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                  <text>Pomeroy's annual Christmas parade slated tonight

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

•

CHRISTMAS SALE

at y

.
;

I

FRIDAY~ DEC. 4 and SATURDAY, DEC. 5
It'll pay you to check the181ale ltemi carefully and take advantage
of the sP.clal prices this. weekend, You'll find exC.IIent MIKtlons
In every department of· quality merchand ..... u.. our Credit
Service ·:._ Cash or Lay-by plan .. We'll iladly help you flftd
what you want.

CHILDREN'S TOPS
-

BOYSSI2.9SJEANS ..............
BOYSS14.9SJEANS ! .............
BOYS$16.9SJEANS ......... ·.....
BOYSS19.9SJEANS ..•...........

$10.68
112.28
$13 .88
S16.38

CHRISTMAS SALE!
Men's B•:;e Denim

Fashion Jeans
Straight leg and boot flare styles,
most all are pre-washed denim A
big selection of looks and stvl€-s.
Stop in, look 'em over. Select
what you need and save Friday
and"'Saturda y .

WORK CLOTHES

Sweaters, velour tops. knit tops,
long sleeve shirts jlnd blouses.
Months sizes, 2·4, 4·6x, 7·14.

L:.ined coveralls· jackets· coats ·
!;lib overalls · hoods. Complete
selection of styles and sizes.

Reg. 54.00 ............ Sale$3.19
Reg. 56.75 ............ Sale 55.39
Reg. 59.50 ............ Sale $7.59
Reg. 513.00 ......... :Sale 510.39

SALE PRICES

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

$5.09
$5.99
$6.79
57.69

Very well made with full tails ·
two pockets. Colorful plaids in
sizes S, M. L and 'XL.

'7"

Slips.

and 31 to 50.

SAVE 20%
MISSES'

JaCkC'h .
\l itc;;~s .

biOUSI.'I .

duroy slacks and jackets, tweed lackets,
polyester gabardine shirts ~nd ·slacks.

Reg.$12.00
Reg. 516.00
Reg. 521.00
Reg. $29.00
Reg. $38.00

swea rers and blucrs .

Reg. 58.50 ..• Sale S7.19
Reg.Sl7.00 . Sale514.49
Reg. $26.00 . Sale 522.09
Reg. 538.00 • Sale $32.29
Reg. 546.00 . Sale 539.09

Misses and Jr. sizes.

REG.$12.00 .....•.. SALE$8.99
REG. $16.00 ........ SALE $11.99
REG. $23.00, ....... SALE $17.29
REG. $29.00 ........ SALE $21.79

SALE PRICES

CHRISTMAS SALI

Weekend sale prlr:es on qual tty slacks.
Polyester gabardine and polyester wool
blends. Belted and cinch waist styles in
assorted colors.

REG.
REG.
REG.
1 REG.

$15.00 ........
518.00 ........
522.00 ........
526.00 ........

SaleS10.19
Sale $13.59
Sale517.89
Sale $24.69
Sale U2.29

Terry tops and knit tops in long and short
sleeved styles. Poly/cotton blends.

SALE $11.99
SALE 514.39
SALE $17.59
SALE 520.79

IA"''"""III&lt; we1terns with !&gt;fWID
lront snap pockets Md wrist
sn11p. Big styl~ seiE'clioo in flan ·
nt"l~ ~uecte loolls ri!I'I'On knib
l'nd polyJcotton bll'!nds . Sizes s,
M, l &lt;'ll'ld X 1.. PIUS rK!(k Sili!S I &lt;II_,
to 17
·

SI6.9S WESTERN SHIRTS
118.95WESTERNSHIRTS
S21.95WF.STERNSHIRTS
524.95 WESTERN SHIRTS

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

REDUCED 20%
Save oil any blanket In stock.
Sheet blankets · robe blankets ·
thermals ' electric blankets. Big
selection. Twin · full · queen and
. king sizes.

HOLIDAY
PRICES

CHAIR
SALE
Holiday Sale prices on our
entire stock of chairs.
Sewing rockers. recliners,
wood rockers,
swivel
rockers,
wall · away
recliners
and
rocker/recliners.
Free Delivery

HOLIDAY SAL£ PRICES
CHILDREN'S

SALE PRICES

111.10
$19.00
120.70
121.50

ALBUMS AND TAPES
Sped.! I weekend prices on albums. casset·
tes and 8-track tapes.
Country, pop, religious, rock, sound tracks
and instrumentals .

...... . .. SALE $3.85
REG. $7.79 ......... SALE $6.2$
REG. 59.79 ......... SALE $7.15
REG. $12.79 .•.• , ... SALE $10.25

Our entire s.lec:rion sate
priced ~ inetudinQ curaild
~shirrs ttannels 5\leOe

FLANNEL SHIRTS
Colorful plaid panerns in bOys' sizes 8 to
20. Snap front, two snap pockets, sna~s on
wrists.

S9.95 Western Flannels .....
$10.95 Western Flannels ....
$11.95 Western Flannels ....
Sl2.9S
Flannels •...

Firm transfer~ works manager

CHRISTMAS SAU!
MEN'S

SPORT SHillS

CHRISTMAS SALE!
BOYS WESTERN

SALE

REG. $4.79

.. ..•
....•
• ...•
. , , ••

57.99
58.99
$9.59
$9.99

lOOks corduroy! ~nirnt .
Terrific wlcc;tlon In SllCS 5,
M. Land XL.

MEN'S $12.95 SPORT
MEN'S $16.95 SPORT
MEN'S$19.9S SPORT
MEN'SS2UOSPORT

SHIRTS .....
SHIRTS, .•..
SHIRTS, ....
SHIRTS, ....

$10.20
Sll.•O
$15.70
$18.90

CHRISTMAS SAUl

BOYS' SHIRTS

COAT SALE

Slzes8 to20. This sale includes

Save on warm winter coats and
snowsuits. Many styles and
colors in children's sizes.
Sale Priced ..
•
From Only

vel&amp;lrs · knits · flannels
1weat .shirt looks. The perlect
gift lor boys.

LADIES' DRESS SALE
~uality

Toni TOdd, Joan Curtis, Happenings, British Lady. '
Better Hall and Lady Laura.
Jacket dresses, 2 piece styles and fancy party dresses In
misses and half sizes.

Reg. $19.00 Sale.$15.19
Reg. 528.00 Sale $22.39

Reg. $37.00 Sale $29.59
Reg. 548.00 Sale $38.39

Y.TILiat~IATURDAY
..
.
. TIL .
.

Boys S8.9Uhirts • $7.40
Boys S10.95Shlrts. S9.QO
Boys S12.t5 Shirts S1G.70
BoysSlUS Shirts S14.00

BERGOO, W. Va. (AP) -Rescue
teams early today freed two of five

coal miners who were trapped a
third of a mile inside an underground mine when a ceiling fell
in, authorities said.

MINERS' RELATIVES WAIT - Cleo Hamrick
com!- IAiulse Argollut whole husband
Dooald Ia still trapped l1181de a SeweD Coal Co. miDe.
(left)

RAVENSWOOD, W.VA. - Warren Cooper, manager of public
relations of the mid-western region with Kaiser Alwnninwn .in
Charleston, has confinned the lt'anl!fer of Ed Nesse'lroade, works
manager at Kaiser's RaveDBwood plant.
· Cooper said, "With Nesselroad's transfer from the RaveDBwood
. "plant, the works 111811Bger position at that plant would no longer exist.
. His (Nesselroade) former staff will now be reassigned to other depart·
ment' managers throughout the plant," according toi Cooper at the
Charleston office.
Cooper ~lalned thsl the plant would now become two seperaled
operations (fabrication and reduction) under new resl~ucturing. Emmett Boyle will handle the operation of the reduction end, while the
fallricatloo operation will be headed by John Scelfo.
.
The RaVIIISwood plant has already tenninated ~ salaried em·pl_oyeea ancjlayed off750 hourly employees back In earlY November.

Two people were injured, one
hospitalized, in accidents in·
vestigated In a 24-hour period by the
Gallla·Meigs Post of the state highway patrol.
The patrol said Sarah A, Coburn,
23, Rio Grande, was southbound on
Bidwell-Rodney Road al I :40 p.m.
Thursday when a northbound
vehicle, left of center, forced her car
off tile right side of the rilad as she
topped a hillcrest.
Coburn's vehicle wast then
demolished when it came back onto
the road, swerved off again and
overturned. Coburn was injured and
tak~n to Holzer Medical Center by
private vehicle, where she was
treated and released for cuts and
bruises.
According to the report, Cletus Arnett, 55, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was eastbound on Scipio Twp. Rd. 259 In
Meigs County al 1:55 P·lll· /NedheSday When his vehicle croo.e.t the
road and strock an embsnkment,
causing moderate damage.

gamnre:
The Number -884
Pick 4- 811111
•
'l1le Illite 1eported eamlntls of $89'/,f'IO~ on Ita ds1ily game. The
earnlnp Cll1l8 oo sallis ol tl,015,Z18, while holden of vvinlllns tickets
are entitled to lhare
l3r1,741.10,101ery ~ jtlid '
.

=

I

.._. tile................ •.... .
.,

&lt;

'

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•llurle!o 111• _..,

Arnett was injured and ta.ken and
taken by the emergency squad to
Veterans Memorial Hospital, where
he was admitted and reported in
!llltisfactory condition this morning.
The patrol cited Arnell for DWI.
The patrol was kept busy in·
vestigating a series of minor accidents Thursday.
The report said an unknown
vehicle backed out. of a private
driveway on Lebanon Twp. Rd. 134
in Meigs County at 7:30 a.m. and
struck an eastbound vehicle driven
by Cecil ' D. Brinegar, 41, Rt. 3,
Racine. The accident is still under
investigation.
Debra K. Adkins, 25, Thurman,
was westbound on Mill Creek Road,
lour-tenths of a mile north of the
Gallipolis city limils, at 9:20 a.m.
when her vehicle went off the right
side of the road and struck a bridge
guard rail, causing moderate
damage and no injury, the report
said.

tenn.
Mayor PickeDB reported that he
has been nMoed president of the
board of trustees of the Meigs County Emergenqo Medical Service.
Gene Imboden, fire chief, anoounced the newly elected officers of
.the depattment.
Imboden wu elected fire chief,

..

1

a possible Increase 1n the current 4cent a gallon federal gasoline tax to
9 cents. Other suggesliOJIB would Increase taxes pajd by the owners of
b
large tractor-trailer trucks Y as
niuch as 75 percent.
Transportation Secretary Drew
ha
peech
Lewis in recent s
es
s

ByKATIECROW
John Bentley was DBmed to serve
on Syracuse Villsge Council Thursday night.
BenUey, sworn in by Mayor Eber
PickeDB, !llls the vacancy created by
the restgnaton of Mike Struble.
BenUey is a teacher at Meigs High
School and wu a fonner varsity
football, wrestling and track coach.
Two years remain on the anexpired

nigM

-I lrl,llllll _
I ' , ... , pT d r:
.
Vftllle c'r#r
4 ' 1

TransPortatl~Doparlment call for

Sll@llested that the additional tax be
Used to ·t~ coinplete tl\e iriteriilite
system and highway repairs with I
cent going to mass transit to make
the plan more palatable to
congressmen fl'\)m urban areas.
"We are heading in that direction
and we think it's the right way to
go," he told a conference of tire
manufacturersearlierthismonth

The patrol repof(ed a vehicle
driven by R.H. Fisher, 54, RL I,
Gallipolis, was southbound oli
Bulaville-Porter Road at 10 a.m.
when the vehicle went off the right
side of the road and struck a mailbox
owned by Lawrence L. Holliday, Rt.
4, Gallipolis.
Fisher claimed he was forced off
the road by an unknown northbound
vehicle. The accident caused
moderate damage to Fisher's
vehicle.
Troopers said no injuries resulted
from a•two-car crash on Gallia Coun·
ty Rd. 2 In Ohio Twp. at 4:40 p.m.
The report said a westbound .Yehicle
driven by Brenda G. Banks, 35,
Crown City, was reportedly left of
center and caused a vehicle driven
by Barbara Sue Hltlfield, 40, Rt. 2,
Crown City, off the road to avoid
collision.
HaUield's car hit an embankment,
and her auto was moderately
damaged. No citation was Issued.

Rescuers were not able to
establish contact with the three who
remained trapped. The two who
were freed said they were separated
from the other three when the acocident occurred and did not know
where they were.
Miners were using a large scoop
shovel in an attempt to dig out their
trapped fellow workers, said state
police Sgt. Fred Dickinson. Special
mine rescue teams and stale mine
iDBpectors were at the scene to assist
In the effort, he said.
Miner Larry Clevenger, 18, of
Webster Springs was brought out at
about 4:20 a.m. alter being trapped
for about seven hours. Donzil Cullip,
'!1, also of Webster Springs was
freed about 15 minutes later, Dickinson said.
Clevenger was suffering "from
minor shock" and was immediately
taken to Webster Memorial Hospital
at nearby Webster Springs, Dickinson said. Cutlip had more serious Injuries, the extent of which were not
inunediately known, ~nd was taken
to the same hospital, Dickinson said.
Rescue teams had been main·
taining voice contact with Clevenger
and Cutlip throughout the rescue efforts over a telephone system,

D~~~~:.:i~ong
eight miners at
work about 1,800 feet straight into a
hill and 300 feel below the surface·
-when the ·couaj)!le ~rred;-Dickin­
son satd. Offt~als sa1_d three of the
ITUners got out urunediately.
Clevenger and Cutlip were
workmg on 8 c_ontinuous mining
machine, o_ne at etther_end of the 90f t1
f
oo • ong pte~ ~ eqwpment, when
part of the ITUne s roof f~ll m about
9:30p.m. Thursday,Dtckmsonsald.
When first contacted by the rescue
teams, Clevenger and CuUip "jusk
said, 'Just get me out,'" Dickinso(l
said. "One said he was all right and
the other didn't say anything" about
his condition, he said.
Company officials wer~
withholding the names of the other
trapped miners, DickiDBon said, adding that relatives of all the men
were at the scene.
. The mine is owned by the Elk
River Sewell Coal Co., a non-union
operation, said Webster County
Sheriff Gary A. Payne, who answered a telephone at the company's
Bergoo office.
There were no reports of an ex·
pl~ion prior to the accident, Payne
sat d.
Officials had not been able to
detennine how extensive tlie roof
fall had been, ~or did they know how
close the rescue teams had advanced to the trapped ITllners
Dickinson said.
'
Bergoo, a small community of t60
people, is located east oi Webster
Springs iJI mountainous Webster
County, in the east-central part of
West Virginia.

Bentley becomes new council member

CLEVELAND- The winning nwnbera drawn nwly
In the
Ohio Lottery's dally prne "The Nwnber" and its weeki&gt;: "Pick 4"

I
C1Gudy wllb a chanc:e ol Olll'rilltanlpt. I.Aiwsll• upper Ill.,Par.
t1y cloudy Saturda)'. Hlibs ID tile WA Ill O.nee ol pncipltaUon 40
percent !Gnlgbt and 11 pen:IIIIIJIII ull). Wlllds ~tllerly to northerly 19-ll mph tmpt
' ,;

photo).

Injured driver charged with DWI

WinniRg Ohio lottery number

Weather forecast

Oue Ia dead, o.. bas beea rescued, oae is pinDed down
but alive, aDd twe are sWI uaaccouDied lor. (AP Laser-

Federal gasoline taxes may go up
WASWl'IGTON (AP) - The
, Reagan administration is considering more than doubling the
federal taxes motorlals pay for
gii!Oline and substantially boosting
fees on large trucks to pay for the
nation's highways and help mass
traDBit.
Proposals being developed in the

WASHINGTON- A spokesman for U.S. Rep. Clarence MiUer (R·
Lancaster) reports Miller was itlfonned today Presi-dent· Reagan
would sign an appropriation bill con~lnlng funding for the Gallipolis
LocksandDam.
'
Phil Strawn, an administrative assistant with Miller's office, said
$1.8 million for an advanced engineering study by the U.S.. Anny Corps
of Engineers on the t+year-old facility was part of fiseal.year 1982's
Energy-Water AppropriatiOJIB BiU.
The study is the first step In a proposed renovation of the dam, considered a safety hazard to Ohio River traffic, which •calls for copstruction of a 1,200-foot main lock and 6IJO.foot lock t1l replace the
dam's present lock.
Miller has supported funding for the project, and Str•1wn indicated
Reagan's decision to sign the bill later today Is significant, because it's
one of two bills signed out of 13 appropriation bills recommended for
next year.

Size 32 to 50 waist. Choose
correct
length.
Fasl:'ion and basic styles a little bit fuller.
cut through thighs al')d seat for e&gt;&lt;tn com·
fort .
Fuller Cut JeiJnS
Fuller Cut Jeans
Fuller Cut Jeans
Fuller Cut Jeans

who want to
but cannot find
jobs hal climbed b ' 1.5 million.
The number of . people who held
jobslnNovember.itoodat98rnillion.
The govemment said 3114,000
people loot their jobs during Novemher, mainly becall8e of layoffs.
Unemployment also rose because
there wu a greater nwnber of
people looking for work but unable to
find it.
As In the prior two months, unemploymenllncreases were especially
large for werkers In blue-collar 00.
cupatioDB becaUBel of declining orders for manufactllred goods.
Layoffs among factory workers
have retailers worried about a
lackluster Christmas ' shopping
seuon. As a result, stores are not
lUring as many people to work the
holiday aeuon u irt past years.
The department noted there was a
sharp drop of 8&amp;,0110 in retail employment In Nove1nber as seasonal
hiring fell short of e,xpectations.
In the constr-uction Industry,
unemployment wa~ 18.2 percent.
The only slgnifl.cant job gains in
November were' in service
businesses and mining, the governmenI said.
Reagan and his advisers,
acknowledging lh4•t unemployment
likely wiU remain above 8 percent as
next fall's congressional eieelioDB
aP(lf'08ch, contend that a rising
jobless rate is an lilnavoidable side(Continued on pagel4)

Reagan will sign locks bill

JACKETS AND VESTS DENIM OR CORDUROYvourJEANS
Men's 521.95
Men's 522.95
Men's 524.95
Men's 525.95

;r,

' WASHINGTON (AP) - The
jobless rate hit a s~·year high of 8.4
percent In November, the government said today, and layoffs
lriggered by the recession dimmed
prospects for a bright holiday
season.
The Labor Department said the
nwnber of unemployed Americans
jwnped by 484,000 during the lui
month to 9 million, while the number
of people holding jobs declined by
190,000.
That took jobleuness fnim 8 percent in October to lis highest level
since October 1975, when the
economy was beginning to struggle
back from ils worst recession since
the Great Depreulon.
The latest rise In unemployment
was particularly sharp among adult
men, the govenunent said.
Their jobless rate rose fro111 6.7
percent to 7.2 percent in November;
just below the Jl(l6t-World War U
high of 7.3 percent in May 1975.
·
Unemployment also remained ex·
tremely severe for teen-agers at2U
percent and for blacks, at a record
!6.8 percent. For minority teen:
'agers, the jobless rate was 41.3 percent.
Private economic forecasters anrl
officials In President Reagan's administration expect the current
recession to· send unemployment
even higher, poeaibly to the postwar
'recordoftpercenl.
. Since July, the nwnber of people
•

15 Cents

Three
•
mmers
trapped

tJ.tnewh~gh

COAT SALE

CHRISTMAS SALE!
Men's Fuller Cut

Sizes 8 to 20. You'll like the selec·
lion of styels and colors · fine
quality and particularly the sav·
ings now.

A Multimedia Inc . NewspAper

LADIES'

SAVE 20%

BOYS' WINTER

2 sections, 14 Pages

Coeyri?hted 1911

$13.20
$14.80
$17.1'0
S19.4p

Juniors, misses and ex·
Ira size winter coats.
Our entire stock includ·
edal

BLANKETS

JUNIOR SlACKS

Sk i rtS .

.....•...•
..........
...... : . ..
..........
..........

SAUl

SALII

Our en t ire stock of misses size
Dt'von. Bradley , Ootfy Mann .
DCH.JQI&lt;'IS Marc. Trissi ilnd
Ail(!('n is rt~duced to ~PCC i al
sale pr ices.

and XL. Choose his

favorite color from this fine

MATERNITY WEAR

Entire stock sale priced. Car coat
lengths · waist lengths · all
weather coats · dress coats and
vests. Regular and extra large
sizes.

CO.{)RDINATE
SPORTSWEAR SALE

M, L,

VelOur blazers, wood blend blazers and
slacks, polyester tops and blouses, cor·

Coats and

blends .
Sizes S· M· L· XL ·XXL

ROBES AND KIMONOS

JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR SALE

CHRISTMAS SALE

Nylons and poly/cotton

CHRISTMAS SALE!
Men's van Heusen

SALE PRICES

$10.95 FlANNEL SPORT SHIRT

Camisoles,
Teddies,
Full Slips and Half

OPF

s. M. L and XL sizes. Plaid pat·
terns with _nylon quilt lining.

MEN'S WRANGUR

LINGERIE
SALE

tlque red, chocolate brawl'\,
green or mushroom beioe.
'
6 styles to choose from.

FLANNEL SHIRTS .

Solids and stripes In perm pres~.
Long sleeves.
Sizes 2to 7
.........
.........
.•.......
.........

1deal for country and c~l·r!l\~~~
POlished brass fihlsh v.

group.

DRESS SHIRTS
$6.00
57.00
$8.00
59.00

LAMPS

Fine C!Uality robes In sizes s.

CHRISTMAS SALE!
MEN'S QUILT LINED

UmE BOYS'

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

PROVIKERMN

I

:vot.lO,No 164

!Jobless rate

SI'ICIAL

· CARHARTT BROWN DUCK

SALE ·

•

enttne
•

JOINS COUNCIL - Jolul JSeD.

Uey, a ,.,... alllletle eMcll Ia
lbe Melp lcllool .,.-. 11M
lleeo dialeD a a 8eW member ol
llyraeue c-tL Batley liD•
lbe uesplreol term ol Mike

struble.

·

Kenny Jacks, ls•1stent fire chief,

Chrla Jacks, Capt., and Dave Habbard and Karen Guinther, Heufenan.
Is

Officers elected to the emergoncy
~~quad were Wanda Imboden, dllef,
Eber PickeDB, usllant chief, Emest

Imboden II, Capt., and Mary
Pickens, Lt.
other officers elected were Oris
Hubbard, president, Troy Zwilling,
vice president, Jan Lavender,
secretary and Wanda Imboden,
treasurer.
Jinboden also announced thst Sanfa will make an appearance in the
village of Syracuse on Sunday, Dec.
20, at 2 p.m. al the village hall.
Treat&amp; will be dlstrib~ted to the
·youngsters of the village.
Imboden reported the fire department is accepting donstlons to purchase the treals. Donations .may be
maUed to the Syracuse Flre·Depart·
ment.
Imboden also ~id the department
had spent f/,01111 over the past year
lor equipment for the department
and ita members. The fire department will jllf. up the BMual Christ·
maa tree and lighls near the
mooicipal building.
CowicU conunended the depart·
· meat for Ita fine work and_Imboden

for his annual rep&lt;lrt.
Council, in other business, agreed
to blade the ditch on the right going
to Rustic Hills, purchase three loads
of bottom ash to be used this winter.
One load is to be placed on Rustic
Hills, one at Rose Valley and the
other on the village parking lot.
Council also discussed th•
possibility of purchasing or renting a
copying machine for the village.
Mlck Ash reported that all sigDB iii
the village have been put in place. A
dead end sign near the Jean Dueer
property and a stop sign at the Intersection of College and Fifth
Streels are still needed. Counctl
agreed to purchase the two additional sigDB.
Attending were Mayor Pickens
JHnice Lawson, clerk, Geo111:~
Holman, treasurer, Milton Varian
chief of police, Troy Zwilling, Jack
Williams, Bentley, Willie Guinther
Ash and Kathryn Crow, councti
members, and Jean Hall and Jbn

Teaford.
\~

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Commentary

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Page-2;~~11yS.ntlnel
..PDrt Ollio

Frazier-Cummings fight ends in draw

Pomero ·

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CHICAGO (AP)- He bad to leltle
for a draw in the verdict. but in h1a
mind Joe Frazier waa a winner ... and
his comeback wiD continue.

Which Americ8ns are ill-mannered?.____-----'-__:.Wi_u_zia_m__F~~~-~-Idey_Jr.

. A,visitor recenUy in England who of America!IS, with the demoraliting
had not been there in a dozen years exception of his native New Yori&lt;
.Writes about it that something has City, where incivility is something ri
:Indeed changed, namely an el"'slon a tourist attraction.
'!Jl that civic gentility that prevailed
But incivility, in the last analysis,
lpr a century or so, giving the British is a measure of what people will put
l!n international reputation for good up with. And what they wiD put up
),nanners and good humor. I rernem- with is-of course also a measure of
lier hearing of a retired British coun- what the alternativs are. II you are
lrY squire visiting in France with his at the airplane counter of the only
)!rife shortly after the war and airline that nins the only weekly
~eiving, at a fancy. restaurant, an
flight to Azania, who are likely to ac&lt;&gt;bviously inflated bill. His reaction . cept incivility with fatalism. If there
lo the maitre d'hotel is supposed to are alternative ways to effect your
be rendered in Colonel Blimp public trip, or your mission, there are ways
~hoo1 accents: ' 'Je ne vais pas faire
to make yhour protest resonantly.
qne scene, mais guand je retourn, je
On the Sunday following
.Yais ecrire une Jettre au Times !"
Thanksgiving, the train station at
: The gentleman, mindful of British Stamford, Conn. - a major comj!ood manners, would not make a muting stop - was as full as it has
'public scene over the exorbitance of ever be'Cn with weekenders and
the bill, but as soon as he returned to students and family, waiting to get
tiis own country, he would write a either· a) the express train to New
l~tler of protest - to' lhe London York, or b) the succeeding train to
Times: where all Englislunen of New York and Washington. It was
pedigreed manners take their com- ·very cold outside, and the moment
plaints, as if to an abudsman.
had come and gone when the first of
• I have not, in hectic trips through these trains was due but no anEngland, had the opportunity to nouncement had been made over the
jnquire into, let alope verify, this loudspeaker as to the probable
&lt;!omplaint against modern England, length of the delay, so that young
but I am reminded that the talented boys and old women braved the cold
Ralph Graves of Time Inc., on outside rather than · keep wann
uking over the reins of Life within the st.ltion. The station:fna,gazine a dO'J.:en years ago, took a master simply did not bother to use
lrip around the United States and · the public address system to advise
remarked the obstinate good humor the hundreds of people waiting of the

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BOB HOEFLICH

AIISI!IIanl Publls h~r/ContruiWr

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DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
N~w.11Edltor

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LETI'ERS OF OPINION arc! welcomed. They sboald bt less Utan lOO won:lslon.r;. All

lt-tkn: ~~~ 1ubjed to edUh111 aad m1111 bl' lligned wJU! Dllm~, addreu aad lelrphoot DIDI·
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hiUl'!l, nnt penonaUtles.

Too many bucks
for the bangs
Mention anns and tl'_e_sjtua.\iJ)n.lhah&amp;ll€3 nnmediately to mil\d is the
long-running competition between the two superpowers, now dominating
headlines again with their rival proposals for a limited retreat from the.
nuclear front line in Europe.
That is, however, far from the complete world anns picture. Problem is
prohably'the better world.
The American and Soviet military estabislunents are only \he leaders of a
parade that 'has plenty of followers. Most of the world's nations, in fact.
In the latest edition of "World Military and Social Expenditures," issued
annually by the Washington-based Institute for World Order, the worldwide
anns budget is estimated at a current annual level of ~ billion. An expenditure, the report notes, approximately equal to the annual income of the
poorer half of the world's population.
The details are depressing.
-Some $100 billion goes into increasing ·nuclear arsenals, already exceeding in destructive power the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima by a factor
of a million.
·
-Twice as much public revenue is going into military establishments as is
allocated for food-growing and five times as much as for housing.'
-This in a world in which almost half a billion people suffer from hunger
or malnutrtion, 12 million infants do not survive a year after birth, 2 billion
peopl~ lack safe water supplies and 870 million adults are illiterate.
-The highest price for the guns and jets that almost evel'jl .g9v~rrunent.
deems essential to its rule on the world stage is paid by the poorest countries.
Military forces in developing countries account for 60 percent of the men under anns throughout the world and constitute 75 percent of the world anns
1narket, an expenditure that cripples economic a~d social advance.
-Worse, the weapons more often than not are turned not a~ainst external
enemies but a nation's own people. The report counts 54 govenunents in the
developing nations controlled by anned forces, and in 41 of these the
generals and colonels are ~ctively surpressing the civilian populations.
With so much being paid out, someooe mnst he taking It in, and guess who
it is. The two superpowers lead by quite a bit a small group of suppliers.
From ·1961 to 1979, the Soviets funnelled some $32 ·billion worth of lethal
hardware to Third World regimes. The United States followed with $27
billion.
There is more to superpower aid than that, however. Between 1955 and
1979, by the institute's reckoning, the Soviets trained 43,000 foreign military
personnel. American know-how during a somewhat longer period - 1900 to
19110- was made available to more than400,000.
.
The two have their areas of specialization. For the Kremlin it is the Middle
East and Africa. For the Pentagon, it has been Latin America .and the Far
East. Three-quarters of the superpower trainees come from countries run by
!heir soldiers.
·
~ report is the result of a survey of141 countries conducted by the 'institute with CI)-Sponsorship by a number of other concerned organizations inct'uding the Arms Control Association also in Washingto)l, Canada's Project
Plowshal'l!ll, the British Council Of Cburches al).d the Rockefeller Foundatlon.
:Its grim message makes the American-Soviet nuclear standoif look
alinoolt like the good news.

Today iD history
'

length of the projected delay.
those air cootroUers who were less
The •xpress to New York arrived, aggressive than their leaders in the
and the eight or 10 cars were cram- illegal strike. It \llO~d he nice to
med with passengers and depart~ make one of them the statiorunaster
for New York looking like those of Stamford, Conn.
Japanese express trains in which eificiency is measured by a
passenger-per; square - inch basis.
Exactly four miniltea after the first
train deparied, there materialized a
five-passenger local to New York,
empty except for a dozen or so
passengers. The local requires only
10 minutes more time to arrive in
New York. II its inuninent departure
had been broadcast over the loudspeaker; 500 persons who had
squee'ted into the expre1111 train
might have had a comfortable
hour's ride into the city.
Those passengers still waiting for
the Washington train - whose
lateness had yet to he defined seethed with indignation as they saw.
the local, still empty, pull out of the
station. But the point of the story is
that no one (as far as is known) expressd that indignation to the insoucient stationmaster, who could
not he bothered to relieve several .
hundred people when it required the
exertion of speaking into a loudspea!&lt;er.
There is talk that President
Reagan may decide · on lenity for

"From what I did tonight after a
five-year layoff, I didn't see too
much missing," said the 37-year-old
fonner heavyweight champion who
drew with Floyd "Jumbo" Cummings Thursday night. It waa hia fir·
sl fight since he retired after being
stopped in the fifth round by George
Foreman June 15, 11'16.

There are the marvelous ex- Japan) , and• II worb. The nice
ceptions. The telephone c:Otnpany people at Amtrak, who run IIICh
people have no competition; but seductive copy ill the ReWIIJipera,
they are all but unifonnly pleasant. are burdened. primarily b)' their
•
·
There is a culture at AT&amp;T (as in agents in the field.

Referee Nate Moran acored the 16round bout at the International Amphitheatre 48-45 for Cwnmings, but
the fight waa declared a draw
because judges Harold· Mararvitz
scored It 47-47 and Collins Brown 4846. A fighter must have at least two
of the three officials vote for him in
order to win.
A majority of boxing writers at
ringside favored Cwnmings.
"I don't even think the fight waa
close," said the 36-year-old Cumminga, who turned pro in 1979 after
serving 12 years of a »~year
prison tenn for a murder conviction
in connection with a killing during
an anned robber.
"We got shafted in our liome
town," said Blackle Pesoli, Cummings' manager. 11 lt was Frazier's
reputation and sympathY for him
·,•

CLEARING TilE BOARDS- Uoiv•rslty of North Carolina forward
Jame• Worthy, 52, soars above teammate Sam Perklllll, right, and
TUlola'• Steve Harris, right, to grab a first-half rebound in Thursday
night's 78-70 UNC victory over Tulsa. Worthy had 17 points In the
Tameels' third win of the season agailll!t no losses. (AP Laserphoto).

Nation 's_businesses trim spending
By A88oclated l're88
cent in the third quarter, but
Blll!inesses are trimming their authorizations to spend money in the
spending plans to compensate for future slipped U percent from the
sluggish sales and the prospect of a second quarter.
lengthy recession, . new economic
Moot economists believe the
reports indicate.
economy is in a recession now,
The Commerce Department although the govenunent's latest
· reporied Tuesday that spending on estimate of the gross national
new construction fell I. 7 percent in product for the third quarter showed
October, the eighth decline in the a small increase in the total value of
last nine months.
goods and services produced.
Spending on private projects was
. off 1.9 percent, led by a big decline in
Beryl Sprinkel, Treasury unhome building.
dersecretary for monetary affairs,
And in New York, a busfness told the National Association of
research group said manufacturers' Business Economists Tuesday the
overall spending plans fell sharply economy hi in a "very deep
in the third quarter. The Conference • recession." But he added during his
Board S1Jld spending by the nation's address in Stamford, Conn., that a
largest 1nanufaclurers on new plan- recovery would he quick and longts and equipment jumped 10.4 per- lasting.

A national study by Industry Week credit markets were mostly higher,
magazine said corporate chi£: although many banks nationwide ·
executives expected the economy to lowered thei~ prime lending rules to
improve slowly but steadily while in- 15.75 percent fran 16 pereenl. The '
flation drops next ye·ar.
banks showed their .caution abour
The magazine's survey of 762 the future-course rJf interest rates by
executives of larg1e-and medium- failing to cut their prime rates to the
sized companies s:aid 54 percent · 15.5 percent level established Moo- .
believed business will improve day by banks in San Francisco and
within the next six months. Eighty Chicago.
'
percent said they believed business
would he better a yeur from now.
-The Commerce Department
In other economic developments:
predicted u.s. automakers would .
-Allis-Chalmers Corp., a major lose $1.4 billion this year, noting that
prnducer of !ann tlquipment, said sales are dowg31 percent from 19'18,
1,300 prnduclion workers would he the last peak sales year. The report,
laid off beginning Monday at its presented to the Senate Finance subcombine plant,in Independence, Mo. committee on international trade,.
The company cited a slump in the foresaw "no prospect for a sharp
agriculture implemtmt business.
turnaround In the immediate
- -Interest rates in the nation's future" for the auto companies.

upilet theoretical i~rguments with
data from his own st1udies.
-Japanese car makers have
average unit costs · $1,700 below
American manufac:turers on com. pardble mndels sold in the United
States. · '
- General Motor:s is "the worst
assembler in the United States,"
averaging 31.5 howrs to aasemble a
Cbeveite. Ford takt,ls 28 hours for an
Eseort or Lynx, •md Chrysler 29
hours for an Omn i or Horizon. In
Japan, the industry average for
assembly is just over 15 hours.
-Whereas U.S. auto workers
average 45 minutes of work for ea~h
hour on the job, Japanese wori&lt;ers

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Second-ranked Kentucky invades
surprising Ohio State Saturday and
both sides will he under a handicap.
The Wildcats will not have Sam
. Bowie while the 'Buckeyes' Clark
Kellogg figures to he below par.
Bowie, Kentucky's 7-foot-1 junior
center, ·has been sidelined 12 weeks
with a stress fracture of the leg.
"He's overweight and nowhere near
playing shape," said Joe B. Hidl, the
coach of the l.j) Wildcats.
Hall will use 6-11 sophomore
Melvin Turpin in the pivot for the
nationally televised non-conference
college basketball ~arne . (CBs-TV.,
2:37p.m. EST).
Kellogg, like Bowie his team's
leading scorer and rebounder last
season, must wear a football mouthpiece to protect a fractured gumbone and replaced tooth, suffered
early in the first half of a 74-64 rout
of Kent State Wednesday night. ·
"He'D have a sore mouth, but he
should he able to play," Ohio State
trainer Mike Bordner said of the 6-7
junior·forward. Kellogg played less
than eight minutes and scored only
five points in the Buckeyes' third
victory in four games this season.
If Kellogg should not he ready,
elt)ler 6-8 freslunan Joe Coneheek or
6-7 senior Bryant Johnl\on will start.
Both coaches concede its an important early game.

average 58. Machine "uptime" in
the United States is ooly 60'percent,
but in Japan it is 80 percent.
-American wages and benefits
averqe $19 an hour, compared to
$12 for the Japanese. Unauthorized
work~r absences average 6 to 8percent m the United Statea industry, .
and 2 percent in Japan. Authorized
relief time averages 10 percent In
the ·United Statea, 5 percent in
Japan .
(In other words, Harbour said in
an interview later, if General Motoni
opens a plant to employ 4,000
workers it has to hire an additional
240 men or women to make up for the
anticipated unauthorized absences.)

year. Congratulations."

"Thanks, Hal. I guess . we were
just lucky."
"Well, International pushbutton
had the best year ever. We made one
billion-two, before taxes."
"Sorry to hear that, Hal."
"Everyone has an off year: I'm
calling to buy your tax losses, John.

I'D. /1M/' A/It lll'l (pr~ FIIDM Cll4ol5 u
A/J()Iff S/l!CKMANt lj4S
IllS C/ISJIIIIJTY llt!I!N

If we can dedu!:l :~our losses against · Dimblehee oil, whuch is willing to cash ·for your tax losses ·nad lease
our profits,' and
the tax credits give '"' $170 mill ion in preferred back to you a completely new plant
against new equipll)llnl, the govern- notes. We're sitting in the catbird in Ohio."
mentr will owe us money."·
sea.t."
1
'
"Now you're making sense. That
· "How much are . you. offering,
"John, I'll he very honest with means neither you nor I wiD have.to
Hal?"
.
you. If I don't find a company with pay any corporate taxes for the next'
"Well" give you $100 miUion in large tax losses,I'Il be in serous five.years."
cash, retool your pl.nt and lease the trouble wiht my stockholders. I'll
"It's a sweetheart deal for both of
equipment back to you at very never be able to explain to them why '"'·John, Will you take It?"
favorable rate. our accountants we had to pay taxes to the govern"Sure, Hal. After all, what are
figure that ..will speeded-up ment on our profit:J. They could sue friends for?"
.
depreciation, we'U pay less taxes me for mismanagement. n
this year than the kid who works in
"I don't want to hear about your
"Great. How 'do you think
the mail room."
troubles, Hal. W)lo told you to make Reagan's economic plan Ia going?"
"G011h, Hal, I'd like to help you a lot of money in the first place?"
"I think he's gong to haft to cut
but, but my accountants figure our
"Someday you'D have a good more fat ,out of the buldgelln order
tax losses are .worth at least $200 year, John, .and IIN•n you're going to
to get the deficit down. He's going tO
million."
heed help from a losing company."
have
to go after the welfare cheaters
"You must be crazy. J,ust because
"Look Hal, if you can't find a way and the people who are always
you had a bad year, and we had a of avoiding taxes ·don't cry on my
looking for a free lunch."
good year, there is no sense holding shoulder. "
"You can say that again. When we
us up."
"All right, John, rve got my con- were kids we worked for what .0..
"This is slrictly business, Hall. troller here and we're ready to deal.
Our looses are our only .-ts. We'll make you the same offer we got. The only way~ is going to ·
United Bull has offered us .150 _made the JllontezUJ1)8 Aut.omobUe · Ret th1a eountry back on Ita feet is to
miUion and 1 Just had a can 1n1m Company. We'll po)l.l'lli millloo in lllop givlntl ~ with • . hardluck story a llanclllut." · ,

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Hoping you have a very
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From your
Nephew Amos

Dearest Keith,

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to the public. "

"I proved to myself I can go ·10
The bout wu bathed in nostalgia.
rounds," said Frazier.
:
Moat of the estimated crowd of &amp;,500
fans in the 10,0IIO«at are1111 rooted . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ . ; _ for the mall who had sa Smoltin' Joe
woo the heavweight championship
and engaged in three claaslc fights
with Muhammad AU.
. .
But this Frazier had a role of fat
&amp;round hia middle - he weighed 2211
pounds - and he showed h1a age and
the effects of h1a long absence from
the ring. He landed several of hla
famed left hooks, but he missed
more.and he never had Cwnmings in
serious trouble. He also seemed
unable to put a series of punches
tOgether and he was nearly knocked
down on two occaalons.
Yet after the fight, Frazier, who
wiD be 38 Jan.12, said "I don't see no
reasontoatop." .
He said he hoped to fight again in
three or four months, then changed

~'or Kentucky, it's a chance to
enhance the Wildcats' prestige in a
bid for the No•.! spot in the rankings,
now belonging to North Carolina.
The Wildcats beat another Ohio opponent, Akron, in their o.pener 83-64 .
For Ohio State, it's another opportunity to stun a top-ranked foe
and to prbve the Buckeyes are better
than most critics suspect. Ohio State
upset Georgetown D.C., fifth ranked
at the time, in the final game of the
Great Alaska Shootout 47-46.
"I don't believe people have much
faith in us, but we're going to be a
great team - underestimated, but
great," said Tony CampheU, who .
shoUldered the scoring burden with
a career high of 18 points against
Kent State.
The ~ Campbell, a junior forward, spent nearly all of his time on
the bench a season ago. "I'm ready
to play this year. l'm trying to do my
best 9to 5," he said. .
·
Kentucky will start !Hi Derrick
Hord and~ Cbuck Verderbe.r at the
forwards and 8-4 Jim Masters and 63Dirt&lt; Minniefield at the guards, bidding to square this series at eight
victories apiece .
' Eldon Miller, the Buckeyes'
coach, will use· the same starting
lineup for the fifth straight game
with 6-11 Granville Waiters at center
and 6-3 junior Larry Huggins and~
11 freshman Ron Stokes in the hackcourt.

Today is Friday, Dec. 4, the 338th day of1981. There are 'l1 daya left in
theyear.
·
Today'I hlghJigllt in hlltory: .
On Dec, f, lMI, Congreaa approved U.S. participation in the United
~ ;'

week, Frazier said, "It's got to be .Ill!

it to five or liiiiiOIItM.
Alked if he would fl&amp;ht Ali again if
hla old advenary, who will be 40
JIID. 17, beats Trevor Berbicllllelll

-

·CHRISTMAS .GIFTS
·fOR THE
HANDYMAN

lmTIIIEII4MY a:IIMI·

I

the fight."

Do you have a Christmas greeting

The corporate
Art Buchwald
safety net.._· ·....,---------:--~~--~--...:__
People keep insisting that I'm
making it up, but under a tax law
lobl!ied rough last sununer, companies hwo lost money in 1981 can
sell their losses to firms who made
money, so the latter will not have to
pay any corporation taxes.
Whereaa company losses were
something no one liked to talk about
in the past, they now have become a
valuable commodity and are being
traded on the open market.
This is bow it works:
"Hello, John, Hal Lemster of International Pushbutton calling. I
jlll!t read your financial report. I see
you people lost $750 million this

I

that kept CummingJ from winning

Bowie to miss Ohio State tilt

Major1douhts exist .about comtpetitiveness ·
NEW YORK (AP) -A Commerce suiting firm claim 150 years e~­
Department report informs perienee in the indllbtry.
Congress that the financial troubles
Based on that experience and on .
of the American aulomotive in- studies of U.S. and Japanese plants,
dustry are seriolll!, and that major Harbonr declares the Japanese,
doubts exists about its future com- "are making us look like 2-year-otds
petitiveness.
·
in how we manage plants."
Coming after a year (1980) in
which the industry lost llltJre than $4
During a car industry symposiwn
billion, that's ' hardly ·a new con- at Stanford University Nov. 21 he
cllll!ion. Sonte penple close to the in- told other automotive analysts that
dustry, like consultant Jaines Har- . "They're stomping us into . the
. bour, have already said they are ground." The entire U.S. induslrial
watching a horror without' parallel base is "going right down the
in u.s: industrial history.
drain," he sa:d, because American
Harbour, of Berkley, Mich., feels managers fail to boost prnductivity. ·
he knows something about
Harbour, a middle-level executive
automotive plants, since he and five at Chrysler before he founded James
associates in his automotive con· Harbour and Associates, sometimes

The Daily sentinei-Pag~3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Love Dian

To The swain Family ,

w,;shlng you a Merry
Chr'istmas and a Happy
New Year.
The ·c allahan's

CASH ONLY

To Grandma Joy ,
TO the best Grandma ever,
Merry Christmas!
From your
Your Grf!nddaughter Amy

'•

�Po:nerov

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pome

Friday, December 4, 11111

Middleport, Ohio

o:nston ralli~s to defeat Cleveland Browns, 17-13

Southern's girls post 47-33 victory

.
EAST MEIGS -

nine points by both clubs during the field, COIII'eCtlnC Cll 21 ol a, wbl1e
entire stretch. Southern gained the netting nine filii frGm the line tor lie
long jwnper from the wing, the edge, however, and inciUaed Ill pet call Eallem canned II Ill 4&amp;
field g...I aUompla for 34 pet Cblt
scoreU.
leadtoaevenpoints.
and
hit leVtl1 of IJ from the cbarlty
After a couple changes of·
Although Southern had the lead,
possession Southern locked the score the glrla of Coach Sue 'l'honipiiOn stripe tor 53 petcelll.
'
Eutem . . the battle ol the boar- · ·
on a powering drive by Laren Wolfe. · continued to hustle and stayed close
At the six minute mark Eagle fresh- the whole dislance. 'l1le two SVAC ds 31·-led by Sarah Goebel with IZ ' 1
man Angfe Spencer again put powerhouses went to the )ocker o!lnd Angle Spencer with el,._. For '
Eastern on top at 4-2, but after room at the half with the score 21-14 Southern r..ren Wolfe end Clnciy
Evans each bad live reboundl to •
penetrating Eastern's defense Mel '' irAvor of SHS.
.
Weese knotted tbe score at 44. Thai
1Sespite substituting Southern led lead tbe winners.
Eastern bad 16 fouls, Southern had. 1
score came at the 5:08 mark.
33-21 after three periods, getting
Moments later Weese again con- good perfonnances from its great 15 fouls, eight turnovers, 12 llteals, ',:
nected for a score, giving Southern bench. Eastern's gala made a and nine assists.
the lead at 6-4. From that point on serious bid during the latter stages
Southern ( 451- Mel W-&amp;-7·19; '
Southern never looked back despite of the game, but when the final buz- Tonia Salser 4-1-8: Laren Wolfe 1-4'- •
Clndv Evans 3-M: Elaine Smith
serious challenges by the husUing zer sounded Southern secured the 2·
~; Debbie Mlch8el Z.1-6, and
Renee Smill11-0-2. Toto Is 21 ·9-45.
Eastern quintet. .
lead and the 47-33 win.
Eastern (33)- Tammv Hudson -4·
When the first period buner had
The win marked the initial trium2-.10; Sarah Goebel ' A'H; Angle
sounded the Tornadoette. went to ph for thl Wolfe brothers, Hilton and Spencer 1·0·2; Cassie Sheets 3·2-8; ·. ·
the huddle enjoying a 1&amp;-10 ad- Larry, iD their debut as coaches of Beekv Ambrose 1·2-A. Tolats 15-7-33.
By quarters:
vantage. .
the Tornadoettes.
Southern
16 21 33 A7
The second · period was a slow
Eastern
10 lA 21 33
paced affair that resulted In only
Southern shot 46 percent from the
'f

Southern's zone.

The D•ily Sentinel

Lebanon' results

Eastern's Sarah Goebel (451 looks for
assistance during Thursday's SVAC coolest agallllit Southern. Toroadoetle Debbie Michael (15) appU'" defemive pressure. Southern won
the coolest, 41·33:

Union vis~ts Lyne
Center Saturday
for non -loop tilt
Lawhorn's Rio Grande Redmen will
try to continue thei r hot string again-

front line scorers against the Bull-

dogs. Each of the three are
Rounding out the Rio Grande star·
lers will be 5-8 Jerry Mowery and 6.()
Rick Penrod.
Union will depend on young
players with frcslunen Mark Herd,
Dwight Dunn ami Chuck Crawford
leading the way. The Bulldogs have
· 10 newcomers. including seven

free throws

with seven seconds

remaining.

who missed four recent games
because of a death in his family .

The Redmen will be at home
against Monday night when they
host Wilberforce University at Lyne
Center. Game time is set for 7:30

MIDWEST

Col kg~ Stdrt$
EAST
Americlin 98, St. Mar)"s fili
Boston U. 91. .Ma SS&lt;~ch wose ll-; 65
Du qu~snt! 511, Roller\ Morns ~2
Holy Cr tliiS 78, Navy 66
Rul~c rs a7, UCI.A 54
Temple 60, I.A:!hitl\1 43
Vir}(lnia Tc.:h !IJ, Gco r~o: e

sourn

Bradley 77, Howard 53
Drakl! 89, Chi ca~o St. 6:i
Kan...as St. &amp;1, AUburn- Mont~umc ry

· N. Iowa
Ri ~e

Arkolnsgs St. 6-i. E. K~ntucky 56
Florida A&amp;M 62, f'loricl 11 lntemul!onal

at

,

Ga. Southllrn 13, Annstron~ St. &amp;!!
Mu.hJie Tennl'!!!i~ 7i, S. Alabllm&lt;~

Winon11 St. 53
SOUTHWEST

19, SW Texas St. aJ

S. Arkansas 72, E. Tua~ St. 71
Texas 76, Coloratlo &amp;I

Texas AXM 81 , Sam Houston Sl aa
Tclla:rEI Pa!IO ~. TeX~~:rSa n Antonio 37
W. Teus St. 104, Pan Ameriran 76
FAR WES'f

69,

OT
N. Carolina 78, Tulsa 71l

OIJ Dominion 76, Norfolk SL 61

~.

t6

Arkansas 85, San Dit'KO St. 6a

Washington 72

S. Mississi ppi 89, U . ~ . Jnter~tional 6 ~
SW t..oulsiana IOJ, SLcLlCI HcLI(hl!i 67

f:IO.IIIt

IYear .... . .. .... _. ..... ,,, ,,,,, ~... $3t.OI
RatetoatlldeOhht
ud Wetl Vir'IUdll

3 Month ...•................ , •.... SI:I.OD
&amp;Month ......... .. ... . ......•..•. $2).48
I Year . . .. . . . . ..... .............. $44.JD

Air Foree 66, Doune 31
Ncv.·La!i Vc~as 69, Arizona 49

N. Dakota 69, 1Puget Sountl 64

NW Nlllilr~n~ 92, E. Oregon 85
Portland 75. Montan11 St. :i8

Meigs records
fourth victory

307motor. auto., P. B.IP .S.

·

1972 CADILLAC 4 DR....••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !1095
Air cond .• electric windows, A·l cond.

tory.
Box score:
Anderson 3-5-11 ;

Crooks 7·0· 14; Oliver 3·2·8; smith 0·
2·2; Meadows 1·0·2 and crooks 1·2·4.
Totals 15·11 ·41.
Jackson (32) - Juhasz 4·2·10;
Cook6·0·12 ; Reed0·5·5; Wil•on 1· 2·4;
Dorsey0-1-1 . Totals 11· 10·31.
By quarters :
M eigs
12 20 26 41
Jackson
8 12 22 32

Nine players in the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
received special or honorable
mention in today's Class A All·
State squads announced by the
Associated Press.
Getting special mention were
Mike Hauber, P. J. Riffe, and
Roger Bissell, all of Eastern, and
Gregg Dee I, North Gallia.

"l

PB/Ps, Air. Black, AS,OOO mile•.

~~~!. !!~J!l CRUISING STATION WAGON·........... 11995
1976 PLYMOunf DUSTER............. :.~~.~~:.'.~':'!: .. i1595
1975 MERCURY MONTEGO.~~.';.~~~?!~~;~~!~·;.':~::.~~ '995

.

.
**********THIS WEEK ONL 'fr*******·**

i 1975 CHEVY CHEV~LLE STATIONWAGON ...... )1o95 i
::********************************./

f

l

? 1J. +

'.
QUARTERBACK CHASE -

..

Cleveland Browns' quarterback Brian
Slpe (11 us~ a Iliff arm • he tries to ward .off liOu&amp;ton Oilers' Jesse
Baker (75) In the second quarter chase at the NFL game at Houston Thur- '
,&amp;day nlghl. Slpe lost two yards. (AP Laoerphato).

SALE - 20% OFF

Enjoy good )'ear
. Outfielder Gary Redus has moved
e,lose to the league lead with 33 RBIB
In , tbe Mexican Winler League.
Redus has had 22 slolen bases in 23
tries and Is batting .~8.
Outflelde!' Duane Walker, also on
the Tijuana team which is managed
by Reds\ Coach RUBS Nixon, is hitting .280 with 25 RBis and has 18
slaals ln ~ attempts. Nixon's team
ha8 a 31).18 recOrd, a half·game out of
fi.,rt place. •

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Phone: 992·2974
NEW WINTER HOURS :
Open Tues. thru-Fri.
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Sit. 9 I&gt;.M. till P.M.

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The Daily Sentinel

SM.£ PREES II &amp;FECJ 1IRJ DEC. 12th

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of what you have, th~n sell it fast with a person·to·
penon Claa1fled ad 1n ...
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PETS, Hamsters,. Gerbils,
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.PARAI&lt; E ETS,
Cages,
Feeds AQUARIUMS,
Complete, · Supplies, Fish
lnd Feeds.

.

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CATS_- Fancy collars; lead sets, toys, beds,
carrymg cases, foods, litter.

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scarves, to_ys, hats, beds,
houses, chams, leads, food,
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Pioneers favored
•
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1

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Receiving honorable mention

POINSETTIAS $1.00 &amp; UP

i
I

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,.

were J. J. Justice and Bruce
Shriver of North Gailia; Dave
Gaul and Mike Bissell of Eastern
and Greg Webb of Hannan Trace.

12:00 TO 5:00

Nova®..S by Realistic

1975 FORD LID ..................................".~:~ ••••95
~-

Meigs (41) -

placed two players each on the 22man first team.
Calvert's all-state selections were
offensive end TOI!l Cawood and
Grant Hemiger, the Seoecas' quarterback who earned an All~hio 'ber·
th as a defensive back. He intercepted four passes in Calvert's
last lwo playoff contests.
Represented Waynesville were offensive Iackie Rusty Kuriger and
defensive back David Deters.
Earning first team offenSive spots
were tackle Mark Richards of
Strasburg, guards Andy Sheli of
New Washington Buckeye Central
and Chris Adams of Berlin Center
Western Reserve, Mogadore center
Kirk DeStefano, quarterback Wes
Meisburger of Williamsburg and
running backs Bob Penza of North .
Milton Jackson-Milton and Eric
Hamilton of Gates Mills Ha•wken.

~·

1976 PONTIAC CATALINA ............................ 11795

Meigs' reserves scored a 31-17 vic-

I SAT~ DEC. 5th &amp;SUN., DEC. 6th

111
II

I ::
II :
1

straight year, and Waynesvil1e each

. ~~

P.B .• P.S .• air condition .

Cook paced Jackson with 12 points
while Juha&gt;-z had 10.
Meigs hit 15 of641rom the fioor lor
22 percent while Jackson coMected
lor 26 percent from the field.

Coach Ron Logan's Meigs
Marauder girls' basketball team upped its second record to 4-1 Thursday night with a 41-32 victory over
Jackson.
Pam Crooks led the way with 14
points while Kristin Anderson canned 11 points.

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE

..~

Fits in a Pocket- and Save!

1977 AMC MATADOR STATIONWAGON. ............... !1795

Auto.,

Welcome To Our Annual

....

team all-state choices, made with
the recommendations of B statewide
panel of sports writers and broadcasters.
Tiffin Calvert, the Division V
playoff champion lor the second

Good condition. 6 cvl ., P.S.

W t.&gt;ber St. 78, W is.-Suptori~r 29

PHENIX CITY, Ala. (AP) the NCM, featuring schools that
Coach Bill Manlove .of top-ranked don't grant athletic scholarships.
Widener can't understand why his
Saturday's game, set lor a 12:30
Pioneers are favored over No. 2 p.m. EST kickoff. is a rematch of
Dayton in Saturday's clash for the last year's semifiual battle at
NCM Division III national football Widener, where the Flyers overcame a 2W deficit for a 28-24 vicchampionship.
"We're No. 1so I guess that makes tory.
us the favorites, but their only loss of
Both teams have relied on rugged
tbe season was to Eastern Kentucky, defensive units throughout the
the No. 1 team in Division 1·M, so I season. The Pioneers' defense has
don't think we should be favored Ill' intercepted 36 passes this year, in-any stretch of the imagination," cluding 10 by safety Tom Deery. The
Dayton defense has had lour
Manlove said.
Widener, which beat Wabash ~36 shutouts and held other foes to seven
for the 1977 national title, arrived at points or less . .
Manlove has a 94-9 record in his
this year's Amos Alonzo StaJ!8 Bowl
finale with playoff victories over last IO seasons at Widener.
Dayton is in its first sellliOO under
West Georgia and Montclair State.
Dayton, the defending champion Mike Kelly, a defensive ro-ordinator
after smashing Ithaca 63-0, in last for the Flyers for lour years before
year's Stagg Bowl, earned a return replacing Rick Carter, who left to
trip with triumphs over Augustana become the bead coach at Holy
Cross.
and Lawrence.
Dayton's top runner Is Tommy
Widener has a 1U record and
Dayton is 12-1, losing only when it's Halstead, a 17~ sophomore
stepped out of ita ci8B8 to challenge who has rushed for 811 yarda. Junior
Eastern Kentueky, which beat the quarterback Jon Vorpe ' - c..
nected on 111 111• J11aa for 1,eGI
Flyers 14-3.
Division III is the smallest within yards and nine touchdowns.

1977 atm MALIBU 4 DR. SEDAN ...................'1895
1976 FORD VAN ECONOLINE F100 ..: ........ ;....... ~1495

Players reco~nized

P.ln.

College basketball scores
Thunuhty'~

Slsmonth , .....•.•.. ... , . ........

first three minutes of the second hal£

despite the absence of Castleman,

Kevin

One week ............ , ... , . ..... . ., $1.10
OneMonth . ... , . .. . . .... . . . .. ...... $f.40
One Year ... . . . ... ... .... : . .. , .. . , 1$2.10

to put the ga m e away. TheY were

scoring and rebOunding.

&amp;.~

Castleman, and 6-7 Dan Curry as

..

SUIISCRIPTION RA11!8
By c.rter or MeliOr Holik

Penrod and Curry d1d most of the

averaging in double figures in

Rio Grande will rely on !Hi forward Watson McDonald,

PQri'MASTER: Stnd addres.s to The DIUy
SenUnel, 111 Court St•• Pomeroy, Ohlo467t9.

Olllo aH Wett YII'Jblla
3Monlh .•......•...... .. .. .. •.... Sl2.35

Southern won, 47·33.

!
i

;

UtrTril~i.leo;; iiv:llig;;~=ing point
COLUMBUS, Ohio· (AP) Waynesville Coach Keith Mescher,
Cadiz fullback-linebacker Mike
Brook!; and Glouster Trimble end
Scott Holbert have wtin The
Associated Press' major awards tllis
season In Ohlo Class Aprep football.
Mescher was named as the AP's
Class A State C"""h of the Year tor
guiding WaynesviUe to 10 straight
victories, the state poll cham·
pionship and a berth in the playoffs.
Brooks, a :&gt;-loot-10, 111:&gt;-pow•d
senior, scored 24 touchdowns and
piled up 1,541 yards In just 180
carries this fall to be named Class A
State Back of the Year. He was also
Cadiz' leading tackler in 19111. He accounted for 48 touchdowns and 3,312
yarda in his four-year career.
Holbert, a f.-7, l~pourid senior, is
the only member of the 19111 small
school dream team to earn a first
team berth for the second straight
season. Tbe Class A Uneman of the
Year caughl44 passes for 806 yards
and eight truchdowns this tall,
giving him career totals of 1,911 yarda and 27 t&lt;&gt;uchdowns n!cei•ving.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

JUMP BALL- An ualdentlfled Eastern player ties up the ball baadied by Cindy Evans (34) during action In Thursday's SVAC coolest.

'*BIIBIIBIIYIIBIII!IIlll!lOI""'WW!Itl!WBUIIl•IIIIBIIS.!IIlS.S.W1

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season.

never threatened after that point.
The Redmen cracked the century
mark when 6-3 freslunan guard John
Jeffers of Wellston slipped a pair of

Clevelsnd's final play of the game ;:
and he was stopped for no gain.
;;
,.....;~-~--....:..:.....:...::.::.:::.._:.:__ _ _ _ _.:..:__ _....:::___ ~

=· '!'~~r:~~~!~~

cinnati."
Sipe handed off to Miller on

1....

-epoldot-,Ohlo.

freshfmen on their roster this

Penrod had 21 points and Curry 20
for the Redmen, while Richardo
Hairston ca me oil the bench to score
12. Watson McDonald and Jerry
Mowery chipped in10 each.
Transfer Eddie Whitaker came off
the bench to lead Union with 22 points while Herd added 14.
Rio Grande recorded the easy win

teams.

""""""'·

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

No Jubscripti&lt;m by ~il permitted in town•
where home carrier service Ia avaiiabie.

meeting between the schools. The
duo combined for 41 points.
Rio Grande held a 48-361ead at the
hall but went on an 11·2 spree in the

Kentucky Conference schools. The
Redmen have defeated Be•·ea (72-70
and 87·71 ), Thomas More 184-791,
Union (101-&amp;l), and Pikeville (101•
100, 2 overtunes) in bouts with KIAC

"""""'*'~~

Subscribers not desiring lo PlY the carrier
may remit in 1dvanct direct to The Dally
Sentinel on a 3, I or 12 mcrih bMis. Credit
will ~ given curltr each month.

Saturday night when they host Union
College at Lyne Center.
Game time is 7:30 p.1n.
The game has been tabbed as
" Riepenhofl Night" with selected
members of the Reipenhoff
Distributing ComP,any of Jackson.
. Rio Grande enters the game with a
five-game winning streak against

--·-·--N.ICourt-.
,_., .

Cleveland dropped to a 5-9 record
when he blocltecl a Cleveland punt in
the Oilers moved to~ and out
the third quarter to set up Camp- and
of the American Football Conbell's touchdown plunge. Houston's
Adger Arn\strong picked up the terence Central Division cellar.
loose baU and ran It eight yards to
Sipe, who completed 21 ol 31
the Browns' three.
0
That hoosted Houston's lead to i76, but Cleveland quarterback Brian Cleveland's failure In the closing
Sipe whipped the Browns to a fourth seconds.
quarter score, a one-yard plunge by · "Everybody's got to reme111ber
. Cleo Miller, to provide the final that I'm not a general or a chief. 1
margin. Slpe, who Increased his am only an Indian and 1 don't want
league-leading interception total to to second-gue8s calla from the ben23 in the game, also took the BrowllS ch. Sometimes I disagree but I
to tbe brink of a winning comeback always follow instfuctions. The fourbefore !bey were slopped at the Oller th down call was a good one. 1
four with 20 seconds left In the game. worked for a touchdown against Cln-

.

Fridoy,
IIJ"""" . - .
\:1;-lbo
Publilhod
· "011/o
" "Volley
""'

PRICES
Daily . . . .. .. . . . . . . .. . . .. • . . . .. . ll Centl

damage for the Rcdmen in the first

Kentucky Conference

.

SINGI.J!:COPY

teams

st

,,

lUll'S I - )
A 01~ tiMIIIIlaledla. lilt.

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Jabber
covered the mile course in 2:09 Hi to
win by a half-length Thursday night
in the featured $900 race at Lebanon.
Jabber took the lead in the stretch
and held on, paying $7 .80, $4.00 and
$3.40. Bonnie Marie returned $5.80
and $3 lor place, and Knight Frisco
paid $5.00 for show.
Tbe 3-1 daily double combination
. of Nibley's Lady in the first race and
Edgewood O'Grady in the second
returned $34.
Acrowd of 1,021 wagered $102,577.

LOOKS FOR HELP -

Coach John

31 yards against the BroWilli and
played a secondary role to Nielsen,·
of the
when quarterback Gil· who replaced starter Ken Stabler In
lord Nielsen came off the bench to the second half and ignited the
rally tbe Oilers to a pulsating 17-13 Oilerstotwotouchdowna.
victory 'over Cleveland.
Askt!d why Campbell rushed on ~5
But after popular head coach Bwn· times, Biles said, "I didn't think we
Phillips was fired out from under needed to (run Campbell more) sinthem last season the fans are in- ce it was a short week and be hadn't
sec~ about rumors they hear conhad much rest. He had other things
· cenung all-pro rwming back Earl on his mind."
Campbell.
Biles declined, however, to
"Bud, please don't fu-e Earl Cam- elaborate on the "other things."
pbe!l," a sign in the stands implofed.
Nielsen, who has been awaiting his
D_iler owner Bud Adams Thursday momentto prove himself, completed
ll!ght following tile Oilers thrilling five of his first six passes In the third
VIctory thai helped salve tbe wounds quarter in directing an ~yard
of a dismal ~ seasm.
touchdown drive which· climaxed
'"I;hereisll!ltruthtothatrwnor, it with a 30-yard touchdown pass to
is something thAt hasn't been tight-&lt;!ndDaveCasper.
~·" HOU$n coach·Ed Biles
The touchdown pass put the Oilers
sa1d in response tJ rwnors Campbell ahead tor tbe first time in the game,
would be traded~
erasing Cleveland's 6-3 halftime
"That's the rtbest thing from lead on field goals of 18 and 19 yards
my mind but I jus.t can't stop the . by Matt Bahr. Toni Fritsch's 32-yard
rwnors."
.
first quarter field goal provided
Campbell; t.. National Football Houston's only first half scoring.
League's leading rusher the past
Houston rookie Avon Riley
rna11 na1ro witnessed a chan&amp;ing

Tbe Eagles' Cassie Slletta broke
the ice at the 7:'.r/ mart, swishing a

Tbe Southern

Tornadoettes sputtered through the
opening minute. then came on
strung to defeat Eastern's Eagles,
47-33, in girls' high school basketball
action here Thursday.
For Sou.thern. it was a victorious
season openCr, while-eastern now
weighs in at J,2 overall.
Mel Weese led all scorers with an
impressive 19 point effort for the
winner.;, while Tonja Salser added
nine, Cindy Evans netted six, Debbie
Michael five, Elaine Smith four and
Laren Wolfe, Renee Smith each with
two.
'For Eastern Tanuny HudsOn ripped the nets for 10 points, Sarah
Goebel added nine, Cassie Sheets
eight, Becky Ambrose four, and
Angie Spencer two.
Eastern grabbed the opening tip
and got on the scoreboard first alter
working for the good shot agairu;t

RIO GRANDE -

HOtJST1~N (AP) - Houaton Oilers

I

..

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••

�Page-8- The Daily Sentmel

Pomeroy

Friday, Dece'inber4, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

-'

)'

Meigs County happenings,_ _ _ _·'- - - - r· -_
servation efforts.
Work on personal development
was held during the meeting.
• Meetings of the troop are held 'each
Monday evening at 7 p m. at the
Leg1on hall in Middleport. Any boy
over 10 who has completed the filth
grade and 1s II may jom the troop.

Troop 245
Members of the Middleport Boy
Scout Troop 245 made plans for
JOmmg m the Christmas parade in
Middleport Monday mght dunng
thr r recent meetmg .
·: he wolf patrol l1mshed 1ts patrol
IJ,,g, and the raccoon patrol repaired
1ts flag On Saturday a h1ke was
taken at the Legion fann. The
patrols learned the bas1s of wmter
hikmg m the cold and wet weather
Several kmds of wildj1fe were seen
and the troop noted ' nature con-

Wildwood
Garden Club
A demonstratiOn on makmg bows
lor Chmtmas wreaths h1ghhghted a
meetmg of the Wildwood Garden

Williams returns from meeting
tY Wilt latnti of Syracuse, an in•pendent beauty consultant lor
~1~ry Kay Cosmehcs, Inc., has just
1L

The VIsit was the f~rst step m a
three-month quah!ICallon penod to

Mary Kay Cosmetics was founded
m Dallas in 1963 with a premiUm hne
of skm care and glamor products
and an tnttlal sales force of only
mne. Today, Mary Kay Cosmetics
has more than 132,000 mdependent
beauty consultants and 3,200 sales
d~rectors marketmg 1ls products
throughout the Umted States, its
tcrntortes, Canada, Australia and

become a Mary Kay Cosmetics sales

Argentina .

returned from an intensive, week·
long management and saies tra1mng
meetmg

at

the

company'l:i

m-

lernatlonal headquarters 10 Dallas,
Texas

director Dunng th1s- tune, Mrs
W1lhams w11l be expected to meet
certaJO sales and recrUitlllg
reqUirements. If successful, she w•ll
d1rect her own umt of beauty consultants and be responsible for their
trammg and supervtston As a three·
tor, she will be part of a well-tramed
management team m a company
wtth a umque success stor)o .

Mar~

Club held recently at the home of Rebecca Jones lost the most weighi
Mrs Peggy Moore.
and Conme Turley was runner:up. In
After making their bows, mem· the Pomeroy class, Juanita Sayre lot
hers made Christmas tree or- 'the most weight, and Delores
naments usmg pinec011es. For the Donahue, Karen Johnson, Etta Mae
arrangement of the month, Mrs Hill, Brenda Neutzling, and Vicki
Betty M1lhoan, co-hostess, displayed Ferrell tied lor runner-up. Two new
a cormcop1a f1lled wlth fruit, members were welcomed. At the
vegetables, and colored corn.
· Thursday morning exercie class,
Plans were made for makmg Jodie Hysell, Jackie Reed, and Betty
Christmas fruit baskets fpr area Dill lost the most weight.
shullns at the next meeting which
will also he the members' hohday
party. There w1ll he a $3 g1!t ex·
change.
The semi-annual inspection of
Mrs. Milhoan read a poem, "The Bethel 62, International Order of
Simple Things of Ule" and "Care." Job's Daughters, was held recently
Mrs. Arnold gave a summary of the at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
day's events at the Region 11
Introduced were past honored,
meeting held recently at Eastern queens, Margie Elman, Bethel 73,
High School Both Evelyn Hollon and Gallipolis; Kathy Johnson, Bethel
Mrs. Grace Fisher received nbbons 62, also a past l!llardian of the
m the nower show. Mrs. Fisher com- Bethel; Twila Childs, Bethel 62 and
mented on preparatiOns and director of mustc, and Theresa
mulchmg for nower gardens for the Starr, past grand representative to
wmter months Refreslunents were Arkansas.
served to the 15 members attendmg.
Walter Shuirr, grand inner guard,
assoc1ate guardian of Bethel 10,
Spnngf•eld, and enumnent commander Palestme Corrunandry 33,
Members of the Booster Sunday
w•s the mspecting officer.
school class of the Racme F1rst Bal&gt;'
Others presented were Tonja
list Church met recently at the home
Tracy. senior princess of Bethel 79,
of Mrs Grella Simpson lor a
McConnelsville, visiting Job's
Thanksgiving dmner. Co-hostess for
Daughters, Myra Albert, Angela
the dinner was Mrs. Dorothy
Albert, Galhpois Bethel 79; and Paul
Badgley.
Darnell, past grand gaurdian, and
Mrs Ora H1ll preSided at the
past associate grand guardian of
meeting with the group smgmg "We
Bethel 62, and a meml&gt;er of the
Gather Together " Prayer was by
Kmghts of the York Cross of Honor;
Mrs. MarJorie Grurun and scnpture
Lmda Mayer, Bethel 62 guardian;
was read from Psalms 100.
Bonn a Tracy, Bethel 79 guard1an,
Named to the nommabng com~
McConnelsville, and Kenny Wiggins,
1mttee were Mrs. Badgley, Mildred
assoctate guardian, Bethel62.
Hart and Margie Grurun. At the next
Others mtroduced were Emma K.
meetmg , members are to take a
Clatworthy, Mary Wise and Sue
Chnstmas readmg for the program
Starr, ali past guardens of Bethel 62,
and a $3 exchange g1ft. A Thanks- and B1li Quickel, ~•ate
glvmg program was presented by
guard1an of Bethel62 Council memMrs. Gnmm. The hymn, "Come, Ye bers presented in add1hon to Mrs
Thankful People, Come" was sung,
Mayer and W1gg1ns were Barbara
e~nd there wet e several ThanksDugan, secretary; Ruby Vaughan,
gtvmg readmgs The meetmg closed
treasurer; Tw1la Childs, director of
w1th prayer by Mrs Laura Noms
mus1c; Carol Sasson, chBJrman of
~oc1abllity; V1rg1nta Buchanan,
custodian of paraphernalia; Mary
Wise, promoter of hospitality; and
Beth Hayman · lost the most
Enuna
K Clatworthy, d1rector of
we1ght, and Leslie Wells was runner-

Job's Daughters

Booster Class

Kay Cosmetics 1s the 12th
fastest growmg company m the
Umted States and the faste;1
growmg cosmeltcs company m the
nation Net sales m 1980 mcreased 83
percent to $166 9 rrulhon wh1le net m·
come mcreased 57 percent to $15 1
milliOn. Net sales for the f~rst quarter of 1981 mcreased to $59.8 million,
up 66 percent over the $36 m1ihon
reported last year
Along w1th her new responstbthtles a~ a sales director, Mrs
W1lham.s w1ll enJOY the opportumty
for mcreased earmngs through
generous conumss10ns on her umt
sales volwne. Last year, the
average annual mcmne for Mary
Kay Sales directors was more than
$22,000 More than 50 directors ear·
ned over $50,000.
The week m Dallas mcludcd
trammg m product knowledge, cor·
_ porate pollcies, business
management and sales techmques.
The classes were taught by Mary
Kay Ash, founder and cha1rman of
the board, R1chard Rogers,
president of Mary Kay Cosmetics up at the Monday mght meeting of
and other corporate offtcers and Shnderella at Chester. In the
sales adJmmstrat1on directors
Tuesday mormng class at Mason.
Mrs Williams and her husband,
Jack, have three ch1ldren

Slinderella

Williams

finance.

Those of Masomc relabonsh1p Introduced were Jesse Brinker, grand

Social Calendar

Astrograph
December 5, 1981
Several old, unproductive mterests m which you have been mvolved
these past years Will be dissolved and replaced by more productiVe
ones ExciLmg and advantageous changes are 111 store for ybu thJ.S
commgycar

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Instead of domg your usuallhmgs
w1th your usual crowd, seek diverSIOns and change today. Go
somewhere different where there's a posslblhty of makmg new
acquamtances
CAPRICORN iDee 22-Jan.19) Your m•hal thoughts could be a Inne
self-centered today , to the pomt that you are mroe concerned about
yourself than others However, this won't last long
AQUARIUS !Jan. 21l-Feb. 19) Be on your toes today. Solnethmg
unusual could develop to turn a losmg s1tuat10n mto a profttable one.
Swift ac!lon may he reqmred
PISCES !Feb. 21l-March 20) ThiS IS one of those days where a goal
for wh1ch you've tned very hard could he demed you, yet something
better will result 10 an area where you've expended httle or no effort
ARIES (March 21·April 19) Be wary today of makmg unpu!s1ve
deCISIOns Your fiTs! thought could he more cmohonal than logicaL
You'll get on target once you've settled down
TAURUS !April21l-May 20) A fnend of whom you're quite fond could
he a tnfle difficult today, s stnve to be understandmg and em·
~ss10nate Tolerance heals all
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Assocl8tcs will be more supportive today
1! you make it clear that you are lookmg out for their mterests as well
as your own.
CANCER !June 21·July 22) Don't be discouraged today 11 you fad to
achieve your purposes on your flrst try. Success comes after a sohd
second effort.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Steer clear of business mvolvements today
where most of the control is m the hands of others, rather than in
yours. They could make mistakes you wouldn't.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Don't be afra1d to bargam a b1t m order to
~et your terms regardmg somethmg 1mportant to you today Be fair,
but stand up for your Tights.
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. %3) Early m the day things may not go as well
as you'd hke, owmg to your negallve attitude. By afternoon the
positive ''you'' emerges and regams control
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If you dec1de to go on a shoppmg spree
today 1t's best to do so m the afternoon At that lime you will be more
value-and-budget-conscious.

Friday

(SANTA'S ON HIS WAY)
'

Health Club
Eva Robson and Genev1eve Ward
were welcomed into the mem·

In compliances with a request
from their distr1cl supermtendent
that charge conference he "d1f·
ferent" this year, six Meigs County
United Methodist Churches w1ll
evaluate theiT mimstry to the com·
munity through a mock tnal of the
churches
The Bethany, Carmel, Morning
Star, Morse Chapel, Portland, and
Sutton Churches will meet together
with Rev. Benjamm Edwards,
supenntendent of the Athens
District, Sunday at the Sutton Umted
MethodiSt Church, on the Bashan
Road. A covered-diSh dinner will be
held at 12 30 p.m., and the charge
conference w11l begm at 2 p.m.
For the "tnal" there w11l be persons playmg the parts of judge,
prosecutor, and defense attorney. A
jury will be selected from those
present, and church people w1ll be
called to the stand to testily as to
what has been done and what has not
heendone.
Followmg th1s program, the most
important business sess1on of the
year w1ll be held for all s1x churches.

A BAKE SALE Will be held in
front of Ingels Furmture Co. and
Elberfeld's m Pomeroy Fnday
and Saturday It w11l he sponsored by Fa1th Fellowship
Crusade fm Chnst Cmruniltee.
For any mfonnation, contact
President Betty Pugh at 985-4111.

.

NINTH ANNUAL Chr~stmas
bazaar of the Me1gs County
Hwnane Society, ali day, Fnday
and Saturday at the Thnft ShoP'
pe, N. Second Ave , Middleport.

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
Trustet!s wtll meet tn 1egula1
M?ssiOil on Fnday at 7 p m at the
hnmc of the clerk, Mrs Wanda
Ebhn, Laurel Chi! Road.

Saturday
CHRISTMAS Bazaar Saturday,
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at firehouse in
Tuppers Plams by lad1es
auxthary of the Orange To" II!-! hip
Fire Deparhnent.

THE REV Glen Beverly of
Washmgton Court House will he
the guest speaker at services
Sunday at 7 p.m. at Hobson
Chr~stl8n Umon Church.
HYMN SING Suoday at 2 p.nt.
at Nease Settlement Church.
"Harmony Smgers" to be
featured. Pubhc mvited to at·
tend.

Monday

111•1/i l

ENTIRE STOCK

CHAPM.AN'S
SHOES

HUBBARD'S. GREENHOUSE

FURNI~!~!RDWAR:r.I
Homelite S•w•

s

MMK
VSTORE
·'
Middleport
r .

.....

WIKirwtJday

10 17·27

Mennew
25::H-48

Diamond Savinp &amp;
Loan Co.

........

U ·IJ
Satvrctsy
(lllflhCUJ

2581 7

Services~

•

Baken at
G&lt;lad Bread

.. .

Hunrtngton, w

CHURCH

OF

THE

7 •30; mid-week ser-

326 E.

Main St. Pomeroy. Sunday urv•ces at
10 30 am Holy Commumon on the hrst
Sunday of eoch month, and combmed

wifh marnmg prayer on the thtrd Sunday. Mormng prayer and sermon on all
other Sundays of the month Church
Schoo! and nuner.y care provtded Cof·
fee hour m the Pamh Hall lmmedtately
followmg the servtce

POMEROY CHUII&lt;H OF CHRIST

212 W

pm

,.

THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
A.11e , Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Roy Wtnlng offtcers J" charge. Sunday holiness
meet1ng 10 am Sunday Schoo! 10 30
a m Sunday school leader VPSM Elo1se
Adams 7·30 p m .. KIIVGhon mevtmg.
VariOUS speakers and mUSIC Spectols,
Thursdoy-10 am to 2 p .m Lad1e5
Home League all women mv1ted, 7 30
p m prayer meetmg and Btble study
Rev Noet Hermon teacher

BURLINGTON

SOUTHERN

BAPTIST

CHAPEL Route I Shade B1ble school, 7
p m Tkursday war1h1p servtte, 8 p m

WESTSIDE CHURCH OF

CHRIST 200 W Main St ., 99'2·5235 Vocal
mus1c Sunday worsh1p, 10 a m , Btble
study 11 o .m worsh1p,bpm Wednes ·
day B1ble study, 7 p m

OLD

DEXTER

BIBLE

CHRISTIAN

CHURCH Rev.Ralph Smtih pastor Sun·
day schooL 9 30 a.m , Mrs Worley
Franc11 supermtendent Preoch1ng ser v•ces flnt &amp; ttmd Sundays follow1ng Sun ·
day School. .

.. llnllldAitlltl

GRAHAM

ONE EVENING
Show at 8 P.M.
SUN. MATINEE
One Show at2 P.M.

UNITED

METHODIST .

Preaching 9 30 a m , first and second
Sundays of eoch month thtrd and fourth
Sunday5 each month, worsh1p service at
7 30 p m Wedn.tdoy even.ngs at 7·30
Prayer and Bible Study
SEVENTH-DAV ADVENTIST Mulberry
Hetghts Rood , Pomeroy Pastl:)r Albert
DttJes, Sabbath School Superintendent
R1to White Sobboth School Saturday
afternoon ot 2 OQ wtth Worship Serv1ce
followtng at 3 15!

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHSI5t41r Harriett .Worner Supt . Sunday
School , 9 30 a .m morning worsh1p
10 45a m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
Oovtd
Mann miniSter Wtlllam Snouffer Sun ·
day school sup! Sunday scho&lt;JI 9 JO
am., morn1ngworsh1p ID 3D am

I

')

FIRST

unforaettable .•• atw

.

,.

her a Starftre engaae·

ment diamond. Starftre
diamonda are guar·
retlatered ond compte·
meatal by beautiful
rt111 otylea in 14 Karat
yellow nr white aold.
See our c:oUecllon toclay.

FROM KEEPSAKE
•l

J

~~

BAPTIST

282

Mulberry Ave Pomeroy Rev W11Hom
R Newman roster Hershel McClure,
Sunday sthoo sul¥rmtendent Sunday
school q 30 a m , morning wonhtp,
10 30 evemng wal"1htp , 7 30 p m .
M1dweek prarer Servic•. 7 30 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH Del( ·
ter Rd Ad./ Langsville, Rev A A
Hughes . PastOr Sunday School 10 a m
S.rviC8SDn Tuesday, Thursday and Sun day. 7 30p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH . Batlev
Run Road , Re\1 Emmert Rowson pastor
Handley Dunn. sup! Sunday school 10
om Sunday ev•ning servtce 7 30 Bible
teac:htng 7·30r m Thursday

MIDDlEPOR CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Lowr8J'(e Manley
pastor: Mrt Runell Young, Sunday
School Su!)l Sunda)' School 9 30 a m
Evening wonh1p , 7·30. Wednesday
prayer me•ting, 7 30 p m

MT

ant:eed, permanenUy

SOUTHERN

MORIAH CHUII&lt;H OF GOO

Rocln•- Rev. JOIMI Satterf1eld pastor
Mornmg worship, 9 AS a m ; Sunday
5choot 10 45 a m , ev.ning wor1hlp 7.
Tuesday, 7::JO p.m
lodies prayer
m"tmg, Wedn••day 7 30 p m YPE
MIOOLEPOitT FIRST BAPTIST Corn'!r
Sn•th ond Pdlm•r th• Rev Mark McClung, Sunday scheol t 15 am •. Randy
t'fayes Sunday School supennt•ndent .
Dan R'~Qs, osst 1upt Morning Wonh•p.
10 15 a m. ~auth meeting, 7 30 p.m.
WedniSdlll)'. lndudlng wee tats, 110ger
beavers, junior as1ronouls, ond junior
and senior h~ IYF. choir proctke B 30
p.m Wednetilay prayer mMting and 81·
bte1tudy Wedne~ay. 7·30p~m

CHURCH Of CHRIST, Middleport 5th

and Ma•n. lob

Melton. minister, Scott
OttOCiott minister Bible
School. 9!30 o. m.: moming worship
10:30 a. m.. eYening service, 7·00 p m.
Wedlttld~ Stuc:ly and youth group

Saltsman,

'Q'Jettel~

POME ROV

"':'~~'"cHURCH OF •THE
NAIAIINI. 111v. Jim lroame. C.~:;
Ill White, S..nday ochaol oupt.

odiiiOI. 9:$11 a.m.;
ID-.10 •·"'··

Vt'sdneiclat, 7 p m
(

maml"' ...........

Sunday evangelistic
-llilt· 7:CID p.m Prayer "'"ling.

(

II

Cavnlv

LQ~n

Pomeroy

Maggie and June 'NOfll:ed all morn•ng
I'TI8king lhe1r snowman He go1 so big lhal
they had to fetch a stool and stand on tll)loe
10 ~ his arms and Ia clndef button him
The mailnWI helped put on hiS head

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY Rev Wanda Johnson
dtr&amp;clor Harold Johnson dtrector of
&amp;ducat ton
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN Wor
shtp Serv1ce 9 a m . Church School

.,..,._, they napped 11\8.1 afternoon the
P1 shone hot and bright and the south
wind blew When they \IWOIIe !heir S«JNNf
pal had dwindktd and his cu·oer lace cried
dirty stnNiks Sadly they turned away

J030a m

MIDDLEPORT, Church School , ~ 00
om , Mornmg worsh1p 10 15
SYRACUSE
F IR ST
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN Church Church School
10 15o m , Worsh1p 11 30om
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Pastor
Rev John Evans Sund9y school 10
a m
Sunday worshtp
11
am
Chtidren·s church 11 Cl m Sunday even
tng servtce 7 00 p m Wednesday even
1ng young ladleS OUlCIIiory 6 p m
Wednesday family worship 7 00 p.m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Near
Long Bottom Edsel Hart pastor. Sunday
schoal
10 am
Church 7 30 p.m
prayer meetmg 7.30 p m. ThUrsday
MIDDLEPOR~

FREEWILL BAPTIST Co'

ner Ash ond Plum Ralph Butcher
pastor Soturday evenmg ser\IIC8 , 7 30
p m., Sunday School 10 am . Sunday
Worshtp Serv1ce II o m , Btble Study
Wed
7 30 p m , Noel Herrmann,
teacher

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Robert McGee mtenm director
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert McGee
POMEROY Sunday School q 15 a m
Worship servtce 10 30 am
Cho1r
rehearsal Wednesday 7 p m Rev
Robert McGee pastor
ENTERPRISE Warship 9 a m Church
School 10 a m Richard Rothem1ch.
pastor.
ROCK SPRINGS Sunday School 9 15 o
m Warship servtce 10 a m Rtchord
Rothemtch pastor
FLATWOODS. Church School 10 am
Warshtp 11 a m , Rtchard Rothem1ch
pastor.
MIODLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH Church School 9 30 a m Wor·
shtp 10 30 am UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robinson Pastor
RUTL,4\ND Church School 9 30 a m
Worship 10 30 o.m Rober t ~1der pastor
SALEM CENTER
Worship 9 a m
Church School 9 .t5 o m Ro~erl R1der
pastor
PEARL CHAPEL Sunday School 9 30
am Worshlp7 30p m '
SNOWVILLE, Sunday School 9 30 a m
Worshtp II 00 o.m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Stanley Merr.f1ed M1n1ster
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 a m Church
Schoo! 10 am
MIN~RSVILLE ChYrch School q o m
Worshtp 10 a m
ASBURY Church School 9·50 a m
Worsh1p 11 am Bible Study 7 30 p,m
Thursdoy UMW f1st Tuesday

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev James Clurk
Rev Mark Flynn
Rev Florence Smith
Rev . Carl Htcks
BETHANY (Dorco15) Worship ~ 00
am Church School 10 00 a m B1ble
study 1st 2nd 3rd and 5th Tuesdays
7 15 p m youth teliowshtp , 2nd ond .tth
Tuesdays 6 00 p.m
CARMEL and SUTTON (Worshtp , Sun·
day School and most other events held
JOintly ) Sunday School9 AS and Worship
11 00 at Sutton ftnt and th1rd Sundays
and at Carmel second and fourth Sun
doys B1blc Study second fourth and
ftfth Thursdays 7 IS p m Famtly Ntght
Fellowshtp 01nner thtrd Thursday 6 30

pm
APPLE GROVE

Sunday School 9 30

a m Worship 7 30 p m 1st and 3rd Sun
days. Prayer meet.ng Wednesday 7 30
p m Fetlowstup supper first Solurday 6
p m UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAST LETART Church School 9 am
Worsh1p servtce 10 a m Prayer meatmg
7 31) p m Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 7·30 p m
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school
lOam : worsh•p. II am Choir procftce
Thursday , 8 p m
LETART FALL5-· Worshtp sttr\'tc:e 9
o m Church School1(1 a.m
MORNING STAR Worshtp 9 ,30 a m
Church Sc.hool10 30 o m ,

MORSE CHAPEl Church S&lt;hool 9 30

om Worshtp 11 am .
PORTLAND Sunday Sthool 6 30 p m
Ev~tnlng Worship
7.30 p m
Youth
Fellowship. Wednesday, 7 30 p m

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
R..... Richard W Thomot
Duone Syd•mtrlcker Sr
Sheldon JoHRlOn
John W Douglas
JOPPA, Wonh1p 9 00 a m Church
School 10 00 a m
CHESTER Worshtp '9 a m
Church
School ICI a rn Chotr Rehearsal 7 p m
Thursdays Bib._ Studv Thursdays

7·30p m
LONG BOTTOM Sunday School at 9 30

am ~lng Wonhlp at 7.30 p .m.
Thul'lllay llble Study. 7'30p.m.
RfEDSVlLE: S..nday S&lt;hool 9.30 a "1·

-..lng Warohlp 10.30 a .m E-lng
Worshp 7·30 p.m. llble Study
Wednesday• at 7:30 p rn ,

~

11181 Klll!llel'

~rl""9

What makes life mean"'IJIUI?II posses-

cant tn111w us happy what ean ?

Our churches have the answer
Through warship and ptayer they teach us
10 lind the Joys of spml

s.r.ott

pm

BEARWALL6W RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST Duane Worden , rn1n1ster 81ble
doss 9 30om morning worshtp 10 30
om
eventng worst,.p
6 30 p m
WedMsday Bible study 6 30 p m
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
Church Sunday School servtce 9 AS
om ,
Worship
serv~ee
10 30
EvongeiiSIIC Serv1ce 7 30 p.m Wednes
day Prayer meetmg 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy
Hornson..,11le Rd Robert Purtell , pastor
Bdl McElroy , Sunday $Choolsupt Sundoy
school , 9 30om worsh1p serv1ce 10 30
o m , Sunday worshtp serv1ce 7 30 p m
Monday ond Tuesday eventng sen~~c:es
7 30 each evening
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Pme
Grove The Rev Wilham Middlesworth
Paslor Church servtces 9 30 a m ' sun·
day SchooliO 30om
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Jerry
Pmgley !)OS lor Sunday school 9 30
mormng worsh1p 10 30 o m
a m
Wednesday evenmg servtce, 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rev Eorl Shuler
pastor Sunday school 9 30 o m Church
serv1ce 7 p m
youth meettng
6
p m Tuesdoy 81ble Study 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Thomas H Coll1er pastor Martha
Wolfe Oo1rmon of the Boord of ChrtS·
t ton Ltfe Sunday School 9 30 o m mor
ntng worshtp 10 30 Sunday evening
worsh1p 7 30 p m Prayer meeting
Wednesday 7 30 p m
RACINE: FIRST BAPTIST Don L Walker
Pastor Robert Sm1th Sunday school
supt , Sunday 1chool 9 30 a m mornmg
worship 10 40 am Sunday evening
worship 1 30 Wednesday evemng Btble
study 7 30
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rev R. 0
Brown pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m mormng worshtp 10 45, youth ser·
v1ce 6 45 p m &amp;\l&amp;nmg wonh1p 7 30
p m . prayer and pro1se Wedn&amp;sdoy
730pm
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST , Rev Mar
"'" Mork1n pastor Stev&amp; l1ttle Sunday
school supt Sunday school , 10 am
mormng worsh1p, II a m Sunday even
mg worshtp, 7 30 Prayer meeting and
Btble study Thursday 7 30 p m youth
senrtce 6 p m Sunday
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH 3B3
N 2nd Ave M1ddleport Sunday School
10 00 o m Sun ' lues Evening Serv1ces

Fnday Prayer M&amp;elmg 7 30

pm
LIBERTY Chnshon Church 4 Ltberty
Ave . Pom&amp;roy Sunday S: chool 10 o m
Worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday Serv1ce 7 30

pm
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOO Rev R E
Robmson , pastor Sundoy !Chool 9 30
a m worsh1p ser111ce 11 a m , eventng
servtce 7 00 youth sarvtce Wednes
doy700pm
LANGSVIllE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Robert E Musser pastor Sundoy school
q 30 a m Paul Musser supt mormng
worsh1p 10 30 Sunday evenmg serv1ce
7 00 l!fntd week serv1ce Wedne-sday 7

pm
SYRACUSE

CHURCH

OF

THE

NAZARENE Rev James B Ktttle pastor
Norman Presley
Sundov School
Supenntendenl
Sunday school 9 30
am
mormng worsh1p 10 45 o m
evangeliStiC stnv1ce 7 p m Prayer and
Protse Wednesday
7 p m . youth
meeting 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Elden R Bloke pastor Sundoy School 10
a m , Robert Reed sup! Morn1ng ser
mon. 11 a m
Sunday ntght servtces
Chr~stton Endeavor 7 30 p m Song ser
viCe 8 p m
Preachtng 8 30 p m
M1dweek Prayer meet1ng Wednesday 7
p m Al..,ln Reed toy leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST Located at
Rut land on New L1ma Rood neK! , to
Forest Acre Pork Rev Roy Rouse
pastor Robert Musser Sunday School
supt Sunday school 10 30 a m worsh1p
7 30 p m Btble Study Wednesday 7 30
p m Sa!urdoy night prayer serv1c:e 7 30

pm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Roger
Watson pastor M1ldred Z1egler Sunday
schoolsupt Mornmg worsh 1p ~ 30 a m
Sunday school. 10 30 a m , even1ng ser·
VICe 7 30
Ml
UNION BAPTIST , Rev
Tom
Sunday School
Dooley Joe Sayr&amp;
Supermfenent
Sunday school. 9 ,45
a m everung worsh tp, 7 30 p m Prayer
mvetmg 7 30 p m Wednesday
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
Vmcent C Waters Ill , mtntster Herman
Block supenntend.ent Sunday School
9 JO o m , eventng service 7 p m ,
Wednesday 81ble Study 7 p m
CHESTER CHURCh OF THE NAZARENE
Re\1 Herbert Grate pastor Frank Rtffle
supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Worship
serv1ce 11 o m and 1 30 p m Prayer
meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m

LAUREl

CLIFF

FREE

METHODIST

Ct-IURCH Rev Robert Mtller pastor,
Lloyd Wnght Otrvclor of Chnslton
Education Sunday School , 9 30 o m.,
Morntng Worsh1p , 10 30 o m Cho~r
Practice Sunday 6 30 p m
Evemng
Worship 7 30 p m. W&amp;dnesday Prayer
and Btble Study 7 30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Charles
Russell Sr m1mster R1ck Macomber
sup! Sunday school 9 30 a m warsh1p
serv tc.e . 10 30 am Btble Study Tuesday
730!)m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS

CHRIST

OF

LATTER

Portland Rocme Rood

DAY

Nahonw•de Ins. Co.
Cal~mbus, 0
B04 W Matn
992 · 2318 Pomeroy

at

Equl"pment

Sales and
Serv1ce

Rutland. Ohto 4S77 5
J Wm.' B11l" Brown , Own er
Phone (6141 747 ~ 11 1

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
Mtddl e&gt; por1
P11m e r ov 0

-

·-·
. ~.

' • 'u:.··

t•i

MT HERMON Untied Bretluen m
Chnst Church Rev Robert Sanders
pastor Don W1il loy leader Located tn
Te:.:as Commun1ty off CR 82 Sunday
s4:hool 9 30 am Morn1ng worshtp ser·
ll tCe 10 45 am e\len~ng preoch1ng ser.
1------:'-------~ vtce second ond fourth Sundays 7 30
p m Chnsttan Endeavor ftrst and !htrd
pastor Phyll1s Stobart Sunday School
Sundays 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
~upf Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morntng
meehng and Btble study '-7 30 p m
worsh1p 10 30 am Sunday eventng
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 37319 State
serv1ce 7 p m Wednesday eventng
Route 124 (One mile east of Rutland)
prayer serv1ces 7 30 p m
Sunday B1ble l&amp;cture 9 30 o m Wat
BETHLEt-IEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler
cht~er study 10 20 o m Tuesday Bt
pastor Worsi:Hp serv1ce 9 30 a m Sun
ble 't study , 7 30 p m , Thursday
doy school 10 30 am Btble Study and
Tt'lea~rohc School 7 30 p m
Ser vtc:e
prayer servtce Thursday 7 30 p .m
Meeltng 8 20 p m
CARLETON CHURCH Ktngsbury Rood
RUTLAND FREEWILl BAPTIST Church ~
Gory Kmg pastor Sunday school 9 30
Salem' St
Rutland Oo,old Korr Sr
a m Ralph Carl sGpertntendent even
pastor Bud Stewarl supertnl~ndent
mg worsh1p 7 30 p m Prayer meettng
Sunday School 10 am eventng wor
Wednesday 7 30 p m
sh tp 7 30 p m Wednesday even1ng ser
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Tom
vtce 7 30pm
1
Rtchason pastor Wallace Da"mewood
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy located
Sunday School SupermtMdent Worshtp
on the 0 J Wh1te Road off h1ghwoy 160
serv~ceot«Jo m B1bleSchoollOo m
Sunday School 10 a m Supenntendenl
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH Re"
John Loveday F1rst We~day ntght of
Theron Durham pastor Sunday School
month CPMA svrvtces 'lBnd Wednes
at 9 30 a m Mormng worsh1p at 10 30
day WMB meehng lhtrd lhrough ftfth
o m Thursday serv tces at 1 30 p m
youth serv1c&amp; George Croyle pastor
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ol Bold
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Gron1
Knob located on County Rood 31 Rev
Sl M1ddleporl, Sunday School lOa m
Lawrence Gluesencamp pastor Rev
mormng worsh1p II a m eventng war
Roger WlllfooSSISionl pastor Preor.:hmg
shtp 7 p m Wednesdar e"&amp;ntng 61ble
serv•c&amp;s Sunday 7 30 p \-n , prayer
sludy ond prayer meelll"tg 7 p m Af
meellng Wednesday 7 30 p m Gory
ftltated w1th Southern Bopltsl Conven
Grtlhth l&amp;odeYouth groups Sunday
!ton
ev&amp;mg 6 30 p m w 1th Roger and V1olet
BRADFORD CHURCH Of CHRIST Wtllford as leaders (ommunton ser·
Rtcky C 1lber1 pastor Steve Ptckens
VIC&amp;s first Sunday eoch month
supenntendenr Sunday School 9 30 a
WHITES CHAPEL , Coolvdle AD Rev
m Church Serv1ces 10 30 a m
Roy Deeter pastor Sunday school 9 30
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER am worsh1p servtce 10 30 n m Btble
Georges Creek Rood Rev (. J Lemley
study and prayer servtce Wednesday
pastor John Fellure sUpenntendenl
730pm
Church school 9 30 o m mornmg wor
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST Eugene
sh tp 10 30, evenmg serv1ce 7 p m B1ble
Underwood pastor Herb Eil1ott Sunday
Study Thurs 7 p m Classes for all ages
school sup! Sunday school 9 30 o m ,
Nurser y prov1ded for worshtp services
mornmg worsh1p and comunton 10 JO
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH •Cornet
om
of Sycamore and Second Sis Pomeroy
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
The Re" Wtlltom M1dd!&amp;sworth Pastor
Amos T1lhs pastor Donny T1llts Sunday
Sunday School at 9 45 a m and Church
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
ServiCes II a m
followed by mornmg worsh1p Sunday
SACRED HEART Rev Father Paul D
evemng servt&lt;.e
7 00 p m
Prayer
Welton , pastor Phone 992 2825 Satur
me-etmg Wednesday 7 00 p m
doy evemng Mass 7 30 Sunday Moss 8
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF THE
ond 10 om
ConfessiOn Saturday
NAZARENE Rev Lloyd D Gnmm Jr
7730pm
pastor Sunday school 9 30 o m wor
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N 2nd St
shtp servtc:e 10 30 a m Broadcast live
M1ddleport James E Keesee pastor
over WMPO young peoples service 7
Sunday morntng worshtp 10 a rn , even
p m E11ongelts11c servtce 7 30 p m
mg servtce 7 We-dnesday even.ng war
Wednesday servtce 7 30 p m
shtp 7 p m Vtstlat ton Thursday 6 30
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Corner of
pm
Second and APaslor Fronk Lowther Sun
TR!NITV Chrtst1on Assembly Coolvdl&amp;
day school 9 45 a m worsh1p service
Gtlbert Spencer pastor Sunday
11 o m ond 7 30 p m Weekly Bible
school 9 30 a m morntng worshtp , II
Study Wednesday 7 30 p m
o m Sundqy evemng serviCe 7 30 p m
MASON CHURCH OF Ct-IRIST , Mtller
mtdweek prayer serv1ce Wednesday
St Mason W Vo Eugene L Conger
730pm
m1n1ster Sunday Btble Study 10 om
MOUNT Ohve Commumly Church
Worshtp 11 a m and 7 p m Wednesday
Lawrenc&amp; Bush pastor Mo.: Folmer Sr
Btble Study vocal mus1c 7 p m
Supennlendent Sunday School and mor
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH - I~ North
nmg worsh1p 9 30 a m Sunday e11enmg
Thtrd St Cheshtre Independent fun·
serv1ce 7 p m Youth meeting and Btble
damentol servtces Sunday evenmg 7 30
study , Wednesday 7 p m
p m Pastor Rev Or Robert Persons
UNITED FAITH CHURCH -- Route 7 on
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD Dudd.ng
Pomeroy bypass Re11 Robert Smtth Sr
Lone Mason W Vo Rev Ronn1e 8
pastor Rev James Cund1fl osststanf
Rose Pastor Sunday School 9 45 a m
pastor Sunday School , 9 30 o m morn
Mormng Worshtp II o m Evenmg Ser·
tng worst'ttp 10 30 a m evenmg war
v1ce 7 30 p m Wednesday Women s
shtp
7 30
Women s Fellow sh1p
MmiStnes 9 am (meet1ng and prayer
Tuesdays 10 a m Wednesday n1gh1
Prayer and Btble Study 7 p m
prayer serv1ce 7 30 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF Ct-IRIST IN
FAITH BAPTIST Church Mason meet
CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev Wtll1om
at Untted Steel Workers Un1on Hall
Campbell pastor Sunday School 9 30
Ro1lroad Street Mason Morntng war
a m . James Hughes , supt even1ng ser
shtp 9 30 a m Sunday School 10 30 am
vtce 7 30 p m Wednesday evemng
Evenmg Servtce 7 p m Prayer meeltng
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Youth prayer
Wednesday 7 30 p m Mtd W eek Btble
ser111Ce each Tuesday
Study Thursday 7 p m
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Letart W
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev Nyle
Vo Rt I Mark lrwm pastor Wor$htp
poslof
Corneliu s Bunch
Borden
ser11tces 9 30 a m Sunday school 11
supermlendent Sunday school 9 30
om evening worship 7 30 p m. lues
a m second ond fourth Sunday s wor
day cottage prayer meehng and Btble
shtp serviCe ot 2 30 p m
study
9 30 am Worsh1p service
MT MO~IAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Mom St M1ddleport Rev Colvm Mm
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now located
n1s pastor Mrs Elv1n Bumgardner
on Pomeroy P1ke County Rood 25 near
supt Sunday school 9 30 o m wor shtp
Flatwoods Re" Blackwood pastor Ser·
ser..,1ce , 10 45 am
v1ces on Sunday at 10 30 a m and 7 30
BURliNGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
p m w1fh Sunday school 9 3Q.oo m 81ble
CHURCH Route I Shade Pastor Don
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
Black Affllll:~ted w 1th Southern Bapt tst
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH
Convention Sunday school I 30 p m
INC Pearl St
Middleport Rev
Sundgy worsh1p 2 30 p m Tliursdoy
0 D•ll Manley pastor Sunday school
evenfng 81ble study 7 p m
9 30 am , Morntng worsh1p 10 3D om
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY
Rac:tne
evenmg worshtp 7·30 p m Tuesday
Route 124 W1lltom Hoback pa stor Sun
12 30 p m Wom•n's prayer meetm~
day school, lOam Sunday evenmg ser :
Prayer ond praiSe service, Wednesday
v1ce b 30 p m Wednesday eemng ser •
7l0pm
vlca 7
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
CARPENTER s.-.PTIST Re" Fr&amp;eland
JESUS CHRIST Elder James Miller B1b!e
Norns , pastor Don Ci'.eodle , Supt Sun
study, Wednesday . 1 30 p m ~. Sunday
day School 9 30 a m Mornmg Worsh1p
School , 10 a m Sunday night service
10 30 a m Prayer Service alternate
730pm
Sundays
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAl , Th1rd
Hormon\lllle Road , Earl f1elds pastor
A"e lt!e R&amp;v Clark Bok&amp;r , pastor Corl
Henry Eblm , Jr , Sunday School Supt
Nottingham, Sunday School Sup! Sun
Sunday School 9 30 o m . Motnmg Wor·
day ·School 10 a m - classes lor all
shtp 11 o m , Sunday eventng serv~c:e
ages Eventng servtces , 6 00 Wed·
7 30 m , Prayer Meeting Thursday 7 30
nesdoy Study 7 30 p m Youth ser..,tces
pm
7 30 P·!" Frtday
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOO Not Pentecostal. A•v George 01ler.
ECCLESIA FEllOWSHIP 128 M1ll St
postor . Worth~p nrvtC41 Sunday , 9 AS
Midd&amp;.port Pastor 1s Brother Chuck
McPh.,.son Sunday School at 10 a m
a .m. Sunday school . 11 a m . wanhip
serviCe 1 30 p m Thursday proy•
S.Ntc•s Sunday evening at 7 p m and
W41dnesday ot7 p m
meetmg , 7 30 p m
· for A Real Auchon
{ ,,11 the Real McCoy"
1 0 " Mac" McCoy
t&lt;'t 1, Reedsville, Oh
9HS JY44

lett with empltnMS

7 30 p m

.,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

P 0 ED 1102( C.... IOIIU •til VwQIIU nt0e

ALFRED Sunday School 01 9 45 a m
Mormng Worshtp ot 11 om Youth 6 30
p m Sundays Wednesday N1ght Prayer
Meet1ng 7 30 p m
ST PAUL (Tuppers Plains) Sunday
School 9 00 a m Morntng Worship at
10 00 am 81ble Study 7 30 p m lues
day
SOUTH BETHEL (Stiver Rtdgv) Sunday
School q 00 am Mornmg Woshtp 10 00
a m Wednesday B1ble Study 7 30 p m
KENO CHURCt-1 OF CHRIST Oliver
Swmn, Sup&amp;nntendent , Sunday school'
9 30 every week
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Sunday
School 9 30 a m Evenm9 servtce 7 30
p m Wedne-sday prayer meettng 7 30

.

Complete
Automotive
ser111Ce
Locust &amp; Beech c ......~.
992 9921 Middleport

SouW"III'I&amp; life Is like that 5I10Wffi8ll grand aM glittering with 1111 the things we
nave Then the hot winds ol disaster blow
and lhErit impol1ance vantShes and wtt are

SIOf'll

m
..

ElliS &amp; SONS SOHIO

.'

GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Racme 949·25SO

Main St Netl Proudfoot pastor Bible
school ~ 30 o m , morn1ng worsh1p
10 30 am , Youth meettngs 6 30 p m
evemng worship, 7 30 Wednesday n1ght
prayer meeting and 81ble study 7 30

IiiDECEMBER 4 thru 10J

So\lltniJS &amp;

216 5. Second
Pomerov
992 3325

• •

~

SONS SlORE

' GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

ffliDAY 1/ru THIIRSDAY f 1

Alh~n1·

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

WAID CROSS

vtce, Wednesday, 7·30p m

AU SEAfS JUST I 150
4DIWSSICW EVERY TUE&amp;w.r I I 50

FMmPriY

216 E Mam

..

Reuter-Brogan Insurance

-

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.
461 S, Thtrd, Nolddleport
991 2196

Phone 992·3480 ..:.':l; "

Thursday

Pomeroy

214E Matn
992 51JO Pomeroy

Phone 992· 6304
126 E Mc11n

151 1-4

Frtdsy

BAKERY

dpy school 9 30 o m Glen McClung
st.pt • mornmg worship 10 30 a m :

n

'

.....

510 N 2nd
Mtddleporf
992· 3451

Tuesday

•

Malfflew

E

R..,, Clyde V Henderson pastor Sun

iMROA.W Mtr/NEES ON SAT a SUN

I

Eatlnor
Carry 01Jf

992 66SS

RIDENOUR

eventng serv•ce

w. Mam

881 10

Pomerov

992 2955

212

Pomeroy, Ohto

NAZARENE Corner Un1on and Mulberry

992-2641

Next toE lberfelds In Pomeroy

Ph . 992-2101

KERMIT'S KORNER

POMEROY

•

M AtN

MDfldsy
Psalms

John F. Fultl, Mgr. '

Cl01HING HOUSE :lv':,;

Tuesday 7 30 p m under dmt&lt;;t•on of
AI tee Nease

~"
I~
,.

Make tile holldoya

MIDDLEPORT BOOKSTORE

,,. -&gt;1

pastor, Oebb1e Buck , Sunday school
supt. Church S&lt;:hool , 9 15om. worsh1p
service 10 30 o m Cho.r rehearsal.

Syracuse, Oh.
NOW OPEN FOR
CHRISTMAS SEASON
Poinsettias-51.00 &amp; Up
Christmas Wreaths, Can·
die Arrangements, Christ·
mas Cactus, Foliage Plan·
ts &amp; Hangmg Baskets.
Open Daily 9 to 5
Sun.1 loS
Phone 992·5776

Jo\CQUELINE IISS£T CANDICE BERGEN

717 F

1

Prescnphons

TRINITY CHURCH , Rev W H Pernn

RICH and
FAMOUS
-~· ~
IRI

GIVE A LASTING GIFT

1 \(

\.\ CENTER, INC.

~~~~

GIFTS
Middleport

NEW YORK

MEIGS TIRE

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

'tis the seasoD for
starfire love

We Al10 Do Imprinting

"Mill St.

·"

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
Church &amp; Ollke Supplies

l

The officers for 1982 will be elected :'
and annual financial deciSiOns will :
he made.

POMEROY - The annu~i
Chnstmas t.hnnet of the Pomeroy
Umted MethodiSt Church Women
w1ll be held at 6 p.m. Monday at
the Me1gs Inn. It 1s open to all
membe1 s and thetr guests
Followml!, the dmncr the group
wi ll go to the church for a brief
busmc!)s sessiOn, a pro~ram and
the exchange of $1 humorous g1f·
ts New stlent praye1 partners
wt1l named

Prints and Gift Ecrttions

usm CARS, INC.
CheSter

''

"

~rge

FRIDAY NIGHT 5:00.8:00

RIGGS

.

Iva Powell reported on $ new i
storage place for the club owned)
hospital eqwpment. A $30 donation:
was acknowledged.
:
For games the group drew turkeys';
m the dark w1tb Mrs.~ an~ Mrs. 1
Robson winmng for the best •
drawings.
,1
l
The 90th birthday of 1DeUa Curtis l
was observed w1th cake and ice:
cream and the group sang "Happy l
Bn-thda'y" to her.
1
Ida Mash donated crutches, a bed ;
pan, and a sitz bath to thelclub. Next •
meeting will be a potluck supper at !
the home of Mrs. Fetty on Dec. 10 at :
6.30 p.m. There will be a $3 gift ex- !
change. Robin Campbell was a :
visitor.
"

The Interested Businesses Listed On ThU.

ThU. Messgge and Church

POMEROY

Choose From Our Selection
Thompson-Chain
Scofield, Nelson Open Bible

STOREWIDE
2Q%0FF

!'Y

TONIGHTthru
THURSDAY

C!)MGM

RUSS AND the Gospel Tones to
be featured at Reedsville
Methodist Church Sunday al
10 30 a.m. Pubhc mv1ted to at·
tend.

l&gt;ership of the Laurel Cliff Better
Health Club during a recent meeting
of the Laurel Cliff Belter Health
Club held at the home of Polly
Eichinger.
1
Ruby Frick had the opening
prayer and Donna Gibnore gave )
devotions using scrtpture from ~
Psalms 105.
Readings included ~
"Thanksgiving" by Jean Wright, ~
"Chryssnthemwns"
Marge Fet- ~
ty "! Sa1rl a Prayer for You Today" I.
by' Bertha Parker, and "Something \
Told the Wild Goose" by Ann Mash. :

COl .0,) · ,
•

fXPERIENCE 111f JOY Of RELIGION ~

-

Churches to hold mock trial

Sunday

COME SEE THE PARADE

CHRISTMAS SALE

sentinel of the Graod Council of
Royal and Select Masters of Ohio,
'and also a member ofthe Kmghts d
the York Cross of Honor; James
Buchanan , hi~h priest, Pomeroy
Chaprer 80, Royal Arch Masons, also
a member of the Knights of the York
Cross of Honor; Dan Arnold,
•llustrious master of Bosworth Coun·
cll48, Royal and Select Masters, and
commander of the Ohio Valley Commandary 25, Knights Templar
Initiatory work was exemplified
for Kri.stlll8 Kim Adams. The Bethel
voted to contribute $100 to the grand
guardian's project of providmg
hearing aids for children. The
librarian read "Friendship" and the
mother, father and guardian's
prayers and song were g1ven. Mr.
and Mrs. Jun Adams, parents of the
candidate were presented. Zandra
Vaughan, honored queen, presented
the inspecting officer with a gift and
extended thanks to her ofl1cers. The
inspecting officer commented on the
work and noted that money received
m November will go to the Wisconsin
Fund for one of the grand officers
whose possessions were lost in a fire.

TheDa

SA INTS

Wtlltom Roush

Sermonette
WHAT IS ADVENT ANYWAY?
A quest1on like this may ~eem a bit strange We church people just
aulomat1cally th1nk everyone 15 fam11iar wtth church terms Not So
Maybe we need to expla1n more
Advent means "ARRIVAL" Of course we say, it 1s as simple as
that It has a very deep meantng when we associate itw1fh the com1ng,
, the arrtval In Bethlehem, and the birth of Jesus Christ The nativity of
the blessed Chr1st Chtld 1S someth1ng to celebrate That 1s why we have
"ADVENT", the four sundays before Christmas It is a season of
preparation, getting ready We think of decoratl/lg 01.1r homes. chur·
ches, c1ty streets .!lind havtng part1es
Whenever an Important person comes to our home, our church, or
our' town, we usually get ready for them We sweep and clean and put
our best foot forward We want everything to be just right So tt IS for
Christ and Chnstmas
Ever read Isaiah the prophet? He cried out1n (40.3) '"Prepare ye
the way of the Lordt ''Our hearts do respond if we are bel1evers, ' 'Yes,
Lord, we are expecting Thee Come mto our hearts and homes and
lives "
,
Ouf churches procla1m th1S glad message of the arrl'val Of a Ch1ld
born in a stable tn that small town, Bethlehem . We use this" Advent"
season to prepare our hearts and homes and churches and com
munlhes for His coming. Let's all1oln 1n the anticipation of th1s great
celebration of Christmas The Birthday of our K1no He ts coming
aga1n. Let's all prepare tM way for Hts comma.
Rev W1lliam Mlddleswarth
Me1gs County Lutherltn Churches

l

�;'

Page- 10- The Da11y Sentinel

Mrs. Ben Rife, Middleport, Richard

Edgar Wolfe , Grant St., Middleport.
He received gifts and cards.

.·

Martin

Manley
A party was l;eld recently in observance of the first birthday of Carl
Steven Manley J r., son of Sieve and
Dorcas Manley, Middleport.
Garnes were played with prizes
going to David Manley, Christina
Manley, Tracy Manley , and Angie
George. A Teddy Bear cak" baked
by his rents

WHS

scrvt~d

Brooks, Sr., Colwnbus; Mr. and

Mrs. Edward Mullins, Missy and
Kenny Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Jamod Milliron, Matthew and
Justin, ReedsviUe; Mr. and Mrs.
Riehm d Brooks, Jr., Lorrie, Cindy
and .Bill Morris, Grove City; Diane
and Tanuny Milliron, carla and
Becky Rife, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Jacobs, Gene, Miners·
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Edward·Dailey,
Long Bottom; Mrs. Marie Milliron,
Middleport ; Mrs. Vicky Macomber
and Chip, Cheshire.
Sending gifts ' were a granddaughter, · Mrs. Janet George,
Richard, Cissy, and Shawn, Colum·
bus; Mrs. Grace Tinunons, Coltonbus; Susan and Cne Gary. A large
birthday cake inscribed "Happy Bir·
thday, Mom" with all of the names
of tbe children 'and the grandchildren inscribed on jt was served
to the guests.
Mrs. Rife has foUr children, nine
grandchildren,
eight
greatgrandchildren, and three sleJ&gt;-g reat·

•..

Others

attending

Debbie

Geo rge ,

\'

Sheets
Wright

were . Jonda

a n~

Margaret McDaniel.
Sending giits were the Rev. an&lt;1
Mrs. Odell Manley and the Rev . and
Mrs. David Light,

Martin
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Martin, 740

Oliver St., Midtlleporl, enl0r-.ined
on Thanksgiving Day with a party in
celebration of the lOth birthday of
thl!ir grandson, Troy All en Martin of
Charleston, W. Va. His birlhday is
on Christmas

~t~

Rife

g randpe~rents,

and Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Luginbill,
Deca tur . Ind ., great-grandparents.

..

Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wright entertained recently with a party in observance of the 12th birthday of their
daughter, Tammy, with a dance party held at the Riverboat Room of tbe
Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
A doll cake and.a sheet cake, with
a disco theme inscribed "HaPPY 12th
Birthday" was served with chips,
iee crewn and pop. , Prizes were
awartled to Chip Werry, Dee Hen·
derson,_Bryan Korn, Kim Calvert,
Tracy Shoulderer.

De~ y.

Others attending the dinner were
his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
J ames haley, Rutland, and his
greal-gnmdparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Mrs. Bertha Rife celebrated her
85th birthday on Thanksgivin~ Day
with a surprise dinner and family
gathering at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Milliron, Leading
Creek Road.
Mrs. Rife was presented gifts and
flow ers with red roses coming from
her gr·anddaughter, ai1 arrangement
from her children, and a pompom
mwn from her grea t-grandchildren.
She was also presented a corsage of
red and while roses by Mr. and Mrs.
Ron Reynolds and Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Russell.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Milli~on, Miss Boni1ie Rife. Mr. and

Sheets
Mr. and Mrs. David Sheets,
Pomeroy , entertained recently with .
.a party honoring their daughter,
Mandi Lynn, on her seventh birthday.
.
The Strawberry Shortcake theme_
was carried out in the decorations
anti the cake which was baked by
her aunt, Mrs. Sandy Needs. Each
child received a treat at the party.
Attending were Betsy Ann Sheets,

Others· attending were Greg
Fields, Gary Hysell, Jason Wright,
Jeff Holtz, Mark Elliott, John Britton, Dena Manley, Shelly Wolfe,
Kim Hamm, Shelly Stobart, Tina
Riffle, and Julie Baily.
Sending gifts were. Anthony
Wilson, and Teresa Johnson. The
girls went to the Wright home
following the dance for a slwnber
and pizza party.

specialty. Oitcher or
Trench Service.
Gas &amp; water Lines

JIM LUCAS
PH, 742-2753

. Roun c , Marie Williams
celebrated her fourth birthday on
Oct. 31 with ·a party given by her
parents, Terri and Rocky Williams,
Hysell Run, Pomeroy. A Halloween
. tbeme was carried out and guests
were served cake, ice cream and
punch.
· Attending were ·her grandfather,
Edwin Ash, her grandparents Ray
and Iris Williams, Skip and Connee
Enslen, Richard,' Pennee and Courtnee Knopp, Mark, '!'rudy and Kasey
Willia1ils.
Presenting gifts were her grandmother, Martha Ash, her grlll!tgrandmother, Florence Baer, and
Roger and Ronda Ketchwn:

Lyon.s

I..,- _; '

KLUB
Ordtt
NDW lor
c~rtstmas:
G.itfl tor Golfers
Diluunt Prices on
Slolrll; Windbreakers,
Swulen, Socks,
Ponts, Shoes
~s•-'
rtgame practice
.. nu
*Prop-Golf lessons for
all ages
Repair: Cleaning.:
refinishing, new grips
lengthchange, _
Weight change
Fastservice

*
*

*

..

Birilis

'*

•

•6drawing
Free lessons

Mr. and Mrs. Dale Wilfong; Reedsville, are announcing the birth of
their first child, a daughter, Sari
Elizabeth Colleen, born on Sept. 25
at Camden-Clark · Hospital in
Parkersburg, W. Va. The infant
weighed eight pounds, 12 ounces.
Mrs. Wilfong is the fonner Robin
Elkins.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and. Mrs. David Elkins, Tuppers
Plain~.
Maternal
greatwandparents are tbe late Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Lance and Mrs. Flora
Elkins, Rockledge, Fla.
Paternal grandparents are Mrs.
Lena Wilfong Jackson, Steubenville
and the late Ernesl Wilfong, and the

Mr. ·and Mrs. RaYI11ilnd Lyons,
Jr.-, Parkersburg, W. Va . .are announcing the birth of a son,-Travis
Ray, born on Oct. 25 at the camdenClark Hospital in ParkersbUrg, W.
Va. The infant weighed seven. poun·
ds, 12 ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Lyons
have a daughter, Misty Dawri, two.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Connolly,
Tuppers Plains, are the maternal
grandparentss and Hazel
and
.
Raymond Lyons, Sr.; Parkersburg,
W. Va., are the paternal- grandparents. Great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Schultz, TuJ&gt;pers Plains. Mrs. Lola Griffin, TuJ&gt;pen. Plains, is af great-greatgrandmother.
•
.(

Small.,investment, large :· return. Sentinel Want Ads

MOD· JU 1 Row

·-----------·-c_:u
, bli c Notice
_ ___,P

.

!f"pTnlsAdfor

. tul•IRA•I•Nrenc(• E
AP~
.

S·c.,;
t!oftVICE

K Young
en
For Fast Service
985-3561
II

·
cE
PAR~~~~~~~RVI
.,

~

•Wosnors
•Dryers
•R--•
-··•Dis~sols
Dl
Tonks
·••Hot
• Woter
wo "'an

-· r----------------------1
l Curb Inflation
I
lI
Pay Cash for
, ·II Classifieds and

,.

.

(Pomeroy
Iron

&amp; Metal)
Now picking up junk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid .(or auto bodies,
scrap iron and metals..
1 mile west of Faergrounds on qld Rt. 33.
Mon.-Fri. 8:30 to4 :00
2 6564
Ph.99·

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Hta.ftr Cort to the
Lorgost Rldiotor.

AND CUSTOMIZING
Re-Btue and R•Finish
Restock. parts, etc.
Order Guns 10%
Above Wholesale

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 vrs. Experience

I
I

I

I

I

Savel
II
ord~

Ca11After4P.M .
992-7656
11121mo

. .

l Name

I

1 Address

1

II Phone

I

I

Print one word in each
I space
below. Eac h in ·
I t lti al or group of figures
I counts as a word . Count
1 name and address . or
1 phone number if used .
' ll get better results
I ifYouyou
describe f ully,
I give price. :r he Sentinel

I classi
reser ves
1
f y,

•

GRAVEL

·

D&amp;D ,
WELDING SHOP
REPAIR WORK
•Gas &amp; Electric
•Cutting
•Brazing
•20 Yrs. Exp.
Reasonable Rates
866 South Third
Middleport, Ohio

......:Addons and
remodeling
.....,.Roofing onCI gutter

,.

- ,...

I
I

) Wanted
JFor Sa le
)Announcement
) For Rent

1
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t.

2

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3.
4.

1 5. •
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1 14.
I 15. · - - - - - - - -

116. ------------

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--+-+-'+--t--i

eRENTALS
~'-Hous~llor Rent

&amp; Al.lction

~~t~~~~~~~~

Oh. 45769

Jl- H0 uSeholcl Gooch
n - ca, T\1, RaCiio equipm ent

Sl- Aotiquu
~•-Misc. Merchandill!

II - Help Wanltd
11-Situatlon wamed

B - 8ulld i nt Supplies

ll - lnsu ran ce
~~ - Business

56-Pets for Sale

Tra ini ng

S7- Mus ka llonlrument
SI- Fruits I \lelellbJes

15- Schoo'ts Instruction
11- Ridlo, TV,
&amp; CB R e pa ir
11-:Wanted To Do

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17.
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18 .
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19,
1
20.
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3t.
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n
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33.
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34. - - - ----~ .I
35. - - - - - - - -

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

59- For Sale or Tnde

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

e FINANCIAL

61 - Farm EquiPment
n - WIInfed tO Bu~
Ol- Ltvntock
,!.ale
14- Hay&amp; Gra,n
es- 5eed &amp; Fertilizer

2t - Busineu
OpportuntiV

22- Mone.,. to Lo an
H - Profenian;u '
Se rv icl's

e TRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

7l-Vansi4W .O.

tor hie

H-Motorcyclel

Jl- F.armt tor Sale
34 - &amp;~o~ si n en Build!ngs
H - L ou &amp; Acreo~q e
3' Relll E"&lt;lle Wan!NI

75-Roah I ¥otors
" 16-AUIO PUIS &amp;

J1- Rjaltor'

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines
Mcnally 2 ·00on S&lt;'! lu n:la~

Tuhdlv lhru Frido~y ! :oa ... .M,
the day Oelore ~ublltaUon '
Sunday i 1lXI P .M. r:=rido~y

I

Lost andFoUrid- -

7' - Avtos for hie
n- Tr ue~ s lor S.ie

lt - H 0 mes. tor Sillt
ll- Mobile Homes

Acc•uor'ivs
17-AUID Repl ir
71- CAmping Eqvlpment

SERVICES
e1 - H 0 me l mprovemenh
11-Piumbing &amp; H11t1nt
IJ- E•C.IIIIIint
14- EIIctrlull

Relrift!'Utlon

15- Gerterat Heulint
16- M . H . Aep;ilir
·,,_Uphelllery

Classified Ads

Rates and Other Informal: on
Up to I Swords , .. one day inurttoa .

Up to I~ word s ... three d1 r irnertion . .... .

I
1

.. u .oo

bring you

.. ••.oo

Up to 15 wo.ards ... siJC CliVI inse rll on ... .
... 11 .00
(AYirllll• words Ptr line/
Mobil• Home saiH and Ya!11 Hill lrl ICCIPteCI OIIIV Wiftl c•sh
with order . 2S cent cf11r'9t for HI urr'filll Box N~tmblr in Can''

I

I

extra cash
for

Th1 S.nllnel.

·
Ttll Publis hlr re..nu fltl rttllt toecllt or rtiOC:f 1nr Mil dMmtd
ebite:llon.l . The PuiMilftl"r will nat bl r•spcuulll..,lor mwa ftlen Ofla
lncorrtct lnsP · i~n .

I

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

-------

remove , abate, !&gt;uspend,
tz; thence north along the
alter or otherwise improve w est line of said Witliam
th~ real estate herein and
Bentz lot to the center of
detnand that said nuisan·
the road leading past
ces be corrected by a
Willia(D Bentz' house;
proper party and if not, the
th!nce in a westerly direc·
costs of same be assessed tion along the center of the
against th e property and road to the west line of Sec·
made a ilen upon the real t ion 24 ; thence south along
es tate. and costs of this ac · the weSt l ine of said Section
tion . The real estate is to the place 9f beginning,
containing 3.65 acres, be
de~cribed as follows :
Sit uated in Orange Town · thE' same more or less.
ship, M eiys County, Ohio
REFERENCE
DEED :
Company s
Purchase , Vol. 211 , Page 39, Meigs
Town 4, Range 12, begin · County Deed Records .
ning at the southwest cor·
You are required to an·
ner of Section 24 ; thence in swer the complaint within
an east erl y direction along twenty -eight days after the
the center of the- road to a !fast pubticafion ot this
lot. owned by William Ben· notice, namely , by not later
than the Sth day of
January; 1981. or judgnient
by default Will be rendered
against you.
·
Fred W. Crow, Ill,
Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney
Cll l 6, 13, 20, 27, (12) 4, 11 ,
6tc
·

41- Mabile Homes
lor lient
44-A parrments lor REnt
45-Fu rnished Rooms
t6- Spacelor Rent
4) - Wanled ID Rent
• •-E qui pment lor A en!
4'- For Leue

t-Want•d to Bu v

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy,

eANNOUNCEMENTS

~---·

- ___ _! ublic fi.oti~-

NEW LISTINO_: MID·
DL.EPOIH - 1 , ~EGAL
'QUAliTY - ffistori&lt;;al
10 room hOUse with 3·4
bedrooms, sun 1 room
with wall of 1stained
glass windows, '
rooms with 6 fireplaces,
marble and lovely wOOd
facings . 2117 baths,
remodeled
kitchen .
S3S,OOO.oo.

shopplna sprus

Sue P. Murpfty
Heten L. Tel lord

Sh Riclil Rd.,
Eastern HIP School

Gordon B. Teofonl

'
'

I'

I

/~, ',,'l/1/{1,

,·

Let

George Miller
check vour present elec·
tricil svstem.
·
Residenlial
&amp; Commercial

'.
,''

call

f"ORTLA~

-

Custom kitchens and appliances,
custom
bathrooms. remodeli.(lg,
plumbin, electr1c, and
heating.

.,

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH . 992-6011

"2-7656

Concret work
- Plumbing ond
electrial work
(Free Estimates)

V. C.

YOUNG

Ill

992-6215 or 092-731A
Pom..-v-, , Ohio • ·30.tlc

PH,

992-5643
11 ·6· 1 mo.

NOW
OPEN

276SycamoreS1.
"o
Middleport , Oh 1
9 21 ti c

ALL STEEL'
BUILDINGS
Sizes start from 30x'l:4' i,
SMALL
·

ROOFING

4

And Home Main.tenlnce
•Rooflnt of all types
•Sidlnt

•Remodeling

•FrH utlm1tes
•H y n . eKperlence

bedr oom ranch' Home
with attathect sinQie car
garage,
l lf2
baths.
workshop, utility, woOd:
· burnt;r to augment elec tric rad iant 'Ceiling heat .
Nice home. $43.500.00 ,

TOM HOSKINS
Ph M9·116001'9•t· 2412

'

IHNTAL
IN·
VE!iTMf.NT- Thi'ee 2
bedroom Uftfts ·-v.-llh
separate , 111-iltiJies .
Glazed btOo:l{ hll.dtlg littlp maintenance. Full
base.,.,i11. S:N,soo.oo.
" .;
'
RlALTQI!S
Henry E. Ctetanct, Jr.

Utility Buildings

CALL:

POMEROY
LANDMARK

You 'II
tract It down

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

7-1-lfC

WANT AD

•
54

PRICED RIGHT.

Misc. Merchandlce

CALL TODAY!

OFF SEASON RATE!S120WEEKLY
$400 MONTHLY
Roles bosecl on double

SHAG CARPET
3 Rolls to
Pick From

2'

~un

No hunting or trespa ssi ng
day or night on the Charles
E . Yost and lvah Well far ·
ms.
Birchfield's

Taxidermy

Deer heads mounted . East
of Rutland on 12.4. 614·742·
2178.

Good Selection
Kitchen
Rubber Backeil
cash 'n' Carry
Brown, Blue
STARTING AT

'4~

we still have plenty of ap·
pies at F itzpatrick . Or·
chard, SR689. Phone 61.4·
669·3785.
Deer heads mounted with
experience and care. Con·
tac t Perry Ken nedy 614·
742 -2927.
Gun shoot at the Rutland
Amer ic an
Legion . · 12
o'clock Sunday . Factory
chock guns on ly.

134.95
l'U79.95
lltl.fti-JI"

CASH PAID for clean, l ate
model used cars. Smith
Buick· Pontia, , GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call446'2282 .
BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
paying cash for anything
stamped 10K, 1.4K, 18K. and
dental gold . Class rrngs,
· wedding rings, sliver coins
or
anything
stamped
sterling . · Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
992 ·2054 in Pomeroy1
Junk cars with .or without
motor s, a nd batteries . Call
388 ·9303 .
Buying
Gold ,
Silver,
Platinum, old coins, jcr~ p
rings &amp; silverware. 'Oally
quotes available. Also
coins &amp; co in supplies for
sale.
Spring
Valley
Trading , spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 or 446·8026.
Will do house cleaning or
babysitting , live in or just
care for elderly . Call 446·
4423 .
Wantt&gt;d to buy motor for
1976 Honda Civ ic . Ca ll 256·
6652 .
We pay cash f or late mode l
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnson.
446·0069.
BEDS-IRON , BRASS, old
furniture, gold , sliver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc.,
Complete
households .
Write : M .D. Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy,, Oh . Or 992· 7760

POSITIVILY no hunt ing on
th e old H. C. Brown Farm
oppos i te Raci ne l ocks
Le tar t, WV . Signed B i ll M cDaniel.

CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end . $12·.50 per ton . Bundled
s lab. S10.50 per ton .
Deliverd to Oh io Pallet Co.,
R ock
Springs
Rd. ,
Pomeroy . 992·2689.

DEER -skinned, cut, wrap·
ped. Call Cisco, 304·675·
1498.

· LAFF- A- DAY

. Yd.

Gold, silver. sterling,
Jewelry, rings, old c;olns &amp;
c urrency. Ed Burkett Bar·
b'" Shop, Middleport . 992·
3476.
Industrial sewing machine .
614-742 ·2656 .
Raw furs, hides, scrap
metals,
batteries ,
radiators, g inseng, yell~w
root, and merchandiSe
brokering. Harper·Halste·
ad Sal vage Company, 300
E leventh Str eet . 675·5868 .
A lso Flea Market open
daily .
Ope n MondayFriday 1·5 pm .

' Buy Now &amp; save.S2·S6 Per Yard

' From

I

"I think .I've

LOCUST posts, 8 fl. tong .
4, small lip-chip poles. 304·

11et It every Unoe the INIY1ft- 675-6325 afh)r 6 p.m .

12·3·1 mo. lid.

•re due! "

.,

\

aot cat aicknea.

.

'

Help Wanted

Why se ttle lor less. Sell t he
best. Sel l Avon. For more
informa ticm ca ll 446·3358 or
742·2354 .
Pinecr es t Care Center now
acce pting app li ca t ions for
RN ' s·LPN 's. Immed ia te
opening f or LPN with phar·
macology, 11 ·7 shift. Con·
t ad Judy Holley R N DON.
446·711 2. EOE.
Jacques Seed Co .. Dealers
needed in Ga llia Co. Far·
mers earn extr'a money , no
i n 11estme nt r equ ired .
Phone 245·9174 . E mory or
Mary Wetherholt .
GE T VALUAB L E training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tine I route carri er. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992 ·2 157.
F uller Brush Represen·
tative in your area. Call
304·273·4559 or write Rt.l,
Box 243, Ravenswood ,
W.Va. 26164 .
Insurance agent w_ith top
c;om,pany . Male or femat~ .
training program, pa 1d
vaca ti on.
r e t irement.
hospi ti lizarion, gua ranteed
salary while in trai ning.
Potential of $.20 ,000 in first
year . Adva ncement. Cal l
6·14-592·2073 or write . D . L.
Vorhees, Di stri ct Manager,
Box 20, Athens, Ohio 45701 .
NEED
IMMEDIATELY.
Dependable person who
can work without · super·
vision i n Pt . Plea sa nt area.
We train. Write T .H. Dick,
Pres ..
Southwestern
Petro leum, Box 789, Ft.
wor1h , Tx . 76101 .
CHRISTIAN lady nee ded t o
work i n pe r sonal care
home. Live-In nece5sa ry:
Write Sox C-27 in care of
Pt. Pleasant Register .

Stolen Property. Antique
kitchen safe. Antique
dining room cabinet. Two
rocking chairs. Other
items . Anyone kn~ing or
seeing this lurniture being
hauled in the vicinity of
Flafrock, WV on October 10
or later, a liberal reward is
offered. 675·1302.

Rolls Carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpel installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Rem nants $2.50 up.

FOR CHRISTMAS
. 14 Avollnlo
Madt from Ced•r.
crprou, Walnut &amp;
CMrn&lt;.

ii

(

hen .the snow pi
high, .,oull ~hoW
omforring it is to haW!
f'RIHIDLY NICE GuY
tor dependable
fATING OIL SERVICE

II t~ I

·&amp;as

_.

[t (

.

~un .

No hunt ing or treSpassing
on the following f a rms.
Alma Peterson, Bill Cion·
ch, Louise Eden, Rutland
Townsh ip.

e

1-304-675-6276

macy , Gallipolis .
. Lost: Dog Wed. on Si lver
No trespassing, no hunt ing, Ridg e Rd. Eastern High
no motorcycles or dirt
bikes on the H. C. Waugh Sc hool.~ 14·985·3818.
!arm. Trespassers will be 7
Yard Sate
prosecuted , Addison Twp .
'-~-'-"""""-'"--Heated Garage Sale-First
time this year . To many
For bulk delivery of variety of items to list. 9
g' asoline, hea ting oil and AM till 5 PM, Sat . 8.
d iesel fueL call L andmark, Dec. 5th &amp; 6th . Paul Den·
_ 1. Pomeroy, Oh .
nov ' s corner ol554 and Bid ·
992 218
well, Rodney Road in "Bi d ·
wel l, Oh io.
Gun Shoot Racine
1
Club. Every Su n. sar
on g
a t 1 p.m . Fa ctory choke Patr iot·Cadmus Rd off 775.
gunsonly .
Clothes, dishes . bicycles.
and tools. Christmas items,
TRAPS an d T RAPPING and antiques. Dec. 4th &amp;
5th , Hea t ed bu ilding ,
supplies
. Gene
Hines,
Amesv
ille.
Oh io. 614·448·
BASEMENT SALE 37
6747. Daily after l p .m.
Evans Heights. Furniture,
Remington typewr it er,
Racine Fire Dept. sponsors
d·raperies, bedspreads,
a Gun Shoot, Sal. nights
crafts,
Christmas
6 :30p.m ., 8ashan. Factory
decorations, &amp; clothing.
choke 12 guage shotgun .
1 :00 p.m .-6: 00p .m ., Saturday .

No hunting with or without
written permission on the
Kenneth Hartley Farm,
Bunker Hill , Pomeroy.

VInyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnSulatlon
• Storm Doors
• Storrri Windows
Replacement
Windows
·.Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
11-12-1 mo.

OCCUINtOCy.

TRAPPE.R We have a com plete l ine of trapping sup- Mother (good mouser) &amp;
plies. Traps, dye, wax, and k itt ens. Ca tl .446·1248 after
lvres .
Spring
Valley 4PM .
Trading Co., Spr ing Valley
Plaz a. -4-46·8025.
6
Lost and Found
Control hunger and 1ose
LOST
Minature
b lack male
weight with New Shape
poodl
~.
Lost
lr.
Garfield·
·Diet Plan and Hydres
Water p · 11s. F ru th Phar· Por tsmouth Rd . area . Ca ll
1
446·2457 .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54.
Ra ~ine, Oh .
Ph\ 614·843·2591
6· 15-ttc

11

Giveaway

A NY PERSON Who has
anything to give away and
Announcements
does not offer or attempt to
offer anv oth er thing for
SWEEPER and sewing sale may place an ad in thi s
mach ine r epair, parts, and column. There will be no
Pick up and charge to the advertiser.
supplies.
delivery, Davis Va_cuum
Cl ea ner, one half mtle up
Georges Creek Rd, Call Fem.al e kitten to give away
w i th litter box. Ca ll after
446·0294 ..
3:30, 388 ~ 9934 .

Truckloads of m erchandi se coming in day of s_ale .
Don' t fOrget our r eg ular sa le ever:y Saturday n1g~t
at7 :00p, m.
·
.
•
Not responsible lor acc•dents .
Terms of Sa le: C.i!Sh or check with posi ti v_e I. D .
Auctioneer: Don Ross er

.J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

SCOTTISH INNS

4

before Christmas. Call Bob
Grubb, 446·4525,
Texas Oil Company needs
matu re person tor short
trips surrondlng Gallipolis
area. Conta ct cus tomers.
We t rai n. Write T. G. Dick ,
Pres .
Southwester n
Petrole um, Ft. Worth ,
Texas. 76101 .

In Ma son County

Flea
Market.
New
Opening . 7 days a week.
The Heart of Middleport . 28
N . 2nd St. formerly Martin
·General Store. 992 ·6370.

5!1- yd . inslaltecl

Roger &amp; Dott~ Tutner
Jean TruueHfle9·2660
•OFFICE f91·2259

water-Sewer·E lectric
Gas Line· Ditches
Water Line Hook·ups
Septic T1nks
county Certilled
Roush Lane
Chtshl re, Oh.
• Ph. 367-7560
I· 7·1

992·2156

Special Christmas Sale
December 5, starting at 2:DO P . M.
Continuing throughout the evenrng
AT THE PAGEVILLE AUCTION

. CJHI) 'VAllEY

CHfSTF.R AR E- A -· 2

.

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

In Meig s County

.446-2342

c a rot Nea 1446· 3862
$5 discount for pianos tuned

Sizes from 4 to li and au
wood buildings 24xJ6 ,
Insulated Oog Houses

AUCTION .

much hsttr·

bedroom h6\.tse _ .;_ 2
bAths on 2 lots with a
small house • tra iler .
$27.000.00.

991-619\
992-Sd1

742-3195

Ci. MASH
coNmUCTION

MIDDLEPORT - This
remodeled home is in
excellent condition with
mOdern built-in kitch en.
3 bedroo·ms,_ beautiful
stone wall in dining
room . Fully car.Qeted.
Forced air . g_as heat.
Front porc:rr ~ntt· rear
pnt io. ApJYrox1.
61t'
acr es. $39 , 900~00..

f f( J
r

'.

••

UPPER ·LEE CIRCLE
- Rusnc Htus· MOdern 3 bedroon:i fully
insulateq home With ref .
and range , Electric B. B.
heat on approx. .23
acres. $_37 .SOO.OO.

AIIOCtllel

PH.HS-3111
I

539,000
New 3
bedroom ranch on 5
acres with pla ce for
maw and paw, or even
children. Gbod gravel
road on each end of pro·
perty. School bus and
mail routes .
"$9,600- You can really
live reasonably here.
Trailer with 2 rooms ad·
ded, woodburner and
flue for you.
$400 PER' ACRE - lor
the 325 acre farm, old
home and some out- ·
buildings.
·
$12,000 - What a buy
this cozy 2 bedroom
home Is. It has a coal or
wood furnace , large
family room, bor, bath
and 31ots.
131,000 want in·
dependence? Well, here
Y\JU can have It with
your own business and
live in a nice l'lome, Nat.
t;~as furnace, T. P . wafer,
In the countrv.
569,900 - What will you
give for this excellent
frame home. Has cen tral air and hot water
heat, 1112 baths, and 2
addltlonitl renlals.
WANT
TO I&lt; NOW
WljAT VOUR PRO·
PERTY IS WORTH?
TWO CERTIFIED AP·
PRAISERS AT YOUR
SERVICE ..
CALL
H2-3176.

For all of your wir·
ing needs.

NEAR MINE ONE - 3
bedroom ranch - home
with part • baSQment .
Forced •ir heat. Ap·
prox. 2.5 a.:;;res with
storage buildin9. Fruit
trees. S29,"/oo.oof ;
•

1-( 614 )-992-3325

'

992·2259

IRGILB. SR.
216 E . Second · Stre~t
Phone

',

POME""'"·

Probc=~t e

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

HARRISON
TV SERVICE

~=========~~====:::===~~F==========-~--~--------j
''
.:~'

E .Maioololl.ltl

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

1-Card ot T hank s
~-In MemoHam
J- Announcemenls
4-Givea way
S- Happy Ad s
6- Lo~t il nd Found
7- Yird Sale
1-Public: SOl ie

the
rig reject~
ht to
ed
it or
1any ad. Your ad will be
ut 111 t he proper ~~_f~~~~2:~~~~
I pclassifica
ti on if you'llI check the proper box
These cash rates
1
include discount
I
1below

~·~'"

·I

I

Tappan Recuperative
A"r
Furnace, Coleman
1
Cond itioing, Arkla:~e r·vel Gas Air Cond1t1on ·~
in.g, Sheet M etal Work.
SUNRISEHEATING
&amp; cOOLING
Rt . 2. Albany, Ohio
614 . 69 8·6791 It
11•1(1 - n

, ,.'

PHONE 992-2156

I

SUNRISE
HEAJING &amp;
COOLING

992-6259

Pomeroy,
Ph ,
• Oh.
992 2174
5·7·1fc

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
· SERVICE"

11·12· 1 mo.

Robert E . Buck
Judqc/
Clerk
111)27, (12i4.11,3t c

WANT AD INFORMATION

write your own ad and
by m ai l with this 1 .
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone w hen you get 1
r esults. Money not refundab le.
1

I

• ··

MARY R. CASTL~ . ET AL
Defendants.
No. 17,607
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
Th e Defendants, Mary R.
castle, Jean Sweene y ,

322 N. Sec. Ave.
. Middleport
&amp; 10788 u .s . 35
Jackson, 0~ · .
,... 11 ·13· 1 mo.

Used Color TV Set s l or
Sale.
.NEW PHONE NI L _

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

STUART WAYNE
PULLINS

IIIVEWAY
UMESTONE

P~ORATE

vs.

ldeot corn

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP Sera p

S&amp;W
GUNSMintiNG

9·5· tfc

•House Coal
Ph•.992-2772

COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
r_ STATE' OF JOHN M .
ST IV F. RS, DE CE ASED
C.lsc No. 23614.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
on -November 20, 1981 , in
t he M eiqs County Probate
Court. C~sc No. 23614, Gail
L. Coble. 40 Virqin ia A'\ie.,
Dc1yton, Oh io 45410 wc1 s ap·
pointed Executrix ot the
f'S tntc of John M. St(vers,
decenseq, lflte of J90 N ..
TH ird Ave ., Middleport.
OH 4576(]
'

Tro~ctor

Picker

CERTI FlED GAS
our Specialties
Cigs: 61c pk.; cartons
sus reg.f· $6.05ton,s.
We!.ell he followon~
8 P«. RC, Diet RC or C
100 l1.lt plus dep. &amp; tax
6 pk. RC productsS1.S9
8 pk. Pepsi products
S1 .39 plus dep. &amp; tax
6 pk. Pepsi products
S1.99 &amp; tax
8pk.16oz.Cokes
S1.l9 plus de~. &amp; tax
· Hours : Mon.· at.
6 A.M ,-9 P.M.
sunday 8 A. M
.M . .
11.-9
·15P-1mo

c &amp; L Bookkeeping . Com·
plete bookkeeping i!tMd taK
l·&lt;·• '•·;i&lt;:e for business and In·

,

2 Locations

~=========:.+=::::=======~+=========~t==========l

Public Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
STATE OF OHIO AND
COUNTY
OF
MEIGS
BOARD OF HEALTH
Plaintiffs,

N~w

SHOES

In Gallia County

Profession••
Servicll •

Piano Tuning -Let your
piano sound pretty for ·the
hol idays, only $30.00. Call
Bill Ward, 446·4372.

no

Boots &amp; Shoes for
whole family.

Equipment

Dealer
FARM EQUIPMENT
PA RTS &amp; SERV IC E
USED EOUIPMENT
No. a'oo Diesel Ford
Trilclo r w / Cab

MOD-4010 Di~ s~ l J.D.

work

---·-Publi c Notice

BAILfS

~==~~~~~~~~t=========~t======~I0~·~12~·~tt~c~t===:=;;;;~=~

Lyons

Wilfong

t-

3·11-11&lt;

Scout cam_p Rd.
Chester. Oh.

5·21-tfc

23

to rent buy or
in good con·

LOOKING
Super cab , 6
overdrive .
payment or negotiate.
after 5:00 713·466· 1261 .

MoneytoLNn

Columbus First Mortgage
Companv FHA· VA· Flna~­
cing Loan Rep. Coolue
Krautter (30&lt;1675·3473 .

RAW furs , beef &amp; deer
hides. BeSt prices guaran ·
teed . 30A·ol58-1656.

949-Racine

Mason Co., W. ViJ .
Area Code 304
675-Pt. Pleasant ~~
458-Leon
)
576- Appl e Grove
773- Mason
882-New Haven
895- Letart
937- Buffato
..

22

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

u .S. Rt. so Eut
GuyiYIIIe. OhiO'
Authorilf'd John D11vre.
New Holland, Bush Hog
~&lt;11rm

Meigs Co. Area Code
614
992"""'"Middleport
Pomeroy
98s-CheSter
3d-Portland
247-Letar1 Falls

WANT to buy house In Fit .
f'leasant on land con tract
or lease basis. Write Box A·
27 in care of Pt. f'leasanl
Register.
'

1'12-Rutland
667-COO-Iville

Ph. 992-7201

SALES &amp; SERVICE

BISSELL
SIDING -CO.

Gallla
Co. Area COde
11
,14
446-Galllpolls
:U7-Cheshire
318-Vinton
245-R io Gra~de
256-Guyan Dist.
643-Arabia Dist .

L icensed &amp; eonOed

BoGGS

''l·e autlful, Custom
Built Oarages"
Coli lor . frH siding
nt1mat11, 949·2101 or
949-2110.
No Sund1y Calls

THE

...

eBackhoe
e excavating
• Septic Systems
e Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas lines
e Dump Truck

1l · l9 · l mo.

SIDING

iok 742·2225

~

sites
&amp;
Driveways. Small iobs a

Trailer

&amp; Aluminum

VInyl

HiiiiTanoing

•

•·

CONTRACTING

New Homes - ex:
tensive
remodel·
ing .
.
• Electrical work ·
• Roofing work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583

9_ .... wanted to Buy

Ji•llml'infi telephone exchangflS ...

J&amp;F

11 · 19·1 mo.

Finest Qua lily
Excellent Service
Fish -'G1me Head·
Life Silt Mounts- Plus

w1th Jce

Michelle

DIE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

Services

The

C/iu.~ified Pages mt)er the·

'·

Wright

grandchildren.

All en, Christina and David Manley,
Jeanee and. Jay Gilmore, Wendy
Clark, Bridget Jacks, Crystal and
Tracy Manl ey, Naomi, Angie ami

Busfn~ss

Mrs. Frances carleton, Mr. , and
Mrs. Buddy Ervin, Sara Beth a_nd B.
J., Mr. ~nd Mrs, Chuck Sheets, Mrs. ·
Connie Carleton, Mrs. Candy
Carleton, Chris, Jason, Keith and
Deidra, Mr. and Mrs. John Marlin,
Johnny and Charlie, Mrs. Yvonne
Young and Yvette, Miss . Usa
Pullins. • ·
Sending gifts were Mrs. Cathy
Scarberry, Gina and Court, Mrs.
Janet Sheets and Jason, Mrs. Faye
Watson and Jim, Mrs. Christina Hall
of Kenna, w.Va.

cream, potato chips, and Kooi-Aid.
Assisting with the party was at1
aunt, Mrs. Nancy Manley.

..

Ohio

Bkilidaycclebrations~~~~-·~~~~~~~~~~
--

..

·,

Friday, Decembler4,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NEW YORK, NEW YORK .
wanted ; Ambitious hair
stylist to work In in ·
novative salon. Apply in
person to Julie McGinley,
401 Viand St. Pt. Pleasant.
HELP wanled ·full tim e
house parent, Mason Coun·
ty Childrens Home. Live in
96 hours, off 48 hours. High
Sc hool graduate, drivers
licens e required, 50·50
medlclal plan, raise every
6 months. Call 9 a m. to 5
p.m. 304·675·682.4.

PIANO
TU NIN G -Lane
Daniels . Associate :
Brunicar di Music. Phone
61-t-742 ·2951 or 614·992·2082.
D iscount to Meigs residen·
IS .

HARPER Adult Care Cen-·
ter·provid ing the personal
ca r e your elder ly need in a
home l ike atmosphere.
vacanc ies . now availible .
ca i1JQ4·675·129J.
Roo f ing; insulation, plum·
bing , and general home
maintenance. For estimate
ca ll 675·5496, if no answer
ca ll 675·3147 .
COMPLETE home main·
t ai n a n ce,
appliance
r epai rs, no iob too small·at
a price to please. ( referen·
cesJ Ca ll304 ·576 ·2798.

- Home5tor Sale

3]

BY OWNER : 4 bdr ., spl i t·
level. living room &amp; dining
room combination, eat·in
kit chen, lg . family rm ., 2
112 bath s, located in Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, $75,000
f irm. Kyger Creek School
Distr ict. Shown by appt.
only call446·9403.
12x60 Indy Mobile Home,
S6,000 .
Fin a nc i ng
.w ai lable. Ph . 388 ·8747 .
Ni ce 3 bdr . home in Cen·
tenary, $42.000 . For more
info r matioFl . Ca ll446·3897 .
3 or 4 bed r oQm house with

bath in country on 2. 3
acres. Storm windows, ci ty
wat er . Close to 3 mines .
Will sell on land contract
with $5500 down . $17,500. ·
614·742·2502.
Or rent-3 bedroom fur ·
nished home on Bud Chat·
t in Road· on big level lot.
576·27 11 .
THE Roush home at 2515
MI . Vernon is for sa le ca ll
the son at 614·927·54 13.
The Roush home at 25 15
Mt. Vernon, Pt. Pleasant,
is for sa le. Cal l the son at
614·927·5413.
SANDHILL Ro a d , Pl .
Pleasant. 3 bedrooms, 111:2
baths. double garage .
owner wi ll finance . lm·
mediate occ upancy . 304·
675·5817 .

j2----Mobite Homes
for Sale
TRI · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . Gallipolis. Year
end sale, price reduced,
used mobile homes. CALL
446 ·7572.
----~---

Situations Wanted__
12
El im Rest hom e. Care for
i'hancl ic!lp~oed, aged, or bed
patient. Temporary or
limited care. Or continuous
home with us . Equipped for
whee lchair. '-42·2266 .

Will babysit 1 ch ild in m y
home. PreferablY 2 to 3
years old . 614·985·4120.
13

-

~

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
suran ce Co . has offered
servi ces for fire insu rance
coverage in Gallia County
tor a I most a centur.y .
Farm , home and personal
prope rty coverages are
ava i l abl e to m eet in ·
dividual needs. Contact
Kail Burleson , agent .
Phone 446-2921.
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE
been
can ·
celled?
'LOst
your
operator' s License? Phone
992·2143
18

Wanted to Do

Butcher's Shoppe Custom
butchering &amp; proces~ing.
Call 446·2851 , Ga-l li pol is,
Oh.

-------

Babysitt ing wanted, i n
North Gallia Dec. ·5, 12, 19,
.21. 22 . $1.00 per hour. Con·
tact 367 ·7402 .
Will babysit In my home,
city school distr ict. Call
446·8285 .

TV service calls. Call 992·
2034. Also used color TV for
sale.
Will do electrica(work. 992·
''726.

CLEAN UStO MOBILE
HOME S
KESSE L ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WE ST, GALLIPOLIS. RT
35. PHONE 446·3868.
Or rent 12x65, 2 bdr.,
mobile home in Ce ntenary ,
Call 446·4292.
BARGAIN! 14X70 3 bdr .,
new dr illed well, acre lot,
Davis Rd . off 218, $8,000 .
Ca ll 446·4394.
12X60 Monette 1972 MOde l.
Furn ished. $5500 or $2000
and tak e over payments.
For more informa t ion call
304 ·882 ·2985 .

--- - - - - -

1974 RMT 12 X 60 2 bedroom
furn is hed . Was"er and
dryer, A i r ,conditioning,
and underpinned. Also 1972
Skyline 12 x 44 1 beclroom
furf ished . Ideal for covple.
Park lot can be rented, Kall
614·992-7479 .
~- -~-·-------

1971 Dar•an 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Crown
Haven , 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
ex pando, 3 bedrooms. 1913
utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 1.4 x 70, 3
bed r ooms. 1972 N ashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B 11.1. s
Sa les, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt. Pleasant. WV .
Phone 675·4424 .

-·

-~.

·- ..

-~-------·

1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, underpinned . 675·4064 .

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

1977 v ictor ian 14 x 70, 2
bedroom, family room, all
electr ic. Call675·3987 .

------ - - - -

1974 12 x 60 Cameron,
stove, ai r conditioner, un·
furn ished. $5500. 675·2560.

---·----------

1 will do baby sitting in my
home. Rosa Greene. Hart·
tord, WV . 304 882 ·2912.

1974 tr ailer , 12x65, 2
bedroom , f urn ished, cen
tr u l
air
con d 1 t io n i ng , un derpcnn i ng ,
$6,500. Phone 304·S76·21Jtjl .

WILL do odd jobs, car·
pentry , plumbing or elec·
trical ,
have
good
reputation, 30,.·675·5918 or
675·3770. Ask for Steve.

1971
Brookwood ,.. 3
bedroom, bath and half ,
gas heat. unfurnished . Call
67S· IS53.

---·----------

'

···-

---- -----

�·.
11-The Oa
.J4

Mobile Hame5
for Rent

Business Buildings

PROFESSIONAL

office

11

no blowers, $200 each. Call

52

' ·t· j

·+~..
.
~~J
GlL\.dT

, Home for sale, rent, or rent
. with opt ion to buy. 3 bdr ,
·near Centenary . 1·216·734·
' 3].l.t evenings.

1st. flo-:&gt;r unfurni shed apar·
tment. deposit &amp; referen·
ces r equ ired. Call at 631
Fourth Ave. , Gallipolis,

OH .

2 or 3 bdr . house in Eureka . 3 rooms with private bath,
Dep requ ir ed. Call 256 · 845 Second Ave. Phone 446·
1413

wi ll accept children . Call
446-0157
2 story, 3 bedroom house,
fireplac e in Vmton Large
lot, garage, no inside pets,
secu rity deposit &amp; referen·
ce required . Call388·8795.
4 rm s .• 1 bath, unf urnished,
f1r eplace. clean, Main St. in
Vinton. $145 mo. Call 245·

5818.
2 bedroom all elec tri c ran·
ch styl e home . l .mile from
~acine .
References and
·deposit r equired. Available
'Nov. 15. Call614 ·949·2849.
2 bedroOm house; furnished . Brown's Tra iler
Park , MinerSVIlle. 9n·3324..

,J. bedroom house and bath
1n Ru tland . 614·992·5858.
3 bedroom, 5 room house
plus bath and ut ility room .
.N1ce and c lean . 614·446· 1519
or 614 ·992·2430.

·-------

L arge beautiful house for
rent, 1 block from Tin Mid·
dleport. 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1
'h baths, g?rage . $300 mon·
th, deposit and referen ce
required . Call 614·448·3821,
~to 5 weekdays or 614-448
1555 .

Lost : 1982 E astern class
nng. Lett in Murphys
l a di es
restroom
at
Gallipol is. The ring was
wrapped In blue angora .
Reward no questions ask .
Call 614·985·4313.

. :rwo

bedroom, furnished
cottage at 2103 Jefferson
Ave. Depos1t requ ired. 304·

675· 4100, day .
1-fOU SE for rent, 304·675·
343 1 or675·3030.
HO U SE
for
r e nt
at
Gallipoli s Ferry , $125. a
month, 304·675·3216.

Very nice, modern, large 3
bdr . apa rtment, un ·
furni shed, convenient, in
town, quiet street, car·
peted 3 large bedrooms, 2
baths, living room, formal
dining room , kitchen plus
dinette. Call Ea r l Tope 446·
0690
days ,
446 · 016 1
evenings.
2nd. floor
fiency apt.
Ga llipolis.'
A.dults only,

furnished ef·
129 2nd. Ave .•
Call 446-0957.
no pets

- - - -----

Application bei ng tak en for
1 &amp; 2 bdr . apartment at
Valley View in Rio Grande.
l bedroom apt available
now . Equal opportunity.
Call 245·9170.
Apartment,
bedroom.
$150 plu s utlities, no
children, no pets, 456 2nd.
Ave., Gallipolis. Call -446·
2129 .

2 bdr . apt . co mpletely furn
all
e lectric
new ly
decorated, 2nd Ave .. dep . &amp;
ref . r equired . $225 per mo
Call446·2236 or 446·2481 .
1 bdr. apt. completely furn.
all
electric
newly
decorated , 2nd Ave .. dep. &amp;
ref. requi red. $200 per mo.
Call4.46 2236 or 446·2481 .
2 bedroom furni shed . $150
month plus uti li ti es. SSO
deposit. Avai lable Dec . 1.

No pels . 614-949·2875.
Apartment
dowt ow n
Pomeroy . Convenient for
shopping.
$125
p l us
uti liti es. Adults, no pets:
614·992 -3201.

992-5908.
Apartments. 675 ·5548 .•

--------

"3

bedroom unfurnished
house in HenderSon. 304-

675-9760.
Mobile Homes
for Rent

, 42

"' 2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile
hOmes. Call446 ·0175.
• Trailer lor rent in Rio
; Grande, $150 dep, rent'$150
. per mo. plus utilities, part
~- turn . 388·8508.
· 12x60 Completely turn., air
• cond .. adults only. Call 446-

4110 .
• 2 bedroom tr a 11er down R t.
;-7, S125. Adults only , Call
••256· 1157.
t 1

··"

From all of us at
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Oa ily Sentinel
Point Pleasan1 Register

L----------11

______

··3-bedroom double -wide
:,G,reen Local School. 2·
, mobile home K &amp; K,
' Galli pol is. Call 675·3000 or
I 446·0682.

.-------13 bdr. mobile home com·

: fjletely furn ished. Call 446-

· 9669 .

A PARTMENTS, mobile
hom es .
houses ,
P1t .
Pleasant and G'all1polis .
614·.t46-8221 or 614-245·9484.

2 bedroom twin si ngle in
Pt Pl easant at 205 Poplar
Street. $200 month plus
deposit. 1·614·263-8322 or

614·263-2669 .
Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street.
Mason, WV . 773·5651.
Twin si ngle, large rooms
and yard. Pt . Pleasant.
Deposit and r eferences . 1614·263·8322 or 1·614-2632669.

.

IN Middleport, 2 room ef·
ticiency apartment, 1·304
882·2566.
IN Middleport. 2 bedroom,
furnished apartment, 1
small child , 1·304·882-2566.

Ca11UH247 .
Misc. Merchandice

Couch for sale exc. cond.
Phone 446-39-tS after 5PM.

tor Rent
CLEAN, 3 room furnisheel
cot tage, utilities furnlshed,
adults, no pets. deposit,

Patriot Home Builders will
now build a J bedroom fully
carpeted and finished
home on y'our tot: Only
$24,500. Phone 379·2617.

Old Avon bottles, old knick·
knacks, old tools, dishes,
atar i game. diamond
cluster ring, clo1hes. FM
convertor, lots more
Priced cheap, sign on por·
ch. Thurs. through Sat.
Inquire 506 E . Main St .•
Pomeroy,

Lump Coai ·Z inn Coal Co.,
Inc. Call 4-46· 1408 between 9
and5.

-- - - -

1S"" discount on wood &amp;

304-675· 28 12 or 675· 1580.

coal stoves while supply
last. Gallipolis Block Co .•

New unturn1Shed apart·
ment. washer and dryer
hookup . References and
deposit r equired. JO.t-675·

123112 Pine St .. 446·2783.

9760.
Nice furni shed 3 room
apa rtment , 7th Street .
AdultS . 675-3811 .

45

Furnished Rooms

SLE EPING

ROOMS and

light housPkeeping
Park Central Hotel.

apt.,
.

Weekly Rates Ava ilable $60
and up i n Circ les Motel.
Catl446·250l.
Room and boartl for senior
citizens in the country . 614742·2266.
,..__.,.s£
p!!
a~
ce~fooo:r!R~eo.&lt;noo:t__

S'econd Floor Office Space,
carpeted, heat and light
furnished. Ca ll 4-46·1737 or
write
P .O. Bo x 409 ,
GallipOliS, Oh 45631 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large tots. Call
992·7479.
•
MOBILE home spaces
available,
Henderson
Trailer Court. 304-675·2946.

Lamp's,
owls , c loc ks,
si lverstone, figurines, and
other gift items for Christ·
mas. Faye's Gift Shop. 493
Broadway St., Middleport

FireWOOd. 1 load $35, 4
loads $100, 10 loads 5200.
Ca II 256· 1471 or 614·886-

614-99H59~ .

Polaroid SX70. Like new,
w ith leather case. 614·992 ·
3454 after 4 p .m.

candy Making Supplies.
Nestle chocolates starting
at S1.35 lb . Nestle real
chocolate morsels $2.00 lb.
Nestle caramel, candy
boxes. molds, sticks, bags,
etc. L1tt1e Bits, St. Rt. 233,
Oak Hill, Ohio. Phone 614·
682·7562 for more in ·
formation-:-

D iscontinued cabinets, top,
stove, hood, sink . $1200 .
Dale's Kitchen Center. 675 ·

2318.
LUMP coal S4S . ton
delivered. Firewood $30.
ton delivered . 304·675·7199 ,

2 maturnity dresses, Sears
and Penney's brands. Ex ·
cellent condition. Several
tops and pants too, size 9·
10 $20.00 for all maturnity
items. Also a long velvet
roy al blue evening gown
with an empire waist line
trimmed with white outlet
lace. Worn only twice, size

Used tires. Hanshaw's,
Lucas Lane Road. 675-7360.
SE A~S

Captain beds, 1
vear old, $500.00. Clock,
wall
sconzes,
S\:~.00.
womens clothes. size 9, 304·

773-9130.

9, $20.00 Call304·458· 1997.

14 112 ft . car trailer with
winch $1,500, air comp.
$800, car I iff S400. Ca II 304·

F i rewood·seasoned har·
dwood; $35 pickup load
delivered . Call446--4176.

Hou sehold Goods

Sl

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, c hair, roc ker, ot·
toman, ·3 taF,Ies, S500. Sofa,
c ha ir and loveseat. $275.
Sofas and cha ir s priced
from $285. to $795. T abies,
$38 and up to $109. Hide·a·
beds,$340., queen size, $380.
Recl iners, S17S . to $295.,
Lamps from S18. to $65 . 5
pc. difettes from $79., to
$385. 7 pc ., Sl89.
Wood table with 4
,
$219 up to $495 . Desk 5110.

Hutc hes, S300. and S375.,
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom su ites · Bassett
Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses. $250 . and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin. S58.,
firm, $68. and $78. Queen
sets, $195 . 5 dr . c:hests, $49 .
4 dr . chests. $42 . Bed
frames, $20 .and $25 .•· 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350., d inett e chairs S20. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. ·or·
thopedic super firm, $95,
baby matresses, S25 &amp; S35,
bed frames 520, $25. &amp; S30.
Electric fireplace , gun
cabinet , Living room suite,
wOOd table &amp; 4 chairs .
used,
Ranges ,
refrigerators, and TV ' s,
3 miles out Bulaville ,Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri. , 9am to 5pm , Sat.

NEW US Army clothing·
boots·packs, bags. Surplus
rental clothing, denim .
Sam
Somerville's
Warehouse. (New Era) 7
miles east
new bridge. Routes
open only
afternoons
weekends. (Call in orders
304·675·3334 Pt. Pleasant.

R iteway woodburner, $200

Call388·8-ll0.
Double bed with box
springs &amp; mattress and
chest, living room suite
with 2 chairs in good shape.

Gravely . riding tractor.
1981. 12 HP with SO inch
rotary mower . List $3,871,
sale SJ,OOO. Gravely riding
tractor , 19 HP , w i th
hydraulic lift and 50 inch
rotary mower, 1982 list
price $5,590, sale $4.000.
Gravely 2 wheel tractor. 8
HP, 4 speed transmission,
with 30 Inch rotary mower
and dual wheels. Lists
snow blade with any of the
above tractors if purchased
before Dec. 15. Outdoor
Equipment Sales, J e t. Rts.
7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph. a146·

3670. Closed Tuesday and
Thursday unt il! March 1,

1982.

Four hundred foot inch and
half black pipe. 602 McNeil
Avenue or 675-2851 .

Sears consol e stero AM· FM
radio, maple finish, $75.

Call 388·9809.

Gun cabinet. 10 gun
capacity,
Mediterranean
oak. good kondition. $200.

Complete set of weigllts
with benc h Call 446-1079 after SPM .

675·6884 .

- ------ - - -

Baldwin Orgasonic $850.
Singer, 'Touch ' n Sew' with
cabinet $195. Boys : · suit
s1ze 10 $10. shoes Size 4W
and sm. S5 each, cuat size 8
SID. Girls : shoes IC SS. Tap
size 13 $3 . 675·2191 after 6

WOOOBURNING STOVES
Free-standing &amp; fireplace
inserts. Top (luality at a
low price. Jividen's Farm
Equipment. 446· 1675.

'

pm .

Snow plow for pickup. E)C .
cond. with power angle.
Call388 -9848.

55

USED

AP ·

PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refrigerators.
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave., 446·7398 .

Building Supplies

Building materials, bloc~.
brick, sewer pipes,· win ctows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande. o.

Beautiful wedding gown,
off white, size 16. See at .t74
Kathy Dr., Pleasant·Valley
Estates.

TWO bedr9om mobile
homes, Ma~n &amp; New
Haven. Adults only, no
pets . Phone 304-675·1452 af·
fer 3 p.m .
TWO bedroom mobile
home , furnisheel or un·
furnished , call 30-1·675·1371

or.67s.3812.

PS, PB, auto. Call446·8267 .
1970 · Plymouth

HAS GIVEN US
AODRIISSifS ON s~;•
ADONIS SAYS.

1980 CheVy Scottsdal e, 3/;
ton, 4 WD, 4 spd., PS, 28,oo0
m i., good cond. Call 773·

PAST-''

5150 .....,

:::A
: u:l:o::P::a:r:ls==:::(

..
SALVt.. GE

&amp; Accessorl•~

CHARLIE'S

~

---~

'

Auto parts, auto repair~
wrecker service, buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 446·7717.

77

Auto

I MEA&gt;Io I WQI;'T
PRINT IT UWTIL.

Repair ~

YOU ~1ve lola
THE OKA'f.

Ouality Autobody a. Pah\t
work . Insurance wor:k
welcome . Sunroofs iAr

stalled from S200·S2JO. Auto
Trim Center. 446·1968.

"

pups, 304-89H958.
AKC Cocker Spaniel pups,
make a nice Christmas
present, 30a1·67S·5726.

56

SADDLE·New Western
show saddle for sale. Call
992·5782 anytime Sunday,
after 7 p.m . on weekdays.

DRAGONWYND

r---------...l----------~
Tl. 'II D
•,ey
0 It Every Time

IWIY/ZZIT? IN

Siamese klllens. Call 446·
38U afler4p.m .
HILLCREST

£VERY SHOWER-7H4T

CAT ·

TERY · KENNEL. AKC
black Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and

KENNEL ·

Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.

SCWP&amp;/Y$# ....

Also

AKC

Reg.

Dober·

mans. Catl"-46·7795.

Boarding and grooming.
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
C~ll

New Pianoior sale, Wurlit·
2 Hammond Spinet Organs.

Cherry and dark wooo
cabinets. Excellent for
hOme or church. Make
beautiful Christmas music.

3063.
~-·------1971 Mercury Montego.
Also 289 engine and transmission. 614·992·2833 .

PAINTING · interior anq
e xterior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remocletln ~
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652 . ,

1971 Ford L TO station
wagon . 61.t-992 -3489 after 6
p .m .

STRUCTION - SpecializinQ
in concrete driveways.
sidewalks .
patio,
basement, garage floor~
and etc. Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 367 ·

,,

BING ' S CONCRETE CON'

7891.

- ·- ---·- - - - - - - - , '

.-

sa

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

GENES

---·-r-- ·-.J

RINGLES' S SERVICE ex·

perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter.
electric fan ,
general repairs and
remodeling . Phone 304·675·

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

good condition . $7000 . 614·
992·.5468.
Chevorlet 1 1on truck,
gra.n bed, cattle racks,
hoist, excellent cpnctition.

EXPERIE .NCEO

or business remodeling or

pickup truck.

First

CHEVY Camper Special,
&gt;4, $1050. 15 Ford pickup

12000. J .D. 2010 lraciQr.
$2500., new blade Sl85.
Phone 304-576·2328 or 516·
2606.

Farm Equipment

smokes. body rough.' 30·35

Livestock

"'---==~'--­

leploed. Call61~·949·2574.
Game roosters and hens .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 4ot6-«77

8~=· - -Excavating
Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work. SPecial
far!'l rates. Call us for free
est1mates. 446·4440.

------- ---··

BAC~HOE and Septic tank
Se~v1ce .
Larry Siden ·•

- = .-- E-:;~~i~~~ -: .

--·- ~ ~e~igeration
SEWING' Machln~-~;~-a i~s,''
service. Authorized Singer
Sa!es &amp; Service. Sharpen
SCISSOrs. F abrlc Shop
Pomer6y. 992 2284.
'

----. ·-----·

KANPS!

EIUSINE'5S
THE &amp;ift¥S\I1

.-r

W£ Die:&gt;.'

)Q#IPUI,Ct::

Evening television listings __________________
3:25 (!) MOVII! -(COMEDY]•• "In

FRIDAY
D!C.4, tll1

Clod WI Truet" 1SJ80 Mltty
Feldman, Loulae Lauer . A
monk Ia appointed to gooutlnto
the outelde world 10 lind mona~
for the monaatery'a mortgage.
(Rated PG) C106 mint.)

1838 Charlel

,

l,.tmarr.
8:00 C!JMOVIE •(ADVENTURE)
··~ "Tbe Octagon" 1180
Chuck Norrta, Lee Van Cletf. A
retired mar11alarta champ gata
btck Into the chop of thing•
whan he muat combat a aecrel
order of oriental kUiera. (Raled
IU (2 hra.)
1:30 (I) MOVII. ·(COMI!DYJ •••
'' AMerlcPizatlon Ofl!mlly"
1114 Jtmea Garner, Julie
Andfewe. A reluctant NIY&amp;I U .
Commander follow&amp; order to
rtln Normandv lnvaalon and
apparantly euccumba . Helalet
tume up after a "aluehaabeen
ereetH IC him . (2 hra., 30

mJoo.t .

·

10;00 rnMOVII! -(DRAMA•••
11 1uehtdo ll1da" 111!10
Richard 8aoM, Jamu Earl
Jonea . A. ntval commtndtr
lead I a b1nd of eetlora end
Jape naN on• quell to recover
Jlpan'e eymbollc aword. (86

SATURDAY

D!C.5,1181

MOANING
1:30 Ci) MOVIE -C,ANTASY) u•

"Pale'•l;hegon" 1877
Shelley Wintera, Helen Reddy .
Storv of a boy who nuan
animated dragon !fiend. (Ailed
Gl_(2hre., 30mlna.)

1'.00 (])MOVIE ·(ROMANCE)•
"H•adln' Far 8roadwtr"
1180 Rex Smith, Terri Treat.
Four young p1rformef'll come to
New York City to make the biO
t!me on Broedwav. (90 mlna.)
0:05 (JJ MOVII-(ADVENTURE) •••
"Fivlng Tigen" 1842 John
Wayne. Anne Lee. Story olthe
Flying Tigera outfit atetloned In
wortd War II China. (2 hra ,,5

10:30

mJoo.]

11:30 (11)110¥11 '810o(f ...nla' 1870
Pet•Carpenl•, ...r'IAragon.
2) 'Frankanattln Cre,ated
WaiMn' tH7 Pell' ":ll.t11ng,

e..n

7'1 DOOGE power wagon, • ·
wlleel·drlve, 29.1100 miiH, 8

Deftberg. (2 hll.. 30

!D[oo.l
11:H CIJ IIOVII.CCOMIDY) •• 'MI
"1M1'' 1171 Oefl Aykrord.

--

California following P . . rt
lttaok.(Raled PG) (2

11Jt0 WMOVIE-(ADY!NTUREJu•
1 'F11htlnt1•••••••• 1044

John Wayne, Sua•n HI)IWifd.
To~gh oonatruclion foremen
and aNavymanorganiZII work
battalion to raptlr lnatallatlone
c:loeetoJapene.. llnea. (2hrl .,
&amp;mine.)
APTIRNOON

12:30 (1) MOVII-(ADYENTUft!) .-

"lloller,loogle•' 1t71 Linda
llair. Jll'l Bray. Orowp of klda
jOiftfONMIItotl'lwa" enevtl man
from clollntj! the local roller
akatlng rlnlt. (Rated PG) (2

--· ..

••

VAN· 1'172 VOlkswagen bus.
rebuilt engine, new paint,
new muffler. Interior like
new, 3114·882-3145.

W MOYIE •(MVSTI!AY) ••

••y.

Ned8HttY.8tortotw.r~nicln

·

N~W HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways
Call for estimates 3&amp;7· 7101 _·

O!![no.t

"The Mirror Creck'd" tHO
Rock Hudaon, Elizabeth Teylor.
Agatha Chrlalle my1111ry: tha
marveloua Mlet Mtrple
inv•atlgatea the murder or a
locelgo&amp;Cipinyolvedlnthallvea
at American film etara working
!l!!.locatlon In London. (2 hra.)
tJ1 MOVIE ·(ADVI!NTUAII
"MaraceU:.o" 1168
Cornel Wildt, J•enWallace. An
e'~tp&amp;rt nretlghJer gael to
Venaz:uelato combat an oil
bltze,endtlndahleex-girttrlend
tn1n; In that country , (2 hre.)

···~ ~~~~~~~ji~
.... ~ii!~:·ttfi~~

11!0.1

t'IIIIOVII•(COMIDY) • V.
11

11'1 A lllllftl Wortd 10 1117

DaborahW...,.,•TammyKirlt.A
a11parlover ohaate etter •
bll!M4MI cwUt, bat aha doeen't
......nttiMIP'I''qlldaue

•lrii-UOI.

(80 mlno.]
1:00 W IIOVII·\CDIIIDYl"'

"Cen•Can '1810 Frank
llnatrl, lhlr1tV Uoll.lna. Tha
1810'1: WhanaMntmartre
da- haN owner 11 oonetantty
ratdadtorp.lltonllnetheiUegal
cu-oMl.IMhl.ato ....harown
reaot~ra . . when en tldtrl)'
• ~oaclllr a voeng,

2255.

2651.
PIGS
$30.00 each .
Firewood 125.00 at term
only. 3114:195-3395.

FURNISHED apartment.
phone 30H'I5-J450.

• .. LEARN THE
CF&lt;'AFT... LIKE

UP/

..

JONES BOYS ._ WA TE R
SERVICE . Call 367-7471 or
367·0591.

78 JEEP CJ5, good con·
dillon. $3900. phone J007J.
5250.

THE FASHION

N. air c&lt;?ndltion service.
commerc•al, industrial

1973 Jeep CJ5. 615· 274.5.

cyl. call after 3 p .m. 304·

WITH LEARNIN&lt;!I

WITH HEFt

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
·
.
~~~~ ~~~!r~,H~~~~~~ -:

675·31'18.

· UP )t)(JR MINt'
10 RNPA SR:7T
FClR ~ER. AT

--

Phone 882 ·2079

$1400.

Holstein Heifers. ~ fresh·9
others close up. Health
papers furnished . I BA: and

&amp; Heating,_ __

~ :·

·-. Vans&amp;4W.O.

mpg, regular gas. Many
new parts. 614-992-7247 ask
for Freet WUI sacrifice for

-===::;::;=::;:::::;:===
3

.•.

73

1978 Subaru Station wagon.
4 wheel drive, engine

condition. Phone 304·.68·
18.14 alter 5.

8; ::.:: :='-::.Pi~mbing -===:

stncker. 675·5580.

$1,850. Call446·4394.

GRAVELY tractor, with
all equipment, excellent

new structures .
Free
estimates. references. 304·
67s.1440 .

1

1970 Dodge tr'ui::k, runs
good, S300. Phone 675-5220.

Ford 800 tractor. excellent 1976 Ford window van . Red
condition. 6ft. disc. Set &amp; white, priced reduced,

14in. plows . 614-241·3895.

car ·

penter avai I able for home

614·247·3895.

1971

NaTHIHG~

304-895· 3802.

197~

SSOO gels II. 675·,1302 .

MOIEUI'M!"

I'ER NOW!:sH~'P
IWITltER WORK

1lfAT~A3U"W

5TA~T

AT lHE 60Tn:JM

dl:t~llM ~u'

2088 or 675·4560.

GMC 14ft. dump truck . 3
axel, 366 gas, PS, radio,

Firewood hauler. 1963
Dodge 'h ton pickup. 614·
992-3489 after 6 p .m .

••• RI!!TURN 10

501J.NPS LIKE
)QI'n' MAPE

•'

1981 Datsun pickup long
bed, S speed transmission,
ex. con d. Call -4..;6-8380 after
5:00PM .

GOOd firewood truck, 1966
International:
1/1
ton
pickup. 614·992·3489 after 6
p .m .

601NG10t'l?

5HE :;;.&gt;.YS
AAfWAY, THERE'S

F &amp; K Tree Trimming', ~
stump removal. 675· 1331. . t

6x 6 1ruck crane $5000. 76

304·675-6493.

6

- - -- - - - - !

Call446·3675.

FOR sale or trade·steam
Ginny, 2 go-carts with 5
horse power motor, ex·
cellent condition. 500 amp
Mobar1 welder with leads
on factory trailer. 20· w
Bucyrus Brie water well
drill ino machine. 1 pump
puller, gas operated with 2
winch lines. 71 Doooe
pickup with utility b&amp;d. 6
cyl. motor. new tires, ex·
cellent running condition.

(

WHAT'S CONNIE

5/ic'LL

NO .••!iHE SOJD

RON'S Television ServiceJ
Specializing in Zenith and •
Motorola, Quazar, and'
house calls. Phone 576·239.8 :
or 446-2454 .
~

1979 GMC 3/4 I. 4· WD.

7260 .

61

882·2079 .

..

WINNIE

------- -'

36,000 mi.'. dual tanks.
$4,600 , great for w inter.

Will trade for a truck or
stationwagon a 12 gauge
1100 series Remington
valued at $3-40. Call 675·

CARPET

LOCKSMITH
Service. ~
Residential, automotive .•
Emergency service. Cawl}

71 _ __!!_ucks tor Sale

s--9-----F
~o='r=';:
sa:;l;e::::o::r:;;T-:::
r:::
ad:;:e-=
"'

-- -·---------·•

Cleaning, Special rates for
Nov. ancl Dec. only . Call
now and save. 614·992-6309.

341'1.

SOl b. number one potatoes,
S6.50. 51b, tomatoes S2.00.
~pples, pecans, oranges,
tangaloes, grapefruit. we
accept
food
stamps .
Rayburns , Market ,
Kanauga, Ohio .• 446·8247.

time!

I_.,.,..

Call 446·2801 for termite ~
roach, bird, rodent, spider, 1
and fleas . control. Fre. t
estimates, Bill Thomas. .

1980 Plymouth H~rizon,
front wheel drive. TC3. -4
speed, new tires, $4500. 882·

1

Phijll is. ijOU
knowl can't
sleep in the
dall-

All LJOU need
is
sleep,
. Walt!

·:

French City
Painting\
ResiCiential , commercial. /
inter i or. exterior. paper/
hanging, and texured~
ceilings. Ph, 367·7784 or36i~
7160 .
,

614-992·6235, 614·992-7338, or
614·949-2118 ask for Pete.

Ca~

CAPTAIN STEEMER

pe1 Cleaning fea1ured b~
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimateS:
Call446-2107.
i

1968 Ford Galaxie, runs
good, $250. 1969 Ford LTD
$275. 675·2851. .

Livestock
Ravlslered
Hereford bulls &amp; heifers.
Corllfled &amp; accredited
Hertford. Phone 304-882·

THREE room furnished
c.partment, clean, pr ivate,
on Mt. 'v1ernon Ave . 30•·675-

1182.

AMC Spirit, 2 door, hatch
back, 79 model, 304·882·
2119().

zer Spinet. Call-446·8392.

or work. 304·.68· me.

Gallipolis Ferry . 304-675·
1371 or 675·3812.

tedured ceilings,
corrlmercial and reside.ntial,
free estimates. Call ~56·

30H4H678 or 30H47·5697.

Reg. Quarter Horses for ·· IGHT week old piQS, call
sales, boarding, training, 304-882·2532.
E(1glish &amp; Western lessons.
Dan Beam. G~lllpolis. 4.46· GENTLE horse, will ride

0183.

STUCCO PLASTERING ·

1980 MIG I 111 Replica car of
1953 MGTO. Excellent con·
dition, priced to sell, $6,000.

99B449.

388-9790.

Carpet Cleaning

304·458·1074.

Pets lor Sale

POOOLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

STANLEY STEEMER

73 CAPRI. runs gOOd, new
paint, low mileage, 5800,,

Musical
Instruments

1!5-

Home
1m provem ents

o-

,Doberman pups,
mate and female, black
a lid rust, 1ails cut, wormed,
declawed . 882·2230 .

GlN6 AAE

LOONJN' AT

11

675· 1636.

Tw~AKC

lH05E 5CI2ZY

A PICiURE POSiCAIW-

OPPORTUNITY to gain a
good car. Assume paymen·
ts. 1976 Maverick. Call 304-

Caii24H121.

am~&amp;case.Caii24H213.

T' BE AS PR.ETTY AS

1973 Camara, 350 engine,
new shocks, good con·
dition. $1100. Call 61A-7.t2-

AKC
Dachshund.
Pomeranian and POOdle

-'CE!'f l t:Ol'T
LIKE ill' ¥rtf

• MAIM 5TRW IJSED

2143.

Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., F"t.
Pleasant. 675-2063. Mon.,
Thurs .• 1 Fri. 11 to 6. Tues .•
Wed., I Sat. II to 4. Check
Our Fish Special.

' 57

GTX ·440

magnum , auto. , com ·
pletely res1ored, all stock,
rare, price negotiable . 742·

614-99j.5059.

7 pc. drum mate set, red
sparkles shells, bass,
snare, tom -tom . cymbals,
fool pedal. stand. Sl15. 614·
992·3660.

38 . 304-458· 11154 alter 5.

In Middleport . 2 bedroom
unfurnished apar1ment. 1
small child . 1·304·882·2566.

ONE
bedroom,
un ·
furnished.
located in

A

446·4208

74 Chevy wagon, good
cond., 4 new Tempo tires,

Black
Scottish Terrier
pups. A .K.C. registered.
Shots. 3 female, 5 male.

VENDING machines, 1
sandwich, 1 popcorn. 1 bOt·
tie pop. 304-882·3356 or 304·
773-5611 .

882·2566 .

2172.

T IS
STATE
DIINTIFIED
WITH 'THE
FUTUREY&amp;T IT HAS
A SENSE
OF ITS

FI'IROL&amp; OFFICii~

uoo. call388· 979~..

3599.

Yearling Paint colt; 6 yr.
old APHA mare , youth
prospect;
3 yr .
old
buckskin geld ing . Call 992·
5782 anytime Sunday, after
7 p.m . on weekdays.

Console Magnus organ . 37
full size keys, 12 melody
chord buttons, bench, song
books. $35 . 614·992-30\60.

SUIT, size 38 . Trim , all
leatller black overcoat size

Ford Mustang 28.430
miles,
AM-· FM stero·
cassette radio, new tires,
excellent cond. Ca II 4;46·
77

HOOF HOLLOW Horses &amp;
ponies .
Everything
Imaginable in horse equ ipment. Also belts, boots. 6983290. Ruth Reeves.

p .m

MPC-electric guitar with

G OOD

5PM.

LEFT handed bath tub,
inquire at log cabin, Fair·
view Community, 5 miles
back West Columbia.

SEASONED oak firewood .
Call JOA-675-2757 after -4

$2,368, sale $1 ,900. FREE

446 0322

In Middleport . 2 room et·
fiency apartment. 1·304·

For rent 3 room turn . apt.,
adults only, no pets. Call
61H&lt;53 .

ral&gt;uflr

76 Ford Cobra Mustang PS,
PB, 302, nw paint job, tires,
rims, 52,700. Call 446·7122
or 4&lt;16·3100.

AKC
Register She11and
Sheepdogs
(S he !ties) .
Small dog, good with
children. 446·2152 after

576 2602 .

Call446·4604.

Merenandlse

Pets lor Sale

56

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

CI..GVERL Y &amp;li!$16NEP

2 trailers for rent In Mid·
dleport. $150 per' month.
SIOO deposit plus you pay
your own utilities. 61.t·992-

saso.

1974 ,Bukk -limited.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Small trailer Spruce St.
Water &amp; gas inc l,uded. $200
per mo. Call-446·2991.

446·9808 afler

1979 AMC Concord station·
wagon, l_ow. mileage, A· I
conditiOn.-'Caii24S·5294.

00e
.,.,--~A
;:p::a::
r"
rm
:cm
=
r -­

2 room furnished apt..
adults, private entrance.
Call446·0168 .

Apartments fo r rent. 614·
SEVE N room house, nice
location, good references
required. 304-675-1090.

COBRA XLR 40 channel

6624.

Furnished- Apt. 1st floor,
utilities furnished, Ref.
required . No pets. Adults
preferred. Call at 631 4th
Ave .

Auto for Sale

$150. Call
5: 30.

CJ5,

to yours ... sea ..
son's best wishes.

2215 .

3 bdr . hou se in Rio Grande,

Jeep

From our house

446·7886.

--------

CB, TV, Radio
Equipment

Tidings

in Crown City, Ohio. Call

25H520.

1960

motor &amp; trans, runs gooct:
need! some body work,

1972 Chevy 1mpala, fran·
smisslon needs to be rebuilt

SSB base CB . Pearce Sim·
pson Super Lynx .. 23 base
CB. 100 watt apollo base
linear.
moonraker,
~
beams. phone 3CW·675· 156-f.

54

~~ -- MOiOrCyCtes- :

76

256·1427.

Unfurnished house for rent,
1 bdr., $145 mo., dep. Mobile home in ci ty cen tral
required, no utilities paid. air and hea t, adults only ,
no pets. 57 Olive St . Phone dep. 446·0338 .

6260 •

'

through local gpvernment
sales. Caii1 ·7H ·S69·02•1 for
your directory on how to
purchase, 2.4 hrs ..

2 Sears wood &amp; coal stoves,

2 bdr. apartment unfurn ..

2 bdr., apt., large living
room &amp; kitchen, no pets.
Call446·3937 .

'

CARS, TRUCKS, JEEPS.
AVAILABLE FOR UN·
DER $300. Many sold dally

4.46·8181.

Furn rshed apts. $210.,
utilities pd ., 1 bdr .• near
HMC, adults. Call 4-46·4416
after 7PM.
...

House on Friendly Ridge
Rd. Ref . req uired. Call 256·

71

For sale automatic washer.
Frigidaire dryer. Both like
new and guaranteed. Call

.

2 BEDROOM apartment,
7 rm . house in town. kitchen furnished, HU D
ln(luire at 918 2nd . Ave .. program . utilities paid, if
Gallipolis. can 446·3874.
qualifi ed. 304·675 ·5104 or
304·675· 7364 .
3
B e drooms
wittl
-basement, deposit, .on Small furn ished house,
river, re ferences required. adults only . Ca,ll 446·0338 .
Ca ll 245·5453 after 5.

'

6 mos .• gold. Call388·8200.

'

Houses for Rent

....
...... ...........
" ..

by Lirr!1 Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~

Hou..hold Ooodl

Electric Tapan range used

building with full 2400 sQ .
ft. basement, situated on 3 ONE bedroom trailer, fur·
lots, in hlghlv desirable Pt . ni shed, adults only, no pets,
Pleasant WV location, with you pay uti lilies. phone 304·
·150 ft. roao frontage on 675·2535 .
~ackson Ave. Office space
·IS
currently leased to Two bedroom mobile
.medical doctors &amp; other home. Call304·675·3885 .
professionals. Owner f lnan·
-clng
available
witn THREE bedroom t rai ler.
negiotable terms. This 304-895·3486 .
building &amp; real esta te will
make an outstanding tax
shelter &amp; long term i n- 2 bedrooms. 3.4 mile out
vestment; upper bracket. Sandhill Roacl . 675·3834.
For additional infotmat ion,
phone 304·675-S.UO days,
675-6595 evenings.
Apartmemt
for Rent .

41

T he Daily Sentinei- Pag&amp;-lJ

Pomeroy - ¥iddlepol"t, Ohio

1111

-·

--·-~

~

- I I lilt., 10 Ollno.l
VII

•tolt•MA) ...

...... Dt1wo.NIIa .. 1t41

JohnWa~ne, John

~,.

Agar. Tough'

training a U.S. Marlneaergeant
gi 'IU a squad ot rebell i ous
recrulteln New Zeeland results
In Immortalized capture ollwo
Jim a. (2 hra., 5 mlna.)
3:20 (])MOYIE o(ADVENTU"E) •••
"Opentlon Pacific" 1051
John Wayne, Patricia Nul. A
aubmarinecommander Ia
overly deYoted to hia crew and
~at . (2hra., 10mlna.)
4:30 ())MOYIE •(COMEDY) ••
"Lemon Drop Kid" ttl51 Bob
Hope, Llo~d Nolan. A rtlcttrack
tout owea a gang tier a great
deal or money and mnt pay or
we . (2hra.)
5;00 ' C!J MOYIE ·(F ANTA8Yj•••
"Pate'• Dravo"" tt77
Shelley Win!.,,, Haitn Reddy .
Story or a boy who hu an
animated dragon friend . (Rated
G) (2 hra., 30mlna.)

EV!NINQ
8:00 (I) MOVIE ·(ROMANCE) .. ,
"lt'e A wonderful Uta" 1047
Jamee.Stewen, Donna Reed. A
guardian engelahowa a
potent lal'aulel de victim how
terrible lila would be in hlatmall
town without him. C2 hrt., 30

min•·•·

12:30

1:00

1: 10

' 1:30

Stor)" about an Engllah pariah
priest and amateu~ sleuth living
in New York . (2 hra. )
(]) MOVIE -(TITLE UNAN·
(90 mine.)
ttDUNCED)
(l)aMOVIE-(COMEDY)•••
"C.alno Royale''
t817 Pete r Sellers , Ursula
Andress . Secret Agenl Jamea
Bond Ia pressed o ut of
retirement when tour interne·
tlonalagenta aak tor hi a hal~ In
amaehlng an espionage group
at the baccarat tables . (90
mint)
(J) MOVIE -(ADVENTURE)''
"Knockout" 1U41 Arth ur
Kennedy , Anthony Quinn. The
stcryoflheril8 and I aII of a prize
fiQhle r and hi&amp; Inevitable
~mebeck. (90 mina.)
W MOYIE ·(MYSTERY} ••
"Tht Mirror Crack'd'' 1980
Rock Hudson, Eliz:abathTaylor.
Agatha Christie myst ery: the
marvelou s Mis t Marple
lnveatlgatea the murdlir ol a
localgoaa!plnllclvedlnthellv&amp;a
or American 111m stars working
on location In London (105
mlna.l

(ill
GJ
MOVIE
-(SCIENCE• FICTION) • ~
"Beware! The Blob" 1172
Godfrey Cambridge , Rober!
Walker . Follow · up to 'The
Blob,' concerning how the
derma nt Qraymuaia aHowedto
thaw and proceed• to tnvelope
everybody In town . (Qd min a.)
2 :40 (])MOVIE - (COMIDV) •••
"Brother R•l" 1138 Ronald
Reagin, Eddie Albert . Fun,
action - filled veralon of the
Broadway play relating the •
llvee ofthree V. M.I . aenlore,
their romanc••· and the
pregnant wile ot on a ot them .
Ut5mlna.)
3: 16 ())MOYIE -IROMANCE) •
"Headln' For Broadway"
1880 Rex Smith, Terri Treat.
Fourygung pertormert come to
New·vorx City to make the big
!.!!!1• on Broadway . (80mlna.)
4:45 l!J MOYIE •(WESTERN) ••
"Long Aldert" t880 Oavld
C arred lne, Keith Cerra tUne .
Story ol the James -Younger
outlaw band, one of the moat
teared. notorloueand admired
gange of ttl&amp; Old Weat. (Rated
R)(105mlna.)

8:30 ill II)IOVI£ -(COMIDY')'' " A

Chenoa or aeaaona" toao

Anthony Hopkin&amp;, Bo OerMt. A
middle-aged coyple deckle to
have a romantic Interlude with
younger pannera. CRated A) (2
hra.L
1 •00 • C1J ~ CBS SATURDAY
NIGHT MDVII ' The Children
Nobody Wanted' 1861 Stara:
Fred Lehne, Michelle Pfelft&amp;r,
Matt Clark. Oftina batedontha
trye · lile tlf!!Hia at Tom
Butttrfleld, wholn 1902,trledto
provide loll&amp; and a Ia mii~ life ror
foaterllngt who had nowhere t(J
ao and no one to tum to. (2

IJI&gt;.I

(111 MOYIE ·(DRAMA) •••
"Meal John Doe" 1141 Gary
Cooper, Barbara Stanwyck. A
nalva mania hired to apeemead
1 national goodwill drive
benefitting a corrupt pollllolen.
{a_h,. ,, 30mlne.)
11:01 C1J MOYIE ·(DRAMA) .. , 'fl
"ToHPaandHIIveNot" 1N4
Humphrey BogerJ, Lauren
Bacalt. A aklppar -tor · hlre
becomae tangled up In W.W.II
lntriguetnd romance. (2 hra., fi

1 1:30j

I"~ MOVII•(HORROA) ..

lffl~rutffi1t ~THATSCRAMDLIOWORDGAME

Qt.~~ ~~ f&gt;l

byHenriAmoldandBobL."

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one lener 10 each square, IO form
four ordinary words.

I TRAFC
'""'" ,,

II Islet

11 Unclooe
(poet. 1
18 Costly fur
%0 And not
%1 Work unJt
It Uke
Z2 Palm liquor
O'Neill's ape
Z3 Eyelid
19 Boundary

Yesterday'• Auwer
Z! Outlet
Zll Gl!lley mark

Z3 Begin
31 Roman
II Papal crown
official
!5 Cold cut
31 Bird
16 Sin8er
35 High protein
Frankie

21 "El Rancho
-"

source

31 Musical note
38 Faucet

swelling
Z4 CoUatlon

!5 Cloy
Z7 Hollands
Z8 Bunna's
old name
29 Volcanic
depression
32 Malay
glbboo
33S..W river
34 Sire's mate
38 The other

Utle

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work il:

{j

lo

I CARFIBj
1

batter
15 Had supper

fllnborn
4Z Deeply
rooted in

, "'"' , ,.,

KJ I

I! Moote 13 Batter's

2 Choice
3 Sblp
I Varnish
ingredient
5 Painful
I Bonal
7 Wee bird
llron Curtain
country
I Trample
10 corrlda
figure

choi~e

I

TELLU

OOWII

I Mulberry
cloth

39 Was a slave
tO Athena's

. I ..........
I I
. I -rJ
..... ..
'''"

YHOMAS JOIIPM

ACROSS
I Dlvul&amp;e ..
5 Swear by
II Other
matters
(Lat.)

~XYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

'

One letter eimpl)' 1tand1 ~or another. In thi1 umplt A l1
uaed for tbe thrH L'1, X for tbt two O's, etc. Single lentn ,
apoatrophea, the ltn,th and formation of the word1 are all
hlntl. Each day tht code leuen are different.

rr

"Meptlletowaua" 1871

JtcquellnaBiaeet, Alan Aida. A
womanbettleetdevllollll*hloh
hat tranetormed her huaband
into a gthed planlat. (2hra.) •
~

.

) I I

MDVI!

·~AOMANCI·COUEDY) ' ' ' '

' lllnnla and Uoakowltl:"
1171 Gena Rowlandl , Say·
mour Caaaat. The atoryof the
romano• bttween a1011aty
ProteatantWOCMnendaJewtah

n

I

Now arrange me Circ18&lt;1 1anara to
form the aurPrtaa anewer, • lOg·
gested by thl above eattoon.

.(31"(o.1

MOVII o(MYST!In') ••

·. uaanctu.., Of F•ar" 11Tt
lernardHugh•a. K•vLenz .

Prfntanswerhere " [

I I I I I

r

(An&amp;werl10rn0n'OW)

Yesterday 5

I Jumble!: PECAN

FUROR NUTRIA GAINED
Answer: Wha1 kind of an lmprasalon did tha cops
have of the crook?-A FINGERPRINT

CRYPTOQUOTES

HAR

PXHXQR

RDH

JP

GR

G J CC

EI'{FR

SR

TJPPRQ-

HAR

lQRBRDH

TJPPRQRDH . - IRHRO

EWQUJ.D

Yf!llerday'• ·Ctn~Gquole:1'11E ULTIMATE RESuLT OF
SHIELDING ~ FIIOM 1'IIE EFFECTS OF FOLLY IS TO
FILL1'11EW\)RLDWITIIFOOLS.-HERBERTSPENSER

.,
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i

i

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l

�-14-

Reach agreement on budget cuts
WASHINGTON
(AP
half that amount, and Wbite House
Republican congressional lea~rs
spokesman David Gergen repeated
and Reagan administration offic\als
Thursday that "what the president
are in tentative agreement on an adhas asked for is something that
ditional $4 billion in domestic spen- · meets him approximately halfway."
ding cuts to meet "the major
Sources .said the new proposal
challenges of the president" and
generally calls lor across-the-board
avert another budget crisis.
cuts of 4 percent' In m081 domestic
· ''I am very optimistic that we-can programs, including those singled
fly this thing," said House out in Reagan's September request . .
Republican leader Robert H. Mtchel
Goverrunent benefit programs
of Illinois.
'
such as fOOd stamps and Medicare'
President Reagan's "final wonld be exempt, as would defense,
signofr' on the plan, to be included the judiciary, law enforcement
in a new emergency money bill to operations and veterans' medical
replace one that expires Dec. 15, was benefits.
expected today, said a congressional
The issue of how much to spend'on
source who asked to remain foreign aid is unresolved pending acanonymous.
tion next week in the How;e on
The source quoted White House related legislation, the sources said.
budget director David A, stockinan
There was optimism that the plan
as telling participants in a private would be adopted by the full House
Capitol Hill meeting Thursday night and Senate. The president's acthat the proposal "meets the major Ct!ptance would avert a con·
challen~es of the president.''
frontation like the one that occurred
On Sept. 24, Reagan asked last month when Reagan vetoed a
Congress (or an additional $8.4 compromise spending measure, for·
billion in domestic spending cuts cing a temporary shutdown of non·
12 percent across the board. He later essential government services.
indicated he was willing to accept
Rep. Silvio 0 , •conte of

Massachusetts, the ranking
Republican on the House Appropriations Commiteee, was reported to be generally pleased with the
proposal, in part because it included
$1.7 billion for low-income energy
assistance and $400 million more for
social programs than the Senate approved in the stopgap bill that
Reagan vetOed last month.
That money .preswnably would
make the plan attractive to some.
moderate or liberal Republicans, as
welt as some Democrats whose suppOrt will be needed.
Passage of the plan is virtually
certain in the Republican-controlled
Senate.
Sources said several Republicans
already have had informal
discussions with key House and
Senate Democrats in an attempt to
smooth the way for the plan. '
The $4 billion in domestic spending
cuts for the current' fiscal year that
began Oct. I would be attached to a
stopgap spending bill that must be
passed by Dec. 15 to keep virtually
the entire federal government from
running out of money.

OPEN HOUSE- Vera aad Millard VBD Meter will
hold their annual open house at their Pomeroy Flower

·School districts
The November State School Foundation subsidy payment of
$88,467,962.63 to 612 Ohio city, exempted village and local school districts and 87 county boards of education
was reported by State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson.
Meigs County's three local school
districts received a total of
$316,309,07 including, after deduclions for retirement, Eatern,
$75,320.76; Meigs Local, $168,439.97;
Southern, $72,548. 34 .

(Continued from page 1)

Albert W. Jesse
Albert Walter Jesse, 68, 376 E.
Main St., Pomeroy, died Thursday
evening

at

Veterans

Memorial

Hospital. Mr. Jesse was a son of the
late Chri&gt;iopher and Ottila Wonkee
Jesse. He was also preceded in death
by five sisters and five brothers.
Mr. Jesse was employed by the
former Blaettnar Auto Co, and the

fonner Pomeroy Motor Co. over tbe
years.
Surviving is a sister, Erna Jesse,
Pqmeroy.
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
Monday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. William Middleswarth
officiating. Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home anytime after I
p.m. Saturday.

Meigs County happenings
Probe minor wreck

Issues warning

Two cars were moderately
damaged in an accident on W. Main
St., at 8:10p.m. Thursday. Pomeroy
Police said a car driven by Kathryn
J, Chaney, Pomeroy, struck the rear
of a car driven by Eddie L. Casto,
Mason. Both cars were traveling
east and the Casto car was attempting a left tum, police said.
There were no injuries.

Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews warns residents that a man
alleging to be an electrical inspector
for a power company has been at-

tempting to enter homes under that
pretext. He warns residents not to
allow the man to enter their homes
and to contact the police immediately if he appears at their
doors.

Veit&gt;rans Memorial
Applications sought
Applications for Christmas food
baskets and boys will be taken at the
Salvation Anny, US Butternut Ave.,
· , , Pomeroy, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Tuesday and Wednesday.

Admitted-Evelyn Schuler, Middleport; Kathy Jo Robinson,
Pomeroy; Amber Pearl Warner,
Pomeroy.
Discharged--Terry
Barrett,
· Harold Hubbard, Tim Justis.

Units answer calls
Will hold dinner
Shade River Lodge, 453, Chester
will hold a dinner followed by open
installation Dec. 10, at6:30 p.m.
Members are asked to bring a
covered dish.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted-Roy Miller, Columbus;
James Miller, Columbus; John
Cook, Pomeroy; Helene Sayre,
Minersville; Florence Potts, Minersville; Harley Burton, Syracuse;
Richard DeMoss, Pomeroy;
WOOdrow Hendrix, Sr., Syracuse;
Leona Babcock, Pomeroy.
• Discharged-Marie Young, Blan·
cheScragg.

Meet Monday
i'

The Meigs Band Boosters will
meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the high
school.

Market report
PriL~!I

OhloVoll&lt;yUv"l«kCo
""""'JR'"'"'
tak~n from the aoctlon of Sclturll&lt;ty,

Nov . 21. Tr~nds : v~al caiV-t!lillleady, fl!eder cat·
tle$2to$4hl#ler. t'Owsskady. Tot.Hihead6I9.

effect of the administration's anti·
inflation program.
The administration is firm in its
prediction that Reagan's program
will trigger a strong recovery by
mid-1982 that will guarantee a
prosperous economy and

8

low in-

In addition, the Meigs County

flationrateheginningin 1983.
Democrats accuse Reagan of intentionally causing a recession
through a tight-credit policy. But
Reagan has rejected suggestions
that he alter his program to help
alleviate the unemployment
problem.

Board of Education received a
directallotmenlof$75 ,548 .34 .

r'-_______:_____

Federal court
reverses ruling
CINCINNATI (AP) - A Federal
apP.,als court Thursday overturned
a lower court decision that a police
officer and the city of Gallipolis
aren't liable for damages in the
death of a motorist.
· The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the District Court judge
instructed the jury incorrectly and
improperly refused to allow a rebuttal witness to testify.
In a 2-1 decision, the appeals court
threw out the jury verdict and sent
the case back to the District Court
for further handling.
The lawsuit stemmed from an
early-morning automobile accident

Six emergency calls were an-

on June 4, 1977, in which James Mar·

swered by local units Tuesday, the
Meigs Emergency Medical Service
reports.
·
The Middleport Unit at 6:58 a.m.
took Margaret VanCooney, North
Second Ave., to Holzer Medical Center and at 4:13 p.m, took Roy Sansbury to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy Unit, 8:25, Arthur Hoyt, Union Ave., to Holzer
Medical Center; Rutland at 10:31
'a.m. treated Myrtle GardPer at her
home; Racine at 3:57 a.m. took
Kevin Dugan from his home to
Holzer Medical Center, and
Syracuse at 9:59a.m. took Hattie Arms from College Road to Veterans

lin was seriously hurt. He later died
ofthe injuries.
Martin's auto collided at an intersection with a police cruiser
driven by officer Timothy Weaver.

Memorial.

Weaver was

chasing

a

~

II
J

violator through the intersection.

.')ecretary of Stale Anthony J.
Celebrezz~, Jr. reported today articles of mcorporation have been
filed with his office in Colwnbus by
3- R Industries, Incorporated of
Langsville, Incorprator is Rex E.
Shenefield,

TREE FARM ON CHERRY RIDGE
fRESH CUT TREES OR CUT YOUR OWN

I·I

new Country Christmas Shop WJ"th tree

~

hand·crafted gift items opening Satur- •
d ·1 lh
ill ·
a1 V rough Dec. 23, 10 a.m. until dark.

to

.e.50-$6;

F~r

;w. ~

41 .56-52: 300 to400 lbll. 31-lil : .JOOto 500 !bs . 31!.;.;o.

EVERY MONDAY NIGHT AT

5LSO: 5011JooooJbo,3&amp;«J: GOOto;ootbo. a..&gt;: 100

to 1100 lb.&lt;l. 37.50-SJ.SO: 800snd over .lfi . ~9.7~ .
FC4.-der Bulls: Good and Chok.'e 2!&gt;0 tu 300 lbl! .

,..,,aoo;,..,J.,,.,J,.,.,,.,I"."...'"'

CHOW'S FAMILY RESTAUR,AN' T

Bullsl,OOOib!l.andup3&amp;-4UO.
~~::\'::
~~;;: uHIIII•~ 34,50-4L2&gt;; Comwrs

SPAGHETTI DI,N NER

500 to eoo lbll. 3a-47 .25; 600 to 700 lbti. 3&amp;--41; 700 lu
~ lt.l. 37.50-43.00: 800 lind owrl5-47.
Hobteln ste«s anll bulls 300 to MlO lb!l. 35-U.

•

Veal Cllvu- Choice and prime 71-93: .(IIJO((

•

•

.

. I.Ut&gt;OI,

Ask About Our Introductory Memberships
we Offer Memberships and Daily Fees
j_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Served with
Choice of Salad, Roll
and Beverage ,
DINING ROOM ONLY

Nov. Zl. ltll
CATTLE PRICES
Feeder S teers · / GOOd and Choice) JOO SOC lbs .

HOG "II! ICES :
HotS : CNO. 1, Borrows and Gills ) 200·730 lOS

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURA.NT

41 41 . 70.

Butcher 5GW&amp;ll ..S0·40,
lukMr eo.n JHOO.
F.edM Pltll: flY fM 11eac:H «&lt; 2J.SO.

SHEEP PltiCII:

~IWfhW u.-. IH4 .

PH. 992·5432
221 W. MAIN

POMEROY OH.

14 Sect!)ns, 108 Pages 35 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper •

Old library out as new
city recreation home

Of Home Entertainment
Available NOW To You.

ByKEVINKEU.Y
Tllllt!II-Seotlnel Staff
GALI1POUS -It appears the old
Gallia County District Ubrary
building won't be tbe new..home &lt;i
the Gallipolis Recreation Department.
However, the department hopes to
go ahead with plans to operate its activities out of its proposed recreation
center on the goU course grounds adjoining Gallipolis Developmental
Center.
The library building at Third
Avenue and State Street had been
leased to the city for 10 years by tbe
Gallia Academy Trustees, a private
group which owns the building. In
October, at the recommendation of
the city recreation board, the city
commission sought to extend the
lease to 60 years.
If the recreation department was
to move into the 70.years-plus-old
building, it would have required extensive renovation. The city and the
trustees were unable to come to an
agreement on the lease extension, so
the city broke the tease, as was its

Over 80 Channels
24 Hours A Day•
12 Different Satellites (..,

v
Potential Dealers
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FOR INFORMATION

' . AFl'ER .appearing In Pomeroy Friday evealog,
SaBia Claus

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

CHRISTM.AS SALEI
MEN'S MATCHED
WORK SETS ·

In Gallia Couilty Saturday

Ill downtown GalllpoU. ilbortly before noon.

Inside today...
Area deaths •••..•••••••..••.••••••••••.......••••• A-7
Business ...• : . •. ·.......•.........•.•.... ; . . . . . . . • • E-1
Classified • • • • • . • • . • . . . . • • . . . • . • • • • • • • . . • . . . . . • . • D-3-7
F.dJtorfal •••••..•••..••••.•.....••••• ·•••....... : • A-2-3

Homes •....•.•.....•....••......•.•.. ·•............ F-1

, Matching Pants and Shirts in navy bluecharcoal - dark .olive - khaki · or forest
green. 65% polyester/35% cotton blend
fabric. Complete selection of sizes.
Perte~t gift tor the men on your list.

...

$11.95 WORK PANTS
$12.95 WORK PANTS

Will ~ted

(291044)

(461050)

$10.95 LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS (l4 '2'0 17)
$11.95 LONG SLEEVE SHI~TS (18to20l

. IJfestyle • . • • • . . . • . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . • . . . . . • . • . . . . . . • B-1-8
S~te-National .••....•. , .•...•.......•.••.•.......• D-1-2
Sports ..•.••••• ~ ••.........•.•......••.......•..•. c-1-8
_'rakeoOne • • • • · • · • • • • • • . . • • • . . • • • • • • • • • . • • • . . • . • . Insert

1 ------------~-------------

Hunting death said accident
POMEROY-A -Rt. I, Dexter man
was accidenUy shot and killed
Friday while deer hunting on McCumber' Hill, Salem Township, at ,
app~tely 9:40a.m. the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department reported Saturday.
'
, Dead as a result of a gunshot '
wound to the head is Darrell L.
Jones, 41, Rt. .1. Dexter. Jones was '
lor

accidenUy shot by a juvenile hunting
companion authoritles said. The
weapon was described as i shotgun.
The Rutland ER Squad transported Jones to Veterans MemorialHospital where he was pronounced
dead. At the scene was Sheriff
JamesJ. Proffltt,.Dr. R. R. Pickens,
county coroner, ' and wildlife of.
ficials.
·

Sv...a.,

Huge crowd
views parade
GALilfOUS - A huge crowd
lined both sides of Second Avenue
here Saturday morning for the annual Gallia County . Christmas
Parade.
Seventy-seven units were entered
in. the colorful event. . Dr. Paul
Hayes, president of Rio Grande
College an&lt;j Community College,
served as parade marshal.
The parade, sponsored by the
Gallipolis Retail
Merchants
Association, featured, among
others, el)tries from county, city and
village governrnents, county and
city schools, churches and area service clubs. It lasted roughly 40
minutes.
Alter arriving downtown, units
circled the Public Square and wound
up at the Upstream Public Use Area
on First Avenue.
Parade judges were.David Lyons,
Gallia Academy High School; Brad
Painter, Southwelltem High School;
and Jerry Skaggs, F'rench Art
Colony. The winners !"!re;
Best Walking , Unit, Stylettes
t&gt;aton; Best Theme, Christmas and
American ' ,cuajomll, Lighthouse
Tabernacle, No. 62; Best Religious,
Continued on A-4
'

$8.95 SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS
SAVE THIS WEEKEND DURING OUR
BIG aiRISTMAS SALE
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 -

SATUIDAY TIL 5

EtBERFELDS IN POMEROY

option.
For now, · Keven

Wright,

recreation director, said plans for

the recreation complex are currenUy in the works and are subject to input from the city commission and
the public.
If completed, the complex would
include a swimming pool, shelter
house, playrgound, jogging trail,
bicycle path, tennis coui1.s, baseball
and softball fields and possibly two
outdoor handball and racquetball
courts._
,
"We're trying to go for things that
ate best sJJited for the area, to meet
the demand," he said.
Wright said t~e pool will be one of
the major selling points of t/Je cOJTl·
plex, and the city hopes to install an
aU-year pool, covered by a bubbletype structure in ,the winter which
can be easily removed in wanner
weather. The tennis courts would
also be lighted for night playing, he
added.
"This project will be a boon to the
community because it will be a
large, centrally located, easily ac-

Four Gallians were at Pearl Harbor 40
years ago when Japan pulled -attack
GALI1POUS - Four people
who live in Gallipolis today were
at Pearl Harbor in the Hawaiian
Islands 40 years ago when the
Ja,panese destroyed the United
states Pacific Fleet from the air.
(See wire.related story on i:H).
They are Geri. and Mrs. George
E. Bush and daughter Jane (Norvell) and Oren V. Kyger,
'
In those days there was no local
Sunday newspaper, but Gallipolis
and Pomeroy had their own
Saturday newspapers and Point
Pleasant printed the Register
than on Saturday - and there
still is a Saturday Register 40
years later.
Saturday, Dec. 6, 1941, the
GallipOlis newspaper had a twocolumn three-line headline which
read:
JAP ENVOYS KEEP UP
INSCRUTABLE PALAVERS
WITH~ETARYIIUU.

There was a United States boldface·insert which read that Japan
told the Unlleol states that
Japanese troop movements in Indo-China were in full accord with
an agreement between Tokyo and.
Vichy. President Franklin D.
Roosevelt had given a blunt

demand for an explanation of the
troop movements.
In sports, Jackson defe•ted
Gallipolis 41-32 at basketball, and
the Fraternal Order of Eagles
scheduled a district initiation and
dinner"at2 p.m. Dec. 7.
Hughes Drug- it's Price Pharmacy today - advertised a
turkey dinner for 60 cents.
Brown's Furniture advertised an
occasional chair 'for $14.75, a
toaster for $15.95, and a desk for
$29.75. A washing machine co..1
$62:50 at Columbus and Southern
Electric Co., where you could
have gotten a coffee maker for
$6.75, a percolator for$7.95, and a
waffle iron for $8.95.
Evans Super Market had a twocolwnn three-inch adv offering
five large cans of milk for 39 cents, flour 24 pounds for 'II cents,
spaghetti ' four pounds 25 cents,
' and cream cheese per pound 31
cents.
Firestone Sterling Store sold ,
radios for $9.95 to $39.95. DavisSbuler- it's vacant now - had
toddlers' frocks for $1.19.
The Pearl Harbor Day extra is
loot, but Monday, Dec. 8, 1941,
found three banners across the

top: "Japs Begin War, Kiil and
Wound 3,000 in Hawaii." The middle banner read, "Senate . and
House Speedily Vote Declaration
of War." The other: "PrCsident

Scores Jap Treachery, Describes
Onslaught."
A year later the United States
Government
released ·
photographs and facts of Pearl
Harbor Day. One of the pictures
shows the Arizona belchilig blaqk
smoke as it sinks, In the in·
tervenlng years GallipoUtans
have visited ,the monument erec-

ted over the rusted wreck of the
Arizona.
The Colony Theater advertisement asked the readers to
go "gay with Garbo," and "gay"

merely meant happy and joyful
in her role in "Two-Faced

Women."
While there were four
Gallipolitans of 1981 present at
Pearl Harbor in 1941, one other- .
Lawrence Dickey - died recently in Florida. He was in the Army and was serving in Hawaii ,
when the Japanese struck.
Dickey spoke befor~ civic groupo' ·
on several occasions to describe
his experiences.

Ohio unemployment second highest in nation
By 1be Aaaellled Prell
Ohio's 11Jl1111111~ ,nle in
November wu the
hlll*t In
the natian, will! the Jllllllber of
JCiblea ObiOMI ~ to Its
Jdchell point In 110 y.,., llate aud
fQral oftlclallllld.
Willi about
people out ol
wart, the slale'l WleiDployment
... Iut-I'IIGilllt readied 11.4 per-

•.ooo

cent. 'j'hat'a a full percentase point dependence on the auto industry and
above the llgure lor October and related businesses.
,
three polnltt bl&amp;l1lll' titan the national '
WilUam Papler of the Ohio Bureau
rate ol u percent, the u.s. Labor of Employment Services said the
Deplr1rnent said Friday.
latest round of layofla wu due not
only to weak demand In the
· Worten are belnc laid off from
auto IUid steel planll Ill over the automobile and houalng lndualrles,
state, dlnunlnll pitlljlliCia lor li hap- but allo to cutbacks In sales of other
py bollday ltJr u-ntil ol famWea., ~NDulactured items,
"Manufacturers of household apOhio II IICOIId. to Micldgan In Its

• f

~·

'•

cessible area - and it's also the la~t :
little hunk of space open in town,''
· Wright said.
He also pointed to the fact a city
with good recreational facilities is
attractive to industry looking f&lt;T
relocation sites. The proposed
private golf course and country club
in Rodney and l!l\ccoon Creek County Park are also considered, and he
sees no duplication between the
three facilities.
"The 11ew golf course, 0.0. Mcintyre Park District, the chamber of
commerce, they'll all go into
developi~g t/Je area economically,"
he explatnPd.
While all of this i,s just • plan
. Wright said the department's im:
mediate plans are to improve its
land at the new water treatment
plant off Chestnut Street.
The department has one softball
field ready at the site, but there are
plans in the 1982 budget to expand it
into an athletic area. Wright said
what will go into the area is up to the
commission and the amount of landscaping necessary . .

duJin« the aiiiiWII Cltrlltmas parade. Pbolo was taken

Farm •.••.•••••..••. ·• . • • • • . . • • • • • • • • • . . . • . . . . . . . E-2-3

st sa .so; sao ,oo tbs ..as,.
Feet:ler Heifers : / GOOd rtnd Chok:(' ) d .S(I Sr ;
SOil 100 lbs. 41 .50·50.
Fet&lt;~er Bulls · !GOOd lind cnoicei JOO·SOO lbs
,..y ,. 500·700 lbs. 47 56 .50 .
•
.
Sllwvhter Bulls : co..,~r 1.0001os 41.75 49
'
• Slaupnter CoW~ : Ufilifit-s 35 41.$0. Ca nrlt'rs
...:;..:. Cutters'' l!i. H.
·
S,VtnprCows: 1Br thf' Pound) Je -'6 .
Cow er'ld Co\11 P111rs fBy tne Unl tll65 SIO
V•ets: /CI'IOice and Prime) 66·70.
lebW' Calws : fB~ ine He11dJ 15-1'•.5 : B~ rne
POUNII G.JD·l5,

'

Sunday, Dec. 6, 1981

... .

AthH.ll Uvf:Minrk S.ltll

Alb.Dy, Ollltt

'

'

Vol. IS No. 43
Copyrighted 1981

..,

1

&amp;by calves .»87:50.

.

honon during Saturday's GalUs County· Cbrfstmas·
Parade. Seven-seven units participated In tbe . - 1·
event.
· '

tnttS

Mary Powell • Owner-Operator
Trudy Roush - Styli~t

There's A Whole New World

BEST REUGIOUS FLOAT - United Methodlat
Cburtb Ill Thurman cap!ured "Best ReUgiDW! Float"

•

DRAWING FOR DOOR PRI·ZES

•

Top Hu)ls210 to 230 IbM. 43-47.50.
Soirts Jl-.34.
Pi1U1by the head la-27.
Sows400 lbll.iind up t2-4::1.

"'gb

SUNDAY, DEC. 6 from 12:00 to 5:00

992-5777

F'''"""""' G&lt;ood•ndC!w;" 250103001"',
I
,..,.,aoo,
•
.,.,
..
,...,,.oo,..,to5001bo .....,. •
.
WATCH FOR SIG.NS .
~ .$0 ; 500 800 lbll. fS.fi&amp;.M.SO: 600 to 700 lb:i.
fi!I:IFJiJIISJIII-----I
••.so.at: 100 to eoo 11:1s .
aoo and ov~ ·~ lr;;;;;;;-;;;-~-~-~~~lllll~"'l~lllf.I~M~JOJS~JOJS~-~-;~-~·::·~-~-~~~~~~-~~
Heifen: Good and Chc:l"' 'l;&amp;l"• u :m-.
52 ,

Fitness &amp; Beauty Studios
2021!2 E. Main St.
.
Pomeroy, OH.
Over T!lp of Dollar General s,tore
·
Ph. 992-6720

various groups aud other milrehing units. Followlag
tbe psrade Santa dlalrlooleol treats to the yCJIIDgllen
from tbe parting lot stage. Plrtured with Santa Is five
year old Erica Robble,IIGie Hl1l Road, Pomeroy.

CALL SAT., DEC. 5 ONLY

Papers filed

BRADFORD'S
Do. n'l m
. iss the
trl m m mg and
day De 5 d
'
c. an

TOP OF THE STAIRS

SANTA CAME TO TOWN - Santa was the bll ol
tile c.ru.tmas pua,de beld In Pomeroy Frtday Dlcbt
spollliOI'ed by the Pomeroy Chamber of Comm~ to
welreme tbe Cbristmas holiday seasoa. Tile parade
let~tared tbe Melga
Baud, pickup trucks carrying

traffic

I.~---------------------,·
. CHRISTMAS TREES I

II

GRAND OPENING

receive funding

IJobless. ."

Area deaths

Shop on Butternut Ave. from II a.m. to 5 p.m. Stmday.
Door prizes wlll be awarded and refrl!!lhmellts will be
•erved. The publlr Is Invited.

-~

pliances and motors for hoo·aebeld
appllance8 are laying ufl W'llilen. A
wide variety of man!lfacturiajl fn.
dustrlea beyond auto IUid hot......
are laying off," he said.
---~
The automobUe lndutry 1114
November car pnldudlon
25 percent from the
level Mil
thai .sales were down 114 1111 I
Continued on M

pl._
1•

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