

English Bulldog puppies,
AKC champion blood line.
$500 to saoo. Albany 614-691·
8511.
HOOf HOLLOW Horses &amp;
ponies.
Everything
Imaginable In 11orte equipment. Also beiii,IMJols. .,..
32911. Ruth RHYOt.

Game roosters and 1'\&amp;ns.

EIGHT week old pig&amp;, call
304·882·2532.
'
GENTLE llorte, will ride
or work. 304·458· 1721.
REGISTERED Hereford
Bulls &amp; Hollers. Cerllllod &amp;
accredited herd. Pilon&lt;! 304882-2255.
64

AKC

STRAW Sl.SO, phone 304883·2.122.
LARGE round boles ol hay;
$10.00 &amp; up. 304·458·1656.

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

puf'l, 31W·I95-39...

kldnopplfta, o ololan lnhorl·

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·

tanceandtheft'tfetedpurelutof

pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.

ii!Jtlce. (2 hrl.)

10:00 (]) MOVII·(COM!DY) " '
"Theln·Liwt" 1878 Peter

CARS, TRUCKS, JEEPS,
AVAILABLE FOR UN·
DER 1300. Mllny IOid dolly
through IOCII IIO,.rnmont
tales. C.II1·Jl.ts.f Gl41fer
your dlrectol v on . _
purcllaM. :U hra..

to

1973 l'ord IICIOd COIId.. 41;1100
mlln. calf .,...1112.

Falk, Alan Arkin . A blleafullv
content dentalaurgeon Is
thrown tbglthar with 1 C.I.A.
agent when their children
dacld• to niarry. The. tun and
leughtar bag in with their
bullat-rlddltd chatefrom
ManhaHantoa South American
benant1 republic. (Rated PG)
{110mlna.)
11:30 (lD) MOVIE •(COMEDY)"
''Beauty And Tht Robot"
1110 Mtmlt Van Doren,
Tuetday Wald. An electronic
brain pickaa brainy atripperto
head a college aelence
ftpar1mtnt. (2 hra., 30mlna.)
11:35 (]J
MOVIE
·(MUSICAL·COM!DY)"I'o
11
RidlngHigh" 1150 Bin~
Crosby, Charlet Bickford. The
atory of a racahorae owner
whoat thrte·ytar·old 'Broad·
wayBIII'heanaverhadachance
to prove hlmaelf. (2 hra .. 25

PA-INTING - inte-rior and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling,

20 yrs. exp. Call388-9652.
BING'S CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION · Specializing
In concrete driveways,
sidewalks, .
patio,
basement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 367-

ANNIE

6EE ~ I'VE 6EEH
IUIOCII.IH' Al'l' "HOCII.IN~
BUT THERE" HO
IVIMIER., SAIIOY..

7891 .
FERRELL'S
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home

HELLQ?

IIHYBOOY
I/OiftE? IT'S
~

HO LIGHTS 61101'111-\'
i\I'IYYIIIEIU:, EITHER-

- E'IEH IF "OfiDOY" IS
/Will( 60I'Ie\'tiERe,

TI1f!PS MIGffi'Y

TIHE'G

PECULIAR*

SOlLIE STAFF TAIUH'
CARE 0' TH'
HCX.IGE .,

maintainance
and
remOdeling. Phone 388·

AI.Jfll'{!;

9326.
French City Painting
Residential, commercial,
interior, e)(terior, paper
hanging, and texured
ceilings. Pt, . 367-7784 or 367-

!!!l.n•.l

Call 446·2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates, Bill Thomas.

2:00 l1J MDVII •(DRAMA) "\1
''DangtrOUIIY They Llvt''
1141 John Garfltld, Nancy
Coleman. Girl who mamorl:r:ad
Allied thlp locatfonala
kldnappad by Nulapl.., but Ia
aided by young doctor. (3hra .,
'!§mine.)
2:20 (]) IIIOVI! -(COMEDY)" "In
God Wt Truet" 1180 Marty
Feldman, loulaela8Ber. A.
monk laeppolnted togo out into
the out.W. wortd to find money
tor the monaatery'e mortgage.
(Rated P&lt;ll (2 hrs.l

Al.LEYOOP
m:lM WHAl I'VE Rl:'"''&gt;, IF
f)R, TI!!PI!S IS A VAMPIRE,
THEN HE'S CAf'NII.£ OF '
LMNG TWII•' ._. OP

CARPET

Cleaning. Special rates for
Nov. and Dec. only. Call
now and save·. 61.t-992·6309. ,

LOCKSMITH

YMRS1

Service.'

Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Cawl

73

The time .....ring concept

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenlth and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576-2398

-lone popular in Europe-is
making rut Pf'Oires&amp; in the
American market. With this
arrangement, the investor
buys richta to an apartment
or ·piece of property for a
specified period of time
each. year. Over 400 timesharing projects are ip the
worb in the U .8., at an
average purchase price per

or~·2454 .

GASOUNE At.LEY

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,

stump removal. 675·1331.

walt, where
is your car?

walt, 4ou're back.., .

RINGLES'SSERii!CE ex·
perlenced "mason, rooter,
carpenter 1
electri::ian,
general repairs and
remodeling. Phone 304-675·

from

:i'&gt;"'.

Pinville!

shared unit from $5,000 to
$6,000 a week annually for

I was so

penter available for home
or business remOdeling or
new structureS.
Free
estimates. references. 304·

1919 Jeep CJ7, 251, 6 cyl., 4
spd., 28,000 miles,
Renegade package, till· 675·24,j(),
steering, power steering,
AM·FM &amp;·track. Call 446·
12
Plumbing
1092after 5or446·1112.

Oveneaa Financial News,

WINNIE

&amp; Healing

... ANPA

1971 Dodge 1/2 PU, 4 WD.,
318, V-1, auto, PS, PB,
~port package, new tires,

·CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

eke. cond. Call 446·0515

PhOne 446·3888 or -«77

/MNNGOOP
$,11/.ES·
aENK/

anytime.

1973 Jeell CJ5. 675-2745.

WELL ...
WHAT t:'lt:'
&gt;fJU THiNK

Cor. FoLirth and Pine
83

wheel drive, 318 engine,
automatic, good condition,
11450. 304-675·3941 1W 675-

5912.

I'M GOINeS STili
t:'NAZY/ I'VE
607TOISET

BACK TO~ft~E'K

... ~/

OF MISS

E xca vatlng

COOPER?'

Gallipolis Diversified Con·
~

Larry

--

-- ·-. ··--------·-

•

•••

TAKE IT,

servlc@. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,

PAW!!

TAKE
'1 , IT!!

. Pomeroy. 992·2284.
19 DODGE power wagon, 4·
--..- ----- --··-.
whoel·drlve. 29,000 miles, a JACKS REFRIGERATIO
cyl. .. 11 alter 3 p.m. 304· N. air condition service,
675-3891.
commercial£ Industrial.
Pl1one882-2079.
-'-••
'
.
1910 CHEVY Scottsdale, 'II.
ton, .4WD, 4 opotd, PS, IS - G!:_nerii-HaUii~~-~21,000 mitts, 110011 con·
JONES BOYS WATER
dillon, to11304·773·5150.
SERVICE: Coli 367-7471 or
367·0591.

-----

domestic investors,
too. reported in a recent
issue ~hat in spite of the
many

declining European econo·
my, advancina Socialism
and the uupoken fear of
Ruui.an domination."

SiGen ·

1949 CHEVY Panel truck, stricker'. 675-5510.
'II. ton. new patnt.
custom.lze&lt;t tnalde, new
tune up, sura battery, 16" i4 - ·· · --e.ectriCili - .tires, olklng S1600. 304·576· -- ~ _ ~ f!efr.!f!!_!'~t!~~-- _
2956.
SEWING Machine repairs,
1970 JEEP Wagoneer, 304·
675·2668.

the U.S., and popular with

doUar apinat European currencies, interest in U.S.
properties, particularly real
.tate, continues to flouriah." Reuons: "Fears of a

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service.

a newsletter publiahed by
Larry A. Rubin &amp; Company
of New York City and
geared to providing foreign
inveatora with business and
real eatate developments in

"strong performance of the

st . Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work." Special
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 444·«40.
~-··--·""-----------.

A recent aurvey among

360 lnnston and inltitu·
tiona in Europe and the

Middle Eaat diocloaed that
New York City remains the
most popular U.S. real estate
market amona foreign invMton. Othen {in order of

popularity) are: Houston,
Mlami/Weot Palm . Beach
County, Dallu, Loa Aneeleo,

-------

Phoenix, Denver, San Fran·
cisco,

'

- ---------

..........

-----·------···

675-4154.

BEADLE

KOSHER

.,.

Answer: They should Improve the view-GLASSES

Jumblti Book No. 18, contlining 110 puzzt•, II IYIIIIbiiiDr St.t5potlpllld
Irom Jumble, cloth Is newlpllpel", Box 34, NOtWoocl, N.J. D7841.1ncludeyour
n•m•. 1ddrn1, d ~odl•nd· m•k• che&lt;:lls
•b• toN..
•·

.BRIDGE

...'
'

West rolls home a winner
By Oswold Jocolly

.... Alu Soata&amp;
Not muy playen would
approve of ·N orth'• lhreedlamond prHmpt with only
a six-card suit. His reason
was ~t be wu playing
agalaat superior oppooftlon
and the vublerablUty was In
bis favor.
Barring some unusual
distribution, ali cllamoads Is
lay down. After North's bold
pre-empt, It appean to be
quite easy to reach six
diamonds. But sOuth greedl·
ly bid tbe wrong slam.
South won West's passive
club lead in his hand and
surveyed his prospects.
Unleos the opponents could
be Induced to win the first
diamond with the ace,
declarer would be hard
pressed to make 12 tricks.
At trick two declarer led the
jack of diamonds, West
played low and oeclarer

with

overtook

.J

NORTH
lJ·I-81
• 10 ~
6
tKQ10971
+1032
WEST
EAST
+Q932
+86
.Q B12
.9713
tA&amp;
• 512
+917
+JB!I '
SOUTH
+A KJ 71
• AKlO

tJ8

+AKQ
. Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
Wett

Nortll

East

Soa1b

3t

Pan

~

Pass

1 N'r

Pass

Pass

Pass

PaM

8NT

Opening lead: +Q

dummy's

kln1. East playing the deuce.
Now only a very fortuitous
layout of the opponents'
cards would allow tbe slam
to succeed. South vilualized
thil pouiblllty and played
for II. At tricks three and
lour declarer cashed bls
remaining two club honors,
and exitea with his diamond.
Whichever defender won
this trlc&amp; would 1M! end·
played If he had both major
clubs.
West won his ace of diamonds and bad to lead a
major suit, enabling declar·

er to fl8e dummy's seemingly entryleos diamond sult.
Either the jack of hearts or
the 1D of spades would provide acceos to dummy .
Eventually, West chose a
spade and 12 tricks rolled
home.

"Nicely plaled," commented Nortll. 'But six diamonds would have been a
cinch. Furthermore, a
fourth-beat lead of either

major

suit

would

have

cooked your goose and mine

also."

t'!lca•·•"rr'
ltr THOMAS JOSEPH
ACI\0118

48 Impala

1 Louver

DOWN

&amp;·"-Marco I Good buy
Polo"
(sl. )
11 Elepbant's· · Key - , Fla.
ear
3 Cant
12 Adullerated 4 Extremely

Atlanta

13 Therefore

5 Wretched-

It Tars
15 Past
II "- waa
I.Dla... "
17 Gambling

ness
1 Abrasive
7 Reach acroos
8 Indonesian

Island
9 llennit

medium
II Drlnldng

vessel

If Pile

!Ill Uncoln's
secretary

I .

Yesterday'• Aaswer

4 Jacob's %8 BeUef avowal

Z1 Barren
%2 Italian

commune

It Bilek out
18 Thursday's ·
namesake

Z9 Sultan's

Z3 School
subject
%4 Interdicts
Z5Language
perfectionist

decree
30 Avoid
31 Snake
33 Indigo plant
36 Pioneered .

21 Tosca's
"Vissi d'-tt
%% 'Meat cut

%4 Scottish
hillside

!$Duo
Zllnd&lt;&gt;Chlnese

toncue
Z7 Ship's
designation
(abbr.)

Zl Sbawoplay

and

San

34 After
hot or ram

35 Pressed
31 Actreas Diane
37 Galt
38 Advantage
3t "Waterloo
Bridge" star

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'a how to work It 1
lo

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFRLl.OW

PEANUTS

Harl'ov Davt-. 1~ Pan
HoiiCI,
condition.
envlnnl bHn mullt. Cell ai=-:::uphalslory- 61A-'192·3t~l or61H92-5126.
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
71
11113 Sec . Ave., GaiiiPolia..
M!!lln ......
..... 7133CW446·1133.
15 11. lloltt, " H. Chrysler
I l l = - · '1m MOWREY&amp; Upholstery Rt,
llctlll:U, PI. Pleasant. 304·
11.3110.

c..••

JumbleS: SHVL V GUEST

One letter limply 111nds lor another. In lhl1 umple A [I
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sinale lettori' •.
apoatrophe1, tho lenath and formation of the words are aJi
hiniL Each !loy the codolellen are dlferent.
·

----·- ------·-'-

=.

r ·.

(Anawers tomorrow)

· Antonio.

1975 suzuki strat bike, NOW HAULING house coal
115cc, IICIOd cond., UOO. &amp; limestone for drlvewoys.
Al10 Suzukl2111c:c dirt bike, Call for estlmafes 367-7101.
IICIOd c;ctnd. SGI. Call 446·
n~e~,.M.
Llmtstone hauling. Call

rOOd

I

I I I I

3ZHinden

Motorcrcln

319·2642.

Vostorday's

THE ·".(

z

25 years.

worried!

truck,

Vans&amp;4W.D.

goaled tor the above c.noon.

suit queenS and no more

882·2079.

long Water wells. Commercial
wheel base, automatic, 6 and Domestlt. Test holes .
cyl. engine, 1,000 miles, Pumps Sales and Service .
asking $7,600. or assume 304-895·3802.
loan. ph0ne30H76·2602.
EXPERIENCED car ·

74

Dachshund.

Pomeranian and , _ , ,

1838 David · t.to(:aUum, Ek·
kthardt Belle. A Swachbuck·
ling adventure mlaed with
romanci'lalntertwlnad by a

free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

Now 11rrange the circled llttera to .
lomt the eurpriae .,...,, u auo·

Print answer here:

(8oMdPG)(2hro.) .
8:06 CJ) 1110¥11! 'Kidnepped"Port I.

te&gt;ctured ceilings, commercial and residential,

-

Hay &amp; Grain

71
Auloferlale
YNrllng Paint cOlt; 6 yr.
19
NOW
Yorker,
IXC. Cond.,
old APHA mare, YOUtll ,
prospect; 3 vr.
old loaded. Call446-7711.
buckskin eoldlng. Calf '192·
5782 anytime Sunday, otter 72 VOila auto, ~ cyl. COli
7p.m. on-di.,S.
446·0117.
FISh Tonk and Pol Shop
:U13 Ja~kson i&gt;,ve.. Pt.
Ploeunt. 615-2063. Mon.,
Thurs .. / Frl.11to6. TUtl.,
- · · I Sot. 11 to 4. Chock
ourFishS-Iol . .

CHEVY

75 OODGE Club Cap,
m·~.

BORNLOSEII

STUCCO PLASTERING ·

1971 pickup truck. First
S500 gets it. 675· 1302.
. 2088 or 675·4560. '
81

Building Supplies

Call388·9857.

t
I I I J

ITREFER

11
MJihn Godfrer .. 1131
William Powell, Carole
Lombor&lt;t. T,..w.anhymodcop

years experience. Free
estimates. Remodeling.

GENES

rJ

1

1:30 (J) MDVII ·(ROMANC!) '

work. ~

7160.
GMC pickup 57 Classic, low
miles. Call Anita or Jim
Taylor, 256-1274.

'

your selection of parts

Sl NGER sewing machine
with button holer &amp; WOOd

Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outda;or facilities .

Cai161Hn.237~

1977 HORNET AMX $2,500.
3CIH7H768.

JIVIDEN'S
FARM '4-lol-0959.
EQUIPMENT Full line o(
equipment, From Long, 1977 Ford F150, 4-Wheel
Vermeer, Kuhn, Ktllev, drive, PS, PB, AM·FM
and many others. With stero, tinted windows,

Warm morning wOod and
coal stove model 420. 5275.
Tors for Christmas. Glass
fireplace doors. 675·6766.

for sale. Call 446·7337.

new. Call 388-8200.

3763.

304-675-6493.

576· phone 304-675-263&lt;1 . .

Chevy Coupe $1000.
2602.

MORRISON'S Auto sales.

I

·

An un•u,own Woman' 1&amp;'48
1.2011 ,..._, Joan Fontolno.

Duality A\11-y &amp; Paint

Call ~·2107 .

cabinets. ex.cellent for · Henderson, WV. Phone675· ·
home or chUrch. Make 15741W 675·2881 .
beautiful Christmas music.
614·m·6235, 614·992·7338, or 1975 4 door CheVrolet 1m·
614· 9~·2118 ask for Pete.
pala with ps, pb, ac, cruise
control. new brakes. new
muffler. good condition.
59
For S,ale or Trade
Price reduced to sell. 675·

Air cond itioner only used 3
months, large window
type, cools whole house, SADDLE -NeW Western
paid S550 new, will sell for show saddle for sale . Call
S400. Call 446-4929 before 992-5782 anytime Sunday,
. WALKER coon dogs, 1
after 7 p.m. on weekdays.
JPM.
female, 1 male, call after 6

52

1971 Mercury Monteoo.
Also 289 engine and tran·

smls&amp;lon. 614-m-2133.

2 Hammond Spinet organs.
Cherry and dark WOOd

for garden English Cocker Spaniels.
dep. 446-0338.
fertilizer weed and feed . S2 Ca 11388-9790.
per bag.
2nd.,Ave, Gallipolis.
2 BEDROOM
apartment,
·kitchen
furnished,
HUO I1-,;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;.,J.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.~ Re_g, Quarter horses-sales,
program, utilities paid, If
barding, training, E;ngllsh
&amp; Wes.tern lessons. Dan
T hey 'II D 0 1t Every T ime
qualified. 304·675-5104 or
Beam, Gallipolis, 446·0113.
30H7H364.

Clly water. will consider
land contr oct. 675·1883 9·5 ·3 rooms with private. bath,

UnfurniShed- few rent,
1 bdr.. 5160 mo., dip. ·
required. no utllftln peld,
no pets. 57 Oll•o St. Pilon&lt;!
446·7116.

for 1 adult or young couple.
Call 675-2305 after 5.

MOBILE home spaces, 3
miles from town, Jet. 2-62

·A pa rtmemt
for Rent

Call446-3937.

Hou- for Rent

1 bedroom cottage, ideal

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

trlc. Call 256·6413, 12 PM to
9PM .

41

IN Middleport, 2 bedroom,
furnished apartment, 1
small ch ild, 1-304-882-2566 .

742-2266.

44

auto..

rare. price negotiable. 742·

882-2566.

2 bedroom trailer down Rt.

7, $125.00. Adults only. Call
256-1157.

Small

p.m .

1N Middleport, 2 room ef·
ficiency apartment, 1-304·

SLEEPING ROOMS and

adults only. Caii446·D338.

be' con•erted single homo.

Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Stre~t.
Mason, wv. 773· 5651.

Large 2 bedroom trailer 1
mi. out of town on Rt. 588. 4S, _ _.F'"u"'r"'n"is.,h,-ed"-"~"o"'om~s­

2, 1 acre house lots, on 554,
Jow dOYin payment, land
contract, rural water.
Columbus &amp; Southern elec·

BY owner, 3 apartment
house on appro)(. 1 acre.
Uve in one. rent others to
make your payment. Can

2 bedroom lwin single in
Pt. Pleasant at 205 Poplar
Street. $200 month plus
deposit. 1·614·263·8322 or

304-675·2453.

did Caii513·59H175. ,
9112 acres 1 mile from Rio
G'r ende on Centerpoint Rd.

614·446·8221 or 614-245-9484.

per mo. Call446·3547.

1972 SCHULTZ, 12x65, 3 4110.

bedroom. partially fur·
nished. sssoo or best offer,

mobile

Twin sing le, large rooms
Double wide for rent. 3 and yard . Pt . Pleasant.
bedroom , furnished all Deposit and referenCes. 1utilities included in rent. 614-263-8322 or H1063Ref. required, no pets, SJSO 2669.

3118-9909.
1980

GTX·4,j()

2143.

614·263·2669.

turn . 388·8509.

10x5Q older mobile home
needs work, S1,200. Call

Plymouth

magnum,

or 742·3154.

homes ,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.

lour onliNiry -

1:00 (I) MOVII (CONTINUU
FROII DAYl!IIII'Lottor From

JIM MARCUM Rooflng
spouting and siding. 30
1910

br---Bobl.ee

Ju-.

alat••· UHI vagrant a a part of

Apartments. 615-5548.

APARTMENTS,
MObile Homes
for Rent

~ ~ ~~·

DIC.1,111111

Auto Rop!!lr

77

10 WOROIWIE

'jlln.ATICR_. I

Unocromlllo -lour
..,. - 1 0 uch oqun, 10 form

• TUIIDAY

14&amp; FT . car trailer with
winch $1500.. air com·
pressor S800.. car lift S400.;
phone 304·576·2602.

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpal Cleaning
-146-&lt;4208

IL---------'

675-4100, day .

42

5 rolltY oport rims. Call
256·1353.

Homo

plelely restored. all stock,

2 bedroom furnished. $150
month plus utilities. sso
deposit. Available Dec. 1.

buy

I mprevemtnts

From all of us at
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The OiiiY Sentinel
Point Pleasant Register

Apartmemt
for Rent

Mrvice,

lllllomObll.., radiators and
...- .... .f,l6·7717.

your family.

TWO bedroom, furnished
cottage at 2103 Jefferson
Ave. Deposit required. 30.4-

446·7572.

wrecker

ft\J9N}!]}'il

Television
•
•
vtewtng

CHARLIE'S SALVI'IGE
Auto Pl.,., auto repair,

Chrhtm;u happiness to you and

2 bedroom house, fur nished. Brown's Trailer
Park, Minersville. 992·3324.

Beautiful country home for
sale or rent 'to qualified
persons . 2 or more
bedrooms,
deposit
required. Located In Flat·
woods area . Phone 614·446·

~

new tires, with new rebuilt
ena.tne. Call256· 1417.

614'927 ·5413 .

HOMES. Gallipplis. Year
end sale, price reduced,
used mobile homes. CALL

'

74 Nova. V·8 automatic,

3 bedroom house and bath 44
In Rutland . 614-992-5858.

MOBILE

new tires. Call 446·

73 Mavrtck. 2 dr., 302, 3
spd•• I100d engine &amp; Irons.•
body rusted. $100. Call 4-lol7135.

Canaday

The Roush home at 2515
Mf. vernon. Pt. Pleasant,
is for sale. Call the son at

TRI · STATE

.-to"

1972 Chevy 1mpala. tranomtrebUilt
S150. Coli .f,l6 1101 tfter
3:30.

In City, 3 rooms, bath, $150

2359.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Aulo lor lalo

1972 Chevy Nova, 2 dr., ex.

576·2711.

32

71

cltan,

Nov . 15. Caii61H49·2849:

3 or 4 bedroom house with
bath in country on 2.3
acres. Storm windows, city
water. Close to 3 mines.
Will sell on land contract
with $5500 down. 117.500.

Tuesday, December 1, 1981

KIT 'N' CARLYlE"'

2 or 3 b(jr, home, .f ully e·arpeted, Iorge yard and gar·
den, 3 mi . from town. Call
446·06&lt;48 alters.

required . Call
Realty. 4~ · 3636 .

'

Tuesday, December 1, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
51

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THAT •SANTA 8116" IS
COMIN61l&gt; TOWI-I •••

CRY"OQUOTIIS

WHO IS 60lN6 10
BE PULLING
1-115 SLE161-1 ?

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_ . , , l'lllks Ollly 11th i.
the

monvthowlncllosl U.S. cities.

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Yeoterday'o Cryptoqaole: UVING MONUMENTS DO Nd-r-:
COME OF COMMITTEES-THEY
COME
FROM
INDIVIDUAI.'I.-JOHN HENRY NEWMAN

�IAUINDSIAYUIDAY,DICIMIIII,Itll .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pag._12-The Daily Sentinel

Officials dispute claims
Claims an amebic dysentery
sicm- is being carried freely by
Gallipolis Development Center
clienta have been disputed by health
officials.
The responses were made to a
statement passed out this week by
the Ohio Public Workers United, a
Columbu&amp;-based union which said
amebiasis, an apparent off-shoot of
amebic hlstolytica, wasn't being
controlled by GDC staff.
"Amebiasis is a very contagious
disease, and massive statewide
treatment should begin at once,'' according to the statement. "The
public needs to be aware that the
many employees, volunteers and
public use of mental retardation
facilities such as swinuning pools
and recreational areas could easily
spread the disease throughout the
community."
The . statement also claims the
sickness, which affects mucus in the
blood, wiD eventually affect the liver
and possibly caU.se hepatitis.
Dr. l;:dward Berkich, GDC ·
medical director, said Clifford's
charge is "absolutely false" because
amebiasis is "not highly contagious" and seldon affects the liver.
• "As to the opinion of the degree ri'

••

'comrnunicab!Uty, it (the statement) found on a random stool survey,'' he
' said it could easUy spread - this is said.
not true," Berkich said.
Berldch said he has information
The sickness is present in rougldy from the U.S. Department of Health,
five percent of the population, he ad- Eduaelion and Welfare (HEW)
ded, and in two percent of center showing incidents of htstolytlca or
amebiasis are not a serious threat to
clients.
Dr. Fortunato Soriano, chief the public health, and contrary to
pathologisi with the Ohio Depart- OPWU's claim it must be contained,
ment of Mental Health, ssid it's nor- it doesn't require complete isolation.
mal for mentaUy retarded clients or
Some of the GDC clients who may
residents of state institutions to sui· have contracted it have reportedly
fer from histolytica because of poor been isolated for treatment.
hygiene habits. The best way to comBerkiclt said he also assured City
bat contraction of the sickness is Manager Chris Morris the sickness
through cleaning of the hands by ,doesn't threaten the water supply
both clients and employees, he ad- either.
ded. ·
'
OPWU's claim was the 9econd
" It's not as contagious as believed su~h statement made by one of the
by some," Soriano said. "Some unions at GDC in two months. The
patients have it, but the incidenls Communications Workers of
are not as high as the union claims." America, representing apSoriano said he was at GDC two proximately 75 personnel, charged
weeks ago, where he gave a !Ill- at a Sept. J4 press conference
minute presentation on the care and histolytica was detected' on the cenprevention of histolytica. He also ter grounds and ' nothing was being
made reconunendations which are done to check its spread.
now being implemented there.
GDC Supt. Robert Zimmerman
Berkich said none of the clients wouldn't comment on the charges,
who have the sickness are serit~usly only to say neither OPWU or CWA
ill.
are recognized as bargaining agents
"None of the clients have active for its members who work at tl)e
symptoms, and it's something we center.

Nebraska hit by blizzard

The Saving Place•

TREE - Betb Farley, a belper wltb Browide
Troop IZI3, Rullaad, appe&amp;red u a deearated tree
complete wllb a abiDing star on top wbea tile troop
made an appearuce ID tile auual Qrlllmu parade

'

By The Associated Pre••
A blizzard with winds gusting to 50
mph swept from Neb!JI~~a to neighboring states today, blocking highways with impassable drifts and
bringing snowplows to a halt.
At least two people died ·and

Pierre, the capital, to Mitchell in the
southeastern corner.
The snowstorm that charged out of
the ROckies on Monday spread into
Iowa and Wisconsin today.
In Iowa, blowing snow forced slate
snowplows to stop plowing Inanother was missing.
terstate 35 between the Minnesota
Highways were strewn with
border and Mascon City.
jacknifed trucks and many
Fierce winds in the hilly, western
motorists sought refuge in motels,
part of Nebraska Monday created a
farm houses and emergency
blizzard from snow already covering
shelters.
the the ground and icy roads. In the
In South Dakota, where 10 inches
more populous eastern section of the
' of SIJOW fell in places, a 50-year-old state, the_winds came first, claiming
rna~ co11apsed and died while i'un- · one life, and were followed in rapid
· ning a snowblower Monday at his succession by the rain and the snow.
home in Brockings.
The high winds caused the death of
'Qne man was killed when the win- Brian Dittmer, 23, of Uncoln, when
ds (tippled an oil rig in Nebraska, the 100-fool-high oil rig he was
which also got up to 10 inches ri' working on near Potter buckled and
snow, and an elderly trapper was collapsed in wind gusts of more thaa
missing in Iowa, where 7 inches was 30 mph, Cheyenne County Sheriff
on the ground in places.
DaJTell Johnson said.
The National Weather Service
Snow-coated ice created
·saiit -the huge winter stonn was dangerol!s
highways near state's
producing blizzard conditions in par- biggest cities, Grand Island, Lincoln
ts of Nebraska and South Dakota and Omaha. The mayor of Grand
with the blowing snow building high Island, Bob Kriz, declared a snow
drifts and reducing visibility to near emergency.
zero.
As much as 8 inches of snow fell on
A winter storm warnirig remained Nebraska on Monday and the
in effect for northeastern South National Weather Service recorded
Dakota, northwestern Iowa, the wind gusts of up to 60 mph, blowing
southern half of Minnesota and the snow into high drifts.
northwestern half of Wisconsin.
Roads and highways in the state
More than 100 miles of Interstate were barely passable. "If you creep
90 and parts of slate highways in along at about 5 mph, you might be
central South Dakota were aU right. It's pretty had," said
barricaded as state police searched Hooker County Sheriff Mike Okinn.
for people stranded in cars and
The Nebraska State Patrol issued
trucks.
travelers' warnings for most of the
"There's people in the ditches and state, saying Interstate 80 from
more people trying to get on the Shelton in central Nebraska to the
road,'' said Gov. Bill Janklow, who Wyoming state line was ice-and
ordered the closings. "It's a real snow-packed. There were many
hazard for people trying to drive on reports of semitrailer trucks
it, and they're going to kill jackknifed along the I-80 near North
somebody ... It's legally closed and Platte and along U.S. 30 in the same
it's illegal to drive on it." 1·90 was region.
closed from Murdo, just south of
Elsewhere in Nebraska, power

unusual .....___.!Crc,o,n:!tin:::u:::ed::;f~ro:::;m::.Jpa=ge::..l:..&lt;)_ __
know they are on the outside."
.In remarks to the $1,000-a-couple
Meanwhile, a brief fund-raising crowd, the president' blasted
appearance by President Reagan congressional opponents of his
provided Ohio Republicans with economic policies.
more than half the cost of a $385,000
.. Yes, we're in a recession, and its
computer analysis of state voter in- causes go way back beyond Jan. 20,
formation.
1981," Reagan said. "Yes, we've had
Theodore D. Griley of Newark, an increase the number of unemvice chairman of the Ohio ployed, but there already was great
Republican Finance Committee, unemployment in the auto industry,
said the lavish Monday night soiree in steel and in construction.
11
should net about $200,000 even
While there are more unemthough the turnout was smaller than ployed today, there are also more
some had predicted.
working. There are 266,000 more
Slate GOP Chairman Earl Barnes people working today in the work
bad ss,id he hoped the Reagan a(&gt;' Ioree than there were when we took
pearance would pay off some of the office.
·
party's $501),000 debt from the last
"Inflation is a little more than half
election. But Griley said the fund- what it was, ana inierest rates have
raiser wouldn't buy the computer
more
than four
percent
in
.analysts to guide . next year'.• . fallen
the lastbyfew
months.
We've
already
congressional campaigns and hail cut the rate of Increase of governout the party, too.
ment spending to less thaa.!IJiltpbMit
The president spent about two it had been ... and we've just begun
hours here, a brief stopover on his to phase in the biggest single laJI cut
return to Washington, D.C., from a in history."
Thanksgiving vacation at. his
califomta ranch. It was his first
visit to Cincinnati since the 1980 e1ec- Funds received
tioo camiJailn.
Stale Auditor Thomas E.
Rsgall wuiJUIIllaled to throw out
Ferguson's
office announced the
the fJnt ball of the 1981 baseball
of
December,
seuon here last April, but was $49,252,335 in19111,Aid distribution
to
Dependent
wounded in an auaasination at·
Children to 574,330 recipients in
~ a week before the Cincinnati
Ohio's 88 counties. Meigs County
Reds' traditional season opener.
received '$160,159 for 1,944 recipients.
Plan annual bazaar

'•

The annual ChriatmiB bazaar of
the 1\feip Senior Citizens Center wiU
be held frOID 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. both
'l'hw'ldar and Friday. ChriBbnas
craft boll, ornaments, ceramic,
Jmilted .ad uoeheted ltema will be
f« llle.ad thin wiJIUo be a bake
... LtMICb will be .,..... to the .
publle tram 11:30 a.m. to I :30 p.m.

boiiJclayt.

.,

was knocked out Monday night in the
south-central city of lexington and
winds flipped light planes parked in
the western viUage of Oshkosh.
However, Corn Belt fanners
would not look at the stonn as all
bad, said Tom Drudik, the extension
agent for Han County. He said that
with the crops harvested, the rain
and snow wiU build up the moisture
in the subsoil and help next year's
crop.

The storm was the first big one of
the season for Nebraska. In Arizona,
residents were still digging out Monday from a weekend storm that
dumped 15 inches of snow.
Texas was lashed with thunderstorms Monday. Two people
were killed iii Dallas when their light
plane crashed in fog Sunday night,
authorities said.

Another •••
(Continued from page I)
to the borne and threatened to kill
Mr. and Mrs. Smith if they did not
help him.
Wilson ordered the Smilbs to drive
him from.the area.
As the three were getting into the
car, Wilson got in first, a police
cruiser came by. Smith, who had not
gotten into the car, yelled at the
police warning that Wilson had his
wife. Officers inunediately converged and took the suspect into
custody.

Board •••
(Continued from page I)
year and over employes to ~eceive
four weeks vacation. MUeage will be
paid at the rate of 20 cents a mile effective Nov. I, this year. other
benefits go back to last Sept.!. ,
As for money. the new contract
provides for a 20 C.ntan hour acros8
the board pay increase for all noncertified employes plus increments
for service.
Employes with
through nine years service will
receive an additional eight cents an
hour in addition to the flat 20 cent in·
crease; employes from 10 through 14
years will receive an additional 16
cents and hour and those with 15
years service and over wiU receive
an addltional24 cents an hour.
There are 83 non-certified employes in the districl at the present
time. Negotiations can open again
for the employes in February, 1982.
In other actions, the board
authorized Treasurer Jane Wagner
to advertise for bids on four • •
paasenger buses with specifications
to be prepared. A request lor use of
the Meigs.Junior High building for a
basketbaU program
as requested by
.
Gene Wise.waa tabled.

five

.

NATIVITY- This float entry by the Middleport First Baptist Cbureb
featured a Nativity scene. The Middleport Chamber of Commerce sponsored the annual event to welcome the Christmas holiday season.

Authorize work on football stadium

Terminate
.
22 cases
.

•:·

Fourteen defendants were fined
and eight others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court recently. ·
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Duane Wolfe, Coolville, ~and
costs, speeding; Samuel Uoyd
Bowerstown, $23 and costs, speed;
Alice Buckley, Syracuse, and
Jerome Howard, Po!iteroy, $26 and
costs each, speed; Jeffrey Sims, and
Ronald Sims, both of Columbus, ~
and costs each, hunting on land or •
another without pennission; ClarenCe Williams, Shade, $10 and costs,
failed to drive on right half of roadway; Charles Lee, Athens, and
Ronald Epling, Reedsv!Ue, $25 and
costs each, hunting on land of
another without permission;
Darlene Reeves, Middleport, $5 and
costs, defective brakes; Charles
Mulholland, WilkesviUe, $364 and
costs, overload; James Kimison,
Hadcliff, $454, overload; James Jar. vis, Stewart, $147 and costa,
overload; Matthew Queen, Shade, !0
days confinement, six days suspended, six months probation, criminal
trespass.
Forfeiting bonds were Steve
Grimm, GalUpolis, Charles Durfee,
Southside, W. Va.; Henry Price,
Tuppers Plains, Ralph WellB, Long
Bottom, Alvin Tripp, Rt. 3,
· Pomeroy, and Candsce Brothers,
Pomeroy, $40.50 each, speed;
Howard Lockhart, Coolville, $35.50,
improper backing; Donald Shope,
Bidwell, $35.50,left of center.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A law the project on behalf of OSU through
firm has been authorized by Ohio At· June 30, the newspaper said, adding
torney General WiUiam J. Brown to that he will be paid $55 an hour, up to Four runs Monday
continue worldng on plans to expand a maximum of $9,000, under terms of
•
the 09-year-old Ohio Stadium, all- the pending .-ontract.
Four emergency calls were anUniversity officialB have denied
cording to the Columbus CitizenJournal.
that OSU has taken steps to hire LehThe Citizen-Journal reported in man and begin a private fund- Service reports.
today's editions that a contract,bet- raising drive to financ;e expanding
At 2:24p.m., the Middleport Unit
ween the state and former state Rep. Ohio Stadium from its current 83,112 took Tim Juslis from his home on
Harry J. Lehman - administrative • seals to about125,000.
Pearl St. to Veterans Memorial
partner with Jones, Day, Reavis &amp;
Hospital; Racine at 11:03·a.m. took
Pogue of Columbus - has been for- Basketball meeting
Lawrence Johnston to Holzer
warded to lehman and is pending 1
Medical Center; Tuppers Plaina at
Persons interested \n Ill• Meigs 6:47a.m. treated Clyde Moreland at
his aPJJroval.
lehman ls authlll:ized to work on Elementary basketball program are his home; at 5:45 p.m, Tuppers
invited to a meeting to be held at 7 Plains took Cleo Smith to Veterans
p.m. Thursday at the Middleport Memorial Hospital.
Veterans Memorial
Elementary School.
Admitted-Michael Wilson, Scot· r-----------------:------town; Harold Hubbard, Middleport;
Arthur Nease, Pomeroy; . Shirley
Frazier, Middleport; Timothy
Justis, Middleport; James M!lDonsld, Middleport.
Discharged-Blanche Gibbs, Berth&amp; Dutton, Wayne GiUland, Mary
Rathburn, Hollie • Friend, Marie

':~:~~r~:r~e=-~~~

Duddirlg.

~;;:;:;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~=====;;;;;;;~~
Ivery Wednesday Night At

. .'

'

.

.

.

.

•
••·

OUr RegUlar 1.5&amp;

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

1.11~poo

BAKED STEAK DINNER
•

•••••••••

K mart Coupon

L'IAl~Panlyllole

NylOn. cotton panel.

Mlues'

Served with Mashed. Potatoes, Choice of Salad,
Rolland Drink

sizes A·B.

DINING ROOM ONLY'

•
:

W1tl1
•
Coupon •

Cft•~~~~n-,c••

••
•
·····:•
••
OUf Regular 12.97
•

77

WIIh

. :

Coupon:

••

Meets Thursday
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order o1
Eastern Star, wll! meet Thursd8y 11t
the Middleport Muonic Temple for
a covered dlah potludl dinner. Mat
will be proy!cled and there wlU be •
01r11tmu 11ft achange. Duea are

now payable.

•

Crow's Family -,Restaurant
221W. Malll

Pomeroy, Ohio
1~r

1(

.'t

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