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·

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return

____

WASHINGTON (AP) - National
security ad~ Richard V. Allen,
cleared ilf wrongdoing for receiving ·
$1,000 fr~ two Japanese journalists, Will stay on paid leave pending a new inquiry into his. inac·
curate financial di sclosure
statement and his a«eptance or two
watches.
Allen said Tues'day that he was
."very happy" with the results or the
investigation into a fl ,000 "thank·
you" payment for a · Jan. 21 interview with Nancy Reagan. But the
announcement or a new phase or the
probe raised fresh doubts about his
future.

White ·House spokesman David
Gergen said Allen wiD remain on
paid administrative leave unw the
investigation is completed. And
Gergen refused to !lay whether Allen
would be welcomed back If he is
cleared by the JIIStlce Department.
Early today, In a Muiual Broadcasting System radio Interview on
"The Larry King Show," Allen said,
"I certainly do anticipate and look
forward to resuming my duties."
Asked whether he had any doubt
that President Reagan would keep
him on, Allen said, "Of course the
decision Is always the president's we serve at the pleasw:e or ihe

'

president. Should the decision be was no evidence of violation of
otherwise, then of course that fs his federal criminal law.
But in its !~page report, the
decision. 1 '
JIIStice
Department also said two
Meanwhile, the White Hou.se adadditional
matters had come to its
ded a new obotacle . to Allen's
attention
"within
the past 10 days"
poulble return. Presidential counsel
and
the
need
for
a
speci81
prooecutor
Fred Fielding said that after ~
to
examine
them
"has
not
yet been
Justice Department CO!Dpletes its ·
determined.''
inquiry, his office also wiU review
the case to see if any "standards of ' The department said it would look
into Allen's claim on his initial flnan·
conduct had been violated.''
cia!
disclosure state10ent that he
In releasing the findings or a 21&gt;•
sold
his consulting finn, Potomac
month investigation into the $1,000
International
Corp., in 11178. After
"thank·you" payment, Attorney
press
inquiries,
Allen said last week
General Wlllianl French Smith ruled
that
he
had
made
a mistake and
out. appoinlnlent of a speci81
amended
his
statement
to say the
prosecutor on the grounds that there

PAGE SIXTEEN

'

Voi.30,No .112
Copyrighted 1981

BEAUTIFUL 18"·

CH RISTMAS
WREATH

•

Li.mited Quantity

i

I

·

RFSTRAINT .TECHNIQU·
E
Marrltt Stevens
(foreground, kneeling) of
Springfield demonstrates a
restraint technique before
members of the pollee
auxlllary class at Gallipolis ·
~ Developmental ,Center to
~ help in handling physical
eoufrontatlons. About to be
cuffed Is Ron Bretts of the
• Ohio Peace Officer Training
Academy, who assisted
Stevens iu his presentation.
Looking ou are (from left)
Lonnie McGuire, GaUipolis
City Police; Paul Rowe and
Jlmmer .Souslby, both Meigs
County Sheriff's Depart·
ment; Wade ... Henson and
Bobby Cornwell, both '
Gallipolis auxiliury; Tina
Bowland, Rutland Pollee .
Department; and Sandy MeCombs ·aud Tom Bauks, both
Gallipolis City Pollee.

Hunters bag record deer kill

Modei FF- 1

· COLUMBUS, Ohio - HUnters bagg~ a record number or deer on
the opening day of Ohio's gun season for deer, state wildlife oFficials
say.
.
Preliminary figures show that 12,556 deer were killed Monday, said
the division or wildlife of the state Natural Resources Department.
That was an increase 'of 3,336 over last year's opening day kill, of·
ficlals' said.
Counties with the most deer killed were: Guernsey, Ss7; Harrison,
649; Muskingum, 616; Coshocton, 519; Athens, 473; Meigs, 463;
• Morgan, 461; ·Licking; 430; Tu.s&lt;:arawas, 419; Tiumbull, 400;
Washington, 390; and Vinton, 381.

SALE

- Clairol
Rebate
Your
Final
Cost

7"' Value

1

,.............____

• Use.with or without water

$2 9 99

Judge will drop mandamus

~

·N'ESTLE
QUIK

KIIAFT
MARSHMALLOW.

I CREAM

I

CIRClEVILLE, Ohio- Corrunon. Pleas Court Judge William Ammer says a mandamus suit he filed against the Pickaway C4lllnty commissioners to get more money for his court will be dropped.
The suit was settled out of court after the commissioners received
an amended Certification or funds from the county auditor. Auditor
Margaret Remy said the county will receive about $50,000 more. in
revenue than had been estimated at the start ofthe¥ear.
· .
Ammer filed the suit last swruner to get additional money for his .
court, the sheriff's office and tl!e prosecutor's office.
·

Bil

38.4 oz.
·Bonus ·
·sox

·59e

1.....,

I

..

Cab' company helpi.lig police
.

I

I--------

Limited .Quantity

CLEVELAND - Bright yellow police cars patrolling city streets
aren 't too common, but a fleet or Yellow Cabs hit the streets Tuesday
to help Cleveland police prevent crime.
More than 200 taxjs owned by the YeUow Cab Co. and its branch ·
companies around Cleveland began a program in which cabbies are
trained to look for trouble.
The program, called Taxis On Patrol, began In 1978 at AIIStin, Tex.,
where the Southland Corp. - parent group of a chain or convenience
stores - Is based. Using store parking lots for taxi layover points,
company officials said·crimes in the stores and surrounding neighborhoods dropped sharply.
·

•

BIG 2 QUART

COCA-COLA
PITCHER
'l" Value

Man faces deception charges
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio - A Lancaster.man ~"''arraigned Tuesday on
charges stemming from the sale of five brass bars, which authorities
say he aUegedly sold as gold for $20,ii00.
Chllrles E. Conrad, 33, was arrested about4:30.p.m. Monday, police
said. He was charged with two counts of grand theft by deceptiori, a
fourtiJ..degret' felony.
Franklin County M~nicipal Judge George Smith set Conrad's bond
at $2,500 and scheduled a preliminary hearing for Dec. 14.
,
P!&gt;lice said the bars were sold to Anthony L. DiSabato, owner of Anthony's Hair Fashions, by a man who had said he wanted to sell some
gold cheap for tax purposes.

17.95

. 1

VALUE!

Winning Ohio lottery number
.

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Tuesday night In the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 203.
•
The lottery repo!1ed earnings or $675,917.50 from the wagering on its
daily game. The earnings came on sales or $990,289, while holders or
winning tickets are entitled to share$314,371.50,1ottery oFficials said.

OUR BUSINESS.
. BEGINS WITH
FILliNG .YOUR
PRESCRfPTIONS

FRUTH· PHARMACY
"THE EVERYTHINGS STORES"

101 Sixlh

Ave.

Huntington, W. Vo .

2501 Jackson Ave.
' Point · PINMnl, W. VI .

364 Jockson Pike
· "O.liiP.OIII. 0.

· no w. 2nd st.
· Wellston, o.

Weather forecast
All STORES
. OPEN 7. DAYS

A WU:K
' FREE PARKING

.

Mostly cloUdy tonight and· Thursday. Lows tonight in the low 30s.
or precipitation 20 percent tonight
. and Thursday. Winds southwesterly around 10 mph tonight.
Extended Oblo Forecast
Frlday·thniugb Sunday:
c•nce or flurriet1 Friday. Fair Satunllly. Not u cold wtth a chance
or nlD or soow simday, Highs mainly In the 30s Friday' and Saturday
and In the upper* and COt Sunday. Lows In the 20&amp; Friday 1nd Satul'day and !be low 381 Sunday.
Highs Thursday near 40. Chance

.....
IJ?."i!ll
'"'"'•'

II lXII

£\1

C:H
It II

-

•••
p

---,J'OIUICA8'l'
•c• -

WEA'I'IIER
Colder w41' II ap nled In !be
1 - 1 perW, We¢? flf alll'l'kiltiJ wilbJC, flir the -*m
l'lml, MldwM ..r -'tal tile llelltllelll. Wl!llenl arou wDI be,....
- · (.t\1'1

lrp.IIDMip),

lS tents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

• EliCiuoMielk_.,. hood poo,.nll opllllng
• Matntains proper water temperature
•4-Wav COntrol Dial- Heat, Massage, Massage &amp; Heat, Ott
• Foot"5haped arch rests stimulate teet
• Hundreds ol tiny Vibra-FingersTYmassage, refresh teet
• Sure grip handles. Built-In storage stand

Under provisions of the 1978
Ethics in Govenunent Act, the
Justice Department has 90 days to
conduct a preliminary inquiry into
allegations or misconduct against
high-level government officials. If
evidence 'Of a crime is found, the attorney general must ask a panel of
federal judges to appoint an ;,..
dependent special prosecutor to investigate further.

2 Sections , 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, .Wednesday, December 2, 1981

byCiairol
Soothes Tired, Aching Feet With Automatically
Controlled Heat and Vibratory Water Massage

3 STYLES

in.
Allen has said' the watches were·
personal gifts for his wife and that
both were received before Reagan
took offlcO.
'

'

at

e

__,_ ....__

.
enttne

•

.

sale actually occurred In January
19tll.
In his initial statement, filed in
February, Allen also failed to list
any interest in the firm 111 the end of
1980. Last week, however, he repor·
ted a $100,000 to $250,000 holding in
the company at the end ollast year.
The new Inquiry also Will focus on
Allen's receipt or two watches f;;osn
the Japanese journalists who in·
terviewed Mrs. Reagan. One of the
jourliaiists, Fuyuko Kamisaka, has
said the first watch was given to
Allen on Jan. 16, before the
inauguration, and the second on Jan.
22, two days after Reagan was sworn

Women hurt in crash
TWo Jackson women were injured
The accident caused moderate
in. a car-tractor trailer collision on damage to the Skaggs auto. and the
U.S. 35 Tuesday afternoon, ac· driver and a passenger, Molly G.
cording to the Gallia·Meigs Post of . Skaggs, 53, were both injured and
the state highway patrol.
taken to Holzer Medical Center by
The report said Lisa A. Skaggs, 19, the Gallia EMS.
slowed her vehicle to make a fell
Troopers said F:red M. Priddy, 30,
tum while eastbound one mile east Rt. I, Middleport, escaped injury at .
of-Rt. 325 at4:20 p.m. when an east· 9:45p.m. Tuesday when he swerved
bound truck, operated by Robert 0. to avoid collision with a deer on
Booihe, 39, Roanoke, Va., failed to Meigs County Rd. 5 and struck a
slow and struck the rear of Skaggs' General Telephone Co. pole. His
vehicle.
·
vehicle was moderately damaged.

Landfill commission topic

-- ----

.

The Meigs County Commi!!Sioners Tuesday discussed at length the
recent visit of EPA officials ~onceming the nel'{.landfill site.
Commissioners expre!!Sed their gratitude to state representative
Clair Ball for his help in resolving the probleiiiS encountered with the
· proposed site.
The dedication date for the new access highway from Union Ave., to
Veterans Memorial Hrn;pital was set for Monday, Dec. 14. Time or the
dedication will be announced later. ·
Commissioners will not meet next week. it was reported.
Attending were Henry Wells, president, Richard Jones and David
Koblentz, conunissioners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Chambers.
r

.President may lift employment han
.

'

WASIUNGTON

.

(AP)

-

The

Reagan administration, seeking to

sibility is to the controllers who
stayed on the job, working long
hours to keep the planes flying
safely."
Gergen suggested, however, that
because 'rransportation Secretary
Drew Lewis Is out or town, Reagan
could not make a decision in time to
announce it to the AFJ..CIO leaders.
Lewis is in Japa~ for talks with auto

thaw relations with big labor, Is con·
sidering whether to lift a three-year
freeze on federal employment for air
tr¢fic controllers who were fired af·
ter striking against the government.
President Reagan broached that
possibility in a meeting with leaders
or the International Brotherhood of
Teamsters, White House aides con- industry executives and isn't exfinned late Tuesday. But chief pecied to return to Washington until
· spokesman David Gergen " em· Tuesday.
phasized that Reagan "was not conAdministration officials maintain
sidering" returning the 11,500 con· that federal laws bar for three years
trollers to the flight towers.
the employment by the govenunent
Reagan was meeting today with of any federal employee par- ·
AFJ..CIO President Lane Kirkland ticipating in a strike - a position
and members of the federation's that organized labor contends has
executive council in a major ad· never been tested in the courts.
ministration peace-making of·
Meantime, J. Lynn Helms, head of
fensive aimed at rebuilding ties to the Federal Aviation ·. Ad·
labor leaders.
ministration, was urging a
In a break with tradition, the AFL- · congr_essional panel today to apCJO denied the chief executive an in- prove $57.5 million in special pay
vitation to its biennial convention in and .benefits for air controllers and
New York last month, And it deman- other agency employees.
ded that Reagan end his
Roughly three-fourths of air con.
"demeaning vendetta" by rehiring troller union's membership par·
the controllers, whose union, the ticipated in the Aug. 3 strike. The
Professional Air Traffic Controllers union is appealing an Oct. 22 order
Organization, has been decertified by the Federal Labor Relations
by the government and has filed for
Authority, revoking its exclusive
reorganization under the Federal status ~s a bargaining agent for
Bankruptcy Act.
federal air controllers.
Speculation about an ad·
The administration has relied· on
ministration show or mercy toward· nOIH!triking union members, new
the dismissed air controllers has .recmits and miljtary personnel to
surfaced several times since the police the flightpaths while it
president fired controllers who rebuilda the air control system.
igl!ored his bag-to,woi'k ·ordtf bi
Reagan's invitation to Kirkland,
early AugiiBt.
which came just before the AFL-CIO
Despite repeated administration opened its convention in New York
denials of any plans lor a general on Nov. 16, created a stir within the
amnesty, Reagan told the Teamster top councils or. the 15 mlllionll!ldera that he Wl8 "COIII!cledng the member labor federatlqn.
quatlon of whetller or nat the conTWo inembe)'s ol the execuUve
troilers who have been llred lhould council - GleM E. Watts of the
~ to be barred tram any em- · co·rrununlcatlons
Workers of
ployment (with the lederal gwern- America and WUiiam Winpisinger or
ment) for a three-year perind, ai Is • the Interhational Association of
Machinists - voiced resentment at
currently the cue," Gergen said.
But the spokesman abo quoted the timing of the peace offering and
Reagan u saying, "Our first reapon- declared they would not attend.
---·~-

-

--

_,

In its quest to smooth relations
Kirkland and Secretary·Treasurer
Thomas R. Donahue , the with big labor, the 'administration
federation's No. 2 official, said they set up a private meeting Monday
would accept, however, and most between Kirkland and Vice
union leaders on the 3!&gt;-member President George Bush and a recep-tion that night for labor leaders at
executive council followed suit.
The AFJ..CIO has been Reagan's Bush's residence.
most •-trident critic. It assailed his
Reagan also issued an executive
budget and tax policies as rewarding
the rich and massed a protest rally order directing all federal depart.
which attracted more than a quar· ments and agencies to solicit the
ter·million demonstrators in ?"ion viewpoint on major policy
ISSUes .
Washington on Sept. 19.

ADDRESS TO ()()ICP'ERENCE- Prelldeat Reagan gestuns durlq
speech Tuesdly in Wubi!JCioa belen lbe Wbile H-.e Coaferenee .,
AlbJI, Tbe presklent uld lbe elderly !lave beoa "weedlenly IIJid crueUy
lrlgbtfted" about bil prop 111ls for SodaJ Security, 1nd be promiHd 111t
to betray tbelr rights to benellta. (AP Luerpboto).
'

1

�'
··.~

Page-2,-The Daily S1mtlnet '
P.on•eroy-Middteport, Ohio
wednesday, Decembe~2.1911

Commentary

D

back· it. Because the bishops should . secrated to study, namely the moral
not be concerned witll poise, tactics, issue. It is up to the· Hatches, and
other senators, to decide how, in ordealings, wheelings.
·
der
to get to A from B we need to
. It is the bishops' task, pure and
travel
pillitically.
sunple, to tell us what IIIey are con-

The bishops have been sorely '
misled. The result, unhappily, will
be !heir loss of tbe only kind of
authority to which they should
aspire.

TrOnly one SVAC team, Hannan
. ace~ was victorious Tuesday
?'l!ht m three non-league batlles .
mvolving l~gue teams.
The Wildcats opened their
season on a bapPY note wilh a 66110 victory over Synunes Valley.
Soutllwestem absorbed a 71-64
loss to Chesapeake ~hile Nortll
Galha suffered 1ts ~econd
stra1ght defeat, 7~ at Trunble.
WILDCATS WIN
Greg Web~, semor guard for
the Hannap Trace Wildcats dumped In 33 points lo lead his team to
a SIX pomt win over Symmes
Valley,
Webb scored several points on
inside shots and was also HT's
best rebounder witll 17 Tob
•
Y
Sheets was the only other Wlldcat
hitting double figures ·wilh 14

'

points

• "'

Gene Myers led the Vikings
with 17 points while Larry Miller
and Burcham provided l2 points
each.

Hannan Trace held a 31-22 halftime advantage and 49-35 lead
going into tile final period but had
to hold off a last quarter rush for
. tile win.
HJGHLANDBRS LOSE
Led by Corder's 23 points,
Chesapeake turned back Southwestern, 71-64 in an exciting nonconference battle at Chesapeake
Tuesday night. Others hitting
double figures for the Panthers
were Moore with 17 and Harris
hadl3.
Jiloger Wells paced Coach Uoyd
Myers' Highlanders with 18 points while Gary Baker had 13 and
Paul McNeal, II.
The hosts jwnped into a 23-13
first period lead and were never
headed.
Soutllwestern · hosts Hannan
Trace Friday ..

..

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
'·

Assl~taat

BOB HOEFLICH
, General Marwger

Publlsher/Coa,roller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
-New~ F.dllor

A MEMBER of The As.~ntiaw:J Preu, Inland Dally Press Aa,,oclatlnn and lilt
Amer1eao Newspaper Publlshen Association,

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed. Tbt-y should be ltss than 380 word!lloug. All
lettrn are sabj~llo edlllng and must be signed wltb name, addres5aod telepboDe aum- ·
ber. No uulgued lelkra will be published. ~..etten 1houkl be lo good taste, addrrulbx

iuues, not personaUtlea:.

Two approaches to
•
mvestment
success
:There are many approaches to investing, but here for the sake of cont(ast are two of them: The book route, which might never get your there;
and the investment club route, which guarantees to.
:First, the books. If you were to study a tenth of the investment books
that line the booksellers' racks you might never have time to invest.
~oreover, you might become intimidated rather than encouraged.
· Mter supplying more than 250 pages of material largely culled from
other books and from magazines, one new author suggests you read five
rilore ,books, pore through issues of live magazines, and study two or
three investment advisory services, all of which Ire.names.
:You might become disillusioned too at having wasted time. "Buy stocks
when they're undervalued," the author advises in his swrunary on the
ClJncluding 260th page of the $15 book, which purports to be a guide.
· Considering the likelihood ' that nobody sufficiently accomplished to
tiave slirvived to adulthood requires such ersatz wisdom, the reader's
time and energy, not to mention $15, would seem to have been misspent.
; The author, a person who seeks to earn a living with words ratller than
investments, inadvertently offers one valuable suggestion: "In getting
Mvice," he advises, ''consider the source.'' Excellent advice.
: Meanwhile, as you meandered through the book racks, olher amateurs
flave taken a simpler route: 'fhey've been investing, earning 21 percent
compounded annually, doubling their money in less than four years.
: This is the IO.year•average experience of 220 investment cluba (3,500 in&lt;lividuals) which responded in a sampling by lhe National Association of
Investment Clubs. It is an average; some clubs did much better but, of
oourse, some failed to perform up to the average.
'
:Still, as the NAIC proclaims, it's a remarkable record, considering it
&gt;tas accomplished "not by following an exotic, mysterious stockmarket
system, but by consistently following three simple principles."
• First, said Ken Janke of the NAIC; the clubs invested a set sum, usually
$25 a month, regularly (usually monthly) over a long period. They rein~ested dividends as received. And they sought a portfolio they believed,
on average, might double in value in about five years.
:The NAIC, based in Royal Oak, Mich., has preached that philosophy for
decades, and over tile decatles it has helped people of rather modest incumes to finance their homes and educate their children.
: Members don't seek to outguess the market over the short term, having
observed the financial corpses ol those who soek to do so. Instead, IIIey
r~tain their shares through bull markets and hear, confident tllat the
~ics on which they made the.ir choic~s will prove out over time.

Today in history
Today is Wednesday, Dec. 2, the336thday of 1981. There are 29daysleft
in tile year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Dec. 2, 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself, Emperor
Napoleon I of France.
On this date:
Jn !942, a nuclear chain reaction was demonstrated for the first time by
scjentisll working on a secret project in Chicago.
In IIICill, Fidel Castro and his followers landed in Cuba to overthrow the
ll4t1sta l,lovernment.
·
Jn [980, the Archbishop of CanterburY broke church precedent by
vliiting Pope John XXIII at the Vatican.
And in 1m, lire J'llged tllrough a pop music festival io Seoul,' South
K~. killing more tllen 50 people.
.
.-en years ago: Astate of emergency was decla~ in Chile after a night
ot:..Jolence triggered by a demonstration against food shortages.
·
Five years ago: The Chinese govel'lllllellt dismissed foreign minister
Chiao KuarHiua and named H111ng Hua to replace him.
·
One year ago: Moacuw denied reporta of a Soviet military buildup along
!hi! boider witll Poland, where Jabal: unrest threatened the Conununist
gctvernment's ltablllty.

'

Investment provides·many approaches
NEW YORK (AP) - There are
many approaches to investing, but
here for.tlle sake of contrast are two
of them: The book route, which
might never get your !here; and the
investment club route, which
guarantees to.
First, the books. If you were .to
study a lentil of tile investment
books tllal line tile booksellers'
racks you might never have time to
invest. Moreover, you might become
intimidated ratller than encouraged.
Mter supplying more than 250
pages of material largely culled
from other books. and from

magazines, one new auUlo~ suggests
you read five more books, pore
through issues of five magazines,
and' study two or three investment
advisory services, all of which he
names.
..... .;... ~
);
You might become disillusioned
too at having wasted time. "Buy l
stocks when they're Undervalued,"
tile autllor advises in his swrunary
on the concluding 2fiOth page of the
$15 book, which purports to he a
guide.
Considering tile likelihood tllal
nobody sufficiently accomplished to

have survived to adulthood requires
s'uch ersatz wisdom, the reader's
time and energy, not to mention $15,
would seem to have been misspent.
The a_uthor, a person who seeks to
earn a living with words ratller than
investments, inadvertently offers
one valuable suggestion: "In getting
advice," he advises, "consider the
source.'' Excellent advice.
Meanwhile, as you meandered
· through the book racks, other
amateurs have taken a simpler
route: They've been investing, ear·
ning 21 percent compounded an·

nually, doubling their money in less
than four years.
This is the !()-year average e•perience of 220 investment clubs
(3,500 individuals) which responded
in a sampling l)y tile National
Association of Investment Cluba. It
is an average; some clubs did much
better but, of course, some failed to
perform up to tile average.
Still, as the NMC proclaims, it's a
remarkable record, considering it
was accomplished ''not by following
an exotic, mysterious stockm8rket
system, but by consistently
following three simple principlell."

PIRATEs BEATEN

It is entirely possible that there is
less to the whole business than
meets the eye in public print. One
Justice Department official, a
career man with no special tie to the
administration, suggests tllat it has
been overblown from the beginning.
Part of the problem is disclosure
on tile installnient plan. When information about suclt a matter
comes out bit by bit, with new
disclosures every day or two, the
case lives on, and flourishes.
That's what happened in the sum·
mer of 1977, when Bert Lance,

from tile White House was that
Reagan would support any
legislqtion upon which the House
and the &amp;nate could agree.
Then Smith came forward with his
report, which drged the president to
support weakening changes in the
House-passed version.
Smitl&gt; urged Reagan to support
allowing states and localities to
escape easily from the act's
requirement that they clear all elec. toral changes with the Justice
Department ·oi tbe'' U.S. District
Court for the District of Columbia.
He p~sed tile discontinuation after 1985 of the bilingual elections
that tile act requires in some sections of the country.
Most important, the attorney
general advised the president to support a reversal of the House-passed
provision enabling minorities to
prove discriminatory effect, not
di~criminatory
. intent, when
challenging electoral procedures.
Meanwhile, a battle to win
Reagan's support' for tile How;.,.
passed legislation was being wageil
witllin the White House. Leading the
troops was White House slaffer Mel
Bradley, one of lhe few black faces
inside the administration. Bradley
brought in Edward Brooke, tile

Massachusetts Republican who was
the only black to serve in the Senate
during this century, to urge Reagan
to support the House vefsion of the
extension.
AI a ·Cabinet meeting, the
argwnent raged again. On the si~e
of the House version were Housing
Secretary Samuel Pierce; thenly
black Cabinet member, and Health
and · Hwnan Servil'es Secretary
Richard Schweiker. Opposing
argwr!ents were made by Smith and
Energy &amp;cretary James Edwards,
a former governor of South
Ca'rolina, which is one of the covered
slates.
Reagan aides prepared a
statement supporting whatever·
eornpromise emerged from House-Senate deliberations. That would
have been a victory for White House
moderates.
But Smith, angered that his
recmrunendations had been ignored,
storined into the White House and
confronted Reagan. The result was a
statement that Jnanaged to upset
everyone, from tile apologists for
American apartheid who long for a
return to state control over voting
rights to the civil-rights advocates
who insist that •federal protection
will be required in the covered states

WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) - Two
free throws tiy John DevereaW&lt; and
a breakaway layup by Nate Cole in
the fmal 18 seconds gave Ohio
University a I!H2 win over UNOWilmington in college basketball action here Monday night.
DeveieaW&lt;'s conversion on a on"'
ancl-&lt;lne opportunity gave the Bobcats~ now l·i, a 64-tO lead, but UNCW's Shawn WitHams .cut it to two
points witlla pair of charily tosses.
Cole then broke free on an inbounds play, going the full-lengtll of
the court on a pass from Tim Woodson to seal the win.

President Carter's budget a~viser,
was under investigatiOn for his practices as a Georgia banker. Lance
resigned after weeks of controversy.
His . departure probably was
inevitable. But the serial disclosure
system made it all worse.
The expert on that would be
Richard M. Nixon, who could have
taken Watergate at one big dose. Instead, Nixon and his advisers chose
wljat J~hn D. Ehrliclunan calied "a
modified, limited hangout." As a
result, the administration took
poison on the installment plan.

for many years to come.
· Reagan's · slatement did ,support
e&lt;lendmg the act and itS bilingual
elections. But it called for weakened
"bail-out" procedures tllat would
permit jurisdictions to escape ' the
act's c'&lt;lverage with little more than
a promise to do wrong no more.
Most frighteningly, Reagan said
the act should retain the "intent"
test. Th~t mean.• lhat blacks filing
sutt agamst a discriminatory reapportinmnent plan, for example,
would have to prove that the
legislators who drew it up
specifically intended to discriminate
agairu;t racial minorities.
Since even the most unrecon. structed lawmakers arc
sophisticated enough io avoid racist
eonunents while the ca•neras are
rolling and the reporters pencils are
poised, "intent is. impossible . to
prove.
"It's like asking the Victim of a
mugging if .the thief 'intended' .to rob
him," ;mid a ciVil-rights lawye(.
"Your wallet in his pocket won't be
sufficient proof!"
. ·Sen. ~dward Kennedy, f&gt;.Mass.,
called Reagan's statement "backdoor repeal."
I just wish the president hadn't
said anything at all.

A«. PfiE!iiPl!ll1;

By Alooel81ed 1'.-

Evenatage37,CoachTomMeyer
of lllinols-&lt;:hlcago Circle is finding

out he's DOt old e110118h to beat up on
Dad.
Tuesday night, Meyer put his
team on. tilt court against seventhranked DePaul, coached by his
father Jlat, and took a licking. The
Blue Demuns beat Chicago Circle 71153 behind the game-high 20 points
Terry Cummings and some timely
baskets by reserve Bemard Rand91ph.
Dad is now 67 and the winningesl
active Division I coach witll651 viclories in his 39-plus seasons. He
congratulated Tom after tlleir
history-making meeting, the first
between father and son head

as Trimble rolled iO an easy ·7&amp;.62
non-league win over Nortll Gallia
Tuesday. Mark Eslenkamper led
lhe way witll 15 points; Scott
Holbert - had 14 · whit Mik
Moore and Dav~ Koone had 1;
points apiece.
Mike Mays and Matt Kemper
paced Nortll GaUia witlll6 and 15
points reapectively. For the
second • straight game, the
Pirates played witllout the services of~ Eric Holle who Is out
willian ankle injury
Nortll Gallia plaYs at Kyger'
Creek Friday.
SOUTHWESTERN (64) - Scott
~ewls 2·0·A; Gary Baker 5·3·13; Rob·
bie Price 4·0·8; Roger Wells 6-6·18;
Charles Stewart 1·0·2; Paul McN~al
3·i · ll; Kent Walker 1·0·2; Randy
Layton 3·0·6. Totals 25·14·64.
CHES.-PEAKE Hll- W.St 2·0·ol;

Fernando wins
another award
NEW YO~ (AP) - Fernando
Valenzuela, the left-handed pitching
star of the Los Angeles Dodgers, added the National League Rookie of
tile Year award today to the Cy
Young honors he captured lasl month and became the first player to win
tHose two trpphies in one season.
The chunkY hurIer from Son ora,
Mexico, wbo impressed the baseball
world wtth poise belying his 20 years
- he turned 21 last montli - and a
dancing screwball, received 17'f.. fir·
st-place votes and 6\2 for second for
107 points. The balloting was done by
a panel of two mernhers of the
Baseball Writers Association of
America from each National League
city.
He became the third straight
Dodger pitcher to be named NL
rookie of the year - Rick Sutcliffe
and Steve Howe preceded him.
Montreal outfielder Tim dines,

Hamlin3+7; Harris5·3·13; MooreS ·
9· 17; Corder 6·10·22; Rowles 2·0·.4;

McMaster 1·2·4. Tolals 23·25-71.
Score by quarlers:
Southwestern
13 18 14 19·64
Chesapeake

1~71

23 16 17

Reserve score: Chesapeake 61.

Southweslern 18 .

NORTH GAlliA (52) -

Gregg

Deel 3·0·6; Paul Hollingshead 3·0·6;
Matt Kemper- 6·3· 15; Mike' Mays 7·2·
16; Kenny Neall · l -3; Dav,icl ROberts
2·0-4: Bruce ~hriver 1·0·2. Totals 23·

6·52.

.

TRIMBLE (78)- Mike Moore 6·0·
12; Scott Holbert 4·6· 14; Dave t&lt;oon
6·0· 12; Mark Estenkamper- 6-3-15;
Steve Lanning 2·4·8; Cliff Campbell
3·0-6; Chuck Dunlevy 1·3·5; Bruce
Fouts 2·0·4; Terrv Carter 1·0·2.
Totals 30·16·78.
Score by quarters :
North Galli a
8 18 ·~ 2Q-52
Trimble
II 22 21 18-78
Symmes Valley (60) - Myers 5·7·
17; Patterson 3·1·7; Shepard 0·0-0;
Walsh 1-0-2; Burcham 6·0· 12; Miller
4-4-12; Murnahzh 0·3·3 and T. Pat·
terson 3·1·7. Totals 22-10-00.
Hannan Trace fU) - Sheets 4·6·

14; Webb 1.1-11·33; Waugh

1 · 2 · ~;

bases in just 88 games, placed
who ledtotile
league with
71 stolen
second
Valenzuela.
Raines,
a .304
hitter, captured the remaining firstplace votes, 6\2, ahd second-place
ballots, 1712, for 65 points.

Petrie 0·0·0; Barnes 3·2·8; Rossiter-

2-0·4; Bays 1·1-3. Tolal• 22-22-66.
By q·uarters:
Symmes Valley
Hannan Trace

6 16 13 25-60
18 13 11 18-66

Reserve score: Hannan Trace 49.

coaches In college b8sketball, tHen
threwinsomeadvice.
In other games involving ranked
teams, 12th-ranked Indiana downed
'No. 19 Notre Dame 6~, No. 16
Missouri clobbered Alcorn State 8251 and 17th-ranked Alabama
wallopedTennessee-MartinW-64.
ne Top Ten
Randolph, DePaul's sixth man,
added 13 points, and the Demons led
by as many as 19, 31-12, in the first
half of their season opener. Cummings got three baskets in the first
half on goaltending calls against 7foot-2 Chicago Circle center Dave
Williams.
Johnny Ellls scortid 10 points to
help pull· Circle witllin 12, 36-24, at
the half.
Tim Anderson led Circle with !6
points.
neSecondTea
India~~a eosch Bobby Knight shuffled his lineup, sl;lrting four freshmen, but it was a pair of up. perclassinen who rallied the 1981
natiorial champion Hoosiers over lhe
Fighting Irish.
Ted Kitchel, a junior, scored 14 of
his 22 points in tile first half, and
Randy Wittman, a senior, scored all
15 of his points in the second half as
Indiana, 2.0, built a lead of as many
·
as 17 ptJmts.
.
,
Knight inserted Kitchel and Wittman into the lineup early in the
game but nearly sent the freslunan
back in before the Indiana offense
began to click.
'
John Paxson had 24 points for
Notre Dame,!·!. · '
Jon Sundvold scored 19 points, 10
in a burst early in the second half, as
Missouri romped over Alcorn State
in its season opener. Sundvold's fast·
break basket ignited a spree of 13
straight Missouri points during a
four-minute span midway in the
second half as the Tigers led 61-39.
Missouri center Steve Stipanovich

scored 16 points and grabbed II
rebounds. Albert Irving led Alcorn
State witliJO points.
Freshman Bpbby Lee Hurt scored .
20 points to lead Alabama, which
was ahead by as many as 20 points in
the first half and finally built the
leadto30, themarginofvictory.
Eddie Phillips added 14 ptJints for
the Crimson Tide, now 2~. while

Curtis lllgh led T..........,.Martln with 26 points.
·
Some other scrores:
Morehead State beat Cleveland
Slate 62~ to win the Eagle Claaaic; .
Georgia topped Florida State 7D47; .:
Syracuse downed Cornell ltH~;
Villanova hit St. Francis, N.Y., 93-_· ·
63; Seton ·Hall beat Foidlwn 71-64·, ·
Lewis upsetDrake 41-40.
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Lebanon results .
LEB,ANON, Ohio ( AP) - · Ms.
Special Lass outdueled Edgewood
Eileen for a photo-finish victory
Tuesday night in the $1,000 featured
mile pace at Lebanon.
The winner paid $15, $4.110 and
$3.80. Edgewood · Eileen returned
$3.20 and $2.110 and third-place
. Cloverleaf Susan paid f3.20.
The 7-6 double of Henry Tyke and
One By Land returned $67.40. Attendance was 1,030 and the mutue.l
pool totaled $94,954.

'I

.·

OU edges foe in .
final seconds, 66-62

He ·sh~uld have kept quiet.,__ _
Ju__
lU.n_Bo
__n__
d
If you can't say something nice,
don't say anything at all.
If wish President Reagan had
followed that advice. Then he
wouldn't have said what he did about
the Voting Rights Act.
Until mid-November,no one knew
for sure where the president :,1ood on
what has been called "the most important ci~i!-rights legislation of this
century."
He had made general noises supporting the extension of tile act,
provisions of which expire next
year. But he had qualified that support in such contradictory ways that
no one was quite sure where the
" great communicator'' stood. ·
He told the NAACP convention in
Denver last June that he supported
the right to vote. He later ·said that
he favored extending portions of the
act to cover all 50 states, an exercise
sure to render voting protecti.on for
minorities ineffective.
As the renewal legislation approached passage in the House of
Representatives, lhe president hid
behind a report on the act's effectiveness tllat was being prepared
by Altorney General Wllliarn FrenchSmitll.
Even after the House passed the
extension by a ~24 vote, the word

.

Four players hit double figures

Is there a pattern_in.controversies?
happens that raises a cloud or
WASillNGTON (AP) - Sorrie day,
perhaps, a deposed government of- · suggests a conflict of interest, tile
ficial will write a little guidebook for
subject of inquiry and his defenders
his successors to consult in times of could, at least, 'avoid making it wortrouble. Richard V. Allen could have
se.
u.sedone.
That is what has happened in the
There is a pattern in controversies
Allen matter.
like that surroll{lding President
It began as an inquiry over an
Reagan's national security adviser,
unreported and, Allen says, forgotand the lessons of one adten $1,0(!0 honorarium for a
ministration never seem to register
Japanese magazine interview witb
on the next.
Nancy Reagan. It has raised other
No set of instructions is going to
questions aboot Allen and the conavoid such problems: they go with
sulting business he sold w~en he
the territory. But once something
joined tile Whit~ House staff.

The Da i ty Sentinet...feW!
..3 .
N , . ...

Father's ·team jumps all over ·son's cagers . . . . .

Hannan Trace
· whips Vikings

The Daily Sentinel

Ut-!92-!156
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF' THE MEIG&amp;MASON AREA

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
I

&lt;&gt;rennllQ________________________________________________WI_i_UM_·m__F_._B_~_k_ley__J__~
the bishops' apparent opposition to inflation (the most savage enemy of
Ronald 1te3gan's program is one of the poor) and by encouraging thrift,
those flashes of trne ignorance savings an&lt;l enterprise.
On the matter of abortion, the
which bring pity. rather than iJl.
· dignation. If the bishops were bishops have made a sad mistake.
merely trying to convey tllat a great They truly believe that the .human
deal of hot food and vitamins cail be fetus is entitled to the same protecpurchased by money that Is other- ,lions as the black 21-year-old male,
wise going to the construction of S.I five generations ago a slave. The
bombers, then that •'ialement is as war against Roe vs. Wade has been,
true as that the hungry cannot eat quite properly, a war at all levels.
the gold chalices with whieh the But it wasn't the bishops who
priesthood. regularly celebrates the stressed the constit,utional arrogan- .
sacraments. But just as .there is ce of the decision that suddenly
spiritual yearning for the great legitimized abortions everywhere.
cathedral of Chartres, and the They taught, instead, the sanctity of
hallowed vaults of St. Patrick's so life, stre~ing lhe arbitrariness of
there ls a yearning, also spiritual, deeming life to exist only at the
for the freedoms we celebrate only moment when the fetus is removed
nuclear weapons issues.
beduse we have bombers at our from the mother and is suddenly
~he purpose of a counter·arsenal
transported into fresh air and the
disposal.
b~ .the West is not to advance the
protections of the Fifth and 14111
chance of war but to dminish it.
Amendments
to the Constitution.
II the bishops are critici•ing Mr.
Pope Pi u.s XII In 1947, in a statement
The
bishops,
with
the enthusiastic
uriiversally interpfeled as sanc- Reagan's progfam on the _grounds
help
of
a
constituency
that can ·only
that there is a reduction in federal
ti~ming the usc of defensive nuclear
be
compared
to
the
abolitionists
of
weapons, stated that some things welfare spending, then they are
150
years
ago;
waged
moral
war
ignorant of the causes of human afa~e "of such importance" meaning, of course, hwnan freedom nuence. We preside over the against those who believe that
and the cultivation of spiritual greatest welfare enterprise in the human birth is an act of biological
values - that their defense by ap- history of the world, and tllis is made transubstantiation.
But suddenly they have become
propriate l)'leans is morally possible because we have learned
tacticians,
backing the bill of Sen.
how to accumulate a surplus. And
jljS!ilied.
Orrin
Hatch
which would return, liy
pn the issue of tile nation's poor., this we managed to do by controlling
constitutiOnal amendment, tbe right
to make decisions on whether, when
alid how abortions might he un·
•.
derl.&lt;:lken. Now, there is reason for
' thoughtful laymen to back the Hatch
Amendment (although it will not be
111 Court Sired
passed). But none for the bishops to ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

.'

·'

Wednesday, December 2, ' " '

I

'J'he National Conference of
Calholle Bishops has acted as
tbbfl8h it forgot to open Its sessions
with prayer for guidance. Either
that, or the L&lt;lrd was fear!illly
preoccupied, because the bishops
could ·not have done worse if IIIey
had issued a road map produced by
blilld men at a rummage sale. The
g&lt;ials IIIey seek are not served by
following their advice.
On tHe issue of nuclear power, the
biShops are of course correct in
aS;erting that the use of it would ·
m~an ·most awful hwnan destruction. But the bishops speak to those
within the Soviet Union, whence the
o~ly seriou.s threat of the use of

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6
;,£1

J..on~shots

·

Round Steak ...... ~8~

Bod)' Shop 2!i71 .

Teum
Smith-Ncbnn Mtltors
Tonfs Cary Out

f

.t

·.

44
44
42
42

Coal Buckets

r

..

INGELS FURN. &amp; JEWELRY

298 SEOOND St.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES GOOD lHRU DEC. 5, 1981

Mixt"d lk.IWIIIIIC Ln~t:uc

Rooch'sGun Shnp
Jet)·mar CUi:! I Cu.
Powell's Su~r Valu

-

.

Tl·am gatne - Zit.ll''sSpurtShop688.
EMrlySuDday

Tt&gt;Hm

'

I

DEC. 3rd, 4th &amp; 5th
THREE DAYS ONLY ·
THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT.

Smoked Sausage..
SUPERIOR CHUNK

Bologna.............. !!.8
SUPERIOR FRANKIE
oz.
.
W1eners............. :~~.

DIAMONDS WITH
EMERALDS, RUBIES
OR SAPPHIRES

12

58

f~aglcsCJub

:iO

Smith's BOt!)·Shop
50
Zidt•'sSportShnp
48
Hhth ~cncs - Tnm Sm tlh ~ . Ce~ roly n
Hal'hlll'f fl27: Russ Carson fl07. Pat Cur~on :i2t.
Hi~:h ~amt• - Tnm Stuilh ?.:16, Edna Russell
191 : .Bub Cuul'h 202. C:arolrn Ba~: hucr 100,
Team scril'S - F:agks Clot; 19-1&amp;
Team ~anw - Ea~ lc ~ CluiJ697.

Southern frosh
' dump Wellston
RACINE - The Southern Tornado
freslunan team, behind a solid team

..

effort, rolled by visiting Wellston 3022 in ninth grade basketball action.
Southern scored the first bucket
• Md led the entire distance, with the
exc~ption of a 14-14 tie in the second
period. After one quarter of play
Southern led 9-6, then managed to
slay on lop 17-14 allhe intennission.
After three full periods SHS led the
Rockets 26-18, holding on the final
canto for the 30-22 win.
Greg Nease led the Tornadoes
with 10 points, followed by Darren
Roush with nine, Scoll Schultz four,
Steve Teaford three, and Kevin
Teaford, David Ebersi&gt;ach two each.
Cheatwood led Wellston with eight

,._-r~

Bananas.... ~.........~ 2·
DAR I FRESH •

GREER FREESTONE

iUSPSI*"'II
A Dlvltlua of Mu11imedill, Inc.
l'ubllshed every afternoon, Monday through
Friday, Ill Court Street, by the Ohio Valley
PublishinK Company - Multimedia, Inc ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 992-2156. Sec:ond class
posta~e paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Assncin:ed Press, lnlan4 DaJ.
I)' Preu AIISOCiatlon and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association, National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper· Sale~. 733 Thllrd Avenue, New
York, N~w York 10017.
pa;TMASTER: Send adctreis to The Daily
Senlinel,lll Court St., Pomeroy,Ohio 4$719.
SUBSCRIPTION RAtts

By Carritr or Motor Rwle

Oneweelc-.
···················•·•·· . $1.00
oneModh ..................... , .. .....

____,.....,..

No....,•Ja:lll' •by 11116 permitted In town.
w11ere ldM canter ..met IIIYlilable.

IWLIIJIICIIII'IION

----......

JNondl ····••••·•······ ·· ···· ·• · ·
sa......................... ••
'12.l5

IYMr ..•. ,,,, , ,,,,,,; •..•...... . 13J.OO

.
~- ........................ .. IIS.OO

"FULL CT."
· CLUSTERS

Ingels
·•

COUPON

TIDE
DDERGENT
171

oz.

$599

Limit One Per Customer
Goad Only at Powell's
Offer Expir-es Dec. 5, 1981

retAXWElL HOUSE
MASTERBI.EftD

SUGAR

COFFEE

39 oz.

$195

00

5LB•.

$529

BAG

Lim It One l'er Customer
GOOd Onlyat Powell's
•Offer Expires Dec. 5, 1981

$}29

Limit One Per Customer
· GoOd Onlyat Powell's
Offer Ellplres Dec.. s; 1911

25LB.
BAG
Limit One Per Customer
GoOd Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. s, 1911

·····:::.·:··.......
. .. ..
'•, ... ..
....

.

'.

--~ _.....__

__ -·-'---...,-'---------·--·,

Furn. ·&amp; Jewelry
''CANDY'·S CLASSIC
COLLECTIONS"

big
brilliant
look "POLICEMAN ON
for men
7•kmaNI
DUTY AT ALL TIMES"
dut.n

•" " " " " " " " " " " •. " $2.1.10
I Yw .......................... • ....211

'

Her
Birthstone
and Diamonds

Peach Halves...~.-:. 5
CORONET
$ BoRDEN'S GLACIER CWB
$ og
T .I
JUM~
owe s...............~~~~J · Ice Cream .... ~...~~...1

delfrlng to j)lly the C81'1irr

may remit in adYanct r11rect. to Tbe DIU:.
~I on a J, I or 12 month bulL Credit
wtU l?e given C81'1'1er eiiC'h month.

$17900

$}&amp;9

.

12

OneYear •..•........... ...• •••. 152.10
SII&lt;GLECOPY
PRICES
[)ljly ...... ". " .. ·:' . .. " ..... 15 Cent~

SUf»eriberl not

(7

2% Milk .......... ::~~~ ..
KRAFT AMERICAN SINGLES
$Jlg
e Ch eese. Sl.1ces... t~2·~..
oz.
··

markers.

The IJ.Jilr SctHincl

,·-~ ·

~.....

·- I -

.,

MIDDLEPORT, &lt;liiO

l

r
I '

'

�'Ohio

The

•• Wednesday, December 2, 1981

Meigs High School wresUers
defeated Fairland 4+29, then lost to

(F)andJeffRoach(G) .
Doug Priddy pinned Robbie Young

Upper Arlington. Olher local teams
competing are Athens, Gallipolis,

Candy' Making

..

Carousel Confectionery

.•.

' High school
cage score~

Galloway and Bob JarrelL
Saturday and Sunday the
wrestlers will compete in the Ohio
University Open against top notch
c9mpelition such as Cleveland St.·
Ed, Cincinnati Moeller, Akron, and

remain following sales ai the schools
on Thursday and Friday, the
remaining allotment wtll be sold at
the gate.
Ironically, the cross-country
rivalry will open league play for
bothschoolswilhbolhleamsowning
1.0 records going into the game. The
reserve till begins al6:30 p.m. with
thevarsitycontestfollowing.

Akron North H. Norton 61
All en E. 63, UltC{llnvit.'W 62
Amhel'ill Steele ·69, Westlake 57
Anna 61, Fort Loramie 42
An.YOnia &amp;!. MIII11t.e r 64
Arlilll(ton 11, McComb 46
Ashtabula Htt~rbor ~. Girard , Pa .. 52
&amp;tavia 10, fllew Richmoni.l ~5
Bellaire St. John 99, Buckeye W. 45
Bethel-Tate 72, Goshen 52
Blanchei:iler 16, La!abur~ _ F'~irfic!d 56
Bluffton 82, Pandora-G ilboa 01 !
Botkins tfi, Jackson Center 45, OT
Brookfield 71 , Bad~er 69
· Cambrid.t.~e 611, Meadowbrook 54 ..
carnpbeli·Memorlal 00, YOUil~. Ells1 t9

•

.

1

I

"From top to bottom, the Chicago
Cub organization was a disaster

24 oz. 20 Count Landmark

.

BAROAIH MATINfES l'l" · SAT · SUN
ALL SEAr$ JUST J 1.50

ADMISSION EVERT TUfSQ.-,Y $ 1.50

~ FR(OAY thru THURSDAY,

J

NOV 27 thru DEC.3

•

3 lb.

Quarters

Kraft

·

.• ..

•

·

1

Bag

..

1 Lb.

BOOTH PERCH FILETS ••• :~;;. $1.79
,,.

0

FRENCH BREAD or
·ITALIAN BREAD •••••••••~

2

10'12 oz. Campbell's
LoavesFor$119

.

FRESH

Coconut

CREAM PIES ·•••••••••••"'
BROWNIES················&amp;
'

Lemon
Chocolate

ALSO
.

FOR

6 Pack 12 oz. Cans

'1291 .

CHICKEN w/RICE
.

46 oz. Stokely

&amp;9

$2

$}19

Coke-Sprite~Tab
.

•

·

soup
......
2/7r
.
.

2 .LITER BOTTlE
.

29 oz. Del Monte

:0~\'n. ·~:~· s129

. .•

1

40 oz. Showboat ·

'

U.S . GOY1 GRAOIO

Mixed
Fryer Parts ...

•

oz.

•;

PORK BARBECUE SAUCE.~:~. '1.2J'

~ Roll Pack White Cloud

:· .

;:,. I

12
DF

•

SAVE
INSTANT COFFEE •••••••••••J::•• $4.79. ::·.. :, PO.-a
sa· .
•

•

12 ·
OF

12-oz.99c

c

lox
lllll 4 IOUSWITH COIPOII
~ . lltl .

llll

-11-lllftlliCIIIUD

S579

KROGU

.

White
Bread

. .

. . . .3

20·01.

For a special person express. ing special feelings with a
special personal touch . Your
name on one side and . . .
that special someone' s on the

-·

Open All Day Thursday
and Friday Night
Tiii:OO

c.

~····--

Parkay
Margarine ....

$129

FOR BIG
APPETITES ...

t

. ....sse
.....

age

Marshmallow
·oa.
Creme ..... ISJ•r

Spotlight
Bean CoHee

f$499

AVONDALE

sw..t

Pickles

. .

KEllOGG 'S

. . ..ggc
......
. . $159
age
g9c
Jar

'IOZIN KIOGII

Glazed
..
...••.
Da llho
..... l'ko .

Pkg.

Dill DIJIAITMINTS
HOTI'OCIOS
AYAILAill

HTUINAILE

Tab, Sprite
or Coca Cola

3

5 29

~LL

PU...OII

......
C~
..-r ....
Ctnr .

(riiiYIMY liW P11Ci)

I laM· 7pm

-

'V'

-

AYONDALI

::!':: . ."t~:·· 39c

WISHIONI, READY TO EAT,
I-PilCH

Fried
$499
Chicken. auckat ·

MACAIONII CHIUI

lwonclalll ,.,.....
Dlnnen.. ... ...

23·C

Cost Cutter

I'

t

M•....L.a ,.....

-.-Ill "'•·

COST CUTTIII

Flab

ggc

FRISN .

California
CauiHiower ... Head

Shelled
Pecan Halves

$399

lb.
.111M10 IIMI·IIII IXTIA FANCY
WAIMINOTOIII OOLOIN

Delicious

·

49 C

SANDY MAC SLICII) TO ORDER
'ALL MIAT GillMAN

s169

Bologna ...... lb .
FIIISH IAKIO .
24•01. $149
PUmpkin Pi8 Pie

.

fiOifN COST CUTTU

~=· 'li~~- 8g~

-.........

..... ·~·

•

( nmiiY WW PIICl)
"V

-

6SC
c.:.;-·:s4·79
ItO VALUI

V1nllla

•

•

... .
Wlfen.... .12...

-

Dl*an ... ... .
WII'CIItlnlllr~

......

~---....... ..1.

..'

.........

UMMM, OU).IMHIONED GOODNE8S

• MAIN • POMIIO'I'

.

s4 99

GOLDCIEST

l·lb.

NIWCIOP

Now from Nabisco;•
a cracke[ that's big .
and hearty, yet light and
Old Fashioned Crackers. They're made with
only the finest ingredients in a simple
o)d·fashioned redpe-for that true, crisp,
crunchy old-fashioned taste.
So go &amp;bead, pile on your favorl~ cheese,
meat or topping._These firm, hearty crackers
are big enough to take a real payl011.d New
Premium Old Fashioned Crackers ...
th~ "Big Enough" cracker!

Plastic

Wrap ..

s,.claiK
CereaL .

.. io;id
White 2 o~~~$199
Potatoes .........

BIG

HOME "IDE

IN ITOIII WITH

Lvo.

-:.~·

Toddler
Dlaper1

AVAILAMi ONlY

=........ ~$109

ring

Christmas Eve.

1

QUAHUS

~$•"*

Available in VALADIUM or
IOK yellow gpld. Order early
to Insure delivery by

$ 39

.

C,ream·.......... 'I•·Gal.
Ctnr.
. .,

COMFOJT

Smoked
o
PoICniCI
.........

-......::..--~ ~~,:~ .. ... :.. .. ~~~-

•,

..

•·7·LI. AYG. WHOLE

YACPAK

..... ..
..

..

TAKE HOME PACKAGE

LIMIT ONE COUP'ON
, _____
......PEl FAMILY

Yahtzee
Game .......... . Eoch

Set with a sparkling diamond.

lb.

i

,

MILTON UADLIY

other.

''

Whole Fresh
29
lb.
$1
PorkSLICED
LoinFHI......
INTO ONE CONVINilNT

I;;TIY CLUe

promis ~

f'

Sun Giant R11isins I

I

.

ji

1•·17-LI. AVG .

TOILET
TISSUE ······~·...... ~~~.· 1 3~.
.
10 oz . Folgers

'·

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

.A

$

'·

lb.
HOLLY FARMS, U.S.O.A . INSPICTID

PORK-N-BEANS ••••••••••••••
;.a;~. 9r
•

STARKIST TUNA ........ ~:~•••. $1.29'
. .•

CHOIC~

•

Boneless Top
R9und Roast .

•
' ··
=

IN RUllAND TOWNSHIP

the personnl

&amp;SC

AVONDAU

~--············-··

'

Y1nlla
Fla10rl... .. .....
• ...

C

,.,....... c..

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

I

111E
ftBJG -

99

Ctrt

.DEL MONTE SPINACH ••••. .2/'1.0$..,
6112

,,.,,....

KIIOGII

WIIIIIIIVI fHIIIGHT 1'0 UMil QUANTIJIII . NDNI SOLD

t:

15 Ql.

33c

Awollllale

ctrt a..tt .. 't::·

.

.

99eEACH

.

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE •••••••••• ~:~. 99*
$ OQ
PEAR·HALVES ..............~:~. 1• ~.

10 oz . Vien'n a

COKE-SP.RITE-TAB

•

.,•'.

.

ENOUGH~

.. --..

~f:.:,~~:f.T.~~n=r.

'FOR SOlE~~ COST CIMIS, NO ITHEI lUllS AIIITOCIED

ONIONS ........ ~;~

NO TRESPASSING
OR HUNnNG
DAY OR NIGHT
ON MY PROPERTY

A
SPECIAL
CHRISTMAS
GIFT IDEA

SAYIUPT040%ofl

3 lb. Bag Yellow

PAUL SJURGEEN
.,..
..

115 N. .,"nd AVE.
MIOOUPORT

.992·2342
~~~=========~=

Phone 992·5776

•

APPI£S•••••••.••••• 89'

SALAMI&amp;
·
Lb. $2 29
atEESE ••••••• • .

OPENING WIDNESDA Y
DEC 2 d AT 6:00 A.M
ft
•
•

00, Col. Linden-McKinley 46
Centenni 11l 78, Col. Independence 44
East 70, Col. Walnut HI!Jge 611
Mifnln 71, Col. Eastm oor ~ 9
Northland 76, Col. South 59

....

managing the Phillies two years
plus part of the 1979 season.
Green said he has hired "those I
thought did a good job building the
Phillies organization. I think they
can do the same thing here (in
Chicago)."

IXMNINGCHILDS
INSIJIIIAIICE
IUVt
AGENCY ·

ACROS ACROSS FROM VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL

Bri~ ~:s

._,

some of my own people," Green said
of the job he took six weeks ago aller

Syracuse, Oh .
NOW OPEN FOR
CHRISTMAS SEASON
Poinsettias-$1 .00 &amp; Up
Christmas Wreaths, Candle Arrangements, Christ·
mas Cactus, Foliage Plan·
ts &amp; Hal)ging Baskets.
Open Daily 9 to 5
Sun. 1 to 5

Of everything
the Price ,

•.

· Raq

• •

.

the Cubs. " I also found a very
negative attitude throughout the
organization,
with everyo~e
blaming the team On the field for aD
their problems.
"I could lind ablolutely no direction and very litUe organization. I
got rid of some peopie, moved some
people to other jo!Js and brought in

POTATOES • • • • • • • • • 1.29

MMGARINE ·.. ;.b.;

DONUTS •••••••••••••••••••••• ~.o::~ .. s179
531 JACKSON PIKE · Rt . 35 WEST
Phone 446-4624

IOib. ~alne

lib. Kraft Parka'{

BAKERY, .EtC.

Col. B~chcrofl 66, Col. Wclll. :i7

'

Philadelphia Phlllies broldcalter
and colwnnlat Rich Alhbum in an
interview publi$hed Tuesday in The
Bulletin.
"Too lew people had too much
responsibilily, and they couldn't a.,.
complish anything,'' Green said of

· • problems.

PUIAiED WIENERS. ••••• •• •····· ••.~~ .. '1.99
I·
ECKRICH OLD F~ION ~.........~~• -'1:97

Vaughan's .cardinal_

Chwe. Marshall 82, CleYe. Hayes 78
CIevc.
st. Joseph
53,
Lakl!woo..l
St. EdwHrd 52
CleVt!. Trinity 49, Cleve. Unlversity 29

Col.
Col.
Col.
Col.
Cui .

I
If

executive vice president and general
manager, says many managerial
employees blamed the leam's ioept·
neu for lhe organization's

·

Located on St. · Rt. 554
between Cheshire and
11 Porter.
11 Open Tues.-Wed. -Thurs.
10 : 00til5 : 00
11
U '

fROM THE ALL NEW

Austintown-Filch 56 OT
Gin. Colerain 65, W. Ch~ter L&lt;!k~a 60
Gin COI.Ultry Day 71, em. Chmt1an a4
Cin: F'nn&gt;sl Park 58, lndia_n Hill 54
Gin. McNicholas 00, Reallmg 66
Cin. Northwe1:1t .Jf,, King:~ 75
Gin. Turpin 58, Glen Es~e 57
Gin. Walnut Hill.'i :i6, Cm. Hughes 52
Gin Westt&gt;rn Hills 76, Cin. Aiken 60
Gin: Withrow 69, Cin. Wood~anl 66
CleYe . Bapti st 00, Clew. Henta~e 39

.·'

iI

.

'

~anfield ~.

I

LARGE GLAZED

Ohlv High School84ly~ Bllllketbllll
TUe11d11y'M R e~&gt;uiU
Akron ElM 6%, Hudson 56
Akron Firt=l!'lone 57, Cuyaho!l'a Falls 56
Akron Manl!ht.-ster 57, Canal Ful ton NW

..

I

II
II

area, everi wone than I lint thoul!lt
when I took the job," Green told

HUBBARD'S'GREENHOUSE

BAHERV

Game tickets on sale Thursday
Tickets for the Eastern-southern
basketball game slaled Friday
evening al southern High School,
•- will go on sale Thursday morning at
both Eastern High School and
Southern High SchooL If any tickets

11

PHnADE~(AP) - ~1~

Green, the Chicago Cubs' new

.

The Daily Sentinei~ Page-7

I

~~~~~;;~~~~~~~,..~-~11!11~-~-~,.~-~-~-~-~-~·~~ ECKRIQI PICKLED PIMENTO LO~ ••••~~. 11.97
ny Davis was pinned by Sieve Ben·
nett and Sieve Chapman. Meigs'
HOMEMADE HAM
Harry Roush lost to Robbie

Meigs will travel
to South
High
Tony Welch pinned Mike Wilkes
opponents,
as did
MikePoint
Willford.
School Thursday at 1 p.m. for a . (F)andToddSheets(G),whileDanscrimmage.
Results Saturday were as follows :
Jilmes Snyder pinned Robbie Young
(F) and won by forfeit over
Gallipolis. Mike Mourning won both
matchesbyforfeits.Mat!Rilflewas
pinned by Tony Armstrong (G) and
pinned by Matt McComas (F ), while
Brill King pinned Derrick Ashlock

1.

I

Ral'nbow
Gift Shop

Middleport, Ohio

.

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

;;;;;;;;;;.-J II

Gallipolis in a dramatic finish in the (F) and Mike Wiiif&lt;td pinned Ross ra;n;;d;;N;
ew
;Le;;xin;gt;;
on;.
closing match 42·30. Against Swisher (F) before claiming a forGallipolis the match carne down to leit over Gallipolis. Craig Sinclair
FREE
the last two weight classes, where · was pinned by Sieve Saunders (G),
Meigs went down to defeat, giving Troy Bauer lost to Scott Smilh (G )
Class
themueDevilsthevictory.
and J eff Gallaway (F). Greg
Br.ill King and Larry Romine were Thomas was pinned by Gary ChapDEC. 3 AT 7 .P.M.
credited With outstanding per- man (F) and John Ackerman (G) ,
DEC . 8 AT 10 A.M .
formnances, pinning both their op- . then Larry, Romine pinned Randy
Call to Reigster
ponents during the day. James . Galloway and Mark Bausell (G). Ed
Snyder also kept his record un- Blount was pinned by Jeff Lalunan
PH.f9H 342
blemished by defeating both of his (G)andJobnBragg (F) .
317N. 2nd
Middleport

Pomeroy

!~!i. . Green says Cubs really have problems ·

·Meigs second in tri-wrestling match
·

.

.. ll
[

r.

.,

·~::
I

�.·

Weclneselay, December2, 1981

·Meigs

' Busi.ness Services

Band Notes
Tile band will marcll 011 Friday,
Dec. t, in ihe Pomeroy ClwUtmaa
parade at 8 p.m. Band students
loading instnunents should be at the
hlgluchool at$ :15 p.m. Sludents itclt
loading should meet at tlie Pomeroy

DID
WELDING
S11W
REPAIR WORK

New HOim(tS
tensive

Reasonable Rates
166 south Third
Middleport, Ohio
PH. 992·5663

HMRISON
1V SERVICE
.
.

'Uvltles for the 111111-«1 symphonic
band Includes llle Firat Anllbal
Meigs County Band Feetlval, the

Freshu Spencer, chlldreO; Eileen Bowem,

se~lbJe;

Virginia Wyall, character category; tmcks, Tony
Heaton, children's category; Scott Wheels, adult
category and Unda GiUilao, grand prize in trucks, First place wioaers in each category receive a $25 U. S.
Savings Bond while grand prize winoers receive $50
bonds.

GRAND PRIZE- Tbls ciiiWII doll cnatal by Mn. Mary Galalher,
Syracuse, is the grand prize wtnoer of .the •111111!11 olress a doD -'ell of
The Fannen Bank and Savings Clab .Ut of t8 eotries. Mrs. Galather wDJ
receive Jl $50 savings bond for ber top entry. Toys and dotls created
through the contest wiU be donated by the bank to the Meigs Jaycees, the
Salvation Army and the Meigs Conaty IDftnnary.

· A Christmas workshop wii! be held
by the Meigs County Cooperative

Meigs County Extension Agent. At
10:30 Patty Asbeck wiD demonstrate

Extension .Service ' Thursday, from
10 a.m to 3 p.m. in the fellowship hall

how to make a festive vest for your

o! St. Paul's Lutheran Church in

Pomeroy.
Registration for the all-day event
will be $1 payable at the door.
B.e sides the demonstrations and
special activities, there will be
displays provided by the Meigs and
Athens Counties Cooperative Ex·
tension Services, the Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy; Ruth Francis, and the
M~igs

County Homemakers' Clubs.

At 10 a .m . gifts from the kitchen
be presented by Dale Stoll,

,;.ill

on sewing gifts and decorations for
tbc holidays. Participating in that
will be Betty Reese, Gallia County
Extension Agent, Mrs. Stoll, Ann
Lambert of the Fabric Shop, and
Shirley Huston, Syracuse, who will
als o demonstrate how to make

holiday wardrobe or to give as a gift.
Sheila Curiis of the Carousel Confectioilary, Middleport, wiD demonstrate heme-crafted candy for the
holidays at II a.m., and Lil Thomas
of Galli a County wiU ·show wheat
weaving, a traditional art for
holiday decorating.
At noon there will be a potluck Jun. ch and those attending are asked to
take a favorite holiday dish and their
own table service.
·
The afternoon program will begin
at I p.m . with fabric ideas with tips

grapevine wreaths.
"Giving a Gift of Spring for Christmas" wilt be the theme of Janet

Upcoming events are as follows:
Dec. 7, 7 p.m., Meigs Band Boosters
meeting in the bandroom, and Dec·.
13, 3 p.m., Meigs High School vocal

spring bulbs for Christmas giftgiving. Patty Asbeck will make a
holiday cheese ball, and Annie Moon
and Mrs. Stoll wilt make a holiday
casseroleandtalkaboutnutrition.

White
and. Mrs.

Dan

White.

Pomeroy, are announcing the tiirth
of

2i

ason, Shawn Keith, born on Oct.

'at the O'Bieness Hospital in
Athens. He weighed eight pounds,
five ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. White have two other

sons, Eric, six, a·nd Adam, three.

Mr.

and Mrs. Leo Davidson,
Rutland, and Mr. and Mrs. Dryden
White of Bob White, W. Va. are the
grandparents.

Norris

Mr.. and Mrs. Gary Norris , Route

1, Rauine, announce the birth of a
son, Kyle Paul , Oct. 24. He weig hed
ei,ght pounds, three ounces ·and was
21 inches long. .

-Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Cross, Route I,
Racine. Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Norris, Route

2, ,Racine. The materna l great·
g~apdmother

is Mrs. Lena Hoi ter,
Route 1, Racine. Mr. and Mrs.
Norris have a four year old
daughter . ·: ..:Jra.

.:

Will

TO BE FEATURED- Russ and The Gospel Tones will be featured at
Reedsville Methodist Church Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Members are, fin!
row, 1-r, Joanna L.anham, Belpre, Jan lavender, Syracuse; second row,
Juanita Spencer, Chester, Leland Dunlap, Parkersburg; tbinl row, David
Strausbaugh, &gt;\!hens, Peggy Bush, Racine, and Russ Spencer, Chesler. ·

.

'

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel T. Will (Julia

Holter) of PomerOy are announcing
the Nov. 13 birth ·dl~ heir first child, a
~;

Joshua Daniel, at the Holzer
Medical Center.
~ Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs·.
David P . Holter and Mr. and Mrs.
Wllliam L. Will. Greatg~andmothers are Mrs. Hanson
(Elma) Holter, Mrs. John (Elma )
Epple,and Mrs. Raymond (Eurana)
Thomas, of the Chester-Pomeroy

area .

Social
.Calendar
Wednesday
LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bottom CommWlity Association
hold a potluck dinner at 7
;p-.m. Wednesday. Those attending are to take their own
table service and a covered dish.

will

: POMEROY LODGE · 164,
F&amp;AM, regular meeting, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, refreshments.

·•·THE MIDDLEPORT Uterary
Ciub wiU meel at 2 p.m. Weditesday at the . home of Mrs.
. Charles Gaskill who will a~
liave the book review.

···

Friday

A BAKE SAlE wiU be held in
front of Ingels. Furniture Co. and .
Elberfeld's in Pomeroy Friday
i.nd Saturday. It will btl sponsored by Faith Fellowship
llrusade for Christ Committee.
:For any Information, contact
President Betty Pugh at

-..m.

Astrograph
.
December 3, t981
Family and relatives will play important roles in your affairs this
coming year. Involvements in which you beCome immersed with kith
and kin will prove very lucky .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) Normally you're the type who does
more for others than they do for you. H?wever, the reverse could be
true today and you'll feel getting is more important than giving.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jao. 19) Enjoy yourself socially with your
friends today, but make it a point not to participate in any form of
gossip regarding pals who aren't ptesent.
AQUARIUS (jan. 00-Feb. 19) Major achievements are possible
today in career and financial areas, provided you cbart the right course and hold to it. Beware of winds that could make you drift.
PISCES (Feb. :»-March 20) You'll have good ideas today regarding
how to get what you want, but there's a strong cbance you could completely ignore them when the chips are down.
ARIES (March 21·Apri119) Don't make assumptions today based on
hunches or hearsay. Probe deeply until you're sure you've uncovered
all necessary facts.
TAURUS (April 00-May 20) Make haste slowly today regarding
business or financial commitments . This is especially important if you

are lending or borrowing money.
GEMINI (May 21-Juoe 20) In career ma_tters today things are likely
to work out better if you act on your own, rather ~n wait on sluggish
associates. Take the bull by the horns.
CANCER ~June 21·July 22) Your priorities could get a bit distorted
today, to where you place greater emphasis on pleasurable pursuits
tban you do on productive ones.
LEO (July 23-Aug. %2) You're lucky today in areas where you apply
your know-how and practicality, but tbc reverse could be true in involvements where you lack expertise.
.
•
VIRGO (AUI· zs.Sepl 22) Promises made to outsiders are likely to
be kept today, but things you say you'll do for family members could
conveniently slip your mind.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0el Z3) This is not a .good day to discuss your
material affairs with pei'IIOIII not directly involved. Tlleir advice could
be welllntenllooed, yet hannful.
SCORPIO (Oet. ~NIIV, liZ) Good lhjnga should come your way today
without too much pe~ effor,t, but you must be very .careful about ·
lakin~ sPeCulative risks ~th high~-

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To the Defendants, ·The
Unknown persons, who
have a vested, contingent,
or reversior'lnry interest in
the real estate known as
the Hiland Chape'L Chur·
ches Of Christ In Christian
Union, Salisbury Town·
ship, Meigs County, Ohio,
and th!!ir unknown heirs-at·
law, next of kin, devisees,
legatees, their execUtors,
administratorsj custodians, assigns, or guardi tms
and
the
unknown
executors, admihistrators,
guardians, custodians, or
assi~ns or heirs-at-law next
of km, devisees or legatees
of any persons who have a
ves ted , contingent or
revisionary interest in the
real estate known as the
Hiland Chapel. Chur'ches
Of Chr ist Jn Christian
Union , Salisbury Township, Meigs County , Ohio,
Who se Res iden c e Is
Unknown :
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Address: Meigs County
Courthouse,
Pomeroy,
Ohio45769
Case No. 18036
NOTICE
The General Board Of
Trustees, Churches Of
Christ In Christian Union
Petitioner

Code of the following
descr ibed re"l estate
known as the Hiland
Chapel, Churches Of Christ
In Christian Union.
Situated in the County of
Meigs, in the State of Ohio
and in the · Township of
Salisbury and bounded and
described as follows ;
The following parcel of
land, namely seven rods
square. bounded on the
State Road, . on the west
side of said Road, and on
the west side of the Creek,
near the South east corner
of Fraction No. 32, Range
No. 13, TownshiP. No. 2. The
above descnbed real
estate, being in Salisbury
Township, Meigs County
and State of Ohio.
Last Transfer : Deed
Record Volume 189, Page
261
Said premises being also
known as Hiland Chapel,
Pomer&lt;&gt;y, Ohio
Petitioner is The General
Board of Trustees of The

VS

The Unknown persons, who
have a vested, contingent
or reversionary interest in
Ute real estate knowri as
ttle Hiland Chapel, Churches Of Ch~;!st ,In Christian
Union , Salisbury Township, Meigs County, Ohio,
et al
Defendants
Plaintiff has brought this
act ion naming you as
defendants in the above
named Court by filing its
Petition on November 25.
1981.
The object of the Petition
is the sale, under the
provi s ions of Section
1715.14 of the Oh io Revised

Churches Of Christ . In
ChriStian
UniOn .
the
Hiland Chapel, Churches
Of Christ 1n Christian
Union is a regularly admitted member of tbe
South Central District of
the Churches Of Christ In
Christian Union. Said

Hiland Chapel, Churches

Of Christ In Christian
Union, having become ex·

tinct, Petitioner seeks

(1)

the' sale of the above
described real estate pur-

PRICED RIGHT.

CENTRAL REALTY
Quiet street in Racine. Nice 2
B.R. trailer, large living room, eat· in kitchen in·
eludes appliances. Offered at$11,500 .
NEW LISTING -

PORTLAND AREA - 7 miles from bridge. J 10 4
a&lt;::res. could be 4 B.R .'s; vinyl sided, large orchard.

Askirq S2S.ooo:

BEAUTIFUL BRICK - Home nos 3 B.R.'s. 1'h
baths, laundry off kitchen, fireplace, storm win·
dows. well constructed, assume small equity &amp; take
over· l~ mortgage . AsklngS3S,900.
CLOSE TO NEW B!RDGE - Has to sell at$12,900.
Could be 3 B.R. home. Stove· and refrigerator stays.
GOOd starter home or Investment PropertY .

zo ACRES - OWner will carry
1m down .

on land contract-

NEW BRIDGE AREA - A-frame. ThiS 3 story
newer home on 6 plus acres. features 3 BR'I, 2ll:~
baths, fireplace: buill-In ~rbecue, 2 de&lt;:kt. 2 Pllllot
&amp; many extras. Separate garage end ·outbulldlnga.
Priced in the mid S10's. Owne~ mavflnance part.
BUILOING SITE - Noar Portla~d . 1'/&gt; acre,
suitable for underground or solar home. ewn,r may
help finance with d~n payment.
DEER HUNTER SPECIAL - 1 acre 2 B.R. fur·
nished trailer wlftl city . water In Long Bottom,
58.000.

Pomeroy . Ohio

SCRAP

Public Notice

.
I

New
bedroom ranch on
acres with place
maw and paw, or ""''"I !I
children. Good
road on each end pro·
perty . . School bus and
mail routes.
59,.00- Vou can reaily
live reasonably · here.
Trailer with 2 rooms ad·
ded, woodburner and
flUe for you.
S400 PER ACRE - for
the 325 acre farm. old
home and some out·
buildings.
sn,ooo ~ ·what a buy
this cozy 2 bedroom
home Is. It has a coal or
wood furnace, lerge
family room, bar, bath
and llots . ·
$31,001 want Independence? Well, here
·you can have It With
your own business and
llva In a nice homo. Nat.
gas furnace, T. P. water,
In the country.
NMfll - Wllal wtll YOU
give tor lhls ••cellon!
frame - · Has cen·
tral air and hot wallr
neat, 1\':r baths, and 2
acldltlonat rentals.
WANT TO KNOW
WHAT YOUR PRO·
PERTY IS . WORTH?
TWO CERTIFIEO AP..
PRAUERS AT YOUR
SERVICE • . CALL

Call742·3195

'

Ph. 992-6564

Real Estate

--·--

DRIVEWAY
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL
•House Coal
Ph. 992-2772

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

General•

END OF. YEAR CLOSEOUT
3 ROLLS
Kitchen
1 Blue, Rust
Rubber BackE!dl 1 Creek Bed
Cash 'n' Carry
JGolden
· Brown, Blue
STARTING AT

3 Rolls to
Pi,::k From

'12"
NEW LISTING-· MID·
DLEPORT - REGAL
QUALITY - Historical
10 room house with 3-..
bedrooms, sun room
With wall of stained
glass windows, large"
rooms with 6 fireplaces,
marble and lovely WOOd
facings . . 2112 baths,
remodeled
kitchen.
. $35.000.00.

11·12-lmo.

BAILY'S
SHOES
&amp; Shoes for
whole f;lmily.

Buv Now &amp; save $2·$6 Per Yard
25 • Ralls Carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed lree
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Rem·
nants 52.50 up,

Drive A Lillie

2 Locations
322 N. Sec: Ave.
Middleport
. &amp; 10788 u.s. 35
Jackson, OH .
1 1 13 1

Save A lot

742-2211

MAIN ST.

Keep Th\1 Ad

Pomeroy, Oh.

H·llc

plete line of trapping sup·
plies. Traps, dye, wax, and
lures . Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 4-16-8025 .

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

Control hunger and lose
weight with New Shape
Diet Plan and Hydres
water Pills. Fruth Pharmacy, Gallipolis.

Aluminum Siding
etnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Repa.cement
Windi;)WS

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

Absolutely No Hunting or
trespassil'\g on the Ralph
Jeff.e rs, Paul Jeffers,
Calvin Waugh, and lewis
finley properties. NO EXCEPTIONS .

11 n
. GUNSM.rn.IING

AND CUSTOMIZING
Re-Biue and Ro-Finish
Reslock, ports, eft.
1
Order Guns 10%
AboveWholesale

To c:Orrect error in Gallla
county History Book under
John Dodrill Family should
read William Dodrill by
tradition a British soldier
as we do not know this for
sure. Submitted by Dwiglit
Dodrill.
For bulk delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
992-2181, Pomeroy , Oh .

STUARTWAYNE
PULLINS
Call After 4 P.M.
992-7656
"
11 -12·1 mo.

BOG
·
'

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S . At . SO East
C.uvsville, OhiD"
Authori,ed Joh11 Deere,
New Holland, 8u§fl Hoq
Fo\rm Equipment
Dealer
FAAM EQUIPMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
USEO EOUI PMENT
1- No. l600 Dies el t"ord
Tudor w l C&lt;ab
MOD-4010 01 C ~ tll J . D. Tr.Jttor
MOD-32l 1 Row New Id e., ( orn
Picker

7:l tf&lt;

CERTIFIEOGAS
Our Specialties
Cigs: 6lc pk. ; cartons
JS.9S reg.; $6.05 lon9s.
we sen the followmg :
8 Pk . RC 1 Diet RC 9r RC
100 S1.29plusdep.&amp;lax
6 pk. RC productsS 1.59
8 pk. Pepsi products
$1.39 plus dep. &amp; tax
6 pk. Pepsi products
Sl.99&amp;tax
8pk. 16oz. Cokes
S1.39 plus dep. &amp; tax
Hours : Mon.-Sat.
6 A.M .-9 P.M.
sunday 8 A.M.-9 P.M.
.
ll -15-1mo.

_) .

• 561

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
•Wash.,.,

~;:.

•Dlopotol•
· -Dlshwa•h•r•
~ot Wato• Tonks

-

Station
Apartments · ·
.

Elderly Units

F1111iiJ Units

CHESTER AREA - ·2
bedroom ranch home
With attached single car.
garage, 11h baths,
workshop, utility, WIIOd·
burner to augment elec·
tric racUant ceiling neat.
Nice homa. &amp;43,soo.oo.

•

'
ecarpet
··Draperies
• G E Appliances
• Garbage Disposal
• Laundry Hookups
elndlvldually
·
controlled heat
and air conditioner
• community Room
• Public Laundry
- • Tennis Court
eTot Lois

eCarpet
e Draperies
,
• GE Appliances
• Garbage DisPOSal
eEmergencv
Alarm
• SecuritY Building
eLouge
ecommunitv Room
• Public La.undry
• Buildings have·
sprinkler system,
smoke and
. fire alarms

Adfacent to Ravenawood
Plaza Shoppln• Center
Applications Being Taken
Rent subsidy Available to
Qualified Applicants

Ave.

1 p.m,·S
wash.

446· 273;.sll6

Trailer
sites
&amp;
Driveways. Small jObs a
specialty, Oitcher or
Trench Service.
Gas &amp; Water Lines

JIM LUCAS.
PH. 742·2753
9-5--tfc

•Beckhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
• water, Saw,er &amp;
Gas Lines
• Dump Tru,ck

One Bedroom
Apartments

Two Bedroom
Town Houses

QUIJS on

Licensed &amp; Bondod

Ph. 992-7201

l

·

KWB
scout camp Rd.
chester, Oh.
Order Now for .
Christmas:
*Gifts for Golfers
* Discount Prices on
Shlrh, Windbreakers,
sweaten, SOCks,
Pants, Sttoes
*ShOrt gaml prlctice
*Prop-Golf lessons for
all•tn
*Repair: Cleaning,
refinishing, new grips
length chana;e.
-lghl&lt;h•n••
* Fast Hrvice
*'Free lessons
drawint

9

"l11utlful, Cuttom
Built G1r1111''
Cotl lor fru tiding
astlmat11, '49-2101 or
f4··-·
No Iunday Co lit

lHE
TAXID
ERMY
1'
SHOP

1

F 1nest Qua lily
ElCcellent Service
Fish· Game HeadLife Size Mounts·· Plus
Hide Tanning
PH. 742·2225

In

446-2342
In

Clerk-General Offlco Aicfo.
20 hrs. per week, some
typing, must be 55 rears'Of
age or older . Must meet
Dept. of Labor . guide lines
and be a WVa . Resident.
Call Pt: Pleasant Job Ser·
vice, 675-2770.
HELP wanttd-fult time
house parent. Mason County Chitdrens Home. Llve' fn
96 hours. off 4 hoUrs. High
School graduate, driv@rs
license required, S0 -50
mediclal plan, raise every
6 months. Call 9 a .m. to 5
p.m. 30H7H824.

Meigs county

1,2 · Situations W•nted

992-2156

Ellm Rosthome. Care fbr .
handicapped. aged. or bed
patient . Temporarv or
limited care. Or continuous
home with us. Equipped for
wheel c:hair. 742-2266.

Mason county

Want~d to Buy
Have vacancy for elderly
Gold , silver , sterl ing, ma_n or woman In rtly
jewel rv, rings, old col ns &amp; home. Shirley Jones 614·
currency . Ed Burkett Bar- 667-3402.
ber Shop, Middleport. 9923476.
Have room and board for
elderlY or disabled persons
Industrial sewing machine . reasonable. 992·6022 .
614-742-2656 .
3 grey striped kittens. Call
13
Insurance
446·0728.
Raw furs, hides, scrap
metals,
batteries. SANDY AND BEAVER in-"
1 kitten and 1 mother cat. radiators, ginseng, yellow suranc:e co. 1'\as offered
root, and merchandise services for fife insurance
Call evenings 446·4987 .
brokering. Harper-Halste· coverage in Gallia County
ad
Salvage Company, 300 for almost a century.
3 month old female Wire- Eleventh
675-5868. Farm, home and personal .
Haired Terrlor to good Also FleaStreet.
Market
open property coverages are
hOme. call675-6145.
daily . Open Monday ~ available to meet individual needs. Contact·
Friday 1-5 pm . I
Neil Ins. Agency, agent..
6 puppies, 3 male and 3
female . Blue Tick &amp; LOCU,ST posts, 8 ft . long. PhOne 446-1694.
Wlllker. Call 304-458-1760.
4" small tip-chip poles. 304·
AUTOMOBILE
IN 675-6325 after 6 p.m.
SURANCE been can·
MALE dachshund, 10 monLost
your
ths old, house bro~en, 304· WANT to buy house In Pt. celled?
operator's License? Phone
882-2760.
Pleasant on land contract
or lease basis. Write Box A - 992·21'(3
27 in care of Pt. Pleasant
. Wanted to Do
18
Register.

Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In this
column . There will be no
ctlarge to the advertiser .

-1

No hunting with or without
written permission on the
Kenneth Hartley Farm,
Bunker Hill, Pomero)l .
we still have plenty of apOr ·
1 zpa t r lck
pies ·a 1 F't
chard, SR689 . Phone 614669·3785.

NO
hunting &amp;
no
trespassing wlthoi.Jt wrltt~n
permission on Woolhan
Farms at Apple Grove.

NO hunting &amp; trespassing

on Bright McCauslancl
Farm operated by Woolhan
Farms.

9

- - - - ----

Lost and FOund
Found female Blue Tick
hound. Phone'304-895·3404.

6

RAW fvrs, beef &amp; deer
hides . Best prices guaran·
teed . 304-458-1656

'·-~~_,Y_.,a'-'rd~Sa..,l_,_e_

LOOKING for 1981 Ford
Inside Sale-Homemade Supercab, 6 cylinder with
BARBIE and KEN dOll overdrive . Take over
clothes. dishes. bazaar paYment or negotiate. Call
items. Dec . 3 &amp; 4. 2 miles after s :00 713·466·1261 .
west of Gallipolis on Route
141. McGuire 1S.
Big

Christmas

Bazaar

supplies. Gene Hines. Ave., Gallipplis, Ohio. All
Amesville, Ohio. 614-448- kinds of crafts, wood Items,
6747 . Daily alter 1 p.m.
and baked goods. Dec. 3, 4
&amp; 5. Starting9AM to?
Racine Fire Dept. sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights Giant Yard Sa le. Cen·
6:30 p.m.; aashan . Factory tenarv Townhouse. Dec.
choke 12 guage shotgun \
Jrd. &amp; 4th. Some antiques,
bed, wheel chair, pots.
RAW F.UR buyer. Beef &amp; pans. dishes. clothing,
deer hide-glnshang . Trap- feather pillows, Blue Hob
ping supplies. George Nail vases, lamps &amp;.wt1af·
Buckley , Rt. 2, Athens, Oh . nots too numerous to menOpen tion. AI ma Wood ..
614 -664 -4761 .
evenings.
Yard sale. Mens wear,
womens clothes, household
No hunting or trespassing linens . Antique Jlshes,
day or night on the Charles
E . Yost and Ivan Well far- crockery lugs , kitchen
ware, jewelry. Dec . 3 and 4.
ms.
corner of Page St. and
Birchfield's Taxidermy . Railroad St., Middleport.
oeer heads mounted . East
of Rutland o.n 124. 614-742- Garage sale Dec . 3 and ~ ­
Morning Star area. 5112
2178.
mile out Forrest Run Rd.
Lots of toys.
Flea Market . New
Opening . 7 days . a week.
The Hear.t of Middleport: 20 9
wanted ta B'uy
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin
General Store. 992-6370.
WANT TO BUY Old fur·
niture and Antiques of all
No hunting or trespassing kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
on the following farms. 256-1967 in ttle evenings.

kitchen Property
safe. . Antique
rr~~~;;~~~;:,fr======3~·~11~-lf~c~~ Stolerl
Antique
dining rooni cabinet. Two

THE

G,l llia County

IY
·-;;:;;s-;;;-.;T;,;:pf;ij;j(;l
given by Judy Fellure and
TRAPS and
Dot Madison at .409 SeCond

There will be no deer hunting oi1 Eldon Morris
pjoperty on Bailey Run .
Anyone caught on my
property will be prosecuted
excePt with my consent.

lLf:·"~===§~=~=~;::=~~~1=1·=19:·:1::

Ravensw~d
'

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every sun. starting
at 1 p. m. Factory choke

Peterson,
Clonch, Louise
Eden,Bill
Rutland
Township,

for

Coli Ken Young
For Fost Service

.

PORTLAND
4·
bedroom house
2
baths on 2 lots with a
small house trailer.
$27,000.00.

ttz.Mh

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC,
Ph. t92•217•

1n

Announcements

and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
446-0294 ..

,14
H2-Middleport ·
Pomeroy
915-Chesler
343-Portland
247-Letart Falls
949-Racine
742-Rulland
617-Coolvllle

NEW YORK, NEW YORK.
Wanted : Ambitious hair
stylist to work in lnnovafive salon. Apply In
person tQ' Julie McGinley,
A01 Viand St. Pl. Pleasant.

SWEEPER

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

This ·
remodeled home Is in
excellent condition with
modern built-In kitchEon.
3 bedrooms, beautiful
stone wall In dining
rom:n. Fully carpeted.
Forced air oas heat.
Front porcn and rear
patio. Approx. 6'12 ,
acres. 539,900.00. ·

REALTORS •
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
,,..1,1
R...r &amp; Dottle Turner

3

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. EKptrlence

Future Refer•nc•

MIDDLEPORT -

'

COMPLETE
RADIA"J:OR
SERVICE

Meigs Co. Area Code

Mason Co,, W, V8 .
Area Code 304
47s-Pt. Pleasant
4S8-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
882-New Haven
195-'Letart
937- Buffalo
.
lO PLACE AN AD CALL

sisters. In our
hearts ·and
you
mother
are always there and we
know your love enfolds us
from a botter place. We
miss you. we loved you
vecy
much .
Wife,
children. mother. and all
fan:tiiY members.

M~=~§§~~-~·§m=o~-~t=~;;;;~~~~ ·Aima

RUTLAND FURNITURE

'
NEAR
MINE ONE- 3
bedroom ranch home
with part basement.
Forced air heat. Ap·
prox . 2.5 acres with
storage buildlrig , Fruit
trees. $29,900.00.

RENTAL
INVESTf!jiENT r- Throe 2
bedroom units with
separate
ulllille, .
Glatedl;&gt;lock bultalngI!Hie ,..lnten8l)ct. Full ·
blumenl, 52-1.508.00.

In Memoriam
In mem'Ory of Harold E .
(Batdyl Hysell wyo passed
away a yoar ago on Dec.
s, 1980. sadly missed by a
loving wife, children, grandchlldren, and great grand·

I~~====~~~~~¥r=======~~~

'4"

Sq . yd. installed

UPPER LEE CIRCLE
- RUST.IC HILLS Modern 3 bedroom fUlly
in;;ulated home with ref.
and range. Electric B.B.
heat on apJ)rox. .23
acres. $37,500.00.

2

~::::::~====~~~~~=====:::::=1:0:·1:2·:1f=c~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
' GS

OFFICE. HOURS:
.

-

Tappan Reeuperali~e
Furnace. Coleman Atr
conditlolng, Arki~· Ser· vel Gas Air Condition-k
ing,SheetMelaiWor ·
SUNRISE HEATING
&amp; COOLING
Rt. 2, Albany, Ohio
614·698·6791
11-16·)!"

2, 9, 16, 23,30 (ll 6, 6tc

JunT,.IIIIHf-• Oflf'ICI tft.1U9

r

HEA:nNG
COOLING&amp;

( Pomeroy Scrap
Iron
&amp; Metal)
k
Now picking _up jUn
auto bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies,
scropironandmotals.
· 1 mite west of Fair· ·
grounds on Otd Rt. 33.
Mon.-Fri. 1 : 30 to4:00

410 s. Ritchie

f

Ill

9'r.!-6215 ar 992-731&lt;1

9 am.-1 p;m.

(

YOUNG

Rule 4.4 of the Ohio Rules
of Civil Procedure) .

Phone
1-(614)·992-3325

•

V. C.

Gas Line-Ditches
water Line Hook-ups
Se,tic T&lt;~nks
county Cerlllled
Roush Lane ·
Oh.

(Note: This notice Is issued
and pu))lishect pursuant ·to

IRGIL B. SR.
216 E. Second Street

m-•"·

work
_ Concret work
_ Plumbing and
electriol work
(Free Estimates)

Let George Miller
check rour precent electrical system.
·
Residential
&amp; Commercial

Common Pleas,

LANDMARK

-

remodeling
_ Roofing anCI gutter

·
For all of your wir·
ing needs.

Meigs County, Ohio
Meigs Cou~ty
·courthOuse
Pomeroy, Ohio

POMEROY

SH,OOO

__Addons and

MIUE
SERVICE.

Larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Court of

(m

....... .. ..

.

'
-""'
• ,., ., .... ,., .., ., r

~2~0-~tf~c~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~m~o-~
~~~==:;~8·
WANTED TO BUY
SUNRISE
S&amp;W
R

demanded in the Petition.

suant to section 1715.14 of
the Ohio Revised Code; (2)
an order of said Court
authorizing and directing
Petitioner to hold the net
proceeds derived from said
sale of said real estate pvr·
suant to the terms and con·
ditions of Section 1715.1,. of
the Ohio Revised Code; and
( 3} for such other an~ further relief as may be just
and proper in the premises.
You are required to answer the petition within
twenty-eight days after the
last publication of this
notice, which will be
published o"nce each week
for six successive weeks,
and the last publication will
be· made on , January 6,
1982.
1n case of your failure to
answer or otherwise
respond as permitted bY.
the Ohio Rules of Civ11
Procedure within the time
stated.
\· udgment
by
default wi I be rendered
aqainst you for the relief

614-992-2181
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel ' Heating 011.

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water-Sewer-Electric

CARPENTER
SERVICE"

FREE
ESTIMATES .
PH. 992·6011
992·7656

.

.,.,

"YOUNG'S

custom kitchens Mid appliahces.
custom
balhrooms. remodeling,
plumbin, electric, and
healing.

Dec.17fromnoonuntll3p.m. There
will be refreshments and .,..
tertainment.
The COAD Senior Nutrition
Program annual Christmas dinner
will be held on Dec. 18, and reservatiooi• are to be· made by Dec. 14.
Transportation will be furnished to
all parts of the county. There will be
a visit from Santa and Christmas
music.

Public Notice

_
lesize
Mounts,
ildlile
Novelties, Custom Tan·
ning. Fast Oelivery ·
'14·985·3833
or985·3364
11 ·25·1 mo. pd .

992-6259

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

re t urn. s
. enu·neI w
. ant Ad
. s.
Public Notice

446-Golllpolls
367-theshire
311-Vinton
245-R lo Gun de
256-Guyan Dist.
643- Arabia Dist.

sprees

~~~~~~~~~==~============~~==~~::::::::::::::::~~==:;:::=::::~~~TRAPPERWehaveacom·

music concert.

_ _ _;...,;.._ _;..._..;..;.,,;;,;,;,;;,;,;...;._;;,;;;;;,,;,;,_...;;;;,;;_..;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Public Notice

'ill'e;;iii;~~'

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·21 tic

1-304·675-6276

e

.

shopplna

From the Smallelt
Hea_ter Cort to the
L•reest Radiator._

Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.
NEW PHONE NO.

Ralet based on dou•bttl

srnaII ·m· vestment,· I arge

r~;;.,.;;..;...

Bolin's demonstration on how to pot

Birth
announcements
Mr.

· Christmas crafts, ornaments,
eeramic, knitted and crocheted
items, quilts and nwnerous other
gifts will be available. Senior
eitizens are encouraged to lake in
items
Nnv. 30 for inclusion in the

bazaar. A bake sale is also being
held and donations are needed.
Lunch will be avallsbie for the
public from 11·:30 until 1:30 both
days. Tlie regular nutrition meal
will be served to those seniors not
wishing to participate in the public
lunch.
Senior citizens. agency personnel
and the general public are invited to
the Center's hcliday open ho...., on ,

TAXIDERMY

OPEN

OFF SEASON RATES
$120WEEKLY
1400MONTHLY

Extension Service sponsors workshop Senior citizens plan bazaar .
Tl1eSeniorCitizencenter'sannual
Christmas hazaar will be held on
Thursday and Friday, Dec. 3 and 4
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day.

,14

lor

TOM HOSKINS

Now

Contest,

Jacksonlltlelgs EJ:change ·Concer?l
and tentailve plans for.. winle!' llftl
spring concerts.

'·

WINNERS - Mrs. Joanne Williams, employe, Is
pictured with the wiunJng entries In the anoual dteso a
doll-build a truck contest of The Fanners Bank and
.Savings Co. Selected as winners by judgeo, G•U Hovatkr and Marilyn Meier, were DWe Beair, laney doll;
Debbie Salser, knit costume; Linda Well, natloaallty;

Ph. 9'9-2160 or949-2412
•
1-5-tlc

Galli• Co. Area 'coctt

· · 1~5;·tf~c~~~=~~~~~==~chlldren,
~~~===1~1~-1~9~-1~~~~===~=1~1~-6~-1~m~o-~t=:;;;;;6;
BROWN 'S

This week marks the beginning of
sympholilc band IO!asOn. PJarined ae-

Ensemble

jidlmf'inl( te/t•phone exrh11nges ...

ntra cash

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Rt. 3, Bo• 54
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2591

to' amf iii 11

lJIIsNifierl Pnp;elf cover the

brl n&amp; you

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

4

·~~~~~:!:'~~~ 24x36
HDus~s

The

Classified Ads

And Homo Maintenan&lt;o
•Roolingolalltypos
•Siding
•Remodeling
•Free estimates
•20Yrs. e•porionce

Utility Buildings

• raztng
•20 y rs. E xp.

• Roofing workI
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Pn. 992·7583

for the basketball games. '

and

BUILDINGS

Silesstartlrom30•24"
SMALL

•Gas &amp; E lecfric
•CuHing
B
·

ing .
e Electrical work

stadium at i:30 p.m. Immediately
lollowing the parade, members of
the pep band are to met at the high
school as soon as poulble to practice

Solo

Pomeroy-MiddlePOrt. Ohio

-.. - - ,Hu.;:ei;;;p"UwU.a;;n;;:te;;;d.--11
Te)(as Oil Company needs
mature person tor short
trips surronding Gallipolis
area . Contact customers.
We train . Write T. G . Dick.
Pres .
Soulhweshrn
Petroleum. Ft . ' Worth,
Te.Xas . 76101.
WhY settle tor less. Sell the
best. Sell Avon . For more
information call4.t6-3358 or
742·2354 .
$40,000 -SSll',OOO 'Per Ye!Jr .
National Company lookmg
for Distributors in 16 Ohio
counth!s. Part time or Full
time. Call1 -800·238·5329.

rocking chairs . Other
items. Anyone knowing or
seeing ttlis furniture being
hauled In the vicinity of
Flatrock, wv on October 10
or tater, a liberal reward is BEDS-IRON';; BRASS, old
furniture, gold, sliver
offered. 675·1302 . ·
'dollars, wood Ice box:es,
POSITIVILY no hunting on stone jars. antique~. etc.,
households .
the old H. C. Brown Farm complete
M.D.
Miller,
R~. 4,
Write:
opposite Racine lock·s
Letart, WV . Signed Bill Mc- ·Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992·77~.
Daniel.
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
CHILD care-Opening soon . diameter )O" on largest
small group, nursery like ond. $12.50 I!"• ton. Bundled
environment. Uptown Pt. sl5b'. s1o:·5o per ton .
Pleasant. very• reasonable Oellverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
rates. Have gOOd referen- Rock Springs R~ . •
ces. For infor~atlon call Pomeroy . 992-2689.
!04-458-1552.
WANTED : to rent buy or
DEER· sklnned, cut, wrap- borrow. plano in good conped. Call Cisco. 30H75- dltlonL older person, no
thlllfren, 304·~7S· 5A5A.
1A98.

•

Wanted to do light hauling,
carpenter work . Call .4667532 .
1 will babysit in my home
for $25 a week.. Call .w6·
2615.

Babysitting wanted, In
North Gallia Dec . 5, 12, 19,
21, 22. Sl.OO per hour. Contact 367 -7All2.
TV service calls. Call 992;.
2034. Also used c:olor TV for ·.
sale. •
·
Will do·electrlcal work. 992- l
5726.
BABYSITTING in
home, 304-882·2301 .

my

1 will do babysitting in my .'
hOme. Rosa Greene, Hart:
ford, wv. 304-882-2912.

Money to Loan

Direct care &amp; nigl"!t relief
people needed by a residen ta l care facility servicing
MR: adults with various
behavioral disorders. Applicants must be ~ c:reafive,
patient, &amp; entergetic . Be
able to work flextble hours,
$3.50 hr . for night relief. 30JS hour-s per week . $10,000
year salary for direct care
positions. Requiring a 45
hr. wor-k week . If interested send resume to
'
Ohio Residential Services .
CASH PAl D tor clean; late Inc. Rt.1 Box7.Mi11Creek
model u9ed cars. S'fT'lith · Dr., Gallipolis, Oh . 45631 .
Buick -Pontiac, GAllipolis, Attn. Dave or Leslie.
Oh io. Ca1.1_446·2282 .
'
Fast +'g rowing business
BUY.ING GOLD &amp; SILVER _needs salesperson to call on
paring cash for anything new and existing business's
stamped lOK, l .. K. 18K and &amp; Industrial accounts In a 5
dental gold. Class rings, county area. No experience
wedding rings, silver coins necessary, out-going per·
or anything Stamped sonality is a must. Must
sterling. Clarks Jewelry provide transportation .
Store . Gallipolis 446-2691 or Also · need part -time
992-2054 in Pomeroy1
delivery person . Call 446·
41~ for an appointment.
Junk cars with or without
motors. and batteries. Call GET VALUABLE !raining
388-9303.
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
Buying Gold,
Silver, some great gifts as a Sen·
Platinum, old coins, 'Scrap tinel route carrier. Phone
rings &amp; silverware . Daily us right away and get on
quotes available . Also the eligibility list at 992·
coins &amp; coin supplies for 2156 or 992 ·2157 .
sale.
Spring Valle-y
Trading, Spring Valley Wanted RN part-time day
Plaza, 446·802S or -446·8026.
shift only . 1v nursing team
expierence preferred but
necessary . Ca ll
Will do house cleaning or not
babysitting, live in br just Veterans Memorial Pharcare for elderly. Call 446- macy . 614·992-6297 E.O.E.
"'23.
Fuller Brush Represenwanted to buy motor for tative In your lrea . Call
1976 Honda Cilfic. Call 256- 304-273-4559 or write Rt.l ,
Box 2 .. 3, Ravenswood ,
6652.
W.Va . 26164.
cash for late model
used cars.
frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson, ·
446·0069.

Butcher's ShOppe Custom
butchering &amp; processing,
Call 446·2851, Gallipolis,
Oh .

Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA·VA Finaridng Loan R:ep. .Cookie
Krautter (304)675-3473.
Professional
services
Piano Tuning-Let your
piano sound pretty for the
holidays, only $30.00. Call
Bill Ward, 446-4372.

23

-- - - - ., ..
L Bookkeeping, Com-

c&amp;

plete bookkeeping and tax
service tor business and individuals.
Carol Neal-446·3862

- - - - - - -.

$5 discount for pianos tuned

before Christmas. Call Bofl
Grubb, 446 -A525 .
PIANO
TUN I NG · Lane
Daniels . Associate.:
Brunicardi Music. PhonC·
614·742-2951 or 614·992·2082, ·
Discount to Meigs reslden· .
ts.
HARPER Adult Care Cen'·
ter-providlng the personal :•
care your elderly need in a ,
hOme like atmosphere. \
vacancies now availible. ~
call 304·675·1293.
,

.

'

Roofing, insulation, plum · ;
bing, and general home ~
mai,ntenanc~. For estimate i
call 675·5496, If no answer J
caii67P147.
j

\

COMPLETE home main- !
tainance ,
appliance
repairs, no lob too small-at 1
a price to please. (referen- ,
cesl Call JOA-576-2798.
,

__

. '

'

Insurance agent with top
company. Male or femal~,
training program, pa1d
vacation,
retirement,
hospltilization, guaranteed
salary while In training .
Potential of $20,000 in first
year. Advancement. Call
614-592·2073 or write. D. L.
Vorhe.e s. District Maneger,
Box 20, Athens, Ohiooi570L

31
Homes for SaleBY OWNE;R : 4 bdr., split- •
leVel, living room &amp; diniroa
room combination, eat-Ill •
kitchen. lg. family rm . , 2 ~
112 baths, located ·in Tare .
Estates. Club house and ·
pool privileges, S75,000 j
firm. Kyger cr~k School !
District. Shown Qy aJ)Rt.
NEED IMMEDIATELY . only cal! "'6-9A03.
"Dependable person who
can work withOut super· 12x60 Indy Mobile Homo, •
vision in Pt. Pleasant area . $6 , 000 .
Financing ,
We train. Write T .H. Dick, available. Ph. 388·8747. - •
• I
Pres . ,
Southwestern
Petroleum, BOx 789, · Ft .
4 bedroom house with :
wortn, Tx. 76101.
·
1n country on !!:,3 •
acres.
windows, &lt;ltv.\
CHRISTIAN ·lady needed to water . Storm
Close to 3 mines. .,
work In personal care Will sell on land contract
hOme . LIVe-In necessary . with SSSOO down. S17,SOO.
write BoX' C-27 In care of 61HA2·2502.
Pt. Pleasant Register.

- - - -- --

'

�-------- - - - - - - - ----· -

--

----·--------

-

-

DICK TRACY

31
Homes tor Sale
3 bedroom house, 2 acres, 2
baths, tamlly room . Full

basement,

oaraoe.

9.e9-

2079.
Or rent-3

bedroom fur ·

nlshed home on Bud Chat·
tin Road on big level lot.

576-2711 .
The Roush home al 2515

Mt. Vernon, Pt. Pleasant,
is for sale. Call the son at
614-927·5413.
SANDHILL Road, Pl .
Pleasant, 3 bedrooms. 11/l
baths, double garage .
Owner will finance . lm·
mediate occupancy. 30.4·
675-5817.
.
. 32.

Mobile Homes.

for Sale
TRI·STATE
MOBILE
HOMES. Gallipolis. Year

end sale, price reQuced,
used mobile homes. CALL
446·7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MO!jiLE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLI POLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446-38611.
Or rent 12X65, 2 bdr.,
mobile nome in Centenary.
Call ~ - 4292 .

3 bdr., 2 balh, 1979, 14x70,
515,000. Call388-9957 . ·
Schultz 2 bdr. trailer. Call

388-990'1.
12x60 Monette 1972 Model.
·Furnished. SSSOO or $2000

:and take over payments.
.For more information call

304-882·2985.

41

51

. Houses for R.nt

2 bedroom all electric ran·
ch style hOme. 1 mile from"
Racine. References and
depo•ll required. Avallabto
Nov. 15. Caii61H49·2849.
2 be;droom house, fur ~
nished. Brown's Trailer
Park, Minersville. 992·3324.
Beautiful country home for
sale or rent tQ. qualified
persons. 2 or
more
bedrooms,
deposit
re(luired . Located in Flat·
woods area. Phone 614·4.46·
2359.

3 bed.room house and bath
In Rutland. 614·992-5858 ..

rwo

bedroom, furnished
cottage at 2103 Jefferson
Ave. Deposit requIred. 304·
675·4100, day .

A

stockln11 full of
best wishes to •II
our wonderful
patrons.

HOUSE for rent, 30..S·675·
3431 or 675·3030.
HOUSE
for
rent at
Gallipolis Ferry, S125 . a
month, 304-675-3216.

From all of us at
CLEAN, 3 room furnished
cottage, utilities furnished ,
adults, no pets, deposit,
304-675·2812 or 675 · 1580.

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel
Point Pleasant Register

•

SEVEN room house, nice
location, good references
required. J0-4·675·1090.
~
Mobile Homes
for Rent

44

Apartmemt
for Rent
2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile
Twin single, large rooms
homes. Call-446-0175.
and yard . Pt . Pleasant .
Deposit and references." I·
1 bdr , trailer, 2 mites from 614-263-8322 or 1-614-263·
Holzer Hospital off 35. Call '2669.
446-7525.
IN Middleport, 2 room ef·
fic;ency apartment, 1·304·
882-2566.

Trailer for rent in Rio
1974 RMT 12 X 60 2 bedroom Grande, $150 dep, rent $1.50
furnished . Washer and .per mo. plus utilities, part
dryer, Air conditioning,, furn . 388 ·8508.
r' and. underpinned . Also 1972
-..:Skyline 12 x 44 1 bedroom
'furfistled . Ideal for couple. Furn. mobile home near
Park lot can be rented. Kall Cententary, washer'. dryer,
air, big yard. adults only,
"61-4-992-7A79.
no pets. Call-446·3918.
1971 Darian 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 Nashau, 14
)( 60, 2 bedrooms. B V" s
Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt. Pleasant, wv.
Phone 675-4424.
USED MOBILE
576,2111 .

HOME .

1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, un derpinned. 675·4064 .
1917 Victorian 14 x 70, 2
bedroom, family room, all
electric. Caii67S:·39B7.
1974 12 x 60 Cameron,
~tove, air conditioner, unfurnished. $5500. 675-2560.
12)(65 TWO bed.room, new
furniture, underpenned,
new furnace and carpet,
304·675-4568 or 675· 1035.
1972 SCHULTZ, 12x65, 3
bedroom, par)lally .fur·
nished, $5500 or best offer,
304-675-290! .
34

Business B11ildings

PROFESSIONAL office
building with full 2400 sq.
ft. basement, situated on 3
lots, in highly desirable Pt.
Pleasant WV location, with
150 ft. road frontage on
Jackson Ave. Office space
is currently leased to
medical doctors &amp; other
professionals. Owner financing available with
negiotable terms. This
building &amp; real estate will
make an outstanding tax
shelter &amp; long term in·
vestment; upper bracket.
For additional information,
phone 304-675·5440 days,
675·6595 evenings .
Lots &amp; Acreage
35
would you like to own a
home of your own. We
didn't have $,10,000 for a
pown payment nor $5,000
norevenSl,OOO. Do what we
· did Call 513-592·9115.
'
2, 1 acre house lots, on 554,
low down payment, land
contract, rural water,
Columbus &amp; Southern elec·
!ric . Call256-6-413, 12 PM to
9PM.

Houses for Rent
3~ bdr. house, 2 baths, fully
carpeted, SJOO plus deposit,
3.~ Chillicothe Rd .. no pels.
l=all 446·3748 or 256· 1903.

Unfurnl!lhed house for rent,
1 bdr., $145 mo., dep.
required, no utll !tles paid,
no pets. 57 Olive 51. Phone
-4-46·7886.
7 rm. house In town.
Inquire at 918 2nd. Ave.,
Gallipolis. Call446·3874.

....

2 bedroom home furnished
(~lean!. 2 miles out, clly
utlltles, S175. c.all446-0939.
In C:lty, 3 rooms, bath, 1150
mo. Reference and deposll
requlr.cl. Call . Canaday
Really, 446-3636.
3
Bedrooms
with
baaement, deposit, on
'rl.v er, rtferenen required.
Call :145-5453 after ~·
House on Fri~IY"' Ridge
Rd. Ref. required. Call256-

62d0.

LAYNE' S FURNITURE
SOfa, chair, rocker, at·
toman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275 ~
SOfas and chairs priced
from S285. to S795 .. Tables,
S3B and up 1o Sl~. Hlde·a·.
beds,SUO., queen site. 5380.
Recliners, Sl75. to S2'15 ..
Lamps from S18 . to $65. 5
pc. dlleltes from $79 .. . to
SJU: 7 pc .. S119. and up.
Wood table wllh 4 chairs,
_1219 up lo $495. Desk 1110.
Hutches, S3DO. and $375.,
maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites - Bassett
Oak. 1675., SaSHtt Cherry,
S795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, S250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
S275. complete. Baby beds,
S99 . Mattresses or bo)(
springs, full or twin, ssa.,
II rm, $68. and S78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
4 dr. chests, U2. Bed
frames, $20.and S25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350., dinet·
te chairs $20. and S2S. Gas

~~:~r~lcs~:~~~i~~s.$~~;

baby
matresses,
$25 &amp;
&amp; $35,
bed frames
S20, S2S,
SJD.
Electric fireplace, gun
cabinet, Living room suite,
wood table &amp; 4 chairs.
·used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavllle R:d.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
hru F r I·• 9am t o 5pm, Sa ·
'
'
446·0322
52

42

HousehokiGoods

COBRA XLR 40 channel
SSB base CB . ~earce Slm·
pson Super Lynx, 23 base
CB, 100 watt apollo base
linear,
moonraker, 4
beams. phone 304-675· 1.564.

More than 100 pieces of
In Middleport . 2 bedroom brown underpinning for a
unfurnished apartment. 1 mobile home, used just one
small child . 1·304-882-2566 .
year . A seven and one half
Trailer, 2 bdr. , center of
feet by 58 ihch wide oval
town, adults only, no pets.
For rent 3 room furn . apt., rug, and white uniforms
Call 446·0931.
adults only, no · pets. ·Call size 9·10. Call 446•3065 after
4:30PM.
675-2453 .
2 bedroom trailer down Rt.
7, $125. Adults only . Call
--------------Patr iot Home Builders will
256· 1157.
5 rooms &amp; bath , $90. Gar· now build a 3 bedroom tully
bage and water paid . Call carpeted and finistled
675·104.4.
home on your lot. Only
3· becfroom double -wide
$24,500. Phone 379-2617.
Green Local School. 2·
bedroom. un ·
mobile home K &amp; K, ONE
located
in Lump Coai ·Zinn Coal Co.,
Gallipolis. Call 675·3000 or furnished,
Gallipolis
Ferry
.
304·675·
Inc. Call446· 1408 between 9
446-0662.
1371 or 675 ·3812 .
and5.
Large 2 bedroom trailer 1
Furnished Rooms
15% discount on wood &amp;
mi . out of town on Rt . 588. 45
coal stoves while supply
Caii24H170.
SLEEPING ROOMS and last. Gallipolis Block Co.,
light housekeeping apt. , 123 112 Pine St., 446·2783.
2 bdr . mobile home In Por- Park Central Hotel .
ter area In country-. Ref . &amp;
Fi.rewOOd. 1 load $35, 4,
dep. Call 367-1101 .
Room and board for senior . loads $100, 10 loads $200.
citizens in the country . 614- Call 256-1471 or 614·8863 . bdr . mobile home com· 742-2266.
6624.
pletely furnished . Call 446·
9669 .
Space for Rent
Candy Making Supplies.
TWO bedroom mobile Second Floor Office Space, · Nestle chocolates starting
at $1.35 lb. Nestle real
homes, Mason &amp; New carpeted, heat and light
Haven . Adults only, no furnished. Call 446-1737 or chocolate morsels S2.00 lb.
Box 409,
Nestle caramel. candy
pets. Phone 304-675-1.t52 af- write P .O.
Gallipolis, Oh 45631.
boxes, molds, sticks, bags,
ter 3 p.m.
ere. Lillie Bits, sr. Rl. 233.
Oak Hill, Ohio. Phone 614·
682·7562 for more in ·
formation.

home spaces
Henderson
Co~rt . 30H75·2946.

-

44
Apartm·emt
_ _ __,fo.,r:.!f!!.n_l ____
Furnished apts . $210 . ,
utilities pd. t 1 bdr .• near
HMC, adults. Call 446·..S416
after 7PM .

-

-

Bl LE home spaces, 3
from town, Jet. 2·62
oldY, 30&lt;-675·3248.

-·- - - -.

2 bdr. apartment unfurn.:
in Crown City, Ohio. Call
256-6520.

'4erellaRdlse

---- - - - -Household Goods

51
Mobile home in city central
air and heat, adults only,
dep. 446-0338.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES - washers,
dryers,
refrigerators ,
ranges. Skaggs Ap ·
pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave., 4A6·7398 .

2 BEDROOM apartment,

kitchen furnished, HUD
program, utilities paid, if
qualified. 304·675·5104 or
304-675-7364.

Electric 2 oven range in ex·
cellent condition. Call 446·
7525.

2 pla't;pens &amp; 1 high chair
for sale . Call446·7337.
2 maturnity dres$es, Sears
and Penney's brands. Ex ·
cellent condition. Several
tops and pants too, size 9·
10 . $20.00 for all ma't urnity
items. Also a long velvet
royal blue evening gown
with an empire waist line
trimmed with white outlet
lace. Worn only twice, size
9, $20.00. Call304·458·1997.
Firewood·seasoned har ·
dwood, $35 pickup load
delivered . Call 4..46·4176 .
Riteway woodburner, $200.
Call388 ·8410 .

Gravely riding 'tractor,
1981, 12 HP With 50 inch
--- ----~
rotary mower . List $3,871,
Small furnished ''house,
sale $3,000 . Gravely riding
adults only . Caii446·033B.
Air conditioner only used 3 tractor, l'il HP, with
months, large window hydraulic lift and SO inch
2 bdr,, apt., large liv ing type, cools whole house, rotary mower, 1982 list
room &amp; kitchen, no pets . paid $5.50 new, will sell for price ' $5,590, sale $4,000.
$400. Call 446-4929 belore Gravely 2 wheel tractor, 8
Call 446·3937 .
3PM .
HP, 4 speed transmission,
with
30 Inch rolary mowe'r
1st. floor unfurnished aparand
dual wheels. Lists
tment, deposit &amp; referen- Electric Tapan range used
ces required . Call at 631 6 mos ., gold. Maytag ringer S2,368, sale $1,900. FREE
blade with any of the
FoUrth Ave., Gallipolis, washer, white, pactically snow
above tractors if purchased
new. Caii388·8200.
OH .
before Oec. 15. Outdoor
Equipment Sales7 Jet. Rls.
.
3 rooms. with private bath, For sale automatic washer, ,' &amp; 35 , Ga 111 po 1·•s. Ph. ~845 Second Ave . Phone 446- Frigidaire dryer. Both like 3670. Clo•ed Tue•day and
new and guaranteed. Call Thursday untlll March 1,
2215.
446-8181.
19
Furnished Apt. 1st floor,
utilities furnished . Ref.
re(lulred . No pets. Adults ·
preferr~ . Call at 631 ..Sth
Ave.
·

~

Ull,lta.l.,

'

5 ralley sport rims. Call •
•
14 Nova, v.. automatic, 4 256·1353.
DeW tires, wllh new ret&gt;ulll
Auto Repair
11
engine. Call :!56- 1417.

1979 AMC Concord station·
wagon, low mileage, A·l
condition . Call245·5294.

8:00 (I) 110¥11 (CONTINUIS
FROII DAYTIIII) ' Kid From
C..lond' t84110eor;oBronl,
L&gt;lon Borl.
.
8:01 (I) IIOVII 'Kidnopped' Part II.

Ouallty Aulobody &amp; Paint . ·
work. Insurance work •.•
weltome . sunroofs in· :
stalled from 1200·$230. Auto ·~ ··
Trim Center, .446· 1968.
·

1980 VW Rabbit. Gasoline
fuel · lnlecled . 184Ql0 miles.
S520D. 614·985-3909.

~--

·1 981
Olds
Cutlass
Brougham Cpe. Loaded .
Low miles. Sharp. Must
sell . Consider trade. Call
614·992-37911 or 614-742-21.0.

~ . ~~ or:~~;e~v~~on~~:
~~:::~~~~~~~=r:;~~~~~·§-§"§-§"~~- dition, auto, ac, am·fm
Misc. Merchandlce
3 beautiful 8 ft. show ca5es
with lights, 1 large
bedroom suite, double
dressor and chest, 2 an·
ti(lue clocks, 1 meat slicer,
and misc. grocery store
~uipment. Call 256·6-413
12PM to 9PM.
54

56

- - 'P'-'e"-'ts for.~S"'a"'le,__,._

English Bulldog puppies
AKC champion blood line,
$500 to S800. Albany 1-614·
698-8511.

HOOF HOlLOW Horses &amp;
Ponies .
Everything
Call614-992·2374 for garden Imaginable In horse equip·
lertllizer weed and feed . $2 menl. A Is&lt;&gt; bells, boots. 698·
32'10. Ruth Reeves.
per bag.

radiO, cruise. Call 614· 446·
1478 o·r 614·1192·3364.

1970 Plymouth GTX -440
ma.gnum, auto., com ·
pletely restored, all stock,
rare. price negotiable. 742 ·
2143.
1973 Camara, 3.50 engine,
new shocks, good con ·
dltlon. Sl100. Call 614-742 3063.

Large hand crafted baby Yearling Paint colt; 6 yr. 1971 Mercury Montego.
cradles of solid mahogany old APHA mare. youth Also 289 engine and tran·
prospect;
3 yr . old sm ission. 614-992·2833.
and oak. 614-985-4163.
buckskin gelding. Call 992·
Used ladies and chfldrens 5782 anytime Sunday, aner MQRRISON.'S Auto sales.
Henderson, wv. Phone 675·
clothing. SOld on con· 7 p.m. on weekdays.
1574 or 675-2881.
s ignment. Save money.
Check us qut. Also we still Fish Tank and Pet Shop
have the largest selection 2413 Jackson Ave ., Pt. 1977 HORNET AMX $2,500.
of maternity clothes in the Pleasant. 675·2063. Mon ., 304·675-6768.
area. The Watermelon Pat· Ttlurs., I Fri. 11to 6. Tues.,
ch, New Haven. Open Mon, Wed.,/ Sat . 11 to 4. Check
OPPORTUNITY :o gain a
Wed, Fri ·10 to 4 only , 304- our Fish Special.
good car . Assume pay,nen·
882-3410.
Is, 1976 Maverick. Call 304·
AKC
Dachshund, 675-1636.
325 Locust fence posts. 7ft. Pomeranian and POOdle
&lt;&gt; -·- ·- - - - ---~pups. 304·895-3958.
long. $1.25ea. 992 ·6057.
73 CAPRI, runs good, new
paint, low mileage, S800.,
Musical
20 cubic foot chest freezer. 57
304-458·1074.
ln$:truments
Only been used 3 months.
- --·-- - - --·--Too big, must sell. 992·7467 New Plano for sale, wurlit·
1980 MIG I 11 Replica car of
or 742 ·3154.
zer Spinet. Call446-8392 .
1953 MG TO. Excellent con·
dltiori, priced to sell, $6,000.
SADDLE · New Western
Hammond Spinet organs. 304 -847-7678 or 304-847-5697.
show saddle for sale. Call 2Cherry
dark wood
992·5782 anytime Sunday, cabinets. andExcell~nt
for 72
Trucks for Sale
aft~r 7 p.m. on weekdays.
home or church. Make
57 Classic , low
GMC
pickup
beautiful Christmas music.
BARREL Saddle-New. Call 6 14·992·6235, 614·992-73311, or miles. Call Anita or Jim
Taylor, 256-1274.
992·5782 anytime sunday, 614·949·211 8)1Sk tor Fl'ete.
after 7 p.m. on weekdays.
Ford truck 250 camper
For Sale or Trade
special, with new stake bed
Old Avon bottles, bid knick· 59
knacks, old toots, dishes, Will trade for a truck or and dual wheels. Call 256·
atari game, diamond Stationwagon a 12 gauge 6413 12PM to 9PM.
cluster ring, clothes, FM 1100 series Remington .. -·----- ' ·- -·--convertor. lots more. valued at S340. Call 675- 2 short bed truck toppers. 1:
Priced cheap, sig,n on por· 7260.
insulated S65, SSO. Very
ch. Thurs. through Sat.
good cond. with crank out
. Inquire 506 E. Main Sf.,
windows. Phone after 5PM,
FOR sale or trade·steam 446,0959.
Pomeroy.
Ginny, 2 go·carts with 5
horse power motor. e)(· "'-----:·- - --··- ------·- -'Lamps, owls, clocks ,- cellent condition. soo· amp 1977 Ford F 150, 4-wl\eel
silversfone, figurines, and HObart welder with leads drive, PS, PB, AM-FM
other .gift Items for Christ· on factory trailer . 20·w stero, tinted windows,
mas. Faye's Gift Shop, 493 Bucyrus Brie water well 1=rager wheels, roll bar,
Broadway St" Middleport drilling machine. 1 pump auxiliary gas tank, very
6 1H92-2598.
puller, gas operated with 2 sharp, $4,500. Call 446·492'1
winch lines. 71 Dogge before 3PM.
Discontinuecl cabinets, top, pickup with utility bed. 6
stove, hood. sink . $1200. cyl. motor. new tires. ex· 6 x 6 truck crane SSOOO. 76
Dale's Kitchen Center. 675· cellent running condition. GMC 14ft. dump truck. 3
2318.
304-675-6493.
axel, 366 gas. PS, radio,
good conditioo. S?OOO. 614·
LUMP coal $~5 . ton 1973 Oooge pickup truck 992 ·5468.
delivered. Firewood $30. auto., small V·8, exc . con·
ton delivered. lOA-675-7199.
dition. Will trade for car of 1975 Chevortet 1 ton truck, .
equal value. Phone 675· grain . bed, cattle racks,
hoist, excellent condition.
Used tires. Hanshaw's, 2634.
614-247·3895.
Lucas Lane Road. 675·t.l60.
~
-~"'
, ....
,, .,,
1971 pickup tr'uck. First
SEARS Captain beds, 1
SSOO gets II. 675-1302.
year old, SSDO.DD. Clock,
wall sconzes,
$15.00.
Womens clothes, size 9, JO.C· '"' -'-'F:,a,_,r~mC!..!:E~q~ui!!p~m._.,en:!.!!.t_ 81 CHEVY truck, long
773-9130.
Ford 800 tractor, excellent 'Yheel base, automatic .. 6
condition, 611. disc. Set cyl. engine. 8,000 miles.
asking $7,600. or assume
Regulation size pool table, 141n. plows. 614·247·31195.
SlSO, good shape. Call 675·
loan. phone 304·576-2602.
1295.
~ --· -- ------- - ~-63
Livestock
~! =~~- -va~s-&amp; 4 ~}&gt;~= :
l..s 1/2 ft . car trailer with Registered Quarter Horse
Winch Sl,SOO, air comp. filly, Registered Apaloosa- 1979 Jeep CJ7. 258, 6 cyl., 4
.. · 28,000 miles,
saoo, car lifl uoo. Call 304- bOin 4 yrs. old and !IOOd spd
Renegade
package, tilt·
576 2602 .
blood line. Call 256: 6413
steering, power steering,
12PM1o9PM.
AM·FM 8·track. Call 446·
NEW us Army clothing·
1092 after 5 or 446· 1112.
boots·p.a cks, bags. Surplus 1 Registered Landrace
r~ntal
clothing, denim. boar. Call256·1353 .
1978 Subaru Station wagon.
Sam
Somerville's
Warehouse. (New Era) 1 ·Holstein Heifer!!, 4 fresh ·9 4 wheel drive, engine
miles east Ravenswood's others close up. Health smokes, body rough. 110·35
new bridge. Routes 56·21, papers furnlsned. IBR and mpg, regular gas. AA"any
new parts. 614·992·72A7 ask
open .only afternoons leptoed. Call614·2574.
fo
~_!.red.
Will sacrifice for
weekends. (Call In orders
""""'
304-675·3334 Pt. Pleas.anl.
Game roosters and hens.
992-5449.
1973 Jeep CJ5. 675·2745.
ss Building S~pplies

-- -- - - -

------- ----

---·........

...

S1

Building materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows. lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, ~io Grande, o.
Call245·51 '1.
Sheet metal. Flal 20 to 24
gauge. Porcellan enamel
oar d s·
4 ft b 8 f
c e . •zes
Y
t.
thru 4 II by 12 fl. Many
Ohio61A-667·308S.

~.----~P~e~,~.~~~r~s~o~le----

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

In City, 4 rooms, 2 baths,
$200.00 mo. Reference and
deposit required. Call
Canaday Really 446·3636.

ORAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
black ChOW puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Slam- kiHens. Cell 446.384Ufter 4 p.m.

2 bedroom furnished . $150
month plus utiHtles. $50
deposit. Available O~c. 1.
No pets. 614-949-2875.

HILLCREST ~KENNEL
loanllng all broods• clean
tnd-·outdoor lacllltlea.
Also AKC Reg. Oobermans. Coll446·ms.

Apartments. 675-5548.
APARTMENTS, mobllo
homes,
houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and GallipoliS.
614-446·8221 or 614·245·9-184.

BR-IAAPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and vroomll)g.
A KC Gordon sorters,
EngliSh Cocker Spaniels.
Call;ll8·9790.

2 bedroom twin single In
Pl. Pleaunt ot 205 Poplar
street. 12111 montn plus
depoSit. 1-614-263-1322 or

Reg. Quarter Hones lor
sales, boarding, training,
El!lllllh • wearem touons.
Den IIH!II, Gallipolis, 446' 0183.

Efficiency rooms bv lh•
- k on Main Street,
Milson, wv. 773-5651 .
I

EIGHT wee!&lt; Old pigs, tall

·-:-- -

-- -- - -~ ~ ...-·--

......

75 DODGE Club Cab, 4
304-882·2532.
wheel drive, 318 engine,
automatic, good canditlon,
GENTLE horse, will ride S145D. 304-675-3968 or 6755912.
or work. 304·458·1728.
Livestock
Registered 1949 CHEVY Panel truck,
ton, new paint,
Hereford bulls &amp; heifers, lh.
Cerltfled &amp; accredited ·customized inside, new
Hereford. Phone 304·882· tune up, Sears baHery, 16"
tires, asking 11600. 304·576·
2255.
2956.
.-.-PIGS 130.00
each .
79
DODGE
power
wagon,
4·
Firewood 125.00 at farm
Wheel· drive, 29,000 mile~. I
only. 304·195·3395.
cyl. call after 3 p .m . 304·
675·31911.
64
Hay&amp;Graln
'
STRAW 11.50,
882·2422.

..
~

n

'

..
' '

'
'

...

p~one

'

."'. . '

Aute for Sole

304· 78 JEEP CJ5, good con·
dillon, 13900. phone 304·773·
5250.
VAN ·1972 Volkswogen bu•,
r-Ill ""VIne, new paint,
rww muffler, Interior like
rww, 31U·II2·3145.

Alan Breck Stwart becomlla a
rungltlve when hela wrongly

Home
1mprovements

11

.

BING'S CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION · SpeclaiiZin~
In concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio,
basement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 367·
7891.

F-E~R-R
-E
-LL_'_s__W--IN
__
O_
O_N ~

HA1l, THAT 161;'T LIIU:LY-LOO~IT

GLASS SERVICE Home : \
malntalnance
and .•
~;~-ling.
Phone 388- .. :

TH' PLACE! 'ALL OVERtillOWII ~,;;
\'liTH VEf()5 'N' EVERYTHIH6!

!

.
~

_\

""'t
.. ,
d_,
.,r
1

Call ..e.46-2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates, Bill ThOmas . ·

(2 hra., 5 min a.)

MICROWAVE OVENS
High energy. costs have

hit ev~ry family's pocket,books-and trying to find
ways to save energy makes

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Caw'!
882·2079.
RON'S Television service.
Specializing In Zenith and
,Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576-2398

Ma4be
it was
stolen!

parked it
downtown and 1forqot
where 1
it!-.s==

~

or-446 · 2~.

t

'•

F &amp; K Tree Jrlmmlng, ;
slump rell)Oval. 675·1331.
.

NORTH

. We are Indebted to
Sumner
Cotzln
and
ocommunicauon" lor
today's band. It ill simple
enoulb wbell you see aU the
cards, but doeo illustrate
some very good delellle.
Tbe play starts simply.
West leads hla live of
spades. East plays the nine
and South the 10. The dlamoocl kl•l eame nett and
Wesl took bls ace.
·
Now It was up to blm to
lead. A bad player might
plunk down the ace of
spades and hope to drop an
unguarded kin&amp;. West knew
this . to be an 1mpouiblllly.1
East had played the nine so
that South was marked wl.tb

U·J.II

+Ht
1hou

tQJ96~

4KQ
WEST

l

''

.
EAST

4AQ7p

492

• J 9 3 :·
+A8
46 32

j

.A71i
+732

+ta7S4
SOVTH
4 K 10 8·

.KQU
t K 10 I
4A J 10
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Soulh
West

Nor1b

East

·Soa

Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pus

!NT

Pass

Opening lead:

+5

and

lor" K-J-9·3 of heaits
weaker spades.
So West led the heart niDe.
East took hla ace IIDd lid
back the deuce of opadeo to
leave declarer two trlcb
short at three notrump.

dlr~u•t.,
lly I'HOMAS JOSEPH

oven.

ACROIIS

DOWN
1 Cry
%Alaskan

I PoUah cake
5 Any soap

RINGLES'S SERVICE e~·
perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter, electrician, ""·
general repairs and _.,
remooellng. Phone 304·675· :
2088 or 675·4560.

3 Misrepresent
4 Indian

opera,

lor example

11 Athena's title
mulberry
12 ShOw
5 "Porgy and

t
_ _ _ _ _ __;· !

EXPERIENCED car·
penter available tor home
or business remodeling or ,
new structures.
Free .
estimates. references. 304·
675·2440.

WELL, WHAT 17/P'
)OU THINK OF OUR
MISS COOP!:R?

THEN SHE
HAS YO!J~

BLESS IN~?'

Plumbing
&amp; Heali!l!!

OF COURSE/
*'5ANASSE,rl
TO YOUR,
STOR:E ...

!7HE15 WilY

... JUST MAKf SURE
YOUR RELATioNSHIP
WITH HER: IS PURELY

A 6VSINES5
ONE!

OH,

I~

SQR~Y...

I DIE:&gt;r-l'T
.MEAN TO
/NT8Mt/PT
yOU TWO!

N/CE... ANP
· A VERY
CAPABLE

·'

chanicter
15 Him (lt. )
6 Happening
Yesterday's Aaiwer
li To plunder
7 Inlet
11 Hobo
·
%1 Functioning
(Scol.)
, (Sp.)
19Part
%1-beel
·
17 Greek letter 8 Meanllme
of speech_:. 30 Hetlnue
18 Inhabit
9 Solvent
22 Shopping 31 Ham It up
ZO Quarrel
in paints
%3 Wise one
:tz "Lorna-"
%1 E•-bo•er ~ 10 Guided
U Unknowing
31 Sharif
'22 Ancient
loward.s
Z5 Nautical
:til Stripling "'

I

= I o--

JCPe1ney

ri&amp;ht
interfacin&amp;
for
aeora:ttte and other soft
fabrics?
A. The beot way tc&gt; tell if
an interfacing will work
well with a apecific fabric
ia to sandwich the interlacina between your fabric and feel how it will
hllDdle between your ring.
ere. Soft fabrics nch aa
geOrgette require a wry
lflhl wei(ht lnterfocinlf.

BARNEY

ElectriCII
1

FELLER HEROIN'
THIS WAY WITH HIS
SUITCASE .. IT MIGHT

BE ONE OF

NOT BE MY BROTHER
BUBBA ·-·

KINFOLKS

SEWING Michlne repairs;
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2214.

IT COULD

VORE

JACKS REFRIGERATIO· j
N. air condition service, ,
commercial, lndu•trial. t
Pnone 882-2079.
,

!'

33 Symbol
'ofwiscl&lt;&gt;m

24 Large vase
3li Byre sound
31 Business
oilice

section
4G Richly ,
bedecked
41Splritlamp

42 Required

43Suds
1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

1

:

27
21 Moontain
pass
21 Malsy gibboll
31 Dirtied

TIPSlOHELP~
Q. How can I chooae the

BACKHOE and Septic lank
Service. Larry Siden·
strlcker. 675-55110.

3t Johnny -

"

flavored
- even keel

~"'~Good Ideas from

Gallipolis Diversified Con- ·
st. Co. .Custom dozer &amp;. ~
backhoe work. · Special •
farm rates. Call us for free, ~
·e stimates. ~-4440 .

~esc..,a,;,pe.,...,.,.-·rope

weight unit
Z3 Hel~rate
%1 Strong-

lf£MFJsEWING

P#ft$(Jf(.

Bess"

handled

load.

SAlES·

8::~3EEj~!!!~LE:
Excavating

·u Properly ·

Since microwav~ energy
be(iru cooking instantly,
. there's no w•itina: for the
oven or surface elements to
· heat up. Plus, nearly all the
cooking energy is used ~o
directly cook the food, not
heat tbe surrounding air b
the oven cavity , . . so
cooking is ruter aDd more
energy-efficient .
This also adda up to
even greater comrort and
savings in the summer by
eliminating any additional
cooking heat added to your
home's air conditioning

Water wells. Commercial .,
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service. ,
304-895-3102.
•

· &amp; Refrigeration

By Oswlld Jacoby
IIDd Alu Soatal

might well have played him

good economic sense. Ac·
cording to home economilta from Whirlpc&gt;ol Corporation, the microwave
oven can help cut cookinacost.s in a big way since it
only uses about half the
energy of a conventional

GASOLINE ALLEY

Heart shift isn't enough

a heart.
A heart shill wasn't
enough. West led the nine of
hearts to tell his partner no.t
to lead a heart bacll.. Had he
led the three spot. East

With

GENES
CARPET
Cleaning. ~peclal ra~ for
Nov. and Oec. orily,- Call
now and save. 61.t-992·6309-

BRIDGE

ed a dlatlact chance that
East would hold. an ace.
Declarer still coufd have 17
HCP. Which ace would It be?
West came to. the arbitrary ·c onclusion that Eut
was more likely to hold the
beart ace so West sbllted to

UtjorBowaeAmetureConteat.

- - - - - - .-

14

I

K-8.
A count ol points Indicat-

A &amp; C Home InSulation,
Inc. No Job to small or
large. 2 yrs. experience &amp;
training. Work guar8n·
teed! Save up to 30 to 50 per
cent on heating billa. Free
estimates. Call 286·7U1 or
286·5740.

how lo

work

it:

AXYDLBAAXR

.

.

lo · LONGFBLLOW
15

Gtnerol Houllng

One letter oimply •tondo for onolher. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Sinaie lettors·
apootropbeo, tbe leniJlh ond formation 'of the wordo are oli
hlntl. EKh doy the code letters ore dll!erent.
,

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call 367·7471 or
367-o591 .

PEANUTS

~our .li".!~i:-a.J:. ~ ~~·s.:::SU:.":i~, :f::;

61H92,3941 01'61H92·5126.

Q)!lof. (RotiCIR) (2 hro.)

I:H (I) MOVII•(ADVI!NTURI!)
' ' ~ ••Purtult Of The Grat
llpM" 1N7 ""thony Quoylo.
Peter Finch. The WW II tele of
the dlltructlon of the lormld·
able Garman battlathlp, the
!O[aiSpoo. (t t5 mlno.)
3:40 (J) IIOVII-(IIU81CAL)"
11
81nglnglllrlne" 1837 Dick
Powell, Oorlt Watton. Timid
buc:k privet• becomat 'pride of
th• Marin at' whan he wine

• ;,

Li,_...,.

73 Mavrick, 2 dr., 302, 3
spd., good -ine &amp; 1rano.; 1910 Clltvy Scllllldete, 314
Jon, 4 WD, 4 spcl., PS, 21,000
body rusled, SIOO. Call mi., gooll cond. Call n3·
1835.
5150.

10:15 ()) IIOVII-(W1!8Tt!RN)"
"Lont Rldara" u•eo David
Cerradlna, Kallh Carradlne .
Story of the Jamal· Yourigar
outlaw band, one of the moat
fur eel, notorlaua and admired
ganga of the Old Waat. (RetH
l!l (I 011 mlno.)
11:30 i!I)IIOVll o(MYITIRY) "~
"Pandulu•" 1818 George
Peppard,JaanSeblfti,ApoUce
captain, accUMd of murdering
hla wlfa and lover, hlraa An
attorney who had previouaty
bean able to tree a known
murderer on a technicality. (2
~ru~., 30 mine.)
·
II:H (I) IIOVI! -(IUSPI!NI!)"
"lmbiiiJ" 1072 Chuck
Connora, Ray Mllland. A
euapenu atory revolving
around the efforta of the U.S.
Embuay In Beirut to amuggle
out 1 top Rutlilln delector. (2
!l!J )
.
12:30 1.!1 MOVIE 1DRAIIA)" "The ..
llua Laooon" 1880 Brooke
Sh .. lda, Chrletophar Atklnt. A
young boy end girl, ahlpw·
reeked on 1 troplcelltland,
cope wllh eurvlval ud their
growing awarena .. of each

PAINTING - Interior and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remooellng.
20 yrs. exp. Call 388-9652. •

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
PhOne 446·3888 or 446,4477

~

) I I- I

IBoiiCIPG)(2hro., t5mlno.) ·

NOW HAULING house coal
lo ilmetlone for driV41WIYS. •
Ca!lfor ntlmatea36N101.

cond, 1400. Call .W.·
1 1IOOd
4929before2PM.
197! c-v Impala, Iran·
sm11110n nMdato bt reulll Horley 0~1111011. IN-4 Pan
1150. call 446-IIOt ef~r Heed, eoD&lt;I condition,
5:30.
-Ina 111 bten rlbullf. Call

flilocl. (2 hro.)

aide nt ' 1 proapectllor
re-e!Ktlon, by covwtno up the
fiCII IIIITOundlng the colllllon
or a U.S. aatelllta with a UFO.

CAPTAIN STEEMER.Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Hallett Brother.s Cuatom
CarpelS. Free estimates.
Call446·2107.
·

82

.,

E.VIDENTI..Y EA'T.

EftortooflheWh~o-Chlol
~ Ston to protect liMo pro-

JIM MARCUM Roofing
!lflOUIII!II and sldll!ll. 3D
years e~perlence. Free.
estimates. Remodeling,
Call388·9857.
- - - - - - ''·
STUCCO PLASTERING ·
textured ceilings, com·
mercia! an~ residential,
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

French Clly Painting
Residential, commercial,
Interior, exterior, paper
han.ging, and texured
cellongs. Ph. 367-7784 or 367·
7160.

WHO MAKE:

~SE~VEI7 ~UIT~
ANI7 veeETA5L~

accuaad ot murder, David
Be !four It 1 wllneaato the
murder and IMktJuttloefothla

8:30 ())
MOVII
-(ICIRNCI-FICTION) ' '
"Hiftllr tl., 1010 Robert
Yeuohn, Darren McGavin .

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning '
446-42011

CARS, TRUCKS, ~EEP$,
AV ILAIILI 'FOR UN· 7-;- . Me!orey&lt;ltl01
. '\Mny IOld dally
~I _
_ . 1975 SUZUki ltrHI bike,
pure-. 24 tn.,

IGLYFAD t

1831 David McCaHum, Ek·
kohllldl Bolio. A 0/lon of honor,

197.4 Buick limited, $850.
ca•l-7247.

=========J..::8:2:.:::::::::::::::::::::~ tobuilding
Prices
S5.60
$8.00. use•.
Tuppers
Plains,

(

..
..

I

l-i1'1't.e t!MJ.'f "'

614-2~2669.

Home for ule. t-ent, or rent
wltll apllan 10 buV. 3 bdr.,
..... r ~V· 1-216-734373-' evenings.

72 Veta auto, 4 cyl. Call CHI\RLIE'S SALVAGE
446·0117 .
Auto parts, auto repair. "
wrecker ser11ic;e, buy /
1973 Ford good cond .. 41,000 automobiles. radiators and • ,
batteries. 446·7717 .
::
m lies. Call 446-1522.

llil&gt; l.tWe A

Equipm~nt

54 Misc. Merchandice
IN Middleport, 2 bedroom, New woodburning fur ·
furnished apartment, 1 nance $450, Davis 700 tren·
small child, 1·304·882·2566.
cher &amp; hoe $5,500, 40 ft.
Fruehauf box trailer S3,500,
26
ft. goose·neck flat bed
In Middleport. 2 room ef ·
fiency apartment . 1·30A- trailer $2,500. Phone 614·
256·1216.
BB2 2566.

12x60 Completely furn ., a ir
cond ., adults only . Call 4464110.

KIT 'N' CARLYlE"'

CB, TV, RadiQ

Motorola stereo console.
Phone 6lA-992·:uJO.

Television
•
•
VIeWing

37f·2642.
17

nout~.

•

;L-oL.:

Af,/lJN, LimE 8116,
I J.W'E TO ASK YCJ.l
1liiS QUE5TJOM .. ,

&lt;;alf

BIIT Wf.IV ARE VOIJ
HANGIN6 AKoiiND

EMI'TY SUPPER

VE~J KNOW

· niA1 "SANTA

Bll6'15 ca.\IN6
TO·'ltlWN ..

NO, THIS 15 ((':{ SU~
D151UT IS DEFINI~LV
NOT •MENDELSON'S

DEPARTMENT STORE'!

~Q.

·•.

WIU a 1arment be wuhobit if enrythinl uoed
on It 1o wuhable?

,

A. If aU of the fobrico,
interfoclnp, nc&gt;tl&lt;&gt;no, elc.

.

•, " ere WMbable and pnl obrunk, JOUrlomtenl will
be wuhable. Hoftnr
•
ofter pultlftl work lato

!

Upl!otal!ry

TRISTATE ·
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. QalllpoiiO:
-713Bor-1131.

----- -

1110. "
........

MOU'RIYS Upllotltery Rl
1 Box 124, Pt PIMMnf,JOi

.n-4154.

•'

.

r

the colllkuction

•

pre-.

of a

• 1arment, It mltlbt look
' bettor dry clNilod and
&lt;

Il-l

.

.\

1~

••'

CRYPrOQUOTBS
NEF
KVM

NH

BVMGECNKVM

NLUVYC

FHBECGTS

YGVGEKTTF.- YHGNtG . '

Yestenlay's Cryploquote: SUCCESS IN UFE .IS NOT SO •
MUCH A MATI'ER OF TALENT OR OPPOR11JNITY AS OF ·'
CONCENTRATION.-C.W.WENDIE

..

�I
Wednesday,

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Cottageville, W. Va., Pi: Harold J.
Will, Poineroy, 130. all posted on
speediJig charges; Debbie Mlller,
Pomeroy, 820,- aUowtnc adoS to run
l001e.
Ray B. Wolford, Middleport, for. felled a P53 bond posted on a charge
of driving while Intoxicated.
~
Pomeroy Pollee aaid a vehicle
'driven by Wolford struck the mil' of
a car driven by Mason Wood, Route
3, Pomeroy, Tueaday on W. Main St.
Wood's vehicle was stopped In the
lane ol traffic when the accident oc-

pecember 2, lfll

curred. There were llaht tlamlile. tD ·
both vehlclea.

Reminder issued
The Meigs County Commilllooera
remind residenll ol the Tuppen
Plalna area that a meeting will be
held Wedneaday evening at tile Tuppers Plaine Elementary Scbool for
the purpose of dlscu8aing t h e - ·
problem in Tuppers · Plains. All
residents of, the community are
urged to attend.
'

•

CASTRIES, St. LUcia (APJ ..:..
Secretary of State Aleunder M.
Haig Jr. and Nicaragua's foreign
minister swapped charges'.of intervention alter a 90-minute
meeting, but "at least we are
speaking," the Nicaraguan aaid.
''It would be valuable to continue
. our dlscuaion," Haig agreed after
conferring Wednesday with Foreign
Mlnlster Miluel d'Eacoto Brodunan
following the opening of the
Orplllzation of American Stites
8S8elllbly on this Caribbean ialand.
Haig told. reporters be got 'no
assurance that Nicaragua would
stop what he .called its "interventionism in El Salvador,"
where leftist guerriUas are battling
a U.S.-backed civilian-military junta.
'l1le United Stales cut off aid to
Nicaragua's leftist government
earlier thla year, aCCUBing it of funneling anna from Cuba to the rebels
In nelghborllig E1 Salvador.
Nicaragua's Intervention "is ex· .
lerulive today In both training, com-.
mand and control, and the provision

!THE SHOP
.

i'»

•

PLEASANT RIDGE ROAD

Have your
.Deer

OPEN HOUSE- Open house wiil be observed at Hubbard's GreeDIIou!le, Syracuse, Salurday and Sunday from noon until 5 p.m. each day.
Each person atteudlog will be given a live plant. Refreshments wiD be
served and door prizes awarded. Assisting with !be open bouse will be, 1-r,
Alberti Hubbard, Unda Hubbard and Doil Hubbard.

Middleport Thrift
Shop

Area deaths

Meigs

.

George 0. Hensle y
George Otto Hensley, 71 , Long
Bottom died this morning at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. Hensley was the son of the late
Hiram A. and Wilhelmina Deafen·
baugh Hensley. He was also
preceded in death by one daughter,
two sisters and two brothers.
He was a retired employe of the
Department of Natural Resources,
Stste of Ohio, and a member of the
Long Bottom Methodist Church.
He is survived by four sons,
George A. Hensley, Phoenix, Ariz. i

John C. Hensley, Tuppers Plains;
Henry L. Hensley and Robert D.
Hensley both of Long Bottom; one
brother, John P. Hensley, Long Bottom; one sister, Mrs. Margaret
Murray,

Ironton ;

sister-in-law ,

Leona Hensley, Long Bottom;
brother-in-law, Perry Carpenter.
L.ong Bottom; 16 grandchildren,
eight great grandchildren, several

·SPECIAl. OF THE WEEKI

y
SAliS &amp;

CHUCKWAGON ·······~·· 89~
WITH FRIES •••••••••••••• ,129

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Phone: 992-2974
NEW WINTER HOURS :
Open Tues. thru Fri.

We will close for the season on Dec. 13th

ADO~PH'S

9 AM. tiiS P. M.

. Sat. 9 A.M. tin P.M.

·Cut,
Wrapped
. &amp;Frozen
Professionally ·For
We Will Skin Your Deer.
Quick Pick Up

~GRAVELY

DAIRY VALLEY

NicaragiWI axis as a ·threat to Latin
America.
En route to the nine-day conference, Haig told reporters In his
plane the United States bad two
"clear manifegtations" '!bat
Nicaragua was RpeCting to receive
Soviet-built MiG fighter jets.
"We're watching an elllenaive
program for the leogtbenlng and improvement of airfields and we know
that there are Nicaraguan pllots
being trained In Eastern Europe,"
he aai!l. "The natural conclusion
would be there will be 1101'00 MiGs." ·

of Ulldt anna," Haig claimed.
1be United Stales is "the only
American country to have made
mliitary Intervention a custom,"
d'Ealloto retorted at a news con-

ference, caUing America 'a symbol
of intervention."
D'Eacoto, who will pay an official
visit to Moocow thla month, said
Haig told him if Nicaragua intervenes In other countries, it must
''ezpect reciprocity from lhe United
States."
Haig abo told reporters there are
!,54!0 Cuban military advisers and
1,500 Cuban technicians, specialists
aruJ.teachers In Nicaragua.
"The level of Cuban presence in
Nicaragua and the influx of
sophisticated annaments is an
mninous deveiOprnet.t which poses a
threat to peace and stability in the
neighboring countries and indeed
peace and stability in the
hemisphere," he said.
Haig, in a speech to the 17-nation
OAU assembly later today, is ex•
peeled to attack the leftist Cuban-

Later, Haig aaid d'Es~to told .him
''that at the pre~ent time there are
no plans to bring MIGs. .
"I said I was very reassured by
that statement and that I hoped it
would hold well into the future,"
Haigaaid.
D'Eacoto acknowledged his nation
was "impi-ovlng our airports." But
be ~ as "ihferences and
speculation'' the U.S. claim that the
improvements were Intended to ac· co11U110date new jet fighters.

Eleven indictments (including one
secret) were banded down Wed. neaday following a session of the
September tenn of the grand jury.
Indicted were Michael Amos
Wilson, 28, Reynoldsburg, four counts of theft of drugs. The charges
were in coMection with the anned
robbery of four drug stores in Meigs
County from Nov. 3 through Nov. 29.
Theft of drugs, as charged in the
indictments, is a felony of the first
degree carrying a possible penalty
of folir to 25 yes':" in a prison. Since

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

'

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
"The way Amenca Sends Love" .
'Ph . 992-2039
·
106 Butternut Ave.
992-5721
Pomeroy, o.

NOWIN .
NEW LOCATION

.~

Hours :

Wed.l:00-5: 00
' 6:00·9: 00

Examinations by
Appointment, Other
Examination Hours
Available by Request

PH. 992-6545
'

FOR THE FINEST FOOD AND ENTERTAINMENT
ALL WEEK LONG, VISIT WITH US .

J.

.
!
~

$
*l

~

..

1ft

···~L

·- -A,~

. ....

~·

.~:

,. .. •.

''· .

•••

Jailed after hospitalization
Michael Amos Wiison, 28, Reynoldsburg, who was wounded in a
shootout with officers following the anned robbery of Swisher -L.otrSe
Druge Store Sunday night, was transferred from Veterans Memorial
Hospital Wednesday to the Meigs County Jail Sheriff James J. PrOffitt
reported.
The department was infonned by TOJ!l Marcinko, RD, Reedaville,
that the front wheels and tires were take'!, from. hil!...l!~c!or. The theft
wlis reported Tuesday.
· •· '
'
·
Boib Jeffers E.xcavating, Laurel Cliff reported that gasoline was
taken from four vehicles Monday night.

~

man· is indicted
litale Tre~urer Gertrude W.
Donahey has filed a claim with her
offiCe's bonding agent to cover the
loss of $18,350, saying it "resulted
entirely from the fraud or
dishonesty" of Collins.
Earlier, Deputy State Auditor
Wayne A.,Maloon said that between
February and March, a number of
bank deposits were short $200 to
$1,000. Phony checks were sent to
make up for the missing amount
when a bank reported the shortages,
he said.

such deposit was made.
The remaining cmmt charges him
with falsifying a record kept by the
treasurer's office of miscellaneous

transactions.
Maximum punishment for each of
those charges is five years in priSon.
They are all interrelated,'' David
L. Johnson, assistant Franklin County prosecutor, said of the charges.
The charge of theft from office does
not aay how much Collins wa.s accuSed of taking and Johnson would
not cormnent on the amount.
11

"'...·~
•
"' .......
1.., . .

)('
. '•...

., il

.:HOLIDAY
t: .COAT &amp; JACKEr SALE
.

:Democrats criticize Reagan
WASIUNGTON - Two House Democrats sharply criticized Reagan
administration policy toward E1 Salvador Wednesday, on the one-yanniversar)l of the slaying of four U.S. Catholic missionaries in the
strife-torn Central American country.
Rep. Mary Rose Oakar, D-Ohio, criticized Reagan, the State Department and the Salvadoran regime for "a year of evasion and In' difference" regarding investigation of the deaths.
"Clearly, these women have become symbols of the failure of a : ·
national policy Ural promotes inilitarlzation as a solution to the.: '
political dilemmas of this hemisphere," she aaid.
•

Plane disaster toll rises
AJACCIO, Corsica - The death toil from the year's worst air
disaster climbed to Ilk! Wednesday .as investigators sifted charred
wreckage of the Yugoslav jetliner that slammed into a fog-shrouded
mountain, killing all aboard.
Rescue squads atiU were recovering bodies from the wreckage, scattered over a wide area on 4,543-foot-high Mount San Pietro. Many
bodies were dismembered and burned, rescuers aaid. A temporary
morgue was set up at the airport, 30 miles away. .
The Inex-Ailria Alrwar.i charter flight was carrying YIIIIOeiav
vacationers on a one-day package tour of this mountalnoua French
Mediterranean island organized by the Voyage KOMPAS travel agency.

and will work with preseDt · The' board also agreed to seek ap- year period. The two fl)en will
Treasurer Nancy Carnhan to gain plications for the position of receive no salary.
experience In the position before assistant to the treasurer. Resumes
The next regular meeting was set
taking· over in January. Mrs. Car- are to be given to Supt. Bobby Ord
for
Dec. 15 at 7 p.m. at the high
byDec. l4 .
nahan resigned recenUy.
'
school.
Ali board members and
The
board
named
Frank
W.
Porter
,
Hili was named to the post for a
'
Supt.
Ord
were present for the
and Darrell Dugan as co-head footrecessed
session.
·
bali coaches in the district for a two
two year period.
'.

Engineer, residents discuss sewer problems

1 FOR YOUR ENTIRE FAMILY .

'
Approximately · 4ll persons at,tended a meetiog at Tuppers Plains
Elementary School Wednesday
night to discuss the sewage problem
in Tuppers Plains.
Discusoed was the fac1Utill8 study

'JR. COATS
.
CHILDREN'S COATS
MEN'S COATS
MISSES COATS
BOYS'
COATS .·
.. HALF SIZE COATS

now being conclrlded

by

the Jolm

David Jones .Eogineerlng finn of
Columbus, for corrective measures
that may eventally be taken to
correct the sewage problem in the
Tupjlel'il Plains area.
Resldenta were given the opportunity to uk queatilllll of the

' and representatives
commissioners
of the engineering finn.
,
Representatives of the
engineering finn pointed out they
will continue to work on the facilities
plan with emphasis placed on the

correct measures to be taken. A
second public meetiog will be held at
the conclusion of their study at
which time their proposed recommendations will be presented along
with coat estimates for the project.

Israeli cabinet accepts draft
JERUSALEM - The Israeli Cabinet today,approved a new draft of
a joint statement with the Ul)ited States aimed at bringing European
.troops into the peacekeeping force that will police the Sinai after
Israel withdraws next April.
The Cabinet said it will insist the Europeans expliciUy accept the
coudltions in the statement or it wjll veto their participation In the
U.S.-sponsored peace force.
ACabinet statement said Foreign ,Minister Yitzhak Shamir will convey the agreement to Britain, France, Italy and the Netherlands "and
will ask them to confirm the principles detailed" in it.
.
.

•

'

-

Winning Ohio lottery number

I~·

CL.EVELAND - 1be winning number drawn Wedneaday night in
the Ollio Lottery's daily g&amp;Jne "The Number" was 258.
The lottery reported earnings of $458,9t2 from the wagering on Its
. dally game. The earnings came on sales of$1,004,887.50, while holders
of winning tickets are entiUed to share $5§,696.50, lottery offldals
aaill.

;':....

.....
.,. :
~

If

Weather forecast
Rain changing to 'snow tonight, then tapeling off to 11110\f Ourries
Friday. Lows tonight in the miiWOs. Higbs Friday in the upper 301.
Chance of precipitation near 100 perteni tonight and ao percent
·Friday. Winds southwesterly 10 rnpb tonight.
EYI 1ed Ollie F - 1
8alurday tbrualb Mu.day:
Pully cloudy wttllllprtac llarrlel poufble ID tile - t:'Mit Salwrday. CJoady 81111 J111t U ~ IJimdaJ wltb a dla.e Ill b IW&amp;i. hlr
Moaday.lllgliiiD tile . . 8alardlly Dllllllllly ta.tlle . . 8 . 1 J ...
Mc.daJ. IAWIID tile .. 8atardey 81111 laday ... tile law .......
day.

l HOLIDA
Y SALE
.
. 'PRICES
'

,~ Etberfelds .In ·Pomeroy
'

.

'

2 Sections, 14 Pages IS Cents ·
A Multimedia Inc. NeWSPipw :

'

Meeting in recessed se8Sion
Tueaday night, the. Southern Local
School District Board of Education
named Dennie Hill, Racine, as new
treasurer of the district effective
Jan. I, 1982.
lnll was named to serve as payroll
clerk during the month of December .

ELBERFELPS ·

; *************************+****************"*1t1i1iftft1i1dii&lt;****
.
~

entine

Southern board hires treasurer

AN~'S

'

'

the offense involved the theft of . Pomeroy, Sunday night.
Mrs. Wilson was also charged with
In his attempt to elude police a · pennittingdrug abuse.
dangerous drug with a firearm there
can be no. probation and the Pomeroy woman was allegedly
Terry Geisel, 22, Pomeroy, was in. minimum tenn of imprisonment ia taken as hostage. As a result, Wilson
was indicted for kidnapping. Wilson dicted for breaking and entering in
four years.
Wilson, who as wounded in an ex- wa.s also charged with permitting coMection with an incident Nov. 20
change of gunfire with police, drug abuse, a misdemeanor.
at Small's Grocery. Breaking and
Anita Wilson, 25, Reynoldsburg, entering is a felony ·of the fourih
remains in good condition at Veternas Memorial Hospital.
:.vile of Michael Amos Wilson, was degree carrying a possible penalty
indicted for aiding and abetting her of not less than six months nor more
Wilson was also indicted for at- husband in the robbery of Swisher than five yuears.
tempted murder as a resull of his and Lohse.
Those indicted will appear in
alleged shooting following the robMr. and Mrs. Wilson are being Meigs County Comon Pleas Court
bery of Swisher and Lohse Drugs, held under bond of $250,000 each.
for araignmenl in the near future.

OOLUMBUS, Ollio (AP) - A for- . scheme coating the state $18,350.
The first count of the six-count inmer cashier in the state treasurer's
office must answer criminal charges dictment alleges Collins stole funds
that he stole state money and tam- from the state between Feb. 'll and
July19.1f convicted, be could be senpered with records.
The charges were made Wed- tenced from a minimum of one to
neaday by the Franklin County three years to a maximum 'of 10 .
Grand Jury against Ronald E. years in prillon.
Four ot the remaining five counts
Collins, 35, fonnerly of Pomeroy,
who resigned Aug. 14 after allege Collins falsified on various
prosecutors began qqestioiling him dates records ol depo6ils of state
funds wi!h the BancOhio National
about missing funds.
The charges were related to what Bank, each time making it appear as
officials aaid was. a. check-cashing if $500 had been deposited when no

_L!EfRESHMENTS &amp; DOOR PRIZES

Fri .

·
'

. .Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 3, 1981

- Fo~er ·Pomeroy

Rt. 7, Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains
Call667-6485

photo)

Meigs jury returns ll .i ndictments

EAR, NOSE ., THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

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opealJII c:eremoales Wedneoday lor the Orpa'nlhe fll :
American Slates meetiDI Ia SL Lucia. (AP . . _ . ·

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Voi .30,No. l'l
Copvrighted 198l

JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC.
VETERANS• MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Mon.}
Tues
.
9:00-12:00
Thurs . 1: 00· 5: 00

GREETINGS - Uolted Stales Secretary of Stale
Alex811der Haig, left, sbates a laugb with Cbilean
Foreign Miolllter Rene Rojas Galdam"'! prior to .the

at

.

C:AKE
DECORATI.NG
SUPPLIES

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PH. 992-3471

S70 w. Main
Ph. 992-2556
Pomeroy , OH .
'' Located at the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

nieces and nephews and his former

wife, Stella Chevalier, Waterford.
Funeral services will be held
Friday al I p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. Richard Thomas or-·
ficiating. Burial will be in Sutton
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening.

Society

U. S., Nicaragua
•
disCuss Issues.

~lll11ral a. a.Jvadlr We4lflhJ, Ill boDor Ill tile tbrft r\merleu
- a l a -wl werlor killed Jut year by rtghlflt foreea. (AP LuerpliNI

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